Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
1977-10-27 - Orange Coast Pilot
l l. ege er eapon • ncovere m :·DAILY PILOT 7. * * * 1oc * . * * . THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 27, 1977 VOL 10. 1.10 . >DO, 4 SECTIONS, U PAGES Clemente 'Freak' Blast Injures TRWWorke'r By ANNE COOPF.R 01 llW 0.lly Pilol Sl•ll An explosion <Jt thl' TRW 11·:-;t faci lit y northea!-.l o f San Clemente ~cnl a hl•a\'Y thrt•l• foot lid s mashing throus:h two ~tc•·l sheds Wednesday hdnn· 11 <;truck and critically lnJUr•·<I a l.ib technician. The victim. Raymond Lynch. 38, of 203 Calle Dorado, Sun C lemente, was r eported .'" critical condHion today in the m- t e n s iv e care unit at San Clemente General Hospital "It was a freak accident." said Jlon Coleman, San Clemente fire c)lief and a pe rsonal friend. or Lynch's. "If he'd been standing two feet either way. the thmg wouldn'thavetouchcd him." Bolts which failed on a pres· surized •. s te am -heat;d autocl ave, used to establ_ish special conditions for chemical experiments, were blamed ,for the accident, said Capt. Nick Ma ule of the San Clemente Fir<: Department. Ma ule said the autoclave lid was hurled through the steel roof of one buildJng, about SO feet into the air, and down through ttft? roof of the chemistry Jab, where Lynch was working. The technician suffered head Injuries, a broken right arm an~ multiple lacer ations in th~ acct· dent swd Maule. Ile was in sur- gery' Wednesday night. and was Or::iJ! Coast ~ Weather Locnl drizzles becoming p a rtly cloudy in artcr- noons. Slightly coole r days. Lows tonight 1n mid·50s. Highs F riday UP· per 60s. INSIDE TODA ll' Dlaea.sea of the heart will account for 52 percent of all deatha m the nation this year The account of one man's or· deal u f<1ll'lld on Page A9. Index responding to treatment today, lhl• hospital spokesman said. L\ nt'h has worked 12 years at thl." TRW Capistrano facility, 'Jld ln1ng Littman. proJeet 1hn·clnr fnr the firm. His wife, Judi. \\Orks al a San Clemei:itc ('<tmNa :-;hop and has been active in loc ... 1 civic affairs, Coleman s<J 1d . The Lynches have a daughter, Wendy, who attends Olr Hanson Elem entary School. The TRW testing facility is <See BLAST,_Page AZ) Actor's Bets, I Dat,es Learned In Wiretaps OKLAHOMA ClTY CAP> Television star Lee Majors al· lcgedly placed Sl,000 bets on col· lege football games and alleged· ly had two dates with an Oklahoma City woman, the latest last November, gover nment wiretap tapes disclose. <Related photo, /\5) The wiretap tapes naming Ma· jors, star of the television series "The Six Million Dollar Man" a nd husband of television personality Farrah Fawcett. Majors, were played Wednesday by the government in the case of seven people on trial in U.S. Dis· trict Court here for allegedly con· ducting a gambling opration. The tape naming Majors was made Nov. 24. The recording told how Majors allegedly made $1,000 bets on the Pitts'burgh and Oklahoma foot· b<Jll games to be played that weekend. The conversations were among 60 taped calls the government has introduced into evidence. They were recorded during court-approved wiretaps on three telephones last fall. <See MAJORS, Page A2) Section Scans Sailing Scene A special magazine section 'with timely advice for sailors an- ticipating many fine winter sail- ing days comes to you In today's Daily Pilot. ' "Orange County Boating" is a 12-page magazine with stories and pictures of interest to begin· nrng and expert boaters alike. For the last word on sail and power boating run, look for ''Orange County Boating" in. side your DaHy Pilot. • Suspect J Killed by NB Police Holdup Suspect Slain I By MICHAEt PASKEVICH • 0. u. D•1ly Pilot Sl•ff /\ fleeing robbery suspect, who allegedly pulled a shotgun from his pants when cornered by Newport Beach police, was shot to d eath Wednesday night in Costa Mesa, police reported to· day. Wayne Michael Nabb, 21, of 133 16th St.. Costa Mesa. died of bullet wounds to the head and· chest al about 10:45 p.m. al the corne r of old l)lewport Boulevard and E. 16th St., police said. Newport Reach police were contacted aft er Nabb allc~edly tried to rob two pwon:. at kni{e- point in the parking lot or a New port Beach restaurant Wcdncsdaynjght. Costa Mesa police Lt. George Lorton said Nabb wac; later seen on foot 1n Co.'>la Mesa by a n un· identified cab clrt vc•r. Newport Rc·ach police patrolm:in Robert O 'Neil re· portcdly cornered Nabb and took a knife away from him. But O'Neil then backed off and sum· moned support from other of· ficcrs alter the cab driver told him h e be lieved Nabb had another weapon hidden. Newport Beach patrolman Bob Stephens and Sgt. R obert Gatewood arrived on the scene and Nabb was reportedly shot by the officers when he started to pull a single-barrel s hotgun from beneath his clothing. • The shotgun was hidden under Nabb's loose-filling s hirt, with the barrel extending down his right pants leg, police said. Al least six shots were fired by police, with two rounds striking Nabb, Lt. Lorton s aid. · Costa Mesa paramedics said Nabb djed at the scene. Police said the incident began at about 10 :30 p.m. in the parking lot of Delaney's Restaurant on the Lido Penins ula. Nabb aJ. legedly tried to rob a man and a woman at knifepoint in the restaurant parking lot. Police said the pair ran away. He apparently chasefl them , but (SeeSHOT, Page A2) ~,.,~ .._..,_.~~ POLICE BEGIN INVESTIGATION FOLLOWING DEATH OF COSTA MESA MAN Newport Officers Say They Shot Would-be Robber as He Pulled Shotgun Judge Orders Police Probe LOS ANGELES IAP) -A Superior Court judge h as ordered Los Angeles Police Chief Edward M. Davis to explain why the de·. partment refused to coop'!rate wilh a county coroner's in· vestigation into the fatal police s hooting of Ronald Burkholder. Judge Paul G. Breckenridge Wednesday .signed an order re- quiring Davis, as well as Sgt. Kurt Barz, the officer who fired "s ix s hots at the 35-year-old biochemist, to appear Nov: 22 in Superior Court. The order was issued in response to a contempt petition fil ed by the coroner ·s office against the police department and Barz. Vallt07 Marder Search Yieltb Gun 'Used' in Slaying By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI tile 0.11)' Pli.« SuH Newport Beach police, wded by lifeguards wading through thigh-deep mud have folmd the gun they believe was us~ to pump the nine fatal ~bots ~nt~ a Fountain Valley man m their city early Saturday morning. Meanwhile, the four people ar· rested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder in the shooting of Stephen John Bovan, were scheduled for an initial court ap· pearance today in the Harbor Judicial District Court. O.Uy 1'119' Slaff Pflel• Detectives. who have been working around the clock, say their investigation of what they term a "bizarre" case bas broadened out to include the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and an investment firm in Newport Beach. Det. Sam Amburgey said there a re "a number of people" still under scrutiny for their part in the events leading lo Bovan's death. H e said the investigation is now probing the relations hip of four men he described as mem- be rs of the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna to the dead man and the suspects. Agni Dave, president of the Laguna Beach temple, swd the four m en -had at one time been members, but have not been ac- t! ve for more than a year. He said they had not practiced the c ull's teachings prohibiting eating of meat, engaging in illi.~it sex, gambling and cons umption oC Intoxicants~ nor b ad lbey_ak. tended the required m orning and evening daily religious s ervices. One of those m en, Alexander Kulik, 28, was a rrested last weekend in Mission Viejo when Sheriff's deputies found m ore than one pound of nearly pure oriental heroin in jars on the floor of his Stutz Blackhawk car . The link that connects the four alleged Krishna members to the Bovan murder is a Newport Beach investment firm they ope r a ted under th e name Pers adan. T hree of the four suspects in the Bovan murder , J erry Peter Flori, 41, Anthony "Little Tony" Marone, J r .• 23, and Raymond Steven Resco, 28, were employed by Persndan. The fourth suspect, Debra Ann Addison, 24, ls as- sertedly Fiori's girlfriend. THIS IS GUN POLICE BELIEVE WAS USED IN NEWPORT MURDER LAST WEEKEND Bovan, Amburgey s aJd, worked for one of the firms in (See GUN, Page A2) . Stlll-cocked 9 mm Weapon Recovered WednHd•y From Upper Newport Bay ' • A2 DAILY PILOT s Thursday. October 27, 1977 I 'Killer' Satellite Second Sov iet Test Successful WASHINGTON CAP> -The Soviet Union has s taged its second apparently successru1 test or a system that could threaten destruction or U.S. re- connaissance and other military satellites, the Pentagon disclosed today. "We have preliminary indica- tions that the Soviets launched an antisatellite interceptor Wednes- day against a target satellite," a Pentagon s t atement said. "Presumably, a successful m- tercepl occurred.'' The announcement provided no elaboration, but defense of- ficials said the hunter-killer satellite passed close enough to the t arget satellite to have permitted its destruction, if the Russians had wanted to knock out the target. This was the first time that the • ,wt...,... John Bennett and his secretary, Diane O'Dell, display differences between hi s bent handles and the regular kind used on tennis rackets, hammers and machetes. He says the handles folJow the natural flow of the wrist muscle and forearm, and could revolutionize sporting goods, tools and cooking equipment. Doctor Sues Doctor In Hospital Hass~e A physlcian is suing his own doctor for alleged remarks about the hospital in whlcb the patient is a part owner. Dr. Eugene B. Sive names Dr. Jtobin Oxman as defendant in his Orange County Superior Court ac- tion. Sivestates in the lawsuit that he <Sive) is a part owner or Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana - the hospital where Ottman was treating him for a serious illness. Sive wants $100,000 in damages from Oxman for the defendant's alleged comment that he was be· ing treated in "a bad hospital .. and should get out of ther e im· mediatelyifhewantedtollve. Dr. Sive further complains that Dr. Oxman charged him for services rendered after the defen- dant was called in as a consultan't. Couple Killed lnAir Crash TONOPAH, Nev. CAP) -An Ojai, Calif. man and wife have been killed in a plane crash dur· Jng a speed test about 10 miles south or here. The Federal Aviation Ad· minls traUon in Las Vegas said Bob Reichardt, 40, and wife Shel· ly perished In the Tuesday mis- hap. According to witnesses, the re- built. Howard radial engine craft came in too 1ow on Its test run, s nagged its fixed landing gear a nd cartwheeled several hun- dred yards on a dry Jake bed, ORANQICOAIT s DAILY PILOT ~~~f:.~!T,'!':i:4.:::f:&.: Cout...,1111!1111.,.eo-.oy ~-.011-... t =~.::,~~:::·:-.:.:~ ••1" V111t,. lrv1,, •• la•tl•tMC~ Vatlrt •IMI "--1tl1oollltCN\I A~•...-iHI• l..,. I• -1-S.tvf ... f\ --"' The arl,,.INI OUOll\1\1"'° ola•t I\ OI JJ0 WtU !Moy SI•"'· Cott• M<!•t Qlll••"l•mM. ····~p,.,,.,. .... nd ....... ,,,,... JaO lll C . ....., Vo<•Prtf ... f\t .... O..al MltfltOW ,_ •• ic • ..u E:dllff 'Yi..!MtA M .......... Mil•••'"' l!dl• °"'''""·""' .............. " "'''"""'Mio ... ,,""'"'"" Of lie et C:..t• Mtw . uo w.11 Bf'!' SI,... l .. lm•llU<~· lt .. Ql=r,rtll ..... 1 HIJll~,~=.~~~~l~;~·N,r.~ P'::"r.:'d ttS.•01_1' ...... .., Telephone (11•l142>4ttt CfaHfffed Aawertf""' ..a.sen hO<llll,.<-Val .. y-Ol'lt<t 511-UtO -s...c-• 4 ..... ~--Or-~C'MwNHtlts l40-t220 Cle'lt•t "" 0••"9" , .... -1\11 ... ,_ Hflt\t "'" ,.. .. , tt ..... ,. '"""'·-· ..,.,.,..,. M •Htt •' •t •u 11,tmfllftl\ "",.I" ,.,.., .. ,,. .... .,.,._ •• wlt"tv ''•ftlt terl'ftfn t11\ tt ........ , ... - ~·flf ,,_., ••1t•t• e•1f tt C>\t• Mn•. C•lltorf\lt Jwltu r1•t10 lty <ff"•' 0 IO =~:.:\~'b -~:~1~ INfll~IYI mllltery ... ,._ Doctors never bill other doctors for medical treatment, Sive as· serts. He claims that Oxman sent him a bill ror $100 and threatened to turn it over to a colJection agency when it became overdue. Instead, the lawsuit states, Dr. Oxman filed an action i11 small claims court where he is still try- ing to coUect the $100 be claims Dr.Siveoweshim. Dr. Sives tates Dr. Oxman's ac- tions have caused him "humilia- tion, mental anguish and emo- . tional and physical distress.•· He has now recovered from the acute respiratory lnrecUon that con- fined him to Mercy General April 5. GUN FOUND. which Persadan had invested some money. The story, as detailed by Am- burgey, goes like this: Kulik, and his partners, Joe Davis, 2S7 Canyon Acres Drive, Laguna Beach, Roy Christopher Richards of the same address, and Joe F ed eros ky of 1300 Bluebird Canyon Road, formed their firm to invest their money in local private businesses. According to Laguna Beach police Capt. Neil Purcell, the four Persadan principals are members or the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and Richards was a rormer president or the temple. ''They employed a large number of people whom they put into the businesses in which they'd invested." said {he detec- tive. He said That over an un- specified period of time. some Persadan employes apparenUY. em beuled "hundreds ot thousands ot dollars" or that in- veatment money. At that point, Fiori, Resco, Marone and two olher men were hired by the Persadan principals to "try to recover tbe embeuled runds," Amburgey asserted. Meanwhlle, late in August, Bovan and at least two other Persadan employes which Am- burgey did notidentify, allegedly kidnapped Kulik and held him for $100,000 ransom. Wblle they had Kulik, Am- burgey said, thoy "severely beat hlm." Flori, Resco, Marone and their two colleagues were used to Pt.Y the ransom for Kulik and the ca~e was never r eport ed to :iuthoritles, Amburgey satd. "From that point on," the de- tective userted, "there w115 a re- ward offered allegedly by the Persadaq group, for Bovnn itnd Defense Department has volun· leered information on a Soviet antisatcllite test, renecting an apparent Carter administration intention to point up a Soviet de- velopment that is worrying U.S. leaders. Defense Secretary Harold Brown told u news conference Oct. 4 that U.S. oCCicials de· le rm incd that the Russians "have an operationaJ capability that could be used against some satellites.·• Both the United States and the Soviet Union rely heavily on satell ites in earth orbit to watch military developments in each other's territory and to keep track of missile tests and other indicators. This Is believed lo contribute to mutual deterrence and to dis- courage adventurism or surprise military moves. President Carter appealed March 9 for a mutual U.S.-Soviet ban on satellite-destroying weapons, but the Russians have never publicly responded and have held three antisatelllle tests since then. On e lest jn May was ra{ed a failure, but subsequent tests in June and this week are consider<.'<! successes. MAJORS ••• Defense attorneys objected to the taped conversations being played in open court and later at- tempted to question government witnesses on the relevancy of the material presented pertaining to Majors. Government witnesses would say only the decision was left to the U.S. attorneys office. On the tapes, one man iden- tified by a government, age.nt as L. D. "Luke" Morris, tells on the tape of ta.king two bets from Ma- jors. He is then asked by a man al- leged by the government to be Randall Lloyd Keef, "How did you roo into him? Was be at the Brigadoon (a private club>?" "Yeah," responded lhe man al- leged to be Morris. "He dated Barbara once before. I new up to Enid and got him.·· Majors has attended several Grand National Quail Hunts. where celebrities and politicians mingle during sever al days of quail hunting near Enid, Okla. The man alleged lo be Keef later is heard to say, "That ·s something. He's dating Barbara. the blonde?·· "Well, thls is just the second dale she's had with him, but the last one was about six months ago and he said 'I'll call you next time I come,' "replied the voice alleJ'ed to be that or Morr is. "Or course she djdn 't think he would, and he was up for the quail hunt in Enid ... "He called down and talked to her ... and her old ego just pumped. you know, a thousand percent and she's trying to figure how to get him back down here and l said I'll fly up there and get him and I did." Morris and Keel are among the seven defendants in the case. e • the kidnappers.•• The nature of that reward is under investiga- tion, he said. . P olice say they believe Bovan, 36, left his home at 17332 Zeider Lane, Fountain Valley, to go lnlo hiding. He apparently stayed out of the Orange Coast area until Saturday night when he showed up at the El Ranchito restaurant, 409 28th St. He left there early Saturday morning after being spotted by Miss Addison, who was also at the popular night spot. Police al- lege she Upped Fiori, Resco and Marone to Bovan's location. Police allege Bovan was met outside the restaurant by at least one or the trio who shot him nine times with a 9mm automatic handgun, before neeing in a green and white Cadillac. Based on a description of the car sem leaving me !UM, P<JNce arrested Flori when he appeared at Nabers Cadillac Tuesday morning to sell the car. Costa Mesa police, who wanted to question him about the car, ar- r ested him when they allegedly found nearly three pounds of co- caine in hia possesaion. By tracing the car's registra- tion, police round Resco, Marone and Miss Addison. PoJfce said they were told where to look for the gun, and llteguards Larry Gibson and John Blauer waded through the thlgh·deep mud tor 20 minutes before finding the atllJ-cocked fl rearm. Amburgey said he and other in- vestlg ators are probing the role played by the four Persadan men In the case to determine the nature of the "reward" they al- legedly offered for the location ot Bovan. "We're Interested in talk· Ing to them," he said, noting that they havo apparently been out oC the country. f • 'No Fril ls' Food Saves CJIICAGO 1.\1') fly sl'll llng for soda c·Jn.., "''' h no POIJ·lOP!-. and pea., that arc a lighter !-.h ;.1dc of green. the grocery shopper can save 10 lo 35 percent on the price of nationally ad- vertised food an cl household basics, ., muJor food chain says. J ewlll Food Stores in- troduced Wednesday a no· brand name line of goods for 88 products ranging Crom shortening to corn flakes that nltempts "lo peel away all the frills," said Jane Armstrong, vice presidenl of consumer af· fairs for the city's largest food chain. Star Markets or Boston began a similar program this year. F ro• Page AJ SHOT .•. was unable to catch them because his movement was lm· paired by the shotgun he waa car· rying in his pants. After eluding the would-be rob- ber, the couple called police. Although the shooting involved Newport Beach policemen, an In- vestigation will be carried out by Costa Mesa police because the fatal incident occurred within Costa Mcsn city limits, Lorton explained. J\ I I three of the Newport policemen reportedly fired their weapons, but an autopsy must be completed before it can be de- termined which officer fired the fatal bullet. Information compiled by Costa Mesa pobce will be forwarded to the Orange County District Al· torney's office. which will decide if any charges should be flied against the offi cers, or if the shooting wns In s elf·defense, Lorton said. I.Via Thre at Bay Aren Ad Warns Prince SAN FRANClSCO (AP> -A full-page advertisement in the San Francisco Chronicle today warns Prince Charles to "get the devil out of Ireland or be as welcome here as George III." The advertisement, in the form of an open letter to ''Prince Charlie,'' was signed by the ''Irish Republican commi&t.ee John Maher, co-chairman." ' The prince, Britain's heir to the throne, was to arrive here to- day for a three-day visit lo northern California, the final stop of a 13-day, 10-city tour or the United States, <Related photC' AS) . The ~dvertisement apparently IS the ftrst Of a series or protest gestures Irish activists here said they have prepared for the prince's stay. During the prince's visit to Cleveland last week, a dcm· onstration was staged by the Irish Nati011al Caucus to protest what members said were "800 years of British suppression." The advertisement today declares: ''Your Royal Highness s hould not beideceived during your visit. While there are surely a few - heirs to those traitorous Tories who hid under their beds during 1776 -who wm clustel' about you in an attempt to add tarnished E'r.,..PageAJ BLAST ••• located in the foothills between San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano. Guarded gates are accessible via Avenida Pico from San Clemente or Ortega Highway from San Juan. It is the site of classified r e· search on aerospace components and energy systems, Littman said. dross to their lusterless lives; these arc few and we ,re many ... The open Jeller demands: Withdrawal or British troops from Northern Ireland; an end to "torture" of Irish prisoners in Britain: a stop to prejudice against Northern Irish Catholics, and the prosecution of "British Army war criminals in the tradi· tion of Nurcmburg." "Should you rail in this at- te m pl," the teller concludes. "then you must, out or a commit· tnent 10 huma.n justice and com- mon decency) reoounce your claim to the spurious throne of Ulster." Leaders of San Francisco's ac- tive Irish bloc said they have also prepared 1,500 black coffms foc the •'Prince of Torture.'' The col· fins were lo be a symbolic protest to a lleged torture o( Northern Ireland prisoners by British of· ficials. organizers said. Pie 'Nicka' John Dean FREDONIA, N.y. (AP) - John Dean Ill. whose testimony helped break the Watergate scandal, was nicked by a banana cHam pie wb.lle-givlng-a lec1Aue at Fredonia State colle,e. cam-pus police said. Moments after Dean began his speech Wednesday, a young man in the audience donned a mask, laug hed loudly a nd yelled , "There is the con man, there ls the con man." As the m asked· man ran from the lecture h~ the pie-thrower struck, police said . "ll just brushed me." said Dean. Jo hn Paul Yuskiw, 23, of Fredonia, was charged with dis- orderly condu cl and was issued an appearance ticket, ·said police. Introducing thejVC 3060. Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach, Mountains, Desert -Anywhere. See the world's first portable AM/FM Radio-TV-Cassette Recorder Price • 2 50°0 This JVC quality crafted unit includes a 3° diagonal black & white TV that locks In clear. bright pictures on VHF and UHF, a sensitive FM ana AM radio w ith an Jlnlplifier and speak"91' to give you clear, rich music or sports; plus a cassette player recorder for listening to your favorite tapes or recording your favorite pro- grams. Records audio from radio or TV plus it has a bullt In condenser m1c for voice record· Ing. All in onel You've never seen anything like It. Also available without the cassette recorder (Model 3050) at $190.00. JVC Moc:W CZ~75, FM/ AM/SWl/SW2 Stereo Radio, Cassette Recorder JVC Just 1 200°0 JVC's 9475 is packed with fealures that make It n best buy. Its biggest feature is stereo sound. for recording and ptaybad< fl even records stereo FM directly from the built-In tun<tr. Two big 5 .. duel-cone speakers. Two -left and right -bu1ft-ln condenser mlc:rophones.. Two easy -lo-see meters. An up-10-the-m1nuto cassette mechanism with full auto-stol) and cue/review foeihttes I· 1111 I a1·1or-11 H nrrntll it•<.; 1•1u-. Our Pt·r~ouuf Ou••\ ••ur f,;unrnttl•••• Ou l .t·•·r~1 l"roduc•f M1• ·'••II: 275 East 17th St. n ... a.ctt...ic~~ s....me y_. ... ,_ .. Costa M~sa .................. 2 D-. w ... 9f Cwte M. Phon~ 642-8882 Stors Hours Daily~ Set. 9-5.30 lwfllllt "'9 "~ Alw .._. I tH . ' ·-~ .. Prof••"'"' ion al ~•"r' it·•• e·or ••II ~our uo111t• c•l c•c• • ron it· ... Orange Coast EDITION * * Today's Closing N.Y. Stocks VOL. 70, NO. 300, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1977 C TEN CE"'TS Fleeing Suspect Killed • Ill Mesa F\' Sla!fiag 'Murder Gun' Found By JOANNE R EYNOLDS Of u. o.11, l"llet ·~If Newport Beach police, aided by lifeguards wading through thigh-deep mud have found the gun they believe was used to pump the nine fatal shots into a Fountajn Valley man in their city early Saturday morning. Adair Srw// s Oil Inferno TAFT (A P> -A stub· born oil well fire that killed three people was finally snuffed out today by world- famous fire fighter Red Adair, who triggered an explosion to quell the two- day blaze, fire officials said. Adair used plastic ex- plosives to put out the names in his first attempt to douse the fire which began Tuesday in the Elk Rills Naval Reserve with a n explosion of unex- plained origin. Navy Cmdr. Roger Martin, chief of operations aL the nation's largest oil reserve outside Alaska, estimated the fire was burning 12,000 barrels of oil daily. County Seeks Private Plane Mrfield Site By KATHY CLANCY Of -o.;1, ...... Sl•fl About 464,000 of the 500,000 flights that departed or arriveft at Orange County Airport so far this year have been by private aircraft or what county officials refer to as general aviation. Orange County super visors de- cided to try again Wednesday to find a new airfield site that might handle some of those private takeoffs and landings. The board voted 3-1 to order a I s urvey of possible airport sites i ncluding one proposal su g· gested Wednesday by a Hunt· ingto n Beach h omeowners group, the HOME Council. Supervisor Thomas Riley cast the lone dissenlin!'( vote calling the study "a waste of effort. a was te or lime ... Supervisor Ralph Clark. however, called the need for a new general aviation airport "very critical." He said Orange County Airport is now the second busiest airport (See AIRFIELD, PageA2> • m Bay Meanwhlle, the four people ar- rested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder in the shooting of Stephen John Bovan, were scheduled for an initial court ap- pear ance today in the Harbor Judicial District Court. Detectives. who have been working around the clock, say their investigation of what they term a "bizarre .. case has broadened out to include the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and an investment firm in Newport Beach. Det. Sam Amburgey said there a re "a number or people" still under scrutiny for their part in the events leading to Bovan·s death. He said the investigation is now probing the relationship of four men he described as mem· bers of the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna to the dead man and the suspects. Agni Dave, president of the Laguna Beach temple. said the four men had at one time been members, but have not been ac- tive for more than a year. He said they had not practiced the cult's teachings prohibiting eating o( meat, engaging in illicit sex, gambling and consumption of intoxicants, nor had they at· tended the required morning and evenlngdaily religious services. One ol tho6e m en, Alexander Kulik, 28, was arrested last w'ekend in Mission Viejo when Sheriff's deputies found more than one pound or nearly pure oriental heroin in jars on the noor of his Stutz Blackhawk car. The link that connects the four alleged Krishna members to the Bovan murder is a Newport Beach investment firm they operated unde r the name Persadan. Three of the four s uspects in the Bovan murder, Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, Anthony "Little Tony" Marone, Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven Resco, 28, were employed by Persadan. The fourth suspect. Debra Ann Addison, 24, is as· serledly Fiori ·s girlrriend. Bovan, A mburgey said, worked for one or the firms in which Persadan bad invested some money. The story. as detailed by Am· burgey, goes like this: Kulik. and his partners, Joe Davis, 257 Canyon Acres Drive, Laguna Beach, Roy Christopher Richard of the same address. and Joe Fe deros ky or 1300 Bluebird Canyon Road, formed their firm to invest their money in local private businesses. According to Laguna Beach police Capt. Neil Purcell. the four Persadan principals are members of the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and Richard was a former president of the temple. <See GUN, Page A2) 0,.ly PllOI Photo b• P1<r..rd ICMl\ler POLICE BEGIN INVESTIGATION FOLLOWING DEATH OF COSTA MESA MAN Newport Officers Say They Shot Would-be Robber as He Pulled Shotgun Benefit Tax Hike OK'd House Moves to Keep Social Security ·Solvent WASHlNGTON <API -The House voted toduy to keep the Social Security i.ystem from go- in~ broke by dra!;tttally increas- ing the taxes paid by more than 100 million /\mcr1cans and their <.'mploycrs The bill was passed. 275 to 146. and S<.'nl to the Senate. which hns similar leg1slat1on rn commlltce. Under the bill. the maximum Social Security tax would more than tnpk rn the next decade, from 5965 p{'r ye.ir t<• S.1.1Yl5. Rep. J\l t:llmJn 10 Ore). "hose wa, ... JOd :\ll-,llh Comm1l· l<.'<' fash1orwd th(· hill. call<'d the lf.>g1shit10n ",1 \tlJI t•onn rn to nrtuall) C\'Cr) t\mnH·an · "Practically t•\cry /\mt•rican 1~ l'1ther a bcnd1c1arv under the Social Securtl y i.ystcm. a con- tr 1 bu tor building protection which will provide future benefits or a dependent of a con- trrbutor ... Ullman said. The large tax tn<.'reases were made necessary by def1 c1ts in the Social Sccuritv fund in recent years. Without the new funding, Section Scans Sailing Scene A s pecial magazrne section with timely ad\'1ce for sailors an· t1 c1patmg many fin<' \noter s ail- ing days comes to ~ou in to<lny's Daily Pilot "Orange County Roating" is a 12-page magazine with s tones and pictures or interest lo begin- ning and expert boaters alike. For the last word on sail and power boatinJ: fun, look for "Orange County Boating" jn. side your Daily Pilot. the system stands to go bn1ke in a few years. n eror(• passing th(• bill. the House added an amendment that would ••dd still further to the drastic tax increases rccom· mended by the Ways and M-ean<> Committee by remov1n~ a ll limits on v.ages earned h v * * * rcc1pi(•nts of Soc·w l Sct:urity pcn.,1ons Tht• amendnwnt introduced h\' Ht'p Wilhi.1111 ~1 Kt'lt·hum <R <';1llf I. and apprn,<'<1 :!fi!l tn 14!1. v.ould J>hil~t· out tlw currPnl hm1l of S.J.000 in out:-.1d<· t'Jrn1ng-. b\ 1982 • <SN· SF:CTRITV, Page A21 * * * Co11nty Tax Boost If Pensions Cut? By GARV GRANVILLE Of It. 0.tlY ~lktt SUll If local governments In Orange County are forced to abandon their o·wn pension plans in favor of Social Security coverage for public employes, the move will cosl county property taxpayers an additional $74 million in 198.'J That prediction was made to· day by county Tax Collector- treasurcr Robert Citron. ch1er administrator of county govern- ·ment's $175 million employe re- tirement system. The target of Citron·s com- ments was pending federal legislation that would bring federal, state and local govern· m ent workers under mandatory Social Security coverage in 1982-83. The tax collector-treasurer predicted that such a move will add from $144 to $164 jn addi- tion a l property taxes on the average Orange County home by 1983. ·•1 do not know what our representatives in Congress arc thinkinR about In their hell-bent quest to attempt to save a bankrupt Social Sec urity system,•• Citron said. "They must have blinders on not to know the consequences of brini.:rng 10<.-1:11 govt'rnment plans into the Social Security systl•m. "And." Citron ~1dd<.'d , "al the same time thl• rc·r>rt>scntatives <See PE~SION, Page A2) Pie 'Nicks' JolmDean FREDONIA, N.Y. <AP> J ohn Dean Ill. whose testimony helped break the Wat ergate scandal. was nickt.'d bv a banana cream P•<' whtle g1nn"g a kcture al Fredonia State colll·~c. cam- pus police said. Moments ufter Oean began his speech Wednesday. a young man tn the audience donned a mask, l augh ed loudly and yell ed. ''There is the con man. there is the con man." /\s the masked man nm from th<' lecture hall. the pie-thrower struck, police said "It JUSl brushed me," said Dean. John Paul Yus kiw, 23. of Fredonia. wa~ charged with dis- orderly conduct and was issued an appearance ticket, said police. Doctor Sues Doctor ·In Hospital Hassle A physician Is suing his own doctor for alleged remarks about the hospital in which the patient is apart owner. Dr. £ugene B. Sive names Dr. Robin Oxman as defendant In his Orange County Superior Court ac- tion. Sivestates In the lawsuit that he (Sive> is a part owner of Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana the hospital where Oxman was treating him for a serious illnei.s. Sive wants $100,000 in dam a~es from Oxman for the defendant's alleged comment that he was be· ing treated in "a bad hospital" and should get out or there lm- mediatelylfhewanted to li ve. He claims that Oxman sent him a bill for SIOO and threatened to turn it over to a coll er I ion agency when it became overdue. Instead, the lawsuit stales. Dr. Oxman filed an action in small claims court where h<' is still try· ing to coll ect thl' $100 he claims Dr Sivcowes him. Dr. Siveslates Or. Oxman's ac- tions hav<· causrcl him "humilia· t1on. mentar anguish and emo- tional and physical distress." He has now recovered from the acute respiratory infection thot con- fined him to Mercy Gcn<'ral Apnl 5. OallY l"llt4 't.tt ,._ Othe r Coverage More cover a gr or the Harbor J\rca appears toduyon PageAIO. Victim 1 Carried ' Shotgun By MICHAEL PASKEVICR Of IM O•llf PIJOi Slfff /\ fl eeing robbery s uspect, who allegedly pulled a shotgun from his p ants when cornered by Newport Beach police, was shot lo death Wednesday night in Costa Mesa. police reported to. day. Wayne Michael Nabb, 21, ofl33 lfith St., Costa Mesa. died of bullet wounds to the head and <·best at about 10:45 p.m. at the corner of old NewPorl Boulevard and E . 16th St., police said. Newport Beach police were contacted after Nabb allegedly tried to rob two patrons at knife-. point in the parking lot of a Newport Beach restaurant Wednesday night. Costa Mesa police Lt. George Lorton said Nabb was later seen on foot in Costa Mesa by an un- identified cab driver . Newport Beac h police patrolman Robert O'Neil r e· porledly cornered Nabb and took a huck kmfc away from him. <l':--:e1l wa-; unaware that Nabb "a~ l'Onccaling a shotgun, said Lt Lorton. Accordmg to poltce accounts. ~,... O'Neil sou ~ht protection behind th<.• rear of his patrol car. N:..bb reportedly pulled a single· barrel shotgun from beneath his t•lothtn~ and pointed it at the of- f 1rt•r Within second s, Newpor t lh.•ach patrolm an Bob Stephe.ns • .n<I Sgt. Robert Gatewood ar· n ,·cd on the scene. Nabb was re- portedly shot after be ignored • commands t.o "drop theguo." Police said Nabb did not fire his weapon, which h ad been hid· lkll under his loose-fitting srurt, \\1th the barrel extending down 111-. right pantlcg. Police said the shotgun was huldl·n under Nabb's loose-fitting ~hart , with the barrel extending down his right pants leg. Police :.J1d .Nabb did n ot lire the weapon. At least six shots were fired by police, with two rounds s trikjng Nabb, Lt. Lorton said. Costa Mesa paramedics said Nabb died at the scene. Police sa1d the incident began at about 10 :30 p.m . in the parking lot of Delaney's Restaurant on the Lido Peninsula. Nabb aJ. lcgedly tried to rob a man and a worn an a t knife point in the restaurant parking lot. · Police said the pair ran away. lie apparently chased them, but was unable to catch them , because his movement was im- paired by the shotgun he was car· rying in rus pants. Afte r eluding the would-be rob· ber, the couple called police. Although the shooting involved Newport Beach policemen, an in· vestigation will be carried out by Costa Mesa police because the fata l incident occurred within · Costa Mesa. city limits, Lorton explained. /\11 three of the Newport oolicemen rePOrtedly fired theil" weapons, but an autopsy must be completed before it can be de· termined which officer fired the fatal bullet. (See SHOT, Page AZ) Or:::rJ ~Coast Weather Local drizzles becoming partly cloudy in after- noons. Slightly cool e t" du ys. Lows tonight in m id·SOS. Highs Friday UP· per 60s. INSIDE TODA V Diseases of the heart wm account Jor S2 percent of all deaths in the nation thi.3 year. The account of one man's or. deal ;s found on Page A9. Index Al Yo11• ~ka Al4 l11lwmlulool an Erma••~" 8J Ann 1.•IMltn eJ 1.. M Boyd A• Movlu a11 811•1 tu .... M41tYll fl-. .. C•lllorn1• "'' lf•llOllll "ewt M,Q "•ulllt<I Cl-II Or~11et C-'f Al• Comlu CJ iyhl• Ptt1W .. Crouw.,d CJ '-" .... 1 OHlh Holi<ff ,.. Sletll Marti.ti .. . Edllorlal P... ,. .. , Ttltvhltll 110 ~ftltntl-91•11 T ... •lttt a ll .... 111rl11t II J WH111er • • ... Fo• Ille ltKonf AU World NtWI • M,CJ ".,o'u" Ill \ THIS IS GUN POLICE BELIEVE WAS USED IN NEWPORT MURDER LAST WEEKEND Stlll·cocked 9 mm Weapon Recovered Wedne1day From Uppe_r Newport Bey I Dr . Slve further complains that Dr. Oxman charged him for ser vices renderl'd after the defen- dant was called in as a consultant. Doctors never bill other doctors for medical treatment, Sive as- serts. 1 " .. • ,, ' DAILY PILOT c Thursday. O<:lober 27. 1977 ' ·. · 3 NB Men Face Drug Rap Three Newport Beach men are · slated lo stand tnnl Dec. JJ in fe de ral court in llonolulu for. their alleged involvement in a S7 million co<'am~ s muggling ring investigators are calling the •'Tahiti connection." Joe Avila, 30, his brothe r Sergio, 26. and Stephen Chula, 27, a ll p leaded innocent to con- spiracy to smuggle cocaine in their initial court appearance Tuesday in Honolulu. John Bovan. was s hot to dea\h o utside the Newport Beach restaurant. Investigators have link ed Bovan 's death to a narcotics lraf. ficking operation, but they sauJ they are convinced that the case inv o l vi n g the Avilas and Chula and the C<tStl involvini; Uovan are not linked 1n uny way. In all, 11 people were indicted by the Honolulu federal grand Jury In September in connection with the case which had been un- dt'r 1nn•:.t1g<.1t1on by Newport lk<fl'h polacl' and feder al agents for two )'l'ars. l'ohte all~gc the people in- \'ol ved purchased cocaine an Peru and brought it into the U. S. vw Tahiti, Honolulu and Van couvcr, British Columbia. * * * The 10d1t lment claimed the group imported m•>fl' thun :11 pounds or coca1nt• No I rial cJal l' h.i:-. bl'l'll 't•l for thl· :.1.'< rl'mmnin~ m1·mbt·rs 11( thl· allcJ;t.'d ring, 111ducJin1oe ('ultfon11an:. Mark St(.•ph(•ni.un llalkr, JI'. 28. Suoth Lake Tahot·. .lo\' Marlene Chalwn. 2ti, o( 2·I05G La· Ho111k. El Toro, and Stephen l.ranat, 26, a one-time Newport lleuch resident. * * * The Avilas are owners of the El Ranchito restaura nts in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Chula is 1he son or Orange County criminal attorney, George Chula. lo addition to the three Newport Beach men, two others ure s lated to stand trial at tht' same time. They arc Ro nald Peterson, identified bv federal agents as being a California resi- Fro• Page A J Coincidentally. on the eve or their departure for Honolulu, a Fountain Valley man, Stephen dent and Alfred Samango, 39, or GUN F OUND• Hawaii. Both m en have also pleaded innocent to lhe s mug-• , , glingandconspiracycharges. They employed a large number of people whom they put F r._ Page Al into the businesses in which they'd invested," s aid Am· burgcy. AIRFIELD CROWDED. • • in the nation and finding a new location for private aircraft could reduce much or its traffic. Airport Manager Robert Bresnahan said today about 45 percent of the 464,000 private aircraft flights al t he airport as of Sept. 30 were what are called touch and go flights which are practice takeoffs and landings by pilots. Br~snahan also noted the coun· ty's Jast major study a imed at finding new a irport sites was in 1969. Since then, he said his de· partment has m ade periodic s tudjes of new or existing airport sites. The HOME Council's sugges· lion was that super visors study development of a general avia· tion airport on portions of lhe Seal Beach Naval Weapons Sta- tion. HOM E Council s pokesman Steve Schumacher s aid ap- proaches and takeoffs could be directed over a Huntington Beach indus trial park so homeowners would not be dis· turbed. Bresnahan said today the SeaJ )each Navy property has not >een considered in the past a s an 1irport possibility. For one lhing, Bresnahan said, 1e had understood the station ~as used for storing ammunition \nd might be a dangerous loca· \ion for aircraft. For another , he said, t he sta· t ion is not presently used as an airport. County supervisors In the past 'had asked military leaders for permission to use three other d e· tense facilities in the county for Accused. Son Misses Rites MEDINA, Ohio CA P > Michae l Swihart reportedly prayed in his jail cell rather than attend memorial services ror the four members of his fam ily he is accused or s laying. About 500 people attended a brier interde n omination a l service at St. Ambrose Roman Catholic Church i n n earby Brunswick on Wednesday night. Swihart is an 18 -year-old fr esh man at Miami <Ohiol University. The c l o sed casket s o f Michael's rather , Donald, 41: mothe r , Sue Ellen , 40 : a nd brothers. Brian, 16, and Russell, 9, were set in the center of the church before the altar. They will be buried Friday in Cov- ington , Va .• Mrs. Swiharl's birthplace, F r081PageAJ SHOT ... Io!ormation compiled by Costa Mesa police wiU be forwarded to the Orange County District At- torney's office, which will decide if any charges should be filed against the officers, or if the s hooting was in self-defense, Lorton said. ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT =:t.~:.:.~::~~ ::i:.::::~~= C-t ............. c:.o-.... w. Stow•t<llt...,tt<• puOO\l\MI Mof\def lfr\tOVOh ~rfd.ty I~ (,,..M" Moo-. ... ..._, 11• .. ft, HUflll-llo«.~1~....,_ ''*'" \f~lt~., 1r1111ut. 1•ddlfl'i«ll \l•ll•\f .-~ l~~&--1/'ft\ \ovtrt(O•\t A\.1"4\f'•foQ••..,.l.a• ttcW\ t\ lklbtl\IW'CI S•tw.rct•"' ~ Souna419'1 ff'HI> Dl"•"CIHI CNttfl'"i"IQ ot .. _,t h M J-.0 wt'I ... ~'"' C.o\tl IM-\f (•l·lor'"•""1t llMorlN -Pr•lt<M'"t •'WI ~•Wf' Jkllll (M1rf V-<• PrO•Otftl t""Ge-•1-._ Tlil•M••tlCM•'• l.dltM TM-•AM ........ ~ft•t•-o c911.,,. a.,,.,........ •'<,,.,,..._,, .,. •• A'""'•"• Mo11ft10!"9 6diuw Cotle Meu Office fol••fll>Q 1!:::::'. :•1n:o~WI. ""'"' T•f•pllon• (71f)ln-4321 Cl•H lfled Advenl•lng '42·5..,I ~17:~ !:~ °:1:r"rn c~~:!,,~~ft·~1~:':1 ''"""' or •tt••'t11u1rn•l"!t\ f'l•tfll11'\ m tw ,.. r•l'lf"fl9'11 •tf 'tfff"owt 'D•f• .. .,..rmu.uon u1 ,...,,.'°"''"'' '\t<•M ell \\ 00\t•o• o••fl Al (Mt• M ill'\ •• CeHff'rP\l• Subur1ot1n!'I f\~ t •,,t~r U i.G IN)fllhfy; It• ntAll \I \0 l!Wlfl\nf1J l!lflffOlf dt\UMl-'1.IOmOfllllfr. ai rcraft flights, Bresnahan not· ed. but were turned down in all three cases. Those fac ilities included El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, Los Almaitos Naval Air Station and Marine Corps property in the cente r of Mile Square Park. Supervisor Clark said Wednes· day that without the possibility of a new airport for private aircraft and those used for businessmen "ther e is nothing but disaster facing us." Fr .. r~Al SECURITY •.• Since elderly people could go on receiviug a Cull salary and still draw full Social Securi t y benefits. a greater percentage of elderly would elect to take their pensions under the Ketchum amendment. This. in tum, would mean that Social Security taxes would have to be higher than otherwise to finance the extra pensions. In order to raise the extra funds, the Ketchum amendment would m a.ke the m aximum tax $3,025 in 1987 for a person earn- ing $42,600. The maximum tax now is $965 per year. The higher tax burden would fall more on upper-income wage e arners lhan middle and lower· incom e workers, but all workers would pay substantially higher Social Security laxes. Ketchum said keeping SociaJ Security recipients from having fuJl-time jobs .. deprives society or the skllls and ability or many people." He called the $.1,000 limit "one o·r lhe most onerous provis ions of the Social Security J • • • aw. Ullman argued against the amendment, saying it would al- low wealthy professionals such as doctors and lawyers Lo con- tinue to work past age 6S and ..:arn $100,000 or more per year while also drawing Social Securi- ty pensions. "We are making an annuity program instead of a reti rt!ment program," he said. Actor's Bets, lhdes Learned In Wiretaps OKLAHOMA CITY <AP/ Television star Lee Majors al- legedly placed $1 ,000 bets on col- lege football games and alleged- 1 y had two dates with an Oklahoma Cily woman, the latest last Novembe r, government wiretap tapes disclose. <Related photo, AS> The wiretap tapes naming Ma- jors, star of the television series "The Six Million Doll ar Man" an d hus band of t e l evision personality Farrah Fawcett- Majors, were played Wednesday by the government in the case or seven people on trial in U.S. Dis· trict Court here for allegedly con- ducting a gambling operation. The tape naming Majors was made Nov. 24. The recording told how Majors aliegedly made $1.000 bets on the l'1ttsburgh and Oklahoma foot- ball games to be played that weekend. The conversations were among 60 taped calls the government has introduced into evidence They were recorded during court-approved wiretaps on three telephones last fall. On the tapes , one man iden- tified by a government, agent as L. D. "Luke" Morris, tells on the tape of ta.Icing two bets from Ma· iors. HP 1s then asked by a m an al lcged by the government lo be Randall Lloyd Keef. "How did you run into him? Was he at the Brigadoon (aprivateclub)?" "Yeah," responded the man al· leged to be Morris. "He dated Barbara once before. l flew up to Enid and got him." Majors has a ttend..'d several Grand National Quail Hunts. where celebrities and politicians mingle during several days of quail hunUng naar Enid, Okin. He said that over an un- !)pecified period or time, some Pcrsadan employes apparently embezzled "hundre d s of thousands of dollars" of that in· vestm ent money. At that point, Fiori, Resco, Marone and two other men were hired by the Persadan principals to "try to recover the embezzled funds," Amburgey asserted. Meanwhile. late in August, Bovan and at least two other Persadan cmployes which Am- burgey did not identify, allegedly kidnapped Kulik and held him for $100,000 ransom. While they had Kulik, Am· burgey said. they "severely beat him." Fiori, Resco, Marone and their two colleagues were used to pay the ransom for Kulik and the case was never reported to authorjl1es. Amburgey said. "From that point on," the de- tective asserted. "there was a re- ward oHered allegedly by the Pror.;;arlan "=roup, for Bovan and the kidnappers." The nature of that reward 1~ under investiga- tion, hcsa1d. Police say they believe Bovan, 36, left his ho me at 17332 Zeider Lane, Fountain Valley. to go i:tto hiding lie apparently stayed out of the Orange Coast area until Saturday night when he showed up al the El Ranchilo res taurant, 409 28th St. He left there early Saturday m orning after being spotted by Miss Addison, who was also at the popular night spot. Police al- lege she lipped Fiori. Hesco and ~I arone lo Bovan ·s location. Police aJlege Bovan was met outside the restaurant by at least one of the trio who shot him nine t1 mes with a 9mm automatic handgun. before fleeing in a green and white Cadillac. Based on a description of lhe car seen leaving the scene. police · arrested l-'1ori when he appeared at Nabers Cadillac Tuesday morning to sell the ear . Costa Mesa police. who wanted lo question him about the car, ar- rested tum when they allegedly found nearly three pounds of co- FretaP~AJ PENSION ••. would be leading the beleaguered property taxpayers further down the road lo ban.kruptcy." · Citron s aid he has written me mbers of Orange County's congressional delegation "telling them of the fallacy or attempting to save the Soci11 I Security !'ystem by bringing in local gov- ernment pension plans." Ile termed the move "simply a temporar y bailing out of a system that is near bankruptcy." Citron said coverage under the pcnMon plans of local govern- ments benefits the worker more than Socia) Security benefits. TONIGHT BACK TO SCHOO L NIGHT - CQsta Mesa High School, 7 to 9:30 p .m . C OSTA MESA COUNTY WATER BOARD -R egular meeting, 1971 Placentia, 7 p.m. HAUNTED HOUSE -f air-. gr ounds floricu1ture building, Oct. 24-31 , 6 p.m. lo midnight. Adm. Sl.50. Children under 12 mus t be accompanied by parent. OCC LECTURES -"Family Es tate Planning," Fine Arts 119, 7:30 p.m. "Slim Chance in a Fat World," Women's Center, 7 p.m. "PRIVATE LIVES" -South Coast Re pertory Theater, Tuesday-Sunday through Ocl. 30. 8p.m . COASTLINE CC LECTURES ·'Coping With Adolescents," Unitarian Church Auditorium, 8 p. m . "Nutrition and Health," E8ttmcia High Room 252, 7 p.m. FRIDAY, OCT. U FRlDAY AFTERNOON FILMS -"Dishonored," (1931), OCC Science Lecture 2, 2: 30 p. m . FOOTBALL -Costa Mesa vs. El Toro al Mission Viejo, 8 p.m. Estancia vs. Villa Park. OCC Field, 8 p.m . Newport Harbor at Huntington Beach, 8 p.m. • • caine in his possession. By tracing the car's regislra· ti on. police round Res co, Marone and Miss Addison. Police said they wer e told where to look for the gun, and lifeguards Larry Gibson and J ohn Blauer waded through the thigh-deep mud for 20 minutes before finding the s llll·cocked firearm. Amburgey said he and other in· vestigators are probing the role played by the four Persadan men in the case to determine the nature of the "rewa rd" they al· legedly offered for the location of Hovan. "We're interested in talk- ing to them.·· he said, noting the.it lht•y have apparently been out or the country. Bandg Bandies John Bennett and his s ecretary, Diane O'Dell. display differences between his bent handles and the regular kind U::.t'd on tennis rackets. hammers and machetes. He ~ays the · handles follow the natural flow of the wrist muselc and forearm. and eould revolutionize sporting goods. tools and cnokang <.•quipment. Pastor's Rites Slated A memorial service conducted by clergym en of all f1uths will be held at South Coast Community Hosp1taJ Monday for Rev Robert Enlow O'Bnan, 82. who \\a:. s tru ck and kill e d h y an automobile Tuesday night A Cam1h sgokt:sman said priests und pastors from several com mun1 t~· churches v.111 par ticipate in the s hort service at the hospital auditorium begin- ning al ti um. Rev. O'Oraan was the unof- ficial hospital chaplain for three ycu r s al South Coas t, and hos pital s pokes men said he brought comfort lo hundreds of patients during that period. The former secretary of state of Iowa moved to South Laguna in 191>7. making his home al 21651 Wt::.ley Drive, with-his wife :0.t abel Dr. O'Bria n, an educator , :.cholar and clergyman, also was a SU('Cl'Ssful businessman in his earlier years. and ser ved as a cons ultant to two foreign coun- lnes after resigning as president of M ornin~side College in Iowa. In addition to his wire, Mabel, oC the family home, Dr. O'Brian is survived by a son, Edward O'Brian of Anaheim, an adopted daughter. EraBelle T hompson a nd a foster son the pair raised in Costa Rica, Guillermo Cruz. Ile also leaves two brothers, J ames O'Brian of Clearwater, F la • and Michael O'Briao of L og a n s port, Ind ., three ~randc hildren and a great- gr andsoo. Introducing thejVC 3060. See the world's first portable AM/FM Radio-TV-Cassette Recorder Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach, Mountains, Desert -Anywhere. Price • 2 50°0 This JVC quality crafted unit includ~s a 3 .. diagonal black & white TV that locks '"·clear, bright pictures on VHF and UHF, a sensitive FM and AM radio with an amplifier and speaker to give you clear. rich music or sports; plus a cassette player recorder for. listening ~o your favorite tapes or recording your favorite pro· grams. Records audio from radio or TV plus it has a built in condenser mic for voice record· ing. All in one! You've never seen anything like it. Also available without the cassette recorder (Model 3050) at $190.00. JVC Modef 9475, FM/AM/SWl/SW2 Stereo Rodio, Cauette Recorder JVC Just •200°0 JVC's 9475 Is packed with fealures that make ii a best buy Its biggest feature as c;tereo sound, for recording and playback It even records ste<eo FM dtreclfy lrom tne bu1f1·111 tun,.r. Two big 5" duef~e speakers. Two -left and rtgl'lt -bu1lt·m oondenser micr°"tiooes.' Two easy·t o·se e meters. An up·to-lhe-minute cassette mechanism with full auto-stop and cue/review facllltl8'. 1·1111 l'a••lo~1 Hnrrnnrie•' 1"111., Our-1•e•r-.ounl fl11t• tt•nr fii1u1rut1r•••• Ou I,.,.,.,, l"r 11dut·1 Mt• .'ti•ll: 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa "_ ...... ....,._ 2 D~ Wttt flf Cetit ,k, Phone 642-8882 State Hovrs Dally 9-6 Sat. 9-5:30 S~•-. ..._ HwiNr Ar9e SIM• ltU -,, d b l ·-----.. ' ·. • at-~ 1ut er " Ve lis 1lg a ch lY al al 's >n is Thursday, October 27. 1977 DAIL V PILOT ii :J TV Inspired Sex Attack on Girl, 9?. SAN ~NClSCO <AP> -A Jury must decide whether a na· lionally televised show Incited a copycat sexual assault on a 9· year-old gir l. the California Court of Appeal has r uled. The..3-0decisioo Wednesday re. fotned the $22 million damage suit against the National Broad· casting Co. a nd NBC affiliate KRON-TV to Superior Court for trial. The ruling reversed Judge J ohn Ertola's dJsmlssal of the suit on grounds the First Amend· ment proteclS television stauons from liability for damages stem· ming from mu.teria l t hey broad· cast. The appeals cou.rt said Ertola's vie wing the film "Born lnno· cent" and then dismissing the suit violated the girl's constitu· tional right to trial by j ury. T he ruling said if a jury a warded damages, it would have been the responsibility or the trial court or Court of Appeal to determine whether the verdict could be sustained against a First Amendment challenge. Valeria Niemi filed the suit on bch a lf of her daughter. lt duimed the girl was attacked Sept. 13, 1974, by a group of teen a~e girls on a San Francisco beach and "artificially ra~>d" with a bottle. The complaint alleged the us- sailants had seen the "artificial raoe .. scene in "Born lnnocenr· which "caused them to decide to do u s1m1lar ucto to u minor g1rl." After viewing the film, Ertol;1 ruled it did not udvocate or en courage violent and depruved acts and thus did not com.t1tutc an incitement. T he suit claimed the girls were influenced by the TV drama which three days earlier explicit· ly portrayed a sexual attack wlth a ''plumber's helper'' on a young girl in a state-run home. T he appeal court noted that rri ,1tcriJI commnuntcatcd by i.iuhl1c m<.>dta, including !icUon1d nrntcrl;tl !'!Ueh u:s seen in the TV :-.how. is ~cnerally accorded pro- tect 1un under the First Amend· mcnt. But it s aid the freedom of speech g uarant eed i s not ubsolutc. • ''Speech which is directed to Inciting to or producing lmmi· nent lawless action, and which is likely to incite or produce such uetion, 1s also outside the scope of First Amendment protection," the court said. Before the appeals court. at: torney Marvin Lewis argued the television show was "nothing but child pornography, no matter how you put it. Let them pay if they caused harm . • . We have a du{y to prove It l;and thls we arc prepared to do." NBC altornoy Anthony Liebig contended 'the suit proPosed a new form or liability which "would stultify or chill any dram atic presentation.·· Jail Death Suit "-Widow Gets $100,000 """'I ........ WHEN YOU'RE MASKED, YOU ACT LIKE KIDS Sherri Dlxol' Matches Vampire 't Grimace Letting Go Mtuks Change Penontilitie8_ MIA~ CAP> -P sychologists say that wh en people put on Ha lloween costumes they do things they m ight not otherwise do. And costume s hop owners agree. .. ''A mask lncreases the likelihood people will act in wa)S not usual for them ,•• says Dr. Phillip Zimbardo of Stanford Universl· ty. "You are more subject to momentary whims and pressures ... HAROLD CASE, WHO RUNS ABC Costume Shop. says a ser ious-Jooking man m ay ch~e 1920s style dress and "start dancing the Charleston" at a Halloween party. Sherri Dixon or Dixon's Costume Shop says her customers "get into the costumes and act like kids." Zlmbardo s ays masks give people anony mlty so their "beha vior is less under the controllin& influence of society .. , 'EDWARD OIESER OF THE University of Illinois studied the dtfterenee between trick-or-treaters who were asked their names and those who were not "We found that of kids who came in large groups and re- mained anooymous, a large percent would take extra candy,·· he said, b ut a much smaller percentage or those who were identified would take extra candy. Pot Penalty Vote Draws Two Blasts WASHINGTON (A P l -Two senators who say mar ijuan a possession should continue to be a federal c-rime hope they can re· verse a Senate committee's vole cutting the penalty to a SlOO fine. · "W c are sending out a message that really should not be sent out ," Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R· Utah) said after Wednesday's judiciary committee vote to sub- stitute the civil fine or $100 for criminal saoctions. Sen. Paul Laxalt <R·Nev.) sup· ported Hatch. so.ring it would be "a terribly hnd thing for us to in· dicate to the peaple of this coun· try that we arc legaliting mari· j uana. ·· Hatch said he m ay propose, as an alter native. t h<1 t t h e possession of up to 10 grams still be classified as a criminal of· (ense, although subject only to a fine or $100. Under federal la w, m arijuana possesision is punishable by a fine of up lo $5,000 und imprisonment of up to one year. Under the bill the committee approved, the penalty would be SlOO ror possession of less than an ounce. Possession of m ore than an ounce could draw a maximum penalty of up to 30 days in Ja il a nd a SSOQ fine. Ten grams is enough for about seven cigarettes. An ounce wtll make about20. T he committee meets again Monday. Repealing the (ederat criminal sanctions would have little prac· tical effect, as virtually all ar· r ests for marijuana are made un· der state laws. But backers of the move have said they expect it to be a model for the states in modernizing their criminal laws. T h e p r oposal t o m a k e possession of sm all amounts punishable only by a fine, much as minor traffic violations are now handled, was made by Sen. Birch Bayh (D-lnd. ). By TOM BARLEY Ol 1 .. O.aly PllOl$~fl A Westminster woman has ac· cepted $150,000 in damages from the county as settlement of a wrongful death suit she filed after her husband s uffered fatal injuries in the Orange CoWlty J ail. SuperiQr Court J udge H. War· ren Knight approved the settle-m ent in favor of Mrs. Bonnie Nelson and her stepson, They took legal action a rte r Don Oeinente' s Nixon Tour Sold Ont Tickets arc sold out for lhe Feb. 26 tour of Richa rd Nixon·s San Clemente estate, t he San Cle m ente Cham be r of Com· merce announced. Nixon's estate, situated inside guarded gates, has been seen by few people since the form er president retired there after his 1974 resignation Tounsts are often disappointed to learn they cannot see the Nix · on housl' \\hen they come to San Clemente. F ou r m onths ago San Clemente·~ muror, Donna Wilkinson. wrote 11> the Nixons, asking 1f 1hrv would participate in tht· c·1ty 's observance in f'chruary of its 50th anniversary . W1th1n a week. a Nixon aide was making arrangements with the city for th<' tour, said Gt>1w(. man . He said the aide told hi m the ~ixons fe<>I San Clemente is their communil' ;11ul that they're de· lightt·ci 111 huld the tours fo r the cit v·s t'l'll'hr:it\tm T1ckN~ \H:nt nn sale Oct. 13 al $2.50 C1wl(lman said lwo-thirds of the 1.:100 lll'kcts were sold 1n 1wo d ayi,, so the city r aised the total number of tickets lo 8,000. Now these tickets arc sold out, except for a few lhe c-ity is hold ing back for celebrities. sa1'1 Goodman. He said that lhe Nixons will not profit from the lours. All pro· ceeds wtU be used to pay for the city's anniversary celebration. he said. Tickets have been ordered by tour groups from all over the country. Goodman said. All three or the major nt•lworks. CBS. NBC and :\BC. have told the chamber or commerce they pl;m to take the tour, he said. T hree buses will leave San Clemente lhgh School in ten· minute relays from 9 a .m . to S p.m . to convey ticket holders to the Nixon estate, said Goodman. No plans h:ivc been made for the Nixon fa mily to g r eet tourists. who wlll not he allowed off the bus inside the compound, he said. Inquest Ope ne d PRETORIA , South Africa (AP> -South African officials today opened an inquest Into the death of black leader Steve Biko wh\le in police custody six weeks ago. Yacht Race Still Close Merlin, Drifter Bow to Bow in La Paz Event By i\LMONLOCKABEY OllM Dally Pll9U WI Y achtsmen In a long distance . r ace h ave been known to fahify their latitude and longitude posi· tions to lull the competition Into. complacency. It used to be ca ll e d "gamesmanship" before it W8' declared illegal. But legal or lllegol, It's pretty· hard to do when t wo yachts are aaillng within sight or alongside each other. Such seems to be the cue wtth Merlin and Drifter , the two front· runner~ in the l,OOO·mlle Lons Ucach to La Pai race. On Tues· day they repor ted identical coordi nates Clatltudc and longiludcJ and Wednesday they diff~red by only two minutes of Jo.niJLudc -a dlstance of less than two miles east and west. T he position placed them just south o{ Magdalena Bay and about 35 miles offshore with about 160 miles to go to Cabo San Lucas. Al the Cobo Falso light the 2S yachts in the r ace will t ake their own lim es and continue about 100 m iles up the Sea of Cortez to the finish at La Paz. Winds a l ong l he B a j a California coast continued li ght with yachts report.Ing eight to 10 knot! from the northwest with a four lo flvc-foot swe ll from the west. Of the yachts r eporting, only three others had logged 600 miles or more since the start. Thry wore Cottontail, 608; Buena Vlda Vl, 600; and Elusive, 610. Elusive is a P erformance Handicap Rae· . ing Fleet. yacht. • '~ There was no report from Sneaker, Cottontail's sistership which had beC'll sailinu even with Cottontail on Tuesday. Others not reporting were Sptttre and Sasqua~h. Handicap sta.ndJngs with dl~· tances from Long Beach : IOR-Merlln, f>llO; Drifter, f~: Silver Fox. 562; Equation, 580, High Roll'r, 564; Blue Norther, 551; Sunset Rlvd , 564; Cottontail. 008 ; Sneaker, no report; Secret Love, 520 ; Conception, 598: Au dacious, 594; E sca l ante Grmrde. 583~ Duma Vida VJ. 600; Shcnrwater, 50.5: Spectre, no ro- J>Orl, PllRF-Kurma, SAA: Cher E Dan , 547 : l)rill Rig 3, 551; Elusive, 6W: T,eprochaun. 526; Tasmin Sea, 531. Wlldwlnd, 497; Sasquatcb, 472. Edward Nelson died in lhe UC Irvi ne Medica l Center in January, 1976. The lawsuit, which now has been taken off the trial calendar , claimed that jail negHgence led to Nelson's death from a skull frac- ture. Nelson entered the jail on Jan. 24, 1976, to begin serving the first of fi ve weekends he drew follow- ing a drunken driving conviction. He was taken to the county hospital the next day with what Rearing Soaght later proved lo be a skull fracture and died there eight days later. The s uooequent lawsuit filed by 'Mrs. Nelson cla imed that Nelson fell and s truck his head on the concrete floor while being served lWlch and that h~ fell again and struck his head after he was returned to his eel\. It is alleged that jail personnel were negli gent in not insuring that Nelson received immediate and adequate treatm ent for his injuries. Cella' s Trial Bid Gets Action Friday Los Angeles Federal Court Judge Malt By r ne r efused Wednesday to rule immediately on Dr . Louis J. Cella Jr. 's motion for a reopening or the fede ral tnal that e nded with his conv1cllon on multiple criminal charges. Jud~e Byrne set Friday as the day he will ad vise Cella. 52. and his lawyer:. if he is prcp<.ircd to order a hearing into their claim that they have unearthed new evidence favor able to their clil'nt. H he granL'> the hearing it will inevitably delay appellate court Jct ion next week into Cella ·s ap· peal a~a1m.t his convictwn on charges of tax evasion, Medicare fraud and Nnsp1racy. ' And such a hearing could ur feet Celia 's next Orange County Superior Court appearance on charges related to the federal case and contained in a Grand Jury inclictment that lists 127 felony coWlts. Cella and co-defendant Stephen Robert Evans, 32, have been granted changes of venue for their trials on the Orange County allegations. Judge II. Warren Knight has schedulE.'CI NO\'. 10 as the date he is expected lo announce that C'clla ·s trial will be transferred to San Diego. The location of Evans trial will noilbe announced until the Cella trial is in its hnal stages· Judge Knight said. Cell al:. free on appeal from the federal sentence of five years in 1mson. Evans is free on appeal from the one·\·ear term handed him by .Jud~c Byrne SEVERAL FLOOR SAMPLE DINI NG ROOM PIECES O N SALE SAVE UP TO 20o/o Th'e f ~l isl1 J~li qg The se piece s c r afted of soli11 oak, charmin~ly antiqued. It also a ll eged that medical personnel at the county hospital im properly diagnosed Nelson's injuries and failed to take action the could have prevented his death. The settlement indicates that Mrs. Nelson received $100,000 and Don Edward Nelson II, the 15-yenr-old son of the deceased by a previous marriage, $50,000. The county issued checks In those amounts this week. Fann I.and Developing Approved About 1,000 acres or San Juan Capistrano farm land has been freed for development as coun- ciJm en unanimously approved regulations governing sewer c:oo· nections on the land . T he farm land had been the subject of a State Coastal Com· mission-imposed a g ricultural prese rvation measure aimed at halting developme nt of the land. The restriction was tied to ap-. proval last year of a new oeean out Ca 11 fo r th e Southeast Regional Recla ma tion Authority <SERRA>. Coastal Commission members granted San Juan the a uthority lo approve sewer hookups upon learning. or the city's own 23(). acre {lgricultural preservation prograWI. That program Is tbe subject or a petition soon lo be circulated among residents CAii- ing for abolition of the preserve. This 48 inch round dining table takes two 12 inch· fillers, extending \o 72 inches. At 48 inches ideal tor family use and at 72 inches ready for company. OAK CHINA 53" w ide SALE PRICED 89900 5 PC. DINING SET 48" TABLE and 4 CHAIRS SALE PRICED 99900 Your Favorite Designer Wiii Be Happy To A:;s/st You. PROFESSIONAL INlEIUOR DESIGNERS Open Mo11., Thvri. & Fri. hes. A4 DAIL y PILOT HOW NOW.DEPT. -It's pret· ty tough these ditys for the stu· dents of our coastal region to find good part-time jobs where they can earn a few dollars out in the fres h air. Thus il is that we can lament the passing of an enormous youth job opportunity when the Great Irvine Cow Count got canceled before it even got started. ll looked good for som e or our unemployed youth a bit earlier this month when the Irvine City Council, in its infinite wisdom. ord er ed up the bovine nose- count. This was the brainchild or Council person Gabrielle Pryor. Mrs. Pryor had suspicions that the Irvine Company was failing lo Jive up to the rules in getUng a tax break for lands held in aericultural preserve. IT WAS HER belief that in or· der to earn the tax writcoff. the great ranch com pany must keep at least one cow on each 10 acres of preserved lands. In s canning news dispatches on this question, I could find no mention or a bull requirement. You could conctude that bull ex- clusion 1 is -pretty sex isl. But maybe that"s beside the POint. Thunday. October 27, 1977 Extension OfERA Blasted WASHINGTON <APl -Houi.c Republican Leader John Rhodes, who supported the Equal Rights Amendment when it was before Conaress. opPOSes an extension or the seven-year ratification deadline. The legislatures of 35 slates have approved the amendment, which will die March 22, 1979, un· le ss Congress exte nds the deadline another seven years or unless it is approved in two-thirds or the states. Rhodes' home stale. Arizona. has not ratified it. "I VOTED TO bring the ERA out and s ubmit 1t to the nation because it was an important ques tion, .. Rhodes s aid in an in· te rview Wednesday. "It seems to me that the question will have been decided by the time the seven years is up and it will not be wise to extend it." Congress members pushing for the extension argue that the Issue of equal rights !or women is u much livelier one now than when Congress acted on it and that the states should have more time to decide. Rhodes said the focus s hould be on stute a nd fcderul laws to .. do whatever is neee~s ary lo provide equal rights ." Billy's Beer WEATHER I NATION 'U...fJlest, Steeetnt' Husband Tells Of Ki11ing Wife MOCKSVILLE, N.C. <AP J -Daniel Webster Hid his wire Gladys was "a lady, one or the humbl est. sweetest women" he bad ever known. · Then he told a jury how he killed her by hilling her on the head with an ax, strangling her and then stabbing her. Webster. 51. has a lready -------------pleaded guilty to the July 26 slay· ing of his 56-year-old wife. The trial, which resumes today. ls to determine whether he spends the rest of his life in prison or dies in the gas chamber. "I BEUEVE IN my heart if· I'm not given the death penalty. there's no justice in the state or North Carolina,·· he said in a taped confession played in the courtroom Wednesday. Arter the tape was played, Webster-t ook the s tand to describe in detail how he s lipped up behind his wire as she fixed his dinner and hit her on the back or the head with an ax. As she lay on the floor. he said, he strangled her and then stabbed her in the throat. ''I kissed her on the cheek and said, 'I'm sorry, but lt'a bettw this way; .. hetnUfled. WHEN WEBSTEa finished, Dist. Atty. H. W. Zimmerman declined to cross-examine. ••rve heard juat about enough today.·· he said. Despite the protests of bls at- torney. Webster pleaded auilty Tuesday to first degree rnurder. Zimmerman said he was the first person in the slate ever to plead guilty to first degree murder. Webster insisted be bad planned the, slayil)I "for m onths•· and had tried once before to do it wtth a .22-eaUber rlne, "but she didn't prosecute:· 'Industry to Dump Bryant for Stand? ORLANDO. Fla. <AP > --Anita Bryant. the stnger wholeeampaign ugainst rights for homoseX1.1als has enmeshed her lo controversy. mar be on tht: way out as the Florida orange juice industry's leadlnl representa,ive Anyway, back to cows. Mrs Pryor and her comrades figured that the cow question should get settled lo determine if the Irvine Company was coming up short on bovines per acre. This brought orders for the Great Irvine Cow Count. TWENTY JIOOSE members, including Majority Leader Jim Wright of Texas: Majority Whip John Brademas of Indiana: Rep Peter Rodino <D·N .J . J. judiciary committee chairman: and the ranking GOP membe r of the ways and means committee. Barber Conable or New York. arc co·sponsoring the proposal lo ex tend the ERA deadline. The first stacks of Bill \· Beer, na med tor Pre~1dent Cartcr".s brother. a r c rcudy for !)htpment from f'alls City Brewing Co., Louis ville. Ky. Only the sl <1cks marked ''GA.·· near which ware house s upervisor Bob Elrod s its. urc the new brew. Firs t ::,h1pmcnt will go to Georgia Edward Tavlor. executive director of the Florida Department ot Citrus. said \\'cdne~day that "a t·h angc will have lo bl' made in thl' foreseeable future ·· :\I ISS BRYA~T 'S c rusade agam!>t a Dade County, Fl a . or· drnance forbiddin~ d1scr1m1na· lion ugainst homosexuals in h o u sing and l'mploy ment 1·hung ed her image to the point that "when consumers sec her they don't think about orange .1 uice, they think about the gay rights issue." Taylor said. Orange juice commercials. t\t iss Bryant appeared at a re· vival meeting Wednesday night J i n Lima. Ever mindful of the taxpayers' dollars. the city chiefs didn't want to send out highly-paid staff members on a cow-counting ex· pedition. So they ordered that students be hired as cow census· takers. Lynde Accused of Slur Ohio. and gave no in· d lcation she knew of Taylor's s tatement. •'Orange juice sales are up 25 percent,00 s he told an a\l· THIS, CLEARLY, was <1 marvelous opportunity. Some new youth jobs would be cr eated. Job requirements would be that the youngsters know what a cow looks like and be able to count. Comedian Denies Black Profs Allegations 1\1 a rket resear ch studies show that the singer is not reaching the younger people. the i_ndustry ·s future customers. he said. There must be at least a few students in our region who could quality. Think bow &rand this would have been. The kid might even get a large brass badge that pro- claimed, "OHic i a l Cow Counter.·• Then the youngster would simply gel lo wander out on the ranchlands, commune -with nature and s tart counUng bovines. Since cattle herds have been known to move about overnight, tbe job might last indefinitely. The student would be counting the same cows over and over. This might mean the job would iequire tagging each cow as she was counted. : · COW TAGGING would be okay loo, as long as no student m istook :a bull for a cow. Bulls have been \s"nown to be anti-social under these circumstances. Alas, this great student )ob op- .i:>ortunity evaporated before the first cow counter got hired. Irvine's Cily Planning Director ·E ddie Peabody, son or the fameq banjo player of yesteryear , in· =tormed the city chiefs that there ·i.s no rule exclusively requiring cows per acre to quallry for a tax break as an agricultural pre· ..aerve. So ther e will be no cow. .counting jobs for the students of our region. · 1 knew it was too good to be :true. EVANSTON, lll. <A P > -· A black professor al Northwes tern University says that comedian Paul Lynde directed a series or "racial insults" al him shortly after Lynde appeared at the sc h ool 's hom ecomin1: ceremonies. Sociology Prof. James Pitts said Wednesday that the incident occurred at a fa s t .fo od restaurant near the campus on Saturday night and was wit. nessed by about 10 people. PITTS . A FORMER ~orthwestem bas ketball player. s3id Lynde referred to "spoiled black people'" and made an ob· scene gesture at him. Pitts described the incident in a letter published this week in the student newspape r Daily Northwestern. T he newspaper also carried a lett er from a white student, John Christofersen or Batavia. 111., givin~ identical de· tails and deploring Lynde's al leged behavior. The news paper also published an article quolJng Lynde as dl'ny · in~ the IOCI· dent and say· in g he did not recall havini: bee n 1n the rc~t a urJn t Saturday mi::ht. Pills said in h1:. lelter that L y nd e, an \. a lumnus of the university, stood behind him in line al the res taurant and "ke pl uµ a i:.tcady chatlcr , mo!lt of 1t racist r-omments directed at black people 10 gener al and at me in particular .. PITTS SAID LYNDE an nounccd that he was scheduled tn do a comedy ,s pec ia I with "-;polled black people ·· He quot· cd Lynde as sa) ing, ··'Black peo- ple are too s poiled. There are ~o ing lo be all Lhc~c bla<'k people. I'm the only white lhey·re ha\'ing on the show." Pills s aid the remarks angered him and that he said to the <.'Omc- dian. "Perhaps they particularly wanted you on the show To thi:i1. ht! 'l aid L vmle res ponded. " 'They w a nted Archie Bunker ' PITTS SAID ltt; wondered as he stood in llnl' "whether a six· GRAJL4M FUND TO SELL AGAIN :\llNNEAPOLIS CA P > The l31lly Graham Evangelb tic A., !>Oc1at1on ha~ mt:t statr ~tandard\ and may resume ~elhng an an- nu1ly fund in Minne!>ota. the state Scc·urity D1 v1s1on i-.ays B<'c ausc of what the a!>~oda LIOn '!> offtc1als said was a cll'n c:.i l overs1 ~hl, the fund had violated ~tat.: law :-incc December 1975 and had been withdrawn from the m:.irket earlier this \'car Quarlt:rlv reparts had not -been fil ed \\Ith the stule durin ~ that period . Southeast Skies Clear , Texana Boak in Indian Summer Temperatrue H'9ft l.•• .t.lbucllle•<IU<' IS d Am•rillo .. !O Anc~t•9e •l JI Atlonla 10 ).) 1 9J"'1iUCk ... J.4 hi~ )~ toi ton •• 1k'own•v1111 n. eu11010 10 JI "" ., .. lj IJ • 0.-rl<'\lon, SC. •• ., 01 • (111"'90 "° 41 Cl~I"""'' •l \I ~, .... ,.no 12 ·~ 0.ll•~·fl. Wor11• .. )41 ~., ~ " Oelri>ll ... 41 F~lfkn-• u ,, HtltN lo8 7ft .-..... Ml II -- ttou"oo 0 "' *"'°"'""· -· ~' ~lttft Clly IJ Ill \,n'V•oal ~ ~ L.111 .. llOU I • )I O..,rAotoe1 • ..., hChor ........ l~~f~f\I' ,, Vf"Jll ,,., 1't>f h4V• --· lrf ~ )0 ll"1•oll bolOtft1 0 Ill ..cl y()Vr '"OY woll boo •J61o_.,e!t 84!.nNY l lWJ £.1n•Jtv If "'"' 00 nc)f t«..... yOur ~"OY bv 8 6"' r.•11 o-Jot• JO 1'" .,, .. 1 JiU.H" tr.fJt'Jy w.11 t-.. .,..,....., ~T~ ........ 0.MOf Co.iMV AINI t•J>•>tt Hotl~I ~nlo"Olon Uu«ll -W9t11•11n '"' f4f.fflt .... 0-1'1•• Cao-•lfll'O ..... h ..,.,,...,., ........ "'> o-"°"'' so..n 1 ,.,. ........... NIQ-* , 0 ...... ......... CDUl .... ~ Ml•ml 15 17 ~ftwautu.'• Sil •I #\t\nOl't ~t P~""' h4 ·~ ,._.~* Orlt••n' ,. )) New Yorlil w )I )) 0~1 .. noni• '"'' ~· \$ Om11h" n )J Orl•ndu Ml $1 flhlloOolO"'" ., ,.. 41 Jl~nu •• el P1t1,llurQI\ &~ >2 Pornano, Ot•. )/ )I !i.I lOUt\ •9 .. ~I Pe1~r1t>urq•l<1m,.. 87 tt \<111 L•U (.1ty to )0 \f'tn J.f'Af'\(1\(0 61 ~ ...... 111. H •f \rio~•n• H ~ W•,lllnQlon 70 .. IJ.S. s ....... .,, A (Ohl frt:Jll INll btOUQtlt dt•~lll!\O ••'"' .. INJ Soul"'•" In I/It llnl NII ot 111o "'"' ~ '"""'ftO ""' to l H IOd•Y, Pr""'4\1"9 <lffllf'!I •~I ... end m1t<.ftt tff'\pef•tuttti. !.om• ••In conllnuMJ In lhe m10 Atl1tntlC \t•te\ ~ tl'W'rl' WffO • fflw '"O•tr\ &lld llluncH!'>t>o_,. over lhe wetl•rn Cterotff'~n. Mt•nwhlt~; 1 ttxAn' tontlnv.d to l'M\• IOI lno1an tumm•r u ltm potAturt\ were 1111oe<tfl\J to (ltmb into Ill• ~us for Ille i.e<ond \lr•IQlll d•v. with lht ~\!DUiiy Of M>m• m0<9 'iO- deQrH reeolngt . lil\t~ ...... <loud'( ~'" .... nded over "''"" Of 1ne Apo.tla<t1IM1t ano Oh to V •ll•v norlh••,l••rd ln10 )OUtMfl\ New 1::"91•1111. OtMt too tnrmeo ow r t••~ paru o1 lndl•n• •nO Mltll191f1 Ouh•O. ol IM Sovlll .. tl and mid· AllA!\h(, Dre<lllli.llOll We\ llmlt~ 10 • lfw t!W>w.,.t In no'1horrn W•.,,lllQIOtl *>d Or~on aNI '°""' ttol•l•d lhun O.• \llOWtr\ In nort,,.r n C.•lllorlll• iome t-11\es\ ttrtttlltO trom llOrtMrn Ml,_)Ol.e lnUI $0UIN4\ltm llt\Ofll•n• fftCI .. '° .,,., IM .OWllwrl'I l)<lrh ot 1 ... ,-No,. Mul<o, CaUfornla A <IOUOV, PO"lotv ·~·"• rr10~~ morn1nq 11 e:•oec.teu to tutn tnto • ,..,Y sun\111ny ollltrnooo. s•v~ IM Na llOn•I We.Iller !ie"'IC• (\ul Ille l'le41•y 109 ol lhl' IMI le• morntn9\ wlll a1»11rtnt•v 11ght•n R•ln tll•l'l<H Mii 9r11a1.,,1 •long ,,,.. to•''· Wlfh1•• mount••n •nO dt M"rt •t~•' t~ ••PM.t tair w••thtr w.iU IOOlwind' l emper.illftt are ••PKllCI lo ton 11nue In I toe m•O '°'· oerNPS sll9"11• tooter Mar thlt u>a\t . Coaatal Weather Ct-y n1Q111 •"" morn1nq ,_,. wltll ch•n<" OI a<tule i..tom•"9 .,.,, h'<loudv tntr~•'"''""°'' Llglll oriM>tP wtnd• night •~O morning !lours High• F r1oav 1n the u-r.O~. cou1a1 ltm~••lurc• w111 ranQ<' b~twetn ~• •no bd tnlAnO tem · peolurH wlll <•1191 11<•1-n SI and /J l"41 wa!Cf temperalur~ wilt be•S. THUll$0AY Sccono 1ow • · 11 p,n., o 1 S.conll 111911 10.41 p.m. • l "lllOAY Finl low J.)6a.n1. 1 I f tntlllOll IO:Ota m \I 5.c.ond low l 03 o m. •O.O !Mtcond 1111111 11 n p m. • 0 !>\In,,,.,, ota,m. ~H O&o m Moonrlw,•:.,pm.,•"•' •Jp.m S•rflleport tlunllnQIOll Be.ell. Wallfl I-to ti ... IOI Wllll "'f\I ""•" '°'9Q111on • t•I• Newpo<1 IW<Kh W•w\ thr ... IO tour 1••1 w1tll tOUl~I •-II (Ond1 t1onH•lr ' foot nine·inch black NU ulumnus and Ph.D. employed hy his alma mater can get away wi th beattnR hell OUl or an Intoxicated but wea~~hy and famous white alum· nus. lll'A die ft Ce 0 f 21000. He i.aid Lynde grimaced at h 1 m and made an o bscen e gesture whe n the counte r "'ailress brought hi s order nut Dan Richard son . ctiairman or the Florida Citrus Commission . said he disagre~ with Taylor. Richardson said Miss Bryant's image has not been harmed by her politics and the commission has no plans lo c urtail he r appear ances in ln Miami, gay r gbls activist Bob Kuns t criliciied Taylor's de- cision. "Firing her because of her political opinions and actJvJtJesb • an act of dlscrimlnaUon wt»dt we oppoee, ··Kunst said. ••t would stand for Anita on th11 lasue ... We Get Top -Ratings When It comes to local news, nobody tops the Dally Piiot. We come up with the straight score every Ume, from city council coverage, to school board action, to high school spor1t. Get the fastest. most accurate information about your communtty, In new, easier to read Dally Piiot. We can tell you aome of th• interesting things your neighbors do. where to eat on the Orange Coast, how much your tax bill will be, and who can cure your consumer complaint . Our reporters dig beneath the surface to find out why thing• happen In your community, and who causes them to happen. In-depth reporting brings you the right score on what Is going on In your world. Our editors select stories and picturee of particular Interest to Orange Coast readers and organize them In easy·tO·flnd fashion. Enjoy the bright new pages of the DAILY PILOT 642 -4321 .... , ... STATE I SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA PRINCE CHARLES MEETS HOLLYWOOD STARS Farrah Fawcett-Majors (left), Sophia Loren Share Dela ~a Handshake Charity Bash Stars Royal Attraction . LOS ANGELES <AP> -England's futU(tt ldb( ~as a star attraction at a party ·lVflere he mingled with stars like Cary Grant and Farrah Fawcett· Majors to help raise funds for a local host>itai Prince Charles capped a busy day Wednesday -which he began by viewing the successful flight of the Space Shuttle Enterprise -with his appearance al the party at the Bever- ly Hilton Hotel. Visitors paid S500 each to s hake his hand and have din- ner. STARS ACCOMPANYING THE prince on the dais included Grant, Miss Fawcetl·MaJors and her husband, Lee Majors: Sophia Loren. Telly Salavas and Dean Marlin. The prime spent four hours at the event, which drew .about 1,000 people. The patty, which benefilted St. J ohn's 5ofJ on Patrol ' Hospital and Health Center in Santa Monica, was sponsor~ by the Variety Club of Beverly Hills, a group or mov- ie stars who r aise funds for charities. "People paid $500 per ticket to shake hands with the prince In the re- ception line and have dinner and $100 apiece just for dinner,·· a hotel official said. ··u was packed." HE SAID ENTERTAINMENT in- cluded a · performance by comedian Bob Newhart and songs by Martin. Earlier in the day, the 28-year-old bac helor prince toured an arcbeologicaJ museum and visited a downtown British goods promolion He was to depart this afternoon for San Francisco, the last city of his tour . after tours of the J et Propulsion Laboratory, a methane gas recovery pilot project and 20th Century.Fox Studio. Klan Border Watch ·Called lneff ective ' SAN DIEGO <AP'l -U.S. Border P<tLsoJ oWcials say the highly pubUclied Ku Klux Klan border watch '5 baving liUle errect on the ap· prebension of illegal aliens and that officers have had little contact with KKK members. David Duke of Melair1e, La . the 27-year·old Grand Dragon or the Knights or the Ku Klux Klan, one of 42 separate organizations known as the Klan of America, insisted the ciUien patrols were tn full swing. Duke and Tom Metzger or Fall brook. California KKK organizer. claimed more than 500 Klansmen in rour slates were p atroling th e border from Brownsville. Texas, lo the P acific. • Meanwhile, a federal court judge )Vednesday denied a petition flied by several human rights groups seeking a temporary restraining order limit- ing the Klan patrols . .•ttdflet Baelced LONG BEACH !AP) -Trustees of the California State University and leoneies have approved a record $712 million support budget recommenda· "tion for 1978-1979. 8.S percent higher than the 1977-1978 request. The support budget. approved at a spedal meeting Wednesday, does not include salaries or capital outlays. It contains a request for $3.8 million to fund a college·level remedial writing 'skills program, a similar version of which was rejected by the governor and s!ate Legislature last year. . S .. l .. 8t T..,ed SAN SIMEON CAP) -A 43-foot i sailboat that was foundering in 12·foot waves and high winds in t he Pacific· ( • STA.TE J Ocean nine miles off San Simeon Wednesday afternoon was towed safe· ly toSanSimeonharbor, the U S.Coasl Guard said. One man aboard was unhurt. hut the Coast Guard said It did not have his name. The boat, the Phaedra, was own~d by Sidney Weissman of Woodland Hills, the Coast Guard s aid 1Mrd Teett Arre•ted OXNARD <AP) -A third teenager was to appear before a Juvenile Court judge today in connection with the murder of a high school music student and the rape and beating of his girlfriend. Police said the 16-year.old boy was arrested Wednesday and booked for investigation or flrst·degree muroor in the death of 17-year -old Paul Nen- ney and the rape-beating of Llnda Fiene, 18, Oct. 14 behind Channel Islands High School. T.alleliel SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr. says the time is still' not right for a special legislative session on property tax relief. "The moment I see some llsht at t he end of the tunnel l will call them back into session." Brown told..mem· bers of the County Supervisors AS· sociation Wednesday. "As of yet, the period of questioning, meditation and education must continue. There def· initely Is a need for more th ought.·· CAN YOU SPARE 60 MINUTES a week to clear your skin problems? •ACNE • ORY SKIN • OILY SKIN • WRINKLES •LINES • BELMISHES NON-SURGICAL muscJe toning and contouring will start with your first visit! .1/ r;l/o,, {;/)11J iu 'lilrm l(,/,,wlly ~Youl!t/ul ,<]'i-;,, C .. fer IRfol ""'"°"TODAY /j:~ SKIN CARE CENTER HUMTltifGTOH llACH 16877 Gothard Ave. !Across from Levitt) 194-7142 AMA ... M 1701 So. Eucllo-Suite E (1 Bloek No. of Ket .. la) 77M7'0 Thurl!lday. October 21, 1977 Slayin.g Suspect Jailed Navy Man Charged With Knifing Murders SEASIDE <AP1 -A 19·year· old high school dropout has been iailed an the bizarre, bloody knif- i n ~ murders of hi s grnndmother, aunt and two cousins. Polit'e say more arrests are expected. Monterey County dri.trict at- torney, Dean f'lippo, s aid at a news conference. But he refused to say how muny arresll> arc an- ticipated, or what the charges would be. Gull ett said authorities are concerned about pr~trlul publici- ty, und won't discuss any details of the case outside of court. Jn- c l u ding motive or evidence which led to Bicknell's arr est. BICKNELL WAS ARRESTED Tuesday on a warrant charging him with four counts of first degree murder in the deaths of J osephine Smith , 66; her daugher, Suzanne Harris, 28; Mrs. Harris' daughter, Rachel, 6: and Mrs. Harri!)' niece, Renee Ferguson, 16. Harold Arnold Rickncll , who cnlisll'd in the Navy shortly after allendins.! the victims' mass funeral last August, was flown here under guard Wednesday from th(' San Diego Naval Rt><·uril Training Center. Police who had been under public criticism from members of the fumily were exuberant. Fiseher Sued "WE'RE VERY PROUD. There's a ton off my gut," said Bill Gullett. the police com- mander who headed a task force assigned to investigate the kill- ing of the Sunday school teaching grandmother. her daughter and two grandchildren which stunned the seaside city of 23.000. some 120 miles south of San Francisco. $5,000 in Damages A8ked Bicknell was confined al the ci· ty jail pending arraignment to- day in Monterey Municipal Court. Hail was set at $50,000 but prosl'cutors said they expected to askthatbeincreasPrl •'URTllER ARRESTS are ex· pvckd within the week. assistant PASADENA IAP> -Former world chess champion Bobby Fischer is being sued by a South Pasadena woman who says he at- tatked her ln a dispute over some recorded conversations that wound up in print. Holly Ruiz. who filed her civil s uit in Pasadena Municipal Court . is seeki ng $5,000 in damages from Fischer. She claims he forcibly entered her apartment Oct. 10 and struck her after she refused to write and -··-·-.. _ ------· L ! :; -~-··. ~ • • • • • • • • • • • - -• • --_. • The only refrigerator that dispenses •Ce Ch1lleC water. and two 1u1ces or Olher beverages right through the door • Fully-ad1ustab1e tempered glass shetves • 100'-Frost-Proo! convenience • 20 cu It total refrigerated volume • Twin Vegetable Hydratora and 7 day Meat Tender LAUNDRY CENTER n,;, e1dusive Frq;doife Lciunc*y Cenrer is both o w0.J>w and Q.y. "' a l~m cobonel ~ 2 I eo1 -'a nn alrncnt on.,..tiere SAYE NOW sign a statement that he was un- aware the .conversations had been taped. HER SUIT SAID the conversa- tions concerned Fischer·s reJa- ti on s hip w i th Pasadena 's Worldwide Church of God and eva n gelist Garn e r T e d Armstrong. Fischer has been quoted at length in Ambassador Report. a magazine critical of Ambassador ·College and its parent. the Worldwide Church of God . ASHER-DRYE This Fricjdawe Wo~/IJ,yer pc>r ~ our be\/ ~. Feo!llRJ 7'1f)eeds. )<)'Cles ~e wo\h and M$ll temp MilecttOn\. ~e' 10< o c,eai buy at [)a,,is·Browri DAILY PILOT A~ 7Held . -.: On Lewd: Charges ,SA N FRANCISCO, <AP) -Pornographl~. film star Johnnie Keyes. who played in ''Behind the Green Door," hus been arrested with six other:> in a a raid of a Ii ve stagci;how. Two male members ol the audience w ere a m on g those arrested Wedneday in the raid of Mitchell Brothers Bijou Theater in downtown San Francisco, police said. "WE HAD A spotter m t h e a udi e nce , u plainclothesman," Capt. George EJmll said. Keyes, 37, the three women and the theater m anager were booked on one count each of puttinss on a lewd show in public and committing lewd acts in public, police said. The two audience m em bers were booked for Investigation of le wd conduct. L---_SAVE $80 ~:..,______, WE'RE #1 ..• THE LARGEST INDEPENDENT APPLIANCE & TV DEALER IN THE HARBOR AREA. STORE HOURS: 9-9 DAILY 9-6 SATURDAY FOR DAVIS•BROWN'S AWARD-WINNING FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE, CAU.: 548-3437 - 1 orano• eoas1 oa.1y P•101 Editorial Page ------------------------........................ ... A8 Thur ~<foy October 27 . 1971 Robert N Weed Publisher ThOmas Keevll /Edltor B1Jrbora Krelblch 1Et11torlol Page Editor Board Call Act ;Now on Reforlll "° • Oran~e County supervisors now want to form a so. called blue-ribbon COll)mittee to write a political campaign reform ordinance that wi11 bring s uruty to campaigns for -;,elected county offices. Forming another committee is just so much nonsense Worse, it is nothing more than a device for three incum- bent supervisors to stall long enough to avoid running for re-election next year under new ground rules. Jn case supc>rvisors haven't noticed, they·ve already heard reform proposals from at least three groups, tht! 1976-77 county grand jury, a citizens' group called TIN CUP and supervisors' own Citizens' Direction Finding Commiss ion. . If those reform suggestions aren't enough from which to develop a workable ordinance. the fi ve s uper· visors need only dus t off their own 1975 proposals for cam~aign reform. Those propos als were quickly forgotten in the 1976 elections. · With all that work already done on political reform. supervisors would s imply be plowing ground already plowed and stalling for lime by appointing another com- mittee. What :;upervisors should do is to get on with the tas k by holding a public hearing and then drawing up their own or- dinance as they promised but failed to do in 1975. With all that's gone before, there is· no reason wh\' a political campaign r eform measure can't be enacted before the first of the year. That ordinance should be in effect in time to govern 1978 election campaigns to avoid more travesty in Orange County. <-: ·State and Schools • The state's latest attempt at school finance reform. coqked up after endless hours or wheeling and dealing by members of the state Legislature, contained a few surprises when it finally filtered down to local school people. ~ Most of the Orange Coast school officials who followed the progress of the bill through the Legislature s aid they ·were so busy trying to keep track of the financial 'ramifications . they failed to notice a rew last-minute provisions that were tacked on in the waning hours of the legislative session. r~ Primarily the bill, called AB 65. was written as u msponse to the state Supreme Court decision in the Serrano-Priest case that held inequities in taxing abilities between school districts-and the resultant inequities in spending abilities-must be ended. People from districts with high assessed valuation5 are going to have their spending levels held down while their tax rates are kept up. They call it a Robin Hood bill because the state will start taking money from the "rich .. districts to give to the "poor ... But the bill contains a few other proposals that aff eel · all districts equally -provisions that pertain not to nnance. but to instruction. One sectio~o( the bill stretches tbe existing state law "'mandatin~ tests or reading, v.rriting and math skiUs to !,sfudents m the elementary grades. Until AB 65, such testing was required only in junior and senior high schools . The bill also contains a sect)on dealing with "school impro\'ement'" in which districts are ordered to establish School Site councils for each campus in their dis tricts These councils are given broad and generalized powers lo iosert themselves in every facet or a school's operation ' from budgeting to staff and volunteer assignments to "·monitoring absenteeism and vandalism. • Taken individually, these requirements may seem r•'ruirly i1U1ocuous. but we don't think it's possible to ignore 'the warning sounded by one local school orficial. "It ls ,·· hr says, "just another s tep toward state takeover of locul school dis tricts ... Amen. • .,9Prnlons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. ~her views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Dally Piiot, P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 ·' . Boyd I First-born • • By L.M. BOYD ?.-: Tests s how tlrsl·born ~~toungsters are more depen- dent, more conscientious. .,,. O\Ore ambitious and more anxious than the later-born o(fspring. First-born boys tend to marry at an earlier age, but that's not necessarily the case with rirst-born girls. , Even though first-borns aren't more intelligent than ' ,l h e I ate r · b o r n s . l h e y somehow manage to become ' ~tter readers. They"re in- • clined to dominate the pro- fessions. And more of them ,, wind up in "Who's Who ... ., Relatively fewer of them turn .• Into alcoholics. In 1845, a man near the J' Pacific Northwest's Colum· bia River flipped a coin. Had v-It come up tails instead of ,> heads, the biggest town in •' Oreg.on would have been ., named Boston instead of •!· Porlland. The computer boys report ~ "1at June marriages end up ~·with a higher divorce rate ~ than marriages in any other ., If· .. ... month Dear Gloon1 y Gu It's gonna toke more than a TIN CUP to bail out Oranie County gov- ernment.. A.C. ........ e.1111 .... ,. .... .... fi9f .. , ............ -· -"' """" ............ -=··· ................... .. •"-' .... ...., ...... . .... Q. "Why was the Rock of Gibraltarsonamed?" A . Credit a Mohammedan general called Tarik Cor that He crossed the straits from Africa to invade Spain about A.O. 700. And he named the place ln his own honor, the Hill of Tarik, or in his llngo, Gibel·al-Tarik. Somehow it wound up as Gibraltar. That waterway in front of the big boulder had been known as the Gales of Hercules, built. too. came to be called the Straits of Gibraltar. Q. "How many coins of ours have pres idential portraits on them ?" A. Six. Lincoln penny, Jer. fers on nickel, Was hington quarter, Roos evelt dime, Eisenhower dollar and Ken· nedy 50·cent piece. Q. "Our busiest uirports now are ... '!" A. Chicago's O'Har e, Allun la's and Los Angele~ 's , In thut order. Q . "llow did 'Fido" get to he u stereotype name for a do((?" A. Came from the Initial let- ters of "f're11ki1. Irregulars. oerccts. Oddities." ft was humorous l y hung on mongrel~ years ago, The word also names any com "'ith a minting error Any Seasoned Cltlien over age65whohas lived In Al83ka for at least 25 years Is entltled to a :st;ite i>ension of SlOO a month. What, you con 't st:lnd the smell or mothballs? Sprinkle black pepper on those wool clothes then. Thnt works. loo. Jack Anderson Red Tape Smothers Enterprise W ASJUNGTON l,.j:g 1~l11tivc hod1es al all level~ federal. 11late and local e nact &n cst1m a tcd 150,000 law" e a<'l1 )'car. On the averul:c . 1•uch new la w Will re.,!Ull'C the issua nce of JO rcl:ulations. The end result of all this is l(rowth li"yond control <>r comvrehension of government reAimcntat ion in the United Stales. Add to this rc~ul atory en tanglement the volunta,,_ ~tan da rds whic h a re a ccepted l>v industries a"nd often adopted b y the govern- m e nt. Those t ec hnica l. ey e -straining t•odc s d e - te rmine such detail s o f commerce as the width of tires, s pac e betwee n s truts o f children's playpens and impact rcs1s tanceorrootball helmets. Eve n the ind o mitable Superman has bee n bound up by the Lilliputians who write the regulations. His derrin~-do is carefully prescribed by the com- ic book industry·i. code or con- duct. which mandates that good must triumph over evil. Thus Superman mus t go on. pagt! after page. overpowering the bad guys who are doomed 1n advance to defeat. Every private enterprise of any consequence is now cnsnarled in red tape. For the federal government alone, busi- nesses had to prepare 114 million forms last year. IT IS THE genius of the free economy that it does not require the innovator to secure the permission of organized society to launch his schemes. If he can get a few speculators to bankroll him. he is on his way -free to create if he can. H he succeeds, the rewards for him are spec- tacular and society sh&res in the ga10. lf he fails. only he and his improvident bac kers are the losers . Dul the difficulty is ACttlng an innovnli\'e propostJI, or even a routine one. past a ll thos e re~ul a- 1111ns The n grd observance of rule~ and procedures requires the inte rminable ~eel< ing of r crmission for any diver gence. Kept "1thin 1t:. prof>\'r ')pht•rr , such r1 g1dity 1i. bene ft cicnt Im· posed upon society a l largt-. 1t n.•· Charles McCah~ ~ult1; In ~wi.:111.1uon, which ends rn put r el u<'twn The f.tOvcrnmcnl c:lcr k seated 1n his l'uhitlt' pondering an ap· pl rcat ion and d eciding il runs a foul or regulations is get- trnR a straflglehOld upon us. But :.<> ~cntly, pros ai<:ally, gradually a nd invisibly does he lighten his c lutches that we n eve r ip- prcciatc the extent to which we arc 1n h.ls grip. WE PROTEST only the lncon- ven1cnces the bureaucrat im- poses upon us --the late letter. the length or government lines. This finesse, this capacity to narcotize. makes possible reals or domination unimaginable to C.:harlemagne or Napoleon. Th e r e are bene volent bureaucrats who protect the public and restrict the predators with r~1irness and res traint. The re are also relentless and rupac lous bureaucrats who harass the citizens they are sup. llQSed to serve, And finally, there a re reluctant regulators who befriend the lawyers and lob byis ts or the industries they regulate. It is not unusual tor regulatory agencies to adopt the standards that the industries impose upon themselves. These standards are s eldom subjected to the rigorous e valuation that goes into de- veloping government rcgula· lions . They are often vague, with no provisions for oversight. THE VOLUNTARY sta ndards .i re coordinated by the American National Standards Institute, a no nprofit fede ratio n of 985 vrivate professional. scientific und trade groups. One govem - m en t experL told Senate· investigators that ANSI stan· dard~ appeared "lo be written by persons who primarily represent the business interest of the\r own company or industry.'' For example , an Ohio sewage line worker, wearing a construe· lion helmet that complled with ANSI standards, was struck by a frozen sand ball. He died from s kull rracture complications. Alarmed, r esearchers tested s everal similar helmets, all of them sold by manufacturers that subscribed to the safety require- ments . TM researchers found that the helmets "were not manufactured uniformly enough to guarantee an acceptable product" and that they did not •·comply with the minimum impact resistance pe rformance requirements." Yet these industry standards had bc(!n accepted by the federal Oc· cupational Safety and Health Ad- ministration. AN INTERNAL Commerce Department evaluation of volvn- tary standards cites 28 "so·called horror stories," covering the in- duslri al g:imut from asbes tos ce· mcnt pipe to hot water heaters. Both the Commerce Department and Federal Trade Commission found that some industries also used \'oluntary codes to restrict competition and exclude in· novntors from the marketplace. One ITC investigator told us that deliberate exclu!!ion was not widespread but that the "ag- gregate dollar value" of the ex- cluded producls was "substan-tia I. .. ANSl's legal counsel, William Rockwell, said the "horror s tories" are merely allegations. He told our' associate Tony Capac cio that complaints against voluntary standards are .. usually brought about by guys who want to push themselves lnto them arket politically." Richard Simps on, former' c hairman of the Consumer Product Safety Commission, now an ANSI consultant, gave us a more revealing comment. "lf you stacked up standards that have been written about as anti- competitive," be sajd, "the pile would be one inch high. Ir you stacked up the standards that nobody complained about, the .. pile would be 100 feet high ... And if you stacked up all the · · regulations Americans are ex:; peeled to Uve by. you would have another Tower of Babel. Brown Strategy: Pick Obscure Issues It 1~ reported that Richard R eeve:., on e of ou r m or e clcars1ghtcd political writers. h as l>cen moochrn~ around Sacra mento and other Californ11t Silt's 1n preparalton for an article 1n Esqui re on "the next prosirlent vf the Unite<1 States J erry Urown .. Because t lay Felker, the new editor ol the ma ~a1.1nt•, hJs ur dc rcd i.uch a p1c('e written, docs by n o means assure that s uch a disa s ter will occ ur . Y e t afte r three pygmies like Nixon. Ford and Carter. it would be hiss- ing against the wind to deny that ANYTIUNG can happen It has to be 1:1d m1tted that Jerry, the little rascal, has been m aking the kind or right political a nd wrong m o ral m o v es calculated lo land him in the Oval Office. RIG HT NOW he is taking people's minds off the fact that PauJ Harvey they haven't Jobs. that the city streets arc shooting galleries. and that he himself has turned almost full circle in his alleged poht 1cal views, by stealing the thunder of the famous Harvard guru and Junkie, Tim Leary. Leary has discovered that the "ay to Salvatjon 1s no longer LS D. but sending otr colonies of <11sconlented humuns to other planets. In a speech som e lime ago in San Francisco, which he has been repeating nationally. Tim argued that the closinJ.t down of American frontiers has turned the American people in on themselves. A m onth later the htlle rascal nur governor, was babbling about his new space kick 8l'ld s aying· "As these frontiers close down, people begin to turn upon themselves ... But I don't think the frontier is closed. it's just opening up." NEXT HE PUTS the arm on the aerospace industry to pay most of the $35.000 bill for his opera comique ''Space Duy" -J to mark the fir11t hard landing of the space shuttle Enterprise at Edwards Air Force Base Thrs number is less about space than about JObs. Most of the guests at Space Day were bus iness leaders, a crowd somewhat different from that in- \'ited to his earlier spectacular. Whale Day. Brown may indeed want to colonize s pace More cer· tainly, he riceds to revive the aerospace industry by getting Congress lo aulhoriic m ore and more hardware. T H £ NEWS comin~ out of the g ove rnor 's office these days sounds like nothing so much as a sophomoric bull session. The mechanics of governing the st.ate a re almost lost in the lucubra- li on s of the late E . F . Schumacher, Bucky Fuller, Stewart Brand. and of course the Ulessed Tim. "Why is everyone going lo see ·star Wars'"? he asks reporters. 1'hen he lies down with the top union brass. Then he is nipping around with rock stars like Joni Mitchell, Linda Rons tadt and the Eagles, who may be his biggest political backeyi In days to come. All thi s organli e d and calculated duplicity has, aJmost inevitably, kept the little rascal's popularity ratings at a more or less consistent 4 to 1. If Jerry's popularity continues, we know whet kind of campaign he will run. because his 1974 campaign manager, Tom Quinn, has told us how Brown ran THAT front· running Cight. "IF THERE was a srategy in the campaign, it was to try to keep out or trouble and not get involved with issues like the death penaJty or victimless crime or mari)uana -the things where Jerry's views didn't coincide very well with those of the general electorate. We didn't want those to become pnme issues ... "We stayed away from those issues as much as possible, and the issues we picked were ob- scure and boring and dull ••. The press coverage never bothered us. It was as adequate as we wanted it to be. It was our feeling that the less coverage the bet· ter ... The duller the race the better. We wanted this dull, dull, c ampaign. ·1 think we suc- ceeded." Forced Retire1nent Wastes Human Resources Mos t e ver y fa s t food restaurant in Chicago h&s a s ign out fronl : 'HfRING ' o r 'WAITRESS WANTED' or 'lM· MEDIATE EMPLOYMENT OP- PORTUNITY'. Yel the government continues to pay 82.417 Chical(1rnns for not working. tr Congress wlll abuU~h the mandatory re tire ment a~e • many or thos (• unfilled jobs will provide extra Income for the able elderly. Wlthoot waiting ro r the f ederal g o v~rnment to act, some s t a te s are pr1>ceeding to abol111h m11ndatory retirement at 65: CallCQrnia, Alaska. Maine Since the advent of Social Security in the 1930s it has been the cost.om and has become t.he low that every worker should have to stop work at age 65. MOST UNlONS and most busi- ness~ like it like that. Yet for those who wont to keep working. the idea or forced retirement is a vlolotlon of their rights. George Sherman, personnel clirerlor for Midland-Ross in Cleveland, says. "Mandatory re- tirement is <~ terrible WO..'lte Of t\umnn resources. Some of our be1il, most experienced people are forcNI out.'' His company makes excep· tlons to the :sixty·flvc·and-out rule. Nonetheless, most corpora· lions want employes to retire at 65 or sooner and they fear that legally to protect the employe's job pasrttrat..-ge would make it.- difficult for an employer to dis· mise un Inefficient worker. CBS FINDS that it i11 having to relax it'i mnndutory retirement rule In IL'i Steinway vn1l because there are not enoul(h younger piono makers . The Wall Street Journal's sur- vey on this s ubject revenled that many Industries are enforcing retirement at 65 "with excep. Uons." A Roper survey reveals lhnt two-thirds or workinlt Americans w.,nt to retire eorly However, when Roper asl<ed people closest to retirement, tho!le !lt)(ly and older. only one-third wanted ear· ly rcUrement. Roper analysts infer from thelr findings that what most workers really want is the freedom to make the retirement decision for themselves. The sense of the Congress now seems to favor some modlfica. lion of the mandatory retirement lllW~. ONE OF the foctors encoura_g. rng !!lderly workers to keep work· ing is inOutlon. What might have been a comfortable reLlrement. ln· come ten years ago no long et is. And there I~ still a "joy in wor'king" tor some persons -a fulfillment of the need to ba needed -a reason to get up ln the morning -which many youn"cr persons have not yet ex· perlcnccd. . ....... ._.~ A1 DAil. Y Pll.O't Thureday, October 27, 1977 MORE OPINION Nicholas Von Hoffman We Must Make Room The Price Tag on Ending Diacrimination W ASfllNGTON -IC reverse discrJmioaUon ln people ls going to be made verboten, what about money? The Chicago Reporter, an excellent newspaper ln ·the field of race relations, has dug out the fact that the federal gov- ernment is pulling lts Medicare deposits out of minority banks and transferring them to white· owned ones. From a high of $14. 7 million Medicare deposits in minority banks under President Nl"on in 1973 the flgw-e has shrunk almost to the dlsap. pearlng with but $800,000 on • deposlloow. T h e news letter quotes a board member of the black-owned Seaway National Bank of Chicago, which is losing its deposits, as saying, "There are many issues of which Nixon can be criticized, but he went much further on a id to minority business than either president since." If the Carter administration's record in this regard tboks bad compared to King Dick's, It isn't much better stacked up against Jerry Ford's. Since the Spirit ot Equality flew in here from Plains, Georgia, total federal de· posits in minority-owned banks, not just Medicare deposits, have dropped $S million. THIS HAS happened in spite of President Carter's orders to the contrary and in spite of the inten- Hons of the Carter people who. whatever their faults, aren't out Punch lo do in black business people. The problem is that the desire to help black businesses comes up against lhe desire to cut govern- ment costs, particularly medical costs. Seaway Na tio na l los t i ts federal deposits through even· sleven, fair bidding . In return for an interest-free deposit the ba nks with Medicare funds handle the P.aper work and ·the sending out of checks to reim· burse doctors and other supplier!I under the program. The bank that offers to do the work for the s mallest interest-free accqunt gets the job. · Seaway National was underbid by another, white bank, which has a corporate tie-in with a data processing firm and so can do the work at lower cost. P erfectly legitimate. but It means that Seaway, a small in· stitution, loses about 40 percent · of its volume of bwsiness transac- tions and will have to let 10 or 12 people go. Naturally they're black and will therefore supply Clrst-rate handwringing fodder when next months's unemploy- ment statistics come out. "IF THEY WANT to call it a minority banking program, they should give some weight to the fact that we're a minority finan- cial institution," the Chicago Reporter quotes Seaway Banlc president, Richard Pearson. ·'It's not a special minority program and they have no right to claim credit for placing money with us, when we have to com· pete agains t larger. more established white institutions and bid: so low that our profit margin on the account sinks down near zero .. "Do I hove the patient's consent to switch off the life wpport l)'Stem?" As opposed to this unhappy ex- perience with the federal govern- ment, Mr. Pei.rson r eports that, "We've had much more success with the private sector. We go to Tom Ayers (c hairman of the Co mmonwealth Edison Electric Company) and we s ay we want some business and. if he agrees, he goes right to his treasurer and makes sure it's done. With the feder a l government it takes months just to (ind out where you stand." Just as the admission of black students to medical school at the expense of keeping white ones out, If the not-so-low bidding black business is chosen over the lowest bidding white busineas we have reverse money discrimina· Uon. IF THAT'S wrong, too, what we're coming close to saying is, "Look, Mr. Black Man, we know you got ort to a poor start in life's race through no fault of your own, but the way we run the races around here it would be against the rules to m ake it up to ., you. We hope you understand the rules of fair play preclude en· forcing fair play." If black individuals or the na- tion's black businesses are going to get a helping band. somebody is going tohave to pay. Itcan'tbe the black people bec.auae-they already don't have anything to pay with; jt's got to be the white people, but which wblte people! That's what we ought to be wor· rying a bout in.stead of reverse discrimination . If Seaway National Bank is given the business even though it isn 't the Jow bidder, that extra cost to help black bu.siness is s pread around among millions of people. No one, single white person bas to do all the paying. THE SAME thing could happen with medical school. You don't keep the qualified white out to let the black with slightly less s hiny qualifications in. You let both in by providing extra room. The white teachers may have to teach a little har der. but that's a far Jess onerous sacrifice than being kept out of the profession one yearns to join. And it costs the taxpayers a little more to create tne extra slots, but the burden 1s fairly shared. Either we begin to think and act in such terms or Bakke and reverse discr 1minat1on m ay turn some of us into packs of black and wh.ite dogs fightin& over a small bowl of Alpo while some of the rest of us hve the life of Morril> the cat. Meet the madcap DJ. Dick Whittinghill at Robinson's He'll be in Newport on Friday, Oct. 28, 12:30-2:30 pm. to autograph his newest book~ Wh lttlog.blll..AgQl.o (like We Did Last Summer), $7.95. It chronicles his Impossible adventures as one of Hollywood's most famous DJ:s. Can't come Jn? Phone us and we'll send you on autographed copy. Books, 24. .· Robnsons Ro binson's Newport Fa shio n Island 644 -2800 .. starts Friday at 9:30 a.m. • ·.r... savings throughout the store on selected. clearance items! quantities, colors and sizes. limite.d to stock on hand, so shop early for best selection! these items available in our Huntington Beach Store women's sportswear ORIG. 2.581CTOPS . . . . ........ SlO 30 JL'XIOR TOPS . . . . .. • .. . . S6·S 10 50 MISS\' 8{.()(jSf..S . . . . • . . . . . . . . SG ~PA.\TTOPS ................ SG SO Bl00St5. . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . SI 0 25 SOLID BLOliSES . . . . . . .. . • . . • $8· S 10 lSOHALTERTOPS ........... 3.99·S10 WSHOR1$ .. .. . . .. .. . . . .. . . 2.99 40 Jl!:\IOR PA.\ 1$ . . . . . . . . . .. . . S 13 25COOROl\:\Tf..S ........... S 11·S16 30COOROl~.\Tf..S ....•...... SG·S9 70COORDl~AT£.S . . . 5.99·S16 400C\1'1\l:sl'S. . . . . . . . S8 IOOSWl~ISl.:11$ . . . SS·S 10 SOTIJRn.E~EC~" . . . . .. .. Sl l 25051.llHU:.5.S ._,\ll'S .... . .. S4-S6 30Jl'\IORPL'U.OHKS ........• Sll·SlS 40JL'~IOR l\.\lni ............. SS i'OSHORTSLEE\ E !\.\Jn,.. . .... S7 % lt::\IOR K.'i11~ . . . . . . S7 . 50JL':\IOR K.\IT TOP:.... . . . S5 75 X LARGE BLOL SE~ SB 50 \llSSV K.\ITTOI~ . S8-S 10 300K~ITTOPS . S4 50 K.\ITTOPS . . Sb 75 K.\IT TOPS . . . . .. • • • . • 2.99 dresses, pantsuits ORIG. 20Jl.:\IORDRESS~ .. ... . .. S1 3·Sl8 2SPA\l'Sll1S ................. 18.99 20 ~USSY ORf.S.Sf..5 ........ . . .. SI 6-S28 NOW 4.98 1.98 2.98 1.98 3.98 3.98 98c 28c 5.98 5.98 2.98 98c 2.98 VJ8 5.98 48c 6.98 1.98 2.98 98c 98c 2.98 3.98 48c 98c 28c NOW 5.98 9.~ 9.98 lingerie, loungewear ORIG. 70ftUSLJPS ................ SS 93PA\TU\ERS ...........• S6 21 U~IFOR~tORf.SSts .......... S9·10 44 U~IFOR\IP:\\1Slll'S •....... S14 18 U~lf'OR\tP:\\TS ....•....... S6 44BR.~ ...................... S6·9 41 BRAS ••....•....•.......... S5-6 HS PLAY BRAS ................ 2.50 159 A.SSTDSU'OI SEP..\R . .\ TES .... S4· 12 JJ4 ASSrDSU'J\I SEP.\R..\ TES .... S6-10 67fUf.CERORf.S .............. S16 166HOSTESSLOU\GEU1:.\R ..... S11·12 67HOST£.SSLOU\GEWE..\R .....• S13 -16 59WAl.TlGOU'\S .............. ss..a 96C01TO~& \"\'LO~CO~·\:-..... $6-8 33 X.SIZESLE£PU'EAR .........• S6·9 NOW 1.98 1.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 2.48 98c 98c 1.98 6.98 4.98 6.98 2.98 ·2.98 2.98 , . women s accessoraes ORIG. 96 rl:\ \'L BAGS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . $6-8 100 \'IWl BAC.S . . . . . . . . . . . . • • SS.12 51SUDELE:\Tltt::R8 . .\f.5 . . . • • S6 29TRA\'ll.BAGS .............. S1 2 368EL1'5 ..... . . . . . .. . . . •... Sl·S JOO SCAR\ E.'I . • . .. . • . . . •••• 2.50·4 46 SHA \\'L 'i . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . S6 NOW 1.98 l.98 1.98 S.98 1.48 98c 2.98 savings for girls ORIG. 25 l'A\ ni't.:11'5 L .. . . .......... S 12·S 15 30SHORTS~ ................ S6 20 JACKE'r.5 . . . . . . • .. . . . . • . . . . • S 10 4<lDR£SSES ................... S7-S6 35 SHORTALl..5 ................ S8-S13 40 P:\~'1$. . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S6-S 12 2S TOPS ..................•..• S5-S7 20 BU>llSts :\ \ D TOPS .. . . .. . . . . S4 40~-WEATERS ................ 2.97 savings for boys ORIG. 52S.SL\.SPOR1'SHIRTS .... · ... 4.99 <ii L SIX. SPOR'r.5HIR1'$ ........ 4.99 70TA:\t.:TOPS ................ 3.50 120l. SL\'. DRESSSHIR-r.-> .•..... 3.99 140Slt1DE..\TPA\~ ........... Sll-12 IOOASST'DPA\TS ............• 7.49 29 Jl'\.IWAR~l-L'f'Sl.:11~ ........ 10.99·14.99 33Jt.:\'I SHORTSET$...... . ... 3.4g.S,49 savings for men ORIG. 130S. SL\'. DRESS 'HIR-r.5 ...... 7.99 41 L SL\'. DR1:5SSHIRTS ........ 6.99 ISO POCmTEr.S .............. 3.SO JOOS. SL\·. SPORl'SHIRl'S . . . ... S.99-().99 97 S. SI.\'. SHIR'r.5 .............• 9.99 MLSL\'.SPOR'n>HIRTS ........ 7.99-12.99 103 U:lSt:REJ..\C~ .......... 9.99 57 U:~t.:RESL~Ct\.S ............ 9.99 10.SSWEATER \'£5TS ........... 6.99 36CABA~ASETS ............... 15.99 76 VOli\C ~IE.\S JE..\ \S ........• 13.99-20 savings on shoes ORIG. 5.5 BOYS& \fE.\SSPORTSHOES .•• 8.99 51 CHll.DR£.\SSA~O.US ........ 10.99-13.99 40tE.\SCASt::\LS ............. 18.99-20.99 75WO~t£'.\'SS:\."iD . .\l.S .......... 14.99·18.99 yardage, notions OllC. 130Yni. l~iERLOCK PR'r.5 .••.•• 3.99 100 YDS. Sl~ClE~'mi .......•• 1.99·2.99 ~YDS. BEDroROCORD ....•.•• 2.69 150Yni.C..\.W . .\.S .............. 1.99 IOOmi.CHALU ' ............. 2.99 125 YDS. l.OOP ~'ilTTtRRY ....• 2.59 350 YDS. BROADCLOTH . . . . . . . . . 1.99 300 mi. CAL'ZE . . . . • • . . . . • • . • • 1.69 220YDS. fl.OCKS .............. 2.29 400YDS. PUSSE •...........••• 1.99 lOOYDS. SEERSt:CKI:R ...•••••• 2.99 IOOYI)). fll.T ................. 3.69 130 VOS. \'OJLE ••.••••••...•••• 99c 140 Vlk). <:HlffO~ ............. 1 .49 lOOYDS.QIA~:\ ............... 3.99 lOOmi. ttnu:cLOTH .......• 1.99·2.29 lOOYOS •. ~DFABRIC •.•••••. 2.99·3.99 287 PCS. A~tY Y:\R.'\ ............ 79c 100 PCS. STITCHERY KITS ...•••• 88c 110 YI)). POL YEST£R PRl~TS .... 2.99 '• NOW 6.98 1.98 3.98 3~91 6.98 2.98 2.'8 1.4)8 '8c NOW 1.98 1.48 48c 1:48 2.98 2.98 7.98 98c NOW 198 :t.98 · ~98 2:91 2~98 :t.98 ~·· 1198 h• . 2,98 S.98 .. NOW '1.91 7.91 1.91 9.97 Now .98c 1.18 1.18 .'8c 1.48 68c 68c ,<$8c: 68c ·~ec ,98c 1·18 48c ,48c 68c: ,98c 48C 38c 38c '1.68 savings for the home inf ants and toddlers ORIG. 201:\H:\TSWE . .\lt ........... S6-S8 25 TOOOl.ER GIRi,.'\ P.\\ T • . • • . S4 20 TODDl.£R BOY!'i WE...\H ..... 2.49·S5 NOW l.98 98c 98c ORIC. 308EM.'HTOW£l.S ............. 9.95 221~'DIA.'iPRl~TRl1GS ......... 21 .~ 25TWl~SHE£TS ............... S.99 54ftU.SHEETS ............... 6.99 19QliE£.\SHEm ....•........ 10.99 10 KL\C SHEETS ............... 12.99 9811 ADAMS AVENUE, HUNTINGTON BEACH -963-9731 NOW 4.98 ~.98 1.98 2.98 $.98 •• 98 ., . ERVYN'S . ........ ' • .f.8 DAIL'( PILOT Thursday. October 21, 1911 t Skaters' Injuries Soar W~l_IJNGTON (AP> -More people wall be in· jured ruling skateboards Uus year than playing scholastic, collegiate and backyard football a federal study discl<>5es. ' turning, weaving and speeds or up to 90 miles an hour that riders can now experience. The safety commission'b options range from banning the product to safety campajgns. Kitzes said a ban is unlikely. Ada 111ant St<ATEBOARDS I OBITUARIES FOi THI PIORSSIOHAL TOUCt4: DECO INTERIORS IMTBIOR '1.AHHIHG AHD COMSULTIHG c_,.... Mkctl• of • ..,.,... • ....,..."· c..,... ffoorilMJ, .... terf. fllnlltw.. CgMiftcJ -4 ~ct1•ori"' V1s1t Our Design Studio 2Ht2 MaraHri .. P'tlwy., Mltaletfl VleJo , ........ ,...,.~ .. i • ..., .. "'.""' -.. ,..,... ·-· . The Consumer Product Safety Commission estimates 375,000 people will be injured in skateboard accidents in 1977, compared to some 370,000 in all the non-professional football games in the country. ''The trend is toward safer skateboar<ting," he said. "That's what we're interested in." , f<"'cderal Reserve Boat·d Ch::urman J\rlhur F. Burns :,tood firm Wed· ncsd ay on the board's tight money policies a nd a sserte d that il will not bow to outside pressures. 4 H ·O 202 MClftdlly ttn Stlllrdlly t SO. 04 00 AN UNRELEASED REPORT BASED on the study predicts that the number of skateboard in- juries will be more than double last year's 188,000. ~ commission official said oQ other product un· der its jurisdiction bas shown such a dramatic gowth in the number of injuries associated with it. William Klues, lhe agency's program manager for sports and recreation, said only bicycles will ac- count for more injuries this year. There are about 80 million bicycle riders, compared to 20 million skateboarders. K ITZES SAID JN A TELEPHONE interview that more t.han 25 percent or au skateboard acci· dents occur the first day or use. He said the skateboard report, which will not be finished until next month, shows that only 2 percent of the injuries r esult from defects in the skateboards. Most injuries come from skaters• tnexperience Ol' such problems as potholes. About 40 percent of those hurt go lo hospital emergency rooms, be said. OF THOSE TREAT ED, 30 PERCENT break an Uf!t or leg and 24 percent have cuts and bruises, while strains and sprains account for 18 percent. The commission previously reported there ..,ere 13 skateboard deaths between 1973 and last April. The number of skateboards has grown from about 14 mi1lion in 1975 to 20 million in 1976, the com· mission said. SKATEBOARDS HAVE BEEN AROUND in some form since the 1950s, Kitzes said. But the ear- ly models allowed only ~ S;;tra.igbl ride -not the KITZ~ SUGGESTS THAT RIDERS wear safety equipment, s uch as helmets and pads. The full commission will consider the growing skateboard problem in three or four months, Kitzes &aid. And he said the commission will shortly ask the Interior Department to allocate money to convert parklands into federally run skateboard parks. Coastline Offering Workslwp "Being Single and En· joying the Holidays" is th e topic of a four· session workshop offered free by Coastline Com· munily College from 7 to 10 p.m. Thursdays begin· ning Nov. 10 at Harbor View School in Corona de! Mar. The l ecture r i s Norman Rockmael who a lso has pres ented "Making it as a Single," ··social Skill s for Singl es" and "P op Psychologies." Participants may at· tend any or a ll the sessions. They are : "Ridding Yourself of the Holiday Blues," Nov. 10 ; For the Record Deaths Elsewhere -"Where Singles Can Go for Holiday Cheer," Nov. 17; "Using the Holidays for Developing New Relationships," Dec. l , and "Sharing Holiday Marriage • Oit_,, LORENZE,...TOLLl50N -Rober1 ..... 24. -°'°"' ... J ..... u. bolll oi~nCJ...-1e. ._,OLF E·V I Tl ELLO M•••on, 1•. •nd Art-N .. ll, boln ot l1U(ll11191on lMrtr.LE·KIMURA • P ... f R , ~. ~R111ao,l•.bo11101 El Toro 0c ..... OOOGE0RINGLE -Jon Philip, 19, ,of Westminster. -Rooyn Ann. 11, or G.,.,.n Grow MAIREU.·8RONAUGH -w •• , .... a H., )9, Of W"tmlnster, •nd Ruby o.niu, l6, of c;."*' c;.o,.. 8ROWN·ZEOl.1 -Urry ,,.,_, 11, -OffA1>n,21,ooc11o1wes1m1nster. GRANT-MITCHELL -Alvln P., 3', ttl Ple1• Oitl i:tey, -"' IMrgo J ., 36, el F ..... lnValle'I'. CRONCE·PETERSEN --·-K , 1', of HUl!llfl9\0fl Be.er" •n<I Lort J Hn, 17, of Goleta. £NCINA$-L0GAN -lh .... n. 11. Of G•nMn Gro ... -.JoRete, JI, Of F-i.1nve11ev. NE TWIG-REDFERN -;elfro P. 2•, e nd Loretu1 Ann, 11. bot" of W.U:tmlnstw fLEtK.fLEClt -R-ld S • o . ellf P•11I• P., ll, boll1ot Weslmtn•l•r LOtKE·OEEM -R•cnerd n->es. lO. -.a unoe -· i-. DOtr1 ol H11nllnvton &e.c:11 ~ACKSON·ttOOV~R -J•,,,.s Ltt, Jr., It, ol HW11U•91on lu<ll, •no lfAi.rle Je•n, 11, of RMtr'ildf. ~HORESON·ESOVIVEL ~~ All .... 2•, of St.nlon, •ncl P•trt<I• fr;IY, 20,0I l.DSAl.mt\OS Oc_,. WISE·JONES Ke>tll 0.,,,,.10, 11, of Monlwey, -v1c.i.1 ~ .... ·10. ol Wt\ttnlMter. DESROCHERS·8ATE~ -J1<ques ~ClllM, 2', of NtwpcJf't e.~11. -P•ttk.I• Mery,27,ol lrv111e. ~.10 MUl..1..IKIN·WILLIAMS -Roqer O.lll119er, J.I, •ncl J•net Norm•, 11, boll! ol Fount•ln V•lley. HOLYOKE. Mass . (AP > -Jacob Barowsky, 85, developer of the liquid household cleaner Lestoil, died Tuesday. MADISON, Wis. <AP ) Laurence F. Graber, 90, co-developer o( a strain of a lCalfa that thrives in Wisconsin's harsh climate and a former president of the America n Societ y of Agronomy, died Tues- d ay. Death Notlee• Sl'AllUNG JOHN R SPARLING, resl<Wnl ol Ne,..POrl 8uc.ll, barn Jan ... ry 1'. 197l on 1"9lt•OOCI, ~. JMU•O ·-, ~· l•ber U , 1'11 In New-I 8••<11. Svr•tved by ht\ wife J••n·M•rt•# c~lld••n l.M Scw•llno. 0\4'1$ *rtln(l. Brea••v ~111'9. MICN I Ruth Soerl· •nv. Gele -Urry Sl#.orns. p..,1 • .,,., .,.,,.,, ... s--•v. -·ei Mf"ll'<·~ ,.,11. IMICI FrtO.y Ot.t-lt, 4.00 PM •I SI AndRws-f>resbytarlAO C!Nt(rt, Uln •no Irvine.~ ~K" In lleu of flow.ers. UM Jonn R. Sp•rlinQ Memo,.•I F\RI Ns llftn e\&eblli.heO •t 11 0 •0 M emorl•I HO>P•t •I. Pru1rt1e,..,, P..:111< V-Mortu•ry Olrect.,..~. CASWELi.. Joy," Dec. 8. The sessions will be held in the multipurpose room of the school, 900 Goldenrod Ave. There is no charge. Further informatjon is availab)e by calling Coastline Community College, 963·0811 ext. 256 Sausage Classes Scheduled WASHINGTON <AP > -The American Meat Institute, an industry supported group, has sent out enrollment forms for people who want to take a s hort course in sausage mak· ing. For a registration fee or $200, a person can at· tend the salfsage class Dec. 7.9 at Iowa .State University, Ames, Iowa. LEVI'S® WESTERN SADDLE CORD JEAN Machine wash poly/cotton fabric in colors of: Beige. Blue &Camel Reg $20 00 NOW $1199 (7.99 off) loll•• 9ood tor ,_ .. ...,,.,, LEWIS.Mc ENT EE -Wl/11etn M .. Jf, ol L-Nl9.,.1, end &••IMI•• Elelne, 47, ol U Hlt>rl. k1EFER·11ERRON -Rlcll1rd .lotlft, llo, Ind 11th• 81anc.,..r<I, ~. Mblol EIToro ALFRED 8 CASWELL,~ ... ,•~•· aent 01 H...,,t11191on a.ac11, c.t. P1n.o •w•Y on Frld•Y OctOC>er ti, 1911. Gravuodlt services w111 be C'or>OllCI~ •I 10;00 A.M. Frl<lev 0<1o1>er 18, tt71 •• tr.. Goo<I ~rd Cemetery. Vlsol•· lion at Pierce Orotneri Smllll" Mori wry lroml.00109 00 P.M Thur~ O•Y O<tOO.r 11, 1911. Pit''• 8rotners Sm1 tl\'' MOrt...,yoirtctot'\ The fee includes a text· book, three luncheons, one dinne r and "a handsome certificate" when the course is com· pleted, the institute says. A tentative schedule includes a lecture on "Basic Chemistry of Processed Meals 1" followed b y "Bas ic Chemistry of Processed Meats II" and then a dis- cussion of "S!usage Raw Materials." l_•VE 'i'~ S Tl JFF~ 800KEY·MARRrOlT J•mn Gt< II, 32, Intl Sfttryl A.. 31, l>Olll Of H11ntu19ton Se~h PETE RSON·EtKHART R09tr WUlletn lS, -OteJIYI R-. 11, OOlh OI ~ 111115. Ck-II MITCliELL-GUTIERREZ-8ouy ,,.,_, 2•, ol Uln9 !Madi, ...a Cvn1111e Ml<IMle, 21,ol LO\ Al•mtlOS PRENTICE·BARON-.Jolvl TOC>ln, .. of Sen Ju.an t.lc><W-. end Cindy LIN, 2•, ol T11<.Mlft, ArllOM, ~--~--~-~-~ IALn..tll•llOM FUMHALHOMI Co<ona del M ar 673·9'50 Costa Mesa 646-2424 IB.l HOADWAY MOltTUAlY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 SMITH TUrHtU. LAMI COSTA Mis.A CHAPk 427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa • 646-4888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N . Broadway Santa Ana • 547-4131 "BCI POTHHS SMe'TMS'MORTUARY 627 Main St Huntingtoo Beach 536-6539 NH,AMILY COU>MIAL fUMllA1. HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 l/88V WESLEY RICHARO Ll88Y, rlSI· aenl Of $.tnle Alie. Cot. PU~ •w•Y on Otlol><tr 1', 1911 •t lr>e •OI of 1>7. Belo""d t>usband ot LOrra•ne Lll>DY. ••lh•r ot RICNrd Wnley Ltl>DY af !,ecr•m•nlo, ~. brolllef' of ti.uter 1.ll>DY of TurlOCI<, U ., Ell'flyn Terr ol lurlo<k. C•, Editll Hecllman or Full•rtD". ~ .• F1orrnce Cooper ol FulltflD", (.a -two 9ran0<~llO•en. G•tvet•cM W"'•<H wlll DO! MIO Frid•Y 0<100.f 1', i.11-' I 00 P.M. et Ace<,•• Memor1el P1tk 1n ~lo. c... Smlm ru111111 S.nl• M• Mo<tulry directors. ~14131 SA HOS 'COP SHOP' (HARLES P~ESSLY S ANOS, rttl~ so aenlolCO\leMese.Ca.P•-O•w•yon LD our 0<101>er H , 1911 ellne eoe ol 97 ,l>rotlltr ot Gunl• Nl•on O' Cost.a Mese, Ce. KJNSVILLE G ,unerelserv1C8'\W1ll1>e"9•<1onFriday WAT 'a. octooer 21, 1911 at 1 oo P .M. 11 (AP ) -Among th e F1lr1tev111 .Mtrnorl•I P••~. S.nle An1, h' hi" hls ( th I Ca. Smith Tu111oll Lamb Costa M•H Jg 1g 0 e annua MOrtu•rv<1ortt100.-."881. Ocon ee County Fa 11 WILLIAMS Festival here was the WENDELL W WI LLIAMS, pHsed t' ' f \h OJ' C •wey on O<lober 21, 19n S..rvlved by auc IOn.lJ'lg 0 C p I C nl\ wile Anne, wn M•< ... tl, Cla~hlff Station. L\<nn Anne In lieu llow,,. '"" l.tmlly L a m a r B e l I 0 f rtQuHll iupporl 01 a f'uNI For The tn11oren,A._w1111.tm1F1rs1Na11on.J1 Watkinsville paid $300 oank, 1bl0 Ac11m1 Ave. tosta M •••· for the 8-by-10-foot build· u~ d w1LL1AMS ing which has serve as MRS . MARY LOU WILLIAMS, the police station for 10 PHMO •*•Yon Oclot>e• 2..S, 1971, a •os•· Th I' d l Clt!nl ol Minion Viejo, Ge. hlOYed wole years. e J'IO tCe epa_r ot tn• ••te J.tmn w 1111am,. Lov1n9 ment has moved In with motner ot Ro. Erl< ano M1rk the sheriff's department William' Oe11911tw ot Plato Me<;)nuson • Of W•noo, Net>r•J.'t•· F~r•I s,e,-yl(~~ ----------- Friday 7 OOP M. el Mount ol Oll•e\ -----~!!'!!'!11'9:"--lotm\ Llllhtrln tllurth. Ml'''°" v .. 10. t• ~. ' T M•morl•t contr•ta.it~~ m ay bf> rn•t:N 1t,. lo 1fle Ho•o•ce tll•PIP• ol OrAnoe E .. ., .. 'S Counr• O Conl\o,. L•oun• .,.,,,, ~ Morluerv a lrectors. 2Sl01 Al•<•• _,W,.91HG P•rk••r. LetluM Hilll HIA Tll4G l(UNOKAMER All COHO. 1NEZ RO'>E ltl.INGKAMER, ra\I $1 Lie. 211.SI dent o1 fU(!i(lln, Art~. P•\~ ll!IW,., ~T'lftt#ll•t.1.i Y•'~' on O<lober lJ, 19/1 •I the aCJt OI /9 IC..11 Slore Nel~l\l Y-Areel lhloveo molhrr ol 011v1a Jorda" COSTA MISA ti42• 1753 (,rave\ldtl MNIU\ ... 11 "",,..d """AY UM"..._,····· O<lol>•r 28, "" •I 11 00 A.M •• MISSION v11J0495·0401 Melrose Atic..y In At>al'lj'lm, C•. '"'•" ..,, Ceml.,. Ca-'slrlM men! at MelrOH Abt>oy. ~l!n Tullllll !S-~ ,,,.,,.,. 11 ,.,..,.,. ftliwy I Lamb(OU•~Wdir«tor• ~ FROM LOVEn STUFF The stitched pocket denim jean with back buckle. Reg. $21.00 NOW $15.99 LEVI'S® BLANKET LINED DENIM JACKET Blanket hn1ng tor extra warmth. Reg. $26.35 (oiler good 1-1roa1y1 ~:6;ff) $20.99 Choose from a group of aweaters from KB V and A guide to community churches and thei r event• appear• Saturd1y1 in the DAILY PILOT FAMOUS MAKER WOOL PLAID WESTERN SHIRTS Wide assortment of patterns & colors Reg. $17 .00 toUet goocl 1 •-Ii: only) (3•990~ow $}2.99 ,.. OUR ENTIRE STOCK of Levis for feet reduced to clear featuring -the fa mous -Levis "Alph a" -Now reduced from Regular Price to $26.99. All other Levise for f eet have been reduced to CLEAR, so HURRY!!! Whife they iast!! rACIFIC YllW MIMORIAL rAH Cemelery Mortuary Chapel FASHI0'1 CLOTHlr-IG fOA THE ertTIAf: FAMLY · 3500 Pacrl1c View Drove Newport. Callrorn1a 84•4-2700 McCO•MtClt MOITUARIH Laguna Beach 494·0415 laouna Hiiis, 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1778 ,. DIAMONDS • GEMSTONES Jewels by tosephs la searching for diamonds and gemstones lrom private lndlvlduals and estate•. Careful ' examlnatlon and evaluatlon by our experts. Highest prices paid. Calf 540-~ 10-9 dally, Saturdav 10-6, ::;unoay closed. ASk for Betty G,aco or Frank VanderWsll iewels by loseph South Coast Plaza • 3333 8r1stot Cotti! Mna • 540-9068 ORA"GE 70Q Jo. llJttin /Jfle. 714·bJQ·11Ql • ... - MISSIO" VIEJO CERRITOS 151.51 tnclntyre ARTEJIA i 711.·soo~blOO lOOOO Cridely Jt I . ......._ ....... , .. SlrtTI .... .3430 Jo.Drittof """- 7\4 ·~7·0100 MM ;t MM f . ----'"""'---' !-21J·Q24·000J ... "' • ..;;._+-.1::.~-.. .... ! JTOQE HCXlll/, OAlV lO·Q JO ~ ....... ;..-...=:.i:... SAT 10·100,JUN IO·O 00 Watch lor our new Westminster Store Openinq Nov. ZStb ' \ t ' I ~!ALTH - Warning Signs Ignored 'Heart Attack Never Sudden, It Builds' • EDITORS' NOTE -For more than two years,~ :onrad had all the ·Mgna oj heart trouble, but Ignored them. Then, m month.t ago, the S1·year·old reporter for The HmJld in New Britain, Conn .. had a heart attack. Here he look.t al how it happened and why, ' NEW BaITAJN, Conn. (AP) -The American I Kearl Association says diseases of the heart will ac- ::ount for 52 percent or all deat.bs in the nation this ZOOSKTS A RECORD SAN OIF.GO (AP> A record 1.1 mllhon v1~ itors arc touring the San Diego Wild AnimaJ Park this year, and San Diego Zoo expects to match its record attendance of 3.2 million set in 1976. The announcement was made at the 60th an· • nual meeting of the San Diego Zoological Socie· ty. Thal group owns both facilities. Thursday, October 27, 1977 DAIL v PILOT A () Sears Recalls Baths "' CHICAGO <A P I Scars, Roebuck and Co ha:-announced the recall of some 2, 100 hand and foot whirlpool baths sold Since Sept. lS because or a potential electrical sh~k hazard. The company said the manufac- turer. Dazey Products Co. or In- dustrial Airport in Kansas City, Kan .. discovered during rQutinc testing that a crack mtiy develop in the plastic motor hous ing, allowing water to make contact with the motor. TH E MODELS, retailing for about S27 in Sears catalog and retail outlets throughout Ulc United States, were munufotture<l from St'pt l:l to JO. Owners were advised to check th~ date code on the plastic motor housing or the unit above \he electncal cord exit. The affected units are identified by these date codes: C97. 097, £97. C977, 0977 or E977. The model number located on a metal plate on the fro~t of the motor housing, is 638.2262. All other Sears compact and full· size whirlpool baths. including model number 638.22()2 with different dale codes than thos e listed, are approved for's ale and operation . ye..-. !t I came closer to being one o ose statistics .han I like to think about. This is the ory of Unlt ex- JWience. It should be subtiUed The Diary of a Fool. ~. JF YOU ARE GOING TO have a heart attack. a t 16clor's office is as good a place as any, and that's low it happened with me. But let's back up at least a couple of years ltcause that is how it began with me, and it il- ustrates how stupid I was to ignore the warning I 1i1nals 1 had. HALLOWEEN PARTIES The American Heart Association says, "No j 1eart attack is really sud<ien ... Coronary disease lUS in all likelihood been building over the years, , 1elped along by the patient who has ignored the risk 'actors and failed to heed the early warning signs." IN 11lE FIRST PLACE, there was a history of teart trouble in my family. My father and mother iad it. A heart attack killed my dad. A couple or years ago, I noticed that slight exer- iOI" or mental strain would produce pressure in my tpper chest that made me slow down or stop what I vas doing. Like the night I had 10 minutes to make a ludline when I was covering President Ford on a 1isit to Newport, R.I. l tried jogging to a phone booth and the 1ressure hit me. I made it by two minutes. But that vas one of many such instances that were to bug me n the montlls allead and I did nothing about it. I asually figured it was indigestion. APWl,..pMlo BOB CONRAD DISREGARDS SIGNALS Recovery From Heart Attack a Long Process A GHOST OF A CHANCE Then, during the week before Easter, I found I WITH 0 UT was losing sensatlOn in my left arm -another clear sign. r booked an appointment with a heart specialist. The njght I got there. he took one look at LA A~Z the electrocardiogram tape and booted me right in- to the hospital. Coronary occlus1on. That was the name for my problem. A family ol popular cocktail mixes for home entertainment T ALSO THOUGHT IT WAS because I was a atller uptight guy and Ws was a result of the ension. But the press ure thing became more fre- 1uent and intense. And there were other signs, like 1wakening in the night choking desperately to get o)'-breath. A~EVERY SCHOOL KID knows, the heart is a M IXES big muscle that pumps blood throughout the body. In my case. a ~ain section~theplu~bingforthe ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ return or blood to the heart had become almost l was all too easily fatigued. But I thought that 1as just because I was getting to be an old goat and ·ou have to expect to slow down. Then I found I ouldn 't walk up a slight grade without having to bsolutely slop in my tracks. "Waiting can be fatal." That's what the .merican Heart Association says. The signs can differ with the Individual. They :tay involve pains in the shoulders or arms. dizzi- ed, shortness of breath, nausea. THIS WENT ON UNTIL LAST winter. when the ressure would build up several times every day, dd I had to make excuses for avoiding walking I 11th people from the parking lot to the Capitol ecause l had to stop and wait for it to su~ide. Complete coverage of county 9overnment and court1. Every day In the DAILY PILOT totally "occluded" -or shut off. The auxiliary system the body builds when the main plumbing gets rusted out wasn't doing the job. About three weeks of special care in the hospital with medication and intravenous feeding and oxygen and total rest began to turn things around. Many other conditions can contribute to heart disease and produce heart attacks. Medical science can cope with these troubles most of the time. BUT IT NEEDS A LITTLE help from people who are aUected. That means using the old brain, 1r a person sw;pects trouble. Maybe the diet 1s wrong or includes too much salt. M<iybe smoking 1s a con· tributing cause. I quit smoking about 15 years ago But the key is a c heckup. That ·s the part I almost flunked. ••• 'Che First Littht Bulb Mias Jttt The yeot' wot t879 and the man wos the prolific American inventor Thoma, Edison. Some of his other important inventions were the carbon telephone transmitter: the megaphone, the phonograph ond improvements in cinematography. He died In 1931 ot the oge of 84. ' .. . · THAT SAME YEAR, 1879, John Bloeser stoned o carpet business on the $f>Ot ~e the present l.o$ Angeles City Holl ncYW stands. In the 97 years since, the company hos built o reputation for integrity uMIOfched in the Southland. This reputo1ion is yoor guarantee of complete sotisfoction when you next buy fine corpet ex droperies . .. Special Sale Prices Good thru Oct. 31 only! 'EGAL SPLENDOl 11 BORDEAUX MISSION HILLS ~ Mcllfioul 100% outodcM heut Mt 2 rJy ~ incotporoting ~ for toil : fttiilafa, -.oty deaning and~ control. • ~ 90'glOUI colorl. : . .. • • TOTALLY INSTALLED Including heavy carpet podding • l:,;-:,-;-,:, COSTA MESA ' -2'27 S. Brrttol I l11t1• ..., .,_ -•Mt• ..... (714) 7S1-23l4 3 fly ocAoclcr;e Nol Ml ,,&oii "'°"" 24 dealrolor 11-'6 "-ioia cdor1 en ~ w.11 ~ in '*' from Mbtie tortfl '°'* 10 li!MM ~· • l!Oind arid Ol't rtody for 'fO'I ""f ~'-o ~. l'-colors art Mf1in9 t1w pac9 for tlw ditc:rintf. • Al !(,lid cdor1 W'Q ~ '-lfl ~ ~ in noting-"'" ~. fHA ClflP"ooed cat111M14Qll $13~~Yd.: TOTALLY INSTALLED Including heavy corpet podding . Save 2.00 per yd. TOTAl.l Y INSTAlUD Including heavy carpet podding ... • 00~~!'!.!~:.~.t.-;t ....... e FULLERTON ...... " ._...:lll~.+-·I 513 South Euclid -e l.OflO BEACH ssio.-0< •-~ lfV~ ~ A<..,.. .... l .. MM~.....,.... Wllf. g;!~"f_'.,Sol tOS ff ..... Moll • fl\. T~ t (714) 870·5212 FINnc1nt LOS ANGELES ms,_ SI. Avall~t • o ...... • .. .._ 11111 .,, .. ,,. Low power con1umptlon- le11 than a 100-watt bulb COLONIAL You 9et our best run1ng . >1ngle·~nob. 20· po•11o0n RCA S.gnaloclt l"IOctromc tuning' PhJI. 100'-IOlld•SlllO Xtendod· llto Chassl9. Au1oma11c Color Conl•ot and Fleshlo,,. Correcoon, AuromAllc Fino AC~~~~:~~.~~r ~~r.r~ Plclure Tulle . I I . -- I. I ~ l I . ;;; AJO DAILY PILOT L1SC Thursday. Ot:tober 27 1977 THEATER /LOCA Nudie Revue 'O~ Calcutta' Tours Provinces 'OH, CALCUTTA' CAST MEMBERS BACKSTAGE IN BIRMINGHAM, MICHIGAN Marilyn Faith Hickey, Patricia Alexander and Regina Rodwell In Revue Nursery P e tit ions Mesans Giv e Views On Panama Treaty While voling has been held in Panama to ratify the proposed treaty with the U.S., Costa Mesans have been casting their own un- official votes on the subject. Steve Hollister, owner of Hollisters Nursery and Flower Shop on Harbor Boulevard, decided to put up a sign advising opponents of the treaty that they can sign petitions at his store. "I >VAS A U1TLE OVERWHELMED at first as to the response," Hollister s aid, estimating be has gathered 3SO signatures in two weeks. Whenever be bas a group of petitions, which contain flve signatures each, he sends them to Senator S.I. Hayakawa <R·CalJ(). "About30 minutes alter I put up the first sign, one of those large motor homes was driving down the street and saw the sign," Hollister said. •1'HE STREAM OF TRAFnc carried them on down and they had lo navigate that big motor home back here just lo sign the peti· tion." He said be has encountered no one who supports the treaty, which would e.ventually give control of the canal lo Panama. Hollister's petition asks that the U.S. retain sovereignty over the canal forever. HE SAID HE'LL CONTINUE to gather signatures until the treaty is voted on in Congress. which probably won't be until next year, or unW it becomes a "dead issue." "The interesting thing about this whole thing ls that fl-om what l've seen. the American people are overwhelmingly opposed to iJv· ing away the Panama Canal," Hollister said. O.llyll'llMIWll ....... SEEKING SIGNATURES ON PANAMA CANAL Costa Mesa's Steve Hollltter Proteatlng Poetry Forum Set For Laguna High Poet Marta Mitrovich will discuss personal styles of poetry writing at.8 t~nJght in Room 77 at Laguna Beach High School This will be the first of a Saddleback College forum series on Ex· cu!'Slons in Poetry. Admission is free and no preregistration Is re· qutred. Mltrovich, an English- Amerlcan actress and director or the LalUJln Poets organization. has performed in clubs and on col lege campus and television. Her dJscussion or poetic stylec; will h<' followed by n !><'sc,1on of rr adin gs and comment among those in allendance The series wHI continue each Thursday through Nov. 17 with poets David Lavaughn Brown, Bart Yoder anti Willia m McLean Will1·r Bus Route Changes Set For Laguna A survey on Laguna Beach bus service conducted last summer has culminated in route changes which will go into errect in No- vember. Hourly service to three routes was ouUined in a study conduct· cd by the city 's municipal services department and ap- proved by councilmen last week. The new routes encompass the existing five lines that crisscross Laguna Beach, according to ad· ministrative assist ant Koko Grant, who evaluated the 400. respondent suney last August. Nearly half of the riders responding said they would ltke to see improved schedules for the hourly bus tnps. The changes, expected to be in· 1tiated n~xt month, include: Route A, which is the existing Monarch Bay route, includes an addilionaJ segment to the Boys Club on Woodland Drive. The route will go south on Glenneyre Street and Coast Highway tu the Monarch Bay area, then return north on Coast Highway and up Laguna Canyon Road. Route B, a combination or the old Arch Beach Heights and Bluebird Canyon routes, goes up Nyes Place t.o Balboa, connects with Bluebird Canyon and allows Arch Beach Heights passengers heading downtown to transrer to the Monarch Bay line at the Coast Highway. The new route also includes heavier coverage along Oak and Catalina Streets Route C combines the existing Alta Laguna and North Via Mon· terey routes with some additions. The combined route allows greater bus coverage at Top or the World. the Skyline area Mystic Hills and High Drive. ' The route change process in- cluded help from a CalTrans transit planner who spent three months assisting city planners with the route revamp. Lecture on Plants Planned in Irvine Saddleback College's Zane Johnson will explain bow cacti and s ucculents can help a droughl·ridden landscape at 7 p.m. Friday at University High School In Irvine. Admission is free. J ohnson, an instructor of agriculture and horticulture, will explain the planting, propagat- ing and care of these plants. Further information may be ob- tainec! by calling the college's community ~rvices office. Newport Scouts To Bold Breakfast A pancake breakfast wilf be held by Troop 10 of the Boy Scouts of American from 7 to 11 a.m. Saturday. Nov. 5 at St. An· ctrew's Presbyterian Church ln Newport Beach. The rund-ralsing event will' cost $1.50 for ~dults and $1 for children under•l2. The church is located at 600 St. Andrews Road. Tkket11 will ht> on c;alf' :tt thP door. 81RMINGHAM , Mich. (AP > - It's been eight years since "Oh, Calcutta" titillated off· Broadway audiences with its nudity but left critics yawning. Now the revue is touring America's smaller cllies, and the actors who perform in the buff still hear it called obscene. In Providence, R .l.. Charleston, W.Va., Cleveland - and this week in this qu1et suburb of Detroit -a revival or the re- vue that is touring 44 cities has been dodging a series of legal ob- stac les. IT HAS CLEARED most of them, but when opening night ended here Tuesday, some in the audience wondered what the fuss was all about and even agreed with the critics. Michael and Jackie Kallen slipped out before the end and she explained: "We were just bored. Parts were cute, but I dJdn 't think there was anything more they could say or do to en- tertain me." Others were offended by the collection or skits, which poke run at sex. "IT'S CRASS," HUFFED an elegant matron who lcfl with a bout 15 others after an ob· scenity-laced, but clothed. takeoff on the Grand Ole Opry. But most or the audience - which ranged from young people in bib overalls to women in diamonds and minks -sat through the entire merformance. They laughed loudest when the play poked tun at itself and squirmed only sllahlly at the nude scenes. Actually. nudity occupies only about one-quarter of the lime. There are two scenes in which none or the singers and dancers ls dressed and another scene in which two cast members dance in the nllde. PONTIAC ASSEMBL V line worker Noah Lee, said alter see· ing the play: "You really don 't notice the nudity. Yet everybody gets so shocked and don't want to be seen seeing it.'' The tour, which started in March, has faced one legal hassle after another. In Springfi e ld. Mass.: Providence. R.I.: Cincinnati; Cleveland, and Eric, Pa., of· ficials tried to block it as ob- scene, but were overruled by the courts. In Lexington, Ky., mem- bers or the cast were arrested a fter police watched a performance. In Charleston, W.Va., producers bad to obtain an injunction a&aiNl threatened arrests. "IN NEW YORK it's old hat, but in the rest of the country it's som ething new and different," said actor Michael McArthur. The controversy, oo occasion, has been turned to the show's ad· vantage. Here, for example, Ule announcer declared: "Brought to you by Broadway productJons, the American Bar Association and last, but not leut, the Blrm· ingbam Fire Department." The fire department became Gem Theft Probed Orange County aherl(('s of· ricers are lnvestleaUng the then of jewelry valued at S600 trom a Dana Point store. Deputies said owner Jack Ray Woolsey, or Thunderroot Jewelry, 34161 Pacific Coast Highway, told . them the jewelry was stolen while be was busy in hls store. the butt of that. joke when it ob· jected to the show's costumes. not the lack of them. It. said the costumes posed a fire code viola· tlon, but a federal judge in· tervened and the show began it& six-day run as scheduled -at S3 to $8.50 per seat. FEW PEOPLE, HOWEVER, seemed surprised that "Oh, Calcutta" would cause a stir in Birmingham, a clty or 26,000 peo. pie with no adult book stores, X· rated movie theaters, topless go- go Joints, or, until a year ago, any bars or cocktall lounges at all. New York was shocked In 1969, when "Oh, Calcutt.a" opened. lt was not the first show to have nudity, but it was then the nudesL It eventually reached Broadway, but even before itdit prices ror the best seats rose to~ much as $25 -the blgbestinNe, York. . • · DESP I TE THE ~E putation of critic Ken-J,!et Tynan, who put t he 1;.evu together with contributions .fro1 ca rtoonist J ules Feirte1 humoris t Dan Greenb~q former BeaUe John Lenn~.;811 others, many critics were Qltin pressed. Still, that. didn't b~ 1 the box of!ice. . , In 11no, a videotape was sh9w at 85 theaters across the coun~ Theater ow n e ri; i Massachusetts and Ohio .:-wer charged with obscenity, and in l Jinols a judge ruled it couldn play in a Peoria drive-in. .· . .. 1 . . . 'Best I've Ridden' Jockey Emhitterci,t Over Horse Theft 1 . ,;~ Jockey Kenneth Hart remains mystified today over the loss or b1 mount that he relt he was destined to ride into racing history. . The horse is called Town Policy and mys teriously disappeared1'_t-o1 hi!flstall in Stanton one week ago today. ' r , HART, 29, A GARDEN Grove resident, spurred Town Policy to eight victories in nine outings this year. one of which set a world~s r ecord for quarter horses. Town Eolic.y was the best little mount Hart ever straddled and he will tell you so, aching inside for his horse. Samaritan Not Bitter After Kmfing . VENI CE, Fla CAP > Gregory Stoll answered a cry for help and was stabbed in the chest for his effort, but be says be bu no regrets. "It was just caring about another person," says Stoll, 26, six months arter undergoing ogen heart surgery for the wounds suffered when he tried to stop an armed robbery at a liquor store. "I WOVLDN'T hesitate to do the same thing again. It hasn't changed my outlook on life. I would still help another persont" the six root two truck driver said after the Sarasota County Com· mission authorized payment of up to $10,000 for bis medical ex· penses. Stoll was shootin& poo1 ln a bar adjac.entto t.bUiqllOr store when he heard the crflor help from a clerk. • "I ran in there and followed a guy out the dqor , he turned oo me, slashed me and stabbed me in the heart," beaald. STOLL WAS TAKEN by atn· bulance to the boapital. The ban· dit escaped but later wu ap- prehended and convicted, or at. tempted armed robbery and aggravated battery. He Is serv· ing a 15-year prison sentence. Sheriff Jim .UardcaaUe ask.-cl com missiooers to help pay Stoll'• medical elepenses under Florida's Good Samaritan or· dinance. "There isn't any doubt Jtbol that, and I've been ridi~ pt fesslonatly since 1966, .. s a• Hart, who remains bitter a~sat BE, AS WELL AS owne~ u operators '>! the top__qWart horse racing in Californ ciules, are mystified abbut motive f~ the $500,000 arum theft. · The 950-pound gelding carm by anyone's understanding, expected to race again o.nd anyone else's colors. : Th e trim, somew,ba temp~ramental little b~ t' be r~ogni%ed at any U.S. Q'fli horse track and quite likely •t place he might be raced if be w spirited to Mexico. A TRANSFER TO Mexic9 ra ing circles has been specqlat by those investigating the t!Jeft ) Town Polley, but quickly · missed as not feasible. "l 've went to Mexico and iJ match races down there, end don't see bow anyone would · thlllt," ~ays Hart, Town Pole personal jockey. "Tbey i v write soocs about their borsea.' He and ot,ber jockeys ~ Cl the quarter 'horse racial lPirt' so widespread on both sides the border that it is impossi Town Policy could run Und anothernameundeteeted. :.-: .. "BE WOULD BE recogn~ his fir~t race." • ~ The question of pogsiblyJ mandlng a ransom for the m log horse has been discuss~ authorities do not hav ..... llLJI~ nJon in thatdlrecUon. _:;;., Being a gelding, Town roli could not be used as a stud hors .1 Teacher Burgled A .burglar who kicked 1a; door to gain entry took pro valued at $65cO from a San Capistrano teacher's Orange Cou(lty sheriff's o said a coin collection, a tape corder, cameras and cash YI taken f rom t h e homo Capistrano Valley High teacher &nald Doyne LoDll of 26512 Paseo Belardes, WbUe I was away at work. .., .......... Leaving Their Jtlark . ·3 •• in the Newport Plan ~lternative h~· school program, consulted with other s • dents on the design and did the f l painting themselves. Newport Harbor High School students John Sihler and Tricia Mason put the finishing touches ·on a mural they de- signed for the wall of the school's home nrts building. The pair, who are enrolled • I BRIDGE .. .. Thursday. October 27, 1977 DAILY PILOT A J J Italian Bridge Team ,Accused of Cheating ' MANiLA. The Philippines <AP> 'the World Bridge f'ederatJon bas de- cided to suspend the Italian federation on grounds that it failed to investigate tltoroughly charges that its players Osed s mol$.c signals to cheat in world <!ompetition. Jt delayed the sus- ~nsion, however. •·In Milan, Italy, the Italians quickly \replied Wednesday they made such ·~an investigation and sent a report to 'both the European and world federa- 'ttons. President Luigi Firpo said the world federation's action might be lflte to a misunderstanding. .. ... ONE PLAYER ALLEGEDLY in· volved in the scandal called the sus· ·~ension "another American trick." '"Italians annoy Amer icans." former world champion Benito Bianchi said in Leghorn. Italy. "They have a voting majority in the World F ed er ation. but number makes strength, not right." The world federation's announce- ment said it was deferring the sus· ~nsion until March 15 and left the '"door open for another three-month de- ferral alter that. Sources said the sus- pension might not be imposed if the Italian federation satisfies the world •oup that it was taking action to police itself. ; :·SUSPENSI ON OF THE Italian .l~deration would be an unprecedented step and shake the fo undations of in· ,.IMAlogk1$.,..,., ternational bridge. Ita ly. whose fumed Blue team has won all but four of the last 20 world titles, would be ex- cluded from world competition as long as the suspension was in effect. T he 18-month·old s moke signal scandal started with a claim by Lean- dr9 Burgay, a leading ltallan player, that he taped a telephone conversa· lion in which Bianchi admitted to cheating with Pietro Forquet, who played on all 16 or Italy's world cham· pion teams. BI ANCID AND FORQVET played together only twice, and both times they won the world title: in 1973 in Brazil and in 1974 in Venice. Although contents of the tape were never made public, world federation officials said it revealed ,a cheating system based on the position of a player 's cigarette, in his mouth, in his hand or on an ashtray. Bianchi. reached for comment Wed· nesday, repeated his contention that Burgay doctored the tape but added that even so. there is no evidence in the tape that he said he had used smoke signals with Forquet. ' Monday, October 31 , 4:00 pm Open to all children through the 6th grade. Trophies for aweepatakea, first, second & tblrd place In each age group. Sweep1takea wlll also win a $10.00 cash gift. • Entries are eligible ror a drawing for a 10-SPEEO SIKEi Everyone will receive a participation ribbon. interpreting the tape," Bianchi said. Phone----------"THE AMERICANS INSIST in mis· 1 "The tape shows Burgay and I were schoo1---------- d is c ussing s moke s1gnals as a Gr•de----------- hypothesis for anyone who wants to ~~========:....==-=---=----------------------------------cheat." Firpo stated in Milan "we in· vestigated the charges fully and we found no evidence or any cheating." The Italian federation, following its hearings, suspended Burgay on ground s he was trying to blackmail the federation into selecting him for the llattan team. That charge was dropped for lack or evidence, but Burgay was disciplined for wiretap- ping and talking with the press and the world body about the alleged record· ing. Bianchi also was reprimanded and suspended briefly. THE F1RST ITALIAN team ac- cused of cheating was the 1958 team which defeated an American team at Lake Como, Italy. The protest was disallowed for lack or evidence. l ·• ·~·s SLoltl OM 'ftfE HtllS, l·· -.• Then in 1975 the Uni ted States ac· cused the Italians of cheatini:< by touching feet at the Bermuda cham· pion.ships The world federation reprimanded two Italian players. and since then partitions have been in· stalled to prevent foot contact under 244_ 399 I :· ~ ,.........., . !• ~Card Sale ·. ~~Benefits Hospital · Saddleback Communi- : l)' Hospital volunteer!> .. are selling Christmas cards in the main lobby .o( the adjoining medical center Mond ays through Fridays from 1 lo4 p.m . • The cardl; may be en- gra ve d with the "purchaser's name or the name of someone else if , the cards are a gift. . Proceeds from the sale 'benefit the non-profit ~cute care hospital. C·The medical center is located at 23561 Paseo de '.Valencia in Laguna : Jtms . .. :.1>rison Set ' .. SAN DIEGO CAP > -A ~van Nuys woman. Penny Louise Whitl ey, 18, has ·~en . sentenced to 90 · cntys in federal prison for •onspiring to smuggle a Tijuana woman into the United States. the table. SPECIMEN PUMPKINS A ROGER'S, SPECIALTY! Rog~ Gar~• 640-$800 !>an .io.q.,1n al MacArthur • N""PO't B~edl 9am-6pfn AUCTION !:STATE SALE Property of two prominent beac!l area residents together with property of others. Property includes fi ne cut crystal, porcelain figurines. china sets, oriental rugs, bronzes, oils, furniture, clocks, fur coats. etc. Also. many items of fine antique and modern jewelry including 35. carat platinum and diamond bracelet set with large diamonds, a 24. carat platinum and diamond bracelet, a 15. carat emerald, several rubies, and a number of diamond solitaire rings. Other miscellaneous items include gold chains. watches, diamond stud earrings, etc. SALE DATE: Fri., Sat., Sun.· 28th, 29th and 30th at 8:00 p.m. Inspection of property 7:00 -8 :00 p.m. sale night. NEWPORT GALLERIES, LTD 2542 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach (714) 645·2200 TOMS: C4Hll. ... et A~ce c:..i, Metw C._,., CIMdil. etc. C•t191u11ts •c.,+e4 ..tll i :OO ,._. Fric19J, Oe.._, 2ttti ,be"--Alf LIYfMI MEN'S MEN'S KABUKI FLANNEL ROBES SHIRT 1097 2 i o ...... fits all. Machine FOR washable. s9 I Sizes S-M-L I • av2 QT. 11 ss .... cR __ o __ cxii.iP ... o .... T --... WROUGHT 1 LB. IRON CANNED PLANT STAND HAM J 59 Boneless. skinless, fully cooked. :IO 1 .. 1 pllM tl- MllUllO IO IOd wp IO I POI MEN'S SHETlAND SWEATERS 1 ()97 BLACXBOARD & GOAL SET 1286 .. BUSHa 21s1 LEAF BAGS Bo.w of 10. ' •' • t A J2 DAILY PILOT Thursday, October 27. 1977 Ward & Harrington FRIDAY SAlURDAY ·SU.NDAY Thatsa delicious idea Fun-filled food maker Bakes professional-style pizza, whether frozen. ready-mix or scratch. Great for heating up T. V. dinners too. Saves up to 70% energy compared to electric or gas range oven Add corn. oil. Then relax. Tender, fluffy pop corn is yours-fast! No stirring or shaking. Special base coating speeds popping. Even-heating polished aluminum units. Made of even-heating aluminum. Directions. shell has heat-proof handle and recipes included. Holds 12" pizza Model ;M0-368-35. ELECTRIC PIZZA BAKER, Reg. 27.95 18.88 Not available at the Orange st01e. Stake out a bundle Stake your claim to a bundle of redwood lath UH It lo assemble an arbor. put together a trel11s or atake a garden. J<.-x 1 VJ• x 4' lath. SO per bundle. ~ #2 REDWOOD LATH. Reg.4.49 3 .. 88 For convenient climbs Two-step design, very light weight. With satety lop guard rall, heavy slip-proof traction grooved step afld platform. Also has non-mar plastic feet. It's maintenance-tree. and !olds to 2" for carrying and storage Model 11:$-20 ALUMINUM LADDER. Reg. 12.99 8.88 Not av•lleble at the Orange store. Everyday n1entlal A hot water heater la as much a part of hfe as doing the dishes and taking a bath. If yours need a replacing, take advantage of thla hot price. Glass-lined tank keeps water hot with a minimum of gas during 1t1ndby periods. 40 gallons. 5 year manufacturer's warranty. AMERICAN WATER HEATER. Reg. 99.99 79.99 Water heater enclosures avallablc legs. AC-DC cord included. Model #M-9233-40. MIRAO ELECTRIC 3 QT. COAN POPPER, Reg. 6.95 4.88 Not avallable at the Orange 1tore Give a pole a role Gove lhese peeler pcles a starring role tn your landscape plans Use them to edge garden beds. lerrace slopes, as rusltc accents Peeler poles are 8' long. PEELER POLES Reg. 4.99 3.88 \ Stands up to winter rafna Rep<Jirs root leaks. ovon In a driving rain. Also elfecttve on asphalt, molal, masonry. Keep It on hand. Be prepared tor the wel weather ahead Model#208. HENRY WET SURFACE PLASTIC ROOF CEMEN1 Reg. 4.29 2.98 Turn your water heater Into a fuel aever Under-Insulated water heaters weste fuel end cost extra. Which maMs Oberglus Insulation a Wise Investment. It quickly pays for ltsell In fuel savings. Just wrap II around the heater. No special tools required U.L. listed. OWENS CORNING WATER HEATER • INSULATION KIT. Reg. 19.99 16.88 ) I I Deck the w•ll• How about giving this beautlfully cralled spice rack with room lor 12 Jara. plus 2 small drawers and hangars tor easy wall mounting. Includes aplce labels too. In stained wood flnllh. ' Tht homemaker who gel• It wlll lhank you tor a long time to eome. WOODEN SPICE RACK, Reg.6.99 4.88 Nor evellable at the Ortnge atore. Push-button decorating Give youroldles but gOOc:lles a fresh new look. wllh a coat ol S~-E-Namel. Spray on one of many decorator colora, In a tough, extremely durable finish. Uae for all Interior and exterior surfaces. Sale, lead-free, drle• In mlnutea. stops and prevents rusting. 13 oz. ZYNOLYTE SPEED·E-NAMEL. Reg.99c 78c The profe11lonal touch Keep your painting Job neat ••• cover Windows. floora or whatever araae lhat don't need painting with masking tape •.• It halpa give you a gOOc:I, straight painting edge, too. 'I•· x 60 yards. ARNO MASKING TAPE, Reg. 79c 48c ard & HarringtQ.n ...... o .... T7W Giiden 0(ov~ Blvd. 617-tlTI « 19M623 Qplrt Mon. thru Frt. t to t &at. l Suo. t to 8 '"''•rlon 301 So. State College 870-0050 Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9 Sat. l Sun. 9 to 8 Cotta Mna or.,.,.. 1215 Brl1tol 324 Wiit Katella 55&-1500 991-1224 Open Mon. thru Fri. t to 9 Sat. & Sun. 11 to 8 Open t to I every day Sale prlc•• good Frfday, S1turd1y and Sunday, Oct. 21 through Oct. 30 .. -. .,,.... . ....... .. ' ~ . . PUBLIC RECORDS For the Record Birth• S.plemllerH Mr. •NS Mn . ~rsrw11 Chr1\11e, 4J9' R•IHl. lrvone. boY. S.P'emllerJO Mr •net Mrs,. Ft•r<1S M4irlm, 2'o.a1 Gretnt>oro,t<untlr'QIOn6ucn.11or1. M t. •no Mr~. Jottn Lemm .. ., UtH.t L•~epoonl Lane, t1u1111n11ton Bto<h. DOy, • Mr. and Mr\. JOM Ros< ... •hlO Dorcl')esftf', CotOtW Oet M•r. 9ui. Mr. ar>d Mrt, Wllll.tm t<atcne11. l~I s11-ngrll.t, t<untlnvton S..o<h. ll"L Mr. •no ~ Jot<k Stov•I. 10.ll Wtute S.lls W•Y. CGron.cwl NWf", girt. L.AS VEGAS -Meui.oe llcenws ~lllce lochldll; ~·· O'ORIEH·WHALEN -P•lrlclt Mlcl\Ml,32,-NWry Kim, a .bOlhof Newpott 8HCI\. ADAMS-HEMMER -RlcllArd E-. ll. ano Kay Ft-ft. 1', both otCosteMH4 k0EGEL.·8YE -Ml<l\HI Rot.r1.10, andJ-Louhe,22.bOlllof El Toro. PACITTl.(;()URD -Guy~. 41. •nd N..-.C'I' Lee, ll, bolll ol t<unl· l"iJ\Oft llMc.h. DUH-.0.GERTY -Jamu R .• 34, -L.11..s. S...-, JO, bOlll Ol lnmw.. MEYER~STAHL.EY -Clllford Co<\, It, end JMl>ee. II, l>Oth of UIOIHY HlllL MIL.UiR-sHAAP -Jey L., ll. - Kalllleetl ~M. Sf, both of F-l<tln veu..,. MENS ANO WOM[N ~ SPORTSWEAR l03 MAIN STACC'T BALllOA,C.ALIF Ill.Kl A WIDE VARIETY OF SELECTED PATTERNS TO CHOOSE FROM Here's our g reatest sole of the year. Just In time to decorate your home for the coming Holiday Season. BUY THE FIRST R0LL AT OUR LOW SUPERMARKET PRICES AND GET A SECOND ROLL FOR JUST ONE CENT! FAIRIC·IACKED AND PRE·PASTID VINYLS $5~~io $10.95 NOW $388 TO $888 per single roll ORIENTAL GRASS CLOTHS, WEAVES AND TIXTURIS $2~.~~·IO $36.00 NOW $788 TO $1288 per a Ingle roll ,., ADDITION TO HUE SUPER VALi.XS WE ALSO HAVE SOMf FLOCKS. WM.· COATrn AND PlASTIC.COATED PAPERS ON TH£ ONE ClNI SAU llMllEO QUANTITIES ~p EAl?l.V FOR BCST snrcnON MONEY BACK GUARANTEE All papers $Old by Wollpopers To Go 01e retumot:>le for exch011ge <X o oomplele rotund We wont VOIJf bus•neu. hOneJllyl • Wallpaper, to go z: 200 W llinlfll Ill.VO I .,,. .... .-rot &<1o<"118M-1t tNJ 691-09•9 A 2300 14AAIOP llVD (Holbot 51-o c.merr lAUAHA llHI VINJU•A k'\IO I a.iw .... ..,..,<O<> <>nnl_..,l l:tl11 H6 oO•J lAMHA U21 lllttCUUS Sf 1oc10., llO"I' Akll)n t.~l 111•1 460 l120 (71") 6'0-&0&I - lOHANCE 11•07 14AW1HOllNI II.VO 1 '• ""'9 "°""' 01 Met'O 1'"'1:1 I f2tll 370·$$21 ClllAITOS I AATlSll. 116~ 50UIM SI !'•"""'•"' nrlo.C-...,. ..,,.., 12131924-7611 • Thursday. October 27, 1977 DAILY PILOT A J 3 ~Q_u_e_EN_1_e ___________ e_y_Ph_1_1_1n_t•_,1_an-d 191 i ~OROJ>Oly Champion An1Wunced 95 >•I"" t, !>O \j ftJt>• If•\, tlldC~wall t.Jh• \I 6J F,,.ae'"' F-., • .,." 1J• The Jct-Air ill fcntwc~ n rugged four-ply construct1on. Ourage.n- Tread Rubber, and famous tw1n- tread design. 7.00.12 Tubeteu Blackwall '21.95 plut it.97 Fed. E.t 1•• F71-14/F71·1S Tubeless Blackwall '25.95 C71·1' Tubeleas Blac.kwo>ll '23.95 plus $2 CM f'cd. h Tai G71·14/G11·15 Tubeleu Blackwall '27.95 Terrific Tire Buys! BUY NOW & SAVE £71·14 T1.1botess Blackwall '24.95 plus S2 ~5 ftrf [t, Ta• H78·14/H71·1S T ubcle!. .. B•ilckwad '29.95 W·l·D-E Glass Belted Ge'*"' Scrambler Letter White ldNI For V•na, Pk:kupe R.V. A LArge Sportcers ph• '2-H-70-15 Fed. Exe. Tax NEW OTHER BRAND _ Glass Belt BlackWall H-78·15 Plue '2.99 f1td. £ac. Tu Close-oUt 4 FOR •122 = Ind . .c wt.et 8elMCe & v•ve StlnW 0 STOC Whitewall Blems G-78-15 s3195 H·78-15 "'"' \2 39 to S2 43 reo E• h• dCr>and1n9 on \•lO 1 .,, n &5 to S2 s~ f('·I l, '"' rh•> \l 7 1c. n 80 r~., t. f •• s3395 CIOOtf\d•n'l Or\ t111 th fA.' .. r 'I c,n f 'lflli \'Vh1lc .. all• only S2 M \• mo•• oor I••• RADIAL TIRE CLEARANCE SPECIAL PURCHASE Whit s.,,ty 1-h Steel 'Belt ·Radials Gener11I Du•I Steel LUXURY CAR OWNERS NEW OTHER BRAND • RADIAL ~~C:W.:i FABRIC GR·78·14 Limited Quantity s35 = $58~0 LR78• 15 ~"tic Pfua 12" fed. Exe. TH• f DELco----sl*k-AbsOrbe~-1 ~f-~~g~~~~~~&ROtOiss5eiVQiCe6--6-1 I Big ''D" $995 lftsllil11itft I I •TUllH llOTOltS I l CARRYOUT hahMt I I •PACK .. OMT WHUf.. I I SPECIAL UCM _I l..-l.~ltftL-----------------;J ---~------~----------~~~~~ ~-~~---~--~~~~~~~~~~~~---, ~--~~~~~~~-~-~-~~-~--' I SPIC~L I BRAKE • Check Uninga I I 88 ¢ I I, FREE •Check Disc Rotors I, 11 TIRE ROTATION CHE(]( • Check ~ett System I Good With This Coupon Thru Oct 31st ·77 j L --~~-V~,!.'~~~~_2et..:.~•.!,C!! _____ J ~---~--------------------- COAST GENERAL TIRE 2855 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, Califomia 540-5710 .- HQFE~ TIRE SA~E·s 8249 lol1a Midway City, CalHornla 892-2093 ········ ···-.. . • Al .. OAIL y PILOT Thursday, October 27, 1977 AT YOUR SERVICE "Got.a ~? Then writ• to Pat Dunn. Pot wtll ·Cl&t red lope, getting the.~1.ond.octum you need to 1olve inequiliea in gor>nnrMnt and business. Mail l)our queationl to P.al Dunn, At Your ~ice, Orange Cooat Daily Pilot •. P.O. Boz 1560, Cosio Me;a, CA 92626. At many 1.eUers.aa po.ssible unU be ~ed. but phoned inquiriea or ltttn& not including the T~n·a /vll name.oddre11.and business hours' phone numbtrcan.aot beccmmered. T~columnappearsdoi· ly ncept Saturday•." DEAR PAT: I have a couple of questions about do-it-yourself carpet cleaning. I'd like to find out if a homemade solution of detergent and water would deap just aa well as a commercial product. I know that il would be less expensive. Then I'd like l<! f~d out if I should rent steam or s hampoo cleaning equipment for the best results on my shag carpet- ing. E.T .. Mission Viejo Commercial carpet cleaning products are formulaU!d &o crystalize as they dry and thus are more reMUy vacuumed out tban homemade mix· tures, wlllch tend to leave a detergent residue that attr act.a and bolds aoU . According to Consumer Reports, steam cJeaala« la said to remove more soU and suds than sbampooiag wtth Jess rapid resoling. The steam method Jets a stream ol hot water and cleaner into tile carpet and at tbe same time draws oU dirty suds. Tb.ls water extraction method ls rec- ommended for cupeta wUta a pile tbat could be damaged by bru,hlag, but heavily soiled shag carpet may require the abampoo brushing methods for thorough cleaning. Are l'ou Rip to lean Size•? DEAR PAT: My brother is able to buy quality jeans for less money than I can when getting women's jeans. I've heard that there's some way to convert men·s s izes into women's. Do you know what it is and what, it any, difCerence there is in fit? L. E., Huntington Beach Men's Jeans are sold by waist slae and in-seam measurement, but you shouJd use your hip size as the gulddlne. If hips measure 35~-36~. buy men"s waist size 30. Other JiiJp to waist conversions are: 37-371'& -31; JS.38~ -32; JI.at~ -i:t; ~·~ -34 and 41-U -X. • Measure lite bl.aeam of a pair or jeans t.bat fit yoa well to determine length. Men's jeans ftt women t11htly around tbe hlps, but there will be some IOGHtlesa bl tbe wallt. sfJftawa Dote• tM Dr•h• DEAR PAT: I've been ~ing a no-phosphate de- tergent to help preveot water pollution. but my. clothes are suff~ring! They feel rough and the col- ors look faded. I stiU want to use this type of de- tergent, but wonder if there's anything I can do to help prevent my cfolhes from looking this way. • N.E .• Mission Viejo The AMoclatlee ol Rome Anlluce Manufac- tur:ers bu tome adYI~ for yoa aad otller readers who refer ''Do-pbospllat.e" aodlam c:arboaate (soda ash) deCttgen&a. U11Dg Nit Wlater for your laundry will cut dow1l oa the lllllllnl or rttdd•e buJJdup 0t1 fabrtcs. lloUer w.,...1 water al9o Hips, u does a pbosphate.basecl water eeadWoaer. Residae cu be removed from g.armeeta by soaJdag regalarly for 15 mlDutes ID a sol.UO. of two cups ol household <white) vt.egar per salJoa of water. Do not put v1De1ar ID Llae wullibl1 machine, bowever, as it may damage lite wuiler basket. AllAJI, whlcfa n,pports propel' treatment of sewage rather U.u Um1ttn1 pbospbate detergent ue, saya yoa cu tell If yoa llave calclum carbonate deposits OD cJodla U tJtey fed still, roaglt or greasy to the tooclt aDcl If colors become dall or yellowed. ADAM adds that carbonate ddergeats aJso shorten garmm We by ap to ZO petttat and damage washing macblae parts due to resJdae baildup. Potato Olp llel-4 Delqed DEAR PAT: What happened to the potato chip refWld? I recall reading in your column that the latest lime il was to be refunded was late spring this year. This was after a promised refund in November 1976. Con s umer s are urged lo participate in order to bring about just settlements of unjust deals. I did so, and filed my dumb chip refund request. Why bother? P.L., C-OSta Mesa You're rlpt. This refund bas t•ken too long to proces,,. Refund flllng deadllae was April 21, 1975. The latest anllclpa~ refand malling will be "late 1977," accordlng to tbe olfice ol Martin Shapero, attorney for tbe plalntlff. Verillcattoa of the 314,000 claims submitted took loager tban anticipated, and the court presenUy ls being petltloaed for an order to distribute the funds. Shapero•s spokesman polnU!d out that all funds bave been held In escrow and are accumulating Interest unde r the Jurtsdictlon of tbe coart • ,,,,.. )J )J li-... ·~>,_ L .)., Royal \'idt Queen Juliana of lhe Netherlands will vis - it Senegal from Nov 28 to Dec 1. repay- ing a 1974 vis it to t~e Net h e rland s b y Senegalese President Leopo ld Se d ar Senghor. Want Ad s Call 642·5678 • Feat Treat Guinness Coming Out LONDON <AP> -The Guinness Book of Records, that grand collecl1on of famed doings, I'> s ues its 24th edition later lhts month, and funs of rccord-bceaking feats will be treated to some new achievements. In tribute to the ingenuity, or tht! restlessness. or the world, between 30 to 35 percent or this ycur's entries have been updated, replaced or rev1i.ed. Among the new entries: -TURKISH CIRCUS PERFORMER Suleyman Eris, 22, has become the shortest measured livtng dwarf at 30.1 inches. Meanwhile, 22·ycar·old Sandy Alle n of Shelbyville. Ind., hus finally stopped growing and at 7 feet, 7.25 inches. is the tallest living woman. -Bob Spec a, a University of Pennsylvania stu· dent. used one domino lo topple 49,999 others in an almost 18-minute-long tumble. -A SMELT WEIGHING 1·16th of an ounce became the smallest fish to win a fishing compe ti · tioo when caught by Peter Christian of Norfolk, England. The other 107 competitors didn't catch anything. -New ZeaJander Paul Wilson ran 100 yards in 13.3 seconds to establish a record for the fa stest run backwards. -A record for declared profits was set by the National Iranian Oil Co. with $17, 175,182,000 in 1976. The 352-page book sells for about $6. Starts Friday 10 AM! CLEARANCE AUC"flON SALE UMITID STAnS IH'ftY l.D. #Jl47t2' HAND MADI ORIENTAL CARPETS AND RUGS Shipment, !ICX503 ordered by PhOne eK London warehOuse 516177. 23 exoess bal•s arnved Los Angeles 7 /19/77. Excess refused by importer. We have been commissioned 10 auction the excess 23 bales to avoid reshipping to London and realize cash to cover various charges incurred en route. Auctioneers nore. we have examined tile bales and found the rugs to be of fine Quality and in excellent condll1on. They vary 1n size from 3'x2' lo 18'x12' 1n vanous makes and ongins. This is a great opportunity to obtain fine rugs and snould not be missed. AUCTION WIU. TAKE PLACE SATURDAY, OCT. 29 AT 2:00 PM YJEW DAY OF AUCTION I PM AT HOLIDAY INN llll UISTOL AVL COSTA MESA T.,._ CM• C:IMcll CAT4LOGVIS AYAIU.IU AT AUCTION J ( ___ M_A_•L_B_o_x_· __ ·) STIMULATES Giant Orange County at JCPenney! Selected women's coordinates! St•r1 wltti • denk: colion conturoy 11,.t.9' ~ .,.nt... Muc In an .c:ryllc COWi or a pt1id pQtyester/couon 10f>9 sleeved shirt Sploe with an acrytoc plaid vest 01 pantsklrt. The result -a 1upe1 werd101:1e In misses sizes. Corduroy blazer. rog $26, Sale '13. c;>orduroy pants. re9. s1a, Sale 19. Plaid shlrt.1109 $12, Sale •s. Plaid vest, reg. $12. Sal• •s. c owl sweater. reg. s12. Sale •8. Plaid panlsk,,t. reg $16. Sale •8. 503off women's selected dresses! Choose from 11rly l•ll 1tytff and colors In dreues, pan1su111 end long d11ne1. Fav0tlle colOrs In mlsies and hell 112111. JCPenney Qll'ln1'1J8' •re llmll.cf on cloMout mercltencti... COSTA MESA 2300 Hsbor llYd. Harbor Cettter HUHTIHGTOM IUCH 7777 Edinger Huntington Cettter ., 503off! Cleeek ttrfl"I 11'1 1 Pofyet'9f ~that lnchxles blazer, p1nta, tunic veal, gauchO Ind print shirt. Beautllully coortflnated In ml1H1 sizes. Prinl shirt, reQ. $18, Sale 18. Tunic vest, reg. $21, Sal• 10.150. Bluer, reg. $2$, Sale •13. Gaucho, reg. $13, Sale S.SO. Pants, reg. $14. Sale •7 • NEWPORT IUCH 24 FcnNOll Island M.wporiC...ter oc '" wesl~ Saramae Cream with Contrasting Embroidery · P-etlte. Small, Medium $22 For that Great Halloween Spirit Monday, Oct. 31 Party Papers, Door Decorations, Masks PAPER UNLIMITED I I I 2 1RVINE _. VBWE _..' NEWPORT IEACH, CA. ..• .... 541-7921 Christmas Cwds one UH lwp; lllled FllH p Sport coats-In medium & lightweight fabrics of wool. wool blends, & cotton blends styled in an authentic natural shoulder manner. 17th & Irvine Av~ •• ~wport Beach, C.11lif. (714) 645-0792 -- Rust, c.amer & BkxiC<if Brown Suede '52D OPEN THURSDAY EVENINGS Specializing in DESIGNER& BETTER SPORTSWEAR . For the belt selection In Orange County \'lslt u1 at ••• w ..... ,, .... 10.CO Irvine, NB 842·244<4 Ne:•·-1107 botee.NB 84+-0570 #10 TOWlt Ir C~ S.C. 777 So. Main. Orange 541""4109 THANE ) :lJ8 DAILY PILOT Thursday. October 27. 1977 POLITICS / AIRPOA'1 Mangers~ View Coastal B ill Opini o n D ue By O.C. HUSTINGS Ol \119 Dallr Pli.t 5\Mt Assemblyman Dennis Mangers <D·Huntington Beach), will testify Nov. 1 before the Assembly Water Committee, which will meetfrom 9 a.m. to 4-p.m. at Seal Beach City Hall. Mangers will discuss his bill, AB 1109, which proposes lo reimburse coastal communities for losses incurred while operating beaches and provid· ing emergency services to nonresidents.. .. .. * • SEN.$. I. HAYAKAWA <R-Calif.>.bascalledon Congress to retain funds for the 81 bomber program .. saying the Pentagon is asking for a more expensive replacement bomber. He said President Carter already bas asked for $20 million lo initiate a $350 million research and development pro- gram to c reate a manned p enetrating bomber. He said the total cost on the proposed new bomber would be $17 billion. compared wilh $ll billion for the Bl. "'* * 'EXPLOSIVE AREA' Thomas Riiey 0.11• Pllot Stall ........ 'IN SYMPATHY' Laurence Schmidt M esan's Slayer Found Guilty A man who stabbed and killed a Costa Mesa taxi driver in what Santa Ana police described as a motiveless slaying has been found guilty of second degree murder. Airport Study Approved ~ Hy KATHY ('(,ANCY t ime when he would wunt to see a change in the 0ti ... o.u,i>uo1si.11 airport's or~ant.atlJon. but for now 1lshould remain A rc\WW u( Orange County Airport manage-as it is. he suid ment that could leud to a transrer or some decision-Riley contended, Jn addition, thal the airport making power to the five-member Airport Com-oper ation involves s uch sensitive issues that mission was ordered by three count,y supervisors s upervisors should avoid placing the Airport Com· Wednesday. mission between a irport management and The 3·1 decision came over strong objections themselves. from Board Chalrmnn Thomas Riley. whc,se fifth . "lt ls an explosive area," he saJd. supervisorial district includes the airport. Then glaring ut a smihng Schmit. Riley added. RILEY CALLED DECISIONS about the airport "Thank you for laughing, supervisor ." "explosive," too explosive for supervisors to .re-SCHMIT LATF.R SAID, ''THE humor was not linguishanyconlrol. al you. It was for you, in sympathy .•• We have to Riley al~o w11s displeased with a s uggestion maintain humor, otherwise we would not be able to from Supervisor Ralph Clark that county officials tolerate each other sometimes." should study r emoving the airport from the um-"Those were your WQrds, supervisor;· Riley brella of the county General Services Agency. replied. Clark said a recent survey of airport tenants i. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~;;e;. showed they belJeve the agency has placed airport · management within n large bureaucracy that has ~1!8_.llllllll burdensome regulations and is slow to make de· cisions. THE SAME STUDY SHOWED that some ' tenants view lhe Airport Commission as another layer of bureaucracy lacking decision.making power and that some commissioners believe their · advice ort.en lsn 't sought on airport matters. But Riley contended supervisors already have decided that the airport should be included within the agency's umbrella. He said the current arrangement is effective and caUed it "a crime" to tamper with the manage- ment framework. An Orange County Superior Court jury returned SUPERVISORS PHILIP ANTHONY and Jussu p, 30, of 2404 LaurenceSchmit,howcver,sidedw1thClarkincaJl-· Harbor Blvd •• Costa ing for a management s tudy, with Schmit contend· Mesa, lying beside his ing the curr ent management system isn't working that verdict in the trial or Andrew Valenzuela, 21. of Santa Ana. Judge Ken· neth E. Lae sentenced him to five years to life in state prison. abandoned cab in north well anyway. 2700 W. Coast Hwy. Cat RJytnldt) Newport hoch Santa Ana. "M-ay l ask what is not working?" RUey SEN. ALAN Cranston <D-Calif.>, J bas been named to a Police said Valenzuela snapped in one of several clashes between him and VALENZUELA was made no attempt to rob Schmit Wednesday. arrested March 14 short-Jussup and could offer ··Are you happy wilh the way it is today?" Ski Mart Open House Today Thursday ly after police found the no explanation for his at· Schmit shot back. HAYAKAWA committee studying how to prevent filibustering. The issue arose in the wake of the recent week· long filibuster against the natural gas deregulation bill. bod y of Robe rt W. _;.l::a.::.ck::-__::.oo::_:th:e:..:l:a.::u:.:drl::ve=.r·:_ __ _:R::l:LE:::V_::CO=N:C::E:.:D:E:D:_THE.:::_:RE::__:m:i~g:bt:.._:c:om=e-a:...::· ~~?~~~§~?~~~§?~~~§?~~~§~~~~~~~~~3~~~ *** PAUL BELL. 40, AN Anaheim attorney. bas an- nounced that he wilJ seek the Democratic nomina· tion for the state Assembly in the 69th districL He is seeking the seat that will be left vacant by Assemblyman William Dannemeyer <R- Fullerton), who is running for Congress. Bell sought a slate Senate seat last year but lost to Republican John Briggs. Coed Sues Patient In Attack A Golden West College student who claims she wu attacked twice in one day by a Fairview State HospltaJ patient bas sued the state and the patient for damages to be determined in trial court. Dance·to Mark H alloween · The Santa Ana Lodge of the Poljsh National AJ. Hance is sponsoring a Halloween dance Satur- day from 9 p.m . to 1 a.m. at St. Gregory the Great Church Hall, Whittier. For further informa- t ion call 529-7034 or 535-4047. C ustom Creations for all Special ~occasions ,,.• Marie Ann ']:\lrner filed her lawsuit .. in Orange County Superior Court. • She alleges that the pa· tient attacked her while she and other students were touring the Costa Mesa facility as part of a college learning pro- gram. HAll.OWEEN· BOUQUETS A 6t!:~4 San~" al M.-cArthur • NllWJ)(>rt Buch 9am~pm PRESEN1'1NG CALIFORNIA'S FINEST WORKS OF AR'£ OCT.27-30 Come to °Calif omia Artists7 an exciting exhibition and sale by the state's most respected professional artists and craftsmen It's free. And it's at Fashion Islanc:L where you'll want to make a day of this hilltop shopping experience. You'll find a superb selection of shops, restaurants and five major department stores, including J. W. Robinson's, The Broadway; Buffums:]. C. Penney and Bullock's Wilshire. "Calif omia Artists:' A Fashion Island experience -and the last art presentation until the summer of 1978. You won't want to miss it In Newport Beach on Pacific Coast Highway between MacArthur and Jamboree. ·~e difference between bettu & best.'' Don't let a good bu Stagmn:s 1 Uown. Stag nm:s v.o. 1.75 L. (59.2fl.oz.) REGULAR PRICE $18.49 REDUCED TO $1149 Benchnmrk Bourbon sz60 750ml. (25.4 fl. oz.) m sz99 750ml. 1.7 5 l. (59.2 fl. oz.) REGULAR PRJCE $13.75 ' REDUCED TO SJl.99 .... Stagmn:s Extra'Or.g Gin QUART REGULAR PRICE $5.99 REDUCED TO ss.49 sn99 act 1.75l . ,.. 7e (59.2 fl. oz.) The Glenlivet Scotch $14.75 750 ml. Save an additional 10% by buying a case of these fine products· all one size·mm brands or match brands. . &08'UllY O.CMLIOIMI WlllU'I UllOID.IYIAIS Ol.D. llU l'IOOI ~C'All'S l CtO'll'W.AllUIW WIUWT-a llDO. 80 PIOOf wcwn UTIA OIHm.eo PIOOf OISTIUIO ot'f c1• O•l!WO Boll CIAPI lllUS'S tUJt. IMPOITfO lllO l'Jilllll l'f ftlD I. llYltS, tal.11ll0tt, ~ IO "OOf T• GU.llMT ICOTCtt.11WitOlt.16 NOOr. lllPOITlO l'l IUGWI NnllUI CIOllHdff. tOllCMVIOT an. OQTIWI l10ll w eo NOOf IUGUll'I llJalldl llllrtlCll emitHl IWtlOll WlllUn •• ,.,.,, RACtlll DISl'lllU3 OOWMV. • l'C. ( t ' I I l I t ' t N Sf DE: • •Sports •Business •Television •Entertainment ThurSday, October 27, 1977 DAILY PILOT Featuring_ .. _ .. ___ 8, A n ew FDA regulation requires cosmetic manufacturers to list most ingredients on product labels. ti1 By LOUISE COOK AUMl•lff Prei• Wr!Wt A Food and Drug Administration regulation Th~ ~r~ect on bodily functions is a key part or has not been determined.·· Unlike the other in-1 wh ich took erred April s requires cosmetic the def1rut1on. Products such as antiperspirants gredients, color additives used in cosmetics must 1 . Castor oil. beeswax and borax. These are the manufacturers to list most ingredients on pro-and antidandruff shampoos are legally classified by approved by the FDA for purity and safety.· items dreams a re made of for American con· duct labels, or, in cases where the item is very as drugs because they are designed to change the One of the best·known colorings, Red Dye No. 2, s umers who spend nearly $10 billion a year on small, on accompanying packaging. But the w~y the body acts; deodorants and regular was banned by the government last year and cosmetics and toiletry preparations. agency says a lot of misinformation persists s hampoos are cosmetics. manufacturers have been forced to develop sub-, Leaming what's in the different products a bout what cosmetics can -and cannot-do. Drugs are much more slricUy regulated than stitutes. can help you save money, decide among compel· The Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act defines cosm etics. They must be proved safe and effec-Many of the color additives that have been ""J ing brands and protect yourself against items cosm etics as substances which may be "rubbed, tive before they are placed on the market. No okayed for general use in cosmetics are not ap- you might be allergic to. poured. sprinkled or sprayed on, introduced into S1fCh testing is required for most cosmetic ingre· proved for use in products applied around the The principal ingredient m lipstick, ror ex-or otherwise <tpplJed to the human body for d1ents although the FDA does insist that 1f the eyes because of the sensHivity or the area. The •, ample. is castor oil. Beeswax also is used in cleansing. beautifying, promoting attractiveness manufacturer has not substantiated the safety of FDA also announced recently a plan to make l lipstick and it is mixed with borax in cleansing or altering the appear11nce without affecting the ~ product, the label must carry a statement say· sure that eye cosmetics have adequate pre: l Of Pauline t r Jan Vinikow, left, and Terry Schnft'zer, right, visit newcomer Bobbi Glavin. Shalom This Je wish version of Welcome Wagon says, simply, that someone cares. By JUOITU OLSON Ot Tr.. D•llt Pilel St•tf It had been a difficult decision for Shirlt•y Katz lo leave her home1n the San Fernando Valley and move to Orange County. Bul the s mog and congestion were getting to her and !>he felt the need of fresh air and sea breezes Mrs. Katz found that she really didn't like Orange County. though. because 1t was hard to make friends. She didn't know how to find the J ewish population so she Celt isolated. She had moved numerous times try· ing to find just the right place to live so her problem or rootlessness was com pounded. Enter the Shalom Wagon. Two volunteers from the Jewish communi· t y. with specially prepar ed packets, knocked on her door one morning re· cently and offered her a new lease on life. I J an Vinikow and Terry Schnitzer first gave her a beautifully wrapped bottle of kosher wine and two candle!> as tokens of hospitality. and then sat down to visit. "THE FIRST THING we"d like to do is simply welcome you," Mrs. Vinikow saia. "How long have you been here?" Talk progressed to other areas Mrs Katz·s lovely ocean view from her rented apar tment. the high cost or houses, the purpose of Shalom Wagon. the availability of singles groups for Mrs. Katz's 29-year·old son and the difference in temples. Mrs. Katz asked the volunteers 1f they were new to the ar ea and seemed r eassured that they, too. had gone through Ute period or feeling lonely and rootless. As almost an afterthought she asked if either of them could recom· <See SHALOM, Page 82) 'Oh, it's fun. I love creating characters. I absolutely love it.' By DENNIS McLELLAN Ol IM D•ily PlleUi.11 Once upon a time in the London of more than a half century ago a 9-year-old girl visited a theater where her aunt was acting in a play. The curtain had long since fallen and the seat~ were e.mpty_. The girl walked out on the empty stage. illuminated only by the small light on the ~tage manager's desk. She gazed out at the cavernous hall "I can see it today ... says that htUe girl. now a woman whose hair has turned gray. "I could feel everything. It was alive and living Tht• backstage area was permeated with the Q1vine fragrance of greasepaint. .. That memorable true-life scene wus not the turning point in Pauline Hague's life. She says it was not so much a conscious decision to become an actress as being "lured"' inlo it ·: 1. was drawn into it." reflects Mrs. Hagu~ ma Rntish accent softened by more than 40 years in America. "The theater grabbed my 1maginatfon from the beginning. That was my real world .. AFT ER A LJFE on stages in England, Chicago and San Francisco-and minor parts an mov1ec; such as "Yours. Mine, Ours" and "Bullitt" Mrs. Hague moved to Huntington Beach five months ago lo be near her daughter and grandchildren. But she hasn't entirely given up performing She'll continue facing audiences with occasional play readings and with a monthly book review al lhe llunlington Beach Libary. Her book reviews were a proven hit for yearc., in the Bay Area where she li ved before moving to Orange County "I feel there 1s a greater necessity for book re· views today than ever before," she says, seated in her Landmark Homes living room furnished with a grand piano and. fittingly. shelves full or books. "Years ago people would say that if they heard someone tell them a story they won't have to read the book. That's being intellectually laay. "TUE E XACT OPPOSITE is true today. So many people a re busy that a book reviewer helps keep them up with current books that they haven'ltimetoread themselves. "And very often their intellectual curiosity will be prodded lo want to r~ad the book themselves ... Mrs. Hague is often asked how she selects a book for reviewing. Those on the best seller lists. s he says. sometimes are the worst books published. T HAT COMES EASY to someone wbo began acting in London theater at the age of 16 and who .. once was nomjnated as Chicago's best actress of the year for her performance in Samuel Becket's "Happy Days," One of the many character ads in which Pauline Hague· "So I do a lot of research every month to find a book that is intellectually challenging and excit· mg and at the same time grabs the imagination or lhe audience ... Her career is illustrated in her photo scrap book appropriately tilled "The Many Faces of Pauline Hague." of Huntington Beach has sta"ed. While few Orange Coast residents no doubt have had the opportunity to see her on stage, her race may still seem vaguely familiar. People love to be informed, she believes. Yet the reviews must appeal lo the audience's feel- ings. That's because it has peered out of numerous magazine advertisements promoting such things as cigarettes, sports cars, airlines and banks. "I don't want to lecture to the audience. I want to draw them into the content of the book so that they feel they are almost living it." "They're not looking for glamor in a woman my ajte," admits Mrs. Hague, flipping through <See PAULINE, Page 83 Bandstanding It 'In those days, it was a status thing. Being on Bandstand was like being on Johnny Carson.' By CHERYL ROMO Ot U. D•llr l'llet SLtH Sometimes the girls danced together because there weren't enough boys to go around. They wore their Catholic high school uniforms and long skirts with bobby socks. The guys were s lick ed down with J>hiladelphia ~rcasc a nd tight pants and the s how's host, Dick Clark, with his Pepsodent s mtle, was-alwnys congenial, always calm and always Mr. Super Clean. The kids on American Bandstand taqghl the over 30 generation of tnday how to do the Twist. the Stroll and a host of other dances popular in The City of Brotherly Love Chris Harwood, now a Newport Beach resi- dent and real estate salesman, remembers it all well. He was on the sidelines working with the TV crew, initially as a cameraman ("In those days you did everything") and eventually as a director and one of the s how's producers. A former Philly D.J. and professional actor. Al first recruiting teens to dance on the show "':as a problem: ."We tried all the schools and in- v1~ed ~v~one. And then we started getting cer- tain kids m the area who came more rrequenUy a nd who became so good and were so extroverted -that they m ade the show." Soon after Bandstand started, he says Horn ~cft and Dick Clark took over. "Dick was 'really JUSt the moderator. The kids were the show." In fact, when the show went netwol'k with ABC, namt'S likeJ'us line, Barbara, Billy Lee, Bob, Arlene and others who were r egulars became the recipients of fan mail and were lopics of conversation in drive-Ins and m alt shops across the country. · Harwood recall s a ll was not wonderful from a technical point of view: ''Those kids knew how to ace anyone out of a ca ~era shot. They made themselves pro- fesstonals atit and we (the crew> had to become devious to ke~p them from hogging the camera ." One device used lo contuse the teens he say~: ~as to tak~ the lights out of the cameras so the kids couldn t tell which camera was on. Un- fortunately, il confused the hell out. or t.he performers who were appearing on the show." The situation became so bad, he adds, that <'am eramen s tarted to dislike the "kid stars .. I· ·: Chris Harwood: 'Those kids knew how to ace anyene out of a camera shot.' , Harwood became Involved when the show first opened as a local broadcast on WFIL with Bob Horn , who was then one of Philadelphia's popular disc jockeys. In fact, Harwood adds, the name Rttndstfmd was taken from Horn's radio show. 1 <See BANDSTAND, P age 83) t 1 l 1 ' . } r [ i J 82 DAILY PILOT l /SC Thursday, Ocrober 27, 1977 ANN LANDERS/ERMA BOMBECK Sex Before. Marriage Is Proof of Nothing DEAR ANN • LANDERS: lam writing . this for "The Wife ot a Sex Maniac." Please print it. She needs lo know a few things. The woman wrote that she and her husband are in their early 60s and she has had enough sex to last her a lifetime. Her hus ba nd, however, is still very much interest· sex on the baslS that it's wise to learn what the othe r person's sex ap petite is like BEFORE marriage" -wrong, wrong, wrong. . ed in bedr oom gym. nasties. To keep him from going elsewhere $he never refuses him and even pretends to en- joy it. 1 went a long with "wife" to that point ·'but when she said, "l am :~in favor ot premarital . . ~: ·= .. '• I have been married three years to a man who had an insatiable ap· petite for sex when we were going together. We saw each other every 'night for two years and al least three nights a week for 11 months before that. He was al~er me all the time. 1 was both flattered and ex- hausted. I also wondered how I would be able to keep up with him after marriage. Well, I didn 't have to worry. Now I Aaa Laafkrs find myself begging him to make love to me and it's degradin,1. So let this be a lesson to girls who think they have to try it out for "educational purposes." You won't learn a thing. -I DIDN'T DEAR l.D.: You speak the truth, lady. There Is sometblog a bout the "forbidden" that makes ft much more appeall.ng. Why? Human nature - the excitement of rbik- taklng. And Jt can work in re· verse, too. Some mar· rled couples report that their sex life Improved greatly alter marriage. They became more re· laxed , moce comfortable with one another and their love grew deeper a nd more meaningful. The ro ost erogenous zone in both maJe and female is loc ated between the eyebro ws and the hairline. DEAR A NN LANDERS: I will call him Wallace although that is not his name. We have been going together for two years. I am no child, Ann -I'm 31. Wallace is 36. I was engaged six years ago but m y fi ance remarried his former wife a nd practically left me al the' church . Wallace has never been married. W e h ave talked seriously about a lire gery that you've been together but he has never put.ting off? actually proposed -un-When I expressed s ur- lll last night. Here's how prise and became indig- he d?d it. We were seated nant he told me he was on the sofa and he took a only being sensible - slip of paper out ot his that his best friend got pocket and handed it to stuck for thousands of me. I nearly fainted. It dollars because there was a questionnaire. was a Jot a bout h is .The first four of the fiancee that he didn't twelve questions were as know in advance. follows -justtuglveyou What do you think an idea: about this, Ann Landers? 