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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-09-15 - Orange Coast PilotI ' ~-• • ce_: __ onsc1enoo Peli1'ery Death Blamed • • • • Plans Baffle e Police /tfilft arg Flight ·:Crash Kills :~20 QU Plane -ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP> 1 ~)\n Air Force plane 1lammed 1~ • 11\0W\taintlde on a hlgb 1 1ecurlty Army base, killing all 20 I people aboard when it exploded · on impact a half mile from a bunker conttalning fissionable material. authorities said. ~ The four-engine plane crashed on Manzano Base. where nuclear weapons are s tored. three ·lance: 'Clear r· Conscience,' NaCover-·up ,WASHINGTON (APl - BUdget Director Bert Lance, ap· pealing to the American people to: be "the jury in this proceed· iaJ;" told the Senat.e today that wJ\lle he may have made mls- tahs .running his Georgia banks h& engafed in. oo wr.oncdoing and no cover-up. · !'1 am secure and comfortable · ~wing that tny conacieoce is cl~ar and that the people's v~rdict WiU bee a falr and just one," the director of J)resldent C1u1.er'1 Office of Management and Budget told the Senate Gov-ernmenlat Affalrs Committee. Drawlinc growly and solemnly, ,. HOMETOWN RALLIES I r.: FOR BERT LANCE, A4 minutes aner Its takeoff fr0m · Klrtland Air Force Baso at 11:45 p.m . Wednesday. Kirtland base operations con- firmed there were no sµrvlvors, said Walter Sprick of the Federal • Aviation Administration. "One big fireball and that was it,'· a nearby resident s aid. Air Force crews using fiares and helicopter spotlights re· covered at least 15 bodies in a predawn search. Authorities said all those aboard were military personnel. A spokesman at the plane's base said it was used frequently by hi&h-ranking military person· nel and American and forelcn dignitaries. .to"'ormer Secretary of State Henry A. Kissfoler is among those who have used the plane, the spokes man said. The aircraft, which was scat- tered over 10 acres after impact. was used as a model for modiricaUons to Air Force One. the president's plane. An air traffic controller said he tried to warn the pilot the plane was in trouble. •'The first indication we bad he was in trouble was when the radar showed be was too close to the mountain and flying too low," said the controller. "We hit him on the guard fre- que~cy and 1.olcj him to turn rigtit and climb ... but he never djd, .. he said. . The jet was a communications aircraft b!lsed al Seymour Johnson Air Force Base in Goldsboro, N.C. An Air Force spokesman said it was on a train· Ina misaion and was on i\S w1yto Neilla Air Force base in Nevada. The EC135, described aa a "'modlfled 707,'' stopped in Albu· (Seeit DEAD. Pa1e Al) This. Blaze a Gasser / • • o.lty '""' ,,... ~ lat , ...... .NEWPORT FIREMEN BAlTLE QAAAOE FIRE WEDNESDAY NIGHT IN IRVINE TERRACE At Kewemee Drive and Avocado Avenue, the Barbecue Got Out of Control treat the woman. "I knew what was going on, but l didn't want to know,'' Mrs. Pope testified Wednesday in p choked voice. Sbe said when the bab' was de· livered, the doctor would· not speak to her or show her the baby. "l looked over and the nurse was crying," Mn, Pope recalled. "Then J knew." She said her divorce one year later was caused by the ml!ntaJ ancuiah she and her busl>and 1uf • fered because of the batu''s (le6 BABY, Pase Al) ' Gason ~BQ • Sets Newport Garage Fire Employe Finds Copy Irvine police were trying lodar to determine the authenUcity of a Xerox copy of an apparent plan to m.ake a' bomb, discovered Wednesday by an Edwards Laboratdries employc. The diagram was found in the printout tray or the copyina machine, located just inside thi loading and shipping dock of the• facility, at 1401All.on Ave. ' Personnel Manager Rick Barkley called police when an employe showed hirq the draw- ing. Police said the drawing ap· peareci to be plans for a radio· controlled bomb, which dia· grammed blasting caps and three sticks of dynamite, with power boos ter. batteries and what appeared to be a television receiver. The maker of the diagrams av· parently was semi-literate. Several labeling words were mis- . spelleci. Pryor Show Miffs Four GR.AND RAPIDS, Mich. <AP> -If Richard Pryor's first TV variety show is to appear on television screens in Grand Rapids' and three other cilles, it will be Jate at l"light. The four stations, tttcludtne one in Grand Rapids which never before had. canceled a variety show due to its content, stopped the debut of Pryor's program 'rutsday nl&ht. , Cloudy lai. tonl1ht and early Frlctay mornln1. Partly cloudy afternoon and evening hOuta. Lowa tonight 58 to 84. -Hl1ta Frl· day new '108 at beaches to mid-10l lnlarid. I. ... ' ' 1 '·. ,, . -2 DAILY PILOT s Thu1id•r· Sep••mbor 1s, 1977 .. 'Threatens PoWei!' WA ~lll NG TON <AP) - tlHpttt df'<'M • ol 1tudy, t United State at 11 h not fllUM out how to act. rid "of danaerously 1 adlouctlve wa!-ttt from powor plunu Wld mtlttary weapon& pro· ductaon. the General AccounUne Ofnce repor\A. Unleat. thl• problem Is solved. the GAO saya. the aceumldaUon of nuclear wastes with hazardous rad iation that lasts up to hilt a l1l llhun year!J "threatens the tutun· uf nuclear p()Wer in the • Al'WI ......... LINING UP TO HEAR BERT LANCE TESTIFY 'The People's Verdict Will t;te Fair, Just' Lance 'Welcomes' Public as His Jury WASf([NGTON <AP> -Bert Lance struck back at his tomen lors today, acting as if he consider ed himself Gulliver bei.et by L1lhputi ans. He let it be known at the outset that his remarks were aimed at the American people, not the senators on the Governmental Affairs Cdmmitlec. "I WELCOME .T.HEM AS THE jury in this proceeding," Lance :-.aid mto the telev1s1on cameras. •·1 am· secure and comfortable knowing that my conscience is clear and that the people's verdict wi ll be a fair and just one." The setting wa-; one of those big Senate Office Building hearing rooms that have become so familiar in movie and TV fictionalized accounts a~ well as in real life. The Senate Watergate hearings spring to mind, although they were in a different chamber. United States. Robert W. Fri, ntinc ad· mlnlatralor of the Energy Research and Development Ad· ministration, defended the waste-disposal program before a I louse government operations subcotnmiltee. He said that many of the GAO's observations are baaed on 1976 d ata and outdated. He said that his agency, which will be absorbed by the Department or Energy on Oct. l -ts 4oing the best it can to deal with the problems. f'ri said that the Carter ad· ministration will s hortly an- nounce plans to deal with spent fuel at commercial reactors. a program under which the gov. ernment would reportedly offer lo lake these wa3tes off the hands Cooling Bis Heels Al'Wl ......... Nine-month-old Srntt Phillips was quite content in this :\1 ontreal Po<>I \\hen lhl' tcmpc•rature hit 104 degrees. The tot had u bottle and his g randmother within eus' reach. · or commercial plants for a fee. The Energy Research and Development Administration is • planning to develop six locations for long.term or permanent burial of radioactive wastes by 1985. But the report by the in· vcsligative arm or Congress says that "ERDA may have promised .more than it can deliver .•. BWck's Beach 'Failed Noble Experiment'? •'There are. we believe. formidable social, geological and regulatory problems which must b e solved," it continues. "Foremost among them is op. position of the public and some political leaders. "ERDA may not be successful in gaining their acceptance un. less 1t can convince people that is has a sound waste-management program and that geological dis · po~al ri!>ks to man 's environment are acceptably low," a cilfCicult task, the report saad. "Some radioactive wastes will remain hazardous for hundreds of thousands of years," It said, m eaning they must be perman e ntly isolated from human contact and environmen- tal influence. 20 DEAD ••• qu~rque to reruel, tb&spokesman said. A spokesman for the Fede~I Aviation AdminislraUon said the pilot made whal was prol>,bly a routJne attempt to contact de· partw-e control just after takeoff. Tt\e tower responded, but the pi lot didn't r e\urn the com· munication. The plane crashed about 8.500 feel up the Manzano Mountain range, about five miles east of the Kirtland run\\ a~ Settle m ent R emote CONC-ORD (AP > -Pr06peets for a rapid settlement of Californla's only public ~chool teachers strike appeared remote Wednesday, ai> both sides argued over a financ ial report and nobody would speculate on re· sumptlon or negotiations. SAN DI EGO (AP) -Turnlna over a public beach to nudism was ··a noble experiment that failed," a newspa~r s aid today in urging that Black's Beach be restricted to suit-wearing. "Even its advocates n ow deplore the voycurb m . the oc· casional bizarre behavior. the body painting of unclothed chtldrcn, ·· said the San Diego t:nion in an ed1tor1al. The municipal beach ha.!. been classified "swimsuit opt1onar· for three years and is one of the most popular areas along the coast. The newspa per , urging a p- proval of an election issue before San Diegans on Tuesday. said it agreed with police that Black's Beach is "not a hotbed of crime.·· Lance. the kind of big amiable fellow who looks as if he'd cry i he squashed a bug, came armed for the fight with a 49-paae state· menl to rea~. And Sen. ,Abraham .Rlbicoff <D·Conn. >. the chairman o( the committee, said he'd get all the time he needed, if lt takes a Saturday session. "A program must be de· veloped for present and future w aste·disposal operations that will not create unwarranted public risk. Otherwise, nuclear power cannot continue to be a practical source of energy,·· it said. -ti ERDA is considering burial or radioactive wast~ in under· ground sa)t formations that are stable, relatively free of ctrculat· ing around water and ·able to carry off beat from the radioac- tive wastes, block the escape of radlaUon about as effectively as concrete and s tretch, rather than s hatter, in an earthquake. That alone indicates a serious matter. LANCE WALKED INTO THE hearing room 15 minutes early with his lawyer , Clark Clifford, who was described aa urbane aa lon1 ago as Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S Truman. Now he's described as white-haired and urbane. ' "I don 'l reel lonely today at all," said Lance as he looked around the crowded room. He had plenty or support. Wife LaBelle and aon David, 22, sat in the front row, right behind the tables ror reporters. · "Nervous this morning?" a reporter asked as Lance made hJs way to center stage. "N?, .. he said . l!E STOOD COMFORTABLY BEIDND the witness table as a horde of photographers, sandwiched between the aenatora at thelr semicircular bench, clicked away. Lance's hands were ln h1s . pockets. He looked upruffled. The senators, m eanwhile, looked lonely and ignored. Rlbicoff called the Mlring to ofder five mi.n,utea late and J.n· toned that "we dOO:t inl~nd ihb to be a trial by ordeal.·~ AND SO IT WENT, LANCE'S firat session of what be cal~ h1a day in court. . One lessonAe bas learned, Lance told the aeoatora In a Gulliver· to LllUputlan-tone ot voice, "is to be mJabty careful in tbe future when I am discussing basic buman rlabta. '' * * * ,,.._~llfleAl BABY ••• death. Mrs. Pope broke down on the stand and the testimony was re-i cessed for 15 minutes to allow h~r to regain composure. In taking responalbUlty for the death, the Alr Force said: "The United States does not contest the allegation that lf propel' care and treatment were rendered to the patient. Michelle Pope, the baby would, based on a reasonable degree or medical certainty, have been dellvered alive and healthy." ®QUALITY TELEVISION 8yA•THlJllft. VINSEL OtllleO.-, ........ A opeclal study panel of ln· qulry wQ appointed today by the National Aeronautics and Space J\dmlnutratfun (NASA> to st1.1dy why a rocJc'et bullt in Huntineton Beach failed ln • T uesday n1ght launch ffOm • C•H Canaveral's KeMed.)' Space CeQter. (See pk· tu re, Paae CS.) The Ci.Int r~ket henf n1 a European Space Agency <ESA> copu11unicalions utelllte into. the heaveDJ on an experimental mis· sion was blown to bits like a $40 million firecr acker. Davers began to hunt wreckage al daybreak Wednesday along the sea noor 1n 85·foot depths of the l\tlanUc Ocean off the ca~ to reassemble m sea'rcb of clues lo the failure. A N ASA s pok es man in W ush.ingt.on, D.C. said today it appears the rocket built by Mc DonneU Dou1las Astronautics Company began to break up in flight. Flight records oflhe first Delta since 1969. indicate the craft beaan to tumble and bad to be destroyed aloft by remoteconirol to prevent an accident ·on the ground -possibly involving in· habited areas. A 11p()kesman for the Goddard Space Ftight Center in Green· )>elt. Md., said Wednesday that onboard TV' cameras monitoring the ship showed fire breaking out a t the top of one engine just beforehanq. The onboard blaze and s udden erratic traJcctory convinced a l ".S Aar Force range safety of· f1cer 1t was ttme to press the red b.utton and blow the missile to bits. Major parts or the Delta plun1v, nery. and hissing, into the s from about five miles In the s 'I in a dazzling aerial dis· play visible for miles over the southeastern United States. Other portions fluttered lightly to earth on Cape Canaveral's Up. Doctor Held :~ In Molesting r,...Pflfle A l LANCE ON STAND. • • The COLE • SJ1939W Fin11hed In simulated groined American Wall1ut with brushed Aluminum color accents. Earphone. • tll". Sol•lttte ChHW't It give~ you that great Zenith color picture automatically! Think of II .. • TV c:ontrol room In YOUf N U II control• lite colot plcll.ire •.. correctt the color picture •• ~ llme1 1 aecond .. urom1tlclltyt ' · LA CRESCE'NTA <AP> -A Los Angeles County tieal\l) de· partmenl physician has been booked for investii•tiion of molestina a 13-year·old boy at a plcnlc site Sept. 3, sbertrf's dep· utiessa1d. T hree rolls of pornographic movies, SS boxes of slides and 100 . rolls of undeveloped rum were selted during the artest. of Dr. Dale Roeer Scharer at hi• home. said Deputy W!lley Burrow. • -'"""' v ...... ~~., .... "''"' . _, .. ""-·-.. ~ . .,_,_ • "ofttlon '°' Ct e>t. ef .._._. •• ""' ...... c ..... .- FINAL 1977 CLEARANCE BIG SAVINGS I Ora.nge Coast. EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 258, .. SECTIONS, <42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today' Clo Ing N.Y.Stocks THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1977 C TEN CENTS Lance Claims 'Conscieric~ Qear' WASHINGTON <AP ) Budaet .Director Bert Lance LOld the American public "my con· &c1ence is clear'' today and made u point-by-pomt defense of his per5911al loans and overdrafts as a Georgia banker Brulget Boss Def ends Actions Lance, one of Pres ident Carter's closest aides, srud at Senate hearings into his financial eHair:s that published alle~alions h ave cau:.ed him "profound Petition Efforts .Slowing The North Cos ta Mes a Homeowners Association 1s only shock and disappointment." .. I did not ask for this fight but now tbat 1 am in 1t. 1 am fighting not only for myself and for my family but also for our syst.em ," he said. Lam·c, who has S<1id he will not resign, declared. "Is it part of 600 names short or the 3,600 sigmrtu~~ 'jtTa~a=----""'l'!!.;::.:~~I!! controversial rezone initiative on next March's general election ballot. However, spokesman Don Bull s aid today the drive has been slowed because some residents fear they may be included in a $2.5 million lawsuit filed against the group. The homeowners are attempt· ing to block a 48-acre home and apartment complex planned by the Amel Development Company of Santa Ana. O.tll' ,.,,.. Sl411f ,._. 'WOULDN'T PLAY BALL' Ex-director Levine our American system that a man can .be drummed out of eovern· ment by a series of false charges, half truths, misrepresentations. innuendos and the like?" •· He asked the nationwide television and radio audience to be the jury "for I am secure and State Bearing comfortable knowing that my conscience is clear jiOd that the • people's verdict will be a fair and Just one." . Lance had been saving his point-by-point rebuttal for the committee hearing, which sup· porters have referred to as "his Ex..; Fairview . . . ... Boss Testifies SACRAMENTO CAP l Fairview State Hospital's former director told a slate hearing today that he was fired because he dee lined to support a State I lealth Department coverup of poor con· ditions at the hospital for the re· larded. At a hearing by the state's Little JtooverCommission, Dr. Michael J. Levine testj(jed that Don Z. Miller, deputy director of the de- partment, told him that ''I was an excellent professional and clini· cian. but I wasn.'t playing ;all with the team." Levine, who was fired as head of the Costa Mesa hospital, in May but remained on the stare of the hospital's developmental diagnostic unit. said when the hospital was bemg considered for accreditation by a prestigious commission raise entries were m adeoo patients· charts. Dr. Francis M. Crinella, who look over as Fairview's director following Levine's dismissal, was unavailable for comment today. <See LEVINE, Page A2> day in court." Some argumpnt.s had been made previously by Lance or his asslstant.s,~ut he saved his most compre nslve defense for his appea ance before the committee and the cameras. 'I At one point, Lance made a Cace-to·f ace challenge to Seit. Charles Percy of UUnois, the committee's senlo'r' Republican, who previously asked whether Lance may have backdated checks to take advaritage of in- cometax deductions. Lance said he found Percy's statements "puzzling ... regret· table" and offered an explana· tion that Jed Percy to COj"ede: "It was wrong for me • even raise the possiblllty." With his wife, LaBelle, and guests from· Georgia in the au- dience, Lance said his family's . overdrafts did no harm to the Calhoun First National Bank while he was its chairman. "The bank for years followed a liberal policy with respects to overdrafts," Lance said. "I make no apology for this prac- tice. lt was believed by the bank's management that a liberal overdraft policy was a valuable tool for the bank to use in attracting and retaining customers. ..Despite the characterization or the bank as my personal toy. members or the Lance family were not accorded special favors regarding overdrafts. Lance said. ·~-...-.. APPEALS TO PEOPLE Lance at Hearing The company has llled a laws uit against the homeowners and is seeking a court injunction to halt 'the petition drive. The company claims the petition be· lng circulated contains "errors. inaccuracies and misrepresenta· tions." Air Force Plane Crash Kills. 20 While still confident of getting the needed signatures by the December deadline, Bull ad· mitted there is increasing reluc- tance from iome residents to join the fight. ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. <APl An Air Force plane slammed into a mountainside on a high secu,rity Army base, killing all 20 people aboard when it exploded on impact a halt mile from a bunker containing fissionable Hit Mountain Near Base he said. The jet was a communications aircraft based al Seymour Johnson Air Force B}lse ln Goldsboro, N.C. An Air Force spokesman said lt wlls on a train· ing mission and was on it.a way to Nellis Air F«ce base in Nevada. COLORADO Both sides are due back in Orange ·eounty Superjor Court 'l'uesday. A Wednesday hearing was delayed because the hun· dreds of pages of documents arguing the case for both sides <See PETITION, Page A2) material. authorities said. The !our-engine plane crashed on Manzano Base, where nuclear weapons are stored, three minutes after its takeof( from Kirtland Air Force Base at 11 :45 p m. Wednesday Kirtland base operations con- firmed there were no survivors. said Walter SprH:k or the Federal AviatlQn Admln1stflt10n. "One big fireball and that was it," a nurby resident said. Air Force crews usln1 nares and helicopter 1potU1hts re· covered ot least 15 bodies in· a predawn search. Authorjtles said · all those aboard were military personnel. A spokesman at the plane's Holiday Killed Infant Air Force Admits Fault; Parents Want Money MIAMI CAP > -Mi chelle Pope's baby died at delivery because a base hospital was on a three-day holiday and the limited staff failed to give her .. proper care and treatment." The Air Force admits it was at fault. It· has offered $15,000 in restitution. But Mrs. Pope and tter estranged husband, Army Sgt. • James Pope, say it's not enough to make up for mental suffering and the breakup of their mar- riage. "I never saw my baby. I had to ask if It was a boy or a girl. l wanted her to have her name, not just be a dead baby,'' Mrs. Pope testified Wednesday. A federal judge set a final hearing for Friday to declde the 1ovemment's liablllty. It was not known how much the Popes are asking. Coast Cloudy late tonieht and early Friday mornln&. Partly cloudy •ft•nioon and eventne houra. Lows tonl1ht. 58 to M. Hlabs Frl· day PNf 10s at beachu to .mld-i'Ol lnland. Tes timony showed Jessica Marie was alive and well in her mother's womb when the time for delivery arrived and passed but that labor should have been induced. But the Homestead Air Force Ba:ie hospital staff failed to give Mrs. Pope needed tests when she arrived bec:iuse no doctors were on duty during the 1975 Veterans Duy holiday. The night duty nurses, the government added, were not certain of their ability to treat the woman. ·'I knew what was going on.r _but I didn't want to know," Mrs. Pope testified Wednesday In a choked voice. She said when the baby was de· Ii vered, the doctor would not speak to her or show her the baby. "I looked over and the nurse Suspect Held In Double · Rape Attempt - was crying," Mrs. Pope recalled. ·'Then I knew.'· She said her divorce one year later was caused by the mental anguish she and her husband suf- fered because of the baby's death. Mrs. Pope broke down on the stand and the testimony was re· cessed for IS minutes to allow her to regain comPOSure. In taking responsibility for the death, the Air Force said: "The United States does not contest the allegation that if proper care ar1d treatment were rendered to the patient, Michelle Pope, the baby wouJd, based on a reasonable degree o·f medical certainty, have been delivered alive· and healthy." FEl'E DEUYED BY NO MOON ISLAMABAD, P•kiatan <AP> -Millions of Pakistani• fasted· an elttr.A day today after religious .comroltteea thtoqho\lt the coun-try f tlled. to sight Uae new moon to encl.the Mostero holy mont'1 or RaD'Sadan. RelleJou1 authorltln postponed untll Fridly thla Mo•tem country's moat joyful holiday, celebrated like Christmas and New Year at oncit. This· meant another day of aboPOln• for food and aweeta and for holiday st.na ... . .. base said it was used frequently by tJigb,rankipa military person· hel ah'd Af(letlcan and foreign dignitaries. Former Secretary· qt State Henry A. Kissinger ls among those who have used ttie plane, the spokesman said. The aircraft, which was scat- tered over JO acres after impact, was used as a model for modificaUons to Air Force One, the president's plane. An air tramc controller said he tried to warn the pilot the plane was in trouble. •'The first indlcadon we had he, was in trouble was when the radar showed he was too close to the mountain and flying too low." said the controller. "We bit him on the guard fre- quency and told him to tum right and climb ... but he never did," The EC135, described as a "modified 7C11," stopped in Albu·· querque to refuel, the spokesman· said. The plane crashed about 8,500 feet up the Manzano Mountain range, about five miles east of the K1rtland runway. A spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration said the , pilot made what was probably a routine attempt to contact de· parture control just after takeoff. The tower responded, but the pilot didn't return the com· munication. 'Pigeon Drop.,. Scheme Plan• I Crash A ltuquerq:;."•;;;.---• Kirtl!fd A.F.!. NEW MEXICO 0 . ·~-·,. ....... ~ WHERE 20 PERISHED Map Spots Site Womm,i Bilked of $2,200 Newport Beach~· ire look-ing for the two yo meo wbo bilked an elderly man out or $2,200 in casb and her wedding rings In what. one detective described as "a textbook cue of pigeon drop." Pigeon drop ls the name of a bunco scheme practiced usually on elderly women. like the 74-- year-ol<l Santa Ana resident who was viciirnbed WedneJday after-noon. Police said the woman was shopping at South Coast Pllta lQ • Projects in Doubt SACRAMENTO (AP> -A $4.2·bUlion plan to buJld the Peripheral Canal an Cl four ay>er · m~or water projects wu 1Ual in doubt today es th• CaUtomfa LeJ11lJtUre'a 19?1 Hlllon .en- tered lta final ho~. The wattr plan -a top JetlsJatJve prtortty of Gov. Edmund 'Brown Jr. -was kUled Wednesday n11ht by the senate Finance Committee. . Costa Mesa wben a woman in her mid-twenties stopped her in the mall and pretended to be an acquaintance. They chatted for a while and the young woman re· lated ahe had a friend who ,had lound a bag contaln.lng $45,000 ln cash and some pornoerapblc photos. The young woman told her elderly compaolon that the friend waa afraid to tum the money tn to police, but didn't know what to do with It. At thla pofnt, the ftiend joined the two women and the flrat youni woman 11in1Mted she talk to her boes to see what should be done. Whlle the p•lr waited, th~ YOOfil woman dJaappeared, aJ. legedly to ... her employer, and returned with the f oll0Win1 ad· vice: 1'he1 could keep the cash. stile• ft ,. .. l)l'Obabty iUlctllY aallMid and they could dlvlde tt up between tbertt. provided the.Y - - -~.-r-# didn'tspend any for90days. In order to qualify for their share, each of the thtee women would have to show an attorney. a Mr. Stouts. they had enough cash to live on for the 90-0ay waiting period. The two young women took t.he older woman to her home where she got the money and the rings then drove to the attorney's of- fice in Newport Beach. One woman went up to the laW}'er'a ornce with the woman's fl.Inds and with the lound money, returning moments •later ap- pare,nt)y empty·handed. The older woman was then sent "pstain to tallc to the lawyer and collect her cash, but wb4m 1he got there, tbere wu no lawyer's of. fice, no cub and by then. the two young ~en had departed. Wtir~eom. Leads In America'~ Cup NEWPORT, R.I. -Shifty wlridl o6 Rhode ltland Sound left •IOIM doubt t(jday al to Wbe\btt' the eecorWI rao• or llae America's Cup woQl4 be flnllhed. l\ulea say &he rffe mU1\ be lln.lshed in 5'ri houn. t I \ I 1 \ .... .. I .I DAILY l'ILOT C Inquiry Grdered By NASA BJ AaTRUR a. VINSEL ...... f'\llll&llf • A apeclal 11tudy P•n•I ol in· " quary wu appointed tod11 by the N allonal At!ronautlc1 end Space Adm.lnlAraUon <NASA) to 1tudy w by a rocket built In ff\tntlntton Beach failed ln a Tuetda,y ollbL haunch from Cape Canaverll's Kennedy Space Center. Tbe slant rocket Hftlnt a European Space A1ency (Efu\) commun.lcatiom sateWt.4.nto the heavens on an experhnental mis· sion was blown to blt.s like a MO milllmfirecracter. Divers becan to bunt wrecUia -at daybreak Wednesday alOQI the sea floor in 65-foot depths of the Atlantic Ocean off the cape to reassemble in search of clues to the failure. A NASA spokesman in Washington, D.C. said today it appears the rocket built by McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company began to break up in flight. Flight records of the first Delta since 1969, indicate the craft began to tumble and had to be destroyed aloft by remote control to prevent an accident on the ground ..-possibly Involving in· habited areas. :4. spokesman for the Goddard Space Flight Center in Green- belt, Md., said Wednesday that on board TV cameras monitoring the ship showed fire breaking out !It the top of one engine just beforehand. · • The onboard bJaie and sudden erratic trajectory convinced a U.S. Air Force range safety of. f1cer it was time to press the red button and bJow the missile to bits.; • Major parts of the Delta plunged, fiery and hissing, into the sea from about five miles in lhe sky in a dazzling aerial dis· 11lay visible for miles over the -.outhcastern United States. Other portions fluttered lightly to earth on Cape Canaveral's tip. George B. Harding, of the Marshall Space Center in Alabama, will head the in· vestigative team, NASA officials said today. The deliberate detonation and subsequent crash into the sea destroyed a $25 million ESA or- bital test satellite built in a com- bined effort by 10 European na· ' tions. A spokesman for McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company said today that Associated Press reports that the rocket was in· sured were incorrect but tax- . payers aren't out a dime. LEVINE ... Pat Wallace, assistant direc· tor. r e fused comment o n Levine's allegations, saying "It's a matter between Dr. Levine and the state board.·· Commission members were told by Levine that Fairview ·'bluffed its way through" an ac· c reditation procedure by the J oint Commission on the Aecredltation of Hospitals, according to a Sacramento Bee aceount ol the hearing. Nathan Shapell, head of the commission, has been urging the commission to turn Levtne'a al· legatiocs over to the at.ate at· torney seneral 's office for further investt1ation. Sha pell said in a prepared open· ing statement that the hearing was taraeted at fin<liq oat bow m uch the department had responded to commission find· ln1s one year aao on atate health proarams. • Settlement Remote CONCORD (AP> -Prospects for a rapid settlement of California's only public acbool teach~ strike appeared remote w ednesday, as both eidea argued over a linanclal report and nobody would apeeulate on r~ sumptioo ot ne1ot1atlons. DAILY PI LOT l'Ateliag Bu Beek ~ine-month-old Scott Phillips was quite cont ent in this Montreal pool when the temperature hit 104 degrees. , The tot had a bottle and his grandmother within reach. Fro• PClfle A J , PETITION. • had not been fully reviewed. If the initiative qualifies and is passed by voters, it would downzone the area, a llowJng single-family h omes only. It would block Arnel's plans to con· str~t 539 apartments on the site bordered by South Coast Drive on the north, the San Diego Freeway on the south and Bear Street on the east. Bull said the initiative drive is more of a reaction to the city council's approval of the project rather than to Amel's plans. Bull, along with eight other as· sociation m embers and 100 "Does." is named in Arnel's Jawsuit. Black's Beach 'Failed Noble ."Experime~'? SAN DIEGO (AP> -Turning over a public beach to nudism was "a noble experiment that failed," a newspaper said today in urging that Black's Beach be restricted to suit· wearing. "Even its advocates now deplore the voyeurism, the oc- casional bizarre behavior, the body paintln& of unclothed children," said the San Die&o Union in an editorial. The municipal beach has been classified "swimsuit optional" for three years and is one of the most popular areas along the coast. The newspaper, urging ap- proval of an election issue before San Diegans on Tuesday, said it agreed with police that Black's Beach is "not a hotbed of crime." But it is "the only area of its kind in the entire country -it is' the kind of attraction we don't need and don't want," the Union said. New Sanity Tri&l Ordered For Allaway Edward Charles Allaway, con· victed of sbootine to death seven peuons~ on the Cal State Fullerton campus, wu ordered todaf to face a new sanity trial Nov.2. · Allaway, a 88-year-old ex· campus janitor, sat mute ln the courtrooP.1 of. Superior Court Jqdge ltOJ>ert Kneeland aa the judp scbeduJed tbe n!'W trial, presumably by jury, on the Hnl- ty phase of the mass-murder case. The,f'ury which convicted Al· laway aat month was wi.ble to reach • verdict on whether be wu ~e when he went on A sbotlUD-sbootlng blnCe JUl)t 12, ~\e ~-WU ap-Uy de,~ent 0veir marital &rib- lemt attbetlme. . Hoag to Host · Fair to Noie Anniversary In celebration of its first 25 years service, Hoag Memorial Hospit.al will host a free health fair Saturday as the hospital's thank you gift to the community for its s upport . (See related story, PageA13.) More than 30 health organiza· lions will be on band to provide information and demonstrations. The event opens at 10 a .m. in the hos pital parking lot. Included will be the emergency medical service teams from the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach Fire Departments as well as a rescue helicopter from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.. There will be continuous enter· tainment from 10:30 a.m. until 4 p .m . "Healthy'-' food will be available for 25 cents and there will be free cake and ice cream foll o wing a cak.e cutting ceremony at noon. Included in the lis t of dignitaries expected to attend a re Assemblyman Dennis Mangers <D·Huntington Beach>. Assemblyman Ron Cordova <D- Ei Toro), Mayor Milan Dostal of Newport Beach, Mayor Ron Pat- tinson of Huntington Beach and Mayor BUI V ardoulls of Irvine. Entertainment will be pro· vided by local Girl Scout troops, t he Harbor Singers, the All Organic Low Calorie Kaaoo Band, Ule Retrogressive Five and the singers from the Live Wire sinatng telegram agency. Regents Er,e UCI Design Center Issue l)niversity of California re- gents, meeting in Los Angeles Friday, will be asked to okay a design for a previously approved $4 million University Center on the Irvine campus. The design plan calla for a two. story, 30,000 square-foot concrete· building, with a concrete and glass facade and .heavy timber roof. EsUmated completion dat& is June,1980. The center will be located west of the campus admtnistration building. within an area called the Gateway Quadrangle. It will house student eovern· ment of!lcea, recreation areu. food service and a bookstore. There will be lounaes, mualc listening rooms, offices for clubs and orcanlzatlons and con- ference room~. Coeds Guarded ~er Slaying Radioactive Waste WASHtNGTON (AP> - Despite decades or study, the . United States still has not figured out how to get rid of dangerously radloacUve waste from power plants and military-weapons pro· duction, lhe General Accounting Office reports. Unless this problem is solved, the GAO says, tti, accumulation of nuclear wastes with hazardous radiation that lasts up to half a million yeats "threatens the future of nuclear power in the ·United States. Robert W. Fri, acting ad· • mioistrator ot the Energy Research and Development Ad· ministration. defe nded the waste-disposal program before a House government operations s ubcommittee. He said that many of the GAO's observa(ions are based on 1976 data and outdated. He said that his agency, which will be absorbed by the Department of Energy on Oct. 1 -is doing the best it can to deal with the problems. Fri said that the Carter ad- ministration will shortly a n- nounce plans to deal with spent ' fuel at commercial reactors, a program under which the gov· ernment would reportedly offer to take these wastes off the hands of commercial plants for a fee. The Energy Research and Development Administration is planning to develop six locations for long-term or permanent burial of radioactive wastes by 1985. But the report by the in· vestigativc arm of Congress says that "ERDA may have promised more than it can deliver.•· "There are, we believe. formidable social, geological and regulatory problems which m ust be solved," it continues. "Foremost among them is op· position of the public and some political leaders. . "ERDA may not be successfuJ in gaining their acceptance un- less it can convince people that is bas a sound waste-management program and that geological dis· posal risks to man's envlronmeot are acceptably low," a difficult task, the report said. "Some radioactive wastes will remain hazardoua for hundreds of thousands of years." it said, meaning they must be permanently isolated from human contact and environmen- tal influence. ''A program must be de· veloped for present and future waste-disposal operations that will oot create unwarranted public risk. Otherwise, nuclear power cannot continue to be a practical source of energy." it said. ERDA is constdering burial of radioactive wastes in under- ground salt formations that are stable, relatively free of circulat· FRIDAY, SEPT .16 KIWANIS TRAVEL ADVEN· TURE SERIES -"Andes to Amazon," John Goddard Jee· turer, OCC Auditorium, 8 p.m. occ LECTURES -'"Art or Communication," Fine Arts Bldg. 119; "Drama of Weather," Science Lecture l; "Histofy of Furniture," Science Bldg. Room 10; "Stress Management in Today's World," Fine Arts 116.: "Success in Competitive Athletics," Science Hall; "Un· derstanding Sexual Interaction," ScienceLecture2. All 7:30p.m. MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -Fairgrounds, 8 p.m. FOOTBALL -Estancia vs. Edison, OCC stadium, 8 p.m. ®QUALITY TELEVISION FEATURING " ing ground water and able to carry off heat from the radioac· tlve wastes, block the escape of radiation about as effectively as concrete and stretch, rather than shatter, in an earthquake. But the GAO polnted out that there remain some ••major gas. salt and potash in the same re- gions and the posaibilil>' that ground water or brine might somehow leak toto storage cavenis." The GAO said ERDA knows abciut the uncertainties and is studying them. Coast Feels Quake From Anaheim Area A Wednesday earthquake ten· lcred on a fault in Anaheim measured 2.7 on the Richter scale and was strong enough to be felt by residents as far away as Costa Mesa, Cal State Fullerton seismologists said to- day. It was the first quake that could be detected without instru- m ents in Orange County since Memorial Day, according to Christopher Buckley, assistant professor of earth sciences. · Buckley said the quake tu1 at 2:3S p.m. on an unnamed fault five miles south of the campus. The-tremor caused no damage and apparenUy affected an area 15 miles from its point of origin, l1191ate Stabbed SAN QUENTIN <AP> -An in· mate was stabbed in the max· imum security unit of San Quen· tin prison in a fracas involving nine prisoners, prison officials said. i]iiWii i~iiiii It gives you that great Zenith .. color picture automaticallyl· rr~~~~iiii~~~~~~: TNnt of It., a "TV oonnf "*"In 'fOAll ..U It control• the color picture ~ Th• COLE • SJ1Sl3tW ••• C0"9Ct. the color picture ••• 30 tittle• a N Cond evtomet/ce/lyf Flnlthed In simulated grained Am•rlcan Walnut with brushed Aluminum color accents. Earpttone. ·*"'~1101ec-• --"Voll•" 111...-ouoe ,,._ ·-•leP'--C ..... ·--.,.........,.,,c_orMUIH -c-FINAL 1977 CLEARANCE BIG SAVINGS l ,.,. ........... THEIR AGES SOMETHING TO CHEER ABOUT Pep Squad Members Keran and Perkins Real Seniors Cheer Lemlen 28 and 36 FRESNO <AP) -At ages 28 and 36, Marlene Ker an and Inkan Perkins arc practically senfor citizens as members of the Fresno State pep squad. Although other squad members range in age Crom their late teens to early 20s, Perkins and Miss Keran don't consider their ages a handicap. In many cases, they have used their years to their advantage. "WE DON'T P ULL ANY punches about our age," said Mis~ Keren, co-head pep girl. "In fact, we try to emphasize it with ad ministr::.~ors. They listen more intently because we're not 18 year-olds they can shove in some corner." Another use for that leverage of age is in recruiting fans to at- tend games. "Pur age is an advantage when we're talking to older stu dents. At least we arouse their curiosity," she said, "And the younger kids on the squad look up 10 us ... they listen to u~. and they keep us young.·· THE ONLY DISADVANTAGE THE pair feel is 1n µh)s1cal hm1tat1ons age brings. "f have never worked that hard in my entire life." Perkins stud of trying out for the squad. "I had trouble sitting down and getting back up again." Miss Kcran added PERKINS RETURNED TO school after a 10-year absence to study radio and television and Miss Keran is pursuing a dei.?ree in fine arts after a six-year absence. They found it natural to get involved In chcerleading because that was an 1mp<>rtant part of their school days one and two • decades ago. Mexican-Americans . . , Set Observance Mexican Americans an Orange County will JOin thousands of others in Southern California sta"rting at about midnight tonight in marking 16 de Sep· tiembre Mexican Indepen- dence Day. The celebrations begin wllh the traditional "El Grilo," which literally means "The Yell" but ' is, in fact. a Mexican cry of freedom dcchmn~ independence from Spam. Though there wall no doubt be numerous private festivities in the Mexi<'an -American com· munitles of the county, few large actJvitics hav" been planned to mark the da) Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla aroused the re· volt that be~an an 1810. ln Santa Ana. the county seat, Mexican-Am('rican leaders have prepared a '-J>Ccial flag-raising ceremony al 9 a m Saturday in the Civic Center's ·Plaza of the F·tags." After the ceremony. which will feature speeches b~ government leaders, a small pa rade will take place in the downtown area start· ing al noon. Jn the parade will be a pre· cision motorcvcle team from Ti· juana, high -school marching bands, floats and other features. The other large event planned in the county \~di take place in Placentia Saturday. Casa Placentia and Amigos de Casa Placentia have planned a block party in the Atwood com· munity. Santa Fe Street will be closed to vehicular traffic, ac· cording to organizers. The event, which is public. will feature booths for food and games, live music and a queen crowning. It will run from noon to9 p.m. The actual dav of Mexican in· dependence is ·Friday but the celebration usually lasts several days. Numerous c\·ents are taking place in Los Angeles. which has declared this week to be "Mexico Week." Tonight at the Los Angeles Sports Arena, there wall be three and a half hours of Mex 1can entertainment, including mariachis. the Ballet Folklorico and the "El G rito · · ceremonies at llp.m. DAILY PILOT Battered Women's Aid Nixed CONCORD, N.H. CAP) -- 1''ernmist& are seeking to dump a women's rights commission which has opposed abortion. the Equal Rights Amendment, and the "Mar y Hartman, Mary Hartman" TV show while sup- porting the lady bug as the state insect. The latest flap surrounding the New Hampshire Commission on the Status or Women occurred when the panel refused to act on a program to help women who have bPen beaten by their husbands Althou~h there was no formal vote, nine of the 10 com- missioners s aid they w ere against the program. Com- 11\tssioners at Monday's meeting s aid they saw it as an intrusion of government into the personal problems of New Hampshire citizens. "You can't legislate love in the home. The government isn't de- signed to interfere here," said commissioner Simone Mason of Salem. Commission member Gloria Relzil of Nashua simply said of the prograDl's defeat, .. Some women Ubbers irritate the hell out of their husbands." Dorothy Craigie, commission chairman, said the panel has not dismissed the wife-beating prob· lcm but plans to "study the prob· lcm ;md come up with a recom- rncndat1on " The d1sscntmg member of the l'omm1s:,1on, Frances Drown. stud she would continue to pursue the program to help battered women at a special conference or women 's groups set next Wednesday The commission's record also includes support or prayer in the i.chools and opposition to the re· peal of a law banning lesbian ac· ti vities and to a federal family and child services program, But the rejection of the bat· tt•red wives plan outraged feminists groups and women leg1~lators. Hcoublican Rep. Gale Mor- rison call ed on conservative Republican Gov Meldrfm Thomson. who appoints com- m 1ss1on m(•mbers. to remove those who \ okd against the pro· gram She said women legislators ha.ve banded together to Lry to abolish the commission because "we felt that the group did not represent any of the issues we stood fo1 or were workini for." Black Marine Sentenced For Beatings · A black Marine must pay a fine of $650 and accept a reduction to lance corporal for participation in an assault by a group of blacks al Camp Pendleton on partying "'hite Leathernecks last No-· vcmber. The sentence was i mposed Wednesday on Cpl Clarence Capers .Jr of F.dgewater Park, N J . b_,. a five-member court martial board tbal convicted him Tuesda~ Capers "':is tried on six counts or assault and on(' of conspiracy an the incident that sent sax white M urines tolhc hoi:.p1tal. Tht• black Mann"s charged in lht• caM• h;.I\ c tc:o.llf1cd they were out to break up a Ku Klux Klan mceltn~ but ixot the wrong bar· racks room The attack. however. brought to fight the existence of a KKK cc.II on the n ation's biggest M arlne installation. Part of the Faai'lfl1 .............. Elmer Duellman, an antique car collector and auto salvage yard operator in Foun- tain City, Wis .. k_eeps a 1929 Ford Phaeton touring car in the family room of his home. He says the unique parking spot helps pre- serve the auto. Killers in Indiana Inspired by Movie? Boy Kidnaps To Avenge Slain Mother LOS ANGELES CAP> -Vin· cent Bugliosi, who prosecuted Charles 'Manson and his family, s ays he is "terribly disturbed" over reports than an Indiana mass murder may have been in- s pired by a mQvle based on a book Bugliosi wrote about the Manson case. "lt's a terrible tragedy and I'm extremely upset about it " Bugliosi said Wednesday wh~n told that one of the accused In· diana killers alluded to the movte ·'H elter Skelter" in court testimony. Dan Stonebreaker, 20, and three others are accused of in· discrimlnately killing four brothers in a VaJenUne's Day ri- fl e attack In Hollands burg, Ind. Stonebreaker, who has turned state's evidence, testified this week that he and another of the accused watched "Helter . Skelter" on television two months before they walked into the mobile home of Mrs. Betty . Spencer and opened fire. ''We talked about it Cthe mov· ie >." Stonebreaker testified. •·rt was the movie of how Charles Manson killed people for no reason." Stonebreaker said he, Roger Drollinger, 24, David Smith, 11. and Mike Wright, 21, picked the Spencer family at random. The attack killed 14-year-old Ralph Reese, his brothers, Reeve, 16, and Raymond, 17, and their half- brolher, Gregory Brooks, 22. Mrs. Spencer's wig .was blown off and the killers left her, ap- parently thinking s he was dead; authorities said. "This is the first indication I've ever received that anyone ever got any ideas from 'Helter Skelter'," said Bugliosl, a private attorney in Beverly Hl11s. .. People have asked me before if l was worried someone might get ideas from the book or the movie, but I s3:id it has never happened. I 'm terribly disturbed about it. . ·Tm s ure people will start say- ing that shows like 'Helter Skelter ' shouldn't be aired, but that's an extreme, too," he said. "What's the alternative? Are-we going to keep stories of tragedies off the alr because some dement- ed mind might try to parallel the act? I just can't believe that just watching a movie woi.tld turn someone into a cold-blooded killer." MOBILE, Ala. <AP> -A youth kidnaped a taxi driver in order to be arrested and sent to the prist>n where the confessed murderer of bis mother is being held, police said. Kenneth Lynn Curry. 17, was arrested Wednesday a nd ) charged with kidnaping and rob- bery after allegedly kidnaping a~ 49-yeer-old taxi driver at knife. point and allegedly taking $.50 from him. Police said Curry told the taxi driver, Benny Dillary, that be wanted to go to prison to avenge the death of his mother, who was raped and murdered. Curry is the son of Venora Hyatt, one of t hree wome n whom Thomas Whisenhant of Irvington con- fessed to killing last year. Appointment OK'd SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov • Edmund Brown Jr. 's reappoint. : m ent ol Ronald l>octor to the • state ~ergy Commission bas s queaked through the state· Senate on a bipartisan vote. 7 ft. ii=e J~~~-~.-":-~,.. PR~~ED $595 ,. 5 ft. Love Seat •100 Le,. r DAil. Y PILOT s ThulWday, l!ptember 11, "" The Sand And Fury ARE FACTS DEPT. Downcoa.st in San Dleeo. voters will be goin& to the polls Tuesday lo decide whether or not bare is beautiful. The issue on the ballot I~ Propos1 t1on D involving a placecaUed Black's Beach. -Th.ls relJtJvcly secluded strand 1:. the only plJt·c m our region where puhltc· beach nudity is toleratL'<l Now the pracbce b as become an elccllon issue. The question has raised some temperatures an the San Diego area and newspapers ot that re· g1on arc filled with letters, pro· nude and anti-naked The ques- tion has triggered sermons. quips, puns, wi secracks and ~omc pretty <.•motional blather on lioth sides. /\LAS, IN ALL lhe fervor. Black's Beach nukcdness has drawn considerable attention in the news and not ulways with pin- point accuracy. · As August began to wind down and the nude election month ap- proached, a local television sta· lion fired the first loaded salvo by s uggesting lifeguards were con- cerned about "an atmosphere or perJTiissiveness" at Black's Beach. From there. the papers began hyping the stor y. indicating pohce had established "a bikmJ patrol" lo search for crime and sexual misconduct along the ha thing suit-optional strand. "Severul arrests have been made, including one in which an ••dult male is charged with child molesting," a police s pokesman was quoted as reporting. THEN IT DEVELOPED that t\I JaCohy, assistant to the editor of the San IJ1cgo Union. got sus picious of ull these rather generalized reports lie went on an investigative spree of bis own Jn his column on the editorial page. JaCoby characterized the escalating nud1e beach ston es as "a media storm ·· J aCoby d1sco\'ercd that De,p1tt• lhl' television hype about "pcrm1ss1veness" along the strand. an actual police re· i port got buried in the flurry. That report said. "Black 's Beach has one-half lo one-third the crime of other San Diego beaches ·· There 1s no ~uch thing as a "b1km1 patrol " Police had reg· ular plainclothes patrols. The "hikini" name had been made up by u rcporlt•r As for the lone child molest· ing cast', 1l had not occurred in the last few weeks. JaCoby pushed to find out when . He was given un "(•1thcr April or May" answer I le persisted in insisting that polic~ give him the precise date of that arrest. They finally supplied 1t -last Feb. 6. a 50-year-old man who \\as babysittin g a 6-year-t>ld girl JACOBY WA RIGHT. San Diego had been swept by a media storm in which the news people didn't cover themselves with glory. But that doesn't mean that the voters won't go ahead and cover · Black's Beach. Folks Back Larice omdown Rallies f0r 'Georgia Boy' . CAUIOUN, Gu <AP> It waa like an old· Ca1h1Mt'd revwal meetJn1 u the hometown folkl atomoed t.h Ir f l, prayed and ebeered one of their own -Bert "Oood Ole Oeor1la Boy" Lance. About t,500 peoplo -more than one·nllh or Calhoun'• popuJaUon -turned ~ in a demonetra· lion of eupport. for the director of the federal omce of Manaaement and Bud1et on lho eve of his ap· pearance befort a Senate panel lnvest111Ung his financial aflulra. TH£ CROWD uve a atandlnl ovation as the hl«h school band played "You'll Never Walk Alone" and "JDldltM~ Way." They had placard• Hylna "Calhoun ror Bert" and "Bert's A Good Ole Geor1la Boy." They uaed words like "love," "rrlendsl\lp," and "honesty" to describe Lance, who did not attend the rally. "I 'll tell you what kind or a guy he is," said Jack Purcell, who used to be the catcher on the softball team when Lance was pitcher. "I called him up last year to come speak lo the graduating class of the school where I was prin· c1pal And even thouah it rained and ttie loudspeakers didn't work, he came and he spoke And when l i.ent him a check for speaking to the class. he sent the check back because he didn't do it for the money. That's the kind or guy Bert is ... A DOWNPOUR drove the crowd from the high school football field across toe street to a gym· nasium, but it didn't dampen their spmts. Lance's minister, the Rev. Emory Brackman. told of the "very generous .. contributions of Hme and money that Lance and hia wJre, LaBelle, made to tho Flnt Methodist Church. He recalled that Lance received "the highest honor" a United Methodiat can receive when he was elected to the church's General Conference. LT. GOV. Zell M1ller, who shared a double desk with Lance in grammar achool. accused the news media of distorting the Lance affair. He denied a statement in an article in a national magazine that quoted him as saying Lance was a poor arithmetic student. "Powerful and ruthless forces" -whom he later identified as the federal bureaucracy -have attacked Lance, Miller said. "To say that Bert Lance bas done somelhlng wrong does not make It so," he said. THEY WANTED to talk about \he back-. slapping, joke-telllng Bert Lance who married his high school sweetheart and helped his neighbors as he rose from a 19-year-old bank teller to a 32-year- old bank president. · ''He treated a man like a man wants to be treat- ed," said John Houser, who carried a sign saying "Bert Lance Was Fair To Me .. We Need Him In D.C." He said Lance helped him get back on his feet several years ago when he lost "a lot of money" in- vesting in a mill. "He went out or his way to help a lot of people in this town." ~~~~~~~~~~~~- HOMETOWN FOLKS RALLY BEHIND GEORGIA BOY LANCE Calhoun Realdent• Dlaplay Sign• Supporting .Him -. New SS Plan \)n••·••••• "''''~~ Report Says Breast X-rays Hikes Lllnit For Retired WASHINGTON CAP > Retired people could earn up to S4.500 next year without losing Social Security benefits under a plan approved by a House sub- committee. Its chairman says the current limit reduces some e lderly persons to eating pet food. RECIPIENTS WHO now earn more than $3.000 lose Sl in benefits for every $2 they bring in obove the ceiling. That limita lion. says Rep. James A. Burke CD-Mass.), means some retirees are "living on a diet of cat and dog foocl. .. ln a move experts say could af· feet a million people, the House Ways and Means subcommittee on Social Security Wednesday tentatively approved raising the allowance in 1978. Under the proposal, rec1p1ents could earn 56.000 in 1979 without facing an aid cutback THE LIMIT ON exempt earn· 1ngs this ~ear is SJ.000. lt is ex· peeled to go to SJ.240 in 1978 and SJ.480 m 1979 under a prov1s1on of the eXJsting law that tics benefits to inflation. The subcommittee's move. ap proved 9 to 3, was a compromise between proposals to abolish the limitation and others for a s ma Iler or later inc rease Republicans had suggested phas ing out the limitation over three years. AS PART OF the compromise. the subcommittee agreed that the whole subject would be con· sidered again when the panel takes up long-range changes in Social Security, probably next year. The subcommittee is now put· ting t.ogether legislation to keep the deficit-plagued Social Securi- ty system alive. All the votes it is now taking are subject to later change or re· versa!. Burke, the panel chairman, predicted the move · · wouldn ·t ~et SO votes against it .. if it reaches the lfouse floor Partly offsetting the co.c;t of raising the income ltd, the sub· committee voted to remove from the law a quirk that allows a re- tired person to earn as much a~ he can in a month if he forfeits hls benefits for that month. : MEXICO . -. -: fo 1•''' o,,i,. 0 300 w ' t Mi n w .,. Wlreplloto M.111 llombed Sltn '.\1<.lp localt•!:> :\kxic<.111 c 1li1·!-> \\ hl•rt• 2:1 bomb bla:-h 1n - 1 u rt·d 1'1\t' l.lllU did an t•s t1m.<1tl'cl ~2 0 milli°on d a magl' Wt•d1h•sda.'" The i.:on.•rnml'nl put 10.000 pnllt·c> anct troops on full .tit· rt toda~ to hunt do\\ n Ill'\\ IC'll \\lllg tl'rronsl :..:roup that c:laiml'd l'<''>POl1:,1htli l~ Police Find, Potted Plant Actually Pot NEW YORK (i\I>t A 19-year old Bronx man .w::is arrested when his neighbors discovered a 3'h·foot tall marijuana plant growing in his window. Overlooking Jose La boy's first floor window was the second · floor office of the Youth Aid Of· Cice of the 4oth Precinct. "We couldn't believe 1t, .. of· ficer Frank He nr y sai d Wednesday. "We looked out the window and saw what looked like a marijuana plant in the window of the first. floor or the building next door ... Missile launched VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE CAP> A Minuteman 3 In· tercontinental Ballistic Missile was successfully launched Wednesday as part of an overall tea\ of the Minuteman system, the Air Force reported. Possible Cause of Cancer WASHINGTON CAP) -Ana- tional breast cancer detection program should be continued. but its use of breast X rays should be restricted because or their potential for causing the disease in some womeh, a Na· tional Cancer Institute advisory group said today. The report, presented today at a breast cancer screening meet· ing, said X-raying breasts, a process called mammography, effectively finds cancer that goes undetected by other methods. BlIT TOO MUCH is unknown about the possibility of radiation causing cancer for mammo· gruphy to be used routinely on all women, particularly those under age 50, the study said Attending the meeting at the National Institutes of Health is a group of scientists, physicians anct laypersons who hope to de velop u consensus on whether the detection program should be con· linued and what 1t should in elude. The report reviewed data from the SS-i million Breast Cancer Detection Demonstration ProJ eel, cosponsored by the National Cancer lnsli lute and the American Cancer Society, in which up to 270,000 volunteer women aged 35 and older are be· ing screened for five years. The value of the project has been questioned not only because o( mammography, but also because it is still unclear if early dete~tion improves long-term s urvival, as many medical authorities believe. '32 Million' Need Mental Health Care WASHINCJTON <AP1 , -Between 20 million and 32 million Americans need mental health care. a new report to the government says. but help is often unavailable because of in adequate ~ommuni­ ty services, costs that are loo high or the stigma of mental illness. "The time has come for mental health care to become part of a, broader effort lo deal with hum11n needs ... concludes the pre· liminary report of the President's Commission on Mental Health, released today. THE REPORT notes that 15 percent of the population neecjs !-tome form of help. ranging from counseling to long-term care, not counting the six million who are mentally retarded. Al any one time, the report adds. about 25 percent of the country 1s under enough emotional stress that a doctor might diagnose such' people as suffermg from depression or anxiety. The sertH of 15 artlclH wH prepered by Dr. Jerome Skolnick, director, Center for the Study of Law end Society et UC Berkeley. He •nd 13 noted legal acholera end writer• contribute th• artlclH which make up Couraea by Newapeper. The wHkly •rtlclea may be reed Ju•t for their lnternt value, but meny reader• elao enroll to earn college credit from ., .. collegH Including Coaatllne •nd Sant• An• Community Colleges. COURSES BY NEWSPAPER Or. Howerd E. Fredkln, netl9n•llY recognized edvlHt' In corr~ctlon• end aodology profeasor et Cel State Unlveralty, Long BHch, la courae In· atructor for atudent• enroutng In the CoHtllne Community College. Completion of the bfenk below lnlttat•• enrollment. Th• collegH may re- quire addltlon•I reading•, one or two on-cempua mHttng1 end • final paper or eHmlnatlon. Since th• D•lly Piiot five yHra •90 begen of· ferlng CouraH by Newap•per In cooperetlon with UC S.n Diego Extenaton end the NetJonel Endowment for th• HumenltJH, 200 new1pepera heve Joined ua In preaentlng th• weekly "lee· turH" rHd weekly by 15 mllllon Amertcana. Thi• HmHter, Courae1 by Newapaper ex· plor•• "Crime, Juatlce end Punlahment In Amertce" beglnnlnt Sept. 17 In the Delly Piiot end continuing for 15 con1ecutlve Seturdlly•. The Delly Piiot offer Ct>urae• "by Newapeper H a public Hrvlce. Reedera reafdlnt in the Sad- dle back Community College Dlatrtct muat obteln • permit from that dlatrtct pnor to reglatertng for credit In another dlatrlct. For convenience use th• m•ll reglatratlon blank or call 913-0824 for further lnfonn•tlon. ------------------------~----~------------------COASTLINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE REGISTRATION FORM 10231 SLATER AYE.. FOUNTAIN VALLIY, CA 12708 Maine Gets First Snow , llwol Me Ill: Sociology 161 Ticket fl 134 Thuntlentorm Aciivity Ends Nationwide Tf!tftperat ures Mltll U. l"cit. A lbuqWrqllO •• ii All9fll• as '1 IJ 804'4! u .. Boilon 11 S2 .Ot Buffalo .. 0 , ... ""'°" s c '° " Clll<ll90 10 ii CM ClllCl-11 ,, ., 01 , ...... ...., .. '° Oell ... FI WW11\ u s. O.nwr •• s. 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R0<'I" atld ~ ll'lt• Q\ell •M Or"°" L '"'' rain om Ml*"" •• 110t ... .,.c1ec1 to lltrilfklllltly .. Itel r1v.r1. MOii .,. rllttdllll, but ltlll Wtre lllOW lftod II ... Htly , ... ,. Ill _..._. Ml_,I, tne Pl•tlt'ttlver 11upeded16Crfft IOdll'I. Oft t~ Mit-t w11irl fllvv, crt111 were rokM• ~'flnWt'ltfl'f tl\O LHll'f*I. Mo. Ski• _. cloudy ovtr11lotit. °"'" C•lllOt11I• .... Tuu not..i l••to e rHUI< lffr .-It\ N.WE: ~~~...,..~~~~~~-,.~~~~~~~llltldlll:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Liit ' Finl 11111111 ,.._ 0., Yw ,....,,. Addr.-Whitt AllllldlllO Coullllle ' I Rich Bomb Targe~? BllUt Shatters WinJows in SF SAN FRANCISCO CAP > San Franel1co'1 "~ llh\ "<'r<' th<' appart'nt taraet of llnother bomb ui1 tl;ack Nrly toc:.h•Y, In a n•ut·oua ~xplC>lllon that pohre said ahutlt-rc.>d window• In tho c:Jly's pluah Paclflc 1tt1Qht section but lnjurt'<I no one. R ponstbillly for the explOtllon at about 2 :4S u m wu claimed b_y the Tom lllrks Unit. the New World Llbuation rront, ln a tehiphone call to the A.sloclated Pre11 early today. THE AN0NVMOV8 FEMALE caller uid "the bo mbing auack ut Pacific Heights" was "lo further presa home ou1 JUSt demands for decent houalug for ull people m San Franclsco .. " She said nn NWLt' communique would be "availoble later " Previous NWLF inessa~es have sald that at- tacks were to com~l the city's -rich to improve liv- ing_ conditJons for the poor. 'lbe attack was the sixth m about three weeks in the San Franch.co .Hay area claimed by the NWLF Eaelosed Areas and ltl second within a week. A blut early Friday at the San Francisco Opera House crumpled an aluminum awning out- t>lde the building and shattered windows but c:lidJl 't delay the scheduled openlnJ of lbe opera's ~th season Friday nlghl. "AS LONG t\8 P09R PEOPLE are forced to live in WI.Sale, unhealthy housine, ruling class func- tions wlll be lhreatened, .. said an NWLF communl· que to which the AP had been directed after the at· tack. Police had difficulty randing the precise loca- tion of today's blast aner reports of the noise nooded pollce switchboards, but authorities said the attack apparenUy centered near Broadway and Lyon streets. A six-root hole was reportedly blown open in a gate at the U.S. Army base at the Pl"esidio and win- dows shattered in the Pacific Heights neighborhood over a twe>-block radius. Petition to ·Ban Snwking Allowed Official Urges Ship Terminal For 2 Tankers · LONG BEACH <AP> -A pro- posal for an oil tanker terminal designed to accommodate two ships, rather thall' three as originally planned, was raised Wednesday .at a meeting of the. South Coast Air Quality Manage. ment District Board. SACRAMENTO <API -Supporters of a p~ Initiative statute curbing smoking in enclosed areas have won the ·nght to circulate •petitions to get it on the California ballot. Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger said Wednesday he bad given the pro- posal submitted by the Clean Indoor Air Committee the UUe: Seve r e Rape Law Sought "Regulati~ of Smoking, .. and had approved a summary oriL He s~d that did not mean he was for or against it. SACRAMENTO <AP) -Peo- ple convicted more than once for rape would be punished with li£e imprisonment without parole, if a new bill in the Senate becomes law. His office sald the measure would ban smoking in enclosed putJltc places, places of employ- ment and educational and health facilities, with ~pecified excep- tions, and-require restaurants to establish nonsmoking sections. It would prohibit employment dis- crimination based on exercise of rights provided by the statute. The board passed a motion by Orange County member Paul Raven ordering its staff to pre- pare a supplemental environ- mental impact statement on the effects or a two-berth facility. Standard Oil of Ohio <Sobio> has proposed a $4S·million three- bertb plan. /f. Sen. 11.L. "Bill " Richardson CR-Arcadia). said Wednesday his bill, SB 1300. would be ap- propriate punishMent for such repeal rapists as Sacramento's "east area rapist." Police say , this person is responsible for more than 20 ntpes. Current law punishes forcible rape with lhree, four or five years in prison with three years added to the sentence for each prior violent felony, for a max- imum total or fi ve years. Citing an automatic one-third sentence reduction for good _ behavior. Richardson said that "the longest a violent rapist can be. kept behind bars for a repeat conviction is six years and eight months.·· IT WOULD permit stricter local regulations, requiring post· ing of signs designating no. smoking areas, and set fines tor violations. The signs would cost the state up to an estimated $600,000, which could be offset by unknown income from fines. The measure might a lso result in savings because of reduced heath expeq- d1tures, sick leave and disability payments toemployes. The measure also could result in reduction of state and local c igarette tax receipts, the at- torney general said. It takes the signatures of 312,404 registered voters to quall!y it!or the balloL AN ENVIRONMENTAL. im- pact statement has already been s ubmitted on the three-berth, trestle-supported Sohio proposal, which would handle tanker ship· ments of up to 700,000 barrels a day of crude oil from Valdez, Alaska. The oil would be pumped t hrough pipelines to Midland, Tex. for distribution to midwest refineries. Raven's motion provides for public hearings within 30 days after the supplemental state- ment is realeased. · The statements include estimations of. bow much pollu- tion lhe facility would create. 1• Aqueduct Repair Pro"longed Water S LOS ANGELES CAP> - Northern San Diego County resi- ~s were facing imminent er shutoffs and 300 Riverside fa ers had no relief for their parched crops as workmen dis- covered even more debris than expected clogging the vital Colorado River Aqueduct. Sand, gravel and rock were found as far as 1,000 yards Into the pipellile Wednesday, causing Metropolitan Water District Of· fi cials to estimate the water route won't be clear until next Tuesday, rather than Sunday as they had predicted. The aqueducl, a major source or water' for 11 million Soqthern Californians, was shut down when a flash nood tore away a 2,500-pound access hatch at a Desert Hot Springs transition structure last weekend, pushing mud and muck iilto the adjacent s iphon and pipeline. s.ia.-fJ•e P•lted SACRAMENTO CAP> CalUornf aM are expected tO re· ceive the bluest lncenUve to the nation for using solar energy in -.-.iL-.own Imminent? .. SI'A.TE their homes ~ SS percent tax credits. The legislature Wednesday gave final passage to AB 1SS8 by Assemblyman Gary Hart <D· Santa Barbara). Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. baa endoned the con, cept and is expected to siin It. The votes were 74-0 in the As~ . sembly and 25-4 in the Senate. . . llldfdme11t ll••dted INDJO <AP> -A Rivenide Superior Court Judae bas quashed a grand jury indictment alleging that a Palm Sprints psycblatrist tried to hire a police undercover a1ent to kW another doctor. Ju4ge M,rrill Brown dlalnllsed . the indictment. Wednesday, on grounds that the grand j ury had issued it too huUJy, without 1tv- ing Dr. Morttn Kurland'• at· torney sufficient time to prepare a defense. · F a111i llepo~ Otd. SAN FRANCISCO <AP> There is no guarantee that slgnilicant earthquake faults in the area of the Humboldt Bay nuclear power plant will remain inactive, a government report says. .The U.S. Geological Survey re· port was cited by the Nuclear Regulatory CommlHlon in deny- ing Pacific Gas and Electric Co. permission to resume operations at the plant. . n......., Beat.la Tied LOS ANGELES <AP> -The county coroner's office says it has found sUgbt traces of a rare haUucinogenlc drug similar to "angel dust" in the blood system of Ronald Burkholder, a nude man who has fatally shot by a Los Angeles police sergeant last month. Earlier tests had shown no drugs in Burkbolder's bOdy, but the coroner's omce said Wednes- day that one one-thousandth of a milliaram of a drue known as PHP was found ln the dead man'• blood and liver fiuids. LNG F Oes Refuse t!J Quit County it wo eould have the propert1 tax from the LNG plant." said Fletcher. The board chairman aald the tacWty wlll have little ef(ect on retldenta. Alked 11 anJOM would have to move betauu ot tb• teml1nal1 Fletcher .replled, ''Other than a couple of ~ows. bO. • At for preaervaUon of the 1Cerilo and nearly un- touched area, Fletcher H)'I ofthe fac'Jllty, "Where ii wW bt located, no one will ... at." • Allen cllaaareed, otUnl the propoeed snlle-long pter and ia..1tory stora•e tank1. "To 11.1 that it lln 't '°'8f to be seen ii jQt falH," tald Allen. ''U'11olnl &o •tud o.at like a t•r-rlble mon1troelt)'.;, -· •• • s OAJL Y PILOT f ,A S -\ I ' BOfJg Brings Woe Eviction Fight Could Be .Landmark Case- LOS ANGELES tAP> ··-Steve and Lois Wolfson ·s bundle of joy has caused them a peck of trouble ever s ince the la ndlord informed them their baby son would force their eviction from the apart~ ment where they have lived for more than three years. , · Culver City Municipal Court .Judge Harold I. Cherness be~an hearing testimony today, on the suit the Wolf sons fil ed to hold onto their S390·a-month home overlooking the yacht harbor at Marina del Rey. · They contend the apartment's ban on cltlfdren violates state law. The c.:asc could have sweeping implications for m illions of families with small children seeking rental housing. MRS. WOLFSON BROUGHT her in - f ant son, Adam, home from the hospit al in September 1975. but nobod y said a word about it for more than a year after he was born. · "We've never had any complaints a bout Adam, .. she said in an interview. ··Jn fact, all of our ne ighbors have signed affidavits saying they like him and want him to stay in the building, and they're appearing in court on our behalf.·· A neighbor, Robert Smitb. whose bedroom is directly over the Wolf sons' apartment, said: .. w e·ve never been awakened by Ada m crying. The Wolfsons a re very considerate people and have asked us on several occasions to be sure the child isn't bothering us.·· IN NOVEMBER 1976, after the Wolf sons had signed their lease renewal. they got a letter from the cor'poration that a'cts as landlord, Marina Point Ltd .• tell-. ing them t hey would have to ]eave because of the child. Entrenched there· since Februar~" 1974. they decided to fight r ather than move. "We love it here. It's a terrific buy, and \ve're pleased with it, .. Wolfson said. "There ·s a great view of the marina from both bedrooms.·· Several other children already live in the apartment complex. They lived there before the han on children was impos~. "Th~ children from adjacent build· mgs whu <:a me over to play in front of this 1 one are a lot nois ier than Adam's ever been, .. Smith said. . , Loofdng for that SPKlal ''lust ri9ht" new window -covering? OUr own designer collection of beautiful fabrics are now on sale: •. Troe custom design & make-up our $s>eclalty. Thru SePt. 30 Only • • ''r '1' .. 7 - 0 • .. , A . New Credibility . Cap in Washington E.-. •Bert Lance WM ICheduled to have hla Ny before the Senate CommlttN, two thlnga became pafnfully obvloua; -lance h• to go. -Premdent Carter hM bungted thl1 one badly. tt 19 ci.r thet Lance'• r.cord u • financial wheeler dealer and his Jack of candor with tM Senate during hl1 con· fl~heerlngaand atnce~destroy.dhla ueetulneee. He •l'll!PfY would not have theconfldlnce of the Congreu and pro-~not theconJl"-nce of the people at targe. Thla IS too bad becauee lAiee by all ~ports hn a pretty falrdegt• of compet~ and nu had the confidence of ttte b lnem community • a voice for moderation among the •ometlmes zany economic theort8ts In other parts of the ad· mln1'1ration and In the departments. We h~e commentcMI before on the fact that the furor r&- aultfng from the progresslvety more damaging revelations about Lance has overshadowed other problems that need mQf'e attention from Carter and more public discussion -the Panama CanaJ Treaty, the defense plcture,.the Middle East, erwrgy and the economy generally. \~ we have Carter's own credibility suffering from the queitlon of how much he really knew about Lance's situation. ff he knew little or nothing, the administration looks terribly Inept. If he knew much or all of the story, his judgment and his Mr. Clean image both are In question. Now comes another damaging development: Press Secretary Jody Powell's "leak" of Information about the sup- posed use by Sen. Charles Percy, a Lance critic, of free ·airplane transportation and other favors from various cor- porations. Apparently Powell's Information was wrong. And this could happen to a new boy In town. But there are two disturbing aspects:. It begins to smack of the old Ron Ziegler performance in the eagerness to harpoon a critic. More important, it raises the question of Carter's involve- ment in the leak. If we are to believe that Carter keeps a tight rein on the finer points of White House staff activities, it is hard to believe that, Powell would have leaked the Information without Carters knowledge. Carter is too smart to let a press secretary jeopardize his relations with a key member ot the Congress without knowing what's going on. Mr. Carter better be preparing a full, frank explanation of all that has transpired, and he had better be ready to deliver It soon. And it better be good. There is a man living in San Clemente who could tell Mr. Carter the perils of stonewalling and cover-up. Wrong Target Meanwhile, Sen. S. I. Hayakawa has weighitd-in with hrs share of foolishness in the Lance affair. Rushing to defend Mr. Lance's "giving up a lot to accept the federal job," Hayakawa railed against the media tor re- porting (and in some cases digging out) the activities which now have Lance in trouble with the Senate. · Hayakawa apparently belongs to those who believe that nothing a public official does would be improper or Ulegal if ' the media did not report it. Rather than "driving good men away from government," as Sen. Hayakawa seems to feel, the media exposure Is about the only mechanism available to the American public for mak- ing sure that they get good men in the government. • Opinions expressed in tf'le spac;e •bove are those of tf'le Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are tho~ ot their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invited. Other Views Latins Eye Panama It seems incredible that the U.S. distributes millions of dollars throughout the world in order to shed responsibilities, while in Panama, where the gringos would like to stay forever, a considerably smaller sum is offered. The South Koreans do not want the Americans to go, yet the U .S. pays the South Koreans so they can pull out. There is just no way to understand the gringos. -Juan Carrete, Critica, Panama City rindependentJ. The agreement will make us a · sort of sanctuary --- s imilar to Switzerland. In fact the only threat to the canal's security is sabotage. Our people have proven over 70 years that ther are capable and responsible enough to keep it functiarung. The agreement seems to be right and proper for the Panamanian community's best interests. -La Republica, Pa~ma City f pro-government /. The agreement in principle betw.een the U.S. and Panama, in addition to providing a solution to the problem of the canal. also restores one's faith in the possibjlity of negotiating the many disputes that exist between our con· tinentand the whole-world. It is also palpable evidence of a new North American political style. · -La Nacion, San Jose <independent J. 11te projected new treaty represents a triumph for the Panamanians and for all Latin Americans. On few other occasions has there been such a continental cohsensus. Why. one might ask, is there not a similar unanimity about ' the independence of Puerto Rico? ' -Fernando Val<Uz, E:rcetnor, MextcoCitu findependentJ. Dear Gloomy' Gm _!lowland Evans/Robert Novak Korea Memo Paints Grim Picture WASHINGTON -The same Carter adrnlnistration document that contemplates losing one· third ol West Germany to a So- viet attack cootends that remov- ing U.S. trooJ)ll from South Korea atves Washington "flexibility" to determlne whether or not to in· tervene against Communlst in· vulm from the north. PRM (Presidential Review Memorandum) 10. a top secret tnter.aaency study ol U.S. force struc- tures, also is gloomy about holding the South Korean capital of Seoul against invading N o r t h Koreans to· day. Even with U.S. air and naval intervention and U.S. troops still stationed in South Korea, the study suggests Seoul cannot be held·. AU this contradicts President Carter's assurances that his de- cision to remove the 2nd U.S. ln- f antry Division does not undercut the U.S. commitment to South Korea. lt also undermines cur. rent military doctrine based on the retention of Seoul as a necessity. Thus, South Koreans face the same problem as the West Germ ans: s hall they believe public pronouncements of U.S. leaders or private docu· men ts or their staff experts? The administration's claim that PRM·lO merely discusses options is simply untrue. Just as PRM·lO slates that present allied forces could not hold one-third of Germany, its disturbing com· ments on Korea are based on con· ditions before and after the U.S. troop pullout, not on any option. "ONCE THE U.S. land rorce.s are out of Korea," says PRM-10, "the U.S. hu transformed its presence in Asia from a land· based posture lo an off.shore posture. This ... provides the U.S. flexibility lo determine at the lime whether it should or should not get involved in a local war." · The document goes on to re· Jack Anderson veal an unpublicized reason for removing the 2nd Division: to give Washineton the choice o! whether or not to intervene. With the troops gone, says PRM-10, "the risk of automatic involve- ment (which was a major factor in removing land forces from Korea) is minimized. However, should the U.S. decide to in· tervene, military forces would be readily available." Even with the 2nd Division aWI on station and the U.S. supplying · .. initial air and naval support at D-Day," PRM·lO spins a grim· scenario: "If the North Koreans were to achieve tacUcal surprise, it ii possible that they could at least temporarily attain their most likely major objective - the capture of Seoul." Wblle predlctlnt North Korea could not win "a sustained com· bat," it predicates thiJ on maJ« U.S. help. ''With the U .$. COD• tributioos of land and carrier baaed tactical air· asaets and material support, it would ap- pear that the U.S. and ROK (Republic of Korea) would pre- vail again.at North Korea in the lon~er t.erm, but with possible in- '' MArt! TAik 41'7out used CMS ••• " itlal setback• -lnc1udln• perbaPI tbe fall of SeoW."0 Wtl'llOlJT U.S. belp, the 1ltu1· tion is desperate, accordlna to PRM·lO! ''The level of fOl"ffS which could be brou.abt to bear at the front on D·Day would generally favor Nortb Korea over tbe ROK ln all catecorles .•• The ROK bu widely epread Inf entry fotcea with limited mobUlty and vulnerable 1tock1 of war materiel." The document implies a return to the old U .s. strategy of keep- ing allied troops away from the DMZ and lnatead falllnl bact on Seoul. Now-reUred i;t. Gen. James HoWngawOl'lb chanaed that when he took command nearly four years a10. ~­ing the North Koreans wanted to capture Seoul quickly and then start debllltatln1 peace neaotia· tiona. So. allied atrateay cbanaed to a forward defense ol Seoul. Such a defense requires Korean confidence in U.S. rndi· neaa to sqpply lndl1penaable airpower. South Korea lane bu worried that itl defense pact with W aabington provides-a less ..automatic U.S. r.ponae to in· vasioo than does the NATO Uu· ty, President Carter's July 25 let- ter sought to rea.saure Piesjdent Park Chung Hee t.bat the U.S. troop pullout does not mean "any change wbataoever in our com- mitment." ; PRM·ll undercuts aJI of South • Korea's expectaUoa.a. While em· phasizing that only U.S. air and naval intervention could atop an invasion. it now makes that in- tervention a matter of ·choice rather than automatie response. After our column reported the PRM·lO aaaeasroent of a Soviet attack in Central Europe. a seniOl" West German army of- ficer secretly visited Waabinctoo to find the truth. Interviews with 30 people, the general said. left "not the shadow of doubt In my mind" that the column was ac· curate despite White House de- nials. South. Korea's generals may now begin a similar process with hopes that .ibe answer will be more reassuring than the find. ings ol their German colleague. Red Carpet Treatinent for a Communist· WASHINGTON -For 25 years, the State Dept has been arbitrarily blocking selected Communists from entering the United Stat.es by invoking a law from the Red Scare days of Sen. Joseph McCarthy The McCarran Act, passed in . 1952, established nearly 30 categories of people who could not visit the United States unless they were recommend· ed for visa waivers b y the State Dept. Among the UD · desirables were prostitutes, polygamists, paupers and ad- vocates of the "International doc· trines of world communism." Now, thanks to a recent bill passed by Congress, the McCar- ran Act will soon be less restric· tive. Over the years, neverthe· less, the law has often been selec- tively applied . Out of some 19,000 waiver applications last year, for example, only about a lhOJJSand were denied. Dw1ng the Richard Nixon- Henry J{jssinger era, Communist leaders from Western Europe were conafdered anatbema, because official visits to the Unlt· ed States would give tbem credibility at home. In 19'T5. for Sydney Harris \ instance, a prominent Italian Communist, Sergio Segre, was invited to speak at the New York Council on Foreign Relations. The waiver was denied and the conference had to be cancelled. • COMMUNISTS who were critical of U. S. allies were also considered verboten by the Nix· on administration. One such case involved a prominent British citizen, Carmel Budiardjo, wbo wanted to lecture 1n the United States on human rights violations in Indonesia. Under pressure from the Indonesian govern- ment, the State Dept. temporari- ly withheld her vlsa on the grounds that she had previously lied about being a Communist from l9i46to1948. In contr~. Communists who · have tbe State Dept. seal of ap- proval are speedily eranted vlsa waivers and are ushered in on a red carpet. Take Vulkan Shopov, chief of agriculture for the Bulaarian Communist party. As an Eastern European Communiat, ln an era of detente, he is ardently courted at>y U.S. diplomats. SHOPOV CAME to tb'e United States in June at the lnvttaUon al the State Dept. The U.S. tax· payers footed the bUl for bis month·long vtslt. including travel expenses to and ftom Bulgaria. In a !day 9 cable to the State Dept., the U.S. ambassador in Sofia, Martin Hen, was ecstatic about Shopov's pending tour. "Embassy strongly believes <Shopov) must be accorded VIP status as far u (expenses) and general treatment is con· cemed," exclaimed Herz. The Communist leader, cabled the ambassador, should be taken lo a "Southeastern agricultural region, including visit to AUanta or other Southern city;" the Great Plains wheat, corn and soybean region; and the Western st•tas. In 1ene-al. wrote Herz, Sbopov "would like to 1ee lllOlt advanced · form.1 of American airtcullu!al technology. Se hu Hid be ex- pect.I to work hard durln1 the visit.•• DESPITE the dlatlngulshed Bulaarian's announced intention 1 to keep his D06e to the crlndatone, Hen suggested some lavish en· tertainment for the visitor: "He would appreciate chance to ue ~ American dance (though we suspect anJWns too av~garck.woutd not ao down well; believ'e American Ballet Theater, Alvin Ailey or Eliot Feld would be Just about rtgbt>. Broadway show (au11est, if , possible, 'A Chorus Line' or 'Bub- bling Brown Sugar'), Ope.ra, or orchestral concerti. Shor,ov not lnterestedinjuzorroclc.' The ambassador added a ''special note.