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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-10-11 - Orange Coast Pilotr '4. 1 ~17 ·ea in Train _..rashl i • ' • . Botz Says Joke CJtapter 'Closed' I ) In Co11nty Talk DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * M ONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 11r 1976 VOL. ... NO US, l Sl!CTIOHS. 22 PAGES I 'From Closet? I APWl ....... to A fireman rescues skeleton from haunted house operat- ed by Milwaukee March of Dimes after fire broke out in the building housing fund raising project. Police in Milwaukee say they sus pect arson. Fog Hides Coast; 3 Boats Aground Two people were injured Sun- day when a dense afternoon folt caused three power boats to run aground along the Orange Coast. Bishop Moses suffered leg in- juries when the 21-foot cabin cruiser Centurion, with seven J)eOple aboard, went on the r ocks off Crescent Bay Polnt in Laguna Beach. Moses was apparently in- jured "bUe allem pUng lo hold the boat off the rocks. He was report- ed. in 1uarded condition today at tJCI Medical Center after un- dergoiJllsurgery. eventually sank in 40 feel of water. A 21-loot motorboat with four people aboard went agro\lnd off Eighth Street Sunset Beach. No injuries were reported. A H arbor d epa rtm e nt spokesman said the afternoon fog caught many yachtsmen by sur- prise and Orange County Harbor Department rescue boats from Dana Point and Newport Harbor were kept busy locating small craft in distress. An u nidentified woman was treated tor minor shock an.er the O.foot cabin cruiser Lucky Duck ·crashed onto San Juan Rock Al so assisting in the rescue operations was the Coast Guard cutter Point Divide. Despite the numerous calls Crom people expressing concern over yachtsmen who bad not. re· tun)ed on schedule, harbor de· pa.-tment offici als said all boats men were accounted rot. lbortly after clearlng the Dana Point Marina for N8Wl>Ort Beach. Jlu-bor Departmentolficials said . the er~ owned by A.E. Aiken I Here's Right Flu Number In ataday's Daily Pilot atotr a bout Swine nu VIC· cla all on c ll n ics, the telephone nu~r for in· formation about the clinics was tncorreclly Usted. The correct phone number for the CommunJ- ty Referral and Inlorma- Uon Service Js s.47·5178. The Daily Pllot regrets theetTor. Police Probe Knifing Death Anaheim police are seeking the tiller of an unidentified stabbing victim whose body was found on a city street early Sunday morn- in1. The victim, believed to be an alien, report e dly died l o Anaheim Memorial Hospltal about an hour after beinC dis· covered lying at 1 a.m . in \be street ln the 100 block of Wills Drive. • Butz: '-I Paid Price I For Joke' By KATHY CLANCY Of111eOellyPllelSC..N Former agriculture secretary Earl Butz told an Orange County audience tod ay he ·•paid a tremendous per sonal price" for what he said were indiscreet re- marks about blacks. But he told the c r owd in Anaheim that he did not intend to discuss the matter further, noting "that chapter is closed." Butz was speaking to about l.500delegates to the National As· socialion of Concessionaires and National Association of Theater Owners at the Disneyland Hotel. Butz. dressed conservatively in a gray pin-striped suH, blue striped shirt and maroon Ue, said of the racial slur which forced his cabinet resignation a week ago, "I have apologized as sincerely as I know how to do it. .. In a press confererfce af- terward. he also said he would not discuss them atter further adding the remarks were taken out of context from a private conversa· lion. He s aid he intends to do all he can lo help congressional can· didates, President Ford's re- election effort as well as the draft- ing of new farm legislation. Partly referring lo notes, Butz discussed Cree enterprise In the U.S. and what he said was the fmestfood supplying and market· ing system in the world. Butz, who served as agriculture secretary since 1971, said U.S. consumers spent 17 percent oC their pay for food today compared with 20 percent In Canada and 2S lo 40 percent in other nations of the world. In addition. he said U.S. citizens <See RUTZ, P ace tU) YOU A UTO TRY 1JIE.PILOT ADS "Many than ks -the ad brouabt a buyer Within 24 hours olU1 appearance in the Pilot!" That's the Advertising success story ol a Corona del Mar woman whoplac~ this c;lasslfied ad: G REAT CAR : '66 Belvedere Jl1 2 dr l\rdlp, extra clean P t$, P/8, foe. air, 361 v.a eng. gives real go power. Orig. ow ner . U nder 73,000 ml. $a:;o U X·IUCXX For Information about bow you can put the Daily Pilot &o wQrkfor you c~U : 642-5678. · ( Surprise Fog Hides Coast; ' SOUGHT FOR MURDER In Costa Mesa Case SOUGHT FOR RAP-£ TRY In Laguna HUis Case A111eriea1ts Vi c tims Two Trains Collide In Northern Mexico CHlHUAHUA, Mexico (AP) - A passenger train carrying tourists, inc luding som e Americans, collided with a freight train in the rugged Sierra Madre Mountains of northern Mexico, killing at least 17 persons and injuring 45, police reported today. They said at least five of the in- jured were Americans, and there were unofficial r eports that one of the dead was from New York City. Some o( the passeJliers were travel agents, most from Mexico City, making the trip as part of a touri•m promotion, police said. The American Society or Trnel Agents had been meeting in Guadalajara, though lt was not known whether any ~ the group wu aboard the train. One observation car on the ''Railroad to tho Pacific" FordOpiniOn ChiJed by Pole tumbled into a 45-foot-deep ca- nyon when the passenger train smashed into the freight Sunday afternoon near the village of Pit- toneaJ about 200 miles west or Chihuahua City and 200 miles south or the U .S. border, police said. They said rescue 'Yorkers were still trying to pry apart tile cur'i; wreckage to reach passengers trapped inside . The r escue squads could not use cutting torches on the wreckage because spilled diesel fuel might ignite, police said. • The freight train was east- bound from San Rafael en route to Chihuahua City, and the passenger train wu ..-estbound on the same track, police said. Crash Injures Goanty Pilot-· BAKERSFIELD (AP) -An Ahlheim mao who crashed in mountainous terrain while pilot- ing a s111all aircraf\ over eastern JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP) -Kern County remained in critical The top ran k ing Polis h -condition today at a hospital American io the Ford ad-here, authorities reported. miniatraUon eaya the Presklenl's The pilot was ldentlfiecf as statement that the Soviets don't Peter Pl1Un1, 20. He crashed late dominate eiastern Europe was an Sunday afternoon In mountains· Inadvertent "overstatement." near Lake Isabella. He was d.is- "Tbe President tecopiles, covered by a U.S. Forest Service and be muat recorn.I.•~ that employe and taken lo Mercy Poland ls ln a sphere c:l mouence lt01pllal here. by the Sovlet1. He certaln}T Autbori~es don't know what . know~; tbe reality ~ Eul and caused the'crash. Fw1herdetails: -:~t. a~d l\llt~~e11 .. KwHnsk1 •• ,wereunavallable. . 1 l . # • f . . . ' . . ,. -. Artist's Drawing+ Sinrllar -• . . ' By ST EVE Ml'IOIELL • OfU..Oallyl"lltlta.tf Costa Mesa police said todey they have found several llnJss between an attempted ;l.Ssault 9t1 a Laguna Hills woman a w~ ago, and the murder of a Costa Mesa housewif~last month. • A description of her ~allak by the Laguna Hills woman.1s very similar to the ooe providect by a witness in the murder Of Pam Davis, who was sbot~i e times at close range m bet Mesa home Sept. 10. "At this time, we think suspects may be the same m~· said Costa Mesa Police J.t. George Lorton. ' Pam Davis received a ph~ call at her home, which was sale, at about noon Sept. 10. e caller s aid he was interested looking at the home, which ;· been advertised for sale 1 several newspapers. , The man, posing as a potenU buyer. showed up at the home; 2867 Velasco Lane a short ti e later, wearing a black rainco black trousers and a hat pul down over his race. Mrs. Davis apparently allow the man to enter her home, an ~bort time later, a young worn m th e home heard shots and: scream. . The witoess-e~tiered fl ban~ the home and saw the sus~t standing at the e ntrance to Uie master bedroom. She ran out U}e back or the home and sousr.t help. <See UNKS, Page A2) Coas t . • . Weathe r Low clouds and deme • fog expected again Tues·; day morning with clearing. byvallemoon. Beach hlgbs • nea..10. • INSIDE T ODAY . Tiii preu cam!! 1mder . acat~ attack from a /""116 Nlzora cdde in an Ora.,Cotm· fJI addreu. Sec. P.age A7. latlex AtY-S.nlce •• ... ,..K.,. i1 ......... AS All11U1..-.n ·1 L~· AJ ..... QI a ... Na"-91 ... wt i; 0-lflN •1-n =c.-.. ~ ., ... , ., S1M.9,,.,.._ .. Ot•Nlotkfl "' =--""' l ........ ~ ... M ............... t ... ,_..., .... ""9M• M ~ fllrllleit.(91"1 ·~ ~. M .......... •• ....,. ...... • • ' 1 I A 2 DAILY PILOl' s ~onday. Octobert 1. 1978 Turkey Trot Payclwck Wins Top Trophy CUERO, Tex. CAP) -"Gentlemen, start your turkeys," was all Ruby Begonia IV and Paycheck needed to-hear. With that, they <began • fnmaied loot and air race to decide the winner of this year's Traveling Turkey Trophy of Tumultuous Triumph. When the f ealhers settled at the end of the 150- yard contest Sunday, Ruby had the fastest time in the final leg of the Great Gobbler Gallop. But Paycheck won the six-foot trophy. Ruby, the Texas entry. failed to overcome a time loss she suffered against Paycheck in the first leg of the race last month at Worthington, Minn. The gallop was the highlight of the annual Cuero Turkeyfest. The town of 8,000 bills itself as the Turkey Capital of the World, a title also claimed by Worthington. A fte r Bad Week M~e Aggressive Ford Effort Se.en WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent F'ord's campaign manager says be expects to see Ford "get somewhat mor e aggressive" after a week acknowledged as ''less than outstanding." As Ford n ew here from Dallas Sunday to end a week-long Western tour , cam paign chairman James A Baker 111 told five reporters aboard Air Force One: "In the five-week campaign, we think we've had four out- standing weeks. We recognize this last week has been less than outstanding. We think this is ~omething to be expeded ... that there would be peaks and valleys." Baker said. "We would acknowledge that we hit a bump Jast week," with the resignation of Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz under fire and Ford's re- peated efforts to clarify remarks he made in Wednesday night's televised debate with Jimmy Carter about the status of Poland and other Communist countries in Eastern Europe. "I firmly believe," Baker added . "w e h ave regained whatever mom entum we 've Jost." * * * He said Ford recouped during weekend visits lo Oklahoma, where he criticized Carter's de- fense posture, and Texas, where the President grabbed for the coat-tails of the late former President Lyndon J~son. The Ford camp felt the can- didate's chances in Texas have been enh anced by Carter's criticism of Johnson in a Playboy magazine interview for which the Democratic nominee has apologized. When a reporter suggested to Baker that Ford seemed to be taking a more aggressive posture following Wednesday's de bate, the campaign chief replied: • "I would expect to see the President get some1,1,·hal more aggressive in his camp;Utn ap- pearances.'' However, Baker contended that Ford would not be ag- gressive "to the point Gov. Carter has reached when hel called Ford more secretive than Richard Nixon or a worse presi- dent. than Richard Nixon. It seems to me those are rather desperate-type tactics." * * * Carter to Revise Campaign Manual WASHINGTON CAP) -Jim- my Carter has ordered his staff to revise a manual that suggests such tactics as s talling traffic to create crowds and using fic- titious names in telephone sur- veys. The manual was written for the Carter campaign's advance men. who precede th e Democratic pres idential can- didate to campaign stops and talte charge of planning and pro- motion. ~ Some of il "is not in line with the way 1 want to sec this cam- paign run," Carter was quoted by bis press secretary. Jody Powell. Powell. s aid Carter had never seen the manual. The campaign staff's review of it, he added, was hurried and inadequate Some details in the manual were "never Intended to be ta.ken seriously," s aid its author, chief Carter advance man Jim King. The manual is a guide to draw- ing and pleasing crowds. ''These techniques will enable you to draw n s u bs tantlal crowd th~ough . or~~niiation in a re- latively mv1s1ble manner which will lead the press to infer that !Jte candidate drew the crowd, .. 1t said. One method mentioned is stall- ing cars to create a Lramc jam. Another is to "Invent a fictitious name like 'Resort Marketing Inc.,' "Ito us e m l<'lephone sur- veys to determine whether peo- OAANQE COAST s DAILY PILOT n.t O.~ Co•'t c-.. u., r1.tnt Wlt'ft•l't•tfl, rom hl""""l"t' ....... p, '0•1ht1.J""d b'1'ttW'Of.,n ..... C:O.\C Pvbll,11'11"'1 ( "'0 .. "'I S.o.tt••tflt·I~ .,.., PVOU;lted A.\.f''l"l(t-'" ''"' """'" .-,,,. •• •or (~'·" ,_,..,~ .. NP-~I f.•t" Hul'tt0••1tl)I" f'r-•·.,. f:~ '•'" ..,,., •• ., 1•1'iP'"' s'""'"""' "' v ..... y •l"M1 \."OU._..,,,...., ... !.ovth (f\4" • •ft\11· , ... ,, ,...,.,..,, ,.,,.. ., ou&11\1'it'O S•,wro•.,. .. """" ~,~ TP1.- r.;::o.-~~~;:i.~11f~":,.. .• '.:,.'1l'I ._,I R•._ ·-•IN W-...-euO.t"t~""'*1"""'r JtOa c ...... 'llM'• ,.,,..,,."1 •M Gf'M# •IMitMor• Tll..,.HICt...tt fd1l.,- Tl .. -• A ............ ""•"·~'"' l lflto< CMrtt• M L••t fll't'1W ... I' Natt Al\•\t•"t Ma'h~91riiq ldlW" Office• CJt\tt Ml'U \JOW .. ,.:f 81"¥ $t,_.... l "1q'in• .. .._,. t '"CU•"""•'• Stf"tfl' .. t:t~t·:~~ .. !'Wit.r..":::-:0-:'d •• S.1"1 01•" pi, ..... Tetepllo"• (7t4)~21 CIHllfled Advertltllfll "2·1171 s.edOl•M(ti ValftY NtM Otflc• U1~10 """'" , ... (t1~ .... '95-0UO r-f"Ofll"I N&t't'-Or An .. (Ot~ty ~I.._ 540-1220 ... c--"" o ...... c .... ""*"t.11'"' c--IMM\' NI l'lll•t t•ont'-iHV"1'•1...._\ ...,,~., .... ::·:;_,:;. ·:~.·:~~~·-:.:~·.~,._...:~:.:.~ ':; ·-··-· \« .... tlt O ff\tt .. poi. ol Coll """M (ellter"t• lvti\t •1•t taflll f\• ,. .. ,,.,., ti)Q... ~'"'• ,. ,._.,, U ... ~t"IY Mlllt..., .,.,,,....,,.\,) ,.~·~'" . )• pie intend to be home on the date of a campaign appearance. The manual is very specific about the physical arrangements for a Carter appearance. It touts Carter's hair as his best feature. and it tells how to arrange television lighting to create a ra- diant ci rcle around Carter's head to hi ghlight it. Whoever appears on stage with Carter, the handbook s ays, ''should be Middle American 1n appearance and balanced by race and sex. "Don't leave enthusiasm to chance . . . Encourage pan- demonium by scattering hard- core enthusiasts through the crowd . . . 0 rganize 'spon- taneous' cheering ... Instruct the claques to clap, chant, and cheer when the candidate ar- rives," the manual advises. The h andbook tells Carter's press ajdes to dribble out in- formation to reporters to insure maximum publicity for the can· didate. "Never tell people more than they n eed to know to perform their function.'' il adds. "By restricting knowledge you will be better able to control what happens." Carter , the manual state~. "dislikes being hustled around by excitable people. He needs 15 to 50 minutes of private time to prepare for every major speech. There must be a decent private holding room with bathroom near where hew ill speak." Cops Arrest Sex Seekers InSanDiego SAN DIEGO (AP ) -A cr ackdown on female prostitutes is aimed at discouraging them by taking away their customers. Police arrested 40 men ranging in age rrom 19 to 67 last weekend for investigation or soliciting sex. Five hundred males have been arrested since May. Among the latest 40, who later made bail, were 19 servicemen . A police spokesman said none ol the wom en working on downtown streets was arrested. Three women police decoys joined in. At one lime, he said, "guys were driving up to the curbs to stop and talk to girls. The traffic was bac king up bumper to bumper on some 1t.reeta.'' "It got so bad out there that we had to concenlrlale oo taking the busine11 away Crom them," the spokesmao said. 2 Dead, 11 Hurt In Riot CARSON ClTY, Nev (AP) - Two black inmates were stabbed to death and 11 others were in- jured when a group of wbite prisoners attacked the blacks In the dining room of Nevada State Prison, orricials said. One white inmate was hurt. The attack occurred Sunday, one day after ofCicers began a partial release or inmates who were locked in their cells after racial fights broke out in the max- imum security prison Sept. 27. About 415 inmates were locked in their cells after those fights, which left 36 inmates injured. Aotlloritles said no arrests were made pending a probe inl-0 t.he .slayings. Howard Pyle, head prison counselor and duty officer SUn- day, said tear gas was lobbed into the cafeteria to force about 125in- mates into the main prison yard after the fighting broke out. Pyle said whites and blacks were forced into opposite ends of the main prison yard as they came out of the dining room, but hctdidn't have exact numbers. "This is apparently the aJ. termath of the incident two weeks ago." he said. "But different in· mates were involved, because the main people involved two weeks ago we are still in lockup. "Two weeks ago. blacks at-/ tacked whiles. This looks like re- taliation." From Page A l LINKS ... Jn last week 's assault attempt, a 26-year-old Laguna Hills housewife told Sherifr's deputies a man knocked on her front door and identified hi mself as a re- allor. When he entered the home, the tall suspect said he was not real- ly a realtor. "What I really want is you," he told the woman. The victim. who was edging toward a rear door. asked the man what his name was and he said. "Earl." Sheriff's deputies s aid the woman then ran to a neighbor's home. Costa Mesa's Lt. Lorton said today the Laguna Hills woman provided a description of the as- sault suspect before viewing an earlier drawing provided by the witnes s in the Pam Davis murder. . "The two drawings are very similar," he noted. Police are circulating the two drawings in hopes the suspect might be identified. The m an is described as being between 27 and 35 years old. with short black hair parted on the left. He wears square cle ar glas ses with thick dark frames. Anyone who can provide clues as Lo the man's identity is asked to contact Costa Mesa police or the Orange County Sheriff's Of- fice. Grant Fu1ul.s Jose Park SAN JOSE (AP) -A $300,000 federal grant has been awarded San Jose as half the costs of ac- quisition of another 33.5 acres for Lake Cunningham Park. The area in San Jose's east side will be developed for water sports. hiking, biking, and nature study, centered on a 00-acre man·madc lake and a 5.2 acre swimming lagoon With the new acreage, the park will total 125.9 acres. ... SMILING, HANDCUFFED PALESTINIAN TAKEN FROM SYRIAN EMBASSY IN ROMEWlr.pllelo Terrortats Surrender After FalRng to Take AmbaaHdor Ho1tage Terrorists Free Five Three Palestinians Slwot Way Into Embassy ROME (AP> -Three Palesti- nians protesting Syrian interven- tion in Lebanon shot their way in- to the Syrian Embassy in Rome today but s urrendered to J>Olicc after holding fi ve hostages for two hours. Police said one hostage. em· bassy counsellor Huncn Hatem, was seriously wounded in the leg The guerrillas allowed him to be taken to a hospital where he un- derwent al 'h-hour operation. A Syrian official sci1d the Palestinians s urrendered after they realized they had failed to take the ambassador hostage Ambassador Farouk al Sharac had left the embassy earlier to attend a ceremony. About five hours after they stormed the Syrian Embassy, the Palestinians were jailed and charged with attempted murder. taking hostages, violent action against a private bwlding and its occupants , and import . possession and use of explos ives and war weapons. A Palestinian, identified as the 25-year-old leader of the group, was quoted by llalian radio as saying they were protesting what they called Syria's betrayal of the Palestinian cause. Syrian forces a ll ied with Lebanes e HBShooting Being Probed ; One Wounde d Conflicting stories among wit· ~esses to a shooting in Hunt· ington Beach that left one man wounded in the leg. apparently not s e rious ly , wer e being evaluated by investigators to- day. Details or the Incident that OC · curred at 14th Street 'and Orange Avenue wer e sketchy, since com- plete reports of the gunshot as· s ault had not yet been compiled. ~ficers said in early stages of their probe the assault with a de· !idly weapon episode apparently involved two men, at least slight· ly acquainted with each other "Apparently it was a tossup just who was going to shoot whom," comm ented one officer No arrest was made and tn· \'estigators say they have not yet established a specific motive for the predawn incident in the westerly downtown residential area. Christians have been fighting lef- tists Moslems and Pale~tlnians in the Leban est. civil war. The attack came two weeks alter Syrian authorities banged In public in Damascus three Palestinian terrorists who had raided a hotel in an attack in which four hostages were killed Youssef Miro, an embassy of- ficial who was among today's hostages, sajd, "The three came in, leveled their guns a't. us and said they wanted to revenge the massacre in Lebanon." He said there were about 10 people in the building, but five fled by jumping from windows. Restaurants Hit in Trio Of Burglaries Three Newport Beach restaurants and a delicatessen were hit by burglars over the weekend, police reported today. According to reports, in two of the burglaries. thieves made off with cash and goods valued at more than $1,170. In the other two. apparently nothing was talten. investigators said. Thomas Arconti. owner of the Chicken Deli~ht at 500 W. Coast Highway. told police he lost a meat slicer and S28 in rolled coins when burglars pried open the rear door during the hours of darkness Friday night and Satur- day morning. He told police he had secured the door by nailing it shut. but the thieves apparently were able to pry the door open sinvway. The second loss was reported Saturday morning by employes of the Smashed Potato, 101 Palm St., who s aid an overnight burglary cost the restaurant $156 in coins and cigarettes. Police said a second Peninsula. restaurant. the Tale of the Whale at the Balboa Pavilion. was broke n into but a ppar ently nothing was taken by the thi eves who were frightened off by lhl' burglary alarm Employes of Gallo's Itali an Deh. 3900 E. Coast Highway, also reported an attempted break m from Friday night but poli ce said that burglary was apparently foiled by the door lock that the in truders could not break. Taken hostage, he said, were three men and two women. • In his radio ipterview, the Palestinian leader s aid the guer- rillas were members ol the Black ·• June Movement, which is named for the month when Syria sent an i estimated 13,000 troops a nd s everal hundred tanks into .# Lebanon. The guerrilla leader said the / embassy attack was designed to "draw the attention of the world # to the betrayal of the Syrian gov- ernment and the plot of Arab ~ states against the Palestinian people. :. "We did not want to harm anyone," he s aid. "This action ; marks a new stage in the strug- gle of the Palestinian people." Fro• Page A J BUTZ ... ; . . ·: . . • enjoy higher quality food than .. those in other nations and packag-': ing and marketing provides some ; "built·in maid service." ': For example, he said, 60 per· • cent of the potatoes consumed ii. ·4 the U.S. today are already peeled and partially processed, work formerly done in the kitchen. And~ he said similar conveniences are~ packaged into other foods. "Tt::s is one of the marvelou~ success stories in the Americ~ story." - Because Americans spend re- latively little for food, they havt! more money for automobiles~-• television sets and other conver niences. ~· "I( you listen lo some or the . political palaver that is golntf, : around you get the impressionr • that America is ralllng apart a\ the seam s," Butz continued. : "You get the idea that you ha~'" better crawl back in your shell~" and sit on what you have.'' .: But he said it has been free en·" terprise and an ability by govern~ ' ment to let free e nterprise work·· that led the country lo where it is today. • New A1nh assador 4 CANBERRA. Australia (AP>•, -Alan Renouf. 57, wtll become .. Australia's ambassador to the , United Stales early next year. the government announced to- day. Renouf has been bead of the permanenl staff or the Depart- ment or F oreign Affairs. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- The Last Bag of S11111•er These rolls of hay on John A. Fyffe'a farm outside Albany, N. Y., signal the last cutting of bay before the l Indian summer days are over and wlnlt!r comes to the Northeast. ~ ' Monday. Or,toher 11 19'16 OAILYPILOT A:S Youth's Flight Thmarts Killer's Aim PHILIPPI, W.Va. (AP)-Sb· teen.year-old Jeff Moala' de· eillon to nan for b1s llfe, Instead ol tattn1 a bullet lytng down. paid oil bandaomely. "I peHed that I wu just aa • dylnLoo the run aa la.y· there," oat.a said Sunday er eacapin1 from a man who him be planned to shoot blm. 'I sot ln a klnd d half-crouch l1te I wu coins to do what be aald and then I started to run. I cou.1d see bJ m out ol tbe cornet" of my eye taking aim and I toot a roll and hit the dirt. I beard the bullet go over my head and then l heard a 11bot." Minutes after Moabi informed state police of what bad hap- pened, officers arTeSted LewtS Harris, 24, of Brownton on ~ Ppot Logbook J op Sports Hailed At Escape Country r . B71'1LUAMSCRllEIDER Of .. o.11, ..... tuft ON llY WAY BACX from a press sneak peek at the new skateboard complex al Escape Country, I fmally figured out wbat it is about that so-called "amusement ranch" that makes my skin crawl and palms sweat. It's that same feeling ol impending doom I got while watching those two science fiction movies about a com- puterized, robot-staffed amusement island called Delos where "Nothing can .. go wrong ... go wrong ... go wrong. Escape Country harbors and even en- courages all those crazy sports that I wouldn't try for all the tea in China. I call them the "pop" sports. They're like pop wines and pop music -in one day and out the next as new realms of thrill gratification are explored. Into the category d .. pop" sports, I lump such things as hang gliding, sky diving, dirt motorcvcliDIZ. bot air ballooning, surfing, skateboarding, drag racing, rock climbing and hot dog skiing. Hula Hooping could be added bere but its thrill aspect is questionable. THERE'S A Fil GREATER "macho factor" in pop sports lban in tbe more traditional plebian athletic pas- times such as S'!Vimming llnd football. That's because the key aspect of a pop sport iS the constant specter of instant death or borri ble injury. But the most intriguing thing about pop sports is that all the participants act, sound and even look alike. Maybe that's because m8J\Y of them participate in giultiple pop sports to decrease their probability of survival. They all seem to have an intuitive grasp of the jargon in each pop sport and can easily recite the names of the top akiler, skater, glider, biker or whatever. Because each pop sport bas about a dozen "individual events," there seem to be hundreds of "world champion" pop sports figures. AND JUST AS ALL pop sports enthusiasts must look as though they are cut from the same mold, so m"'t there be pop sports groupies and hangers-on. There are the armchair thrill seekers who prefer thelr dole of excitement vicariously while they sit in the open doorway of a custom van sipping beer and watching "the action." Coast Woman Sues Over 'Witch' Quip A woman who claims that "CNBC anchor man Paul Moyer 1a.s referred to her during his ?Yening programs as "the witch San Juan Capistrano" sued the evision personality Friday for ,000 in damages. Mrs. F . M. Snowden of San UJD Capistrano claims In her ge County Superior Court awsuit that the comments al- egedly made by Moyer over annel 4 stemmed from a letter him in which she criticzed his ammar and diction. Mrs. Snowden states that her tter was stressed as being nal and confidential. She cues Moyer of breaching that t and of quoting her letter on air in an attempt to humiliate discredit her. She claims that Moyer re· ferTed to her as a witch while dis- cussing upcoming Halloween festivities on Oct. 6, 1975. Mishap Kills School Chief FREMONT <AP> -James M Nunes, former superintendent of Alviso School District, bas been killed in an accident al his ranch near here. Authorities said Nunes. 