1. Do you expect to in· -HONOLULU herH any money? DEAR HON: I think 2. Do you owe any you don't need a goof llke large bills? Wallace for a husband. 3. Do you keep your Suggest that he run an teeth in good condition or ad then he'U be sure to will there be a lot of den-gel exactly what he tat work in the future? wants. 4. Do you need any s ur----------- HAIR BEAT 911H"-: The ho# ,.._. mt ~olp ;, 0oly, bui 1h@ rest of my hair is dty. b there o W:lmpoo or o lreotment tho! I ~ use 1 (Debbie Plo11, Cc»to Mew) ........ -. No, 0 Viontpoo by ,1,ell probably won't cor•eo ir. But J11'1moc:~ ~ 0 treolmotll •hot w"{on lomJoie lo you,wioq Mo9"•~um ~ °"' 1oen1, 9M•"-: Why do I lose so 111uch ho~ evet:y 1""6 I shampoo? (Ptoscollo. Newpor1 Beoch) · Atuwer: I( your hair is f*~ ...oved. bleodted °' 1wed, you've pr~ been to ;:That Last Bastille, the Bathroom ~ale Corduroy Blazers $19.95 Stl-01 Cotoo• 1he WTe>ng hantyfm who hos OYCll•ptOCeuecf OI b<.nt 'fO" hoif. This con be CO<fecled wi1h reconsttuc1en. Aqo.n. hmoc~ hm on f1<cdlen1 lreotmenl coiled flpHo.,ee. If no1, you're ptobob1y I~ ~. pr~I or o 1>e.VQl6 ... eek, '" which cO\e >'OU ho •• 0 ?obleni be)'Ol'd my con1rol! ,._,..,, .. .,._.;_,. ... .; ! Sometimes, I curse the "~day my children became !·t oilet· trained .. bus and I'll have to dt;i ve you to school." "I 'm in th e C4JvAMD<> tant future r can hear the minis ter at the altar say-IV.!~a'l~I ,1 It seemed like such a ·wonderful idea at the -~time. It would cut down ... on laundry. Jt would cer· ;tainly make us more :socially acceptable as a E,...a ... lleek the table, turned on the hot water tap full force in the sink, added a squirt of detergent and headed for the bathroom. The other followed closely, turned the water off and headed for the second bathroom. We were not to see either or them again Wllil the milk had soured and the leftovers had left us permanently. bath room." As a mother who must d epend on inefficient. ing to the mde, "Where ls the bridegroom?" It's something I hate to think about. -~,::::;. ____ , HAIRSTYLlST 2630 Avon, Suite "O" NewPort Beach (714) 645-7290 cheap labor of children, ----------------------------- ·~family. And I could take ~all those newspapers up ~·off the floor once and for ~·all. :: Now its seem s the ~rainees have turned against us and are using the bathroom to their own advantage. . Kids Prepared : For Hospitals By CHRIS ROBERTS We ll , m e dicine is changing, and that at· mosphere of fear is going Every lime the phone rings. one of them runs to the bathroom and yells, "Would someone get the phone?'' Every lime the dog scratches to get out I hear, "I can't do it. I'm in the bathroom." The other night after dinner, we figured out which two kids were on for dishes. With all the precision of a fire drill, one pushed away from The bath room h as become the only bastille in the American home that insures diplomatic immunity from every chore you can think of. ''Wh ere is your brother? I want him to help carry in groceries from the car." "H e's in the bathroom." "Hurry up or you're going to miss your school I 've used every un - derhanded, sleazy trick l koow to make the a bathroom unattractive. In addition to not clean· ing it. I turn the heat on during the summer a nd the air conditioning on during th e winter months. I've cut off s ub- schptions to the popular m agaiines formerly de- livered there and sub- stituted Bleeding Gums Journal and Who's Who in Needlepoint None of il has worked. They still spend 18 hours a day there in exile. Jn the not·too·far dis· .ca thy J~ron neo.>.port beach. ca 926«J ~exv suede from Gorollni. In grey, comet block. rust. and brown. PHILADELPHIA . CA P > -Rtmember . when you were a kid and : you had your tonsils out? . You were put under by an . evil-smelling gas and ; wokeupscaredtodeath. the way of doctors who madehousecalls. Sh I WWT g Pediatric hospitals • • a ODl .. ~a OD around the country are • erasing the fears of their ------------------------------ ·: tiny patie.nts by treating ___ _...., _______ the mind as well as the Children's Free Show &ing YoUT Youngsters to !he Huntinglon Center mall for the fun performances of the Madhattera Marionettes. 4 shows daily the puppets come al/ve with song and d&rl(;e thru Oct. 30: Fri. at 1·2·3 & 7:30-Sat. & Sun. at 1·2·3-4. Sponsored by Roston Montessori Schoolhouse. Come to the mall at Beach & Edinger at the San Diego fwy. body and laying the mysteries or medicine out on the table. At Children ·s Hospital of Philadelphia, for ex- ample, the gas masks smell of root beer and licorice. And Bert and Ernie and. Kermit the frog dolls are doctored by the kids themselves who are trying to get bet· ter. During play therapy sessions, the youngsters g iv e their stu ffed charges shots and blood transfusions of water , plaster their appendages with casts, and anoint their bodies with Band- Aids. They toss around m edical jargon like OR (operating room> and IV (intravenous) with ease. The n e w ti()lidaY YCJU I waitlnu_ ~ ~G) ~~ ~~ tll~ l t.\11? l-!A~[)lfl2S ·,!!!!!. 11~ Irvine Blvd .. NewpOrt Beach ~ iiiii' 642-8484 .. What CAN You Get for a dime these days?? ALL YOUR FAVORITE ·COMIC STRIPS DAILY PILOT <From Page Bl> mend a dentist. One could, so the phone number was s hared and everyone was satis(ied. Another newcomer had Celt the warm bonds of friendship and the true meaning ol the wo rd s h a lom : someone cares. given the volunteers so far. "Ninety.five percent of the people are ame ous for us to come," Mrs. Vonikow said. "Many girls have been asked to stay for lunch. A bond is formed that is much deeper than friendship. They like just knowing that there's someone to care:· "TO UNDERSTAND t h e s ignificance of the Shalom Wagon you SHALOM WAGON, a project of the Women's Division, J ewish Federation Council of Orange County, is a brand· new project which was started when some "very foresighted .. women saw the need of greeting newcomers in the area. have to unde rstand the J ewish ~-~~~----~-~-~~~~---~~~~~~-~---. philosophy,·· commented Andrea "There is trauma when a woman moves," said Ellie Burg, the first chairman. "This seemed like a good way to welcome newcomers.·· While there are other kinds of hospitality organizations in the area, none meet the s pecific needs of Jewish people, who share cultural and religious traditions and ceremonies they have practiced for years. A woman might want to know where a kosher butcher is, for exam· pie (there is just one in Orange Coun- ty) or bow she could find an ap- propriate woman's group. P erhaps her children are troubled by the move and need some help. Shalom Wagon can tell her about Jewish Family Service or some suita· ble youth groups. JN EACH PACKET there is a large booklet with lists of all the Jewish women's organizations. temples and other county resources along witn their addresses and phone numbers, as well as pamphlets describing dif· ferent kinds of services of interest to J ewish people. ''We're constantly updating It and educating oun;elves as lo what's available here," said Mrs. Vinlkow , the current chai rman. Volunteers are trained during classes led by professionals in the psychology and counseling fields and newcomers ar e gr eeted durlnit periodic coffees. the next of which Is scheduled Nov. 29. That the program wat' needed is evidenced by the warm welcome Breslow. a volunteer. "Jt·s one being responsible for the next. We are responsible for each other no matter where we are. "A tight family structure was what held Jewish families together.·· Florence Feldm an. a Newport Beach resident who also enjoyed a vi sit recently, said she appreclaled the s upport ot knowing others In the J ewish community when she faced what might seem to be UWe pro· blems, like school starting on Rosh Hash an ah. a high Jewish holiday. "It's very reassuring to meet peo· ple who live in this area who are J ewish, to whom this is important. This makes me feel confident.·· MRS. FELDMAN, who moved with her husband from Atlanta, said the size of the Jewish community in Orange County is much bigger thao people might think and that the at· titudes toward religion are better here than in the South. ·She most appreciated the addresses of the women's organizations, which she said would be hard to find alone. "The information on shopping also was helpful. Ir you have a strong Jewish background you need such things as kosher meat, and they're not easy to find. "This is a very nice servlco. It makes life easier. I was very lucky. We had a nice visit. They (the volun· t ee rs > were r e ally very sym-pathetic." Anyone wishing o visit from the Shalom Wagon, or lnform8Uon about the volunteer program or coffees may calJ the Jewish Federation Council of· fice, 754-1944. HI, l,m .Wl.t• Sandy Lnt1ltlnK all of you lo call m~ ond r-e•l•tnr for our clau lt<uoru no'"· lAnon. in oU l11ro11l• nnd oil o~o 6ro"~ /omain11 NOii'. JOIN THE nJN -LF:ARN TO ICE SKATE AT TWO BEAUTIFUL CHALF.TS IN COSTA MF.SA. Ia CAPADES CHALET AND SKATING SCHOOL Costa MeBa Harbor & Adams 979-8880 Costa Mesa Bristol & PauJarino 979-1750 Best Idea Since Shopping Carts ' ... ,,. ""• '~Now you can do a week's shopping ·~ . without forgetting a single =•r (1041111•) M'ni•lted In convenient teef'<Off p9CI '°' J111t 11.so (po9tege 1N"epald) Send Today To I I 1""1!1'T---------..------1 l ctTY-- --- ---• ZIP-----.I item! Use pre-printed shopping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 ...,., ... print.cl Item-, p1ua edcffdoftet .,.oea rou can fl" In rourMlf. 34 ....... 21 Ye .. tebfee 14 '1ult• 8 8akety ttema s ..... , .... 1~ Meat and fl•" enttlH 11 Dafry ••• ,,,. 20 Mlecellaneou. U.tt ·-Hl...i - DAILY PILOT L. - -•-- - ------.I __ ....... ____________ _. .. ~ ... .. .. . HOROSCOPE ... Pat•line (From Page 81 > the album want." "Charactt!r 1s .... ht•t lhey really ACl'UALLY, THAT DOESN'T bother the ac· tress who pauses at a ~hot of her wearing a '60s psychedelic dress with her leg propped up on a sports car bumper. "Oh, it's fun,'' she says with relish. "l love creating characters. I absolutely love it.·· While she bas a face that ad agencies love. she doesn't plan to resume that type of work, which she describes as a rat race. "You have to give yourself up totally for 1t:· she says. "That kind of energy has left me.·· Besides. doing that kind of work. like her brief fling in the movies, is too business oriented. The term "show business." she says. is applicable to "just the very lowest kind of theater. ''lT STILL SHOCKS m e to hear theater re- ferred t.o as show business," she says. "It's vile. When J started out as a young girl theater was art and it wasn't a business.·· ReOecting on that moment in a London theater more than a half century ago, she says1 "In those days if you bad talent it was considered sacred. "I grew up in the days when talent was con· sidered a divine gift. To me theater is still an art." •• Cosmetics (From Page BU · servatives to make them bacteria free. even when expooed to potential contamination during ordinary use. The agency acted after receiving reports of instances where contaminated cos· metics caused eye infections. While cosmetic manufacturers and retailers claim special properties for individual brands. tbe basic ingredients for a given product are fair- ly similar. The dU'ference in product -and price. -may lie mainly in packaging and promotion. Personal tastes and reacUons also play a major role. What works for you m ay be a disaster for your neighbor. Advertising and promotion claims may be confusing and the FDA advises consumers to take these claims with a grain of salt. "One word ... which is probably more con- fusing than any othet is 'moisturizer .... says the FDA. "The word would seem lo imply the product would make something moist or wet. But moisturizers do not add moisture. They merely put a protective cover on the skin, so the skin can retain its own moisture." The FDA regulations require that ingre- dients be listed, by uniform names. in order or amount contained. Ingredients which constitute less than 1 per cent of the product need not be list- ed by amount and color ingredients can be listed in any order, regardless of amount. The ingre· dlent list does not have to include the names of specific flavors or fragrances. although the agency is considering suggestions for change in this area. If the manufacturer can show that a given ingredient is a genuine trade secret. he or she does not have to list it on the label. The names of the ingredients may not inean much to you, but they can be important if you de- velop an allergy because it makes it easier for · a doctor to determine what substances you have been exposed to. You also can compare the value of competing brands of cosmetics. The regulation applies only to products manufactured after April 15. The FDA did not re- quire a recall of item s already on the market so . you may still see some cosmetics on sale without ingredient lists. Some cosmetics are advertised as "hypoallergenic" and specfaJ rules apply to these items. Under new FDA rules, a cosmetic can be labeled as hypoallergenic only if scientific studies show that it causes signigicantly fewer adverse reactions lhan competitive products used for similar purposes. ANNOUNCING MEW OWNERSHIP UNIQUE GIFTS PAITY DECOR 1 0% Dl~£0!J~T sa~a's 1049 M191f• ................. . leec'°Uuuliwft• 5-"' CMtw ta.It to Lalr(1I ,_. HM I 11 -D.ty '"' ct.Md -..Y. New Classics From Greece ffi1ki:~os ~ #-~~SHOES Thursday. Octob11r 27, 1977 DAILY PILOT B3 Students Learn Law ] ( Horoscope By SueSbellt>ob11r1<er h~hl .ind 11•1\nis courts FRIDAY, OCT. 28 By SY DNEV OMARR ARIES <March 21-April 19): kccent on get- tmg rid of losing proposition. Refuse to be sad- dled lo past. You'll see lighl -know it and celebrate. Au.1 ..... p, ... w .. 1or aft 1•1 prcscntin~ public lllgh school students 1n nffic i :.ls with detailed St. Paul, Minn., w~ntcd :.I ucla'-'!'> showing their Jo eliminate the stench nt>l.!d . from nearby factorit!s. Some $15 million has teaching law and order. and the liberals love you because you're teaching constitutional rights.·· Law r elated courses vi•ry an emphasis. Some include lobbying ex- perie nce, some voter registration drives. and some mock trial com- petition or s traightforward law study. All stress involve- ment in the legal and political sys(em. trl t-i\•w Jer~cy spend huurs talking Wllh stu dents. and officials in Des Plaines, Ill., grant thret•-week Jobs in village government lO a s ummer class or "clinical government·· students. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Cyc:le high you make new starts, you find ouUel for creative expression. Leo, Aquarius figure prominently. Stick to number "1." Judgment, intuition are rator-sharp; know it and be confident. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Cycle can be considered one which sees you gaining "inside information." Visit special club. institution or hos pital. Doors, previously closed, are due to open. Your bunches pay off -you choose the right pl~ce at the right ti me. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Accent on re· suits of professional-business endeavors. You have reason to celebrate. Gemini, Virgo and Sagittarius persons figure prominently: Your "lucky'' number is "3." LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Diversify; accept pressures as challenges. Refuse to be locked in, painted into corner .. Scorpio, Taurus individuals figure prominently. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Be ready for chamre. variety, travel -analyze relationship. Take future into consideration; bring long-range view into focus. Gemini, Sagittarius figure in im· portant ways. Students at Woodrow btien s pent on law- Wiison High School in related education in the Washington, D.C., want-pasl 20 years, according ed a shopkeeper to re-to the American Bar As· move a sign barring sociation. Most of the young people from 9 a.m. money has come through to 3 p. m. grants from the federal ln West Windsor, N.J .• Law Enforcement As· students demanded a sistanceAdministration. traffic signal at a About 500 J.egal educa- dangerous intersection, tion courses are scat- and in Mount Laurel, tered throughout 40 N.J ., young people want-states, and 50 teacher- ed more city tennis training institutes on the courts. subject were conducted Police in Fort Worth attend teacher training seminars; judges in Rockford open their courtrooms early lo talk to students; legislators All of the programs share a common prob- 1 em --finding the money to stay alive. The LEAA grants that support many of the pro grams are about to ex pire, and in most cases organizers have been un- able to convince state or local officials to pick up the funding. Alt got what they want-nationwide this pas t ---------.------------ ed. But not through sit-summer. ins, picketing or van· The ABA estimates dalism -all common in that aboulfive percent of past eonfllct$ between the nation's 50 million youth and the establish· hi&b school students menl. These young peo-have been involved in pie worked within the such programs. system with skills they "We're trying to show learned in school. • people that the system is I n St. Pa u I, not always aJ?ainst Washington, D.C., and them," says Ed O'Brien. hundreds of other cities, deputy director of th~ practical courses in law Street Law Institute, a \\r~11·10T .t.r I' ab LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Money, art ob- jects. luxury items are spotlighted. Partner or mate is very much in picture. A gift or token of affection should rate high on agenda. Take no person -or situation -for granted. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Decision re- garding partnership, a contract -or marital status -could dominate. Key is to be realistic. Define meanJngs. Know what it ls you need as contrasted t.o des.ire. wi~hful thi-nlt'tn g. daydreaming. Pisces, Virgo figure in scenario. and po U tics b ave national education proj- r eplaced the stuffy civics ~c t at Georgetown classes that seemed an U n i v e r s i t y i n int e gr a I part of Washington, D.C. "It's yesterday's high school ' not always going to be curriculum. rosy, but there are times Hickory Farms ALLOWEEN ilND~SflL SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Obtain hint from Scorpio message. Involvement, pres- sure and responsibility are featured. U single, question of marriage arises. If married, business and possible addition to family dominates atten- tion. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Imprint style. Insist on valid interpretation of your mean- ings. Love is in picture. Emotional responses dominate Aries, Llbra individuals figure in scenario. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Door of op- portunity opens -you have the "wings" to Oy Chances which had eluded you become once more available. Leo fig ures prominently. PISCES <Feb 19-M arch 20 » Activity featured in connection with Ideas, written material, security. short trips, close neighbors. A relative, who boasts of "psychic powers .. could suffer embarrassing moment If Oct. 28 is your birthday you al',f creative, te mperamental, intense, stubborn and passionate. This has been a very significant year ; September was a pressure month. You make new start In November. Leo. Aquarius persons play important roles in your lire. If o;ingle. lhis could be a marriage year "We want to teach kids that the system is going how to deal in a society to b~ on their side.'· that' t-ncreastn gly A beTfef that the bure aucratic. Whether ..sys tem was a~ainst we like it or not, that's them motivated disrup- the way it is," says high live demonstrations and school teacher Joe acts of violence by stu- N a than of SL Paul. dents in the 1960s, says Na than and his stu-Joel Henning, education dents at the St. Paul director for the ABA . Open School filed com-Concern that young plaints against local people didn't understand companies and achieved the S)<;lem they were de· installation of hundreds nouncing prompted bar of thousands of dollars associations to set up law worth-0f pollution control education projects first equipment, although in Illinois. then in Nathan says the air "still California. he said. doesn't s mell terrific." The movement has Th c st udents in since found champions Washington, D.C., knew al both ends of the they cou Id s ue the political spectrum. shopkeeper for violating .. Being a director of age discrimination pro-law-related education is visions of the District's like selling motherhood human rights ord.inance. and apple pie," says a But the sign came down state project director. after a brief discussion "The ronservatives love or the law. you because you 're The New Jersey stu- dents got their traffic · SOL'Tll COAST ACJ'ORS CO-OP ~~~fi©W f~~!~- ·wEsrcuFF PLAZA 17tll & llVIH~IT HACH PHOHI: HZ.0'72 Mo....fri. 'TM t W . "Tl 6 S... 'Ti 5 AN OPEN LElTER TO A WEALTHY L.ADY. OF ANY AGE I am a 38 year old gentleman. who 1s well groomed, well read. in excellent physical condition and with. no personal bad habits. J was a self-made millionaire at age 32 and through personal misfortune. am no longer in that position. I am willing to offer the right lady friendship. companionship, loyalty. devotion. love and marriage, if desired. I am not a fortune seeker. but rather than s pend the next five years working to become a millionaire. I would rather enjoy life. and make some lady happy. who already has the means. but lacks the right individual to enjoy it with. All replies will be handled with strict confidence and answered promptly • • • BandstBnd h atwa'f' -Chi"'! IO< MW O< ••Htfenced telef\C for film•# TV, ·-& c.ommorlUh All -~· (714) 957-0282 Write Ad No 110. Daily Pilot. f' 0 . Box 1500. Costa Mesa. Ca 92626. I From Page Bl) and would ··ram their cameras right through them . Sometimes. we had to fight to get the show on and get & new !>hot.·· Finally. they even con- cealed the cameras, ··But the kids figured that one out too.·· flarwood says he did "like S<>me of the leids" and his favorites were Barbara and Billy Lee .. With a note of regret, he explains the s how became a s trong monetary vehicle for re- cord companies and the performers they were promoting. He says many of the performers were exploit- ed by promoters who Harwood calls him .. the teenage version of Eddie Fisher" who was appeal· Ing to adult audiences of the time Fabian. he ::.ays. "came in strictl y as a lookalike deal: but today he's a pretty good actor.·· James Darre n was "shy but had a lot of things going for him" and he didn't like Connie Francis' singing but .. s he fit in with the times.·· "In those days, it was a status thing. Being on Bandstand was like be- ing on Johnny Carson." he says. "And their vis- ual performance on the s how aided them im· mensely with their re- cord sales.·· Chfis Harwood Come in and browse ~ ANT1QuEs 'N ~I 8 ,. .... ACCENTS . I~ TOYS 'N TINSEL ~ GIFTS 4535 C•mpua Drive, lrvlne GALORE 1 'MICll'r 1~ 955•1977 ~ WtnnWl:t@W i I :.~ were "just using people" -----------------------------------------------------to get a certain sound they could market: "All they had to do was take a young person who could move a little bit with music and then they would (through e lec- tronic dubbing> give them a voice." Of the performers who appeared on Bandstand . H a rwood reme mbers Annette Funicello as "a terrible singer but a nice kid" whose father used to bring her to the studio. Frankie Avalon. h e thought. had some talent COMPLETE DECORATING SERVICE lit i.t help you c1ea11 a more b1111i.11fut home. Our Halnect oecoratore aoarch out labric end doalgn library 10 no1 only uve your tlrne but to olf11r the ""'Y tHISI CO!Df and fabric c:o- or d1n11 II on a l ho re Is no 1dd111onal charge lor ll'11s service You pay only for the morchandlso you 1011ct • Or11>4r1e1 •Carpeting •Wall Cov11r1no • Furnnure • UphOl1ter1no • Bedroom t naembl•• Come 1n or call today for an 1ppointm1nt in your home b44·88GO 23 Fuhlon l1lend Newpor1 e .. ch 644·8MO SN our n•• loc.llon •I ENDERLE CENTER N9"'por1 ,wy. ac e:. 17Ch St. FURNITURE INDIA PILLOWS The big 27" floof' ond the 15" tou plllows. are hand loomed, hand tied and fringed 100~ cotton tex· tured In natural colors. Deluxe-' quality decor for your home, ona wonclertul as think-ahead glftsl Toss ;f!!!'GS Floor u~ ~Sa plllowsW. plllowt ·~· • "'o.-,,;:"" HOW TO R9 IUAHl'TUll-SIS l'IOlll IN 5 WlmlN STATts ~ 8"°" 7 04YI A Wiillt • WUK04Yll tO UNTil t • U'fUlllOAY 10 UN"'-I • tUMOAY 12'30 UNTIL t AN .... IM • ttt2 W. U..Colft • n.,1231 HVtmfllOTON HACH• lt4'1 9Hch Blvd.• HS.217, COSTA MllA • ltlf N. "-"tOf l!Yd. • 54t-17'1 LA HAIAA • ITlO W. Wlllllllr • 191.0711 fULLlllTON • 310t YO<M I.Inda 911111. , U...011 MNTA AHAIT\llTIN • U'OS I . 171h St.• Na-1201 WHTMtNSTlA • 19011 heetl 8NO. (114) ....-n·~.8ooft . 0 ttT1A8 ~ lnc.,8'\AmlltcM&IOdt~ ~ 99 Fashion lsland,,Newport Beach •. 759-95~1 Tuetln 544-1650 .114 .... o.A.1L·V·P·IL·O·T ............. Th·u·rsd .. •Y .... Oct.obe .. r2·7···19·7·7 ......................................................... ~ .... ~~~~ Eye on Target Rich Kcllev of lht• ~ew Orleans J azz has his eve on the goal as he drives against Bob ~IcAdoo '11> or' the New York Knicks. Th~ J an captured the !\iational Basketball Association game. 123-106. Wednesday night at the New Orleans Supcrdomc. Niekro Seeks Job; AIA P .lays Soviets ATLA:'\T,\ Phil N1c kro. the veteran 1\tl ~tntJ Brav(·~> pitcher who.,(' llancm~ knuckleball ha-; hafflcd ~at1nnal Lc·a~ue batters tor mc1n · tha n ;i '1c·C'a ck. wants a .,hot ;ct nutfoJ1.1ng the league's m <tnag('r., In short. he want'i to m anage th e Braves. Y.ho f1 rt•d Dave Bristol Tuesda' "I'd take 1l right no'' "\1('kro ~a 1d in an ml en I<''' {UA. Tests Red• : LOS i\~G ELES Athletes in Ac tion opens the 1977·78 basket· !)all campaign Tuesday night 18> J s the Soviet national team in· v<tdes the Sports Arena. I ~urphy' s Goal I Gives LA Tie ·INGLEWOOD CAP> -Mike :;turphy drilled a five-footer with 3 :28 lert to play Wednesd ay rught to give the Los Angeles Kings a 2-2 National Hockey League Ue '+'ilh the New York Islanders and ~ap a three-game los ing s treak, • The deadlock was the second ~raight played between the two olubs, who fought to a scoreless ~tandoff In New York Oct 18 Tickets (2,500 have alre utlv hcen sold1 arc scaled at $6. SS.~ and S.1 and a re available at the A IA office, located at 145 E . Irvine. Blvd. <Room 12 ) Tus tin, at the S p o rts Arena Qr through Trckctronoutlets Tennis Re•ult• PERTH. Austr alia -Tim Wiikison beat Phil Dent 6·2. 5-7. 6-3 in a 2• 2·hour m atch Wedncs- d a " t o a d v an ce to th e qua.rle rfinals of a S46.000 tennis to urnament. "That's my best tournamr nt perform a n ce eve r ," said Wilkison Third-seeded Harold Solomon also gained the quarters with a 6·4. 6-2 victory o~er Ross Case oC Australia. Ea rlier, top American pro Jim· my Connors said he was pulling out or the tournament arter tear· ing a groin mus cle during his vie· tory over Sashi Menon of India. In another match. Jiri Hrebec beat sixth-seeded Bill Scanlon, 6-4. 7-6. Paterno Soa OK DANVI LLE. Pa. -David Paterno. son of Penn State foot· ball coach Joe Paterno. was re· leased Wednesday from the Gei· s inger Medical Center where he had been hospitalized 12 days for a fractured s kull. Sherman Offered Post at UCI By a Dally PUot Writer Rod Sherman, fired nearly a year ugo as UC Irvine's assistant athletic director, has been of- fered a position in the develop- ment offlce of the univer s ity, the Dally Pilot has learned. She rman, a former USC foot- ball standout, was dismissed last November. He appealed the d is- missa l and UCI chancellor Dr. Dan Aldridge reinstated him. S herman was to be offered the position today. It is similar to the job he had before-as UCl's .Conflicts Already For LA '84 LOS ANGELES <AP>-Sever al apparent mis unde rs t andings have arisen In Los Angeles· bid to host the 1984 Summer Olympics. but city officials h ave dis missed them as insignificant. The y involve Los Ange les repre~entati ves committing !'acilities and services in the city's bid without consulting fully with the pen>ons or institutions r es ponsible , ltle Los Angeles Times reported today. In one c ase, the city's proposal ca ll ed t or a tempo r ary \'elodrome or cycling track to be s et up at Santa Monica College's Cor s air Field, but college of· f1 clals say they never formally committed themselves to allow- ing use of the field for a Los Angeles Olympics In another instance, P asadena city officials said this week they h a v e n ever committe d the m selves to converting the Ros e Bowl for use as a regulation s occer field However Pasadena offic ial Bob Holden said the city will probably make the con- version next year anyway, Olym - pics or not And in a KNBC t elevision show taped Wednesday. Los Angeles police chief Edward M. Davis said no one lnvol\'ed with the city bid for the Games or the l'ity gov- e rnment has ever asked him for an es timate of security cos ts for a Los Ang<•les Olympics J ohn C. Argue. head of the Southern California Committee fo r the Oly mpic Game~. a private group which assembled the proposal that won Los Angeles the U.S. nomination for host city, denied some of these point:, in a Los Angeles Times in· terv1cw. Argue claimed that m embers or his committee have contacted Davis and that Pasadena and Santn Moncic11 College officials had m ade verbal commitments con cerning their respective facilities. In the case or Corsair Field. however, Argue admitted that ef· forts to obtain a written con- firmation of the purported verbal comm itment were uns uccessful. Dr. Archie Morrison. Santa ;\fonica College vice president in charge of athletics and s tudent services. said earlier this week that there are parking problems <trnund the fi eld a nd that the cyc hn~ track would have to be h :i nke d so high that many s tadium seats would not afford a \'le W. However, he expressed willing. ness lo discuss the problems with c ity officials. Anton Calleia, mayor Tom Bradley's aide acUng as Olym- pics liaison, said there has ob· viou sly been a "misunderstand· ing·· with Santa Monica College. But even if it cannot be resolved, he said, other schools have in- dicated Interest in accommodat· Ing the tempora ry facility, whose cost h as b een budgeted at ssoo.ooo. With only four days remaining to the Oct. 31 appHcation d eadline for cities interested in the 1984 Games, Los Angeles re - m ains the only city to have sub- m itted a bid and is expected to get the Games. athletic fund-raiser -but he wilJ not be part of the athletic de- partment. "I have been instructed by Dan Aldridge to offer Rod a position in the d evelopment office. Jn light of his talents, he certainly would be best used in the area of athletic fund raising," said Gene Clair , UCI director of develop· ment. Clair said he had not discussed the position with Sherman, but was scheduled to meet with him today. "J want to outline the job and sec if he is interested. He will be ~1 member of the univer sity de· velopmcnt s tare and not the uthlclic department. His c hief duties would be in the areu of athletic fund-r a is ing , but he would also be available for other s pecific duties ... s aid Clair. "The chancellor felt that Rod had s omething to offer the un- iversity and that there was a olace for him here. Rod had In· dicated he wanted to be reinstat· ,. Bruin Takes a Bard Clterk ed and the c huncellor wanted him lo be," said Clair. Sherman was dis missed b y athletic director Ray Thornton for performance reasons, the nature of which we re not d ivulged. The university has a policy of not comm enting on personnel matters. Thornton Is now in Madrid, Spain on a leave or a bsence for·a year, researching and teaching <1t the Nutional Sports Institute. Linda Dempsey is the acting athletic director. Bost on Bruins· John Wensink (right> throws his head back after getting checked by Minnesota's Tom R eid in ~a tional Hockey League game Wednesday night. Tne two tangled later and were pen alized for fighting. Host Minnesota posted a 3-0 victory. Everyday Play Pays Off Former Area Star Comes Into Own at Seatt'le By CRAIG SHEFF Ol IN O~lly I'll°' Sl .. t A year ago. forme r Mater Dei High standout Dan Meyer was u part-time player with the Detroit Tigers. He finished the st:'a!>on w ith a .252 average. hitting two h ome runs and getting JUst 16 rbi. But :t ch ange in locale re· vllah zt:'<I Meyer P l:iccd on the expansion list. he was s elected by the Seattle ;\ta riners last November and went on to have a very good season. l\I eyer. a first baseman. played in all but three of Seattle's games and finished with some very im· pressive statistics. He batted .272, spanked 22 hom e runs and h11d 91 rbi. "l l's hard lo explain why I hit better this past yenr , ·· Meyer told the Dally Pilot via telephone from his Redman, Wash. home. .. , g U<!SS the major reason was I was playing every day. I was comfortable and I got a lot more confident as the season ~ro· gressed. ·· Meyer's batting 3\'erage for each month progressed. peaking in August when he batted .318. For the month of September he had a .280 average. "I didn't set any goals for i : DAN MEYER m yself because 1 didn't want to be disappointed if they were too rigid. I just wanted to help the team and try to improve as the season progressed.·· s ays Meyer. u former El Toro resident. And his 22 home runs came as no s urprise. despite the fact he hit only two the pre vious year "I know I'm capable of hitting the long ball. Jl was a little shock· ing to hit just two the previous year. And for the first three or four home stands I dldn 't hit well In the Klngdome. "Rut right a round the all-star break I started to hit well, both at home and on the road. Because the Klngdome has s hort fences I think players have a tendency to think home run too much. .. nut t kept drilling il in to m yself not lo worry about the home runs ... they wm come," s a vs Meyer. As far os next season is con· cerned . l\lcyer ls hopeful the Morlncrs can improve on their s ix! h pluce finis h. .. We didn't end up in last place <Oaklnnd did) and we h ad the third most victories ever (64) for a n expansion learn. So everyone h ere is fairly ha ppy, "But a lot or us feel w~ can im- prove," says Meyer. And the 5·11, 180-pounder was a s taunc h supporter or the Yankees in the re<:ent World Series. "I en· joyed It. I was for the Yankees all the way because that's my league. It was good to see the American League come out on top ... : Murphy connected with his tflird goal or the season on a re bound against New York goalie ern Smith afte r a drh·<' by T om· rhy Williams. , Williams shot the Kings into an <:arly lead 18 seconds into the ~econd period on a power play goal from 20 feet out. The Islan- ders bounced back with 11:32 re· maining in the period to lie the ~core on r ookie defens em an ~tefan Persson's first NHL goal. Franchise Runs Afoul of Law ·Austin, Morse Vie At Newport Beach • Persson'.s goal broke a score· ICss string for tho Islanders aolnst the Kings wbJch lasted '52 minutes. six seconds. The ~ring datt:'<I back to las t season. • J e an-Paul P aris e scored a power play AOa l w ith 4: 30 left in th<' second period to give the Clila ndcrs a 2-1 lead. Parise's third gonl or the season was a ~o-root~r which slipped under ~fogs' goalie Gary Simmons· arm · T he Ktngs are now 2·3·2, while th1 ·Is landers a1'e 2 2·3 LAS VEGAS (AP > -The financially-troubled Las Vegas Quick silvers of th e Nor t h American Soccer League, ap. parc nlly ready to move hack to San Diego where they wer e known as the Jaws. have run into s tiTI more ptobl(.'ms The Clark County district :.ti· torncy's office has filed a civil s uit against the tea m. charging d ecept ive trade and false ad- vertising, and the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors J\uthori- ty Is threatening to atta ch the franchise unless $32,000 In back rent for the use of Las Vegas Stadium i~ paid in the near future Deputy district ally. Elliott Sattler, who heads up the county prosecutor's consumer fraud di vision. filed s uit against the soccer club Tuesday, claiming that the Quicksilvers falsely ad· vertised specia l nights featuring gl ve-uwuys. The suit also chnrges that the team is planning lo move bat'k to California e ven though seasrm tickets have already been sold on the premise that the t eam will piny its home games here next _>cur The s uit nsks civil penalties of $2,500 Pf¥: count, and that the t'lub's m!nagemcnt and owners be prohibited rrom s pending any of the money taken in locally from the Sales or lll'X t ycru"s season ticke ts. The suit <'hnrges that thl1 soc Ct!r c lub tid\'l·rtiscd n spcdul j1.1ckt•t night 111~t .luly 20. cl aim- ini:t that lhr first 500.youngst<'rs admittt•d to thr ~:tm(' with Fort Lauderdale would be ~lvcn n) Ion windbreakers. The action c horgcs that the wlndbrcnkers we re not nylon, hut plastic. The suit further alleges that the team ndvcrtised a fan ap. prec._1;tion night, during which telr·vpion sets and a trip to Soc cer Bowl '77 would be given a way , but that no television set was given away, nor was a trip Hwnrded. The Quicks il\'crs promptlv paid the stadium r ent due fo·r llwir nest four games, b ut the club's front office ceased poy. m ents after that, a ccording to Convention and Vi sitors Aulhori t y rccor<1s. Th~ authority's finance dlrec· tor. William H ammond. s3id a "looph ole" In the rental ag ree- ment allowed the team to d efer ying rent until it ballooned to current level. Young Trncy Austin, the 14. ycur-old women's tennis s tar from Rolling Hills. will meet ~indsey Morse Saturday morn. mg u t tl at the John Wayne Ten· nis Club in Newport Beach . Austin Is the newest m em ber or" the "1 uyno Tennis Club und will ht> playing for the club team against an Orange County all. ~tur contingent. She'll also play Hl a mixed doubles match at 9 a.m. The matches begin Friday with tickets priced at S.S per person. Proceeds Will go to the junlOl' de· velopmcnt program tor Or~e ounty tennis .. FOOTBALL Thursday, October 27, 1977 DI.IL y PILOT B:> FV-Edison Two Major Tasks Corifront Estanci8. Capsule Look """'•'''" <Co,lJ "''"' '"•h'; E••l<> h"'·· '"" >:""'"'"''""loss """', ... victories, and neither adds Bralten. "Villa Park bchcm '" lough ••: 111.1 ior 1 ..... i...., i·onfrnnting them Friday night came bet'all!>c quarterback Dave Jeranko had to fense, a strong runmrig game and I.hey cut their A P D l -.wp111ni.: \'11la l'arl. 111).(h ':-. out:-.1dc running attack hur~~· ~1s passes . . hair. They believe in a· lot of the things that we do t as t Ue S ~11ul n•hrnmchn~ from .1 tou,i:h. one point los~ to San-Kevin Obym ako had his best game ever 1n the and we expect another tight game If we score l( t.1 .\na \':.ilk~ offens1n• line." s ays Drallen. "And Craig Crandall points I feel confident we'll be right there." V11lu Ptirk 1nvac1t•:. Ornngc Coa:-.t College Fri· and Kevan \:Villlams and the rest played super on As for being mentally prepared, Bratten says. Gnme No. 9 in what has become Orange Coun- ty's No. 1 prep football attraclion, the Edison I Hun- tington Beach) IUgh-Fountain Valley series, is on tap Friday night at Anaheim Stadium where 18,000·plus are expected to attend for the 8 o'clock day \81 for the Century League football crucial <1nd pass protection. . his crew should have no trouble getting ready for Eslanc!ji t'<wch Jim Bratten .:.uy:. 1t may be easier .. But_our orrens1 vc line is going to be challenged Villa Park, de.spit ti the short span since the Santn to rcbmlnd ml'nl•illy then physically put the stops to ugain this week. Villa Park has the best set of Ana Valley game. tlw Spartans of \'ilia Park linebackers in the league and it likes to stunt a lot, "We don't get too high emotionally." says Brat- "Wl' cumc oul of thl' Santa .'\na Valley game like we do. ten. "Rather, we get ourselves mentally prepared: with thC' bl'lil'f that Wl' t•un play with anyone in "Villa' Park's def~nsive P,hilosophy is lo make each time out. lt shows in the number of penaltiei s tart. . The Chargers of Edison have made a living beating their rival and Friday's g11me features un- beaten Fountain Valley, ranked No. 1 in Orange County and the CIF. against three-time loser Edison. Southern Confcrt•ntl.' or the Cl F. S<1nl a .\na Vullcy things happen .. ~nd 1ldocs. . we've had in our rirst six games -19. • is suppo~cd to h<' No \ and we actually lost the Bratten s ays his crew must contatn the running "We're still in the thick or this lhing wilh on~ gaml', Santa Ana Valley d1dn 'l win it," s ays Brat· of fullback Mark Kahn. espcdally on the sweeps loss in league. It's far from being decided, but wf ten Jround the flanks. to slay with the Spartans. know both of us have our bucks to the wall Friday: '13ralll'n blaml'~ lwo pa~:. interception~ roe "This is hk.e playing ourselves lo an extent... night." ' Here's a look at the past: 1969-Edisoo 21. Fountain Valley 20 ·Orange County's greatest prep football rivalor was born when Rocky Whan broke through to tackle FY <1Uarterback J ohn Svoboda as he lned to complete a two-point conversion pass. The Barons of Fountain Valley still had 8: 17 left, but they were not to threuten again in a stun- ning upset . Edison's seniorless first-year team gained a winning season (4 wins, 3 losses and 2 ties 1 and it has never had a losing season. Fountain Valley h ad tied favored Loara <Anaheim) 21·21 the week before in a game coach Bruce Pickford acclaimed as his Barons' greatest victory. One week later the Barons had lost a piece or the circuit crown and a CIF playoffs bid. The '69 season also included two shocking in- juries-junior varsity player Mark Naylon was fatally injured and Sam Fuga is in a wheelchair to- day with a spine injury. 1970-Edlson 28, FountaJn VaJley 6 --The Chargus, under coach Bill Vail, were clearly domi- nant as they mowed down eve.rything in sight. en route to lhe CIF 3·A championship and a 13-0-0 re· cord. Jim Moxley, Rocky Whan, Jerry Hinojosa and all of the rest or the Chargers that were there a year before, kept the pressure on throughout. 1971-Edlson 21, Fountain Valley 6 - Quarterback Mark Harmon. Rocky Whan and Jack Haynes led Edison's victory, which eliminated Fountain Valley as a title contender. Haynes ran 71 yards for a touchdown after Whan had slopped a Fountain Valley march at the Edison 22 with a hard tackle. Haynes picked up 139 yards in 14 carries and Edison's statistics over whelmed FV. wUh a 342-146 bulge in net yardage. 1972-EdJson %6, Fountain Valley 7 --Before 8,500 al Westminster High, the Chargers made it four in a row with ease despite the closeness in statistics. Fountain Valley made it close when Bill Ogden raced 90 yards on a pass·run play from Bill Hatlleld to cut lhe margin to 14 ·7. only to see Cr aig Way direct a62-yard scoring march, capped by a 45-yard TD pass to Mark Weatherbee. Nothing went right for the Barons as lhe luck of the bounce continued to go Edison's way. 1973-Fountain Valley 18, Edison Z4 -The jinx was briefly ended as the Barons got their first break of the series in I.he waning moments as Edi.son fumbled at the FV 2 with 38 seeonds left. Dave Bienek recovered the fumble to preserve Fountain Valley's only victory just when it seemed all was lost again. The Barons had scored with 1 :36 lert to take I.he lead 011 a Dan Troup touchdo~. 1974-EdJson 0, Fountain Valley 0 -Fountain Valley coach Bruce Pickford calls it the hardest hit- ting game he's ever been associated with and at the end, both teams stood on the field, eyeing each other with the frustration that the game was over and there was no winner. A field goal try with no time left before 9,000 at Orange Coast College railed from JO yards out for Fountain Valley. 1975-EdJson 19, Fountain Valley 6 • Before ll,099 at Anaheim Stadium the Chargers had too much Rick Bashore for anyone. Bashore completed 12 of 22 passes for 153 yards and ran for 103 yards in 20 carries. • Bashore scored a touchdown, passed for another and led the Chargers secondary. The clinching TD in the fourth period was a six· yard pass from Bashore to Don Whan with 7: 39 lefl. H 71-EdJson 13, FHntaln Valley 3 -In a stun· niog display of derensive might. the Chargers domrnated unbeatm Foontaln Valley, allowing the highly touted FV orfense 118 yards net. Willie Git· tens ran for 83 yards in 21 carries, but lhe rest of the Barons were throttled as Jeff Smith's interception and 31·yard return to the FV 3 set up Edison'o; second TD. Earlier Steve Rakhs hani connected with Smith on a 46-yard touchdown hookup as twice-beaten Edison went on to an undefeated league season before 18,000 fans. Fountain Valley, ranked No. 1 in the CIF, went on to a 10·2 season. but s till without the league championship that has elu<Jed the Barons since they b'egan playing in 1966. Calendar l'r!Ur <Oct. 2t I ~oott..11-Hew!IOO Han.or al Hunt lnottn 8MCll, £dlJ.Ofl "'' Fovn1au\ v., .. ., 11 Alleftllm Stedhim, Marina •t Wewnlll\Wt", 11111• P•rl•.,, E1C.n· <I• .. Orenve to.st C.Oltf9f, MIUIOn Vl•fo "' CM-del Mar •I N<l•-1 H•r-, C:OSll MeSI 'fl El loro •t Mh 1ion 111110. untv•ratty •t S•ll Clemente, Oen• Hiii• al Laqun• 8ea<ll, 1•11 etll Soccer-Ml Sen Anlonto al Orat19t (OUI Coll-ti JOI Water Polo fo..nt•tn va11tr •I £1lln<l1 Ill, Mari"" al l.o• Al•m110. l>:ISI, Downey al New-1 H•r- IJ•IS), I.~ 0.A<ll at Eal•on Ill. Pro Scores H•li.,..•I 8..a.tlNlf AtM<l•hOf' o.&1ro11 Ill, Gclden Stffe 101 New OrlHni 123, New Y0<k 10. Oenvrr 111, PM llano 108 Su111e'7, a .. 11110., All•nl• Ill, Nt'WJ•r~y 110 101 I H.au ... r Hoon LA ..... LOiAn1jelft1,NV fll-r.\1 NY Renveru, !aL '-""•l 1 0.1ro11 •. PillH>u•onl Wnlll1>9ton •. Allanl• 1 Montre•l 1,. TOf'Of\Co 1 Plltl•d•IP"la), (nt<.tl/01 MonrM>Mll•U. lloltonO Oai.., f'1i.t $u H ~ EDISON'S JEFF HYDER (7) AND THE CHARGERS MEET FV FRIDAY. Irvine Foe Ne"', Too . Serrano Struggles With Problems PHEL1\N, Calif. The Serrano High School football team has the '\usual problems of a Cirst·ycar school without a sC'nior class. And lhe Diamondbacks abo have some proble ms that others arc not forced to contend with a !> the squad prepares for a Saturday afternoon (21 game with lrv1ne High at Vic tor Valley High of Victorville "There isn't a blade of ~rass for us to practice on here," coach John Reed says. "We have to travel 30 minutes by bus lo reach the closei;,t grass on a junior high field and then 30 minutes on the return trip "This makes £or a long day for the kids who usually don 'l get through un- til alm06l 7 o'clock. And right now we don't know if we will have grass next vear. either." · Serrano Jli~h has 419 studenLc;. It 1s located in the Wnghtwood area. Firs t it was a water shortage :rnd when that was solved , it became a pump problem to get the wal"r lo the needed areas. This hasn't been re· solved yet and Recd 1s s keptical about next year · /\s the school'l' nickname would in- dic ate, rattlesnakes arc prevalent in the area. Some have been found on the school campus. according lo the coach. Throu gh all of thi s th e Diamondbacks have posted a 2·4 re- cord this season. They won their first two games against La Ver ne Luthe ran and Mammoth and have lost four straight. "These kids have to be dedicated," Reed says. "ll 's starting to get a little old having lo travel so far to practice Ther e lsn 't any s uitable gr a ss between here and Hesper ia " Top players on the Serrano High team are both linebackers. Joe Lynch at 170 pounds and John Walsh al 175, have been the mainstays of the de· fensive unit. Jay Kliewer. a junior who weighs in at 150 pounds. is the starting quarterback on a team whose line has starters weighing 125 and 140 at guard and 150 and 170 al tackle. "We don't have any size and our en· tire backfield along with some of the linemen go both ways,·· Reed says. "We have lht> numbers but the quality isn 't there yet. But we're working on it.'. Plans for Sat.? IT'S HAPPENING AT c{Pa;~-::i~~.:'tCJi,orls GIANT ROCK AIRPORT ~EE AD IN WHICENDf.A FRIDAY. OCTOIEA 28th Fall-TENNIS 20 to 80% REDUCTION • WARM-UP SUITS SALE! lu•bn "' Irvine Ht9ll •I UC 1 ...... ---------------------() ISi, Oranv• Cool Coltoe •• • TENNIS SHOES lllv~Slcle ()) Cr•u C....nlrr UICC al C.Otcten WHl(oll19t IJ). Girl• vo11evw11 P•lomar Coll-et S.oOIH>.K~ COllfl>e ll JOI, so M41SI •I Or-Co.tsl C.0llf941 ":.01, Golden Wt• Coll-al Pa-.0 Clly COllf9t (l:JOl, UC lrvlrw •I Cal Pol' Pomona (1,JOI, ,,.1 ... HIOll ., L• Qvln\e IJ: ISi. I SKIFILM '-te. 4'1l9h coat of o .. ", .... D H 'K Di\ f&Rl'MOR}I, -· '"""" ~ 11•NO OUOIMI au n--•1111'-. OCT. 27, 28. 29 "''·"'" ''"'"' .................... ... •eir11Mt1...-, .... .,, •••• ATTENTION GOLFERS ! Rancho San Joaquin M ens Club in Irvine. TH E FU N BUNCH r ' 1 · . 1 I 1 r n 1 t • 't 11 u n1 I> " r n t ''" rnlwr .t11p·, ri11w ,1v,11l,1hll' ill :.1,·1 I'' r y• .ir In< l11rlP<, ,•: ... ,,,t,. r .hrp 1n '-CllJlh1·r fl { .11if,,111 .. 1 1,,,lf /\ ... 01 r.J!<JT1 tor t.it11. 1,,,,.l t1.111rt" dP'-Mon1t1ly ,, . ir ., 11" '" .1: •1 'lull n11t111q-., 1,:'1 · ,,, '"' 111 .l.1r l1nq 11111•» 552-0601 • MEMS & WOMENS CLOTHING, SOX, ETC. BANCROFT BALLS SJ 2r5 = Cmt ~ Wlttt T,..._111 'llllif!9 of l Old leflt HO LIMIT OH PURCHASE c(Pa;~::;;,::rCJi,o,.ls lit-hind tlw lnternt1t1onal J>ant ak1• lloui.c ·1:1:1 ... tilh :-t . t'oi-lu M e~a !'hone 642-6888 .. • . ... .. ... · . . We DeserVe a Break, Says Barons' Pickford. Since that landmark :,,eason or 1969 when Edison <Huntington Beach> High 's seniorless Chargers shocked Foun· lain Valley High. 21 -20, lo knock the Barons out of t he Irvine League championship and the CIF playoffs, it has been a fanatical defense that has led lhe way to a 6·1·1 record for Edison in the seri~s '!Vith FV. And Friday night, it begins again al Anaheim Stadium and Che scene is reminiscent of past years Fountain Valley is un- beaten (6-0) and heavily f avor ed to whip the Ch argers in Suns et League football action. action. Fountain Valley coach Bruce Pickford .1cknowledges I.hat it has been the Edison defense which has proven de- e1:.1vc. but takes issue about the upsets. ·'The only vicloric~ Edison ('an ~loat about are the 1969 game and last year's game. In those two games they never should have be11t us. We had a great team in '69 and I thought we had a better team last year. But the other years -Edison had bet- ter personnel. "But it all balances out. We'll see. We de· serve a break ... To counteract Edison·~ ~tyle of ~ng defen- ders, Pickford says his team must employ pa· tience and poise. "You can play like a maniac on d efense." s ays Pickford "But eventually I.hey a re go- ing lo make a mistake and we want to take ad- vantage. But we know we're going to look bad on som e plays . "These pcoµle have players in the gaps on e\'ery play with one or more blitzing all I.he time <1nd it doesn't give you a Fans Rally · Around Capo Valley Rival lot of time to m esa around. They put a lot ol· prcssun· on your passing game and we'll have to avoid anything dealing with intricate ball handl- ing or slow·developing plays ." Reports out of Edisoo arc th~it three standoui back s . including sophomore quarterback Frank Seurer. are banged up. but Pic kford l41ugh :-. and s a ys · ''They'll all be there Fri day night." With Wilhl· Gillen~ scoring IH touchdowns in :.1x J;amcs. the Fountain \'a lley passing attack has not been as obviou~ th1:. year and Pickford i.:oes one better : "We han• not thrown as much a:. we'd like or to our i:apabililJes. But I'm not worried We threw a cou pl<' or times in the second half a couple of week~ ago <.1 nd wl"rc s t i ll l·atch1ng hell about 1l for trying lo run up the :,,core "J havl' Tim Holmes running around here with about two reccp· tions a game, which 1s :.ibsolutely absurd." Edison's aggressive tactics in the secondary arc also a concern for BO UL DER C ITY, a roof and they hang a Pirkford Nev Capistrano victor y pennant , /\"for dea ling with Valley High's Cougars parents. alumni and the F. d 1., on ·., 0 r f e n s c , may feel they've been band are around the Pickford says. 'T m sure through the intimidation locker room and it's kind thl'y'JI try to control the war s this year with the or awesome to watch all ball. surely they don't abilit y of E s peranza this. It's like a ~otre want us to have it. Thev <An:.iheim > High and Damcrally. alw:iys seem to come up psychological weapons "The fans ure not •n· wit h something unique or prison tc:im Nelles timidating. But the trad1· for us. Edison uses a lot < Wh illler 1 High. tfon is and Boulder City of blast and power and SomcthJng else to con-wrtl give Capistrano all it th<' famous quarterback lend with is tradition and wants. kt>c p, but they do it with at Boulder City, where "Capo needs to apply a lot or diffe rent blocking 6.000 citizens r ally CSeeFans,P age8 6 patterns." a round the Eagles each--------------------- week in the fall. the Cougars will see plenty. I rvin e High coach Chuck Sorcabal. whose team lost a 34·15 deci~ion ·~!Iii .. ;&.~ ut Boulder City two weeks ago, compares BC r::===~~::~~~=====:~~~!~~ with Esperanza. ''Boulder City is so phy s ical and dis. ciplined," says Sorcabal. The athletes are not as good as the ones at Esperanza, but the ex· ecution makes them so tough. They were much tougher than Laguna Beach. Jt's Uke a team out or the late 50s. .. You go in there and everyone knows you're there. After the game the team captain gets up on Lease from Dunton Ford ALL MAKES & MODELS '71 Resta lll'lll'liclilh Del•..-y · s913s Lease-fol--°"'Y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . pluSIU • per month tor 36 mos • open end tease oased on 15,000 l'!'llles per year. Cap Cost S4 154.00, -Residual Value S 1910 84 ln11tal Investment S95.00 refundable security dePOslt, S96 86 Ut mo. pmt and 1st years License Fees $81.00 on approved credit Cal 714·54'-7070 &t. 56 ]-,lorsheinf still ma1keH shoes by l1ai11d . $5200 Tan & Black Ktdakln Srzes. AA lo EEE 61) to 13 -S4 PASHIOM 1$&.ANO • MIWf'OtlT IUCH .... ..... u. 27 East Mein SI Alhambre 12131 28~'.1878 • Bank Ameficard • Mister Cl'l11go • Hemohlll Ol.vgt . . I t I t f Bfl DAILY PILO r Gauchos Coach I Is Wary Saddleback College footb a ll coach Ken •Swearingen bas been trying to persuade his team lo concentrate on this week's game -and not be looking ahead. B u t it hasn't been easy. The Gauchos take on winless San Diego City College Saturday after· noon (1:30) at San Diego's Balboa-Stadium and Swearingen is a bit Jeery of the situation. .. We play Citrus the following week and it's bard for the kids not to look ahead -especially since we've been looking at t he Citrus-San Diego films. "But we can't afford to be looking ahead. San Diego has a lot of talent and they're big and .strpng. But they've been very inconsistent. Against Citrus (a 21·17 loss> they looked sensa· tio.nal, but they looked terrible last week against Southwestern (a 17-0 loss), gaining onJy 70 total yards,'• says Swearingen. Thu1sday October 27, 1977 The Gauchos coach s ays mistakes have real· ly hurt the Knights. .. They'll make a 20-yard gain, but they'll have a 15-yard penalty on the play. But against Citrus, San Diego made few mis· takes." Saddleback also has Enaotion Is (Jp made few mistakes in rolling to a 3-0 Mission Newport Harbor High ·s football team has Conferencemark. . been a pleasant surprise to its fans this The Gauchos have run year, cruising along with a 5·1 record up 35·-0, 24-7 and 35-6 wins Tough play and emotion. s uch as assistant inconferenceplay. coach Hank Cochrane shows here after ~ "We didn't play that t hd · well the other night ouc own m a recent game. has helped against Palomar, but __ P_r_o_p_e_l _th_e_T_ar_s_. ------------ they did a lot of things different and it took us a while to a<ljust. But it was typical of our de· fense this year. It's done alotofbeoding,butvery little breaking," says Swearingen. Greg Speicher and Bil· Jy Yancy continue to sparkle orrensively for the Gauchos. Speicher is the No. 1 rusher in the Mission Conference with S81 yards and five to'\lchdowns. Yancy bas completed 43 oC 93 passes for 739 yards and six TOs. FANS ••• Continued From Page BS press u re on the q u arte rback, Kirk Hasen. If it doesn't he·u pick them apart." The Eagles of coach Evan Wilson rely on a lot of motion out of their backfield and constantly use wingback Jay Booth's running. Booth scored three touchdowns against Irvine. "Boulder City is the kind of team that will fake lo lhe fullback going over tackle and end up hitting him with a pass 40 yards downfield," s ays Sorcabal. "Boulder City has 11 seniors on offense and its multiple offense is so complicated. It is so well drilled you get the im- pression they do it year- round." Volle yball WOMEN"S VOl.LEYIALl. !>addl-k ~Rio -dO IS-1. JW, 1~. Saddteback ''now I.() In •••911<1. 9·0 over•ll. "4ex1 ll•me · P•lornu •I S•d· dlei..ck, l'rlCNy, 3 JO. $•n1a Ana "1<1. Or•nQe coa,1 1)·i 1~.1s-10 • S.n • .,,..,..,,,,. TOflmamel'll CoMol.at .... ,,,..,, Goldon Wot Collevo <l•I Lo"v Btat" CC, 1!>-/ • St. John Bosco, Mater Dei Battle Although it is not an Angelus League football game, Mater Dei High <Santa Ana> coach Wayne Cochrun says there is plenty at stake tonight (7:30) at the San· ta Ana Bowl where St. John Bosco <Bellflower> invades. "We're very con· !>lop the fullback. Paul Davis ·· Miiiar Doi Ott• ..... St Oou11 11¥111 ,..,.,. L 1 Tom<,.r..oy LC.~J•m fngr.,., (. SJr•rSc1"1rl>"' RC -c..,. tlcMi!"luel IH Chr" Grcy !>to Ru•IY Wood 011-TrmO' ... ra H 8 -Oave Cionl•1•~ HU Mike OoU..ru ~ L broa11 Ot411b;I ''° 1$~ 110 ,.., l'IO .. ) 1k ''° 1.S lfO 1.0 c e r n e d a b o u t o u r ""'• °" o..-.. won-loss reeord and we OLB ·T1ms.•evo 11) need momentum." says ~~~:i;:::,.r~;::11 ~~: Cochrun. "Our goal is to CJ1<c. M•U!>re,..,,.,.,. 1uo k th CIF 1 DllT llobA .. 1• •h ma e e p ayorrs OLB-M•rceaci ... ,,,o 1., and a win tonight could Lb -C•••1104'°" •"II mean the difference." Ls -c.revsc1wr1 11~ c b -JOhn M("°"'.,. '"' The Morr-.trchs are Cb -H•"~!>rt••f<I• 110 com in g off two i m . :-s----~_,_.,,_•_Aqu_"_'·----'-"' pressi ve starts <a 14·7 Joss to highly regarded St. Paul of Santa i'°e Springs and a 10·7 victory over La Puente•s Bishop Amal) after cm. barrassing losses to Lakewood and Edison <Huntington Beach > "'The kids h ave not given up on themselves and w e haven 't panicked. ll would be easy to get down after the Lakewood, Edison combination, but ad · versily has kept us together.·· The improved play of defensive tackle Phil Thornburg and all of the line backers has bee n largely responsible for the turnabout, which has seen Mater Dei gain eight turnovers in the past two games. "St. John Bosco is very comparable to Bishop Amat in size, speed and type of defense," says Cochrun. "We have lo . CIF Rankings I 4-A water~ Glru Votloy~u 1 Mir• Cost•; 2. N-port Harbor; 1 Ntw_.i Harbof'; 2. Mira Co•I•; 3. Unlver~tv; 4. Long Buell Poly; .s. J. Corona de1 M.,; 4. l.aguna aut n, 1.8 Wlf'MHI; ... CNffov; '· SllMy Hlll1; .s. Mlufon Viejo; •. Sol'll• MotlJCO, ' 1 Los .Altos.•. C.O.ona de! Mar; 10. 81thoc> Monlvomory; a . .iuom.,,Y. • 0ow .. ev. SI JOMpft fl.ak--1, 10. St An· 4-ACreuCountry 1 Costa Mew. 1 Elwnno .. .,. 3. '°"n1aln V••l•Y: • P••os lloroes j, ~rina ... Foo111111, 1. Miulon V111o; • San MMCOS; '· Ne .. Dury PM~ 10. OosPueblO'I. tnonv. Clf 'lo<lt .... 11So<t .... f0001N11 (A1 \tlKled by ti. Dally PllOll PO\ Tum. •OC0<11 "'"" 1. F01H1l•1n11a11ev 16 Ol U ' SI. Paul I~) H J l.O\ Al1M IMH ., 4 !>.nt• Monlt• 16-0J JO SHU-LIFE GUARANTEE Thc'"Shu-Life Solt• is guaranteed to out we ·ai· the uppers or a nc•w pafr frt>C. Olrls Crou eou..trv 1. Ea1son, l. Elwnnower, J. f-oun l•in VAiiey. '· Cost• M~s•. ) VnlvettllY;•. Cot,,,,. del Mar, I. Hun- 1•nglon Beacn, a. Oot Pueo10s • $.on· t• 8erbara. IOs.uQus. ! ~ui:~~:~:. !~ K2/K3 Reg.$:W.!J~ ~·~~~'.!.~~, :~ No w s2199 ' NOWl)Of"I f).Jl t 10 Rflll.,IO\ tS-11 \ l . r---0'is;:r=:tt;:!:;1~1;"r;:i:::t:;;.!~W=_~. ,;;:;~;r.:::;;1=-0---~~ KNAPP I The more ror the money shoe. BUY or LEASE FIAT :=:-AACHITOM x 1/9 '20 W. WAlNH, SANtA A~A 557-2132 ;::;::;~II" --HUNTINGTON BEACH, .... IS901 Golden West (aero~-; from GoldPn W1>st Coll!'ge) Tel 894·9515 II you d ltke tohavo a Knapp Sh<X' ,.,lc-;man vrsrt you call 894·9515 Over SlltJ 12 ft"'d $1.00 . "" Mon.1.Tu.s., Wed .. Set. 9:00 to 5'30 lhurs end Fri 9 00 to 9 00 Agains t F J C Have to Pass, Says OCC Boss In 16 years at Orunge Coast College, a l>ick Tucker·l'Oached football team had never gone four games w1thout a victory. But that mark was wiped out last week and it could be increased this Saturday night (7:30) at Anaheim Stadium when the Pirates face unbeaten Fullerton College, the nation's No. 1 ranked JC team. Tucker 's club enters the game with a 2·3·1 mark, having started the season wilh two victories. And Fullerton looms as a very big favorite Satur· day night. Tuckl-r readily admits Fullerton will be a tough obstacle, but he isn't ready to throw in the towel. "Fullerton deserves its ranking. Th~y 've beaten some very good teams, they're undefeated and they've been improving every week." Tucker says. "But l've been around football too long to count us out before we've even taken the field. I rea.lbe we're the big underdog in every corner, but we've beaten Fullerton in the past when we were un· derdogs and who's lo say we can't do it again Satur· day night," says Tucker. The Orange Coast coach is concerned about tutnovers that have hampered his club in the last four games. The Pirates have given up lhe ball 20 times in those games-11 on interceptions and 9 on fumbles. "'With 20 turnovers it ·s not surprising why we haven't won in our last four games," says Tucker. "As far as the fumbles are concerned, it's not the fault of any one guy. We 've got good athletes io the backfield, they just haven't been able to hold onto the ball." Tucker says quarterback Gary Guisness has been improvin8 with each outing. "He's throwing the ball well and reading de- fenses better. He's going to have to have a good game Saturday night because we're undoubtedly ·going to have to throw to beat Fullerton," says Tucker. The Pirates dropped a 33-17 deeision to San Diego Mesa last Saturday as Olympians quarterback Steve Fairchild passed for 453 yards. ·'Fullerton is tougher than San Diego Mesa. Fullerton's defense is tougher and lhey run the ball better. I just hope they don't throw as well as ~Iesa," says Tucker. 4 Wlllfl HI/at IOI '1C0£1 llO#I DISC & HU IWI m 8911 Area Prep X-country VARSITY (O•I• Mew I U ) UOI El Toro I 111•1 Gcrrwotdl, 'l'0\11\Q ICI IS )I J. Cn••••v ICI 1• ••. • Ovcrno11 !Ct lb;J/, S. I.Ari ICI 16 41, •· S<n.1d 1C1 ll 42; /. l<otar Kl 1•.47;8. Flynt1 tE1 ,,.,.; • Ponlhllmll,., IEJ 11 42. IU ilro•n El 11 • J UNIOltVARSITY CHIUMW llU 1411 f.I Toro 1 lomlln IC) II 11 ; 1. 11111 H""' pnr··~· V•n•bl• ICI I/ )• • Campbell \Cl •~ 20. SO .. HOMOltE CH1•MHa IU) lHI [I Toro I L•Crouo IC) 11: 1'; 2. Cr•cktl Kl 11 2Q, l. ~ ... ICI 11 14, • GIDl>S u:i ll:SJ; j. Ooall tEl 11 ll. o ll•\l IE111:41. FRESHMAN CutaMeu-llylorftll. VAllSITY WtUl!>IM4er IV I UDI E.OMll I Gold•••n IEI 11>·1s; 1. LIMOOn •EI lo.JO, 3. Bueker IWI 16.)1), • HeflOQ 1WI 1o:Y; ). Bracktll IW• II. 11 , o. SloDorn 1E l 11.10; I Gr•msey IWI II n , I. V1r9•\ IWI 11:0 ; 9. Plero IW) 11:•1; 10. An· Ger.on (E) 11:4. JUNIOR VAllSITY WOllMl-lltl l•l ldl,... 1. Grtllon CWJ II: 01; 2. Klrlol1 tEl 18.04; 3. BracUll 1W) 11;011; •• M<Crerr tWl ll:d . SOPHOMORES Edi-u:JJ Wl Wn1mi.,slff I. S.ndtr• lEI 11.1); ?. MUnyer 9) 11:36; s. Ot"daz tWl 18:SJ; •·Tomasic tEl 18:54; S. Frf\>denberg <El 19:1J; •. V•t9H (El lt:11. FRISHMAN EdfMft 1171 IOI Wntml11~1tr 1. 8u11or IEI 12:02; 1. wo1verloll <E l 12:'3. 3. ~HH 1£1 12:U ; 4 C.1tp1n IEI 12 SI, ), Ellng-VI 1J 00 • H-10n (WJ 13.01 Surfing Ora"tf• GNst t7'h 14'1 M IHC..Ut OranQeCo.tst lnV">I lS3V.SOState l•t<kN llti41) OCC he•I wlnnt••-Mlke Pond, llrf•n c11at1es. Oon Ovtn ... OGc. .-cona• ~It Sclurr, Brad Albe<!•, Maclt Ptlors, SlupOsc-r. Y'fome11-1.JwlloJo-IOCC); 1, Oonn• Llddl<ole IOC(I• J IC•11'1y WlllOfl IOCCI. Nut ,,_. S.hHO.Y ·~•Ml C.I Slate IL8 ) " H~n11nqlon S1rHI Be~n. 1 a.m. o..-.a Wnt un Wlc.tl~ IUI latO.....w.eM,_.,Ha l GWC !Ifft wl,_~IN .. II. "at M~Glnnls, Bobby Nolslll. GWC: MC:oncl•-Bob CH-., Slaw Pavfkll. IC neebo•rolnQ-1. Pat Colluon IGWC ). Women-1. Jullt Ooda tc.WCI. Nut rnMt: Saturday avalr~t uc San OIOIJO ano MlraCo•la •I CX.MMO., 1 a.m. FOOTBALL I CROSS COUNTRY FaeeHarbor Rustlers Seek End to En-ors Fumbles are always u concern lo football l'oachc~ and the Golden West College Rustlers have had their share of bobbles this season. The Rustlers have fumbled 31 times in alx games and have lost the ball on IS occasions almost 50 perc_ent of the times they have fumbled. ' This week the Rustlers will play Los Angeles 1-~arbor Colle~e on the Orange Coast field Saturday night (7:30) in a Southern California Conference outing and coach Ray Shackleford is hopeful his ...quad will eliminate some of the fumbles. .. There are two types of fumbles "Shackleford says. "One comes as the result of play from a wild extravagant team where pitchouts and handoffs ar~ • dropped. We can do something about this le.ind by · changing our offense. ''The other is the type that comes from the baU carrier who has possession or the ball,. and is under way. then drops it or has it knocked JOOse. We can't go out there and hold the ball for him and there is a new rule that ~ays no handles can be attached to the ball." "Some players are more prone to fumble than others," Shackleford adds. "We've been running the same type or offense for eight years and some years we have had few fumbles. It is a result of the individual people, not the style of offense that 1• used. ' "In every instance this season, it has not been the fa ult of the pitchout or the exchange." Golden West will be facing a dangerous foe In LA Harbor, one that has come alive in recent games. ··They are much better than the r ecord in· dicates," Shackleford says. ''They have played very well against some strong teams and they led Santa Monica at halftime." Harbor is 1·5 Tor the season-but-has a new quarterback, Steve Smith. Smith played for LA City College last season and threw two touchdown passes againt Golden West. He will be directing the Seahawks Saturday night. ~hac~eford feels the Golden West offense is im-proving with each game and is confident the pass- ing game will finish lhe season with 1.200 to 1 '°° yards. • "We are averaging 14 yards per completJon and our opponents are averagini only 12. I feel we are throwing a lot more effectively." On lhe ground, Golden West ls averaging 258 yards per game lo 108 aver age for six ooponents. UNIROYAL TIGERAIW 18" .:::. 2611 21 11 .~~1 2881 2311 .:.::::. 2611 ~STIEL iiiiii IADIAL CUSTOM lmlAIS $11~ $MAIT SAVll,SI a.wo 13• IMllJ .... IJlll'4 ., .. ,,.,, .. 11• """ , .... ...... 17• '""' ,, .. ""'" . .,.. C11ill .... ..... W. ..... lt. , ........ SHOCKS MOIT U.I . CAH 4!~ DOUM.E a ELTID ITllL llAOIAI. WHHlWALLI t Ill aTOCll WAI~ IA\I "lllCI 81 Dff71/14 ~ 43•• 71111111ia ~ 4&n Wll.f 208Ftt71/t4 ~ 49•t fNfY 19• 011111,. ~ 53.. lASTI [!O!O OU1l .. ...-. 192 Ol'l11/tS ~ 27 .M1'/tS ~ .,. ' .... :0 ·;~·:1,. tM••o• •o• Att C0 .. 11. tt0 .. 10 O • tOl tlOH OAIL Y P ILOT 87 Edison Tops FV; Hume Scores 13 . --------------------------.-·------------· PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLlC NOTICE P VBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE .. --------~·-~·----------------•---~---------~!------------~ M a rin ti (llunting ton Beach ) High wat er polo v••S•TY coach Dave Pic k ford m ade u deal with scoring a ce vi1Jo .-ms. ... •11~a:-'J"~ , 1 ,, B o b Hume on T uesday tha t paicfoff in big divid ends L•••nc.. ) l 2 • 1 1 ,. \\' ·'-d E~l<111t1<1 ><0•11111 J. Wyfll l k On ew1es a y, WYdll 2. Onto J, lfrll, Ooon<il •. ''I told ruin I'd give him a chan ce ut th e school Ot~~•l. single gam e s coring r ecord provid ing he didn't f .anbroo~ Sornrow~er; J / miss two in a row." Pic kford s a id "Ir he did. 1 'd 0011011111. o J ' 1 • yank him out... D~n• 11111• "or1n41 M•lo><n 2, J. b~~m"n. M, bt~o .. n, V•rr•'f' l. Hume d idn't m iss m a n y s ho ts ut ull. h1ttu1g on k wo.,GllWI .. • 13 of 18 attempts to lend the Vikin gs Lo a n easy w•ro•n J 1 J 1-10 S Le . 1,vln• I ' I I 4 uns et 16-7 agu e vict o r y over Westminster. H is '''""' "<>'•nQ-Murpny, r•r'•' •• outburst gave him 75 ~onls on t he s eas on . tying him M<C0•m•'-'· ,, ... ,2. Sot•Qvt with C osta M esa 's Bo b Dolan for the ar ea scor in g Marina Scor••You.~ .. ~ •• 1• le ad. """•tm1n•1rr / .• 1 2 / N e wport Ha rbor r emained m f irst place with a 1.~~;:4,,.lf."''"g-+iumt' '' 1h•1"' 20·6 laugh e r ov er Hunting to n Beach w h ile E d is on so,..1>y0o<uten <Huntin..,..on Beach l p r o vided the o nly S uns et u pset Fount••n v.,,.,. 1 u 1 J / b " E0150n 1 J 4 1 11 whe n ll d~alt. F ounta in V alley its firs l leagu e loss, Foun•••n vo111e, scorono l •~m•n 11·7. 4, Htl>Oll Nkllo<llS, POrlt EOlton ~or1n11-~1n s. ~kl• 1. l'1010ro l, T he big g a m e. tho u gh . was m the Centur y McMn. League where E s tan c ia <Costa M esa ) ran o ut of k.,..11yo...r1on b Newp0r1 11tr00< S • • S-20 come acks in its sho wdo w n w ith Villa Park. Hun11nv1one..cn 2 , o 1 • Forc ed to p lay c atc h -up rrom the st art and N•wp0r1 t<eroorscor•M B••G«""" s. e.em. iogly out or it whe n th'""· faced a four.goal d ""f · l, vouno>. Fu11n, A-r1.on1.c.'"' "J " l . Taylor J, G9ugtr '· I' 1-<ll«". JCll in t h e second pe riod. the Eagles r a llied t o t ie Hunt on(llon l\ucn Hor ln9- t.h e score eigh t tim es befor e los ing in over tim e . Moo•er1oust•.M<,..,,.,..r,AtK1t11n JV"CIOll VAllSI TY 17·16. on n s h ot by M ur k Cornell with fou r seconds s. ..... 1 °"'"'"" l e ft. vo11• P.,~ 3 l 2 II 1 • Eslln,111 o o 3 7 ~ The loss left E stancia w ith u -l · l leagu e r ecord Esi•11<l• scor·no-M•"""""~· b e hind unbeaten Villa Pa1'k and lhe Eagles must Norm•••orn,u.nunr12,Murp11y. . th • ' . c kenilry0...r1W~ win e1r two remaining gam e s to m ake the IF' FOlin .. 11111 .. uey 2 1 • ,_a playoffs Ed'"'" o • o 1 s E s tancia d idn't lead until lute In the fourth Foun1•rn v.u.., Korr110-Jonttnon •· Porte 2. Eolton Kor1nv~tb1 2, pei:lod when Jury Wyatt fired in a s hot to put the Fu11.n1. uyr.,. Eagles on top, 14-13, w ith 35 seconds left. Eight N•w110r1 .. ~"Q;f'}~ , s-•• second lat e r , Villa P ark s cored to s end it into over-H11n11nQ1one. .. K 11 1 o o ,_ 3 time. Nt•Porl ...,..., KOrtnv St•wM ?. G AlllM>nJ, O.Vrle 1 I, 'W1lll-1 I, Phil $.)hie m atched a goaJ by Cornett in the first c.ormon J, Rmo Hun11no1on llt•c" O\'erlime a nd in the second extr a period. W ing Lam M:or1nv-s..u1e, P .... 1u . put E s tancia in front with a rebound shot with 1:30 Lo~Am10:.,.."ro...7; 1 •-~ remaining . 0c .. nv11w • / , ~ i; But Cornett tied it h alf a minute l ater and w h en °0 •" 11.e• Koron41-to11r•. l>•C>t• •, Jen.s.111 l, Gffff'lwood, Aober1i ~" E stancia was s lapped with a kick-out foul with five A111d. s e conds left, he s la pped in the ga m e .w inn er on a ,ROSK·SOPH SC-llY~ flCfl TIOllS IUS1H£U NOTICE IHVlflHG llOS NAME U ATIEMl!NT NOllO •>l•••brll• ... n l!MI IM Bo.to '"• lullow11111 Pt•WI ·~ oo.no bu>r· ot l•ullM• ol '"' Co.11 Cqmmunlly n•u •~ t;.01199• 01\lrlCI ol Or..,~ Counly, b• l'.ocoll<ot, 1Qo1 llu111•u Ccnlcr C..illfornl•. will "'"'W .. •lt'I 0101 uo Or '>Ullt 101, 1nr1n., CA•)llS 10 II :00 •.m., l'rlcl•y, Nowmber 4, o ..... c;e,,1n.¥ll/ •A(.1>rolSpr1nos It//, •• I,.. Pvr<~lln\I Oeo1. Of HIO "'' . H~hll"91otl llf"'"· (A.,.~ ..:nool Ol>lrlct l<><•t.o ., IJ/0 Acl•m• I nn nu~ntu •) tOfltJu\.tt:a bY An 1n· Avef\ut., Cott• Mtto•, CttlifOf'nl•, •• omou.il wnicri ''l'Y\9 u 10 DIO~ wlll D9 PUllll<ly Uot1'"""\.''" o~nwd•Mt•4tCl for: rn11 ""''"''"'1 wo> lolocl w11ri 1ne PURCt<ASEOF CLINICAL {uurtly (;lor~ ill Or.w19' U1<1111y on 0< RESEARCH TREAOMH.l ANO IOliH II, 1Q/I EXERCISE LOUIPMEN1 ,~In "II b•d1 ••e lo C. In •ctorO.~• wlln PuOll\lltO °'''"°" Co, .. 1 IJ•1ly l'llol, '"" Old ~Oln) '"'''"''Ion•""" ConGI· Uc1. lU, ''· No•.J, IO, 1911 lion• fnd Sjlli(ltlt•llons wlllch •••now on I lie •no may bt M<urt<l In t/I• olllce PUBLIC NOTICE OI Int Purc ... •1119 AQtn\ of Mill Khool dl>ht<I. E.•ch bldcjer mu1l •u1Jmll wllh hi• bid FICllTIOUS BUSINESS <I t .. hltr'S <neck, <.,lllled <he< .. , Ot H4MIES'tAllMl!NT l)iQO.r'• ~ "'-PIYlblt 10 tM or· Tito lollowtnv "'"-• <>re~nll b\l>I oer ol lne C:O.•I Communlly C.oll-oe """"'' D11trk l Bo.trdOl lfU•l•t ln•n•-• NAI LS FOR SAIL.. 9SSS Gerllold, no1 ltH tl\9n ll1re Plt<Afll IS'l.I of IN founl•in V•llev. CA. •unl b1a •• "9'111'..,'" u..1 U>e bidder Jo•n L. -11•, 11&.t2Su <rol L~M wlll t<lle• ln'IO "'9 pr-MO ton1r.-;t II H11n11no1on lle~11. CA. tll>46 ' ""' sem• I• -••cle<I to nlm. 111 1n. Art el A Welters, t1t11 ee .. <h»OO ~·•nt 01 1.iiu,. 10 ..,1.,. 11110 wen <Ot>· Or . Hun\1119100 B ... cn. CA9l... lr•<l, 11'111"'°'ftcl'04 '"" cneo will bt T hh busin~n Is <.Ol>..,<lt<I Dy • lorttlled. °' In ti. Ult ol • bond, lne \l«Mt•I P1r11W1~1p tull •um lneniot will be lorlelWO lo .. 111 • Atltl A llV•ller> ¥h001 dl•lrlel, Tl'll• st•ltn•nl w•s llltd ••th,,.. Nob<-mowllhdr•whlabld le<• C.oun1v (Itri.. 04 0.41n91 Coullly on°'' perlOcl of IOrlY·lllle l-01 o.;s •lltr 1"4 u, Ull. CMleselforttw -lnv tnereof. ,.JM/ fM 8Nf0 04 l twsl-reW .. l IN Publl.nod Or-c:o.11 O~I• Pilol. pr1v11~ or ro)e<tlnv .,.y _ell bid> or Ocl. J0, 1/-Nov. J, 10, 1911 lo ... ,.,. •nt irt~ulerlllH or In· 1 ___________ ;:.:0:.:•~ .. ~11 •01m•lll~~=~:!;~~1nv. PUBUC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS aVSINUS HAMIUTATIMIHT TM IOl-lllQ l*iOln 1$ dolnQ bu$1• ntu•s ICEITl1 ENTERPRISES. 2'201 E L• P ... L..oQuN Hiiis. CA '7•SJ JIJ<IV R .. RobC>lns. 211 Ooll>l\lfl. Ltoune 1111.te:n. C4 11n11 Tnl11>1n1ness 1, conouclltd bY .n In c11v1c1ut1. Jlldy Robbin} lnl• "'"tll-1 w•s flieo wnri tne Col.Inly (;l•rk of Ort1r10t GO\lnly on 00. 4, lt77. ,...., P11bll>l'otd 0..M19e C.0...1 0.lly PllOI, Ocl.•, IJ,l0,l7, 1911 431~11 PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTtTICIUS •VtlNEU NAMl STATlMEHT lne tot....,lnv """"' '' dOlflO ...,.,. neuu: BOG-O'S PONDS ' SWAMPS. 1am (;rtQO<)' Uni!, HunljnolJM 8H<1', CA. •1-Jlm Alu So9dtnof. '"l2 Cr-ry Lane, H<.NlnQlon IMa<n, CA..,_ Tiii$ llUllf>tu la ~1.0 by llll II\• cllvldo..tl. Sec,..1¥Y 80.rcl cf lruslMI Put>ll"*i Ot.nge C:0.11 O•ll v Plfol. 0<1. 'lO, 11. t•17 •Mio/I JACICIOM & IUOOI• P UBUC NOTICE ... "-' c.ettW Dl1w, 14e. Me, -·-----------· .... ,.,. ..... CA.t2* SUPlatCMCOU•TO,Tltl STATIOI' (;ALl'°aNIA ,Oil TMI C:OUHTYO,O•AHOI CAMNO.A·~J1H COaltaCTIO HOTICI 0'SALl.0' a EAL "IOPERl YAT PRIVATE $ALI Pubtlll'4CI Orelllll CotlA 0.lly PllOI °''·'· lJ, 20, 27, 1911 t 11 the Meller ot In• E•t•I• 01 "'" GEORGE J. BAOWH, !>«••-· NOTtCaOP fllUSTll'SSALll NOTICE IS 11ERE8Y GIVEN lh•I T .S ..... 19'11 lhe unOerslQned, JAMES E. HEI M. On NOYllml>tr 19, 1'71, •I 9:00 A.M .. Publlc Aomlnl>tr•lor. •~ edmlnh l••lor PM( £SC ROW, • ~lllornl• Corpor• ot tne "t•I• ot IN __ ,,_ ot<•· lion clW Prop11rty MotlOtl• Co. lllC. oent. will ,.., •I Drlvtl• wit to ,,,. f;s<row. u lllllr •-'"'"' l nKIM un· M IMS! .,,., ... , aec..ol~. Alf1"'r <Ill• .,., •nd ""'"*" lo °"" 01 Trll$1 , •. clv<llonOf -.y ,_,.., Dtok•r'lcom· COl'Oto N-•. •91•. H ln11. No. Ml»ton ""°" ttw ternll 9ncl<.oncllllon' 47'•, tn booll 111tJ, -U9,of Ottk .. 1 rwreinttlfr nM1n1-o. •M 1<1b1t<I 10 Rt.Ord\ In O~ OOl<.e Of ll'lf County conllrm111on by '"" 1oove .. n1111.o llecoroer ol O<-Cou"'•· Sl•I• ot Superior c.ovrt, oo NoYllm.,... 10. 1~1'. .:.fllor*• WILL SELL AT PUBLIC fl lne "°"' ol ........ ocloO .-.. or AUC TI ON l O HIGHEST BIDDER tfltrUll•r Wfllllll tne ti-el-.O t>y FOR CA!>tt Uleul>le ,u tlfN Of Mle 111 • ...... Int Ol11<• ol IN ~I< M · 1•"'1VI m-r Of .,,.. UnileO SUIHI et m1n1>1r11or, IJCO Soutn C.r-A.,.""'· Ille Sov\11 ltronu t'll•.tftC• 10 tl'lf Old s.tll• Al\9, ~liloml•, '270S, ell tlol\I, C-tr Cowl-. In l/W City of SolnlA ·-----------'""'--"-• uue, •n••••ll •"" •U •tt .. u 10 AN, c.111 .. •" tlQlll, uut .,,., Interest pcwtwtUC NOTICE -------------GEOllGE J BROWN, dkU}9(1, '" -(OllW.,.ci '°....., ,_ ""'" ,., It -· vu PUBLIC NOTICE . . high p ass 10 front of the net. I' •llbrook • o • 1-lS O.n• Hiii> 0 0 l 0 1 Jl"1 .. lloedanOf lhl1 •1.tltment w~ tiltct wlln \lie County Oer1< of Or~ Colln4y Oft OcL 10 tll•I ce,.,.,n nael proptrt't CMM:•lllM MlidOMdotTru1tlfllMllf-'1Ysll.,..·l---=,,,..,....=,...,..,.._.-----l · _ 9SfOll°"''·'°wlt; 14111 wld '°""'' 91'4 Sl.tle-r1DeO PICTTT10'1SaUMMIU ------------~' l..Ol 41"' Tr..:t SOit, "'IM C•t'f of M: NAM&U"'T~M .. n l'ICTfTIGUt•UMNIU D•n• 11111• 1eorl,,Q-V.•lo.tll•ld. !>tUnclerl. Sceni1ry0iw.-. ~•rrcn ' • l J-ll tr•lne 2 I J 2-I trv1ne-\<CH'UWJ-P•ut J. 8oncU J , Pruen 7, .,,,.,,.,.~ Sc.,.....,°"'""''" Hwn11nv1on IM«t\, a >Mwn on . m.. LOI »cf Tr<Kt No. 7~. '" '"" Clly Tiit .. ,._.,,.. __ .,.llOl,,. .... M-NAMaST"''fMINT roreor_in_ut.~>-t."''' ol lrv1N.ftllt' ,...p .. «1,..,..,ln 80011 ntnas: Tht~...-••<tolnoDu»- oll-o..• ""-·_.,.ell"' Or-311, -· l 10 . inct~IW Of Mis COMPU tEA INT ERFACE ntUd: County,CAll.......... c»I-MAP\. records ot o ... nge TECHNOLOC.Y. "'22 V•• Allor... OOHWOOO PROPElllTIES, 21• E «~lno ~111rOll'I en 11->"-Ill· Qlunly,C•lltorl\I•: Mbsl011Vlt jo,CA'2t7S Vlct0t10.CMMMH.9,CAm27 1.rul on •II 011, lltS •ncl ot n•r TN•lreti.OO<••l•Mollltt~ommon Jt"Y AObertW~n.2JIUVI• Norm•n G. Jueterl, 3111 PUBUC NOTICE ll•drour_, i<mt.-.<•• •"" mincr•l In 0-JIQftallon, 11 •ny, or lne , .. , pr-rlY A11or91, MIMlon Viejo. CA 9'•1S WHrilrtglOll, Coat.a~. CA _,.2' 4, '"'· ~Ull11 Pvbll-Or-C.0.'1 O•llY Piiot, Ocl • ._ U.20,21, 1971 <321-77 Diablos' Passing Worries Sea Kings VIII• Ptrll 0 l 'l J I ------------Incl ul\IHr ... 1c11-. •• <onwytO to -"'*' •00'"' 1• P\ltPOr1"" lu De: Mtrt• Br-n, 1170 O•krl09• Rtc:-11 A V•Vt rllt, '10 Oallll• Noll<e lnvlllng blO> tor• lrec;lor Mounl•ln V-O.irte1, Inc.,•"'" .Mll C•pfl,trvUle,t•llfornr• Dtive,$9n1AAN,CA"1IOS A ... ,ColleMeM,CA'26» The lhreat or an out-How a bout lhe Corona standing pas s.ing g~~c d e l Mar p assing g ame, 1s b y the Mission V1eJo il a s s trong as in other High Diablos h as coa c h year s ? Dick Morris of Cor o na "We've do n e as much del Mar High worried on passing as we have eve r the e ve oC the ir crucial done. W e j ust have n 't South Coast League foot· comple ted as many ," he ball strugg le Friday S!\)'S. ni.ght at Newport Harbor ·•ourquarte rbaclcs use High. the sprint-out option and "Of all the teams l Lf tbe nm is open, they have see n this year," u s ualJy take It rather Morris s ays , "Mission than throwing the ball." Viejo is pro b a bly the Cor o na d e l Mar has bes t in our le ague . s everal player s on lhe Esl4n<1• O 3 O •-1 Es1.ancl• '•ot••Q 6ololn9 2, Hutunv>. SOPHOMORI. !A-...,~~· Ne .. pcrl H•,,.... ) i )-Ii Hu~Ungton Ueo<n n o o o o N•WpOrt ""'-~Orlng-Sthmldt 5, O••leY. Moftno. 8ech11 2. uym•n 4, ThO,,...l. HlqDy, V.114\f, S<eni t>y O...nen l'ounl•ifl Velley o O O o-O EOIJOn I 0 J J-f IEO•M>n -• ... -Emery. Allty 2. W-l, Vyelo.itWI. SUr't ., o.aa ..... -rlM 1 J 2 4-II w .. 1mlnner O O O o-O Mer IN tcorl"ll~~ •, Retwlk 4, .Jdlfr. R-. Roell. ,aESMMAll ._..,~ F°""l•lnV•llev I 0 l I-S eotson J / 1 2-u Fovnt•in V•ff•Y' .cOf'lrtQ-·EfcHr, ,,,..,.., J. St•-· l:.0•$0> .cor1<>9- V.-n •· C..-•. So111>1. Muello. Hf•lllC.00 lo.oor, ~ffl<M-,., .. ,, ooullon, 1>y -recor<Md O.ctmbtr TN un<letstoned Tr.ntH dlKIAlm1 YuH110Lln.7.U\1111 A1lor119,Mls• l(ennetb L. W•rm•n, tU• Biel <1011no: Nowmber 9, 1971, IO;:>O 18, tOS In 11oo1o 197, peve •7•, Oftl<l•I •nv ll•bllllv '"' ""Y 1nc0<r0<tne1.s 01 1lonVltlo,CA'7'1) Lobr.oot,Cofl.tMe .... CAm» <o.m Cll'r ot Founl••n Velfo'I'. 10100 Rt<Orcl•,O..lw•lnowtttwrlQlll touw tlM I"" IHttl •OOtC'H •ncS olhtr <arnmon I hos bu•l,..u fl •-<ltd bf'• l hll buslneo I• conO..<ltO bY • !.later Aonue. l'ounltln V•ll*r. wnKe o1 ... 1c1 I-• or eny p0rtlon O-•IQnt llon,lleny,"'°"'nMrt•n. QtMralpartl'll"111p 9tnt••IMt\M•.nlp, Celllornlf 111or.ol wrtnln lOO fMI 01 1ne wrr.ac1t In \>910 s••• •'" 1>t ,.,_, DUI wllllooit .Je<ry A'*"' W.shbufn Ktnrwlh L. Warman Pu1>ll1Nd Or<lft\lt to.o•I Dallv Pllol, 'on""'""' wtln ,,..,. c1o ... 1_...,1 °' ~•· <owMnl or """""''Y· ••ortt• Of Im· fhll •I.ti-I wes flltO will\ tflt Tl\11 Jt4111.,.,.,11 we1 flftd with tri. ~IOUc!r ll, 141/ .. ,,.7/ mo vii OI l•lcl Oii, o•• •ncl oll>cr pllt<I, r<t941rcl1r>Q llll•, "'" .. "'°"•ore<\• C-ly Cl.,ll o1 OJ.-ee Cq\jMy 4111 Oc• CounlT 0..11 of Ortnve CouMton OU.' hyorOCorDOn •ul>SC.n<t• .ino mtn.r••• (umbr•nc.1, IOp.t)I llie """-llllt19p<1,.. -If, 191> J, 1'n. PUBIJC NOTICE "CTITIOllS au~tHU.S NAME S,..ATEMIHT Tile lollowinQ per ton Is ool"V b\114· ,,. ... ,: THE DIGIT DEALERS, IUl M.Vf# ~ •• C..i.t -·CA '1•21 un<• LA<t -& SNar-on C.•Y H•V.r, Sole "'-letor, tUl _,., Plac.., CAie ~w, CA •liV llll' -~ i. <ondw<l.O Dy 1 In· d'VtdU.i>. ~-... n<,t ~f f'tt• Jf.C...,.,. W4\ f1lf!d wttPI fM County cien o1 Ou•>Ot "''""''on 0c 1 •. 1•11 ,.._. •• rtur•tO 1n -rt<O•cl<OO NO•· <IP•••umotthlr ..... 11119<.UttclbyHIO ,.,... ....u• ~mbtr 19, 1'11>) In -11 .. , P911f tff. OHO ot 1 rui.I, ,.llll 1Mtrtll 1"4tton. H Publl.-OfM119 C.0.$1 Oellr PllOt PulNl"*I Ot.,.._ Coel\ O.lly Pl~ 0111<1•1 Rocoro" 0to.10ed In w•o rt0lt bl, 9d'r•nu•. II ou. to. u. Hw.J, IO, 1'71 OC1.•. tJ,10, JJ, 1•11 Aho••<O!ClllftOIN,.., ....... 111 .... ,.. ..,.y, ....... "'"'"""'of wlcl °""Of •»2·77 ma 1n1n9 oll, 11••. •nd olll•r Tr.,;1,f .. •.<nK~sMl4••1»n-ofllw llydrO<trl>On "'°"•n<tt -ml,..r•lt Tru1IM encl of 1"9 tr1nl& er .. ._. t>y P\JBUC NOTICE in, uncltr, or ltwl ""'Y be ~•d -MIO 0-Of I rui.t. , wvell "°"' ~ -lloftt Of --Tl\e .. ,..11(1.,y UnOll< Mid 0..0 of -------------dltS<•lbtO pr0e>er1Y loCt~ ..-e 11\M lru\I l\etelotOt• t,..<Ul.O ..,0 O.· PICTITIOUlaUSINlU jOO f .. I -IN wr11Ke. CM •hNlll 11...,..., to Ille llftder•~ • written ........ STATaMtlNT .... ••Ohl.-.. to 11\t ,,,. Wf'iA(t of O«IM•lloftOI Oet•1tll -Otmend IOt l flt to•-111 .,.._ •• oeinv buil- W IO ·-· °' -port-,_ wllNrt S.lt. •ncl • *•ltltft HOiio of Otf9\lll ,.._as: >QU tttt Of Ille ~..:t In c-llon •ncl Elt<llOn lo Sell. TM ur.dtr~ HUNTINGTON GRANADA "''"' IN _._,,.,,, or r-•91 ot <Ml~ Wlcl NOloCt ol 0.flKlll-Ele<· FUNO, LTD., 1000 Quell SlrMt. S..li. MIOO•l,~-o-n.,orOU<-wt;. llqn~flobe-ln lN <-•r 160,N-Pof1-.CMffOl'rll•f'2WO >l•n<o.,,., ""-•••. •• , ... ,...,"' ·-•lhlr,.•l11<-1v•11outt0 A-ldV. fWllH. JIOOetvk Clllw T.,,,,n vm..,.. lrt( ... C.lllorrtlt (Ot• O•l•O °'-'°· lt11 o.1 .. we1L5oenl•An9.CA . .,/OI PG••lion, .,, -lviOeO -·IWlll •n· PM<. l SCAOw. • c.111orrtl• ThlU1ustneu hcOf""<ttG II••""'''' l••ot. eno Ot'rov~ C°"slructlon «><l'°'•Oon •Nr1fltr1Np. t.on'l>•ny, • c.tlltorn•• cor-•1-• .on doe PrOM•1Y Morto•ve co. "'-V.8u0w "'10,.,0.0 .,,..Nil tnt•,...t, In 11 .. 0 r• In< LS<f-''"' ,,.,...,._ -• tiled •llh 1"9 PVBUC NOTICE ·: ~--P--ICT-ITt-OUl--1-U_M_N_l_SI___ I ICAMa ITATSM•N'f Thi fohtwlnl ......... I• llOl.fll Wlol· -;lLL'S l'tAHO SHOPPE', m w. rtllt St., C..Y Mei4, CA. m'7 p .... A.. llo.tlc.elno, XJ Hemllt.rl, .._. P·t,~le ~CA. 92627 Tl'llS .....,_,It <-led llY ... f.ft• cll•ldu.tl. _._. ... 81.tsc.Alno ••We know thei r d o ubtful lis t fo r Friday's quarterback is a good gam e, including s tarting passer and that w e have t ailbac k Mark Hubbard to put the heat on hj m to who bas a hip-point in · survlv e . Mission Viejo j u ry. . "'-.... °"""'~ N.-..i>ort H.,bor I f 2 2-I Puoa•~ ()r-C.0.0\1 Dt oly Piiot, 0c I. t, ll, lO, l/, It/I torO<rd No-9, l'ltl ~ -.-.>1. 8y 111• lr11st Died Servin ,_,.,Ci.no ol OrMl9e °"11>1Y or'! Otl. p_ 7 .. , Oftk .. I AKorft. C:-....,,y,.flOtftt le, 1977 Tl\1$ ,191_1 w•I Clletl ""1111 \lie c-ty Qwil ti Or4111f11 c.urllY ... Oct. 4,lt7'. ...... has good athle tes and R ick Starnes, t he they are fundame ntally starting saf e l y and sound." b a ckup quarterback, has Morris was re fe rring a dis locat e d s houlde r ; to qua rte rback S c ott Mike Baker bas an ankle Spear as the passing injury; Mark B a ker a leader for the Diablos. pinched nerve in his Spear hit. eight of 16 at-neck; and Skip A llen, tbe tempts last wee k for 231 s tarting cente r is still yards agains t Dana d o ubtfu l afte r missing Hills, including four las t w eek 's g ame . touchdownpasses. "W e h ave confide nce "We're working on our in our backup play ers pass defense this week." and feel they wiJl d o a s Morris adds. well a s the starters:· Morr is s a ys. Grid Odds Fo11-•ne -'"' -on °'""09 Cofll •rt• rllOfl K -9ncl jll'llot (01-le!Je lootllllll ~ •• Mlecled l>y ,,_ Oallt PllOl-'SUtlt: M•I• Dtl owr SI. Jqlwl Bo.co by • N•wsaort ,.._ owr H<Hlllnglon Bff<llW I> FOUrtl•lnV•ll..,oYttr EdlJOnl>y tin westmift'1er-•M9rlne b't ta Ell•n<it owrVlll• P•rkbyJ Mln tofl VlejO -CM'on. .... Ma/ .... s E 1 ToroowrCool• MltH ov' S.11 Cltmlfllt O"ff \/111 ... rllly O'r Sin u oun• &u<ll O'ftr O•n• H•ll> Dr ·~· Irvine owr Se<r~no by 6 BOUIQ., City over C..11hlr..,O ll•lltv loyJ One e xample he cites is reserve center Mark Dobbs. He moved into a s t a rting assig nment a gains t Laguna Beac h las t w ee k and gaine d p l ay er·of ·the·we e k hon o r s f o r hi s perfo r m ance. Men's GoH NEWPOaTa•ACHGC Prt>ooenr• Hllncli<ft> TourMmttfl •Low "ttl: l'lrll l'llQht-1, J•c~ Arl<!Mult, SO; 2. O.ane Bowen. SI. Second FloQhl-1. ICtMt lfl Wt•I. A1; ,, O•rney MCCiure, ... 'Third l'llght-1. OonWV.,,40; 2, lvtn SlurQll, '7. Awaros wilt be Pf'ltMflltd .i 1"" neal men's clull -ral ll'WelltlG, No'I. t4 NtWJ>Or1 He<bof -~lno, R1uo, 1. L. Pe1eri.on " H111111no1on 8M<h korln9-"-"-Fuy-e4, Sun..., 0.0.r1tn LOtAml<)<K 4 S t 4-1) O<H nVI..., 0 0 0 0-II le.We ..., o.o.ri.n MetlM 4 0 1 J-~ Wu lmln\lff O O O 0-0 Merine tco•1no-Milloy • Oollbeum l, BllKM, Hiii Tennis Aho "'""'"II ...... ,., -nono 8y ErTot s Stlll-n 111e,.10, l>ul wilt.c.11 ..,Y rlQnll ol '"' ~1•9d~tu•• •K t 9'1t•y -• _,, ol iCO f .. I Publhlltd N•wpo'1 "4rbor Newt ~ ,.CTITIOUlaU'INl.U trom tne ""'.a<• 01 "''°lend •• oe Preu comC>l""d wilPr Int Or""Gf C:O.al ..,._,, • Ct-llTATIMEHT Gictl•O lo IM City QI H ... n11ng1on O•llyPllol,O<I 20,17,Nov.J,IWI !---------------·-----------..,. l tw IOllawifl9 Ptt .. n, •r• OOlflV BH<ll,on ltwrr,.oot .. ldtr.acl 450~71 PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE builnHu~: Wiiie<• to•" .. ,..,.,.,,,, concllll-. THE HAIR SURGEONS. J7!0 S. •ttltlcllon'-.. M..-1\, h <hn1on•. r•• 8rl\lol. S«tl• A~. C•lltornl• •1704 wr••llons. 1-.. riQl\U, -rlQM• oil-------------Comptroller of the Currency G"'" Suede, 11t10 s-r. o.rc1en .... .,. 01 rec-C-~y _,,...,. •1. PUBUC NOTICE Administrator of Nation a I Banks oro"r:k~~~= ..... 1111 u-i ~.~~o~i!."" '--· Hl>nltnQI..., Be~"· REPORT OF COND)TION W•y, Tll'1lln,C..1tomtt 8id$orotroru•e1""'1ettrorsatdpro-s-mtt IRVINE NATIONAL BANI< Of IRVINE In the state Of Thia buslnflt ,, condu<ltd Dy . Perly.an0mustbtin•rltlno •nc1 .... 110. SUl'lftf~COUftfO,THE CAL.IFORNIA, at the close Of business on september r.ulvtcl •I lhtotllctof 1Jw Public M · SlATIOf'CAU,.ORNU~ 'o• I Qll.11 ""*'""" Cr9'IOI C.M O.lfy PllPI/ O<t .•• ll,10,tJ, .. 11 ..... PUOlls/Wd Or .... C:O.st O•Hr PflOC Oc1, 1J. Hov,1,, 10, 17, 1911 PUBUC NOTICE '":~:·=. .. "'" w•tn I,,. ~1~!'~!':'c!::\°or5::.n:~".':.",:~ '"~~.:!T~OftAHH ~~m~~~~ll~~b~f sn!d d~rr~~~r::n:~~ t~t~!' ,T,a~~lt~ Orant• ~ Jwtlet TtMIHMlft• lllltd wllll 1ne Cl-04 w lO Superior NOTIC& OPMIAalNG OP KTITION States Code, Std Ion 1 "1. ~" COllftt'f Qerk of Or•"llt! Counly on (.qwrt, 0, m4Y w cltllvtroO to ••Ill POft l'llOMTI 0' WILL AHO '0• "' f •1~1r-11 .. ..-.c-0<•-11•1m. PvDllc AOmlntm•tot perwrw1ty, •1 Lan•u OP AOMtN1ST1tATtON Charter number 16168 Nat onat Benk Region Number CM,.._~,wlt ""°''"*' OrtftQ9 OMIH oauv'::::. •"Y lime ... "''* PllbHt•tlon Of'"'' WITM WILL ANHIJClD AHO PD"' 14th .. .,.,._ 0ci. t• -.v.-~-.. 1~1 A-11 .. 11 n111ke •nc1i.tor•111e ""'"'"11 "' u •11 AUTMoai:1•'10H To AOMtHtn•• Statemeftttf R ....... •rcesand Llablllt""'s T ................ ,ot S<C'\I Davi. IStM• Monl<•I def. .. "' "v. ... " w it. UNOEa TMI IHOCPStlOl!HT AO. ... -.. nr ...., ..... ,,.. Tony Tru r IStrll•-<•W,W. TEAMS OF SALE: OSI>, ••wful MINllTll.ATIONOPISTATl•ACT. Dollars Clmt,_ PUBUC NOTICE monty ot 119 vntteO Sl-4u. or won EUat• of <;LIFFOAO SHIRLEY ASSETS Cr11111I• AtNlflll 1eor-c1e1 M ... ) ·--------------1-" terms -C-11-at m•y lie MAAl(El..L.•ltO"-•CLll'FORO c f k def. ~MY Smllll l"'-1*1 hKI\).. K<el)labltlo U..<MlrtllllOllConllrm•· S.MAAICELL.,OK .. MCI. ashanddue rontban s ........................ 4,244 }-7, .. J.~ '~c:;..~~!:~!f::~ Uon. TM 1um o1 SJ,000.00 tn mh, NOTICE IS HEAE8Y GIVEl'I tll.tt U .S . Treasury 5eCUrltltS • , , • • ••••••••••••••••••••• 8SS ...,. _ Ctttllled ""<-. °' money"'""' m.nt OOAEE"' 8AA8ARA M<CllEA ... , Obll;atlonsof other U.S. Govt. agencies·-~orps 1,862 l(tvln For11H IC.MON a.I Merl TN '911owlno P9rton IS OOlflO bull-..:comp.tny H<h -111on bid or otlor, tlltcl herein • Ot11tlon lot P,...... .. Of Obll l' of St t d lltl I ...,.I lr.-1 dot. Kira Wlfb l~<I All•) }-7, a.i. "'""" ,.un tM oel-• of Ille l)urCNM prl<.e Wiii •nd for 1.ellffs of Admlllli\Hlloft Qa tons a eS an po CCI SU"" V $ ons • ., • 1,242 .... Per! H"E,:!.V:p~~T #~~OE~S .. w~~~ lo ... Ptld vpon<OnflrmeUon of ...... wllh Win Mnelltd and tor Alll'-lt•· Federal Reserve stock and corporete stock •••••••••• 62 Olttt ,._..r epp<o...o 11ywkls...per1or <;qw" uon 1o "'~"'"'~ -t11t 1~ Feder al funds sold and securities purchased · ('~..., Lewi• tSun Vt lltY I Otf, St.en. CA'2'60 All bid• or di .. ,~ bot w bmll'*ll ""'11 AllMinlSlr•tlOft OI E•I~ A.cl, r.-d t t II 000 lr.cr Price •Olul•Vlswl.,1.~. A1C1w1ro A. M<Gonneclt. n40 Pe•• onat11<m fvml-1>y1MMt1tr. ltf'tfl<• to wN<ll t• -tor 1..,1,,., un er agreemen s O re se .................... 4', .. n,_r Ntwpot'1 $o., "4IO,N-poo-llldach,CA 1"' rlo.lltto rwjecl .... y ....,.llblq,ls per11c;ul.,.,_"'61U>ellme-P1Kt Loans, Total (excluding J.,ome Jonel IL.ol Ano-fHI Off. ,,~II ""''"'" Is 'onclu(l.td by • Mrtby ,.,.,.....,, °' Merino I ... -.... -ttl for unearned Income) ••.•••••••••••.• 16,096 MMk A11.-1t IP«"" ... 11-11 o11.o °'t-r•• ... n Nov. u. it11, •I io oo •.m .. In IM Less: Reserveforposslble •4,H . QtMt•l-1ntrlhlp. JAME!> E. HEIM, (O<lrtroom of Dttlef'tt\'le'11 No,> of t9kl GlnJ 1.._.r RA MCCMmec1t Pwtc:-ttr-t.wrt. a11oo a vk ten1 .. 0.1,,. w .. 1.1n loan losses ••••••••••••••.••.•••••••• 135 JeM $(rotlt< IWtitmfMT«") Mt. TPlll ... ,_ w~ lllecl wllh .... OlllW Eti.t•ol t"9Cltyot5erlt•-""'·"'"lornl•. Loans, Ne1 ••••••.•••••••••.••••••••••••••• lS,961 Jun• Frnler ITOO'-•I H,H.•4. c ...... iy , .. , .. of our191 c.oun1y 011 oci OEORC.EJ. 8 AOVVN. O•l.ct Ocl.tt, ""· Bank premises , fumlture and fixtures, and other .. .,,_r 11, tttl. Oe<ffMcl WIU..IAMl.IUOllN, r 1m p _.i 1s.n1a AMI .... R1<1t R11u attvce &H01.uuc"' Go111>1yC1er11 assets representing bank premises •• , ••••••••••• 491 Le.Cl\ 11.AOUN affdll ... , .... M . Publi&MO Of91199 C:O." DtllY Piiot. Alter .. Ut 1,ew OIH I L, llUalM Other assets ••• ,. , , , ••••• , , , • , •••••• , ••••• , •• , ••• , 278 Oltl• t+--r Oct. ?0.77,Nov.J. IO, 1911 1w1 weucllff on... , .. tt Vt11tw•9f..,, •Jtf TOTAL. ASSETS 28 99S CN fVI ~ (Lot A~t""1 c.Mtf. '-'S•·11 "'4t•JU """'"'•"'O.S.-CA..ttm · • • • · • • • • • · • • • • • • •·• • • ·• • · · • • · · • • , Ellu11t1h E11ent IS..ntlt Mon1u 1 •·J, N•w,..n a-1!,~nwo t.1: 11121 1~.. LIABILITIES .i, PUBLIC NOTICE T11. 010.a.... Att.r,..Y••totU~ Demanddeposltsoflndlvlduals , ..'" 11~ •11-r•_,._ Publl Ul«I Orllflte c.o.11 Dally P1101. prtnshPS and corps 12 200 ,rent c;r....,11 tS..n Dit901 dtl. PICllTIOUS IU$1NIU Puollsllt<I Or.tl\9f Co..•I Dally Piiot, OU . 26,21.tndNov.2.1177 Tl ._ _ _.sa'' I"" --'1't" 't'1' •d'1"1'd' "1" • "· ·' • • ·' ' Cllrlslopf\er Gr-IS.n M•rl!IOl •-O, NAMEUATIMlitHT O<l.1',71,8nc1Nov.J,191/ .. u .17 ...,_17 me .. 