HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-10-19 - Orange Coast Pilot-TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 19, 1976
~ .. , MO':its, J S~CT1CMH. 14 ~AOH
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1 Sle1nons Ducks Cordova Debate'.
f
Coast Hearings
New Building
-Okays H·alted
No applications for new con-
struction within the realm of
South Coast Regional Zone Com-
mission control will be aceepted
for a 57-day hiatus when a
legislative gap soon ,PUts the
aeency in limbo.
Commission Executive Direc-
tor Mel Carpenter announced at
a meeting Monday al the Hunt-
jngton Beach Civic Center that
.Nov. 15 is the cut.off date for ap-
plications ..
Commissioners who have been
1 criticized both from without and
Yiithin their o1tn ranks previous·
Jy for bogged-down project ap-
plication processing will race to
catch up in the meantime.
. ·They agreed to meet i n
• emergency sessions Nov. 1, 3,
1 and 8 in an effort ·to clear up 396
pending applications, 115 of
Which require full-blown public
bearings to take any pro or con
tbtiinony.
Location of these meetings is
~ t.o be determined, but it is
llkdy to be Torrance City Hall,
•ince most matters coming
before commissioners prior to
!fov. 15 involve· Los Angeles
County matters.
'A commission stall member,
bt>wever, said at Monday alter-
Cbon 's adjournment she un-41ntood the meetings would be ~ the Huntlnston Beach Civic ~r. The agency alternates
\ltween the two locations.
·Followln1 the Nov. 15 applica-
tion cutoff date, Jan. 12, ttm ls
tbe first date at which they may
• filed again for conslderaUon
wtthln the comln1 year.
Nothing unresolved before
NbT. 15 can possibly be hem\
'before Feb. 7 and q~te likely any
dtw appllcaUon1 fUecl followinc
'
resumption or the commission's
work won't be beard until later.
A 21-day delay is required by
law before commissioners may
consider an application for
anything involving new or re·
vised construction and building
within 1,000 yards of the
coastline.
Legislative terms or Proposi·
lion 20, which created the
California Coastal Zone
Conservation Commission,
.parent agency or the South Coast
(See COASTAL, Page AZ>
ManAttacla
Wife, Kids,
Runs to Death
PARAMOUNT (AP) -A 38-
year-old man, apparently de·
ranged following a marital argu-
ment, slashed bis wife, beat bis
two son1 -one fatally -and
ended the rampage with a
suicidal dash onto a busy
freeway, authorities said today.
Wences Alcantar died when
struck by two automobiles and a
second son was in "very critical"
.condition following surgery to-
day. His wife was reported in
good condition with knife wounds
on her face and shoulder. The Los Angeles County
Sheriff'• office gave this account
ol the Sunday night violence:
Alcantar of Paramomt. driv-
ing bia family bomt from a shop-
ping trip, become so enraaed
that be stopped the car and
slashed his wile, Benita, 33,
several times with a knife. Sbc>V-inC her out of the car, Alcantar
sped away with hil soos, Wences
Jr .• ~ and Eduardo, 3.
Alcantar drove to the home oC
relatl•ea in Compton. where he
stabbed himself four or five
times. Though wounded, be
drove off and beaded east oo the
Sao Bernardino Freeway.
At an offramp lD Redlands, he
droYe Che car down a 45-foot
slope,~ it came to rest.
Hflb•ay patrol oftlcers said
Alcantar flag1ed down a
motorist and said bis sons were
injured. Accordinl to sheriff's depu~les.. they were found aev~ty beaten lD tbe back aeat
Clftbecar. >.. blth .. , patrol om~
were examlDlnl tbe car, A.lean·
tar ran onto Ul• hMWay and wu
ltnlc1 by two can.
"It was u apparent sulcfde, ••
aaid a deputy, "bUt ol coune
there's no wa1 of teWn1 for
awe.''
Eduardo died dutini the ~
at Loma 1.JJKta HoapU.al. ,
It's One of 'Thein' I
This fellow isn't a refugee from the movie
about the giant ants, he's just a fire ant
magnified 160 times by a scanning elec-
tron microscope at th~ University of
Ate Tobaeco ·
-..... ,......
Southern Missi~ippi. He's 'ained a .new
lease on life with the banning of M1rex ,
the only effective killer of the pest that
plagues Southern states.
Press Barred
Porno .
Probe
Cited
BJ GA•Y GltANVILLE
Of tlle Dellr ll'IJtt Miff
A debate between Assembly )
candidates Republican James
Slerpons and Democrat Ron
Cordova turned int.o a one-man
Cordova show Monday night
when Slemons heeded the advice
olhls.aUorney and bowed out. The announcement or Slemons•
last-minute withdrawal Crom the 1 League of Women Voters-.
sponsored debate drew boots and
laulfl• from a standing-room. t crowd ln a campus lecture :ff' atSaddleback Collete.
Orange Coast League Presi·
dent V alerle Murley sai4
Slemons' attorney, John D.
Cochran, told her he advised
his client "not to appear in public
discussion until an investigatiOll
now under way ls completed •
probably in about ooe week's
time." Mns. Murley said Cochran did,
not specify elther the subject orj
ta.reel of bis investigation. 1
But today the Irvine attorneyi
admitted be bas hired in·
vestl1ator1 "to check out cert.ail\
faceta" of recent news stories ln
the Santa Ana Register alleginc
that Slemons: ,
-Wbile in Germany recenUy
malled to himself in Newpott'
Beach two pornographic books
that were later seized by U.S.
Customs agents undt:r regula.-
tionl prohibiting the lmportatloo'
ol IUCh material Into the U.S.
-In ,1974 lpst four reels of.
pornographic movies to cua~
agents •fter they were dlt•,
c overed in his sultc811e when he
\"ewmed from a trip abroad.
<See &LEMONS. Page AZ)
Punishment Choice
Ignites Parents' Ire
From Adamson ________ _
BUMI:, Mo. (AP> -When the
hlgb school principal caught
three teen-age boys with
·cigarettes in their pockets, be
save them a choice or pw:Ush-
ment: take a paddling or eat the
cigarettes.
Two boys chose to eat a total of
18 cigarettes and have devel~
Peace, Freedom
Candidate Speak&
Marsaret Wriahl. tM Peace
and Freedom Par\>'_ presidential
candidate, •111 dJscu11 ber
part,'1 platfarin ftrial a noon
~h at Oraa1e Cout Collet•
Wednaclay.
Tbert wW also be a receptico
at· 11d81 Klpabulu LaDe in Hun&.-
tnctoft Beach 1t l:ID_P.:~ror.
more ln!ortn1Uon cfP ~. f.:.
health problems as a nlUlt, their
parents aali Mondv.
When the boys' mothers wmt
to a school board meet1aC to pro-test, u.e board voW to upbold
the principal'• acUoos.
Board member Joe.. Broob
said the prl.Dclpal'1 aatborit7
would be damaced unleu the
board aupported him.
"I fHl like if the. kidl make ~
their own mind. 1t 'a up to tbem, •
Principal _ K•noe&.h H11htower
said shortly after Ute incident
lutmontb.
H11htower aald i. -1wQS of·
fered the same alternatlve to
otW studenta wbo llc'OIDI tbe rule
apintt CU1'1ba~ but
allb.ad.eMleo
BJ1btower e••I t: Terr1
W..U..rmu, 11, B&llAAiu, 14.
and _.notber yoetb wltb the
ci1.-ette1. Ile tOl4 Qaem they
coWd have two••••~ a,....
. <a..•O&IN~TA&>
Jury Picking
PHOENIX, Ariz. <AP> -The
trial of John Harvey Adamson.
cbar1ed with m\fl'derln• in•
vestleative reporter Don ~lles• entered its second day fl Jarr
Hlectlon today with trial .re-
port.en locked out.
A panel of 82 prospect.iv• jtlron
underwent-an airport-lt)tle metal detedor teareb u they entencl
·the heavily ~ courtroom ot Superior Court Juda•
Fr•rlck HeinemlD. Jn a, becti" ope.ding day Ma&
d ay. Heineman lntenslffed
aecurlt¥ precauUona and ordered
reporters ban:ecl from tb•
seventh noor or the courtboUI•
ftDe. juq la belDaadected.
Boll••.t.. a reporter ;!•r l Art.-a .e,ulk, ,,..
IQiured Juoe t when a balD
riDl*l Uu'oqb bia car. -wltnesaea ba.e said Uaa\
before Bolla di.a u days later.
be Mid, "l'lnd JobnM•m.,.,, 0
On 110Dda7. witboul N.1\Di
wbr. Heiaemu _ dflcnisled Ole 1tst•oftOO~ft~
·Coast
We~ther m ... in th• mid '10s ft·
peded UarvQsb Wednelday
with eontln'ed morning md m,bttlme foa and low •
doulb.
INSIDE TODAY
'H....Cor,• i. c ~ oome for oMldma and.~
bona of a eolleoe doll GfWl nurl~ bf/ lb. MagarJnt. lt. ·
inoentor "°" nner '°°" tt, '*t thf'• nof grlpmg. Sn wlaf/ on
PagrAI.
l•tlex
, :· :llJ DAIL V PILOT Tuesday.October19,1978
~: Election· 'Tossup'
..
··· Carter, Ford Agree Race Very Tight . .
By The Associated Pre11
President Ford and Jimmy
Carter have found one thing to·
• agree oP: the election la just too
, <lose to call now.
• ,. It was a light c amt>algn day tor
both candidates, But as
each managed in a separate way
. ·to point to the lightness or the
race for the White House, Carter
continued a brief, l2·bour cam.
paign swing today through
Florida, North Carolina and New
York.
Earlier, he declared at a news
conference that the election is •
"up for grabs" and made an
emotional appeal in a Florida
speech against voter apathy. Ile
called non-voters cowards. The Democratic standard
~arer outlined his ideu on
health care to a Miami awllence
of about 2,000, then visited a
kosher bakery and addressed a
senior citizens' rally.
He promised the American
Public Health Association co~
vention "aggressive leadership
to provide comprehensive, na-
tionwide, effective health care -·
and you can depend on it.••
Carter said he favors national
health insurance which "must be
universal and mandatory,"
added that patients should have
'Few Good Men' Say No ...
WINK. Tex. (AP) -"The Marine Corps needs a
few good men." said the poster at a shopping center.
and Roger Woodriekdidn'tseewhy he couldn 'tqualify.
But the Corps rejected his enlistment application.
That made his mother happy but disappointed a lot
of his friends in the second grade.
Roger-is8.
''He just filled out the card and mailed it off." satd
his mother, Mrs. Boger WOO<irick. "It was about four
days before he got a reply from the captain in
Washington, D.C."
As Capt. Curt Murray put it: "We appreciate your
interest in the Marine Corps. However. since you are 8,
you won 't be eligible to be a Marine for awhile, but as
our way of showing appreciation for your interest, we
arc enclosing a special MarineCorp~ster."
"It's a huge poster," Mrs. Woodrick said. "Roger
is real proud of it." ·
Coincidence
Nixon Farm Visit
'Bu_gs' Vole Aides
SPRINGFIELD. Mo. <AP) -
··Whal can you do? You can't
CO\"er up the mailbox,·• moaned
Bob Dole's advance man. and the
Republican vice presidenUal
: M.mi Booked
For Robbery
PORT HUENEME (AP) -A
Camanllo man was booked on
robbery and kidnaping charges
after he allegedly held up a drug
$lore then held an employc
hostage all night before being
smoked out by tear gas.
Allen J . Kuckuck, 21, was
booked Monday for the investiga-
tion of armed robbery and kid· naping, police said. -,
Kuckuck allegedly concealed
himself in a Thrifty Drug Store
here until after closing time Sun·
·day night, then pulled a gun and
robbed the cash registers of
$8,000. Three store employes
I were bound and gagged, but two ! or them managed to escape and
: notify pohce while the robbery
' was going on.
lEgg Fracas
: Brings Arrest
SAN DIEGO IAP) -Ball is
: set at SS,000 for the manager of a
: poultry ranch who became in-
: volved in a frRcas with govern-
: menl agents attempting to con-
1 fiscate egg products.
1 Edward Michael Briezlnskl is
charged with assault In connec.
; tlon with a confrontation with ~Deputy U.S. Marshal Phillip
'Martino, who appeared on
;crutches Monday to testify at
Brzezinski's arraignment
·l>cfore U.S. Magistrate Edward
A. Infante.
ORANGE: COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Telephone (714).....,,,
CIHl#led Ad•ertleint M-M71
~-lV•ll•f-0ot'<• .. , .. ,,o ,,_,.Cit_ , ......
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candidate went ahead and visited
a farmer named Nixon.
"He's not related to that other
fellow." said Dole. "I want lo
make that perfectly clear."
The last line was often used by
that other fellow.
Despite some of his campaign
workers who were upset lo lear
that local Dole supporters bad
scheduled the visit. Dole spoke to
about 150 persons inside the
farmer 's barn. It was raining
outside. Dole praised President
Ford's farm policy.
Although most of the schedul-
ing foulups that plagued Dole's
campaign in the early days have
been eliminated, be continues to
encounter a few rougb spots
along the campaign trail.
Aides on his campaign jet
grimaced when they learned that
Dole·s first stop today was a visit
to the "Nixon farm" in Spr·
ingfield.
It was just a coincidence. The
farm ls owned by George Nixon,
a prominent farmer in the area
who ls not related lo the resigned
president. But that didn't keep
Dole's aides Crom groaning
anyway.
"We didn't know· the guy's
name was Nixon until we got out
to the fa.rm and saw the name on
the mailbox," Hid one Dole ad·
vanceman.
F...-PageAJ
SLEMONS ••
-Last spring lured Dale Scott
Lucas into the Republican
primary in the 74th Assembly
District to undermine the can·
didacy of Marian Bergeson.
Today S lemons labeled the
news story "allegations based on
unknown sources" and said he
expects to have them all cleared
belore the Nov. 2 General Elec-
tion. •
"I can assure you I have not re-
ceived a letter regarding two
books hidden away in an
automobile manual," said
Slemons.
The Newport Beach
Republican, who employs 9'l peo..
pie al bis Mercedes Benz
dealership, .. many of them
Germans whose relaUvea and
homes are in Stuttgart.
"l 'm not saylnc that any or
them mailed the books -if they
were mailed-but just that there
may be another answer,'• said t
Slemons.
Aa ror the alleged 1974 pomo-
gra pb ie material incident,
Slenions said. ''that afaln ts
based on alle1atlons from so-
called informed source1."
The .C3-year~ld auto dealer
flatly denied 1pollSOl"in( the 1.-t-
mlnute Lucu candidacy bl tbe
June primary elecUon., a can-
didacy that deprived Mra,
Bereeson of lut place on Ute
bJJlot .
freedom to choose. their physi-
cians, and urged greater em·
phula on preventive medicine as
"both 1impler and cheaper than
cures."
Ford, rematntng in
Washington until Thursday, sent
word through a group of
Republican governors and
senators who are his key party
supporters that be views the race
as "a dead beat" now. Major
polls also show the race ls tight.
Ford ls studying for Friday's
rinal debate with Carter in
Williamsbur1, Va., and aides say
be is gearing his campaign
toward a 12-day final push that
will take him to as many as 14
slat.es.
"Although I've been dis·
coura:ged, I've been dismayed
and 'so,mell m es l 've been ashamed.. or actions taken by
g~rnment leaders, Carter told
a Tampa audience, the federal
government can be effective and
responsive, "provided the
American people don't give up."
Citing an unspecified poll that
he said indicated "more than
halt the American people are not
going to vote,'• Carter continued, .
"In other words, theysaid,,'l'm a
coward, I'm afraid of the Cuture,
I five up on my nation, I'm not
going to try lo control rny own
destiny and stake out a belt.er life
for my children."•
Fro•PageAI
SMOKING .•
dJe or eat the tobacco they were
carrying.
The unidentified boy chose the
pa ddle, but Terry and Bill
divided the tobacco from 18
cigarettes and swallowed it.
Both soon began to vomit, their
parents said.
Mrs. William Adkins said she
took Bill to a doctor 20 miles
away that night after he began
spitting up blood. She said tests
showed he had a small ulcer,
which doctors said had been de-
veloping over a long period but
could have been made worse by
the tobacco.
She a nd h er husband are
threatening legal action against
the school.
Mrs. William Weatherman
said Monday that Terry has been
sent home from school three
times recenUy because of illness.
She said she is awaiting results of
medical tests.
The incident in this town of 3SO
has sparked criticism from·
health experts aro\Uld the coun-
try.
"That's a very dangerous form
of punishment," said Dr. Paul
Larsen, a pharmacology expert
who studies effects of tobacco at
the Medical College of Virginia in
Richmond.
Dr. George Wise, director of
the poison control center at
Children's Mercy Hospital in
Kansas City, Mo., said he knows
of cases of people dying after be-
ing injected with nicotine to rid
them of certain diseases.
Dr. Daniel Hom. director of
the National Clearinghouse for
Smoking and Health in Atlanta,
said that swallowing tobacco
could be harmful, but had no r~
cord or anyone dying from it.
The parents or both of the boys,
knew they smoked.
"I really don't approve or smok-
ing," said Mrs. Weatherman, who
said she knew Terry had been.
smoking since November.
• Blll's father. William Adkins,
said, "At first I didn't approve of
his smoking. Then later on 1 did.
He's a very nervous child."
Offices Near
Airport Hit
Newport Beach police said to-
day losses reported from a
weekend burglary or an airport
area office building now total
more than $13,600.
According to investigators, the
offices. all located at'500Campus
Drive, were appareoUy entered
by soRleone who bad a pass key.
A total of nlne offices rei>orted
break-ins and in most cases the
losses were expensive electric
typewriters, although one busi-
nessman reported the theft of a
$400 zebra akin rug •
Shark Bites
Manin Leg
EUREKA (AP) -A. 25-year~ld McKlnleyville
man •aYI he wa1 bttt.1 by
a 10.foot bl11e ahark while
dlvln.I south of Trinidad,
the Humboldt County
ahtr1ff'a department re-
portl. WUltam lCellnedy told
de'PUtles; be bad a run-tn.
with tbe reroctous ereltUre Mcmday. He wu treated
~~·:.:;. ~~~~=··~1":i::.~! :i -··-· ~-t••n ,.,,.,.. N HI .. ~t• -. ... C.111 .. ftlA ht.Ct!,, ... .,, ....... U .tt
-'""'' •1 11tall fj M -lllt. 1Nfll6tf b ... .-.u,.......,..•
It la believ~ by some wbo deal • in pollllcal campalpl Ullt next ·
to top spot on lbe ballot. lat ·
place ts th•be"st poait!on to at· · ttad. voter ftte.DUoo..
. 8t • local" holpltaJ fot • ~\l·l'Dc'b cut in bla lee that ·wat an inch deep, tbe re·
po a.id.
'
A' WI 1"911Mlo
EXPLAINING HIS REMARKS ABOUT ISRAEL 'BURDEN'
General Brown With Defense Secretary Rumafeld
Carter Demanding
Brown Reprimand
WASHINGTON <AP)
Democratic presidential can-
didate Jimmy Carter is urging
President Ford to "show some
leadership" and reprimand the
nation's top uniformed officer.
who made controversial remarks
about such U.S. allies as Israel,
Britain and Iran.
Ford, according to the White
House, accepts Gen. Geor~e S.
Brown's explanation and "con·
siders the matter closed."
For his part. Brown, chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Stair, told a
news conference Monday that his
remarks in an interview did not
indicate disagreement with the
U.S. policy of aiding Israel. In
the interview. Brown said that
aiding Israel is a burden on the
United Stales.
Hiii statement on Israel in-
volved him in controversy for the
second time in two years. Brown
was reprimanded by Ford and
apologiud in November 1974 for
telling a Duke University au-
dience that Jews have too much
mfluence in Congress and "own,
you know. the banks in Uus coun-
try, the newspapers."
Carter, arriving in Miami on a
campaign tour Monday night, re-
called Ford's reaction when
another appointee, Agriculture
Secretary Earl Butz, got into hot
water over an obscene racial
slur.
"Mr. Butz stayed there until
Mr. 1'~ord assessed the political
consequences or what he said and
finall y Mr. Butz resigned,"
Carter told reporters.
Carter conceded tha e had
not read transcripts of B 's
remarks, but added: "Fro
what I hear in the news media,
th ink that he s hould be
reprimanded. 1 think President
Ford s hould show some
leadership."
F,....PatpeAJ
COASTAL ••
Re&ional Zone Commls.slon, ex·
plres at year's end.
Legislators agreed despite pro.
blems inherent In the ~wcracy and ~ tape the
•)'Item 1eoerattd, the ~Pt
baa been a iood ooe ud lta work
abo\dd be conUnued. ~ew le1tslatlon nqulred to
eatablllb the covernme.ntal qen· c)', bowever, was not passed In
Umt to prevept the pp between
·~pltaUo_. qr lti• Aftlent. or--tUlsatloo ud ereat.\oQ -on
peper-of 1ta ldtbUcel SUCctlllOI'.
''If we took an application for
just a 11Mlt fa,nl'1 home now, th~ nrst ot~~bruery WOUid be the first time it could possibly be
heard," a coastal commission
aide confirmed today.
Such an ap)>Ucation can next
be received and filed for· com-
mission action Jan. 12 and ii not
treated as an administrative
item under its blank4't ~t
calendar, it muat beheatdlater.
Consent calendar 1teml are
generally non·cont.rovertial and
meet all or most criteria de-
manded of local, count.y and/or
state building and de~pment
requirements. ._
Commission Chairman Judy
Rosener, of Newport Beach,
warned 1t will be intolerable if an
attempt is not made to clear up
all or as much as possible of the
396-item backlog in the mean·
time.
Commissioner Elertb Erickson
pointed out it probably won't be
cleared up becauae in the put,
action has averaged only 10
public bearings per day.
Coastal commission observers
and members predicted two re-
sults o r the sudden bog-
ging ·down or the environmental
protection panel's activities in
carrying out its legislated duties.
Faced with lost time and in·
creased financial outlay on pro-
j e ct s scb e d uled with the
Southland's rainy season loom-
ing.some builders may take legal
action to force post·Nov. 15 ac·
tion.
Commissioner~ay also in the
meantime act Wlth• such baste
standards of development they
were appointed to uphold will be
lowered to clean off their meet· ing agendas.
By the time the panel resumes
action in 1977, it is predicted they
will have a backlog roughly iden·
tic al to the current 396 projects to
consider.
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....-...::~
...
Tuesday October 19. 1976 DAILY PILOT A:J
Beware of the Young, Edueated co·ok
WASHINGTON (AP)-A gov-
ernment survey indicates that 63
• percent of American home·
kitchens are "blah rlak" zones
for the two million to 10 million
estimated cases of food poisoning
each year.
The risks are higher lf the cook
is under 50 years old, better
educated and part of a family
with $15,000 or more lncome a
year, according to the report by
Judith L . Jones and Jon P.
Weimer of the Agriculture
Depa rt men t • s Econb'mic
Nation's
Growth
Falters
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
nation's rate or economic growth
faltered from July through Sep-
• lember, a slowdown reflected in
the increasing number of persons
on the jobless rolls during the
summer, the government report-
ed today.
The Commerce Department
said the Cross National
Product. the total output of goods
and services in the economy, ex-
panded at an annual rate of four
percent in the third quarter.
The gross national product
grew-at an annuaJ rate of 4.5
percent in the second quarter and
9.2 percent in the first three
months of the year.
Most economists consider the
Jtrowth rate during the se<:ond
and third quarters adequate on-
ly to provide jobs for the ex-
pansion of the nation's labor
force due to population growth.
They believe it is inadequate to
provide employment for persons
thrown out of work because of the
recession.
The Commerce report also
s h owed that inflation, a s
measured in the Gross National
Product, was less severe in the
third quarter. Prices rose at an
annual rate of 4.4 percent. com-
pared to 5.2 percent Crom May
through June.
The doll ar value 01 tne liNl" m
the third quarter was placed at
$1,709.7 billion.
The percentage increase was
the smallest since the 3.3 per-
cent growth rate recorded in the
fourth quarter or 1975.
The growth rate was held
down in part due lo the slow
build-up or business inventories
and a slower pace or new invest-
ment in businesses and homes.
lnventones grew during the
~ third quarter at an annual rate
of $14.4 billion. compared to an
·annual rate of Sl6 billion in the
\previous three-month period.
Total investment expanded at
an annual rate of five percent
during the' summer months,
, compared to 11.5 percent in the
, 'spring quarter. the department
· said. '. . • The CNP fi gures represent
·the broadest measure of thewna-
tion 's economic performance.
Today's r eport is the last due
before the November election.
w
The four percent growth rate
was in line with economists' pre-
dictions during the past several ~weeks, although it was well
below Administration fo recasts
_.s recently as July.
\ ln midsu m mer. the Ad·
m inistrati on for<'cast the GNP
growth rate would be about
seven percent for the last six
'months of the year when com-
' puled on an annual basis, drop-
pi n 1t unemployment below
' seven percent by December.
Research Service.
Tbe nationwide survey, usine a
scientificaUy selected sample of
2,503 representaUve households,
was conducted in 1974. The
analysis or the findings la being
published this month.
The f()(!us or the study ls the
.. high risJt" homemaker -those
with an unnecessarily high
potential or sickness due to possi·
ble contamination or food
through such things as un·
dercooking and poor refrigera·
lion.
Too much faith on the part or
the cook is a major part of the
problem, the report says.
"Homemakers may place un·
due reliance upon government
inspection functions for preven-
tion of bacterial contamination or
raw meat and poultry products, ..
it concluded.
• For example. Agriculture
Department meat inspectors to
not check or try to regulate the
amount or salmonellae, the most
common source of food poison-
ing, in slaughtered meat or pro-
cessed products. The bacteria
Welcomi119 Committee
are present in the environment
generally and 1t would be im·
practical to market sterile meat,
the department said.
But 63 percent of those sur-
veyed thought it unlikely that
government·ins pected meat
would carry such bacteria. The
survey also found that 30 percent
would taste a suspected product
to see if it were safe to eat, a
potentially fatal act, the report
said. About two-thirds of the
respondents thought the leftovers
Crom cooked foods should be left
out to cool before refrigerating.
Ruth Norman, a 75-year-old widow, stands
at a 65-acre site near San Diego she has
purchased for an ·'interplanetary con-
ference" she predicts will take place
between now and March. She is certain
enough r epresentatives from 32 planets
will gather for "their first meeting in
thousands of years" that she has a $5,000
wager riding on it with a British betting
agency.
Three Juveniles Guilty
Boys Tried as Adults in Shooting Death
By TOM BARLEY
OI tlle O.lly Pll<ll Sl~lt
Three Orange Coast juveniles
who were tried as adults on
murder charges filed after a
Westminster man was struck and
killed at a Huntington Beach in·
tersection by a bullet fired from
a passing car were found guilty of
manslaughter chaq~es late Mon-
day in Orange County Superior
Court.
Judge Harmon C. Scoville
closed the six-week trial in his
courtroom by ruling that the three
boys -· ages 15, 16 and 17 -arc
guilty of involuntar y
manslaughter. They will be sen- '
tenced Nov. 5.
The three youths were among
seven juveniles arrested by police
investigating the shooting death
of Michael C. Calleros.18. Two de-
fendants were cleared of murder
charges while the tnal was m pro-.
gress.
Two othtV defendants were
):(ranted immunity before the
closed trial started in return for
their testimony against the three
juveniles convicted by Judge
Scoville.
It was learned outside the
courtroom that Judge Scoville
commented while returning the
San Clemente Police
Discover Weapons
San Clemente police are in-
vestigating the origins or a cache
of weapons they said they found
Monday during the routine arrest
of a Camp Pendleton marine on
outstanding trafCic warrants.
Police said Thomas II.
Laubach, 20. was standing near
his parked car Monday night on a
desolate stretch of the Avenida
Pico extension road. 1 ''!I miles
east of Avenida Presidio.
During questioning, they s aid,
an officer spotted the butt of a rifle
inside the car.
An identification check of
Laubach turned up the traffic
warrants, and police searched the
car for other weapons.
Lt. Ray Hartman said officers
found a sawed-o ff( s hotgun,
shotgun shells, a sawed-off .22·
caliber r ifle. another .22-caliber
rine, .22·callber ammunition and
18gramsormarijuana.
Laubach was held today on $200
bail st emming from the war-
r ants, one alleging driving
without a license and one alleging
an 1llegal le ft turn. Further
charges were pending investiga·
lion .•
~ounty Man
Shot During
Union Dispute
A 28-year-old Fullerton man
was shot in the stomach Monday
afternoon during an alleged busi·
ness dispute at ll union hall,
Fullerton Police reported today.
James Joseph Wright was re·
ported in satisfactory condition
today at Martin Luther Hospita~
in Anaheim, police said, where
he is recovering from the .22
caliber handgun bluL ·
verdict that the defendants' con-
duct was affected by drugs and
alcohol at the time or the killing.
He also noted that one or the de-
fendants was mentally retarded.
Police said at the time or the ar-
rests that the s hooting incident
stemmed from a quarrel between
Calleros and one of the defendants
over a girl who had dated both
youths.
They said the youth accused
Call eros or pulling a gun on him
and urged the gang, of which he
was a member, to help him in his
dispute with the victim.
Police said a car packed with
gang members drove past
Calleros as he stood near the in·
tersection of Warner and
Edwards in Huntington Beach.
They said one shot hit a parked
car and another struck Calleros in
the head. The three convicted de-
fendants were identified as the
gunman, the youth who quarreled
with Calleros and the driver of the
car.
IJaby Clawed
By Raccoon
HOUSTON {AP> -A five-
week old boy is recovering from
injuries be suffered when a pet
raccoon attacked hlm as he
slept, his parents say.
Elmo Scott said Monday that
officials at a local hospital
described his son, Charles. as in
fair condition, a week after he
was attacked in the bedroom of
his grandmother's house.
"He bad to get 86 stitches in
his face alone," Scott said. He
said the raccoon, a pet belong.
ing to a neighbor, apparently got
in the back door.
A homemaker earned a "hi~h
risk" designation for one or more
o( these "undesirable prac.
tices":
Eatlng hamburger rare, leav-
ing meats at room temperature
for more than two hours after
cooking, leaving tWla, chicken or
other salad-type sandwiches -
including brown-bagged lunches
-at room temperature for more
than two hours, stuffing a turkey
a day or more in advance, stor-
ing stuffing in the leftover turkey
Newport Exee
or cooking the turkey partially in
ooeplace and finishlllg it later.
Of the 63 percent getting the
label, about half committed only
one of the errors. the researchers
said, while 47 percent hit on two
to lour.
The Jones-Weimer analyals
commented that one reason lor
the apparently "safer" kitchens
among the older, lcss~ucJlted
and lower-income fammea·.ts
they are less apt to be buying
vulnerable whole turkeys or bie(
or pork roasts.
Jail Sentence
For IDegal Aid
LOS ANGELES {AP) -The
president of a Newport Beach
aerospace firm has been sen-
tenced to 10 weekends in jail and
ordered to perform 1,200 hours of
charity work for illegally giving
a French company technical as-
sistance on rockets and missiles.
Veron Edler, Sr., 56, president
of Edler Industries of Newport
Beach, was given a two-year sen-
tence Monday and placed on five
years' probation. But U.S. Dis-
trict Court Judge Manuel Real
suspended the term except for
the weekends and charity work.
The judge also fined the com-
pany $25,000 and placed it on
three years• probation.
Edler and his firm were con-
victed last month or five counts of
illegal export in violation of the
1954 U.S. Mutual Security Act.
Assis tant U.S. Attorney
Theodore Wai Wu, who prosecut-
ed the case, said company
representatives provided
te chnical assistance on
lightweight and carbon material
fabrication processes used in
missile nozzle comPonents to the
Societe Europeane de Propulsion
plant in Bordeaux, France. The
prosecution said Fren ch
engineers and technicians also
visited Edler Industries to ob·
Soviet Space
Chief Robbed
In Anaheim
The chief of the Soviet space
program and another Ru ssian
scientist were robbed of $J5 while
attending a space convention in
Anaheim, police say.
Officers said Monday that
Boris N. Petrov, the Soviet spa1.:e
leader. and Vasily A. Sarychev
were robbed by a gunman as they
sat in the lobby or their motel
Thursday.
The bandit apparently had
some problems because the
scientists do not speak English
fluently . police said.
Officials said they would have
provided a security escort for
Petrov. who has diplomatic rank.
had they been notified that he
was attending the convention.
Petrov headed a 42-person de·
legation to the International
As tron autical Federation
Congress that met here last
week. He heads the Soviet coun-
terpart of the National
Aer onautics and Space Ad-
ministration.
Police s aid the two Russians
escaped Crom the young gunman
when people getting off an
elevator momentarily distracted
him. While he lowered his gun to
avoid attention, the Russians
hopped on the elevator and
escaped.
Convention officials said
Petrov did n ot register a
diplomatic complaint about the
incident. They said he left Satur·
day for Washington for talks on
the f~ture of U.S.·Russian space
· cooperation.
serve fabrication processes. ·
The government said althou'1
Edler once had State Departueat
approval to sell data to too
French firm. he continued to prO-
vide information through di4·
cussions in 1974 and 1975 aft~r
losing the permission. Withollt.
State De partment approvaj,
those discussions violated ttwe
law, prosecutors said.
Prior to sentencing, Edler's a~·
tomey argued that data given to
the French firm was common
knowledge obtainable tp
technical literature.
'Charity'
Sentences
Setfor3
A federal judge sentenced
three men, including two Hunt-
ington Beach residents. to prison
terms ranging from three to six
months after each pleaded guilty
to conspiring to sell cashier's
checks worth $8 million.
U.S. District Court Judge
Manuel L. Real suspended five.
year sentences for each of the
three men Monday in Los
Angeles and placed them on five
year's probation.
Fred A. Hamilton, 40 and
Richard Gates, 39. both of Hunt·
ington Beach, and Ronald J.
Polo, 41. of Rowland Heights
were ordered to perform 1,200
hours or charitable work.
The three men were arrested
alter they allegedly agreed to
sell 24 stolen checks to an un-
dercover FBI agent for $20,000.
Defense attorneys said the
three men had helped authorities
determine who had given them
the checks. but the defendants
said they did not know who stole
the checks from a Hollywood
bank.
Polo was sentenced to 90 days
in prison. Hamilton was sen·
tenced to 120 days and Gates was
sentenced to a 180-day pris~>n
term.
Conscience
Now Clear
'•
Call it a case of a delayed
guilty conscience. Newport
Harbor High School is now
$2S richer after a student
who stole a book from the
school's library nearly 30 years ago decided to clear
the record this week.
A money order accom·
panied this note: "This $25
is for restitution of the
library book I s tole from
the li brary in the late
1940's. I truly regret this
act of dishonesty."
T he note was simply
signed, "A former stu·
dent."
11 est Feet Foi-iearcl
Officers arrested Pet.er Fran·
cla Filion, 36, or Orange at the
scene on a charge of assault With
the intent to commit murder and
aggravated aaaault. police said.
He ls being held ln Fullerton jail.
Police alleged tbe shooting oc·
curred inside the Painttra and
Allied Trade Union Local 1817 in
Fullerton after a business dis·
pute. The hall iJ at 2330 W.
Ora.niethorpe Avez
Planting Berries
. Jlls this lhe newest way to clean out the oven ar could
Jl;omc.body Just be pulling your leg? In fact, this dummy ~ stove serve as an eye-catching roadside display for a
S!1;1all. ~~~~near .llunb4le, Ala. ~
Irvine Ranch workers are busy planting
strawberries at a field on Moulton
Parkway near the .San Diego Freeway.
The berry secdit ~re beneath the plastic
I
strips laid ln the fields, which keep them
warm while they germinate. Workers ex·
· peel to harvest the berry crop next spr·
~-l ' . -
6f DAIL V PILOT
.Ja.t ,.,..
£easting ,~J ~
wltla
Tom
arphine
I,.. ,
iMore Sound
~dFury?
RICKY TICKY POU'OX: We
:JK>W have Friday to look forward
i o, when presidential hopefuls
-Gerald Ford and J immy Carter
will once again clash in what is
billed as the th\rd nation-
ally televised debate. ,Already
l'm sleepy. You go ahead and
look forward to it ii you want. I
think I 'II try to rind a nice Friday
qigbt high school football game
to attend. Any game wlll·do. At
least there, the combatants will
be moving around some. Carter
came out just· yesterday and
declared he's going to "lean over
backwards" in an effort to keep
this presidential campaign.from
descending to the gutter level.
NOW NORMALLY, when some
politician starts talking about the
gutter, eyebrows go up. People
wait in breathless anticipation.
This is because when politi -
cians start talking about keeping
a campaign out of the gutter, you
can fi gure it's just about ripe to
fall over backwards into that
well-known trench just below the
curbing.
But not this time. Don't count
on it. That would be too much to
expect.
Instead . Jimmy Carter went
back to Plains, Ga., and did some
praying in asking that the good
Lord bless those who have hurt
him. He did not divulge the
names of those offered up in
prayer.
ONE NAME MIGHT have been
that of a fellow Baptist, one of
those radio preachers, who is
planning to go on the air and de-
nounce Georgia Jimmy for talk·
ing about lust in a Playboy
Magazine interview.
Meanwhile. the Carter forces
counterattacked by contacting
the radio stations. They warned
if that preacher was allowed to
sound off about Jimmy, then
Carter just might demand equal
time.
The preacher abruptly
screamed foul. saying his radio
stations were being intimidated.
Carter's people replied that they
'didn't consider· seeking equal time as intimidation. So much for
all that.
MEANWHILE, WHAT IS
President Ford doing? Well, he
has apparently recovered from
Fool-in·the·Mouth Disease suf·
fered when he popped off on the
status of P oland in the free
world. He is now apparently be·
ing cautious not to bump his head
into anything else.
Ford is clearly running a cam·.
paign al the highest level or his
available vigor. What he has
done is retur n lo the White
House. This is incredible.
EVERYBODY KNOWS that in
the last heat or a campaign, no
incumbent president should ever
return to the While House. That's
the last plnce on the globe that
anybody would expect to Cind
him.
Thus the American people
have been treated to the specta·
cle of Carter running back to
Georgia lo pray and Ford hiding
in the White House to recover
from his Polish wounds.
No wonder this campaign is a
real yawner.
'
Tuesday. October 19. 1976
'Dow Could I?' Rejectio11 Hinted
Boycott List
Draws Denial
Lebanon Peace
Views Divided
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -Reaction to a proposed ceue-tlre-and
new peace plan aimed at ending Lebanon'• civil war wu d.1vtchd here
today, lndicaUng th• truce mi&bt be no more eff tcUve than• otben ln
the 18 months of warfare.
WASHJNGTON <AP) -Many American companies identified as
participants i.n the Arab boycott of Israel are complainlne that they
are frequent trading partners with the nation they s upPosedly are
boycotting.
The Commerce Department r eleased Monday the names or The propoul for a cease-fi.ro by mldnltbt Wed.auday and the plan
to end the war were agreed on by
American companies involved in
59 transactions with Arab nations
since Oct. 7. Tbat wa.s the day
President Ford announced his
decision henceforth to reveal the
names or American companles
participating in the boycott.
THE MATERIALS claimed
that 3ome of America's largest
corporations -Citibank of New
York, Bank of America of San
Francisco, McGraw-Edison In·
temational, James Beam DisWJ-
ing Company, Kayser-Roth
Corp., White-Westinghouse and
Solon Hits
Tuning of
Affair Tale
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. <APl
Rep. Donald R iegle Jr. admits he
bad a ''brief relation.ship" with
one of his office workers in 1969.
But he says that to bring it up in
the midst of his Senate campaign
is "the most vicious hatchet job l
have ever seen in politics."
In a prepared statement Mon-
day. the Michigan Democrat said
his opponent,
Republican
congressman
Marvin Esch.
is "personally
res po n sib le
for the gutter
level tone of
this cam -
paign."
Esch denied
RIEGl.E a d v a n c e
knowledge or a copyright article
in the Detroit Sunday News
which said Riegle had an affair
seven years ago with a woman
who worked as a volunteer in his
Washington office
"THE DETROIT NEWS has
been his (Esch's) willing ac-
complice in the personal attack
and mud slinging," Riegle said m
the statement.
Esch said he thought the dis·
closure could hurt Riegle's elec-
tion chances.
"l don't think you can separate
personal integrity and public
life," Esch said.
MARTIN S. HAYDEN, editor
of the News. said, "To my
knowledge, Mr. Esch had no idea
that the story would appear in the
Detroit News. until be saw it."
Riegle and Esch are fighting
for the Senate seat now held by
retiring Democrat Philip Hart.
The News said the incident oc·
curred before Rieg le was
divorced from his first wife. Nan·
cy, and married his second wife.
Meredith Ann White.
RIEGLE, WITH HIS wife .
daughter and parents at his side.
told a news conference that the
relationship with his former of·
flee worker was "a foolish mis·
take and has been a source of
great regret to me."
The woman's identity was not
disclosed, and Riegle avoided
questions about her, referring in·
stead to the prepared release.
In the release, he said Esch
"has conducted a campaign of
oersonal attack, malicious dis·
lortions, innuendo and outright
slander." .
Deere and Company -have
slltlafied the Arabs that they
have complied with the boycott.
But as the companies listed
learned of their status, many
began issuing denials.
"The party who is supposed to
be boycotting Israel ls as Jewish
as Golda Meir, and that's me.
Now how could I boycott Israel?''
said Joe R. Gerson. president of
Gerson Inte rnational of Fort
Wayne, Ind.
.. IT HAPPENS THERE is
absolutely not one iota, not one
particle of truth in iL"
Gerson said bis export com-
pany deals with a number of
countries that have restrictive
trade clauses, such as an Arab
requirement that goods not be
shipped in vessels calling at
Israeli ports. They do not affect
him and he would not comply
with them if they did, he said.
"All we do as an independent
export management company is
report these clauses to the U.S.
government in accordance with
U.S. government regulations. In
no way do we comply."
Arrened
Danief Ellsberg, who re-
1 eased th e Pentagon
Papers, was a mong about
50 persons arrested in
Washington, D.C., on misde-
meanor charges of imped-
ing traffic Monday. He had
addressed a Pentagon r ally
of about 700 in a demonstra-
tion by t h e Continental
Walk for Disarmament and
Social Justice.
Palestinian leader Yaslr Aralat
and Syrian President Halu As-
sad and were announced Monday
Ul Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
ARAFAT AND ASSAD m et
there in a two-day s~mit con·
ference with PresideQt.s Anwar
Sadat of Egypt and Elias Sarkis
of Lebanon, King Khaled of Saudi
Arabia and Shelk Sabab al-Salem
al-Sabah of Kuwait.
Pierre Gemayel's Pbala.ngists,
who have the largest militia
fighting on the Christian side, en·
dorsed the plan. But Camille
Chamoun's National Liberals
sald IL did nol r estrict the Palesti-
nians enough. There was no com-
ment from former President
Suleiman Franjieh, the third ma·
jor Christian warlord.
The Cedar Guards, numerical·
American Hanged
In Triple Slaying
A SPOKESMAN FOR Deere NASSAU , The Bahamas (AP> American Micbaiah Shobek, his
and Compa n y. a tractor bead covered by a black hood, was hanged today in the ~mall gallows
manufacturer that traded with room at Her Majesty's Prison at Fox Head.
Saudi Arabia, said, "We sell to The excution came 29 months after Shobek, a 22-year--0ld Milwaukee
both Israel and Arab countries hand yman and would-be
and have for many years and in· songwriter, confessed to the
tendto conlinuedoingso.Tothe murders of three fe llow
best of our knowledge, we are not Americans he described a s
boycotting any organization or "angels of Lucifer."
any nation." · The death was confirmed by
Another company, Kremers· criminal investigation depart-
Urban International Corp.. a ment chief Addington Darville
drug maker, said through a DARVILLE PROVIDE D no
spokesman : "We have never details of the hanging.
knowingly participated in the In Milwaukee, a Lcg~l Aid
boycott of Israel or any other Society lawyer representing
country. I think it is erroneous to Shobek 's mother, Juanita
assume that the list is that of peo· Spencer, said he had tried Mon-
pie who have participated in the day night to get President Ford to
boycott." make a last· minute appeal, but
The Commerce Department that a presidential aide had re-
documents show that in nearly fused.
aJl cases the U.S. firms indJcated Shobek's body was taken from
they had com plied with the the prison to Old Trail Cemetery.
boycott reques ts. In a few, the about two miles away. A small
companies said other parties to section of the cemetery is rc-
the transaction would have t o served f or p au per s and
make the decision on the boyci>tt. murcerers.
In no case did a company say it It had been raining when
refused to comply. Shobek was hanged shortly after
Part of the confusion may dawn. The skies cleared and 1t •~W11'911110t•
stem from the nature of the Arab was hot and humid as the hearse HANGED IN NASSAU
lY •mall but tbe most extreme or the Cbrlatian milltiaai vowed
continued warlare ''unU the last
Paleatinlan ls either killed or
kicked oul of Labanoo."
KAMAL IUMBLA1T. leader
of the leftist Lebaneee Moslems.
was silent. But his supporten ex-
pressed fear the agreement
would le1itimite the praence of
Syrian troops in Lebanon. They
reiterated that there can be no
peace unlil all Syrian forces
withdraw .
The Palestine ReJectlon Front,
made up or militant factions who
broke with Arafat, was certain lo
rejecl the cease-fire.
Israeli government aources ln
Jeruaalem said the agreement
had little chance of success
because so many particlpant.s ln
the fighting were not represented
in the negotiations.
A JOINT COMMUNIQUE
broadcast from Riyadh said the
conference agreed to expand the
2,300-man Arab League peace-
force in Beirut to a strength of
30,000 to enforce the peace agree.
ment. It appeared likely that
most of the r einforcements
would come from lhe 21,000
Syrian troops Assad has sent into
Lebanon since June to prevent a
leftist victory and preserve a
balance of power between the
Christians and Moslems.
The expanded peacekeeping.
force is to disengage the warring
parties, put into effect the 1969
Cairo agreement restricting the
Palestinian guerrillas to the re-
fugee camps and the Arkoub re-
gion of southeast Lebanon.
supervise the withdrawal of ell
fighting forces from the war
fronts, and maintain law and or-
der, the communique said.
The agreement also included a
guarantee or Lebanon's ter-
ritorial integrity and national un·
ity and called on involved fac-
tions in the fighting to cease pro-
paganda warfare and direct their
information media to uphold the
cease-fir e.
President Sad at announced in
a radio report to Cairo from
Riyadh that the leaders bad
agreed on the "basic issues" to
settle lhe crisis and that details
were being worked out by their
boycott. A Congressional com-carrying his body arrived at the Mlchaiah Shobek
miltee earlier this year reported r:=c=e==m=e=t=e=ry::::. =:..==--================================:; that it is often loosely enforced
foreign ministers.
and its terms vary from country
to country. Only rarely does it re·
quire a company to avoid all
business with Israel
GAY NVMBERS
BRJNG NO JOY
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -Of.
Cicials are receiving complaints
aft er mailing out some 1,000
Hinds County license tags with
the prefi x "GAY" ahead of the
numbers.
County Tax Collector Jake
Richardson said Monday that the
complaints indicated that "not
everybody wants a car labeled
GAY."
J.W. Howell, director of the
s lalc Motor Vehicle
Comptroller 's lag division, said
"nothing offensive was meant."
He added, "No one in this of-
fice ever thought of it in another
term ."
Richardson said he would be
"glad to take them back if reci-
pients don't want them."
Snow Blankets Midwest Kitchen Help
...
Texas Panhandle Shares in CoM Weathe~
Temperature•
"''" A!Ufly 4•
Al~que ..
AmMillo 50
AIKllOf-d Attaftla St
ea11 ... ,1~•d ..
111-•0 It tlolw ~ -'°" n ..,....., 4l
OllQ99 '° O~~t SI O..•-,. o..i.... 41
ci.t""t " °"'""' is HtlltNt .. ........,." .. Htul!M ••
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MQ<od..,.,rtd..,. II yQ11 dO rtG1 ~
l'Ollf -D'f • 30 0 "' CAii "'''"' 7 fl" and )'O\lr COllY Woll be Ofl1..,90.
"""*' efl(I 911ftdw '' Yoo# ~ llOI ,....... rov< cooy l>'I •• "'· Ujt
llelof9 tO t I>\ ~ 'I°"" OOCy ""'" Ot ...._...,
a. ........ , ........ ._,.. ~ eo. .... 1 MP 4U nu ..,,.,,.... -· .... Oft...,. ...,~ ...... ,.... .... .. ,. .... ~. c.""-""'"' ..,. .,.,.,. ea.,.,.._
0-. "'°""' '°""' i..,... ~H ..................... >t
You Can Count On
You can count on the Wednesday food pages or the Dally Pilot to help
you lC you'r e counting calories, stretching rood dollars or almply hunt-
ing for recipe ideas for family or guests.
Food Editor Barbara Gius brings you a host or consumer Ups and menu
suggestions to help you subtract kitchen time while adding to eating en·
joyment.
Food is news this year. Keep up with the latest on nutriUon. slu>rtages,
prices, new markets and cooking trends by turning to the Wednesday
People section.
To make the most of what you buy or grow for your dhmer table, count
on the rood pages of the Wednesday •
DAILY PILOT
642-4321
I I
' ' ,,
,
:nail Dri,uer Kille d
Firemen stand by wreckage of mail truck which
plWlged over the side of a bridge on Hi~hway 101 in San-
ta Barbara Monday, killing driver John Alan Burkman, 39,
of Chatsworth. The truck narrowly missed crushing a police
car passing under the bridge as the accident occurred.
;police Drop Charge ·
ln 'Attack' by Dogs
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The district attorney's office has decided
· not to file charges against a man whose two Great Dane dogs were
shot dead by police as the animals charged officers.
James Evans, 29, was booked last week for investigation of assault
1 with a deadly weapon after he had allegedly ordered his two 130-pound
Great Da ne dogs to attack a
·neighbor, but officials have dis-[ J
closed that charges weren'tfiled. St a l e When officers attempted to
"search Evans after being caJled
Lo the neighborhood, the dogs
went toward the policemen and
were shot.
. Store• Staying Open
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
n AJthough possibility of a
Teamsters' strike against major
· food market chains in Southern
California and Las Vegas looms
··closer, market representatives
11say stores will stay open despite
a walkout.
There was little progress re-
ported Monday between the Food
Employers Council and officials
of the Teamsters Union, and over
the weekend union drivers and
warehousem en rejected what
management said was its final
: offer. The offer was rejected by
• nearly 99 percent of union mem-
1 bers, officials said.
: Pilot'• Strike Due?
e LOS ANGELES (AP) -Con·
~ tinental Airlines pilots ar e
• t h reatening a nationwide
t walkout Saturday which would
~ shutdown all airline operations.
ing on a request by state officials.
has offered to purchase a grove
of redwood trees for $1 million, it
was reported today.
State Resourees Secretary
Claire Dedrick asked the League
to make the purchase offer after
a logging company had cut down
about 10 acres of the majestic
trees, leaving about 45 acres un-
touched, the Los Angeles Times
reported.
Tax Red~tlon Urge d
SAC RAMENTO (AP ) -
Democratic U.S. Sen. John Tun-
ney is proposing a $15-billion tax
cut for early 1977. But he denies
it's an election-eve proposal in.
his close race with Republican S.I. Hayakawa.
Tunney said, "The unmistaka-
ble evidence is that the recovery
is sagging." He said a personal
income tax cut would "stimulate
lagging consumption and produc-
tion." A Tunney aide said $13
billion would go primarily to low-
and middle-income taxpayers,
the rest to businesses.
d . The pilots say they will walk
L out at 12: 10 a. m . unless an accord
~ is reached by that time on an
t agreement between the carrier
11 and the Airline Pilots Association . Prisoners Kiiie d ~ that has been under negotiation
t for more than one year. Saturday ~ is the end of a federally mandat-
~ ed cooling off period which began ~ last Sept. 22.
~ Grot'e Off e r Made
I GARBERVILLE (AP) -The ~ Save.the-Redwoods League, act·
II
'
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Prison
officials have reported fatal stab-
bings at San Quentin and Soledad.
One victim, Richard Hernandez,
was just two months away from
parole. The other, Samuel
Wtlliam Jones, was on San Quen·
tin ·s death row.
!Ontario Police Seek
~
!3rd Kidnap Suspect
~
> CHINO (AP) -Investigators
: are seeking a third suspect who
'helped in the kidnap and alleged
~attempted extortion of $5,000 a from a rancher.
I San Bernardino County
sheriff 's deputies said two people
have been arrested and booked
, for investigation of kidnaping,
• robbery and burglary.
: Deputies identified Glenna
!Quake 'Ce ntered
•Near San Diego
r SAN DIEGO CAP) -A mild
1eartbquake t h at rum bled
h hrough the coastal area at 10:Z7
I a.m. Monday was apparently
•centered between offshore oil I tracts already leased for drilling
and a prospective ocean oil field. ~ Its epicenter was put, after ) early confusion by seismologists,
at 00 miles west of San Diego
.along one of the unnamed faults
breaking the ocean noor.
A• tbe ocean floor moved
slightly, residents as far as ts
miles east of San Diego and into
80Uthern Orange County report-
• feeling the tremor. No
agmsrep<nted.
Gibson, 21, of Ontario ad Guthrie
Danowski, 21, of Fontana. They
said a third person was still being
sought.
AUTHORITIES SAIDTIIE trio
attempted lo extort $.5,000 from
rancher Ben Ingber, 56, owner of
a horse ranch and part-owner or
a Chino area packing house
market.
The three allegedly went to
Ingber's ranch where they took
as hostages 33-year-oJd ranch
foreman Theo Wilton, his wife,
Wanda, 47, and a friend, Janet
Swallop, 36, of Ontario. The
hostages were bound with gauze
and Wilton was reportedly or-
dered to summon Ingber to the
ranch.
INGBER ALSO WAS taken
hostage and was driven to Chino
Valle:y Banlc, where be was al-
legedly ordered to withdraw s.s.ooq for his abductors. The
other. hostages remained at the
ran.ch.
Aft•r ent.ring the bank, Ingber
told bank ofCicials of tbe pl~and
Gibson was arrested on. the spot
by a security auard.
Sheriff's deputies said they ar-
rested Danowski at the ranch and
freed the remaining hostage3. No
one was injured. •
Tuesday,Oetober19, 1976
Noisy Denunciation
Pa rents S lam Sex-clw:riged Teacher
\ t • EMERYVILLE (AP) -After
being warned that slander could
have legal ramificaUons, a dozen
speakers took to the floor to de-
nounce Steve Dain's attempt to
teach in the high school here.
'Ibey objected because Steve
Dain used to be Doris Richards,
the girls' gym teacher. He bad
Pair Pulled
From Ocean;
3 Still Lost
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
freighter has r escued two San
Anselmo people who took to a
raft from a yacht that sank 800
miles west of San Francisco, the
Coast Guard says, adding that
three others are being sought.
undergone a sex change opera·
lion.
THE GATHE RING tesembled
a revival meeting. Those who ob.
jected to Dain were greeted with
shouted "Amens."
But when Dain's only vocal
supporter declared, "Ed ucation
ia education whether a man or a
woman teaches it," there was a
chorus or boos.
More than 100 parents, stu-
dents, former students and com-
munity residents turned out at a
special school board meeting
Monday night.
"WE WEREN'T LISl'ENING
to them because we already had
made a decision," school board
President Felix Capelllno said
later. "But these people wanted
to be beard."
for defamation or character,"
declared John Stephens.
"WE WON'T BE threatened,''
someone yelled back. and the
parade to the microphone began.
W.L. Parks, wbo identified
himself as a church deacon here,
said, "according to God 's law, it
is not right. Miss Richards is not
capab l e of t eaching in
Emeryville."
MAXINE DUNCAN, the
mother of a st udent, said, "God
made her a woman, and I think
she should stay that way. If one
of my children gets in her class, I
want them pulled out,"
Marie Williams, an outspoken
Dain opponent, said that allow-
ing the teacher t o return would
break down moral and educa-
tional codes. "We don't want
anyone in th e classroom in-
fluencing our children to have
t heir sex changed,'• s he
declared.
Moo t o Ford
'\
Sen. Walter Mondale (D-
Minn.). cups hands to moo
like a cow shortly after his
arrival in San Diego MoQ-
day. Mondale, DemocraUc
vice presidential candidate,
said the bovine gesture w a;>
in response to a recent
photo of Preside nt Ford
with a cow.
A Coast Guard spokesman said
a Liberian flag freighter rescued
Dure! Miller a nd Nancy Perry
from a raft Monday night at
about 6:30. The yacht, named
"Spirit," had been en route from
Honolulu to Sausalito.
F IVE P LANES F ROM the
Coast Guard, Navy and Air Force
flew out at dawn today to search
for another raft carrying Jim
Ahola, 25, of Fairfax, Camilla
Arthur, 20, of San Anselmo, and
Bruce Collins of Walnut Creek.
The board voted Oct. 14 to SUS·
pend Dain from bis job on
grounds of unspecified "immoral
conduct." That came after a
judge told the district to reinstate
Dain and pay him $3,200 in back
pay. Dain, who wants to return to
teaching, is entitled to a hearing
within 30 days on the board's ac-
tion.
THE 37-YEAR-OLD teacher
did not attend the board meeting
Monday, but. speakmg on his
behalf, a representative of the
150,000-member California
Teachers Association criticized
the session as prejudicial t o
Dain 's case.
L.A. Postman Slain
The Coast Guard said a line con-
necting the two rafts had been
severed during a storm.
.. This is not a legal or court
proceeding so everyone is sub-
ject to libel laws and can be sued
l .c;-idcr~h1p.
It doc~n·t come from just·
... miles ilr1<l promises. It come-;
frum strength. from an undl.'r·
Stirnding of people's problems and
ncl.'<ls. And from years and years.
ot 1.•xpcnc.·1lCe. Thilt's why Home
Silving-; has ~rown to be
J\mcrids l<irgc<;t. And why it"s
a good secure place for you lo
put your money anJ your tru,t.
Herc <1rc some more reasons why.
Now 7 Biiiion
Dollars Strong.
With over a million accountc;,
and more as<;cts th<ln any savings
and loan institution in the nation,
it's no wonder more and more
people arc saving at Home. They
know how safe it feels to be with
Old Dependable. where accounts
are insured to $40,000 and no
one has ever lost a penny.
The Hlsflest Interest
Allowed by Law
They know how profitable it
is, too. Home pays over a millio11
dollars in interest every day, at
rates much higher than those
offered by any bank. In fact, one
Clccount cvcn lct~you double
your money in less than nine
yc;irs. And unlike banks that mily
ray interest only quarterly. and
charge fees for certuin withdr<l\v·
als, Home lets you make deposits
and withdrawals any time you
like.There arc no fees, and you
l'.Mn full interest day in to day
out. There arc suhstantilll pcnnl-
ties for cnrly withdrawnls from
term accounts but this applies
to interest only.
ANNUAL ANNUAL TERMS RATE YIELD•
7%%" 8.06% 6;ir••' \1000 "''"'"c:
7 Yl%" 7.79 % .,..."' \t,ITTI '"'"""".
6%% .. 6.98 % ,.,,..~
Sll'G> ,,.,,.,,.,
6Yl%~ 6.72 % '""'f· \l(l)J ,. fftll\"
5%% .. S.92 % , .........
'''"' ··-"~ 5!4% 5.39 % Sh""""..-.. .... , ......
A.111unt
..:.~~T,:::t:~!'!:.-:::::.7:'!.::;,."'.,;.· .. ,.,,.,.,N .. 1olll_,.,1,_.... .. 1i • ..,
Prlvl~of the
SH~Orde.
With a qualifying balance,
you can step into Home's Silver
Circle and hclpyourself to e."<tra
savings. Silver Circle members
LOS ANGELES (AP)-A U.S.
postman has been found shot to
death in the back of his mail
truck near Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport. FBI agents have
been called into the case.
The victim was identified as
can purchase cars at fleet prices;
take advantage of special inter-
national travel opportunities; buy
insurance at group r'ates: and
receive preferred rates at many
resorts, hotels and entertainment
events.
lots of free Services.
When you're number one,
you can afford to give more.
That's why we give so many
extras, like free traveler's checks;
money orders; not;iry service;
free trust deed and note collec-
tion services; and free chec king
account with major participating
banks-all for savers with quali-
fying balances. We also have
David Solat, 31, of Hermosa
Beach.
Investigators said the 21h-ton
truck was full of mail bags and
that there was no immedjate in'-
dication that any mail had been
taken or that the postman had
been robbed.
auwmatic savings dcpostb, ;iuw·
matic loan pi!ymcnts; c;L1vc·hv-
mail service; soc1<il sccunty
<lircct deposit; and payroll'"''
ings plans-free to ;111 orn villt1ed
customers.
Free Presidential
Campaign Buttons.Too.
When you visit J HnmL' of lice
r'ight now, be sure to sec our
Historical Campaign Hutto11
Exhibit. It's a nostalgic trip
through American political
hi';tory, fc;lturing 75 buttom frnm
the great l'rcsidcnlial c;imp:11g11 ....
Tilkc your choice as a Sflll\'1.•1111·
\\lllh our complurn:nts.
Number One In the Nation In Both Savings and Loans.
Open Saturday, October 9, 9 ti\M to l PM. Member: FEDERAL Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Accounts are insured
to $40,000 fur <tn individual, \rp to $5()(),000 fur a family ci four. Member: FEDERAL Home Loan Bank System.
NEWPORT BEACH
190 Newport Center Drive
Near Fashion Island
640.-6100
~
EL TPRO I LAGUNA HILLS
23861 El Toro Road
837·5111
WESTMINSTER
15069 Golden West Street
714 .. 897-3515
'9 A8
"DAILY PILOT E DIT ORIAL PAGE r
Diedrich's' Big Push
I
Orange County Supervisor Ralph Oiedrlcb•s fint three years on the Board or Supervisors were filled Jritb accomplishment. • Brtnglog with him to the board a strong back-
IJ'OWld and knowledge or government affairs to go
lrith bis considerable energjes, Diedrich Introduced and pushed through the board one worthwhile, in-
novative program after another.
With wide-ranging accompllshments to his credit,
however. Diedrich has appeared to be stumbling
badly lately.
He•s carried on a continuing battle with the coun·
ty •s superior court. probation department. district at-
t.omey's office, and seemingly, anyone else who
'NOuldn 't either bend to bis will or move out of bis way.
As titular head of a bi-partis4Jl government, he's
involved himself deeply in partisan ~litics and a
political campaign for an empty supervisorial office.
The net effect of the Diedrich turmoil in recent
months is that he's begun to look like a heavy-handed
bully who wants to play the game only when it goes
his way.
After Diedrich's laudatory beginning in his
career as a county supervisor, it would be Orange
County's loss as much as his own if he continues on
what appears to be a road to one-man rule that
became an anacbronism20years ago.
Take the Long Look
Orange County Transit District (OCTD> officials
glimpsed into the future last week when they took up a
'proposed plan covering the transit district's next five
years in business.
The so-called short term transit plan envisioned
OCTD's passenger patronage jumping from its pre-
sent annual level of about 13 million passengers a
year to roughly 48 million.
It also forecast a need to just about double
OCTD's bus fleet and predicted the tra.D1it district 'a
annual expenditures will climb from this ye4J"•a $39
mllllon to roughly $76 million by 1981.
By then, the short term plan predicted, OC'rD will
have spent about $398 mlWon over the live-year
period, $120 million for capital equipment and $218
million In operating costs.
And, onlY about 10 percent ol any year's expen·
ditures will be covered by fare box revenues.
'Ibe short term plan is a blueprint only and sub-
ject later to OCTD director approval and change.
But OCTD Director Al Hollinden was right when
he said the transit district needs a long-range plan
before undertaking such a program.
Hollinden was also right when be said OCTD
shouldn •t commit itself to such a massive ouUay of
public funds lust because the money is available
through federal and state programs.
Message for Parents
Thousands of Orange County parents are playing
a foolish game with their young children's health -
probably because they don't know free vaccinations
are available.
When the county's five-year-olds were signed up
for kindergarten last year, a whopping 65-95 percent or
them did not have protection against the basic
childhood diseases.
That protection is free and convenient. The
Orange County Health Department provides shots at
70 locations throughout the county. You can find the
clinic times and locations by calling county health of-
ficials at 834-3171.
On the list recommended for inoculation are
whooping cough, diphtheria, tetanus, polio, measles,
mumps, and rubella.
If your young child hasn't had these shots, don't
put it off. Call the health department today. ''SL f'' n~me.
Playing to Israelis
Backfires on Ford
:@_ Cosmetology Schools
Boosted by New Bill
WA.5HI NGTON -In the hours
following the second debate.
President
Ford com -
pounded mis·
fcrlune by ap·
proving m a·
jor new
militar y
equipment
sales to Israel
in an effort to
rally his fad·
ing J ewi s h
support -thereby revealing the
bankruptcy of political thin.king
in the White House
This bankruptcy was obvious
enough in the PresidenL's inabili·
ty to reach higher ground for
three full days following his inex·
plicable handling <:A Poland and
Eastern Europe. Much worse
than this fumbling was his
desperate effort to repair the
damage on the Jewish vote.
During the debate. Mr. Ford
reacted to Jimmy Carter's total
advocacy of Israel by mis-
representing the r ecent con-
gressional fight over the Arab
boycott againstlsrael.
HE FALSELY implied that the
administration, not Congress,
was pressing for the toughest an·
U·boycoll position, angering
even his own supixrters in the
Jewish community. The post·
• debate arms-for -Israel decision,
alle mpti ng to repair that
damage, undercuts Mr. Ford's
own principles while surely fall·
ing far short of its ~oal
Whatever the political result~.
the decision to make available to
Israel sotne of the most advanced
technology in the American
military arsenal has stunned
high military offic ers and
• divided the Pentagon·s top
: civilians.
• Details arc still obscured In
secrecy. However, included in
super-technology long sought by
Israel and long withheld is a new
"fuel -air" explosive which de·
t onates j et-str eams or a
petroleum-like substance 20 feet
~r the ground with tremendous
devastation. Another f>.igh priori·
ty weapon in the U.S. arsenal is
the Focward Looking Infrared
( EV ANS-NOV AK J
syslem which p ermits a
helicopter pilot. actually to "see"
at night.
Wh at makes this decision by
the President so suspect is that it
was made inside the White
House. Neither the Pentagon nor
the State Department was asked
in advance to reverse their
vetoes of the past two years
against dispatch d this equip·
menttoany U.S. ally.
' One bitter administration <:A·
ficial complained privately that
there is "absolutely no strategic
or tactical rationale for ddng
thi s now ."
SOME LEADERS in the
American-Jewish community
say there is no political rationale
either. Their reasoning: Mr.
Ford irretrievably lost any
chance to break into the Jewish
vote when he misrepresented the
administration's position on the
Arab boycott.
But the risk Mr. Ford takes in
bidding ror the Jewish vote at
this last moment in the campaign
Tlaoagbu at Lar1e:
When a candidate attacks b.i5
opponent bitterly in the primary,
and then urges all good party
members to support the scoun-
drel a few months later, it mere-
ly breeds cynicism and disbelief
in the voters.
Poets and lyricista have dwelt
too exclusively on the pain ol
"missing" someone -but it is
the people who don't have anyone
to miss who are the saddest.
For every one person who re·
ads a book in order to think, a
dozen read in order to avoid
thinking (else why would Agatha
Christie be the moat popular
author of our century!); there is
~frrl'
'Passengen awaiting the
Mrivol of a Mig 24 from Tokyo
are advised that there has been
a furthllr delay. •
goes far beyond the election
itself. This spectacular exercise
in ethnic politics brings the
President down lo the same level
as Congress, which has repeated-
ly blocked Mr. F<rd's foreign
policy by playing ethnic politics.
This has r esulted in con-
gressional advocacy d Greece in
the Greek-Turkish dispute and~
Israel in the Arab-Israeli strug-
gle. -
Therein lies the bankruptcy of
Mr. Ford's post-debat.e writhings
to recover the initiative be lost to
Carter Oct. 6. Lacking the re-
sourcefulness to devise a bold
new stroke, Mr. Ford is choosing
the discredited route of playing
to ethnic politics.
This compounds his problems
in foreign policy as President,
whether that lasts four more
months or four more years.
(SYDNEY HARRIS J
obviously an alcoholism of the
mind just as there is of the body.
Knowledge of probability
theory bas never inhibited any
statistician from complaining
that be bolds "poor carm" at
bridge.
How women can chew over a
d.l.nner party or a dance at great
verbal length afterwards, wbUe
the men are oblivious to it all,
was neatly explained b y
Malcolm de Chazal, who observe
"ID mixed company. women
In exercising his veto power.
Gov. Jerry Brown has repeatedly
expressed an aversion lo further
government interventions into
the lives or the citizens through
extension of the activities of state
licensing boards.
It wa s on that basis
that h e r ej ected a bill by
Assemblywoman Leona Egeland
which would have created an Oc·
cupational Ther apy Committee
and required certification of such
therapists.
"Unless it is really clear that
stale intervention is needed lo
protect the
public I pre·
fer to leave
the judge -
ments r e ·
quired to be
made under
this bill with
those closer to
the problem. I
have serious
reservations
about the excessive licensing ac·
tivity engaged In by the state,"
he said.
In the same manner he refused
to sign a bill by Sen. George
Zenovich expand.ing the authori·
ty of the Behavioral Science
( EARL WATERS )
Board. "I have," he explained,
"reservations about the wisdom
of the state injecting itself into
the family and marriage counsel-
ing business."
DESPITE this antipathy lo
licensing boards, the governor
did approve a bill permitting the
cosmetology board to extend its
jurisdiction over a new class of
female beautifiers. It authorizes
the board to require those who
give facials, apply make·up, pro-
vide skin care, apply artificial
eyelashes and r emove
superfluous hair for compensa·
lion to be licensed and perform
the functions in a licensed beauty
parlor.
The new program will start
with registration in January of
those who have been engaging in
such work for at least one year.
Unlike the usual "grandfather"
clause common to laws creating
a newly regulated vocation, the
registration will only entitle In·
dividuals to practice until Sep·
tember 1978.
After that, all will be required
to be licensed through examina·
• Uon.
practice a sort of visual
shorthand. wbicb, lat.er. they will
laboriously and lengthily decode
in the company of other women."
It is the irony of our time that
lhe man who ls m<J6l fervent in
his protestation or "in-
dlvidualisoi" is often the one
most heavily dependent upon
corporate benevolence.
Everyone considers himself
above the average in certain ap·
titudes he is proud of; ror in·
stance, 72 per cent of all
motorlsLS consider themselves
"above average" in driving ablll·
ty, wbicb is a mathematical im-
poul bll lt y, as well as a
peycbological delusion.
mE EXAMINA110N will be
open only to those who have had
at least a year's experience or
who have completed 000 hours or
training in an approved school of
cosmetology. With that provision
it is obvious that one of the re-
sults of the new law will be a boon
to business for the beauty col-
leges. A further result may well
be the staving off of sentiment for
the consolidation of the cos-
metology and barber boards and
the unification of their licenses.
At present the training require·
ments for a barber or beauty
operator license are almost iden·
tical. The major difference is
that barber s may not give
permanent waves and beauti-
cians may not use a razor.
The fact is that barbers today
The Real Streets of San Franc~co
SAN FRANCISCO-The scene
b a pat one. ll ls played over and
over . Th& kindly mayor
d San Fran· tlsco is ex -
plaining to the
nice you n g
man from the
Los Angeles
• newspaper
• that ·'ever -
ybody's
favorite city"
11 not going down the drain, that
· the pimps and tho whores and the winos are just a minor
ru.sance, that the cable cars nrc
, really neat and not an antiquated
• traffic menace that serves only
outalden, etc., etc.
Said O eorge M O!Cone to o r e-
cent worrier f\'om the Southland:
"All I k.now Is thal wberevcr l go,
L belt East or otherwise. they In· ., troduce me as Georie Moscone.
which <~LS nobody exdted. and ~ as a m~«. which tet.a nobody . I'.
excited. Anet then they add San
FraMiseo and everybody wants
to grab me and take me to dinner
and all they want to talk about l!'I
what a great city thls is and how
they're dying to get back here. I
don't think the lure cl thJs city
has been tarnished one biL"
J don't think t.be m-.vor fully re·
allied il..but in bisllUleTe Darm
he hit on precisely wbll ta wrong
with San Francisco. What's wronc with San ~anclsco Is the
damned tourist industry.
UVED HERE f«' the ea.s years, and I Gl)eCt l abllll
di e. I find San Pl'anc!ICO, at
least the part of It wblc?b I In·
habit. a mucb moro aathlytng
place than the San Frlmclsco cl
1955.
The quaUrlcatlon Is aJI·
lmJ>()nant. There .. e pieces In
the city that I wouldn't &ec..,bt
dead In. dJd not some atreme necessity f «"ce me to be tber-•.
Oownt~ for one. Jt ii a plate
( CHARLES ]
_ McCABE _
inhabited by strangers. The transl~don ol San franclscointo
the Manhattan of the West by n
series of misguided m~ors and
boards ot superviscrs has pre>-
duced a strangely repellent
enclave, which a good San Fran·
else an does his best to Ignore.
I spent three years d my youth
teying to promote "tcurism" In
the lovely Island ol P\urto Wco. I
concluded In those d~s. and
have never «:banged my mlnd,
lb• the tourtst tndustry ts just
about the worat barcatn a culwre
can mike. -Tbe quick buck b there, to be sure, but the lasting
valuesonwhlch a~culturemust.
be based. are erodest bY. bo.-ds of
mtndlus stran1~s .who just
want to ef!J01.
TbeH ma, be a d.l«ereocl
(.)
between tourism: anCI prostitu-
tion; but itis a dif(erencewithout
much dlstincUan. J\ ~li.:e is dis·
covered to have certain features
-physical beauty, excellent
climate. agreeable people -and
these features are placed on the
selling block for people who
come from places that do not en·
joy these advantages. These
strancers tend to treat these
amenities with much the same
regard as a john pays a whore. In
the end, they despoil.
T A&llANGE my life in San
Franclaco IO that it is almost un·
touched by the tourist menace. I
live mostly ln North Beach,
where the nearest thing t o
tourism arc the busloads d peo-
ple comlna to see the show at Joe
Finnocblo's. tr you sta.y off Broadway, which Isn't all thet hard. you can Immerse yoursell
ln 1 ~wture that is purdy San
Fraoal1ean. and hJghly eQJoya.
ble .
Joe Alioto and sorrre Of his
predecessors liked nothing more
than turning parts d lhe city
over to the cameramen d the
movies and the tube. This was
done in the severe belief that they
wer e doing the city a favor.
Nothing could have been rarther
rrom the truth . The sleazy melodramas situated here
si mply plac e the l abel
meretricious on the whole clty.
andmostumairl)'. Awisemayor,
and wise supervisors, wouJd
eJace a Oat empargo on the pro-
duction of movies, d any &<rt.
I am aw are th at thousands d
San Francbcans have Jobs based on the existence·and even gcowth
d the tourtst Industry. These peo-
ple have been sadly misled by
\heir leaders. You have oaly to
look at downtown. whJcb ls our
true "Inner city," &o know "What
lOUJism ·bas wrou1ht. You have
only to look at the nelghbortloods
to reallie what San Ft10cbco
wu, and can be again.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
If the city and county of·
licials had agreed to hold
the line on expenditures
next year. our tax bill
would not be one penny
more than last year, re-
gardless of the assessed
value.
SAD SAM
Gloomy GuJ comment\ •r• •llllmttt~d .,,
••-n•1tO do tlOI neceu•rlly reflect the .... ""'of"" ...... , ...... $eftd ,_.""' Pff¥el0 Gltomy Gu>. O•oty PllOI.
like to be known as "hair
stylists" and wave and curl hair
in their work. Beauty operators
do the shaving with electric tools.
The advent of the long hair
mode for males has increased
the dissatisfaction among many
in the business with the need for
two licenses when both are
performing essentially the same
services.
mE BIG HANG·UP is that a
barber desirin g a beauty
operator license, or the beauti-
cian wanting a barber license, ls
required lo take the complete
course of the opposite number
even though both courses are
almost parallel.
Thus many hours arewasledln
repetitive training to the enrich·
ment only of the schools.
Now that the new discipline
has been brought under regula-
tion with a license to be known as
a "cosmeUcian" Ucense it can be
expected efforts will start to con·
solidate that with the cos-
metology license as a device to
withstand the unification of the
barber and cosmetology fields.
It is strange then that the g<W-
ernor. in the face or his stand against "excessive" licensing
would sign the cosmetician bUJ
when, in the view or many, the
present laws governing beaut.y
operators and barbers ar.e
already extensive.
Quotes
"I just wanted to do aom~
crazy once ln my Ute. This is lt; ·
-Joe Se81, who rolled ba~k menu prices 142 yeara in hfa
Dewittville, N.Y., restaurant for
ooe nlght thaL cost him '8,000. ·
ORANGE COAST •I
DAILY PIL9T
Hobffl N Wf'fd, Publillter
Thoma• Kttvll. t:cbtor \
B<lrboro Krelbtch. 1
£ditonal PaQ# Editor I
The editorial page or the Dally C
Piiot seeks to lnrorm and ,
stimulate readers by ~ting
on this page dlvtr$t commentary~
on topl~ or Interest by ayndlcat· .
t'd columnists and cartA>Onlat.a, by ~
providln1 a forum ror readen': views and by presenting this ( newspaper's opiniol\a a.oQ ldeu r
on currtnl topics. Tbe editorial t
oerinlona oflbe Dally rnot a&>Poar-
onty In tho edltort.> column at the
top of tbt-P•I•· Opink>na ex-1 ~ by the columnlsu and ~ cartoon.lsll ond letter wrtten are their own and no endonenent d:
t.hdr vlftol by the Dalt, Pilol
lhould be inferred.
Tuesday. October 19, 1978
Goblins' Deli lat
Stands Hold
Pumpkin Buys_
By Cite Assoda&ecl Press " Would· be eboula, (Cbolta and goblins may find a few less pumpkins
than usual in stores and roadside stands this Halloween, but a spot
cheek 1bow1 there should still be plenty of the bright orange
vegetables to carve lnto Jack-o'·lanterns.
There have been scattered reports Crom individual 1rowers in the
Mldwut. that tbia year's
pumpkin auppb WU down.
BUT TB& U.S. Department of
Aericulture doesl\'t keep
a,\atistica OQ over·all pumpkin
production. And one USDA
spokesman noted that rumors of
small crops are COOLOlOll just
bef«e big selU.O. seasons. While tbe federal government
has no way of keeping tabs on the
pumpkins that are sold at
roadaide st.ands, usual.l.)' only a
few miles from where they are
grown, it does measure the
number of pumpkins at 41 major
tenni.ual markets.
The 1976 figures are not com-
plete. But a s maller crop would
be a reversal of a trend. From
1974 to .1975, for example, the
a1nount of pumpkins by weight,
unloaded at the terminal
markets, increased from 27 .6
1 million to 29.8 million pounds, a
, boost of about 8 percent.
NOTE: THESE FIGURES in -
clude only what are known as
fresh market pumpkins; they do
not cover the millions of pounds
oC pumpkins and squashes used
for processing in canned and
frozen foods.
Retail prices of pumpkins
vary, but are generally higher
• than last year. Cost depends on
size, with the big pumpkins
favored for jack·o'-lanteros 1 usually ranging in price from
$2.50 to $4.50.
Checks with growers and
sellers indicated that the
pumpkins that are available are
top quality.
.. THE SIZE IS excellent this
year," said Gerah1 Huber, a
Starlight, Ind., grower. ''Our size
over-all is probably bigger than
il bu been in five years."
Huber said, however, that the
acreage devoted to pumplrlns in
(CONSUMER J
bis area has d~creased a s
farmers turned to other, more
profitable crops.
"Tbe volume is way off," he
said.
John Reichert of Springfield,
lll., agreed. Reichert planted
pumpkins on about four acres
this year. He is selling most of
them at bis own garden market
for prices raneing from 59 cents
to$3.
"PUMPKINS ARE MORE
scarce," he said. "Not that they
didn't do well. There just aren't
as many. They are good in
quality."
Reichert blamed dry weather
duri.ng the summer for the
smaller supply. He said that the
pumpkins he didn't sell at his
own store went to supermarkets
at a wholesale price of $50 a ton,
up from $40 a too last year.
According to the USDA, Illinois
is the country's largest pumpkin
producer, followed by California
and New Jersey. About 80 per-
cent of all pumpkins are sold in
October.
THE PUMPKINS ARE often
cheapest when purchased at or
near the field where they are
grown.
. A New Jersey farmer with a
roadside stand offered customers
all the small pumpkins they
could carry last year for $2.
In Germ an town Hills, Ill., a
l:>eal lumberyard simply stacks
the pumpkins outside and Jets
people take their pick for $1.
At the farmer's market near
Metamora, Ill., the cheapest
pumpkins are 25 cents; the most
expensive are less than $1.50.
l. End to D erg?
Joh Not the Answer
···For Wifely Wait
MINNEAPOLIS CAP) -No wife wants to feel trapped at home, but
•rinding a job may not be the answer for all women, says the author of a
·new J>ook on bow to avoid the housewife doldrums.
• "The cure for the trapped housewife 15 years ago was to get out and
io to work, but that wasn't a cure for everyone," says Arlene Rossen
.Cardozo, author of the book,
.. Woman at Home." "Today, I
think women no longer feel that
having a family precludes other
things." •
Mas. CA.R'DOZO'S BOOK out-
lines ways for the woman who
"Sex-changed
I
'Teacher's Job
-Bid Refused
WASmNGTON (AP)-ANew
Jersey public school teacher who
was fired after undergoing a sex
change operation has lost a bid
for a U.S. Supreme Court hearing 11~ charges of sex discrimination.
(1• The justices refused Monday to gview a decision of the 3rd U.S.
rcuit Court of Appeals uphold-
g the action of the Bernards
Township, N.J .. Board of Educa-
tion in dismissing Paula
Grossman. I THE TEACHER, formerly
known as Paul Grossman, was
fired in 1971 after 14 years as a
tptusic teacher at. .Bernards
Township.
. Grossman was married and
t.kad three d aughters. The sex
~.i.bange operation was conducted Tu March 1971, and Grossm\li an·
oounced plans to return to
I classesth.aUallas a woman.
The school board contended
Vtbis would be potentially
' psychologically harmful to the 1 students.
choses to remain at home with
her family to make those years
more creative and productive by
discovering latent interests and
talents.
"I think it's great that women
don't have to feel that marriage
is the only way to go now," said
Mrs. Cardozo, a 38-year-old free·
Janee writer and housewife ... I'm
a feminist if that means women
should have a free choice.
·'But I thin It for a Jong time
what came across was that you
should be working outside the
home. This was a mistake. It
made a lot of women who chose
to stay home feel there was
something wrong with this -and
that was wrong.·'
MRS. CARDOZO, WHO also
has wriUen a cookbook, many
articles and reviews. has three
children. ages 5, 10 and 13. She
said remaining at home gives a
woman two major freedoms: 1.
To create the ideal home for
herself and for her family and 2.
To develop her own interests on
her own schedule with no one to
please but herself.
She said her youngest daughter
contributed a lot to ber latest
book.
"She napped in the morning so
I was at the typeWrilertwo hours
every day, 10 hours a week for
three years," Mrs. Cardo'Zo said.
"I realize how lucky I am to be a
free-lance writer working at
home. It would have been im·
possible if I had been facing
deadlines."
I
t I ' Revenge! •
,,
!•
Town Fathers See Spots
DURHAM, Conn. (AP)-Elsie Arrigonl took a bizarre.
but colorful, revenge on city officials who turned down her
request to build a rest home within thd271-year-old Durham
Rlstortc Dtstrtct.
Mn. Arrigonl aald the district c9mmission refund to
approve the project, even though she hired a designer to
wort vP plans to fit the area, consulted. with the com-
mlNJoners and 1pent $4,500 for a ~ariety of surveys.
After her application was rejected, Mrs. Anigoni bad
all the llmba removed fro111 a tree OD her property in. the
centar of town. Then she had lnidescent orange, red and
~ Polka doll painted oo the spots where the limbs bad
. .
Who'll Be the New Tournanaent Queen?
This lovely group of young women are the new court for
the 1977 Tournament or Roses. One will be selected queen
of the yearly tournament in in Pasadena. From left: Lori
Japenga, Diane Ramaker, Carol Jean Newell, Pamela
Stephanie Pastis, Cheryl Peoples, Margarite Price and ,
Debbie Van den Broek.
..
I~ebergs to Fill Saudi Wells? . . .. . ~ . . . -.. ·. ... .
PARIS (AP) -A French
engineering firm says oi l-rich
Saudi Arabia is considering a
plan to low icebergs from the An-
tarcUc to the Red Sea to provide
more water for the desert
kingdom.
The firm said Monday the
5,()00.mile voyage, at a snail's
pace of one nautical mile per
hour, could take 6 to 12 months
and cost about $80 million.
THE CO MPANY, Cicero.
located in the Paris suburb of
Marly-Le-Roi, said it was con-
tacted about a year ago by Saudi
...
officials who wanted a fresh ap-
proach to their country's water
problems. Contract discussions
are in the final stage, Cicero of-
ficials said.
Cicero engineers worked out
the plan to use icebergs, which
are salt-free and melt as fresh
water, in coordination with
French polar experts and said
they are confident it is feasible.
Details were provided by the
firm's commercial director,
Francois de Broglie.
He said for the trial run, five
ocean-going tugs, each driven by
20,000 horsepower ei\gines, would
travel to the Antarctic where
special crews would pick out a
suitable iceberg.
THE IDEAL ONE would have
a more-or-less rectangular shape
to prevent tipping, weigh about
100 million tons, be about a mile
long.
De Broglie said after the
iceberg is selected, experts will
fix an 18-inch thick special
plastic cover over the monster,
both to protect it from the melt-
ing rays of the sun and the
Start one
at lank
destructive force of waves and
currents. , But there are still problems.