•• In bis taUµJ with Shopov, wrote Herz. the Bulgarian made a .. special point of saying be does not want to bump into correspondents from <Radio Free Europe> wblle in U.S., and does not wish t.o give in· terview to (Voice o.f America) ... He ulted that in· terpreter not be 'political immi- grant' .•. " Shopov had been assured, the ambassador stated, "that in· terpreter would be selected in such f uhlon as to UIW'e there would be absolutely no political embarraumept." · WDN BE finally arrived in the Unit.eel States, Sbopov WU taken to the Smithsonian, the Kennedy Center, colonial Williamsburg, Va., an4 to other spots arouncl·the countey. • But the scholarly ShoDov. a State Dept. offldal told us, "squeezed ln° the cultural licbts only when be had spa.re time. The Bufaarlan decided to tweco Dia- n011.s. .tllcb "dllappomted" State Dept. ofllc1al1. Footnot6: While Communists. need waivers to visit the United States, leaders of repressive right-wing regimes aucb as Chlle. South Korea and Arcen .. tina. can come and ao u they wlab. 'Rollleo· and Juliet' \ll;"asn't Meant as. RoDUlllCe . Asked to name Shakeapeare•a 0 niost romantic" pla)', ninety. nine persona out· of 100 wouil promptly reply: .. Romeo a.ad Jaillet." And they would -be 1hocked ancf dfsbellevtnc to be • told It Is really ·•n .. anU• man that ta not paaalon's ~lave . . . ..• ) It 11 lnterestint to note, turtber, that Sbunpeare bof'. rowed the story from a lone poem by Arthur Brooke, ln wbleb ttM orilinal Juliet la a ','wily wench" who wexes mer17 ewer tier sue· eeMl\11 ded'epUOD OI ber, iDGt,her. Brooke ... the•• ol ~tot.­ pl• .. ..dtlernld rsmllbment .. tor UMlr tMbiMsi Sbat-.pean '°"even furtbtr bJ cbullnl Broote•1 monlhs ln\O dQt. '° tbat Romeo and Juliet ar• •lrtully 1tran1•r• to tach Ottier.) SVbYTlllNG tit Ute Dlu 11 an unlol'tunat• 11 •eclaeat, .. E l CID by tb1fr ~ . It la acelclntaJ tbat eraauo &a• ROliaeo tO u.e ·~.,.....be mMta .Id& ltll an Mddmtb.c bltl!ill Ida totM fa"611.-bltwa~ 'l'JW llld .......... It .. u ...-.. ... . . . Fnar John II quarantined.. And It la a fatal accld~t tbal Juliet awakens from her trance a mo-• ment too la~ to prevent Romeo tiliaa polton. lt la QOt a play about "lcwe .. at .U. but abcM f'OlhUUc rutrnll Everybody 11 o•erex~4!J •l*lally Ronaeo at eacrll ~I ot tae plot. Th• 1 ~\)' ~ the llODtQMI C•»uleta t1 nnect-4An . .,..vtol' ol UMir cblld~ --4 •:ttame01114 Juliet •• , ratlMi' tho Ntftf • dra.mMlc ....... to tJae ba~.,._.... tbe llliNH9, II.an e11mpl• Of .. ,,._ tlna of lite fatlMIW bilftj ,_,.. ""8 •the cblNnia.•• ·~ ...... , ........ DO piOll tiif ... or llMei M ... AOt for tta e.UOW eoatert• o# ......... " ....... WI' lolll1Jw.d$xce.Na•ftlit ~ .. -.._...,o"Jll;•81f abOIL • Orange CoHt Dally Piiot ThUf'lday, September 15, 1977 Nick 'Thimmeecb Pundt To write the Oa)ty Pllot/Boic 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 91626 To C,11 the Oallv Pllotn14 '42-4321 ~· A7 Unions Balance Eco~omy --------81 CONCUNl_.Ql PRIVl~J' WASHINGTON Tbe other qy ao lntelllaent. YOW\I 11ert~n asked me wh4'tber thert' wett labor unions In tho U S. a early as the Twenue . I replledthat the.re Sllre were. tbal union• h a v 41 flpurbhed •Ince \be lut century and ·grew qp with our industrial We. I was only p artl)' right. True. the In· ternational Tywgraptucal Union <!.a~s to 16~2. but ln 1648, lqng before this land had its Industrial Revolution, the shoemakers 81\d' barrel workers bad fortned a unlon Jn BostoQ. The urJefOr workers to oreanlze to prOtect themsel ve& I.a both d~ 1 4:PJY felt and universal, and goes back to al l~t the Mid- dle Ages. Perhaps my young friend, growing up in the television uplrant• are looklna for money. or when aood old Hubert Humphrey ll puah1n1 another rull employment pantacea TO MANY Amencans, uoiona loom as powerful oares, capable of crippling or ev~n de1troy1n1 our enter .. prlae system. Frankly, unJons are often a pain in lbe you. know-where. No baron of in- dustry was ever more auto- crat.le than some labor skates I have known. Bur the labor movement Is an absolutely necesaary balance wheel in our society indeed, has es· sentially been a conservative influence in our national life. Despite all the hwflng and puffing at the national level, the labor movement these days is scarcely holding its own. Only 20 million of the 97 miJUon employed Amerioans (20 percent of work force) belong to l•bor unions. Employment growth is in the government and service sec· tors and in the South. Labor unions make little headway in these areas. much oldes: than the rat of unlondom'1 brasa. ln tho T'b1rl1el, 1 collection ofsplrited,cour11eousyouna men Oflanind the buse Buie Industrlel of America. That waa adventure. But today, unJona ~resentltll workers in autos. steel, rubber, alum.tuum. 1Jua aid mtning have settled into eftlcient. Dlainten.an<?e of their mem· ben' ri&btt and welfare. Tbe irowth ii in associa· tlons representing govern· ment employea, say, civil workers or uachers. These associations like to think or themselves as "pro- fessional, .. though they talk. act and function like labor un- ions. IF TBEBE ls any question that labor leaders and their members are really middle- of .tlJe.road to conservative in social lUid polltical outlook. flash back to the hard.bat movement dwina the Viet- namese war, or to the reality that the majority ol union members voted for Richard Nixon, not George McGovern, in 19'12. UnJons serve a bourreoisie, not revolutionary, purpose. They balance, and keep In· dust.ry and bu.siness on notice not to get out of Une, to put aside any lustful, greedy urges. Though I am far from a libefal, I have never regretted beloncm1 to labor unions (Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of America, Laborers and Hod Carriers lntemaUonal Union of North America, The Newspaper Guild and the American Federation of Televlalon aod Radio Artists). A seat belt or crash helmet may be be un- comfortable, but they are necessary. AND UNIONS can help keep industrial order as well as diaturb it. One of the great industrial relatiooa experts oC our time ls Lou Seaton. now retired as vice president or General Motors, in cbar1e of perS011Del. He once told me, after a heated bargain1n1 session with Walter Reuther: ..The UAW can drive you up the wall. but General Motors · era, ·thinks of unions in terms of Cesar Chavez and the grape workers, or the disap- pearance ot Jimmy Hoffa, or J.he murdet of Jock Moreover, most union members wowd rather gape at TV than go to mfftlngs, and yawn about their affilia· tlon unless there ia attike talk. The union movement is run from the aging top. AFL- CIO president George Meany, four score and three, ian 't too StJU. wit.bout labor unions, couldn't operate without it. the American economic Imagine having fiO different '\'a f>lonski. L . Unions are so integrated in our economic system that their role is often functionary. They splash in the press dur· ing strikes, or threats of them, or when Democratic system oot•ld tum-back to_ outf~ °'81Wt.Yltem. a1L chaos. 'nK!IUit for the buck1.s -· ytpptiig or tlireatenlng-'"to ~ so strong in our socle(y that walk out. At l~aat with the avatlce ahd exploitation UAW we have some con· would &llrely overwhelm, U sistency and know where we there were no labqJ-unions. are." Editorial Views By The Associated Pres~ Here is a sampling of editorial opinion on the proposed Panama Canal treaty: ARIZONA DAILY STAR -"By putting all its energies in· to the canal pact, the Carter administration has shown that Its priorities are out of line. Just as the canal is an emo- tiona~ issue that elicits pangs of patriotic fervor, limitation of strategic arms is more abstract, leas likely to stir latent 'jingoism." -ALBUQUERQUE N.l\f. TRIBUNE ~-"Carter and the country have much t9.lose in a treaty defeat. His ability to conduct}9relgn aCfaJrs would be cUminished . Other coun· tries would hesitate to make agreements with ·us, even vital ones on limiting nuclear weapons, out of fear that the White House could not deliver congressional approval." -SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER -.. This nation, it must be admitted, was engaged in practices, 74 years ago when the treaty was written, that we now condemn in Soviet strategy when segments of the population in a coun· try areinduc¢ to rebel against that nation's leadership." NEW YORK DAILY NEWS --"Tran sf erring ownership of the waterway to Panama would not impose any hardships on the U.S .. or diminish its security. And doing so would be a mark of strength rather than, as treaty foes contend, a sign of weakness." TH~ INCUDIBLE COLLECTION OF AU DEMARS PIQUET TIMEPIECES NEW AT BW NEWPORT For more tha" ~ c•ntury Audemar1 Piquet h'' 1kl1tful1y Jic).fpl(.re4 tJmt< lrUO beauty. The1e 1uptrb tlmtplece1, produced In limlred '1umben, are reserved for th'e prlvlleged few. tt you •"* .ltl'l~l\l 1hose few, to whom near perf ectlon ~ord' 1 partkl.lf1t-1leature, we Invite you to view the tolkctk>n it the tt{~wport aw. flne Jewtlt')'. ' Tiii• l1mlly-al1e Frlorct1lre fH~ I CJefmat\eflt or- c)'dt end lllNd dfYlno. Sew money Clurlng 11111 Nie. $$SAYE$$ aEARANCED PRICED II ·sidewalk Sale Friday Septeliib~r 16' Tllll at1nd1rd CIPICllV model l11tur11 1•0 m1nut1~ or ll••d 1er1101111ure drytno . remcJl/lbte uo-lront lilt.,, and porcelaln/11n1m11 drum MOWOHLY · s18995 dl . , " 'A n ... ''" ,, l ... DAil. Y P1LOT Thurte11 • Ge tambtf 15 1077 57 Coast Merit ·Students Qualify Seniof. Artkts Newport Beach•s senior citizen center opened this month with a variety of classes and activities, including a class in painting. Froll') left· are Marian Chandler, Eleanor Newman and Ione Stockholm . " Italian Mod~ls ·Pose, ·Then Strike -BOLOGNA, Italy (AP> -Moclels ai Bologna's Academy of Fine Arts voted today to pose ror only one minute at a time and strike for four in support of their demand for a work contract. The modets• union said the hiccup strike would last for the rest of the school year unless a contract is given it. The models now are paid by the hour and have no.contract. flnallatulre exPOC.ledto. uuaUf~ as tlnallsll. . Flnallsta wm compete for at least 1,000 Na· tional Merit Sl,000 acholanbips. Other award• and 1ranta uaoclated wilb the program may brtni a flnall1t '1 wloninfa to more than $1,500 In •cholarahlpe per under1raduate year. "lbe namet of acbol~ winners will be an· nowxednextAprU and May. . Local sem.lllnallats are: °*9 M•• W,la Sebool: David C. Dawe, Dmcl Doyle and Donald D. O'Neal. £Mada JO~ Sebool, C.ta Mesa: Randy J. &niniton. Larry W. Kraiaa and Eric T. St.Ue. El T.-. lllllt Sebool: James E. Hugbee. loupb P. Mu1U1an ma Richard T. Scalettar. l'-*alll ValleJ Jl1&b Sdaool: Gwendolyn A. Dean, ¥tchae'l J . McCarthy, Paul M. NeJson,. Robert II. Schotidd~ Randy J. Scbwarti and Jay A: Watlon. The center at J'ifth and Marcuerite avenues in Corona del Mar is open Crom 9 a .m. to 5 p.m. fi~ days a week an<l also offers services such. as l~gal aid. NEW CUT• LOOP STYLE 100% heat-Mt nylon pUe that haa been Ban-Lon wear-tested tor durabillty and eaae ot cate. Select from 9 colofallone • . '~9!! f.Searsl k~ I Q,l, .. •,t. 4 .. 11 UI, CORRECTION NOTICE In the current Seara advertising pre-print effectJve thr!)ugh September 17, an error occu"ed. The Illustration for the adult gray aweatshfrt priced at $3.99 la Incorrect. We regret the error and any lnconvenhtnce It "1BY have caused. . NEW? FOR ORANGE COUNTY SOUTH COAST **MUSIC CATERINO** Having a party, reception, or sales booster event? Had a problem with five music? Custom music systems are now avaHa- ble for your home, haH or business. Complete installation & operation • · featuring a Dimension 7 disc Jockey. Super sound musical lights. Your music or ours. Reasona ble rates, five hour m inimum. EarJy reservations are sug-gested. CDB Cteartle's Disco Business After Six please: Charlie (714) 955-3535 Danny (213) 691-9944 Featuringi;;mD · BAN4.0N TIXTUREO PLUSH One of our beat eellera, a bulky PIUlhpile In 1 aeleC:tlon of ' be..ifut aolld ~·· Heat·set pit. ·~ljj!!. • Moore lsoltJtion Ends • ALDERSON, W Va IAP> -San Markley •llphalned that lnmatel ln Ju Moare rcltued from a the unit take tuma decldl.na which •p«lal 11\Wmtam •~urUy ncUon ot teltvtlioa abow1 they wlll wafeb each the ~·11 eral p.UO. ~after nJ1ht. n•arly • •ed'I t>UAJ.ahmeot loc ber lnvolvmltnt ln • dt1pute ~r what tele~ pro ram to watch. He aaid they watched the first three se1menta of the proaram on prealdtn· tlal oolitic• when Mlsa Moore declded Friday niahl to watch the "Ml.ls Black America" beauty P'lceant ln· stead ot the fourth inalellment. Mlaa M~. 1 rv1ni • Ufotn-m tor attempttn1 to assuslnate former Pra1d~t 1''0l'd, didn't want to watch the fourth episode of the ABC mini·&ertes •·war.h1n1ton: Behind ' CIQSed Doon1 ." OTHER INMATES BECAME an. gry and the televillon Ht wu thrown to tbenoor and broken. .. WAllDtN CARSON Marldey of the Federal Co~Uoaal losUtutioft said four other women were ptaced 1.n the special maximum secunty unit at the all-women federal prison after the fracas. No one was Injured in the dispute, but Markley said he felt it necessary to isol.tte Mias Moore from the other inmates for her protection and pend· ing aninvesU,ation. A~WI ...... PUNISHMENT OVER Sara Jane*°°'• When it comes to knits, nothing fits ... like a Gant! Gant starts with 100% cotton knit fa bric then trimly tailors it to fit the body. Like this new fall version of the famous Rugger shirt .. In classic two-tone stri'pes with con- trast knit collar, placket and cuffs. Brown, wine, green. camel combinations. 19.0(;> silverWoiJdS 45 FASHION ISLAND• NEWPORT BcACH AN OPEN LETTER TO OUR CUSTOMERS: Two years ago Wallpapers To Go opened Its very first store In Son Francisco. Now we're proud to state that we hove 16 stores throughout the West. We really a ppreclate that you, our customers. hove been very enthusiastic In your support or our exciting new concept. Thousands of people who have never purchased wallpaper before. discovered us an_d no'tY ore our regular customers. . ~ Thank you for yourworiderful response to a whole new way to save on first quality wallpaper .•• Wallpapers To Go. In appreciation of your support, we-re brtngtng you our 2nd Anniversary Sole ..• Great voluf)s for great customersl Thank you ogolnl Slnoerely yours. 9Wv~ President, Wallpapers To Go Campus Signs Okayed Hiding t DAIL V PILOT A 9 liens Charged Patrol agents near the Oak Grove im· ml1ratklo checkpoint on California 183 ln northern San Diego County. A prosecutor Hid the aliens were in the camper. Metzer, a 19-year veteran of the Air Force, said be la being transferred from Eglin AFB, Fla .• to Hawaii. Ifs HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS for the right start. In llf e Kinder11rten thru 8th Grade • All·c!IY classes E#lldlt ~- Fan Semeater Start• T&lelday, Sept. 6 'JOHNS' FA.CE SEXARRESTS I Registration Fee ONLY S20 ·Reasonable Tuition SACRAMENTO (AP> -Men are being arrest· ed nearly as often u women in Sacramento's crackdown on prostitu· ti on, police chief Jack Keams says. Keams reported that 112· women and 70 rpale customers were atTested in Adgust on charges re· lated to prostitution. d ~ I % ion has slashed their prices on all Hoovers "A Priwate School of Distinction Founded in 1942" brate National Hoover Week R QUICK BROOM • u ......... .......... ck •=-bag . • " ... for ..... •c:c. ........... .... ... ... -..~ ....... s24aa ,... .. ,... s...•11• HOOVER DIAL-A-MATIC With Automatic Powadrtve :~::r= .... •9' I ... •'-ft••11llll11M1g •PowaM..aw ... ,. ...... d. 111 ................ HOOVER CONVERTIBLE s5991 s...•20- ~·~· • • Thu , 15 1Dn Another Sweep hi Cup? Courageoua F ~rd to Retain Trophy •1 JORN NSL80N . OUN ftBPHENS OF Sparkman & !>tepbena • NEWPORT, R.l. CAP> -PredlcUna the out:\ beau deattntna America's CUp boata lD 1830 wben come ol the America'• Cup ll a UtUe Ub prodktloc1b• oo-cleeiped the e•p defeoder Ranf.tr, a J Clua whlcbplanot w'1l be cloaeet to th• aun on aoy 'lven 'boat. U. 6u cleelped every delencl.lq lJ-meter day. , 1achlexcept Weatherly lnltG. Jt'a almu.t that ea•y Jn the ellnunaUoa series, Australia lost just ~ only que1uon I n ta whet.Mr 1tlpper Noel 1Ce, while ,Couraieous lost e11ht times, But the Robl.nl lJ·meter yacht Australia, tbe challen1er rnerkao bOat eel ber crew, which liaa been lntac\ rrar:n Peth, will be able tb wtn •race In the best-of--ce June, raced 32 ttmes to 14 for Australia. •e¥en aerles,~lch beaan Tuesd~ with• convlnc-Cureceoua' akippeyand crew have had twice tbe U>.i victor)' for Cou.ra1eous and slupper Ted Turner· ~nber ol races in wbleb to teat sear and improve 11IE TWO BOATS continue the ffrlet today, if the weather perm au, and l1 bu come down to a race not eo much of boU speed -which seem• compara- ble -butolaalll, riulna, tacUca and crew work. Io fact. one of the reasons bull speed bu been ao comparable is that Auslralla is very similar ln de- sign to Courageous. A source inside Sparkman and Stephens ol New York, which designed Courqeou.s. ~aid the firm st.ron1l.Y suspect.a the Auslralla syn- dicate bad drawings of Courageous before buildin& ' the new Aussie yacht. Other publuabed rep6rts have t indicatedthesame. t .. We're not maklnl aey predlcUons," said Bob I McCullough, commodore ot tbe aponaori.ng New ~York Yacht Club. "After all, we all know that J Australia is a carbon c-opy of Courqeous." f • IN THE FIRST RACE, Australia's bull speed stood her in good steal • • • alter dropping more than a minute behind on the first leg because of 1aU f problems. t The experieftce behind the American derenae, the 23rd since the schooner America won the trophy in 1851, is immense. Two of the world's best-known and most auc- cessful sailmakers -Ted Hocid or Marblehead, Mass .. and Lowell North of San Diego -were skip- vers o( defense candidates which Courageoua eliminated. Courageous~ Hood s'11.a. Aust.ralla uses North sails made in Auatralla. And both SverigeoCSweden and Australia's Grftel II. una~· cessful challengers, used foreign-made North sails Schedule Given ·For Harris Series 1 The California Yacht Club has announced the schedule of its annual Fred Harria Fall Series, a Coor-race offshore aeries on Santa Monica Bay c:om memoratina tbe late Fred "Friendly" Harris Harris, one of tbe most well-tnown and ~m petitive yacht.amen lD Southern Calllo'll•· dled a few years ago after a long bout with cancer DuriJJg the last year of his life he gained considerable publicity from his frequent visits to cancer patients throuabout the Southwest. otferln& 'friendly en coura,ement. Despite knowing that his illness was terminal, he continued..to compete in yacht races until the last. The Harris Serles ls open \0 all yachts of the In temational Offshore Rule, Performance Handicap Racing Fleet, Midget Ocean !lacing Fleet. Midtet Ocean Raciq Aaaociatioo. and Cruising Club of America ratiot rules. First race of the series will be the Squirrel Bank Race, an J.8.miler over a windward leeward course SepL17. Other races will be the Inverted Enduro, Sept 24 ; Lazy 8 Race, Oct. l, and the Five O'clock Bell race, Oct. IS. Sailing Courses Oflered at College CoasUine Community College is otrering two marine oriented courses this fall -one on ocean sportCishing and the other on the techniques of sail·" ing and the design of sailer aft. The fishing course wttl be held at the McGaugb Intermediate School Library, 1898 Bolsa Ave., Seat Beach. The first lecture will be held Monday night Sept. 19 from 7 to 10 p.m. and will continue each Monday night through Oct. 24 . Lecturer wlll be Jack Main, a professional fisherman for over SO years and co-owner-operator of a fleet sport and com· mercial fishing boats. The saillnc lectutes will start Thursday, Sept. 29, and continue each Thursday through Nov. 3 at tbe Harbor View School Multipurpose Room. 900 GolderJrad Ave., Corona del Mar. Lecturer wUI be Al Nelson. a veteran sailor With more than 30 years experience in everything from Sabots to 12-meters. · • ~worL ''We've been throutb a 1qtby program,'' said =er of bueball's Atlanta Braves and a Georsia radlo-TV c1ar. "We"Ve &ot a aet operatina u far as aalla and crew work are oct01od. aad we don't intend to chanae. •• ~RV J OBSON, THE tactlclan aboard Co~ and Turner's alt.er-eio, hopes b1.s boat can '9 tn .. four auaiebt. but you never know. We'Nlanntna on ualng our same sueoeatul tac- Uca .._Australia and l'ni'pmtf conlld~t." .. ~gonna get •em as lonl as we cover ~ben we~,.... ud attack when behlnO," aald Joblon. .. .,. d be four atraiaht." Tunlv admJtted~ .. but it ~ be the other way. Whai do you tblD.k I .am~ I'm not goln& to make any predic> tion.s." · __ There is no charge for either series. Reaistra· tion will be at the first session. For a ddiUonal 1ln· ..,. formation call CoasUine, 963-0811, Ext. 256 . . Cla.es Set Dana ID Teach Novicea Novice sailors can learn baste bottlqa tkW1 ln a 12-week course starting Mondb, apcmored by tbe Dana Point chapter of the U.S. Power Squa~. a boatina (ratemity. The free cluses w~ll meet Mondays at 7 :3C) p,tn. at Dana Hills High School, 33333 St. of the Golde-. Lantern in Dana Point. All family m embers can •ttend c1aues, whlcb will featwe dilcUNtons ot madlHt aatety, 1ood aeUIMIDlbJp, equipment malntenanee. navi1•UoA and eompua ,read.lo1 for both 1.U and power boatamen. Addltkmal lntormatlon cri the coune la avalla· blebyca1llng'8MUS. . · r • ·• --" . START THE NIGHT WIT ATEQUILA SUNRISE OR YOU'LL HATE YOURSELF IN THE YOU KNO • .Et(l'REE IV~ .. ~ StQnl9y EQUAU.Y AT HOMI IN AN ELICiANT TOWNHOU$E 01\ A Rusnc COUNTAY COTrAGE. SAVE UP TO ~0%1 As. oppropr1ote for o grodous d inner os lt ls for o casual brtJnch. Ir's handsome lines ore tahful enough to morch any .. decor. And rt:-~11 11ng wood-od< vene•rs and solids In woodrone finish enhonats this wnartllfy. See this-wondrous col\ect1onorEdwardslnrefbs ••• o unJq~aod dlstlnalve~rore fof rti05e Who oppni!'dOfe fhe ftnest In home furnishings. 5-Pl"9 ~nlng ........ lrldUdes ocrog-$ 588 onol pedesrol ~ wtfh 1·18" apron fll· ler, 1 orm and a side c:cne bock choirs. Reg.$779.95. ~ atno, 42W 160 7eH. Reg. S579.95 •••••••••• .-$094 Duht, MW 190 \JOH. Reg. $439.~ •••••••.••• _. ~ · • r Jntedor design service ovarlabtewlth your pureta. at no extra ~· , Shop Our cuStom di~ end ~ depQrtrnent for outstaridJ~ values.: ... •. ·. ' ·.,,. . . . .. . . .. ·. ... .·. ... ... :o(. .,: .... · . ... .· . . I I ~ .. ~ '. · . ·~ ":; .. . , .· ·~ ~· :- .. ' . ' ... \ ) ,. I , .. From Out al tlae Past Mr. and Mrs. Dave Rossi of Costa Mesa and their d a ughter . J essica, admire 1911 National that was in the first two Jn. dianapolis 500 races. Tne antique racer has a four-cylinder, 590-cubic·inch engine and still runs, according to its owners, who displayed it recently in connection with an antique car exhibit at a Newport Beach shopping center. LA County Population Up LOS ANGELES <AP) -The nation's most populous county, which saw a dip in the number or res idents earlier in the decade, appears to be grow- ing again, censas statistics indicate. ·Census Bureau figures released in Washington s how that at least as many people are moving to Los Angeles County as are moving out: FOR THE FIRST TIME since 1970, the county'l> .popu~tion topped seven million. The provisional cen~us statistics for mid·l.976 recorded 7,004,400 people, less than the 1970 all-time high of 7,041,980, but more than the low point in 1974 of 6,930,000. · "The amount of net out-migration from the county has been going down in the last few years, . "FREE! t~LUSTllAT~D ·. ,INSTllVC~IDNI , USE OF SNCIA~­~ tlltD TOOLS! ;~OlllT ADVICE, PL.ANNING HmLP : FULL. REFlf ND 'ON UNUSED TILE but Los Angeles grows more from natural increase than from immigration," said Walter Hollmann of the state Finance Department. HOLLMANN AND LARRY LONG, a census bureau demographer, were cautious in predicting that the dip in out-migration in one year was setting a trend Census figures for the 1970· 75 period show a net out·migration of 362,600 from the count)!. During the S'ttme period plus 1976, the figure dips to 356,200 persons, suggesting a small gain or 6,400 people. The population dip in the early 1970s has ~en attributed to job losses in the aerospace industry and fears of earthquakes. VINYL LATEX REDWOOD STAIN Specially formulated for exterior redwood to ofter etcellent durability and protection. Water clean-up . Easy brush application. ~ ....... ~~ tit 1/&E AT THIS LOW PRICE! LATEX HOUSE PAINT WHITE AND COLORS Our best house paint offers fade resistant, non- yellowlng, fast-drying features -Ideal for wood, masonry and asbestos shingles. • ....... ~ ~UR BEST HOUSE PAINT/ DAIL y PILOT A J J Zoning Restudy· Urged Newport Beach officials want county officials to reconslder a zoning cm wbicb could end up producing more than 600 apart· ment units in an island of county territory surrounded by the city. •'I thlnk this is a lltUe blt ridiculous ," said Councilman Don Mclnnla. "I submit that. the traffic gen erated will not recognize boundary lines on a map." THE CASE THAT drew the ire of councilmen involved the triangl~ of county territory near Hoag Memorial Hospital. It bu been zoned for a combination of . light indutry and apartments. County supervisors last week re· zoned most of it for hJgb density Ca bout 23 unit.a per acre>. The hlJhest density allowed In Newpon Beach ls 12 units per acre. At Monday's council mfft· ing. Mcinnis pointed out that the tri&nale lnclud• one apartment complex that contains more than 40 wlit.a per acre. Councilmen decided to a sk 1u pervi10tS to reconsider their dedslon, but differed on how to present t.be requeat. MdNNJS. WHO DESCRIBED the.county Planning Comnussion e NOT A DISCONTINUED BRAND·X "23"' e 40 CHANNELS! 1971 ENGINEERING! e BIG S/RF .METER! SIX CONTROLS! e RF GAIN AND )J.l THE GOODIES! as a kangaroo court,~au11ested a hard line. demandint that the case be reconsidered. He-was backed by Councilman Trudi Rogers who said she views the rezorung as "totally unac· ceptable. l think we abould be forceful about lh1s." The city's community develop- ment director . Dick Hoaan. sug. gested that some personnel lobby· l n g by co unc.llmen with s upervisors might be a more el· fect1ve way to get the caae re- heard. Councilmen agreed to try both approaches simultaneously. I e AS ADVERTISED ON NETWORK TV! 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SAVE 50°/o TRUNK MOUNT CB ANTENNAS Reg.1411 29'• 21·tU • Twfn Trunller Ho-Holfl Mountt • Stronger RecepHonl Trensmi11ionf • tnafJn It YourMH •nd Get Stf For the H.w Fl# TV · S.tonf . l 2 DAILY PILOT 2ND Sl'ORY ACI' SCARY Army QUEENIE By 'hil lnterfondi ALTHOUGH women are barred from combat by Jaw, they frequently Orange County supervisors have agreed.to fun<\ two south county social programs, Rell~ Senior Volunteer Program of South Oranee County and Color It Orange. -....... • .... 'loo_ _ _ -: face combat situations D J_.... ! I because they serve ln r eat1UJ combat support and ~ combat service support F r om federal r evenue-sharing funds earmarked for use in social programs, superviaors ag~ to direct $10,272 to the retired senior volun· teer program. t 'units, Rogers told re- 1 Elsewhere ~ porters. He doubted, • ., •"however. whether tbe WILLIAMSTOWN American public is Mass. <AP) ...... Laurls G: readytoacceptwomenin Treadway, 94, founder in!antryandarmorunits. THAT PROGRAM SEEKS "TO generate volun· teer opportunities for persons of retirement age and to a.ssi5t them in finding volunteer service by matching their expertise with meaningful volun· teer work within the community.·· and president o f ' Color It Orange -was elven $11,000 by supervisors Tueaday. Treadway 1nns, died at · •'What we are talking his home here Sunday. 4lbout is a woman with a rifle and a bayonet The money wlll be directed lo the Laguna Beach School of Art to cover salaries and benefita of the Color It Orange program director. WILLOWS <AP> - John F . Martln, 70, one of the nation's leading test pilots during the 1940s and 1950s, died out the re with tbe responsibility of hand to hand combat or a tank crewman on a tank that has been destroyed c rawling out of tbe escape batch and being p r e pared to defend herself," Rogers said. COLOR IT ORANGE IS~ countywide youth art festival aimed at eacouraginJ atudenta throuihout the county to submit art work for competitive judg- inl. Wednesday at his home 10 this Glenn County community. He flew the experimental D-558-II Skyrocket powered by rocket and jet engines on its first flight in 1948. Judged wor~s will be hun1 in the Laguna Beaeh Museum or Art and certificates as well as scholarships will be awarded to the most promising young artists. HEMET <AP> - Services will be held Fri· day for Gabriel C. Duque . Jr., 48, a partner in the Los Angeles law firm of Committee Approves Children's Porn Bill O'Melveny and Meyers, WASHINGTON CAP) -The Senate w.ho .died Tuesday eve-Judiciary Committee has approved nmg m Los Angeles. Du· ·.unanimously a bill to make it a que was the presideq.t of federal crime to use a child under age Rancho de Esperanz~ a 16 · th od ti f h' hrecdin"ranchhere. 10 e pr UC on ° pomograp •c b materiaJ&. Death Notke• It aJso would prohibit the interstate transportation of any child, boy Of girl, for the purposes of prostitution / SODEN :>..) 8ETTVLOI) ~OSE SODEN, sur• JN ADDITION. THE bill WOUIQ vl•ed Dy ~ers Ketlll-Pol.end Sharply increase penalties for the Sale ~~~n~·=··u:.'.:-a.~~~:;·,!°,,::r-:1 or distribution of pornographic Je•vl<•S 3 JOPM S.turcley, Se"i.rnber materials. 11 1917 .t Clvhl Pr&\byterUln Cllur<h Sen. John c. Culver (D·lnd. ), 10111 ~1i.. Hunllnivtllft e .. c:h. c.. !>frvl<t\byl._NeptuneSec:lety. 8url11' Chairman Of the <:~tlee'S SUbC?Om• •1~... aoLTON millee on juv~~-delfquency, said GLAOYS ALTHEA BOLTON. rnl· Wednesday the bill Wlstde&lgnecf to d•nt o1 Coron.t c1e1 Mar, c.emornl•. enable the federal government t.o take Paued ont M>ll Ooneld A. BollOfl. oranes'°" 0onstd 11 ao11on. or.end· effective action against the sexual ex· claugl\ltr Oonne Botlon. Grevolde p}oitat(on Of children. M<Yl<ft _,..Mid S.PtemlMr U. 1,11 81 J OOPM P•Glllc View Memorl•t He said that testimony taken ~y the ,.., •• ottl<l•flr19 wet ,,,. R,•. eruc~ subcommittee showed that use of Kurrte. PiKtllc View Monuary oir~-ton children in pornography and prostltu· PA v 1. i N :A~.~A~ 8 1 u. SK,.. tion ~as f:>ecome a highly organized, e•RKAL. n1 s>racu.e. New V0t1t.1198 • multimillion dollar business operat· ~I Survived by her l\utbe!WI Peul ing nationwide. &erk.et ot H Ee~! I.eke Reed. Slta,..all4t~. New York, 1nd sister Mn .. Tho<'l\h """" vor11 • ...a 11,1er M,. SIMILA.ll BEARINGS have been Tt-ornft ......... sou ....... ior""'r1v... held by a g,.. .... Jud.ic1·,...., •••'----· &each, Ce., el\d P•tfffltlY of 1'0 ,.._... _, MllA.V ... TMf'IWI•·"*· Pln•ford. N-v-. mit.tee, but it bas not acted on any Mra. a.wu1 ,..,..cs .ew.-, pn sunciey leglsJaUon. StPt....., 11, 1tn In svtacw.. rww Vorlt ...... kwlO lllness. ~ 9.,-., The Senate committee approved the WHo ..... wltlltM Svr-Scl\ool •bill withoutdlaaent aftet feJ_., .... by $y1tl'f'll. 8urlel •H T ...... y. Sep. """~ ~m!llW IJ, "~'· a 9.4 vote 91\ amendment by Sen. Or· .. rin Hatch CR-Utah) to ban the sale or d istribution l>f any obscene material depicting sexually explicit conduct by children. Culver a nd Sen. Charles Mee. Mathias <R·Md.), who introduced the 'bOI. contended that Batch's amend- ment was unnecessary and mitMJm· peril the constitutionality or the legislation by raising First Amend· meot questions about what is obscene under U.S. Supreme Court rulings. THE FIRST AMENDMENT, among other things, bars Congress from making any law restricting freedom of speech or the press. . . Hatch's amendment; in effect, would have broadened the legal def· inition of obscenity to cover anything ·depicting explicit sexual conduct by children. If a movie or a book or other material include something of this nature, it would be treated as obscene as a whole and thus banned from sale or dtatrtbuUon. wmLE BATCH 8,\ID that be believed that would be QPheld u con· s tltutlonal, Culver and Matblas argued i\ would lead to court leltl that could drae on for three or four years wblle what they called the vicious ex· ploitation of children con!.f ued . llUllOUWAY MOITUAIY 11 O Broadway Costa Mesa 642·91&0 ESTATE JEWELRY & SMITH 'MtMJ. I.AMI COSTA .. SA CHAP& 427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa• ~88 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N. Broadway Santa Ana• 54~-4131 rtact•OTHUS SMmtS' MOWTU4lY 627 Main St. Huntington Buch 536-6539. ... PAMILY COLOMW. PVNllAL NOMI 7801 Borsa Ave. W"tminster 893-3525 PACWK: VllW ...,llA'-PAll • Cemetery Mortuaty Cha~ . 3500 PacHlc View OriY9 • Newport, Callfomla 844-2700 Fine Crystal, Porcelains, China, Bronzes,, Rugs, Furniture, Silver,Oils, etc. 1Yz M.illion Dollars Worth~ Don't miss this important sale! 5 Lo11otdilmondlOl-1ndcllll1011.Fine t/:' ' men'• ind lldistwltctltl, rl1111t....... ~~ bractltta. n1eklecu. etc., •t with dll• , CA.id mondt, lnttllldl; rubilf. U,phirfL ~c·~ Sfttnll important llrge tmellld1 Md.,,.lm. • ••••••••••• Fr.iclay Night 16-8 pm €oastal Cbntrol a 'Victorry.' Dana Point residents won a victory of aorta when the Dana Point area wu excluded from beln1 exempt from c0utal commlsaSoo control. Accordlnl to Sudra Boostrum of the Dana Polnt Qtilens for AcUon, residents of the UM Deed "all the help they can get." in controllln& develop-ment. . • llV'l' DANA POINT WAS omitted frosn the tx• empt llat u a result ot Ml'L BOClltrum '1 plua. Oppoein1 the Dana Pol.at exemption WU• SupervtJor Laurence Scbmlt. a member ot the coastal commission. However, Supervtaor'Ihomu Riley said be wu am.toua .to "8pond to the want. ot local raldents and secured the support of th.rte·~ to alve Dana Point the exempUon. AND, MRS. BOOST&Ulll SAID, leavin1 the area under coutal commtaaion control will provide an acldecl check to pouible wayward development ------------------ ln thearea. . Al. th1nga stand, development in the coastal re- 1lon muat be cleared thrt>ulh the coa.tal com· mJaaieo •well u throuah the county bureaucfacy. TUaday, the Board of Supervbon approved aeeltlni exemption from ·coastal commiaslon con· · trol of coaatructlon of sln&l•family homes and duplexes ln certain portions Of Capistrano Beach, Emerald Bay, South Laguna. Sunset Beach and . Lagtma Niguel. Painting, scalptqtetV and graphics of 100 Southern Callfomia artisf.S will be on display from Sept. 21 to Oct. 30 at the Laguna Beach Muaeum of Art. The invitational exhibit will feature artists s uch as Billy Al Bengsteon. Florence Arnold, Millard Sheets and Jacquie MoffetL Museum hours are 11 :30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily. The art museum. located at 307 Cliff Drive, is closed Tuesdays: J . DECO INTERIORS IM18IOI PLAtMMca AND qOMSU&.11M• cu,hta....,._.,..._..,, • ......,..,... . ......... •• 1 llbf, ................... •CHIMe• Visit Our Design Studio • .!:.Z~~~r.:r~~ 4fM202 W..., tin W.., IJ0.0400 DIAMONDS• 6DJSTONES Jewels by Josephs Is searching for diamonds a.nd gemstones from pcivate Individual• and estates. C•ntful examination and evaluation by our experts. Highest prices paid. Call 540-906e 10-9 d1Jly, Saturday 10-6, gunday closed. Ask tor Betty Grace or Frank Vanderwall iewels by ioseph South Coast Plaza • 3333 Bristo!. Costa Mesa • 540-9066 .. • 3 Daors ~~! Pier l's ~all Rattan & tfVlcker· Clearance! .. . - • • 'Thurtday, September 15. 1971 DAILY P1LOT All . Hoag Celebrates 25 ¥ears of Service 8y JOANN aDNOLD8 Of ..... o.ur-,.....,, Jt bu bffn U yean, .00 tt>ore bedl, aoo more pbyalciam and• vut arra.v ol mecUul t.tchnolo11 1ince Hoa& t tmonal HoaptlalopenedTtadoors. On ~Pl. 1~. 1852. etabt ~Uen\I wen check.ct lnto \ho 1~ bed hospital wbeN \bey were th• center of attention of the SI phyalclana and ee ataff mtm· ~. ftlE HOSPITAL, CAU.ED IN thole da)'I the pink hotel on the hill, wu the bralncb1ld of the late Raymond tSrahama. a L11un1 Beach cleroman whose friend dJed on tho lont drive to St. Joseph hospital in Oranaedurina the early 1940s. The often frustraun• atruagle to rabt money to buy I.and and bu.lid the bolpital luted for nearly a decade, unul the lloac Foundation donated s:i00,000 to the bolpltal fund to cet the project movtn1. Since then, the foundation has elven nearly M million to tbe hospital. George Hoag II, whose father, George Hoag Sr .. established the foundation, recalled with irony that he was a patient at another hospital when work on the Orange Coast's first hospital was begun. "IN AUGUST O,f 1951," HE said, "I bad my ap· pendix out at St. Joseph Hospital at four o'clock In the morning, sat on the edge of the bed at eight o'clock. signed the contract with Means and Ulrich. contractors, and the hospital was physically started." The original administrator, Robert Bacon, pre- sided over the plannlne and construction, but, just before the hospital opened, he died of a stroke. • His wile, Winifred, took over and ran the ' hospital until her re1trement in 1967. Before her ~ • death in 1975, she recalled looking around the t : hospital the night beofre it opened and discovering a t few oflhe beds had been assembled backwards. ' ... =· TWENTY-FIVE YEARS LATER, the hospital boasts some or the most advanced medical equip- ment available and a staff of 385 physicians who represent 22 medical specialities. .. However, in its earlier days, life at Hoag was a little less sophisticated and there were times when supporters and staff had to rely on their wits. For instance, Guy Claire, a member of the board or directors, recalls one of th\ early fundrais· ing ploys AN AD READING, ''TIUS IS your last chance to send $1 to P.O. Box 1234" was run in a local paper. He said more than $1,000 in donations were received. While community members were scrambling for money, staff members were scrambling to keep on top of things at the hospital. Hoag recalled one memorable evening, not long after the hospital opened, when the frogs kept in the lab.for pregnancy tests escaped, sending doctors, nurses, aides, orderlies and anyone else handy in a mad dash after the hopping beasts. THE STAFF SOMETIMES WAS stretched thin. Kelley Ludwig, now super vising nurse in pediatrics, remember ed working as relief operator on the switchboard in between nursing duties. Roberta Heath. now the senior surgical aide in the James Irvine Surgical Center, joined the staff less than a month after the hospital opened . ., ' "The emergency room wasn't staffed when we opened, and when an ambulance called to tell us a patient was on the way, one nurse and an aide had to leave the ward to staff the Emergency Room," she explained. ACCORDING TO HOAG, HOSPITAL officials and staff members also had to rely on their wits during one of the facility 's first lnspectlons by the slate Joint Commission on Accreditation. He said that, when inspectors arrived at the hospital, there were 94 patients in the 75-bed faclU- ty. "Everyone was wheeling those not critically Ul up and down the halls, hoping they would never figure out the total,·· he recalled. • Apparently, the inspectors never added up the patients. and the hospital received accreditation. a hallmark of quality care, a year after opening. It has maintained its accreditation since then. BECAUSE THE HOSPITAL HAD a chronic problem of having more ~atients than beds, the facility began to expand within a year or its open- ing. Ludwig said the staff put patients "v.'herever we could stash them when it got crowded. We were so full at times we made patient rooms out of offices and put beds out In the halls with screens around them for t>rivacy.'' .. First patients were moved into existint : facilities, by conver$'ion of the solarh.1m and Grace •.Hoag Home, a nurse's residence. THE FJR81' MAJOR ADDITION, A four-sti>ry main wing that held an additional 150 beds, a medical library, more laboratory space and the maternity facilities, was finished in 1959. Forb-slx more beds were added ln 1966 when the pediatrics wing was built and in 1963 t.he hospital leased a nearby convalescent hospital, thus addina another 93 ~s. That addition proved to be too complicated lo be practical and fundraiaing got under way for die ll-story tower that opened in 1974, brlniin8 tbe hospital'• bed count to 471. A l'IW OF THOSE BEDS COME wittl eatra pampertni. Patients who care to add an·enra $55 a o.tly Pll9l ,..... 'y IUchlrf K-lff THIS IS HOAG HOSPITAL AS IT STANDS TODAY AFTER 25 YEARS Tower Now Dwarf• Ortglnal On••tory Building Just Above Parking Garage day to their normal $110-a-day hospital tab may rent themselves a room on the tower's tenth fioor. There, they find themselves in double-sized rooms oouiuped with sofa beds for overnl~ht vis· itors and refrigerators for snacks. .... Gourmet meats; served by the floor's hostess, are set on a linen-covered iable. TOP-FLOOR PATIENTS AUiO HAVE the use of a sauna and a beautr salon. With the expansion of the hospital's ability to house patients has come an increase in staff size to sup e .' , I lS • I I I I ·Oomnue: Vnited 'I! ·TWA 2 747's 300-lO's 7 1,344 and improved technolo1y, ranainc from the James Irvine Surgical Center, an outpatient aur- &ery clinic, to the critical-care units and the com· puterized diagnostlc equipment. Throueh the years, the surroundlnc com- munities bu provided support ln the form of dO!la· tlons and volunteers. Carroll Beek, a 56-year resident of Balboa Island, recalls a luncheon at the Newport HarbOr Yacht Club in 1945, durtn1 the fundralsln1 days before conslruction, in whlcb community members came up with $19.0C?Q m donati~n.s ~n45 minutes. MRS. BEEK IS A PAST MEMBER of the hospital's board of directors and a !onetime member of the hospital's auxiliary. Dora Hill. Newport Beach's first woman mayor, was the first president of the auxiliary. "When we oreanized in 1952, our uniforms were bright yellow smocks we made ourselves," she re· called. "Then we learned we were supposed to be 'pink ladies' and we changed to that color." In addition lo helping in the hospital, the group raises money. It donated $65,000 to the hospital last year. ANOTHER SUPPORT GROUP IS the 552 Club. a group or businessmen formed in 1966 to raise funds for a SS2·bed hospital. That number has since been revised to 471, but the name stuck. There are now 125 members of the 552 Club. One of the newest support eroups at the hospital is the Sandpipers, organbed ih 1975. It was founded to raise funds for the hospital's radiation therapy center when 'Corinne Elkouri. arter undergoing a mastectomy, learned there was no radiation therapy center in the Harbor Area. THE HOSPITAL IS STILL changing. Plans are in the works for construtUon of an Interfaith spiritual center and remodeling of the obstetrics and orthopedic units. Reflecting on the hospital's 25 years. Hoag not· ed. "We are still the 'pink hotel on the hill' to the majority of beach people and we hope to keep it that way." .... rOoa.oh · Now you can enJoyUnited's super h saV1ngs on e.116 of our da.1ly flights to Ch.1oago m LA. I~ternattona.l. Plus our 2 da.1ly flig'hts trom Ontario AirpOrt. Deluxe super O~ With a. ohotoe of en~s. 18 $10 extra. ll'you don't have a super Coach t1oket, There a.re no super Coach restrictions. No advance puroha.se required, no Jn1.ni:mum or ma.x:1mum ~ Seats a.re ltmited. So call your Travel Agent now. Or ca.U United at 537·7621. see United~ P&ft,ners in Travel with Western International Hotels. • ft'luted•y. S.ptt_mbe1 16, 1977 Solar Homes Approved Tra~ler . Notice ·costa Mesa Project Planned Near River Sea JJluU Townbomct. a 11olar-heated con· domlnlum complex planned near the Santa AQa River In Cotlt11 Mesa, baa won the approval of the South Coast Realonal Comll).luloa. missioners who voted 9·1 (Margaret Feuer posed) in favor of the project. OP· Needed 1 He claims the project is being undertaken as a professional challenge add will be of the highest quality. "I'm doing tJ>is because I want to do it, not . because I want to make money." the young de· veloper told commissioners. U no •PP"Ml la aubmltt.d to tbe State Coastal Commluaon, Costa .Meaa bullder Jamea H. Gregory can begin construction on the U·unlt pro- Ject t.o be located on 9.9 acree south of Sea Bluff and Canyoo Drives. THE DEVELOPMENT WILL REQUIRE ex· GllEGOBY'S $S MILUON P&OJECI' wu ap-teosive landfill-a total of 58,720 cubic yards -lo proved last week by Costa Mesa City Council. · raise the homes and roadways above the Santa Ana Appearing Monday before the 10.member panel flood plain level. Ta.rPr•ff \ ........... in regional coastal Huntiniton Beach, Gregory raJ} The commission's staff noted that the area could mto objections from the commlsalon'a staff aa well be under six feet of water in the event of a severe as veteran commission-watcher Eileen Brock. · flood. Gov. HuE?h Carey of "iew York will be rn - v est ig at ed by the ~tate's ta'\ depart· mcnt to determine whether he s hould pay personal income 1 axes for his family's· use of slate planes. Several times. Mrs. Brock told commissioners Gregory hopes to complete the project in about the parcel should be used for a motel or hotel to al-one year. It will include 66 three-bedroom and 17 low visitors to enjoy the area. two-bedroom condominiums, all three stories in THE COMMISSION'S SfAFF recommended de· nial of the plans, saying federal and state agencies are interested in preserving the 509 acres south or Hamilton Street and east of Valley Road for recrea- tion and wildlife. However, Gregory was able to sway com- Alphabet Memos WIUte House ACronyms Ab(Jund~ W ASJilNGTON (AP) -One ot these days, Jimmy Carter pro- bably will get an IDM on bow to make the government simpler. It most likely. wHl be followed by an RM, or a PDM or even a DPD, The plain old pres(denllal memo has been replaced in Jim· my's new streamhned govern· ment by an "alphabet soup" of acronyms DESIGNED TO HELP Presi· involved, name an agency to take the lead in exploring it, set up a coordinating committee and flx a deadline for presenting options to Carter. RMs -TUESE Response Memoranda will provide back· ground information, analyze op· tions and list agency recommen- dations, giving voice to the views "" of all members of the coordinat- ing committee. height. At last week's council meeting, surrounding homeowners praised Gregory for bis cooperation in consulting area residents before submitting tract maps. TO MINJMlZE POTENTIAL VIEW blockaae. developers plan to place television antennas inside the attics· of the townhomea and construct a wrought-iron and brick fence around the site, Each townhome may be equipped with a greenhouse and atrium. They are expected to sell for between $70,000 and $80.000. Fireworks Outlawed SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has signed a bill outlawing the sale or so-called "safe and sane" fireworks to persons under 16 years old. . The bill, AB 882 by Assemblyman Louis Papan <D·Daly City), was requested by the state fire marshal. Paoan said studies found that ,most fires started by people usrng tareworks involved persons under 16. There had been no age limit for buying fireworks. "Safe and sane" fireworks are those approved for sale in some areas of the state, and they do not include such dangerous devices as firecrackers and cherry bombs. SACRAMENTO CAP> -After Jan . J., CalJ!ornia mobile home park owners must five 60 days written notice of r ent increases. and tenants must give 60 days written notice of lnten· tiontomove. Those are the pro· visions of SB 586 by Sen. Bob Wilson, (D-La Mesa), whicll Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr. signed into law. PRESENT LAW bas no requirement for notice of rent increases or intentions to move. The final form of the bill was backed by lob· byists for both the tnobile home tenants and park owners. JN ITS original form. the bill would have pro- hibited park owners from requiring tenants to redo the landscaping around their mobilehomes. That proposal of the Golden State Mobile Home Owners League was dropped after op- position from the park owners. Tax.Rate Cut SOUTH LAKE TAHOE (AP> -For the third consecutive year. El Dorado County supervisors have cut the county tax rate. This year's rate was set al $2.23 per $100 of assessed valualton, down 28 cents. ' DAll .. Y PILOT Ai , Taste That Tiger Gunther Gebel-Williams, headliner of the Ringling Bros., Barnum and Bailey Circus, tas te his birthday cake before a performance in Fresno. The 400-pound cake featured a life-sized tiger on his haunches. Gebel-Williams shared it with his audience. Would the people With the brown C8maro who Ptcited up this dog at Cano's. NewPort Beach · PLEASE CAU. 673-0636 FOi A UWilD. NO QUESTIONS ASKED. WE MISS HIM TERRIBLY. • dent Carter make policy de· c1sions, the memo-writing system for the domestic policy area closely parallels one used in handling national security de· e1sions PDMs -EIZENSTAT'S staff, "where appropriate," will pre- pare a Presidential Decision Memorandum summarizing op· tions that have been reviewed by all those involved and affected. SUPER s·ALE MIGHTY MAR.K The d1rect1ve to agency beads was released by the White House Wednesday. A press release said the obJcct of the exercise is to "tighten up and better coordinate the way major de· c1sions are made and followed up" in the domestic arena. Herc's the way the system is ~upposcd to work: IDMs -WHEN domestic policy assistant Stuart Eizenstat or an agency-decides an issue re· quires presidential attention, an Issue Definition Memorandum will be submitted lo Carter. "after full consultation with the vice president, all affected de· partmenls, agencies and senior presidential advisers." An IDM will set forth the issue DPDs -,.W H ERE ap · propriate, presidential decisions will be set forth through a Domestic Presidential Direc- tive." , To get things started, Carter directed that all agencies submit to Eizenstal by Sept. 23 a "brief list" of ~omestic issues "which have substantial impact on domestic policy and which re quire significant inleragency JO· volvemenl." The Carter memo leaves an escape hatch from the new system if an issue does not re· quire a lot of coordinating or In the event of "excessive lime pressures or unusual political sensitivity." Maybe they'll call those PDQs -for pretty darn quick. NEWPORT BEACH OML Y · STOCK ELIMINATION .. EVERrfHING GOES! - 6.,. JI. OL ·· TO '.zo · DFF f 78 14 G78114 L78/1S WHITEWALL E-T WIRE DISH WHEELS to tt:ie rescue! Thurlday. September 15, 11>n Solution Palatable? Senator's Dlvoree Wild Horses Blamed for Range Damage ~ Drunk, 'Cruelty Cited (ARSON <.:II Y Nev lAPI Thee form er dlrtctur ot lht' Nt"cvad f'l h and G1amt Com ml!WC>n h a su111eat1on about "bat to do "'1th the 1lale'1 wlld bo,.. pt'rty 1md evf'nluully hMve lo be dt'1troyr\I by tho federal •overn· mtnt " ranae forage In this way," Groves said. McDONOUGH. Ga. CAP> -Sen. •'rank GrOVl"!I uld wt ahould 4.'dl them. 'We do 1t with '.alllt·. dun't \\(' · beu1d GROVES SAID THAT many mustangs adopted under the federal iovt"rnmt:nl 's Wild Horse Recen\Jy. Groves added, he sold a apolled auddle hone for •round 29 cents u p0und "while •l t.h6 same sale a fa t holsteln· herdc.>rd cow only brouaht 23 and one half centJS Yet we. as lbe Amerll'&O public, allow a valua bit' tood• i.ource lo be shot and burled "l am told that many or the people ln India are dying of starvaUoo. Yet due to religious • beliefs the brahma cattle are al· towed to eat tbe forage but can- not be slaughtered for human eonaumpUon. Are we beaded in the same dlrecUon?" GROVES SAID RE batUed the late Velma Wild Horse Annie J ohnat.on on the issue of wild horses "but that didn't do any good.'' Herman Talmadge's wife, Betty, haa accused him or being cruel and habitually drunk in a divorce petition. A lawyer for the Georeia senator said the accusations were an effort to hurt hlm politically and to get more money. · THE OOUPLE WERE divorced this year, but the slate Supreme Court overturned the decree in May and or. d ered a jury trial , after Mrs. Talmadge appeaJed the settlement . AlliWI • ind Burro Act have "done W\told damage lo bolh humans and pro· "SINCE WHEN HAS our nu· lion become so rich in naturaJ re sources that we can abuse our CRUELTY CHARGE Sen. Talmadge Division of property has been the TV 'Nag' Role Opposite In Real Life NASllVI LLE, Tenn CAP J Roni Stoneman doesn't nag her real-life husband.. llite she does Gordy Tapp ever y week on tfie syndicated television s how "Hee Haw " Miss Stoneman is well-known· viewers as the gap-toothed wife wl rags who's always nagging her husband. "MY HUSBAND WOULDN'T TOLERATE ,nagging," said Miss Stoneman, 39, the wife of Geo'rge Hemrick, who has a doctorate in English. "He runs our house. . "I can be mean when I get mad, but I'm not re.ally a mean person." she said. · J\s "Hee Haw" enters its ninth season, here are other answers to questions about Miss Stoneman: -THE GAP NASHVILLE be tween h e r two ( SOVND J :,.;,~~~ uppe. teeth ;, -She is as nutty as she appears in other segments of the show. She is not ugly. "I've had people come up to me on the road anct say. 'Are you reaJJy as ugly as my wife says you are"!'" she said. ·:And Lhe state police stopped me once. 'fhey made me show them my teeth and they still gave me a ticket." Nutty? Cod!lider this: SHE HAS A GRAY. OAK outhouse in her backyard. ''Il 's juat a one-seater." She and George "Goober" Lindsey recenUy sarig "Flush Me From The Bathroom Of Your ~ Heart" while dining at a ~ fashionable French restaurant STONIMAN in Los Angeles. "I'm kinda screwy," she said. "But it's better than being sad." In reaJ Jife, she has seven children. . "Don't anybody tell me I'm not sexy," she said. But people persist. VISmNG TUE HOME OF a "Hee Haw" ex- ecutive Coran audiLloo, she wu told: "You're just .what we need. We've got all the pretty girls we want." • Then thete'a the matter of dressing rooms . She shares facilities with statuesque beauties like Barbi Benton and Lisa Todd. "I could wear my bra backwards," abe moans. - But she can be serious. Like when she talks .about her 17-year-old daughter, a "special" child. Or about her struggle out of poverty with members of the country music pioneers, the Stoneman family. · . . "I HAD AN AGENT WHO TOLD me once to act like a star, said Miss Stoneman, a gifted banjo player. "I'd been hungry too long to act that way. --. "I never had a dresser drawer until I got mar· ried. I aJways had to share. I never realized anybody h ved different than we did untU I went home withagirlfriendwhohad a bedroom." · . "SomeUmea I get quiet," she said. "There's a t1 me for everything ." \ BUI' MENTION "HEE HAW" and her mood brightens. Some behind-the-scene activity: Misty Row~ oace accidentally knocked off the ha irpiece or a fellow star. Everybody gets along well. "All the women chase Junior Samples." Assembly OKs Bill SACRAMENTO (AP ) Gov. Edmund. Brown Jr. must sign or veto a measure ·allowing a transsex- ·ual to ask a court for a change of birth certificate a fter uex.changeoperation. By a .'9·U vote, the Assembry Wednesday con- curre(l in Sepate am endments.to the bill, AB 385 by ~ssernblyman Wlllie Brown (D-San Francisco>. • eyc>umake ·thelllOSt ·of Now you can make saving a real pleasure-at Home Federal's new Huntington Beach office in the Seacllff Shopping Center. The easy access and plentiful parking let you drop by anytime without having to.worry about traffic. Once out of your car, you'll enjoy just strolling throu~h the beautiful, park-like setting. And when you walk in, you 'II feel right at home in our c~mfortable, spaciC?US.lnterior. .. If you're an Investor Club me mber;you can pick fro m many of those hard·to·find best sellers in our lending library. Or relax and enjoy a hot cup of coffee in the plush lounge. Plus yo1,1'U be able to take advantage of money· saving discounts from many local merchants, popular attractions all over th e state, and a multitude of extra fina!'lcial services. Best of all, you 'II be putting your moriey to work. Our manager, Ernie McGill. or any one of our efficient, courteous staff will be waiting to help you. So why not pamper yourself ... and save at the same time. Starting today. • "Requires minimum balance of $2.SOO. • Your S2 Billion FamUy Anandal Center HOME F'F:DERAL SAVINGS of San Diego Huntington Beach Office: 2111 Main St. • 536-6511 (At Yorktown Ave. In Seacllff Center) HunUf\glon Buell Houra Mon-Thurs 9A~PM/Frl 9AM-61>M1Ssl 9A~1PM /. ... main wue in lbe divorce action. 1'almadge, a 64-year-old Democrat. contends his wife improperly ret.aln.ed about $7S0,000 that resulted from the sale of his s hare of a tract of land. He said his s hare was placed ln her name to prevent news· stories on its purchase and to avoid controversy. MRS. TALMADGE, 53, argues the property wa.s a gilt to her and that she was justified in keeping the money from its sale. The cross-petition was filed in Henry County Superior Court. "--./ \ \.) ' . I I AJ• DAIL 'f PILOT __ __:T..:.:=;.hureda=Yu.=;• l!p:i;.:.::;te=mbef;.;...;,;11 ........ , 11....__77 I . ' l • ! i . ' . I I I I - • •• . . 'Enriched Flavor~tobacco fllakes MERIT unique· afllong low tar cigarettes. Since the introduction of MERIT, a number of other low tar brands have c9me along. But MERIT remains unique-the only low tar cigarette with 'Enriched Flavor ' tobacco . MERIT delivers what others · can only promise: the flavor of higher tar cigarettes. The kind of flavor mad€ .possible by a , breakthrough in tobac;co technology. , Here's how it was done: .: By cracking cig'arette smoke ~ down into separate elements, : researchers were able to ..- isolate certain flavor-rich _.__. ......... ~ ingredients that delivered t """ f ' taste way out of proportion to tar. These flavor essentials were· then packed into MERIT, giving it extraordinary flavor. Taste tests against a number of higher tar cigarettes , proved it. Overall, smokers reported they liked the tas~e of MERIT and MERIT lOOs as mt{Ch as the taste of the higher tar cigarettes tested. Cigarettes ·with up to 60% more tar! Only one cigarette has 'Enriched Flavor' tobacco . And .y;0u can taste it. .. . . -• DAILY PlLOT 8 J Vataha Not Bittel-ut Being Let Go EX·GWC STAR RA.NOY VATAHA TO GREEN BAY. Tennis Challenge Laver, Gerul~itis Clash ·in Irvine Vitas Gerulait1s will test Newport Beach's Hod Laver m the featured men's s ingles tenni~ match at the Irvine Racquet Club tonight 18> but an announced match between Tracy Auslm and Lea Antonopolis has been can- celed. · Austin, the 14·year-old Rolling Hills High School fr~an, asked to be dismissed fro the singles match Wednesda~.. en· tati~ly, she will play with Laver agains t Gerulaitls and An · tonopolis in a doubles match at 6 :30. "Everything has been done to try and get Tracy to play a singles match." a spokes man for the charity matches said Wed· nesday. "But she and her parents requesled that she play a doubles match instead becau~e they feel she is too tired from her recent summer competition." Gerulailis, 22. is one of the bright young stars on the tennis horizon. He 1s ran1ted No. 2 hehmd Jimmy Connors in the U S and is seventh m th.e world. 1 ll' became the first American in 17 years to win the Italian Open earlier this season and pushed the world's top player. Bjorn Borg, to fi ve sets before losing in the semifinals at Wimbledpn. He is subsUtuUng for Borg against Laver here tonight after Borg suffered a s houlder injury and aggravated 1t at the U S. Open in Forest Hills . . Laver , one of the all·time greats of tennis and a three-lime triple crown winner, says he is excited attout the match tonight. H e was the one who origirially set up lhe challenge with Borg and sub sequently a rranged for Gerulaitis to play. T he· Harbor Day School of Newport Beach is the recipient of the proceeds or the match "I've had good success against Vilas," Laver says. ''My game seems 'to fit right into the groove in playing him. I enjoy playing H I fol Hm• l someone like Vilas who is ag. e p gresstve rather than a slower · type pla}'er." F LA Build In World Team Tennis where Or : GeruJaitis plays for the Indiana Loves and Laver for the San S1WiYn Stadiun. Diego Friars, Laver was the "~ __ .!.ll master in four meetings. LOS ANGELES CAP > -The U.S . Olympic Committee has given the city a few helpful hints on how to be chosen to host the 1984 summer Olympics. The trick is to build a S25· million covered swimming stadium. a separate diving pool and additional facilities for other water games, officials say. Anton Callcla, Mayor Tom Brfdlfy's liaison official for !he Olympics. annou nced the privately made s uggestions Wednesday. He said city administrative of· fleer C. Erwin Piper has estimat- ed that bufldlng a covered stadium oL the Sepulveda Basin site in the San.ferl'\ando Valley -instead of tbe planned open pool -would boost the capital out.lay for the proposed project from llSmllllon to$40 million. But e\'en so, Callela said tbe ci· lY would go atonJ wrth the cov· ered stadium provl~lng t hat federal lunds would be available to finance Jt as part or an expect- ed federal subsidy for the aames. Dr. John A. Bo&~rt. a member Of tb6 Olympic comtnlttee, H · plaibed 1he idef.S w.e otl.ly 1u_g. ' 1e1Uons made to UM ell)'. ''This 11 not to uy L An•elea wouldn't 1et the tapport ol the U.S. Ob'mPtc Co.lttee Oft the lntemaU.Jl OlYDIJ>ic Ctamit· lff wi~ some tllthe>Mlhln1a •• WeriMS•~ We were on· ly clttq ~odentl. •' BGcst rouoned saat tbe1lna1 awl........, eventl hiV• Mn tild r at l!Wll~llnff tie 1• o~ 1D ~And ncenUy. tbe DI• d6Di1 mmmtni ch1mploMblps tn llUlilMm Viejo wert, at times, J>NU1ddUy. While Laver h as dominated Gerulaitla in individuJ} meet- ings, tonight's match could be a turning point. When be lost to Borg at Wimbledon, the scores were 6-4, 3·6, 6·3, 3·6, 8-6. Irvine Racquet Club is localed on Culver Drive approximately one mUe south of the San Dteao Freeway at Sandburc Way in the city of Irvine. .., -81 CRAIG SBl."rF . Ol .. DIMV .... lflllfl Randy Vataba, watved by t~e New En1land Patriot.a and then picked up tmmedlately by the Green Bay Packers fues· day, bas no lll feelln11 about his Conner team. Packers Take Him the first rour regular season games. He lost his starting job and caught only 11 passes. Io fact, Vataha had pralle for the Patriots wben contact· ed by the Dally i>llot at his Bottonhome. • • "Yes, I was a bll surprised I w" waived by u.e Patriots, but the team i5 very deep in a lotd position.a. They have a lot oJ No. 1 picks and • lot of • t11lent. It was a numbers game,•• says Vataha. "Riehl now the Patriots have two wide receivers and two on the taxi squad. It was ·just a problem o! numbers and m y ago (29) probably had sornet.hlne to do with it. "Also we had the fifth best rusbina record in NFL history last year. Our leadin& receiver on1f. caught 80 passes. · • But I really enjoyed lt. here. This is now my home and I '11 continue to live here. The Patriots were very good to me. t wish them a lot or luck. l played six more years than l h ad planned on ," says the fol'mer Golde.p West College and Stanford University standout. Vataha, who came to Golden West as a quarterback ffOJD Garden Grove's Rancho Toni htinU / Seaver ShootS ·For 200th Win LOS ANGELES <AP.> --Tom Seaver will be bearing down on a personal m ilesto.ne to night against t,he Los Angeles Dodgers. lt ·s at 7:30 and will be broadc~i on KABC <790 l. The Cincinnati Reds· n ght- hc.inder Is going tor the 200th vie:· • tory of his career. u feat ac· complished by only four other ac· live m ajor league pitchers · Ferguson J enk1ns. Gaylord Perry: Jim Kaat and Catfish Hunter. Meanwhile, the Reds' only bat tie left is for second place in the National League West. But after coming from behind to defeat division·leading Los Angeles 9-8 Wednesday night, the Reds' Pete Rose looked on the victory as something of a con- solation. ··At least." he said, ·'they can't clinch it here against us, and that means something." The Dodgers' magic number remains at rour ro~ wrapping up the division crowa' after Cincin· nati scored six runs in the last two innings to defeat Los An geles ace Tommy John for the first time this season. "Tommy J ohn got the Dodgers where they are," said Rose "He's the most valuable pitcher on their staff. maybe in the league. For us to score nine runs off him ls really something." The Dodgers had an 8·3 lead after the seventh inning with Dave Lopes, Steve Garvey and · Steve Yeager slugging home runs. year have come since he was traded to Cincinnati by the New York Mets. lle averaged 18 victories dur ml( his 10-year career with the Mets. and started the current ~cason with a recor<l ot l!S<:!-107. This has been a season of personal milestones for Seaver On Aug. 31, he made Montreal ·~ Del Unser his 2,500th strikeout ''•Clim. a fo tal reached by only.10 • other pitchers in major league h1slory. lie since has boosted that total to 2.509 and moved past Christy Mathewson into 10th place on lhe all·t1me hst. Seaver needs 25 strikeouts to r each the 200 mark for the 10th consecutive t ime. His string of nine Is a major league record. The tbrec·time Cy Young Award winner also is hoping for hi s fifth 20-gume season , needing > three victories in .possibly rour starts His career high of 25 victories t came in 19i9. He won 20 1n 1971. 21in1972 and 22 in 1975. CINCINNATI ... , " ... Ro\P ll> S I 2 0 Murreyo O o o O Gr1ll•yr1 S t 1 1 (Ol\UPC •on h S I 1 0 G l'O\ler II S 1 1 1 Benct>c s 1 2 • C.arv~lb l 0 O 0 v•rOnlmotl 4 I 2 l ,,...,,ba<., lb 1 0 0 0 KnlQhl lb I 0 0 0 Norm.,,o I t 0 0 h •mlef\1#11 o o o o Armbrls1¥ Oii I o O O BOt'bot>P 0 0 0 0 MMc;ian ?b o o o o ..... I.OS ANGEi.ES LOl>"\1)) Au\,,.11 \\ Sm 1thrf L•tY rl SlmpW<">rt M ola pl> (@ylO Garv•Y 1b Beker II 8ur• .. tf ...... , .JOlln o So~p D•v•llllOOl'I ... , "Iii ~ 1 ) ' • , • 0 1000 I 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 '0 0 0 • 0 1 1 S I 4 l SD I 0 ~I I 0 • , , 1 , 0 0 0 0 0 00 I 0 0 0 t olill• JI t It a /01••• 4.4 t lb I c1 .. olw11 110 ooo 041 • Lot Anoe•" > tOt JOI 100 • But Cincinnati got within a run , scoring four times in the eighth inning lbrec of Lhem on a home run by Cesa1' Geronimo. Ken. · Griffey's two-run homer in the ninth'was the game wmner. £~Ruu4t. OP -~o• Angeln t LOB r!r>el,.....1 \ \.O\ Af>9e1M U ?B Con<epc•Ot> Lacy Burk• HR v FO\!Pr l~I, Loott •111, GarVtY JO) ....... ~ llSI G+•.,.,lmo "'· Grill•.,.. 11 1 N•rma" Sarm...,,10 hfbon W•-41 Mu"•'t IP H It Elt 19 JO ~.; i ~ ~ ~ ~ ,. • 1 1 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 Earlier, George Foster clouted his 48lh homer. tops in the ma· iors. Joh" 11..1••> Sow ' 'Sev.-M uff' AV A 50.103 Jt 9t l' > I 0 0 0 1 l•I WP Jnt>n T 1 \~ Alamitos High and was turned into a wide r eceiver by Rustlers coach Ray ShackJeford, made a name for himself catching passes from Jim Plunkett. He was Plunkell's chief re· cei ver at Stanford and after be· mg cut by the Rams ln 1971 (be was the Rams' 17th round draft. .:hoice), he was picked up by the Patriots where he rejoined Plunkett. He had an outstanding rookie year in '71. catching 51 passes. He caught 48 passes two seasons ago, but broke his cheekbone before the start of the '76 ca?lpalgn and missed He'll report to Green Bay to· day and will be in uniform Sun· day m the New Orleans Superdome when the Packers play the Saints. "I had a chance to become a free agent, but Green Bay wanted me and I am satisfied with my contract. At the end ol this year I 'll see where my priorities lie and determine whatl'll do," says Vataha. Vataha and a business partner have been involved in constructing an $800,000 14- court racquetball facility . "I've been rWming things . here, so it's been a busy two days taking care of things before I e~." saysVataba. lust Out of fteflf!la .. Bu~lon ... Bull'h llobson .'i u~t m issed th1~ l111 e d 1:1\'C ott thC' hat of thl' Yank(~s · Buc·ky D~t Wednesd..i." n1ji!hl a:-.. tlw Yank~ pullC'<I a\\ <JY lrom the Sox. 2·0. Ill Am('nca.11 LcaguL· baseball action cit ~.cw York. Re!!g1e ~ack~o_n' 1" o-run homer ch:oppl'd the Sox :.l' ~ games ~eh ind N' Ill the East ern Di\·ision. John started the ninth as the National League's leader 1n earned run average, at 2.48 After the Reds got through with him. thee.r.a . jumped to 2.73. ''When you 're just starting out. you never really know how sue· cessful your career ls goine to be," Seaver said, "so the round numbers seem to t ake on significance. I caQ remember io- ing for my fiOtb-, then my lOOth. Bashore Recalls Start "It will be nice to get my 200thp whenever it comes. Then 1 oan ~tart thinking aooutaoo victories. Tbat will become my new goal. Back ln sprlnc ttalnlng thJs year. I remember saying to myself thatJ waneed to make sure I won at least 18 games .so J cq.uld make it to200Ufiseason ... Tbe 32.year-old Seaver has moved steadll1 t.Qward ~ goal slnce..iolnlni tbe Reds in June. 'J'ii1oThls l'I victories so far this ~ Kansmt Next S~p for Ex-Ediaon Ace I By ROGER CARLSON Of ... DellY f'llet ll•ff ReServed and unassuming .aopbomore gqarterback Rick Buhore' o( the UCLA Btuins is going ab6ut the bUsiness of pre· paring for in\'ading Kansas Saturday ntehL -still maintain· ing a low profile. Baahore and t.be Bruins collide with Kansas in their second non• conference football game in six nigbts and th e Bruin s quarterback says (1) the Kansas efense is big and physical (2 ) he's assfuning he'Jl be the starter again, although no one has told him direcUy. "And I was surprised that f played the entire game. I didn't expect that. But it helped me a lot. I learned to go the distance and it did a Jot for me. I think the team is gaining confidence id me. I feel accepted by the team. Questioned about Bashore's status, UCLA drumbeater Vk Kelley almost· came. u1111tued. "~re you kidding? Alter Mon- day's performance? Of course "I didn't think we'd throw nearly that much, but Houston .,_tedSi.,.., 82 • was keying on the run so much, givingusthepass." be's out .start.er barrtna a dis·, A sophomo r e starter at aster," says Kelley· . quarterback at a major unlversi4 R e flecting on has e fforts ty is1'0t a common occurrence, agai n s t Houston at th_& but Bashore says that was hls Astrodome Monday night before goal a nation~ television audieace, "Wtten I decided to come to Bashore.says, ''I'm satisfledJbut UCLA I looked ahead and felt the 1 need to improve a lot on my job •ould be open my sophomor~ footwork and fundamentals. And year. It'• something I've worked l 've eot to learn to protect myself and prepared for. The optJon after handln¥, the ball off. The aeries lS cllff)cult to learn, but t refs w~ren t watchina very feel I'll 1et better with each closely!' eame The Bruins suffered a 17·13 de·, "The coaches told me I played t4at to Jloustoh, keyed by the in· well for my tint game, but they ability to punch the ball acrou also to1d me there waa room for / after ~.atentna three Umes in Jmprovement " corlol(o terrttory durin1 tb• Bashore ~mpleted 12 of 2'l second half. 1J8SRS for 24S yards and a 20. "We were ~re t.ht~. times yarchcottnt pus. And he netted and we dtdn t score, says 33 yards on the around tncludfnc Bashore. · "lt wu kind ol <ttl· a 25-yard tcamper to the Houston heartenJlfil .•. we should bave 10 t .. • put It (sc:Ored) ln there at leut ;,I thcNJbtl wu eolog to score lwtl)f.'•\ • and Uhlftk I should have;• Q)'S . Baabore'• •tar&inf ood was not Buh!Wi. "l thou•ht we'4 win tM made offlclal un 11 Monday.. same.'' but he aays he had an lnkllni the nod woWcl 10 t.o him the p.aat two weeks. "l felt Ukt 1 WU aMICI Of Uae pace. -*lall1 coapl• ol da" tieforedii'iame," ••1.S Balbofe. a wllo prepped at Bdlaon Hieb CH~ Beach> Soboal. BabQre ~•red MmNI at the outlet •1th Houatoa 81\d aar that he was. "Yeab, a lit· tle;" ,_.RMboiael "BU\a-.ae or plQSlat.erUUnO totntupre. U.Y quick. J feJt a Jo\ Ntler u the 11m•wwnt01L ' I 0 .t.ll Y PILOI Thuraoar. ~ap1am0er If> 1&11 Area Football ., ·For This Week )•rlday Nh&hl HllbtM:boot F..dltoa <lf-.ot1-&ton fte•~h) "• E1taod• <C0tta Meta) al CJranao Coall Collete 1K1. · Olree~ .. : ,-f"U<••••-<J N lll •in l\d1tll\!\, 1i..1'll llurbo1 Hlvd. OCC foe-1111t'd oo rt1ht. Marina flluath,&&ot\ 84'-u•h ) n (;uroaa d.:I Mar at. N"wport HarbUr tt1in (8>. Dtred.I01U: <From Hunl111glon Beaeh> South on San Diego Froow~ (405) to Newport Blvd. turnott. South on New1><>rt Blvd. to 16th St. Left. on 16th lo scbool l.f''rom Co,rona del Mar> nonh on Pacific Coast H11hway to Dover. Right on Dover, left on 18th. FoutalD Valley"" Redlaod1' al Redland!i Umverslt y (8) l>tre(UODS: North on Newport Freeway <M> to Rwerslde Frl!e'Way. Eut on Rivenude Freeway (91 > to San ~rnardino Freeway. East on San Bem1:1rdino Freeway <10> to University St. turnoff and turn letl lluntl.o&toa Beacb at Garden Grove <7: 30 I. _ DtrectJom: North on Beach Blvd. to Garden Grove Blvd. East on Garden Grove Blvd. Left on Euchd, nghlon Stanford. El Toro al Valeoda 18>. Dlrectlon111 : North on Santa Ana Freeway tS> to Orange Freeway (57). North on ~7 to Yorba U nda Blvd. East on Yorba Lin- da lo Bradford m Placentia and tum right. School located on Jert. Saddleback <Sant,a Ana) at M'5sioa Viejo t8l. University Urvfne) at Tustin (8 ). DtrecUons: North on Culver Road to Santa Ana Freeway. North on Sant a Antl Freeway (5) to Red Hill Ave. Tum right on Red Hill, left on Laguntl Road to school. Laguna Beach at Brea (7 :3()J. Directions: North on Santa Ana Freeway (SJ to Orange Freeway (57). North on 57 to Imperial Highway. Left on Imperial Highway, right on Stale College Blvd., left on Birch St. SanClementeatBolsaGraode !Garden Grovel 17 :30>. Dtrections: North on San Piego Freeway to Santa Ana Freeway CS) to Garden Grove f'reeway 122> Weston22to Brookhurst South on Brookhurst. right on Westm1nstt'r Ave Lo~ Amigos IGardt'n (.rovt>l V!I Dana Hills· al San t'lt:melit1• J l1gh 181 Directions: South on San Diego Freeway (5> to Avemda Pico turnoff. Left on Afenida Pico to school on right. Capistrano Valley at Elsinore (7 301. Dtrections: From San Diego Freeway take OrteRa Highway 174 1 inland to Grand fl.\'<: wdJacent to Lake Elsinore1 and turn right. Proceed six miles to Corydon Left on Cor ydon, r!ght on Palomar Road, left on M1ss1on Trail. Proceed to Can>:on Dnvt and turn nght to school. Field is located at 21800 Canyon On ve. Saturday Night Hlgh School Costa Mefia vs La Quinta (Garden Grove> at Bolsa Grande H1gh <7 . 30). Dlrectfons: North on San Diego Freeway 1405> to Brookhurst North on Brookhurst to Westminster Ave. and turn left. Aquinas <San Bernardino) vs Irvine at Tustin (7 · 30 l. f)jrections: North on Santa Ana Freeway 15> to Red Hill Ave Right on Red Hill, left on Laguna Road. Liberty Christian <Huntlngton Beac h) vs Huntington Valley Christian <Newport Beach ) at Estancia High <I . 30 l 18·man > ' Directions: <From Huntington Beach I East on Adams to Eshm cia Ave. (Placenlla) and turn right. (From Newport Beach> North on Placef)lta to Estancia H.igh, located at 2323 Placentia. Saturday Night Junior College Orange Coast College vs Golden West College al Orange Coast College <7 · 30 >. f)jredions: <From Golden West College) Proceed South on San Diego Freeway 1405} to Fairview turnoff. South on Fairview. SaddJeback College vs Cypress at Western High 17 : 30) Dtrectlons: North on Santa Ana Freeway (5)to Ball Rd. turnoff Wt•st on Rall Roar!, t•ros~ B<'a<'h Blvd . rlRhlon Western : Kansas Invades More Problems Confront Bruins . LOS ANGELI!;S UCLA had more than its s hare of difficulties Jn opemnj? its college football f,cason Monday mght. ! Hous ton overcame a 13 3 tialfllme deficit to hand the ~ruins a 17-13 setback on na· i1o naJ telev1s1on That was dis· l'ouraging enough. But rt we1s • \\<OrSe. 1 UCLA lost a pair of key players tit the Astrodome and the team 1s row Involved in a unique situa ion brou~ht about b.,y its chedule the Bruins have little ~ime to prepare for the1r next a m e. That comes Saturday night r • hen the Ka nsas visits the oliseum in the Bruins' home pener. "The problems or the gatne at louston were difficult enough, .. aid UCLA coach Terry Donahue ednesday. ''Now we've got lo ace the problems of this week's a me with very little prepara- ion. "We're obviously two days ehind," added Donabue. "We'll ork harder Thursday and Fri· ay than we normally do. We Chink we'll have enough time to 'ffl after Friday wilt\ the game Ing Saturday night. "We've never done thi s etore." Few teams have. And Donahue ays Kansas la noL an ordinary am In ten:ns of preparation ''Kansas la an excellent r90t· all team." said Donahue. '1Thcy resent prepuration PtOblt.ms r our derense becau11e they run ut or both tho wishbone 11'\d (. rmalions. ' .. W•'tl have our h•nd• full trY· g to win Saturday nliht, l rori\lleyou that." While U.. Bruins Iott CM4r top her of tut year. ~I bee" Drown with a \'tfalota\ It e)bow, •nd punt1r;.,. l•ceklcktt f an!( Corral. WM roke f\11 jaw, all waa not cnm ond1y ftl1ht. Sophomore ,_.Rlcll 811h0re of Ed1so11 High l llun tington Beach 1. who competed for th<' starting quarterback berth with Junior Steve Bukich last spring and this fall and was a late choice of Donahue lo start. had an ex tremely successrul debut. The 6-foot· 1. 177-pounder from Fountain Valley, comple ted 12 of 27 passes for 245 yards and one touchdown. "I anticipated playing both quarterbacks against Houston and l anticipate playing both agaipst Kana as , .. addect Donahue. "But the game might change those plans as it did Mon · day night.·· "" Emerson, Martin Fall .._..___ .... . • Delly PIMt ....... .-, LH ,..,.,. ROUGH ANO TUMBLE RON WADE HURDLES A COLLEGE OF DESERT BLOCKER TO TRY FOR A PUNT BLOCK. UCI PolQ Outlook Still Flossy With ftvl' 11tarlers returning, UC Irvine figures tonavt! another l>anncr water polo season in 1977 bul Anteaters coach Ed Nl•wland says lbe jury is still out. "I haven't the sll~~test idea how we 'll <.Iii until Wt' pla) '><llTI('lmc ... :-.a):-. Newland. "Hut ""t· ~hould bl• t alrlY" good. We do h J \'l' 1>0tcnl ia I .. Newland will gel e1 much better idea this weekend when UCJ hosts ils annual tourney at Newport JI arbor High Leading the returnees for UCI 1s !\ertior Gary Figueroa. called by Newland one of lhe best of· fensive players irr othe col,l11try. Figueroa scored 83 goals last year. leading the Anteaters lo a third place finish in the NCAA tourney Other starters back include goalie Bob Malone, senior Simon Boug he y and sophomores George Newland and Ceorge .-Hassett. . Other key players Cor the An· leaters include sophomore Man- fredo Lespier, a Puerto Rican who played for UCI last year . sop~omore Mark' O'Brien. freshman Dave Rltchle from Fullerton's Sunny Hills High and JunioNJ Scott Becker and Pat Lyons. Newland says he 'II stress de· rense again this season and an important NCAA rule cha nge figures to help the Ante~ters. Last season a team was awarded a penaJty throw ~er 10 team fouls were a$s~sed pn the opposition ln one quatter. But that rule has been thrc>W'tl out by the NCAA. * * * . Big Tourney UC Irvine and UC Berkeley are co·favored to win the anftual UCI water polo tourney, set F~da.y t hrough Sunday at N.ewport Har&rHl,h. · A tot1 . o f · 12 teams will participate in four dlvlsiona of the tourney with the top schools from each dlvi.slon adv.ancm, to the champM>nshlp roun4 ~tur· day and Sunday. Other top teama in the tourney i nclude UCLA , UC Santa Barbara and Arbona. UCLA was second in the NCAA toW"Dey lut year, with uqJ ltnlthin1 thiid. The first aame of the touna.y matches UCI aaaln~t Cal State <Lona Beach) at 3 F..ut.y. .......... ",.. ..... ~ ,,,.,~l"ll11tn.O\.Mlt .. 1Kll. ,~ J ~Cl.AVl ,....HI,.. '• ' 4·~~UI( S »-UCIMIA ..,,..,. v• "'"' . •·~ClrvlMv .. UC0.•11. 1 10-tlCl.ATI.~~· L t-<el11t. t-\Dlttf...... cf ~~• .r.. •:~tlnta .. ..,.,,. C.~'r c,...,..., .................... ,,_, .. 7 • rn. -UC: 0.¥1•.,,. Cl LOflt 99f(ll. . ,, • .........,.. ...... a"1.,..,_.: :., •: ........ ..._ ...... Qll'9W ...... , •:......,.Qleo91t ... ,,. uc...-....... .. Two-way Star No Pushing Around For Gauchos' Wade A year ago, Hon Wade was just about set to play football at Oran~e Coast College. A standout at San Clemente High School, Wade had become disenchanted living in the South Coast area But two th1nRS chan ged his mind and turned hts future around.. · ·Thcrt• \\ere JUSl too man~ ~uys out Cor football Cover 100) at Or ange Coast. And the Sad dlcback ~oae hes ha d a real positiv~ attitode when I talked to them. but they d1dn 't put an~ pressur~ on me, ~ays Wade. a hncbacker The dec1s1on. says Wade. was one of the best he's ever made. "I'm jtlst super glad I came here. I like the school and I li ke the coaches. I couldn't have picked a better school." says \\'ade. " ', But hu m iy ha~had son1~ rt>· servations after playing in his first ga~e for the Oauch9S; t;lst season. · ' · i "It was against Cypress and r really teamed a lot that first game. I got pushed around quite a bit and I faund out It's a lot tougher playing J C FootbaO," says Wade. Wade doesn't figure to get pushed around this season -due p-rtmarily to the fact he's gaJned 30 pounds and added an lnch lo his height -he'a now 8·3 and 205 "I've ju!fl been 11klnny most of m y life, but I started to gain weight la&t ~ar. And 1 llfted a lot of weighb,'' s1ya the 19-y~ar-old ·Wade. • '• At San c~m~te )ll.h. Wade played both 'Ways as a runnfng back and· a defensive end ..... and I ' • ., t• in his senior year helped lhe Tritons to a 10·1 record. But he prefers lo play defense. "1 just prefer defense." says Wade. "I guess l JUSt like the con· tact." But he also adds that his work· ing relationship with linebacker coach Don Butcher makes it that much easier. ''Butcher really has a positive attitude and 1t 's made me poslljve. I really want to play well because of that. The coaches here make it run to play foot ball," says Wade. Gauchos head coach Ken Swearingen thinks Wade 1s headed tor a big season -and that was exemplified in the open· mg game last Saturday against College of the · Desert when he was selected the top defensive star. ''Ron is really a team leader. He 's an intelligent kid a nd he really gets guys going. He's <i lotal player a nd :i great prospe<'I for the four.year schools.·· says Swearingen. Perrys Win Dan and Georgia Perry defeat· ed Fred and Fran Hill 6-3, 6-0 to capture first pJace in the cham· pionsfil.p flight of the Mlsslon Vie· jo Tennis Association husband and wife tournament last week. In lhe. second flight c ham· pionshJp match. J oe and Glona Byrnes downed Phll and Gean Lagestee 6·3, 6-2. Bob and Judy Hale won the third night title wllb ~6-4. 6-7, 6-1 victory over John aftd Mary Loy Coutlee. ~ Bas.e&an Standings New York Baltimar~ , Boston Detroit NATJONAL LEAGUE ' Eut Dlvlslon W L Pct.GB Pbll~eJpbia 90 55 .621 Plt.ta~gh 83 63 .518 7'ta St. LoiUfs 76 '9 .$24 14 Chicago 75 69 .$21 14'h · Montretd 67 78. .462 23 New \'ark S8 87 400 32 West DlYlalOD Dodtm 89 51 .610 ClnclMaU 77 '70 .$24 121t\ Kouston 73 73 .SOO 16 Sad Francia~ 18 79 463 21 'h San Dlego 64 84 .431 218 Atlanta 55 OJ .377 34 RON WADE Angels Trail By 20 With 19 Games Left ARLINGTON, Tex.. Tht> sag- ging California Angels were mathemalically eliminated from the American League West title ruce Wednesday when they took a 2· 1 loss from th e Texas Ranger.; The setback left the Angels 20 ga mes behind the s treaking Kansas City Royals with 19 games left in 1977. • IL also left the Halos five games under .500 ln the win col· umn Texas right·hander Doyle Alexander s hackled California Allflei. Slat~ All Gem.son KMll"C lhdi.11101 ... l>I UCelllontl1elTe••~ S lOp.m MP' 16Gellloml1etOllC.91> S:Up.m S.DI 17Celitornlaet0.lc~ 11:10a.m on three hits and left fielder Keith Smith m ade a brilliant de· fensiv.e play to propel the Rangers to a 2·1 victory over the Angels Wednesday night. Alexanderi now the w~nningest Rangers pitcher wltb 15 vic- tories, against 10 losses, ~tired the first 12 batters before Bobby Bonds lined a slngle in the Mh. Texas' John Ellis drUled his third home run of the year ln the third inning. A double by Ken Henderson, a single by Jim Sundberg and Toby lfarrah's sa~rtfice ny providC!d the win· nJng margin ln the 1lxth inning against loser Ken Brett, U.U. The Angels scored a nan ln the seventh innln1 on Don 81.7Jor's rb1 smile but Smith cul down Mario Cucrttro at't.he p(ate try· Ing to score from aecond on a ''n.•loby Davl' Chalk. . * * * • '· I BB Rival larger, Stronger Yoo can bol Hl.mtlnfton Be h lU 'l bl tool.cl by the tfN foorllaall NCtlf'd of Garden Grav• llil who the OUet1 opeo up a1a1-l Friday nl1bL (t:JO> in Carden Orovto .,. The .N'ICID&U offtclally were o.t lMl year but that b more than • UWe n:u.teadln1. Oo t.be they. '-•tu to enter the CIF playoffs, Garden Grove bead coach Olek Cu\pbell discovered that one ol players wu 30 days past tbe age l.taut for high school playen. The Argonaut& not only mined the playoffs, but had to wipe out lbe slate on a 6-2-1 campaign. A little wiser this year, Garden Grove is also a lot stronger. Only two of last year's offensive star\el15 graduated and Campbell has 16 starters and 26 lettermen back overall. The best of the lot could be quarterback Tim Golia (5·11. 