1iv V.,.,S.....,,.,..S SO n V UaS, t..I. Tne followlnQ l>tfton 11 dolno llusl· ------'-------'------....._ _______ , prtnshps.r ~f'ld COrpS · • •• • • .. • •,. •• ,. ......... , 11,342 01111 12.wt• ""'.,, PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Deposits Of united Statel'i Govemment •••••••••••• 951 c.~~1~:Y~;;:~:1 ~i:..~1"1 o.t. TE R~~:s~ ~~1 E c;'!,:.1~~00~ ".s N~'! Deposits of States and poll ti cal subdivisions •••••••• 100 , , ..... 11d11tf R.,.nt1c:.ll4!u...otc;n111Nsa•HKO,cou•MHAofc:.ti. Cer tified and officers• c .. •cke 1 "7• rPOt16 .. c.ri,CA'2b63 '"' ,. .................... ,, ,. Meu,Or-C.-y,aM~llCSulll ... llfleUllMCl• .. Mktl-•M• TOTAL.OOMESTICOEPOSITS S Gl.r)s' Sports Report 0'1~S1~!:E :~:1: ,_._,JO,nl7. s,.,.............. · Tota1demanddeposus-. •••• :::::::::1·i,42s··2 • 867 olvioua1. . •ssus o.i1atA-111111t11T,_.... Totaftlmeandsavlngsdepe>slts •••• 11,442 Jtnnlf•P•jot ~~~:;.~~~':.':'v~7:: • 1fJ Other llabllltles .................................. 184 Tlll't 11e1-• ... , filed wllll IN ObllgetlOniol04flt<U.!t.Gov•mm•nl1t1J•rtele14flllc11<p6r4l\I-. TO.f.ALLIABILITIES ~excludlngsubordlnated County Otrlo. ot Ortr19t Gounly on°''· Ott _ _. debe t 4, lt7T OOll9allonu11 !tttlH....Sl>Ofltlt•I Wbcllvhlont ,,7" n S .. ..., n UrtS • , , , , , , , , , •,,,,.,,,,. , , • 26,051 FulltrlOl\OWtOrltl~ (q9sl f)y I• Go1c1t11 Wesl over LA Harbor br 1~ s.odleC>tc-over san 01100 by 12"1 (7.~I. PlUC'KOCltlY VAll$1fY Un9 litecll Stale (JI (01 6olden .,..., H•LltlrM-1.0, OIALS VOU.IYIALL VAa$fTY Melt r D•lorf ROWrl' IS.1, 1$. ll JUHIO" VAllSITY M•ler Otldll Rowry IS-1. 11 1 VAa$1TY 1 .. "1~~twood Off. '"''"' , .. ,4. f· I), Jl/HfOft VA•ll TY U ktwooddtl. l"'ine t).12, n • (;otl•M•Wdllf Unl>'trllly I).• 11 \ LIQVna 8ff(h GM Mitt'°" ll .. 10 1).S,1$-10. S•n Cltmtfllt 0.1511oro•1), I).>, U·ll, Cotons dtl MAJ• cltf o.n.. Hiii\ ""· IM, Hllflll"D'°" .. .t<,. IHI w .. rrn1n•l•r lS.l, tW. M.,1,... l)ef Pounl-ln \lelln I) t .. ,,,1H NtwPGtl llubor ci.1 ~Olton IS •. ,,., • l•IMcl1delOr~U•.1n ouu.sc•OU COUNTaY VA•JITY ••IMll 11•1 l•I Wt\llftl11t1•r t. (llel Hvh•, J-•· Klrkorn ll 1 ll 11; 4, ltlflQtf IEI I). It, S. l'•"t" 11:1 1J•11 6 w1i.011 (WI 11 JI, I c~uy 1e1'u ,., • M.,...,, tE.1 u 11 t c;,,nlol>en lWl 1> ll; 10.'9Ylor IWI 16 OI. '-''• Me>M llj l 1•111 Ttf't I, lllel Put<•ll ICI. I.IN•-((I J l•ll•r 1<.i. Romt llll 1(1 I T•tr e ult 1(1 IC•'"' ICl, Alllbv•or ICI, I) •• 0 I L-Ill lJ 41; t ,.I'll IE I U_.) 10 ()""• 1E. I ~ .. 4U .. IO• V•llllTY l fl"" 1111 IJtl W•.1tlftl111I•• I R•lln"""'I ILi I) II l (f,..,I 1£11S It . J Mof'een CEI u .11; • C.ltrk IE) H :ll. OIRLSfRHHIS VAllSITY LI! ......... lt l IJI ,,.,,,,.. ~ Whllll•IO II) Gel. Arnold~l. S-1 •.... Aol>ttl\ (I) dei Berktr 6-J W , a.3. V•IOt II I loU 10 Pff'rt7_., S-1. ~ .. Qri;n,.Orown 111 IO>I lo Kolm•n Oor "" t •, I •. 8rlQM·V•I09 Ill toslto S•ll<llt1·8••1t• •••• O·•; Hoclou o.1v•11• 111 '°'' 'o M<.Off·Brtw~n H,t.. , Mtl~ 0.1 1101 161 Maryw- $1rtflff IJ4rrOw' IMOI del 00rMY .. 0, cltl lfhty. I, O••vtu~ IMOI won .. 2.1 •. n.IM•tJO_ll .. ), Rwu IMOl won•·l, .,. Doll Ifft ~ullt• 6811\ <MOl .... 1 lo HonU I C,llmor• •+. 10.1 to C.tull NffdMm I •, 10>1 10 Hammon·V.llt•nr 1 4·•; "'"'"•"·MoHl~\tY IMO) won • l. IO\I 4 o. won 1 ), 1<.e1mohDr•vtu~ IM01 .,.on~ l,1()'11 .. l,3·o. JVHIORVAfUITY 1...9-121 IOI l~/llt t ••l•1to.Pev1son Ol •ott 10 VI•••~ Hllli ) ~. ~; 'l.tnllo.C.rotl 111 1011 10 Crolltl•LGqe-o.4.0 6 U i.Mtt 10 IJI kftflr Mllh Mntl" CJ1lct1ct IE.I IMI l•I'~ H . <;vll•r •EI °"'' Or~,.,,.."'"'•'· o...n •l 111c1 r.u,,.,~ ..... 4 o.wlrltf !'uly Ptfl<t-• IE I cit ! Ot lU ~oroul I '· f orbtt,..Cl•r ~ (EI o•I fut h< C.lrt M, Kl1<,...,..l(.,MT>tn0• ll.l 101110 wrlglll ~.,,_ >-•. C1.r• Pool 11..1 well\ Ot1 ~lllh W•lt' .. \. \•MHOr\ JOYftet '"I Iott 10 Pefr· 0.nler ... II t,fff ltl 11 H '-" CleMtftto. J.. si ....... Pt\hf 'LI 'Oll 10 , °''"'""'). lo\I 10 Sleent 2•6, O•I MtOoneld 7·$1 F•lul•lle IEI 10>12•6, ,_.,._.; L. 81111· U (El-•1.a.J,6"" -.. Oon110.MorTb <£> otf Llllll .. Sl•<• •1, lo\I loA-1-0w.,.,O.I FerMn· OtR·Ytsl 7.s. FoOmer·8rOWfl IEI loll ,_., 1°" S-f; O.vls-C. II-.. I E I lo•I 1 ... ).6, ,.on• I. Mtu ltfl Vkjt (11 ttOI UfllN hteh """" Klueltr ll81 clti MOne •1; oet Ivory. 2; Oii U mbtrH2. PIU IL8) M>ll 2 t. _. ...,_ ,_,; O'Sulll••n won W , lotll.<7, -t-1 ~ .. HtWlllo,nt·C.•l•lon ILB I Cl•I HO.\l'fll•llltdl.,11 t-A, Otf 11tMI .. M<<iow•n ..... io.r lq fl'Otd·Sew•ll 2 .. ; M"h41\..,.V.1Cllttl ILlll lotl I .. : "'°" • ), lo•I 2 •; rr-h W•lle« CL8) 10,1 •t,)./,$-7 COM tt•l 101 D...,.. Hiii• $Intl .. M•<-t (C) dt f Wtlntrl 6 0, clel MOOOY 6-2, 0.1 Vaupel •..O; 0. )ontt ltl _, W. t•I. •·2. tliOO!'f (() wont.0, • j,60-°""" .. 11trn•nou Hun,ohrlH IC I ntt I flDOltl Cl•r<I• •·l, dtl I rOmm. On rs1.-. .. 1 • J, o" HO\..Oltt r 1.._k •·I, l iOYf""'•IO•>IUnG !ti won •.•• ••. • 1. ~lvin-<;la\QOw 1<.1 won •t. I ), • • (oti. ~ 1111161 Ulllvenlty ~·· \("'le ICM) IO\I 10 MIMf\ O•, llel S••t•• • t, '""o ~nol•t >-•. LIU ICM I IOtl i ... -.. ,. al, Ctoc-tr IC:MI WOfl l·),~,'°'I .. -.. r l\llt,. venr\tll• ICMI •• , 'f>OlllPH•• Motor• .... dtl 'kltfMvm· Owtn• 6.0 , Ott (.It•-·JoMtorl 7·)· O'Neil Hiii t(.MI ~ ~·. -• J. • t. Erwin Hf'"' ICMJ~-T •. • 1. IOtl •. , T ,__. •. loens, l04al 1Uclucl11>41uno•rMd Inc-I 21,..0 l!QUITY CAPITAL PuDllll>td OrMl9t c;o.,, O•llY Pllol, 11. lUS; Rfte,..,. lor ll01•1Dlt 1 .. n loiMI •s Common stock °'1·'· u. 20• 17· "" B;n~°:r~~":.. lufllllurU n<l llatvnit:-2'·j4J ~. No. Shares authorlztd 322,SOO •Jll-11 PUBUC NOTICE ~~7Fr~:;~•-ll"O!Hn" prtml•H ~~ Surp~~~.~~.~~~~~~~~.~~~·.~. ~~~~.~~'.~~ •• ~·m "CTlllOUS IUSIHU$ ltAMEHATIMIHT l M foltowtfto Plfl<ln i. OOIM bijll· ,, .. , .. , SANDY ~ANO L IN G ' A~· SOCIA t ES, "2t2 (.empuJ Dr., Sulle t. Nt•POft Otetri, CJ' '7MO Elmer A. S"'11111nQ, 211H Will neWQO LI,.., El 1oro.CJ'4'l•JO Thi' bUtlnen "conCIUCl.0 Dy •1111\ olYIOulll. El,,,..A SonclllnQ Tnlt •tal-1 •H ll•t<I w1111 I,,. C:.Ovnly Clttll of OtftlOt Counly on O<I. II, 1971. fllll7$7 Publl,_ Or11191 (AMII O•llr JlllOI, Ocl. ~.17, llncl Nov. J, 10, "" PUBUC NOTICE "CllTtOllS aUSINE U NAMISTAlEMENT l ht IOllOWi"ll Ptf-• ••• clOOl\Q l>u>I ntU A\. llRT PLVS.t lOl>En1nci•r ~ounl~lft VAllfy, (;At77Ct Wlllllln' f'okl)O, , .. ,. !th• •11 " f ovrittlnVAlltv. <.A•UOll M•rr E. .,...,~ •• 1•11• loll.all )t , I Oufll#ll'I Vallty, (.".,,Qt lhll bu\olWI\• I\ <Md!Klo .. llY • oeneral P9r1N nl'llP "11.rr ( Paotot 1 ~·· ........... 1 ••• '""" "'"" t,.,. (flvnly (J9rl al Or-COU"IY on lk· tobtr 17, 1'77 ''*t .. ubll•l\tcl 0.~ C~•I p.lly 111101. (XI tU. JI, No• J. 10, it.'/ J o .a.ir L1AerL1r1•• Undivided profits ................................ 191 0tm•noGei!OS•tsof lncll•ldu11'·"'"""''pu n<1<orpor•1ion. 10.n 2 TOT AL EQUITY CAPITAL ...................... 2,944 llm• •ncl WYl"9Sclel>Ol•l•ot lndlvltllYh,perlncnnl~.-<or-•llont u, .. I TOT AL LIABI LIT .CS ANO EQUITY CAPtTAL. 28,995 OtpOill\ Of Ur\lled SttlH Go11emm•nl 171 0t1>CK1tso1 StalH•nopo1111u1 •ubcllv111on1 :.n• MEMORANDA c..r1111eoenooft1<m <hlro• m Averagefor30celendardaysendlngwlthrepertdate: •· TOTAt.DEPOSlnlNOOMIESTIC:OFl-ICES tl.010 C h ... d f b k 111 Tot••c1em•nc1oeD01•t• •1.u1 a s a.~ ue rom an s .................... 3,"89 111 ro1e11'"" _, Mvl"9' O.POsll) u,a. Fed. funds sold and socuri tres purchased under c. l0l AL0 EPOSIT'$1H OOMt;~TICANOFOAt:ICiH OfFIC:IE~ 11,010 agreements to resell ...................... 3,600 ~o":~~~~~~11 1es :e.~~ Total loans .......................... " .... 1S,9S' eou11Y "'"""" Time deposits of s100.oooormore In ::ttoek~·.~::!n"!~:!!~:~:!~ne~~t INrv•lw l ":: T~:;"C::~~~:~~~~ .'.'.".".·::.·:.·:.·.·.·::.·.·.·:.·::.·.·.·2~:~~ UnclMdtdPfollh 411 TOTALASSETS •••• ••••• ................... 27 873 ro rA.LE.ovtrv CA Pr TAL • 1,ttt Tlrne certlflcatts of de Posit In denomln.ttlons ' IOfALLIAlllLlllESANDtQUllY<;APll ... L iO,aM ofS100,000ormore ............................ 1,S90 MEMDltANOA 0th ' de I Av.r•o• tor)O<••tfl4.tro.yu n<11,.11w11 riu 11c1n11. ... er t me POSlts n a mounts Of •·''""""""""t"'"'"""k> 2.u. $\00,000ormore ••••••••••••••••••••• , •••••••••• 2.so b. F•t1t1•1111t111swi1d•naww1111.. . I, R. w. Creighton, Executive Vice President a. t ~~~~~.~r •oretmenhto••••11 ,,_: Cashier of the abOve-nemtd bank Clo hereby declare Cl. llnlUtf)0\060ll100,000or mor•lndllm41•11'offl<.•• •,0)1 that this Report of Condition Is true and correct to the I t 1~~:!~~;11~~oo.oowrnooinoom.-11,0111... 21t.'ll bes t of my knowledge and belief. ,1 •· T1mtc•t\lll<•tttoic1too•111n /S/ R. W. CREIGHTON oenom1n1111onuo 100,oooor ""°"' i,41t October 18 1977 • b.01llff11-oeoo,111111.,,lOlln1,00 100,ooo ... mo,., 10 We, the unde r slgntd directors attest tht c;orrtct· , Mar•t1v•lwotlnvt \t,,,.,,lte<ur1t1n ),lllO of thl t t t f t"" u"""••'o-t. 1•••Vo v. •1mo1e11. Prf\IOenl ....i .io"" w v..1,"' "· v P. ~ ness s s I emen o rttOUrcts and llablll ties. We ' ,.,,,,., o1 ,,.. ..., •• Ninff a.nk, _,.. c1e<1.,.., 1ar "'"'•"•lone ... c1 ~ i.r declare thet It has been examined by U$, lll\d to the best " "" 01111• of our knowledgo and btlld Is true and correct. t h•"" 119''°""'"nowltl>O'ol.,..m•ll~rscontlllf\fdln lnlu-'.M141 1Mllt,,. JAMES L VNCH lhel N<ll JI.ti-I lfl Nld r•Pof\ I• lt\14 Et<ll ti IM 11""8f\IOflt'd, f>or lllmMll 11on .. nd not for1neot,.,.r,c..r1111ttW'Ot• """'1rvor11t•IW'tll\611ht10ff9D1n01, LEONG. NELSON, M.O. 1rvunoc.ornP<1 G. W . McCLEl.LAN E••<vttc1or>0t1ot»n• 1•11 •• 1e •• taM .. ,Ce111-.. Directors f•tioo v ~m-n Jo1onw w.,,., •1 . Rublls~ Ornnge Coast Oelly Pllo Ottober 27 Pullll-Or•nvttM•I0.11, ....... 0cl.21,ttl/ ..,.._,, /f 1977 "6o4S.77 1 I i t I t .. .... OM.YPILOT I Thura<Uy. October zr. 1917 R r.~ Business AFTER 22 YEARS IN ANOTHER FIELD, HE'S HOOKED ON WORMS Darrell Richards Can Hardly Keep Up With Demand for His Red Wigglers Early Worm Turns Him ·:ELK GROVE VILLAGE, 111 <~P ) -Four months ago Darrell Richards . 42. visited an earthworm ranch and his lifes tyle turned around. ··I got hooked. Up until then the oitly thing worms meant to me was fishing," said Richards. "I was surprised how big a business w.orms are and the future it has. I qµit a fine-paying job with a heal- ing and air conditioning firm I'd been with for 22 years and start- ed Earthworms Inc. ;n some old greenhouses I was tucky enough to find and lease ... -'RICHARDS BECAME one of an estimated 100,000 earthworm growers in the cauntry . And, like many of them, he can't keep up with demand for the red wig- glers. ·"I've had 2,000 calls and visits f rom persons i nterested in worms," he said. "I have 70 customers -dentists. doctors. lawyers, airline pilots. an army colonel and even a night club owner -who have bought worm beds at ~ each. Each bed has t 75,000 worms. They are intrigued by worms -they don't bite. bark or smell -and from our stock they can grow worms and sell them to ball shops and plant stores ( ONTHEJOB J ·•one regular customer is a woman who buys a few pounds (3,200 worms to a pound> to feed her pet alligator." THE WOODEN WORM beds are three feet wide, eight feel long and 10 inches deep. The worms thrive in moist wood shavings and horse manure and reproduce about every 60 days for the rest of their lives, up to 15 year s. A full·grown one is about four inches long. They are an en- tirely different species than night crawlers. "Earthworms have both male and female reproduction organs and if you have 100,000 wrigglers today. you will have 200,000 hatched in two months and 6.4 million by next October. You have to keep splitting their beds and barv!!Sting them for resale ... said Richards. He said earthworms eat the equivalent of their own weight every 24 hours and multiply so rapidly they must be harvested every JO days before the bins become overcrowded and the reproduction process s lows down HARVESTING IS done by a machine that separates the parent worms from Lheir babies. castings (worm manure> and egg capsules. Richards got his start by buy- ing one million from The Won· der(ul Worm Farm in Ontario, Calif. They were put in peat moss and delivered by air freight in cardboard boxes. He has 40 large bins containing a total of 112 million worms and still must buy from the Ontario affiliate to meet the demand from nurseries, florists. pet stores, bait shops, Brookfield Zoo and forestry programs. DEHYDRATED WORMS, which are 70 percent protein, are being used as a food s upplement for animals and even humans. Richards displays prize- winning recipes like "The Earthworm Wiggle Omelette." A !)ign reads: "Earthworms For Food." A T·shu'l is stamped with "( Eat Worms." ~arthworm cookoffs are becoming a thing in the industry This summer in Pomona. Calif .. prizes were given for the best recipes. 2.000 of which were sent in from worm fanciers in this country, Canada and Japan State's Economy Hailed LOS ANGELES (AP) -At least 400,000 new Jobs will be created in California during the current year. and personal income will rise more than 11 per· cent, Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has predicted. "No state has created more jobs," Brown told t.tbo ut 800 businessmen gathered at the Los Angeles C.onvention Center for the Business OuUook Con· ference Wednesday. TKE STATE'S ECONOMY IS buoyant, re- c'overing faster than the rest of the nation from re· cessionary pressures. said Brown, who has been criticized in the past by businessmen for failing to spur economic growth As evidence of the improvement. he announced that New York-based Grumman Corp. would build a plant near Fresno to manufacture solar and windmill power equipment. "This is a direct result of my business offensive to attract the type or industry that will benefit the state," Brown told reporters afterward. WHIM TO CAlL YOUR CHILD'S f'HYStCl4t-t HE SAJO THAT THE NEW firm. Grumman Energy Systems. would provide JOO full-time Jobs. "We are taking a strong lead in the solar energy field," Brown said before introducing the new firm 's president, Ron Edwards, who echoed Brown's economic optimism . "One factor in coming to California was that we believe you will be in the forefront of economic growth •ind we want to be part or that," Edwards said. BROWN SAID THE STATE would continue to urge new business investment here in an effort to resolve the claims of the unemployed and other seg· ments of the population to a share in the state's wealth. "The creation of new wealth occurs because people are willing to take n s!·s," Brown said, "and for women, m1norit1es, those who have been left behmd. new bus1ne!)s oflen offers more op portumty." ly'TIUY ~IAHT. s I 0 5 60 PUI "'°"TH AS LOW AS P\.USlAA TR-7Cars R ecal,led •·"'- You ~bould never hesitate to «'o il your chi l d's phy s ician whenever :.my abnormal . cond1t1ons anse. A doctor knows better than anyone else how to relieve and treat them. Certainly call 1f ony uf the following occ ur ubdom 1nal ruin . uccld<>nL'i. hlood m stools, C'onvuls iono;. rroup . cough <>sp<>c1olly 1r s evere . diarrhea. earocht•. ft•ver . poisonmR. poor :ippettte. rashes ("1pcc1ally those assoc1otrd wllh flovcr, sore. throul. i.wolltn g l and \, vom111n~. whee7.m>: or difficulty in breulhtn~ ur lh(!llC', poi 11 oninK . severe abd<>m1nal 1rnin und croup aMoclutcd with rever and lethargy nrc most dangerou.1. YOUR ()()(:'J'OR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prr.scrlpllon Ir 11boppln1 nearby, or we wlll deliver promptly without extra ch1rae. A ereat many peoplt entrust us with their prescriptions PAIK U00 rHAllMACY I Jil ........ l• ............. a.1110 EQuipped with automatic transmission, power steering. power disc brakes, factory air cond1lloning and more OllOU YOUIS MOW °""laill..S COii SSll57 0o A ... d..-1 v11.-$3SJI 00 SIO!t 00 SMr mool~ pi.,. .. 33 0. raw. M:it.80.,.._. Olllt UC-0'! --or-IClt H- By The Associated Press The National Highway TraHi c Sa fety Ad - ministralioh reports that British Leylund Is recall- ; n g about 5,000 TR·7 1111111111111111111111 automobiles. Officials said ac · celerator cables may fail In some of the 1975 and 1976 cars, resulting either in the engine run· Businessmen: FILL TIB ClllUm14S GIFr LISI' WITB fH~k~r1 fdrm~. OF OHIO FOOD 011'1' PAD Now 11 the time 10 order Chm 1mns ~tu tor cuuom"•· employeet. tic. Thl!Y will apprec:101c our famou~ food ~h pc1k1. Ste l~m Oil dcsplev or ph.,.••. We'll OM•I. If V"U wl\h A'IMI~ In ~ ~· 'tin0e ~«t """ ~ l( • .t~uttt NOffllt,...,, •• .,. r...,~1l1•'4~l>OllO ~ COftt "-te Slort 540.Htt ning wide open or shut· ting down. The agency said the (lrm is contacting owners of the autos and will replace the defective cables. Drivers whose autos begin running open should shift into neu~ral and turn the ignition ocr. oUicials said. Members Drive Set /\ onc·day mcm bership drive has been set by the Orange County ehnpter or the Buildin~ Industry Assodalion for ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Nov. 15 Cell 842-5678. Put • few wo1d1 to work for you. In the DAILY PILOT According lo mcm· bership chairm:rn Danny O'Sullivan of Walker & Lee, the drive will be a jy1nt effort with the Sales 6 M nrkeling Council or I ht> assoc1 at ion Carter Energy Strategy:· Walk Gently in Senate •• • J By STAN BENJAMIN Aue<l•l..S Pren Wrllor NEJVS ANALYSIS Senate approval. the Carter peo· plc think. TO GET HIS energy taxes back into the blll in the con·, freence committee, Carter is r e· In public, President Carter has criticized the move to lifl petroleum price controls as "the biggest ripoff in history.·' But in private, the President has dealt more gently w1lh the Senate leaders ·who seem ready to let that very thing happen, dumping his energy program in the process. tack stopped with the companies and did not apply to the Senate committees. whose action, he said, "just reflects a general re luctance to impose taxes." I yin g on the House conferees. I Senators, elected for six years I and with greater individual in· ~ fluence in a chamber of only 100 members, are traditionally the targets or heavier industry lob- bying than are congr essmen in the 435-member House. THE R EASON, KEY ad ministration aides say, is strategy. Like a bridge player. Carter is trying lo lead the action into his strong suit. Thal is in the llousc of Heprescntatives. which has passed the main features or his t•nergy plan: continued controls on oil and gas prices, but al higher levels, and new govern- ment taxes to raise the consumer prices still higher. moves Carter hopes will stimulate conserva· *lion without giving petroleum companies excess profits. The petroleum industry has lobbied heavily against Carter's plan, arguing that pr;ces s hould not be controlled and that higher profit5 arc needed to encourage exploration and development of oil and gas. That has been the tone ever since. LAST WEEKEND ON a speak- ing swing through the Midwest and West, Carter warned again of "an enormous windfall in profits" and said, "There's u limit to how much we can takeout of the pockets of consumers and give lo the oil and gas industry.·· But back in Washington, meet· ing with Senate h;aders. Carter jus t explained his position and left it to them to write their ener gy bill without heavy pressure from him. A well-placed administration aide says the administration, in fact. did not want to press the committees lo include Carter's tax provisions in a Senate bill because it seemed likely they would be rejected in a Cloor vote. ONCE COMMl'ITED against those provis ions. the Senate would be hard to turn around. Representatives, up for re· election every two years, are more subject to the whims of the voters back home, who also hap· pen to be consumers generally distr"ustful of the petroleum com- panies. SO CARTER HAS taken to television and public speeches to crit icize what he terms the • "ripoff" supposedly planned by those companies. 1 Th at is the second h alf of ' Carter 's energy lactic. . By putting up only token re· 1 sistance in the Senate commit· : lees, Carter avoids an immediate showdown on the Senate floor. Dy attacking the petroleum in- dustry publicly, he seeks lo rally public opinion and stiffen the re· I solve of the House conferees to · bounce an energy bill, including his tax proposals. back to the Senate. THE PROPOSED ENERGY taxes and their direct or indirect return to the public were cul out of the energy bill in the Senate Finance Committee. Against t h at background, Carter suddenly attacked the petroleum industry on Oct. 13. charging it with an unreasonable grab for profits. Instead, the aide said. the ad· ministration hopes some form of Carter's energy tax proposals will be put in the bill when House and Senate conferees get together to iron out their dif· ferences. 1f the tax proposals reach the Senate Cloor in a bill recom· mended by a joint conference committee and without a pre- vious rejection vote, they may stand a better chance of winning IF IT WORKS, Carter will still face the job of pushing energy ~ taxes through a reluctant Senate, ' but _he hopes it will then be a little l easier. Jf It doesn't work, Carter may l even consider vetoing the energy l bill and starting from s cratd'l ; next year, his aides say. But the next morning, Energy Secretary James R. Schlesinger made it clear that Carter's at. Ove r The Counlt-r MASO listiftCJS DOWNS ~t. 8,.nk' llrookS BrwTom 8r•n1n9 8u<kbff Buckeye LA~~ .. ..9i) 31, -,., , -'~ ,.~ -1. 1U e -114 1~. _, ... s -,., S' 1 -'l I•'• -I"" •.. --........ -tt. 8:! ltl I Off "·' • ' g: '::: I Off .... ' ~~r;~t! C•mOOCll C1nr•dH C1pSwCD ~plnAlr C•Plt<ft oir '·' •I Oft '" ' Ofl Lt ' ' Off 1." I •'• ,, J'• -1_. 8ll ~!-I g~~~s 14'• , .. ,,., -"' 91 ... -~ JI• -\,. Oii 1A I Off 7.J, • Oft 1.1 C"mL~• C.he,Ull C.lrtl~f C•tlUtA C•l1Ut8 CIU,Jl. c.i-Cp Co•uvent ComCIH CmlShr (mwTel <:on Pap g: ~:: I )' • '· J't-h -21• .~. ._ 1 ~) I• I Oft 1 I Oft 7.1 Oft 1.1 Olf .., Off ··' Oft •• , Off .. , l ''J -ft! n, -"" J\1 -\4 Off .. , ' Off .. , 1 n•• -'°' n , -J.1' Olf u : I MUTUAL FUNDS ;I NEW YORI< (AP) Olvld 1.61 1.'ll Four E II.II., . . Capm t.~ 8.'IO MMB UO 10 II Plllrncl 8.11 I.ti SoYU In IUO 1?.02 Tile lollOwlng tiuo. Monti> 11.M 16 00 Opln lJ.21 II.SO (Apll S S.1>3 6.0, Mellurs 1).0/ NL Price F'unds. Soe<tra P •.Sii NL l•llOM SuPPlled by NtWS •. ,. 10.11 T•Fre ll-t• NL 1~v011or, Gl'OUP: Merrill LyllCh: Gr .. 111 9.1• NL Sl•I• B-Gr: Che N.illon.l Auo<I· NYVn 10.t& "•S rldtllly Group: IOS Bo uo 6.01 Buie •.40 •7• ln<oin 9.'I? NL Com I' a.as •.21 ellon ol !.e<urltlet CGFuncl •.ot •.IJ llC>lld 8 73 NL IDS Gr1 S.30.... Capl\ 12.16 11.11 N Er• 10.U NL Olv Fd •.6' S.1J Oeele(), In<., 11re CGlncm 8.H t 2• Caplt 7.77 1.'8 IDS ndl •.SS ..... RdA't 1.00 NL N Horll 7.U NL Pro0 F 3.S7 :UO fl>{! Prl<U ~· Wl\1(11 CApPru 1.00 NL Contld <I.SO NL Mull • 73 9.'9 Mid AM 5.07 S.S4 T•Fre 10.211 NL S1Frn1 Giii S.11 NL lhlH -urlllfls Cenl$hT 10.SI 11.•I O•lly I 1.00 Nl PrOQ 3.01 3.21 "'on Mkl UIO Nl Pro Fund S.)S NI. Sl'rl"!I 8.11 ,,II NI,, could ,,.,_. o.en Ch<1llnv 9.41 10 J.J Oslny 1.U ..... T uE1t S OJ s.28 MONY F I.SO 9,19 Prolnctn SUie St 3'.M «>.OO \Old IN•• •s~I Ch••IFd 13.43.... Eo Inc ,.,,. NL SIOCll 1>.18 18.'7 ..ise Fd 12 ... NL 10.50 NL SIHClmtn Fl#tds: ••luel O< bou0"1 Ch•H Or Bos Mlll)tl 21.17.... Sele<\ '·" 10.U Mui 8eft a.SI •.• Prov Glh 7.iJ. I.OS ... ,,, lftd 1.24 NL tvecue IJh.& t.tles Fund S8J 631 Mun Bd 10.Sll NL "•' Py •.GJ •. ,s o,\IF Fd 1.n e.ss Pru SIP 8.1• 9.lO Auo" 1.0I NL tllaroel Wodntday: Fron\ l.SI 3 'IO Foelel 14.•s 16.:J.4 Inv Rnh ._.. S.•2 '°'IF Giii 3.68 3 ... Puln•m Funds: lnwst 1.30 Nl. , 1 S«ll eur SMre .... 7.SI Pur11n 10,01 10."4 ISlel lf.40 11.9' o,\ulu•fof <>mah.a: Conv J0.9' II,,. Oc•al' 6,11 NL AGE Fd S.!O s I Soetl s.os s.n Salem 4 SS • ., IVY S.71 NL Am~r 11.61 12 ,. Eoull 9 7S 10 ... Slelll ROI Fds: I A<ornl' 14.13 NL CllHPD 10.u NL Tnrlll 10.12 NL JP Gr1" 936 10.11 Gr~n 3.7t A.II ~·orv 11.11 13.S. B•lan IUO NI. Advnlny 916 NL C,,.ml'd •.st 7.1' Trend 1'.'IO 71.IS J•nus I= 11.11 Nt. lncom 9 21 1008 G,...U'I 10.1011.CM Cap 0 Lll Nl. 1 A•INl'd I.GA'·'' CNA Miii Feb: Fln•n<l•I Prov: John Hancock. laFre IS» t•&S lncom 1.tt 1.70 Sto<k 11.01 NL I Aetn•Sh n.'2 ,. 12 Llbrly •,02 4.3' Of!\• •.t' NL Bal<1n I.Sol •.H ..iut Shrs ,., 31 NL 111ve11 1 16 7 .8J wrvey F l,71 1"7 I Alulure I 9' NL Menll1I 1l21 S4 lndu!ol A OJ NL Bond 19.ll 21,IJO NEA Mut 711 NL Op\n 1l.2> 14 ... Temp Ot 12.2' ll.43 AllSl•I• 11' Nl S<lluU 7.•7 I.. •ncom 1.11 NL Grw111 s 10 S.S4 N•ll 1114 10.01 NL hEal 14.Aol U.6' l•mp Inv 1,00 NL AlpflAF 1001 NL Colont•I: Fsl lnvesl0t'1: JoMsln It.AS Nt. N•I !>ttur w · Viii• t.61 10.jO rns Cap '-11 7 . .i A Birth f t.SS 10., Cnvrl uo 4,<IO Oltc;o S 02 S." Kemper Funds: 8ef<1n I.ti 9" Voy•9 10.jO 11.4' rns ln11t t. It 9.tl t AEQIFCI •• , s.os Fund I 10 'SI Grwth • 36 • 9S lncm 10.111 11 • .ft Bono • ,.. A,, Relllbw '·'° NL Tr•v Eq t,AS 10.SS American FllRd'S! Grwlll A.11 A.61 ln<OM 1.10 t,SI Grow 6.7S 1.3' OJvfd J 91 A 17 Reser,,. I 00 HL. tfudr HCI U.42 NL B•l•n 7.11 • '° 1ncom IAO t .U Stoo 1.m 8,11 MC>llM 1.00 Nt. G""''" S.IS S.)S Aewt• ).10 Nl TwllC Gt ,,. NL I Amcp '10 • n Opln 10.0 11.'1 FslMll "' UNV<lil Mune 1018 11.:n Pf Slk 7 11 1.1' !><lft< Eq1 •• ,. •.OJ ..... c Inc "" Nl. ' Mull I 'IJ t 16 Colu Gll'I 14 t9 Ml. FIMllOI lll\lvill Oplft l~IO 14.32 tncom SJJ S.U Slife< Olh I.IS •.61 Jsit.A GI 7.16 Nl. 8on<t , .. , UJl Cwllh 1'8 .•s 1.01 .. Will IS .. NL Summ lO.tt 11.JS Stock 1.U 1.12 SIPC•P 1.JJ 8.01 USAA'"' IUO NL C.pll 6.. 1.06 Cwllh C I '1 Ul Fncf Glh J .. '.00 Tecll •Ill I.oil NELif• Fund. ~IPGwl 1 Ot 7.7S l!S Gov 9 .. JM.• 0•*111 1 'O s J1i Comp Bd IO 'Ot Foutoci.n G•lMI: TolR t ,'7 10 St EQull U .. 17.CM SPl.IQA unev<lll .in11 M11t 7.-Ht. ll'l<om U . .» l•IO Como f'd •. ti 111 Grwln •.ll A.S1 l<•yslone Fund' Grwtll IJS t.ot ~udcltr St,_: Un on Svc OrJ>: IC" ll OS .. 1' Con<oro 12 JI NL lncom 11.43 IJ II APollO , .. •.CM Inc om I) .. IS.07 Com St .... NL BrNd 10.1S 11.M NP•n 14."6 l•H Cons Inv I.ti 'JS Mul•I 7.11 I SI Cus 81 11.15 11.liS sc~ u,. 1).'1 lncom 14 M NL Nel Inv J..lt • .. n WlhMI ...... ,, ConUel G S,IS NL. Sl>e<I '00 t.&I C11s 82 It 'l 11 2' Ntu~r91r a.rm: IMI Fd IJ.'17 Nl. u C.D to.ti 11.n Amer GerW?ril CC>llt Miii s.. NL Fr1nklln c;,_: Cu\ 8c &>II 9.14 Enrgy ll.OI Nl. M•n A 10.00 Nt. UnlOft IJ.40 U .. U CApBd en 97' Clry C.o 1017 It.IS Brown .-.avall Cul 1(1 7.olJ 8.f2 Guard 1676 NL MM8 IO.V Ht. Unli..t FundS: C.aPGlh > 76 •.II Olylncm I 00 Nl ONTC ll.ct 6.92 fus 1(2 •.ll S.11 Partnr t.?• NL SP<KI 73.•I NL .Accm S. .. 6.0 ln<Fd '" ,,. D••tle Fd 709 NL Grwlh 4.91 $ 2' '" $1 16.21 11.n NtVW I'd 1.00 NL S<l<urlly """"'' B-7.» t.oc Ventr 12.16 tJ 2' deVtOll 79.SO NL Utl1$ .... S.06 us SJ 7.0t 7 IS NIW Wld I0.13 Nl. 80l'ld 10.13 10,tl CO<\ Gr a.JI 9.0I EotG111 •.:it•.e1 Oel•w••• c;,_ lncom 1.1s Ut <:us ~ >.SI l.to NewfGI 11,.i NL Eouly l.74 4.0t Con inc •.12 t .t1 fdAm .... 6.11 Decal tU2 11.U US Gov t.fol 10,37 Pol.-$,Ot a at Newl Int ,,1S Nt. Invest 7.JI 7... lncom t ... 10..S. Provld U3 • IJ Dell.. 10,361111 Cepft ',, 4.•s LUl1'19ton ~: • NltnlFd IS.SI NL Ullr• •.SJ 10.•1 Munl 10.lt 10.se AGllll'd S.)I s ,4 D•lth • 21 ••• s £quot 3_23 l.<14 Cp LClr 1US 1a.s1 NomurA t .16 10." Stnllntl Funcis: klen s.u U,J AlnslnFd S06 S.Sl HF rt '1,SI •.'Ht Fundpk 7.10 1.ll LU Gr 1.76 •.S1 Noree" 14 '° NI. Gr .. 111 ).IS l .•2 Vllflg S.IS S.U A1nvut S.I. Nl. Della •.u s.os Fund 11\t Orp• l.U In ..... 11.41 NUYUll •.11 10.11 Trusl t.11 10 • .sSUnlt Svcs 1.92 NL Alnvln< II 8' Nl. Dir CIP 3.71 4 lJ Gomm 1.32 '·°' l.U R 14,0S IS )I> OmtOA t,11 9.IC S.nllntl 0,_: V4lue LIN Fd: ANl<llll 2.1.1 3.11 OoCl8.tl ?0.112 NL rmp•c ,, .. I.st Lii• Int 7 • .st 11.21 OM WM IJ.10 NL ... ,,.,, a.u l ... "" LI &.7• •·•> Anchor Grouo. OO<ISll\ 106 NL Ind Tr 10.01 10.0 Lincoln Nill: Ot>1141nl\elmtf' Fd: B•l•n 1.u 1.~ llw:om •,'3 S.o. Oal1r 1.00 HI. Dru Bur 9.11 NL Pllol 1.IC 8.S1 S.I Am •·111 NL e>ppen S.'8 1,tt Com S 11.0 1).CI l.evOI 10.31110 6S orwlll •.10 •.st Ortyful Grp GESI. S U.16..... Sel Spt 11.•) NL lnc8o) aw. t.>ti S.n1ry I' 11,92 12... 5111511 •.U •.J• 1n<0m 7 n 1 11 Orof Cl 14 12.11 C...n Sec I.SI NI. Loom I• SaylH. 1<11onll 1.00 Nt. 5'1Arenolc1Ht <;p· V•11ce S<lnde'll SJ141t lr ~ ••• •.S1 LtvQ41 IS S2 It.% Grtll Incl IUS Nl. C•Pfl •• , NI. Oplm tJ.tQ •• ,., Cm"' U:I .... ln<Om IJ.~ l•.1$ F!llnv 627 6 16 liq As t ... NL H1mlll(!tl: Mui 12.2' NL hPre •O.•I I'll. Enlrp .... S.29 lnv"t t.lol 1.41 W••" 9 )2 10.'6 ... ..,,,.. UI NL F HOA 1 fl 4,21 Lord Abe.ell AIM •• IS '56 ,.,., FO J.M... • Comm ),flO 6.17 AuGU~d U •lei 5pl In< 1 11 NI. Grw111 .... I.JI Allllld ,,. 7... lllTlt 7.SJ 8.l> Herb< cl:IA •.11 S114<1 ...... ., Awt Houghton. hE.m 1' • NL lntom 124 NL Bn<I di> II.OS 12 OI OTC St< IJ,11 IA.)) L.e1><1I • tf t.7$ ""!"VIHrd ~. Fnd B 7.AO I~ Thro c IUI NI. Harl Glh "" NL 11\~0m 3.Q J.11 p.,.m M ,,, •?s Pll(e 10.n 11 IJ E•Plr t•U Nl ln<Om S-00 ) 0 E•OI• Gr 10 u 1110 Herl l•" I I• NL L.111,,.ran ero p-So I .. NL Sl'lear\Oll F..ncts. F llOX 12.M NI. SIOO 'II s" (:tfOf'l&HOWMd Herlloe I~ Funo •.tl 10 u Penll Mu ......... 11 ... ...,.. IS Ill 17 •• • ... " 7~1 NI, 81.C Gt 10 IS II Ot ...... ',. • is Hl1111Vld 1111. lncom • ?1 10.01 Pl'lll• •.'3 1 SI '"'°"' lt.'1 "·'1 MV.O "·'° Nl. B•HlllC I.II NL Fo..r. 7.. Nl. HoldQ fr I.Oil Nl. Mllnt lOA> ti.JI P""4 C.p , ill • ,. 111 ... \I t.IJ ~,. ''"l e,14 HI Bel>l Inv I 61 NL (irwtll I U t n Hor M•n IJ tO IHQ US (iov '11 10 61 ,._n I'd t 2' 10 1S $1trrA(. 1.11 NL. Well\I II... NL BH<Hlll • " NL lncom • 01 ,, .. •Sf (iroup M ..... ,11 ..... n Go: Pll!lrlm ~ ~rm 0 II.ti NL W•lltn t.04 I'll BH<ln• 117 NLO $!)OKI •. I) •u Orwlh •2' ... FrM• ,, .. l.'9 lli)I Fs .... It.•> SH11·m .. Furtr1\' Wt1I II t.65 Nt. Bifr Orcup. Sloe• Ill 904 ln<om J.J6 >" ln<le" 701 711 f'llO ,. UI •.11 C•Pll 141 t'6 WUldr lOGJ ~L I f d H'I NL EDIE $p IHI NI. Tnl '" 16 ., 11.SI Mus 10 It 11.0'I M•t c ~ 11 • ,. '""ll '" 10.6:1 Yer In a.Ji $..a I F• 110 NL l:.,ono ISi Nl Trtl"" H1. M<i•s FIMMI. MH ... ·~ tA ltus .. ,. , .. WellSt G Ml ... 1 8e(k(ep 7.ll t 01 l:a••t F t IS 10 71 111<111\lry 2.17. .. MIT 'It • '1 f'IN SI 10 11 NL lltftt 11.-IJ ... Wein Eo 11.7J NL 8-S1• OJ c tS ll111t1 Tr ll ....... 1111 l11vU llNYMI MIO '-u ._.. PIO!lffr l"\ll'ld' s• !&qty t.2' t.11 Wtstf Ort uo 1,17 8o•lt"' t n lo.ot "•lrlld I 1t t 41 Inv <;v~ UO NL MIO JA I 0 t i fund 1~ 141' H l&Or IU1 1f '6 WIK' Inc: 4.tr sq Cel• Bullett.. Hoer•ttd ~llftds '"" In 11' NL MFO II IUO II I 16.*i Se<>en In " .. 11.11 ,. Bu It 11 .. 11... Am Ldr 1 ~1 7 ff Inv I" tOc t tS MCO 1).lt H.21 f'lr.: Inv 10 11.tS $w J11v\ 7.Jt Ut NL -... 16.td C•ft<lft •• , 1 )I E.mplr 110. ... Inv (OU~·· MF8 IS'2 ,. .. ftl '''" 10.0I II Cll ""''" G • "' "" !Ml• <llt19tl I ' 'I I STOCKS I SYLVIA PORTER Thursday's Closing Prices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Quot•llew>• lftth..,. lr-1 ,,...,,. ,.._,.Vo''· NIHfwwu. l'•(fllc, 1'8W, ao.1..,,_ Ootro111no ""''"''•II •IOtl t •CllWIOH ~ ~ l>Y .... NttMllMll AUOCl•llon ... S.Curltlo o ....... ,.., IMllMI Thurlday. October 21, 1977 N OAILV PILOT •• Off to College Grants, Loans Can Help, Too :• ... ·=· .... By SYLVIA PORTER ~= 11.A•li•. $eriftl • Students who :ire not eligible for aid through feder.i: · programs may be able to get help from state or special cot;.:. legc programs -assuming need can be proved_. Students.: can use financial aid forms, available from htgh school:· counselors. State programs otrer more than $600 million ~! grants and many loan opportunities for residents. ..::. U) Under the state student incentive grant prograrrr.;: the U.S. government matches the state grants to studen~-:: Average grant is $500, ma ximum is $1,500 a yeai:. Check the:• California State Scholarship and Loan Comm1sslon. 14*· Fifth St., Sacramento, CA. 95814 with sucf\ questions ~: Cnn part-time and half-time students get awards? Cat;! awards be used only at private colleges, pubtlc .colleges, ~. both? Can grants be used at out-of-state colleges? When if:: the application deadline? What are requirements? ::: (2) COLLEGE PROGRAMS: MANY HAVE their ow~· tinanc1al rud packages of grants. loans and jobs. Expensi~: colleges usually have more money than lower cos tones. -~· <3) Cooperation education: This complete edu~aUon~~ pla n includes career-related work as part ot tbe curnculu~; More than 1,000 colleges offer programs under wbich st~ dents alternate each se mester or quarter between fullllf1't'. :iludy and fulltime work. : ' For a fre-0 copy ot "Undergraduate Programs o«i:: Cooperative Education in the U.S. and Canada." write to Nntional Commission for Cooperative Education, 360 Hun ington Ave., Boston, Mass. 02115. (4) Loans by col----------, leg es: Some colleges of- fer !Ong·term Joans at low interest rates and with tolerable repay- ment schedules. though the amount of the loan Money's Worth m ay be much less than ·- from other sources. The loans can be short·t.erm. l.oo, or can take the form of postponed or deferred wltlOA. Interest rates generally compare favorably with rates charged bY. others; repayment after ttraduation may be geared to ioJ come. Check with college aid direct.ors. C5) OTHER LOAN SOURCES: STUDENTS who qualify • under none of these might try such loan sources as civic o~ rehgious organizations, credit unions, bank~. insurance companies and finance companies. Befor~ turnmg t.o a com· mercial lender where rates are usually highest, check loc~ civic !llld religious organizations. consult. high sc:h<><?l guidance counselors, community centers, churches and. similar sources. Before taking a loan, hnd out: . -What is the simple interest rate: how muc:b will be ~>aid back, principal plus interest? -What extra charges arc involved? -How long is the repayment period and "-'hat \s the monthly payment? When do payments begin? -Can the loan be terminated before the contract ex- pires? How much notice must be given? Are there penalties? -DOES THE LOAN CONTRACT contain a "balloon clause," under which a larger 9ayment is tacked on at the; end? -Does the contract include a clause providing for .. wage ru>s1gnmenls .. or "ganusblng." under whJch the lender can ask an employer to take a specified sum from monthly earnings and send it to the lender it lbe borrower defaults? Reject any contract that contains such a clause. -Are there any other rcslricUooson I.he loan? Market Zigs, Zags Dow Advances Agai~ NEW YORK (AP> -Stock prices advanceduneve-niy ln an erratic session tO<i:iy. ·l The Dow Jones average or 30 industrials. up more than 8 points at its mid·day peak, showed a5.20pofntgain tol18.$1. Advances maintained a 2·1 lead over losers among New York Stock Exchange· listed issues. Trading was active. Big Board volume reached 21.9 rnillionshares. Analysl.9 said additional buyers appeared to have ~n attracttld by the market's showing Wednesday, when the Dow made a stand at the 800 level and then jumped 11.87. points for lt.s sharpest gain ln more than she monlha. Brokers abo noted encouragement over resistance from some leading California banks t.o the~atesl increase In the primelendlng rate trom 7\l:z to7~ percent. D•8"lo11.nA re .. a~s Whai Si~la Did New °l'OrlllAPI Fl,,., DowoJ-1 AlittAQH STOCKS ClDef\ HIQll Low Clo~ CllO )() tnO 1114~ W,11 IOt,Al Ill •I .. ) 20 10 Tr11 20:! 91 :IOU9 101 Jli 104.:lt • 1.11 IS \l.11 109.01 110. 14 toe.st 10'9, 11 ..... •I SI 21t 44 211.49 V • '1 27•.lt• I S. '"°"' . . '............... 2,019,00U lrt n .................. .. 447,900 ~s11~~k ... ::::·.:::·:.:::::::·::· i.11!:~ NEW YORK !AP> ,,,..,.,. Touy •'I' '1S IOOt • ... 4S4 .. 419 . 110 ,.,, II I a ia ........ ACl\'lrtttd a1o.f•Y ~~ Oe<linecl UI "1 Un<l\Allo.<I ~! J 14 -----..... -----------1 l OIAI hl..U ..., ... ..... ,.,, fll4M • • Htw 1'11 -. 11 4$ AM•JC SAL&S AjlPf'Oll flMI tot-.! • • • • • • • • • • • • • Hft.000 =~o~i'UC:,.,-0:.iH·::::·:.:. ~O:~ llond s.tea .,.!If' 4tOO • •• • • • • • • • Jl,MO;GOO NEW YOflK lAPI• 5'>~, 4 lt.lft. Win •M Ml (IW>Qt Of Ille 1111 .. n m.d ~II .. Mtw York Sloct. Ill<,,._ · 1._ .. trMll~ nottlOl\elly •t ,,_. "'9fl SI. ClllC~ll .. . ..... ~~ tlrt • "t $<1M~ JUI..... a.II IJ .. -h <Mii Mole><•,. .. , SI .,\.ot -\') Oow Cll......... --'9"-+ \, ~etl'tlCo • "..... ~11;100 t)loo + "" NCR Corp,.,. .. • 17S.IOO 4'1-o • -, 8 e111 Stffl., ..... , tll..lOO & .... • "' Eut KOCUlll.,,... t ... ..lQO ~ _ ~ ,t.mTT ....... ,. 1.UAGO 141 -.... S .. O Rb ... .. .. • ,W.iOO "'~ ••••• ! tf'!M<O • ., ,, ., • Soi,<IOO ~ , ,. , • .1t~t<O Inc., ... ,. ... f1 • ._ us Sh•••......... •s:= 10t: • "' hllltf\f .. • • • • • • 1•~.tOCI 1 • "' -~Otl . .. . . .. .. JJ,JOO .. " ..... 8J 0 DAILY PILOT Th1msday. October 27, 19n ENTERTAINMENT I TELEVISION COASTWATCD: Tonight's Tl' Fare .. .. .. .# , . - I IH 'l<SIJ:\' • EVENING 5:00 9 G 8 (I) 9 NEWS 8 BONANZA G THEAVENGERS Steed It Invited to the Cll09lng down party of an R.A.F. camp wt\ere he waa stationed during the war. m MICKEY MOUSE CLUB .. WAJTTILL YOUR FATHER GETS HOME e SESAME STREU II> VILLA ALEGRE 5:30 m TOM ANO JERRY • AOAM-12 • FREEHAND SKETCHING 8:00 8 CBS NEWS 8 8 NEWS 9 EMERGENCY ONE1 "Involvement" D MOVIE **IA "Where It's At" (9169) David Jannen, Rosemary Forsyth, After resisting, an tvy League-er Jeams his father's night club bualnesa and becOmea a ruthlesa manager. (2 hrs.) GJ THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY When a European promoter tells Shltley that she Is no long- er a valuable pett or the group. the audience and her klda bring her out of retirement. e THE ROOKIES The man who Mtloulfy woond- ed Jiff Danko '8 not llable· to prosecution because he la suf- fering "°"' a brain tumor. 9 ZOOM D AS MAN BEHAVES III ABCNEW8 8:308 MOVIE ** "POwderkeg" (1970) Rod Tiiytor, Dennis Cole. lWo men attempt to reeeue a hijacked train and lta seventy-three p&IMllQ9l'S. (1ht.,30 min.) e THE 000 COUPlE "OoN YOCJr Mother Know You're Out. Rigoletto?" e ASWE8EEIT "IRD" lnterr11cial relalfonahlps, Including dating; "Anybody Can Stereotype Anybody" Dfa- torted Images. Cl!> QAOWINO YEARS (I) C88NEW8 al MERV GRIFflN 7:00 8 NBC NEW8 9 UARSCLUB 8 ABC NEWS • ILOVELUCY "Lucy Hat• To Leave" • ADAM-12 Officers Malloy and Reed beoome lnvotved with the c~ ne.e community when an undercover of11cer Is shot. • MACNEIL I LEHRER AEPOAT e EARTH, SEA ANO 8KY (() TOTEU THETRUTH 7:308 $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE e NEWLYWEOOAME 8 SNOW IN LOS ANGELES Thia program takee a unique lootc at the probtema faced by the Loa Angeles communl1y cauted by the traffic and UM Of the drug cocaine. • THE BRADY BUNCH When their dog tums up mlas- lng, the kid• take out an Worried Michael Learne d u ~ Olivia Walton is wor - ried when daughter Erin rejects a marriai-:e proposal and the young man joins the Army on The Waltons, tonight ul 8 on CB.5, Channel 2. advertisement In the paper. • LET'S MAKE A DEAL • 28TONtOHT Host Cljl Ware discusses the legal and ITIOfal rights of adop- teee, and wheth« or not they should be allowed to try and find their natural parents. ID NEWSCHECK Cl) IN SEARCH OF .•• "Witch Doctors" (1J MATCH GAME P.M. t:OO 8 (() THE WAL TONS Erin r&1eet1 the marriage pro- ~ of a childhood sweet- hewt prompting him to enlist In the Army, but discovers how much ahe really need• him wtlen M .. no longer around. 8 CHIPS . ''Baby Food'' Offlcers JCHl and Ponch rece against time to dis- cover the Whereabouts or an Infant endangered by contami- nated baby food. Their day la further complicated by a tnipped dog and a driver head· ed In Ute wrong dJrectlon on the f\'eewtry. e MOVIE **'n "BrWnstorm" (1965) Jeff Huniet, Anne Francis. A young man~ a acheme to klll hit k>wir'• htnband and plead lnunlty, thus rf9kJng only tem- ~ commlt"*'t. (2 hra.) 8 9 WELCOME BACK. KOTTER G JOKSfS W1LO • CAAOL BURNETT ANO Rat ings G uid e tMcMM -r.it<t «<0<d1"9 to loo• otlkt ~. MoYlts lot T\I •~ l...,..., .,., • '"tic.) • * • * -excellent • * * -Very Good •• -Good ,. ~.. -Fair • -Poor Preneiere Tonight 'Best Of Families' ' Ambitious But Dull By JAY SHARBUTI' LOS ANGELES CAP> -"The Best of Families," a much- publicized, eight-part series, pre- m1eres on pubUc TV tonight at 9 on KCET, Channel 28. The series covers the period 1880-1900 and is (TV REVIEW J -setin New York City. project. Suddenly it goes bust, and they'reoutohvork. FRIENDS Guests: David Hartman. Paula Kelty. II) MOVIE ***'~"The Adventures Of A Yoong Man" (1962) Richard Seymer, Olene Baker. A young man grows to maturily after leaving home In search of adventure. (2 hrs.) fD ONCE UPON A CLASSIC "Robin Hood" Mudge Joint Robin and his men aft81' his father is unjustly hanged. Robin becomes an avowed enemy of the Sheriff ot Nottingham. (Part 4 of 12) G) WOMANTIME AND CO. ·~30 a 9 WHA. rs HAPPENINGll •if I'm Elected" Dwayne Is cruShed When he thinks that his politician father, whom he Idol- izes. Is a lier and an e>ppot1unlat OI the WOl'$t sort. D CONCENTRATION GJ CROSS-WITS • FAWLTY TOWERS Guests and staff become contused by 88$il's state or nervous tension and a cue of mistaken Identity. (Part 4 of 6) Ii) AS WE SEE IT "Anatomy Of Riots" Origins of racl1lly·lnsplred fights. 8:008 Cl) HAWAII FJVE-0 When a former Honolulu cop's drunken blunder permits a sen- sational armored-truck robbery to euooaed, McGarrett doubles his efforts to find the fugitives who may try a repeat perf0<m- a.noa. D JAMES AT 15 (Premiere) "Friends.. James (tanoe Kerwin), In his looellnesa at a new achool In a new city. reaches oot to other new- comers (Susan Myers, David Hubbald, Lisa Pelikan) who are as tsolated as himself. ' 1J 9 BARNEY MILLER "Copy Cat" Detective Yemana's pnlOOCUpatlon with t~i.lon provides a etUcial break In soMng the M.O. or a felon plaguing the 12th Taped in that hamlet, it U!M!S t hree fictional families representing tbe upper, middle and lower classes to illustrate an e ra of profound change in America's technology, politics and SOC?iety. It was made by the Children's T el evisiqn Works hop, which says the project cost $6,150,000. Seems high, considering that 13 episodes of "Six Million Dollar The upper clas& is the Wheeler family. It also runs lnto fiscal woe -but only because the head oC the family disregards bis banker's advice to sell his stock in a railroad which now is in bankruptcy. Narrator · Man" would total about $S.3 million. BUT "FAMJUES ... whose cos- • Uy, meticulously researched COS· tumes and sets were created from scratch, isn't intended as • throwaway pop entertainment. It • aims at educating as well as en- • tertaining. Indeed, 14 advisers. mainly . historians, worked on it, as did a • full·time team or s ix r e- • searchers. And lhe noted actor · John Houseman was hired to host it, Lo explaJn each chapter's significance. All this care is mighty admira- ble. But honest to Pete, the first • half of tA>cUght's two-hour opener "struck me as so dt•dly dull it • seemed wise to skip Hour Two, lest that one cause the mortal sin .. of snoring in the screening room. LORING MANDEL, one of six writers doing various episodes of the series, wro~ the premiere, which wanders back and forth from family to family, introduc- ing them and getUng their crises underway. Our lower-cl us f olka are the devouUy Catholic Raltertys. The clan's head Md bis two grown sons are barely mutng enda meet as Jabofer• on .. buJldlna THE IN-BETWEEN set is represented by the Baldwlns and ambitious James Lathrop. He's a young engineer-architect who, like the Rafferty men, is thrown out of work by tbe collapse of the building project. He seeks help from his middle- class minister, Dr. Frederick Bald~in, who is plugged into New York's Protestant power structure. The reverend also has a comely daughter, a Vassar graduate. She catches Lathrop's eye in church, setting the stage for woo- ing and wedding. The show opens on a promising note -the opening of an Jrlsh saloon. IT ALSO BAS at equally im- portant aspects of New York life in 1880 -Tammany Hall power. lrtsh politics and the start of what men now call women's lib. It co\lld have proved rich h.ls· torlcal drama. But ~hat I saw or it mainly seemed a collection of sighs and furrowed brows. The lively wit of New York's Irish was /\ WOL. brooding ran rampant and the cast appeared an ensemble cure for insomnia. It may have been on atypical episode. Here's boplne any of the next seven one-hour chapters s hows signs or life . I 'd hate to see this well-intended variation on ''Upstaitlie Downstairs" go en· Urcly for rlaughl. Burt Lancaster will be the h ost for an upcoming t e levision doc ume ntary series called "The Unknown War." TU BE TOPPERS KCOP6)8:00 -"Ad- venturcs of a Young Man ... Richa rd Beyme r portrnys Ernest Hem- ing way·s young he r o who leaves ho me in search of adventure in this 1962movie. NBC 8 9:00 -.James at. 15. ThQ premiere episode of a new series ins pired by the recent TV movie with Lance Kerwin as a tc.-enager growing up in a new e n-• vlronmcnt. KCET@ 9:00 The Ae!\t of Familic.-s . Begin- ning a new dramatic <;eries focusing on three New York City families in tht> 1800~. <Review this pat:{c . > f' Precinct. 0 IRONSIDE An amateur witch causes the death of her apartment house manager and allows the police lo hold a mentally retarded playmate for the crime. CD MERV GRIFFIN fil9 BEST OF FAMILIES "Generations'· The llves or three New York City families: the Aaflertys (poor Irish Immigrants), the Baldwlns (a middle-class minister's family). and the Wheelers (wealthy and aristocratic) are greatly altered by the turbulent events of the 1800's . ~ THEAGEOF UNCERTAINTY "The Rise And Fall 01 Money" Galbraith explores the hlatory and functions of money and the llmllatlons of the monetary S}'Stem. 9:30 fJ II§) CARTER COUNTRY "Baker Buys A House" Chief Roy, disturbed by an epithet spray painted on his deputy's dOOf, drives the crew crazy In his determination to find the culprit. (Part 2 of 2) 10:00 8 Cl) BARNABY JONES J.R .• Investigating the murder of a street gang member. learns the In's and out's of the gang's operations and faces the reality of being eliminated for knowing too much. Cl ROSETTI ANO RYAN "Ma. Bluebeard" A widow (Eva Gabor) charged with murder when her fifth husband la hit by a truck wants -.. two young lawyers. aucoesaful and unmar- ried" to detend her. 80 HEWS 1J (!}) ABC NEWS CLOSEUP "Teenage Turn-On: Drinking And Drugs" Tom Jarrlel nar- ratea a look at the maaatve, but mostly lgno<ed, ptobtem of teenage alcohollam and drug abuse. Included are film dips of an encounter MSSion where young people strive to over- come their chemical dependen- cy. Cl) GET SMART '19 SOCCER MADE IN GERMANY 10:30 CD e NEWS 11:00 8 D IJ (I) 9 NEWS 8 HOLLYWOOD CONNECTION f) MOVIE **'h "Where It's At" (9169) David Januen. ~oaemary Forsyth. After resisting, an Ivy League-et' learns hla father's night club buatneaa and becomes a ruthleea manager. (2 hra.) G) FOREVER FERNWOOO Cathy gets some relatlvely new roommates; George and Mar- tha watch Perry Mason at the motel; Merle propositions a streetwalker; local polltlclans complain at>out changea. II) HONEYMOONERS fD MASTERPIECE THEATRE "Dlct<ens Ot London" Dlci<en• befriends Edgar Allan Poe as a result of his Interest In the art ot l'M$(nef'lam. ai) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT 11:30 8 (I) CBS LA TE MOVIE *•in "Visions Of Death" ( 1972) Monte Markham, Barba- ra Anderao.1. A clairvoyant warns a skeptical Denver Police Department that he haa had mental Images of someone planting exploalve devices In the city. (R) 0 TONIGHT Guest host: Burt Reynolds. 8 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE ''Love And The VIP Restaurant I Love And The Hitchhiker" IJ 9 POLICE STORY "Oangeroua Games" Under- cover cop Charlie Czonda (James Farentin~ sets out to trap the slippery Snaxe McKay (Fred Willlamson), head man In a prostitution, dope and extor- tion ring. Ellubeth Ashley and Janet Margolin also guest star. (R) GI NEWS Cl) GET SMART MORNING 12:00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE "The After Hours" CD MOVIE * * ~ "Footsteps In The Fog" ( 1955) Jean Stmmons, Stewa.rt Granger. A servant girl black- mails her employer Into making her his housekeeper. (2 hrs.) (I) MOVIE **'h "Island In The Sun" (1957) James Mason, Joan Fontaine. Raclal unrest results when a British West lndlaa leader falls In love with a white woman. (1hr.,30 min.) El OICKCAVETT 12:30 II MOVIE ***'A. "The Barbary Coast" (1935) Joel McCrea, Edward G. ~oblnson. The exctternent and savagery of San F~ In the late 1800'a la depicted. ( 1 hr., 55 min.) e CAPT10NED ABC NEWS 12:378 OJ THURSDAY NIGHT SPECIAL "It's A Fad, Fad, Fad World" Some or the orlglnatora and popul~s of IOCh venerable American pastimes as ftagpole sitting, hula hooping, marathon dancing and twisting -Chubby Checiler. Tiny Tim, June Havoc and Larry Hegman wtll appear tonight with host Richard Dawson.(R) 1:00 D TOMORROW A question and anawer ....ion with college newspaper edltora. I) ISPY "Court Ot The Lion" 1:308 NEWS m MOVIE * * ~ "The Lady Paya Off" ( 1952) Unda Darnell, Stephen McNally. In an attempt to Pll'/ ::'1 her gamt>Wng debts, a young teacher agrees to be a tutor tor the children ot a gambling caai- no owner. (2 hrs.) 2:0008 NEWS 8 MOVJES ** "KJll Or Be KU!ed" (1H6) Robert Mat1<, Elena Dewitt. A famou• gunman,~ aa a drunk, finds hlmMlf In the mid· die or a two-family feud. (2 tn.) ***"The Glenn Miiler •tory" (1954) James Stewart, June Allyson. The life of the f1m0ua big band leader I• depicted. (2 hrl,) • MOVIES **~ "Eight Iron Men" (1952) Bonar Cofleaflo, Lee Marvin. A· aquadron of aoldlera are trapped for aeventeen daya during a bombing bll~. (2 hra.) ***"Th• Howards Of Virgin- ia" (1940) C•ry Grant, Martha Soott. A. tiueband and hi• arla- tooratlc wife differ over the American Revolution when the huaband Joins th~ colonial forces. (2 hra.) 2!05 8 MOVIE *** "The fJ'tems" (1H2) Michael Callan, Cliff Aob«tton. Four young men, training at a large city l\Oapltal, struggle to cope with the problems faoed by all Interns. (1 hr., 40 min.) ~25. HEWS 2:30 e MOVIES **~ "Hou .. Of Fear" (1939) Wllllam Gargan, Irene Hervey. A New Y orlt theater houae la the ecene or a blzzare murder. (I hr., 25 min.) *** "Thia la My Affair" (1937) Barbera Stanwyck, Rob- ert Taylor. President McKINey or<*'a an agent to Infiltrate a q__ang ot bank robbers. (2 hra.) 3:30• HEWS 3:468 HOONTIME F riday's 1i Daytinre Mof?le• I MORNING 1:30 D MOVIE * * ''Winge Ot The Hawk" (1953) Van Heflin, Julie AdarM. A wlldc&ttlng mining eoglneer alrlk• It rich and becomea lf'lvotved with. bandit queen. (1 hr., 30 min.) 10:00 8 MOVIE *** .. Two For The Seeaaw'• (1962) Rob«1 Mhehum, Shirley ~.A~ women convtnc:lea her boyfriend to go bllck to his wife and ace.pt h4mMft .. he la. (2 hrs.) AFTEAHOON 12:00 e MOVIE *** "The Bugle Sounda" (1842) Wabce BMty, Mlrforfe Main. An dd cavailty officer thwart• a aabot-O-plot by outwitting aples. (2 hrs.. 20 min.) 2:00 G MOVIE *** ."One, Two, Three'' ' (1te1) J&rMS c.gn.y, Ar1ene ) Frand9. When Na boa' daugh- ter b9cotnel I~ wtth a JoMr, ., executive doubta hi• ch&nCM of edvancll'Mht. (2 hrs.) 3:00 di MOVIE *** "The Notoctoua l.andl.-6(' (1982) Kim Nowk, JKtc Lemmon. A government em~ Mta out to prov. hie !Mdlady Innocent of • mutdet c:hetge. (2 tn.) 3:30 8 MOVE **'n "Fun In Acapulco .. (1"3) EMa Pr-.y, Ur8Ula And...... A night club enter- tainer wonta ... Ille guerd dur-Jno tM day .S flnda_-a11plie rim.tor~ • She'll Take the Heat Jaclyn Sm ith 'Com/onable' as an Angel By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES CAP) -A lot. or hell goes with being an Angel, but on balance Jaclyn Smilh agrees lhat it's a good thing. ·'Whenever I feel like com- plaining, I thlrtk or all the girls would love to be doing what I'm doing',·· she comments. "Then I feel too guilty to complain." Jaclyn is part of the troika or "Charlie's Angels," who started out as herself, Kate Jackson and Farrah Fawcett-Majors and now comprise Smith, Jackson and Cheryl Ladd. THE~ OF the celebrated F -M seems not lo have dimmed the luster of the ABC crime series. It has remained in its snug position as one of the top five s hows in audience ratings. "Charlie's Angels" has struck the American Caney as have few television shows since "Laugh- In." Last year's sudden fame was a shocker to Jaclyn Smith, lhe Houston beauty whose pre- vious staning roles had been ln beauty commerctals. Fact is, she earned more from commercials than "Charlie's Angels" In her first season. ·'But that has changed with a renegotiation of my contract," she remarked. "J'M PLEASED with the way we are treated. We have nice pro- d ucer s (Spelling-Goldberg). They gav<> us these motor homes, which make it comfortable when we're working. They're willing to res hoot scenes if we don't think they're adequate. "The only thing that bothers me is the lack of sleep. If I don't get eight hours, I'm not at my best. Then 1 need to eat to keep up m y energy. "Even though there are thr~e girls in the show, we rarely get much time orf. The idea hns ulwnyR b<>en that we work together ." JACLYN WAS enjoying a tew rare momenta of relaxation In her motor home oul~ld •20th Cen- tury-Fox's Stoge 8, where she und Kale Jackson had spent tht- motnln$t climbln(( the catwalks .. ,. ."""""" HANDLING STARDOM Jec:tyn S mith for a "Charlie's Angels" se- quence. The current segment is a musical, the next one will require the stars to ride horses. Earlier this season they did skin diving ln llawaii. Other activltles: Ice s kating , belly dancing, motorcycling, working with elephants. "Thia show could be murder 1t you 're not in condition." said Jaclyn. EXPECl'ABLY, THE white heat ot tbe "Charlie's Angeles" publlcit,y has brouibt pains. "Most of it I can take." Jaclyn remarked. "But it hurts when it affects my family. When Kat.e, Undsay Wagner and I had a kid· napping threat, I called my mother and told her the police and the FBI had the situation un- der control and not to worry. She dJdn 't, until she started bearlng the story from her friends. Then ~e went a UUle cuckoo.·· Jaclyn herself has known un· pleasant momenta, as when un. known people tried to enter her hotel room ID Hawall at la~ hours. "THE SCANDAL maguines and the fan magazines are just awful," she added. '1Tbey make up stories that have absolutely no basis in fact; they seem to want. to print tho worst news possible. ''For Instance, one ol them re- ported that I said Cheryl was a heller actress than Farrah. 1 never said that. and lt certainly dldn 't help my relations with Farrah, who ls a friend.'' Mow Jong will Jaclyn continue with the Ange.ls? "l h~Uy don't know:• she re~lled. "'But I don't aee myself dotng it for flve years, which is whot mycontrllctcalls for." No Hijack Movies? LOS ANGELES (AP> -AP· parently no one Is rus hing forward with movie plans follow- ing the We.'1 German commando raid to free hljacked airline hostnges rui producers did after the Israeli uid on Entebbe. A s pot check of the throe networks and major motion pie· lure studios turned up no plans for a movie on the nld that freed 86 hostages held about the Lut· thonsa alrllner at Mogadu hi. ..somalia. , i Following th~ Entebbc raid ott July •. 19'16, et lent 1even mo1r- i o s w er e immediately an. nounced. Only three ever made It to the screen, however. Spokesmen tor ABC ant;t CBS said they were not planning :tny movles. NBC aired a movJc Mon. day wlth some almllarltles to the Luftham1a hljacklti1. "The Night They Stole Ml11 Beaulllul, .. a bout the hljackln1 of n planeload ot beauty contutant.s About 10 beauty contestants wett aboard the hUacked .Lufthllf'Sa plane. ~I ENTERTAINMENT I THEATER Thursday October 27, 19n Lll\tl '( PILOT B 11 f Two Theaters Woo I Saddleback Valley t i I t t • • • ' I • l I I f t I , ~ ' ' c , ~ ~ • • r Is there room for two community theater groups in the Saddleback Valley? Not so many years ago, there wasn't even room enough for one - and the Rancho Community Players folded their tents in 1970 after trying for three years to generate theatrical interest in the E1 Toro·Mlssion Viejo area. Then, two years ago, the Sad· dleback Valley Community Theater was born. After a tentative start with a year's lapse between its first two productions, this group appears t.o be nexing its artistic muscles. HOWEVER, THE Saddleback Valley troupe is, of necessity, follow· ing the same path once trod by the Rancho Players, that of producing plays in different locations for lack or a permanent home. Their first show was staged at El Toro High School, the rest since then at Mission Viejo High, and the next, ••Don't Drink the Water," is scheduled to open on Thanksgiving weekend at La Paz In· termediate School, also in Mission Viejo. ~ Enter now, from stage left, the Mis· sion Viejo Repertory Theater, which will bow in on Dec. 2 with the well· traveled comedy "Barefoot in the Park" (the third version or the Neil Simon comedy in Orange County this year) al El Toro High School. THE BALANCE of the repertory group's season, an evening or one-acts and a musical <as yet unselected) will be presented at Mission Viejo High School's little theater -which also is being used by the Saddleback Valley "Community Theater. Confusing? It may be if you live ln Mission Viejo or El Toro and are won- 'Best of Friend_, Intermission Tom Titus dering just. which theater group is which. Hopefully, there'll be audience enough for both, since the Saddleback Valley l)as grown considerably sioce the Rancho Players threw in tbe towel seven years ago. · .. SPEAKING OF THE Saddleback Valley Community Theater, that group has announced the cast for its second show of the season, Woody Al· Jen's ''Don't. Drink the Water.·· Joanne Applegett, a director with many credits from the San Clemente Community Theater , is staging the comedy set behind the Iron Curtain. Joe Cordio and Barbara Lentz head the cast as the American caterer and his wife. while Nancy Muttershead plays their daughter and David Sheeran will portray the am- bassador's bumbling son. The role of the refugee priest will be played by Benny Goodman Jno, not THE Benny Goodman>. AMONG THE supporting cast are Ellis Estes, Bob Howell. Julie Kuehnert. Robert Trublar, Karim Bakawi, Bob Davies, Dick Vara and Marge Wellman. Performances are scheduled for Fridays and Saturdays, Nov. 25-26 and Dec. 2-3, at 8 p.m .• Sunday, Nov. 'Z7, at 6:30 and Sunday, Dec. 4, at 2:30 at La Paz School in M ission Viejo. Further information and reservations may be obtained by calling 586-8342. In •(,curie' Pernell Roberts plays his first f c.·a tUl'l' rol e since 1969 in th1.• upcoming mov· ie, "Lassie, My Lassie•." 'Bair' Filin Set NEW YORK CAP> -"Hair," Broadway's first rock musical in the 1960s, is al last coming to the screen. Filming is now underway in New York. Milos Forman, who won an Academy Award for "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," is direct· ing and Twyla Tharp is creating the dances. U•ltld llpge fmlhll CIM1UtT21,......_ nwto2 OMH61 MAU. 0.-.,. 6J7.0l40 ,~w..-....,.....1at s ... ,. %·4+1-10,_ ""°°"" ,_,.,. IPGI "'''--·~· "'THI NQMT"" _,,.,. "'',.....~~- llltltlllelSt )t61111 1111 ,.,,,.,. .,H THI HALM OF THI SlttSIS" IXI "EMMA.HUIUl" IXI PKu.&. HAUOWWI NATNlil \o\~AY-ll:l• CINEMALAHD 1414't ~.rttl • lftMll m lial "OH, GOD" IPGJ -AY'-"4~1ttl• "'''-. l:>Wil ................ , CINEMALANO- .. .. ... ,. ,. Knight Play Suffers CIHIMA. WIST, 1 w ......... lt2A4tl • LA MtllAM • • WEWOOO t :: t I f: .. ,. • • • • • , • • • ,. .. r ~: .. .. • • .. .. .. • .. .. .. .. .. .. •. • • • -,. • • .. :; .... " '• '• .. /' ~. r • .. By WILLIAM GLOVER NEW YORK <AP> -For his Broadway debut, television's Ted Knight has gotten himself woefully ambushed in a doleful fantasy. "Some of My Best Friends." Knight, once the happy anchor man of the "Mary Tyler Moore Show," comes on strong and displays a fine stage presence during the silly and unconvincln~ events which premiered Tuesday night at the Longacre Theater. Sympathy for effort is also merited by several other partici· pants. THE AUTHOR, STANLEY Hart • bas concocted a yearn about a bard· driving business executive who goes--. off his rocker, then after shock therapy becomes a genial Id ler . Somewhere during the transition he learns to talk with plants and animals, thereby out-doing drama's earlier hero "Harvey" who could communicate only with a huge hare. Playwright Harl, h owever, I.A. Pf'WY (MANCHll'l" IX.I 1 Q,Q, "MWlal~f7 0 ... UCJ 'A QMl'UCltY .... MOVll Y .._.OOVI 1Ulr Ill A "SUSPtftlA0 (R) , V "HOUSI IY THI UU-1 I • ._..,Mcie 12;30 to 2:00 ia,M. • 1 lAT em CIHTll CtHIMASt ...... -.. SI.JI Open Daily I 2.30 pm has a leaden imagination. a wooden r~-~--= ... ~!-~-~,~--~~~:l sense of humor and unfocused .. u.CJM .... w••• ......... n. purpose. His ex-tycoon spends a large ... ,. -.. 11.2.io '-""'11.11 part of the play in chatter with a wolfhound who sounds U ke Arthur Treacher, and a tree which claims to bave been Millard Fillmore in a pre- vious incarnation but now has a Yid· dish accent. Gabin Reed and Lew Wallace are the victimized i m· penonators, respectively. or those as- SAD~l, ~ ~"a,c;~, ~~ &ZA signments . EVENTUAU.¥ A BABY Joins the dubious symposium, clutching wildly at fading memories of some other Ure It-s a job RaJph Williams probably won 'l list high on his Equity credits Director Harold Prince, a veteran of many happier Broadway events. seems as boggled as his cast by the script and never finds a way to lighten the tedium. "Some of My Best Friends" ends ·with Knight back in the workaday world, stripped of his mystic ability to talk with all nature. There's probably a moral there, if anyone is still awake. ' ... . . . . .. . . .. MWS -·"-" ... ,,~.....,.,ltll "Tr$A.UYr _,._,,._ ... ,~- , -.....M>tSTQ "'°9CT1 CAJILO" t 61 _..,,.__._._ ,,.~ .... 'l/Al.l..EY ', ................ .. •• -._ .......... t• , .... ., "OMI Ott OtW' Cf'GI -•H1:>0 .... ,~ .... .._,, A drtom '"''" ro di~ South Pacific "ESCAPE UNDER SAi l" \ ·. foa~AROS LIDO THEATRE -Oct. u to Nov. 1 AILY 3459 Via Udo. Newport Beach SUNOA y 7 • • ............. ,... ...... .., ..... .__ 1-3-S.7-t C:'ntan •nd drlwlonln ••• _,,...,...the beat ,,,.,,,._,,. .afloll In tawnl YOU HAVE SEEN GREAT ADVENTURES. YOU ARE ABOUT TO UVE ONE. r; .. ~:lr4Jft~tJ:J;. ~..-!I~ , PG ra11-.11 w.i•1 illl£41111 u ' ~· v.m1w.01COutHwy1J1M1cArthur OAILVAT 5:31M:00.10:15 SAT &SUNAT ':oo-3:1 S.5:30-. .-....... .. • l'llW'°llT MACH • t44·0tt0 11 , l:OC>-10:15 WAlll_... NllONH l'fllCt f 1.60 MC*DAYllWlllATUllDAY ........ ~ l:tlO•UO LA MIAAOA t OlllY &UNDA'l'S & ~YI,,._. .. 2::00 el09el.,... • ~ DCHVU ONOOO<Nt "'"' CM.IMH" U.U. Y fNt ... , MiWU I FSNTI tMI NAICID .... lit NII ,. uousm CW> • .-.ocT "°' MACAl1MU& (Mt PlW llllMAY"9. MM,._..... WCINT DAMNA110N AUIY (NI '"" ClONUC'Ol MOIOf~ °" OOOl(POl IM.US OUMIAU WLY~ "tt•s true. People have trouble re member•ng My Words. Moses had such a bad memory I had to gtve tum tablets." ~!~ "\}\\., {pG) 1' ...---- "DAMNATION ALLEY" CPG) "LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR" (A) "SMOKEY ANO THE BANDIT'• "THE STING" CPG) ''THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" ,"THE DEEP" (PG} "YOU LIGHT UP M Y LI FE" "FUNNY LADY" CPG} "ONE ON ONE" (PG} "BITE THE BLILLIT' "SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" • .. THE STING" (PG) "YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE" "SHAMPOO" (A) "KENTUCKY FRIED MOVIE" (Rl "Tl)~NE~ VISION" "THE GROOVE TUBE" .. FLA~H GORDON" (A) "DAMNATION ALLEY" . "3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR" <R> "ROLLING (R) THUNDER''. Plu• "NAKED AIDER" ,--.,.--,..:..,,,== ...... "CAR HOPS" Plus BRUCEl.!E '" "ENTER THE DRAGON"(R) ~Ul"'IS'Tt Of' '"""" 1 1 I PJ2 DAIL V PILOT Thursday, October 21. 19n / . ' Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determi ned That Cigarette Smoking Is Dange rous to Your Health. r ,., ,. . ....... , .. it • . . -- . ' . , ... , , ... ' . ,. . .. ' . ' '' .. • • "::> ·~ ' ~\·. ·~ ... r., • , '• . ·. . .,. ., ' I .. .. ... \ , .. ,. t# ., '.. • • • • , I I \ o ~ o ,, I • ·, ; t 'Jiu , j t ' .J .. ; ' • • ... ' "' \ • ... -~'\ • • • • •• I t ,, .... ~ t ( ~ • ~ • • !l ,, . ' . ,,,,. , ,,' ~· I .. ... .. . ·,, .•. • l :s. .... ! .jJ ~ r . ·' ,, I ' Regular ana Menthol ~ . \ ' ~ .. ' . : .. , ·.. \ I ' l ~ • .. l . i i l 1 ' I ~ , t ' \ I; i f I • ,. I I I ~ ' .. . I ' I ,, J \ 1 l j ~ 11 ~"ta(.' 0.8 mg nicotine ft. pertlpret!e: by FTC matflod. • , ·~ i . Thursday, October 27, 1977 DAILY PILOT Cl HOW ABOUT -A LEASE? AS' LOW AS . 1 ~ +TAX .IMMEDIATE DELIVERY EXAMPLE ·capitalized cost $7066 00, maximum llab1hty at end of lease $4096.00. $131 .96 per month 10< 36 months plus $7.91 used tax per month. $485.83 maximum needed tor delivery on approved credit. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST SELECTION OF TRANS-AM'S 197.7 CLOSEOUT s 1599oo DISCOUNT Ser. #2037K7X146840 1977 CLOSEOUT saaooo DISCOUNT I Ser. 1f2M27C72347629 BRAND NEW 1977 BONNEVILLE BROUGHAM BRAND NEW 1977 SUNBIRD. Suggested retail once S 781 6 so· Discount s 1589 SALE PRICE S6227 80 Suggested retail once S57 18 38• Discount S880. Sale Pnce $4838.38. . SPECIAL DELI ERY 1976 lE MANS 2 DOORS· 4 DOORS & -~ !l\ --. t ~----. ,. 'I" I' . I! ~--"' -S«. ll2D37P6P128251 EXAMPLE . LOADED WITH EQUl.PMENT • Automatic Transmission • Power Steering • Radial WSW Tires • Factory Air Conditioning • Front Disc Brakes • AM Radio These lewllfwl UHd Ccrs Were Sold Mew ly 0.. Dealership A GREAT -BUY •suggested Retail Prioe May Include Dealers Installed Acoess09es If Any $ 00 . \ -OR- 5495 DOWN s910~ • • PER MO. , Selling Price $3495. Sales tax S209.70 & s3.00 license transfer. S495 total down. S91 .03 per month !Of 48 months APR 15.99% Deferred Payment Price 1486<t.44 on approved credit. 25 TO CHOOSE FROM IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • All c ... S. 0. .,,....M Cndlt All c ....... Tu & Uc"'M All c ... w.tect .. Prior w. Print G..t ti Od. JO, 1977 OPEN DAILY - 9 A.M. TO I 0 P.M. · WE LEASE .ALL : MAKES AND MODELS t . .. ft DAILY PILOT ThurSday. OclObe< 27, 1977 MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson BOOMER . r • ' I • i . "Yep! If you lose something, this is the place to find it!" FUNKY WINKERBEAN l:l a 0 ~ ~ ~ ~ .....--.. ;:::::::=; . ' '" • HE<,) I WOO ARE • .. ~ 0 -=r 1 ! ~uv'eii!eo vov~ COMPL.1M£,.Jf5 "ID 1H6 C.HtF', ''R , ~NO H! WA~ EC'~IAT1C! Ml(. 6C1MM1? we AG~ee WtTM YOVl Ailour 1HE~E ~ING 100 MANY CLUI'~ IN Tl-4/$ '°"'°°'-... by Tom Batiuk 0 w 0 0 0 ------~ ,.--~ ~ ~ t J I ,. . ' ,, /lf'vl z I' 'TV". I :!I . a 'I'M EDDIE FRoM Bl& ' 11HINK 11'5 TIME 1 <OET rN..) (.OIVl81NATION CHANGED ! ~ .'! WAL.NUT 1ECH ! I'M A FRIEND OF ruJKc.;'5 ! CASEY '-'MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX .. DENNIS THE MENACE ....... . #1FlWASRUNNIN1 M~,l'O~~ 'THIS PAAr AA' PUT IN A 1Uf /JIPMTM!NT/' k.... . .., .......... -·-- GORDO ... by Charles Rodrigues by Ferd and Tom Johnson I WAS SAY/~~ I CE~AINLY Do l'PJOMtSE -rt>, IF ANC> WH~N ! - JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS NANCY COME ON, SHERIF~ - by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson IHEf"EF~E I IN Of(OEi -ro 00 ~METHING ASO(AT IT, we·~~ f1:)~MING i'HE" ,..KeL.L.'V ~HlXJt.. ~OClfTY 1'o f:L.JM INA1E Cl.US$ .. '.~ DOOLEY'S WORLD WAArs wrrn 1~1s STUPID MIR~OR , ANYWAY ? DR.SMOCK COMICS I CROSSWORD PEANUTS 'rnAT~ "THE Mosr. by Charles M. SCbulz IF ~OV WATCH LONG ENOV6M SOMETIME5 '{OU'LL SEE AN OWL POKE HIS HEAD OUT ... OR EVEN ~E OTMtR STRANGE C~EATVRE RIDICULOUS WING I tVf EVER Hf.ARD! J J i I i J by George Lemont YOU CAN KINDA TeC...t.. VVHeN YOUR RE:Pt.JTATION AS A POCi"OR IS St..IPPING ... WHE:N eveRY F'HARMACeu-r1cAt.. SAM.Pt-ES YOU GESi", ARR1ves c .o.c::>. ! ()•411 ......,, ...... .,...... ... .. .. by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux YOU WALK eACK TO THE l5AA. PAY FOP. YOIJR ~NK, GIVE WAU.Y A FIVE OUCK TIP ... AND GET LOST! by Tom K. Ryan by Ernie Bushmlller OH, ME --·WHY 00 --WHEN t KNOW I WASTE MY TME GOOO GUY ENERGY LIKE THIS ALWAYS WINS -1 c·~nu"" .. ,_,.,.. ...... &. ' ' . , . TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PVIZLI ACROSS 52 Riga citizen 54 Aromauc 1 Not current plant 5 Propelled a 55 Tree e>unl 59 Smalleat 10 Not •Indy number 14 Auto patt 63 .. 15 ,._ 1 ... onty: .... nee Sleng 16 Medley 64 Europa I 7 C111s dOubt capital: 2 UNITED F .. ture Syndicate '#telt1fedl(•P11aleloMll: on woroa 19 l<lftd of 68 Great lakH ~Hf"!"" drunk: oort ~rf:ffltr 20 ~ngotlon 1 87 S19n11ur1 21 P::"11t1: a ~:;-nta: Sano 68 Breach In 23 Brought to rtl1Uons maturity 89 Bring 25 ltl·nalUfed together person. 70 .. 0 1 Sleng course I'' 28 Accommodallng si.ng OtOPlt 71 L 11 30 Mttalwor11tfl e tra 34 Featl\9r11ke object 35ltlt t n 37 Cerlllon 38 Continent: Abbr. 39 Ptacllcat peraon 42Clnema name 43 Ttllgrau 46 Liquid atdlment 48 Balenee theetiltm 48 SI. rrancls Of·- 50Curtlllt DOWN 1 p~· 2 Act of going out 3Llkewlee 4 Spe1k formally 5 N.C. rlvtr: 2 worda 6Army tnnoh: Abbr. 7 Sal'ik In the ground 8 Prohibit 9Atg1td1 with dltdaln 10Eng. P'llMOH p«>mlse Ntwtpeper I I Came to VIP ,.,, 41 Ot11'9d QOll 12 Vt rtt unit 44 bpendtd 13 S.Cur• 47lloy'a111,,,. 18 Ship outfit· 49 Son ot i.r Noah: Var. 22 Slippery··· 61 Stupid 24 Sorrowtul 63 Vltreoua 26 Enttrlalnmtnt mlntral lorm comPouftd 27 Mualc lorm fi5 A lot: lntor- 28 Begulles mat 29 Auctions 59 Old tlmea 31 Pltylully 67 Wll'ld mock 68 Utter 32 Port 90 Flobt. • ••• · 33 Narrow Nottd Vlrgf. wooden ni.n 1trip1 91 Geometric 38 Elll>f•Hlona ratro ot rellet 92 Mall.ta lace •o -· -es Alt Trar. chief: COnt. ' , . . H ll •l. 41 I I ( ~ . l PEOPLE I LOCAL /NATION ~1ly Pl ... ~I.it f'Mle 17TH CENTURY BOOK AT MESA COLLEGE It's 345 Years Old, Worth Only $100 345 Years Old 'Bloody Mary' Book At College in Mesa Long ago, in not so merry old England, John Fox witnessed the deaths or hundreds or Protestants in the wars or religion during ''bloody" Queen Mary's reign. ~e v.rote a three·i,;olume "Hlstories or Foreign Martyrs, .. .,.. hi ch was illustrated and printed in Old Enghsh Text type in 1632 SOME ~5 YEARS LATER. one volume or this senes found its way to th~ library at S~uthern California College in Costa Mesa. rt was the gift or Joseph Higgins of San Diego, a pastor and father or an sec student. On examining l~e time·worn volume, an heirloom in Higgins· family, coU~ge administrators decided it might be of great value. Head li~ranan Ken Tracy had it appraised, but the results were dis· appointing. Because oC its condition -spineless. with yellow and brittle pages -the volume was valued at only SlOO. ''IT'S ~RETfV FAR GONE," Tracy said, adding, "There are lots of Fox s books of martyrs around." However, college s pokes man Dennis Green said the book will be kept in the library's vault and put on display from tame to time Alth~gh it ~ay not be of much commercial value. the book still reveals interesting charactenstics or its age. ln the old-style type, lo~er·c~e S's are written as F·s. Also, the book 's torn leather cov· enng st1ll shows the imprint or metal clasps that once held it l>hut Ta.r Ov erride Voters to Decide On SC ParaDledics Funding and eqwpment to transform San Clemente firemen into paramedics ace being solicited by a citizens' support group, although voters have yet to decide the question of paramedics for the city. San Clemente voters will be asked to approve a tax override March 7 to finance city paramedics. IC the ballot measure passes. ·san Clemente will be the last city in Orange County to have parampiics. "I FEEL WE are being taxed to death, with very lilUe to show , for it," said Joseph "Jay" Durkin, who heads the jroup. "But I don 't object to paying for paramedics, because I'll be get· ting · something for my tax dollars." Currrently, San Clemente firemen respond to emergency calls and. when necessary, transport injured or ill patienLci to area hospitals by city am bulancc. ALL SAN CLEMENTE firemen are trained as emergen· cy medical technicians, but they cannot administer drugs, use a cardiac defibrillator or carry out other res c u e operations performed by paramedics. The paramedic support com· miltee was organized in May to raise money to campaign for paramedic service in San Clemente and to give firemen a head start on funding and equlp- m en t H the Ma r ch ballot measure is approved. San Clemente Major Back From Turkey ~ Marine Reserve Maj. Don Jeisy of San Clemente Is hack from Cigli, Turkey, where he participated in Op<·ration Dis· play Determination. a multa- nntlon, NATO.force exercise. Jelsy, a 1957 ~raduate or Arizona State University. is tht• executive officer for Marine Arr Support Squadron·4, and attends monthly drills al Marine Corps Air Statlon. El Toro. In his civilian occuµat1on, he 1s vice.principal at Oona llllls H111h School in Dana Point The committee meets the second Monday of the month at Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Association. 601 N. El Camino Real. Additional in· formation is available by calling Durkin, at 498-3660 or 492·9937. Fiesta Association Meets in San Juan San Juan Capistrano's Fiesta Assoc iation will h ol d a Halloween gene ral meeting Saturday at 7· p.m . in the Whistle Stop, 31952 Del Obispo in San Juan. The gathering will beg in with a no-host cocktail hour with hors d'oeuvres followed by a meeting at 8 p.rn. Members, guests and potential members are invited. For further information, phone 493·1137. . Tnursaay. October 27, 1977 DAIL v PILOT C3 S e arch For Mo1n 2nd and 17 Balance Goverrwr Job Of Trade Waning NEWDUHY, Vl. <AP) -J ean. Ellen Caecavaro had two months of activities written into her personal calendar when she plunged into a crowd at the an· nu al Vermont summer festival last July to round up her five children. She never r eturned. The children found their way alone to their father. James, who takes care of three of them while lhe other two slay with friends. THEORIES ON WHAT hap· pencd to Mrs. Caccavaro vary, but each day her family and frit•nds grow less hopeful they will ever see her again. Cact'avaro believes his wife s uffe red a breakdown : her mothe r rears she is dead: her friends say she m ay have just de- cided to leave. The slim 31-year·old brunette disappeared at the Cracker Bar· rel Bazaar on July 29. The three months since have been "a. nightmare," says Cat:cavaro, once a cheerful Vermont logget,, now nervous and unemployed. I He has moved from the home in1 Newbury to his mother's house in I -Newton, Mass .. where r elatives· Has Rewar~ f'rom AP Dispatches Being governor is worth 33 yards at ~ollege football games, says former Washington Gov. Dan E\1ans. "~used to sit on the 5-0·Yard line at University of Was hington football games," he s aid in an in· terview. "Now l sit on the 17." Ev~ns. tht'. s tate's Republic governor for 12 years, IS president or Evergreen State College. ~vans, who did not seek re.election, was succeeded in January by Dtxy Lee Ray, a Democrat. * U.S. Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumen· th al says he "learned not to clear my throat" lest It affectthedollar. "As soon as the U.S. secretary clears his throat the dollar catches a cold," Blumenthal told a group of American businessmen in Kuwait. A recent stalemenl attribut- ed t o Blumenthal added to un· certainty about the dollar on in· tcrnational currency exchanges. "Commenting on the dollar is a tricky business," the secretary conceded to busi· nessm en. • Michigan State University President CUiton Wharton has help him with the children. been asked to serve as president of the State University of New York, the nation's largest un· · iversitysystem. "I CAN'T DESCR IBE this hell, .. he says of the disap· pe<1rancc. "I've s pent $50 having pictures of her printed. I've walked Into hos pitals and talked to doctors about what could be wrong, und I'\'e been back and forth from the police to the newspapers trying to find her." Wharton, 51, said at a news conference in East Lans ing, Mich., that he will accept the appoint· ment, despite the fact that it means a cut in pay from $65,000 to$56,650. ·'The e xcitement and challenge of heading the hjgher education system of the nation's second largest state makes the offer ... much too attractive to resist," he said. • During President Carter's WHARTON flight from Denver to Los Angeles. aides canvassed reporters aboard Air Force One for jokes or one·hners the President might consider using in addressing an evening fund.raising dinner for the Democratic National Committee. One suggestion was adopted. Courtesy of a THE MAN. WHOSE identity newsman, Carter was able to tell his audience about efforts lo involve brother Biily in the affairs or gov. has not been disclosed. dropped ernment. <Related photo. M ). Police traced Mrs. Caccavaro to Monroe, N.H., where they say s he attended a stFeet fair two days after the Newbury bazaar and spent the night in a cabin loaned to her by a man who picked her up hitchiking. Ver· monl State Police say the man went back to the cabin lhe next day. and Mrs. Caccavaro asked him to take her to Maine. her off at the intersection of "I had il all ar· routes 12 and· 116 near Eastern ( J ranged," the President Township, N.H., Police say. She PEOPLE reported. "I was going t<f carried no idenlification and no reorganize and put the money. ---------C IA and the FBJ That ·s where the trail ends together. Bu( Billy said State Poltcc Cpl. Cli nt Gray h I · h d says New llampshire and Maint! e wou dn l ca up uny agency that he couldn't spell .. police arc cooper ating in the search. but all leads have been cxhausled. Wherever she 1s. Caccavaro says, he's sure ''she's working with her hands. She can't keep her hands still. She's either knit· ting. working with animals or washing dishes, something like thal." HE SAYS llISwife "loves the ocean, riding horses and dancing. ·'She was married at 17 and had five kids by the time she was 22, but she took it like an old veteran. Shew as a family girl -her fa mi· ly always came first. ll took an awful lot to make her go.·' He admits there were pro· blems, mostly involving money, in the couple's 15 years of mar. riage, "but we had good limes. loo." Screening Program Set A. physical fitness screening program for heart and blood vessels will be offered Nov. 6 by the Laguna Niguel Jaycees and the Capistrano Hills Sevenlh·day Adventist Church. , The two-hour physical lest will be adminstered at Dana Hills High School from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m . The t ests will be ad· minis tered by a Loma Linda Uni vcrsity team of physicians. For further information or re· scrv a lions, phone 493·3686. .. After nine years as a San Diego Padres an· nouncer on television and radio, Bob Cbaadler will be replaced as color man on the broadcasts, the baseball club reports. A former second baseman with the New York Yankees, J erry Coleman, is expected to r emain as an announcer with the Padres Geolf Witcher, host of a Los Angeles Dodgers' pre-game radio talk show, is among those men· tioned for Chandler's job next year. * More than $17.000 in overdue docking fees have been paid by the new owner of the SS Catalina, ac· cording to Los Angeles Harbor Department of· ficials. The department's cashier's omce said a $17,498 check was received on the outstand.lng $17,974 in fees from Beverly Hills real estate salesman Hymie Singer, the new owner. Singer purchased "the Great White Steamer" for $70,000 at an auction last February as a Valen· tine's Day gift for his wlf e. .. NadHhda Pavlova, the fastest·rising young ballerina oC the Bolshoi Theater, added a new role to her repertoire, dancing the lead In Tchaikovsky's "Sl eeping Beauty." Pavlova, 21, burst onto the theatrical scene four years ago from the small Urals city or Perm to win the prestigious Bolshoi competition. Since then she has danced the leads in "Giselle.·• "Nutcracker" and "Spartacus " tn which she premiered Just last season. ' • Rep. Uonel Van Deerlln <D·Calif.) threatened lo take legal action against a Washington state. based gun lobby he contends deliberately mis· represented his stand on gun control. Van Deerlin, of Chula Vista, said the Citizens Commiltei! for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms distributed a fundraising letter nationally with the legend "From Congressman Van Deerlin" showing through a cellophane window on the envelope. The mailing falsely indicates he opposes gun control, said Van Deerlln. He said his position on gun control is "diametrically opposed" to that of the citizens committee. • Metropolitan Theodosius, 44, Archbishop of New York and Metropolitan of All·America and Canada. has been elected t.he ruling primate of the Orthodox Church In America. He was elected at the fifth All·American Coun· cil or the church in Montreal. Metropolitan Theodosius is the first bishop born in North America lo head the million·member church. The Orthodox Church In America became independent from the Russian Orthodox Church in 1970. .. Pepper Tamika. Root, given little chance for ~urvival when she was born 4v.i months premature, ·~ 18 months old today. Doctors suy 11he 's doing just fine . "I feel we have been blesse<i so much," said Serita Root of Columbus. Ohio, mother of the half. term baby who weighed 1 pound, s ix r.: when she w:-is born April 27, 1976. "I fed that if it hadn't happened t t way, we wouldn't appreciate her like this. I just look at her cv~ry day and thank the Lord tor what he gave us." Improves WASHINGTON CAP> -The U.S. balance-of. trade picture improved in September when the United States sold more goods abroad than in any month in histqry. the ........ ...__.___. _____ _ Commerce Department -·-----------said today. The U.S . trade balance still showed a deficit·for the month, but the deficit of SI. 7 billion was a sharp drop from the $2.7 biJJion deficit for August ; ( I NSHORT J ~VBUC NOTICE ~IC11TIOUS aUJINUS HAM•nAT&MINT Tll• foltowlne per.an II OOlf'9 "'9 .. IMIUH: !>PA OF HAWAII, 11434"1 ~II OlvO., Hunllft9lon llte<h,CA91647 1Cyu119 HOf>9. 1tJJGl,...-woodCJr., full•1'10f'.CA~ 11\IS l>V-\lfteU IS COftO..Cted by • ~Mr•l tNr\nef'Slllp. ~Hong Tllll ... ,_, WH filed Wltll I ... Co..n ly Clwk ol Or 1n98 '®Illy Oft OU. and the smallest since a 11• "11• ,.,,51 Sl.2 billion deficit in Pu11111i..csor~co;utDa11yP1101. May. 0c1.zo,21,Hov.~10.1m For the year. the Unit· ed States has bought ---------- Sl9 .2 billion more in PUBUCNOTICE foreign goods than it has -·--,.-cn-TI_ou_s_a_u_si_N_l!_U __ sold abroad. The deficit HAMCITATSMU fT could reach a record $30 Tll• tollowmo puson 11 do11111 b.11. buslneteu: l ion for the year, ad· Ml!MORIES IN MOTION, ''°' ministration officials Y11•to.. •• eos .. Mew.c.111om1d20' h 'd Wllllem J-~ 1901 L-1 ave sa.i • or.,cost1Mesa.ea111om1•t2'2' TPtls lllNness Is condllei.d by ._. lnOlvlduel. Wllllll!YI J-s S<Olt Tiiis , .. t_ was filed wltll ti. CoUflty Cltrll Of 0t•ll9* c-ity CM O<totlef 11, ""· AHl1' PllblllNd Or ... Cots! 0•11• Piiot, 0<1.1:uo.11,en0Nov.>, ,,,, '41.s-77 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE Du ring orf.duty hour~ In Turkey, the 39.ycar·old orricer toured ruins at Ephesu&. Turkey. and shopped in lzrnar -MARINE OFFICER TOURS RUINS OF EPHESUS Mej. Don Jelay In Turkey for NATO ExerclH Blonde·ba.ired, blue·eyed Pepper welahs 16~ paunds and aJthough she Is sflll lC?Ss than 30 Inches lull, she is beginnJng to walk and her pediatrician considers her growth and development normal. r f .. 1'4 DAILY PILOT PVBUC NOTICE \iiermtiUS IUllNW • tllAMll nat•M•NT Tr.e ro11-1nv --•t• aotllO tMitlMU ti l f'AOFEHIOH"I.. IEMIHAAS 110111 Kiin• Drive. S•nl• An•' c..t ....... ~101 • WllllM!I S. H11111tr, 20111 l(llM ~1w,s.nt1AN,Clllf0tnt••7701 Ml(hdl H, Veu, 101 o,.,.,. Blouom., tr.,,.ne, C.lll0tnl• tit 1• "nll.s bv>INu It <onoucua 111' I Ollllltal saMIMtw.tp. WllllMn $. """''" Tll" ..-...,. WM tlltd •ltll Ille C_,.1' Oefll OI Or ..... County°" Oci. 7.ltn ....... P~ Or.t119t C-1 Olllr PllOI., ~. lltl0,11,endNov,J. 1917 Thur1~1(. October 27. 19n PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITt~S I USINESS NAMl$TATIMENT l1W~r-t-•••CM111tbW• ,,."'" ST.\" (OMPANY, n J l.•ouft• Ctnl'O"R-.~8Hcn.C•'l?UI Jolln Huol> Wlfl>lllO, ,...., Ptuton Or,, L-N'°'4#, CA tlt1' 0.•¥1, Ectw.nl, ~9'· 111 11•011 ~IW. ~ ho(lt. tA f'UU &rue. H. 1..ron. ltd IMMd• Awe., lu A~ GA 4007$ C,.iQSl-Hwl:stl, '1910 Lup111 Plt<t. So<llll i...o...... CA tl•ll T111> b, .. ,,...n 1> co•><hKltd t>v • 9tnt•.i 1Nr-Jlllp. -Wint/Ill) Tlll.s Ulc.ntftt 111.s 111«1 wllll 1111 County Cleo. ol 0r-. Count¥ 011 Oct. •• 1911 ,.,... Pwblllhtd Or~ C.0.•I O•llY Pjlot, Oct.•, U,10,U, 1•11 021·1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Cl'·.$Mt NOTICfi TOC•EDITo•s SU,.IEIUOlt COUllf tw THt: STATEOf'CAUl'OllHIA 'OR THIE COUNfYOl'Oll<llllGE _....., . E•l•le ol KERMI f LVROY RHONE all.e KERMITL. llHONI!, Clec••....S. NOflCE IS HERl!8Y Gt VEN 10 tr. crtoltor101111t.iioven.m.o 0ececi.n1 tNI all Ptf!IOM r..vtnoi C161ms IQllnS1 Ille Miid OK-Mt ._irea 10 lilt tr.m. WIVI tlle -..Swt'f -~ I" trw Olllce d tN <le<ll OI tt1e Mow - tltlecl C~CW 10....-1 lrleft\ wlt1\- 11KeU1ry-.., toh....,...o t lCIO llOSSL. EOOEU... JA.Att-r et Low, IDU Euclld St'"" o..- Orovt. CA. 9lM3, ~ Ii Ille piece OI bullneu OI U. -~In •II inti· tit<> ~rltlllll!Q IO Ille H ltte of MtlO de• cedeftl, WllN" f-~ 611¥ Int llrit 1>110llUllon ot tNl notl<t. 0•1.o Oc'-t•. 1•11 MYRAl.AHOt4E Adrnllllllrt1tlllof tN EtUte Ollllt-~dt<-. llOH I.. 1.0CKLL., J •• Atttr,..y .. y,. U:MS I llCIN SO.. G ...... G.-,Ql ...... ta.q Tet: auu ... 11•1 An-ytw~,lr .. r1JI PllOll~ 0r.,. <->! Oolly Pllo1. Ocl. l1.~.3, I0.11, 1'11 ~ .. ,, PVBUC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICt! IN THl ,UP[Al()ll COU llf Oft t"i J'ATI! OiO'CALIP'OllNIA ,0,_ '".'°""''0'011~0• N0.ADIUl1 CITA,.ION ICC.lU,1t111•>1 In thr ~""' OI AOOOl >On Ptlluon of ROtil;Rf HENRY llOCHHIO, .... ,. lnQ P0"'1t. 'fttE Pt:OPLE OF THE $TATE OF CAl.ll'ORNIA 10: 8ENOUY.,..,AM 8v °'°" ol 1111• Cou•I ¥OU ue llettO• d ttd lo-er tlflOrf lfot 1-0f'••IO. 11\t Ill~,, ....... •b<>vt "°"'' 0.. F<IOIV, O.C-t 40. lt/1, •I f ;OO • m., I'*"""" \tlitt• to show c~.-. U lflY •°"' tl•vt, wny lllt ci-1H10ft ot ROBERT HENRY ROCHHIO lo< Ille •dOotion or BRIT 1(£LLE ... OVYN· DAM, Vo4Jtf mlnor<N"9l'lltr. '"°"Id not ,,. O' .nl.U. OA TEO: OCIGl>ef' ). "11 Wl"'-€.St-, Clef1L 8y: RQ0e'11ne HH 1¥, Oet>u!YC!e•lo. CAl'aETZ t.JOICl>Oft&l.O Anw•n•t.w IHJJ_A,..._.._., ... 111lttUS l"'IM,C..ll~'t11S hl:OWl ~D Att~twPMlllMw Plltlll"'" Or.._ C..ul O.lly Piiot, 0c1-.t., 11,20,21, 1tH 4331-n PUBLIC NOTICE HOTIC& TOCltllDltOR5 SUPIRIQai COUllTO .. THI STiil i OF CAL.,OttNlll •Ott THECOVNTYOF~ANOI ..... -E U•le OI Oll4<£ L. SMlllt, •U C.RACE LORRAIN( S Mll H, 0.< .. Md. NOTICE I!. HEREBY OIVCN le IN vt<1110t• OI Int .00~• ,..n,.o Oo<odtnl 111•1 •II pet..,..., "-"'"O ''-'"'' ... lllll IM wld OtOO.flt Me hqulr'9cll lo fllt l11t1n, .. 11111he nie<e•-v ~ 111 11\t Olll<t OI IN t letli or IM .ollow .,,. 1111..S <ou•l,cw-10 _...,, llltm. """ 11\t 11t<t•-, ¥tucl'let\, \loU.-\lgNl<I •1 lllolaftluol OOHAlOJ. nEllN, Al· '°""'°1 .i Uw, -H, VIN lot., ~ltt •in, HollvWOOd, C•lllor111. 90011, ""''<" I• .,,. PIK• al bu>lneo of~ """ oe .. 1onoc1 tn •II """.,' PWUlnlllf to IN n\.itlt 04 -Cle<-nl, wlllllft ,_ mon111utt .. 1ht tlr>I out>Hotlcwi 01 tlllJ llOllCt Otl.clOclO«lef 4. t07 GllAYCE M. SMITH E~t<lllrl•OI U..WlllOf '"'-~•<-flt. 00.ALOJ, UlllH 1-H. vi..-., S.W Utl Heltr-.tat .......... , .. , ..... ,. Att-y .... __... P\ol>ll""° OI'-C.0.sl 0•111 Piiot 0<•-·•·•~.10.u,1t11 4>4~n PUBLIC N011CE PVBUC NOTICE f1C'IH1CKIS I U51NIU NAMllTATIMINl ,..,. 10110..lnq -""'It Oolne l>u•I· ,...,,.,: t..JCC CV TIVE C.VSTO M C.OAGHE~ • ....0 El RtT, I t, 1'...,tel" ValltY, C.Att/OI J amO\ I(, '"°"'""°"• tt.JD "' k•¥, i:~. ~-t .. n Vallt'r,GAf2/(jl Tl\lt tl\IJI .. \) I• (-VCl91S by lft In• OlwlGutl. J•mftll..l'-1pWlfl 1111\ .... _, .... , 111 .. wit" ..... Co\iftly Clert. OI Or...,. C.0..•11¥ on Cott. II, It//. .,.ntt PuOllJ-0.-Gout o.11¥ Plltl. O<t. 20. 11. tlolt.3, 10. ~11 PUBIJC NOTICE "lcTITIOUI eUllNUS NAMaSTATUdNT TIM lol-lftgptf-Me#1"91Ktll• llHnt· LOOK 'N Q)(>IC, tzjO 0........ Cir· Cle, Htwpon IMOCll, GA~ Ot nltl W. Emory, nso Go10t11 Clr- <lt, NtWPtfl a.octi, GA92* P•lrl(k w. O'Neill, SU6 1 •• un1.- ~. YOfVUllllt.CA fnt1 l>llsllW\S ll c~ l>y °" 1 ... Cllwl.,.,11 o...i.i w, Emorv Tiiis iM-t wM fll«t wllll lM c-11Clttll .. Or ..... 411\°'~11, 1'17 NOnU IHYITIH HA.LIO...-~ 1e1011 l'O• TIMI COMST•UCTtC* ~ k~OO. 011'°°5.t.LA• IA T•Mf'OllAAY el •M IRVIHIE llNt01W .. TIER 01$TlllCT UIVIHE., CAl.ll'OllHIA NOTICE 1$ HEREeV 01\IEN tMt tn. ...,.., of Dir.cw• ot uld Olft<I« tnvllK -111111 tkel .. -l)<e>-jltOlll' 1...,_I 1111> to ltle ...... OI 10'00 •·'"· °" .. _.... 10. 1m, 11 ""ottit. fll VTN GtMol~ 111<., H ....... Mio-, lw tvrftal\lng towlO OIVtkl all ,, ... ~llllM. <Nt.,, ..... -11fntf!f, ..-.~.,..,_.i. __ , to ~lf'll« s.HI -fw 9W Olittlec, ti wllkn ''"" wlO ,,........ wlll be -4 ttlCI -Moud •I 111t ol'lkt OI VTN COHSO\.IOATEO, IHC., t)Ot Caml)11t Ort..,, P.O .... C•ltSlt. lrlr!M. u. '27 ll. kid ~ wi1 c;Ol'ftorm to ...., Ille ,._, ..... '° .. ~"" --b torwHl-.. _...._•--lw ~Ot•11ct--lle~leCI !rt ""tKllfltY r .. trM tit ti.<tlll. C..-.. ti .. ""'1rat --u .,. °" .... -_., ...... """" '" '"' ... 1"-of .,. Oltlfl(t -In aw ettl<• of .,,.,. ~1-. IM~·-...... ....,_, ~ •"""" ... of • <ocrt of , .. St1Mer• 5-Klfk al'-'6 W l"Wlk W.tt\ C-1Nc11an,,,...., ....... ~ II -otfk:e OI lllN GoNollOM .. , ll'ICY Vt~~ ol Ai Pf\' ... l ....... C~k• ~yllllellVTHCOMotlelot• tl'IC.1- Wa '9'41\llOI ~~\of --,,. ,,._ -~lflutJMt -'9IW'l'IM. AOOl\lot\al ..._, ol tvtt •I.lo ,,..,,,..., __ ~•l•tMlofllO. Pllni .,,. s.po<llk •UWll Wiii " .......,, -r911W~, to pt-llw _,. ,_, on ..itJoMt U .00 lt\M- ""--'•' '°'°""' tllt ~I"'"°'~ --llllQ.. G#oH ..... ~ .. 5-clllc•ll .... ,., Public -"' Coft\ltv<llon ••• tfflletlt ,,.... -8"110lfl9 ""-t. 11'1(~ JOU 0........ A-, Los .......... c..111w111a-. ,,.. _. '-''" ,,.r-•• ,,.. C-t lllO C-.""°'lloft of o C-1.0 Mrtl\.flll ...,._,._. IW lllO ti~ ..._., •n lncJ..olrlQ 004 ... •II to· q,,treo tit• or ... no. eacft1tlfl9. litlo· ..... lt-11fto, ---taifll..,11\-1111 -twt.o lf'Ofn _.,. ..... .._. 1-"'t• wttti •II Oltwr rwlotw work •• ~11\-~-·-"k• ~ ,,,. ~ _.. " .... n ... "" .......... -"lul'-.,.. _.., .. --Oft Iii. of .. Olll<t of VTN GtMO!lo.led. •nc _,, Cloc:umeftb tr• Oy 1111\ reltrtnc.e Mrill" In• <-•t• . Ee<" ~-I De te~br • etrtHltd or Cftfl .. • ~II or~·· "*"' "' ., -t ..,._, '° io..orcet11 .. ,,,. ~or,,,..,.., ,..,..,.,.t,.. lrvlM R..,ctl Wetar 01101<1 u a ...... n, .. ,,,.. , ... 0100.t, "'"'· It ow•releo fht ccwitrte"t, eMor lt1t• • wtl•la<lorv •--• •11111,, •• .. .,, frcw-n O.lt ol notleeot ..,.,Cl ol conltac.t -1wrnt"' I OOtlCI In tlW _, of •I ... ,, l~oltfloecuta'IWlMdtW -'9'tOf'INflC• .. lie -lfl -co•O•"<• w1111 Ill• <onlrocl •"Cl U>tctflutleM lllef...., -• Mf>CI 111 ............. ol~lottflt~· .. lllcl lo V-Wll• t,_ H"f9NM of 1M ,.,•ltrlal, """ M!d ltbor.rt. EKll l>IO ITHl\I be m-On tile pl'OpOhl l>IMh fWlllthN 1w ,,_ Otwlct. Tiit ~· bOl'ICI """'De outy tl!KVl.O l>y the l>lci. -llld•llflel'ltte11y--.1"~ ""' ..-tr.v.t tolf-kl bonlnu s '" lllli SlllO -.....,,. -Is Oii Ill• wltll tfle CN!Cy Gltf'I of 0.-C-ly ., "' ·~ -HMflcltllr -wow c.-nv. Tiit bid dl9<11 « ~ Of 1M WC• <A-UM 1>~ ""Ill lie loritlltd to J•lo OllC<f(I In "'9 •"""I WCll -•ltlllf ..._,felt> Of•-to •-lflto 1M ~'" '**llC1 •to Mft!IA 1111 ,... OWlreO ~wltN"-tlmt ... 16rVI In tM SIM(lfkMl-•w.--. N o I> .. wlll lie~ ftom 1 C.... trlKI« ""°""Ml OHi\ ll«l'IJtd In K • corci.nu wttll tM provltloM o1 ci..ottr '· Ol•ISlon l of l u•lntt• an• PrtletslOMI COde of llle Sl•I• ot CAllll0tn11. Tiit Contre<to-sllall btQI" work within S "'-dtVl •llt< tllt d•I• or rec..1111 of .,. tfftl<.e to Pr«-from IN°"",..', tnCI Jlllll ~· •11 ot tl'lt -11 i,,c1o-111 h tCWlllltt wltfllfl 21 <t-.. .,.., ~ ,, W<ll noou. In IKCMMrlCe Wllll Ole~ c.Mt Of lflt St•t• Of c;.llto.nl•, 1111 t rvlnt fltlltll Wlttr 01.Crkt Mt MC.inee1 trom U.. Ol-W Of "'9 C>ttoert_,,t et 1,,.,,.ltlal Retlllelll, Ole fOMfll ,,.._ "'alll119 r1w Ol P"'Olofl'I ........ MIO Ille ........ ,..., .. ,"" , ... lot ..... llOll· ... , -°"""""' W0'1I tw ttclt cr•ll CltHlllcltlofl er tvPw Of worllmen ,,_ I• _.,.. u. conlrKI. -II Wll M ,.,....,...,,., ....,,. ltle COfllUtloi' lo "'*" ,,,. t.tll"ac' n .... .tr_ MO "'°" •nv ~tree.~ undar lllm to pof llOl ... t -wl4 .1p«Hltd tttet r• •U Wwtlm.11 ~ lft Ille tllKlllltfl Of '"' c...ltl(1, ... "" .. -OMftal ,....,,t lllflt , ...... W'tlH Is M fllt Ill IN olll<• ef lltt ,,...,,,. ,__n wa1 ... Olatrttt -IMll "'9t'9d tl tltt IMI site o.,. '"' c..nv'Ctor. Tiit tnw..,. _IOSJ"O "'9 ~ti ..., ..... Ho.Kn For S. ................................................ ..... ,.. 1002 8la01S· Ad•~ •• ••••• ••••• •• , •• • ••• •. .~ :...__,_ .....__i--.L. VA IUYll --c--.,_..,-... %MOS DOWN dllr..: ,.,_. .:::._ Qike lo beach from thi~ ,.... cl9hty. •-sprawltnt: executlvt: DAit. Y PILOT .,._.. es~te! Quiet street leads hWltty fortt.e tint.._ to secluded entry. Lavish ~ ......... ....,. llv. rm plus gour~et kitche n ! Sweep1n~ l•--------•lmns ter bdrm plur:; chlldreo'i1 r e treats. Wlhlt"• Hetkr. Separate fun time ta.m. All real estate advertised rm. Seller requests qwck hl W. newspaper is su~· .o1J,f,;,f.~1•11ft~~!!ern<r• Ject to the Federal Fair THE REAL ' ESTA'f ERS }lousing Act of 1968 ~.l which makes it Illegal to ~:, i! advertise .. zany pre· ~~'<N',... ..... ~ ference, llrnttallon, orl~:=5:::::~=~~~!.. discrhnlnatioa based on race, color, rellclon, sex. or nalk>nal origin, or an intention t.o make any such preference, Umlta· lion, or discrimination." This newspaper will not knowlngly accept any ad11crtlslng ror real estate which b 1n viola-Uon of the law. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---- UKEHEW 4PLEX Spacious units w/btn In- t erio r s. Low main· t e uan ce. Bltn ap· pliances. Redwood ex- terior & attractive cedar lnt.erlors. Ocean VIEW lrom 2 units. Just put on market. $2.15,000. 646-7111 ~ Walker & lee Ge._,., 1002i~~~R_e_a_IEs_'_t_at_e~~- •••••••••••••••••••••• S6l. 950 3 11-2 IA 11 + HUGE OCEAMFROHT FAM. RM. WITH Right on the Bluffs. FHlftACf & IAI watching crashing Located on cul·de-sac waves, Catalina & an OC· lot. Great tum . home ca.sional passing whale. enclosed patio . prime Prof. decorated "Model" HunUneton Beach loca· ccndo ln San Clemente tion. Fbr thls uruque buy w/all the bttns. & private call 963-6767 stalrway lo beacli. Of'fN "' v ·" ~ rur~ rout"'"''' JAc:~~*LTY -lfi$ljl C.A.PICOO $11,000 $2,150 TOT AL DOWH Wlndlng roadway to soaring 2 st y retreat! Private grounds proted secluded entry to lavlsh llv. rm.! Gourmet kJtchen overlooks sun- shlne courtyard! Wlnd- lng stairway leads to sweeping maste r ~droom plus child's retreat! Huny. seller Is anldous.8'1"°10 •~~~~~~~~- ortN 1119• 11'$ FUN 108( Nf(t• fa_. ' THE REAL ESTAT_ER_S _ )) EXCHAHGE or buy! Prime £3Stside Costa Mesa duplex at $146,500. Five years old. Spacious thre e bedroom-two bath up- per unit (jusl llke a home•. Let the lower two bedroom unit help make )'our payments. Custom. quotllty built k:tngs li e bedrooms . c l e ctrlr builtln kltchens, wood burning brick fireplaces. Need four to six units In San Clemente. COLI OF HEWl'OltT REALTORS '7$-5511 .A.l.A.NOOMIO VANISH VILLA IE.A.CH ASSUME SH.SOO Arched formal entry huge 20' Jlv. rm. with crackllng stone fireplace • «>Witry kitchen • din· In g, Fiesta party rm overlooks covered d:ince pavilion " lush grounds . Separate wing for ma· jesUc master suite & guest qu3rte ra. Take over 8~• VA loan. No new loan costs. No qualifyinf. 1288/mo. p a ys al . Hurry! 963-7881 Ol'tN 1119• II S IUll ION N•(f • THE REAL <iOODOLD GUMDMA So you'v~ •1•4'1$ wanted a house with real charm, well YoUt lime bas come. Bric k fireplace. old fashioned four legged bathtub, dlning rm over• looklng fern garden. huge yard, Chicken'• cit.her go or st.ay, it's )'OUr choice. Grandma's house is loc3ted in 11 pride of ownership Ellst sldc Costa Mesa st.root.. The price ls right asking $72,500. 646-7171 fiiRflfi llVIHE CONDO 2 BR. A/C; nr. park II pool. Only SSG,000 HI 833-9781 Hester-Brown I A l IO•S LAGUNA BEACH Lowest price In Arel' Bench Heif(hts. 2 BR. : bath. 2 lcvel. 2 Yeats old 180 Deg. \'iew. Lge bac~ yard. Sll2,000. Super 4 bedrm. 3 bath lge k lt chen1 family tremendous lh' rm 4 rumpus . See to ap preclate. Top or the World. SNS,000. 