· The first is beat. lceberfs
are rarely sighted beyond 40
degrees latitude and, Cicero's
confidence notwithstanding, it is
not known for sure whether tho
iceberg will survive the trip.
Problem No. 2 is ocean depth.
Even though the waters off the
Saudi capital of Jidda are 1,800
feet deep and could accom-
modate the iceberg, the Straits of
Bab al Mandab, connecting the
Gulf of Aden with the Red Sea.
are only 120 feet deep.
of America.
There are good r~asons why more
Californians get more auto loans from
Bank of America.
Economy: You get low bank rates. And a
wide choice of payment plans.
Speed: If your credit'~ good, we'll do all
we can to get you your money fast.
Smooth handling: You'll get your l.oan
with a minimum of papexwork.
For more on our auto loans, visit the
Bank of America near you. Or, discuss
Bank of America fin a ncing with your
dealer.
For a new car, airplane, mobile. home,
boat-whatever type of financing you're
looking for-we'll get you off to the
right start.
m BANK OF AMERICA
\ '
Their Foe Is .Ignorance ~as::e~:0~p =
HIATI"• Handicapped Moll Solutions to Problems coa1~ge~!"c~~r~0se~~~~ !;!:.°·
h I assertion training wtll :;...,~inv-Ar .. -e.ii
By ANNE COOPER • Ol .. o.lty ...... MAff
Physically and mentally handicapped penons
have more obstacles ln their way than lack of
mobWty and opportunity-they also bave to balUe
·public ignorance and' apathy.
"It ls important for ua who are handicapped to
work in numbers, because that ls the only way we'll
be beard," Zula Hadden told a Saddleback College
audience at a seminar on problems facing the ban·
dicapped in south Oranae County.
revised with ramps to accommodate w eelcba r meet on four successive .,.,s11oicv•1JO
tralfic. Friday evenin°s, oo..t .. _ ,.~,c.-c-·•·-• •"" n.0-1...., ...... ," .. ' SBESAIDASANTAMonicaarchitect will soon ning Oct. 29, fr om 495-0401 vis~t her modified mobile home to get Ideas for de-7:30-9:30 p .m . In OCC's co!>TAME::>A
slgnini mobile homes specifically for lhe han· science lecture hull 1. •~:& Newoo<• ei.d
dicapped. Admission ls free. 642·175l
Marlene Reavla and Shirley Richard from the Lecturers are Barbara ICITCHIH • IATH
StateDepartmentorRehabllltationtoldofhelplnga Kenney and Mlchael llMODILIHG
school teacher who had been refused employment Armstrong, graduates ot RH ISTIMATIS
after he was Injured in an automobile accident UC Irvine who have led 1 .. ow.01.,._, .. ,
becau.se school administrators said they were ANAHE1M•MA1N Ol'l'iee many discussion groups 1.w w 1 afraid be would not be able to bold students' alt.en-on assertion training. Aak ..,,~.r;c:t" s· lC. 0 WE HAVE TO GET out," she said. 1'We have
to ask people to help us, so they can see how incon·
venient it Is for us to get around on conventional
sidewalks without rampe or get into stores in our
wheelchairs.
tioo from hi.s wheelchair. · 77~3470 .,,· •• v.
A non-handicapped friend has volunteered lo -;;=========~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ work with the teacher as an unpaid aide, and the j
O.lty l'llol Stall l'llo1o
"We have to let people see we have .bra.ins and
ability. We are people who have conquered many
obstacles already. and we can handle more, if given
a decent chance."
Mrs. Hadden, president-elect of the south coun-
ty chapter of the callfomia Association for the
P hysically Handicapped (CAPH), was one of
several speakers on Awareness Day at the college.
CAPH AND SADDLEBACK'S handicapped
services program jolnUy sponsored a two-hour in-
formational m eeting, which spokesmen from the
two groups said they hope will be the first of a series or joint efforts.
Participants shared both success stories and problems to make life for the handicapped more
normal.
AWARENESSDAYHELDATSADDLEBACK
Z~la Hadden Heads Unit For Handicapped
Ruth Wilson, a member or the association, s aid
she has talked with San Juan Capistrano officials
and merchants , who have assured her that curbs
and sidewalks in the 20()..year old community will be
She .Just Can't Win
BALTIMORE (AP) -The
woman who invented a feminist
,parlor game called "llerstory"
admits she's never won it, and
;adds, "When men play, I usually
place third or fourth."
But Sha ron Donovan, 32, said
.she's content to let others suc-
ceed at the game, which started
as an assignment for a course on
"'Sex Roles and Social Ine-
quities."
· "HERSTORY'' JS similar to
)'TlOSt board competitions, Ms.
Donovan said in an interview.
Players roll dice and move a
,designated number of spaces.
with the winner the first to reach
1.he block marked "Herstory. ··
Along the way, they pass over
squares marked "Vote," "Exit
from Home," "Go Home," and
"Go To Work." There arc s pecial
cards marked "Pay Checks,"
:'Awards Certificates" and
:·style Bulletins.··
•.
Feminist Game's Inventor
Not Angry, Just a Success
Ms. Donovan said that whjle
she was studying at the Universi·
ty of Maryland-Baltimore Coun-
ty five years ago, she wanted to
come up with a simple game to
teach children about women in
history . So she took a pa rt
another•s child game and painted
the "Herstory" steps over the
board.
SHE GOT AN 'A' on the pro-
ject. but promptly filed it in a
desk drawer. In 1973, hearing
that Ms. Magazine was interest·
ed in developing nonsexist toys,
she brought it out a~ain and re:
designed it with the help or an
artist. and a Baltimore teacher
friend.
problems coming up with a game
that would teach children about
women in history without ap-
pearing to demean men or the
home.
"We were dealing with a really
touchy subject, and wanted to do
it with honesty and integrity, and
didn't want lo put anybody
down,·· she said.
Talk Slated
On Growth
In San Juan
teacher will soon be back ln a classroom.
JOE DEMARCO, DISABLED l Z YEARS by
multiple sclerosis and legally blind, tnld Ute au-
dience his radio program "Wider Horizons, ·~a "tall·
in format with interviews, currently broadcast on·
the college station, KSBR, 88.S F M, may soon be
syndicated.
The show is aimed specifically at the ban·
dicapped, some or whom are unable to watch
television and are therefore more dependent on
radio. DeMarco said. It is heard between 6 and 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays.
The college radio personality offered his show
as a clearing house for services geared to the han·
dicapped.
Additional information is available by calling
DeMarco at the college, 831-9700 or 495-4950, ext. 362
or208.
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS au" NIU NAMI STATIMINT
Tf'le loll-1119 -MlftS ate dOlng bl41·
,,.,:ias:
BELLO WOOO PllOOUcn, 1'20
Wttt OIMtnul. ~nt1 An1, Calllornta
L. P.tul N•<"Oll, 1607 Wlnte<Qfff<> 1'1ac•. Coste Mew, C1ltlomt1 mi. Jen L. NICl'IOli , 1601 W11!1erqrfft'
Piece. Cost• Mew. Calltornla .,,,.
This busl~s h conouct~ by •n 1 ...
dM<1U1t
J.anl Nlc"<>h
Thi\ ~t•t~me"t w41" ••ltd wtth the
Cout>tv O•tk ot Ot•n941 County on~
tember JO, 1916.
aver, on .1no dCrO\\ p0r tlon\ nf thtlt "'id
e>1rce1 ot land locdt"<I 1n lh<! C•tv ot
~l•Meu
AC>Ublic metltnq uoon thtt flU""\hnnof
makfnQ suc:l'I d~dlullon w11l tx> ""'<I ol
~18 Mesa Council Ch•m~"· /1 Fa"
()rive. Costa Me••· Calllorn•"· on the
761h a.av of O<lober, 1•1• •I lhe l\our ot
1·.ioo'c•oc1t om
BOAROOF EOUCATION
NEWPORT MES ...
AA,,,._..
MANNING'S BEEF
Front Eustet 11 w.at Co.
·. -.__ ..
s21J.
s I 'J.
53'!
PHONE: 768-5137
fOR RADIO Ot')PATCHfO ')UVICl
UNIFIEO SC~OOL OISTRICT
QyJ-W.N1cofl S!!Ctet1ryol '"IO Board
Publl~""d Otanoe Col\I 0,,otv Piiot
Oct " .. ,. 4«11 lb WHOLESALE THIS • SHIUIS • HOUSE rLA"1S0 : The board is sprinkled with
?Irawings or items associated
)'Tith wom en. like pots and pans,
jlnd with tools of prc.'dominantly
Jllale trades, such as the T square
!JSed in carpentry.
Thinking it "looked beautiful"
they s ent the game to the
magazine. but Ms. called a few
days later to say that. although
the game looked good. it didn't
work.
Thomas Merrell. San Juan 1----------
Capistrano planning director, PUBLIC NOTICE S300.00 MINIMUM
"We hadn't played it." Ms.
will address the Town Hall As·
sociation Thursday on the city's
proposed growth management
plan and Los Rios redevelop-
' THE GAME CAN BE played
either by older children or adults
answering questions about
women in history, or by younger
~hildren simply moving through
~e board and skipping the ques·
:ions.
Donovan said with a laugh. ment. When they did try 1t, she said,
"it was so boring." The meeting is scheduled for
7:30 p.m. in room 202 at Marco
Forster Junior High School, 25601
Camino del Av ion in San Juan.
She said many questions con·
-:em figures important totbe his·
~ry of the women's movement,
>Ut who mav be tittle known.
mch as the suffragette Elizabeth
8 ady Stanton. .
FOUR NEW VERSIONS were
drawn, with testing and refine·
ment in the teacher's classes.
They picked the best and sub·
milled it to several game com·
panies. The game is being
marketed by a Chicago firm in
Slowing the pace of develop-
ment and preserving the historic
center or San Juan, includlng
the Los Rios area, have been two
major goals of the association,
said Chuck Buck, president.
.conjunction with Ms. Magazine,
she said.
Ms. Donovan said there were
Landers, Wayne
Heading Crusade
NEW YORK (AP) -Syndicated columnist Ann
Landers and actor John Wayne have been named
leaders of the American Cancer Society's crusade
which gets under way next April.
Miss Landers will be national chairman of the
annual educational and fund-ralslng campaign, and
Wayne. who lost a Jung to cancer in 1964, will be
honor ary chairman, the society said at its annual
dinner at the Waldorf.Astoria Hotel.
Dredging Moving Along I
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Dredging the bottom of
San Diego Harbor may be fini shed six months
ahead of the January 1976 date set by the Army f
Corps of Engineers. officials here report.
FIRST JN THE NATION r
You are respectfully
~ invited to the ~
birthday celebraUon of
JACK NEWTON DANIEL
;:~-~~~iiiiiiii.iiiiiiii~\
CM:RMIGHI?
Learn What Makes
The Lindora Method
So Effective
A complete program to Instruct patients
how to lose weight easily. then how to
molnta111 their lean weight.
Doily therapy, with audio and sub-liminal
vlsual aids to promote motivation and
encouragement.
H C.G .. a fat mobilizing substance. makes
It easier for patients to lose weight without
fatigue or excessJve hunger:
lindorO's very special diet. designed for
rapid weig'lt ~ end rrproved eofhg habits.
Behavior modification techniques to learn
weight control.
Llndora·s easy-to-follow maintenance
program to prevent regaining.
The entire program is under the strict
supervision of medical doct0<s, specialists
In bariotric medicine.
Coll !Of 1nformotton
Mondcy thru 'ridov
9 AM T01PM -2PM 106PM
S·mtS FICTITIOUS IUllNHS
NAMf;STATU"'I NT
The loflow1nq i>e•SO"S ar. OOino bu\! ness•s:
Re L tNVESTMEihs
1016-1041 Nola, WestmlMt••.
ca111oml1'7.a:J
Accounlanl\ Ovprload. • ~llom••
<MDO••tton, •so Wllsl'llte 9ouleva1d Los A"9ele•, Callf0<nla 90010
Tl\ls Duslllen I• cond11<i.d bv • cor·
e>or•tlon
A<countantsOwrlOad
a Calflorn11 Co100.-.UOt1
OoMld E . Whttler
S.cre1arv This slatem@nl was fifed wilt\ ll'le
County Cler• of Or1nge Countv on~
lt"1ber 21, 1~76 ,.,, ..
Pu!>llSlled Or1noe Coast Oallv Pllnl
5-pt. tl.andO<t, J, 12, "· 1t16 .o</4·,.
EACH PURCHASE
# ·,. • ../ ....... ,
•. -~.otf' ..... -'·'-~·' ..... ~! :' .... -~...z. ~.~ "'·~-~~
24'"BOX TREES
15 GAL. TREES & SHRUBS
5 GAL. TREES & SHRUBS
WHOLESALE BOOK PRICES •.-,. ~r·.~ ·~ t:! .~ FRUIT -SHADE ·AVOCADO -CITRUS· ETC. "'~'l 1'< .. :., ,.:· I I ~~~ tAlir~ER-S.D. Wholesale Growers
11622 WARNER AVE.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
PHONE 546-3429
DAILY 9 AM-5 PM
See all you getfr-ee When you
save in Keystone Kountry.
"'\ t
t • (
I •' NEWPORT BEACH
640-6831
~u tui l5k:rd
COSTA MESA
557·1893
MesoVerde
Profess1ono1 Bldg
Son Bernardino • E. tong Beoch • Mission Hills
Hawthorne • Orono• • Newport Beoch
Gorden Grove, Long Beoch • Posodeno
lo Habra •Woodland Hill$ • Sherman Ooks
West Covino • Fullerton • Riverside • Sonia Monico
Cosio Meso • Pomona • Cerrito& • Hollywood
1t~~~
t t ~ l t
l
HOIKI Mon·Thura 9-4. Fri 10-8.Sat IM2. '
O KEYSTONE SAVINGS · )' (114) 893-2491 '
W.itmlnaltr Offteo 14011 UNch Blvd • Airport Cantor 0fflco1 4l01 MacAr1tlur Blvd.• An1helm Ofhc:e. 4$$ NOt\l'I Evc;Ud
, Anaheim Hlit1 Ollie•. 5741 e. s.at• An• Canyon Roaa • Mluion Vio10 Of~, 2A041 M1rguorlto Parkway
Aaaota over S88 mllhon.
LM.Bogd
Cleveland's
First Indian
About 11 years q o • British sc""'ar "'" dertoolt to ftnd out if people with the same names have similar personality traits. His
concluaton: Yes, or at least oftentimes. For
example, fellows called Tony, he learned,
tend to be hl1bly sociable. Women named
Apel, be determined, seem to be overly
aenlitJve and a bit critical ol others. And the
lldla known as AM, he decided, are llkely to
beaby.
Our Chief Prognosticator says cars in the
... not distant fuwre will have electronic
daahboards that compute
arrival times, estimate
fuel needs. and monitor
signUicant working paru.
If the sight of ants,
cockroaches and spiders
just nat out terrifies you,
young lady, what you suf·
fer Crom is acarophobta.
YELLOW ROSE
Q. "Who was 'The
Yellow Rose of Texas'?"
A. Tales vary. Here's one: Emily Link
wu a mulatto slave captured by Mexican
General Santa Ana during a raJd on a Texas
ranch. When Sam Houston won the decisive
battle of San Jacinto in 1836, Emily was
rescued, and subsequently so nicknamed.
Al lo the phrase •'he wouldn't hurt a fly,''
our Lansuage man has been informed It com· ea from Lawrence St.em's 18th century novel
"Tristram Shady" wherein the gentle
character Uncle Toby is so described wh en he
opens a window to turn loose such a little buu·
lnabeaat.
Finl American Indian to play major
leacue baseball was Louis n-ancls Sockolexis. When he worked the outfield for the Cleveland
team, it was called the Spiders. But in his
honor the name was later changed to the In·
di ans.
POEM NAMES
Is it not time to reactivate the "My Name
la a Poem Club" started so many years ago by
the late E .V. Durling? Why not? Maybe you
may recall the name of that club's last presi-
dent was Hugh Blue. But there was a lot of
ariument about that. Hugh is an imperfect
rhyme for Blue. I would prefer lo nominate for
the new presidency Peter Jeeter of Los
Anceles. Who'll second it? And name can·
dldates to be vice president. secretary,
treasurer and sergeant-at-arms?
If you want to know how many silks there
are on any given ear ot corn, count the kernels on the cob.
Addre8' maU to l .M. Bofld, P.O. Box 156lJ, Coda Mel<l, 9%626.
Tuesday Octobef 19, 1976 DAILY PILOT
Restrictions ·on Newspapers Hit
Watergate Editor Charges 'Natiomd Embarrassment'
By NICHAELPAS&EVJCH
Of IM Delly l'llM -.it
BenJamln Bradlee. executive edit.or of
the Washington Post, Insists lhere
should be no restrictions on what a
newspal)er prints, aaying "lbe national
security argument is really a national
embarrassment" and the government ls
scared of the publlc.
Speaklna al Chapman College Sunday,
BradJee, who directed reporters Carl
Bernstein and Robert Woodward in their
Watergate coveraae. said. "I have never
heard a valid claim that national securi-
ty would truly be served by withholding
a story."
BRA DL EE ADMITTED HIS
newspaper bas wilbheJd stories at gov-
ernment request, but said newspapers
should print anythirtB that doesn't know·
ingly threaten a human Ule.
Pointing lo an incident in which
Amer ican submarines colllded with
Russian submarines three times ln Sov-
iet waters, Bradlee said the Post didn't
hesitate to run the story.
"Who's it a secret from~" Bradlee
aaked. "Surely not the godless Com·
munist.s, ··he s aid.
Card Sale
To Benefit
Hospitals
Holiday season car~
depicting Christmas
scen es as viewed
through the eyes of
artistically gifted
youngsters who are men·
tally retarded and
physically handicapped
go on sale soon on the
Orange Coast.
A local spokesman,
Mrs. Ruth Stiers of Costa
Mesa; is the contact for
ordering the cards,
which will benefit the
Exceptional Children's
Foundation's program to
aid state hospital pa·
tients.
A representative of
Fairview Families and
Friends Inc .. she may be
called at 545·6067.
Fairvlew S tate
Hospital, Costa Mesa.
annually receives about
$2,000 in funds from sales
"IT WAS A SECRET Crom you,"
BradJee a aid. ·'The American Govern-
ment Ls scared of you. . .scared you
mtaht think lt'a crazy ... scared you
might know in advance whY you went to
war next time.·' BradJee sald.
Bradlee also bad aome crtUcbms for
the media, saytnc "the press ls captJvat·
ed by the establishment" and that there
is some blu in the news.
"Remember,·· Brad.lee said, ''Just
beeause you didn't rud It didn't mean il
didn't happen." He said a coup in Chile
was not reported by a major wire se11Vlce
beeau.se its correspondent wu on vaca-
tioo.
mE EDITOR SAID READERS, who
have their own biases. should watch how
news is presented.
A focal point of Brad.lee's 00.minute
speech was manipulation of the media
by the government and revolutionazy
groups.
He said newspapen should be carefw
to avoid becoming mouthpieces ror gov·
ernment positions. calling the release or government news without sources (at
government reques t) ''shodd y
journalism.··
BSADLEE 8.\ID THE POST and
rour other newspapers were victims of
blackmail when Croation nationalists
holdine airplane p8SSeflien as hoatag~
forced the papera to print their demands.
"No editor could stand reading that S4
people were killed because hls paper re·
(used lo print lbe demands ... he said.
1bua, the dem 1nd11 were printed out or
fear. a trend BradJee hopes wUJ disap·
pear in tbe future. ·
Bradlee refuaed lo answer questions
from·the audience ccocerning the identl·
ty ot "Deep Throat," the legendary ln-
alde source who led lo the fall of many
members of the Nixon adminlstration.
HE SAID THE notoriety for
journalism since Watereate can be
dancerous since "reporters should be re·
ad. not heard."
BradJee said.the movie "All The Presi-
dent's Men," in which be was portrayed
by actor Jason Robarm, "was an honest.
but somewhat overgJamoriied attempt"
at capturing newspaper life. 'PRESS CAPTIVAT£oi
Benjamin Bredlee •
GLASS BELTED . of the ca rds a nd
notepaper, both religious
and secular. The money
is used to brighten pa-
/ tients' Jives. 2for Deatlu Elsewhere
;._MONROE, La. <AP) -
~ormer Louisiana Gov. ~a•es A. Noe, 85, a
jaetime protege of Huey
1J,.on1 . h as b een
tJk>sthumowsly identified I-a the tipster who un-
•pwered the Depression·
era scandals known as
.tbe Louisiana Hayride. ·Hoe, who suffered from a
bean cliseaae for some
• •
IAL TZ .. l .. OIRON
FUNERAL HOMI Corona del Mar 6 73·94!50
CO.ta Meaa 646-2424
Bl!LL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
11 0 Broadway
Cost• Mesa
6'42·9150
McCORMICK
MORTUARY Laguna Beach
494-9415
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
"Acme v11W
MEMORIAL f'MK
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3SOO Pacific View Drive
NewPOrt. C.tlfom1e
M4-2700
NP FAMILY
• COLONIAL l'\JNERAL HOME 7801 Bolaa Ave.
Westminster
893-3525
....,.,.. MORTUARY
127 Mlln St. HuntlnQton Be1c:tt
53&e639
_,,. TVTMILL U•
OUR
Wl'tTCLIF' CHANL MottUllY •• 84&-4818
427 E. 17th St .
eo.11 Mesa
time, died Monday in a
Houston hospital.
BOLOGNA, Italy <AP>
-Giacomo Cardinal
Lercaro, 8-4 . a former
archbishop of Bologna
and a close collaborator
of Popes Pius XII, John
XXIll and Pope Paul Vl,
died Monday alter a
brief illness.
Deatll Notice•
Professor
To Show
New Slides
Slides of Iceland and
six European countries,
taken by Orange Coast
College geology pro·
Cessor Albert R. Kerr,
will be shown at noon
Thursday at OCC.
The slides were taken
during Kerr's recent
five-month sabbatical
trip, the professor will
narrate the show.
An exhibit of color
photogra phs, also taken
by Kerr. will be on dis·
play through tbe first
week of November in the
OCC Library.
Thursday's presenta-
tion will be held in the
college's Fine Arts Hall
116. Admission Is free.
90
S11e A78·13 tubeleu blackwall,
plu~ S1.7Sr:ederal
Excise Tax
The General Jumbo 780 features two glass belts, a
two-ply polyester cord body, and a wide, multi-rib
tread. fl 's designed to provide long mileage. easy
ttandilng, and traction on both wet and dry surfaces.
S1.ce A78-13
21015790
S111 C78-1'1 Srie E78-14 Size F78· 14
21o16590· 2tJ6790 2tJ7390
Tubelfla Bl1ckw1ll Tubeless Blackwell Tubeleu Blackwell
plua 12.05 Fed. Ex Tex I* Ir• plus 12.27 Fed. Ex. Tax per the plu1 $2 43 Fed. t:x. Tu per lire
Tubeltat Bltckwell
plua S 1 75 Fed. Ex.Tex per""'
51111078-14
210~7590 Size E78-15 size F79·15
2tJ7390 2to~7590
Tubtl9H Bl11ckw111 Tut>et.se Blackwall plus $2.eo Fed. Ex. Tu per tire plu1 S2.40 F9d. Ex. Tu pw "'9 TubelMS Bl1c11w111 plua 12.5'4 Ftc:t. e.. Tu I* u,.
Sitt 078-15 Size H78·15 Size J78-15 Site l 78-15
2tJ7790 2,J8590 2forSS790 2to19190
Tubel"9 Blackwl" Tubelttt Bl1cllw1ll TubtltH 8l1ckw1ll Tubeleas Blackwall
pjut $2.65Ftd. El. Tu I* lltt plu112.87 fed. El. Tu per tire plut ta.03 fed.&. Tu per tire plus S3.14Ftd. Ea. Tax pw ure
Whltewalla CO.t 13. to M. More Pw Tire
rl BRAKE RELINE
t lnatall NEW heavy duty tining on 11l 4wheelal $
2 Ret>ulld 11ie cylinders oo 1111 wtlfflat 69'5 3 Bleed brakes -lnatall l'lefVV duty brake fluid
4 lnlP9ci breke return te>t1ngt
5 Turn and true all " brake drlllM u'1":a
& Inspect front wheel bearfnga ~·
7 AdJu11 bf1kH and check tmetQenC'V lif'\k.IO•
8 Road teat vaur auton'C)l)61e
@6. Don Swedlund Inc .
ALIGNMENT
We ~~~~~e~~mbe! 1295
toe-tn, and toe-out settings to
car manuf ac turer 's
specifications.
COAST
rBIRAL TIRE
Dr. Bruce Belm•n a ,,.Ctd• lfloW!ltC -.. Otntrll Tiit ...,,..
...... A4-......
~~~J~,~~~M~.:~ =::r= 2855 HarHrllYcL ,._540-5710
his recent Antarctic div· ~=.. 646-SOJJ ~rJfr!eb::;! 7&;:t ._°'""" __ . __ Sooner or later:, W\lt'll own Generals ____ __.
CalJege's nne arts hall ,~
116. Admisslotl ls (~ee.
Costa Mesa
\
·~ 'AJO DAIL V PILOT
. . ..... Name Change Refused PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUllUC NO'l'ICB
"CTITIO '"""'°' .. 1CT1nous eutiNUS NOTICIO" f'Ual.tCNIAltlMO .-cYITtOUI •1111 ... NAM• STATIMl.NT NAllH $TATWMINT NOT1ca 11 M••••Y OCY•tt TMATA ...... STAT'tlM•WT
Tiii> tollowlllt M'Wtl I\ dOlllQ CUM• TMIOl!otitl119pe,,_Hr•dol1100USI ~IUC NIA•tNO Wll.I. U MILO ~~N _..,It ootno ....... ,."'"" ,..,,..... IY TNI f'l.ANNINO CIO'lllMl•ION l'tti : · l(IM·CUSlER'S FIRST n ANO. tHf SCOTSMAN llRE OVTllJT 0" ., ... CITY o .. SAN JUAN c NOOlt HOU Se. ••••O Mt.
New York Judge Denies 'Woperson's' Bid •: ;:.
·:
1'I E lhll SI Co)t• ""''"• c,\'12o27 t'31 N•wp0rl 80ulev4ro Co)I• MllM, CA"' ST It ANO ON TM• tM11 01.Y 9fr Wl\l\lnotO•\ !'01#111111 V1lley, CA~ CA OCTOlalt,Hl•,AT l:•f'.M..INTM• Ollt., Hff-nn \.ell-. 2110 SU"ll J KIM l(ellll s l(lm, '°2l!I STONE 11R~ CORPOAAl•OH .• CITY COUNCIL Cl44Nl•l•S.,,.. Wlll'-Or .. l.O<W1Bff<t1.cA..-.o
Awnn lno SOtlnQ) l.n • Hunllnoion feut Cot-•llo•" ..02 E .. 1 Walt..... f'Al 80 ADll.AMTO. IAN JUAN ,,,., lllillnHl ,, CONllK1" 11'1 M I~ ~~·~= 1, (OllOIKIOHI by 1111111» CllYolC.oM-fU.CA ~ CAf'tSTltANO. ltll.ATIVI TO T'NI dM~I • . ,, ·.
.~. ..
i• •" > .· '\" i' .. .. .· .. ..
'• .• .. •• ::
~em AP Dbpli&c:lles
A Babylon, Loni lsland, femirUat wu denied
permission to change her name from Ellem
Coopermu to EUm CclclptJ1)el'IOtl. In hia declalon. New York state Supreme Court
Jualice Jolm SeUeppl said lbe change would expose
lhe women ·s liberation movement to ridicule. M.s. Cooperman, who ~ives in Babylon with her
9-year-old son. said she has been using the name
Cooperperaon for about three years, and lor the Jat1t
year. bu been listed in the telephone book under
that name. • Mexican President Luis Ecbeverrta made it mown that he is available for election as U.N.
aecri't.ary-general for a five·
7ear term starting Jan. 1. ' Kut w'alclbelm, the current
secretary ·general. is seeking re-
election. He is an Austrian.
The Mexican ambassador to
the United Nations. Roberto de
Roseuwelg Dt11. said t.he retir·
ing Mexican president ·'would
be a candidate if there is a cur·
rent of opinion favoring a can-
didate of the Third World.··
* The stepson of financier C. Anabolt Smith seeks
relief from debts with a bankruptcy claim that lists
liabilities or $822,063 and assets or $14,899 .
Among debts listed by Joseph Thomas Alvarez m is $6, 750 owed to his
~. ( ) mother for rent. Helen PEOPLE Smith has rented her home in Rancho Santa
-----------Fe.
Smith himself faces
multimillion-dollar tax and other money claims as
lhe result of collapse of bis business empire. • Two leading American artists -AJesander
Calder and Andrew Wyeth -are staging
simultaneous exhibitions in New York that de·
monstrate their radical differences in style,
purpose and philosophy. ·
"Calder's Universe:· which opened last week
at the Whitney Museum of American Art. is an ex·
plosion or color. abstract forms, steel, paintings on
canvas and even a bird made of coffee and beer
cans.
"The Two Worlds of Andrew Wyeth." which
opened over the weekend at the Metropolitan
Museum a few hlocks away, is a stark contrast. The
FCC Widens CB
To 40 Channels
WASHINGTON <AP> -Citizens band radio
buffs will be able to buy new, 40-channel radios lo
replace their 23-channel models on Jan. 1. the
Federal Communications Commission bas con·
firmed.
The FCC on Monday ( )
turned down petitions IN SHORT
trom television broad· _
casters and other in· ---------
Lerested groups for de-
lays and changes in its July 27 expansion order.
The FCC decided on channel expansion when
the recent CB fad jammed the existing channels.
particularly in urban areas. The FCC also decided
lo set a deadline of Jan. 1, 1978, for the last sale of
unmodified 23-channel models.
Mao lt'fdo.,, E'ari119 P•rge
TOKYO (AP) -An editorial in the Chinese
Communist party newspaper indicates that an of-
ficial arnouncement of the purge of Mao Tse-tung's
widow and other leaders of the party's radical wing
maybe near.
The Peking People's Daily said that a "firm
campaign must be waged tO thoroughly expose and
criticize those who attempted to snatch power from
the party."
Auro-W6t"~er• Et1el•fl Nezi Target
DETROIT <AP) -Ford Motor Co. still is
partially shut down by local disputes as bargainers
work on national contracts for 508,000 workers at
General Motors and Chrysler.
The UAW will use the Ford pact as the basis of
agreements covering ll8,000 workers at Chrysler
and 390,000 at GM. Officials at both firms have said
they would accept the main provisions won at Ford.
The UAW likely will name its next target this week.
Flu Prograna Turno11t ~lgltiett•
By &be Associated Press
Federal otricials say delays in the swine nu
vaccination program and reluctance of some
Americans to get shots may keep them from their
goal of winding up the proJram by Christmas.
Turnout bas been light in each of nine states
where clinics reopened after shutting down last
week following reports of deaths among elderly
persons who were inoculated. Authorities in every
state found that the deaths were mere coincidence
and unrelated to the sbots.
een. ... Jflo.,ed to s-.ear l••~al
WASHINGTON (AP ) -U.S. citizens will be
counted every rive years instead of every 10 years
under a new law signed by President Ford.
Ford bas given bis approval to a bill requiring a
mid-decade census of the population. Tbe fint of
the new censuses will be in 1985, with subsequeat
tallies every 10 years. 'lbese will be in addiUon to
the normal censuses taken at the beginning of each
decade.
131 works are introverted. introspective and almost
monochromaUc.
clivl-I Thlt bw\lllft• I• con<lu<l•<I OV <I CC'lf f'OU.OWINO: o;e.., H1m1 ... n t.t-
S J I( -•lion Mevt~ IN c:.tll-llltY ~ """ ••et•mel'I WM "'" ........ ~i..S ~:;:. ' STONE TIREC()i.~1111'1°" ...... Act-t'lli .. Y_....__ °"""" Clffll of Ote119e °"'""'•Oft
Thi\ •••t•l'Nlll w•' Ill.cl ""'°' llw WT &r.ov. Se((etarv Cltv ..,.,ilUtkln to rec.I .. tfllf'd ~·· "'1• * Tlllt '1elem11n1 .... , Ill.cl wtt" Ille -lvncllnt ,,..otr tM Col#lt'I ..-..1nQ .,.....
Dr •--• •-(!__.a. th b b d t '"h Coulltv Qerk 01 Or•11oe (ountv on°" Oountv t1er1t of Of•noe Coiilllv on~ •<V:I COMM\lf\llv Oevet~ OrMI Mil•-0r .. _ C::O•'' o.11v Piiot, . UOl:l""'am111 ~·· e a Y oc or ... ose •·"" ~ ~1.1'1• Ac11111,a11on.n••c11t•l~•1tldtrMlor•11 0c1 1t.1t,,.,e,.,Nov.t."1' •• ,.
Child•Clre books have been USed by mlllioru; O( -·-0.<lll4" Co8't Delly PllOI lllU•tN M. TUllHlllt, I MI jllMll""• ol wla IU~ ft<el..cl I\ lfttl l------------
A eri t -r...aloed • · -...nv Hllh. C. "'" ~ •••• rornMon•v kl\Own u ti. I.A m can paren s, .,..... a oo •>. 1~.1• •ncS Nov 2·' 76 Pllllll•holel O••llOe coHt o.11v l'lilot. "'°''1.ltt1• ,..011.,wood ''" Mo•• license to marry a woman less -----------•-7•_•·-'6•10c1 rt. 1t. tt.•""NO" 1. m• .,..,. tOKl•k•llv. , ........ " bollnOIO llY
PUBLIC NOl'ICE
than halt bis age. PUBLIC NO-CE rr.-.co O'ttll.., '"' ..,.,,, 0.1 Ob1t110 •--... ,,.,..,,CT"""'in,.,,....oG""s'"'a""u'""1""ti ... ilm...,.,.--aa -------------IStffff on the -.ith. Slfll,. Fe Rllllroed llAMI STAT•MCMT Spock, 73.saidhe willmarry • 1------------1 PUBLIC N011CE rlQ11t-of.wavto t1Me"t.811C1 Tr~11 .. n.ttot1ow•11Q~•.,•doHIO•lo
Mary Morcan Coaac:i.Ue, 3S, next ~~c:~T~~~!:~~1::r °":::r.":!.';.c1 "ti """ , • ., .. ....., 1inc1 "'":1'~ c-Ml!'M sYneMs. "'°"' tn. weekend \ii Little Rock. Both are ftlt IOl~wln11 ~'Wll I~ dolno tlU~ "'CTITIOUt•UtlNIU prounecl 111 .. ccord•M• ..i111 the duvttVW••.We.tMlnJttr,CA'*lt divorced. •n•• NAMISTATEMllNT Qltlto.111• En't'll'OnMl'll•I 0...111¥' Aci Gtntld ""IMI WllMIM. 14612 Wlltoll
R .d h l build s •NI w PHOTOG~A .... Y. IM The..,._"' ........ n "'dOino .....,. fl\a Cit¥'• EnvlrOl'llft ellt•I ~YleW $t,Mktwl¥0 to,.c:A'2tU eSaJ t e COUP e are • Ro\emory Pl fC ~ Co•I~ Me•• lie~•> &olf'dhi>\ltlllerMl,...j tt.altheOf'Oi*'1 H<lllfY ectwlft l\llh'"ltl, '1$1 ing a home in Rogers in the C..llfor11la~1m C'IVSEY ANO COMPANY, REAi. "'411ftO( ... .,..tJqnlflttllllrnt>Ktonthe .......... e."".,\lllllltt•.CAeoeo.
northwestern Comer Of the State Elvev Jouon S1'qner t9b4 15TATE. Mtlll Olltt• 1'00 E. PM:lfl( .,.vlron-ftt~U04i"ll .. tl/1dlllQINI Thi\ 1>1nlnus I\ collOU<.ttd tiy t Ro1•Merv Plot• C0\16 ,,.~ ... 0>e1t Hwy Lonq 0..t<h, Ctllloml<t lf>l>•oe>llc•t10nl,••OOt1t\ll<>rlvneb•llO OtM••l1NrlMt\hlp because Mrs . Councille's 11· C.lllnrn1ot2611 'IC*<I 8fj1ncn Ollie• 1104 ~ 0>.UI doot• nol 1-tltv any ~Ilk projKt, GereldAllenWlllllftt
Year-old daughter. Ginger. SPOCK TtlltO\l)lnf'\\l\COndut l•OOvtntrl Hwy L•O'lfl•BuchC..lilomlo~&SI TM&o."'~OQnla\IMl tlulle'.I" "'''''"•""'ntw1tlll4fd wU"""' QIVIO\Mll Fron<•• E CdUMV. 4450 ...,,.lnul "'411.,. reqvlr.CS •or •ny -· COuntvClffilMOr~C-·Ofl-wanWd to Uve near her father, a resident of Fayet· eivev J~""11s1a11""' st . s.&1 Beech c.111orn1a90140,. velooedf« .. ~ltvreotHCOAt\lllCB. ••-1•.1•1• t vill Thi• ~t•tttnont ••• llltcl ..,,,.. the Tt11~ lkl\lnt\~ I• condUCIAO by.,, 1~ Notice h lurtllff 91.,.n It.at .t said • ......
e e . COuntv C1ttrl< o1 Or•nll' Countv on()( dl~I llrM ol'KI DI«•, lnt•re1te0 CNNOl\S ere Pllblll!IH 0r<IJIQe C:0.11 Otltv "'1'al. Spock is the People's Party candidate for vice ~r u. 1916 Frlll\Ce1i E C.uwv '""'leclloalt.ndWl<IDl/bllclMlltrlnQellCI lit .... 26.•ftdllloveMt>ert.""
President F....s Thi\ '1atem1<1I "'f' llted with ti. tit llttrd In l•vat O!. 01 lt1 -'llonto ~6
· PubUU>e<I Oraft91' Coa~t Oallv Pl!oi Qlullty c1eo. of ~ange Cbutlly on()(. wldlllPllClllOft•llNrorallyorbywrll· I-------------
+ Oct "· 16 end Nov 1 • t•76 4331P6 tobtr "· 1•1• ten C0<11mt1nl<ellon to ltw City Plaml119 PUB.UC NOTICE
A former San Diego State football player and PUBLIC NOTICE Publl'lh<td Or•n9l' coui 0aiiv~ ei;:n~:::rt>ar1tcut•r,,4t1•"4-teC11------------San Diego policeman races new charges of Oct. It 16 •nd Nov l ' 1916 4'1().1~ perWftUre lnvlted to <all ltle olflc9ot PICTITIOUt•USINUS · in d j 1--------------' the SKmarv ol the PltnlllnQ Qorll. MAMI STATUo\llNT furnishing cocame. hero an amphetam nes. ~•CTmous BUSINESS Mls$1<>n _,.. Information .._-cHno The fo11owt110 per$0tl is Oolf!O -..
Tom WUUams earlier was arrested on two NAME STATEMENT "''"N11011,on11111, .. noluvt11•ti1•10r -sn:
f ed bbe t f b l f flM! 1ollowln9 per\O<I •• dolnq bus<· PUBLIC NO'l1CE l>Ulllkln\IMC110f1. JAG Jl!WEt,A't, U'1 Brlllot COWlts 0 arm fO ry, WO 0 urg ary, One 0 rena• DATEDOCtollor14,"7t. Aw-.OKtatMw.C4 t'lU.
conspiracy to commit robbery and one of auto theft. DECOR ON THE MOVE ••• , PICTITIOUSBUSINUS fHO-SG.MERAEL.L. Dave~ ....... ,.., Ac.epulco. t.H
Th 30 ld 1 art b k i...Payelle Or , Hunlonoton BH<.h. CA SECRET•AY Vl'Oti,lllV"lt l e -year-o .ormer qu er ac was ar-.,.., NAME STATIMENT Pl..ANNIHGCOMMIS$10H T'11) 1>11&1 ... u ,, condUC'lllll Dy." lflo resWd Sept. 6 When 8D alleged aCCOmptiCe W8S (4rollM M Kanoi.o'IOI UFbyelle ThelOllO'#ln<JDeOO!IUr4'dOl"9bu>I· PUOllS!led Or<J'f9e Cotst Dally POOi, ~vt<IUM.
killed by police at an East San Diego holdup. °'T;,~u;;:,1,~~~~ ~:~~~:,:6:.~ an tn ness,:hR•C MOTORS. 10n HorbO< oc1. i11.1m 43"-76 Ottve e..c~
• dtvtdual Blvd . C<xta Me\a. CA l/'2617 TMs sit(......., ••• tlltcl wltlt .,. The U.S. Supreme Court refused to review a CartillMM Kano• wu ioniua Enurprrse, Inc · PUBUC NOO'ICE <:ountyCltrttOfOfo,,..Coul!lyonOct. Th•• statement "'"' 111ec1 wllh 1.,. Ollll .• 083 Con<JrH\, Costa ,_w, CA 1, !'76. ,._. challenge to a decision by New Hampshire Gov. Countv Clerk or OronQe CounlyCf'I O<· 92t71 NOTICEOl'f'UUICMUllllNG PUllllMoeOOl'•llOll CO.st 0.11¥ "'""· MeJdrln Thomsan cutting off funding to a local 100er6, 1916 Thi• 00''""'' •scondl.l(tfld by • cur· NOTICE 1s "EREBY 01v1N THAT oa. tt. ".K.•no Nov.t. "'' ~.,, •f'U'1J4 "°'Mlon literary maga.,m· e Which he "OWld had publis' hed Ob· ~st-all" Ent4h!rlws 1nc A PUii.iC HEARING Wll.L IE MELO .. I' Pl.lb41•h•d O<al>QI! Coul Dally PllOt. ..... "tr~ ..,, IY THI: Pl.ANNINO QOMMl5SION ICenitieS. Oct.11,19,26,a<V:!Nov.7 1916 Thls slal.,menl wa>C th~ OF THE CITY 01' SAN JUAll PUBLIC N011CE * ~16 C-lvCltrl.ol Ora11oe ountyon""". CAPISTRANO ON THE 26111 DAY 01' 1-------------1 IS, 11/16. .,._ OCTOaelt. mt. ATJ;•P.M.,tNnt• '!.CJM•T.IOSTU?T'~!·.~ President Valery Giseard d 'Estaing promised PUBUC N~CE clTY COUNCIL cHAMIEltS n-. R• -'"'-R• vaa Pl.lb4i~ ~onQe Coa1I D<!Jly Pl101. PASIO ADU.ANTO S"N 'JUAlll Thtto4IOWlnQ-lOMartdoi119bu5!• Polish Communist party leader Edward Glerek 0c1 12, 19.16,dna Nov 2.11110 CAf'tSTlllANO lllELATIVIE 10 ,,.. M$us· that France will return to STATEMENTOl'AUNOONMENT (21&-tt. FOLLOWING · cou RTl!ous P"Ric1No
Poland 61 cases of silverware ,.1CTmo~~~~:.~~SSNAME o.-•• f.1u Am..-..... 1w: seitvice. 1111c •• stt~°'"""°AWIM. A.4-'<""",. ~ftffVatleft 00.-dtlMar. ClltrtomlctQU that have been the SUbject Of a Th~ lollowlnQ l)erM>n> haw 111M'!n A OfOCIO'ld -"men<lmenl IO Ille Courteous PtrltlllQ s.nlce. ~. t
legal conflict since the end of = 1~R'Z~~ '~R~·~~1~:'~s~;n:~ •-------------• c:.ornoos11e uinc1 U$e Mop 10 de!>!~ Clllfoml• cC>f'DC)f'atklft, su~ ~
World War 11 . B PUBLIC N011CE >oe<lllc t•nds wllltin 11te Cllv '°" A .. nue, Corona dtt ,,._,, c.llllWnl• Oc•all Avenue. L.t\)una racll ·-------------eorlculluretuse. 92625 The Silverware W3S put in a CA.;;::~~:~liou> Duslness "",.,.ruler...., Cf'·lt'7 Notice I\ lurthe!r qlven that at !oeld This bu$ll'!e\S I\ collducl«I bv e Oii'·
French bank in Marseille in 1940 '° aoo.,. wn llted In Ora~ c.our11v.,., STATaMEHT O~ WITHl>tt'IWAL lllM •nd place lnt.re\led P«'IOM •re ~tlon;.~---P ~i ~ Junel'76. "Y • ' "ROM f'ARTNIRSHlf' l"vlted lo alloncl ~Id publk hNrlno ~ ... ous ''" no """"'""· by the Polish consul general. Laooo1~ V•rft•s, ll'llS Maula Ct Of'li.ATING UNDER ""°be heard In favor ol °" "'QDOOSI· Inc. -
Aft th th ' "" v ~ l'ICTITIOUSIUSINESSHAMI! llOI\ to said GeMrtl Pian -'menclrNftl '"llcl• ..... r,Vlc•r·-er e War, ere WaS re· L41QUnaNf9wl C.tllfOfnl• The fOllOWlnQ person 11.u wilhOr.-tllllt<' or•llvorbv .,rilten COMMllniCI· 1'11\ stet-Ill WA\ lfltd wltft tM sistance in France to sending the Thi• l>u'lnen was con<11Ktecl by 0 u • 11enera1 put ner troM '"" 11on1ot11eOtvP1a11111n11Comm1JslOn. CoulllV Cieri! ol Or8f191 Ciount¥0ft0ct.
iJ f th aJ ti pannenltlp. pertnef'\ltlo operellno unOer the tic-"or ( 11 nt st 1 "1• s verware rom e roy cas e L10001oover90~ , ......
1
, uuous 1>ustM\• name 01 AIRPORT •ur1~• perfl u•a,.., • ' ere · • · ...at• in Warsaw lo the then newly in-.,. REPRODUCTIONS, at m'I e1rc11 :' ~~::;:.~n~:·:.·i:.~::.:,~::= Pu1>11S11eG Or•noe Coe« Delly Pliot. stalled Communist regime. Gll!llllC Pl.lb4l\lttd ()f&l\Qe Cont Oa1ly PllOI Street. Newport Beacl'I C&lllornla m•SSICf'I wllere inlormulon n>QMdlno Oct."· 26,alld Nov. 2.~.1'76 Qft-16
O<lobt'r S, ll 19 76 1976 4197·16 926M. 1111\ Mllttor IS on Ill•. and Is .wallllllle
Tiie llCllllOus business name •tole· tor put>l•c IMoe<llon PUBLIC NOTICE menl IOf lhe Pdr1tle"hlo was tiled on DATEDO<.IOl>01U, lt76 * PtJBUC N011CE
Hagb Fraaer, a prominent Conservative -------------tJanu•rY ts 1'11 In lh• County OI THOMASG.MERRELI.. 1.IOALllOTtCa
flCT'ITIOUS9USINESS ()ranqe. ~ SECRETARY Nolle• I\ MM'I 9IWt1 t11M Ille -member of tbe British Parliament, started divorce MAME STATEMENT Full nan>eond Addrn~Ol ltle non P1.ANNtNGCOMMl5510N ptk.ttion tor lfll ~Qlstr•tlOft OI h proceedings against his author
wife. Lady Aatoala Fraser, on
grounds that their 20-year mar-
riage has irretrievably broken
down, his lawyers said in Lon-
don.
Lady Antonia, 43, a
prize winning biographer and
fiction writer. was named last
year as the "other woman" by
actress Vivien Merchant who
Thi! 1011owlnq oerwn is ao;no l>v\I· Wit~••....:~: 11 1 ISISI van &ire!\ 0t':'1~~~ 0-•nqe Coctsl O..lly=· totlOWlno deur lbtd: "Ma.rtow ~" -..:~ST COAST SERVICES. «JO? 81¥d.~~7ver\~de~rC:.111ornla eQO<.Oftl•lne"bf9ftd1J1'5tw(Dlttoe
Crvstat I.It , S.Snld Ano. CA '171().1 Fran~ SOll9f'I Pe:~:~':" of ,.,.
Sl•ven Ross Shulman. «JO? Cr~at This slalernenl wes htlld IOlllh lhP PUBLIC NOTICE CetitonwUI Admllllltrtllve COClt: 11111
Ln Santa An<1.CA977C).I County Clerk 01 Or•n<ie County on Oc· bun tiled with th• OtreclM of
This bli\lness ,. conducted bv an tn· ,_, 1· lt?t.. ,.ll.E HO. F-l10S ------S..-,.._-------I ~1\.,,..0f..,. Sta~ Of ca4ffolftl• rt
dlYl<lual Tuo+tEY. ••ATON •Ml s u "E It ' 0 R c 0 u It T 0" ,, intellded Itta I said brand ..........
SteveSl\UIM&" MCOElllMOTT,INC. CAl.1 .. 0ltNIA, COUNTY 0 1' one119conlalMnOwnedb•-anit.ll This ~ete""'nt was lilt'<! wtlll I~ ,...M0 R 700c1 I "-t11e ....,-~• c....t•l~wbra.......,muslnot.tie~ •y:WlllltMM-••r10ll .,.,~~ "• V c...,. ,.,.. ... ~ .. ~" '"""' Counly Cler>. of Oranoe County on Ott. AtlorMY'"' uw Sent•An.1.C.lltornl• l>v otlte r\ wlll'1out mY ••II " 7. mt.. UllONOf'lllMal11St.. CAH NUMIElll 0 ·104111 oemMssion.
Pl.lbll'>Md O<a~ Cont Q&llyF:f!'. Sl!NAna,GAWOt SUMMONSIMAltfUAGEI ::.~~~; •
Ott 1, 19 16• <lncl Nov. l , 1976 Pub4lslled 01ctnqe Coast Dally Piiot, In rt• "'8 marrl"9'J of Petitioner: ~·~i·~A ~--~ ,. __ ...... 1 ... Pl' ·,
ANTON•A,.RAHtt said she was bringing a divorce
suit against her husband. playwright Harold
.. 4....._16 O<toller '· 11, 19. 16, 1~76 •191-76 CAROL'-· PLECHNEA, and ~Sl>Cf'I-~~ ~~ ..,.., •• ,. • .....,.,,. ""•• Ill< '"~ de<ll· RICHARD F PLECHNER. Oct.19.26.Nov.1.1976 ..ot-16
PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE I You h•ve llffll wed. Tlte
-------------1,our1 m•y dKlde ...,111St yow,.;-
PUBLIC N011CE fOllr M1119 loHrd """u Y°" _,....
PUBLIC NOTICE , Pinter. ·
Both Fraser, 58, and his wife come from Ro01an
Catholic families. They have six children.
$·*3t wl!"ln JO d•••· RtM Ill• ,......,,,."... FICITIOUS aUSINHI r: SUPERIOlllCOURTOl'THE llelow NAMIESTATEMENT ,I
STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR ,:0,:~c:~~s:1~~ri:n~~£ OF A\11501 UttedllUldUem.,.,....~, The following Pll1'SOn k dotllQ ... THECOUNTYO~OltANGe NEWPORT tl\IC ETC .. Plallllllf v\, lt1.,,.,..I Pl'ed• de<ldlr contr.a Ud. ''" onessas: Fraser is a friend of the family of the late U.S
President Jobn F. Kennedy. Caroline Kennedy was
staying at his home last year when a terrorist bomb
exploded outside and killed a neighbor.
• He. A·...e2 wdltMI• .I -Mt CllOe Ud. ,..._. C'IPISTRANO FENCE. »6St HOT I Ce 0" HI A It IN 0 0 F ~~~:,,~ MAR ION IC 1 NG. ET AL. -tro de >0 din. I.el I• ll!for~left Carreterro, Sbn Juitft Olplstr-., i;A AM IE N D.E 0 f' ET I Tl ON PO It .. quultue. • 9267§.. f'll08ATE 01' WILL ANO FOR I.ET· o. ,.,,,. I Totl'le Res~nt l'ietl0ot'10te'.>: J•-ANIOld Puf'9t$0fl, S26$1 Qw. TE ltS TESTAMENTARY AND By Vtrl ue 0 ' ctn e w~cv -& n..p&lltlontrllaslllecl•pelltion ~erra,SllftJu.nCaplslr<lftO,CA'21QS
'IUTHORllATIOH TO ADMINISTER 1ton lswed on September ll. 1976 concernfnQ vour marrl~e You mav This llu51nen Is conc111cted bv en Jn.
UNDER THI! INOEf'ENOENT AD-by 1118 Superior Court County 01 111., d wrlllen resoonse wllllln:lOdaysol dlvldual. * MINISTRATION 01' aSTATESAc:T. Ora~. Stale O! Caltlornla, won .t llWltlatct l:MlllllS wmmons luen.edon JOlln Purqason Est.tie of CLARENCE .A. OOVTT, ludomen• entered In f<JVOr 01 CAN you. This ~aternent WIK flied Wiit! ...
Oouased. NELi. & CHAFFIN OF NEWPORT. I>. II you l•il to Ill@ • -11ten County Cl-of O.anoe Gounty-
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ll'lal INC •s ludQmentcredllorsMd~ln.,t ro-.oonwwillllnsuc1' Ume, your~aull October6, !976. •
1.ARELD• S. DOUTT, 1ormer1y RICHARD MARI ON KI NG"'"' maybeenltredand ll'lecourtmay...Cer ...
LAREl.OA S. GER ALO ltas llled 'IUOREY I( l<tNG. 8' 1u'1Q'l'l!nt °"O A IU<l<Jmtnl con1a1n1n9 lntunc:llvt °" PublWltd OrMIOI! Coas1 Delly Pl(ti,
heroin en Amended Pellloon tor tors, \llOwlnqa net balan<e oHJS,79• 86 otl'M!r °"""" conc81'nino dMslO<lol pro-Oct. I?; 19, 26. and Nov. t. 1976 Qllltfi.
ProbateotWlll andtor luuanceoll • .et· ncll>illly due on ~IO •U<l\lml'nl on 1"" oer1y, ~sal wPOOrt, chtld cllSlod'f, -------------
1ers Testemcntarv and AulllMlrat•on to oat• 01 lh41luuance0' •aid eicecullon 1 child s-rl, attorney's lees. cost\, PUBLIC NOUCE :
Adml!llslt" under the lndeoendent AO· tlevtt revled upan ell the rillhl, llllP dnd and \uci..OIMr ret101 •smaybegri!lnled
rnlnlstrallC>ft of E\tates 'let, ,..tereme lnteN'sl 01 \alO fudomenl d~blor1 in lh<: l>Y tfle court,""'''" could result 111 IM•-------------
to which 11 made for lurtho r prooertylntheCounlvolOranQe.StatP 911rnlshnwntolweoes.leltlnQolmoMY SUNltlOtlCOUlt'TOftTNa _.11cul&rs 8no llltl llM! UMtandQ4ace Ol Calltornla. Clescrlbtd 11~ fot!ow\ Lot orproe>ef1Y,Of otW reltel. STATI OflCALIPOIUllA"°"
°'""rln9ti.narnella• beell~ll0<0c· l61n Tract 7788, Booll 301, Pt90:$ IOtoU c If -WIMI .. _k ltlelNIVioOI "4EC:OUNT'fOflOaANOE •
loller 16, 1976. •t IO.OO am .• In the ot Mlscellaneous M•Ds. Ollf<lal .., .att-y 1,. "'" m•tt.,., you -Ml .... A.ehtt
cour1room ol Oe~r1menl No. JOI said Rtcorcl\ofOranoeCounlY do to ,,...,.11, .. lt\at .,_ wrlttttl llOTt C« OP Ha A RIM• ~
Mrs:-Smitb-would not ..sug..
gest names, but said she had
cast an absentee ballot for a con·
servative Republican president
and a liberal GOP vice presi-
dent. SMITH
Prooer1ylscomrnonlyknownas6Rue 1 .... ITI-. -It p--•TIE M:.= court,al700ClvlcC'.enterOrlv.West.ln G•an_d Ouc4ll, e wporl Beach, ......,.,lle11y,m•ylllfli.cl111I-· rs• ..,... ,..... .._ ~¥111.-nr.Ot._,,._ c.a11lorn!';; .IJ.O.JtlL ANO l'Oll &.IETT•RS TaS'Y
O.tedOctobtrl, 197b TOQ4'll'ler with 811 and .. nouiar 1~ Wll.UAMa.SlJOH!C. TAil WILLIAM E. SIJOHN, teneme'l1', heredll.tmenl\ •nd •D· Cieri! Esltll Of AMAlllOA ELIZAISE'Of
Cownty Clerk ourle.-an<e> t~eulltO belongln<J or in By Frances I.. ValaJrtc. NORR, OKleM.
JOSEf'H 9. M<MULLIH .ln'(Wl\UDt"'f'lnlnino Otoutv NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN a.at
US1Hortllt..llltAY•"... NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVENtMlon 'Ttla -n$e <lnCI Other oerrnltltd WILLIAM E. lllO"A tie' tllecltlef'ell\• a11.-, ~"Ott M dlllsd.ay, NoveMber IO. 1976, di P>'P•n musl be •n wrilln9 and In thO oelltlon tor ~te of Wiii -tof .. Attlorlltyr.... ~Ill-10.00 o'clock 3 m .al Mein LOCC>y form p•escrlbed by Ille Callfornl• ~of l.etttn Tes._erYto•
Publlst>ed Oranoe Coast D•lly Piiot, Courtt..ou~. 700 civic Center Ori.,.; Rules of Court. They MUSI ~ lllt!<I In .-.it,.,,...., role-. to Wl>k:TI i. .....
PUBLIC N011C~
0<100tr 11, 13. 19, 1976 •3'11·16 'Nest. CHY 01 Sanla Ana, County 01 "''' c.ourl wlli.. Ille o<Ol>l!r ming lte eno tor furtlltr 1>11rtlcu1.,s, Mid 191111 ...
Or,.nqe,St•teofCallfornlo, lwlll\ellat pcoOI of servke of a COP'/ ol ettc.h Cf'l llfMefldplec:.OfllHrl1>9tfle-*
e>ub41c auct1o1110 lhe lllOllMI b4dele<, lor ~tltlon~ The lllne when • '"""""°"' *" stt lor OCtobff 16, 197., et tOflt cesll In ••wiul monty 01 uie Unlleo ll deemed served on a l)aft'I' mav vary .. m •• 111 ttte cOllf'tnlOfft °' ~ PUBLIC NOO'ICE PUBLIC N011CE
--------------• -------------1 °'l)el\<lln<J on tho mct"<>d O! senlc•. No. 3 ot said c»wrt, .. 1'00 Ovk Olflllil' S-J06'5 NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS SIAIM. •II the '19111• 1111• end 1"'""'''°' For e'lllltnl)le, SU CCP 413. 10 HtrOUQl'I OrlYe West. '" .. City ol s.n.. At9, SUf'•RIOlt COURTO,.TME CAI.LINO P'OR BIOS said tudQrnent debtor~ In IM abovt· OS.40. GllHMnla. }
STU• 0" CALlf!OltNIA flOlt ScllOOt Olltflct. NEWPORT'·MESA descl'illed pt'Ot>eflV. or \O Much~ IAlllNES, SMITM, 0.ttCIOctobtr1, lt1t.. I T"•CIOUNTYO~OAAN0£ UNtFIEDSC>IOOL DISTRICT ~m..,.l)e n9ouarytosall\lysaldH· El.YANOWAOLElc;H Wll.UAMli.St~ll,
Ne. A·""' Bid Oe<1d1tne·? OOo'ctoc• om o1111e ecutlon. wllll accru&<I in!..-tsl dfld Atl<WMY•atuw ()ouMyCtm f
NOTI C Ii 0 I' HE A A I NO O" Co!il\. 'ATRICIAM•ltZOG "'""°" l'Olll ,.OBATE Of' WILL IOllldtvOI No~mbt>r. 1916 Oel4'd al Santa Ana. Calllornla. S.p. ZOHI ....... """'· • Piece ot Bid Recelol. BuSIMH Of WteD A .... , .. u. ,.
AND llOlt I.ETTERS TUTAM•... 8S7 p I' A c t ~ temoer7BIR, '•Q7D6GATES ~-1'---.. -11.c· .. ••• ...... ci.ettH.-., " T"ltYANOAUTHORIZATIONTOAO. ll<e,I tacen • .s ve ~"~"" ........ ...,,,_ ~ ~·•-• ,,.__.,. ... c:Mit..ts
MIN t S T a It UN DIER TH a 92t27· SMrlfl·COroner hi: 11141"2.-I --r, • T 0 TR Pro let I IOtnllllcallo n N&,,.,. Coll 1 !Or C.lll 1\1 AteerMyfw: "9tltl-r '91: r7141.,..11M ~ INOl,INDIN A MINIS ATION Aetnc>v&I of ul•tin9 lloortln,l•llatlon n vo •no-, °'" 11 Pub41slttd 0.•~ OMISI OlllY PllOC, ~-' ""'"'-" Of'EITATHACT E W A B y J OwlOO, Dtputy OCt.!2,t•,26,•...,~•u ',1"76 .. 1.16 PuOllSMCIOr-Coes10ellyPt •• EsUte of INEl 1.0RR•INE :.":c';!~rtqymnlllum. n\•Qrl....., !!_A_!f~11A1~~~.~~ _..,...,. • • ,..., Oc1.tt,IS.19.I.,. ._,.
HUT CHI SO N. a•• l "I EZ 1. .,.,"' .~ .. ·-• HUTCHISON, Ot!<.Hsed p I" ( 0 p I ans a . e 6 " I' 1 • ., E. "°""""° ...... Sultt .00 NOTICE IS >IE REBY GIVEN 11\al CARMICHAEL·KEMP co . mo L&.. f'llsHelM C.llttmltt1100 RAY FUHRER ha. flleo herein a oeli· Felli Pt l.O\•n9ele<. C...llfornle'l()():l'I Pul>llSll;d Orange Coe.I O<t1ly Pllol.
11on10rProo.t1tofWlll ancllorlswanct NOTICE IS HEREBY GlllEN '""' Ott04>er1119,. 1'76 G'l-16 the dllOv•·Mmi,<1 S< 11001 Ol~rlct OI ' ' • of I.Alie• Tntementerv ftnd Autl!Mtra-Orano-County C.lllornlA .-.Cl•llO llY llOn to AOMlnlsler ullder the I~ o 90 OMt Adtnlnlltr•tlon Of E1tttA Acl,,... ~~0,;~~°:~~ • •:' r 9 ~~o;~~n! 1 o a~d' __ P_U_B_L_l_C_N_O ___ C_E ___ ,
·-~ IO """'<" 1• mMlt! lor ,.,,,.,... "OISTRICT", will roctl•o \II) lo "'" I.
Ptf'll<llllll'S,lllellll.ttt.,.tl!Mllndolact not iaitr ti..an '"° &l)ove·st•le<I 11nw. -------------• OfheerlftQ lll•Heme .... """wttorOc· 9"ted llt<b '°'" ll'W! ~-·"" OI ACQll1rK\ NO'TICI! t>f' SHEllll .. P''S SALE -26, 1'16, •t 10·00 e.rn.. In lhe lorlheeC>O.,,.~Oletl ROBERTA p MOORE. PIOlntltt vs. C-1room °' Otoerlrn.nt No. )of Mild 91°' \,,_II 1>0 recetved In tl>O pla<e RICHARD N COUSINEAU. ET AL. ~. It 700 Clvl( ~l•r °"'"" -· ldentltl4'd ebOY't!. ~nd sll&ll I>" oo.~ O.ltnd&nl, NO. 141441 lntMCltyofs.Al•Ane.Calllor,,11. and oul>lltlv •H<' ,.1011<1 81 th<! .ot>o.,,.. By virtue 0t en ~•Kwllon i\SUCd on
°"1tldOctq1>1rl, tt1• stet4'dtlrne andol.tGfl S"llttmbo!r n , t'71> llv the SOOOflor
WILLIAM•. St JOHN, T'ht1'e #ill l>O <I twe11ty 1\711001 de-Court County ot O<a110~ Sl&t• ol MAllVl~~t~~;: ooslt r1q11lrtd lor •4<h •Cl 01 l>tCI ao<u· C..lltornla. UPon .i lud9ment Mtef'tO
-h 10 ouar•nlct t~ rtlurn 1 .. (IOOd 1,, •• ..,O< OI ROBERTA p MOORE "'
...... ~at•d ..... 40t conclltlon within five UI <IA"r\ a!ltr the 1udome 111 crooitor •nd "9"'"" ~::c:CA.-t bld-"'"lldal• RICHARO N COUSINEAU, ONG•LA
""""9y '........... Eacll bid mu,, contorm Ond lie p co us I N EA u . 0 AN IE L Pwblls!led OrlHl99 C:O.sl l>all'f PllOI, l'til>Ofl\lvetotlltconlra<ldo<..,.,.nl\ DEAWOOD ORISCOLL iin<I ELSIE A
C>noller 12• II. tt. '"' .._,, Each 1>1e11h•ll be •ccomr>•n!ec!l>v th\! PAINTER 101n11y and 'Ml•••ollv ~'
PUBLIC NOO'ICE \t<Uflty rtftrr'eti 10 I" the contrett ludoMtllt oeotor\. thow1n9 " tlOI
C10eurn111H and oy the lln of~ billlftCt of i111,11s.1' •ctu•ll'I' IM on --_,......,.. __ ...,... _______ -ltacton ~cl Judg"'llnl on tM oeto of ""1 is-
NCJTtCa TOCltEDIT~ Tiit DISTRICT ,,,.,,,el the rl(IM to t uente of u ld uocurro11, l ll•Y• SUNRIOltCOURTO~nM retectei>vor•llbldsortowal,.nnyl•· le111eo ~ t ll 1~ rlQlll. Ill .. eftd In.
STAT& 0" CALI l'OltNIAf'Olt ~lal'lllK~ l1tlOl'M•llllM In flllY bk!\ --~ O! WIO t\ldQment d9btori In Ote
TNECC)UNT'fO,.OltANOS or111ttwblddlno cwooenv In ti. County Of 0.-tnQt,
Ne. A .. ,.. n. 01ST"1CT ~., ctt1trMloed IN Stfl• 01 C•lltornlo. oucrll>ed •'
Es It I e O I J 0 H N G . VAN Olfltnll ~O\f•lllnjj •81• OI o.f' dlOll'I IOllow>: AM!lllSPOORt, •U J. G. VAN WfQt\lnlhe lOC•lllyln wtliCl'lthls-'1 Lotl6.Tr1Klll:k>,8ool\17.P __ ..
AM1£RSFOORT, o.c .. Md. lsto1Mf)trf0tmte1tortott1cr,rtortvll't ttnd t•ot Mlscell.,.eot1\ M41tM cParccl
NOTICE IS HEREBY G1vr.. lolllt ol-llmM\ l\ffct.d to tre<ult ll'lll ton• NO 4~.0•. Coo. Aro.a Ol·Om
O'td!W't °'tile tbo.,. llt~Clliq(llM ttllet r-~w r•IH •rt on Ille flt tile ""°'"''Ya. c«nrnortly 11;,_.,'" »!
tlWt ell -IMVlflO clet ... ...iMt OISTRICT orflce loctt4'd al a...n.,. Holmwooo Orl~e. N•wPor' 8eo<h. IM MIO deeeoent tre rtQ ........ ft .. Olflu tl.j1PIM: .... Ot4w • ~ MllW. GllllornU
"'""· llifltll IM flt(t_., ~ .... "' CA. '2621. Coolts mo 114' otllat'*l (!<'I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ""''
.. Off!(-. Of lht cl ..... of Ille tlllO¥t -_,,,A (.OPV °' thtH f(lff'\ \Mil lie on Wiid .• Novtmi)er "· 11/16, 41 10;00
tltled-t,Of'IOP•"Htftlttltm,wlltl""' flOO•dMtllelO&Sltt. o'clo<I\ •. rn .•• M ~"" Lobby,
NC__,..,Y'OUChtn, to tfle111\111n191'1td ,,.. f0t'e9Qlno K Mdlllt of per oi.m COvrthOUt.e. 100 Civic Cent•• OrlWI!
.. tllf .... ( .. Of HIA'Witt, Rtmtr. Mt<· ~ " .,.._ "'*" • WO•kl"ll dily of W.~t. Cllv ol Stntt An•. Qwntv O!
OoMIO a M•at.•. • Pttof•t.t1ollet 91Qllt t•• ltOWf.. Tit• r•tt for noOdrt Or-. St•t• of C.lllornle, I win •II ~loft, Qlftlld Slrwt, f' ().llo• fl'4 O'<'ltrlh,_ work •tlell Ill-' llP\I 11 l)<llllk. .w<tton 10 UM 1tl9flo61 bid.,
mj. .... .._., .. ~It, CtllfOt'llll ~ lllM t1141--Mll. -· tor U\11 In .. #IUI M-Y ol ttlt
wllldl ISltlt p1«eof t111.i-1ol llte-II thell lle-nNIClfY llDOll ltle CJl)N-Ull!Wd Sl•lt\, ell tht rlqlll, tlllt end dtnl9llM lfl ell .matte!'• Ptrttl""11 lo TltACTQI' l'O ~ tile qntrett 16 IMtrwtl Of w1d l~nl ~In
lllt .. ~at M>kJ CltetlMllt, w1W11 to.It -rdlld, and "°"' tl'Y ~-t11t et>o¥• ott«fllld proowt'I • ., '°
'"""ltt.ntrt1tetlnl 11110tlc.ellOllollN's ..,...,i.tfft,topn•1e•"*'lllt mll(ft tt1tr.af I\ may ee _.,to not~. IMCltltd "'" to •II wo1amtn "'"'"' Mid ••KullOfl. Wlttl 41ffr\leCI
oetHOc\otllf' S, lf7' ~ by Wlem 111 lite ·~"" OI 11119r"I -CO<JI• "9n'-.nV-~ ftCtlllffllCI. 0.ltd 411 s.nte AM, CellrorT!le, Oc·
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fllilltltllecl Of~ ~· Ollly '"9(. llllb!llMCI ~ (OHi !Mii\' ~lat. (lcl t•, 2$. tllll 1'@¥, 2, l'f& Oct.,,,, •. -..1111 ..... J. .,,. .. " °"°"" "· 16. "1• 40-1 °'"''
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PUBUC NOO'ICE PUBLIC NOTICE
CONSOl.IDATEDlll!POltTOflCOHOITIONOfl CITIZl!NSMMICOflCIOSTAMIESA
O" COSTA MESA, OllAHOll ANODOM&STIC: $UISICHAtttal
AT THE CLOSE Ol'•USINIHON HPT«Mlllt IO. 1'7' STATE IANK NO., ... .assen
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T~y. Octoti.r 19. 11176 DAILY PILOT A J J
t I Author Fights Movie's Showing
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -The author
ol "Death Wl1b • • tears that wbeo CBS
airl the movte version ~twill trigger a
.ruh of copycata tmJtating lbe "hero"
: -a Ql&D who ldl.la thole be thinks are
law·.breakers. ~-··SO Srla.o Garfield bu been waging
• tow-far unaucceutul campaign to
GAJlf'IELD'S BOOK deals with a man. portrayed by Charles Bron.son
in the film , wbo takes the law into bls
own bands art.er bis wife is murdered
and bis daughter driven insane during
a vtcious rape b7 three hoodlums.
realizes he ia the vigilante tiller and
turns bis back on the bloodshed.
GARFIELD OBJECTED to
schedullne the fUm as a "Movie of the
Week" late this year in prime time.
aays be plan.a no further eUorta at the moment.
"I'm the last one who want.a to be a
censor," be said. "I tried to exercise
some moral pressure and that's as far as I'm entitled to go."
· c:oovince the network tbaa. showing the
vtolenc.drencbed rum on a Friday
. night ill prime Ume ls a m1stalte lbat
couJdteault ln tra1edy.
HIP may DON"l' abow It, it might
teep a eouple of people alive," the
novelist said ln an interview. "If you
run it for an audience ol 100 million.
you have to accept the responsibility
for kooks. ".My problem with the rum la that l
think it's dangerous." saJd Garfield.
wbo was attending a writers·
worbhop here. "lt'a already led to a
couple of people emulating tbe
The character in the book shows clear evidence or a mental disorder as
the book progresses and near the end
is shooting burglars and car strip·
pers.
"He's obviously a nut," Garfield
said.
BUT IN THE MOVIE, says
Garfield, wbo bad oo part in the pro-
duction, the m an is made out lo be a
"cowboy hero" who never s hoots
first.
"It makes it much mor e appeal·
lng, ··be said.
" suuested they think or n.anning it
as a late show. But ot course ii they
run It aa a late show th~y lose ad·
vertialng .
"The only reply I got was full of
courteous double·talk which amount· ed to a 'no .... be said.
"Mr. Garfield's desire to have us
not show the film does not reflect the
reality or lbe situation al all," said
Mike Buchanan, bead of CBS public!·
ty on lhe West Coast. "U a sbow meets
our program practice standards. il is
shown."
"rr·s AN AWKWARD position, ..
'Benji' Back
In New Movie
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Thal fiop-
earred cannine star. Benji. is comJna
back fOf' another movie.
Producer·dlreclor Joe Camp an-
nou.oced in Athens, Greece, thal the n~w movie. "For the Love of Benji,"
will be fllmed entirely in Greece.
: eventa..''
The character. a wealthy architect.
kills bis first victim, a mugger .
almost by accident. But after the ease
with which be exacts tus retnbution.
be decides to continue his vigtlante as-
sault on crime.
Garfield admitted. "I don't want it to
k>olt U.ke I'm trying to teU CBS bow to
run their network."
Camp declined to discuss the story.
except to say that il will also be told
from the dog's point of view. CBS. which says the movie meets
lta programs' standards, says it'll be
broadcast in November but no date
baa been set.
As the movie ends. Bronson 1s
caught in lhe act by a policeman, who
Garfield. who stands lo lose about
$50,000 if the show is taken off the air,
The original "Benji" was one of lhe
~gJ"OSSing pictures last year.
..
~•PlJUl1 t ~t_A~~. ~:~ A,A . . . . . . . .
I I•: .t
OivlF~N
! r;-i ' ,
"SOUNDER:
PART II"
WK OAVS SAT/SUN
7:15-9:15 2..+e-a.10
MIU•~l•ISI ~1111 telt • .. OIC
"MARATHON
MAN" ""·~""',..,.,.' "''~··~"4 .. _, ....
" -SO. COAST PLAZA
Mlthlllk ~1111 1111r•111C
"UMO.OT"
'"'"''~,_,,.. '1'111 DOLLY" IPC) ... LU,.__._,...,,.
"ALICI ..
WOHDRLAMD• CXJ ..,.....,..._
~ ................
ABC Now
Grabs
Korman
LOS ANGELES CAP>
-ABC Television, which
lured Redd Foxx from
NBC. has added CBS'
Harvey Korman to its
future star roster.
Fred Sllverman. presi·
dent of ABC Entertain·
ment. announced that
Korman will develop a
half-hour comedy series
to begin in the fall of 1977.
This apparently
sign a ls the end of
Korman's 10-year as-
sociation with the "The
Carol Burnett Show.'·
Korman 's company
will also develop other
projects for ABC.
Movie Role
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-John Rubinstein, son
of pianist Arthur Rubins·
tein and a star or the
"Family, .. TV mini-
series, is playing a musi·
cian in Universal's ''The
Car," about a mystery
vebkle that terrorizes a
small town.
~.:=.. ...
=~
:m;;a1e
~I FROMT" 1'51
11A MATI'lll OP nMr l .. J
-rlA YaS Wl1H MY AUMr
ICT's 'Red Ryder' Held Over
The "held over " sign has gone out at the Irvine
Community Theater whertl the Orange County pre·
mierc of "When You Cornin' Back. Red Ryder ?'' is
maki ng big noises at the box office.
Originally schcduJed to close this weekend,
"Red Ryder " has been extended one weekend,
playing now through Oct.:.> on a Friday and Satur·
d ay night schedule at ICT's temporary theater,
Bristol Street and Red Hill Avenue, Costa Mesa .
Curtain time is 8:~ p.m. and reses-vations are being
taken at 646·3178 during the day and 557.7297 even·
ings.
NEW ARRIVAi$ ON the coastal circuit this
weekend include "I Do. I Do." opening Wednesday
at Sebasllan 's West Dinner Playhouse. and a pair or
coUege theater projects ticketed (Of' lhis weekend
only
"I Do" 1s the musical version of "The
Frurposter " and features a cast of two -director
Dan Verre and Brooks Almy as a married couple
who go from newlyweds lo elderly people during the
course or the evening. The show plays nighUy, ex·
cept Monday. at varying curtain times al the dinner
theater, 140 Avcnida Pico, San Clemente. Reserva-
tions 492-9950.
A pair of Harold Pinter one-acts. "The Lover"
and "The Collection." will be presented Thursday
through Saturday al UC Irvine's Fine Arts LitUe
Theater with an 8 o'clock curtain. Ashley Carr and
Stuart Duckworth arc directing the shows with each
appearing in the other 's play. Reservations
833-6614.
MEANWHILE. AT SADDLEBACK College,
"F1anncry. Fl anncry," a production based on short
story them es of the late Southern writer Flannery
O'Conner will be staged on the same evenings at the
s ame curtain limes in Building R on the Mission
Viejo campus. Reservations are necessary, and
may be obtained al KJ l-9700 or 495-4950, extension
263.
Completing their r espective engagements
along the coast this weekend are ''The Secret Af.
fairs ol Mildred Wild" al the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse ... "Bell. Book and Candle" at the San
Oemente Community Theater and "Blithe Spirit"
at lbe Saddleback Valley Community Theater.
"Mildred Wild" winds up with Friday and
Saturday performances at 8::.1 in the Community
Center auditorium on tJre Orange County Fair·
grounds (556·5391 ). "Bell, Book and Candle" goes
Thursday through Saturday at 8::.1 at the CabriUo
"CAR w~: .... wtiere, t>etween me hoor5 ot 9 ands anytting can happen ... aoo usually doest
Intermission
Tom Titus
Playhouse, 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente
(492'°'65). "Blilbe Spirit" is at the El Toro High
School theater Friday and Saturday at 8 o'clock
(S86-8342 or 831-9196)
ROUNDING OUT ntE week's calendar are a
pair of Costa Mesa productions, ''The Ruling
Class" at South Coast Repertcry and "Come Blow
Yrur Horn" at the Holiday Inn.
"Ruling Class" continues tonight through Sun-
day at 8, with a Sunday matinee al 3. in the SCR
Third Step Theatc.or. 1827 NewPort Blvd., Costa
Mesa (646-1363) The Neil Simon comedy plays Fri·
day and Saturday at 8::.>. preceded by a 7 o'clock
dinner. at the Inn. 3L31 Bti!'tol Street al the San
Diego Freeway (557·:.>00).
• Ueut MC>tl••Ull 1t1M.I-lllHOA1' a ~.':~ 'l.':3ilir. cue•"' _..., n .... 11.10 --T. IACI,., ~YI 11•-·-
clll ;3f.fuo )
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' dJ.2 DAILY PILOT Tu~sday.Occoberl9, 1978 .
Prize-winner Hits Home
Friedman's Theories: Pocketbook I ssues ....
proper money s upply and letting
il move freely. By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP loulMH M•IY•t
When an economist wlns a
Nobel Prize you may be sure that
most people dismiss lhe event as
the economist's good luck but
none ortbeir busmess.
Wrong on both counts. Chance
does play a role, simply because
so many are qualified, but.
nobody wins who hasn't con·
tribuled lo the fund of knowledge.
And, yes, it is everyone's busi·
ness, and their money, too.
PROFESSOR MILTON'
man, the most recent winne
spread his influence throu
vast panorama or life, rnclu
welfare reform and the vohmleer
army, besides directly influenc·
ing modern economic manage-
ment. .
Jt is in this latter area that
Friedman, at this very moment,
is having an impact on. your
pocketbook.
Fol l owing the Great
Depression of the 1930s, the
Philosophy of John Maynard
Keynes, the English economist.
dominated economic thinking in
ttle Western industrial world well
into the 1960s.
TO SOME EXTENT at least,
almost aJI economists acquired a
bit of Kcynl?s. They tended to
believe, as might anyone who
went through the depression, that
there was a downward bias to
economies that had to be cor-
rected.
This correct ion was the
r esponsibility of government.
Through its fi scal policy, through
spending and taxing, it could
stimulate or restrain the
economy, even fine-tuning it like
an automobile engine. lt was in-
terventionist.
As the postwar expansion
aged, economists learned that .
• economies also might have an
PUBLIC NOTICE
NEWS ANALYSIS
upward bias. Inflation be<:ame a
serious, often unmanage1tble,
problem.
NEVERTHELESS, THE
J<eynesiaos dominated thinking.
and their in fluence is still
enormous today. But Friedman,
who tends to believe economies
are stable if left free, began ma.k·
ing his mark.
Friedman is a ma~erick, and
h e was freated by so me
economists as a thinker deserv·
ing or scorn. He was an exponent
of monetarism. He believed
nomies were best managed
by the least management. He
believed in letting interest rates
and prices rise and fall lo correct
imbalances.
But while his hands-off views
were being criticized, the models
of Keynes were demonstrated to
be imperfect. Rather than being
stabilized. economies were
lurching from expansion to re·
cession, with inflation tossed in.
FRIEDMA N GAINED some
acceptance, some perhaps by de·
fault, by the imperfections in the
Keynesian models. Economists
who once thought they had an
ideal approach to economic
management now realized they
had problems.
Friedman preached that the
supply or money and its growth•
were greater determinants of
short-term economic trends than
were taxing and spending.
Rather than attempting to
make the economy succwnb to
one's bidding through fiscal
changes -through what he con-
sidered the heavy hand or gov-
ernme nt -he beli eved in
nourishing the economy with the
Friedman has watched, no
doubt with satisfaction. some of
his notions become 11.ccepted,
albeit grudgingly at.Cirst.
INTERNATIONAL
MONETARY Tates now float.
That is, they are to a great extent
free to seek their own values in
the competitive marketplace
rather than being pegged to
arbltrary, speclfic values by
their governments.
His views on money supply are
practiced in most trading na·
lions. Goals are set for
~onomles, and the money sup·
ply is regulated to achieve. tho.5e
go~.
Jn the United States, few
economic indicators are moce
closely watched than the money
supply, as measured by the
Federal Reserve. Monetary
policy has taken its place beside
fiscal policy in economic
management .•
F RIEDMAN JtEMAINS con•
troversial. Many economists
think he is living in a prior age
and that bis thinking, sophistical·
ed as it might be, has primitive.
aspects also.
But Friedman is also viewed as
providing the intellectual base
for defending mode rn
capitalism, although be is among
lhe foremost critics of its im-
perfections, such as monopoly
power.
Against great odds, right or
wrong, he has impressed his
thoughts on society, and, as a
former student and practicing
economist said Friday, he has
done 1t solely through intellectual
power rather than by way of
dramatics.
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS cac11·11ac L£as·1114 FICTITIOUS IUSINE.SS NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT ~::!'."I0"'•"9 ~·son•.,., doong boJ11· · -"'::.~Ollowlng IN'Mlfl I• OOlng bu51·
PIVEPSIOE MEADOWS, LlO, r "-Oi.o<\'l\"l le . ...~ :.... Ct.IPJOINT,31MllC.o.ntHwy.No. 3~q s.n M•Qu&• or., su110 JOO, Newpo<I , l'"' • ir Dealer-direct asing. r, ... w...,est selection. 4, Sou111 u9 .. .,.. c.111orn1• mn
l:lea<n,CA'l1660 P-i-Nicholas Cornea Jr., 2 ... 1 Via A,, mu th E Quill•'· Inc , a l -ii l/Je best rates. C'1.C6J/ent S6flliCe. Gnn<le,Mluton Vl•lo. C•ll•omoamH
Cahtornoa <orPordl1on l~9 San M!Ouel ,, Tnls busln.sl Is condutled by.,,,,,. or. N~wQQrt Bei1tn. c • 9?1>M ::::~. __ "Prum pt Delivery dlvldu•I.
(ltv Natoonal B~nk ol B•v..rlv Hill• Nlcholat Cornt• Jf.
tlllf PMlnnl <I\ Tru•I•• u"°"r T•ll• Nabers Cadi·11ac This Sl•lomenl WAS tiled wl"' the N>ldl"'l Tru" :~19, r'o Bt•rro M•lf~r C.O..nly Cltrl< of Or•n<Je c;ow.iv on
o\ l(OOt,n 9)SO Wllshore Blvd , lltwrlv SePltmbl!r JO.""·
H111' CA'IO?l7 2600 Harbor Boulevard Coua Mesa 540·9100 NDM 1n••l>v••n-•s lstonducledbY•llmol Publl!.Md Or•n~ Coul 0.lly Pllol,
td perl~r•h•P 1-...:::====================:::::_ Ot-r S. 12. 19. 2', 1'16 41.).16 Amnuln EQU•ll••. ltlf
S G Amon. Tr•b\Ur~r Th•• •l•t•rnent w .. 111~<1 wlln 1ne
County Cler~ 01 Oran9e COllnlY on 0<.1
8, 197b
FMUO Publl\hf'd OrMQ" COA\I 0.11ly Pilot
Otl. 19, 1',•nd Nov 7. 9, 19/b
41'176
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 8USl .. ESS
NAME STATEMENT
TM tollo•lt\9 persons ort OOlno bltsJ.
"4'li\\~' PAINT PAPER & THINC'\ (Slo" :n 7414 ~n M111u•I Ori•t, Nrwoort
8e.cll"1bb0
Johlt C Cox, Jr,. l>OI> Oortr1990r °''"" Co< on a~· MU. Coll. ..,.,s Ol•ne IC, Coa, ll04 Oulrl119er
D<I,,., Co<onadol Mitr, CA "1US
Tiiis l>INnen Is tollducted t>y an I~
Clvodl>el
eettvB.W1rd.Men1~
~na~r ,,,,, statement wn OIM wflh 11\to
Coun1v Cttrk Of Or4"go CQuntv on Oct.
8, 191' .,_,,
Pvbl~ Oren99 CoMt Oellv Pjlol, Oct. 19, u. •nd Nov. 2, 9, 1976 OU-16
P UBLIC N011CE
S·ll6lt SU,IEIUOR COURT OF THI!