185). an all-league pick destined for college greatness. according t~ Campbell. In addition, there is an offensive line which has just one starter under 200 pounds. Two are massive underc)a.ssmen who started as sophs, all·league center Dan ?tScKie (6-5, 240) and strong tackle Kevin Alexander (6-4, 235). • The guards are Roy Yoshida (6-0 >. 200) and Dennis Laughon (5·11, 180). David HatUich (6-0, 200 >, a starter at tackle last year. is being c hallenged by another potential blue chipper in soph Terrance Rock (6-0, 205). The tight ends are Joe Ryan (6-1, 205> and Mike Clayton (6·3, 200). Clay Harris (6-2, 180 > caught six touchdown passes as an a11· league wide receiver. ·• The only vacancieis on offense are at running back where Ca)npbell says he. has plenty of depth Jnd speed but no clear cut s tarter. Among the seven starters back on defense are end Ron Amen- dola (5·8, 155), nose guard Mike Malone (6-1. 200), linebackers Marv Rose (6·0, 200) and Bruce M cGinley (5·8, 185 > and tackle Steve Brill <6·2, 220). The giant on aefense is the second nose guard, Dan Leonard (6·5, 270). Campbell feels that Huntington Beach will be a lot stronger than last year when the Argonauts whipped the Oilers 14·0. "Huntington Beach has some real good juniors and their quarterback (Marco Pagnanelli > -looks like a real good one,'' he said. "They have a couple of good receivers and it looks llke their defense is a lot more mobile than last year . 1 expect a good football gu me from them because they throw the football very well.'' Los Amigos Has Vets On Offense Los Jfmigos High <Fountain Valley) is a considerably dif- ferent footbaJI team from the one that handed Dana Hills a 13-3 loss in the season opener last year. Coach Al Calonico says his of- fense is much improved but his defense is much weaker. That diversification makes it difficult for Calonico to forecast how his ·77 edition will fare. Friday night's season opener against Dana Hills at San Clemente High (7 :30) will be the third Ume the Dolphins and Lobos have met. They split their previous games. Los Amigos has four returning starters on offense and three on defense. The most prominent re- turnee ls all·league offensive tackle Randy Vasquez, a M. 2-45-pound senior. Jolnin1 him on the offensive line are two guards from last year's varsity -5-11, 200-pound Dan K.lrkland and 6-0, 185-poun Mike Sands. · Los Amigos has a speedster at wide receiver, 5·9, lSS·poun Randy Lew. Calonlco says hJ runs the 40 in 4.7 aeconda. · At quarterback. Calonico still deb aUn1 between two c dldatea for the atarUn1 Job . .Juniol' Art Wilcox is the better passer. but senior Emte Fisher la Ute fuperlor runner, a diatinct advantac• in Loe Amtros • veer offense. Calonlco 11y1 he'll play boUt eJCteMivety during pre-lea1ue ••mes. Fisher II also a 1tartini comerback and Calonlco calla him the best athlete on the aquad. "Our major concern b the de- f ense," Calonlco ••>'•· "We played PoOflY tn OUJ' 1crtmma11. We weren't ~•retalve flDoc.IP and we dldn t Hem 1ur• of ourtelYejJ. I've tot aeven ,..,._ ta the defense whO '•• nevtr been :hi • vanitY 1am• blfON .. LOI AmJloe' 01Mtaodln1 de- fenlivr pl11•r to tar bu ..._ --~ allSbl.W, ... ltS). c~l!I.?::'°• Hilla' ill ..= th•_. oa , • ..,. aDd rollcluU. ....., ............ J EFF BITETTI (LEFT), JOE CARNAHAN•UAD 1'HE WAY FOR NEWPORT. BACKS TONIGHT. Newpo_.t, Millikan I Square Off Newport Harbor High •s edition of Im football will be unveiled tonicht as the Long Beach • Millikan High Rams invade lbe Sailors campus for an 8 o'clock non-league tiff. As in most opepers, tonight's clash involves a lot of unknowns. What is known about the Sailors of Newport Harbor coach Bill Pizzica is that they are the fastest in years. What isn't known Is how effec- tive the passing game from quarterback Craig Lyons to re· ceivers Wayne Kasparek, Jeff Bitetti and Larry Higby will be. Nor has it been established that the Sailors' game Is a weapon to be reckoned with. P1zzjca has three standouts who will shuttle at fullback <Dave Thompson, Don Barker and Dana Wandrocke>. but tailback Chris Corum is out with a knee injury. Corum 1s the fastest on the team with the ability to run '40 yards in 4.5 seconds. "I've no idea when Corum will be back," .,~•vs Pizzica. "It's a recurrence or"an old knee injury and we're going to get it taken care of pro· perly." Y•••llSte••Fee Norton Says Ali, WoR"t Fight Him • LAS VEGAS <AP) -Ken Norton continues to wonder whether Muhammad Ali will ever fight him again. ''I'll believe it only when 1 climb into the ring with him,·· said the No. 1 challenger from Los Angt?les, who beat All once and then lost two disputed de- c isions to the current heavyweight boxing champion. Norton, 223, first has a dale with Jimmy Young on Nov. s. and the two tuned up with. easy victories in nationally-televised bouts at Caesar's 11alace bere Wednesday night. Norton says Ali wants to avoid him, but the heavyweigfit cham- pion -who has a title fight on Sept. 29 against Ernie Shavers _ ... has gone on record saying he would put his title at stake against the Norton-Young win· nerh YQIQ·l'l'g . a 213 -pound Philadelphian. started slowly but picked up speed and boxed his way to a one-sided 10-round verdict over Jody Ballard, 205, of Houston other's showing. but each made a point of watching µte other. .. I hope Norton doesn't think he's going to do the same thing to me," said Young after watching the kayo on television. Ron Lyle, the 220-pound No. 3 contender from Denver, said he suffered from the nu but barely outpointed little-known Stan W ani, a 23611•-pound newcomer from Sacramento, CaUt. One judge scored the bout even and the other two had Lyle just one point ahead. Larry Holmes. the undefeated "Easton Assassin" from Penn- sylvania, stopped Fred "Young Sanford" Houpe of Los Angeles for the first time in the latter's career. The end came after 47 seconds· or the seventh round, when both or HQUPe's eyes were bruised to .. mere slits. Holmes, 211, knocked down Houpe, 199, a split-second after the third-round ended. When the referee stopped the fight. the ending went as a technical knockout. Leroy Jones, the 271-pound gargantuan from Denver, loQk a unanimous decision from Greg Johnson. 207~. from New York. . . . .. . Trnl~y. S!ptember t5. 1m DAILY PILOT Ruatlen QB Right Decisions Is Holst's Forte Ray Shackleford haa bad a lot ot 1ood quarterbaoka in his 11 years as football coacb at Golden West Colle,ce -but bls current QB, BW Holst, is rated the best in the school 'a hlltory. "For the offense we're runninf right now, Bill runs·it better than any quarterback we've bad. There have been ~tter runners and better passers. but none with his all-round ability." says Shackleford. And the thing that sets him apart from the others, says the GWC coach, ls the fact he makes the right decisions. And decision· maldng.'ls very important 1n a veer offense. "He just seems to make the right decisions on whether t.o keep the ball or pitch it. He'• very quick, but he's not real fast and not very big. But he's quick and strong for his size," says Shackleford. "And he is a bell of a leader. He's not a screamer, but every· one on the team likes him because he's such a nice kid. The team respects him and they play well behind him," adds the Golden West coach. Holst, a 5-11, 175-pounderwas a backlg> QB to Jim Andrus last year, but saw enough action to complete 29 of Ji8 passes for 343 yards and four foucbdowns. And although he only gained 46 yards passin& and ran for 40 more against Santa Ana last week. be has the confidence-to have a bannec year. "I only played about one ball and we ran so well we didn't~ to pass against Santa Ana. And after we scored on the first series of the second half (to make the score 38-0), I came out," says Holst. Lakers Trim List LOS ANGELES (AP> -The Los Angeles Lakers announced Wednesday that they have re- leased guard Bo Lamar, The Lakers acquired the 6-1 Lamar the day before the 1976-77 season started in trade with D~troit. Lamar, 27, ap- peared in 71 games for the Lakers, averaging 7.1 points and 2.s assists. The r elease of Lamar brings the number of players reporting to the Lakers' training camp which begins next Monday to 17. Included are eight guards, six forwards and three centers. ''But I'd like to get at least. 1,000 yards passing this season.•• aaya the former Hunttn1too Beach Hlgb standout who will lead GWC against rival Orang~ Coast Saturday night. Holst has had little problem adapting to Golden West's veer offense since he was a veer quarterback at Huottneton. . "Bill bad a super high school coach in Roy Brummett. I really can't take lbe ctedlt fot teachinJ Bill the veer. Brummell was a very, very good high ~chool coach and be had ~ solid un· derstanding of lbe veer," sa)'$ Shackleford. As for Holst'a future after Golden West, it wlll depend a great deal on what the Rustlers quarterback does this season. "Bill is not a very big guy, so it will depend on wh~l kind of year he bas. It he has a big year, ho should get quite a few scholarship offers. Option foot· ball is very prevalent now and there are 11 lot of quarterback1> skilled in the option, beth in junior college and high school. "So tt will depend on how big e year he b'as.'' But it he continues to play the way he has so far, there's little doubt the four-year coaches will be knocking on bis door come December . Evert to Play· In Newport Tem\is star Chris Evert and three other pro standouts will compete in a on~ay $10,000 win· ner-take-all tournament at the Newport Beach Tennis Club. Saturday, Oct. 1. Evert will be joined by Martina Navratilova, Betty Stove and Francoise Durr in the charily event. Navratilova will meet Stove at 10 a.m. with Evert and Durr clashing at 11 :30. The wi~rs mectrorthe$10,000 all:30. • And a special exhibition sistei:it doub)es match pitting Chris and Jeanne Evert against Martina. and 'Jana Navratilova will be held at3 o'clock. Tickets are $6 for general ad· mission, $10 for reserved and $125 tor an eight-seat box. They are available at the Newport Beach Tennis Club. Pizzi ca is not overly concerned at tailback, however, wilb 170- pound Bryon Ward stepping into the starting berth. "Ward is the best surprise we've had," says Pizzica. "He runs the 40 in 4.6 seconds. He's quick and has the moves." Ward is the Sunset League record holder in the frosh-sop& high and low hurdles. Norton started even slower and got tagged a couple of times. But at the end of the firth round he knocked out No. 10-ranked Lorenzo Zanon, a awkward 207· pounder from Milan, Italy. There were only two seconds left in the stanza when a left hook started Zanon on the way out, so the time gpes as 3:08. eight seconds after the rowld.'s scheduled end. Soccer Tiff Set SOUTH CO.AST PLAZA Newport's d e fense. with Barker and Bob Brown leading the way, should be up to par. The question is offense and Plzzica says: "Last year we had no of- fense." Millikan marclies in with an option offense, but the indivktual with the most potential is 170· pound halfback Fred Morre, who 3veraged T.8 yards per carry in '76. __ ,. Hal'MrScartlltt LI.._. OHMH ~ 1 E llltetll lOO 100 8ttettl R@ RT C.PNNn 2.0 200 SturOlt RT R G Ashlft 200 110 Ablllte LT C twrns 1'S 190 llr«k~ 1..E L.G 8roc~me.,... ''° llS W"'*otU Lii L. T Stur911 )00 200 eanier ML.8 WR H'9bY 1.S tlO J.~-Lii oe L~ 1es ''° Hiit.ti • ca T 8 Wet'd 170 ISJ Ktlfrlcll C 8 F 8 Thorn9ton 1'0 1SS 8t-. Mon Fl. IC~ tlO 110 ~ S Prep Water Polo VAllSITY lt""*'V l ...... ml 161 It) &A.-8Nc.ll L19une 8"c:h • 0 0 0 2-t KenlltdY 2 i 1 1-4 Leo-9Mc:hte0rlno-<llfl$ttn-t. PllOSHIO~N L..-. llff(ll CUI 121 K~y IAltlMlfllJ Le~ 8Ncll 2 • 2 S-11 Kennedy D t O t~ LIQUfl• &each tcor•no-Lf"'' 1, lnoen t, Trnwll2. l..onQlleld3, McCvrdY I, R«lulmeM 1, ~11.0t9IV11v1, Neither Young nor Norton said he was impressed by each Royals Nab 2; Streak fits 14 KANSAS CITY <AP> --Dennis Leonard hurled an eight-hiller and Tom Poquette and John Mayberry each drove in two runs, propelling the sizzli~g Kansas City Royals to a 6-0 vic- tory over the Oakland A's Wednesday night for a sweep of their doubleheader. The sweep, which included a S-2 opening.game triumph. stretched the Royals' winning streak to 14 games. a Kansaa City club record and the lonaest in the major leagues this 1eaa~n . Philadelphia had a 13-game win- ning streak ,arlier lhis year. Leonard, 17-11. struck out three, giving him 208 for the season, .a Kansas City record and second best in the American Lea1ue thls year behin d California's 'Nolan Ryan. 'the loss went to Oakland starter Matt Keough, 0-2, from Corona del Mar. Olle Starter BaCk. . I .State JC Chanp lfeP;Jup . With three returning starters and a pair of ex- perienced reserves, Southern California College soc~er coach Ken Miller is optimistic the Vanguards will have a successful season. SoCal opens play Saturday at l, hosting LA Baptist College. The top returnee for the Vanguards is goalie Gus Rivas, a senior who was selected to the Dis· trict Ill NAIA second team last season. Also back are starters Jim Brown and Ali Tavakoli. Brown was the Vanguards• most valua· ble player in '76 while Tavakoli earned All· District III second team honors. Sophomores Tony Chol and Eric Tresfzer will also start for Miller's team . The top incomina players are fr~sbrnen Je!f Campbell and De,n Berg and Fullerton Colle&e transfer Pete Robbins. Rustlers No. 1 . Iii Southland r • VILLAGE LA AZTECS • • I SOCCER CLINIC SATURDAY, SEPT. 17 . 11 A.M.-12 NOON; THEN 1 .. 2 P.M. THEORY & DEMONSTRATION BY. VARIOUS TEAM MEMBERS SOUT:H.COA$T PLAZA VILLA.GE SUMFLOWI& & llAR ST. ~.;'~S-~.ANT~A AM~ J ,,,.. . i.mbef 15. 11JTT .Costa Mesa · Cross Country Loaded JOE YOUNG, COSTA MESA'S"BEST. Football Menu TM rNjO< college football K-1• n'.o'ltonCOll-!It r--· n4Ql\I tortlllS_..,.,, SttnforO,.. Tut•N,ntV"t • f<n.Ay,s..t.1' TPa•\A&M•tVlrQtntah<ll \.OftO B•ech Slat• et Full~rton V•IQ(1)111 •t Wake Fornt. nlqlllt St.te,n19M. • MldwM.I s....wr. ~· 11 t<er>I si..ieete:o1or•0o £-.t BowllnQ Gree n eC Ee•IUI\ VMI et /VMV Mltlll~"· n•Qtll L•fayette al Col911te M"\A!Url at llllno1~ Harva<G•tC.Otumol• (AMr81 MK~ el llllno11 $t.at .. Prlnceion at Oertmoutll 1119111 • M"'Vlft !.!•I• v~ Grambllno State LO<Jt\Jene Slat••llnclttne atN-Yot1< towaStMe.all-• Con'*11<111 •I Navy F lorldf S1.ateat Kan~ State CorNll at Pem, nlQfll OuU at Mlclllc>an HCllAloft .. Ptnn State WMhtnQlon Stale at Mlcll\9911 Stele Wiiii-& Mary et Pitt • AlalMl"'9 at N•l>t' ... ka HotyCroos .. RhOOe hlel\O Muw'ftotaatOllklSl•le '. Buc-nell fl Rutqtrs U1et>a1 Ot.t4'hama North Cerollna StMAI a~yracu~ Ot>10 U. at,,.,,_ Orakeal l em04e 1no1.-a~lll• .. Souftwrn lll•no•• , 8•11"-~a!Vtll-va Eal!Cerotlna.ftTotedO,nlQlll Bro_ .al Yale Nort'-1 L.clulsl.,,. et Tulw , nltftl Sevl" To•U .ArllnQlon at We•Urn Tennnse Slat• •I Atabeme A&M, A.llCllloen nlqht Nortt-e<n llllnol\ at W11'COft\ln Alcorn State al Alaoem• St•t•. ~""""' nlQflt O-lllllOmi SI-'• v~ Arltenw• at Lii· r .. _,_ -<:NttAnOOQe et Al> tie Rod<, nlQllt ,,.tacllltonSt.ole, n•9" KentutkVal 8ev10r Soutllern MIUIUll>Pl•IAubl.lrf! • Soul'-Sl«n LoulJI ..... , t..emar. Wotem Carolin. al The Ctt-1, ntQlll nlQlll !.olllllern Metf'°'11s1 v\. North r .. n Toes-.Arll~on •I E•St Cerollna. Sl•teetlrv•rwi. Tei nlV"I nlQM Jac•Mlf' Stal• 4't Pr•lrla View Ea\t Te.,,,.u .. Slate et furm•n, Florl<Yat Rl<f,1tlOhl nlo"t Vll'l!lnl••t T•u s Cl""''°'' •I Georol• Ort9on lit Tun Cllrlfll.tn Mlefl'll, Fl• at Geor9l1 heh. lllQhl N••MeklC.O"" TUH Te~, nlQltl Clncl1WW1tl itl Loulsvtlte, ntQht I'•• W~ M.,,..,.•O SI lllt •tl•il•B Mll s.n 0le9o 5(.te ff_ A ton.t WestVlrvlnl•etMer,l•nO Nprt-stern "\!. A ltOf!• SI.ti•. WHITeutSlal•MM<NHMSUI•. •nloM nlollt Air FOO'<• et Celllornl• Vt.,.Si.IAr•I Mernclt\ls Slitta, nlQlll 8oh•Stlll•81 Fr-St•t•.nlql\t .. otra Oem• vs. MIU IN IPPI et Color..toStllle M H--11. PllQllt J •ckton PeclflC et IClllllO, l\lglll Alchmondet NortllC...Ollna Wlchli. Sl .. e et Ntw Me-lco Slal•. ArkMIMS I tal• •t Nortl!Wntern nlvht • Loullltona, nlQl>t t(aM .. et UCLA, fllg!lt Ml-I, O.et Sotllll CerollN, nlQllt • S.r1.-Sta1t •t WnNl>Q!on 'THU Southern et Sovtllern U., 'Teu~EI Peso•l'tllfyo<nll'>Q 11lqM F ooiball Odds kavad• oOcUmakers favor top· r1P1kecl Mkllloan l>l' lO polnll over Duke In tllh -k s coll-foolbett action. Htr• Ma ,,,. DClds tor the coif~ football '""" from Herrah·• A•'!O .t1nd L•k• T allOe race ano •00•1• lloOU: S.t11'11ay ... ,.. 17 Ml<lllQen JOo.,.r Dull'• U$C24overOoc;ionSt.te Notre O•me 1'over Mlulnllll>I Al~•-• Nell<e.-e Te118'A"M 12owr VlrQlnlo Tech Ptf'll SI.ti•• over Houston Marti-IOOVtlr Wttl VlrQlrll• A~Olllahoma State • .,.., G~Ole 1 over Ci.<n$Gn UCLA IS-K•-Tu•Ut owr Virginia FIOfldl t•-~ka Mlcllllllft Sttte .. owr W-shlnc;iton St•t• Gellfenlle lhYff Air For<• Or9t;111117 """' TCU StM1f-1'owr Tut•~ Arl-Stett 17-Hort~•rn Here ere tlle oddt for the tll'I.. IHMt: ,.,...,,se,t,11 Los Ange"" 1owr Atront• ClnclnN\l ltowrClevtland ~lladeli:H• Uover Tempt aov WeWtlllllton s-H.-. YOl'll Oi.nll Miami low r 8lJft•lo N•""E"91-1lavnlC•MASC•ll' ChiuqoSov•r O.tro1t New ()rt .. n\ I ov•• Grotn l av O•ki,,nd ISov•r $9" Olefl'> Holl\ton70VM N•w York J~h • Mlnnuolll lovtr OallM O.nlM!r 40Ytlr SL loul< 8altll'l10l'•'•-S..tlle -....,.s.,c.11 Pltt\llUflll\ 1$°"'9< $611 FraMtKO ...,.,.....llC>df• ~dllOrloYer E\lel\Cll D'( IO'h G1roen Grove ov•r HunllnQton 8NClllJ¥• Matef' OHo,,.r Dex Pueblos bV I MllllClfl vi.io OVltr S.tddl-ck l>Y7 8,.._ _ l...ffillN 9M<ll W 1YI n Lot.Amlqoe-0-Hlllt by 1~ ,CN!fteltl .., ... ..., ..... lltdelndt .., CM-dltl MM over M•rlna Ir'( l 'h Va'-"tl•-r El TorolJo'( t Unl,,.'°'lty_ T.,..lnby I &oh• Grlllde owr S.n Cle,.,.,,I• ll'f a11t ~ VIMlt'l-r .. ,,..,. llt' 71/a CDfl4I MftA Wf/lf I.a °"""'by. ~--•f'WWIJ17~ ~ ..... c:r-wiM 04*ltlO\ w.tt -Or..-CMtt..., 6\lt LawnB~ling ,. Tbe number la 8' and counttni. That's how many dual mtiet.s Colt• Meta Hieb'• croea country toam hu won witboUt a loll. TM 1treak nacbea back t.o 1968. Couch Joe Ftlber hu plded tbe team al.nee 1069 and hu hu yet to wi. dual meet defeat. Tb1a aeWIOC\ bll Mu.st.up are favored to wln the CJP 4·A crown, ind IC they do tt 1'l1l be baet·~bac.k tiUes. (;oat.a Mee a woo tbe J.A booon lan1ear. Only two ot Colla Meea's •tartinl ltwen run· ncrs from last. aeuoa have Sl'aduated and Fbhel- Corolla def Mar beat Colta Kesa.• But lf t see a kid improvfnl from . Ir anyone can beat one race to another. Costa Mes~ HJ&b inc~ that's an achievement. t country this season. it 8 don ·t preach winning, I probably Corona del just preach improve· Mar. The Sea KJncs are ment." loaded with talent. Sean F1ynn, the No. 4 Co-cap~aln Dave man on )ast year's Hunsaker is cunenUy Chargenaquad, isoneof the No. 1 runner. Last two seniors on the team. year, before the distance The other two returners was changed from two are juniors, Bob Rini miles~ tbr~r Huns~ker (No. 6) and Manny Gri-bad a 9.38 t.o rus credit. jalva <No. 7 ). . Corona d~l Mar coach Waddell. in bis third J1m Tomhn says t.he year as head coach, ex- longer distan~e sh~uld peels the rest of the h e lp a runn~~ h~e varsitysquadtobecom· H u n saker· . H e s prised of sophomores matured a lot this sum-Gary Bass and Steve mer and ,,shoul~ be a Gibbs, junior Dave Hig- great.ooe, .Tomlin s~y~. gens and senior Mike The other co-captam lB Sachs · Cam pouglass, a 9 :~ Fly00 is a 2:00 halr two-miler wh~ spent his -miler while Ring has .summe~ runmng across been clocked in 4:45 for the United St.ates w~lh the mile. las t year's co-captatn, "-ll°'S--, Jeff Day. ~ ~~te Steve Chase, the No. 1 One thing new San tunner in ~6. also bas .a Clemente Hi.gh cross , 9:48 t~o-nule _under h.is c ountry c oac h John . belt. Chase is a good Balak bas a lot of is ques- solid kid who wants to lion marks. win," Tomlin sa~s. "We've got a few kids Tom Spooner ts No. 4 coming back but I really and is trying. ~ come don't know what the y back from~ Ul.JUf'Y th~t can do," said Balak, who shortened his se~on lD has been on the job for 1976. Oth~r returrung let-only a month. "A lot is termen mc_lude Ashley undecided right now." Powell, Mitch. Fuller. Balak, who took over M ~rk Zaleski, Scott when long-time Tritons Winget , a nd Steve coach Benner Cummings Brand. retired, s'at<l he is bring- El Toro ing his runners along slowly, concentrating on Winning isn 't ever y-diste.nce runs. "We're thing for El Toro High building a mileage base. c ros s country coach trying to increase the Mike Waddell. ~ amOWlt of time they can With just three varsity run," he.saJd. "Time and runners back from a mileage have been a fac· team that went 1·6, Wad· tor. It's just a matter of dell feels it would be trying to bring them foolish t.o entertain along slowly, getting to thoughts or a cham-know the kids and'what plonship campaign. So they can do." ht! had his C~gers set There are· 10 runners their sights on the next back from last year's bestthing:doingthebest team but nobody or they can and Improving s ignificance so Balak a s the season pro-refrained from s ignaling gresses. out any individuals. All "We're lh a very tough of the runners, like the league Clhe South Coast ) program. are s tarling and though we have a Crom scratch, he s aid. fairly good team, with Currently, there are the teams we have to run over 30 athletes running against we really don 'l for San Clemente and have a chance." he ad· Balak expects to field milted. teams on each of· the "l shoot just for im-divisional levels: varsi- provement. l. can't tell ty, junior varsity, frosh- thc kids 'l.<>t's go out and soph and girls. Last year Irvine High Rival ·sIDall; But Lethal has an added secret weapon t4&t abould make his team unbeatable again. Tbe Mapon is transfer at.udent Mark Charkey, Jaat year'a Wyoming state . prep Croll country chamiNon. He nans 1: ~ ln the 880 and could probabfy be the No. 1 cross c:oantrY runner at almoet any 1choolexcept.CoetaMeaa. O R4lturn1nl are last year's No. l runner. Joe Y owil, and two other lettermeo wbo will batde for the No. 2 poaltlon, John Gerhardt and ~rian· Tbompaoo. All three are seniors. Cbarkey is currenlJy the No. t man, bgt some jockeying for position is certain to tak• place aa tbe seuon progress es. In whatever order they are ranked, the top four are Young, Gerhardt. Tbomi-on and Charkey. Beyond them, the varsity ca.odidates fnclude aenior Chris Tomlin and four juniors-Ted Evans. Brian Overholt, Alan Venable aJ¥f Fted Lara. Team.a which have the belt shot at thwarting Costa Mesa's drive to the err crown' appear to be Eisenhower High (Rialto) and Palot Verdea Hilb. San Oemente lOlt all of ·Under coach Jack Slobom (9:57) and An· its vanity dual meets, Rowan last year Marina derson (10:081 reeording forfeit.eel every jayvee took second lQ the Sunset their best times (flat sur· race and had only League and fifth 1n CIF. face)in'76. moderate sueceas on the Rowan baa given way to "At three mites, we'll ELSINORE-Depul is Crosb-eoph and girls• coach Dave-Lockman. a t>e happy U we can get a a problem for Elsinore levels. 1971 eraduate of Marina. few clockings under 15 High School football and Lockman predicts minutes." says Fiuel. coach Randy Haskin this 0-• Bilk another fine season. season as be prepares With only two vanrity "We're loein1 only a Edatldo his Tigers for an ope$g runners returning, Dana few of our runners from Estancia (Costa Mesa> game with first-year Hills HJgh cross country Jut sea.son and we have High cros s country Capistrano Valley HJgh coach Tim Butler bas ,.alotofdepth,".L.ockman coach Don Beatty Fridaynighte7:30)bere. highhopesfortbisyear's says. "I don't want to figures Foothill (Tustin>. Going into the first Dolphins84uad. say we're going to' win Villa Park and Tustin game of t.he season • Sixth place a year ago leag~e, but we·r~. not will be the leading con-· Haskin wlll have 22 in the rugged South shootingforsecond. tenders for the Century players ayailable tor Coast League and never Senior Carl Anderson League championship duty. known as a cl'06a cowitry and junior Mall Blaty with his Eagles fighting "We started with qu{te p 0 we r b 0 u 1 e. t b e are vyiog for the .No: 1 for a berth in the upper a few kids,•· Haskin says. t Dolph.ins are counting on spot,· and anot~er JUDIC?r half of the league. "But a lot of them quit s eniors Chip Maude:&io is close beh\nd, Lu.is Beatty has· a quality the team, moved or were and Kent Pelt plus four. Garcia. Greg Harris is runner in senior Mike injured. . talented jWllors to lift another returning let· McCaa, the league varsi· •,,,• 0 u r 1 tart i n g them into the first terma~and Robert ty mile champion (9:50), quarterback broJce a , division. Lebovic will also be .with seniors Craig finger in.our scrimmage "We hope to be in the among Marina's top run· Spraker and Kevrn and~ are going'wtth a top three· but with the ne.i;;. . McCarthy backing him player who has never type of league we're in, . We have abo~t five or up. . . been at the pC>sitlon it'sjustgoingtoreallybe sue people vying fo r. Others 111 the fold tn· before." tough," Butler said. the l~~ two spots on the cl ude seniors Gary . Elsinore's woes are .. But most of the kid! are team. Lockman says. Demory and Richard such that Haskin says: real d'edicated and .. I expect to have the Kupis and juniors· Jeff "If we can turn the·ball they're eager to win team filled out in a week Scholl, Rollie Ward and over with our deferuie. ~ because we haven't had or two." David Poulter. · we will kick a field goal • · a winning tradition yet. I B .. tftlgton . McCaa, Spraker and on first down if we are think we're ready to McCarthy are Teturning closeenough. moveup." Huntington Be ach varsity lettermen and "Qur kicker is Kenny Maudezin, the team High has four runners Beatty says the cross Hardcastle and he has a ·captain,' was the No. 2 coming bac k from · a coun~ work shou~d be range or 40 yards." man on the Dolphins varsity cross country the unpetus for bigger HardcasUeis asenlor. · squad last year .. A 9:47 team which took-seventh and be~ter things fpr Two~ rwi!!J backs two·miler he finis hed in CIF last season, and McCla m track during countedoo~kin are 18th in the' league finals. coach Paul W<Jb<i is look-tlfe spring. no longer wtth the team. Pell wound 'i season · ingJo,.,.ard to a stronger B la One moved to Colorado as the No. 1 on the program overall this Lafllal• eae and the other, Kurt Ortiz. team. . season. -• · Information unavaila· who was an all-league The best pf e junior . "We're going to be ~H blefromcoach. player last season, is in- quartet appears ~ be ngbt, .but whether we U eligible'. Ortiz weighs Mike Bruggeman. 'who be good enough for ~he l.ltdverdty 215 and was the ~am's wa:s second in the CIF Sunset Le.ague rem.ams To s ay .University topnmner. 3·A frosb-soph mile last ~? be seen .. " Wood say~. <Irvine) High 's cross . David Valle (5-6, 140. ' year in 4:25. Rick lief· Fountain ~alley l S country program is in a Jr.) bas been mowed to tersoo, a 9:57 two-miler.· ~ough and Manna (Hunt· rebui lding year might be, quarterb~c~. His coach. Neal Harris and Don ingt.on Beach) looks hke a bit of an understate· says he um t much of a Reynolds are the other it's going t.o be strong, ment. ., · · passer but that t!le team varsity hopefuls. too." Not only-did head has ~ee ~ood receivers Butler expects over 30 Currently ins.e!"led in coach Bob Messina lose includmg ueht. end Doug teams to compete in the the ~o. 1 pos1tlon f?r nine or l ast year's Hornkobl (s.10. 165). annual Dana Hills In· Huntington Beach is seniors lo graduati9~. he .Homkohl plays monster vitational Sept. 24. The j.unior Gordo.n Duff, a lost his four best juniors on defcnst and .was a~ follow in~ week. the 9 : 40 two-miler a s a and two bests(>phornores all-league selection last Dolphins will find out so~omor_c. ., . for reasons varying from ·season. . . Just wher~ they stand in .Mike Gifford,. a senior injuries to transfers to A.t the running back the South Coast' League with a 9:36 to bis credit, burn-outs. . positions are Topy Lewis since they kick off loop ~ouldt~ethe No .. 2.spot Nobody on this year's (5-9, 160) and Jsaac action again~t defending if he recovers suff1c1ent-squad has ever run i1t a Gree~ (5-11, l~). ', ClF 3-A champion Costa ly from a sprained ankle. varsity race before and ~e H~skm isn. t con- Mesa on the Mustangs· Battling for the No. 3 half of the Trojans are ceding the game to Ca~. course. and 4 positions are junior sophom~es. tn addition, V~lley, h.e doe~look al it Mik e Vucirti c and Messinl .says he doesn't wi.~hreallty. . . f'01111tal11 "~ s op horn ore M a r ti rt have a front runner to They will defarutely Fount a 1 n vane y Hernandez. T~ squad is compete with the to p ?,verpower ~s. ",he says. High's Barons will ,bit-round~d out py· Mlk4: man on opposing teams We aregOlngtotry and tough again in cross W<10dlo:ck. Ste.ve B?nd1 in the always tough play, defense and hold country with the entire and Jim Dascouh~s. South Coast League. ''A them down a~ ~uch as varsity squad intact with with other contenders in· lot of teams will go 1.2 on we can. We wall Just run the exception of No. 5 eluding Eric Wieb• us and that's going to off tackle when we have and No. 1 from the '76 Mike Worthylake, Steve hurt us:" the b~ll, but.the only way crew. Neil and Tom Buck. J 0 h n s ch i Ph 0 rs t ~e ':"111 stay in the ~ame Coach Bill Thompson N_etDpf/f"t. Bar.,hr (lO:ll) and Tony Powell 1.swi~ourdefense. has Brian Appell (9:26 ln Head coach not select-<10: 16.6> have been elect-Elsmore was l~ Jast the two-mile and 4:21 e", information un-ed captains fort.hisyear. seas~n, winning from credits in the mile>, Kurt ~ The other varsity can-P e rri.,s. Buhler (9:35 two-mile), available. • didat.es are--seniors ~e · John Sprietzer (9:55 two· EAIUOll Fredrickson and Rod mile> and juojor l\ick The Chargers of Boyle, juninr s Dale Golf Results Smootlnthetoia. Edison (Huntlngtpn Beesmer. ·Bob Starich And, juniors Steve Beach> HJgb c~ss coun-ClO:l8) and Sam Walling AANCHOSANJOAOU•NOC B V I d F.l 1 Odd Holt• Tourn•m•"': A row D. a ens try coach Gor on i ze (10 :38) and sophs Todd FllQM-1. u1e1 Glnnv Slako, £11een Hernandez and senion have four returning Andrews (l0:18}, Ralph v rac.ovrn, JJ. e Flloflt-1. enen D . n...1.ty and Gary • b t it till McW.lnl•v. U Vt. c jlOfloht-1. \.ou eruus..,wv., ·st;lr,.ers u s SutterandTorySmith. w111-.,331 2.1tel Mltf"Allil1r1o11t, Tblbeaulhre.avaUable. figures to be an uphill "We were third in ClF ~-1tot11-.•~0F11Q11C-1.11e1. But. 'Thompson says it battle in S\lnset League (3-A) last year and we ivV•~,~CA .. V«*tc won't be a breeie in the warfare. won it the year before so n,.. Low oa11J ot "'""°"'• Sunset League. "It's 10· .. Fountain VaJley. we have a pret•y aood T--...: 1. J-Hlftln, Arie • f " • Bl'VWl\Ol-Hell,.._C>lole,217; in& to.bet.be same type 0 Westminster' Hunt-tradition," Messina said. 2. To!llOtlpflent.~••Uev,Helen fiiht as 1976," says in oton Beach and "Wewanttollve uptoit Anderson,"°"' .. NI•:"' e1 .. 110 .. Tb "Edi e \.Hl11111\'. "'"lit ~l ... r, LoulM ompaon. son, Marina all flgure to be butit will be pretty hard. N1•,Jor<•a.tc.tte11or,t1'- Marlna, Westminster tough," says Fitzelr wbo-;::;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;~;;;~~~iii~ii~;=;;;;:;;::;' and Hunttngton Beach is countln1 on tbe return are capable ot challeng. of ae.niors Milt., Slobom, • lng." • Billy Anderson and John Brown is a 4:30 miler, Goldstein. along with Hernandez wu the lead· junior Mike Lanadon, for Lna junior varilty runner the bullt of the ~argers' in "le and ll running wttb point.a. Sophotnore Mark t.he top five no\lv, Duddy SandersloomsastJtebest was No. 4 in '76 and prospect amoni non· Thibeault. WU No. I OD retumtnaatartera. th~ j"'1101 .. 1arllty ladder. Others who could help ,,......... are .seniors John Glltin, Hendrik Klrlels and Bob Martoa High <Hunt· Smythe. initcm Beach> hu a new tnjurlea cut h\to croa eountry coach, but E ~tao n in • 1 e wit b not muota •l•• hu stobom end Goldstein cbaqed-tbe team 11 hobbled. At UC lrvlne atilt expected to be a tltle the Cbaraen were at contender and m•ke a their best with Goldstein I 1tlOQlabowlqlnCJF. (9!'3), Lamdon (t:4T), r MARMADUKE by Brid Andenon \. ~ w l,··· ..••.. , • . 9·1S" "I didn't know they had an obedience class al Vista Grammar!" FUNKYWINKERBEAN MISS PEACH • ~EtLi Sc:HOO~ ~LAJ21DN i El>lfl»~~L ' Offtc.ft I .___~ l . ~ow vo Ybv ~NOW 7 I by Tom Batiuk ! TAU<ED lO THE ~l~CIPAl AND HE ~5 ~ HAVE 1D LET 1HE FOOTSAU.. 1EIW\ 50 C,OO'LL JUsr HAVE TO "ffiKE <,JOUR BAND El)IVIE- WHERE ELSE. ! <,ru MEAN "ffiE.Y HAVE. TO PRAC.llC£ 10PLAQUKE1HAT+ , ~KE ON-rnE ~·uAL.L. Fl~Df TANK McNAMARA MOON.MULLINS Pnt! MAY I SPEAK TO )t>tJ IN PRIVATE', N.Oot.J? ~~' TODAY'S -CROSSWORD PUZZLI aspect 40 Preminger 12 Sarah ··-. and Eno Hart>ech aclress 41 Journahsl 13 Prec1p1t1lion Nellie··· IOfm 43 Livestock's Ot)WN 1 Withdrew 19 In harmony: grazing abruptly 2 words areas 2 Unfrequented 21 Cash on 44 Exactly right 3 Branch of delivery: 45 Defeat learning Abbr. unupec- 4 Place 01 24 Group ol tedly dl'treu: 2 plants 46.Suffhc with words 25 Marah bird radio or tele 5 Man'a 28 Extrude 47 Past the nlokname a lowly prime 6 Nut tree 27 Hot rcick 49 Mtnltoba 7 De,erve 28 Biller lndlan 8 AllCleftl 29 Hetd men 51 Ftbled giant Burma 30 Fabric 52 Stablllzes MJ Sank villaQt 32 Golf COUl'H prlcea oubllcly 90oltfedefate l11ture !53 ~ngers 41 Hair oolOi' eotdltr: 34 Engllah 55 -11p: Add •2 RIYtr to the lnfonnal oompoaer 56 Stumble Ob . 10 Matk wlth 35 M1rrle1 57 Cookbook 4'flat 1pol1 378oftCllM.. tbbr. turflCel 11 Facial 31Moregaucty by Jeff Millar and Biil Hinds TUMBLEWEEDS HUSMNP HUNT!R'S HANPt!JOOK Always·~ a la~WU're witiLHlln,Pu.ture · .ilk.ea Frincess. s.ctwell·brOO.and. geu.tee1. · l I l • • by Wm. F. Brown and Mel CaSSOft • t t-J~Vesz tZe{tAt, JA'V ~5 OF' IN~AllO~ f DOOLEY'S WORLD · MOTLEY'S CREW f"' l..OOK A'f 11' 1Hl5 :'t WAY, NCTl-fX,. Hl6~~~. ~~y 1'.AXc;~ MEAtJ M1$E~ ~ 'IAUJ6. by Mell by Gus Arrtola - l!u!day, S!pmbtt 15, 1971 DAILY PIL01" • 85 PEANUTS by Charles M. Sc"ulz THAT WA5N1T SUCH A DtF!=ICUlT QUe.;;r10N AFTER ALL~ by Roger Bradfield )bl.I Ne/ER LfJ\RIJ If YOU OON'r ASIC QUESTIONS! " ..• eo1'" HE! PIPN~,... KNOW 'THA1'" NANCY ·P~EW'S 1"0Y' PIS°IOL-WAS 1..-0APeP WllH PLJM•PLJN>. CAPS ..• " GERIATRIX -t . . . - • ;o&.u·~~ ll . error 1 1 a •I • ; ; .BliSIB·eM ~·Ejes ~·. ,u.:zing With Poteer ¢incinnati to~ F.omeany engineer Charles 1 • ~mmings, 4~ts at the wheel of the elec· \J 1C car he ma(le for $3,500 by using ~od,ified parts. He says addition of another motor w<?uldgive the car capability pf st>eed up to65 mdes per hour: ; '•I . , l •• ' ,.,, Edison Rates Hiked " .:PU(:, Approves 7~2o/o Average Temporary Jump . , . .~LOS ANGELES CAP) -provaJ this week of an applica-3.3percentmoreontheexcess. ;)Outhem California Edison has tion filed by the utility in June, A Southern California Edison q~nn granted temporary rate in· and will remain in force until spokesman said the increase if.mases averagi~~ 7 .2 percent energy costs are reviewed again would work out to about 73 cents Re.cause of add1t1onal .e.nergy late this year. on an average biU of $21.66 for a . ~~ts due to drought cond1hons, a residence using 500 kilowatt ~t.~tc Public Utilities Commission "NONE OF THE increase will hours a month. <.~pokeswoman said . be passed on to residential usage , ,Carol Kretze r said the in- • creases took effect immediately <"fo1lowi.n4 the commission's ap- of 300 kilowatt hours or less,'' Ms. Kretzer said. · Owners of homes using more thaa 300 kilowatt hours will pay .. Car Sales .Increase OTHER INCREASES ap- proved were 8.4 percent for agricultural use, 8.3 percent for commer~ial use, 10.6 percent for industries and 8.4 percent for public authorities. . DETROIT CAP) -The pace of domestic cars sales in early Sep- tember was the highest for the period In 22 years, witb the industry reporting a gain oCllpercent.!rom.the.iuneperiod.lastyea.r. _ . Ms. Kretzer said that because or the drought, the utility was un- able to 'purchase hydroelectric wwer from Northern California, Washington and Oregon tbii year and was forced to buy hJgher· priced fuel olJ. · . The four major car makers reported Wednesday that dealers In its application for the ·in· creases, Edison asked that the new rates take effect Aug. 1. qelivered 180,725 cars in the Sept. 1·10 span, compared with 163,052 , .in the same period a year ago. I , PORD MOTOR COMPANY SAID that during the period it sold a record number of cars, 55.94~. tor a 9.5 percent increase Crom 1976. THE UTIUTY HAD expected The only manufacturer to show a decrease was troubled to realize $39.4 million additional American Motors Corp., which said Jts sales teU 28 percent from a revenue from the increases over yearagoto3,338. the three months ending Nov. 1 The industry's daily sales rate for the period was 22,591, the best but because the commission did early September since 19M, when a record 23,812 cars a day were not act until this week the addi· sold. The latest rate was second-best for an early September. The · tional revenue tor the period will dfily rate is the industry's ya{dsJ.ick for con1paring sales in period.! be about half that figure,, Ms. ~icl\ hav•" differe~\!ii:•'f'lJusip.., ~~\ \ Kretzer said. . ly TERRY GIANT", llP'\. Physicians advise that ' one should not stop up one Mde or the n06e and then blow the other. Some of the force will back up into the throat. Also. germ-laden mucous might be driven into the )Diddle ear wi? a ,possible in fec on re~ulting. Blow your nose genUy. It must last you a lifetime. Don't pick or pull hairs from , ll. ,A. · serious infection •Y be ca used. And, if It troubles you and ~me remedies don't glve quick help, don't delay. • Go to your physician ror inspection and skilled treatment. YOUR DOCTOR CAN .Slo~~ (;rOWth Due, • Bank's ·Report Says The nation won'Ua.ce a recession tn 1978, but economic growth will slow throughout t.he year and quite slug. gUsh by year-end, according to an economic forecast by Security Pacific BanJc. . In releasing some highlights of the quarterly economic report, e<:onomist and senior vice president, t>r. Robert T. Parry said the next y~ar·s growth pattern will heij> keep a lldoolnflalion. "SLOWER GROWTB iN such key areas as retail sales, Inventory 1m~nt. ~1 J~ and employment will prevent inflation from escalating as 1l did a few years ago," PareyJaid. bank's latest forecast says the exi)ect· ed slower economic growth, plus an easing from the recent unsustainable • surge in homebuilding, will affect job gains in 1978. "This' slowing of erowth, coupled with the constantly growing workforce, will make it more difficult to cut our nation's job leas rate In 1978 much below an estisnated 6.7 percent 'compared with 1977'& projected rate of 7.2 percent," Parry said. Turning to some of the admlnistra· tioo's proposals and th~ potenUal Impact on the economy, the bank forecast says some may face "tough sledding" ln Congress, specifically those on energy and reforms of tax, welfare and social security programs. .,arry said the adminls(ratlon 's energy patkage probably wiU be ·modified extensively as it aoes tbroup Congress. PHONE US wbeo you '11eed a medicine. Pick up 1~our preacrlpUoo U •horplng nearby. C>I' we wil deliver prompt\)' without extra charge. A great many p eopl e entrust us' with their preacrlptlona. MaY we compound yourt? "Wblle tbe national rate ot lnflation will average around 6 percent neXt year, uP very slightly from 1917's pro.- jecU!d ~. '1 percent, it will be well below the double-digit ratea of a7f.~~,,~.sbould l~rwe 1teadl-, ly ~ou~ lm/' be satd~''lh tum, consumer price lnfiatlon should ~o down from WI )'ear•1 eaim.Jted 8. 7 percent to 5.8 percent in 1978." Irvine Fnm Celebrates · PAii UDO PMilMACY Jll~ .... .....,:-.._. 641·tHO He said the expected slowdown lD consumer prices will stem from only -srad,ual rises tn food pricea tor tbt ' consumer and a levelln1 off ii) enero price inllatlcn from the 1lrarp lJl· creas~otrecentyears. ' ON TllB OVTLOOJC for employ-ment UIU.Altm'a ~rate, the The 20,oootb "'Naked Mint" com· put.er rou.ct olt· the au~mbly line at ComPUter AutomaUon, Inc .• Irvine, in time to take part in the compuy'a 10th anrdvenary celebrati90. The "computer on a bod'' was presented to the Data Syatems Division of :Xerox Corp. durlb,- ceremonies markln1 Computer Auto,matton's eompleUon Qf lta flrat dec9dct· OAILY PILOT . • , . ... Quiet Meet ltefl,ects-Multitmtionat·'l'retfW ., ~ i By JOHN CVN~1 F [' ) &•diets or guns or cages at J A two~~\~ ence la NEW. ANALYSIS proVideueatofsec:urlt.y. 1 scheduled in Chlca'o ater th1a Th;ls belnc so. the be•t prt>~d- month on the .ubJ~tt. "Ter-tlonusHldtobealowproflle. t .-orism an~ the AmerJc•IJ derstand their countries. ..DON'T MAKE. A pubA Corporation. No reporters wlU Th .... · th b d personality o' yourself If 1 be per_mit~ed to attend. No rt· rou ... .,-norance ey l\m er. doesn't advanc' your ~ompany, .,. gtstr~t1on ~st wlll be published. Thia viewpoint i.s supported to says Weiner. New,-p·aper ads T~. said the sponsors, is in ~a:'cs =~ r:.~a:edc~e~== featuring the ch\ef execullve at~ keep10g with the best defena• ahowint Amerlc_an multlna-foollshfromh.l$potptofvlew II I against terror.ists : "To •tudy Cionals and their executiv"• But the detaib we won't h; tbem as they are studytn1 you," 1 t_ .. • .., aboUt. becatase terrorism ls and to make tHe ~ompany &J'd ex· • t~c;:-;1= Y of ~ne U:~Cf!'~~ combated by witbholdlnc ~ ecutives tncoosp1cuou.s if to do ao wblcb they work. formation from potential tt won't hurt the company's The horror of it all, 85 Welner rorist&, and in today's socie fortunes. views it, is that these misun-potential terrorists may "TERRORISTS Jl ... RELY deratandings o(len Invite ter-stand out. The rostrum )> ,. rorism.-speakers does, however. giv strike at random," the advance somebi.ntotl;helasues. , literature relates. "They often AN AMERICAN mulUnaUonal l research corpor~te targets in in Ireland that never appreciated -J . Bowyer Bell, of th.e depth. They review annual re-the depth of the religious eonfllct' Institute of War and Pel\,C~ ports and develop carefully con-there found, belatedly, it bad Studies, Columbia University; is structed plans to exploit existin& employed only Protestants in author of the forthcoming boO~ vulnerabilities." · · I "The Democrat1'c Respo"•• . aupervHory poS1t ons. and ,....., . Sfsns of the times : This is Cathollcsasunderl.\Ogs. Terrorism." i. only one of a multitude or social. -American companies ; ~ { politic a I . operate in Canada wJthout an Wl· • -L. DEAN BROWN, pr~ • bureaucratic deratanding of the Quebec dent of the Mlddle East lnstJtut~. and other con-Separatist movement when, as is former deputy undersecretar~ cerns facing· -Probe and some of its outside ex-of state and was the'"President to d a y · s perts believe, the Separatists.are s pecial repr¢senht1ve t multinational gaining and civil war cannot be Lebanon. ' , 1 companies -ruled out. -Miles Copeland was a s--~..L. onlyoneofthe For multinatiooab, problems ·official of the Centra~'n· i s s u e s o n are multitudinous. ~artier con-w h ich com. ferences dealt wilb opportunities tellisence Atency, Lt, Gen. Beq·, 1 panies such and dilticultiea in tbe Middle jamin J>avis, Jr. 4leveloped the as Probe In-, · cu•1N1 East, bribery and corruption, U .s. antibiJackJng pi-ogram, ternationaldestenduponforallv· boycott and aatlboycoU, Jamea Ingrim la with the ing. • Eurocommlurtsm 8ftd prospects Federal Bureau of lnvesuaa· Probe is a tiny but tnfluentlal in Vietnam (immediately: nll; tion. • • ' intelligenc:e concern operated out _ long range: modest>. of Stamford, Conn., by Benjamin Weiner, a former foreign service officer in Southeast Asia, Europe and WashingU>n, D.C., its main client is the multinational cor- poration. CONCERNING POLITICAL issues, said Welner, multlna- tionals might be land-based but really .. they are out at sea.." They operate on assumptions and half-truths; they do not UD• IN ALMOST ALL situations, the prospect for tert'Ortsm or dis- ruption is inherent. And since the corporations know little about dealing with the problems, Probe bas succeeded with its "trouble oriented meetings," once believed to be an anathema. lls p~mptive attac~ against terrorism begins with the thesis that there ls nothing you can buy to protect yourself. There are no You get the idea. They're not the kind of men of whom you ast "how's businss?" They've gpl other things on their minds. · : Job Nears End I . ' I . I . ~ou1der Bros .• Irvine, repotts lt ts nearing completion of' a $16,000 landscaping contract at the t. Magnin, store in the Sooth Coast Plaza shopping camp1ex1 , f I .............. 11!11 ............................ ~..................................: I Over The Counter HASD U.tings I \ U:%in9 With Power . · inciru:iau toy c~mpSny engineer Charles \ ~ .~mnungs, 45. Slts at the wheel of the elec· 1 ~J •C car he made for SJ,500 by using modified parts. He says addition of another motor W<?uldgivethecar capability of speed upto65 m1lesperhour. b•I ·. . , ,,,,. ,,,, Edison Rates ·Hiked .. .~PU(', Appr~ 7.2o/tJ Average Temporary Jump .~ los ANGELES <AP) -'proval th.is week of an applies· 3.3percentmoreontheexcess. ~ulhem California Edison has tion filed by the utility in June, A Southern Call!ornia Edison .turJJn granted temporary rate in· and will remain in force until spokesman said the increase Jf.r~ases averagtJ:i1; 7 .2 percent energy costs are reviewed again would work out to about 73 cents l?ecause of add1t1onal .e.nergy Jatelhisyear. on an average bill of $21.66 for a . ~§ts due to drought cond1t1ons, a residence using 500 kilowatt ~t.~~c Public Utilities Com mission "NONE OF THE increase wiU hours a month. ~~pokeswomansaid . be passed on to residential usage ·.·,Carol Kretzer said the in- • creases took effect immediately clt>l~owinf the comm lsslon 's ap- of 300 kilowatt hours or less," Ms. Kretzer said. Owners of homes using more than 300 kilowatt hours will pay OTHEJl INCREASES ap. proved were 8.4 percent for agricultural use, 8.3 percent for commercial use, 10.6 percent for indus_tries and 8.4 percent for public authorities. · • . .. Car Sales Increase Ms. Kretzer said that because or the drought, the utility was un· able to purchase hydroelectric p0wer from Northern California, Washington and Oregon this year and was forced to buy h!gher- priced fuel oil. Ol I . DETROIT <AP) -The pace of domestic cars sales in early Sep- tember was the highest. for the period in 22 years, witb the industry reporting a gain of ll_percenlfrom thehmeperiod last year. · . The four major car makers reported Wednesday that dealers .. cfelivered 180,725 cars in the Sept. 1-10 span, compared with 163,052 , •n the same period a year ago. In its application for the .in. creases, Edison asked that the new rates take effect Aua. l . . FORD MOTOR COMPANY SAID that during the period il sold a record number of cars, 55.~. for a 9.S percent increase from 1976. THE UTllJTY HAD expected to realize $39.4 rmllion addiUonal revenue from the increases over the three months ending N'ov. 1 but because the commission did not act until this week the addi· tional revenue for the period will be about half that figure,. Ms. Kretzer said, The only manufacturer to show a decrease was troubled American Motors Corp .. which said Its sales fell 28 percent from a year ago to 3,338. The industry's daily sales rate for the period was 22,591, tbe best early September s ince 1955, when a record 23,812 cars a day were sold. The latest rate was second-best for an early September. The dtily rate is the industry's Yll(ds .. ek for coqaparing aales in periods ~id\ haV•• differe~~l}:·qf~usipNJ-q~1 "\ < . lyTUH GU.MT, llrk. Physicians advise that 1 one should not stop Up one side of the nose and then blow tbe other. Some of the force wlll back up Into the throat. Also. germ-laden mucous might be driven into \he ,i;nlddle ear with a possible inflctlon "resulting. Blow your n08e genUy. Jl must last you a 1Helime. Don't pick or pull hairs from il. ,A. serious lnfecUon may 6e caused. Andi. if it troublee you ana home remedies don't 1lve quick help, don't delay. • Go to your physician for inspection and skilled treatment. SlO;wing _Growth Due, Bank's Report Says The nation won 'ti ace a r~ess1on In 1978, but economic growth will slow throughout the year and qui.le slug. glish by year-end, according to an economic forecast by SecUrity Pacific Bank. . In releasing some bigblights of the quarterly economic report, economist ~nd senior vice presidenl, Dr. Robert T. Parry said tile next y~ar·s growth pattern will he{J>keep a lidoninflation. "SLOWER GROWTH iN such key area. as retail saJes, Inventory ·m~ Jeramal ~·~ and employment wm prevent inflation from escalating as it did a few years ago:• Parry said. bank's latest forecast. says the exiiect· ed slower economic growth, plus an easing from the recent unsustainable surge in homebuilding, will affect job gains in 1978. ''ThiB' slowing of erowth, coupled wilb the constantly growing workforce, will make lt more d.ilf'lcult to cut our nation's jobleis rate in 1978 much below an esUinated 6.7 percent 'compared with um·~ projected rate of7.2percent," Parry said. Tt,im1ng to some of the adminlatra· tion'a prop()Sals and th~ir potenUal impact on the economy, the bank forecast says some may face .. tough sleddlng" in Congress, specifically those on energy ana reforma of tax, welfare and social security programs. llarry sald the administration's energy package probably wlU be ·modified extensively as it aoea throl.llh Con&resa. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE us wbeo )'OU 'lleed a medicine. Pick up t~our prescription H •hopping nearby. or we will deliver promptly without extra charce. A great many people entrust us' with their prescrlptlona. Ma9 w~ compound youn1 ''Wblle tbe national rate of t,lflation will averaee around 6 percent neXt. year, '-J> very slightly from 19'7'1's pro- jected 5.1 percent, it wlll be well below the double-digit rates of 1914-Ji'T.54 ~16b0'1ld iJ9.~rpxe 'teadl· , ly tbi'ouiooul 8'8," he s&Jd: "rn turn, consumer price 1nflaUon should to down from thla year'• estimated 6.7 percent to $.8percent1n 1978." Irvine Fum Celebrates · PAIK UOO PMAIMACY ,.,~ .... ....,,::-642-1110 Re aald the expected slowdown 1n consumer prices will stem tro.-> only .gra®al rises 1n food prices for tJ,o · • conaumer and a levellns off b).. eaieru ptice inflation from the sharp In· creases of reeent yeara. f ' ON TllE OVft,00"_ f<>f empla,· Dient IJkltlleAltlea•1 J°'*9 rate, the ~ The 3>,000th. ''Naked-Mint" tom· puter roUed oil· the aaaembly line at Com~Automatlon, Inc., Irvtne. ln time to take part in the C0111PU1'• loth amdvenary celebration. 1'Jw 0 ClOIDputer on a board"' WU prenoted to the Data Syatems Division of Xerox Corp. durlnc ceremonies marking Computer Auto.sn.uon11 eompletlon ol lta flnt d~~. ' OAll V f ltOl • By JOHN CUNNIFF AP~&Aetr• A two-day conference is scheduled ln ChJcaco later th1a month on the 1ubJect, "Ter· rorhm and the AmerjcatJ Corporation." No reporters will bl! peS'fllit.ted to attend. No r•· gtstration Uat will be publlsbed. This, said lhe sponsors, is in keeping with the best def~ against terrorists: ·'To 1tudy tbem as they are atudylnl you," and to make the companv and ex· ecutlves inconspicuous 1f to do 10 won't hurt the company 's fortunes. "TERRORISTS RARELY strike at random," the advance l~ter,ature relates. "They often research corporate targets in depth. They review annual re- ports and develop carefully con- structed plans to explolt existinr vulnerabilities." Sicns of the times : This is only one of a multitude of social, political , t bureaucratic ; and other con· ·cerns facing • today's multinational companies - only one of the i ss u es o n 'which com· panies such as Probe In· cu•1..,. ternational depend upon for a llv· ing. •. , Probe ~ a tiny but lntluenUal intelligence concern operated out • of St.amlofd, Coon., by Benjamin Weiner, a former foreign service officer in Southeast Asia, Europe and Washington, D.C., Jts main client is the multinationiti cor· poration. CONCERNING POLITICAL issues, said Weiner. multina· tionals might be land-based but really .. they are out at sea.." They operate on assumptions and half-truths;_ they do nol un· . . ( NEWSANALYSIS J dersta nd their countries. Through irnorance they bl\mder. This viewpoint 1s auppo,,ied to some dearee by a Conference Board study released this week abowlng American multina· tionals and their executlv~s ,core poorly when tested on their knowledie of Ule countries In which they work. The horrorol it all, u Weiner views it. is that these misun- derstandin1s orten invite ter- rorism. AN AMERICAN multinational in Ireland that never appreciated the depth of the rellgious conflict' there found, belatedly, il bad employed only Protestants in supervisory positions, and Catholics as underlings . -American companies operate in Canada without an un· derslanding of the Quebec Separatist movement when, as Probe and some or its outside ex· perts believe, the SeparaUsts are gaining and civil war cannot be ruled out. For multinationals, problems are multitudinous. Earlier con· ferences dealt with oi>Portunitles and difficulties in the Middle Ea.st, bribery and corruption, boycott and anttboycoU, Eurocommtmism and prospeets in Vietnam Ornmed.iately: nil; long range: ~est>. IN ALMOST ALL situations, the prospect for terrortsm or dis· ruption is inherent.. And since lhe corporations know little aboul dealing with the problems, Probe has succeeded with its "trouble oriented meetings," once believed to be an aoalllema. · Its pre-emptive auacll; against terrorism begins with the thesis that there is nothing you can buy to protect yours~lf. There are no . I I I I ~ z1 , I aad«eta Of suns or uses \hat~· proYlde 1ueal of security. ~ I This beJoi 10. th' bett p~ tlon ii Mid to be a low prolile. "i ··DON'T AKE A puba personaUty o/ yourself l! l doon't advance_.rour compan)f, 'i says Weiner. Newapaper adi featurin& the cb.\ef executive ~• foolish from b1e motnt of vlew~ ... But the detalf.t we won't abotlt, beca\a.,e terrorism lt combated by wltbholdlns i formation from potential tt roristl, a.nd in today's soelel potenu.i terrorists may s tand out. The rostrum )> s peakera does. however, gtv some hint of thd llsues. I -J . Bowyer Bell, of t,h.e Institute of War and Pe~cp Studies. Columbia University, Ji author of the lorthcominl boO~ "The Democratic Response ; Terrorism.·• / -L. DEAN BROWN, pr~l­ dent of the Middle East lnsU~U4 is former deputy undersecre of state and was the President s pecial repre1ental1ve t Leb=~ Copeland w~ a s-h official of the Central~· telligeoce Agency. J.;t. Gen. Be'l· Jamin Davis, Jr. developed the U.S. antlhijackln1 progrun, James Ingrim la with tb~ ~ederal Bureau of lnvesUilf· taon. • • . ; You getthe idea. They're not the kind of meo of whom you ~le "how's businss?'' They've ~ otheT things on their minds. • . ' . • I . . 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I 21 Ut UnTc1>oOJ2 11110 '> U11IT~I 111 • 11 201' • " UnlT l pll '.IQ U I~ t un1ver S6 I I! ' •. ., , Unlv~d I 11 I ,, '1~ • '• Urtl .. I ' • I 18 )(),\(, • I. UPI°"" I JOU 71\ 35"\ 1> USLIFE 41 I 12' 1e• t -14 Utllltf -ti 11'• Ul•nP\. I.it 10 101 10''" "· UtPLDI 1 llD U :n -Y -Y -~t.'&,.p 1:: 1 '1 ~~. . .. V•lleyln «121 &I l''t •'o Varian .U U 222 11\'o .. <\ Vero1nc: ~ • 1 IO'". Vt nOo . I ~-... Ven1t• l'I . I ''\ ', VHISt l.Jll' • !4 !l•e ... Yetto .21eJO 2119 20'" •!Vil VI.COM .10U 110 11'1t + If> VeEPw 1.24 I "' 111.,.,. , V•E P pll IO . 1211 S$11t-''J V•EPpf t .1$ •. rS010 IOI t 'It V•C ~2'0 .. II Jl''I ... V•E J r.n .. dO " •• ,, V•C. IJfl.lO •• tlSO ti'>• l''r ~:~=' 1.10.; li J~ : ~ l'hur!9. ~ 11. '877 I IN DAIL V '9tLOT Deqcg,eats All Bal.dts Help U ~on -Up Debts By MILTON MOSKOWIT'l The ko.y to :s ucc•tslul 1el1Ul1 ... to make it euy for cu1tomer to buy. Th.A.Oki IQ the credit card, banks ha 1ruped that key. And .. they turn lt. they are well ~ their way to openinc the door t6 baokl'uptcy -for us. 1be messaees banks dJte(t at us. in \heir ads and ot.her published materlala. make 1t appear as If they are in the public service business . We 're almost expected \0 respond ''Thank you." 1 IN FACT. OF COURSE. banks are as much In DHI u an apparel company or food processor. They, t have a product to sell They. too. hope to sell that p at a profit. Tbep~oct banks bave tosfll Ls money They buyJt you and me and others at one rate -say. In lbe fora\ ot I in11 accounts. the qua rterly interest you receive belnl pr1ce you 're getting for your money. And then they loan k at a higher inter~st rate. The bulee between what they pay for their money and what they get for loaning It r epresents tbelr profit margin. Money r Tree Before the advent of the credit card. if you wanted to borrow money from a bank, you had to fill out a long ap- plication form. It was a cumbersome affair, and bamrers were never famous for making the small borrower feel comfortable: Today bankers have made It easy for w. to become ins· tant borrowers. Just go to a st.ore or hotel or car rental agency or airline ticket counter. nash your card and - presto -you have the product or service you desire. IF YOU PAY THE MONTHLY BILLING In full ff8hl away. It doesn't cost anything extra. But In practice two out or three cardholders cannot -or do not ·-pay In Cull . And what. we don't pay immediately becomes a loan -at 18 percent. aMual interest. Al firs t the bank credit card business proceeded along two trac k s. The r e was o n e group that issuetl BankAmerlcard while a nother 1roup issued Master Charge. Now. though, the business has taken a wlld \Ur'1) -' Banks that issued BankAmertcards <this name Is beiri~ ebanged to Visa > can issue Muter Charge cards . Add M~ter Charce banks are free to Issue Vis a cards. /l£. a· result, banks are hustling to set their cards into your hands. The nation's lar1est. Banlc or America, has some 4.5 million Visa cardholders in California. On Feb. 15 It began issuing Master Charge cards as well. n ~s already issued 800,000 Master Charge cards . · MORE THAN V MILLION. BANK credit cards are already in the possession or American consumers. Tht: present drive by the banks to sign up cardholders can ex· pand lhal tot.al by two or three times It's now easy for ~u to get your hands on two, three, four cards. The banks don't care ir you don"t pay off the balances T hey're quite wUUng lo accept a minimum payment. 1'he smaller the paym ent, the bigger the interest on the out· standing balance In their teal to sell credit. the t)ankers will make dead· beats of us all tl' Market Slips Ahead. As Report Awaited • t NEW YORK <AP> -The s tock market moved ahealJ gradually today as traders awaited the Federa l Reserve~ weekly report on the money supplv • The Dow Jone:, ave rage or 30 industrials was up 2. points to88>. 79. Gainers held o 4·3 lead over losers among New ') Stock Exchange·lli.lcd issuei.. · · . Trading rem ained quiet. Big Board volume came 18.23 million shares . The market appear ed to draw some support Crom a r port by New York's Citibank that asserted that the econotrt' was still showing solid signs of vitality 4 But analysts noted that the mam subject on investor minds was the report dn the money supply due to be issu by the Federal Reser ve at the NYSE close tod11y. . I Doael••~•A ~rogn MJaat Stulir.Old ·1 NfW Yorll "'"' l'IN I Oow-Joll•s ''""'99ff ST~CS 0J)efl Hl9" L.ow CloM OIQ JO llld IS~ M a.6. I& ISS SI 860.1 .. 1.01 10 l"I llt.• 211.0~ 211.0. ,., .... 0.71 IS VII Ill '1 llU 6 111 SI 11) ?l .... . '' Srt m.Jt 2'l.11 m• m .14• u • ~~':.' ·. · .. :·. ·:.::·.:...... ··~-= ~s11!~ . ·:::·::::::::.::··.~::·· ,.m:: lip• and aoacn• I NEW VOl!I( •AP> ·-·l Ad•enetd '" Ot<ll,,.,, UI Vl'<M nood )tt ' :i:i: l~~Qll\ , .. , 1 lJ ...... "" ._. • $Al.H ' Due to late transmlssloni today's fisting wlll no appear In the Daily Piiot. WtlAT A'°"I JC DID 11 NEW Y()IUC (Af'I ,,, T-y ~.,..,.nc:.. "' ~IJ-t)I 2 (........ >04 ot11 1u..... .,, ........ "" lll9M 11 N"tw 1917 -. It It ' ... IAUS 1 Oue to late transmtssloci today's 11$tlng will no a~itr In the Dally PIJot~ StfH'k• IM The s,,.,, •• ,., ,, ) ... I .. DAit r I :L (J I Tl1u11day, S pt•mber 10 llt77 COASTWA.TCH: Tonight's TV Fare l'llt 'WSIM\ EVE NINO 5 00 8 0 0 I J~ NEWS 8 BONANZA /I, young ''~'" hrnan, btlll•v1ng ttimHll In 1 .. "'" , .. °' arn111on ol a lamou ~040t M>h At>out living th• m.111 11) .. Q WILD. WILD WEST r,..,. N1Q1tl 0 1 Th11 rreeboo1e11 Wn11 .. nd uornon 11111 4Sslgnod lo 1n11t1&11gdte i\n outl w army &10lng 1et ru1t11cl !or lhtt t OnQuttal of 8aJ11 Cdlllorn111 CD MICl<EV MOUSE CLUB (I) I DREAM OF JEANNIE fli) SESAME STREET ml MISTER ROGERS 5 30 m TOM AND JERRY Cl) ROOM 222 Qi) CARRASCOLENOAS 8-00 U CBS NEWS DO NEWS 0 EMERGENCY ONEI The paramedics talk down an air- plane piloted by a 14 ·year-old boy when the p1lo1 suiters ;:i hearr attack 0 MV PARTNER THE GHOST Escorting valuable cargo from Glesgow to London tums out to be a risky assignment tor Jell Randall and his ghostly partner m THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY Reuben feels he's not long tor this world when the Partridges start \ giving him special attention. «!) ALIAS SMITH ANO JONES Heyes and Curty try to lmd out why someone wants them to leave a town where they have found safe employment ED ELECTRIC COMPANY '1!) CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN A NATjON OF ORPHANS @)~BC NEWS 6:306 MOVIE * • * "Experiment In Terror" (Part 2) ( 1962) Glenn Ford, Lee Remick A terror-stricken glrl must aid the F B 1 in lhe capture of a master criminal ( I hr , 30 min ) Q) THE ODD COUPLE Ell) ZOOM '1!) PUBLIC POLICY FORUM · Freedom 01 The PrPs-i'.Aegula- llon Of The Media '\ 11.) CBS NEWS ®) MERV GRIFFIN 7:00 0 NBC NEWS Q LIARSCLUB Q ABC NEWS 0 CONCENTRATION Q) I LOVE LUCY "Nursery School Q) THE F.B I Er~k1ne 111es with an organized crime nng to locate 1:1 messenger and recover important e111dence before tl"la man can be killed. Ell) MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT ([) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7 :30 Q NEWLYWED GAME 0 THE GONG SHOW 0 JOKER'S WILD CD THE BRADY BUNCH The Brady k1dc; accompany Mike on a business trip to an amuse- \ REDD FOXX wlll headline hl1 own mu1lcal varie- ty series thl• fall, featuring some of the blgge1t name1 In show buslne11 .. guests. It's titled, simply enough, Redd Foxx •net premieres tonight at 10 on ABC, Channel 7. ment park. fl) 28TONIGHT "Displaced Homemakers" a\) SPECIAL :·including Me" Six '.handicapped children reach lhelr polenllal with the help of encouraging parents. teachers and friends. (J) CANDID CAMERA @) MATCH GAME P.M. 8:00 8 ({) THE WAL TONS (Season Premiere) With the out- break ol World War II, Rev Fordwtetc enlists In the Army. His chosen replacement is a good- looklng, charming young rebel (Peter Fox) who wins the approval of Ohvta but 1s opposed by Cora- beth (Ronnie Claire Edwards) 0 CHIPS (Premiere) Two bachelor motorcy· cle oHicers (Larry Wilcox. Erik Estrada) take on a sophisticated car-theft ring and a load of lndus- trlat glue splUed on the L.A free- way. 0 MOVIE '-* * • "The Desei't Rats" ( 1953) tM ov1f"\ •rt ratl!d M.corc:Uno to bO• ofti(f •tt~n<r Mt>v•~' lor TV •'f: 1udqtd llV a <rl!I( I * * • • -E1celfen1 . .. . -Vr~ry Good • • -Gooc1 .. -Fa11 • -Poo1 1 Richard Burton, James Mason. The commander of an Australian dl11l1lon forces his war-weary troopa to defend a key North Afri- can outpost. ( 1 hr .. 30 min.) D ®} WELCOME BACK, KOTTER (Season Premiere) " .. And Four's A Crowd" It's a big surprise -twins tor, papa Gabe and mama Julle (Parts 1 and 2 ol 3) G MOVIE *** "SOiomon And Sheba" ( 1959) Yul ~rynner, Gina Lollobri- glda Israelites revolt against the romaf'lce between the Queen ot Sheba and King Solomon. (2 hrs ) m NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL "The World Of Jacques-Yves Cousteau" Captain Cousteau and a crew of five lived and worked 328 feet below the Mediterranean sur- face for a month. Cl) PERRY MASON "The Case Of The Greek Goddess" Mason defends an old friend who Is charged wtth murder- ing a Greek Immigrant woman fJD MASTERPIECE THEATRE "Upstairs. Downstairs: Such A Lovely Man" The Beflamys face a social dllemma--Vlrglnia is invited out by a rich and pctlllllcally Influen- tial man whose help her husband. Richard, needs 8:30 a\) INCLUDING ME "Follow-Up" 9:00 8 (J) HAWAII FIVE.O (Season Premiere) An exotic new explosive Is hijacked. tor u~ in Northern Ireland. by a ruthless lrlah terrorist (Stephen Boyd) 0 ROCK MUSIC AWARDS Peter Frampton and Olivia Newton-JOhn wtll hoat this third annual show featuring the blggHt names In popular music al the HOI· l~oOd Palladium U OJ BARNEY MILLER (Season Premiere) "Goodbye Mr Fish" It 11 retirement day tor Detecttve Fish. but he can't be tound. Meanwhile. the rest of the squad tries to-slop a vigilante Q!_OUp. (Part 1 ol 2) CD MERV GRIFFIN g) BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE fm SPECIAL "Including Me" Six handicapped children reach their potential with the help of encouraging parents. teachd(s and friends Qt!) MdVIE * • • "Algiers" ( 1938) Charles.. Boyer, Hedy Lamarr An interna- tional 1ewel thief takes refuge In the exotic Casbah 9:30 8 FILM FE.A TURE 0 [VJ CARTER COUNTRY (Premiere) A Southern town's may- or (Richard Paul) gives a black. New York City-trained policeman ~Kene Holliday) the I/We ot telling the police chief (Victor French) he 1s not wanted on the dais welcom- ing the President 10:00 8 iJ NEWS 0 [VJ REDO FOXX (Premiere) A fast-paced, contem- porary comedy-variety show featurlng_guest atara. Cl>; ROOM 222 Ka\Jfman, attracted to a teacher who was once a nun. supports her when she's criticized tor advising a student who plans to become a minister ED MASTERPIECE THEATRE "Dickens Of London" At 19, Charles has discovered the cap- tivating Marla Beadnell, a banker's daughter who receives much of his attention (Part 3 of 10) ({) BARNABY JONES (Seasof'! Premiere) An unethical newscaster (Robec't Reed), In his attempt to aeate news. causes the death of a stuntmaf'I and a pnest 10:30 m Cl) NEWS 11:00 8 D 0 CJ)@) NEWS 8 HOLLYWOOD CONNECTION 0 IRONSIDE "Accident" m FERNWOOD 2NIGHT Guests: daredevll-turned--educator Vlrgll Simms. liquor lobbyist Elllot Tubbs. Cl) MARCUS WELBY. M.D. The relatlonshlp between Identical twins Is &fleeted when one Is badly burned. Ell) WOMAN "Pornography'· ml MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT 11:30 f) Cl) CBS LATE MOVIE ** "Cold Swear" (19741 Charles Bronson, Liv Ullmann A man and his wife are terrorized and held captive In their own home D TONIGHT Host: JohM)t Carson Guesll Johnny Mathia. Tim Conway Elayne Boosler, Steve Landesbef'g D LOVE. AMERJCAN STYLE A womaf'I decides to UM a love potion In order to get her long-time flance to propose 0 ®J POLICE STORY "The Cuttlf'lg Edge" When his part- ner retires , a thirty-year police veteran haa a hard time adjusting. Chuck CoMors. Sylvester Stallone ~eat alar. (R) m NEWS &:) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS MORNING 12:00 D TWILIGHT ZONE "A Kind Of Stopwatch" G MOVIE **'" "Kathy O" (1958) Dan OtJryea, Jan Sterling. A pony-tailed movie star's temper causes prob- lems for the studio publlcrty man (2 hrs ) CD CROSS-WITS Cl) MOVIE *'h "You Pay Your Money" (1957) Hugh McDermott. Jane Hylton A couple attempts to stop the thett or a valuable Arab manuscript ( 1 hr., 30 min.) ~ 12:30 8 M()VIE • * •;. "We're Not Married'' ( 1952) Dayid Wayne. Ginger Rogers. Five couples are surprised to learn that their marriages are Illegal. ( 1 hr . 25 min.) 8) MOVIE * * "The Ooollns Of Oklahoma" (1949) Randolph Scott. George MacReady. A former outlaw Is unable to escape his put. (2 hrs.) 12:378 ®)THURSDAY NIGHT SPECIAL "The Late Great 1968" A retros- pective of the year with host Hef'lry Gibson and guests Lt. William Calley. Tom Wolfe and Tammy Wynelle. (R) 1:00 0 TOMORROW Various religious cults will be dis- cussed by Carroll Stoner and Joanne Park. authors of 'All God's Children.· 1;30 Cl) MOVIE *'*'h "Larceny, Inc " (1942) Edward G . Robinson. Jane Wyman. An ex-con buys a luggage store as a means of access to the bank next door, but discovers he doesn't have to steal 10 make money. 1:558 NEWS 2:0000 NEWS 8 MOVIES * * * "City That Never Sleeps" ( 1953) Gig Young, Mala Powers. A young Chicago cop Is nearly led astray by a cafe entertainer. (2 hrs.) .-' * • "Sahara On Fire" ( 1963) Christian Marquand, Magali Noel A m•n struggles to bring In a') 011 well \vith the aid of a misfit err . (2 hrs.) 0 MOVIES • * "Female Animal'' ( 1958) Hedy Lamarr. Jane Powell A young 1tuf'll man savea the lite 01 a famous movie actreaa. (2 hr1.J • • • "Th• Ufa And Oeatt: 01 Colonel Blimp" (19431 Deborah l<err Antt>n WalbrOOk. A Britlst. Army oflloer Is unable to c:ope with the constant change his care« demand• (2 hrs.) 2:308 NEWS m MOVIES • *'h "Sign 01 The Ram" (19481 Susan Peter1, Alel<ander Knox. Driven by her tear of loneliness. an 1nvelld over-protects her family. (;1 hr., 30 min.) ** "The Mob" (19511 BrOderlak Crawford. Betty Buehler. A detec- tive poses as a dock worker and a gunman lo mtlltrate a gang Of waterfront racketeers. (2 hrs.) 3:00«1) NEWS 3:05 IJ MOVIE *•in "The Capetown Affair'' (1967) Clalre Trevor. Jamee Brolln Two South African aecret eervlce agents attempt to retrieve a roll or stolen clasallled rmcrorilm. (1 hr., 25m1n.) 4:25 8 NOO~TIME Friday's Daytbne Movies MORNING 9:00 G MOVIE * *'h "The Perfect Furlough" (1959) Tony Curtis, Janel Leigh. An Army officer Is accompanied by a female psychologist when he wlO• a week In Paris with a movie st•. (2 hrs.) 10:00 8 MOVIE * * * "Enchantment" ( 1949) David Niven. Teresa Wrlg_ht. All elderly man Is reminded of hla put romance when his grandson con- front• him with his love story. (2 hrs.) AFTERNOON 12:00 m MOVIE * * * "B F 's Daughter" (HMS) Barbara Stanwyck, Van Henln. An ambitious daughter of an induatrlal tycoon nearly ruins h« mamage by her dominance. (2 hrs .. 20 m1n.1 2:008 MOVIE * • • "Benqal Brigade" (1954) Rock H\Jdson. Arlene Dahl. One man staf'lds against the onslaught of attacking lndlan rebels. (1 hr., 30mln.) 3:00 [VJ MOVIE • **'"-"San Francisco'' (1936J Clark Gable. Spencer Tracy.A Bar- bary Coast gambler and his boy- hOod pal. now a priest, have dfffe~ ent reasons for cof'!cern over a young singer (2 hrs.) 3:30 0 MOVIE . * * 'h "Tribes" ( 1970) Darren ·' McGavin, Jan-Michael Vincent. Ao hippie creates problems for his tough drill sergeant because of his unconventional ways. ( 1 hr., 30 min, Tivo New Cop Slwws, Redd Foxx il[Debuts Tonight's TV Highlights 'Barth' Plays Bocker Hy JA \' Slli\RBUTT LOS ANGELES IAP I Thrc~ m·w sc•rlc!> wob· blc 1n t0n•Rhl a Ca lirornia High way Patrol party called "ClllPs" on NHC, Chan· ncl 4 at 8, anc.l J\ BC's "Cart.er Country" sit ~om and Redd Foxx· new comedy, music and old· limes hour on <.:hnnnel 7 We warn right orr the bat that NBC'i. entry ts a :.lone dog. Intended as action w1thout,gunfire, it ts show without mind. It stars Larry Wilcox and Erik Estrada as two cheery motorcycle cops Wilcox is your basic All-American, aw shucks boy. Estrada plays tt)e lady killer, "Ponch." Uc has a crooked s mile, but straight teeth. Both are dashing yo ung bachelors, Kawasaki Kids. if you will IN THEIR p remiere hour, they roar about, grin, meet a pretty crash vicUm and bring a hot· car ring to justice. Ponch also gets to fall in a mess or spilled glue and emit such classic llnes as: "If I ever scope that turkey again, I'm gonna pull him out throu1h his wind wina. se-at belt at. tached." ABC's "Carter Coun- try" is about a young, New York-trained black cop (Kenc Holliday> who l1 a ser(eant on the small-town. once all- wbHe O•otgia con · atabulary of Victor :Vrencb, who plays the \M>Uct cbJef. Tonlaht'1 premiere ln· ~olves a prealdenUal vi1- ·, t.; Fre n c h '• fried "chlckeoi a rnan·hunary, mlddl••Jed aectetary; a low.key redneck ln poll~ blue and a mayor •ho l•ar1 only ht• mother and rrenoh •: IP' TffE ahow hu a :-memorable Une, 1 forsot • ft. It'• just anotbtr .:ttoUY,WOOd attempt at • SoutMm humor, Wltb a .. T\' REVIEW few affirmative-action )nd mild racial gags tossed in to indicate pro· gress The Redd Foxx hour on'ABG has the only hope or success amon& tonight's new entries. and that hope is'faipt un- less he relies more on improved skits and less on a friendly. laugh-al· anything studio au· dience. He opens with a good bit involving two bogus world leaders . and follows with a passable monologue in which he notes ABC's censors "de· cided the only thing I could do from my night club actis smoke ... " But thlngs bog down with now-obligatory 1938 Anita Bryant Jokei., u s kit on how & black named Yuma, Arii.; a massage parlor routine. and a scene from "The Wiz" we saw on H. Cosell's variety s how t two years ago STILL, THREE good moments are worth your time -a too-brief visit from Iron Jaw Wilson, an old Foxx pal; a sur- prisingly good reading of "Easy to Love" by Foxx, and a largely j!Jlenl routine about inventors. The last has Foxic and Byron Paul, ex · executive producer of last year's Dick Van Dyke show on NBC, as inventors of identical and amazing mixing blenders. Had Foxx cut the dialogue, shortened the beginning and end, the routine would equal Ernie Kovacs' best. Starring CHARLES BOYER. and HEDY LAMARR NBC fi) 8:00 Chips. The only new cop show of the season , this one follows a pair of California Highway Patrol motorcycle officers ! Larry Wilcox and Erik Estrada Jon their rounds ABC f1 8:00 Welcome Back. Kot- ter. Gabe and Julie start off the new season by producing twins in this hour· long opening segment. Gabriel Kaplan stars. NBC U 9:00 Rock Music Awards. Pop stars tl,lrn out at the Palladium in Hollywood for this third annual event. hosted by Peter Frampton and Olivia Newton-John. ABC fJ 9:30 Carter Country. lt's "In the Heart of the Night" with laughs as a black policeman <Kene Holliday I joins the staff of a Southern-Cried sh~riff (Victor French> in this season premiere. Martin Mull. who is Barth Gimble on "Femwood Tonight." will play a rock superstar•on "Wonder Woman" Dean Jones and Paul Sand will star in "Once Upon a Urothers Grimm," a two-hour CBS Tbanksgiv· ing special. lllya Baskin and George Pusep. Jewish immigrant actor who were film stars ln the Soviet Union, wlll play Russians in ABC's, "The San Pedro Beach Bums · .. Pavid Gerber. executive producer of 'Police Story .. will participate in a workshop panel on television violence at the 84th annual Conference of the lntemallonal Association of Chiefs of Police in Los Angeles on Uet. S ... Phil Bruns, who was the father of TV's Mary Hartman, will pl~ .a shady gas station operator in MG ''Stingray" e .. ., . INQ - Tb.eater Sets Carnival Ono I camlval dtst•rve anoth r, aftd tb .HunU.niton Boac:b Pla)'ho •I• mlktnc plan• for It.I 1eeood annual ev ~\ln lb conUnwn1 c1mp1l1n to rJllailmoae7forapljldnan.entthe1t~homt Tbb year t.heV.Uvhles wUl be held Sept. 13, 34 and ~ ln the S.~llff vm ... $boppln1 Center ., M •lo and Yotlttown.1,1111. :::,.... the atrHl from the :::f 8i~~;;~~: ~;:~;;;~ wit.b ftona14' MacDona'd on nd to entertain tht you.aplC"tJboS.tu.rday f l l p AN ADD£D FEATVa MLL be. men'1 le1 contest, wtlb a prize offered for the btiriest llmb. En· trants should mall lheit appllcallona to Lb Snyder, J 01'75N. Feldnert21, Or.0&•821668 s Vohmteen also ·~ needecS for strolhna enter· l tainers juagle~. mimes, barber shop or folk sJngers, clowns,"'lc Those who can help out In thls i c:apaclt.y can call Miss Srutder at 973.()38() between 9 1 •.m.ancS4 p.m. • Hours Of the playhouse tarnivaJ will be from a to f mldnlibton Friday, 101.m. tomidni&htonS.turday J and 11a.ni.to10 p.m . Sunday. Proceeds will be uaed • to fUrther the Huntinaton Beach Playhouse building f, fund. ••• I ' COSTA MESA'SLAUli Black may be shooting I for the local record for playln& tbesame char act.er in S different productions of a play. ~ Laura already bu bad two shots at the part of • Bobbi in Neil Simon's "Last of lhe Red Hot Lovers." 1. the moot recent one with the Lido tale Playe'8. And J Producer Douglas i Cets Acting Rf>le J . I' LOS ANGELES <AP> -Jane Fonda, Jack Lem· 'mon and Michael Douglas wiU star in the action- s us pense movie "China Syn. I drone," which Douglas will pro- S du<·c forColumbia Pictures i ' f lt wall be Douglas' first production since lhe Academy Award winnjng "One F'lew Over the Cuckoo's Nest " I I l I I I DOUGLAS ------ .James Bridges will direct und write the screenplay for an original screenplay by T . S Cook and Michael Gray. i 'Worlds' I D-. • i •~UlJUJR I I j LOS ANGELES (AP> : ~ The 25th annive~~ry : of Lhe 1953 H.G. Wells 1 science fiction classic 4 "The War of the Worlds" J was celebrated by Para· , m ount Pictures with a ''"'r-eunioo and party. The George Pal film, starring Gene Barry, 4'nn Robinson and Les 'J)-emayne, is being re· . released on a double bill .._with "When Worlds "'C'olUde." I 1 ' For the party they • r' o l l e d o u t t h e -';\earchllghts and red \farpet and served cham· 'i>agne and cake lo the 1,.celebrlties and guests. "JAlllllWAU" Ill Ill J ....... ," ""THI SU MACHIHl"lll "WAI Of n41 WOll..DS" IGI ,,...., ....... "WHIH WOil.OS C:OUJOr lGI l .. '"4<1 .. JIM "WAaOflHI . WOILDS" IGI 11411-1.~· ""WM1H Woa&.DS COUJDt'"tGt ,.,....,...., .. Intermission Tom Titus SOl "fll ( 'O:\!'T f•tt hf Ml Af,fJN• •11 ;, It-. .. ~ r• I ; ,. ~-w.-s.. 1:41 ·1"1Aru• "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" CPO) Ht fought wars ahd won them. He defied Presidents - IDd might have been ont. "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" "THE SORCERER" (PG) "'SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT" "THE STING" (PG) "NEW YORK, NEW YORK" (PG) "RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHER" "FANTASIA" ~G) "THE DEEP" (PG) 1'SINBAO & THE EYE OF THE ~IGER": "ONE ON ONE" (PG) "A BRfOGE TOO FAR" DAILY PILOT •• Peter Sellers will continue his escapades as Insp ec tor Clouseau in ''The Curse o! t he Pink Pan- ther,t• the fifth m ovie in the comedy series. C> CINEDOME 23 " .. ,. H.t.Af' 411 AO•-..~. CO''"' tif .. JOOO W \MAPMAN AV! •O"lNG( (7141 5441·310? IM·?!l~l _._ ..... ,....,1'11 • ..-t:..... -. .... 11111 _, .. ,,.,, PACIFK:'S (nlll1llJ OOMI ~,-, . .....,..,. ,..._,,-..000• 4M UO• \t 1111.tl'MI llatAt~ .. l ltlll'll I.A MIMOA ' • WlWOOD • WALll-#1 IAllOAffl 'ii.Ci IUO llllONOAY l!Wv IAl'\lllOAY (l,...C _,al It"'!!. ..... I.A MIU~ 4 OHL'( IUNDAYI 6 HOLIDAYS1a:. M UIO H11••n11 1'4~ 'JAi u '( I Hll Jf 1t-, "Buford Pusser ... Now there was a man!" "TEASERS" PLUS(R) .. Glrla Who wm Do Anything" . . .. . . . .. -. .... _ ... .._ ·---:-:-, •••• t....t.=.• • -r • .... • . -...... ..._ ....,,. ..... ..,_.. • ,. O~IL Y PILOT Thursday S.pttrnber 15. tt71 ANIMAlogk't4.,......, €arter Compact Cars Cartel CQstly WASHINGTON <A P1 -The White Houn 1s &ivloK the kiss of death LO It. ntcl Of fuel·h\ln&ry, luxUT)' 1eduns l)eaplte the i.w1tch to fuel efficient compact.a. lhe Carter admlnlatrution and the tax· payer -wall wand up payin1 more mQncy to l euSl' them THOSE LEEK CHllYSLER aedans stilJ cruising throueh lhe White Houae gates at 14 miles to the 111100 bave been leased for aoe> a year. But Chrysler In, tends to raise the basic rate to $900 per car even thovah lhe Wbit.e House wants to switch to MEN'S the economy-sized models. That'• a 50 percent inc:reaae in rates, though the smaller cars , will save an undetermfned amount ot gasoline and further bum ln the Image of a down- home administration that poob- poohs such trappinas of power us fancy autos. ' THE NEW LEASING con- tracts are stlll being negotiated so what kinds of cars the White I louae wiU get isn't definite. And that means no one knows just how much gasoline th~ move will save. Cousin Hugh Carter, the pres- MEN'S • .. I' ----~ENIM BEL~~----, I ' I NUVO FLARES -----........ ..,,--------'I ., ... ------......... ,.,, -----=~ .A'--........ ............ ,' ---.... h ' ' ' " ,, \ 1 AT OUR .. ,:,, /' ,'' t \ COMPETITORS '' • 1 : \\ $16.00 1199 f: \' NOW Jt .... ':._ .. .,: ..... _ ,,"";,·.1 ......... ::............ .,,,-':...-,, ........ --,, ,,,,, ........ .......,.,_.,. , ... ......... ,, YOUNG MEN'S PLAID FLANNEL SHIRTS by ARROW New. soft Chevella" poly /coll on flannel fabric in a wide assortment of striking trad1 t1onal plaids and colors JUST _, s1eoo '\.~~ '.. -----'-. -____ ...__ ~ ,~,--............... , ,' ,---..,.., C-t AT OUR ',~._.,,, ,,,""' 11 ', I COMPETITORS ',," • I ' 600 ,, \I $1 , I/ (~--NOW 13~9 __ jj ........ --........... _,-,, ... -.................. _ ,.,,,' .,,,...,,. ""--..... ,, ,,,,.,, .... _ -.......... ,,, .... .... .-, MEN'S HANG TEN STRIPED COLLAR' PLACKET & CREW NECK SHIRTS ON SALE! Laree 1ssortrnent of 5tripes In new fall colors. MN'S Short Sltfttl Celar Plactet I.wt • ;:f;w 6.50 $11.50 s1299 llEJl'S $ltwt "9eft4 Strt,M en. ·-ltllit Slllrtt ~Arrow•~ Rte. $10.oo s11 oo S'791 NOW I (Effectr1e Thru Sept. 18) ( idenlJal assistant m charge of cutting White House expenses, said he wasn't sure why the rates are 1oin.g up so much. In the old days, the Ford Motor Co. leased cars to the White House for $1 a year. And businesses and individuals that lease cars today pay anywhere from $ll~to$700a month. CHRYSLER GETS a lot of publicity out of the deal as their ('ars fl ash across the TV screens during nightly newscasts. "It's part or our exposure pro· gram." said a C hrys ler s pokesman . "It's the same general Idea as Ford a1vma their cars to Staraky and Hutch," a popular televiJion show. "You know, ~verybody tit· cept the b ad auys drives a Ford.'' After a year in lbe While House motorpool, a car is sold al auction to dealers, who often pass the word to prospecU ve buyers that this was a car flt for a Carterite. "WE l>ON'T FLAUNT lt. We don't capitalize on Jt," said Jke Jarvis, government fleet coordinator for Chrysler. about the White House connectJon. #501 MEN 'S "But If someone wants fiO know where the cars are froQt, we tell them. J remember seUt Ing a car that Mrs. Nixon rode ti once, and that seemed to mean., lot to the buyer." ~ LOS ANGELES <AP> --A ~­ year-old woman was killed w~ struck by a runaway bus in an Rapid Transit District bus yard, police spokesman said. Mari\\ Delores Fernez, an RT!> employe, was in the yard inc• tral Los Angeles Wednesdar when the incident occurred. -- - - - - - - - - --r ~------------., • ' t MEN'S · • ' ' ' t t t • I I . ' ~ ~ _____ .(:ORD BELL!____ : ; I I • ~ ', ,----~HRINK l!>_f!T___ , , ., ... -------.............. ..,,, ------........ .......... ~ .... , ...... ,' ,,,,,.-... .;::; 1 AT OUR '<,,-~..."" RltST 11 ~ ~ COMPETITORS ',, QUALITY • \ \ $13.60 999 : ,' I I I I \1 NOW /, .... '-....... ,.--") ..... , .... ..... ,, ,-... .... ,:........ ,.~ -..,. ' ...... ,,.,, ..,,.; .............. -, ........ --,-,. .. ..- ,,., ------...... ...-"" -----:-..,,.._, ~ .. ATOUA ---.. :~~,,/";...-·-,,.ST .. n \ \° COMPETITORS ... ,/ OCJAUTY • f \\ 15.50 1199 ;; ,, NOW " I I II \ \..., -~I ... '"....... ,*".,,, ' ...... --::_ ..... ... ""' -..,.,_ ..... , ,_, ......... :-......... _,, _,---.................. ,,,,,.. HOT A snCIAL l'UICHASI LARST ITYUS A ocean pacific MEN'S OCEAN PACIFIC LONG SLEEVED STRIPED KNIT SHIRTS ON SALE Fantastic assort· ment of styles and colors to choose from! WOMEN'S BRUSHED COTION HI RISE JEANS sizes 26·32 Reg. fJ7.50 NOW $1·399 --. . ' .... I ! # • Letter Writing Loses tO the Telephone BJ AJDITU OUION °'"'-.....,"-""' ttow lon1 hu ll ~en alnce you've aotten a nt'way. folkay letter from •om eon back hom«.1" If >OU 'rt> an 1vera11e American, the chanct-s are 1t bas been a Iona whale People are wriUn& fe~t·r and fewer pe,.Mal lctten each yur. The main culprit, 1ccordln11 to po~lMI a uthonues and psycholo1l•ta. l1 the telephone · Peopk are lazy." said Or Kenneth Fineman. a Huntlncton Beach psychiatrist. "They are 1etUna lazier in terms o( everyth1n1. from walktnc t.o the atore to writinc lettera. If people can afford t.o telephone, they wlll. 1• Even thoee who can't afford the lone· distance cbarees will not hesitate t.o dial a fnend or relative, Dr. Fineman added. He said be and bas colleagues have all bad patients who have racked up enormous bills without seemlnt able t.o control their habit. fear ing that they wlll ''make fools" or themselves. ''THESE CALl.S are not important, either," Or Fineman added. "They're not about life· threaten.Ina matters " A poll of Orange Coast residents found only a few people who enjoy writing letters. 