400l119. RJIW. tlld' ... MW Buy your own ho me s2.soo. down. up le S62,500. Or no down, up t< ~ •. ----... ESTA'fERS , ---------• S87.SOO. for vets. Agt 9G4·22G3 MlSAWOODS This la one or Costa Mesa's lavishly decorat- ed 3 bedroom homes with antiqued h a rdwood paneling, decorator drapes. expens •ve wallcoverings, plush, plush carpeting ar a great1_;_;;;;:::;::=;::====== nelchborhood. The yard ls 1p11dous ft beautifully VJLLAGE San Juan SJC ~ landscaped. The proper-br. 1 bn Country Courl tylsvacanUrready toru homf', Wood patio quick s ale at $!15.900. 640-0818 or 495·52'16 aft CALL 751·3191 1_9P_M _____ _.__ • SELECT PROP Htwe 11<>mNhlng to sell i ERTIES Classllli!d ads du It well. 1-~~~~-~~~-~--1 Ultll Ille ....... tfMI t441rfttt4 to VTN r -01 ~ OCWltolio.ltol, ll'<,.UOI C--Ort... tf:..,-~r~~""""9 IP.O. lo• C.~1. """°"· Gtllftt-nl.t f,,... ,....., '2rti ... dtll"""" .. tntlltd te VTH l:fi::'=.!.~%.1 tlll-Jelo (CWltoflOttlll, lllC., "°' ~ °''"'· •.• .,,,. lrflnt, Cl!...,.. lfle _.._ SMll l~:"'' Ul:' '" pl•lnly ......... In IM .....,., 1•11· ;.,,,. 'fM>I" MM <t<Mf Wlltl 1111 Nfl'lt tflf ••"1t IOWlll Ml....,, ., ,,,. ~ ............ bfff' .... •Off• 'lf~-·-· !1 ~ .. "l>topoMI IOI'/' 1el'°""9d by lht Utlt Of n;i:.::;;::::::..-1 l;;o"''""V ~ l•t llll lPt<lllcalklll f9r 1111 ~ 1M !ht t• NH .. - o-tt •nO -ol ~of l>ICI•. The ;:~-111 !:~ ttfllllt• ot Ulllltr'S c.lleO, _,Of• t/la 4r '- .. t, •r OIOller't Wlf t!\111 .. _ .. tMI ••-41Doa<• lnllle••--...w11111111~. 13::.:::::.::;::.:::=1 ~;:;; ft&ow•.i Tiit IMl'll.C Oltt<1Mtot IN Olt.Ukl n ,.,, ... , r.~:"' ""~' 1111 <tof'lt to ,.lt<t •nv .,,. •11 n111o.i.. "'t OICIUllCllOwelttlftylllU lllrrot111arl· neo.., ~·~ tylnanvalcl. "4Dr !.<IWl!I ey TH& OllOlll Oii lH& IOUO =~ 061o Of OtRICTO"-\ 01' THa lllVINll a:~~W Jtt~ na.. •AlfQfWAfl•Ol5TRICl =-.. c;;· ~=-!;_ftWfl. '"'·)I .,Oo&-• tl>c;Mlvlly Pllbll~ <>tlltO c.u Dell• Pli.t ICl•»':~~·,, .o.GooJ ®""~-~I. l0, 17. ,.,, AU"11 __ _j_!:=:!:~=\S/==:;::==C=========~ ..... ················ ...... . H.sH F-or s• ~OU,~$ For Sal• HouHs For Sal• HouSH For sa1. HCMIHS For Sal~ G~a• 1002 ·~;, ··········;~~2 G;;;::;··········;~~~ ;;;;.:;;;i··········iooi ~=;~~······,····;~~~· ~~:~~.~~~.~c:':•••••••• _T_hu_rsc:t_a....;y_Oc__;to....;be..;...r 2;;.;7_...;.l..;;.97.;..7;.._ ______ .:;D;..;A.:..::IL:...;Y..;P..;l.:LO.:;.;..T_...;:(s;.!';'-.. ~ • ••••··········••······· ••...........•....... ~ ·•············•··•••·•··••••••····••·••••····•· ........ ~ .....•••.....• G-.rol I 002 HOUH$ f.or S• HOtlses For s• H061SH for Sak . ......................................................................................... ... CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX ---------------GeMt"oJ I 002 G~rol I 002 o def M.-I OU--· 'lose to everything -best swimming beach. stores & Fashion Island. A very spacious duplex with 3 bdrms .. 2 baths, & enclosed garage ror each un 1l. Always rented. WE HA VE 2 V AC AMT DESl<S WAITING FOi DPHIEMCEO SALISPIOf'U 759-0811 Hut~ Gllea! Wt4tt~ Bedg. FAMILY POOL HOME ~~~~ .......... !~.~~,!:~~!'! .......... ~?.~~ Prime Mesa Verde comer, opposite Adams School & Mesa Verde Park on a 7800 sq. ft. lot, and the home vou should see! Fireplace in the den, large formal dining (or family) room, bay window kitchenette & 4 spacious up- s tairs bedrms. Owner anxious at $150,000. OPEN HOUSE DAILY 2·5 ,._. 2220 Waterfront CoroM del Mer ...... Cl"OW flies. pa wil find ow open ..... aoc •Mt °" a ...,,. ,.,,_ trH '-ct .... in okl Cot'Ofla dtl Mer. 2 s.al mh wtth hc:rdwood ftoon. Room to eJCpcn•d • capt11re the sunsef! $115,000. c .. 673-6900 1002 Getteral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• associated BR 'k tll!>-REALTORS .. ~'2l Yf ea ti'" I) Jl J&t>' DO IT HERE Enjoy tbe beautiful ocean & canyon view, that is. 3 Bdrms. & all th~ other quality hom features. $21i0,0 00 Includes 1 y~.1t homt protection plan 67l·4400 HARBOR A Oiv1s1on of llarbor tnvt>slmrnt Co TWO UNITS on MagJlOlia lo Easts1Cle, C;.t. 2 Lae bedrms. 1 bath. 1p1,bl e hou se w/studio ren&al in back. House has new paint. carpet & grewt new kit. Super location w/go<><.I income potential . S83,900. J PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 642-5200 macnab I Irvine realty UNGA ISLE LAGOON Newly listed ! Custom built 4 BR w /sep. maid's, formal dining, fami· ly rm w/wet bar & kitchen w/brkfst rm. Pier & slip. Appt. only. Beverly Morphy 642·8235. (V-951 642-123.5 644-6200 '°' Dover Drive Harbor View Center Irvine at Campvs Valley Center 752-1414 $~~JtllA-l/, £2rS 9 That Intriguing Word Gome with o Chuc/c/e ~~~ .......... !~~,!:~~ .......... !~.~~ PENINSULA 4 Bdrm .. 2 ba. home. All amenities. Lovely area. rew steps to beach. $189,500 LIDO ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4 baths, living rm. w /cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,950 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy\1dt• Orrve NB 675 · 6161 SAVE FIX U,...IVUI: fi()MI:§ REALTORS'. 546·5990 1525 Mesa Verde Drive. East, Costa Mt1sd also m_Corona <let M.1r. Jl 675 6000 GetMrot 1002 GettH'al 1002 • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLE FOR LEASE Charming, fresh & de- lightful! 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 story home on corner lot w /ups tnir mstr s uite. North & South patios on finest street. 646· 7711 to a quality and spal'111m. ness In this outstandln~ 2 story homu on a lar~t' \\00<.led lot. The secluded master suite & 2 more bedrooms arc ul)l>hrirs & either Of the 2 hNlrOQm~ downstairs eun he uscc:l as a den. Fresh rrnlnt & expensive wa llco\'crini,:s enhance the d ecor . Loc:itcl'I :i short tlist11ncc from schools, shop1;ing & REDUCED 54 OOO tennis the full price Is on· , • ly S9H.!l00. CA LL 556 2660. SOUTH OCEANSIDE, !p SELECT BFST AREA. 3 br, 2 bn, UP beam ceilings. hrdwd. PROPERTIES ASSUME noor.s. frplc .• din rm & sr;, FHA loan, w 1 pay. breakfast area. JOO'xl75' Selling anything with a menus $231. P1 mo. 1450 lot. Open House Sati Sun Dally Pilot Cl11s11ined Ad Sq ft. home on lgc lot. l490 Avoc ado Rd .. is a simple matter ... $71 ,000 . lnt'I R .E . 498-07880WNERVAOK juslcall &i25G78. Thts homr needs loll! or paint & elbow grease! 4 Bcrlroom. 2 bath home! Do the work & save $$ Red Carpet. 75-l· 1202 Network Tou<'h1>tonc 1002 -__ _, 963 0867 Chwff.. CHtteral I 002 ---······················· ...................... . I 002 Gftlef'al 1001 -----.... -4 "' C\A1 I '0UAH • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • ••• • • cae: 1101&1 BLllNS ca. 0 '-•01199 '-"•" ,., .... I-••O""""" -d• .... ._ IO lo"" lovr ~"'pt. WOfd• II DOJN UC I I I r I Is GA M £ l I 1· I I G A W N 0 I I .r I I :: . I ff'IO per10n "'1ho Sllld Noth· 1ng 11 tmPOUtbl11 never lrled ••••••· rn V11r11ce [HAMG OE I G ,.,,.. ......... ••-<•. •NO•od I' I I I' I Yow ::.;~"t.:.. ~=p ~ "f b= '•'"'' IJIJV8tU O ti mu ,... '''f'[ Y'.). At(\ I I SCRAM-LETS Answers In Clu~ificotlon SI OC> I OU) COIOHA DEL MAI Finely crafted contemporary with extensive custom use of wood & tile. Two bedroorns. ~arge adult family room with wet bar, swimming pool & guest house. Easy walk to the beach. $225.000 . A COLDWIU UM9'M CO. 644-1766 211 l SAN JOAQUIN "ILLS lltO tN NlWPOllt'T CENTtlll OVER 50 'llEARS OF SERVICE NEWPORT CREST CHAWNGES COMPARISON Spacious TownhousE' Overlooking Pool, Jacuzzi & Tennis Ci>urts With View Of Ocean From 2nd Fl()()(' 3 Bedrooms 3 Baths. Oen/ Fumily Room, Will Be Redecorated In Colors & Tones Selected By Buyer. $129,500. Shown By Appointment. HI DOYER DllVE 631-1800 ....................... , ..•....•.............. ·····················~· JACUUI TIME -A beautiful 4 bedrm home j ust 2 1/2 years old, sharp and clean. Neat jacuzzi for your entertainment. Hurry on this one $96,900. c• 546-4141 CAMEO SHOIES -Corona del Mar 's most prestigious address. View . pool, + quality home with private beach can be yours. Call now for your own private showing. Appt. only. Price $385,000 Call 640..6161 Offices locate-cf S. Coda Meso HwrtirNJfOtl B~och -N~wport ~ach S.sh into this ireat JIC~I IOr your com1ne trave~ Spo1t111tly st11ped jacket t01>S your fawr1te separates. hsy lo c1od1et tn J.col0t combo of mach1nt·washable, syntlletic wO!Sted Paltein 7400 Srlt1 I 0 16 included n.zs f()f each ~ttetn Add 35f each pattern l0t l11sl·ctass a11ma11 and hanahne knd to: "-* al all you cet! Btaulilul basir; prroct1s dress plus tour more ¥trstOns (one with cowl coll•r) plus lunic plus elastrc wa1sl P•nb. Allee Brooks Punted Pattern 9417 tlalt Needlecralr Dept t05 Sizes 10•1, 12i,. 14h 16'>. Da11y Pilot 1811 20'~. 2211. W;. Sue 1 4~ Box 163, Old Chelsea Sta . (bu\I 37) takes 2 118 .,dJ. 60'' N-Vork NV 10011. Prmt N•me Address Zrp St11d Sl.25 l0t each pattern. Pattern Number . ' ~dd nc IOf tkh palttfn IOf MORE than ever before! 200 hrstotlau aum11I, htnclllnt. designs plus J free printed I"· Stnd to: ''de NEW 1976 NEEOL£CRAtf Marian M11r1tn CATALOG! Hu everything. 75c Palfern Oept '42 Crochet wltlt h u111s i1 .00 DAtly Pilot Crochet• Wardrobe il.00 ?32 Wo~t 18th St . New Nifty rtfty Quilts j.00 York N¥ 10011 P11nl Alppte Crochet .00 Sew ..l Knit l ook \1.25 NAME, ADDRESS ZIP Nt1dl1polnt l ook S1.00 SIZE on d S TYL E flower Crochet l ook Sl.00 NUMBER llalrpln Crochet looll Sl.00 Oo you •11ow llow to ut 1 lnstnt Crochet look Sl.00 pattern Im! Stnd now fer tnsunt l1llcr1me loo-_ $1.00 our 111w fall·Wlnter P•tt•rn tnat111t Mo11ey look St.00 Catlfof-cllp ceupon lftslde lo· C1mptet1 Gift l ook St.GO free pattern •I reur chelct, Colf'pl1t1 Althus -14 _SI.DO Send 75• ~•wl 1 Z '-lte Aftflm : f 7 50c Sew .-.. ~It leoll loolt ol If Oultts : I 50c l11stut Mo11t~ Craft• Mun111 Quill t ool ;2 SOc Instant Fashlt11 a... IS Qulltt for Ttdaj :3 SOt lutaat Se.i111 Ito\ loe' " II Jltly 1111(' ~c SIJ 5 Sf.GO Sl.00 SI.GO CDMIEACH COTTAGE $65 000 .... . ··---, . ~ PoDular Condci : Mon,lcello townhom~ • with a Cull Une of ~¢' facilities. 3 bedroom' AN;~: den, caUng area, hand.)"'• kitchen. ratio. $65,m_ ... BKR, 540·1720 : • ~. ""• TARBIU.~~ ... ... ,. ... . " ' •..; ~ .. OHL Y $2500 · .~ DOWN •• .. gel'~ you Into lhl_t liu'W• 3 BR runc:h home with• low lnterca\, low pl\'~.' mcnt.s. CALL NOW I ', ; 540-3666 .; ' t •~• .... ,u . • "I.• Wltela11 RI/II l \11111 ~ ~ New Condos, Z Ur. 2't Ba, 2 trplc's, ceramic tiJJ.' kitchens & bntb. Pool "- •pa.117~·4912 Broker / 1 M ESA Vl.;RDE, lUG "Q.ft .• 3 nr. no qualify. Ing, ts~ aown. Quick c.>11crow. quick pos session . $89.9S~ Owncr771·2386 '"' ... f ' DAILY PILOT fttursduv October 27 1917 Hou,~s For Sato Hou1u For Sal~ Housu For Sal• H0tiH' For Sc:I• liteo.-Pro~rty 2000 lncomt ProfWl'ty 2000 ·••·•·•·····•··••·•···· ·•·····•••············· ··•·•··•····•·••·•····• ···•••················· ............................................. . . ~::!.~~.~~ ....... ,~c:4!!~!.~~-~~ •••.•.• ~~!:!.~~~~ ....... ~~~.~~~~ ..... ~?.~~ ~':~~~.~~~ ... !?.~~ ~~.~~~~ ..... !?.~~ ~.~~~ ..... !?~~ tlfQ MHCI I 024 Fowwfoln VoMey t 03 l"IM I 044 THE BLUFFS HEWPORTHTS I UMITS MIS.ADEL MAI .................... • •••••••••••••• •••••••• •••••••••••••········· • OPEN HOUSE A R B 0 It l. A K 1-: "DAILY.II.I.•• "HH. dinin~ room. nt•Jr FOUR.PLUIS 0.. The Fairway lrd to find Mesa Verd" 1untry Club location I 1rac 4 bedrm, fum1J y • 11 &t dining rm Great ew. from 100xt4(.; lot iklng $185,000 <;a II 0.Wl. · ~--HERITAGE . • REALTORS ' •·Woodside" 3 Ur. <len, pool. lo~ :.11>!-ilh-1.1111111 \'u! Only 1117,900 ur bl..' li:Jll f untJn.1 W,1y 11~. $11.000 un<kr b.rnl. opt. s.52·7133 turr 1\lt.i \'1:.1.1 1 <ippraisel at·t f,1i.1 • t.Ati N1\ 111-:,\<.:ll VALLEY 640-9900 WOODIRIDGE Thrl'l' twt11ou111:.. 31111--....... .....,.=====~ PRESCOTI' bath:. & "f'unor..tmlc ~ Lgi.t Woodbridge home. S VIL•wi."' S:!l!.1.500 ~ P\~ BR. or 4 nn ~ den. REGENT REALTY -czo\ Es O Overs1z.-cJ lut , fully 49 L _950 I landsc. ldl'11l for i>OOI. /\II u 1---------1 uprded. Mexkun puvl•rs PRICE SLASHED Scav1ew. New Bedford lllc.A,C.Llv,din,rms.3 w/v1ew ll<!l Y:tthl OCliH VIEW -0 fret.lo. ch ... 1119 .cl tHhlded 3 b""°°"' ........ ~ 2 ...... .._ wfttu oce• mw ...._ a ...... wooded lot Min 15°/o DOWH 8 Cn.1t$ being totally re· rurbi&hed to be dl!llvercd hkc·new condition. Full price Sl99,900. Will citrry 15% down. Owner will trude. BEST UNIT DUY IN AREA. Call 962-7788. .. KE:Y -. 4)11P.€ALTORSft' Costa Mesa's best lnvHt· mcnt property in prime location, under i1so,ooo. Olli now. 140-3666 Wltelan Wllll l\11111 HunttncJlon leach I 040 llA. 3 Cur gur. Nr. vurk. b<'lo-:v market for 1m· Yankee. Pvt i;t rL'l'I~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Walk to lake. $\llli,000 n1••1hate ~UIL· ! Owner Community PoOl1 t<!Ollis. ' 1vely 3BR. FR. quiet ' HesalcSpeclalists. 3, Drkr/Ownr 552·4121 , le1ivrnit urea. Churmmg $279 900 By own~r ll·de-~c. Jrg. yd. 20;jij "ors bdrm models avail, 8.15·3535 3 lldrm , 2\2 balh family 640~7 s:iJ.3622 "''' Cl ,.... find ... Cl ........ of 5-ttt Lctg111KL •••• $I 49,500. APA.ITMIHTS COMMIACIAL INDUSTRIAL LAMD-MHP IHVISTMIHT OflPOltTUMITY Excellent .Motel in the heart of Laguna. Xlnt condition. Large pool 4' recreation ·area. Short· walk to beach. For Jn• formation call: U;so. oU 20th & Ir vine. somewn>ools,968·4602 . homo. W<'ll located with ' 1.n~ by. Open Sun l ·S. Pcnnini:,'\on Properties 1:.U rt I c.,r o c ~ Lusk tnunyextrus.SL39,SOO. PORTOFll'IO H urbor 499 .. 4551 DANA POINT 493·8812 gt&46·1044or675·1S80. -------Tartan .JBr2 Bp,sngl Cousey&:Compony View Homes 4 Dr. din fam. S139,900 or Ille opt. l10.1Su.C:oust llwy rm, fum rm & game L/\GUN/\ NIGUEL 495·1720 LAGUNA BEACH '97·2489 ESTATE • Sl,500. .,y_.. •• ...., . • Uege Park. 4 bdrm 2.ba, IY OWNER 552·7133 1,1\GUNA B~AC11 room. Owner has priced .;b·lotu1rpt lnc.ewNec~~tasw~pxd Yorktown Villa Condo. 2 Walnut Squure Condo. 3 497 24 5 7 to sell this week. $157,SOG . 5000 sq.ft. house on 6 plw <icres. m aid qtrs, 494-1671 4'9·2100 " • ..... ~ · '" yeursold.3 bdr,2ba,dts· B 8 • fc<' tl-10·178.'ior759-9269 Mewpo..tleach 10'9 SanC......_te 1076 ·as. Agents welcome. hwasher, laundry rm, 2 r 2 a.~·-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• M>,900....546-84?7 car garage. 1>alio Must OCEAM VIEW Boyfront R~duced Flt4ER HOMES stables, pool. beaut.I-_______ _ landscape. "·-h D le OPEN HousE ~ ore IP 1 c..-r Wrft• Off• sell 10 escrow, assuma· BY OWlli..IER 1-.ido Nord Pier & Doelc •I --------•I "Cantamar" ubove the .....,....-. ble FHA 7'•'' lo.in. s:n " South Laftllfta... + F. Bay!rrml Prop BLUFFS . s 4 b d reot r ental area 2 0 h ":J-· "l2·"""2 or"'5.c. .. ,,.,..,1., 1:1ty. uper e room •. S•UNEDl1CO-A23L;B~::::G $172,500. . , mo w taxes or Vt\ n ea o e om e -n i' Oc:e:m \'l<'ws from c\·cn "' """ .,.. olVV\I ' u Open Sat t -5pnl Excll· family home with ocean ttPlexes. all 2 Br,·.l ~ down on new lo:.in. Park ··Kensington" mdl room 2Bdrm+lge loi mg Trina end plan with view Sl69,SOO. a.$235,000. $1.iS.000 . Bushard & w11>ool, jacuui & air. w oceun view l,ari; CutetkachCottoge unusuatsecludedenlry.;I ·" -Yearly Income $15,600 Pride of Ownership plu Big 4 bdrm. upper • 2 odjolnlng C·l Properly. bdrm. lower. FantaaUc 6.7X gross. Orang beJAch investmenL J u.st. So. Callf. Realty Adams · Drive by 9 Cstm. pool decking. 2250 co u n l r y k 1 l c h c n wailing for decor a lot Br. 2''2 bath. Jlas choice Goll course ··cape Cud". ~-~ Bickley, HD. .SQ. ft . ~1inl·blinds Sundblasled \\ood in touch. 5 doors to ocean ......... n•·-lt locul11111 with 4 Bedroom, study, 2700 County listed! Aat· 648-9898 .,.,., 323 M 1• 3 87 hr t c 1 c k You o w n t h c I 11 n d • ... "" "" TS IY OWt'4ER .....,., or_,. l l uou • om ng oo · tcrior , beJmcd ce1llng SJIS,OOO.Call&IS·l!SS7 Back Day view! Lge s q . ft.. ocean view. 8UNI Bdrm Hse so. West top stove. lwsh ntrium, frplc. bnck vatio & de{·k wrap around p J ti o $179.000. 7· l BR. 1·2 BR. SlB. 780 In fl t:nits. Anaheim-SZOOK ·oastArea.940CongressMu.o;l sell, by owner. All uuto. sprinklers & litct. Walk to beuch Opc1 HVHMONTEGO features expensive tiled nERTHi\llENRY come. Completely re 19t:nits-Riv.Cty.-S1MK t. terms. 5 BR. 2 Ba, t'ov. Ownr1Agt. 552·0110 ur house Sat1Sun1la) &t lbr 2ba, lam rm, highly Jacu.a1 Special outtJoor l!EALTORS rurbished. 12l.'nlts·C.M.·S325K 540-4646 3t6.'\2 2nd J\\ c. ltcclucc lighting l'Hl•el« & f1rep1l :as J>cl :\l.ir .192.4121 CURTIS R.E. & EASTSIDE 12 UNITS patio, car port. Only lo$129,500 UPE:rd Sl49.9 00. n ~ makPs th1:. home u true SHOPPJNGCENTER INVESTME~ $68.000. 0)len Jlousc HUGESBR+ w/Jbaths. OWNER "!i'J·-1·10 Owner 0 H Sat Sun. w1nnerforthc best in en· Sm.Juan 22Unitprime Muntingto 962·24S6 RB>UCE0$10,000 Sat,Sun 12·5. 17152 Rot-lmmac. by owner. Save ---21115 Port C.:hclseu tertainmg. C-'atrcmo 1078 Beach location. .,.__ _______ _ • lwner s oys scll th1•:.e terdum Ln. 830 '"'97 comm! S124.900. Wknds1---------i lllW·l981 ..,.. a ~L--S• 2200 ...,., AESOP Realty ••••• • • • •• ••••• ••• • •••• ~ Tillllr" en!,Jble properties ln u -- ---or uft 5 wkdys SS2·1'>49 HILL TOP inmelocation.FormorcOwner. vu. -iur. 212ba. , , DAM POINT SpyglanHilf CallDonor lli!lcn OUTSTANDING SERVICE STATION ••••••••••••••••••••• .. nformatfon coll today pool, suana, Jae" SI 12,950. • ,.. W 0 0 DB RID (, "· A 5 l\drm Coronado ore 73H911 Res83S·0739 IUY Terms. 556-6076 Quuhty BROADMOOH :J CONDO S21!1,UOO 55l· 1234 Bdrm home $101,900. !Jcautiful. lll'nrly new, :J m Vill11ge San Juan. 4 Laguna Niguel-net •NEWPORTLOT·SSJCJ~ $70-80,000 per year. Aprv Pins 2·Sty $76M 9U~llAM$ ~N HOUWMAlTY ,J;i> 11'l13°'9"9•.Cotl<I ... •• 'V"\ 645-9161 IH THE $50's Owner55l-4038 lwtJroom, 2~1 bath, 2 Wcstclirr by owner-I.> Ix • • BR. 1.530 sq. fl. home. 11 ACRESC·l LAND A warm & q uaint 3 :.tnry mo<lcl. Wood hurn :Jhr, :!bu, entry style ram y $75,SOO. Prime Bakersfield loca· Zoned for Dplx (R·2>. 647 lrvlne Ave. 548-8532 urL•a, crackling used Warmington 2Br, 2uu s:1una!I. jaculz1 Lo\'cly for pool. R\' or t;ual •CLASS Ownr. 496-aMS bfr 9, af\ hnck fireplace. Special Conoo. AJC. up~rudcs ocl'an lm.•rzcs. HURHY! stora~e 1201 Pembrolo,1: •AMENITIES INYISTMIMTS ACREAGE 6. bt.'1Jrrnwitha la rgeliv1ng WOODBRIDGE ini: f1r<'pl .1cc. µoul. 1·m,dblfrpl,patio.Roorn •LUXUR \l AMCHOIACH tion. Ocean vu, wlk lo bch. kitchen with eHicien ~r lake, prks &1>001 Hy S81l.!i00 Ln.W6 98.'.l6oc646·0100 •FlOOR PL.AM (7141496·7711 4 ~o ~Acres, C·l, M-1.•..._·-.. --,-, .. --D-•-Mrt--,-- ll" Pnde or Ownership layout. Indoor laundry, owMr. 5.'>9·6575 til 10 30 Thal s um s up lb is '"=:-========::: RJ.B Z Retort 2400 \Orne in ffalecrest area. \'an1ty bath. new carpet pm for appt fabulous Portofmo home Condo, 2 str;• 2br. $49.500. For u complete integrat •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• \siting S75.450. Lytton J~t installc<J! Communi· UDO PEHIN. with t'xlr11s Including. ;\lust sell. 32185 Pa.seo :b 1911111!.~ Ull !lJty. MS-4771 ty club st)' le li\'ing. Not BE.ST BUY 3 Monarch Ba)• Plata 2 Bdrm .. 2 bath bayfronl •Jacuw •v, auto timer Carolina. 5Sl-13l9 tlCi •ystem app.roac l ~ llOCH Rou.._.D farfromthebeacb.BKR Lu~unuto;1guel c:ondomin1um 011 Liclo -6Weekoldcarpct ---------1 ~11 .. Real Estate DC· CHOICEIUGR YEAR " SJ6.9Jll. • 496-7222 831·083 Park L>rive. Pier & i.lip •Elegant master 3 Bdrm, Hi bath Condo. 2 uvih~·lnvestdent pr3 DESERT PROPERTIES LUXURY In a\·ail. ~l5,000 •Gla~ed in frplc car gar, A/C, $59,950. perties-tax eferre . write or call Mr Frey. LIDO REALTY w b rAll A""'"""" n 5 exchanges-development· Ben Hinkle R.E. 21930 rhrough an enclosed FHA or VA THE WILLOWS lbr Condo. l' 1ba. Ocean • cl ar """ """'""''0 a pm. p r o P e r l Y Hwy 18, Apple Valley, frontcourtyard,disco\•er New offering with a side, pool. gar $64,500. 673·7300 •CUSlomized Family rm. By owner Sun Hollow. mana1ement·corpe>rat 9230'7orPhS.A . .5'2-~ this beautifully decorat greal "homey" feeling. PP. 4~ 9601 $20 ... 900 MUil sell 164,000 2 br 11"1 portfolios . ... 3 b droom 2 b·1th R I · Lowest priced Plan 105 in ,. r bill CALL FOR C__... "" e • • ear 1vsng room. spac Hewport•a Atutd ba, cpl, ;p, ns COY• -·r /\ome with rich cocoa informal dining rm. lge the Willows area or Hard To find l.IDO ISLE SPAN I Sii PACIFIC ered patio, yard, laundry INFORMATION ,,.,.,.., 2500 browncarpeting,custod covered s itie patio & ~~mT~~m~af~~[~~e: CHARMER. Elegan t COAST inside, walk to school CROSS COUNTRY ••••••••••••••••••••••• dklrta .. ~eesn, arre ... maodPeLJUeS much more for 173.900. island home with 400-4110 .. n "' Seller wtll pay for your upgraded c a r pets . d f ----------1 brandnewpool&Jacuzzi FHAorVAloan~ throughout with a new bcoullful re tile roo . PROPERTIES SaiutaAlia 1080 PROPERTIES INC $71500 CRY & <·<weted patio. S&S,900 531·S800, eves.f!9.i·9491 dishwasher and dtsposal. Clo!>e to water. Enter· 631-0~00 •nytime ••••••R•2••C••O··.::•IR••••••• IMVESTM...._.~ .... IV. Sh.arp 3 b r with central ()pen Ul 8:30pm, Mon· tnt1 RE Networil Has a large enclosed lllinment style living ,. ~ " isnT., Tb""" pallo.llisideallylocated n)Om, gourmet kltchen (7141141·1 Ill ait.LocaledlnlbeCoun- .....,. . .. , W(~" pl"nlc ce1T1ng & • • House & Investment inl~~~~~~~~~~ ly. r n-e lot. No down to •---------1 near new park with pool. -,..,., .. ---------1 R b b .....,e ~ F h t • d b o I d n pc n be a m s . One. 3 B ouse on l e any Veteran. f~I ~ f'ANORAMIC VIEW t~o~:houi. p~:e~na~~n-i'IUVATE SP,\ nestled PAINT BRUSH comer or a major Blvd. TRIPLIX,C.M. 5$'97771 •IPlace HlngViewPtNorth4Br. ly$71,850.forlastsale. In a forest or plants. SPECIAL Potential reionlng lo Great Eastslde loc. W.Waffllllt.t• ...._--&.a-pool, sauna. spa. By Hurry!Cn11S4S.0303. commerclal.$52,000. l. newer 3br,2ba,frplc,yd.~~~~~~~~~ ...--.-r.~..,. · owner $113,500 556·6076 Oringyourpaintbrush& l nl'I R .E . Network/ ( 2b b U 1 i.. 7$2-1920 BrkrCo--0p HOME SWEET idcll& &. take advuntuge Touchston,e,963-0867 2> r ,01 a, pa os, enc. ..,.__.. 1400 owuui. "'w~r UA.C --1 _,,,HIN 1050 gar. Sl7 .ooo. Pro t'' lllO 276. LOR.Ea..JZO I. Bdr!11 • HOM£ wr""" • ot a great investment op· Wflfmluttt« I Otl Tom Lee, Rltr. 642·1603 ~f r 11;n 't ••••••••••••••••••••••• JlOrtwuty. S br. 3 ba. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Calf Cr 551 Pnme 3 BR pool home. sty. in Eestblu/f. Must DUPLEX CATAUMAISLAMO Your f&mily wUJ enJOY • a c A ·c Sell Rent ur T1 ade ·-~-~ sell this week. lleduced S%,500 DOWM this lrg. "' lovely 2 sty, 5 Well can<l for home. IOV· A heautiful Plan 5 10 the ~11 o' wn aut lo get into this beaut. 3 br 2 Bedroom unit with f'or ~ale By owner 3Br, BR home w /Olympic ely decor. Large 4 bedrm Park homes of Deerfield. -" -HAR HOR View Home b) tDSlM,SOO Mnke otr. home in quiet loc. Won't priva~ patios on deslra· l~Ba, twnl\se, Above sizepool +parking for 2 noorplan,tormaldi.oiog, This 2600 sq. rt. 4 VlEW LOT :i Udrm 2 owner . prof. decor.. R.C.9T5A.5Y~305R0CO. last! Agt.840-5060 blecomerin ~ASTS51DE aver age , fn cd yd. RYs. & 3 cars. Quiet & brick firepla~. covered bedroom beauty ls UP· bath. Jiv rm, rlcn rm landscpd. e.llec home "Y C 0 ST A ••• E A ! Secluded area of Avalon - sale 6treet, close to oil paUo, &.railer parking. graded throughout and S7S.OOO. C;}JI ~1 -ll.U Priced SlS.000 uelow Completely remodeled SlS0,000. Prln only. PO «> /·schools. Sll0,000. S87.750, BKR, Call localedonly2doorsfrom 1_,... _ _. IOSZ mkt.alS175,000.644·2064 WISTCLIFF S.StlilylfiA,.•• exterior, landscaped, Box 1614. Avalon, Ca. S 0 U T H C 0 A S T &&2.8854 the pool and park. Priced -,--•..,...... Convenient location. sprinklered. Open 'lll1_907_04 _______ _ INV·ESTM ENT, CO toaeUat$1.28,SOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• STEPSTOSAHD IEAUTIFULLY op-Newpalntinsideandout. 8:30pmMoo·Tburs. .._. ...... 645-UOJ. ..aAlll!l I JUST REDUCED tn :"1:wer1luplex. ·~ blk to polftted 4 bed,., 2 Large lot. 4 Bedrms. 2 b~ 2100 PAINT I l'lftDCU. BERKELEY ~~OOO~ ~r~~~:s~ hJ•:, 1 r ;::s~ ~~r~r~t~:u~· bath hoMt. S.,. dlltfltcJ :~~!i>1!i r~~l.ac~~1ci'osi f £. 'QuRI ••••••••••••••••••••••• "# t .. Cafffonlla" 2ba. shake roor, Pac{'~<'! dt.-ck, patio, bit-ins; good rm, forflMtf fly rM, S63 900 Agent &«·7270 P-. . Wli,y pay laxes? • Ea- P A TCH in College P ark A ter home High grade for owner-occupant or brick fplc , 2 c.,. ' · Prap•s U.. chanael Fruk Zelame.y & a RO FIT 2 Br. 1 ba, lge yd, c • magnilicient4 bedroom J new cocoa crpt, de summcr1wint.er rentals. 4J•r•t•• lo"dapd & 7S2•"20 Realtor. 4M-l502 r must sell. Nr 11chools & bath S&S Home io Irvine corotor drps w shccr)I, NEWPORT IEACH ~d. hat ~ ~ lt•IEatot. 1400 OU4tUl. Raat 31kdrm,2bathbomeln s hopping $59.500. Bk Completely upgraded stamcd~lass.dininJ?;ll,. REALTY 675-1642 In thh eJrchnh• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PROBLEMS? qualllyareaneedsowner ~JaOl wsth front and rear lngrm,d1v1dcr,pcrfcctly I hb h d ~HOWU91 TRIPLEX Tiiey are our apeelaJt_y. with imagination. Ir patios. Genuine lath and: lndscp d. m_any xtras. n. 9 ° r 0 0 • Fars. 1100 creauvely handled by you'relookingforagOO<JC02y 3br , 2ba. RV plaster construction . Vscwotgratingcattle& BIGCA .... YO .... Sl46,500.0Wftft"wm ••••••••••••••••••••••• Closeto beach andsbop· trained counselors. ~al, call 645-7221 storage. bllns. Cncd. VA, Ideally localed lo p00ls. Saddleback to lnfin\ty " " ....a-&a.tc.. BEACH AREA-2 br, 2 ~~~e·l!_!!aa'!. oaldo.rNHeunwlty· Phone fOT appointment. ()ntu 2 ml to heh. 673'2505 park and school. Prit•t•d Comp]ele privacy. Orm Dov~n MODEL -... ....,... .._"' .... i.711! .. ,,, Its s t S n 12 I P in ~ Worid Wide lroken bu. t971 Coach, lovely in"ton Beach. Pr ice • -. --~ 4br, 2ba. pacsous. coun· toscllalS12'\,900. ,e 4a99i29u21 o "'• r . 2br.2b3 +dcn.l800 sqn. 671-4545 cond. $21.500. Agent ·h'"arply r e duced t THICAWSOHCO. _ ... ,. try kit, bltns. lilk wall, ~ on y. · · wner Lowest price in Canyon. 646-4380. $ise.soo. ror quick sale. REALTORS . --=--: -.J l .i Xlnlloca. 673·2505 Seo Terrace Twnhm Pnn only. Xlnt for re· Good financing avalla· 2819Newport81vd,N.B. -b ,, II tired cpl or yng exec. Dy Larae Custom Ho me, Lovely dbl 2 BR, 2 ha, lk bl Westcliff Realty Townhouse. 3 BR, bllns, ' 3br. 2''1 a $99.000 ..,a 640 7..., .. d b e N d I d "' " 71~-840 29rn aft 6 owner $235.000. ·4 JI Lido Isle. Pool size lot. new crpts, rps, was er · Roy McC___. .• _ eva a an + cun S!i3,90(). 5'" down, by $294,000/olfcrs. Flexiblll· & dryer. Adult park. Ft. _...... TDs for improved R.E. Colonial owner.Call646·28l6. FOOTHILLS ty on Interior features. Vly. By Owner. $25,500. lllOH•wportlf•cl M·ACorp.67W756 HuntW°" Upg raded 2 Dr , 2 MOVE·IHREADY 18·S> 540·3383 Broker 963-9990 CostaM.s.541-772' ......... Showplace! H~ 1042 RANCHREALTY ba+dcn. Gar. patio, ~~~~sl~0':;:8t~l.~~~m~ cooperation. Mobile Home SJOOO. 140 W..ted 2toO Moveup\obelterth1nK~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 55 l ZOOO frpl c. $73,900. Ph &denhome.S93.500 IAYVIEW Cabrillo, Costa Mesa .NEWPORT DUPLEX.•••••••••• .. ••••••••••• here! Oversized lot . RB>UCB> TO Slll · (714)495·0832 CAYWOOD Mobile Home, located in See Mabel, #8 SlSS.000 3 Br, l br, nr WUlpaycasbtnanasbfor across from Mesa Verde 3 hr, J ba, dock for 4.5" WOODDRJDGE PLACE IEST BUY flEAt.TY •INC. exclu..'1 Rayside Vilhige, 1971 Teton 8:128 fuml.sh water. Agt. 673-2058, eves your house, unit& or land Golf Course. 3 ·car boat. Cstm decor. Deep 5 Bdrm Biscay . ., 548•129 0 * Br 2 Be, Din Rm, Den. In lovely adult park 642·3338 Orange Co. Back pay. 1arago, huge 4 bcdmom. woler. Ownr. 840-3432 SUO 000 551-1234 in L.N. 5br, 3ba + pool & wetbar. lndry, !>ltns. etc Cosla Mesa. S7S per m NEW NEWPORT onenta OK. Scott Realty family room. rec room. · ,.u S1l2.500 83t·38u7. 1 UR H V Montcgo By owner. Pnnc Only. space rent. Self coot DUPLEX $18-1S33 <l i o in g room . . UNIV PK ... La Salle", MOS0l40 VOJ:ue ll E. •lJ5 500 Lease hold. S59 500 675 7903 ---------fireplaces. For a priv11t1: •JUST LISTED Lge 4 Br 3 Ba. onl) . --2u.s.93-320'7da s · · · $6500. 979·7813 2-3Br2~"Ba unit.!., 2 dbl a....._a._a.. showing UKll t·all lmmacuJate4 Bdrm 2'1 SllS 900 or lse opt Pnmelocation Nrocean. Y BLUFFS, highly up •-for cM l20 garages. First user-- 540-1720 · i.. h L ' d SSZ.7i33 Fresh air. :.unshlne. oraded 3 Dr 2~"a Ba con .-.u;,... s benefits. 6•5·3009 o ••••••••••••••••••H••• • •1a ome. :irge yar · Vaulted Jiv rm frplc .,. •••••••••••••••••••••• """11'"• Bkr. ...___ F••~he:! xlnt location JUSt steps · 2 Reduced $12,500 do. nr pool. $125,000. B v•.r -.._. A_.. TARIB.L beach club & marina Turtle Rock Hlghlands fam. rm .. Ille kit .. J Br. Beautiful Newport Cre!>t owner. Call for appt ADE"vaamop<?!'s Co .. &.....6-.. •1ta ••••••••••••••••••••••• S1&4.s0o . Vu lot. 5br Stewart. f'rln lile.baths. lndry rm. ouk Condo. 2 Bedrms & den 752·6492; 640·8857 o 5" ............. .,...-a..o-1.... 3106 PURCELL REALTY only. 752·5664 patio, lge trees, fntd yd. Upgraded cpts, drps, wet 640-8381 Riverside County ln Sun· NrGoldenweat/ffell ... •••••••••••••••••••• "#l In Coll...._-lo" S t Be· h 84" -·0 2 car i;ar. Rll 1972 1·t approx 49 "~'tRealty"',.. 7533 ONW•'TER Tvrn unse uc ..-~ w•LHUTS,..UARE $89,900 By owner. bar, pool an<) tennis . nymea . . ~"" -· ~ --;:;;.;~;-·!~~~~~~~~~~ A ,. courts Sellers will pay Private Party, wishes acres. Perlect. for mini· CHARMING 2 Story, ' THIS MESA VERDE Live in Irvine for S00.200 (714)495-0088 . I ·I . trade S Br home o ranches. S Miies from 2-4 Plexes C.M. All 2 br, 1 Bdrm home on Beat f'AIA.DISE 1,..n,. 1044 &under.2 BR .. din.rm .. buy~e 00 jg ~i~~.ll~ primepartofCoslaMes LakePerris. ba,slngle.story.$160,000. Bayfront locatlon. Ytty ••••••••••••••••••••••• or 3 BR. two sharp Exper·1ence to . n y .. Go lf Cou rae Co IC T·YLo•co Agt,54<>-36SO I $1400/ Wo ..... T L •sT EM 5 34 74. Red Carpet waterlr·ont home w/p'e • • A " • ease. mo. n A lownhomes! Great place Th f 1· f hi , ., ... 'SBURYREA•'TY IT JUST forchildren. lm~~~~:;;teec3in~gr~~ Reultors. & slip. Llnda, Udo, clc., '55.0150 N:ri'mC:~~~~n~Ju:~::: <>AWCall673-6900'"' 4 BR. 3 BA. 2 sty, pool, jacuzti. Pri Ced $5000 IJelow appraise!. Co II 549-8062 or 751·05~3 ISM"" EVELYNCOPELAND home. Enjoy the lush 546-8757 LOA.DEDW/OAKS S36S,000Princlple:sonly • ..._p 111 ...... ll07 '.I REALTOR 552·0434 n e w cnrpclin g and THEILUFFS BEACH SHACK w/plans Fiveacres loadedw/oak Byowiler.&4$·2071 ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• POSSIBLE' peacerut view or lhe Plaza 3 bdrms. · l !!r permits ror 3 sty re' trees in Cleveland Nal'l For ule by owner. S.C. • ·MOKE TREE-Terrific valley. then wander In baths: lge. enclosed model,$97,500.675.1006 Forest.So.of OrangeCo. 8UNlTS 3Br,2ba.Bayview.sus. Plaza area. 3 br, 2 ba. To list all the exlrui< this end unit on Greenbelt. the beaut 1 f 11 1 I y pallo. Net1r pool & shops. Municipal waler, gentl EKcel>tlonal. $251,000. Spacloua 2 aly. Al.lo Z Bt ram. rm. Model home. home has to offer. llu.t If 2Br. 2Ha. many up-lundscaped gardens . on-Drive by : 2428 Vista rolling knolJs for view PaclllcShoreRealty delwce apt. Wint.er. $325 • .Best ofr. Prin. only . you're looking ror a grncfes.manyxtras.Ask· lySS\,!150(501 Hogar&calltosce.Ask· NEWPORT sites. Owner will carry. lJlW.PaUzada.OldCll Call546-9409 714,.979 ...... 21 213 757.51H1 home with 3 bdrrns .. 2 Ing $72,900. 552-3475 eves. Ing ...a 500 Plaza SC. 492·5300 ,.~-.. Mw l I J"' -o<.V ba .. tlin rm . tam. rm.· j/!.,/.-.:.. B AYFRONT HARIOR'HIGH /\gt. · · -• ;"~ 2053 wkdays bcr. 5 your own Juruui . ~ive WOOCRDOBSSR~2GGE ,;(01Urf. Condo·, lge. 2 bdrm .• 2 Just a few blocks away (714)677·5691 fourplex for snle, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1 usu coll. wc·11 be "lad Lo ..., f ..... m thls qu•llty buJ'I• 3 OR522.-0530 S21S.OOO. 150 yards of BEST CHINA COVE • " The Village or Wood· bath.<! & atrium. on first •v " ~ be h 237 W Ea I LOCATION F buJ MESA VERDE HOME show you this excep. bridge. 2 & 3 l~tlrooms. floor: security bldg., bcdrm home. largetaml I ACRE RANCH s .c.c"92.SSS1. ca ones, ai.tmel VleW and be:~ Pride of ownership with tlooul home' From $96,990 to $125,990. Lido Peninsula. $219,500 1Y 1 room. 2 bath 1 , dt b 0 le fplc . Fixer upper house, 3 car out fl'Ull. Decorat.or's 2 lots or extra features. 3 Enter the Village on __ LUSE arge corner 0 · wne garage, bunk house, ou 120 UNITS atory, 4 Bdrm home. br 2 ba. tile entry 2 1-·/r . w · ht b anxious ond will help bl"'"' II ale r I l I d arner Ave, turn ri.11 U.eFored 1055 Unrurn luxury ayfront !lnance.Call 5<CO·llS1. .._.we w r, e~c Huntington Beecb/3 $850/mo winter lease. b.-aut ru an scaping. on West Yole loop. Jo(t on ••••••••••••••••••••••• condo: 2 b<lrms . den, 3 Ing, lots or t~ees. Bemg miles from ocean. Orou Wate rfront Hom ea. Are just.• few of the e'l-Stone _Creek So. & r~i,:M Owner. 3 br, 1;._. Im. 1-·, J>, hulh..,, 2 decks: security split lnto-2 s . Terms. scheduled rent $367,080. 631·1'00 lr1l!Jprtt ~ouyo:::::::~~~P· onSpnngvale S59·Jlt1I upl(ratlerl, cluh ta c blda.S975Mo BKR Scheduled expen aea1-----.---- $5000.down payment buys $79,900. 4 BR In Me.ea del i--leach 10 .. 8 m.ooo w C2nd5A6-602t GIB WALKER <7l4l616·S7l7 Sl39.278.PriceS3,300iOOO.MfwpwtlHdt ll6t _,,_.... .. OR 522·2080 ·installment sale w/ :and •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ·~··••••••••••••••••••• SAILORS DELIGHT REALTY 675·5200 contract. Prln. only.I-_______ _ ir. a ir.y LIVl .... G I 00 Ft t L le pa •ERMO MOJ:ir.a 10 Acres on Water front (114)631·2950 O·.,., WAT-.. -1•.. boa• r:.z3 C T\.. J ' ~ " 0 a e HVH MOHTEGO ~ ~ hwy. xlnl mobile homq....; __ . -----1 ... QA .. "" " 10~6 't., Afl!PUS""':RVl~E in this easy care 2 Super North Shore 4 "y iiwner, Park view, 48r,famlly rm /frplc, park Riverside Count CostaM ... D ......... Jl dork, 2 story, 3 bdrm • Bdrm., 2 bath O·Y·O An bdrm, 2.,.. h11, fam. rm .. ~~Br. 5500 used bricks In 2 story. 3 bath&. Ov<'r belo~Blylbc,2mltopro East.slde-rw; ~ w/VlewS790/mo. •••••••••••••••••••••••--easy walk to Main Cormnl djn. rm .• 2365 . 11116 P L 22Xl sq ft lncl.lond.xlnt posed Nuclear phrnt t-2w/(rplc.Extraroom. ON LIDO. Elcatant 2 Mar. 963.5993 3br,~bahomcw/voult.-HEW Beach. Easy terms with sq.ft, or luxury home & pa Lins " ~r wnd. Undt•r murkcl nl $150,000.PP642·8200 $l07,000 bdrm with T.V., view cd celllngll. Approx. 2100 private flnancinl(. 1111d i:upc•rh lorutmn for view Prov~nce. St47•500. mcl $1Cll,i50 CotNNrclal Private Party, 073,6312 a nd prlv ate beach !!Cl· It. Comp!. w/dccor TURREROCK 1r11 eosy to aee thl11 va· Frpl1• in llv rm. & ~4•2185 759 0226 Sim/mo. cl'}>l11&potlo slnb. Olrcc1 LISTING l"OOl property. Jus l nlu!!lcr hdrrn Pri.rt•11 10 REDUCeD CARMEL • Pi"Opffty 160 APTS FOR SALE. 29 OCJo:ANFRONT. Short. from builder. $120,0oo f:xpandrd #1 Droartmoor $85.SOO. sell fa!ll Sl3S,OOO. Suhnilt :i HR. 2 na, fam·rrn . {l'WIN •~••.iiit1) •••••••••••••h••C•:•••••• prtda of owne.rshlp unlUI Term. '330/wlr. 2 Bdrm (71417152-8511 l<wat£•rl m the trnni~ l'lob NORINS RULTY o f r c• r ' • '' w n ,. r $1:12 000 rec Uy owner. wrw ~· w Newport lluc ·I. cor. tor :rnlj,? hy owner. ·ru11Un Dollhouac. 11J't•u. E11J11v 1111 .. :1 llfl, 2 lrtrnMt•rrcd o: ( s.' 8 · 2 l' .,llllACfOQ) ner loc Good parkina. area. Pool, aame rnf, WATERFRON'THOMES fountain VaH•y I 034 14 /\. "11 h , ,,11 r 0 w n * 494-805 7 * :11717 Tnlloc J.11111: 11 · •1! · ~n. ,17 1 ort <lm1lfnr 11mRll bu11lncsa, etc. $775,000 (714)6.t2·4U6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• J<tt:lll.71 lt1•1•rntl.> point ----.--JOHN ll F.EO Ill.TY Allhley l I. 64~·1~1 s. Clement• I 07 6 597.500. Al{cnt 646·4380 Call 63H.OO T\buron R11rc Malibu 2 erl 1n anti nut s11<1.ooo Decorator t Delight 894·•Mlll ••••••••••••••••••••••• Want to buy n 4·Plex? Dot br, for1nal dlnln11 . tam Andyouowr11h1·lant1' 2·Sly. Enahsh <'Ountry $61.000 lnt'rt•r1ihlr \'lrw o o..M .. s/ can'taf(ordlt? Pool your Sbr2baslet))612,at.peto rm , pallo. Xlnl lor i;lylc wtu1>ix:r liv. rm .. MfssronVlefo 1067 IFYOU 1toll rour'c & rollln CWha• ~y '5b~yapitrt.Ast. bch.S500mowlntcr.Aat. · 556-01"91 frpk .. bdrm .. den" bn ••••••••••••••••••••••• hil\·1• J c;crvitetootft•r or hllls 2Br, 11111, :.lnJllt •••••••••••••••••••••• 964c·2263 G7S-4630 •• . reef hill ~~:.' ' 552·7500 Trade your old atufr ror new good1 ~t1 with u Classified od. 612 5678 Gu<'l>t rm. & bu. w1scp BarCl'lnn11 3 I.Jr. itreat ao00slol!dl,fl1&ceannd l!lllry con1lo.clllh~o.i>00I H\snllnaton Beac --------- entry on ll)w.er level view. Ac. fcncc-d yard. in the Da l y Ptlol wlk lo h<'h :lH Oelud Duplex, SG,000. Old, bu Unlt.s 11vaU. from $22 to OcUnfl'Oftt. 2 Br cottace, Needs work! $149,500 us,ooo lly owner. Cl.i!'i~1r1e<1 Sertioo JUI By nwncr. Open dol nice. Good area. U.S. SS&K per/unit. Trade1 bltna, S.00/mo tW J&lftc. ,\flulon R"Jty 494 0'731 1714)1~ 3629 Phone IU2·SG78. ly 12·5. Ml-2031 Really,648--0507 accepted. Aaf,. 964·22A C.Ut73-$HO. l, Houtn Ml"'l~h~d Ho..->~s UnfwnMtcd Houact On1umi~1c-d H0tiHS Unfunii~ Condomlnlurn' Aportm•nts Unfwft. •••••••••••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ····•••• • ••• •••••• ••••• ••••••••• •• ····••••••• • Unfuimls~d l425 ••••• ••••••• ••••••••••• Htwport hoclt 316' Cotta Me.a 3224 lrvlM 32 44 wporl a.och 3269 ....................... lalbo I I d 3106 Apcrimub u.tw.. .,_..,..nh u..tun.. .,_ hutth ~ ••••••••••••••••••• •••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ., SR new beJL't c·rpt reul a 1 on ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• ... ~ • D • ••••••••••ee eet e eeee eee OMTHISAHD Newport Hcighti> nrw RENTALS ~1btblultJHr3Uu.F.1m 111t·t• $325 mo l>u y CostaMHa 1124 teMese 3124 HewporilHch 316' 'Bcauutul 3br, 2ba, dpl.Jc, Duplex, 3 BR, 2 Ba, frpl, 2 Uk, 2 ba . . $125 525 Hm & den, form.II tl1n, ~·7200, l'' e:. 5'15 11190 Yrly 2 hr, no children ur •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••" fhursda)'. October 27, 1977 0All. Y PILOT Cl paUoi new crpts, drps gar .$4~.6'CZ·S722 2.;.DorJbr.:!ha~J.51 525 1.ic Ii.itch. lpk, & \le"' Co~~ \'•ry-1.'l·an JI)--;-pcb Unfurn. or l>MtlYCOS'rA MgsA -214 S.W01''YDt;I>w/AD OCt;i\N V l ~W Yrl y Aval immediately 'l1l 3 HR. 2 Bu s.us 47.S ~ mdd i:rdnr & "'lr 2bu i t·'r 11• re 2 'vc101 .' furn Rt>C:. $3~tl. rno. Thunn Street. Deluxe STUNNING lrg 2 br, :! b,1 1&2hr, 1 bu duple:\.• S/78. S600. '752·7410 dys, 4 br, 2 b3, COilege Purk 4 BR. 211 U.i $46S/W5 '~'I 1.mml'd. 6-tS·4107 ur dubhou~t' ·~u.bmit 0~\ 1173 50!1!1 Bedroom, unlt:1 uncle garden apt, pool, rec rm, $ 4 o o & s 5 o o m o • 0.-48Slev8/wkndl f11mlly h(lme. $450 li4S-~i0<1uft5PM kids h.l & last mo:. 1 cnl lalboa P•ttitmlla 3107 constrt1<· tton. LO\'cly. $275 710 w. 18th St 64-1 6780.1}<12 36:~ 640-0008 \ . l .. $""S \ t :<paciou'> lownhomt ty -----Oceanfront Sp11rkllng 3 llarborVlcw Homes snit, • '"1 ''!'me.. ...,, 1 g:. •••••••••••0 •••••••••• with fa mil , rocmis s;i.15 2Br. lUu, hi·b\:um ccil· Newport H.,;hti1 2 Ur.1 l>u. Br, lrplc, com pl furn. •ANTHJUE COTT AG!::• 'Lt 0 . 3 Ila. view. 1750 niu JOJO & Chuck 5'lO·l720 2 fir. 1 bu, nt!wly redcc Q u A 1 t! p L A c iogs. pvt pallo, nu pets. Jmmed occuJ,11&ncy. l 'll AVlil 3·8 mo'a. $680. 1 HR, s mall den . Ll ~IJ-a 7590l4Jor6447783 tr1Jl,tlrps,gnragc.Stcp11 PllOPERTIES INC Avail aft Nov 1. 316 !!:. 646-11705 975-1849 breakfustnook.veryp\t '1(° .... l ..1. 'r --;:--~nhfuml1h•d t.n sand.Yrly.S400.mo. 1714)75i.!.i920 · IBlhSt.642-liSJ •---------~ · Freshly painted . water '-l'JI' .,.. _________ ,••••••••••••••••••••••• Uuys ll411·~USO · evei. _ _ Newport Shores, n Ulk Cottage,atl woodlt1t.t'ul· pald.Nodogs.S275mo.8338600 CllllRMI N(; J Bclrm lalbo l1land 3706 f~·s.225 • . /\ttruc t1 ve 3 b •;c--~ from6ccan. Bach.14': ly modernbed. 1 blk to SS2Smoveio. !)6()..J989 . • home IO hc:.t lOl'<t llOll ••••• ! ................ -townhouse. Frplcs. pool. BRAND NEW 2 ·11. (rum $275. mo . bcb 3b "b hr d $700/rno. cu.,·1· $395 '"'11 W 64<»5078 •. · r, • a, ws · ryr, Nice home new cpts very • · I h<lrm + office li;;c deck r-.1 tr I h 3118 ~· · • ..., · lrg dck w/grlU. Ample 1 8• 2 b . d. 1 . S23,. ON W/\Tl!:lt with clock & 1 O<I l d ._..,...., ano eac Su ower lOtoS triplex just completed J • pa.rk'g. $475. Prefer urllt ore ecahin.,d3renr.O.Ka. N' ao peu tsls.. .. ...AMPOSDa·IRVJNf and large patio. lluHc 3 L ~los~s, ~cmqu1c~ ~ d·u~:' •••••••nu•••••••••••• ' . br 1 ba front hou11c $350'. 2 DAVl''tlONT Leaso. 2 B'j, cpl. No pets. 615·8536, 645-9S86 afterSpm ----------i lklrm, fam rm & dining s1o e673 5710 a · New 2 Br . duplex unit, New ONDO~ br, 21".l ba. br 2 ba back unit $395. 3 2ba, gar, l~rraccs, .P00 • f>'7~Can11erv) · IRV. Groves Nu 2 br, · roomhomc.Mastcr s ulte -· 34372 San Juun , 2 frplcs, bltms, pool & br2bamidunit$425.All $650,1133·9442eves. 3 br gar, range, lge yrd, ba,den. frpl. Pool, lt'11111b 1s laritc enough lo be an Balboa Peninsula 3707 Ca Pi s l r on o 8 c h . 11pu. $375 mo. 675·491 with O/W, F/P, garagei1. tto.ft Uwfw.ftNd cpts, drps. $340. 636·1326 $475. 640-0997 art SP M ;ipurt mcnt. Extra room • • •• ••• ••• •• • •• •• • •• ••• 493·6651 : 493·21\lO Bkr 186 Santa Isabel 675·2311 San Clenwnt• 3171. •••••••••••••••••••••••1Brh0uae,tncdyd,do LSE$U0,4Br Ho4Ba,FI'. could bu an otru·c. BALIOAIHH Atlractivell>r,dcn.Pool, AGT.Dnys. •••••t••••••••••••••••• fhelllt.. 3202 olt. Tenant will s bo 4502 Wyn~iitc . Th SllOOimolease Sl25·$27SA Month COf'Ofta•I Mor 3122 Jacuzzi. $28:i 2511 W. br l V.ba, newly painted. •••••••• ............... after 5 pm. S200f mo. Willows. 55 1·2000 ; ~N LID~ w1lh Vl.l:;W l~clt1des utJI. EqwpJ>~d ....................... Sunnow•r.10·5 Huelth40ft .. Cllll:h3140 S24Qmo.Eslher,MO-J..850 • 2177-A MinerSt.642.2464 1194.3434 Elegant. 2 bedrnl. rlt'n k11ehcns. lOS Muln St. ... ES p NES ••••••••••••••••••••••• dys,640-62J..3evs I & RIN i and dinmg rm. 1'11ll1>. Balboa. 675·8740. "' A I ' * A TAL E ·s1de lge 2br Swedish San Joaquin townhome. $700/mo. • BRAND NEW. Studio/I •$420. Kid&, pets ok. New Panoramic Ocean View. Wb.>'payS25-$30when frplc.beam clnis.Fnc BR. 2 ba. ELEGANT• ON 1100 2 Udrm PBNlN.P01NT.lbr.S215 (-61 v &2 bdrms,S230,$285& 38r,2Bo,bltns,Crplc, f rom n ew 3 br , 3ba youcuaetthebeatror yd $295.548-6680 Overlooking MOlr course PLUS,plw. plus • New i~ per mo. ~ .. Blk to heh. " ·•~res $350. lmmed. occupancy. yard. Wshr/dryer hook· w/frplc. Enclosed gar. less. $15. fee. 1 Days Lease, $495. an<lo~l $to00 m~ Call67S...721J ~ Pool. jacuzzi, frplc up. 675-6670or64S·S506. See at 101 Ave de la ~~""fhedunlt 3br,2ba.rr,dr,lr.Frplc. ALSO ON WATER. EXEC Cotono~IMar 3122 dshwhr.Adults,nopets. Grulla. San Clemente. Sl9S s'!~~utilpdw/yd Nr So. Coast Plaza. $415. Univ . Pa r k Vi 11 CONDO with fant.a:.tic ••••••••••••••••••••••• CORONA DEL MAK SOtpenC dMaily( ... ~ VH~rdl1 •O-• Dally l2·S _49' __ 2._139_3 _____ _ SS7·3440 Hanover 3 BR on green· · 8 f 11 ll 2 Br Townhouse, frple. . . . ,.,esa er e r-=~::£!:~'ir.1fch 3Br, lBa, cptS, drps, lg belt. Avail. Jan. l , le11s ~~~nteeda·u~i ~cf rn~: 21!'1:r'!1~u~~~le~lk~~: b~~· ~~a=:·v~:S~~I~~~ Dr.~t~1:,3J!;iIPl;ti !:.~::i~f:io2o!'e~n~r SalltaAna 3110 S2:502bt' bousew/yard yard, no pets, W . Side. ~land Rltr. 552 04 $700t mo. yrly. pliances. Attrocuve UP· to shopping &dine beach. 549-2447 S3S-2248 846-1826 •••••••••••-••••••••••• S2'753brunil kidsok $350 mo. wtr incl'd. ls ---------1 WATERFRONT HOMES stairs.492 5372collect. TOWNHOUSE S275 2br 2 slo'"" condo last & $150 deposi CallGJl-1400 ,._644-·26_u ______ •1Attrnctive2br,2ba,pool, s I I d 'd .,, 1• jacu••i. $ .. 15. ''Sll w. 3 8° 2 ba, 1 blk to bch. pac OWi, new Y ecor . W/"""l,lddsok. 751-4738 L--leach 1248 ---------• ... ., " ... 3 b 1 •~ b townhome ~ -.,.--Sunnower.10·5. Ocean vu! SSOO mo. 216 r, "" a · 11&6Newport Bl. C.M. ••0 ••••••••••••••••••• Costa Meta 3724 IREATHTAIOMG 6thSt. 962.5033 Air. bltns, patio. pool & $LS. fee 645·5990 E·SIDE. Sparkling. N 4 BR, 2 Ba. Den. L!>vely. 3 B_drm, 2 b. a on. ••••••••••••••••••••••• y , l Adlt.s.. new 2 br, pvt pat. db Ocean view $000 Sandy Beach. Bal~o" SSO WEEK Ir U, JETTY VIEW 2 & 3 Bdrms , mature sauna. ery qwe · . HOMEFl .... DERS gar. adlts, no pets. $250. 49 .. 5710 .,~. 9806 Co\•cs. $6S01mo on yrl) Upgraded 3 BR upper, adults, gas pd. 778 Scott •ALL NEW APTS 2 only, pets OK. $365 per " 673-0231. "" or.,..... lse. Call 673·9114 Stud1u, 1 bedroom steps to China Cove. $750. Pl. 642.5073 b.d rm s, e n c I. g u r , mo. 586-6770or 834·1810 Ufetf .... s.r.lce 2Br, 2aa house. N. End. . , Maidservice,pool Mo Call Nigel a t f trcplaces , b l tns . $1201brplex. Hurry! Brand new twnhse, ste close to bch bus & shop. N. Blwr Condo, 3 Br 2 ~ 2376Newport Bl, C.M. s.w.7211 Agt. ' M~sa Verd~. 3129 Cin· (714)840.0188 7 days. South LOIJIMCI 3116 $12Slbrbouae,fidook outdoor~opool &jacuzzi. ping 49'.7079 Ua, Fum Rm, S600 mo 548·9755or645·3967 mmon. Lg 2br, 2ba, nu N t D 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S1751bruUlpdnew CdM Deep pile earth ton · · 759·12'14 Spolless.Walktobch. pnt &drps,enclosedgar. e w ex r a e uxe 1 2 8 R $21Slbrhouse utllpd cpb.2Br,2~ba,2f'rplc,ssso Mo .. ocean view, ---. STUDIO 4BrJBaFamrm2100' Adlts, no pets. $275. TownhouscApts.Lg3Br, ean.ve~ ,upper ,l .....,.2br hs•, klda/pets bltns. $425/mo. 631·2133 gar 3 Bdrms pat1'0 Bluffs, ch?ice view end WEEKLY RATES Yrly, 509 Acacia 645·7048 _7_5_1-8462 __ ro_r_a...:.p..;;..pt_. ___ 1 2ba. frplc, bltns. W ID Ba, refn g, gar. Mature . -" ·• " · unit avail fdr Imm <l hookup, patio, dbl at· adults. no pets. $385. • '2952brhsekidl/pets E SJDE2B D 1 Avail.now.Call494·3474 occu'pancy. 2 BR ·,l~11• t'ullKitchcn&TV h I 5810085 SlSOJbrrentlopttobuy . r up ex, ., . . ~. Linens&Utilitie:. 2 Br. trplc, Ctp\$, stove. THEDAISY tac ed gar. Xlnt loc. P mo. · S260 3brkida/fncd/gar SanlO Tomaa. S275 mo. BLVE LAGOON VILLA 2 J ba .. 2200 sq. rt. $750 CLOSETOOCEAN Balconyview.Xlntcond. FOltklDSAND $425. Ph 545·3604 or · -..., Open 7 days Fee lit/I.st + $100, 'nO dogs Steps to pvt bcb, pools & Mo. 675·0060, 759.7500 Royal Suites Motel Adults-_ no pets. $350. 32 THEIR r ARIHTS! 963-4218 ~am Funllhed l.S2S Mesa Verde Dr. E . 646,-9'729 tennis. 2 ~R. 2 BA. cpts, 3 Br. 2 b:a, nr bch. D/W, ~Newport Ulvd, CM JleliotropeAve.G75-6024 •Pool NR BCH. lrl·coltage 3br. orU..fwelkMd ltOO CcisUi5M5es7a~8c2,s2w206 . ~..;s~~r;.~;,;s'&:'/i~~: patio, !rplc. gar. $495 yr. 64.2·2611 2 Br 1 Ba. s. or Hwy, •2bedrootns 2ba hse now avail. S38S ...................... . -v . Patio garden & l.ge fnc Sec gates. Avail L2/l . J.y.646-4087. 846·8080. SUS C .1.eoiy.1.eo adults, oo pets. $290 mo •Tot lot Reas. dcp. 1809 Hunt· 11iE EXCITING --------bkyd $39S 646-7528 / 1 -,_ Call 642·5953 dy s; P "~ r _.. d lnatonSLSJ6.3920 PALMMESAArTS. r ..... •-•-..11 3206 · · S550 mo. 1.sl, asl + sec FOR LEASE Nicely furn. large & 673·3983 or 6~5 .939 a ...... enconiyar B • ._ den Rer s Own/bkr .. 687W0 est18lhSl. . N ...... Sla*"'r •· Hospital, MlNUTBESCHTO. NPT 4• •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR, fam rm. 1~• ba .,. · · 3 UR, 2 Ba, uv.rm, sep. small I br. Adult.s, only, evesiwknd.s ..... "' ... Charming 3 BR. 3 ba. S3'15;mo. A1ent. Cal 499-4.271or (213)331-0908. din-rm. Jge fum-rm, no pets. 2110 Newport ---------.i Call631-3SlS brand new, 3 BR, 3 Ba. Bach, t&2 BR. +den; paUo, gar., yrly., S40-ll51,askforLes. Sweepingocn vu rrom hv· trplc. Bright. clean Blvd New lBr .apt, frplc, ope ;:~g:. ~g:~t0~;c~f\~ from $220.&up. $600.Ait.475-4822 Cape Cod Broadway E· ing rm, dining rm, modern home. Encl. beamceillngs,adullonly29r 2Ba,nochildrenor 5:30&allwknds.847·32Al Adults.N0 Pel11 Side 2+den or 38r, frplc. lcitchen. 2 br 2 ba condo. Yard • w ' com PI et e ..._t~on $395 mo. SS1·5836 peta. Elec stove. 1S61 Mesa Dr. ?8 R..2 ba.Veryn.ice! lndryrm,lg fncdyd,ne Nr town SSOO mo. pn vaC)' Sep. ya~ for Hart>Our 3742 1BrG::r.Aptw1Garage. 646-43112 Owner'sUnit.3Bdrm,H<.t (5BlltaEastolNewpe>rt rly.$650.Nr.bayfml. cn .. •palnt,.t-,alleyac 494-4916eves. dog 3 Car gar. ~/auto.••••••••••••••••••••••• $315 mo Slll' reCri" N •-2 Bd . ..,.,,.. •-ba. $300+ per mo, de· Blvd.> Winton Realty 67S·3331 ,,_ .... "" opener For lease to tc· . · • •· l • r m uruts. -"' d M ~9860 cess 1425. avl Imme 32 50 nant w'ho will take care Studio on PCH .acros,s pets. Employed adlts.on S2'70. Pvt. patio, hltns. no pen 1ng on gmnt1 _________ _ ..... ,.,. ....... 3207 646--0304 r 't $600 1 Id from bcb. Pool, Jacuzzi. ly Days 64.2·1.521, E\•es chlJdrenorpets. l llOVic· res ponsibilities. Nr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 1 · · mo. nc S 2 so m o D y s 640-7474 lo · CM ~~" 3197 Warner;Golden West. • OCEANFRONTW.SlhSt. E. 210lhSt. Lge 2br, lba,Leisure~orld.Brandnew gardener. By owner. 714 .89 4 .171 7, e \•es · na, ,.....,. Avail Dec )5. Cul l B 4 Br+ den. 3 Ba. winl.er sundck, Adlts, 3 br, view, beams. 21 2 Agt. 979·1298or751·2223 2l3·f>92·21177 $395. Yr ly, 2 BR, hsc + 110 Del Mar, upstairs, 2 847""120fordetails. l~e Y 1 000/ C 11 $215 752.:!550 ca r gar. $600. Owe, car Port . newly dee. BR ... <I\ mo lst & \"St ~. r y Sl mo. a · 581.3429 Steps to t>_each. Duplex. 3 67s...~ ~ves. & wknds. s.u.'~r54i-u41 " · Lee 28r, 2ba. Brookhurst 6'13-54lO. DanaPoW 3 ~r. 2 ba. s4so. Yrly. l.acJilna S.ach 3748 Petok near Ocean. $275/mo. •••••••••••••••••••••• gar, Nr fwy, shopping. L 2 b 2 b bt> t I 1 BLK BEACH 22 F:W 2 Br, 1 ba A1C, 2 car 642·~ Ageot. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cozy 1 Br, frplc, great Call 5.J6.9987. BIG' 4 Bdrm, 2\.!r ba, 2 sty, LARGE 3 8 , LUff LAGUNA BE;\CH ~TR gc r, a. au v ew location. A<llt.s. $230/mo . Lo 1 .. b b lrplc, xlnt cond. $575 yr· r. very· nice pool & clbhsc. $39~/mo. 8 S INN. $6S1wk. S2s01 mo. or bay. Trees! Private. 646·9U9 ve Y ne~ .. r 2\.; ~ 2 J Iv. 642·3783 between 6 & cond. S450 + dep. 581-7209 M Id r color TV $475. 675·5205; 673-4841 story, enc d, sar+pat10. ~m. 497·2653 U 8 6e v · 3 Br , 2 ba, $300/mo. Adults.979·2228 a . "" In Leisure Wor ld, new BEA TIES heated pool IJ01 ~: 3Bdrm,2ba,newcarpel. Downstairs, pallo, no Huet~ :,_ Ceplsfr..ohec:lt3211 BToro 3232 C~AROSACorlse.SS2S. MOVE-IN READY ::;~294• !IS$ N. 8 d~hwasher, gorage. 706 pets. 1021 Val e n cia H::iT.~ 1142 There•s Slmlllloo \n ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SSJ·5777eves Totally new, comptet"ly Iris. SS2S/m.o . yrly. ~ _.._.. r ecr eation : Tennis. • " 640-6656 an r 5 OOPM ----------• ••••••••• •• •••• • ••••• •• .2 BR Duplex, adults, l ew Exec Condo 2 Br, 2 Laguna Hf«JIMI 3252 custom designed 3 BR Luxury penthouse. 2 br. 2 e · swim ming, billiards. ~ child consider ed. No 8a oo quiet. cul-de-sac.••••••••••••••••••••••• 21, ba "specta0cular"' ba, di11 rm. frplc. big _ ----,....... $27S. large, neat 2 . br: Bach apt, nu crpts"d~. heallh clubs,free&anda~ , pets. New crpls It d rps, Overl.oolting lake & len· EA TERRACE-3Br den S575 Mo' v i c w ll 1 o c k to ~~ Quiet area. Enc. p:auo & ~rig. ocean vu. Aval! brunch , parties a n d some ocean \'lew, encl Dis ct. A/C lncl full club pool & heh ac~ess: Designer's showcase downtown . $475 mo . PRIME LOCATIONS 1art111e.64Z·0282 ~~:n::S8C>m:.s CaU T. MUCH MOREi g ar . 268%5 Ca lle memberablp. S395f mo. guarded. ocn view, be s m art.es t decor! 4~H379e\'es :957·028Z 2 &3 br apt.s.+bach.CnoGardenapts.tbr ,slove&----------i Plus beauUlul stnales. He rmosa . U I O. m o . 830-7898 ssso. Ul756ji629 E\•erything new. 4 BR. 3 Studio & 1 br apls. furn stove) Sl6S-S49S. AGT. refrig. $225. Bachelor , Lof-a hoc" 3141 !c,~ u=~~~~ ~ Wtod-s 496-JS&l , or ba., lam. home. $725 Mo Ad Its 0 pets P vt 67S.23ll days stove Ii refrig $210. New. ••••••••••••••••••••••• adults only, no pets. The-(213)869-6232 flomt• Valey 3234 Sea Terrace Tw!Jhse. ex Spotless & immaculate. prk~ \io °& Yrlv r~ntals ~ _ _ _ _ _ ly decoraated. Adults, no 2 Br. New decor. Blk to .,_~ j b 11 C.-del 3222 ....................... elusive rec !acllJtJes, 3 » :;tunning 3 BR, 2Ya ba., <H .ail .i9'7 J.l9l · ~-------~:::=:: pets. 548-6920 bch. View. Adults. no •u..,... n country cJu v-•••••••••••!'!!':' •••••••• Large 3 br, 2 ba executive 2•,, Ba. $450. 497.3774 split level. green bell --2 OR Duplex. gar, uUI. ~ E Sid tri I 3b pets. 1410/mo. 963·3653 ~~t;ooprlm':a)'~acear~l8;.re. ,,......,._ 8 Ba ti family home. Ver y Mission Viejo 3267 view IMO Mo. rm., sundeck, i.tv., new -/ e P ex, r, ----------• •v.u "" .. .._._ge,2 rl ,pa o, private w/10' wall.••••••••••••••••••••••• l'Wwportleoch 3769 crpt .. S375.mo.83J--073'1 2ba.frplc,yd.,encl.gar. Spacious 2 Bdrm . 2 available. newdecor,carport.f.of Family rm, formal •dl.nLovelyJbedrm,2 ba.fplc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• TSLMgml 6(2·1603 ba+lge fam rm . Nice Ou~ Bwy.t55-!$47eves. rm, u_pgraded crptg, ow. Ai C. drps, cpts, 1--0-c•11:-...... ·FR-O-H•T-•lc~toMna 3824 1er.garage.$Z20/mo.No ~:~~~~1r7~!~~~296 O&rda\Aputmcnta New Dplx 3br, 2ba, tplc, d.rps, Jacuul. SS50 mo great area. S395 mo. llOAJ"'ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets, quiet, mature ----------• nxt to park. Wik lo bch. 988-4737 , 540·0:>11 ; 963-4567 Agent no fee. F\Jm, lgc. 3 BR .. 2\Al b:i., • person.642·16'94 OCEANFRONT 1 6 2 Br, $S1:>.. 428 Begonia 644-1132 962.()862 • • lrplc $500/Winter $300. 2 br. 1 ba ~aslslde b I d 21 Vie C do m.J663 642·22S3Eves triplex. encl. gar, Eas~lde l BR,$2.35.Stv & S:oocoiz·~:!! elncorl,ugtalrl. Q)anning 2 br 1 ba home Ll.ke new 3 Br 2 Ba den r w °" ' cute Npt. Hts. hOme: new balcony. Near new. rern g. Coiy w /natural ,,.., ~" _.,.,, c · ......... "-Ill ..... 880 lrvine (at 17U\l 6-i5-0S50 So. o( H /'r I ood Jge yard boa't.gate cul'. S350 mo. Len 73H 433 carpeting in LR; 2 BR. 1 TSL Mgmt 642·1603 wood c;ab. & beam cell· -'"""""""---------• wy w rp c, w d • • ba + guesl rm & bath ceilngs,. dining rm, yard e·sac. Renl lncl. yard & New lux twnhse. 2S Vds sUsM Agt64S.:esoo . N""'" BREEOAPTS lng. 130 E 20lh S t. 1 BR, l blk to bch. Adults. H_,...17001McW1 .. h eo.s-ttt. .. I& -Uo. All new kitch. water. $495. (213>•~ Crom MV CC. Nice vu. 0· """ ~107 No pets -s "' "' ,... or(2JJ)67S-9111 t 273 1 Br & bach w/loft. · ·-.mo. (n.....·-at l ... "") .. w/alde by aide relrig &c ex· 3Br.or 28r,&Den.Many 1Bdrmhouse.'-"loocean. Adult, n o pets. 393 49'J·3900after4 uu8'2.8170vu• "".f.'' dsbwhr. Just redone In· Super 2 sly 3 br 2 ba xtras. Re f 's req 'd . 1 mature adlt, no pets. H 'It 645-4411 1 ... ,,. ... t ..._ •• ...... C ... side Ir out. Real cute! w/bonus r~. Fpl~. cpts: $500/mo. Call 752·930 Yr ly.673·2512an.3pm. .l~~~~~~~~~~l~~a~m~t~o~n~,~~~:---1 _...__"'_" "' 3 BR or 2 & den, blk t Garage Gardener $450 .i-..... c evs/wknds Lar"e 3 Br Townbou•e lecM I larA•l 11 /1 heh, Cantas.llc v lew11 . R~ 4000 ' · · '"..., great a rea ......, 4 Br, 2 Ba, 2 Sty. 2 car gar. " " Agt 768-&7S 494-8611 --!e!s.Beaonia . 9$5·3649 983-4567, Agent, no' fee. . H.w-rt a.och 3269 Blk to bch. $600 mo. OCEANFRONT with paUo, garago + 2 Ir Avl 12/ l·SSO ' , . • ..................... . r-· 6423242 WTNTER RENTALS pool. Quiet complex. •P• 2Bdrms,COaat Hwy,Jblk Room w/tll~henelt.e • ---------·iSPACIOUS 3 Br Tiburon••••••••••••••••••••••• · · 28R 1 ba S310 Adults, no pets. $350. All uUts pd., cpts, drps, to beach . Mal . adlts. $50 weeklcup. S.-yG• .a.SS Condo. 2.,., ba, A/C, wet· WALK TO IEACH Saft CletM..te 3276 Lae, •3 BR·. 2 ba. .._""' 645-3381or 675·5!M9 pool, lndry. fac's. Adults $350. 494.1535 548-915.s r ~ bar MSO. 8'1-4525 3 Bdrm. house plus large ••••••••• •••• • • •••• •• • • " ~ o e 35 n p t r ' DELUXE fenced yard. Only one Shoredifts4 Br. Fam Rm. 2BSRT.:;Sn1'. 0 a~·cH$400 NEW OWNERS c~ltdre~. ~alle ~u:: LofiMMlgilel 3152 ROOMS, Sea Lark Motel.~ .\;> PROF.DECOR. IMitlagloaleodl 3240 block to the beach. on golf crse, club & bch -558.7707 or He n ry : u•••••••••u .......... 227•NewportBlvd,COsl(I.. .. .. 4BR,3Ba,fam.nn,3car ••••••••••••••••••••••• $450/mo.HURRY-call prl $475 2JJ..794•3453 2BR.1ba.,yrly $375 'MEW' M .......... ...._EMR ... T 842•9137 Delwce u,2 e r.S26S &up, Mesa. Some retrlg.' - gar, 2 Frpl's, microwave 3 Br. 2 ba, bltns. 2 car v. · 1 BR .. yearly $400 "'""'• ~ pool & rec room, quiet 3vall., color TV. AM/FM oven . wet bar . gar •• fenced yd, pool, * 494-8057 * New 3 br townhae, full 2BR,lba,yrly $310 area.&11-7766 radio avaJI. Weekly ren· Panoramic view. S900. $440. 14431 Cbateau La."----" .t 3 BR 2 BA ocean view, covered SUNFLOWER 2 Br, 1 ba, pr, pvt yd, t alsS6Sliup.M6-7'4S mo. lease. Agent. 6T.M.54S ""r....., 1u ron • . t · patios. Pools, $410. walllowall cpt. Av allt he Hewport leech 3169 Amb dor Inn 1 ,. ....... _ 6"-'72l.1 rp c, garage, w10 er 540-4061 I bdrM-...11 .... _ lat. Call 754--0847 between •••••••••••••••o•••••• assa n """"' .. ________ _,3 Br+den w/frplc. Close turn. $600/mo. Call _.._ 6&t9pm PAJlk HIWPOllT Mesa, 2277 Harbor. Cen· ---------1 to shopping center bus 675-6670or8'73·78C8. New Townhouse, end unit. 2 ..ct 3 bdrwtt traUy focrated, 23S rooms. Large2BR.2Ba,2yrold se rvice . $450/mo. 2sty.3BR.oceanview, 3brtoWftho•••s HEWC:ONDO Bac h e lo r s, 1 or 2 MANY with kltcben Duplex, dbl attach gar, '494-8958 Bayfront ~o. plush 2 beaut. decor. sos. 2 L&e Br . 2~ Ba, frplc, .Bedroorns •Townhouses phone & TV. Swimming ftp\ . 719 Jasmine, (A). Br, 2 ba w/lrg rms, love· S7S-l71M orS3l·J69S Cwlttl flreplecesl From$274.50 pool, jacuzzi, and rec. SC75.mo.83J..7084 Sharp 3 bedrm, 2 bath ly view. Full security, vtEW OF BAY udult.s patio, dbl gar, S38S mo. Spectacular apa, total room. Dally " weekly D I B •. d dishwasher, cpts, drps: sub-parlt'g. Slip avail. BeautUully decorated 3 decorator's furn 1 er & 3 POOLS 673-9208 recreation program, r11tei starting from $48 • • e u~e ~ r k ... hen, nice area, kida/pet OK. caU675-67'75. BR, 2 Ba. oce1rnview, dcn.SlOOyrlyormonthly JACUZZI JODS OK·2Br. S220 mo. soclalprogram.7~18,8 week •••• J:i._s_'!:l-.. ~e r<;e' cam· S385. 963-4567 Agent, no4 B 2 B ... _ t quietSt.MZS.496-8033 ITTS-9877 pool. carport. Call termls courts.At ashion . 645-4840 • ~ p1un:uuP tennas crts, spa, fee r, a. s11ac, .,.,au • SAUNA 64S-8084 ClOAM 7PM ) Island, J amboree & San ---------pool, sec guard. $800 mo. · Westcliff area, fplc. lg 2 Br, 1 ha. Nice yard. 3 Br, 2ba, some ocean · J oaquin Hills Road. Steeplngrma S75-Sl05 mo. Fri·Mon.644-6920 Super sharp4bdrmhome kil &dinrm,2 car gar. Available now $325/mo. \iew. Bltins. Garage. ClosetoS.A.frwy &t SO. $185. 1 br. No sharing! C714J644·1900 AJJ SSO. wk. Share kJV " y w/heavy shake roof. Liv· $750/mo lse/opt. 673·454$. iro El Portal, SC. Eves $<150. Ph 963-8818 aft 5. Cst shop'g. Tiny Tots Non·smoker only. Refs. bu th. Shown Mon-Sat. SP GLASS ing rm w/frplc. famllyHVHm 4 B 1 t hi af\6,640-8647 welcome.Jplaygrounds. req'd. 954 w. 17lh.New duplexes2·3br S3SO Refsreq'd.SS6-0058 front rowvtewor ocean rm off brigbl, cheerful 5 r, <: 5 0 sc 5• Lgc 3 br, 2 ba completely 548-0358 up yrly. F amUy & pets bay. 4 Br, F amily & kitchen , Jge m aster parlt, pool. $825/mo. SclnJUClft · furn. I House from ok.675·4912 Roomquiet man,cooklng, bonua rm, $1450 m o. bdrm. Across from lake lncls grdnr. 6 mo min Copfstrono 3278 ocean. Winter $475. Yrly FROM $265 UP close ln, prlv. ent. $ll0. 6'4·5061,ownr/agt. · &park.~.848·942'7 lse.833-1861. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S575. 11!09 W. Bulbo:i Ncwport Sboresarea.l 'r'.I 497-8687 4 br 3 ba !am r m 3200 4 Br. comm POOi, 1 mile fr Blvd. <2t3)445·1329 or 2SI I w. S..ttflow•r blocks beach, 2 bd , l ba. ---------S450. Lge 3br, 2ba dupleic. CX>NDO 2 br. 1 \\ ba, new it 1444· S ti 'N 8 Dona Harbor. 5450 mo. (714 )962.ft24ot Yr lse. (714)956-5871 Very nioo room le kitichen. Frplc, P'/A, gsr , patio cpts, !lrps, refrig. Pool, sq. · an ago. · · 898-6827&646-662.3 • UUI pd. S14S. N.D. blt.ns. 642·9918 clbhse. $295 mo. l st. last Sl250 mo. Aaent. 541-5032 3 Br 2 J3a. Cplc, spacious. 1 days,10 to~ 3 Br 2 Ba, beam clga, 673-1451after 3:30 +dep 979-7888 Sea . b . Brand new 3 br, 11~ ba :steps to woter. $495 mo. So1T)',nopets. wood paneling, bllns , c.t.Mft• 3224 ' VlCW, new 4 r w/vicw. twnhse Pool lac Child 209 41s t St. 673-3057 dOle to bch. S4SO yrly. F~ale, furn room In pvt -.. ••••••••••••••••••Executive home near 21Z\J'u~~ Yan~l/~ O.K.W/mo. 754.6341 wkntb. 213·!M1·6Dl<l. 3 ::io~.;;f'S~:8~a~~ 673-7684 home. Kitchen & Saund. Cmdo, new 3 Br 2~ Ba, ocea3~ 4 bd, :i ~a, f~m ~ ~~~aJ-3622 en· 322214 Pasco Carolina 2 1Wl9·5985 1~12·5206or646-3442 $39S. 3 br, 2 ba, block to Rpr1vll.&84!~~afl4~mOS. 0 AJC gar relrig wshr rm. rm, w ar, re BR Co d N . lS sjoo beach. Encl. gu. Yard. °°"' _,. "' dryr, po0l, tenn'ts.yr ly rlnf., outdoor BBQ & Gorgeous new condo, 3 br, n o& 1° pc · ~nh 3 Rr. 2 ba upper. Mesa del Adults, no pets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ., 1M.S480mo.642-3443 poo . S'750/mo: Coosldel' 211 ba, pool. 15 acre pvt p/mo. lsl ast + $100. Unfwftlshed Mar. $290. Family, no 1'yootOrongeCoUnl'(s TSLMgmt. 642·1603 Room It boar d in pvt • ---------1 lsc/opt. 848-0707; 968-4347 park. Coastal breetes. cleaning & sec. dcp. Call pets. 54S·4991 ....... -.• .........._. horn"' 110, 2 elderly lad1•t1 · M v rd I Bobble Evers, at Valen·••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------11 mosa .....,v'""'ol"""'""" .., '' "' esa e e ux. exec. ADULTCOHDO ~~:7fewpor~ Tcr· tlnc Really Co. 532-6777 GftMf'GI 3802 NEW 2 BR, b l tns. communlles.Arelamg Yearly 3 br, 2 ba, ~ blk or 2 elderly aenllemen. ~~~t·.~n_i4;,~~F Clean 3 Br, l lh Ba. club 88 --or 752·1S34 ••••••••••••••••••••••• balcony. car port. $32S ..-..,.Wlltl steoms. bay" bch, end. ga1'. No Pleasant s urrounu ho h Lo Be h 6'5-644 ( I i ..... w"' pets. $400. 644·l103 home cookod meals: N t H t ., 8 U5e. pool, $335 per mo. 2 Br. 3 ba, bnr, bllins. e_._ Ana 3210 •Cl r $1651. ni: ac ,· I or n o. wotemlls,ona mojesllc 3 Br 2 Ba, • blk" bch. ,~ .... L h1cldcnta'• incld l ewpor gs o r 968().3680,avlOct.24 cpts, drps. hlf(hly up·~ · pt11, c rps. s tv. re .. .. ·-~· .. . duplex. h~ Ba. fplc. pvt graded Condo J hlks to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,\ d I t ~ , 11 o p c l !I Foxhollow VNI• 1rMS. feal\lr1ng pools. Poo1:1. tennis, now cpt.s, CM a rea, 84f.3301 pat.lo, aar, $400. 64&-8579 Coodo 2 br, l VJ ba. tennis. beach. Pool. JllC, suunu. Lwtury 2 Br .. 2. bn;' dlx 714 8.13-S974 tr.ii W Wll<ion &t6·2010 Jocuz:zl souno, blllords, M50. ~9265; 545-0898 S-..r lltfttah 4200 pool!!. 962-8891 doys ask 1495, mo, 1 yr lsc Av~il Condo. Nr S.C. I lata. 1-'URN OR tJNFURN on<! exclllng CIU~ Twnhse, 2 sty condo, 2. Br. for ftlla. 645-5971 968-7634 Nov Jst S4o-4480 Pool, frplc. jac. gur s:ns. •2br town homo w/frpl Win social Mf'llS. Tennis, 3br, 2ba, l blk bch. Gar & •••••••:••••••••••••• •• 2~ Ba, FP, OW, Micro ofter a pm. &\0-44G2cves IEACH RENTALS •l.gc paUo&enc. gara"e "'""'.OOd...--IOf bllJ\S, yrly, nu decor . dck SKIERS, HousofoT'l'flll,tn wave. 2 car aar. w/trah mutrs, 3 bdrm, Hay views. WINTlm •Adults only. .,... • ...... ,..... patio. 673-2571 '!:":...1?.'.;. $200. tor 4 mo a. ~ •: comptr, door opnr, WW Sharp 4 br, 2 ba w/(plc, pool.$SSOlo$1~/mo. Bradford Place. 2 Br. I (L·c:inrrontl.uxury Poot•·ja"U'""lavall TilOVllOge.MoreOf _..._, cpta,drps,new.$450mo. cpls, drps, nice ares. Rltr844·0134 ba. $325/mo. f~vt>s & J lJr~2ba hseSl400 "'".... · tw91ythlngyou'rtlooldng S450. Large 3br. 2 bn.v .tfaft 87$-5487 1\gcnt. Kids/pets OK. $405. -wknrl~ !iS9·0404 or Spncious nuyvlcw Lllr&e townhouso near for.Fumllurel$OYOloble.. Dl()ck to beach. Encl. 8C Rfftf9t1 4250 ' ~. AJJent. no lite Bluffs condo. 3 Dlt, 2 ha .. 768-7100 1Br,2 bo.. 81; U •l50. new. centre I loc. 2br, One ond "'·-B""----nar .. balcony. No pet3. :••:••••••••••••••••••• Sp ac. 3 br In E -slde lllnl cond. s.s2.c; Mo. ---H b I cJ yd •"'15 '""' 111\11111.1111 TSt. Mgmt 642·1603 Cabin, Big Bear, 111)1 4·18. tl1plcx frptc, 2 enc. g11r, Dix, ne11rly, frwy els. 2 J\itenlf'.44 1133 Westmlnst..-3298 WeslNt•wport Comforl 64~ 4°6s,.,nc . i;ar . .., , AdUILMng. --$3S up. Pool tbl, olr tv, enc. yd. Cnrdonor. Refs. SR. 2 BA, Crplc, star. -••••••••••••••••••••••• Z Ur. l bo. S350/mo. omces 9 00 6:00 Attractive 3 brf crpt11, dbl frpl, 41M~!t. $410. &75·1849 c11rth clr11. S32!5i mo No Pcnlnsuln l't. WA l.K TO Nice 3 hcdrm. l both, uw. 2 Br apt near 1hoppln.i. open : IO · · drps, bltns. frp c. Gnr ............... _ doll&. Cull 062 1131 or n 1': AC II & n AV :I drvs & ('µt~. l(ood urco. Stove & remit. Adult.II, no,__N_<M_""_nll_nlQ.-.·----.ii No pell!. Adults only. "'~to SIMN 4100 Never lived In exec 3 Br 53t'r0901. Dr+fom rm +sludy 21 J ~'mo oo:H!'M\7 Ai:l'nl. pets S23S. 3t3 \7th Place. Xlnt toe. $3.'IO. 842-4381 ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• 2~Ba,pvtpatlo.tcdecks, b a . $ T 0 0 1 m n nofrc• llptl.Of)('n.1142241'"' •BESEL£CT1VE• Jndry rm, Nwpt Hgts ,,.,,..,. 1244 <2t3J342·972L collect --2 Br, 1'~ bu, deck, ~~ blk t.o Cltll 645·748S· 640·8468 area. Ordnr Incl. $575 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -3 Urpoolhorne. Lgey<l . LG t br, O/W, c pt11, b c h . C:tt cr ii11rna c SHARF.A HOME·APT mo.548•336$ New sccludfd lakeild RLUFFSWATF.R VJ,.,W Nr 405 & (;G fw} lolboolsland 1106 carport. no kid~ or pets, $38..\/mo. Aitnt 675-1972.1--------- 3 BR. It family; l><'nut SJ751 mu S31l 7!.J:t, ••••••••••••••••••••••• S'l05 Avl10·26.64fi..S251 EVes,637 3ti'5 Fem rmmale to 11h1re 2 Brand new n nd cundo, ll pacious 211 rounyard AR\6441133 ~31:12 Br28afurn.PlneCtffk beautiful 2 BR. 2~ bo w/pvt polio. W/D flku~ --------Uayrront Bal hi apl, New Condo 2Br, 2~8", :i BAYFRONT 3 Bdrm, 2 upl. Nr OCC. $!77.50_ Condo. 2 Fplcs, OW , w/d, pool. t~nnla, saunus. S2AS-mo. + Utll. 1 Bit. J Br, 2 bu. trpll'. :i cnr i.:nr 3br . :.!b11 M1lhon $$view fflllc11, bltns. pool. BPlt, ba. 7~l-6771 '7•m·ll or •It 8 pritnt beech loc. $395. Adults U!use $34St mo. frpl 434 Alislo Nice llrca. S42S .+ sec. Luxury Aclulb, Yrly l~c dbl .iaragc, $42=-mo. $1000/mo. or 042.5440 Mon-Fri• ia-45eT A&cnt. no fee. SS1·t900 (7 t41622-84;Jt 846-51.37 $675 675 :11m 631·2133 673-2058 lUPM ONLY. ' - . Lost&Found 5100 He1 W_.ed 7100 H_.pWMt•d 7IOOH.lpWonted 7 100HefpWont•d 71 00 Wontflf 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• p ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• a...tals to Sh.,.. 4300 Offke Rental 4400 Morl909H . Tn1tt F'OUNO •AUTO SALES IOOKl<EEPER COOK, Ex-r•d t>o-nt,il .1,.,1111 St> l • ..i•'. DAILY PILOT Thursday, October 27. 1977 ••••••••••••••••••••••• >••••••••••••• ••• •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 5035 l\tult• Samuycd. FvlJ..Ch r -.. V1c.<'M A<'cnt R. ~t U>Sl2K IUSEOI! or~ Or ~•llinl( lo lr.i111 Mu'>t J>rde:,.,p'«il , It u .\. 'l'emale share w1lh irnme, NEW OFl-'ICESUl'fES ···~·•••••••••••••••••• 548·5501 ~retancs 10S1~K Cht•\')' ch·Jler lo ..idd lwo ?\I u s t be J :i rn 1 Ii a r Ill' dl.'f)('ndul>f,•. llr!< Wt•cl 4\19 1355 • N .B .• tenrus. non INNEWf>OttTBEAClt l<etirt!Ucouplehu:.money • -Re\·epl 'l'yp1:.l $7:10 <'~f)l'ilcnn•d u'cd t ar w 'l'rVkl' hun•.iu rom Thur, & t-'ri 1u .1m • 11moker, 548·9600 Mon-1000 t~ 2000 ft avail tolo<monlsl&2ndTO':..l-ound: Tubby kltt)', Jr.ProjCntrlr tu$14K :.alc\llll'rl for l'ui;y ll1th!r1>~bll'Ol!>&~µcr'd tl.:JOµm,SJt&Suntium 1)1-:NTIST A ~i;od u11•, lt'rialt6PM w indl\ gar'1q::e:s Agcnt.4!Hl(Jlj()() whtt flca eollur, wht lr\'1nel'crsoruwlA>!l'1H:y .!>lra11:ht ••'II lh•11crnui. In ,\ P. I\ H. JlJ)'rOll. :! :1orun. Mc!><.1 Vl'rdc ~ µrujlrc:.!<h<'. nlflre tn ---------1 64S 3323 • . ----oosc. Vtc. flks.1 V~rde ·'88 £17th Co.,t:i ~h·:...i pay 111.m. ovix>rl unity lur Hr11 'I lcdi:er I hr1.1 T U Con' Jl(JW. 6til C.:t·11lc1 t,;o,t.i M.•'li•• ~.1 ntu Ana >!aJe llhr lux condo Np --· \.\'. F.. ~U Y l".l. IU\ 1'_ ~ area, C.M S45·1577 Suite 224 G 12 l !711 .illvum:cmi•nl St'I.' S.ili·:i (';111 (71 1 l Sol(} 32111, Mon St, c~t 5"18·SS8.., u r 1• u 2 L> u Y :1 wk Bc:h W/&amo. Gay o Office :.pal·e LJ!: Be:ich Si!: C 0 N 1> I It US 1 -----_..._, - - ---MI: r , II OW /\ HJ> i'!°t • 8.:JO !WM for uppl 97V 3fflll straight. Own bdrm 5«>:.Q.ft.cpbdrps.S270 !>l';~:ys. A<;t;NT FOUND: ~·~,otan,.:c ~~:=:-~ t'hcviolt!l,Dtm·&l,Juuil 1::01'~ COOKWAHTED 1--------- ba. J acu.t, :suuna, pool & mo. 497-·088 ufll pm. t14..i.1t>·Ol!OO _ Mor rib Kll t~. • m ~le St:. .. Ncwrll"lrt til!al'l1 IOOKkEEPER 1\11 bhiJl!I. 1-;x1wr'tl only. J(3r. View, nr bch. $210 --~,o~a collur. V1<'. Irvine Acc..'lna Bkk1>n8 . ' Apply m Jlcr'>vO, Joli~ 6'5-2004 lusinHs Re-ntol 4450 LOWEST 'l l.'rrac~ Cd~ 675·0112 TEMPORARY i\uhirnollH• Sml dei;1i;n t1ro1 n ds ltOi.t~r. 100 s. Cou~l llwy. :Da l Pen. oceanfront. •••:•0•:•U•X••E••0•F••C•;5•••• Inf-st Rat•s Found mix<'d .M Tcrri~r RegistC'r 'foday to w11rk N(•W Dct,1il Shop needs l I cha ~gc l!k k 11r. I\ g . Laguna Beach ~ .... "'"". " dwnlwn H.B.1-'Jea collar on vuriousaccounlinl(& help i.:ress1ve, 1nnovativc,-----BR. 2 Ba, Shr wi2 males. Q>nC. rm .. seat 25. ti ll ht T.D. s, also b'73·l240 hm. 536·88ll ofc bookkeeping <1ss18n . Top wug~11 pu1d. Enuine front ofc a ppeur. enjoy COUNTER HELP $160. fum. 675·7561 paneled, sm. whse in re· 2nd T.D. l.oons. menls. Work close to Steamers, cni.: painters, people, able to handle 1opm.6am. Wi11d1ell'i1 Roommnte w n nt cd . ar. lor2yr. leasc. Lakt> 1''u1r.,.11tTerm::.:.mccl!l-1!1 Found: Lad.Y's ring. )'our home. FIJ(ure bllffcrs & pollslwr.s. up sectry <1u11cs as well as Donuts. 253 ~ 17th St. Balboa lsl;,nd. Share 3 Forest area. Ke: n l sattt~r•Mtg. Co. Owner tndeol1f)' by slic, Clerks to !;r Acl'UUll· hoist cry t.ha m1>1101'rs, toke full d1ars:e of ore. Costa Mcsu. Br, 2 ba. $1'11 incl utH. Harkins. 64., ., 171 545 0611 ~olor. etc. Cull Uunl· tants necue iJ thruout chrt•k uut. pick-up & tic Interested only 111 lop ---- 673-8632 7l.S·581·9393 .,. • .,. • 1n1<ton Ueaeh Poltc1i Oran.:cco. livcry.Applynt notch expr'd g irl .Counlcr JleJp,Pnrtllmc.5 $7 ooo· 2 d T I> G t · Ocpt. 536 5621 ltOl>t!rl Half's ;ro59 Hurbor DI, CM 640·4415 or 675-6522 btwn day a week. llrs 10·4, ;\p Jlappy Go Lucky Guy to LAGUNA ty 3 ~rs du~· 1~.he1~~-L 0 S T . W H 1 T }' Accountcmps 645·1030 8·Spm. ply in J>erson between 10 ~hare lg 2Br, fur~l.s,hcd 2 Shops, one 470 SQ., It. & G~ocl · d1scu~1H .' Als~ SAMOYED. Male named N~;w~~~V~~:~a1nk i\U'fOC.:i\RRzERS. morn-Bookkeeper/Receptioniist. ~i~;a~~~Jil~l·bo:,111·: apt on Nwpl Penin1>ula lheolhetOOO sq. fl. in tho smliller or laq:cr ·.r.D.:. "King" Vic· 17th & Th 0 Jn ••:i, es•ab. Ile .. 1'stcr front ok. Busy o(c. 8·5 ------$150 mo. util incl 'd henrt or downtown, high D•'> 3S J ~·--. In eCityof ruui;e " • ., '673-5761 ,631-0053 (mesg) foot traffic, next to park· ""'. 14· · °""m. Tu:.tm, <;.M. Ca ll cullect 714/835-4103 route. Good money. 11.IJ Couture Chiropractic Of Counter girl. Sandw1Cht!s. _______ __,;;.....1 ing lot. Xlnt retail Joe. l-7~·7433 F.V. areu. 842 1472 btwn fi ces, a~k for Wendy, HlAM·2PM , Mon-Fri. NffdC1RootN11Gt•7 Cull Realonomics . AllnOUncements/ 8am-4pm. 645·SJOO. l781U Skypark IJh•d, ln• To P?Ofesslonully Find 67s-6700 . Pft"SOftofs/ ACCOUMTIMG CLERK -.--M6 0780 THAT RIGHT PERSON Lost Ii FoWtd P""°"ms 5350 The Southland Corp has Automotive IOYS ·GIRLS 1'...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••• an opening fo r perma LOT MAH 12·16 yeurs of age. Eve· COUNTER HELP ~E·CI2Aru 'l!HuM1TW Store&orticespaces $100 nent full.time accounting We want an cxµcrnmccd mng work. Obtain new Days Mature per:ion TWY~ Drinkingproblem·t 1 1 ubs · li f th D · "-'AC' G« ~~HR per month &cup. ernenh 51 00 clerk in New Port Bea<'h man on y lo kl.'elJ 11ur Ol s cnp ons or e a1· needed AppJy bl wn 2 5 a>~ W'-0•""1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~l~~l~dh;; ~ Office. 10 key by louch, <'ll'un, etc w,, offer µrof1t I)' Pilot working with an pm. Del Taco. 2S2S<! Lu 832·4134 Since 1971 ATTORNEY AT LA w good math required. Xlnt :1ht1nng, eumvany paid aduJt !>Uperv1sor. Earn Paz Rd, Laguna Ullls 'Burr Whit~ n~.llt~r DIETARY AIDE Full-time 10am·6pm Hospital Dietary experiencl.' J>referrtid bul not 1·equired. Please 1·11nlacl M rK. Johnsoo, Dietary Dept . IEVERL Y MAMOR Convulesc:ent Hospilul 2'1452 Via l!:strada Laguna Hills, 837-8000 Equal Oppty i!:mployer DRAFTSMEN lS.etro/ M•chanlcoU MatW'e woman \>vt room .,. bath. convenient loc., F. V. $115 mo. 963-6216 2901 N e w poll Blvd N B I ~I <i I t)7 ') -1630 PREGNANT? company benectts. Apply insurance. vac..ition , $20 lo $:J0 per w~k orl----'-~----1 BANKRUPTCY $95 Caring conCldential in person: 4001 Westerly gooc1 hours. Apply •n more. Call 213/ 597·0396 Be fam1bar with com· counseling & referral. Pl. Suite 117, Newport person to· Vic Snyder, noon-Spm, 2131 '198·24 73 CREW mer c 1 al e I e et r o, DIVORCE $95 Abortion, adoption & Beach. Affirmative ac· Servl(•c M!{r Spm.9pm, Call Collect. mechanical s t andards .l1 F b 2 b hs . kt.>eplng. Lion and ~qua I Oppty Atlus Chrvslet·l'lymouth BOYS WAHTED MANAGERS and pr:ictices. Must be 1 . 3 t ~ e vie Nr. N'pt P.O., profess 640·2507 APCARE S47·256 Employer 292911urbor Blvd able to write E.O.'s, re · Bn.sto)/Paulanno$150 + bldg., 1900 sq. fl., $900 ---------1--'--'--·--Co:.taMcsa AGES 10·15 Pit1me eveni ngs & vise drawings und work util.Nopets.979-o54s mo.Agent646-2414 H 4 D FIRE 0 R UHDA&VICKI ACCOUNTANT ' ---Huntington Beach area. Saturdays managing from engineers instruc· Christian woman to share IURGLARY? OutcClll Motsage Pvt Country Club. Must l';arn. S20·S30. per week. Junior Sales Per10ons tions. marked prints or a Br Condo In Fountain lndustrfalRffttol 4500 Free coo 1>u lta l1o n Forthef'Wtofffl beuble tomuintain com AVON ~~l~;~fE~:iLYs~~~~~~ selling s ubscriptions bkelches. Minimum l Vly. $150/mo. 554·4111'1. •••••••••••••••• ••••••• wt claims ex1>ert547·824 1 Serving all Orange Co. pleteths1et or books11nclt.I 'g No delivering or colJecl· door to door. Requirei; year experience pref~r· 6"0-8725Michcle. •COST•MES"' • 835.7313 mon Y rinancia state iog. Cail this numb"'r to va n or laqco s tation rably in the electronics • • SCRAM-LETS ---------• ments. For interv. call Chri1hna1 Earnings "' w:i gon. Phone collect, industry. Send rt!sume or ~~!_... 700 & 1300 sq ft . 110·220 •MICHELLE'S• 644·5'104 h9ift How apply 213 ·597·0396. After apply in person to : TUrR..,. 4350 pwr. ' N S For AVOM 892-4625 5:00pm. 213·498·2473. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3800 sq fl. sprinklered. A SWER lOA~~~I Mass~f~4462 ACCTS PA y AILE REPRESENTATIVES ---------:-----1·--------•I TREND AT A N N Loading dock. 12· doors. J""und _ 1. mage _ IOOKKEEPER IUSIOY WANTED -Per Mo. ear ewport Rltr. 752·50"1 "' Best time to <'stablish G _. h.,. F/t' CORP. ~81 d CM St g 0 I Wugon -'lom"ge -S-lri'-·-" R--"'"-r l of Oh•, Count1ns most J raveya,u s In. 1me. Proc ¥ • . • ora e n y.1-----------1 .. .-.. ,.. ._ ~ ... ~ customers. nterested ? De d bl I Data essing St-..1---1 M•-n'•s Call631-3273 JOGGING 1Bl5So. El Camino Real progressive Heal ~lute Call 540 7041 or Zenith pen a e person on y. JOlu THE mKIW"V ,._ "' The person who snid San Clemente. Fully lie. Dvmt. firms is seeking 7.1359 Apply ln person. Grinder " Dlvls'°'9 toro,. 4550 "Notlung is smPossible," For appl. 492·7296 mature, re$J>. lndiv. to1---------1 Rest., 1400 W · Coast UNDERSEA An Applied Magnetics Co Office ll...t.. 4'400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• never tried JOGG1NG 1n ---'--'------1 compliment our present Hwy, N.B. 6"2-888l. WORLD OF 3400 W. Seger~trom 0 ••••••••••••••••••••• torage units from $15 Ventce. DIAL·A·SEltVICE acctg. ~laff. Must have Bubys1tter CASHIER Santa Ana, CA 9270. 65• PER S9 FT mo. Indoor & outdoor RV ESCORTS. MODELS strong bkgrnd. w, multi· $2 Pet HOUR JACQUES 1714) S4J>.3605 t 1617 WESTCL1FF·NB & boat storage. Mgr on MASSAGE pie sets of books, manu:il P/lime in m)' home For Thurs, Fri, Sat, Sun. AGT. 541-5032 ~mlse. 24 hrs security. C:.Pool S 150 540-8393 & computer systems. Wed. & Thurs 9am-3pqi. cau Barbara for appt. Equal Opportunity 'l1le Storage Place, 1830 ••••••••••••••••••••••• As k for ext. 25 Located temporarily in 'I\irtlerock. Own trans. weekdays, 540·3280. COUSTEAU Employer M1 F 150 I Westdiff Dr. Mt. Langley. No. or Ellis, Ride needed to work & ---------• Santa Ana. co. will be re· 752.uz.,a Days. CASHIER N F' i 1C Fountain Valley. Pb back, from 8·S. 11.B. to loca ting in Laguna•----------• ewport mnnc a tr 9&"1607 Irvine Ind. cente r . HORSEDRAWM Nigue l. Xlnt. opp, Babysitter for 3 days Full Pit. Respperson World's largest scuba l.eal"'90fflc• Spoc• 96().3023 growt h , sec urity & week . N . D . home . ovr20. will trn, gd pay manufacturer has a n hn· CaUonSileManager 3xl50 fenced storage HAYRIDES salary. Call: 835.8035, 7:J0·6PM Ph Hood, METROCARWASH mediate opening ror a Drapery workroom needs (71") 642·3111ext246 yard. SlSO. mo. for groups :'don. t.hru Fri .. SAM to 333.2900 2950 Harbor Bl. CM Senior Programmer ror cx.p'd CUlitom drapery ---------• M5-Sl26or675·8074 t __ 300 evenings 5PM •------------------i Syste m s 3 MOD 15 culle r or full lime D&UXIOFFICIS Mnf Ir FowKI 5 ?days 8 week BABYS ITTER after· Cash ler /Tclephone. SHOP. Mlni~um 4 years trainee. Top wages. Paid Cornml•lndstlapaces. 4600•••••• ................. t O minut es from noons. perman e nt Muture person wi exp. e xperience w ritin g holidays &i vacation. 200 lo 2000sq.ft.As low • .... ••••••••.......... T:Slamese male cal. Newport-Rivers ide ACTIVITIES University Pk 675·6263 for CostaMesa area.$500 COBOL and RPG 11. mec.1.benefit.Apply l835 u 35it sq. n. Laj Niguel & visiting inlaws need a Blue Pt. Sept JOth, vie freeway. Minimum of 20 ' mo + beneUts . Apply Knowledge or BOMP and Whittier Ave, Unit B·7, Mlaslon Viejo areas . fum'd rental or hse to sit Spyglass Hi 11. Cd M . per group. For details, ASSIST ANT ~~h3ei: ~r ~;1~~2~~~0• MRP helpful. Excellent CM or cnll 642-1843 Jlandy to S.D Frwy. for the Month or Dec. "Sirakil" Reward . conlac..'lKris,637·6990. BANKJNGDATA s a la r~ and fring e Driver. FiUme ror Jocal Ca.U:831·1.f00 Pref the CdM area. 640-0655 PROCESSING c•~HIER benefits packu~e. Con· d"li·ven·es. Xln' •lriv'nn --------• 640-8828eves. M•ss•GE We have nn Immediate COMPUTER ~ t t J Wh tfo d " • ' ' .. rtofflc•s $50REWARD " " luUUmeopenlngfor on PROof!!.•..t.MMER Wanted,mature woman, Ma c o nD t p1 r •rec. req'd. Phone for "'" FIGURE MODELS · t it --e! d A I · unager a 8 rocess· appl. 557·9212, usk for NTH FREE s/lrind/ for lost brief case. S2S for asststanl to our Ac '" Y Chulleng.lng oppor. ln an exper pr erre , PP y ang al (714) 540-3010: Mr. West. Newpart Sta· Alli service. No lease re An .. ~. contents. Brown leather, ESCORTS Director. Hours are 8.30 expanding systems 3 Jn. in p e r a on Co u s l U S DIVERS 'd """·"""' n Pl ..._ "' left in O.C. Airport amtoSpm.Mondaythru I . f RPG II Supermarket 3347 E. • • liooers. q •--sq. · enl ••••••••••••••••••••••• T I C II 6460781 OUTC•LLOMLY Friday, Successful can· :ital auon or an CoastJfwy,CdM. 3323WestWarner ---------of parJtlng. 2082 S.E.,._,, ermana • a · dldale mus t be v ery programmcrw/utlcast2 SantaAna.CA92702 DRIVER Brist ol St, Newport Opp~ffy 5005 aftSpm. '31·llll · · d yrsexper.CCP exper.or SUHDAYOHLY Beach. 557·7010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found Blk Persian rem EXOTIC GIRLS :f!g~u~o~ke:;~~~1o~°a1 training desirable. Xlnt CIVIL Equal Opportunity D 11 0 · i Pll t ..,,. __ ,,,. "'611 or send r"' .,...Gl""*ERBIHG E c ver a1 Y o -.....-. •••ow•--DISTRIBUTORS cat, vie LaMancha, M.V. evenin"" and weekentis. ""'~ ...... .,,.. ,.. ...., nll>U\ mployer bundles lo carriers. Re· ...__. ~ ._. Mas.sage & Modeling ..-sume to · Ole space ln Newport· NEEDED 831·1416 Outcall5"2·3l6\9/S43-3250 Starting salary S3 per Design DraJtsmao. Ex· quires van or large ... .___ ,._ n--U •NoSeJUng d . C hour. Call for interview SAHTIAGO IAHK p'd .. In wa.ter . & sewer DELIVERY P "'rson to wagon and a good driv-~~ IV'ea. ;;;;iep on •No exp. required f'oun Blac~ P~r.sian B :it. RELAXING MASSAGE between 8 am and 10 pm 132-5200 file s. SUbdivis_aon design make deliverie;, handle In g r e co rd. P bone • ~ serv., eren.c -co. Tr4in.ing Prog.ram 1300 Bloc es t , ay BobJame$·Llc Masseur dally. S3S ~.lit St Tustm k.no"'.ledge des1rable. Ap· ore supplies & equipml. 642-4321. lask for Harry -f:'ting tib..!e;/ :~tu~~. •No Vending ~ahchines Ave. N.B. 675-0743. Outca119-9. 494-Slll F.qual Oppor Employer ply in pe_rson to: ~~r. & take care of gen. otc Sc.-eley. Equal Opportwti· 1 FrooiS290.(71"}7S2.n70 •Co. Es tabhs ed Ac· FOUND: p a rt Gold *SlfERILEE• IEVEtlLYMAMOR Fuentes. Robt. ~ctn , needs; some heavy Jlft. ty.Employer ---------t counts Retriever . male. Wht Con\•alescentHospilal Wm. Fro!it ~Associates Ing r.o.n'd. Xlnl. benefit.I. WFSTCUFF BLOG >;f UI (_I•' Bl:.C>I ' .... C.lll Mi 11ow "11 t,4~ 6101 •Restock Packaged Can· Oea collar Vic. Costa Certified Mas.se ust-24452 Via Estrada !l_.,,1401 Quad St., Nwpt Apply~ Jack G. Raub DlJVBlS dy Displays. Mesa. SC8-S518 House Calls . By Appt. Laguna Hills. 837-8000 BANKING ""'"· ,._ S CM Early AM, 3"6, d.tlivery -r-t R t t 838 6838 H0'9'1£>S & COLLEC ....... 1Z Baker t.. · LA Ti C M ... So .._s eqwremen rom · EqlOppty Employer ''" • 714-751-2Sl0attn. PU3on· mes, · · ... · MSOO. Sec:u:red by inven· Found: small blk dog, DANCE OF FUN TIOM TB.Litt CLEANING Ole's. P l/· nel SBo.Ab. $:U.S mo+. 545--0770 tory Vic· Cr 0 w n Va 11 e Y Btt1 nude girls dance & mic bank has im· Ume days. no work pre· --. --------c ----------•Writte n Repurc hase Prkwy, Laguna Niguel. rnp session. lOAM to ADMINISTRATION med. opening ror Dank nure S3.50 hr. Women. neliverxmen f~r ectrly Earn utr4 money at A~ment . 831-0211 2AM Mon-Sat 625 N. Irvine firm seeks person exper'd Notes & Collec· 861-0714 Al'll newspaper dellvery home. Phone Sales wort •Fu.llor Part Time. , . "EucUd Anah 559.6150 w/6 mo's to l yr account· tion Teller. In CM. S400 per mo. + tor m4ture ambltiouis We are a naliona!lY FOSefND · 2 5youdng 1v fh FREESESSIONWi AD ing exper. who can type Applyl\t bonus.548-1740 people onJy neputable known company with ter fups, un ay. c. .S wpm & run a JO key by SANTIAac> IAMK CLERICAL ' ,, thousands ot established Bays de D r • Cd M · WANT to meet attractive touch. Lovely ores & co. S3SE. lstSt Tustin PURCHASING CLERK Delivery /file c Jerk, company. (714)82l-3Sl8 re tail accounts Crom 675-7872or&73--0l20 female, mid twenties, for paid benefits. S;al to S600. 20 E o E medJcoJ lab. M·F 9·6, Gd El df r 11 t· t t F C 1 P i h Room 1. . . · Req's accurate pun:hase driving record No ex· · ect. tsman. u u:nc. coas . 0 coast. or con· REWARD. Lost b"'ef· dining & dancing com-a l a m W r g t , rd t I •-1 h • ex""rienced Industrial ---------1 fident1al interview, call nase •. calculator at'c'ar pany. CallJirn.83l·3807 833-0673forappt. o er YP ng, ..-ep one p c r . o cc e s. C al I ... ~ . "-Ii SAN CLEMENTE M Co be ... .,. ln followup, & expediting. Mnrgaret6'1o-o140 commercial bldgs ...... r. r llttrt~rson to wash. Victoria & Placen· Own Your Own 3 Yr old ADVERTISI NG SALES ear:~ ACCOUHTS Exper. pre('d. 546-7480 for .appt. R .E. Mftlcal Arb lldcJ persooJl~co54e7 ·985A UPaM. Wayne 645·6995 art 6 Nwpt Bch home. for P/tlme work. Mon & Sat. COU ... SELOR STACOSWITCH IMC Deliverymen. LA Times. Wall & Associates. Inc. Ideal Medical or Donta -t-• llJ • $2:5.000 total. 548-0856 all 9 to 2PM. Apply: 1660 r C "~ Iii 1139 Baker Costa Mesa early AM home ctellv. BfGIMHRIMG TECH !~~ p~~b ~·r::~ ft.t---------LOST· grey CocJcatlel 5:30. Placentia Ave .• CM. ~r ostaC mes: °Li c~i 549-3041 rts. in West~,. F. Vly & Ex Pa n ding c i v i 1 CallYEATSCOMPANY 9 AcGtlfftR-.ch bird, .Lake Forest area. TALL·6'3". alender, Aide wanted to care bed ty~e.::~~~~~.Call~r. F.qualOpparEmployer r:Jin~~S:J1~1':~nff~1~0 ~~~ engineering & planning 498-0660 "99-223 Reward.58&4850 mnlure <40+ business patient, Westministe r DonnellyatS46·2300. hrs a day. EMm>mical ofr bwi an lmmed. open· Now's your chance to OST: Male German man, arter ye ars in area892·5789 C A L I F 0 R N I A CLERIC TYPIST car req'd. Depending on ing for a technician to Office space 1100 sq ft have an excellent family Beverly HUJs. have re· . . FEDERAL route location & your perform civil engfo~r· dividedinto6officcs o business where you can Shorthair Pointer, llver located oCfi ce & r e.Amb1tiousCoupleW:inled SAVlNGS&LOAN Insurance company in wishes we arrange tor ing cu l c:ulatio n s. Mesa Verde CrplS, drps eajoy tremendous s mog & gray, left ear torn. sidence here In Newport to manage a small bus . 2700 Harbor Blvd. CM. Nwpt Bch needs accts our carriers to h ave earthwork q1.1antillcs A i C. sor sq . It. Cal rr~ year round climate, Reward. 642-8614 and do not know anyone Will not inlerfere w/your Equal Oppor Emplyr. payable clerk. Exp nee. either 2. 3 or 7 days a mo. survey\ng oftiee calculA· _H_a_dJ_e_y_._963-8933 _____ -i It bas sleeping facilili~s Found Black dog, v ie socially. I'm a non · presentjob. Must bewllJ· ~~~~~~r Mbu~~P~e b;~:d off. 893·2706, 638·0126. Uons & cost csUmoting. 2 LOVEL y Fashion Islan for 40 guests+ pool tennis Costa Mesa Park. Call smoker, happy, positive lng lo learn. 642·l634. IARl_Bt typist & pro(icienl on 10 842-3225. Yrs coll«!gc or expe.r. re- omces. Comp. fu.rn 'd. court, rec rm, corrals, 642-8166 eves. th.inker, young Jdeals. a Apt manager couple for For large fac1Uty ror de· key. Salary lo $600. & DELIVERY ~· Call Jack G. Roub decoral'd. $225 per ofc r!~e!t ~~f:• r!~fiuyon: FOUND: Girl's new 10 sharp dresser, desire to rental "Startup". New. vclopmenl.llly dlsf!~led. ~ood company benefits. ...EB> MO ... EY7 92G26.1(z:l4 Bl ~~f.~~J: CM M r . Ant h 0 n y meet attrac:tive, slender large Triplex T ract Must possess cer11Clcate tl33-8450 " " 71~ you'llwanttoown it. s pd bike, vie. Nr,t. girl 20-28. to s hare Cos la l\fesa. Rcntai Issued by C~llf. S~ate · · We have openings for JOO --------~ Call Mr Frey 542·3456 Shores. call to Identify. mutual T.L.C. 1f you ean m g mt ex Per 1 enc e ~ard t:xa'!'1ners. Sub· COCKTAIL people to work approi1:. 10 FACTORY HELP M~toNVlEJO Ben Hinkle R.E. 646-<M.34 dig a lovins. caring, sin· necessary. Adults, no mJt applications by 4pm. WAITRESS days. Deliver telephone Runs s mall machine. Grt!at view, 200 sq. n. FOUND: 1 South Shore cere mature guy. drop pet.S. Apt +sal. + incen· on l.0 / 3 1 I 11. to W . Lcurn in 40 hrs the most directories In Huntington some shop <'XJ)(!r .• but up. UW. pd. Spectru OMEN 'S JUNI OR Surfboard, owner id"'n· mcalinc:#211,2172Du· tive.G42-4907 wkdays 9-4. Mayf1eld ,Falrv1ewState 't' g 1 Beach, Westminster & will train. C.M . co. u-...~ .... 1es. '9"' '771 " t o 1 I C 92715 llod.1t~1 2501 Harbor cxci tn • g amourous. Laguna B"'ach. Wor" 545-0403 nv.,..." '" .,..... WEAR STORE. Trade tify colnr. size. loe los\ & pon r, rv ne, a. .. · hi hi Id f D "" " ----· -------_,;..--------1 name The Top Drawer+ s--'al .. ""-II H.B. Police p~--..a S 1 5360 APT Managers. m.ature Div .Costa Mesa. 92626. g Y pa pro ess. ay your avail. day light P-resllgious Lido offic f' t &c f 't N ""• " ..., ....--.-tn ces couple 20 unit children or eve sessions. Place· hours. Men or women Food Stnlc• space. ii so. mo. up ix ures urm ure. o Dept536-5621 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1· i 0 h Aft Achi••u1 ment assist. Good job op· over 18. Wi'th cur. stu. •-·is'--• ~-bstit·...i... lease hold rights. Balboa . comp ex n ran (te. · ....... .--.""..-.. ~ _67_5_-4030 _______ -i Island SJ.3.3622 Found 2 Dogs. Ger man Want to Houses1t & care $400/mo incl. rent. 1:-:x. Would you e njoy a por. wgn. or light t r ucks. On call basis. 2.2o,; hrs Dbt ofcs w/secy service ' Shep & large white dog. for pets. plants etC', EX· perienced only. 752·2881 challenge w/xlnl cnrn· Call 714/751·9I94 Pleasant outdoor work. per day. S3.10 per hr. J\p. 1 Gin' Gallery, working possi bly s hepherd. eel.Reis. (213)331·6738 lngs? If y~u have~ hrs So. Coli . Cn ¢ktuil Validdrivers lic. &Calif. ply to Irvine Unified i~r:!·~: &~~rport. partner. Limited hra & 836-8818. T .C 5450 ,..,SEMn•y per wk. Cull fo[ l~ler Waitresses, lnc., 17922 Uc. plates req. Oas al· School Dls lrlct, 2941 ---------t lnvslmt r e q'd. Or raY n.> QM appl. M rs . C r a i g. Sky Pa rk Ill, Ste C, lowancc p n[d, dully Alt.on Ave, Irvine. (71") EXECUTIY!SUITES purchase option. Ph: FOUND: Mnle Bassett••••••••••.••••••••••••• 644·5.191. Irvine, Ca 927M draws avail. For im· 556-4000, 8 ea u t l f u l b 1 d g Mon thru F r i, 10·12. Hound, Blk& Brn & Whte Christmas1Skl vac1atlon. Beauty saloll ""-•ubllshed COCKT•IL mediate assl1tnment1, EquaJ Oppor F.mploye.r Personalized phone cov: 675-3080 Found 10/24/77 in profwomen 3Q,des res lo """'• ~ foUowingashorttralnlng erage,secyaervic:e,con!. University Park, Irvine. shr condo ln Sun Valley. In Nwpt Och seeking WAITRESS session. Apply a t the --------- room, :xerox & more. U(t>UOR LICENSE ~ Dec 18-27. $342. 752·2197. NODS operator. Call 631·2'120 Exper'd. Call 97!).7550. location nearest you, al Food Service Easy Crwy access Nea OrangeOnSale C'ktls ...,~ _...,, Beauty Operator, earn Helga. 8:30am, 10 :30am 1>r DIETARY AIDE .,_ Co t Pl .F LOW! W I LOW.' LO .' FOUND: 2 dogs. Germ. a: ~ INDUSTRIAL 1 JO d lly .. ~g1nnl ,, L11:•0 PIRSO ... .,.,. as aia. rom Agt213/272-4249collect Shep. & lge while dog, -._,.,.. • ._ more _by rent1ng space. Companion. Live-in for : pm. ll "" n., '""' " $225.546-2982 POSSlblySbep. Vic.Santa ••••••••••••••••••••••• WORKERS Lending CdM sa lon. elderly lady. Personal ~ .. ~~~~:~.urea, 6772 ~d~~l le:~ri~~r·c~~~: HO.RTHCM. ~u.. 5015 Ann.836-8818 ~-7005 li44·732l or552·0943 care. Lt hswrk. Thurs Wcstmint.lc r Blvd, Good pay " benertls. D•-Of • .,,,., fl.,., .... ,..._,_ .. , r:o d llDrrwoonun •StartWorkToday• •""-F/C toSllOO 6pmtoSun6pm.Leisure Weslmlnste.r. Jlle11 eQ>ntoct "' cs~ o 41.u;., mo.••••••••••••••••••••••• roon : ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......,... World Lag Bch 830 9681 L B h S s • NC, all u~ pd. Joe at r you'r• not •etting Keeshound. 6 mos old. ,., Olffe-n• wkl" ~c•lng •PockocJen Fr~. Local ore of lop inl'I · · · ag. c . area, 1550 o. So.Ht Coast 7S1"611112AM s "' ., Santa Ana 642 6953 .., "'" • 1 0 • T--1-........ • ·--1..• co. iieeks lndlv. who en· Coast Hwy, Lag. Bch. ~-sa.. H pff~ ---------113.S~•returnonyourin· · · work.shops ... vldcolaplng * ~-•_......•,.. jOys much client contact. COOK. exp energetic, Equal Opportunity __.,,,.,._...,, 01 '"' ~le60 sq. n. office, No. vestment. call Sandy REWARD ro r 11 mnl l of scenes ... jdb place· •ShippMcj/R•celvlltg CPA background a plus. c lean c ut. <'a rce r Employer 31872Q>astllwy ColtaMesa.S19S +,incl. Ross,AJait Co.837·3744 ladies gold ring with 3 mcnt assiatrortheenter· •Loocln4J/Unloodlng XI t be & l t Al minded Gosl' •ht SOuthLaguna,92677 utU.Tom.S40-2200 •Avel'age yield on pny. stones loslinSouth Cnast lalnmenl Indus try. n ns po en ' .so · q; -DELIVERY. early morn 499•1311 , · " offs to AJax investors, Pl.17.a Hotel 10/22/77 9:57-0282. •lftventory Ci.rks Fee Job~. Cull Chris, S48·791.'l --Ing L.A. Times route.~~~~~~~~~ Offite apace ava . from Jan. thru July, 1977. 540.572\ •~d Als.ntbC.rt 540 OOSS, Coa,stol Pcuon· C 1lonh Costa Mtirn 11rl:'8 - $'7St.o$250 mo. State law permits a pre· KUftCJ,. lfllOftl APPLY nel Agency, 2190 Harbor. . OOK ' No collectinjt. M1t!ll have r to t '752-8321 payroent penalty charge OST. Male Siamese. CaU675·9956,67J.2229 1141 c...,... Drfn CM Full lime opening for depend. car. 5"6-4481 rl ma u1 I 803 f 6 Sh I (ts Cd M 1.. cook In t'onvalcscent --P/tlme poslliorYopen ln Office space ror rent by ~on~h:n~n~arne/ln· 61~~c 1 ' • Jol»W-.hd. 7075 54-4741 IOATIUILDER hn:ii11tol.Someexprprer Dental Ortho do ntic SanClcm.IEMls11lon Vle· month. Approx. SSt per teresl on the balance. ••••••••••••••••••••••• <Across From Hrs: 10;30 to 7 PM. Wed chairside assist. 3 dnys a Jo are a . Apply 11 t ) sq. ft. 2 story bldg. Ne11r Mortgage Brokers. Of· Lost: Oc~2ti;t. Vic Wilson· Orange Co. AlrPorl) EXPAMDIHG At Thurs otr. Apply In wk. M.V. 768·02UD·5PM 1:-'otomiitSl-Ore!!J 801 N. El &Isa ChJcu & Warner. fered to California rcsi· /National. Mt~lum male ,RIVATIDUTY EqualOpporEmployer t, n ° k I n K f 0 r person. 12232 Ch11pmo11 Cnmlno Reol, i::tln Clem. From 1100. & up. Cull dent.. only. Au:1t rallan She pherd. MUltSt IXPER ~XPl-':RU.:NCF.D E IOC· Ave. Gorden Grove. DIHTAL ASSIST. or 25573 Jeronimo Rll. 848-1311 Orn & grey w/blnck ASSEMILERS t r l cla n s. 1-;nttlne Perlod6ntlst nccd11 full· Ml~i.lon Vlojo or call ~plotches. 4 white feet, Also Quad!! h1atollers, l'lumhcrs & tJmc assl11t. Expcr'd. Ex· Alice at 634·'33&. Exec:ulive omc:o s_pnco, white c hest. bob toll. 5574448 557-6447 Work Is clean, but rrq's CarpC'ntcrs. Top r ny. COOK J)nndcd duUe11 t>r>p<>r. x. ~------will share turn. orth:cs .... 2 rl\l\I c 11 M c r Reward 071 29 18 dexterity. No exp nee. "'Int working <'Onds & ray "-rt rc"'d S"'l ..,. In N.B. Xlnt loc. Occnn •~ '"""' up. a r. 0 c · S2.50 hr to start. S H ~od bencflli;. 4 Duy Port·llmc, flexible hri1. '""'' · '' 0 o,.,,,n. view. &31·2400 or eves. Fnd 2 Germ Shortholred Nurse will the Coro of Engfnenrtng In<-. 842·11584 Wi•ck Xlnt benefits. Apply, H.ll. 842·oo:u. 6"4·1033 to Lo. 5025 Male & fem vie Ortego you In your home. Much Apply In rr.ri;on Personnel Oepttrlmcnt DIMTAL.OltTHO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hwy ompslte. 495-0889 t'xperfcnce. 887·5014 AUTO EST l MATO R DOWN t:AST YACHTS JC PEHMIYS Chahislde upet. & RDA, C.M. lat nr ~ ba A/C + t "-~ ._ l rd TD. expcr only, llutchensona F. 1 s d ll tOr9gc 15x24 . 1648 h • ''"' • · ·' Found bicycle vie Npt oman w/10 year old BodyWotksM3-5513 700 ··A ton •• anta Ana 200l.aguna Hllls Moll •~ ays or P ;llm e . Newport Bl .. 5"8 ~7f,r. LOANS AVAILABI.F. Bch. Call anyUme. daughter, acl'klng apt -Lagun& H.111! Newport Bc.h. 642·2626. C~itnollmportanl. 673·1666 mRnagement Job. Small Auto-Metal man . llt~ loc*k--F/C EqualOppnr Employer DENTAL ASSIST 720 ICl n. Deluxe corner '"*""• 493·3 I 02 un.ll, hevo outalde JC'b. 2 clean shop. Lo~ of wnrk. , --r-· suite. Air coni11tioned. FOUND: Oranao ma le 1 r • e xp 0 r . ca 1 I Permanent. Own tools . F nth Isl Investme nt --l alrl offlco. 4 day week 1120 E . Garry Ave, Ste foney Available. bany klttm w/ while paws & 213·323 7245, btwn !M :30, Hunt Auto Q!ntcr, lW llrlft. Xlnt OpJ>Or-. F.xpt"r. Coo k•. want ed M a F.itp, ln upnndcd dulles. 120. Jrvlne or call for sources. all projects. chest. Nr Baker, C.M. or 213 921-3601 art 6, 118t Laiunu Cyn Rd . LOR. 4c maturity rcq d. Cull ~rker a R~t:iurant. 212 XJnl working cond. N.O. appt. '7$1-7673 S50K min. 752·6052 ~'7 U109 f Diane. ' ~h. 4!M·3000i8J311004) 640 0123. F~ 17th St. Costa Mc11a _646-8822 ____ _ \.==========-=-~====±::===============1::::::==::::::::::::::::=::=.1....;t:::.. __ ~~..;;:_...:::l.::=.:.:=====---==-=~ -~~ GENERAL OFACE Your t knls al"c in de mand •t •II Jovela of ox. per. We have many jo~ ln the Oran1e Co. area. Work wher• • whe.n you plc:ase. SIS-...Olllll.L 4.320 Campus, Ste 130 Newport Beach 549"'°71 . ,, ihursd1y, October ZT. 19n Add it...Build it ... Diaper it...Hammer it. .. Carpet it...Cement it...Wire it...Hoe it...Clean it...Move it. .. Press it...Paint it ... Nail it ... Plaster it ... Flx it... SERVICE DIRECTORY P l umb t ... Patch 1t ... pe 1t... e mo e Roof it ... Landscape IL.Tile It... Trim it. .. Sew lt. .. Haul It ... Add it. .. Plant it ... Alter it ... Learn It ... Adi-stlin«J · C~ SerYice Controctor Sectrical G.....-aa Sff •Ices HcM.lsKleMllMJ Mo•lnq PaWtncJ/PofMri'ICJ Remodel la Repair ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HAD ARE Carpel l\1:.n wlll la\ \'ours rt J lluffmon & ~.n . Grn ~Li-;CTRICAL Ot-;SIGN HANDYMAN JIOUSt-;CLt;ANING is our l.ocul & Lonl! 01sl11nt·c FOSTER ·s PAINTING Add on, poUo. skyhghl~. ORIURGURY? or mine ltcpuir ... & r11n1r.cu,lt11nAll&Add. &. lru.lullml'nt Time & NOJOB1'00SMALL flusini·ss. Reliable Moving. l,owesl riil<.'8, Comm'I 4c Residentlril. reprs. R~ld/comm'I fr Free consultation cleanmgtoo!Gu11rw.t1rk 11utlui., ('ahirq•t s , MuleMalonly.J imChrl:. S48·0059 1wrvicc, Junl<:o·::. Htl!L· •o~~. t!rficlent service. No job too big or too est 962·4217 Lukay" w/elalmi expert s.s1•8241 lit h1gl(~~ ~1n 111gs. t-rce form1<·.1 New t·uu~t. Hes ly & Son (1141 97!*·7312 -;-------l'<ly Anus at 645·H!OO Fr cc est. Ma Jest I c smt1ll. 12 yrs ex pr. f"ully 298233 t.~l.00·:1641i & comm. ti.$5 46441 ufl5 IM YOUR HANDYMAN Modem Movers639·8552 l d/11 "3" 6995 ~. ---------.... _.. R I R Id C 1 F' 67°~~ .. c. v u· "'A .... iU ..... ··Rcmod Quality .,.,...ece .,. r -~·1l5-ll l,1c Rondecl --es 1 omm · ree t•sl. Alu:es Housecleaning -.,,._ "" """ •••••••••••••••••••••••ShumJ)OO & :.team cle1111 --Gardeninc) nuarunteed, Dullui. Reas ri?hnblc rds Own SmallMovmg&Hauling. work. Fair. not cheu11. B & J AppUnnce Srrv Color brighlenci·~ · wht P ll 1 Corp . L It' 'd ••••••••• •• ••• •• ••• ••• • G46·5888 trams' 642·7207or 646.4871 Free Estimates . Painting. Homes-lntr & prices. 642·1770. Eve & TRIPCHARGE$t0. c~ l_OmlO bleach. Cle~n ~nglnt>~rs & Genl Bulle!