$TATE OF CALI ,ORNIA FO"
THE COUNTY OF 0AAHG£
HO.A·IU4•
NOTIC• 0' $ALE D' REAL
FREE SEMINAR
''INVESTING IN 10% TRUST DEEDS"
You ;ire cord1atty inv1led lo auend an inlonnative mefil·
ing we are holding for private lenders (and their friends)
who have expressed interest in !rust deed investments.
Officers of our company will present and discuss the
many rewarding benefits of using high yield low risk trust
deed investments as a building block tor Investment
secunty.
This eveoino seminar is free. but seating is limited, and we
must have your resetVation in advance. Please can:
Huntington Beach (714) 848·2225.
oat~: October 20. 1976 Tlmt: 8:00 P.M. Pf1ce:
Union Home Loans, 17552 Beach Blvd., Suite O,Hunting·
ton Beach, California 92646.
Presented By:
UNION HOME LOANS
17552 Beach Blvd., Ste. o. Hunbnoton Beach, Ca 92646
Nation's Largest Home loan Brokerage Firm
29 Ollices throughout CafilOfnia and Arizona
PUBLIC NOTICE
CP·1'U
SUPli:AIOlt COUltT 0,THE
STATE Off CAt...1 l'OAHI .. flOlt
THE COUNTY OF OltAHOE
He. A·t91'7
HOTtCE 0, HEAAI HG OF
PETITION FOlt PltOIATE OP Wilt..
AHO FOR LETTERS TESTAMEH·
T•AV AHDAUTHOAllATfOtfTOAO.
MINI STER UNOE lt THE
INOE,!HDEHT ADMINISTltATlON 0, ESTATES ACT
Eslate of JOSEPH I. OANSREAU,
OtceBsed.
NOTICE IS HEPEBY GIVEN 11\at
TITLE INSURANCE ANO TRUST
COMPANY has tiltd ,,.,tin• Dtlllion
tor Prot..te of Woll and for h...-nce of
t...en~s Testement•rv to t!M P>ottlt~
.tlld ..it"°'IHllon to M:tmlnlstw ttw
utale \lnder lh• lndepende<>t Ad·
monluratlon of ESIAIH Act r-enct to
wlllcti Is .... oe IM fun.,., -11cut~.
-Iha! th• time •nd PIM• flf ... ring
'"" same hH bffn HI IM No.emi.r 2, 1916. al 10:00 •.m ., In !ht CO<.lrt,_.,, Of
Oepertment No. l of said court, -' 100
Ovlc Center Orlv• Wtst, In Ille Oty Of
$tnteAna, C.lltornle.
Diiied October 14, 1'76.
WILLIAM E, St.IOHlf
eo..nty Clerk
COO.SEY. COLEMAN & HOWAltO ly: C.I H. c.1 .......
ma IEHI 11111 St., W.at lkft,
Tusth1, CA tt6M
l1141 DM474
Atto....eys lot': tt.tltloM,.
l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilJ Pl.obllst>ed Or•n11t Cout Delly Piiot Ot1. "· 206nd 76, 1914 ,,.,. P "OPEATYATPRIYATESAl.E !--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~ .....
In lhe Maller of, ... E\l•I• ot FAllN
CIS A, RICHARDS, aka FRANCIS
RICHARDS, ak• FPANCIS AANOt...0
AICtiAROS. Oeo•sed.
NOTICE 15 HEREllY GIVEN ""''
Ille ..,_rSIQft~. J AMES C. HEIM.
PUl>llC Admlnhtralor of IM Counly of Or._, St•i. of Calllornl41, a\ A<l-
nllnlstr•tor Of the IEstale ot FRANCIS
A. AICHAROS, Ak• FRAN(:IS
RICHARDS, •~a FRANCIS ARNOLD
RICHARDS, aecea•ed. will !o<lll 111
prtvole Ule to Ille lllQhest Ind llMl net
bodclor, •lier ded\lctlon of 9"Y ~I·
eel brok,.rs' cornrnln lon, ui>on tile
tefms -con(llllons ller•llMlll~ ~
tloMd, -s11blttt to conll,.,.,..tlon b¥
\lie _v..,,lllled 5upforlor Collr1, on
'nlvr.Oey, Oc lobl!t 21, 1976, at I,. hour
el t-l<H o"clock noon, ~ lht•UllH
wllhll'I Ille llme allo-d by law, al Ille
O!llet• al 11'9 Publlc Admln1'1Mtor, 1100
SOutn Gr•11d Avon"•· SM\l.o An•.
C..llrorn ... ell rloht, llllt, lnlerttl Mid
euet e ol said FRANCIS"'·
RICHARDS, etu• FRANCI S
RICHARDS, •-a FRANCIS ARNOLD
AICHARDS, O.CeHed, at tllt ti~ OI
tws d4'tlh, end env and 111 rlQlll, llllt
and In-I t ... t Hid 1\1•1• 11.H ec.
011lreo. bv 011er•tlon 01 law o•
ol,,......lw , otM• tlo<ln or In -lion lo -t Cf .. Id dec-nl 11 1114 llmt OI Ills o .. 1n. In ena 10 ,,..t certoln '9-4 pri>
pertycln<rlbed as follows, towlt:
t...ot l of Tract No, 13U. I,. tlltCltvof ~helm, County of Or•nve, St•• or
Calllor'flla, as per <NP the,_ recorded
!ft 8oOll 4?, P-34 of MltetU-
M9tn. AecordSol Hid Or••Cl>lrltY
llW eommon Slrfft •ddr•n of 111ld
~YbelnoSl'W.Jull•nneA-,
AMM!m,C.lllon>I&.
Bld\0toffe,,.•r~l11vlttdfor..id""1Y llftd l'll\ISI be lnwrlllno-•111 be
~1¥td •t tile Ollie• of IM Pubti< "°"
mllMst••tor, 1)00 s. GraNI Avtnw,
59nl• A,,., C.litornl•, or,,,., be 1111!<1
with Ille ci ... 1< Of Mid S~rl« °""'·or
flll'f tit Otllwred to .. Id Admlnlltretor
P'rson•llY, •t any Um• •It~ rlist
publkatlon 011hl1 notice Mid""-the
"'"1,.q Of said .....
T IEl~MS 0 F SA \.EI Cl\11, lawful
""'""" of IM Ut1lted Sl•IH, or I*\ ~ •"" balt<K• evlden<:ed tl'f note or flOltft M<Vred by mor·t9'tQll or tt\111
-111 Vie ~rty so sold., may be ec:~llM to the COvrt -~.,,.,,,,.,,...
110n. ~ sum Of \1,000.00 Ill <•\h,
c9ttlfl<HI cM<lt or _,. -"""' .:COMjlltlly t.Ch written bid or .,f .....
""th !flt NI•~· Of tl!ll pVr(ll.tW IW'IClt to 119 1141ld \lllOfl COf'lrlfl'll•lkwl llf .... M ~ by'Wtld5vpo<IM C;ourt.
All blf'J or offers mu\t i. ~ ... '°'"' lwN•-11'1' , .........
,.,. r1tM 10 rtJKl any llld 1111 _..le
Mrtll\'r_,...,
DATIO; Oct-.r'-1'7&,
JAMES E. HetM "'°'k Adrnlt1l1I rflOt
Adl'l\lnhtr•IM ol
Mld~lt WROO•a.t. HAU. )l,.._J tw A ... hlf\lr•W
.. "'"' "'4nt ....... ..-.ua.umtt
,...1 1114114 .. ., ..
,..."""' Or• ... CiMU o.11'1 llllllt. °"""' u. u, lt, 1'1• ~14 ,. , '
f.PWl ...... lo
POCKETBOOK IMPACT
Economist Friedman
-·
PlJC to ltlull
Two Airlines Seek
Monterey Flights
LOS ANGELES (AP) -.. Two
airlines have entered last·minute
pleus before the state Public
Utilities Commission (PUC> in
hopes of gaining approval to
serve the Monterey Peninsula.
The two airlines. Pacific
Southwest ( PSA) and Air
California, each sought PUC ap-
proval Monday lo fly into the
coastal region south of Sao Fran·
clsco, which now bas flights by
United Air Lines and Hughes
Airwest.
The pleas came at the close of
four weeks of hearings on the
matter before the PUC.
AIR CALIFORNIA Vice Pres.i·
dent Frederick Davis said thero
were four courses of action open
to lbe PUC: to allow both air c._r.
rlers to serve the area, to
authorize only PSA or only Air
Calllornla, or lo refuse to let.
either line use the airport..
"In my rnlpd, the evidence sup-
port.." onJy one additional car•
rier," Davis said.
Davis said that airline should
be Air California because it bas
had a better record on rates per seat miles and better operating
results over the past four years.
Pair Note ~line
In OC Office Space
A PUC ATfORNEY said bear•
ing examiner Jack E. Thompson
will submit a draft decision in the
case to the five-member PUC
board, which will make lbe final
ruling. That decision is not ex•
peeled unW late this year or ear·
ly 1977, the attorney said.
Orrin N. Ford, manager or the
Monterey Pen insula Airport,
said the airport board favors ex··
panded service in hopes the com·
petition will provide lower fares. A decrease in the amount or quality office space available in Orange
County has occurred in the past several months, according to Mike
Mackin and Tim Steele of Coldwell Banker Commercial Brokerage
Company.
Air California proposed mak-
ing 78 flights a week to t.he
airport Crom Orange County-Los
Angeles, Sacramento, San Fran-
cisco and San Diego County.
PSA 's proposal called for 48
flights a week from San Fran·
cisco and Los Angeles.
They s urveyed county o£Cice buildings completed since 1956;
facilities in the study ranged
from a 6,000-square-foot office
building adjacent lo Orange
County Airport to the 350,000.
•square-foot Union Bank Towers
in Orange.
MACK lN AND STEELE report
that there exists about eight
million square feet of lugh· and·
low-rise office space in lhe coun·
ty. Oflhis, half is in low-rise build·
ings or single-and two-to three-
story design.
A vacancy factor of 18 percent
was discovered in the office
space included in the survey.
Although vacancies were found
in both high· and low·rise build·
ings in every area of the county,
the alternatives are limited for a
firm in need of 10,000 square feet
or more, the pair said. For this
reason, many national firms are
beginning to pursue the acquisi·
lion of space in advance of pro-
posed moves.
MACXJN AND STEELE said a
number or projects have been de.
signed and are ready to be con·
structed, pending a tenant's com·
mitment to lease.
PSA AND AIR California each
presented two witnesses at. Mon·
day's bearing.
Major moves to Orange County
usually have been to buildings
designed and built to suit the te.
nant 's needs. according to
Mackin and Steele. For this rea-
son , o nl y a few Jarge
speculative buildings are in the
planning stages. These proposed
buildings range in size from
50,000 square feet in Santa Ana to
180,000 square feet in Orange.
A staff study by the PUC
Transportation Division earlier'
r eco mm e nd ed that Air'
California's petition be approved
and PSA 's denied. "In the opi·
nion of the staff, there is i.nsuffi·
cient demand to warrant
certification of PSA and Air Cal
to serve Monterey," the report
said.
HOWEVER, IT SAID approval
oC both would cause a 23 percent
diversion of passengers and a 4.1
percent loss in gross revenues for
United and Airwest.
Over The Counter
MASO listin<Js
14~ lS'h Polr\n H
37 )) ""''°"' 111• 18"' Polhbnn
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'
T~ay. October 19. 1978 s DAILY PILOT A IQ
Lucre Lures . . . . ;.,.
Del Monte Corp.
Prunes Its Cans
DeJ Monte Corp.,~ oationla largeat canner o! fruits' and vegetables, has decided lt's Ume to concentrate tta·
energies where it mikes the moat money. AA a result il will,
over t.be ne xt four years, ph.aso out many ot the items LD lU extensive lineup. So if
you bappen to be a de-
votee of the Del Monte
product that bas low
consumer appeal. you
DUU' soon find it mlsalng
from the grocery abell.
The San Fr-ancisco-
Money
Tree
baled company packs such a wide wide variety of product&
in aueb a wide va riety of styles and sises that it bu more
than 300 ltems in ita lineu_p .
FINANCIAL ANALl!STS AT DEL Monte will scrutinize
this array to det~nnine which are expendable. How much
demand is there for sweetened orange Juice, apricot nectar.
crinkle style cut beets and early garden spinach? And is It
really necessary to pack 2S styles and sizes of canned.
pineapple! Thia pineapple roster. !or example, includes the·
followi.nc :
Four sizes or crushed pineapple; three sizes of plnea~
pie chunk.a; three .sizes ol pineapple tidbits; five sixes ol
sliced pineappJe; four sizes of unsweetened pineapple juice;' Lbree abes of crurbed pineapple in its own juice; three aiz8$.
ol pineapple chunks in its own juice; and four s izes of sliced
pineappleiD itsownjuice.
The Del Monte examination will be ruthless. Richard G.
Landf.a, president of the company, said the aim is to .. reduce
our in\tentory burden, increase turnover and improve over·
all profit margins." This way of looking at the world, be
pointed out. "demands intellectual discipline, the ability to
make decisions based on the facts. on a reasoned judgment
of what 'a best fer the corporation, rather than on lraditlooal
biases or intuition.'·
THE KEY PllJlASE IS: .. WHAT'S best for the corpora·
ti.on."
Previously, it may have been appropriate for Del Monte
to rely on '"traditional biases or intuition" and pack Poliab
style dill pickles or Mary Washington all-green asparagus
salad tips; even though the p>tenUal markets were not
huge, at least some cmsumers would be interested in buy-
ing them. .
However, Del Monte now plans to look at each product
nm from its standpoint: How does the company make out'!
Del Monte's product overhaul was prompted by the
dramatic change in the company's makeup during the past
five years . In terms of where the company is making its pro-
fits today, it's no longer simply a processor of foods for the
United States market.
FIVE YEARS AGO U.S. processed foods accounted for
BS percent of Del Monte's profits. This year the percentage
ol profits derived from this source is 43 percent.
What happened? Two things. Del Monte got into the
fresh fruit business -bananas and pineapples -and while
this segment represents only 12 percent of its sales volume.
il pumps in 26 percent of profits. Second, Del Monte found
that overseas markets can be much more profitable than
the domestic market. In 1971, Del Monte secured only 8 per·
cent of its profits from overseas sales. Today, it gets 50 per·
cent of its earnings offshore, even though foreign sales ac·
count for only 27 percent of total sales volume.
Del Monte is impressed with those figures. Why mess
around with a flock of slow·movtng canned fruits and
vegetables, which languish on the shelves of A&P and
Safeway, when you can be out selling bananas and pineap-
ples to the Japanese consumer -and make much more
money for your effort?
'Ibat's why Del Moote Corp. is pruning its line.
Beneficial Use
Eyed for Tobacco
W ASWNGTON <AP> -Tobacco could tum out to be
beneficial to world ~alth, research at the Agricultural
Research Service station in Beltsville, Md .• indicates.
Between 12 to 17 percent of a tobacco pta.at is bigb-
quality protein that can be extracted and converted to
human and anima.l food through a process called
"homogenized leaf curing," the researchers report.
AT THE SAME TDIE, SAYS Dr. T.C. Tso, who de-
veloped the process, some of the chemicals in tobacco that
produce pollutants and unhealthy substances for smollers
and nonsmokers are removed.
Tso said his team is trying to link e ach element .. lft the
smoke that ls considered undesirable'' with an element in
the plant that can be extracted.
Some of the amino acids, the building blocks of protein,
ror ex.ample. are associated with cyanide compounds pr&-
seot. he said.
AS A RESEARCH SCIENTIST, he declined to speculate
about the ultim ate lm.pact of the team's work -whether,
!or example, it will lead to eliminating from cigarettes the =ods responsible for lung diseases that have brought
s that smoking is dangerous to health.
He said growing tobacco as a source of protein -alone
would not be economically practical. A soybean plant , for
exa1»ple, contains '2 to 44 percent protein or Pf'OCM>r-
tiCloately about tb.reetlmes aa much.
With no lncreue In tobacco acreage worldwide, 'l"9o
Hid, be projects a worldwide producUon of 12.5 bUUoa pou.nda by 1985, and 20 billion pounda by 2000.
BUT AT CURllENT YIELD LEVELS. bis cunn1 pn>o
ceu sWl can obtain what be said la a conservative estimate
ol 20 to 40 pounds o/ useable protein per acre.
lf his projections were realized. that would mean 750
million pounds of the protetn b)' 198:5 and 1.2 bJlllon a year by a>oo .
Depending on wb.icb ol the aeveraJ nutrttlonlata' st.ea~
dards are used. tbat would meet lbe daily proteiD-
consumptlon needs of between &1 mJUlon and a m1WoD
penons. be said.
Al} ARS spokeswoman said tho T1o teaf-ew1n1 proew
wu ori&inaUy d evtaed to save labor and Improve the amok· inl quality of lbe tobacco, But it also make1 pouJble the .....
movalo.C a compound called Fr•ctloD·l·Proeelo, lOGC mo..
u the 01~r soluble protein In all green plant..
Computer Tabs Bets
A lar1e-scale>-compute.r system aoon will be oft to tbe
facet In Auatralia. .
Burrou.ps Corp. 's Miaion Vltjo plut will produce a
B '7'700 computer ayat.em for the SOutb Auatrallan Totiiliutof
Aaency Board <TAB> ln a $2.S mllUon order for computer
equlpmenL
ll will be used to process beta and calculate payouts for
the stateside Ofl·ttadc bone race bettlnl operation managed
by TAB. The orde r in.eludes lnpul and cllsplQ termin&l.s and
t«mlnalcompui.n.
Oomputertu\icm wW extend ewer a »mmth .,.,......,.
period when about ~ pereent ol all bctt1nt will be proc 11nd 1rY tbe B 1700.
,.
,4 J4 DAILY PILOT
THE FAMILY CIRCUS. By Bil Keane
"It's o vest. Ooddy weors it when he needs
more pockets."
Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pal will
cut red tape. getting the answers and action you
need to solve inequities in government and bu!i·
ness. Mai l your questions to Pal Dunn At Your
Service. Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560,
Cona Mesa, CA 92626. Include your telephone
"11mber. The column appears daily except
Saturdays.
lltaU•ted A re• Codes a._ie
DEAR PAT: I would like to know whal Ma Bell
suggests to solve the problem J 've Jusl experienced.
J had occasion to place a direcl dial Jong distance
business call to a firm in Whitestone, N.Y. I did not
know lb.is firm's phone number and I planned to dial
Whitestone's area code plus SSS.1212 to ask the U ·
sislance of the long distance information operator. I dutifully looked an the pbone direclory to seeJJ
Whilestone's area code was listed. It was not, so I
dialed the opera tor and asked her to fmd out what it
was for me. I was lold that the area code could not
be provided because the routing operator didn't
have it listed. I was med to name a nearby large
city. I bad no idea in wbat part of New York
Whitestone is located so I eould not name a nearby
city. The operator could give no further assislf.JlCe
unW J could name a nearby city. I bad to sit clown
and go through my almanac unW I located a major
city with a similar zip code. It was Brooklyn, so
naturally, J dialed area code 212 followed by
555-1212 and found that Whitestone indeed was in
the 212 area code. I cannot understand why the
obone company can'tprovide the area code of a city which has a eost officeandz:ipcode.
A. D., Costa Mesa
A Paclftc Telepa..e Co. spokesman aald t.laat
ate IOllltioll to thll problem la to dlal tbe "mala area•
code" for tbe state In wbldl sacla a mystery city la
loeated. AYS bas ~ Gala proltlem muy
dmes ud baa bad to re.on to &he dp eode medtod
too. Muy states laa.e several area codes ud oae
area code operator wDJ not e.tact uo&kr area
code ID &he same state If &he req1let&ed city la DO& In
bis or her area. It woald be cenvealetlt If &be phone
company abo bad dp code references for cWes so
small tbat tbey are no& IDclDd bl tbe area code ID·
formation list.
£og RolUag Sel'n Moraq
DEAR PAT: Although we've been experiencing
our usual hot October days, cool nlgbta are on the
way. I've been told by a neighbor that you have a re-
cipe for newspaper logs for wood-burning
fireplaces. Could you re~at this for me? l'Jl! very
interested after just having checked the pnce of
real firewood. TB ,,.~ M .. ,~ta~
So•tbern CaWonda liaay llOt laave vlalbfe
.ealOllal claaa1es comparable to tlloae "back
Eu&.." bot tbere are repJar ladkatlou t.laat IUl·
mer lau hmled to fall apJa. 'l'llwJ aewspaper lol re·
dpe bu been reqaestecl by rnden each fall llace It
wu ftnt pabllshed ID t.m. Tlda recipe mast work
well becaue no reeden uve ever said o&Jaenrlse.
U &bere are HJ ,.,,..._. for lmprovemeat. let
AY8 bow. Tbe followtq la tbe medlod: fold
.-npapen lDto I-foot loq, ~ IDcJa ddd aectto..;
IOlak overnlPt lD wa&er ud cleterle•t IOhaUoa; roll
...,.... l ·IDcla rod, ~ oa& exceu water ud
lllDOOdl aides; allde olJ rod and l&aDd to let dl'J.
Personnel Chief
Wins Pronwtion
Jose Sandovalb personnel a~lallat with the
south county branc ol the Oran&• County Recruit-
ment and Placement Center, baa been promoted to
bwnan relations epeclaliltin Santa Ana.
Sandoval bad coordinated the south county job
service since November, acC01'Cllnl to Jobann
Schenk, publicity director. Bll work included Job
development. coumettnc, tatin& and placement.
8CllENK l$AID THE COtJNTY la seeking San·
doval's replacement.
Tbe Recrutiment and Placement Center
ates wWl the CapUtrano-Lacuna Restonal
Occupatiaaal Procram <ROP>
ID placing graduates in jobs. ID
return. tbe RO P f\ll'Dlsbel the cmtet office space at 2l8llOO Ac·
Jacbema St. in San Juan
Cepiltrano.
Scheat said more than 1,000
penom have been aened by tbe
cent.er since it opened in NOY· ember.
MHO'IM. MNDOVAL ~
clients to pursue career tralnJ.DC, rather tbu
Mttlina for Jobs of!ertna little penooal utlafadJon,
uld Schenk".
He was also wortinl with Saddleback Col1ep
edmtnlstraton to improve ucl expand Jlf'Oll'aJDI
for~b-apeakfnaRl'Cleda
Kiwanie Tap 'Vaebuan
Paul Wickman, pna· as prHldtnt of tbe dent of Wlckman Xlwald.IClubdNewpd
Pbannaceutlcal Co., Beacll.
JDc., bu been lDltalJed
Krishna Case Growing Complicated
NEW YORK <AP)-Queens Dist. At·
ty. Nicholas Ferraro aaya be ta tr)'iDC to
find out where the money gdes that the
oran1e·robed memben or the Hare Xriabna sect collect in their begging bOwls.
"We have reason to believe the money
Is not Caing where it ii intended," he said
Mooday.
11IB AMOUNT, COLLECl'ED around
the country, was estimated at hundreds
~ thoulands of dollars a year.
Tbt •monta , • whose beads are shaved
to top.knots, beg on street comers and
e¥m on the ateps of such churches as St.
Tbomu Eptac.opal on FUlb Avenu~
FMie Shapiro, 23, wbom the Queens
prosecutor claimis wu_ brainwubed by
t.be Met, said the ~knot was "for
KNbna to pull u.a up if we start linking
in the sea of materialism."
TED PATRIC&, WHO claims to have
depfOll'ammed 1,000 young people, ls
wanted by Ferraro as a materiai witness
since be once worked ao Shapiro.
Patrick ls serving a one-year sentence
in Calitonua on Orange County charges
be Wecally tried to force two young peo.
ple out ol the Hare Krishna qalnat their
will.
Asat. Dill. Att. Michael Schwed said
be Ttould seek a cw.rt order to bring
Patrick here.
ME•YLEE &RESBOWER. 23, of
Fresh Meadows, Queem. is being held in
$50,000 bail as a material witness.
Scbwed said she spends most of her time
ln her motel room •'chanting up a storm."
Kresbower, Shapiro and Patttck are
wanted to testify against two ot the sect 'a
New York leaders indicted b7 a grand
jury on charges of bok1lnc tbo two YOUD&
people unlawfully.
They are Harold Conl ey, 25,
supervisor of women at the laokon Tem· P.te. and Anaus Murphy, zz. president of
the temple.
SllAPRO WAS BACK Uvtng at the
temple Monday after lawyers from the
American Clvil Llbertlea Union
threatened to sue South Oab Hospital in
Amityville ll it admitted the youth for
court-ordered treat.mmt ol diabetes and
mental tests.
7.50
arl.R.I.
or
For Any Self ·Employed Person
Open your Keogh account this month and Fidelity Federal
will waive the usual $7.50 annual Trustee Fee for 1976
charged by most savings and loans and banks. Set aside up
to $7,500 of earned Income each year exempt from current
federal income taxes and $2,500 of callfornla state Income
tax. Interest earned also exempt from Income taxes until
withdrawn, In retirement ye.-s.
SAVE $7.50 -No1976TrueteeFH
l.R.A. 's
(Individual Retirement Accounts)
For Any Employed Person
Open your IRA this month and Fidelity Federal will waive
the usual $7.50 annual Trustee Fee for 1976 charged by
most savings and loans and banks. It not already coverl!d by
a qualified retirement plan, set aside up to $1 ,500 earned In.
come each year exempt from current federal and California
income taxes. No current tax on Interest earned, either.
EXTRA BONUS:
F1dellty Federal pays 7"6 % (equ,I to 1.08%
c:ompoanded dally) Oft
any balance I.A.A.
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21 offices to serre you statewide
COSTA MESA
NEWPORT BEACH
1855 Harbor Blvd.
645-4420
'J
11
11 ,
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' . .....
'G.f
~----...................... _ ....
'Outward Bound experience shows that the
limits you have set yourseff
are not realistic. You can surpass them.
It teaches you about yourself under stress.'
Persona·I Limits Scaled
By DENNIS McLE LLAN
0 11 ... D•ilf r llatSlottl
The first day out' they were u p
before first light for a brisk four·
mile run through the woods. If
that didn't wake them.up, the dip
in a glacier .fed stream did.
During the day there was ruk·
ing (often with 40-pound packs on
their backs) over rugged terr ain
and weather that ranged from 85
degree heal to torrential r ains
and pelting bail. And there were
steep rocks to climb.
After dinner (canned stew and
crack er s ) they crawled into
sieeping b ags. By dawn the
water in their canteens often was
frozen.
Tl's called Outward Bound and
each year thousands oC young
people (with varying degrees ol
outdoor experience) sign up for
the 23·d ay physical and mental
m arathon tbat bas to be the
closest thing to Gl basic training
that civilians will ever have to go
through.
But Ray Operacz and Debi
Lee, two UCI s tudents who spent
August In the Colorado Outward
Bound, wouldn't trade the ex·
perience for the world. ·
.. Outward Bound's philosophy
is lo teach you about yourself un-
der stress," said ()peracz. a 19-
year-old bio-science major from.
Fountain Valley.
• "lt shows that the limits you
have set yourself are nol re-
. alistic. You can surpass them.
When you 'r e climbing a rock
glacier you wish you were any
place else but there-unW you
get to the top and seewbat ycu 've
done."
. Miss Lee, a 19-year-dd soclal
ecology m ajor from Nm'thridge.
agrees.
"I came lo the conclusion if I
can survive Outward Bound I can
·get through anything,•• she said.
"I'm so glad I "had the op-
portunity to go through it. It's so
bard t o explain: You force
yourself to do something that you
don't really want to do.
"Bat you just put one foot in
front of the other to get up that
mount ain. It's just phenomenal
It's a real ego trip. Your self im·
age r eally increases."
JOINT SCHOLARSIDP
the experience would be. Conse·
qu e ntly. all l e tte r s and
newspapers w~e cul ct!.
One d the benefits d the trip,
he s aid, was that he learned to ap-
preciate things more when it was
over.Ahot shower,f<r example . "Just having running water, a
r eal live t oile t and decent
food. .. " be said . "Coming back to
Denver we at.e up a storm ...
He §J'id he had a "minor c ase ii culti.t.re shock" after complet-
ing tile course and bad a bard time
getting used to sleeping on a soft
bed. He slept on the flocr the first
threedays.
aUGGEDTERllAIN
Operacz, luckily. was ln good
shape at the outaet. Those who
weren't pald for it, he said.
Seven mile hikes over rugged
terrain at 9,000-foot altitudes and
scaling steep rocks look their
toll. The course culminated in a
solo of three days and four
nights. in which each person is
dropped ott along a trail near a
stream. They were restricted to
100 yards In each direction.
They bad all the water.they
wanted, but no food. A tarp,
ground sheet a nd r aincoat were
allowed, but they could ooly br·
ing a sleeping bag and no extra
clothes or the clothes and no bag. The opportunity to take the ex-
periment in outdoor living and
survival WJlS made available
through a scholarship co-funded
by lJC I and the Colorado
Outward Bound.
Operacz spent the first day
looking for a suitable campsight.
He found on~under an umbrella·
like pine tree. His bed was on 1 '~"""'of'~
Ray Operacz, 19,
of Fountain VaJ/ey who
is a bio-science major
at UC/, 'wouldn't
trade his experience
tor the world.'
It is the fourth year the
scholarship h as been awarded to
. two UCI students who. by being
selected, agree to live in the
Mesa Court "Outdoors Hall" for a year and serve as resource
persons to the 100 students living
in the r esidence hall.
Because it was something he
alw ays wanted to do (but never
had the necessary ~). Operacz
applied for the scholarship as
soon as he saw the annooncement
in the school newspaper. (Both
students paid for round-trip
transportaUolfto l>enwr).
An experienced backpacker.
he described Outward Bound as
"completely unique even if you
have been out."
The two s tudents wer e as-.
sign ed t o diffe r e nt areas:.
Operacz was in a part ~ the
mountains that bad dense aspen
forests and rock falls. Miss Lee's
terrain w as r ockier and less
forested.
MUSTERING AREA
Upon arriving in Marble T 'a
pin point on the map''), Operacz
said, gear was unloaded from the
bu s. They were welcomed in a
mustering area and divided into
nine-man patrols.
· Ahallhourlatertheywereoff.
Oper acz' group. obviously
gung ho, decided that the more
isolated they were from the out-
side world, the more "intense"
four inches of pine needles. On the second day, he said, the
isolation started making itself
apparent. He drank a lot oC water
to keep his stomach Crom growl·
ing.
GREW WEAK
Quite weak on the third day, he
stayed In his tent. He thinks he
passed out at one point. He's not
sure.
· He spent time by writi ng in his
journal, thinking and frequently
day-dreaming of chocolate chip
cooties and lasagna.
For Miss Lee it was dreams of
chocolate cbJp ice cream and
pizza. She wasn't hungry until
the second day and on the third
she fainted.
... But I wasn't going to qui t,"
she said, adding she was near a
grove d aspen trees and that a.
waterfall was below her. "I bad a
beautiful spot ...
In fact, she said she "loved"
the solo and that it gave bet lime
to think and r est.
"I really loved beiog alone. I
was singing to myself. I wrote
stupid lltUe poems and wrote in
my journal non-stop. I just got a Jot of things done ...
MENTAL EXERCISE
A Girl Scout for 12 years, Miss
Lee said she h ad done a lot of
backpacking and was in fairly.
good shape. She feels the course
was more mentally than physical·
lydiUicultfor ber.
New Career Fills Need
By BARBARA GIUS
0 1111• 0.11, r 11a11U"
When Sandy Udovcb gave birth
six years ago to her third girl, a
diagnosed victim of Down's Syn·
drome (mongolism), she was
ur1ed; like m any parents of de·
. vel<Ji>mentally disabled children,
to place her baby d aughter in an
institution.
"But the doctor told me I 'had
to take her home' because the
state was talking about ~losing
down its m ental care facilities."
Ms. Udovcb r emembers.
"At the time I felt the doctor
was very wrong for putting that
kind of 'take it or leave it' judg·
ment on Cary nn. She r eally
didh't seem any different to me at birth than the other two of my
daughters," she said.
It was because or this that Ms.
Udovch decided to obtain her
mast er 's d egr ee in soci al
sciences, with a specialisation in
social P,sycbology.
OUT OP Df:FENSE
"I did it out or defense. I didn't
like the way my daughter and I
were being treated and I was
sure the information I was r e·
ceivtng about her abilities .was
erroneous.'' • · Six years l ater. Ms. Udovcb
sQs she still doubts Carynn's re-
'ta'dation since her behavior pat·
terns show h er excelling 1ge-
•Ppropri at e adaptalve skills
such· as dressing herself and
WPlllC in the kitchen.
"'t;arynn ls presently dfagnosed
•a "trainable" mental retardee
I .but Ila. Udovch says she is
Jll~ng . for her attemptioC to 1,
have her daughter 's abilities r e-
test('(} for educ ability so that she
might be schooled in special pro-·
grams a lo ng with nor mal
children her age.
T hrou gh h er experience or
Car y nn 's d ev elopment, Ms.
'Udovch says she believes that in
most instances, the parents oC
disabled children m ake their
best advocat!?S.
"They only need to be educat·
ed," she said, since cognitive
tests show them to be "the best
assessor s of t heir children's
abilities and disabilities."
VOLUNTEER PROGRAM
Ad vocacy Ser vices, a new
volunteer program that grew out
of a grant that she authored, will
make it possible, she said, for
parents to learn bow they can
best round out their disabled
child's world: provide him with
an "okay" social environment
roe experiencing emotions; en·
courage him t o take age-
appropri ate risks and express his
fears.
Advocacy, she said, is one
method of amelloraUng past
"overly protective .. philosophies
in the field of developmental
psychf>lf>'Y.
"M~~Y r e tarded persons.
especially the older ones, have
experienced abandonment to
board and care facilities. con·
vales cent h omes and s t ale
hospitals," she s aid. "Trained
advocates can a4ld a certain
measure of humaalb' to their
lives.
.. I 'm not s ayins the c.-o
they 'r e r ec eivi ng In these
facilities is inhumane. I'm say-
ing that they have social needs
just like everyone else and few
opportunities to vent them."
Headquartered In Costa Mesa.
Advocacy Services is one of
severa l seed proje cts in
California that will make used
some $9 million in federal grants
under the umbrella d the state
Developme ntal Dis abilities
Council, said Ms. Udovch.
Project ·coordinator Liane
Janssen says the program will
provide for 30.45 volunteer peer
advoc ates as well as personal
training for parents d disabled
children and for older disabled
clients themselves so that they
can become more effective ad·
vocates for their individual
social needs.
UFE EXPECTANCY
"It used to be thought that
epileptics, autistics. and victims
o( cerebral palsy, mental re-
tardation and Down's Syndrome
ooly lived through adolescence,"
Ms. Janssen said.
• Up until that time, it wu
society's r esponsibility to proteet
them. and keep thern happy as
"eternal children." she s ai4.
..We now are finding mare and
more developmentally disabled
persons llvin1 past middle age.••
Some are even marrying, she
added, even though in the past.
their need for sexual com·
municalion was most often over·
looked.
Advocacy, Ms. Janssen said •
will "lend volunteers one oC the
most cre ative opportunities
available for companionship."
SERVICES
Volunteers may be called upon
fer a game of cards, a stroll
through the park, an escort to a
museum or amusement pBk or
Just some 1ood conversation.
By furnishing the disabled
person With a "normal" frtend.
by allowing him the chance to ex-
plore a "normal" peer rtla·
tionshlp, Ms. Janaaen says the
advocacy proeram will provide
models fer self·awm'eness and
developmenL
In addition. she bopes AS will
achleve a more cOllDlc 1oal -
that oC community .eceptance ~
ret•ded persona a total human
person all ties.
"We finally are recognl1ing
that the limUaritles are stronger
than the diss\mllarities." sl\e
said. "and that by ctrertna them mere than Just protection, we are 1 Wtually if anting them the ritbt to experience their feellnp and ·
Identity."
Sandy Udovch and
daughter, Carynn, enjoy
a moment on the swing. --
•
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tuesday,October19,1976 Bt
Considering herself to be
somewhat independent. she said
it was difficult at first bei ng tol d
what to do all the lime. She re·
belled against it for the first
seven days, she said, and didn't
r eally enjoy herself.
"I r ealized if I didn't start look·
ing at the beautiful scenery I
wasn't going-to get anything out
of it.'' she said, adding the mem-
bers or her patrol were encour ag·
ing and worked as a team.
..
At the end of their solos, Miss
Lee had lost 15 pounds alfd
Operacz' wool pants that ~ere
light fi tting in the beginning~ad
to be cinched in at the waist.
Despite the various bardshfJ16
they bad to overcome durinl tbe
23 <hys, Miss Lee and ()per(lcz
highly r ecommend Outw~
Bound to other students. ·
"Do it now before you get'too
old," advised Operacz. "It Will
help you the rest o! your life."
·.~. !:
8% DAILY PILOT Tuesday. October 19 1978
. ,•
Price Paid · Much Too , High (Ann Landers ~J
.~EAR ANN LANDERS: Not.
)4llt aao you ran a letter from a ~r whose kida ba.ssled her
beca"u.se she threw tbelr dad out
(he)lr'as a bum) and were mad at ~cause there was no man in ;t.t;, .house. I would like to tell
t..bpA'Q kid• to shut their traps.
Tbe! are LUCKY. W. live with two parents who
fl~\ over everythine from
~Y to why a pin is in the ·~a t. When they aren't on each
's backs they are on ours.
We" ve in fear that any minute
oiieof them will go berserk and 1 shoot us all.
In case you think we are trash,
I 'd like lo tell_y~u our father is a
Ideas Limitless
physician and Morn was a pro-
lessiooal person abo.
We wish our parent. had split
lone aeo instead of staying
together, threatening one
another constantly and maklng
nervous wrecks out of us kids.
Don't suggest counseling.
Each one feels the other is at
fault. They refuse to discuss
anything with a third party.
No advice needed. I just want-
ed to get in my 2 cents worth. -
TIUNK I'LL STAY SINGLE
DEAR THINK: I'm printing
your &eUer la the hope &hat some
warrln& parent& wW read It, see
how they look to &heir c.blldreo
aDd shape up.
:Ooo~s Opened
.... ~ .. ..
Rome Decorating Problem:
What can be done with a blank.
hallway, 15 feet in length?
Interior Design Solution: Use ~ured wall covering to add in-~i. or paint the doors the col· --~·the rooms they lead to, or l~~n a piece of contrasting
t:+t in front of each doorway.
!C:Jr . .do a bold gr aphlc or mural
·~ walls, or hang wood strips
!floor to ceiling with mirrors
een them to give a wider
~or ...
~~. The possibilities are almost
eftdNss.
TD· assist the homeowner in
Je~g basic skills .so she will
feel ·~onfident inventing and re·
i:ogaizing her own solutions, in-
ktjor design classee are being
of~ in Laguna Hills by Lee ~hff:. nationally known de-
ciorafor and color consultant.
' :rhe six-week course is aimed
at helping people do their own
hom e improving, b e a
knqwledgeable consumer if they
~.a decorator, and save mak· hrif~an expensive mistake with
something they'll have to live
wlt.h'}or a long time, she said.
NEW CLASSES
Head of Lee Mink & Associates
in Beverly Hills since 1970, Ms.
:Mink is offering classes for the
fiuttime.
A varied curriculum, which
Will cover all phases o! home
beautification, will include:
-Color psychology, the study
of how different hues make you
feel, "It's the easiest variable
and the first thing you notice
about a room," said Ms. Minic
-seasonal decorating. "Every
spring people seem to want to re·
do their rooms in yellow and
green. By changing accessories
and slip covers for a new look, a
room can refleet the seasons."
-SCale drawings. "By draw·
ing the layout of a room, it's
easier to see proportion because
you have a bird's eye view."
-Lighting. Ways lo achleve
moods and where lo place lamps.
-Methods of mixing patterns
and fabrics.
-Wall and floor coverings and
window treatments. "A textured
grass cloth on the wall will give a
different feeling than patent.
vinyl or mylar."
-Cost variances. For exam·
ple, a parquet wood floor and
good carpeting can be close to the
same cost.
-Furniture finishes and how
to order them.
-Upholstered pieces. ·
-Furniture and style periods,
how to mix and blend them.
Ms. Mink has had 10 years'
professional experience as an in·
terior designer. beginning as a
representali ve for a national
fabric manufacturer in 1967.
She noted, "We even have a
man enrolled in the classes. He's
Gharities ~.--..
Benefit
Services for the Blind,
lnc. and the Japanese
Retirement Home will
benefit from proceeds
raised by So· Phis of
Orange County at the
annual Fa ll Festival.
Jt will take place
Saturday, Oct. 23, in
the Santa Ana Elks
Lodge and will begin
with a social hour at
6:30 p.m . Enjoying
playground equip-
ment at Services for
the Blind is Albert
Willis. Watching him
are Shiz Okuda (left)
and Mae Murakami.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l 'm
wrltlng about that tall gtrl who
asked about the operation to
make her shorter. Why didn't
you tell her to move to Texas''
ll is very common to see very
tall girls in the Lone Star Stale
especially in Dallas, Fort Worth,
Houston and San Anlonh.>. l 'm
sure she would find happiness in
any one of theae fine cities. -
WANTING TO HELP r
D~AR WANTING: Sorry, but
the gJrl'a problem isn't the state
she's living In, il 's the state or her
mind. I suggested that she vlsU a
rebabllltatlon institute or a
spl.aal cord Injury center and see
what life la like la a wheelchair.
She would thea bfl gratdlll to
have two lel• to walk on -no
matt.er bow long.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: In a
recent column you responded to a
prostitute by saying, ··since you
are a member of the oldc::.l pro
fesston, you oughttoknow."
I'd like to point out that pro-
stitution is NOT the oldest pro-
fession. The Bible clearly speaks
of professions that are older. For
example : Jacob was a tailor,
Ishmael's sons were builders,
Laban was a sheepherder, Leah
was a housewife, Cain was a
f~er, Abel was a shepherd,
Jubal was a harpmaker, Noah
was a shipbuilder, Noah's wife
excelled in nnlmal husbandry
and Hagar was a maid-servant.
All these professions were
mentioned before the Harlot.
There's nothing like knowing
your fa cts, Ano. -JUST /\
READER
DEAR FRIEND: You are
more than .. J••t A )leader."
You're • student of the Bible and an alert one, at that.
And now a word &o all pro·
atltutes. No fair calling
yourselves me111bers or the
oldest proreaalon. You've been
pre·dated, Sirls. From now on.
atlck to "Lacliea of tbe Evealai."
Proof's
In the
Pudding
For years, the battle has raged
on about whether a child is the
product of his heredity or his en-
vironment.
To me, the division has always
been clear·cut.
A child is influenced by three
factors: life about him, plus
dominant genes from bis
mother's side and dominant
genes from bis father's side.
Ironically. all three of our
children share evenly in the dis-
tribution.
C 0 N F 1 D E N T I A I, T 0
CREDIT-CARD CRAZY: Your
wile and millions or others are
getting no bargains. They arc
merely postponing the agony of
paying the bill. And 1t 's costing
her (and all the others> plenty -like 18 percent yearly interest.
Discov~r bow to be dntf! hail withouL falling hook, line and
sinker. Ann Landers' booklet.
''Dating Do's and Don'ts," will
help you be more poised and sure
of yourself on dates. Send SO
cents in coin along with a long,
stamped, self.addressed en-
velope with your request to Ann
Landers, P.O. Rox 1400, Elgin,
Ill. 60120.
AT ·
WIT'S
END
controllable ·cowlicks, weak
ankles, Inability lo conquer
math, tendency to put on weight,
short interest span, sulking over
Monopoly, shyness, a definite
weakness for losing anything of
value, car sickness, poor taste in
friends, the lack of wisdom to
know when they've l05t an argu.
ftlent and a hang.up about
Brussels sprouts.
To many parents, It might
seem very discouraging knowing
that certain traits in your chlld
are predestined.
But all tbe mothers I've talked
with, without eX"ception, were
able .to supply the saving genes
that gave their children the
motivation to go on living.
Lee Mink Conducts Cla11es
From their environment they
gleaned bad language, poor judg·
ment. hopeless dependency on
the telephone. lack of motor
skills to pick up a towel or
replace a cap on ,the toothpaste.
little realism concerning money,
disregard for responsibility and
job opportunities, the need for 18
hours of sleep, impetuous de-
cisions that never work out. a
·dress code that is sub-standard.
and a rash that appears when it is
suggested they write a thank· you
note.
From their father they inherit-
ed s hortness. frequent
nosebleeds. poor spelling, over·
confidence, no memory. toeing
in, allergies to dust and mold, un-
I know from my side or the
family, our children have inherit-
ed good skin, good grades, ins·
tant comprehens ion, imagina·
lion, coordination, a sense of
humor, good posture, straight
teeth, sensitivity, appreciation of
the art.a, moral values, integrity.
a good feeling about money, in-
finite patience, loyalty and are.
champions of the underdog.
going to hire a decorator, but
first he said he wanted lo be a
smart consumer.••
Classes will be held on
Thursdays. beginning Oct. 21.
from 9:30to11:30 a.m. or rrom 7
to 9 p.m. at the Brig restaurant in
Laguna Hills. One flat fee of $50
is t"haued and silrn·UDS will be
taken at the first session.
As my husband observed.
"Don't forget humility. That's
your strongest trait."
You know, I think he's right.
Cancer Analyzes
WEDNESDAY,
OCTOBER20
By SYDNEY OM ARR
ARI ES (March 21·
Financial situation is March 20): Accent on
featured in connection gaining sense of direc-
with partner, m ate. tion being sure of legal
PISCES (Feb. 19 .. rights, permissions.
April 19): Job gels dof!-e ----------;:;;;;;;mp;;;;;miii;;;;:;;:;;=;;:;
;0~:~Pr;:~v~f.tter, ga.m Injured JewelrJ?
TAURUS (April 20· Fine Jewelry healed by UPHOLSTERY -...i-oj._._.rwr:"':' May 20): Emphasis on gentle j ewele rs -W.-Y•W...t
speculation, romance, Jewelry appraisals by ..._ ~"
dealings with children. graduate gemologist -1922 H..t>w lt•d.
GEMINI (May2l·June Cu s tom d es igne d c..toM"-541-025' jewel ry. 1"-~;:;;,;:.;;;.;:.;:;;;;.;.-..~~_.
20): Complete transac-Fi M G lion. Become famili ar ve ems
with basic m aterial. c.!?!!'~::,!•;.,
CANCER (June 21· 645-1909
Call 642-5678.
Put a lew words
to work tor ou. July 22): Spotlight on ._ __ ......, ....... ___ _
short trip, significant-------------------
call or message, news
concerning r elative in
transit. Be analytical.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22):
Payments, collections
are featured.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22): Take initiative; be
confident. direct, in· ·'
dependent.
UBBA (Sept. 23-0cL ~ .. earn.1ng Disabilities. Studied ~~·~~;;:r.:~:r: club. institution.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·~----------------'s p E c I AL normal adults to give Saturday,Oct.23,inthe TOASTMISTRE~ES: Center .the annual Nov.21): Don'tpressls-
PR o GRAM s : The viewers an ldt:a of :what Mission Viejo home of Laguna members will p~ade will take placeOcat sues. Leave details for
Puzzle Children (those it's like to be mtelligent . Dr. and Mrs. John M. hear a book review by 6.30 p.m. Thursday, t. a n 0 t h e r t i m e • wi~b learning dis· yetunabletocompletea Fowle. A potluck Eve Schweit.zer in the 26. . • be anted · SAGITl'ARiUS <Nov.
ablUes) will be tbesub-almpletask. barbecue ls planned. Laguna Federal Build-• Prizes will aw 22.0ec. 21): SpoUigbt on ject 9f an hour program A folloW·UP program PHI MU: Mrs. Paul lng at 7:20 p .m. Monday, lll three dlff~rent ta:e goal, career, prestige, to~ presented at 9 p.m. on learning disabilities Niel, national collegiate • OcL 25. ~.:i!: ti:ost ~~ginaJe general standing in com· W61nesday, Oct. 20, on will be presented 10 p.m. sorority extension direc· BANN AR. R ATCR. w,..... ' ' munlty
K0t:E,Cbannel50. It wlll include tes~g tor, •ill visit Orange CllAP'l'Ell: A Bicenten· f~est and beat Blcen· CAPRICORN (Dec. ~boating the show · and ldentityihllog speoandal County chapters Mon· nlal Film will be shown tennialSalute. . 22-Jan. 19): Accent on ~be Julie Andrews edueaUon c drt etin. day,Oct.25. after an 11:30 a .m. BAZAAR: United philosophy, educational WBbby. give a presen a on on luncheon in the Garden Methodist Women or project. long·dislance
0 one has disco.end Mard !ln Center oI UNJVEllSITY OF Grove Women's Civic Christ Church by ~eSea communication. ~!~Uon for learning ,Educational Tbera~y. MAJlYJAND ALUllNJ: aubbouse. The group is will have a bazaar from 1 AQUA R 1 US ( J ~ties but one ol 'lbe programs will be Anelectlcm luncheon will •ffiliated with the to 7 p .m. Wednesday, ·20-F b l&)· E oti 8 '!i
th't:_..anawm 1eem1 to He repeated at 6 and 7 p.m. take place SundaJ. Oct. Dau g b t er s of t be · Oct. 27, at the church. . i · i ls m ~
U ~e way the bralD pro-Saturday• Oct. 23. 2', in Irvine Coast. Coun· American Colonists. Newport Beach. mvo vemen accen
~ informaUou !rvm KAPPA 11.APPA GAii· try Club. Precedin& tbe ff. A LL O W E B N-----------------1
CJUt'yesandean. MA: Saddleback· sesaionauo:aoa.m.will PARADE: Sponsored ELLY BEANS Ai the rum. a couple of Caplatrano Valley Alam· be a aoelal featuring 1oinUy by the Huntington a~ and optical trleb nae will have their Kap. ~ of Maryland foot· Deacb Junior Woman's te~t>orarUY dlaorlent pa Kaper at 7:30 p.m. hlibliahtloU97S. Club and Hunlineton :
~hristian Science
F· Heals! • • t -lEARN HOW av ATIENOUIG A FREE LECTURE
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~ott'141
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Roatd of L«~itt
OCT. 21. t:OO flM
f int Qluf'dl Of ClwtU, Sco9!111U
3303 Via Lido
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IN CO~l.tGt ' 1t> LOOI( FOfl A J08
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INSIDE WOODY ALiEN by Joe Mm Hu
Ye~ ' MeD1~'f€ UJ M!Wf€9 A
r:JAY ... iH1llK. OF
NOffilllG fOR
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RIMKY WINKERBEAN
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2't HOJ RS
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H~ WWA
TV tJ~'fWOR(
V~E
PReS1 DEN'f.
byT• lathlk
In the r3.Ce for
Student Council Pres-
ident ...
"Crazy'Harry, a well-
known freak' has
thrown his hat into
the ring!
It's the first time
it's been off his head
in over four years!
TANK McNAMARA
NANCY
WHY DON'T
YOU JOIN
THAT CLUB?
NO··· THAT'S FOR
LITTLE K IDS ···I'M TOO
OLD AND MATURE
FOR THAT GROUP
by Jeff Miler & Ill Hinds
by Ernie Bushmiller
THE VlllUE OF VEIA V AUAMT
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR. SMOCK
OU'f'WARPc..Y, 'f'Me \NORC..P sees o...,&..YA COOL.. L..APY
PMYSICIA...,, PR. FRAYL.11 •••
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
TODAY'S CRDSSIDBD PUZZLE PEAMU__,Ts..---~ r---------by Cltmtes M. ScWz
UNITED Feature Syndicate Mondrf aPuute SOlveo:
ACROSS money. 3
W()(ds
1 Small 44 --line:
barracuda Radar
5 Slluale system
precisely 45 Also
9 Old-46 1noenuous:
lashloned var.
14 Cartlonated 4 7 AgrtWttural
<kink tracts
15 Span 49 Furnishes
16Planokey with seeds
meterl81 53 Preven1 tn 17 liOht·welOht advance 11 N N
metal: Abbr. 67 SalllnO o E s G N A r ~i:.:.ii.;.."""'
18 Sheep vessel Shelter 58 Praylno oroup 35 Farm 19 Jules --· 11,.,re 6 Ship's Implement
F th ,,.. 104'war<l 36 Show r. au or 59 Stratum dlapleature
20 Weighed 6 1 Fraorant oil: 7 GP~ourt P of 37 Better tht111 down var. 22 B.C. or 62 Carrotl elOllt none: 3 wu" 8 Ancient word& ""''· cheracler Gre.... •O uaea the native 63 Notion -t I 24 P1escrlbed 6 4 Sandarac dlalect g:Jc,
bel04'ehand tree 9 Tum Hide 42 --YOl'tl or
26 Tyrants: 85 Hermit, e.g. 10 Declares Dix
Var. 66 Sura thing· poaltlvely 43 Bunlt!OI•
27 "You da1't Siano . 11 ~acer~~ed 46 fi~lor teeter sayt" 67Had 12 eabr 47 8eev&1lve 29 Dwelllng compeulOl'I l3Color •8Ba .. 11nner'1 unit; Abbr. wortler mMeUYW
30 Water Illy OOWN 21 African SO -011111:
leaf 1 lndlan native Perla 33 Not subject 1rop11y 23 R9COfdino c1t1edfal
to division 2 Opposite In medium 51 Comple'9
37 Puncture dltriot• 25 E. lndltn g~ ~ecrHtlOl'I
38 lnatrument 3 Eacape fabric .:~11 39 Food of The detection 28 Tactful 54 Plinth: Atdl.
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40 Medltltflfl• 4 Clrcua 3, Utah 5e !:
ean Island pertormtta· community .Cy
41 Cupkfa 2 words · 32 Clergym1n 80 etrey one·•
counterpart 5 U.S. mil. 33 RetrlQ9flled comrldte 4 2 Borrow 34 Boundety
--, --JUDGE PARKER
MISS PIACH
••
L
1 D<)(r KNaU.~MAA'8€
ME WENT 1t> NEELUS
1lJ VISIT HIS 6ROTHEJL
•
by Harold Le Doux
EXal5E IAE, Ml5S FfWIKUC •..
THERE'S A PM0HE CALL ~ 'l'OO
... A MR. GNl:f FA'IOf<! t TOLD
l4IM YOU WW ftiT OINHER ... &UT
HE 5AIO IT Wi6 IMPORTAMT !
\
'
Tiac!!y, October 19, 197&
~
DAILY PILOT S
' .
by George LetnOet
by Gus A"'1.
by Ferd John~
IMAGIN~ AWoN~ FAJ.~ING FO~THAT
'---' LINE??
THE GIRLS .... -:; .... '
:
.,
,,. ...
' . ·.·.·
.. ...
-· , ----IO-~· ; .. All the mardting I've been doing lo protest building a highla~"
through our pe.rt is rally aettina results-already l'•e taken otf
two inches around my waist and throe around my hips." ..-; .... DENNIS THE MENACE
1
~
~ a ~ -.-l
'rllS IS"IME tBT MUJl6 sn&Tlffb.N! A SU soi;
N( >. rM1f ll:Jf. Nl A P#fRf ~IN A RON I• ",. . _...
. B DAILY PILOT Tuelday. October 19, 1918
Reds Rookie Zac .
. NEW YORK CAP) -Cincln·
Jtati Reda manager Sparky An·
derson isn't about to write off the ~ew York Yankees and Yankee
qianager Bllly Martin thinks he's
tyiae not to do so.
• "I said before the World Series tie1an that I thought it would go
teven games," Anderaon said
tiefore the series resumed tonight
With game three. "I think I'll
12.ick with that.
: "The Yanks are an excellent
<nub. They have to be to be in the
~ries. They've won three or four Ill a row before and they can
always do It again." Anderson
said.
The Yanks will have to do Just
that to 1et back into this series
OnTl'To•tg)aC
Chaaael 4 at 5d5
They lost the first two games in
Cincinnati, S· 1and4·3.
Only six times in 73 previous
World Series has a team been
down 2-0 and come back to win
the championship. And two of
those teams were Yankees teams,
in 1956 against the Brooklyn
Dodgers and two years later
against the Milwaukee Braves
"I thank Sparky's right,"
Martin said of Anderson's con·
servative stance. "I think we
have the edge at home because
we're more used to the natural
grass. And we're very easily
capable of turning this thing
around in a hurry.
"I 'm not all that impresesed
with their pUching," Martin con·
tinued. ··But 1 am impressed
with the rest of their club. Still. I
can't call them awesome the way
CHRIS CHAMBLISS LEADS THE YANKEES AGAINST CINCINNATI TONIGHT.
J{ozelleRule Grogan Stars
'
Unlawful, New Erigland Fans
Says Court F orgettirig Plunkett
ST. LOUIS A federal ap-
:peals court opinion Monday
·which upheld an earlier court
.ruling against the National Foot·
,ball League'l> Rozelle Ruic drew
,optim1sllc praise from the two
chief protagonists in the case -
the league and the NFL Players
•Association.
• A three-Judge panel of the 8th
•U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals up·
•held the Minnesota District
Court's ruling that the Rozelle
.Rule is unlawful and in v1olallon
:or feder a l a ntitrust la ws
• Howt.'\'Cr. the cou:-t also found
:that "some reasonable rcstric·
:tions relating to player transfers
:are necessary for the successful
•operallon of the NFL" and sug.
gested that s uch re!>triclions
should be negotiated.
The appeals court ordered the
cast• remanded to the district
court. where the players' de-
mand for damagt•s l>l1ll is to be
settled.
Reds f'at•orf-d
RENO -Nl?vada oddsmakers
say the Cincinnati Reds are 10 to
)3 favorites in the third game or
the 1976 World Series.
In gambling parlance, 10 lo 13
mf'ans a $13 bel pays $23 if you
win.
&>rie• w,-aiher
· NEW YORK -The weather
.bureau said the temperature will
'be near 50 degrees when the New
·York Yankees and lhe Cincinnati
Reds meet in the third game of the
World Series tonight at Yankee
Stadium. I Winds will vary from 5 to lO
,milesanhour.
Solo•on Win•
BARCELONA, Spain -Harold
Solomon beat II. Marten of West
Germany. 7-6, 6-3 in the opening
round of the 24th Count or Godo
tennis tournament Monday.
Other Americans advancing
were Vitas Gerulaitis, Pat Dupre
and Terry Moore. Gerulaltis
jdowned Patrick Proisy, France,
1~·3 , 6-2; Dupre beat Juan
1Gi.llbert, Spain, 6·7, 6-4, 6-4, and
~oore beat Australia's Colin
Dibley, 6·3, 2·6, 7 ·5.
l.Alker• Cut T"'o
LOS ANGELES -Veteran
forward Corky Calhoun and
rookie guard Wayman Britt were
released on waivers Monday by
the Los Angeles Lakers.
Guard Stu Lantz was placed on
injured reserve, which prevents
his playing before the end of the
five games of the season, which
starts Thursday maht in New
York.
, Tbe reductions trlmtned lhe
1.akera roster to tbo 12-man
, limit.
aue110£o•n
FOXBORO. Mass. (AP) -
Steve Grogan. the Ne.., England
Patriots ' sop homor e
quarterback, isn't yet compara-
ble to such National Football
League scramblers as Fran
Tarkenton and Roger Staubach,
but he loves to run as much as
pass.
The 23-year-old former Kansas
State star has done both in mak·
ing New England fans forget
about traded Jim Plunkett while
learung the Patriots to a surpris·
tng 4·2 record .
Grogan enjoys running so
much that he even scores
touchdowns on broken plays. He
rud that twice Monday night,
sparking the Patriots to a 41·7
romp over the New York Jets
before a national television au·
ruence.
Grogan, who received a tele·
gram signed by about 500
hometown friends from Ottawa,
Kan .. celebrated his debut on na·
tional TV with a spectacular
performance that stole the
thund e r from veteran
quarterback Joe Namath of the
Jets.
He completed 14 of 23 passes
for 145 yards and one touchdown.
He also carried seven times for
103 yards, including a 41-yard
scoring sprint.
And he scooped up a fumble by
teammate Don Calhoun at the
New York six and ran for a touch·
down.
"Grogan had an excellent
game, a super game," Jets coach
Lou Holtz said. "The tale of the
game was the offensive line.
·'They protected Grogan and
opened holes in play action.
When we bJi tzed inside, be
* * * Al FOMbOrO -SO ... )
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New E"Ol•nd 1 ll ti 0-.1
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RECEIVING -N•w Yorl;, GeiMS .. "; Glem-
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Ef'ff'e"41. JoM,on 4·41 ; Fra11t•\ 1-41; vet<ll\e 1·34.
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0..n0-2-0.
Grid Ratings
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I Mltll Ull ~ I Ut 11 Flt 4 I 0 , ..
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t Tt•T<ll ~ <IM 1• Ala ._,.. II
stepped outside. When we blitzed
outside, he stepped inside. He
sure has some horses in front of
him and behind him."
Grogan's pickup of Calhoun's
fumble for N ew England's
second touchdown in the second
period was the broken play.
However. his run for the fourth
touchdown in the Uurd quarter
was electrifying.
"A couple of his runs were
planned, a couple weren't," New
England coach Chuck 1-·a1rbanks
said. "The long one for the
touchdown was not designed for
him to carry the ball."
"Most plays are not designed
for me to turn, but I took off
about four limes on my own
tonight," Grogan said. "They
were giving it (quarterback
runs) to us."
However. the J ets didn't give
Grogan the run when he took off
for has sixth touchdown of the
season. There was a mix up in
signals in the New England
backfield, so Grogan kept the
ball himself. found a hole on his
left side, picked up blocks from
tackle Leon Gray and guard John
Hannah and raced for the score.
"ll was really exciting playing
a Monday night football game."
Grogan said. "You want to do
well when you know the people
back home are all watching."
Namath, 33. and in his 11th
NFL campaign, completed 16 of
l7 passes for 135 yards and one
touchdow11, only his second of the
season. before retiring to rest a
pulled hamstring in the third
perl~. -
The Jets now are 0-8 In the
long-standing weekly television
series and 1·5 overall for this
season.
Faces . F:IJis Tonight
some people have. 'J he Yankees
clubs that ( played on, when we
woo five World Series in a row,
that's awesome." .
Martin sends 31.year-old rlght·
hander Dock EIHs to the mouud
tonight in hopes of turning things
around. .Ellis turned himself
around this year aft.er coming to
New York as a virtual throw-in in
a trade with the Pittsbu rgh
Pirates. After several stormy
and ineffective seasons. he post·
ed a 17·8 record this year.
"I hate cold weather. l don't
like pitching in it. I don't think
* * *
anyone likH playing in tt." Ellis
said, viewing lbe possibility ot
playlnc In sub·freeiinc tem·
peratures in Ya.n.keeStadium.
"Mayb e, eventually ,
bueball 's going to do something
about tbis. Maybe they'll get
tired of playing tb1.a late. I don't
think NBC and the others have
enoueb money. . . "
Ellis &aid be was in no way
nervous about being the man on
the spot. "It's just another eame to me," he said. "You've got to
ta.\e each game as it comes. You
can"t get Jll worked up over one
* * * Hunter Prai..•ed,
Yankees of '61
Better--Kuhek
NEW YORK (A P) -The New
York Yankees are no Little
League team. After all, they're
the American League cham·
pions. Yet former Yankee Tony
Kubek thinks only one player
from New York's 1976 club could
have started for the Yankees in
1961.
Kubek says that ol the present
Yankees regulars. only Catfis h
Hunter would definitely fit Into
the pinstripes of the Yankee
powerhouse. which crushed the
CiRcinnali Reds in the World
Series 15 years ago.
Kubek, a cog on six Yankee
pennant.winning teams in the
late :>es and early 60s, considers
himself a somewhat biased his·
torian. but he was willing to com·
pare the two clubs that are
separated by much more than 15
years and new double knit
knickers.
"It's really hard to make com·
parisons." says Kubek, part of
NBC's baseball broadcasting
team. "The game's changed so
much, with expansion, relier
pitching, artificial turf and the
designated hitter.
"But the only guy I feel cer·
tainly would m ake the 1961
Yankees would be Hunter." Cal·
fish, five-lime 20-game winner,
would fit nicely Into then·
Yankees manager Ralph Houk's
rotation. which included Whitey
Ford, Bob Turley and Ralph
Terry.
The 1961 Yankees brought tape
measures wherever they went.
They hit a major league record
240 homers that year, with Roger
Maris and Mickey Mantle com·
bining for 115. They won 109
games, second most ever by a
Yankees team, winning their
second of five straight pennants.
The streak ended in 1964. the
last time the Yankees won the AL
pennant until this year's team,
beaded by Hunter a.ncJ bitters
Thurm an Munson, ~ick ey
Rivers and Chris Chamblis~'·
Catcher: "Thurman Mu..-on's
a helluva g-ood player, but could
he have beaten out Yogi Berra J}r
Elston Howard?" asked Kubek..
Berra, a Hall of Famer, balled
.285 with 358 homers in his 19-
ye a r major lea1ue career.
Howard hit 167 homers and
batted .274 In 10 seuons.
First base: "I like Chambliss.
but Moose Skowron bit over .300
four straight seasons and he was
a good defensive first baseman,"
Kubek s aid. In 14 seasons.
Skowron batted .282 and slugged
211 homers.
Second base: "I know Willie
Randolph's a good, young player,
but I can't say I'd take hlm over
Bobby Ri c hard s on ."
Richardson. one of the smoothest
Yankees infielders, batted .266 in
l2seasons.
Shortstop: "Shortstop, I can't
say," said Kubek. who happened
to play that position for the 1961
Yankees. A slick shortstop with a
s trong arm. Kubek batted .266 in
nine seasons.
Third base: "Graig Nettles
had a great year and he has
power, but no one ever played
third base like Clete Boyer."
Kubek said.
Outfield: "People forget that
l lector Lopez drove in a lot of
runs for us and he was in and out
of the lineup," Kubeksaid.
Mantle, a Hall of Farner, is six·
th on the• alltime home run list
with 536. His lifetime batting
average was .298. He was an ex·
cellent outfielder. In 1961. he
slammed S4 homers. scored 132
runs. knocked in 128 RBI and
batted .317.
Maris hit a record 61 homers In
161 games, and had a powerful
arm in right field .
UCLA Stars Lauded
Bukich, Baslwre Sparkled
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Jeff Dankworth leads the undefeated
UCLA Bruins football team, but coach Terry Donahue bas a couple
of nuggets ready to take over whenever needed.
The Bruins go to Berkeley to face California Saturday, which
has its No. l quarterback, Joe Roth, ailing.
This fall, Dank worth bas led the Bruins to a 5·0·1 mark and 2·0 In
the Pac-8.
Dankworth will be the starter for UCLA, however. and Donahue
found he has a couple of most capable backup men. Former
Newport Harbor High star Steve Bukicb came as no surprise. He let
tered as a freshman two seasons ago and then red shirted in 1975.
After Washington St.ate fell behind the Bruins 28·0, Donahue took
Dankworth out and after the first quarter the regular saw action on·
ly to run in the touchdown that put the score at 35·0.
Bukich did well, said Donahue.
"Bukich gets better as he plays,·· Donahue said Monday. "He
geu better and better as the game goes along. He has to learn to set·
tie down, not to rush things." When the Bruins scored four more touchdowns en route to their
62·3 victory over Washington State last Saturday, Donahue called on
Rick Bashore, a freshman from Edison High <Huntington Beach).
Bashore took over and engineered a ~-yard touchdown march.
"I was very impressed with the 18-year-old quarterback," said
Donahue. ·•He had excellent poise and he looks like a real comer."
,.,. .. ,.. .....
game, no matter how 1mportanL
it may seem. You can only do
what you are capable of doing.
It's the same w"y all over, start·
ing with Little Lc•gue."
Going against j:llis will be
rookie Pat Zachry, u. 24-year-oltl
right-hander who was 14· 7 this
year .
Zachry finds himself in an un·
usual position, playing in a. ball
park he always wnnWd to plav ih
-but in the wrong wUform.
"The Yanks were always my
favorite team Crom the time I
was growing up,·· he said.
OVEJOHANNSON
Set Field Goal Record
~m--ning
HowtoKick
By Tbe AiSoc\ated Press
No Texan worth his lizard skin
cowboy boots eve'r' figured a
Swedish Import a,.S a small·
footed Aggie would boll!. the Lone
Star State into the naLionaJ col·
legjate football spotlight.
The Swedish import -Abilene
Christian University's Ove
Johannson -boomed a r«ord
69-yard fi eld goal last Saturday,
whjle the s mall-footed Aggie -
Texas A&M '11 Tony Franklin -
drilled 64 and 65-yarders.
Johannson's kick was an NAlA
and collegiate record, while
Franklin's barefoot kicks -with
his size eight Coot -set NCAA
marks.
"When Ove hit the ball, it
sounded like a rifle shot," said
Abilene Chri stian reser ve
quarterback Dean Low. who held
for Johanl16on 's record-breaking
kick in the Wildcats' 17·0 victory
over East Texas State. "I knew
he hit it just right."
The soccer-style field goal by
the 28·year-old J ohannson, a
former NAIA soccer All·
American, was only the fourth of
his career. His previous best kick
was a 43-yarder.
The native of Gothenburg,
Sweden never had kicked a foot-
ball before last January and
earned a scholarship at Abilene
Christian during spring practice.
Last fall . he came to Abilene
Christian, where his girl friend
was a student, after leading
Elkins. W. Va. College into Lhe
1975 NAIA soccer final. Due to
collegiate rules, this is his first -
and l ast ~ year of eligibility.
"I've never hit the ball as good
as I did that one,'· he said. ··Even
the approach was good."
After his two lon g kicks in Tex-
as A&M's 24 -0 victory over
Baylor. Franklin said. "My goal
is to kick one 70 yards. That third
one Saturday would have been
good from 70 yards. I knew it was
good the minute I hi lit."
Franklin's 64-yarder in the
second quarter broke the NCAA
mark or 63 yards. set by Clark
Kemble of Colorado State last
year. But In the third period, he
broke his own murk with the 65-
yarder.
The 5·10. 170-pound sophomore
has made 19 career field goals In
18 games at Texas A&M. I
Both kickers were alded by a 1.6
mile-per-hour wind.
Rams' Haden
Practices
LONG BEACH (AP) -Los
Angeles Rams quarterback Pat
Haden and Ron JawoTSkl showed
up at practice Monday apparenU
ly with no Ul etf ec:t.s from Sum
day's action.
~ the Rams beat the Chicago
Bears, Haden was knocked out at the end of the first quarter with
hh club leadi.n110-0.
Jaworski, wbo only five weeks·
earlier bad broken a sboulde.r.: came on 88 Chica'° scored .u
point. to go ahead but .raworskJ
engtneered two (owtb quarter
d.rtves to earn a20·10~.
I PALM SPRINGS -Australian
Wendy Turnbull, fresh from a
,._2, S-0 ,weep over Brull'• Marla
Bueno, faces No. 1·teeded Betty
$love tonl1bt in t.be S!00,000 1Jnaugural women's tcobl5 ,~ament sin des semifinals.
t Olllo SI •t·1 '4l "5 c.t '"HI 16 IO GffrQla S.--0 1 ~ JO E Car H_. II (lltl 11\itt.S. S 1'4 I) %HE PATRIOTS' TIM FOX STOPS LOUIE GIAMMONA IN NFltACTtON MONDAY.
He aaJd afl.r the game lb at hi•
shoulder waa tore, but appeared
all rt1ht in the Monday practice.
Haden, the rookie from th•
Unlveralt)' of Southe rn
Callfornta, bad re1aided hia
senses before lbe tnd ot the gamf
and also worked ouL
~· .
Tuesda , October 19. 1916
Offensive Players of the Week· CIF Ratings
Barons Retain
No. 1 Position
WIN PRIZES
WORTH eo.chH et Each Alee School Sefect Pl1yera of the WHk.
MARC JOHANNES
Corona det Mar
BOB CHARLES
Et Toro
CRAIG FRENCH
Laguna Beech
Pickeroo
Winners
This week's Pigskin
_Pickeroo football guess·
mg contest winner came'
a long way lo get into lhC'
action but came through
the upset-riddled com·
petition with only six
wrong to earn the clear·
cut victory.
DAN DUDDRIOGE
Costa Mesa
KIRK LANGDALE
Estancia
CARL CHERRY
Marina
]
NEIL JENSEN
Dana Hiii•
WILLIE GITIENS
Fountain Valley
JIM DICKSON
Mater Del
JIM JUDO
Edl1on
Fountain Valley Beach 's Marina ls
High's Barons continue fourth, Fountain Valley
their domination ot the ls slxtb and Huntin&'\on
CIF 4·A football poll Beach seventh in 4·A. following tbelr firth lnB-manfootballHunt·
• straight win, capturtng lnaton Beach's Liberty ·
18 of a possible 20 ftrat ChrtaUanlsNo. 7.
place votes. •·• ""'"" The only other Oranse ;:=~1~1~·:~1°·01 !~ Ooalt area team to re->.s.v11e1~1 1'°
celve vot es in any '·"0'""°'0.01 1u s.s.nttMoftlt• 1~.01 10t clustflcatJon was South •.si .... uHMI "
Coast L g l d 1 lll"'°PA,...1 IS-0) tt ea ue ea er a.S1.Fr•M1,u.01 10 Corona del Mar, 11th in •.~eo111 .. et+.11 u
2-A action with a 4-1 re-IO Plvs 11 '"11 • 1•
rd 01111n 1 Mvlr, Wot Tor,.,.ce,
CO • CVl>'tU, Ntwbllry P4r-. ~ Mlrcos.
Fountain Valley's re-t.Soll ... ,•~~~11
cord this week will be , er.~ ... 1eve11ou-01 !~ t ested at Newport i.v111e P.,_1M1 1~
Harbor Friday night, ;:~=1~Y <s.o> ::~
while Corona del Mar 6-1<11o1111"1.+o '4
meets Dana Hills Salur· ~·:C~k":11':.!r1 ~ day nieht al Newport •.s...1Mr1"°1..i1 •s
H bo Both F •-•-10 Stft1tAMV•lley(MI 22 ar r. OUD~a OU•trs: t..omooc. lit ""°""'· Valley and Corona del 1ftQI.-. 11ewr1v H111,. T......,.. ci-Mar will be favored to 1v.Nof1111uversldt,S<ll11rr,CM-. 1·Al'MtNll win ag!Un. U.eHttwt IS-01 100
Tb~ area 'a dominance i. "'°Mou <s-o> ue J. KtMtcty (B•rs.I (HM I 119 in cross country and • s-.,.,._., m
~~1~~s;i~~~~ Water polo play iS again S.Aftltlot»lf•lltYIN).11 116 •.HorttVl,I• 14.0.11 ' 9S . evident with Newport 1.•90"'•1•-0-11 H '"''~ Harbor High 's water a.Ne11 1M1 s.
l h t AvltllOI\ 144-1 I 56 MARCO PAGNANELLI po o t.eam t e No. 1 10 eo.c1>t1t•V•1t•v<•·o1 so
Huntjnnton Beach squad in 4-A circles and 0111ers: coro"• d•• Mar, s1. •• Costa Mesa's 3-A cr""'S e .. rn•rch. Ct Jon, Esoeranza, s.... ._ 01mH,VerbvmO.I.
RICK GROVER
Mission Vlefo
country team atop the •·Ac:teuc.111 .. trv field. 1 VIII• Perk t . Edl\01\ J. FootllUI •. Merln• S. Crescenlt v.-llty 6. Foun· Al s 0 g a in in g a t••n V•llo 7, H""tonoton ~act> •. measure of recoaniUon Wetlmlnster•. 8ur.,.nk 10. Kennedy. . "' J.A Creu Cevfttry 111 water polo are Irvine's 1 Cost• Mew 1. uo••,.dl. valt«I•
University and Costa • ""'"left v1.1o s. eve ... Pa.-•·
Mesa. University is third ~==1~'.~~';:.~.·~01'~~00'S9• in 4-A rankings and 4-AW•ter ... 1.
Costa Mesa. also a South 1. l'Mwoort Har-1. S""nyHlll\l . Uftlwrslty 4 Mire Coste S. t..B Wlltoft Coast League team, is •· 1..11 Po•VT. a.wriv ""''*' O\tttev•. ninth. CosteMes.~,.;:~::~ ..
In cross country, Hunt-1 Uo•tftd t I.As AmlQOt, u Stn\t · gt Be h' Ed' l 4 Fooll\lllS IUverslde Poly• ~llo m on ac s lSOC\ s 1 El 0o<aoo 1 v1111 Pa,_•. CrHunt•
second , Huntington v.11.v10 "•""'°"'·
Sallta Ana, Eagles
Have Sintilar Marks
One thought will be on (145) a nd Sam M aisanai
the minds of both teams (170) handling most of
when the Santa Ana High the work. Only Williams
Saints .tangle with the is a senior.
Estancia Eagles in Cen-Thom as describes the t~ry League footbal~ ac· · Saints line as "not really t10~ Thursday night big but a little larger
(7.30 ) .at Newport than last year. Relative-
Harbor High School. ly speakin g we are
That thought will be to small except for a couple
escape the ce_llar in the of kids."
$3,600
IN'76
Sponsored by
* a=rfi> R e t.1ben·s
e::g/,(~ 10 0~ I~.·\l\.E rl
*
. .· . .. .. . . ... ~. ..
.... ..
Weekly Pigskin Pickeroo '76 winners ~~.
will share prizes worth more than $330 ,.·~:=
by selecting their choices of the win-· ~::
ners of 30 weekend football conteat1. ·~:. ....
The· Dally Piiot reader best predicting • ··
the outcomes of Pigskin Plckeroo '76
games will win a one-year membership
at the Nautilus Newport physical fitness
center, 4220 Von Karman Avenue, .• -
Newport Beach.. ";~. ~ ..
Second place winners will enjoy a din-
ner for two at the Moonraker Restaurant · ~
In Irvine, Reuben's Newport Beach or :•
Reuben's Costa Mesa.
Third place winners will be awarded · :=·
free car washes by Metro Car Wash :· ~
Systems at Harbor near Baker Street In
·Costa Mesa and Beach at Ellis Avenue
In Huntington Beach ..
RULES
...
" •,
G. F . Reynolds or Clearlake, Iowa is the champion and rece1\'es a AL VOM STEEG JOHN EDWARDS JOHN1DAV1S
league standu~gs. Bo!-b Sergio Hernandez
have been . winle~s 1.n (200) is at tight end, tbr~e pr~v 1ou s circ~t David Reyes (230) is at
outmgs·th1s season. with one tackle and Joe Kulp
each posting a w~ in (200) is at a guard post.
Pre -1 e ~ g u e a c t 1 ~ n . The Santa Ana coach <?ther~1se, .th.e Sa1.n~ says Estancia is ag-
tted with M1~s1on V1e10 gressive on defense.
t w.m1t "''" cntf'V ttt•,.k Mtow 0' • ,..''°"°'b'• fK1l"1••• ef It to ~lff tM t ortt•1t "'Rf',nor.i1tMt ti1c,,,,.., •. 1~ dief1ftl'd •\.tr. ••'n duOh<ltt •• Efttr1n mu it bf vftttortn "' ,.,,. Artd ,.._ •• to f•<thl .. tt 1"°'1•"9 Tf\oH •frt•tfrt Clon t COftlorm w11t M01\qu.tht1td
2. t~"1~~~:.G~~~. n~~.~:oo, '1•. S-" Ot1Mrtme111, ,. o. , year's mem bersh1p m the Ne wport Harbor San Clemente Un Ive ratty Nautilus physical fitness ___________________________ _:::__ __ an~ Estancia lost to "Theyarea lotlikewe ). Of\ty OM ffltry "' pitr\on ~rm1nfd f.tCf'I •""" Contt~U"O ,,.
•dvt\ed '"•' co"'''' ott1t1.tt\ m•v 1n¥•U••••• muthole '"'"'' , '"°"" • 'Ir.qt• •dOr-•\t or \ti"lqlt e"¥tf00f .aftd "''" O•\Qu.t•••v 111,..y • • center of Newport Beach
for his prowess.
Runnerup honors go lo
Cost a Mesa n Ron
Taylor, who actually tied
three other entrants with
Saints lnt,ade Thursday Edison. are," he says. "They do
Coach Bob Larson of fairly well on offense and
Santa Ana feels his team defense and throw and
may have a slight edge run the ball well Against ~th<?ugh be isn't admit· us, they'll prob~bly play
~~~ ::!~·:,'.~".,u,\ .~~~~:~·;~Oft~~·.~:r, ot t&Hka•\ on'"'' ""''
4. En1'1~ mv1t M OO\lm1tr1C•d "°' litff 1.._.n Ft1d•Y or mu\t M dt· •: hwre<l lO lht Dally Po lot CH'-Me•oUlll<tbY• PM, • '
·seven misses but got the
second place nod via the
tie breaker.
MD Foe Likes to Pass tu~~ it. . like gang busters." From our point of
view, we aren't playing a
s. ~"!~!llot •m,1ous •"O ,,,.., """'••11•1• t•mllln •r• 1101 t1itlblt .-
• TIE 8R£AKEll &LANI( MUST 8E Flt.LEO IN OR ENTRY IS YOIO. ' . '•
• Taylor wins dinner for
two at Reuben's Costa
Mesa or Newport Beach
or at the Moon raker in
Irvine.
Don Beck of Fountain
Valley is the third place
finisher and gets free car
washes at Metro Car
Wash Systems of Hunt·
ington Beach and Costa
fy1esa.
This week's football
baCner entry blanks will
be published today and
Wednesday in the sports
section of the Daily Pilot.
Area Calendar
WedftOOO IOCI lOI
W,1ft r P"'" Edl~OI'\ ..ti N•wp ,,.,
U1.1rbtH ••vnl lnqlon AtPiHh "' ~\tm'""'', r ''''"' .,. ,, n, •ltti'\O-1 '" •t l 1~' Foun1Mn\l•ll,.v v\ M.uu-.,,,,
NewJ)l')fl H•trMr f1 n rn 1, Ul lr¥1nitt
et USC 11 JOp m • Socte,-Soutt'itr'n C.3llorn1A Cnll~~
•t 'JN L1\ V•·q" ~"' m • G•t'I\ f'Ht\lu>lb..,11 0, HH)I" '·'·"I .u
$.anl.• An' ,,. , Full1rton 111 C,nlch'11
w-.1 !1"l111.
LONG BEACH-SL
Anthony High Schp0I of
Long Beach has a...,.ecord
of brilli''a nt
performances in football
in past years but coach
Mike Thomas isn't kid·
ding himself this season
as the Samts prepare for
their second Angelus
League encounter Thurs-day night (8) against
Mater Dei al Saota Ana
Bowl
The Saints have com·
piled a 2·3 record this
year , losing to Servile in
the circwt opener last
week. 35-7.
"We have a young
team on defense with a
f<'w more back on the of·
fensivc unit," Thomas
says.
"Up to last week we
had been playini;( pretty
~ood football but we
played horribly against
Servile.
"When you have to
play all night on defense.
HIGH·RISE VIEWS.
LOW·RISE
CONVENIENCE.
Gateway Plaza in Newport Center.
Four new buildings in a garden
office community.
outstanding views, high Identity,
prestige environment:
Up to 8,000 square feet per floor.
Free adjacent parking.
Free space planning.
G'.ATEW'AV Contact your broker Ml Ml or Bill Doiley or Tom UlmOfl
PLAZA ol Mallow-Kennedy Corporotton,
(714) 644·5165.
I••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• the other team is going to
score soont'r or later and
that's what happened to
us."
between three and four
yards per carry, and
Chester Smith (5·10, 175,
jr.) who is close to three
per try.
giant." he s ays. "But UCI Faces this is a game either ! ENTRY BLANK :.: ·: . :
team can win. : Name ........................................ _ ••• •
The Saints platoon
both ways with the of-
fense operating out of a
pro-I formation Passing
has been their chier
weapon in moving the
foo t ball and Thomas
feels he may have a new
quarterback ready to
handle the situation.
If the Saints are forced
to go to the kicking
gam e, Plum mer has
booted field goals of 32
and 37 yards this year
and is capable inside the
40-yard mark at any
"We have played San-T •
ta Ana Valley, Foothill r018fiS
and Villa Park and each .I
. .. :
: Addrttss • • • • • • • • . • • . .. .. . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . • :• ·!
: City .......................... Zip........... . :
JO<.' Plummer (6·2. 1~.
sr ) has been running the
team but had trouble
mo\'ing the ball last
week.
Sophomore Tim
Esposito (6·1. 170) took
over late m the Servile
ga me and may have
earned a starting assign-
ment aJ?ain st Mater Dei.
Running backs are An·
tonio Anderson (5-10, 165,
jr.) who Is averagt.ng
time. ·
The Saints line is about
average size with guards
in the 185-190 class and
tackles at 200, says
Thomas.
Whal does Thomas
think about Mater Dei?
"Probably their de-
fense is their biggest as-
set. They are bigger and
more physical than we
are and they will pose a
lot of problems for us.
They are ver y ag·
gressive on 'defense."
was undefeated when we
met them.''
Co mparative scores
usually mean very little
in games of this nature.
This is Thomas' third
year at the helm of the
Saints and he has a team
composed largely of
junior classmen.
Two quarterbacks
have been alternating at
the signal-calling spot.
Jerry Wallbridge and
Ken Cas t are both
juniors and both have
been improving on their
passing game.·
Quickness ls the key to
the Saints running game
with Mike Williams (150
pounds). Ray Chavez
WATCH EXCmNG ••••
ORANGE tCOASl COLLEGE
FOOT-~LL
THIS SATURDAY Nl&HT -O~T. 23rd
occ
vs.
FULLERTON
at Lelcrd Stadium on The OCC Campus
Game Time 7:30 P .M.