'Dolores Blanco. a Newport Beach resident, said she likes to write because she "talks" to her friends and relatives through letters. She writes two to three a week, two to tour paees each, and gets letters in return. He auegested that because writing skills aren't slressed much in school anymore. readlne and writing have almost become a sldll of the elate "People tend lo jump on schools a lot but you can't believe how many people come out of high school without knowing how to write a eood let· ter." Some people are "totally unaware" of their lack of wnting skills, the psychiatrist said; while others "have a gut feeling" that they aren't very good and consequently avoid writing letters, ONE WOMAN reported that she writes eight lo nine letters each week. two to three pages each, to various relatives and friends. "I like lo write." she explained. "But my friends don't like lo write back.'' She admltted she sends many more letters th an she gets, but she didn't seem to feel cheated. Why don't her friends write more often? "I euess The · Store Min .. der By MARCIA FORSBERG Of the Dally Piiot 5141fl She's well· groomed, with a short, n eat coi ffure . and s he 's fashionably clad in a flowered skirt and stunni~g black blouse. She'a minding the store in South Coast Plaza. Karen Ohringer, al 31, ls the youngest manager in lhe I. Magnin chain. She lends to all the details 0£ oper ating the 23rd stor e, which opened here in August. Mrs. Ohringer is one of many women managers e m ployed by Magnin's, and she says that as she worked her way up she never once encountered discri mination because of her sex or her youth. Sometimes, though, when she's introduced in public or to a customer as the store's manager, she senses vibes that say, "A little thing like you can't possibly do all this ." But the truth is, she can and she does . "I almost think that sometimes people put too much ef· fort into worrying about $etting ahead. To me, that's a negative at· tilude" Her rise to the top began with a libera l arts education a t Wes tminster College in Pen- nsylvania, where she majored in French and minored in business. IN HER SENIOR year, Gimbel's department stor e did campus recruiting and hired her as an ex· ecutive trainee. "At that time1 they were very excited about having young people in the store, so I got three or four promotions rather quickly " The man she was dating cn·ow he 's her husband ) came to Califomaa and she followed. "It was the first time in my life that I had to read a want ad," she re· called. . up lo an assistant buyer, then de- partment manager, then chain as- sistant buyer in Am erican and E uropean sportswear. She was promoted to store manager in Pasadena, and then to South Coast Plaza this summer. "We started hiring our staff July l." Of the 150 em ployes, Mrs. Obr- inger had a hand in interviewing and screening most of them. In an attempt to remain or- ganized, she consults a detailed calendar book each morning so she can plan her day. •'Then I go through the'1tore, checking aree~afiment managers. There are 10 mllllon things to do in between, so it can take three or four hours," she said. AFTER LUNCH, she's back on the floor ''to see how the staff is servicing the customers" and to ~ straighten dis plays. She works closely with the display depart- ment "to make sure the 83 manne- quins tell a great fashion story." Mrs. OhrinJ(er dQesn 'l do any ac- tual buying of the store's merchan· dise, buts he does ''pass on to buyers '. what we feel the customers in our location want" as well as well as local lrend ideas. The chain conducts fashion seminars at the beginning of each season which Mrs. Obringer at· tends to keep up with the industry. ''Fashion is something you kind of feel. When you spend time in a s tore you pic k it up. It's a sensitivity. "You have to love the pace of the fashion business -and it's a fast pace -and if you love clothes and pure fabrics and appreciate what a designer has created, then you can commit yourselt to the time it takes t.o be a merchant. Del .. ,. ... ,_.., l'atr10 0-0-H She applied for a position as as· sistant buyer in I. Magnin's Bever· ly Hills st.ore and "started out sell· ang -that's their philosophy." "It gets in your blood," says the Tustin resident who doesn't mlnd giving up a leisurely weekend lo devote hours to her job. Karen Ohringer: "You have to love the pace." ~ Mrs. Ohringer worked her way "The busier I am, t he more I ac- complish." Dorothy Jean, lupus victim, has helped set up an area chapter for those with the disease. A Little-Known Dise..ase By CHERYL ROMO Of tlw O.Uy PllOt Stiff ~ dent has declared the week of Sept.18 to 2• as Na- tional Lupus Week. Mn. Jean and Stephen Steffins, both of Hunt- lngtoa Beach, have oraanized a local chapter for luvus auff erera. The 1roup bopea to provide ln!Ormatioa Oft the d11ease tl\J'oulh lectures from 1ptclallata and to otter support lo each other throuab rap seulona. AccordinJ to Dr. Gitlin, lupus wu at fin t "on& rec!Olft,l&ed u a akin disease and thfll it wu found that It could affect tbe lntefnal or1ana u well.'' Today we recEtwo fonu ol lupus, be 1aya: One that affec <*lY the 1kln called d.llcold <DLll> llid linotbw lhd eyatemlc <SLJ:> wbk!b ma1 affecttbealdn and may .uaeke•erytnt.Dal orfan. Dr. GIUln warn• that every paUant•a 'IJmptoma are not the aame. Wbll• the lunp, Jolnta. leidne)'I and ner~&tem ma1 auner, th• molt eommon maftJt are Jolnt saaln, aneniiat ._ MiillUvlty, blab lever, wetcbt loo, c:Hlt~ and chronic fatll\le. The dlleue la frequently mltdlapoted u r~ arthrlt11, he 1aya. However, '1wtth carif\il patient hlttory, throuth pbyatoa ex· amllUdba Ud the pro~r blood.teltl, dlqnotia todre=b aln\pler, •he~ ~ Gf 1M dlHu.·11-unboo. There are iDclreml11t.ona,he1~. <SM LUPIS, Pace 0 ) it's laziness," she said. Judging from responses, writing letters to- day is a woman's art. Most men stated bluntly that they don't like to wri ~e and won't do it. "We usually talk on the phone," one man said. "My wife writes but not very often.·' Dr. Fineman said that this sex difference is a "culturally reinforced thine." "INTE RPE RSONAL communication has been given a non-masculine overtone. Men don't want to get involved. I t's difficult to sit down and write a meaningful letter without expresslnt yourself," he added, "and men find that il''s safer to back off. "It would be interesting to see letter writint <See LETFERS, Page CZ> People Thursday, September 15, 19n C1 Sid&--ti/t, face-framing hat. ' t t ' ... . . . . . .. DAil Y PllOI r Olivia deHsvllland will star in Town Hall Serie3 on April 10. f, Town Hall Series Set The 1978 season of the Town Hall Celebrity Series, for man)' years a project of the &sistance League of Town Hall L11una Beach, will open Monday, Jan. 23, with the co-sponsorship of the Assistance League of Newport Beach. May 15 with Jon Morrow Lindbergh, an oceanog· rapher who has spent bis life on, in and under the sea. Lindbergh participated in the Man in the Sea pro- gram by occupying a habitat on the sea floor for 49 hours. The lectures will be of- fered ab10:30 a.m. at Edwards Cinema Theater , Newport Beach Tickets, at $30, are available from Town Hall, P . 0 . Box 856, Laguna Beach, 93652. Fifty percent oft.he cost is tax·deductible. Further information is available from league members at 494.5977 or 673-6130. The first speaker will be Vincent Price, a personality known to mo- tion picture, television and theater audiblces as -------------------- well as lovers of art and collectors of cook books. · Hugh Sidey, Time Magazine's Washington, D.C. bureau chief and weekly columnist on the presidency, will speak Feb. 27. Sidey is the author of four books, his most recent being "Portrait of a Preal· dent," a work about Gerald Ford. Sidey, also the author or a personal memoir, "These United States," will speak on The Presidency and the Na- tional Political Scene. March 13 will bring Irene Kampen, the author of "Llle Without George,•: which was the Help aend the band to South Bend this year. Bring your friends and enjoy llatenlng to the . USC-Oregon game at Roger's Gardens • Food ..ct Drh•• * look stew. Gift ,.._ * The M..cw.g ·-SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 6:00 PM DOHA TION $5.00 per penoa IOGO'S UIDfMS. SM JOAQllH fll1.S BAI AT MACAITlll IOUUYU8, llWPOIT IUCH. bai,is for "Tht; Lucy -------------..-------Show." AMlla;,ted bY the N•llOftel Col!\111l1tH toward USC'aCe"lurv II Mrs. Kampen also lras written six other books and many humor articles for lllading magazines. • Olivia deHavilland will come to the stage l'F April 10. Credited with 'lJ, being ''one of the world's • 0th k · I d best-loved and most ~ er spea ers me u e, respected actresses " , from left, Hugh Sidey, s h e b as won t ~ o Jon Morrow Lindbergh, Academy ~wa!ds and Irene Kamnen and Oscar nom~nations for ':' · three other films. Vincent Pnce. J'he series will close Call my offi~e for an inuJtediate dental appointment The Fighters Vs. the Switchers Mark my word. The next group of militants to dominate the American scene will be the non- s mokers. J 've seen it coming for a couple of years now. r AT WIT'S END he said, "but sometimes being cruel is a kind· ness." The face-off started talked to your Father out civiJ enough. First, that way," said the the non-smokers dis· woman. "I know Mom," played a small sign with, The battle 1s going to get worse. There are evidences everyday. Lit- t I e things. Like a Marlboro man rode his horse on the lawn of a "THANK YOU FOR NOT SMOKING.'' The ~mm C1 smokers retaliated with ri a polite, but stiff. ~ "YOU'REWELCOME." The smokers coun- tered with, "Do you mind very much if we s moke?" to which the non-smokers replied with a smile, "Of course not. Just don't EX-hale." The exchanges have continued to gajn momentum and every day in this country a •• bumper sticker pro· .~ claiming, "I QUIT!" crashes into a bumper sticker maintaining, "I DIDN'T." Airlines have become a battleground for the dissension. The segrega. lion of smokers and non· s mokers has divided wives and husbands, ex- ecutives an~ cllenta, and has gotten some Ulicit weekends off to a shaky start. RecenUy, on a 1ulded tour, the sightseeing buses were divided into smoking and non - smoking. One day when a man boarded the DOD· smoking bus, someone noted he had a pack ot cigarettes bulging in his shirt pocket. "He's one of them," cried a non- smoker. "We don't want your kind on this bua,,. he said. "Take )'Our nicotine breath and your stained index lh1fer back to your own group!" For a minute, I thought the poor man was going tp be ~toned as he made a fnuiied exit. ''You shouldn't bav• . .. Letters cross-culturally to see if men write more in other countries.•• While the average person has virtually stopped sending letters, the famous seemingly have not. esJ>(!cially the literary notables. In l.8lh Century England, letter writing ac- tually was considered a literary form and was carefully done by such authors as PoJ>(!, Johnson and Lord Chesterfield. Some modern writers, like Virginia Woolf and Sylvia·Plath and the late philosopher Anais Nin, wrote so prolifically that their letters fill volume after volume. , Creative people, said Dr. Fineman, who have intelligence. and sensitivity, "tend to have a need to communicate at a very basic, creative level." TREY USUALLY also are -aware that their letters will be published someday and they want to leave a representative body behind. _ "To actually sit down and write something is a Jong-lasting way to communicate something to someone," Dr. Fineman said. The doctor said be himself writes a lot (with the be1p of a dictating machine) and meets has communication needs through reports. No one should know better what the letter writing situation is in Amenca than the post of- fice, and evidence there supports Vte disap-pearance of letters. Bill Lang, customer service manager for the Newport Beach Post Office, said he has observed a change in his 25 years with the department. "Fewer personal letters are eoing Uµ-oueh the mail," be said, 1'and business mail has picked up." He estimates that 80 percent of the mall now 11 business-oriented, while 15 percent is third cJaas: OnJy five percent is personal communica- tions he said. "But ·this isn't published fact. It's just my opinion. l think more people are using the telephone." non-smoker in Wyoming the other day and made do-do. A sailor on one of the big ocean liners painted all the lifeboat s FromC1 SMOKERS ONLY A smoker in New York dai- ly goes around planting smoldering cigarettes on elevators and calling the N.Y.Times. ... Lupus Steffins, 52, sUffers from both DLE and SLE. "Look at the scars on my face," he says. "Some people lose their noses or other J?arla of their flesh. Psychologically, it 'sdevastating." He is on disability and has been unable to work.for more than two years because of chronic fatigue. "I hope and pray for a cure every day. I'm fortunate in a way -it Oupus) hasn't hit my in- ternal organs severely." Then he points to Mra. Jean and says, "But this little girl . . . you wouldn't believe the pain she's been through.'' Mrs. Jean has spent three Christmases in a row in the hospital. Because she suffers from ex- treme photosensitivity she has never bffn able to take her five chUdren to the beach or on a camp· ing trip. . The first meeting of the Orange Coast Chapter will be at 7 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 27, at the Del Mar Mobile Estates, 19251 Brookburst Street, Huntington Beach. For information, con- tact Mrs. Jean at957-1234 or962-1668. Says Dr. Gillin: •'With proper treatment, the outcome of the disease iB much brtahter than in the past; especially since the introduction of modern ways for early detection. "But there are no two lupus patients alike - treatment must be tailored to the individual." n€ttl€ *CR€€~ S H 0 P King and Queen . DECORATOR QUALITY BEDSPREADS Values to $260 Now $99 .\ There is an under· ground movie being circulated showing that clean air causes bleeding gums. Rumors have it that s mall fires are being started by militant smokers, but I don't for a minute buy that. I mean, have you ever known a ,smoker in your life who has amatcbonbim? 4535 Cempua Ortwe. lmne 955-1117 look Smashing in an Anytime - Anywhere Plaid . Jum~r from psi .~JumperP> Uozy Hase Corwt (oalc & wool) $22 '\_! I ·or. Alan Miller F amiJy Dentist 2'»9 Fairview Costa Mesa • '779-3970 Come In and browse ANTIQUES 'N ACCENTS TOYS 'N TINSEL GIFTS GALORE 'or td ", ~ I I I .I I ~· I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I . I ) Battle With Grief Renewed 0 t; A R A N N I.ANDERS Six yon 111"0, my only aon. • br11ht h andaome J7 YC'dr old dh.-cl H lh" re :i.ult ol om~l'tf' elt •""' rc.-r k lf'~ll dr1v 1n" Ile h vt-d ,..,, t'r I Wt'toks with .,,., t•tt• brain damMWt' .ind u broken body My b11t l l1· w1l h 1trief h u\ bee n trcml·ndou., Lll.lt yur t.omet.1nl1 I know bud ir"fOung rhlld v.bo WM killed In an auto uccadenl I went to the home l o express my 'ympalhy The wom an be gioln lo S>h ontl m e al most Immedia t ely .after my VISll "JUSl to talk " Then s he started to dmp m unexpectedly d l all hours becaui.e I had been through the 'ame ltung and was Lhe only one who understood wh a t s he W d ' go ing through I prayed for slrengt.h lo help her I fell as 1f a d r owning pers on had ~ra bbed on to me and wa:. pullmg me down to t he bottom ot the s ea with ht"r Now I ftie l 1 u1l t y for renntin~ the w•y \ tl t• ha a 111 M I n u ate d ht.>rH«!lf Int.<> my life At th~ ume t1 me I know 1 mwst aet rid of her or I 'II crack up What 1>hould I do' SINKING DEAR FRIEND: Vo• do not owe tb womao r m oOoeal s upport •& U1e npeDH ol your meatal h e alth . Th e re 11 1oomf'thlnc sick <maybe l"Veo punitive> abou& tbe way she bu glommed on to you. Be perfectly candid. Tell ber you cannot allow your old wounds to be re· opened and her pr~ce does ju.W; that. Sugsest s he work tbrougft her grief with a profess ional therapist. Theo ring off. DEAR A N N LANDERS · Qui te a while ago you printed a letter rrom a &irl whose boyfriend was conatantly tickling her. Your reply made reference to the fuel that tickling was once a method of torture . A bet Is ridJng on thls. Pleue reprint that letter a ndsetUeit. -VITALLY INTERES.rED D~RVITAL : I had to dig back two-and·•·balf yean but bere It ll: D E ·A R A N N LA NDERS You have print~ several letters a bo ut re l a tives who t ickle children "All in fun." May I comment? As a student of Orien- t a I histor y a nd F a r Eastern culture, I can tell you that tickling was a form of torture several centuries back. Any pediatrician will verify the fact that prolonged t ic klin g c an c au se hystencs and even con- vula!ons. The expression "tic kled to death" is more than just a phrase. V ALLE.10 , CAL. DEAR A NN LANDERS: l have a few words tor that Waitress in South Dakot a who chastised wom en for be· lng "stingy tippers." She s ald she would rather wait on men any day. I have had to endure many wallre6ses who ignored my presence, except to s lap some food in front of me while they are asking my husband if he'd like more water , more cof- fee, or, "Was the food O.K.?" If wa it r esses gave women the same atten- tion and courtesy they give men, the tips might be bigger . -IRATE IN OKLAHOMA . DEAR OKLA: I r e- ceived dozea.a of leUen trom 'fOmen who wrote to express tbe same sea· tlmenu. The volume of mall and the intensity of their wrath c~nvloced me tbat there '• IOIDetblDI '° IL There's 10& &o be a letaon in here someplace. CONFIDE NTIAL To Afraid To Leave Tbe House For Fear Of Paolc! Get Dr . Claire Weekes latest book. (She authored "Peace From Nervoua Suffering"). It's "Agora pho bia" published by Hawthorne. $6.95. This remarkable woman has helped so many people. I recom- mend her books highly. It's not always easy to r ecognize love, especial- ly the first time around. Acquaint yourself with the guidelines. Read Ann Lande r s's bo ok l et, "Love or Sex and How to Tell the Difference." For a copy, mail 50 cents in coi n a nd a l o n g , stamped, self.addressed envelope with your r e· quest to Ann Landers, P .O. Box 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611. Capricorn: Be Open· FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER Ii By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <Ma rch 2 1· J\prll 19> Inte rest in mystery. the occult ls ac- ti vated. Give full play to intellectual l'uriosit y Gemini . Virgo persons figure in activities which bring about slgniClcant changes. TAURUS (April 20- May 20): Emphasi! on contracts, partnership, marital st atus. Sudden moves. announcements are featured. You gain t hr o u g h f ri e n dl y peri.uasion GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Avoid t he s ens a t1onal maintain steady pace>. Recognition is on horizon Build on solid bast' Examine research, get id eas on market pl ace. Key 1s to b e thoroughly familiar with structure, pertinent is- sues. tn authority, bypass red tape LF.0 <July 23-Aug. 22 ) · What had been moribund is reRclivated. Trans ac- tion that ca n be of long · ra n ge b e n e fit i s s potlighted. Contractual arrangement could be ~>n agenda. Domestic prob· lem will be resolved. Circums tances dictate actions. VIRGO CAug. 23-Sept. 22): Make new start, ex· ch ange ideas, express original views. Deal with those who are capable of making contacts, selling, who are lively as con- trasted to placid. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 2:? J : News r e c e ived which makes you feel good whe re money situa- tion is concern<.'d Accent on gr e ate r securit y Member of opposite s ex 1s in picture ·You loca te lost articles SAGITfARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21 >: Examine restrictions, a pp arent obstacles. You actually ~o1u~d c~es so::i: a~~a!e;.~ pingstones. Aquari us. Leo. Taurus figure prom- 1 n e n t l y . St i c k to number "4." Check fine print, read between the lines. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J an. 19): Friend can be instrumental in pro- moti n g pro f itable tra n sac t ion -o r romance. Be open, re- ceptive, willing to m ake changes, to explore, ask, to be more flexible. en- t husiastic and curious. AQUARI US <J a n . .20-Feb. 18): Positive ad- vancement indicat ed . You get hearing, a re able to demonstrate con- cept s, ca p a bliiti<.?s. Count your change, gel money's worth, be sure your "credits" are in w r iting a nd not me re verbal puffs. PISCES C Feb. 19- Ma rch 20 ): You're able to articulate beliefs, to reach more persons, to obtain bigger a ud iences V1 rgo -could figur e prominenUy. Ir September 16th is your birthday, you are perceptive, sensitive, ljpOOdy , critical. a perfectionist, an artist, s pi ritua l, an idealis t April was one of your most important months of 1977 -you m ake vital c hanges and travel in October and could fal~in love. P is ces, Vir go persons play key roles in your life. • Hair Design •Skin Care Chemin de Fer, Alpeq Jentzen, Cole EllHbelh Stewert IALIOA ISLAHD 67M770 • Man icure/Pedicure 1120 Irvine Blvd . NewPort Beach 642-848<4 Thu!Wda , Se tetnber 15, 1971 DAIL V PILOT (2 HAIR BEAT HAii COHDITIOHOS AHSWfl: !or e hoor cond1llOf\l)"S '"' 1Hy '"'Ct<\.aty? N"n T L t-<rt 8h AHSWfl: 'tu, ho•r condtlt()n('rs ae neo<~\\0)1 11 you WO~I lo \ttp 'fOl' hot In<' I ""J n,. t-... urd ,,, "' n" ,..,.~~. to lo "r ,1 ,., ~rv h.••1' I, r • .,,Qd \ ,, • ')' u W\ rt r X'tt 11 .. ,th ...... , Q11HHon: ,.,., 1t.u.. ' rr" < nti IOYt· ~JO"!IN thon Olfiov- 1''r> VI 1 , """'f>C" AHSWI-= Ye,. 1W r.l., 11>.,,e <•• .r<rl' jW; ""'" I;-. •tlt'f 11 >n r ihrr~ X..•-+ ''"-d.'"'"'~~ ''"' l..;ht~r. rr ..,..,i,.. wo1 the .,...., 0" I O•f' "'o'I" d out th,. le llow.nq .I..,,, p..lO. Ott. ... , nr,. ~··· u ,,..._,._, non . no orrconl of "'°" r<..:t ..... (If·! ,, (~ c-1 y<"' ho" cn,,..rdotl'I~ Ple<ne CJ'OI et call yo.1 ~lions to C;4 JVA!M~O HAIRSTYLIST 2630 Avon. Suite "O" Newport Beach (714) &45-7'290'i RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY ~l•W• ....... 1922~1t•d. Cott• Mne-141·0259 SOUTll COAST . ACTORS C'O-O P Is always searching for new or e xper ienced talent for films, TV, stage & commerci al s. (714) 957 -0282 lr--r --------... -- 1 I 11 I I I coupon Good untll October 10, 1977 FREE I Beginners / 1 Racquetball ~ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Coupcn entitles you to a ontrhour 1ntr0duct1on to the I ' sport (for non-members). We supply r1¥=Quets. balla. I court. and Instruction at no charge tp 1ntr0duoe you to I thia fun, exciting new &Port No obligation. Instruction I I limited to adults. (18 and over ) I can Racquelfun at (714) 963-0864 I I RacQuetfun 11 nearby and open tor play. Low annual I $50 individual membership. Pay as you play with no I I monthly dues. I I I A.. I 1 K~ · Rocquetfun ·Inc 1 · I 9872 Hamilton Ave., Huntington Beac:h, CA 92646 I L DP.·· ---------~ CANCER <J une 21· July 22>: Creative force is s tr ong express yourself, stand tall for beliefs , insist on getting at least an outline or ag ree m ent P er ceive potential · see persons SCORPIO tOct. 23 Nov 21) Surpr is es. quick changes, excite- ment of discovery are on your personal agenda. Social life acceler ates. pop ula r ity inc r e as es Aura of glamour sur- rounds y o u -sam e per sons reach out to "touch" you. through innovat ive dis---------------------------------------------------- F URN ITUR E play and distri butio n . Anot.her Piscean -and a Call 642-56711. Pul a lew words to work for ou. RB ~NAL DESIGN AVE-PIECE DJNE I IE SET IN WROUGHT IRON AND GLASS WITH A SUNSHINE FEELING. Here's the perfect dinette set with a 42" round tempered glus topped tilble on ii sculptured frame with ii baked enamel flni,h, and fou r chaiirs with easy-cu e vinyl cushioning. Fresh new ;apple green, lemon yel· low or bright white colors to choose from. Gru t styling ind quality ail ii cheerful RB price! Delivery and our f ;amous wilrranty at no extr.a cost. Experience You .ire pamperl'd rro111 lht 111omcn1 you w:llk m the door at in,111utc Marengo. The abundance 01 I rel' hJng111g plan I\, wood beams and naturll liittJung in the three \tory 1n'111utc mal..c JI bo1h rclaxmi: and unique . Arter a rcw minute~ war I while given lime to adJpt to lhis plush environment. I wa~ ushered 10 sec Mi. Marengo m l11s ofllcc where four beauty makers looked me over, analysed my hair, skin. and alter they con· sui ted for a few minutes. they came wnh what Mr. Marengo slalcd a "~ophis11catcd· sensual" look. My first 'lt'p WJ~ 3 quiet facial r1><1111, an almosphcre so rcla).mg. you would only fall asleep. My skin wes thnroughly clcan'iCo, taken upstalra, refreshed, re· lued and the cluoeat ftee In town. Mter an lnterue an4lysls thac would put l surpon to ~~, my hair sa.yUst deckl· • td on· the beat look for my face and ltre.iyle. This WH followed by hampoo'•, con· dltlOl\lna. cutlln&. sh1plna. a\)'lln and blow dryln" Back down to the first floor ualn for my fltit cum w11h r.J1rlen1, ~ or the makeup UU.U. Marlena iptnt clON to one hour ap.,iyina end t X• J>Jtfftlnt wh•t she wu doina. N mib&XP le.on wt• moet tnlfsbtnlnt Ind tht rtsnlt WU •dewy. alowtna look, atamor· OUS yet c..uaJ. lhen J mull1· lude of bcau1y r roducts, each fcclrng bcllcr 'han tht: 1351. A warm mist w :is sprayed at onl' point and mol&t packs were ap piled. Al the end of all llus luscious Indul- ge nce (which 13 kes about I hour) my face w:as lightly vacu- umed and l wai ' By Bil Kt•one 1'Ht, Mommy' I didn't wont to bother you.'' P\181JC NOTICE tcl,..IOlt CIOUH 011 TNI If &'9 Of' CAUttotlMIA ,Oil '"• cou"" o•~• ... ....,. MOTICt 0, MIAat•• 0' P'TITICllC tJiOtl PllOU'I Of' WI~ AMO l'CMI IA"l•t THTAMllf· TAltY, l'O• AUTMOltllAYIOllf TO AOMINUYll UHOlll THI t•Ot ..... OIMT ADM1Mltn9&TIC* OP UTATHAc:T •••• ,. ol OlOA WILHal MIHIA l l HTIHC THOllNTON TltU¥1", OK•-NOTICE IS HfllfllY C.IVIN 1 ... 1 llll tLl>RfO JIA.H FllOOIWI( .,., ,,,_ ,,.,tin• ,_.1111'1 fOf Pf-I• of w111 Mld lw l*!i.n l•-terr, IW •11WIO•U .. llOll •• -1"11•~ un0tr ............... cle11t -"'•lrall.,. .. MttlK Kl r• '•r•nw • ""'''"~ h ~ lot 111r-Nr11cui ... ., etWf lllotl tlle II"'-•ftd 1HM.t Of .... ,,ftt .,,. -.... -\et 10• Oc· -• ,.,, •• 10•00 • "' "' "" ct11rlt0Gn gl ~""-1 HO I of W'41 <eurt, at /GOO••t C..nt.er Oriw Wot. 111 lhe tit'; of S..-1• Ma, C.lltornle O•lllCI 'WPl-r IJ. 1''1 WILLIA.Ma \IJOMN. C-yC'-rll "HOOllS I l'IOllt QQWlltlllreel,.. ••••tfy NI"'· CA tttt I T•I 1t1Jl66._ A~,,." I• M 1t1.,.., Pu1>41.,,.., Or-C0.•1 Oellr Pllol, September U. 1•, n, 1t71 411)1 11 ----1--..,.BLIC NOTICE Level of Noise Rated by EPA WASHINGTON <A P ) Is your vacuum cleaner deafcnmg? Does your hrur dryer leave your · ears nnging? Tell the government about ll The Environmental Protection Agency is seek· ing comments on its plan for providing noise labels ~n appliances and wan ls to hear what bothers you. THE DEADLINE FOR SENDING IN com· ments Is Tuesday and the address is Director, Stan· dards and Regulations Division, Office of Noise Abatement e1nd Control <AW-471), Envirpomental Protection Agency. Washingtort, O.C., 20460 . Docket number 77-5 The EPA is propo~ing a labeling system for all :,orts of appliances to tell how much noise the items maf<c when in use so consumers can compare pro· ducts before buying. Products expected to be among tbc f1rst in the system include vacuum ( J c leaners, air coJXdi-CO!V~L'~IER tioners, shop tools, dts h· _ _ washers and power ed lawn and garden equip· ment. AMONG "HE MATTERS UNDER considera. lion urc whether to use a numbering system, or lel· ltrs or symbols on the labels. and which product! should get top priority in noise lablelng Products which reduce noise also will be labeled, according lo how efficient they are, and the rirst item to be included 1s ear protectors These will be rated from zero to 31 according to erreclive- ness. ··If consumers make it plain they want quieter producLc;, the marketplace will in all liketihood respond," said EPA Administrator Oougla~ M. Cos· lie. PUBLIC NOTICE lT & TIMt!NTOI' AeANOOHMI NT • OFUSIO(' l'ICTITlOUSeUSINIUNAMI Tr. toUowlnQ _....,, ll•ve •blln· dOfled U. UMt Of lhe 11(\1110..l l>UilMSI n•me FAUSTA VITAll & FRIENDS 117'11 eo.\I Hwy u;un• fM«,,, CA. .,.,, l l'w-FlctlttOU\ 8u\.ll')#\\ NemP r•· lorred to •-wu tltllCI In O.ao191 .C-ty"" Jiiiy u . ,,,, . PMrkl• J Fotrmr. JOll 1(1~ Ro.d. N-1 llU<lt, CA .,.., Gilbert G Foefll.,., 2011 I( 11>9~ RMO. N--1 Bff<ll. CA .,.., Tlll\IKdl~\wHtoncluetedb'; en"" djvldu•I P•lritl•J. Fotr\ter Tllos 1i.1-"' WH fifed with ,,.. County c1.,.1o. ot Or•nQe '°""'"on S.pt. ' .. ,, l'lttU Pu1>Ml'9CI Orenoe COHI Oallv Pliol, Sept u .n.,,.-oc1.•, '"' PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUteUllMl.U ltAMISTATIMIMT T"-tol'-'"9 per-l•dol~ IN•lneu ••: TE04NO\.OGV e NTEltPRISU, ' O. a.. 1m. s .. 1 .. ecll, CA 90HO; 1'ot E. Vine Suite • 0 , o.....-, CA, ., ... OoMld V. Heffner, 14671 011motlt .l\W •• Horwellr, CA. IOUO Tlllt M inns 11 tOftdll<led by en In. OMd..-1. DoMldV. H•flner T"l1 1161.,,..nt w.t• Ill~ .. 1111 llM CoUl\IY Otr1P. ol 0.-c.ounty on S.pl • .. .. ,, ... , ... P11bll9Wd Orange CoHI Delly Piiot. ~pt U.l1.'Jt.-Otl •. lt77 PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE SUl"llll<HI COURT O(' THI STATE 01' CALll'OllN14 FOR Tiii COUNTY 01' O•ANOI H•.A-t?* NOTICI 01' Ml:AltlNG Op PITITION 1'011 PltOeATI 01' Will ANOLl!nt:•\Tl:STlllMl:NTA•Y E•lele ol AC.HES E MEHZLER. OotU\ed HOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE"f l""I JAMES E HEIM. PUBLIC AO· Ml HISTRATOlf Nl 111.0 herein e pell· tlon tor v-l• ot .. 111 •ncl lt11tr• 1•11-tarv. referent• lo Wllkll fl m•IM lor lur1Nr ~rtlCUIMI, end ,,,., ,,,. 1,..,..""' piece Of twarfr>Q IM w-,,., """ ~ '°' 0c1-r s. 1'n. et' oo • m ., In ""' t O<lrtroorn ol o.per..,,,_ No ) Of wiles court. •I 100 O vk c.nter Orfve W.SI, In Ille Clly of S.nl• .t.ne. C•lllor-nia. OetedSeol-14.1'11 WILLIAM I . st JOt4 ... County ci.ni ADlflAM llUTPlll, COUNTY COUMHl JUlll A. SAMS, Dll"U'TT ,,. C111tc c..t1r °'· w"' l".O .... U1't SenU AM, C.llterflle '1Jtt T,t:C7M)~ ... _.,.._: Mltl- ll>ul>lt"'9cl Or-CH•t 0.llY Piiot. Seo1-r11,1•.tt.1m _,, PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS aUSllHH MAMI JTATIMl.lfT Tiie lollowlno lie"°"' er• dolfll llull- neu n : CltlATIVE C.RAFTS, 21tU·C Moulton PM'~WfY, lAtlUfle HlllJ, CA t?UJ \ttflllnie M P1tr•Y. 2JJOI Rldg9 RL Or .,..~Hllls,CAm» J-c. Petrr. 2lJOI Rldqe RI Ot. 11 n, ~ Hlll1. CA t»U Cetol J Story, 1JH1 VI• Se" Mltl•I. ~ Hiii•. c:Am» ~rift A. Storr. 2.sat Via. S.11 M19.,.1, L-Hllls. CA'1•» Tllh OUtl,..H h COtldu< te4 by O _, .. PJtf\ner\lllp Vlr9'n4• M. Perry T~ll \l.tl-t ••~ 111«1 with tlW County Clerk of Or en119 Collllly on Sept. 12. "" """ Pullll-Or-Goes! o.tly Piiot, Sepl IS, n , ft. OCt. 6. 1971 PUBLIC NOTI CE .. OTICI 0' NOH·•ESl'OlllSlllLITV NolKe I\ lltrel>V Qlven 111•1 the U4'1· ":~"= ::':,;:: .. ::.'~=:~~ ,., anyoni1 other tnitin mv~tt. on or afte,. ll'tltdel~ Oeted '"'' utn oay ol SePl•ml>e•. "" .Jotw\ W JuUn•r '7J 8a~Oo Cow Wr\I N-1 BH<ll. C4'7660 PubllSl'ed Or-Coast O•llr Pl101. Sept~ IS. 1•..n. 1917 404311 PUBLIC NOTICE \-SUNltlOI' COUltT 01' THI STATEOl'CAlll'Olt .. IA l'OR THI COU .. TY Ol'OllAHGE ........ tHM HOTIU 01' ... AltlNO OP PITITIO# 1'011 f'~TI 01' Will AND 'Olt lETTl!ltS TISTAMENTAllY E•l•I• of MARJORIE E BEAL\. ~ho ~nown "M EVELYN BEALS, O.ctM<ld. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tl\et M•lOREO T•YlOR !\as 1,,.., r..raln • pet111on tor Prooate ot Wiii •fld lor h · •u•n<• of L@H•r\ Tttl•~nl•ry to, ... oeHUOftl'f'. rl'ter"""@ 10 Wt'H<~ &\ m.ot tor lurtllef j)jlrh<ul•"· •nd In.wt 11141 llm• ~ 11111<• of llParono tr.. .. me"•• l>.et1'4'llMOtl •.1~77.•I 10 00• m .• ln tne counr"°"1 of Department Ho J of .. ,d t O<lrt ,., 100 CIYiC C.nle< O.•ve Wr•t '" Int C•t• o• !>anla An• C.illorni .. O•ledS.ot. ll, 1'17 WILLIAM a. SI JOHN, CoumyClertc CALLISTEll a CALLISTE" SUWntMllSlrffl l••A-let,CA t00t4 lta-M IE. C.elllll•r A It ...... .,"' PwtltlOfl.,. PUl>ll\hed Or-Co••I Delly Piiot SePI 11 16, 21 1¥ff ~" PUBLIC NOTJCE PU81JC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE .. ,..,, PUBLIC NOTICE CAl'llaTl&McDCMIAL.D •r: .1-r. '-°"'·•-.. IUSZ MICAl'Ulw Mn.. •41 J 1,.,,1,,., CA ft'11f , .... , Pllbllilltcl Orenoe CO.ti Delly PllOI, ~l ... li,D,lfn P U8UC NOTICE PUISUC NOTICE llM't WNlllOll()OUltf O' THI ITAllOfl CALIPOll•I• '011 1'MI C:OUtn'Y CMI 0. ANOI -·~ llOTIC& 011 Maaa1Ne OP l"ITITION •O" AUTltOat TY YO IOttMW _.l't AltO IMCUMHlt AltlTI Of' THI llTATa AS HCUltlTV '"lltlPofll l•l•lt ef ltOll,l!lUA lfOICON MOORI •~• lt06&ATA MAltV =~=-•h ltOHIUA MOOU. NOTIC~ 15 Hl•IBY OIVUI l/loel JOMN IOYO MOOltl II, Co· •dmlitlttr•t•r llat filed l1trel11 • utltlOft Iv e 11tlltrlly 10 ciorr•• mo"tT •"d •" fll"'._ ~Of .. "e.tt M .-e11rlty tit.rw~• to Illa t.....,lrthl.r, t•• "'"""lo...,."' la,,..-. 4'w ~r .-'1klA4n, Md lflllt "'9 ti--twlt• tf11Mrl,.t'9_JIA_,Mtfltr ~Oltr'lllW*l, ltn,10:•a."'·· •n .. tell'*-flf ~ .... , .. ,..., ~rt,elJIQO 0 Yk C.... Ol'lw We9'."' .. Cltyefs.M• ....... C.elll0t"'•· o.-.~'·"n WILUAMa ... .IOMN, Cou ... YCWll AAltOlf L. UHCOfll' ... LI a11.•"°'-'• A.,..r .. i.ew w .. 11 ................... •1WlltMrt ......... ~ lellteMeiM~. CA .. t . ........,. ... ~ ....... , .. ,..,...,., Plltlllll.cl 0'°91\0t <::NM Delly Piiot. Sept•...., .. ·~ "11 ,,..,, 1PUBUC NOTICE C~1 .. CTITtOUS lutf#IU ~IT .... NT I PUBUC NOTICE PICTtnOut. ..,.. ..... MAMISTAHM•"" Tiit lel-1111 --I• ~ htl· ,.. .... AMI It IAL. TY C:.Olt ..OltA YION, no Ne~ Canter. Ori,,., •t09 u11llel ...,_,..,. •Hell, C.elllHlll• '*' A~I( ... ...., .... 111-- llH+ty C8f'lliet .. loft, e c.I...,,... (W> _.tlkln, UO Ht...,,t C.Mfr Ori..,., \11111 -..._. .. acll. Calllf9nll• ... Tiii• OllAIMtl Is<~ .. a CW .. ,.,..,, A/Mf'lclft ~9199 ,_~ ...... " ~ .. .... ........ .. ~ 5-cfT-. H1l1 ,.........,. w• lllld w..,_ - Gouflty Gtr1I .. 0r-. c:.wtty ... ........... ,.,., PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOU__,11 ... '6 HAMl ITAftlilnT Tiit ....,_. --11 Willt ...._ ... ftftl L.100 CLl!ANEl'S, "2J AllAMe. H_,,,.lftcll.eft IHdt, CA. cetml• Zl\tt 161JICMM St., F_. t.tln Ve1i.r.c•i11t. tt10L Tllh INllnH-. ts <onduettf by .,. I~ cltvkaMI. CM,,..,. Zita Tl\lt ~ WU flied Wlttt tlle C-tvC19f11 tf0rlfl9I c.ew.ty .......... u ,1tn. ,..,,. ~ OrMlf c:a.st Delly ..... Sept. 1, L IJ, 12, lf17 T~ folMwlno ~ 11 dohOQ ~JI· -·c~"r"v 141lLS. L'To., ,,,. , __ •_v_BLI __ c_N_o_n_c_E __ C•"'-Of1,,., 5'111.e 11•, ""-' 1-.. kll,CA ..... Biddle Developm•nt, Inc .• • ~llf0tnl• COtJOre!IOll, 314 C.m11<11 Othrt, S..le 114, N-.ort 8"<11, CA '1660 Tiii• ~ntH ISCOflCkleted bye llmlt· .. pertNrtlllp. 814*• O.oel'""'*"' Inc. W.kott ..... 'Prftl.-..t ,l<'ft.,,OU'l •Wt"m •AMaSTAHMllNT Ttw followhlQ per~ •n clll'll WM• MUe': SUNRISE PltQ.l.l:CT.L.!AltKWA Y Pl.AlA, PACIFIC 1tENn:". SC.OTT caHTUt, v ,.Ll.EY P ltOJl!CT, CAMl!LOT PllO.JeC:T, 11>41 lrYIM BOllJtverd, M• I 11, T11ttln. CA '2.-0. l'f\11 ..-UC1t-. Jr., 217 S.vth VlolM i.-, 0rW'99, CA ft'69. Thlt Wl'-t WH flled wltll 1"9 Covnt'( Clerk Of Ore11w Covntr on A\19\1Sf14. 1'77. Del> Poth, 11*'t L• E11tred•, » Vt4'MU,..,CA,,.._ """' PUBLIC NOTICE J. S<ou F•wutt. ,,,, Nw- AIY•• Clrtle, F-'1111'1 V•llty, CA '210I, Wlltt-C. Ml.,....S. #i ~. ~BMctl,CA .. n. Tiiis IMMl .... t ti ~-• ., • 9tflt"., plrwrllllct. J . $at1 Fewcett Tltls --... filed Whit ... C-'' 0eA Of Or ... ttuttty ~Aue. U,1''7. ....... l'vbl!Shld °'"""' C..$1 Dell'f PllCIC ---,-.-m-n_ous ____ u_Sf_•_•_1_1 ___ ,~'·'· 1t.tt.1m ...,, NAM& STAT&MaWT TIW lotlowlllf ,_,_ Is ~ lleltl-nen es: AMERICAN MORTGAGE) !Jiit Htwpo.I C..ni.r OrlW., l11li. 200, .. ....,llHcPI.~ ..... A_."411 Men .... ,,..., .. ,_ .. lhellr Corpor•llon, • C•lllor11I• Corporetlcm, UO Newp0rt Ce"t"' Orlvt, $vita 200, N~ ... tll, C.elltOJ'l\le t:IWll Tiiis tMlslfttn II CMCM:ttd try e cor• pofetloft. Amtnc.,~ l~llMlty ODl'llOt ... ~A.0.­S«ffr-. Tltlt llM-""" flled will\ Ille C-IY Cltr1< Of O.•nve Covt!ty °" AUOllSI 2', m1 ,.,,,, PUOCl\htCI Orenge (.M'I O.lly Pilot, S.I>(. 1, 1. u. n, "n PVBUC NOTICE ..,.,, "1CTIT10US IUSt•HI MAMaSTAftM ... T Tiie follo-.lno "''°"• .,. •1119 bus I neH H ! • SCOOPING STAfla.t ..... ,_ Mell, Or.elt99 Frt.,.••Y 6 l~IM H1g11..,,, Bt• .. CA!Htmle • Grell•M Dodd, c to »4 Seetl\ Tl!lrO Etsl, Seit I.alto City, Utelt 1011 Jeft<l f' W•ttrl"•• "" C.VMr'f Club !>11.,., Gl...O..r•, CA. t11'4 Tiii$ bllslflUS fl (Otldll((ff l>y • oe-........ p. Jolwt .... WetllllW Tiiis i&M_,,. WU flled Witt! 0 -e CovntV Clertt elf Or~ qvntv on A119. 31, ltn. " ......... w.-i ... '" ,..,,. L.111•. ·- ------------........... CA.ttlt'l T .. I lttJ) "1•Dl1 PUBLIC NOTICE Publllf*I Ofenot C..'1 O•lly Pilot, ------------15tpt l,IS.n11t,1.,1 l'ICTITIOUSaUSfM•U NAMaSTATIMl"T Tiie f<l!lowlng Otftonl ete Oolnt Wtl· ntua: OlMNIS OllALITV Fltl!SH ltlt()()(.U, ... ~ Aw. ~ te411VelleY,CAtt10I Af'Nld AtUnc)el, MIOI l(l"9'1ey Ot., ~.CA""1•1 o.-1• ~ ... 14'7 w. 141 ,t,~ 0-:::-~= It CCMlfU<tMI bll' t oene•• ""°'"""'1p. o.Ml•S. Kent~lro AMM!Arhft90! Tfli~ $~1 WM '111111 _,. I ... County Clerll of Oren~ C11u11ty on Auvu.sl?l, ttn. ...,,. PUOC1.-0r.,. coast 0.11., Piiot. PUBUC NOTICE l'JCTtTIOUt IUlfMa• M&Me ITAT:tMaen Tiit folloWlllll per-It M'!ll btlJI· 1141116: l'AI lt~IU> •NTl:RPltlSIH, l6JI W, l"tncllftofl AW.,~ Al>•, CA t trM Wll'jlN IC9"Nfll f'elfdllld, »• W. ~1.-A .... ,lllnteAne,CAT2'°4 Tlllt llOllM$S Is COftClllCted try ell kl-- dl~ltlloel Wovne IC. Felrdll~ Tiils SI .. ~ WOI fll9CI wlfll tM County Oen of OrenQO Ctuftty on Sept. •• 1977. ... , ... A119usl 2J, Sept. 1,1, I). 1911 Pllb41"'9<1 Or ..... Go.tit 0Mly Pllot'f ,....n $tpt.a. ~:12.n, 1t71 _,., PUBLIC NOTICE • • l ' ' • J "Claerapy Cited .. Arthritis Affects l Enti.-e Lifestyle By WILLIAM HODGK OfU.~NotMlfl v. halt' 1almC>..'l neryonC!I tu.If tr 1 trom 1omt form of arthtttl1 - 4 1\ 1nn1m1m .. uon rtf thf' }olnta -'" J*)ple "a.Un tbe dlatase can •• brul'lh 'hattn ~ofU4.'Un"'t. cnUrt hfeatyle ·~rh,· u~t of medical C&rfl alone can d~vutale aomeone's fman. , t 1.11 11t.'<'ur1t v ·• Knren ~bmld. arthritis FoundaUon aoclal worker, 1 told~ Ralhntng -'l ~•ddleba~k Community Hospital. "t'Olt MANY, EVEN If' THEY'RE not totally disabled, their ph) 'll~lll condruon 1s chdngt'd ~o that they cannot continue their present 1ob, · M1~~ S<-hm1d said And the necc:.sJly of chdngmg 1ob:. or quitting work altogether can have deep ps) cho\og1cal 1mplJcatJons for the arthritis sufferer. · Some of these p~ople ha\ll! avoided IJ!e's problems through de· d1 cat1on to their Jobs llnd all of a sudden their abibty lo do this is im· paired," Miss Schmid /xptamed ' "Thtt most common emo ( J twnat reaction to this situation is MED/CJ NE depre!>s1orl. "she said . That further complicates the ___________ ,,,,, problem, according to Mis.) Schmid, since many people are frightened of i;>sych?lherapy "PSYCHOTH.ERAPY CAN ~e a vePy painful ex perience." she-said, "But so can the depression itself." .. A p.)ycholhcrapi:-.t will ht'IP people explore other ways of cop ing with their problems and some or thei.e ways of deal- ing with stress arc very produc· live," she ex- plained. M i s :- Schmid cited , "O t cc h n i q u cs like self-hypnosis that tram pco: pie to help themsetves relax. She :,aid classes in "progressive re- laxation" are held at local com· munity colleges· and will teach people.self-hypnosis techruques. RELAXATION IS particularly important to. arthritis sufferers because of the disorder's nature. "When you're uptight and ll'nse. your muscles and joints are going to hurt that much more," ~l 1s:, Schmid s aid. lier Job with the Arthritis Foundation in Santa Ana and the Newport Tract UC Irvine Medical Center deals "'ith the social problems related Lo the disease. Miss Schmid said the social problems are centered !~six areus including finances. voca- t Ion al c hanges. hous ing, m anagemeot of the household, transportation and isolation. "Many people discover the house they've been living in for years is becdming less and less practical," she explained. "I can Help them firid other forms of housing that ·is better suited to their present · physical condi- tion." SHE ENCOURAGED p~ople lo consult a doctor when they begin to experience 13Ches and pains in their joints. "People can tolerate the lit· tie aches and pains so they don't go to a doctor," she said. "That's not good because the disease could be chronic and early treat- m enl could stop it from progress- ing." Miss Schmid also cautioned people against exercising io the hopes the pain wou d go away. "There ar lot of miscon· ceptions d about how ex: ercising _can el p people with arthritis," she,.said. "ActuaUy, in some cases. exercising can do more damage than help to the disease." Street Opeµed Vp At Condominium Angrily declaring they would not be used by anybody, Newport Beach city councilmen have killed a plan they said would have brou8hl $10,000 to the Newport Terrace Condominium Homeowners Assoc:iatioo. Instead, council'men 'took advantage of a lhree·Y.ear-old offer and made one of the association's private str~ts a· public street in a deciSioo that ullmately will bt•neflt the bull'dlng firm of Welton and Company. . THE BUILDE R AND homeowners have been at odds the past year over use of Sun· dance Drive as an access to a 12-home development Welton wants to build adjacent to the Newport Terrace condominiums overlooking the Santa Ana River. New-port Terrace is buHt on the site of the old city dump at an ex- tension of Costa Mesa's 19th Street. Welton 's land locked parcel ac tually lies in Costa Mesa. A representative or the builder told councilmen the only finan· · cially feasible access is from Sundance. THBEE YEAJ.tS AGO when the condominiums were built, the builder. Landmark Romes. of· f ered to ded~ate all the str"ffls lo the city, but c)ty officials declined to act on the offer at that time. Last year, Welton came.to the city asking that Sundance be made a public slreet lo provide acc~ss ·to his · project. Homeowners objbcted, askiQi that the council vacate the ofter made b~1Landll\iµ-k. CouncHmt;n declined to do either .buti.Atked the two sides to negottate a settJem~nt. APn nt A YJ.:1'• OF n1?Joti•t· ins. W.Pton olf e»d 10 wl~ the 32·f00l""4••lr'• to'40 f4l'*\ for a distance' of 1'° 1f~t fiom >¥11~• t.be Welton1WoJcct would beRln. • .. The developer also was going lo pay homeowners $10,000 and have resident& of the 12 homes become dues-paying members of tbe Newport Terrace homeowners a:5Sociation. . . ~ But homeowners rejected that offe'r af\d the 't'ejeclion clearly angered councilmen. Councilman Don Mclnnis noted that in 1916 homeown~rs ,c9m-. plained about potential safely problel'Wl if Sundance were to become a public street. .. THAT P ROBLEM SEBMS to have beer\,anawered," he satd of the company's offer to wideu the street. "Bµt lt bu a6w ~me a matt.er of doll an. "I get the U:npreusto6 Ul~t if Welton had bMn wUUnc to JIOb.Y up $50,t)OQ. ev~rl(lbln« wou.Td be jusHine." ~ 'Bmtered' BillSi~d SACRAMENTO IAP> LeaialaUon lo protect bat· tered apouses from their males ha~ won the signature of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr Called "the battered wives bill" by some. AB 1019 by Assemblyinan Vic l'~ado (0-Sacramento) gives a spouse the right to ob tain a tempor ary restraining order without first filing for dfvorce or separation It goes into effect Jan l, 1978. Viet~' T ffiting P ush ed OAKLAND (AP> -The de· fense in the mass Chowchilla kid· naping case has asked that four victims of the hijacking be tested by a psychiatrist to determine if they sUffered emotional harm in the ordeal, court documents dis· close. Attorneys fo'r two of the three confessed kidnapers filed mo- ti ons asking court-ordered psychiatric examinations of four children the state contends suf· fered physical and emotional harm in the July 15, 1976 abduc· tion. A RULING ON the request made by attorneys for Richard Schoenfeld and Fred Woods is ex· peeled to be made Monday by Judge Leo Deegan in Alameda Superior Court, Woods, Schoenfeld and his older brother, James Schoenfeld, have confessed to kidnaping I.be 26 children and their bus driver in a scheme for ransom. But they have contested the five counts or kidnaping with bodily harm. A TRIAL BEFORE a judge is scheduled Nov. 1 on the five counts, which carry a mandatory sentence of lire imprisonment without parole if copvicted. Along with bus driver Ed Ray, Jennifer Brown, 10, Jodie Hef· fington, 11, Becky Reynolds, 10, and Cindy Van Hoff. 8, are al· leged to have suffered physical or emotional harm in the kidnap- ing. · Ray and the children were hi· jacked at gunpoint on their way home from summer school, taken by van 100 miles to a Livermore rock quarry owned by Woods' Cather and entombed in a buried moving van tor 18 hours before escaping ' Three-man Basketball Loop Forming The Saddleback Valley Unified School District's Recreation Department now is accepting ap. . plications for three-man basket· ball leagues. League games will be played on Sundays from 5 to 9 p.m ., begillniog Oct. 2, In El Toro High School. For compeUtion. leagues will be classified according to age and height. A $20 entry fee is required. However, $10 wlll be relurn4fd if no forfeits occur. Entry forms may be obtained from the department office at 25631 Diseno Dr., Mission Viejo, or by calling 768·0981 or 586· 1234. Str.eet Work Foes to Meet ., .. The Dana-Niguel Defense Leegue. a group of homeowners opposed to the ef tens Joo and widening of Golden Lantern and Chaparosa Avenue lo Moult.on Parkway, are holdlra1 a lund raising art auctlori $ei>t. 30. 'Mooey raJMd from the fUCtion will sUl)port~•~tl9P .a1atiitt the Orana•CouittY aupenl.tors, "'ho plan to widen Cbaparoaa from lour to 1ht label. ~ut ~esman Jjm RJch. 1rd1on uld the auction will t>e held .t e~ao p.m. 1t lh• s~ Clem-*6 Clul>IM>uae. 100 N. Calle SevlJ..le •. For more UJtormat.lon, call ~&t.-.SS9S. i Thurlday. September 15. 1977 L/SC DAILY PILOl C$ •ooze Broohah~ Utah Liquor Laws S~ir Controversy ) SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -Drinkers complain that Utah liquor laws -desi&ned under Mormon influence to dJscouraae the consumption of aplrit.s -are harassing and degrading But the same laws make 1t so the weakest codctail serv~ in Utali is 1.6 ounces, one of tbe strongest drinks served ln any American bistro. LIQUOR HAS BEEN a point of controversy in Utah since the formation of the Utah Liquor Control Commission in 1935 with the end of Prohibition. Tht latest sq uabble pita restaurant owners against com· missioners who propose to in· terpret the Jaw lo mean that a restaurant patron cannot purchase a drink until be is seat· ed and has ordered bis meal. Ready t o ·aoll Soon ,. I The Colossus, billed as the Jongest, highest and fastest ' roller coaster in the world, will open next spring at Magic Mountain~ It's a two-track racing coaster shoot· mg its cars over 60 miles an hour with t\\'O 100-foot drops. Couneil May Hike . . LB Parking Fines Laguna Beach motorists who fail to plunk dimes into city parking meters in lime to avoid a ticket. might be paying larger fines for their . tardiness in the future. Councilmen are mulHng an increase from the current $3 fine lo $S for parking violations on city streets. BUT FIRST, they wanted to wait and see what the Parking, Transportation and Circulation Committee's recommendation on the fine fee hike would be. Councilman John McDow~ll said he would also like time for citizen comments on the pro- <.-ol'V""'"' increase before voting on esolution. A ugh they will wail until the pt. 21 meeting to vote on the r olulion. it is apparent.. what outcome will l>e, based on counc comments last week. LAGUNA'S BUILT-IN parkin~ woes were a major factor ln the proposal for fine increases, and Vice fftayor Sally Bellerue said the current '$3 ratE: is too low. "It's very clear to me that S3 is what people expect to pay when they come down to the beach and park." . She said many people accept the £me as a parking fee. "Btrl' I\ $5 FINE might make them think twice about parking illegal1y." she said, adding. that raising the fine will have an el- f eel on those motorists. Other council members said they bad ;no sympathy for motorists who block fire access routes in the city, or those who block private driveways and business entrances. A lte rnate School Director Selected For Dana Program Gerald Mays has been named direct.or of the Capistrano Unilled School District's Crossroads progra~ an alternative acbool located on the Dana Hills High School campus. Mays, 41. has worked for the Torrance Unified School Olstrict since 1959. His most recent position there was counselor. Gerald Mays has been named director Of the Capistrano Unified School District's Croaaroa~pro­ c.ram, an alternative scbool lbcat· ed on the Dana HUis High School campus. Mays, 41. bas worked·for the Torrance Unified School Dtatrict slnte 1959. His most recent posl· tlon' rewascounselor. CAPISTR ANO \JNU'I ED trustH& apptoved a new job doscrlpt.ion tbls week for the Crossroads admlnlstrator, who ta to he called an ·'alternative 1chool resource spec\allst." His 1onuaJ ulary wilt b• ~.- MAYS SUCCEEDS John Porter, w h o r11l1n1d u C?oasroads director to ac~t an admlnil\raU"-' posiUon ln • Sa.n · S.mardino CoUJ"1 School dta· trlct. . . .. Hetilth Course Scheduled at l.nguna High A l.2°1cssion course explorlnt thtt option• av1Uable to .the health con.sumer ta beln1 otf~red thls lall at Laauna Beach HJah School. Alternattvea lra nutrhlon, medicine and 1pproacbea to ex· erclse ~n be outlined by lnstruc· tor Mira Ho.ft&•, •ho has taueht nutrition in Loe Angeles acbooll be!oremovtqitoSoutb Lacuna.. 1 Claste1 meet at_lp1m. lo rclQm 32 l\ lM bl&h ICDOOl ~ Se~. it. -•'-. \ An""ner re~mmts 1or1 tullng -d6Sing stlle J uor stores al 7 p.m . -was,pr ptly : changed because dereli~ gan • banging around the fa cier hotels, where stale liq r 1~es. were allowed until 10 p. \_... ) LAW ENfORCEMENT of· ficiab complain the laws have in· creased the numbers of drunk drivers because any drink sold in Utah comes from 1.6 and 1.75· ounce minibotlles. A normal drink is one ounce. "We serve the biggest drink in the country -liquor by the drunk ." said Michael D. Gallivan. director of the state's tounsm development agency "Tourists think twice abo~t coming back.•• he said, be<:ause' of the confusion and inconve- nience. they experience as a re· suit. of the laws. IN ALL BUT a select fe't.r restaurants, you have to bring your own booze with you in a bag. Then you have to drink it aJl, because it is illegal to have an open bottle in your car. Al r~ts authorited by the st.ate tO ell mini-bottles, you have to w ross the room. buy the mini·bolUe, then r,tum to your table to pour the drink younelf. Your waitress could be arrested if she handled the alcohol. IC you decide to purchase a temporary guest membership at one of Utah's 149 private clubs, another proposed regulation would prohibit all but your spouse from accompanying you. And he or she would have to prove it by showmg a marriage license. . A Ul'AB RESIDENT must sub- mit an application, with ref· e.reoces, to the governing board of a club log~ membership and wait a minimum of seven days for approval. You can't 6uy a glass of wine in Utah. lf you want red wine and your date wants wllile, you must order two bottles of wine. "The laws are an absolut~ joke," said James W. Gilson, al· torney for Benihana·s Japanese restaurant. "It simply isn't hospltable to be made lo feel that if you drink liquor you're a sub< standard citizen." THE CHURCH OF Jesus Christ of Latter.·day Saints <Mormon) succdsfully rallied opposition to liquor-by·th.e-d.rink • in a 1968 reCerendum. Legislators th en passed the mini ·bottJ e 1 aw. The church, which bans drink- ing by members, supports th~ state monopoly of liquor and op- poses· any changes that would en· courage more liquor consump· tion, a spokesman said. Formet state Sen. Hughes Brockbank says the church supported the mini-botUe bill after it opposed one he sponsored. Th.e state's latest attempt to stifle alcohol consumption is a printed sign that must be dis· played anywhere liquor is sold: "The consumption of alcoholic beverages purchased in this establishment may be ha:iardous to your health and the safety of others." BVT BOB HUTCHINS, vice president for food and beverage at Snowblrcli., a resort with a dozen food concessions, said the signs increased sales becaus~ they tell people booze may be purchased in places where they didn'tknow it was avallable. llutchins said Snowblrd, a ski resort during winter montM. has difficulty competing with largt> Colorado and Idaho ski resorts because oC the liquor laws. .. We spend a lot of time at the f'rontdesk alienating guests" try. tng to explain how and where alcohol can be purchased. he said. DENMS R. KELLEN, actln• operations manager of the Uquor commission. sald all private' clubs ln Utah ID\lSt be feg:istered as oon·.P.~ wtltorganl.iations. But IJe saJd .. almost all'' 1et aroUnd that r uJJni by sett!nf up two corpcwa&.looa -one to leaH or rent f acllJUes to the other eom· pany, which runs the bua1DeQ and ls Uated u DOO·proflt. Kellen 1ald ~mlulonen are birtng audit.on to m onitor 11 .... and tranater or mon•y from one ~ompany to another. ANOl'JfE R aEQ\Jl&EMENT, lhal all privat• clubs ~alnt&m lockers f« patron.I to 1tore liquor ln, ts arcbaiC'. b said. A IPGt check of local clubs revealed lockers 11i unused In back rooms gath..t.nc dust. The law refers to all clubs., ''loekercluba.·• Kellen 1aid the commlal°" with a full·tlme 1wr of 230. wW •pend S:U million thi• '1 ar ad· mltllatafnl liquor taw1. He aald the state troaed $34.J mlWon In Uqaw1a!e1 lMt ,-ear. ;utM nnb ~ ln Its anutJ per ·taplta co111um pUon qt altolril amonf th• 11 atat.w •II~• alcoho 11 controlled. Ut-. and Visitors dtinik tr &aUcili Of ~Obol·,., tlpitl lait Yt• • eompvecMo No. l ~tw HampiatUr. nere drtnken tom· IUIDed I Sal'* pet Pll'llDll. Ke1Mn"*"9. . , • , ' .. ' ThufMSa , S. tambtlr I&, 1917 Ward & Harrington FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY The right place at the right time . ' This roomy shed is th e place to store bulky things like lawn mowers, garden tools, even bicycles. Gambrel style roof, sun gold walls, white trim. Walk-in height doors. Exterior dimensions: 119%" x 116"0 x 84112 "H. Model #CAM 1010. CAMBRIDGE STORAGE SHED, Reg.199.99 169.88 For a flr•aafe home ·. Measure It right Vanity fair Pick the fairest vanity of all to beautify your bathroom. J All our vanities in stock are on sale right now for 25% off. A fair opportunity to replace your old sink with a sleek, compact vanity cabinet. A wide selection of vanities, from 17"x21" to 22"x60". All have cultured marble sink tops. In natural wood "finishes, painted, or vinyl laminated; with and without drawers. Sale prices sul'.>ject to stock on hand, sG> shop early for the best selection. ALL VANITIES IN STOCK, 25%off No power shortage here ·' Whf. take chances? Put in this battery-operated. sel -contained early warning smoke and ftre elarm. C.11109-mounted with 2 screws. No wiring or function box needed. Oo-11-yoursellers will spot the quality the minute &hey see 11. Tape blade conforms to all U S Government sp991hca1ions for accuracy. Preclalon-madeo'or lonp Ille Get the performance you paid for In calculators and radios. Put in tong-tasting, dependable, heavy duty batteries. Now's a good lime to buy some eXlras as well. .• . .~ ... ,,. U.L approved. Model #Z· 700. .. VIGILANTE" FIRE ALARM. 19.88 Come to the concert Set up your stereo components on this handsome, compact ahelt unit. Then alt back, and enjoy great sounda. There'• room for books and records, too. Solfd core coostructiori. walnut llnlah. easy to assemble. Model #49. HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, Reg.24.99 19.88 A natur1I aftow-oft Your plentl wm ~!Mir belutJfUI bttt on this ltyllah stand. It provld .. maximum expoeuc.e to aun and lit, IO plant cart IS easy. SOll<S OOl'9 conatructlon With simulated walnut flnllh. Reidy to u.mble. 2.4"WlC51 V. • H. Modtl#29. PLANT ST ANO. R4t0.29.99 22• and heavy dutY use. 50 , Model #505 . EVANS TAPE MEASURE. Aeg,6.99 3._48 -. ., A tum for the better Handsome Kwlkset entry lock set add• new glamour to rour front door. Brass flnl1h fits l Ve" to 1 V• doors. complete with two keys. lnltalla In minutes with the help of a tcl'ewdriver, Model #400K3. KWIKSET TYLO ENTRY LOCKSET, Reg.11 .99 7.88 The 9r .. t pretender With Ptttlctt btlrd l)lntl• you cen pretend that Ulev're anYthl~you.want thero to be. Paint them to a tlch trnl~: slaln them; en&INll them; or do e tm00th wallpeper Job ••• ell at• price that won't put a dent In the budget. ~o/•"· MRTICIJ?. BOARD PANEL~. ReQ.eA•· 7.• Model #01604· 1. RAY·O-VAC 9-VOLT TRANSISTOR BATTERY, Reg. 99c each 68ceach RAY-0 -VAC "C" or "D" GENERAL PURPOSE BATTERY, 4 Pk. Mocfets#1C4, 204 • 98c Put up a well of uvlngs Put up that wall you've been putting olf, with economk:el concrete brick. Use It for everything you'd use red brick for, ex09f)t tlreplaces, at a fraction of the cost. Red or natural color. Customer plck·up only at this low price. CONC~BTE BRICK, Reg. 14c each aceach Lend a hand DlltlnctlYe rMtal ri.nct ran In 6reot. A tiandeome addition to your gardiri path1 27l~"hlgh. ' l ' MET AL HAND RAIL. •' MOtlon Reg. 6.49 4.88 ffMCllon Aeg.10.99 8Jl8 NEWELL POST, Reg. 2.49 1.98 ,~ NOW AVAILABLE J MODELS S:-1 MODELS LJ MODELS GOOD SELECTION . - Ser •2J57R7P345504 Thurlday, September 15, 1977 DAIL y PILOT D L . ASLOWAS '.\ EXAMPLE: Equipped With: •Factory Air Conditioning • Sport Mirrors • Sport Mirrors • 350 cu. in. V-8 Engine • Automatic Transmission • •Accent Stripes IMMEDIATE DELlVERY • Power Steering • Body Side Mouldings • Power Disc Brake~ •• ·miw iGAS!!! 33 MPG HIGH WAY 23 MPG CITY l o-.d Git tt. rfflllh of tfth c~t.d er c.tHled by tt. U.S. .... aaa1.1t rr•tectt .. A,.•cr ti.. ty,lc.il fJGI .......,. of tWs •.wd. b "HIMted to "9 2J Mf'G city. ll MN M9h.,. Y- .ct.al.....,. .-, •wy. t ~ {-• ---I ti/ Ser ll,2C', 1B7U 534332 EquipPed With 4 Cylinder 140 cu. in. Engine and Standard Transmission IMMEDIATE DELIVER~. NEW 1977 PONTIAC ASIRE { $ •• • 95 Per Mallth . Total Down Only s395 CASH or TRADE $395. total down payment. 48 monthly payments of $89.95 includes tax and license Deferred price $4712.60. APR 14.23% on approved credrt. NEW ·1977 PONTIAC vanmA NEW 1977 SUNBIRD • Example Equipped With • Factory Air Conditioning • Automatic Transmission • Power Steering • Power Disc Brakes ' • Rallye II Wheels $ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 33 MPG Hl•HW•Y 23 MPG CITY Baaed on6the results of teats conducted r certified by the U.S. Environment Protection Agency the typical gas mllt1ge of this vehicle 11 estimated to be 23 MPG olty, 33 MPG highway. Your 1ctu11 mileage may-vary. Ser. #2M27B723•887• ;t t ,\ ' D2 DAILY PILOT ~:!~ .~~~ .~~~ ...... ·I~'!'!!:!!.~~.~~ ...... . GtMt""•I I 002 G....,.GI I 002 ~~!!!.~~.~~ ....... ,~~!!!.~~~~~ ....... ~!!!.~~~.~ ........ ,~:::~~.~~ .•••.... G•Mrol I 002 G....,._, ' · I 002 Gofttef".e I 001 Gtftffol I 002 Thurtd r. September l5, 1~7 n. ..,_, Mli"'-t-• on the 0...., CN•I DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ·••••···•·············· ······~················ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~CM Sell n. Find It , ( aA2•H78 J T .... It With e WW'lt Ad V"'W 7000 71 HavtH kr S-. ~Ml llor S-. ......,....,,., Notte•: •••••• , • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • ••. •• ••• • • • •••••••• •• • • \ll n'lll HlOllt .. th N11&C'd ....... I 002 G ... ,... I 002 II\ lhla ~apaal)t'r I• •ub ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• )1'(1 to \ht• Ft~1t r1 I •·111r Uou"n• \d tlf lflH 'Ab&ch m&kt!l' 1t 1111·11111 In adY.,rlla•· un> 1u1• t ttcn~•. II nut 11t ion 01 ~wc:nmto.illoo l•a1t1·tl on r11ce. t.'0101 r<"h1o:1nn, M'>t., M nallooal or11~111. llr un intention 111 rn,1k1• ony '<UCh pl"t'fl•rt•nrt' hm1t11 uon, <>rdlbt ntnlllJllUn · 'J'hla new'lhlllt r ~ill not fc'Qpwinti l\' Jl'<"t'lll J O) Jdvl'rlls1ni.: fur rt'JI "'5tate wh1th '' in '1111,1 taoooltbel.iw -..._..for Sat. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gws_. 1002 ,~,, •••••••.....•...... COHDOCO~lY IMPUSSIVI LIDO tSU SUt,tlO A delightful home on a lgts comer lot. Tht: !~ling is open & the now is smooth. North & south patios flank the I ... R. other rooms open to patio also. 3 Bdrms (lgt: mstr suite), 3 baths & charming den. Beamed ceilings, frplact:. Prof. dt:coratt:d, quality cptng, Van Luit paper. All amt:nitit:s ·in kitchen. Lido living includes tennis cts, pvte beaches, clubhouse. 521 VIA LIDO NORD OPEN FRI 1·5 21 I I San Joocplin Hils llood HIWPOttT CEHTER, M.I. 644-4t I 0 Gfltffol 10021GMeral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• THIS IS IT!!! SPYGLASS · OCEAN VIEW Elegantly designed -beautifully located high on a hill where, on a clear day, you can see forever - almost. The home will accommodate a good sized family. with 4 bdrms., huge family rm. with wet bar & frplc,; also, a formal dining rm. There is a large semi·covered patio & 3 car garage. Also, there is ample room for a pool - with view. $277,500 YOU'U LlkE OUR HP ... experienced sales personnel 759-0811 450 NEWl'OHT CENTEH OAIVE 759 0811 * NEW LISTING * HARldR VIEW HOMES This dtluxes "Phase II Palermo" home is st:t llk4' a fin~ jewel amid the' lovely landsca~ grounds. Acctmtt:d by extE:.nSlve brick work & ovtsrhangs, this 4-bdrm, 3 bath home has formal dining room, family room and TWO fireplaces. A gem worth inspt:ctlon now! $188,750. Sfsller wUl help finance. llG CAHYOH ""GREENlllH" Wider COlllfructt. Buy now -move in later -for fastlionabl(j Country Club living with poof, tE:nnJs courts & private gardt:n patio! \'ou'U love your camel carpctt· ing with coordinating ceramic W~ en- try & kitchen -formal dining room, fireplace, wet bar <Uld huge meatt:r bed.room with sitting room. Exclusive area. $144.500. j Need A clean. quiet and top quality Q plan in The Bluffs. These are hard·to-find and this one is hard-to-beat! 3 bdrms, formal dining, sunken conversation area. and a large master bedroom s uite. Very clean throughout! Present- ed at $139,500. No yard work, yet an attractive. 4 bdrm. condominium with 3 full baths & an abundance of storage space. Of· fered at $162 ,500. Make a big red check here! Gett.rot I 1002 GeMral 1002 UNIVERSITY PAllC-4RYIME Beautiful 4-bedroom, 3 bath Kens- ington Plan on quit:t cul-dt:-sac. This two story family home is upgraded with numerous cu~tom builtlns. formal dining room, family room and prict:d to sell now at $139,500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Bedrooms? U,_..l()Ut: li()Mt:S REAL TORS', 675·6000 244.3 Eut Coast Highway. Corona del Mar illSO m MrsJ V1·rlJ•', JI 546 b990 I 00 2 G>eneral 673·4400 r LUXURY wate rfront condo, 2 BR, 2'h ba. Pool. jacuzzi. 24 br. security. Brand new; comp. furn. $220,000 FOR $12,500'' A i:rcal Santa Ana area. Ntl'C homes, ni ce s trt•ct Paneled1 ronvert1blc dble garai:c I Oedrooms, 2 bath:.. l.iri:c yard. Large 1um1ly din mg rm. All terms. ..•.•..•.•..••.......•• ·:.:.;.··················· PENINSULA, 4 BR. 3 bp . home. All amenities. Lovely area. $195,000 $58,750 Huge family room with used brick wall and fireplace. J Bedrm, 2 ~~;~;;~;;~ bath, dble car garage. -. new 18' Doughboy pool & mter. All this on a secluded street. Hurry, callS46-5880. LOOK ~ .... HERITAGE • • REALTORS WHERE ELSE? DM1lon of Harbor lnvHtmeftt Co. Canyougeta3bedrm.2 ·!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! bath home, only 3 YnJ old. located In a beautiful G .... rol I 002 G...-ol I 002 area of rolling hills AND ••••••••••••••••••••••• '••••••••••••••••••••••• f LIDO ISLE, 4 BR. 2 Ba. Nicely decor. Lge. patio, beamed ceil's., hdwd firs. 48 Ft. lot. $225,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 3·11 Roy\1cl1· Q,..,,,. N B bl':J t>lt.>I WITH A Vl~W for only You can llve in the pre· OWHElt ANXIOUS S69,900! It s furthe r stigiows hills of Turtle 48drms,aspotlesscmo· enhanct.'<f by a cracklmi:: Hock. Sparkling bnght tronal home is just ~rick flre~lnc.~. ~1 ~ cheery home in move-in openers. You will hvc on General 1002 Gtflffal_ 1002 country kitch!n & cov condition. 3 large b<lrms. a qwet cul .de-sac in :i ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ered patio. EZ FHA or 2ba atrium man~ II k t ct .llTYP RK VA ·terms too' Call lo c u: l 0 m b l'1 1 1 l 1 0• "·e ept ra amoni.: UHIVER~ A NESTLED 1-~~~~-~~~1 ... super UWll ·lnS All lh1s ., EfDR: "'T I see~ bookcases Onlv Sl IK.950 plus lhe beach-bike trails Th 1 s beaut 1 f u I -R ~ 546-4 I 41 Lowest pncc ·in Turtle and schools are all m bedroom. s1n J!le 'tor) \our new home is :.cl off LIKE ... LOVE that':. whal'll happen when you i:.t!c this lovely home. 4 Bed rm, 2 story, i>ep tam room, form din • room & pool. All on a manicured rorncr lot 1n CQsta Me5a. SI 15 ,000 ~~tury 21 Wcstl'11ff ~7221. ·--- WATI RfRONT UOMlS REAL ESTATE 631-1400 DUPLEX WEST NEWPORT New on the market; 3 bdrms., 2 baths each. On Cea. land. SleP6 to the b e a c h . Xl nt sum· mer /winte r rental. er-iced atS189,500 673-3663 675·4n7 Eves associated BROKERS-REALT ORS 20 2~ W Balboa 67l·J66 l §alh1hur!l • • lli\l,BOA JSl.ANl> I • 673-6900. DUMPY DUPLEX Pride of owners hip would be hard lo find ;.-------•! here, but if things like a IEST VALUE low pnce or $49,9QO and IM HARIOR VIEW reqf. potential of s420 lo- ·) & a den or J bedrm. t e r ests you, CAl.L ~ COATS & WALLACE REAL ESTATE . INC. Rock area Ry Owner. w a I king d ls ta n c e has it all Central t.11 r t."n Wllh southwest landscap· Pnn only. Open Fri Sun Jlurry! 546·2313 d111onin~. new drupes. mg. I lldrms and new l~.833·2227 oPf•1111Y·• ,, .,,,., '· eledr1t· i:urai.:c door drapes m fa m. rm and [ ~ opener. covered bric~ IJv. rm. All new ~itchen THE · VA Appraised this nuar new :I bedroom Summerfield homt' on a corner lot for $80,000°1 Low down ror Vets! llurry' Call now! Hcd C:arpct, 75-1-1202 ~.,fil~il!;11 patio Its close to pool appliances. Patio with ~ JifjlJj\J :'rl'c~d~o~re:~~~tss!:'e~ ~~~n~. Call soon. CALL751·Jl91 . ,..,,,,,,,,.,,,,.,,,.,,Of/','( ~~~~~":~~~.j~ R~~~~~~l .000 [® IH~IMI haths. f1relace . Full .PROPERTIES r>nL<' Sl04.500. Lease for -~11s1mo while you liavc --------FRONT ROW .vouruown paymcnl. Call CUL-DE-SAC VIEW 673·8550 M 1-: S /\ V !<.: H D 1>: 4 ,.,., • 1 • , , '· •' hcclroom. 2 balh, Liri.:1· l ~j ' ; ll k' II • '. I I ' ••FREE•• VA Counwlin9 & Info. s.niu Mo Down Paymettt FrHUstofVA HotMs In O.C. ~ lam rnt ccnlcnni.: around 16x3ti f>ool Shakl• roof. double f1rcplut·t• & dinini.: rm PrH·e1I r1i:h1 Call ~6 5880 ~~~ HERITAGE • • REALTORS MAGHIFtCEtd! Almost new 3 bdrm. :i bath with step down liv rm & f'OHMAL dmin,g 1oom Btfl quality wall11apcr thru out. Custom llxtures. mir- rored wardrobes. Wet bur. !:>hort walk to ocean. pool, Jacuz7j & 2 tennis courts. (~IWM!ii§i!lrnl Real Estate COROMA DEL MAR DUPLEX JUST ~ block to big Corona beach. 2 Bdrms rn each unit plus a guest room for your overnight \•tsitors. This is a must ~ee property. Call today tor appoint ment ! 673-8550 Orange Co's. Largest )) VA Home Broker .; CaH24f1n. ~ 675·2626 I ~~·~~~ WORLDREALESTATE ......... ._ ..... _ .. ,'= ---· PLEASE call & have us Expertly up,::ra<lf'rl thruout Featuring special llghung fixtures , del piao tile, beautiful carpets & drapes, stained glass window~. Close to pools, tennis & beach. 3 Bdrms . 2 baths: 2-story, shake roof. frplc. NEWPORT SHORES. $102,000 LIDO REALTY 673-7300 Ol'it./ Ill Q •I ~fl.JN 70 fff f11r: 1 CAMEO SHORES tell you about a t('rrific BUENA VISTA ln Corona del Mar . PRIDEOF buy in b'e autlful IAYFROMT - PretUglous private com-0 ...,,..._SHIP Eastbluff. A s bdrm., J Commanding a premiere munlty with private ""Qlll. v;aw of Newport Har....,._ Tri I i C l .... bat.h, with dlnlng rm. & a K; .,... beacbes. SparkUng three P ex n OS 8 mesa. & 4 of it,s 8 l•Jands, thls J 2 bd it vrew, too. Walk to pool, ... bedroom & family room · rm un 5 on a unique home comblnes • Uelightrul pal1os. yard. S56-2660. home with OCEAN 60x102 corner 6·car park· tenru11, schools. churches e very modern conv•· ~ll&lml&il VIEW. Especially laq~e ing. sun decks, pnvatc &shopping nience, with timelcu , yard with secluded patio. patios, garden area• charm & understated Hi g b I y up g r a de d . C: SELECT .1~.med. occupancy. T' PROPERTIES ~~~~~~~~ . .CORONA DEL MAR $266,000. lndry rm, all In apple pie elegance. Nothing was COL£ OF condition. Owners are overlooked in creating '" anxious and asking for NEWPORT un offer. Would you one of the fines,t ' DUPLEX Lovely duplex. each unit haring 2 bedrms ea ch. Walk to beach Pnccd to &aU ---f~ I I \ ~. it I( I \ l I \ ' I '' 1 'i I Cu·.i ~., Coron• d•I M11 : J . Golfers Dream ?rt-eaa Verde's molt SPtCTACULAR home. 5 4 ba, FR, DR, LR, ab 2 atoey, 14 acre. golf course is your , yard. Open House 7 • 1·5. 1190 Panay Cir· qleAet.~ WORDY EVttY ..,_II\' G\.anY •Mwrr ;, a rtiym•"I pe1r ol "'9•'1• llAe Trw Blw, Plain hnt. and llutnrt)' OlimP11 I, llcad tht defint11on.1htn 1hlnk of'"" GUIDT rh~mu11 '"'"'JI •h11 w1ll nr In lhc lc>rrcr "llllr.._ The nu111t-.:r aflrr lhe dtfl11hlon ttll\ yov tiow many nll•t>lo on ttth BY TRICKY RICKY •on! of the rh11nin1pair f. ApoUca't '°°'1 pltdle (I) I I I I• I I I I J. TOf al Mt. ot,.,. (I) 11111•1111 3. ~ ... ,,....ecatton(I) I I I I I I• I I I I I 0 4. NY M17a.'1 r--. (I) S I I I I I I • I I I ( s. A-.r•Wi...-.(J) I I I I I I • I I I (.I I .. Oimilnsf1, Ma. s.n. (3) l l ·l Ill l I I• l I I I 1. Jtdlf ~>'W W1W dlt ..... 0> -,-,-1....:..r;[l;;;,;_..~,-,~,.....p..;,~ .......... ~,-,-,--"9-.-1. '7~SS I I' believe 5160,000 for this waterfront homes ever to ----~-----1 winner.Ca11646-7171 IYO~ER be built in Newport '"" Beach. 4 Bdrms., 4l'J GROUND FLOOR o<'f'' "1"' 11 s' •r• '0 "' 11 1' LUXURY LIVING bat.N, S fireplaces. bay ~~~:o~ I ~-B~lll r:.~~~;,~.::~::Yi~~ ~;:r~::3·~~::~~~ 2 Bedrooms In luxury architecture! Tennis. beach. A truly remarka- hlgh rise building over· --------•! po o l & j a c u z ~ i ble his & hers kitchen, looking huge prhate DUPLEX Owner/Agent with double everything Su 759 0087 for informal gourmet en-patio area. per conve· Ocean l·blk.; 3 bdrm., :? _ • -lertalning. Finest ap· nient to freeways, 11hop· b ths un'l Seller Ping, churches. Call a ea. 1 • AR.AR~ ONE pointmenta thruout. anxious. $167,950! S950,000, On excellent 962-7788. laltoa1lay Prop of a kind 3 bdrm. 2 hn terlllll. Brochure on re· K€Y • charming home in CdM Ag Rdon with 1 bdrm guest house quest. ~R€ALTOP.Sh •675-7060• forlncomeorgucsts ·the -------.. main hom e 18 Un· Lawson GAR.DIN GROVll! believably charming. $60,950 rttlDEQF You will dream about il. Realty Company 3 Bit, 1~ ba. cov paUo, OWHHSHIP Owner anxious asking ~gar. Priced to &ell, t.i~.';!:,~JPlor':Ji~ G~~·~1Ufrou,.c11 ln•=-.·,···••545-•,.,••• 0 1 5,~~T~i ~-fill;I r~~ii~.~~~~:il 714-675-4S62 YrlW 'YllW • VllW Privacy ii enjoyed ln ttils 4 bedroom. DOver Shores home. Ex- terior le interior la captlvatlnf . . Space to add for the larfe family. Close tx> all the beat o NeWJ>Ol1, 'Beacti. $315,000. GO AHEAD-MONKEY AROUND your own BANANA TREE ln your private room.for-a .garden back yard. The balance of this 5-bdrm, 2 bath family home is equally unique from its wood framed brick fireplace, custom drapes & plush carpeting to the spacious 20xl3 upstairs bedroom! Rooininess & selectiventSS mark this fine home! $82,950. · FANTASTIC Poot: HOME Grab your suit and hurry into this rambling 2-story, 3 bdrm. ho~ with TWO master ~rooms, separate din- ing room, Cireplace. nt:w upstairs carpeting, freshly painted exterior and gorgeous pooJ! Great livability in lovely neighborhood pear schools . PRICE REDUCED to $92,SOO. * TWO SPYGLASSER.S * Never-lived-in. ~d designed for .YOU if BEAUTY fl EW art: a n~sity. This horn~ fe.1'. des class frl>tn its spacious elefant interior to tbe strik- ing combination of brick/wrought iron foncing. 4-bdrms, family room, formal dining, TWO fireplaces & one of the loveliest locat ions imaginable. $26.5, ()()(} • I ********** DoublE: French doors lead to a central courtyard with fountain, surrounded by skylighted living room, den & fami- ly room, lending to the flow or s paciousness in this 4·bdrm NEWPORTER PLAN luxury home. TWO lar~e entertainment areas - cozy breakfast nook wtcity lights & water view -professionally landscaped. QUICK POSSESSION. ~~500. ' THE ··soMERSETS .. HAVE m In prestigious HARBOR VIEW ar&a, a professionally decorated S.bd 21h bath family home, close to park and school. awaits your approval. Family room, 2 fireplaces, formal dining room. Grtsat Newport Beach area! $188,900. ) ********** This handsome, professionally de· coratt:d 5·bdrm. PLUS family room "Somerset" home is introduc~ by a Tt:rra Cotta tile parquet entry hall. New wall coverings, extensive ustd brick patios. custom wall units & bookcases. Fantastic Newport area! l!!lllQuail liilPlace ·Praperties · 752-1920 :>Jliio~ 1400 QUAil ST. NE~ORT lfACH G........ 1002 G~ 1002 ·····•••····•··•·•····• ........ , ..•.......•... ~ COATS&WALL ACE REAi F.STATF. INC. l ~~.~.~ ........ ~~!!:.~~: .~ ....... ii ~~~!!!.~~ .s.'!': •••••••. ~~~!~! .~~: ~~-~ ....... . e ••r.. t OOJ GI........ I 00 Corona ckf Me,. I 022 Cotta M•10 t 024 ··•···················• ··•·······•··•·•··•••• •.................•.••• ·••·•·••·••············ IJ/uffe Ownerjkip ~r $5000 JJown H<)I lh>~ At• nt "'111 "'' II l1h1lhl <.: •H1tJ11 ;: tt.11111 homt un C'\llllr.u·t for '" hlllo· •~ S..'>CIOll 1lu1A.n \1kinc l'n'" "'d l>t-111~ muht .. 1 SW 1iov F1t1 111form11!.1'.n "' .. p~11111rrll111 111 •H Ctl '40.U7' ... Ht-•467 OPIM HOUSI M /s.t/5-doy 5-,t 9', 11, II tr.. l I AM to 4 PM 2323 Vista Huerta COM BEACH COTTAGE , ,,,, orl "''""' ·""' ,1,111wd ~.1...i. -.I ~I I'" R.C. TA.YLOR CO .. 955·0350 A STARTER I f1 •flU' UI\ IH \ tHI \ h'~ ~llt' I 1!.1• 111·"' • t..-rl1uo111 ;: t. 11 h :oo.I" 11111 It\ \l , IU I d u\\ 11 HAL P1.-.CHI_.,. Ill \l.llllt ... 675-4392 CORONA HIGHL.4HDS I h1-ui. • .i 111111l11nu111111 ol .1 Ill\\ f111rt1t' Ill Jll I .1 I> I 1 ' It P !I 111'1) ltl~H 1i11ml l1'.1(lt1111): Jll I Ii• 1.111·-.1 ,q1pt1H1I Ill •• II I ' 11 \ •• I 't ( l' d I 0•2 , .11 "l'l' l.u i!•· rounh ·1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :._··~·...:.:..._••....::..._••:.:..._••:.::._• f;.alh ~tf•pdo""ll\'1t•l tu•r , / WESTSIDE DYNAMITI HHDOMHOME O"' nl'r hl'11d111i: N11rt h \ 1·1 > Jll\low Tl11" rinl' 1.\1111 I Ill"\ 10011 1 .I hr I j 111 rm, di.I 1!\'t .1"h1•il 11.11 'Ir t-t• hnt•cl !>l I.~ tin1 k lq1h' N1•w roof. • 111111t•r 11h11111>in1: 11.illll ell 1'411 7171 ' ,. . [~IR&H1ll] 'Ql9,!150 \fo-.1c \'t•nt1• :I Hr + Fam Jlm, \,H'.JOl 77 1 2:"181J I Hr, ~ h.1. :.p1·1nkkr~ l111t ht k, patio lla ll uf V:uoc• Jrt•;i. ::;lo<JO <.:aq.1et .illow ('lo~t· lo :.dtls. -.h111111 & fr'4< ~ · 01n·n ll111t!>l' Sept ltllh & 17lh Ownl'r 1' rn.iJ c!>L, hrokl·r Cull .>.'I? 16-lti or 7>1!1 1~;.1 AmsrssrtelAL ~~ 1111111on•u11\ll'"' .i111u1h llACH l STOIY HAWAII 7 1.11111" .q~:11 ..... 11k111i.: 111~ 11) Owner. 3 BR hou~r 11·. $54 950 \I j 111 II ( I'·' n tr .. " I I.till I' to Ill I\ .th ht .•dt lntl•rc:.l. 2\1'' d o\\ n owe • '"'J\1111( 11.il11b -.hil• 'l'J511uo h1• lll(>rtl<Ji:«-' !-MO Congrc-.,.. Dr11 m at1c "" 1 ul .,,11111 ltt'Jl''' Lu 11 CA1.L644-721 I 111 -.cc, h·liiJ.t!IO l'n111· eou.rmet k1tchl'n. •lull' 1r111111 .o1 1,1..111111,., ellll "111\ ::.1111eepi.ng stJ 1r. lo hH.ll· , 11111 JI Ii• I,. ,,. 11 h 1 ,. • away m:istcr ~Wll' ,1nd tn.H uliJlt• 1-u,lOll\ l1C11t1• !. v1·ew the ' uest "Wlrtcr1> Hurry' e-:---:---... 6.. )!Ul''>l homt• ou n•·o11 °':!~1,. , • , .11 n· 01 ~l •• 1•r 1111t 1 '-' Golf Course Xlnl In\ n.dn~·nl llf' [ra IHl'Hll rmrlunll} hn.111 n H 'O' : 11J 1:1~1~·~:1~·~.'~·;111:·,.1'.:i' .. 1~~11 s: lion ~5.uoo Real i-:stutc• -----11CA'CH RETREAT+ OLWfVl 1''ami It v1n..: room, gourmet kitchen COZY H.AVEH DUPLEX You l<.. .).our ~n.Hll!-o ~ tll l 'llJll) the i.tuod hie 10 1n1-. Coronn dcl M <ti' dup ,., Jiii.i.'> j.(UCSl -.\utl111 \\.ilk (II -.hopJllltJ.: t'( ltt•,11 It T1·nn1., ,\ r1•1·rr ul111n c l'nll•r 1 '"''' Ii\ Old wor ltl 1·ha1 m 1nH'l nnw. c•OJIJ} 1111 C\tl :)llU,511l/ HORIHS REAL TY * 494-8057 * with breakfast har, 1;t<·p· Very nH'I' :i hr l ha,\ 1 hr down convcr:;atlon arNt r c n I u l • S I 6 2 . II n 11. '*'lh fireplace. built in Leasc/opt 1on Slll.1100 loft. unique •ardcn home clown Owner. 040·7030 at SS8.000. II 00:1 S7f.7 REC REOUCE Over 2300 s q. tt of ·'Class i c .. be a uty w;vaulted ceilings, walk· 1n bar & great storage. 4 bdrms, fmly rm & frml din rm. Onck crt yard entrance " only 10 mo1> old. N ear So. Coast Plaza. At $93,995. th11 won't last ! S45•94111 ~ Walker 1; lr.e ~NJ...-~ 'l"J. Ilk to Ocean Costo Meaa 1024 •..•.........••..•...•. MES.A VERDE BEAUTY! l.\I\ lge :J k\1•1 ltrtl.\ hmtlt' 111 hi fl ,1rl'.• V1·n ntl'd\ cl1·1•/lt .ti 1·d ,ti,, I ll 'lnl 0 1·01111111011 Ila~ I f);frnh l( l).!1• I 111 h r 111 "' I 11111 I .uh 111 I r1·1·-. ,'(. • 1·m1•nl 111111·1 h;tll or potd1ll1· lo t\ltl ', 'lllll'l ') h !11~11 BY OWNER Shaql 2 -.t~ 'lB1 l·'•l\J hoim·" "'"paint. q ll ' /!« dq~ .1111.11 L:ilr opnr ffiilO} ollll'r '1 ra:-. onh ~.!W 1 lll ( hat il''>lun :.:.1 Ul1 GREAT MES.A VERDE F.AMIL Y HOME CRV $80,000 Sharp4 brtnCosta Mt'sa. 5Sl Ptl'rponl St Ho Down VA 556-7777 Wortd R.al Estot• FORESTE OLSON 1#11~ ff. Ao 9UU• ••t--c;.._ Submit Antsy Owners! Nt•ut .uul l'lt•an. h lj.( l'flV · 1·11'11 p11l111 t ru1l1•r 1>~1rk lllJ.:, :1 ht•1lrnom:.. t'.1l 1n.i.: .111'.1 ,,.tJ linc·k In 1·pl.11 ,. '-'•l.!1.10. Bl-\ll r,1u 1.:w TARBELL "~I In California" Ii> own<' r h m 11 o I cl modt'tn lA>ndo. l lld1m 2 li.1 i-1 ,000 ('Jll 518 !17 lK MESA VERDE EXECUTIVE HOME Just R~•d $5000 111 1>15 1,900 l01 i lln lo 1111ahr1cd bu)cr Pool & JUl.'Ull.1 ~pa+ 4 Bdrm~. :1 ha, lam rm, din rm Walk lo i.tolf <'Oursc Dov id Bourk~ Rltr. 546 9950 RAREFfMO I lklrm, famil) rnndo ('cntrally lorated Sfi~l.!-!50 1'ry $7()()() down or trade. HALPIMCHIH REALTOR +;75.4392 Vets AHetttlon V/\ appraised val ue SRu.ooo Orfered a t m.soo Quality built 3 bedrm . 2 bath Shake roor, brHk f pl c. har<lwo<>cl fir~ Near sl'llOOls & 1>ark Vat·anl. !I e c a n \' I 1 m l' C a l I 540-U.51 -....~HERITAGE • -• REALTORS Hovs.a For Sai. Thursday. September 15. 19n DAIL'( PILOT D3 ····•···•·•········•••· ············•····••••·· Ef Toro • 032 ~Oft HouaH Fors• HouHt F« s• IHoutH Fors• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• t-tarbOur 1042 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ······················:1···············••••\••• DECORATOR'S ••••••• •••••••••••••••• trvl,.. I 044 ~HI~ t 052 u.a..na MICJWI l 052 D!ll<i..r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;;.~~~•••••••••••••'•• 1-;1 Toro Condo le!!b than ISLAND PRICED REDUCED on" yc01r old 2 Stor}. 3 WATERFRONT s1.ooo bdrm 11<t lullh U\crlook Nrw l1ictlnl( hy uri.:, Trl'e ltnc.:d cul·de-sac 1ni.: itr•enbl ell it nd owner l~aul D.ivenport 'l'llc entr) Formal step m ·'"J.:" f1clrl Uperadrd bhi -1 Hr. 3 bu Su1wr up lJ\ mi.t room. Vaulted thruout ·all ca.rth tones phm. 2 lir down. M a~h·r 1 e1hni:s l!U(tl' kitchen & ODDortunity is knocldncJ This •cltarming remodeled 3 .Bcfrm home bas new landscaping new carpets, new doors. new bathrooms and more. which add up to a bargain. Great starter or investment for only $99,999. drapes Crom Germ;rny nn woter & I m11rc uv lanuh combo Walk m parquet ll1.1ori. · l'O\t•red J.'a11ll!bt1c v11·w ot '1a111 p11nl ry too• Secluded l'Jllo t•ome und i.ce lo Channel JJui:i: ~Jr ~ tna1itt:r ~u1te 3 ~l orl' Jl'PrCl'18ll'' By uwm•r 1>Wkleek +45' boul tloc.:k 11uee11 sized bedroom:. ~.OtlO Call 581 ~ to ~J.000 du to new S250,000 Don l wail. Call 752 1700 c!.t)' loan '· ,. ·• Assumable VA Loan at 8~% Interest ~·~~.~~~.Y .... !~.~~ -·P·u·~-~-~-~84•L•:•~•A•L•T•Y-1 [ ® lfilltl Architects Custom Brand new 4 Bdrm home with out· standing reatures. Including· high beam ceilingsJ skylights, and an open feeling. Read~ to move in now. A Bargain at $13!),500 In Law Quarters DREAM AND/OH BY THE SEA THftCHJet'S R.tnat 1"utr11l your dreams 111 this re~pl cntlcnt 11111 $66,900 2'•Jlla home llY lhc 11cu I> O y 0 U N f: t-: I> ~ Th 1 .!> I a :dll o n a h I l' JIOMF:S IN ONF.'> Tn nc1~hborho<xl . lrc:-.hened this Frenr h Chalt•au'• b}' t hl· :.et1 brect.l'S JHI• Lots ,,f "ol<l world.. bent:. 11ol Ju~t J J.tf1n·1ou:-. lh.u-m. from woodc.:·n tn ll•1t•I home. hul u wa\ !.huller:. &<·cdar shini:lt::-. ol hfl' Des1gnud lur lh1• t.o the !>U:>fJCOdl.'<l. wind eM·Cullve. Wllh lilt' root mi: sla1rcai.e Ueaut1ru1 pn \'alc cnt~' lnw mum plush <'Jrpclini: and tuncnrc lamlM·aµt• Jncl '-' 3.C•r garu~c. This L., J l:lL,l.Alm dr;.rpes &>duded ~be value 11l $11>2,511\J. pl~h pal10 /\c1 c-. of green i:rass & 10.,..criru: or full part1culurs and il tree~ 'IUrr.ound lh" private :oohowwg <-'"Jll 1111 p u I a r TN II S 1-; + NOW' r11n-;.rte Jl1l 1 <'Jll now, this uniyuc.:• humc won't la'>l!' ~J.J.59'l·l3--lti 71--1 ~!1961 COLO~li\L H t-; ~rfft RHlty 846-5573 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SANLUCAS Lave 111 Lili' Ra rH·h ol bt.'aultlu1 Inane. This 3 tM!droom home !'Ills on <1 cul·de·sat• IOC'atron lhal barks to tht• t rcl'lmcd lo(l'l'Cn Ix-It. N1.'ur srhools, purk and ron vcn1cnt le ~hop11111~ i\sk1ni: ~'<14.Sod C.111 lost~ I , RAMCH REALTY ' SS 1·2000 STOP HOW$76,500 RANCHO SAMJOAQUIH S•Luit Rey Mel. Townho.- Most popular + largest fir plan. Va ulted ceil'gs, dlnm;: area. 3 hr , 2•,-, bu, lndry r m. 2 car gar . P rof. dct·or'd thruout in earth tone wallpaper~ +cistm . "oodwork Unobstructed vu of T ur tlerot·k it 10 Rani! Open Sa tfSun 12·5 Call an 6PM 752·6774 or 640·1624. By owner $127.500 ' ijoth homes will be open ror inspection Fri.. Sat., Sun. Call for directions. MAYO CK C ORPO RATION LAGUNA BEACH 494-2146 Owner says "Sell" Laguna HlcJuel I 052 'Laguna )IC~ I 052 Low~c~d 4 BR an ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• Dl.>t<rfteld. $97,000. firm. ·:I BR H or immed. Ol'· c upancy. Douglas Cor· rea. Rltr,644-8415 THE RANCH JOOOSq. ft. Ready for im· med oct·upa ncy. Best huy 1n ar eu. Dougla::. Correa . Hltr. 644 8415 •WALNUT SQUARE Open da ily 2·4. J41i31 Ovill Rd., c.:·rosi; st reel::. Walnut & Kazan: 2 bdrms .. ramily rm .. 2 bu. rondo with central air. Lge. put10-yard Sharp end uml. Cooveoient Joe Pnccd right at 564.900. · "CLASSIC .. .NOME WITH POOL . "/ -,,.,,...._., decot"Clhd s ......... ~l bath ..... perfect for ftlllly 1.-g -,.. ady lo .... Into. • • $. Sl,Sf>O. LAGUNA NIGUEL 4115-1720 499-4551 DANA POINT 493-88l2 LAGUNA BEACH 497.2489 EVEL YM COPEi.AHO REALtQR 552·0434 W.W.. 1048 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sparkling T u r tle Rock ... ________ _ home in move-in cond1· 1• tir>n. Bnghl cheery open large room1>. Rare Plan . :lbr. 2ba , aslrocourt. uble Clll' i:;11rage. Many AFFORD AILE! IRVIME LlVlMG REAL TY IJllC. 714/846-1371 .md you probably won 'l c lrnd a lK•ttcr huri:arn m s tom bu1lt1n C<i!.es. Lar i:e lot. l expensive in art"a Owner. Prin only Big s undeck, fplc. cen· lral air. mlfrored w<ilb • plush ca rpetini:. super d c I u x e 2 h l' d r m Townhomc. well locutcd ·S62.50tl Possibly the most af lorda ble prope rty "in Laguna today. Bright -& airy. 2 Bdrm:.. & 2 bath. ().. Y 0 JU!\l one block to the bea c h. Newly re decorated. you can movt: in with only ~15,500 down. lnterc!\l only financ[ng ;ivmlahle. ONLY 585~> HY O WNf<:R. lt u n l 'J.: Lundmark udult \'UOOO 2 Hr, 2 Ba . brand n \'W plu.-ih cpl & <frp11. Calf S.llH5!-J5. LG SUN:.R DLX CONOO f'or adull' over lli v n. Mu:.t leaq~ area Ii\ owner, ban:ain µfi ll' lO.'i !•HJ t'onsulcr all ol kr.-. . 5Jti tP\lri XI.! 110i3 !>II :M17 Beach Pad! Open atrv reeltng lot~ or gla:.~ and wood. Galic.~ k1lchen-van1ty bat h & tlrcssmg. Fenced yard A<:ro&s the street from heath. 'BKR 962·5Sll LOTSOFLAMD -with :.mall 2 ·bedroom house. lleady to expand Only S00.000. SCOTT REALTY 536-7533 I st Time Offff•d Seller hall hou~hl other property . 3hr tr1 -level. Atrium entry Step-tlown fa m r m overlookmi.: 1torgeo~-; pool. 1"l m il<> 111 oc•ean lluicl Cul ck ::.a•· Slr cel t2 l:l I 431 !Hl22 1131 ·31115 HUNTINGTON LAND~l.\RK 3Br. 28a, single \tory Condo. upgr adl.'d, shown by appl. 96(4923 BY OWNER Rustle semi ru:itom hit w used bnck. Atnum . patio, frplc. 4 Bdrms. 2 ba. fam rm, hiJ:hly up grd 'd. Next to jloH course. 11, m1 to ocean. or srhls. ch un·hes. & pa r k. $97.000. 5802 Thophy Dr. 846·0089 ...: I r v 1 n l' l 11 d a \ :J bedrooms. dcn anti neat l'OVert•tl 1lal111 B.,_·_._... ......... r ~i -Sun 10 ti. hurry '' RANCH RE.AL TY SSl-2000 UMIVERSlTY PARK Under $60,000! VnbeltevJ bly priced Orangetree townhomc. 1•nlr}' hall..'hti.t Ii\ 1111-t room. new appltant·c·~ rrnrrored C'lo,els 11111) ~•'I !ISll, IJ" H. 5-111 l i211 TAR DILL "JJ I In California" 531·5800. eve.1> 968 772.'i lnt'I RE M•twork 1--------Woodbridge A:.