-WEEDING CLEANUrS . • • _ ~-0386 Exterior. Specialty: wk.nds.CaU Ken. I care. 202SSM SA U\,dtorm,h111l$15.A\g 1ng Contractor~ Wt!eklyMaintenanee HANDYMAN .Carpentry. llOUSECL~ANING Apts.Lorat..es63t·2.508 • · am, • rm $1 . .SO. couch $10, chr S p e c i a I i z i n It : Free est 642.9907 ele\:lrical, plumbing & 2 men, reliable. honl:!i1t dt Two men will move you. Roofing 5'9-242'l 957·0l6S SS. Guar. elim pct odor Res, Comm ·1. Nl•W or ad------noors 646·6851. 847-27117 dependnblc. 840·336S We handl~ big moves. <?C· Plcnter/Repalr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...__ W.lcn Cpt repn1r. 15 yr~ cxpr dltions. 6401020 Gardening Service: clean -;;::--------flee & household. Dis·•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ROOFS lnswllcd factory ;:-;:;: ................. Do work mysclr. Refs up & hauling, weekly +tociftg Super clean, mature lance & locul, also pack· VERYNEATPATCll direct· estab'l 35 yrs. ELECTROLYSIS . 531·011 1\ddasaun11,wctbt11.l'n-nrnlntcnance. Rcasona.••••••••••••••••••••••• European woman di!· Ing. Lowest legal rate. JOBSll'fEXTURE Call 'Harold Cunn. l~rtninmc11t center. t•lc. ble rules, rree estimlites. Sldplo~der. Dump Truck. SU'l!!i, reg. houseclean-L le' d JI n s rd. Ca I T F'reeeat. 893·l•39 549-2961 Permune nl hair re· WeCare CurpetClcaners <.:all f?r free esl. on re· After 4:30 usk for ft(.ln. lfuuh.ng, tree work. Ing. Refs.494·6190Terry IUll-944. Ph:847-7278. 1----------moval. Free consulla· Steamdeanor~hampoo moocling, ulterallon=> & 6450511or548-4981 grading, demo etc -.......... ROOFSFORLESS lion NB 673-lOtS ask Cor also upholstery all work addn10ns. Ralph Tt:rry, -831·1257 'nlt-;SUNSHINE GIRLS PoMtitMJIPC!p9riftc) ....................... All types, flnan avull. Karen guar. Truck mount unit. Gen. Contral'lor. Lie, 0111 JI Landscape Main· LOCAL ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOMESAVERS. Plumb· Free est, lie/bond'd. in· iJC'DCOSMETOLOGIST Fr es_l. reas rates bonded.400·8l:JO t<.'nance: Mow & Edge. HcaMnc) HOUSECLEAN'G PETERSPAJNTINC inglcHeaUng lc air con· sr.Senlorcltlzensdlscn\.. will do acrylic nails. Call 64>3716 Full mainl. hauling, •••••••••••••••••.••··~· SPE~IALI~TS Expr'd. Reas Rates. diUonlng. Free est, $l0 894-04.2lan,yllme forappt.960-4135 Your carpets & up-PUTAROOMOVER clean-ups, rotot111ing CHEAPEST hauling 1n Bonded, msurd. Free Free Est. Call Gene hr. Honest le r ellable 'Pl.L. ----------YOUR GARAGE Free Eost. 675·5S16 town. Fr cs ts. Cll EA P! est. 24 Hr serv. Taking 552-0458 service. BofA, M/C OK. •-C.,...te' hol~tery deserve pr~· Room Additions, Houses . . . 642·2995 orG45·1390 holiday reser vations. 751·31!i0 ..................... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• fesstonal care. CaUforma Apartment Commercial Mowing, edging, trim-540·952Sor 552·02,15 Paint Your Castle Ceramic Tiie, 2S yn ex· Carpentry, any type, 7<;:arun7~•g Technicians at F'orfreeeslcaJl6313005 ming,cleanlnghuullng& OCC Student. Big ~ •. ·r L~-'"-AverageExtrlStryS395 DRAJNSCLEARED per, .speclult)' entr¥ P I d ..... 04.& Pl & r . .1 mo\•lflg. Rells. 646-6S52 truck. Trllsh, tree tnm, -c..,...-"'# 2St ... ,A .. 1 uc FROM $3 .so ways, free est. 962·1883. aoe, oors, ctr. Also • :ins 1nat1emgeva1 etc Randy 642.~703 ••••••••••••••••••••••~ ory..,...,, ntr.,. .. rm C 11 · Comm'I. lie/est. Alt 5. nt/Conc"t. Ken A~renberg I XO YE Just arrived back to Calif. 549.3666 'Rolo soll prep. Plants, l'nces ind matr'l·labor a ?Sl-«H2 SELL idle Items with a 548-2719 --••••••••••••••••••••••• .U•ll Shcrbacort Gardener/landseup~r --shrubs. I awns. Rens Guar/hurd, Freoeat. Repair & remodels. Jleas. Dail Pilot Classified Ad. Doors windows cabs EM ENT WORK .A II Licensed & Bonded nds jobs, ~5 yrs ~xpr lll Hoaec&.anhtC) rall.'5. Bud 645-!lt49 Ted 636·1085 ql&l&illy work. Eugene 642·~8. shelv~s. Rough; finish: kinds. Reasonable. 1-rce Electrical t'Omm1 res1d. Rehable & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----PROFESSIONAL Paint· ___ _:536-.~~3688~~---"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii- Pickup wrk. 759_0759 if ~ts. Call 150·6625 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wunl~ lo ple.ase. Lu~t Want a REALLY CLF.AN Mosonry ing. Inter/Exler. Reas, I R 1 d f · ---position Gen I M i:r in HOUSE? Call Glni:ham ••••••••••••••••••••••• k &42-0386 Pool 5erY c•, •pan noaos ys.call~l 6 ''-' m c ll l W 0 r k · E.LECTRlCi\L SERVICE Landscaping, Nursery G1rl.Fr~est645·51.23 Brickwork. Small Jobs. wor guar ••••••••••••••••••••••• Geo. Repairt Mainl Driveways, patios. CAU.SSt5 hr.&SMALL business. Call art 6, , , Newport. Costa Mesa & WORKGUARANTEED Beautify your pool. Carpentry-garage, walkwuys. Rea:.onuble, JOBSS42·8233 ____ 548 9752 IMMACULATE CLEAN-Irvine. 67S.3l15eves. lntenori Extr. Free est. Repair" replacement o Far Ad Action cabinet, panel'g, patio fret! ests. 556.0757 Hubbard Electric R"liable College Student~. ING. You DESERVE the 25 yrs exp. 642-029S old tlJe or coping. Free covers. etc. 898·9001 1 ... 327136 64<_...,.74 " _, BEST. 759-0377 Fireplaces. planters. est, Guar. S36·7!Hl2 & ---------11-ement work · patios. -.. ~..,, comp. serv. Yd Maint. . . brick concrete patio, blk YOUNG Man. S yrs expr 879-0743 Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 Marine Carpenter needs sidewalks&drivewuys Cleanups. Free Esl. Rosemanc s Houseclean· walls. BBQ pits. Refs. In wallcovering. Freei----------t p/Ume work. Has own • 496·8345. 661·1979 1-:L.ECTRlCLAN·Prked 5.'i2·.S075 In~. Xlnl work, refs, gd ests 646.0464 ests. ~76, Andy Dix pool cleaning service. . ahop. Fiberglass. etc. right-free estimate on .!:!_tes. own trans. 642 1403 Chem incl. Reas rat.e:!, CaURobat64&-4178 WOULDN'T YOU largeorsrnalljobs. People who need people Classified ads sell big PAINTING. lntr/Extr. xl.otwork 840-3622 Sell things fast with Daily Pilot Want Ads. rather be sailing? Licensed 673-0359 should aJwoys check the House Cleaning Reliable items !.mall Items or Expr'd. honest, neat.1----·------1 Seerlass1fkation 9060 ScrviceDiret.'loryinlhe & immlleulate. Refs. any hem. Just call Reas. Llc'd. 96.4·1045SELL i~le Items_ with a It can be a reality! WtinLAd Help'! 6-12·5678 DAILY PLLOT 675-2821 642·5678. Dave Dally Pilot Classified Ad. HelpW..t.d 7 100 HetpW...+ed 7100 Help Wmtted 7100...., W•ted 7100 HelpWClltted 7100 HefpW..tff .. 7100 HtlpW..tecl 7100 ..•.................... ....................... ..•...............•••.. ......•.....•.••....... .................•.••.. •.•.•...........•...••. .......•.•.........•... 7100 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• GENHAL CLERK MACHIHIS T NURSES AIDES Real Estate Sales People RETAIL SALES V....../Cosmffu ; H<YrEL E c 1 ted u to 901101 • SECRETARIES Service Sta. • Niabt Attend _,_ ~.:.,: Expanding N.B. finan· xpe r . e nte r ess lrORDHUES wan · P '0 Laguna Hills Mall. 40 hr k A I P/Ts.._ 54--.-clal organization has LAUHDRY Grinder. C.M · co. Sal de· Needed to give tender comm. spilt. Nwpl lkh week. $2.75 to start. M/F, 2 Or 5 llites aw · PP y, • opening for resp. ind iv. SUPERVISOR pe o d s upon ex Per· lovlng care to lhe elderly 631-0900 18 yr1 up. Ph 586-8445 Your skills are ln de· SbeU, l7t.b ti ll"Vine, NB Waitress, exp'd food & ~-0403 mand at all levels of ex· coclttall. Over 2L 1600 E. • for switchboard. mail Wearecurrentlyst'ckmg · _____ pali~n.ts. Will train Recpl for beauty salon. per:. We have many jobs Serv.Stalle.lpoeededhn Cat Hwy, N.B . See r oo m , f il ing, or a qualiC.ed laundry •MAIDS• quahfl-;d personnel. Exper desired.P/Time RN'S in the Orange Co. area. med.F\illorp/LApply, Karen,lo.3.644-9$50 microfilm duties. Exper. supervisor. Enjoy OUI · The Inn at Lugun3 Eurn wh1I~ you learn All Apply Temple lons · Work where & when you 990 E . Cst Hwy, Nwpt•---------- helpful. but not req'd s laodln1: company 211 NCslllwy.Laguna shtftsava11.Apply.1445 Beau tification, 2030 please. Beh. WJt.llB10USEMAM Apply, CPI. 2nd f1oor. benefits ,\pph ~lam l s64u2.'?.~1r01.or Ave, NB. QuailSt.NB,5-iO-JOOo 31l&1J-7Shins SIS-+40RREU. SH•-.... '-CLRa" 180 Newport Center l>r. n.ion. \Ion Fri, l'cr.,on· ~1AIDS WANTEU "" Xlnt benerlls. liayview SouthL w.-.... w - N.8. 644·4360. ask fM l::d nul OonQuixote Motel Convalescent. 2055 4320Campus.Stel30 t.t~ft'RoUTE Weigh bulk vitamins, Cook. MARRIOTTHOTEL 21ooNewportBl.CM PARKING ATTENDENT RESALES Thurin Ave, C .M . NcwportBeach 549·8071 The Daily Pilot has a box tablets. &oad truck. 900NewportCtrDr S2 .50 t o train $3 00 LUSKRE.a.•yy 642-3505 1 t 1 S th Good math, neat. GeneraJ omce. Llle typ. Ing & bookkpg. Cal 675-1636 for interview. Newport Beach :tlamtenance. lite, days. trained part·time Park· ~ arge r ou e n ou mature. Apply 8·9am. APPi>' in person. 1131 in° lot 361 Cliff Dr. is opening a new resale SALES SECRETARY Laguna • approx earn Mon·Fri. Llowilco f,qual Oppor Employer " omcc m the Huntington SUPPLE ..... ENT 0 ings S400 per moolb. M Back Bay Dr. N.B. Laguna B1·h Call blwn 8 Reach area. Needs both ~ SMALL FFICE lhru Fri afternoons and Laboratories. lU8 '-lt.o...IERAL OFFICE &_s_.a_.97_·_1946 ______ 1 m:inaaer, sala"" + com· YOUR INCOME S I\ hobby craft mrg Sat&Sun mornln«c. Ca Newport Blvd. C.M . .._. Hote04HJMAud~or \l ainlenan.l't' person ,.. ._, SSSSSSSS nt.'t.~ ok girl w/strong ..., Must like to type & file. Ex per Airporter Inn l..agun~ R1\•1era o~rcrs m-mi.ssion and salespeople secy'I, mechanical skills, and good driving record a rehouse fr Stock Comfortableo!c • .NB/CM H 1 C , M 1 teresung P i T JOb for PART TIME Beller than averugc PARTTIME ncatness.Prevlousexper required. Call 642·4321. Clerks, F/time positions area. Call Mr. James, Ole· onlact • r. Ian-person living nearby commission + incentive TaEPHONE WORK nee Good pay, bencrits. Lc11vb,1g name and phone avail. Phone for appt. NS-2640 nan B33-2TIO w merh skills for upkeep EVENINGS plateaus. This oHil:c will HOUSEWIVES For lnter vlcw cuU Mr number. 5S7·9212 ask for Mr, •-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-_.-1Housecleaners needed. of pool, plumbing, elect. AtluJ h ·' be3pprox lftOOsq It with COLLEGESTUDll!:UTS SchUt546-41~. STATTYPIST1'RECEPT West. Newport Sta• u T c j!urden. ct(• • 2 days or ls wit outslunurng, a lot of company s upport. ....... ----------• Uonen GEN'l LIBQR ... aturc. opSS. ar mort'l'h49-1 Jl9G allr11ctlve personalities Call Paul. 714 :bi5-34ll Guaranteed H'ourly SECRETARY Attractive &irl w/aood ---·-------A neede<l642-t403,645·3439 who enjoy working with Wa)te Plus Bonus . 5:30 telephone voice for busy URGENTLYNHDEO Housec leaning Serv. ~1A..'1 for delivery or LA kids Start al SJ.SO per pm to 8:30 pm. Call ~~~s:S~~~~·n:a!:d'a!ee:Y CPA office In Newport Allgnment&Brake Mustbavephone &reUa· needs ambitious Eng. Times. In 831boa, Jdays hour Phone642_.321. ex-RE Sale:. ~223orcomclo250E. skills. Mu.st be able to Ctr. Call for eppt. Technician . Newport ble transportation. Long s pknl( i:al ruJI or pi l. Top p wk 4AM -6PM Ideal tension ~ between 1·00 GET 17thSt.,<.:osw Mesa. prepar e schedules. do _644_~ _______ __.nre Center. 5 Day work It short term assign-S Cull Ma~gie, 557·0609 for :ilu<lenl. &16·1413 or and5.00PM lhe h~lp YVU need to beSa1e-s_g_ir-lB-111 1sl-.~-1AR_C_O detailed work & STB40GIW'HH ~~C:.:::'7,~~· meots.H.oUday &vaca· aflS 6732515 ---A.flkforJI• s uccessrul. Join our POLO.PrefExplnmen's followup. Call S40-28M Heavydictaphoneexper . lion pay. Hospitalization HOUSEKEf:PER·LlV EM I\ TUR F: w 0 )\I\ N ~!~~~e~ pportun It Y team or condo. specialist or women's European for appt. Desi~n Firm. Good 1pellln1 fr punctua· P•IWan!~aEHU. OUSEtu11EU IN Npt Bchfamily.mast p time to ~ elcomc ---------1 al the Condo. lnforma· t'lothing. 1-·u11 or P1T. SECRETARY lion . Mrs. Baker, -~ CLll!:J/!Jj ~KS..., !>""uk En". refs rcq'd. n~wcomers & c·ontatt PASTE·UP ARTIST lion <.A!nter Call now & 673-6274or615·5.296 833-9550 ~•'-'-~ ~ "' h Fl bl h sk ror A<!rry 9G3 0867 ---------1 Gen'I Ofc duties. A/Pay, --------~ * CJll ~4.o6!IO or &12·ll li5 mere :mt.' ex1 e rs. Exper'd. Pleasant work· al· IR E N • k SALES LADY F h' A 'R l i •· 10 k STOCK ROOM CLERJ< •----------•SH:Jil!CIYVING ----Need car, lite typing ing conds. Co benerits. nt ' . . etwor • renr s 1 ec, YP ng -ey * UFTOPIS llskpr;Comi>. chuutreur. 547-3095 Apply, Pennysaver, 1660 Cupcake Bakery full by touch. Call for appt. Islander Yachts bas a ,!X'terDloWr~~.RM •• ~.!pbeer l.Jve-m. 2 davs ofr a wk Pl . C 1 time Will train. Start 546-2901. Woodllgtlllng Cull time opening for a .,, u-.v.--· lntervlewsS..3Mon·Fri for cpl on wat<>rfronl. Mature res p. person acenUaAve. l\ Restaurant S2.75hr.548·3031 1''ixture Co., 2031 S. E. person to perform able to r ead & Ull· APPLY Non smoker rt>q'd needed to care for 2 PIX.AnsS•cO_.. MalnSt,lrvlne. gene ral at oclt r oom de~tandprintl.Work at VOLT ,.~ ... "" ..... J.4"'11'•·· 3141 c...,.. Dn•e 546-4741 (Across From Orange Co. Airport> Equal 0PPol' Employer fl46 ·6565, 557 !IH!fl, t·h 1lriren n1tes 7 & 9 . ,...... COUNTER SALESLADY duties. E mployee bench w f min • 5'&8·2624 Perform gen . h skpi;: lmmed. openings. /\pply PERSO ..... .._.EL to cull on established ac-cretarial. Diversified benefits package pro· supervls!on. Good pay. 1----------1 duties. Sal S300 mo in person betwn 9am & "" counts. with bukets, position avail. in travel vlded. Please apply at cond's " benefits. Call Insurance +pvt. rm & board Call .ipm Mon· Fri 155 lamps, furn. etc. Must industry for bright ln· 1922 Barrancit Rd. for appt or apply in CUSTOMER 714·552-7845 Rochester Sl , Costa Pan-time, Day<> & have own trans. Guar dlvlduaJ. Good typing & Irvine. betwn 10·1.2 Mon person. Allr ed M. SERVICE R~P . ---------1_M_es_a_. _______ 1 nights. 18 or O\'cr for sal. 968.3771, M·Th 9 lo 4 phone personality. lhruTburs. Gordon Designs, 250 Fis· Insurance Agy needs MESSENGER PIX Answer Sen niichta. or983-8752eves 1 ____ 7_52_·_1880 ____ 11----------1 berAve.,CM.540-2840 bnght energetic per .. on I' T messenger llAM · Want lo work days, after· Apply In Person SECllT""RY STYUST wanted for top YACHT 1 1 w some insurance back· 3P:\t daily. Must provide 2-6 p.m. Saleslady. G lrt Shop. "' Newport BeacbSaloo.. nsurance o e. ,:tr o u n d to ha n cl I c own transp Ca II 1 rvme noons & evenings in NB Tuesday thru Saturtlay Mature. Do nol apply un· For marketing research 6'2~164 Npt. Beh. bas opening for customer aeets . Xlnt Savings, 752·&156. E O.E. & CdM arcns? Work (/ less you have ex per. company. SH a +,must an exp'd. Ins. agency ----------iworkintt cond" & ---time or p / time . CARL•SJR Buggs International, begoodw/cllents.Nwpt SUPERVISION person. Salary open lo Gtng.bam Girl houseclo benefits. Salary C'Om· Mission Viejo Weekends 3 must. Xtra • 2()&3WestcltrrDr.NB Beh, near Airport. Call Hoo.o.tyAWH quallllcalloos. Pb : service nds women p/l, mensurate w1 ex per. Call .~fO~OR R.OUTE Pa Y r or ex Per • d m &. 17th St 751-0266. 3 Hrs per day. Sal S3 hr. 67S.S2162 ror appt. t.op$.carnec64S-S123 Linda.963-0941 The Daily Pi.lot has a ~pcOraEtors. Call 640·0812. --Cos-t•a•M•cs-a •• C•A--ISALES MGR/TRAJNEE s-RET .... IY/~ Apply to Jrvlne Unlfled y.a.eKTUS_. ----------1 large route In Mission ... . & Sales Clerk. pitlme. -.. "' School District 2941 "' '"" Cilll.RIDAY J.C p~ ..... EY CO Viejo. approx earnJngs PIXO•Ea.a.TOR Restaurant THE TABACCON IST B111yNewportBeac law Alt.on Ave Y-·•-e' <?l~> Male/Cemale, boat ex· llOl""ll" $300per month. Mon lhru . .-51\A INC. Fashion bland office. Must have xlnt • ....... • per. Salary·local co. ~U:.~PK:,_0~~g~us~. 2300 Harbor Fr1i atternoon11 and AnsweringServexp. pre· MEN ED'S N.8 . sk:llla & ability to accept =(>ppor-Employer 64.5-0229. 1 b Costa Mesa Sa1&Sun mornings. Car I'd. Full & P/T avail. 1----------1 respon.slbUltf. Legal & ---------~ ep one equlpml II h Sc IC II nnd good driving record also graveyard relier FA.MILYPIIZA Sales-PARTY PLAN Mag Card I expr prer. T1lepttan1 Sain pful. Nancy ~l066 d~~t ;0~/ti::.eegecu~~~.' required. Call 642·4321 Apply 657 W. 19th. Ste H. PARLORS ~:~:!~~~~~;~0~: _eon __ ta_ct_P_a_t_6"_·9_190 ___ 1 Want to make money? ~ GHtLS MllDID dian work. Hrs arc rtexi· Lcav~g nnmc and phone _642_·_1403 ________ 1 T~ llemsS48·3180 SECRETARY Can you sell on the••••••••••••••••••••••• Sandwich delivery, ble. An Equul Opportuni· num r. Presser trainee 2·• hr •Cooks Newport Ctr lnvestment phooe? Top Un 011r bual· ........ 1005 days wk., 4 hrs day. Ow ty Employer. Mother 's helper.lite house Moo-Sat mom. One Hour •lartettcti.n SALES firm. Good gen. ore back· nest. 646-3030, ask for ..................... .. ~~~a f1a7 a:~ 1 ~:. KEYPUNCH work. 3 days week. Over Martinizing. ~-6'85 •Defl•ety Drinn Part lime, S-9pm. Mon ground. Cal I Eileen, Ray. Oriental Screen, Silver 20. Must have refs & car. PRESS OPERATOR Port·llme openings for Fri, perfect for Colleg 640-0123. ~OME SALES Cheat, Cortee la bit. _S4N339 ___ . ______ 1 Uala Entry Opr. Duy Salary open. 640·0048 or · •ex· women & men wilh oul· Student, no pressur ----------• ·TlredortberouUne? chairs. All carved or In· G• ........ OUR JOI s hirt. ln·house <'nm 955-1641 per. on AB Dick 360. 333 aolng personalities who sales or quotas to meet Secretary for Design & laid L l ...,...,.. pulers. Req's speed&. uc· ---- -Third St. Lag. Beh. ... OR Graphics co. Must have Thlsjobls ror youl · amps, cap ce National cosmetic com· curacy. Key to d111c ex-Mother's Hel""r, 4 Days take pride in their work. 5.11· 11 . kJll & can Us Now At IL g ht s . po r c e I a In • h I I <" "''" Otlality Assuranc• Over 18 & able to work ----.------1 superior sec. s ' lll-8095 Clol~onne " more! pony wants mature per. e pru . ,,..al open. 11:30·5.2Children.$3Hr. Adhesive manufacturer evenings $2.70.s3 loSales·Reta1l substantial exp. in prof. 4925268 ~=~n~~o~e:;~:.:~~~ Xlnt benefits & 1,1,orking Wes le Ii rr area NB . located ln Orange Co. start.. Apply ofter SPM SALES environment. lrv. area TIME·l.IFE •--·--------conds. Apply, National ~9979 daily, ....,,,. .... ,,.GEuE ... T 71•·556-3937 LIBRARIES Beautiful Antl~ue We train. Management Systems Corp. 4361 Birch has an Im med. opening ~"' ~~ ---------li'Aual Opp Emp'"r mtr F positions avail. For ln· Sl. N.B. (~ear oc roraQ/\engineer.Can-MENEO'S We are presently in ""'t " urnlture ror offce, terviewcaJI 957.()196 Airport) EOE. NURSES dldate must have a min. Famlly Plua Parlors tcrvlc.wing for a rashio SECURITY TELEPHONE homes or shop. •94.·2136 ---------1 -----LICENSED of 3 yrs exper. In quality 1180 S. Bristol.SA conscious person to tak SOLICITORS OAK c lock or watc h GUARDS LADIES carr:i $200 per engineering &1or QC 410K11th,CostaMcs:i tull c,hH~e or ou GUARDS (10) Needed immediate· makers work benc-h, Universal Is expanding wk. Part.lime. your PERSONNEL supervision. preferably 16532 Beach Bl, 11.U. womens dept. Must un ly. SJ.$3.50 p/hr to start. marble top $275. CherTy its operations in Orange home. 536 2403 nrt. -tpm. in aeropspace or other -dt>r'lt and Eu rope n 75H601 af\. lpm, & maple 4-drchest, early ed Fu• & ......... ,,. L"pt1isticatcd manuf "'n R ••. t fashions & be a crnatlv w kl "· Id Vi E I County & ne s 40 part & Liquor Clerk. over 25, "" · ~ · es ... uran i '" ee y pay.,. pa vac. TELL-ct mp re ~· Tlf· rull l!me security of· pi time. two ni1tht!\ a PM&LoteShfft vtronmenl. Req's sound MAHAGER rurt~~"grwou/pnrd~rsr::lgm+t Xlnt fringe benefits. Ba k E -ui ed fany styJe lamp.birdde· ficers immed Ex per. not week. 642-6537 knowl l~ge ror stalll:st1cal Elpcr'd in rest. or hist "Omm + profit ~harfn Above avg w n g es. lrvnlne Nxpeatlro.nreqal Barnk sign $80, 545·3967 nee. Top wages for ex· --Please rootart NurMnl( ana ys1s o qua •Y re· roods. Also, need p/Llme '" Uniform & eq,ulpment per. personnel. car & L VN/Doy Shift Pcrsonnl'I daily after <I llabilll)'. theory. We nffer help. Call 675.2835. plnn. Call for oppt. IQ In furn. Car & phone req'd. Contact Bob Creight.on WATERCOLOR ol Boats phone req. 21 Ir O\'er. t;very other wknd off pm. t.'Ompct1t1ve sal & fnnge1----------1 tcrvlwew. Openings In Fashion 833-3700. E.O.E. 20x24, Arthur Beaumonl Veterans & r etirees Mu sl be dcdicah•d 10 benefits. Send resume or THE LOOK Island, N.B. TB.L-s :~ .• ~useum exhibited welcome. Uniforms rum. !itood patient ea re. /\pply' IEVERL y MANOR cnll Reliable Manufac· RETAIL 644-6500 -........,_, Time & 'Al ror over 8 hrs. 1445 Superior /\\'(', NB. Convalescent Hospital luring. 10910 T albert Call (71•> 541·6206 JI you have had tellel" ex· Almost A tt.. Apply 9 t2 3nd 1 s Mon· 642 2410. 2'14S2 Via Estral.la Ave, Fountain Valley, Ca Salcs·Retnll. ()(rice sup· l-'orS:mta Ana Apt>t. per, are well groomed & n ... ue Fri. Laguna Hills 837-8000 92708. (714 > 968·336t. CLERKS phes & stationery. Full & Interviewing Wed·Frl would Uke to wol"k in a Carnival & Depression IJM•tnal Protection LVN, Pl time Equal Oppty Employer (213) 592·2851. pitlmc J><>Slllons onll. 9AM 'tll lPM b u sy. f rl c nd I y at· glau.-Thrlft & Glr~ 1 .... 6 W ...... S S Equal Oppor Employer roone ror appt. Ask for Equal Oppor Employer mosphere whUc earning Shop 130 E. 11th St, CM. " •Sm t .. A. 3-11 Me<l cations Mr West. S57·9212. an xlnl salary + 646·3020 Hillside Foundation Man In Laguna Bch IHl'11. 'Per m employm<.'nt 494-861.3. HOTEL DfSK CLERK O\ltatondm.i oplJ()rt 11011 y ror people o ric n leJ person able to work evenings & gra' rvar1J shirts. Enjoy oul!>l1111dm11 C'Ompany heneCIL'i Apply9am·noon ~Inn 1-'tl Pcrsonnrl Ocpurtmrnl MARRIOTT HOTEL 900 Newl)Qrt Ctr Dr Newport A.•ach 'Equal Oppor l::mploy1•r GARAGF. SAL~ ad<> In ~Daily .. 1101 briOR hc1p RH,P/tlme NURSES AIDES 1---------1 Help wanted lst. 2nd & NewpartStationers. ---------beneflta,caUMrs.Maall11 ________ _ 3 11 Charl(1•Nurse 3 "0 hlfl .. 1 •REALESTATE• 3ntshlrts Noexperlence ---11t 4'5·5333 for an ln.3 Pc Antq.OaltBdrm sct. M<"laVerdcConv 1111 ... 11 •• ..-~:~"Lid~ c.,~~ 'Wts:. Newore.xperlenced Top rcq'd, We train those SALESTIAINH •S.Cy/AdlniftAHt terview. hand CArved hdbrd, tl61 Center St. c·:tt 4~; Flu"shiµ Rd. N n training avail. Pnvnle hired. Applicants npply Pus w1rnst growln1t <Travel 30Mlnutes) ._.of Newport chest of drawe r s & l'Hll 5585 642-8044 11Hice's, Large odvcrtis· at. Oronite Co. manut. In $19,200 Per Year 1.0 L was h It and • Sl 8 0 0 • LVH'S .._ _________ lng!Judact.Callnow! UTOTEM technicul lndustriul Employers Pay All Fees i------·-____ 1_546-_..;.~7_<M;.;..;...o:;;ft:..:.....;.6_w .... k;.;:d:..::Y.:.S __ .-p.a.CIFICCO•ST solci;. C:olltlc!r buck-Llz RelndcritAgcncy TIRISBVICI HOUSEFULL OAK 7 30 & 3 II 30 Appl~-. U HG ""' ""' ground rcc(d'-'&c some .020 Blrch St. Ste 104 5 Day wk.. Sal + comm. ANTQS. Thurs '*Sat on P11rk Lido t'onv 111 .... p, N RSI PROPERTIES STORES snles expcr. prel'd. Call Newport Beach 833-8100 Apply, 3000 E. Coast ly. u . ~7SA,Santa Aoa, Ifill l-'ln1111hip Rd. N B. ATTENDANTS •631·0400* l>oni;, Deltronlc Corp., CallforAppt/~lab '65 Hwy.CoronadelMar. CM 1~12 8044 •--------· Lui·otrd At· 545-0401 or s1•nd resume 1---------- LYN'S 3 II Shifl. Xlnl hcnrfll" 1l11y\ lew Convnlr:it'enl. 21)55 Thunn Avl'. (" \1 •~t;i :isos MACHINI OPR. ~n t•xpcr. nrr $2 !;() to :clJrl. sn F.ni;111ecr1ni:. lnr. 642 B.'llH Full-Tltne 12412 Lampson. G <; rv 10: PO Box 21SS, CO!lla Tow Truck Drivers ex· Music Boxes, Clods AM Shifts SlOW. South St, Annhrn Mes.1. Ca 92fl2G. Ser vice Stol~on Attcn· per'd. Top pay. Apply, Slot Mochines F.xpt•rif'ncc Prrfrrr<.'d RIAL EST A TE 111 Del Mnr, C.M d_ant, ex fer ti. Day &t G&W Towtna. JOOO Irvine S t-: /\ M s 'f R F. s S E'·~. l-°\.11 & p1tlmc. Ap· Avo NBG42·12S2 Nickelod eons, phono· SALESPEISOMS 885Glenneyrc, Log Bch T It A I N r-: I•:. v w r ply, Shell Stal.ion, 17th Ii: ' graphs. World'a lar~cst fllr;1"'' t·tml.11'1 \lur~1ni.: Perwnnf'l 1L11lv .1(1 4•r 4 1lm IEVERL Y MANOR C<>m,ale11r4'nl llospll ,1 I 244~ Via ~trn!i.1 l.nj.luna Hills 837 8000 t-:Aual Op).l\y Employc•r t: x p e r I e n c e n o t We are nn equol machin<•. must spt"uk Irvine, NB. TYPISITTH selection. J\110 itlfla. ne«'Ssary. hut ability to opportunltyemplo~er F.n~li~h. CM Nwpt arH 1 Yr exper. proficient&¥ furniture, antlques. wofk & lcurn Is a mui;l! 1----------1 <.:all Judy. t"i42·S830 t'r\ lee Stn. Attendant, operaUna lBM ~lectronlc American lntcmaUonal: l'len~c call tor npp't exP4)r'd. 1-'ull or p/Ume. composer. Min. salary 1802 Kettctlntt: lr\•lno. IAY & llACH NOTICE $c•l'11•l;11v I'll' :! Apply Arco St.ntlon, 11th $849 mo. 12 Month poal· 754-1777. Open Wed. thru llliLTY 759·011 l how Uuil} r"Jol Ch1g cloy, 11 ·wN•k, 5 6 , hr~. &Irvine, C.M. tloo. ApJ>IT to : lr\llne1-Sa_t_. ------- Hied nets 1li11pl11y thia,lr e:ieh dak. Rt'as .• si h & rvlce Sta. Attendant, Untried School Dblrkt, l>tptts3ioo &lus t'lub ol mcss!lJll'S with lc~iuiln y typlna 8 1113 rC"Q d. ~nl. mnl~ or fem. Jt:xf)61'. ro· 2941 Alton Ave, 1rvinu. H.B. pre11cnt. 5th Gta111 PY results. To plan• \•ou1 Tr\ d Du 1 t y P 1 In l druw1ng curd. pl\On l' Clu'\S1f1rd /\cl lo buy. sell Find what you "ant In Get GRJ-:EN cash ror WI U f'E elephants "'1th n Chuuuf1c-d Ad C..'nll &12·5678 nnd lrnpatt? Our ads, ~e ,!!R· ~M ____ q'd. Must be honest & de· (7U) "6·4900. Closln1 ShowllS•loSatOct29th, 111'\' proud lo say, r1•ally Cla .. ified At.I" •ell bll{ pendablc. Apply , d3lefor•ppllcaUona0ct. 10-<CPM at the H.B. iret r1:sult11. Phone 1tc-ms, small Items 0 Nrwport. Shell, 2800 w. 28th. Equal Oppor. Women's Clnb, 420 lOl.b _r.t2 5678 loda~ or rl'nt somrllun~ l>ntly Pilot Cln1111if11•cl!'I °"2·5678 any Item. 642-5678. Coailt Hwy, NB Employer St. H.B. _,. ~::IL'( PILOT 8005 Dogs lhursda;o:::::.~~977 8050 ~'~t·~'!r-~·· .. ~:·f~!!.1~; ~~;¥.=~!~.~~ ~.~;.~'!'! ........ !~.'.~ ~~!~~.~~~ ......... ~~~-~t~.~ .... !~~.~ ~.C:!·.·.":~ ..... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Ct-;RMANY·tirand new, (2) 1.ar"c OfNce de"k", WA.MTRISULTS7 ~I/ IMW 9712 0 " • SeUyourbo1&llhru -asslct 9520 ---------•IAKC Golden ltdTlt \l'r LivingRoomf1.m. .1lrrudy sewn on tup..• & metal, McDowt.•11 & SOUTHWISTUH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Whc>Wsol4t pupplf" Sl!>I> ru f-'ir:.t &Acee~ ~:18 1201 really lo I.Jc hun~. Onl' Craig. l\lso c hulr:i . ·~ DF.NTLt:V Mdl S·l. I u1i.·n wcon• beige with 5116-55-W. YACHT SALES To TM Tract. shots inc-ldccl, '<·ray ok ~I inf"' (.'o((• •. 1.,,,1 ., 1 1 h •••Jl/H~,ORT lmmac. Righl hand 5814497 .• ,. " . n , v c. .. 1rown o cover anyw ere rvl't s;,,... dn\I) U68·SllD ENGLISH Lon it. 19" Y.1d1•. Jro11 lt•af fro in 10 lo 20 foel depend-Co1>y rnacbine d ea lcr D!AL!RS German s hort h.11r~·d on l'u l<llll! '>•dc 'l:!J llH! (In fullnesi, Also. muving to new location· (711) 673 !li!ll JU3S Jo'ord P1t kup $2500. I d I I rt gettmg n o pr~cnl m ''Al . SHIPMENT Pointer.., 10 wks Shols, !Hti·llj.'>.'i Y.l11ll' IJl•JullfUlly cm· · ·d ( - wormed. t\l...C' $85.'i•tl &", k 1ro1ercc Jt·y t•u um, venloryofused•·rebw'll "' ·~I Alomu• .i. lW. :>48-79°.!7 WE BUY CLE.AM CARS &TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET ON SALE 545,3249, ~18·3673 " a · ·~Ill:"; 1111: :.1tl' floor lO t·dllni.: Come & . h. "" . spin, Jib, anchor & hnc· l-'RIDAYOCT 28 9A M gd com.I St;,11 11 .. t ulr t-1•1,•toupprccintc&nu1ke mac mes. Buy as is, ~t for crwsi11): l::\'c & Beaut. res tored 1940 s.doW11Allff • Ltd Seauurul Shih 'l'i u pup· Uphol. t\rm l'hnlr·., s:io or<rr.22935Gnlaxy""111c, bestofferS.C.M.'s,3M'is, wkncls ll'IS·O'JU . :. Plymouth 2 Dr. !ledan. 2828 Harbor81vd. .... pies, w1shots, AKC reg. e.164.292'16 L't'foro ~"1'w1ca A.M. 500's, 2 Savin · Reblturi«.cng.Buynow COSTAMESA 1529ZlolaaChica Chumpionlmc.536·9627 ---"' .JO '"'"" Suhara 200. also A.ll. CAL20,fullyeqwp·d.new for quick turn over in 546-1200 H.I. t714) 193-7509 --I.iv rrn xofu, xlru t•owl il' ll'' Surfl.K>ard w1lh new Dick. 546·4906. 137 Lex· bottom paint, slip avail. Newfl(>rt 8eu<'h auction,--------Sl50. <;opp.:1 iu1h'I! u1.11·h (111 & leash $35 Primo ington Ln. Monticello $1,700. 545·3762 or kt.~p forever. $3000/of-WE PAY TOP DOLLAll 8045 ~.Llvrml·hr$:1:;.l'ort wetsui t new size Townhouses.CM. L'k" A . 2 for.ss1.2742 :lft.Spm FORTOPUSEDCAHS 3.,.,u n•n•••••••••• ••• •••• • a·cr1b SS. 752 5.25·1 . ~ 11 . s4' s L• ·'. h 1 .: new quar1ux 1. _____ __:_.....:;,__:__ FOREIGN, DOMESTIC ~~li.ll-IDll<••.us ao I 0 ----s rn.. . • .. cs c er 4 UIL-.J Dri ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'AT~! CJ\'l'S' 2 litfl ~· Red Spanish Coul!h Supt•ri:lass i;nows kls. p•a.... Hendy to soil, resnb'I, ,,...nc... "'•• 9550 or CLASSICS FRG H gruy1blk, 1 affectionate Red 1 •t 1 , 1,, .. ,, "· J!IScrn wio Bdng ·$7S ., 8017 6hp Chrysler mlr, anx· ••••••••••••••••••••••• lfyourcarillextraclcun T DAMAGED Calil'I> l Siamese n·cd \e\l lcU(uvuru"' ~1k ·SOO W I 17.0 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• loustoscll.Call 833·2827 A.MC·JEEP seeusfirst. HOTPOlNT SALE 3308 ' ' c spread clhl ht•d s1 Ulx " ooc cm 0 -b N Be h I -"UER IUI K w W l\ · bo gd homes 557-4435 whcekiiair 77.1 ll·H ll w t-:c•kt•I Safety Bind· ou Y <.:~kallels & other pt. ac · #I le Collf. "' ~ • arncr ur or r. ----'b, · ,., •. 1r. Sk b l · . t!X.Ulh-birds Call Paul 2925 Harbor 8 <I SanlaAna.9'19·2921 3 kittens, 6 weeks old. !llilM1288cv wkndh 1!,,. . .,.;, ,, 1 oo.s·sli<'s 997:7126 CAT/\LINA22,3Mo'solcl. WEOUTSELLALL -Real cuw. Cull aft 5·30 ~ . to.•· H, .H ~. 9: lO , $7.50, Many xtrus $6000 JEEP DEALEl\S CosUI Mesa U79·2500 CASH PAU> PM646·5486 6-; , Cou<'h & mulrhing ~5 :. SJS · $JS. ~ $45. Albino Cockatiel & caJ(e 847-l489AMs & PMs lNTHESTATE For Wsbr/Dryrs/Relrig ----·H~ lo' l's t•ul. Yt.'llow Girls ic~ skates.site SN, S75 Pair of Dove --HUGE INVENTORY workingorn<>i957..fll33 IUSKY,fcm, 2 yrs olri. All naug & chrom<±. Gd cont! bkul~ ba". & akule dress-w/<'~ge $20. 645 9109 s ''11 Aquarius 23; great All Models New & Used shots & lie. Great w kids. 51501 bst orr 551-tllW s11c lO (chlld >·all Cor $50. --cond. Head, OB, 3 sails, Leasing Available GAR~GE SALEPrlceson Watchdog. 54g g759, --~--•• . . Occas1onul chu1r (needs PlanotlrONJCllll 1090 SleepsS.Pnt,751·0285 C re c o n d 1 t. 1 o n e cl 6'16-G842 Ll.\lni; ~oo~n Sd, <.:ustom recu''l•rlng >·~40 Anh· ••••••••••••••••••••••• • . . osta M•aa refrigerators, wshrs & liold scd I :.ur,1. table~ quc:d wrought iron Bar qUA.UTY PIA.NOS 22 Catalina, fixed keel. G A.MC JHp dryrs. Guar. & del.l{QLUE l'ollie Puppy 8 ldmps & much mc1n• K:irtw2glassshelves& Be h headrm.3sails.Loadcd. 2S24 HARBORBLVD. DUN LA P 'S 10960 wks. h Germ ShevJ. ··~ Sl.200. Call636·1:!1·1 8 botUe holders (new & Tnc. es,slools!~i(ts. SlipavallatDanaPnt. Costa Mesa 549-8023 Talbcrt<Al Euclid) 1-'.V. Huslde Fem, needs ~d r----Sol• 8055 cui.tom madc)-$95 . ....~.mpg~~pSahomng. 6-42-4599 963-0721 oome. 645-52-43 --r Piano-Story & Clark-r-. t .._ ppe -••••••••••••••••••••••• walnut con bolc-butter 728 W19lh. CM 548·7272 l8' Alpha Cat. Must sell. .MUST SELL-Btn Washer & Dryer, Super OeluJCe ~lodel, perfect running Furnitwe 8050 coad. like new $250 both. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Giant mulu-tom1I" .,ale h Gd cond. Trlr w/bo:i1 Year of collt'clahll•s. 1. an ocw·S95o. Call GRAND piano. Redeco'g box. &t ofr 1213)332-8894 Clolhini:. rurmturl'. toy:.. ti4Z·OlJ8 & hu\•e no spa<'e Xlnt or (213'433·7339 2 door FiF reCri~ S2W. Some mis!!. furn Sol5·574lS odd&ends.Satunl:.tylkt W ..._. tone quality. like nu 29 & Sunday Oct :JO. 9 ·I A" TED finish. $1795. 832-1653 27' CORONADO ''11. In BUNK er;u.arown & 9561 Rockpomt Ur. tfron1 TOP CAS H DOLLA n . . . brd, 3 s11ijs, ~heel steer· whilcwilhdruwcrs One llushard & Uannin1.u. l'AID i''OR YO U H Wurhlzer spmclori;;in, 2 in((. VHll'. Knot meter. JHPS"77" CJ ·S 's, CJ -7's . Che.rokeC!i. Wagoneers. Pick-ups, up to $1,200 dis· counts. S yr 50.000 mile warrantys available. CopelClftd Mtn Inc 200\ E lsl, SA S58·8000 TOP CASH pJ for go ycarold&ingoodcondi· 11 B. Ji':WF.l.RY. WATCHK'), keybrds includ'g tone depth meter. Slip reCrigs. furn, stoves & Lion. Sacrificing al $l80. AHT Oil.I 1-:(;TS. GOLD. c.-on\rol, ~dal kcybrd & 530·1886 '6 7 CJS dyrs.1139-9123, 891:1-0132 Call 581-00Sll. 2 coffee u11Jb S'JO pr s IL v 1-; H s i-; It v I c i':. S~l'll pedal. &;aut maple LJ6 h-...u.a...a Bestofr 640·0849 eve 1.Sicyclc. girl's Schwinn t-'INt-; FUflN & t\~· fin1i.h. incld s bench. _....n. Refrig, btCI bltln bar, nds S1'0REW10ESALE S35. 2 s teel :.lorn gc 'l'IQUES. 64:; 2200 Must Sac. S375. 557.3907 w/Newport mooring. '77 JEEP RENEG/\Df:. \\~rk, cheap, tape r.ccd'r New & used furn. nppl's. cubll\Cts S'JU 1>r. Wu:.hl'r aft 3PM $27,000 by owner. 6.aS-5391 Only 2600 mi. CB radio w1amp. um/fm 631·3001 misc. WilMn·s Bar .. a1·n •· d •c "''IOO 'I I LUGGAGE T ... GS incJ. $6850. 833·9719 .. .,. r) r, l>r ... · ·'"I' l' "" •BEST• ''IS HOBIE CAT 16' Lcov.1---------- 0'.Keefe & Merrill cast ~ook s.15 & !!M w .. Hlth, table lam1is, niilkglas!> l'rom )"ur business card. Pl""HO IUYS il\g s tate, must i1ell! frucks 9560 irongasstovc.Goodcon· CM.642·W30&548·3262 S70 pr. lluhtiy lttol Sc d d f h ~ dition. $75. 549·1554 cahinct w• raclio & light . ·n une car or eae Stcinw!ly 6' grand, com-Sl800or best ofr. 75\-'WSS ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP DOLLAR PAID r-on CLEAN ~ 1883<, BEACH Bl VO ~IUN!ING TO N Rf AC:H s.i.i ns1 S40 04,n IMPORT CA.RS ALL MODELS WE NEED CLEAN USED CA.RS HOW CALL PAPPY 540-5630 IOll~SO~ & SOX • LINCOLN·MERCURY **I BUY** fixtur<> s:L~. 1..11 Y 1111}' ~:~~ :.~i ~~~r:i~~~·n~~ pletely restored, $5000. Venture 17, indd. Trlr S 1976 FORD Kenmore elect <:lolhes Good used Furnatur~ & l'h:.1irS8!.I 1507 l'urn11;,ill, i.cull'tl allracti\'e ta~ & Yamaha G1·3 grand, 0/8 motor 3 hp, xtras: hpsidePlckup 2626HARBORBLVD ···········•··••······· WA.HTEO TO IUY Qu,1l1ty usf:<t RMWs 'ROY CARVER IMW IS.10Jamhorcc Road Nfo;WPOltT RF.ACH 640-6444 CREVIER &I Jf 1>1110.t.OWAV S.t.HIA AHA 835·3171 flll UlllMA Tr. 01\IVINO "'ACHIN£ *USED IMW's * '77 S.'JOi 4sptl 286Sl!ZU '77 320ia Sill J77H.SK '71l 2002 4.."pd Si ll •tOl PDI' '763.0~i 4 spS, fl 572PQM '711 Bavaria auto 7llOM VG Closed On S..ndoy. Capri 9715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 4·:.pd. 58.000 mi. Gd ures. Grt cond.. $995i ofr 642-8803, fl7S·9626 ---- ,720 '73 Datsun UOZ. cleun. r uns Rrcal, $4.195 548-8300 or 556-0697 anytime '7S1 ~ 280Z Mags/radials, J\Mil-·M. 10.000 m1, Super Clean• 640·2:160 dy. 640-1059 ~ \'. '67. Xlnt gas mi Gd cond. inside/out. Currently not running due to"...minor elect. malfunction Ask- ing $300. 963·2976 '71 2-IOZ. Silver exterior, black Interior. AM/FM stereo. radials. $3700. l'.P. 557-5177 <fryr. X1nt working or-Appli:inces--OR 1 will NB. 94 strap, ml'etlng airline S3955. SO new n nmc Xlnt cond. Best ofrer CUstom paint & interior. COSTA MESA ' _d_e_r_.S7_s_.5S2 __ -0_325 ____ 1 sell orSELLforYou. LEAVING STATE SALE I U. rt.>qwrcrncnts. Pre· br:ind grands. consoles, over$1800.SS1·3920 4 speed, air cond. & low -- Coldspot. refrigerator, M MASTERS A.UCTIOH \ent to:.:. & th<.'ft! l-~or a Sptne~ & player1:1 10<,I miles. (1Dl2139>. WE IUY '72 Datsun 510, 2 dr, xlnt cu Ct, White. Like new 6464616Ir133·9625 • SALE• peri.onallwd l.ig cnl'losl' on~~~~s~.Music Center J.frS TaA.DE NlolwLOLnlyY ... sT4E4S9S . USED CARS! cond. Sl,250. Sl65.&lS-l073. 1-----,\11L111uc~. rr1tlucl111g wallpaper. fabric or 17~BeachBlvd 11 B 28" Morgon 01 loaded _,,,. werethenewChevrolel 770·~ CASH PAID ~:~.?hco~.!>p.1·a'nuursnt.~~1u. 'l·o1·1· ~~;•>IJ;~~(.Pal~n·mr ~.,,wutr' 847-8536 .. . ~:~~i~:w. ri:~~~n1tn VW-PORSCHE denlers!Up in the Irvin{' ''16 280Z. 7,000 m1, under Re!rig. 18 cu. ft .• gd cond. For gd used fum. anti· ,.. ~ <>< ,, i-\uto Center We 11ccd '"arrantv lo d d Fl -s 'f II b I t · 1 I l O t els like ne'" cond1'tlon ~nd s~n Juan ,.._p1'strano · .. · • 3 e · aw-•• ... usl se y Nov. l , ques&clrT\ .. s.957-8133 l't.· 1 > c 1l l'fllS, l'll· b··~,.,k· r rky two car Upright Piano. beautiful. wi'll sle .. e~ 6 adults"i·n " .,,.. yourusedcor! lesscond.997·2767 4!U·IS37.C213)4J3.8U8 Dine tte scl & muc h ac tot>:ic • Gd cond . .Must sell. S500. 837·4800 493-4511 JOE m1>rc. Friday & Salurdu~ l'Rlt;ES R31·25Sl aft. 6 or wknds. comfort. land up he11d. •77 Cleor•ce •FURNITURE• 10·5 18699 :\toroni:o SI S2 l•J or 3 $5 galley etc. Owner will '73 Luv PU. Low mi. A:\f· MAC PHERSON Spanisb or (orf Elli~ & Sant.1 .1:;tai:s s1r.oea Beaut. BahyCrand5'6". C.'Onslderlalemodclcom· FM stereo cass. shell. CH V llURRV-Wearerunni.ng MOVING; Lady Kenmore 800 Waabcr & Ele<' Dryer, harvest gold, xlnt cond S200 set • 3 mo. old MW Signature 17 refrig, harvest gold $250 . 675-0958 Contemporary hadora) Nr NewlJnci 1.o :Hai;:s Sl 50ca 1'u rinbh. Xlnl cond. '1U<'l car or ~ too pick up cust wh.ls. $2500/bst ofr. E ROLET outol cars! Complete 3 rooms of all Ftn ~ 10 or more Sl.40 ea szioo firm. 4!16·~ us p11r1 payment. Ca II 4~-1003 ext. 610 ~l Auto Center On Vt' $50 Onr lnvoic• Sah .. -s Tnx Included 1·628·9348 e ves o r . . IRVINF. on all remaining 8210s. new r~ture. ln~ludes GA.R,\GF.SALl::·Fn & Sat ~O CARO? BALD W J N 0 r ~ :rn. weekends. 73 ~uv PU, radLals. 57.000 7 68-7222 F\Os&710S in stock! M as 51 v e ll P 1.e c e 10-4 325 CrcsC'ent 8uy, IJrJW your own or send ~alnul. Good c·onJ. Ask· . , . nu si97sorbesl. Call Ut MOW ~~set. Beautiful 7 Laguna B c ll eh nJrne. addrei.s , µhone & mg$190. 846-5137 LEHMAN 12 Sa1lbo11l, 559.4932 '65 . '61J Mustang. VS or (l 1 .. 1111111111••~ .. -· piece hymg room set & 5 Beds preads. barstool:.. 1 --perf cond xlnt gear I · 1015 piece Din Set cir TV. chaodc•ht•r. lu~s. ~c· ~'J1d,~ -One ~ard per TY, Radio, $540.'962-611S • ·n Dodge • 2 LOn V-8. 8' fY i. stick or a-;;.~· 3~i2ed ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUST SACRIFICE clothes. bike. misc r~g. ea<' HiFi, St•reo 1091 bed, mags, lumber ruck. or ransp. car_. __ . ___ 1 $588.00 ----_ _ Send check or money or-••••••••••••••••••••••• Newpart 21;1, 1975. J/B gd mi. X1nt cond. All 5. PUBUC FURNITURE t 28, 29 & 30 MOVING. t.lcrlo. Beautiful 2S" color <'On diesel. 3 sails. fully 496-8057 Alltos 1~ -EASY TERMS· must sell everythinit PILJ?.oT.PBoR~Hl!~!4G sole $158. t yr warr., Cre~ equip'd. S21,500. 675·6887 '76 Chev Luv Mikado. •••••:••••••••••••••••• *AUCTION* .....w.y 7:30 .. .M. lo.altrs Welco•I CONS10NMENTS SM. BANKRUPTCY DISPERSALS MASTERS AUCTION 20'15Newport 81\'d. CM C-~ 17061 F.v('r$!rl'l!n Cr, ~ ol<IV dcl &s t "·'" Mrn •-~ .,,, .-n1Furniture-HuotDch.8-18·0221 Costa~1esn.Ca.!.12G26 e·up .... u. • .,....., ~.~pt/ AM1FM cass. mngs,'68 VW Sqbck. • spd • 1865Harborll.CM -. Mcl'.'ITOSH 2s05 am . Docks 9070 rack.~ew Ures.}mmac. AMi FM .xlntcond.$1<150 645.6151 !'ltOVING SA LE• Furn .. I~ Pcr.11an c1>ls. d1Herent c.24 pre.amp, :'tt. H. f7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 22M rru, $3600. 49i ·3616 or bc!>tofr. Bh S5Hi821 ~~~~~~~~~ hsehld gets, etc tO S slle'i & <'olor s. under FM tuner $1225 5''8·1-107 $200 REW A.RD ''17 Ch · El C · I · Sat ·sun r'>1· 1. wholesalefi.11~1 • · · e\y amino ,,...,, R S ' 1 • 1 " _.: --s ,1 . · TV . For info leading to Ion(? ClassiQ. 4100 mi, fully "'"a omto SALE MOWI ~a~orc. Oranl!c \'W tow b;.ir. 1rioo cc vw ) \anta • 2s 111· culor. term rental of :io· sail equipped. Must sell or ••••••••••••••••••••••• Semi-Annual sale in Rat· GARAGE SALfo; t 'rr, s,1t. eni:lne. HV mololrcyclc remote~:1568 l~veaboard slip. Call le~ s ~. ( 1G9 4 39 3) f\LPHA '60 1300 Spider. 83J.'9625 646-8686 tan&WickerFurniture Sun. Cameo IJ11!hlantl~ rack , 1\ns aphonl' -Chas.Berk at644·1380 American Car Plun. Rblteng,5s1>.S25000Cr. Oct 15lb UU1J Oct 29th. 4727 l>orchcsterC:d;\1 StunorC'llc. 1'1µer air loah & M.W.• 751-8910 (714>1·684·7881 ----------1 Closed Sun/Mon. RAT: Hon phowdoor .. Cont. 0·470 :\! EquiPftl*nt frwttport.tioA VCMS 9570 1lt.-I.... 8020 TANL.AND 217 Main St ff 8060 l'ni:!1lll' . t ont. 0 170 K ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• AusffR.H.-y .... ,......-. e--• · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''} lindl\r s Pnl·&ra.:ino 1o~ M.......:-C 5.-a ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .;xc .. Beach.(213l430-01lln A I ('Id . I ··,,· ..... un .• -· ~·-•I 1973fOROV""H ••••••••••••••••••••••• cg. nppa oosa "~ ini: to """ ) Ll'r. " ct / ~lro11 . EquiptMftt 90)0 R.td 9120 "' 65 ~ . "l\vopd~~ Fo~mula One 10 ak w glass srt. coffee la· Yrs, 15 h:&nds Very gen U I Y m pus t c I c pholo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Wiltdow Surfer•• wh~n~ar~u~~a::c ~u s ... es. like new. S31 ble, $120 + movie Ue.$800. (714 >522·43"l0ur 1;a(·uumclcJner.~6·72015· t -1 & lk • 3xpeed V8 mag wheels ber ·' · 0 Reynolds tubing Crames. camera. 644··9186 12131!»4·6111 wkday:. or S."2 3310 Pvt Pty igne :-c.':!..o Po' o~ 6c7as3-le6.20 ~ cnmper sbe-11, near new' special ·exh'aust & brand a eve $5500. 640-4731 S12S ea 548-4650 ------------new. .......... a)s • cab hlgh wht " cream . . 3'couch. gd cond $35, dbl Appendix Qlr I yrs TJIE PERn:CT eves67S-7756 S21S/b5L Sse-4932 . new. Cu~ly carpete~ & RACIMG>lllCE chest of drawers. end lS.2hands.Eni:1rarncd CllRISTMASGIF'T . ,. • customried ioterior. IMw Swiss &IONDlA 25" near tables, misc. 842·1023 Shown at A & n sho .... -. FOk SON & 0 1\D' J~ 2 7 & 3 H.P . Out· II ROADRUNNER. Setr-(7&l5lW>. ••••••••••••••••••••••• perfectcood,claS!!icblue -Cal1Laun1.4ol5-tll21 (;l•rman ''N" s~~ll c ':'°" · Both work. $J0 cont a ined. S ips 6 . SA.DDLH.ACIC & silver Crome. CUmp;Quecnwnt.erbed,6 moold. . mooelMinitnxtrninset:; ~aorbstorr.SSl-6S2l S950iolr.Ph642-5613 VA.U.EYIMPOllTS equipped-Shhna no brks. $150. Bdrm access. floral Girl to shun· cw. for 1 ) r with l>lal1on h<>u !>Cs. loah, Power 9040 WANTED: 131°2040 495-4949 sms. 644-8203 blu/ grn chr. match 'g old A rah Ila~ Gcldrni: mountain tunnels. forest, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------1 sprd & pnt'g SlOO. 979-lS90c\'eor&15 !l!>!lO villag~s. etc. etc . & FOR SALE!!! 8'Q.ibover Camper, g<KM! '72 Ford E300. 302 VS. W&.a....M........,n"-'•8025 64G-2743aftS:30 AQH ;\ Bay '"·ld1n" ,, many more extra!>. cond. Or t rade for 8 Paneled,cpt'd,oewtires ~ unr ..... "' ,. v C11"l11m I yout on 3· G' '77 Sea Ray 24 Jt. :imper Shell. 846-8S'l9 a nd bra .. es. $2850. •••••••••••••••••••••••IN STORAGE. MUST Yrs, West Eng. Jumps ·' a x Weekender with 70 ,. BARNWOOD PANEL'g SELL•. nA"Ut "Av. H'1lls All tack. orrcr. li:lti l:.!,,11 t.ihlc All mounted &. re· hou M t 11 bo h eves. 4W-4736 """ ,,., udv to h~1\'c run with. rs. us se ; ug l ---------- RR ties·Tcl poles-beams F.Btate items from the 7," , SJ.SO Hurry' Cu ll new boat. Prl. ply. Call Motorfudllbs 9140 77 Dodge Van, total 2X4/2x" l""al 631·2460 20s. 5' mahog set•Aa,'hop· 1 ~cnllt~l· J.ll»>.' "', 0 1,,1· .,1., Ol"°. Je...-v at t C S .,.. "" "'" Ask I! Sl200 t d f ., ~ .,., · · ~ ••••••••••••••••••••• •• cus m. ost over 9K. p11c1~hlte style · striped eau1~s-:J-tl7 ~,~·!1 c ur . - - --544.alSI Columbia Moped. A ·l 8:000 ml, ful~ war:nnty. s " S2SO. Lg wnl &----Irvine Country Club orS46-1200 rond.Lessthno6moold. like nu, w1sacr1( for mahog library th\ Sl7S. J•w.try 8070 !\tembcrsh1p S750 + S275.642-9859aftSPM SS700.754-06SS M:ibog QA d.ininR tbl. 3 • ••• •• •• •• • • • •. • •• • •• •. tn1nsfcr kc f,.:t.\.!1()6\ leaves S27S. fruit wood -SEA RAY'S ·70 Ford Super Van :i:, ton. sq gametbl. lthrtop$100. WANTED 15x25 · Yet low s ha i.: Mototcyclff/ Auto trans (rcbu1Jt 1 mo. Lgdownoverstuffedcht TOP CASH DOI I t\R curpct, lovely, 42x24.. A.Jll978Modfls ScGo .. n 9150 ago),newenginew/only SADDLE BACK BMW COME IN& Sil THE630CSi MOW OM DISPLAY OUR COMPLETE IODYSHOP ISHOWOPEH Kitchen Counler With sink. formlca top, dis· posal. 2 aluminum frame wfodows. 6'x3', mini blinds 6'x3'. s· cultured marble bath vnnity top, I window 3'1t3'. S4S 0859 Catnmn& $\00. Frwtwood chr SilO. p A IL> f<' o R y 0' It Oak clc.'>k p;11nlc<I. 32' I &'.JO' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 18.000 miles on it. Askinl! Also Danish tenk tbls, JEWECHY WATC!lt::S Wall dress :.hop rods & t974 250 Yamaha MX· S2200 . 870 ·4561 BMWRESA.LES misc uccess & pnt'gs. \RT oiiJiCTS GOI ii' poll.'s. Hi' Closl't 1>1 fold HARRISON'S Terry kJt front fork, Bog _(_F\i_ll_ert_on_> ____ _ Call to sec. 54S-3967 SILVER S 1-: l{ \'I c' ~;' melol cJoor' 58G ~O shocks. etc. SSSO. Call '75 PLYMOUTH Vovoger 1974 l.OCSA. Fl~f: t-TIPI & \~· · --SliRAY 9629898aner'lpm J .,... .. t 8030 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEW GAF Sound mo1:\e OMOf A Kind 'rlQU~:S l>l 5 iivli • KmR me & twin mapl.c 27 • · · · 318, auto. P1S, stereo. COUPE. Automati c:, cam e.r a-game show 18 yr <>Id Maple Dinm~ _ · hdbrd~. s10 ca llublltra11 :?:.! sS:o~la55·5s.A. "IS Hondo SOOP. xlnt cond, nk. xlnt. SSOOO. 4!>3·7530 electric sunroof & wm· contestant-fleeds cash Room Set. All Ila rd Rock C>iamondi>. nnl!'>. dl.Hn'>. ham:. t r r ho ml'. l'O m · sac. $400. minor repairs. , Ch dows. leather Interior & for taxes! S400 or best New En~lancl Ma pie bracelet. rn1n:.. :ill i:old plctc. SIO. I dr cht'Sl Sto. 3101 Coast Hwy, N.B. 53\-8406 76 ev '2 lon. Xlnt cond. I u x u r Y w h c" Is ofr . 7S2·0315 days, Just hkc new! Call after underwhh,l.ti:u :l'llil lll'dY.OOCI thl.& 4 hnchs, 631·2547 Norm, 968-8283 or Silver block. (4881.,.NT). 7S9--0040evcs 7PM,778·I076 StS Indian GtUdi: tepee, . ,, 1973 R onda XL250, _962 __ .J_OO_l_e_,_·s _____ 1 . ----Gold c1rdt· I'm. 11 ~mall $.'i Thi J41mp SJO. 557·3907 13 3 BOSTON WHALER St/dirt. Lo ml. S425/bst . VAN.Sh<Jp Demo .• 70 For lliMlla, 3 lenses. l'asc & Kitchenette Tbl & leaf, 4 sapph1n•., J 11pra l'>t'tl afl 3Pl1 ~ llP Johnson. 3 yrs. old. 559-4932 Lo bed Co 1 t 1!1POd· $250 Or bei.l offer chr.s, gm vin scall!. <iuali S)SO. Mukl' oflt·r. 1;1;, fl75:i ----bke new. Many extrus. ng. · X 'f Pe e codn· tal167J.504G ty.640-1667 or64S·ll2I S2000. 642·3434, 540·!>100 73SuiukJ TM125, ported, ~/i~n . 'OO:~~odn · --:--WEAVl..._.G CR1ck) goodcond. r~. .,,,.,..,._ ys, Cab 8035 Super remodeling Sale! L1nstoek 8075 " 968-4652 968-0MS mtes. ••••••••••••••••••••••• fo'ri g, stove, wshr/dryr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOOMS•. 17' Dorsett w, deep V. Xlnl --------O!der kitten. Himalayan S<>fas, tbls. chrs & ac·llc~.Moripnm.irt.hrnki-ocean o r lake boat.'73 Norton, 850. 4 i. i 4 Chevy•:iton,3S028,000 Seal Point, xlnt papers ccss.675.34123rtSPM tu ride & urivc. lllk l\S .. noorloomsl2l 4har Johnson 75hpeog.Brand Llkenew. Must sell th ml custom Int. clean: SIOO. 496-63.19 -parnde ~foq;an 1tdtlmi:. ncss, Swedish type for new cond. $2100. 631-0208 week. Offers. 640·2995 xlnt. cond.586·0982 . In a Hurry! Mu i;t lfog We8tern 17111 rent. $35 mo. ti75·834<\ --'75 GMC C Beautiful fluffy kittens, sacrifice all m y furn. 338.1011 Chcl Salisbury II Must Sell 31' Bertram. 7S Honda CB300 T. xlnt amper V:in. pleasegivelflcmohom<' 1-:verything must sell. _ f'i B sportsflsh e r . cond., 3800 ml, S700ibst Loa~ed, x lnt eond . 963-8005 Mon·Fri, ar M-101' M. Machinery 8078 Completely nu thruout. orr. 968-8754 aft4pm S79001ofr. dys 8:30 to 4:30 ---C . l'cnni11 Club Family Mem· Fully equlp'd. Xlnt cond., 'IS2·'1S8S or an 6. 498-1497 0-80_.0 10041 onstitutwn t>r, ••••••••••••••••••••••• I h' I b • 71 D t R I _T' , 11 8 962 JSGS 1 >01·s 11> ava1 n le. nfov· Dys 675-9800, eves eser cac y 360 •72 Oodnc ElOO 6 <'Yl ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · · __ cw Bl ster l'nk, 15 .. xl:.", 1nA out or stat('. Must 673-5033 Ynmaha. Rebuilt, many d SG 000 ·. C • " SllEIUA.HHUSICY 'I d rawer Maple chest 2slation.110 Af!1p .. S!}'JO iwll Days cull ~33·38ij4, xtras.642-5910,642·2'721 s p •. mr, pts. Pups AKC/OFI\. 75\.1333 w 1.;c mirror $60. Brand wkdys 631·0700 {,erry eves ·wknds 759·1166 ~~c"r~~~g~h<;!;.,~ ~hfs~ nu Cir TV uerral alhc l.t .. x30'' S9!15 Nf'wport fkach 'l'i.!nnis SU MM E R DREJ\M MotorH01M1,S•I clcnn S3"00 Aft 5 For .sate, West Rli;chlnnd wrmouotlng S20 003 3709 llorironlal m1llmp. S!l!l:i C:luh Mcmhcrship $900. dlcln'l pan out•. 1977 25,~. l...t/S...... 9160 8-17-4122 " · · Wh1te Terrier, papers , 8 aft s . t213) 001.3434 • wkmale.~-633.S -------C4 llf!.l l·Oll;.la(tSprn. llayliner Sarato~a. 225 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1976 2002 4 speed, stcrt.'ll. mag wheel&sunroof 14681). 1976 530lA. Automatic, air cond .. stereo, beige exterior & low miles. <HANS 21 1974 l .OSA Full powor. i:.unroof. leather Interior & nlr COlld. (388KL1''). 1974 IA.VA.IUA AulomaUe, a ir cond .. !'Unroor & slurl'll cassclle. (860LWC> 1973 IA.VA.RIA. 1976DA.TSUH •·210 F.xrf·ltcnt condition! Like brnnd new with less lhnn 16,750 miles . MOOPKFt. ONLY$2795 COSTA MESA DATSUN -6 (l lan naui.th. steeper MitcellCNWOUs 8080 I 5 kw 110 vac, l'lcc starl, Volvo. less than 20 hrs. Rent a 1977 Excut.lv.c OOGTRAJNlNG couch. Naugh. overstuCt••••••••••••••••••••••• vort w c:irl. $250 o(r . 3 Falhomet er, VHF Motorho mc or Mini · Your Piece or Mine cha~ Bestorr 495-4956 pincL pt:ino s:mo, 1-:oocl kw 110 220 \'ac. 6 hrs run m;irine radio. bnll tank, motorhome from Herb '7 4 CIMv'[ Surfer AutomaUc wllh air 1·on· Gr eat con , lo mi & dilionlnR. stereo cusseth' more! Must sell before &sunroof tOOJNBZ> !!84S tfARROR BLVD. wt•ekend. $3100/ofr . 540.6410540-_0213 John Martin 548·00.59 ---------•I cond. nds hmm~ li&W tune. l'ull start. $600iofr can\•as Paid olmost ~~~~:~~r~"11 nny 01 640-5944 Debbie. 551-\628 1973 2002tll . • ev~. PP. 1 ~iwcd. AM/FM rocho, 71 210Z. Air, AM ·FM JUMALAY AN Kl'ITENS POOtlle Spaniel Mix York11hlre T errier'> FURNITURE WAREHOUSE SALE! JJOrl TV S50 548.56lll_ 1;.t2-!'l(il3 S~G.000. Will lake $13,000. 191•6777 CJrm Days, 963·1855, 537 7777 ----------1 nircond U7300~l sterC(l, r:tdl:ils. nu eng AMtot WClf'lhd 9590 S3400 4fl3··ma BIG SALE, dbl 1lr n·fnK. 5p.irc lrnllcr tr re 12 ln<'h ·I eves 5.51·2742 • furn. ch1hlrl•ns dothcs. lu~. new $1:i 751 :~2 12Mlll mfanl lo fiX. m>'I<' Thur~ !H;:I ~i 10,000 Sq F'I or 1''111e till i.old !l(ill ~1~swn l>r Ill' Ros ton Whnl('r, M<YJ'OR110MF~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1973 2002 4 s peed, Becker AMtl•'l\I &~unroor. (177RF.V l 72 510 wgn 1Uf·FM cass, nu :.hocks. tires. Gd eng. $1500 673-3'177 ) l'oodJe Shellie M Ix Pit Dull Terrler:s P' A.RKEtt"S P'ETS NEWPORT 8EACll S.t0-0090 Jl(JmcFurnis hlngs c.~1.Apt.t.9i!11:1;.:, Win t• 1:ra11l·~ for i.a k : w ·EvinrudcRS&Trnll1•r. FOl\HF.NT Fenturing Dinini;: Rms \\.di ;\O\' :, Tor flU;tlit Y s:nso 675·0700 wkt.lay!l, From $100. wk. 770-0644 '& AnllQUf' R cprodUl'· 8' (iemlnp Ca mJ'(•r Slwtl t'i1h1•rrH"l Sauvl..:11111\ 113 lion~. All wrll dlsrount~·d fits ·'• um p1c1<u11 C:ood C,111 010:.1 fill/l.fiAAti ---------IRENT Fireball 23' Seit wny below our com· com!. $250 Kl\li K57!1l•vci< 1 d loots, R...t/ cont. Autoialr. CC. CO, WEWILLIUY YOUR DA. TSUM Pi\TO FOlt OR NOT TOPDOLLAlt fOlt TOP CARS 1972 IA.VA.RIA. 4 speod, s tereo & cond. <MLMOl\fW) '72 Dntsun 240Z. $3800. Call 7'14·'4141 or Ir 00ft·9288 t-;NGLIStt ntll.l.DO(; llUPl)lt'S·AKC Kl'K & llrilli1h lmportl'fl I 7:17 ·8:!.'l!I pclllors (;omc m ~ sec -l 1111 t•r""0 0 l' I l' •· t · Chcrt.r 9050 stereo, sips 6 G.IS·2283 for yourself Four ll IS Arms! ~11111: t 1 u lH~'I rt r ~mo Harmon • •••••••••••••• ••••• • •• S ""DDLEI "'CK Jf::Fl"ltFY'S'I trac & rim.., (,If rnnrl l\urllr•n :.l1•rt•11 $100 R It Trollen "" "' r Sl•t•kln.: lnJ\vldunlfl wllh ••••••••••••••••••••••• 13 I ·2040 49&.4949 BARWICK DATSUM ·, 111 I 1.111 • I" tr 11111 831-IHS 49J.lJ/S L'UltNTTl,Jll·1.l S2(MI hi<t ofr 1)13 u1«1x i;.12 !111r1!1 or• Opportuft Y • Trenl '170 V AU.EV IMPORTS 1!'1102 Rrdhill. Tu. Im univ 1\ttilrtu· \'luh mcm Mu•lcal c:<tl.'Mlvc 111\llinR cx~r. Must Sell: l7' Komfort OOBIE PUPS AKC l'lwm t lkdh1ll ut 1':dln1?cr 1 hnship l'IOI qunll st . lnstnlmtnh 8013 who would be lntt•rci1h'tl lllnt cjOnd, \.l!\ud 4 time!!, ORAMGE COU ... TY'S pion sired, 11hot11. C•lri< . . Npl fkh <'nit ~30 o!lll7 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• lo )mnlnit an exclusl11<' <;I( <'Ontolncd. Includes i:ropped 1131; 4lili I .1 Ct Couch II ' Cori.'cn l>rlllt, 2 ur\ 711m ~111rtln 1:u11ur f'lnq~lcol 1•hartcr mcmhershlp. Wr nu.~h toilet W/lrg holdln11 Sl 62 ~er DAY OLDlST SP~l. h11rn111111ll11~ dull 1'ht11r!I ,\ 1 m oil h;e\'<' a ~· Oownc•alllcr 11-nk, 6 g11I hol wutN Th '. 1 $ w nttomu11 . 2 t'how Cui1lotn Wn\l'O Woodie , 1;1aJ'MZ SaillJOul with unly 5 ht'utcr, ranio & ovt"n lltsa youpAyfor Miu. Schnuu1l't!I. ,ill ~hob 1ahh·' ~Int l'ond SJ011 1111nl l>Hnd<1, 11011 .. 1wit1•\ m<'mlJcrshlr.16 ,l\'Ull(ltilc. w/fon exhGust. dbl sink, n 30dny ad In tht.• &pa1>4Jrs,xlntcli-.p &~11 1•111nµ~lt·51!1232i &more• Su1K•tclh1·1)unti. 1:111\ont-:.-;1211 lnlll:itlon1dumul(t' dt•· 'hower. :1 lp~ G, lri: DA.ILYPILOT looks 67S·57~7 1 111411'~ Ph 11-15 tl%1 ,.;tl'l'I rk 11u1t.1r posit rl!Qlll red Jf In <'IOl!et3, Ira llH & elcc SERVICE Snlc,·Servlcc l.A!nstnir '75 710 Wa11on. A/C, 4 spd. 17.000 ml. S3200 97!)..2186 TIM '781 4,.. H.,.e All mode.I~ & color11 ....... dlat. Dtflv..-y Today! R•malallltCJ I 977 H••• Got To Go! COSTA MESA DATSUN SrctSofll. 1 p1· 1 ur\1•11. $175 Mll·171:1J ll'tclCtNI, plru:w contal1 rehilt. pre11surt> wat.cr Roi CarY•r,lnc. J.rtsb Setter, lcmuh'. It) gm )lohl btocacll.' N11·c llrt~r.,umcth111~:.'"""'""t Mi c hael Relnl a nl sy11trm w/SO gAI ol DIRECTORY mo. old, paper~ S\00 con d In cl!. l J h I•' to ..,,,11~ C'li1'>:11fu•rl Ji!' d1 l'mc l .... hJt '"u ~unl m l'uc1flc bland Chuter. 11tater. ballery " 110 Ila. 00 IT NOW! Rolls oycc liMW !J61.m2 S\70 oh 646 Ul05 at W\'ll M2 56711 u.111\ l'1lot t 'l,1!!~1fll'cll' Call Mo.,.J,.'rl 751 3852 ~. 637--41.56 642.5671 1540 Jumbort'I' 2R4$11ARBOR BLVD ::;::;:;:;::.~~~~_JL...:....:._:..:_:::::::~..:__~__J~~~-=-=-...:_~~--1-~~~~-~--1...=.:.:..::.:..:.~..=::.==::==1=::=:::=::::=::::====:±====~~~~==::l~N~ew~po~rt~Be~1c~h~64~0~64~~~·~5~4~0.4410540.0Zl3 ~ •• l•ported Awtos, IMp~ AMtos, hftported Autoa, lmportH A.utoi. U1ed Awto•. Uaed •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Thu1sday, Oclobe1 27. 1977 DAIL V PILOT CJ J .,..... 9720 Mead. 9738 !torscM 9750 VoldwOC)9ft 9770 Cadiffac: 99 15 9 940 Autos, U•~d Autos, U1ed Auto1, UHd •..................... . .•...••................•.................... , ·····················•· ············t·······1·· ······················· ······················· ....................... ····················· .. * DRIY~ A.* SPORTS CAltS 1~ BAJA DUG.Has '67 Wt Piftto 9957 P1ymouth 99'0 ~~~ ........... !!.~~ * LITILE. .. * -new 11.rt-s. root rar k & LONG 71 Foril Pinto i.tution L97S Plymouth Spurt l-'ury '76 Pormula, sllvt·r: blk lo9gllt •Sold rt.'bullt cn1:1ne & trans .. llil PH IL ••••••• •• •• • • • • • • •• • •• • •••• •• •• •• •• • • • •• •• • • • • many extras. Asking • FORD "'ai:u11. 14 ,UOO miles, Lhree bCali.tJL1011 wagon <'a!ICll>Y top. FM ~~1; SAVE A LOT WEST GIRMAN $1600. Call 642 3434, m.i.;i.. lugi.:a.:e rack , A Daily Pilol cwcutl\'I.' ~~1u~i1u~~SOO. Grace:, SHOP&t COMPARE IMPORTS S40·9lOO IRkk) Oranqe CCM1nty'• tape ch.>ck. clean s;uoo car. clean & curcfully JW _. ----- 714/ 548·1116 llUG t:SELECTION S.vlUe Cnter 870456.t(Fullerton> muintam{'J Air l'Oncfl '711'onllac llonnevllle,all BARWIC K DA H UN ',• 4 , 1 1 1 I l 't" US ED CARS • ----twning, power l>lecrmi,:, pawer good cond $1150 ~•des hnt 9740 •71 PORSCHIS 1976 C "'DILL"' C '7 I PINTO. A Mi i''M 8 trk. power laUgalt•, llnled 541001 · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Top c11~h $$for yout_VW. "" "" 'l' r Y c It!~· n · mus t glass, r em ote c·ontr<1I - •73 240z Xlnt cond. SPORTSCARS AREHERl!U Paid for or not. Call SEVILLE i.cll l>eslofr 55i·6198 _ mirror:,, reur u•al yecJG 9974 831-IJ1!>49J.Jl1S Am/Fm, air, mags, 4 DOH"TWAIT! Keith or Jerry f'ull pawer assisLs plu~ , ............ ~ •• o-.,.••••••• ,72 lltchbck. 59,000 mi. speaker & luggage rat·k ••••••••••••••••••••••• pd lo..,M & Sold llLL y A TES BOU WITHAM vw CUSTOM G fllLL. rull .............. ,,..,,, ,.,.... Brn, i.lnl cnnd, SI JOO Priced to sell at $2,l!IS. VEG"' ,76 8 • 7600 Wf•stminster A \'C padded lop, cruise con· __ SH 2-l7 · r 31' M & k d See in Daily l'llot park· "" $42()(). 5'8-0291. WEST GERMAN VW.PORSCHE 893·7551 or631M880 trol. AM/F M stereo " 1th __:_ b a l . ~~ ing lot, 330 Wcbl Ha y SI , HATCHBACK 1972DATSUM 0 TS SanJ uanCapislrano tupc, CADILLAC wire '76 GHi\NA DA Chiu, '71 Pinto SlOOOor best of· Cosla l\h•ba, or c ull 5Spcctltrans.,radio,ctc. 5 ,ow "'GO.... IMP R 837·4800493-4511 1972 VW Bus, 4 s 1>d. s un· w heel c·ovc r s. l'lc. loaded, lo m 1. Sull' or for Call:!lJ·5!122089 aft J &12-.i:121 uncl u,.;k Hi ck or Onl.v deven milcL>! "" " 714/ 548·1186 roof, mag wht•cls, Z uccl, <004NLDl. lake over he. $14!1 mo. orwknds Oscur in the fleet i,:arag\l (00..IHOG) ln excellent condition. 41---------1 1973 ltORSCHE lmmac. SJ200 or be~t ofr. 59 9 88 No dwn. PP. 545·3650 -for more 111rorrna tion. OHL y $329 5 speed. radio & beater. LeaH 914 Olll 960·2441 for appl. '72 RUNABOUT 4 spd.. - ---"'RD ct.-I t Less than 40,000 miles. '75 f'ord Gr an Torino 4!00() eng. Lo mi, xlnt. '69 Barracuda, 6 cyl cng, HOW,.. -•roe <405KlN). Mew-Used With mag wheels & ap. '67 Bug, clean, no dents, Nabers Brougham. A/C. Pill, oond.$1450firm.846·2420 P/S, new batt, gootJ Dove•QuaUSts. HURRYMOW! ovaaoo peara nce g roup. El<· flared rear renders & P1S, AM /FM SLl'reo cond.$950.Ph 494-~9 NEWPORTBEACH MERCEDES cellent! (4685). near new tires, new Lupe, lo mileaJ:e, xlnl 72 Pint o Runul>uut. 833 0116 S/4DDLUA.Ck shocks, runs great. $975. c d•JJ cond. $3695. 644·489'1 Original owner, 44 ,000 Ponffac 9965 -----·----- OM DISPLA y v ALLEY IMPORTS S48·S49., afler 5 PM & a I ac miles. aulo. lrans, ~a~ial ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Vega. Good cond. Air. -~"HARBOR BLVD. HouseA,,....'!OfRlmlZpoDrts tll-2040 495.4949 wkends. i 1ioo 11..,1111, ll'1<I Mercury 9950 llrC:, very clean 11C'dt~ Private Party: Jus t had valve job. COSTA MESA DATSUN ~ v u~ to . '75SplnlCamper. Refrig, c o)l.i \In.•" 111 •1!1111 ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• an out. Sl500 a '76 Pontiac Fitel>ird SSOO/bslofr.646-7896 540..410 540.0213 MERCEDF.S DEALER 74 .Porsche 914 2.0, 60,000 sler~. xlnt cond. 20,000 J~~~~~~~~ ORANGE COUNTY'S 979·23il2afler S:OO PM Formul~. til~ wheel. .73 Vega CT Wagon, <tsi>d. 6862 Manchester' nu, must sell! ml S6950, SSH 234 HEWEST . 74 Sq u I r e w a go n . powe! windows, .power R & JI. runs good, $1100. '76 280Z. 4 spd w/mag Buena P ark 646-7223eves. UNCOLN·MERCUKY si450 'best offer. Xlnl steenng, aulomat1c, air, 759 LS34 wheels, AJC. AM/FM. lo 523·7250 ---------11968 VWBus,custom.new '72Cad .. Cpe DeVllle. Brn Dealershtpisnow Ol'EN cond. Ms J an•15642•3850 AMi FM stereo-8 track,--·-------- m ilea ge. $6700/bst '68 911 TARGA All r e· reblt eng, xttas. $2500 or w lthr mt. Lo ml. $2500 RAY FLADEIOE -mags & lo-lo miles. A •73 Jllchbk. Ru &l. Gd ~1S4 On the Santa Ana Fwy. finished. $6200. ofr. 960·1477 PP. 968-6710 ·72 Pinto Runabout. A1·r. cream puff'' •U!JV' Cull nd d L. $1200 bsl 493.7530 ---------1 LINCOLN-MlmCU RY .. ~ co • g ires. I '74 260Z. A/C. A){·FM, 67 ~L, auto, stere~. '69 Camper, reblt cng, 1973 Cadill ac Coupe 16 18AutoCt•nter Dr. Q.~:~~~~ mags, $1100. 1~:·::~k ~in6~.ti 9J03 a!>k oervr. 644·5633 or 673~ ·mag wbls. Xlnt cond. lthr. rear seat. 10 ma. Porsche 1965 SC Cpe. radials.8lrk,runsgd, DcVi lle. f ul l pwr, SDJ.'wy-Lake l''orestcxit ---------1 --------- $4 350. Dys 833·1361, )!Jnt cond.&tofr. Ruby Red. Xlnt.cond. $1950.968·7725 AM/FM stereo,light sen· IRVINE Autos.New HOOA.utos,New 9800Autos,Mew 9100 Eves/wknds 675·5430 675·7903 thru-oul. New Michelin Unel, dlx appls. Excep. 830-7000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' .. ,74 280 <l9M mi xlnt cond tires. Complete overha ul ·m VW convt. $22001 Bst tjonally clean. $3500 or ___ _ __ _ '71 Dataun 240Z, lo ma s, All i. S9a00 752.7474 & balanced engine. No orr. '72 VW Bug, xt ra bsLofr. 833-0481 Mu•tClftC) 9952 mags, ~M/FM 8 tr k. or~~7eves · rust thru-0ut. $6750. Ph c leah $1 600/Bst oCr .. 10 Cd All 1 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• auto, air. Must sell. 4.!H·2220 9604533 mll 8 • powerC. ow '76 MUSTA1'4G II 675-3864 M ed nc:o En es, runs good. lean · ere es 180• 1""°· g '66 Porsche 912, 5 spd, •m VW Sundial Camper. Inside and out. $1800. Wltitei blue lop & decal~ '73 Dats un 240Z, IMlkelnew.llLoBmitleagfe. good body, clean. runs xlnl cond . Must sell 870-4564 (Fullerton ) Whlte lnteriorw1buckels S3900/Besl ocrer. Auto, us se · es 0 r . good.S3300.968·15l9 $2000.S48·94lll . , & console. Extra clean! air, AM/F M , m ags. 631·3961 , 76 Cad . E l Dorado. 16,231 m1l<.'s. (510PCU). 536-3402, (2131 680·9497 · 68 230• Good cond. Auto, fl«l'ICIUlt 9755 71 VVf C:imper. ~u lly Loaded, aslro roof, full ~or sale ?r lease at <;ort A M I F M ca s s ••••••••••••••••••••••• equipd.$2200.Rbll , mtr powe r , wh ite W 1 rctJ f oxLeasing.Cull 12400/0BO. Sea l Bch ~C.......,'s unde r wrnt y, new leather interi or . 645..3661 9725 (2l3)A"""""" --7IWIS_T., radJals. Tip-top cond. Ph Sacrifice a l $3500. one ---------1 ••••••••0 ••••••••••••• ....,...._, " 546·5460 dys. 830·8666 owner. 63Q.l710, 633·9264. 'M Hardtop. Xlnt cond. 'fB Fial Stat. Wgn. 4 cyl, 4 9742 RENAULTDEALElt eves or see al Texaco st a· V-8, 3-spd. $1175. spd. Runt good. Low •••••••••••••••••••••• is Mi rac l e Ma zda/ lion, El Tor o Rd & 76 crE DEVILLE 830-7022 -m aint enance. $650, Rockfield El Toro Very clean. Lo miles 646-7378nites afl6. 1976 Met MIDGET Renault. Come to Mira· , 640-0454 ·m fastback, 351 eng, a ---------14 apeed, radio, beater , cle where we make car '62 VW splendid1 owner car $995 special stripes & deck buying a pleasure·not a not running Sl50 '72 EL DORADO, dark pp SJ6.&146 HCl9tClm 9727 rack. Less than 20,000 chore . We have new 892·6371aft1:00 PM brown, loaded, like new, ---------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• miles. (2(9RJL). Ex-Renaults In stock now & S2 850 orig mi asking '66 Mustan9 $900 1..-d New •77 cellentsavlnjs at our introductory offer to '72 BUG Moving m ust uiso. ~4888 0; 842-4435 675 9325 OMLYS3695 youisa sellt Xlnt.cond.thruout. Terry HONDA Cars AlH!!! $11100. 645-6787 ---'-------l owner. 1970 Mustang 8 track tape deck or the , '72 .CAO. XlnL cond. 77!\1 Grande, P S. P, ll, Lape MANY t'ash equn·alenL wiLh th1: 76 VW Conver tible. IJU. lownr. $2100. player. dlx model Super To Choose From! purt'hase of a ny new yellow, xlnL cond. Low Call S-i6-3375 dean! Trailer h1Lch. Xlnl UNIVERSITY 2845 HARBOR BLVD. Renault. See us today! ml. 67S·7886or 87&-2640 '77 Cpe De Ville. XlnL 2nrrd carMSlJOO. ?1r1 mcaklel 540-6410 540.0213 MIRACLE '75 convrt. Good cond. cood. LS,000 mi's. ~~~ usL i.c · a o .. .-b1i. ...,... Cars • GMC Tn.cb 2850 Har bor 8Jvd. Costa Mesa 540-9640 I 974 Mcndo/Renoult AM·FM casa. Red. PP ss.100. 114497.2993 4 2 50 H ...._. tu d Asking $3500. 838·2828 . . '65 Mustang, VS a.,pd, new lCOS~~M"F.S~ . m C\d11lac Sedetn, White paint. Lires, brakes, MGB Hard & son top, Vot.o 9772 W1 blk lop. $750. shocks. Mu sL sel' $1450 or R&.tf, new clutch, brks, 645-5700 644·5061 ofrer. 979-0S46 rings & valves. AlmosL 9756 •••••1••EF0•••• 1 •E••y• 0 • •U•• ••• • new tires, car cover, RolbRoyce '70 Mui.tun~.Ca!>i.tin~y.6 W--MGhla 9735 runsgll.SJ:l()().548-8175 •••..,••••••••••••••••••• SELL YOUR cyl eng. W/rnun trun:.. -••••••••••••••••••••• #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. VOLVO Comaro 9 9 17 new wide O\';JI I ires . '73Ghia cpe. Very cln. Nu "'-I 9746 ~ ROY • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Run11 pcrfecL. $11150. v alves, c ltc h t r ans .-..... Sec us•for 11 lop dollar ,74 Ca maro 1 ow er &14·1464 $2850.494-2130 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• CARVER estima te! • n · - ----------·12 Opel Raltye Coupe, 4 ROLLS-ROYCE MAR9UIS VOLVO su_per clean. loaded lo OtdsM>bHe 9955 ••'M convt, cust to~, nu spd, Rldl, factory air, IMOJ•"'bwH MISSION VIEJO mi. irnr. $.1000. 673'8120_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• pnt, nu int, n u e n g. newpaint "Ures,52,000 ,..__, ... "' 811·2880495-1210 ~v~.t 9920 19760kkCutlcns Ko•ls. Porsche rims. mJ,646-0415 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •--" TT Ce>mpietely restored. 1 of CLOSED SVNOAYS OtlAMGE COUNTY ""~ am • op a ti.Qd. Su_per Cherry! Opel GT 1973, gr eat cond. Full pawcr. 8 lrat'k C 8 . A$(or Rkbard,MS-5702 $2,200. 832·3196 eves. ors. 9760 VOLVO sLeroo combo.cruisecon· ,.tt.m.5195 bm S46-5750days. n•n••n•n•••n•n•u EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO ,. it lrol. lllL wheel, tlcluxe in· ·n Sa b 99 4 d ( l · j J.aroest Volvo Dealer • • tenor & only 15,000 ~New 9100 Alltos. Mew ,.0 AM/FM ster~'ca~~. 1x~~t lftOrange CounLy! • • males. (647640). •••••u•••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• cood. $1800 best orrer. B\JYor LEAS!:: • • Mow Only $5495 SS7·9878aft5pm DIRECT ._. it SADDUIACk II s New. Ifs Sharp, It's Exciting. Economy & Sporty. This new ~Ire has taken the country by storm. Many httle extras are included with ~~b~t~~J's3l~~; price. ,S er. '11 DATSUH 2401 MUST SEW! '75 POtlSCHI ft4 .. , Looi! s.,..-...,· '$3998 $2799 !:r.:;~;;;~;;~!~~~ [!:ff.Z~, : ~ .~~~::d~:~:::, .,, T~..... "o oO SELL YOUR 2005 S. Manchest« it ~~~~~ c~~cs~i.wfo~::J: ·~""r~rz;;-._., "\_V ~o c / HOIDAS TOY OT A., Anaheim 750-2011 S3895. Will ne". Eves Or ~ ~\..:7 o. See us for a top dolla r wkntls~Z-9!)37 t-----------c~V-rt(4 estimate! '75 2440L, lo ml, stereo, '66 CuUass 4 dr-. -ai-r-. -Cull &111Ct1ane1.:!.5w.~--o ~1 ~\ MA19UIS TOYOTA air , xlnt cond. Days pwr. viny l top $400. ,..,.,,.,.,,_.,,_-.o ••n,i!OO. • 0\\0 MISSION VIEJO 642.2655, ev~642·7213 6"44'60 ""-"'°"""" ·i..o.w ... ·11°011Mve1 0 ~'46· ()0 831·2810 495·1210 67 122S Wagon. clean ,.._ .. 0 -----$4065 \) ~\~~ ~ A~ $1400. Call: 535.107s aft r mr 9957 l\tan "~o~\C) ~I -'71 CORONA Mar k 11 6PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• AH-.1>1 ... 1••b1Ve.N.,., .... cttd1o ,..""'7"" v Wagon . Air . gd. cond.t---------' '71 FORD PINTO. l\uto """'~~.!:, ~:..: ,_,. •h f $1250. 586-0790 68 VOLVO. good condl· •..• ._.,.,. w; ~ood mileage. New friwnph 97 6 7 ~ Sl350. 493-2686 art 5 • oott & brks. Ca 11 968·3687 ·j I I •••••••••••••••••••••••i----------.. HOO ......_ N 9100 A-. M ....... M '59 TR3, xlnt mecb cond. Aatos Used _ _.. __ _..._ ___ o1. •••• .' ••• e.": •••••••••••• ••••••••~•"!•••••••••••• ••••• .' •• ~."! ••••••• !!!~ ••••••••!.':•••••••!~ Wi r e whls. $1495 . • 6•0-2358 673-6962 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w x 640-2349 • ' G1Mrwl 990' Chev. ag. Int cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1400. FUUy equip. Call ---------i 997·2805 aft 6. '76 Trium ph T R7. Gm. 5000 ma. A /C, n o catalytic converter. Xlnt $5700, 559-6728 ••••••••••••••••••••••• n Chev Concours Wgn. Sml VS. 307cc. Clean. Sl.200/bst,646-4114 74 El camino. Loaded, '74 F.etate Wagon, shell. 51,000 mi's. $3200. loaded, 69,000 mi, 581-4582/768·1201 $2895. 644-4966 77 Chevy El Camino '73 Buick, 4 dr, lmmac. Classic. 4100 mi, Cully AJC. pwr .. tr, brk, lks. equipped. Must sell or wind. Nu Ures. lo ml. I ea s e . ( l G 9 4 J 9 3 > $2195. P.P. 644·2877. Americ a n Car Plan. 830-089l 751 $10 ----~----1 1978 DeVilles and Fleetwood Broughams • Eldorados • and cflef1L ... . ' Stock No. 7019 73 Buick Estate Wgn , ette 9912 loaded. Xlnt cond. New •••••••••••••••••••••• Excellen t Selection Now at Orange County's Most C:Omplete FULL SERVICE Cadillac Dealer. DltVl OHi HOME ••••• TODA YI .JOHNSON &SON paint. 37.ooo ml, $3200. '67 FAST9ACK 844-8768 Orig, perf cond Auto. '72 Buick E lectra. cust 2 AM·FM, P/W. This t'ar IS dr hardtop, rull pwr It n awless. a real invest. air. Nu tlres. Xlnt cond. Inqui re al 675·5543 Or\f. owner. $2300. Call~;.ci-..cr 9933 71A:M2·1549 .... ---------·.-······················ '74 Appolo, •1M 011. clean, MUST SELL! moet xtraa. $2600. or 01• 1970 X R7. V·8 auto. _r_er_._497_-3205 ______ 1 $1000/bst ofr . 554-4980 '68 GS400 Converllble, dys, 960·'1135 evs Herst 3 spd, <nds work)i-...;------9-9_3_5 Sl000.646-3479 C ... ac 9915 1973 Dodge Charger,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• special edition, uuto shirt SF.Vrt,L E WAN'l'El>. kit, mags, cust paint, Under lS,OOOml hy P/P Broughnm int. 400 cnR • (714)84.2-4116 like new. $2400. 646·2'700 "IS Coupe de Ville $5.000. Font 9940 78,000 frenay mlles. ••••••••••••••••••••••• eves 831·0737 days '68CortinaGT, 495-1870 PIP $400. S57·S560 aft Spm 'fhe fastest draw In the 19'iO Ford Mavcnt'k, stun· West. .. o Dally Pilot dard trans, xlnt cond. Classified Ad. 642-5678. $1200. SS2·7960eves. SALES • SERVICE • PARTS •BODY • LEASING DEPART~NTS K.EfPntAT GREAT GM FEELING WrrH GENUNE GM MRTS (;J 2 DAILY PILOT T hursday, October 27, 1977 ~ . ....... .. . NEW 1977 VOL VO 264GLA NINE TO CHOOSE-EXAMPLE 1974COROMA 2 DOOR HARDTOP • . ., .. Air-5 Speed Mags f389MCH .. ;,• . 4 Speed Radio #9780LO 1974 SMl2DOOR $2699 TOYOTA • NEW 1977 4x4 "'' f"•. • I I ' ~ TOYOTA UMDCRUISER HARDTOP : ;, .. ~ 57 64 .'t.·; ; ~~'4 • ~ • • Warn Hu~adi~Mud Snow Tires • fJ-40-262322 1969 CORONA 2 DOOR HDTOP A9tOllMlfk ExtraCS..' 1363AVJ ,. .. ·• ~· 1973 MERCURY CAPRI ~1999 AutOlllCIKc ssm P.S....U./FM Rocio .: #367MXT 1974DATSUN1210 ·s2299 s1299 .. • • D1•ntington Beaeh Fountain Valley EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 300, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGEtCOUNTY, CALIFORNIA Armed, Fie• Newp Kill S By lt!ICHAEL PASKEVIC Of Uwt O•lly l'Ool Sl•tf A fleeing robbery suspect. allegedl y pulled a shotgun ~ his pants when cornered Newport Beach Police. was I to death Wednesday nigh Costa Mesa, Police reported day. lllldlerflwtl ·Tracy Benedix, 20, of Hur ington ~ach, is GoldE West College's 19i homecoming queen . Tt • Fountain Va lley Ilig School graduate is Lt dau~hter of Dr. and l\11' Richard Benedix Spook House [ in Huntingto~. j ~u~:, ~~!,~~ th.at the Huntington Bea Jaycees' Halloween Spook Ho is not in the historic old Newl House but at the Newland Ho4 grounds. Nightly tours of the SpOI House -co-sponsored with t. lhe Huntington Beach Histori< Society -are more like tours o s pook red -and-white-strip circus tent. The show 1s open weeknight to JO p.m.; 2 p.m. to mldni1 Saturday and 2 p.m. to 10 p, Sunday and costs 50 cents ! person and is st.aged In the t right n ext door to the landmark home. Magic shows and dramatic • presentations by Edison and f Marina high schools' drama classes also will be offered this 1 Saturday and S\Jnday. The Jaycees apparently were out visiting some of their old haunts today when called for a statement on the Spook House that turned out to be a Spook Tent. But a tape-recorded voice on their of£ice phone, trying Its best lo sound like a sepulchral Dracula, promised it really is pretty scary. - I thi ·.,-:· ......... ---·--· '°' ............ u.: if any charges should be filed against the officers, or if the s hooting was in self-defense, Lorton said. · Potential Danger HAVANA (AP) -Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro says the United St._81.es remains a "p.otentlal danger" to Cuba and is still trying to foment re- bellion in his country, Name Withdrawn W l\SHINGTON Cl\ P > -The Carter administration intends to withdraw the nomination of career diplomat William E. Schaufele as ambass ador to Greece, Informed sources say. OWcials feel his effectiveness would be impaired because of hostile Greek reaction to a re- m ark he made before a Senate committct', according lo the sources The city is prohibited m its charter from collecting property taxes in excess of $1 per $100 in assesed valuation. Bonfa argued that the transfer lax was not a real property tax but instead was an excise or transition lax. The Court of Appeals issued an alternate writ of mandate order- ing the Superior Court to rescind last summer's ruling or to show cause why it should s tand, ac- cordinR to Bonfa. <See APPEAL, Page A2> Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1977 ~cu. ••'-v ..._ -· Catholic Church in n earby Brunswick on Wednesday night. Swihart Is an 18-year -old ·fr eshman at Miami <Ohio) University. The closed caskets of Michael's father, Donald, 41 ; mother, Sue Ellen, 40; and brothers, Brian, 16, and Russell, 9. were set in the center of the church before the altar. They will be buried Friday in Cov- in gton , Va., Mrs. Swihart's birlhplac<.'. . . 't More Coverage Other Huntington Beach stories appear today on Page Alo. Co.St Weather Carnival On In Val.ley Man Held After Chase Local dritzles becoming partJ.ly cloud ~· in after- noons. Slightly cooler days . Lows tonight in mid·SOS. Hlghs Friday UP· per60s. The Fountain Valley Halloween carnival will be held at lhe city Recreation Center, 16400 Brookhurst St .. through Sunday. The event. sponsored by the Fountain Vullcy Lions Club. be1tan at J p.m. to· day It conlinues until 11 p. m Thl' same schedule wi II be in effect f'riduy. The rides. ((ame booths and s hows will be open from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m . Salur~ay and from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday. A jobless draftsman was jailed today after an 81).llf{le~per·hour auto chase in which i>ollce allege h e rammed one Huntington Beach police sergeant's p~trol car twice, the second time headon in a futile bid to flee In his own wreck. Patrol Sgt. Arden Beavers suf- fered back injuries in the crash finale or the three-mile pursuit around north-central Huntington B eac h but h e wa s not hospitalized. police said. The suspect, Thomas Johan- n ah McKenzie, 21, of 8322 Westminster, was booked into Westmlnister, was booked into ..q # City JaH in lieu of $2,500 bail on charges of felony drunken driv· ing fpllowlng the chain or episodes. A full report by Sgt. Beavers , who was treated at Pacifica Hospital and r~lcased after the 2:50 a .m. pur~uit, was lo be furn ished CHP invest igators when lhc sergeant was able to complete 1t lalc•r today Patrol Lt George Hcnek ex plain~d lhe chase bc~an when S<.'rgeant Beavers attempted to s top McKenzie's nine-year-old sedan on Slater Avenue al Gothard for a traffic in· vesllgaUon. ' • The suspect assertedly ac· celerated and sped on west on Slater Avenue, running several four-way Stop s igns before the fleeing car fishtailed off on a dirt shoulder, s kidded through a red light at Edwards Street and con· tinued northbound, police said. The c hase con tinued to Edwards Street and Edinger A venue. Lt. Renck said. where Mc Kcniic reportedly spun out once. then u>0med into 11 closed service station 3!ld switched off has headlights. Trying to head him off, Patrol Sgt. Pat Clemens just then ar- rived on the scene and stopped at the northerly curb of l:dlnger Avenue, whereupon the two sergeants' quarry allegedly trled to speed away, . "He exiled the station east· bound on Edinger, but then he spun out again, made a complete 360·degree tum and wound up facing southbound on Edwards St reel .·• Lleulenant Renek said. 1\1 c Kenzie assertedly gunned his t!>61J sedan again but careened into another service station on the soulheast corner or the in· terscction, crashing and losing a wheel. Still fuJJ of fight, police alleged, <See CHASE, Paae Al) INSIDE TODAY Di1e0#1 of the heart toiU account for 52 JH!"Cent of au deatha tn the nation thu vtor. The account of OM mma•a or- deal i1 found on Page A9. Index Al Y twr Sffvkt A 14 Irma ltmllKll at L.M.lo.,_ At ..... ,,... .... Calltorftlt AJ CllHlll.. Cl-II CMftlO CJ ,,.. .. ..,_ a Ooalll H .. lcH Al ...... 1.1 ...... M-1 Eftl..UI-1~11 FHlllfl... IW ,_.._ .. ..,. AIJ _ _.,,. u lftlttmlnf.., Ill AM l..al\4lon IU -YIM I ll Mwt11all'-• It !itllOftal Hows A4!CJ Ou~tC-y "" 5Yl1rla f'tf'ltt It 5-U ... , SIKll Mal"IMtt ... , Ttl .. ltlell llt Tlleelon II WM Iller w., ........ , .. -# • I • 2 DAILY PILOT Thursday. October 27, 1977 ••••••••••• $$$$$l ••• HAS IT ALL! SO WHY PAY HIGH RETAIL PRICES? ........ • .......... $ • , Pacific Rigging Carries Everything for Boaters When local boaters need equip· ment, they think of P acific Rigging l\farine Supply in Newport Beach. Locate d at 2430 West Coast Highway, the firm is known as the "sailboat mechanic" or the area, ac· cording to co-owner Tom Dougan. Pacific sells all types or marine ~car for smaller boats as well as as· scmbly parts, inslalllng winches and instruments, tuning m asts and general installation or equipment and rigging. "People think of us as a shipyard without water," said Dougan "We'll evcn go out to the cu~tumcr's boat and replace stand mg riggings." Pacific Rigging has gro" n rapidly since the business started in 1972, ac· cording to Dougan. "When my brother, Mike started the business, he bought a van to carry hjs equipment and worked out of his home." Since Ufen. Pac1f1c has bought Manne Supply Co and has moved into its present locat10n to offer the ht'~l service available Day's End Many perfect days of salllng lie ahead for Orange Coast Hllors as winter approaches with Its reliable winds. Pnoto llY Ken Pltnv ''All our employes have ex- lcns i ve s ailing backgrounds and know the sailboat from one end to the other:· says Dougan. "They can give l'xpcrt advice and guidance to our cuslomcrs." Orange Count~ 'Boatillll I DAILY PILOT Oct.26&27, 1977 Robert N. Weed PrH ... wl -"*liMf' George A. Leidal S-IM S.C... U llff Bob Ayers s.e<lal ~ Wr- Barbara N. carey St>Kl•l S.CU-,_..,,..... Mari Kennedy S"<IMS.CU..,.,....,APMr Ceftr P...W DyGAllY AMlllOSf. •I DANA POINT MARINA c •• ,#,f ·- .Boat Place Adds New ·craft Lines The Boal Place, at 2801 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach, has added to its inventory or quality sailboats since moving lo a new loca- tion in July. Jn addition to carrying Catalina sailing craft, the Boat Place has in- tfoduced Pacific Dolphin, Tarfan and a yacht brokerage to its clien· tele. ''Catalina is probably the finest bu ill boat for your mQncy," says owner Bob Romberger. "Tht>y run about 15 percent less than comparable built boats. No one can fi gure out why the prices are so low." he said. When it was decided to sell Tartan and Pacific Dolphin. a new· dimension lo the Boat Place was added. explained Romberger. These two lines or sailing craft arc designed by Sparkman and Stephens -the famous New York design team which cr eated many of the 12-mcter boats for the Am<'rica's Cup. The Tartan tine features 27. 30. 34. 37, 38, and 11-foot. high quality lxJaU. built for boatint:: .people. Tartan boats are built in Ohio and :'forth Carolina. ~ ..... - DAILY PILOT 3 ·Quality.· Backed at Shipyard For 28 years the Lido Shipyard in Newport Beach has had one product it always stood behind -quality workmanship. When owner H.L. "Buck" Ayres took over the yard's lease in 194S"tle determined to proviqe area boat· owners with the best workmanship possible. He and his general manager, Harold Steck, have kept their goal in sight for all 28 years, and the quality work continues. Ayres' son, Pat, is stepping into the business with the.same fixed de- termination to maintain the high s tandards at the yard. He currently serves as vice president and assis· tant manager of the firm. •·we maintain quality in all facets of our work." says the younger Ayres, "with haul outs, launchings, painting, marine carpentry, mechanical work, welding, elec- trical and hydraulic work." The Shipyard, located at 900 Lido P ark Drive, also features its own electronics sales nnd ser vice farm, Wilbo Electronics. and its own brokerage, Lido Yacht and Ship Brokerage. Pacific Dolphin is bl.lst:d in Oceanside and produces a 21-foot sloop and a 28·foot sloop. G. William Peterson adds the finishing brush strokes to a yacht at Lido Shipyards, 900 Lido Park Dr. In Newport Beach. Call 642-5678. Put a few words to work for ou. . •• -· Here It Isl BaghnerBodeg a • 40' OF PURE LUXURY • 3 PRIVATE STATEROOMS • 2 HEADS WITH SHOWERS • ENORMOUS SALON Newport Pacific NOW OM DISPLAY 2200 W. COAST HIGHWAY HEWP~ IEACH • 6*-l•IO .. .; ; i ' ~ DAILY PILOT Thursday, October 27, 1977 Balboa Bay Oub: 30-year Newport Harbor Landmark There was l>oatinj! before there was mul·h of any anything else at the Balboa Rav Club. Back in· 1948, when the club was first created, the marina consisted oC little more than some ramshackle wooden docks that the rounders in· he rited from lhe government But now, nearly 30 years later, it's a different story. Today lhe Balboa Bay Club's 15 acres of dazzling waterfront glitters along Newport Har bor with a mar i na t ha t ya chtsmen have procla.imed the finest private moorage in tfie United St ates. The big yachts in the club's "Bat· lleship Row" along A-Deck make an ·· impressive sight. They range from 65 to 100 feet in length and most of them are equipped for long range cruising. Bay Club boats come in all sizes. however. Darting a mong the 80 footers are six foot sabots. kites, Lido 14's, 20-foot Bay Runabouts and 40-foot fishing cruisers. Adding to lhe fun of sailing around and out of the harbor is the congenial nature of lbe yachts men themselves. There is an elHe fis hing fraternity called the Pacific Anglers which was founded at the Bay Club and. to this day, participates in many interns· tional game fishi ng competitions. The club also has the Coast Guard Balboa Bay Flotilla 25 which meets at the club and performs many wo rlbwhtll• boating -related services. , On the social side, club members l'njoy boat hopping. meeting for lunch or dinner in the First Cabin, or toasting good health in the Bay Club lounge after a day of r acing. One of the best places for sailors to relax is on A-Deck where multi- colored spinnakers billow in the Bay breeze. The Balboa Bay Club is not only a yacht club, but a social, athletic and racquet club rolled into one. Unique combinations of facilitie$ includ~ a sports center, he,alth spas, card rooms, r acquetball courts, swim ming pools, billiard room, gymnasium and 17 nightlighted ten· nis courts -seven additional tennis courts will soon be added. Th e facilities, a long with or · ganized monthly activities, make it a com plete, family-oriented retreat. For members' b-usiness n~s. the c lub 's s pacious g ro unds a nd facilities offer an excellent site for meetings. conferences and catered parties of all sizes. Ove rnight accommodations are available for guests in the attractive Palm Court and waterfront Bayside buildings. Perma nent year 'r ound res- iden ces are avai l able in t he dr amatic Terrace Apartments on the club grounds. ,NEWPORT HARBOR SHOWBOAT CRUISES presents the "TIKI" All Brand New Red Carpet Treatment For Yow Pkosure • Wl'f._. • Enclosed SHffrtCJ • DCM!ble DtcJt. loomy • Toped Mlaic & Dancift4) • CahritM) & Un w.rtalnmettt A•offclMe l Harbor Cruise loah to S«n You 673-0240 .. .•..•......•............. \, ·-· ~- Club Iona offers an auay D! social and boating activities. Club Iona Plans Sailing fun For boating and social activities, Club Iona.is the place to go. The Iona club concept was started by Iona Yachts Inc. for owners of Iona yachts over a year ago but ex· panded rapidly alter that. Now Lltere are two locations for boating members to enjoy the at· mosphcre and facilities of Club Iona. The first club was opened at 24703 Dan a Drive in Dana Point but because of popularity, the club opened a second facility at 3333 W. Pacifi c Coast Highway in Newport Beach. Club Iona features a complete package or sail and power boats for charter, a sailing school for boaters ranging in experience from novice lo expert and safety and navigational ins truction. Planned social activities include cruises lo Catalina, tennis and golf tournaments. exercise classes. Mon· 1lay Night Football specials and TG IF, Halloween, Christmas and New Years parties. A panoramic view of Newport llarbor is a lso featured at the Newport Beach location. which s its atop the Jolly Roger Resta urant. In addition to the boating club. Iona Yachts Inc. specializes in the manufacturing of their own yachts rangini:: from 26 feet to 51 foot ~iants For a limited time only, a charter membership is available for ne" mt•mbt•rs The fee •~ $150 for an individual membership a nd $250 for a cor poral<.' membership. SOUTh COAST }'ACl'JTS 30' Islander ... choose from 3 35' Coronado, '72 .. $35,000.00 (2) 36' L-36, '58 w/Newport mooring · 38' Kettenburg, very sharp 39' Erickson, full race . .FIVE 44' Wlf Star 'i4ketch. $98M 45' Sea Ranger ketch. NEW. $79 .SM 51' Garden ketch, MS, dsl, loaded Over 5000 listings available BuyiftC) or Selling .. Call US. 675-7950 2230 Newport ll•cl.. Hewpcri leoclt NB Dealer Specializes In Big Boats Trans Oceanic Yacht Sales is the only store in Newport Beach whicb specializes in the larger sailboats -. SO feet and over, according to salesman Fred Fourcber. ••we've been here two and one-half years now and we sell more sail boats than anyone. I guess you can call us the sailboat experts," be said. Located al 3400 Via Oporto, the dealership features two parts to the store. uwe have brokerage salesmen and new boat salesmen who are specialists in their fields," says Fourcher. "Our brokers are very selective in listing used boats for sale. The boat must meet strict qualifications or we won't list it or try to sell it," he said. ••our brokers will travel anywhere t o find a boat for a customer. They will personally check a boat for quality. especially wood boats.'' The three lines or sailing craft car· ried by Trans Oceanic are Pearson, Newport and CT-Imperial Yachts. "Pearson is the largest manufac· turer of sailboats in terms of dollar volume, in the U.S.," said Fourcher. Thursday. October 27, 19l7 DAIL 'I PILOT 5 Aeet Marine Services Boat Engines E xperience and quality service have been trademarks of Fleet Marine Services for the past four years, according to owner Mike Thompson. Located at 2622 Newp<)rl Blvd. in Newport Beach, the "garage" specializes in the sales and repairs of engines and outboard moton from Suzuki, Ford-Lehman and Volvo. "We concentrate on rebuilding engines and doing complete power jobs for the engines we sell," says Thompson. •·sometimes we can diagnose a . problem with someone's boat engine over the phone. A lot of people are handy with wrenches but they really can't go ahead until they know what is wrong,"_hesaid. . Fleet Marine Services strives for quality workmans hip, no matter how long it takes, according to Thompson. · Thompson has been an engine mechanic for nearly 20 years, in· eluding a number of years as a Navy mechanic. ••He Is one of the best mechanics in the area," says salesman and long. lime friend, Blair Hunter. The store is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. six days a week and from 10 a.m. to6p.m. on Sunday. Trane Oceanic Yacht Salea presents the Pearson 424 at the Long Beach Boat Show, ending Oct. 30. "We're one or the biggest dealers for Suzuki outboards In the U.S. mainly because we'll service them," says Hunter. • Quality and inte9rity of workmanship will ' never be second choice at Lido Shipyard. Our dedication towards this end hasn't faltered in 2 8 years of service. Other people may do it cheaper, but ·. NOBODY DOES IT BETTER!! Complete 'services For Power & Sail From Dinghys to Luxury Yachts 900 Lido Porte Drive, Newport leach, Caflforni~ 92663 1714) 673-7272 ,. '· ·, FOR PERFORMANCE-MINDED . - BOAT OWNERS pacific rlooino 00 0 MARINE.SUPPLY $495 SEA FURL -r---------------------, I • ,/'ROLLER FURLING I I ,,, SYSTEMS I I 7. SEA FURL MARK J I I ;/ • SEA FURL MARK II I I // I , I I G~INI FOIL ~CING HEAD~TAY I ~-----~---------------· --IUGGING AND MARINE SUPrt.IES-f••• l11tm_..• -... _. .. ,,left -Wettlm-tllp Gver .... lffd ~ M"""'&"'°""'°""""·°"""' ~ pacific rigging !=omporn,i· ---. (714) 631-2161 1UI W. Coett Hwy., Hewpoff htlch, t2UO . .. . ................................... , ..................... . • • I • f • ~ '-" --·····---·-· ---~·-----------·--.. -~·~·;!:l·t~·:xr-~fi" • I • ! • I Thursday, October 27. 1977 Owner John Walters shows Ericson 35 available for chuter at Windward Salling Club, 3400 Via Oporto, Suite 5A, Newport Beac~. Windward Updates Club Fleet Windward!Sailing Club in Newport Beach continually updates its boat· ing fleet to assure me mbers or the safety and quality of a new boat. : The vessels come equipped with V HF radio-telephone, AM /FM ster eo. two beads ails, inboard e ngines, carpeting and fa bric cushioned interior, bulkhead or bin· nacle mounted compass and knot· meter, slab-j effy r eef syst e m , coc)'tpit scat cushions, and boom· vang. "Our members are provided with the finest equipment a vailable," says owner Jennifer Wailers. "The boats range Crom 27 to 4G feet and not one is over two years old, .. she said. ' Located at 3400 Via Oporto, Suite SA, in Lido Village, the club is within easy walking distance of a gourmet mar ket, grocer y, de lic atessen, bakery and several restaurants. Membership prices are $100 for a Camily of two adults. There is no yearly renewal fee. A $45 fee monthly applies lo charters and accumulates if a boat is not used for that month. "If you pay $45 and you don't use a boat, then the next month when you pay you have a $90 credit," says Mrs. Walters. Windward's boats are chartered on a 24-hour basis with a half day rate availa bleon weekdays. WINDWlRD S41Llf\G Udo v-.,.. l400 Via Oporto, Wh SA, Mew~ leach 6 75-9060 •Lessons •Charters •Memberships UM Ow 17'·46' S ..... 1: Cab, C•.U.n. EricMM, H..,.nt WIHDW ARD DILUXE l(j)Ulf'l'IO Inboard gas & diesel. VHF, AM-FM stereo. genoas, boom 11angs. knotmeters & much more .. Ask Pasadenan Area Folks Miss Cruise •·tr you want to find out about the Fun Zone Boat Co., jus t ask someone frpm Pasadena," says owner Dal Gretlcnberg. ''There are a lot of people in the area that don't even know we exist, but about half the customers we have on our cruises have been on them before," he said. Located at 700 Edgewater on the Balboa Peninsula, the Fun Zone Boat Co. has offered a scenic cruise of the Camous Newport H arbor since 1949. The Fun Zone Boat Co. has a neet of four cruise boats includlng two large craft set up for parties, dances and cocktails. A cruise boat leaves every week- day at 2 and 3 p.m. during the winter months. The 2 o'clock Cully-narrated tour covers the northern half of the bay while the 3 p.m. cruise takes in the southern half. The tours last 45 minutes . .. One may t ake either the northern half or the cruise or t he southern half or both," says said Grettenberg. The.Tiki can be chartered for cockt1U p1rtlet end dances. MINNEY'S IS YOUR CRUISING CENTER FOR • Navigational Charts from Alaska to the Panama Canal plus Hawaii and the South Pacific • Nautical Books Caro lyn Newcomb, our new manager, will gladly help you splice anchor rode and dock lines. In Samson or 3-strand. .,. Instructor Gary Fo1ter glve1 a few polnter1 to two students at CalypsoS a111ng Aasoclatlon, 2633 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach. ~ fJIJa4iafJIJ~~dl/ A private world of business and pleasure. 1221 W. Coast Highway Newpoo Oeoch, <:.A 9266.J (714) 645-5000 Thursday. October 27, 1977 DAILY PILOT 1 Calypso: Winter Brings Finest Sailing Days of Year "The sailing season ls slllJ very much with us. ••some of the most delightful sail· ing of the year comes in the winter months when winds are generaUy better," Calypso Sailing AssociaUoo owner Jim Parker observes. For those who wish to learn how to sail or join the Calypso Sailitlg As· sociation there might never be a bet· ter time than now. Nearly private lessons -only four to a boat -are offered for only $79 and include all costs for the 12-hour basic or intermediate courses. Calypso membership is available tor $85, plus a $15 certification ex- pcnse tor experienced sailors or lessons for beginners. Montbl~ mem bershlp dues are $9.50. Calypso members may sail any ol the so sailboats in the Calypso neet h arbored ln Marina d e l Rey, Newport Beach and at the newest Calyj>so base itl San Diego. Reservations for sailing or tor ski accommodations at the Mammoth Skl and Racquet Club, Mammoth Lakes, may be m ade by phoning 645-7100. A toll free line - 800·432-TI77 ls available for Jong dis· lance access to the Calypso reserva· lions computer, a new Basic Four system. Newport Pacific Opens New Orange Coast Area Location Newport Pacific, al 2200 Wesl Coast Hi$?hway, Newport Beach has prospered as "one of the most suc· cessful dealerships in the nation," according to Bob Swan. · After nine years of serving the Orange Coast community with only -0ne location, Newport Pacific has opened a sister store at 1200 Wesl Coast Highway and is appropriately named Newport Pacific South. The new location houses the ex· elusive dealership for Formula Power Boats ranging from 18 to 26 feet and for Buccaneer Sailboats rangitlgfrom20to33feet. Newport Paclric North features Skipjack. Bayliner, and Formula Thunderbird Products as well as Wellcrafl Nova and Scarabs. A CuJl spectrum of boats from sport fishitlg boats and ofCshore crari to family yachts is featured. The Wellcraft Scarab, a luxury speed boat, is one or the most popular boats in Newport Pacific's fleet. says Swan, reaching speeds up to 62 miles a n hour. NOT OWNING DOESN'T HAVET~EAN NOT SAILING Joilt lhe ""' WOttd of C8'rpso ~-pour low-cost ..... ...,,. to ow'*'9. •Largest sclocbOn of quality boiits on the west eo&t -50 boats by Cal. E.ncson Md Islander. rnmnt.wied d<ltly by our Y.lmesti.lt, • M boats Cl\llSlnO oquipped will> ship to 5horc, FM raoto ond U S. Coast Gu:ird snfery equip· moot -most with I~ Genoas. and many With pcc:testal steering • Calypso ollets you ltvce con- ,,_t Southem C&ifomia manna locations E.nioy SIWlO from al ltvec at no extra cost. • Calypso's oirltno-Typc com- pu1er re9l!Mltion system mMM getbng Ille boot you wont quiet!, easy and rcllal*l. ' LHrn to ulf ., <Alypeo Salling School . • 'T\lfelvU·hour ba~•c and inter· med1a1e sa1~ng course~ - learning Is tun, ensy and ~~~=~ ... -w OCQnomieal • M cla$S time is on the waler aboard boats bke the CAL 25, w11h lop proless1onal mstructof"I. • • • COn~cnlcnl course schcdulet and special family rates ova1l4bla. c.ittodeyfor~t• Information~,_.,.,'°"' f()f ~ c.typso location: 1-800-432-7177 SAILING ASSOCIATION ANO SAILING SCHOOLS Newport Beach, 2633 W Coast Hwy. next to Ancient Manner Rost.Durant 714/645-7100 In Marina dcl Rey ol tJ!>89 Mindonnow ay 213/823·4338 In San Olego at 1450 H."lrtlor Isl Or. 714/231·7447 ~~--------..... mll!'l--!!11111!1~------"""'· .. ... .. 8 DAIL V PILOT Thursday, October 27. 1977 Carrie Minney displays a sextant from Mfnney'1 Ship Chandlery Inc., 2537 W. Coast Hwy ., Newport Beach. Minney's is 'One Stop Shop' Pla nning to build your own boat or travel around the world? . Minney's Ship Chandlery, Inc., in Newport Bea~h. is "your one slop store for nautical and navlgational needs," says owner Ernie Minney. Minney's features surplus marine equipment such as teak lumber, cabinets and drawers as well as new sailboat equipment, charts and navigational books. "We also carry anchors, chains, compasses and almost anything you need to travel around the world in your boat," says Minney. "In fact, my wi(e, Carrie and I are going to travel to the South Pacific with some of our equipment in our schooner, the Scearwater, on Nov. 15. "Carolyn Newcomb Is a well known sailor a round Newport Harbor and will be the new manager when we leave," said Minney. The store also offers a yacht brokerage, selling both new and used boats and a charter service for southern California waters. The rates depend on the boat size but range from $75 a day to $500. Endowed with • ~nence designed, produced and prepared by • • rts c1U1smg expe · ·~· .. INTRODUCING THE NEW MP 34 MARINER. · CAU5KJ YPOiTS Writ• f•;1 f1ti:? l:Jrochurc. 