UC Irvine's water polo • • • team returns to action : Phone · .. ···•···• ....... · .. · .......... ·.... .,..:
tonight (7: 30), hosting • Circle teams you think will win this week's gamH :
USC at Newport Harbor ! Atlanta vs SF : ffi~. • ~
UCI's Anteaters, 8-3 : Rams vs New Orleans :
for the season, are com-: Baltimore vs NY Jets ing off an 8-5 setback to •
Stanford Saturday. : Chicago vs Dallas
Irvine also has a game : C Friday night, meeting : lnclnnatl vs Houston
Cal State <Long Beach> : Denver vs Kansas City
at 8:30 at Belmont Plaza • Detroit vs Seattle pool ln Long Beach. :
Gary Figueroa con-: Green Bay vs Oakland
Unues on a torrid scoring • Ml I T pace for the Anteaters. am vs ampa Bay
He's scored 49 goals. Minnesota vs Phlladttlphla
Freshman Jeff Hassett New England vs Buffalo ls second in scoring with
12 while Geor ge Newland Pittsburgh vs NY Giants
and Boyd Philpothavell. San Diego vs Cleveland
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ,: 1:
UCLA vs Cal
Oregon vs Washington
Oregon State vs USC
Arizona vs Texas Tech
Arkansas vs Houston
Maryland vs Duke
Florida vs Tennessee
Georgia v1 Kentucky
Michigan vs lndlana
Iowa State vs Colorado
Missouri v1 Nebraska
Notre Dame vs South Caronna
Purdue vs Ohio State
Oklahoma State vs Oklahoma
SMU va Texas
Boston College vs Army
Yale vs Penn
·. . . .: .. •
. . • • • , '• .
r •••• : .... • • • ... • .· .. • ... ~·! ..-:
: !• :
·~;.-~ ., .. • t ~,'. " • . ..... ··" .. I I •
·::} . •.. E . . ·~·. ... . . · .. ·:: ., ..• • • . ... , • . ' . • "' • ,4' /,,: , .. . .... . ,,; ... ; . . .
"'•'( • -·t ..... ·. ;.
t ·'· : .. ,, . .. •' ..
TIE BREAKER -My gu.ss on the total ·:· ;
ftumber of ~lnts KOred In all 30 gamu Is '•'·; ~!_)XII~' ·~iE~ ·--"""---TICllT PllCIS: .............. -·•: .. !i ~ ADULTS $1.IO IOI OFFfCI FREE PARKING , .. : : NEWPORT~~CENTER CHILDllMtt:oo OPINSAT GOOOPRICES • ..·~·i
by 1HE IRVJNE c:av1~ STUDIMTS Sl.00. 6:30 P..M. GREAT fOOTBAll : .::]~·
A ~11 .. ptac,. '<"" ho .n .. ,< "n b""~ •" .. '~"'"'"' IN i>eOOle • . 1 +--~_;_;._;;.~,.;._ ....... __ ~~~..-----~.;.;......---. ________ .,. ____ ..-.;;......,....,..., ................ "-------....:-. .... ...-.;.;.....;;.:o.;...:.,;-..; ________________ ..;;, __ .J.' . ' . ... ..............•........... , .....••.. ~.
. ·~ ..
"' •
I
OAILYPtLOT
Defensive Players of week GWHosts
Fullerton
DAN KILLION
Estancia
JOHN GLEASON
Mater Del
Renegades
Rated No.I
Ba ke rs field Coll~ge
has moved into the No. l
position in the Daily\
Pilot's Southl a nd J C
football poll.
COechff at &ch At•• School Select Pf ayer• of the Week Golden West College
1 women's baske tball
team. undefeated in
s even outings this
seas on , will hos t
Fullerton College Wed·
nesday night (7 :30) in an
lmportant conference
BILLGRILZ
Fountain Valley
RANDY BROCKMAN
Mlaslon Viejo
RANDY ROTH
Huntington Beach
MATT KAWAMURA
Newport Harbor
RAYSH~EKS
Edison
l ___ ....._jj·.
JEFF GREENOUGH
Laguna Beach
SHAUN MEHAFFEY
Marina
ea me. 1 Monday night the
Rustlers defe ated LA
Harbor, 53·34, to remain
undefeated. Eva Brown
was the point leader with .
14, followed by Katie
McLea n with 11 and
Sharon Campbell with l 10.
Dianne Glass was the
leading rebounder for
the Rus tler s with 13
while Campbell bad
nine.
Fullerton defeated
Golden West twice last
s eason when the
Rustlers posted a 17-3 re-
cord.
O.IMtt .... ($4) uo I.A .......... ... " ,,, IP
Giireath , 0 0 • C.mOOOll \ 0 0 10
Burr~ l 0 0 .. er,,_ 1 0 , " Bon 7 0 Q A
~ne-11 I 0 I 1
Mel.Un s I • " Gia\\ 0 ? 0 'l
W1nkleoltc" 0 1 1 1
Lowrey 1 0 0 t
Tofel• ?I> • 8 51>
Hallllme Goldtn w u t, 31-1'.
Women's
Race Entries Net Results
Vtfth"a Tourft.t"'•nt
~W.d11ff<l•Y
At Santa A111t.o
l'l"l .HI: 1:)0 •. m.
CAorfcl~ Orum COlivart\I
SqulO\I IC.staneoa I
11~ IHM·UM'le
11\ 51ft'llH
, )t.ttt) l(o•hfor CCd M I def S~eo.trd Ca\tl"IJ Couch I01n1cotal
c;.-amma Gerl IC.m1M1sl
Ma11rwl U~amlret I
II\ IC4ro<nlerl1I 40 6·1: d•I l.•CKOn
SEVENTH ltAC~ -About ~· >
l1ft turtonqs on turl l .,,. .. ,. old\ a. uo
11• Cr•is\•ti~altow•nc•' Pur,~\1f. ooo
ll'tltST ltACE -•furlono• Allies&
m.><t\. 3 yeM old• & up. CJa1mi1>Q.
Pu"e SHOO. Clalmln9 or1cot
\10 000-1'000
II) CC.tro<ntercal 6 •• 6-t Oef Bell 11000
O.k\l 6 '· • ? lo\t 1n wmoflnals to
W"'°" IS.tn1a Mon1c<1116 o 6
ForO fCdMI .,.., Hortel IV~ur&t
6 1 "O d •I samuel\on !Santa
O..rtMr.l) t.·l 6 0 10~.l 1n quctrtPrhn••'t.
to Ptlllhoson (San Marco•I 1-11. 1-4.
Cal"Y Charmer tc.ntaneoa> Jao.Trt~ IGontaltrl
S«r•I E1<cuw IMaltorneyl
Ta\ttofWine INoq""''
Go Patrice IO•nlcolal
Crystal HI IValtnruel• I
Annot LOwrodQe (Cesoede•>
8olOA'1'Y (Torol
Mill•tlon Ml\\ IVtrC)ara I
W.lcomeSunsllll)e IPln<avl
Picture Posturd CC•moa\I
WOrtllyC.u~ (Pierce I
11S TV1US~etl.t IC•mCM\I '"
118 C<lc>1 !>!even\ I Toro I 1u
XlOS 8.trrydown IM<HArQIHtl lib
111 A Guard\ VO (01n1cO••I )(IO'I
1 u F'or; Gramoa ICa\laneda I 111
116 Pl\1\lralo IVer9Ma) 170
116 GoldStanoard IP1~rc~l 118
I II Cl\arqer'l Star tve1asque11 PS
H6 Surr F•r"' tP1ncdv\ 11\
116 A·Ab~nt Minded !Ou,.colal i<I tl
Oliel Pronto !Lambert I •'IO
Do111tln
Baldwln.aercaw rcaMI d•'
JIK-·W••,.r tNordhOlll 6 I 6'
~f Vane""l·Arm\frono IBu~I f>.l.
f>.l; Cltf Henoc• Pollln 11000 0.ksl
f>.I ... .o def l(ur Gont.tlH 6 1. 1>-•;
won. ctta"1"01on\l'uo bV dPff'at1n9
Kr~1rr Port•r1•tld ICdM l6 l.1 S.
S£COHD RACE 6 lurlo"O'-A -Hurd~•lt-OWl'M!Oentr•
1(1~ftr·Porl•r l 1tld CCOMI cl•'
l(O<"tl•fl St•·~~ (Ven1ura l 6·3 61, del
Ho'11 Smith INordhOll I 6 I 6 l ,,.,
N•l_t•\ La(,"'\" tS1V'lt., Mon1(.iJ b 1 6~ ~I Cr~wtord Ynun9 IS & I· l<KI
'" lin;tl\ lo Baltlwln·Aer<dw ICdMI
H .P.
EIGHTH RACE 1 furlO~ 1v"•"' Flllln & Mares. J year old1 & uo. Al
•-•nu•. Purse s 11 ooo 114 oicx Sta~M Pu"~ U0.000 AdOt'<I
111 Hab•tony tShoem •ker I 0-nclno ICa\IMe<I& I
UOY Lunar CNoquerl
Cll!tr1 Merl I Pierce I
Slrtn Son9 (Toro I
Furl'M>Cle IGonralezl
Forest Princess C Pl"<!O• l
Oou" Accoun1an1 tC11moasl
No&td (Pln<•yl
Renu~nose CMen11>
J•n Gin ISlloem11•er I
MeM1ue Bteu I Oln1cola I
111 B·ld 'N 81<1 CPlnceyl
111 TalPOf Po-r ICHtan...,dl
111 I'm A Zipper ll..dm~rtl
1,. Reolant <Toro I
111 Curreftl Concept (Ollvarul
.,, ", 177 1a.•fld·11ndtr
Sln9IH Rool ICdMl to\I lo l(l~sa< .. tS..nta
Monica I• 6 3 6.
S1trr• tCOM) d"' Tranan (Aqoural 111
'" 111
NINTH ltACll: -11116mll~ Fllllf'' 6 ... 6.J: IO\f fo S Llo~on ICarplnte<••I
& mares, l v•ar 01e1s & uo Cl•1m1no. G 6 0-6
)(IO'I Pur ~e ~1000 C111lm1ng prtcp Ooubln \8000-11000 Sch~rl•O·M~Oe ICdM I def !)m11t1
M1n4 F"ll• IL•mtM>•P llb Law¥er llhOland~ I 6 1 &·l. 0~1 ~veAoyal f01n1col•• >C101 Ev••f'1on-'lhr1\ (\/cnhH'l ) b 4 6·3: l~t
Money Tolo~ (MCH"rqUf'. '11 ti'\ t'UJd"'"'t'n"I\ lo Corbl-U T~ttlll
THI ltD ltACE -6''1 furl""°' 7
V"M 010 mA•d<'n colt\ & ~ldinqs
C•t'•m•"9 Pur\.e ift.SOO Cla1m1noor•cPo
\10000..\16,000. In Ra,-, Fo,.m CP•~•.,., 110 tGl~nd·•htJO ft b·'
119 &eunt (V•rciaral 11~ Goodbo<1v l..lovdn•k tCOMI d~I ll'ir" Ectto (P•n<ayl
118 :>neGhic.ken '"" tSelltJr\) x111 l 1tton 'liitnn1q iS•nla 8arb6fA' ~ •
119 A19"1I H' Prooer CSnoem•••rl '"' & 1 O•·I Mo"''•• ~nul)I' !San MMto· l
t1!1 MovtrnJento (Menal 11• -. ' f) 7 '"'' '" au.\ftprftnttl~ to KOl'"ntQ Uf\Ol-t"f't11t fV~ntur.,l 3 f) &--1
_Tonight's
'fV Highlights
ABC fl 8:00 :-Happy Days. A pre·
mature baby in the Cunningham
household shakes up Richie and Fonzle In
this episode, which conUnues on Laverne
and Shirley at8:30.
NBC 8 8 :30 -.. Can Can." This
fr:othy 1960 musical, set in Paris, features
Shirley MacLaine, Frank Sinatra Louis
Jourdan, Maurice Chevalier and' Juliet
Prowse.
CBS 8 ~:30 -One Day nt a Time. Th~ conclusion o! a four-parl story in
w!llch Ann (Bonnie 1'l'anklin) is reunited
·;1~~ut;!~ .runaway daughter (MacKenzie
-..Iii:...-.:;~/
r
TV DAILY LOG
TUESDAY
EVENING
e:oo a rn cm m m 11ns CJ lW CA) G.OI m World Strlts
Bneball Cont'd. from 5PM, Im: coverage of game ttiret.
0 titl Stir Tttk
( 6) Gomtf Pyle
• U (~ 00) Ntws
0 CllllSlllOkt m hrtricltt h•ilr &>W-12
f1.i) (ledri( C..pHJ
Qfl OiMll! m little 1tna1s
-6:30-
0 Duialt! Cuests include Chock
Woole1y, W1lhe Sulton. Ronnie
StheU, and Shields & YilntlL
(6) Andy Cnffith
m hmllyAH111
l11) ill CllMlllMe
f;DZ-!
biHion111e who w1nls to own 111"'
wllen Rudy's electronics pl1nl 1s shul
down by the unt0n,
ID "AllE WE HEARING * EARTH'S ENO?" flND
OUT TONITE AT 9! m Me" Critti11
Q)Tht V1111Nn f.D Variety Show (~ (() Mowit: CC) "Psltho" (dra)
'60-Anlhony Perkins. Janel leieh.
fr) What's Wrona With My Cllild?
"fl Ch1mpionsltip Wrulhnc
-9:30-
0 l]l') (]) ()) 0111 Day at A Tim•
Ann learns moH about molllertiood
and makes lhe tou1hest dec1s1on of
"1!r hie, when she comes fact to-lace
w1lh htr runaway dau&hle< 111 the
contlust0n ol lh&S lou1·part epLSOdt. m Cl1111est Dr1ma
ED Movie: "Monika"
m~ul11 '76
10:00
D l17 ) l f1 Swttc:h Aile< Pele
ts se~erely bealen lor datinc a 1111 a
mobster consrdued his "private
PIOPefly," MK seeks menge on the
mobster by posing as a welathy l uas
showman who's 1s heroic now as Ile
was as 1 Manne durtng the war,
0 &'J Nns
16) lloMftU
U Willie's "Home Movie" * Disrupts FAMILY
U ( atl 1 el) 13t hmily "Home
Movie" Willi~ Lawrence enlers 11
con1cs1 for Amaleur movie ma~rrs
Anti.uses his family as the sub1ects. 126~smoke e> S.rat1 de Prlmne,.
-10:30-m m ED News m 24 Hom
11:00
D 0 m (39 News
0 l•J oo 231 f~ News Cl (t29) LL) ~) love Ame11un
Style
a Su HUlll
O Ctltbrlty ltvue m Mary ' Tom Gel That
The Renegades. 37-21
winne r s over Golden
West, jumped seven
spots to the top rung
after previous ly un-
UeJalen San Diego Mesa
((trs t ) and Ve ntura
°""''' Blnsed IMuc111olol Olarfle~~c~ ll..3m~rtl
Zu•P<! Soldter IS>toema-er I
~ "'" C,r@1al «V•lenruttta • O>ntro•, Prine:~ (How•rdl
081er IOllv•resl
~•<•'~no.at• fHa,.r1!Pt Rul~ The Orbit IGont&lec I
YwtwnH Pro-I ITorol
:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • Old feelin& ' Martha
Gets Propositioned!
CORKY CALVERT
San Clemente
DAN MITCHELL
University
(third ) l os t l ast ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
weekend.
Citrus is No. 2 in this
week's poll. followed by
Mt. San Antonio and San-
ta Monica.
In k ey g ames this
Saturday, Orange Coast
hosts Fu llerlon in South
Coast Conference play
and Santa Monica is at
Rio Hondo in Southern
Cal circuit action.
With San Diego Mesa.
Ventura a nd San Mateo
losing last week, the
state unbeaten list was
reduced to just five.
DAil. Y PILOT T0 • 1t "'· Col,.,.. lhcord "1\
'· a .... ~r\flfld u 1 > "' t. (tlrU\ c .. 1 l Al
l. Mt \an Anlon10 !S.O II ,, •. ~nf6 Monot a IS II n
\,. Pt .. rce U ·t U ~
~. 1'611 t• Ol 7J
'· F ull~r ion C. n 10
11 Grl>\\monl t• 11 •• ' Glf'nd .. I~ 1•·11 17
10 C...,,_. CS-01 10
llVIN ADVANTAOU
OUI PAOll onus~
th•t .yours may natl
1 COMH.M OllAN•I
COUNTY COYHA•I
loocJ114'4tf: L..-..... s. c ............... "-fe, .................. ""' ............ L.A.flW
2 MONTH TO MdfcTM
llNTAL IASIS
, NO DEPOSIT 119UllD
.. ON AmOYID ClllfT
4. OMLT $11.to Pll MONTH
TOTAL COST ·:~ r .. 11..atH ,...., i! NIW COMPACT "NfT ~SID f1 'I• 141 V1 >
~. YOICI MISSAH PAGllS ~ AUO All AYAll.AIU
t.'PULL JIR MAINTINANCI
:~ .... ... •• .. :·
OR.\NCiE COUNl\
fl,\OI01ELEPHONf
SHl\'ICl '"
17 I 41 IJS.UOI
..... 1MTA "-llllffA AM .,_ ...... leltdl. ~ ....... OMl_ .. c--. ..... ~fl,_ tMI ..,....,.
.... nu .
College Grid Slate
JC Grtd Unbeaten .
....... "' C.111•""• c.n..t, •t<Wlll PP
Cuelle IS.01 113
Mt $tll Antonio (S.0-0 '~
Tait l•.O> l~S ~c.111.me
~SIMI 147 ,,__,to ~ti lti
"'''I Hooton f!>ellersl
118
llS
"' II~
Xtll
HOC OlltlllllVTOfli. INC • lOI ANOHfl •IO l'llOO'
100"5 GIWN llWTAAl UllW'fl • HJITIONM. OllTilLlN l'l'OOUC'I COlll'AHY
m IMry Hlrtman, Mary H1rtma11 m Tale1 ol the lirm e
17 I 3 Stump the SIJn
-11:30-
0 111i (l) (8) CIS ute Mo~ie:
K4111k-lut •ISJ for A Dud ''.at;
CJ "Money to Burn" (dra) '73-£ G.
MdrShdll. Mildred llalwt<:k. o .2>' 6 1 10 m Johnny CMS011
( 6 )The Pll Club
0 (~ W ) QtJ Mp!Jry tf the
Wttk
mNews
(2t) The 700 tlub
fD Movie: "Dr. Mabuw, «in& or .,
Crime''
12:00
O Btst of Groucho
O Movie: "The ~"' War" (dra) ·~-Cllartes Bronson. !lent Taylor. m Moyie: "What A Woman" (com)
'43-Rosahnd Ru~ll. Brtan Aheme. ED Cinema 34
-12:30-
0 All·Ni&ht Show: "Affair i11
!Qu111," CC) "ltKitlr Bloed," "Al-
ways on Sunday" m Moone: "1e11e Le enrtt1" cm>
'50-Joltn Carroll, Vera Ralslol\o
1:00
U 121> m (101 Tomonow m Th• '1lClub
2 :00
U Ooubl1futu11 Mtwies:
ft) "ltom1110ll ' Juliet," (Cl "The
Unauardtd Moment"
CD All·Nlaht Show: "Blowlnc Wild,•
"Ctll 2455 Oeatll llow," "Tiit fiJec
Uppers"
-2:30-
Olhwt
3:00 a Mo.It: "Nora rr111rrss" (dra)
'47-Ann Shendan, Robert Alda.
....
-.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTlCE
JIM MOTIC,I 01" IMTUtTIC*
PICT1nQ\IS8UtlMO I TOOI OIC:.TI EAHMI N1'
•AM& tTATIMlffT NOTICE IS HEREBY G•VENINlon
Tll9 .......... ,__ It OOl"9 bull· l"9 1'1" d .. ol ()cWber 1•16 U. 8<M«I
--o! E01;u110" ol ,,.. N•.,eort -.. 1"1$Ht!lllMAN"$ WHA't, J4tll Ol\lllOdS<l>OOI O"lrt<tol0...-00<.o.A Lllpl,.Ot<lo,~la-W CAmlt IV C<!Hlor"'• •-d• ~"'Oll'l'°"ot
s.llor't I"' , )1411 Lu.piM Orttt '"""'-10 -co•• 1n ._.., lo C-"'Me .. ,C:."41' Q>ttA Mn<t (.ou1>h W•••• Qturo<I ., T~WllNHl\btlnQconOut..Ol>Y• 900"<• .. ,,,. ~••I• o• C•l1-• IOf C0<1111rllloft 11 .. llydr..,I ,,,... ..,_, ~d NW
Wllllam 111 ic.i\IMIQ '"'"'I&"" 1«11.., o .. r. o"-•~• Vke ~1KH1t111 ""'1"'"• ot ,.,., wio D••~•• o1 1-
Tlll1 ,_...,._,,, fl .... wllll 11'1 ~ IOCl14'd 111 t ... ("lty of Co\IA W11
~ ot °'.,,.. Covnl• Oft.....,_, 40..111•< "'ftt1nquoon tM""9'110nol
\4. lt1• -'"9 \li(ll dldlUllOfl ••11 1111 IWIO et
rt.UIS "°'t• IN"' O>uncll c;l\ambo" T1 F•lr,
1'\i41111Md °"-C.0.•1 0.11• l'llOI onw Cool• WW. C•••IO-nl• on .... ~ •• ..,ci ()cl ), If, tt. tt7• ~I· ~~:.!:: .. ~~o!Mlr lt1' •I lfts llour of
PUBLIC NO'nCE
S.JOJ7S
iU1>1•1011 COU ITOl"nll
$TATI Ol"CALI l"OllNIA l"Oll
TMIClOUNTYO,.O•AMGC ..... .....,,
O•OlltTOIMOWCAUU
l"Olll (HANOIO" MAMe
80AROOF EOUCATIOH NEWP()Rl MESA
UNI Ill ED SCHOOL DISTRICT
BY Joftn W NICOii t,tttr"t•tvot,O•d So.rd
l'vlJll\M<I CJ•enQit t.o•\I D•ll~ Pllm
Ottuc.r 1• 1•1• ~ 1~
PUBLIC N011CE
Til .. OOlluUonot THOMASGMP4R 1------------MOlllELL •ncl PAUL.& TOl(I MORELL S.>06JO -~ .......... l\n l11t-flM<111\ NOTICE TO c•t OITOltS
Qur1, -11 11Q011rlno from ~d itt> No. A~ Diiuiio .. tll•I THOMAS GASPAA SVPl!lllOW COVltTOt'TME
MO!tl!LL-PAULA TOKI MORELL ST4TE 0 1' CALll'OllNIA l'Olt
-lllodoneppll<ellonl>t'ocio.lf'Cl ll'Wll THI COUNTY Of' OAANOE
lllelr -llot Clll,,...:I to THOMAS In the M•ll•r ot lhP EO•IC' of
GASPAR MOAl!LLl •nd PAUi> TOl(I IU!8ECCA H SULLIVAN al'IO l<nown
,,.,_.LLl,...,.Cli"''V. ft REBECCA SULLIVAN al'IO ~
Now. INnl°"• II I\,..,..,., ontwiMI • Q.AAISSA REBECCA SULLIVA"' -dlrecttol, -•II __ ....... -AEBECCASULLIVA .... Dfo<.N)otd
Id 111 Y id fl\ltt.r t90 ·-· tlftot'I lllh Notice I\ httellV Q•'ffft IO crOO•tor\ Qlw11n°"9et't-"1 IOf'f,,.Mll\dirtOI M•ln<J cl1tlm\ -1n•I IM w>d OK• Oct., tfl•. 1 1 11 00 o'cloclo AM. ol cleft! to me, • .., c•••m• •n ttw ofll<• of
Yid di'( to ,_ u.,... ...,, _,. -""' <•• .. ot !IW ator•<W•O coun or to
.. lcMlon tor CJIM9e OI Mml sllOulO not .,,_.,1 ,_., lo ll>e .... ~, "Q!Wd ot tM be9r....... olfoc• ot CHRIS R CONWAY ltlt~oro.ndtMh<OPVoltn .. Gltl~AM VANDENBERG N()TI
OnlerToSftow~Je bepubll-lnl"" CO ... W A V AND CAN ... O N. " 0rafl99 Coetl O.ltv Pilot ICSNOI • P.oten1.....,1 C.OrDo<at•on no E Oc~ ~olOIM•ll<lr<ulM-orinl 81¥CI , Su!IP 1000. 1n IM C•IY OI LGnQ
lld !fl 'Wlcl '°""''· ....... Oft<• MCll Beac:ll 1n Lo\ ,At>CJ91H Countv ...,.,,. _..,tor four wt<•Hlve -• P'IO<' 10 1•11•• ottf<• I\ ,,,. Diec• o• !l\154-• ot
llledlYOftoldllUtlnq '"" under\IQMG 1n Ill• m~tte'l ~••P O.l4'dt11h n c11vot S.ot-. 1•1• 1no to w l<I Hl•t• Suell <1.!llms w11n 1"4> SAMUELDREIZEN ,,.<e\wry voucne~ mu•I be filed Qf
Ju<IOIOUaiO °"~nl~ "' ator4'\dld w•tn•rt '°"' S.-rlor Court month\ •lier Ille lor~I Dubllut1onot '""
'°"ATWAMK.OOLOBM notlc~ ,....,.. .. u.. O.tl!dOcl 1. t•1b l•l~P•rtr•esl,UU.J'loor M4RI( S SULLIVAN
LM.,....._ Callfomlet0067 E •~tutor o• ll'lt Woll
IJ\i!SS>-ml ol -.Id OeceCHtnt
A...,_.,lerA1191k..,h 0411!5111.00NWAY
P\ltll-OraltOt (.ou t 0.lly Pllol Gll1St4AM. \IANOEN91 RG. NOTT ~.21.tndOcl.S.11, 19. m• .,,, a OCINWAVANDCAN"O"
AprofH\IOllOI CorporelllOI
PUBLIC NOTICE 1a1.0c .... a, .... ,sv11e1000
~-II.CA._. ------------1 Publl\hed O••nQe Cont 0.lly PllOI. $-ltHt 0c tober 12 "· lt, •nd NOv 1. IW6
ltOT1C1! 01" SALi! O" O•IP6
•IAL P•OPSRTY AT
PRIVATI SALE .... ~,
tuNltlOltCOUllTO,.nlE
ITATI CW CAU ll'O•HIA ,iolt TM• COUNTY O" OllAHO« I• Ille M11ttr Of Ille Ellett ot
ALBERT A8AAM SHIFFMAH
Ooqesed.
NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN 11\81
.. ~Qfllld Wiii Wll •I prlva\t
-· 001 M ~ , ... n..d doY ol 0c
-· 1'76, •t Ille olfl<A ol COLEMAN & SILVERSTEIN, Su11t 810 Com·
_..,, .. E•cf\1-Bu1ld•no. •IAW 1111
54., Lot A-ft\. C.l1lor,,1•, CollfllY OI
LM "'9 .... St•le ot C.lllornlt, to llW
lllQN" ano IMl•t bidder and wot«t to
COftfirmet•on by uld s_.ior C.0"'1.
ell the r1oht. title •nd int•-OI .. Id
-•ed a t 1111! time 01 die th encl 111 tne
rlqM,tlllllfldlnterHl lllAl IMHl"1tOI
w ld dec;~ecl 1111 .ocaulred l>Y -• llOftot lewor ottMrwlH , ollllr l,,.norln
_.,,.,..to'""'' ot \.Old <1ecei.wc1, et tll•
lilN ol Oealh. In encl to en the ctrtfln
l"NI pr-rty •lluat• In '"" Counlv ol Or-. St•t• ol C.lltor11I•, oertl<UIM lyoew::rllMld~follOw\, to wll
"EXHIBIT A"'
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO ClllEOITC>ltS
SUl"EllllOlt COURT OF THE
STATI! OF CALI l'OllHIA FOlt
TMECOUNTYOFOltANGE
Ne.A-11711
E\IAlt of WILLl4.M A HOFFMAN.
l>Keesed NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 10 '""
creo11on 011,.., ebove n•~~t
that Ill Ol<SOM l\a•inq <1•1'"5 ~""
the \<t•d o.c~nt tr!' rl!Quored to fli.
I-. wllll lh<> MOU.try ~~.In
t!IP otllce ot tM cltrk ol tl'le <lbOw en
1111..S<ourl or toort.et>l lht'm.wlllll.,.
ne<9'Wryvouc""''· tot""u,..,.~ lit l""offl<• ot PORTIGAL ANDHAM-
MEAT()H. AllO#n&n "'' L ..... 1(711 Ea•I
.,,, Streel. Suitt 170 121. Santa Ana.
C.llfornl• •nos. wn•<" " '"" ol«• ot
bus1ne" of th~ under'\•Qnf'd "' dlt """'
t@Mo oert•ln1110 to 111~ "'~II' ot "'1d o.
tr-dent, w1tn1n tour month\ @HPr i1li(
""' oubllcatlon of tnl• Mite• Oel~d 5'>P!l'mMr n, 1'76 Al CHARD J HOFFMAN
E.(~(UIOr Ol Ille WlllOf
l""4boveMm!'<IO&Cl!dt'nl
PAltCl!L 1: Dwtlll"9 Ut11181n8ullcl-POllTIGAL ANOH4MMERTON
il'Q NO. '°''· 6\ w lO Unit I\ JllO#n on 4nortotvl ti U • 11\al u rt•ln Corwsomlnlurn PIMI al 2011 l!ut •ll•Slreet
le<twd \0 ond made a oart ol lh<ll cer· SollM l10· 1lJ
loin Oecl•r•tlon ol covo11•nl•. Condi· satll• ..... Clllllo"''" n1os
11ont •t1d Rutrlctlon\ r•<ord•d T•t 17'0 Ss..4"1
J.,,...ry 11. 1971. 111 Boot< 9520, p--owy1forEu cutor
11S, of Otlk1•I Record• 111 Ille Otlk• ot Publl\Nd Oranqtt Coa\I 0..1tv PllOI ~=: =~0~~;1~~=.=~ _Se_1>1_21_._•_nd_<><_•_~_. 1_2_. 1_•_1_.,_,_f//Jf#_1_11>
-tln....StoL01101Tra<tNO 112t"1 PUBLIC N011CE -nwp r1<.,..<led In 8ooll 7'1. Pl!O" 11 1 ___________ _
""4 31, lnch;\IVO ot Ml•ctll...-CP·tm
MIO\, In Ille olfl<• of .-Id CounfY SUPE lllOlt COUATOFTIU! ~r. \l\OWn •ftCl1Ml1nedt'"C:O-STATE 0 1' CALl,.OANIAFOlt
-....... on,,,. •boW·reftrred lo THEC:OUMTYOl'OAANGE
C-lt1lUt1' Plan No A"'171t b <tl'f"'9 l ... nlrom •"V oorlton of NOTICa 0 11' SA LE OF lllE'IL
Lall A, 8 .no c of \lld Tr.oct NO 111' PltOPE•TY AT PAIVA TE SI.LE
a<1Jo<nlnv...idlot 1 111 Ill• M•tler ot '"" E•l•I• 01 AltoHCtollno•Jldrnervonqu!llOlnt MARTI N THEODORE MESECI(,
Grll'ltor. Its •ucconor• ind H\•fl'I• OKHW<I ...,,..._Id 1/IOOlll v"°l•oa.d1nl..,.\l 1n NOTICEISMEAE8YGIVEN1"410"
w t0Lolt.--c•<lus1veeawmen1s-0# •ll~r Oclo~r 21 1976. '"" un
,_.act.,,lverlQh"olw•Y-.-r den1Qnf'<I MERBEATW MESECl( • .tt __ , __ tlon•of Wid LOI I UP. Adrnlnl\lr .. lor ot IM O\Ulttot MARTIN
Oft wf\l<h no bulldlno or otMr s1rUClur• THEODORE MESECI(. de<enf'd w•ll
"'" -erecteo tor necenMY or de· wll at prlval" S1IP to '"~ ll•o~t net slr•bl• l1>9rH• or toreu. 1 .. 1...,111on bl-. \ublPCI 10 cont.rmallon by 1111!
~. unoeroround wlrn """ con _.,. entitled SuD•!rlo• couri all '""
Clul" tor •leclrlc1ty, lelto-""° r'9fll, lllle, lntere\1 •"O t•lale of '"" otller PUri>"O a11<1 eccoutrtrnenl\ •ceclent •llllt hrneol hl\de"1h. lna"CI ll'tefft•. -·•·drain\, water. QI\ ancl 10111at cert••n '""'property loc•led et
1turn PIDH . 1110 ucoulr•menll 1526 w Occl<lent•I. s.11111 Ana. Counlv
lllllrtlo, •n<I tor •u<ll roof ow~ ot Or•no~. Stale ol ~•t•fOrn••. and otller encroe<llrne~I\ of • llke to oe:icrlbtd as follow\
cllulmll•r ••no: 8fld ••Mrnentt on Id Loi 11. B•otl< 00e·· ot Tract I'«>. S06
la<.,.I LOii In U ld TrKI tor roof o .. r •\ D<tr ""'P lllvreol, recorded In ~ l'WlllO' ond other lfl<rOIKlltnl'nts, ol a 11, lll 0.tQet 26 1111d t1 Inclusive. o1 Ml\·
llU or OIHlrnll ... kind, 1-1-wllll <•11-u> Map\. retorCI\ ot 0.anqo
Ille rlqtlf lo <-• Nld .. ...,,,_,, to County. Sta!t of c..111orn1a
MW Olrwl\, llrm, pul>ll< .. 1111ly, or llO'" B•lh or ott•n <tro lnvolt'<I ror lhe o<o
crnment•I bOdY oertY eno mu\I be 1n •rol1nq -,,,.,
Alto e11wotl"9 tram ••Id Lot 1 all M !MllY!Pted to 111~ Admln•~tr•W or to
-· Oii, llydrocart>ons. rn111H&I\ -'"" otfl<H ot '"' AllQfntV JAMES c .,...., 11A>tt-H tylnQ IM'low • dl!Otn ol BOOTH. 1 NC . A Profeu1on•t (.orpor•
li00.00-. DUI wttr.out Ille rlqflt IOO<\ltr lion. 111177 E 111~ Strffl. Sutt• :!OS,
-IM wrtac:e of w~urle<e ot Ille Tutlln. C.llfo-nla, or may be flll<I In
...-tv •t>ove • dlDlll ot IOO 00'"1 lor "'° othce ot the < 1ero. o1 the ~•or enypurpoM1'11111-ver.asre~lfl Court at 1nv time alter the flr\I
~of r.coro. PUbll<Atton of 1111• no110 •nd ~or-t1"'
PAltCIL 1: NOn .. achr<I~ ~IS•·
INnt) for 1119f'H\ And IQf.\\ pul>ll< \lllllll!K. _, •nd tor all OU<PO!oh ,,._
tldefll•I 111tre10 lnclUdlllO l>UI root
llmlleO to 1t!e <11t1\lr uc;tlon ln•l•ll•hon.
rto•ecemet'\t, ,._.~,. m&'"'•"•nt•
-••llon -uw ot elf ,,...,...., ... or
OOll••lllt rOedw•v•. tlO..,•••-' llfld ~H 0¥tr LOI\ A. e .,,., c"' Trl(I
NO 1111.111 lhe County of Orll'Qt, St.,•
of Clllfornte, .. -m•P r~orded 1n 8oGll 267, P109\ )T •nO JI ot Mls-
<tll-MID\, In IM Offlq of Ille Coufltv tl«order of w 10 county
Provl-11111 IMS Cleed I\ ICtel)fed
-mlde \Ubl.Cl to lite -Ill\ 4flCI tnirO•llS lrnDoud wpon tilt 11nd -rlb9d In Wld P•rul I •bow for Ille ,...1ue1 benelll of ,,,. owner> o1 ... v Dor·
tl0n6 lllertOf l)y 11111 <erl•ln OKI.,•
lion ot Conn1nh Conditions ano
Atltrlctlon1 recorded J•l'IU••v te, 1'71,
lol a-u 10. P•o• n~ or Otfl<l•I ~ In Ille Olflt e Of \lld CowllY RKordlr.
f OPPOaTUHITY
tmofh often when )'OU
UM raull·1elling l>ally
Pilot Classified Ada w
racb the Orange Coast
market.
Phone 642·56'18
..-1no ot i... w•• T~rns •""condition\ ot \ate C.sll 111
law!ut money ot Ille U11tted Stales ol
Amer1ct IO"I. ol Ille -flt bid to IC·
<Of'l"CMlllY lhe otter lfld llle °""""•"'119 oeld uoon confl•m•11on 01 safe bl' -S.-rlor Court Taxes. renls.-•llno
end ma1n1t<1a11<e e•DMH\, ond ore
mlumt °" ln•..,•llC• .ocuot•ot. 10 ,,..
ou<<IWIMr sllall 114' pror•tfll "' ot llW Ootte ot confirmation of ••le Tlwo ...
•""fllllon of tlllt 1110 rttQfdlllQ '°""
.. VlflCt \hall IMt ti Ille U-OI the
purche'•'' or pure",,'•'· Tttl• In ..,,on<• oohtv prern1um •11•11 be •111\e
upen,.o1111e.e11er
Blch mus1 Ile •ulld •ftCI wlll lit
OOOrlOd at Ille OlllU Of J4MES C
900TH, INC • I ProteH-1 Corpora
lion. 11m e 11111 StrHt. SUilt ?O\.
T111111n, Clllloml•. et tfl• !lour ot 10 00
A.M.onlM•bov•O•I•.
Tlte orojlttty lleftl" oe•nlb9<1 11
eom-ry ,.rtrred to n t\'6 w. oc
<ldenl•I Avt11u•. Sa nt& Al'I•.
CalltOtnle. TM un<1er1IQM<I ~• ... rfoll4 ..,,.JICI •llY •tHlall bldll
0.ted ()( tober •. ,,,6
HEA8ElllT W MESECK.
AO!l'llnl\lrtlor OI
Ille Est•teol MAATIH
THEODORE Ml!SECI<
JAMHC.800TH,INC
A--y lltr AdmhlfllU* um •.1n111t •• Ste. Mt ""11•.te.n• (1MlmAM
l'Wllv..d Oran911 CNll Otltv PllOI.
Ocl. 11, IJ, 1•. 1'7• Ol>-7'
PUBLIC N011CE
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DAILY PILOT 11'1 . ._ ... IOOJ ......................
·-·· _.... $46,750
Z Bedroom. 2 bath. ln·
Rffll &tote ~for Sot. ..._... ,_. S. dlvkiuaJ Condom inium. 2
.. •••••••• •• •• ••• ••• • •• •• •••••• •• ••• •• ••. •• ••••. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Car gurage w /elec door GtMral 100~ •002 o pener -h ighly u p
•
• • &raded, carpellna. wood ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• •••••..-••••••• .. •••• .. • 5 •-I """
II• CAMYOM-SZ71,IOO
aMAMT -llAUTlfUL-VllW ERRORS: AdnrfiHn aa • m rron . ...,,.
... _ ....... ca.--k .,.._,r ~ -------~4---------the community pool. A most luxurioWl & highly upgr aded
Versailles model by Deane Homes.
Panoramic view or golf cours e .
mountains . lights -also a view of ocean. Paneled f am rm.. expensive
wallpapers thruout, custom cptng &
drapes. marble &air-conditioning.
-._ ,...., _.. YOU HAYEN1 YllW COHOO at. lennls court.5 & ~ 1.:::C.i':~ ~ h:e~fa~e.' l~ei~~~'j~ clls"i;s;;~hoANYYIME'a rlnJ~
DAILY PILOT a1MBn~• SEEN THIS? North La guna Ex· liability few tt.. flrtt an exceptlonally attrac· punslv(' sundcck over· live home thul radlales lookln1 lhc blue Pacific . cornet Insertion onty. charm lhruout. Featutts Priced unde r market.
3 bedrms. 2~ baths. Exelualve844·T270. 2111 S-J I ... ... IMd
Publistter•s Notice:
AH real estate advertised
in lhts newspaper is sub
jcrt to I.he Federa l Fa1
llo u111ng Act of 196
wh.ich makes at allega\ l
adH~rlli.e 'an y pre
h:ren<'c. hm1talion. o
d1~cnm1nallon ba~ed o ral·c. color. reh1o:1on. sex
or naltonal origin, or a
mtcnl1on to make an
!.Ul"h preference, hm1ta
uon. or dtScnmmation."
for mal d ining. large
family r oom w/(plc:. ~~ Tastefully decorated ln
1mmaC'ula le condition
and ready lo move ln ~LJOIS
Lovely yard and covered 1~;-~;;~~~-~~~~ 1kJ Conyo. &tat. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
~ CINm. H.L 644-4910
\ \ r ' , , .,~\_~I 1
IOOZ Ge•r .. 1002
patio. Possibly lhe be_stl' 4 BR. 4 BA. on Fairwa". t---11111111111----~ SPANISH VILLA
buy in beach areit llt lbis ~ lim e! Priced to sell 11> ACRE sn>Sq.ft .• marble entry, 3 IEDROOM+ POOL
quickly al $75,900. Please GEHTLIMAN'S gourmet kil .• s.25.ooo. n Beautiful tiled entry to
phone ror add1llonal in· IAMCH By appt only· Exclusive 12 h uge 11 v1 n g r oom .
rormalion and appoint· Agenl&1~ ~ ..---Cr ack ling fireplace. m l CUSTOM IUILT PENINSULA Gou r m el k 1 t c h e n en · 546-4141 Tree lined gtr eet In Gnatt.ns..._.! 0 .... THE POl.._.T w/breakfast area. Serve pnme residential a rea. "" " lhru window to private
This newspaper will no
knowingly oC'cepl an~
udverl1~lng for r eal
l'!>lalc which 1s in viola
Laon of the law.
Houses for Sole •••••••••••••••••••••••
General 1002
•••••••••••••••••••••••
TRILEVEL
Lurge 2 st.ory. 4 bedrm.
formal dining. family
rm. 3 bath. fully air t."On-
d 1l10 n ed pres l1gious
home. Fully sprinkled,
tr1 mmed to perfel·llon
landscaping. f::nJOY
j!rac1ou11 l1v1ng a
S96.~ · II for a l.
~UPERB
HOMES
1556 W. S.11~.C.M.
Neat lo~ Basnl
549-8655
Don't drop the ball! Get a
job with a low-cost Daily
Pilot Classified Ad
Phone 642·5678 -------
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
RESULT'"
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For Result
Service Call
642·5678
btnZZ
~
COATS &WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC
642-5678
DAILY PILOT
STAR GA'ZEK« .. ... ~:..:..:..:.:.....---fl.< l.<\Y It f'OUANl---..------t
Ji.
SEEK & FIND• RUSSIAH AIJTHORS
V T E K R Y l 0 V Y 0 U 0 l C P l 0 D
A L T P I K R 0 G E M I R C A t 0 J M
R E D 0 S T 0 E V S K I A S D l T D R
0 U I S K U P R I N A P T 0 N N S M I
V C N R B K V 0 N 0 E l I Y Y L G V
O V JR IKHLAORA
Z O B S A V E C E H F H V G E K T U N
t N 0 S V E 0 H A B S R 1 0 B A V 8 0
M O I( I 0 Y l K 8 U N 1 N C H R E N V
E M 0 A K E E l P V 0 N S A R K D E E
R 1 V N S D B 0 I 0 N S A R K 0 E R R
G S 0 L E A A H G l A 0 K 0 V 0 A H l
0 O S T L F 8 S H 0 l 0 K H 0 V F E C
t H l 0 G 0 G B L 0 K 1 V 0 H A M 0 R
S A L T Y K 0 V K A T A E V t l F E Y
IPUIUCllO<ll" Hidden WO'd& befqw .,.,._ forwen:I, tiecll·
•11d. oip, d own or d1.,,..i1y. Fiiiet Hdl Ind box It In. t
Chekhov Gladkov Pushkin ~
Oostoevsk1 Gogol Sholokhov u
Ehrenburg Gorkt St110nov "'
Fadeyev Pasternak Tolstot
Tomorrow: Ch11•
Set:ttotll.1\.-l& £~S •
That l nfri9uin9 Word Gomt with o Cltud/e
~~""., .. ~ 0 '--.._. ol .... '°"' o<roMblecl _,,, .. to. IO for'" '°"' olfl'IPle _,..
, -
Secluded entry to huge Beauty shop and build· Custom bulll one owner patio. Spece for RV.
living room. Cr a<'kling ing +large 1 bedrm apt. h o m e p l a nne d f or parking. Located near
fire place. Massive over dble gar. Choice gracious indoor & out· schools and shopping.
formal d ining room . Easlside localion. door entertaining. Fou Bargain price al $.57,000.
Huge country sly led Calldayornighl bedrooms. 2 baths, and Hurry' Call 963·6767. kitc h e n . 2 S t o n e guaranteed trouble Cree OPTN 111o ·11~•UN101·1 N'<' •
fireplaces. Family room for one year. Close to I• I ~~~~~~1 ~~~~:'cid~0 evL>ey:~e; .. ;~c.o· : . . ·)191;11jt
roam lhru. Hidea wa y . · .:::ii=•===••·•~
master swte &children's,l•--------•I fVL .trD _111_,_,. alU._. quarters. Much more. .,_JtMM_.,_
Steal this one for onl)' .:.:~~.:!TE valley Re~ lty CALIF. RANCHO 9 .500. Hw-rY 963· 7881. • 3 A C R E S P R 1 M E
()lltN ollO •!ISIUNIOtilfo#fCI' SM+ POOL BLUFF FRONTAGE .
THE REAL JACUZZI Overlooking Upper Bay. Formal double door en·..._ _______ _. Gorgeous pool & garden
l.Q' l.o entertainer 's de-BIG f\.ANYQN <rtvaUng Rogers l. With ---=;;;...;;;====-i llght. Living roo m . "" separate party/guest
PRIOEOF Cath edra l c eiling. CUSTOM house. Main home has 4
~-'
ESTATERS _
Ow .... £aSHIP Crackling fireplace. Step bedrooms. dining room.
"U'l down ramUy eo\ert.aln· Spectacular 4840 aq.n. 4 large den wilh wet bar &
Exceptional prid e or menl center '1(.it!J wall or bedroom home In rinal dark room and more.
ownersnip in this income glass. Sparkllos p00t and st ages of construction. Room for horses. te nrus property. Very flexible Jucw.zi. Formal dining Family room and library courts. etc. Call lo sec!
owne r 's unit w1lh 2 room. Huge gourmet overlooking gorgeous PETE BARRETT
bedroom guest quarters. kitchen. Sweeping stains pool a rea nnd go lf -REAL::rY-
f\Jlfill your lax shelter to lavish maste r swte + course 2 Story li ving
needs with the additional bonus room for poollable room w ith mass 1 ve 642·5200
2 uruls. All units deluxe and cards. Eas" terms ! f I d I I fl
d J 1repuce an vew o .... ~~ a n s P a<' 1 o u s . 963·7881 $385 000 -----
Fireplaces. patios. and OPfN 111'>-11 s 'l'V 'Ollf "1'Cf • • 6'40·6161
separa te gar ages. I• I ~!~~-~~~r~;a:~:~~~ . .°'ilt~lltF ~
COATS &WALLACE
•HORSES•
~49,950.
WE'.RE LOOKING FOR
f\ SPECIAL KI ND OF
FAM ILY . L et )'Our ()l'fN 111Q•11 S IUN ION N!(I'
,[•lftMtl REAL ESTATE . INC. Six HOUSES children hvl.' where the
trees ure tull and lhc air
all on an Eastside Costa ls pure. HQrses welcome
Mesa street. High de·t----------.i on this ~2 acre estate.
ma nd r e ntal a r e a . ( Luxury & privacy make l•---------.i Present owner's home is LEGANT for pleasant evenings at Belvue Lmte charming 3 bedroom. 2 home. A great buy! Vets
BALBOA Just listed. bath with fireplace and DOLL HOUSE OK. Something you won't
Custom built home on pool. Great iovestmnenl. wantto miss. Please call qwet slrada Perfect for CALL 556·2600. Decor prefect Ion. 3
lhc tncydc set. Nearby Bedrm. 2 bath + room
tennis club. ocean a nd !p fo r ra m l ly or 4 lb SELECT b e d r o o m & b a t h bay beaches for Mom PROPERTIES <plumbed>. Large patio and Dad. 3 Bedroom. den and dining room. Larget---------.;JI of' large hobby rm ofr
40x100 ft. lot $137.500. COSTA MESA large 2 car garage.
Call 540.115 I 3 + FORMAL DINE Large loL ssuso. We're here to help!
..,~:. HERITAGE $5"',950 CJl MW H...tinc)ton leach + FAMILY 400E.17""' FOR lll • ~ · .. --::ti... SEABREEZE No way to describe this POOL + J •cuZ9I 1~~~~~~~~~~ property without seeing "' .. 1: it. 3 king sized bedrooms. Prest1g1ous Huntington
Lovely format dining1---------...i Beach locallon. Spacaou~
. • REALTORS
DUPLEX-Wahr View
$159,500
Especially large duplex
with a new ·•cedar face"
on a quiet cul·d ·sac.
Spacious 4 Bed, 3 ba & 3
Bed. 2 ba units. Shown by
appt.
WATERFRONT HOMES
REAi.ESTATE
631-1400
HEW LISTINGS!
COSTA MESA
E.ASTSIDE
3 Unlts.189.500!
4 Units.1128,000!
lcAoa loy ,.,.op.
Rfflton * 675-7060 ..
HEWLISTIHG
Westcllrr condo, bright
cheerful 2 bdrm.,
baths. Adult complex
Prime tocatlon. $64,950
673·3663 642·47
associated .
fl JI r rl .1 I\ • lo.',
' h I,' ''
room . Sunny country two·slory with huge
kitchen. rnA/VA terms. Vacant-4 Bedrm ma!lt.er suite rirsl noor
Owner says sell!!' Call Costa Mesa. 4 bedrm. plus two t w 1n ·s1ze
l0day 646·717l formal dining, fam rm, bedrooms upstairs. Twin
oPfN 111 o· •IHuN 1om NICI' tge kitchen w /d inette palios. separate laundry -..,
THE REAL
ESTATERS
-----
••• HORS E HEAVEN
$65.000 An ACRE lo
area. And much more!• mom, professionally up.
Com er location adJacenl grad<.>d lhruout. S65.000.
to park. Room for motor CALL now. 962· 7788
home, boat or lrlr. Back
East ownex wants quick
sale! 546·5880. a•~~~~~-p
roam with a gre at 3 COUEGEP"'RK ....... ~~HERITAGE Bdrm home. Outsland· "'
ing location in Vista ad· CLASSIC
jacenl lo wide open Clcanesthome in C-Ollcgc
. • REALTORS
spaces. Tack rm. 5 ton•-----------1 P a r k . 3 m a s s 1 v e
hay barn, 2 paddocks & 4 IEDROOMS bedr ooms. Beautiful
fenced pastures. Great $51,950 ram1ly room. Gigantic
£or kids. Prime Huntington Beach fi replace. Move-in condi·
•BERTHA HENRY• location. Freshly painted lion. Wife saver kitchen REALTORS 492-4121 d with all the modern con· 2LS DelMa r.San Clem ecor alor wall paper. vc nie n ces Don 't
Near S<'hools, park and hesitate. Call 646·7171.
llKE TO IE.ACH shopping. Assume 7w~ S67.9SO full price.
SUper area. super condi· FHA loan with total pay. MN 111v-11s1UN1011rN<t•
Uon. super fam ily home. menls 1of $224 .~o per •.
1l11s S bedroom, 2 story ~::i· Hurry · Call · j
large £amUy_ home on a OPfNl1!9•11SfutH08'NICt' ~
--~
THE REAL
ESTATE RS ---. corner lot 1s near a ll 1.~ • ~
schools. shopping. beach .,liJ~11·1J1 Et0fca~:·l~:!t~~1;!! :·i -·~~~jiQ }i; ·aa-r·1·a-in_H_u.nt•e•r•s•
OPCH flt 0• 11S'UH10111 Nof:I
I-I A 11MUST SEE" FIXER UPPER ~-lftlltt ~~~~~ : CJ. r: i:.d F~ ~~g !~rou~t:::!~~ . =••-1••1•-home. Extensive use of Th11i;iood 1iolld home ls 8
VACANT
$46,950.
brick & paneling. Truly a mess-help! I Asking
special ho me for u $49.SOO.Call 540•11!11
speclul famll,Y at u low,
low prico of S6l.llOO.
545·9491.
• .., S > HERITAGE
. REALl.ORS Ready to move into. 3
bedroom on large corner
lot. Newly painted.
brood new carpets for
low down. NOTICE
~
Walkr.r t: I ee
Ruol lstaltl PILOTREALESTATE how Dally Pilot Class·
ARACE SALE ads In 540--055S lfled ads display their
the Daily Pilot bring bap-he Cove, New port· 11 messages with legiblUt,y
py results. To place your SELL ldle ltema with a Bayfronl award winning and Impact! Our ads. we
drawing card, phon Dally Pilot Classified Ad. Newsboy condo. w /slip. are proud to say, really
642·5678 loday.&42 ;;.....:...:·5678;.:...,;_· ------l..:$220~~·000~:..:· O~w:,:n~e~r.:_:. 640..&~~16~1..:·I 1J el res u It•. Phone $42.-5678. ca •• ,.. 1002 ... ,.. 1002 ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ca ... , .. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
cae:·
111111 ILlllS aa.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
#J UMDA ISLE
OPee DAILY l·I
New Pl er & Larae SUp lot 50 Footer
Has Just Been lmtalled at tbJs
Lovely B ayrront Home! 5
Bedrooms, Famll.Y Room, Wet Bar
3 Fin!places. Terrace Deck with
Flrepit. $275,000
•• 531-1•
r
macnab / lrvtne
raaltg
POtn'OfllMO W/VflW
2207 l'Otn' HAIWICI -OPIM DAILY
l·I P.M. Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2~
bath home tastefully decorated.
Bonus room w/loft·bedroom & bath. Comm. pool &tennlscourt (JS7)
•
" ..
. • • ..
l • • • . . 4 • • ' ) .
' ...
i
.. ..
-DA.IL y PILOT T~. October 19, 11711 Houses For $ciie Hou•M fCM' Sde HO&nU For SaM HovHS For ScN 1~ ... '* ~·;~~··io-01 ······················· ······················· ·····•················· ·•·················•··· .._....,.We t='-W. ,_.,. ..._..,_.We ....................... CottoMHo 1024 Hunff,._ .. och 104 Newpottlt«ll 1069New,.,tlem 1069 ....................... ........................ ....................... ....................... . ...................... ····················•· ······················•······•··········•····· 1 UNITS-S29S.OOO
8111 .. 1002 1002 •-rtl IOOtG•••tl 1002 &·acheotta•~ S&t.500 ASSUME
....................... ....................... .............................................. ~BR .• a bo. Sl&-1.500 GI LOAN .c BR, 3 ba Sl37 .000 3 bedroom & ranul.y. 211
b4tths Sharp' B month&
old coooo North Costa
Mesa SM.050
MISA....,. SPUT
Delight.Cul com er loce.lion for t.his
Mesa Verde split level that features
lovely wall coverings, tile kitchen
counters, professiooally landscaped
yard with firepit a.o.d several oew
appliances. You'd make a hit with the
Mesa Verde s plit, jmt $98,500.
tJ.-..IC>lJI: 11()MH
REAL TORS . 546-5990
DO YOUI RllMDS A FA•oa Tell them
about this 4 bdrm. home in Cameo
Highlands we just listed. But do it
quickly 'cause these goodies don't
lNt ! Located on a huge cul-de-soc lot
with view & orfered at $118,500. Here's
an oppe>rtunity to do your own de-
coratln g. The house wo listed for
$1"5,500 at 4833 Dorchester a week
ago, sold last weekend, so don 'l stub
your toe on the way t
'7M400
DhltlcMI of ................. Co.
1525 Mesa Vefde 0five. East. Costa Mesa ~!!!a!l~so~rn~C~o~ro~na~d~e~I ~M~ar~,~a~t~6~7~5~·~6000~~~~~i~Q~-~·~ .. ~ I 002 Gew1 ti ~ ............................................. .
e iau.. I 002 SPA>41SH VILLA
1002
.. ••••••••••••••• .. •••• •••••••••••• ... •••••••• $57,500 I Two story with red tile COSTA MESA
CONDO
Lido Soud waterf root. 4 bdrm .. 4 bath
home with jacum pool & boat slip.
Move-in condition. $W>,OOO.
Attractive 4 bdrm. horr.e en comer lot.
Bay views from living room & upstairs
bedroom. $185,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
\ \1 ~.r1'1".•ti•· tJr.~· f'4 B ,•J •J f"11(1
1
roof! Secluded entry to
lavish Living room. Can· tina kitchen and private Assumable Loan
courtyard. Soaring Newl y carpeted &
stairway to master draped thruout this 2
bedroom complM. Ex· story. 2 bedroom. shake
ecutive cluster home llv· roofed townhome. Nice lne. Seller anxious. Try areu-close to shoppini.;.
SS.750 total down! CaU Will exrhan~e for hOuse 847-6010. or duplex 1n Newr>0rt
()l'fN 111q·"s1VN ro Ill NJ(r • Beach. $44,900.
ltJllll m=::.~· I
Daily Pilot Classified Ad. OUAlln Ht UACM SELL Idle ltem5 with a~-~
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!2!L!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~~!~ .......... !~~ ~ ........ •• ~ ?~ ~
•-•.. 100 fiewr.. 1002 ..............................................
SAM JUAN CAPISTRANO
Very popular, but scarce Buccaneer 3
bdrm. model with 2-stories. Located
less than a mile from Dana Point Marina; community pool is included.
Now vacant & early occupancy
available. A splendid investment in a
fast growing area. $53,950, Is very
realistic!
• •
IS SPANISH YOUR STYLE?
It's all here in this custom designed
comer borne built by Valentine &
landscaped by Beeson . Large
massive rooms w /high ceilings, 3
bdrms., game room, private mstr.
suite w /jacuz.zi. $239,900
A COUJWIU IAMlB CO.
644-1766
2H51 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS AO.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
WR & den l129.500
Marshall Rlty 675-4600
Corofto def Mor I 022
·•·•·········•········· OWNF.R 1AG~NT
S40~5
FENOMIHAL a Ton> 1 Oll EXPRESS YOURSELF
3 BR + ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vcrsot1le rtoorplan wllh NEAR PARK Outstnd'1t 2900 sq.rt upi:rudcd re.ituru.
1-"r<"Sh as a dalsv & 011ly OuhUu in l.ukl• "'Ort•:1l. ~ l>couillul yard!'>, jacuuJ.
:steps lo a gr a11!ly, Jt'tty br. 3 hn. Incl 11team rm .. 1 hdr. rumrm w/coiy
view piirt< & walkmg dis-loaded w/upgrade11. pmf frplc. Jo.:asy Assumabh1
tunce to :snndy t>eoctwi:.. dcl' w/Van Lull paper V A . Ol·cunulre ho me.
11 delightrul r oomy & U1ruout ltahon Marbll• Collect. 71<11 \1118·44SG o~n 2100 sq n 3 br. 3 ba. entry. coth t'oltlng in LOOKING IH S60's?
lumJlyrm homt!w/dl'n& !Iv.rm w /m l rrorod Hcro's 2 lh !it:irt with. 3
Cormul dining lncludini.t frplc .. formal din.rm., flllrs, fml DR. t.g . a s umptuous m11ster Com rm. + bOnus rm. Fmrm,pullo.loungesiie
isu1te wtwood beam ccjl /\JC. lo mulnt frnnt & wet bar w/bl•er tapper,
inJ(i; & stain glass win buck pullo w/Counlam & l'ustom <'ub1ncts &
dows Reduced to to sprinklers 3 rar ~ar s h e l ves . s pacious
$149,500. w1opener. Nr schools & k1lchen. sparkling cleun,
CaH 64-t.7211 :;bop'g cntr. Pnced for I IS super-close to oceun.
.. lo Inspect lheso rine homeslles on
LIDO ISLE, the seaside colony that
offers the ENCHANTMENT OF
NEWPORT HARBOR & the conve~
nience or being seconds away from
the malnJand.
3 Bdrms .• 2 bat.M; fresh & clean.
Warmth of wood paneling. Great
street. $147 .ooo
2 Bdrms .. 2 baths; a real charmer
with high beamed ceilings & beautiful
decor. $165,000
Vacant lot for the ones who prefe r to
build the home of their dreams.
$96.000 q ul ck s.i I e, $89, 950 Collect, 7141968-4456 Ownr I Agnt . 837 ·4687 aft 6 --0-E'-/\-N-' E-' ;_ll_O_M_E-'---I
orSSS-8534 PacaficSands.4 Br. 2 Ba, LIDO REALTY
--------Fountain Valley I 034 by appt only S&l.000. by nn Yi. Udo, M.a. '7J.7JOO /Jn !'llGEL
111\ILEY &
i\5Sl)(IATE5
Oki W orid Chorrn • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• _o_wn_e_r_. s.36-__ 987_2 ____ • !!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Huge 3 bedrm w/ex· Sha.rpCondo.1600sq n. + -pansive view or lush bonus room Carnage S&S ResaleSpecaahsts._3. l"IM 1044 Log11M1M'9-1 1051 garden D ecorated Realty, 12131 541-4701. ~or5bdrm models avail,••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
w/love using lots or bnck somew/pools. 968·460_2 UNIVERSITY
PARK
MONARCHIAY
TallJt.CE & mirrors. Sep hobby Pennington Properties
nn. 40• Patio. Prestig Prestife Home 6 Br-den·2 ba. Near
loc. You own the land! WITH POlfL Plush de-Manna High Bltn BBQ. call for private showing. ror and landscaping, 4 $00,900. 968-5700 Owner.
Royal Properties bedrm + huge family
968-4405; 642·1830 room. 2'-'' Baths. Owner 1 .
anxious $$ 000 ""'~ I 044 RO~~~:~ED ''mmr:mm~ .... ~.i~·~·~·;~;~; ....
Waits growing fom1ly 3 962-44TI1~M $64,900
Bdrm,31Ja,DH .larn 1·m Quiet cul -d1.• sac in
N1•wly done to a sparkle. SUPER FA.MIL y Irv me. Spanish arches 509 DeAnza entry . La rill' enclosed
Open Daily l-5 HOME rrontyard pa110. Smoke)
HAL PIHCHIH TI11s bea~l 4.Br . 21-,ija, mirrors and redwood
REALTORS hus approx 2300 sqft, :I bllard decorator living
'l727 E , Const Hwy r ar gar. s moke detec· room -plus Spanish
675-4392 tors. rrplc + many more bnck r1rcplace. Handy goodies. This won't last chcr·s ·kitchen. Family
long. Call now ror appl room Queen size m aster
968·3301 : eves. 968·3119 suite plus :i more family
View. privacy 4' pod. 4
A Rare Dell.et Bedrooms, ramlly room & den. Indoor·ouldoor
Enjoy lhla large 00 sq. entertaining al 115 finest.
ft . ramlly home. Imagine Close to schools, shop-
lhe cozy warmlh from Its ping & beach. Appoint·
two fireplaces (1 in the menloni . siee.soo
oversized master suite>. rret c1 1iiilliiiiliiilll
Stun n.I n~ Fr u n ca s cu n ~i1;.'•w;ili•l•il•l"i;r:li.Mmliil·. t'eramic tile adorns step· -• • • • •• • • down family r oom . 496-7U2 8ll·Ol36
Private patios Cor 2 or lhe~~~~~~~~~ 4 bedrooms. Jus t slepsl·
from your private t.'Om· WES!' NlNE ·Best buy on
munlty pool and tennis lhe golf course. Charm·
courts. A delightful In· mg Spanish style con·
vestment! Call now ror dominlum. 2 bedrooms. 2 details. baths plus ame nities.
31448WestNine. 1 000. BY OWNER Duplex. 2 Ur
J Ba +bachelor 3 Br 2
Ba. $149,500. 640·1526 aft
6PM Pnn4'. Only.
$88,500 bed morns. E -Z ca re ..... .-;:-::-;-:-=-~:::'.::'II llfJM!lilMiiJliitilil yard. Pollm~ bench. Re· ~ CALL NOW
locating -take advan· 752 7315 l!l~~~~lilll ta~c ! Call 752-1700 lod.llY· i ·~~~-· ~~ C'Jf'IN l•i';l• ti\ ll!N l(,)81 ,_i<f• 1 •
Local resident w<Jots · [ DONALD M.llRD ?i::::P~~.~~1~1·e~o ~~~ ~=='~'ll~l;::*~~~ft:=·~~I ~--;l_fl!lttl •--~-'-EU..c_•~-~-·-•-•-'-'~-!--' POOL HOME
ASSUME 6 1/.cVA 2 bedroom townhome In WITH VIEW
Pvt. Investor
Triplex. w1pool ltHI New s uper plush c pts, ll/\NCHO SANJOAQUIN "The Terrace", 3 Bedroom. 1 '1'J b:1.
Seaward Rd . CdM Onve thruout. 4 Br 1~ Ba. 3 Or 21 '2 Ba , popular Sa Fireplace. Upgraded highly upgraded. Lots of
_b_y_. Sl_&_l._000 __ 0~_,3_1_1_62_--1 beaut. covered patio. Luis Rey. Man y up-drapes&carpet. Patio. paper & charm. Jacuu1
Costo M~sa 1024 w/lge back yard Lge gr:ldes. View golf cours RANCH REALTY & pool. Owner anxious. entry kitch an exclusive. & lake. SllS,000 547.704, ____ ss_i_.2000 _____ 1 h as bought another.
Owner. 2br, den, 1"'1 hn. at f.64.950. Call 839·6655 or833·3215 TURn£ROCK Open House Sun 1·5.
r I I
A·" 27006 Via San Diego. Agt.
cmr . nrc yr< 2017 Ma ,.,,. Rancho San Joaquin 4 Bdrms .. 2"'2 ba .. I e . 673·7601.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
-'p_lc_-._s.t_9_.5<_J0_4_94_-&1_2_11_~Hwrtinqtonleach 104 L/\RGESTHOME family rm .. formal dln"'ll---------
4 br. I >/
4
ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 RH. 2 ba. end unit; ing rm .. atrium, r.,,1c. wpot'f leach I 069 EXECUTIVE RARGA1N lllush cpts, del·orato Xlnt location. acro11 ••••••••••••••••••••••
llome ''!r s&ale hy ownr. 6 Br. 4 Ba. S&S. Near appl's, prof. lndscpg. Crom park & pool. Many HARIOR VIEW HOME
Nr shop j,\ Sl'houls.lm· bl«lrh . owner. li e. Nearpool.V1ew!S99.000 custom features incl. Original P orlofi n o
mac C'Ond J>rin only· 962-8946. 968·1805 llASTlNGS &CO wallpaper,. warm fall Col· Model. 3 Br, 2~ Ba . ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ 30fl7 Trinity Or C.M Hcaltors 640·5 ors. quality carpe ts & +bonus rm w/loft bdrm _ _9_79_-4-18_9_. __ __ ARTIST'S drapes. A super Camlly & Cull bath air cond
Sparklin930'Pool BEACH CHALET ForSatebyOwner h <?me! Reasonably Spanish tile
0
pool Jot.soi ~ff.a:r:u:a:u:R"..JY1JS GeMral tMf'al 1002 Shake r ooreu dri·am Charmin~ spllt level ut least l':lll a pro· Po"lV1eaDl DS92c.s:>RLSO..a brick work.' new 'lnd1ep-
--==-c:::1_.-o:::::::::::.m:::::11_.""".. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• house. Close to South art1st 's chalet across frss1onal at llL-d ~rpet • " Ing+ much more. ATRIUM & VIEW 5 BDRMS Coast Plaza. 3br. 2ba. 3 from palm hoed park. llcaltors m !nine to ex-R£Al.TOR 833-9293 OPEN HOUSE sl1dingglassdoorstothc Sun porch open:-. to plain lhe raner points in SAT&SUNll-~orappt.
Channlng3 bd. 2ba. Fl Lovely f.1m homL· 111 btn r ear . mature t r cei. ~pani<1h s tucco living marketrnJ( your home. BY OWNE~. 3 Br . 2Ba , 1824PortSheffield Turtlerock beauty. Pror. lrv1nel'nmmunity Ncur room S tep saver None or us wa nt to see central air. upgraded. Feel.and SW.500
lndst'p, lovely garde school:. & at'cessablc to kitrhen Gracious dining you 1n a ll•1tal hassle or a S63.500. Ph 552·1493 By owner (7141998-2228
atnum. delightrully de frwys May be purchased room. Glass enrlosed "fall-out" cM·row. We G R E E NT R E E a-yr 0 corated w/a great moun subject to existing low in· master with breathlak· 31m to plcasl'' For a no • .... ronl rama fi:om lop lain view. Many mor terestGI loan.646-7711. in!( v1t•w or Cataltna' ol>hj.!at1on but a very In· Brentwood. 3 Br/2 Br+ to i?ottom In tbls new
extras! S45-949l. dill·. E . .\STSIDE two on a lot 1-'rc~h p:.11nt. upgraded ror m:Hivc chat call den. 2 Ba. fam rm, lndry s tr1 k i ng l ~wnhome First time offered. Sale carpel Doi-! run and 1:13:J 3380. rm. upgraded, pvt. wJt.otal secunty. 2 Br.~
or trade. O~ner Agl patio. Two l'llt garaj.!c S66,700, Pri n o nly decks, lhe bay & a 45
. ··:: .. '.' 642·7033and645·31~ ThrL'C blocks to ocean. NEW Univ Pk Pe ters 551-0598 =~p0at you~door.
By Owner. 5br. l,,b:i. i·ov p1cr and r1sh1nR. Two Twnhm 3 Br 2"'2 Ba. L-•-ach I 0,.1 • · wner. 181. bedroom, two baths Just popular C Pla n. Xlnl toe. --,-·--.. --======::.--11---------•I ered patio, new paint. 556,950. Call collect. $98.500. 547-7044 0 •••••••••••••••••••••• CAN.ALFROMT
POOL EST A TE FREE PLAYHOUSE lowest priced 5br 1n C:M 842.2535. 833·3215 HERNANDO'S NEWPORT SHORES 41EDROOMS Nd rast sale. SS9.!lOO. Of'IN•llQ•ll\ICIN IOflfNl(f• HIDEAWAY Sandy beach. boating &
Private roadway leads t Make your kids ecstatic. 540-0518. [9 ll~~·i;·~· Authe ntic adobe t swimming at your Cront double ca r gar age. bring your decoraltn~ v· I .J • V.l.P. t)edroom. fireplace doorf~mthis3BR,2ba,
Secluded executive tile ideas and save loads ot II a Retreat ,~, ; Value Isn't price! But vaulted ceilings 1 cbarmmghome;stepsto
entry! Dining entertain m on e y o n l h i s 4 Country 'n Trees! . ----• ·-··~ you w'~ receive both in seduded setUng. S64 ,500. ocean. $85.000 ~t~~e~: ~::,~~t~ rr.f
0
i;,,n ~~~>mt'.}~"'i~t~thg~~ Sprawling Spanish home ~~;ih ~;~11~0~~~°:~ t~~ HORIHS REALTY CJt.YWOODllW.TY
in·Law quarters w/bath. ,·acuzz1 and Tom Sawyer with gorgeous park hkl' FANCY Dccrlield cievelopmenl. * 4944057 * * SU-l2tO * yards. 11 assorted frwl WESTMO.._.T d Soaring staircase t 1idcawriy Only $88.000. trees. room ror t ennis " Upgrade thruout with IY OWMER bedroom retreaL'i. Lush PEACE & QUIET rourtor pool 4 bedroom, BcautaruUy decorated 3 ceramic Ille entry. up· WALK TO ALISO BEACH Bayfront #S Collins Isle.
tropica l ba ckya rd 2 rullbath.s.Dmmiuirea. Br.ram.rmover2car graded carpet s and 3Bedroom.2bath.faml Trade or flnanee w/sh1mmerln~ summer Comph•ll.'IY r ustomized gourmet kitrhen. He<1rly garage. custom rinishcd drapes• mirro r ed 1y room and rlreplace. S298 000. 613·1110 o;
funpool.Sk1nny di1>peri. rul-<lc·::..ic horn<!. Large rireplace lo warm }our kitchen , brick rrplc. wardrobe d oo r . Secluded H&F poo 558W
delight! Own<'r houghl lot. 3 Ucdrooms. l 'h t oes. SS:?.500. Mi·su marble entry way. Show Everythani:: ror luxury JOx15.SlOS,OOO. .---------
new. Must !>ell. Tr} baths. huge master Verde BKR call 54IH7 &scll.$00,500 962·7751 living In and out. Only JayW. YealSReally
S9.300 t olal down ' bedrm, fornHll dining. · · INT'LR.E.NETWORK $71,500 31709CoastHwy
84Hi010 giant hvlng rm. tremen TARBIU. · So. Laguna 499-223
Ol'fN 1•1 Q . ,, ~ ruN •0111 N.rr • dd r IE ""CHW ""LK dous a -on amily rm. 2 "' "' By Ownr. Spacious 3 br. [.1~~~·11·~· gorgeous fire places BYTHESEA ba home. Ope n bea ,, . . l. jl,
1
Almost new plush upts ·~I In CallfOf'Tlial" In lhml111i.tton Dea ch. ceilings w/beaut ocean
_ .~----~·-··~' & drps. Many. mnny u11 · Walk or JOA nn the surf \•1ew & of coastline Arad<.-s Only $47.50!1 FOUR BEDROOM Just ""' mite rrom home $78.500. 499·1950 art Gpm. HARIOR VllW
II 2 bath. pool. Mesa Verde Its a 2 bedroom + de MESA VERDE Roberts ~.900 with Sl4,000 or upgrad Dlamand Bri9ht MYSTIC HILLS HOMES
·r IV.A. R It OWNER/AGENT i~g. _This outs t andtn Spor kllng Greentree 3 Bedrm. 3 b11th, sauna CARMEL Beaut1 u Mesa Verd eil y 540-0555 Pan lS very popular and Windsor. A 4 bdrm , 2 view, view, view. Grea Comer lot, 3 BR. 2 BA,
.. T .. plan offered fo is a real experience ~I bath. hiAhly upgraded exec u t a v e h ome family rm. professM>nal·
veterans 3 bedrooms :4.:.:::".:! MINI-RANCH ~~~~T\~~~~e,:.1, da7.zler . Hurry. it's going SI59.900. J\gt,673·7601. ly lndacpd, atrium .
secluded master suite ~~~~~~~~~ DACK B/\Y NEWPORT [ I to go quickly al$77,000 Priced to sell now. OpH many extr as. large t = .--·-•• •-house Sat 2·5. Sun 1·$. r;;e;~':_1rp~c~~~rtn::. ~~r':e~n~\~.~~ ~a~k ,,,~,~jl!\ll ~ 1730 Port Barmouth. Aiit
lrvilw Racquet Clb Peck. Agt. 5110 .5964. 1 ~~~~i!Mfa'l~w~ii~:~~~ 552·7000 673·7601.
Call M6-2313 Cor V.A. In By Owner $73,000 R di p K 6 .. ":: f~~':',~~~o.~is 1uhro111N1c1· B 4122EscuderoDr. a o age" ·I I -----THE .. ·:... B~~~~~~~l~~2~~~: ~.: llNltll ~1 ~in'in~b~~~~:t'11;~~re!i~l M t S II" Park Jt.rea VILLAGE. · '.: 2v2 Di\, 3 car gar. Pror. ~ : ror uppt-or Open House US e .. Ele1umt older residence REALTORS _ V CY dee. well ldscpd, cor lot.
RELAX In cozy comfort In two ;<;;;. ~~ j i Sun 1.5. Ph S59"4Sl4 3 BR on Jge lot. New cpl. located on 11ulet, tree· PRI A nr. 7th. (airway. 9 Cstm
versions of ballet slippers! _ • .--=-iH•i•~ Could be income prop. tined !llrcet In pre STYLED This home hai. It a ll! homesonstreel.$230,000. Krnl 1 peir I« rourstlf, an·
811
"' ....
0
... EW Good rental area. CUii sUg lous "OLD TOWN" ls Ocean sldo of hwy, Owner (710 644·163'1 for
other for tllrifty alft'fivlng' ftA" " ror info. awt1itini: your approval FOR THE bdrms .. 3 baths, hoatc-;i-~..:.\p..;..pt_. ______ _
Use 2 colon •d 2 atrlllds ol DUPLEX 6 .. 5 3474 Outt'h tloor entry. rru1t pool. view 11nd !deli synthetic wonted las onel THERE'S .. • trees. modem kitchen & TIMES palio.si411,500 By own er. 2br. 2ba
Casy' Pttttm 7~08: Sizes BIG In sought arter Eastside tmill newly painted and 1~~~~~~~~~~lwnhse, Newport Crat. Small. Medium. lJrae included. Back Dny area. No com· 1 I II pa red A. hom e t hat proves I-$68.000. Call 673·'7794
$1.00 for HCh pettem. Add MO ..... EY mon wa ll. JUSl llke • • pe · sophisticated. modern FAMILY DE&.t~HT _e_v_es_. ______ _
Thty're All so CASY-drHs. JSf each 111ttem for nrst<lau " ~parate homes! Each ~~==~1~-~~-:1 ~--.LL.~ C---"-rt styling can tic beautlrul. tunic. elashc-9.lrt pt111 1~tl 11r!Nil Ind llandl1nii. Stllll te: has 3 bdrms, 3 bas. Frplc ~ unnv For •99 5o.. e J·o 3 High above La gun a ; Wolk to beach. 4 br, a bll, •-thl ........., I Soulhern HB luv"'"tJpool • · "• n Y large 3 bdrm 2 bal C I dsh h .....-.. s wa1.,..,.,... n nrvtr· Ahoe Brooks in m hv rm & master bdrm. ~.. bd 2 b th r ·• rp c. w r. etc. Re· prtn 'nils tor city, country, Needlecraft Dept
105
646-Til l • home. 4 Oedrrn + nus rms1.. a1 s~ u am. ~me: many extras. Dbl. t'&""'\ & save! eo.a50 t-etall yt~ BY OWNER. MUST f F 1.1 rm .. arge ivrng rm. f1repla"e large dlnln •..-·•· ~ o .. 1y Piiot LITILE + am rm. ormo '''"' with F .P. First clilhli con· " • . Property house. Pnnted Palletn 923' ll'lss.s' Box
163
, Old Cnelsea Sta.. SELL in((. 3 car garage, com di rm .. private bnck poUo.1---"--.;..... ____ _
S11es8.I0.12.1•.16.l8.?0 NewVOfk.NY10011 Print WA~T •os mn 3br, 2ba up~rodtd Co1t ofJacuu1.Sll3,900. t1on' large fenced yard wit NEWPORTSHORES Size 12 lbllst 3'1 dfHa t.U1 Ne Ad '" z " ~ condominium. S47.SOO. SURF REALTY ma. ture trees .. Xln 3 Br + den, sun da1ok, 1~11 yards 60·1nch fabric me, v reu . 1P Call Bob,7t4-':u"~082. Ontu bborbood Pri ed """ Stnd $1.00 f'>r Heh llllltm Pattflfn Number. "'"' ne111 . c to hlahLY upgraded, 2400 sq.
Add 35c' for each Pllttm fOI MORE thin Mr belort! 200 To plat'e your 3br, l ~ba, rrpk, on cul· II/' d•Y Ill 189.000 rt. 2 blks to beach, pool:s, ~!'n'•·c110a._ss llnna1I. handllna ~~~1137!": Pfint(C~}~ Cc'~a1551 ICled A~ tbe fastest draw In the de-sac tn 8 much sought '''21 -tennis court, S97,1500. ... ~TAl.OC' H: v W>l """' a 642-5670 West. . .a Daily Pilot after are11. Walking dls· --=-""' ftwftG)~ Prln only call '*8607
M•11an Martin Crmtt ~t11':::.'r~i~$~&i TODAYl Clualfled Ad. Phone tance lo South Coast -~I I ~ btwnU&lOPM.
Pattern Dept 442 Crtclltt 1 war°"'9 _ $1.00 r;;:;::;;;::;;;=:::=;L;;;&Q..::;:5878:;:' ;:::;::;:;::; Plaza & Montgomery 536-7M2 • 536.1474 499·2100 i---.......,,=-----
oaoy Pilot ltlfb Flfb llullts 1 oo 1 Wards & schls. $02.000. 2'32 West 18th S t., New ~ Cttc"-t __ s1:00 Southe rn California'-________ , LAICJlllMIHllh 105
York. NY 1001 t Print Sew + lllft lttlt _ 1.25 N••• • Realty, 548·5605 ori---------1 •••••••••••••••••••••• ;~~i· ~~DdRe:~· v ~Pe :"::::.::... t: 540-8l49. ~S13 C\M"15J>a:l~ll(E LOCJMN Hiii
NUMBER. "''""' Crtetltt '"* __ 1.00 •l•e• "'-··--FH"'Ln. ASSUMPTIONS OPEN DAILY Price r educed!
1
Supc
l11sbllt crtcht "'" -ua ·-···-' .. ~m~~'"' ~-..... A The wise buyers way to bu,y! 4 BR bomo.540·9922 Dt Ytl k ... lttw te pt • 1111bftt ..._. IMll .oo .., -r lmmnc. 3 br + 1tucat, 2 save! Take over , 1mbjc1•t __ s_A_.M __ • T0 __ 6_P_._M_. __ 1 :r'":.~.~~ ~ l•~tMlltflMl . _ 1.ao ba. lge lot ln nice arco. to existing VA or J.'llA New3bdnn.2balhhome. HAlllOlVllW
Cttlltt-cllp C9•• l•tlde ,., Ct""'9tl llft ...-• $48.950. Auume FHA loan No quallCylna. no Deerfield ;2S Deerwood E HOMIS tree ,.tttn ti rew clttlct. Ce•tt=•~"-'a Loan. $34,200. Mo'ly polnt.s,lowercoete.Over Ryowner;Prinonl.y PALlltMO SIM lltt ""I ~: :, ..,.;:;~ ::~ •cu pyrnni..1354. pays all. 50 ave1loblc wltb vartou.s $75 ooo 6«-4340 Model o n cul·d o·snc C:.t lllfl W it.ZS ..._ ...... It~.. ;z ._,.___..._. down payments. Coll · l 1 11tttJ Cr1"a • 1M S tlllltb "";, T 11& ~ ....,. ~AA ACTION NOW! TURntROCK GUM s reel, r1 aide yd for ~ =:; = _ ~:: et 11 nnr'WJ~-== A~~ wn.:!:;~eatty ~~· ~~~c~,~~~ ~:~; --------..--1 ~~ ~5u~°r~~~
•
............................ Qwner5Sl4931/5S20100 ~Dwfilaellit. Port Barmoulh, Aat. 673-7601.
All So Easy! Quickie Gifts!
7408
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• Re.tab "-"U.fwW•d "'-"Uwfw .... d HwnUafwill .. d Tuelday10ctober19,1976 OAILVPILOT IJ9 ........... s.. otller .... &tot. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........_ .............................................. Hous.sFMAl.a..d BT JJlJ ......... 1244 .... 1244 ........ U.M •1•1d ,..,_IDlataFw•IMd --. ... ....,..... .. -.. I 06 1t ... / oro ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .... ,......_.,...... ....... ---· •••••••••••• ••• ••• ••••• .................. ••• •• 269 38 4
....... ••••• ••• ••• •••• Mle 1100 eoro.. .. M• ) I U 3 br 2 bA rplc OW WUlow Hom es. 3 br 2 ba r\.lerock P lan 3. 4 br. S..Cll l HuntfncjtOft S.och 37 40 Costa Mesa 2
••••••••••••••••••••••• per d ' 't"as'1 ' OW fplc cpt s 'dr""' dln'a & fam rm Pvtm ••••••••••••••••• •••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••v QUIET ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpt1 rps ""' m o • • .. ,..... · ·· ·· _ Jceonfront Duplex 4 AR Beach houae o\ Crystal 9tS3~A.gt .. Noreoe. · 1386/mo.~A&t.No vAew. $.'!OS. mo.&«· 0 CEANFRONT VIEW 2 Hr. pool. pntlo. all uUI, Newaduhwntl'rl'1011t.11>t•
u p s t ti i r 11 • 3 8 H Co a' I unUI June 15 ftt. or MZ-7003 CONDO. 2 + l><'n. 2 cat ~1ni:lc11 $21W f'tl' $1~ in M1~.1 Vtirdc l\i.•uuttlul CLASS down .. tu1r!1 .rlRhton1111nd Ph~~:ev 6'-r.J35l0days Fomt•V•y 3134 U Pk fl 2 b 2 b pnvute porklng, rull 631 20 tl , 547 2501 or IJlld'>l'llP•n.: f:Xl'('Jl m Nwpt Hrh. 1210.000 ' · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Live In lrvlnr Village We niv. • "· 11 e('UJily hullding Lease. 879 lOliO ltuually 1 lch 1ntvrlo1 ~.