68, who lived alone on the six·acre ranch, died Saturday when be was pinned beneath a tractor. He headed the Alviso School District for 17 years until it merged with the Fremont Unified School District in 1964. char1es ol abductlon and armed robbery. He wu la.tcr lltt'Uled ot murderto1 another aervtce st•· tlon attendant. Moats, a junior al PbJUp· Barbour H.lth School. said be was worldn& at a service station -near Pblllppi when a man en· ttted the station on Saturday, whipped QUl a pistol and ordered him to empty the cash register. •Let's Neek' The aunman then ordered him in-to bb vehicle, and tbe two drove to Claruburg. "We talked all the way over there," Moats recalled. "Wo talked about his wife and bis ramUy. He made me feel a lilUe m«e al euc. He was~ nice on the way." Alter drlvlng for a period ol time, the 1unman pulled \he car .......... A ~ive-day-old giraffe nuzzles up to zoo keeper Karl- Hemz Rosseck for a nosy nip at the Munich. West Germany. zoo. Rosseck has spent the nights with his charge, bottle feeding the animal after her mother aban-doned her. Dutch End Visit To War Liberators FORT CAMPBELL. Ky. CAP) -The races were different, but the "Screaming Eagle" insignia was the same worn by the paratroopers who liberated Mathew Van Luyt's hometown in Holland in World War IJ. They were the Screaming Eagles or the lOlst Airborne Division s tationed at Ft. Campbell, the same division that 32 years earlier had helped liberate Van Luyt's home of Ein- dhoven after four years of Nazi occupation. Van Luyt, along with 51 other me111bers of the Society of Dutch Airborne Friends <SDAF> and 13 Belgians, ended Sunday an 11 · day reunion described as the "of- ficl al continuation of the friendship that exists since the 194-4 dropping.•· SI>AF was organized in 1966 and given legal recognition by the Dutch government to com- memorate the liberation and honor the liberators. Van Luyt was 11 years old at the time of the liberation. When Germany overran Holland in 1940, Van Luyt, now 43, recalled, "My father said, 'Well this is not going to last longer than a year.· But we waited quite a long Ume for it." Van Luyt, now an electronics manufacturer, said that when the liberation finally came, in the form of a joint American-British airborne attack, he was "as- tounded" by the large numbers of men and material from the United States. "I r emember so well the planes coming over with their gliders behind them," he said, "and just a couple of hours later we had Americans in the streets . . . paratroopers. It was so won· derful." While at Ft. Campbell, the SDAF vis itors have gollen s pecial treatment. They were given a demonstration of an air assault complete with helicop- ters. a sky-diving demonstration and were guests at a dinner dance attended by Maj. General John A. Wickham, division and post commander. rll the road beb1nd some brush and ordered him out. Moats said. "Re told me to 1« out d the car and walk beblnd it and lay down. laaid, ·You're not goin8 to aboot me. are you?' He said. 'Yes.lam'," After be escaped. Moats said, he hid in the woods while the gun- man called to him. "He kept blowing the horn and Yel.llni to try to talk me into comJ.nc bac:.k Ulte l was an idJot or 1101Dethiq," Moats said. • "I was scared but I think look· tng back on it all makes me more scared than what actually bap. pened did.'' · Moat. said he may even pla,y ~from school today. "l ... thlnk l'U ju1t take tomorrow off." Co11nee Boswell Death Claims Big Band Singer NEW YORK (AP> -Connee Boswell,\. a noted singer from the Big Band era remembered for such songs as "Stormy Weather" and "Whispers in the Dark, .. died today at Mt. Sinai H06ipital. Miss Boswell, 68, bad been con- fined to a wheelchair since she contracted polio at 3. She bad un- dergone surgery for cancer last February at Mt. Sinai. Born in New Orleans, she first came to the public's attention as one of the three Boswell Sisters. tn 1936. her sisters retired and Connee forged on alone. It was about that time she married Harry Leedy , the group's manager. Miss Bos well also made a name for herself in mo-films as •'Kiss the Boys Good Bye," "The Trans-Atlantic Mer- ry-Go-Round," and ''Artists and Models." in which she sang the Academy Award-winning song, "Whispers in the Dark." She recorded for Decca re- cords and had a series of duet hits with Bing Crosby. Some of the best sellers were "Yes In- deed," "Basin Street Blues" and "Alexander 's Rag Time Band." With her recording of the operatic song .. Martha," done in swing style, she started a trend of swing bands and singers adapt- ing classical m usic for their own arrangements. She performed from a wheeled stool that could be moved about the stage. Her floor·length gowns were specially designed to bide the stool. 'Tm not trying to hide the fact oostage," she said d the 'long gowns. "But I don't want the fact that I can't wait to stand between me and the audience." Miss Boswell, who lived in New York City, was widowed in January 1975 and stopped performing about that time. Funeral arrangements were pending. Dana Resident Sent to Jail Bradley Cuthbertson ol Dana Point bas been sentenced to nine months in Orange County Jail and fined $2,500 alter pleading guilty to possession of cocaine. Superior Court Judge James H. Walsworth oTdered the jail term, fine and three years' probation after accepting the plea filed by Cuthbertson, 21. of 24812 Selva Drive. San Clemente police arrested Cuthbertson Nov. 17 after a search of the home he reportedly shared with a 17-year-old girl who was booked into juvenile ball on related charges plus runaway al- legations. Marconi Ex Dies -.&.. ,. .............. ~ ),,, BAND SINGER DfES .; Connee 801weU, 18 Jane Calm For Debut On "Today' NEW YORK <AP> -Jane Pauley, who made her much ballyhooed debut as cohost on NBC television's ''Today" show this morning, says she never got the expected jangling of . nerves before the broadcast. "I was very calm this morn· ing and I actually slept last night," the 25-year-old Indiana native said as she relaxed after her inaugural appearance on the long.running morning pro- gram. Sbe said it was much easier than her first time, referring to a guest appearance on the show last July. "And I think I really got over the hump during the one-week stint l spent In September." Mlss Pau l ey replaced Barbara Walters, who left NBC for a million dollar contract to coanchor the ABC Evening News with Harry Reasoner. She was selected after a na· tionwide search, leaving a job at WMAQ-TV. the NBC network affiliate in Cb1cago where she bad been the flrst woman to coanchor a regular weeknight news program in that city. Tom Brokaw. the other recent addition to the ''Today" show staff which also includes Gene Shallt, said he thought bis new coJleague was "calm, cool, col- lected and had something to say." Inmates R espond Small Town Humming One of the highlights of this and the two previous DAC (Dutch Are Coming) trips, Van Luyt said, is the opportunity to stay in private homes. "Tt}is is what ( thin.It makes the friendships," be said. ROME CAP> -Beatrix O'Brien, the divorced Irish wife of Guglielmo Marconi, the Italian inventor or wireless tele- graphy, died Sunday at 95. She and Marconi were married in 1905 and divorced in 1924. Marconi died in 1937. CIUNO <AP> -Inmates al the Chino youth training school have given $500 to the wife of a guard who wa.s seriously Utjured during a riot and breakout at the Institu- tion last month. Elko BracesforSumma's $142 Million Trial l:LKO, Nev. (AP> -When r1vate jets start landing at 's airport, and they stay ~)>und. residents know ng is going on. what ls going on in this mall eastern Nevada city is a ~ trial alleging $142 million ln M1ages against one of the most .tul companies in the Unit· .._,..tes, if not the world. ce Elko ls not what you'd a $142 million town. It all ~-a blt paradoxical. In this , in an a lmost ancient •.-totlhal111A, are 11 bia·clty at· 11, an angry newspaper .a .. iber and two carporate jets. defendant is SWnma Corp. to be c ailed the Hugbes Company and was owned controlled by tbe late lonaire recluse Boward ... Vegas. The case was in recess over the long weekend, but was set to re· sumeTuesday. Everything about Howard Hughes in recent years was sur· rounded with mystery. Shadows ol enigma pervade this case. The attorneys carefully guard their mountains of mes and lug them home for study each night. There are few spectators and all listen every time the name of Hughes comes up. Sam Lionel, whose Las Vegas law firm ls the largest in tbe sta"!.t represents Summa while Ralpo Denton, alaoolLas Vegaa1 bead.I the• Gretll.SllUD team or lawyen. Green1pun 'nd Lionel have etasbed on several occasions, especially wblle the Lu Vegas Sun publisher was being croes· examined. Uonel, ~enUessly sluaging at Oreenspun's testimony over several years, bas attempted to discredtt it. 411 At one time Greenspun asked Uonel to step away from blm. Another lime be refused to answer a question. ObYiously haaard at one point durlna bb second day before Lionel. Greenspun voiced his ex.haua· Uoa and sa.ld: , "I'm tired ... if there was a un· ion of witnesses I would join it right now.·· The case is simple in essence, complex in litigation. Chronologically, in 1967, Greenspun borrowed $4 million from Hughes to rebuild bis ftre- ravaged Sun. He secured the note with some land be owned adja- cent to the Paradise Country Club near Las Vegas. At the lime be also owned the club. In 1969 Greenspun and Hughes ne1otiated for the sale ol the country club and the land. The deal fell through when Hughes wanted out. But Greempun re- fUled to let him back out ol the eoane1ale. At the same Ume. Greenspun contends, the terms ol lbe 198'7 loan were rewrltten, allowing him mot"e time lo ~. and more importantly 1 be maintains, cb&nJlf.u the collateral on the note from•the land to stock in the SUD. • Summa contends the change ol collateral was tied to the abortive land deal. The trust deed on the land wu note filed by Summa unt.U im. 1uddenly and without notice, Greenspun sald. PUBLIC NOTICE For your convenience Western Union is now' open 6 days per week. Mon. thru Fri. 8:00 a.m. til 5:00 p.m. Sat. 9:00 a.m. til 1 :00 p.m. This is a full service office able to assist you in sending money or messages anywhere in the world. WESTERN UNION 771 WEST 19th COSTA MESA 645-9920 or 645-9921 < t ~ I , ~r •• • . . .. -. DAILY Pll.OT CRYSTAL BALL DEPT.- Nobody ls really fretting today about what the weather bas done. It's done everything. What you have to wony about now is what it could possibly do next? So far we've already ex- perienced early October weather that included b.t. tog. smog and soaring ocean water tem- peratures. ... Liz' Newest Fa1nily Belfast Rage Moh Attacks Peace Leaders BELFAST (AP) -An angry mob ol lloman Cathollcs punched and kicked the two leaders of the Women's Peace Movement and destroyed their cars whlle the women took retuse lo a Belfaat cbureb. Betty WUUams and Mairead Corri8•n tried to add.ral a meetlnl ol the Turf Lodge Tenants Association. The meettni was called on &an· day to protest the death earlier in the day of a 1.3-year-old boy bit in the head by a British soldier 's plastic bullet. THE HOSTILE AUDIENCE ol about 600 women chased the women out of the meeting, and they ran to a nearby catholic church. "I AM NOT BnTElt about what happened because I can un· derstand why these men took the gun," Mrs. Williama said. "I ~ not want any army on our street& . . . I have seen the British army commit atrocities and these peo- ple in Turf Lod1e have beeD un- der terrible pressure iD tbe last three weeks from the British army.'' M a matter or fact, just last Saturday was proclaim~ the hottest October day in Orange County since 1909 when at 2 p.m., central county thermometers soared to 104 degrees. DO YOU KNOW bow long ago 1909 was? I will remind you. William Howard Taft was Presi- dent of the United States. Elizabeth Taylor, center. and former Navy Secretary John W. Warner at her left, are planning to marry before the end of the year forming the family pictured here. From right: Michael Wilding Jr.; Liza Todd. Miss Taylor's daughter: Mary Warner, Warner's daughter; Miss Taylor; Warner , and Mrs. Michael Wilding Jr. The baby is the Wildings •offspring. "The mob was right behind us," a woman w\th the group said. "I saw them pulling Miss Corrigan's hair and trying to rip the clothes off her back. Mrs. Williams was kicked In the stomach.'' Mrs. Williams said later that It was the women who were against us when we arrived who advised us to leave. They were shocked by the animal hatred of most of the crowd. She said they went to the pro- test meeting "because we have said we condemn all sorts ol violence, including violence by the BritJsh army." LEADERS OF TRE peace movement called f« a rally in downtown Londonderry, Northern Ireland's second largest city. to protest a sur1e ol violence there. Taft got to be president the year before by defeating a man named William J ennings Bryan. Bryan, known as the Great Com- moner, had made his third run at the presidency. Coup Plotters Assaikd "WE CAME OUT OF the back door of the hall and beaded towards a church about 100 yards away. "Outside the hall there was a group of about 50 women and children. Ralph (her husband) and I walked band·in- band dead straight towards the church. and I was kicked, punched and my hair was pulled. China Near Naming He is the only man ever to run for president unsuccessfully three times. He was clearly stub· born about the thing. Thai Military Ruler Clamps Down on Left Successor Byran first won the nomination in 1896 when he challenged the Eastern Establishment's bard line on the gold standard. He favored a two-metal standard. Thus he made bis famous speech to the Democratic Convention. urging that this natioo not be crucified upon ••a cross of gold." PLE~E DO NOT anticipate thi& kind of rousing oratory in our current presidential campaign. We have already suffered the agonies of dozing off during two nationally televised debates by our current standard bearers. There is a third one coming up. There isn't much hope that Debate Three will develop any fist-thumping declarations. The best we can hope for is two or three coherent sentences strung together. The blessing is, you suppose, that William Jennings Bryan isn't around to witness these pre- sentations. He would be left baf· fied and amazed, wondering what this country is coming to. BUT I DIGRESS. We were sup- posed to be talking about the weather, which is more interest- ing than the presidential debates by a long shot. Point is that it's been 67 years since it got this bot in our region in October. The weather has been all over the place. So it went to 104 Saturday and then by noon Sun- day it was up to 90 at our inland reaches and thus sent streams of beachgoers our way. And what happened? They got here along the coastline to be greated by vagrant fogs that drifted in and out of the shoreline area. NOW YOU HAVE to wonder what will happen next. The weather people are predicting it'll get cooler. That's safe. 1t can't get much hotter. For the real forecast, however, l have turned to my trusty Old Farmer's Almanac. It predicted the beat wave. The almanac now forecast we shall have rain by this coming weekend. Quite heavy, in fact. Just remember where you re- ad it first. BANGKOK -Thailand's rive- day-old military regime has ac- cused a general or plotting with other army officers against the ruling military council headed by Adm. Sangad Cbalawyu, senior military sources reoorted. The sources said the accused general, Chalard Hiranyasiri, 53, was •'under security sur- veillance" and was ordered lo appear before the 24-man military council. They said the · council had also drawn up a mt of army generals and lower- ranking officers suspected of plotting with Cbalard. Flight Aborted But Baloonist Sets Mark PONTA DELGADA, Azores (AP) -American balloonist Ed Yost, rescued ·nearly 600 miles short or his goal. says he feels "perfect" and "in good spirits because I broke lots or records." Yost was forced down in the Atlantic Ocean on Sunday east of the Azores, cutting short bis attempt to become the first man to cross the ocean in a balloon. But his headquarters near Washington said that before Yost ditched, be traveled longer -nearly 107 hours -and farther -2,500 miles ,.----------........ ] -thananyotherballoonist. ( IN SHORT The West German freighter Elisabeth Bolte~ rescued Yost and was taking '------------him to Gibraltar. The ship was expected to arrive there Tuesday morning. Ford SeUlf!tfaenf. Doubt• A rl•e DETROIT CAP) -The tentative settlement in the 27-day-old strike at Ford Motor Co. appears in jeopardy as early vote results show the proposal rejected by skilled tradesmen at the union's largest single local and by members or a large local in Ohio. However. some locals voted to ratify the contract. and the re· mainder of Ford's 170,000 United Auto Workers employes were to have voted to<tay and Tuesday on the proposed three-year contract. S~ond Erere11f. Cll•h Dropped EVEREST BASE CAMP. Nepal CAP) -Members of the American Bicentennial Everest Expedition are headed back to base camp after 100-mile-per-hour winds and numbing cold forced can· ceUation of an attempt t.o put a second team on top or the world's tallest mountain. Dr. Chris Chandler and Robert Cormack made it to the 29,028- foot summit Friday afternoon, but expedition leader Phil Trimble decided Sunday to call off an assault by the three-man second team. "We have decided to abandon the mountain," Trimble said from Camp 2, at 21,000 feet. "It's very windy and cold and the weather seems to be getting worse. A second summit attempt is not worth the risks it would entail." Pilot •Repeat•' A·bo•b Raid HARLINGEN (AP) -Watched by 40,000 persons who paid up to $5 each, the pilot who dropped the A-bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, re- enacted his historic mission from a B29 ,bomber -complete with imitation mushroom cloud. Paul Tibbets, a retired Air Force general, flew a B29 SUperfortress over this Lower Rio Grande city once Saturday and twice Sunday to help raise money for a group that preserves World War II aircraft. The real bomb he dropped from the "Enola Gay" on Aug. 6, 1945, left nearly 130,000 persons dead. missing or injured. Cold Keeps East _Chilled Temperatures Dip to 30s along Atlantic Tempera tu~• AMlllQutrQ111t A"*1llO Mt'lletl9r AtlMla eosaon llufll4e Ollceoo OllClllNll Oewland ~ OIKMol~ o.ir'oll OUllllll .,,.._ ~,., Hellolvl11 .._,.. IC-City t.MV.,.• Uft .. ltock MIMI! ,...._,... ~·St.Ptul HIW Or'-"6 ... Ytftl Ok ....... Qty C)INM "i.tl ...-11 a 13 '1 40 JS ., .. SI Cl 5-4 ,. M C2 60 ,. jt .. 12 .. 1• •1 M o SI Jt " tJ SI 1J ., ,. ll .. 71 S3 ,, " 7S '° ., 74 ,. JI ., 47 1$ •S ~ 42 •1 SI '° .. 'FORECAST Pialllls.rl~ PMoRoeMS PNladttDlll• ,.._.,. . ""..,.,,... PDr'll....,.~· ""'aluff Secf~ s.. LAll>l• Sett Ullle Oty SM P'tan<IKo SMttl• "l"!Mr-1 W\19\tllnoton .. ts .. SI ~ ., ,. .s ,. . .. 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HIOlll T'"say Ill tlw mld10'•· OMl\l•I 11mperet11tH wtll rantt IMIWNfl •O •no 7J. tnl•n~ ,,,... --~' wtll ran~ 11111-u -'6. TI!twaler1~rtt11rewtllll .. t s....,n...,T1c1n MONDAY ~low S·9'p.m, U TUHOAY Anl 10W S:• a.II\. U FIMlllOll 11:17 a.m.. H ,...,...... . .... "" ... S.C.OllOlllOll 1t120a.ll\. u hll,._.t·1h m~MtU:)4p& Moor'l •l•tt t .40 p m • ..u t.••.m. THE SOURCES SAID the council ordered telephone taps and surveillance for those under suspicion and some might be dis· missed from their posts. 'Ibougb Cbalard is known to have some support among the of. fleer corps and bas close connec- tion with the rightist. Thal Nation party, be did not appear to be a serious threat to the military group that overthrew the elected civilian government last Wed - nesday. The ruling council is made up or every key military commander in the country and controls all command posts. CHALARD WAS assistant commander or the army, but earlier this year he was transferred to a staff job in the defense ministry. The sources said he was "not in tune" with Sang ad. Special units continued to man security checkpoints In Bangkok, searching for leftist ·'sub- versives." and patrolled the streets in jeeps mounted with machine guns. But life in the city was bustling once again, and schools reopened alter being closed almost a week. "Just as we got to the entrance of the church, I felt a blow on the back of my bead and I passed out." Williams said his wife passed out in the church aisle but recovered 10 minutes later and the group went into the vestry. "WE WERE IN THERE for about two hours and it was while we were there that our cars were wrecked by the crowd," he said. "We could bear muffled shouts of the crowd outside and the sound of a rew bricks landing here and there." The group left by the back door or the church after enough men bad gathered to protect them. The peace movement was or- ganized seven weeks ago by Mrs. Williams, 32. and Miss Corrigan, 23, to protest the Catholic· Protes- tant warfare in which at least 1,634 persons have died in seven years. Both the women are Catholics, but their movement is not popular in the Turf Lodge area because residents believe the women are backed by the British government. a charge they deny. TOKYO (AP> -China's leaders are believed to be wait· ing for a meeting ~ the Com· munist party Central Committee before officially naming Premier Hua Kuo-feng to succeed Mao Tse-tung as party chairman. But another report from Peking ap- pears lo indicate that Hua is Mao's successor . Hsinbua, the orfic1al Chinese news agency. reported SUnday that the Chinese army pledged obedience to the Central Com- mittee "headed by Hua Kuo- feng." HUA PRESUMABLY bas been acting bead of the committee since Mao's death on Sept 9 because he was first vice chairman of the party. But the H.sinhua report repeatedly used the phrase "headed by Hua." and this appeared to confirm bis elevation. The army's support is con· sidered crucial lo tbe power struggle that apparently bu gone on in China since Premier Chou En-l ai died last Jan. 8. Vera Valiant, Vera Valiant! Come back, I love you! Everybody loves you! Winthrop Smedley pleads with the lovely but star-crossed heroine of the hilarious new comic strip. "The V irtue of V era Valiant." What the stuffy suitor 1s saying is true. folks- You all are destined to fall quickly and madly in love with Vera Valiant and the wonderfully emotional predicaments she and her friends get into ... in H ac kensack. New Jersey. They are the brainchildren of the legendary Stan Lee. of comic-book fame. who undertakes to spoof the soap operas of television and the old -line comic strips. H e gleefully promises that Winthrop won't be the last one to lay siege to- Begins Today tn the .DAI LY pf rot• f • • •. I f "" • 642-4321 J, ••• Ju I •I f, ~. .; •( '> 1· ,, JI ' 1 .~. Mond'Y. Octob~r 11, 1979 DAILY PILOT /I( 'But tt'e Need Tltent' Official Slams CY A ~stupidity' Agqny of \'irtory Joe Rarick of New Baltimore, Mich .. strains as he slowly edges toward victory over Ron Bennett of Sonoma in wrist wrestling championships being held in Petaluma, Calif. Rarick won, advancing to final rounds and capturing the lightweight title as well. Ford Death Plot An Einpty Threat LOS ANGELES (AP> -An intense weekend in- vestigation into what appeared to be a plot to kill President Ford turned out to be "much ado about ..-.aothing." the Secret Service says. Authorities thought they had stumbled across a plot to assassinate Ford when blueprints of a build· ine near the route the President used during bis vis- it to Dallas over the ( J weekend were found in an BR/ E FS abandoned Hollywood _ apartment. '"----------The Secret Service spent the weekend in· vestigating the background of a man who aban· dolled the apartment and left behind a mysterious device and the blueprints to the World Trade Mart in Dallas. "As it turns out. there was probably legitimate reason for him to have the plans," Special Agent Robert E. Powis said Sunday, "he's an architect." I State Drop• Laetrile Charge SACRAMENTO (AP) -Criminal charges of dispensing illegal Laetrile as a cancer cure have been dropped against 64-year-old Roberto Clement~. Laetrile, an extract of apricot kernels is called an ineffective quack remedy by publlc health authori lie$, Clemente was found innocent last February of practicing medicine without a license. But the jury deadlocked 11-1 on the Laetrile charge. A un· animous verdict is needed for conviction in criminal cases. The dismissal by Sacramento Superior Court., SACRAMENTO CAP> -Allen Breed, outgotne director of the California Youth Authority, says co1 .. rectioaal lnstlUUons '"are concrete monuments to :;ran:=g~!ty ln deallnt with the problems ol But "that does not mean we don't need them,·• Breed aald in an interview publiabed &lnday in the Sacramento Bee. Breed, SS, leaves later this month for a one-year U.S. JusUce Department fellowship in Washington, 'D.C. He said he is reluctant t.o leave. "l'D REALLY LIKE TO be direct.or under Jerry Brown. but I have strong feelings about ~banging lbe bureaucrats every eight oc 10 years. We need to throw lbe rascals out every so often,'' be said. He said hJs successor, Pearl West, former vice chairwoman of the Youth Authority parole board, will be "a breath of fresh air." Breed said it costs $12,000 a year to keep a juvenile in an institution. "How much more money should be put into corTectional institutions is highly questionable." "IF WE REALLY WANT to d9 something about the problems of crime, we should work on strengthening the f amlly." be said. Breed acknowledged the tougher public at- titude toward crime: "I see increasingly harsher• sanctions being imposed. Basically, the American people are a punitive lot, and they have no un- derstanding of what time behind bars means. "The general public really doesn't give a damn about due process for inmates. They generally feel they deserve what they're getting and it they'll just st.op bitting people over the bead and stealing their property, they can have their freedom. It's not that simple." Primitive Earth Too Hot for Life PASADENA CAP>-Temperatures which may have reached 160 degrees may be one reason there were few complex organisms on earth three billion years ago, a Caltec.h scientists says. Dr. Samuel Epstein, a professor of geochemistry. said in the current issue of Geochimica et Cosmocbimica Acta, a scientific journal, that the earth "may simply have been too hot and too humid for any sophisticated life to have evolved.