-.pen ,M<KI ahr. 2ba. 10•7,, dwn 888.000 Vogul" H.E. 540•5080 Ill'; own ~lbr. :.!ba '4< i.pu Supt!r int xt r 5192 Skin ner VilJ:UI' H I•: 510 501SU •US \l e~ Fttil' L1:.t • VA home~w1t h no clown Voi:uc R 1·: 540·::MIKll BISCAY MODEL \\oodbnd.1:1.' Place 4hr :iba. upJ!radc::.. Stepi. lo lake i>'\J'i .900 MORIMS REALTY * 494-8057. WATCH CAT ALIMA SUM SET lrom u no bi.lrurllblt• occ:an homl' 2 br. 2 b;J 11l'n . frµlr & 1l 1•1'k !SM!l,500 Decorator's Delle)ht $94.950 Ellc1t 1 n~ Ell1nhur)! model townhome w :I bdrm~. rJmil) rm 21, bdllu. llu).lc bat k.\ a rel w bn rk pat to & flrcp1l OWNER SAYS 64-HlOlli, 961139~ _ 2·Sty l':nl{hsh country Waterfront llome!. 631 1400 BEAUTIFUL WILLOWS Sill! Colony Pion I 00 $85,SOOVA·OK Owner sell1ni: s uper style w/upper liv. rm .. frplc., bdrm., den & ha Guest r m, & ha. w /sep. e ntry on lowe r fcvct. Needs work ! Offered for 1mmcd s11le. $149.500 M111111on Rcalty_4~~ 3 bt·droom fllrn1I) horn<' with rounlry k1\rht•n. Alw cn1oy lhl' comlort of AIR CON DITIONING and Ill the evenings tht• i:rcut c:o\'C•retl pat 111. 1\ II this for onlr $71,0oo ('all to !Ire Qwet tree hned eul·dc· 1>harp 3 Br. 2ba. ram rm. sac Wood bu ilt ins lge k1lch w 11olarium 11nhanec livmg room & Upi:rd 'd rpl'K thr u·out. family room Sunkis~cd Comm pool. park & ten f;im1 ly kitc hen 2 Queen nrs r rlli. $84.000 P h sued bedrooms. Lushly ~3092 •---------COUNTRY RANCH REAL TY 551-2000 WOODHRIOG.IL Hroad· moor Plan K '1 Br. :l Ua, 2-~ty. d1ninl( rm. frpl. J. c•ar l(ar, up~rd'11. Part lndscpd. Sl H.500 Open house Sun H I 45 Spar· rowhawk or t'llll owner an 6, 496 1391. pl anted backyar d ISt ---------- patio. ·Brin l! your VJ\ DELIGHTFUL!! buyers. Don't wait call And, a com er tot. too! m 1700 GntCIOUS, i>tep·down l1 v· • "• "' ., • "· 1 1•1 • • '"'' • • in g rm .. Jjle. ror1nul dm· [ ~: 111111 ~rts0~.:~~~: lWOIDRM ~~~ODO~ VILL~ throui:h wan or glass 1n REALTOR.S ·· kitchen & family room. _ _ _ _ STARTER $88,000 Spectacular College Park Stanford. Beautiful bnck frplc. Sun sparkles Separate master wing Logmcr leach I 0'48 Beautifully landsraped ••••••••••••••••••••••• grounds. Cal l n ow,._ ________ _ 752 1700 ,. ''I ~ l './ • ~ I l './ J f!r '• I ' [® .. Blltfl LEASE/OPTION Orangelree patio home, orrercd on this NEW 2 2~r. 2ha. $ate or Lse,op· bedroom l'Ondo on the tton 67~---­TOP Of WORLD Atlr. 3 bdrm., 2 bnth SPANISH EnJOY country life on your Capistrano estate. f"anta11lic well built. lar~e ranch ho•· ti Bedrooms. 4 baths; ptJt>I Storybook home for Ymir eh1ldrcn. $325,000 -~, 3 Monarch Say Plau Laguna NigueJ 496-7222 131.0136 SWIMMING POOL PWS OCUH VIEW Get r~ady for the Ot.ym pies. with this 4 Br home swimming pool and pat11• for grea l entertalnKig. Ocean vie w JS an xtrJ Near tcmnis courts a ncl school grounds. for jo,1.: ging or sporL'I. Priced for the Investor or fam\lr at SlM,000. Call for ln•ite•· t.10n , • ~~~~~~~ HURRYONTHIS! water in Oranitelre l'. AIR <.!ONDITIONIW and c-ommun1ty recreational f ac llillei; I rvine's newest a clult comvlc it. T ennis, !!po gym ond pools . Askin~ S74.000. Call to see. Turtlerock Broadmoor ~ome; famlly rm .. din· M A y Q C K 1ng area, frplc . Lge. fenced yard. Some view from deck. Patio off mstr. bdrm. Owner buy - ing another home, unx· loustoaell! $117,000. MESAVBtDE FOURPLEX One 3 Br. fplc, three} 2 Br 2 Ba units C losed gar1rges Don't wa it! Call Owner!! have bouRht another & a rc anxiou11 to 11ell this 3 bdrm .. 2 buth home. nr. bcilth, schoolll &shopping. 867.900 NEWPORT HACH RE.ALTY 675-1642 Scarce4 bdrm .• fl,l m. rm. home In good location. Very sharp condition. Beautiful patios for out· door living. You 'll Jove Utls home. Call today for oin apPoinlment. red hi ll _ '' r ) i L, fll) MAURYSTAUFF'ER SEAlJON R.EALTY 1213 N. Coast, Laguna 497·3311 644-22 I 2 I PRIVACY .. ~I waler spills ~lly into • Kol-filled pond a~ you enter the vtr) pnvat.e gardens or· th•~ i---------1 reatored South W8 nu villa. sns.ooo. < 107l l DAIL. Y PILOT Thur1<11 , Se .. mbe, t6 1911 Hot.Mt kr Sal• OtMr Rul btat• Ottt..-bol htet• °"'9t' l•Gl lstet• ......_ U....,tlwd ......_ U..-,.l1Md ....... '::.~ ....... ~:~!.~~.~ ....... ,~!!!.~.~~-...... . ....... ..,.... ,IOU "'•,.,.tleoclt 1on•.,.n1e.... JOH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S. J.,.. ~•ff/ lnconte r..--rty 2000 RN •tat. CONM cMI Mar 322J 8 Toro Ul2 C.,,ttr.o I 071 Unlta.,aat. 1100 ••••••••;.~i;;•••••••••• hc"-9-210, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• • Reul Sharp 3 br, ii b41. f pie. .................................................................... fZ LAICISIDE 5 HOUSES Why puy tnea 1 ·Trude SPYGLASS cph1, dr1•. tac fenetd F't1h llhd 11111. minute• 2 Retttal Hwi l"l"aJ\kZelamcy Realtor Ot:CUX•~1PROF yurd, 1re1i1t for kid.II & ... , • 5'AUUMG POOL Ila jaru.nl " )'OUT. '" !ft 11111 hlll"h up home ( h1rm1n1 ~ lutrh~n famll) ~.\kl\ & '4 ~room• Prif'td nctit at 1t~.S1•1 NIVATI r.AUOISI · ~1<'4r rt<hkC'•I St• I 1·r ra~ homl' on 1.111:1 1111 With J ti.drooma, r.im1I) toom Ii l'lin1n.11 toum ldRlh· ltx'utf'd M •tWd rul dt ''<' with v1t>w uf tolhna: hill• SN Ulll), pr1 \'I.Ill.' ™'••rh pool .\ tfl\fils roun~. 11ffnrct lhl' bt':it of lJ \lrl•' \ \..,ii UC Ill ~.1100 SU THI.ACE Nc.otr thll 't'J ~ tlh p.-rl1~l <lCC'UD \ 14""" Ncur "'""' :1 bedroom , .!\~ bath towuhunHi with ;!I) ti m~stcr bedroom "'1th hrcplulc ~e toda.), unly !!1~.!l50 lOCJUM Hi«JIM' Reatty UO·S050 496-4040 ~----a PUBLIC AUCTION Owncn UI healU\ requlrft lmm~lat• al.It 1WO <.1IOIC! 8EACHP'RONT PROPERTIES Nll:WPORT agACJI. CAUr nu.uu. f'URNISHED l>UPLEX-f-OKNER LOT WITH B&ACJI COTTAGE To~ off.red Mpautely and In It• entirety. SAT SY.PT 17, lf'll 2 PM ~ s .. .bot• Dnv• N~wport Ouch, Calif. S.lt lo tw held at th• •lte ' ln.pt"<'t1clfl . Sat. Sept to thtottch Frtd1y Sept 111. 10 A M to 7 P M F.arh day, 111d pnor to ult Lime on Sept, 17 • io'our bedroom• 11nd two balha on the lower levt'l two ~r1)(lm11 al'\d one bath 011 the 11.:cond level Svn di:rk, two cu 11race Complt:tC"ly furnished 111cludin11 Mii co0klla1 uten1ll». dillhell, hnen6, natware etc. Lot •dJoln· tng lhe duplex measures 25' x 95' Beach cotta1e un lhe lot Du°'ex waa de11l1ined and custom bujll by the OWN'E R Thtt quul1ty (J[ his s ~lll ed crafh(Jluru.hip ii. evidenced tliroughout . TERMS I~', dt:posit on day of sale, balance .upon deh\t-ry of dee<1 and marlu~lable l.IUe. Buyer wtll ~ required lo arr11Rge hnancmc prior to tht: 'ult: Sales are subject to comlrm11- tlon of sclh:r 1976 H E. laxe~. Duplex, t2211 Lot $1906 . ~ 81\,QKER COOPERATION INV1TED f'Oll BllOCMURE, CALL OR WRJTE FQX ANO eARSKADON '-951 South El Camino Real S11n Mateo, Calif 94402 (415) 342 7701 -.a Br, 2 Ba SPf,CIA I. 1••.»oo . .Beautiful Hiilsdale Mod('I, JUS1,.tc duced, ~36 Vt!>la Plat.a • Pr. Open StS. an\t1mc by appt. 711·4!15-4823, ar -----------........ -------- .,NA. 49'3·ll>2S. Lvti ml>!__ Newport lea~h I 069 Mewport leach I 069 "or 5 br. 3ba & pool. 2-11:!6 ................................ .,>; ••••••••••••• •' ,Lli'SNuranjas. • PRIME Newport> Beach Vogue H ..: 5.10 SOtiO PRICED TO S!LL! 'llH. 2 ba .~. t.u m . r.m . -----2 + Den + formal frpk. ,$100.500. All\ ~&4463 Superb Buy' +hit.ins -t: 2 &ar gar -----• --• +o~:ean + pool'!: + ten: WES1'CLWI<' 'dlx 3 br. 2 ~ UP I: r a d.e d & i m nis'.'$89,5-00 ba. eount1·:r At.> 1~ fom "· maculnte, 3 l.ltlrm. ho mt• Lg ... 2.sty. A·Frumc. 3 rm~ outdoor entertaining wilh view o( rollin,r( hills. HR:. 2 ba .. A-l conrl. patl<J6. Open d111ly. 1201 Covered p11tio &. security' +ocean. SllO 000 Pembroke. B~ owner. o( fully feni;ed ya.rd · Sl-19 000 6.16 9836 ... ' Amen1t1cs too numerous CAYWOOD . · · · .vc~ fb hst Won't IJ:.l k>ni: 1n:AL.TY. IN(.' 64t>·Ol()() I ~.250. <2111 • S48-l290 • . ~Ko/an 111 .,, L • r.111. 11" / McJll,lto I• fJ,1 , f'I I/ I u,1 11b1 UJt JtHH.S 1055 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . HAltlOR VIEW PALERMO Watft'front Cape~od 3 Bedroom hollle w bo,.11 dock m front S189,500 Pe<J<» Brom1 Recittor 645-1531 IHr, 2'~U;1. fam rm din rm , jJrof lndscpd. jacuu1 Owner al <c· duced pnce of ~79.SOO Lease hold o r ~193;2501•--------- l<"c 6-1-1-622 1 _____ Newport Crest 2 -B<lrm SEA VIEW :!1 ~· j>u lq,;lt!Ve!· LQ\H~l New 2 Br + den 2 13· ~!1l"C.-d plan Q. t.: pi:radcd '. • iJ. 1'.nd unil, !1 lt: Pl> lu puul & alnum C~r.~cr lol on t•ul tennis. SI lJ,50() Onr At:l de sac <.uar~. pool & 6i5 0100 or 675 S200 JaCUL~1. 014 nr. 640.2365 · UHfqtJE WOODS HM 3WO Sq fl.in the ultimate ~ vacy ol the "'!XXbi I ln". 31.la. F R. U It ovt•r look patio. t? frpll' ·s, wet b»r. 1:.laod k~l Select ~·our own ca q> cl~ s1211 .9uo h~· uwocr OCEAMFRO,NT SUWIHDCOHDO \...jl,10-117\)ij. West Newl)l.'.>r·t 3 Br. SAl.1-:0R LSl';OPT --' • lllouch llofne. ~njo)· :v!on· 1n \omorrnw, 4!Ur. , K . F U..taltna view & surfin~ 2ba Sl50 i'r\u. $4000 opt ~HAWAIIAN* al your doorstep. mone~· ~J.INlO ' He;._.,f»ort Pier Rlty. * .HQLIDA Y * Pecigy lrom1 673 20M • M8-411t1a 'ftV1'WO Hrlt1.>:.ind111lc' RHlltor 645-1531,_ _______ _ 1'0u11tl trip air fun• &. bn(el with ci1·run '14'w * LIDO ISLE \ LEASE-OPTION our houst·l4arm1n.: ~tfl to L~c ele~ant 5 Hr, •l;a , $500-YIEW , yuu l'ur\'h,"l' hr.incl ,...,,_,hla•lJ" NAW""rt Cru•l .. ,. r tiim rm"' bar+pool t'J ~ ~ ' " ,,,, ·~ ~w rwmt• rnm own~r 4 hie 1-'rml t.hn -rm 11 LaT <:undo 1900 ~.fl ol :.beer Ddrm!>, 2', ba. 22001~ft elegance EnJOY thl· r I f l d ,,_ t:ir 5315 000 Dri'l' b) 2 rp c. urm11 in r "' tJO Via r.idn Soutl then breathtaking view ol ranuly rm ~ under O""an & harbor hlr• make appt 673-9401 ..... " mark cl ~ l 05. 000 Thts3 bdrm dream 140n't HURRY this won't )J.,t t••--------11a.,t al only $149.000 Call ~5395 752·1700 DRIVE BY .. ~sslon Vl~jo 1067 ..... , ................ . 1000 DOVER DR. N ll VACANT I Bil. FRPl.C $129,500. n :RMS .. .. from the door 1tep ur lh111 on large lot. roned for :i All 2~rm, beam c~ll 494·8502 DJ.::COR pet. 1385. N3-~7. Aaeol lmmacuhatAt 4 lx'droom, Income II> I 0 mo· m~. ~ood frplc 11' pvt 4 Br, 3 &. l''wm Jim. !J noree Re«tced for qwck ult!to )'1i1nb PLUS 3 older un .. r 1 . n. balh home with m1m) •ls All ror ,270,000. Real &t• car g1&r, " pc ~. macro 1.1Pilrack• 1and frwttrct~• m,500 E111lside C M A~t W..t.d 2900 wave oven. wetbur. ,.._...,. V.._ l.234 i\lkinr 175,000 oo 1103 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Panoramic view. $900 ~, ,,.;--FourpS.x mo. LcaM!. Cull Onnlc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ANCHOUGI Urantl new,! 3·2 btldrm N:;-HRt;°7rJ I~ -Luc1i1l build~r w1i1ols Agenl.W 7:Hl64UIJ2 SPAClOUS 3 br Tiburon wut1 & 1-3 bedrfl'\ unit SIW,500. Three 2 gr u~'. bulldable, property coudo,:l11ba. bltni •• A!C. INYISTMIHTS u d d lbr l F 1 !ta A l SIU 0 27 Newport, Costa Mesa --------wt'l b•r 1Cur ctr. opor. 17 •.. , .. 9~7711 pgra e uou · Pc ... .-90011 · ' o r area. Tear-downs, 4'dd· 2 Br 2~:: Ba. 1-'am nm. Pool soo. ~7·4525 "" • -e 8 ch ~ n i 1 Lu 8 h '""" oru., multiple unit pro· kltch. refn6j, w:.hr dfyr, - --- 1 4' n s d 6 t· a P i n g • CWI C"-ti• Loe perty. FAST ESCROW. 2 car gar. bcuul yard. Bea11t. 3 bedrm. 2 bath, .s.it• Alto I 010 spnRiuer:;. eie;::.,000· E/slde front dplx 3 1 Ca. 1164().8208 anytime. ardnr pd. $575 yrly huge bonus room-Cpk. ••••••••••••••••••••••• oy c h 11 d.. >r lmmed occpy 427 DW. cpt.s, drps, super RNltorlllqHewport !IC, a ~ew re ~uou W11lpaycasbforyour.re· Narc1ssus6423286. n eighborhood, $435. CoataMe1aS48·77.Z9 encl pullos, ull encl ulcslate.Caahin aflash! 98J.4567A.sent,nofce. 2 STORY/POOL ' garages. pool. frpl , Scott Realty 536 7533 Nr beach, shoP1. upper, 3 lndscpg. $142,000 Br 2& W/D D/W fplc OMLY M9,900. tnco...t p--.... 2000 a.. t2·0759 & 752·1920 Gen 1--.aa1 gur i•5o. '67S·S34o : ~-a.ach u 4o t "" "··d ·--· •r Ryan .....,.. • .Jt:. 1 •••••~•·••••••••••••••• ••llll4uc rm,2buthCen ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-3 Bedroom. 2 bath. tury llome is on a large 27 UNITS, lNUUSTRIAL ,_ ________ HouMt Fvmllhd Charming sceluded 2 Rr. gorgeow. brand new unit lul ut en<iof qwet <IUl·dC· PARK. Annu&l iJlcOmc 1 uu•rs •••·•·•·••••••••••••••• (pie, wood beam clg11, With 1 Ira patio, car. 1>ac. Mu~ upgrades. $109,000 ... Priced ut '¥ lalboalsland 3106 gar $525.644 5687 frplc, close to tronsp. Low m11rn t-nance yard $930,000. Seller w /curry Costa Mesa . .$17,500. in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,._._.. Kids & Pets ok. $410. Call with I\ V 11cceb!>. Good contrac:t at 9'1. Pnnc.u..-come. llu1i1e lot. $l~950. WINTER RENTALS 3Br, 28a home, yard, 2 846-l826oc675·6670. ag\. ~hooh •. Close kl South ly. Bkr. 556·6171. • car aan~e. $450 mo -Co;u.t Plaza. Seller has ---------6 UNITS 2 br 2 ba $.SSO R i b 2 b bpughl ~ew home. Call SAN CL~TE " 2 b • 1 b $450. . 759-1131or6408000 eaJ n t'e 3 r , a , cpt:-., ii .I l Ofl J0.000 wq ft + + + lot r67, a • drps, 2 C8r gar., fenced rot additlona u1a1 ~ TRI·PLEX~trn 01ca 3 " 5·0994 Duplox 2 bd 1 ba Nu d d I $395 Ji ~A °" Z"'n"' .. c 2 L>.• L'.ast~Jdfi . • yar • aoo oc. • S•tl>·• I I BR. 2 DA owne' r 's anil ._, ""' " • r_ " ~ children No pets $350 •c<.G f Costa Mesa S1'29,950 E Dayfront lge uprox J M 213.799 7·7.,, · · 963-·wv7, Agent. no ee. · ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. w ....... .,. 1098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GllARG.ltH with no money down. you (•an purchai.e a hoM'· for ~.9QO in a nite ,·<1m· .rnWl1ty w frplc Walk·to..beal'h & n •· R D ..,. park. $152.500 675-2626 ugt i.q. '2 "' 2 + F / en, & C..1..0SE TO BEACH DUPLEX -Sharp 2 & I ntiar. beath & park $1.500. FOUR·PLEX-Bei;l bu; near beach. $182,500. BE.RTllA ff EN HY · llP:ALTOR,S 215Del Mar _0~~~1 .UNITS UNiTS Great Cbh Flow ' 12'..., cash on cusb relum ror !250.000 down pay. meot on mini warehouse rn Orange Co. 100% least.'d m pnme location. Call for details i.ndr &rein/patio. 4-0' sup Cottage, 2 Br l Ha . patio. Clean 2 Br, Cormal din avll. Winter or yrly. new decor. l'Urport S. or rm, 1 sty patio hme, From 10/l. S34·17W Hwy. 955.3547 ~ w fplc. wetber. refr1g. N. BAYFRONT·lO mo Sparkling 1 Bdrm. partly 14mter rental $600 mo. furn. Patio. So/Hwy. 642·1670days,S48-8647 $350. 673-8617, 549·1967 D W. bltn:i. Tennis. pool & RV :.t.orage. $42S mo. 9722 Verde M ar <Brook hur at & .~ ..... --,-•-.... _ 3107 8eauuful3br,2ba +den Hamilt on') 5'4S·3359, -......... _.., cust. hm. Mex tile, 848·2600 M Ay 0 CK ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roman tub. S undk __ b ____ d ___ _ PACIOUS oceanfront 4 64().7849 3 Br, 2 a, cpt.a, rps, 2 car Dr 2 Ba complelcly furn. -gar, fonced, frplc. $100, hme. (<'pie, w11hr /dry r. 675·5810, 642-0393 dshwshr. 2 car gur. no peb. Yrly rental an11l. Sept. Tath. 6«·9582 Winter rental nr Bay &. Ocean. 2 or; 4br. frpic &. furna c11. No pets. (213)243·5316 <;osta Mesa 3224 L Bedroom condom inium ""••••••••••••••••••••• neur pool and tenn1i;. ~esa Verde :i +family, S290/mooth . Call !~4 ba., new paint. $400 646·4477. Mo. No pets. SPA''l_O_U_S_l_ -I -b--2 Agent 833· 1768 .., l eve . 3 r, · ---------ba, pvt yard &garage. t Consumen leware! child ok. No pet:.. S325. 4 BR, 2 ba, Seashore Dr. Before you pay some 8122 Michael Dr. Day,, Wint.er lease $575. mo. agenclea for the "run 847·.~U . eve11536-3638 S36·1827or960-1830 a r ou nd · ' c u I l Hare Sp)!llass Hill lot · CONSUMERS GUIUE. S 191 Z Ir, no Ls.. " magnificent oecan & Cc+istrano leach 3118 Muny have and are &lad 1----------i .. ·:..i.h1on bland \ ll'\4 s ........................ lhey did. 100'1> or h!>e's, Distress ~roperty! Perfect for yuur custom On Tha Beach. 3 Br, z ba, plex's & apl 's available ' Circle this! Fncd yd, + more. Nice nrea. Call the experts. many more avt. Small fee. Pix. Prof rent serv. 6'\5·4900 ~Real Estate ....•.••.••........•... MobueHonws For Sale 1100 ......................• f,,·Jn rind it ror you ·home • ~ mo winter. Avail NOW' At beach or . Up Bt!~h area ~pc1..·i.1ll~l Sl.C. TA. YLoa CO. "°"'Call 496-5913. to IOO's or NEW listings Probates. f'on·do:.ure:., 955-0350 ""~on leach 3140 ~a t•FhREdL.a lyr. Sm a II &1nkruptcies.01\ortc • _ .... .., .ee c. 1 e 11erv1cc. 5215 h k th , N" ? ••COftSUMerS G11l• J1nci.tmcnt properties LOT n I. SJn Cll•mcnlt:, ••••••••••••••••••••••• &is-4!l00 • c ec IS. ICC -lk•Jullful 2.ix55. :! hl·ilrm Belo"' murlll'l µm·(: ocfan park \ iew. By Bach condo. l blk from *•Consumers Gulde Br. kids OK. xtras, rcnl 2 both +-dl'n l'Oac:h "llh Wortd Wide Brokers nwrwr s3R.tlOO OTrl·r beach. Barbour ra,ifll· ---__ serv, fee. No lasl mo. norrh + 2 l-.1r porl nose • 1 1921~17 or 19;! 5721 . Fu 11 ~ furn p 00 t '& SO>. New E side 3 br, 2 Musl see. 645 4900 lo dubhou'l' and 01·1·;.m. Cat. 673·4~5 j a cu z l I. S2 5 O, mo . bi, yurd. encl garage, * •COftSUftMt'S Gui• $32.50011\)..'l 616·43f:IO · --Jl.J J...OT. 13 Units. Co:.ta 213 59'l·31il ufL 6:30pm. W O. No pets. -R-3 Ba d '-. SK.Y'S'iHE LIMIT :\fo:;a. Prin\' only CJI! -lSL M~mt 642· 1603 .i r 1 •. · cpls, rpi.. ~xso Skylmt• Zbr zha ~ , . . . ,, 5-8pm. ~.5935 • lacJuna S.ac:+t 3148 - -bltns,. btke to bch. S.t5o. St;ir (" M Adult prk 2 4-I~,& ~.unit> ·~at h --• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. 21, HA, gorgeous 848·~'68; 114~00 lknt under Sl3tl :t mi' tr .and mland Urit~it"'Cuu~ Npt lleh 3 Arl'h Uuy 2 Ur frplc lrand new condo With 2 -- 111·t·ufl"" S27 ~o\ 11) t~ lora!.1<1'h lor ~.'l(h<•!>l tradt· -ti\-J Wt•s1m1n!-.tcr. otln \,~. p~ b<'h. stas' lrg. put1os, 2 cur garage. 4 UR · 3 8 11 · N r: Owm·r 645 3357 :tMt. H2ti7 . '<tlut: , c;,ilf 979·HSJ.J, Ooh ~JOxltilix?().JxG:I. ~'75,000 !>:J..1.~111:1or499·21.M>ti Jt>QI, jacuw, tennis. Sub Rrookhurst & Ade.m::; ... K. or Uhn !I. 11:15.flilfi!i 11f:. . f!lil 0 11 kid~ & 1K't1> Sl!l5. Will ne.:. rent w / ri ~ht Trcasurl' lslanil (L1vrn).! i1 Bedroom. 31~ baths. Call549·J710orS3'i Wf>ti party. Larry Dunne rm. !Klrm, cabana l~)!e MobUe home/ lari:e 11 \'ing room .. z -· 714·627 1551, tl·4 wkdy!>, p;ilu1 2 Ut mobilt• 'l\m TrtrPrtu 2300 prh·ate pulios, 2 car Ntw 3 Br 2'i Bu twnh1>e, noag\11. l'\l hl·h~<> i:"lnhlci·n-•••••••··~·•··--·••••••• gara~e,.. In \Cl') papurar rpfrig. W D. 2 l':1r g:.ir. . J -... fl('ts. 20~:t~ ·~.'h l!i!I 2t.c11 ' *lahll:.hed II V park. nr area I\' all Sept <!Olh ltnmi., pool, jucuw. ret· 3 8r·. 1 h ~ ~· N~ ... ~~rner & 4 Plf!X Hunt. Bch. llcmel fl) rcrnotc \ a'llt•, for )Car around lca:.e. nn. Sl!!5 mo. 610 57:;1 ~-~ I m 0 ~>.56'.Adlt O\Cr Ill, i.µal~ rent 'S9S pcT mo Sm.ill rx,:t ok S'lH.500 THJ>:Gl':ARl1'; C.:0~1PANY 640·6ti00 _. " Walk to bcaC'h from U11s lovel)' 2 boorm. :? Ila home or enJOY pool & dubhou~e ·art•' 1t-tc~ ph h s:!t.500. Jui.I hi.tt·1I. A~6111 IH6 13ftll • I' u r I • CJ f :J 5.:; a\' r l'.,' ~12!11'.J per month • - Pntll• of OW'11cr11h1p 3 hr J)Jl'k.1~(' I 1,1tl , .. ii) a,· It I . bi' c:)\ ~ Sl. J (Ir I' 2 B;~. 3 br. 2 ba. fenced ) cl 112 ba owner·i; unit .Jui.t ti bd 0 :£~ t ~e Fam Rm & fplc retlu1:e•(to a 1-w Sl~.9HO approve i.u I\· wner 0 6 Wa 6 1'4 l'ncd )II Sl25 &12 0<!82 · Children ok. SJ6() m1J I." 1n.ay 11~11 ·pa.rk or subd1' :J"' ~~ _ 962..JS33 · · 9~3-0891 ' ep A~ (1,99'1·~> RfAL ESTATE : 3 bdrm 2 ba. bu1ltin:.. wrl)Ct:., urupci.. libl c1o1r Nc.1t. 2 br. I ha homt'. BY THE SEA l3SO S.Coait Hwy. •ar, renc1.'<l } r<l. w patio \~ cpl<;, c1rps, 2 l'ar 1o:ur. l.1ke ric~. 2 .UR. fam1I~ 494-8536 CO\l'r Gardcnt<r paul l<enl·oo.y01rd. Ntl'e area. rm. i:la.:.'-rm. muny <'X Oceanfront. 3 BR. 3 BA . $15CJ pr mo. 833 lOIH aft S350. 963-4567. agent. no tr.is a Jl('t adult park. turn. fresh & clean. S9<Hl !i oo PM f'oto i>eti. Ice _ !'~~~~~.!>ell 20>..lR' Apply Ros e Lan . ~;-;-ba Me:.ndcl M;;:-~IO.lDr,frplc,new w w COURTF.S'' REAL T\ NICllOl-5 Reul Estate. Cln' frpl •nu ''Pl!: ' cov 1•pl & p<iml Front hsc ~ OO:! i?lll 1506 S. (;oast Hw)'. 1. .. ~ r><tl . ~ 640.0008 • w ll1~ )-artl, Inell. gras' , lkh · -& tree!>. Nr Ucach Bl. & Oiltlof County !>Zl5! Circle th1:. ~ Nil'c lot', major shop'g ctr. Pet ok p,._rty • 2550 2 bdrms. 2 baths. frple, cull the cxper1b !or lhe Owner675·1959 · -...-"'hlle waler View Ste~ 'II 1 k "' •.-•••••••••••••••••••• • to beuch. 494·287 1 sen you 1 ~ "l'l'. Run l' ho Ca J 1 for n 1 u . -------_ pix IW> 4900 Temecula. 5br. rum rm. lacJuna Hilts 3 I SO ••Consumers Guide 3ha. frplC', wet bar.•-••••••••••••••••••••---- S175. I Ur. new w w cpl & paml Nice ) ti. Hear h:-.l· :"\ r . U ~ h U I 0 w n t' r bi5·195!:1. J>rt<m1um lukc & mnl vu . Leisure World Condo. 2br. Owck this 2 Hr 2 Ba kids t1bhSl' fac. 2')0<) Ml fl . Ol• Iba carpart ~100.. mo ·~· fncd )'d. Pllllll. ,a.:ar. 2 llfl, bltns, new rrpts & cui>uncy Ckt I Sl25,'000. Ba~cs545·3722 · C..ll the expert runtul drp:;. Bcac:h 1Gurf1eld C'all owncr ill &14 ·477!) or ---------'erv. Pix. Fee. 6-15-4000 $350. mo. 554·7211> 6-16-8402 or 5411-1789 Newport hoch 3169 • •Con1wners Guide . 8UHITAPT. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----4 Bdrm. family rm, l Lovely bavfront 3 hr 2 ba tl75. 3 Br 2 Ba, ktdli pets bath, bui It in:., frplc-. ~h t\se. Dshwh~. W~!>her ~K. Pool, etc. Mu!!l sec. patio, gurdentir No peb & dryer l2lJ l~7.6087 . Call the rl!ntul expt>rt Nr Graham & Slater. 12l3)749.4445 ' Jerv. Pix. Fee. &IS 49?0 '475imo. *•Consumers Guide 898 2028 Eves 493·9-131 l . 4 ....... U.tw.l.._, Ho.IHI Uaf~ .,.... .... 'WW.... AparttaHh Unfwn. Apartfftenh Unfurft. Apartment. Unfw-ft. 'Tl'iureday, September 15, 1977 DAILY PILO.T 1 @ ••••.••................ ..........•..•..•..... ·····················~ ....................... ········••········•·•·· ·•····················· ·~ ~ ............ ?~.~~ ~~~.~ ... ~~! ~~~ ...... ?!~'-~~~!':° ... ?~~~ ~~~~~ ....... ~~~~ ~.~4!!~ ..... ?~.~~ ~~ ............ !~.~~ ~~~.~~~ ..... ~~.~~ Moo~ .. Tr111f iM S ••••••••••••••••• ,-;Ji •• ·~ R°"' Jbr, fem rrn HOUSIWAHTfD Nlrt!I)' furnl111l•d yrly --------1.._.EW OW..-ERS l UR \ll'W .111t. nr llotl'I ttoo•t s $2) wk & up HO.COSTAMUA ' J a. ... " Ou OUA' '" ~"''" tn·4 "" """11 llu.t rl'ntal l Rdr111, $300/mo, re .... ;-.... .... Lul(WIU, $27!> Kt!l'!I re w ktkhCll'•, $42.50 wk & •Ptlvate oHke $7~ per LOANS 9~ nabl~rNJl\&S3M1 Ill.'»•!£• 42· Wlahl'• 11" oo Ulrnn yrt', 1 bllt lo I HIWMAMAGIMIHT <fd. Al'ply, Nl(.;HOl.S up Apli. S48~7M month1ndut1I .uto2-~'Wft 1TIAlt11h.1 ll'li l' or bul.A)<v 1l R J • --'"" Lo\fiy 2 br, I b•. w l>W . .,, ~ ll"w N••w port N bth 673 :iooJur-1»4 4«20 ~t~!:_c•_ SUNFLOWER. ea t.:1.tnta, 1!>06 Su ..... . 1 k' •440 SQ F1'. Car~l. F t T .i~~Q ..-. d "--tio I I ·--------•I £,.. ____ -Co.1•1 llwu, J,u•• Heh .:xp g rm on Y. no t•.oo ~. dr11-s. alr-nd. Sl.9S , ... r iures erms~ ... ,_. f19,..-• l I , ... ww ••c.t. Requlro 1aa.manc1dtft J .. ro Id pld DO ~ ...., r• s.ttttrM""'c.l ~d Nh. -11hbortw.<Ml l~I II) ZUIJV •4 tl Ht'I f V11"tor1• on ti.1u•h 11de I --Hl--.t 38 r 0 ~ r em month UICI ulil .... II.)~ Slt!t ",«'liomt! M15 •\1111 "'r1l .. ti() lL·w 17',1, 2·•ur , uoo • ...,,.,. S~p,' CORONAD~L~IAR 2cmdlbdrnn ......,.. ... -rs• 52 dmk·r . smok'r, $4S mo •Two olflce swles, 630 '42-2171 545-0611 -U1f7 A l N r " • ' ...,.. 411 ~ • ~<IU • • 2 Ur 1'ownho~c. frplc. lbr toWl'lhouHs ••••••••••••• ••• • ••• • •• t.St3 Oran~e Cl!. SQ IT. Ji22$ per month t;C'n ' 0 c-.. U..11•" l•l.and. ~ or Jun". fr I) I 1 , v I cw. PuuJ, h:nn~ Somo ocean l Lt.L. "'i--' ) Deluxe 2 nn Apt, bt'uul M· , 1 d d· . Kl Ind ulil. RetJred couple bat mon!Y NC'¥> Twnlue 3Rr. Z'~fia. nall H\~U401~1 tw~or~l l!>'j9 4< Catalln:t vl~wl. Close "'"n ••• ,..acea loc. Nr • .BC'h l'uol & rec an cmpoye a}':;. t . 540.220() (213)697-2064 wloanonlat&2ndTJ)s. d t I 3 POOLS rrn. $310 UP + dt:". G.u. privileges Sl35 mo -----·'"'ent.496--080() l .... (' I . • .. -~ .•vllY ..,.., •• " O<U '"'11 J ·c· ... z1 &wtr pd. 831 37!16 -~... ... .: :w 4::,, r.t • Atl:. pnv bath, w E 8 u y Fr ns:ft •. ,pb, fll9, pa '°• poo • Wlli. ~ dt 3 Hr i Hu J l'·~ "~ "it:"" ... u ............. t~ahopplDg & Hne beacn " Co~t"' Mnsa 631 067-t ~ ·C t'nlWI n•u .... or u 'llf'r NII w1irm ~ ~ 1\-.10 . wn J O mo. Uttl. lrlcl """" ~ V6 "'I •~ " .,. 4. W1t~nul $.SOU mu "oucl i,ant'IJ.:, h\·11m •)IV', 1!"·UUI I•--------• SU•• .. u Hewporl .. och 3869 We~kly. $7120 £or 1or2 4 unit bid~.• near SECON D TRU•S T t>U ~1-_ _ llihlllt. 1>k, r...itlo, dill Jl•u , "'"~ ()(.'Opie. no kids or pets. freeway & S. Cs~ Plaza. DEEDS , t .._ • .,,. t 'I ., •• .... tr t (.)'canlront 1 br, f/p, gar. Cl<.r.1<: toS.A..lbivv &So. ~··•••••••••••••••••••• N1) ktl<'h"'r1. 5l'11lark $150.Agen_t5'8·7729 ___ AG" .... ,,,; 71" .... -,.,. • -leec9' lZ41 t•omm PK•. c11n1" ~"" t•1111 • .nr ""c11n on • A lit t w· t h > Spac1.ous ttr Crplc bltn "' ""'~ • .. ...__... ~•••••••••••••••• rnoyrly,7Ullt.Ol:!:I~ tvk.1;11r ,ll(t!1lcck Qwet ...,'e11 5 n1° pe25 is.377 1 8n7er Cst s op'g. 'l'lny Tots nearllongllo t •1 $37~· Motel~ l!274 N~wport Dix ofrlces w /secy :t Dr. :?1 ~ b.i 2 C"ur 1111.rk•na Walk lO ti-.11ch. JacuUJ 111u O•Clcan v1111w Nr ~ $61~ cw JU.:11 ~Hlh lJSO ••••••••••••••••••••••• allllll, 1111 µcts. Winter, ......,,yr YS4 .67 · welcome.3pluygrow\ds spt 8 • • lllvd,C.M .646·~_s __ service, xerox. Nr. o.c. PVT PTY will p.x.owre Nl'wl>Ort (.'rc.t 1.u\ condo ¥3.~ 494 ''"'' SpoUeD lux"'"" duplex FROM $285 UP 642-~ 1>~-m JI. buth own en· Ai"""rt. $250/mo 752·5626 for your 2nd T.D, , l \ ;fl", 21'1 bi., h·nn111, llilOI, _,, p&nl( .... E"61PO wv .,.. • ·•~ 642357~ t ec:Ulll, uuna. Wik to L\ t!Un Front wtnler !Br, F'rplcs, New cpt/drps 2511 W. Sunflower ""' " ,,.. RT trance, mature business EXllU"'UTIVE SUITES . .1~· h Heh G''I IJ'•' 20·' rr111" ·rv """" Wik to bch·11hp'fC . Grdnr 557-4800, S. •. n ach e Io r s. t or 2 "''rson ref 615-8953 E.CM ,.._ . ..,1 "'IO 2nd TD hdit1nd 9112l7i;"" mo. " v•, bU~r kll;hcn, ~ur~'n,; &llll·Wl.r lncl. Vrly lea1e: 7days 10·5.No;ls Bedrooms&Townhou.sc11 -"-~---------5-0 Deluxe 1mvate office. iiio:ooo. on. fJilth pets 1450 4\M 571)2 :J Br :1ba1700' $595/mo • From $264 so Vocation RenfQf1 42 Sunny . a Ir con d . Laguna oceanv4ew t e· Nwpt HcJhh Ar.a '4 lir 3 bit lam-rm 2100' 2 Bdrm. Dishwshr. encl Spectacular Rpa, total ••••••••••••••••••••••• Personaliu."<f phone cov· sidence, in escto-' lo N~w 3 Or, 2 bii condo 2 llr. l'l ba Townhouse Hewport .. ach 1769 5WS1moAdult.spref'dNo gur. $325/mo, 1st/last, r ecreation program, r1nn your wlntcr ,·acu-l'ra11e. secreta rial Doctor at $267,ooot'All \'1i.>w A C. pool, tcnr\I:. i\pl 14 Jiatio. $29!> mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pel8~Aeacia64S.7048 ilOO r efundable dep. 6 social program. Spools, 8 lion PaJm Desert Tenn1l> ~en 11·e 1-:asy fwy ac· duo 4.S days. DlscoU~ Lagwia V11la~e. No 1x·i.. b.lt 08tl t!ves, 8:!3·8127 On the beach winter ren mos lse. 646-3436 or tenrus court!>. All"al>h1on Club. 3Br condo. 639 :i:n1 1·el>~ 6titl Baker St • C.M. 1 · Id 20~ per •oh ~15064.j!r.l().t, ,1,~ tul Duplex 3 Oft. 2 Ba 2 BR., I.earned ceilings, 540-2960 Jsland,J amboree&SJn -----N1OCA1rport5462982 7°51Y!:..., r :'93 11""'" • 0 encl. deck. $425 Mo. A"' 1 ·ab1n -Hi" Bear. Sips 12 -.u.• o .. • "" • · --up, ~195. 2 BH. l Ba down ,.. Joaquin Hills Rood " "' 3 Br, 2 ba, A <. • llwlluls, IJDO 1Sl.fo; luvl'ly 2 s lory S.195. Hoth w gar & frplc 644-2212 497·3388 QUIET·CUTE·PRJVATE C714) 64(-1900 l'oo1 lbl, dr TV. 550 cla\ 1770 Ormtge An. ~.,,,,,.,,.../ , ~I S mo237N06r ... ~111ulloan on w· lot 2 I.Jr, 2 bu, ~tuture adults. 646 2030 Lge 2 br. 2 ba. beaul view l Br, ut1I pd. $310 mo. <1~·11«11 l 150SQ.ll., reception area PfnOftlJlt/ •. a.ta. .-.vrl'i.in J,1Jrt1allyfum1shed huge - -of bay. Priv"te. SSOO. 642·083Sor646·6423 New duplex.es 3-3 br $350 2 orflcel>. pvt. restroom Lottlrfotltd .... ~"· M2·9603or~2200 -palin.SMSO mo.759·SSSS tkcanfront 3 Bil. 2 Ila. 675·5205·613-4841 .,..,.,5 3B 2Ba ls 186 up yrly. Fam1ly & pell> l~f~~c~[. ~:ra~~~rll>ei5l3~: ilZS.:>-18-6996 ----•••••••••••••••••"~•••• frµk. Sept June or yr _ _: ..,, · r •nope · ok. 675 4912 • -• F..-.d ~O Lovely home, 3br. 21.Ja , SanClemeftte 3276 1.,, !196·6756 ______ 21.stSl. E1S1de. -__ modl'rn hollbc. £lee. ap .!Nlu·u• office space 525' ~•• .... l Crplc, crpl!>, drps, b(llifl> ........................ • ·~~~-.-.-546-WSS STEPS TO SAND. deluxe µIi .s Artesian hot ~Newport Blvd. Cl\1. ............... -•• AtC, sunder~. f1m.I r1.1 l.G. 2 br, ) ba home OCEANf'RONT, neat 2 Br ll11nfexes & A~ts ; B ls &_2_B_h 3 Br. 2 lia. gar, bltni.. rruneral :1pnn~. adj lo 21 38dl 556-4181, 644 2228 Lost: Grey Coc~ai\6•. &anteoer. $-125 mo. Call Stone's throw to the heh. w gar. Adlls. no pel!I ~ . • ~ r ap '. . r .St! sparklmg clean. 5450 mo hr fret• hot mineral halh --Tame. Banded. Pa>cDOn· wknd.s768-47S3 XJ.nl. ocean.vu, patios. $345 mo. Winler . l, 2 & 3 bd.rm. rime wgar,cpls.k1dsOK,no yrly. C.ll l·98S-69S<l 01 J-'urnorunfurn.529·00HCorQIW dcJ Mar. outside toryBayarea.RfNlfd. 213 795 3018 Corona del Mar loca pets. S235·$250. 831·9081 l ·629·""-·~ duy:., or 675 9087 wknds. entrance. i.econd floor, 675-4512 ... Lease w /option tt> buy, ~arden. newly dccor'd · _ d ~ ,.... b th •· • $385 -I -:t.. ,lions. Agt. 675·2311 ays. MESA PINES l O ..,.can view, pvt a "" new 3 BR, 2 Ba Condo. w1newcpti:. mo int WATERFRONT ~-~---~ anAND NEW. Studio/I ATOUCH01''C:l..ASS Rentals to Shatt 4 0 i.torugc Walk lo bank & LOST: Male Ge an Jo'ully upgraded In ullls 4!12·6188or547-0361 RI d n Charm n" l br w b"" •• •••••• -••••••••••• re:itauranb ~'ll!()u••r mo. Shep & Great Daa.· ix elegant earth tones. Cu.o;t • , ---2 8 · uxury con ° BREATHTAKING & 2 bdrms, S230. S285 & v1 1M"'otur" ad1 1 11tsJ M •1 • h• f h d 3 Zl:i'J E. C.:M Jlwy"Apply at OC College, Au" ,.30. bit bar. 'rplc' ett•. NewM1ru<..:ostaTwnhme. f\Jllyfurn.$l500 Mo. .,.,.''.lmmed.occupuncy. ew. " • aetos are umts e · h b"' .•. 2 ° d f I $360 BILL GRUNDY JmY VIEW °""" Must ~re' 1510 W. Balboa bdrm. 2 ba home 1n Suitt> II. m t·all 752 1830 Wearing c oke e ~..,. Panoramic view. "•so ,"r + en, P c, mo. REALTOR 675 6161 Pool J·acuni frplc & am• left-'" U=o nd .,.. 4!f7 2747 &106878 U~1 raded 3 UR upper, · • tall5lh1 I rvine's Unive rsity macr ......... \ mo. 581·0075or634·89S6 · _or · Chi C "" dshwhr. Adults, no pets. please Cfll: s@ ; ---San s to na ove. Vl..w. Open daily 11 ·1/4 6. $395·$450 3 hr, 2 bu, encl. Park. $250/mo. 552·960f BusinenRental 4450 847·7675 LocJunaNigu&I 3252 CJ~ 3278 OCEANFRONT ~~721~~~. Nigel, at Wlcnds 11-4. 2650 llarla ~ar. BIOl'k to 1'l'ach, or7S2·63'75 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------T'"""-••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• ~!!!':~•••••••••• WINTER RENTALS St. C.M. <Mesa Verde .bak . ylC.lltoJ>els Female roommate lr> shr 4 DELUXE OFC'S LOST: Female m~lrer NIGUEL SHOR ES, prl v. Lo I b 2 b f I 2 "R. 1 ba. "':r70 2 Bdrm. Builtins, frplc, Dr: off Harbor Blvd .. 1. .'fSL M~ml 642·1603 2 br, 3 ba townhouse at Conf. rm., seat 25, all Spanial, Apricot~ "ommun .• dramut1'c 3 vey 4 r, n. pc, 0 .. lMONTH FRL'"' · 9/9 R..achwallt,.-~os ... DW ts d k d / l LJ!e. 3 BR. 2 ba. S.'50 pool, sundeck. p alio. c.c.. Park Newpart $195 mo paneled, sm. whsc Jn re· · ..,. "-• BR, 2 ba., comp . ,cp • rps, is pe 2BR.2ba. $400 Adults. No pets $325, '549-2447 Wf;STCLffl<' 2~r. 2ba, 64Q.4160,639·i!441 . ar lor2yr.lease.Lake Reward!S36-4°'8 •• pnvacy; steps to Pool. ~>.K, ~ood area. $425 673 1418 e·ves or adults,no1><.'ts.S:H5.Jnq Forest a rea Kent , .. t ennis, beach. $550. 963·4507,Agent,nofee. STEPSTOBEACH week~'tlds 2Brw/gar.$250.Nucpll> 1700We!!lchff0r.Alltll! Mt FShrBeaut.4-bdeon Jlarkms. • l.ost:Youngfem~t«ed 49J.7278 Charminit 2 br. 11 2 ba. 2BR,den.2ba SS75 · thruout. Water pd. 2228 -do Woodbridge -Irv 714_581.9393 black cat. Mesa..VVpdtil e ( I Ow 2 l·BR.. early $400 2 BR ttil ea new crpls "D" Placentia Call bet l 4 Hr, 2 bu, .:arai::t'. new Amenities. Mark 559 7111 -----area. Reward. S4.9·~ OCir..a. ..... VIEW lit',. • car i:aral{e. • . &56364120 l'J>l••fre•hly pa111ll'd ~" d d drps. Close to brh. S.165. ·· " ~ . • SHOr R.INTALS , na<'I' •• Dog, vi·c u-..J.1ton t·pt!i, rps, ~oo D , . ------Ylryl:.e$.S5()•mo .J.llhSt :"Zeed Havellome Apt~ '-""H n.ou Adults.2Br,2ba l''rpk. n<'1ghborhood. S375. mo. ay:; 556-0960, eves 2br, 2ba . At.lits only Clol>elobch.5323331 Wunlcong'lroommatc? Art1bttcatmosphere & Harbor, CM. Fein, 6 2 Clubhouses, Jacu.ws & 96.1 \Sf>7 i\grnt. no fe<>. 968.-6025 _ Completely rcdero ~35 Call 64S·740S. 640 S461i CAHNEJlY VILLAGE mo 1, t a n S b e & _pools.S460i mo 75_2·_9260 2 Hr+ den. hltns. pool. 2 br. frpl<-. crpts. stove Ava111G-l.835-666S l.UXUllY adult l &2 br. •SHAREAHOMF:• Severalavoilablefrom Ridgeback, red, 3 BR. 2 ba home, pool, lnkcs. rec. fac. S375Jmo. -------llaleony-\1ew Xlnteond -i.lcp lo bc.ich, v~·l'wtvu $65to$430pcrmo. Reward! 84!5· new cpl, $475. I mo frcv 8.18 :isms:U·:1248 Bayfronl 2 & 3 BR, S500 & Adults no pets S370 322 2 bedroom 1 bath, newly 5515 ltl\cr /\ve l.sc Need M F' roommate, 5PM 111. t' A 67560.,. decorated. Ca rpet:.. &t22566 Nwpl li~h '• blk to ------llill rentw/l_yrlse. 546·6274 ..,_. ,._ 3210 ai(J()mo. winter. e 10 rope ve ..:__u. _ drapes. S280mo 646_0176, Burr Whit~ H ~altcr . . 3267 .-nTOllUIO Agent675·7060 545-GLSS ---------1 bCJCh )l'ill +-11l1I. Miuioft V1•jo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---s.t9·-tl.99 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Greal 5 bedrm, 2'a baths, Oceanfront ''HtJ(hl on BACHELOR 2 BR. l'~ bo, AC, frple, fpk, ow. cpls, drps, beach". Ulil. pd. l br Costa Meta 3824 LAC.AS.A BLANCA <;utdown · bltns, laodscpg. $375 F,V. Mt Sq Park area ·s270·S330. 675·0513 , ••••••••••••••••••••••• APT U•iftcJExpettsH! SBl-4255 K I ( I $4.25 968-3558 FoxhoHow Vitloc)e Bach, 1 Ir 2 BR Share a home or aptment 963ac s pe Awe ctomef. . . Avail Mow-SSO D•p. Al.L UTll .. ~. PD' ,,..._wport •-.... h 3269 · ·4567, gen • no ee. 621 W. Wilson 646-2010 h.~ .. E.m ........ n.-.... Tm ,_ --FURN OR lJN"'URN All ullls pd., epls, drpi.. 100· from the ocean. &..(.VU-> ~r-Vl'lUl"U ••••••••••••••••••••••• Luxury 3Br. 2Ra Condo BACH"OR •2br townhom/w,frpl pool,lndry.fac's.Adults Avad now! 201 fo: uu~~Ci."i~Jl nrSo.CstPlata,$365mo y.. •Lgepauo&enc garage over 35, ,_.., pcfs or Ball.Joa Blv1I Only $250 c...1~bJu~ l>IO·t-162e~cs APT •Adulls,thildUi&over t·h1ldren. Ca ll Sue per mo NO 1-'f:B Call· ForovcrSyrs.832-4134 On I.he Bay, 2 Br. 2 ba, un derwiu prk 'n~. full sec Redec. 1 } r I col> S7~~~~~94.l2 t:.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Crt·~l ftondos. Nu 2 bdrm conqo beaut ocean vu 2hr/clcn ore vu. nr shopping mall frplc. all' rvvfac11.' Also Laguna lhlb ~.s mo. 1~~3br. r m rm. frplt 963-9356 -- $650. e . Sell $125,000. Delu'le two bd. acr cond 673 eondo $255. No lease • f'ool&jacuz:1iuvail. 556·7777 or Henry Sut-ul55fi7777<in~l1mc 1\'LL UTILS l'U' 542.9237 ---------: 2 HR Apt, lrv Fem. shr 1110 rrum the <H'C'an 2 & 3 fldrms, maturel•--------•I wnrnmc $170 + util /\\utl now' 201 1·:. adults, ..:us pd. 778Scott D P :-..1. 3826 We~lcllll :! hr, t •~ h11 55!Jl~hef.3pm 0 Pl. 042 :)073 ano o...... lownhoui.~· /\cJuHs. no Balhoa Ulvd nly $250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pcl.!i. S:fl~mo 1728 I.led Sh<1re super t·ondo 2hr, per mo. NO fI-:1-; Call. r 2b f I I lbh Sue at 556.7777 anylim<'. lkaul. 1&2 ur i::ardcn Mag n lf i cc n t Mn r 1 n a ord l.n. 54/i 7~1:1:1 a, rp c, poo . c se. 1 or 2 Br furn or unfurn apt~ Din tm, dshwhr, View, J(ori:ieous 1, 2 & 3 br $150. 673·2332; 645·7953 r I N Promonlof\ l'o111l I HR, ----rp c, pvt patio. r . Apts.493·0075 ,1c~i Sholl 01 Ion~ tl'rm Gf;tis Irvine Ind. area. SS7·28'H . . -l"a);e .,.14 ... 1." for _ _.. --2 BR, magruf1ccnt O('Can ... .,.. o .. " nu 4350 OAKRIDGE VILLA vu. Woodburning frJJI --....•..•...•.........•. 3br,2ba,bltns Children Av!. 10,1. $375 mo. Block from "'.atr_r, Shores Garage for renL E /Side ar<'a 4 hd, l h.1 duplex Cobla· Mesa S35 Yrlse t71<lW56~7t 6'1.5·2679 · · $411-0868 Nwpl Shores, ltlcp:; from ocean. 3bd. 21'>a <fuplc>x l',....._......,_,,.--._......,.,....,_I Yr llte 1711)956 51171 8RAHOHEW! OCEANVI F:W vrl" nu 2 Br apt&.1411.DeJawarc. <'i>b & pumt, 2 fir I U.1 HB Open 12 5 Dally I dµlx S450 mu ll4• ti7HO, Mile t.o ocean. 642·9601 &12 :1639 Agl.. 536-1808 ----Office Reintal 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 65• PER SQFT ltil7 WESTCLIFF·NB AGT. 54.1·5032 1so1 Wntcliff Dr. Newport Finaiic1al Clr Lffling Office Space Call on Site Manager <714) 642·3111 ext 2-16 ======----Last: parak~t. litioMUe. Retail.COmmerc1al, front banded, vie Npf ~ bldg & garage. We are 548.4982 , .. 2901 Newporl Blvd N 0 (71 41 f,7';, 4630 redecorating & painting LOST: Ladies Silver Wrist now. Go by & look, then watch Huntington·~ call 752-1830 for lnfo. 2544 Mall ~eward. 968-4912 · Newport Blvd. CM. --·-------- Industrial Rental 4500 Found, white PUPVY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alaskan Malamutet.-'1•:; •NEWPORT IEACH• mo's, 15 lbs. Vie. lG.Ui g Orange, C.M. 646-'tm~ 3800 Sq. 1"1. sprinkle1;ed. · M? $13 per mo gross. Agt Lost: Sat. small blk'-m Call752·504l. Cul, w/Oea coJUf' • ..N.ic. --Bucknell & Catpe1le, IND. Units w/oftice CM.S4&-4639 Reward. 1SQ0.4000sq.n. from 19" . IMMl!:D.OCCUPANCY LOST: Tabby, able Leasing ore open 9.5 dal· neutered, w/flea.i c:oUar ly. Sat 9-noon. 7ll W.17l tied w /slrl og."·'.\n: St. c;.4 or call 642.4463 "Spooky". Iris, 'CdM -64<1·7262 •. Llt•Mf~a S $ 2oc Lost: Male Lab s.tt~r 380-50<> sq. • !.» 1 blk i 19th •-PJ~-1· mo Uttl pd 646·3357 • v c ... --• . 642·6027 .,. St~ 4550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost: Wht & bile Slo .,.,., 1959 Male dog. Has l blk rage garage .,.,... 642-6027 Maple .Ave. CM. Mgr at1--------,,... Apt 5. 646-6505 -LOST: Fem all blk .c'· ReMals Want.cl . 4600 w /greeo ~yes. Vfc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harbor &: Wtlsoo. Sept.. WANTED lBr/studio un. or l O. S48-0296 ...,/-- ---3 Br, 2 ba, frplc, IAc yard. 77o~or 76B·71t7 __ $400mo. Oupfexes Furn 3550 FAMILIES STOP HUMTIMG Lge bach, on·an v1l'w, p11L10 end i;:ar, refr1~ I WE HAVE IT ALL AT blk to bral'h $250. BANBURY CROSS . 6.113950 -DEL-U-XE OFFICES furn ept. $300·S~so . Found Black Sh@/Lab ·Mature worilntwoQlan, Friendly. Balboai:ftvd '· 675-4912 Akr ••••••••• • ••••. •• • •• •. • Roomy, luxurious Bay View apt, larae Near N. JI. V .C. l Rr. 2 Ba, SSOO 2 nr. 3 Ba, $650 Burr W hit~ n ~a llM 4''101 Ne wpotl Blvd IJ U 1714l 6l'.> .t&'!O ----------- Winter Rental. Lge 3Br. STUNNING 2 Br 2 Ba 2ba luxury apt. Beaul garden apt, pool, rec rm, rum. Avail Oct Isl thru $275. 710 W. 18th St. June 15. Block to heh. $525/mo 673·3057 or (213 )800·5985 Small l bedroom. All uUUUes paid. 838·1742 Close to beach. schools, freeways. 3 DR, 2' 2 lia. <'<mdo 35 fo't. •Poofs• •Jacu11i• hoat slip avu1I. $6110 2 Bedrm from $2/JS 2 OR. 2 ha huyrronl con 842·6604 do 1n ~etur1ty hid A l'ool Viewpoint La. off Beach 5750 Mo Ai.'\ 67!H6·12 mo. Comm I & indsll spaces, 673·9894 Coast Hwy, NB 548~ 200 to 2000 sq. ft. As low as3S'sq.ft.LagN1guel& FOUND: 6 wk ·~1 .. M1ss1un VieJO areas. lllSfnfft/ln••st/ German Shepherd'.~J· ll d S D F Flnanc• F. vie 14 & Oran1IM ~l-an y to . . rwy. ••••••••••••••• •••••••• 96().49,.,.. -(;all. 831· 1400___ luliMH ----- AirDOrt Offices l '10Nl'H FREE FUU service. No lease re· •1 'd. 200600 sq. ft. Plenty nf parking. 2082 S.E. llril>tOI St. Newport Beach. M7·7010 --------- E. .. cutl•• Row Inc Ofc space in Newi>ort· Airport Area. Reception, phone serv , conference rm, k1tch, secy serv. die· tauni.: & copy machine. From $290. <71• 1752-7170 Opporiunlty SOOS FOUND: Fem. Ing hail ••••••••••••••••• •••• •• dark calico cat, Newl?t, Trade name fixtures 4t Bristol. SA Hgts. Leato eqwp. or Jr. wear store, collar. 546-9482 '.'t Balbao I s l , 25 yrs Found: Siamese-fer.. goodwill. 833·3622 _ w/nurslng blk ldtten SAN CLEMENTE HB.SS7-1491,~T-4 HEALTHCLUB FOUND : SmaY.!1 II FOR ~OMEN. female loot hair }. W1U ~am m e~rc1se & Vic. Ellis & New enr. nutnl1<>11 co1W1eling. All y v 962-6222 • "' equipment 1n cl uded.1--·-·------1r- Great opportunity. LOST: S mo old t BER1l1AHENRY blk/brn w/ori ~ 'r REALTORS white belly & paw . Vic 215 Del Mar 492·4 121 Pnnceton & Gree~1 ---------I C.M.546-7378 •••. Opport t.o have a bus\· Lost, lge grey/whitfb1i ness of your own in th~ by cat "Demian~lh fast arow~ weight COii· Harbor V iew lfttlr; trQI lpdustty. Q>ntacl 640-7316 te Severlf Weier. ~TA JV ~ UP<>RATORl&4', INC Lost : Male mini •r• JRVIN!: 751•9m Schnauzer. CdMt1fe e a n 11wer1 to M'T le ---------• JUward. 640-8585 -"rt GIFT Gallery, wortln ma from McH...,d partner. Limited hr1. II urea, 1 man'• blac invstmt. rcq'd. Ph: Mon briefcase, Jnillals 'QD~ thru rr1.10.12.67S.3080 In a old. Jm po~n Opportunlly tor a mbitious papers. Reward if <• people. Dianlflert, in· 754-7788, 557·2566 .,. ' t.«estlft(. Good earn1n1 """entlal Full Gl' p tr LOST: Male J>oi>errrftv • ...,,. • ' · yr old ears not cUfped ' (. - .\ •I -=..;:i.._.....;0;;;..41LY PILOT Add 1l Bu11u 1t...01,ipcr 1t .. Hammer it (qrPf:'t SERVICE DI RECTORY Plumb 1t. .. Patch 1t...P1pe 1t ... Remoo~1 1t..."'I 1t. C• ment 11 W11 o 1t Hoe It Cl<Mn 1t Mov~ Roof IL.Landscape it... Tile 1t .. Trim 1t...Sew !t .. . ll .•. Pr~s~ 1t...Paint 1t N<tll lt ... Pl<">\lN 1t...Flx 1t Haul it... Add 1t .•. Plant it ... Alter 1t. .. Learn it .. . .... .u 1.,W c ... ld/C..creie lledrtc.e ~al S.nl,e1 HouHCManiftcJ Hou.Ka.aning P~/P~1t9 PalnHrNJ/Paperin9 Roof\nv ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• U • J .\pf.la nco St-r \ ~>NI': tt1t\N t 'rt1w !\) ra '°'' 1':t.l·;t·nrn.·1t\N vrll·cJ llANUY MAN· Curpenlry. Wllllt a Rl!:ALL V CLEAN OtrrCH COUPLE lo clean , .. y Castle Int/Ext dependable rea11 ROOJo'S Installed factory 'fRlf>CUARGF.~lll pr pounn1 II fl1111h1nii r'lllhl frl'I' l'i.t1m.1te 011 4·lt·c·tm·1tl. ptumbintt & .HOUSE? Call Gingham occupied & vacant A E~ S .. .,..5 treeeisttmate. Cult Jay dc;111r~1t1·t ,L1easrta0b1d'l ~~u>n•ns •. ,1. ?OZ) S "un :, \ S.·nuur O'-'n lort111, un har1111or11111111 Jou floor~ ~lli ~1. l.~"7·2787 Girl. Free est 645 5123 homes. 842-0720 vtru"e xlr 1 try.-645 7005 • v S.O.MZ'l iu7 1111'..:i Ml(int'Y 1.a1 M"I l 1 • 67J 0~9 ---2Story SSU. lntr $4Srm • -:;.i9 2961 - 01 • HANDYMAN l~MACULATI!: CLEAN· t.-..c.,-, Prices Incl matr'l·labor Smt painting co. small -----c.,...... 1't:'MJo:NT Wt>llK All hdlulllltcJ NOJOB'fOOSMALL ING You DESERVE the 0 ••0 •••n••n°••u•• Guur/hurd.Freeesl. prices lnt/Exlr. Depcn ROOFSFORLf;SS •u•••••••••••••••••••• k1n1.i. Rit1Honulllt< Jo'n·•· ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ti7S 2-140 BEST. 759·0377 8 yrs exper, free eat, also Ted 627 7900or636-708S dable. Work auar., free All types, flnan uvail. t':.irn1•ntq .iO)' n pr ,.,.,, <'all 7~>tA2.'i Wl':~DINO l'l.l':ANlJl'S ------lndscpng material avail, est. 154.aJ:!l t'roe eiJt, ll<:tbond\I, m-,. Wt•t•kly Miunlt-nanc·u llANUY!\JAN Home!i & HOUSECLEANING 1s our clean up & ref's. Jay ~ROFESSIO~AL P4int· ----bf. Senior c1hwns du;cnt. ~an.t"J. 111"1"'· ,.,, \ho IJ at L> (onnch• All )o'ri•i·•· l t~l~V!l07 1\pts Consr1ent1ous l:lusiness Reliable Sl8-40C3or995-2~ mg. lnter/Exter. Reas, PAlNTlNG. lnlr/Extr. ll9-1-0t21anyt1ml.' 1- l.,aUll 1 lh 1 '1 Alt 5, .~ •-11 ... & <.:r11Ch.man t•h 645·1002 !>urv1ce, Janice'!> Rag. work gunr642·0386 . E 'd i.0nil t neat --'"I+ ..... •t·1 l'OOlll!w:, ''"'" xpr 11 .. ?> . R L 'd •-1 1 ~' -hn1 k ~Jrlt ... rh· t'!ll• Gun.lc11111to: Ser.,, I cc t lc1tn i:e<ly Ann..~ al 675·65S3 Motoni-y . ' . • epa1M1. 1r "' ni.n Rr•1i&:h &. hn1~h. rt'mod 1Jl•'l1 & hontlrti ti7~ 9'7~1 up Iii h1111hn11. Wt<Cldv Grodlnci • ••••••••••••••••••••••• nne work. Stale he. & lO· ~:::· Lie d. 964·1045 All lyJ>Cli. Free est. Call "1);ur nn & J>l rnb _ • • m..iinltm.snn• lkai.on.; ••••••••••••••••••••••• HousecleaninJ: by reliable Brickwork. Small jobs. srd. Exterior spec1alisl. anytime 541·~30 Wall _ r ,: 111ot1 i:, u \ --·--or hll' 1 ulti~. frec cbllmutes Sk1ploadcr. dump triu•k, couple. References· New""rt, Costa Mesa & Try me-<::allco83&-5SSS Plashr/R--'r TI'-mx. '"' um ~ arpell 'Y •••••• ••• ••••• •• • •• •• • • """ 5813 or 1 .,,,,, "126 ,,., .,._. "' _.., .• 111 J\lt\•r 4 :lO u"lt for llon hauHni:. tree work, .:rad _.,.,,.. ._.._...,_ __ Irvine. 615·3175 eves. WOHK GUARANTEED ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~t:~~~n&A~~·~~~f. ~~llol'MM 1987 ~·~emo,etc7Sl·39JO_ HcMIMwortrR.Uablr Mo•ing . lnterlor/Extr. F'ree est. VERYNEATPATCU C~'ltAMl<.;TlLfo:. New or Carpet s~lce p.i t I Ob. (' •• b In e t b . VJo:HY LOW l'JUCE.l.i• Hau1Jn9 Own trans. 5411·0431 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Syrsexp."2·0295 JO!!f &TEXTURE r~model. f'rce est . sml ••••••••••••••••••••••• forro1ra New 11>n:.t Hei. on gardening rna111 •··~··••••••••••••••••• . Local & Long Distan"" K~les Pa'anl ,. Fteee : 893.1439 jobs welcome. S36-l268 r~u--....t M II I , . 1 llousecleanini: Ex pr & ...-In • · aft 5 ._......, •mw1 ~)our~ at l°CHllm. tl4~ 46441 knunre Geor11e549·201S Jfltuln!:.movlng.clcanup reliable Japanese lady Moving. Lowest raty, lnt/Ext, commercial Ptwnbincf _ _ . ur mint• llrp111r:. & ~ 4~1 L.lt-. Bonded fltuv. Treework. Heus, Nds trans-ortalio~ fast, efficient servl~. aph r esidential & •••••··~·••••••••••••••t---------l•leamn~ too• Guur work -l"ro1f Japanedsc .LandMstOP· fai.t, f1·ce ei.t842·4S97 642.4389 P Free est. Majestic mobll~ homes. 83EH120 HOMESAVERS. Plumb· fOf Ad ACtiOR "t b1g~cr i.u\lli!Zt. l'rec On wall And Al·oui:.t1c mg & Kur ~nm11. Jl~t --. 3,. • Modem Movers 639·8552 In~ & Healing & air con· est,00 JM8 SIJl,·I'. st Lu:, 63U 57JIS or mcl '.'"0~111~, tn"?m!"t:: OCC Student. Big ~ T Xlnt houserleaning by YOUNG Man, ~yrs ~xpr diUoning. f)'ee est, SIO --121314l!2 021U i.pra~mj(, weedlnt;. I-rec truck. Tra?>h, tree tn~. day. Own transportation. Pamtlag,lftaperittg Jn wallcoverang. Free hr. Konest & reliable Call a r ~lllJlj)OO & ~tram <'h:Jn -bl !>151072 etc. Randy 642·'S7UJ, """"'"a ••••••••••••••••••••••• ests.64.S-8576;Aody rvic . BofA M/C OK. • <:olor bniihteners. wht Bedrfcal ---549-3666 """,,._, PETERS PAINTING , ;~l-3~ ' o~ily Pilot q>h 1om1n blearh. l'lt•un ••••••••••••••••••lr•••• G -• C'.--• ---COMPETENT, OEPEN· Expr'd. Renli ltatcs. Comm 1 a;Realdential. Nb _________ 1 at In, din rm, hall $15. Av~ F.J.i':fi'RICAJ • .Sl::I VlCf'~Wrw .-rYtces CJIEAPl-.:ST hauling in DAHLE l'WSlom service. Free Eat. Call Gene job loo big or too i;mall, DRAINS CLEARED AO-VISOR rm ~SO, l'Ouc·h SlO, du <'ALLS .l15 hr, & SMALL ••••••••••••••••••••••• town. Pr ei;ts. CHEAP! llB/Npt. 848 0647 M2·<WSll ~ 20 yr11 exp~. Roomi; FROM $3.50 ~ Guar ebm ~t odor JUHSll42·112J3 Professional window 00·29'J5or645·1390 ---------$1.5/up. Fully msrd & lie. Call75l·W42 642 5678 Cpt repiur 15 yrs expr - --------wa&her. Pa1nt1ns. In· Trade your oldstu!J for llousecleantn~ Weekly. Painting. Homes, lntr & Wdjobstoo636-699S - Oo wort. my:.etr. Hefi-Hubbard Eledric tr e'<tr, odd Jobs. Jerry new goodll'S with J Good work Good refs. extenor. Apls; Special· Have something to sell? ~1-0101 _I..1c ~136 645 6974 64S-8197 __._ Classified ad. 642·5678 ~>.per. 675-9589 ty.1..o rat.es. 631·~ Want Ad Results 642·5678 Classified ads do it well. 1--------- PenonaJs 5350 Jobs Wanted, 7075 tWp Wanted 7 I 00 Http Wanted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LIM~&VICKI Outcalt Ma.ssocir For th. Fun of it! Servin~ all Orange Co. • (J35· 7313 , Splritucd Readrr 1815 So. El Camino Real San Clemente. Folly he. · For appt. 492· 7296 ~ ------ •MICHELLE'S• Governess or l'Ornpanion, hvc m 5 days. Loving l':ire & meuls. Refs 630·2329 -------· PATTERN CU'fTJNG. mosl patterns 75c·Sl. Can pickup and deliver. 5-17-3182 Practical Nurse. P /T , Hc:fi:,_ <.:all 4114·9119 to 9:'.lOPM Oytt·:1ll Ma~sage IOA~l -~A:\t 73t-411)2 HefpWant•d 7100 ----...................... . BOYS & GIRLS After school and evening work Earn $20-$30 per week or more Apply now by calling 646·2443 lx:tween 5:00 ~d 9:00 p:m. Monday through Friday .. ...., Want~ 7100 HetpWant9d 7100 HllpWant.ct 7100 HefpWClllt9d 7100 HelpW•t•d 7100 p •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bookkeepin~ •COOK GENER AL Shop. fl!~h isthool girl port lime. WHY HIRE A UKKPft• Urollcr mon & Kitchen DocwnefttControl machining, ossembly, 4-6 PM. Harbor/ W1bo11 Use our computerized help wanted ror dinner Cleric fiberglass. Small co. area,CM.631·3029 bkk • i d I d h c II I Small Orange Co. rlrm Good advancement !or -. ---pit serv cc es gnc ouse. a 1or appt. has need for sell starting right people. $2.15 to HOSTESS I /time dars. for small businesses. 494 9991, U&k for Don. 8.A .... "." ...... 2. over 21. Aho, dis-s I t La Be h indiv. w/3-5 yrs exper. in ...... .....,......., imp e en ry. inex· guna ac · ... _ 1---------hw"''her, f/llme. lnqwrc · 634 1"05 II document conuul. Typ· .... pensive. l · · " ca •--------a l Lo m b a r d 1 • s Amrt. · CQOK ~!~t~~·fex~1r~';: GeneralOfflce Restaurant Saddleback BOOKKEEPER Exper'd for conv. hosp ply in person, Scientific MESSENGER/ Valley Plaza ~I Toro. F/tlme.Goodt1111I& Dn'lllng Controls, 4040 G1:o..1R.D.c.LOFC 581·7160 Computer payroll exper. 1 I\ I p k Lid ...-.~ ----------& refs nee. Part or >enc. PPY ar o, Campus Dr, N.B. Mariners St1vlngs has HOSTESS.DAYS F lime. N.B. 646·4071 466 flagship Rd, N.B. 557·9051. EOE. immed. opening for a - - ----642-8044 f I t i m c E s c r o w Apply lo Person llullclcr 's II ardware Cook. Part time, some ex· DOORMAM Messenger & Gen'I Ofc COCO'S :.pccaalty 1:0. in N.B per. apply in person Must have neat, clean Asst. Must provide own "18Fashionlsl,and.NB ~ ou dcsunc lll meel so ACCOUNTING CLERK :.eekmg cleancut man for Derby Restaurant, 1262 appearance. Xlnt job for yetucle k type min. 35 Equal Oppor J::mploycr ·~oone )OU bclon>t with Involves l'Omputer data P.~.~,r:! •. t: m ploy m c n t. S. E. Bristol, CM . stllienl. Apply aft 1 pm, wpm. Xlnt benefits & HOTEL-BELLMAN dav Call e ntry . u t 1l1 '1 n " H.ip Wanted 7100 Hefp Wonted 7100 ~'° -><..-. -Mann' So c t Pl working cond~ Apply • · _ _ 631 :.!1!71> _ typcwnter an<.I 111 key"•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ---COOKS Thea~er ·3, 0~5ext 11~~ Al' . • i~f~, Ai rpor~1cr 1:nn Lo o K 1 N c F o R lnchxJes preparation & UUSBOY wanted, exper Lune!\ or Dinner, ex per. Sumitomo Bank, corner . Manners Savings e · contact r. an· AMI::HICAN SPOUSE! input of accounu paya. AUTO BABYSIT'flo~R Needed necessary. lunch & din· only. Apply btwn Sam· Bristol&Sunflower. 1515WestcllrrDr, N.B. ~833-2770 --. 27 Yr old female, folk ble. Also cash receipts. •METAL MEN* for athlcuc J yr. old boy ncr5• applyFrin phcrcsorn. 4pm .• Harry's Un r & Equal Oppor Employer Housecleaning, 2 Da) ~ • cJassiral d:tn<'er. never bank deposits, filing & Excellent pay and work on Tues & Thurs .. 8 3() to ~4 i~m~e"l'~~ Blav~: Grill, 4248 .Martingale Drafhpenon wkly, Short hri.. Must be l'JlDrried . wanlii to meet stalislical typing. Call mg conditions for ex 4 -30111 my Bluffs home. NewportBch.G4S·6700 Way,N.U. M4fchanfcalQesiCjltff eHic1eot. No smoke. Carl w1clower ovl•r 30. Wnte: Pam 586·1973 Santa perie nced metal men 759-lZH S·lO Yrs exper. in GENERAL OFFICE llve·m.N.B.642·3481. Miss Kini l\li Ila, Kwani.: Margarita Water Dis· n<'<!<lcd now at grow1nl! llaby::.ille;-:.anted, 1-;-~ BUSBOY·Day or night. COOK WANTED mechanical design & Lite. N~eded immed . HOUS ECLEANER with Hwa l\10011. P .O. Box trid, M.V.• __ Chevy dealership's body d k 1 interview btwn 3 & .iP~l Full·lime & P /time. drafting of devices, pre-Will be d"ing f'iti·n", li'te loving heart. Prefer 13~. Seoul. KurcJ shop 1n f Oran"e Count• ays a wee · 2 c,ma 1 al I.a Cave Rc:.Luuranr Avail. any hrs,' morn I l t " " " ' t h1 Id r n 0 ·n lt 1 s::.ure vesse s or ro a inJ.( tvp1ng. lmmed. a<stgn-•p'nlu"I ""r.·on Th•• Im. - ----Acctn" Bkkpn" Airport Compll·x Colle•~«.: PJ~k •• :.~~ tID51z lninc.C.l\t pref'd t;xper.prel'd.Sal mechanisms. Dut1ci. to ' " "' l .. t..-c"ir. ~ (' EXOTIC GIRLS TEMPO R " Fiberglass body worl.. op s.t!)~sti ~ -----open Apply in peri.on. include detail de:.q~n . ment. macu a e o:..inrng 0 l\liJi.i.ai:c & Modchni.: RA y tionat. Opp. for advam'l' --_ _ Caf•teno H•l~r Grinder Restaurant, 1400 t.upport for engincerini.i. MO FEES ?S!I o:rn _ _ _ outcull 5i1;i.:uoo 513·3250 Register Today to work men l. S e'r L' a i. t• y. 1Jabyi.1ltcr. ev1's. very liti· P 11me work. Mm :i hr!>, £. Co3sl Hwy, NB. check In~ & draflini:. Sal CALL TODAY!! HOUSE:NEEPER --1onvkaknou!>accounUni.:& HOWARD Chcvrold. hskpi: .. 10 t•xc:hungc for Mu:.t h<ivP ~ar . C.M .. ---------1 ('Ommensurate wlexpcr. MANPOWER, IMC Acute care hospital ha.~ •SHARON'S* mo eepmg assign· Dove & Quail Sl),. room & tio.ird. collcJ?e NB.&CdMarcas App.Cosmetologist needs as-Applyinpersonw/work 448W.19thSt.C.M. f a 'd Ol1TCALLMASSAC£ mentl.. Work close lo NewportBeach ~tudent OK. Female Iv . Newport .Mesa s1stanlfor2days Thurs samples to Scientifil-. 645-2043 opening or ·n e>.per 99 22. }our home. Figure pref.64-l-48-l:I Un1f1cd Sehool Dist.. &Fr1.536·2078or536·81129 Dnllin~ Controls. 4040 Housekttper, day shift. -·I 1 1 ---Clerks to Sr. Accoun· • AutomotiYe Sales Food. Scrv1_t·c De~l, 1~57 . Counter G1-rl, D-a~-·s. "P-P· Cam Pus Dr N 8 Good pay & benefits. t t d d th · " .,~7 ...... "l. EOL'. ' • • Pacifica HosP.itaJ RELAXIN(; MASSAGl:: an 5 n~e e ruoul Opportunity! Pl~ce nt1a i\vr . CM '"· Capt-Mike''> f"ai.h .>o> .,.,,,, .,, GENOfc. ii1rl, p/time,ltle '"'bJ" !1cua OrangeCo G r h • "\NK ~c.,.,...,.,3 -' ofc dutle.0 • Must be de· 18792DelawareHH .. , .. me!> • "' sseur Robe.rt Half'c.· 1el SN .or t e 711's' 0 ' ·""'."'' Fry, 815 W. 19th St. CM " uutcall 911 191 511 l ~ G Ch d 1 Drapery Manur. needs pendable & have own cur Call 842·0611 -· "-' · --Accouot.cmps O~~!~J?,.0:;?;. ~~ .. ~,~~ EXPERIENCED C.:J\ll PET Clcancr .. f/t1me Counter Girl Full or pit. full or p/time female !!, 2392 run err:inds. HH. ~ HOUS£.,EE.PER--- 1t I Frre Question• SOOS. Main. SteSOl " >' · dd . or P1llmc. Will tram de· Apply 2.spm, Orange help. Exper'd or will .,..,..,. P\ No Tower UnionBanlc complex will ad 3 PART-TIME pcndablc person H B tram. S275·$5 hr. EOE. 2 days a week. Own S1sterAnnareadscards 1 ·Th c·t' fO salc!\men for eas\ T£LLER , . ~ · Juhui.. 479 E . 17th St. ln Tea Leal Reading?> n 7e14110~coA103range straa~ht sell. Aulo c\ ., I h. appl. ~ 16·8602 or C ~t. <Next to Lido C'ar Ali>o, need installer, Gingham Gari house<: g transportation Laguna · (2l3 J461·5845 -"--"nsa°""ta.·~"l2.30 pertencc not required. UNITED 846 '.fl.77 Wushl mate. full or p/time. 1-;x. i.erv1ce nds women p1l , Niguel. 496-0958 v....,. o7<r per·rt or will t rain. Will top S. cai-nee 1>15·5123 --UEAUTlFUL NUDE but previous sell1ni: Carpet~ayer!lhelpcr.Op·c ouwr1·:1l<;1 n1,~ negotiate woges. Paid ---llousekecper, flve·in , GIRLS 625 N E Id --h e l pful . Monthly CALIFORMIABAHK porturul.v to learn good Sand• .. 1'1•111·~ •tci11 l«1·1 I I & J\ I 1"3" GIRLFRIDAY N.B. l'vtrrn/bath. Good ,\nuhci ~u · ' · 'uc 1 ' Acct'g clerk. Rank de· bonuses, opportunity 1111 trade. Must l>c rcspons1· 7-.isA~l -t t5·1• \1 1 i>ll\ j ~~ittic~·ax ve. PB~l 8.7: BLACKn~·s salary. 644-839.S 559.6150 535.5363 J)0!>1L-.. f1hni:. check in ad\lancement. Gent"rous 6JOANl!wportC'trDr l>lc & depcndabl~ . .._. · BOATYARD --- --"\Olcei.. lG-key adding & payplan SeeSale:dli:r :'loc"'porlUcad1 557·6103 between 7 & ~~J:i~rk Blvd In C'~I orrall 542·1843 20.25 Hrs wk RecordH.ousekeep1ng & DIAL-A-SERVICE bkkp '~ knowledge re· HOWARD Che' rolct. 10pm _ . __ onver for compressed keepm11:, 'typing & bk <.:h1ld~are. hve an or rla1 Jo:SCOKTS.MODl!:LS qr'd.546-0606 Dove & Quail Sb · (7141644-6464 -.--COUNTE(t lldp, d,1)' & .1:as Will train. Must be kpng.Rcq.Knowledgcol ly basis. 644·6887• Nwpt MASSAGE Newport Beach. Olr \\ash. Catier~. Cen· mornini:. M c D011.i1~1 s :ible to work all hours. boat terminology & Orh. _ 645 861ti 0A~ EXTRT A $5000. rt Automotive 1\n ~q.ual ~~11 ;4 ~6o range Co. Hesl:iuranl, :1\.11 II arbor Start immediately. Call hardwa_re. Non smoker. HOUSEKEEPl-:R Askfore"t.25 unng axs~ason,pa LIGHTMECH Opportunclyl::mployer •1 __ . __ . ____ Ul\ld. CM. 5!'>6·9943, ask 4!1:!·7240. American Call673·6834. .NplBch ·------time. as an rncome tax • Casha"r~-'-l. l>'P•n" lorSue Ra.p1raloryTherapy " ll '" re th T C TIU'"HNICI....... --~ " ----Girl Ft1'day (or busy ore l..a\lc in, must ha\C car. v•n eman 1n ... 1s. allrac p parer w1 ax orp. ....,. ~" h l f 1 B b - ---------In e, clean. seek!> lady in of Amen ca. No ex per. Busy Chevy service dept BA.'\IK.ING c ~ 11 • i"l·a~, :ir ara COUPLES needed lo help DRIVERS Need person for liJ:hl room· board • s alary 20s for mutual pleasure req. We tram. Jhgh com · r n Or an ge County TELLER lor appt _:" 0 3 manage family bu!iinc~:.. Early AM. 3·6. delivery bookkcepmiz & typing. 751.7125 rlays, 6"5.46211 & rnembh1p 642·2837 art m1ss1on:> &. prestlj!e. Call Airport complex needs M1:-i;ion Vie Ju Ci shier. c'p'd. Pu II t 1mc. P1ti1ne. 557·0215 LA TIM ES. C.M. ~00 Careful atten. to detail. a cves/~knds. - - 7. wknds all t1ts} 55Z 9600 or 848·3898 or expenenced technician Pcrmttn<•nt posit ion Lani .. Q1ll for intt!rvicw. ---mo+. 545·0770 Bob must. Pleasunt ofc area. Housekeeper/Live an, b1~ ,. ... ---493·2881 U> do lliiht mechunical, L't1me. typini: required. &"14111 CREW -Regular hrs. Call ~h. bnl;(ual OK. Bulhoa bl . .M.asse u r • :. tu d t' n l 11 r quick ser.,,ice and 15/\ Xlnt career oriiortunlty Miner for appt. 645·2640 Chtlclren. 675·50'7<1 higher awarencss Apt manager, coup!e work. Plcusanl working & bencflls Call ;\1r~ Chemical Operators. MANAGERS GQl:ineenng --'t ·1'h~vcut1l' 913·1606 ext needed for 42 unit com· conditions. good money. lialdndgl' $3 50 hr w/pcnodic re MEW PRODUCT Girl Jo't1doy, late bkkpng HOUSEKEEPER _1~ P11 1e'tb ind Costa ~kfesal. opportunity for advan1·e· 586-8!!00 \lcws. 2 Shirt~ 8·4.:W or Part time. evenings and DESIGN EHGINEEa 1A1t8e CmaLc0h1_!1ker5Ym~iotrhk Enghsl\ speaking. Small us an may wor ou · ment. See Service MJCr. Keystone Savings & J:30·midnighl. Mon·Fra Saturdays mana0 1n° ... t · · 1 d ... f I p... & b th Alu1sh1 c·Hccord past life No c h1'ldren or net". 1 HS h t y ork " " •0 crea c ongma e· Newport & Lagun• ~miy .•• room a · " ~ HOWARD Chevrolet. .oan · · c em1s r or w J·uniorsales persons sell-· r f mi · t · d Q Lindalsle NB "7505c" an:ilyses W/c:ounseling Gross salary approx L'o1.·u F ,,..... w/chemlcals pre signs 0 nia uru.e areas . 497·3:.!33 o r _ · · ·" ··_·'°· h Dove & Quail Sts.. '" "' "'' e~.-~r. · Ing subscriptions door to precision aluminated ' metaphysical He\/. w, SS.SO. 631·2950. Newport Beach. -------f'd. 549·3281 8am·5pm. door. Requires van or sw1't"hes & assembl1'es. 642-4762 Hskpr/Comp, chauffeur l'hD 631 2853 Bankm" L' o..... ... f l Se 9 Oc ---ARCHITECTURAL -· .. c. c. lorge station wagon. Wellestab'IOrangeCo. or mo. pt l to l 14 Automotive Branch Secretary ---------Contalt Roland Presley STACOSWITCH INC GIRL FRIDAY for cpl on walerfrnt. Non 'ertonal S..-vius 5160 DRAFTSMAN New Detail Shop needs Independent bank seek· CHRISTMAS HELP at the Daily Pilot. 330 w. Typtl 55WPM. 10 k'iy, smoker req'd. 646·6565 or --··•••••••••••••••••• Sr. & Intermediate, M F, help. ing bank cxper. branch N cw w a Y t. o s el I Bay St, Costa Mesa or 1139 Baker Costa Mesa non·smoker preferred, ~7·9891 DIVORCE Type V, Min. 3 yrs exper. Top wages paid. Enjline secretary. o.c. Airport Needlework. Work 10·15 phone 642·4321 for ap· 549-1041 good pay, hours to suil. --------- to fa II out growing Steamers, eng pointers, area. Apply At: hrs wk. earn approx $85. poinlment. Equal Oppor Employer 697 Randolph, C.M. lnS&A"ance Agettcy lil hour consultation Newport Beach Design buffeni & polishers. up S'9'tfQCJOBank We train. Call Nancy ---------1 _________ 1 540-6791 Secretary & Sales. free. No fee unless office. 642-1898. holstery shampooers. 535 E. lslSt Tustin Mon thru Sat. 9 lo 12 DENTAL ESCROW SECY ---------Salary & commission, ali.sfied 5'18 8919 eves check out, pack.up & de 0 I noon. 642-3764 G r r I Fr 1 d a Y for CilRLS HEEDED prefer some 1nsuran<'c • ----J\rmy • livery. Apply at Equal ppor Emp oycr Orthodontic office. Good Mariners Savln~s is Sandwicl\ del. 5 Day wk, e'lper. HB area. 963·5647 IMVESTIGATIONS l M M F. DI AT E ~Harbor Bl, CM BANKlNG CLEANING SERVI.CES typist! Ftl'.6'42·5997 seeking a quahfied 4 hr day. Own trans. •All types. Missing 0 PEN ING S · 111 s:h1 y 64f>-10.'10 PIX RECEPTIONIST needs matures reliable F.8crow Secretary for Its Earn over $3.SQ hr. Call INSURAMCE persons.8269648,24hrs motivated high school -ft'Vine~onalBank personstocleanhouses. DENTALASSISTA.NT N.B.ofc.Min.6mo'sex· 8am·lpm.PhoneS40·S339 GENERAL AGENTS: · -graduates for tramlog Auto Parts, parts runners 546-0930 Full·time, exper. or re· pet. req'd. Xlnl sal, and work in locations in & count.er men. Exper. Conte bCrelgl\ton "' centarad. NB. 644·9211. working conds & benefits GROCERY Cl.ERK hmmed. 1openings for states and Europe. pref. but will train. Full 833-3700. E.O.E. CLERICAL FRE1: lnclud. dental. 7·11 Store, Upm-7am. 3 enera A gents lo EaiWlcrf'Mtd& Generous benefits. PX. & part time. Top pay & Specjalizlog in a ll ~0ENJ0~"!51~·~t.a:s:~ye Apply Al: Night& wknd. S2.SO-S2.75 ~~:°~!a~n~r:~ro~ ,,..,._.atiOft Travel. Education op· benefits. 2 Stores. So Banking clerical, secretarial. · · MannersSavings p/hr 675 Paularino, ~ •• ;.-:;:-••••••••••••••• portunllies. Work ex· Coast Auto Supply 688 sales & administrative cert. nee. r tllme. Sal 1515 Westcllff Dr 751.4&2 Individuals & Group. •....&..... w-.a...d. 7075 perience. Thrt\c & four Baker St. C.M. 545-8408 UNION BAMK Jobs. open.642-6880. Newport Beach UnUmited Oppor. in one -..,.... H Ano t '"' A of th~ fastest growin~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• year'enUstments availa· ask for Jim as pen ng .-or ALSO Fii JOIS Dental Exper Orthodontic Or Call Personnel GUARDS sectors or heath cure Private duty, male nurse, ex per. w /stroke, cor· ~ & elderly patient.a. Local refs. Non·smolter. drinker. 539-4895 hie, cash bonuses for . -U1'1LITY CLERK Call 540-6055' • recepUonlst needed for For appt. 642·4000 Unlvenal ii expartdlag services. Call 979-2700. some auignmenta. Join Auto ff;epa1r Shop nee~s Career oppor. Must have Coastal busy Irv. office. 552.7900 Equal Oppor Employer Jt.t opel'&Uons In Orange --------- the people who've joined ExJ>e.cer d5 mDaQ tokbelp1 in a min. of 2 yrs recent Personnel Agency ...._. __ . Lan ............ Mai'n· County &needs 40 part & ltin'ERIOR DESIGNER tails. esumales, wnte Invoices various areas of bank· • sn• ten.nee Penon needed. u t me seeun Y o · per P eas oaa to Huntington Bch 962·8821 & answer phone. Paid lo". Pleaunt working Clerical. part tJme. dally' Chatrslde R.D.A pre· Ex per . n e c . Ca 11 ficers lmmed. Exper. not work In la e Anaheim the Army. Call for de· ~et. •>: w · 0 ve ut1lityexper. orexper. i.n 27llOHarbor Bl CM D_...AL/ASSIST . "'"\OU ua-. ,,... t JI i 'l f Ex ·~ 1 1 ,.._,ft ... esa 5"'1"""' benefits. Please apply In .. _...,., I _., 11 I ferred, but not req. Four Maraaret 557 0150 nee. Top waaes for ex· Fumlt. Store telling 'Mii1e,2S,eeekselectrlclan """' .... "4 .. .,. WA> conda. Sal com· ........ ca ..,.,afae stng, handed d e n t.iatry, ' • per. personnel. Car & many name brunds. 'b} maintenance lob LagunaWlla 768·5.251 peraon, 1H7 Anaheim mensura~w/e>cper. Oct 3rd to Dec 9th. !!~r!! practice. Mon· wkdya8:30·4:30. phone req. 21 & over. Prefer de•laner W/V~good mecharucal Artlst•pash-uP Ave, Cost.a Mesa. ~~!er.fu~~~ 64441813844·2262 • ~ W/po&sible td· fACTORY Veterans & retirees w/prevlousfurnatoreex-~tud . Wkdy an 4:30. lnFUllerton,pubU.h.rof 610.NewportCt.rDrlve Cl.HK TYPIST hrs. Hunt. Bch ,ACICAGBS welcome.Unlformsfum. per. Oppty to wortc in ··:.rfor~~~e, 979-392'1 Yellow Pa1u. Full AVON ~ewporlBeachSSS..5280 Trainee poa. for l n · tc1-eor7 Female. Merit r alae1. nnie&~foroverShrs. N.Bareaaftttlltofyear ----------1 charge of l·man art dept. Equal Oppor Employer surance co. In N.B. Good • DINT AL/ASSIST. 1537 Monrovia Av•, N.B Apply lpm·S=·Frl. when branch will open in Companion, Uve in, S Flnilb, pule-up typlng 45-50. Salary to Oral aurgery only. ~m u..l•WMI tao.. ,WeatcllffPlaia. ,·days. Lite hskkps & c:amera, layout. penctl HBO IXTIA CASH7 S500 & aood co. benenta. Now~rt Buch. Call • 1226 ~. SHt St. S.A. ni~r~~~rc cooklnt. No Invalid•, ro-uttb•. 870·8800, Eamlnpareaood·hoUrs Barmaid· Nlihla. Apply ~. a.uJI. 81 PACTORYWOlkllS Rtlt830-2329 <213*M013 mt fiexJble when you're l.S62NewportBtvd.Coata .,......, Manufacturlnt plant GUARDS: Anahe~E.Llnco~4-5383 ~ ao AVON repruu-Mesa COCKTAIL •D8'TAL• needs factory h tp. Call C.. Meu. SU1' sa.10 ~ccoununa maJe>r de A'SIMILllS t.aUvt. C.ll 540-1'041 or IAllTIHDP WAITllSS Servlnf all Otani• eo. for info. 848-&244. PG' hr. 11 PM·7AM ahlA. !BONER. some one to do .,w~;~:A•ofm.~~fi~; ~~:.~~Jt:J':)..•O':i ZUthM.859. Nipu.Expr'd.Jaapera, Learnln40hnt.bemoat. Traineeto~l1ll1t. E'l&ure Salon nuda Uniform• turnlabed. lronJngweekly.C.M.·So. p/Um . Mature, ad. bua. vt.Jon mandatory. Good SantaAoa. 75t-460t ~.~:"p'a'id•~:;.~~~1)1:; ,.!l.~!tc!~ mature womal\ Mon·F'rS, ~~.3C>~·1C~rotlpe~~ Coastarea.~M0431ln. 6 .. beclc1rd.ltxc1ecy1kUls. benoflta Call Carol Babyaltt.er.l)'roldalrl& BE/\tJTYOPERATOR or eve aculooa. Place· .,~ •• .-¥W Fr Ptll Ut>m.Call~.. (213)7?2-7378 JANtTORS·P/Tlme. •• P11 call, Iv 'O'CH&i•· Pat sa1.aao. it. v. area. ' t 00Yf.£d1 ~~ m,1!.}o0mcto.. s•·••ft--,,... .. ent. ment a.silt. GoodJOb op· S3.1-9'740 fflF•• .,.. l'V'\R w .. "ER r ,.1 • lrvlne, Foun\aln VI)'. ·~wu.on.~· IH oH .-41. an .. UVI ... v• I --•. -J'"'-'V ~ • /l mei !HANDY MAN. Jaclc-of·all Nwpt Bcb. CaU 544).'7811 •''~mcMGMTUC:rY AUTOIOOl"911 ~•fl >req. CHI HalrTherapy,963·0717 'Ci.714f.11·tlf4 Da1F.ftf1/Elee toiuoo ;~':~ 7raenlrct., f:'• trade& to #Ork 10-12 hrs n1'2 Armatrona Ave: =l!lacb • alitb de· area 751·Ul0' BEAtrl'Y·Reeept. ror El so. Call . Coclttall Elec:/ICechTecll to$1200 AnnltrootA•e ln per week •t a Npt k h lrviM. ' • ......, ,.., wo11>aa. AB uper. pr.i'd. ~BYSfITER Wantid to 'n>N 1alon Must be over Waltreaaa, tne., 1'1922 E.xec S«.71 .-00 '• · ~ l10CM " otc. Nda to be J i _..CEnaMJr>.t.auo, Ooochypttt•lOke:.1•d· Ukt • ptckup my n.Sa.lon~xpe.r.pref'd. Sk pk 81 ate c Dldaph8tCY tlOO flAMl•FOatMAMf famtuar •ltltctrical1 •o:~Z':'~er tP•• our aowpin , det by touch !fee. Will 1dlt11hter from achl. A 137-414 1 trJn..~t:l'71': · J.rvlMPUIOMelAl•MY CoaatrucUon corp. lfl 1tu.mbtn1 • other fix·I' n•-~t,. liq, apeclilltt traln oa C'OtDJ)Uter. Hn hr CJ( a.ru Pia call: •fafthCOlta lil•a o.ta Iii•• h.u perma J'bt, Aa Jdnt oppr for a ~ P, .. 1t10•, •••· ·w, a-· Xiii\ eo ... 3ms · , ·Boal llanlllactum hu COCX'rAIL 111altreu: -qi 1111•~ _,..._,,.,..~ -.ra, • .,...,. ,..,.. J llt<bert'i{;ii Ja•cller• P a.enu, die· worai ror. Calt Mn! "ooenlnprorStocld\oom Expaotauioda&.ot)' ~ ---, t d t ld tcr.apermpeelUon.Send taplloet. "">' pbont ~mieran. 81'**1' Moton~ a.b;iitt« ~ bome Univ 1<!lerk, mechantcaUy ~·30&o8·30PM ai TM -_, · -• ,ore man. " v ua tin.I mtemtntOhxp. • t&rfter mlndtd lc.elry ~ ~ l•C•I ,..._._ ... _,. ......... _ l ........... ",jJ;'~ 0 . = rnan t~En..i-• 'ttl ..:ct --· .D."' .. t• i·· mua\ be M1hly ael hr'" w:r, r.41uetted lo aalu 9er101\ needed • ..-· b'~ .. •t•· ' -.-~ -·•·-·-,._., • tuA.n. wn •'"' r• or/• -· ..,, moUvtt~. ••Ptli• q 1Aacllni to mamt poji· -1..c ~•'""" ... .,-.. -· traMP. Ullnl W itr lo ' allon, Pl blnl ~ flToroJld .. &1Toro <top Jllu tauraat • oom ln all p(la .. or t1)U u. •Ad II • Oa ly Piiot, Uon A 1 ln non al llJle eio-ordlnat«, other AUIOMOllf'I macfltnJlt. ~ acbl. ii back 2 ct.11• No glettJicaJ. ln<auir.. At•· fir. of Homt SavlQI~ ~I•> Jncer10r. Mtn a dwellln• Cram 1,.1• &»> 'P.O. Bo-. 1580, Co•l• 1133 ar.'t!t ~8. ec;ul c yllQlbfe cU"lflln•. Tel ··, Man :Mtop. Total h4a., bltcp'" Sal open. Me•t.al JUfl• \'acbt Cotp. 941 W: blda> )'l"f f'x~r ~•pablt bf c.Utnt alllart" MneCJts '·Meta. CA l'M2I P.tt S-..•1 ' ~ .. ~~~:tel':1: :"t!:P'Q~*:~~t~r~:; R1h.AIUptn,&Sl:lMO. iMhSt,C.W. -c -, CONST'lUC110N~P1'' rimdmoa,'ror prettnta• ~-In ...... Sii? Q oadWacaltl~ftJ .. lri j; &a_: ~-~~ llllNt '1 •• -· --:_... p.v Is BABY t'l'Tll&, eomi Bookkeeper/ tC)', no '"'* apert • ooedOI, lloo witb cllut, xlnt ,AitWayAv~.c.aet.a ...... ~l.ber-14 i:': S.llm1 alUthfriJ "o, a ~1l .l~b. OaUr 1' • • Couf:AIJlo lfld•AI Moa Fri, 1bort.111od. H.8 . uu. ~1HBarn •tcm Metlla., ttlary °"•· 1114MOMoatbntFrt•6l j_ Roll'tao<rdlemarka Dalli PUo&ClwtnedAd. ~flaO'W..,_~ • • Mklf a ......... ~AllPU,kB, 81laey toramHHtat• · -~"'", 0 ~CTU>,.._, ' ' ,. • ·1· ·• • ~ WldlaClul~Ad ''It a lilllPle--matWr •• • _.., • •1 1~c. . Alli tot JI• --.. ~ -.1_,, , .._ 1w1"Pttte:nc• ..... 1m' j~ s.UklJeUtllil ... , -:~ a..uwMt _ -_....;.;..;..,11 WailtAdt cau---QaUMoW1..a.9179 i1 ,Juilf.ca&&MW111.~,. if • "-,, , .. ~.~.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~!.~.~·~ ..... !~.~~ ~~'!.~.~·.-.~ ..... ?~.~~ ~~!.~!~·:.~ ..... !!.~~ ~!1!.~.~·.·.~ ..... !!.~~1~~~~·::! ..... !!.~~ Th~, S.p~rnt.r·1s. t9T7 DAILY PILOT •7 .)e::!~.,;611t;s· (~~«'hHIV~ Nt-:w IN TOWN? Ula PIST COHTIOL ~bcr OPl'eshJXP~.wm Sal~ . ~!.~~·:! ..... ?!.~~ ~!~ ..... ?!!<! ~~ ••••••• ~.~ ~.,._ p;.r .~ ri~m::.~t~' Hh 01-.1 w1p fll Jkl•I Sh•iidy Job for r1 lhl ~Ill."~·--·. t:o. TRAINEE SUPERVISION TIAVEL AGEMT . WASHB/DIYB APP't in ptl'Mlfl. <.'.Jro, S. Umf Wouid you Ullu A JtlCl'IOO Nu exJ)f'r. °"· u ___ n.a6u &J..t... Career Oppor Ltlsure SUPER DELUXE M'dl. CM taaa Catttu uppor. w/rnulu PmflL •h•rlna & 1roup SAi.iS Awa for hlgb S"h la d t ,_ __ ,"' -l • •ct u Ill l Ilk • bUl.tiorl'1l1rmtEamlni hcallh. Apply Friday, y a .. 00 ,,r~ unts 3~hraperday.SalS3hr. trave sxper.req Call ... u ~yco, e 11.e't'. KJTCHEH HILPU JJC•lr.nllal '" ,·xcou uf ll 00011. Uuy1I Pt>wl Con "~~1 .... CINOMTE to enUsr tho n~wspap(U' buslnt=Ss Appty to. '"me 'Uni/I f*.'mt. ~~Jond. $12$ '"· J•art ume. Moo tbru t"rl UI 000 Will tra.ln. Call Lrul. ~ !!.:. Dyer Rd. S.A. • -" DAILY PILOT Sc boo I Dlatri ct, 290 Tutor needed lor student 2bn P'!' da).~'.MU ~t-9U.. -$$$$ $$$$ Allon Ave, lrvine. (714 In tsl yur or French. Currently working ap· PAITTIMI ~4900. Equal Oppor. CaUKeeley&&.S-50t8altu pllancea, stove: O'Keefe Kitdl9tt Stewwd Ph•"""~ .. 1'1 l'>untrv l luh t-i.r1r NL'R.St:/Ai.ck. C<im1).auloo IHJICTIOM TalPHONIWOIK Thts highly success ful l ocal £mployer. a:aotrnporunt! & Meritt, ereen ns. Lg Hous.wlwlS n~wspaper bas. an opening for a Switchboard Onr. Will capacity waaber & ' . • · Must bn" c•r. II :'kl ht MOLD SIT-UPS u~ ... .,) hir aulcr\11t111r t :.> P, Moo tl.u'u ~at. KnowlC"tllltt of m1ateriala .. train&e in the Circulation Salt:S area. train. Superior rAnswer· TYPIST drytr, Kenmore, wbltr. COLUG~TUDEHTS Selected applicant will recej ve a tng Service, 2SO E. nth Faat. Accurate. 5 Daya pair f15. ~188 all 1 or ••11 1>44~ hr 84.\~ &. u&>er. w /al)t·UP " I t-.(.;\l.~t:CRt~l' RY l'iW'11M Al~-.-.,-.pc-,-.d-o-,-,' o~ralloo of ln.iectlon & <.'orpontton. 1:it111•r 'd ly. l'vt duty. ~lderly tniMf\•r mofdlna or ,...,""portt.:~1cr.&104MJCJ llt·nl whe1elchr. (;oo .. n•ll 1u.u.•u11011 1>Art1. Ouaunte d Hourly 1 St ner wk. PJeuant work· 64.2-4338 Waa• Plut nWJ. 6:30 libera starting salary, regularly .Ster, Upstairs.CM '"--. -------- prn to 8~ pm. Caal! SCh'~"'ed raia&S bonus onportunities · mt conda. Co. benenta. Perfect. 19' Frigidaire. ~orcometo2SOE, ~'16 ' ~ • TAXI Drivers, Laguna Apply, Pennyaaver,1860 Gaff"Satdahwr,ra~c. I s I>ay Shift. 1A.·ic111 ~""· •:xp l tQ 2 lullp. ~al/. un 12 hra STACOSWfTCH INC 'r' "<lnt h p111 ~. no ~ Lc11\le n.rn. llhlhntl. t'l•ll 7:1.Z~lll for phooenwnber. Hl9BakerCustuM~•• 17th St., Colt.a Mesa. and many fringe bE:Mfits such as paid 1eerach & San Clemente Placentia, C.M. Frig. wshr & au dryr. vacations, paid group insuranca and a o Checker Cab Co .1. Ch 645-3161 ~..i:t • H 111 ~1a '-~-provi·d·~ M/F, must have matu,..; 1YPISTCLERK/RECrT __ e_.&p_. _____ _ c~ uruon. e w ~0 UC ~ pleasant dls_position, Busy offlce, beavy Maytag 1 yr old ~OP• SALESCLERK interview itpvl. -549-3041 Hqual Oppor Employer Hardware, Hrs: 11·3, Mon lhru Friday. Con· lad Phil 842-1133 . a company car with Pf:'l'SOnal use beat appear, xfntdriving phones & typing In· perton~. Sell or tT~d• for privileges. rec. Call Patty, 4.94·7211 volved. l !1c<?mlng· gas dryer. a.o.4032 or I, l N 0 L t; U M l N S T A l . f, ti! K • S • Jlll.J'Ul. c.ill for 01J1pt 1S1'32ll ------l.lQUOR l'L~HK l•, t.tme, ov~r Jo 642~ LOTM~N Good hour~ • Good benefit~. Apply 10 per.,on f'r1. 911&' 77. to Mr. U1ll Harold or Mr. btll lier· rera. 540-5630 IOll~SO~ & so~ • LINCOLN·MERCURY NVR£ES Applicants must be 18, have a clean or493-88887-11AM. · outtotna ~ail. Cail San· ~ . AIDES to $40 ~Repalf"IMtl/ driving record, have a high school Teacher.Pre&bool.Cert. dy,549-211 , Feddon io.ooo BTU w\u· l-I I & I l-7 Drallwneft SALES diploma. Hours are gtmerally 11 A.M. orexper.formom.clau. WAITR!SS dow air cond, like new staff & M Outy u you dldn'l takt1 honic to 9 P.M. with s.ome Saturday over· $2.60Hr. 640-8820 Friday IUDch. sat/Sun S195. 831-1148 l.:xper.•Reb ltl'q'cl ~tut week-&c U111tt ForFNJ•w .. lry time. TEACHER·Part·time, bruktast. Good hourly 21" RCA Color TV s yrs Good hetlfttl llt..-. i'.:Z Rooter, 1337 s . .linstol Com mta:1lon Sales· 1f you are qualified and are interested Physical Ed. C.bristian salary. 6?J..3SLS old. $250. Kenmor~ elect. St.SA. Hoursnexlble.Out.stand· in learning more about where this School962-3312 WAITRESS, exper A-·er.SlOO.MG-7758 An11il-l.ow Cost inaco. benefits. "":r WCOULIE PRINTED CIRCUIT JC HNHEY CO. training leads, com~ to th~ DAILY · Tehphone Sdff r~~~!:.af:ply '::~n!~: Large upright Freezer. .._.... Regfstry IOARD SHO' 24 Fashion Island PILOT office, 330 West Bay Street and Want to make money? LeBianit.z Frencb care. near new, Pd $450, sell &Medica.Senfcea Looking Cor GOOD Hewporthoch ask for Milan Lt:avitt in the Clrcula-Can ~ou se.ll on th~ 414 N. Newport Blvd. $250.847~ 35 I M-..JA~ Rd machinist, plater, pro-Equa.I Oppor Employer tion Departuient. pbooe. Top Sin our bus1-Newport Bel\.. 645-6700 N d r 1c•L .__,...,, d •· &. It c t I An rl'O al 0 rt 't E I ness. 646·3030, ~k for ew eep reeze """ c:u. Mew-rthadt ocuon qua I y on ro &:l\fU ppo um y mp Oyer. Ray. WAREHOUSE MAN, ft. En.a. meled ate,,el In• r-· manager. Prease send . -1 .. -A Be ..., /u.TOSsfromlloagHosp resume to . 17581 SALES GJRLS, P/Lime, . 1---------1 &hipping&receiving. sue-, auly .. ts. CALL TOLLFREE Mancbe,)ler Ave Jrvme xlnt pay, no pressure. NelpWant.d 7100 HetpWat•d 710 540-3236asldorZeke P.P.548·1338 ~42-9955 5 .. ft995 .. .....,1A·. ' 548·2585 alt 5:30 or lve ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• TelephooeSalea v -wu--w "'~' "' woman to cook & do odd Frlgldaire Ref~gerator ---------4 PROGn"MMER ~~~"'~:,~we at SCTYE F.topores.?lg~ajCodr~f· •SECRETARIES '10-4 chorea for elderly :~~'!!'t condit1on $50. -p · · irm perun m 11 To $14.400 Local gentleman. 3 hra daily, ..,,._....,.,., 2626HARBORBLVD. NURSES AIDES 2:3'Yrsexper.Ho,nc:ywell SaJesHelpwanLed.1"ullor OpPortunlty to learn W.LAArea$2?K ON THAT 4:30·7PM. For appt.,ST._O_V_E--A-pa_rt_m-en_t_a_lz-e, COSTA MESA All Shifts. Good bene. Easycoder ,Prefd Bus part time. Ap~ly in about reaJ est.ate. Type EmployersPayAUFees 673-6406,CdM excellent condition $50. ----i Apply Garfield Conv. degree pref d. CPI. l80 sierson. The Persimmon nun. 60 WPM, shorthand Liz Rei.riders Agency SALi:'* JOB LVH Hosp, 7781 Garfield Ave, Newport Ctr Dr. N.ll. Tree Inc. 229 Marine pref. Salary open. 40208ircbSt,Stel04 W MerchandlM _M.S-4589 _______ _ J•un & 1>/l1m'e. 3 11 :30 H B.1147-11671 E.O. E. 644'43601 ask for Hey Ave. Balboa fsl. or 712 E. 67..s600 Newport Beach 833-8190 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ffoft 8015 sluJt. Good sal & bent!. ---Connelly, ext.24o. Balboa Blvd. Balboa s E A M s T R Es s / Call for appt/estab '65 GOOD .......... 8005 ••••••~•••••••••••••••• Please apply, Park Lido NURSES AIDES p /Time COOKS Penmsula , AL':fERATION. Full or . •••••••••••••• .. -••••••-------- <.:on v. Cc n tor, 4 6 6 Exper'd. Full·Tlme. Pvt'. Country Club. Ex-SALES, Horrible Job. p/tim~ .. Cor~na del M~r. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii( BUOOYI UI derl d PUBLIC FURNITUR~ 1''1 a JI ship It d. N. u. Trainees-Clas., Starts perienced. If interested Hotten }Jn. Mean Boss. Call 9.30 to 4.30. 675·1381 Secunty • ff.Oft an *AUCTION• 642·8044. Sept.. ~th. Earn while JC PEMHEYS Of Ant1•ques.I you learn. in l or 2 days extra work Retirees acccpled. $2.751,__._______ Thi 1 ..__ t L---t LV.N. (or R.N.J c::J>~f~s~:~~ t~~~er f::~ek. Please call hr+ comm. 531 -0842. SECRETARIES 2.:.= ~51:;:' mt!:s~ T ._--;:~ ~~~m~ :.Tili 8o~!ru :o:i 10:.::: ~:'~J \O work lll clinical lab in 466 Fh1~hip Rd, N 8 SALESLADYS & TYPISTS ls Now Interviewing For IOb fn o~ Co. w. music boxes, llickeJo· STORAGE LOT & Newport Beach. Full 642·8044 Quality Assurance Full lime and part time, PloinCfotMs offtr o f.ase -. a deon pianos. circus or-CONSIGNMENTS , ll & p/l me t 0 ---lnsn.dors needed for our South ~--·......ttyOffl d r-y, t gans. wall clocks, SSS s•vE SSS a~a~l. Call ror;'s~~;'t~ HURSESAIDES :Of 1F. Go""o-d v1,u<il & Co ast Plaza & Seelt'temporaryemploy ~.., cer 9oo comm., xa grandfather clocks, A 640-0140 F·u11 & p/time. 3PM . manual dextenty.-t;let· Weslrnrn~tcr Mall loca· ment where-we make it llrs. Must be flexible boftus & casual at-fascinalina antiques. We honor BofA, MC. llPM & llPM·7AM , ex-tronics background G tionc;. f;xp'd only ncerl worthyourwhHe Outstanding Benefits mosph«e to go along OverSl,000,000Wortb Cashier 's Checks & MACHINIST pcr'd or trainees. Mesa Yrs min. exper. Call apply Top Job, Top Pay M~~~~/:o~:;~o;M w/Olflr staff beeefits. Amencan lnternat1om~l CASK. No Personal Sm.growing Costa Mesa Verde Conv Hosp, 661 Carol, 581 ·3830 Xlnt POCJI& Boy Mat...4.ity You're Your' Equal Oppor. Employer Ho door to door. Our Galleries; l~T Ketler· =~~1'1<:TION :\trgr 1s look1o" for a CcnterSt,C.M.548-5585 benel1ts.M.V.arca 557-5734 · OwnBoss _._ · I L---"fut lng St.. Irvine. Tel 207cNewltrtBl.C"" good mactum.st 0lor our ----------l vno ~ s __,..., 754-lrn.'Open Wed tbr~ .. w machine t.hop. ShouldJ---------t SALESLADY, mature. ~o~ office • Sec'yforsmal1Archf1rm. & no • .,..-. MCHL. SaL9AMto4PM..Viait.1 <:4'714 833-9625 hav~ experon sct·u1> <ind NURSES Real &late Salesperson Permanent. 5 Day/wk. l d Typ'gSOwpm min. Basic W• Train or (714t 646-8686 ~hon. run punch p~. RN's $68-$72 Stf JOOO/o COMMISSIOH 9·5 .30. Contact Phil, 0 over oa sec'y skills. 1 , SOUHDGOOD? • Beautiful, unusual coucbii----1m1111----chucker. mill, lathe{ :.tid S64 Private Duty We furnish de 11 k -&12·1133 CaU640.S538 ""'--Call & chair, 9' long. Custom, ________ _ dnll press. tool & die ex LVH's $46-$48 Stf telephone-secretary & SALESLADY Wanted. 557-0061 ,......., made in 1900 for a cydH 1020 P"r helpful but not ••op · t 0 t help SEC'Y S ... LE~ RUBIER DUCK Pasadena Ea late.••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ' '"" nva e u Y · mature. lleitin p/limc. 3723 Birch St. NB • "' ill Stuffed h necessary AIDES $36-$38 Stf LA CASA RLTYJ Hall murk ~aft & party Sa1lboul Mfg. in Irvine At . wit horsehair & VOLKSCYCLE Cole lnslrumcnl L'urp S38 Private Duty 495-1870 eve: 831· 737 shop. S.IO 1557 looking for someone with 833-8095 every tune you lay down lOSpd. $110 1~12 8080 E 0 Jo: sales & marketing ex1> on it you fall asleep. CallS48·7655 Sen mg all or Orange Co. ALl!:SM FN d , SECRET ARY D . d · TIME.-LIFE Great. for visitors! Deep1------------------1 Working hrs & <luys of S ' • wante · f.'< Sales & Adm1nstrat1vl' uties rnclu e typing, LIBRARIES gold color with cut velvet ...._Materials 8025 your rhoice. Refs & mill REAL ESTATE per. in retail ::.ll'reo sulcl> r eports, he avy . -"i MACHIHE d 0 *SALES* suit's C:all 556 042o Dept. for Interior Design l e 1 c Ph 0 n cs , a n d Equal Opp Emplyr m/f designs. Fringed velvet ••••••••••••••••••••••• OPERATOR prac ms. rcq' · roup · :.__ -...:_ Firm. Shorthand & ac· customer service. Must head covers & carved 1 hundred SO Jb boxes of Small prel'ision switc·h mi..&~E~Tci.iFF,1. Real Estate salespeople· SALl::SPERSON p/t1ml'. curatc1'ypingreq.Apply be.familiar with 10 ~cy. Telephone Sales, Ad· feet. Heavy' hardwood green sinker nailt. . • ·omponunts. ()J>Crulc open your future. l.cl us matur<'. Hunt Bch g1tl ut 250 Fischer Ave. Custa CCU ttl\•o for nppl £OL' frame •. Il lakes 3 men lo $12/bo~. 675-9417 Bob . ~ .._. ___ R r ...., h I · t th b · ho ....,., '"' M-". 540·"'"'" ...,.,.~ .. · "" vert1s1ng. Will train. move •t T l va ncty or marhincs in ~s ecJ1S .. 1 e P Y?u .• 10 o e us1-s p. uv.r6900or 963 t .. r.lti ~,,... "'°"" So 1 • . ru y an un- t:lud. turret lalh<'. verti· 16l7 Westcliff Or ness-Join company . Service Sta. Night Attend mesa es exper. Full & usual addition to your de mills, "unch i>rl'ss, & Ste 212 Newport Uch name 16 years in Orange SALESPERSON SEC'.RETARY· Nwpt Dch 2 Ors mtes a wk. Apply, p/lime. S3 hr + comru. home. Also a matching idlng glass doors wjth acreens, 9 & 10 ft. ;is dnll press .. Short run pro-6:H.(JGH1or 752·9118 County. Call Claire or For fioc jewelry store. 2 girl ofc. sell-motivated, Shell, 17th & Irvine, NB ~7296or 835·9692. wool rug that sets off Ofc Hrs 9.5 Mon-Sat Warren a t R ~A J. Know'! of china, er} st al, type 6.S plus, dictaphone. --your couch & chair to•---------ducllon, small shop, days ESTATEbyMcVAY, srlvcr, fine je1111clry & $700+ 644-4613 Service Station Atten· TELEPHONE best advantage. 646-6188 BARNWOOD- unly. 1714) 842 9371 d d I 1" dant. exper'd. Day & SOLICITORS or6421336 PANEUNG STACOSWITCH IHC. OLDER COUPLE as com-. " Ci~1 ~7~9i;/ ay. ,time SECRETARY Eves. Full & p/time. Ap· Work at home. Will train. ---------1 LargelocalselectJon. JlJ9Baker Costa Mesa paruons & aides.lo elder · Real Esl<lte Sales People --1 .:irl office. Expr'd. ply, Shell Stalion, l7th & Men or women wanted. Wool rug. Custom de· Beams.,decklng631·2460 549-3041 lycouple.R.oom.board& wanted. Up to 90/10"~ Salesperson necd~d lmmedopening.845·4520 Irvine.NB. in So. Beac.harea. (7l4) signed for a Paaadena & Equal Oppor Emplo>cr ~/mo in lovely home comm. spht. Nwµl B<:h P time for retail i;torc in s~RETARY ----------t s.r.-5.594. Est.ate in 1900. Beautiful e.-~ 8030 ---------1 in lx.>St Costa Mesa area. 548-8614 N.B Mu'>t he mlcrcstcd ~ ~rv1ce Sta. Attend. for ---------i colon>. Deep Ros., back· .....-,.. ....... --- - -Call Mr. Jl at 631·0210 --in encr.:y & water con· IMMED. OPENING dn\eway :.ales. M or F. ground with Oriental de·••••••••••••••••••••••• •MAIDS • days or 548-4200 until 9 REJ\LESTATt-; i;erval1on 6756730. Shpref'd, butnotessen E'<Per'd. Apply, 8111 Banking sign'of blues & beiges. per8Kodaklnslamath: ThelnnatLaguna eves. S S ------UseoflOkeycalculator. Rash Chevron Station. JIREOQf Approx. 9'Xl5'. ~188 Movie Camera. Ex-211N.CstHwy.Lagun11 * ALE * SALESPERSON: Even· Goodbene.Callforappt. 24~1 El Toro Rd, Lag or~ ·cellent Condition. OPTOMETRIC TECH.. Negotiate your own 1>pht ings. Enthusiast1<' & 536-2541. fl.Jlls 494-~17 Mainhtlanc~Man approx. JO hn p wk. We...,.,. Lt & energetH'. HICKORY • COMMUTING AntiqueWlottblwt•cane1---------f:1Cpr d. Ov<>r 30. Must Hours nex1ble • Ex per. . n.,.,.. exper. is crs FARMS, Westcllff Plaza. Secretary /Office Mgr. Sen•1c~ Sta. Attendant, chrs. $t95. 8' leatherette Trumpet, Bundy, Ex· b req. Mis!llon Vi eJ·o. Sellers. "'"·0972 Small Newport Beach m exper d Full or p111me. JO YOUR JOB? SO(a $275, match coffee ce1Jentcond1tlon. know emeri:ency plum · 551-4741 ....., s I -. 4.94 2417 in,: Sun thru Thurs days. 831-0SRl eves. ___ vestment R.£. company Apply Arco Lat on. J7th • & end tbl, $1.2S. Sat 9·5, · C.:all for appt. 49'J·2900 or'_oto __ ER_P_R_O_C_E_S_S-1,..-6-1Rcc~pllonist·Bkkpr. Ex-SALES needs Lafl aroub nd om~~ &lrvme,C.M. Exeellent employlllent 2702Ci.rele,NB.67S.3.568 Cats 8035 499.1035 "' per d. Educ<tl1onal t·o. Part time, 5·9pm, Mon mgr. le kkpni:. S Ser Sl· H Ip n eded opportunities at local Antique Country French ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLERK Spanish/En~. Xlnt O"· L'-1. pcrfec .. for ''olle"e and typing skills rcq'd. v. a e e im· savings & loan offices In • v r• < " ., • C med f\Jll or p/I Apply Dining t.abl 7', w /2 Himalayan Kittens, .MAINTENANCE M/\N Busy ofc & phones. use port unity. Good pay. student, no pressure Salary ommen:;uratt: ·, , #' • Mission Viejo, Laguna bencbes. ~. ,97_3754 C.F.A. Rlcadoro line. reqwred by Our Ludy calculator, type, follow-540-2()61 sales or quotas to meet. w/exp. Excel. growth OP· 900 f,. (;st Hwy, Nwpt Beach & Laguna Hills. evs. ~""" Slud service 540-1760 Queen of Ani;telsCathohc up. Foreign market.Ing 5.1!-<llll portunitie:>. (714) _Bc_h_. -------1 E.xper"d personnel pre------------•--------- Churc h, salary + studio cxper. desirable. Irvine RECEPT /TYPIST 644-81.'>3. Serv Stat Attend-('xp'd. forred. For further in-NEW t;NG SHIPMENT! Do4Js 8040 apt . Contact Hcv. W. rt. Complex art!a. Send re· Needed full-lime for SALES/RETAIL CRT Comm + overlm. formation call Mr~. Fine Oak, xlnt variety,••••••••••••••••••••••• Harvey 644·0200 i.ume or letter lo Person-"! e w po r t U e 11 c h We currenlly have open· . SE E ARY Hoover f'hevron. :.1048 Jeruc best prices. New hrs: DOG TRAINING ---nel, PO Box 2415, .Publishing Co. Good in.lls available In the R.E. ore. Prop. mgmt. Bnstol, CM. 545-4257 sec SADDLEBACK lOAM to 9PM lot your YourplaceorMinc ---------1 NewporL Beac h, Ca knowledge of spelhn~ & rollowlngclnssifleationK~ Sh, t~pin~. NOl)·S mokcr Chuck convenience. John Mart.in 675·2440 :'llamtenance 92003. g rammar essential. SALES /BuildlnJ; Send res ume to --------ANTIQUEFAIR - FAR WEST 675-3271 Ma Leri a I, Cashiers. Classified ad no. 954, c/o SICTPPING CLERK 20SlNewportBI., CM AK~ West ~lgh l and SEJlVICES Paralegal for small law -Recelvmg Dept. Apply in Daily Pilot, PO Box 1560, Part t1fne help wanted SAVINGS 646-54S4 · White Terrier pups. Producllonl-'aci hly oflice Airportarea,N.8 . RECEPTIONIST (X'rson. Cost.aMesa,Ca92626 malure responsible tn· DealersWelcome! M /F. Champ back· lRVINE, CALIF. Probate, tax return & Exper., ror hvy phones, Wcrd & Harrin.,.on d1v1dual for hght ship· J5S·OlBl ground. 