A double iron llJte {>ntry 1'.:xch•n1tc• or ljale subJC<'l LalJ-a leoch 3 141 '"' I ce 3 br 2 ba. cov have homes available ror 11\hoil m,e. (rplc. !~~r~I ~-pt mo Ail 644· 72ll • --le h 37 .. 8 1&2 bdrm:-. (ruin S2 ';, & courtynrd intruduc~ t ~chan.:e 8u:un~11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ,rep II • • leaaeln: N! • mm1:1c. _.. Inc ....,..... ac ~ M<.~J Vt rdt• V1l1;1,, 1~11.1
the Indoor t-lc1rno<'(' or 1?r; Nl1t"• uroker•i;~ h ncJ• 4 BR 11200 patio. new cpt,., drp11 & WalnutSq TheRonrh tennis. PoOls. JnCu.ul. Udo Isle Lovely4br.2l>it. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa Vc·rdi· On\•• 1-:.1 '·
Ulla 4 bedroom, 3~ bath C pliob Karkpatnck \' f t> suS750 t , l·BR OW No wax Ors. su~r Deerfield Culv~ale 5.:)29444 or 87l·610L Mr. home. f'rl>lc . all elt.'C kit. llnch Nt>Jr bt>arh. Uttl l'o~tu M e!i a. 17 1-1 t
"Ivan Wells" home in u 7~-81,lll • r1Y ,:W $3:;0 A;~~'.75..'ll toe. S38S/mo. 963-4.S(ll gt Ca. Homes Univ Park Altmann dbl gar. Avu1I wntr or yr pd S1951225 mo I& wk ~W.&ii l
tupcrb low trarr1c. qwel Vr/O Noh.~. Colleee~arlc TU RTLEROCK 3 Br ly G731334aftM5PM 143.SN Clil.4942508
tl'ff lined nclghb<>rhood ncotMf'roperiy 2000 1 Bdrm Bachelor house. Compl redec. 4 br, 2 ba. 3Bryourcho1ceof t9> tam. rm, 2 Ba. Liie yard ULUFFS l·lcvel 3 HK. 2 ---------2 llr I' nJ T"nlh <' l•rl.. ~autJrul parquet floor~••••••••••••••••••••••• Steadily cmplo)ed. new crpts. drpe & palnt. trom~~o.~ nr purk & pool. 1495 mo ba. Lovely grecnbt!ll & ~enn vu•:· $2~. UUl pd fplr, ttnr, li.:1• ~i:1t10. IHlll ,
d•n1 f1omg ilY,,.,."m<)()rn,Pfo~,'::~~ l11Vl' uµ tu $800.000 rai.h 49HU7U fptc. S410/mo. 983~ 4 ~~~,C:~~:S~~16) $200 sec dep. 833·9879 pool. $.SOOAl(t 644·1133 • M~11'::~l·ntols, ~0.5370 ~ov~ts 11fg7~1 l~;7• t-tl~·~ n n r,"' · ti lH " to lrntl!t in units & Agt Noree · Agt bedroom11. luxurwuH Comm'INOW'64-0-8:l00 Oecorator rurn.3Br3Ba . . NoFeea . ll ARU TO F I Nl>MewportBeoch 3769 646 7027
wallpaper & near new -· hse. on Victoria Dr. Oct $42.S. lmmac. 4 BR. 2 Ba. RANCH REALTY COLLEGE PARK 4 Br. En:stbluff l!:xec. borne.••••••••••••••••••••••• Adult llvln..: in spu(' lll'W· ca~ting magnify lhl' · n Clemente. 12 units on tU J une l. l600 per mo home w /bllDI. fplc. w/w 551-ZOOO ram rm. 2Vr Sa. nr pool, 4br. 2bu. Cum rm. Soll BEST Iv r<'<lt"<' 1 ·hr '-> l.J 1 qualtty .conslrut'llon of~ bu1IL res·<·om 'I lot. ~U.112'7·9449 crpts. drps & lndry rm. sch I & park. S450. w11ter. N.-w crpts. drps. BUY 1·ownhs <? \~/p ;;tto ,\
thlsdominating horned~ $21,000 gross, nr bch. Mew rt leadl 3169 Mile Square Park area. 497.3973 pnlnl . Walk to schools. •an , • S300 No 1,.h al~ned w lth Y OU 1n S210,000.Ph492·S078own. =:?.'!': .............. Avail now. 968-1882 or •RENTALS• s hops. tennis club Somepeopll.'sayynuget ~5 ~ciorft37 91'117 1 "
mind. ..._ _______ ... 968-<M71 28R.2'-' b3 ......... SS25 3t>r +den or 4 br. 2 be. S775/mo Lse. Rers. whut you pny for' We ur
,.. Udt> Isle. bayfront & san· 1 BR den. 2 ba. • S47S F, R , fl"plc. S385 m o &4().8775or~2240 fer more And the pnce 1. CASA VICTOR IA
1 Heipts Beauty
wlthpooll
Massive masler suite .
Re mod eled kltl'h en
H eavy s hake roof
Beautiful upgrade
tbruoul. Ea~y to see
Owner aruuous. S89.500
Call 645-72Zl
Century 21 "Wetitcliff'
Olstttu Properly! dy beach. 3 Br. 2 Bu. ~nfll 4 br. 2 ba. dshwshr .. ' · · • 752-6800 644-4663 less Membersl11p In J 1 & 2 Ar, Oelu·u~ Unfu r I can rmd 1l for you. level home. 1-'plc. W!>hr. frplc .• paUo. xlnl loca· 2 BR." Pool.·····" $4'1$ 'eve BcautiCul carmel model Health Club. A tennis or F\im IHI" wtr pd
nt-ach area speciahsl. dryr, gar Lsc lo 6/1. Laoo. No pets. $.54-3891 2 BR. Plan A.·"· .. ~•-leach 3241 3Br+ t-~am rm in H1.1rbor club. 1-•ree t~nntl> le!Sbons roCJ\ 213 214 ~117 3 BR. 2 Ba ........... $4.$0 --r--V II W I I i\tlult.s Nu i;ets Sec ~·•Ii l'robatet1,forectm.ures. «>-.IV • ... 1..,.•Mtt•leodt 3240 2BR.&Den ....... $450 ....................... u om es. e l:hlltards. Sw1mm1ng. Pool,rec rm,elev:uui:.
bankruptc1es.d1vorce. BAVrentat.rum,4Br,21h ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3BR.FR.2Ba .. , S4~ RENTALS landscnped w /putlo. Golf Driving fhnge. 52.5V1ctorla.642·11tl711
tnve11tment properties Ba. saun:a. w/dock avail 2 Story, 4 br. 2 ba. fplc. SanLuia Rey . 1625 LAGUNA BEACH $S75. l'h~4829 Saunas + wreat ac· ---
below market price, for pwr boat. Winter ren· OW. c""a. drps. clean. 4 BR. FR • .. , .•.• 155() 4 BDRM. & FAM. RM .• Pc1un. Pt. 3 BR. dm. rm .. tlviUes: Sunday BBQs. WHY HOT?
Ken JohRIOa. Broktt" tal or yrly lse. S975 mo. $475/m~':' 963-4569. Agt. 4 BR .• ' •• , ••.•..••• $475 bllt-ln kitchen. tge. sun. den. 2 frµI $850 Mo/lse. Parties w1Lh ltvP bands. Sunken hv111.: room
Cu II 1714 l673-4S45 Call Mrs. Long, 644-8612 No fee And we have otherl for deck w;ocean view • S4SO A1eent 673-!lOOO Fr~ Sunday brunch. Cuthedrul ceilln~ i----------i1-=-===-=:.:.!!.:~..:..:::.:..:.::..-i lmmedialeoccupancy mo 2bedrooms, l h balh:,
U I\ I I. PLAC E HousnUnfunllshed Lie 2 DR. llfa Ba. patio. OCEAN SIDE Of HWY 20r.2baCondo,pool.ten· Yourrentdollars goevcn Alluchcd111aro.1~c
I I 1 Qui ~ IS courts Newport furthe r .. •A t err lric W .. chur/tJrycr ook Ul• PHOPERTIES, INC.••••••••••••••••••••••• I'll c, gar. poo · e AT VICTORIA BEACH n · ...., ~
M J\ N AG F. M E NT Gefttrd l.202 adult Townhouse. 1 Ml. Private pathway leudinJ( Crest $425. mo. Adults. mainlenance crew, pm Pvtynrd with µatm ..,.. ti. ..... c. 898-2470 673-7794 eves fess ional management Adults, S3!">0 m11 DIVISION Professional ••••••••••••••••••••••• to _.ac _...,, to beach. lsl Quality J --·----s t arr t hat cares. and f'OXllOLI.OW
apartmc..'fll, office bwld· NEEOA RE~TAL! 4br Twnhse. Cpta, drps.. BDRM. CEDAR HOME. WESTCLll-'1-'4 Br 2!.lt Ba. friendly neighbors VILLAGE
ln)!:>. &~hoppu~g cente Wehavethem.l-4Bdrm nu decor, nr shops, 21fa Baths . 2 tge . rccrm.charm&ideally Models open daily 107 621W.Wlls1111.CM
management an L.A • Kids,pets.singleok. school & bch. 2 pools. •LEASES • rlreplace~. All bllt-ln loc. Vacant. $625. Sorry.nooneunder21& 642·499lor642-122fi
Orange, R1ve:rb1Je ~o NEWERA·fet! 638· 963'83'17.S32$.962·97S8 <somefor&moa.) kitchen. :Stained glass 673·3435, 631-0287 . no pets. Roommate -- --
San IBcrnl,acblino coun(t711c!. lalM»o lslOIMt 3206 Ba f I dbl 2 BR, ram rm , . .$375 cweindll roewsrer. eMncuesst ~!!.e .. ~ox· 642·0067 service available Mon· NEAT & clean 2 Br .1µl, ----------1 Koh 1v ,.., 111so11 ., I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br. 2 • I? c. gar . 8 f •A o · · _...., "' · ---------th·t.C>month occupancy. SbJS mo. A<Jullb no swh. NPT. HTS. dream 3BR 7~·19'~ . S37S mo First. last & 3-4 R. am. rm .•.. .,.I COMMERCIAL STOREt•--------•t Nr. Shops&. bus, 352 Vil"
nr. Cliff Dr. Owner must --• WI NTER 2 BR home cleaning. 839-8883 2 BBR.R debn.din rm • ?!~ oroffke rental. Separate Pt. Carlisle. Ha r bor Oakwood Garden Apts toria, M~r_it 25 64fi 1571; sell Call agt S40·36f>6 6Unih-loncJleach w/fpl.&palto.S375 Mo. 3 ·2 a ................. bldg. & rest rm., at Vtt>w Homes; 3 BR .. . . Onl $79 000 WILLIAM WIHTOM 2 Bc:tr. 4 blks beach. $285. 3 BR, din rm · · • · • $43S Picadllly Circus. Sl60 f d 1 SanCfement~ 1076 Wtllmole than~1tke the REALTOR 675-3331 ~ f~:ai~ Oct. 25. ~:~:~e;r~~t : ... ~Mo .. El.EC. & WA1'EH }cr::~m'"e7·:'noo'!: ;l~n ·
••••••••••••••••••••••• payments (.;ail 752-0 , lal»a Pfftiftsula 3207 a p 3 BR. din. tm. . . . . $475 p~~SSIOM REAL TY View of hills. Vacant.
880 Irvine <at tflth>
(71•1 >645-0550
••• BEAC H GET ur640-0166. Agnt. Picas •••••••••••••••••••••••FANTAST IC YORK · 3BR.ramrm .... S490 98$S.COast.Laguna qwck possess. $595 Mo, 170016thStlatOoven
AWAY. $3'7;,900-Perfec·t leavename&number Cottage,2br,lba.beamed TOWNVILLA.8 mos.old 38R,FR.DR ,...,_
49
4-0731 yrty.lease <714)642·8170
cottage ror -nd. home or ceiung Fr doors & win· 3Br. 2ba, 1385 sq Ct Con· 3 BR. FR, OR . . . Hrighton Rd . Ca ml'o EANFRONT Apt 1 8
go an~ Wiii h~lp Wtlh $179.000, :>lfl 3IS28 Owner or l single only. $29S/m bltns & pool Nr beach. 552·7000 new exec 3 br. 2\1'.l ba,. dtn. rm .• O<'eanfront rental. 548-1930,673·7844 -.. 121'"1"'"'1(
rctirem~·nl Ownr must6·1'1 ex Costa M esa. dows anUquestove cpls do. 2 car locked gar. ~ Panoramic ocean view. Shores.3BR.ram rm .. S225. utll incl. Wmt:r
financing ,\gent r nn only ' I 644--0997 art 6pm no pets. $375 mo. 963-4466 home. 1-\am. or unfum n ~ .... •BERTHAllENl<Y• --. . )ry. frptcs.$650.499-2807. J d d t s12oc UVESUP REALTORS 4!><!·4121 E/\.'iT SI DE C.M. Corona def Mar 3222 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, lge yard, THE .. -ust re uce o I BR, yrly rental. s teps to n,.IM " "I 7Unat11 1 3BR 6·2BR 2 .,8 Brookhurst 38drm,priv.,yard.ocea mo .. annuallease beach. Garage prkg. TOITSNAME 215 ~ ar.~an'-l'm ""10000. · ••79oc..;., Prine'••••••••••••••••••••••• car"' r. ' VILL"·CE. ·.· vu. fullv upg r aded . Let our s"""'ialited ren· $22S.544--0899or675·7598 .. ""' · ' " . .,,,,.., · I BR Bushard area. S425 mo. n , ,~~ [•••PRESI DENTI AL rmJy LEASE Dup ex 2 + 846-9088 REALTORS hardwd rt rs. frplc . t al service f ind you Over500tall trec~u111l Ill
H E I G H T S. S54.000. den, $360. mo. No dogs. ---------Robert Mance 497-3647, qunlirled tenants. Call SoulhLCICJUlla 3786 stream!\ with wutt•rf.111'
Super Plan E. 3 OH. 21\i NEW Agt. Dave S. 644·7211 Nice yard w/frult trees 4 Greentree Homes Btrl 752·6671, 640-1666 BARBARA at ••••••••••••••••••••••• creatu 11 n•laxlni.: iwtt1ni.:
ba. clean & prl vale. Custom Ouplt•xes Npt Fireplace, 2 br, S325. b r . 2 b a. c h 11 d re n 2br. country ktchn. frplc. Laguna Hils 325 lay & a.ach Realty 1br apl, private bch .. Gas
0
forr )2·111b1redspra<1c0i~~s 81:~;7'rt 1
Owner transferred & fh h. Steps lo wate r. Singlesok 1-~ee ~l~ome. Good locat\<ln lndscpd, nr pools. p.irk & •••••••••••••••••••••• 67S-3000 & water pd 4U9-4Z41 or ,,
anxious. 200'.f dcpr avail. Bkr. MatnRentals,54().5370 Cmopt ~!,~~wshr ' S400 schJ.551-2716. Redec. 3 br. 2 ba. cpls, art7,49&716l. ments. l"rolll S2 ~11 . •BERTllA llENRY • ...,.,.~ Furniture u va 1l,1hk
REALTORS 492·4121 ~144 1. Spacious 2 BR+ fam·rm · Sharp 3br. 2ba, bltoa, drpts . fplc. ow,. new Deluxe 3 BR 2 Ba ocean SmJll ptls OK. Aclult'
215 Del Mar. San Clem COVINGTON w t lge prl vale p a l10 3 BR. 2 Ba, crpts. & drps. d shwshr. crpls, 2·car area. $375/mo. 963·45W view. $450. yrly. 675-0688 AP.c:a lmenk only. Ofrlce OJll'll tl.110 111
Panoramic ocean \'aew
Early Cahrornia ranch
style home on estate-size
lot. 5200.000.
woodbuming fireplace+ DJW, lrpl, cov. patio. gar. cul-de-sac. ~521 Agt. No fee. or673·2988 Unfwnis~ 6 00 2300 Fa1nww l<d . FOUR PLEX ara e So-of-Hwy. S4SO grdnr.S435.21l/596·9G76 or898-2337. r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cost a Mu:.tt. Phou .. ~ /n.6651 4 BR. 3 BA. nut trees. Oceanfront. yrly. L>lx 4 ~al 3802 54$-2300 Pnde or ownership units o. Walk to bch. 3 br. s;iso. Woodbridge Twnhme 3 Br close t o everything. BR. 2 ba. lower duplex. •••••••••••••••••••••••1--~-----
on a lovel.> tree lined 2 IEDROOMS Klds/petstsngls. 1-ee. 2 Ba. A /C. upgractes, $4()()/mo. 1st. last + S200 frpl .. laundry rm. S6SO NFFD A RENTAi." S200. 2 br. t ba. f-: ,1111·.
strl'et 1n Tusti n. 3 $325 MOMTH Malo RentalsS40.5370 lake&pool priv. 640-8542 Nofee.Agt.546-0814 Agent675.7060 wc'h~ve them! 1-4 BR Tri plcx. l'nd 1·,ir.
lk.'()roorn:., 2 bath. plus Fruit rurm. S220. l br. L-M1-1 3252 K1d::..pcLo;,::.m!:lesok. b.all'Ony . n1•11r new . ANCHOR.AGE Clrepl11eti owner'i. unll 673-3022 RENT~LS .~;; ••• !::•••••••••• HV Hms. Cn r mel 3 Hr Nt::W t::HA·fce 638.x3o0 Adults ,6421603 IMYESTMEMTS plus3twohedroomu111ls. kids.petsok. Fee. SingleFamaly Homcs , +FR, nr park & school. · ---Cl~ed uar11ges. l'nv<ite Costa Mesa 3224 Main Rentals. 540·5370 3 BR.2 Ba ..•••..... $385 Ocean & lt~r vu. 2Br Con· S575 mo.S44-mO LARGE2 BDH\1
1714149'-7711 dl'('kumJpat1~.s1.3'J,50o.•••••••••••••••••••••••New 3 BR. 3 Oa. 1 blk 3BR.2Ba ........... S395 do+lana1 r oom. P 11c .. -.._ P.ninsula 3807 i\tJulL'l·No Jlt'L'i $2111 iX7 ~========:..I u k t COME HOME• 3BR 2 o-•A., .. Is land Village. Adlts. t:KJ1UUO w Walson i:D tH2·1)83..>11r ro ·er r()-()pcra ion 111• • from ocean. Gardener m· · ..... • · · "· .,.""' $385 640· !644 & S48·2873 Attrar Bnghl 2 br house ••••• • •• ••••••• ••• •• ••• ""·~ 0 x· · · By Owner: Oceanfront lot \ 1tl-d If ave a real home at Fox· c 1 d . S550 536 · 1484. 3 BR, 2 Ba .• • .•. · S425 w / ya rd N cw 1 y r e -Newer. t'r sldinj( 2 br, 2 ..,,..864 306
tn ~Hlusave Cypr u-. hollow Village, 621 W. 536-8026 3BR.28a ......... saoo •••WEST9lowercomer furbished. Close to bl·h. ba,balcon1ci..l'ncl.2car2 br. 1·pts. Jrp:.. liltw .. . ~~csir~n~~1g~3·t~·::;~ 1£ 1Quail ~ f~~f~~·s.&5~0.MJ;:· Comry 3 Br. patio. gar. :~~·~~:a ... ···"::: unit on golf course. 2 schls,hosp.S375mo.J:Jl5 gar. walk to ferry. Yrly 5210.Kad~ok
water. Wall t.akc som1• PrapPlac
7
...
52
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9
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2
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0
. t -6:30 weekdays, u 6: kids OK. S28S. Fee Sl5. "C ' Tow~homeS.. ~er~:e~~~.-~.~e~!:.' Clay St. N.B !;e~i~kn~:.o 8a~-!i2: 645 2978
trade.smallcll'arhoww weekends.Ava11.Nov.1 631 -20ll; 547·2501 or 2BR.28a ....... , .$350 •BOHOREALTY• J8r,2~Ba.ocean,pk& wkctys Bi\VMEADOWAP1"~
Principals onl) f>hortt' 1976.642-4991 879-Ul60 2BR.2Ba .. . •. . $425 831.9411 Eve 496~3 night view Prof. dee. 1&2 hr, ~ar. pool. G<ts tr. 492·1250bt~n6pmlolfpm MOOQUAl~S?Nt~•· 2BR.2Ba ...... $450 S450 642·3036:631-1153 $375 \'rly 2 ur. 2 ba. 2 Willer pd. No kids. no I ---------New 3 br. 2 b:l. delac UniQue 3 Br I ~ Ba. nr 2 BR 2 e S.S25 2 1 on y. * UNITS * rront hou•" of 5 plcx schools. nacc area $395 • a ..... . . . . 3br. rrplcs. ocean vu. ten· ~c story, car enc . gar. pets. From $220. 646-00i'J .,... 3 BR. 2~ Ba.. . .. i-125 nis. pool, g uard. $525. 3 + den or 4 Br. Nl5 Balcony. 642-1603 --For sale by uwnr. Assume $31l5. mo. Drive by 18 mo. Ownr. 213-434·2018 <ir 3 BR. 21,.; Ba ....... $450 494.3320 art6 & wkods. yearly . Wn lk beach , Large 2 hr. 2 ba. S215. In VA loun. Cpt'd., dq1'd.. 3, 4, 6, 1. 8, 12. 16. :t2, 40, Monte Vista . 714·536-8754 Eves. 3 DR. 2 Ba... . ... -~ pools & l<'nnrs. 645-9794 or 3 BR. 2 Ba, crpts, ~rps . fant, s ml pC'l uk. LAl' t lir
dishwshr. range. rdng.. 18. ~. 60. 80 io Oranae Call 673·1181. 3 BR 2 Ba....... . .$500 4 Br 2 Ba hme. lge yan1. 642·5991 Mrs J , frplc, gar. All appll s, nr Sl80. Infant, sml pet ok. autogardoor.~\\lnlflOOI. Count) Al::.o -I02unrts. Supe r s h a r p c las!lac 4BR:2\o!IBa ....... $475 S4.25.2Br2Ba,E.Nme. beach&LldoShops.Yr· 642-001 2
Capo Uch. soo.;oo PH: i\lso-offt<•ebuilctings &MESAVERDE·3 Br,2Ba home!3br.2bawtrrplc, 4 BR.a\.i Ba ......... S495 nr 1tolf course. u75.3Br2Badplx,fvlc.l blk ly.S375.Nopets.675-4727i--------
49'l·7911. commer1c1al property. dbl frplc. S450 mo. w/n bltns & brile chl.'t'rlul 497 2370 Lo bch. new cpLs, drps, l<>vely 2 br. crpt. dq,...,
----------1 Brand new unals & re· c ts. $42.5 as Is. 54s.36SO kit. Lge low maint. back · · paint. Beam cl)(. natural Sl7S. Uhl pd. Near water. 1wr. no pt•ls O\ er 111.
otfMr Real Est• sall'S. Call for appoint 3 BH. 2 ua . fJm·r m, 1 bl yd w/fa ntas tic party Impeccable 3 br, 2 !Ja, wood "alls S47S yrly Applns f'et> Sll!O. 221>0 Plc1cen11.1.
•••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ment to buy. list. ~di or fro m g r ade sch I r:!!:ohoo~~~~;; Close trplr .• spacious yds .. 673 71)84 orG73·0013 Marn Henlals, 540·5370 &16·3160 ------~ Home1 \'Xchangc Halccrest Swim & Ten Ce need. S4lO 494·l9:ll. 4 RR, 3 n a. I blk to Wedge, :'Ile" ly dt•t·or:ilNl. clt'.Ul,
• ForSde 1100 Club. $oa()() mo.546·1187 Hunt. Harbourtownhome. Mission Vieio 3267 SanCletMnte 3276 boat storagt!. $GOO mo. or IKe. lower 2 br ll.lc.1l lnr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IE§uai~' 2 br. 2 ba, frplc, wetbar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• yrly $550. till July I. Artults only. No pl·l~. & k h • $225. 2 br lnhouse. Gar Never Uved In. S3SO per New castille 4 Br. bonus ·pacious 2Br & den Ocean 675-52.\6 S225. MJ(r al 97U 2s:H. 2 DR. llv rm •tc l'n, PlaC9 Klds. pets ok. Fee. mo. Ask for Jim, 963-8961 d co d p I I b 2885 M d i\ I A rutl both , 8x40. 51250. Prna-tiea Mam Rentals, 540-S370 rm. 3 Ba. air con , $495 View n o. oo . cu Nr ocean· 2 BR $325. en ow. 11 ___ _ S48~73 -riii-1920 48r, 2 Ba, av all 9/15. mo. 968.&42 h,ouse. e lc. $3501 mo. OR S.tOO; i AR s.250 • $150 I br dplx. M.arr. t·pl.
L-'sBestluy MOOOUAIUl.NI llACH m>. 3 br tnhse. Frplc. C h i ldre n welcome. 't573CAMP115Da:IRVIME Mewporthach 3269 493·~242 Bkr. Marshall Hlty 675-4 No children. Stv, rcrrtl! ~·-----------• Gar. Sngl~ ok. Fee. Mai S485rmo.636-S070 OPEN DAILY ri B 2 n Co Non smokers only. 1(1•!:. 2 UR. full bath, ram·rm. THREE Rentals. 540-5370 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Luxu 00~ 3 r. 3 . n· BAY v 11•:w I nr. stove & I kltch "lto .._.., ... ROCll!..t.M 8 A.M.T06 P.M I do whitewater view f y I ...,AO Ul"I ... rcq.!IS4W.17lh 548·03fiX iv-rm. ·Pu • .-..c: 3 br, E ·•lde. 51.081,, "llOA ~ NEW 3br tnhse, germs .. · . · rP rli. r y _.. . 1 IJU.1------S3.000down.Owncr/Ab'1 OMA LOT -"' " 48dr.LaCuesta.comer, Univ. Pk. Village I. 2 frpl. pool. SSOOt mo or 4J!,c9400uui. pool, 17141 675-8764 VIF.WOf~
494-0-15lor499·2986 Three bedroom. two. 2 ok. Fee. clean&landscaped. M35. story tnhome, 3br, 2h $450 on lse, kids ok ""' OCf;M-l &CITY
13 SO 1.11.-drnom Garden Grove. Main Rentals. 540-537o mo. Children & ""l ok. ba. fam rm. frplc & sun· 67S.1666 t-"a ... __ 3280 Corona del Mar 382 Lite, hns:ht, air.), nc" ~ ~hProperfy Slt!.1~10 lO'f l ..-~ -••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••• ••• ••••• • · · c own. 3 Br 2 Ba, spmklrs. W\ Call Gary 968-4456 deck. xtra clean. I mmed •••••••••••••••••••••• • !Jr. :.! ha, frp I. ll / w .
MORRO Bay ocean \'le" ()w~e;~enl pd.walkto tennl.s,schls occpy. $46S. Incl. tennis, .Especially larg 3 Br. I~ ba. s.w. Santa jacu1 7.1. gar. $311
lot. short WJllk lo b<'h, S4~. 768·7208, ~-1720 2 Bdr. former model, pools & Jaruui. MZ·0736 4Br+den. Front yd 1 Ana. S350. Isl & last .... .,, fi42_·7_9!_~2 ______ _
$1,990krms. 675·7239 4 PLEX Lee Urban ~a.5jacu~ mo. call orS.$2-94.44 Mr. Dunn green park with view o +Sl50. Lr!.( fcnCl'd yd r6' Lovely, l~e 3 br. newly re ·
b d rd 3B aryat · FOILll!..t.SE$550 the water, boats w/patao & playhouse. ''" J,.,~~~ __ s__ dee. ldcul lot i'lo 1wt-.. ,,.--...rctal four. 2 e rooms. Bright Me110 Ve e, r 110A p &kl"-k c:A5 ..... 1 ___ "~-~--..__ ... ,.. ' I 600 i\nahe1m. 195.500. Ba. Fam nm. 2 fplc's, EXEC. IEACH HM Thru Wroo&ht Iron gates Spyglass Hiii. $600/mo. ets ""0 · ., •. ,.,.. · S265. J\I ~r .it 97\1·:!5.IJ . ••~•••••••••••• OWN EH/AG ENT $450. 1754 Iowa. 644·1836 4 BR, 3 Ba, boat access, & court yard entry to one .. Oceanfront home o Westminster 3298 CORON/\ DEL MAR USS M11111l111:1 Apt A
540·0555 tge cor lot, l \.'J yrs old. of the prettiest mosl prime Peninsula Porn ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Ur Townhouse. frplc •---------BA YFRONT ---0-UPLEX 2~.'~i~t~i3~~:11~rg; Sue,963·7881or9&3-6187 ~~~~o~~G.Ei~E:~l~ ~~:tBlo~~~~oon th 3 Br. fam rm Near Pool. tennis . continental Two b~llroom s:ii; .•
Orftcl.' b11ild111~. i.pc·r 213 797 \818 N 3 BR Cnllr Cl I water i n NB . 01 schools.Lrg locdy<.l.$370 breakfast.Someocean& month. i\dults onlv . tocular view. luxurious Two, 2 bedrooms. < 1 (; S42S j ~ss ~ townhomes In Rancho Newport quality 3 Bdr mo.Call839·1S58. Catalina views. Close to Carpets. drav<·s. bulll Cxecutl·ve~rnt"'!l "nxlnt Sti!l.9511. ll unt1n°lonou•-2br"'-··~ .... Pvt,fncd ase .tnc wacr SanJoaquin. bo shopping & rme beach t"'s,p··t•u.lll"' •'oll'lr. lnvestmen'\ at '630.ooo. Beach 4 miles \ooc:'an. tot"' . .....,., m'""'0 . ""' gardener. 840-38Stl DECORATOR has used and den with 6 new a Houses Fumilhed or 64 ...,11 · ... u • ·~ " "
G T _..., lavl•h wall coverlnu•. dock for 50'+ boat nn •L-.L.~1-.. -..1 3300 4"" Eldnd•'" ·1t7"2 1°20 .ILLGRU ... DY OWl'iERtA,EN •••2 br duplex. encl JBr 2 baduple" Corner 0 .. ~ Id ~~ l~~~~~~~~~~~~~,..,~·~·~v~~.,~-~ " 54005i>S · "' mirrors. g o r geous w e water view •••••••••••••••••••••••1-Rffffor 6 75-6161 gar. rncd yd. $235. mo. lot. vacant . $295. Duys d r a Pe s •-•hades . $1250/mo lse. RR 2RA h E t d b So lh f ----------1 ----548~ 9 6 3 7 8 8 1 • v c s "' "' 4 omc a:; sa c 2 br. l a up\, u o $220, 2 fir, 11111 rm, khl..,, EA.':>l'SIDE C M. 3 UNITS · • ~ k r Beautiful mirrored wet· Wahrfront Home c M. Nt•wly painted. cln hwy. Adults, no pets. ~ 1n .:1 e.. F n ' s 1 •.
OFFtCE BLDG. (0uplcx/Houiw l <.: 2 lot. Jbr , 2ba, eastslde, n r g;1;1•39· 7578· as or bar. reflects large bnck 63I·1400 Skve 752·6671 doys s.100. mo. Ca 11 f.42·5953 631·201 1; ~ 47 2501 111 The bcsl unc in Newport SS.640 jlr08s. s112.ooo or schools la rge yard. ' rlreplace on opposite n.-a.. U_.__ 3600 wktly!S, G73·3118J or x1!HOOO
is avallliblcfor $300.UOO. trade.1'492·371Uevcs. $375 /m'o. 557·1247, Exec. 4 br, fam rm. 2 ba wall. ~HS RTw-n 645·11399eves&wknds. 1--------
963-6739. wtdbl frplc. rom er lot. View of hills & Unlversi· ••••••••••••••••••••••• N~W BllEElJ APTS LotsforSal• 2200 Vacarnt . $495. Days ty fromhlghcornerlotNewportlsland.Yrt,y.n<coiy N.R. 3 br, 2 ba.2br1:\4bu,blkto~ch.no 1 br & t br w/lurt.
••••••••••••••••••••••• $395.3Br.2Ba,bltns,fam 96 3 • 7 8 8 l . e v cs near pool. ~75 per mo. peu.quietnelghborhood frplc.,patlo,gar.,nrbch, pelA $375. Dave S. Agt. Garugc, pool, JBcurn.
An· .... BUILDERS rm, rncd yd, ref. 2980 t2l3 )439·7578. ask ror 1-'or appointment call $350. 673-4749. no pets. $400. 645· 1682. 644·721l.1:13.'J-0996ev rrplc. li:as & wutor iwl.
Ar1prox. "'~ o f acre. Jacaranda. 675-3461 alt s Dale 536-8847 days; 833·9779 NewportCrest 3brcondo From$2:1o.li45-4411
Benedict t:s1 a te s. PM . evenings. • d
R1vers1dc County Can 3 bdrm. l "4bu, available 3ba, 2-car gar .. auto .00 . t.;a11l91dl' J br, 2 h.1,
be split Into 4 lou. Total Mesa Verde. sharp, clean Oct. 23, S325 +'150 de· Greentree 3br, 2 ba, Im· opener. tennis,. swim • ...._ __ 1_,~ frplc. y,int, i.:.ar. Adult:.,
ri ...,,. 000 3 BR. 2 BA fa mily room. po&it. Refer. 962-3991. mac. SJ8S mo. 64().4462 mlng, jacuu:I avail. Mus --------'-----i-.:.:"°:.:.!:r:>C:.:'~::.~·:..:IY:.:'l:::?..:.160:.:3 ------------. P cc~v. · Compl redec. ready to eves&wknds rent. $850/m o. Cal •••••••••••••••••••••••
TRUCK STORAGE NEWPORT IEACH move into. $400/mo. call 2 Br hse, newly decor, leas 646-00$7 aft 7pm Bayfront-yeorly. 3 BR .• 2 l OR 2 BA. fpk, bltn:t, nu nr wtfilo~c & rcfr11t. nil
.BAt.'K BAY NEWPORT REALTY 67S-1642 Heritage Realtors, ask than l ml to bch. Lot!a LEASESAVAJLABLE ba. lowrr unit In prime decor. aep unit IVJ blk5 gor V1•ry ch~un. A•lult,,
Horses OK. llome & ~-:i rorDave540-lLSL windOws.fpk ,you'lllove Uve in lrvine Village. WESTCLIFF so. boyfront l oc. _bc_h_.S4_9S_._67_5_19_S_7_-:--i..:.:no:..!:.1.e:.:l:::.:1:..:.S2=.::50::_..:.Wl.:..:...·&:.:."'..:.2l_•_
acre onl)' $56,000. Jack ATTa.TIOM lt.960-4003 We havehomesavau.ro ESSIXLAME Bc11ut1rully lurn.S675Mo •Lovely 2 br, l h bn
Pe<'lt, Agt. 586·6964. BUILDERS 3 Br, cpU, frplc, 2 ba, 2 teueln.. Exec. Address. Lr W ILUAMWIMTOM tnhse. rrpl. pool. Wulk
Radio Page .. K·161" NORCO AREA car g:tr. no dogs, kids Sharp3 BR. 1~ bath Walnut Square spacious immae. home. Real Estale 675·3331 bch. Adlt:ttno pets. 132."> El Puorto Mesa
2.,... ACRES OK. $350, G4S.29TS home. S3751mo. Village Ranch Ct\ I.Home Br. 2 ba. lrg liv rm at . 833-8974 orl!3J.IM3 2 BEDROOM
' °'l!:he~~ 1800 Ideal for s ub·dividing or LARGE 2 br home. Crpt, Real Estate 9624471 Deerfield Univ P l 11 c h e d d e n . Sun fun. Sl65. Util paid. ----------1
••••••••••••••••••••••• country estate. Lots of stv, ref. Fenced yd. Gar. Very Dice new interior de· Cu.lverd'1e Col.Park sophlatlcated rental l Foo. 2 nn. new npplianCl'!I, Also I ldnn Furn
• newconstrucllonln area. Adults.$225.675·1827 corated. 4 BR. 2 Ba. 2 bdrm.yourcholceof A·l cond. Frplc i1 MalnRentals.540-5370 drapes & rarpetiog, Nochll<.lren.nop1•b
.. WATERFRONT Owner will help flnBnl'e. frplc, bltns, encl. yard. fromSMOtoS400. kitchen . self cleanin lolN>aP-......0 3707 pat lo & lge. deck ; Pool&Hectt'aUon
DUPLEX FUii pnce S45.000. Agt.Dlx2Dr Condo.allbllns, vacant. $.195. Call Don· 3bdrm ,yourcholceofl oven.elecgardoor,sta •••••••••••••••••••••••beautifu l t rc<-s N 1959MapleAve,CM Pl.._R Ir DOCK 673·7801 refrtg, encl. auto gar. na. 962·24S8 fromS37S. toS* lnglnswindows. garden children, no Pt!IS. S300.
s ---------1 door opnr pool Ir rec rm. 4 bdnn your choke d w: SSSOFirm 543.7300 Beau\ 2 br. lite furn. apt. 644-4848or675-~ LGF. 2 br i.n l.J"lplx, W/l!,1r. Dey now & sclc~l your Momtalft, DeMf't, 752·7363 days, 675·34 s 8r 2 Ba. fncd yd, up-c $4SOto$S7S · · ' Next to beach. $300-1325. nr shops, 1i,, b{I, adlL,, ownlnt~nor.Wontlasl. Resorl 2400 cvea. graded. nr bch, s cbl rom NoF'ees Nwptftlthts3br.2b3.cor 962-050S 2 Br 1 n:i, fplc. cpts reCs.637-8828(7141
Dwlder.675·1233 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .a.-535-61~ .... ~Hi•••TY ner home w1panoramic,,._toM....... 372 .. drps.~pcrmo. & Id ... ,_ 3.._ "ba fr.Jc _...,..., -"""' ~ i l -.-.v • l!.ol• • ... ~ Nr beaches. sch ls, shnn. Apple Vo l ll•y sac • e~ ut, • • .,. • ocean v ew .• 1v rm. .,_. . ...,.,.. ,. Bucblront home + Ill· · · dbl gara1te fncd yd II 1·2000 fprlc, tge rec. rnl brtck ••••••••••••••••••••••• . pmg, 3br "2ba, pvt pullu,
come! 2 Uni~. 4 Br up-W/Cabln, sec. fl. reMon• d h h J • d Nr' llulf!arla. patio. New crpts. pain\. $37.50 weu a UP DLX 2 Br 2 Ba. upstairs, gar. S3751mo. 552·735(1 111-ll'll. 3 Br down6tair;i. blc.c"llcves 879·9000 !rk~J9s.;,~~· · te.11a_. 3242 UNIVERSITY PARK VI 146$.M?-8968or 557-8717 •Studlo&lBRApt.s pnvncy, x\ra lge, llke1--------
Locatcd righton snnd in a..a1&tah P •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• lll,3Br2'°'S.+bonua •TV&Maid&!rvAvail new, encl dbl gHr. br. l bn, adlts. no J)el'>.
NW.,t Dch. $235,00 ~x· W.t.d 2900 ~ac 3Br. 2ba ln Mes11 S Br. 3 ba townhouse. rm .. XJnt loc. Avall Nov UDO ISLE •PhoneServ.Htdpool ds~wshr, wtr pd. N nwty dcrt"d, we11ts1dc.
<'han:e or l'loleri'ub~cct to ••••••••••••••••••••••• erde. Cvh 1ntd pa~~· d~I ssfi~kl~111n~-:VLtlo~~· ~s. S47 ·7044 or 5 Odrms .. 41tll ba .. din. •Children Section 61ch11:;~n or pets. $415 ..... 6_7_5_·34_36_•_· ___ _
exc nnJtr. u!' ttt?ss F. 1 r1n11 firm look! JC frplc. c 1 ren • pe 11 • a a ' rm ram rm study •L<>wmonlhlyra~. s. 1 F.·Sldt> J Dr Ion. bltns, Properlle~ Brokerol(e .nitnee n OK.556-0125 M&-1J71or&te-5'$1evo.. UNTVPK • "B •-d 'LI·· .. lot ... 200Month ' -New""'rtBlvd.CM d *""" Co Sob Kirkpatrick for rc&oncd older re ,new. r. en, '" n ~·., .... CostoM..a 3824 crpl/ 1ll6 .-.~ 7~80n ' s1dencc or commett1al 1 BT Duplex, Alrport nr~e ..,.,._ 3244 twnlune. Pool, jacuni. WSOM REALTY 548-97~or G45-3!1117 ....................... Cull (''4211243
l*la to convert Into of· Stove. frht. It utJI incl d. ••••••••••••••••••••••• nr parlc & school. ~ * 675-4562 • SUS CASITAS rH"""'fO"' •dull 1.,.., Br HH garden 3pt, fr>rl<'. WaUc to beach! 2 Units on fice IJIO. 1200 to 0000 wq fl. SUIO, Adufl only, no pet&. mo 5»5828, 846-5239 _...,, Q .-.. •• oOUO ~•lboa Penln. 2 BR HB . W atm natr o r 549991Ur538-2l7S RancboSanJoaqulnlBr •ILUFFS• MinutestoNB.8ac:h&l SZ00.$285 Uk~new Pool dahwhr, pool. pvt p,U1n.
r oot. 3 HR b1tck! Newport arco 1714) den, pvt patloe oo UnJv.Partc,aBR,d&arm, WaterVlewCOndo BHfum.Adutt.s.nopcts Encl.gar.Patlo.No~ts nr lrvlne Ind Arca,
.. I uo.ooo. E~t'hange or 848·0122 days & (2 13 ) a TOt'O COUJ'M .. ~ hule frpl. atrium; vault· 3 BR. end unit : larae 2110 Newport Blvd. CM. 646 69'13 or M4 0878 $230 557·2841
U aubject to uchanar ~·2170ev~i •••••••••••••••••••••• ed beamed cell '•· gated country lcllcb. l850•to. STUNNING 1 Br A•rd•n Adult 2br wfetlcl. Busln .. s• Prop .. rtl~!i 3 Bt. z ba Saill~t .. Ml Univ Pit Princeton, 3 tfttJ')', pool.a, Jacuw. ten· C f ,,..-£-.. __..... .... . " " .. :i u "' twnhM frestl d.c« Di beJ 1 M60 • • _._......., apt. Pool. rec atta. ...... 2009 Maple. $225 Broker aae. Co. Bob wbat >'°" •ant in A club ractl. cu 144'mo · ~G~.~~~ · It""°" 640.0020 TlOW llllhSt CM MJir ••Gll-3271 te:btpatrlck. 752-8011 , Daily PtlotClaNUleda. bome. $4.IS mo. 798-Dtt . mo. • ,...
'
SlSO. Small apt at
228 Albert 1'1 Wr•llb,
493-()761
. ,
8Je DAILY PILOT Tueedey, OClobet 19, t~76
dd it. .. Build it ... 01aper it ... Hamm er It ... Carpet SERVICE DIR c-rioRY umb t. .. Pa c h t ... 1pe It.. em {! ... IL.Cement 1t...Wire it. .. Hoe lt ... Clean it ... Move I 1 Roof it. .. Landscape it ... Tile it... Tnrn 1t •.. Sew 1t. ..
it ... Press it...Paint IL .Nail it...Plaster it. .. Fix it... Haul it... Add It ... Plant 1t ... Alter i t ... Learn 1t .
A.ccounffnq Cabinet Making Carpet S..-.lt.• Gardenht9 HaullncJ Ho.Mc.._.nq Mcucwy aWtnc)/Paperift9 Plumbtnq .....••.••••••..•••..•..•......••••••....... ·•••······•············ ......•..................•..•.•............••.•••......•.•••.•.•.••.....•.••..••...................•.....••...........•••..•...•..........
ACCOUNTING Sl::KVIC II& FC"ABINETS Wt!COr<.'C'arpt>l t'lt!~111<·M> abdlero & ~•e>n' 1-:Aµr lhaullnJ(/movil\jl. (kenuµ REL I AB t. 1-; .. ; t' 1llt' Bnck Wurks. Cu:.to Pu(l(.•r IJUinl 20 >r' el.p M \HV'~ PLL \I lil'l•
Complete &erv lhru P Kltdwn. h14th, ~luraj(~ Slt'um (fean or i.hJmpoo 11.1rde1wr 1-·r t•,ls. re $7 up Trtc"cwork Reas, flCll::NT. flef erenct•!\ bnrk work tjlock w.111~ 1-'n•e c'l ~.all~l•H'l 1un • •t>4t; !11101 • •
L. incl laxes ror lteai. Cunlru t·tor Also Upholstery All work a~onJblt!. ll.!tl·4ti~4 ufl fast freet•)tll42·459'7 l'Jll Anita li<ltl 08•17 frt't!~l LH· 12'94328 l'tl t;u:.m111tt-eJ SuH· $ no !llOJUUl'OOSM \II.
type of bus 581 ·9327 welcom~. 551 3074 .iuor Refs/Mt:, frt>'ll 4pm · HU Nlhrea ~\ISM wu1t
5381841 ltl•!isRatei>045·:t7Hi - ----YOUHAVE ITllEAOY -----i-963:1t)ll • Plumh1n.: ,'(; llcul111 · Add-A·Room ----t:xpr J11p11nl'lll' ~1mfoner l'LL HAUL IT AWAY Lanchc:apf199 Mov.,.., ltcpu1r No Joh t1x1 ~n1.1ll'
•••••••••••••••••••••• C.,.,.tff Controc:tor Compl m:11nlenanl"l' & TIM ~ 63()1) ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Proll'~i;1,011ul pmnt~·r lo· <'.ill D11\t•111x1r17511111 .1
Addllloiu remodels. rc1111 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• de.inup, fr-.·st1rea:1> ll1r<1 F.xpr'd l.l'lncillcllpera; MOVING• L.•12Expr'd lrt l!:Atl' I-r1·~· ,.,.b
pri c int:. » u" i.' rt o MINOH HOMI!: ltEPAIR 1.1-;E M JAHVI~ 7511937 Remove ct!rn~nt. a:.phalt. Sµnnklen. lostoll & re men lllOVtl you. Kcus. tt1.•.1,.onabl~· t.3 l 131111. T.tevfsion Repair
wor.kmcni.h1p. 1n g Ri C:arpenlr), Plumhmi: t\dd1t1ons & Ht•modchng Ex P • d J din. tree~. l'll" f''r est. pair Concrelc & brick Dan ~!17·31Q/ •• •••••••••••••• •••••• •
day <"omµI. Ile. •317H5 Ceramic Tile ~o ~ 962 5573 Lil' 317 r • ;i I> 11 n e !> l' 6'U·2624 Lk/in:.rd work G4S 797tl Malom• 494 $36 & S~ l245 m~g l'i\NOl'Y T\ S \ t l'll
75().63511 _ gardentir t:ompl main 1•a1nt111g lnl'fo:'tl LI<' l'l lt.ill·~t·niH•
New·Hemodel·ltti>u•r • •Gt.'Orge P11Jn1•r & Sons lenance 1-'r CISl, cleun ~ ALL PHASES Friendly MQVlllJC U> Effl •~931 R\•r "';ce esl .1l Ft111 µm•1·:. !ltiO ltiJ.I
Appliance Rt'pair ltt.'S1d & Commrcl·Heas Adds/ Rmdlr Pamt/ Plans up. 557 2210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sprinklers. turf. plans. rient, fr1 cntlly :wrvu•t!. Work xaur. Wo11 l be un •••••••••••••••••••v• l'alumboConi.lruclion lll 109669 55769 --llOUS1':CL~AN I NG 111 etc Call HS ·l SH Lo1h'sl poss rat e dcrbid Mt 01>m008-0887 TrMServiu
APPLIANC"F.RF.PAlll UJ062831424hr.. Yest La"nCardt•n &ir Our Rus1nes~. Cnll Mll(he11Slateh(283974 ~70992 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SlO SerVl(eCall ----Roon Reg mnint. cln upi.. J1mlC<!'s Ha.:gedy Ann:. F.Aprt Painting & Pnp.•r ltl'lllll\Jb lri111m1n
(714> 549·2422 ~ s.,-..1,. •••••••••••••••••••••• s prklr' Fre\' e:i.l or t.'7~ , Mointtnane• PaMHllMJ/f'operiltCJ ing Cu~lom work + prunm)I, fr1-..• l'~l l.u •I ----------t•••••••••••••••••••••• Scrub & Wa'IC K1l<'he rourlK!ti4<l l880 Rach ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• matcnal:;, 25 )r.. exl)('r, 1-"\.lll) 1n~u1 ·u 1;12 :?l'''I ........ t&AJ --rtderenrt!~. Richard l -~ -Y.'"'"9 3mpoo & !lleam t•lt-a11 Floor Spec1JI SW 95 . • Wtml a RF.ALLY CLEAN Mohilellomt• MJlnl Paint Repair 35 yri. 111
•••••••••••••••••••••• lfll(. (;olor hn1o1htl1ncrs: Cull"Spurkh:".002 m11 t::~perl Ga~~en Mainl HOUSE~ C:tll Gingham ll 1 I l o area workm11ns hip 000·336l Tutorin9 . Cleunup Trt C!>. Rcai., ull Girl. fo'r~· eslli ,,. .... I.,., oo In I!• P um II n". 1" k d 't ( •••••••••• ••••••• •• • ••• Babysitting my home
Mother of pre·S(hooler
will babyi.1t s amt>. Fut
tame preferred &12·0530
wht carpt:. l O m1 c:rd • areai. 5'&88020 --~ ,.,.,.,..,"' ctearun~ ~uar. a ea vau .o my •CUSTOM PAINTtN(l•
bleach. Clean hv rm. d1 G~ ~'ree Eslimah.•:. exper. 536·7056. HI Ql!Al.ITY TUTOIUNG Muth or rt·
adm~ l'l\lldrcn. Rtll\h''
1 6 Ccn1f11-tl td1r l'llhl'r
home 646-11119
nn & hall SlS Avu rm •••••••••••••••••••••• r~---"S-'ce• l'ersonahied12Sfor 4 hrs "'U LOOK 846 ·704" "' E -'Ii . I ~ """ .. , ~ ~ f:x b Leave i• o PaintY C dt LO HATES S1 50 couch Siil. chis1r S5 Aprn aw11an i.:o.n ener ••••••• ••••••••• ••••••• M <.:a 1 1146-8579 our a • Call Bruce ~ti 0720 t.'ves Gua~clJmpdodor.Crpl Yd cleanups. tnm.mm!-\·HANDYMAN·Homu' & nwssage rs vert AvrgExtr 1StyS34S
Will babyMl, my hom e b repair. 15 yr., cxpr O ~r11n1 n g. Lt Haul Apls . Con"·ientiuui. llooseclcananJ: & Uuildm~ Maso. 'f 2·Sty$46S/lnlr$4Srm Ptastff /R~ir
the We<)k . Mesa Verde work myself. Reh 0-156987. craftsman 645-6558. Maintenance. Vi:ry re •••:•••••••••••••••••• Pnces ancl mlr'l/lobor
area. 751-7529 531-0!01. , . d. f G ---asonuble 559.1532 fo 1rcplaces Planlt"rs Guar. msrd. free est.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
PATCH PLASTEHlNG
••ALLTYPES••
.---------------. ----~ 5~~ el> 0 r een· Yard Ila nu~ mJn Carpt'nlrv. Unck Concrcll' P ut10 Ted 636·7085 or 552·0134
luliMss Stt"vice Ca,,.,et Man w1ll lisy yours C.ire ~.oral ~,t•rvicc, painlmg, mlenor rmdl'", Hou:.ework by day. t\11 Block Wall!I BHQ Pit PETERS PAINTING
To Place your
.. Fast Result"
Service Directory
ad ..•. Call Now
•••••••••••••••••••••• or rnane. llt•patrs doY.n to Earth pnt-c~ rep.ur.ydwrk847·SZS4 areas. own t.rans. refs Ref. ~ts646-0464 BOOKKt;EPfNG cli:arung too' Gu.1r "ork 6-10 !H85 Call5S2·4!188 ----------1 Expr'd reas. rates. rree VERY NEAT PATCH
Free Est 540·6825
All phasel> bookkt•epmg at lugger saving~. l"t esl -Have somethanl( you want -----Don't give op lhe ship! _est. Call Gene 552·1M58 JOBS & Tt-;XTUR E
:1>latemt'nb. pa~ roll. etc 645·3&t6 The rastesl draw an the to sell" Classified ads do Classified Ads sell big "usl" 11 in class1r1e<1. Try a 0 a Ii y P Ii o l Free Est 893 1439 642·5678 4 yrs. exper w/ CP/\'s West ... a Daily Pilot al well -Call NOW. alems. small 1Lems or Ship to s hore results! Classified Ad to buy, sell . .
Lg/ s m ull uccts 962·82'JO Classaricd Ads 642·567 Cl1.1SS1lied Ad. 642·5678. 642·S678 any Item. 642·5678. 6'U·~8 or rent something. Sell idle ite m:; 642·5678 ____ tat_. _3_22 ___ _.
~..twMtltsu.fww.. Rentab Want.cf 4600 ,... t .. •k u.fur'a. ApG IMC.ts Uitfurft. Apm tac.ts u.tw.. Offic• R...tal 4400 ....................... MoftCJOC)i'~ Trvst P~s 5350 H .. p Wanted 7100
•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ······················'· ••••••••••••••••••••••• DMd$ 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C~taMHa 3824CostaMesa 3824 H.wportBeach 3869 SouthLCICJU" 3886 PRIMELOCATIOH Refined old•r c oupl• •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••1••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••~•••••••••• Good ex1)0s ure. Em.yin· w/ no pets n.eds 2
PARK NEWPORT Lgc, qu1t•l. luxurlOui. ~x .:n'l>S & CJtrcss Plenty uf Bdrm house w I garoq• LOANS 9% *KAREN1S*
OUTCALL MAS!:>AG£
838·1780 ASSEMBLERS ~~~~~GRAND OPENING~~~~
Step into the APARTMENTS e\'-2 br. 2 ba apt parkmJ:. On Urookhur~• CMcrH.Under$250. AJso2ftdTDLoans
1 or 2 lledrooms and Ele\ alor to scenic pn v & All:.1111.a in Hunt.111i::ton 548· 1915 Fairest Ter ms since 1949 EXOTIC GIRLS Ex,,.ri•nc•d
Nl'l-ded to work >.hor1 &
looR h.•rm as!.1Rnmenh.
/\pply lmnwd1ulel)'
Townhouse-; bch Party&J(ameroom. Bt.'al·h Approx1matcl> ----Sattt C
From SJ29 50 tolal Sl'C. Perfect hvmµ 800 bQ rt. of ground floor Stt.lnl net.'<15 Jpl hse. Iv m "'MtcJ. o. Massage & Modeling gOodlife Oren 9·6 Daily or wknd r <.'lreal for lh!! space Si~nm~ S32Sl mo by 10120 or i.hr. 645 4495 _6_4_2_-_2_171 5_4_5_..0_6_1_1 _o_ut_c~I Only 542·3169
Sr>a ·Pools·Tl'nni!. :illvcnluroui. adult $515 Call Mr . Plummer. lvrnessa~e .a.~--6 tem~o Across from "'a!ihroo nlll yrly. lse499·283.'i !J63·6767. ----....-.-...•meftts/
I I d J bo --WANTED: Fu r n1 !1ht.'d Personals / HYPHO· THERAPY
Stroll thc pathways ()f <1 pinl' forest Mecinder p.ist
tumbling w.iterfolls and qult!t poob listen to the
"otlund of hubbhng SITedmS aod growmq things
s an at am rec· on .t....-..a...a. Fu • h.d lll•!.1dence. Duplex or Lost & r-:._...1 WESTCLIFt-BLDG. San J1>Jqwn Hills Ho:.td. ......-!!'n:"''. nus ..._... 1114 1644•1900 orUnfurnisMd 3900 CondoinCoronadcl Mar •••••••••••••••••••••••
Depress ion. w~igh t .
smokin~. & 1m1>olt!nce
H.B. 2·8pm. ~1*·2600. 1EMPOHARY111-:LP
Call 540.4455
E11ual Oppor Employl•r ••••••••••••••••••••••• or South of l:lack Uay Lost & Found 5300
Call 644-9100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
NE.WPORT BEACH
1 ,, •• .\11>~• n ( ~ , •• ..,., •''"'•A~~ OVERWEIGHT? Your atluh ,1p.1rtmenl home ..ii Pim.-crel!k VlllJgl' I!.
,, total rl!frc.it H~re you can enioy unusucll pmracy
11nd lu>.urv
BE AMONG lliE FIRST TO CHOOSE the best
locdt1011. 1he ~ arrangNncnt. the colorr. vou w.mt
Don 1 wd1t Two tennis cuort-. 5'.wnm111g JXl<.ll
plus unique volllfyb.lll Jl(JUI ,l,1rnu1
"'-ind volleW.111 coun Mou111.11n lodgl' clubhouw w11h
f1rttpl11cc, conwr~11on p11, bilh<1rds, gym, '<lun,1 .
Hunv to thl' good lifl' c1t1d tlwn rd.1x.
FROM SZ65 TO $355
lncludmg Heat & Waler No Le,1w Requir~d
~~ <xw R..'<lr<.om Om> R..11h \..JJ. ~ lwo lx•d11 t0m Tv..-i Ri"h
1:5<JO /\d,1111., Aw 1n C<N<t Mi:"".
acrQ<;c., from Or.mge Co.1st College
~llM!en Hc11bor and r <llMew.
PEMIHSULA PT.
' :.! lilt. 1 ba unf SSOO yrly
OCEAMFROMT
3 BR.2 bu S.S~l
NEWPORT TERRACE
3 BR. 2 ba condo SSOO
SEA WIMO CONDO
2 1m. den 2 ha s-150
BA YFROHT HOME
l DH. 2 ua. $2000 M1> yrly
STEPS TO BEACH
2 UR. 2 baths $.WO
associated ,.
BROKERS-REAL 'TORS
201S W Balboa 671.JUl
'nlE 1-;XCITING
PALM MESA APTS.
MINUTESTONPT
BCll
l:iarh. 1&2 BR
from Sl95.
\<lulls. No Pct)
lfinl Mt•!.a Dr
I;) IJll., '> f-:a:.t Q( t:wport
illvd.)
546 9860
TRAMSFERRED
TO LOMG BEACH??
(714) 540 IJOO
We haH' sludaos. I & 2
Bdrm un1t:1> n ·ady for 1m
rm~• on· u 1>a m· y. Co 0\ e
n1e·ntly lol'alccl all
11dulls From $117 mo
12l:Jl "123 H515 Pnrk DBK
Apts NOWRENl1NG )CEANl"llO!"'r HIV 2 ";--
-------------------Ill(. I IJJ rk<'k,g;}r l:JllS. Rooms 4000
Costa M•sa 3824 Huntinqtan B•ach 3840 rl rp!. · 1111 Pct~ SJ>i5 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645 365S OOMS S25 "k up w•th
XTH1\ 11-!C I Ur &. Ua
bltns, 2 c.ir i.:ar. adull Nt
flel'i \OV 5 lll'C)
6-16 ~757
, . --k1lchl•n. S37 50 wk up 3 Rr & 2 Br Jpb r bC'h, I hlk hcb. lrA lbr. ~uu. nw· apts. 5'11:1 9755 nr645 3'J67
dean . .ill blto,. j!ur, n ty rl(rtt1 no fl<'lS, yrly lse. -- --
advanCl' rl·nl llJ rcsµrm~1 S54!5 &12 :i 113 S25 Pl'r "l'l'k I hlk fr
blctcnanl 11.opcl~. leav twarh llB l':ill Mark .11 rne~sai:e 5.16 157'l 2 Br Jdulb. nn llt·I" $2110 9602fiifinr1 .. avt• m"J.:
l Hr 1 Ur. I 12 Ba. bltn~. --2121 1-. Iii.lb ~t . N lli:t:.
..,dllS. no p1•1s .. )?ar. <J\ ail Clean I Br l'ontlo. bltn~ &16 tHlll Hoom Fu1•11
II I &15 ll:i27 W'>hr rlrvr. c·11l:.. tlrps, & IJisth
rnrdput10S2:15 9tl314l42 W1\TEltFltONT dpl\ :I Pt-nm l't
'.! Hr. no 1·h1hln·n or flt'IS -----. --Ur. lri·c· hoJl 1l11l'k ~ ulll t.i5·98ll7
l'nvatt• {'nlr
VHll IU 22
83.>·5235 or
t;Jll5 mo ~h1H· & rdrt): •-. l>lk to bt:h :Jhr. 21 ~IJa. J>anl) ruru. w I) $.175
•Ni·SO&l frpk. S.'r1J 121 201.h SL Hly, S.1\1;; wnlr pt•r mu Sll•t•1.1111g rm. p\.t b .1
536.:.1111:1__ (';ill t.75 tilli!I f!m(ll ii tl.1y., S25 "k
Huntinqton B•a'h 3840 MAG~OLI \ (; \ rtuENS WATER-FRO HT -lluul lk'al·h 962·171!1 .•.....................
l,f.!e 2 br. :! ha. ,\, C. 1'1-:W :! hr & l hr 1 <ll'n Ho11m. hit• kt1·hn & l11dry ADULT·SECLUDED dshwhr llio kid:.. no pcls lu\ury :.tJ>b fac1lll1c~ Reference ~ llr 2 Ha , patao. clean t2•10 !162 HIOO • hulll111~ Costa ~le~u. :Hl:l-1372. \Ir bch shoir,. S2~ mo
900·1279 MMiNOLli\G1\RDENS •Tr.ai.hl'omJ1at'l11r ~tHom. 4150
-----t 1.i:e I ur. At<:. cbhwhr •Wet h,1r •••••••••••••••••••••••
BY THE SEA No kids. nu f'Cb. S2W • 1-'1re11la1·e .
962 l800 •l'nvut"l>"""h l'vt rms. IO\'IOg care. Nl.'w 3 br deluxe lnhse. ' ~ ... , •· 1 I I I I 2111 J llh Sl. 5;i(;, 1718 • Plcx1i.;lass end . put.Jo:. u!I ,ml'N ( it.•ts. ove y
----irviM 3844 •~mokl•Uelt:ctor!. r11tio11:rc1n!.~l4·3K33
BLOCK TO BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~lap:, J\'ail. lo ll'nunt!i Vacation Rentals~SO
2 Ur. t.'ncl i:ara)?l'. pat111
aJS l5lh St 536-8729 o
:i.16 1718
l hr, cpls • pool. play ycl .
110 pell> 2208 1\.
Cklawar('. 536·0959
Hear Lab Park
Odm.t.' 3 br. 2": b~1. all
tlbl r::ur . patio, frp k 170l
,\I a burn a. 53G·3-lti5 o
536·171~
2 UR. 1 Ut1. newlv th'l'Ol'UI
l'<l , gara~e ~00 mo
~ 28118 uft 6pm \\ kdy'
1 llr, l ba. frplc, nl tht
Rancho San
Joaquin Apts
lh•11tm.: rrom S200
Adult avti.. Ll'J1>1n~ pre
\ 11.'w now 1!> .i pn•slJAe
Ir v ine r11rllmun1Ly,
Twl!ntv Per~ol.i, Cul\1.!r
4t S.mlJbur~. 2 l1lnt·I,;~ ~o
of Snn Dll'l.:U Frwy.
5&.H 11111
!.ll!J Ba~•:,1dc Dr,673 81M •••••••••••••••••••••••
""'--------...ii1wx11r1ou!.. rurn \'lll:i on
WATERFROLJT Sayoht.1 B~ach ncur
f"'lll Puerta Vall:irta. 4 br. 4
2 BUllM. r anJH' & oven. bs S.')()(> wk 731·3777 refn~ .. t·arpct111)!. hoAC
d l' (' k " i 1 h B II <l . l.kgmnini: Nov 28 thru w..s monlh. Jan 5 Wl' would hke tQ <''
C'h.ml(l' our bcJul new
J llOR!\I. 2 II,\, hltn ... ranrh home 111 Kono.
oearh<:.ieh S4tMl/month H:iw:111 for )OUr!t 10
JACOBS REALTY Newport ll<ilhoa or 2 Br 2 B;1 Twnh!.c. pool & La.:ur1a. Auto!! can I)(' Ill
rt·(' l.11•11. v:itm. uvail 675-6670 cl i\i\,\ rt•f, furn. & n J.. 11 l '7tl S42S 752_109_:J __ jii _________ _. q'd Write R t:; l'o'<
$1 SO. Monthly -;lla~e Snn Juan 2 Bdrm.
Will i:.hurt• lrvm1• house 3 211a. 1mt10. Avail l~c
hr. 2 1~ IJa , pool & Ml32~
J;H·u/.7,1, n1·11r cuurlll. --
&104280.
n n 1, 11.t" 111. Caplam
Cook. I lawon 96704 ----...talsto Sha~ 4300 .•.......•.....••••...• lwath <:urnge. <:as
w:1ter 1>d. S'l25 mo Ne
ll\'ts. 846 !llWI or !lliO 232.
or st-e mJ:r upl H. 11211 16th L
'il oguna Hills 3850
3l yenr olrl professional
Jeweler, moving to
Luituna CX-t to open sm
!ihop Looking fo r
cm!Jlnvcd .stuhlc rm
mall' to rut cxptmscs.
1213 ) f'.n:l 4362
.............••••••.•.•
8'.sirwss/lnvHt/ LOST: In Costa Mesa. fie101ce: Im p rov e Rnonce M JI e <.: o 111 e M, '<. lkulth! t..oow 1U 29 lbs
••••••••••••••••••••••• r es1>onds t o "fsh1." monthly safely. Nutural
8'.si..ess
Opportunity ...........•....•...••.
ASSEMBLERS
Wt• w 1 I I tr,, 1 n
l\lal·Gn·~or Ya\·hl (.'m•p,
ltiJl 1'1Jt:<.'llll3, Coi.t,1
Me!. a
Blatk, ti yea rs old. food fo rmul<J . "Slender
5005 healthy do~. Long Bench Now... Money back
ta1ot Pleo.se call Jean. ~uaranlel' Truly Fan
548·7416 1ast1c. 962 2757 or
------____ 1•fo\lm1lurc & Pl) wd Mfg. ----------• 963-t470. /\!.~cml>ly \\ nrker<o, ,.,
•l MO FREE HENT• •Ore!lsShoµ. Ha·Class' Lrn>"T : $50 Reward of .._ _______ -.-.-.-;. J)Cru to work 111 i.m:itl .))>
Call Mr. Howard
645·6101
•BOOKSTORE fered for Collie like tan" u 1 1 I 1 2·3 Rm. offl<'t!S from • Dl'F"'ERY WKRM w1wht mah~ don a ns to Sho.pe up before lb st•m }' 1 n t· & 11 ,. "12 c Ad '·•r .. marh1111ng •11>eral1110' ., ., per mo J •RUG /UPHLCleaner "Danny". 536·0401 or Holidays: let ml.! show Wmf1c•ld Locks Inc, Ifill
A1rporlcrHoll'I Noll'a:.e •F\JllNITURERt'fin 540-llllexl444. youhowtolost'lus&.•• M11nro\1<1 /\vc. l·M .
re<1. 833·3223 Tai noon l'onlact Agnt Sam Cron~ ches. mcrca~e vatahty t;.12 ilWI
60< PER SQ FT
1617 WESTCLH'F NB
i\ GT S.ll ·5032 ------
DELUXE OFFICES
Comml & md!oll spa ces
~ tu 2tl00 Ml fl 1\!I lc1w
IL'\» SQ fl. i...DI! Ntl(Uel &
M.1s:1>1on V1cJ11 :ireas
Handy to S. I> Frwy.
Uill 831 I IOI> -----
FORUASE
3 OFFICES
SI SS MO EA.CH
F111l'COSTA M f:S1\ Loe
752-1700
liMl645-4170 S.11Hl6Utt Lost . H imalayan Cat. Call meat557 2RIS
male. Monan-h Terrare'-~~~~~-~~~r---------
1-:-,t Jloullquc. Pnmc NU. area. Lag. Nag. Reward r ASSEMBLERS ltX'ation il5.ooo + mven· 493.5(171 GEMTLE TOUCH
tory Evl's. 644·1755 _F'_O_U_N_O ____ Do_x_ie-OUTCALL MASSAGI!: l\1111 ti mo':, C'Aµcr an :in'
Make )(Int money in a !JrO-remale. VIC Mesa Verdt> • • 751 3931 • • or lhc follow111~ l't' ,\
'<'n Plant Party Pro· ~7·4161 or 540-~2 -----------1 't•mbl). lllirnl'''" u 111
.:r:irn Work your own ----.------SCRAM LETS netlor or Solclt·r t'olo1 hrs Salt!:. aids & lramang Found: Small lan female • l'Utfo not rccftJ 1:.\1.'\'lleut
.ivaJI CQntact Dick. al puppy approx 3 mo!> ANSWERS l'O l>l'ncf11:. 1nd1Kll:'~ 1 :>22 7760 Vic · El T oro Rd and "'ks Val'ut wn urt l'r ••
· Jt•ron1mo. Will l!O to AnAina -Pow.-r _ mo', 11 f'aul hoh1l11\' ~auty Salon sheller 1r not claimed. Suedl! _Bemoan_ group 111~11r:111t·e ~tJJ t-. ~" ~l:il100 . icleal,_768_-4_1_2R_______ BANG 1,;p d:iv Of htrl' & mun'
n\•lghhorhoocl opcrntion Found l•'ernale Wh1t\• Garbage colle<'tors an· mon·
Owner h·aving state Toy Poodll' w 1rope bccom11IJ't mor{' 1111por i\ppl)' l'l·r~onncl
Submit .ill offer:; ll'ash 19th/0ranl!C, CM. tanl all tht• t1mt.' They dt OOCUMENTOR
Mc·VJ.} lnvcstml•nlCorr1 Oet 17 ut 10 .30 PM aUt\NG Ul'JolJ
1114, 1142· 1481 1'46-4ns DIVISION [~ .. ',.·.1f~~ .• i11~·.~1 ----------""'1-·""o,...u..,..,.No:-=D-·-F=--e-m--d,...u_I!_'. Penonal S•rvices 5360 --·-.... -... -REST AURA HTS hlond\'. s hrthr. med su:e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Addr<·s~o.:1 :i1ih
'lL\INOf'TllRl':E sunset Bch areu REUNION \lult1f.truph
INVESTMENT DMSION GHOSSED $2.184.489 846-~5 Alhambra lfa~h ~1·hool 2921 S . Daimler
111 1!l75. Well es1abh!ohl.'d . f S HT HA in Southern Calif. Loca· F~UNO : Iris h Seller. Classo 1947 A AA Bt\YFRONT <)ffwt• Bldi: 11111" inclod v Com· S;iddl~IH1ck Mtn area. A :JO year rcu11111n 1:; in Er1u11l Oppnr ~mplt'1\ 11
Spal'e Av6~~ 8lll1·r ,· m1s:.1ary & Corpor::itt-Of. 549·1363 to identify t~lannan~ st;ige~ . Wt: ----------1 f1(es. $650.000 ruu price. FOUN D . Weamaraner. n namei. &. add.resse• -ASSE E
IHVINE·7 room nffacc A~ 837 4200 female. 7 :\1o's old Vic· offormerela:.i.mates. MBL R
:.wle w/conforl•nrl' rm Dover Shores area. N.li Small ho<it as:.cmhhr
Ideal for acccounlant.s, FlOWER SHOP G46-940J Call Pat ILcnlll J ohnson apply an per!>on. W:i:? t-:
rontrnctor:. $750 mo Owner desperate to sell. ----------• · 536-2350 eve:.. OR Earla Pomona St. S /\.
979·3560 due to illness. Low down FOU~~ w~atc Dove, Lusk ((;ann) Styli 548·2380.
----------1 payment. Good term!> homesarea.CdM. ~yrMnt &
150 I Westcliff Dr. /\~1 837-4200 &14_·S_544 __ _ FOUND Prescr iption pcration Newport Financial Ctr DELICATESSEN g ld!.!>e:.. ~o ld m elal •••••••••••••••••••••••
Leasinq Office Spac:• NETS $50.000 Y It. frames. Tewmkle Pk. . Sc1ns~'-'tion
Call on Site Manager Complete ly he lp run C.M. 557 31111 "-
1714>642·31 ll ext24s l"anlasl1c fool •r_:irra LOST: Germ_a_n_S_h_e_p_,_l_a_n •••••••••••••••••••••••
Corona Del M3r, newly locJt1on. So. Org. Coun & blk male. wearing red BE A BARTE ..... DER
dC(Orated offi ces. Tw ty, Mrt. 837 ·4200 collar. fJ!l' ears ans: to '""
w1lh own bathrm, easy •T ..... A.......-y• Crete. ~3rd St Nwpl B<:h Full or Part time
outside access $1}2.SO 1n rGYS80n 000..,-·~ l O / l 6 . R E W A R D ! De ready lo work as a
cl util. 675·S.t44 t\pprox . mo l'!l"OllS 673·5602 profess ional bartender i
enJOY the benefit~ ol th1 .,..,..,...---..,....---1 week. F ree Job place
CORONA DF:C Mt\R xlnl beach area loc. W1 LOST· Plea)>e, please re m<.•nt ass1stuocc
Sl50 Dix Sllllc. <imple truin, $77,500 full pnN tum my dO!l An lnsh Amencan Bartenders
700
i\ssocwtc Rer
18 OR OVER
HO EXPER. NEC
II you 'rt> n<.'w to Ora11i!c·
C'o , temporarily di!>l'•111·
llnuing your cdur;1t111n,
r,•1•t•nlly d1srharjJl•J
lt1tm the serv11 c· or ror
.my rl'U!.On !.et•k111g ll'm·
porary or career t.'mpl11y.
fOl!lll, t'On)1dCr lh1:. Ulll·
QUt'l)flJllJr. 't'ou ran cam
$196 PER WEEK
pkg. A C. 67S·~IO Terms. Set. male. I yr . w /Ohm School
OM EG1\ t;i.i:s. Lo!tl 2 wks a1w. 1104 E 17t h St SA I
Top LOCATIO .._.S Thalia St . Lai.: Heh • Hu,,<.'I on your pruc:Ju1· ...., llUSINESSSALES 834 1960 l 1 v 11 y, ,. om m , ~ llarbor itren's besl 100 558-8531 Rewam 494-MSl. _________ _, m1·('nllvt•!> & extra l)C'(lfat
'rol.OOOsq fl F'romSSO -----------iLOST: F'cmalc Saamese ----e-thortn g bonu~ 1"h•
llEALONOMICS,Corp Jomtorial Sen . Balboa t'al. flea rnllar. var HefpWant.d 7 10 Wo111"11 & !\kn we un•
Hr-okers 6756700 NwJ>l comm accls Orchuf/CdM . Reward•••••••••••••••••••••• look&rlg formuyboUr4~1
equip. $700 + mo. In 644·7071 i\AAi\A/\i\/\AAi\ of tv11111~. £01tl111~ PUtJer,,
Sl•veral offices for rent in <.'Om!'. 494·4464 ----------GEN. OFC JOBS warl'hm"<' 1uhs & \\llrk
lrvme lnduslnal ar Nl -----------11,0ST lo llarbor Vit>W sss.~ssssssss lllf.: for a h1111Lr•1l 1r1tt0n1t•
l'honc answennf.: :.erv1cc C irculation Homes ureu. Siamese "Career Snoh .. ;JV;ul \V k 1 avail Rent under $125 Director cut. responds to .. Coco", ,. or w ynunl! Jl('()P , • mo.540·1714 neutered male. Filrnaly NOW th rou~h Control ltuf>HI .1<l\,1n1·1·mc111
Fur.l g rowing Fam1I g rieving. ltew::ird Career F.mployml'nl JlC)""ihlc• "J"v'rt• 111 or Sports Publi(at1on ft44 D.,72. t\~cnl'y, 31100 lr vrnc, 11v1•1 & wl)ul hc· 11v11ll 111
1 Ulock to Beach Lf.:C I Ul'Efi S lli\RI' :J Hr Con
nr Hl'nllllK now! Wat clo P;anoram11· Viel4
pool. Sl!IO 212·220 Hunt Pool. S.'l6.'> ino. 8301394;,
anglon St. Cull m~ \•ves/wknd!.. H3·1 :1ssu
!J60..2812 dyi.. o:sk for Mr Horn h needsc1r(ulatlon mano ....., S 111 tc 104!, Newu orl •t•1rtwork11nrn•"I "all Y ll ·11 h OfCicespace·s are ,... ., , " , Olmga orncy w1 s arc :.puce w/Lagunu Beach woman immcd. li1 LOST : Mal e kitl cn lkud1. bt'lwn!laan&3pm 3 br. 3 ba tnhouse W/11\· CPI\ carninl(s. exclus ive t{'r whl/hrn, 11 m n. very CALL 556-8505. Lge2br.2ba Garage dependent female . t"ry $2000deposit re EXECUT'yr. 494.97:;1. n " · fnendly. vie. Wallace &, ______ -____ -_-;,
yartl Jlrookhursl &Newport&.ach 3869 11:: <2l3J4874660or640-AA9S luodable.640-6670 l9lhSt.C M 548.6295 ,. 539-1183
Hl0atm5 1lt106~.V\ ~1.!'ca. Avn1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RENTAL SERVICE AVOIDINCOM PATIULE Lease Town & Country ACCOUNTANT JR i\utoml)t1ve 0 "'"'" llom(•s, upLs, condo~ HOOMMATES! Sh. op'g ~nlr 530 sq.rt. Estab. Candy route. ne UJST: Great Dane. mulll • DETAIL HELP Newport Shorei.. 11'.! blk L ... 01"' "'100/monlh d d--' l 3 f ..,()0 $150/mo for 20 hrs work color male, & s ml maxccl G I l r WALK TO REACH
2 br. l ba, down. Garage
$260. 846 9088/536·4508
,. , "~ 1v1 "" m o o cs . ..,.. . •<'nera ac·coun mg unc Inter. shampoo. 1)1,111 .. r.,, ocean. Super loc 21>r & 673 760 I A.tjt ~ ""'-· 7T •• ···-"'"' 6697 9 • kd _s _10_oo _P_h_fl7_5_·8_113 __ --f breed l1lk/w /whle m11I" l r II I , • • • E•'..UJUu Vl"LU"U 1 ru mo.""'" ·aw ys. "' ion or sma mu nu c·o \'n u I n c 11 u 1 n 1 c r ,. Jhr duplex apls Owner,1--------...;;.--1 ti R d I Pl I r ..
3876
Takes the Guesswork Investment og. ewar · ease re Know edge o 1•omputc•1 o;tc•11meri; Pickup & 1lt"
t714J870·9203 S.Clemettt• outoffmdmg lhal lusinusRental 4450 Oppotiwtfty 501 lurn.840·3147 s ystems e '\.,(•nl1ul hH•n• 2059 11urbor Clh 1I.
NEAR <X"'un 2 Br 2 Ba Yrly, steps to bch mod ••••••••••••••••••••••• RIGllTROOMM.ATE ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Pet"'IOftClls 5350 Responsible for mldll ol Coi.111 Mt.'su 64:-,.1030
fplc, newly painted upper 2 hr. Ileum c:c•1l..WlllTEWATER Vu , 832·4134Slnce l'71 PRIM ERETAIL"P1'CE SH.a.•EPROFITS computer run" & Jlrl' --•. uper clean. G ~r. a val -~ ., "'" •••••••••••• •• •• ••• •••• pa ration or J011rn ''I 0 11 Auto Sule~ ·' 0 fq1l Gor dr. operat.or garden setting. lge 2 Br. N t n-h w· h b lid I h · .. ~ Nov. 7, $300. 846-0814 S.125.642-3400 adlls, 8265 rno 245 w. Prof bachelor share home ewpor udC pier uren 1l u er n ousm Orlnklnit problem? tries. Assist U(C'OUDllnM Ken Watten Soyt ---------t p 1 & t l200 sq. ft. 675·3080 prOJe<ll. Xlnt rolum o Call i\kohol Hclphne I 3 Br dlx patio hme r.<.-MarQUll{I. 492-39671 W/same. 00 e nnL!I lnveslmenl. 754·0454 24 h,.,.odny835·38'"' ss·uT~rvcososrw. ITCH l ..... C Hi9hHIGHES Wc.-.TCLlft-• 2 br. J12 ba 446 5300 courts.544·1796. IALBO.a.11o...11o...1 .. ~"1 .. ,.., "" "' ...., wtlndry hkups. 21t7 Hun townhouse Hltn:.. d/w,•---------1---------"' "" .,.,.... """' 11.,.., 0 k Co l .. by lmgton St 8'12·3513 P\1 pa taos A1lll'> only. n San Ju. GCll'OC)ff for Rent 4 350 ~usqtl.I f.l.11on~I. .~1an1knarSeta. MOM __ y_t_o_Loan ____ 5_0_2-• MASSAGE ...., a er =' o me &a ----------t pet!>. 1128 &drord L.n c-i,..__o 3878 ••••••••••••••••••• •••• °' " '" fll!..URE MODELS 549-3041 FAR ~rfer's special! $180. -r· "_. 675-8740 •••••••••••••••••••••• w t::Qual Oppor Employer Commission~ for .auto .. r, kids/""'•/.•ngl•. F'en S32S mo Avnil Nov 15. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · rage garogc for rent. I t ~-.... & ]rd TD. ESCORTS 1 1 If '' ... ~ ...... " " "' .,_ l't1 19"" M I A 1 ...,,,.. 1 sa ~peop e. you •ri· 111 Main Rentals540·5370 548·7533 Twnhse,3 Br2'-11Ba ...... mi ~ ~r ._ ape ve, 1736ANAHEIM.CM 1,0ANSAVAJLARl:F. .._. douhl, T llY us, I:(, ---------ts hi•· • RP· from Ooheney State /\pl 5, .M. 600sq n g....,.und r:loorof c....i· t i OUTCALLO,..LY AdvJ\ss1Slont ""rit>n"c·"'only ·"PJll"in Dix 3br. 21 ~ba. nlmo11 ll (.~sc 1 U ark Bea(b. & Dana Wharf flccorshop'.vToilel. p(trk: r""'67!t4883no 9m~rteraol ··~ • '"' " " new. rrivol~ patl N~wport , tot ol spll S5SO mo.1l4.Q4-8282. an S2S month l n2S 6732654 .... '"" 631·3811 WOMEN person baleony. J?Or. nll bltns. 1 h1c1lities. S310 mo. 6PM,S24·IOl2 Closem Lag. Bch. ng. · . -----1--,---1---P-R_E_G_N_A_NT--,--1 DUNTON FORD
mi from (){'(•an. &c0-0696. 640-7858 494-()432. a..dntrial Rental 4500 rut Cor W11rncr & M111n !'ii
9UIET·ADLT·CLEAH
2 Br 2 Bo. nr shops
bch. pvt patio, gar S2
mo.96CH279
Sant .. 3180 DffdS 5035 Caring ~onfidcn lial 18 & UP S'ANTA ANi\ a ""na ••••••••••••••••••••••• f '' ,, I Bedroom Slud111. 41i9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Offlce RttttGI 440 •••••••••••••••••••••• roun11ellnic & re erral. ---
Newport Blvd, Apt 114. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRIME LOCATIOt4 Abortion. adoption le Nallonul com puny no" AUTO SALES
Sl<IO/month Musl 'huy Coodexpo!rnre Easy In· SPECIAL keenlng. blrl nrt ror c usiomer Prnfctill ionul :o.Jli'' I o ....... & egr. -·.· Plc n'" or AfCAf>L" c..7 .. ..-service publk rr lu uonll misc. fun1. $100. '"'"" ....., '"J LOW RATES '"' .,,.. ''-""' · · p (' r 11 11 n . P r ore r MIKESAVAGE ....._ parking. On Brookhursl .a.IOltTIO..... Am1trkclin11 ;iutomoU\e sales b.1rk
Walk lo bea(h from you Real E,,tralt• ft42·9GOJ Off._M~~ 7 t ~_Allhant'! In Hon1 Ungto1n 9UICk CASH Cou~llnl •-Re"r ... -al MO EXPERIENCE Rrotind. Straight "11
own 2BR . 2BA !'pac bluf ' tcos •1 pr va c ...,ac npprox mate Y TD Lo.a...a5 ....., • ~· ... ECESS•RY llou'> cstablii.h <I I bnlconv & Jlllr J32S 0 "'est { 2 br. 2 ~ b11. htaths. 45 Centa 8 sq.rt. In· 800 sq. fl of around noor · • "'" PT'eg. les\·8V8il. wktl<b n ~ ,. l' or
3 u r '2,_88 ram rm encl gar. Adull!I. 1365. chldin& ulWUes. 300-eoo space. ~1gnlng. 5325/mo £1DotadoMortaaReCo. 24Hr HclplineS47·9495 We train For mtcr vicw ·ovl'r ~ yei•~ Looktni.:
u • n ' ~.r•e""" .. ., .. ,,IU\l\A "t ni•· C II M f•l !213lG70·31G0"ollect 1---------1 "alJM1··Br ·~nah-n• for I full lime P4~~on to area. frplc. balcony • .,...,.~;.,.,.,"VVV\.I nn aq,,,,u ... 8 r . ummcr, "" SPlRrTUAI R EAOER .. ~ o.. "" '' roundoutsnlcsst<llf '1'11p """ c B B d RovMcCCS'dle 963-6767 or <7t•)0686MO * t'ullf L1;•ns~.. 751-601] '"&0 es. 1·-r1·.r11· A·~ f•>r patio. garage. _..s. al Ra(hclor. 4 plcl'. all uUI, 4 r, lwnl\8 " pool. ra · ' · '-"' ...., " ... "" .,.. , ,,,, • \Offe,~. kld,orslngles. $175 Fe• rord ~I S A. $375 mo. RHltor lllOM•wport t.000' clean. ucu re SAVIU 3l.2N E Comin0 Ret1I Larry111547·~
Wan.l 8d results
' '
ru 63J.2011. 547·2501 or 646-3'1 .. 1 or 5411-1000 •fl eo.t.W...541-7729 Storoge or llahl mta. Pnvete party will buy SenCJemente. Forappt; SELL Idle item1 wtlh 1 ----
810 IClGO SPW SZOOtmoolh. MS-U&4 your 2nd T.O. M2·3573 «·9034 492·Vl36 Oa.tly Pilot Clasamed Ad. Stll 1dle Items t4U$78 ------=-
T
tt.t,W.ted 7100 ..... p Wont.<f 71 0CJ~Want.d 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 HetpW..t.d 7 100 HetpW..tecl 71 00 Tu.day.()ClOMI 19 1m DAILY PILOT •IJ
•••• ·-... •• ............. • ••••••••••••••••••••• t .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • •• • •• • •• ••• ••• • •• • • •• • • ........... •• •• • • • • • •• • • • • • • ...... •• • • • ---;.;;.r.;.......,;;.;.;;.o--.--._.;;--------_.;;;....;.--;..;.;;;;;.;;..;...1::;..z:..c.