·· Bacteria and blue-green algae may have been able to withstand the heat and humidity of the primitive earth, be said. Both are believed to have been the first life to have evolved on earth and fos- silized bacteria have been dated back 3.3 billion years. Epstein's research, which was done several years ago but reported only now, involved using several isotopes found in a flint-like rock. Through analysis, the temperature at which the rock was formed can be determined. reported Sunday, followed the request of Deputy ----------. out. Atty. Dennis Warren. How to get aEA E'ore• Cu•• in Sf. all SAN DIEGO CAP) -The 1977 budget adopted by the California State Employes Association will require a 20 percent cut in staff. stockbrokers StoP putting it off. Welcome . Aboard By ALMON LOCKABEY Fire exUnaulahers on boats are usually th<>uaht ol as safety devices. Jo fact, Coast Guard approved ft.re extlnquishers are required by law to be aboard mo1t veaseb. But these same fire extinguishers could become the moat unsafe 1ear items aboard your boat -in fact a potenUal bomb. The Coast Guard warns that fire extinguishers can become lethal lf they are not properly main- tained. A recent case involving the explosion of a C0-2 ftre exUngulsber aboard a recreational boat prompted the w arnl.ng from the Coast Guard office. ol Boating Safety. Here's what happened : A 47-POOT Maroa yacht that was secured in lta slip was blasted by an extinguisher that was stored in the cockpit ol the boat. The vessel suffered extensive damaae to the port side of the bull and minor damage on the starboard side, . ApparenUy, when the extinguisher exploded it crashed off the starboard slde and embedded itself in the port side, knocking several planks of the wooden bull loose in its fllgbt. Damage was estimat· ed at $1,500. Fortunately, no one was aboard so there were no injuries. The C0-2 extinguisher that caused aJl the damage was 30 years old but appeared to the owner t.o be in good condition. Close inspection after the accident revealed that corrosion _µnder the label was the source of the canister failure. The Coast Guard believes that routine maintenance could have prevented the explosion. ALTHOUGH NO FEDERAL regulations re- Quire maintenance of fire extinguishers aboard recreational craft, California Administrative Code, TiUe 19, Subchapter 3, does require it. All fire extinguishers must be serviced annually by a certified service man. This servicing may re- quire as little as a visual inspection of all the compo- nent parts of the device. It may be as complicated as a hydrostatic test to determine if the canister is still strong enough to withstand the internal pressure to which it is normally subjected. All service must be performed by a mechanic certified by the California state fire marsbaJ. EVEN IF THE UW DID not require it, an an- nual inspection should be made to make sure the fl.re extinguisher will do the job for which it was in- tended rather than becoming a further hazard, the Coast Guard warns. l.elunans, Lasers Sailed Off Coast Fourteen Lehman-12 sailors turned out at Newport Harbor Yacht Club Saturday ~d Sunday for the W.D. Schock Trophy series, and 14 Laser sailors wer e on the line for the local fleet cham- pioosb.ip. The winner in the Lehman-12s was Tim Hogan, followed by Bill Symes and Ted Munroe. All three skippers are from NHYC. Kevin Kirk or Balboa Yacht Club is the new Laser fleet champion. Runner-up was Steve Arrigo, NHYC, and third was Mike Arrigo, NHYC. J The action Sunday at the CSEA's annual con- vention means 40 positions will have to be dropped, effective Jan. 1.1977. from a staff of just over 200. to refund your losses CaDToday ToUfne 800-528-1445 c. ................. .., Officials said even with the reduction in staff, the 1977 budget of $8.1 million won't be met unless the membership, now 86,000, is increased by 2,000 during the year. .._ ________ _. What makes dinner and entertainment at The Registry Hotel such a g6od idea? Shape up and slim down. Holiday Spa can help you make physical improve- ment a pleasure with steam. sauna and whirt- pools at all clubs. Even heated swimming pools at key locations. Gals, ask about Jaz:znastics- f un group exercises to uptempo music. Because The Registry Is the the happy landing place where happy evenings happen naturally. In the Grand Portage Restaurant and Saloon enjoy a great dinner of gourmet food cooked. table-side. Enjoy dancing. Stay for one or even 1wo exciting shows. So come for dinner. Or dancing. Or the shows. Come for all three. Now thars a happy landlngl THE REGISTRY HOTEL . ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT 18800 MocArtror Boulevard, lrvtne. Phone 752-8777 ~ ~lltry Hotels. Dollen; Minneapolis I St. Poul Allport. soon In Scottsdale, Mz. OwMCI end ~.0 by Ho9pitallly M~I Cotp, OellA, Tex .. }, Give us a call. Today. 'Ne can help you find your way. •• Foulup Fog Cut Back Race~ A mlxup on the settJ.ne ot marts and deDM toe reduced the -Ocean Rae· int Fleet champiONhip series from a projected three races to one. The overall winner in the only race sailed Saturday was Cadenza. a Peterson-deslened Two Ton sloop built, owned and skippered by Carl Eichenlaub of San Dleao Yacht Club. THE aEGATTA schedule called for two races on Saturday and one on Sunday. One ol Saturday's races was thrown out as the result of a protest on the loca- tion of the windward mark. The race committee then scheduled two races on SUnday. but a dense toe set in Just before the start of the first race and never dissipated. The fleet milled around the starting line for a couple of hours before the r ace was called by the com· BOATING mltte.e for safety re asons. THE SERIES wa hosted by Long Beac Yacht Club and ~al' sanctioned J>y the Oce'-. Racing Fleet of South~ California. ' Results based on on ' race: , CLASS A -Oo9 Pattll. Doll Ayn' Jr .• NHYC; 2, OuHter, 8111 "'-: NHYC; J, ... ,.,.,, Jim Ll- IYC:. Cl.ASSl-1, C.deftra; 2, "-tt 14.-1 lwec•. CYC: J, Spellbound, E ~LIYC:. a.ASSC-1. e ... allft. 8-M.--. PMYC; 2, rtll Hea ...... landO Perrll. ABYC; ). Preamble, s.im ., .. Terry Cicero. LBYC:. Dana Race Taken By Silent Woman Silent Woman. an lslander-36 owned anc sailed by Mark Meade, Capistrano Bay Y acbt Club was a Class A winner in Dana Pont Yacht Club't Dorcas Britt Regatta, named for the woman club member on the race committee who does most of the spade work for the committee. The event was originally billed as the Fall Regatta and featured Performance Handicap Ra~· ing Fleet yachts racing on outside courses and small boats racing inside the harbor. Results: evcPt-lJllF It. -I Siient Wo ....... 1 Coll~ (Jll.a"91r-lJI ~"Y l(Ufln. c.oc pHJll F.e -•. It.voe• ICel ,., Tim Fuller. OPYC. 1. Sun\111~ IC.t•ll-111 Ron ~l•<'M•Y. Of'VC. l. Wlndlr....., ICel·tll Tim Kelln, CeCK> eve: PHJlll"·C. I '4orl1°" JOI> 101-Marl-HI Crtlq Ftetcller. OPVC. 1 00!.t"IOI\. •C•• !51 8oD G<l•n. CaPo 8VC. J. lltlle Sc>trlt lknte,...UI Ch<Kll •• , ... CaPo e vc CAUIS•NG CLASS -I l(01na .. 1a (\/IC1orv·111 Pllll Ov!llet<I, U'lalt..:lled. ? Fllnf'Y l't~hn<j IC•t•llna.711 "91f Mtede. Ceoo 8YC. ). Com11any'l 8ell tCel·l51 C.OfQe Cunn1nqnen1, OPVC SABOT -I Ju He Timon, C.po 6VC. l l00.14 -1, Phll AOam\, OPVC. 1. Lii" 51,,_IOft, OPVC. J, Marty Te1•amo, caoo eve l..A5£A -I, Tim Full••. OPVC. 2, Crato Flelcllff. OPYC. Flam Cal-40 Champ Dense fog Sunday failed to daunt eleven Cal_. skippers and crews who turned oat for the cl&!! championship at Los Angeles Yacht Club. Twc races were sailed Saturday and one oh &lnday. The new champion is Barney Flam of Lonj Beach Yacht Club, owner and skipper of FlarJ>· buoyant. Runner·up was Persepbone, skippered by Jack Woodhull, California Yacht Club, and third was Firebird, sailed by Bob Grant, Santa Barbara Yacht Club. r A8 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Looking Elsewhere Perhaps the most reasonable step taken recenUy toward solving Orange County's airp0rt problem came last week when county supervisors agreed to discuss seeking a regional airport site with neighbor· Ing government agencies. -has at one time or a.not.her accepted hospitality from ind.lviduals. businesses. unions or citizens' special interest grou1>5 wbo wanted to be well re- garded by the office bolder. The issue always turns on how much is too much. For too many years. the airport dilemma has languished inf alse hopes that a suitable site is availa· ble in Orange County. And that, in turn, orten is measured by the extent to which "everybody'sdoingit." In the interim. more than $500,000 has been spent for a series of studies that accomplished little more than suggest sites that were quickly ruled out oo closer exam in a ti on. And one politician after another has held out such lackluster and improbable solutions as joint use of military air bases that are nearly as impacted by urban sprawl as Orange County Airport. Be that as it may, one thing seems clear. AB a re- sult or the discussions or the courtesies extended to Ford and Carter and previous disclosures of gifts, goodies and contributions to senators. Congressmen and all down the line. there should be a whole lot less ol. this kind or lbing going on in the future. And t.:1is is all to the good. While such false hopes have bought time for politicos on the hot seat, the list of practical alternatives bas dwindled to a point where a glance at a map demonst.r"'ates there is no suitable site for a ma· }or jet airport in Orange County. Too Much Surprise Or~ge County Transit District <OCTD> Board Chairman Ralph aark took fellow directors by sur· prise last week when he popped up with an eight. point program to give directors more say in guiding the district's financial affairs. Rather than continue futilely thrashing about, lt is better that Orange County cast its lot with others to seek a solution to a problem that has obviously out- grown county boundaries. So it wasn't rurprising that board members de- layed action until they know more about the pro- posal. All Those Freebies • • • Chances are the Clark plan has its good points - and certainly there's evidence the OCTD needs some clearer policies on how it handles its multi·million- dollar operation. The minor fiurry in the Ford-Carter campaign about the acceptance of vacations, plane rides, golf games, etc., doeso 't shed much new light on the t\merican political process. And barring some star· t.ling new and major ~sclosu.re. proba~ly has had :itUe impact on the standing of either candidate. But Clark should have asked that his proposal be placed on the agenda and handled as a matter or re- gular business. Instead, he sprung it at the end of the meeting, ruf(ling feathers and producing a generally negative reaction. The average American voter proba~ly is .Pretty ·veJ.l convinced that every elected public offlcal - ?residents, m embers of Congress, governors, 'egislators, county supervisors and city councilmen OCTD directors have criticized staff members in the past for coming up with major proposals at the last minute. The same criticism applies when the board chairman tries the same thing. Butz Goes, Hinshaw Stags -What Moral Judgment? I "o the Edi tor: The hypocrisy within our gov- mment has finally slapped the ther cheek of the law abiding itisens of this country. even l'ler all lbe "Watergate" mess. I cannot believe that our elect· d congressmen, who set the 1oral standards for our young nd old, could by majority rule ote down a resolution to ermanenUy remove a convicted ~lon, Congressman Hinshaw, :om the taxpayer's payroll. a ian who doesn't have the decen· y to resign and flaunts his dis· ~gard for the law publicly. TIDS IS MORE blatantly et· ibited in the cu1TeDt publicity .11Tounding Earl Butz' resigna. on for a racial slur which, by te way, was repeated by John 1ean -an individual whose redibillty most of us should uestion. Or did you forget? Don't you think that it is time ·e stop and take a look at our riorities -when the time comes ta\ an official is more severely eprimanded for an opinion iven lo a private conversation, ·bether right or wrong, than a ublic servant who steals from le public coffers? It's a sorry ,gn of the times lo witness a lack t public furor in one instance od a demand for resignation in not.her -shouldn't these situa· ons have been reversed? How do you teach chlldren ( MAILBOX J right from wrong these days? BARBARA KEER €1dilleS-r To the Editor: I The lime for witches and goblins is swiftly approaching - but to ME. the real spook is the augar our children will consume over a relatively abort period of time. I suppose fru.I t and homemade goodies are out too because of past incidents of certain people thinking it was "cool" to Insert razor blades or dnlg:s. So we carefully instruct our little ones not to eat ANYTHING until Mom or Dad have checked it out thoroughly. Whatever happened to "The Good Old Days "? The worst thing I ever did was to change costumes and go through the neighborhood twice! BACK TO 81JGAJt! We just spent $313 on our ten year old son's teeth. Tben there's always the weight aspect -not to men· tioo the under-weight sugar coo. sumer who's super prone for a diabetic existence. This letter won't contain any great alternatives, but 1 hope some of you imaginative readers will come up with some -for in· at.aoce. possibly handing oul lbe inexpensive little birthday favors. If you don't believe that sugar can be a killer, please ask your doctor or get a book on the sub-ject. By the way, I'm not a "food freak''. My own withdrawal from being a Twinkie lover was un- real! JUDITH TREFE"l1fEN Belptag Pets To the Editor: Kathy Clancy's ·well · researched ai'ticle (Sept. 26) and your editorial (Sept. ~) prove once again the Daily Pilot's com· passionate awareness of the pet population problem in Orange County. You have performed a service to pets, pet-owners and non-pet-owners alike by publishing this information. Concerned readers will be in· terested to know that this month a volunteer program is being in- augurated at· the Orange county Animal Shelter which wUl bave as a main obje(!Uvetbeeducation of the public to the need for responsible pet-ownership and pet population control. Dear Gloomy Gos Why don't supermarltets follow the bank practice cl lining up all customers and letting the one at the head or the line go to the next available checker! As it ia, when a new cbeckstand opens up, its customers are the ones wbo haven't waited in line at all. FRUSTRATED ~G•<-• ......... -~ ~.,,_ .. __ ta.~Hy~llN ·-.. u.. -~· ~.,_pet -toOI_,._. O•lly ,_. ..... Also, we hope that the presence cA volunteers at the shelter will encourage more people to tum in strays. Too often, fearing certain death for the pet at the pound. the finder wlU look the other way, leaving the stray to uncertain death by starvation or traffic ac- cident. Or, if they dotakeitin. will keep it or give it away. Meanwhile, the distraught owner dally searches the pound in vain. The re.uniting~ lost pels with their owners will be a major concern of the volunteers. Volunteers are needed, and people interested in learn1ng more about the program should call 960-2900 or 644-8851. PAT GUI VER President Anl mal Assistance League Carl Albert Almost Became President WASHINGTON -Sources ,()le to Speaker Carl AJbert say e could have been President to- a.y lf be bad been willing lo 1anlpulate the contressionol taebinery. In discusstons so secret that :air members were excluded, o m e }emocratlc olleaaues r1ed Albert l lt7S to bold p the con· irmation of :erald Ford o be Vice •reaid ent. 'bls would ave left the peaker next In line for the pre-- ldecy. 1'1E DEMOCRA11C schemers •redJcted that tbe embatUed tlcbed Nixon, then in the last 'Jtches of his presidency. would ie impeached. He was unworthy. bet argued, toaelectbisownsuc· eqor. OltANGR COAST DAILY PILOT Robm N. Wied, PVblUMr Tt.omot ICtml, £cllor Borboro ICrdbich Edllorlal P~ £dJJor Monday , October U. 1976 I (JACK ANDERSON J All Al be rt had to do, they su11eated, was to delay Ford's confirmation and wait fOf' Nixon to be impeached. Then, un· der the ConstltuUon, AJbert could take over the White House and brioi the Democrats to power. This possibility stirred deep controversy at the secret strateey discussions. Some areued that lt would amount to • Democratic coup and, therefore. would alienate the voten. Others contended that the Republicans had been so badly discredited by Watergate that a Democratic takeover would be best for the country. Our aourcea dJaagree over how ser ious the Democrats were about block.in& Nixon's vice pre- eldenUa.l .election. Some se,y the ldea never aot beyond loose Ulk. Others inJlst that ii Albert bad The editorial page ol the Daily Pltot auks to Inform and 1timulate ttade" by J)N!Sentlng oo thll pa1e dl\tene com.men· tary oo toplcs oC tnttre:st by syn· dlcatcd columnist& and car· toonlsll. by providln1 a forum for readers' vtew1 and by pre. scnllng this newspaper's opin Ions and ideas on current topics. Tht editorial opinions of the Daily Pilot appear only in lhe editorial column at the top or the paf'e. Op\nlon1 expressed by tile columntstl and cartoonists and letter writers are Uwir own and Do endortement ot lbe:lr Ylew1 by tbe Dally PlJat should be inferred. gone aJong, Ford's rmftrmation would have been obstructed. ONE TOP DEMOCllAT, privy to the backstage dlseussions. told us that Albert could have become President merely by remaining neutral. It toot Albert's active oppostuon, said our source, to thwart the scheme. All our aources ~ that the Speaker refuaed to bold up Ford's confirmaUon. During one discussion, be clted the second section of the 25th amendment to tbe ConstltuUon. It states simp. ly: "Whenever there is• vacan- cy in the ottlce of the Vice Presl· dent, the President shall nominate a Vlce President who shall take oftlce upoo confirm•· tJoo by a m~oMty vote ot both houlel of Congress." Albert declared nnn.1,y tbat he did not Intend to tamper wtth the constttutlonal p~esaes. NUON NOMINATED Ford for Vice Pre1ident on Oct. 12, im. Ten dan later the Houae JUdiclary Comn:iJttee betan an lnQulry into poesible Impeach· IDlllt c:bar1es •lainst N\xon. By late November, It appeared to leadini Democut.s that there were IJ'()Wl4a t-0 I mpeacb blm. Our sources dUfcr over wbo led the move to dela.y Ford's con· firmaUon UGUI Nixon was im· peached. Some say it was lfouae M~ority leader Thoma~ '1'lp" O"NelU <D.-Maas. ). But O'Neill told ua ho supported the Speaker. Our aourcoa recall that the matter finally was brought up at a secret caucus of House Democral1. HouH Judlclary Chairman Peter B.odlno <D.· N.J.), warned lbat ay delay ln the coa.flrmatJon ~would violate the splri t of the 2Sth amendment. Speaker Albert strongly agreed. So on Dec. 6, 1973, Gerald Ford was con· firmed. Footnote: The Speaker did not return our repeated calls. OLD RAMROD: SEN. Strom Thurmond (R.·S.C.), who com· ports himself like the tut surviv· lng Civil War general, has been a model of personal integrity. He Uves scrupulously on his Senate salary. Even bis speaking fees wind up in a loan fund for needy college students. But Old Ramrod let his atM· dards droop a bit when lt came to three of bi• trusted lieutenants. Thurmond slphoned thousands of dollars to the trio ~ an ob- scure loophole in a 1964 law. The law was passed to prevent military men from collecUng fat government pensions at the same thne that they received re· 1ular covernment paychecks. But a loophole was chheled ln \he law to allow the Vice Pre.<sldent, House Speaker and Q\'il Service Commlasioa to grant exemptiooa tn "1peclal" and "emersency" caaa. THE VICI! PaBSIDENTS have granted on.ly 10 cmercency waivers ln Lbe past five years. Of these. Tbunnond wangled three of them. He arranged foe three of his aides to collect retirement pay and Senate salaries at the same time. They are bls admlniltrative as· slstanl Lou Beasl~y. a Nitired lieut.en.ant colonel; mlULarr u- al1tant Jt. K. Cowan, an n· GOklnel; and at alt aide 2morJ Sbteden. a retired brlcadle:r 1eneral. ' ~ j " • I ·~ .. ~.I 4' '1 -! .., ~ . · .. .. "Retnemb~t, now-only tht het.d.'' ChoW"chilla Trial Tests Court Costs Gov. J erry Brown's veto ol the bill to defray Madera County ex· penses in the trials of the Chowchilla school children kid· napers was everything its author, Assemblyman Ken Mad· dy, called it. Maddy, a moderate Republican who often acts more I I t e a Democrat. probabl y because he represents a district pre· dominantly regis tered Democratic. termed the veto "flip· pant" and said the governor lacked sensitivity. Maddy's wrath is two-fold. An attorney, he sees the possibility of a miscarriage of justice if the county Is unable to finance the court battles anticipated in the prosecution of the kidnapers, whose well·heeled fa mill es will be employing high powered counsel for prolonged legal maneuvering. He also sees the injustice of put· ting an undue tax burden upon the families of the victims. For Madera is one ol the state's smaller counties, just barely over 40,000 population. Its totaJ revenues from property taxes are only about $5 million. Recent celebrated trials have been run· ning as high as $1 million in cosls to the taxpayers. And, as Maddy sees lt, to require a small county to expend 20 percent cl its total budget for all county government operations on a single lriaJ is un· reaJistic. THE GOVERNOR objected to the blll on the grounds It would apply to any situation similar to Madera County's plight. He in· dicated he might approve a measure limited to aiding that county alone. That may be good penny pinching but it plays havoc with the logic bis Jesuit training should have provided. JI the pr:ln· cipie is sound in providing aid to Madera County, why shouldn't any other county confronted with a similar problem also be as· sisted? The issue reaurf acei the ques- tlon of who should finance the ( EARL WATERS ) superior courts. The fact is that such courts are state courts. That is recognized in part by the state in paying the lion's share cl the salaries of the judges ot those courts. And it would seem time for tbe state to assume full responsibility for the costs of those courts. In a mobile society, local property owners sbouldn't be required to bear the burdens of trials which come into the courts by twisls of fate and acci· dent of county lines. There is no more reason for the county taxpayers to pay for the superior courts than there is for them lo finance the costa of those same cases when they go to the appellate and supreme courts. FtJLL STATE FINANCING or superior courts would get the hearty support of those who con· tend property taxes should be levied only for property-related services such as police and fire protect.ion. The debate over court financ· ing opens the scope of true ~ perty tax reform. Local govern· ment should not be required to finance those functions of gov· ernment over which it bas no control. Certainly it has no con· trol over the courts, nor should it. Of course. true property tax re· lief measures must contemplate that, II and when the state does assume the full burden ol court expense, it does not Cree local tax revenues for other PUJl)Oses but directly benefits the taxpayer by property tax r eductions. To date the falla.cy ~ all p~ perty tax relief measures haa been the increasing of subsidies to local government with no absolute Umits on property tax· es. Although former Gov. Ronald Reagan attempted to design his homeowner tax exemption 1ub- sidies that way by freezin& tu rates, he left the back door wide open in overlooking the ability of locaJ government to increue N · aessed valuations. The result hu been that the state has greatly In· creased subsidies to local gov· emment and the property tax billis keep climbing anyway. ... "' .. S'INGlfS CLUB \ , .. I Mondav October 11 1976 DAILY PILOT A 'ft ... L Jtl. Boyd Beekeepers In Demand Only school in the country where you can 1et a dearee in beekeeping is the Ohlo Asricultaral Technical Colle1e. Make mention of thla because ther e's a shortage of beekeepers now. No beekeepers, no control over the bees. No control over the bees, no planned pollination ol the fruits, flowers, vegetables, grasses, whatever . Witbout planned pollination, you wind up with bapbuard crops. Do you realize the shortage of beekeepers eventually could ruin our food supply? Enroll today. QUEitlES FROM CLIENTS Q. "What's 'StargazyPie'?" A. A baked fish dish. Out oCthe hot pie crust across the top are supposed lo protrude the mimerous h eads of small sardines, each look- ing straight at. you. No, thank you, my dear, I 'II pick up a snack al the club. Q. ''What's the world's longest street?" A. Some claim it's that JO-mile stretch of Figue r oa between Color ado Boulevard in Pasadena and the Pacific Coast Highway of Los Angeles. But debate goes OD. Q. ''Can you identify the fi rst lady newspaper editor?" A. Wouldn't that be , Anne Franklin? She edited the Mercury in Newport, R.I .. in 1762. A recent survey in our prisons reveals a predominance there of convicts born under the sign of Aquarius with Capricorns next and then Tauruses. Fewest were those pnsoners born under the sign of Aries. Probably no other animal, including man, is so fond of chewing tobacco as is the elephant. Did I list Mrs. Andrew Jackson as one of our First Ladies? Wrong again! She died before her husband was inaugurated. KINDN~ Item No. 684C in our Love and War man· s file labeled ''Kindness" is a quotation from ac- tress Lauren Bacall: "Women are kinder to men than men are to women. If men knew the power of kindness, they'd have lo beat lhe women off with slicks." Not counting birds, what marine creature travel the seas with the wind for propulsion? Some jellyfish do. And so do right whales, using their tails for sails. President George Washington's eggnog re· cipe called for whiskey, rum, brandy, sherry, spices and a bitofboneywiththeeggs. It's a matter of record, loo, that a certain Egyptian pharaoh many centuries ago was particularly fond or freshly picked cherries. But the nearest cherry orchards were400 miles northeast at Baalbek. Syria. So at the outset of the picking season, a flock or 2,000 carrier pigeons was shipped there. Each bird was har- nessed with a sack only large enough to hold one big cherry. All were loaded up with frwt and turned loose. Those cherries picked in the morning wound up on the pharaoh's table that night. Did somebody say "race car " was a rare phrase inasmuch as it spells the same way both backwards and forwards? Not at aJI rare. Consider: Bird rib. bomb mob, party trap, Jive devil, seven eves, girl rig, daft fad, diary raid, elite tile and gate tag. Addrcu mail to l.M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Me1a, 92626. 