2312 Nc.wooit C3oufcv:ird tic:. port Beach.CA 92660 (714) 675-1393 Yachts, Clothing, Supplies Found at Captains's· Locker Whether you need hardware £or your sail or power boat, natty nautical clothing or maintenance supplies from brushes to waxes. Captain's Locker, 900 Pacific Coast Higbw ay, Newport Beach, has it all. Brian Bickford, manager, notes' that Captain's Locker has been serv• ing Newport sailors since 1947, mov· ing two years ago to its present loca· lion across PCH Crom the Balboa Ray Club. "We carry a big enough inventory or marine hardware and supplies to satisfy someone who makes bis liv. ing in the boating business or the amateur weekend sailor," Bickford said. Captain's l..o<:ker ls really three stores at one location, Bickford ex• plainea. , A nautical clothing boutique car· ries outfits and shoes by such name manufacturers as Sperry Topsider, Peter Storm, Oc ean Pacific and Hobie. Christmas girt mer chandise in· eluding boat or family room lamp Cixtures and furniture is also in stock. But the majority or customers rely on Captain's Locker for common ma in tenance supp Ii es including waxes, cleaners, brushes. paint an1 rope. ·Owners ol new boats take advan .. t age of complete rlgouts at special r ates including equipping and ln· stallation or required safety equip· m ent. "We cp.n supply anything needed tor any boat from a daysailer to a Transpac yacht," Bickford said. Name brands carried by the store Include Z.spar, Par.J absco, Samson Yacht Braids, Shaefer Marine and three complete lines of saHboat h ardware. Most replacement parts tor outboard engines also are on h and. Sm all outboard engines by J ohnson and Seagull up to the Johnson SaiJmaster 10 horsepower unit are in stock. The firm also car· ries Avon inflatable boats from dinghies to 16 and a halHoot sports boats. A small warehouse near the store and a backup warehouse ln Irvine operated by Captain's Locker's parent company, Newport Supply Co., m eans items not at the Newport Beach store can be obtained within 48 hours. "We can put together a complete sanitation system, if necessary," Bickford said. Captaln's Locker is open seven days each week. FLEET MARINE SERVICES 2622 Hewporl ll•d. Mtwport le«h, Calif. U'6l 17141 675°745' Also Oealors For Volvo Penta• Ford Lehman • Metzeler Inflatables IStr1I" • r.t. • Salttl ,''.~--.. ·. . . I I I .. . . . 1 I It t t It t t 1eIt1 t t • t t t ft ff t f It t t ft t f t t • f I• t t t '' • • • f •rt t t t t t ,_. 1 ' Economical Diesel Engines Booming South Coast Yachts, at 2230 Newport Blvd. in Newport Beach, of- f<.'rs a complete brokerage service as well as marine hardware and elec- tronics at discount prices. ··we deal strictly in quality used boat§' over 25 feet in length," says . owner Dean Ritter. "Our brokerage sells both power and sail boats and we will soon pi ck up a new sail boat line,·· he added. Ritter notes-that area boaters-are demanding more and more fiberglass yachts at 35 to 40 Ceet with diesel engines. "Because or economy and the ha2ards oC gas engines. people have been asking for and buying diesel engin es," says Ritter. ''The demand for these engines has gone way up in the last rew years and they are realty hard to find but we've been able to find them." Ritter explained that the company presently handles a boat listing that includes boats from as far away as Florida, Mexico and even Spain. ; ·we can find lhe right boat Cor anyone no matter where It is," he said . \ Thursday, October 27, 1977 DAIL V PILOT 9 Derington'$ For Marine Eledronics Oeringlon Marine Electronics has supplied Orange Coast area boaters with fine radio, automatic pilot and depth sounding equipment for eight years. Located at 355 North Newport Blvd. in Newport Beach, the store carries quality marine elec- tronic devices trom such fin e manufacturers as Icom, Hy Gain and Gemtronics. Owner Ray Ha rtwick noted several features to look for when buying marine radio equipment in· eluding good sensitivity in frequency control and frequency stability matched with a good antenna. The big development in radios in the past year has been the con- version oC marine radio frequencies from double band AM to VHF, says Ila rt wick. "Too many people were using the AM frequency in this area and it was beginning to get so bad that no one cou Id hear anyone. "With the limited-r ange VHF. boaters can hear one another. The frequency is limited to a shorter range, .. said Hartwick. South Coast Yachts bas more than 7 ,000 yachts available to them through brokerage listings. More than 7,000 boats are listed by South Coast Shipyards In Newport Beach headed by owner Dean Ritter, left, and sales manager By Allen. Most oCthe boaters in the area don't like the new frc9uency chaJ)J:e but Hartwick adds. 'it's adequate for ofCshorc boating " LOCKER NEWPORT MARINE CENTER too w. e...t Hwy .. H.wporl .._. OHE WESC OHL Y IOA TING SPECIALS THRU NOV. 2nd ( SAVE 200/o THIS WESC OML Y ON ) 8'\R&J' Winches and Accessories SIGNET Wind and Navigation Instruments Trophy Britid Rope Anchor Packages. Campbell Chain. Samson Rope ( SAVE lOo/o THIS WEH OHL Y OH ) !/i/Jil/t.ci Antifouling. Topsides Paint and Varnishes STURMS Sans SOUCI Flotation Vests ·L.. U.S C.G. APPROVED Flotation VA~ts (---BO_A_T_l_Q_UE_L_O_C_K-ER---) O.P. • PACIFIC TRAIL· PETER STORM HOBIE • INTERNATIONAL • AMERICAS CUP • POSH PELICAN 1/2 PRICE SALE hy ~ at~ pric.• .-:-: lecy ~9ftd for V2 price! IT'S HERE! THE·NEW SANTANA 525 ONE DESICN TJIE POPl'LARITV OF' THE SA1''TASA M IS SWEEPING THE SATION. ASOTIUS NEW, BIGGER MODEL IS Sl 'RE TO DO THE SAME. Designed by Shad Tun1er Sp~ification<i: LOA 2.t'7" LWL 18'6" Beam ,., .. Olsplacenwnt ?tee lbs. Drart 4'6" Ballast llrafl) 956 lbs. '7895. OTHER SHOCK BOATS AVt\11,ABLE - Shock Oork'I, l.lcio 11, Santana 22, 28, JO & 39 CC'. 1 ~ BOATS 673-2050 2!)00 LAFAY E1TE NEWPORT RE1"WtH • On the. Wulcr Nex l to The Can n ery ' Restaurant ~ ..................... iiiii ........ .,... • 10 DAILY PILOT Thursday, October 27, 1971 Mariner Xachts Fine for Expert Sailors ~Master Series' Designed, Equipped by Pros Ed While, founder of Mariner Yachts, reels many boats ar! de- s igned, produced, built and sold by people generally without cruising experience. "lt 's unfortunate," he says, "and leads to many disappointments." White established Mariner Yachts in 1964, and had a great deal to do with the introduction of the well known Mariner cruising ketches. "Two factors must be satistied before a sailor can hope to have a boat he will be happy with" White, said. · "First he must rind a boat suitable to his cruising requirements and JiiS pocketbook. Second, It should be com missioned, outfitted and pre· pared by people with ~xtensive cruising experience." As a result of his commitment to good cruising boats, he decided to produce his own. He calls them a "Master ~ries'' of cruising boats. ''We've done it,·· he says, "because it's so difficult (or nearly impossible) to find a boat built and equipped with the things we think vital. "Things hkc Cully lnsulat!Xl hulls, adequate tankage and stowage, a big diesel engine, powerful winches, bow and stern anchor s towage, and last but not least, really outstanding sailing performance." "Since our people do the com- missioning preparation of our boats, we're able to provide the kind of boats we believe in." Mariner Yachts is located al 2312 Newport Blvd .• Newport Beach. In addition to the Master Series, Mariner Yachts also offers the com· plele line of Cat, Hunter and Irwin sailboats. An extensive brokerage service also is offered. Owner Ed Whtte kneel• on a boat from Mariner Yachts, located at 2312 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. WE PROUDLY OFFER AMERICA'S Warehouse Launches Discounts Mail Order Marine has grown from a single catalog warehouse in Costa Mesa to three discount loca- tl on s since the concept was "launched" seven years ago. T he establishment discounts thousands of items including marine electronics, marine hardware. nautical clothing, and even dinghies and small outboards, according to general manager Lee Gjolme. "We discount everything in sloe~ and we don 't discriminate against dealers -we'll sell to anyone," he said. ·~climes, we will special order non-stocked items and sell them at 'our standard discount." Alexander Torbitl, president o! the company, started the business in an unusual way. "Alex loves to read the classified ads and one day he found an ad for a mail order marine sen •ice," said Gjolme. Since be loved the ocean and boats in particular, he thought it. sound~d like a good idea. Including the main office at 3().18 Pullman Street in Costa Mesa, Mail Order Marine has opened establish- ments in San Diego, at 1214 Rosecrans Street and at 2610 Avon Street in Newport Beach. FINEST SAILBOATS ... PEARSON and NEWPORT YACHTS ... FOR YOUR PLEASURE AND SAFETY AT SEA . . . &illis .!~Derby {.•J Jim McCI IRariqi Caqtractar- NEW INSTALLATION AND REPAIR PCLINGS • FLOATS PIERS • BULKHEADS MOORINGS , 111 CanMry Village 2806 Lafayette An. Newport leech 6.73-1.630 ... _. In Cannery.Village .. , Shock Has Boat, Supplies Whether searching for nautical hardware or clothjng, a dry storage for a boat, a boat repair shop or just a new boat, Shock Doats in Newport Beach will fill sailors' needs. The s tore, located at 2900 LaFayette in Cannery Village, has been offering everything for the s ailor since 1946. The manufacturing division was moved lo Santa Ana in 1958. • Shock Boats manufactures their ow n line of 20. 22, 25, 28, 30, and 39· foot Santana yachts as well as the Lido 14, a 15-foot New England dory and a 20-foot lifeguard dory. The company ls also the dealer for Boston Whaler outboard motor boats ranging in length from nine to21 feet and mercury outboard motors. Shock Boats sells Its own boats and Boston whalers. Other services featured by Shock Boats include a canvas and sailmaking shop, boat slips for 25 boats, and a yacht brokerage. fl1e · · ·l1taa1 f plaice 280 I W. Coast Hwy .. Hewport leoch 645-1144 27 7AR11tN ~: "' 37 The Boat Fo r All Reasons! Our "Boat Show Special" Immediate delivery on the Tartan 30. See us NOW tor all outstanding buy 41 Thursday, October 27, 19n OAIL Y PILOT 11 New Boat Unveiled Esprit 37 at Long Beach Show The Valiant Yacht Corporation, in Newport Beach, will introduce its new Esprit 37 at the Long Beach Boat Show today through Sunday. JVC $)9995 ICOM M25 The new craft features "the com-. fort of the Valiant 40 at a price range more typical of the average boat," says area sales manager Robert Babson. Its price range is between $00,000 lo $70,000 while the Valia nt 40 has a price r ange between $100,000 to Sll0.000. "We maintain a different rela· tionship between us and the builder because the design and tooling used in lhe construction ot the boat belongs to us," noted Babson. • The corporation has been in busi- ness for three years and in each year basdoubled in size. There are now four locations tn- c I u ding Seattle, Annapolis and Boston. Located at 3408 Via Oporto, Suite 6, the Newport Beach store has bene fited from its system or guar anteeing quality in sailboat con· struction. "Last month was unbelievable," says Babson. ''We grossed over $1.2 million in sales. Valiant Yachts have also fared well in world-wide competition. The Valiant 40 finished third and placed 10th overall in lhe Observer Single-Handed Trans·Atlantlc Race rrom England to Newport, Rhode bland. The Valiant 32 Is one of the ·Valiant Yacht Corporation's lines. s57900 m........._ &Mo.t with purchase ($100 value) Stop by and see our complete IN of ....... tlectro..ics equipment indllcliftg: learcat I 0 I cind 210 Sc ... ers Depth Sounders, Dlrecffoft Flnden, and much more ••• Derinaton's Marine Electronics 355 tOfctJ twwport ll•d., Htwport ltoc" · ,.n.s1a' • .. • 12 DAILY PILOT Thursday, October 27. 1977 GHii• end Derby crew of mertne contractors bulld piers, docks,· floats, pfNngs, and see walls end aervlce end replace moor- ing•, elphon out alnklng boats and other marine work ln the Newport Harbor. The firm I• based at 2806 LaFayette Ave., Newport Beach. Go to MOM'S After starting with a single catalog warehouse aeven years ago, Mali Order Marine, at 2610 Avon St., Newport Beach, has opened two new stores In the area. Story on Page 10. club iona Boating and Social Club Has opened its second location here in Newport Beach SAILBOAT CHARTER Sach u the Iona Mark JI, Excaliber 26 and otben. SAILING COURSES Salling School at 11peciaJ ratee "Cre~ Coune8" for ab~ family. WEEKEND CRUISES Sall larger boat8 H part of a working crew. SOCIAL ACTIVITIES Including tennis tournaments, backgammon, pong, video blackjack, giant 6' TV 1tereen, di8c o par1ie11, TCIF parlie8, Sunday bruncheft and many more. . Many activitlee now 1akin1t place! Thi11 Sunday, we·re having a "ebare the ride•• day on eome of our boat11. Charier Merral>f!r.l,ipa /YON lkinf A.cceplff Come by Sunday from Noon til 6 for champagne and o toW' of our f acilitie1 . CALL NOW FOR DETAILS ' Ask about our corporate plan c . clab iona 3333 Pacific Cout Hwy., Newport BHch • 631-1900 (Coast Hwy. at Newport Blvd. Above Jolly Roger) Opening Soon ln San Dlt'l(o & Marina dt-1 Rey Huntington Beach Fountain Valley EDITION Afternoon N.Y.Stoek~ * VOL. 70, NO. 300, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE·COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1977 TEN CENTS 1 'Death Gun' Found in Ba·ck Bay Armed, Fleeing Newport Cops -Kill Suspect By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ol t,,_ Oa11y PlloC Sl~ll A fleeing robbery s uspect. who allegedly pulled a shotgun from his pants when cornered by Newport Beach police, was shot to death Wednesday night in Costa Mesa, police reported to. day. a.derflWll Tracy Benedix, 20, of Hunt- ington ~ach, Is Golden We s t Coll ege ·s 1977 homecoming queen . The Fount ain \"alley Hq~h Sch onl g 1«1 d u~t e is thi· dau~hter ot Dr. and :'\lr~ Richa rd fknC'ch'\ Spook House In Huntington Real,ly Tent Some citizens have complained that the Huntington Beach Jaycees' Halloween Spook House is not in the fiislorfc Old Newland House but at the Newland House grounds. Nightly tours of the Spook House -co-sponsored with the the Huntington Beach Historical Society -are more lik e tours of a 1 s pook red -and-white-str iped circus tent. The show 1s open weeknights 7 lo 10 p.m.; 2 p.m. to mldnigh~ Saturday and 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday and costs SO cents per person and is staged in the tent right next door to the old landmark home. Magic shows and dramatic presentations by Edison and Marina high schools' drama classes also will be offered this Saturday and S\lnday. The Jaycees apparent.ly were out visiting some of their old haunts today when called for a statement on the Spook House that turned out to be a Spook Tent. But a tape-reeorded voice on their office phone, trying its best to sound like a sepulchral Dracula. promised it really is • pretty scary Wayne Michael Nabb. 21. of 133 16th St., Costa Mesa, died of bullet wounds to the head and chest at about 10:45 p.m. at the corner of old Newport Boulevard and E .16lb St .. police said. Newport Beach police were contacted after Nabb allegedly tried to rob two patrons al knife· point in the parking lot oC a Newport Beach r estaurant Wednesday nighL Costa Mesa police Lt. George Lorton said Nabb was later seen on foot in Co.5ta Mesa by an un- identified cabdriver. Newport Beach p o lice patrolman Robert O'Neil r e- portedly cornered Nabb and took a buck knife away from him. O'Neil was unaware that Nabb was concealing a shotgun, said Lt. Lorton. However, O'Neil backed off and radioed for support after lhe c ab driver shouted that he believed Nabb was concealing a second weapon. O 'Neil reportedly sought pro- tection behind the rear of his patrol car and ordered Nabtno "drop the gun." WHhin seconds, Newport Beach patrolman Bob Stephens and Sgt. Robert Gatewood ar- rived on the $Cene. All thre«: Newport officers fired at Nabb as b e p ulled the single -barre l slfot•un from b eneath his clotblng. Police said the shotgun was hidden under Nabb's loose-fitting shirt, with the barrel extending down his right pants leg. Police said Nabb. did not fire the weapon. Al least six shots were fired by police, with two rounds striking Nabb. Ll. Lorton said. Costa Mesa paramedics said :\ abb died at the scene. Police said the incident began at about 10:30 p.m. in the parking lot of Delaney's Restaurant on the Lido Peninsula. Nabb al· legedly tried to rob a man and a woman at knifepoint in the restaurant parking lot. Police said the pair ran away. He apparen~ chased them. but was unable t o catch them because his movement was im- paired by the shotgun he was car· rying in hi5 pants.- After eluding the would-be rob- ber, the couple called police. · Although the shooting invoh·ed Newport Beach policemen, an in· "estigation will be carried out by Costa Mesa police because the fatal incident occ:url'ed within Costa Mesa city limits, Lorton explained. All three of the Newport poJlcemen reportedly fired their weapons, but an autopsy must be completed before it can be de· termined which officer fired the fatal bullet. Information compiled by Costa Mesa police will be forwatded to the Orange County District At· torney's office, which will decide if any charges should be filed against the officers, or if the s hooting was in selr -defense, Lorton said . Potential Danger HAVANA (AP > -Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro says the United S~es remains a •·potential danger " to Cuba and is stiJJ trying to foment re- bellion in his country. o.ltr ...... Wf1 ....... THIS IS GUN POLICE BELIEVE WAS USED IN NEWPORT MURDER LAST WEEKEND Still·<:OCked 9 mm Weapon Recovered Wednesday From Upper Newport Drizzles Continue Near Coast The southern l.'d.t:l' of a Pacific storm brou.t:hl drizzles to the Ora nge Coast this morning. and weather forecasters said more can be expected. The weatherman said the present storm should move northeast tonight. but that more dnlllcs are possible through Fri- d:.iy momm.t:. 11 l' .,,llfl ,mother P:.ic1fic storm 1 s ,1 pp r11ach1 11 J.: :-.; o r the r n C.ihforma anrl that m or.• dnule. whu:h mav tnl'rt'J "<" tn r:.un, b P<•.,s1 bll· i-·nd<J} mghl .111d S<1tur- fla v Surf. also st1rrr<I up hy the Pac1ric storm, droppC'd Crom \\."erlnl'sday's high~. Waves of four to fi ve feet were rcpOrted in Huntington Beach but·were down to two or three feel elsewhere on thl' coast. Small craft advisories con· tinued in effect from Point Con- ception to the Mexican border. Section Scans Sailing Scene A s pecial magaT.ine section with timely advice for sailors an- ticipating many fine winter sail· ing d ays comes to you in today·s Daily Pilot. ··orange County Boating'' is a 12-page magazine with stories and pictures of interest to begin- ning and expert boaters alike. For the last word on sail and power boating fun , look for ''Orange County Boating" in- side your Dally Pilot. Name Withdrawn WASHINGTON CAP) -The Carter administration intends to withdraw the nomination of career d iplomat William E . Schaufele as ambassador to Greece, informed sources say. Officials feel his effectiveness would be impaired because of hostile Greek reaction to a re· mark he made before a Senate commillec, according to the sources. 1,000-foot Drop Sports Car Crash Fatal to HB Youth A llunt1ngton Beach youth killed Sunday when his sports car hurtled off u road in the San Gabriel Mountiuns and plummet· ed almost to lhe base or a l.000- foot precipice was buried today. Funeral services for David Rao;k1M. 19, or 6862 Breeland Dnve. on the city's north side, wer e conducted this morning an Fa irhaven Memorial Park, San- ta ,\na. California lhghway Patrol in- ,·es t1gators ~aid the victim 's 1971 Court to Hear $900,000 HB Appeals Suit . Attorneys for Huntington Beach have won a request to ha ve a $900,000 class action lawsuit be considered by the 4th District Court of Appeals in San Bernardino. The lawsuit involves lengthy Ii ligation regarding the city's m. fated property transfer tax which the city collected on real estate transaction for purt.s or 1974 and 1975. City Attorney Don Bonfa said the city·s request for an appeal w as approved Tuesday. The hearing is scheduled in San Bernardino Feb. I. Orange County Superior Court .Judge Walter E. Smith ruled In July that the tax was illegal because it was a form of property tax. The city is prohibited in its charter from coll ecting property taxes in excess of $1 per $100 in assesed valuation. Bonfa argued that the transfer tax was not a real property tax but instead was an excise or transition tax. The Court of Appe(lls issued an alternate writ of mandate order· ing the Superior Court to rescind Jasl s ummer's ruling or lo show cause why it should stand, ac· cord in~ to Bonra. <See APPEAL, Page /\2) MG was traveling about 80 miles p(.'r hour when it shot off a curve abo' e Baldwin Park. Witn~es reported the Sunday accident, but it was not until after daybreak Monday morning that a team of gl'OW'Jd searchers was able to find Baskins• body fJr down the cliff. The tragedy occurred on wind- ing San Gabriel Canyon Road, or flig hway 39, which becomes Beach Boulevard from the Orange Count y line to its terminus a t P acific Coast llighway in Huntington Beach. Survivors of Mr. Baskins, who worked as a tubing bender for a cu stom motorcycle manufac- turer, include his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Baskins, of the home address; a brother, Robert and a sister Mrs. Lorraine Dramonor Anaheim. H e also leaves his patemat grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Baskins of Hawthorne; maternal grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Strickland of Kings Canyon National Park, and his great-great-grandmother. Mrs. J eanette Van Os, of lnglewood. Accused Son Misses Rites MEDINA, Ohio tA P) Michael Swihart reportedly prayed in his jail cell rather than attend memorial services for the four members of his family he is. ·accused of slaying. A bout 500 people attended a brief interden ominational service at St. Ambrose Roman Catholic Church in nearby Brunswick on Wednesday night. Swihart l s an 18·year-old •freshman at Miami <Ohio> University. The clos ed caskets or Michael's father, Donald, 41 : mother, Sue Ellen, 40; and brothers, Brian, 16, and Russell, 9. were set in the center of the church before the altar, They wilJ be buried Friday in Cov- ington, Va., Mrs. Swihart's birthplace. 4 Await Court Hearing By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of• o.lly PllM~ff Newport Beach police, aided by lifeguards wading through thigh-deep mud have found the ~un they believe was used to pump. the nine fat.al shots into a Fountain Valley man ln their city early Saturday morning. Meanwhile, the four people ar4 rested on suspicion of conspiracy to com mil murder in the shooting or Stephen John Bovan, were scheduled for an initial court ap- pearance today in the Harbor Judicial District Court. Detectives, who have been -working around the clock, say their investigation or what they term a "bizarre" case b as broadened out to include the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Reach and an investment firm in Newport. Beach. Det. Sam Amburgey said there are "a number of people" still under scrutiny for their part in the events leading to Bo\ran's death. He said the investigation is now probing the relationship of four men he described as mem- bers of the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna to the dead man and the suspects. Agni Dave, president or the Laguna Beach \.emple, said the four men had al one time been members, but have not been ac· tive for m01·ethan a year. He said they bad not practleed the eult'1 teachings prohibitlne eating d meat. en1agin1 in U.Udt sex. gambliDg and co:nsumpUoo or intoxicants, nor bad they a~ tended lhe required m om ing and evening daily relll{iOUS services. One of th°"'e mel\, Alexander Kulik, 28, was arrested l ast weekend in Mission Viejo when Sheriff's deputies found more than one pound of nearly pure oriental heroin in jars on the floor of his Stutz Blackhawk car. · The link that connects the four alleged Krishna members to the Bovan murder is a Newport Beach investment firm they operated under the name Pers11dan. Three of the four s uspects in the Bovan murder, J erry Peter Fiori, 41. Anthony "LitUe Tony" Marone, Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven Resco, 28, were employed by Persadan. The fourth suspect. Debra Ann Addison, 24, is as· sertedly Fiori's girlfriend. Bovan, Amburgey said. worked for one of the firms in which Persadan had invested some money. The story, as detailed by Am· burgey. goes like this: Kulik, and bis partners, J oe Davis, 2S1 Canyon Acres Drive, Laguna Beach, Roy Christopher Richards ol the sam e address, a nd Joe Federosky of 1300 Blueblrd canyon Road, fbrmed their firm to invest their money Jn local private businesses. According to Laguna Beach police Capt. Nell Purcell. , the <See GUN, Page AZ) More Coverage Other Huntington Beach stories appear today on Page Alo. Coast Weather Carnival On In Valley Man Held After Chase Local driules becoming partly cloudy in arter· noons. Slightly cooler days. Lows tonight in mid·SOs. Highs Friday up· per60s. The Fountain Valley Halloween carnival will be held al the city RecreaUon Center, 16400 Brookhurst St.. through.Sunday. The event. s ponsored by the Fountain Valley Lions Club. befitan at 3 p m. lo· day It continues until 11 pm. The same schedule v.illbcan cffcct f'riday. The rides, game booths nnd shows will be open from 10 a.m lo 11 p.m . ., Saturday and from 11 a .m . io 10 p.m. Sunday. A jobtesa draftsman was Jailed today after an fJO.•ile•per·hour auto chase in which ~Uce alleae he rammed one Huntington Beach police sergeant's patrol car twice, the second time headon in a futile bid to flee In his own wreck. Patrol Sgt. Arden Beavers suf. fcred back injuries in the crash finale oC the three-mile pursuit around north-central Huntington Reach but he wa s n o t hospltaliied, police said. The suspect, Thoma~ Johan- nah McKen&le, at. oC 8322 Westmlnata-, was boOked into Westmlnlater, wu booked lo&o "' . City Jail in lieu or $2,SOO ball on charges of felony drunken driv· lng fpllowing the chain of episodes. A full report by Sgt. Beavers, who was treated at Pacifica Hospital and released after the 2:50 a .m. pursuit, was to be furn lshNI CHP in vestigators when the sergeant was able to com plelc it later today Patrol Lt. George Renek ex· plained the chase began when Sergeant Beavers aLtempled to stop McKenzie's nine.year-old sedan on Slater• Avenue at Gothard for a traffic in· veattaauoo. ,. • The s us pect assertedly ac- celerated and s ped on west on Slater Avenue, runnlng several four -way Stop signs before the fleeing car fishtaHed off on a dirt shoulder, skidded through a red light at Edwards Street and con- tinued northbound. police said. Th e chase continued to Edwards Street and Edinger Avenue, Lt. Rcnck s aid. where McKenz1c reportedly spun out once. then r.oomed Into a closed service station and !Jwilched off his headlights. Trying to head him oft, Patrol Sgt. Pat Clemens just then ar· rived on the scene and stopped at I ,. the northerly curb or Edlnger Avenue, whereupon. the t.wo sergeants' quarry alle,edly tried to speed away, ''He exited the station east· bound on Edinger, but then he spun out again, made a complete :lflO-degree turn and wound up focin" southbound on Edwards Street," Lieutenant Renek said. McKenzie assertedly gunned his 1968 sedan again but careened into another service station on th«> southeast corner of the in· tcrsection, crashing and losing a wheel. Still full of nattl. police alleged, (See QIASE, .... Al) • INSIDE TODAY DLfecses o/ th• heart wfU account /qr 52 pm:fftl o/ oU deatha m the natfon thU .,.ar. The account of on~ tn<m's or- deal 11 found on Page AB. Index At Y•~r s.n1u A14 "'"'''~· ... L.M.le,. A4 l10tl11eu ... , C•llterfll• At Claulll9f CMJ Cetnlo ct "•n•M11 tJ OHtll H•lk.. Al 1.i1w111 ,._ ,,.., 1!11 .. rt•I--' 1 .. 11 .. ......... ,.. ...., 'trlllelt«ft AU ...,_..,. ... , l ... A% DAILY PILOT H/F Thursday October 27 1977 Count11 Ta% Bjfu!'t Pension Plan Move 'Costly' Br GARY GRANVILLE ot 11,. o.uy r1i.1 s1att Ir local governments ln Orange County are forced to abandon their own pt:.nsfon plans 1n favor of Soclal Security coverage tor public employe3, the move wiU cost county property taxpayers an additional $74 million in 1983. That prediction was made to- day by county Tax Collector- School A ide Subject Of lnq_uiry Members oC a Huntington Beach homeowners group are asking Huntington Beach City <elementary> School District trustees to clarify the status of iJl. terim Assistant Superintendent Bob Landi. Landi is identified as an assis- tant superintendent (not in· terim) on official school district stationery and by various board members. . .. The HOME Council wol.lldjust like to know when his posi_tioo became perma- nent," Steve Scbwnacher said to- day. School Sul>{!rintendent S. A. Moffett confirmed today that Landi is still the interim assis· tant superintendent and final ac- tion will not be made until the status of Deputy Superintendent Charles Palmer is determined. Landi has been performing Palmer's duties while lbe latter bas been incapacitated by ill health for more than a yea?'. Palmer bas suffered from blood clots on the leg and lung, according to Moffett. The HOME Council also ls re- questing that the position that Landi ls filling be opened to other candidates before a final de· cision is made. "We are not questioning Lan- di 's qualifications, but. we want to make sure the position is filled by Ulo best persoo available," Scbumacber said. The watchdog homeowner or· ganhation said this practice was follo•ed recently to fill other )>Oeitioos. Moffett Hid there Is a request that the position will be discussed at the board's next meeting Nov. 1. Board President Brian Garland said today it is uncertain that posting oftbejob will be made. "Jt all depends on if there are three board members who think that Landi is doing a superb job," he said. "I personally think he is performing very well." Garland said it would be unfair to other candidates to go through a screening process if the majorl· ty or the board thinks Landi is the man for the job. Moffett, who said there was nothing intentional in the way Landi~ position was listed on the s tationery, said he is in favor of throwing lbe job open to appli· cants. He added, however, that he hopes Landi stays in the position. Landi was appointed interim as· si.stant superintendent in May. I NFORMATION JN 'RIYERSIDE' treasurer Robert Citron, chief administrator of county govern· ment's $175 million employe re- tirement system. The target of Citron's com· menls was pending federal legislation that would bring federal, slate and local govern- ment workers under mandatory Social Security coverage in 1982·83. The tax collector-treasurer predicted that such a move will add from $144 to $164 in addi· tional properly taxes on the average Orange County home by 1983. •'I do not know what our representatives in Congress are thinking about in their hell-bent quest to attempt to save a bankrupt Social Security system, .. Citron said. "They must have blinders on not fo know the consequences or brii)ging local government plans into the Social Security system. "And," Citron added, "at the same time the represent,tives would be leading the beleaguered property taxpayers further down the road to bankruptcy.•' Citron said he has written members of Orange County's congressional delegation "telling them of the fallacy or attempting to save the Social Security system by bringing in local gov· ernment J>{!nsion plans." He termed the move "simply a temporary bailing out o( a system that is near bankruptcy." Citron said coverage under the pension plans of local govern· ment.s benefits the worker more than Social Security benefits. He also argued that the money paid to local funds is ad - ministered locally and authority rests in Orange County rather than the nation's capital. GUN FOUND. four Persadan principals are members of the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and Richards was a former president o( the temple. .. They etnployed a large number of people whom they put into the businesses 1n which they'd invested," aaid Am- burgey. He said that over an un· specified period of time, some Persadan employes apparently embe~zled .. hundreds of thousands of doJlars" or that in· vestment money. At that point, Fiori, Resco, Marone and two other men were hired by the Persadan principals to'"try to recover the embezzled funds," Amburgey asserted. Meanwhile, late in August, Bovan and at least two other Persadan employes which Am· burgey did not identify, allegedly kidnapped Kulik and held him for $100.000 ransom. While they bad Kulik, Am· burgey said, they "severely beat him.'' Fiori. Resco, Marone and their two colleagues were used to pay the ransom for Kulik and tbe case was never reported to outhorilies, Amburgey said. "From that point on," the de· tective asserted. "there w3s a re- ward offered allegedly by the Persadan group, for Dovan and the kidnappers." The nature or . that reward is under investiga. tion, he said. Police say they believe Bovan, 36, left bis home at 17332 Zeider Lane, Fountain Valley, to go into hiding, He apparenUy stayed out 'No Frills' Food Saves CllJCAOO (AP) -By settllne tor soda ca>.., with no pop-tops and peas that are a Ughler shado or green, the grocery shopper <'an s a vc 10 to 35 percent on the price of nationally ad· v e rti se d food and household basics, u major food chain says. Jewel Food Stores in- troduced Wednesday a no· brand name Une of goods for 88 products ranging from shortening to corn tlakcs that attempts •·to peel away all the frills,•· said Jane Armstrong,. vice president or consumer af- talrs for the city's largest food chain. · Star Markets of Boston began a similar program this year. . Three Seized In Santa Ana _Drug Raids Santa Ana police asserted they may have heavily dented a ma- jor drug ring when they arrested three people late Tuesday and seized heroin having an estimal· ed street valueof$SOO.OOO. When coupled with other ar- rests connected with the drug in· vestigation that began three months ago, police said the operation has netted almost thre.e pounds of high grade heroin. Arrested in Tuesday night's undercover buy.bust operation were Jose Gallegos Bejarano, 40, of Norwalk, Arrellano Contreras Jasso, 20, of Santa Ana, and Mon- cerrat Anaya Rodriquez, 31. Police sajd the three suspeded drug dealers were arrested in Mrs. Rodriquez's home al 1118 W. Third St., Santa Ana. • • or the Orange Coast" area until Saturday night when he showed up at the El Ranchito restaurant, 409 28th St. He left there early Saturday morning after being spotted by Miss Addison, who was also at the popular night spot. Police al· lege she tipped Fiori, Resco and Marone to Bovan's location. Police allege Bovan was met outside the restaurant by at least one or the trio who shot him nine times with a 9mm automatic handgun, before fleeing in a green and white Cadillac. Based on a description ol the car seen leaving the scene, police arrested Fiori when he appeared at Nabers Cadillac Tuesday morning to sell the car. Costa Mesa police, who wanted to question him about the car, ar. rested him when they allegedly round nearly three pounds or co- caine in his possession. By tracing the car's registra- lion, police found Resco, Marone and Miss Addison. Police said they were told where to look for the gun, and hfeguards Larry Gibson and .John Blauer waded through the thigh.deep mud for 20 minutes hcrore finding the still-cocked firearm. Amburgey said he and other in· vcst1gators are probing the role played by the four Persadan men in the case to determine the nature or the •·reward" they al· legedly offered for the location of Bovan. ''We're interested in talk- ing lo them," be said, noting that they have apparently been out of the rountry. WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi· dent Carter's most recent re- organiuUoo plan would create a new Agency for International Communications to replace the U.S. Intormation Agency and also assume some cultural· educational exchange activities handled by tbe State Depart- ment. · Some USIA employes have been grumbling that their pro- spective new agency would be CIA spelled backwards. . Ruling Due Friday On Activist's Trial -H/fl DAILY PILOT Judge Edward Laird closed a brief Santa Ana Municipal Court hearing Wednesday by refusing to immediately rule on the issue of whether ja.il reform activi!t Charles Thomas Miller should stand trial in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Laird said he would rule Friday on a motion that could send Miller, 33. lo lhc higher court for acUon on charges or un· authorized taping of telephone conversations: It is alleged in a case activated by the sheriff's office that Miller taped two conversations between blmaclf and Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge Richard Parslow nnd a separate conversation between himself and FBI agent J. Francl~ Sullivan. The Judge was told by self· conf~Hod burglar Daniel Portley durJnr I.ht two-hour prcllmlnnry hea· 1 11 th~t Miller taped thf> ctil • ta.st Feb. 17 In the kitchen of his Santa Ana apartmt'nl. Portl'Y has received Immunity trom prosecution tor hts role in the alleged taping. But he still faces court action on the burglary cb•TCCS to wblcb he re- portedly bas coa/essed. Judge Laird was told during the hearing that PorUey, 31, is of· fering evidence against Miller in a bid to receive lenient treatment for an almost certain felony con· viction. Defense attorney Roger Hanson branded Portley as "a linr who is i!rasping al any straw including Miller" in a bid to switch the spotlight away from him. It Is alleged that the conversa- tions with Judce Parslow and Jo'Bl agent Sullivan were made while Miller was seeking to im- prove conditions at. Lhe Oranie County Jail. Miller, who once aharcd a cell tn San Quentin prlaon with Portley, hos frequently slated that he has served as a legal t'ounsclor to many principal& in orgnnli«f crime syndicates. Milter was active In a jail re form move me nt lhlll led De mo<'ratl<' Auemblyman Richard Alntorrc or Los Angeh:s to hold h('arlngs last J~1nuo>ry In lo conditions at the Orange Coun-ty .J all. A subwqucnt report claimed t bat Inmates bad auffered brutality at. tho bands or jail 'uards. .. 118 Police c.;:s;~: :J D ecision Upheld The etty of Huntington Beach hu s bee n s u s tainc:d an a ~rievancc brought against 1t by a volice officer, city offiduls i.wd Wednesday. Administrative Law Judge Frank Britt has released an ad· visory report rinding that the city acted properly in a disciplinary matter involving Ll. Georg(' Renick. according to City At· torney Don Bonfa. Renick was suspended 40 hours without pay by Police Chier Earle Robitaille in January following an argument last Oc· tober with a fellow officer over an investigation into orf·duty ac- tivities by police officers. Personnel Director Ed Thompson said the investigation is connected with so-called prayer meetings attended by of(. duty police omcers at Hunt- ington Beach Central Park. Several officers were dis· ciplined for taking part in the drinking parties in 1975. Nude swimming also reportedly oc- curred at the "prayer meet· ings." · Thompson said that Renek could lose about $450 if the hear- ing officer's recommendations are approved. The Jaw judge also recommended lhal Renek be censured for making unOatterlng remarks to Lt. James Walker in connection with the investiga- tion. The hearing officer's recom- mendations are advisory and will reportedly gotothecity's person el boardforafinaJdecision. Dahl, was reinstated to the force Oct.19bythepcrsonncl board. He had bee n fired I ast December on a number or allcgci- tions, including attendance at prayer meetings and an involve· m enl with a Garden Grove woma~ · The personnel board held, however, that Dahl should forxeit salary and other benefits when he was off the forq for about eight months. ThattotalisbeUevedtobe about S19,000. the suspect accelerated and tried to roar away on only three wheel8 but found himself on a bead-on collision course with Sergeant Beuvers, his inJtiaJ pursuer. Swerving his car to avoid the juggernaut roaring al him in his northbound traffic lane. Sergeant Beavers tried to pre- vent the collision, but the wrong· way motorist crashed into the pnt rnl car. Mc Kenzie was collared a nd subdued by Officer Nlck Ekovlch before he could flee again, police said. Fro• P age A l APPEAL ••. The suit against the city WoS fil ed by Orin Berge Jr. and others who bought property when lhe measure was in effect. Berge asked the court to rule the tax invalid and for the city to return the $'900,000 to those from whom it collected tbe money. Bonfa said there were about 10,000 transactions in the city during that period. The transfer tax went into el· feet in 1974 but was repealed the following year by a city initiative election. Man Hiding With Machete LONDON <AP> -P olice tried using noise to blast a 42-year·old accountant out of his bathroom where he has been holed up for thr ee days, armed with a machete. The attemptfailcd. The standoff began Monday after Grant Bickell slashed al three omcers who were trying to help public employes take over his London apartment to make repairs, police said. Bickell, a bachelor, li ves in a municipally owned building. Two policemen were cut by the 1 wo-foot-long machete as they went through the front door and a <'onstable's truncheon was sliced in half. Bickell then locked himself in the bathroom. Prince Warlled: 'Get Out' SAN fi'RANCISCO (AP) -A full·pagc advertisement to the San Francisco Chronicle today warns Prince Charles to ••cet the devil oul of Ireland or be as ~kome here as George Ill." The a4vertlsemerit, ln the form or an open letter to "Prince Charlie," was signed by the "Irish Ilcpublican committee, John Maher, co-chairman.'' The prince, Britain's heir to 1 the throne, was to arrive here to- day for a three-day visit to northern California, the final :-.top of a 13-day, 10.cit.v tour or the United States, (Related photo, A~> The advertisement apparenUy is the first of a series of protest gestures rrish activists here &aid they have prepared for the prince's istay. During the prince's visit to Cleveland las t week, • dem· onstration was staged by the Irish National Caucus to protest what members said were "800 years of British suppression." The advertisement today declares: · "Your Royal ffighness should not be deceived during your visit. While there are surely a few - heirs to those traitorous Tories who hid under their beds during 1776 -who will cluster about you in an attempt to add tarnished dross to their lusterless lives; these are few and we are many." The open letter demands: Withdrawal of Brltlsh troops from Northern Ireland; an end to ''torture" of Iris h prisoners in Britain; a slop to prejudice against Northern Irish Catholics. and the prosecution of "BrltiSb Army war criminals in the t.radJ. ti on of Nuremburg." "Should you fa.ii in this at· tempt," the letter concludes ''then you must, out. of a commit! ment to human justice and torn· mon decency. renounce your claim to the apuriou.s throne or Ulster." Introducing thejVC 306Q. See the world's first portable AM/FM Radi o-TV-Cassette Recorder Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach, Mountains, Desert -Anywhere. Price •2 50 00 This JVC quality crafted unit Includes a 3 .. diagonal black & white TV that locka In Glear, bright pictures on VHF and UHF, a sensitive FM and AM radio w ith an amplifier and speaker to give you clear, rich music or sports; plus a cassette player recorder for listening to your favorite tapes or recording your favorite pro- grams. Records audio from radio or TV plus ll has a built In condenser mic for voice record- ing. All In onel You've never seen anything Ilka it. Also available without the cassette recorder (Model 3050) at $190.00. NC Model 9475, FM/ AM/SWIJSW2 Stereo Rodio, Cossette Recorder JVC Jost 1 20o0 o JVC s 94 75 is r>acked w11h reatures thal make 11 a best buy lie; b19oos1 tearure 1~ <;lereo sound. lor recording and playback II oven records stereo FM dlreclly from the butlr·1n tuner Two big 5 duel-cone sp•akers. Two -leh and nght -built 1n condenser microphones Two easy·IO·See meters. An uo-to·the-mlnure cassette mechanism w11h full auto-stop and cue/rovitw facilities. I uU I 11t•fo~1 Uu rru11ri1•, ,.,,,,Our 1•,.,.,.,,.,., f11t1• \ ,.,,,. f11111 r11111 ,.,.Ou I ,.,.,.,, 1•,.,,,,,, •. , n •· .... 11: 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa .. _ ......... ......_ z o~ w..a .-c.41 "· Phone 642-8882 Storo Hour:. Daily U Sat. 9-5.30 .... .... Irvine EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 300, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA / Today s Closing N .Y. toeks THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1977 TEN CENTS l 'Deuth Gun' Found in Back Bay Armed, Fleeing Newport Cops Kill Suspect By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ol 1"-D•llY l'llol Sl.ttt A fleeing robbery susr1ect. who aJle'gedly pulled a shotgun from his pants when cornered by Newport Beach police, was shot to death Wednesday night in Costa Mesa. police reported to- day. Adair Srmff s Oil Inferno TAFT (AP) -A stub· born oil well fire! that killed three people was finally snuffed out today by world· famous fire fighter Red Ad air, who triggered an explosion to quell the two· day bl aze. fire offt cials said. Adair used plastic ex· plosi ves Lo put out the flames in his firs t attempt to douse the fire which began Tuesday in the E lk Hills Naval Reserve with an explosion of unex· plained origin. Navy Cm dr, Roger Martin, chief of operations at the nation's largest oil r eserve outside Alas ka, estim ated the fire was burning 12,000 barrels of oil daily. Actor's Bets, Dates Learned In Wiretaps OKLAHOMA CITY CA P ) Television star Lee Majors al- legedly placed Sl.000 bets on col- lege football games and alleged· l y had two dates wilh a n Oklahoma City woman, the latest last November, government wiretap tapes disclose. l Related photo, AS> The wi retap tapes naming Ma· jors, star of the teleyision series "The Six Million Dollar Man" and husband of t elevision personality Farrah Fawcett- Majors, were played Wednesday by the government in the case of seven 'people on trial in U.S. Dis· trict Court here for allegedly con- ducting a gambling operation. The tape naming Majors was made Nov. 24. The recording told how Majors allegedly made $1,000 bets on the" PiWlburgh and Oklahoma foot- ball games to be played that weekend. The conversations were a mong 60 ta ped calls the government has introduced into evidence. They were recorded during court -approved wiretaps on three telephones I astral I. Defense attorneys objectc9 to <See MAJORS, Page A2 ) Coast Wayne Michael Nabb, 21, of 133 161h St.. Cos ta Mesa, died of bullet wounds to the head and chest at about 10:45 p.m. al the corner of old Newport Boulevard and E. 16th St.. police said. Newport Beach police were contacted after Nabb allegedly tried to rob two patrons at knife. point in the parking lot of a Newport Beach r estaura nt Wednesday night. Costa Mesa police Lt. George Lorton s aid Nabb was later seen on foot in Costa Mesa by an un- identified cabdriver. Newport Beach po li ce patrolman Robert O'Neil re- portedly cornered Nabb and took a buck knife away from him. O'Neil was unaware that Nabb was concealing a s hotgun , said Lt. Lorton. According to police accounts. as 0 'Neil sought protection behind the rear of his patrol ear, Nabb reportedly pulled a single· barrel shotgun from beneath his clothing and pointed it at the of· ficer. Within seconds, Newport Beach patrolman Bob Stephens and Sgt. Robert Gatewood ar- rived on the scene. Nabb was re- portedly shot after be ignored commands to "dropthegun." Police said Nabb did not fire his weapon, which h:id been hid- den under bis loose-fitting s hirt, with the barrel extending down his rigbtpantleg. Police said the shotgun was hidden tmder Nabb's loose.fitting s hirt, with the barrel extending down his right pants leg. Poli ce <>ai d Nabb did not fire the \\ 1:apon. i\l least six shots were fired by police. with two rounds striking Nabb. Lt. Lortonsaid. Costa Mesa paramedics said Nabb died at the scene. Poli ce said the incident ~gan al about 10:30 p.m. in the parking lot of Delaney's Restaurant on the Lido Peninsula. Nabb al- legedly tried to rob a man and a wom an at knifepoint in the restaurant parking lot. Police said the pair r an away. He apparently chased them, but was unable lo catch them because his movement was im- paired by the shotgun he was car- rying in his pants. After eluding the would-be rob- ber, the couple called pol ice. Although the shooting involved Newport Beach policemen, an in· vestigation will be carried out by Costa Mesa police because the fat al incident occurred within Costa Mesa city limits, Lorton explained. All three or the Newport policemen reportedly fired their weapons, but an autopsy must be completed before it can be de- termined which officer fired the fatal bullet. Information compiled by Costa Mesa police will be forwarded to the Orange County District At- torney's office, which will decide if any charges should be filed against the officers, or iC the shooting was in self-defense, Lorton said. lrrine Students ~ty PjMt $1.ttt !'Mt• THIS IS GUN POLICE BELIEVE WAS USED IN NEWPORT MURDER LAST WEEKEND Still-cocked 9 mm Weapon Recovered Wednesday From Upper Newport Bay Benefit Tax Hike OK'd House Moves to Keep Social Security Solvent, WASIUNGTON <AP) -The House voted tod;ly to keep the Social Security system from go- ing broke by drastically increas· ing the taxes paid by more than 100 million Americans and their employ<'rs The btll \,\,)' .. P•J~Sf'd, 275 to 146, and sent to the !:>cnate, wb1ch has similar le~1!>lation in committee. Under the b11l, the maximum Social Security tax would more than triph• an the next decade, from S:li;.'i f><'r 't•..ir to $3.025. Rep \I I II man < 0 -0re. J, "'host• \\';1..-, .met :'.lt•an' Commit· tc·c faslu11111·ll tlw 11111. <·altl"d the l1•g1s\;1t1on · .1 \1t.1l c·oncern to \'1 rluallv f'Vl'f\ 1\nwncan " "Practicall)· cv~·Q' American is either a bc·nefic1ary under the Social Security system, a con- tributor buildin g protection whi c h will provide future benefi ts or o dependent of a con- tributor," Ullman said. The large tax increases were made necessary by deficits in the Social Security fund in recent years. Without the new fundJng, the system stands to go broke in a few years. Before passin.I? the bill, the House added an amendment that would add s till further to the drastic lax increases recom- mended by the Ways and Means Committee by removing all li mits on wa~es earned by Section Scans Sailing Scene A special magazine section with timely advice ror sailors an· ticlpuling many fine winter sail· ing days comes to you in today's Dai ly Pilot. "Oran~c County Bo;iting" is a 12-pagc ma~tmnc with stories anti pu·tur<.•s of interest to begin- nin~ and expert houtcrs alike. For the la:-.l word on sail and power ho ;.rtin~ fun . look for "Orange County Boating" in-side your Daily Pilot. recipien\s of Social Security pensions. The amendment. introduced by Rep. William M. Ketchum <R· Calif.). and approved 269 to 149, would phai.c out the current limit of S3.000 in outside earnings by 1!1~2 Since elderly people could go on receiviug a full salary and stall dra w full Social Security ben~rits, a greater percentaee ot elderly would el«t to take their * * * pensions under the Ketchum am endment. This, in turn, would mean that Social Security taxes would have to be higher than otherwise lo finance the extra pensions. Jn order to r aise the extra funds. the Ketchum amendment would make the maximum tax S3.02S In 1987 for a person earn- ing $42,000. The maximu_m tax DOW is as per year, tSee SECURITY, p_,-. A!) * * * County Tax Boost H Pensions Cut? By GARV GRANVILLE oi • o.11, P'l ... St.ff If local governments in Orange County are forced to abandon their own pension plans in ravor of Social Security coverage for public employes, the move will cost county property taxpayers an additional $74 million in 1983. That prediction was made to- day by county Tax Collector· treasurer Robert Citron, chief administrator of county govern- ment's $175 million employe re- tirementsystem. The target of Citron's com- m en Ls was pe nding federal legislation that would bring federal, state and local govern- ment workers under mandatory Social Security coverage in 1982·83. The tax collector-treasurer predicted that such a move will add from $144 to $164 in addi· tional property laxes on the average Orange County home by 1983. ·'I do not know what our representatives in Congress are thinking about in their hell-bent. ques t to a ttempt to s ave a bankrupt Social S ec urity system," Citron said. "They must have blinders on not to know the consequences ot bringing local government plans into the Social Security system. "And," Citron added, "at the same time the representatives would be leading the beleaguered property taxpayers further down the road to bankruptcy.'• Citron said be has written members or Orange County's congressional delegation "telling them or the fallacy of attempting to save the Social Security system by bringing in local gov· ernment pension plans." He termed the move "simply a temporary bailing out or a system that is near bankruptcy.•• Citron said coverage under the pension plans or local govern· ments benefits the worker more ·than Social Security benefits. Coffee Fines· BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - Ten Colombian corree e)J.porters were "fined about $S milllon We dnesday on governme nt• charges of withholding 180,000 sacks from the world market awaiting higher prices. Suspects Appear In Court By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of t11e o.lly f'lleC Staff Newport Beach police, aided by lifeguards wading through thigh-deep mud have found the gun they believe was used lo pump the nine fatal shots into a Fountain Valley man in their city early Saturday morning. Meanwhile, the four people ar- rested on suspicion or conspiracy to commit murder in the shooting of Stephen J ohn Bovan, were scheduled for an initial court ap. pearance today in the Harbor Judicial District Court. Detectives, who h a ve b~en working around the clock, say their investigation or what they te rm a .. bizarre" case has broadened out to include the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and an investment firm in Newport Beach. Del. Sam Amburgey said there are "a number of people" still under scrutiny for their part in the events leading to Bovan's death. He said the investigation is now probing the relationship or four men he described as mem- bers of fhe Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna to the dead man and the s uspects. · Agni Dave, president or the Laguna Beach temple, said the four men bad at one time been members, but have not been ac· ti ve for more than a year. He said they had not practiced the cult's teachings prohibiting eating or meat, engaging in illicit sex, gambling and consumption or intoxicants, nor bad they at- tended Uae required morning a.ad evening daily relltCious services. One of those men. Alexander Kulik, 28, was arrested last weekend in Mi.sslOll Viejo when Sheriff's depuUes found more than one pound of nearly pure oriental heroin in jars on the floor of his Slut.% Blackhawk car. The link that connects the four alleged Krishna members to the Bovan murder is a Newport Beach investment. firm they operat ed under the name Persad an. T hree ot the four suspects in the Bovan murder, Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, AnthOOy "LitUe Tony'' Marone, Jr., 23. and Rlymond Steven Resco, 28, were employed by Persadan. The fourth suspect. Debra Ann Addison, 24, is as· sertedly Fiori's girlfriend. Bovan, Amburgey said. worked for orte or the firms in which Peraadan bad invested some money. The story, as detailed by Am· burgey, goes like this: Kulik, and bis partners, Joe Davis, 257 Canyon Acres Drive, Laguna Beach, Roy Christopher Richard of the same address, and Joe Federosky or 1300 Bluebird Canyon Road, formed their firm to invest their money in local private businesses. According to Laguna Beach police Capt. NeU Purcell, the four Persadan principals are members or the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and Richard was a former president of the temple. (See GUN, Page A2) I \\'ea th er Local drizzles becoming partly cloudy in a fter- noons. Slightly cooler days. Lows tonight in mid -sos. Highs f'nday up per 60s Skill Testing Approved INSIDE TODA V Diseases of the heart will account /or 52 percent o/ aU deaths tn the notion lhb year. The account of one man's or· deal is found on Page A9 Index Al Ytvr S.rwl<• 1'14 h•ltrmlnlon 611 ltml lt"*<ll 11 Allft l.ancl•n 12 L. M. ltyt "' MO•IH 1111 lrfllM'tt M-t MlllY•I 1'-t It C.llltrlllt AS Ntlllfl•I Htwt M,(J Cltnlll... (I 11 O.afttt C-y A1' ~~' Cl hi••• Porl« " Cr•u-.rf " S-h 11•-1 OHtltHetlC.. ... S•M-M•''"' .... l:clll«l•I P... 4"6 I htt•l\IClft a lO l:ftltri.1-a 10.11 11•Ultr\ a11 halWtflt at J WulMr A4 ,erllWll-AIJ W"tclHtW\ ••.CJ " ... ~.,. IJ By PIDUP ROSMARIN Of'"' D411ty Piiot Sl.ttl Irvine school trustees ap- proved a program Wednesday to d e velop tes ts to meas ure minim um skills in reading, writ- ing and arithmetic which a stu- dent must have to graduate from high school. The action came as a result of a s tate law that requires school districts to design a minimum standard of education for high school graduates. . Under the state law, no stu- dent wiJJ be awarded a diploma after 1980 who bas not met stan- dards er proficiency. Dlstt1ct otflclab emphasized tho 1tandards a.re not to be the \ . aim o: educators. but rather lhe rock bottom level which it is huped all s tudents wi ll achieve, then surpass in varying degrees. The proficiency standards arc aimed at insuring that gradual· in g students arc able to cope with everyday ~ltuatlons that require some bal:>i<' tc:.irnini.:. The gouls arc :.is fundamental as m o kin~ sur<.' Johnny Alumnus rttn write a reasonable letter to ~randm.1. bnlancl' a checkbook. read u map on a trip to New York 11nd undC>rstanrl the finance page i>noi7s:h to know wht•ther his stocks an· nornl( down or up. Minimum proficiencies in E ngh!'h and language arts would measure a stu.ftnt•s . ability. to locate, absorb, analyte and evaluate written informatlon, and to summarize and Interpret it accurately. Students also will have lo be able to master abilities to write well enough to be read and un· derstood. Skill goals include the ability to complete a job application and write a business letter of com- plaint or inquiry. Math skills to be tested Include abilities to compute using whole numbers, fracUons and dec- i mals, and to solve percentage problems. The sol vtng of J¥!f'So.tttf con- su .n er finance problems, the (SeeSKD.IS, P•ae "Z) I \ Linda's Best Frlead Bert the Clubfooted Turtle of Irvine, desert tortoise who s urvived misadventure of turtle-napp\ng by Hltle boy with a fondness for reptiles, is reunited with owner Lin- da Miller, 14. Bert had been stashed ln bushes nearby Irvine police solved riddle of his cliaappearanco. • f' \ f I I AZ DAIL v PILOT ~~ergy \Effort Urged W ASIDNGTON (AP> -Presi- dent Carter renewed his appeal today for congressional action on his energy package and said all public officials would be judged by "the courage we are able to muster" tn facina up to the energy problem. · The President also told a ni:a· tionally broadcast news con· ference that he decided to delay sending Congress proposals for c hanges ln the tax laws until ac. tion ls completed on the energy package and Social Security legislation. As Carter spoke, the House completed action on a bUl· de- s igned to deal with the fiscal crisis in the Social Security system. The measure which goes to the Senate, would more than triple the Social Seeurity tax dur- ing the next decade. The tax portion or his energy package was being debated on the Senate floor. Carter sald he would fight for retention of his energy proposals i n the legislation which wUl go to a Senate-House conference com- mittee to work out dJlterences between the bHJs passed by the two bodies. Carter also said he decided to support strong sanctions against the sale of weapons lo South Africa. He predicted the United Nations would adopt a resolution imposing such an .embargo and that it would be observed around the world. The President made clear the U.S. action was sparked by the r ecent South African govern- ment's cr ackdown on black.! and their supporters. · Turning to the arms limitation talks with the Soviet Union, Carter said there la "a falrly good prospect .. that SALT will have reached the point within the next several weeks to allow description of the gener al out- lines of an agreement. Three Seized In Santa Ana .Drug Raids Santa Ana police uaerted they may have heavily dented a ma- jor drug ring when they arrested three people late Tuesd~ and seized heroin having an estimat- ed street value of $500,000. When coupled with other ar· rests connected with the drug in· vesligaUon that began three months ago, police said the operation has netted almost three pounds of hilh 1rade heroin. Arrested in Tuesday nJgbt's undercover buy-bust operaUon were Jose Gallegos Bejarano, 40. of Norwalk, Arrellano Contreras J asso. 20, of Santa Ana. and Moo· cerrat Anaya Rodriquez, 31. Police said the three s uspected drug dealers were arrested in Mrs. Rodriquez's home at 1118 W. Third Sl., Santa Ana. Woman Injured In Car Collision A woman was injured Wednes· day when her car collided with one driven by a teenager in Irvine, policeaald. Dorothy Lillian Rose, 47, of Garden Grove, complained of neck pain, but refused medical treatment at the scene of the 3 p.m. collision at Red Hill and Alton avenues. The other driver, William Frank Agee IV, 16, of715 Larkspur Ave., Corona del Mar, reportedly wasn't injured. South County News Additional coverage of the south county appears today on PageAlO. OR.ANOE COAST DAILY PILOT llW Or-0.11 O.lly ""'" ..... WlllC!l It.--IM ... -~ .... ,,_._.., ... Or_ Otelt-1 ....... 0.-....,. ------... =~.:k~==~= 1.i11 Y•ll•Y, '""111•. Se .. ~ Y•lln -~=~:.=.:~s:=~;:; =.~~~:'1.~:t::.i~.::._m Wnt .. , ll-r1N.-Prttleo11l•11C1 ~l- Jff, 111.~ v10,,..1G11111en<10. ... e1~ ~··-...... .,_.,,.~ lilltllfflnt&•• OHMM.IMt ..._,.,,111111 MIOllMIM ..... lllM .... Otf1Me C»lte=::~ .. ~=~':'.... =J .. ecftf ,,.,,_ eou<._,, -Valle•:Ul!OlL.e ... 1lll-tMIOl•t11'' .. ...., -r...,...,.. (714)MMn1 ClllMlfted Advertl""t MHl71 Seddlt--YtllO ...... OllK• .. , .. ,,0 Ft-S411CI_. .ttMIOO Thursday. October 27. 19n . . AP Wlrephoto CreeJJ!I Critters A g roup of spiders is s hown weaving an interesting web o n a sprinkler head outside J anc~ville in southern Wisconsin. Reds Test 'Killer' Satellite WASHINGTON CAP) -The Soviet Union has staged its s econd apparently s uccessful test or a sys tem that could threaten destruction of U.S. re· connaissance and other military satellites, the Pentagon disclosed today. "We have preliminary indica· lions that the Soviets launched ao antisatellite interceptor Wednes· day against a target satellite," a Pentagon s t atement s aid. "Pres umably, a successful in· tercept occurred." The announcement provided no elaboration, but defense of· ficials said the hunter-killer s atellite passed close enough to the target satellite to have permitted its destruction, if the Russians had wanted to knock out the target. T his was the first time that the Defense Department has volun· leered information on a Soviet anlisatellite test, reflecting an apparent Carter adminis tration intention to point up a Soviet de· velopment that is worrying U.S. leaders. Defense Secretary Ha rold Brown told a news conference Oct . 4 that U.S. offi cials de· termined that the Russians "have an operational capability that could be used against some satellites." Both "the United States and the Soviet Union rely heavily on satellites in earth orbit to watch militar-y developments in each oth er 's territory and to keep t rack of missile tests and other indicators. Fro.a Page Al SKILLS ... ability to u.se forms, charts and ~raphs and solve measurement and geometr y problems are other mm1mum goals. The t~ts to measure these pro· ficiencies will be developed by district officials and approved by the school board. Students \\ill be tested at least once in grades seven through nine. and twice in grades 10 and l l. Students who pass it once won "t have to hurdle the exams again. In cases in which students can- not meet basic graduation re- quirements, distr ict officials said, special tutoring will be given until the students can pass the le~ts Fr .. P-.e A J SECURITY ... The higher tax burden would fall more on upper-income wage earners than middle and lower· income workers. but all workers would pay substantially higher . oc1a l Security taxes . Ketchum said keeping Social Security recipients from having full-time jobs "deprives society of the skllls and ability or many people." He called the SJ.000 limit "one of the most onerous provisions or the Social Security law." Ullman argued against the amendment. saying it would al· low wealthy professionals such as doctors and lawyers to con· 11nue to work past age 65 and earn Sl00,000 or more per year while also drawing Social S~uri ty pensions "We an• making an annuity program instl•ad of a retirement proiiram." he s~ud Fro• Page Al GUN FOUND ... •'They employed a large number of people whom they put into t he businesses In which they'd invested," said Am· burgey. He said that over an un· specified period or time, s ome Persadan employes apparently e mbezzl e d "hundred s of thousands or dollars" of that in· vestm ent money. At that point, Fiori, Resco, Marone and two other m en were hired by the Persadan principals to "try tb recover the embezzled f'1nds," Amburgey asserted. Meanwhile , late in August, Bovan and at least two other Persadan employes which Am· burgey did not identify, allegedly kidnapped Kulik and held him for $100,000ransom. While they had Kulik, Am- burgey said, they "severely beat hlm." Flori, Resco, Marone and their two colleagues were used to pay the ransom for Kulik and the case was never reported to authorities, Amburgey said. ~·P"rom that point on," the de- tective asserted, "there was a re· ward offered allegedly by the Persadan ~roup, for Bovan and the kidnappers." The nature or • that reward is under investiga. tion, hes aJd. Police say they believe Bovan, 36. left his home ol 17332 Zeidcr Lane, Fountain Valley, to go into biding. He apparently su..ved out o( the Orange Coast area until Saturday night when he showed up al the El Ranchito restaurant, <109 28th St. lie left there early Saturday morning after being spotted by Miss Addison, who was also at the popular night spot. Police al· lege she tipped Flori, Resco and M aronc to Ro van's toe at ion. Police allege Bovan was met outside the restaurant by at leas t one of the trio who shot him nine times with a 9mm autom atic hand~un, before fl eeing in a green and white Cadillac. Based on a description of the car seen IC'aving the s cene, police arrested Fiori when he appeared at N<Jbcrs Cadillac Tuesday morning to sell the car. Costa Mesa police, who wanted to question him about the car , ar· rested him when they allegedly fo und nearly three pounds of co· came in his possession. By tracing the car ·s registra· lion, poUce found Resco, Marone nod Miss Addison. Poli ce said they were told where to look for the gun, and li feguards Larry Gibson and John ntaucr waded through the thigh-deep mud for 20 minutes befor e finding the still·cocked firearm. Amburgey said he and other In- vestigators are probing the role played by the four Persadan men in the case to determine the nature of the "reward" they al· k~cdly llfft'rcd for the location of Bovan . ''We're mterested ln taJk. inJt to them," he said, noting that they huve appurently been out or the countrv ort Sites Eyed County Uy KATllV ('I.ANCY Of ttte O•lly PllOI ~t•lt About 464,000 of the 500.000 flights that departed or arrivetJ al Orange.• County J\i l'J)ort so far lh1s yl'ar have been liy private aircraft ur whut county officials refer to as gtmeral aviCJlion. Orange County supervisors de· cidcd to try again Wednesday to find a new airfield site that might handle some of tho!ic private takeoffs and landings. The board voted 3·1 to order a survey of possible airport sites including one proposal sug· gesl.ed Wednesday by a Hunt· ington Beach homeowner s group. the HOME Councib Supervisor Thomas Riley cast the lone dissenting vote calling the study "a waste of effort, a waste or lime." Super visor Ralph C la rk, however, called the need for a new general p vi<ltion airport ··very critical.· He said Orange County Airport 1s now the second busiest airport m the nation and finding a new location ror private aircraft could reduce much of its traffic. Airport Manage r Robert Bresnahan said today about 45 percent of the 464,.000 pr ivate aircraft flights at the airport as of Sept. 30 were what are called touch and go flights which are practice takeoffs and landings by pilots. Bresnahan also noted the coun· • ty's last major study aimed at rmding new airport sites was in 1969. Since then, he said his de· partmenl has made periodic studies of new or existing airport sites. The HOME Council's sugges· lion was that supervisors study development or a general av1a· tion airport on portions or lhe Seal Beach Na\·al Weapons Sta- tion HOME Council s pokesman Steve Schumochcr s aid ap· proaches and takeoffs could be directed over a Huntin$(ton Rea c h indus trial p a rk s o homcown1:rs would not be db · turbed. Cites Private Bresnahan said today the Seal Ueuch Navy property has not been considered in the past as an airport possibility. For one thing, Bresnahan said, he had understood the s tation was used for storing ammunition and might ha a dangerous loca- r,ra.PageAI MAJORS ••. the taped conversations being played in open court and later at· tempted to question government witnesses on the relevancy of the m ateriaJ presented pertaining lo Maiors. "d On the tapes, one m an l en· tified by a government, agent as L. D. "Luke" Morris. tells on tbe la pc of taking two bets from Ma· jors. He is 1hen asked by a man al· lcged by the government to be Randall Lloyd Keef, "How did ,·ou run into him? Was he al the Brigadoon Ca private club)?" "Yeah," responded the man al· leged to be Morris. "He dated Barbara once before. l flew up to Enid and got him." l\J ajors has attended several Grand National Quail Hunts. where celebrities and politicians mingle during several days of q uail hunting near Enid, Okla. The man alleged to be Keer later is heard to say, "That's ~omething. }{e's dating Barbara. the blonde?" "Well, this is just the second date she's bad with him. but Lhe last one was about six m onths ago and he said 'I'll call you next time I come.· ··replied the voice alleged to be that of Morris. "Of course she didn't think he would, and he was up !or the quail hunt in Enid ... "He called down and talked to her .•. and her old ego just pumped, you know. a thousand percent and she's trying to figure how to get him back down here and 1 said l'll fl y up there and get him and I did." Introducing the JVC 3060. See the world's first portable AM/FM Radio-TV-Cassette Recorder Flights lion for aircraft. 1''or another , he said. the sta· lion is not presently u11ed aa an airport. County supervisors in the past hud asked military leaders for permission lo use three other de- fense facilities in the county for aircraft tllghts, Bresnahan not- ed, but were turned down in all three cases. Those facilities included El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Los Almaitos Naval Air Station and 1\1 arine Corps property in tbe center of Mlle Square Park. Supervisor Clark said Wednes· day that without the possibility or a new airport for private aircraft and those used for businessmen "there is nothing but disaster facing us." Storm Brings Drizzles to Orange Coast The southern edge of a Pacific storm brought drizzles to the Orange Coast this morning, and weather forecasters said more can be expected. The weatherman said the present storm s hould m ove northeast tonight. but that more d rizzles are possible through Fri- day morning. He said onother Pacific storm i s approaching Northern California and that more driule, whic h may increase to rain, is possible Friday night and Satur· d ay. Surf. also stirred up by the P acific s torm, dropped from Wednesday's highs. Waves of four to five feet were reported ln Huntington Beach but wel'e down to two or -three feet elsewhere on the coast. Small craft advisorles con· linued in effect from Point Con. ception to the Mexlcan border. JVC Model 9475. FM/ AM/SWl/SW2 Stereo Radio, Cassette Rtcorder Price '250°0 This JVC quality crafted un1t includes Ci 3'' diagonal black & white TV that locks in clear, bright pictures on VHF and UHF, a sensitive FM and AM radio with an amplifier and speaker to give you clear. rich music or sports; plus a cassette player recorder for listening to your favorite tapes or recording your favorite pro- grams. Records audio from radio or TV plus It has a built In condenser mic for voice record· ing. All In one! Yau·ve never seen anything like 1t. Also available without the cassette recorder (Model 3050) at $190.00. Just 8 2 00°0 JVC's 94 75 11 pack0d with features that make 1t a best buv. lls bl~est feature is sl ereo sound. for recording and playback It even records stereo FM ci1recllv lrom the built·in tuMr. Two big 5·· duel-cone speakers. Two -left and righl -bU•ll·ln concienser microphone.. Two easy·to-see meters. An uP·to-the-mmute casselle mechanism w1lh full auto·slop and cue/review tacitlt1es • J "ull l-"flc•fo'11 H urrtutl ;,., 1•1., .. flur t•c•r"1tt1u1I 0111• \1•e1r (.;unrflt1f•••· On I,.,.,.~, P rod twl ti•· .ftwll! 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa "_.....,.. . ....,._ 2 ·~ ., ..... c... •. Phone 642-8882 Storo Hours DalJY 9-6 Sat. 9.5:30 "'""" ... ".,. "'" ... ''" n ........... ............. S..-.keT_.,_.,_ .. I \ 1 .. TOCKS I SYL VtA PORTER T h u rsday's Closing Price8 • NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Oliot•ll..,. lntllldo! lr-0.• ..,,..,. i..w Yo'11. Ml...,.tt, .-.c111<, Pew, 16.tOfl. O.t"41 •r>d Cllltlnn.oll rnKk u cn-....,rfll0'1.0hl!w H .. l.,...IAtM<l•ttonof S.Cutll'-' OH..,._ 111>1IN( DAil. Y PILOT ·~ Grants, Loans Can Help, Too .... ·~ BySVLVIA.POlrl'D , ~ ........ ~...-) .. ~ Student:. who arc not eUglble for Ud U...ouib le~r~~ programs may be able to get help from stale or ~lal col ... :; lt!t:e programs -<u;s uming need can be pro.ed. Student(. <:an use financial :ud Corms. available from high school.\ couns.:tors State programs of'Jer more than t8IJO miJhon i • grants and many lo;an opportunibes for restdA!nt3. ':40 <1' Under the state student tacenttve grant program ... :. the u s government mulches the state cranta to students .. : Average grant 1s $500, maximum Is $1,!IOO a year. C!leck th~~ Cahforrua State Scholarship and Loiin Commlallon. l4l<t• Fifth St.. Sacramento, CA. 95814 with suctt_ .que9tlons as~: Cnn part·tlmc and half-time students get awards? Ca11>=-' awards be used only at private colleges. pubic colleges. o~ both" Can grants be used at out·of·staie colleges? When 1~-. the application deadline'> What are requirements? ..:: <?>COLLEGE PROGRAMS: MANY HAVE their ow~: fmanc1al aid packages of grants. loans and )obs. Expens1v~_:~ colleges usually have more moneythanlowercostones. ..:. (3) Cooperation education: This complete dlcatlonaJ:: plan includes car~r-related work as part ol the curriculum::~ More than 1.000 coUeges offer programs under which stu~!• dents alternate each seme:;ter or quarter between tulltimt-: :;tudy and Culltimt' work :Z-· For a free copy of "Undergraduate Programs or.·, Cooperative Education 10 the U S and Canada.·· wnte to ?'<allonal Commission for Cooperative Education. 360 Hunt· mgton Ave .. Boston, Mass 02115 (4 > Loans by col· ~--------.... Money's Worth leg es. Some colleges of· fer long-term loans at tow interest rates and with tolerable r epay· rnent schedules, though the amount of the loan may be much less than from other sources. The loans can be short·term. loo, or car( take the form of postponed or deferTed tuition. Interest · rates generally compare (avorably with rates charged .by others; repa) menl after graduation may be geared t.o ID• come. Check w1th college a1cf dlrectors. .. ($) 0111ER WAN SOURCES: STUDENTS who qualif)I , under none of these might try such lolln sour ces ~s c1v1c or religious organaiat1ons. credit unions. banks. msurance companies and finance companies. Before turning to a com· mercial lender. where rates are usttally highest. check local . civic and reh.ious organizations. consult high school~ guidance counselors. commtm1ty centers, churches and, :i1m1lar :;ources. Bsfore taking a loan. find out· . -What 1s the simple interest rate; ~much will be paid back, principal plus interest? ~What extra charges are involved? .. -How long 1s the repayment period *<I what is the monthly payment? When do payments begm? • -Can the loan be terminated before the contract ex· pires'' How much notice must be given? Are there . pt:nalt1es? -DOES THE LOAN CONTRACT contaMl a .. balloon eta.use ... under\\ h1ch a larger payment is tacked on at the end? -Docs the contract include a clause providing for . "wage .1.M;1gnmcnts · or "garnishing." under which the., lender c.m ask an employer to lake a specified sum from .· monthly earnings and send 1t to the lender If the borrower t.ld au Its? Rt·Jcc.:t an) contract that contains such a clause. -Arc there any other restnctions on the loan? · '· Market Zigs, Zags \ Dow Advances A.gai~: NEW YORK (AP) ~stock prices advancedunevenht_in :.in errcthc session toduy. The Dow Jones averagt1oC30 industnals, up more than 8 points at its mad-day peak. showed a 3 4&galn to816.87. · 1\dvances matntalned n 2·1 lend over losers among New York Stock Exchange·hsted issues ~ Trading was atUve. Bil{ Board volume reached 18 S9 million shares. , Analysts said add1ponaJ buyers appeared to have been attructed by the market's showing Wednesday, when the' Dow made a stand st the 800 level ,;lnd then JUmped U .87, points for its $harpest gaJn in m<>rt than six months. Brokers al!lo noted encourngement over resistance from some leading California banks to the latest Increase in the prime lending rate from 71,2 to 7n~ l)GrcenL ·, Mat St.0~1111 Did NEV. YO~K CAPI Advenced Deel!~ Vnthanoed Tvtll IHU..'i ....... 1911 hltl>, New 1Vl1 IOWi Prev. Adv~ncta 31r-v ~l Oe<llrwd 731 nt UMh•n\l'ld 261 .31' -----..:-----------t hlll luws ~ M N•w 1911 lllQl'li • • ..... ..,, '"""' ,, ~· AMI• t.ALH Due to late transmission today's llstlno w ilt not· a~ar fn the O•ftY f'.>llot. · St~lu '" Tiie !ipotU.ltc ~ew YORK (APJ• s.111, 4 P.m, ptle. •lld ntl Cl\enOt Of , ... llft .. n lfto•I •If" Ntw Yont Stock E-c""'nee l~• 1••111119 MllOIWlll~ •I lllOrt INft $11_ ' Cltl<ori> .. • ·~.eoo 2h't + " S.mt>•n lht • . »1,eoo 22tt -•• Oen Motor\ .. ,.. ~IUOO •ti,, -h Pow Ch • , 261,CCIO 211, + "7 l>•J>,ICo 212,100 2Sloo + \<a NCR Corp ....... !lJ,100 ai-. .... IHlll StHI .. in,JOO 20~ + lit ~••I KCICl<ll-..... 6'.-0 ~h -.. AmTT .... ISJ,600 M\il -~ l-•'J~I> ., ... • UJ,500 ffh ..... ,•ftMCO • ••• .. lSJ,400 29\t • .,. • t~•<o IM, ..... 146,.JOO 21"" + (.I us~,............ 10,too aow + "' Wl!lflfltr ... ., • T0,600 1 + Vt eaaon • .. ... ... tu,.100 "'"' ..... • .. . • f , I t 2 • 'I LagunB/South Coast • After n oon N.Y. Stocks E D I TIO N • VOL. 70, NO. 300, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1977 TEN CENTS hnas Tied to Mtirder? ,Arme d , Fleeing Newport Cops . Kill Suspect Temple Denies Report' By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ot..,.o.ltyrt ... ~ Newport Beach police, aided by lifeguards wading through thigh-deep mud have found the gun they believe was used to pump the nine fatal shots into a Fountain Valley man in their city early Saturday morning. By 1'11CHAEL PASKEVICH OllM Dally Piiot Stafl A fleei ng robbery suspect. who allegedly pulled a shotgun from his pants when corner ed by Newport Beach police, was shot to death Wednesday ni ght in Costa Mesa, police reported to- day. Wayne Michael Nabb, 21, of 133 16th St., Costa Mesa. died of bullet woWlds to the head and chest at about 10:45 p.m. at the corner or old Newport Boulevard and E. 16th St., police said. Newport Beach police were contacted after Nabb allegedly Lab Man Hurt in SC Blast By ANNE COOPER Of IN O.lly Pl .. 1 S14ff An explosion at the TRW test facility northe a s t of San Clemente sent a heavy three-foot lid smashing through two steel sheds Wednesday before It struck and critically injured a lab technician. The victim, Raymond Lynch, 38, of 203 Calle Dorado, San Clemente, was reported in critical condition today in the in· t en s ive c are unit a t San Clemente General Hospital. "It was a freak accident." said Ron Coleman. San Clemente fire chief and a personal friend or Lynch's. "If he'd been standing two feet either way. the thing wouldn't havetouched him." Bolts which failed on a pres- s u r ii e d .. stea m -heated a utoclave, used to e s tablish special conditions for chemical experiments, were blamed for the accident. said Capt. Nick Maule of the San Clemente Fire Department. Maule said the autoclave lid was hurled through the steel roof of one building, about 50 feet into the air, and down through the roof of the chemistry lab, where Lynch was working. The technician suffered head injuries. a broken right arm and multiple lacerations in the acci· dent, said Maul e. He was in sur· gery Wednesday night and was responding to treatment today, the hospital spokesman said. Lynch has worked 12 years al the TRW Capistrano facility. s aid Irving Littman, project director for the firm. His wife, J udi. works al a San Clemente camera shop and has been active in local civic affairs, Coleman s a id . The Ly nc hes have a daughter, Wendy, who attends Ole Hanson Elementary School. South County Additional coverage of the south county appears today on Page AlO. Or:::~ .. ~ast \\'eatlJcr Local drizzles becoming partly c loudy in a fter· noons. Slightly coole r days. Lows tonight in mid·50s. Highs Friday up· per 60s. INSIDE T ODAY Oisell$es of the heart will account for 52 percent of all death$ in the nation this year. The account of one man's or· deal IS found on Pu{lt' A9 Index ••You•S•"•iu• ••• 1n1erm1u10n 1111 £rm• tom~• 111 """ l•IWl4" llt L.M. l e wd A• MOVIH ltl 11w11 ... u a.• Mut,.•1 ,,...,,, II Colil•'"" At "'" ... '' ....... A•,a Cl•HlllH Cl 11 Dr•nt • C-y At• C'"'lu Cl hl•il Plf1.. II• ,,.. .... ~ (l '-" •• , 0..111 "•llcn ' .U $110 M••llftt II• H llttl ll ,._ M-1 Ttltvl•i• lllt l11'4NI-1 1 .. 11 Tl•t1l1rs I ll , .. ,........ .,.., •.. ,.., .. hf .. llet.... AIJ Wtl' .. Ntwl 64,Q ..___ IJ tried to rob two patrons at knife· point in the parking lot of a Newport Beach r estaurant Wednesday night. Costa Mesa police Lt. George Lorton said Nabb was later seen on foot in Costa Mesa by an un· identified cab driver . Newport Beach police patrolman Robert O'Neil r e· portedly cornered Nabb and took a buck knife away from rum. O'Neil was unaware that Nabb was concealing a shotgun. said Lt. Lorton. ~lyPilot5UH ...... M'eanwhile, the four people ar· rested on suspicion or conspiracy to commit murder in the shooting of Stephen John Bovan, were scheduled for an initial court apJ pearance today in the Harbor Judicial District Court. According to police accounts. as O'Neil sought protection behind the rear of rus patrol car. Nabb reportedly pulled a single· barrel shotgun from beneath his clothing and pointed it at the of· ficer. THIS IS GUN POLICE BELIEVE WAS USED IN NEWPORT MURDER LAST WEEKEND Stlll-cocked 9 mm Weapon Recovered Wednesday From Upper Newport Bay Detectives, who have been working around the clock, say their investigation of what they term a .. bizarre .. cas e bas broadened out to include the Ha re Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and an investment firm in Newport Beach. Det. Sam Amburgey said there are "a number of people" still under scrutiny fo r their part in the events leading to Bovan's death. Within seconds. Ne wport Beach patrolman Bob Stephens and Sgt. Robert Gatewood ar· n ved on the scene. Nabb was re· portedly shot. after he ignored comm ands to "drop the gun." Police said Nabb did not fire his weapon, which had been hid· den under his loose-fitting shirt, with the barl'el extending down his right pant leg. Police said the shotgun was hi~den ~er Nabb's loose-fitting shirt. with the barrel extending down bis right pants leg. PoUce said Nabb did not fire the weapon. At least six shots were fired by polic~. with two rounds slrildne Nabb, Lt. Lorton said. Costa Mesa paramedics i.aid Nabb died at the scene. Police said the incident began at a bout 10:30 p.m . in the parking lot of Delaney's Restaurant on the Lido Peninsula. Nabb aJ . legedly tried to rob a man and a <SeeSHOT, Page AZ) Storm Brings Drizzles to Orange Coast The southern edge of a Pacific storm brought driazles to the Ora nge Coa.5t thb morning, and weather rorecasters said more can be expected. The weatherman said the present storm should move northeast tonight, but that more drizzles are possible through Fri- day morning. He said another Pacific storm is approaching Northern California and that. more drizzle. which may increase to rain, is possible Friday night and Satur· day. Surf.' also stirred up by the Pacific storm. dropped from Wednesday's highs. Waves of four to five feet were reported in Huntington Beach but were down to two or three feet elsewhere on the coast. Small craft advisories con· tinued in effect from Point Con· ception to the Mexican border. Section Scans Sailing Scene A s pecia l magazine section with timely advice for sailors an- ticipating many Cine winter sail· ing days comes to you in today's Daily Pilot. "Orange County Boating" is a 12·page magazine with stories and pictures of Interest to begin· ning and expert boaters alike. For the last word on sail and power boating fun, look for "Orange County BQ•tlng" in· side your Daily Pilot. , Suspect Ide ntified ABU DHABI, U n\t~d Arab Emirates (AP > -The accust:.'<I assassin of the United Arab Em i r a tes d e puty for ei g n minister was identified by of· ficials today as a 19-year·old Palestinian, Saleh Mohammed Khaleel, who was •PPrehended on the sP,Ot last Tuesday alter be killed Sa1.f lbG Gbobasb. R eds T est 'Kille r ' -~Satellite f ·WASHINGTON <AP > -The Sovie t Union has st aged its s econd apparently s uccessful t est of lJ syste m that could thrcall'n dt·">lrucllon of U.S. re· c·onna1:..!><1m·c and other military satellites. the Pentagon dlscl05ed today "We have prehminary indica· t 111n~ th;1t the StwicL'> launched an ant1);atc•ll1lc.> 1nt<.•rceptor Wednes· day a~atn.,t a tar~t·t !>.tl<'llile," a Pen t a~on ... tall'mcnt !>a id. "Presumably, a ~ucccs.,ful in· tercept occurrN1 " The announcem<•nl provided no elaboration. but defense of· fi c 1a ls said the hunter-killer satellite passed close enough to the target satellite to have perm it led its destruction, if the Russians had wanted to knock out the tar get. This was the first time that the Defense Department has volun· leered information on a Soviet antisatellite test, refl ecting an apparent Carter administration intention to point up a Soviet de· velopment that is worrying U.S. leaders Defense Secretary Ha rold Brown told a news conference Oct. 4 that U.S. officials de· te rm ined tha t the Russia ns "ha ve an operational capability that could be used against some satellites." Both the United States and the Soviet Union rely heavily on satellites in earth orbit to watch military developments in each < ee LAlJNCU, Page i\2) Clemente Hig h Ral,lie s for Homecoming • Friday is pep day a t San Clemente High School, culminal· in g in the school's homecoming ga m e Friday n ight against Univcri.1ty High School of Irvine. F riday activities include: A pep a"scmbly at IO a m. on th(' football field A contest to S<•e how many s tudents can be stuffed into a Volkswagen "buJOt." at 12: 10 p.m. in front of the library -A homecoming p arade at 3 p. m., starting at Calle Seville on !'venida del Mar and proceeding inland lo El Camino Real -The football ga me at 8 p.m. on the field. -A homecoming dance follow· ing the game at about 10 p.m. in the school ~ym . , The seni or c l a~s voted for 15 girls to comp<'tc• fo r homecoming quc<'n this ycur. The football team elected rive of the 15 as fin altsts. The rl\ l' girls who wil l com· pr ise th!' <iuecn nnd her court oC prtnccs!il'S urc Debbie Conzales M arlsa Sisca, Sanely Lacebal: Lynne Cheatum and Caroline Mar tin. The queen wHJ be announced at Friday's homecoming footb~ll ga me. . ·-··-· .. ----. -·---.----. ------·-·--·-·- Sky Message LBHS Queen Named on High Lag una Beach Hi gh School never minded a little fl ash with its annual Homecoming Queen halft ime activities, and this year will be no different. Announ cement of the new qul'cn will come via m essenger -a par;H·hulbl >A ho will drop on· t11 thl· lugh M·hool football field from an air plane. \\ 1ith any luck al all, he'll still have the envelope containing the n:.1me of the nL·w queen. which he "'111 <kll\'l'r to Michael Gaffnt.')'. master or ccrcmonws The La~una Bc.>ach lllgh School artists \.\'Ill med Dana Hills Hi gh School players Fnd~y night But homecoming game ac· .., tivi ties will begin Jong before the 8 p.m . kickoff. Restaurateur Harry Moon will host the football team, and other invited school guests for his an· nual team breakfas t at the Colony restaurant. ·.Moon has donated food for the morning fuelup for more than a decade to the team, coaches, cheerleaders and song leaders. This year's "11th annual Pan· l'akl• Demolition Derby," will be nQ t.'xception. Th<' Homecoming P a r ade bcJ?ins al 2 o.m. Frid av from l.uycr field up St. Ann ·s· Drive, down Park A venue, left onto CSee QUEEN, Page AZ > Tape: Farrah Mate Bet, Dated Blonde OKLAHOM A CITY CAP > - Television star Lee MaJors al· legedly placed $1,000 bets on col- lege football games and alleged· ly h ad two dat e:. with an Oklahoma City woman. the latest l ast Novem ber. government wi retap tapes disclose. (Related photo. A5) The wiretap tapes naming Ma· jors, star of the telev1s1on sen es ''The Six Million Doll ar Man .. a nd husba nd or t c lev1s1on personality Far rah Fawcett· :\I ajors, were played Wednesday by the government in the case of seven people on trial in U.S. Dis· trict Court here'for aJlegedly con· ducting a gambling opralion. T1''! tape naming Majors was mill.le Nov. 24. The recording told how Majors allegedly made $1.000 bets on the Pitt~burgh and Oklahoma fool· ball games to be played that weekend. The conversations were among 60 taped calls the government has introduced into evidence. They were r ecorded during courl·a pproved wiretaps on <See MAJORS, Page A2) He said the investigation is now probing the relationship of four men he described as mem· bers of the Hare Krisl)na Temple in Laguna to the dead man and the suspects. Agni Dave. president or the Laguna Beach temple, said the four men had at one lime been members, but have not been ac- tive for more than a year. He said they had not practiced the cult's teachings prohibiting eating of meat, engaging in illicit sex, 1ambJlng and consumption • of intoxi~ants, nor had they at· tended the required motnlng and evenltil 41aJly n•~tous ~trYlces. One of those men. Aleunder Kulik, 28', wu arrested last weekend In Mission Viejo wnen Sheriff's deputies found more than one pound of nearly pure oriental heroin in jars on the floor ol his Stutz Blackhawk car. The link that connects the four alleged Krishna members to the Bovan murder is a Newport Beach investment firm they operated under the name Persadan. Three ot the four suspects in the Bovan murder, Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, Ant.bony "Little Tony" Marone, Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven Resco, 28, were employed by Persadan. The fourth suspect, Debra Ann Addison, 24, is as· sertedly Fiori's girlfriend. Bovan, Amburgey said, worked for one of the firms in which Persadan had invested some money. The story, as detailed by Am· burgey. goes like this: Kulik, and bis partners, Joe Davis, 257 Canyon Acres Drive, Laguna Beach, Roy Christopher Richards of t.he same address, <See GUN, Page A2) o.11, ............ .. QUEEN CONTESTANTS -One of these ~irls will \>e nnnounc<.>d as San Clemente homecoming queen Friday at the school's football game against University High, Cloc~wise, fr~m ~ttom, they are Caroline Martm, Mansa Sisca, Debbie Gonzales Lynne Cheatum and Sandy Lacebal, ' \ •• A% CAIL Y PILOT l tSC Pastor's ServiCes siated A memorial service conducted by clergymen of all faiths will be held at. South Coast Community Hos pital Monday for Rev. Robert Enl ow O'Brian, 82, who was stru ck and killed by an automobile 1'uesday night. A family spokes man said priests and pastors from several community c hurches will participate in the short service at ~e ho.5pital auditorium begin- ning at 11 a.m. Rev. O'Brian was the unof· ticial hospital chaplain for three years at South Coas t . and hos pital s pokes men s aid he brought comfort to hundreds oC patients during that period. The former secretary of state of Iowa moved to South Laguna in 1967, making his home at 216Sl Wes ley Drive, with bis wife Mabel. The pastor was walking home after performing a wedding at Heisler Park in Laguna Beach when he was struck on Coast Highway at6:45p.m . Dr. o·Brian, an educator, >cholar and clergyman, also was a successful businessman in his ~arlier years, and served as a ~onsultanl to two foreign coun· tries after resigning as president >f Morningside College in Iowa. lo addition lo his wife, Mabel, >f the family home, Dr. O'Brian ts survived by a son, Edward ;)'Brian ol Anaheim, an adopted :laughter, EraBeJle Thompson ?nd a foster son the pair raised in :osta .ruca, Guillermo Cruz. He also leaves two brothers, ra mes O'Brian or Clearwater, Fla., and Michael O'Brian or 4og ans port, Jnd., three ~randchildren and a great· ~randsoo. The family suggests conlribu· ions may be made to the clergy und at South Coast Community Iospital. Crash Victims Still Serious Two Laguna Beach teen"gers injured in a Laguna Niguel auto accident Monday night remained in lhe intensive care unit at Mis· sion Community Hospital today in Mission Viejo. James ruddeU, 18, of 20 Vista de Catalina, was in critical condi· lion today, a b06pital spokesman said. St.even Pendergast, 18, or 30842 ~ Drjv~. was in very se_~ c~dllion, sbe saJd. The tWo graduates of Laguna Beach High Sehool were injured when their car Sheared Ort a COO• crete light standard along El Lazo Roed, near the federal Zig· gurat building, California Highway Patrol officers said. ,....,.P_AJ LAUNCH •• ·• " other·s territory and to keep track or missile tests and other indicators. This is believed to contribute to mutual deterrence and to dis· courage adventurism or surprise mililatf moves. President Carter appealed March 9for a mutual U.S.-Soviet ban on sate llile·destroyiog weapons, but the Russians bave never publicly responded and have held \hree antisatellite tests since then. One test in May was rated a failure, but subsequent tests in June and this week are considered successes. 1V, Stere o Stolen L:agunan Santos Delgado told pohce someone entered his home through a living room window Wednesday morning, taking a televblon set and stereo valued al $200. Santas, of 425 Jasmine St., said the thief entered the house between 8:30 and 10:30 a.m. OftANOt COAt'T t..ISC DAILY PILOT =.:t'.~~~~'.·r. :.':i:::;.::. ~\4""°4'"''"'~' ,._ ............ ,... "*°":'.!:,ftflhV~~~=,,:=-~~ ~a ~•U•tt. ltVlf'lt. "OdltlM<'t V•H•Y a"" ~'"-~"CN•t • ...,....._,..,. ~ i. _,....,.~vnl•n --.,, ,,,. ~) -IVI .,..., I\ el DI Wu t ... -.c;Mte ... -., 111.,..,. • .,.,._ · .. -..... "'"'"'"'--·-J•O II. Cw1irt V1<•Pf .. ldoftt-0.-<11111otN90r ,,.....~ It di tor '=9.~,;,"'i't CMnftM,C.-ll~P.- 'lt\ltl.i\I Mll_.flt !All"" L.Nun. hlCt!Offlce --n .. o........,.,..sc,... w111.,.,.,.,. .. P.o.1o.-...~ OflleH C..141 Mlw: lllOW. .... VS!<Mt "'Cl.ii:~~:.~~~~W~",.~~·d ..... ~01_,,_.., ,..~"· ('f1•)~1 Ct•••lfled A~el111int IU-M1t L411V11• B .. ell All O.,ettl'Mntt: Tflepltone 4......e ,..