CARPEHTUS fl.OQRMAN. a't? 2~30 Kitcf\t"n PWMIERS Hdp Wanhd 7 100 ...... Wmted 7 100 Docp 8040
K' M "d At I \ fl' t I c-.. ~ s t..-M s w .............................................. ······················· AYON In 1 )'r t'Xl>Clr rec1 . t-H a uuu ~-• • • )tin l yr exper req'd, . ----
Must ha,,• O'Wll lools & pct!IOt\llllt)'lo worklnall Wllhrc flciale-lrt?Xprr wintcd for unique ltu.st have own toola &~ ___._ -----tfe...,._dl.dP•IM•s
t.raiup Top 14 ogr11 & lllnl ~l nl.ghlclub lntervle~ Garf le Id eonv Hot pita I chall~lng poet an Sout.h tramp. Top waa~'l' & xlnt J. ~ ~Isla P ,u me ~hr fl wk11 old 125 cad' Mffd Extra SS beneflla Appl)' loSt-cun-on SA• e • 2• t• s 7781 Garfield Ave llB Oranite County. An op bftiell~ Apply toS«un· Hal Jeweltn ~Tee~ Hador$7 ~r ~,7337 aller 51'M
To Male• ty Gu.rd .. W~l.lli.11 Corp. _!_ai~w. S11~ 847 9671. portunity to explore miw ty Guard. Wt.>Staall Corp. Now lnlerv11.1w1na at So. Rtt~pl (.; Ok tosn:I ----Chrf tma M....... 7 275 Mr<.nrm11:k Ave. G rd r , l>U technique~ Po11t opon 2T5 MC"Corm1ck AH. Co.lat Plu11 location tor Secy Bkkpr loS800 Bt.n Dulmallon .:rud re
P: '.. •• '
0
u Coo6t1d1lt"11u. _ ~t!ne;;e::pe~\iirrt~ No .. U th Wrltt t o Co!ist:iM8 a quality ules oriented lrvlrwPcl'lonn•'IA1otcnc>' n:nl~'<hchl.papera.to "'om auvut S4 on ev1•r)' - --• mu LAMIMATORS 1 lflcd d 783 0 11 Pf'"e>nnt'I Jewelry ex ~~.17th Costa Mc10 iood home only 11 25
'100 you a~ll as an AVON '-LEANING Ludy. 5 Dill-. !_81ary · 6U·4007 da)'ll W<'l!uull Cori,i uHboat ~~:u.t p 0 ~ • 1;.J P ti ml" S11 It·~ $40 S7C per deslrabll'. but not Suit~~ _642·~70 $400 vulut> 7~ 178l af\
R\tpr,•1untaUvc Sl!ll a wk 6pm l! JUnrn Bon· .r-.-----JOffl munut. hai. immcd C ul ·M · ·c .. ~"" · wk up Men. ladles. 11tu· llt'(' Plcni1c t•utl M9-l370 -_ --~PM t>.ouuful g1tt1. JC14 elry. d,1bl1· S U uk bkl!I 40 ...,,._..-'"" ce 1 f h d :-0e • l'Sa. ""'""'° den t 11 Ev t.• 11 / s 11 t · ---=--------
<'Oamvllcs. more. 1 ·11 llr... Mead) 1411rk l'lldlw l,ermonr·nt. purt llm'' lo~l~~l~r:"w ~t lea~~ 1 ~?851.839·7~1. ~l37!_fora~ W11nte' \'oun1t. In Auatrttll;in Sheph vrd.
ahow you how \all 644 0606 Multi \11lhon Oollor corp >r t•x1>4.•r. We have open SALES LADY tclhgent Mlrl w Ml·n~ral 11p11yed. !<hot&. 6 tno'a ~704t orZl•rltlh7 IJW -,---t11f11n.: llCW o k In •na~ on lh" r'"-'"lar Mon orr uper to opcralc ~ ~.O}~ --------...iCLERK . Bookston· l rvlnt-N\•,•11 ..-n ~ .. ~ ' 'o'" NURSES AIDES R [ A for ex<'luslv children. Biis1c IV Cnmputcr Wiii -~-------TI1u~&f'ri Mu~tbt.>cx thualntlc. positive t.hruThursalllnor7A7'1 •• gents store In South Cout trall\ Od work'tt rond.GrHtDanePupple:JAKC.
Ba by all overn •1<ht O<' c 1t1 n i;. d y n om I t' minded peoplt1 to In to 5.:lOl'M + 8 part tim~· If you are rellding lhis. Pl 11u Ex per only profit sh a rl n g. pa td r h11mvion line. uc:rtflct!
caslonally, sludunl ac· f.7~1*S95. troduct>lnexpenatvl'na shift t'rithruSun aame We h11v l' 1111medlat e YOUmaybt'oneot lho2 M98585 _ vacallon~::IU-5 ~4714 1
ceptable. Good 11alary -t1onally known produet.s hours. Apply tu th<' openings tor ma ture 642l lndu:1try Way · St tttl Nov. 7 403-0964 Colll'ctor .ror A~t!ncy Ex from oor ore. l''rce park !iecuril >' gua rd. 275 Nu r !\ e11 A Id ea Ex. Senior Assoclalee I am Salesman, lo distribute Wcstmlnatar
evl>s. pr n.'<I SulJry + romm. Ina: & other bent>fils McCormick Ave. Costa perlence is prercrre<l. !!eeklnR Exclu!'lve loca· sitins at Hdware & Sta ,.... to You 8045
Santa An;, isrea. l'b for pleas·int iturroundlngs & Ml'!l.l. but we wlll provide v•ld ~:>n~~e:~~tve:n~la~d: ~er-11lores. Oran1a~& WANTED: t:xp atyllst •••••••••••••••••••••••
Babys1llt>r wanted . :.µpl Mr Uermu relax~ ut.mosphere. Ne ~ t rai ni n ~ All sh lta Inger Acommlsaionpro-o. Van requr .• w/rllcintel~ In Northlshep/Collle male. 7 yn
Mature wornan Wdlll<.'d 558-81711 exper nee & no g('lhnl! LA U NDRY Perso n av11Uable. Please appl)' 1tram· unique In lhe In· commission ba s is. Ca8ta Mesa aren. Appl)' ta~s. etc. Obe)'S well.
to babyi;1t J dy11 n week'" COOK. Expet"'d involve.'(!. Xlnl oppor for Hayv1ew Conv. llosp in person at . dustry Dia I It ·.YOU 'II ~-83QIHor appt In penson ~fo~ ull day or Neuh•red. Good home. ~!-01"!~oor View Home Good pay JI •.. -nef1ts. A~· ll d v a nc l' men t. C ll 11 205 s Thur in. C. M Uke It' S31·5800 SALESPEOPI ~ TUH es mom. Swltchcran 646-0724 ....., JU. .,. ~ 833-8095 I EVERLY MAMOR ' • au·sl)'ling. l091 Baker.-----------------1 ply an peraun, J oi y · 1142·~ 24452 viaE.i,rada GeorgeWeierbach plckupS:SO.eamS300 CoslaMeaa.540-0341. Med. sized half German
BABYSITTER & Light Roger, 3333 W, Cst Hwt. General Ofc help for sm LEGAL SECRET ARY Laguna HUI•, Ca Westha•et1 Redly Call 644·9410 shepherd needs home
Ho usekee4)1 ng. l''rec NB electronic Importer •. Ex per. Corpo rat e. An "'ftunl Sal Ph N Woman tor general home Loves kids. llas ahots & room & board+salary ,.,.~ ""i e$· one oexper . care. elderly woman In II C II rt c: JOp
1 I Nd COOK r b kr t E AMwer ..,.ones. typing. New P o r t Ce n l c r . Opportunity Employer necessary. We will lr•in ... alld. Sruoak En"llsh c. n a er .,; m. rv ne. resp person or rea as x· flllng. hrs. 8.5, S433/mo ,, .,. llAIV\ GET I $250 to $500 • ... ~ • 7514!070 for care or my 2 chUdren per'd only. Cass1dy's. Call /\.C tnd~tries ror -"-"""""""' * MTO * averag~ 1n· Wknds & eves. Aft 6pm .•---------
ages 6-8 wkdys. ~-7845 Newport Bch. 675-8468. appt. 979.l)!j3() Uw in for elder Iv couple. NURSES AIDES RE •L ESTATE c,ome. a fl er t ra1n1n_g. ~1435. Calico. Spayed. shob, orC213)29H!026 m;A CBU.Mr. Huber for U\ very pretty. Loving COOK GENERAL OFFICE En~llsh speoking. No 3-11. Exper pref'd. Mesa tervaew. M().6091 Working mgr for horse home only. 1:131} G227.
BARMAIDS: Day. Night Food serv1 cr supervisor smolCtng. Days 64008.iO Verde Conv. Hosp. 661 •Freelireasetralnlng boarding stablea S5001-----'------
& Reller Shifts Call for for uctave convalescent Interesting position Eves 61~377 CenterSl.C.M •Fteesalestrain1na SALES/R.tail mo. Can live on pre -Deaut1ful male gray ap~intment,54iM781. h osp. Good sa l & answering J>ludenl in-LU>.J l-l l ·.J O ....... --.... id-•Rlghtstartprogrum Seriousmlnc\ed.tulltlme mi s es. Capi s trano , hairedklttens.necdgooJ
bt-ncfils. St'nd resume quines by mail. Req's •" ____.. ~ •• •Eam while you learn retail sales persons witnl· 4!J3.-0675. home. 645·1J4J.i
BARMAID
Allract1ve. Colle~c OK.
Salary plus . Nights
&is SS.14
BARMAIDS
FULL TIME
177 E. 17lh St CM
Beauty Salon need~
S H AMPOO G I RL ,
p/l1me w /lie 641·7321
QJM.
BEAUTY OPalATOR
No follow. nee. !:;>.per pref'd. •..; ·s or lcil:.e. Call
&lHOSO.
Beauty /hair stylist
wanl.ed for El Toro llalon
837--1743.
to. <.:lnssified ad no 764 mature judgement. good Chorge Nurse & Metllca & Orderlies •Nationwide advts'g ed for rapidly growing c/o Daily Pilot, PO Box memory, detail abihly. lion. F'/llml' Apply Pnrk F,xper. pref'd. Bayview •National Reio ser vice specialty game stores. YACHT SALESMAN rxlra alteetionale mother
JS60 Costa Mesa . Ca typin g 4 5+ wp m . Supenor. IU5 Superior Conv. llOBp.~5Thurin •Guursalespro~ram Must be enthusiastic. GoodOpportu01~y cat.nds homeforherkit·
!Ylti26 Customer service b11ck· A,e. N B !H2·2411.l. Ave. CM 642·3505. •Choiceoflocations self-motivating & nexi· 646·9000 tens. Evs . 640·2&5 ----~ ground very helpful. Ap -- --
C 0 ply National Systems. LYN 11·7 NURSES AIDES *JOIN * ble. Apply in person. Men:hmdhe ff'ff Pupples 0 KS '36lD1rchSt.N.B. &JANITOR "'/lime & r mme. Day TheFastest Growing Chess & Games. Unlld. ••••••••••••••••••••••• M7.a&s3 an6pm I·: " P c r . d N c w Network in Orange C.o. 2700 West Coast Hwy . .A..1&..-... 8005 . A I Lido Conv <.:enter shill. Expe.r'd pref'd . Ap· N rt Be h _... •• ,, .. on d I r fh•stJuranl. pp y in 1~Super1orAvc,NB ply Park su-rtor. 1445 Centuryfinancfol ewpo ac . • •••••••••••••••••••••• Po,o e ( ef!'alel \'Cr) pcri.on. Mr. G 's GENERAi.OFFICE "" R-_.t . fni,ky&lovana. to homl· H(•staurant. 3100 Irvine Musthavctyping&malh 646-7764 Supe r ior Ave, NB. -ors Sandwich Shop ll~lpr, Wonderland with love toglve.673·6329
A\c, N~wport Och abihly. 5118·5300. ---------1 642·2410. Call 752·5353 help prepare sandwiches
--C-OUMTERG --IR_L _ _, GEN. OFC JOIS NURSES AIDES ~hi~~:v:v~r,~t~Ti~:-t~ Of Antiques! "i~~~P~·ki:,~t :C!~~~
HS$$SSS$$$$$$$ LYN'S & RN'S 7 to 3 shm. Will train if Real Estate Sales 2PM. &5PM to7PM . CM. H UG E ware h o use 962-4283aft5PM. Mu~l be plee:.tmt & confi·
dent w ,thc public
Slcady l'mpluymenl in
:-.. B E:istblwr Cleaners.
2SJ7 ~aslblurf Dr. NB.
l>l l-09.12. --DECK HAMD
.. c3r"'e~r s"';ots" :wail. depe ndable Country HOGIMMICICS 646-4678afl2PM crammed wit.hover 500 ---------
NOW through Control lmmedl:ite openings on Cl ub Con valescent 70"JCOMMISSlON music boxes. nickelo·lsheepdog, female. 2 yrs
Career Employment 3·11 andll-7 shiflslnour Home. 20362 Santa Ana Exper.Only.Appl)': Sffr'STuxedoD.,t deon pianos. circus or· old . ··Mandy". Gll
Agency, 3400 Irvine. 218 bed r ehabilitation Ave .. Santa Ana. P b CENTURv 21. Salesperson needed gans . wa ll clocks. w1childr en . Moving
Suite l 02. Ne wport facility We orcer top _:;4_9-_306_1______ CROCJ<ERR.E. Weil groomed. Mostly gr andfather docks. ~5313 w~g"'s ~nd our .. -n-'its 621W 19th C M mo rni n"s & wknds fasclnatlngantiques. ---------Beach. u " .. "" l!I • • • p ti ea"' th A<AO 3333 OverSl ,000.000Worth Free to good h o m e. CALL 55MS05. package Is excellent. Nursing 642·5062 ex't 34m1e.. y, '" · ' America n l nt.emaUonal Siberian Husky. 2 )'rs
F'llll time. mu'>t he ex· ---------1 Please Call Te rry al K Id M 645-5456 Boat Carpenter per . well groomed. col· r-IRL FRIDAY 837-8000. R.,. SUPERVISOR Receptio nist. Uniaex Galleries; 1802·T ettu· ~-....-----
F. · hT k " 7·3.30 Shift. Mus• have Salon, lmmed. opening •SecN!tan es-Legal Ing St . Irvine . Tel.
IOIS ea ll•g1ale. between 20-34 One n1rl ore. Typ1'nn. sh • A Se Wed h "'--.LL--805 FUii or p time Apply in ~rs. Gd pay & ~.'flefits. pre·r·d". C."1. r:.U! ,,,,,,6". BEVERL y MANOR a c u t e h o s p i l a I tor 1 r /time & t p/Ume. ~~lnlstrrlatave cy's Sa754.1mA Open t1 ru ~ 0 person to oat w ttllh, !::.end resum(' lo 011 c:7Hl. " ...,,...,,,.. 24452 Via Estrada supervisory ex per. Xlnt Regis Hairs tyling. So. .,.,.,,retll es to $1000 t. 9 M to4 PM. Vis l! •••••••••••••••••••••••
-
CM __ ___ c 0 The Daily Pilot. I-' 0 G IRL FRIDAY bene(ils. Contact Mrs . Co t1 s l PI a z a. C M . Employers Pay All Fees **I BUY* * Laguna Hills. Ca J ensen . Costa Mesa 540-888&. Apply an person, Lu: Reinders Agency SHIPS LAtiO'ERMS
ROAT CAHPENTEH. ~lx 1560. Costa ~l ~":>a. P lime. Varied lnsks, An~qual Memori a l Hospital. Manager.Mlss fo'afar. 402001rchSl,Ste l04 540-342201'673-4339 Good used Furniture &:
Ptrime, lo help build ~ 9~ _ fll!x1blc hours Mature Opportunity Employer 642.2734. Newport Beach 833-8190 Appliances-OR I will
Tnmaran. Call urt 6PM Oehvt-rydn~·cr!'forPiu:.1 woma n pref. NB1Cd,\11~~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~~~1 R E SALES Call for Appt1Eslab'65 5 Oak Pr~back chairs, sell orSELLforYou.
6-154717 delivery & handlers. Ap· area. 833·1<17l •MAID-LIVE-IN Qu•~i·de sales-full or part • • ..---~~~ su~e S70 each. MASTERS AUCTION
1 · t r1 Mlddl ed E "' Frff 14 do SECRET ARY 64.6-8686 & 833-9625 loat RepalnMn ~f:n'"1 .. ~rs1°1!!rboo r uizvzda GROOMER e ag · xper nee. time. Fine jewelry line. Y ... lppli 10 ".. ""v ., u h ._.. Call8481114 T · 1-c Accurate typist. book· -Mees 10 ~.fust have actual JOb e"· c..... Bather/Brus er wan........ · · Liber al commission ram., oune SAVE N & ed f .n k e e P I n g . s o m e ••••••• •••••••• ••• ••••• ! ew us um. l)i!r Mechan1cal1elec. - --N.B.644·M~Mon-Frl. Maids. Apply The Inn al~:... shorthand. personable. Freight DamageHolpoinl appl's, misc. Wilson'!\
n:p::ilr. Wood hull yacht Oellvery. neat appear GUARDS Laguna 211 No Co::ist p •Personal Instruction Real Estate Office. SaJe. 3308W warner. Ba rgain Nook. Now z repair. Need clean Good tran5p nee .\1in s.J 11 L. ee· h AREMTS •Manugementopporty•s worker w1cle11r record hr+mi.Formtenwt.tll CostaMeso wy , uguna ac • llaveyoul5·20 hrsawk •lo80'lCommnmon ~!;fe~~~ler. Call nearHarbor.SantaAna ~~~C~~564t~~~ow&
Ulackic's Boal Yard. 497·3720.1·8.JOpm. Perman~nl. Full & parl· MARINE l<> work while children •OnlhejoblralnUlg - ---- -Caloric Coppe rtone 548·3262.
673-6&'H. De~WAsst .-c hrsd. umc. Phonl' & 1ra nsp re· ELECTRICIANS r:!~,:hh':!?P~l~e !~: •Manytopom celo<"s SECRETARY for Real Stove, auto timer, meal -u----, -----
Bo-a..a.. F/C.._ X F. q'd. Hellrcd welcome. Mm l yr exper. req'd. .,. Eatate Co. In Fashion prober r otisserie 2 mOVING · Recline r . _,,.~I . .., p . tim~. ' jrays ,vcs Call ~16·027 1, ore hrs 10·2. Must have own tools & ceplional earnings op· Island. Must have 4 )'I'S ovens. '1 self cleanl~g. dresser. nite stand. dbl
F 1ume. tor contruclors. ~>me Sats. I U ~16·3!>.\0. _ Cloc.e.I Wi·d trJnsp. Top wages & xlnt por. In school related exper. type 65-70 wprn. bottom w/broller. sooo bed. small tables. planl.S
l640Supcr1or A\e, C.osla Dt!nlal Rec eptio nist - -bcnd1ls.Applyt0Secur1· sales. Call Virginia RED CARPET s h 80·90 wpm . Arply Ultenew.Also,somedls· &:mi~.675·1404
Ml'Sa ~-5S3l w msur1111rc exlX'r Sl•111 ll~1rcln.''!>l'r fur Cab:irct tY Guard, Westsa1l Corp. Calkins, 5S7·10Cl. REALTORS 962-1011 TMI. 369 San Mlgue Dr. hes, pots & Pans . For Sale: 18 & 19 Century
Bookke~per
F.xper. nee. (.;.Hfkld
Conv. llospilal 7781
Garfield Ave, Ji ll .
847·9671.
aookkffp«/secy
Xlnt oppor. for r ghl
person having bkkpng &
secretarial skills. Call
Elizabeth. 640-87~2.
Baokltu per P /tfme
Sat & Sun. Warehnuse
Rt!s l au r ant. N ll
6iJ.4700. -------
Heoch. 213 · 131 2:)W or c mflurcs. P lime or full 275 ~l cCo rmick Ave p l ·l· · t L FordC'lails call Linda i;200, NB. 898-6460. inlaid turn. Repruduc· 5•.~ . ..,.7• w1following 847·3422. •·~ta Me•a. • a r ame ass1s a n , '"""'" """ " femalepreferred f0f'cut·1• _________ 1secretary needed forKenmore Washer&Gas lion fro m Austria.
l>ENTAL ASSISTA~·1~ Il a rd wa r e· llousewa re MASSEUSE bch spa. will out work $2.65 starting. Restauranl youn~ Orange Co. firm, 3 Dryer $200. Kenmore 644-4876for appt.
leasl l yr cxp. Exp:ind· Sales. M&F'. p e rm. train. Good pay. Ca ll 645-271S FARWEST girl ofc.Typing60 wpm, washer&elecdryerS17S,SoUdoakklngszbdrmset
ini:: duties. X·ray. rart p/l1me. M usl work 1 536-7991or675·0258. sraVICES f!O sh. Xlnt benefits. Z03l Whirlpool Cas dryer $45, w/armo1·~e. lnlald wood . Call D w ,1 wknd da y C r o w n ~ S E Main Ir vine N h $45 •
84tim7_e850. 1 r. c ner. Hardware. 3107 E. Coast MASSEUSE \18·28> legit PBX Hn.s a new exciting con· · · ' · orge was e r · game set w/mat.chlng M6·2901. (Across from Maytag washer $30. ser ver. corree tbls &
-_..:...:...;__------1 Hwy.CdM. full lime position In cept in r estaurant OrangeCo.Alrport.) Guar.546-8672 ...._"t""e.Catvelvetsora
DEHTALASST. Massa~e. No exp. nee. OPERATORS !>er v1ce.llia tobenamed """" .... · R e g 1 s l c r e d · · We ~ruin. Call 540·2053 A i---------•IMayt.ag washer. lake new & loveseat, queen sz ma·
w orthodontic ex per. HOMEMAKERS anytime. Cord&Cordless SUND J'S S.C~taryHffded! cond. & depend. $95. S. pie bdrm set, glass lop Electronic Pulse U--'· 0 I rr1 -l 'nlf I ... 499 1865 dinette. lamps, glus & F' t\1me 54R·2291 u T U R 0 "'"' And Is located In Mission ne ~ir " <-e yp1..... ~· · brass coffee tbls, den ~---Now that the kids are '" A E W M AN Longor shorttcrm Vi · t 27750 c lite bkkp1t. invoicing & OEMTAL back In school, why not p /time t o wel<'ome assignment~ vaW:Y iarkwaf, 0~00i~ order: taking. SH pref. Freezer upright. 15.5 cu. rurn, all in xlnt cond.
Orthodontic Chnirslde go to work? Trainee As· newcomers & contact Never A Fee Al Tempo East corner of the San Please cull Sandy al fl. Frost free. $200, 1_5.s4_-4_760 ______ _
\ ,.· l r.v .,1 l'·ll 0 sembly & Packagini: mcr<'hants. Flexible hrs. TOPS$$$$$$SS$ Diego Fr-way. 673-2784 for interview. 540·7982 DLX. HIDE·A·BED. un· 'sns i:.-rwr · 'u r Jobs now <1vall. Long & NeNi car, lite typing. "~ P llme. :>63·8!131 short \erm assignments. :>17·:kl95. 0 Now Interviewing For: SECRETARIAL WORK. Colds pot ref rl g. Ice ~· cost '390/sell h70.
Students TOPSS""ssssss ~em~O Cooks Gd typing skills. 4 hrs m ~ker . cold water debver 5S4"'760 DENTALASSISTANT-',fe~h ~n1·c~I I nspector •-p-----• spig~ covered by wan H-·••w1"w•1 & N " F Al T ·• ~ " " _. ~ per day to start 631·1425 67c:7~". ' OAK Student desk chairs, _..,. ... Chalrside exp. or School ever" ee empo Ex per 1n Sheet metal ,,. ......, Moonli...a.ten t ramed. lmmcdlately. 0 fabrication. Must have T EMPORARY Ht;LP Dish Persomd ~/R ~· t gi each. Oak straight .,.. Call 540-4455 Hosm1 PenoRMI N ~' t ecCt .. '"'i""' t.IS Upright freezer, xlnt back chair s. $50 ea, Million Dollar Corp MIVi074 !iemnQ some welding inspection ewpor .r . n er~a · cond., Sl.25. 646-4018 on 631-1463 needs men & women of i..--------•I .__"'_ exper. Exposure lo heal· EqualOpporEmployer FoodWaftnss uonal CPA rarm moving 2PM ---
any age who l'nJOY DIETARY AIDE TEMPORARYHELP ing & aircond helpful. CodctaHWoltrffs tonewquarters req'sex· AM /FM stereo w/table speaking w/olhcrs & who c-540 4455 S w Ing s h t ft hr s . PEOPLE PERSON Interviewing Mon·Frl per'd secretary & recept· Bicycles 8020 speakers $12S, small cor·
are bored w/the averai:e -• •1:30pm-12:30 a m. Con· Exec needs p/time as-9AM to5PM ;typist. Dictaphoneakilla ••••••••••••••••••••••• ner tbl $10, childs record
runofthemilljob:. Mature Individual re· EqualOppor Employer tact Gene Underwood. soc.inwhslesupply.Ful· AlOur Tempora ry a must.Call Mrs.Allday, NEW&USEDBIKESand player S\0, pr gold/wht
quired for salads & 17141498·2230. lycapitallzed.673·2223. OfricelnThe Trniler betwn 2·4pm for appt parts. Cruisers. MX's, ~ swag lamps $25, red
No nclual ~elllni: in· d l w k d O P 835 1242 voh \.'d & no !'.cttm~ up ~~e~ i ·"IJ\n ;;,e Pl~~ Horse Trainer, M/F. ror:0.1EDICAL0f'f'ICEASST We~r:!~~<;al -· · & 10 Spds. Cycle & Co. velvetswaglampS25,sm
pointmenls. Work w one ca.II . Ms:""c'a r.v ey at training stable. Quarters llunlmRton Beach Phy111· opportunity employer Sdervicc Slat.,idon DAtten 2488 Newport Blvd .• C.M. cabinet SlO. walnut chr
<II the most "''"ular & ........ 000 & s alary. (714 l :138-lOll , cian. Reply lo DellY Pilot PERSONNEL ant , ex per . ay & 642·7910 SlO, Maple hutch $145, ,~" ""' o Ad p 0 Bo dbl bed headboard $7, 11uccessful p roducts 011 BEVERLY MANOR 244·2218 • ll7Si. · · x 1560. CLERK --Eves. FUii & p/time . Ap· Raleigh record girls 10· phonean6pm,645-7857, the market today. An In 24452 Via E.'llradu _H_O_S_T_E_S_S_/_C_A_S_H_l_E_R-1 Cost11 Mesa. Ca 92626 Retail &:delivery clerk for ply, Shell Station, 17th & spd, $65 or best offer.
Hpcrmve produet whose art & drafting ~upplies. Irvine. NB. Call898·4822 Kingslze Serta, mattress, ""me 1s o household Laguna Hills Days. Apply dally llam· MED 1 CAL REC E PT· We need a detail oriented Salary based on exp. boxsprings &drame SSS.
word thruout lhc world. Equal Opportunity lpm, Mon-Fri. Mi Casa J\l u!ll lake sh & be f~i11t person to hand le the Career opportunity. APP· Service Sta. Attend an~. 3 &: 10 Spds. Cruisers & Call 540-3393.
Work in a youthful. Employer Mexican Rest., 296 E. typist. llr.i rlexlblc Call clerlcol procedures In ly In p e r son. PA.S full & p/tlme. · Exper d. Standards. Parts & te· ---------
friendly utmosphcrC' &---------17lhSt .C.M. lll99.'l-l74t. our Personnel Office. G r aph ics, 4220 Von Appl)', Ray C~r ey palr.Trade-ins.Ouaran Solid Pecandln.rmtbl .. 3
havefunwh1lcyouearn MEDICAL. expcr only. Pos!t lon r equires 6 Karman , Newport Chevron. 604 S. Coast t.ees.631·2101 lears.6 caneback chairs,
top poy. You receive n D' t• i AD .t. Housekeeper/Companion kno·"l••dgc of front. • monlhs general ortlceex· Beach.833·8262. ltwy,LagunnReach. china cab. Sl,000. Bwfet le IC an • ·~· W/SOClal 1sccunly.li vein. ~ ~ °'' i t I f 50 CalMrcn& $200 Ca ed be h 1175 r;:~:ll~ifl~1~1 ~0~: wanted t o aid I n Cook for elderly lady. U~~,~~f1;~· Newport ~~~~ce~pft~~~eo ror RN-LVM SewlftgMochOpr EquiptMttt 803~ 2Cnrved:.ht.&~~dmir:
mission & bonuses. Con· establishing n complete· $200. mo. 675·1932 · · rigures and the a bility to F/time for 7.3 & 3·11 Ex per, top P C work ••••••••••••••••••••••• rors $125. 3 Paneled fold·
tests & other Incentive ly new ser vice In MESSENGER deal with people. Must shittl. 99 Bed rehab. pricea.Beneflts,642·3472, Private Photo Lab Ing screen $50 Be n
Xlnt advanceme nt hospitals Must enjoy ~ousekeeper-~arl 01!5 Hl\ROOR AREA. Must speakrluentSpanlsh. oriented racilily. Call NB Sellout. Mamlya RB·67 FrankUnmdswlvetdcsk
J)06alblbt1es fo r l>oth u'len working with food. New uties for guest ome an have motor c Y c I e & Mrs. "B" 213/943·7156. SHtrr1ur-0-Camera & 250MM lens &: chair $250. Red kin..: *-0 raduale desired. Posl· C.M. 646-6716. pt ..... Call I perl I Co Ce ,,w ..,.. 1 • se Omerra I ..., . I.lilted bed d • ..,, ... women. ~ comp. Insur ance cov-~-m a nv. nter. . ca . ., en a • .,er. • q sprea _,.
Lion C?~n now. Write w HOUSEKEEPER/COOK era~c. Good knowl<.'dge foruppoMtMent: 11926 La Mirada Blvd La Cos~ a M es a fl rm · lenses & condensers. Solid maple dbl bookco&e
No ex per nee. You re classified ad lf700, Daily 2 Girls. ages 7 & 10. Pvt or Harbor area. No phone Carol Rufhto Mirada. Tr a' nee . Good co Safelights. tlmcr.i & al hdbrd $25, 2 Maple twin ~vcfullpnywh1lcbelng Pilot. P .O.Oox 1560. room. cir TV. NB area calls. Apply in person. benefits. Call for appt darkroom access. Cal hdbrds $10. M aple
lrainl'(!. You can work~Cos~l~a~M~es~a~.C~A~9~26~26~~l:~64S~·~2S~l~O~-----I Western Union. 771 West 979-2000.xt 132 RN Relief Days. Beverl)' 8·llam.M5<M01 Logon.646-8376. bookcase $30. Mar.le
morning or eve hrs. Onlyr: 19th St. CM. ~~~a?g~M·. :~~7~ SHIPttl ... G CLERK Cob 8035 night tbl 5.00. Oil pa nt·
10 min. by Fwy. from oll DONUT Shop H e lp ,•----------=~:.:..:::::..;_____ 8.P. JOHN Mfg. Expcr'd,642·S472 ••••••••••••••••••••• .. ings.675-4927.
t1 urro1.1 ndlng <'Om · p/lime PM shift. No ex· INSPECTORS MOTEL MAIO Work. RN-WMlctttds PERSIAN Kittens. toJ DINETTE SET/4 chrs
munlt1es. You owe It to per nee. Female. age Neat, enenieUc women. COMPANY D-·~"lsor Switchboard Recept. quality show.prospects. 535, Call otter 3 pm. youl'Mlll lo at ll•nsl in· 25-45. Apply in person, Laguna Bch resort. 6 -,p S 1 Vnslllon o pe n for · 6389308 645-826l
Vl'St1gtlte this unu'>ual Mr. Donul.135 E.17lhSt. •lt.cti•fftg/M.ch, D1y wk or p /tlme. E 1 Apply a r uper or, mature, wellgroomed. · ---------
uppor. Conla<'l Jenelle Costa Mesa. 2 Yrs recent ex per. In 494·1196. Opport Anj qEa 1 1«5 SUperior Ave, N.8 . Exp. only Call Diane Dogs I04C Early American Furn &
Taulbee. 833-8098 ---------• sheet melnl. plastic & ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! un ty mp oyer 642·2410· Sodla for appl. 979-2500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• miscellaneous. ReASon:i·
-Draflsman. orch., •Pl machine parts. Some PC Isales Car eer -s teady Irish Seller Pups. ble. Ph848·8204 DOREO builder. Costa Mesa ex-r.desJred. 2 ""rson bus ofc ol non· A.KC ·"" llOMEMAKERS., ,.. __ .. 1 ·r f t "" f Ad Act• .,.,.. ' work, $175 wk~u to start . .,., 1 0 1 , sholll. worma1. b Li · vuuu sa ary ' as. ex· •I-a......-... 1 Qf 100 profit organlz"8tlon nds "'uller Brush _7851 •00 M tin 64 ... 7473 Uam oo v rm set, Unlimited opportunity -rlenced 642 ~oo7d"Y8 ...,.."'"°... 1 rrt I " " B l h Blk kit h for personal & financial .,.. . .• .. Min I yr exf:r. in In· outgo ng e c e nt M · TOOL u c er c tll't ,
f I I l Call a aanh:ed sectry. Ccn. s•L•s-Australian Shepherd p•1p twn beds bdrm set. rewards without socrlflc· e.ctrom~ ... ,,_... process o a e ec ronic ~ '" ' I .. ~ 1 u M t k utles. he avy t,n1lnJC . o l re c • 0 u , 9 I d e pies. Good breeding, $25 Riv era sofa bed. AM & lfli r11nily responsibilly Trainee. $2.50 hr. 8 to nspec on. us now lmly Pilot rd " • PM 11640 6038 Fu II or p /Time sales 4:30 Health Insurance. color codct, blueprints & Non-smoker pre , S650 salesladies. needl'd Im· DESIGNER ea. 557·9359. ca ' .
POSltioru open to men or profit sharinic. Allen Tell schemaUcs. mo.+ benefit•. 873-8683 mediate ly. tor home AFGHAN PUPS. Silvei roo1 tbl S25~ Din rm set ~men. For interview Vl"Oducts. tn<'. 2211 So. •Profo.Sowe• AD-VISOR PHARMACIST f urn ishings & ac· Musl beable todeslgn& white&Apricot.Lovabl~ w/6 ehrs. $175; Dresser
ca 11 Mrs. It obk irk. susan St, SA. M6-3522 4 Yrs eitper. In 1ource of New shoppln! center ceasortes. Ir you have detail small machines & personalities. 548-<>SZJ. $15, 559-5366or ~S-2443
557-ll>tl. L250 ---------• all electronic lnspecoon. 642 5678 N 0 2 ...,. .. 218 ambition and aro willing mechanisms ror RltD & ..:....---------1 ENGINE Must know color code. • · · < l3> -• .., or to learn call. Denise production. Appllconta GOLDEN RETRIEVEll MUST SELL tit
IOYSANDGIRLS INSTALLERS blufprinta. ftchematlcs. <213>399~anePM Snlder,768·1091 should have 4 yrs min. AKCrcg.,Cbampllnes.E HOMEFULJ.OFFURN.
MJssion Viejo · El Toro Min 1 yr exper. rcq'd. Wil ~Of'm lnspertionl•--------!Sales exper. Lile electronic~ wk old male Outatand 836-4170 eve1.
area. Earn youbsr o':"n Must have own tools & at su tractors & as· -F)Jll or part time. exper background helpful Ing markings. 538-4321. Herculon 9' Sofa & Love =:!n!~1~~~~ F':r~~ trons,t· Top waaes & xJnt ~~~:~et!';'=~~spec· SO PHONE SALES req'd In fashion bouti· RtOMTllR. INC. Rea. Mal e Afghan St1l. xlnt cond. mo
rormallon. call 830-0913 ben~1ts. Appl)' to Sccurt Ex-Uent co . .._ems In· ·--.~ WUT's que. Advancement oppor •oCopald mtdlcol. tawn/blk, btll. gentle, E 64C>-2'149 aft 6. ty v uard . West s11ll ..... ""'" MEW Pbone Sales people. ror career minded gal. dent•ltnaurance mo. Sl75.SSC>-5199 r..a-
CAI DRIVERS Corp .. 275 McCormick elude l wks vicetion , J WITH male or fem a lo. l8 to 85 Call Apropos 64+2652 or o • 10 Paid holidays Goi • -1055
M ... 0 or Womftn Ave, ~lA M~a. arter 6 mo's. 11 P aid •. , -•t . yearaof aaie. Guaranteed or come lnto 29 Faah1on •••2 Wks PaJd Vac ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' ... --'--------•holidays, aroup in· .. ~ ""' • lssl Mustbe2Sorover ExperDMVPersqn. surance atart.~ doy of wages or l"Omm ons. lsland.NpBch. USITHI Pendulum pool game $5..
Apply ln PeNon Contact Mr. M ilMr .hire & many more. .., .. l 250 Eut 17th S'rut. Apply To Perso~Or llanglng orange lamp $5. Ytllow Cab AUasCbryslt r Plyn\outb Appl,Y Penonnel ~: ~~ Suite o. Costa Mesa, Send Resume :t DAILY PILOT Zblueendtablelampe. sa UZSlSlatcrAvenue 546-1934 benNen4:00"8:30p.m. JuclJMileek. ..,AST pr. Drapes & curt•IM. OOCUMENTOR $4$.m8. ft nfi lfl Al'Uflclal Xmas ll'M SB.
__ F_ou_ft_ll_ln_V_a_lle_..Y __ Experle n ced custom EqualOl>Portunlty °"° --or er. c USULr Revolving tree stand R .
.. _ rabinet m anufacturer DMSION .~/ Employer k:nocb oft~~ 100 2955 til. Airway SBYICI Revolving eolot for tree neededCall~l820 use result-ftU.ina Dally U>catedattbeend $2. Santa Claus S6. IFYOU Addreao1rapb --------tPUOl ctue1n..d Ada to otS.k~rSt.No.of DtllCTOIY MS-«m. m E. J.8th St ..
baYe•ttrvlce toorreror RGHTltilR.ATIOf'4 Mutttiraph 0.... .. 111111,....,..... reach u,. Oran.re eo.t Ora_~eCo.Alrport For Result AptB,C.M. ,
to&ell. rtace 1•n ad Add utra money to the Zt21 S.I>........ ,....._...,.. ... ,..,._. Clas1lrl~ ad1 1ell bll __ .......... CO!ttAI Mesa ~~rvfc• Call r 11 b d t L I ._.._ ... ....._ • • L'lllt) ... ...,., wanr.a. ~ ... 4 Family V 1rd Sale
b e Daly Pilot om Y u~c · oca --lt•mtl small Items or Pbone64.2-5618 64•1671 £verythln8 there. H S a .. med Section ... Amway tlb butor will Equ.al ()ppor£~p~r l1Zflilijj@i ady lem. J un call Plnd what you 'Nnt in ..,. Cabrlllo C.M . Wed/·
fMMMWe'JI, train. 673-4788. IGa'l'I. l>ail1 Pilot CJualfteda. Id. JU Thur/Fri.
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8 J,2 DAILYPILOT Tueldey.October19,197e AutotW..ted 9590....._ .. , • .w .......... 11tiacl ~-........ A.iltiM.UaH AldM.Ua-4 • -........................................................................... ~·~1 .......................................................... .
Horwt 1 060 Mmkat INh. Sell 90 CASH FOR CA.ISi c.pn t7 I I .._ .._ 9740 v_....,... 977 C.._ 9' 11 Pont 9940
••••••••••••••••••••••• ..._......_.. 108 •••••••••••••••••••••• Top I I>ollar I s>ald t ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••• ., • ...,••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••"
Fluhy Chestnut Appy •••••••••••••••••••••• 74 £RICSON 3S ~~ ~':· rvcr 74 c.,n 2100 lftre.sn Bcl\l '1S. ~ '91 VW BUG. Qd cond. "'76 SON. LOADED. LO '72 LTD Brouabam. Sntf,,
mare, o yra old, needs at· Conn l't11n·O· totlc el~ &Newport Moorill1 O'Neill or au v ... en& .uto lrant. rec aunroor. tmmu, New Must sell. Make otfer. MI . BL U t: I W HT AC. Cr Cont .. rull pwr11.-
tcnUun 67~93bfr6pm oraon. t!xcellenl cond1 714·~3538.~747 HOW A..ROCINt roMt tor')' air Dix int & llUD Michelina. ue.soo . SSi-1747 ~5075 l\f'1' 4PM . PVT Vin top. Mltb Uttl. Dl.$Qt1 Uon,$ti00,PP.53212S9 •-Y roof vi. t me"h __ ... 642·7774 after jpm PTY brka. l!Clnt cond--TallyHofanns . Hob1eUJ,trlr,ntwtrans.. Dove &QuallSu. . • ... n ............ -.~ '688vg.'iOrbll «n9.Rblt 99~1108. 6i5·2266 o~
llox •ta1ls S90·SlOO. l'lpe Guita r nu ep1pbon more. 11.'25. 546-8~ or NEWPORT BEACH $2650.S..1487 t rans. New tires & '76 El Dorado Convert S40 2WO cornls S7S We , __ ..,. Joi-MO ctn w/case. M58 ·;.;:1:;_·7_:S05_;__ ______ 1 73 C4 ri V"' C '70 ~ Rdstr. 2 tops. shocka OHer ee8-9l36 Loaded Jo'ucl Inject ed '?' . -... Al(r842 2.184 -wlnt ~ .. vN. eedautom, Aone/ • lmmac, pwdr blue. "IC, . . . 1000 M 1 B"s t off"r i~ I.TD t-:,t"c car . I clean dally. English & "" 16' fiobl"' "-•.light, rails~. -..l!AtMo.AP>.iii: -... ...,..., y " " " ... ~· r-Q"hl. .,. .. ~H., ,. • AM/1'"M.199:10. ~2109 '68 Bua. Runs ireat. c DJZ459 > 540·7U4 or QHIC Lo m1 J\1C. lov W!!atem721~2soNns &hlroan "'• 117.e vioUn & case, S&; New Hil~ w /wlndows + FOREIGN, DOMESTIC .,. ..... _. . .._.a •• v ---------Good Um. $850. 494-0167 ~rffn, ~13011 bst ofr. P ,
1ni:. 1 u ew ope . run alie violin le case Lrlr.Sl~.644414f7. or CLASSICS •73 ve. Yellow ver MG t742 Cal1497·~ . 540·7UOO K 5 wkdya ..
fountain Valley, 97lMM7S SSS. S40-8379 an 5. ir YoUr car u extra clean sti.rp (Id U • 11 M 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Classic 68 El Dorado 5a4 2157 wknds Aalt for
OUTST ANDI NG Show OffkeF111•...,..& C:~'::t~~~t 2~~ ft'!~I c~::I ~eeusfirst. KJIUo~ at ;:,:afro· a~ '60MaA Sl695 63 vw Bus. dependable. Su~r Clean. Call bet Hud quality Thoroug hbred Equipment 808 Dana Pt. $5800, p IAUIRIUICK fl:30&wknds &4M&l4 good cond .• $1000. Pvt 6&7pm.640.2.&39 i._,;._ ______ _
dark bm gcldmg $2$00 •••••••••••••••••••••• &12-9630 292S HarborDlvd. SEITOIBJEYE! Pty.AM846·S711Q 'SODo<h:e.l(dCOl\d, '7;) I.TO Squire Wo~
494.5397 OAK Exec swlvcl chairs Costa Mesa 9'19·2SOO Colt 9717 THlt..lCc •11cRQ CI '68 VW . Sharp! Runs '800/bstorr. ~1~1~'~;.:~· ~~~~i:p~1
HouMholdGoods8065 $75,nKhtorlen.hando La.seroo.16359, blue,cov WE BUY •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• * A PU * aood. autometlc slick MB·~aft6pm pty 642·G!58A. •••••••••••••••••••••••Desks. S80 ea. Metal er, wood cradle SW<> •USEDCARS& '73 Yellow Colt Wiag. 2100Harbor,Blvd.CM 1hlft,juattuned.lubed&C 9917 ~_;,__;;....;.,;.~-----
Nearly nu ..,1rby vacuum. wood desks for home Call67S.-5937. TRUCKS• Rack·decor puck. Ne 631·2620 malnl 1'erv. Movin a. ....-o i3 Torino Squire. It po ~ ~ of 631 1463 SSOOovertlaul. New tires mmt sell. Mike offer.••••••••••••••••••••••• w.in 44,000 ml, V8, auto. uttachmunl11 + rufl c. · P(UVATKEit•PARTV Comeln orCall etc. Ona Owner. Sac. '72MC Mldget.Alr. 8509'1' '72 CA MAFlO. 350 cld. pwr, A/C. stcre<> rad.lo,
shampooer $190. S38-213S He rme s type w r It e FREE Appraisal Sl.8SO. 830-4141, Miaslon $1.150 auto, PS. Firestone V 1 nu Urtis/brakes, trans.'
eves \¥/metal stand. Work 12 Ft. s ailboat No.814 Groth Ct..vrold V 493·9153 sleel radials <ncwl on i;hocks Xlnt cond, must • h _._. 8070 well. Good buy al S35 Xlnt. cond. Xtra sail lt«211 Beach Blvd. 9 44 Vot.o 9772 U.S. S spoke m:.gs. New ~ell S26SS bSL 556·6856 •
•• :::.~ ••••••••••••••• 646-llUS dolly. $500. can S48-4032. Huntington Beach 1973 Coll. Sharp auto. air MG& 7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sliver paint. Moving ur I, ___ ._ 9945 ----------t 147-6087 • 549-3131 24.000 mi, dfx int/ext. Bs Y.;.~•••••••••••••••••• SOUTHllM to Porsche. must 11el """'""""
WA .... TED "'-os lrOrgaM 109 ofr.MS-nt1 MGB '15, 17,000 mt. Uke -•U'-ecou~ S3000flrm. PP.8304727 •••••••••••••••••••••• .. " •••••••••••••••••••••• loah. Sllps/ TOP DOLLAR new AM /FM cassette ~..-"'' ~ ·rs LI ln T Ca~ k> TOP CAS ll DOLLAR Docks 9070 PAJD DatMI 912 . $4.$00.960-2598 • VOWMI 1974CHEVROLET mill':~. 10:~. $28oo.
PA 1 D F 0 R V 0 U R 5' Grand Kawa.ii, ••••••••••••••••• ••••• • ·-;::::•,.••,•::::~•·••• V'" VO De•• Ra C • u •RO LT CPE ....... ""~ • JEWELRY. WATCHES. 6mo'sold 640-7773 IMM EDIATELY _. ..._.. -.._..._ ~"" .....,....,,.. !
Alff OBJECTS. GOLD. . 3S' SLIP FOR RENT F0~.~~1c1ARs TOP Dollar Pal '70 MG B. EXAM ~ Air cond1Uonlni;i. tinted Men;ury 9910 s IL v ER s Ell v 1 CE. A..eansi'de Harbor C On ... 'Trad .. -Ins Runs good PLE: Bra new glass. steel belled radial ••• •••·. •• •• ••• ••••• ·~ "" NE F U RN •-N La H 1·d 18 "" ALL OR COME IN ~ ..,. ,..,1 r1c ~ 1976 Volvo 2425. lJy white stripe tires. turbo r 1 "' /\ · wrey 01 ay. m $7Smo. 646-9000 TO SEE US MEWPOllTDATSUN ~ vr..-~eves. equipped. (090046>. h y d r a m a t I c '71 Marqws. $199S. or bes
TIQUES. MS-2200 new. solid Pecan spinet NEWPORT IMPORTS Ill Do•e Strfft n-a 974 Aai..lay $6Sf6 transmission, AM/FM orle r. Days, 499-1341.
U•estock 8075 ~:C5~1 re~~~~hN~~~~& Sli=~~~l~:~::~~i:· 3100 W.Cst Hw y,NB NearMacArtbur :':::•••••••••••••••••• v.-stereo radio. console. aft.6pm,S3l-0842
•••••••••••••••••••••• mus t sell $14SO/bst 673-8711tlll10 pm. 642-9405 &Jamboree Roads '72 Opel UIOO. Super ml. <DP-SU MustGIM) 9952
Reg. Morgan mare, broke S56-6856. . . . 833-1300 air. $1,400 968-0858 w $] 39 5 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• to ride & dri ve. blk 30' max side lie, Pvt pier TOP orM Fa"' '"·30 M FB """"Aa~ ~ Goods 809 · •• ... · See in garage area ustang • ~ • parade Morgan gelding . ......,,.. .. ng on Little Balboa Island DOL• •R DRIVE A p--"'-Ask for Ri ck mags, $750 or best or er. Eng, Wes t ~rn (714 ) •••••••••••••••••••••• $100/mo. s.19-9911. 9 lo 4 .,_ ~ 67S-667R ft6PM
338·1011 l!NlVE~~L ~ei\~t lift pm. PAID LI TILE... ,.73 Porsche 914_ Super 0..-ge Coast M a F' b k Co 1 "'~ blk M ·~ mac me Y arcy FOR CLEAN SAVE A LOT Datty Piiot '67 ust st c . mp ""'aut r eg orga ong cost Sl300 Sell $750 T-~ IMPORT CARS con d . Ne w tire s . 330 w' l 8 St recond .. new eng., paint Stud. Bay r"g mare 3 y · •-......... ·-·~· A .. /FM es ay ~ 7S l·OSS3 ••• SHOP&CO .. PARE m • appear gr p. OR•NGECOUMTY · &cpt. AT.675-4230 llroke to ride /dn ve . sho ••• • ••••••••••••• ••• 1 •RWICK D ... ·TSU... $5100/bsl ofr. 963-8837. "" VOLVO ___ Cos~~la!_!M~e~S,!8 ___ 1:-:--:--::--:-...;._.--:--:--::
qual. 338-1011. 244·22l Ston, Restauront, MofolSc=s/ 9 I SO "" "" " 992 '66 Mustang 6 cyl, gd 1714) Bar 809 5anJuancaplstrano '67 911. Comp restored. EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO ChtYl'Old cond,aul0.$600. ----------1 ·••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 811·1375493-3375 Mint. alloys. Webbers LargestVolvoDealer •••••••••••••••••••••• Ph64S.2094
Moehinery 8078 RETAILERS KAWASAKI MCI 90 '73, --------i $6,250.644-0850/642-0054 lt Orngec.Ainly! O.'tS..Usflnt".
••• • • • •• • • • •• • •• •• • • • • • very clean. 300 mi. on TOP IUYER BUY or LEASE lut "---U L ! 11 Ross Forkhrt. llrts S Ton New e lectronic cast engin e . Best offer. See us first, & last! To '63 Super 90 C. Sharp, al DIRECT _._ 1 ost ·•
vert i ca 1. $23~0. Runs rgstr. Buy direct fro 979·9834 or <10-16 thru dolJar paid Cor imports. orig. $4,SOO. 6-«·0SSO 0 '1f YOU Don't
well.64S.-t691 Mfgr. MarchClllt 10-201979-2640 COSTA MESA. &t2-<XlM. Ivy from
Misc~loneous 8010 OfOrcmgeCouaty '76 Kawas aki KZ 400. DATSUN 197Pri5P•~hPe•91!' .... o CONNELL.
'65 M uatang $300. i Ures, 6 cyl, needs w
673-8650. 675~7 art 6P
'73 Mustang 351. ~
green. very clean, •
49'l-063S I " ••••••••••••••••••••••• 547 .... e9 New. $1200. S56·9843, ""' .. .. Y • p '--... _ Darrel or Art. Rm 201 o 284SHarbor Blvd. Silver w /b lack int. 2025 S. Manchester OUN GY--. W ANTED Swops 809 210 Costa Mesa S40-641 performance group, AM Anaheim 750-2011 Too Msh!.. Oldsmobile
TOP CASI! DO LLAR •••••••••••••••••••••• '7l 3iOZ. fine cond. 4spd. FM stereo, 8·track tape ••••••••••••••••••••-.
9'15
P A I D F OR YOUR 011 bod 14 KAWASAKI 00. Xln AM/FM, mags. $3600 ~.wchaee111~~.,1~ .... ':1.ilaess lt75VOLYOZ4Z CONNELL 19750LDS J EWELRY. WATCllES. For sale, u ty Y cond. bas ket carrier ...... _,,......,.. ,...,,.,.~-~ ART OBJECTS. GOLD ra~k for small Datsu $300. Ph67S·8113 642·1641 for Brian. 4 cyl. coupe. 4 speed, air CHEVROLET -~ SILVER SE RVIC.:Jo: or .S150.64S-4032 '74 Datsua260Z.Lowmt cond. & stereo. Extra Hardtop. Fu l power
f'I NE F UR N & /\ N TV. Radio, Motor Homes, 916 I BUY JUNK CARS silver w/wire whls. AC '71 914, white over black clean, low mileage. 2828 Harbor Blvd. w/air rood., split seat.a.
TlQUES.&i:>-2200 HiFi,Stetto Sale/Reftf USEDAUTOPARTS xlnlcond.$4750.642.-am/fm, 40,000 mi. Xln <464NKH>. COSTA MESA AM /FM radio. Local ---=--------•·••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• S40-S125 847· after s :30& wknds. cond. ~. 960-~8 OMLY $5400 S46·l200 car-only 12.000 miles·m
G GET Gs R • GMC Pvt t s howroom condit loc. LUG A , A . R~A 25" color console TV ~\ ~2616 ~r 642.4~~-Autos. IMport~ '73 911T Sliver. 5 spd '74 Monte carlo. Till whl, C790LPH>. from your bu!.anc~card Sparul>h.fullremotecon NewportBeach calir ••••••••••••••••••••••• STl~Tl730DNA.WT~UGNOH mags,FM.alrcond.etc s uper c lean. $3300.
&·nd one card for each trol. btrllsharp, lat • · General 970 I "" "" 1 Owner. Xlnl cond. thru 835-523Sor831·9319
ti.lg plus one spare. We model. Cost over $700; 2S' OPEN ROAD. Cully ••••••••••••••••••••••• Automatic, radio & roo out. 110.700. 64s.8625 o
r etur n perm ane ntly ask1ng$3S0.846-9094. self·cont. Winter rates .. 63 HILL.MA N Gd rack. 049HDE>. Super 963-1804 '68Chevelle Malibu 307, ~ealed attractive Lag & 644.a38S • • economycarCor _ _._ ______ -i Sig Ergson Cam. OHy
:-trap. meeting airline Sherwood S8600A $65. transportation. S200. ONLY $2600 '70 Porsche 914 . Xln Hlgbnse, Holly 6SO 4 bar·
Mf\RQUIS
MOTORS • "\ ,1l,""" .w 11•'"' ' ..... ..,.,, '
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~'I ',ll)f4 VII )1 l.D. reqwremcnts. Pre· Sherwood S7600A SSS. 20· E l Dorado. Sips 6. 64S·391S cond. Must sell. Best ofr rel. Recnt valve & he:id
vent loss & theft ! For a Wharf dale W70 withou Dy or wk rental avail. AHa RotMO 970$ Pvt Pty. S48·2893. A11fot. Uwd job. new G-50x14 tires & "
personalized las: enclose g rilles $40 ea. P Reasrates.968-3643. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l""" p h 911T 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mags. Be!>l orr. 557·3057 ._
1 II /"\liO ..}\/', l
wa llpapl?r. fa bric or changer $3S model 2020 """"' onr;c ~ • x n AMC e905 or673·5276 Into 9._, "Da y Glu" paper & we Alice 979-8104.Pvtpty Sale-'75ExplorerMoto '67Alfa Romeo4-drsed. cond.lowm1les,lnt&ext ,, · ••••••••••••••••••••••• will hack & trim your Home. loaded. See at 1600 Super engine. 4-whl like new. 640-926S ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Malibu Classic Wgn tug~. Or try lwo cards Stereo Console record W. Wilson, C.M. dis~. brakes. Mlch~lin • '73AMX, 401 C.I. &-pass, bm w/camel int: 73 PINTO W ~GO"'
1• kl b· k p I a v c r w I s Pk r s radials. Good cond1t1on. 58 Porsche $2250 546-4825 loaded, am/fm stereo. Automati~. air cond..
)UC () P~lCES <Gurndig) Mahog. $t0. Rent 26' GMC. luxurious. S16SO/offer 64~7542 356 c~ vry clean. S36-839S. stereo radio, roof raclt.
S2 aaiirJtu · Ph646-811S ru_lly equipped . lo ........ 1 9707 B21 f SilverClassic $3495 '74 Gremlin. AC. PS, PB. ~ags & wood graJn ' ""' mileage 640 7400 -'75 O. 33 mpg, am/· Lt,.67souc Luggage rack. Asking 'G6Chevy for sale. s ades. <432HDB,>.
4/5 tags $1.60 ea . Boats & Marine . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,r!.~· .. !11aagsft 1'pm$2:6SO. Cal •THE CA.It ,-:a & ce· 12295. 581~ 961-2693 cherry at
6/9 tags suo ea. Ecppment s for Sale """'"" -5 ONLY $2700
l Oor more $1.40 ca ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •72 A.UDI I OOLS '73 D 610 2100 Har bor Blvd, CM '71 Green Javelin, 73 eng, ·ss Corvalr. Runs. Needs Sales Tax Included General 9010 6 ..__1 Sedan. Automatic. air 2dr b ardtstoun A ·pd 631·2620 white strip, runs well. body & eng work. Make NO CARD'> .... ".!._~!' • a p, .. s · Sl.SOO/bslpfr.898·4822. ..1'-'· .,A., A1-. Draw your own or send ••••••••••• ••• ••••••••• ClilSsJcs 9520 c o n d • & s u n r o o l. 63HK3!lor 63-1·2026 '7S 914 2.01 MelaJll" blue,1--'----'-----1~"'-'''-""'-~--'-'----1
name. address. phone & YACHTSALESM_AN ••••••••••••••••••••••• <S39HON). Now reduced Fen-art 97z pvt pty . l7,000 ma., cit 9910 '65 Chevelle. 6 cyl, au
we'll make one card pe Good Opportunity •OVER 70CARS• lo •••••---••••••••••••••• 673-4917or774·9469 ••••••••••••••••••••••• trans. gd mileage, 4 dr.
t.ag. Add w each &a6.0000 fN INVENTORY ONLY $1999 .64 330 GT 2+2. Burg/blk. R....tt 9755 1972 IUICIC Callaft6, 7S1·0080
~~o~heck or money or· lo~=~ 9030 ANTlQUES&CLASSICS Borranl's. 3.000 ml o ••••••••••••••••••••••• CUSTOM SIYl.Allk 'SJ Cbevelle Malibu, 2 dr,a.=========-"° PILOTPRIHTIHG ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rolls Royce. Bentley & rblt e og. 644·08SO European Renault 16.I Coupe. &Sotd 11ocallyll, one bdtp, air cond, PS, $650. '72Runabout autotrau T-Birds; From s:;oo to 642-0054. Xlnt cond. Fr oal whl owner a ow m eage 64S-<ill8laft6PM · nd. ' ti ·• P.O. Box 1S60 SPORT YAK. 8' dinghy $S0 000 dri ttlln car with (ull power & air all' co •new res, YtirY
CostaMesa.Ca.92626 with motor mount, oan BUY~~ELL·TRADE Fiat 9725 toov:n~~e~ llst~l1~: rond.<105813). 9930 ~}!!.,'!.;,._ SlR~u,_~s Gr~l!
Zig Zag Sewing Machine. and seat S17S. Also 4 ~p EL% FA.RGO & CO ~7·5 .. ;~·:·;;;·~·••••••;;, Come see, 133 E. 16th St. ONLY $2995 •••••••••••••••••••••••1...:.;,,,_:.:...::_....,=.;_· :.:..;.•""=-=------
made by Singer. Is an John .. sl~~ 646outbo068ard1 ' like 830S. Maln·Sa.nt~ Ana m1·1ea1age. -.200 oorupe.t of· J2, C.M. aft 2Pm. '75 MA.RI( IV '74 Pinto. One owW).
Xlnt ~oncl. Comes in real new.,""· · · M s "" bes L ded with all the "c:ooo ·XI t d ~ 10to6, on.· al. IMW 9712 fer.call673-4312. RohRoyu 9756 oa ..... m1 .. n con . -:rf'1o~ t:~, oo~~~;.a~~~~ s;.:~~~;·6~:c~taT~~~~-e~ ~'s~-~789"! ....................... Honda 9727 ··:;.··o·E·A··L·E·R··1N··u··s··A··· :::1~~~!nis1!~o::Of.~~1-S2= ___ :..:.:·09S=-.... ---__;~
sell! 831·2S~l nfl. 6 or leaves with 5'4" Gimbotdi.----------t ••••••••••••••••••••••• • · · wbeeJ . air conditioning r••-•• wknds.Mlss1on Viejo. Tray, perfect $1SO. '61Rile,Closslc • ROY andmore.Beautiful car.••••••••••••••••••
67c l\cco N f A h l t Bred Mew '76 rm CARVER Must see to appreciate. J ohnny can 't read 7 ~ ew mo"'r, mec x n . partialJy restored $900 HONDA. Cars ROUS·ROYCE •i-======~• <SY89A8ZI036>. Complete cour.1e for slow Boal Lra1ler. 16' Vanson. MS-8664-8 to 5 daily. · $8786 r eade rs: rccorct s & $000. llke new. · OVER I 00 1Mt nmlliWff '67 IUviera. New motor.
booklet. Cost over SlOO 640-S675 'S2 MGTD. top cond. Red BUY OR To Ct.oos. Ft-o.I ... ......, 9t•ttt meth perfect. new paint, sell $25. 642-3379 w/wire wheels. Reasona· \\----' ~ stereo system + more. GUSTAFSON
loots.Power 9040 bte 751.91090rsse-288S LEASE 111o...1ow UNIVERSITY ae»1osUN0Avs S1250.645·3716or67S-3922 USED Restaurant tables. ••••••••••••••••••• •••••--· ------~ 11"111 ~~a..n-perf ecl work tables, Co 30. Chris Crafl Classic. 4 Whfft Drives 9550 --·54 Bentley R Type, wbt, 1973 IUICK
LINCOLN MERCURY
1h800 Reach Blvd
Hunt1nqlon Dt>ach
842-8844
ATLAS
Chryse.r/PfylllOllfh
Open Dally & Sun. 'ti.UO
PM , ;.
2929 Harbor BIYd,. 11 Cost.a Meso r?
546-1934 " home or ore. 631·1463 New t w 1 n e n gs .••••••••••••••••••••••• BMW TRADE-IM's Ho.Ida Ccrs • GMC gray Int., sun roof, auto, RIVIERA
12 ~uage Sea r s Tc Completely overhauled. 1974 TOYOTA. '702800CS-<23SCFS) Trucks x!Jlt cond. (2l3)8Sl·l91M Rallye wheels. vlnyl top, •74 MA.Ill( IV '70 Barracuda 383 Eng.
Williams Mdl 200. vcn Perfect r o nditlon. LA.MDCRUISER '722002-A(UJFTQ>. 2850Harbor Blvd. foyoto 976 80/40 power seat, cruise Full powe r. AM /FM Auto. PS /PB, Orig
nb. 28" barrel. $90. Al $7~/bst ofr Sac. for Hardtop. 4 speed.locki ng '722002-<lsp. <6505> Costa Mesa S40-"640 .. •••••••••••••••••••• control. Only 32•253 stereo. vinyl top, leather owner.11400/ Ph644-Ml
nitrous oxide kit $200. qwcksale.Call642·IS5l hubs & less than 37,000 '72Bavaria·A<488FOFI ~ 97l8 miles! <l87GXJ). interl_or, till wheel. 1974PLYMOU c 67~'6755 s G rru'les (lt:ALHZ> Ready '74 Bavaria· (348LFM> ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOYOTA Be '" I M t ee '71 50 hp Winner. . · "" · .752002.A. (Z36MMN>. au ... u_ car. us s
Twin box ·spnng & mat Crwser. Trlr C.G. equip-to sell al '7SS30IA·A. (70SNIJ>. '74 Mazda RX3 Coupe. 4 t o a ppr e c i ate . Custom .Suburban two
Lress wJrollcr'i. hkc new. ment. 71, hp aux eng ONLY $4500 SA.ODUIACIC IMW spd, under wmty, very FOR <liOlLEl\!l, seat SlaUon Wag_on Min·
bedding also. 6-$2 3669 Best ofr over S2SOO. MISSIO ..... VIEJO clean837·3202 '77 $6986 dard equipme~t mclailes
493.2257 " ~~~~~~~;::~ e lectronic 1gn1t~. V1vltar E·34 enla r ge 831-2040 495-4949 Men:edn hm 9740 power dl.sc front br4ps.
wtsafellte. easel, truys 27' "Victoria Command .. ••••••••••••••••••••• mot yet-but we do have power s t ee r l.q.g,
etc. 190 cash. 675·6lS7.' Bridge" BayUner, ~cw. l9S> Mercedes 220. 4 spd, new '76 Corollas. Exam '75 RIVIERA automaUc transmission.
673--4876. Twtn 170 Volvo. ~re1ght AM/FM radio, new In· pie: <TE3118S919> ro f\111 power. Including v.s rubber bumper guards. ---------1 damaged (repaired l terior & tires. 25 ml per onl.v aulOmatlc transmission, AM ratlio, llght package,
Antique mirror OS yrs. Sacrifice. Sl6.7SO. Call G ~al. Best offer or tr,.de 5299J 1 d't iona·ng v1·nyl s t a n d u r d s l J e ~ oo b t r N I Sf • H OAOWAY "' a r con 1 ' wbltewnlls. deluxe wheel .. 1 I s o r. l'n r nu Steve, S46-7172 or pickup or panel. top, AMtFM stereo with Con.tt• 9932 " mater n 1 t y dresses . '70 Toyota Land cruiser SAHtA AHA 67S-09'l0 days or 673-967£ l 8 p e, t l l t w he e 1 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• covers, len remote mlr· SS9-U08 ·7s Spectra 19' Jet, 27 hrs, w/platform & ramp for 835-3171 alt6pm. 11JE BETTER 1o.aiMJD> ror. electric clock, ttag. 1mmac. cond. Tandem motorcycle. $2400/Urm. TI4IUl.TIMAft~MACtt1111 BARGAIN ._ 56. llf '75 Corvette. All options. gage rack, tallgate'~lito
2ND HANDER, n run sho Trailer . $6000. rirm. fi4S.3093btw4·Spm. •USED IMW't* Lease Sac Co94r f~].,orr. Won new tock, 360cld, 4 bbl, vs in 1qiarage. Try it, you'll 848·0865 car.4 •iJ'OOO. engine. heavy duty su1·
like it. 120 E. 23n:t, C.M. Tn1eks 9560 '73 Bavaria·<906LVY> Mew• Used k • 1 Tues-Sat. 10·5 20' Sklpjack-open. 215 n••••••••••••••••••••• '752002 . (833NiJM) OVER I GO 1976 Corvette. loaded. pension pee age'ri a r ----O MC, radio. d e pth •54 Chev.:~ ton PU, S800 '7U002A . <0499> 3,300 ml, Must sell! Oya, conditioning. H led
BEAUTYEQUIPMENT sounder, t a ndem trlr, or bst orr . Art. 6pm. CloMdOnSultdcl,s MERCEDES 67S-5477,642·7288Evs. wlnd11hleld <DP-44~ ...
FOR SAL E xlnt cond, $7,000. 494-4064 498-2325 OH DISPLA. Y '74 Convt Hd top. AM /FM $2215 .
S36·9807 ORA.HG! COUNTY'S See I 21 , FIBERFORM .7 0 t.s PU HOUH of lmDOl'h c-----991 r stereo. /\II extras. new • n garage arO/l Wood Pool Table, 8 'x4 · 4" 4 a un ' OLDEST AtrrHORI Zl:O ---v Ures, 39K ml. Xlnt cond. Ask for Rick I.
w/occessones. Bst orr. Hardtop, custom lrl m, 52400· MERCEDES DEALER '7S Corona Sta Wgn, h pd, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 847-3444 OMlllCJe Coau Call S48-0MS O.M.C .. 6 cyl .. outdrive, Call aft 6, 498·5259 & 6862 Manchester. AC. radio, lug rack. Good ol Plt-.a..
Special childrens cloth Ing recorder. bait tank, tilt $2"100. 873-3888 _.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 330 West Bay St ---------1 low hours, radio. depU. .64 EICaminow/shell. Buena Park running cood. Must sell. (!) Dodge 9935 D ly tvFO
t1vail.Ocl21, lOAM·3PM. trailer with electri c S600 o &• ~~... Le i 523-7250 '70Coronet440. New Urea. Costa Mesa wmch. $4995 or make of 751·2615 .-.CS·~ice-81 na On the Santa Ana Fwy '74 Corolla Z dr. orig. Tldctoclltf' Thrift Shop R~C--IK. 1 t ~-"' u 318 V8 eng. Go Power. Plymouth Belv-11.-.
540 W . 19 .... St. CM fer 642-2717 an 6 pm. '7s El Cami·..,., Auto. n /1, -...... • 73 M--.... --210 owner. x n .. vuu .... ust .....,. 493-""°" eu ....... '" b air 1""' l. / h 11 Rolla yce BM ...... ~ sell, movtni abroad. · _,,,. """" white. 2 dr. lo m_lj'new --------loots. Sail 9060 ff.500.646-~~. w • e • 1S40Jamboree 645-4230or84U44$ S2200.67J..0995 Fonl 9'40 radials . .iood conot~
• N-n-acb ••••••••••••••••••••••• """'""""btwn3&6PM •• •••••••••••••••••••• v... 9570 ~~..-· llJlll' "73280-C, pvt. 1 owner. ru1. "JS Corona v•.........,
1011 VENTURE 23, Nae-••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 3.0 cs. Snrf .. Vet ly .,.quip .. xln\ cpnd.. AatQ,alr.lqwnr. NalJeJS ~~~~-~ d:~:~ '62 PklYm,.<:lh. ~n\fof.•Nrds
Orep Yachtownedde·'7·.Dod v Xlnt-nd Int .• air, ale~ & tape 32,000nd.AM/FMstereo $187$. ~26S7. c:ad·11ac car.lo mlleage.675-'U""" C~l.;H.~lo.r....a .• er. ••••••••••••••••••••••• monslr3tor. Out.standing u I~ an. ~ " auto. $18,000. 53'7·S160 ex casseLte. $8.200. °'make •...;..--------• ,......., ... .....,..,,... $$$CASH FOR cond. S3300. MacGrego 6,000 mt a., TlakeDoove,rtSleed43· 416. orter. 831·17S4 ask ror Mr. '7S Corolla. 2 dr, U!OOcc.J •59 Ford Ranchero, '89 3llO __..._ tt~s
Good "•edfum/rdri•• YachlCorp 642.alO. pym.n .on se. n n Goeb A/C, 4 ap;Jd voyl rr, Pt' t u ~ • ....., -· au the room 963-7171 r-.1. 971 s tl ,..... ""000 Quality and act eog. $300/bst o r. -uat ••••••••• .. ••••••-•••• fnntstovesS46-0768 · · _....... map, • r .. ,., ""• Gu:aro.nteed sell S40-7982
WA.MTR>
ORIENTAL RUGS
Persian & Chinese also Tapestry, Pvt Pty'aonly.
640-7014
f'\berglass SABOT. $250. DODGE ,.,3 Bubble lop ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1970 MU m6 w•rr , coco matt, · 1975 PONTI~
Complete w/nylon sail, conversion. Auto trana, 76CA.PRI zao-sasllA.N u,oeorni. LeasingSpcc.la14m '6SFaJcoo G~DP~
&oodcood.8'13-39'1& P/S, P /B, elec water 4Speecl, AM t FM stereo. Le_ather.pownwlndo1n, Velrlw•• 977 Preferred Rate' Greatshape.SSOO. Bucket aeat.e. AM /FM
COLUMllA 26 hkup, 15950. Pvt Pty. air c:ondlUonlng, m&1 11tereo _radio. t ao roof. ••• .. ••••••••••• .. •••• Marty,S48·28S2. atert~o. nllye w~e!Jt.,
M •RI( I I 963-5758 wheels , aunroot, decor <M4~WS> ·-VW /-bit e"=ne vinyl top.
"' aroup. less Uum 21,000 SALE PRICE ~ u..:.·;tereo," . (740LRY>. ,,. s wtnchea, 9 sails, bead. 70 f:OltO V A.M ml. Pretty car. ready to 5 4 5 Will pay 1• per metal t1allt1y tots o1 gear. Very ~ ton with st.cfto 8 trk, aol <'1&2.NLJC). 648-4Jt3. ~2
clothes hanger. Good fatt P.H.R.F. winner ice box.1. maas. a gas $3161 ·10 Sq~k. ao1ni East. for Ad Action
eooc:tltionitneec:,w only. sio.500 or mate offer tanks. lid cood. li2.250. mutt telL A rew dent.e, 651-8658 • er s f\42 2111•f\6 pm. 548.-1487 what do 1ou want '°' Call a
Wanted: U.S. stamps & 12 ' Hob6e Moao Ca 'TZFORD.Stove/oven, S30C>.~DaoaPt. Wht Pila
coins. prtvatc coll ctor w/blue&yeUowaalls.N c:rpt..loe box.s.i.ooo. 280Se.ruU pwr.rectrit 'H 1 11 , vw IMRJ l f!Y~m. ore. 634 512S trlr.493-7684 Call 1--.1221 overh•ul. lllnt C()ncl, If 'I equ P .,. u,,,_,_ $31115$. 9fS3.387I ~~· radbi.J llrtt. IA 'VISOR
DI a111U>ln1 wllb a "'7S VW 1 Pasa BUS. Fact r '°-SIOO. '7s.-006e Nr W~tn~ l~~t!otf:> P:ee OaJl,yPUotCla.sslCl~Ad a•r, tapo & AM /FMJfave~7ouwasat ltB"15280S. Muatacllt.o .TC VW Bu•. SU OO. 642·5&71
rr .. -i" " la a almple matter . . . r.uo. hnmac. $.'5085. Pb to Miit Cl ed a do bltolr. PP. Cb's. m.t500. Oraeg • atk t bl'l, .lllnl ..;--;;;;;;;,.~;;.__-----i Juatc:all&GS67L 788-sa>GltGS-l.221 U.w.sJ.~ tMS,56USlt cmd .... Rlf1lll·S'10t
.
" ,
I
'7SOT Htchbck. A•tFM 9 erk, clean, 60.HO ml
war r $2400. G'om,
MNl7S. •
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..
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
EDITION
rternoon
N. l:". Stocks
~~. __ o_L_.6_9~,_N_o_._293~,2 __ se_CT __ 1_o_N_s~,_2_6_P_A_G_e_s ___________________ o __ R_A_N_G_E __ co __ u_N_TY ___ ,c_A __ L_tF_O_R_N_l_A __ ~~----~-u_e_s_o_A_Y_,_o_CT __ o_e_e_R_1_9_,_19_7_6 _________ .T_E_N __ C_E_N_T,~
1Crim.e in. Huntington Drops 6 Percent
By ROBERT BAHER
OfltMO.ltyf'llel~.
Major crime in Huntington
f
Beach took a six percent drop for
the first half or the year, accord·
ing to latest statistics released by t the FBI.
1 Crime in Huntington Beach
dropped in five or seven major j crime categories.
. r
Declines were reported in
inurder, burglary, robbery, as·
sault and larceny.
Increases were listed for rape
and vehicle thefts.
Statistics were based on the
January to June reporting period
in 1975 and 1976 for cities with
populations or more than 100,000.
There were 4,595 major crimes
listed in Huntington Beach for
the six·month period in 1975 com·
pared to4,321in1976.
Three other Orange County
cities were listed in the report.
Santa Ana bad a drop from
9,075 major crimes to 7,ZIS and
Garden Grove was down from
S,134 to 4,864.
Anaheim went up from 8,59C in
1975 to 8, 774 in 1976.
Murders went down in Hunt·
ington Beach from two to one in
1976; robberies were down from
61 to St; assaults were down from
164 to 118; burglaries were down
from 1,550 to 1,355; larcenies
were down Crom 2,S40 to 2,505;
motor vehJcle tben.s were up 258
to 268 and rapes were up from 20
to23.
Chief EuJe Robitaille' said to-
day the resUlts were gratifying,
"particularly to the l\G'S out in
the field. We hope we C11lft con-tinue the trend,•• he said.
RobitaiUe sajd that police have
been unable to bring about the
changes in forcible rape
statistics "tbal we would have
lilted to see."
He attributed the increase oC
three rapes to the prevalence or
young female hitchhikers. ·~y
have disregarded our warnings
tha~ this ls a dangerous activi·
ty,"hesaid.
Robitaille said ,there were a
number of fact<-rs involved in the.
16.4 reduction in robbery and the
12.6 drop in burglaries.
He said that. two helicopters
were operational for the six·
month reporting period and
;tfong with another police
hell copter m alntained sur--
veWance over the city for a~t
19 hours per day.
Robitaille also sajd that the
Neighborhood Watch Proaram ls
believed responsible for cutUnC
into the burglary and residential
toU .
He said that residents in the
program made numerous calls
that panned out regarding SUS•
(See CRIME, Page AZ>
Coast Bull • g Permits Cut Off
Nail,s 'Close'
OM Feud
A disturbance of the
peace and malicious mis·
chief report at a downtown
Huntington Beach apart-
ment sent police out one
more time to mediate a
long·standing landlord·
tenant feud that flared
again Monday. .
This time, Officer Den·
nis Branch told the lady le· nant apparently being
evicted for non.payment of
rent and damaging the
landlord's property that a
lawyer is more advisable
than a hammer.
He said she had nailed
the door shut to barricade
herself against process·
servers.
Restaurant
Robbed of
Meal Take
A gunman robbed Charley
Brown's Restaurant in Hunt·
ington Beach at the tail end or the
busy dinner hour Monday night,
taking about $800, police said lo·
day.
The dapper bandit entered the
night spot at 16160 Beach Blvd.,
looking like any other pro·
fessional man from the surround·
. ing lakeside commercial ~d or.
fice complex, according to in·
vestigators.
But, instead of reserving a table
for dinner. he approached the
manager at the cash register.
discreetly brandishing a pistol
anddemanding money.
"The gun alone would have
been enough to convince me." one ·
police spokesman said today, not·
ing it was a blue·sleel weapon
with a six-inch barrel and a blood·
red grip.
Officer Larry Olson said the
bandit pocketed the wad of cash
and quietly hurried out into the
busy parking lot in the com·
mercial complex near the San
Diego Freeway. I He was described as 35 to 45,
1• well·dressed in a dark blue ault
1 ~!~s~:.ht shirt and dark·rimmed
The gunman had short, dark
hair and a dark mustache but
was otherwise sin gularly
average-looking, police said.
Orange Coast
Weather
llieba in the mid '10I ex-
pected through Wednesday
with continued morning
and nightUme fog and low
clouds.
INSIDE TODAY
'Hn.tOt'JI' u a non-tcid oomc /or chUdr~ and.~
bom of a college cla.a cnf
. ftlO't1nd ~ ,., •• ,., t:l{ICJdM. '" ~hot. M"1' won u. but
w•1 "°' flrlpbag. Stt '°"JI °" PGQIAa.
ladex .,. ...... ~ "" ti_.. Att
At,......_., A1t
AJ .............. A4,tt • , OioMil CMM:• At ....... ..., ::1 C',..rwt .,~,;
........ _,.. .. ,.,, ~ 114
AIM,,........ All llJ........ A4 .,, ............. ,. ••
Pay Hike
Approved
By Board
Ocean View (elementary)
School District trustees have
approved five percent across
the board salary increases and
$200 in additional fringe benefits
for most e mployes.
The district's ~ instructors
received 3.82 percent increases
in salary increments for educa·
tion and experience in addition
to the across·the·board pay
hil<e.
The average 1976-77 teacher
salary is $15,492 compared to an
average of $14,257 last year,
district officials said.
The district will pay $898,130
more this year for teacher
salaries.
ln a separate action, trustees
approved the five percent raise
for non·teacbing personnel with
two percent salary adjustments
for some or these employes.
The district will pay an addi·
tional $188.012 this year in non·
teaching employe salaries, dis·
lrict officials said.
The board also approved
salaries and benefit packages ~
for five ad m inistralive ~-of "11.hem'
Catch-Up
Hiatus
Planned
No applications for new con-
struction within the realm of
South Coast Regional Zone Com·
mission control will be accepted
for a 57-day hiatus when a
legislative gap soon puts the
agency in limbo.
Commission Executive Direc·
tor Mel Carpenter announced at
a meeting Monday at the Hunt·
lngton Beach Civic Center that
Nov. 15 is the cutoff date for ap.
pLications.
Commissioners who have been
criticized both from without and
within their own ranks previous•
ly for bogged·down project ap.
plication processing will race to
catch up in the meantime.
They agreed to meet in
emergency sessions Nov. 1, 3,
and 8 in an effort to clear up 396
pending applications, 115 of
which require full·blown public
hearinfs lo take any pro or con
testimony.
Location or these meetings is
yet to be determined, but it is
likely to be Torrance City Hall,
s ince most matters coming
before commissioners prior to "'"wi",.....'0 Nov. 15 involve Los Angeles
County matters.
secretaries not covered bY, ~'"' ·~-~ 1 l
other ag_reements. . . , '\: \,~fellow isn't a refugee from the movie The five secretanes win reJf " . , . . ceive the five percent pay ruke~14 a t . t.he giant. ants, he s~ 1ust a. fire ant
the $200 increase in the benefit magruf1~d 160 times by a sca.nnm~ elec·
package and an additional $30 tron microscope at the University of
Southern Miss issippi. He's gained a new
lease on life with the banning of Mirex,
the only effective killer of the pest that
plagues Southern states.
A commission staff member.
however, said at Monday after·
noon's adjournment she un•
derstood the meetings would be
in the Huntington Beach <Qvi.c
Center.. The agency alternJ&tes
between the two locations. " per month, according to
-SU~l1nt4i!ntfent Dlde COOg&Jl .
Trustees approved the $200 in-
crease in benefits for manage·
ment personnel but will not set
salaries for these 30 employes
until next week, the superinten·
dent said.
Universal Truth:
Management _pe rsonel in·
eludes the superintendent and
his assistants.
Oiler Band Wins
The Huntington Beach High
School marching band woo the
music s weepstakes and first
place in their division in competl·
lion at the Artesia Bicentennial
Parade last Saturday. The Oiler
drill team finished second in
competlUon against seven other
high schools.
By The Associated Press
President Ford and Jimmy
Carter have round one thing to
agree on : the election is just too
close to call now . Jt was a light campaign day for
both candidates. But as each managed in a separate way
to point to the tightness or the
race for the White House, Carter
continued a brief, 32·hour cam·
palgn s wing today through
F1orlda, North Carolina and New
York.
Tobaeeo Eaten
Students Sick Over Choice
HUME, Mo. CAP) -When the
high school principal caught
lbree teen.age boys with
cigarettes in their pockets, he
gave them a choice of punish·
ment: take a paddling or eat the
ci1arettes.
Two boys chose to eat a total or.
18 cigarettes and have developed
health problems as a result, their
parents said Monday.
When the boys' mothef'9 went
to a school board meeting to pro-
test, the board voted to uphold
tbeprincipal's actions.
Board member Joe Brooks
said tile prlnctpat•s authority
would be dam11ed unless tbe
board supported him.
"I reel like if the kids make up
their own mind, It's up to them,"
Principal Kennetb Hightower
said sboril.1 aftet' the incident
lutmootb•
Hi.ahtower said be always of· fe~ the same altematlve to
otber students who broke the rule
against carryin1 d&a.Mtel. bul
all had cboeen paddling.
Hightower cautht Terry
Wealbuman, 15, BW Adtjna, H,
ud another youtb wtth the
d(arettes. He told them they .,
could have two s wats with a pad·
dle or eat the tobacco lbey were
carrying.
The unldentified boy chose the
paddle, but Terry and Bill
divided the tobacco from 18
clearettes and swaUowed it.
Both soon bee an to vomit, their
parents said.
Mrs. William Adkins said she
took BUI to a doctor 20 miles
away that night after be began
spitting up blood. She said tests
showed he bad a small ulcer,
which doctor• said had been de-
veloping over • loq period bUt
could have been made worse by
the tobacco . S~e and her husband are
threatening le1al act.ion acaln.st
tbescbool.
Mrs. William Weatherman
said Monday that T.-ry bu been
sent home from school three
Umet recently becaUM of Ulnesa.
She aald 1be ls awaitine tesults ot
medical test.a.
The incident ln th1a town~ 350
h11 aparked crlUclsm from
health expert.a •ro.md the COUil·
lry.
''That's a very danaeroua ronn
. '(SeeSllOKING,PaaeAZ)
'
Earlier, he declared at a news
conference that the election is
"up for grabs" and made an
eQlolional appeal in a F1orida
speech against voter apathy. He
called non· voters cowards. .
The Democratic standard
bearer oulllned his Ideas on
health care to a Miami audience
of about 2,000, then visited a
kosher bakery aod addressed a
senior citizens' rally.
He promised the American
Public Health Association con·
veotlon "aggressive leadership
to provide comprehensive, na·
Uonwide, effective health care -
and you can depend on it.·•
Carter said he Cavors national
health insurance which "must be
universal and mandatory, ..
added that patients should have
freedom to choose their physi·
cians, and urged greater em·
pbasis on preventive medicine as •'both simpler and cheaper than
cures."
Ford , remaininS in
(See CL~E, Pace AZ)
Thieves Get
Tun 'Vehicles'
An all·polnts vehicle bulletin ls
out today for a rlg stolen in Hunt·
ington Beach over the weekend ,
and police wlll find It easy to spot
-iftheyflndit.
Dorothy Apel. instructor at coat11nea Pre·School at Lake
Pm tn t.he cilY'• downtown cUJ • trtct. told omcera the $100.plus
burtJary occurred al lM school 'a ttotac• abed.
Taken were a little rod l*f•l·
drhen llro en1tne and a bluo
tricycle.
Judge Rejects
Kidnap Pair's
Bail Cutting
A bid for reduction of their
$100,000 bail by two men accused
or kidnaping Newport Beach
potato ctiip heir Jack Scudder
has been rejected in Orange
County Superior Court.
Judge Harmon G. Scoville re-
rused to adjust the bail set for
William Rudy Wesson, 44, of
Tustin, and Ricki Dale SeUers,
20, of Long Beach. Both men face
trial Nov. 29.
Both men are accused of kid·
naping Scudder, 64, of 145 N. Bay
Front, Aug. 19 shortly after he
left his dentist's office in Hunt·
ington Beach. They allegedly
sought $250,000 in rans om
money.