'EleCtronic Junta' For11Wr NixonAith Blasts Media in County Talk By MICHAEL P~KEVJCH Ol 1111 Dell' l'I• SI ... Former Nlxoo aide Bruce Herschensohn says bias in the natJon 's news media led to the fall of Richard Nixon, the rise ol communist influence in 50Utheast As.in a nd the purge ol the Central In· teWgence Agency. Speaking before a meeting ot the World Affairs Council of Orange County, the «·year-old author and Conner film producer said, "The nation is dangerously close to an eleetronic junta. There is a need for more self-discipline and restraint on the part of the peo- ple operating the news. The public should raise a furor." Herschensohn called the re- cent Ford-Carter debates on domestic and foreign policy "a futile exercise." "It isn't the Presid ent who dir ects our HUKHENso"" foreign and domestic policy.'' he said. it's the na- tional media." ALTHOUGH THE FORMER deputy special as- sistant to Richard Nixon denied that there is a coo· spiracy in the media, he said that there 1s a definite strand of liberalism. Herschensohn sajd there is a need for more diverse views and less selectivity. "What is and what isn't reported is the most im· portant aspect of the news," he said. "What a newsman thinks is a wrong in society may not be." Herschensohn cited the unemployment issue as an example. "How can that be the highest priority when 92 percent of the nation is employed?" he asked. IN CONTRAST, HERSCHENSOllN said the media failed to give sufficient coverage lo an Aug. 22 incident in which a pastor in East Berlin burned himself to death to protest Communism . "In my mind. anyone willing lo kill themselves is worthy of media attention," he said. Herschensohn refered to TV ncw:.castcrs as "performers" whose art.Jsl1c orientation causes them to use phrases that provoke negative images. "Was the Saturday Night Massacre (Nixon 's dismissal of special prosecutor Archibald Cox) re· 2, 150 Join County Easter Seal Unit !\lore than 2,000 Oranj(c County rt>sidents ha\'C joined the Orange County Easter Seal Society dur· ing the organizat 10 11 ':; r urrent member:.h1p dri \'C. Addil1onally. aboul Sl2.000 has b~cn donated as a result of the m emlx'rshiµ drive. The money will go to the Society's Rehabilit ali<m 1 nstitute <R 10) in Orange, an outpatient facility that provides re· ha bi Ii talion ser vices to the county's handicapped. Six classes of membership are available, rang- ing from supporting member at $3 lo patron at $100 and above. Those interested in membership should contact RIO at 633· 7400. SAVE 100 OFF REG. PRICE ON TIIE ally a massacre? Did Nixon really work in a small, secret hldeaw ay?" "The same thought process runs through all TV networks," he suid. "When you have the responsibility ot telhng the nation the news you shouldn't editorialize." HERSCHENSOKN SAJO during his talk Thurs· day that the recent printing or classifi~ documents on Lhe CIA formed "a Cuny line between scoop and treason." "Daniel Schorr went above the will of Congress and the American people," he said. "Yet there is a different set of rules for re· porters than the Nixon Administration," he said, commenting on the lack of investigaUve reporting into the Schorr case. Herschensohn de~ribed the Watergate scandal as "unavoidable" but said that imbalance in report· inf can be stopoed. "There will always be some damn fool who's going to do something illegal," he said. "It's just human nature." HE NOTED THE C~E of Utah Congressman Allan Howe, who was indicted on charges of solicit ing prostitution. as another example of the media's "phony morality." Herschensohn drew applause "Money grubbing has been good to me " when he said: "Since Watergate we judge people by ---------------------mistakes while we judge ourselves by our highest accomplishments. You can't judge someone by one night's foolishness." Hersch ensohn cited the three major TV networks, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Time magazine and Newsweek as the media ouUets most responsible for the bias he believes plagues the news . Two Joining UCI Chancellor's Club Two members of the Orange County business and professional com mun.ity have been select ed as officers in the Chancellor's Club at UC Irvine. Sanford L. Brickner, a Santa Ana attorney and certified public accoun· tant. will serve as vice president and chairman of the program commit· tee. Named as vice pres1· dent and chairman of the membership committee president of Philco-Ford Corporation , and Dr. Norma n Nixon of Laguna Beach . The membership com- mittee is composed of James Gianulias of Corona del Mar. founder of Cameo Homes; Brian Lawrence of Tustin. chairman of the board or Burt C. Gentle Company. and former ! Congressman James Roosevelt of N cwport Beach. 1s Patrick Cadigan, pre·---------- side nl of E lertrontr Engineering Company of California, Santa /\na. ·Members of the Chan· cellor 's Club pro~ram committee a r c Mrs. RaJph Gerard or Corona del Mar; John B. Lawson ~I lf1 .~!.!!.., ~ INSURANCE 1 :\ r 1'14 Herkr h•le"erl.I ~1\· COSTA M!SA.'B,_ 549.5554 "~ FED LIP WITH FAI ~IFTS? I t t ...... ...... 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Heed Off.Ce : Los Angeles r~eral Sav•nQ8 And loan AS'lOC1atlon One Wilshire, Los Anoeles 90017 • Olher offices throughout the orce .. .. ,, ( ... I J " .. J ,. ·' ) r :i "' f Aa DAIL V P1U:ST s ~ ' . . Monday's Afternoon Price8 MMday. October 11. 1978 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS~ ---------....... ' \ • Coke Studies P ayments ATLANTA (AP> -Coca Cola Com· pany otflctala said they have reported to the U.S. SccwiUa and Exchan1c Commlaalon <SEC> lhal the cornpany made "queattonabJe foreign pay. mentt" of about $300,000. The AUabta-based lot\ drink com· pany said lt baa b.lred "outside • counsel" to lnvosUfale the payments. · _ .. J Pat ie11ce B lps Used-car Buyer Needs Caution ·. By SYLVIA PORTEil An estimated one million used cars will be sold UUs yeu to people who previously ~uve never purchased anythinc but a new car , reports the National Aulomobilo Dealers ~sn. Buying a used 41uto can bring personal aaU•factlon and considerable savings to an experienced s hopper. But to an amateur it can be a scenario lo frustration. Ion ot money and dissatl1faction. Yet, •·many ol the ' problems experienced by the buyer or a us'ed car are of his own mak· ing," says the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration of the U .S. Department of Transportation. Money's Worth WlT H COMM ON Sl":NSE, MOST of these problems can be avoided. It's not that tough to find a good, safe and depen· dable used car. even though an appalling number do contain uncorrected safety defects or may be mech1mically un· sound. Know-how and patience are necessary. · These weeks mark the start or the new car season, which traditionally means an upsurge in trade-i ns on tbe used-car lots. Thus, some common sense guidelines: -Under no circumstances shrug off the safety aspect. even though priorities also may be price, gas mileage, style. appearance, power and desired equipment. -DO NOT ACCEPT WITHOUT question statem ents by a seller regarding a car's condition and performance. Rare- ly does a first·time used-car bu.yer inspect the auto for naws, araely does he check the details of the warranty, and rarely does this shopper even check whether the dealer is equipped to repair the car when it needs servicing. As a re· suJt. a used car buyer may be stuck with an unsafe car that requires costly repairs to eliminate defects that should have been corrected before. . -I~ possible. have the used car run through a diagnoshc center before purchase. Or have it inspected by a competent m echanic. -Don't .buy at night, in the rain or under any conditions that could discourage you from examining the car, inside and out. Crawl under the car to inspect it. Rainy-day shop.. pers may not check for a rusted-out frame, worn steering or suspension parts. leaking brake fluid and curb-bruised tires. What's more, rain can make dents, patches and~ paints shine like new. Investigate for rusted-out doors flooring and tailgates. ' -DON'T BUY 111E CAR without giving it a test drive. Don't buy if you're refused a request to let your own mechanic check the car. Don't buy if any promises for mechanical adjustments are not written and signed in ad· vance or purchase. Insist on a final test drive or inspection after all promised pre-purchase repairs. -:-To protect against unrepaired safety defects ignored by prior owners, call the auto safety hotline of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (800) 424-9393 and give the make. model, year and vehicle identification number, This toll-free number Is available to residents of every state except Hawaii and Alaska. The call can net &Te- port on defect recalls for that make. -Take into consideration that depreciation reduces value of U.S.·made cars about SO percent during the first two years of its life. -Write the Consumer Information Center, Pueblo, Colo. 81009, and request brochure 2930. "Common Sense in Buying a Used Car." It's free. Prefer Lo11Jf Us«_11 Car Partsmakers .. ' Fight Switching· By Capital New ti Service Automobiles are changing rapidly in design and in materials used lo produce certain parts, largely due to gov- ernmental regulations. Independent parts firms are reluctant to tool up lo pro· duce a replacement item unless they know the item will be used on cars for a minimum or eight lo 10 years, according to the current issue or Motor magazine. Auto companies have no way or forecast· ing how long they will (.IN HIGH GEAR~ stay with a particular ~ ~ part or design . They may be forced to switch by a change In regula- tion. The independent partsmakers s ay they cannot nsk the s ubstantial invest- ments ne~ed to put a new item in production If it may be scrapped m a few years, The next time your car is on the lirt at the service sta· tion for a lube, use the opportunity to do your own check or the entire length of the exhaust system. Look for holes, den~s. broken brackets and loose connections. Be particularly alert for areas of rust and corrosion . . THESE AR E THE EARLIEST signs or a hole develop· Ing m the pipe. Use a screwdriver lo probe liihtly on all sus· peeled spots. If the screwdriver should break through the pipe, it's no disaster. More likely you've avoided a serious problem. Most muffler11 are designed to slow down the exhaust gases. This means more rust and corrosion and more muf· ner replacement. The "how-to" manuals seldom have very much to say abou.t auto water pumps ; they are very reliable. Amo11g possible problems: The bearings can wear out and they can lose a seal, allowing the pump to leak. If your car has coolant loss and there aren't any leaks In the radiator or hose~ examine the bottom or the water pump. There is a small drain hole on the underside of m~t pumps. If the pump has a bad seal, traces of coolant can tie seen on the fronL of the englne under the pump. Only an tt· pert should allempt to llx a pump and chancu are tt ls cheaper to repl ace than repair. Before you repbce m~ sure tbe fan belt ls set at the proper tension. If it isn't, tt w 1 cause the pump and fan t.o run more slowly than Is need for aood cooling. I anded Shrim.p Eye For: Desert Project YERINGTON, Nev. <Ar> -Dr. Robert Taylor has dream -a shrimp farm In the desul, mo,.. lban 200 mn ftom the ocean. Tbe Sierra PacUlc Power C91npan7 wUl P.11 SSt.000 dud int the next 18 monUts to Taytor, ol tM Univertil}' Nevada School of Vetuinuy Medicine, for t.rylrtg to r sbrtmp ccn:nmerclally ln the power slalton's 240 acres coollng ponds al FortChurchJll. - I ' , lh Uae As$0Clated ~ The !allowinc are BiJlboard's ho( record hits for th~ week endin g October 16 as they iu>pear in next week's inue or Billboard magazine. HOT SINGLES DlSCO DUCK Hick De~s & ms Cast of Idiots <RSO) 2. A F IF'T H OF BEETHOVEN -Walter t Murphy & The Big Apple Rand <Private StockJ 3. LOWDOWN BozScagga <Columbia) 4. IF ,YOU LEAVE ME NOW ..-Chicago (Columbia> S. PLAY THAT FUNKY MUSIC -Wild Cher ry CEpic·Sweet City) 6. ST ILL T H E ONE Orleans <Asylum ) 7. DEVIL WOMAN Cliff Richard (Rocket) 8. SHAKE YOUH BOOTY -K.C. & the Sun- shine Bank <TK > 9. SHE'S GONE II all & Oates <Atlantic) 10. I 'D R EA LLY LOVE TO SEE YOV TONIGHT England Uan & John Ford Coley <Big Tree) TOPLPs 1 1. ST EVIE WONDER Songs in the Key or Life (Motown) 2. BOZ SCAGGS Silk Degrees <Columbia> 3. PETER FRA~1PTON f<'rampton Comes Alive <A&M ) 4. STEVE MILLER BAND -Fly Like An Eagle (Capitol ) 5. LI NDA RONSfADT Wind (Asylum) Hasten Down The EASY LISTENING l . FER NANDO Abba (Atlantic) 2. LIKE A SAD SONG-John Denver (RCA) '3. IF YOU LEAVE ME NOW -Chicago <Columbia) 4. GOO F US Carpenters CA&M) 5. DON'T T HINK ... FEEL Neil Diamond <Columbia) COUNTRY SINGLES 1. YOU AND ME Tammy Wyn elte (Epic > 2. T HE GAMES T HAT DADDIES P LAY Conway Twilly <MCAJ 3. A WHOL E LOTTA THINGS TO SING ABOUT -Charley Prtde CRCJ\l _ 4. AMONG MY SOUV ENIRS -Mar ty Robbins <Columbia) 5. HERE'S SOME LOVE -T anya T ucker <MCA) SOUL SINGLES 1. JUST TO BE CLOS E TO YOU -Com - modores <Motown) . 2. GIVE IT UP Turn It Loose -Tyronne Davis (Columbia) a. MESSAGE IN OUR MUS IC <Philadelphia 1 nternalional ) O'J ays 4. SHAKE YOUR BOOTY K C. & The SWlshine Ba nd CTK) 'i 5. T HE RU BBERBAN D MAN (Atlantic> · Spinners .Film Actress Replaced ROME (AP) -English actr ess Te resa Ann Savoy has been signed to.replace Ma~ia S~hneider in the s tarring role 1n Gore Vidal s film . .. Caligula," now shooting here. Miss Schneider, the Frenchwoman who won fame in "Last Tango in Paris ." waJk~d out on t_he new film after argumenls with the dire ctor Mis s SaV-Oy, 21, Jives in Rome_ -~.,...­' At.LC-_..._..,.,...n, I l'llH YDAY'nl 2l:IO"""'-•ll U s'·un• J~ IO •••114 SI Sl' 1111 1111 ,.,.,., ''LIFEGUARD" , .. , • lt'1• 1Ul'--J'4 .. l-lt ZO "W NEWS BUIS" (PG) t:U 1AT"llM-l ·Jtl1.l:H SO. COAST PLAZA • Jll0 .. 11l1ISI ~Ulll 1111 t ot1111C "CAMELOT" . "ALICE IH WO ... DERLA.HO.'' lXJ WtOOAY1 l1•• ...... .. .... , /SllM , .... ,,, .... .. ..... ,,, .. ., ....... . CINEMALAND 1114 So ""'°'•MN• US liOI Utf ,1.IUllC 'tlFIGUUD" I .......... . "BAD NEWS BURS" (PG) I ll·l 1•tt ·U CINEMALAND • llUS. "t<H• h•llt""lJ)liOI "" , .... "' "JAWS" .. , .......... .!. "THE HINDENBURG" ,, . ._., .. .,., · CINEMALAND · ".ALICE IM WONDERLAND" lXI J1l••·• .. •·1• 7:t .. l:JO.tt 00 'Runaways ' Run Loose Q: It'• about time. I bear U11at ln E ngland t~re'a a new rock band, &he Rwiaways, made up of youn• &lrls. And they play num~rs that are as "wholesome as mom's apple ple." •~ lhli true? -J. Wren, Pittsburgh. A: Ir so, then mom's apple pie 1s full or worms. "They ma y be onJy 16," informs London writer Mike Cable, "but there 1s nothlng sweet about the Runaways. The ir music is raw and their sh1Je act is wild. The ir debut album , 'Runawayl'I,' JUSt re- leased, is packed with references to drugs and sex." Guitarist Joun Jett boas ts. "We do e ve rything that's on the album.'' 'Glad You Asked That' by Marily11 ond Hy Gardner Lead singer Cherie Currie whose tongue· flacking, prancing and writhing 1s as s uggestive as Mick J agger at his most outrageous walked out of school a nd in!>ists that she 1!> never going back. · 1 know how to re ad and wnte there's nothing else thev can teach m e that I want to know." she sa)s -"T he r ocking rebe ls," Cable contin ues. "s moke. drink and spatt~r thei,r conv.ers ations '' ilb four-letter words." Despite t his, their parents are backing the m all the way. The girls are looking forward to the day whe n they're 18 and a ble to tour the countryside. "We r eally wanna destroy England," warns Joan. Q : What do psychologists have to say about the kind or violence on TV by which cops-n-robbers chase scenes encourage amateur d rivers to be equally reckless? -Dolly Sotherd, San Mateo, Ca l. A · You 've touched upon a tender topic. At le ast that's· what some researchers al the University of Hawaii discovered. They claim that watchers of Kojak. Cannon. Barella and si_milar. shows. "re~ct more aggressively and \'Jnd1ctively m everyday in- cidents than normal drivers." (Whoever they are!) Q : How come Rl'dd Foxx is enjoyin g his new found fame and fortune without doing what people like Sammy Davis, Harry Belafonte and other black perfor m erf do -stand up and fight for or at le ast finance such efforts for their people? - B.D.S., Austin, Tex. A: Jf that's what you think, you have Redd wrong. Only recently he put up one-half million dollars to produce a b1ographicaJ rilm about Martin Luther Kang. It's llUed .. Selma." based on King's famous march through Alabama which gave in- spiration and faith to fellow blacks Q : I r ead that Bob Hope rents a warehouse to house the thousands or plaques, cups. scrolls, etc. he's received during his SS yeani in show business. Can you ask him wbJch awards he prites most? - Mrs. Donald MacGregor, St. Paul, Minn. A: "I can't sa y 1 don't like !'very awar d I have r~eived ," Bob answers. "but there a re some that stand out in m y mind. For instance. the Medal of Merit presented in behalf of the U.S. gov~rnment by President Eisenhower. The Congressional Gold Medal presented by President Kenned y. The Sylvanus Thayer Medal from the Association of Graduates of West Point. And the Commander of the Brillsh Empire (C.B.E.)." Concludes Sir Robert: "Pretty good for a vaudeville ham , right?" THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE O•AHGE 6l4-Jtl I 1'-' CITY CENTRE CINEMA\ .... S.A. ,RWY IMANCHUTEA EX.I 0 .0 . FRWY CCITY OA. EX.I ~ "OISISSIOH" lf'GI HE STEf'PO•D WIYH" z "lOGAH'S •UM" "AITUHWOUD" lf'GI ~ -nttE&•EAT SCOUT AHD CATHOUU THUUOAY- "THI f'OM f'OM GIRLS" t•I •MURDEa IY DEA TH" 0 '"THE ILACHIRD" INI $9ect1I Puce 12.30 to 2.00 p m. lnu-' S... & ti I Sl.H Open Daily 12:30 p.rn. "THE FRONT' IPGI MB.llOOIS ''SILINf MOV1F' "IVHYTHIHG AIOUT SIX .. Cal .. HORMAN IS THAT your· IPGJ "HAllllY a WAL TB GO TO MEW YOU" tPGI "f~NTASIA" IGt CAITOOM~ "MAIL PllOT" -olSISSION" ""SMAl>OW Of ntl HAWK" CrGt "MUltDH IY DIATH" ... LACIMllD"CNJ RITUltH OF THI MAH CAU.8> HO•R -ntUHDICltlOLT AMO U•HTFOOT' '-ntl l1MAMT"' ''UPSTfCr CIJ I • Got a problem., 'l'lit>rl 11•ntr to Pat Dunn. Pat w ill cut red ta pt• <Wtl 111<1 1111• c111s1t~r$ and cict ru11 11ou m•t•d to 1mlt•1• llll'l/WI It'·' 111 c1oi•er11ment und bwu· rlt'~s ,\Jail 1111111 q1w.\l11111s It> Pat Dunn At Your .'\1•n we. ()11111111• Cuu'I f)c11f11 Pilot,P 0 Ho..r J5fi<J, Co,ta .\frs u . C \ 'l:!IJ:!ti lru lutle your tel11phorw 111m1lier 'fill' n•/1111111 uppt1ars da1 l11 ('.tc(•pt S11t 1adny., 1 'ope SllglUlfl 01 Track DEAR PAT: I saw a television commercial for a Sam my Davis 8-track tape, and decided lo order it on June 21. My t ape arrived July 2A, but it was de- fective. I mailed the tape back lo Audio Resea rch Inc. in Downers Grove, 111 .. on July 25, requesting replacement. So Car, nothing has been received . I decided th a l I was Just another victim or a P.O. Box TV ad but I s aw this same commercial again yesterda y and de cided to ask for your help. 8 .F., Huntington Be ach This offer was not a ripoff. Slow fouttb·c:lass mall appears to be the culprit. An Audio Research spoj(esm an said tbat your replacement tape was mailed to you Aug. 24. Since up to she weeks are usually required for tbls type of delivery, your t ape probably bas ar rived by now. If not, Inform the firm a nd it will contact you personally. Your re· tum~ tape took more than a month to reac the Chicago area where the firm is located, so Its replacement also should be expected to take just a s Jong. Populot ion Pfnned Doten DEAR PAT: Can you tell me the address of the Zero Population Growth organization? I'd a lso like lo know if this is a nonprofit group. G.R., Huntington Be ach Zero Populatlon Growth, Inc., ls located at 343 Second St., Los Angeles, CA 94022. This orc anb ation is a nonprofit corporation whJch alms to stop the population explosion through educ at ion and political activity. Seor~hing tor Sunbeam• DEAR PAT : lam the new owner of a 1961 Sun- beam.Alpine It 1s a very old car and since they are no longer manufactured, it is quite difficult to know how to care for it. I've heard that there are Sun- be\im clubs in the Los Angeles area, but l 'm unable to locate one in this area. I would be grateful if you could he lp me in my search. P. M ., Costa Mesa A YS struck out on finding a Sunbeam Alpine Club for you lo Orange County. U any of our readers can provide Infor mation about such a Club lo Orange County or the Los Angeles area, you'll be contacted. Monday October 11 1979 h •• , .. . ....... , .. . ff4-2400 ..... ,,_ S31·9510 ...... ~, . ......., 531·9580 ... ..._ ,.,_ !>31·9580 ...... ,t i 1l h •t•U SU-3S26 ........ , .. (t,, •• , ... "'' ... 493-4S4S '( DAILY PILOT At) ......................... _.. .... , YIMAHl1 fOl(I "' t "lit. Oil• OYNAMITI 1N 1 ................. -·*··~-­...... -M OMIMte1 OfVIL WITHIN HIR 111 -·-·---· -11 Ml1 JVlll JAWS "' etoot4 C. KOn DA f Of TMI DOl'"IN IN! ........ ---· .,_,,, .__,. . ·-"""""' ·--· 1t01: a s'act oonsn ie1 COWll..uoul •tOM , ....... Cl'tM ., ....... __ , -N CHI WKllUI I. OUMIAll UlUY 1'°1 2. CANNONIAll IPO) ), WMm UNt UVU !POI llCllAU MAl .. t lmllH Of MAN CAWO MOISl1P01 l'lut• TMUNOHIOlT & UONTfOOT 111 CUl'f_,_ OIUSSIONc-.1 _,,_~ SHADOW Of THI HAWlc-.1 - tt• IOU e """' ""'" NOIMAN, IS THAT TOU? '"I H TH IONN e WtAll .. -ottn MAU, cun LAIU"' ___ ... UTVIH Of !WI CAWI MOUltPOl P\ut. TNUNDHIOLT & UOKT1001111 curr 10.u110M OISISStON CN l _...,. ""° n•- SHADOW Of THI HAWK IPOI ....,llltlCT In Of MW1" llDCllT MOllOI ..cT\IU SllOW 1•1 . '"''• '"AHTOM Of ,AlADlll IHI lltllnl Of .i.-1CH1 r-1 JAWS ,.. •OMtC.KOlT DAT Of THI DOl'HIN "" WU(-IO 'nll r\ITUlll I. lOOAN'I RUN CNI t WT MTlllWI OM WTM INI i. CMOMN IUIVIVOU CNI @ •· i HIL--.. .... It- .. l ' AJ8 DAIL y PILOT Mond1y. October 11. 1976 ., I Letters confirm low tar MERITas . taste-science breakthrough. ~ \ ' .. ., ... .. • I .. I ~ . ll'l"hon1{s for con•iderlnc &he people'• uasu rather than the manuf a&turer•' cin:.mi&Jt• •••• Merit is a boon to smoJ(.ers everywhere." -Ms. Sharon Kessler York, Pennsylvania "~nit you for moJtinc &he JJicce•t 1'reo1{throuch in smol{inc in 1111 the years I hove amoJ(.ed. 'l"he taste ond pleasure I cet from MERIT is unfle1ievaf1Je." -Marc A. Nolan Akron.Ohio UAnd they said it couldn't fie done. Some one ha Jirul11y produ&ed 11 fine clcorette with low tor, !Jut e"ceJJent ioau.,, -Miss Dolores Taylor Arlington, Virginia "Your new Meri& cicarettes ore creae. I have tried every low tor and nicotine llrond on the nuarl{et and hove /bul11y found one that truly taates Jil{e a smoJte should." -Phil Hill Kirkland. Washington "I've JinoJJy found • menthol dcaret&e with cood taate and Jow tar. I wouldn't switch now for anythtnc." -Beth Herbert Boston, Massachusetts "I switched to MERIT cicarette& Great cicoret&e, and bHt swiuh I ever mode." -Ernest Balish Miami Beach. Florida "We iried every Jow i.r ctcorette on the nuarl{et, eo no ovoiJ •••• Now we 1m0Jte MERIT. Great taste, veat Jlovor,I" -Mrs. Patricia Owornlczak Lansing. llllnolt "Merit ii a winner! c.n..nJc.• eo 'Merit', my wife ond I 6oth are now msol{inc the Jira& enjoyable Jow i.r." -James L. Brooks, Jr. Prattvllte, Alabama "Verdi&&: FINALLY, a Jow tor ctcoretu with """·" C Pl\ihp l>fom• rnc.. 1976 -Bianca Doeschner New Yoril, N-Yortt 9 mg'.'tar:' 0.7 mg. nicotine w. per cigarette by FTC Method. "'l"honl{s for o low tor cic•' rette thoi tastes JiJ(.e • cicorette and not just Jil{e oirl" -Ms. Diane Smith Franconia, Pennsylvania "AJI that taste and Jow on tor too •••• With MERIT around, I won't lie re0&hinc for onythinc else." -Alan L. Vaughn Columbia, Missouri "I hove tried oJJ the Jow tar cicarettes ond I lle1ieve if they hod • horse race for Jow tor ric•rettes, MERiT would win by several Jencth•!" -Ms. Victorta M. Lowry Provo, Utah ''You've done it; nuufe • cood .. tatinc dc•rette, Jow in u.r and nuotine. I've .wiUhed to MERIT!" -Mrs. Frederic Shaw Jenkintown, Pennaylvanla une e..re ;. ouuu.n4inc •••• I, for one, thonft you for MERIT dc•retu .. Warning : The Surgeon General Ha s Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health . 'Chey are really refrelhinc·" -Douglas B. OeMarls Mlnneepoll1, Mlnneeot1 .. ~- \ • -, ' "'l"hese thine• have so much flavor, it's very di1Jku1e to believe the nicotine ond tor rotinca, even thouch ehe7're printed richt on the JHU'l•ce·" -Thomas A. Zentner Cayuga. New York UMERIT is the GREA'l"ESCJ"! A truly remorl(oflle low tor cicorette that leaves me satisfied." -Mrs. Richard H. Walther Richmond, V1rgin1a "I couldn't believe how cood they taate and how Jow they ore in tar and nicotine." -Ms. Roselyn Hall Minneapolis, Minnesota "'Che very ftr•C pa&f{ of MERIT Menthol did It. I wo1 immedllltely impressed with the t#lte." -Raymond 't. Abdoo Suttleld, Ohio "My hlUIHJntJ ontJ 1 irud IWIUhinc to • ""•nd Jower In . Mr. 'N ddtn one of ua &ouW. f.l"hen we h'Nd MERIT. We re•Jly Jflte them and 1uJ11e Ileen amoJtinc them ever ain&e." -Mrs. Barry Brandon Whltetlall, Penneytvanla UBy (OIJ)', i&'• true what people M)' about Meri&. I tried them, l awiuhedt 'Chey're utisfyinc, while I'm n.tdnc down on i.r." -Mrs. Dawn Rauh Burbank. Catllornia "I W08 omated! I can't llelieve thot o Jow tar and nicotine cicorette con taste so cood.JJ -J. Thomas Ellicott, Jr. North Palm Beach, Florida "Now that is one reaJJy cood cic•relk •••• 'l"honJts •c•in-your new MERIT MENTHOLS ore rea11y out 0£ richt. &outifuJll!" -Mrs. Gayle O. Rosengl'tn Minneapolis, Minnesota "I would UJte to compJimene you on " fine lllend or &o1'11&&o. ~nJt• for • cre•t dc•reeu.n -Joseph Commiskey Elmira, New York • "I've tried •H the Jow. ~r, low nicotine ctcorette• and they •11 'llul{ed late •nd {la11or. 'l"hen &4Sme 'MERIT' voillll 'Che p.vor ii Jtne •nd I enjoy them." -Mrs. Jeannette Trebilcock Virginia Beach, Virglnl1 "'l'h•nl{ you Philip Morru, ror Jivinc up eo your wordt MERIT ia truly the lie•&"' t••tinc Jow uar an4 nkodne cicoretu I've ever .mol{ed." -Terry Stewart Sprlngfleld, Ohio UMERIT will lie my •tedy llrond from now on. 