-..,.ci.-.... 4...UOO ' E'r091PageA1 QUEEN ... Glenneyre Street. up Legion St reel, right onto Short Street and back to the football field. Student club representative!'>, the homecoming princesses, team members and other stu· d ents will Participate in the hour· long parade, led by the high school band. And s tudents a r e getting psyched up for the big game this week with a series of school ac· t i vilies, including Hollywood Day, Cosmic Galactic Day and Ha lloween Day. Stude nts are dressing appropriately for the theme days. Th~s year_'s homecoming queen candidates include six prince!>!>C.-. a nd l\o•o honorar y AFS prin- cesses. The cour t includes J anis Brahams. Rosslyn Cox, Kann Lane, Wendy P ott er, Lind a Ro bertson and Elisa T y ner . Honorary princesses a r e Beatrice Russo from Italy and Shadi Tchoubineh from Jran. .Zoning R e q u est Okayed A proposal to rezone 50 acres of 11 70 ·acre Capistrano Valley 1wrcel lo permit single.family homes r:ither than apartments won the ttpproval of Orange County supervisors Wednesday. But the bourd included with ils unanimous approval require· mt.'nls that the developer put low or modcraU.'·income apartments or t•ondoma niu ms on the re· mainder of the property. The land is located on the east side of Del Obispo Street at Stonehill Drive. County planners, in a report to supervisors, noted the zoning re- quest "is indicative or the trend lo develop property at lower densities and thus at a higher price in the Southeast Orange County area." As a result, the County PJan· ni ng Commission recommended that the remaining 20 acres be developed for apartments or con· dom1niums and that t he de- veloper include with his plans a n •porl on lower.cost hous ing. At the suggestion of Supervisor Thomas Riley that report will in- clude recommendations on ways to provide low and moderate-cost housing on the developers• prop-erty. It also wi ll include description of state or fodcral subs idies to help provide those homes And the report should describe the number of low and mooerate· ancome homes located in the sur. rounding c·ommunaty as well as a laslin~ or maJor employment llrt'a~ within a 30-minute drive from tht: development Haley told frllo~ supervisors lhe developm1:nt could provid<- as many as 96 low or moderate- p r i cf• d apartm ents or con. clom1n1um:.. The development also will be planned to complement the trail system along the nearby Sam Juan Creek. Rilt:y said. • Fro• Page A l GUN FOUND. a nd J oe Federosky of 1300 Bluebird Canyon Road. formed ~heir firm_ to invest their money m JocaJ pnvate businesses. According to Laguna Beach police CapL Neil Purcell, the four Persadan principals are members of lhe Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and Richards was a former president of the temple. "They e m p l oyed a la r ge !'um ber or people whom they put •nto the businesses in which the y'd inves ted." said Am· burgey. He said that over an un· specified period of time, some Pers adan employes apparently e mb ezzl e d "hund r e d o; of thousands of doll ars" of that an vestment money. At that point, Fiori. Resco. Marone and two other m en were hired by the P ersadan principals to "try to recover the e mbezzled funds," Amburgey asserted. Meanwhile, late in Augus t. Bovan and at least two other Persadan employes which Am· burgey did not identify. allegedly kidnapped Kulik and held him for $100.000 ransom. While they had Kulik. Am burgey said , they "severely beat him." Fiori. Resco. Marone and their two colleagues were used to pay the ransom for Kulik and the case was never r eported to authorities, Amburgey said. "From that point on," the de· tective asserted, "there was a re· ward offered allegedly by the Persadan group, for Bovan and the kidnappers." The nature or Fro81PageAl SHOT •.. woman a t knife point an lhc rest aurant pa rking lot. Police said the pair ran away He apparently chasi>d t hem. but was una ble t o catc h them because his movement was im· paired by the shotgun he was car· rying in rus pants. After eluding lhe would·be rob· ber, the couple called police. Although the shooting involved Newport Beach policemen, an in· vest.lgalion will be carried out, by Costa Mesa police because the fatal incident occurred within Costa Mesa city limits, Lorton explained. All three of the Newport policemen reportedly fired their · weapons. but an autopsy must be completed before it can be de· term ined which officer fl red the fatal bullet. lnfo rm11tion compiled by Costa Mesa police will be forwarded to the Orange County Distract Al· torney's office, which will decide IC any charges s hould be filed against the officers, or It the s hooting was in s elf·defem1e, Lorton said. • • that rewurd is under investiga. lion. he said. Police say they believe Bovan. 36, left his home at 17332 Ze1d1::r Lane, Fountain Valley, to go i~to hid mg lie apparently stayed out or the Orange Coast area until Saturday night when he showed up at the El Ranchito restaurant, 409 28th St. He left there early Saturday morning after being spotted by M i~~ Addison, who was also at the popular night spot. Police al· lege she tipped Fiori, Resco and l\J arone to Bovan ·s location . •Poli ce allege Bovan was met outs a de the restaurant by at least one of the trio who s hot him nine ti mes wa lh a 9mm automatic handgun. befor e fleeing 1n a gre<'n and white Cadillac. Based on a description of the car seen leaving lhc scene, police arr est ed Fiori when he appeared at Nabers Cad ill ac Tuesday morning tosell the car . Costa Mesa police, who wanted to question him about the car, ar- rested him when they allegedly found nearly three pounds of co- (•aine in his possession. fly tracing the car 's regislra· t 1on. pohce found Resco. Marone and Miss Addison Potier :;aid thev were told \\ ht•re to look for the gun. and l1fl'g uard<1 L~rry r.abson and John 111 '4urr waded through the thi~h·dcC'p mud for 20 minutes before fandang the still·cocked fi rearm. Am buq:ey said he and other in· vestigators arc probing the role played by the four Persadan men in the case to determine the nature of the "reward" they al- legedly offered for the location of Bovan. "We're interested in taJk· ing to them." he said, noting that they have apparently been out of the counlry. 2nd Marine Arrested in SC Burglaries A second Camp Pendleton Marine was arrested this week by San Clemente police, who said ~_,two men aro being questioned in connection With a string of re- cent burglaries. David Leroy Lounsberry, 20, w as arrested Wednesday al Camp Pendleton·. lie is In the San ClcmentcJ'11il on $25,000 ball. A 17·year·ol Marine was arrested Sunday nnd Is being held at Orange County J uvenile Hall. Lt. Huy lls rlman, of the San Clt•mC'ntc Poli ce Department, said the two men are being ques· lloni'd in connection with more lhnn a do~en recent burglaries. llnrtman said detectives believe some or the burglaries were com- m i ttcd by one Individual, others by two men working In concert. • I C'oamt• Tax Bike1 Pension Plan Mov~ 'Costly' Hy GARY GRANVll..l.E Of 1M 0¥11~ Plltl Sl"I If locul governments j n Orange County are forced to abandon their own pension plans In favor of Social Security coverage for puhlic cmploycs. the move will Fire Truck To Take On LB's Hills Laguna Beach has ordered a shiny, ne w S46,500 fire truck with lhe capability of handlin~ the Art Colony's dirt roadSt....an'd steep hills: F i re Chief Cha rley Kuhn originally asked councilmen to approve spending $46,435 for the 500 gallon capacity truck from Emergency One, Jnc. llut last week the flre chief said he had reconsidered a bid from Crown Coach Corp. for a similar truck for $46,373 Besides being $62 cheaper Kuhn said the Clre department could get delivery of the Crown tr uck by next June And Kuhn said, if the city paid cash 'for the truck, it could receive a one per- cent discount Th e fare chief said the new truck wi ll include a differential rear end geared for travel on dirt and hills , and a special traction n:Jr l'nd lpos1tral'lton differen- tial I He said the truck could con· ce1vably travel along a water pipeline route between the com · munities or Top of the World and Arch Beach Heights when that project is completed next April cost county property taxpayers c.an additional $74 million in 1983. 1'hat prediction was made to- d ay by county Tax Collector· treasurer Ro~rt Citron, chier administrator of county govern- ment's $175 million employe re- tirem')nlsystem. The target ·or Citron's com· men ts was p e nding feder a l legis lation that would bring fe1eral, st ate and local govern· ment workers under mandatory So cia l Security coverage in 1982·83. The tax collector·treasurer predicted that such a move will add from $144 to $164 in addi- tional property taxes on the average Orange County home by 1983. "l do not know what our representatives in Congress are thinking about in their hell·bent quest to attempt t o s a ve a ba nkrupt Soci al S ecuri t y system," Citron said. "They must have blinders on not to know the consequences of bringing local government plans into the Social Security system. "And," Citron added, "at the sam e time the represent~Uves would be leading the beleaguered prope rty taxpayers further down the road to bankruptcy.·· Citron said he has written members ot Orange County's congressional delegation .. telling the m of the CaJJacy of attempting to s ave the Social Security system by bringing in local gov· ernment pension plans.'' He termed the move ''simply a te mporary bailing out or a system that is near bankruptcy." Citron said coverage under the pension plans of local govern· ments benefits the worker more than Social Security benefits. He also argued that lhe money paid to local funds is ad· ministered locally and authority rests in Orange County rather than the nation's capital. Adair Snuffs Oil Inferno TAFT <AP) -A stub· bor n oil well fire that killed three people was finally snuffed out today by world· famous fire fighter Red Ada ir, who triggered an explosion to quell the two. day blaze, fire oCCicieJs s aid. Adair used plasllc ex- plos ives lo put out the names in his first attempt to douse the fire which began Tuesday in the Elk Hills Naval Reserve with a n e.x pJosion of unex- plained origin. Navy Cmdr. Roger Martin, chief of operations at the nation's largest oil reser ve outside Al aska, estimated the fire was bur mog 12,000 barrels of oil daily. MAJORS ••• three telephones last fall. Defense attorneys objected to the taped conversations being played in open court and later at· tempted to question government witnesses on the relevancy of the materjaJ presented pertaining to Majors. Government witnesses would say only the decision was left to the U.S. attorneys orrice. On the tapes, one man iden- tified by a government, agent as L. D. "Luke" Morris, tells on the tape oC taking two bets Crom Ma- jors. He is then asked by a man al- leged by the government to be Ra ndall Lloyd Keef, "How did you r un into him? Was he at the Brigadoon (a private club)?" .. Y cah," responded the man aJ . leged to be Morris. ''He dated Barbara onct! before. J flew up to Enid and got him." Majors has attended several Gra nd Nationa l Quail Hunts, where celebriUes and politicians mingle during several days of quail hunting near Enid, Okla. Introducing thejVC 3060. See the world's first portable AM/FM Radio-TV-Cassette Recorder Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach, Mountains, Desert -Anywhere . i .... Price •25000 This JVC quality crafted unit includes a 31' diagonal black & white TV that locks In clear, bright pictures on VHF and UHF. a sensitive FM and AM radio w ith an amplifier and speaker to give you clear. nch music or spon s: plus a cassette player recorder for listening to your favorite tapes or recording your favorite pro- grams. Records audio from radio or nl plus it has a built in condenser mic for voice record- ing. All in onel You've never seen anything like it. Also avallable without the cassette recorder (Model 3050) at $190.00. JVC Model 9475, FM/ AM/SWl/SW2 Stereo Radio, Cossette Recorder JVC Just •200°0 JVC s 94 75 1s oacKed with features that mal<e 1t n be~I buy 11,. biggest feature Is stereo sound lor recording and playback II even records stereo FM directly trom the bu1IHn tuner. Two big 6" duel-cone speakefS. Two -left and right -buflt·ln condenser microPhones. Two easv·to-see meters. An up-to-th&-minute cassette mechanism wllh full auto-stop and cue/review tacilliles .• t ull t'n•·tor~1 Hurrcu1ti1•, Plu, Our 1•,.r,011ul 011t• \••fir l.i1111r1u11 ,.,.Ou I n •rlJ l"rod11c·1 M1• .'iit•ll! 27 5 East 17th St. Costa Mesa M ... Wtiil9n' I...,._• l O--. Wetf f/lf c..1a k . Phone 642-8882 Store Hours Daily 9-6 Sat. ~5:30 .. n ....... ...,~ Service y.., 1..,,_ .. - • I ' I t ' ' t , ' l 1 ' ..... Orange Coast EDITION • I * Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks .1 VOL. 70, NO. 300, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1977 N TEN CENTS · 'Death Gun' Found in Back Bay Armed, Fleeing Newport Cops Kill Suspect By MICHAEL PASKEVICll Ol IM 0.11~ Pilot St4fl A fleeing robbery ::.uspcct, who a llegedly pulled a shotgun from his pants when t•orncrcd by Newport Beach police. was ::.hot to death Wl•dm:sday night in Costa Mesa. p<>licc rl'portl'd to- d:ir. ' . Adair Srwff s Oil lnfenw TAfol.' <AP I • A !>luh- born oil well fire that killed three rx.'<>ple was finally snuffed out today by world famous fire fighter Red Adair. who triggered an explosion to quell the two· dav blalc, fire 0Htc1als sa1.d. Adair ust•d plastic (.'X plos 1v cs to put 11ut the flamc·s in his first attempt to douse the fire which began Tuesday in the Elk Hills Naval Reserve with ao explosion of uncx · plained ori~in. Navy Cmdr. Ro ger M .. rtin, chief of opcr;itions at the nation's largest 011 r eserve outside Alaska, estim ated the fire was burning 12.000 barrels of oil daily. County Seeks Private Plane Mrfield Site By KATHY CLANCY Ol IM O•lly Phol s .. 11 About 464,000 of the 500.000 flights that dcpartt•d or a rri vca at Orange County Airport so far this year have been by pri vale aircr afl or whal county officials refer to as general aviaLion. Orange County supervisors de· cided to try again Wednesday ti) find a new airfield site that might handle some or tho::.e private takeoffs and landin~s. The board voted 3 l to order a survey of possible a1 rpQrl sites including one proposa l sug- gested Wednesday by a Hunt· ington Beach h omco\\ nrrs group. the 1 I0:\1 E Council Supervisor Thomas Riley cast the lone dissenting \'ole calltn~ the study "a "'a::.tc of effort. a waste of time." Supervisor Ralph Clark, however, called the need for a new general aviation airport "very critical." He said Orange County Airport is now the second busie:.l airport (See AIRFIELD, Page J\2 > Wayne Michael Nabb, 21, of 13:1 lGth St., Costa Mesa, died of bullet wounds to the head and l'hest at about 10:45 p.m. at the corner of old ~wport Boulevard and E . 16th St.. police suid. Ney, port Beach polt ce were c.:ontaclt'<i after Nabb allegedly lned to rob two patrons al knHc- point in the parking lot or a New port Beach r estaurant Wednesday night. Costa Mesa police Lt. George Lorton srud Nabb was later seen on foot in Costa Mesa by an un- identified cab driver_ :'\ewport Beach police pa trolman Robert O'Neil re· 11ortedly cornered Nabb and took a buck knife away from him O'Neil was unaware that Nabb w as concealing a shotgun, said Lt Lorton. 1\ccorcting to police accounts. as O 'Neil soughl protect10n behind the rear of his patrol car. ~abb reportedly pulled a singlc- barrel shotgun Crom beneath his clothing and pointed it at the or- f1cer. Within seconds. Newport Beach patrolman Bob Stephens and Sgt. Robert Gatewood ar· rived on the scene. Nabb was re· portcdly shot after he ignored commands to "drop the gun." Police said Nabb did not fire his weapon, which had been hid· den under his loose-fitting shirt, with the barrel extending down his r ight pant leg. Police said the shotgun was hidden under ~abb's loose-f1lling ~hirl . wi th the barrel extend1m: dO\.\ n his right pants leg. Police said :'\abb did not fi re th<> \\l'apon. At least siic shots were fired by police. with two rounds stnkmg Nabb, Lt. Lorton said. Cos ta Mesa paramedics s aid Nabb died at the scene. Police said the incident began at about 10:30 p.m. in the parking lot of Delaney's Restaurant on the Lido Peninsula. Nabb al- legedly tried to rob a man and a wom a n at knifepoint in the res taurant parking lot. Police said the pair ran away. He apparently cbasfd them, but was unable to catch them because his movement was im- paired by the shotgun he was car- ry in~ in his pants. After eluding the would-be rob· ber. the couple called pol ice. Although the shooting involved Newport Beach policemen, an in· vestigation will be carried out by Cost a Mesa police because the fatal incident occurred within Costa Mesa city limits, Lorton explained. All three of the Newport policemen reportedly fired their weapons. but an autopsy must be completed before it can be de· tcrmined which officer fired the fatal bullet. (SeeSHOT, PageA2) OMtf f'tlet SIMI PMto THIS IS GUN POLICE BELIEVE WAS USED IN NEWPORT MURDER LAST WEEKEND Still-cocked 9 mm Weapon Recovered Wednesday From Upper Newport Bay Benefit Tax Hike OK'd Hous e Moves to. Keep Social Security Sol~nt WAStll;-.;GTON <AP> -The House volt•<! tndav to keep the Social Security sysll'm from go- ing hroke hy clrast1cally increas· ing th<' la'<C'> paid by more than 100 m illmn 1\mencan::; and their cmployc•rs. The bill\\ ;1s p;is.,NJ. 275 to Mr.. and -.l'nl tu thl· !)l'n<itl·. w h1ch has s1mtlar lcg1slation 10 committee. Under the bill. the maximum Social Sl·t•uritv tax would more th.in t nplt· in Lht· nt"\t clccadl', from ~l!.5 pt:r ~ '"'r 111 S:I 02:; Ht· p \I l II m .1 n II J IJ re J, '"hO'>t' W,t\.., .11111 '''"'"' ('ommll· lt•e f:J'>hi11iw<I th•· htll. l"•tlll-d the ll'J:i'>latwn · .1 '1t.1l 1·•intTrn to \ irtually <:ver~ ,\mt·nn in " .. Practically <·vt•ry American 1s either a t>en('(1c1ar y under lhe Social Security system. a con- trt but or butlding protection whic h will provide future bencfil<> <1r a dependent of a con· tributor, .. Ullman su1cl. The la rge tax increasC's were m ade ncces!-i:iry by deficits in the Social Security fund in recent years . Without the new funding. Section Scans Sailing Scene A special magaiine section with t1mclv adv1c<' for sailors an· t1c1pal1ng ·m·m~ fim· winter c;ai l- ing days comes to ~ ou 1n today's Da tlv Pilot "Orans::c County Roatmg" ir; a 12-page mugo..:inc with stones and pictures of intcresl to begin· nmg and eicpcrl boaters alike. For the last word on sail and pow<'r hoating run. look for "Orange County Boating" in- side your Daily Pilot the system stands to go broke in a rc·w years. Before passin~ the bill, the !louse added an amendment that w ou Id add stil I further to the dras tic lax increases recom· mended by the Ways and Means Committee by r emo\·ing all l1m1ts on wages earned bv * * * r ecipients of Social Security pensions. The amendment, introduced hy Rep. William M. Ketchum (R· Calif.>. and approved 269 to 149, would phase out the current limit or SJ.000 in outside earnings by Hl82. (See SECURITY, Page A2) * * * County Tax Boost If Pensions Cut? By GARY GRA NVILLE Ol IM O.lly f'lle4 Stall If local governments in Orange County are forced to abandon their own pension plans in favor of Social Security coverage for public employes. the move will cost county property taxpayers an additional $74 million In 1983. That prediction was made to- day by county Tax Collector- treasurer Robert Citron, chief administrator of county govern· ment's $175 million employe re· tiremenl system. The target of Citron's com· ments was pending feder al legislation that would bring federal. state and l<><:al govern· menl workers under mandatory Social Security coverage in 1982·83. The tax collector-treasurer predicted that such a move will add from $144 to $164 in addi· tional property taxes on the average Orange County home by 1983. "r do not know w hat our representatives in Congress are thinking about In their hell·benl quest to attempt to s ave a bankrupt Soci a l Security system .·· Citron said. "They must have blinders on not to know the consequences of bringing local government plans into the Social Security system. "And," Citron added, "at the same time the representatives (See PENSION, Page A2> Pie 'Nicks' John Dean FREDONIA, N.Y. <AP> John Dean III, whose testimony helped break th.? Wate rgate scandal, was nicked by a b anana cream pie while giving a l ecture at Fredonia State college, cam· pus police said. Moments a!ter Dean began his speech Wednesday, a young man in the audience donned a mask, laughed loudly and yelled, "There is the con man, there is the con man.'' As the masked m an ran from the lecture hall, the pie-thrower struck, police said. "It just brushed m e," said Dean. John Paul Yuskiw, 23 , ot Fredonia, was charged with dis· orderly conduct and was issued a n appearance ticket, said police. Suspects Appear In Court By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI U. O.lly Pllet $l.tf Newport Beach police, aided by lifeguards wading through thigh-deep mud have found the gun they believe was used to pump the nine fatal shots into a Fountain Valley man in their city early Saturday morning. Meanwhile, the four people ar- rested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder in the shooting or Stephen John Bovan, were scheduled for an initial court ap- pearance today in the Harbor Judicial District Court. Detectives, who have been working around the clock, say their investigation or what they term a "bizarre" case has broadened out to include the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and an Lnvestmeol firm in Newport Beach. Del. Sam Amburgey said there are "a number of people" still under scrutiny for their part in the events leading to Bovan's death. He said the Investigation is now probing the relationship of four men he described as mem· bers of the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna to the dead man and the suspects. · Agni Dave, president of the Laguna Beach temple, said the four men had at one time been members, but have not been ac- tive for more than a year. He said lbey had not practiced the cult's teachings prohibiting eating or meat. engaging in illicit sex, gambling and consumption of intoxicants, nor had they at- tended the required morning and eveninS daily rellitious services. One of those meo, Alexander Kulik, 28, was arrested last weekend in Mission Viejo when Sher iU's deputies fo und more than one pound of neatly pure oriental heroin in jars on the floor of his Stul% Blackhawk car. The link that connects the four alleged Krishna m embers to the Bovan murder is a Newport Beach investment firm they oper ated unde r the name Persadan. Three of the four suspects in the Bovan murder, Jerry Pet.er Fiori, 41, Anthony "Little Tony" Marone, Jr .• 23, and Raymond Steven Resco, 28, were employed by Persadan. The fourth suspect. Debra Ann Addison, 24, is as- sertedly Fiori's girlfriend. Bovan, Amburgey said, worked for one or the firms in which Persadan had invested some money. The story, as detJJiled by Am· burgey, goes like this: Kulik, and his partners, Joe Davis, 257 Canyon Acres Drive, Laguna Beach, Roy Christopher' Rlcha~ of the same address, and J oe Federos ky of 1300 Bluebird Canyon Road, formed their firm to invest their money in local private businesses. According to Laguna Beach police Capt.. Nell Purcell, the four P ersadan principals are members of the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and Richard was a former president or the temple. (SeeGUN; Page A2) Doctor Sues Doctor Coast D•llY Pl* Pi.1e ltY Ill< ...... tc..i-1~ POLICE BEGIN INVESTIGATION FOLLOWING DEATH OF COST A MESA MAN Newport Ottlc•r• Say They Shot Would-be Robber H H• Pulled Shotgun In Hospital Hassle A physician is suing his own doctor for alleged remarks about the hospital in ~ich the patient is apart owner. Dr. Eugene B. Sive names Dr. Robin Oxman as defendant in his Orange County Superior Court ac- tion. Slvestates in the laws uit that he <Sive) is a part owner or Mercy General Hospital. Santa Ana - the hospital where Oxman was treating him for a serious illness. Sive wants $100,000 in damages from Oxman for the dcfendanl's alleged comment that he was be· ing treated in "a bad hospital" and s hould gel out of there Im· mediately IC he wanted lo II ve. Dr. Slve further complains that Dr. Oxman c harged him ror s ervices rendered after the def en dant was called In as a consultant. Doctors never bill other doctors for medical trcatmenl, Slve as· sort.a. ,. .. He claims that.Oxman senthim a bill for $100 and threatened to turn it over to a collection agency when it became overdue. Instead, the lawsuit stat es, Dr. Oxman filed an action in small claims court where he is still try. ing to collect the $100 he claims Dr. SI veowes him. Dr. SivestatcsDr. Oxman's ac· tions have caused him "humilia- tion, mental anguish . and emo- tional and physical distress." He has now recovered from the acute respiratory infection that con- fi ned him to Mercy General April s. Other Coverage More coverage of the Harbor Area appears today on Pa&e AlO.. Weather Local driizles becoming partly cloudy In after· n oons. Slightly coole r days. Lows tonight in mid-505. Highs Friday UP· per60s. INSIDE TODA. Y Dlaeaae• o/ the heari wlU account /or S2 percent o/ oU death• in the notion thil y1ar. The account of one man'• or· 'deal i• found on Pagt A9. ladex AtYffr5"vke AIC tnttrmlnleot .,"'. ·~· ., """ ............. L. M. le...-A• ~•let lldl~• ... , Mwlffl ,,.... .. Call~11la AJ ffell..,al .._ M,CJ Cl.tulll• CMI ore,,.e c.uMy "'"' C9"1k• Cl Syl'fle l'..W It CHet• ... f Cl 9-tl ... 1 0.811111 .. 1(., At Mecll "'8r41N .. . Ullwlel I'..--..1 T-1-'• alt e11ttt'lel-a ... 11 T,_al...a all '••IWlllt 114 .,......,. M ,., .. •1e..-. All W«WfMWll M,Q "-.. h -- AZ CAIL y PILOT N Thursday, October 27. 1977 1 3 NB Men Face Drug Rap Three Newport Beach men are slated to s tand trial Dec. 13 in federal court in Honolulu for. . their alleged involvement in a S7 million cocaine s muggling ring investigators are calling the ••Tahiti connection." , J oe Avila, 30, his brother . Sergio, 26, and Stephen Chula, 27, all pleaded innocent to con- s piracy to smuggle cocaine in their initial court appearance Tuesday in Honolulu. The Avilas are owners of the El Ranchlto restauran~ in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa . Chula is th e son of Orange County criminal attorney, Georee Chula. Coincidentally, on the eve of their departure for Honolulu, a Fountain Valley man, Stephen Rev. O'Brlan J ohn Bovan, was shot to death out side the Newport B.each restaurant. In vestigators h ave linked Bovan's death to a narcotics traf· ficklng operation, but they said they are convinced that the case involving the Avilas and Chula and the case involving Bov an are not linked In any way. In addition to the three Newport Beach men, two others are slated to stand trial al the same time . They are Ronald Peterson, identified by federal agents as being a California re:1i· dent and Alfred Samango, 39, of Hawaii. Both men have also pleaded innocent to tpe smug· gllng and conspirac1 charges. LB Pastor's Rites Slated for Monday A memorial service conducted by clergymen of all faiths will be held at South Coast Community Hospital Monday for Rev. Robert Enlow O'Brian, 82, who was s truck and killed by an automobile Tuesday night. A family s pokesman said priests and pastors from several comm unity churches will participate in the short service at the hospital auditorium begin· ning at 11 a.m. Rev. P 'Brian was the unof. Cicial hospital chaplain for three years al South Coast, and hos-pital spokesmen said he brought comfort to hundreds oC patients during that period. The former secretary of state of lowa moved lo South Laguna in 1967, making his home at 21651 Wesley Drive, with his wife Mabel. The pastor was walking home after performing a wedding at • Heisler Park in Laguna Beach when he was struck on Coast Hlghway-at6:45 p.m. Dr. O 'Brian, an educator, scholar and clergyman, also was a successful businessman in his earlier years, and served as a consultant to two foreign coun- tries after resigning as president of Morningside College in Iowa. In addition to his wife, Mabel, of the family home, Dr. O'Brian is s urvived by a son, Edward O'Brian of Anaheim, an adopted daughter, EraBelle Thompson 2nd a foster son the pair raised in Costa Rica, Guillermo Cruz. He also leaves two brothers, James O'Brian of Clearwater, Fla., and Michael 0 'Brian of Logansport, Ind ., three grandchildren and a great· grandson. The family suggests contribu· tions may be made to the clergy fund at South Coast Commuruty Hospital. SHOT .•. Information compiled by Costa Mesa police will be forwarded to the Orange County District Al· torney's office, which will decide if any charges should be (i)ed against the officers, or if the shooting was in self-defense, Lorton s aid. · Sparling Services Scheduled Friday Memorial services will be held at 4 p.m. Friday tor John R. Sparling, a Newport Beach real estate inves tment specialist who died Tuesday a!ler undergoing s urgery. The services for Mr. Sparling, who was S<I, will b<l held at St. An· dre w 's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. Mr. Sparling was born in Inglewood and attended the University or Southern California, where he was a member or Delta Tau Delta · Fraternity. H e se rv e d as bomber nC1vigatorduring World War II. Mr. Sparling and his wife, Jean-marie, headed Sparling En· terprises, a real estate invest· ment firm. Mr. Sparling was a member or the Balboa Bay Club and a life member of Al Malaikah Lodge of Los Angeles. He is survived by his widow; his mother, Ruth Suman Spar- ling; his brother, Gerald S. Spar· ling; children Lee, Chris, Bradley and Michel Ruth Sparling. Mrs. Gale Sterns, and Mrs. Paula Swavely. The family has s uggested memorial donations to the John R. Sparling Memorial Fund at Hoag Memor ial Hospit al an Newport Beach. Will NB Council . Abandon Entrance? Homeowners in Newport Crest said today they believe they can s till convince Ne wport Beach ci- t y councilmen to abandon the tract 's main entrance, Ticon- deroga Street, as a public roadway. Councilmen voted unanimous- ly Tuesday lo m ove ahead with plans for the extension of 15th Street which is to mcel an ex· O~AHOICOAST M DAILY PILOT ~~~":.~~~~~':r, :~i:.:::::>: (OA\t Puotl\IH~ C."'9•fllY ....... 4te fOtljOM ••f" ovb'l""'O Ml"d•y tf\rWt" ,,~a,y ~ Co,I• tN-t tff•OO't 9•ec." H\lfltfl"4P19" 6'M" '°""'" ,,,,,.. V•ll•r ''"''"•· S•Od•t .. (JI v.,,,., •"4 ~!:t,~~i~~~~'v:~~~·~ orlft(to•• O\ff,>tl\At~ •'•"' ·~ 11 no .,.,, 84'1 5.ffMt Cotte 'Mt4 Ci111•ornftttU' lttltor1M -• ,t\10.f'llt •ncl Put111~· .110 It CV<toy VK.e Pt1tldlf\\ 1"4 0.ftlf'tet ftM~r 1'9'~•·••r.ll Cd•tor T-tAM-• /IM"•O•twJ t•oor CtttrfH M L. .. t •kAfnl fl N.an ~ut•I•"' ~~141"'1 Utl~ OlllCH ('>\tit Mew J)OWt\t a.v\trn\ i. u1~n..tf\ft•<" ,, .. o•~•'•!tt•H' tfo.-itinQIOI\ 0t11lt f\ t'll)&!.)(f\~lt'w•'d ~<M1~h:~~ft·~r;~~~~~u nottet tension of Ticonderoga in the blufr top area west or Hoag Memorial Hospital. Joani Doherty, a member or the Newport Crest Homeowne rs Association Board of Din:ctors, pointed out that councilmen act· ed Tuesday only on the 15th Street extension and took no ac· lion to either approve or deny the request to turn Ticonderoga mto a private street. City staff members suggested councilmen take no action on Ticonderoga Tuesday because "the s taff has been unable to re- solve all problems" relative to joining the extension of Ticon- cteroga to 15th Street. City maps of the bluff area do s how 15th Street extended lo con nect to an extension of Ticon· deroga. E ventually, city officials hope to extend 15th Street lo meet an extension of Balboa Boulevard, north of West Coast Highway. Newport Crest homeowners contend their street ought lo be private and should not be ex· tended to meet 15th Street. They say that if Balboa Boulevard 1s extended, there will be no need for Ticonderoga to connect to 15th Street. 13 in Drug Ring SAN FRANCISCO (A P l ln a sweeping raid. San Franc1l>co and Oakland police hA\'C nrrt!!.l cd 13 pursons who they :u1y belong to a dru~ rinJ? which Pl'd dies a bout $500,000 Wflrlh of heroin a year. In ull, I l people were indicted by the Honolulu federal grand j ury in September in connection with the c:isc which h:id been un dcr 1n\·t'sllgat1on by Newport ll<.>ach police and federal agents for l wo yc<.1rs. Police alll'gc the people 111 V<llved purch<1sed l'Ocaine in rcru and brought il into the v. s. via Tahiti, llonolulu and Van· couvcr, 8rili:-.h Columbia. * * * The md1etmcnt cl.1lmed the group imported 11111rt' thJn :u pounds of cocaine . l\o tnJI datl' has lit•l'll st.•t for the :,ix rl'ma11lln1' nH•mbcrs ''' the alltt~ed ring, in cluding Californian:. M;il'k Slt•phenson llJllcr , Jr 28. Suoth L<tkc Tahm., Jov l\I :.irll'fll' Chaban, :u;, of 24056 L;,; Hondl'. El Toro, and Stepht•n (iranut. 2G, a one-liml' Newport Bcuch rc1>1dc•nl. * * * Fro• Page Al GUN FOUND. ·'They employed a large number of people whom they put into the businesses in which they'd in v~sted," said Am· burgey. H e said that over a n un- bpecified period of time, some Persadan cmployes ~pparently e mbezzled "hu nd r eds of thousands of dollars .. or that in· vestme nt money. Al that point, Fiori, Resco, Marone and two other men were hired by the Persadan principals to "try lo recover the embezzled funds," Amburgey asserted. Meanwhile, late in August, Bovan and at least two other Persadan employes which Am· burgey djd not identify, allegedly kidnapped Kulik and held him for $100.000 ransom. While they nad Kulik, Am· burgey said, they "severely beat him ." F iori, Rcsco, Marone and thei r two colleagues were used to pay the ransom for Kulik and the case wn~ never repor ted to authorities, Amburgey SCI id. .. From that point on," the de· tcct1ve :u.serted. "there was a re· ~ ard offe red allegedly by the Persadan ~roup, for Bovan a nd the kidnappers ." The nature of that reward 1s under investiga· lion, hesa1d. Police say they believe Bovan. 36, left his homl' al 17332 Zerder Lane, Fountain Valley, to go i:ito hiding. lk ;,ipp<Jrcntly stayed out of the Orange Coast area until Saturday night when he showed up at thl' El Ranchilo rel>laurnnt, ·109 28th St F ro.a Pllfle A l AIRFIELD. • in the n;itwn and frnding a new locataon for pr ivate air craft could rcdut1.• much of its traffic . .-_tr port Man a ~<· r Ro bert Jlrt'SnJh.an :.;ml tod<i \' about 45 pen·cnl of the 41.W ,Ooo pri\'atc arrrrafl n1~hls at the airport as o( SC' pt :JO \\C•n • \\ hJt arc called touch :md ~o f11~hts which are: ,1ract1c·e takeoffs and landings by pilots Br.:sn.1han <Jl sc 1 notl'd the <'oun- fy's lul>t muJOr study armed at finding nl'w arrport sites was in 19ti9. Since llwn, he !>aid his de· partmcnl ha!> made periodic ~ludll's o( nt•w or cx1s t1ng airport biles. The llO:\t E Cuuncll "s sugges- tion Wal> that supervisors ·study clevclopml•nt of a general avia- llon ai rport on portions of the Seal !leach Na\ ul Weapons Sta- tion . llOM E Council spokesman Steve SchumachPr said ap· prouchl·i-anti tdkeoffl> could be d 1 re<: lNI ovt• r u II un l in~ton Bea c h 111du !>tr1 1d park :.-.o hom<•o\\ncrs \\Ould not be drs· turbcd IJrcMlUh;1n :.aid today lhc Seal llt•J<'h :Xii\ y property hJs nol bl'l'll <"Ofll>Hh·n ·d in the past m. an airport pos:.-.1b1hly For on«.! thing. Bres nahan said. he had understood the s lalion was usro for stonng a mmunition and m1J!ht be a dangerous loca- llon for :uraaft Jo'or anotht.·r, hl• sard. the sla· lion 1s not p1 cs1•r1lly used ~s au airport'. County supervisors in lhe past had ai;ked military leaders fo r pt•rm ission lo use three oth er Cle· fense facilities in the county for aircraft flights, Bresnahan not· eel. hut wl'rC' turned down in all three cases. Those facilities included El Toro Marine Corp!> Air Station. Los Alma1los Naval Air Station :ind M arinf' Corps property in the center of Mile Square Pa rk. Supervisor Clark s aid Wednes· rl:ly that without thl' possibility of <1 nc•w airport for private aircraft u11d tho:.c used for businessmc·n "there 1s nothing hut disaster facing u. ..... PENSION ••• would be leading the beleaguered property taxpayers furth<•r down the road to bankrupt<'y ." C itron said he has written mt'mbers of Orange County's congre~stonal delegation "telling them or tho follacy of attempting to save the Social Security Rystem by bringing In tocal gov· {'rnrttcnt pcnRion plans." lie tl'rmed the move "simply a temporar y hailin g out or a ~yst cm that if, near bankruptcy." C'1tron S<u<l cov<•rage under the penis ion plan1. 11( local govern· m Pnt11 bl'ncfitl' the worker more than Social St•rurily bcnchll' • • Ile left there early Saturday morning after being s potted by Miss Addison. who wa:1 <Also 1tt the popular night spot. Police al· lcge she lipped Fiori, Resco and Marone to Bovan's location Police allege Bovan was met outside the rcl>lauranl by at leal>t one or the tno who shot him nine Limes with a 9mm automatic handgun, before fleeing In a green and while Cadillac. • Based on a dcscriptton or the car seen leaving the scene, police arrested Fiori when he appeared al Naber s Cadillac Tuesday morning lo sell the car. Costa Mesa police. who wanted to question him about the car, ar· rested him when they allegedly found nearly three pounds of co· caine in his possession. By tracing the car 's registra- tion, poli ce found Resco, Marone and Miss Addison. Police said they were told ~here to look for the gun, and IHeguards Larry Gibson and John Blaucr waded through the th1gh ·dccp mud for 20 minutes hl'fore finding the s llll·c()ckl'C! firearm ;\ m burJ(cy su1d he and other in· ve:.t1gators are probing the role playl·d by the four Persad:.in men 1n the cas e lo determine the nature of the "reward" they al· lt·~cdly offered for the location of Bovan "We're interested in talk· 111,g to thl'm," he said. noting lhat tth'y hil\"l' apparently bCl'll uul Of the country APWI,...._ .. Bandy Baadles John Bennett and his secretary, Diane 0 ·0~11. displa~· diff ercnc:es between his bent handles and the regular kind UM::d on tennis rackets. hammers and machetes. He suys the handles follow the natural flow of the wrist muscle and forearm, a nd could revolutionize sporting goods. tools and cooking equipment. Fr .. Page AJ SECURITY BILL. • • Since elderly people could go on receiVJug a full salary and still draw full Social Security hcneftls, a greate r percentage or elderly Y.ould elect to take their pensions under the Ketchum amendment. This, in turn, would mean that Socwl Security taxes would have to be higher than otherwi;ie to fi nance the extra pensions. In order to raise the extra funds, the Ketchum amendment would make the maximum tax S3,025 in 1987 for a person earn· ing $42,600. The maximum tax now is $965 per year The higher tax burden would fall m ore on upper-income wage t!a rners than middle and lower· income workers . but all workers would pay substantially higher Social Security taxes. Ketchum said keeping Social Security recipients rrom having full-lime jobs "deprives society of the skills and ability or many people. v He called tbe $3,000 limit "one of the most onerous provisions or the Social Security law." ·~~~~~~~~~ Introducing the JVC 3060. See the world's first portable AM/FM Radio-TV-Cassette Recorder Price '250°0 This JVC quality crafted unit includes a 3" diagonal black & white TV that locks in clear. bright pictures on VHF and UHF, a sensitive FM and AM radio w ith an amplifier and speaker to give you clear. nch music or sports; plus a cassette player recorder for listening to your favorite tapes or recording your favorite pra. grams. Records audio from radio or TV plus 11 has a built in condenser mic for voice record· ing. All 1n one! You 've never seen anything like It. Also available without the cassette recorder (Model 3050) at $190.00. Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach, Mountains, Desert -Anywhere. JVC Model 9475, FM/ AM/SWl/SW'l. Stereo Radio, Couette Recorder JVC Just 1 200°0 JVC'a 9475 Is packed wlth features that make It a best buy. Its biggest feature 1s stereo sound, fo r r ecording and plbyback II even 1ecords stereo FM directly rrom the bullt·in tunt\r Two big 5" duet-cono spoal<ers Two -left and nght -bu1lf.ln condenser microphones . Two eas v-t o-aee meters. An UP•lO·the-mlnute caaaette mechanism with lull a uto•stop and cue/review f1c1llUea. f "ull fn•·•u111 Hnrrteufif•'li ,.,,.,.Our Pt•r~nttnl Ort•• \ .. ur f.1urr11111 .. •• On I n·r~1 ,.rod1u-1 Me• .'tt•U! 275 East 17th St. Costa M•sa " ......... ........ 2 o .... w ..... c:... Jr. Phon• 642-8882 Store Hours Daily 9.S Sat. P-5:30 l.n .. M1t H.,.,_ Arw SkMe ltl6 n ...... "-........_..._., ht'.SC• Ye.r ... ,_ ... ~ . . . . --·. --i"··· Preti'e•-.-.io11al s .. r, it••• fttr all ."our llonu• t•l•••·•rnnic·-. Saddleback E D ITI O N Afternoon N.Y. Sto cks t VOL. 70, NO. 300, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANG E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURS DAY, OCTOBER 27, 1977 TEN CENTS House OKs Social Security Boosts • WASHINGTON JAP> -The House voted today to keep the Social Security system from go- ing broke by drastically increas- ing the truces p aid by more than 100 million Americans and their employers. The bill was passed, 275 to 146, and sent lo the Senate, which bas similar legislation in committee. Under lhe biU, lhe m aximum Social Security tax would more than triple in the next decade; from $965 per year to $.1,025. R e p. Al Ullman (0 -0re. ). whos e Ways and Means Commit- tee fashioned the bill, C411led the legis lation "a vital concern to virtually every American." "Practically every American is either a beneficiary under the Social Security system. a con- tributor building prot ection wh ic h wil l pr ovide fu ture benefits or a dependent or a con- tn butor." Ull man said . T tu! l<1rge tax increases were made necessary by deficits in the Social Security fund in recent years. Without the new runding, the system stands to go broke in a few years. Before passinJt the bill, the Murder Weapon Found in Bay? llr•ed, Fleeing Newport Cops Kill Suspect By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of Ille Daily Pi19' S 14ff A Oeejng robbery suspect, who allegedly pulled a shotgun from his pants when cornered by Newport Beach police, was shot lo d eath Wednesday night in Costa Mesa, police reported to- day. Adair Smt/f • Oil Inferno TAFT <AP> -A stub- born oil well fire that killed three people was fin ally snuffed out today by world· fam ous fire fighter Red Adair, who triggered an explosion to quell the two- day blaze, fire officials said. Adair used plastic ex- plos ives to put out the flames in his first attempt to douse the fire which began Tuesday in the Elk Hills Naval Reserve with a n e xplosion oC unex- pla ined origin. N a vy Cmdr. R oger Martin, chief of operations at the nation's largest oil r eserve outside Alas ka, estimated the fire was burning 12,000 barrels or oil daily. County W ams Of Added Tax For Benefits By GABY GRANVILLE Of Ille O.Uy PlleUteff If local governments In Orange County are forced to abandon their own. pens ion plans In favor of Social Security coverage ror public employes, the move will cost county property t axpayers an additional $74 million in 1983. That prediction was made to- day by county Tax Collector- treasurer Robert Citron. chief administrator of county govern- ment's $175 million employe re- Urem ent sys tem. The target or Citron's com -m en ts was pendi ng fe deral legislation that would bring federal, stale and local govern- m ent workers under m andatory Soc ial Security coverage in 1982-83. The tax collector-tre asurer predictt.'<i that such a move will odd from $144 to $164 in addi· tlonaJ property taxes on the a verage Orange County home by 1983. •'I do not know what our representatives in Congress are thinking about in their hell·bent quest to a tte mpt to s ave a b:inkrupl Soc i a l Security system ." Citron said. "They musl have blinders on not to know the consequences o( bringing local government plans lnlo the Social Security system. "And." Citron added, "al the s ame time the representatives (See PENSlON, Pa,e AZ) Wayne Michael Nabb, 21, of 133 16th St., Costa Mesa, died of bullet wounds to the head and chest at about 10:45 p.m. at the corner o( old Newport Boulevard and E. 16th St .. police said. Newpo.-. Beach police wer e contact«! after Nabb allegedly tried to rob two patrons at knife· point jn the parking lot of a Newport Beach res taurant Wednesday night. Costa Mesa police Lt. George Lorton said Nabb was later seen on root in Costa Mesa by an un- identified cab driver. Newpo rt Beach p o l ice patrolma n Robert O'Neil re· portedly cornered Nabb and took a buck knife away from him. O'Neil was unaware that Nabb was concealing a shotgun, said Lt. Lorton. According to police accounts, as 0 'Neil sought protect ion behind the rear of his patrol car. Nabb reportedly pulled a single- barrel shotgun from beneath his clothing and pointed it at the of- fi cer. Within seconds , Ne wport Beach pelrolman Bob Stephens and Sgt. Robert Gatewood ar- rived on the scene. Nabb was re- portedly s hot after he ignored commands to "drop the gun." Police said Nabb did not fire his we apon, which had been hid- den under his loose-fitting shirt, with the barrel extending down his right pant leg. Police said the shotgun was hidden under Nabb's loose.fitting shirt, with the barrel extending down his right pants leg. Police said Nabb did not fire the weapon. Al least six shots were fired by police. with two rounds striking <SeeSHOT, Page A2) Wrdova Gives High Marks To Legislature While claiming that m any im- portant bills become victims of the Legi s l a tur e's ''hype rparlisanis m, •• As- s emblyman Ron Cordova, D·EI T oro, lauded several accomplish· ments or the previous legislative session today. "While the Congress is still de· bating ils bills on child pornog- r'aphy, we have passed a severe l a w agains t p eople who traumatize our children in the produc tion of s mut," lhc freshman Democrat told the Sad· dleback Valley Chamber or Com- merce at a breakfast meeting in Laguna Hills. Cordova cited penalties for people convicted on child pornog- r aphy charges or Up to ri ve years in slate prison. He said as a former prosecutor he believes the penalties should be e ven stiffer. The 74th Assembly District r<>presentatlve also cited privacy laws passed recently allowing citizens access lo stole records about the m. "In an age when computers a nd bureaucracy conUnually (See COIWOVA, P11e AZ) Suspects Appear In Court By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ol IM 0~1ly Pilot ~~II Newport Beach police, aided by hreguards wading through th1gh-decp mud have found the gun they believe was used lo pump the nine fat al shots into a Fountain Valley man in thei-r city early Saturday morning Meanwhile. the four people ar- rested on suspicion or cons piracy to commit murder in the shooting or Stephen John Bovan, were scheduled ror an initial court ap· pear ance tod<tY in the llar bor J udicial llbtricl Court. Detecllves, who have been working around the clock, say their investigation oC what they term n "bizarre" case h as broadened out to include the llare Kn:.hna Temple in Laguna Beach and an mve!'>tmcnt firm in Newport Beach Del. Sam Amburgey said there arc ''n number of people" still under scrutiny for their ,part in the events leading lo Bovan 's death. He said the investigation is now probing the relationship or four men he described as mem- bers of the Hare Kris hna Temple in Lagun a to the dead m an and the suspects. Agni Dave. president of the Laguna Beach temple, said the four m en had at one t ime been members, but have not been ac- tJve for more than a year. He said they had not practiced the cult's teachings pro~lbil~n.g eating of meat. engaging 1n 11'hc1l sex. gambling and consumption of intoxicants, nor had they at- tended the required morning and evening dail y religious services. One of those men, Alexander Kulik , 28. was arrested last weekend in Mission Viejo when Sheriff's de puties found mor e than one pound of nearly pure oriental heroin in jar s on the noor of his Stutz Blackhawk car. The link that connects the four alleged Krishna members to the Bovan murde r is a Newport Beach investme nt firm they o p e rated under the n a m e Pcrs adan. Three of the rour suspects in the Bovan murder. J erry Peter Fiori. 41, Anthony "Little Tony" Marone, Jr .. 2.'l, and Raymond Steven Resco, 28, were em ployed by Persadan. The fourth s uspect, Debra Ann Addison, 24, is as- sertedly Fiori ·s girlfriend. Bovan, Amburgey said, wor ked for one of the firms in which Persadan had invested some money. The story. as detailed by Am- b urgey, goes like this: Kulik, and his partners, Joe Davis. 257 Canyon Acres Drive. <SeeGUN, PageA2) Section S cans Sailing Scene A special magazine section with limrly advice for sailor s un· tlcipaling many fine winter sail· ing dayi, comes to you In tod ay·~ Daily Pilot "Ornni.tc County Boating" is a 12·pagc magazine with stories and p1r1 urrs of inter<>c;t to begin· ning :rnrl l'.~prrt boaters ah kc. For the last word on sail und powe r boat ing fun , look ft>r "Orange County Boating" in- sld<: your Daily PiloL House added an amendment that would add still further-to the d rastic tax increases r ecom- mended by the Ways and Means Com mittee by removing a ll limits on wages earned by r ecipients of Social Security pensions. T he amendment, introduced by Rep. William M. Ketchum CR- Calif. >. and approved 269 to 149, would phase out the curre nt limit of $3,000 in outside earnings by 1982. Sw ee elderly people could go on r ecciviug a full salar y and still dra w full Social Se curity benefi ts, a greater per centage of elderly would elect to take their pensions under the Ketchum amendment. This, in t urn. would mean that Tape: Farrah Mate Bet, Dated Blonde • OKLAHOMA CITY <AP) - Television star Lee Majors al- legedly placed $1,000 bets on col- lege football games and alleged· l y h a d two d a t es with a n Oklahoma City woman. the latest 1 ast Novrm bcr. Jtovern menl wiret ap tapes disclose. (Re lated photo, AS> The wiretap tapes n aming Ma- jors. star or the television series "The Six Million Dollar Man" a nd husband o r t e l evision person ality Fa r rah F awcett· Majors. were played Wednesday by the government in the case of seven people on trial in U S. Dis- trict Court here for a llegedly con. ducting a ,:(a mbling operation. The tape naming MaJors was m ade Nov .21. The rccordinJ( told hC)w Majors allcJicdly mnde $1,000 bets on the P1lt~bur,.ih ~md Oklahoma foot- ball games to be played that weekend. The conversations wen! among 60 taped calls the government has introduced into cvidcnc<>. They we re r ecorded d uring court.approved wir l'tapc; on three telephones last fall Defense attom<-ys ohjecl<'d to the tapt-d conversations bean.et played in open court ~nd Inter ut tempted to question i:ovcrnml•nt wltnessl'S on the relevancy or the material presented pertnlnin~ to M.ajors • \ On the tapes, one m an Iden- tified by a government, agent as L. D. "Luke" Morris, tells on the tape or laking two bets from Ma- jors. He is then asked by a man al- lc~ed by t he government to be Randall Lloyd Keef. "How did vou run into him? Was he at the Brigadoon (a private club)?" "Yeah," responded the man al- lc~cd to be Morris. "He dated Rarbara on~e before. I flew up to E nid and got him." . Majors has attended several Gr a nd National Qu all Hunts, wher e celebrities and p<>liUcians mingle during sever al days of quail hunting near Enid, Okla. The man alleged to be Keer later is heard to say, "That's something. He's dating Barbara, the blonde?" "Well , this is just the second date she's had with him, but the last one was about six months ago and he said 'I'll call you next ti rnc 1 come,' " replied the voice alleged to be that of Morris. "Of course she didn 'l think he would, and he was up for the quail hunt in Enid ... "lie callro down ond talked to hN . and her old ego just pump<•d, you know, a thousand Pl'n'1•nl nnd she's trying lo figure how to ~ct him bock down here and I smd I'll fly up ther e and get b1m undl did." Social Security taxes would hav~ t o be higher than otherwis e t.o finance the extra pensions. In order lo rais e the e xtra funds, the Ketchum amendment would make the maximum tax $3,025 in 1987 for a person earn· ing .-$42,600. The maximum tax: now is $965 per year. The higher tax burden would <See SECURITY, Page A?) .lat VUftl •g Some Mission Viejo resi· dents. along with members of the news media, thought this Marine helicopter had cras hed near Capistrano Valley High School. Closer ins pe ction r evealed the craft had landed there in· tentionally to conduct a demonstration for the alu· d ents . among whom was Mike McDougall, getting a view from the pilot's seat. Storm Brings -- ---- Drizzles to Orange Coast The southern edge or a Pacifie s torm brought driztles to the Orange Coast t.his morning, and weather forecasters said more can be expected. The weatherman said the present storm should move northeast tonight, but that more drizzles are possible through Fri· d ay morning. He said another Pacific storm is a pproaching Northern . California and that more drizzle, which may increase t o rain, is possible Friday night and Satur· day. Surf, also stirred up by the Pacific storm. dropped from Wednesday's highs. Waves of four to five Ceet were reported in Huntington Beach but were down to two or three feel elsewhere on the coast. Sm all craft advisories con- tinued in efCect from Point Con· ception to the Mexican border. Potential Danger HAVANA (AP> -Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro says the United States remains a "p.otential danger" to Cuba' and is still trying to foment l'6o hellion in his country. We a t h er Local drizzles becoming partly cloudy in after· noons . Slightly cooler days. Lows tonight in mid-50s .. Highs Friday up• per60s. INSIDE TODAY Dl1ease1 of tM hNrt wlU account /or 52 perctnt of all death1 itl the notion thU year. The account of one man'.t Or· deal is found on Page A9. latlex AZ DAIL v PILOT SB Wning Request Okayed A proposal to rezone so acres or a 70-acre Capis trano Valley parcel~ permit single-family homes rather than apartments won the approval of Orange County supervisors Wednesday. Bul the board included with Its unanimous a pproval r equire- ments that the developer put low or moderate-income apartments or condominiums on the re- mainder oC the prope rty. The land is located on the eas t side of Del Obispo Street a t Stonehill Drive. County planners, in a report to s upervisors, noted the zoning re- quest "is indicative of the trend to develop property at lower densities and thus at a higher price in lbe Southeas t Orange County area." As a result. the County Plan. ning Commission recommended that the remaining 20 acres be developed for apartments or con- •dominiums and that the de· 9eloper include with his plans a report on lower-cost housing. At the suggestion of Supervisor Thomas Riley that report will In· elude recommendations on ways to provide low and moderate-cost housing on the developers ' prop. erty. . It also will include description t>f slate or federal subsidies to help provide th0se homes. And the report s hould describe the number of low and moderate· income homes located in the s ur· rounding community as well as a listing of major employment a reas within a 30-minute drive from the development. RJley loJd fellow supervisors the development could provldt:: as many as 96 low or moderat~ priced apartments or c on· dominiums. The development also will be planned lo complement the trail system along the nearby Sam Juan Creek, Riley said. CORDOVA ••. threaten our rights, this law aJ. lows the individual to be left alone when he chooses to do so," Cordova eXplalned. He said the law also allowed citizens to have inaccurate in· formation removed from their .records. Cordova restated bis opposi· tion lo SB 1S4, a controversial property tax relier bill voted down in the Legislature. He called the biU a political immick geared to garner votes for politicians Uirough rebates to the group of people most likely to vole for the majority party. Cordova also attacked a com. prehensive tax bill which in· eluded a provision abolishing California's inventory tax. He said the bill would merely allow tax increases on bll!$inesses in other ways to make up for the in· ventory tax revenue loss. Sl,ore Owner Kills Man, 21 LOS ANGELES <AP) -A 21· year-old Lancaster man was shot to death by the owner of an An· telope Valley store he had tried to rob, Los Angeles County sher iff's officers said. David Slocum, 29, told deputies he was in his 7·11 store Wednes- day when a man later identified as J ohn L. Crawford pulled out a seven-inch knife a nd demanded money, authorities reported. Slocum said he ran outslct., pulled out a handgun and fired twice, hitting Cr awford once in the chest. Cra wford was pro- nounced dead at the scene. Crash Injures 12 SAN FRANCISCO CAP> Twelve persons were injured Wednesday when a city bus and milk truck colllded. . . ORANOE COAST 111 DAILY PILOT ~r.:-c.~::,~~T.~':iZ::::~~: C...I -111111"1 C.-•nY. -.io'°'\'°"' ••• _II_,, MoNl•y l~rc>vOll l'rl6.ty tor Cotl• MK.a Htt-•Poft h.ch Hwnt"""" •.c."'F°"" t•I" V•llt~. H••fl\t. Se•ct• .. «-V•fl•., .tl"lrd ...,_ 60<1<111_,h CoaO ... _....,._,.., tloCln ,, ,.,.,,~ S..11i1rO.y• -a """°'"'' ,,_ priMINI ..,.,.,..,,,.., •••~I h •I 1.IO WH\ a.y $UNI. Ool&o ~ ... C•lllorni.- lt-N. -Ptfl ... •ll •N hlli""" JK-lt C....., '11o PrnlaM•N!O._ .. ~ Tt.eom•' ll(H''ltl [d+tOf' .,.._ .............. lo\en•••nolfl.,.. 0 .. rttt M. \..Mt ttit ._,.. ... Heh ......... "'Me ........ '"""" Stdcllebecll Veffey~ "'°'Le l'u !lo.., o\ S... or-I'•-•• OtflCH <Ml•NltH1 lJOW.1t a.yJl....C ti"""l""'Oftll .. <11: ltlltltKll ...... vMf L.oq ..... 8-KM t••o-vnSl•"I TeleptlOflt (7141~ CfNlffled Advt"llinoMa•M1t -1•--V•lloy -~k• &11 .. ~10 t:''t: ;::, ";.'::'!;, c~~~ • .'.;:~~u:.~, ,,..,,.,, ltl •0•,1t10,1uM, ,.. ·t~ n M.t~ DiJ "O'tHhif(,f WltftlVI 'Ot tlAI ~'"'""Of\ 4f r••''"''~ ~ft:,.,,~•."su9::~~f:11':1"&;1c~1:, ~'f6 -·~••: '' "'el' t• M ft""fllfllH lllllll•rY _..... ....... p.'°,_tNy. Halloween E~plained O'Neill Ele mentary School fourth g raders <left to ri ght> Dony al Mukri and J ennifer Clarke tell '·Martians" Mar k McGr ath and Tam Wolodarsky how earthly Halloween traditions began. It's all part of a play written by their teacher, Richard Bird, for presentation to par ents and other stude nts at the school. F ro• Page Al GUN FOUND. Laguna Beach, Roy Christopher Richard of the same address. a nd J oe Feder osk v of 1300 . Bluebird Canyon Road, formed their firm to invest their money in local private businesses. According to Laguna Beach police Capt. Neil Purcell. the four Persadan principals ar e members of the Hare Krishna Temple in Laguna Beach and Richard was a former president of the temple. "They e mployed a large number or people whom they put into the businesses in which they 'd invested," s aid Am· burgey. He s aid that over an un- specified period of time, some Persadan employes apparently e mbe zzled "hu'bdred s o r thousands or doll ars" of that in· vestment money. At that point, Fiori, Resco. Marone and two other men wer e hired by the Persada n principals to "try to recover lbe embezzled funds," Amburgey asserted. Meanwhile, late in August, Bovan and at least two other Persadan employes which Am- burgey did not identify. allegedly kidnapped Kulik and held him for $100,000ransom. While they had Kulik, Am· burgey said, they "seve rely beut him." · .Fiori, Resco, Marone and their two colleagues were used to pay the ransom for Kulik a nd the case was never reported to authorities, Amburgey said. "From that point on," the de· tective asserted, "there was a re- Scary Movies Set in Viejo F ilm riends are invited to a showing of two freaky features. "D r ac ula " and "Th e Busybodies," at 1 and 2: 15 p.m. <;aturday in the Mission Viejo Public Library. Youngsters also are invited to create a creepy costume and join a monster pa rade at 2 p.m . at the library. Me mbers of the Rancho Viejo Women's Club will Judge and award prizes for the funniest, prett~est, ugliest. most scary and most original costumes. Free tickets for the movies m ay be ob- tained in the library children·., department. FreaaPageAl SECURITY •.. fall more on upper-income wage earners than middle and lower- incomc workers, but all workers would pay s ubstantiall y higher Social Security laxes. Ketchum said keeping Social Security recipients from having fu ll-time jobs "deprives society of the skills and ability of many people." Hf.?. called the $3,000 limit "one of the most onerous provisions of the Social Security l aw." . U llman argued against the amendment, saying it would al· low wealthy professionals such as doctors and lawyers to con· tinuc to work past age 65 anti earn $100.000 or more pr•r year while also drawing Social Sccuri ty pensions. "We are making an annuil)' program instead of a retirement p~ogram," he said. • • "ard offered allegedly by the Persudun ~roup, for Bovan and lht' kidnappers.·· The nature of that reward 1s under investiga- tion, he said. Police say they believe Bovan. 36, left his home a t 17332 Zeldt!r Lane, Fountain Valley, to go i!llo hiding. lie apparently stayed out of the Orange Coas t arifuritil Saturday night when hehhowed up at the El Ranchito restaurant, 409 28th St. He left there early Saturday morning after being spotted by Miss Addison, who was also at the popular night spot. Police al- lege she tipped Fiori, Resco and Marone to Bovan·s locatjon. P olice allege Bovan was met outside the restaurant by at least one of the trio who s hot hi m nine tim es with a 9mm aul~c handgun, before fleein in . green and while Cadill ac. Based on a description or the car seen leaving t he scene, police arrested Fiori when he appeared at Nabers Cadillac Tuesday morning to sell the car. - Costa Mesa poli ce, who wanted to question him about the car, ar- rested him when they allegedly fouod nearly three pounds of co- caine In his possession. By tracing the car 's registra- tion. police found Resco, Marone and Miss Addison. P olice said they were told where lo look for the gun, and lifeguards Larry Gibson and John Blauer waded through the thigh-deep mud for 20 minutes before finding t he still-cocked firearm. Amburgey said he and other In· vestigators are probing the role played by the four Persadan men in the case to deter mine the nature of the '"reward" t hey al· IC'gedly offered for the location '>f Uovan .. We're interested an t:ilk- mg lo them,' h1.· i,a1d. noting lh<Jt tht•y haw app:ircntly been out or the countr~. F ro• Page AJ SHOT •.. N<1hb. Lt. Lorton said. Costu Mesa parumedics said Nubb die.'<! at the scene. Police suid the Incident begun at uhoul 10:30 p.m. in the parking lot of Dcl~ney's Restaurant on t he Lido Peninsula. Nabb al- legedly tried lo rob a man and a woman at knifepoint in the rl'sluuranl parking lot. Police s aid the pair ran away. rte apparently chased them , but was u nable to catch the m because his movement was im- paired by the shotgun he was car- rying in his pants, After eluding the would-be rob- ber , the couple called police. Although the shooting involved Newport Beach policemen, a n in· vcstlgnlion will be carried out by Costa Mesa poli ce because the fotal int'tdt'nt occurred within ('osta Mt'i,;:1 ritv limits. Lorton c>xplnlnt'd · Arthritis Group Plans Anniversary S addleback Community Hospital's Arthritis Foundation Auxiliary will celebrate its first anniversary Nov. 14 at 2 p.m. in the hospital cafeteria The featured s peaker will be Dr. Ronald Levin , specialist In phy~j_c.a l f m cd icln o a nd re- h a bl1'la lon. F o r furth er 1nformation, phone 837-4500. • • 'Killer' Satellite Second Soviet Test Successful WASlUNGTON <A P> The Soviet Union has staged its second appar ently successful test of a syste m t hat could threaten destruction of U.S. re· l·onnaissancC' and other military salellilcs, the Pentagon disclosed today. •·we have preliminar y indicu- tlons that tht Soviets launched an antisalellite interceptor Wednes- day againl!l a target satellite," a P e n t a gon s t a te m ent s aid. .. P resumably, a successful in· tercept occurred." The <mnouncement provided no e laborauon, but defense of- ficials said the hunter -killer s atellite passed close enough to the t ar get satellite to h ave permitted its destruction, if the Russians had wanted to knock out the target. This WCI.') the first time that the Defense Department has volun· leered inform ation on a Soviet untisalellite test, refl ecting an apparent Carter administration intention to point up a Soviet de- velopm ent that is worrying U.S. leaders. De fense Secretary Harold Brown told a news conference Oct . 4 that U.S. officials de· termined tha t the Russia ns "have an oper ational capability that could be used against some satellites." Both the United States and the Soviet Union rely heavily on satellites in earth orbit to watch military developments in each other 's territory and to keep track of mjssile tests and other indicators. This is believed lo conttibute to m utual deterrence and lo dis· courage adventurism or surprise military moves. P resident Carter a ppealed March 9 for a mutuol U.S.-Soviet ba n on sat e lllte·des troylng weapons, but the Russians have never publicly responded and have held three anUsatellile tests since then. One test In May was rated a fallure , but subsequent tests In June and this week are con!ijdered successes. The new jntcrcept apparenUy was made in a relatively low or· bit, which suggests that the So- vi el weapon could be used against U.S. sateJUles carryin( cam eras and in!ared ond other sensors. Like the June test, this week's intercept was in an elliptical or- bit. which scientists rate a more difficult feat than the circular or- bit. Doctor Sues Doctor In Hospital Hassle Fr .. P~AJ PENSION ••• would be leading the beleaguered property taxpayers further down the roadto bankruplcy ... ' A physician is s uing his own doctor for alleged remarks about the hospital in which the patientls a part owner. Dr. Eugene B. Sive names Dr. Robin Oxman as defendant in his Orange County Superior Court ac- tion. Sive states in the laws uit that he CSive> is a part owner or Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana - the hospital where Oxman was treating him for a serious illness. Sive wants Sl00.000 in damages from Oxman for the defendant's 13 in Drug Ring SAN FRANCISCO CA Pl -In a s weeping raid, San Francisco and Oakland police have arrest· ed 13 persons who they say belong to a drug ring which ped- dles about $500,000 worth of heroin a year. alleged comment that he was OO· ing treated in "a bad hospital" and should get ou\ of there tm· mediately if he wanted to live. 0 r . Si ve further complains that Dr. Oxma n charged him for ~er vices rendered after the defen- Doctors never bill other doctors for m edical treatment, Si ve as- serts. 1 le claims that Oxman sent him a bill for $100 and threatened to turn it over to a collection agency when it became overdue. Instead, the lawsuit states, Dr. Oxman filed an action in small claims court where he is s till try. ing to collect the $100 he claims Dr. Siveoweshlm. Dr. Sive states Dr. Oxman's ac· lions have caused him "humilia· tion. mental anguish and emo- tional and phys ical distress." He has now recovered rrom the acute respiratory infection that con· fined him to Mercy General April 5. Cit ron said he has written me mbers of Orange County's congressional delegation "telling them or the fallacy of at.tempting lo save the Social Security system by bringing in local gov- ernment pension plans." He termed the move "simply a t e m por ary bailing out of a system that is near barrkru9tcy." Citron sald coverage under the pension plans of Jocal govern· m enls benefits the worker more than Social Security benefits. He also argued that the money paid lo local funds l s ad- min istered locally and authority rests in Orange County r ather than the nation's capital. South County News Addilionul cove rage of the south county appears today on Page AlO. Introducing thejVC 3060. See the world's first portable AM/FM Radio-TV-Cassette Recorder Take Along Stereo Sound - For the Beach,' Mountains, Desert -Anywhere. Price •2500° This JVC quality crafted unit i[ICluC:fes a S" diagonal black & white TV that locks i!l clear, bright pictures on VHF and UHF, a sensitive FM and AM radio with an amplifier and speaker to give you clear. rich music or sports; plus a cassette player recorder for listening to your favorite tapes or recording your favorite pro· grams. Records audio from radio or TV plus It has a built in condenser mlc for voice record- ing. All in one! :You've never seen anything like It. Also available w ithout the cassette recorder (Model 3050) at $190.00 JVC Model 9475, FM/ AM/SWl/SW2 Stereo Radio, Cassette Recorder JVC Just 1 200°0 JllC s 9475 1s oacked with features that make 11 a best buv Its blggell feature 11 stereo sound, lor reoordlng and playt>ack It flven records stereo FM directly from the bullt·ln tuner. Two big 5" duel-cone speakers. Two -left and right -buill·ln condenser mlc~es. Two easv·to -see metert. An uo·to·the-mlnute cassette mechanism Wtlh full 8UIO·StOp and Cue/revl8W tac1h1tes . 1·1111 f "tu·for,1 Hnrrcuali••, Plu., Our P••r!"otanl , On•• \ t•Ctr f.iunrfull•••• fin I a·•·r~, ,., . .,,,,,,., M , ...... ,,~ 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa .. _....._ . ....,._ i Oewt Wttt _. Cerlt Jr, Phone 642-8882 Store Hours Daily 9-6 Sot 9·5.30 l'ror ........ ional s .. r, ic·•· i'or all ·' our ......... ··••·c·•roni•· .. f .. J s 1 • • • ' .. , , • , f i " l • .... • ;.. "" • ... " . • . • . # . A JODAILY PILOT S Thursday, October 27, 1971 Punch "Are you sure you have a sowed-off sho1gun, miss?" • Pri1'ate A irport OC Studies HOME Plan -... By ROBE RT BA.BUR OUM Delly .. 11 ...... Leaders of Huntington Beach's Homeowners Mutual and Executive Council Inc. <HOME Coun- cil) today can turn their attention to second-phase problems in their drive to relocate a private airport in west Orange County. Orange County supervisors Wednesday agreed to study the HOME council plan to create a private airstrip at the &?al Beach Naval Weapons Station. THE IDEA WOULD BE FOR the weapons sla· tioo airport to replace Huntington's Meadowlark Airport which has come under heavy criticism froll\ nearby residents and city officials. The new proposed field would be about two miles north o{ the present Meadowlark strip. HOME Council officers contend that the pro- posed location would be safer and have a lesser im- pact Ob reskleot.s than the Meadowlark location oo Warner Avenue near Bois a Chica StreeL ACCORDI NG TO MARK POltTElt, president of the watchdog city orcanbatJon and member Steve Sbumacher. takeoffs and landings would take place over non-residential areas and would occur lo prevailing winds blowing in trom the ocean. · There alto would be a lack of obstacles, such u the development that presentlY occurs oa the doors .. of Meadowlark, they claim. A runway of 3,200 feet is proposed. They aay that •ould Jae an added safety feature. The two men admit that "a few" second·stace obstacles stand io the wa.y, including geuhlc permhlion from the Navy Department to use the property and In rmding ways to r1.nance the airf'~Jd. .. THE PLAN SEEMS TO BE so insurmount· able tbal itjust might work.·· &humacbersaid. Porter said that. after all, the laod beloep to the people. "It's federal land first and Navy land second." he said. Porter added that it pilots lobby u strongly for lhe new airport as they did in keepine Meadowlark Airport open, "This thing should get going in a cou- ple of years." THE PBOPOSED SITE WOULD be directly west of Bolsa Avenue and Bolsa Chica Street. Tbe two HOME Council representatives say that about 100 acres aJ1eneeded. They are proposlng a runway site near ammunition bunkers on the south side of Westminster Boulevard. Schumacher said it will be up to county o!ficia.ls to carry the ball bu& the HOME Council will offer its cooperaUOD. M,£ADOWIAllK .AIRPORT 8J\S be~n the tarcet of cttticlam from nearby residents in recent years. At one time this year, the Huntington Beach City Cotmcll considered trying to close Meadowlark through legal action. It aubeequently changed direc- t ions ~nd formed a committeetoworkoutproblems: Nelgbbors have claimed the airport 1s'11J1Safe and that pilots have buned thf!ir homes. Airport operator Art Nerio maintains that th4t airport is safe. He bas been supported by the F ederal Aviation Agency and Department of Transportation officials. Huntington Crime ·Rises Slightly Overall crime, statistics rose sllgbtly in, Hunt- ington Beach durlng the first half of this year, ac· cording to ataUsUcs frorn the illh Uniform Crime Jndex. .-~ Criminal cases in tbe city rose from .f,321 Jogged in the first half or 1978 to 4,428 this year. HUNTINGTON BEACll IS AMONG 172 cities whose statistics are contained in the FBI report. The 1nformaUon is on so-called Part One crimes, serious o!fenses involv\ni physical harlJl, from murder t.o assault and rape, and also theft and burglary. Drug offenses are not included. Overall, crime In the U.S. decreased 7 percent between January and June, according lo FBI Direc· t.or Clarence M. Kelley. HUNTINGTON BEAC9 SllOWED a drop in re- ported crimes during lhat period only in the c ateeories of theft and forcible rape, with 22 rape cases compued to 23 ln the same period last year. Larceey, or grand theft. which involves goods valued at $200 Ol' more and excludes ltems stolen in burglaries, dropped rrom 2,505 to 2,405 in the six- montb comparison period. City crime overall rose ln seven classifications. The most dramatic increase registered was in vehicle thefts, which soared from 268 in Uie first halt of 1976 to 348 this year . ••wt: IUST DON'T HAVE any explanation for it at all," says Capt. Bert Ekstrom, commander of the department's Specl•I Operations Division, which handles stat.UUcs, training and other mat· tera. ''There Is just no pattern nor rhyme nor reason lo lhe increase in vehtclc thefts.·· he said. THE NATIONAL LUMBER ANNUAL •• I D CHRISTMAS D 4th OF JULY D EASTER D YEAR-END CLEARANCE D STOCK REDUCTION. D TAX CLEARANCE ·:r D BACK-TO-SCHOOL D SUMMER-END .•.) a I ' DSALE . ' •I ... HERE: FO LKS/ '10\J 6E.T A CH~NCE TO BE A 'S LCcesSRJL ADVERTISltJ6 MMJ . MAKE (JP 'iOU~ O WN HEADutJE . ______ _. .D SALE-A~ THON DBONANZA ... . .. ·~· .. DOUGLAS FIR I'm n ot sure who this Douglas guy is. but he aur• do make some mean Ur. From economy 2:x4' • ...,~,,.,.,~ ...... to huge .c.x12· •· 2x4 • . . . 1 2 7 1$-'-9 2x•. • .. 224UJt.FT. 2x6 • • • • 33tUll.FT. 2x8 • • • • 44•UJf.FT. 2x10 • • • 55 •LIJC. FT. 2xl2 ••. 66•wc.n. 4x4 • • • • 51 CUJf.fT, 4x6 . . . . 77'U14. "· 1'02 4x8 • .. • UM.FT. 4xl0 • • • 1 29 Ulf.FT. 4xl2 • • • 1 •• UHFT. MASONITE PEGBOARD m The abeeta that are shot with c:annooa. Bang all your toola oa. It cznd make your garage look real neato. STANDARD ONLY 14" x 4· x a· Y.,. x 4'x8' 77c 2'7 4t1 1 ~., .. j •• m' r ~ '1 1 MASONITE CYPRESS SIDE SIDING MATERIAL llEFDnSH!I> Oft mmMlS8EI> J bare pel'90DQUy met tbS9 .sdlD9 and lt struck ... m betn9 "er'f nlce. WHILE STOCK LASTS I ·····-· !!,, . T '·' 11 PeE .1 l •.~ MIX 1 1~-::·c ,., 1 . . ~1· ~ -~. ----.... t ........ ....... 90LB. CONCm:rE MIX What can J~ about concrete mix at hasn't CJ1'eadJ been llGld .,.fore We don't want to repeat ourael•••· , " CORRUGATED FIBERGLASS ROOFING Great for patio c:onr, wtnd.creen or Just prl•acy. 26"x8' 3.25 26"xl0' 3.99 26"x12' 4.87 TREATED MUD SILL AND FOUNDATION MATERIAL Thi• I want to talk about. but they didn't gin m• enough room. 2'x4' 22' LIN. FT. 2'~ 33 t LIN FT. (CHOOSE ONE OF THE ABOVE) ·1 PARTICLE BORTZ Ah yes, particle board. This stuff is :; incredible for cabinet making, shelves, ·': flooring, all kinds of things. It's a heck of a lot cheaper than plywe>o<L and a heck of a ,·, lot cheaper than other stores. '1 " 3/8'' 4x8 SHEET I %" 4x8 5'7 PLYWOODS Oops, we have plywood,, too. I c:lid.n' t mean to downgrade the aaaeta of plywood. This is great stuff, too. Even though it's a little more money than th•~ ... • particle board. we atW have the right " prices on 1t at our plac•. { SHOP PLYWOOD GOOD ONE SIDE WITH MINOR DEFECT AG PLYWOOD v ... ~·· EXTERIOR %'. GOOD VJ•• ONE SIDE ~,, JOHNS-MANVILLE ASPHALT SHINGLES FlftMD J9C1f gucmmt ... cholce of colon.. hecny mlneral coat. 15 LB. FELT PAPER Can this paper be telt? Sure, go ahead and 1 .. 1 u . 7 7!sQ.FT. ' I s•7 AD PLYWOOD %ff 7•~' 7•7 INTERIOR " .. 9n . 9•7 GOOD ~·· 11 •7 ·~: 1197 ON&SID •• 7 CDXPLYWOOD 1097 ROUGH 1297 EXTERIOR 1497 ~~ PLASTIC SHEETING Doffn•t atop JOU from aaaldDg Q ..... Jt Jut leta you make tn meu on lt. (J(9"r quite thought of lt that way befON.) II.ACE OR CI.EAR 3 •7 ROLL 10'x25' NO. l CEDAR SHINGLES . Not number 2 or number 3. but NUMBER ONE. What do.1 that mean? I'll look it up and tell you eometlSle.. 69°~ooSQ.Fr. ~., 8 97 .:. I •:'\ I 0.,, ... I 12.,, .. -r l ... I ... j . ) • I ~ . 'I ·J ·d • !> HEAVY SHAKE SIDNGLES I The .. are '"TY ran hec:CNM W.'c:Gll only get them after a aaa)or • earthquake.Not ~y. I they are juat ••ry nenrous shlngl... · ,. ~9°~oo SQ. Fr. 8 2 DAIL V PILOT s Thursday. Octooor 27. 1977 ANN LANDERS/ERMA BOMBECK Sex Before Marriage Is Proof of Nothing D E A R A N N ::.~x on th e basts that it's LANDERS: 1 am writing wise to learn what the this for "The Wife of a other person's sex ap- Sex Maniac." Please petite is like BEFORE print It. She needs to marriage" -wrong, know a few things. The wrong, wrong. woman ~te that she l have been married . .and her husband are in three years to a mun who their early 60s and she had an insatiable ap. }las had enough sex· to petite for sex when we last her a lifetime. Her ,were going together. We bus band, however, is · saw each other every still very much interest· night for two years and ..ed in bedroom gym· ut least three nights a nasties. To keep him week for 11 months jrom going elsewhere before that. He was after sbe never refuses him me all the time. I was a nd even preten,da to en· both n attered and ex· ioy it. hausted. I also wondered : I went aJong with how I would be able to : ••wife" to that point -keep up with hlm after : but when she said, "I am marriage. Well. 1 didn't :in favor of premarital have to worry. Now I ~Kids Prepared . . ~For Hospitals • ByCHR.ISROBERTS Well, medicine is pH ILADELPHl A changing. and that at· : (A p ) _ R e m e mbe r mosphere of fear is going : when you were a l<id and the way of doctors who ·1 made house calls. : you badyourtorw s oul? Pediatric hospitals • You were put under by arT d th t 11 lli d aroun e coun ry are • ev ·sme ng gas an erasing the fears of their : wokeupscaredtodeath. tiny patients by treating • ___ _.... _____ ..., the mind as well as the J :! -~---Chi1dren's Free Show .. • . ., :: ...... ... • :.. .. • Britl9 your you(l9Sters to the Huntington ~nter mall tor the tun performances of the Madhatters Marionettea. 4' stiows daily the' puppets come alive with song and dance thru Oct. 30: Fri. at 1·2-3 & 7:30-Sat. & Sun . at 1·2-~. Sponsored by Roston Montessori SchoOlh<>use. Come to the mall at Beach & Edinger at the San Oi~o fwy. body and laying the mysteries of medicine out on the table. At Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, for ex- ample, the gas masks sm elt of root beer and licorice. And Bert and Ernie and Kermit the frog_ dolls are doctored by the kids Ulemse ves who are trying to get bet· ter. During play therapy sessions. the ypungsters g i ve thei r stuffed charges shots and blood transfusions or water . plaster their appendages with casts, and anoint their ~es with Band· Aids. They toss around medical jargon like OR (operating room> and IV Cintra venous> with ease. A•• Laaders with one another and their love grew deeper and more meaningful. Tbe most eroge~ous ione ln both male and female is located between the ey ebrows and the hairline . fin~ myself begging him lo make love to me an~ it's dejradinj. · So let this be a lesson to girls who think they have to try it out for "educational purposes." You won't learn a thing. -I DIDN'T "forbidden'' that makes It much more appealing. Why? Humao nature - the excitement of risk· taking. DEAR AN N LANDERS: I wUI call him Wallace although that is not his name. We have been going together for two years. I am no child, Ann -I'm 31. Wallace is 36. I was engaged six: years ago but m y flance remarried his former wife and practically left me at the' church. Wallace bas never been married. DEARLD.: Youspeak the truth, lady. There ls sometblag about the And It can work ln re· verse, too. Some mar· ried coaples report tbat their sex We Improved creatly after marriage. They .became more re· lazed, more comfortable We have t alked • • • Shalom Wagon <From Page BU mend a dentis t. one could, so the phone number was s hared and everyone was satisfied. Another newcomer had felt the warm bonds o( friendship and the true meanin g or lhc word shalom: someone cares. SHAWM WAGON, a project of the Wom en's Division, Jewish Federation COunt!tl otet-ange County, 1' •brand· new project which was started when some "very foresighted" women saw the need or greeting newcomers in the area. "There is trauma when a woman moves," said Ellie Burg, the first cha\rman. "This seemed like a good way to welcome newcomers." While there are other klnds or hospitality organizations in the area. none meet tne specific needs of Jewish people, who share cultural and religious traditions and ceremonies they baveeracticed for years. A woman might want to know where a kosher butcher is, for exam· given the volunteers sobr. "Ninety.five percent of the people are anxious for us to come," Mrs. Vonikow sald. "Many girls have been asked to stay for lunch. A bond is formed that is much deel)i!r than friendship. They like just knowing that there's someone lo care:· ••TO UNDERSTAND th e significance of the Shalom Wagon you h ave-t:o undent-and-the J •wii.h philosophy," comm ented Andrea Breslow, a volunteer. "It's one being responsible for the next. We are responsible for eacb other no matter where we az:e . "A light family structure was what held Jewish famHies together.·· Florence F eldman, a Newport Beach resident who also enjoyed a visit recently, said she appreciated the support of knowing others in the Jewish community when she raced wbat might seem to be little pro- blems, like school starting on Rosh Hasbanah, a h1gh Jewish hoJlday. ----------'-------------pie <there is just one in Orange Coun· ty} or how she could find an ap- "It's very reassuring to meet peo- ple who live ln this area who are J ewish, to whom this Is Important. Thls makes me reel confldent." The new tivllda'Y yvu ls waiting~ ~ ~ ~ tll~ 11411? liA~[)lfl?S 1120 Irvine Blvd .. Newport Beach -8<42-848" propriate woman's group. Perhaps her children are troubled by the move and need some help. Shalom Wagon can tell her about J ewish Family Service or some suita· ble youth groups. JN EACH PACKET there Is a large booklet with lists or all the Jewish · women's organizations, temples and other county resources along with their addresses and phone numbers, as well as pamphlets describing dlf· ferent kinds of services or interest lo Jewish people. "We're constantly updating it and educating ourselves as to what's available here," said Mrs. Vinikow, the current chairman. Volunteers are trained during MllS. FELDMAN, who moved with her husband lrom Atlanta, said the size of the J ewish community in Orange County is much bigger than people might think and that the at. titudes toward religion are better here than In the South. She most appreciated the addresses of the women's organizations. which she said would be bard to find alone. "The information on shopping also was helpful. U you have a strong Jewish background you need such things as kosher meat, and they're not easy to find. i.crious ly about a life together but he has never actually proposed -un· lil last night. Here's how he did ll. We were seated on the sofa and he took a slip of paper out or his pocket and handed ll to me. 1 nearly fainted. It was a questionnaire. The first four of the twelve questions were as follows -just lO give you an idea: 1. Do you expect to in· hcrit any money? 2. Do you owe any large bills? 3. Do you keep your teeth in good condition or will there be a lot of den· laJ work in the future? 4. Do you need any sur- gery that you've been putting oft? Wh en I expressed sur- prise and beeame indig· nant he told me he was only being sensible - that his best friend got stuck for thousands of dollars because there was a lot about his fiancee that he didn't know in advance. Wh at do you think about this, Ann Landers? -HONOLULU DEAR HON: I think you don't need a goof like Wallace for a husband. Sugest that be nin an ad then he'll be sure to get exactly what he wants. ~ale Corduroy Blaiers $19.95 &.IKllOn ol ColO<• .ca thy J~~ fl9Y.PCX1 beach. co 926/;i.) sexy suede from Go/Olin! . In grey. comet. bloclc. rust. ondbrc:Mln. HAIR BEAT ,.,...... (he "°" Ml:6 ,,,., KC>lp i> ooly. but 1ho rw of my hoit ii dty. I> •lioro o rJiompoo 0t 0 fr.o!MM'll Iha! j thouid llM 1 ' l!Hbble Plo!t. C.Ostb Mesa) A11twer: No. a W:impoo by "'•" P'obtddY 1o10n°t corrOCI 11. Bui Jl1~moc~ has o l•OO!ment Iha! wo can formukile f0t you. uMllQ Mo<J'IO~\llTI crd OI tdont. c!'rg Wa (f)n 4or 8.ize . •• rf you are a fashion conscious teen or young woman, you'll fit right In. Because we are fashion specialists offering a great selection of comtemwaty styled readv-to-wear. Especially for the petlle and hard to flt small. You'll also like oor maJor brand name m6rchandise from Hang Ten and Chemin de Fer to Nifty 11 of California and Jody. 0-13 tr:a • 6-14 Tffns. ... an6 · 4aa6ion • This weef< we're featuring !he Hang Ten Corduroy Classic showniller•. ,.:,, ~· Camel blouson screen · pnnt cow1 of polyester/ cotton knit. S-M-L $14 · Basic pant of cotton/ polyester crewcord fn camel. huoter. 3 to 13. $23. Cotton/polyester crewoord aepartt" In· camel or hunter. ' ! classes led by professionals in the psychology and counseling Cields and n ewcomers are gree t ed during periodic coffees, the next of which is scheduled Nov. 29. "This is a very nice service. It makes life easier. I was very lucl<y. We had a nice visit. They <the volun- teers> wer e really very sym· pathetic." Anyone wishing a visit from the Shalom Wagon, or information about the volunteer program or coffees may call the Jewish Federation Councll of· rice, 754·1944. ;:~:It I Blazer. 3 to 13. S30. Vest. 3to11. '15. Buie apllt skirt. 3lo13. S20. Bring In this ad for your SPECIAL PRICES! SENIOR CITIZENS SPECIAL DISCOUNTS!. MOM.· TUES.· WED. BY MASTER STYLISTS ONLY! 15i, ON ALL SERVICES MAGIC MIRROR HAIRDRESSERS 10119 WIST ADAMS AVE. HUHTIHGTOM IEACH OPEN MOM.· SAT. 714-962-2444 That the program wu needed is evidenced by the warm welcome Bi,~'"' Miu Sand1 U.e""'6 all of yo• lo coU me and repUll' /or our clou t.e .. o,.. noao. Le"°'" in all lefft. and all 06• pollJM /omtill6 N011'. JOIN mE FUN -LEARN TO ICE SKATE AT TWO BEAUl'IFUL CDALETS IN COSTA MF.SA. ICT CAPADES CHALET AND SKATING SCHOOL Coata Meaa Harbor & Adams 979-8880 ... Costa Me1a Briatol & Paolarino 979-1750 , ~ j\ ~~ J.~i. ·i ~~'~ m. r l~~t JI\' :i /~' v i:~ HI l 1 ·~ Cotton atilrt In hunter or navy gteph paOfr check. 3to13. 817. • ••• and noM S.avi11JJ8 Starlight Savings 1/2 Qff S.le • Friday night. OctObtt 28,· from 7·10 p.m.1ee ~.for f1ntastlc savlnll' too ••• Select group• of Fall o,..... Reg. $16. $38 NOW $8·18. Fall Pants, Kelly·Dltto·Justio Charles brands, Rtg. $16 • $20 NOW $7.50•10. 6' 4'ReJinicK9Joz· lllM •1H1r ""' S..... • Wsa16* .. u , c.t. '2HJ ,.._ '114119 ... 7711 ' ' STOCKS I SYLVIA PORTER • Thur~day's NYSE COMPOSITE 2 p.m. (EDT) Prices TRANSACTIONS OuolellOl'l• lncludlo ,,..,., Oii tlie ,._..Yori(. Mklwllal. P•<lllc, PIW, to.IOft. 0tt•ol1 enc1 Clncln,..ll ttock •Kt"'"n<JO•-•-1ff ll'f Ille Hollllon•l A.,_l•lloftot S.Cllfltl•l o .. i.,. -lnttlntt Productivity Rises WASHINGTON <AP> -The pro- ductivity of American workers rose al an onnuaJ rate of 4 9 percent ln the third qu:lrtcr, rollowing 8 1.1 percent decline in the second three months or the yeur. the Labor Department re· poncd to.lay Productivity Is the amount of output per hour worked and 1s an imPort3nt mea11urc or efficiency an the economy Rislnlt productlvtty IC'ads to higher reul wnJ(es und lcs11ened ln Clutlon hf'causc more output comes from the same 11mount of time worked. .,,, ... ,. ... ,.w ....... ~lt<l~-IOO&ldOO'l(.,.lodeY i........ 1"\of~"O ll•lllO t"I II, ci.w11 )I )1, .ii.,_ fl•lft9 t l.0 IJ,6o....,lJ I~ Part• Ala..-001c1fl•l119tt~ >O.-IO,. flra'llll~ Ootdci. .. ll•t -·-"'' "· lolfl<l11 ttto.llOl>lddowftU U, t ••I u .. ,.., H•t!Clf ~ H..,,...,, bfw !)fl"•· H ... Yott. t160.40, dOW'll U I~ Eno•lhtrO MlllllO II< l(H, N•w YOfli• "~· doWll ua. ~ Thursday, OetOber 'Z'T, t 9n s DAILY PILOT •• 011 to Col'lege .... ... Grants, I ... oans . . Can ~elp, Too .. .. ..... By SYLVIAPOKTEll ·:: , ..... , ... _, ~. Students who are not eligible for aid throuth federar :"' programs may be able to get help from state or apec:lal col • lege programs -assuming need can be proved. Studen~ can use financial aid forms, available from bigb school. counselors. State programs orrer more than '600 mJUion In :. grants and many loan opportunities ror residents. • U) Under the state student Incentive grant program •• • the U.S. government matches the state grants to st\ldenta. ·; Average grant is $500, maximum is $1,SOO a year. Cbock th«:·: Califomlo St.ate Scholarship and Loan Commbaion. 1411>~.: Fifth St .. Sacrament.o, CA. 95814 with such quesU0n5 as ~: Can part·time and half-time students get" awards? Can": awards be used only at private colleges, public colleges, or.•. both? Can grants be used at out-of.state colleaes? When is the application deadline., What are requirements? • (2) COLLEGE PROGRAMS: MANY HAVE their own ~ hnanc1al aid packages of grants, loans and jobs: Expensive ·· colleges usually have more money than lower cost ones. : (3) Cooperation education: This complete educatlonat:; plan includes career-related work as part of the curriculum.:· More than 1,000 colleges offer programs under which stu ... ;: dents alternate each semester or quart~r between fulltime-:; study and fuJltime work. • For a free copy or "Undttgraduale Programs ol. . Cooperative Education in the U.S. and Canada, .. write to -~ National Commission tor Cooperative Education, 360 Hunt· ington Ave., Boston, Mass. 02115. <4 > Loans by col· ----------leges: Some colleges of- fer long·term loans at low interest rates and with tolerable repay· ment schedules, though the amount of the loan ~oney's Worth may be much less than · from other sources. The loans can be short-term, too, or can take the form or postponed er deterred tuition. Interest. rates generally compare favorably with rates charged by . others; repayment after graclwWan rnJlY be geared to in-' ~ome. Check with college ald ~. (5 > OTHEll LOAN SOURCFJI: STUDENTS who qualify under none of these might try slJCh loai sources as civic or religious organizations. credit unions. banks. Insurance comparues and finance companies. Befcre turning to a com· mercial tender. where rates are usually highest, check local civic and religious organizations. conswt high school · guidance counselors, community ceot«s. churches and•. · similar sources. Before taking a loan. find out: -What 1s the simple interest rate; bow much will be · paid back, principal plus interest., -What extra charges are mvolved? , -How long ts the r epayment period and what ls \he monthly payment? When do payments beglD? -Can the loan be terminated before the oontract ex· pires? How murh no11ce must be given? Are there penalties? -DOES TIJE WAN CONTllACT contain a •1balloon clause:· under which a larger payment is tacked oo at the end'> Does the contract Include a clause providing for "wage ru;s1gnments" or "garnishing," undet' wbkh the lender can ask an employer to lake a spedfied smm from monthly earnings and send it lo the lender iI tbe borrower deraults., ReJect any contract that contains such a claise. • -Are there any other restrictions oo the JO&D ~ B-"rcouglu Adds--r-t Computer Mo~l~ Burroughs Corp.'s manufacturing Facility in Mission-' Viejo will begin producinc a new model in the B6'00 com· puter sen es designed tor users at the entry level of large. scale data processing. • The new 8 6817 system. with multiprocessor efficiency. • provides more than three times the performance of current , entry.Jevel B 6800 systems. Customer dehveries will start in next year's second . quarter. The B 6817 wilt sell for $975,000. ll can be leased for $27 ,225 a month on a one·1ear basis, including arwncl-t.he· clock field engineering service. Bat.,. Beperts T•nt•r-4 Datum lnc .• Anaheim, has announced that record sales- for the third quarter ended including an extraordinary• credit CresuJting from tax loss carry!orward> ol $100.000, equal to 6 cents a share. This compares with a third quarter 1976 net loss of: Sl,184,000, or69cents a share. These results represent4lpu· cent improvement over second quarter 1977 eamlnJt.S Qf .. $151.000, or9 cents. Sales for the third T'.lKfNG compared wllh. a $3,765.000 in lhe stmllar-( J quarter were $4.0'17.000.: STOCK 1976 period. Incoming orders for the third t ------------quarter remained • strong. resulting ln al\ ~ or backlog or $4,070,000 entering the fourth ~ expansion quarter. Net income for the nine months was $435,000, or28eents ; a share, including an extraordinary credit of $'ll4,000, 9qUal • to 12 cents a share. This compares with net loss ln the flm nine months of 1976of $1,616,000, or 95cents a share. Sales for the rune monthl •ere $11,327,000 cdmpand 1 with $10,507,000 in the like per\od of 1976. Befld4tu1rten to Opne Holmes & Narver. Inc .. Anahelni. plans to open Ltsnew international corporate headquarters bulkling Monday. The four-story. 100,000-squarc foot building is at 999 Towa and Country Road. Orahge. The $3 6 million building will house approximately .so ' or the firm 's 1,600 employei;. \ The Koll Company of Newport Beach ia the contractol" i and cCH:leveloper or the new corporate headquarters. ln joint ownership with Holmes & Narver. Langdon• Wilson .. of Los Angeles and Newport Beach arc the architeda and • space plaMers. •GlllcA~eaReperts6-. BankAmerica Corp. has reported that lls rrowtb ln earnings in lhe first half or the year continued ln tbe thlrd . • quarter. • Consolidated income before securities ttanst1e:Uons for the quartt'r ended S pt. 30 was $110.4 mUUon. up 18.7 per~ cent from $9.1.1 million for the same period ofl976. • Net incomt for the quarter increased to $110.7 mtlllon. a goln of 19. t percent from $93.0 million for the aame period a year ago. 1 On a ~ share basis, both income before aecuriUn • trans3ctJons and net Income '°" the third quarter "'" '11 : cents. compared with 67 cents a year ago, an lncreue ol 13.4 : percent. The stock Issue o( i.even mllUon shares ln October • 1976 lowered income per share by 3 cents. : For the nlne months Cll'lded Sept. ao, locome before 1 securities transactions was $288.3 million, an 18.2 pef'ct!Qt. t Increase Crom $242.l milUon eamed In the flrst nine mGatls : of IHt.year. : I •