Scudder feigned a heart attack
and then fought his way lo
freedom. He will appear as the
key prosecution witness at the
trial.
Following the Nov. 15 apP.lica·
tion cutoff date, Jan: 12,£~ is the first date at»whictltheYE ay
be fil ed again for consid on
within the coming year. js' · Nothing unresolved . re
Nov. 15 can possibly be,
before Feb .. 7 and quite lik ·
new applications filed foUowting•
resumption or the commissioo's
work won't be heard until later.
A 21-day delay is requirec:lfby
law before commissioners may
consider an application fot
anything involving new or re-
vised construction and building
within 1,000 yards of the
coasUine.
Legislative terms or Prop<isi·
lion 20, which created the
California Coastal Zone
Conservation Commission.
parent agency or the South Coast
Regional Zone Commission. ex·
pires at year's end.
Legislators agreed despite J>t'Oo
blems inherent in the
bureaucracy and red tape the
system generated, the concept
has been a good one and its work
should be continued.
New legislation required to
establish the governmental ageu•
(See COASTAL, Page AZ)
* * * $21 Million Plan
I
Approved by Board
A revised project package Cora
$21 million coodominlum-
commercial-r ecreaUonal com-
plex at water's edge in San.set
Beach was approved with liWe
discussion Monday by the South
Coast Regional Zone Conserva·
tioo Commission meeting in Hun·
llngtoo Beach. The long-delayed decision on
the 3'1-unit plan developed by
Robert Maiwre ll was balled as
a triumph in the tnae spirit of
Proposltlon 20's creation of the
qency three years ago.
Commissioner Barna Subo ~tnted out serious questions
initlaJly encountered in
M1pire'1 plan for the 35.e.acre
parcel inland from Coast WCh•&Y aL Admlrally Way were
resolved agreeably.
During consultations and
negotlatlons between Maguire,
hJs land1111e and arddtecturatde.
sliners, a project package meet-
ing desired 1peclficatJons wu
amicably developed, s1,bc;>
noted. A total of 244 condominlum \UI"
its, 22 slnale-famlly homes hi·
eluding boal alipS and a 75-room
or auit.e hotel are included alone
with public paths fot atrolllng or
blcycUnc and a protected public
beach on Sunset Beach
baywalers are included. ,
The Maguire marina p~cty
facet HunUngton Harbour, whlda
will be accesalble via aferry ~t
and Hunllnston Harbour tav
<See raOJEcr. P ... AJ) • \,
;A2 DAtLVPtLOT H /F
.::Tuss le
'""
Ends in
.De atm
PARAMOUNT (AP) -A 38·
, year-old man, apparenUy de·
ranged following a marital argu.
inent, slashed hl& wUe, beat bis
two sons -one fatally -and
ended the rampa1e wltb a
auiclda l daah onto a buay
freeway, authorities said today.
Wences Alcantar died when
struck by two automobiles and a
second son was in "very critical"
cooditlon followlng surgery to-
day. His wife was reported in
good condition with knife wounds
on her face and shoulder.
The Los Angeles County
Sheriff's office gave this account
of the Sunday night violence:
Alcantar of Paramount, dri v-
~g bis family home from a sbop-
tl>ing trip, become so enraged
Jjhat he stopped the car and ~lashed his wife, Benita, 33,
several times with a knife. Shov-
ing her out of the car, Alcantar
.sped away with his sons, Wences
;r., 5, and Eduardo, 3.
Alcantar drove to the home or
.relatives in Compton, where he
stabbed himself four or five
times. Though wounded, he
.arove off and headed east on the
~an Bernardino Freeway.
At an offramp in Redlands, he
drove the car down a 45·foot
slope, where it came to rest.
Highway patrol officers said
Alcantar flagged down a
motorist and said his sons were
injured. According to sheriff's
deputies , they were found
severely beaten 10 the back seat
of the car.
As highway patrol officers
were examining the car, Alcan·
tar ran onto the freeway and was
struck by two cars.
"It was an apparent suicide,"
said a deputy, ''but of course
there's no way of telling for
sure."
Eduardo died during the night
at Loma Linda Hospital.
f'ro• Page A J
·SMOKING ..
or punishment,'' said Dr. Paul
Larsen, a pharmacology expert
who studies effects of tobacco at
the Medkal College of Virginia in
Richmond.
Dr. George Wise, director of
the poison control center at
Children's Mercy Hospital in
Kansas City, Mo., said he knows
of oases of people dying after be-
ing in~cted with nicotine to rid
1hem or certain diseases.
Or. Daniel Horn. director of
the National Clearinghouse for
Smoking and Health in Atlanta,
·said that swallowing tobacco
could be harmful, but had no re-
cord of anyone dying from iL
F ro• PCJfle Al
CLOSE •••
Wai;hington until Thursday, sent
word through a group of
Republican governors and
senators who are his key party
supporters that he views the race
as "a dead heal" now. Major
polls also show the race is tight.
Ford is studying for Friday's
final debate with Carter in
Williamsburg, Va., and aides say
he is gearing his campaign
toward a 12-day final push that
will take him to as many as 14
states.
"Although I've been dis·
couraged, J 've been dismayed •
and s ometimes I've bee n
ashamed" of actions taken by
government leaders, Carter told
a Tampa audience, the federal
government can be effective and
responsive, "provided the
American people don't give up."
Citing an unspecified poll that
he said indicated "more than
half the American people are not
going to vote," Carter continued,
"In other words, they sald, 'I'm a
coward, I'm afraid of the future,
: I give up on my nation, I'm not
; going to try to control my own
· destiny and stake out a better life
for my children."'
l
' •
ORANGE COAST HtF
DAILY PILOT
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~I( .....
ldl!w
~ .... .....,._ __ ..,. ... _
I Oll'MM.&Me .... P ....
MJhl°"I -MloilftO U.... ·--_,Qr_c:......,.:. ....
Huntlnaton a.lldl OMce ,,.,r .. t(l\ ~-"""''""'"'''"P.O. Dox1'0,-Qtflcel u~':.~·;l.~~~ ,_ .. ~~m:.;:~':~ ""'"..-
T~• (714)1CMS21 ca ... W!4"1 Ad'feftl""I IUa7I ,, __ Or _ _,_
.... u20
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--ff M .. fll .. M•~tt !Otr•IA fMf ...
_ .. "'" ... •' -(1.i """'""" .. ---· lee-nau -'!f! Mlf • c:..t• MtM.. C.li...,.I•, kMc•~Mfl .., <H•I« U 9 ':;":'~.:.=:!!-r. ........ " ........... ,
0.llf ........... "'"-
HAPPY ABOUT TREND
Crtmeflghter Robiteille
F ro•Page Al
CRIME •.•
picious vehicles in their
neighborhoods.
He also said that residential in·
spections that advised low-cost
home security devices probably
have cut into the crime rate.
"I would just like to see us fully
staffed for one year to see what
kind of a crimp we could put in
crime," Robitaille said.
He pointed out that the Hunt·
ington Beach Police Departmfl.1t
has just one officer per 1,000
population. He said he believes it
should be 1.5 otricer per 1,000 re·
sidents.
F ro• PCJfle A I
COASTAL ••
cy, however, was not passed in
time to prevent the gap between
expiration of the present or·
ganization and creation -on
paper-of its identical successor.
"U we took an application for
just a single family home now,
the first of February would be the
first time it could possibly be
heard," a coastal commission
aide confirmed today.
Such an application can next
be received and filed for com·
mission action Jan. 12 and if not
treated as an administrative
item under its blanket consent
calendar, it must be heard later.
Consent calendar items are
generally non-controversial and
meet all or most criteria de·
manded of local, county and/or
stale building and development
requirements.
Commission Chairman Judy
Rosener, of Newport Beach,
warned it wwl be intolerable if an
attempt is not made to clear up
all or as much as possible of the
396-item backlog in the mean-
time.
Commissioner Elerth Erickson
pointed out it probably won 't be
cleared up because in the past,
action has averaged only 10
public bearings per day. .
Coaslai commission observers
and members predicted two re·
s ults of the s udden bog -.
ging-down of the environmental
protection panel's activities in
carrying out its legislated duties.
Faced with lost time and in·
creased financial outlay on pro·
jects scheduled with th e
Southland's rainy season loom-
ing some builders may lake legal
action to force post-Nov. 15 ac·
lion.
Commissioners may also in the
meantime act with such haste
standards of development they
were appointed to uphold will be
lowered to clean off their meet-
ing agendas.
By the time the panel resumes
action in 1977, It is predicted they
will have a backlog roughly iden ·
Li cal to the current 396 projects to
consider.
Candidates'
Night Slated
At Cafeteria
Voters in the Huntington Beach
Union High School District will have two opportunities to meet
the candidates in the Nov. 2
~pecial election to fill a vacant
Lrustee seat.
A candidates• night is
scheduled for 7: 30 p.m. Thursday
in the Edison High School faculty
cafeteria. The event is sponsored
by the League of Women Voters.
The four candidates, Michael
Vandor, Doris Allen. John
Hundley and James Hamilton,
have been invited to give five
minute presentatim.s on tbe is·
sues and answer questions from
tbe"8udience.
Westminster Sebool District
re1ident1 have organised a
similar event at 7:~ p.m., Oct.
2& The candidates' night will be
held ~n the elementary di.strict
board rootn, 14121 Cedarwood
Ave.;!Wntmlnster.
The spedal elect1on will fill the seat vacated by fOl'l:Del' trustee
Robert Knox who res1'Ded Jut
May to accept a West Orange
County Judaeshlp.
1'be winner of the election wUl
serve the tlve ttmainina months
in Knox'& term and mast nm for
r941ecUan 1n M arcb to rela1D t.bo
seal.
Slemons .
Ducks
Debate
By GARY GRANVILLE 0ti-.Dt11,~ .......
A debate between Assembly
candidates Republican James
Slemoos and Democrat Ron
Cordova turned lnto a cne·man
Cordova ahow Monday night
when Slemons heeded the advice ot hls attorney and bowed out.
The announcementofSlemons•
tut-minute withdrawal from the
Leaeue of Women Voters·
sponsored debate drew boots and
laughter from a standing·room·
oaly crowd i.n a campus lecture
ball at Saddleback Colle1e.
Oran1e Coast League Presl·
dent Valerie Murley said
Slemons• attorney, John D.
Cochran, told her be advised
his client •'not to appear in public
discussion until an investigation
now under way is completed.
probably in about one week's
time.··
Mrs. Murley said Cochran did
not specify either the subject or
target of his investigation.
But today the Irvine attorney
admitted he has hired in·
vestigators "to check out certain
facets" o{ recent news stories in
the Santa Ana Register alleging
that Slemons:
-While in Germany recently
mailed to hlmself in Newport
Beach two pornographic books
that were later selted by U.S.
Customs agents under regula·
lions prohibiting the importation
of such material into the U.S.
-In 1974 lost four reels of
pornographic movies to custom
agents after they were dis-
covered in bis suitcase when he
returned from a trip abroad.
-Last spring lured Dale Scott
Lucas into the Republican
primary in the 74th Assembly
District to undermine the can·
didacy of Marian Bergeson.
Today Slemons labeled the
news story "allegations based on
unknown sources" and said be
expects to have them ail cleared
before the Nov. 2 General Elec·
lion.
'' l can assure you I have not re-
ceived a letter regarding two .
books hidden away in an
automobile manual," said
Slemons.
The Newport Beach
Republican, who employs 92 peo-
ple at his Mer cedes Benz
dealership, "many or them
Germans whose relatives and
homes are in Stuttgart.
"I'm not saying that any of
them m ailed the books -if they
were mailed -but just that there
may be another answer." said
Slemons.
f',.._ PCJfle Al
PROJECT • •
service included in the project.
One of the more serious con·
siderations raised when Maguire
first approached the commission
was possible environmental
damage caused by dredging and
·excavation.
The slough and bay -like its
neighbor to the east, Bo1sa Chica
Marsh. a wildlife preserve -has
a delicate environmental
balance.
Since earlier discussions, a
federal study has indicated the
feared damage is not likely to oc·
cur and in the meantime,
Maguire proceeded with revision
of the project itself.
He reduced the condominium
units' count and added the
7S.unil hotel, al the same time in·
corporating a commission
stipulation to provide the harbor
boat tour and ferry dock landing.
This would presumably be in·
dependenlly·contracted business
separate from the land develop-
ment.
Little additional discussion
was involved, because the
Maguire project was aiready
tacitly accepted, save for a
technicalltY"' that stalled it al a
hearing in July.
Commissioners voted 7 to 4 to
approve il but an eight-vote ma·
jorlly of the 12·member com·
mission is required and the
single vote absent torpedoed
Maguire, leaving his marina pro-
ject dead in the water.
The vote was 8 to O Monday.
with eight commissioners pre·
sent.
Wife Slayer
Faces Prison
A man who called Santa Ana
police to the scene aecands alter
be shot and tilled his eat·wile at
her home pleaded guilty late
Monday to cbareea ot second
degree murder.
Oran1e County Superior Court
J udie Ja~ea H. w.isworth ac
cepted the plea filed by Bernard
E . LaCbapelle, 29, and set Nov.
29 as his sentencing date.
LaCbapelle laces a posstblestate
prison term of five years to Ille.
Police uld LaCbapelle and bl'l
farmer wifa bad beea reccoclled
and were dllcusaJna a secood merrlase when the q uarrel
erupted Jo ber home June 1'. The
killln1 wu wltnlllled bJ the
eoupJe •a 1-year-old.IOCL ,,
Gung·ho Boy
'Few Good Men' Say No
WINK. Tex. (AP) -·'The Marine Corps needs a
few good m en," said the poster at a shopping center.
and Roger W oodrick didn't see why he couldn't quallly.
But the Corps rejected his enlistment application.
That made his mother happy but disap,POinted a lot
of his friends in the second grade.
Rogcris 8.
"He just filled out the card and mailed lt off." said
hi5 mother, Mrs. Roger Woodrlck. "It was about four
days before he got a reply from the captain in
Washington, D.C."
AB Capt. Curt Murray put it: ''We appreciate your
interest in the Marine Corps. However, since you are 8,
you won't be eligible to be a Marine for awhile, but as
our way of showing appreciation for your interest, we
are enclosing a special Marine Corps poster.''
"It's a huge poster," Mrs. Woodrick said. "Roaer
is real proud ofit."
'Ni~on'Farm Visit
Bugs Dole Aides
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) -
''What can you do? You can't
cover up the mailbox," moaned
Bob Dole's advance man, and the
Republican vice presidential ,
White Caps
Set .Luncheon
The White Cappers or Hunt·
ington Beach City Hall are bav·
log a membership luncheon at 11
a.m. Thursday in room B-8 at cl·
tyhall.
Members who have given 50
hours of service to the city will be
honored at the luncheon.
White Cappers assist many de-
partments within city hall includ·
ing public information, con·
sumer affairs and adminislra·
tion. They also give tours and act
as hostesses at city functions.
Vessel D e parts
COOS BAY, Ore. (AP) -The
Bulgarian fishing vessel im·
pounded since Sept. 27 on
charges of violating the U.S. fish
zone sailed out or the Coos Bay
harbor Monday evening, leaving
three of its 80 crew members
behind. The three jumped ship
and asked for political asylum
last Wednesday.
candidate went ahead and visited a farmer named Nixon.
"He's not related to that other
fellow,'' said Dole. ''l want to
make that perfectly clear:•
The last line was often used by
that other fellow.
Despite some of his campaign
workers who were upset to tear
that local Dole supporters had
scheduled the visit, Dole spoke to
about 150 persons inside the
farmer's barn. It was raining
outside. Dole praised President
Ford's farm policy.
Although most of the schedul-
ing fouJups that plagued Dole's
campaign in the early days have
been eliminated, be continues to
encounter a few rough spots
along the campaign trail. .
Aides on his campaign jet
grimaced when they learned that
Dole's first stop today was a visit
to the "Nixon farm" in Spr-
ingfield.
Jt was just a coincidence. The
farm is owned by George Nixon,
a prominent farmer in the area
who is not related to the resigned
president. But that didn't keep
Dole's aides from groaning
anyway.
"We 'didn't know the guy's
name was Nixon until we got out
to the farm and saw the name on
the mailbox," said one Dole ad·
vanceman.
Plagued
Building
Delayed
Ocean View School District's
ct.lay-pla1ued remodeling and
construction program for
seventh and eighth grade
facilities has suffered another
aetback.
Several parents of chlldren at
Star View Sebool, 8'11 Worthy
Drive, Midway City, objected to
the poisition or a relocatable
classroom, now under ,construc-tion, because they said it would
cut off ventilation to adjacent
rooms.
Some parents said the ventlla·
tlon problem already exlsts.
''The kids sit there and sweat
even when it's cold," a parent told
trustees Monday.
Several parents suggested the
relocatable classroom be posi-
tioned on the north side of the ex-
i~ buildings to allow the air
f\ow from the south.
However, the foundation
already la poured. The next stage
of toostructlon will not begin for
another week, district officials
said.
Trustees asked school officials
to look into alternate plans for
the relocatable classroom. or.
ficials indicated a change in
· plans at this point could cost as
much as $10,000.
The position or the room was
determined because of the loca-
tion of utilities, sewer lines and
the fire alarm system, school of·
ficials said.
Truatee Jean Bogen suggested
an air conditioning system might
be corusidered as a solution.
Historical Group
Seeking M~mbers
Life memberships In the Hunt·
ington Beach Historical Society
are available at $100 with funds
going to help restor e the
Newl and House on Beach
Boule vard north of Adams
Avenue.
Residents interested in the His·
torical Society or in the Newland
House restoration can get full in·
formation on the programs by
calling the city Public Jnforma·
tion Office, 536·5511.
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SALON HOURS:
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Irvine
EDITION
'roday~ Closing .... • N.Y.St~u
i J
1
VOL 69, NO. 293, 2 SECTIONS;26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1976 TEN CENTS
[Coastal Building Permits Face. Cutoff.!
1 No applications for new con-Nov. 15 Ls the cutoff date for ap-pendla1 applications, US of A comrnlulon ttaff member, wit.hintbecomlqyur. vifed eoaatructlon and buildina
1 structlon within the realm of ptications. Wbicb require fa.ll·blown public however, said at ~ after. NotMn1 UD1'esolved before wlthtn 1,000 yards of the
Soutb Coast Regioml Zone Com-Commissioners who have beesl beari.np to take aay pro or C'OO nooo'a adjournment abe un-Nov. 15 can polfibl)' be beud. coatliDe.
mlllioo control will be accepted criticized both from witbout and teltimolly. derltood tJ1e meettnes would be before l"eb.1 adqulteliketr Q1 Leaillative terma ol Propol.i-for a 57-day hiatus when a wttb1n their own rub previous-Location of these meetings is In tbe H\IDt.iqtoa Bead> ctvtc new applicatlons filed followtDI tion 20, wblcb created lb•
Jeai,alative sap soon puts the ly for bogged-down project ap-yet to be determined, but it is Center. Tbe a•eney alternatel resumJ)dan ot tbe cwnm•am•a CaUforota Coastal Zoo•
qmcyiollmbo. plication processing will race to likely to be Torrance City Hall, betweent.betwolocatioas. WOftwoa'tbebearduoW~. ColllervatloD CommluloD,
Commlasion Executive Direc· catch up in the meantime. atnce most matters coming Followtn1 the Nov. 1S applica· -A 21-day delay b requlNd by parent aaeacy of tbe South Cout
tor Mel Carpenter announced at They agreed to meet in befon! commlasloners prior to tioo cutoff date, Jan. 12, 1977 is law befon commi.ssionen may Jlelk>nal Zone Commlaslcn, ex· ! a meeting Monday at the Hunt-emergency sessions Nov. 1, 3, Nov. 15 involve Los An1eles tbe ft.rat date at wblch they m11 con1Jder an-appUcaUon for pl.Neat)'Ml"'~end. 1 I in&ton Beach Civic Center that and 8 in an effort to clear up 396 County matters. be filed •lain for canslderallon anythlac iavOlviag new or ,... (8eeroASJ'AL. Pace A!)
I Slemons Ducks
i Candidate Missing at Debate
BJ GARY GRANVILLE Of .. .,..., _Sbff
A debate between Assembly
candidates Republican James
Siemon• and Democrat Ron
Cordova turned into a one-man
Cordova show Monday night
when Slemons heeded the advice
hls attorney and bowed out.
1be announcement of Slemons'
last-minute withdrawal from the
Lea1ue of Women Voters-
spomored debate drew boots and
Ulhter from a standing-room-
crowd iD a campus lecture
at Saddle back College. .
. OraDle Coast League Presi:
* * * ·Cordova
All Alone,
7 f Applauded
kllepubllcan 14th Assembly c!
date James SJemona' la.st-
lnute retreat from bis
ICbedaled debate with Democrat I Ron Cordova Monday night left
I C«dova alone on cent.er stage for
«>minutes .
By the time Cordova used both
Id.a and Slemons' time to field
quest.ions from nenmen and the
overllow audience at Saddleback
College, be tiad earned himself a
rousing round of applause.
1be 2&-year--0ld prosecuting at-
torney studiously avoided usl.ng
bis absent opponent's name.
lmtead, in all but two in-
stances be referred to Slemons
simply aa "the auto dealer."
At that, "the auto dealer"
'wasn't mentio-ied often as
Cordova's rapid nre comments
and answers ranged over a broad
area or public issues.
Before bis 40 minutes were
uaed up, the candidate had given
bis capsule views on tax reform,
criminal justice, medic al
malpractice, education, housing
and the lot of a Democratic at
large in an assembly district that
1a heavily Republican.
"I will never vote the party
line," Cordova sald as he
minimized bis affiliation with the
Democratic Party. "I will be the
representative of the 74lb As-
: sembly District and not the
Republican or Democratic
parties.''
Cordova said be bas not re-
ceived financial support from the
Democratic Party and "owes lt
notbinl-'' When asked by a member of
the audience bow, if elected, be = to gain committee ap-
tments without party sup-
<See coaoov A. P11e AZ>
Coast
Weather
Qilhs in the mid '10I ex-
peeted through w edneeday
with continued morning
ad nigbttime fog and low cJouds.
INSIDE TODA 't'
'ff~' ii .o non-aaUt
ciame for children.and.~
ban of .o c~ c:Jaa .Giid
-.11nd bw 111. MO{IOl:ilw. lu ...,.,.,.,,. -"'"' ~ .. ,,.., ,,.,, tlllC ,,..,,,,.,. s... Oft
l!0'1fAI.
hi•e•
AM _.,.,_ Atl
81....... "" At ............ AU Al ........ ..._ M,M ., Ec..t'J At ., .... .. , ....
At ....... At.a.ti
Aft,........ .. "'"" ~ "" In..... A4 An.,...... M,M
IU
dent Valerie Murley said
Slemons• attorney, John D.
Cochran, told her be advised
bis client "not to appear in public
discussion until an investigation
now under way is completed,
probably in about one week's
time."
Mrs. Murley said Cochran did
not specify either the subject or
target of bis investigation.
But today the Irvine attorney
admitted be bas hired in-
vestigators "to checlc out certain
facets" of recent news stories in
the Santa Ana Register alleging
that Slemoos:
O.lly ,. ... R.tf ,....
ALL BY HIMSELF
Democrat Cordova
-While in Germany recently
mailed to himself in Newport
Beach two pornographic books
that were later seUed by U.S.
CUstopis agents under regula-
tions prohibiting lbe importatioo
ol such material into the U.S.
-In 1974 lost four reels of
pornographic movies to custom
agents after they were dis-
covered in bis suitcase when be
returned from a trip abroad.
them matled the boc*s -If they
were mailed -but just that there
may be another answer;· said
Slemons.
As for the alleged 1974 porno-
graphic material incident,
Slemons said, "that again is
based on allegations from so-
called informed sources."
The 43-year-old auto dealer
fiaUy denied sponsoring the last·
minute Lucas candidacy in the
June primary election, a can·
didacy that deprived Mrs.
Bergeson or last place on the
ballot.
It is believed by some who deal
in political campa.lgiis that next
to top spot on the ballot. last
place is the best positioa to at-
tract voter attention.
Reaiftrar of Vo&er records
show that Lucas filed bis
nomination papers March 17,
the last candidate to do so in
the heated Republican 74th Dis·
trict primary.
March 13 was the regular fiJ.
i ng deadline but because
Republican incumbent Robert
Badbam abandoned bis As·
sembly seat to run for Congress,
the filing deadline ln the 74th wu.
held open to March 17.
_ <SeeSLEMONS,PageAZ)
Gung·ho Boy
'Few Good Men' St;iy N_o
WINK, Tex. <AP> -"The Marine Corps needs a
few good men," said the poster at a sboppi.og center,
and Roger Wood rick didn't see why be couldn't qualify.
But the Corps rejected his enlistment application.
That made his mother happy but disappointed a lot
ofbisfriendsinthesecondgrade.
Rogeris 8.
''He just filled out the card and mailed it off.'' said
bis mother, Mrs. Roger Woodrick. "It was about four
days before he got a reply from the captain in
Washington, D.C."
As Capt. Curt Murray put it: "We appreciate your
interest in the M 8line Corps. However, since you are 8,
you won't be eligible to be a Marine for awhile, but as
our way of showing appreciation for your interest, we
are enclosing a special Marine Corps poster."
"It's a hufe poster," Mrs. Woodrick said. "Roger
is real proud o it."
-.
Hartline Appointed
Irvine School Aide
Gene Hartline current1Y an administrator wlth the Orange
County Department of Educa-
tion, bas been selected as the new assistant superintendent iD t.be
Irvine Unified School District,
&lperinteodent Stan Cony p ·
nounced today.
According to Corey, Hartllne,
36, a Mission Viejo resldent, won
the polt from a field of 13 can-
didates. He will replace lobn RaJctc u aulstant superlnten-
dant for buslneu support
~ e, wbo wW assume h1I new uUes Nov. 1, II curnntb' diJ"ector of the admlniatratiClll
aacl pencm.nel m~t unit
at tbe county Departmeot of
llducaUoo. He's func.tloDed as
their dUef ne1ot1.-for two
years.
Prior to that pact, .Ba.rt11M WU
employed ln the Bureau of
1lana1ement Servtc11 at the
Stale Department ol EducatJoo, where be operated school district
mana1ement reviews and de·
veloped. state school district ac-
COW.lting systems, Corey said.
Before that, Hartline waa
employed by the Kem County
Department of Education. Where
be served as director of special ~cbool&, director of ad-
ministrative services and was
al8o a vtce principal ol a aebool
and a teacber-prlnclpal.
Hartllne, who received a
masters degree from ~esoo
State Uo1ver1lly and Is cutnmtly
leekinl an a4vanced dqree at USC, will coaduc:t aU of tbe buai-
oes1 1ervlce1 for the lnille
Unlfted School Diatrtc!t.
1119 ~ 111or. lllJdc, ,..
eentl,y eft the dlltrid to take a
J)Olitioa with the Kawai Plano
OMDPAQY. 'To IWD It .u up, we· ... dckled to death be'a ... , .. i .... U1 " Corey l'elll81"llad. ,_.._... '
Car \Is. Gate in lrl'ine
Orange County Firemen assisted Monday
eve ning when Mary Anne Cope, 25,
slammed her car beadoo into a closed
steel gate in the Fluor Corporation
driveway near Micbelsoo Road in Irvine.
Mrs. Co~, of 2364 S~ Ana Ave., Costa
Mesa, suffered face and head cuts and
was treated overnight at Tustin Communi-
ty Hospital. She was expected to be sent
home today in good condition. Police said
visibility was poor, with no nearby street
ligb~
Schools Okay New
Cablevision Pacts
Punished Pair
Sick; Parents
Rap Principal
The Irvine Unllied School Dis·
lrlct and th-e Community
Cablevision Company have
agreed to a new five-year con-
tract that gives the school dis-
trict use of four channels on the
cable TV system.
In agreeing to the new pact,
school board members agreed to
pay the TV company $20,000 t.he
first year of the agreement, with
the cost rising $2,000 each year
thereafter until the contract ex-
pires in August 1981.
In exchange, the district will
have the use ol four channels, for
the two-way video ~ystem used
by district schools:
All district schools. except
SELF High and El Toro Marine
Elementary are booked up to the
system and condu~\; two-way
classes between schools.
Up until now, the district paid
the TV company roughly $8.000
per year for use of the two-way
channels.
How e v e r, it was a
"gentleman's agreement" and
the channels could have been
sold to .a higher bidder at any
point.
Taking into account all ol the
costs 'connected with the tw~
way TV operation, Superinten-
dent Stan Corey told the school
board, the previous cost was
about $38,000 per year and that it
will now be about $50,000 per
year. The increase accomrts for
the firm agreement that now ex·
ists between the two qencles.
The school district may recoup
part of its expenses by
periodically subcontracting the
channels to others for communJ-
ty communication purposes,
Corey said.
HUME, Mo. (AP) -When the
high school principal caught
three teen-age boys with
cigarettes in their pockets, be
gave them a choice of punish-
ment: take a paddling or eat the
cigarettes.
Two boys chose to eat a total of
18 cigarettes and have developed
health problems as a result, their
parents said Monday.
When the boys• mothers went
to a school board meeting to~
test. the board voted to uphold
the prindpaJ's actiom.
Board member Joe Brooks
said the principal's authority
would be damaged unless the
board supported him.
"I feel like if the kids make up
their own mind, it's up to them,"
Principal Kenneth Hightower
said shortly after the incident
last month.
Price to Detennine Hightower said he always of-
fered the same alternative to
other students who broke the rule
against carrying cigarettea, but
all bad chosen paddling.
College Land llse Hightower caught Terry
(See SMOKING, Pase AZ>
Saddleback College trustees
•treed Monday that they will
condemn the 20 acresollandtbey
want for a northern ~ampua site
if tbe price of the property ls
right.
The trustees unanimously
passed a resolution authoriling
eminent domain over the Irvine
Company'• land near the in·
tenection or Myford Road and
Bryan Avenue. However, they
Shark Bita
Manin Leg
EUREKA (AP> -A
25-year-old McKiDleyville
man says he was bitten by
a JO.foot blue shark wbile
divinl south of Trinidad.
the Humboldt County
1bertff'1 department re-
porta.
William Kennedy told
deoutlet be had a nm4l
wltb \M rerocioua aeM:&lr'e
l&oDclQ. He WU treated at I local bolpitaJ for a ~u.cb cot lD h1a tu that
wet an lncb deep, die n-
Po.rt aald.
said u won't be acted on unu• Underground afte.r they are given appraisals
OD the property.
"Uthe price is too high, we're Line Proiect not eotng to do ll," said Non1sa ti
Brandt, president.
The truJtees had expected to Start Slated have the price estimates Mon-
day. But Superintendent Robert l Lombardi said the appraiaers Ed1aon Company ollicials.~
won't tlve them a price wttU ear-they expect to begin worlc
ty next month. December on undergroun 1 uUllty lldes along three ·
The trustees obviously were roads in central Irvine.
diaappolnted. "Can't you bUlld a The project Ls expected to
fire under those guys at all," UnueunWMarcbolnextye '
uked Trustee Larry Taylor. ~ Tbe three roads to~
Lombardi said be bas ~ady '! .. biclude: · • '~
tried to push the appraisers but . ~-So db 1 lid e~o Wili~l'lia
he'• been onsuccessfUI. j ii~ue. from rrvtne Hll!tfSMiiiliil
"My understanding of •P· WJtllrey Road. .,
pr-lsals ls minimal but I'm -West alde~·of Jeffrey,
Jeamin1," be said. "Ooe d tbe • from new Walnut Avenue
tblnp I'm learntnl Ls tbfte.tbey lrvineCentenDrive. ·
doo't move very fut." '., • -North slde of Irvine
He told the trustees that their . Drt•e, ftom Jet&ey Road to 2,
relOlutlon 11 "tellint the world" ; ._wester))'ofthatln1tenaectd.
that t.be dlltrtct Ls silll interested. City officials say motoriats
ln that 1lte. He said notb1nll will expet'lence minor inconv
be done ln Lbe proeea untI1 tbe nieacee darhl1 the conlltndoall
, apprallal ll glveo and~. ~that moat d tbe un
Condemnation proceedlDp are I worlt will be
neensary to 1ave tbe lrvlne In the partwa71 aacl that
ComfHY from P•ytnc a penalty raedl wlll telllaln open.
wbm the land ia pulled out d ltl After tbe Unes are UIMl•r·
cuTrent ••rlcalture pretene 1rounded, tbe overbe~
status. Wltbout thil actklG. ~ traanlaa1oo llnes wU1 be <See PtlactLUS, hleAJ> mond.
' . -
··~
~ J\z o.-.1LvP1Lor
Fr .. r.,,eAl
OASTAL. •
LeCJ.Slators acreod despiterro-i· as 1 em a lnberenl lD be
bureaucracy and red tape the
' •ystem generated, the concept
!{as been a good one and lta work
~hould be continued.
New legislation required to
est.ablist\ the governmental agen.
, ey, however, was not passed in
•. time to prevent the gap between
, expiration Of the present Or·
•&anl.zaUon and creation -on . paper-of ita ideoticalavccessor.
·1 "If we took an applicaUoo for
A just a single famUy home now.
the first of February would be the
first time it could possibly be
heard,'' a coastal commission
aJde confirmed today.
Such an application can next
be received and flled for com-
mission action Jan. 12 and if not
treated as an administrative
item under its blanket con.sent
calendar. it must i>e beard later.
Consent calendar items are
generally non-controversial and
eet all or most criteria de·
anded of local. county and/or
tale bu.ildlng and development
requirements.
Commission Chairman Judy 1 Rosener. of Newport Beach.
• warned it will be intolerable if an
J· attempt is not made to clear up
· ~l or as much as possible ol the
396-item backlog in the mean-
time.
~· !' UCI R ecycle
!·"Cente r Open
' · -0n Jamboree
Students at UC Irvine are send-
ing out the word that the un·
iversity's recycling center on
Jamboree Road is open to the
public.
Anyone with items they wish to
recycle rather than throw away
are asked to bring them to the
lrvint; Cooperative Recycling
Center on Jamboree Road, one
block south of Campus Drive in
the UCI corporation yard.
The center is open Tuesdays
,. from 1 to 6 p.m .• Wednesdays
from 10 a .m . to 3 p .m .,
Thursdays from 1 to 6 p.m. and ·
Saturdays and Sundays from 11
a.m. to4 p.m.
Proceeds from the recycling
center will be used to sponsor
speakers and films on environ·
mental issues at UCL
According to the student volun·
: · teers who run the center, accep·
table materials for recycling in·
elude all clear and colored glass.
aluminum and bl.metal cans.
1 newspapers, bond paper, brown
paper sacks, cardboard and com-
puter paper. telephone books and
magazines.
One of 'Them'
This fellow isn't a refugee from the movie
about the giant ants, he's just a fire ant
magnified 160 times by a scanning elec·
tron microscope at the University of
Southern Mississippi. He's gained a new
lease on life with the banning of M irex.
the only effective killer of the pest that
plagues Southern states.
F r ortt Pagte Al
PURCHASE.
lege officials said, the purchase
probably would be more difficult
and costly.
Trustees have said they want
classes offered at the northern
site by September.
Trustees also approved a con·
tract for the architectural
services of William Blurock and
Partners of Newport Beach.
The agreement. which trustees
specified is not lo be considered
as an exclusive contract, says the
college intends to employ the
firm, which has designed recent
campus construction, for the
master plan and a building com-
plex on the satellite site.
The architects may also be
called upon to do some work
needed to move some buildings
on the existing campus, convert
the library to administrative of·
fices and ~la"room~ and other
projects which may be designat·
cd by the trustees.
Carter Demanding
Brown Reprimand
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Democratic presidential can·
did.ate Jimmy Carter is urging
President Ford to "show some
leadership" a nd reprimand the
nation's top uniformed officer,
who made controversial remarks
about such U.S. allies as Israel,
Britain and Iran.
Ford, according to the White
House, accepts Gen. George S.
Brown's explanation and "con·
siders the matter closed."
For his part. Brown. chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a
news conference Monday that his
remarks in an interview did not
indicate disagreement with the
U.S. policy of aiding Israel. In
the interview, Brown said that
aiding Israel is a burden on the
United States.
His statement on Israel in·
volved him in controversy for the
second time in two years. Brown
was reprimanded by Ford and
apologized in November 1974 for
telling a Duke Uruversity au·
dience that Jews have too much
influence an Congress and "own,
you know . the banks in this coun-
try. the newspapers."
Carter, arriving in Miami on a
campaign tour Monday night, re·
called Ford's reaction when
another appointee, Agriculture
Secretary Earl Butz, got into hot
water over an obscene racial
slur.
"Mr. Butz stayed there until
Mr. Ford assessed the political
con~uences of what he said and
finally Mr. Butz resigned ,"
Carter told reporters.
Fro•PageAl
SLEMONS • •
Slemona; woes wlLb the al·
le1ed porno1rapblc· epl1ode1
and the Lucas candidacy mirror
a series ot controversies that
have surrounded his campaign
since his 1.875-vote victory over
Mrs. Bergeson.
That victorious primary elec·
tion campa1gn cost Slemons and
his backers $117,769, more than
twice the amowit spent by Mrs.
Bergeson .
In campaigl\ literature pro-:
duced by the Arnold Forde·
William Butcher-led campaign,
it was claimed that Slemons
was: . ,
-A graduate of the Universi·
ty of California, Davis.
-A close personal friend or
U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater and
his son, Rep. Barry Goldwater,
Jr.
Later it was s hown that
Slemons only attended the un·
iversity and bad not graduated.
And a Goldwater letter said.
"I do not know Mr. $lemons or
if I do, I have forgotten meeting
hlm. My son said that he knows
him slightly but not well.
"I think. frankly. that his use
of our name in his campaign
literature, extends normal
courtesy just a bil."
Irvine Meeting
Over Bicycle
Trails Planned
Members of the Irvine Bit·ycle
Trails Committee will meet Wed ·
nesday night at city ball to dis-
cuss the proposed trail along J ef·
frey Road and University Drive.
The meeting will begin at 7
p.m. in the conference room next
to the council chambers and is
public.
The proposed trail is planned
along Jeffrey Road from the
Edison Company right-of-way
next to the railroad tracks down
to Michelson Drive, after the
road turns into University Drive.
Committee members will dis·
cuss what type of trail should be
constructed -either on-street or
off.street, with or without a
grade separation.
Committee Chairwoman
Juanita Moe said she would
like to see anyone concerned
about bike trails attend the meet·
ing to help firm up the plans for
the new trail.
•
Dole
Visit s
'Nix o n'
SPRINGFIELD. Mo. (AP> -
"What can you do? You can't
cover up the mailbox," moaned
Bob Dole's advance man; and the
Republican vice presidential
candidate went ahead and vilited
a farmer named Nixon.
"He's not related to that other
fellow,'' said Dole. "I want to
make that perfectly clear."
The last line was often used by
that other fellow.
Despite some of bis campaign
workers who were upset to tear
that local Dole supporters had
scheduled the visit, Dote spoke'to
about ISO persons inside the
farmer's barn. It was raining
outside. Dole praised President
Ford's farm policy.
Although most of the schedu1·
ing foulups that plagued Dole's
campaign in the early days have
been eliminated. he cootinues to
encounter a fe w rough spots
along the campaign trail.
Aides on bis campaign jet
grimaced when they learned that
Dole's first stop today was a visit
to the "Nixon farm" in Spr-
ingfield.
Jt was just a coincidence. The
farm ls owned by George Nixon,
a prominent farmer in the area
who is not related lo the resigned
president. But that dJdn't keep
Dole's aides from groaning
anyway.
Irvine's Fall
Rec Program
Shows Boost
Receipts for this fall's recrea-
tion program in Irvine totaled
$15,067 -almost Sl,000 more
than last year's receipts for the
fall classes.
Participation, however, was
nearly the same for both years, wiih '1ast year recording 1,149
Vd• uc:1pants and lhis year draw·
ing 1, 134 recreation enthusiasts.
According to Irvine Recreation
Supervisor Froome Gayle, the
most popular offerings this fall
were the specialist classes
($11,190 receipts, 611 partici-
pants), tennis ($1,980 and 192
participants). flag football
($1.6SO and 300 participants) and
karate ($247 and 31 participants).
The firm will be paid e1ghl per.
cent of the first million dollars,
s even percent of the s econd
million and six percent of the re-
maining cost of the construction
project.
GIVE YOURSELF A
NEW FIGURE FOR FALL
Candidates' Views
Press Barred
At Adamson
Jury Picking
Improving your figure is more than just losing weight. Since two people who
: weigh the same can look so different. The Lillian Ballard Method handles each
lady on a personal basis.
Aired in Encounter
Candidate Robert Badham
said the major issues are sur·
j; vi val of the two.party system and
putting an end to government de-ficit spending.
; Candidate Vivian Hall said
~ there are three major issues.
: honesty in government. full
, employment and protection of ~ the environment.
On those differing notes.
Republican Badham and
Democrat Mrs. Hall, candidates
, in the 40th Congressional Dis-
; trict, began their debate Monday
: night at Saadleback College In
; Mission Viejo.
: They were the second half of a
: debate doubleheader sponsored
• by the League of Women Voters.
: Part one or the encounter turned
":out to be a one-man debate when
",: Republican Assembly candidate
• : James Slemons failed to make it
: to the starting blocks for his
; scheduled encounter with
\Democrat Ron Cordova.
But the interplay among can-.
OAANOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
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n-Hlt-lfllor ,..._ ... __... Me_ ..... _
0.-IH ... lMt ~r ... 11 A\\ht•m Mlt-""l<lf._.
Ofnoet C01t1-:J>OW.•l ... M..-l b_ .... ft, u .. o_,..."_' ~~:.~~!'W~~~ •• Mn 01 ... ,_.,
T...,tloM ff14)~
CHlllfled Advertlelftt "'2>5'7'1
._..(, Vtllff "-Otfi<t
llt1..,10
,, .... ~ci.-
4tf.Ot)O
c.y.'1:: "" Or-CN\l _,..,.,.. c;e.... ::r .... , ... :.s.::ri::'n.~=r.i=~ :!':'~~
,..., .. .,o• •llft•vt •Mt•tl Mtftllui. " ~-Ste-tlOh ............ ao ~·· ..... . C..IU•rn'• Si19tl\Ct••h•t\ ... t•"·~ w .. fflifo"tMJ Oy m.1111 l• 'f ,...,.,,_,, MU11•'Y -l-..... U ,.,_,~1y
didates that was missing from
the Slemons-Cordova non.
debate was present when
Badham and Mrs . Hall
responded to newsmen's ques-
tions.
Mrs. Hall hit on the honesty in
government issue when she
lamented 40th District
Congressman Andrew Hinshaw·s
status as a convicted felon since
the first of the year.
Referring to Hinshaw's inabili
ty to vole since being sentenced
to state orison. Mrs. Hall called
his role in Congress "taxation
withoutrepresentationinlhe40th
District."
She called for full employment
as a means of fighting inflation ·
and said anti-trust laws should be
vigorously enforced as a way to
reduce s kyrocketing interest
rates.
And when she hit on the en-
vironmental protection theme,
Mrs. Hall suggested that the na·
tion should devote more of Its
energies to providing the
technology needed to rid the na·
lion of environmental blight.
FroMPage A J
SMOKING ••
Weatherman, lS, Bill Adkins, 14,
and another youth witb the
cigarettes. He told them they
could have two swata with a pad·
d1e or eat the tobatto they .,,ere carrying.
The unidentified boy cbo8e the
paddle, but Terry and BUI
divided tbe tobacco from 18
citarettes and aw allowed ii.
Both soon began to vomit, their
parents a aid.
Mn J William Adkins said she
took BUI to a doctor 20 miles
away that nl1bt aft.er he be1an
1plttln1 up b•ood. Sha sald lelta
showed be bad a small ulcer,
which doctors aaid hid been de-
veloping over a Jone period but
eould have been mad. wane by
the tobacco.
She and ber hUlbaod are
threatenlnc legal act.ion aaainst
the school.
' ,
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -The .
trial of John Harvey Adamson,
charged with murdering in·
vestigative reporter Don Bolles,
entered its second day of jury
selection today with trial re·
porters locked out.
A panel of 82 prospective jurors
underwent an airport·style metal
detector search as they entered
the heavily guarded courtroom
of Superio r Court Judge
Frederick Heineman.
In a hectic opening day Mon·
day, Heineman intensified
security precautions and ordered
reporters barred from the
seventh floor of the courthouse
while a jury is being selected.
Bolles, a reporter for the
Arizona Republic, was mortally
injured June 2 when a bomb
ripped through his car.
Witnesses have said that
before Bolles died 11 days later.
he said, "Find John Adamson."
On Monday. without saying
why, Heineman dismissed the
first set of 100 prospective jurors
and moved the triaf to a smaller
court.room.
"Ladies and genUemen, we've
had a misunderstanding," he
told them. '
Fro•Page A J
CORDOVA
port, Cordova said he expects to
be able to work within any
framework available to him.
The Democralic candidate
called for repeal of the business
inventory tax and said tbe
homeowners' exemption on pro-
perty tuea should be increased
to S,S,000 ind, tor senior citizens,
to$7,500.
He also sald welfare and ed~atioo costs should be shifted
away from property taxes.
"We have to start taxing on the
ability to pay. not accumulated
paper wealth," Cordova said.
The Democratic candidate
said be favors capltal punish· ment ln some casts, opposes
Proposltlon 14 and favors
Proposition 2 as the beat way to
pre.serve coastal arus wlthout
penall&lnl COHt landownen.
U•an lallcrd
t~:Tty-~
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Tuesday's
Closing Prices NYSE-COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
Tu0$d11y Oetobor 19 1976 l /N !>All Y PILOT 4 l:J
1"1"!re Lures
Del Monte ~orp.
Prunes Its Cans
Del Monte Corp., \he nation's largest c<1nncr oC frwta
and vegetables. has decided It's tlmc to concentrate it•
energies where it makos the most money Aa 11 result1t wdl.
over \he next lour years. pbaso out many or the items 1n 1~
extensive lineup So II
you happen to be a de
votee of the Del Monte
product that has low
consumer appeal. you
may soon fmd 1t missing
from the grocery shelf.
The San Fl'anc1sco·
Money
Tree
• based company packs such a wide wide variety or products
in such a wide variety of styles and sites that it has more
than 300 items m its hneup.
FINANCIAi.. ANALYSTS AT DEL Monte will scrutinize
th.is arr'lY to deterrrune which are expendable How much
demand 1s there for sweetened orange 1wce, a'pncot nectar,
cnnkle style cul beets and early garden spmach7 And 1s 1t
really necessary to pack 29 styles and sizes or canned
pineapple? This pineapple roster, for example, includes the
following
Four sites ot crushed pineapple, three sizes of pl.neap·
ple chunks, three sizes of pme.11pple tidbits. five sizes ot
illced pineapple, four sizes of unsweetened pineapple jwce,
three sizes of crucbed pineapple m its own JWCe, three sizes
of-pineapple chunks m its own Juice. and four sbes of sliced
pineapple in its own juice
The Del Monte examination will~ ruthless Richard 0
Landis, president Of the company, said the aim IS to "redUC8
our inventory burden, increase turnover and Improve over ..
all profit margins " This way of looking at the world, he
pointed out, "demands mtellectual d1sc1pline, the ability to
make dec1s1ons based on the facts. on a reasoned judgment
of what s best for the corporat1on rather than on lrad1t1ona1
biases or mtu1l1on
THE KEY PHRASE IS. "WHAT'S best for the corpora·
lion "
Previously 1t may have been appropriate for Del Monte
to rely on "tradiUonal biases or mtwt1on" and pack Polish
style dill pickles or Mary Washington all green asparagus
salad Ups. even though the potenlial markets were not
huge, at least some consumers would be interested m buy·
ingthem
However. Del Monte now plans to look at each product
run from its standpoint How does the company make out'
Del Monte's product overhaul w1as prompted by the
dramatic change m the company's makeup dunng the past
five years In terms of where the company 1s makmg its pro-
fits today, it's no longer simply a processor of f<><>ds for the
United Stales mark et
FfVE YEARS AGO U.S. processed roods accounted tor
86 percent of Del Monte's profits This year the percentage
of profits der1 ved from this source 1s 43 percent
What happened' Two things Del Monte got Into the
fresh fruit bus10ess -bananas and pineapples -and while
this segment represents only 12 percent of 1ts sales volume,
1t pumps m 26 percent ol profita Second, Del Monte round
that overseas markets can be much more profitable than
the domestic market Jn 1971, Del Monte secured only 8 per-.
cent of its profits from overseas sales Today, it gets SO per
cent of its earnines offshore. even though foreign sales ac·
count for only 27 percent of total sales volume
Del Monte is impressed with those figures Why mess
around with a Oock of slow-moving canned fruits and
vegetables, which langwsh on the shelves or A&P and
Safeway, when you can be out selling bananas and pmeap-
ples to the Japanese consumer -and make much more
money for your effort?
That's why Del Monte Corp is prumng its line
Stock Prices Recover
After Early Wsses
NEW YORK CAP) -Stock prices turned mixed today,
erasing most of the market's early decline
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, down
throughout most of the session, shown a gam or 3 41 to949 37.
But dechnmg issues contmued to hold a alight edge
over advances on lhe Big Board Trading was fairly hght
Brokers said the market's decline reflected wornes
about the pause in economic growth
DoacJ 011es Ave rage• St.~1!/u 111 The
Spot.light
Netc 't'ork Sale•
Due to late transmission
today's llstlng wlll not
appear in the Dally Pilot
lt'hac .fit~lu Did
NEW YORK IAPI
Sflmbol•
_. ........ -
.4J.f OAIL Y PILOT Tuesday,0Ctober 19. 1978
THE FAMILY CIRCU •. By Bil Keone
"It's o vest. Daddy wears it when he needs
more pockets."
Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will
cut red tape. getting the answers and action you
need to solve inequities in government and busi·
ne1s. Moil your questions to Pat Dunn At Your
Service. Orange Coast Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 1560,
Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Include your telephone
number. The column appears daily except
Saturdays.
11..U•ted A rea Code• 80flflle
DEAR PAT: I would like to know what Ma Bell
suggests to solve the problem I've just experie.nced.
I had occasion to place a direct dial long distance
business call to a firm in Whitestone, N.Y. I did not
know this firm's phooe number and I planned to dial
Whitestone's area code plus 555-1212 to ask the as-
sistance of the long distance information operator. I dutifully looked m lbe phone directory to see if
Whitestone's area code was listed. It was not, so I
dialed the operator and asked her to fmd out what it
was for me. I was told that the area code could not
be provided because the routing operator didn't
have it listed. I was asked to name a nearby large
city. I had no idea in what part of New York
Whitestone is located so I could not name a nearby
city. The operator could give no further assistance
until I could name a nearby city. I had to sit down
and go through my almanac until I located a major
city with a similar zip code. It was Brooklyn, so
naturally, I dialed area code 212 followed by
555-1212 and found that Whitestone indeed was in
the 212 area code. I cannot understand why the
obone company can't provide the area code of a city which bas a eost office and zip code.
A. D., Costa Mesa
A Pacific Telepboae Co. spokesman said that
lite aolutloD to thh problem la to dial lite ''main area·
• code" for the state in wblcb sac:b a mystery city ls
located. AYS baa experienced tbla problem muy
times ud •as •ad to raort to tbe zip code metbod
teo. Many states have ae"eral area codes ud one
area code operator will not contact another area
code in the same state If tbe requested city ls not in
Ids or her area. U would be convenient If the phone
c:ompany also bad zip code references for cities so
tmall tbat tbey are not i.nc:laded in the area code la·
fol"Dlatlon Ust.
• fAJf1 RolU11g Sa.,e• lfloaq
DEAR PAT: Althougbwe'vebeenexperienclng our usual hot October days, cool nights are on the
way. I've been told by a neighbor that you have a re·
clpe for news paper logs for wood-burning
fireplaces. Could you repeat this for me? I'~ very
Interested after just having checked the pnce of
real fire wood. T.B., Costa Mesa
Southern California may not have '1lslble
seasonal changes comparable to those "back
East," bat there are regular indlcatlons that sum·
mer baa tamed to fall agal.D. The newspaper log re·
dpe bas been requested by readers each fall since It
was fint pabllabed ID lt73. Thia recipe must work
well because no readers have ever said otberwi.le.
U there are any saggesUons for Improvement, let
AYS know. The followtag ls the method: fold
DeWspapen l.Dto l·foot loag, ~ l.Dcb thick sections;
IOak ovemlgbt In water and detergent solution; roll
aromtd 1-l.Dch rod, squeeze oat ezcesa water and
amoodl aides; slide off rod and stand to let dry.
Personnel Chief
Wins Promotion
Jose Sandoval, personnel specialist with the
south county branch of the Orange County Recruit·
meat and Placement Center, has been promoted lo
human relations specialist in Santa Ana.
Krishna Case Growi.ng Complicated
NEW YORK CAP) -~ DisL Al
ty. Nicholas 1''erraro says be is trying lo
tmd out where the money goes that the
orange-robed members or the Hare
Krishna sect collect in their begging
bowls.
"We have reason to believe the money
ls not going where it is lnteoded," be said
Monday.
THE AMOUNT, COLLECl'ED around
the country. was estirmted at hundreds
ofthousands or dollars a year.
The 'monks.· wh06e beads are shaved
to top.knots, beg on street comers and
even on the steps of such churches as St.
1bomas Episcopal on Fifth Avenue.
Eddie Shapiro, 23, whom the Queens
prosecutor claims was brainwashed by
lbe Met, said the toP-b>ot wu ''for
Kriaboa to pull us up ii we start sinking
in the Ma ot materialism."
ftD PATIICK, WOO claims to have
deprogrammed 1,000 )'OW1I people. Is
wanted by Ferraro as a material witness
since be once worked on Sbaplro.
Patrick i.a servinl a ~year sentence
in California on Orange County charges
be illegally tried to fon:e two young peo-
pJe out or the Hare Krishna a1alnst their Will.
Asst. Diat. ,Alt. Michael Schwed said
he would seek a court order to bring
Patrick here.
MERYLEE KRESHOWER, 23, or
Fresh Meadows, Queens. ls being held in
$50,000 bail as a material witness.
Scbwed said she spends most ol her time
in her motel room ·'chanting up a
storm.''
K.reahower. Shapiro and Patrick are wanted to testify a1ainst two of the sect's
New York leaders indicted by a grand
jury on charges of boldin& the two yo~
people unlawfully.
They are Harold Conley , 2S,
supervisor of women at tbe Jsokoo Tem·
ple, and Angus Murphy, 2.2, president of
the temple.
SHAPIRO WAS BA<X living at the
temple Monday after lawyers from the
American Civil Liberties Union
threatened to sue South Oaks HospltaJ in
Amityvllle ii it admitted the youth for
court-ordered treatment ol diabetes and
mental tests.
an extra 7.50
ur l.R.A. • DIDg
or gh this month
For Any Self-Employed Person
Open your Keogh account this month and Fidelity Federal
will waive the usual $7.50 annual Trustee Fee for 1976
charged by most savings and loans and banks. Set aside up
to $7,500 of earned income each year exempt from current
federal Income taxes and $2,500 of California state income
tax . Interest earned also exempt from income taxes until
withdrawn in retirement years.
SAVE $7.50 -No197STruateeFH
l.R.A. 's
(Individual Retirement Accounts)
For Any Employed Person
Open your IRA this month and Fidelity Federal will waive
the usual $7.50 annual Trustee Fee for 1976 charged by
most savings and loans and banks. If not already covered by
a qualified retirement plan. set aside up to $1 ,500 earned in·
come each year exempt from current federal and California
Income taxes. No current tax on interest earned, either.
. EXTRA BONUS:
Fldellty Federal pays 7'ii % (equal to 1.08%
compounded dally) on
•ny bal•nce l.R.A.
SAVE EVEN MORE BY· USING THE VALUAl.E COUPONS BROW
FREE MONEY
ORDERS
Send funds safely through
the mail using these FREE
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of bills or for merchandise
FREE NOTE
COLLECTIONS
OTHER FREE SERVICES
Sandoval had coordinated the south county job
service since November, according lo Johann
Schenk, publicity director. His work included job
development,co'1D8ellng,testingandplacement. ·----------------------------------___ .,! ___ ..; ______________________________ _
.. ...
SCHENK SAID THE COUNTY is seeking San·
dOval's replacemenL
The Recruitment and Placement Cente r
rates with the Capistrano-Laguna Regional
Occupational Program CROP>
in placing graduates in jobs. In
retwn, the ROP furnishes the
center office space at 26800 Ac·
jacbema St. in San Juan
Capistrano.
Schenk said more than 1,000
persons have been served by the
• center since it opened in Nov·
ember.
SANDOVA\. SANDOVAL COUNSELED
clients to pursue career training, rather than
MUllq for Jobs offertnc little penonal satisfaction,
NidScbenk.
He was also woridng wt1h S.ddleback College
• lldminlltrators to Improve and expand programs
for Spanlsb-speaklq students.
• '
... •
Kiwanis Tap Wickman
Paul Wickman. ""'1· u president of tbe
dent of W l ct man K:Swanls Club of Newport
Pharmaceutical Co., Beach. JDc.. bu been lnatalled
.,
All these Values together with Nation 's Highest Interest Paid on Insured Savings.
---.......... ._.. .... _
FIDELITY
c7~SAVl•GS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATIOff
Bring In your coupons together with your passbook ·from any other savings
Institution. We 'll transfer funds, simply and easily. No bother to you ... no em-
barrassment. We'll handle all the details.
21 offices to se"e you statewide
COSTA MESA
NEWPORT BEACH
1855 Harbor Blvd.
645-4420·
-. . . .
7
Lag11na/SOuth Coast fternooa
N.Y. Stoeks
· ... l ..
OL. 69, NO. 293, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1976
CUSD
TENCENT~
Negotiations ·· Leader Blasts
By JACK CllAPPEIL Ol\MO•lly~ ... ~lt
A blistering attack on the con·
uct of wage and benefit negotia-
005 for 63S Capistrano Unified
chool District teachers was
aunched Monday by Tony Leon,
J>resldent of the Capistrano
Unified Education Association
<CUEA).
, "We are negotiating with an
obstructionist. He's ill-prepared,
he's stalling and the reason is
that he doesn't know what the
bell bas gone on in this district in
the past three years.•• Leon said.
In a hastily .called press con·
ference outside the Capistrano
Unified School District board ·
room, Leon told reporters the
district's $3S-an-hour private
consultant Kent Hall had too
many other business Commit·
ment.s wrucb limited negotiation
Saddlehaek College
Slemons Ducks
Cordova Debate
By GARY GRANVILLE
I Ol 11\• CUiiy f'llo4 St.if
A debate between Assembly
andldates Republican James
le mons and Democrat Ron
rdova turned into a one-man
ordova show Monday night
hen Slemons heeded the advice
C hJs attorney and bowed out.
!,-~~~~~~~~-
Shark Bites
Manin Leg
EUREKA (AP> -A
25-year-old McKinleyville
man says he was bitten by
a 10-foot blue sh4rk while
diving south of Trinidad,
the Humboldt County
sheriff's department re·
ports.
William Kennedy told
deputies he had a run-in
with the ferocious creature
Monday. He was treated
at a local hospital for a
S~·inch cut in his leg that
was .an inch d~e_p, lhe re·
port said.
.,Fence Death
1 Trial Delayed
Till Nov. 8
A preliminary hearing has
been delayed until Nov. 8 jn the
case of a Laguna Niguel man
booked on murder charges after
an 18-month-old girl died on an
electnc ware rigged around a
nower bed lo protect it from cat!>
and dogs.
Daniel G. Guzman, 32. of 29821
Paseo de Ocaso was to have had
a preliminary bearing Monday at
the South County Municipal
Court in Laguna Niguel.
The hearing, to determine if 1 evidence exists to warrant a
&tperior Court trial. was put o((
at the request of Guzman's al·
t.omey.
The case stems from the death
of Kelly M. Mc Mullen, 29801
Paseo de Ocaso on Aug. 15. The
1 chUd died when s he touched a
high voltage line placed around
the flower bed, authorities said.
The child father, Michael
McMullen. attempted to revive
the girl. but she was pronounced
dead on arrival al the hospital.
The announcement of SJemons'
last-minute withdrawal from the
League of Women Voters·
sponsored debate drew hoots and
laughter from a standing-room·
only crowd in a campus lecture
hall at Saddleback College.
Orange Coast League Presi..·
dent Va lerie Murley said
Slemons' attorney. John D.
Cochran, told her he advised
his client "not to appear in public
discussion until an investigation
now under way is completed,
probably in about one week's
time."
Mrs. Murley said Cochran did
not specify either the subject or
target of bis investigation.
But today the Irvine attorney
admitted he has hired in·
ve.sliutors "to check out certain
facets" of recent news stones in
the Santa Ana Register alleging
that Slemons:
-While in Germany recently
mailed to himself in Ne~rt
Beach two porno~raphic books
that were later seized by U.S.
Customs agents under regula·
lions prohibiting the importation
of such material intotheU.S.
-In 1974 lost four reels of
pornographic movies to custom
agents after they were dis·
covered in his suitcase when he
returned from a trip abroad.
-Last spring lured Dale Scott
Lucas into the Republican
primary in the 74lh Assembly
District to undermine the can·
didacy of Marian Bergeson.
Today Slemons labeled the
news story "allegations based on
unknown sources" and said he
expects to have them all cleared
before the.Nov. 2 general election.
"I can assure you I have not re·
ceived a letter regarding two
books hidden away in an
automobile manual," said
Slemons.
Th e Newport Beach
Republican, who employs 92 peo·
pie al his Mercedes Benz
dealers hip , "many of them
Germans whose relatives and
homes are in Stuttgart.
'Tm not saying lhal any of
them mailed the books -if they
were mailed -but just that there
may be another answer," said
SJemons.
As for the alleged 1974 porno·
graphic material incident,
Slemons said, "that again is
based on allegations from so-
called informed sources.''
The 43-year·old auto dealer
flatly denied sponsoring the last·
<8" SLEMONS, Page A%)
County Planners
· Delay Housing Vote
1 Orange County planrung COQl·
m1.ss,ionen heard 90 minutes of
testimony on a proposed $28
million senior citizens bo\lslng
project near Laeuna Beach Mon·
day but tool DO a~Uon.
·,
Tbe commia1i00 delQed unUl
Nov. 9 making a decilioa to re·
commend acceptance ot rejec-
tion of. the zone cbanie ~to
deftlop a 1.285-Unit houalaa ~ Jec:t about 900 Jeet outside clt.Y
limit.a.
By then, a atudy diellCDed to
show if t.be units can be llOld ~
alilUcally for between $22,000 ••• ooo wm be completed.
Alreedr on record .. oPPOllnc thl Mlll•de dnelopment on-4 to ~ -. 1Mt •eek is the ua-a
Beach City Council.
An earijer support from the
Houslltf CoaUtion or Orange
County went into limbo because
ol the pending study.
In Iii letter to the commission
'the coallUOD said ... we sincerely hope tbaL you will Joln us in withbol~i~I a poaiUve poal·
ti~n. .. uoUI those atud.lu and othen are complete,.''
But the propo1ed 415·ure
MaTcroft project drew heavy
SUDoort (tom repreMlltatives ol
aeDiot cilluDI ll'O\lpl• ~Oftl those who spoke in
ravor ~ the projec.t were Jhl'y
Alnnrortb, Arnes Healy, Jlm "1an ucl Walter Seal I
(See SENIOU, Pase AJ)
sessions to once a week.
"At this rate, we'll be until
June eetUng a contract. We're
not willing lo wail," Leon said
angrily.
Leon uid the CUEA was dis·
tributing fiiers to teacMrs this
week asking them what they
wanted to do.
"We're asking, what kind of
action do you want us to take? Do
you want a s~e? Do you want
LO plcltet or what? Leon said.
Dr. Jerome Thornsley, district
superintendent, said today that
be h•d not officially been ap-
proacbed with complaints by the
teachers representatives.
He defended Hall, saying the
district negotiator was "a skilled
talented person with experience
far beyond any of our local peo. pie.
"Kent Hall did the negotiating
for the Reaean AdmiDistraUon
with the state employes. He
knows precisely wbat our'dlstrtct
bas done."
"AJJ these things <Leon's co~
plaints about delays) are new'to
me. U he feels all those things, he
ought LO say it to the negotiator,"
Dr. Thornsley said.
Teachers of the Capistraoo
Unified School District SO\llht
pay increases ranging from U to
30 percent as well as signiflcant
lncreasea in the dl.atrict's leave
policy, for lnsura.nee and N ·
duced class sizes.
'I'he school district estimated
the total package would cast $1.S
million in addition to the dis·
trict 's present $9.64 teacher
payroll.
Dr. Thornsley has said that the
district bas only $2.2 million with
(See A 'IT ACK, Page AZ>
g · Pernllts Cut Off
011e of 'Them'
This (ellow isn't a refugee from the movie
about the giant ants, he's· just a fire ant
magnified 160 times by a scanning elec-
tron microscope at the University of
Southern Mississippi. He's gained a new
lease on life with the banning of Mirex,
the only effective killer of the pest that
plagues Southern states.
Punished Pair
Sick; Parents
Rap Principal
HUME, Mo. (AP> When the
high school principal caught
three teen -age boys with
cigarettes in their pockets, he
gave them a choice of punish·
ment : take a paddling or eat the
cigarettes.
Two boys chose to eat a total of
18 cigarettes and have developed
health problems as a result, their
parents said Monday.
When the boys• mothers went
to a school board meeting to pro·
test, the board voted to uphold
the principal 's actions.
Board member J oe Brooks
said the principal's authority
would be damaged unless the
board supported him.
"I feel like iC the kids make up
their own mind, it'.s up to them,"
Principal Kenneth Hightower
said shortly arter the Incident
la.st month.
weet Vietory
Board Approves Candy Saks
CANDY ·s NOT DANDY -not according to some mem-
bers of the Capis trano Ul'Hfied School Dis trict board of
education. ·
Students or Niguel Hills Junior High and Marco Forster
Junior High had proposed to hold candy sales in December
LO raise funds ror,s.tudent activities.
Monday sc~ool board president, Dr. A. E. Westberg, a
dentist. objecled.•"So did Trustee Robert Hurst who suggest-
ed something else rather than candy be sold.
FINAL APPROVAL of the board was given, however,
on a 4·2 vote after Trustee Sarah Lipp suggested, tongue in
cheek, that the kids could "sell them a toothbrush along
with the candy."
Council Will Hear
Sireet Complaints
held on Forest A venue.
Other council business in·
eludes :
-Consideration of environ·
mental effects of a park proposed
Catch-up
Hiatus
Planned
· No applications for new con-
struction within the realm e>f
South Coast Regional Zone Com-
mission control will be accepted
for a S7·day hiatus when a
legislative gap soon puts tho.
agency in limbo.
Commission Executive Direc-
tor Mel Carpenter announced a~
a meeting Monday at the Hunt.,
ington Beach Civic Center that
Nov. lS is the cutoff date for ap~
plications.
Commissioners who have been
criticized both from without and
within their own ranks previous-
·. ly for bogged-down project ap-
plication processing will race t.o
· catch up in the meantime.
They agreed to meet in
emergency sessions Nov. 1, 3,
and 8 in an effort to clear up 396
pending appli~ations, us of
which require full-blown public
hearings to take any pro or con
testimony.
l.ocation ot these meetings is
yet to 'be determined, but it is
likely to be Torrance City Hall,
since most matters coming
before commissioners prior to
Nov. 15 involve Los Angeles
County matters.
A commission st.arr member,
however, said at Monday after·
noon•S' adJou-i-nment s he Uh·
derstood the meetings would be
in the Huntington Beach Civic
Center. The agency alternates
between the two locations.
Following the Nov. 15 appllca•
lion cutorr date, Jan. 12, 1977 is
the first date at which they may
be filed again for consideration
within the coming year.
Nothing unresolved before,
Nov. 15 can possibly be beaf'(\
before Feb. 7 and quite likely any
new applications med followin•
resumption or the commission's
work won't be heard until later. •
A 21-day delay is required by
law before commissioners may
consider an application for
anything involving new or re·
vised construction and buildlnt
within 1,000 yards of the
coastline.
Legislative terms of Proposi·
lion 20, which created the
California Coast a l Zone
Conservation Commission,
parent agency or the South Coast
Regional Zone Commission, ex·
pires at year's end.
Legislators agreed despite pro-
b I em s i nher ent in tile
bureaucracy and red tape the
system generated. the concept
has been a good one and its work
should be continued.
<See COASTAL, Page i\%) ,.. .
Coast = Hightower said he always of·
fered the same alternative to otl'l~r student~ who broke the rule
again.st carrying cigarettes, but
all bad chosen paddling.
Hightower caught Terry
Weatherman, 15, BUI Adkins, 14,
and another youth with the
·dlarettes. He told them they
Complaint.s by some downtown
Laguna Beach businesses about
"Okfoberfest-type" street a c·
tivities will be heard by the
Laguna Be a ch City Council
meeting Wednesday at city hall.
The council's regular business
(including the street activity
complaints) will begin at 4:30
p.m. Public hearings will begin
at7:30p.m .
·for Oro CaAyon in Arch Beach W h
Heights. A declaraUon hr the Ci· .eat er ...
could have two swats with a pad-
dle or eat the tobacco they were
carrying.
(See SMOKING, Page.\%)
Rock Slide Hits
The 38 owne r,s of major
downtown businesses have peti-
tioned the· council to end the
popular Forest Avenue street
even la.
"We do not feel we should be
subjected to the inconvenience,
: . rowdiness, the drunkenness, San Clemente Road deatructlon of proper\)' and UUer caund by theae undesirable
A small rock aUde propelled event.1,'1tbepetitiOl)reads.
debris Into both northbound lanes Tbe council wlll review the
of El Camino Re.al at Camino San cornpla.lnta and discuss a recom·
Clemente ln San Clemente this mendaUon. No actlon has been morntna. propo.ed.
Fut·•orkiDI 1treet aweepen Th Oktoberf Hl bei.an at the
brushed tbe few sizeable rocks to behest of downtown buatnessea t~ side of the roaa, endinC which sou•bt to ~ate foot
motoriata' uutlous eftorta to ltaffic In the area. ltia unknown
avo6d the rubble by awinctn1 U t.be mercbanti complaint.a app.
around It tbroa1b 1aJtet cl oppot· 11 u well to events auch u the tna trafl1c. • Lquna Craft Oulld showa 61.ao .. ~ ••
ty Council that the proJect will ffilh.s sn the mid 7~
have no adverse impact would peded through Wednesd
speed up the park's develor>.-> with continued ~ ment. , , · . . ~61 an.d m&11,tticte·fdK1
·&:l· i1f cloudf.\.. ·~"~·'· i "I! -Flnal ~c!tlori irrtPo:Sinl at~ ;.: INS.1.lBE" Te'd · hour parlung Hmit' Oil par , ·y . . .,,,, •
meters ln the downt°'*n b\aslJ\ess · 'Jtnlt&ri/.'• f•. o ,.. ~Id•
area. · :. •: · '. ;., . ~ oome /or c'Klldrni"'a"4 •
-ConstderatuSn ·ot CO$t& born of a coll•o• clo.sa
and resj>onse Umes ~ pro-• nutturtd bJ1 Ma. Mogozine. J
posed city contract iwlth tb:y bwtftt6r hol MWT '°°"it, be1fi11
Oranae County Fire Departm ! ,,,_., not griping. Su toilJI cd-
for paramedic service. Poge Al · ~ .. ~"~
Maneuvers Start .. .,..~ ! !!T,.. · ,. .,_ ..... 'Kii et_.... , A
~~::r. At ,_..., ~Wlfs t. BUDAPEST, Hungaey (AP) -
The Hunaarian army befan Joint
'maneuven Monday with SoVlet
troops atattoned In Hun11ry "in
accordanc. wltb the annual train·
ln1 pro1ram, .. the omclal
Runifrian new• agency MTI re·
porud well)'. . ·~ . ---.......... -.
t
.U *"-811Wwt A =-: t:°""''. o-..... ., . ...., •
DMellle41Ut At llec!IMlrhtt1rAt•1 • ....., .. _. AH~ \
.,__.. A11•U ~ ...._.... ., ....
............. Alf~,.._ .... .u.n .,
I . . •
~· .. AZ DAIL y PILOT L /SC Tucsday.Oetobett9,t97S -.-
I )Alone, He's Landed Insurance
Bill Lacks Cordova: 'Never Vote Party Line'•
Endorsing RepubUCln '14th A.ssemblJt can·
dldate James Slemons' last-
liJin ute retreat from his
achedu.Jed debate with Democrat Boo Cordova Monday nl&bt left
rdova alone on cemer stage for
_.., mlo.ute.s.
By the time Cordova used both
Jm and Slemon.1' time to OeJd
~questiooa from newsmen and the
lwerflow audience at Saddleback
College, be had earned himselI a
rousing round or appla~.
Tbe 29-year-old prosecuting al·
torney studiously avoided ~
his absent opponent's name.
lnstead, in all but two in·
stances be referred to Slemons
simpl1 as .. the auto dealer:•
* * *" ~ E ro#IPageAl
·~sLEMONS ••
·'· minute Lucas candidacy in the
June primary election, a can·
dldacy that deprived Mrs.
Bergeson of last place on the
ballot.
It is believed by some who deal
in political campaigns that next
to top spot on the baJJot. la.'it
place is tbe best position to at-
-tract voter attention.
1 Registrar of Voter records
show that Lucas filed his
nomination papers March 17,
the last candidate to do so in
the heated Republican 74th Dis-
1 trict primary.
t March 13 was the regular fit-
, ing deadline but because
Republican incumbent Robert
Badham abandoned his As-
sembly seat to run· for Congress,
the filing deadline in the 74th w as
beldopen toMarcbl7.
Slemons' woes with the al-·
Jeged pornographic episodes
and the Lucas candidacy mirror
a series or controversies that
have surrounded his campaign
since his 1,875-vote victory over
Mrs. Bergeson.
That victorious primary elec·
tioo campaign cost Slemons and
his backers $117,769, more than
twice the amount spent by Mrs.
Bergeson.
In campaign literature pro-
duced by the Arnold Forde-
Wtlllam Butcher-led campaign,
it was claimed that Slemons
v.ras:
, -A graduate of the Universi·
t y of California. Davis. !· -A close personal fciend of
U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater and
his son, Rep. Barry Goldwater,
'Jr. Later it was shown t bat
• Slemons only attended the un-
l".l · iversity and had not gradUated.
And a Goldwater letter said,
"I do not know Mr. Slemons or
if I do, I have forgotten meeting
hJm. My son said that he knows
him slightly but not well.
"I think, frankly, that his use
of our name in his campaign
literature .. extends normal
courtesy just a bit."
While ~he League was not told
of Slemons' withdrawal from
Monday night's debate unW 20
minutes before it was to begin.
the candidate's attitude, at
least, was known to the press
by mid·anernoon.
Jn press releases band-
delivered to newspaper offices, "~emons said, ''Until this in·
vestigat1on bas been concluded,
my attorneys have advised me
not to discuss this matter
further and not to participate 1n
any public discussion."
Slemons• news release :ic·
cused Democrat Cordova of
a>nductirig .. the grossest. most
vicious srnear campaign i n
Orange County history."
However , the aJJegations
Slemons complained or were
made in newspaper articles and
Cordova denied having anything
to do with their publlcaUon.
Surplus E xpected
SACRAMENTO CAP) -
California will close its fiscal
year with a $509.9 rnllllon surplus
despite the fact it will spend
, $245.2 mUlion more I.ban it tak~
in, a state report says.
OAANOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
1
At that. ••tJ»e aato ctealer'" wasn•t mentlo~ed often as
Cordou's rapid ·rtre comments
and anawus ran1ed over a broad
.area ot public ilsues. ·
Before bis 40 minutes were·
used up, lbe candidate had given
his capsule views on tax reform.
criminal juattce, medical
malpractice, education, boualng
and the lot of a DemOCTatic at·
large in an assembly di.strict that
is heavily Republican.
"l will never vote the party
line," Cordova said as be
mlnlmised hi.I alfiliatJoo with the
Democratic Party. "I will be the
repreuntaUve of the '14th As·
sembly District and not the
Republlcan or De111ocratic
parties.''
Cordova said be has not re-
ceived financial support from the
Democratic Party and "owes it
nothing."
When asked by a member of
the audience how, if elected, he
expects to gain committee al>"
pointments without party sup·
port, Cordova said be upects to
be able to work within any
framework available to him.
The DemocrAtic candidate
F r,,_ Page Al
SMOKING ••
The unidenWied boy cb05e the
paddle, but Terry and Bill
divided the tobacco from 18
cigarettes and swallowed It.
.Both soon began to vomit, their
parents said.
Mn. William Adkins said she
took 'Bill to a doctor 20 miles
away that night after he began
spitting up blood. She said tests
showed be had a small ulcer,
which doctors said had been de·
\lelopine over a Jong period but
could have been made worse by
the tobacco.
She a nd her husband are
threatening legal action against
the school.
Mrs. William Weatherman
said Monday that Terry has been
sent home from school three
times recently because of illness.
She said she is awaiting results of
medical tests.
The incident in this town of 350
bas sparked criticism from
health experts around the coun-
try.
"That's a very dangerous!orm
of punishment." said Dr. Paul
Larsen, a pharmacology expert
who studies erfects of tobacco at
the Medical College ot Vll'ginia in
Richmond.
Dr. George Wise, director of
the poJsoo control center at
Children's Mercy Hospital int
Kansas City, Mo .. said he knows
of cues of people dying after be-
ing injected with nicotine to rid
• them of certain diseases.
Dr. Daniel Horn. director of
the National ClearinJhOuse.for.
Smoking aoa Health 10 Atlanta,
said that swallowing tobacco
could be harmful, but bad no re-
cord of anyone dying from it.
Fr~Page AI
COASTAL ••
New legislation required to
establlah the governmental agen-
cy, however, was not passed in
time to p revent the gap between
expiration of the present or-
ganization and creation -on
paper-of its identical successor.
•·u we took an application for
just a single family home now,
the first of February would be the
first time it could possibly be
heard,•• a coastal commission
aide confirmed tod ay.
SUch an application can next
be received and filed for com-
mission action Jan.12 and if not
treated as an administrative
1tem under Its blanket consent
c.alendar, it must be heard later.
Consent calendar items are
generally non·controverslal and
mei!t all or most criteria de.
manded of local, county and/or
state buJlding and development
requirements.
Commlsslon Cbalrman Jody
Rosener, of Newport Beach,
warned it will be intolerable if an
attempt is not made to clear up
all or as much as possible of the
396-item backlog in the mean·
time.
Cotrlmlssioner Elerth Erickson
pointed out it probably won't be
cleared up because in the put.
action has averaged only 10
public bearings per day.
Coastal commission otiseners
and members predicted two re-
s u tt s of the sudden bog·
pg-down of tbe en\'iranmeotaJ protect.ion puel'a activities ln
carrying out lts lectsJat.ed duties.
Faced with Jost time and ln· creued financial outlay on pro-
jectl acbed llled wit h the
Southland's rainy season loom-
in•aofe builders may take leaal
action to force post-Nov. 15 ac~
tlon.
Commissioners may al.lo ln the
meanUme act wtth such llatte
standard& of dev~a.ent \My ~ appointed to Id will be
lowtftd to clean or Lbeir meet-inl aaendaa. By \be lime the panel reawues
action ID 1m. ll ll ~they wQI bave • bacldo1 rouahly lekn-
tJcal to th c:urreaUI& proJecta to
conslder.
eaDed tor repeal of tbe 1*llneu
lnvenlory tax and said the
homeowners' exemptioo on pro-
perty taxes ebooJd be, in~
to ss.ooo and, for seoloc' ciUa.ens,
to$7,500.
He also said welfare and
education costs should be shi.fted
away from property lax•.
''We have to start taxtng on the
ability to pay, not accumulated
paper wealth," Cordova said.
The Democratic candidate
Hid be favors capital punlab·
ment in some cases, oppoees
Propoaitloo 14 and favors
Proposition 2 as the best way to
preserve coaatal areas without
penaHztng coast landowners.
II Price Right
DtllVl'llOt~ .......
ALL BY HIMSELF
Democrat Cordova
8y LAURIE KASPER
Oltl1tO.llyf'I .......
A national healt.b ln:surance bill
belne considered ln Congress
currently lacks the endorsement or both candidates in the 40th
Congressional District race.
The Democratic candidate, Vi·
vian Hall. was asked directly
whether she would vote for this
DemocraUc bm during a meeting ot the Kiwanis Club oC Miss.ion
Viejo this morning.
She replied tba( she would vote
fo~ it only if it is proven to be both
cheaper and more efficient than
the pre)lent insurance system.
··1 have a lot of doubts," she
said. But she added that she 1s in-
t erested in doing somet hing
aboul the country's medical
care.
...........
Muri"fl i'n Triallflle
X marks the spot where
590-f oot Panamanian cargo
ship went down in tbe
"Bermuda Triangle," ab6ul
140 miles west of Bermuda.
Searchers are continuing
their efforts to find the
37-man crew.
Saddleback Views
New Campus Site
But. Assemblyman Robert
Bad.ham, her Repu~can oppo-
nent, contended the government
can't provide health insurance
cheaper than that offered by
private enterprise.
1f it is cheaper, he said; then it
is subsidized by the taxpayer.
From Page A l
ATTACK •••
which to meet all teacbet' de-
mands.
..Things are starting to heati
up. I don't think that's what the
board of education intended. If
so, then they are not negotiatlnC
in good faith," Leon said.
Saddlebaclc College trustees
agreed Monday that they will
condemn the 20 acres ofJand they
want for a northern campus site
if the price of tbe property is
right.
The trultees unanimously
passed a resolution authorizing
eminent domain over the Irvine
Company's land near the in·
tersection of Myford Road and
Bryan Avenue. However, they
said it won't be acted on until
after they are given appraisals
on the property.
"Uthe price ~ too high, we're
not going to do it," said Norris a
Brandt, president.
The trustees had expected to
have the price estimates Mon-
day. But Superintendent Robert
Lombardi said the appraisers
won't give them a price unW ear·
ly next month.
The trustees obviously were
disappointed. ''Can't yo\l build a
fire under t hose g\(yS at all,"
asked Trustee Larry Taylor.
Lombardi said he has already
tried to push the appraisers but
he's been unsuccessful.
.. My understanding of ap-
praisals is minimal but I'm
learning," he said ... One of the
thlngs l 'm learning is that they
don't move very fast."
· He told the trustees that their
resolution is "telling the w<>rld"
that the district is still interested
in that site. He said nothing will
be done in the process unW the
appraisal is given and approved.
Condemnation proceedings are
necessary to save the Irvine
Laguna Beach
Permits Hit
$1.1 Million
The city of Laguna Beach is·
sued 46 building permits during
September valued at$1.l million,
up from $264,000 in permits in
September last year.
Accord.log to a report from the
d e partment o{ municipal
servJce, permits for 13 single
family residences and one duplex
were issued with a combined
valueof$1 mlllion.
The remaining amount cov·
ered permits for alterations, ad-
ditions and miscellaneous pro-
jects.
This year through September,
352 permits valued at $6,089,162
have been issued by the city.
compared to 347 permits valued
at $6,014,226 for the sarne period
inl975.
From Page Al
SENIORS •••
They insisted the project Will
help senior citizens aaJn op-
portunity for moderate cost hous·
ing.
They abo scoffed at sugges-
tiooa the proposed development
ls nothing more than a de·
veloper's scheme to goin land
use approval in the name or
senior citizens.
Company from paying a penalty
when the land is pulled out or its
current agriculture preserve
status. Without this action, cot:
lege officials said, the pureba.se
probably would be more difficult
and costly.
Trustees have said they want
classes offered at the northern
site by September.
Trustees a lso approved a con·
tract f,"11 the arcbitectural
services 01 William Blurock and
Partners of Newport Beach.
The agreement, which trustees
specified is not to be considered
as an exclusive contract, says the
college intends to employ the
firm, which has designed recebt
campua construction, for the
master plan and a building com-
plex on the satellite site.
The architects may also be
called upon to do some work
needed to move some buildings
on the existing campus, convert
the library to administrative of-
fices and classrooms and other
projects which may be designat·
ed by the trustees.
Tbe firm will be paid eight per-
cent of the first million dollars.
seven percent of the second
million and six percent of the re-
maining cost of the construction
J>l'O)~t.
The candidates were also
asked about the cost of subsidiz·
ing the postal system.
One way of cutting costs here,
said Badham, will be lo
eliminate the bulk mail permit
which subsidizes the people who
want to fiJI tbe mail box with
"junk." He said the charge
should be the actual cost of mail·
ing.
Mrs. Hall suggested that costs
can be cut by automating much
of the system.
A retiree asked the candidates
what they would do to assbt the
person on a fixed income who is .
faced with · her taxes.
''We have s1 ply got to reduce
our expendit res," Badham replied.
At the same time Congress in·
creased social security by 6 1
percent, he said, "They were re-
aching right around in your
pocket in the backside or
Congress and reducing the value
or your dollars you had left, if you
had one left."
He said the government can't
initiate new programs without
new taxes.
· Mrs. Hall called for some kind
of property tax relief for senior
citizens.
During a portion of t be
teacher's talk, he directed a
personal slur at Hall, but then
quickly retracted it calling him
an "obstructionist" instead.
He said that after two sessions,
.. we're still at ground zero."
Another session was scheduled
for today, then Oct. 28 and again
Nov.3.
"There's a certain momentum
to neeoUations. Every Ume we
reach that. he <Hall) bas to get on
an airplane and fly to
Sacramento."
Dr. Tbornsley questioned the
propriety of Leon's statements
suggesting the teachers or·
ganization was conducting a
media blitz.
"Ir they have complaints, they
ought to go to the negotiator. It
they do that and it doesn't work.
they ought to come to me. Going
<Urectly to the press with this
leaves one with a big question
mark," Dr. Thornsley said.