962-9563. An excellent JOb OP· funding of trusts. Steno-gd typist for distnbutton .,. ping & receiving days, graphicskillsreq. Phone 1Z1SBristol,CostaMesa •Secretaries, Clerks, hours flexible, contact --------• GLASS-CHIHA Doble pups, A.KC, clJam-portunity for a person 833·9982 warehouse. pleasant or-Typists, Switchboard Micro Electronics Corp ---------1 pion, sired. shots, ears w1mechanical ability & ---------fice. xlnL benefits. Ask Sales, telephone. Na· Operators. Immediate 549.0375 TelephoneSaJes &POTTHY SA.LE cropped836-4664 a1cJequate1 !'no1wledbge itn PARTS/STOCK fckJeri.556·0770. tionwidc sporting good Operungs. --------• NeedMoney$$$$SSS$S SEPT17&18 l' el'tnca "'P um mg 0 E 1 mfr. Good hours, xlol S. TimesaversTemporary SHOE SALES. Some ex· w k Pho li 45DEALERS! WANTED: Temporary m-'-e repai·rs •. preven xper. des red. not re.,_ ________ ,..,.61A2 r p rt. •. F' or on ne new st-1 r T 1 f r b '"' "' 'd w ·11 · ... .,..,. .. .,_ · pr pre a .,. 1time · 30 ~ 30 nn o omorrow 1 10 space or 2 emate La s. live m"i'nten"nce of rood q . 1 tram. must pass RECEPT "'YPISTS .,.,rvice 833·7755 · · · mgs 9: A~ •. to 12: U . .. u h 1 I d b t • ··--------Salary+comm +1ncen u p "f West Kate a, Anaheim Call Valerie Martin. process equipment. & co. P ysica inc u · ark Needed immediately to --------··· ti' ves. Mr. M. 1· iter·. Ap""" pS:30 "' · to !1:30 Sat 10AM-9PM, Sun ~ l>uilctmjo!. X rays Call for appl. fill temporary assign SALES Ch Id . n .M. hone 646-4223 or 12·6PM. M~t Jo Cun· --------... ULTIPLE CO. "-'"76J9EOE 0 ..... _ f YOUDO .... 'T I ren s uootery. cometo250E.17thSt, Afh /E h d "' .._.. · · menls. ur Jov.. 1'0 rom " SECRETARY Fashion Island. 644·2464 s too Cost M rungbam Editor of The g an ng s eep og, BENEl''ITS Part tJme shirt. 8·1or1·6. a few days lo long term HAYE TO Ul ' a esa Glaze or Mo and geifree M, B~yra nds loving EquaJ Oppor Employer Telephone Answering assignments. STAND OM SEMIOR Sitter needed to watch two Telephone Tool Room samples, s~e "Autumn family & yard for ex· CaU (714) 54-0-5662 Bureau. work on busy HO FEES children ages aix and Sales.Earn to $20,000+. Leal Jewel" Tea display. erclse. Lab/ Sheps, pure s witchboard. EOE. Telluswhenyouwantto YOURHEAD PERSONNEL eight ~fter school <2·5 llLocalions.OrangeCo. $1.50 adminloo. Free & mixed, great protec- 546-3333 work. TO FIHD SECRETARY PM) 1n t heir home. & LA. Great benefits, parking. tlon for home or work. ---------• Cotl64S.200 AGOODJOlf · Prefer high school girl security & rapid advan·l•--------w/peace of mind '& C Tlme·Llfe Libraries has • living in vlclnJty of ~2nd cement. Call Republic secur. Minimal dona· MAMflOWER, IM abaolutely the finest With a minimum or 1. 2 s\reet and Newport Distributors, Inc. Mr. Singer Sewina Machine, lions & tax deducUb1e. 448 W.19thSt,C.M. p/Umesalesjoba avalla-years Pe rsonnel ex· Blvd., CM. $.20.00 per Roy 714/834·9088 decorated, really old. Lag. Bch's Pro.JUe hie lo Orange Co. No perience. Will report to week. Pleaae p h one ' · Cabinet ls worthless, Animal Shelter. 497-:1552 door t.o door & ao pre· theDlrectorofEmployee 631·3149after5PM. Tow Truck Drivers ex· wrought iron frame or49'J.1420eves. seure lactictt. We use a Re I at lo n s a nd be pet'd. Tof. pay. Apply. could make nice plant nice frhmdly approach & responsible rorscreenJng Stationery Store In G&.W'tow ng. 1000 Irvine g_tafld. $50. 831-2"1 Olde English Sheep 0o,, '\ Cou .... TER our repututlon \s number non-exempt applications Corona del Mar needs ex· Ave, NB642-l252 .&--.a.-.. IO 10 mo. AKC, ahots. $1.QO~ " personnel llle ad· per'dsalcsladyfull·t.ime ..,.,...--" 844-0490 ERSO MEL l In the bualnesa. ministration, group in· S days, xlnt working con· ••••••••••••••••••••••• , MECHAMtC p M :~~~:.~a:·.~~01';e~ surance clerical process-ds, especially fine chen· Tr11aJn1 0 10l(T S c H 0 0 L Washers. dryera. Clea" BAnJATHE1 8:"' D~ 1r1:.,E..,A · .,. lng, typing of the letters tele. 675·1010 n . late models. $100, l yr ma a -· a 0 1»· Must have own tools. Full·tlme, Pl\l't·tlme bonua plan. There la ex· and maintaining Internal GRADUATES Training ituar. Free deli very. Humane Society f~ llilo. Must be altle to perform Days & Night.a · cellent money on lhe job reports. Should ba ve la lklU you choose. Work Mttr er.,. Will •lso bey. 53M480 llcet repair. 3 Yrs eicper. ---------18oroverfornlahls + the 1t.mo1_phere ls oood typlnl sldl1' and be Stock boy foe local Ught· In loutlon you cl\ooge. 838-2840.,.. -----e>-....... -.. -.. _,,--_--in ~ "diesel. Fi ex Ible Apply in person: casual & fun. Try a Je>b • ed to rt d Ing flxture store. Full o al n 1 kl l l and ex. U"OCnuan ....... ..-uun:u .... p. on ·Union shop. Only 2.sp.m. you'll nJoy(oracbange. ~:~ lbe 'Dt:t.or8~1 time. E:1p. pr.te!Ttd bul perience for you.rfuture. FRO HT DAM AO 'ED fj!s..:....,A9KCa!..,r~tered. quaUfled need apply. Tuesday.Saturday We hav• (8) Part.-tlme EmplO)'ee ReJatlons. not eMenUal. Apply In "l'breoaodfOW'yea.rcon· HOTPOIN'l' SALE. 8308 _ _.or-._ • ., COntact Dick Winkler, lhi.fta I& P\alHJme la of Salary commeniurate pet'IOn, m Victoria St, tract• available. Caab W. Warner nr Harbor, BOXER PUPPJES. h"8 7141870-7380. CARL'S JR. course. naUable. Our with experience. Pleaaa CM. &M.a13'1 bonus. tot aom. •~clal Santa Ana. 9'79·2121 CO\l:lr', 9 wb. MEDICAL tl(p .. manarre1---------1 1720 E . l>)rer Rd .iaft people enjoy ex· ltn4 rttul!\c with salary astlgnmenu. Generous CASH PAID Call m-4500 .,. ctllentbenentalncludln1 .. 1 toru or applv ln a benefita.Travel. Educa-dc. di a•n. ltUfiOOn ID 1--·san-·t.a·A·n·····C·A __ , hea1Ut4dJle lnAurancc. IJ I cO' # STOCK, SOH tional opportunltica. F<r WW/l>r>'rt/Refrt• Standard Poodle. AfCC. 11 · B • 'X 11l L !I u 1 · TryltT•'I pcnoo -F /ti rn• le P /time . Peuonal c~llOQMo. wortdqornot857.ew. Beautlfulblacklemak. 7 114-&41.aM'f UM HI .... D.., 'T Jmrned openJnat. Retail bftltr, para ~ tr~in. BtG SPENDER NEEDS mot. GOO. 752-Sl'l or •fl •MIOICAL• OlVEUSACALL TR..., ~ A Stott. '75MJM. WOiiam• In-avalla le. Im· REFRJGS: WC)rlitin1/not 8call55l-15" Str;1"'all OranaoCo. lo'orA PttM>t\allntervw CORP Sonoma.So. Col.tlPJau. medlateopenlnp,or Jotn phone price quote lrlabSetter 1 8 Tra1n .. toSpeclali1l HJ.1095 STAMOAID SUMM ER lS OVEB. now and enter up to • 63H2Slanythne · 'ma e, \.i mu DI. ,MSOMNIL 11ME·LlPE MIM~llS WUAT NOWT You un roar la~r. Joto tl\o. PtO-old. Choat.nut c:lt'. Lon· Or 'l""nARt .. S . 1 ... a•·ul •·atnlns. I"''-pie who've Joined the Admiralcfbldootrtrrti blt. f.10. A.tic fot llG1dy, I-Medlc-1Complex .. un ..:. • OtVlllOM "'~ •u "'" ..... Army, Call now for do· poo, 979«581 f..13.in~ Fru/Fee rqua10ppF.mpl)'rm/t ADApP1itdlla&MUcaCo valuable worll u · taila. en.an.a •---------3400W.$eitmrom Peritnct and attend col· CciltaMcaa s;o.ime Female Buff Coc'5cir • MESSENOEll Peuon SantaAna.CAU?04 Iese fn the Army. Your i..aunaH.i.llJ 768.gs1 SpWeJ,4mo.old,a~ flf/car. Guar. 2S hrs per Army Recrul ter wll f Jfuatln.atoo Jkh M2-IB2l Ull THI '150/t.lltof1'. 665-4940 :~.t=~.tct'::'~,!: rAtia~?9PGt1unity =:1f4:~':.!!f tt: DAILY PILOi FMtoY• 1045 •• 4.PM. C&lJ~ David r tm)'!O)'t!r ,.,, Ami)' can •• , )'Oii ,. th• .,AST ..................... .,. 1;~;::;:;;:;~;1 ttalotnc you want, u. ornJ:'lXgNvrog1 IHUL~. :!:'=IC!'.J~ ;:t~ Lit tM put>Uc lcriow with SHYICI cu urn up to •100 I« an ad In U1ie Dalb' Pilot DlllCTORY 1<:hooi after you.r ...Utt· Sen'iee Dfr«tory. Jt cin rotn1. Cltt<'lc I& out. CiU ClOi '-" 1t UW•., a .a For Rnult AmsY ptr. dl7. For men Iii SerYlce Call c.-.11.. s.o.scm r~ anc1 coepMI• , ... 1671 Jtiptlellk"'lell ............. eaU..a..n. ... L111una HWa ,_Dal llL DI each. 644-0335 Restaurant • .. • o 1090 looh. l'ow"" '9040 tf.c1H / Yes 9570 Aalto1, IMporW A.tot, IM,...W .. DAILY PILOT t.mbet 15, 1871 pt_.• nJan• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ers 9 150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••9•7••2•5• • -,.._ .... _ 1011 ~weu~ 1010 ....................... ....................... IMW 9712 Fiat , .. ~ .. T• 1041 ....... -... ~.::: ............. Small 44·• Studio Upright 20;_.oULfo'STtU::AM lm-•76 Suiukl TS.ioo new '7S ., . .,rd Van F 100 Surfer .............................................. . ..... •••••••••••••.••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 , µl1&nt> w /btlnch SSOO. mac, fut. 160 Mt'rc J/O cond .. never in' dirt Convt•ri;wn. AM / .. 'M-'7) Spytl\!r iz.a. Afr. AM · Ii 13 m /w UAJLY ...,,KHI 1111 tH'M 2 llURRV l'or your read 675 OOS\ Lo hra-w/3S' Newport _,,~lofr 892.4277 8lrk, mai;s, wide Urell, FM, :clnt cond. $4500. "'*" t''•ll uUH·• lt\td A.nHi l•Ult••, t M1.1ruh•, I lnl" dtnlna PIHaure, - -ilip.$3750/ofr.5'9·2547 ---cust. paint, P s. P,p 634-144tdys&456763eves t 0 11000 D M / f' 1111tl top, bludlu \'ou1·h, 100 tuuos ol Gourmet " K»wal 44" r1ano console &rley Davidson 77 FXE $8500. Call bef. noon, or au ,.,, • .. •• l•Url T\' flf'l,. Ju•t Bon ApJM1Ul •t.p. Call. w bench, walnut. $9~ 16' Runa bout. divided only 1,000 ml. beaullful an. 6 30. 675-0877 & I SJ • HOAOWAY tunt-~ C.:luthn b au. Ml~ __ PP 982·1'172 windahiold, M Johnson bike w/11peclal paH\t, SAMIA AMA .... ~uHI family w 161• r1l :-thot•• b '"N. h•w411lr?. I.JU Yrd or Rrown l'h.wh ~l"lNlSICED UPRIGHT w/t rlr. Lots of xtras. ban, olJ cooler, etc. Paid '.fr~de~~a~ r~. w'":r:a~y 835·3171 '\'ftJl M. Shc-p <iii w kid twla " ml•~ Ucma 4t7 c.~u·pet ~so )'i.rtJ. Pb NO Xlot cood $1100. CaJl548·3506. SUOO + T&L, i;e ll for xt as M l sell cheap '•~;;.atlb de>•, ahula ~!~~nd~I ~~~>'~~~~ti~ 67S·IMl'I Uob,. l80ll . . 17' RElNELL. 0 /B, 50 hp ~,;::~. ~~~7d lo & 2 4~. 4~~21 TH~USE1DoiMw;:l 197G Flat 124, Navy, Spider l,.ow mileage, clean Must sell. 832-9508 AATSALI t -llTIRID ACTlllSS TV Recio Mere. HID trlr. Extras. '75 DODGE Tradesman '74 Bavaria auto 780M VG llNll mlud l H uld nu1h SAT Sl N l to~ pm will llcll be•ullful collet• NA, Shno l091 Perf cood. Best ofr . '76 HONJA XL 250. 1700 lOO. Cptg. & panel 'g ,77 ~~pd 28tiSElJ ;~~;:~n.,~h~•·n u~1~=~~~:1~1 , 110«1 of unuauul colored ••••••••••••••••••••••• &t2·3335or642-607& ~~i. $875~ap'~4~~~or $4200 or best o!r. 645-1847 '762002~pdS/rt 401PDr These cars have never been dr1 ven o r re · g!slered • J"'''" fine j«>wcl ry , Old TV 'a, 1 color & 2 MARAUDER 24'. a fl 9PM '76J.061411pS/R572PQM J'ttt Guanra l'lll to 1000 I Almond Pl, .. :1&1tbluff. fl11urin,·:1, Clo11onnc, B&:W 's . Good woo<t Flybridge, twn screw, HONDA ATC 00, $400. '75 Clo1•d On SW1doy1 '76 XJ9 Roadsters. Choice or 12. $4295 '76 t24 Spyders. choice of8. $4995. '76131, 4 Doors, Choke of 11. $3295 • '761.28 Sedans, •hume 1 WcC'ka olc1 N lJ l''r 1, S 11. 1 I O 3 1voru:.'I, ,;t•rc-~n11, muny cabinet.II, alao an old Hi-low hrs, VHF. like new. 250 XL, $600. Bi 11, '67 FORD Econoline, runs -----·~ C'h1ldn•n' tv)11 . cki.k11. oulllt111dlu61 i:n1s~ Stlll't· F\, $20 t.akea all. 642-4336 "Streaker ". $12,750. FP. &1S-8820or496 7561 gd., gd. paint & Interior. ; dotl11n 11 TV, eq>lll ' Ina ll AM Fr1/1Sal/Sun; or64B-6188 645-2ll63or 752•0687 $850/Firm. 645-7007 ... <l'we dl'i-t.•t•hlit .. mll'7599359 St'ptUl,17,li. Husquavma1974250W.R .• 70 F d S 0 -MAR.HIOTTHOTEL IJ.track stereo AM/FM 2S'SEACRAFT twn l /O's. Xlnt cond. Must aell. or uperva •••••••••••••••••••••• Gl11antk Sulr. furn, 11nt1 Nowpart Beuch Realistic Concert Mate. Pwr w/full cntrls. VHF, $&50/ofr. 7S9•US4 Camper, mileage getter, ' STORf Wmt:Sl\I ... : •~• .. l 948 p k _,, 17 k 6 cyl, 3 apd, tac air, mag •1'.w f& U:IC"Cl furn •PPI '· Lasuna Bch. li41r w :t high b11ck stools, + m y otbe .. •xl"a• ~. .. .... .,.. ... ~ Que., Ctvu• nil. Uf , ..,., 497·24 , ' outriggers, trlr W/bra et LI---so194 whls, •ter""-tan.> deck, f!U6C. W1la.ocu IJ•r,111 !Irk hrwn vinyl. C11bmet New R CA C hro-bar an ' "' ' ... Rent/Storogt 160 perf cond.'1950.645·6457 1'ooik ~ 41 tll' W 19th RELOCATINU 1n bar bJ)tJ lock& for ll· aenerator WR.5088. $50. 19850. S40-7'IOO or MS-7521 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "M .... 9..,. ._ .... ...,.,... E th a m s t "" O b t r Pb ""'"7366 eves. "OTOR llOMES Auto Leosfft9 9510 ~. -1 ----very 1n u .. quor· $40 I a o r . ;.....,. . w. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r -furn, a.rt., auto, \'l1· Z vc Console Packard B~ll SONY BETAMAX VIDEO '7334' LA PAZ f'OR RENT 'Good used P'umuure .Appliances -OR I wil :M!U or SELL ror You : **IBUY** Vt!lou.riteetM>fll,Wi&Jnut Solid Slate AM/FM Diesel, H /C press wlr, FromSlSO.wk.770·0644 197 8FORD & Rl•u coffee & eod bl RECORDER S825 abower, VHF. AM 8-trk, FIESTA tablea w/lamp, table ~~r~~o~."~~~laaft~ 64.2·2.ll.3 . A/P . Propane slv & RENT Fireball ZJ' Self Hottes t ca r on the MASTBS AUCTtOH lamp, h11lchrover table pm oven. $32,900. 675·8866 cont. Auto/air. CC. CB, market! 30-40 mi per gal on 12" wuod treble NEW ULTRALINEAR st.ereo,slps6645228J Availableforimmediatc • 64M616 & lll-"2 blocks, 1re~n velvet :nX> WATT Generator, 10 'SJW "Disco Montor & '742S'MARAUDER Auto Ser-ti Part dehvery. Lowest lease c h a 1 r • c h e e r y hrs. use $375. 255 Mere, fndge, smk. & _. ~!i 9 1 400 rate on the market . yellow /white k1tch set, 495·4328 aft 4PM speakers. List $380 ea. $4800. 675-3866 ACCHavnH See now at CORT FOX C~U PAID refng, wshr , gas dryr, -.--v Atlantic Music's sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2586Newport Blvd. Joor gd w.ed lurn. anh green cpl. New 5 Pl' Qn Completed boat/mo 1na price$149ea. 20' Classic Cabin Crwser, '64·'77 Used Mustang 64 5- 3661 "f)ues&clrTV'&.9578133 bdrm set solid Oak + sale. Furn, appl, ATLAOITJCMUSIC Repossession. See & Pal'U, 990 No. Parker, 959 mirrors '& lamps (<! 1 hrdware, t<>?ls, stereo, 445 t . 17th c .M. make offer. 675-4857 Orange. Call 997-2000 LOV l-:LY Panasonic stereos, many kit. ware. Sabot, misc •-~.·Soil 9060 •·.e....-w.--a.-...1 Like New 7' Sora · Id boat part.s 646-6123 ~ '74 Toyota Landcruiser 6 ~ umwu •1100 9632 orig art ~cs, ~nc · -·--Sansui331Receiver&222••••••••••••••••••••••• cylENGINE. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ L ---.--Giovennet~i, acict on Lady Kenmore Wshr/ turntable, Fisher XP 75 19751B'So1Cal,5oisails, 545·1267 WEWILLIUY {... WATE R BED SALE . .steel. Pla.nt.s: kllch ware, dryr $100/ pr. Cir TV $75. spkrs, 3 months old( No duel trapeze, cstm trlr, ------ '-...--....._ ll1lJ.95 cmplt w /ht' '?1ks m,ag__azi_ncs, t~ls. Antique wood cash re· reas.orferrefused. Gene xlnt cond, $2,000. Chevy Mags, like new, PYAOIDUFRODRAOTRSNUO~J' --:S-ave S50 . .,.LOAT & 73 Dodge Sedan:. A<.:. 69 gister.548-3843eves ~·3664 1-985-8~ w/lires, also VW adap-,.OPDOL' _. 1 DREAM WATER BEDS, Peugeot AC, FUJI 10 sp<l --. tors ~5. 768-9052 I -~2U648each81,atAtlan· & much more. 642-770:1. WATERBED.brandnew, loah&Marine '77 Westsail 32. Fully _ __..: __ :....·----FORTOPCARS ta,H.B.9603202. 184SA'naheim,CM.#16C. king size deluxe w/ Equlpmettt equipped. Sacrifice 15) Goodye-ar AT ~ ---Sat/Sun 10.JPM vibrator. $900. value, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $49,500 or trade for O.C. Trackers, 10x15 white Giant Rummage Sale. MOV ING SALE St must sell! $500.673-2300 loot-. Marfne Real &itate. Pvt pty. spoked wheels. $225 . Sept. 17 & 18. · er eo 11:...1 nt 90 30 673-4220 830-9151 eves. l9640rangeAve,mholl. tape w/spkrs $40. 8 trk Electricallyoperatedduel ....-P'"' ...._ ___ ......:::_ ----• tapes $2 e a. also tools, & control adjustable queen ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hobie Cat 14 ', moving Weber carburetors 48 lDA Drexel game table set lots of goodies. 8391 Dan-sz bed, xlnt cond, ideal 1974, 7.5 HP Mere Out· must sell. $850bstofr. on McKay manifold for w/credenza $500. (714) bury, 11 .B. Fri-Sun for invalid or person board,longshan,remote 646-129tor675·S707 smallblockCbevy,throt· 768-5737 968-3162 ~ w1back problem. $390. controls, good cond $375. Ue linkage & ruel lines 645-0800 768·9052 By owner. 32' D.E. Atkins complete & ready to run -'Eric' ketch, beautiful, $850 or offer. 631-2092 loaded. Localed Yacht days or 979·6247 eves Cwitom 9' Sofa, down cush. Xl.nt'cond. Bst ·oc. Hones 8060 Trunk $35. Antique button Tamaya 3 • sextant Haven #2, Wilmin~on, ---1, ma W. or Ford bndge. VW ENGINES ~/245-1830, if no answer U~ed & re bwll. From rer.644-2932. ••••••••••••••••••••••• collection. RCA coni.ole $225. BROYHILL Din. rcn set . E:O~d~,~~Im~~d~~~itt~~~!. ~:ieoc:nd~c~r:k:1:ir~~· 831 2682 -- BARWICK DATSUN -...,.111 J 11.11.t .ipa--.1 I .u t11 8 31-1375 493.3375 WE BUY CLEAN CARS &TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET 213 518-1091 ~~· 5JO.&J4q Chm~ cabnt. & tble w /6 pad, girth. $100. 631.0208 955.1746 eves. Krueger hydra u Ii c ehrs to velvet. Sac.~. ---backslay adjusler. $450. 2828 Harbor Blvd 536-6814 &963-1918 Household Goods 8065 Sale 12x20 alum patio cov 831·2682 WANTED to exchange: Autos for Sale COSTA MESA ---••••••••••••••••••••••• er, ypu dism11nlle & take -2 ~fan ruhber raft 40' motor, sailer ketch ••••••••••••••••• ••• ••• 546· 1200 2 :w~i>s~f u°s!t f~r ~.nd 6 pcs .. Philippine ra_ttan _a~Y· 6pm 968"8552_ _ S3S. for house or condo m Anti~/ _W_E_P_A_Y_T_O_P_DO_L_L_A R 640-0576 furniture, c hair s. DeWalt radial saw, 7689052 Palm Desert or Palm Classics • 9520 f'ORTOP USEDCAHS ----------t footstool, coffee/end cab'net & accessories Springs. Pvt party. Call E G S Couch & matching chair, tables. $75. 847-4903 5225 1 673.0160 · Weber carburetors 48 1 DA 7141833·3:>44 40 Fo . pk up, $1200, ~ FOR ,f C~~~t~~ TIC brn & wht check. Man's · on McKay manifold for , . , Ford ackup, $600. & 28 or . · 10.spd. bike. 642·3338 Jewefry ao 7o 45 yds good green shag small block Chevy, throt· ~3 Ho~~ 1t k~lr, i~I Model AA Truck, $300. !~~i~!~.1s extra clean • , ••••••••••••••••••••••• carpt ·g w;hvy duty pad. tie linkage & fuel lines hrulapl: bl e 8:1 e 556 ~29· PP 8370279 or 768·6396 8 •UER BUICK :>~ Oiled Wa lnut Buffet, WA ..... TED 831 9327 complete & ready to run. s. u sa1 s. . ---~ ·(Lane) Sl75. Lowrey " ----·_ SI.ISO or ·offer 631 -2092 556-4729. $1100/obo. Mu~t 4 Wheel Drives 9550 2925 Harbor Ulvd. :spinet Organ <walnut) TOP CASH DOLLAR Illness forces sale: tlaysor979·6247eves. Sell. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CostaMesJ 979·2~00 'Sl75. Marble.top Coffee PAID F O R YOUR Thomas organ. gd l'ond -I N 2.,00 AMC-JEEP , 'fbl, $45. All in xlnt concl. JEWELRY. WATClll<:S, $800 ... , st bed, comp., Boats, Pow~ 9040 L~OO 1~ w/tr r. ?· ~. · !lli2·7517 aft. Spm Alff OBJECTS. GOLD, S12S Chesl S20. 2 maple ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnl. co~d. $950. 644·4la5 #I in.Callf. EVERYTlllNG ~.11 ~~;E~U~~R~I~~'. bar;loolsS35 6423280 31' CllRIS .Crart T IS. cab orS44·64 7 ~~~~1~f,~i\i'~~· MUST GO TlQUF.S 645·2200 MATTRESSSALt; t•rsr w1shp. Xlnt. cond. 18' O'Day Sailor. W/shore INTHESTAT1': lrurn, m isc, decorator --Save2<HO',o,Beaulyresl. $8900.979·2251 mooring 00 P!!nn HUGEINVEHTORY atems673-1700 Uvestock 8075 Spring111r. Serta, twin 11r SKIPJACK't 67S.49S6evs/wknds AllModelsNew&Used ••••••••••••••••••••••• ts ""'9 f'"ll~ Q ' p ., bl se "' · u -"· ueens F1ying bridge cruiser 26' Double ender. 10 H Lcasmg Ava1 a e NEW /GORGEOUS! Reg. Morgan mare. broke S129. Kings 1149. "The SIP6 4, twn 22S HP, 45 auxiliary. Classic f~lk Caata M•sa Sola bed: 3 pc com er lo ride & drive, blk Limey's M attress MPH, full electronics, boat. Xlnt cond. w1shp. AMC Jeep group., bolsters, etc. parade Morgan gelding. Warehouse" 114S Baker fishina set·up, fully $3500/ofr. 675-9311 d)'s, 252A HARBOR BIND. Drop leaf tbl, seats 12. Eng, Western (71'i l St. tor Fa1rv1ew) C.M. 'd.. I 100 b S00.3380evs Bench chrs. 5 pc dinette ~lOU M9-8378 cqwp • on Y rs. · Costa Mesa :>49·8023 ~et. Old cedar chest . ._ 8078 This Boal is better now 14' Sam~oat w/cabm, 2 J~S ,. 77 .. Lamps, tb\1. mln'Ofa, ~ PWR Lawnmower, used than when new. $28,000. ·1s ma1o &jib J 5 s;s;r beddmg, Make Offer!••••••••••••••••••••••• McLane 7 blade front 759-0tOOor67S.3222eves. ~3:> 'mtr. many n~~r~s CJ · 5 's. C J · 7 ' s. 615-3167 220 Volt Arc Welder Sears throw w /<'atcher. JU P $2300. 547.2695 aft 6PM Cherokees. Wagoneers, ----------1 60 amp. Never used. 4" Bnggs Stratton self pro P1ck·upe,, up toS1,200 dis· Rural French Din. rm set. Rockwell joiner. Motor & pelled $'225. 536 6868 or *SEA 13' Class Design, r ed counts 5 yr 50.000 mile Chana cab et c. $2600. stand. $400 for both. 536-5894 lapstrake hull w1wh1le warranty!! available s.;1-7211 or898·7494. 963-3532 tot. sloop rigged, all s atl!> C---'and Mtn Inc -----!Contractors & Han &racing gear meld. Also 200i'Eist,SAS58·8000 WATERHED w/frame, . 8080 dymen! 4 whirlpool gas RAY* trlr. Must sac. at S.950 rnatl&:Mahog. hdboard. Miscellaneous furnaces w/water ('Oii Wkdays, 751·5982, '75 Toyota Landcru1ser 4 dwr. wood chest.'•••••••••••••••••••••• top,new.st1llin theship eves/wknds675·7412 Sta Wgn. lmmoc cond. &18·5766 eves WA ..... TED pmg caseli $150 ca. liet. "PL-. Only Boal SSlOO. c~ll 963·6027 or " p p CAO 1338 I """ Hobie 16, gd cond. c 3 91 A k r c I MAPLE Couch, chrs. end TOP CAS H DOLLAR . ,.....,. -If yau care enou9h to w1trlr. $1750. 7.,1. 1 s or ar . t.bl. corr tbl & desk. P 'A ID F 0 R Y 0 U R Rubber dinghy, br eak buy tfHr "fWY best! 968·7482aft. 6 75 Chevy a,; ton 4x4, hi TOP DOLLAR PAID FORCL~AN IMPORT CARS ALL MODELS WE NEED CLEAN USEDCARS- HOW CALL PAPPY 540-5630 1011 ~so~ & so~ • LINCOLN-MERCURY JU al c h •~. Lam pa · JEWELRY. WATCHES. apart rowboat, $75 each. 'perf. 350, hdrs, P/S, pwr 897·8256 ART OBJECTS, GOLD, Wai;her S75.!l62·7987 Sy~ne.Y Sab.ot, com p disc brks, 4 spd . dual ---------------•S ILVER SERVICE . •1978 MODELS• w1sa1ls. Ftbergla.ss lanks.xlnt C'ondS46-l878 1 l''r. Prov. Difling Set, E L'U RN & AN s bot $240 .. AJO I FIN r . MiscellmMous a . comp. ..... . (cherr y wood). l b· 6 TIQUES.645·2200 Wanted 808 1 at,1977PRICES 673--0160 2626 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA M!SA __ 1:hrs, l'ui.t. pads, cbma cab. &l0·1180 GG G T .._GS ••••••••••• •••••• •••••• WhlS. Oft dltplay ~· CHpper. 2 yrs old. Sips LU A ~ "' Want to b uy : pair ol AT THE ANAHEIM 6, 3 sads, aux, safely Dinette, Couch & Love from your business card. 6.SOx16 lire~. W . M t 11 "-Dbl Bed rtbl & c-d one card for each ,,.2 .. ,.,.,9 IOATSHO equip. us se · .:>eat. , co ~" .... ...,, ....... GEL ST•DIUM ~001ofr. PP. 882·8184 oortbl. Lamp!! :>45-5457 lag plus one spare We Al"! A 71 Ford •f~ Ton. xlnl l'ond. AM1F'M stereo, lo mi, $3800/ofr. 495-4513 return permanently Wanted: 10" table saw SEPT. 9 -18 Ll\'·r m set, 9 pcs. Sofa, sealed attractive tag & also bench grinder All Model Sites t'b~neet,S; ~~·al~.h C~; s1tDrap·, m.eellng a1 rpline Please call 548·14i8'-7---• ' 30 '73 Landscruiser. 8,500 mi, cher ry cond. Many 1ttras. ~. 548·1362 aft. Kite 12· w ;street trlr See 6 #t 423 E. Edgewater, -=-------------• . . reqwrements. re d p . 19·20.22·24-2 • Tbl. End Tbl, 2 Swag vent loss & theft! For a Wante : iclures. • Ericson 26. s ips 5, 'Bal. SSOO. 835~ '70Jeep PU, 4 spd. 3SO VS, Tamps. l~ Yr old. $SOO. personalized tag enclose manuals & parts for l9JE orEH IOW V enclosed bead, dinette, reblt eng, Bst ofr 642-8362 aft.6PM WE BUY USED CARS! We're the new Chewrolct dealership Ill the I rvme Auto Center We need your used car! JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET 21 Auto Center Dnve IR VJ NE all,581-5664 (John) wallpaper, !abrir or Packard. SUNRUNNERS many xtras $8900. PP '73Jeep CJ5 Basic, 14, ---------i "Day Glo" paper & we 642·3379 CU'nY CAllNS 1-828-6762 mi. A·l Shape, sell or ~tcGwre Ottoman, teak will back & tnm you'r """"··t'c-' SUMDAMCERS •-......... ,Slips/ trade646 6813 ----------1 (uush. Loose orange d ~ 1111 "'"'" WE'LL BUY cush. Beaut. piece which tags. Or try two car s lnstrumefttt 8083 WEEKENDERS Docb 9070 Trw:ks · 9560 ~can't use. $70. 548-88611 back to back. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl'ORTIRIDGES ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 768-7222 PRICES '75 White Rickenbacker RUISERS $2eaor31$5 OCEAH C 415 tags $l.60ea 4001 boss gwtar w/case. WANT two 27' Sailboat Slaps. Newpart. Balboa. Mr. White, 675-1393 619 tag~ $1 .50 ea. $5()() Call 646·4931. lOor more Sl.40 ea. Accordia.n. like new. Used Sales Tax Included only 6 mo's. Luisettl NOCARD? w/plckup. Make offer. Draw your own or send 84().3288 • name, address. phone & ---------- we'll make one card per Gemeinhordt flute. Xlnt ------------1 tag. Add 25<' each. concL $125. P /P. Send check or money or-751·6303, SSG-1277 derto: GEM El NH ARD 1 · PILOT l'RIMTING STUDENT FLUTE 6 mo P.O. Box 1560 new. barely used $185. Coeta Mesa, Ca. 92626 548.5735 plush. __ Al_pa_c-la_ri_n_e_t_S80 __ Violin to5 WARNING! la=-SpHd & 9080 These wlll be •• •••• •••••• • •••••••••• the lowHt prices JET SKI '77 mdf. 3 mos you'll Her... old. Like new. Going Into on 1971 Models S e r v . S 8 1 · 7 8 8 5 , for the tftfln 213·944-3249 Mark model yetrll atlora Iring check booll! !=~~ ........... .. *Seo Ray rower• Merc.CNter. OMC, Vof¥O 1·15Yr._. Anmcmgl See yau at - tlle Sbaw! HARllSOM'~ I SIAUY 2327So. Main, SA. 14o:61H 3101 Coast Uw7, N.8. 6ll·ll47 Caa~rt,Sde/ ...... 9120 • •••••••••••••••••••••• your foreign or compact ear, paid for or not ! Call Sales l\1 gr. BILL YATES VW-PORSCHE San Juun Capistrano 837-4800 493-4511 WANTED-'72Nova, auto, air, mu11t be in xlnt cond. 540-4739 art. 6 SADDLEBACK BMW I COME IN Ir SEE THE630CSI MOW ON DISPLAY OUR COMPLETE IODYSHOP ISNOWOl'EH ISMW RESALES 1974 3.0CSA Polans silver, sunroof. r rwse control & all op. uoru; (488LNT > Choice of 11. $2.538. All you add to the above prices la lax " license & delivery 1" haodUng charge::.. Paclflc AutO Brokers 898-4645 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrcmd Mew '77 HONDA Cars MANY To ChooH Fnm! UNIVERSITY OklsllftObHe Honda Cara • GMC Trucks 2850Harbor Blvd. . Costa r,tesa 540-9640 Automatic, air cone.I .. & AM /F'M radio. A one KarmoM Ghia 9735 owner car. (ZRV449). ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71. AM-FM, new bltle • 1972 2002 p a in t , no d e n t s . Aut6matk with air cond. $1975 /ofr. Must sell. O o e o w I\ e r c a r . 673-5957 (l2lFT~>. ...:'6,,;,,;6 ;_;K:..;;,A.,_R __ N_N_G_H_J_A_, 1973 2002 looks & runs reat, $1250 • 673-3446 4 speed, sunroof & ~.:....:;. ______ ....._ ____ _ n e c k e r A M I t ' M Mcnda 97 38 1177R~V ). ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1973 3.0CSA Automatic, 1>unroof, .ilr 1• o n d • I o w m 1 I e s . <351JPS >. We al~ have one 4 speed an th•~ model. miracle mazda 21 SO H.._ ll•d. Costa Mesa 645-5700 1974 3.0Sla '75 RX4 wagon, auto. Full pawer, sunroof, 1ur AM/ .. 'M, trans. warran- cond .. & leather int. ty 15 OOOmi $3750 C388KLF). 5Bt-007i . . 1976 2002 Mercedes lens 9740 4 s peed, air cond. & ••••••••••••••••••••••• i.terco cassette. Im · SPORTS CARS maculate! C788HJL). Boyght & Sold SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS 83 1-2040 495.4949 711 l:iMW 2002. 4 sp1l. A, C, AM11''M stereo. Very ~d t•ooo s211001bst orr:. (714)960 14112 wkdys aft 7, wknds. apri 9715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971 Capn 1600, <t cyl. new pamt & interior. Comp recond1l101ted. $1295. 673 4899 Datsun 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *DRIVE A* * LITILE .•. * SAVE A LOT SHOP&COMPARI': BARWICK DATSUN ,,111 I q,111 ( 1p1 .... 1 r 1t111 831-1375 493-33 75 NEWPORT DATSUN FOR THE BEST FLEET PRICES CaH J im Needham TODAY! ~ OOV E SIR Jo: ET Near MacArthur & Jamboree Road!! 8 33-13 00 BEAT THE PRICE INCREASE!!! WEST GERMAN IMPORTS 714/548-1186 '75 MIZ 450SL With m etallic paint. stereo & is luxury eq · ped. In showroom con lion! (447MXN). Pri c o sell or lease. '72MIZ250 COU PE . Luxur y. equipped with low miles & 1s m excellent cond1- l1on c689GWG ). '7 4 Ml% 4505,EL ~al.her interior, pwr. windows. cruise control, sunroof & metaJlic painl. Great condition ! C19'JLOY). Good selection of other fine MBZs in stock lo t•hoose from. MISSION VllJO IMPOlllS A•• ' 1. \ ~ I ••"' " tt ru """, .,..,.,. •• .,, BJ 1. r 741l 495 1104 leClff Hew·Used OVEA 100 MERCEDES OHDISrUY HcMe of lmoorts AlJ1'HORIZtD MERCEDES DEALER 6862 Manchester, Buena Park 56 NEW CARS 523·7250 AT THE OLD PRICES On the Santa Ana Fwy. All models now a\·a1la- ble Call or see us before 19S6 Mercedes Benz 190 4 b , , , dr sedan. Gd shape. Jn· you uy tact. Not operational. $750. 847-3778 '71 280SL, Tobac · S HARBOR RLVD co/cognac int. Auto, 2 284 · tops, m'nt.C()nd. Best ofr. COSTA MESA DATSUN 540.6410 540-021 l 213·622-3325/714-640-6108 ---..::..::....:.::..::..::..::._...;,_ ____ _ '76Datsun280Z·Aircond •. '71 280SL Mint! Silver . AM1FM slereo w/lape, AM /FM c~ss., $J.2,500.' leather console, wire 213-434·9189 wheels. ski rock & maii•--------- caps. Extra snow tlre11 & '68 2505, full pawer. steer· wheels Included. Jnr-ma, brakea, windows. maculate . Pri. party. air, low mileage, ivory Call 759 0944 days; with mint red interior, 6 7 3 . <>5 4 4 n I t es & new radiat., xlnt cond. weekends. s.ssoo. 970--9721, act 6, '74 Datsun Pickup, excel111...:.;•:..:.....:1..;.705;;,;;_. _____ _ cond. M a n y x t r us. '66230SL4t[>. stereo, both s:l00018st ofr. 968~ topa, 1&1111. Oue>O -'67 ~L rare 4 seater '71 Datsun 510, must sell w/fuU leathe r, a uto, lmmed! Best oU~r . stereo,loml.003408 846-9903 btwn S.Upm. Bolb in nawl~s cond. '74'• 21GOZ. Hpd. AM·FM. Serio1Dlnqulriea. air, 'm1gs. A·l COlld overseas Ii.perts $4800. &44-6&48 art 6pm ... 76itoneybec. l&,500 ml &7>71J3 '3000 442-3755 d11y11 &\2-0178t'ves 73 MeH .. • 210 Auto, eir. p<>wer win· • dowi, Beckel' AM/FM, ne* Mlchelln 'e, 45,000 mll~•. "Priatlnt condl-_____ _._ .... t lo D thr u O Vl I" ''P robebly lht finett UtPd 280 anywberet''. MUlt bf'"° and drl Yfn I <MBfffl) CRFV I ER • . ...... ......... ..... •• ~ ~ •• IMpet+td Autoa, Used Autos, Uaed Auto1, Uaed ~y. Sepwmber 15. 1977 DAILY ptLOT U, ' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~--;r;~;;.~ ..................................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• .. ~:!~.~~ .... !?.~. ~ .. ~ .......... !?.~~ !~::~ ....... !?!.~ ~~~ .......... !!.'.~ ~ ............. !!.~~ ~~ ............. !!.u~inv•. Mew 'Tl MO ZIO sr.: Wble llM J>oo1h.i 1112. 0 Afu11 "71~ Vim cnowlndow1l '70 Cad SeJiAn. Full lf7lFORO '73Pintc>Sq Wagw/rack. ••o .... H•w HOO Mtos. N•w tlOO ....•••..•.•....... , ................•..•..•• ,. tan 111&.r. lmm.c, clean tc:U.~ •lnll-orul lll•1•.AM/PM power,nutlreli&ibrka. PlHTOW.ACiOH MakeofCer. 'dnt CODd. low ml, ori '1H;«J 6~1~ •tenx1, lapo.26' ~ llatS 548·0286 AutomaUc lransmlssion. Call646-3531 owner. SU·IHO . <'Pt New Int .,pnt,'70VW Nowen11nt.All'7•CpeOeV1lle,xlnt,ru11 Realsharp!(OS8HSX> '72 Pinto Runabout . m !217 com pl rhlt 011 Uum l'Ol'Olibl kllpl 11inro uno. pw r. i"9 50 I Bs t of r $ 199S 2000cc. ,\ulo. new llre11, Slwtr~....., ~. Konh• Xlnt 1·on1l 8om1• body work need d. t133d>75l·:JCMl2 llLL YATES ~ Sac. SU.95.536-8018 ~ =~:'·!~ c ~ '"' 41111 •tt<d ,,,. s. ::c> Doul 751·2l.23 or 74 CADILLAC VW.p()RSCHE 74 Puito Runabout, lo ml, Lo 111 pp ~MO lMI 1112 Porad1,. f<bll --a DO .... DO San Juen Capistrano xlnt cond. s40·ll44 or • ' --•mfl. Koo1 • mu11•. new USOO EnaiM • Tran~Hle. T\nlcd "'lau, PS & PB, 837-4100 493.4511 _SS._3634 _______ 1 paint tl44 OOJO Gt! ec1nd MOO. • MCM '144 -Cidl840 l4'78 ah· N>nd., auto. trans .. M.Yerick 9947 '71 HATCHBACK Gd. •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• 't7 tllS r urnh<• ttbll power ant4!nna, AM /FM \ran1portatlon. P . P . ............ ta , P ....... er wind ••••.••••••• • •• • • • • •• • •• $7"". ""3 ........ ""'•7• •ill •75 MGI ma.~* ,wlnt. J111t11hl·d 'l.i.1 VW Von. reblt enc. .......... ~· v.. oN '" -.-... , ....... <'an~rtihlo apd ~fee a I Io y 1 Low l' r c d ftow hraku. new gen. "aeata. Power dr. lock1. 71Maverick,4 dr, , lnC' oven:tn\~. Attt t f'N , AM /FM-<a11, Min\ <unll $1200/uad\l.675·251_5 • Landau top. Crul1c con· Rill. S10&5. 73 Pin~ Wagon. Auto . .....,., trol. Tilt wheel. New 968·080l Low nuleage. Gd cond. r.•Jlata. rallyf Wh4!C'll, -·u VWllH)o $600. tares. Just liko new. rzooo. PhM0-5799 ~llJ r~ w1black1 '7l fll4 J>oree hti. i\p 64S·~S ('115KYE) Mercwy 9950 trtm Nice tbruoul . r;:n-aroup Ma•• _ _ ... .181 Bok""'"'"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• pty"'°""9 . t960 .. s b I I. ~· • • • I neta1 ue 0 ~.., ORANGE conNTY'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• uper e" amp • I rblt en11. AM J'lli&t 'at vw e~ Needs ~ngine OurSpeclaJ Price $5090 urwESUT tape . C lean . 0300 v.1>rk. Hei;toffer. "" '73 Duster; V-8, air·cond, ~ .. l_ CREVIER &I U A .. OAOWA't SAHTA AHA 835·3171 THf iJUIMA lf l>"IVINQ MM:tUC 4fl&.8461 5lli-tl207 HANSEL LlNCOLN·MERCURY orig. owner. Fold down -----Dealt:rshlp Is now OPEN rear seat. Only 39,000 mi. '8'19121owner,5 sptl, n~v. '62 V~00G1d11.rcmo.nd. OU>SMOllLI n •y ~ •DEIOE S1750. 8.1J.1768 ch4eh&l75(Jcl·kit ~ •• ftA r-..A -------• B3l·J061Jeves 646·9809 1325 W. Commonwealth, LINCOLN-MERCURY '7 2 D us t c r . G d ----FUiierton. (714) 810-4200· J6-18AutoConter Or. mechanical cond. $1200, Wt Roye. 97 56 '71 S<tbclr. VW. Aulo, lo m1, North on Euclid offrarnp so Fwy-Lake l"orest exit must s c 11 i mm ed . ••••••••••• ••• • •• ••• ••• runs xlnt. Must sell now. from Rivenside frwy. to 1 RVJNE s.ta-6673 Iii DEALER IN US A $1295. 586-2911 Commonwealth. turn a~"7000 ----·----• Optl 9746 . . . len. v. mile to Hansel ~-1''or Sale 1975 Duster . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROY 'ID VW Bus, reblt eng, Olds. . Mudaltg 9952 Automatic A/C, 6 cyl. 70 Opel GT, dependable, ~ CARVER 41bkJJ\g $l8SO. 642•4759 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• &'7-4461 looks & ruiu great. Must ROUS·ROYCE B:ll·006l 76 S.VIU.. $9SO~ · '66 Auto 289. 57,000 orig '72FURYlll sell. $ltl95/bst. 968·2U9 U40J•m..,... '74 Bug Sunroof, AM /FM, loaded leather, wirei., ml. 2 ownrs. Xlnt cond. 4 Dr. ,....,. 9747 *-.ert .. •cJI Nu tires, Xlnt cond. crwse, A,M iFM tape, till $llkl0.83H548 640-0078 \ __ ___._.,... -' S2800i rirm. a15.w18 wheel, P. !leats. air. etc. -----________ ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cto~to suNOAYS ----29.000 mi. 042TOI-'. Pit: Pontiac 74PAMTER.A --------'74PANELY.AH _752-0687or64S·2963Dlr. •6tMustancJS600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 30,000 miles, !ullv fac· COHCAHHOH'S $t!lOO Firm 960·3348 1971 Coupe de Ville. Steel See at l!><l~lacenl.!._3 fAMT .ASTIC IUY ~:fh:Sas(ta~f;,l::J.~.> HORSELESS '72 VW Bu!>. Good cond. rad1a.l11. good cond. $1995. '67 l\lustang, yellow wtblk '75 P~~t:~.11 ~~:~s·Am $14,4H STAILES SJOOOorbcstoUer, 642·9601. _ int. clean. $800 offer AM /FM stereo w /tape MOTOR CARS Brokers of fine contem· __ Call 839~4 Camaro 9917 S86·0S9'7 _ __ __ deck. Very clean. $4495. D'ElEG.ANCE porary . • '73 VW Camper. recent ~·••••••••••••••••••••• 66 4 spd, ·Mustan~. super 957-0336 W hSA ROLi~ ROVC1'. tuneup. Good cond. 69 Camaro 350, auto, eng. nee<b body work & ---------1• 626 17t :W7·9250 BENTLEY ~/bslofr.641-4048. PS/PB. nu palJlt xlnt trans. S48·508l '67 FJREBIRD 400, x.lnt Ponche 9750 automobiles. --cond 1n1out. $1500. cond.$8'15Firm. ••••••••••••••••••-•••• Z7JJ E. Coast Hwy · Ycho 9772 642-9006 '67 Mustang <:onvt. Xlnt MG-05'16 SPORTSCARS <71<1>67s-0930 •u•••••••••••••••••••• rood. Ong 0~nr. SJSOO. 1967 Lemans, new Ures. lo .. &Sokl IEFOREYOU Che•roa.t 9920 673·34l4 eves afl 6 _ batt. ss.ooo Ml, xlnt Saab 97 60 SIEl.L YOUR ••••••••••••••• ••••••• • '65 Mus tang. Lat tie clasi;1c cond .. $700. Call 548·0265 WIST GERMAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• VOLVO, ·m Olevy lmpaln. 2 Dr. while convcrl1blc. Pvt Thundl'rbird 9970 IMPORTS 1972 Saab ,V4. 64,000 mi. See us for a Lop dollar V 8, Auto. arr. good body, pty. $1975. or rea!I ofr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlntcond. $1900. estimate' tires. painl. runs ~real. M r S a n d <• r ~ • ·n T Bird. Full power. 714/ 541·1 II~ 493·94793fl 5 MAR9UIS VOLVO S&50/f1rm . 646·:l1Hl:I <714 l523·725'JorH21 H724 OrrJ:•nal owner . Very SEE US FIRST! Toyota 9765 MISSION VIEJO '68 IMPALA. 1 dr. /\ C, '68 Clas:.H'. Hed. nl'w tic~ I good cond. S2500. Ph 642· 1r you are considering ••••••••••••••u••••••• 831°2880 495· I 2 I 0 PiS, A,'f. xlnt 1ntr. S750. cng. Hi Z2 mp~. 3 spd ~187 _ _ __._ __ buying or leasing your IEfORE YOU --------Call 759·9359 trans S.ienfa·c SIJOO, y-.. 9974 ORAHGE COUNTY 751·8485 -..,.. next. Porsche. SELL YOUR ·12 Che\'. i'ull !>l Wal( ••••••••••••••••••••••• llLLYATIS TOYOTA, VOLVO x1ntconrtXtras.sl4ooor otd5mobile 9955 VeGA '76 Vw..PORSCHE EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO ofrl .. 't'. s.:&0-3727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H.ATCHl.ACIC GT See U!> for a lop dollar Largest Voho Dealer -·73 Toronado, full pw'r. 1 SanJuanCapistrano esumate! inOrangeCounty! '74 Monte Carlo. Full m~L'lell! $2250. or belll DE.,10. 5 speed trans .. 837-4800 493-4511 MARQUIS TOYOTA BUY or Lt:J\SI:: power, low mileage. air offer. 968-3407 or 5<18·9912 a 1 r c 0 n d · • e t c · MISSION VIEJO DIRECT shocks, new tires. !\tint ------!6505 ~).Was s:T195 '76 Porsche 9115 Targa, 831·2810 495-121 o oond. 546-3341 · ·77 Cl.:TLASS Supremt· OHL Y $3198 -xlnt cond, AM /FM tape Dr o u g h am A C. HOW.ARD ChHrot.t deck (714) 735-7722 '77 COROLLA. AM /F'M '75 Monte Ca.rlo Spl Cpe. AM1 FM stereo ca!>:., cri.e Dove &Quall Sls. AMERICA'S MOST EXCITING CAR TRANS-AM \ Ye1 ... E:ui~ment. Luxuriow, pqtHrfal, in4ltual re1pon.1e and """'1lm6 make lhU ~ '77 Po'n.Uoe r,..,.._Am tlu! Hry epitome o/ lhe .4mencan. Motor car •c•tw. 76 IUICI( ~ f1ctoty air. -•• •••••11\Q ·~I ........ ~..._.. 10711RF1i $4798 •74MAJDA ....... 4 S o-•d. redlo, ,....,., ............. -(trot.EOI 'HPON'FIAC 72fOID ..,,..,.... Y·t . •ulo. 1re11e .. 'l•c •orv e lr c0"4111Ml"O, -t .. t rllljl, ~ l'OOf. IUKPH). $1498 $2498 7lDODM DAU t ovt.. •u!Q. 1r1ne , ,_., lle9llno. ,..,.,, ...... ~l'ocl (7UGH0). '77 POU ....., ... Cft. Y·6 , e uroMUIC lfl~tlfliHton. _, 1t .. n110 lillelorv 111< __ ... Ill. MWOot .. l-~-1.000 ........ lladEY> $1998 $4998 -v-e •1110,,.et •c $1798 1111\llMilllof\ ' --• (UMlllW) The BIUatt Marketplace on the <>r...-Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ;--7-3 Porscl1e n11T . s ter. lesi; than,10000 m1. Air.lllwhl,PB.PS.AM· cnlrl. tit whl. all pwr NEWPORT BEACU " Below Blu Bk Be l orr FM stereo. wht wal~ 14.000 ml. $6.0\15 or best Whitc/blk intr hM /FM &l2-8944 c · :. 20255.Manc S3800.PP.835-S377 ofr.&io 2421 d\:..675 96:.i6 833-0SSS VouCanSeUlt,Find"· [84 2•56•8) OneCall Servic;4t !>lerco & 8 track. Air. Al· A he' 7:50 2011 · --------T_..._ tt With Want Ad 1 1 Fa t Credit A....., _ _. loy whls. SOM mi. $1 J,000. VoUuwagen - -9770 na ..!_m -76 Monte Carlo Landau. lo .!.''~ _ _ 74 Vega Wgn. ufr. uuto. •-1 a 5 ~.,,,. Pvt ply 64.C·SS34 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Volvo U2DL, sunroof, ml. xfot eond Make of· Auto1, Us.cf newlires. AMtot U1ed Autos U1t4 Aut U t4 ------1974VW arr. AM 11''M stereo, fer.675-5074 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MO-tl44or548·S618 •••••.'••••••••••••••••••••••.'••••••-•••••••••••••~~· •• ~•••••••••••••• '71914 . l''actory appr ~rp. W•stph-•ia Camp~r overdrive. 1.0.000 ml, '73 Nova aulo p S 6 ,., I Bra & cover. AM/FM 8 uo .. xlnl ~ &tS 3598eves • • / • 'L, · trk. S61001ofr. P. P Loaded includin~ stereo · · -· ex. s harp, <15,000 mi. 58Hl077 cassette. In excl•)lent '63VOLVOS-WJ'astback $1795.673·360'7 _ :;-:r,\RGAITTlT.-x~ condJtaon! <392KLO> Super cofld~iout S975. 1974Nova llatchback VII cond. Must sec! Leather SADDLEBACK Ph64G·Ol5S _ _ __ e111:. Xlnt cond. 57,000 m1. int w/xtras. S4IH931 an VALLEY IMPORTS Autos, UHd $2'150. Call 54s.8453 blwn .SPM 131·2040 495-4949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S.5PM -~~----~ h T ""VWV 97- -~ t90I Impala 1'21' 2dr V" Xlnt Porsc e '76 arga, ureen ..., an, l 1 cnl!. ••••••••••••••••••••••• , -· . o . w /blk Int.. alloys , goodcond1llon cond. $450, or bsl offer. cassette, air. 768·5737 SJS2S. 496-9789 * $599 Sale * 759 1154 i ~ •• UMd Autos. UHd 1970 Chevy Impala. one ••'•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• owner. good ~ond. mu.!>t MllRQDIS MOTORS, VOLVO & TOYOTA ........ . . SJ%&'Al?fi CARS lf74TOYOTA HM.UX ptCl-UP Eaulpped with camper. stove & Ice box. C40135U). ""'°° ..,,,.,.. Automatic. radio, air cond .. & pwr. eteertng & brakea. Showroom newt (UIU319). ltWPOUCMI t tJ Immaculate oondltlonl 4 •P••d & radio. A c6llector'1 lteml (S49KBPI. CRHY313), 4 •PMd. radio & air cond. Super 1harpl (&ee9). • lf14Y~YO ,141WA60t4 Autx>mttle. atr cond. & In euper nice condition! (t18lNS). 9905 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 HORNET. Auto, economy car . '980. Ph 586-8441 · Wdc 9910 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·12 Buick Electra Lld. 2 dr, 60M mi. loaderl. New sU radials. $HOO. 494-3039 or49H760. • I t76 CADILLAC. SIVILLI Full leather Interior, all power aulsts, crul .. e<mltOI, AM/FM etoreo with tape phJtt. <ee&RSH>. $9988 sell. 839·62118 9932 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CORVETTES · Our Construction Is Finished PLEASE STOP Ill AllD SEE OUll llEW FACILmES 110 DURINIOUR HUIE QUALITY USED CAii CLEARANCE lhursday•Frlda.y•Saturclay•Suntlay, Septem .. r 15 thru 25 EASY CREDIT TERMS OI APPIOYED CIJEDll Ask ..... •• "Powertraln Plus" · Senlce A1n1•ent Tl'lurlday, Septerno.r \5, \077 . :~ ".,,, ~ ~~e.~\J . 2YliR~R ~... • . 24,000 MILE . SERVICE POUCY ••• oH MOST USIO CAlS! '' ---.- '74 VEGA STA. WGN. · Air, 4 sp. #SOlKHI I '72 MAZDA RX2 CPE. 8 Trt. 4 tp. #741FAI / 'Al EARLE IKE IMPORTS -ANK FINANCING O.A.C. ly 011r proftuloftOI so...... puttittcJ It Oft Hit ht, yoe t.cl•t MCldt US th •• ¥OlllH import .W. ht Costa Mno. COME IM HOW EARLE IKE SAYS. e e AMDSHWHY! ---. -SERVICE/PARTS ---.. ' OPEH 6 DAYS A WEEKI '75 LUV MIKADO P/U Mag wtih. 4 sp. #I A2653' MILITARY PERSONNEL WELCOME WE · LEASE AU MAKES AHDMOOB.S! '13 MERCURY CAPRI Mcmp, 4 .,. #JllHGf YILYO & TOYOTA DEALER •73 MAZDA PU #64541V "' Bu•tlDgton Beach Feuntalh Valley EOJTION VOL. 70.a NO. 258, .t SECTION$, .42 PAGES v • HB Wins Delay • Ill By GAaY GRANVILLE ... ~,_., .... At the ctt.y 'a request. the Local Aaency FormaUon Commission (LAFC> agreed Wed!lesday to put off consideration or a Hunt- ington Beach bid lo annex 327 · acres of Bolsa Chica bluff land unhl ~arty ne~t March. Initially, Huntin&ton Beach sought to annex the entire. 1,603-acre Bolsa Chica area southeast or Warner A venue and tnhlnd from Pacific Coas t "llfglfWuy. But the city council decided rn· stead to reduce the proposed an ncxat1on to the 3,27 acres between Warner Avenue and the Wan - tersburg Flood Control Channel. That decision was based on a state move to buy 927 Bolsa Chica wetlartds acres. That move was engineered «t>y Assemblyman Dennis Mangers <D-Huntington neachJ. Earlier. the Otange County Board of Supervisors agreed to a county purchase of aaotber 314 Bolsa Chiea acres to serve as a link between a city park and the J Bolsa Chica marsh lowlands. A!t a result or the atale and county planned acqulsiilons, the city's interest In annexation dwindled· to the 327 acres scheduled ror discussion by LA FC Wednesday. However. an LAFC staffrcport said Huntington Beach needed lime to revise tbe ma~ and legal de.scription o! lhe arf ected acreage. Furthermore, the staff report continued. the city wants lo pre· pare a revised environmental Impact report covering only the 327 acres included in the revised annexation overture. "The lengthy period for ttie continuance· <until .March 8> ~ ~fternoon N.Y.Stoeks TEN CEN.T$ requested In order to permit enough Ume to prepare and re- ceive comments on a new en- vironmental impact r eport for the reduced project," city ad· ministrat.or Floyd Belsito said in a letter to the LA FC com- missioners. Without comment the com- missioners afreed to the request- ed dehty. Lance Claims 'Conseienee ·<Blear' I o ' Mliiarg Flight. ·Crash Kills , ·~20 on Plaiie ... COLORADO ,,on• Croth Albuefuerq:.;v•~--.. !Sirtl:Pd A.f .!. NEW .MEXlt O U>aAt Feels :Quake 'rom ·~imArea 1A Wednesday earthquake cen- tered on a fault In Anabel m 11\.'easured 2.7 on the Richter ~le and was strong enough to ~ 1elt by residents as far away ;cs Costa Mesa, c,1 State ewuerton seJsmologlstJ said to- l:l41y. It was the first quake that coµld be detected without instru- ments io Orange County since Memorial Day, according to Chl"istopher Buckley,· assistant professor of earth sciences. BucJtley said the quake hit at 2:35 p.m . on an unnamed faull five tniles sooth of the campus. The tremor caused no damage and apparenOy affected an area 15 miles Crom its polrlt or ortgln. Proba.Wn Bill OK - SACRAMENTO CAP> -Gov. .Edmund Brown Jr. has been sent .a bill that wouJ<A deny proba· i tonary a\mtences to crbntnals Whote vtcUmt are the aged or disabled. The Senate voted 31·0 ;wi~out <ltbale WednJ1sday on SB -3'7u by ~n, at!dr•e DeulmeJtan <R-,Lopa Beach>, . ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. <AP> -An Air Force plane s lammed into a mountajnside on a high security Army base, killing all 20 people aboard when il exploded on impact a half mile from a bunker containing fissionable material, authorities said. The four-engine plane crashed on Manzano Base, where nuclear weapons are s tored, three minutes after its takeoff from Ki rUand Air Force Base at 11:45 p.m. Wednesday. Kirtland base operations con- firmed there were no survivors. snid Walter Sprjck of the Federal Aviation Administration. "One big fireball and that was it." a nearbuesident said. Air torce crews u•ln• nares and helicopter spothanta re· covered: atllleast IS bodies in a prf'dawnsearcb. Authorities said all those abOard were military personnel - A spokesman at the plane's base said it was used frequently by high-ranking military person- nel and American and foreign dignilartes. Former Secretary or State Henry A. l<issinger is among those who have used the plane. the spokesman said. The aircraft. which was scat· ter.ed over 10 acres aftir impact, was u sed as a mode I for modifications to Air Force One, the president's plane. An air traffic controller said he tried to warn the pilot the plane was in trouble. ·'The £irst indication we had he was in h'ouble was when the radar showed he was loo close to the mountain and flying too low ... said the eontroller. "We hit him on the guard fre· quency and told him to tum right and climb .. _ but he never did," he said. The jet was a communicat'\ons aircrart based at Seymour J ohnson Alr Force Base In Goldsboro. N.C. An Air Force spokesman said it was on a train- ing mission and was on ltl way to NeJUs Air Force base in Nevada. · Ttae ~Ct35, described as a "modified 707," stopped in Albu· querq~ to refuel, the spokesman said. · A sPok~man .tor the Federal Aviation Administrallon said the pllot made what was 'probably a routine attempt to contact de· Parturt' cQntrol just aftet takeorr. The tower responded. but the pilot. didn't return lhe com· muntcation. Ceoliag Bu Bee& .............. Ni11e-m()(lt~d SCo" Philljr:>~ was quite cont•Al in this Montreal "·hfn the-t~mpe-r·aturt> hlt 104 d~Bre<!s. .The tot had a bottle apd his gr-andmothet within reach. By ROBERT BARKER Of U. Dall~ f'ftM ltaH Proposed changes in the flunt· lngton Beach clty charter will get ·their first public· test 'tonifht after nel,\l'IY a year ot dls<:wmon and debate. ' A public hearing in wh.lch )"esi· ·Teen Shot; HBMan Held A 45-year-old Jtuntlngton Beach father has been arrested in connection with the shootiog of h.is 16-year -old daughter's oo·yfriend early today. police re· ported. Wllliam Kazuo Tom ila. or 17091 St. Andrews Lahe, was booked into Huntington Beach Jliil on charges of assault with a deadly weapon, Lt. John Foster said. foster sp(d Tomita allegedly shot Br¥don Eugede Arakaki, 18, of 6372 Newbury Drive, Hunt· ing.ton Beach , atf 7 a .m . at Tomlta's home. · Arilkak.i underwent '"1rlaery at Hunlln1Jon lntttcommunity Hospital this ~rnlng for re· moval ot a .38·c111tlber slug rrom- hls Mll leg above the kneecap, ot- flclals taid. : dents can give their feelings,· pro or con, 011 the firstdraft of ·recommended changes wtll be held at 7:30 p.m. Jn council c:ham· bers. ' A second public hearing is scheduled for 9 a .m . Bept. 19, also in-council chambers. 1 The charter, which hasn't been substantially cha~ged since 1966. "serves as tKe eonslltutlon for the city and d\.ltllnes the scope and power or city government. The nine-member charter re· vision committee has made a number of recommendattons that already have sparked some controversy. Some of the major recommen- dations lnc\ude keeping the posi- llon or city attorney erectlve in· stead or making it appointive, elimination or the office of city treasurer in favor of an elected city auditor lind removal of top officials and department direc- tors trom the personnel systetn. 'l'he recommended chang~ tn· ~~ir~ a Jetter &om • treuuf't!r W arNm. ftall who would aee his Jo~ eUrnrnflted tr the rbcomrnen-dat~ an9 carried ou\1 IWl WJ'Qte ~e let~r to the citliens of the. clt7, the cUy chattet ~lsion eommittee1 the 'ln&1't lad clty cpyncll this we•k. ~'tor a c(ote look at <See CHA.t~Ett, Pace .UJ People Asked WASH I NGTON <A P > - Budget Director Bert Lance. ap· pealing to the American people lo be "the jury in this proceed- ing,·· told the Senate today that while he may have made mis· takes running his Georgia banks he engaged in no wrongdoing and no cover-up. "I am secure and comfortable knowing that my conscience is clear and that the people's verdict will be a fair and j\lSl one." the director of President Carter's Office of Management and Budget told the Senate Gov· crnmental Affairs Committee. Drawling slowly and solemnly. HOMETOWN RALLIES FOR SERT LANCE, A4 Af'wi,..,.... APPEALS l'O PEOPLE Lance et Hearing Planners tRestrict Antenna By RAVMOND ESTRADA JR. Of Ille O•lly f'li.t St.ff Des pite the protes ts or a mateur and Citizens' Band <tB> radio operators, the Foun- t atn Valley Plann in g 'tom- mission Wednesday night voted 4 to 1 in favor of a proposed 45·foot vertical antenna height limit. The city council as expected to hold a public hearing within six weeks on the proposed law. Alternate Commissioner John Night voted aeainst the proposed anteM a height law. "I can't conceive of this or· dinance ever being enforced, .. saldNtgbt. "It's-not the authoritf of the ci- ty to regulate persona property Jlk e this,·· he addeq. "}\'~ ere bverstepping our boundaries by trying to ~ontr9l esthetlcs," satd:Nlght. · ···1 Wnk we hQVe overreacted,·· he added. Noo11ein the audience Wednes- dily' night spoke in favor of the helght restriction. ••Jt you take away my antenna hel~tit. you take away my value to RF~qf." satd Donna Molina, a memtX-r ol the Santia10 Radio Emeriency Associated Team <REACT>. RadiQ operators said the la• would areaUy limit their: broad· casttna ranae. •'ederal Co unicationt Comml1'alon re latio s allow C8 radlo oper~ antennas 60 !eec. hath. The propoae'd 7, allows a sln11e vertical ante a element to extt'nd Q h.l1tl a teet. 2 n~11 v r1LO I H f HB Man Trappe d In Auto \ J 4 \nit ·old lluntln1tton lieuC'h mill\ "a'I f1'PC>r\ed tn 1t1 bill candltmn t.oda) 11\er utr - 1n.: tr\l'ArH'~ 1n a thrtCM'kr col h!-111111 't11~.·,duy t•venin& Em"'""" J uhn ftaf\Some Jr. of 403 nh St waa. cul hom rts. »mashed or by HunUDaton Seacb f\remea. Ransome'! C.'Ompuct iedan coJ- laded with a van ~t Edwards Slreel and SliAlt:r A venue about 6.40p.m. Ransome \\ ~ rushed to Hunt· .. u.,.,.... mgton Intercommunity Hospital ·where he remuined today lo the .1 lolensive care unit. LINING UP TO HEAR BERT LANCE T&STCFY 'The People's Verdict Will Be Fair, Juat1 U The van was driven by Eugene Lance 'Welcomes' Public as His Jury ·'' Fuentes Prado, 22. Los Alamitos. Prado. a paraplegic, was treat· ed for injuries at Pacifica Hospital and UC Irvine Medical Center. but v.a~n·t ho~patah zed. authorities s~ud. Hansome 's vehicle struck a third car durin~ the crash. The third car driver and _passenger were·not seriously injured, said police. Man Arre sted In Newport Break-in T ry A Sunset Beach man, who police allege was prowling through West Newport, was in cu5tody &oday on a charge of burglary. Police arres ted Richard Michael Feldt, 34, of 16344 Pacific Coast Highway Wednes· day after allegedly walchin& him break into a storage room at 116 4lstSt. Feldt is being held in lieu of SJ0,000 bail. Officers Joseph Saunders and Dan DiSanto !>a1d they were patrolling the Seashore Drive area at about 11 a.m . when they assertedly saw Feldt going door· to·door, trying door knobs. , When he made the-alleged break-in. they arrested him. Senior Chief Plans Speech National senior citizens· employment program exec11tive J..ouis Ravin will speak to the Orange Coi~t,r ~ni<>f Ctuiens.' Council Friday ht Huntlngton Il<'ach Ravin, deputy director of the Senior Aides ' Employment Pro· gram of the Nallonal Council of Senior Citizens headquartered in Washington. D.C., will speak at the city's Senior Center. I le is expected to speak to the group gathered at the facility at 17th Street and Orange Avenue ahout J :4.5 p.m. Treaty Draft Opens Talks? WASHINGTON (AP> -Bert Lance struck back at his tomen- tors today. acting as if he considered himself Gulliver beset by Lilliputians. He let it be known at the outset that his remarks were aimed. at the American people, not the senators on the Governmental Affairs Committee. "I WELCOME THEM AS'TlfE jury in this proceeding;· Lance :.aid into the television cameras. "l am secure and comfortable knowing that my conscience is clear and that lhe people's verdict will be a fair and just one.·· The setting was one of those big Senate omce Building hearing rooms that have become so familiar in movie and TV fictional!zed accounts as well as in real life. The Senate Watergate heanngs s pring to mind, allhoug h they were in a diffel"ent chamber. .. . Lance the kind of big amiable fellow who looks as lf be a cry 1r he squash~ a bug. came aun~ for the flght with a •S.paae state- ment to read. And Sen. Abraham Ribicoff <D·Cpnn.), the chairman of the committee, said he'd get all the time be needed, ii It takes a Saturday session. That alone Indicates a serious matter. LANCE WALK.ED INTO THE hearing room 15 mtnute$ early with his lawyer. Clark Clifford, who was described as urbane as long ago as Franklin D: Roosevelt and Harry S Truman. Now he's described as white·haired and urbane. "I don't reel lonely today at all," said Lance as he looked around the crowded room". . He had plenty or support. Wife LaBelle and son David, 22, sat in the front row. right behind the tables for reporters. "Nervous this morning? .. a reporter asked as Lance made his way to center stage. "No," he said. HE STOOD COMFORTABLY BEHIND the witness table as a horde of photographers. sandwiched between the senators at their semicircular bench, clicked away, Lance·s hands were in his pockets. lie looked unruffled. The senators, meanwhile. looked lonely and ignored. Ribicoff called the hearing to order five minutes late and Jn· toned that. "we don'\ intend this to be a trial by ordAtal. .. AND SO IT WENT, LANCE'S first session of what be called bis day in court. One lesson be has learned, Lance told the senators in a Gulliver. to Lilliputian-tone of voice, "is to be mi'-hty careful in the future when I am dlscuasipt bQlc human riahts.' Committee Lists Recommendation·s The following are some of the major recommendations made by the Huntington Beach Charter Revision Committee. be a "watchdog" over internal operations of the city would be s ubstituted for the office of Treasurer. --City clerk: The recommen· dation is to change the city clerk position from elective to appoin· tive. -council terms: The commit- tee is recommendin& a limit of two four·year• te.rma. Anyone elected to fill an unexpired term of two years or longer would be limited to a single additional term. TEL A VIV, Is rael <AP> --COUOcilmanic: districts: The Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan recommendation is aeainst -Personnel system: The com· mittee recommends removing ci· ty administrator, assistant city administrator, city clerk and other departme~ heads from the personnel sy5lem. In addlUon. the council would have authority to remove from the personnel system departments, employes and officers a& desired. left Israel today wlth a ~ividihg the city into districts. peace treaty which he said ab -Council pay:,A pay scale for foreign tl'lnisters probably ould U{lCU members ranging from reject in New York. $400 b>fi600 per month, depending ··1 don't really think they know on population, is recommended. the plan, 1 bul I think they will The mayor would receive an ad· not accept it anyway," Dayan ditional $100. <Present pay la Sl75 told a news conference •t Ben· per month plus $125 for expensos Gurlon International Airport. He plus relmbunements for actual s aid It would be a basl1 J'or expenseuucbaslravel.> ' negotiation, even if not fully ac--&teetin&a outside t.be city: 1 cepted by tlie Arabs. Th• council would be allowed to The lsraell progosal11 repo~· hold meetings such as retreats 1y differ little Crom tel'JDI that within a 1.00-mlle radius of the cl· previous Israeli govermneop ty1 but no offtcial action coutd be , ' were prepared to offer the Arabs tuen and no executive HllNona and that Arab Jeade.ra b.Ve re. could be beld . 1P addltlon, , peatedly rejected. The Arabs de. emer•ency meetin11 coukl be ; mand that Israel withdraw from called· witho\lt 24·bour 1tres1 all territory it oc::cupled ln tbe noUce if emer,ency coneeraed , 1967 Arab-lsraell QI'. tbe public peace, h~altb or DAILY PILOT safet1. -Elected mayor: The panel recommends acainst a dltectly elec1ed mayor, pref •rrtna the prtfseet method of h~vlna the mayQI" elected by fellow eouncil mt1mben. ~ity attorney: Committee ·rec~ tt&alnln8 a dlnctly •liNid cl\Y att.ornf.Y • -Truturer:,·The eltmautton , ol olflc-Of t lty treaaurer. la ad· ~A.a ...... C.'7 •udMllr to -Le1al notices: A recommen· dation would allow the city "to do its advertisln& ln any newspaper circulated In the city and not be restricted lo one actually printed here. -Tax measures: The commit· tee recommends a requirement for five affirmative council votes to a'pprove re~enue measures. Al present.. &ix votes ue requlred. * * * ,,...,p._ .. , CHAR'EER. . . 'Tihreatens P ow:er' WASHINGT ON CA P 1 Despite decades of study, the United States still has not figured out how to get rid of danger005\y radioactive waste from power plao1s and military-weapons pro- ducUon, the General Accounllng Office reports. ,. Unless this problem is solved. the GAO says, the accumulation of nuclear wastes with hazardous radiation that luta up to hair a million years "threatens the future of nuclear power in the United States. Robert W. f'r1, acting ad· minlstrator of the Energy Research and Development Ad· m inlstration. d efende d the w aste·disposal program before a House government operations subcommittee. lie said that muny of the GAO"s observations are based on 1976 data and outdated. He said that his a gene y, which will be a bsorbed by the Department of Energy on Oct. 1 -is doing the best it can to deal with the problems. Fri s aid that the Carter ad· ministration will shortly an- nounce plans-t6 deal with spent fuel at commercial reactors, a program under which the gov- ernment would reportedly ofrer to take these wastes 9ff the hands of commercial plants for a fee. The Energy Research and Development Administration is planning to develop six locations for long-t erm or permanent burial of radi~live wastes by 1985. But the· by the in· vesUgative ar gres.s says that "ERDA m ave promised more than it can eliver." ''There are we believe, formidable soci;J, geological and regulatory problems which must be solved," it continues. "Foremost among them is OP· position of the public and some political leaders. "ERDA may not be successful In gaming their acceptance \lD· less il can convince people thal 11 has a sound waste-management pro1nm and that geological db- posal rltln to qum 's envlronrr1ent ffe acceptably low," a dlftlcblt falk. the reporhald. • ''Some radioactive waste3 will remaJn hazardous for hundreds of thoW>~ds ot years." at said. meanin g lhe1 must b o permanently isolated from human contact and environmen· tal tf)fluence. Launeh Fai lure Inquiry Panel Sets HB Rocket Study By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1M O•lly 1'119' 11•11 A special study panel or 10-qtti ry was appointed today by the National AeronauUcs and Space Administration <NASA > to study why a rocket built tn Hunt101ton Beach failed In a Tuesday night launch from Cape Canaveral's Kennedy Space Center. (See pie· ture, Page CS.) The giant rocket hefting a European Space Agenc·y (ESA> communications satellite into the heavens on an experimental mis· sion was blown to bits like a UO million firecrac'ser. Divers began lo hunt wreckage at d aybreak Wednesday along the sea floor in 65-foot depths of • the AU antic Oc;ean off the cape to reassemble in search or clues t.o the failure. A NASA s pokesman in Washington, D.C. said today it appears the rocket built by McDonnell Douglas AstronauUcs Company began to break up in night. FUght records of the first Delta s ince 1969, indicate the craft began to tumble and had to be destroyed aloft by remote control to prevent an accident on the ~QUALITY TELEVISION ground -possibly rnvolving an· habit<.>d areas. A ~pokesman for the Goddard Space Flight Center 10 Green· belt, Md., said Wednesday that onboard TV cameru monitoring the ship showed fire tireaklng out at the top of one engine just beforehand. The onboard blnte and sudden erralic trSJectory convinced a U.S. Air Force range safety of- !icer Jt was time to pre111 the red button and blow the missile to bits.· · Major parts or the Delta plunged, fiery and hissing, into the sea from about five miles in the sky in a dazzling aerial di!>· play visible for miles over the southeastern United States. Other portions fluttered lightly to earth on Cape Canaveral's tip. George B. Harding, of the Marshall SpJice Center in Alabama, will head the in· vestigative team, NASA officials said today. The deliberate detonation and subsequent crash into the sea destroyed a S25 million ESA or· bltal test satellite built in a com· bined effort by 10 European na· lions. .. It gives you that great Zenith color picture automatically! The COLE! • SJ1t39W Finished in simulated grained Amerroan Walnut with bn1shed Aluminum color accents. Earphone. Thtnlt of It .. a TV contiot room In yvur .. 11 It controls !he color picture ••. c:ooecls lhe eOI« picture .•• 30 1imes 1 NCOl!d 1u(om8tfcally1 FINAL 1977 CLEARANCE .BIG SAVINGS ;-- Irvine ED IT IO N VOL. 70, NO. 258, 4' SECTIONS, '2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T oday's Clo sin g N.Y. Stoeks THURSDAY, SEP TEM BER 1S, 1977 TEN CENT Parents Win:-Venado KidS Get Buses Ructm& tu the pleas of two dozen angry parents, Irvine UnUled School Dis trict trustees ordered Wednesday that school buses be provided for Venado ·Middle School students from th!! College Purk and Colony areas ParenL5 claimed at as unsafe for t h e 11 to 13 -year ·old s t u· dents to cross railroad tracks and Culver Drive lo get to school. . Busing was provided 'ast year llul wus l a nc:eled this year bcc:au..,1.• thc residential ureas are h::.s than two miles from the school By board policy, two m lies hJs been the cutoff potnt for eltA1lnltty for busing Stan <.:orcy. superintendent of :.choob. and Gene Hartline, bus1· ncss adm1nistn1tor. argued that Junior high !>Chool C'h1ldren ought to be a hie to. an Corey's words, "learn :-.ome of the survival skills of the 20th Century -deciding when to cross the street and how to watch for a train." The admlmstra tors contended the district would be r equired to hus students from other areas of lesser distances from school. it the board gave in to the College Park and Colony cases. But Trustee Frank Hurd said he doesn't s h are Corey's opinion that seventh and eighth grade children I s hould have the responsibilities of adulta. "Joy and enthusiasm." he said, might find them thinking of things other than safety while on the way to school. "The fact of the m atter is," Hurd said, "there have been three kids kiJJed on Cul ver a lready (although not necessari· Jy on their way to school )." On Hurd 's motion, the board " unanimously ordered that dis· trict staff prepare a report on costs and alternatives for provid· ing permanent busing for the Cplleg nd Colony stu· dents of Vena o Middle School. Begnning Monday, the board decreed , interim busing wlll begin until a further decision Is made. The staff report is due Sept. 28. Hartline had told the board ' that full busing of the approx· lmately 170 extra students to Venado would require three buses al a cost of $53,000 per year. P06ting crossing guards at the railroad crossin g at Culver Drive, and at two other Culver Drive intersections-at Acacia Street and Deerfield A venue, would cost $9,300 a year. he said. CSee VENADA, Page AZ) Lance Claims 'COnscience Clea? JJilitarg Flight Crash Kills 26 on Plane COLORADO Pion• Cro1h Albuque rquv••o--.--.. ··--Kirtlond A.F.8 . NEW MEXICO Carl~b acf • 0 '°° t I MilH •~w1,...,.._-. WHER~ 20 PERISHED Map Spot• Site Police Probe Copy of Bomb Plan in Irvine . Irvine police were trying today to determine the authenticity of a Xerox copy of an apparent plan to make a bomb; discovered Wednesd ay by a n Edwards Laboratories employe. The diagram was found in the printout tray of the copying machine, located just inside the loading and shipping dock of the faciHty, at 1401 Alton Ave. P ersonnel Ma n ager R ick Barkley called police when an employe showed him the draw- ing. P olice said the dra wing ap- peared to be plans fdr a radio- con trolled bomb, which dia- grammed blasting caps and three sticks of dynamite, with power booster. batteries and what appeared to be a television receiver. The maker of the diagrama a~ parenlJy was semi-literate . Several labeling words were mis- spelled. ALBUQUERQUE. NM. CAP ) An Air Force plane s lammed into a mountains ide on a high security Army base, killing all 20 people aboard when 1t exploded un impact a h<Jlf mile from a bunkc.>r containing fi5sionable material, authorities s aid. The fou r-engine plane crashed on Manzano Base. where nuclear weapon s a re s tored, three minutes after its takeoff from Kirtland Air Force Base at 11 :45 p.m. Wednesd ay. Kirtland base operations con- fi rmed there were no survivors, sa id Walter Sprick of the Federal Aviation Administration. "One big fireball and that was it," a nearby resident said. Air Force crews using flares . and helicopter spotlights re- covered at least 15 bodies in a predawn search. Authorities said all those aboard were military personnel. A spokesma n a t the plane's base said it was used frequently by high-ranking military person- nel and American and foreign dignitaries. Former Secret ary of State Henry A. Kissinger is among those who have used the plane. the spokesman said. The aircraft, whi ch was scat- tered over 10 acres after impact. was used a s a model for modifications to Air Force One, the president's plane. An air traffi c controller s aid he tried to warn the pilot the plane was in trouble. ''The fi rst indication we had he was In trouble was when the radar showed be was too close to the mountain and fl yinR too low .·· (See 20 DEAD, Page A2 ) Regents Eye· UCI D e sign Center Issue University of California re· gepts, meeting ~Los Aftgeles Friday, will bev asked to okay a design for a previously approved S4 million University Center on the Irvine campus . The design plan calls for a two- story, 30,000 square-foot concrete building, with a concrete and glass facade and heavy timber roor. E stimated completion date ls J une,1980. The center will be located west of the campus adminis tration building, wlthln an area called the Gatewlly Quadranele. It will house 111tudent aovem· ment omces. recreation areu, food aervice and • bookstore. There will be Jourt1es, music UatenJni rooms, omcea for clubr. and oraanlutlo111 and con· fer~ncerooma. ..... I ....... C'A»Oling Bis Bee& Nine-month-old ~ott Phtllips was quite content m rh1s Montreal pool when. the tem(>t'rature hit 104 degre~s The tot had a bottle and his grandmothe r wilhm recich Lights Go Out Irvine Loses 70 Minutes Electric power was cut to 2,500 Edison Co. customers in Irvine early today, causing hundreds of residents to report late to work a nd school c hildren to be stranded at bus stops. Power was out for an hour and 10 minutes. Edison officials said there was no apparent reason for the 3:30 a.m. matrunction in al'I underground equipment vault. Affected were homes and busi- nesses In the vicinity of Main Street and Jamboree Boulevard. Work crews rerouted elec- lronic circuitry to r estore i><&er while th e u n d e r g l'o und transformers could be fi xed. Transportation supervisors for the Jrvine Unified School District r eported that seve ral buses traveled to school with short loads of students, the drivers-· a nd most of the m issing stu- dents -unaware there had been an electrical failure. They said several of the buses were sent back to pick up strag- glers. Hospital Holiday ·mt in ·Baby D~ath speak to her or show her the baby. "I looked over and the nurse was crying," Mrs. Pope recalled. "Then I knew." She s aid her divorce one year later was caused by the mental anguish she and her husband sul. fered because of the baby's death. Mt1. Pope broke down on the stand and the testimony was re· cessed for 15 minutes to allow her to regaJn composure. In takina reaponstblttty for the death.. the Air Force said: ''The United States does not contest the alleaaUcn that Ir proper care and tre~trnent were rendered to the pattent, Mtchelle Pope, the baby would, based on a ~eoonable desree or medical certainty, have been de.Uvered alive and healthy." People )' Asked WAS HING T O N <AP > - Budget Director Bert Lance. ap. pealing to the American people to be "the jury In this proceed· ing," told the Senate today that while he may have made mis- takes running his Georgia banks he engaged in no wrongdoing and no cover-up. "I am secure and comfortable knowing". that my conscience is c lear and that the p eople 's verdict will be a fair and just one," the director of President Ca rter 's Office or Management and Budget told the Senate Gov- ernmental Affairs CommiUee. .. Drawling slowly and solemnly, HOME TOWN RALLIES FOR BERT LANCE, A4 Lance told the two senior mem- bers of the committee to their race they have been unfair in thelr pubhe statements before this, his day in court. Speaking "more In sorrow than in anger," J,ance told the senior Republican, Sen. Charles )>ercy. that h is actions w e r e 'puz- zling regrettable. · Percy ,replled that Jte ques- tioned the dates on some of Lance s persona l checks and whether they were timed to help him obtain a tax deduction. ''It was wrong for me to even raise the possibility," Percy con- ceded. Then, one oy one, the Presi- dent's longtime personal friend replied to allegations m ade in past weeks that his personal and bank deali ngs, most of them before he joined the Carter gov· ernment. were m arked by ir· regularities and improprieties. When he finished reading his 1%·bour statement, he got a half minute of hearty applause from spectators in the hearing1'oom. Lance told the panel and a na- • <See LANCE, Page A%) Irvine Panel May Resolve land Usage The Irvine Cit y Council is ex· peeled tonight to r~olve land use issues concerning the so-called VlUage 14, agricultural land on which the Irvine Company wants to build apartments and con- dominiums. T he city's community services, transportation and plannlfll comm issions all bave voted bi favor of the development plans. However, some protesting cltlzerus say the la9d should re· malri ln aarlcul\ural preserve. Village lt ta the area bounded by Culver Drive on the east, tbe San Die10 Freeway oo the so~. San Die&o Cree~ and Peten Ca· nyon Wash on the west and l tvlae Centerl>riveonthenorth. Tlie latest plan fbr vutace t• was a edllaboratlve effort ot city pla~ au.ff, council members Gabr lelle Pryor a nd J ohn Burtoa,'tM Jf'YtM.Compa.ny and the U • Marine Corps. It calla for elm•ntrlctl1 nt· tdentlat ltWlcllg In U•• ana bounded bt Harvard Avenw and CulveJ'. Drive to W frtirt "liwl ~-..SW l l'VIMX!iriW Drive alldtblS. Dleao ft.eway tolhe .AOl1.tl did ... ~ . DenalUea would ran1e "'6m nw toadWltlD1 Wllta per acre. Some Mt,OIO UftltJ 4*dd ~bulk. TM rtiidtntlu •l'H wwld be cUVWll~ .......... Ul ,....C. eom•.W w. • woald the t•Wil&dllanMA.-ae.: APWl..,...la APPEALS TO PEOPLE Lance at Hearing Bfuck's Beach 'Failed Noble Experiment'? SAN DIEGO (AP > -Turning over a public beach to nudis m was "a noble experiment that failed." :t newspaper said today m urging that Black's Beach be r estricted to suit-wearing. "Even its advocates now deplore the voyeurism, the OC• casionaI bizarre behavior, the bo d y pa inting oC unclothed children," said the San Diego Union in an editorial. The municipal beach has been classified "swimsuit optional" for three years and is one of the most popular areas along the coast. The newspaper, urging ap· proval of an election issue before San Diegans on Tuesday, said it agreed with police that Black's Beach is "not a hotbed of crime." But it is "the only area or its kind in the entire country -it ls the kind or attraction we don't need and don't want," the Union said. Coas t Cloudy \ate tonight and eorlr Frld ay m orning . ParQy cloudy afternoot\ and evtninc hours. Lows tonight 58 to 6'. lliths Fri· day near 10. at beaches to mld·'70s inland. INSIDE TODAY 1\.2 DAILY PILOf ThurlCS•X, hpt•mber 16, \177 -Consei Clear' Lance 'Armed' For Hearings \\,\SHI NG TON (AP>-Bert LMnce atruck buk al his tormen· tnrl-i toda~. actin& Wt ar ht considered blmaelf OuJUver beset by L1lhputlam, · He let at be known at the out.set that his remarks were aimed at tht' American people. not the senators on the Governmental Affairs t'omm1ttt!t? ... Wlt'911Mt• Newport Tlaelt Newport Beach police are look· ing for Lbe two young women who bilked an elderly woman out of $2,200 in cash and her wedding rings in what one detective described as "a textbook ~se of pigeon drop." elderly com panion that the friend waa afraid to tum the moq~y in to police, but didn't know what to do with lt. At this point, the friend joined the two women and the first young woman suggested she talk to her boss to see what should be done. "I WELCOME THEM AS TUE Jury ln thia proceeding," LaJlce ~aid anto the television cameru. "I am secure and comfortable knowing that my conscience is clear and that tM people's verdict will be a fair and just one." The setting was one of those biJ Senate.Office Bulldlng bearing rooms that have become so familiar in movie and TV fictionalized accounts as well as in real life. The Senate Wateraate bearings spring to mind, although they were in a dtrrerent chamber. LINING UP TO HEAR BERT LANCE TESTIFY 'The People'• Verdict Wiii Be Fair, Just' Pigeon drop is the name or a bunco scheme praclieed uaually on elderly women, Uke the 74. year-0ld Santa Ana resident who was victimized Wednesday after- noon. While the pair waited. the young womao disappeared. al- legedly to see her empl~yer. and returned with the following ad· vice! Lance, the kind of big ami11ble fellow who looks as If he'd cry if he squashed a bug, came armed for the fight with a •9-page stale· ment to read. And Sen. Abraham Ribicoff to-Conn. l, the chairman of the committee, said he'd gel all the time he needed, if it takes a Saturday se;s1on E'ro• P age A J Police said the woman was shopping at South Coast Plaza in Cost.a Mesa when a woman in her mid·twenties stopped her in the m aU and pretended to be an acquaintance. They chatted for a while and the young woman re- lated she had a friend who had found a bag containing $45,000 in cash and some pornographic photos. They could keep the cash, since It was probably illicitly gained a nd they could divide it up between them , provided they didn't spend any for 90 days LANCE ON STAND. • • That alone indicates a serious matter. tional television 'audience that his rights had "been treated in the most irres p-,,,,.;ble and destructive manner" and allega- tions against him have been "er· roneous . . . mis represent· ed ... a nd exaggerated." Moreover, he said, "some are completely misunders t ood because those making the charge do not have all the facts . . . · · LANCE WALKED INTO THE hearing room 15 minutes early with his lawyer, Clark Clifford, who was described as urbane as long ago as Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S Truman. Now he's dt-scribed as white-haired and urbane. ··1 don't feel lonely today at all." said Lance as he looked around the l't'nwdcd room. l lc had plenty of s upport. Wife LaBelle and son David, 22. sat in th e front row, right behind the tables for reporters. ··Nervous this morning?" a reporter asked as bance made bis way to center stage. "I did not ask for this light. but now that I am in It. I am fighting not only for myself but also for our system," Lance declared. "I was a successful busines~man in my home st~te, and I thought I had an important contribution lo make by coming into govern· ment service.·• '"No," he said. HE STOOD COMFORTABLY BEHIND the witness table as a horde of photographers, sandwiched between the senators at their semicircular bench, clicked away. Lance's hands were in his pockets. He looked unruffled. · The senators, meanwhile, looked lonely and ignored. Ribicoff called the hearing lO order five minutes late and in· toned that "we don't intend this to be a trial by ordeal." The budget director has said again and again he will not quit. His demeanor and his words ap- peared to underscore that de· AND SO IT WENT, LANCE'S first session of what he called his day in court. termination. ' One lesson he has learned, Lance told the senators in a Gulliver· to Ltlliputian-tone of voice, "'is to be mighty careful in the future when ram discussing basic human rights ... But even as he spoke, House Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill told reporters that because of Lance's U.S . St ymie d By N u c lear Plant Wast e WASHINGTON l'A P > Despite decades of study, the United States s till has not figured out how lo get rid of dangerously radioactive waste from power plants and military-weapons pro. duction, the General AccouQl.ing Office reports. Unless this problem is solved, the GAO says, the accumulation of nuclear wastes with hazardous radiation that lasts up to half a million years "threatens the future of nuclear power in the United States. Roh<'rl w. Fri, acting ad· min1!>trator of the Energy Hesearch and Development Ad· ministr a tion , defended the waste·disposal pro~ram before a House government operations ~ubcommiltce. He said that many of the GAO's observations are based on 1976 data and outdated. He said that his agency, which will be absorbed by the Department qf Energy on Oct. I -· Is doing the best it can to deal with the problems .. Fri said that the Carter ad· ministration will s hortly an· nounce plans to deal with spent fuel al commercial reactors. a program under which the gov- • ernment would reportedly offer to take these wastes off the hands of commercial plants for a fee. The Energy Research and Development Administration is plann1ng to develop six locations for long-term or permanent burial of radioactive wastes by .1985. But the report by the in· vestigative arm of Congress saya that "ERDA may have promised more than it can deliver." ·'There are, we believe formidable social, geological and regulatory problems which must be solved,'' it continues. ··Foremost among them is op- postuon or the public and some political leaders. DAILY PHOT Inquiry Panel Sets HB Rocket Study By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tM DIMiy ~llet Staff A special study panel of in quiry was appointed today by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration <NASA> to study why a rocket built in Huntington Beach failed in a Tuesday night launch from Cape Canaveral's Kennedy Space Center The giant rocket hefting a European Space Agency <ESA l communi cations satellite into the heavens on an experimental mis- sion was blown to bits Uke a $40 million firecracker. Divers began to hunt wreckage at daybreak Wednesday along the sea floor In 65-foot depths of the Atlantic Ocean off the cape to Hoag to Host Fair to Note Anniversary In celebration of its first 2~ years service, Hoag Memorial Hospital wiU host a free health fair Saturday as the Hospital's thank you gift to the commllnily for \ts support, <See related story, PageA13.) More than 30 health organiza. lions will be on hand to provide information and demonstrations. The event opens at 10 a.m. ln the hospital parking Jot. Included will be the emergency medical servtce teams trom the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach Fire Departments as well as a rescue reassemble in search of clue:. to the failure A NASA spo kes man in ' Washington. O.C said today it appears the rocket built by McDonn ell Douglas As tronautics Company began to break up in Hight Fli~ht records of the first Delta since 1969, Ind icate the craft began to tumble and had to be destroyed aloft by remote control to prevent an accident on the !!round -possibly involving in· habited areas. A spokesman for the Goddard Space Flight Center in Green- belt. Md .. said Wednesday that onboard TV cameras monitoring the ship showed fire breaking out at the top of one engine just beforehand. The onboard blaze and sudden erratic trajectory convinced a U.S. Air Force range safety of· fleer it was time to press the red button and blow the missile to , bits. ~ Major parts of the Delta plunged. fiery and hissing, into the sea from about five miles in the sky in a dazzling aerial dis· play visible for miles over the southeastern United States. Other portions fluttered lightly to earth on Cape Canaveral's lip. George B. Harding, of the M arshalJ Space Center in Alabama, will head the in· vestigative team, NASA officials said today. · F ro111 Page A I VENADO .•. helicopter Crom El Toro Marine But l2·year-old Ricky Glenn, Corps Air Station. · There will be continuous enter· one or two Venado students who talnment 'rom l0:30 a.m. wttU • stood to face Hartline before an ~· audience of so and cable p.m. "Healthy" food will be television cameras, disputed the available for 2S cents end there claim that three buses are will be free cake and iqe cream needed. followlne a cake cutting "Mr. Hartline," be addressed ceremony at noon. .. th ad l 1 t •--•y I 1n·c1uded io ·tbe list of e mns ra"".' ou say t dignitaries exJ)tcted to attend wm take three buses to take us to are Assemblyman Dennis Venado. Can )'OU tell us, then, Maneers <l>·UunUngton Beach>. ;:fes~~l year lt only took two Assernblymao Ron Cordova <D· The parents cheered the boy as El'Toro). Mayor ~UJD Do.tat of H•rtline aaid, atmon under his Newport Beach, Jhyor Ron Pat· b th ''1'h tin.son of RuntiJlgton Beach aod rea • . i,..ere are, more atu- Mayor BtlJ Vardoulb of lrvtne. dev!:i:· ~lddle 'scho"ol Prtn· .Entertainment will bt pr(). cJpal Don .Ercer, who comr:= .td ed by locJl Glrl Scout \l'OOl>8l the . estimated attendance • the Harbor Stn11rs. Uae Al thetwobouJlngtracta, aaldtod•Y Otianle Low~alq I kazoo · thereareabouttheumenumber 1B•nd, tbe R n nve attelidtng °J!:• year as lut. •JM tbe lln1ers tODi U. Uve O all tt__.. , .°'•-•'""'""-···-·-··-"·, • ,,.. , wevv, a ""-"'ance ... ..-........... :--.! ...... ~,, in the lrvtne Unlfttd School Dia· trtct WU up this Yflf by 12. 7 pet• cent. • . Younc 0 1.nn was JolDect ln hts ar1UJnent by another Venado tt~ Robert Alr•n. wbo pre.; .. ,.,_. •• ,.iltioo for bulq 1l18'CI by about tbrff dottn Vend itudeiatl. Abn Hid of the twro;inlli walk ... , drMd lt whtO die,.._ cro .. llllid It tum tield. •• ~ 8 . Dea Oliaft WM \In• 11mPllMUe to Ute, NJ~~ HYltal ~enta'~mplalnta • .,.. .. ~Walk ..• , ........ ... '° .....,, ...... tl I Mer OW"isYatM't wolaUllto • 11cblitll." financial problems "the image of the Presid~t 1s going down a lit-tle bit. .. Seated at a long table covered with green felt and emblazoned with a nameplate "Mr. Lance" the budget director told lhe committee: 'The rights that I thought I possessed have gone, one by one, down the dru1n . "Were my rights protected?" h e asked. "We'll le t the American people answer that." He declined to "contend that I made no mistakes" when he ran the Calhoun First National Bank of Calhoun, Ga .. of which he was board chairman, and the Na- tional Bank of Georgia, in Atlan- t<1 . which he served as president. "But to accept the assertion that I could not even manage a s mall country bank. one must ig- nore the objective facts," he told the committee, which recoDR· mended his confirmation as the nation's budget maker las t January. Lance told the panel he answered questions from mem· bcrs and from its staff fully and acc urately in January and withheld nothing. The young woman told her Panel Okays Popular Vote For President . WASIUNGTON <AP> -The Senate Judiciary Committee ap- proved t.oday, by a 9-8 vote, a pro· posed constitutional amendment to provide for the election or the president by direct popular vote. Attempts to attach a series of other constitutional amend- ments, including one to let states decide whether to prohibit abortions, were rejected. Also rejected was a proposed amendment to retain the elec- toral college system of electing the president but to allot each state's electoral votes.to the can- didates in proportion to their popular vote in the state. This lost, 8 to 7. ®QUALITY ·TELEVISION FEATURING ~ New Sanity Trial Ordere'd For Allaway Edward Charles Allaway, con· vicUld of shooting to death seven persons on the Cal State Fullerton campus, was ordered today to face a new sanity ~rial Nov.2. Allaway. a 38-year-old ex - campus janitor, sat mute In the courtroom of Superior Court Judge Robert Kneeland as the judge scheduled the new trial. presumably by jury, on the sani · ty phase of the mass·murder case. The jury which convicted Al· laway last month was unable to reach a verdict on whether he was sane when he went on a shotgun-shooting binge July 12. 1976. The custodian was apparently desi)ondent over marital prob· lems al the time. It gives you that great Zenith color picture automatically! The COLE• SJ1939W Finished 1n simulated grained American Walnut with brushed Aluminum color accents. Earphone Thlnlt of 11 aa a TV control room In yOUf ieu II controls the color plct1Ho . .. co"ects the color plctUfe ... 30 times a second 1utomarlce11y1 .. I~ So11d-S11u11 CPIH•'• • ,,,_., ltnfty Vollt~ fllt•9'1f1tl1'l9 Sytt•f" • A"4Gr'tfic ,-,~·twnane com,oi • ~h•tGOftOOI • P'Hm~ '"' c.-. or .. ,_.., --~t .... .-.- FINAL 1977 CLEARANCE BIG SAVINGS EXTRA ~~-IN AllOWANQS 7 Laguna/ South Coast E D ITION / Afternoon· N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 70, NO. 258, 4 SECtlONS, 42 PAGES 'THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1977 TEN CENT I Air Force Plane Crashes· . ' 20 Killed AL}jl Qt'ERQL E. NM !AP > -An Alr Force phme i.lammed into u mounta1nslde on a h1gh secunty Arm~ base, k1lhng all 20 people aboard when it exploded on impact a hair mile from a bunker containing f1i.sionablc material, authontlcs said. The four·en~ine r1lan e crashed on Manzano Base, where nucle<1r weapons are l>lOrt·d . three minutes after its takeoff from K1rthmd Air Force Base at 1l 45 pm Wednc!>du)' Kirtland base uperauons con firmed there were no survivors. .... .ud Walter Sprack of the Fetleral A vialton /\dm1n1::.tration. · ., >nc big fireball and that was 11. a nt•arbv rt>s1dcnt s aid. Air Force t'l"C\.\-'> using f1C1res and hd1coptcr s potlights re· covl•n'<.I at lea.,t lS bodies in a pred;rnn se<Jrt:h Authont1es said all those aboard were military personnel. A spokesman at the plane's • base said it was used frequently by high-ranking military person· nel and American a nd foreign d1gnitarie~ Former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissmger Is among those who have used the plane. the spokesman said. The aircraft. which was scat- tered over 10 acr~s after Impact. was used as a mode l for modifications to Air Force One. the president's plane. An air traffic controller said he tried to warn the pilot the plane was in trouble. .. The first Indication we had he was in trouble was when the radar showed he was too close to t he mountain and flying too low,·· said the controller. "We hit him on tRe guard fre· quency and told him to tum right and climb ... but he never did.·· he said. The jet was a communications aircraft based a t Seymour Johnson Air ·Force Base in Goldsboro. N.C. An Air Force spokesman said it was on a train· ing mission and was on its way to Nellis Air Force base in Nevada. The EC13S. described as a "modified 707," stopped Ln Albu· querque to refuel, the spokesman said. A spokesman for the Federal Aviation Admlnistratlon said the pilot made what was probably a routine attempt to contact de· partu~ control just after takeoff. The tower responded. but the pilot didn't ceturn the com· municaUon. <See 20 DEAD, Page A2) Lance Clainis · 'ConsCience Clear' dt Clemente 'Parlors' Collncil Adopts Regulations • San Cll'mf'nt~ c1l.,, councilmen unanimously voted lo atlopt an or dan<ince Wednesday Lo regulate sauna balhs and massage parlor~ in the citv The ordinance. which will Uikt• effect m 30days, specifies the pro cedurc 'or establis hing a massage husiness and liccnsmR m~ssagc "technic11ms." Massage is defined in the or dinance as "any method or pres· sure on. or frict10n ai:?ain!-.l, or stroking, kneading. rubhin~. tap- ping, poundin~. vibrntini.:. or stimulating the external parts of the human body with the hands or with the aid of any mechanical electrical apparatus." A. massage "technician" 1s "any person who administers ~assages, baths or health treat· ments involving massages. baths 2 Suspects Nabbed at LB Eatery Two burglary suspects were captured by Lagur\tt Beach police at a fast food restaurant Tuesday night. 1ust on e hour a(ler they allegedly broke into another eatery. n ecing with S200 lnvestlgator Ron Lister said Jon Robert Hawthorn. 20. aod • Kirk St~ven Moore, 18, both \ransienl..S. were arrested at the Taco Bell at 690 South Coast Highway at about 11 p.m. Tues· day. The pair were suspected of breaking into Whipples Healthy Foods, 263 Forest f\ve. earlier In the evening, taking about $200 from the cash register . Lister said police recovered most of the loot from the two men. and about S80 buried in the sand after one or the men pointed out the location to officers. ~oth men were lodged in Orange County Jail with bail set at SS,000. They face charges or suspicion oC burglar y. or hc•alth trcatmt·nb Cl~ the prin t•1pal fum·twns to another person f o r any t on s 1d c r<Jt1 o n "hc.ilsocvcr .. The new ordinance requires licen!'-in g of massa~c parlors. The heense c<1s ts S250. wh1c·h 1~ non refundable and 1s t11 be used to pay ror a mandatory poltee in vesuga lion of the apl)hcant's hack i.:rouncl M assagc "technicians .. are a bo n .oqu1rcd to apply for a city license and pay a fee or SlOOto cov er tht· cosL., of a police investlga lion and report Applicants must be at least 18 ~ears · o ld and must h old certificates from "recognized schools." according to the or dinance. They mLlil also supply proof from a pJiysician that they have been examined within 30 days prior to their application and are "found to be free of any con lagious or communicable dis ('a SC." San Clemente currently has no massage p;irlors or sauna baths A city s1K>kcs man said the or dinance ..., as adopted to assure that s uch businesses which might locate in the city will meet certain minimum health and safety ~tan dards Flnod Death Toll Now23 KANSAS CITY. Mo. <AP 1 The death toll in the Kansas City fl ash flood rose to 23 today while the damage estimate climbed to $50 million. Twenty-two bodies were found in Kansas City. The 23rd body was found in Leavenworth. Kan .. about 35 miles to the northwest. City and county officials estimated that about 1,000 pe rsons were still homeless because of the 12 inches of rain that fell in a 24·hour period Mon· day. The torrential ra10 caused the Brush Creek to overflow it.s banks along the exclu~lve Coun· try Club Plaza shopping center and pour into the Blue River. Clemente' Billing Accepted for Sigm "San Clemente -Home of La Cr latianlta FesUval" will soon be posted along roads at city boun· ... d arles. City counoitmtn •P· proved lhe slogan Wednesday, over the obJectlona of Coun- cUman Pat Lane. "I think wo ought t.o keep the welcotne signs 1lrn11le - aomethlnt like 'Welcome to San ClefneftW,' "Lue Hid . 1•1 take a dtlretent view." 11ld ~um-T~ DlGlovunl. "l .. CoOling Bis Beeb '.':inc-month-old Scott Phillips \\a:-. quite content 111 th1~ '.\Iontreal poot when the tempr1·ature hit 104 degre('s The tot had a boUle and his grandmother within rl'ach. Bond Issue Okayed By Laguna Council Lasiuna Beach councilmen vot· c d una nimously Wednesday n ight to authorize the Aliso Water Management.Agency to is· sue up to SS million in revenue bonds for the city 's s hare of ll S36 million wastewater 'treatment and disposal system. The first reading to the city or- dinance seeks a revenue bond to provide money to cons\ruct the North Coast Interceptor sewer pipeline and putpping stations for the ANMA. as well as oullall facilities for the project. City Manager Al Thiel said he believes the city's portion of those cost<\ will be approximately S13 .8 million lie estim ates federal and state grants to be re· ceived by Laguna Beach will a mount to $11.3 million. ment rates to reflect the bond is s ue, aod said he does not i.ee any reason why those rates would go up again until after the S36 million project is completed. ~ometime in 1981. "At that time we will be shut· ling down our local pumping sla· lion and a readjustment in the rates to taxpayer s may be necessary," he said. "But that shouldn 'l be for several years · · Disaster Area SACRAM ENTO <AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has called for a presiden1ial disaster deelara· lion for Imperial County where heavy nrtns and flooding last month caused $28.5 million in damage. PeOple Aslted To Judge WA S HI NGTON I AP > Budget Director Bert Lanc;e. ap· peahoJ! ·to the American people to be ·'the jury In this proceed· in~." told the Senate today that while he m ay have made mis· tl.lkes running his Georgia banks h~ngaged in no wrongdoing and no cover-up "I am secure and comfortable knowing that my ,conscience is clear and that the people's verdict will be a fair and just one ... the director or President Carter's Office of Management and Budget told the Senate Gov· e rnmcntal Affairs Committee. Drawling slowly and solemnly. HOMETOWN RALLIES FOR BERT LANCE, A4 Lance told the two 1enior mem- bers of the committee to their face they have been unfair in their public statements before this, his day in court. Speaking "more in sorrow than in anger." Lance told the senior Republican. Sen. Charles Percy. that his actions were "puz- zling. regrettable .. Percy replied that he ques- tioned the dates on some of Lance's personal checks and whether they were timed to help him obtain a tax deduction. "It was wrong for me to even raise the possibility, .. Percy con· ceded. · Then. one by one, the Presi- dent's longtime personal friend replied to allegations made in past weeks that his personal and bank dealmgs, most of them before he joined the Carter gov- e rnment. were marked by Ir· regularities and improprieties. When he finished reading his i :i~ -hour statement, he got a half minute of hearty applause from spectators in the hearing room. Lance told the panel and a na· tional television audience that his fights had "been treated in the mos t irresponsible and <See LANCE, P age A2> That would leave approximate- ly $2.4 million to be put up by the city after the grants. but a max· i mum construction deposit of about $4 mUlion is required to be advanced by the city, according to city officials. ·Baby Died When the A WMA froject ls completed. the cfty wil have Sl.6 million in surplus funds on hand, which might go to call or re· purchase the bondS, apply to the principal and Interest or transfer to the general fund. The second readlng of the revenue bond ordlnance wm be held Sept. 21. Thiel said councilmen have already raised local waste treat· Base Holiday Limits Care treat the woman · · "I knew what. was going on. but J didn't want to know," Mrs. Pope test1fled Wednesday In a choked voice. She said when the baby was de, H vered, the doctor would no\ spQak to her or iihow her the baby. , A,.WI,...... APPEALS TO PEOPLE Lance at Hearing Black's Beach 'Failed Noble 'Ii'~ • nt'? ~~nrne • SAN DIEGO CAP> ~-Turning over a public beach to nudjsm was "a noble experiment that failed.· a newspaper said today in urging lhat Black ·s Beach be restricted to suit-wearing. ''Even its advocat es now deplore the voyeurism, the OC· casional bizarre behavior, lhe body painting of unclothed children." said the San Diego · n in an editorial. The 1c1pal beach has been classified w1msuit optional .. (or three yea nd.is one of the most popular ar along the coast. The "ewspaper , urging proval of an election Issue befor San Diegans on Tuesday, said it agreed with police that Black's Beach is "not a hotbed of crime ... But it is "the only area of its kind in the entire countrt --It Is the kind or attraction we don't need and don 't want.'' the Union said . Coas t Weather Cloudy late tonlaht and earty Friday mornlna. Partly clolldy afternoon ond evenlnt houra. Lowa tonlaht 58 to 64. HJ'11S Fri· day near 70t at·beacbes to mid·706 lnJand. . :· ' ,. O.lly Piiot Slaff P-. Intersection Collision . . . ' ... /!rlan Hug h l\lonahan. 18. of 316 Poplar St 1"' a!-.sis tt!d after his car and anot h~ drh·cn by Mrs. !\1urjorie Durling. 59. <ft' 170 Calliope St . collided Wednl·sd<ty after their lnJUncs and released from South Coast Comm1.mit~ Hos.pltul following the accident at the corner oC Catalina und -\nita Streets · noon. Both motorists were treuted for .Lance 'Welcomes' Public as His Jury WASHINGTON CAP> -Bert Lance struck back. at his tomen tors today, acting as If he considered himseli Gulliver beset by Lilllput1uns lie let 1l be known at the outset that his remarks were ~I med at the Amen run people. not the senators on the Governmental AH airs Commitll'l'. · :·1 Wf~LCOM E .THEM AS THE jury in lhis proceeding,. lJ&nce ~aid into the klcv1sion earner.as .. , am secure and comfortable knowm~ that my conscience is clear and that the people's verdict will be a fuir and just one." · The setting was one of those bi g Senate Oflice Building hearing rooms that have become so familiar in movie and TY fictionalized accounts as well us In real life The Senate Watercate hearings spring to mind, althou1h they were in a dirferent chamber Lance, the kind of blg amiable fellow who looks as it be 'd. cry il he squashed a bug, came armed for the fight with a 49-eage s tate mcnt to read. And Sen. Abraham Ribicoff ID-Cofltl ). the cba~man nf the committee. said he'd get all the time he needed if it takes a Saturday session That alone indicules a serious matter 1.ANCF. WALKED I~ TllE hearing room 15 minutes early ,, 1th his lawyer. Clark Clifford, who was descrlbe.d as urbane as long .11(0 as Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S Truman · Now he's d<'1'<'nbed as white-haired and urbane. "I don't reel lonely today at all,·· said Lance as he looked around th1· crO\~ded room lie had plenty of Rupport. Wife LaBelle and son David, 22, sat In t hr front row. r ight behind the t ables for reporters. "Nl'rvous this morning')·· a reporter asked as Lance made his \\ uy lo canter ~lul(c. "No," he !'lald. HF. STOOD COMFORTABLY BEHIND the witness table as a horde of photographers. sandwiched between the s enators at. their ~('mirircular hcnch, clicked away. Lance's hands were in his pockets. I fe looked unruffled. The senatorl'i. meanwhile. looked lonely a nd iJnored. lhblcoff called the hearing to order tive minutes late and in· l1fo\>d that "we don't Int.end this to be a trial by ordeal." AND SO IT WENT, LANCE'S firs t session of what he called his day incour\. One les1:1on he has learned, Lance told the senators ln a Culllver- to L111iput1an-tone of voice, "is to be mighty careful in the future "h<'n I am discussmg \>nsic human rights ... * * * f',.._PageAJ LANCE ON STAND ••• del'ltructive manner" and alleia- lionll against him have been ''er- roneous ... n\ls represent· ed ... and cxaigerated." Moreover, ho said, '1some are completely mlaunderatood because those maklna the charae do not have a ltthe fact.8 . . . " "l did not ask for this fight. bul now that I am In It, t am fighting not only for myself bul also for · our system," Lance declared. "I was a 11ucc:euf\ll buslnea•man ln m y home Sll!te, and I thought I had an important contribution to make by cornina into 1overn- ment service." The budaet director hu aald again and again he wlll not quit. Hts demeanor and bb words ap· peared to underscore that de· termination. lh.lt even as be lpoke, HOUie Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill told reportett that because of Lance's financial problem• ''the f ma1e of the President is goloa down 1 lit· lle bit.." ~ S..ted at a Iona tab1-c:onrtd with,.""° felt and embluontd with a nameplat.e ..-"Mr. Lance" -the buqel diteotor told ~ commit~ •n. n•hta that l thoqbt I ~,.,Id bne 1one, one by ooe, down the drain •.. ' 1Wert my rl1hta f:l'OteetldT'' ht aaked. "We' J let lh• Amertcan ~Je anawer tllat." He -~ to "contend dlat 1 ma4e no mlttak .. •• wbtn ht ran Lbt Calhoun P'lrtt NatJonaJ Buat OfCllhouli, Ga., ot wblcb tilt.,., • bOard chairman, and die Mt· Uonat 8-i\k Of Oeorata, lh AUaD· la. whldl be1erWCS u Dr•ldmt. Coast Feels ~.~ Quake From 1 Anaheim Ar.eir A Woonesday earthquake cen-. tered on a fault in Anaheim measured 2 7 on the Richter scale and was strong enough to be felt by rel idents as far away as Costa Mesa. Cal State Fullerton selsmologrsts said to d ay ll was the first quake that coujd be detected without instru ments in Orange County since Memorial D<1y , according to Christopher Buckley. assistant proressor or earth sciences . Buckley said the quake h\l at 2 35 p.m on an unnamed fault fiyc miles &OUlh or the campus The tremor caused no damage and apparently affected an area 15 male~ from its poinl or origin Coe~ Guarded After Slaying SAN FRANCISCO <AP) M casures det1lgned to assure the nighttime safety o( studerfts at Sun Francisco State hav.e been adopted in the wake of the murder of a female student. Among the steps ls a university police plan to hire student securi- ty teams for special evening patrols of the campus. 'l'he stabbed and bludgeoned body of Jenny Low Chang, 19, a dorm resident. was found this week In a campus library faculty reading room. No arrests have been made. Clink Plans Fund Dance A third annual dinner dance to raiae lundt1 for the Laguna Beach Free Clinic will be held at the Festival of Arts outdoor rest aurant Friday beginning at 6:!0p.m. Live dance mualc arranged by Robby Whalley and the Guitar Shoppt will be pertormed. No boat bar, dlnln1. entertainment and danclnt under the 1tara wtU round out the fund-r1Jatn1 event. For information. oaJJ IUrli. Martin, 546-3715. LB Seniors Get Discount· Officials or the Senior CitJ.Mns I Club of Laiuna 8each aay U clty merchants are now m1mben ol the chab'1 Senior ClUHb discount proaram. M'erchanta partlclpatlnl In the proaram Ofltr dlaco\lnt.I from 1 flvttoa&peroenton rnercbandise ln their atorft. Dllcount oatd& art available tor older rt1Jdtnt.1 at the Council on A(inf Ottlce, 616 f'or•t Av., as well" a Uat of Ult pardclpaUn1 merchaat.t. ror. lrtformadon, HU Bob Port.tr aUt7-8441. , Cops Eye Bomb Irvine pollce w.re trying today to determlne the authenUclty of a Xerox copy of an apparent plan -to make a bomb, discovered We dnesday by an ~dwards Laboratories employe. The diagram wa1 found In the printout tray of the copying machine, located just ins!~ the loading and shipping dock of the faclllty, at 1401 Alton Ave. Personnel Manager Rick Barkley called police when an employe showed him the draw-ing. l>oUce Hid the draw1n1 ap- pearoo to be plans for a radio· controlled bomb, which dia· &rammed blaatlng capa and three sticks of dynamite, with power booster, batteries and what appeared to be a television receiver. The maker of the diagrams ap· parently was s emi-literate. Several labeling words were mis- spelled. Panel Okays Popular Vote For President WASHING TON <AP> -The Senate Judlclary Committee ap- proved today, by a 9-8 vote, a pro- posoo constitutional amendment to provide lor the election of the president by direct popular vote. Attempt& to attach a terles or other con1tttutlonal amend· menta, including one to let states decide whether to prohibit abortions, were rejected. Also rejected was a proposed amendment to retaln the elec- toral college sy1tem or eJecUng the president but to allot each state's electoral votes to the can· didst~ Jn proportion to their popular vote In the state. This lost. 8 to 7. ' · 0 0 COLORADO "one AUt11q11•rq11e Croth IC!rtti\~ •·'·!. NEW MEXICO lOO . Al"WI ...... ~ WHERE 20 PERISHED Map Spota Site f'.._PageAJ 20 DEAD ••• Clemente . Parking ~ Rejected San Clemente cJ&y c:ouncilm.n bavt rtjected a ptopoaal to sludy the posslbiUty of providing over- nlaht parking for recreational vehicles at North Bea~. M~yor Donna WUkinaon and Councilman Willtam Walker vot· ed Wednesday ln ravor of sending the proposal to the city planning commission for a full review~ CouncUroen Tbomaa O'Keere, Patrlck Lane and Tony Di Giovanni opposed It. "We have one ol the beat faciUtle9 now for recreational vehicle ovemtaht. parklnt -San Clemente State Park," said DiGiovanni. .. Why 1hould we compet.e with lb• state?" Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson s aid familiea visiting San C lemente i n recreational The plane crashed about 8,500 vehicles are currently parking in feet up the Manzan? Mountain s upermarket parking lots or on rangE'.• about five miles east of-.. the street, creating a policlµg the Kirtland runway. problem. Mark Rudd Visits Home MAPLEWOOD, N.J. <AP> · Mark Rudd returned to his parents'• home here for the first time in seven years Wednesday night, soon alter he surrendered to authoritie5 ill New York to face cbaries in connection wlth the student takeover of Columbia University buildings in 1968. The 30-year-old former leader of the Weather Underground ap· parently slipped through a back door at the family home in a quiet uppe r middle class neighborhood, eludina a bevy or reporters and pholoeraphera in the front yard. A witness said Rudd's father. reUroo Army Lt. Col. Jacob L. Rudd, 67, told the crowd about 9 : 45 p.m.: "Look guys, Mark's h1 here and he's ~oing to bed. He's not coming out. · "This it a tourist-oriented town," Walker saJd. "Resident& have sald they don't want. a lot of industrial development, and the tourist business is probably the c leanest industry we can have. "It Is only wise to provide a pJace for visiting fa milies lo slay." ''I doubt that self-contained unlbl will s pend all that much money,"saidLane . "I diaa1ree," said Mrs. Wilkinson. ·•we have a self. contained unit. and when we use it, we eat out very often." O'Keefe said he opposed the proposal on the eround that a private property owner, rather than the city, should provide overnight recreational vehicle parking, if it is feasible. InmateSt~d SAN QUENTIN CAP I -An in· mate waa stabbed in the max · imum seourity unit of San Quen· tin prison in a fracas involving nine prisoners, prison officials said. ®QUALITY TELEVISION Flnlahed In simulated grained American Walnut with brushed Aluminum cplor accenls. Earphone .................. ~ . .,. ... _ ...... , ....... ~~'" .. .,._ • ,,_ ... ,.,,..,.,..,.c_ • J!lth•• e.nffOI ............... e-......... -C:-0- It gives you that great Zenith color picture automotlcallyl • Thl!il of It •• a TV conll'OI room In yoUf .. 11 II control• the color 1>1clure .•. corrects the eolOf picture ... 30 1111'111 a 11cond au1oma11callyl FINAL 1977 CLEARANCE BIG SAVINGS EXTRA tRADE-IN . ALLOWANCES . . , .. I . I :· , , I I ( ~ ' • ~ I DAllYPILOl L •SC '~ . .. .. . £ ... ting •• . ·. ~ •••• Te• upla.t.e The Sand And Fury BABE FACTS DE P T. Downcoa.st in San Dle10, voters will be aoina to the poUs Tuesday to decide whether or not bare ls beautiful. The issue on the ballot Is Proposition D involvin& a pJacecaJled Black·s Beach. This relatively ~eC'luded strand is the only placl' an our region when• public bqach nudity 11> tolerated Now the pracllce has become an election Issue. The question has raised some temperatures an the San Diego area and newspapers of that re. g ion arc rilled with letters, pro- nude and anti·naked. The ques tion has triggered sermons. quips, puns. wisecracks and some pretty emotional blather on both sides, ALAS, lN Aft. the fervor, Black ·s Bcacll nakedness has drawn considerable attention in the news and not always with pin point accuracy. As August began to wind down and the nude election month ap: proached, a local television sta- tion fired the first loaded salvo by suggesting lifeguards were con- cerned about "an atmosphere of permissiven~ss .. at Black·s Beach. From there. the papers began hyping the story, 1nd1 cating police had established "a biktn1 patrol .. lo search for crime and sexual misconduct along the bathing su1t·ophonal strand. ~everal arrests huve been made, includlnc one in which an ad ult male is charged with chjld molesting,'' a police spokesman was quoted as reporting. ·THEN IT DEVEt OPED that l Al Jacoby, assist;.mt to the editor ' of lht' San Dit>go Union, got sus· i picious of all these rather t s.:en<'ralizcd r<'ports. He went on , ;rn mvcl>lagalive sprc<.: of his own. , ~ In h.as column on the editorial J -page, Je1Coby characterized the : escalating nud1e beach stories as ' .. a media storm.·· : ; .J aCoby discovered that '· De:;,p1le the television hype about "perm1ss1vcness" along lht• strand, an actual police re- port ~ot buried m the flurry. That ( report said . "Black's Beach has one-half to one.third the crime of other San 01<.•go hcachcs." ,• Thcr~ 1s no such thing as a · "bikini t>atrol. ·· Police had reg- ular plainclothes patrols. The "bikini" name had been made up ' QY a reporter. As for the lone child molest- ing case, it had not occurred in ; the lust few weeks. JaCoby ( pushed to find out when. He was :' given an "either April or May .. • answer He persisted in insisting that police give him the precise dale of that arrest. They finally supplied it -last , Feb ti. a SO·year·old man who . was babysitting a 6-~ear-old girl. JACOBY WAS RIGHT. San • Diego had been swept by a media storm in which the news people didn•t cover themselves with glory. But that doesn't mean that the voters won 't go ahead and cover Black·s Beach. _., - Folks Back Lance Hometown Rallies for 'Georgi.a BO')'_' CALHOUN, a.. (AP) -It WU like •n old· l11bJOIM.'d revival mettJna u the hometown folka 1wmped thtlr teet, praytd and cheered one of their own -Oeri "Good Ole Gtor&i• 8oy" Lance. About l,500 J*>ple -more than one-fifth of Calhoun's Population -tumed out ln a demonstra- tion of 1upport for tho director or the ftderal Office of Mana,emtnt and Bud1et on the eve of bis ap· pearance before a Senate panel 1nveat11aUn1 his llnantl1l ~ff aln. · TUE CROWD cave a standJne ovation as the htah 1chool band played "You'll Never Walk Alone" and "I .Old IUfy Way." They had pl1c1rd1 HYinl "Calhoun for Bert" and "Bert's A Good Ole Georala Boy." They used words Uke "love," .''friendship," and "honesty" lo describe Lance, who d1d not attend the rally. "I'll tell you what kind or a 1uy he ts," said Jack Purcell, who used to be the catcher on the softball team when Lance waa pitcher. "I called hlm up lut year lo come speak to the graduating class of the school where l wu prin· c1pal And even thotlgh it rained and the loudspeakers didn "l work, he came and he spoke. And when l sent him a check for speaking to the <:lass, he sent the check back because he dido 't do it for the money. That's the kind ot iltY Bert is.·· A DOWNPOUR drove the crowd from the high school football field across the street to a gym- nasium. but it didn't dampen their spirits. Lance's minister, the Rev. Emory Brackman. told of the .. very generous" contributions of time and money that Lance and h.ls wife, LaBelle, made lo the Ftrst Methodist Church He recalled tt\at Lance received "the highest honor" a United Methodist can receive wt\en he was elected to the church's General Conference. LT. GOV. Zell Miller, who shared a double desk with Lance in grammar school. accused the news media of distorting the Lance af(alr. lie denied a statement in an article In a national magazine that quoted him as saying Lance was a poor arithmetic student. "Powerful and ruthless forces" -whom he later Identified as the federal bureaucracy -have attacked Lance, Mlller .said. ''To say that Bert Lance has done somethjng wrong does not make it 10." he said. THEY WANTED to tulk about the back- slapping, joke·telling Bert Lance who married his high school sweetheart and helped h1s neighbors as h~ rose from a 19-year·old bank teller to a 32-year-old bank president ..He treated a man like a man wants to be treat· ed." said John Houser, who carried a sign saying "Bert Lance Was Fair To Me . . We Need Him Jn D.C. ··He said Lance helped him get back on his feet several years ago when he lost " a lot of money·· in-vesting in a mill. · "lie went out of his way to help a lot of people in this town ." ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~- HOMETOWN FOLKS RALLY BEHIND GEORGIA BOY LANCE Calhoun Reeldenta Olfplay Signs Supporting Him New.SS Plan \lri .......... 1r,r.,~~ Hikes Liinit For Retired Keport Says Breast X-rayS Possible Cause of Cancer • WASllINGTON <AP J A na WASHINGTON I AP > Retired people could earn up to S4,500 next year without losing Social Security benefits under a plan apprQved by a House sub- committee. Its chairman says the current limit reduces som e elderly persons to eating pet food. RECIPIENTS WHO now earn more than SJ.000 lose Sl in benefits for every S2 they bring in above the ceiling. That limita· lion. says Rep. James A. Burke <D-Mass.), means some retirees 'are .. living on a diet of cat and dog food .·· In a move experts say could af· feet a million people, the House Ways and MeaAs subcommittee on Social Security Wednesday tentatively approved raising the allowance ih 1978. Und er the proposal, recipients could earn S6.000 in 1979 without facing an aid cutback. THE LIMIT ON exempt earn- 1 ngs this year is S3,000. ll ls ex- pected to go to $3,240 in 1978 and SJ,480 in 1979 under a provision of the existing law that ties bene(its to innation. The subcom'mittee·s move. ap- proved 9 lo 3. was a compromise between proposals to abolish the limitation and others for a smaller or later increase. Republicans had suggested phas- ing out the limitation over three years. AS PART OF the compromise, the subcommittee agreed that the whole subj«ict would be con· sldered again when the panel takes up Jong-range changes In Social Security, probably next year. The subcommittee is now put- ting together legislation lo keep the deficlt·plagued Social Securi- ty system alive. · All the votes it ls now taking are subject to later change or re- versa I. Burke. t h e panel chairman, predicted the move .. wouldn't get SO votes agaln1t It'" if it reachC3 the House Cloor. ......Partly offsetting the cost or raising the income lid, the sub- committee voted to remove from the Jaw a quirk that allows a re- tired person to earn as much as he can In a month if he forfeits hls benefits for that month. 0 MEXICO JOO ;11 .. , . '""'". . . . ... "" Wlrepflot6 Ma' BembedSftn .'.\J ap localt•s Mexican t'ili<'s where 23 homb blasts in- .i u r c d l'ivc and did an esti mated S20 mi l lion damage Wcdn<.>sday The go\'e rnm c nt put 10.000 police and troops . on full al<.'rt toda\ to hunt down n c w l cft:win g terroris t gro up that c laim ed responsibility. Pol~eFind Potted Plant Actually Pot NEW YORK <APl -Al9·year· old Bronx man was arrested when his neighbors discovered a 3'h ·(ool tall marijuana plant growing in his window . Overlooking J9SC La boy's first· floor window was the second- Ooor office of the Youth Aid Of- fice of the 40th Precinct. "We couldn't believe it," of- ficer Frank He nry sa id Wednesday. "We looked out the window and saw what looked like a marijuana plant in the window of the first noor of the building nextµoor:· Mi88ile launched VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE <AP> -A Minuteman 3 In- tercontinental Ballistic Missile was successfully launched Wednesday as part of an .overall testoflhe Minuteman system, the Air Force reported. lional breast cancer drtectlon program should be continued. but its use of breast X rays shouJd be restricted because of their potential for causing the disease in some women, a Na tional Cancer Institute advisory group said today. The report, presented today at a breast cancer screening meet Ing, said X·raylng breasls, a process called mammography, effectively finds cancer that goes undetected by other methods. BUT TOO MUCH is unknown about the possibility of radiation causing cancer for main'mo· graphy to be used routinely on all women. particularly those under age :SO, the study said. Attending the meeting at thl' National Institutes or Health Is a group of scientists, physicians and laypersons wh o hope to de velop a consensus on whether the detection program should be con. linued and what it should in elude. The report reviewed data from the $54 million Breast Cancer ' ... Detection Derrionstratlotf ProJ· cct, cosponsored by the National Cancer Ins titute and lh.e American Cancer Society, in which up lo 270.000 voluntet?r women aged 35 and older are be· 1ng screened for five years The value of the proJect has been questioned not only because of mammography, but also because it is still unclear if early detection improves Jone-term s urvival, as many medical authorities believe. '32 Million' Need Mental Health Care WASHINGTON <AP> • • Between 20 million and 32 million /\mericans need mental health care. a new report to the government says, but help is ort cn unavailable because of inadt:quate comm uni· ty services. costs that are too high or the stigma of mental Illness. "The time has come for mental health care to become part of a broader effort to deal with human needs.·· concludes the pre- liminary report of the President's Commission on Mental Health, released today 1. THE REPORT notes that 15 percent or the population needs -.umc lorm or help. ran~inj:( from counseling to long·term care. not «ountinJ:? the stx mil hon who are mentally retarded. At any one time. the report adds. about 25 percent of the country I!> under enough emqt1onal stress that a doctor might diagnose such peopJe as suffering from depression or anxiety. I • when you· find us . between Palizada and .Miramar, just west of San Clemente's El Camino Real (the coast highway) - -it'll be your world of serendipity! • But . Maine Gets ··First Snow \ . A you wt:len ·TJwnden'torm Activity Enda Nationwide '\. . -I ~ .............. D f\ I t ·r P ! LOT llnol ... llOl•IM .,,._. •nll ll!Ull• dtrtllo-ft Clotted tr.. nortll<l•l'I Re><lllet Mid ext~ 1"1e Utall •nd or.,.,... L loM rat11 Wff' "''"""" " Ml *"' IMt<IM to \lvftlfl<4fltl• ett«t 'hoe.-., Most .,. rect4lflt, wt '"" wtr• ...... lleed " ... M<'ly .... .,. 111 !Mnt\WMI Mii_,.. IN ll'IMle Al.,.r lsthldM•-..... OlllltMlt.-tourf "f\.ff, trt.aU were , .. Che41 ~,.111w.-1,_w~ Mo. s11i.. -. <loudv -"''""' °"'" C•tflOflll• entl Tu .. llOtM ,., .. • , .. ,o1u .. ,._.., . ' • . . .. ·~·1,..,... THEIR AOES SOMETHING TO CHEER ABOUT Pep Squad Member• Keran and Perkins' Real . Seniors Cheer Leakn 28 and 36 FRESNO !AP> -At ages 28 and 36, Marlene Keran and lnkan Perkins arc practically senior citizens as members of the Fresno State pep squad. Although other squad members range in age from their Jate teens to early 20s, Perkins and Miss Keran don't consider their ages u handicap. In many cases, they have used their years to their advantage. "WE DON'T PULL ANY punches about our age," said Miss Kerun. co-head pep girl. "ln fact. we try to emphasize it with ad- ministr _.ors. They listen more intently because we're not 18- year-olds they can !!hove in some corner." Another use for that leverage of age is in recruiting Cans to at- t('nd ~ames. "Our age 1s an advantage when we're talking lo older stu- dl'nls At least we arouse their curiosity," she said, "And the younJ,!er kids on the squad look up to us ... they listen to us, and they keep us young · · THE ONI.\' DISADVANTAGE THE pair feel 1s in physical limitations age brings. "I have never worked that hard in my entire life," Perkins said of trying out for the squad. · · "l had trouble sitting down and getting back up again,·· Miss Keran added. PERKINS RETURNED TO school after a 10-year absence to study radio and television and Miss Keran is pursuing a degree in fine arts after a six-year absence. They found it natural to get involved in cheerleading because that was an important part of their school days one and two decades ago. Mexican-Americans Set OhserVance Mexican-Americans in Orange County will J<>W thousands of others in Soutffe rn California s tarting at about midnight tonight in marking 16 de Sep- tiembre -Mexican Indepen- dence Day. The celebrations beain with the traditional "El Grito," which literally means "The Yell" but is, in fact, a Mexican cry of freedom declaring independence from Spam Though there will no doubt be numerous private festivities in the Mexican-American com - munities of the county, few laree a ctivities have been planned to mark the day Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla aroused the re- volt that began In 1810. In Santa Ana, the county seat. Mexican-Amencan leaders have prepared a special flag-raising ceremony at 9 a.m . Saturday in the Civic Center's "Plaza of the Flags." After the ceremony, which will feature speeches by government leaders, a small parade wlll take place in the downt(>wn area start· ing at noon. In the parade wi11 be a pre· cision motorcycle team from Ti- juana, high school marching bands, noats and other features. The other large event planned in the county will lake place in Placentia Saturday. Casa Placentia and Amigos de Casa Placentia have planned a block party in the Atwood com· munity. Santa Fe Street will be closed to vehicular tramc, ac· cording to organizers. The-event, which is public, will feature booths for food and games. live music and a queen crowning. It will run from noon to9p.m. The actuaJ day of Mexican in dependence is Friday but the celebration usually lasts several days. Numerous events are ta.king place in Los Angeles, whJch has declared this week to be "Mexico Week." Tonight at the Los Angeles Sports Arena, there will be three and a half hours of Mex· ican entertainment, including mariachis, the Ballet Folklorico and the "El Orit.o" ceremonies at llp.m . - Battered Women's Aid Nixed CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - Feminist.a are seeking t.o dump a women's rights commission which has opposed abortion, the Equal Rlihts Amendment, and the ·'Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" TV show while s up- porting the lady bug as the state insect. The latest flap surround.Ing the New Hampshire Commission on the Status of Women occurred when the panel refused t.o act on a program to help women who have b"en beaten by their husbands. Althou~h there was no formal vote, nine of tbe 10 com- missioners .said they were against the program. Com- missioners at Monday's meeting· said they saw it as an intrusion of government into the personal problems of New Hampshire citizens. "You can't legislate love in.the home. The government isn't de· signed to interfere here,•• said commissioner Simone Mason of Salem. Commission member Gloria Belzil of Nashua simply said of the program's defeat, "Some women libbers irritate the bell out of their husbands." Dorothy Craigie, commission chairman, said the panel bas not dismissed the wife-beating prob· lem but plans to "study the prob- lem and come up with a recom· mendation." . The dissenting member of the commission .. Frances Drown, said she would continue to pursue the program to help batterecl women at a special conferenceo( wome n 's groups set next Wednesday. The commission's record also includes support of prayer in the s chools and opposition to the re- peal of a law banning lesbian ac- tivities and to a federal family and child services program. But the rejection of tbe bat- tered wives plan outraged feminists groups and women legislators. -, Republican Rep'. Gale Mor- rison called on ccmservative Republican Gov. Meldrim Thomson, who appoints com- mission members, to remove those who voted against the pro- gram. She said women legislators have banded together to try to · abolish the commission because ··we felt that the group did not represent any of the issues we siood for or were working for." Black Marine Sentenced For Beatings A black Marine must pay a fine of $650 and accept a r eduction to lance corpora] for participation in an assault by a group of blacks at Camp Pendleton on partying white Leathernecks last No-, vember. '.the sentence was imposed Wednesday on Cpl. Clarence Capers Jr. of Edgewater Park, N.J .. by a five-member court martial board that convicted him Tuesday. Capers was tried on six counts of assault and one or conspiracy In the incident that sent six white M arlnes to the hospital. The black Marines charged in the case have testified they were out to break up a Ku Klux KJan meeting but got the wrong bar- racks room. The attack, however. brought to light the existence of a KKK cell on the nation 's biggest Marine installation. Part al ~lie Fa•1ilfl1 Elmer Duellman, an antique car collector and auto salvage yard operator in Foun· tain City, Wis., keeps a 1929 Ford Phaeton touring car in ~e family room of his home. He says the unique parking spot helps pre-serve the auto. Killers in Indiana Inspired by Movie? _/ LOS ANGELES (AP> -Vln· .cent Bugliosi, who prosecuted Charles Manson and his family, says he is "terribly disturbed" over reports than a n Indiana mass murder may have been jn- s pired by a movie based on a book BugUosi wrote about the Manson case. "It's a terrible tragedy and I'm extremely upset about H," Bugliosi said Wednesday when told that one of the accused In- diana killers alluded to the movie "Helter Skelter" in court testimony. Dan Stonebreaker, 20, and three others are accused of in- d is c rim in ate I y killing four brothers in a Valentine's Day ri· fie attack in H6llandsburg, Ind. Stonebreaker, who has turned state's evidence, testified this week that he and another of the accused watched "Helter . Skelter" on television two months before they walked into the mobile home of Mrs. Betty Spencer and opened fire. "We talked about it (the mov- ie)," Stonebreaker testified. "lt was the movie of how Charles Manson killed people for nQ reason." Stonebreaker said he, Roeer Drollinger, 24, David SmJth1 17, and Mike Wright, 21, picked the Spencer family at random. The attack killed 14-year-old Ralph Reese, his brothers, Reeve, 16, and Raymond, 17, and their half· brother, Gregory Brooks, 22. Mrs. Spencer's wig.was blown oH and the killers left hel', ap- parently thinking she was dead authorities said. ' ''This is the first indication I've ever received that anyone ever got any ideas from 'Helter Skelter'," s aid Bugliosi, a private attorney in Beverly Hills. "People have asked me before if ~ was worried someone might get ideas from the book or the movie, but I said it has never happened. 1 'm terribly disturbed about it. . "rm sure people will start say. ing that s hows like 'Helter Skelter' shouldn't be aired, but that's an extreme, too," he said. "What's the alternative? Are-we going to keep stories of tragedies off the air because some dement- ed mind might try to parallel the act? I just can't believe that just watching a movie would tum someone into a cold·blooded killer." -Boy KU/naps To Avenge Slain Mother _MOBILE, Ala. (AP>-Ayouth ktdnaped a taxi driver-in order to be arrested and sent t.o the prison where tbe confessed murderer of bis mother is being held, police said. Kenneth Lynn Curry, 17, was arrested Wednesday and charged with kidnaping and rob- bery alter allegedly kidnaping a 49-year-old taxi driver at knife· point and allegedly t aking $50 from him. Police said Curry told the taxi driver, BeMy Dillary, that he wanted to go to prison to avenge the death or his mother, who was raped and murdered. Curry is . the son of Venora Hyatt, one of three women whom Thomas Whisenhant of Irvington con· fessed to killing last year. Appointment OK'd SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. . Edmund Brown Jr.'a reappoint- . ment of Ronald Doctcr le the • state Energy Commission bu squeaked through the state· Sen at.eon a bipartisan vote. 7 ft. size All n.. •• So/tU f eatun: hardJl10od ~~~-.~...,.~·.:.~·~.~~:~~~~HD $5 95 ~·· e'6ltl ucay 1wmd ''-" coil~· maloM /ll•ff. --~ """ . """"~ I .. I . • I f . t • Rich Bomb Target? Blast Shatters Windows in SF S\'\ FRA:'liCISCO <~J>) Son Fr11nd,co'» .tntl \UI i.econd within u week. w•allb) \H'm t.tw .apparl'nl t1At&d of unothcr bomb tnlf au .. ck c:1nl) toduy. In 1& rauc·ous explo»ion that pul\cc.• ~1ud i;huttl'r~d w1ndo\\S in the tl\,y's plwsh Paclftc tlelitns •ecl1on hut 11\)ured no onw R~po~1b1Uty for the explo~1on at about 2 4S u m ~lb cto.lmf'd b_y the Tom llu:k~ l nit, the New World Ubeution Front, in a telephonu call lo A blw.t t!~rlY Jo'nday at the San Francisco Opera Jlouae crumpled an aluminum awning out· side the building and shattered w£ndows but didn't delay the scheduled operung of the opera's ~th i;eason Friday night. , the A!>soc1ated Pres' early today TllE ANONYMOl'S FE~ALE caller said "lhe bombing altal·k .at Pacific Heigh~·· wai. ''to further press home ou1 JUSl demands (or decent housin& lor all people In San 1''ranc1s('o." "AS LONG AS POOR PEOPLE are forced to live in unsafe. unhealthy housing, ruling class rune· tions will be threatened," said an NWLF comm uni· que to which the AP had been directed after the al· tack. She said an NWLF communique would be "available lalcr " Prcv1ous NWLI" messajlcs have said that at- tacks were to compel the c1ty's-nch to improve llv· ang conditions for the pooc. Police had difficulty finding the precise loca· tion of today's blast after reports of the noise flooded police switchboards, but authorities said the.attack apparently centered near Broadway and Lyon streets. The attack was the sixth In about three weeks in the San Francisco Bay area cla1med by the NWLF A six·foot hole was reportedly blown open in a gate at the U.S. Army base at the Presidio and win· dows shattered in the Paciflc Heights neighborhood over a two-block radius. :Enclosed Areas Petition to Ban t:. Smoking Allowed SACRAMENTO !A I'> -Supporters of a proposed Initiative statute curbing smoking in enclosed areas have won the right to circulate petitions to get 1t on the Cahfornaa ballot. Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger said Wednesday he had given the pro· posal submitted by the Clean Indoor Air Committee the title: Severe Rape Law Sought SACRAMENTO <AP J -Peo pie convicted more than once for rape would be punished with life imprisonment without parole. 1f a new lnll in the Senate becomes law. Sen. 11.L. "Dill " Richardson <R·Arcad1a>. said Wednesday his bill, SR 1300, would -be ap- propriate punishment. for such repeat rapists cis Sacramento's "east are<.1 rapist.'• Police say this person 1.s responsible for more than 20 r<Jp·cs. Current l:.iw punishes forc1hh.· rape \\Ith three. lour or fivl' years 111 prison with three years added to the sentence for each prior violent felony, for a max- imum total of five vcars. Citing an autoniat1c one-third sentence reduction for good • behavior. Richardson said that "the loni.:cst a violent rapist can be kept behind bars for a repeat C'onvict1on is six years and eight monlhs." "Regulation Qf Smoking," and had approved a summary of it. , He said that did not mean he was for or against it. · His offi ce said the measure would ban smoking in enclosed pubUc places, places of employ. ment and educational and health facilities, with specified excep· lions. and require restaurants to establish nonsmoking sections. It would prohibit employment dis· crimination based on exerc1$e of rights provided by the statute. IT WOULD permit stricter local regulations. requiring post· mg of signs designating no· smoking areas, and set fines for violations. The signs would cost the.state up to an estimated S600.0QO, "h1ch could be offset by unknown ln<'omc from fines. The mcusure might also result in savings because of reduced heath expen· d\tures. sick leave and dlsabthly payments to employes. The measure also could result 1n reduction of state and local cigarette tax receipts, the at- torney ~eneral said. l L takes the signatures of 312,404 registered voters to qualify it for the ballot. Official Urges Ship TeQDinal For 2 Tankers LONG BEACH CAP> A pro- posal for an oil tanker terminal dcr.1gned to accommodate two ships, rather than three as originally planned, was raised Wednesday at a meeting of the South Coast Air Quality Manage· mcnt District Board. The board passed a motiqn by Orange County member Paul Raven ordering its staff to pre· pare a supplemental environ· mental impact statement on the t1ffects of a two·berth facility. Standard Oil of Ohio <Sohio> hu1> proposed a S45·milllon threc- berth plan. AN ENVIRONMENTAL im· pact statement has already been s ubmitted on the thrce·berth. trestle·supported Sohio proposal. which would handle tanker ship· mcnts of up to 700,000 barrels a day of t·rude oil from Valdez. ,.\l:..~ka. The oil would be pumped throu.c:h r11wlin('<; to :'\tidland. 'l't'x. l"r d1stnbutm11 to m1dWl'sl rcfincric•s f{ :H l'n ·:-. mot mn prm ides for puhl1c hl'.ll'llll-!:o. "1th1n 30 days <.ilt1·r .lhl' ... upplcrnt·nt<.11 stale· mcnl is n·uka:.l·d ·rhe statements include estimations of how mu1·h pollu· t1on lhe fa<.:al1l.\ woul c1 <.:n·ak . '\ ONE DAY ONUY ARTS FINE QUALITY ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS ALL PAINTED BY PROFESSIONAL ARTISTS , . WJ!..lllrn.r.bio"""' .. ~ FANTASTIC VALUES! •39· MOTHIN& OYER • 5 HOURS ONLY BUNDLE OF JOY CAUSES HEADACHE FOR LOS ANGELES CQUPLE Steve and Lola Wolfao11 Stand Outside Apartment Wtth Adam, 2 Baby. Brings Woe Eviction Fight C::ollld Be .Landmark Case LOS ANGELES· <AP) ··-Steve and Lois Wolfson 's bundle of joy has caused them a peck of trouble ever since the landlord informed them their baby son would force their eviction from the apart- ment where they have li\·ed for more than three years. Culver City :\Iunic1pal Court Judge Harold I. Chcrnes~ bc~;.in hearing testimony today on tht> ~uit the \\'ulbons filed to hold onto their S3!XJ·a·month home o\'erl09king the yacht harbor at J\Jarina dcl Hcv. They contend the ap:.utment ·s ban on C'hildr<?n violates state law. The ca!>e could ha\'e sweeping implications for million!> of families with small children seckmg rental housing. :\IRS. WOLFSO~ BROt:GHT her in· t;.int son, Adam. home from the hospital in September 1975. but nobody said a \\Ord about it for more than a ye<.>r an~ he was born. "We've ne\'er had :my complaints about Adam ... she said in an interview. · · r n fact, a 11 of our neighbors have signed affidnv1ts saying they like him and want him to stay in the building. and they 're appearing in court on our behalf." A neighbor, Robert Smith, whose bedroom is directly over the Wolf sons· apartment, said: "We've never been a~· ned by Adam crying. The Wolrsons ar very considerate people and hav<.' a ed us on several occaSions to be sure t e c:;hild isn't bothering us.·· IN NOVEl\tBE.R 1976, after the Wolfsons had signed their lease renewal. they got a letter from the corporation that acts as landlord, Marina Point Ltd .. tell· ing them they would have to leave because of the child. ' Entrenched there · since February 1974. they decided to fight rather than move. ··we love it here. Irs a terrific bur. and we're pleased with it." Wolfson said. ·'There ·s a great view of the marina from both bedrooms." Several other children already live in the apartment complex. They lived thert' before the ban on children was imposed. "The children from adjacent build· ings who came over to play in front of thb one are a Jot noisier than Adam ·s e\'er been ... Smith said. Prices goqd thlU September 30 ~~~__..~-.-_. C~entrv Pride & Coventry Faire NlOSW 4 ::" 9 tce"'::: Mix and match fashionable comf>anions. Dup0nts touchable, fine soft yarn. 1004Yo nylon, auto-clave, heat set in 24 colors. SQ. Yd. Superior appearance retention, fine plush or carved plush. Totallv Installed Thru Sept. 30, Only aver hNllV padding, ARMSTRONG FFC Solarlan Brick pattern In white or natural red. Se>ectal Mlrabond no wax-wear surface. Thru Sept. 30, Only Looklng for that SPeCfal "Just rloht" new window coverf ng? our own desloner colfeetlon of beautlful f abrlcs ere now on sale •. True custom design· & m•k•uP our sPfCtattv. · Thru Sept. 30 Only Htw __.S1t.fS SO. YD. AllfMI ............ s1s1 ln•t••led fOr tvPICal f • 12 room Floor prep, extra • .. . . ... ..,..,..... THEIR AGES SOMETHING TO CHEER ABOUT Pep Squad Members Karan and PerkJns' Real Seniors Cheer Leaden 28 and 36 FRJ<:SNO !AP> -At ages 28 and 36, Marlene Keran and lnkan Perkins are practically senior citizens as members of the Fresno State pep squad. Although other squad members range in age from their late teens to early 20s. Perkins and Miss Koran don't consider their ages a handicap. In many cases, they have used their years to their advuntage. "WE DON'T PULL ANY punches about our age, .. said Miss Keran. co·head pep girl. ... In fact, we try to emphasize it with ad· ministr;.tors. They listen more intently because we're not 18· year·olds they can shove In some corner." Another use for that leverage of age is in recruiting fans to al· tc.'nd games. "Our age is an advantage when we·re talking to older stu· dents Al least we aroul.e their curiosity, .. she said, "And the younger kids on the squad look up to us . they listen to us, and they keep us young · · TllE ONLY DISADVANTAGE THE pair feel 1s in physical limitations age brings. "l have never worked that hard in my entire life," Perkins said of trying out for the squad. · "I had trouble sitting down and getting back up again,·· Miss Keran added. . PERKJNS RETURNED TO school after a 10.year absence to study radio and television and Miss Keran is pursuing a degree in fine arl'i after a six.year absence. They found IL natural to get involved in cheerleading because that was an important part of their siehool days one and two decades ago. M . A r • extcan-mer1cans Set ObserVance Mexican-America-./'~ Orange County will join th~ands of others in Southern California starting ut about midnight tonight in mar.king 16 de Sep· tiembre -Mexican lndepen· dence Day. The celebrations b,eein witb the traditi onal ''El Grito." which literally mci.lns "The Yell .. but is, in fact, a Mexican cry of freedom declaring independence from Spain Though there will no doubt be numerous private festivities in the Mexican-American com· munilies of the county, few large activities have been planned to mark the day Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla aroused the re· volt that began in 1810. In Santa Ana, the county seat. M exi.can·American leaders have prepared a special nag-raising ceremony at 9 a .m. Saturday in the Civic Center's .. Plaza of the Flags." After the ceremony, which will feature speeches by government leaders, a small parade will take place in the downtown area start· mg at noon. In the parade will be a pre· cision motorcycle team from Tl· juana, high school marching bands, floats and other features. The other large event planned in the county will take place in Placentia Saturday. Casa Placentia and Amigos de Casa Placentia have planned a block party in the Atwood com- munity. Santa Fe Street will be closed to vehicular traffic, ac- cording to organizers. · The event, whicb is public, will feature booths for ~food and games. live music and a queen crowning. It will run from noon to9p.m The actual day of Mexican in- dependence is Friday but the celebration usually lasts several days. Numerous events are taking place in Los Angeles. which has declared this week to be "Mexico Weck." 'Tonight at the Los Angeles Sports Arena, there will be three and a half hours of Mex· icnn entertainment, Including mariachis, the Ballet Folklorico and the "El Grito" ceremonies al llp.m. , Battered Woinen's Aid Nixed CONCORD. N.H. (AP) - Femlnlsta are seeking to dump a women's rights commission which has opposed abortion. the Equal Ri&ht.s Amendment, and the "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" TV show while sup- porting the lady b~ as the state insect. The latest flap surrounding the New Hampshire Commiasion on the Status of Women occurred when the panel refused to act on a program to help women who have b,.en beaten by their husbands. Althou~h there was no formal vote, nine or tbe 10 com· missioners .said they werl! against the program. Com- m~ers at Monday's meeting' s ai ey saw it as an intrusion of government into the personal problems of New Hampshire citizens. ''You can't legislate Jove in the home. The government isn't de. signed to interfere here;• said commissioner Simone Mason of Salem. Commission member Gloria Belzil or Nashua simply said or the program's defeat. "Some women libber8 irritate the ·bell out of their husbands." Dorothy Craigie, commission chairman, said the panel has not dismissed the wife-bealine prob- lem but plans to "study the prob- lem and come up with a recom- mendation." . The dissenting member of the commission, Frances Drown. said she would continue to pursue the program to help battered women at a special conference of women's groups set next Wednesday. The commission's record also includes support or prayer in the schools and opposition to the re- peal of a law banning lesbian ac- tivities and to a federpl family and child services program. But the rejection of the bat- tered wives plan _eutraged fe minists groups arict 'Women legislators. Republican Rep. Gale Mor· rison. called on conservative Republican Gov. M~drim Thomson, who appoin com-. mission members, to emove those who voled against the\pro-gram. I She said women legislators have banded together to try to ,abolish the commission because "we felt that the ~oup did not represent any of • issu.es we stoodfororwerew ~ngror." Black M&rine Sentenced For Beatings A black Manne must pay a fine of $650 and accept a reduction to lance corporal for participation in an assault by a group of blacks at Camp Pendleton on partying white Leathernecks last No· · vember. The sentence was imposed Wednesday on Cpl. Clarence Capers Jr. of Edgewater Park, N.J., by a five-member court martial board that convicted him Tuesday. Capers was tried on six counts ot assault and one of conspiracy in the incident that sent six while Marines to the hospital. The black Marines charged ln the case have testified they were out to break up a Ku Klux Klan meeting but got the wrong bar- racks room. The attack, however, brought to light the existence of a KKK cell on the nation's biggest Marine installation. I Pa..,, of~~ F ... ilfl!' . Elmer Duellman, an antique car collector and auto salvage yard operator in Foun- tain City, Wis., keeps a 1929 Ford Phaeton touring car in ~e f amity room of his home. He says the uruque parking spot helps pre-serte the auto. Killers in Indiana . . Inspired by Movie? LOS ANGELES (AP> -Vin· cent Bugliosi, who prosecuted Charles Manson and his family, says ~ is "terribly disturbed" over reports than an Indiana mass murder may have been in· spired by a movie based on a book Bugliosi wrote about the Manson case. "It's a terrible tragedy and I'm extremely upset about it," Bugliosi said Wednesday when told that one of the accused In- diana killers alluded to the movie "Helter Skelter" i n court testimony. Dan Stonebreaker, 20, and three others are accused or in· discriminately killing four brothers in a Valentine's Day ri· fie attack in H6llandsburg, Ind. Stonebreaker, who has turned state's evidence, testified this week that he and another of the accused wa,tched "Helte r .Skelter " on television two months before they walked into the mobile home of Mrs. Betty Spencer and opened fire. "We talked about it (the mov- ie)," Stonebreaker tesWied. "It was the movie of how Charles Manson killed people f!)r no reason.•• A.ll Tltiu• So/tu /.mun: halduiood franw•, e'Pl "'°" laond 1i.d coU•Pfin6• m1tom /IHed Ql'MCO~ and 'llufl~ Stonebreaker said he. Roger Drollinger, 24, David Smith. 17, and Mike Wright, 21, picked the Spencer family at random. The attack killed 14-year-old Ralph Reese, his brothers, Reeve, 16, and Raymond, 17, and their halt• brother, Gregory Brooks, 22. Mrs. Spencer's wig.was blown off and the killers left her, ap- parently thinking she was dead authorities said. • ·'This is the first indication I've ever received that anyone ever got any ideas from 'Helter S kelter'," said Bugliosi, a private attorney in Beverly Hills. "People have asked me before if I was worried someone might get ideas from the book or the movie but I said it has never happened: 1 'm terribly disturbed about it . "I'm sure people will start say. ing that s hows like 'Helter Skelter' shouldn't be aired, but that's an extreme, too," he said. "What's the alternative? Are-we going to keop stories of tragedies off the a ir because some dement- ed mind might try to parallel the act? I just can't believe that Just watching a movie would turn someone into a cold-blooded killer." -Boy KiJnaps To.Avenge Slain Mother .MOBILE, Ala. (AP>-Ayouth k1dnaped a taxi driver in order to be arrested and sent to the prison where the confessed murderer of his mother is being held, police said. Kenneth Lynn Curry, 17, was arrested Wednesday and charged with kidnaping and rob- bery after allegedly kidnaping a 49-year-old taxi driver at knife- point and aUegedly taking $50 from him. Police said Curry told the t axi driver, Benny DHlary. that he wanted to go to prison to avenge the death or his mother. who was raped and murdered. Curry is the son of Venora Hyatt, one of three women whom Thomas Whisenhant oC Irvington con· fessed to killing last year. Appointment OK'd SACRAMENTO CAP) -Gov. . Edmund Brown Jr.'a reappoint- . ment of Ronald Doctor to the • state ~ergy Commission bas squeaked through the state· Senate on a bipartisan vote. \' DAtl. Y "ILOT L SC ' Th~. .,~, 11, 1111 I ~ I I j ·The Sand And Fury aARE f'ACTS D£PT. Downcoast in San Dieio. voters wUI be aoing to the pol~s Tuesday to decide whether or not bare is · beautiful. The issue on the ballot is Proposition D involvln1 a place called Black's Beach. This relatively secluded strand as the only place in our region where public beach nudity 1i. tolerated. Now the practice hus become an election issue. T_M question has·raised some tcm~atures in the San Diego area and newspapers of that re- gion ure filled with letters, pro nude and anlJ·naked. The ques lion has triggered sermons. quips, puns, wisecracks and ... ome pretty emotional blather on both sides. ALAS, IN ALL the fervor. Black ·s Beach nakedness has drawn considerable attention in the news and not always with pin point accuracy. As August began to wutd down and the nude election month ap- proached, a local television sta- l1on fired the first loaded salvo by s uggesting lifeguards were con- cerned about "an atmosphere of permissiveness" at Black's Beach. From there. the papers began hyping the sto·ry, indicating police had estttblisheq "a bikini patrol" lo search for crime and sexual misconduct a.long the bathing suit-optional stra'nd. f "Several arres ts have been • made, including one in which an I adult male is charged with child r molesting," a police spokesm~ f wa:; quoted as reporting. r THEN IT DEVELOPED that t A I J a Coby. ass1slunl lo the ed1tor ' of the San Diego L'nion, got sui.· t picious of all these rather r gchcralized reports. He went on 1 JO inveSllJ,!ative Sp(eC Of hlS OWn. • C In his column on the editorial ~ -page, JaCoby characterized the : escalating nuclie beach stories as i "a media storm.·· 1 .J aCoby discovered that . 1. Despite the televis ion hype ubout '"permissiveness" along the strand. a n actual police re- port got buried in the nurry. Thal . report suid, "Black's Beach has one-hall to one.third the crime of other Sun Diego beaches ... -There 1s no such thing as a · "bikini patrol." Police had reg· u lar plainclothes patrols. The "bikini" name had been made up by a reporter . • -As for the lone c·hild molest· ' tng case. it had not occurred ln : the last few weeks. JaCoby ; pushed to find out when. He was . given an "either April or May" •'answer. ; lie persisted In insistin1t that · police give him the precise date of that arrest. They finally supplied it -last : Feb. 6, a 50-year-old man who '• was babysitting a 6-~ear-old girl. JACOBY WAS RIGHT. San • Diego had been swept by a media storm in which the news people didn't cover themselves with glory. But that doesn't mean that the voters won 't go ahead and cover Black's Beach. Folks (Back Lance Homstown Rallies for '&eorgia Bor' CAUIOUN, Oa. (AP> -It WU Uk• an old· (HhJoned rtvlval meetlnt u the hometown folks 1lomped lhtlr feet , prayed and cheered one of their own Bert "Good Ole Oeor1ta Boy" Lance. About l.500 people -more than one·fifth of Calhoun'• population -\urned out In a demonstra· lion of s upport for the director of the federal Office or Manatem1;r1t and Bud1et on the eve of his ap- pearance before a Senate panel lnvesti1atJng ,his flnancl-1 alf aira. -· · THE CROWD save a 1tandin& ovation as the hiah school band played "You'll Never Walk Alone" and "I DldUMyWay." They had placard.a saying •'Calhoun tor Bert·· and "Bert's A Good Ole Georeia Boy." They used words like "love," "friendship," and "honesty" to describe Lance, wbo did not au.end thtHaJly. "I'll tell you what klnd of a guy he is," said Jack Purcell, who used to be the catcher on the softball team when Lance was pllcher. "I called him up last year to come speak to the graduating class of the school where I was prin- <'i pal And even though it rained and the loudi.peakeri. didn't work, he came and he spoke And when I sent him a check for speaking to the class. he sent lhe check back because he dldn 't do it for the money. That's the kind of guy Bert is ... A DOWNPOUR drove the crowd from the high school football field across the street to a gym- nasium. but it didn 't dampen their spirits. Lance's minister, the Rev. Emory Brackman. told of the "very generous" contributions of time and monty that Lance and hla wire, LaBelle, raade to the First Methodist Church . He recalled that Lance received "the highest honor " a United MethodiJt can receive when he was elected to the church's General Conference. LT. GOV. Zell Miller, who shared a double desk with Lance ln grammar school, accused the news media of distorting the Lance affair. He denied a statement in an article in a national m agazine that 'quoted him as saying Lance was a poor arithmetic student. ''Powerful and ruthh~a forces" -whom he later Identified as the federal bureaucracy -have attacked Lance. Miller said. · "To say that Bert Lance has done sometlijng wrong does not make it 10," he said. THEY WA NTED to talk about the back- slapping, joke-telling Bert Lance who marrted his high school sweetheart and helped his neighbors as h' rose from a 19-year-old bank teller to a 32-year- old bank president. , "He treated~ man like a man wants to be treat- ed," said John Houser, who carried a sign saying .. Bert~ W~s fair To Me ... We Need Hlm In D.C." He said Lance'helped him gel back on his Ceet several years ago when he 105t "a lot of money" in- vesting in a mil l. "l le went out of h1::. way to help a lot of people in this town." ~~~~~~~~~~ HOMETOWN FOLKS RALLY BEHIND GEORGIA eov LANCE Calhoun Residents DI.play Signs Supporting Him New SS Plan Hikes Lhnit Report Says Breast X-rayS Possible Cause of Cancer For Retired WASHINGTON <AP ) Retired people could earn up to $4,500 next year without losing Social Security benefits under a plan approved by a House sub· committee. Its chairman says the current Ji mit reduces some elderly persons to eating pet food. RECIPIENTS WllO oow earn more tha n SJ.000 los e Sl in benefits for every S2 they bring in above the ceil~ng. That limita- tion. says Rep. James A. Burke ID-Mass.), means some retirees arc "living on a diet of cal and dog food." In a move experts say could af- rect a million people. the House Ways and Means subcommittee on So<:ial Security Wednesday tentatively approved raising the allowance ih 1978. Under the proposal. recipients could earn S6,000 in 1979 without racing an aid cutback. THE LIMIT ON exempt earn- ings this year is S-1.000. It is ex· pect<!d to go to $3,240 in 1978 and SJ.480 in 1979 under a provision of the <.•xisting law that ties benefits to inflation. The subcommittee's move. ap- proved 9 to 3, was a compromise between proposals to abolish the limitation a nd others for a s maller or later increase. Republicans had suggested phas- ing out the limitation over three years. AS PART OF th~ compromise, the subcommittee agreed that the whole subject would be con- sidered again when the panel takes up long-range changes in Social Security, probably next year. The subcommittee is now put. Ung together legislation to keep the deficit-plagued Social Securl· ty system allve. AlJ the votes it ls now taking are subject to later change or re- versal. Burke. th e panel chairm an, predicted the move "wouldn •t get 50 votes against it .. if it re ache~ the I louse floor. Partly offsetting the cost or raising the income lid, the sub. c<>mmittee voted to remove from the law a quirk that allows a re· tired person to earn as much as he can ln a month if he forfeits his benefits for that month. " MEXICO '•"'" OtrOlt 0 300 .... A1lu .... .. ,.w1 ... _..M11, ~Sita :\lap locates Mexican citit·:-. where 23 bomb blasts tn· JUrcd fiH• and did an estimated S20 million damage Wcdnesda~'. -The ~o\·ernmc nt put 10.000 police and troops. on rut I all-rt toda\ lo hunt down n e w I cf t :win g t er r o ri st g roup that c laimed responsibilit~·. Police Find Potted Plant Actutdly Pot NEWYORK <AP> -A19-year· old Bronx man was arrested when his neighbors discovered a 31,~.foot tall marijuana plant growing in his window. Overlooking Jose La boy's first· floor window was the second- floor offic~ of the Youth Aid Of- fice of the 40th Precinct ''We couldn't believe it." of- ficer Frank H enry said Wednesday. "We looked out the window and saw what looked like a marijuana plant in the window of the first floor of the building nexl~oor." Missile launched VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) A Minuteman 3 In· tercontinental Ballistic Missile w as s uccessfully launched Wednesday as part of an overall t.estoftheMlnutemansystem, the Air Force reported. WASJIJNGTON <A P > Ana- tional breast cancer detection program should be continued, but Its use of breast X rays should be restricted because of their potential for causing the disease in some women, a Na- tional Cancer Institute advisory group said today. The report, presented today at a breast cancer screening meet· ing, said X-raylng breasts. a process called mammography, effectively rinds cancer that goes undetected by other methods. BUT TOO MUCH is unknown about the possibility of radiation causing cancer for mammo· graphy to be used routinely on all women, particularly those under age SO, the study s aid. Attending the meeting at the National Institutes of Health is a group of scientists. physicians and laypersons who hope lo de· velop a consens us on whether the detection program should be con· tinued and what it s hould in- clude. The report reviewed data from the $54 million ~reast Cancer ' Detection Demonstration ProJ· eel. cosponsored by the National C ancer Ins titute and lt"~e American Cancer Society, in which up to 270.000 volunteer women aged 35 and older are be- ing screened for five years The vuluc of the proiect has been questioned not only because of mammography.. but also because it Is still unclear if early detcc.tion improves long-lerm survival, as many medical authoritJes believe. '32 Million' Need Mental Health Care WASHI NGTON <A P 1 · · Between 20 million and 32 million Amcncam. need mental health care. a new report to the government says. but help 1s often unavail able because of inadE:QUate comm uni· ty services. costs thut are loo high.or the stigma of mental illness. "The time has come for mental health care to become part of a broader effort lo dt'al w1lh human needs, .. concludes the pre· liminary report of the President's Commission on Mental Health, released tod:1y I THE REPORT notes that 15 percent of the population needs :,Oml' lorm of help, ranging from counseling to long-term care, not l'ountlng the six mil hon who are mentally retarded. Al any one time. the report adds. about 25 percent of the country 1s under enough emotional Mress that a doctor might diagnose such peopJe as suffering from depression or anxiety, I • . when you find us . between J:>alizada and Miramar, just west of San Clemente's El Caniirro Real (the coast highway) -it'll be your world of serendipity! . But • Maine Gets First .Snow - Te111pnattare• Nip Lew flt•. .. ,. ., '1 " ll ,, 1T 12 ... " ., .. ,. 10 • .o. 11 ., ... " . .., ,. 11 64 1J 51 n ,, " 11 et 74 • '2 1' .. SJ .ot .. 12 ,, .. ,. at 11 U4 '1 ,, 1t S1 It 71 ,. . n • Activity Enda Nationwide two DAHY PILOT ' ' . " Rich Bomb Targ~t? Blast Shatters Windows in SF SA'J fftA'-;C'JSCO IAP > Sun Frunrlsco't und 11..s i.econd within a week. weal\b) \H rt-lhc -'VP" rent latJt•t uf Mnuther bomb ln1 a\l<Ack l•.arly todn>. tn a raurnus explo•lon that pohcf" uid s huttered w1nrtows in the dly ·a plush Paclhc He•ghts section but lruurcd no on4J. R~pon 1b1lily for the explosion at uboul 2.45 u m WM:> claimed bv the Tom ll1ck!> Unit, the New World Uberat1on f'ront, tn a telephone call to A blUBt earlY Friday at the San Francisco " Operu House crumpled an aluminum awning out. sld(: the buUdmg and shattered windows but didn't delay the scheduled opening ol the opera's Mth Mla&on Friday night. thu A.ssodult.'d Pre:.!> early today THE ANON\'~OVS FEMALE callet said "lhe bombing attack etl Pacific Heights" wai. "to further press home ou1 1uat demands for decent housin& for all people in Sao Francisco." .. AS LONG AS POOR PEOPLE are forced to live in unsafe, unhealthy housing, ruling class func- tions will be threatened," said an NWLF communi- que to which the AP had been directed after the al· tack. She said ar. NWLF communique would ~ "available later " Previous NWLF messa~cs have said that al· ... tacks were to compel the city·:.· rtch lo improve liv- ing conditJons for the poor. Police had difficulty !indin& the precise loca- tion ot today's blast after reports or the noise Oooded police switchboards, but authorities said the attack appurenUy centered near Broadway and Lyon streets . The attack was the sixth in about three weeks in the San Francisco Bay area churned by the NWLF A six·foot hole was reportedly blown open in a gate at the U .S. Army base at the Presidio and win- dows shattered in the Pacific Heights neighborhood over a two-block radius. Enelosed Areas Petition to Ban Smoking Allowed SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Supporters of a proposed initiative statute curbing smoking in enclosed areas have won the right to circulate pehttons to get 1t on the California ballot. Ally. Gen. Evelle Youngtr said Wednesday he had given the pro· posal submitted by the Clean Indoor Air Committee the title: Severe Rape Law Sought SACRAMENTO CA P> -Peo pie convicted more than once for rape would be punished with life 1mprisonmcnl without parole, if u nl!w bill 111 the Senate becomes law. Sen. 11. L. .. Dill " Richardson CR-Arcadia>. said Wednesday his bill, SB 1300. would be ap. propriate punishment for such repeal rapist!> as Sacramento's "l'ast area rapist. '1 Police say lhas per~on 1s responsible for more than 20 rapes. Current law puni!'>hcs forcibh: rape with three, four or f1v<• years jn prfson with three .rears added to the sentence for each prior violent felony, for a max 1mum total or fi ve Yt'ars. C1t10g an automalic ·one·third sentence n>duclion for good _ behavior, Richardson s aid that "the longest a violent rapist can be kepi l)ehind bars for a repeal conviction is six years and eight months." "Regulation or Smoking," and had approved a summary ofit. He said that did not mean he was for or against it. · Hls office said the measure would ban s moking in enclosed pubttc places, places of -employ- ment and educational and health facilities, with speciCied excep- tions, and require restaurants to es tablish nonsmoking sections. It would prohibit employment dis- crimination based on exercise of rights provided by the statute. IT WOULD permit stricter local regulations. requiring post- ing 'Of s igns designating no- smoking areas, and set fines for violations. The signs would cost the state up lo a n estimated S600.000, "h1ch could be ofCset by unknown in<'omc from fines. The meas ure might <ilso res ult in savings because or reduced heath expen· dltures, sick leave and disability payments to employcs. The measure also could result in reduction or stale and local cigarette tax receipts, lhe at- torney general said. It. takes the signatures of 312.404 registered voters to qualify il for the ballot. Official Urges Ship Terminal For 2 Tankers LONG BEACH <AP > A pro- posal for an oil lanker terminal designed to accommodate two ships, rather than three as originally planned, was raised Wednesday at a meeting or the South Coast Air Quality Manage- ment District Board. The board passed a motion by Orange County member Paul Raven ordering its staff to pre· pare a supplemental environ- mcnta) impact statement on the effects of a two-berth facility. Standard-Oil of Ohio <Sohto> h;.is proposed a $45-million three· berth plan. • AN ENVIRON~tENTAL im- pact statement has already been submitted on the three-berth. tresUe-supported Sohio proposal, which would handle tankf'r ship· ments of up lo 700,000 barrcb a day of <'rude 011 from Valde1. ,\laska. The oil "ould be pumped throu~h pipf'linrs to Midland. Tex. for d1s tnbut1on to m1dwe:-.t refinl'rlf's n ~l\l'll "' m11t1on pro\ Ides for puhli1· hl•;.iring:-"ithin :lO days aft<'r lht• :,,upplcmcntal stat e· mcnl b n·aka~cd The s t;.itcme nts include estimations or how muc·h pollu· lion the fac1ltt~ \\Ould <. n ·alc ONE .DAY ONUY FINE QUALITY ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS ALL PAINTED BY PROFESSIONAL ARTISTS • FANTASTIC VALUES? MOTHIMCi pYER · • 39 5 HOtJR~S ONLY _,,.._ BUNDLE OF JOY CAUSES HEADACHE FOR LOS ANGELES COUPLE Steve and Lola Wolt1on Sand Out1lde Apaartment With Adam. 2 Bahg. Brings Woe •I Eviction Fight Collld Be .Landmark Case LOS ANGELES <AP> ·-Steve and Lois Wolfson ·s bundle of joy has caused them a peck of trouble ever since the landlord informed them their baby son would force their eviction from the apart· ment where the;.· have lived for more than three year!t. Culver City Munitipal Court Judge lla 1·old I Cherncs!'> began hearing tl!Stimony today on the !'>Ult the \\'olf!<>ons filed to hold onto their S390-a-month home overlooking the yacht harbor at J\1urina dcl Rey. They contend the ap;..11tment ·s ban on ('hildren violates state law. The c:a:-.e could have sweeping implications for million::. of families with small children ::.~eking rental hou~mg. :'\IRS. WOLJ-'SON BROVGHT her in· I ant son. Adam, home lrom the hospital rn September 1975. bul nobody said a \\ ord about 1t for more tlwn a vt'ar after he was born. · "We've ne\"er had •mr complaints about Adam." she said 111 ;an interview. ••Jn fact, ull of our neighbor~ have s igned affidavits saying they like him and want him to sla~· in the building, C:tnd they're appearing in court on our behalf. .. A neighbor, Robert Smith, whose bedroom is directly over the Wolf sons· apartment, said: "We've never been awakened by Adam crying. The Wolf sons are very considerate people and have asked us on several occasions to be sure the <;hild isn't bothering us.'· IN NOVE~1BER 1976, after the WoUsons had signed their lease renewal. they got a letter from the'corporation that acts as landlord, Marina Point Ltd., tell· ing them they would have to leave because of the child. Entrenched th~re ·since February 1974. they decided to fight rather than move. ··we love it here. It's a terrific buy, and we're pleased with it,·· Wolfson said. "There's a great view of the marina from both bedrooms." . Several other children already live in the apartment complex. They lived then.~ before the ban on children was imposed. ··The children from adjacent build· ings who came over to play in front of this one are a lot noisier than Adam's e\"er been." Smith said. -NOW°"" lowest •Ice ever ·1549 Sq. Yd. Totatlv tnstalled over hNw peddlng. ARMSTRONG FFC Solarlan Neiw tl'IYSlt.fS SQ, YD • ........ ,.. ....... ~§Z.. Brick pattern In whlfe or natural red. Special Mfrabond no wax-wear surface. Thru Sept. 30, Only Looking for that speelal 111ust right" new window covering? Our own designer collection of beautiful f abrlcs are now on sale •. True cu1'1:>n'\ design & make·uP our sDtclalty. / Tt\ru Sept. 30 Only ' • 12 '°°"' . Floor prep, extra I ,. -I Thul'ldey, Sept9rnber 15, 1tn Robert N Weed /Publisher ThOmH Keevll/Edltor Barbara Krelblch/Edltorlat Page Editor 0rangeeo 11oenvP1101 Editorial Pag_e ...................................................... A New Cr~dihility ~Gap in W asllington Ewr\ • ~ Lance~ echedulec:t to have hi• aay before the s.n... ~mitt ... two thing• became painfully obvloua: -t..nc. has to go. -President Carter ha bungled thla ~·badly. 't tt '-clear that Lance'• record u a financial wheeler let Ind his a.ck of candor with the Senate during hit con· .._, ..... .,,heating• and alnoe have deetroyed hla ueefulneu. He wouldnothavetheconfld8nceoftheCongreuandprc>- lynottneconfldenoeotthepeopleatlarge. Thia ta too bad becau8e Lance by all reports has a pretty r degree of competence and has had the confidence of the siness community as a voice for moderation among the metlmes zany economic theorists in other parts of the ad- P>inlstratlon and in the departments. · We have comment~ before on the fact that the furor re- '-"lting from the progressively more damaging revelations ~ut Lance has overahadOwed other problems that need ~attention from Carter and more public discussion -the ~anama Canal Treaty, the defense picture. the Mlddle East, ~ergyand the economy generaJly. ~ Now we have Carter's own credibility suffering from the ~uestlon of how much he really knew about Lance's situation. ~r he knew little or nothing. the administration looks terribly ~ept If he knew much or all of the story. his judgment and ttis Mr. Clean Image both are In question. ... Now comes another damaging development: Press ~cretary Jody Powell's "leak" of information about the sup- ,posed use by Sen. Charles Percy, a Lance critic, of free :arrptan'e transportation and other favors from various cor- 'porations. Apparently Powell's information was wrong. And this could happen to a new boy in town. But there are two disturbing aspects: It begins to smack of.the old Aon Ziegler performance in the eagerness ta.harpoon a critic. More important, It raises the question of Carter's involve- ment In the leak. If we are to believe that Carter keeps a tight rein on the finer points of White House staff activities, it is hard to believe that Powell would have leaked the information without Carter•s knowledge. Carter is too smart to let a press secretary jeopardize his relations with a key member of the Congress without knowing what's going on. Mr. Carter better be preparing a full. frank explanation of all that has transpired, and he had better be ready to deliver it soon. And it better be good. There is a man living in San Clemente who could tell Mr. Carter the perils of stonewalling and cover-up. Wrong Target Meanwhile, Sen. S. I. Hayakawa has weighed in with his share of foolishness in the Lance affair. Rushing to defend Mr. Lance's "giving up a lot to accept the federal job," Hayakawa railed against the media for re- porting (and in some cases digging out) the activities which now have Lance in trouble with the Senate. Hayakawa apparently belongs to those who believe that nothing a public official do4s would be improper or illegal if the media did not report It. Rather than "driving good men a~rom government,·· as Sen. Hayakawa seems to feel, the media exposure Is about the only mechanism available to the American public for mak· ing sure that they get good men in the government. • Opinions expressed In the space abOve are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Other Views ... Latins Eye Panama It seems incredible that the U.S. distributes millions of dollars throughout the world in order to shed responsibilities, while in Panama, where the gringos would like to stay forever, a considerably smaller sum is offered. The South Koreans do not want the Americans to go, yet the U.S. pays the South Koreans so they can pull out. There is just no way to understand the gringos. -Juan Carrete. Critica, Panama City findependentJ. The agreement will make us a sort of sanctuary similar to Switzerland. In fact the only threat to the canal's security is sabotage. Our people have proven over 70 years t~at they are capable and responsible enough to keep it functioning. The agreement seems to be right 2d proper for the Panamanian community's best interests. · -La Republica, Panama City fpro·g ernment). The agTeement in principle between the U.S. and Panama, in addition to providing a solution to the problem of the canal, also restores one's faith in the possibility of negotiating the many disputes that exist between our con- tinent and the whole world. It is also palpable evidence of a new North American political style. · -La Nacion, San Jose <indepertdentJ. The projected new treaty represents a triumph for the Panamanians and for all Latin Americans. On few other occasions has there been such a contlnental consensus. Why, one might ask, is there not a similar unanimity about ·the independence of Puerto Ri co? -Fernando Valdez, Ercel..sior, MericoCUy findrptndentJ. Rowland Evans/Robert Novak Korea Memo Paints Grim Picture WASHINGTON -The sa~ Carter adroiniatraUoo document that cootemplato losinc one-. third of West Germany to a So- viet attack contends that remov- lnC U.S. troops from South Korea 1ives Washington "fiexiblllty'\• to determine whether or not to in- tervene agalnat Commu.nist in· v aaioo from the north. PRM (Presidential Review Memorandum) 10, a top secret inter-agency study or U .s. force struc- fures, also ls ~~~,·~~ South Korean capital of Seoul again.st invading N o r t h Koreans to- day. Even with U.S. air and naval intervention and U.S. troops still stationed in South Korea, the study suggests Seoul cannot be held. All this contradicts President Carter's a.ssurances· that his de- cision to remove the 2nd U.S. In· fantry Division does not undercut the U.S. commitment to South Korea. It also undermines cur- r ent military doctrine based on the retention o!"'