'l"hey •re • truly Mti•fyinc smoft•·" -Mrs. Joan C. Gottlleb Pompton Plaint, New Jereey ''When I spotted your "" ollout MERIT, I decided eo try them. I wo• not diMppolnted. Your c141ims ollout MERIT ore fuHy ju•tif"d." -Mr. Kaflla Veils Danbury, Connectlc:llt "Merit •11relyi1e11nyehln.c··, you MY It i•1 rtcfH down ao ,,,_ '41ate. I &on no11e Jow r.r _,.. nicotiM 11nd pJe1UUr• aoo.n I • I .. -Miss T. M. Fredericka St. Loul1, Missouri -John E. Ehrenberg Sullllnd, M.ryllnd Hiking Pacific Crest Trail Another 'First' Ta .ken ·in Stride l\CTO N I AP) -Teddie Boston is the perfect answer to the ques- tion of what kind of 49-year-old woman wtuld hike the rugged :.600-mile Pacific Crest trail by herself. Wiry, weathered and grinning, Teddie looks like she would be out or place without her 00.pound backpack, hiking boots and cut.Q,ff shorts. She swings the pack up easily and falls into a n unhurried but long stride that bespeaks an ad· venturer muc h more used to coun try trails than city sidewalks . But that isn't really so. Teddie .ijs a mother ol four from Anaheim. And until May 1 when she set orr from Canada at the beginning of the trail, Teddie worked 18 years for the local school di5trict purchasing de- partment-a job she lost recent- ly when a local paper printed a story about her expedition. The district bad given Teddie five months of sick leave. Looking anything but ill, Teddie concluded she had fudged slightly -•'Well, I told them 1 was out here to settle a case of jangled nerves." While .admitting they miss t heir mo'm , Teddie's college. aged children are excited about the trip -her husband loo. SURPRISE At one point on her journey. Teddie's 20·year-old son, Craig, and 28 or his friends arranged a s urprise greeting in a desolate desert town, just to cheer her on. Predesignated stops an towns along the route allow her to pick up food pack ages and mail -and to telephone family and friends. Mostly a weekend and vaca· uon hlJter, she isn't really sure why she tackled the five-month project of making her way on foot along the Cascade and Sierra Nevada ranges from Canada to Mexico. During the long trek, her answers to "Why?" ranged from, "Because it's there," to ''I don 't know," to "Because l want to. I guess." • But as she talked about the trip, onJy 400 miles from comple· lion when she stopped briefly for mail in the northern Los Angeles County mpuntain town of Acton, more answers emerged. "The Pacific Crest Trail needed m y footprints. Everyone is pretty sure its the first time a woman's done it alone,'' she said. And althoug h she told her employers s he was seeking peace and solitude for her nerves, the hike has hardly been a case of immersing herself in nature as a hermit. People abound on certain sec lions of the trail. In fact. Teddjc met 134 persons on one seven· mile str etch -"the John Mwr Freeway with no passing lane," she said, laughing. But another stretch or the trail saw three days go by with no other hikers in sight. TEDDIE PRINTS On one long haul, she played BEA ANDERSON, Editor Mondav. October 11, 1976 81 leap frog with two YaJe students. The two said they were "follow· ing the Teddie prints," coining a phrase that Teddie may use as the title of a book about her wan- derings. "I'm going off to the hills to write my book when l'm done -I really have to write this up," she said. "Maybe in a cabin in the Sisltiyous or Trinitys." She won't lack adventures, hardships and excitement to fill the book. Early in the trip, s h e scratched the cornea of her eye on a dead tree limb. "I've never known such pain,'' she s aid. "I hiked into Bend, Ore., and it was almost healed whe.n I got there. It was pro- bably a good 50 miles out of my way -and then I found out there's no treatment for a scratched cornea! " DRAMA Another time. she was rross· ing a snow bridge when il co!· lapsed, dumping her inlo an !ce· cold stream. Slogging lhrou~h '"a1sl·high water, encumbered bv her pack, Teddie walked a auarter milf' before the bank was low enough for her to scramble out ' But more wetness was in store for her in Southern California She went to sleep on the edge or the Mojave desert, confident that rain would be her last worry. She hadn't counted on· Tropical Stor m Kathleen. "By 2 a.m . I was soaked in my sleeping bag and by 4 a m . I wal> sitting in my own pnvate pool .. It took me all afternoon in a laundromat to dry out." At the other extreme. Teddie suffered through one 30-mile stretch in the Shasta-Lassen area without water because or the long winter·s drought. "All you can lhink about is aJJ the streams you walked across earlier." The temperature there hit about 107 degrees, the hottest on her trip. The coldest weather was on Aug. 14 when it snowed in the Tuolumne area -18 degrees. Were there times when she was lost? "Lost? Oh, heavens, yes. There's no mnp \hat's up to datl' with all lhe roads. You wind your way through roads lhat go off in all directions. But you alway,s keep on going and even· tually you find yourself on the map." ENDOFTRAIL When she eamc lo a store near Kernville, clerks told her she had reached the end of the trail. "l said, 'Did they move the Tobu ,Subiect Exp-lored By J UDITH OLSON Of tlle D•llY Piiot SUH If you're an average American citizen, there's one subject you don't want to discuss. much less write a book about: death and dy- ing. For Ron Lunceford PhD, a trained sociologist and counselor, the subject wasn't too disturbing until a few years ago when he found himself preoccupied with thoughts about mortality. "I was becoming uncomforta· ble about spending so much time thinking about death and dy- ing." be said. "I began to wonder if other people had those thoughts;" The result of his wondering is a new book which explores death from a cullural s tandpoint. Written by Dr. Lunceford and his wife. Judy. a teacher and psychologist, lhe book is unusual because it concentrates on at- titudes toward death rather than the actual process of dying. In his own pondering about de- ath, Dr. Lunceford reaJiied that he was at a turning point in his life and the troublesome thoughts were occurring because he had "so many things I hadn't done yet." He talked to his wife about it and discovered that she, too, had things she badn 't worked through yet In ttrms of h er own mortality. RESEARCH PROJECT They then launched a research project through California St ate University. Long Beach, and in- terviewed more than 2,000 people o( v arious a ges and ethnic , groups . \ The results are documented in the book ... Attitudes on Death and Dying: A Cross·cuUural View." QuesUonn a ires administered In Los Angeles and Orange coun· ties by trained junior and senior s tudents from CSULB were augmented by in-depth taped in· terviews of people ftom five-dif. ferent ethnic backgrounds. Cultural groups surveyed were Anglo, Asian, Black, Mexican- American and Native American Indian. t' Several interesting facts came out of the survey. The students found that a person's view of de· alh is tempered by his age, and that women Who are experienc· ing new lifestyles a.re extremely eager about life. 1 I ... ~~licion also played a pert in ~wen, Dr. Lunceford said. \ "It still has a great deal of in· fluence on the death process. We have a strong need to identify with a powerful force. Even some agnostics admit there is a more powerful being than a human.'' CIOLDREN MYSTIFIED Dr. Lunceford found that older people, who have accomplished some-of their life's goals, seem better able to handle thoughts about death and dying. "Younger children also think about it," be added. "They are still mystified about life." The age group of 30-45 is where people cling to life much more strongly. "We seem to need to live forever," Dr. Lunceford commented. Most older people interviewed simply indicated that they wished not to d ie in pain. Women who a r e newly divorced. going b ack to school or entering a new career were re· luctant to talk about death, Dr. Lunceford added. People from lower income groups are much Jess concerned about it , the author noted, because "life has Jess meaning for them." Dr. Lunceford also found de· finite cultural differences in the way death is viewed. Jn Asian cultures, fOl' example, the grieving process ls viewed as normal. Indians celebrate death and Jewish people view it as a time for both celebration and mourning. Americans, in contrast, are taught to suppress theire!potions and see death as being-paihful. "We've relied on t.be church to handle it,'· Dr. Luncelord said. ''Even medical schools don't train people in how to deal with / dying.'' MORE FREEDOM He believes attitudes are changing, however. "Young peo. pie fl'e becoming m~'and more aware. Educational instltut.Joos are offering more opportulaities to study death. We're becopllna more healthy mentally.md mere lreo about our lives." Dr. Lunceftrd finds the thought of dnth especially important in his llfesincebebad a close call several years ago through a serious~. "I realUed tbeo tbat life bad a beautiful splritua) meanio,. 1 had no control over what wu 10· ing to happen to me. J bed to IC· cept the'reallly of what was hap- ~at that time." Dr. Lunceford said his lite has ' Dr. and Mrs. Ron Lunceford face own concerns while writing a book. cllanc'ed since then for the better. He now is able to show more love to h1s wlre and children and be doesn't waste time being angl'y. "I feel something more movlng abc:lut people. 1 tell them more bow J care about them." The Irvine resident, who ts a co.founder with his wife ol The People's Clinic ln Sant• Ana aald bis views of what kh'd d ceremony be w anti alter his de· 8lh alsobavecbanced. N'EWDESIR!S Before writing tbe booi be simply wanted to be cremated. "Now, i want my family to be able to say what I meant to \hem. It would be a symbolic gesture." He would like, he added, to have a scholarship estabUshed in his name and be remembered for his part in the clinic. Dr. Lunceford also believes the American process of planning funerals should be updated so it b less painful. Funeral arrange- ments should not have lo be made by grieving families, be ,,1tressed. •• Teddie Boston of Anaheim is nearing completior. ~ of a 2600-mile -journey from t ,.,.WI ........ Canada to Mexico a/orig the Pacific Crest trail. The 49-year-old mother of four believes she is the first womafJ to make the trek alone. Mexican border?• I headed for Kemv1lle on the paved road and told the rangers there that the trail wasn't marked. They said · they'd send a flag crew out if I could rollow the fl ags. I told them l 'd follow a Jack rabbit if it was headed south!·· that kept scratching at the pacl He sta1ed there all ni ght lon trying to get at the food ." Several relatives have su1 gested that her next trip be Cro1 California to the East Coast. Teddie c huckl es at th thought. discarding it as unfeas ble -probably. There were the beautiful mo- ments. too. "I climbed up to the 11,000·foot level. All I could hear was my breathing and my heart thump· ing. 1 camped next to a gnarled pine tree. my pack next to my head. "And there w 8$ a chipmunk ' Family Crises Cooled Anyway, t~ere is the Pacifi Crest Trail yet to finish. She wa scheduled to reach the end of th trail at the Mexican border b the end of October. "I can't believe it's been riv months," she sighs. ./ "" NEW DIRECTOR John Von Glahn By DENNIS McLELLAN OllNDallyl'li.tlt.tf What ·s bugging families today? There's the usual things: Hot quarrels, cold Indif- ference, angry parents. rebellious teenagers, financial pro· blems, divorce and loneliness. But in the uncertain '70s there are also problems related to the changing roles of men and wornen, single parenting, the prospect or job lay-oUs and rising parent and chUd drug and alcohol abuse. Those are some or the trends J ohn. Von Glahn, new ex- ecutive director of the Orange County Family Service As· sociation, has noUcedinrecentyears. Although people a.re burdened with problems, more ap· pear at least to be trying to do something about them, ac· cording to Von Glahn. "There is less of a stigma attached to going to an agency for help," he said, adding that such a move ln the past often made people feel they were admitting failure. By seeking help, however, they discover their problems are not unique and that the sooner they face them the better off they will be. HELP SOUGHT Yet. Von Olahn admits, it's still diffi cult to make that first phone call and ask for help. The county Family Service Association, which provides marriage, Individual. parent·chlld and single parent counseling. handles approximately 2,300 cases a year. Von Glahn. who took over his 1>0SiUon in mid·September following the retirement of .John TUfner, directs the four branch offices: Tustin, Fullerton, Garden Grove and San Juan Capistrano. He was director ol Family and Children's ·Servic~ in Lehigh, Pa. for seven year~. Prior to that he was with the Wisconsin State Department of Health and Social Services. INFLUBNCE "Almost my wboJe career bu been invqlv~ wlll\ famt· Jy or children 'a services," be said. "I think the f amlly pro- bably has the moalihfiuenceon an lJ'ldivldual. "Ir you're going to provide service, one of the first places t.o start Is the family. That's why I reel working with family service1 is so important" While the agency basically ls a counseling service, be • said, it also has beeD involved in famtly ure educaUon (parenting and communlc•Uonakills). A class to help people adjust to divorce is planned for the future. "l r eally see the job ol an agency as olferine more thinfs like courses aod small sroups where people can help each other and le am.·' -•. OAILV PILOT Mond:o1y Oc 1ot>er 11 I 976 Firm Stand Receives Support ..... . .. r DEAR ANN LANDERS: The etter from the teenager in !Mass achusetts who thought 1t ~as unreaJistic to prohibit the ale of contraceptives to ha&h hoot kids -and your agreeing th him -was the talk of our ~d club. <I live In Belmont, a f)Uburb o( Boston ) 1 Now I read In the Globe that ~ch or the so contenders for the Miss America crown was re- CJUl. ·red to sign a statement swear- lilt§ she Is not now pregnant, has Eer BEEN pregnant and has t had an abortion. Wail -re's more. !" Every girl who entered the p ageant had lo promise s he ~ould not get pregnant if she won U\e title. The man who was in tharge or the pageant said it would be very embarrassing if !~See, Ski While ski e xpe rts de· monstrate the art of freestyling and tram· poline a crobatics . s pecialized s ki fa s hions will b e modeled in another . area of South Coast Plaza Wednesday , ·oct. 13 . He ad Ski Wear, such as shown at ri g ht , will be paraded for public viewing at 4, 6 and 8 p.m. Gem :Real Jewel 'NEW YORK (AP)-lf )tou're looking for ~omethin g for t he woman in your life that wou ld mak e even• Elizabeth Taylor ' · Jealous, then Cartier has just the thing : a 107.07- car at diamond with a $5-mlllion price tag. The famous jewelers unveiled the 1 ~-by-2- inch gem , three quarters ol an inch t hick and mounted in platinum, at the Queen started to look a bi• heavy after four monlhs of her reign. So what better evidence could anyone present in s upport of your statement that once teenagers get into sex they need 1nlorma. tlon and protection? Here we have the cream of the crop of America's young womanhood - and one of the major fears of the pageant director is that the Queen might turn up •'with chiJd .. before he r year or queen· ing is up. Just keep telling it like it is, Ann. As a mother of five girls who is firmly against abortion. I believe it is imperative that young people who have already become sexually active should be permitted lo purchase con- traceptives without government a news conference in its such as cracks or traces Fifth ,A venue s t ore. of carbon when placed Cartier-New York presi-under a pow e r f u 1 dent Ralph Des ti no pro-magnifier . mplly dubbed it "the Found ii) th e coal most beautiful diamond mines of South Africa, ever found." the $46,000 per carat APWlrelll'tto Diamond is the m ost ex- pens ive j ewel Cartier has eve r offe r ed for public sale, the other be· in g a 69 .4 2 c arat d ia mond p e ndant R ic h a rd Burto n purchased for then·wife Eliza beth T aylor in 1969 for an undisclosed sum higher than t h e $1.05 milUon paid by Cartier. The glittering, pear· diamond has undergone s haped· stone named almost two years ofplan- "The Louis Cartier ning and cutting. It 1s Diamond" in honor of 1 almost twice the size of the third generation, the second largest ··o des cendant or the Flawlessspeci me n,"ac- French rounders or the cording lo Cartier Of· firm, is t.he largest stone ficials. ever lo achieve a "D They added that it is flawless'' rating by the considered superior even Gemological Institute of to the famous Tiffany New York. d I a m o n d w h i c h The rating refers tot.he although larger, does not colorless gem 's purity of possess the nawless rat- briUiance and absence of ing. any detectable Claws The Louis Cartier Destino scud the gem would remain in New York for a retrospective exhibition honoring its namesake Oc t. 13·29 and then be s e nt t o the jeweler's London store and finally to the Paris he adquarters where it will remain until sold. (Ann Landers ~ interference . I apprt>e1ate your gutsy stand, Ann. Sign this ANOTHER REALIST AND CATHOLIC T 'BOOT D£AR REALIST: Thanks for the 1troa1 affirmative vote. Thf' fact tbat you are a Catholic from Massachusetts makes it espedaUy meaningful. I hope you are able to enlighten some of your card-club sisters who are on tbe other slde of the fence. Let me repeat, tbls is NOT belng permissive. It Is Just common There 's been a n awful lot of com ment an your column lately about women who don't shave ttieir legs or their armpits. You ~aid it would be ha rd to imagine a Jes:. appetizing sight than a growth of hair poking out of nylon stock· ings. sense. What in the world has hair gol to do with the appelite? J think you are nuts . LOUlSVILLE READER DEAR ANN LA NDE RS DEAR LOU : Have you ever been served a bowl ol soup and discovered a bair tn U? Topic Set Dr. S. t. Hayakawa. th e R e publ i can Senator ia l cand idate, will take time oul Crom his campaign to speak on the ProhlC'ms of Higher .Education at the annual Friends of UCI dinner meeting. The event will begin al 8 p.m . Tuesda y. 0<'t. 19, in the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Hayakawa also will be g ues t o f honor at a private r eception for dues·paying mem bers of the Friends al 6 p.m 1n the Linda Is le home of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Lyon Wine and cheese will be served. Reservations for the dinner can be m ade by writing to the Friends of U Cl. U n ive r s ity of California, Irvine. 92717, or by calling the Friends at 833·6424 between 10 a .m. and 2 p.m Tickets are $1 5 each and a portion of the cost J j S. I. Hayakawa will benefi t the Friends. The public 1s JO\'ited. Founded in 1958, the group"s original purpose was to brin g t he un- iversity to Irvine. It is dedicated .. to stimulate interest in hig her educa - tion, encourage gifts to the Univers ity a nd in· form the )lchool and its co mmunit y of eac h other's plans and pro· blems." Tours, Talks Due L E G A L SECR ETARIES : The Orange County Harbor Area Assoc iation will sponsor a Day in Court Tuesday. Oct. 12. in the Orange County Harbor Munkipal Court. Registration will be al 8 a .m. and tours, at SJ each. will begin at 9. Reservations may be made by calling Debbie Andrews at 963·3898. PUBLIC LECTURE: Ke lly Lange, KNBC's nightly weathercaster will talk on Women in Communication at Santa Ana College Wednesday, Oct. 13. Sponsore d by the Com- munity Services Office. Miss Lange's lecture will begin at 11 a . m . in Phillips Hall. Are a high school and college journali6m stu- dents have been invited and the program is open to the public. ti on of s e lf ·def e ns e techniques will be the topic of a workshop at ll a.m. Thursd ay. Oct. 14. Spons ored b y the Women 's Ce nte r al Golden West College. the sessions will be held in the community cent er Child c are is available by prior arrangeme nt with the center, 892-7711. NATIONAL WOMEN'S POLITICAL CAUCUS: Audrey Rowe Colom . nationa l chairwoman will be honored at a reception at 7:30 p.m . Thursday, Oct. 14, in the Irvine home of Mr . and Mrs . J ay Martin. Hosting the evenl is t he Orang e County Chapter . Ms . C ol o m i s a member of President Ford's Steering Commit- tee and is serving her second term as national head ofNWPC WORKSHOP: Legal ALLIANCE FRAN· and medical aspects of CAISE: A travelogue on rape and a demonstra-MartinjqUe will be pre· sented by Dr J eanne Rigsby at the 8 p.m. meeting Friday . Oct. 15. in the Congregational Church. Laguna Beach. MONDAY MORNING CLU B : Huntin gt on Bea ch me mber s will meet al 10: 30 a.m. Oct. 18, in the Sheraton Beach Inn. The program will be presented by Murray Korda and his String Ensemble. KAPPA D E LTA : Newport Harbor Alum· nae will commemorate the 79th anniversary of the foundin g of the sorority when they meet for a coffee at 10 a.m. Monday, Oct. 18, in the ViJla Park home of Mrs. Roland Wedemeyer . Since its founding, the soronty has contributed more than a half million dollars for the care and aid of patients in the Crippled C h ildre n 's Hospital in Richmond. Va. Leo: Accent Romance TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12 TAURUS (April 20· May 20): Money picture is bright. You get bargain, you earn mOie, get more plaudits for ef. forts. Collect. con- solidate. refuse to sell yourself short. the blending of desire in· SAGl1TARIUS <Nov. to reality. You are able 22-Dec. 21 ): Public ac- to test, deduce. analyze. ceptance or your pro- Member of opposite sex posals will increase. makes you feel more Those who opposed could alive. be transformed into aJ. VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. lies. Legal picture is 22): Emphasis on ac· brighter . Tonight's 1V Highlighls KTLA 0 8:00 -"The Devit 's Brigade ." William Holden and Cliff Roberts on play the commanders or Am erican and Canadian military units which join forces lo help win World War II in this 1968 movie. NBC 8 9:00 -"Jesus Chris t Superstar." The movie version of the Broadway rock-religion mus\cal of the last week in the lite of Jesus. 1 ABC U 9:00 -"The Sand Pebbles." An epic movie about a sailor (Steve McQueen ) who falls in love with a mis- sionary (Candice Bergen) in the midst of turmoil in 1926 China with Richard Cren- na, Mako and Richard Attcnborough. TV DAILY LOG l MONDAY EVENING 6 :00 OU tln r31 r• 1 r10 News Q Otl $1 m @ID News O 12tJ Stir Tre~ .111 Comer Pyle Q Gunsmoh OJ Part•id&e f 11111ly II) Adam·IZ ( tti l 8 ) ltfl Monday N11ht fool· t>all San I 1an<1sco J~u 1 ~t lns "ngdes Ram' ,, !>mah! m littlt ltHUls -6:30- 0 Otn1h! Guests •ntludt Geraldo Rima Kenny Ro1e1s. l11ilaod Oin & John fo•d Coley lb oell• r ab1ay and I onnette Mt~rr 4 Andy Cnffllh (lQ, lkrY Gnff111 ~ CD hm1ly Affair 1 r 3· Cunsmote ID Naslrfllle on the Rold 7:00 0 0 2l ~I m New~ 0 lms Club e My Three Sons a Tt Tell l)le lrulh g IM!centnhon CD t love Lucy II> The f81 t» Cine en Cs111nol ltt1 Andy Gritfllh fll) M1elteil/Lehm Rtpot1 el On11111ic Strits m Addams hmily -7:30- Q ~~tornia 8uyh11e 0 Sowlin& tor Dollm 6 The Odd C411plt 0 Mowit: 'C 1 (90) "Rouslibout" trnus) 64 [lv1s P1esley. 8a1b11a 5ranwyc~ loan f rttman. l •11 C rtek ~o. Sue A"t lanitdon A roYIRll 1ec•less S1n~t1 f(>ins a carnival and romances lht 0111ner s daughlei f llllme That Tune g The Johr's Wtld m &fldJ Sandi '1}) 13 Dolly ,arton Show ~ ..! Wild Worl4 ti Animals 26 lto&aft's Heroes El!) Cll1nnel 11 TOlllfhl ~g Wild lbftCdonl m flull Goldon 8 :00 fJ 1t1J q _1 (81 Rhod1 Rhoda lr1~s 10 rose htr · separaflon blues" by attending a s1111ngmg 11ePkend moun lam 1esorr tonre1eocr. and the high light ot the weekend comes when ~e ma~e$ lhe acqua1nla ncr of 39 yw old d1i0rced a11hne slewMdess. Sally Gallagher (guest Anne Meara ) D f2V (f / IJ}I m liltle House on the Pnirit "fhe Race" Aller wed s ol hard work lo earn enou&ll money lo have her hors• shod for the b1i annual race. lau1a learns lhe Olesons have purchased an rlpen s1ve race horsP for Nelli~ 0 Mowie: 'C} (2\\hr)"Tht OtYil's Bri&adt" (dra) '68-V1nce Edwards. W1ll1am Holden. Cliff Robertson 1$J Mnie: re; (Zbr) "01mft T111kees" (mus) ·~g hb Hunter, Gwen Vttdon O ~ ~ (2hr) "Action Man" (adv) '67-lun Gab1n Robe11 SI.ck (D lortnie lo Htnrtttu MuSK Sllow Cl> l'erry Muon ..it Movtt: ~ (2hr) "hn ltttte lft· drans" (hor) '74-0hver Reed. me S<lmmer. Charles A\navour fZl) Tiit Adams Cllronicl11 CR) lohn Adams M1111s1er 10 Grrat 8111am· (1784 1781) Adams t1m1ly membtrs reunite in Europe wheie lohn Ad1ms renews his f11endsl11p w1fh Thomas Jefferson. and Mams daughter m11 11ts an Ameucan d1pk>rna1 m Sp111ls.ll Mo.it !1fl The ~pl1i11 I T tnn.tlle m Japanese u ncua1e Prosrams -8:30- D 01l rn CJJ Phrttis tack Clam guests as Van Horn a bum-who atcosts Phyllis 1n the park 1nd con. lesses he's beco""' enamored ol a pu tly bank employee ilnd wants to lu1n ovet a new lut 1n Oldtr lo attract her attention Phyllis accepls the cllallence 1fli! has lhe time ol ht1 Ille chanllnl her lav011le bum 1nlo • man of d1st1nc1ton 9:00 U <Ill Cl) Cf) Mndt Waller's tlQ(flU om 1 b11su1ess loin nun hts •Kalton, and then he rectives WOtd thal "'l'f ruin 1\1$ ltfe. D ~ [I) Im m NBC M011d'1 M"it: (Cl (Zhr) "Juvs thrill s.enur" (mus) '73-Ted Heeler. • ~rt MclellOll. Yvonnt ["1111an, Barry Otnne11, Bob lll1tfllam. A ldm 14'P· lt11ed to I tunbolt 1n the Y1111Ue Rrvei 111 1916, lalb 1n ~ w1lh 1 IM$1onary tuthfr Wht11 GPtUm 11 pl1nled 1board lht lioll 1nd rt's field under sie11. lhe Ame11Qn is forced lo like 1 sland. m A11n Kina. Pllrllis * Mc,ulre & V'rc DtlllMI All Join MtlV TOllilc OJ Mu• Crilfln Sllow Q) Tiit Vi1tillia1 m Cine U1ittrut fll) In hriCNNnct 11 Welf l 11' ( 2t) fJ)) Mond•J J1l1llt lllltwft: re) (thr) ~c1c1111 fltwtf" ((Om) 69-Waller Matthn. 1nc11d Be•e· min. C:Old1e Hawn 1~9 Mowtt: l~l "a.o,,trl" P11t I Cdra) '6J-lh11beth laylo!, R1<h11d !!urlon. Rea H•m~n. .. 9:30- 0 JOHNNY CASH alMI ROY * ClAltlt bost Country Music Awards. UVE FROM NASHVILLE! o M> m ~c..try MwMt Assod11toeaurds Johnny Ca)ll IMI Ror Clar-co host the tenth inn.al Country Muste Assoc1<11ton Aw11ds pmenlaltons h<1no11ng out )landing ach1tvemenls on the toun Irr muste held from the Grilnd Ole Oo•v 1n N1~hv1ll• 1,nn•sste Show will be h1ghlrghlt4 by Ille announet mfnl ot lht most m enl pmon ~l1l1ts ''«I'd tnlo lbt Counrrv Music llall ol lame 10:00 Cf t Bon1n11 CJlte-«$ tM) Cunsmolie m Ba11t1 de rrimnm -10:30-m II) m lltws EID Slladows Oil tflt Gms 11:00 0 U ID ()IJ lltwi D tu UD l.Ul (lJ lltws 0 (12fl fe ) Lon Allltric111 Stytt ,g Sta Hu~I 0 Ctltlltrty Rttut S•tles & Htn· dmon 1ues1 host m TOM ~SITS MAU l CHMUE CAN'T SUR THC "SHAMr' TO!frTC m Mary IWtm.tll, Mary Hartman m Tiits ol tht Blurre !11 Stump the St•rs ~ frtSnO f1ir lt1ces EZ!> Movit: "ltocUnc Horse Win· ntr" -11:30-u (11l ()) (t) CBS Litt MOYie: McCloud -The Cororaclo Cattle ~per u 12~ m rtoJ m .1o1w1y c-n ! 6 J The nt Club U Your Sllow ot Shows OJ News 1.af) Tilt 700 Club ( ttl (fl) Scitnte fiction llltatrt 1;t1 Mo.It: (C) "Stpte11111er st-" (dra) '60-Mark Stevens. 12:00 0 Best ., Gtflldlt g Mowlt: ct:) "Oodof ii Lotre" (com) '62-M1cl11tl C,1lc. Vi11in11 Ma~tll, Mom Redmond m Movie: "'Air Rll4 "114Hs" (com) '0 -laurtl & !Wdy. m ei11e1111 l4 -12:3G-o Alt.Jli&lll Sllw: (t) "MM Htl," "T~• Mad Doc1or,~ "Cww of Ille Undtad" I!) Mom: (Cl "lh M111 Wht uups" (hor) '66-lclmund l'ur6om. 1 :00 Q l})J r f) 10 Tomorrow Im Tilt rn Clob -1:30- UNtwt 2:00 8 Movit: .. _ Child Is Wtllf~I'' (d11) '63-Burl lancaster, Judy Gerl1nd. D Doubletuturt lttrits: (C) "Docter I• t111 llt111t," CC> "CIN Mt '4ltlG." OCTotU 12 Betft,for,..~,mfM dty'a lllO'ries. 10:00 e (C) "OM S..., Aller· """" (mut) 'U -Otnn1s Molpn, la~ Pl 1c. Oorotlly M1lont .IWtfa,..... (adv) '41-JtltreJ l,._n, P!Mllap Oor1I 111 "Oare• •I II•• U11tt Btla*~ (dr~ '36-tnol Flynn I 1:00 G Cl:) • ......, fMr(' ( .. ) '57-lony C41rtls, Martll1 Hytf. 11:00 ID "Ollr W.. 11M T...., &y SYDNEY OMA.RR 'ARIES (March 21· April 19 ): Joy comes Uirough exch ange of Ideas, short trip to out-or- way place, opening lines ot communication wilh c lose neigh bors , re- latives. You could be in love, alive, vital. Peering Around GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Cycle is such that you make gains. pro- gress, become confident, popular, versatile. Tim· Ing improves; element of "luck" rides with you. Make pers o n al ap- pearance~. Purchase ap· parel. CANCER (June 21· July 22): You get work done, basic issues sort· ed; you gain greater selC· understandtng. Secre t furs, doubts can be pushed aside. Review and rebulld. Concentrate on what Is, not what you wisb. complishmenl. ability to CAPRIC ORN <Dec. favorably impre ss 22-Jan. 19): Health, superiors. Business pro-employment areas are spects are excellent One accented and you could you love makes major have reason to be op· concession. timistic. You ~et second LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct chance. opportunity to 22): Good lunar aspect begin anew, to imprint coin cides now with style, personality. journeys, e ducation, AQUARIUS (Jan . com m uni cation , 20·Fe6. 