The Capistrano Unified School
District has 17,330 students in 12
elementary, two junior highs and
two high schools.
GIVE YOURSELF A
NEW FIGURE FOR FALL
Improving your-figure is more than just losin51 weight. Since two people who
weigh the same can took so different. The Lillian Ballard Method handles each
lady on a personal basis.
Lfllm lallcrd
~!w~ -.-..ll.-"W'nnivers ary
HOW DOES YOUR
FIGURE RATE?
•Is your waistline slim?
•Curves in the right proportions?
•Thighs arms trim and shaply?
if not ••• let Lillian Ballard make some
wonderful changes
i
CALL NOW FOR
Your Co~imentary
Figure Analysis
631-2444
$ Speeial
SAVE 10% ~
UMITED ./no Strenuous Exercise
./ no Shots or Pills
However, Deputy Count y
Counsel R.a lph BenU<>n said
there is no way to guarantee the
J>TOPOSed unill will be put on the '
market ln the propoeed price
range witbout aomo form of eov-
ern.ment involvement.
~iOFFIR ./ Nutritional Guidance
./ no Disrobing
./ Improved Posture
./ 1 O years experience
Bent.on Hld hll Nmub did not necessarU1 mun a 1&ab-
aidiled houlln• procram.
Fames Clear Romes
CLIFFORD, Mich. (AP) -
Some 2,SOO peuons were
evacuated fron> their homes
Monday wben a railroad tanker
cll1")in1 a toxic chemical de-nlled and ex&>lodect, Lapeer
County authoritJes aaid. Ne~ly
all returned to their hornet by
midday, aft er otftclals de-
tennloed tbat. f\unes h"om Ute
burn ln 1 chem ical were not
duaerou.a. acei>t in cloee coo-
t.ad..
,
SALON HOURS:
Mon.-Frl. 8 a.m . ..a p.m.
Sat. 9 a.m.•3 p.m . --
~d/talt, €atttwt.
l
Orange Coast
11 EDITION
Toda~·'s lo~in g
N. Y. S t o<-k s
r. \, .
I VOL. 69, NO. 293, 2 SECTIONI 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1976 C T6N CENT;'
•
:Mesa's 3rd Road Plan 'Expensive'
ONE·WAY TRAFRC IN OOWNTOWN COSTA MESA?
Southbound on Newport; NGrthbound on Orange Avenue
Forum Today
Congressional Race
Hot Along Coast
By J OANNE REYNOLDS
Of-Oelly Plk14SbH
The battles for the seats in the
74th state Assembly District and
the 40th Congressional District
continued today with a three·
candidate forum in Newport
Beach.
Democrat Vivian Hall and
Republican Bob Badham, both
-vying for southern Orange Coun·
ty's congressional seal and
Democrat Ron Cordova, who is
running for Badham's old seat in
the state Assembly, appeared
before the Women's Civic
League of Newport Beach.
The forum, which included
some discussion or election is-
sues, ended in a debate over
campaign tactics and the miss·
ing candidate. Republican Jim
Slemons.
Cordova won laughter and ap-
plause from the audience of
about 40 people when he
declared , "I'm not the
Democratic candidate for the
74th; l'm not the Republican can-
didate• I'm the only canc:tida~. ''
Cordova described Slemolls as
* * *
contemptuous and arrogant and
called the Newport auto dealer's
campaign disgusting.
Badham, who said after the
meeting that he supports all
Republican candidates regard-
less of bis personal opinion o(
them. did not defend bis fellow
Republican.
Badham was busy defending
hlmselt against Mrs. Hall's at·
tacks.
During a question and answer
period, a member of the au-
dience raised a question about
the firm of Butcher and Forde, a
public relations organization that ,
works on political campaigns. ~
When Bad ham began to
answer the question, drawing an'
analogy that included himself.
Mrs. Hall and Cordova, Mrs. Hall
interrupted him.
She stressed lhat she bas never
employed the Cirm nor had
Cordova. She pointed out that
Badham had used the firm dur-
ing his primary campaign as had
Slemons.
Mrs. Hall also noted that
(Sff FORUM, Page.U)
* * * Withdrawal Hoote d
Slemons Ducks Out
On Cordova Debate
I By GARY GRANVILLE
Of th 01lly Piiot St•ll
A debate between Assembly I candidates Republican James
I $lemons and Democrat Ron
Cordova turned into a one-man
Cordova show Monday night
when Slemons heeded the advice
of his attorney and bowed out.
The announcement of Slemorus'
last-minute withdrawal from the
League or Women Voters-
1
sponsored debate drew hoots and
laughter from a standlng·room-
1
only crowd in a campus lecture
ball at Saddleback Collete. I Orange Coast League Presl-
dent Valerie Murley said
I Sle mons' attorney, John D.
Cochran , told her be advised
his client ''not to appear in public
I discussion untH an investigation
now under way is completed,
probably in about one week's
Utne."
Mrs. Murley said Cochran did
not specily either the subject or
target of bis lnvesttcatioo.
But today the Irvine attorney
a d mltted be bas hired ln-
, vesti1ators "to check out certain 1 facets,. of recent news stories ln
U.. Santa Ana B•l\Ster alleging
ibatSemom:
-W'blle ln Germany recently
Plailecl to himself in Newpor\ Jield:I two pornogaphJc books
tbat were later seized by U.S.
I o.tom• a1enta under recuta-
Uoa& probiblliltl \be importaUoo
ohuch m aterial lntot.be U.S.
-In 197• lost four reels of
pomolfaphic movies to custom ..,_
-
ALL BY HIMSELF
Democrat Cordova
I aients alter tbey were db·
covered in hil suitcase when he
returned from a trip abroad.
-Last sprint lured Dale Scott
Lucas into the Republican
primary ln the 14th Alsembly
Dlslrlct to undermine the can-
didacy of Marian Berceson. Toct.y Slemoos labeled the
newa •torJ "alle1aUOM bued on unknown sources•• and laid be
<8" SLEMONS, Pqe AJ>
\
Editor'• Note: City tra//iceflglM~s
cw developing five altmsative1 to
the ccmtinuation of the N~
Freeway through downtown Costa
Mt1a. Two o/ thtu altemalives
wre di9cul1ed in thtl ipoce Mon.-
daJ/. TM third (alternative is dis·
CtAUed today. Altenaatives four ond five will be dealt with in later
articles.
By STEVE MITCHEU.
Of, .... 0.11, Pllel 54.tl
Jim Eldridge's third plan to
get traffic through Costa Mesa's
congested downtown area would
$442,752
To Scouts
For Base
Orange County Boy Scouts re-
ceived $442 , 752 from county
supervisors today to help develop
their Newport Beach Sea Scout
base.
Supervisors unanimously ap·
proved the donation, with the
stipulation that the scouts use the
county runds along with other
contributions to build a $1 million
facility within three years.
Jn addition, the board required
that the scouts submit quarterly
reports on the use of the base.
listing any youth groups who are
turned away.
"I just want to maJce certain
that when county monies are be·
ing spent they are being used for
countywide participation,"
Super visor Laurence Schmit
said. ·
Schmit and Board Chairman
Ralph Diedrich said they had
some reservations about giving
such a large donation when the
matter firs t came before
supervisors two weeks ago.
cost the city an estimated $6.5
million -more than twice as
much as the firs t two plans com·
bined.
But. tbe Costa Mesa public
service director said, the third
alternative would increase traf-
fic carrying capacity through the
city 140 percent -a whopping in-
crease over the 15 and 35 percent
improvements expe<:ted in the
first two plans.
Eldridge expects plenty or op-
position to the $6 .5 million
alternative. It would mean ac·
quiring right-of-way by buying
One of 'Them'
(}~§§)
up many homes along Orange
Avenue, which runs parallel to
Newport Boulevard.
Alternate 3 would make
Newport Boulevard one-way,
carrying only southbound traffic
between 19th and 16th Streets.
Orange Avenue would be
widened to five lanes and would
carry northbound traffic along
that route, meeting up with
Newport Boulevard at 20th
Slrfft. according lo city Trame
Engineer James Anderson.
He said that is where most of
the cost of the project would
come,
"We can't reaJty place a cost
figure on acquisition o( property
along Orange A venue. because
those prices are always going
up," Anderson explained.
"What r:pight cost us $3 million
now, might go up 40 percent in &
couple of years.''
<See TRAFFIC. Page .Ul
But they said today the
quarterly reporting require-
ment, along with the stipulation
that the scouts build their $1
million facility within three
years, would satisfy their re·
servations.
This fellow isn't a refugee from the movie
about the giant ants. he's just a fire ant
magnified 160 times by a scanning elec-
tron microscope at the t;niversity of
Southern Miss issippi. He's gained a new
lease on life with the banning of Mirex,
the only effective killer of the pest that
pla~ues Southern states.
Kenneth Hickenbottom, ex·
ecutive with the Orange County
Boy Scout Council, said the
scouts hope to begin demolition
of existing sea scout facilities by
the end of next sum mer.
Limbo for Coast Panel
He said the scouts already
have contacted potential donors,
noting "the climate is there if it
is ever going lo be there."
5 7-day Hiatus to Halt New Applicalions
The county's $442,752 share
would provide new docking
facilities, along with architect's
fees and site improvements. The
scouts would provide $512,212 for
a building and furnis hings,
$23,SOO for a swimming pool and
$54,580 lor other improvements.
permits and insurance.
The county's share of the pro-
ject would come Crom the
Newport Beach Tidelands Fund.
County officials explained the
fWld will contain about $710,000
by June 30. And 85 percent of all
dolJars over $250,000 must be
given to the state by then unless
they are committed or spent.
The county's agreement for the
lunds requires that the scouts
prove they have raised their
$5'90,292 share before any COWlty
money is spent.
Jn addition, if any county
dollars are spent and the scouts
later fall to complete the project,
they must repay the county for
ituhare.
No applications for new con·
struction within the realm of
South Coast Regional Zone Com-
mission control will be accepted
for a 57 -day hiatus when a
legislative gap soon puts the
agency in limbo.
Commission Executive Direc-
tor Met Carpenter announced at
a meeting Monday at the Hunt-
in~on Beach Civic Center that
Nov. JS is the cutoff date for ap-
plications.
Commissioners who have been
critkized both from without and
within their own ranks previous-
ly for bogged-down project ap·
plication processing will race to
catch up in the meantime.
They agreed lo meet in
emergency sessions Nov . I, 3.
and 8 in an effort lo clear up 396
pending applications, 115 of
which require · fulJ·blown public
hearings to take any pro or con
testimony.
Location of these meetings is
yet to be determined, but it is
likely lo be Torrance City Hall,
since mos t matters coming
before commissioners prior lo
Gung·ho Boy
'Few Good Men' Say No
WINK, Tex. (AP> -"The Marine Corps needs a
few good men," said the poster at a shopping center,
and Roger W oodrick didn't see why be couldn't qualify.
But the Corps rejected his enlistment application.
That made his mother happy but disappointed a lot
of his friends in the second grade.
Rogeris8.
"He just filled out the card and mailed it ore." s·aid
his mother, Mrs. Roger WOO<irick. "It was about four
days before he got a reply from the captain in
Washington, D.C."
As Capt. Curt Murray put it: "We appreciate your
interest in the Marine Corps. However, since you are 8,
you won't be eligible to be a Marine for awhile, but as
our way of showing appreciation for your interest, we
are enclosing a special Marine Corps poster.'·
"It's a huse poster." Mrs. Woodrick said. "Roger·
is real proud of it.,.
·' \
Nov. 15 involve Los •Angeles
CoWlty matters.
A commission staff member,
however, said at Monday after·
noon's adjournment she un·
derslood the meetings would be
in the Huntington Beach Civic
Center. The agency alternates
between the two locations.
Following the Nov. 15 applica-
tion cutoff date, Jan. 12, 1971 is
the first date al which they may
Punish e d Pair
~ick; Pare nts
Rap Principal
HUME. Mo. <AP) -When the
high school pri ncipal caught
three tcen ·age boys with
cigarettes in their pockets. he
gave them a choice of punish·
menl: lake n paddling or eat the
cigarettes
Two boys chose lo eat a total or
18 cigarettes and hve developed
health problems as a result, their
parents said Monday.
When the boys' mothers went
to a school board meeting lo pro·
test, the board voted to uphold
the principal 's actions.
Board member Joe Brooks
said the principal's authority
would oo damaged unless the
board supported him.
"l reel like if the kids make up
their own mind, It's up to them,"
Principal Kenneth Hightower
said shortly after the incident
last month.
Hightower said he always of-
fered the same alternative lo
other student.a who broke the rule
against carrying cigarettes. but
all bad chosen paddling.
Hightower cauaht Terry
Weatherman. 15, BUI Adkln.a, J4,
and another youth with the
cigarettes. He told them they
could have two ewats with a pad-
dle or eat the tobacco they were
carrying.
<See s•OIUNG. Pace ..U)
'" • 1
be filed again for consideration
within the coming year.
Nothing unresolved before
Nov. 15 can possibly be heard.
before Feb. 7 and quite likely any
new applications filed following
resumption or the commission's
work won't be heard until later.
A 2l-day delay is required b)'
law before commissioners may
consider an application for
anything involving new or re·
vised construction and building
within 1 ,000 yards of the
coastline.
Legislative t erms of Proposi-
tion 20, which created the
California Coastal Zone
Conservation Commission ,
parent agency of the South Coast
Regional Zone Commission, ex-
pires at year's end.
Legislators agreed despite pro·
blems jnherent in the
bureaucracy and red tape the
<See COASTAL. Page /\2)
We ather
Highs ln the mid 70s ex-
pected through Wedn~ay
with continued morning
and nighttime fog and low
clouds.
I NSIDE T ODA l:'
'flentory' ii a non·aerist
game for children and adulta
born of a coll~ge clau and
nurtured by Ma . Magazine. lta ~
inuentor ho.t ~er won it, bola 1
1h.t'1 not griping. ~e whJI on
Page AB.
ladex
J
Alt AU
Alt
A4.1t •• •••• .... .
"'"~ AU
A4
M .lt
AZ DAIL v PILOT c Tunday. Ootobor t9, 1978
,, Major Issues Told
' .. Candidates Badham, Hall in Debate
Candidate Robert 8adbam
said the major issues are sur·
vi val of the two-party system and
putttnc an end to government de-
ftdt spendlng. . , Candidate Vivian Hall said
there are three major issues.
honesty in government, run
employment and protection of
the environment.
.
l
On those dlUering notes,
Republican Badham and
Democrat Mrs. Hall, candidates
in the 40t.b Congressional Dls·
trict, began their debate Mooday
night at Saddleback College in
Mission Viejo.
They were the second ball of a
debate doubleheader sponsored
by the League of Women Voters.
Part one of the encoonter turned
•' .. * * * F,.._PageAJ
~·FORUM ...
Republican John Schnuu, who
lost to Badham in the primary by
a narrow margin, filed a com-
' plaint with the Federal Elections
Commission <FEC> in May
charging that Badham had ll·
leealiy used corporate donations
to finance bis campaign.
Mn. Hall, who bad men lo her
feet, vehemently objected to the
. linking of her campaign with·
Butcher-Forde.
"I am running a grass roots
c.1mpaign. It any of you are in·
terested in the details of Mr.
Schmitz' complaint, I would be
happy to discuss it with you,'' she
said.
Badbam said Butcher and
Forde were hired to provide him
with materials. "'Ibey did not nm my campaign," be said.
''I cannot fault any ol the
materials they used," the can-
didate added.
Badham described Schmitz'
FEC complaint as "the nearest
thing to malicious libel" and said
the runds in question were spent
legally on a public opinion survey
before be decided to run for
Congress.
TONIGlrr
''BEHIND THE
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecturer, OCC Forum,
7:30p.m.
COASTLINE CC LECfURE -
"Meditation," Barbara Bullard
lecturer, Firs t United Methodist
Church, 7:30p.m.
"THE RULING CLASS" -
South Coast Repertory Theater.
Tuesday-Sunday through Oct. 30, 8p.m.
WEDNESDAY, ocr. 20
BACK TO SCHOOL NIGHT -
Estancia High and Newport
Harbor High, 7:30p.m.
OCC LECTURE -"Aviation
Safety for Pilots,'' Fine Arts
Bldg.119, 7:30p.m .
FromPageAJ
SMOKING .•.
The unidentified boy chose the
paddle, but Terry and Bill
divided the tobacco from 18
cigarettes and swallowed it.
Both soon began to vomit their parents said. '
Mrs. William Adkins said sbe
took Bill to a doctor 20 miles
away that night after he began
spitting up blood. She said tests
showed he had a small ulcer
which doctors said had been de'.
veloping over a long period but
could have been made worse by
tbe tobacco.
Sbe and her husband are.
threatening legal act.ion against
• the school.
. ... f,. ~
,
OftANQ! COAST c
DAILY PILOT
._ .. _
~.-.... ,.., .........
Htlll.~
Vite ~f'\llOl'l'lt e"'4~-~ -··11-[0UOt
T-tA.~ ...............
°""""'II i..-~ ~. -,. ......... ,..._. .........
eo.ta ..... Ofl'IGe .. w.,..=:•:•J=-: ... -
~':: .::::. °:1:t. ':: .. '=-~ "'•Ht r ., H••tfh·•~t~h "•t••~ m.r M H 0fM Vt9f ••tM-.t t,_t••I pretmtu • t4 ~rt,,_~,
~~ft~~·",:::~~:,,::.·•.:.~::.~":.
-···· •• -·· " ,. -"'·· •111My --··-· ....
out to be a one-man debate when
Republican Assembly candidate
James Slemons failed to make it
to the starting blocks for hJs
scheduled encounter with
Democrat Ron Cordova .
But Badbam, a seven-term
slate assemblyman, emphasized
what be caUed a return to fiscal
responslbillly.
"I 'm totally dedicated to
eliminating deficit spending and
to begin chipping away at a na·
tional debt that threatens us all,"
the Republican candidate said.
But the interplay among can·
didates that was missing from
lhe Slemons-Cordova non .
debate was pres ent when
Badham and Mrs. Hall
responded to newsmen's ques· lions.
He argued that party labels
are, indeed. significant both in Sacramento and in Washington.
Mrs. HalJ hit on the honesty in
government issue wben she.
lamented 40th Di s tri c t
Coogressman Andrew Hinshaw's
status as a convicted felon since
the first or the year.
And he Jibed al the Democratic
Party for opposlng what he
called a constanUy burgeoning
bureaucracy only at election
times.
At one time in the debate,
Badbam was interrupted by one
of bis former rivals in last June's
Republican primary elect.ion.
Rerening to Hinshaw's inabili
ty to vote since being sentenced
to state orison. Mrs. Hall called
his role in Congress "taxation
without representation in the 40lh District ...
Il was when lbe topic turned lo
a complaint that one-time
Republican maverick con-
gressman John Schmitz flied
with the Federal Elections Com·
mission lbat Badham was inter-
rupted io his explanation by
Schmitz.
She caJled for fuU employment
as a means of fighting inflation
and said anti-trust laws should be
vigorously enforced as a way to
reduce skyrocketing interes t
rate!..
But whatever it was Schmitz
was drowned out by vocal p~
tests over the interruption by au-
dience members. And when she hit on the en-
vironmenta 1 protection theme,
Mrs. Hall suggesled tbat tbe na·
lion should devote more or lts
energies to providing the
technology needed to rid the na·
tion of environmental blight.
The news panel bored in on
Badham 's attendance record
while an assemblyman.
But the 14th District as-
semblyman defended that re<:ord
which he said was subject to mis·
lnterpetalion because ol bis habit
oC sometimes abstaining oo roll
tall votes.
* * * F,.._P~AJ
SLEMONS •• Badbam and Mrs. Hall had
their sharpest but cordial dif.
ferences on s uch issues as of-
fshore oil drilling, military aid to
dictator governments, pr~rva
tion or the coastline and defense
budget cuts.
expects to have them all cleared
before the Nov. 2 general election.
"I can assure you I have not re·
ceived a letter regarding two
books bidden away in an
automobile manual." said
Slemons.
The Newport Beach
Republican. who employs 92 peo-
pl e at his Mercedes Benz
dealership, "many or them
Germans whose relatives and
homes are in Stuttgart.
"I'm not saying that any of
them mailed the books -tf they
were mailed -but just that there
may be another answer," said
Slemons.
As for the alleged 1974 porno-
graphic material incident,
Slemons said, "that again is
based on allegations from SO·
called informed sources."
The 43-year-old auto dealer
flaUy denied sponsoring the last·
minute Lucas candidacy in the
June primary election, a can·
didacy that deprived Mrs.
Bergeson of last place on the
tlallot.
lt is believed by some who deal
in political campaigns that next
to top spot on the ballot, last
place is the best position to at-
tract voter attention.
Registrar of Voter records
show that Lucas filed his
nomination papers March 17,
the last candid4l.te to do so in
the heated Republican 74lh Dis·
trict primary.
March 13 was the regular fil.
ing deadline but because
Republican tncumbenl Robert
Badbam abandoned his As-
sembly seat to run for Congress,
the filing deadline in the 74th was
held open to March 17.
Slemons' woes with the al-
leged pornographic episodes
and the Lucas candidacy mirror
a series or controversies that
have surrounded his campaign
since his 1,875-vote victory over
Mrs. Bergeson.
That victorious primary elec-
tion campaign cost Slemon.s and
his backers $117, 769, more than
twice the amount spent by Mrs.
Bergeson.
In campaign literature pro-
duced by the Arnold Forde-
William Butcher-led campaign,
it was claimed that Slemons
was: .
-A graduate of the Universi·
ty of California, Davis.
-A close personal friend of
U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater and
his son, Rep. Barry Goldwater,
Jr.
Later it was shown that
Slemons only attended the un-
iversity and had not graduated.
And a Goldwater letter said,
"I do not know Mr. Slemons or
if I do, I have forgotten meeting
him. My son said that he knows
blm s UghUy but not weU.
"I tbinlt, frankly, that his use
ol our name jn hi5 campaign
literature, extends normal
courtesy just a bit."
While the League was nol told
of Slemons' withdrawal from
Monday night 'a debate until 20
minutes before it was to begin,
the candidate's attitude, at
lea.st, was known to the press
by mid-afternoon.
In press releases hand·
delivered to newspaper olllces,
Slemons said. ''Until thls ln·
vesUsat.ion bu been coocluded,
my attorneys have advised me
not tb discuss tbla matter further and not to partkipate in
any public d.iscussioo."
Slemons' new a release ac-
cuHd Democrat Cordova or.
cooductinc •'the IJ'Ollelt. most
vicious smear campal1n in
Orange County h!story."
However, the alle,1aUons
Slemon1 complained of were
made ln newspaper artlcle1 an.d Cordew• deo!ed baYinc alJ1\hin1 to do wtUt thelr publlcaUoa.
Mn. Hall described herself as
independent Democrat who is fis·
cally conservative and pointed to
her $7,000 primary campaign
versus Badham 's $100,000 effort
as proof of what she called her
fiscal responsibility.
F,....PageAJ
TRAFFIC ..•
He said the time involved in ob·
tainlng rights-of-way would
automatically increase the price.
"When we say .$3 mllUoo-plus
for acquisition today, you have to
realize that those figures are at
today's prices," he said.
Existing parking lots along the
west side of Newport would re-
main. with additional parking in·
stalled along the east side or that
road. Anderson said.
He said parking islands could
be extended as far south as 16th
Street along the east side of
Newport, if needed.
Newport would have four lanes
from 19th Street to the Harbor
Boulevard intersection, then ex·
pand to five lanes to 17th Street.
Widening of sections ol 17th.
18th and 19th Streets would be in·
eluded in the $6.5 million plan, as
well as a realignment of
Magnolia Street to join Harbor
Boulevard.
Anderson said Magnolia would
become a one-way route, con·
necting with Harbor at Newport.
The five downtown traffic
plans are being developed as
alternatives lo Newport
Freeway, which does not appear
on the state's current six-year plan
Fro.tPageAJ
COASTAL •.
system generated, the concept
has been a good one and its work
should be continued.
cy, however, was not passed ln
time lo prevent the gap between
expiration or the present or·
ganJzation and creation -on
paper-of it& Identical successor.
New legislation required to
establish the governmental agen·
"If we look an application for
just a slngle family home now,
the first of February would be the
first Ume it could possibly be
heard," a coastal commission
aide confirmed today.
Such an appllcatloo can next
be received and med for com·
mission action Jan. 12 and lf not
treated as an administrative
Item under its blanket consent
calendar, it must be beard Jater.
Consent calendar items are
generally non-controversial and
meet all or most criteria de·
manded of local, county and/or
slate building and development
requirement.a.
Commission Chairman Judy
Rosener. of Newport Beach,
warned It will be lntolenble 11 an
attempt la not made to clear up
all or as much as poutble ol tbe
-..ltem backlog in the mean·
Ume.
Marcos Sweeps
MANILA, The Philippines
<AP> -The commwioo on elec·
Uont said today tbat early re-
tuma from Lhe weekend retenr>-dwm showed 92.88 percent or
2,08IMO baUota call favored eoa-
t1nuaUon or Prulct.t Fwdlnll)d
E. Marcos' martial·lawrule.
'
Car l's. Gate in Irvine
Orange County firemen assisted Monday
evening when Mary Anne Cope. 25 ,
slammed her car headon into a closed
s tee l gate in the Fluor Corpor ation
driveway near Michelson Road in Irvine.
Mrs. Cope, of 2364 Santa Ana Ave .. Costa
Mesa. s uffered face and head cuts and
was treated overnight at Tustin Communi·
ty Hospital. She was expected to be sent
home today in good condition. Police said
visibility was poor, with no nearby street
lights.
By Tbe Associated Preas
President Ford and Jimmy
Carter bave found one thing to
agree on: lbe election is Ju.st too
close to call now.
It was a light campaign day for
both candidates. But as each mooaged in a separate way
to point to the tightness of the.
race for the White House, Carter
continued a brief, 32-hour cam-
paign s wing today througb
F1orida, North Carolina and New
York.
Earlier, he declared al a news
conference that the election is
"up for grabs" and made an
emotional appeal in a F1orida
speech against voter apathy. He
called non-voters cowards
The Democratic s tandard
bearer outlined his ideas on
health care lo a Miami audience
of about 2,000, then visited a
kosher bakery and addressed a
senior citizens' r aUy.
He promised the American
Public Health Association con·
vention ''aggressive leadership
to provide comprehensive. na-
tionwide, effective health care -
and you can depend on it."
Carter s aid be favors national
health insurance which "must be
unive rsal and mandatory."
added that patients should have
freedom lo choose their phys1-
dans, and urged greater em·
phasis on preventive medicine as
"both simpler and eheaper than
cures."
Ford, remainin g in
Washington until Thursday. sent
word through a group or
Republican governors a nd
senators who are his key party
supporters that he views the race
as "a dead heat" now. Major
polls also s how the race is light.
Ford is studying for Friday's
final debate with Carter In
Williamsburg, Va .• and aides say
he is gearing his campaign
toward a 12-day final push that
will take him to as many as 14
stat.es.
"Although I've been dis·
couraged, I've been dismayed ·
and some tl mes I've been
ashamed" or actions taken by
government leaders, Carter told
a Tampa audience, the federal
government can be effective and
res pons ive. "provided the
American people don't give up."
Citing an unspecified poll that
he said indicated "more than
half the American people are not
'-omg to vote." Carter continued,
'In other words. they said. 'I'm a
coward. I'm afraid of the future.
I give up on my nation, I'm not
going to try to control my own
destiny and stake out a better life
for my children."•
GIVE YOURSELF A
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-
Orange Coast
·EDITION
Today 8 Clo Ing .,
N.Y.Stoeks
r
'VOL 69, NO. 293, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1976 N TENCENT~ a
couts Win Cash for NB Harbor Base.
Orange County Boy Scouts re·
eived $442, 752 from county
pervisors today to help develop
ir Newport Beach Sea Scout
ase.
Supervisors unanimously ap-
1>roved the donation, with the
$tlpolaUon that the scouts use the
county runds along with other
p,otribuUons to build a $1 million
facility within three years. t In addition, the board required
that the scouts submit quarterly
reporu on the use ot the b.ue,
listing any yooth croups who are
turned away.
"I juat want lo make certain
that when county monies are be-
ing spent they are being used ror
countywide participation,"
Supervisor Laurence Schmit
said.
Schmit and Board Chairman
Ralph Diedrich said they bad
oast Buil.
addle-,,ack College
Slemons Ducks
ordova Debate
D•llY PllM ~l1tt Photo
ALL BY HIMSELF
Democrat COf"dova
~ordova Left
f.\Jone, Gets
ig Applause
Republican 74th Assembly can·
idate James Slemons' last·
inute retreat from his
heduled debate with Democrat
n Cordova Monday night left
rdova alone on center stage for
minutes.
By the time Cordova used both
s and Slemons' time to field
eslions from newsmen and the
er<low audience at Saddleback
Jlege, he had earned himself a
lousing round or applause. I The 29·year·old prosecuting at
torney studiously avoided using
b.ls absent opponent's name.
Instead, in all but two in-
stances be referred to Slemons
simply as "the auto dealer."
Al that, •'the auto dealer''
wasn 't mentio'led often as
Cordova's rapid Cire comments
and answers ranged over a broad
area of public issues.
Before his 40 minutes were
used up, the candidate had given
his capsule views on tax reform,
(See CORDOVA. Page A%)
* * * One-speaker
Debate Due
1,ln Newport?
1 Officials of the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Com·
zneTce said today they will go
ahead with plans lor the Wednes·
day Town Hall meeting they bad
scheduled for state Assembly
candidates Ron Cordova and
.1imSlemons.
• Slemons backed out or a
scheduled debate with bh
Democratic rival Monday at Sad·
41ebacll College.
Dan Rogen, executive direc·
tor of the chamber, said the
break!ut meeting will be held at
1:30 a.ni. at tile Carousel Room
CJ( tbt Newporter Inn. It 15 open Lo
tbepubl1c.
0 U Siemon• doesn't come. then
Cordova wlll have the entire
meetlna to himself," Rogers e!d·
By GARY GRANVILLE
DftlMtDaltf Pi1411~tf
A debate between Assembly
candidates Republican J ames
Slemons and Democrat Ron
Cordova turned into a one·man
Cordova s how Monday night
when Slemons heeded the advice
of his attorney and bowed out.
The announcement of Slemons'
last.minute withdrawal from the
League of Women Voters-
sponsored debate drew hoots and
laughter from a standing-room.
only crowd in a campus lecture
hall al Saddleback CoUege.
Orange Coast League Presi.·
dent Va le rie Murley said
Slemons' attorney, John D.
Cochran, told her be advised his client "not to appear in public
discussion until an investigaUon
now under way is completed,
probably in about one week's
time."
Mrs. Murley said Cochran did
not specify either the :;ubjecl or
target o( his investigation.
But today the Irvine attorney
adm itted he has hired in-
vestigators "to check out certain
facets" of recent news stories in
the Santa Ana Register alleging
that Slemons:
-While in Germany recently
maiJed to himself in Newport
Beach two pornographic books
that were later seized by U.S.
Customs agents under regula·
tions prohibiting the importation
of such material into the U.S.
-In 1974 lost four reels of
pornographic movies to custom
agents arter they were dis-
covered in his suitcase when he
returned from a trip abroad.
-Last spring lured Dale Scott
<~ SLEMONS. Page A%)
* * * 3-ca:ndidate
Forum Held .
In Newport
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ofttw0.lff~1411seaff
The battles for the seats in the
74lh state Assembly District and
lbe 4-0th Congressional District
continued today with a three·
candidate forum lo Newport
Beach.
Democrat Vivian Hall and
Republican Bob Badbam, both
vying for southern Orange Coun·
ty's congressional seat and
Democrat Ron Cordova, who is
running for Badbam's old seat in
the state Assembly, appeared
before the Women's Civic
League of Newport Beach.
The forum, wbicb included
some discussion of election is-
sues. ended in a debate over
campaign tactics and the miss·
ing candidate, Republican Jim
Slemons.
Cordova woo lauehter and ap.
plause from tbe audience of
a bout 40 people when he
declared, .. I 'm not the
Democratic candidate for the
74th: I'm not lbe Republican can-
didate. I'm the only candidate."
Cordova described Slemons as
COGtemptuoua and arrocant and
called lbe Newport auto dealer's
·campaign diaauattng.
Badham, wbo said after the
meeting that he support.a all
Republican candldatM reaarcl·
leu ol hil penonal opinion of
them, did not defend hit fellow Republican.
Bad.ham was busy delencllnc
CSee Jl'OaUM, P .. e AZ)
some reservations about giving
such a large donation wben the
matter first carne before
supervisol'S two weeks ago.
But they said today the
quarterly reporting requl re-
ment, along w\th the stipulation
that the scouts build their S1
million facility within three
years, would satisfy their re-
servations.
Kenneth Hickenbottom, ex-
ecutlve with the Orange County
Boy Scout Council, said the
scouts hope to begin demollUon
or existing sea scout facilities by
the end of next summer.
He said the scouts already
have contacted pote,ntial donors,
noting "the ctimale is there if it
is ever going to be there."
The county's $442,752 share
would provide new docking
facilities, along with architect's
rees and site Improvements. The
scouts would prov~de $512,212 tor
a building and furnlsb locs.
$23,SOO for a swimming pool a.net
$54.580 for other improveznenls.
permits and lnsurance.
The county's share ol the pro-
j ect would come from the
Newport Beach Tidelands F\lnd.
County oCflcials explained the
fund will contain abOut $710,000
by June 30. And 8S percent of all
dollars over $250,000 must ~
given to the state by then uni~
they are committed oc spenL
'l"be.county '5 agreement for the
funds requires that lbe sc:outf
prove lhey have raised thei(
$S80,292 abare before any eounit
money is spent.
In addition, if any county
dollars are spent and the s~outs
later faiJ to complete the project.
they must repay lhe county foe
it.ssbare. ., g Pernrlts Cut Off
Catch-up
Hiatus
Planned
No applications for new con;
struction within the realm oC
South Coast Regional 1.one Com ..
mission control will be accepted
for a 57 -day hiatus when a
legislative gap soon puts lb~
agency in limbo.
Commission Executive Direc~
tor Mel Ca~nter announced at
a meeting Monday at the Hunt·
ington Beach Civic Center that
Nov. lS is the c utoff date for ap·
plications.
Commissioners who have been
criticized both from without and
within their own ranks previous.
ly for bogged-down project ap-
plication processing will race to
: catch up in the meantime.
APWI .......
One of 'Them'
This fellow isn't a refugee trom the movie
about the giant ants, he's just a fire ant
magnified 160 times by a scanning elec-
tron microscope at the University of
Southern Mississippi. He's gained a new
lease on life with the banning of Mirex.
the only effective killer of the pest that
plagues Southern states.
Carter Demanding
Brown Reprimand
WAS H INGTON (AP)
Democratic presidential can·
didate Jimmy Carter is urging
President Ford lo "show some
· leadership" and reprimand the
nation's top uniformed officer,
who made controversial remarks
about such U.S. allies as Israel,
Britain and Iran.
Ford, according to the White
House, accepts Gen. George S.
Brown's explanation and "con·
siders the matter cl05ed."
For bis part. Brown, chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a
news conference Monday that his
remarks in an interview did not
indicate disagreement with the
U.S. policy of aiding Israel. In
the Interview, Brown said that
aiding Israel is a burden on the
United States.
His statement on Israel in·
volved him in controversy for the
second tJme in two years. Brown
was reprimanded by Ford and
apologized in November 1974 for
telling a Duke University au-
dience that Jews have too much
influence in Congress and "own.
you know, the banks in this coun·
try, the newspapers."
Carter. arriving in Miami on a
campaign tour Monday night, re-
c31led Ford's reaction when
another appointee, Agriculture
Secretary Earl Butz, got into hot
water over an obscene racial
slur.
"Mr. Butz stayed there until
Mr. Ford assessed t.be political
consequences or what be said and
finally Mr. Butz resigned,•·
Carter told reporters.
Carter conceded that he had
not read transcripts of Brown's
remarks, but added: "From
what I bear in the news media, I
think that he sh ould be
<See REMARKS, Page AZ>
Gung•ho Boy
'Few Good Men' Say No
WINK. Tex. (AP) -"The Marine Corps needs a
few good men," said the poster a t a shopping center,
and Roger W oodrick dido 't see why he couldn't quail! y.
But the Corps rejected his enlistment application.
That made his mother happy but disappointed a lot
of his friends in the second grade.
Rogerls8.
''lie just filled o1lt the card and mailed it off." s·aid
his mother. Mrs. Roger Woodrick. "ll was about four
days before he got a reply from the captain in
Washington, D .C."
As Capt. Curt Murray put it: "We appreciate your
interest in the Marine Corps. However, since you are 8,
you won't be eligible to be a Marine for awhile, but as
our way of sbo'Wing appreciation for your interest, we
are enclosing a special Marine Corps poster.''
"It's a huge poster," Mrs. Woodrick said. "Roger
is real proud of it.''
) ,
P11nished Pair
Sick; Parents
Rap Principal
HUME, Mo. (AP) -When the
high school principal caught
three teen-age boys with
cigarettes in their pockets, he
gave them a choice or punish·
ment: take a paddling or eat the
cigarettes.
Two boys chose to eat a total of
lS cigarettes and have developed
health problems as a result, their
parents said Monday.
When the boys' mothers went
to a school board meeting to pro-
test, the board voted to uphold
the principal 's actions.
Board member Joe Brooks
said the principal'& authority
would be damaged unless the
board supported him.
"I reel like iC the kids make up
their own mind, it's up to them,"
Principal Kenneth Hlgblower
said shortly after the incident
last month.
Hightower said he always of.
fered the same . aitemaUve to
other students who broke the rule
against carrying dgarettes, but
al! had ch0&en paddling.
Hightower caught Terry
Weatherman, 15, Bill Adkins, 1•,
and a nother youth with the
cigar~ttes. He told them they ,
could have two swats with a pad-·
die or eat the tobacco they were
carrying.
The unidentified boy chose the
paddle, but TetrY and Bill
divided the tobacco from 18
cigarett.es and swaJlowed it.
Both soon began to vomit, their
parents said.
Mrs. William AdkinS said" she
took BW to a doctor 20 miles
away tbat nfpt alter be began
spltting up blood. Sbe said tests
showed be bad a small ulceT.
wbJch doctors aald had been de-
velopinc over a lone period but
could have been made WQrH by
the tobacco.
Sbe •nd btr husband are
threatel\iqf leaat actJon agal.Dlt
<See SMOKING, Pap Al)
They agreed to meet in
emergency sessions Nov. l. 3,
and 8 in an effort to clear up 396
~dine applications, 115 of
Whfcb require· full-blown public
hearings lo take any pro or coo
testimQft}'.
Location of these meetings is
yet lo be determined, but it is
likely to be Torrance City Hall.
since most matters coming
before commissioners prior to
Nov. 15 involve Los Angeles
County matters.
A commission staff member.
however, said at Monday after•
noon's adjournment she un•
derstood the meetings would be
in the Huntington Beach Civic
Center. The agency alternates
between the two locations.
Following the Nov. 15 applica·
Uon cutoff date, Jan. 12, 1977 is
the first date at which they may
be filed acain for consideration
within the coming year.
Nothin.z unresolved before
<See COASTAL. Page A%)
Offices Near
·Airport Hit
Newport Beach police said to-
day losses reported from a
weekend burglary1 of an airport
area office building now total
more than $13,600.
According to investigators, the
oUices. all localed at4500Campus
Drive, were apparenUy entered
by someone who had a pass key.
A total of nine offices reported
break-ins and in most cases the
losses were expensive electric ,
typewriters, although one busl·
nessman reported the theft of a
$400 zebra skin rug.
Coasc.i
Weather l
filgbs in the mid 70s ex· .
pected tbl'Oll&h Wednesday
with continued mol'bif' ,.
ahd IUbttlme.fog ~:l . ·
doudi: . i "i
INSIDE.TODArif.
'flerltOf'JI' u .o ~
game for chUdren.ond.odulU
bona o/. o coUtge cltm. GJtd
nurtured bl# Jlf•. Maoca:inc. lt•
Inventor "°' MOe1' WOfl it, but W'• not fripmg. See tMr Oft
~Al.
· l•.iex
(
l
1'.41 DAILY PILOT N
0 100 .....
l#WI,.,...
.. ..., .... rr1a .. 1e
X marks the spot where
SOO-foot Panamanian car10
ship went down in the
.. Bermuda Trlanale," about
140 miles west of Bermuda.
Searcher& are contlnulng
their efforts to find the
37-man crew.
F,....P.,,eAJ
{:;OASTAL ••
Nov. 14 can possibly be beard
before Peb. 7 and quite likely any·
new applicatJoos tlltd followillg
reaumpUon of the commisskm's
work won't be beard until later. A ?l·day delay ts ~red by
. law before commissioners may
consider an application for
anyt.hing involving new or re·
· viaed conatructloo and buildin&
wltbln 1,000 yards of tbe
coutline.
Legislative terms or Proposi··
tion 20, which created the
California Coastal Zone
Conservation Commlaslon,
parent agency or the South Coast
Regional Zone Commissioo, ex-
pires at year's end.
Legillatora agreed despite pn>-
bl ems in h e r e nt in the
bureaucracy and red tape the
S')'l~m 1enerated, t.be concept
bu been a 1ood one and its work
should be continued. .
cy, however, was not passed in
time to prevent the gap between
expiration or the present or-
&aniuUon and creation -on
• paper-o!ita idenUcalauccessor.
New le1tlslallon reqoired to
· establlah the 1overnmental agen-
''Il we took an application for
j\llt. a 11.n&le family home now,
the first of February would be the
• tint t.lme it could possibly be
beard," a coastal commission
· aldeconftrmed today.
Such an application can next
be received and rued ror com-
• mi.salon action Jan. 12 and lf not
'treated as an admlnJst.ratlve
llem under its blanket consent
calendar, tt must be beard later.
· , Consent calendar items are
aeneral.ly non-controven.lal and
• ~eet all or most criteria de-
manded of local, county and/or
state bu.ildinC and development
requirements.
Commission Chairman Judy
Rosener, of Newport Beach,
warned tt will be lntolerable if an
;attempt is not made t.o clear up.
all or as much as possible of the
31&-ltem backloe ln the mean-
time.
Deposed King
ID by Pills
NEW DELHI, lndia·(AP> -In-
dia's national news agency said
· the former king or Sikkim,
husband or the former New York
. socialite .Hope Cooke, was Oown
t.oday to Calcutta after becoming•
unconscious following an over-
: dose or aleeplng pills.
· The agency said the 53-year-
• old Cbogya l Palden Thondup
Namgyal, dethroned 18 months
aao wbe n his Himalayan
kinadom was mel'ged with India,
was found unconscious In bis
• palace in Ganetok, the Sikldmese
capital, where he has been under
armed 1uard since an uprising
· a1ainlt hi.I rule 1D 1973.
Hi.I wife, Queen Hope, hu been
livinl in the United Slate,,. The
· couple bave two children whO are
• with the queen.
·,,.
OftANGe COAIT 11
DAILY PILOT
..-....... , ~--_. ....
1et-•.ewt99 II~·-----~ --""""' .,_,. _,,..... ·--a..rttlll ~ --~--· .... _Me_...,..
T~ay, Octot>er 19. 1978
Ctuulidatea Badharn, ffal,l in Debme
Ca.aclldat• ROM" 'adiam
said tbe m-.jor 1laues are sur-
Vival or the two-party system and
IJUtti,Q1 an end to IO\IS'D.ment de-ficit 1peodln1.
Candidate Vivian Hall aald
there are three m~r issues,
honest y in government. full
employment and protection' of
the environment.
On tbose d itlerlbl notes,
Re publican Badham and
Democrat Mrs. Hall, candidates
in the ~ Canaresaional Di.1-
t.rtct, beaan thelr debate Mooday
nJOt at Saddlebact Colleae in Mf.sston VleJo.
They were the second hall ot a
debate doubleheader spansored
by the League of Women Voters.
Part one of the encounter turned
out t.o be a one-man debate when
Republican Assembly candidate
James Slemons failed t.o make ll
to the startlnc blocks for his scheduled encounter wltb
Democrat Ron Cor<k>va.
But the interplay among can-
didates tbat was missing from
the Slemons-Cordova non-
debate was present when
Badb a m and Mu . Hall
reaponded to newsmen'• ques-
Uons. Mrs. Hall hit on the honesty in
government issue when she.
lamented ·Ulb Dislricl
Congressman AndrewHinshaw's
status a.a a convicted felon aince
the flrat of the year.
* * * ,,....P-AJ
SLEMONS ••
Lucas into the Republlcan
primary 1D the 14th Aaaembly
D61trtct to undennioe the can-
didacy or Marian Bertescn Today Slemons labeled the
news at.ory "alle&ationa based on
unknown sources" and aald be
expeets to have them all cleared
before the Nov. 2 aeneral eled.ion.
"I can assure you I have not re-
ceived a letter re&ardlnl two
books h idden awa)' io an
automobile manual," 1ald
Slemooa.
The Newp o rt Beach
Republican, wbo empJoya aa peo..
ple at bis Mercedes Bena
dealerabip, "many of tbem
Germana whose relaUvea and
homes are ln Stuttgart.
"I'm not saying that any of
them mailed the books -lf they
were mailed -but Just tbat. there
may be another answer," said
Slemoas.
Al for the alleged lt74 porno-ir ,pbl c mat.erl al incident.,
SlemODS sald, "that a&aln ls
lHlled. O!l allqatioos hom to-
called1Atol'me410Uttea."
The 43-year-old auto dealer
natly denied •PC>DIOr'l.ol the lut-
mlnute Luca.a candidacy ln the
June primary electJoa, a can-
didacy that deprived Mrs .
Bergeson of last place on the
l>allot.
It is believed by some who deal
in politlcal campaigns thal next
t.o top spot on the ballot, last
place 1B the beat position to at-
tract voter attention.
Registrar of Voter records
show that Luc as filed bis
nomination papers March 17,
the last candidate. to do SQ in
the heated Republican 74th Dis·
trict primary. .
March 13 was the regular fU.
ing deadline but becatlae
Republican incumbent Robert
Badbam abandoned his Al· sembly aeat. to run for Congress,
the filing deadline in the 74th was
beldopentoMarcb 17. '
Slemons; woes with the aJ.
leged pornographic episodes
and the Lucas candidacy mirror:
a series or controversies that
have surrounded bis campaign
since his l ,87S.vote victory over
Mrs. Bergeson.
'lbat. victorious primary elec-
tion campaign cost Slemons and
bis backers $117,7•, more than
twice the amount spent by Mrs.
Bergeson.
In campaign literature pro-
duced by the Arnold Forde·
William Butcher-led campatp,
it waa claimed that Slemons
was: .
-A graduate oC the Uniwnl-
ty of California, Davis.
-A close penOl\al friend or
U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater and
his son, Rep. Barry Goldwater,
Jr.
Later it was shown that
Slemoas only atteaded tbe un-
iversity and bad not IP'aduated.
And a Goldwater letter said,
'1 do not know Mr. Sletnon1 or
if I do, l bave forgottm meeting
him . .My son said that he mows
him slightly but not well.
"I think, frankly, that bJs use
ol our name 1D bi.I caml)algn
UteratQre, extenda normal
courtesy Ju.at a blt..'
New 'Hero' Lau~ed
BANGKOK, Thailand <AP> -Vletna~ 's Comm unlit re,une
baa made a hero of a YoUDI e&ee-
trlcl.an executed in 1JM fOtt t.rytns
to auaaslnate Robert S . McNamara. TbeoftlclalV'lelnam
news aaeaey •a.Id tbe SallQD city
museum ta dlsplaylna ~than
30 relics of Npyen Van Trot, in·
cludln1 bis birth certlllcate,
poltq"e tta:mp eolleetion. pboto-Jr'apbs and poems by'l'rU "lbow·
mahlloptim11Uc1piril"
Refentn1 to Hlmbaw'I ......
ty to vote since beinl 5elltene.d
to stale orison. Mrs. Hall called
hia role in COl1.fl'9U "taxation
wit.bout representation in the 40th District ...
She called for full employment
u a meana of fifbtiDI inflation
and said antf·tru1 laws should be
vtgoroualy enrorced as a way to
reduce styrocJretlag intereat rates.
And when she hit on the en-
vironmental proted.ion lberne. Mn. Hall suaaeated that the na-tion should devote more ot lta
ener1le1 to provldln1 the
teclmology needed t.o rid the na-
tion or environmental blicht.
But Badbam. a aeven-term
state uaembl.Yman, emphasised
what he called a retul1l to fiacaJ
responslbWt.y.
.. I'm totally dedicated · to
ellmlnatina derictt spencttnc and
to beain chlppinc away at a na-
tionaf debt that threatens us all,"
the Republican candidate said.
He argued that party labela
are, indeed, signiftcant ~ io
Sacramento and in Wuhingtoo.
And he Jlbed at the Democratic
Part)' for opposing what be
called a constantly bUrgeon.ing
bureaucracy only at election
times.
At one time in the debate,
Badham was interrupted by one
ol hi.I former rivala in last Juoe'•
Republican primary election.
It wu when the topic turned to
a complaint that one·tlme
Republican maverick con-
areuman John Scbmlt& flled
with the Federal Elections Com-
mllalon that Badbam was inter-
rupted in bla explanation by
Schmits.
But whatever lt wu Schmits
wu *°wned out by vocal pro-
i.ta over the lnt.etnlpUon by au-
dience memben.
1be newa panel bored ln on
Badbam 'a attendance record
while an assemblyman.
But the 14th District as-
semblyman def ended that record
which be said was aubJect to mil·
lnterpet.aUon because ol bis laablt ot sometimes abst.a1nlng on roll
call votes.
Badham and Mrs. Hall bad
their sharpest but cordial dif.
ferences on such iaauee u of-
* * * ,,....PageAJ
CORDOVA
criminal Justice, medical
malpractice, educauan. bousilla
and tbe lot ot a DemocraUc at
lar1e ln an assembly dlatrtct that
1a heavily Republican.
"l will never vo&e the party
line,'' Cordova a aid as be
mlnimlled hls arrWatioo with the
DemocraUc Party. "I will be the
repreaentat.lve of the 74th Aa-
sem bly District and not the
Republican or Democratic parties."
Cordova said he bas not re-
ceived financial s upport from the
Democratic Party and "owes it
nothinl.'' When asked by a member of
the audience how, if elected, he
expects lo gain committee ap-
pointments without party sup-
port, Cordova said he expects to
be able to work within anv
· frameworlcava11ableto·trun. · · · r ..
The Democratic candidate
called for repeal ot the business
inventory tax and said the
homeownen' exemption on pro-
perty taxes should be increased
to $.5,000 and, for senior citizens,
to$7.500.
He also said welfat'e and
educaUon costs should be shifted
away from property taxes .
"We bave to start tuing on the
ability to pay, not accumulated
paper wealth," Cordova said.
The DemocroUc candidate
said he favors capital pwiah·
ment in some cases, opposes
Proposition 14 and favors
ProposlUon 2 as the best way to
preserve coastal areas without
penalizing coast landowners.
.,/
,,.._P-.eAJ
REMARKS. • reprimanded. I think President
Ford should a bow some leadership."
The other hall of tbe
Democratic ticket, vice pre-
sidential nominee Walter F .
Mondale, waa more blunt . Penoas like Brown '4tbou.ldn't
be sewage commissioners,"
Mondale said.
The remark.a that offended
Carter and Mondale were part or
a wide·ranatnc lntentew wttb
Brown conducted ~I 12 by
Ranan R. Lurie. The fnte.niew 11
bein« distributed to ... ..,....
by Kiili Features.
Brown •u asked:
"Speaking about tbe Middle
£I.It &Gm a purely military PQint
ol view, would 1ou aay that from
U.. American ~lobal atratqlc ID· tereet, mllitarU7, la llraeJ and its
fotcea more a burden or a ble.aa.-
bJt from a pure military ooint ot 'litwto the United StateeT1"'---
Brown repU4NI, "Well, ( t.b1.nk ~ .. lot to be 4!Clalldend a
,...... oU drU.lln1. mWtary aid to
dictator 1overnments, preserva-
tioa ol the coastline and defense
budael cut.a.
Mrs. Hall described henelf as
independent Democrat wbo is tis-
cally conservative and polnt.ed to
her $7,000 primary campaign
versus Badham '1 $100,000 effort
u proof or what sbe called her
tllcal responatbillty.
* * * ,,....PageAJ
FORUM •••
him.sell against Mrs. Hall's at·
taclta. Durint a quest.ion and answer period, a member or the au-
dience railed a questioa about
the ftnn of Butcher and Forde. a
public relat1ou orpniaatioo that
worts on political campatpa.
When Badbam beaan t o
answer the question, drawing an'
analogy that included himself,
Mrs. Hall and Cordova, Mn. Hall
int.emq>ted him.
She atrftaed that lbe has oettr
emploJed tbe firm nor bad
Cordova. Sbe DOiDted out that Badbam bad used the fi.nn dur-
ing hi.8 primary campaign as had
Slemons.
Mrs. Hall also noted that
Republican John Schmitz, who
kl9t to Badbam 1D the primary by
a narrow mar11n1 nJed a com·
elalnt 'Wttb the Feaeral ElectlODI
Co1Dml11lon (FEC) ID May
cha.rlinl that Bad.ham bad il·
le1ally UHd corporate doutlona
to ftnance hll campaitn.
Mn. Hall, wbo bad risen to her
feet, vehemently objected to the
llnkilll of her campatp with
Butcher-Forde.
··1 am nmntna a arau roots
camp&Jin. II any ol you are in· ~ ln the detalll ol Mr.
Schmits' complaint, I would be
happy to dllcuaa lt with you," she
salcl.
Badbam aald Butcher and
Forde were hired to provide him
with materials. "They did not
run my campalfn,'' be said.
"I cannot fault any of the
materials they used,'' the can-
didate added.
Badbam described Schmitz'
FEC complalnt as ''the nearest
th1na to malicious libel" and 1ald
the funds ln questi<m were spent
le1ally on a public oplnloo survey
before be decided to run for eon,ra..
Back on the Joh
Newport Beach has its city manager back again. Robert
Wynn, who has been off duty since Sept. 7 when he had
open he art surgery. returned to his city hall office this
week. Wynn says he's not working full time yet, but is putting in a few hours every day.
Fro.PogeAJ
SMO~ING PUNISHMENT •••
the school.
Mrs. William Weatherman
said Monday that Terry has been
sent home from school three
times recently because of lllnels.
She aaid she is awaiUna results of
medical tests.
Dr. Daniel Hom, director or
the · National Clearinghouse for
Smoking and Health in Atlanta,
said that swallowin& tobacco
could be harmful, but bad no re-
cord of anyone dying from lt.
The parents or both or the boys
knew they smoked.
"I really don't approve of smok-
ing, "said Mrs. Weatherman, who
said she knew Terry had been
smoking since November.
Bill's father, William Adkins,
said, "At !lrst I didn't approve or
his smoking. Then later on I did.
He's a very nervous child."
The incident in this town or 3SO
bas sparked criticism from
health experts around the coun-
try.
"That's a very dansterous form or punishment," said Dr. Paul
Larsen, a pharmacology expert
who 1\udles efrects of tobacco at
the Medical College ol Virginia in
Richmond.
Dr. George Wise, direct.or of
the pol1on control center at
Children's Mercy Hospital in
Kan.au City. Mo., said be knows
of cases of people dytna after be-
in& injected wlth nlcotine t.o rid
them of certain diseases.
Death Probe Set
WASHING TON (AP) -FBI
agents are going to Venezuela to
question rlght-wlng Cuban exiles
about the bombing death here ol
rormer Chilean Ambassador
Orlando Leteller, the Institute for
PollcyStudJessald Monday.
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Saddlebaek
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
•
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1976
Aftern~n
N.Y. t oeks
TEN CENTi
I
CUSD Leader Blasts Negotiati9ns
By JACK CHAPl>EU.
OUIM O.Uy l'lleUUff
l 0 A bllsterlnc attack on the con-luct ol wage and benefit negotJa.
tions for 63S Capistrano Unified t School District teachers was ~launched Monday by Tony Leon, t P!Hident of the Capistrano
J,Jnilied Education Association
1-(ClJEA). i "We are ~negotiating with an
~tructionist. He's iU-prepared,
One of 'Them'
he's stalling and the reason is
that be doesn't know what the
bell bas gone on in this district in
the past three years, .. Leon said.
In a hastily called press con·
ference outside the Capistrano
Unllied School District board
room, Leon told reporten the
district's $35-an-bour private
consultant Kent Hall bad too
many other business commit·
ments which limited negotiation
aeasions to once a week.
"At this ~ate, we'll be unW
June n:nUn1 a contract. w~·re not w g to wait," Uoo said anerUY.
Leon said the CUEA was dls·
lribut.Jnl fliers to teacben this
week asking them what they
wanted to do.
"We're aallina, what kind ol
action do you want us to take! Do
you want a strike? Do you want
...........
This fellow isn't a refugee from the movie
about the giant ants, he's just a fire ant
magnified 160 times by a scanning elec-
tron microscope at the University of·
Southern Mississippi. He's ~ained a new
lease on life wlLh Lhe banning of Mlrex,
the only effective killer of the pest that
plagues Southern states.
Punished Pair
Siek; P-arents
Ra'p Principal
HUME, Mo. (AP) -When the
,high school principal caught
J hree t een-age boys with
~garettes in their pockets, he
aave them a choice or punish-
ment: take a paddling or eat lhe
cigarettes.
Two boys chose to eat a total of
18 cigarettes and have developed
health problems as a result, their
}>arents said Monday.
When the boys· mothers went
to a school board meeting to pro-
test, the board voted to uphold
the principal 's actions.
Board member Joe Drooks
said the prlncipal's authority
would be damaged unless the
board supported him.
"I feel like if the kids make up
' their own mind, it's up to them."
SVUSD M~y. Award
Contract for Kitchell
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District trustees may
award a million-doUar contract
for a central kitchen facility Wed·
nesday.
The board will meet at 8 p.m.
in the multipurpose room at Los
Allilos Intermediate School.
The facility, future site of the
district's food services program,
ha.s an estimated C06l or $1.1
million.
Trustees also will be asked to
initiate the purchase process for
two elementary school sites. One
site, which is estimated to cost
$3,000, is in the Missions Planned
Community, between Cam-
berwell and Beckenham streets.
The second site, estimated to cost
$6,000, is on Entidad, off Los
Alisos Boulevard, in Mission
Viejo.
In another, related act.ion,
trustees will be asked to assign
architects for the two schools and
another facility planned in
Aegean Hills.
Trustees also will be asked to
authorize bids for resurfacing of
the swimming pool shell at Mis-
sion Viejo High School.
District administrators and
coµnty health department of·
ficials have said the outer shell or
lbe pool is deteriorating and pos~ in8 a sanitation and maintenance
problem.
The repair work is estimated'to
cost rrom $25,000 to $30,000.
topicketorwhat! Leonsaid.
Dr. Jerome Tbornsley, district
supertntendept, said today that
he bad not officially been ap-
proached with complaints by the
t.eachen representaUves.
He defended Hall, sayin1 the
district necoUator was "• skilled
talented person wlth experience
far beyond any or our local peo.
ple.
"Kent Hall did the neeoUaUng
for the Reagan Administration
with the state employes. He
knows precisely what our district
has done."
"All these things <Leon's com· plaints about delays) are new to
me. lf be feels all th<Jse ~.he
ought to say it to the negotiator,"
Dr. Thornsley said.
Teachers or ·tne Capistrano
Unified School District sought
.,.y increases ranging ftom 16 to
30 pe~nt u weU u aJ,ruticant
iocreuea ln the dlatrict'a leave
policy, for Insurance and re-
duced clus sins.
Tbe school district •Umated
the total packa1e would cost $7.3
million 1n addition to the dis·
trict 's preaeot $1f.64 te&cber
payroll. .
Dr. Tbomsley bu laid that the
district bas only $2.2 mllllon with
(SeeA'ITACK, Page AZ>
Slemons Ducks
Candidate Missing at Debate
B y GARY GRANVILLE
Of Ille Oally ,.ilot Si.ti
A debate between Assembly
candidates Republican James
Slemons and Democrat Ron
Cordova turned Into a one-man
Cordova show Monday night
when Slemons heeded the advice
of his attorney and bowed out.
The announcement o( Slemons'
last-minute withdrawal from the
League of Wome n Voters·
sponsored debate drew hoots and
laughter from a standing-room·
only crowd in a campus lecture
hall at Saddleback College.
Orange Coast League Presi·
dent Valerie Murley said
Slemons' attorney, John D.
Cochran, told her he advised
his client •·not to appear in public
discussion until an investigation
now under way is completed,
probably in about one week's
time."
Mrs. Murley said Cochran djd
not specify either the subject or
target of his investigation.
But tod~y the Irvine attorney
admitted he has hired in·
vestigatacs .. to checlc out certain
faeeta" ofereetnt MWI stori• lft
the Santa Ana Registel" alleging lhal~erqpns: t -Whilr in Germany reeently
mailed to himself 1n Newport
Beach two pornographic books
that were later seized by U.S.
Customs agents under regula-
tions prohibiting the importation
or such material into the U.S
-In 1974 lost four reels of
pornographic movies to custom
agents after they were dis-
covered in his suitcase when he
returned from a trip abroad.
-Last spring lured Dale Scott
LUCl\S into the Republican
prlm'ry In the 74th Assembly
Distljct to undermine the can-
didacy or Marian Bergeson.
Today Slemons labeled the
newa story "allegations based on
unlmown sources" and said he
expects to have them all cleared
beiore ihe Nov. 2 general election.
"l can assure you I have not re-
ceived a letter regarding two
books hidden away in an
automobile manual." said
Slemons.
The Newport Beach
Republican, who employs 92 peo-
pl e at his Mercedes Benz
dealership, "many' or them
Germans whose relatives and
homes are in Stuttgart.
"I'm not saying that anv of
them mailed the books -tJ \bey
were mailed -but just that there
may be another answer." said
Slemons.
As for the alleged 1974 porno.
graphic material incident.
Slemons said , "that again is
based on allegations from so-
called informed sources."
The 43·year-old auto dealer
flatly denied sponsoring the Jast-
minute Lucas candidacy in the
June primary election. a can·
didacy that deprived Mrs .
Bergeson of last place on the
ballot.
lt is believed by some who deal
Oally fllle4 st.ttf l'Mle
ALL BY HIMSELF
Democrat Cordova
Candidates
Shun National
Health Bill
By LAURIE KMPER
OI tlle O.lly l'lle4 5C.tff
A national health insurance bill
being considered in Congress
currently lacks the endorsement
of both candidates in the 40lb
Congressional District race.
in political campaigns that next
t.o top spot fan the ballot, last
place is the best position to at·
tract voter attention.
Registrar of Voter record$
show that Lucas riled bia
nomination papers March 17 ..
the last candidate to do so in
the heated Republican 14th Dis·
lrict primary.
March 13 was the regular fit.
ing deadline but because
Republican incumbent Robert
Badbam abandoned his As·
sembly seat to run for Congress,
the filing deadline in the 14th was
<See SL EMONS, P age A2)
* * * Cordova
All Alone,
Applauded_
~Republican 14th Assembly can-
didate James Siemon&' last-
minute retreat from his
scheduled debate with Democrat
Ron Cordova Monday night lelt
Cordova alone on center stage for
40minutes.
By the bme Cordova used both
his and Slemons' time to field
questions from newsmen and the
overflow audience at Saddleback
College, he had earned himself a
rousing round of applause.
The 29-year-old prosecuting at-
torney studiously avoided using
his absent opponent's name.
Instead, in all but two in·
stances he referred to Slemons
simply as "the auto dealer."
At that, •'the auto dealer••
wasn't mentio-ied often as
C-Ordova's rapid fire comments
and'answers ranged over a broad
area or public issues. ~
Before his 40 minutes W#re
used up, the candidate had given
his capsule views on tax reform,
criminal justice, m edic~l
malpractice, education, housing
and the lot of a Democratic at
large in an assembly district that
is heavily Republican.
"I will never vote the party
line." Cordova said as he
minimized his af(iliatioo with the
Democratic Party. "I will be the
representative of lhe 14th As·
sembJy District and not the
Republican or Democratic
parties." I Principal Kenneth Hightower
said shortly arter tbe incident I la.st month.
· Hightower said he always of·
• fered the same alternative to
' other students who broke the rule I against carrying cigarettes, but I all ha4 chosen pnddUng.
• Hightower caught Terry I Weathennan. 15, Bill Adklns, 14,
Viejo Cormcil
Seat J? acant-
But No Takers
No one has applied for the Mis·
sion Viejo Municipal Advisory
Council vacancy created when
two-term councilman Carl Neve
resigned.
SHOOT Shooting
For Fast Tax Relief
The Democratic candidate, VI·
vian Hall, was asked directly
whether she would vote for this
Democratic biJl during a meeting
or the Kiwanis Club or Mission
Viejo this morning.
She replied that she would vole
for it only if it is proven to be both
cheaper and more efficient than
the present insurance system.
"I have a lot of doubts." she
'aid. But she added that she is in·
terested in doing something
about the country's medical
care.
Cordova said he has not re-
ceived financial support from the
Democratic Party and "owes it nothing ...
When asked by a member of
the audience how. lf elected, he
expects to gain committee ap.
polntments without party sup·
<See CORDOVA, P age "2)
r and another youth with the
ciearettes. He told them they
I could have two swats with a pad·
die or eat the tobacco they were . i carrying.
• The unidentified boy chose the
II p addle, but Terry and Bill
divided the tobacco from 18
(See SMOKING, P11e AZ)
Shark Bita
Manin Leg
EUREKA (AP> -A
25-year-olcl .McKinl~yvU)e mu HYI be wn bittm by
a 10-foot blue ahart wblle divina eoutb of Trtn.idad,
tbe llueoldt County
aberlff's dfpartmeat re·
port.I.
Wllllam K~nned1 told
~· he bad a n&in
with tM ~eroelous creature
Monday. Re was trea~
at • local hospiU! tor a M6t-lncb c:ut ln tit. leg that wu p inch deep, the re-
port.alcl
The fou r remaining coun·
cilmen agreed 1.ut week to Invite
interested community residents
to apply to serve out the re·
maloder or Neve's term.
The person chosen to replace
Neve will be ti,p for elect.Jon in
March of 1978.
Anyone interested 1n serving
on the advisory coamcil can sub-
mit bis qualifkatloos at the MAC
ornce, 26161-B La Paz Road,
Monday thrpugh Friday, 10 a.m.
to f p.m. Applicants must be resi-
dents of Mission Viejo.
Deadline for applications is
Oct 29. Councilmen will select
Neve's replacement at. their re-
gular meeting, Nov. a.
'Thief Takes Coins
An intruder WM-.ed a 1111·
•Ion Vfejo home via tile unlocked
rear door took $500 inc:baqetrom
a flnt-&alloo water bottle. Oruce CoantT sbertlf '1 ottkers said the
t.belt wu reported by Bruc:e
l:dward Herigatad, 33. of acn Oso ltojo. He told olftcen be..,
away from h1I bomeat lhetJme.
t
By ANNE COOPER Of Ille Oallr ,.. ... .__ ..
Sadd leback Homeowners
Outraged Over Taxea (SHOOT>
has se.nt a letter and petition to
Gov. Edmund G. Brown, asking
for immediate property tax re-
lief.
1be letter to Brown is accom·
pallied by a petition signed by '·* Saddleback Valley tax-.,.yers. asking lbe governor to
call an emer1ency session or the
state Le1islature to freeie pro-
perty tue1 at last year's rates.
The petition also supports the
Oran1e County board of
s~ntson 1n their position, ad-
vocating homeowner tax exemp.
tion to 50 percent ol assessed
value, followed by complete re-
form of the tu 1y1ten). "rve never r un Into anythblg
to damn com~llcated u th~ pre.
MDt tax aystem," aald Ec1Car Mckean, El Toro resident and
Mefftary or SHOOT. "Jn the Sad-
dleback Valley alone, we ha'Ve 67 c:Utterent tax rates. 1be Orange
County tu bill la a model of loef · ficleney."
McKean 1ald tu bW.s are so
complicated, taxpayer1 bave no
way of judging whether their
bWa_.lnerror.
OMlylll ... ,._..,.....
'MODEL OF INEFFIC1ENCV'
Tu Protester Mc«••n
To ualst Saddleback Valley
bomeownen tn evaluaUnc thelr
tu bills, SHOOT hu compUed a
three-p•1• docurnent. llstine pro-
perty tax rates by county service
areas. The tax rate data 1s IC·
CSeeTAXU. PapAI\
But Assemblyman Robert
Badbam, her Republican oppo-
nent. contended the government
can't provide health insurance
cheaper tban th.it offered by
private enterprise.
If it is cheaper, be said, tben it
ls subsidized by the taxpayer.
The candidates were also
asked about the cost ot subsidiz-
ing the postal aystem.
One way of cutt.ing costs here,
said Badham, will be to'
eliminate the bulk mail permit
which subsidizes the people who
want to fill the mall box with
"junk." He said the cbar1e
abould be the actual cost ot mail· m,. .
Mn. Hall sui1ested that coets can be cut by automatinl inueb
olt.besystem.
A NtirM asked the candlda"8
what they would do to usist the
penon on • fixed income who is
faced With hlper taxes.
"We have slmply got to reduce
our expendltures," Badbam
replied.
Al tbe aame Ume Coongreaa in·
creased social security by e.1
per~nt. be said. "They '""re.
CSeeRBALTll. PaaeAI>
•
Co ast
Weather
Qi1bs in the mid 705 ex·
pected throuth Wednesday
with continued morning
and nlehlUme fog and low
clouds.
INSIDE TODAY
'H~O'JI' u o 7ac>n·aitnlt
OO?M for children 'lnd adult•
bom of o coU.ge cu and
m1rturtd bl( II•. Magaliltw. l u mwntor hot ncwr 1DOft a, but i
W'I not griping. SH tDhfl on P.aftA•. .... ""'
!..41 DAA.YPILOT SB
• =€SMOKING ••
dprettea and aw allowed il.
' 1totb IOOD betaa to ..... tMlr pare:nta a.aid.
·~ Mn. WUUam Adktm aald abe
• took Bill to a dodor 20 miks
-away that night aft« be began
; spitting up blood. She said tests
abowed be had a small ulcer,
, which doctors said bad been de-
veloping over a Iona period but
could have been made worse by ~ the tobacco.
1 • She and her huaband are
' threatening legal adJ<ln against -:·the 1cbool. ~· Mrs. William Weatherman
aald Monday that Terry haa been
1enl home from school three
Umes recently because of illness.
She said she is awaiUni results of
medical tests.
The incident in this town of 3:ilJ
baa sparked criticism from
health experts around the coun-
try.
' ''1bat's a very dangerous fonn
of punishment," said Dr. Paul
Lanen, a pharmacology expert ~ho studies effects of tobacco at !lbe Medical College of Virginia in
3l1~hmond.
Dr. George Wise, director of
the poison control center at
Children's Mercy Hospital in
Kansas City, Mo., said be knows
ti cues of people dying aft.er be-
ing injected with nicotine to rid
them or certain diseases.
E'rom Page AJ
TAXES •••
companied by step-by-step in-
structions on auditing a tax bill.
The SHOOT fact sheet is
available by calling McKean at
586-2213.
Total tax rates in the Sad-
dleback Valley, range from a low
of $9.26 in one part of northern
Laguna Hills to $13.98 in a section
of Mission Viejo, according to the
SHOOT figures .
SHOOT was organized Aug. 13
by 17 angry Saddleback ValJey
taxpayers. Tbey maintain that
since most families pay property
laxes out of salaries or other in-
come, a tax hike amounts, in ef-
fect, to a pay cut.
The.v also claim that the pro·
perty tax system has evolved into
.such complexity that most
laymen cannot understand it.
"Property taxes must become
a personal matter, rather than
the unknowing, uninterested and
unthinkable monster it has
evolved into over the years," the
SHOOT steering committee
wrote in their letter to Governor
Brown.
'" Frora Pag~ AJ
.. A'ITACK ••.
which to meet all teacher de-
mands.
.. Things are starting to beat
up. I don't think that's what tbe
board of education intended. If
ao. then they are not negotiating
in good faith," Leon said.
During a portion of the
teacher's talk, he direded a
. personal slur at HalJ, bul then
quickly r etracted il calling him
an •'obstructionist·• instead.
He said that after two sessions. "we're still at ground iero ...
Another session was scheduled
.for today, then Oct. 28 and again
Nov.3.
"There's a certain momentum
Ito negotiations Every time we
reach that, be (Hall) baa to gel on
an airplane and fly t o
Sacramento."
. Saddleback Council
· Meets Wednesday
A membership workshop has
been scheduled by theSaddleback
Area Coordinating Council at 7:30
· p.m. Wednesday in the communi-
ty room of the Peoples Federal
Savings and Loan building, El
Toro.
Bob Price, SACC vice presi-
dent, said the purpoaeot the meet·
ing is t o get members to
participate by identifying and
evaluating problems, needs and
opportunities which abould be of
:interest to coordinating council
.members.
OflANQ! COAST Sii
DAILY PILOT
=:t:.~:.i.~:.'r.::i::i:.:ti.=. C.0.>I l'ub!U/11 ... C_,,,, ~ ...... !-••• ~.'.!~':'~'t~~~·==~,~·
tel• V•llor. ln1t•e. S.H .. .t:;-VII .... '""' ~~=~:~~'.,.A~~;:;
=~~~~~DI Wnl .. , ._ .. _ ..._,_.._._
, •••. an., ""''"'--·1-0.-.-........ .,._ ........
'"'"" \'...-u ........ .. _ .... " ...
~•M.L-. -P.-A""'-'"'""',...i"'~~
t 1Cldl1,9dlV.-.WOMce J5Jt1u~u11-• t.. cr...n-
Offtc" c.. .... •-en,.,... -............... ,.,, ...... _
.._ .. ""' '*~'4rwl
T1l1pllo11e (714)__,
ClaMlftecl Advertltlftll4Hl7'
_, va1 .. y-.01t1<1
A1~0
'°NM$eol0.--4'MU0
c..r-,: ·~ °'= c..e -.-. ~ ::li., •• --:..:,,, .. ..:..: ~ .... -< ......... , ,...c1.1 _.... ........ ._,...._
I«~ Cltff Mt!-Nit .. ~ .... ~llllH1tle hll•<tl,tleft tf t Mllet rt.~ ~Ill,=~~ -"'YI Mii l"'Y
1 \
TU!!d!y, Octobef 19, 1978
Sw.eet Vletory
BoardAp~ c~ Saka ..
CANDY'SNOTDANDY-DGt~toaimnemem
ben ol $.be Capbtrao thd1'ed Scbool Diltrieti boa.rd ol edueattoa. Students of Niguel mus Junior Hilb and Marco Fonter
Jtmior High had proposed to bold candy sales in December
to ralle funds for student activities.
Monday school board president, Dr. A. £. Westberg, a
dentist, objected. So did Trustee Robert Hunt who suggest-
ed aometbing el4e rather than candy be sold.
FINAL APPROVAL of the board was given, however,
on a 4-2 vole alter Trustee Sarah Lipp suggested. &ooaue ln
cheek, that the kids could "sell them a toothbhish along
with the candy."
If P~e Right
Sad dleback Views
New Campu s Site
Saddleback College trustees
agreed Monday that they will
rondemn the 20 acres or land they
want for a northern campus site
if the price of the property is
righL
The trustees unanimously
passed a resolution authorizing
eminent domain over the Irvine
Company 's la nd near the in-
tersection of Myford Road and
Bryan Avenue. However, they
said it won't be acted on until after they are given appraisals
on the property.
"U the price is too high. we're
not going to do it," said Norris a
Brandt. president. The trustees bad expected to
have the price estimates Mon-
day. But Superintendent Robert
Lombardi said the appraisers
won 't give them a price until ear-
ly next month.
The trustees obviously were
disappointed. "Can't you build a
fire under those guys at all."
asked Trustee Larry Taylor.
Lombardi said he has already
tried to push the appraisers but
he's been unsuccessful.
"My under standing of ap·
praisals is minimaJ but I'm
lenrning," he said. "One of lbe
things l 'm learning is that they
don't move very fast."
He told the trustees that their
resoluUon is .. telling the world"
that the district ls still interested
in that site. He said oothing will
be done in the process until the
appraisal is given and approved.
Condemnation proceedings are
necessary to save the Irvine
Company from paying a penalty
when the land is pulled out of its
current agriculture preserve
status. Without this action, col-
lege officials said, the purchase
probably would be moce difficult
and cosUy.
Trustees have said they want
Frora Page AJ
HEALTH ••.
aching right around in your
pocket in the backside of
Congress and reducing lbe value
of your dollars you bad left, if you
bad one left.'·
He said the government can't
initiate new programs without
new taxes.
Mrs. Hall called for some kind
of property tax relief for senior
citizens.
One man questioned whether she wants a "big brother govern-
ment'· since property tax is con·
trolled by the state .
classes offered at the northern site by September.
Trustees also approved a con-
tract for the architectural
services of William Blurock and
Partners of Newport Beach.
1be agreement, which trustees
specified is not to be considered
as an exclusive contract, says the
college intends to employ the
firm, which has designed recait
campus construction. for the master plan and a building com-
plex on the satellite site.
The architects may also be
calJed upon to do some work
needed to move some buildings
on the existing campus, cuivert
the library to administraUve of-
fices aod classrooms and other
projects which may be designat-
ed by the trustees.
The firm will be paid eight per-
cent of the first million dollars,
seven percent of the second
million and six percent of the re.
maining cost of the consll\lction
project.
From Page AJ
CORDOVA
port, Cordova said be expects to
be able to work within any
framework av ail able to him. ·
The Democratic candidate
called for repeal of the business
inventory tax and said the
homeowners• exemption on pro-
perty taxes should be increased
to $5,000 and, for senior citUens, to$7,500.
He also said welfare and
education costs should be shifted
away from property taxes .
.. We have lo start taxing on the
ability to pay, not accumulated
paper wealth," Cordova said.
Tbe Democratic candidate said be favors capital punish-
ment in some cases, opposes
Proposition 14 and favors
Proposition 2 as the best way to
preserve coastal areas without
penalblng coast landowners.
New 'Hero' Landed
BANGKOK,Thallaod<AP)-
Vietnam's Communiat regime
has made a hero of a young elec-
trician executed in 1964 for trying
lo assassinate Robert S .
McNamara. TheolficialVietnam
news agency said the Saigon city
museum ls displaytng more than
30 relics of Nguyen Van Trot, ln·
eluding his birth certificate,
postage stamp collection, photo-
graphs and poems byTrol "show-
inghisoptimislicspirit."
* * * Divergent Issues
Can didates' Views
Aired in E ncounter
Candidate Robert Badbam
said the major lasues are sur-
vival of the two-party system and
putting an end to government de-
ficit spending.
Caod.ldate Vivian Hall said
there are three major issues,
honesty in government, full
employment and protection or
the environment.
On those diffe ring notes,
Republican Badham and
Democrat Mrs. Hall, candldates
in the 40th Congressional Dis-
trict, began their debate Monday
night at Saddleback College in
Mission Viejo.
'Ibey were the second ball or a
debate doubleheader sponsored
by the League or Women Voters.
Part one of the enCOWJter turned
out to be a one-man debate when
Republican ~ssembl,y candidate
Jame1 Slemona failed to mate it
to the starting b)Ocb for his
1cbeduled encounter with
Demoqrat Ron Cordova.
.. ~ut ~e interplay ttmoq can-dldatee that was aliablg from
the Slemons-Cordova non·
debate was preaetit when
Badbam and llra. Hall
responded to DelflmeD'a QW· Uoaa.
Mrs. Hall bJt on tbe honesty tn
fovernment l11ue wben abe.
amentcd •Otb Dlstrlct
C<Jn11'H1maa Andnw Hlnahaw'1
ltat.ul U a COGvlcted feloa aiDce
the tint of the yeu.
Referring to Hlnabaw'a inabili-
ty to vote since being sentenced
to state orison. Mrs. Hall called
his role In Congress "taxation
'wttbout representation ln the 40tb
DIJtrtct ...
She called for full emplo~ment
as a means of flghtlnl lnf1atloo
and aaid anti-trust laws should be
vtaorously enforced aa a way to
reduce skyrocketing Interest
rates.
And when she hit on the en·
vtronmental protect.ion theme,
Mn. Hall suggested that the na-
tion should devote more ot lts
energies to provldlDI the
technology needed to rid the na·
Hon of environmental bUpt.
But Bad.ham, a aeven·term state utembbman. emphaalM(l
what be called a retmu t.o n.ca1
~Dllblllty.
• I'm totally dedicated· to
elim1natina defidt .-'lnl and
to beaiD c6lppln• .,,_, at a na-Uonaf debt that thrMlenl UI all,''
tbe Republican candid.lte Aid.
Re ariued that party labels
are, lndHd. 1i1n1flcant both ln
Saerameato and In Waablnltoa.
And be Jibed at the Democratic
Party for oppoalng what _he
called a constantly burle0ftin8
bureaucracy only at election
tlmel •
At oce Ume ln the debit., Badham wu ln~ b,J one
ol bJI f0f1ber nvala In tut J-..'1
RepubUcan prtmuy eledloo.
N~w BUilding
Okays Halted
No appUcat.lons for new A!On-
1trucUon within the realm of
South Cout Regional 1.cloe Com·
million control will be accepted
for a 57-day hiatus wbeo a
leslalatlve gap SOOll puts the qency ln limbo.
Commission Executive Direc-
tor Mel Carpenter announced al
a meeUn1 Monday at the Hunt-lniton Beach Civic Center that
Nov. 15 II the cutoff date for a~
plicalioQa.
Commissioners who have been
criticlled both from without and
wtthio their own ranks previous-
ly for boQed-down project ap-
pUcaUon processtns wtll race fo
catch up ln the mea.ntlme.
Tbey agreed to meet In
emerpncy sesalom Nov. l, 3,
and 8 in an effort to clear up 396
pending applications, 115 of
which require tull-blown public
beartnp to take any pro 6r COD
teati.mcm.Y.
Location of these meetings is
yet to be determlD6d. but It ls
likely to be Torrance qty Hall,
since moat matter1 coming
before commissiooers prior to
Nov . 15 Involve Los Angele&
Cou.nty matters. A commlaaion staff member,
however, said at Monday after-
noon '1 adjournment she un·
deratood the meetings would be
ln the Huntington Beach Civic
Center. The agency alternates
between the two locations.
Followint the Nov. 15 applica-
tion cutoff date. Jan. 12, 1.9'17 ls
the ll.rst date at which they may
be filed again for ecmideraUon
wttbln the coming year.
Nothing unresolved before
Nov. 15 can possibly be bean!.
before Feb. 7 and quite lt)ely any
new appUcatlons filed following
resumption of the commissloo's
work won't be beard until later.
A 21-day delay ls required by
law before commlsaloDeta may
consider an application for
aQYthlng Involving new or re-
viled constructlon and buUdl.n8
wltbln 1,000 yards of the coutllne.
APWI ......
Mun.., 111 '.l'ria119le
X marks the spot where
590-foot Panamanian cargo
s hip went down ln the
''Bermuda Triangle," about
140 miles west of Bermuda.
Searchers are continuing
their efforts to find the 37-man crew.
E',.._P~AJ
SLEMONS ••
beldopeo to March 17.
Health Director
To Speak Tonight
Slemons; woes with the al-
leged pornographic episodes
and the Lucu candidacy mirror
a series of controversies that
have surrounded bis campeilJl
since his 1,875-vote victory ove1'
Mrs. Bergeson.
That victorious primary elec-
tion campaign cost Slemons and
bis backers $117,789, more than
twice the amount spent by Kn.
Bergeson.
In campaign literature pro-
duced by the Arnold Forde-
WlWam Butcher-led campaign,
it was claimed that Slemom Dr. William Routt, director of
tbe south county reOonat bealtb
team and originator of the county
youth shelter program, will
speak tonight in Mission Viejo.
Dr. Routt will diacusa t.be need
Saddleback Valley adolescents
and their families have for a
local youth shelter at a 7:30 p.m.
meeting in the sanctuary of the
First Christian Church,
Mar1uerite Parkway at
Jeronimo Road.
Also speaking on the Sad·
dleback Valley youth shelter pro-
gram, expected to open in
January, will be Dr. William
Heard, deputy d1red.or or the
south county team; Carole
Neustadt, area coordinator for
the Saddleback Community Men-
tal Health Clinic and a Sad·
dleback Valley Unified School
District trustee; and staff from
existing shelter programs in
Laguna Beach and Costa Mesa.
The proposed shelter . would
bouae up to six teenagers at a
time. In order to qualify for the
program, youngsters who are
having problems at bome or in
school must agree to particlpate
with their families in extenalve
individual, group and family
counseling during their short·
term stay at the shelter.
The goal or the program ls to
reunite the family, witb better
Hoes of communication
established. The program is not
available to seriously disturbed
youngst~rs, juvenile offenders or
teens with drug problems, a
spokeaman said.
Younasters s taying at the
shelter are supervised by
houseparents, a full-tlme
counselor and backup staff from
the mental health clinlc.
County mental health staff are
·considering a house on the First
Christian Church property In
Minion Viejo as a possible site
for the six-bed facility.
was: .
-A graduate o! the Universi-
ty or California. Davis.
-A close personal friend of U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater and
bis son, Rep. Barry Goldwater,
Jr.
Later it was shown that
Slemons only attended the UD-
iversity and bad not graduated.
And a Goldwater letter said,
"I do not know Mr. Slemona or
if I do, I have forgotten meeting
him. My son said that he knows
him slightly but not well.
"I think, frankly, that hla use
of our name ln hl.s campai
literature, extends oorma
courtesy Just a bit."
While the League was not tol
of Slemons' withdrawal from
Monday night's debate unW 20
minutes before it was to begin,
the candidate's attitude, al
least, was known to the press
by mid-afternoon.
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