°"Seoul as a necessity. Thus, ~th Koreans face the same problem as the West Germans : shall they believe public pronouncements of U.S. leaders or private docu- ments of their staff experts? The administration's claim that PRM·lO merely discusses options is simply untrue. Just as PRM-10 states that present allied forces could not bold one-third of Germany. its disturbing com- ments on Xorea a.re based on con· ditiona before and after the U.S. troop pullout, not on any option. "ONCE THE U.S. land forces are out of Korea," says PRM-10, "the U.S. has transformed its presence in Asia from a land· based posture lo an off.shore posture. This ... provides the U.S. flexibility to determine at the lime whether it should or should not get involved in a local war." The document goes on to re· Jack Anderson veal an unpubllcb:ed reason ror removina the 2nd Dlvislon: to give WNhingt.on the choice or whether or not to Intervene. With the troops gone, aaya PRM·lO, "the risk of automaUc involve- ment (which was a major factor in removtne land forces from Korea) is minimized. However, should the U.S. decide to in· tervene, military forces would be readily available." Even with the 2nd Division sUU on station and the U.S. supplying· "initial air and naval aupport at D·Day," PRM-10 spins a 1rtm· scenario: "If the North Koreans were to achieve tactical surpriae, it is pouible that they could at least temporarily attain their most' likely major objective - the capture of Seoul.•' While predicting North '1<.orea could not win "a sustained com- bat," it predicates this on major U.S. help. "With the U .S. con· lribut.lons of land and carrier based tactical ·air· assets and m aterlal support. it would ap· pear that the U.S. and ROK <Republic of Korea> would pre· veil against North Korea 1n the longer tttm, but with possible In· ''MArt! Tt.lk 4Pout used CMS •.• '' ltla~ setbacks ,..... lneludtog perba])I tbefallolSeoW. •• WJTllOVT U.S. help, tho attua· tion ls desperate. aceordJ:na to PRM·lO: .. The level of foftel which.could be broucbt to bear at the front on D-Day would generally favor North Korea over the ROK tn all categories .•• The ROK bas widely spread lntantry forces with limited mobility and vulnerable stocks of war materiel." The document implies a return to the old u .s. atnteay of keep- ing allied troops away from the DMZ and \natead falllnt back on Seoul. Now-retlred Ll. Gen. James HoWncswoa\h changed that when be took command nearly four years aco. cciatend· inc the North Koreans 9ianted to capture Seoul quickly and then start debilitating peace negotla- tiona. So, allied strategy changed to a forward defense of Seoul. Such a defense requires Korean confidence in U.S. readi- ness to supply lndls9enaable airpower. South Korea long has worried that its def ens~ pact with W ashlngton provides a less automatic U.S. response to ln- v asioo than does the NATO tl'ea· ty. Presidenl Carter's July 25 let· ter sought to reaasure.Preaident Park Chung Hee that the U.S. troop pullout does not mean .. any change whatsoever in our com- mitment." PBM·ll undercuts all of South Korea's expectations. While em· phaalzina that only U.S. air and naval intervention could stop an invasion, it now make.. that In- tervention a matter of choice rather than automatic response. After our column reported the PRM·lO assessment of a Soviet attack in Central Europe, a senior West German army of. ficer secretly visited Washington to find the truth. Interviews with 30 people, the general said, left "not the shadow of doubt in my mind" that the column wa.s ac- curate despite White House de- nials. South Korea's generals may now began a similar pl"OCess with hopes that the answer will be more reassuring than the find· ings ofthetr German colleague. . "' ·-. Red Carpet Treatinent for a Communist WASHINGTON -For 25 years, the State Dept has been arbitrarily blocking selected Communists from entering the United States by invoking a Jaw from the Red Sc:are days of Sen. Joseph McCarthy The Mccarr an Act, passed in 1952, established nearly 30 categories of people who could not visit the United States unless they w ere recommend· ed for visa waivers by the State Dept. Among the un - desirables were prostitutes, polygamists, paupers and ad· voe ates ol the "international doc· trlnesofworld communisrn." Now, thank& to a recent bUJ paued by Congress, the McCar- ran Act will soon be less restric· tive. Over the years, neverthe- Jeu, the law bas often been selee· Uvely applied. Out of some 19,000 waiver applications last year, for example, only about a thouaand were denied. During the Riehard Nixon· Henry Kiaslneer era, Commllnist leaders from West•rn Europe• were considered anathema. because official visits to the Unit~ ed States would give them credJbWty at bOme. In 1975. fat Sydney Harris instance, a prominent ltallan Communiat, Sergio Segre, was invited to speak at the New York Council on Foreign Relations. The waiver was denied and the conference had to be cancelled. COMMUNISTS w o were critical of U. S. allies w re also considered verboten by Nix· on administration. One sue ase involved a prominent British citizen, Carmel Budiardjo, who wanted to lecture in the United States on human rights violations in Jndonesia. Under pressure from the Indonesian govern· ment, the State Dept. temporari- ly withheld her visa on the grounds that she had previously lied about being a Communist from 1946tol948. In contrast, Communists wbo · have the State Dept. seal of ap- proval are speedily granted visa waivers and are ushered in on a red carpet. Take Vullcan Shopov, chJef of agriculture for the Bul1arian Communist party. As an Eastern European Communist, in an era of detente, he la udenUy courted by U .s. diplomats. SBOPOV CAME to the 'uruttd States in June at the invltatloo of the State Dept. The U.S. tax· payen footed the bill for his' month·lont villt. lncludlne travel expense. to and from Bula aria. Jn a M~ 9 table to the State Dept., the U.S. ambassador in Sofia, Martin Herz, was ecstatic about Shopov's pending tour. .. Embassy strongly believes <Shopov) must be accorded VIP status as far as <expenses) and general treatment is con- cerned," exclaimed Hen. The Communist leader, cabled the ambassador, should be taken to a '·Southeastern agricultur"al region, including visit to Atlanta or other Southern city;" the Great Plains wheat, com and soybean region; and the Western . states. In general, wrote Ren. Sbopov .. would lite to see most advanced · forms of American agricultural t~bnology. He has said he ex- pects to work bard during the visit." DESPITE the distinguished Bulgarian's announced intentlon to keep bis nose to the grlndstone, Hen suggested some lavish e;- tertainment for the visitor: "He would appreciate chance to see modern American dance (though we suspect anytbina too avant-garde would not go down weU; bell.eve American Ballet Theater. Alvin Alley or Eliot Feld would be just about rt1bt>. Broadway show (sugreat, if pOssible, 'A Chorus Line' or 'Bub- bUnr Brown Sugar'). Opera, or orchestral concerts, Shop,ov not interest..t ln Jau or rock. · The ambassador added a "special note." Jn bia talk.s with Shopov, wrote Herz, the Bulgarian made a ''special point of saying he does not want to bump into correspondents from <Radio Free Europe) while · U .s .. and does not wish to giye · t er v 1 e w to (Voice o.f America) .•. He ask'ed that in· terpreter not be 'political immi· grant' ... " Shopov had been assured,-tbe ambassador stated, "that in· terpreter would be selected in such fashion as to assure there woQld be absolutely no political embarrassment." WREN RE finally arrived tn the United States, Sbopov was taken to the· Smithsonian, the Kennedy Center. colonlal Williamlbul'g, Va., and to other spots around the~try. But the scbol)r17 Sbopov, a State Dept. official told us. "1queaed in" tbe cultural •lcbts only wbealle had 11»art time. The Butiarlan deca.led ~forego Dls-neyfand, 1'bldi .. ~ted" State Dept. ofOeJab. Footnote: While Communists need waivett to vlalt the United States, leader!' of represslve right-wln1 refhnes such as Chile, South Korea and Argen- tina, can come and 10 as they wlsb. 'RoDleo a.DH. Juliet' Wasn't Meant as. RoDlallCe . , man that ls not paQion'1 slave ... ") It is intereatlnc to note, tul'Uler, that Shakespeare bor- rowed th• at.ory from a loq poem by Arthur Broote, lo which the original Juliet i.s a "Wily wench" wbo waxes merry over her sue· cesatul deceptica of her mot.tMr. Broe*• IMI the deatb ot tbe COU· ple u "deterved ~iahment" f~ tbelt rMbea (Sbu .. l)eare ioet even funber by chqln1 Brooke'" montha into d~. so tbat Romeo aad .Jullet are Ylttullly 1tran1era to each other.>--e--~,...----~~ Friar John ls quarantlnect. Ancltt i• a fatal acc\dent that Ju~et awakens trom her trance a mo- ment too late to prevent Romeo tak1nc polaon. ~---_ _.!-·~-.. .. • Oran e Coast EDITION VPL. 70, NO. 2S8, •SECTIONS, •2 PAGES Lance Claims· 'Consc · II WASHINGTON lAP> B\ld&el Director Bert Lance told the American public "my con· science 1s clear" today and madt! a point·bY·point defense of hjs personal loans and overdrafts as a C eorgia banker. Lance, on e of President Carter's closest aides. said at Senate hearings into his financial off airs that published allegations have caused him "profound Speedy Barbeque Backfire s ewport Beach firemen have est1 ated damage to an Irvine Terr ce home al S30,000 after the home · garage was ignited in a misha ·nvolving gasoline. Depa ment s pokesman Art Morton aid the blaze at the home f Michael Brawn, 2111 Kewamee Drive~ was reported at about 8:30 p.m . Wednesci,fly. According to fire department reports, Brawn, 36, was having trouble getting his backyard barbecue started. Morton said Brawn apparently became frustrated when at- tempts to ignite the barbecue with starter fluid failed. so he got a five.gallon can of gasoline from his garage. Brawn reportedly poured some of the gas into a cup and tossed part of it on the smoldering brickcttes. ' .According to Morton. the gas ignited, including the gas that re· mained in the cup. Budget Boss Def e ruls Actio shock and disappointment.·· "I did not ask for this fight but now that I am in 1t, I am fighting not only for myself and for my family but al!.o for our system," h.e swd. Lance. who has said he will not resign, declared, "ls 1t part of our American system that a man can be drummed out of govern· ment by a series of false charges, half truths, misrepresentations, innuendos and the like?" He asked th~ nationwide television and radio audience to be the jury "for I am secure and comfortable knowing that my conscience is clear and that the people's verdict will be a fair and. justone." Lance had been saving his po1nl·by-point rebutta) for the committee hearing, which sup- porters have referred to as "his 0-41y "' ... "-"'•.,, Lit• ,.., ... NEWPORT FIREMEN BATTLE GARAGE FIRE WEDNESDAY NIGHT IN IRVINE TERRACE At Kewamee Drive and Avocado Avenue, the Barbecue Got Out of Control T oday's Closing · N. Y. Stoeks N nee Clear~ dtl' in court." Same argumenta had been made previously by Lance or his assistants, &ut he saved his most comprehensive defense for his appearance before the committee and the cameras. M one poinl, Lance made a face-to·face challenge to Sen. Charles Percy of Illinois, the committee's senior Republican, who previously asked whether Lance may have backdated checks to take advantage or in· come tax deductions. Lance said he round Percy's statements "puzzling ... regret· table'' and offered an explana- tion that led Percy to concede: ''It was wrong for me lo even raise the possibility." With his wife, LaBelle, and guests from Georgia in· the a u· dience. Lance said his family's overdrafts did no harm to the Calhoun First National Bank • while he was its chairman. ";rhe bank for years followed a !i beral policy with respects to overdrafts." Lance said. "I make no <Apology for this prac. Lice. It was believed by the bank1s .management that a liberal overdraft policy was a valuable tool for the bank to use 1n attractin g and r etaining cus tomers. "Despite the characterization or the bank as my personal toy, members of the Lance family were not_~c-corded special favors regarding ov~drafts . The liberal overdraft policy of the bank was available to all depositors,·: Lance said. Comptroller of the Currency John Heimann said in a report Aug. 18 that •'the overdrafts permitted to bank directors, of· ficen and their families linclud· mg Mr. Lance> by Calhoun con A,Wl'""'°'° APPEALS TO PEOPLE Lance at Hearing st1tuted unsafe and unsound banking practices." The comptroller's office found the overdrafts to be excessi\·e and in December 1975, reached an agreement with the bank to prevent them from continuing Brawn dropped the flaming cap and backed away from the b\ne, knocking over the un· • capped five.gallon-can, which also burst into flame, Morton sajd. Air Force Plane Crash Kills· 20 Morton said. Brawn then ap- parently· tried to kick the can away from the names and in his ha'ste sent 1t hurtling into tbe side of the garage. which also caught t'fre ALBUQUERQUE. N.M CAP> An Air Force plane slammed into -a mountainside on a high secunty Army base, killing all 20 people aboa.rd when 1t exploded ~n impact a half rillle from a bunker containing fi ssionable material. authorities said . The fourtengine plane crushed on Manzano Uusc. where nuclear • I ' • ,>-.1.,,, _NB Plea Falb; Flat Re~fors Po~ite to Co~cilman R yckoft By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 tlle Dally P'llot St.alt Conceding that he "probably won't change your minds at all," • Newport Beach City Councilman faul Ryck,o{( took hts case for a building moratorium to the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors this morning. The 50 real estate agents and liroked who attended the breakfast seassion at the Mar· riolt Hotel were polite. but ap- p a r~n tly unimpressed with Ryckoff's proposal. They gave a colleague a rousing ovation when he urged the councilman to leave the moratorium issue alone and move ahead with road construe· tion Instead. Ryckoff has twice this year flliled to get his fellow coun- cilmen to approve a moratorium he says whould only last four months in order to give the city time to lower building densities on the c1ty's remaining open land. Co ast Weath e r Cloudy Jate tonie.ht and early Friday mornlne . Partly cloudy afternoon and evenina hours. Lows t.oni&ht ~ to &c. lll•hs Fri· day near 70I at beachea to • mld·'JOaintand. Ryckorr said this morning ~hat, if his next bid which comes before the council Monday - fails, he will support a citi,zens group which is planning to launch an initiative drive to get the issue on next April 's ballot. The councilman acknowledged that there is merit in the argu- ments of the pro-development faction as well as the pro· moratorium faction, but said he believes most of the residents 6f Newport Beac h favor a moratorium. · He also said he believes most of the city's residents want the ci- ty to move quickly on road Im · provement projects such as widening of Pacific ast Highway, MacArthur ulevard and Jamboree Road t six lanes. He pledged to work on xpeditine those projects. But Ryckoff sai~ that divergent oplnions on the ex· tension of University Drive and the completion of Fifth A venue in Corona del Mar means those projects are not Ukely to be un- dertaken. He said be doesn't believe a moratortum would force housing .. .prices up, but he noted that a sub- sequent lowering or allowable densities would probably ln· crease property valuet in th• city by reduclng the future aupply ot houslna o.tly P'llM ltalt ....... PUSHES BUILDING HALT • Ne wport Councilman Rfclfott Dri\le and at the Newporter North site, saying that proposed densities of eight dwelling unit.a per acre need to be reduced. Ryckoff also said ho is backini the moratorium because of pro· posed commercial projects such as the <&50,000·square root Prudential high rise planned for Newport Center. . weapons are s tored, three minutes after its takeoff from Kirtland Air Force Base at 11 45 pm. Wednesday. Kirtland base operations con· firmed there were no survivors. ..,aid Walter Sprick of the Federal ~ Av1at1onAdm1mstralton "One big fireball and that was 1t." a nearby resident said. i\tr Force crews using nares and h<'licopter spotlights re· covered al least 15 bodies in a predawn search. Authorities saiu all those aboard were military J)<' rsonncl. I\ s pokesman al tn.1.plane's hase satd it was used M°quently by high ranking military person- nel and American and foreign dignitaries. Former Secr etary or Stale Henry A. Kissinger is among those who have used the plane. the spokesman said . The aircraft. which was scat- tered over 10 acr<!s after Impact. was used as a model for modifications to Air Force One, the president's plane. . An air traffic controller said he tried to warn the pilot the plane was in trouble. "The first inClication we had he was in trouble was when the radar showed he was too close to the mountain and flying too low.·· said the controller. "We hit him on the guard fre· quency and told him to turn right and climb ... but he never did," he said. The jet was a communications aircraft based at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base in Goldsboro. N.C. An Air Force spokesman said it was on a train· mg mission and was on its way to Nellis Air Force base in Nevada. The EC135, described as a "modified 707," stopped in Albu· querque to refuel, the a pokes man said. (See 20 DEAD, Page A2) 'Pigeon Drop' Sclaeme t) COLORADO Plane Crash Alb11q11erq:;11•~--.. .. . Kirtlgn d A.f .8. " NEW MEXICO Carl~bed • AP' WIN,._.. Mett WHERE 20 PERISHED Map Spots Site Bilked of $2,200 Newport B ach police are look· ing for the t o young women who bilked an derly woman out of $2,200 in ash and her wedding rings i what one detective described as .. a textbook caae of pigeon drop.•' Pigeon drop is the name of a bunco scheme practiced usually ·on elderly women, like the '"" year-old Santa Ana resident who was v\ctim.ized Wednesday after· noon. Police said the woman was shopping at South Coast Plaza in CostaMesa when a woman in her -. mld1twenties stopped her in the mall and pretended ~O:: acquaintance. They ch _tt_ -!,.j while and the young woman re- lated she had a friend who had found a bag contaJnin1 $45,000 in cash and some pornographic photos. The young woman told her elderly compapton that the friend was afraid to turn the money in to police, but di$ 't know what to do wltb It. At this point• the frlend joined the two women and the first young woman 1uegested she talk to her bos3 to see what shou.l<t be done. While the pair walled. the young wt>man disappeared, al· legtdly to see her emplOJer, and ret\U'ned wltb ~ followtni ad- vice: They could keep the cash, since it was probably lllicitly gained and they could divide it up between them, provided they didn'tspend any for 90 days. In order to qualify for their share, each of the three women would have to show an attorney. a Mr. stouts, they bad enough cash to live on for the 90-day waitinfperiod. The two young women took the older woman to her home where she got the money and the rtnes then drove to the attorney's of- ncein Newport Beach. One woman went up to the lawyer•• ofOce with the woman's funds and with the found money, returning moments later ap. parenUy empty·handed. The older woman was then sent upstairs to talk to the lawyer and eoUec.t bet ~uh. but when she got the.-e, the~ wu no lawyer's of· flee, no cuh and by then, the two YOW\I women had departed. Balboa ltlotoreyrlist Felled H unting ton B e<i c:h p a q1m cd1c!'i aid motorc:~·d1 !>l Ralph Adrian .fu~tinana. 18. 315 Alva r ado St.. Ualboa. who s uffl'rerl ll•g injuric .... wht•n his machine eo l11ded W~dncsd<1y "1th a station w<.1gon drivt!n bv J uqueline Violet Hutchinson of Huntington • Beath. Crash was at the Brookhurs t · Hamilton inters ection. Justinano is m ..,;.iti s f actorv cond iti on at K aiser- P l·rmancntc I ios pital, West Los Angeles. New Sanity Fro•PllfleAJ Black's Beach 'Failed Noble Trial Ordered 20 DEAD.·· For Allaway Edward Charles Allaway. con· v1ctcd of shuotin~ lo death sevc'n pe rson'> o n the Cc.c l St e.e t c f''ullerlon l'Jmµus, "'as ordcrN.f today tu fat•t• a new !>anity trial !'lo\ ~ J\llaY. .1~. a :JH yt•ar old <'X· t'umr1us JUn1Lor, -,at mute m the t·ourtrnom uf S uperior Court .I utlgc llobt.•rt Kneeland as the JlH1J{t.' scheduled the new trial. prt>sumabh hy JUr,y , on the sani- t v phase of the mass-murder l'JSl' The JUry which convicted Al· !away last month was unable lo reach a verdict on whether he wus sane whe" he went on a ..,hotgun shoottng binge July 12. l!l7fi. Thl' c·ustodian was apparently dl•..,pondent over manta! prob· lc·ms at the ti mt• Classes Set In Aquatics · The lluntin~ton Bl.'at•h RPnea- t11m . Park:. a nd Human Services l>cµarlmf'nl will hold aquatic clasw ... th1.., lall <i t lhl.' c1tv indoor pnol .11 Hilh Strl'et and Palm A v<·nur Cost lur 10 lessons is SS for tiny lots. Sli for cmotionaUy, physical· I~· or nll'ntc.clly handicapped, and S7 fw be g1nnt'rs, advanced b1•J,!1nnt•rs. aclults or Mommv and Mc classes · F1ro;t sC'!>!-.IOn classes begin nrxt Monday Second session n1 ur'>es start Oct. 31 For more 1nfo rmat1on. cal\ 536-9385. NEW ORK <AP> -The New York Ya ¥ces acquired slugger Dave Kingman on waivers Crom Cali(omia today. just nine days <ift€r the An~els obtained him via th~ same route from the San Diego Padres. Kingman played in 10 games for the Angels, batting .194 with two home runs and foty runs batted in. Both hom ers came Tuesday nie ht against Texas. ORANGE COAST ,. DAILY PILOT .. _ ......... l'ttt!dlft\tM..,._I_ J11<••·CWlll9 "~· "-*"t .... o.-lllMMotw A spokesman for the Federal Aviation /\dminrs lrat1on said the pilot made what was probably a · routine attempt to contact de· parture control JUSt after takeoff The tower responded, but the pilot didn't rt'turn the 'com- mun1cat1on. Corut Feels Quake From Anaheim Area A Wedm•sday earthquake cen tered on a fault in Anaheim measured 2.7 on the Richter scale and was strong enough to be felt hv res1deats as far away a s Co!>1a M c~. Cal State Fullerton seismologists said to· dav. It was the firs t quake that could be detected without instru· ments in Orange County since Memorial Day. according to Christopher Buckley. assistant profrssorof earth sci enci!s. Auckley said the quake hit at 2 :3~ p.m. on an unnamed fault fi\(' m1lci, south or the campus. The tremor caused no damage and apparently ~ffected an area 15 miles from its po1otoforigin. hunate Stabbed SAN QUENTIN <AP l --An in· mate was stabbed in the max- imum security unit or~n Quen- tin prison in a fracas involving nine prisoners. prison officials s aid. . Expe.ririient'? SAN DIEGO <AP> Turning over a public beach to nudism was "a noble experiment that failed," a newspaper said today in urging that Black's Beach Ht! restricted lo suit-wearing. "Even its advocates now deplore the voyeurism . the oc- t'asional bizarre behavior, the body painting of unclothed children," said the San Diego Union in an editorial. The municipal bea<!-h has been class1fted "swimsuit optional" for three years and is one of the most popular areas along the coast. The newspape r . urging ap· proval of an elecllon 1s~ue before S~iegans on Tuesday, said it ag eed with police that Black's B ach is ''not a hotbed of crime." But it is "lhe onl y area of its kind in the entire country -· it is the kind of attraction we don't need and don't want." the Union s uid. 15 Watches Taken From NB Shop eone walked off Wednes- d y 'th 15 watches front An· es a d nauticals, 430 W. Coast Hi way, Newport Beach police rep rted today. A shop employe s aid the watches, valued at $2,l~ ... were last seen in a display case about 3: 15 p.m. They were gone when the case was checked al 4 · 30 p.m. .Baby l)ied Base. Holiday .Limited Care MIAMI <AP> Michelle speak t.o her or show her the Pope's baby died at delivery baby. because a base hospital was on a "I looked over and the nurse three-day holiday and the limited was crying," Mrs . Pope recalled. staff failed to give her "proper "Then I knew." / · · care and treatment." She said her divorce~ year The Air Force admits it was at later was caused by the mental fault. It h as offered $15,000 tn anguish she and her husband suf- restitution. fered because of the baby's But Mrs . Pope a nd her death. est ranged husband, Army Sgt. Mrs. Pope broke down on the James Pope, say It's not enough stand and the testimony was re· to make up for mental suffering cessed for 15 minutes to allow her and \he breakup of thefr mar-to regain composure. riage. "I never 11aw my baby. I bad to In taking responsibility for the ask lf tt was a boy or a girl. t death, the Air Force said: "The wanted her io.bave her name, no\ Un\ted States does not contest the juat be 8 dead baby,'' Mrs. Pope ~llegation that if proper care and testified Wednesday. treatment were rendered to the A federal Judge set a final patient, Mtchelle Pope, the baby hearing for Friday to decide the would, based on a reasonable government's U.abWcy. Jt was not degree of medical certalnly, knewn how nluch tho P<>pea are have ~ deUvered allve and asking. healthy. Testimony showed Jes~lca Marie WU alive and w.U m her mother'• woinb wbea tlie lime n:..:.r..:..a0 .. Held for delivery •rrim and passed ~I a , but tbat tabor ahould have been induced. . But th• Homesttad A~ Force Bue hoap~ 1taff falled to tlve Mn. ~-~ teai. when she arr(ved'beeaun no doetora were on duty dUtint U.• 1175 Vet.erana »•1 holld•>'· Tit• nlih~ nurae1, tM 1ovemment • were not certain ol \Mir abllltJ to ~::..,~r; ... -. ... but,...;;. ~·~ ... -- 1 dldll't wut &o bow,·• Mn. Pope t•Uned WedneMIQ In a daOkedv-., SM atlld wKeft the bab1 w• de· h vered, U.. dOeW w«*ld not l • ' Radioftctive Waste WAS HINGTON CAP > Despite decades or study, the United St.ates still has not figured out how to gel rid of dangerously radioactive waste Crom power plants and military-weapons pro· duction, the General Accountm1 Office reports. Unless this problem 1s solved, .!he GAO says, the accumulation of nuclear wastes. wilb hazardous radiation that lasts up to half a milJion years "threatens the future of nuclear power in the United States. Robert W. Fri, acting ad m inistrator of t h e Energy Research and Development Ad· ministration. defended the waste·disposal progr am before a House government operations subcommittee lie said that many of the GAO's observations are based on 1976 Man Arrested In Newport Break-Di Try A Sunset Beach man, who police allege was prowli~g through West Newport, was m custody today on a charge of burglary. Police arrest ed Rich a rd Michael Feldt, 34, of 16344 Pacific. Coast Highway Wednes- day ·arter allegedly watching him break into a stor age room at 116 41s t St. Feldt is being held in lieu of Sl0,000 bail. Officers Joseph Saunders antf Dan DiSanto said they were patrolling the Seashore Drive area at about 11 a .m . when they assertedly saw Feldt going door- to-door, trying door knobs. When he made the alleged break-in, they arrei.'ted him. -data and outdated. He said \hat ha s agency, which will be atbsorbed by the Department of Energy on Oct. 1 -ls doing the best it can to deal with the problems. Fri said th1tt the Carter ad- m inistratlon will s hortly an. nounce plans to deal with spent fuel at commercial reactors, a program under which the i OV· ernment would reportedly offer to take these wast.es off the hands of commercial plants for a fee. T he Energy Resear ch and Development Administration ls planning to develop six locations for long-t erm or permanent burial of radioactive wastes by 1985. But the report by the in- vestigative arm of Congress says that "ERDA may have promised · more than it can deliver." "There are, we believe. formidable social, geolo~icaJ and regulatory problems which must be aoived ," lt continues. ··Foremost among them ls op- position of the public and some political leaders. •'ERDA may not ~ successful in gaining their acceptance un- less it can convince people that is has a sound waste-management program and that geological dis· posal risks to man's environment a re acceptably low," a difficult task, the report sald. "Some radioactive wastes will remain hazardous for hundreds of thousands of years," it said, meaning "the y must be permanently isolate d from human contact and environmen- tal influence. "A program must be de- veloped for present and future waste-disposal operations that will not create unwarranted public risk. Otherwise. nuclear power cannot continue t.o be a practical source of energy," it s~id. ERDA is considering burial of radioactive wastes ln under- ground salt formations that are stable, relatively free of circulat· 19QUALITY TELEVISION FEATURING ~ ina around water and able to carry off heat (rom the r adioac· live wastes, block the escape or radiation about as effectively as concrete and 1tretch, rather than shatwr, ln an earth.Quake. Hoag to Host Fair to Note Anniversary • In celebration of its first 2S years service, Hoar Memorial Hospital will host a free health rair Saturday. as the hospital's thank you gift to the communily for its s upport. <See related story, PageA13.) More than 30 health organiza. tions wm be on hand to provide information. apd demonstrations. The event open.s at 10 a.m. in the hospital parking lot. Included will be the emergency medical . service teams Crom the C05t• Mesa and Newport Beach Fire Departments as well as a rescue helicopter from Et Toro Marine Corps Air Station. ~ There will be contlnuoU5 enter· tainment from 10:30 a .m . until 4 p.m . "Healthy " food will be available for 25 cents and there will be free cake and ice cream fo 11 o wing a cake c u tt in g ceremony at noon. Inc luded in the list or dignitaries expected to attend are Assemblyman Dennis Mangers (0.Huntington Beach), Assemblyman Ron Cord'Ova <D· El Toro), Mayor Milan Dostal of Newport Beach, Mayor Ron Pat· tinson of Huntington Beach and Mayor Bill Vardoulls of Irvine. Entertainment will be pro· vided by local Girl Seoul troop1'. the Ha rbor Singers, the All Organic Low Calorie Kazoo Band, the Retrogressive Five and the singers from the Live Wire singing telegram agency. It gives you that great Zenith color picture automatically! The COLE • SJ1939W Think of It at • TV control room In your Mii It control• the color plctu1e .•. co11ecta the cofOf picture ••. JO lime• a second sutomstlcallyl • Finished in s1mula1ed grained American Wa lnul w!lh brushed Aluminum color accents. Earphone. • 11fr' IOf·•l 1• .. C"9.-. • ~-· ,_.., ¥'41-A ......... ·~ • Auton.eOc FfM•IUf'tlf"ll C~l•el • ,.CM.H C~ot . ,........,..c ............... ....._e-_ FINAL 1977 CLEARANCE ·a1G SAVINGS ·EXTRA TRA~-IN Al.LOWANC!~ ' f .... ; . . . . ... Saddlebaek EDITI ON , .. ~ Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 70, NO. 258, 4' SECTIONS, oi2 PAGES ORANGE COUNT Y, CALIFORNIA THURSOA~SEPTEMBER1~1W7 TEN CENTS Air Force Plane · Crashes; ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. IAP> -An Air Force plane slammed Into a mountainside on a high security Army base. killing all 20 people aboard when il exploded on impact a half mile Crom a bunker contaming fissionable rh aterlaJ, authorities said. The four-engine plane crashed on Manzano Base, where nuclear weapons are s tored, three minutes after its takeoff from Kirtland Alr Force Bai,e at 11 ·45 p m. Wednesday. Kirtland base operations con- firmed there were no survivors, !>a1d Walter Sprick of the Federal Aviation Administration. .. One big r1reball and that was tl. · · a nearby resident s aid. Air Force crews using Clares a nd heltcopter spotlig ht~ re· covered at least 15 bodies in a predawn search. Authorities said all those aboard were military personnel. A spokesman at the plane's base sald it was used frequenUy by·rugh-ranking military person- nel and American and foreign dignitaries. Former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger is among those who have used the plane. the spokesman said. The aircraft, which was scat- tered over 10 acres after impact. was used as a model for modlfications to Air Force One, the president's plane. An air traffic controller said he tried to warn the pilot the plane was in trouble. "The firist indication we had he was in trouble was when the radar showed he was too close to the mountain and flying too low.·· said the controller. "We hit him on the guard fre- quency and told b1m to turn right and climb ••• but he never did, .. he said. The jet was a communications ait"craft based at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base in Goldsboro, N.C. An Air Force spokesman said it was on a train- ing mission and was on its way Lo Nellis Air Force base in Nevada. The EC13S. described as a - •·modified 707," stopped in Albu· querque to refuel, the spokesman said. A spokesman for the Federal A viaUon Adminis tration sald the pilot made what was probably a routine attempt to contact de· parture control just after takeoff. T he tower responded. but the pilot didn't return the com · mur}icalion. (See 20 DEAD, Pase A2) Lance Claims _ 'Conscience Clea~' PlansB ... ped Viejo Loses 3 Highways Three propqsed highways in Plano Trabuco in the Mission Viejo area were del~ted from a county highway plan approved Wednesday by the Orange Coun· ty BoarCI or supervisors. The deleted roads were sought by the Mission Viejo Compa11y and endorsed by the county plan· ning commission. But supervisors decided ap- proval of the highways would be an infraction of south county population growth goals ap· proved in 1976. It was on a motion made by Supervisor Ralph Diedrich that the board voted unanimously to delete the roadways most plan- ners Celt would open the area to development. EarUer, the Board of Supervisors asked· the plannini commission lo reconsider its en dorsemcnt of the three highways But wheo the. amendment to the county's circulation element was returned to the board it still bore the commission 's stamp of approval ~he pl a n approved b) sijper visors deleted ~ablis~ m ent or Live Oak Canjlrm Road as a secondary arterial highway - A staf( report pointed out the road was "designated as a nature corridor" and therefore not eligible ror widening beyond its existing two lanes In general the circulation ele ment covering the south county a rea approved by s upervisors was consistent with the popula- tion growth needs adopted by the board in mid-1976 ••wi.....-. Coeling Bis Beeb Nine·month-old Scott Phillips \\>a::i quite content 111 thb l\lontreal PoOl when the temperature hit 104 degret•s. The tot had a bottle and his grandmother within r eat'h. People Asked WA S HINGTO N (AP> - Budget Director Bert Lance, ap- pealing to the American people to be "the jury in this proceed- ing," told the Senate today that while he may have made mis· takes running his Georgia banks he engaged in no wrongdoing and no cover-up. "I am secure and comfortable knowing that my conscience is clear and that the people's verdict will be a fair and just one." the director of President Carter's Office or Management and Budget told the Senate Gov· ernmenlal Affairs Co mmittee. Drawling slowly and solemnly, HOMETOWN RALLIES FOR BER'T LANCE1 A4 Panel Okays Popular Vote For Preside nt Holiday Tragedy Told Lance told the two senior mem- bers of the committee to their face they have been unfair 1rrv their public statements beldr~ · this, his day in court. - Speaking •·more in sorrow than in anger." Lance told the senior Rl·publican, Sen. Charles Percy, t h<i t has actions were "PUZ· 1hni! . regrettable." WASJllNGTON tAP > -The $enate Judiciary Committee ap· eroved today, by a 9-8 vote, a pro- posed CQnltitutional amendment to provide for the election of the president by direct popular vote. Attempts to attach a series of othe r constitutional amend· ments, including one to let states decide whether to prohibit abortions, were rejected. Also rejected was a proposed l)mendment to retain the elec- toral college system of electing the prdident but to allot each state's electoral votes to the can· didates in proportion to their popular vote in the state. This lost. 8 to.7. El Toro Adobe To Be Clo1ed .. After.Friday The Serrano Adobe ln El Toro wW be open to the public from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. Friday. It will be the tut chance to see the historic str ucture before restoratiao work~ins. Air Force Admits Guilt in Baby's Death l't>rc} replied that he ques- tioned the dates on some of Lancc·s personal ch ecks and .,.. hl'lher they were limed to help ham obtain a tax dl:!duction. MIAMI <APJ ·-Mi chelle Pope's baby died at delivery because a base hospital was on a three-day holiday and the limited staff failed to give her "proper care and treatment.·· The Air Force admits it was .at rault. It has offered $15,000 in restitution. But Mrs. P o pe and h e r estranged husband, Army Sgt. James Pope, say it's not enough to make up for mental suffering and the breakup of their mar· riage. "I never saw m y baby. I had to ask if it was a boy or a girl. I wanted her to have her na me. not 1ust be a dead baby,·· Mrs. Pope testified Wednesday. A federal judge s et a final hearing for Friday to decide the government's liability. It was not known how much the Popes are asking. Tes timony s howed Jessica Marie was alive and well In her mother's womb when the lime for delivery arrived and P"5Sed but that labor should have been induced. But the Homestead Air Force Base hospital staff failed to give Mrs. Pope needed tes ts when she arrived because no doctors were on duty during the 1915 Veterans Pay holiday. The night duty nurses, U,e government •dded, 'Were not certain of their ablUty to t[eat the woman ·1 knew what was going on, but I didn't want to know," Mrs. Pope testified Wednesday in a choked voice. Sh& said when the baby was de- livered, the doctor would not speak to her or show her the baby. "l looked over and the nurse . Disaster Area SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. Edmund Browtt-Jr. has called for a presidential disaster declara- tion for Imperial County where heavy rains and flooding last month caused S28.5 million in damage. was crying," Mrs. Pope recalled ''Then I knew." She said her divorce one year later was caused by the mental anguish she and her husband su! fE:red becaus e of the baby .., death. Mrs. Pope broke down on lhC' stand and the tcst1mon~ \\a'.'> rt• cessed for 15 minutes to allow her to regain composure. In taking responsilnlily for the death, the Air Force s aid: "The United Slates does not contest the allegation that iC proper care and treatment were rendered to the patient, Michelle Pope, the baby would, based on a reasonable .degree of medical certainty. have been delivered alive and healthy." 'It w;1s wrong for me to even rnb t• the• possibility." Percy con· n·dt'll. Then. one by one, the Presl- dl·nt 's longtime personal friend rc plwd to allegat.Jons made in past weeks that his personal and bank ckalings, mos t or them before he joined the Carter gov· ernmcnt. were marked by ir- r egularities and improprieties. When he finished reading his 134-hour statement, he got a half minute of hearty applause Crom spectators in the hearing room. ·New Theater Gr~up Starting in Viejo Lance told the panel and a na· tional television audience that his rights had "been treated in the most irresponsible and destructive manner" and allega· <See LANCE, Page t\2) Vandal P o111'8 Acid On Carpet in Tor o An organizational meeting for lbe new Mission Viejo Repertory Theater will begin al 7: 30 tonlCht in Mission Viejo High School's Little Theater. All people who are interested in becomhti involved in the 1roup ot who support the idea of a serious theater in the com· munity are invited to atte"d the meeting. The 1roup wlll be the second community theater organization in the area. The Saddlebaek V.alley Community Theater formed tilde more than two yeanaao. "1 hope the area un 16pport th• two 1roup1," uld Pat C9Uem. one of the oraanlnn of the new 1roup. She explalnld tbal her 1r0up envlllou mon:i prof.atGnm produetlOu, lnclud· ln1 polai.~Jy a Sbli11pearean rettlval aDd· • 1umrnw muaic fllr. . Eventually, 1be 1ild, they hope to brin• 1n ~ from the out· 1l4M ''1nd "'n~au1 m ake t ~-..·· .. ~ .... Wiii tMlr I ~ ailil-:l:L·of g:z_,,._~ ......... ...... .vm1n1. ·J ay Rayl, a drama teacher at El Toro High School, ls chairman of the new group. Mrs. Cullem and Ann Vardanian, drama teacher at Mbslon Viejo High School, are his assbtanta and Fran Chapman is secretary. Further information may be obtained by c'all(ng 586-3808 or 768-6574. Orange County sheriff's of· flcers are investigating a break. in at an El Toro home where an unknown intruder poured acid on · carpetlni throuehout the home. Deputies said damage estimat- ed at $2,000 was inflicted on the vacant home at 15131 Windwood Lane. 'l'he home ls owned by Homos Rafaat, '709 Narcissus Ave., Corona del Mar. t:aP,,o B ":ard; MAC 'SupJlRTt Park Plan • transferred $250.000 this week from the ftneral fund to the Oto- iejo project -the firat f\mdin& let ulde for development of the acruae. As ll now 1tand1, lb• Jthool dll· · lrkt WOuld uac 10 acru of tlae..llie to build tts acbool and d.velop another 10 acres for recre.t.lonll UH by both the school dlltlkt ud tlW~anlt)'. TM remaialn1 land woWd be dtv~ by the county ~th a tre\l •llt•m a1on1 the creek. practice fl•l~•i::.J'?~r Heter ftekll, ...... IORO&U ftetdt •• ~ ~.t.. ninDhil ~ GP41n.-. aa......., laeL • ...... ...,..... APPEALS TO PEOPLE Lance at Hearing Black's Beach 'Failed Noble Experiment'? SAN DIEGO <AP> --Turning over a public beach to nudism was "a noble experiment that failed,·· a newspaper said today in urgmg that Black·s Beach be restricted to suit-wearing. "Even its advocates now deplore tbe voyeurism , the OC· casional bizarre behavior, the body painting of unclotM~ children.·· said the San Diego Union in an editorial. The municipal beach has been classified "swimsuit optional" Cor three years and is one of the most popular areas along lhe coast. The newspaper, urging ap- proval of an election issue before San Diegans on Tuesday, said it agreed with police that Black·s Beach is "not a hotbed of crime." But it is "the only area of its kind in the entire country --it is the kind of attraction we don't need and1ion't want," the Union s aid. Co at Weathe r Cloudy late tonight and early Friday morning. Partly clo~dy afternoon and evening houfs. Lows tonight 58 to &t. Hl1hs Fri- day near 70Js •l beaches to mld·'l'OI tnleltd. INSIDE TODAt' 1\! OAIL Y PILOT Lance 'Arlned' For Hearings WASHINGTON CAP) -~rt l,ance 1truck back at hi• tomen· tors todoy, acUn1 u 11 h~ CODlld red hlm.ell GulUvt'r beaet by Ulhi)l.IU ns He let 1t bo known al tJMa outset that b1I remark• were aimed at lbt' Anwr1can PfOpJe. not the senators on t.he Governmental Affairs Committee. "I WELCOME THEM A8 THE jury in thi1 proceeding," Lan ce s1ud u)to t he tel,l:vi&1on cameras. "I a m secure and comfortable knowma that my coo cieoce ti clear and that the people's verdict will be a fair und just one." · The settine was one or thole bt1 Senate OCfice Buildina hearing rooml> that have become so familiar in movie and TV fictionalized accounts as well as in real Ute. The Senate Watergate bearings spring tomlnd,althoughtheywereinadifferentcbamber. • Lance, the kind of big amiable fellow who looks as·1r he'd cry I( he squashed a bug, came armed for the fight With a 49·page stale· ment lo read. And Sen. Abraham Ribicoff <D-Conn.), the chairman of the COflmittee, s aid he'd get all the time be needed, 11 it takes a Saturday'session. That alone mdicates a sen ous m atter. LANCE WALKED INTO THE hearing room 15 minutes early with his lawyer, Clark CUCford, who was described as urbane as long ago as Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S Truman. Now he's described as white-h aired and urbane. "l don't feel lonely today at all,•· said Lance as he looked around the crowded.room. He had plenty or support. Wife LaBelle and son David, 22, sat in the front row, righl'hehind the ta bles for reporters. "Nervous this morning?" a reporter asked as Lance made his way lo center stage. "No," he said. HE STOOD COMFORTABLY BEHIND the witness table as a horde of photographers, sandwiched between the senators at their semicircular bench, clicked away. Lance's bands were in his pockets. He looked unruffled. The senators, m eanwhile, looked lonely and ignored. Rlbicoff called the hearing to order five minutes late a nd in· toned that "we don 't in lend this to be a trial by ordeal." AND SO IT WENT. LANCE'S first session or what he called his day in court. One lesson he has learned, Lance told the senators in a Gulliver to Lilliputian-lone of voice, "is to be mighty careful in the future when I a m discussing basic human rights." A~Wl ........ to LINING UP TO HEAR BERT LANCE TESTIFY 'The People"s Verdict Will Be Fair, Just' F,....PageAJ LANCE ON STAND. • • tions against him have been "er- roneou s. ·\.mis repres ent- <.'d ... and ex a gge rated ." Moreover, he said, "some are comple t e ly mis unde r stood because those making the charge do not have all the facts ... " "l did not ask for th.is fight, but now that I am in it, I am fighting not only for myself but also for ' our system," Lance declared. "1 was a s uccessful businessman in m y home stale, and I t ought I h ad an important contrib tion to make by coming into vern- m ent service." The budget d ector as said again and again he not quit, His demeanor and his words ap- peared to underscore that de- termination. But even as he spoke, House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill told reporters that because of Lance's financial problems "the image of the President is going down a Ut- tle bit." · Seated at a long table covered with green felt pnd emblazoned with a ·nameplate -.. Mr. Lance" -the budget director told the committee: 'The rights that I ,thought I possessed have OftANOI COMT .. DAILY PILOT gone, one by one, down the . drain ... "Were my rights protected?' he a s k e d . "We '.11 le t th-e American people answer that " He declined to "co.ntend that I made no mistakes" when he ran the Calhoun First National Bank of Calhoun, Ga., or whkh he was board chairman, and tbe Na· tlonal Bank of Georgia, in Atlan- ta. which he served as President. ''But to accept the assertion that I could not even manage a s mall country bank, one must Ig- nore the objective facts," he told the committee, which recom- mended his confirmation as the nation's budget make r last J a nuary. Lance told th e panel he answered questions from mem- bers and from its staff fully and accurately in January and withheld nothing. In regard ~o personal loans he received from banks with whlcb his own banks had special r~la· tionships, he said, "In no ln· s tance was there a finding that the terms of my loans were more favorable" bec4use of the bual· ness ties. . Lance vigorously aenled he had backdated llJ'\Y checks to al- low him to ta1'e tncpme tax de- ductions for 1916. a possibllity sugosted b.y Percy Friday. Lance also made lt clear that ho did not take any improper deduc· ti on.a. "I deeply rearet that Sen. Percy saw flt to 1ct tn thit rqre~ table manner in makina a.cbarae which bas 1\9 mertt. wbataoever, •• Lance declared, New Srltool Peppers Co·capt ains Peggy Day <lcfU and Tami Turnt•1· lrighll a pd Cap.tain Nan cy Me_rola tcentrr, put Capil>tr ano Valley High School Pep Squad through its paces for the school's first pep r a.lly. Frid.ay The new !.ChO(>I. whic!ti opcne<l !\londay in Mission V1eJo. \\ 111 hold HS first d ance Saturd uy at 8 p.m . in the gymnasium. Inquiry Panel Sets HB Rocket Study By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI tlle Dally Pit_, St.ltt A special study panel of in- quiry was ap(Xlinted today by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. (NASA) to study why a rocket built in Huntington lleach failed 111 a Tuesday nighl launch from Capt• Canaveral's Kcnnt.'<.ly Space Center The giant rocket hefting a Eur~an Space Al\?ncy lESA> C'omm~nicat1ons satellite into the heavens on an experimental m1s- s1on was blown lo bits ltke a S40 mill ion firecracke r Divers beg•m lo hum wr~kage at daybreak Wednesday along the sea floor in 65·fool depths of the Atlantic Ocean off the cape to rc:.tsi-.cmblc 1n search of clues to lhc r::ulure. A N ASA c;pok esman 1n Was~ington, D.C said today it a ppears the r ocket built b) Mc Donnell Douglas Astronaut1<:s Company began to break up in flight Flight records of the fi rst Delta since 1969, indicate the craft began to mbl e and had t c a estroyed a by remote co trol to prevent an ident o the g round -possibly habited areas Alabama, will h ead the in- vestigative team, NASA officials said today. Newport Theft Newport Beach police look- ing for the two young wo.men o bilked an elderly woman out. of $2,200 in cash and her weddln1 rings in what one det~ciive . described as "a textbook Ca.!>e of pigeon drop." '' Pigeon drop is the na me ot a bunco scheme practiced usually on elderly women, like the 74· year-old Santa Ana resident who lVBS victimized Wednesday after- noon. . Police said the woman was sQs>pping at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa when a woman in her mid-twenties stopped her in the m all and pretended lo be an ~quaintance. They chatted for a while and the young woman re- lated she had a friend who had . fourwl a bag containing $45,000 in cash andq.Some pornographic photos. The young woman told her e lderly compa niol\. that the friend was afraid to turn the money In to police. but didn't know what to do with it . At th,is poinl, the friend joined the two women and the first young woman suggested she talk to her .boss to see what sho.uld be done. While the pair waited, the young woman disappeared, a1- legedly to see her empl9yer, and returned with lhe following ad-vice: · They could keep the cash, since WelcoDJ_e Warm · WA SHINGTON <AP > - F r e n c h Prime Minis t e r R aymond Barre. received a warm White House welcome to- day from President Carter as they began two days of talks on issues rang1ng from Concorde landings in the United States to international economics. Barre s aid the friends hip and alliance between the two countries is "more necessary than ever." . QUALITY TELEVISION -1 - aJ probably IUlcftly gained and they could divide it up between them, provldeci they didn't spend any for 90 d~s. In order to qualify fof their share, each of the thPee women would have to show an attorney, a Mr. Stouts, they had enough cas h to live on for the 90-day waiting period. The two young women took the olde' woman tp her home·where she got the money and the rings then drove to the attomey's of- fice ln Newport Beach. One woman went up to the lawyer's omce with th~ woman'• funds and with the found money, r eturning moments later ap· pa rently empty-hantied. The older woman was then sent upstairs to talk to the lawyer ana collect her cash, but when she got there. there was no lawyer~s of· fl ee, no cash and by then, the two young women had departed. Wast Feels Quake From ~imArea A Wednesday earthquake cen- tered on a fa ult in An aheim measured 2.7 on the Richter scale and was strong eno~h to be felt by residents as far away as Costa Mes a , Cal Sta te Fullerton seismologists said to-d ay. It was the first quake that could be detected without instru- ments in Orange County since Me morial Day, according to Christopher Buckley, assistant professor of earth sciences. Buckley said the quake hit at 2:35 p.m. on an unnamed fault five miles south of the campus. The tremor caused no damage and apparently affected an area 15 miles from its point of origin. A spokesman for the Goddard Space Flight Center in Green· bell, Md., said Wednesday that onboa~d TV cam~ras monitoring the s hip showed r1re breaking out a t the lop of one engine just beforehand. It gives you that great Zenith : color picture automaticallyl 'l~;~;;;~~:~~:, Thi,. of It u • lV oontrol R>Onl In your •U It control• 11\e color picture -0 The COLE• SJ1939W •.• conects tho colof picture •• , 30 llmea a eecot'ld eutomatlcallyt Finished In s1mula18d grained Ameucan Wa1nu1 with brushed Aluminum color accents. Earphone. The onboard blaze and sudden erratic trajectory convinced a U.S. Air Force range safety of. fl eer it was time to press the red button and blow the missile to bits .. Major part s of the Delta plunged, fiery and hissing, into the sea ~rom about five miles in the sky m a dazzling aerial djs. play visible for miles over the southeastern United States. FINAL 1977 CLEARANCE . , ....... ,.,,.,"'en. .... • "Mfff' lffl!VY Y°'ttOt """"•''"' lptfft • A._'°"'9hc RM-hl'''*nt c.nt.101 Other portions fluttered lightly to earth on Cape Canaveral's tip. George B. Harding, of the Mars hall Space Center in rolice Probe ~PY gf Bomb.' Plan in Irvine . Irvine Police were trying today· to determine the authenUcity of a Xerox copy or an apparent pJan ~ to make a bomb, discovered Wednesday by an Edwards Laboratorieis employe. The diagram was found tn U.. printout tray ot the copytn1 machine. located Just lnslde the loadJnl ud ahJpplnf doclc o( the faelll'11 at1401 Alton Ave. Personnel 1Mana1er Rlck Barkley called poltae when an employe ahowed him tho draw· Jnf, PoUce 1atd the dr•wtns •~ p .. Nd tO be planJ for a rldk>l oontrolltd bOmb, whltb di•· 11'.•.~med bluUn1 caps ancl Oaree 1tlcu ot d1fta0llte, wsu. power boolter. bet~flta and what •PPMnd ab bit a t~ ne.-wr. TM maw ot tM iUqrama ap. pareaur ••• 1•1.:merate. SeYeral labellfti wotdl •we lnll-1~. • ~•UteCOf'l!l~ BIG SAVINGS t • T~ul'" day•a· 2 p.m. (EDT) Pri ,. \ 2'1'. 7\\ 20)I, ••• 20'·· • ~­It'll. ,.., . "' • • 1~ •••• 1''\. . ,, ......... ""• "• ····-"" ' , ~ ~ ., 11 ,,, • "' 50 10' .. ~ 1 .~ ...... s 11'.•. ,, • • •• t •tt 114 , ••• ISi l• 11t 2'tJ. • v. n ... J"-····· II'~ •• I J0'11-\1 36 -1,1, 311 •• v. 76 + ,,, , .... .,,. •'le. l4o IJ •• ,., 211'• .. Va u•.-.,. »\\ -"' '" .. .. "''• ... . \~ ---·------------------- TB~SAt;;TIONS ' . JN FACT. OF COURSE, banks are as much in b ness as an apparel company or"'tood processor . They, have a product to sell They, too, hope to sell that prod at a profit. ·. The product banks have to sell is money They buy It fit you and me and others at one rate -say, in the ronn of • ings accoun~. the quarterly interest you receive belnl e price you're getting for your mon~ And then they loan ltOut at a higher interest rate, · The bulge between what they pay for their money and what they get for loaning It represents their ,profll margin. Money Tree' Before the advent of the credit cer<I, if you wanted 't6 borrow money from a bank, you had td fill out a long ap- pllcaUon form. It was a cumbersome affair, and bankers were never famous for making the small borrower feel ._ comfortable. • Today ban1<ers have made it easy for ua to become iJtS· • tanl borrowers. Just go to a store or hotel or car rental aeency or a1rllne ticket counter . nub your card and presto --you have the product or service you destre. IF YO() PAY THE MONTHLY BILUNG in full rieht away. it doesn't ~ost anything extra. But in pracUce two out or three cardholders cannot -or do not -pay ln fqll And what we don't pay immed1ately becomes a loan -at IS-percent annual interest • At n rst the bank credit card b~lness proceeded alo~g t wo t rack s . There was one group tbat 11 s utd BankAmerlcard while another eroup Issued Master Charge. Now. 'though. tne business has taken a wlld tu~. Banks that issued BankAmerlcards <Uus name is being changed to Visa; can issue Master Charee cards. And Master Charge banks are free lo issue Visa cards. As a result, banks are hustling to get their cards into your hands. The nation's largest. Bank of America.~ bas som e 4.5 million Visa cardholders m California. On Feb. 15 it began issuing Master Charge cards as well. ll has already issued 800,000 Master Charge cards. MORE THAN 65 Mll.UON BANK credit cards are already in the s><>t>Session of Amencan consumers. The present drive by the banks lo :;ign .up i::ardholders r.an ex· pand that total by two or three limes. It's now easy for you to get your hands on two. three. four cards •· The banks don ·t care if you don •t pay off the balances. They're quite willing to accept a mmimum payment. The smaller the payment. the bigger the mteresl on the out- standing balance In their t eal to sell credit, the bankers wall make dead· beats of us all ' lapanese PlllftlOuth For the 1978 model year , Plymouth will introduce !f ·•tuxury" subcompact from Japan. the Sapporo. ! Soviets Schedule Exhibition in L4 !f • .... .. ' LOS ANGELES <AP> -Tbe Soviet sovernment pl~ to bold ln Nov•mber the first trade and cultural exhlblU • ln the United Stat.es since las8. • Alexander I. ZiathuJt, the Soviet con1ul 1eneral ln S Francisco. jolntd wtth act1n1 Lo.s Anietu Mayor J Ferraro and oc.hcr city offtclalJ to announce that ~ ~e.les ha<l been select.eel over other m~r U.S. clUet f~ tbt Soviet National Exhibition acbedwtd tor Nov. 8-29. • "WE HAV£ A GREAT POTENTIAL on both aldts~ tht Paclllc to trade with each othC!.r, to deal with e other.'' ukt Zbachak. The ~xhlbiUon, to be 1ta1ed at Loi Ansel• Coawntion ~.nttr. will coel an eatlmaltd mUU. ~ IDt.Juodl ublbill on scieoet, t.bt ecvlroom• art8. bi.lilneil and OUiu netda, 1p0ke1men aald. . Tbe event ls beln1 cloUded by p~•ts rrom 10ml Jewfjh • :t B::'mu Sl Frum~h>, head of \be ulbi Callfornla Coi.lnell fl>r Sovtet 1ewa. •-'41. "l thin every In the Jewilh communlui wnt perc:elve thlt u a 4eUber apd unmtticeid ln1uti•• beum• lbe exhJblt WU nouohd Gil h Hliibanu, • lmpanaot Jnlati bolid U DAILY F'll OT . COASTWATCH: Tonight's 1' Fare EVENING ~:00 IJ 8 G t) \I NEWS " 80HAN2A A )'OUng "'•"chman. believing h1m1e11 10 ~ lhe re1ncarnauon ot a tamOui poet ••h· &bout llVlng the man 111ta 0 Wlt.0, Wt\.D WEST The Nlghl 0 1 The FrMbOOtara' Wfft and Gordon ere assigned to inve,11gate an LWtlaw armv being recru1t4'd tor 1he conquest ot Beta Calilornia • MICKEY MOUSE CLUB Q) I DREAM OF JEANNIE ft) SESAME-STREET ~ MISTER ROGERS 5:30 '8 TOM ANO JERRY Cl) ROOM 222 C!) CARRASCOLENDA'S e:oo u CBS NEWS 00 NEWS 8 EMERGENCY ONEI The paramedics talk down an air· plane piloted by a 14-year·old boy when the pilot aullers a heart attack 0 MY PARTNER THE GHOST Escorting valuable cargo lrom Glasgow 10 London turns out to be a risky asslgnrwent tor Jell Randall and his ghostly partner. '8 THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY Reuben feels he's not long lor this world when the Partridges start giving him special attention «!) ALIAS SMITH AND JONES Heyes and Curry try 10 find out why someone wants them to leave a town where they have found sale employment fL) ELECTRIC COMPANY C!) CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN A NATION OF ORPHANS ®J ABC NEWS 8:30 0 MOVIE • • • "Experiment In Terror" (Part 2) ( 1962) Glenn Ford, Lee Remick. A lerror·slricken glrl must aid the F B I in the capture of a master crlm1nal ( 1 hr . 30 min ) 0) THE ODO COUPLE EI!) ZOOM '1!) PUBLIC POLICY FORUM "Freedom 0 1 The Press Regula- llon Or The Media' (()CBS NEWS ®J MERV GRIFFIN 7:000 NBCNEWS 8 LIARS CLUB 0 ABCNEWS 0 CONCENTRATION 0) I LOVE LUCY "Nursery School" ti) THEF.B.1 Erskine vies with an organ1zec:1 crime ring 10 locate a messenger and •recover importanl evidence before the man ciln be killed REDO FOXX will headline hi• own mualcel verl•· ty series this fall, featuring 1om• of the blggHt names ln show buslneas at gueat1. It's tltled, simply enough, Redd Foxx end premlerea tonight at 10 on ABC, Channel 7. ment park. fJl) 28 TONIGHT "Displaced Homema~s" ~SPECIAL "lncludlng Me" Six handicapped ettlldren reach their potenttal with the help of encouraging parents, teachers and friends. CJ) CANDID CAMEAA ~ MATCH GAME P.M. 8:00 f) CJ) THE WAL TONS (Season Premiere) With the out. break ol World War II, Rev Fordwtcit enhsts ln the Army. His chosen replacement Is a good- looklng. charming young rebel (Peter Fox) who wins the approval of Ollvla but is opposed by Cora. beth (Aonnre Claire Edwards) 0 CHIPS (Premiere) Two bachelor motorcy. cle officers (Larry Wiicox. Erik Estrada) take on a sophisticated car-theft ring and a load of Indus. trial glue spilled on the L.A free- way. 8 MOVIE • * * "The Desert Rats" ( 1953) Ratings Guide ' Richard Burton. James Mason. The commander of an Australian division forces his war-weary troops to defend a key North Afri- can outpost. ( t hr., 30 min.) 0 ®l WELCOME BACK, KOTTER (Sea.son Premiere) " ... And Four's A Crowd" It's a big surprise -twins for papa Gabe and mama Julie. (Part• 1 and 2 of 3) 0 MOVIE * * * "Solomon And Sheba" ( 1959) Yul Brynner, Gina Lollobri- glda laraelltes revolt against the romance between the Queen ot Sheba and King Solomon. (2 hrs.) 0) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL "The World Of Jacques-Yves Cousteau" Captain Cousteau and a crew of live lived and worked 328 feet below the Mediterranean Stir· face for 11 month. Q) PERRY MASON "The Case Of The Greek Goddess" Mason defends an old friend who Is charged with murder- ing a Greek Immigrant woman. Northern Ireland, by a ruthlea1 trlah terrorist (Stephen Boyd). 0 ROCK MUSIC AWARDS Peter Frampton and Olivia Newtoh.John wlll ·host this third annual 1how featuring the blgge1t names In popular music at the HOI· l~ood Palladium U ®l BARNEY MILLER (Season Premiere) "Goodbye Mr Fish" It is retirement day tor Detective Fish, but he cM't be found. Meanwhlle. the re't of the squad tries to atop a vlgllante Q!OUp. (Part 1 of 2) QI M~RV GRIFFIN (!) BILL V GRAHAM CRUSADE fJD SPECIAL "Including Me" Slit handicapped children reach their potential with the help of encouraging parents, teachers and friends C!) MOVIE ** * "Algiers" (l938) Charles Boyer, Hedy Lama&. An lnterna- llooal Jewel thief takes refuge In the exotic Casbah. 9:30 8 FILM FEATURE 0 9 CARTER COUNTRY (Premiere) A Southern town·a may· or (Richard Paul) givea a black. New York City-trained policeman fKene Holliday) the task of telling the police chief (Victor French) he is not wanted on the dais welcom· Ing the President. 10:00 8 G NEWS 0 OJ REDO FOXX (Premiere) A fast-paced, contem- porary comedy-variety show featuring guest stars. Cl) ROOM 222 Kaufman, attracted to a teacher who was once a nun. sopporta her when she's criticized for advising a student who plans to become a minister. fD MASTERPIECE THEATRE "Dickens Of London" At 19, Charles has discovered the cap- tivating Marla BeadnelL a banker's daughter who recelvet much ol his attention. (Part 3 ol 10) (J) BARNABY JONES (Season Premiere) An unethical newscaster (Robert Reed), In his attempt to create news. causes the death of a stuntmen and a priest 10:30 G) (!) NEWS 11:00 f) 0 0 (I) ®l NEWS 0 HOLLYWOOD CONNECTION 0 IRONSIDE "Accident" m FERNWOOO 2NIGHT Gueata: daredevll-turned-educator Vlrgll Simms. liquor lobbyist Elliot Tubbs. Cl) MARCUS WELBY, M.D. The relatlonship between Identical twins Is allected when ooe la badly burned. G TONIOHT.,. Host: Johnny c Gua111 Johnny Mathia. Conway Elayne Booster. St e Landesberg II LOVE, AMERI N STYLE A woman decides o u&e a love potion In order to her long-time !lance to propose D O POLICEST "The Otlltlng Edge' hen his e,art· ner retires . a th y-year police veteran has a hard Ima adjusting Chuck Connora. S eater Stallone guest star. (R) '8 NEWS fD CAPTIONED A NEWS MORNING 12:00 8 TWILIGHT .. A Kind Of Stopwat " ClJ MOVIE • • •;, "Kathy O"\ (1958) Dan Duryea, Jan Sterllng1 A pony-tailed movie star's tempen,causes prob- lems for the studio ~blicJty man (2 hrs.) '8 CROSS-WITS Cl) MOVIE ••..+"You Pay Your ~oney" (1957) Hugh McDermott. Jlne Hylton. A couple attempts to top the thef1 of a valuable Arab anuscript. (1 hr., 30 min.) 12:30 8 MOVIE **'.'#"We're Not ~rrled" (1952) David Wayne, Glnge Rogers. Five couples are surprls to learn that their marriages are leg~I, ( 1 hr • 25 min.) m MOVIE * • "The Ooollns <1 Oklahoma" ( 1949) Randolph Stott, George MacReady. A fOlmff outlaw Is unable to escape his past. (2 hrs.1 12:37 D «) 1f"HURSDAY NIGHT SPECIAL • "The Late Great 1968" A retros- pective of the year wlh host Henry Gibson and guests Lt. William Calley,· Tom Wolfe and Tammy Wynette. (R) 1:00 0 TOMORROW Various religious culs will be dls- wssed by Carroll Stoner and Joanne Park. author~ ot 'All God's Chltdren.' 1:30g) MOVIE * •'h "Larceny. Inc · ( 1942) Edward G. Robnson. Jene Wyman. An ex-con buys a luggage 1tore as a means of access<to the bank next door. but discovers he doesn't have to sleet to make money. 1:568 NEWS 2:0000 NEWS 8 MOVIES • * * "City That Never Steeps" ( 1953) Gig Young, Mala Powers. A young Chicago cop is nearly led astray by 11 cafe entertainer (2 hrs.) atunt man savea the Ille of • famou1 movie ec1re11. (2 t:rs.) * • * "The Life And Oeatt: 01 Colonel Blimp" (1943) Deborah Kerr Anion Walbrook. A Brltlat: Army officer 11 unable to cope with the constant change his career demand1. (2 hrs.1 i :301J NEWS '8 MOVIES ·• ••lt "Sign Ot The Rem" (19481 Susan Peters. Alexander Knox. Driven by her tear ot lonellneaa, an invalid over-protects her family. (1 hr. 30 min.) • • "The Mob" (19511 Broderick Crawford. Betty Buehler. A detec- tive pose' a& a dock worker and a gunman to inllltrate a g8/'lg of waterfront racketeen. (2 hra.) 3:00 Cl) NEWS 3:05f) MOVIE • • 'n "The Capetown Affair" ( 1967) Claire Trevor. Jamee Brolln. Two South African secret aeNk:49 agent• attempt to retrieve a roll of stolen claulfled microfilm ( 1 hr., 25 min.) 4:25 f) NOONTIME Friday's Dagtbn.e Movies MORNING 9:00 0 MOVIE * • •;, "The Perfect Furlough" (1959) Tony Curtis. Janel Leigh. An Army officer la accompanied by a female psychologist when he wine a week in Paris with a movie star. (2 hrs.) 10:00 D MOVIE • • * "Enchantment" ( 1949) David Niven. Teresa Wright An elderly men Is reminded of his put romance when hla grandaon con- fronts him with hi• love atory. (2 hrs.) AFTERNOON 12:00 '8 MOVIE • • • "B.F ·s Daughter" ( 1948) Barbara Stanwyck. Van Heflin. An ambitlo4s daughter of an lnd~rlal tycoon nearly ruins her marriage by her dominance. (2 hrs., 20 mln.J 2:00 Q MOVIE · * • • "Bengal Brigade" (1954) Rock Hudson. Arlene Dahl. One man stands against the onslaught ol allacking Indian rebels. (1 hr., 30mln.) 3:00 ®) MOVIE EI!) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT (() -1'0 TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 U NEWL YWEO GAME 0 THE GONG SHOW 0 JOKER'S WILD tMovr"' ar• <•tf!d ~<o,.dlt'\Q to bO• ottl<e aO•~nc.t Mcfv,~, to,-TV .,,. lu<IO~ t>y • trltk I • • • • -Excellent • • • -Very Good • • -Good • • -Fair fJl) MASTERPIECE THEATRE "Upstairs, Downstairs· Such A Lovely Man" The Bellamy• lace a social dllemma--Vlrglnla is Invited out by a rich and pohtlcally Influen- tial man whose help her husband. Richard, needs 8:30 '1!) INCLUDING ME "Follow-Up" tJ1.1 WOMAN "Pornography" Ii) MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT 11:30 £) (J) CBS LA TE MOVIE ** "Cold Sweat" (1974\ Charles Bronson, l:.lv Ullmann A man and his wife are terrorized and held captive In their own hOme • * "Sahara On Fire.. ( 19631 Christian Marquand, Magali Noel A man struggles to bring In an oil well with the eld of a misfit crf!W (2 hrs.) ***'"' "San Francisco" (1936) Clark Gable. Spencer Tracy.~ Bar- bary Coast gambler and hi• boy- hood pal, now a priest. have dltter· en}t reasons tor conoern ovef a yo"Mig singer (2 hrs.) 3:30 0 MOVIE • •'h "Tribes" (1970) Darren McGav1n, Jan-Michael Vincent. An hippie creates problems fOf his tough drill sergeant because of his unconvenhonat ways ( 1 hr . 30 mini m THE BRADY BUNCH 9:00 f) (I) HAWAII FIVE-0 The Brady kids accompany Mike on a business trip to an .amuse- • -Poor (Season Premiere) An el(Otlc new explot1ve Is hijacked, 10< use m • Tiro New COp Shows, ·Redd Foxx in Debut$ By JAY SHARBUTT LOS ANGELES <A P ) -Three new series wob· b l c in tonight a California Highwa y Patrol party ca lied "CllJPs" on NBC. Chan· nel 4 at 8. und ABC's ··carter Country" sit com and Redd Foxx· new <:omedy, music and old times hour on Channel 7 We warn right off the bat that NRC's entry 1s u i.tone dog Intended as action without gunfire. it 1s show without mind. It stars Larry Wilcox and Erik Estrada as two cheery motorcycle cops Wilcox is your basic All·Am e rican, aw· s hucks boy. Estrada .plays the lacjy killer. • "Ponch." Hie has a .crooked smile, but ·:straight teett1. Both are dashing young bachelors, Kawasaki Kids, iryou will. (Tv REVIEW J few affirmative-action and mild racial gags tossed in to indicate pro- gress. The Redd Foxx hQur on· ABC has the only hope o f s uc cess 14 mong tonight's new entries. and that hope is faint un· less be relies more on improved skits and less on a friendly, laugh~al· anything studio au · dience. He opens with a good bit involving two bogus world l ead e rs, and follows with a passable monotogue ln which he notes ABC's censors "de· cided the only thing l could do from my night club actls smoke .. .'' But things bog down witb .,POW·Obligatory 1938 Anita Bryant Joke~: a skit on h ow u black named Yuma. Ariz.; a / massage parlor routine, and a scene from "The Wiz " we saw on H . Cosell's variety show :1 two years ago STILL, THREE good moments are worth your time a oo·brief visit from I ~ Wilson, an old 'oxx pa Ut· prisin ly good reading o( "Easy o Love" by F.gxx . and a largely .J!Went routine bout inventors. The I t has Foxx and Byron Paul . ex · executive producer or last year 's Dick Van Dyke show on NBC, as inventors or identical and a mazing mixing blenders. Had Foxx cut the dialogue, shortened the beginning and end, the routine would equal Ernie Kovacs' best. Starring CHARLES BO~ and HEDY I.AM.ARR ' Tonight's TV~ Hi~ghts . NBC EJ 8:00 ···Chips. The only new cop shO\I•' of the season, this one follows a puir of California Highway Patrol motorcycle officers tLarry Wilcox and Erik Estrada) on their rounds. ABC fJ 8:00 · -Welcome Back. Kot· ter . Gabe and Julie start off the new season by producing twins in this hour· long opening segment. Gabriel Kaplan stars NBC S 9:00 Rock Music Awards Pop stars turn out at the Palladium in I lollywood tor this third annual event, hosted y Peter Frampton and Olivia Newton-bn. ABC fJ 9:30 -Carter Country. It's "ln the eart of the Night" with laughs as a bla k policeman <Kene Holliday> joins l e taff of a Southern.fried sheriff <Victor ench >in this season premiere. 0 MOVIES • • "Female Animal · ( t968) Hedy Lamarr Jane Powell A young 'Barth' Plays Rocke'9 Marlin MuJI, who is Barth Gimble on "Femwood Tonight," will play a rock s uperstar on "Wonder Woman' . .Dean Jones and Paul Sand will star in "Once Upon a lirother; Grimm." a two-hour CBS Tbanksgi\f ing special. IJlya Baskin and George Pusep. Jewish Immigrant actor wbo were \ film stars in the Soviet Union, will play Russians in ABC's "The San Pedro Beach Bums " .. David Gerber. executive producer ~ ·Police Story " will pa~ticipate in works hop panel on telev1si:On vk>lenc at the Mth annual Conference of l International Association or Chiefs Police in Los Angeles on Oct. 5 •.. Phil Bruns, who was the father of TV's Mary Hartman, will play a shady gas station operator in MGM's "Stingray" e ING . . . Jtlissf,Je Explodes I A Delta missile bum by Mc Do'hnell Douglas Corp. in J luntin~ton Beach is destroyed by range safety officers at Cape Canaveral io3 seconds after it was launched Tuesday. The rocket malfunctioned, forcing the blast. VD Abundant . . . ~mong Gays DENVER (AP) -Sexually activ~ ,homoseJt- uals tll\•e a 33 percent chance of contntctmg gonor- rhea in a gay bath house, a local study by::::;publlc health officials hafl shown. The finding, published in the American,J or Public Health, was contained in a study~onduct­ ed between January and October 11>76 by the Denver 'Metro Health Clinic and paid~ by the state health department. THE STUDY FOUND TJMT more than 11 per· cent of the patrons of three Denver steam bath.5 catering tohom.o~Qualshad gonorrhea. Pr. Richard Roth.enbere. acting head of the :.tale venereal disease program, said the figure is · ·raifly high" and probably indicates that 2'h times as many homosexuals as non·homosexuals from similar categories of age, r~ce and sexual activity have gonorrhea. lJ£ SAJD TH~ DENVER study "compares reasonably with other citie9 in which gay popula· tions have been.analyzed. It dOes confirm that VD is morecom11100.among g'\Y men." 9enver's deputy m1lnager of medical arr~s. Dr. John Sbarb8ro, saia the VD screening W.flS the '·firstin thecoontry done in gay baths.'' : "Most public health departments tend to shy away from anything at has to do with moraUstlc valu~ ... sajd Sbarbar . ''The Denver Metro clinic look the view that ther is o morality involved in disease." j IN FACT, HE SAtD, a secondary aim of tbe study.was to convince gay persons that they can be treat«!d fairly In the city's public clinics "' The clinic director. Dr,. Franklyn, N. Judson, speculi;tted ia·the arf,jcle f.hat the higher gonorrhee rate..amolli homosexuals "may be a function or homo~el4al ac;{s~~reater promiscuity, and Jessee: utilizciuoo.ol' the heal lb care facilities " • ' I A \ Sipmps /or Valley Rec Program Set .' " Fountaiit Valley Recreaµon Department ~ 'f1cialg· are taking sign ups for fall programs fro~'{ a.m. to.5 p.Qi.'..t,fUs week at the Community Center, 10200Slater Ave. .. M'ost ctas~~ begin next week. Registration is lakenOD a:firsticome, firstserved basi&, I' . . " .. ··A'n'VLT-tussEs INCLUDE: aerobic, belly,• squar~, ~d Tahltll)n·style dance, bow!Al~. btidge, cake decocating;goU, 9uitar, hunter safety, karate, m acra'1}~. ·racquetball, slim and trim, AJlng, skir\ and~tU·f.Vl ''diving, tennis. volleyball, weaving and Yoga. ' ... ' 19 ... • le•gues inclu~: c~ volleyball, men•s wll~ball, stow-:1>itch softball, coed softbaU and thfee-ttrah basketf>a.u. , 1 . YQ~ ·taOGaAMS lnc,:lude: ''ballet, tap; s-quare and Tahitian dance1 baton, bowling, children's aft; exptes~lve movement:' aolf', guitar, gymnastics, borsemanshi.,, hunter safety, lee skat• ing, Karate, skilnt. 'Skin and scuba dlvit)g, swirti team, tennis, tiny tot..a1td tumblitag. F9r more fnfoQtflUon, cal~ 98.1·8321, extension 236 • . ~ ) I DAILY PILOT -1JtUl'!day, September 15, 1977 · WES'JERN . TOILET SEATS TOILETS WATER SAVER LOW ,.. BOY 33°0 4400 That'• wh~ th~ beer cap brain Bunker calla them. You need a good one. you got lt. Aftw that the reat la all •uperfbioUL' IJfetlme tired porcel~ water aavera (aave even more. dQll't hook lt up.) SPLASH 'PUFFY' SOFT TOILET SEATS .\ , MAGNOUA WOOD TOILET SEATS ,I Juat how J am golng to proceed on th11 Item. I am not aure. (that 2 97 · WHITE #M-100 797 11!~s comma wa1n't nec:eaaary) COLORS 3~tOO!IVP HOT 497 COLORS •RVPllOA SW AN TUBWALL KIT 9700 You don't want your pla atered or drywall walla to crumble and go to nothlng. Tub wall kit. nlc:e and functional too. TUB ENCLOSURES UP~· AWAY SILVER 77oo GOLD 8900 Slldea up to create a full opening, lJ that ia what you n~ to make your We and your day more m eaningful. MEDICINE CABINETS RECESSED 13~~28 Ja ck aaya they are a kick. How any adult can be 90 agog _over auch an Item la beyond my comprehenalon. FLuiDMASTER BALLCOCK 397 · Before we get all excited. theM are wood replica& But wait. don't lecn'e. they laat better than wood, · d keep nlcer. REPLACEMENT SWINGING ;~.:·,:. SHOWEJ\ DOORS MOST2900 . s~ . Poaltive and quiet ahutotf. ln the john. TempeNCl 9lau 0 ~ ... a picture of some glau gettbag mad and swearing all O"NI the plaC:e.) COLUMBIA .. GLIDE-~MATIC Stl. VER 7700 ACADEMY :· SILVER 37oo ,.....rr~I ' GOLD 49oo . GOLD 8900 ' l ~~ 't U my Good Idea. both door• L----·----ln~ellectual c:an alld• to the aide ·friendil ear ~811-. i9ad th1li ad and create a full · every week. Ccm...they ~y be all that ammt? Anodlnd illver opening. °' gold. WINDSOR 1 7~s'f.a 2500 #5324 2900 #5330 3500 #533, · TRI-VIEW 6900 #159' 9700 #1539 10900 #1551 Flta between the atud1. nice atainleaa trim. a djustable glau ahelvea. Sliding cosmeUc cabinet. Cologne counter, lavlah atainieaa ateel ttlm. S.. all IJd .. of younelf. The outalde only. The lnaide peraon la atll1 e luaiYe (what la he talldng about?). WALL CABINETS PERMA-BILT HIGHU\NDER WALLMATE TREVILLE II WALLMATE What you aee la what you hope you get. The belt ad 1n the world la put to •ham• by the un.all- .. t rdH. (wbcd'a happenlJlg he.,.?). CLASSIC WALLMATE 39:.t.56.S .. I hacl a coua1n who was nnmecl uSam Tin.,,.. lt'a Jong atory. bat you bow the Immigration department. \ FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY ' The right place at the right time This roomy shed Is the.ptace to store bulky things.like lawn mowers, garden tools, even bicycles. Gambrel style roof, sun gold walls, white trim. Walk-in height doors. E•terior dimensions: 119Y2" x 116"0 x 84 Y2 "H. ~ Model #CAM 1010. CAMBRIDGE STORAGE SHED, Reg. 199.99 169.88' I For a flre-aa1e home Whl. take chances? Put In this bauerv.·operated, sel ·contained early warning smoke and hre alarm. Ce1llnQ·mounted with 2 tclews. No wiring or junction box needed. ~ U.L approved. Model#Z·700. "VIGILANTE" FIRE ALARM, 19.88 Come to the concert Set up your stereo components on this handsome, compact ahelf unit. Then alt beck, and enjoy ,greet aounds. There's room for books and tecorda. too. Solld core construction, walnut finish, easy Jo assemble. Model #-49. HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, Rag.24.99 19.88 •.. ..... .. ~· ............... • Measure 'It right OO·il·yourselfers will spol lhe quality the minute they see It. Tape blade conforms to all U.S Government specifications for accuracy. Preclsion·made for Jonp hto and heavy duty vse. 50 . Model#505. EVANS TAPE MEASURE. Reg.6.99 -~~--3.48 A turn for the better Handsome Kwikset entry lock set adds new glamour to rour front door. Braq finish Illa 1 o/1· to 1 o/• doors, complete with two keys, lnstalla In mlnutea wllh Iha help of a tcrewdrlver, Model #400K3. l<WIKSET TYLO !NTRY LOCKSET, Reg.11.99 7.88 Vanity fair Pick the fairest vanity of all to beautify your bathroom. All our vanities in stock are on sale right now for 25% off. A fair o pportunity to replace your old sink with a sleek, compact vanity cabinet. A wide selection of vanities, from 17"x21H)o 27x60". All have cultured marble sink tops. In natural wood finishes, painted, or vinyl laminated; with and without drawers. Sale prices subject to stock on hand, so shop early fe>r the best selection. ALL VANITIES IN STOCK, 253off No power shortage here Get the pertormance you paid for In calculators and radios. Pul in long·lasllng, dependable, heavy duty batteries. Now' a a good limo 10 buy some extras as well. Model #01604·1. RAY·0-VAC9·VOLT TRANSISTOR BATTERY. Reg. 99c each 68ceach RAY·O-VAC "C" or "D'' GENERAL PURPOSE BATTERY, 4 Pk. Models# I C4, 204. 98c Put up a waQ of 1avlnp PUt up that wall you'Ve been putting off. with economical concrete brick. Use It for everything You'd use red brick tor, exoept tlrepl:,i,, at a fraction of the cost. Red or tural color. CUltomer pl ·UP • only at thl• lqw prl~. CONCRETE BRICK, Reg. 14c each le each • u • ~metal~ 1'911 In bl.ck. A hlndteme eddltfOn t~~ gatdwn path: - 27'41' high. MET AL HAND RAIL. • -4' teetlon Reg. 8,49 4 •• . . - .. • .. , tttnber 111. 1177 -.. ... ' ·. \ . 'ir '. ' '. . . .. . :I ' . l ' FRIDAY SATURDAY · SUNDAY •. ./ .. ' f. ~ .• The right place-at .th8. rig~t:tune-_, . ' Va_riitY fair · · . , This roomy shed is the place t9 store bulky things like lawn · .•. .,, ·'·. •• -~· mowers, garden tqg!s. even bicycles. Gambrel style roof, sun ... ~ 1• • ...• : • gold walls, white trirT). Walk-in heigHtdoors. Exterio.r · Pick the fairest vanity of all to beautify. your bathroom .. All our vanities in stock are on sale right now tor 25%' off. A fair oeportunity to repla~e your old sink w~ 8. dimensions: 1191h"x 1j>'Dx84Y2"H. u · • Model ~CAM 1010. , _, CAMBRIDGEsTORAGE SHED, . Reg. 199.99 169~88 -. .. \ / For a tire-safe home .. . . ,, ·. " . ... ~ .. . .·· .. • ·. .. .. . ~· . . , . . - Measure It right --: . _ sleek, com¢act vanity cabinet. A wide selection Of -vanities, from 17")(21" to 22"x6o~. All have · ClJltured marble sink tops. In natural wood ·finishes, painted, orvinyl laminated; wit~ and without drawers. Sale prices subject ·,.. • to stock on hand, so shop early f~r the best setecti9n. ALlVANITIES IN ~&T~~' 25%off '. ~-. , . .. ... ··' .... I •" o No power shortage here • - .. .J, ' ..:. -. ' . ' • ·- ,'"\ ' t • ~ ,, : '"' . ..... ... \· ( r ~· ~ .. .. .. . . ' .,.> ~ .: . I '• I .'· ., Why take chances? Put In this ballery-operated, sell· contained early warning smoke and fire alarm. C~1ling·mounted wllh 2 screws. No wiring or )unction box needed. Do·lt-yoursellers will spot the quaht~ the minute they see.it. Tape blade conforms to-an u.s Government specifications for accuracy. Precision•made for lonp life : · Get the pertormance'9ou paldior In ealC41lators and radlds. Pul In long-lasting, dependat>lt, heavy duty batfei'ln. ~·· agd'oSf Um• . tobuysomee>d/QasMlt. · : -'· ·, :~:, ... ~ . U.L. approved. Modtl #Z· 700. .. VIGIU.NTE" FIRE AU.RM. 19.88 Come to the concert Set up your stereo components on thfs handsome. compact shelf unit. Then 111 back, and entoy j1reat eounds. There's room for boOka and records, too. Solld core construC1lon, walnut finish, easy lo assemble. Modal #49. HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, Reg. 24.99 19,88 and heavy duty use..50 • Model#505. . EVANS TAPE MEASURE. Aeg.6.99 3.48 A tum for the better Handsome Kwlk9et entry lock set ldds new glamour to iour front door. Brass finish fits 1 v.· to 1 v. doors, CQmplete with two keys. ln1tall1 ln mlnutn with the help of a tcrewdrlver. Model #400K3. KWIK.SET TYLd ENTRY LOCKSET, Reg.11.99 7.88 '· .. • 'co.. . . / . . ., ·"" . . . ~ Model#0\604-.1. ~ . • . RAY·O-VAC9'-VOLT , TkANSISTQR BATTtliY. 1 R~· 99c each . . · 'yt eactf: .. '· RAY-6:v>.c "t" or 1'0" · GENERAL PURtaOtiE BAITERY, 4 Pk Models #104 .. 204. 3' 98C ·I . . Put ....... of savlnp . 'Ml uP that wall Yolfve been Pl,lltl~ff.· With economical pohcreff bl!ck. Ose It for Mlythlng you'd use reclbrlok for, except firepl~, it a ~oh of the 't:ost. Rtd or !Ural ... color. CUltomtr pl ·UP only at this low pr! • CONCAETE BB/CK, • • " • Reg.14ceach ' . · 8ceach > . ' , . . . . . • 4 . ' .. - ... ,. ' . . . t' •.... : .