18): You have publishing. You arepres· chance to express, cient. You sense what is create -and lo love. to occur -and you can Wishes come true, vitalJ- do something aboutlt. t y returns. Personal 1 t1t1011 ol lllt Broadway rock mtn1eaf based Oft lllf Blb!IUI llortts of lllt last ttm dip an I~• hie ol Jaus. • ....,, • Mtorit: a:') (llW) "Tiit SW,,....,-(dn) '66-Slm McQtletfl. R'iclltrd Cftnn•. fbcMrd ~ellbOfouetl, Candie:• Btr1en. l~riy Gatts. Alt Atntricln t~tri1te, trans· Gr•'9S" (dr1) ··~-.. "~"' 0'8uen, Ed'#lfd C. llobiftOft. 1:00 QS CC) "r.S. I lltt YM" (dr•> ·11-Ptr• Ktst•. Z:OO • "Tiit Cl~km" (dra) '63-My Sqsft, Mtlf SttGL l:OO <11 CC> .... ,_.,.. (drt) ·~-CJrt.1klll l.,W. FOR THE SECOND co11secutlve year, Lori W~deln of Irvine has been awarded t.he aMual utider1.raduate student scholarship Cund of the Newi>c>rl·trvlne Rolory Club. · Sbe t1 entering her sopbomon year al UCI. .. . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Accent on romance, creatlvily, friendship, SCORPIO (Oct. 23· magnetis m soars. Young Nov. 21 ): Financial pro-persons support you. s pect s lmprove ,I PISCES (Feb. 19· especially where partner ' March 20): You have or mate is involved. You more conrtden~e - fil'\d that you·re able to you're assured or sup- "cash In" in hint&, tips port from those in and other knowled1e. 1 author! ty • KOCE Television (50) ' ' 8CX.> ! IT'5~RO TO BELIEVE: '.5 FALL Al..REAOO , TANK McNAMARA NANCY HI, NANCY--D ID YOU KNOW T'HERE'S A -NEW GIRL IN THE N EIGHBORHOOD'? svr r DOU'l 1HtlJK ~He~s~~ -16 Ml./ A..ilMAt.. MA~E?fi~M. AND PRE.Tfl'..l S(X:)N I BE WINlU ! BOY, I ~N'i WAIT! YEP, AND l'M TAKING HER OUT TODAY WffltHING EVER<.>0 BUILD SNOWMEN AND SING CAROLS AT CHRIS11M5 Will~ BE Rl'l / I m AFRAID I'VE 60T SOME BAO NEW.S FOR <.lA , BLCKAR.00 f I0-11 by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds J Mond•y. Oetobor 11 1976 THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT DOOLEY'S WORLD W£ GOf OfF SCHOOL IODAY B£CAUSE 11 ~ COWMBUS ' 8JRTHDAY! DR. SMOCK GORDO .:0,1,1i: .JM I ClJPC~KE:! l. ""°"JIT 51T£ "f('l)- '-£; j' ! 5T.}.~T Tl-IE' 1'1/IL I: vou- T.l.KE5., .•voe~. ~~' MOON MULLINS IT'S Ya.II' MOTHllf! Hi ... t!E ~HOIO INllCIPAI-.' 146 5'A/C7 HE HA' HO MOti_.V, NO JO&, N061~t. ••• CAIL Y PILOT' Ill . by Lee Giid Sprt11ger by Rodger Bradfield -SO MANY FAMOUS MEN WERE BORN ON ~01..IDAYS t by George Lemont l ' i [8]j s ' by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson @~ _, ':> ; ""'• : •WI "'."':' ... TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZ·ZLI PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz UNITED Feature Syndicate ~tu1oay sPuule Sol•ed ACROSS t Numerous !> Con1ferou> iree tOG1ddy 1~ Sh.1riblr., 1:> W lnd·f J ·~land lo Sndn15h Pver 17 Grvooll 18 (,po •JI 48 Fur-t>ea11ng animals ':10 Sudden pain spasm 1 Crampcm ~..> 200meler run l(Jr OM' ~!>011~. ___ ,... r--:; -~ . l • A R ; I I'. t...l A ,_ ... -r'o I IE G IO 1l ti Ir l<. p 1 il 1,q '") ? U T RA T r • <; L I II:, . II(\ VA ~ /. T • c '1 IV r 'J r I l r 5 T (1 0 pf P I ll c l -' . I r U L 11 ; <; T T r r ' ~ ' l E y .) > 11• '· I f • ~-I I u A.VA L 0 ~I' 111• l T L /."' 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' ' .. ,,,. be mu!>I bt 1 l Sallpe1e1 10 That which Because ol lyp.: V.u wils erased 37 Brcalhes ~:!Raise\ 1 4 o.i~h 1 1 Ouaht1ed 3<1 Suggested hOrsn,., r 5 01911s ;i J Shade nl 1 u Oirecl•M <•I 1., Mr All('n ·1 ') Pn1nl of view 1..olor mcwemel'll 1 llhlls •14 Must in a 116rl'akoo>1n w1nl!ry • " Hav·nCI "" ~ 7 F rnde• 017 Coricenha ll'd cur••'" nlem•sh 'l Sh PS <!'COid • 'i Assen IQt;• !rue • ~ AclS <4) Chi11fff1\IH J2 l101le1 Brewn 13 Rom<111 gMml'nl JS EQU"1U JoCuo•d 38 Marsh 40Mus1ca1 symbol 4 t Math terms 43 froslero; 45 Medrcrne Abbr •6 Crap tnblc st110 DOW/I '811• ,• Mv lrrPnrl bnnk•, J4 f'u1 1n10 1;mc1s r ll•C.\lhrnQ 1P..1111..111y luSl!Cl maier"" ·~ Archa 4 Cnnd•ltoo ot ;>h Se<ccres, SldlUS , 1 rrooCh CllV !> OHawa and cS Win ,,nd show DC groups ?9 [nd1ng wllh 6 Rub out air or aero 7 Apply, as 30 Glyceride l'l l •tl'langed 'J l (,r,1vP 1n "1olMl'I ... ) G 1C'llC lnbl.' m1·mbN '>J ~11ci.. Jun•Olf'IQ pnle ~4 Control ~5 S1•tt1ng ol an event ~6 Gtnzed 11em o7 ... Tors· Movie-powder -- R Mr Lrnco'n J 1 rec!'11hzed "1J,er 9 Tumulluous lnnt ovules 58 10 mills moo 34 ° . to t-0 · Lance101 l \ --------. DO YOO ATTVRNE'i'S FIND IT VEIN DIFFICULT TO PREPARE FOR A TRIAL ~ ,.....----------, i riE H~IWEST PAl<T 5 TIC:"1NG TO OfC,Of Wt{A-TO F\IT IN "(001( ~tEFCA5E , •, ., j• . ,: -riE LAST TIME I WAS IN COURT I FOR60i 1W( MAIR SPR..W ' ~!?;\ . Ar~~1-----1 :1 -....__.__......._._~---"' .__ __ ...__.__..~-----....... ~~~---''---..:.I! L__...::::::::::===::__--1 JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS UH1_~E:FORE: 'OJ RIPE. 001 ON SCOU'Tl~ VU1V, t.C175A 1.UCK1 I HAVE: ONE: L..ITrl.E ReQOE::Sf .•.. FOR ONCE JN ~R l-IFE, J ~10 CONPOCT VOURSELF L.IKE: A PJ..AIN,OF\l'INARYt J RUN·OF:n.E·MJL.l. 1Nl71AN!! ! \l . by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan THE GIRLS ,..,,,.~.,.., ....... wt lO..U~ .'I "J JUXI hate our first meeting a fr er \Um mer adjournment -it'\ ;i whole afternoon of staring a1 each other 10 \cc who·, put on the most weight." DENNIS THE MENACE ~ &JT ~ 1Xlir Jtr.Ml llKE MV °'U. YELL SQYCT~ING AT ME.'' . . ' t . . -----------------i~ • 8 4 DAILY PILOT Monday October 1 t t9?8 Moose Killed on 29th· Birthday PITTSBURGH (AP) -Pilcher Bob Moose ot the Pittsburgh Pirates, kllled in an Oruo auto crash oo bis 29th birthday, is re- membered for lhe way be battled bard times on and orr the baseball field. "Bob Moose was my kind of player," Pele Rose of the Cin: clnnati Reds s aid whale an Philadelphia for the National League playoffs. ''He would light you down to the bitter end ," Rose added Sun- day on the exact four-year an- niversary or the wild pitch Moose uncorked in the last. inning of a playoff game that gave lhe Reds the National League title. ''Bob was a very courageous person," said J oe L. Brown, re- cently r etired as Pirates general BOB MOOSE Reds L e a ve ~ark,Phils In Shock PHILADELPHIA (AP) Philadelphia m anager Danny Ozark looked like a guy who was shell shocked alter the Cincinnati Reds lowered the boom on his National League East Division champions for the sec ond straight lime. The Reds took a 6·2 victory over the Phillies Sunday and a 2·0 lead in the best-of-five series for the National League pennant and a place in the World Series. I s ther e s ome kind o f leadership he can provide to help the Phillies in their improbable task of beating the Reds three s trai g ht in Cinctn n at1 '~ Riverfront Stadium? '"There is no leaders hip in· volved," said Ozark, who led his team to a nine-game margin over On Tl' Tue•day C'ha1111.-f 7 at Noon defending champion Pittsburgh in the Eas t. "It's j ust a m atter of going out and playing the best we can. We've got lo go out and do it like we did aJl season." Ozark lamented the PhiJlies· failure to exploit a big second in- ning opportunity when they had one run home, the bases loaded and none out. Jim Lonborg bounced to t hird basema n Pete Rose for a third-to-home-to-first double play. .. If Lonborg hit it to anybody else we get another run out of it,•• said Ozark. Dave Cash ended the inning by grounding out. Lonborg pitched hitless ball for S"'-i innings before t.be Reds r out- ed him in a four-run sixth, keyed by the controversial error on first baseman Dick Allen that let two runs in and sent the the Reds ahead 3·2. "The mislnke I made." said Lonborg, "was to get negative thoughts m m y mind. l worned too mur h about the runner and lost my concentration. J was in trouble before I knt'w it " The runner Lonborg referred to was Dave Concepcion, who walked to start the sixth. Lon· borg r etir ed the pitcher, but then the roof caved in. P ete Rose lashed a single for the .Reds' first hit and a run. Ken Griffey singled. and Lonborg was gone. A Phillies mistake hurt in the seventh when r e li ever Tug McGraw s truck out pitcher Pedro Borbon, but the third strike was a wild pitch and Borbon re- ached first s afely. The Reds went on to score two runs. * * * CINCINNATI PHIU.OILPHIA ab r "bl ab r II Ill Rc>w3b f' 1 l I 0 "''"lb ~ 0 t 0 Gl'•ff•, rf ; I 7 I G ~•<I • 0 I) 0 Nll>'9Ml2b 1 I 0 0 Sd•M•dl lb S 0 I 0 T ,,.,.., lb 3 0 0 I L•IJIM•lfl ; I I I G Anlerll '0 0 1 It Ali.<l ID a I 1 0 lleftt"C .. 0 ' 0 JoM•1-rf • 0 ) 0 Geroftlmo cf .. 0 ' 0 eoonec 3 0 7 I Coft<epclon lS , 1 0 0 !Iowa ~· , 0 0 0 lAdlry 0 I 0 0 0 Lonborqo 1 0 0 0 Orleu enpll ' 0 0 0 O.ni.r o 0000 llOt1lon p , 1 0 0 TOltft~ I 0 0 0 M<Gr...,P 0 0 0 0 "'""0 0 0 0 0 McC.-rwr 111\ , 0 0 0 Tot111 " ... TOlll\ "2 10 l Ci~f"""" 000 004 700-4 Pl\11-tbflle 010 010 000-1 e-lt Allefl.OP-C1nc1l'l\lllJ LOO ClllC•" """ s. Pnll..,.IOlll• 10 H It Lu11n.1.i m. se OtlOtv S -a.-. Lonborq SF l P,,rrr. l.tellf• IW, 1.0l ~ ~ ...... ,. (';,tf'Mf V.COf-~ IP H II I ll H \0 1 & I 1 2 1 '•00•0 11 1)11 1 ·~ I I 0 I 0 ., 7 1 1 0 1 f''1 • 0 1 I S.w -~111 WP-M<Gr-T-224.t. -R6ll. ' I manager '"He was full of con fidence, and be felt all he could do was go out and give lhe best he had." Moose w as killed. ~turday night near Martins Ferry. Ohio, in a two-car crash that injured four persons, including l\\O women passengers in his car. Police said !\loose'!> car ran out of control on rain-slJcked Ohio 7 and struck a car. driven by Stephen George, 17, of Yorkville, Ohio. Moose, dead at the scene, wns on his way to a party and golf out· ing at the Rayland. Ohio, course owned by former Pirates player Bill Mazeroski. '"Nobody could believe it," said Pittsburgh pitcher Dave Giusti, who was at M azeroskt s. "We went to the hospital and it was confirmed he was killed. It'» stall hard for me to be!Jeve." "How sad," said manager. Sparky Anderson ol the Reds. "Only 29. How sad." Moose's body was returned to his horpetown of Export, Pa., where funeral services will be held Wednesday. lie is survived by his w ife. Alberta, and a daughter , April, 5. Moose signed with the Pirates after he was gradualecHrom high school in 1965. In 1969, he posted a 14·3 record with Pittsburgh and pitched a no-hiller against the Mets in New York. lie avera~ed 12 victories in each of his next four seasons, in· eluding the '72 season in whicl\ he made his d ecisive wild pitch qainst the Cincinnati Redlegs '"I remember \\htm he made that wild patch," said former Pirate Dave Ca!>h, now with the Philhes .. He didn"t make any ex- cuses. He w usn 't an excuse guy ." Moose's career and his life almost ended an 1974 wh(•n he de· veloped a blood clot under his pitching shoulder and underwent sur gery. Within m onths he was throwing balling practice and he made the Pirate team in 1975 spr· ing training. A torn lhumbnail sidelined him midway in the 1975 season and he we nt to the min ors. Y ct he worked his way back to tha Pirate' late in the year. Used as a relier pitcher this season. he compiled a 3·9 record.JU s career record was 7't·69. Rams, 49ers Battle At Coliselllll Tonight LOS ANGELES (AP) -For three years under coach Chuck Knox, the Los Angeles Rams have dominated the Western Di vision or the National Football Conference, and the San Fran· cisco49ers aim to put a stop to it. A nationwide television au· dience will w atch the California rivals square off in the first of their two battles tonight with tht' Ram s f avored b y l\\u touchdowns. TV for Southern Californi a will be blacked out. That could be a n extreme d1f. fer ential s ince San Francisco stands 3·1 so far and the Ram:. are just a shade better at 3·0·1. J ames Harris directs the Rams at quarterback and newcomer Jim Plunkett, late or the New England P atriots, is at the helm or the 49ers. Harris missed the first two re- gular season games because of a broken thumb. but against New York's Giants and the Mi ami Dolphins. he has pass<.'<i for 615 yards on 31 completions in 52 at Sports in Bri~f tempts for a 59.6 average. Th e only blac k s tarting quarterback in the NFL. Harris passed for 436 yards, including two key second half touc hdowns. as the Rams edged Miami 31·28 a week ugo Sunday. Plunkett has connected on 55 of 92 throws for 653 varcls and a 59 78 aver11~e A Heis man T rophy winner al Stanford in 1970, the quarll•rback played with New England be-fore asking to be tra ded . Each dub possesses a potent running attack, the edge so far co1n_g to th e Ram s wi th Lawrence Mccutcheon and John .Cappellitti. who just this year won a starting assignment. 1.tcCutcheon h as gained 389 )ards in 96 car ries and Cappellet- ti. a former Heisman Trophy wanner from Pe"n State, has 348 on 79 carries and they rank two- three in the NFC. San Francisco also boasts a pair or top runnt'rs although not as well known a:. the Los Angeles t wosom c. Del William!> has gained 295 yar ds and Wilbur Jackson 164. On defense the 49ers have been awesom e. In the preseason when Los Angeles won t0.7, the San Francisco defenders sacked the quarterback seven times. Last week in beating the New York J els 17 -6 they ;.1lso turned 111 seven sacks and that gc1es us a club record. Still , the Rams offcm.1vc lint• has permitted only two sack~ in four week~ The 49ers defensive line has been rebuilt with tY.o vetenms a nd two ~econd -year men. Cedrick Hardman and Tommy Hart ar e the veterans at the <.'nds. with relative newcomers Jimmy Webb and Cleveland Elam at the tackles. Los Angeles boasts more ex· perience in the dl"fens1,·c fronl four but 36-year-old Merlin Olsen has been hampered by a hamstr· ing injury. I It: 'II s larl at tackle along with L•1rry Brooks Jac·k Youngblood and Fred Oryer play the ends . ,., ............ LA'S DAVE SCHULTZ (LEFT), PAUL HOLMGREN MIX. Kings Downed, 1-0 Fi ght Spices Rough Contest PHILA DELPlllA (AP) -The confrontation had classic propor- tions Dave Scholtz, the "enforcer" for the Philadelphia Flyers for four years. was making his first Spectrum appearance in an enemy uniform. . It was short, about 16 minutes, aud not loo sweet. Schultz and six other play~rs were barushed with abou~ three minutes to play in the first period after a bench-clearing brawl .. . "That was your typical F1yers brawl. Four guys on one., sa!d Schultz. "I never was involved in anything like that her e. I believe m fighting one on one." ( . -. Japan's Oh at 715; Solomon Tops Lutz Veteran goaltender Bernie Parent recorded his 4oth National Hockey League shutout Sunday night as the Philadelphia Flyers blanked Schultz and his Los Angeles Kings teammates, 1·0. The lone goal of the game came at 9:20 or the second period ' ~· when Flyers left winger Ross Lonsberry fired a 30-footer toward the TOKYO --Sadaharu Oh, the l))ugging first baseman of the Tokyo Yom1uri Giants. today became the second man to break Babe Ruth·s career home run totalof 714. The 35-year -old power-hitter's record-breaking homer -his 48th of the season and 715th or his career -came in the bottom of the eighth against the Hanshin Tigers with a man on base. The Giants beat the Tigers 9·3 at the p ack ed 50,000-seat Korakuen Stadium. F oleo11s Lose flB ATLANTA -Qua rterback Steve Bartkowski, the National Football League 's rookie of the yearlast season.underwentknec s urgery today and probabl y is out for the se ason, an AUanta Falcon spokesm an said. Bartkowski suffered ligament damage in his right knee when he was tackled by Andy Dorris of the New Orleans Saints just before halftime in Sunday's 30·0 Saints victory. Bartkowski will be out at least two months and probably the rest ot the season. 1'111ldou:11 e y Kolb ONTA R l O Shirley Muld ow ne y a nd Do n Prudhomme made drag racing history Sunday b y winning their final elimination r aces in the Na· tional Hot Rod Association World championship at Ontarlo Motor Speedway. Muldowney, from Ml. Clemens, Mic h., became the first woman driver in history to win two NHRA national titles in the s ame season when s he out· powered Jerry Ruth or Seattle, in the top fuel final. Prudhomme, the veteran hot rodder from Granada Hills. cap· tured has seventh national funny car t.Jtle in eight tries this season to top the record of six he set last year . Prudhomm e needed only to make a single p ass timed 6.09 seconds at a top s peed of 236.22 mph lo take his final run. when his opponent, Ed McCulloch of Fresno, was disqualified. Lui: f 'off# KAANAPALI , Hawaii Harold Solomon defeated Bob Lutz Sunday to win the singles li· tie in the $100.000 Jsland lloli duys Pro Tennis Classic. Solomon . who was second· seeded in the tournament, de· feated Lutz 6·3, 5· 7. 7·5. Solomon won $18,000 and Lutz. of San Cleme nte, wonS9.000. llB ~Jou 2 nd NEW BERLIN, N .Y - Huntington Beach ·s Gary Semic finished second to Belgium ·s Roger Decoster in the Trans· AMA motocross series Sunday at the Un ad i II a Valley Sports Center. lluut Win• Prix WATKINS GLEN, N .Y . Jam es Hunt h e ld off J od y Scheckler in a race-long l(ame of cat-and-mouse a nd won Sunday's United States Grand Prix. clos· ing to within three points of Niki Lauda for the World Driving champions hip. The title now will be decided Oct. 24 in the J apanese Grand Prix, the final event of the Formula I season. Lauda finis hed a distant third and earned only four points lo br- ing his season total to 68, while Hunt earned nine for victory. ICKX INJURED -Belgium's Jacky l ckx, lhree·time win· ner or the 24-hour Le Mans endurance race and a Formula 1 veteran, was injured in Sunday's United States Grand Prix at Watkins Glen, N.Y. Ickx suUered a . - GRAIG NETTLES LEAPS. net The game was a rough one. with referee Jo~n McCa~ley.whisU­ ing 43 penalties for a total of 189 penalty minutes, ejecting the playC'rs a nd Kings coach Bob Pulf~rcl . . . The fight erupted when Ph1ladelph1a s Mc~ Bndgman was speared in the face by Dave Hutchison, who said at was accidental. He had just given a stiff body check Splittorff, Royals Cut Down Yankees KANSAS CITY (AP > -There was a time in this baseball :-eason when Paul Splittorff thought he had run out of time. The Kans as City left-hander could rl'member it with a smile Sunday night a fter r eturning from the pitching scrap heap and nurhng the Royals to a vital 7-3 victor y O\'er the New York Yankees. tying their American League best -o f.fi ve playoffs sen esl-1. The series m oves to New York for game three Tuesday night. Jt was his first meaningful con- tribution lo the Royals since July whrn "ent on the disabled h~'.t with tendon1t1s in the middle finger or his pitching hand "Arter three weeks, I took lht• splint off my fin~er and il swelled right up," r emembered Split torff. •·1 r eally thought I was go ing to run out of timl'. ·· Splittorff h ad won ei ght straight games before being in· jured. Now, he had become all but useless with the strange in· jury. "l waited another week and took the splint off again." he said. "This time, it was all right. .. Aflt'r s ix weeks of waiting, A,WllttlleW Splittorff was sent to the F1orida Instructional League in an effort to r egain his effectiveness. But when he got back lo Kansas City he might just as well have had that splint on his finger . He was hit freely m three brief ap- pear ances and was not con· sidered one of the keys to Kansas City's chances in this series. But Royals m a nager Whitey Herzog had other ideas. During the week of practice before the playoff~. Kansas City had a cou· pie of intrasquad games. Split: torff go a chance to pitch and Herzog likt'd what he saw. "l made the decision then,·· said llcrzog. '"I really didn't have a long left hundcr an the bullpen." Now . aftt>r Spllttorff had throt· tied New York on four hits and held them scor eless, giving the Royals a chance to come back. Herzog again doesn't have a loog left-handt'r in the bullpen. "He's going to pitch the fifth game," the manager s aid. "I'm almost certain of that." "I w anted so desperately to contribute to our team. but I couldn't," Splittorfl said. "l · thought I wou Id run out of time. lt was the most lonesome feeling in the world." The Yankees won onJy 10 more games than they lost at Yankee Stadium this year. And they managed lo beat the Royals only twice in six tries OT\ their home held Nl W YOllK R••l'•HI R-ll•tl ,..,,.,...,c ~m1>11s1b c MllyCll\ G N•lllO\ )II Gemtlltrl RfNlolPll Jb 1".Sl•nl"V \\ P!11ltll1 pl\ Ma<Ofl I\ IE f'IQvtroep ftdr-p •b , ,, ,, ' 0 I) 0 4 I 7 0 \ I 7 I ~ 0 ] I s 1 2 0 l 0 I 0 • 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 ) 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 0 I) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 KANSAS CITY Wol\llOrdll eo .. "'t' G 0"11 » l!Myblrry lb M<Rl~dll PoQUPllHI It Wllll•Jb P11~11 H J Mertl,_r< uoMrllo $C111Uorll p ~"QOrl p n r "'' ' I 1 0 ) 1 I 0 .s 1 , ' • I 1 t 100 0 l 1 '! • 1 '0 ' 1 1 , A 0 1 t 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tolelt 31 3 " J Totals J< 7 • 1 N<\W Yorlt Oil 00 000 _, KM\ .. ~ Clly -'700-001 03>1-I £ • MufllOll t. CMmbtl". I' Slllftlty, Ge!Mlt, OP t<en\u Clly 2 LOB Htw Ytrlt 11, lttll\t\ C.•tv 1 2B -C:. """'' R Wl\llt. M\11'1,_,.., ~-,.,,,,...,, G ... ,II•\, l"Mutlte 18 C. Ortll SB-~' 1 Wl>hllord, '" O 11••11 comPound fracture of the right ankle and possible frac- ture of the lower left leg, as well as burns He re, workors try to put oul the flames frorn hi s burning car. C F19ucrqe IL,0.11 T•drow l-•·" Sl!llllO"I CW, 1 0) M1neorl ,, " It s • • fl\ ) t•1 " ,,,, 4 I 2 I.It •• so 4 4 1 t 1 , ' 0 l ) t 0 0 0 , • 0 0 0 ' l •7 4),•-41,~I. ~ , I .. ,, .. " B The Chicago .ean camewlt.blD t•o points of bOaUna MlnntSola and Cleveland nipped the Pit· taburgh Slee9er• Sunday to b lgbllght National Football League action, which also saw Kansas City, Detroit and tbe New. York Jets come up with aurpri•· Ing victoriea. Tbe Bea.rs llls.1ed two estr• points in th. effcrts to beat the Minnesota Vlldngs alter the V\kes had bul.,lt a 17-0 balfUme lead. The Vikes ~ocked one extra p oint and pl•celdeker Bob Thomas mlss~d another that would have U~ the game at 20 in the fourth qu~r. The Bears' flpal threat died al the Vlkings 44 •Ith l ·09 lefl when tbey missed a first down by in· ches. Walter Payton led the Bean with 141 yarrds in 19 carries and scored two or the Chicago touchdowns. Elsewhere lD.tbe NFL Sunday: PITT S I U R G R AT CLEVELAND -Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Bradshaw suffered a neck injury and was taken to the hospital where X· rays showed no breakage as the Steelers d ropped their fourth straight, an 18-16 decision to the Cleveland Brotrns. Don Cockron.kicked field goals of 43, 28, SO and 40 yards-the last one giving Cleveland an lS-10 lead with 1:55temairung. Also Injured jn the hard-hilting game wa• C l eveland quarterback Brian Sipe, who left the game in the first half with a mild concussion. NEW ENGLAND AT DETROIT -Greg Landry threw three TD passes. two to rookie David Hill, as the Detroit Lions whipped the New England Patrios. 30-10. Detroit's defense picked off five Steve Grogan passes, in· ciudlng two steals by Levi .bhnson. The Lions· third TD, a five- ta rd pass from Landry to Charlie Sanders, gave Detroit a /1-0second quarter lead. KAN SAS CITY AT NASIDNGTON Quarterback We Uvingston's 31&-yard pus to Larry Brunson on a rude du.a.le play ralHed tbo Kansas Clty Chiefs to a 33-30 vletory OVeS" the Wa.shlngton Redskins to pv~ KC Its first win of the season. Livingston handed olf lo Woody Green, who gave the ball to wide receiver Henry Marshall, who turned and lateralled to Uv- logston. who tired tbe ball to Brunson on the eight and he ran lt ln wltb 1: 04 left. The winning TD came shortly after John Riggins ran six yarda to a Washington touchdown to give the Redskins a 30·26 lead with 2: 50 left Jan Stenerud lticlted field goals of 45, 38, 52 and 37 yards in six at- tempts. Two others were blocked by Diron Talbert. BUFFALO AT NV JETS -Pat Leaby's 38-yard field goal with48 seconds remaining lifted the New York Jets lo their first win oft.be season. a 17-14 triumph over the Buffalo Bills. A 67-yard punt return by Keith Moody of Buffalo with 101..r minutes left had tied the score at 14. But the Jets drove 69 yards in eight plays to set up the winning kick. Ed Marinaro led the Jets with 119 yards on 31 carries and scored a touchdown. O.J . Simpson carried the ball 15 times and netted 53 yards. DALLAS AT NY GIANTS The Giants debuted at their new home in East Rutherford. N.J .. but the i:nbeaten Cowboys ruined the occasion with a 24-14 victory behind quarterback Roger Slaubach. Staub&ch completed 13 of lS passes for 178 yards before a crowd of 76,042. The Cowboys cruised to a 17-0 halftime lead, blocking a New York field goal attempt and punt in the process. Then, after New York scored its touchdown. Cliff Har ris picked off a Craig Morton pass early in the fourth period and running back Doug Dennison spun off tackle for a four-yard touchdown to compiete Dallas scoring. MIAMI AT BAL11MORS - The Baltimore Colts raced to a Same Old Story: ·Oakland Tops SD SAN DIEGO (AP) -The >00r San Diego Chargers. They 1ad been hoping the 16th meet- ng against a John Madden· !oached Oakland club would be 1be charm . But Raiders ,uarterback Ken Slabler tlewed things differently and .et them down 27-17 "Stabler had a great day; he 1as a Jot of them ," said ~hargers coach Tommy >rothro of the National Football ..eague game Sunday in which he Chargers• dream of a playoff berth after a long lrought dried up. It also meant that Madden 'as never lost to San Diego Ince becoming Raiders coach o 1969. He has won 14 while yingtwo. In the seeond period, Stabler capped an 86·yard effort in less than four mi.nutes with a touchdown pass to Cliff Branch, who caught it on the undefended Chargers' 41 yard and ran it in. At!><tnOl--50,H> l'lllelen ' 1 0 U-1' O..rv"n 1 O l 1-11 SO -Malthew\ fu""OI• ~ If\ HICI..,,. (l'rlttch Ille~ 1 °"--C4sper 14 O<IU I '""" ~ IStelMort •frw) Oel< -Brenth O• pass !from Sleole< ISlelntort ~"" SO-FGFrlh<hO \0 -Morris I run IFrot\Cn•lUI O.• -8r<M<h •I oau lrom St~ (St•'"'°" tl:l(k ) Oa11. -B~'"rak '"" <1t1c11.f .. ltt1I INDIYIDUAL LEAoaas llUSMtNG -OMtlend, YMI ~. 11J.71, 0.¥1• tO >& 88'1.Utollll. 9-SI S.11 Oi990, YOUftQ 1...,, ~1·H.MOrrlsl 1t RECEtVING -01111-C:--1·10o1.Br~ll S. l&I $.iln 01-Joiner S• 109 C...ren "41, Y- i.• P•SSING Oa•l..,4.St.-J0.•1.J:Jh_.. ~nOl<IQO Foul\ 1 .. >l·I )ft. 28-7 lead early in the third' Quarter, tben went to a ground game in 1rlndln1 out o ~14 vie· tory over the Miami Dolphins. Balllmore abut Miami's run· nlng game to 88 yards and lrepl Earl Morrall, subbin& for the in· injured Bob G rieae, l o •· minimum. Bert Jones ~ompleted 11 ot 14 puses.before the Coles aat bact. and watched the clock take care ol .Miami. ATLANTA AT NE W ORLEANS -Atlanta's Falcons were swlty of four first hall turnovers. led by an intercept.ion by Jim Merlo and an 83-yard re- turn for a touchdown as tbe New Orleans Saints raced to a 30-0 vie· tory. The Saints, in adwtion lo Merlo's TD run, got rich in the fll'Sl half with Maurice Spencer's fumble recovery at the New Orleans two and Spencer's re- covery at the New Orleans 22 on Atlanta's next two possessions to set the trend of the day for the Falcons' hopeless offense. PHILADELPHIA AT ST. LOUIS -Jim Hart threw a 4~ yard touchdown pass to Mel Gray and the opportunistic St. Louis Cardinals took advantage o( a series of Philadelphia mis· takes for a 33·14 triumph. The Cardinals, down 7-0 in the first period, rallied behind a one- yard TD run by Steve Jones and Hart's scoring toss to Gray. After Clarence Daren in· tercepted a John Walton pass. Wayne Morris slired six yards to establish a 19-7 St. Louis lead at the half. SEA1TLE AT GREEN BAY- Lynn Dickey passed for 215 yards, including a 66-yard scor- ing pass to Steve Odom, whiJe Barty Smith rushed for 84 yards and two TDs to rally the Green Bay Packers to a 27·20 victory over winless Seattle. Smi th scored the tying touchdown Crom six yards out with 7:42 to play and Chest.er Marcol's extra point made it 21·20. The Seahawks led 20-7 with 5:54 spent in the second half. TAMPA BAY AT CINCIN· NATI -Mixing a varied of. fenslve attack with a strong de· tensive effort by Tom Casanova, Cincinnati's Bengals bandied winless Tampa Bay, 21-0. Casanova Intercepted a pass which set up a Bengals TD drive and then in the third quarter, he ignited a listless crowd by re- covering a Charlie Davis fumble and going 25 yards for a touchdown. DENVER AT ROUSl'ON - The Houston Oilers overcame missed scoring opportunities with a 14·yard touchdown run by Fred Willis and Skip Butler's lS-yard field goal to defeat the Denver Broncos, 17·3. Willis broke one tackle and carried another Denver defender into the end zone on his touchdown run early In the second quarter to give Houston a 7·3 halftime lead. The Oilers iced the game with 2:3S left with Ronnie Coleman's 10-yard touchdown run. Coleman's score was set up on Zeke Moore's 28·yard return with an i.nterceptlon to the Denver 10. "You throw what the defense pves you. and San Diego gave tS the middle all afternoon," tald Stabler. Prothro has done a lot of >ragging about San Diego's 'new look." but admitted af- erw ard, ''our team fought aard, but we gave them a cou· )le of awfully cheap ones." No Change: FV No. 1 The Chargers scored in the Jlird period on a 45-yard field toal by FrJtscb lbat clmed the rap to 14· lO. Fountain Valley High's un- beaten Barons, No. 1 in the CIF 4·A poll, are unanimous choices ror No. t in Orange County for the fourth s traight week in the of. fkiaJ Or ange County prep fool· ball poll. and Foothill of Santa Ana with lts lackluster wln over Orange, drop out. Key test of the week is an Orange League tiff Ftiday night with No. 4 Sonora at No. 5 La Habra. ORANGE COUNTY TOP JO 1. Foantaln Valley (4-f) • SIXTH ltACE -1·11i. mile\ >VM" OfcH & uo.Aflowefl<•s Pur .. 114,0GO. , ... 000. Jo¥! .. JllC!Qe I Pl"UY) $IO uo J.-0 ~,~ ..... ,,~ IN<19uel) •to J 60 ~111>ulGcwtrei.11 'oo OO-Ol1<11U1111•e4 trorn hi .,.4 pl~ed2nd. ro--ID-41$ "''"° A.,. -ACfVf-y ~«'"' Nativ., C.-. M19" T • ....._ '*>scrat<ftn SEVI ltTN a AC I! -One mt\e. l .,.¥okts.••-•11Ctt ~J1).000. Hai)ltony (Slloem•ker I t4atWl,.,,<Gon&alerl 0>4ef IGO ( T O'O I Timt -1.»·llS uo no 210 S«> JlO 260 AHO ftafl -Prlnlf'H I ..... "-lllO. OWltrman Olh'llo.,o, Elroy llr-. Tr-..cnc>C•on. MoK•al<hft, u lfucta -,......._., .. ··-Wl<lll • ..WUS.•. f;IGMnt aACI! -1.-. '"'"" on tvrl J .,.., 040\ lo Ull. M...cJ"->. P\lrw U0.000 adcltd. C.rleton I' ~ .. A-King Petlifto<e <si-tneur I J.:10 uo t40 A·Aoul~ll 1v_..., J 10 J.20 1 «> ~Nhonocl (Torol $«) Time -I n J/$ (Mw ·-,.. <ordl. Al.O A ... -A-Slbirrf, Too 0-0-0. Sil~r ~. ~ A•-1. Oxcitr Mtl A-C-'IMlltllnQ!le"l l••"*lfftlry Ho Kr~ .... fCINTN ltACE 1-1116 ""~ l .,.•rolOS&ue> Cle1m1119 f>WMMOOO. Farlllon ITorol 1 • .0 )911 UO FleelGr~O.O (~ ... 1 SlanlOt (Mc l4a •VIit I T--1~'1S. .. oo t.11)• >.00 Alto It ... -&Ke.,.IO, Notarf, OOU- ok SUriece, TH Ootl .... H Ir<"""" NoS<TMchet U lude -f.P9fi,._ & ......... ~ .... ~ .. , .•. For Area Golf Results Ml1St4* Yf UO CC The 111\iDIM Vlelo __ ,,,, golf 8 --"'9 IMoW <.._...,,lo -IY. l'111cHf\9 u Joll-, JON>.1lt bul , ... A l••m ••HI to LA Joffe. llll~ .. Tiie 9 I•-Nt11clpe-In Ille tMWflnelt Of "'9 Soul ....... ~ ~·,Golf AU«IMi-~ 4lt ~ '-'trt Chit> In 'Mllltler 1111•-· G11u1 Dey To11r11eme11t: t..ow GtoM-t. N6111ne M1ue, Cea eow.. 911uu 111\ertll• Clmpe , Oof'o111., O't..Hry <El T-1, 1'. I.ow Net-I. ~Yllh • ...._ 1._ M<Comll. _... Alllll Gerr1-IOld Aefttll CCI, S.. S.. Clelr 18'9 C-CCI. ,.; J. CortcY C1141f<Nll, EdHtt c.ni.n•. 9119' i. Dorollly O.IH, s.i. lllldlerdloft (Vktone CCI, "; ). Al-Mlrto91le, Merle Y-141. 90'91« CMoiYft Mlllbift IS-0........ GC>. s.treh Ed9M IHK,.,.,.CC),60. f'Y MILa IQUAlll• OC l..IM Net T-~ A FllQM-1. Er,_ ~ 1'0· 2. Aowli. Sell· ll'IQ, 13: J, ltlel Ao.. ... f'QOI&. <Ar'ol t..on, ~ W.llb, 14. 8 F119M-I. BarNr• ~. Q ; t. Gledvs ltlcller4Mlft, 10; l. MArge •-soi•. 11; •· 111e1 ee11ec.r-. Belt" Nleh1on, U ; •· Mery An11 Hekkelt, 14. c l'lltftt-t. MertN oi .... "= ' c.rot ............... 11 ... (tie) i..t. 8'-. a.wr1r 0.1-. "· D l'llQM-1 AM Otlev. n : t. fllel ~ .. ll<lllOC'h, UI Olemotte!, 1'. 4 OWlaTaMlle,PS. "'•""" .. 1M lillowHI: .__ .. s.11· _,.u-.......... ..,.. 910CANYC* CC TWo L-8ella of I'-<Owtt 0.yl: Al'llQllt !Gf'oHl-t. "-'Mkll, Je<kle W•'-IEI Nlvvel CCI. '- tt'Olltl, TIM Hell (l!l Niii'* CCI. ts7; t ~ .... _ .... lot• I!•~ -CCI, lto.eM V•nce. lt"9I 01tnbt CL.o' A"9tlea CCI, IH. IHetl-1. ,,__,. Fer"90. ~al.,. lmc»r IEI Hl.-1 GCl. Anlle Erick-. 1,.,.. t<.y Um,. Coe~ CCI. 1)4; l. Morge Oullolt, 111~0 M U.-IEI NJ9W4 CCI. ltetllleen Mtver. llt\r\. Wlllle"I Flt<"°"" !Stilt•""" CCI, llO: 1. Dorl• Low, &oMi. s_.,, 11,.,1,. COMt CCl. 8etty ,_ s.r..1111. lt•t"' ~ llrvlne CoHI CCI. 10: 4 JH" Mlilk>n', Alv• Ges~, CS." GelWMI CCI. &ettv Geller. Fren Ty.., (Sen GtlltMICCl.1" 8 Fl19"1 l~ossl-1. ~ Smltll, Merge French 11.ellnlde CCI, -- Rye11, 1'9oor Sc>eivttts (l.ellttldt CCI. "'' t . Oo<ls AOllWY, Ann 8-CS.... le Ant CCI, JMn Fi.IO. llolellle pjjf. ter... IS.flt• Me CCI, IU. l""l-1. J.-111\ertln, Mef'\' ""'""'" ls.role """ CCI. Metle Wlllllalt..-, Doi Wll'°" (HK~ CCI. 1n; 2. eurnp., Atlllnloft, MtttilYft Anl'l*IY II....,,. Coest CCI. Clel,.. Whdom, Ol:oorolilly ~ Ur'lll .. eoest CCI.,.._ i. JMn IAl'llbert, Jenice ,,..,.,,., ILos C:O,.ot#s Cc>, ElolM oin.ln, Fr-. Ktllleln (LOS C.Oyotn CCI. HS; 4. VlrQillle Sclthiemer. Belly 0on,. <Mew Varw CCI, Merve Stnilll, ........... Sllllen (El NI-' CCI. 1-.. S. a.. E ... , Jiii .-le (Vl"91tlla CCI, ~ Ho491t. Pet Oevls I~ CC>. 1'7. Tennis ,_......v.....,a.- At U...-. TClll ,._........_.. ..,.,,. ..... SeMlllMI• ~-~1~.M.M · sc.-..-1 E!Off .. 1 ... 1.1 ... .....,, S~ def Aftdr~ .. J, .. I .._.,,....... .. ._ C9'l'ft def Stronar 1 ... µ, 1 ... Pro Grid Standings IMtl'IO..tlfft S.Ml""911 """'"'·V•n't Hot Oef ~~­ -.... :M., I .. : Bolla-OullalO# drt SC.!Oer·E-• t ·J, .. 4. AMI RICAN CONf'lalfNCI! le-.OOM .... B&ulrnore N;;w EnQl""d Bul1alo Ml"""I NV Jeh W L T f'«, Pf' P4' 4 I 0 .800 IS? 101 3 , 0 .600 Ill Ill 1 J 0 ·"°° '°' • , 3 0 ,40() 102 110 I• 0 200 .am ~lllOM- Onct.-11 • I 0 .800 1• 6' Hovllott • 1 0 IOO toe .. Clt .. r-7 1 0 .400 107 IU Pll1Jbur911 1 4 0 ,JOO IOI 110 f'IMlt ~·Ven•t Molt oef ~. Olll!••-.i.. ... '· .... ._.,.,.. .... f'INoh 8094anofl·IC.ay Otl Arre<londo· l'ltlenon .. 3 ... ,, Ml-~ 5efttla Joltn.,U4·Johnsru4 clef Sl~Mtr· 8rldclio<O 6·1, .. J. Mllef~f'IMlt John•r114-Jo1111s rud 011 ..,.__ll~Mtluenbllf'V '·S.7·!.. Pro Hockey Standings ··- lllATIOMALHOCIClf'YLllAGUll CAM•ellLLC:ONf'llalftt(a l".llrkll Df"'Nell WLT .... W M HYlll~ , 0 0 • ' t Att.,.lt 1 I 0 $ I) 11 NY"-n 1 I 0 4 1J t0 Pl>il_,..P!We I 1 0 t 4 1 Sm'rOotOMU.. 0'4ct90 1 ' 0 • " , Stlovt• ltOJet ~ 1101111> eo....edO I l 0 I I 11 \lent'OUvef' • , 0 0 • 11 WALllS QOtef'llltlfMCli NwrltOlri~ MolltrMI 1 I 0 4 14 4 a.troll I 0 t ) ' a ll'fatllfnQt"" I I I ) n W Los"-llK I ? I ) 11 11 Pltttbwr'Qh I 1 0 1 14 tt AMtn•Df"' .... 1 I 0 4 IS 11 I I I l 11 f I I 0 J 9 9 I I 0 1 J 1 s•..,··~ floslM • Cle..el•lld > Ptill~lplllt 1, L01 A119tl1HO 8uffel0 J, Momreal I OllU90 S, V-.u ... r I T...._._~ l4099-nc:11ec1u1eo .,.._.,.,oe_ _,..., •• Delro4t All.,,te.i NY lllende" NY llAlftVert •I Ml,,,..101• r The Chargers opened the final ter iod by sending Mercury l5orris over from the one for a oochdown that put them ahead '1·14 aft.er FriL!ch booted the \Atta point. The Barons open Sunset League action Friday against. Huntington Beach's Marin11 and are heavy favorites to continue with a perfect mark. 2. Servlte (4·0) 54 .. ts•,..~ The Raiders then went ahead or good 21·1'1 on a ~1-yard pass '\lay from Stablel' lo Branch. JC Football T114•-k's JC IOOlllall OC- SAlUltOAY '-llC..HIC... .. _e ()r-C.0.•l •I 54'ft Ol~ ,,_,. Gro.-., A.It s... """"'° Ot<n""' 'O Fullwt°" II .-.-m ........ ~CelC...- u Soul-tl n. CyPfff• M """9 ,.~ ..... " ltlo-elt..o•A,_.leaC:C ~· Mllftlc.e et U Her- ........ Qlollfre.._. ~ llernatOl..O n . S.--.ll et Ml»IOn Vl•lo H~ C1tr1,. "' S.On O•ew el &elboe 'Jledlvm I• 1111 OWtlltv •I P•lofNr ~-•ltrn •I R1.,."IC1e _,.,..,, .. Cl*fe- "'9MCllM 11 cel.1 v. El Oomlno•l l..-. .. e<h I PIM(U I I.A V•ll•Y ..... "' $1•t•C»Mt-• .._OCk •I ComplQfl (I )Ol Glf<\IMht•< c..11,on, wt•t I.A el Mooi'IMIO v.ntur• e1 '-'*•a...-.. Oneft CM!fot- Vl<lor "•''4' et ""'lreCost. 0.-net IMPotr1111 v e1i., I Mellcmfeol•M• 00-¥1119M•t9Menhel0 "'" ...... • ... lllall •• ..,. ....... ~IW lllQl<ett<I New to the list of rated teams are Mater Dei of Santa Ana and Orange's El Modena. while Anaheim and Huntington Beach's Edison, Jos~ last week, I I LUBE. OIL CHANGE, FILTER 6.88 3. Villa Park (4·0) 36 4. Sonora (4-0) 33 S. La Habra (4·0) 32 6. Santa Ana Valley (4-0) 18 7. Los Alamitos (3·1) lS 8. Mater Del (3· U 1% t. Newport lhrbor (3-1) t 10. El Modena (3-1) 1 lrvlmt'• first and only athletlc club will open soon In the RanchO Sen Joaquin Recr.atlonat Center at Mlchelaon and Parlcway Drive. Tt1• •ntl,. f1m/ty c1n enJoyotub 110///1/11 which wl// Include· • A fuH Ila gymn_.um for 8-ketbell. VolleyMll Oymnullc• 8admfn1oft. betelM ciMMI •SIX ~ndbllll COUrU •Swimming • Outdoor foo9ln9 end woleybeft • A complete weight fKHlty • Men'• end women'• ,.,.. end relauUon MW Tiit Clul> wltt be tocet4Mt dlNCtty ecrOM t~ tetMt ''°"' American P~el'loolt Cf'llld c.,. C.n.., wl'ltr• you can IMV. your el'llldren to •nJoY 1 fully 1upervlNd program white enjOylng ~our Club eetMU ... ,.,.,. 1 l 11! llJli 1'1 Ir INI 5 5 1 -·1 ·I / t . Low Prke. ond belnc; treoted like o member d rhe Johnson f.omlly. wos worth 9<>1ng our d my woy tor. Thor's why I recomfTle(ld you drive to Johnson u 5on. Their Golden Touctl service ls rhe ONLY WOY to buy. Give em o try. They moke you feef reol lmpon'Onf. And. to me, rhot Is imponoor, RudyBukich Newport BNch OIWllE ccunrs <laest llOllf.WJO.IRY WURSIF. rl6 Yf.MS IJ fMHD.Y fAMlY Sf.IMXI 1·-···1 ohnson&son ze:ie HAABOA 9LVO. COSTA MESA 540-M30 .. -- .... -· - ... C:J ()AIL Y PILOT Mondiry. October '1. 1978 For the Record ............ 01111~ PUBLIC N011CE PVBUC NO'l1CB PUBLIC NO'l1CE l'IC'TITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT l'ICTITIOUS BUSI NIU Tiit IOl-1119 pe<sons ••e00inobl61 NAME STATEMENT nenH ~ IOl-1119 !>et.OM •r•dolll9 boat GAR INDUSTRIES, 17311 ll'lduslry .... us '"t,Gorde<\G<ow.CA~t.41 L.tqune Hiiis NUl"\ery, Int 7JIX12 Clarence Wll~on BIAby, 45> El Toro ACMICI El Toro. CA.,.,., P.omonton Or West. NeWOO<'I BHCll. Laoun• Hiiis Nurnrv. lr>e • CA97660 C.l1ton1la co<PO••llon, 7J007 Er Toro Roe.rt Wllllam 0o<10<. !Of VI•, Roood. El T~ro CA '11430 I.Orea, NewPO<l 8HCll, CA 'l16l>l ll>ls wsonen h cond1Kled !rt• cor· Tltl\ b1,1slnan Is conduC1fld ov a 00<4111Df'I -rel PMlntr~lp. Laoun• Hiii\ Nur\ery, Inc. C w Bixby c;.o<qe S Mat\uoU, Prn. Thi' •tetemen1 wn 1111<1 wllll 1'-Tl'tls ~•lernant wo lllecl with ''-County Cterk or 0••"911 Covnty Oii Oc· Counlv Clett< of Otano-County on Seo-ioo.. •. 1•1• t•-10. ,.,. ...,.,, ,.,.,,. PllCCl•lle<I 0r ... oe Coast 0ot1r., "'""· Publt~ OranQe Coast 0.lfy PllOC, Otlol>er II, 19, lS,•nd NOwmil9r I, .. ,. Oc1 7. '· 16. u . 1916 ..,.,.,. •••S.1• PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAMll STATEMEM'T T'-lol-1119 oersons are dOIJ'Obl61 neu .. SOUTHERN MAIUNE SUPPl.Y 1T471 O.lmtet s1r .. 1. '''"'"' Gatllomla '711' N1woor1 Suooly Compariy I• ClllfOfnle coroorei.onl 1101 o.i- SCr"t Irvine C..hlorl'lte '7714 This ........ "" CO<>CIU<lto "'. Cor· -·"°" NEWPORT SUPPLY COMPANY This \le1ement w as l ttf!CI '"''" ttw County Clerk ol Ot•-County°" Sec>- -I>. 1'7•. N2"t f'\11111•-Ot•r>~ Coe\! Dally Piiot Ott 11 II, U . end No• I 1'16 4111·16 ' PVBUC NO'ftCE ll'ICTITIOUS IUSINIU NAMa STATaMINT TlW folio.11'9 __,_ Is ...... 111*• _._, INOUSTltlAL OPTICAL ALIGHMINT COMPANY, 1tS11 ~II( Ct, 'l'Of'be LlllO•, QtllfOmle ltol>••I Pe11I «ne11i1oc11, 2'01 'ftWNft llttCI., ... WPtfl ... ,II. ~lflW'fl••fHtO ™' .,.. ......... tondlKttd"".,, ""' Clhrlcluol llo~ "9111 K'IOl>lo<ll Tlllt tllt-111 -·~ fllad """' "" Olullty CWll at OreftQt Coufll., llfl-. tlmllw u, lt1•. I PVBUC NOTICE PtJBUC N011CE PUBUC NOTICE PtJBUC N011C£ I WIN PRIZ S WORTH $3,609 IN'76 \ * ? R e ubo n·$ ~~l()()~R.\KER * Weekly Pigskin Pickeroo '71 winners will share prizes worth more \h•n '330 by selectlng th.Hr chcMce• of the wtn- ners of 30 weekend football cont••••· The Dally Piiot reader best pred&ctlng the outcome• of Pigskin Plckeroo 76 games will win a one-year mernbenhfp at the Nautilus Newport phJ*a' fttneu center, 4220 Von Karm•n Avenue. Newport Beach. Second place winners will entoy a din· ner tor two at the Moonraker Aesteurmnt in Irvine. Reube n's Newport Beach or Reuben's Costa Mesa. Third place winners will be •w•rded free car washes by Metro Car WHh Systems at Harbor ne•r S.ker StrHt In Costa Mesa and Beach •t EIUa Avenue in Huntington Beach. Pl.sllifl PIOetoo lo A r9Q11I., fell!-oftM O•llY ,.. ... S-1S Se<i-ff<fll M9flClay. T-ay-~y RULES I ~I IM ... ,~. 1116'111 ..... ., ............. 1eo1m11e .. tt '" ... ,., IM <-HI "llUS..W"'-la<M,..11" I\ ef41!W<I •••fl "•U<1 .....t<•t• "lift I rt .. ''""' .. _,_"'.,.,. ....... _ ....... h~ ,....,. T"-"'"IC"<IOA'l <-mwill .. d<~ltflff. t ~II lo PIOSKIN PICKEAOO, '7', ~De--.... P.O. llo• IMO, Cen• Maw. CA '7•zt , ~!r:,:n:.~:.1r:.':."",..'.,';'.=b= ==-=: .. ~ ~::.:. ·=~r.:~~~,~.~:i.=i ... ~=--: 1=:::=~ -10. e«OOCeCI e1 llfl•l llY •If~'- a t:!=,'::'~ .t1r."~~~·~~1e~~~O:~'~ -It .. .,.. \ 0.1trP11oom111n11an<11,,..rl.-1a111emHles•,..•MltoMll ~ ... i.r. •·TIE BREAKEil BLANK MUST BE l'IU.£0 IN 0 .. EMT•Y It VOIO. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ! ENTRY BLANK • • • • • • • • • • • Name ......•••..••.••••••••••••••• , •.•••• Addrtts ............••...•..•••....••..•.. City ....................•... ZJp .•..•...•. Phone ...... , ........................ .. : Circle teams you think will win this weell's pmes • • • • • • • • • • • • Chicago vs Ram• Baltimore vs Buffalo Cincinnati vs Pittsburgh Cleveland vs Atlanta Dallas vs St. Louis Detroit va Washington Houston vs San Diego Kansas City vs Miami New Orteans vs SF NY Giants vs Minnesota Oakland vs Denv.r Phlladelphla vs Green Bay Seattle vs Tampa Bay Washington vs Stanford Washington State va UCLA Cat vs Oregon Stat• Oregon va Notre Dame Arkan••• v• Texaa AIM Minnesota v• Michigan State Michigan va Northwestern Alabama vs Tennesaee Georgia Tech vs Auburn LSU va Kentucky Ohio State vs Wlaconsln Iowa State vs Missouri Oklahoma vs Kan••• Colorado vs Oldahoma State Army vs Tulane Mlsalallppl va South Carolln• SyrecuM v• Penn State TIE BREAKE R -My guess Oft U. ..._, numllet' of Point• KOnd In ~II JO times 11 . ............ DA.f(Y PfLOT . .. • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • ~ .. • .. • l .. • .. "' .. " " ,. ... • • A "* : ; . • • • " . • ' , J • J • ' . .. 1 I • j i < f .. ' • • \ . • • : . f I , The Biaat ~·on the Orqe Cout ~!.~.~ ....... ~.~~....... _Mon __ d_1""y._,Oc.._tob4t""-_r_1_1 .... _1m.._. _______ ...;o .. A_.t .. 1._v_P_1L .. o;;..r_,_....;::C-....7 G••c.. 1002 G•1r• 1001 ..._..PorSde Ho.w1PorS. Hoes..ForS. ..................................................................... ·••••················•• ········•····•··••····· GeMr.. IOOl Gw1• 1001 G1•1.. 1002 MILY PILOI CLASSIFIED ADS ~ (;an Sell tt, Find It, ( 642 •5678 ] '.Dade tt With a Want ~ One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval \\.'!.:--I I Y '\ 1 TAYLOR CO. ..................................................................... RXERUPPER OML Y $7 4,000 CLASSIFIED INDEX ' Tt ftltt Y• ld. C.n &42·5678 ~ ......... ·~ -Mer-<honche ....•. IOOO-t099 & F~ •.... 5050-~ ~& Mc.ine teel . £N\ft ~ GftN\. EMploytMnt It ___...... Aut~ ., .• FVVV"9099 otion ...•.. 700().7199 Tronspottohon ••• 9100.9999 HoltMt For We Ho.Ma For w. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.---------io ... , .. 1002 o .... , .. 1002 .............................................. aROltS: Act.HffMn ....,checll.....,.oda dely md report~ '°"I~. TIM DAILY PILOT a11M1M1 lablllty for .... fht KF:\ I J 11t;s . ...,, .,, ,. l!!.11; llG CAMYOH TOWMHOUSI SPAUl.ING MIW-SI tl,100 DeLuxe features lhruout this charm· ing ~rand new home. The upstairs spactous master bedroom suite has sit· ting rm, private dressing rm & mir- rored wardrobe doors. 2nd Bdrm do may be used as den. Formal dining rm . Lease $800 mo. or sell. 2111 s.Ja ....... oad HIWPORT CEMTa M.I. 644-4910 Spacious 3 bdrm, 2 ba plua flam rm home in 60Uiht after Npl. Och Back Bay nrqa Brina paint br ush & toub ! 04&-7711. ~ Walker 1; lmi , Hual f shi ft: EXECUTIVE llACH IST An 5 IR t .... , • '"· ....... · :-. . . !· ,, •••• ,.! .. r --···~-.i ,. I ~ '• ' 1 -J . 1 I I , • ,..._.~ . (' , ·1 .. . ·~ ~ ". :. corftd htMf'tioft orly. c-.a~ fOI SAlE .. _ ._ _____ __ ..... .i. l.OOll ..... •• . 1tlll C'4111W• a.i.t~ 1011 .Mr•• Hoffee: Attractive 4 bdrm. home on corner lot. Bay views from living room & upstairs bedroom. $18S,OOO ~Bl LL ·c RUN DY~'REA LTO R·- w ... rtll 1002,GtMtal 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• + f'OOL/JACUZZI 1-'ormal double door f'n· lry to cntertainer·s de- light elegant livin~ room Cathedral reilln11 and rrarklinft f1replacl'. Step down family entertain· OH THI SHOUS Of l.Altl FOUST Owners have bought In Newport and are anxious to sell in Lake Forest. Handsome 2 story next to the Lake with stunning redwood deck, model .home.like decor, complete air condi· Uoning and Communlty Association• with teen center, pool and tennis courts. Asking $99,690 . menl renter with wall of ~ gloss. View of sparklina U,_.l()UI: t1()MI:~ C... ... llrir ICll:I All J c.. .. _ . i• rea estate advertised TIBl'S A LOT IN -CAMYOH and lt ·s ll5xl90 ft. or more than 21,000 sq. ft. We know you'd like a home here. with 190 ft. of view frontage over the lake & golf course. It's at $150,000. so dream no more -start on that dream ho\a.se pool and Jacuuti. Formal REAL TPRS..v, 675-6000 ~~ ,._ :: In this newspaper is s ub- ,.....-., , ..... 1 ,~ ject to the Federal Fai J l : flo y~•d•· o,,,.. .. N 8 67') 0161 dining room convenumt 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar • r,::_~'-h l:::'! Housing ~ct of 196 I.al.a•~~ 11M11 wtuch makes it illegal t ly served from huge gourmet k 11 chen. Sweep. ••••!!a!!ls!!o!!l!!n!!M!!es!!!!a!!V!!er!!de!!!.!!a!!t 546-!!!!!!S!!990!!!!!1!!!!!!1m!!9 Ing stairs lo l avish =~ 111111 1dvert1se .. any pre. G....-al 100 G~ 1002 N ... ~vm.:.., !5 fer ence. J1!'11ilation. o •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• today!! 673-4400 master swl~ + bonu GeMrd 1002,G•w.. 1002 room for pool table and •••••••••• • •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• cards . Hurry ! Easy s. _, ,,... dlscn mmallon based on ~ u:.:;a,..u... :: race. color, religion. sex. VIEW OF WATER FRAMCISCAM terms' 963· 7881. Ol'fN 111 9 •ti~ IUN TON N<t • liUI a...i.. 11,.. or nallonat on gin, or an SI 59 .500 FOUNT AIMS ~~···1· •,':-', .. GD inlehnt1onf lo makle any ESPECl1\LLY LAllCt-; 4 +POOL LIKE LOTS OF LAND? llWlli. •. _,.. ..... sue pre erence, 1m1ta DUPLt::X ~1th u new p l Id d lion. d t. ·· n va e cu · e-sac nve IUl ESTATE or 1Scnm1na ion. ..Cedar ran· .. On a l rt rd l i ~1 ["1.INI Of all places, right in the heart of Corona del Mar. Beautiful 5 bdrm .. 7 bath home, of approx. 4,000 sq. ft.. located on a private, est ate·sized hilltop lot of about two thirds acre. The panoramic, sit-down view is magnifi. cent. A really wonderful entertaining home, complete with large heated pool & loads of parkin g . $265,000 1 d o cou ya en ry ... a -~-.. tort'-l:!ilt This newspa""r will no qs u I e t c4 ~~ .. Jcb· "1ha&r3 Jestac double door entry ~-$s.i. llW . ,,.. pac1ous IA"\.I, a lo L d I' ..:;_. ''n1 l!: know1n~tr accept a ny Bed. 2 bath unit~ ~hown E ~ ep-. own iving room . ~.·iP~ 1100 advertising for rea brappointment xccut1vc formal dine -~:..;~·· {:: estate which is in viola~ · s uns h In e go u r n:i ~ t DMtloa of ttc.t.c.-1119Yn._.. Co. ssa. 700-ANXIOUS , Beaut. 3 br .• 2 ba .. huge FR. indoor BBQ. Call for rnfo 963-5671 °""""a U110t11>>i. • 1111i1 l.IOooClhe law. -WA.....,0 FRONT kitchen. Separu~e family . ~ 10 i.. 111 o•<'<I l!IJO • • ""' room w I toasty I ire place. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!! l;;;:i=rty r: Houaesfor Salt HOMES Soaring s tairc ase lo I ~s.1.. noo ••••••••••••••••••••••• REALESTATE s wee p i n g m a 11 t e r Gnwral 1002 GtMral 1002 :.,..M.~~'.~.~~. ;:& 1002 B3l·l400 b edroom t•omplex ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Walker & Lee Real Es tate . · 8:;:';\f~~n1~·~.... = ••••••••••••••••••••••• DEVELOPERS w/scparate dressing Secure ln•Htm•nt OiA01S111~ProP ;"'10 HEWPORTHEIGHTS arep !Trop1calrcar y~rd First Trus t Deed of EASTSIOE llMfl>u.t'arm•\?,.'::':~• ... i100 h1 lited by sparkltnR t:I [;::!~:~~id'~ ····=: HACIENDA .Four lot subdivision on · $200.000. available for llJ ACRE INCLUDJNG THE LAND! RENTALS Th d th Newport Ave. m Tustin pool Seller le1tvang area oceanfront properl.>' Lovely horn~ on eul·de· ere IS no en to and must sell quick v I d · ( sac. Lurgl.' b4.•aut1fully GENTLEMAN'S poss1billt1es!! Lovely available for lrnllding Take over exist loan ai ~.!,,uoooe C1n excess o •. I d d I I R"' .... CH :=: ~;:;.:.~..i = bed r 00 m . 3 b 3 t h ! now 5100.000 down pay S37.2SO at 5397 ""r mo . ...,.,.,. . urrent rate "' an ~t:P yarc h~ll\' """ t1oo1wa •""'o.cn1 :sM> Spacious living room ment F'ordcta1b Hurry ' 847 6010 ,..-terms to be mutually shake roof. 3 bcdrms, all CUSTOM BUILT ffeace euofuofiOM -IC8 eheiga.litat C'CIMomlJOIWM•f'ur• :l4llO fam1l v room w it, OPIN 11i9·•'\'"'"0M •1n• agreeablc.Fordeta1ls large. dblc car gar. 2 T ree lined street in ===~~ .. ·' = be ed' 1 1 f1rcplacl's. boat J(ate amt T..,,,.,.._.,,,, = tr:ml ar~~ 1~~;lp)!~;: MA y O CK [91J:U1;tf·U1 ~ace Enclosed by block t1c1:'udcdes~~~;ia~ a;~a~ ~~,P'~" · :lfAIO Every woman's dream co,..o ..... o.. . l;ilii}~ M A Y 0 C K all. S85.000 living room. Crackling A11Ut1,,,..., :: kitchen + + + 3 ca. LAGUNA ~H • ~OO 400E.lr f 1replare. Massive :=-:-.:.~"' = ii::t~::·r:o:~~~s~~f5 · 1 ('7M)4M 2Me ••• HORSE HEAVEN (7M)'94-2Me 1.c~.~·!·~111~~;:1 ~f~~a 1rod~~:~: :~:1r:d G1111ral :::::...~· ::: yard. All for $89,900 rut S65.000 An ACRE l o k1lrh e n . 2 S t one •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s-.-•~· .-pn ce. 646-7171. roam with a great J ru,iplares Family room ~:"i."=': ~ Cl"f-.1~<>·•''''""'0""' 1• $48 500 Bdrm home Outstand DISTRESS o4erl ooks grounds . TOM SAWYER =.e:~~ :: [\& I 1 • 1ng location 1n Vista ad-SALE!! SPAMISH VILLA Pnvate Crwl orchard lo EASTBLUFF =~:~:w ~ '1' ll11iHW ::a~~f:~~~~~Z.~m ~~F:rf.~~~;EJ::~i ~i~~~~ryA~~r1.~ub~: Two ~tu~~7~~t~0red t11e :~r~~:~0~~i~~~~~~} ~~n~fi~~r.~1.b~J.~: ..... 11'"'ai. ~ Townhouse wtenclose fenced pastures. Great fam rm & s parkling roof' Scel~cd entr~ to Steal this one for only Open Daily 12·5. 2924 would turn on to this pre. st1gc 1800 model. Just show him the playhouse outback with a fantastic pool and jacuzzi for skin ny d1ppini: J\t om will IO\C the sunken living room. formal dining room und a family room wilh firep la ce . Everybody likes the spacious cul·de·sac lot. IUSINISS,INVCST· patio and at tachc fork1ds. 20x40 POOL. Xlnt eond. lavil;h hvini; room .. <.:an· S&l.500.llurry963·7881. Carob NB. Harbour MOtT, rlNANCE Investor's iarage· plus . a cO.t} •BERTHA JI ENRY • Fountain Vallev $77.950. una kitchen ;.ind pn\'ale f'.\f1N '" Q -11 ~ •urv •0 11 ,, '' Sales 644.7423 AMHOUNCEMENTS, msotfllS & LOST & FOUND SflYICES EMrt.OYMEMT & ,_ErAUTION Srhool\ lft .. 'V(llOft Joow ...... , .... ,~ "'•ol•"d ... p Deuro: fireplace & warm at REALTORS 492-4121 FHA or VA te.rms. Call rourtyard Soaring [91 ! 1----·---::.la1rway t o m a~ler 1, f~ft·11·~ ~n.w..n.w.n-.x.w.. mosphcre plus com 215 Del Mar, San Clem. 545-8424 Agent. ' $48, 00 munity pool & Jacu:iz1 lx.'droom tomplcx. 1".x· ' ~ j THEHOMESHE'S A sharp 3 bedrm home plus90'7c (111ancingava1l COSTA MESA eruh~e cluster ~omc hv· · · ,----·-··!:' ALWAYS WANTED with new paint inside and Call 644 721 I ONE Of A KIND mg. Sl!ller anXH\US. Try . out. New carpets and • CLASSIC SS.750 total down ! Call PAIMT·H-SAVE wa~ and alive, the best drapes. Greattocat1on on Costa Mesa's best loca· Customized HARBOR 847-tlOlO. 3 POOL looking 3 b~room home tion. Huge 4 bedroom VIEW HOME with out· OPfNlll9•HHUNro nu1t<1• + available 1n Colle ge HUGE large no· deep lot. Call family home. Masslv standing view of the roll· [ I $49.000 buys this 3 bd. Park! Immaculate in M&-~forfulldetails. Spanish bnck fireplace. ing hills from added ... ,llJij:!!'U recreation r~. H&F side and out. Bcoulifully 3 CAR GARAGE ~:: , __ l_O_W_E_S_T_P_R_l_C_E-~ ~hx:~~~i~~u~~g~avd~~ ~~m r~~~~-l~~~s i~ ,.~ \Jfiiij':f f:1~~~\~;~l~c:!'~ ~:i~~~i~:d w:'o1J htr~~l-will please any husband = IN woman's dream kitchen home has many d e · on quiet tree lined slreel . ments. professional and just wait 'lil she sees ~ NEWPORT HEIGHTS $65,500 full price. As rorato.r upgrades. See to DOVER SHORES Gl, FHA buyer welcome . landscaping, many ex· thal master bedroom -a . -t----------1 Expanded family room sumable VA +++ n ex1 appreciate. 0 r 545-9491. tr as. Word s fail to true Sultan hideaway SPANISH VILLA and huge master suite ble financing. Cal f nc 0l hoNewJ>()rUt Beach11'5 1111 describe this super Cami with fireplace for those 646-7171 640-6161 mes mes! nusua Y ly home A. must 11ee qwctcvenings.4Bedrm . 3 IEDROOM + POOL rakeh th,is the most homh ()/'IN ,,, o·. •1 I l lJN ,,,,,., .. I well designed & full o( before il ·s loo late. Call tam room. formal dtn-Beaullful tiled entry to or l e east prire in t [ amenities for the com -546-2313. ing. 2 story. pnred for h uge li v ing r oom . book Huy it now a ~ liJlii'l!·ll fort & protection of the Ol'fNlt9·•r SJuN•08f N .. 1• qwcksalc.OnlySS0,750 ~ gr;~~~"egt f~r1etpd~~en ~~3 · Hurry · Cal ""'Ui@'iJlfj family Large, elegant --------[&W II ;~ • •"•"•" ""' Sem ~· .. ,. .. , "~ '""" ' ;'.f ~:~~,' •:!:~:; ~; ~~~~·~~~~;1 r~~. •.:: ~•11111 .. ':a~~s = n:~~:~~~E:::~~":.:~: [~ ~Pds;;rl f~;:~~e~r~~nu~uap~a~S~~:; ----------11Canc:tf! ByCaplp.t.$249rt.500h ~°lreoo'1~~u1t~~thb!t~ ~ achools and shopping '~ u__,.1:••= & all ext~as, All in th; JUST . . 0 eswo IY bargain. Price includes MESA VERDE . . . =~·=--= :ii Bargain price at $57.000,1---------··quaint beach town.. REDUCED REALTORS 640-0010 fresh paint , fireplace. B d b ~-Hurrv!Call963-6767. MEW LISTING Carlsbad. $45.000. <.::.Ill ---------rcovered patio with bar. 4 e rooms, 3 ath.l;;;;;;;iiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiii;;;;;i;; oPfN '" o ·"HUN 10 8f Nici• 171411 729 5!f66 llkr DEANE GARDEN huge yard with plenty or formal dining rm. family :i: •. , Peninsula duplex: uppe ---_ ___ $1900 privacy and fruit trees. rm, hidden 2 story. Up. ~ ,, 2 bdrm .• lower lge l·br Fantastic 4 bedroom. 2 DELIGHT Boal and trailer access. gradedtmovc·in fresh. :: , ~ w/frplc. encl. porch ll"fiMRacquetClb b Fantastic family home. Why pay rent ?. Just Localed on t ree lined · ' · l Dbl By Own $73 ooo ath. family home New l · 1 ttmli , 1 nice pa 10 area. er . f uge 36' family room . S4\l.OOO . Hun tington street in prcs llg ous = garage w it h bath 4122EscuderoDr. earpeting &paint.Larjite Low m aint e n a n ce Beac-h . C all now! neighborhood. Pnccd to ""'° ._ _________ , workroom. Extra 2 l·n JBr. 2ba, fam rm. formal comer lot. Grcal fi nanc grounds complete with 842-2535. sell at S93.900. <.:ult now =: Unbelievable! parking . Priced a dining rm, pvl yd. Call mg available. ll urr.} gas bar·b·q.3Klngsiied Cl"fNl119·•t\ruri ro111N.r1· forappt. . -. •Bedroom.Jbathfamlly $105,000 for appt-0r Open House Pleasecall bedrooms w/masslve [iiiM. I['-~----------.! . ~ ~~i~~s~;~~ut~:e2h?i~~ 673-3663 833-0523 Eve,_Su_n_~_·S-~-:-:-~--~_.9·-~ ... ~-1~-/\--Ph: 540-3666 f~~!~::~~~~~f~ :Iv:~ ~':.}lt~ftilf;t QMUPEERSB _ with step down lt vang 3 Br, 2 ba. fam rm. dbl ·~~ D · ,,..,.,. -, · llClW room, vaulted ee1lmgs, frplc. f'/\ heal. bltns. Nr j [g J candlelight dining. 2500 1555W.S.ker,C.M. VIEWCOND.O Large 1 bedr oom . fireplace. 11111 bath. in North Lag una . E x· pan,<;lve sundeck over· looking the blue Pacific. Priced under market. Exclusive 644·7270. expansive glass areas. Wa rner & B r1 s t o I ; •f'D~i:r:J , Sq. fl. of ultimate luxury. BRANO NEW Next toM•rll•I S.akel f I ( Id ~-All for $93.000 Cull lo· S49·86SS 11m1 Y room. orma In· S41.500. Needs work. mg & 3 car garage Neal 1----------1 Owner. &&2·5583. We're here to help! da)· Open house Sul 1 5 PAINT loc:at1on. Call 540-llSt ror l•---------i---------646·7171. rutt deta1ts. * V. A. TERMS * [ ~" 101 Q ;\'176?1' ~~gblt~s~ro.!i.b~"h~~~. ..,_..;.,;;,,,.;,,,;,,,;,,,;_s __ T_A ... ~ ~ ~N-z_E_K_,,_1'_ ... ~ ~,ll~ftlJW bnck fplc. Owner paint M ..,_o.R,...,...,,~ M _ ~ --·-·=-·!!!~' 1ng thruout. 1nstalhng Y •"••"••• '• 11o. sion. Y 1001 G11Mral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~--HERITAGE . • · nEALTORS tllOi-----------new rarpets. Obie gar ~~..:;,:::_;..;.=; POOL TE .... NIS Lgepat1ow/bltn BBQ ol~~bWlt>~ • " 10 and o ut , a n d meticulous landscaping make this 3 bedroom. 2 bath hom e s parkle . Located on a shady cul· de·sac, half a block from school and park. Only $55.900. CALL~-2600 =~ ----------------. "40 VI~ tltu '"" ,..., ""'° - 642-5678 . DAILY P.llOT . ), Calldayor nighl' ;~ ~;~;n :~~ ocr.11 JACUZZI 646-3928;eves546-8104 Jl ... ,. ,,,..., 6JA wof. n $61,000 • er.o.... l• w 'l""'O °" ~Y'W.., !~";::,'"' il~=-:!S::::-"'9 ..si~ Sharp two story Newport ;c::'·-~~ ~~:_, RJvrera 3 bedroom. Hug ""'" )9R-... .,,,.,... m aster s uale. J.'amily :?~. j~"°'....., ~s:.::~·.. room overlooks hu11e ~~~!I a~=~~ :~~ ji:!::l:.l~l<ll tropical ~urden polio. 1•n.._ "'•""• 1•A1w1 Stone woo d burning ::~ ~~::;-::~-fireplace. Wolk lo tennis 11'""1~~'21 :~~ :~~.,, ~~~.;'~"' courts, pool, Jacuzzi. """'1-• .., •• °"", 79 "-I sauna etc .. etc .. etc. Just ~~~"" r.:::; :?::f''Y 10%down. Call 962-7788. n·-·...i \le:-""' •1\•-K€Y n-.. ·· ~Jt......... uoi... • ,. n.. ~. ..... • .. Atid t µ.:;~~--I ~~ ~gi' U~--P.E:ALTOP.Sft Lache·nm·y·er .... Realtor· " CSELECT T' PROPERTIES PRIDE OF OW ... ERSHIP Exceptional p ride of ownership In this Income property. Very flexible owner's unit wilh 2 bedroom guest quarters. f\ilflll your tax sheller needs with the additional 2 unJts. All units deluxe l•--------•I a n d s p a c I o u s . MESA V!RDE Fireplaces. patios, and ,7 °"'"°" $7 00 17 °""" "~ ,.,. .. ,~ 1'Aff ,.,.., 19T ... JOC:-MGo 90,..._.. WEST MEWP'ORT 3 & 2 DUPLEX Located in the best rental & invest· ment area. Parking for as many as five cars on the premises. A·l con· dition & manv amenities. $12.5,000. , • eOUJWtU. a.u.a eo. 644-1766 216t SANJOAOUINHILLSAD. IN NEWPORT CENTIA ~a.®~()~ SEllC & flNtf THE OlD TESTAMENT S M A l A C H I H I M A J H £ 8 0 N D B E 8 M S A M S 0 H 0 U H 0 S £ A 8 M 0 A S E T 8 0 A V S C A J N H A M E R A Z A H 1 N 0 R A A 0 C H S E S 0 M J 0 A L 0 E S A J I S V M 0 H 0 J A G U A H 0 F S M M J 0 A 0 J A T C E U J H LAMTHEOL HOHAARADA E M H A B R 0 A 8 E l £ L I A £ S E N J A P S 0 M M 0 F S E l D l S M E 0 0 K H E A 0 0 J 0 6 T 8 1 M 0 l l C " J E A S H R t Cl£ V A 0 J S G £ A l 0 T Z R 0 S A V A 8 R M H A M A H H M 0 S £ 8 J 8 L A H A 8 £ L H 0 S 0 C 0 M J S A U l l D A 6 A N E L I S J A C 0 8 U 0 l E A M H S J T H G S 0 l 0 M £ A Spacious. neat & clean 4 separ a t e garages . bdrm. + family frplc. Sl~9.ooovalu~.Call t~aee G1111ral 1002,G11M,.... 1002 Well landscaped. etr. thall exclusive listing. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673·8550. 1'9 Canyon lstat. • BR. 4 tlA. Fre nch Regency. cust home on Fairw1y. 5300 Sq.ft . marble entry. gourmet ldt .• oak paneling. beaut landscpg & more "25.000. By appt only. Exclusive Agent 67~ MOW IS THI TIMI lor job seekera to check the Daily Pilot Help Wanted classiflc11tton lf the Job you want 1s not there you might consider offering your aervlcea with ·an ad m the Job W•nt.ed category. Phone 6G5678 1"'11'1K1 one: HldiHfl ow •~w rd, b11t • w1110, "'"· down or dllf'>tl•llv. Find •tdl end bo11 It In.~ Abraham £1 ijah Job J Adam (HU Lot ~ Amos Hosea Moses a David Juac SolOlllOn l_,rrow: 8r1 thh Pl\1losoph1rs Shown by app'l. $110,000' O#'fN '" 9 • "HUN roet NICI • , __ lolbo_._6_~_=salt_~_f_~_;_7_·_,l•N• G1Mral 1002 ........ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CE 111111 ILlllS aa. OVER SO YEARS OF SERVICE I f'LAM IL...-S CONDO "Gold Coast " Front Row Bay Vlew 2 Bedrooms, Famlly Room. Highly Upgraded. Shows Like a Model. $150,000 or wm C<ln5ider a Lease Option. •t 00¥11 DllYI &31·1• mecnab I Ir vine realty THI FIMEST OM LhC>A ISU Custom beauty on prime tip of island w/over 100' on Bay. s spacious bedrooms incl. separate guest/servant's suite. Tiled enter· tainment center, study w /full bar + fireplace, billiard room. glamorous swimming pool + jacuui, elevator & 3rd fl oor storage. PRIME VIEW! Call for brochure. Cathy Schweickert &12-8235. CH63) 642-t2H 644-6100 901 Do11er Ori..,. Haf'bOr View CM\tw lrvlne .i campu& V•tley °"*' 752-1414 I £l OAILYPILOT Mond1y.Octobef t1 ,1m ~.~.~ ....... ~.~~-..... 1~.~~ ........ ~.~~ ........ ~~.!!~~ ...... ~.~~.~ .... Newt fo, Sde ......._for W. Hews Ffw Wt ........ oe leoch I 040 Mtwport hocJt I OH Mewporl -.ach I 0~ ~~~~~~ ... !?.~' ~~!'!.~ .. ~~.~~ ~~.~~!':' •.• !??.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ti weal 1022 CodoMeto 1024 WILLSIU IYmEl.F ••••••••••••••••••••••• -FEMOMIMAL JIR + MESA DRIVE <.:.alltor1111l t1'1ncho on 3'"1 B<':rt'!j, o"t'rlookmg 1.Jp-NEAR PARK per U.:iv Unbelievable Preeb as 8 da•~Y & only find In ti1e ltaruor Arcu ! $"UIPJ to • ..:ras11y. )clly Lovely 4 lwdrm home vtew park & wulktn!( di:>· ~1th l,ug" mu!>trr :iulte. t.ancc U> undy bt:al·hei-. tormul dining room 8 dell&hlful roomy & f1m1ty 11n11kn. swim open 2100sqrt3br.3uu, IJllng pool 11nd 'l'Pllrat fllmily rm hoant' w 1cJen & (ot-11l la11a1 with 1•nh•r formal dining inclucJ1n11 l•mlnR facllill•"I. noom a sumptuous mutu for 1tt1hlc5 und tcnn1 swte w/wood beam cell C'OUrt3. lnRs & stain gJas11 wln PETE BARRETT dow11. Reduced to to SOMETHtH<i 4 Bedroom. l~ batb11 . SPECIAL carpetJI. and drapes likt• c BedtOOml\ $S3 9SO-O('W Vood buy at $65,950 ' ' Ph 962, 1751, large r«re~Uon IOOM~ 2 IN'\"L R E NETWORK baths. blfl liv rm. f11m1ly _ -------- rm. flrepl11 <'e '. custom SPARKLING POOL kitchen Over:mcd riou· bit! gara&c + recrea Shake root. 3br .. 2l>a. tion•l vehh:lcf »tor;ag(• i.uper upgruded. i1l!ding JUST LISTED~! Hurry glusdoortopatlo Su.per ''" this Co1ttt Mc•:\o ll!1m1tc yrd & mtenor. baraa.ln! ! CAllMCH15l $(jS ~ ~~·HERITAGE' wr. s rs1 or·Rr ACT U NG. tl·l t--232] $149.500 ~~~~~~~;~1·--;-:-:-:;:;--1 -REALTY-Callt 644-721 l ~ • . . REALTORS· 14Z.S100 Byown<'r 2bl()(kfilo Newport &uch tri ptu . Bcuut dupht. 21lr. l'-bA. bench. 3br. den. 2ba. on cirnllJ w boat docl<. lrpl. + xtrll.S. So ot hlo\'Y· JUST FOR 1 .&UGHS Teruu11 court I< pOola. 110.4.0 gro:.i.. $135.000. $450 mo. 54!M~Ol. ...,... '72.$00. ~ LU1onla. _49'l __ 11_1_0_. e_v_e_s ____ 12 Dr. 1 \'a Ba , doubl• READ THIS 1932 AD! , ___ S48_-6030_, --QUAIL PLACE garage. 1 ~ bllu t o 1932 Disposal sale of LlDO ISLE PROPERTIES. INC. beach, new paint. cpts. · A T IY OWHER!l MAN AC E M ~ N drpg. Avall Oct 15. No sensational, low. 1932 pnces. C DIVISION Pr(lfmi:s1onol pcta. 1ouomo 644-21\9 QUICKLY! R e member last summer! c~~ C::~~n ~B~t ~c~n. 1111urtmcnt. omce b.,wld· 1 BR Almost hall of Uus beautiful isla nd was pool, billiard rm. view. lnss. 6 i;hopplnl( center fASE Dup ex ~ d + snapped up in the las t 10 weeks of the &.>95.000Courtesy torltn. mttna~rmf'nt •n L.A. en, S360. mo. 0 ogs . 1931 season, w hen the liquidation sale Cal1844-0927orl4<l-W1. Oran~c. H&vl'rsidl' and All· DaveS.6"-'7211 ~11n lkmttdlno <'Ountles. . 2 br. trpfc, •lnilea of ~ido Is le was first announced. 30-40 ---• Robby Rob1n11on <714 > uk. Fct•. -YES. even 50 lots a w eek were sold; NEWPORT SHORES 752 1920 Marn nentats. 540 5370 since then. hundreds ot thMe buyers br. 2 ba. nr cornmun ---------1 have been pl arming homes: 32 already pool/tennis W11lk to lwh 6 Uftit ... Lotiq leodl fkoach <'h1arrner. S2?S. 2 By owni rnn unly Best n..lv $79,000 br. gar.1mgls ok. Fee up or building -sc.'Ores more plans for buy on brh property Will~;~ tllan make lhe Main Rcntals. S40-~ft 'tmmedtate construction -making r"t: 000 "4" ••JOU .....,, " " "'00 payments Call 752·0 · er 1 Ba. 5 blka from Lido I s le TODAY the m ost active & 101.t or 640-0166. Agnt. Plt!ase beach. pvt yd & putlo. MESA DEL MAR s u ccessful seaside colony on the Salt Cl•~te 0 1 m & n mber ~ •••••••• •• ••• ••. ••• •••• _en_v_e_n_a __ e __ u ___ ._1..:..$4:.:25:::...:. 6:.:7.:.5-..:9.:.S;:.13:..:;...;6.::.7.:.S·.::.8.:..78::5;....._ ARTIST'S r:pl~~~~\,8~i'o2ra~'. Pac Uic coast . AND YET. prices are ••• BE.A(C ll CET ·6-PIC'X Cosla Mes.a . -to .... -.... 3224 ~NIGEL'-~ Ulllll V ~ A'lSUllAIL5 St ill at ROCK BOTrOM (or those who /\W 'Y •. ,., ''"" p r t • 79 OC'" ul\ ...,.,,.. o ""~ ,...._ rm, nr So Cat. l'lui11. n • ...,, "''"' er er .1 . .., ....., .. ......, wncr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEACH CHALET ti---------1 ss.uoo. 546-8689 act AT ONCE! <'Ol~ge for 2nd. home or Al{cnt Prtn only per eondo. 3 Br. 2 be. Charming S!'lll level $150-$660-$774 retirement. Ownr must rr k pool clbhlle Nr artist's t·h:ilcl at"ros. 2BR&GAR. APT. Owner. 2hr , d1:n, 11..,bn, 8,0 and will help with 4 PLEX .: · s37•5 tH5.7·953 . from palm hnr<l Jl&rk 2 Cuv. patios. n1rely crnr. fn<'d yrd. 2017 Ma· S 1976 ,..,. floandng Your (2) bedrooms. one s ops. • • Sun porch open~ l r So of Hwy Only ple,$49,50().494-8828. l~~~~~~~~~I MOW IE.A.D THI -•BF.RTHAllENRV • and one hu1r baths. 673-2332 _____ _ Sµani~h ... tu<'co 11v1n • s~~:5oo. Agt. 675.3222 ---E-1---.---Have you noticLle~d lh1e 1s~arWcity. oft R2E5ALOeT1~H1s · 5 4c~21·4l21 S92.SOO for quack sate. COME HOME! room , Step saver eCJGft ln-ifw 1044 vacant lots on 0 Se. e JUS l .. ttr. 1tn em. A n " h <• I m llovea real homealFox· kitchen. Gr;wiou:. dinin8.i------•--•I S • h' ••••••••••••••••••••••• happen to have a rare find at only s u p E R c 1. E A N OW N E ll I /\ 'G ~: N hollow Village. 621 W. room. Gla!>s \•nrlot1ed pants . . . P• k $96 ()()() Pres1dent1u l Hl!1ghts 540·0555. Wilson. Cost• Mesa. master with brcalhtak-FOR SALE BY OWNER Stylish executive. sur· By ownr L ~iversity Car P.s'. 1 wonde r how many laughed in Condo. Calh d~s. 2 Br. 2 ~"'STSIOE Adults. ssso. mo. Open Ing view or Catalina ~ Under market price new rounded by vislu of lush Twnhst.• \iJJlage 1· a1m· Ba . attach oar. l level. """ 4'6:30 weekday!', 11·6:30 F'resh pC1111t. upi:radl' 3 Br. 2 Ba. separate older greenery & a forest of b1.rldge m.dll. 3 b0r. Zabtna.umge 1932? pool toe t•n""ed for rasl 6 HOUSES weekends. Avail. Nov. 1. (·arpt·t Do« run an · 28 lB b h fruit trees. Suburbia iv.rm .• '"er• r , LIDO REALTY ~ •250 000 99 · " wut. r, a , + ac M ... a Verde A bedroom Nr ~Is. tennis crts.. gale by owner $51.9~. • , • lW76. 642·4 1 patio. Twu t.'ar garage elor apt S\49,500. .... .. ,..,,, Jud · e 3 Three blocks to ocean 640·1526 aft &PM Prin with family room. din· ck·~t·i hrens/ park. All e lecp Jl17 Via Udo. N.I. 67J-T300 499 21""' ~~ he;m~cew ~wp~~7 & E·side 3 BR. 2 Ba. qw et pier and fishtn~ Tw only! Ing. handsome fi replace. 1 1.c w n::.;900newEa . SantaAna 1080 privacy Pnnc only Ex· cul·de·sa<'. frplr. bltns, "··"room two bat ' Ju•t ""ull guest d1'n1'ng room. P iances. """• · ves •• dbl gar ••10 673 3600 "''" ' ·• " r I k ., 552 0332 I 048 ••••••••••••••••••••• change. Agt. 751·2223 ·,. · . $56,9~0 . Call collect r--taM ..... -102 Rich <'Olors & tex· onyorw nus ... · r-:-1044•--Beach USE ~ .... _ • ....... ........-.... DOLL HO Besl deal. SZ30. 3 br, 842·2S3S. •••••••••••••••••••••• turesBKR,callS40·1720 BYOWNER •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• OHLYS'49,500 Mountaln,Otlerl, kids/ptts ok.Fee. OPt" 11 ' 9 • '' "'''' '' "'•:/; NEW NEW .... EW' Twnhouse Univer!llty 4 BR+ FAMILY · •Tn.J .. Vi•w Loh Ch RHort 2400 M 1 R 1 o.An """'O .,jjJ .. 'H•lJ • Bdrm home w/NE "· 3 r 2 a. new cp 5 $64.900 H1mrock Canyon ul your ing 3 bdrm. 2 ba home [.. ,. ... ' '"" · YARIEl.L P'· B 8 l & '" GI. FHA lt:rmi.. arm·••••••••••••••••••••••• an ent.a s,.,,...,.....,, · ?.J.iLI'iH) crpts. congoleum. fenc· paint ~.O<)() ~'1·0588 Quiet cul de sac in feet.abackdropofgreen w,huge FR on lrg. lot.MAMMOTH Chamon1x .2 brduplex,garage. _ ----··-·-~ ing & i\ 's in a prim "#I In Caltfornia!" OWNER Irvine. Spanish archl·~ hills. & occan/Calahna Sep laundry rm w/hobby Condo 3 Br 3 Uu deluxe kids/pets ok. Fc.-e. Mesa Verde location BY entry Lar)!l' t•neloscd sunset views. $45.000 rm & s~p bath. Xlnt. furn:sh~ Best cash of· _M_a_1_n_R_e_n_ta_l_s._S4_0_·_S3'7_0_ $46,750 2 Bedroom, 2 bath, in llh 1dual L'ondominiu m 2 Car Rara):t: w elec door t•Pcncr highly up 1:radcd. rarpetm~. wood paneling & mirrors. En· Jr>Y the c·ommunity 1>001. Jacuzzi. tennis courts & clubhouse. Who's hrsl? ~~ .. ANYTIME $00,SOO. Eves. 546·1081 or•uxE coa..100 Assumable loan. 38r . 2 (rontyard patw. Smoke~ NORINS REALTY buy, 545 11'191. re,. 9 ' 9· 0991 days. NORTH MESA 752·0283 or 640-0166 Agnl mirrors an rct wuo * 494-805 7 * Assume VA Toan. 3 Please leave namt: & board decorator living -----eal!state Dr I Ba. new cpts & drps. fncd yard. gar . $250 +-dep. 645-8184. all 5/wlmds -. ,... ba+fam rm. $0"9.500 Call d 1 d ail 838,1906 Eves. Bedroom. family Two number. room -plus Spunish L-Hilb I 050 ExchancJe ---------hdek fireplace. Hand)' ~·-••••••••••••••••••••••• ENDANGERED and o ne hair baths chef's kil<'hen. Family ••••••••••••••••••••••• MOBILEHOMEPAR., Br 2Ba Twnhse.dblgar S64,SOo. owner, Ai:cnt M d I Sales Q · te " / t.o ... t' SPECIES 540·~"\. 0 _e . . ~:t'!1 pl:sc~n~:}~~ ~aa~il; Offter Real &tat• 70 space top rated atl 0/~ S341.~-~ pa 10• Almost extinct-a lru Award winning Untversl· l>t!druom s . E· z ril re MUST SEll NOW! ••••••••••••••••••••••• adult park. Lrg 2br house1---------- tradil1onal 2 st.ory hom 3 & DEN lY Park Townh,?me by J . yard. Potting bench. Ile All the work has bee Mobile Homes for owner/mgr + l V. FARM ATMOSPHERE. 3 in prestigious Eastside OR 4 BEDROOM M Peters. ~o .. One locating -take aclvan done for you in this near For Sal• I I 00 acres & permit for 12 Br. horst' corral, bltns, bon eas,. glihngb ofinres .~omTehs,. san We.st.side, 2 bath, sharp. model ren:i11ining 4 _Br la,gt• '.Call 752-1700 toclay new. highly upgraded. ••••••••••••••••••••••• add 'I spaces. $200,000 S42S mo 546-5777 Ba. 2 sty. mdoor atnum oPIN '" o.,,) •11N •0111 "1<1 bedrm Pacesetter home, COSTA MESA-VACANT eqwty For details call bedroom. 3 bath rarit sharp. Asking $54,000. Professiooally decorated [ . I Jusl move in & start llv Bruce B Howey. SECJC· va1lable Nov. 15th. Cozy ~~frtl~~~ld &asst~~ PILOT~~~~JSTATE ~f;o~~ s~recsu~tcn~h: (C:;'.~JU•. ilft1J ~fixx>~rrererl at onl lhr fur111s~~l r1o: patio. CIM ~~nis ~~~ic.~!ri~ fireplare/marble hcart· 1----------i ""l-0"""· 10 5 Daily ·· i;'i]H,~ awmng. walk to stores & S40·3ZOO S450/yrly. 675·9417 aft 5. PLUS Del Piso tiled en OanaPoint oN ""'" • • FULLER REALTY bus Inquire owner . try foyer & plush mastr •••••••••••••••••••••• Rancho San Joaquin llANCllO SAN JOAQU 1 N Spa<·e 7:!. 219\ Harbor Br. 2ba. bllns, rrptc. new · 546 0814 HI d "•0 1915 cpt1drapes & paint. Very suite. A genuine find-Custom ocf'an vu 3 br 3 BR. 2"'2 Ba Townhouse. 3 Br~· i Ba. popular San • " ·"""' cleun S.\50 •mo. 545.3627 fur selective owner. f a m rm home . 4 Montanas Norte. Luis Hey Many up • 2 Im. hv rm <it kitchen. EAN·CATALINI\ View aft 1 PM ---------•! F ireplace. t1elr cl('a 833·3179cves. Sl05.000 gradei.. View golf ~ourse LGCJUnG Nlquel 105 foll hath. lb. \\I Sl250. mobile home. corner sp. -----------OCEAN VIEW mQua~·· oven. tow malnt yard. Dlomond Brinht & lake. $115.000. 547.7044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SilM li\7'.l P\'1 ply, trade for Ocean rg 2 br & den. Adults. no A block to the bead1. $74,500. ~ or 833 3215 V\I home or lot 494.Sll!H pets. $325 mo 2614 Elden. Ocean \'ICW from the PlllC1t S!'arkling Greentree SWEEPING LCICJUfta's Best Buy CM 548-5241. front bakon)' IJ1R 3 UH. Prapft"tin ~ A.,CHO• "'GE Windsor A 4 bdrm.. NO WEEPING W 2 UH, full bath. fam rm, Rentals -~-- . 3 BA LiPPl':rt unit and 752•1920 " -bath. highly upgrade OCEANVIE llv·rm. kt1,·h. p.iuo •••••••••••••••••••••••Lovety3br.2t>a.dm&fam the LOWER uiut &s a lrg 1 1400 QCJAtur. Nl 111104 INVESTMENTS dazzler. Hurry. it 'i; f{Oing ff[~(I See the sunset from you Storage bldg xlra prk'g House' Furnl~h~ rm 2 kids, no dogs. BH. Each unit has a C714t 4t6-77l I t.ogoquickly at $77,900 beautiful. spacious Park $l20 mo. tncl. util. •••••••••••••••••••:••• W1s1de. $395. 642·5583 beautiful frJllc. bltns. EASTSIDE ~ 1n lovely W llo°ws area. bedroom. 2 bath rondo, 494 0451 lolbo p 1n-·• 3107 T 3-s · d d Move-in condition . AP· · o en -a B on> 32 .. f.~.XJ:t•fg~ad;a~~~.J~l'a DUPLEX '""Fount--a•i•n•V•all-ey•--1•0•3•4•! TSSH2·E7.00·0·· ...•• _ ~~r~~.1Y2 uf:![~ ~o~: pliances & plants ln· S.achPr•rty 1350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••¥•••••••••••• ~133 500 Neat 2 bedroom. l bath ••••••••••••••••••••••• h d 1 d eluded. Owner l!;'avin •••••••••••••••••••••••Charming 3 RR. 2 ~a. Super 3 br, 2 ba, (pie, OW, • · · and 1 bedroom. l bath has an some pal 0 an state S82SOO home w /frplc. patio. cpls. drps. $385/mo. JACOBS REALTY units. Good income, • V LACE . . yard: central uir condi· · ' INVESTMENT lndry rm. Winter rental. 96.1·4~ Agt. No fee. 675-6670 won 't last . 11cller Assumption IL ~ . . . .. tloning loo. CIOse ~o 675-2804or8.'U·7761 motivated $65.000 full RE ALTORS ~ schools & shopping. J\ \,ommerciat Buitdln~ In CJO'ONTHEWATER! .-;;~.-.-.--------•! pnce Q p rt nity true value"at $64,SOO. ocean area. w 1securc Spacious NB oceanfront 3 bdrm new home on 645-6646 P 0 U ---------i 496-7222 831..0836 lease from Government home. Compl furn. D/W, Lake Forest w/vlew of -IMMACULATE Tiw wise buyers way to MEW HOMES 1£ .Qual~ agency for 5,llc. C:qwty washtdry. dbl R3r. No waler. 1528 sq. rt. 2 ba. 5ave! Take over. subjc<'t Two brand new Deane • p•--P.i<'esettcr Home. JBr. build up & ra~h on cash pets. S750 mo 't1l J une A.IC. wet bar. frplr. patio THRUOUT' ~ rR€STIG€ lu existing VA or FHA home~ r eady ror im· ---2ba Dm rm. Fam rm return. for S4:J.OOO down Lsl . Pvt ply 673·3153. & dbl gar. Clubhouse. . ---+----1-t--HOM€~ loan. No quahfying. no medtaleoccupancy.One. PraplPrt~ $92.000. M. Wilson Rltr paymt.•nt <:all lor de· Cot M 3124 po0I & tennis incl. $495. \n eXC\'plional dl~t~,"kleo~a·erdocwonsli.P·.ayl~ a n award winning 14000UA~5J.-~1 TIU.CH 4~584 t1uls. • •• ~.~ •• ~:~•••••••••••• Readynow!Mo-8300 lx'firoom home w1th very JOON N rt NB ......... ..., ··w Id " od I th .,llrnrt1ve featur es , · ewpo · menlandwe havt.'an<'X· a en m e wi ---------642·56'71! MAY 0 CK 2 br. l ba Pets. childrenfotlntainVolley l2l4 . ----------1 cellent selcct1on. C·•JI central air cond. and 4 Br, fam rm, dining rm . Classified i\ds .... , .. ,..,..,, ""' ok. Yard. $325. mo. J ••••••••••••••••••••••• f''ormal d1ninf(. fom1ly EASTSIDE "'OW! " your t•holce of color of Lge lot. $79,950. No LAGt.INA BEACH Sa t 1 bcl 548 6864 Fi 1 3 b 2 b room with fireplace. 2' 2 FIXER UPPER ,, carpe t-the othe r. a agnts_ 552·9336 Newport Beac;h I 069 ('714)494 2148 n a so . . rep ace. r, a, cov baths. most popular floor Cozy 2 bedroom. 1 bath, 531-5800 former model with all ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~ leac;h 3148 b:W~·N~e=a~P~~rs?';:pe~ plan. Lu:.h yard & patio. laundry room. hardwood Westttaven Realty the trimmings . UP EX'f UISITE! H_.....-r VI•~ Homes •••••••••••••••••••••• loc. -"/mo. 963 456!> Agt Ex<'ellc11l locatlOn near I f d t ·--------•I graded carnats drapes ~ -h f ..,..,.,., noors. arge ence yan ·..-~ · · pres 1 en t II om e A delightful 4 Bdrm . l Br furn o use o No fee. ll<'hools. Priced al only SS6.SOO. full pric<' •TIBURON ·BY OWNER fully landscaped front & Turtlernck area. Show:. h1irn1.: In "Model Home" lminns Property 1400 employe.d person. N -·--------- $75,000 546·4141 645·6646 New crpts, tile, IMMAC. rear yard:i. The builder like a model. Principal:-. condition upgraded ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets. Qwel garden aet Comp! redec. 4 br. 2 be. 3 DR. 2'--z Ba, x.lnt loca· 15 ready lo deal so call to-only. 833·0763or $45-3031 w many features. Fl'c OFFlCE BLDG llng. 494·8170 !keep try new crpts, drps & paint. t' D t1 846 8437 eves day for an exclusive 1.·1nd. Top nc1oh"'~rhood o·n the Water. Newnnrt mg). Fplc $4l0/mo. 963·4569 P ~€'TIG€ ion ay,, . · showing Lea••/OPTIO.._. "' "" ""' Agt Nofee _ ~ > &wknds963·3113 ...,. "" $119,750. Beach, oldjacent Lidn On the sand! 4 BR. $1 __ , ___ . ____ _ I HOM€~ Huntf....6on hach I 040 We will make a deal. Nd Village. Short kases, Yrly or S7SO wntr; l·B 4 Br. 2 baths. Nr school & '"J' u family l o li ve in our ideal for hcachi uarler8 w/lofl $350 Agt 494·7SSI sh 0 pp in g c 11 n t e r . 300N.Newport,NB ••••••••••••••••••••••• form er home . 3Br. bid~· l nq111re So\50/mo.554-3874 S&SllcsalcSJ)(•r1allsts.3, 2ba+fam1ly rm By (7141862·11622 2234 1':,t.uxurious oceanfront ---------- For ~u lt: h\• ''"' nl'r l :!OO !iQfl. 3 nr: 1 ·~ ha, w "' rpts, lri.? wt. 700<1 ~qft lot on 1· 111 1f e · s a e G . G . s.l2.000 Call 531 t»IS:l EASTSIDE DUPLEX Large :? bedroom, I hat umts. SSOO/rno. income Won't last. $70.000 full pnce. 645-6646 4' fR€HIG€ HOM€S JOON Newport, NB MUST SELL! Fnmilv homl' m a re sidcnti111 :irea on 11 large lot 3 HR. 2 BA. SSl.000. 4or~bdrmmodelsavail. owner 75,·0283 or Highland Ave . Sdn penthouse 3 BH. Avail.HuntfnCjtonleoch 3240 some w /l)OOls. 968·4602 ----------1 640·0166, i\gnt Please --Bernardino 9240t now $1000 !Vlo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pennington Properties Stop Look·ing leave name & number. NEW LISTING! • Almo~t o<:l.'anrront. 2 story. 4 br, 2 ba, rplc. N'pt. Shores: /\·frame. CotNMrcial OR , 11, bu S42S Mo OW. cpts, drp6, clean. LET'SMAKEADEAL Th• I ltl Turtlero<'k. Broadmoor Hlty,2BR&denor:JRH Pr-op«ty 1600 Unfurn 2 BR. 2 ba. con· $475/mo. 963·4569. Agt. GLEN MAR IS S • Plan 4. Crnr view lot, Bltns, 2 patios Stt:i'll l •••••••••••••••••••••• do. l 1~ blkb to bch. $4~ No ree. By owner single story 4 Outstanding 3 bedroom. 4br . 2Vaba. a trium ocean&pools.$65.000 BAYFRO....aT Agcnt494-7518 -------br. l ~. ba, iclnl cond. 2t,.; baths, family room $98,000. By owner. Prine CAYWOOD REALTY ,... · •• IMMAC 3 Br 2 Ba. ull many extras. Corm:r tot. home in Un iver sit y only.833-8193. * 548 IZ'>O * Office hu1ld1ng. s pec SouthLOCJUlla 3186 bltns & fplc . $360 mo. trlr or boat 3<'ress Open Park. Qwet location · low • tacular view. luxunous •••••••••• ••••••••••••• Move right In! Ternric ho us I;' Sa t 1 Su n l · 5. maintenance yard 1700 LacJuno hoch I 048 HARBOR VIEW executive offices. An xlnt 2Br, 2Ba condv nr ocean. cond. 848·9427 S62,SOO. \162 ·3241 or Sq. ft. of carefree living. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jnvestmcnt at $6:ll1,UQO. T t' n n i s . po o I . ---------- S.."i6·7007 AIC for year 'round com· FAMILY DELIGHT Open Sat/S&an BILL GRUNDY Blue Lagoon Vitia. $450 4br Twnhsc. Cpts. drps .. fort. Pricedat$72,SOO $109,000 Rffltar 675_6161 rno. Ownr 5'15·1561 or nu decor. nr s hops. High a hove Laguna: Phase 3, 180 dt"'rCl· no 213-476·3363 school & beh. 2 PoOls & large 3 bdrm .. 2 bath " rec cntr S350 962 9758 home: many extras. Obi. glare VtEW. mcc derk Approx. 2200 sq. rt. We~t ___ . _:_ Cireplace. largl• <linin)! 11riRr.aded :!h~ ~ den Newport $7\1.500 Agent HousH Unfurnished 2 Br. children OK. pets rm .. private bnck patio. Absentee 0~ Ol r /~kr 642-3850 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wtd<·ri ~9S. mo. 962 3533 large fenced yurd wlth 8::i~e1~l!. ~j14 ~3~~~37~3~r OMpfnH/ Geftef'al 320 or s;H, 11' I mature trees. Xlnl Onitssol• 1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 llr, i Bo. fplr. rlbl gi.r dnei11·yguhtbo$8r9h.~ PrlcC'd lo BRING YOUR CLUB •••••••••• ••• • •••• ••••• S38~ mo. 1''1r&t. last & ''"' COSTA M BSA *RENTALS• cl1.wnmg. 962· 7781:1 White picke t ft:ncln 2 Units on lg lot. Need Sant;i Ann lll'i)!ht!i ------ frames this ttracefull work Good I()(' • great 3 rm . J Iii\ S.1H5 /m 3 tm. 2 bn, very priv \ urd. wnrm3bedroom .2bal P<>tcntial.&t!'i-7:.!21 311R,tBi\ .li3751m1 MOO /mo. 847 ·3:!Ll 3. home. only slc~ to a gol Century 21 "Wcst<'hrf.. r.uizunu Ill/I:. 847 ·8420 or 963·~2S WHAT APAIR! 't523CAMPU5Dl:IR'llffE afi~~~ Two 3 br homM ((\ rh110st· nnno.. ...... 11'3~ •===~=::::::;.i from 011 ~am1• St. Fml ()l'"'N DAILY ~ c:.r n_ ... _ p r r r 001 "' " 499· 2soo -a e-11 nsu a OR, fam rm \ .1riety of 8 A.M T06 P.M ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 BR, 3 Da. din rm. features. custom d~cor. ----------• 7 UNITS $:?95,000 story. Mesa ilcl Mar accents lhruout. park Rancho San Joaquin WALK TO ALISO BEACll cour-.e' In pnmc loca 4UH.:J ll1\ s-i;,o.im Uon in a pcople·who.cnr Income Property 2000 Irvine Var ant 4br, 2-story. frplc, elm rm. den, $425/mo wtr (ld. 894 ':J28tj. Beach rnttai::e S&'l,500 $73,900. 546·111184 llke yards. Very rlose to LARGEST HOME 3 Bedroom. 2 bath. fam1 R.edur1•d ! ~ Br, 3 b11. nr. O c e a 11 . Co I I ti <' t 3 Bit. 2 ba. end unit : ly room and fireplace. nciKhborhood. Sec I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 UH. 3 Bt\ .. $500/m now $7Z,95Q COSTA MESA Co5tn Mesa EASTSIDE 3 BR. t BA Duplex , . $2 I> B t: au t Hu 1 L'" 11 "· FULLER REALTY hny&oc<'un Sl64.~ OPEMHOUSE! 714196R·4456 pluah cpta. decorator Secluded H &f pool 4BH.3ba.$1:17.000 32()11unovf'r Ur Colleg 21421 F1eet S71,900 appt·~. prof. lndscpg. 30xlS.SI05,000. £1Quall ~ 2 Bdr. 4 blka bea<'h. ~. No pcta Avail. (), t . ZS. 2DH & don $12ll.500 Prk. 4 Br+ Sund11y 12·5. 213111 Pleet soo.~ Near pool. View! $99,000 Jay w. Yeab Realty • Pl . Manih.altRlty 675-4600 BobbcSuikkl.646·7414 SHOPPERSTOPPER HASTINGS&CO 31709CoastHwy ace A hot value th11t won't Realtors 640-SSOO So. Laguna 499•223"1 Prop9rtlea OCEANFRONT Havl' somcthin1ot you want I M N 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1•--------·1 752·'920 Swedt~h frµk.\, 2 yrs old Prtnr only Mui.t (')( ,._ __ •5•4•6•••0•8.'.4--~Nrwer 3 br condo Great chun~?I' A).(t 751 222:1 1• loc. $JSO . Av:iil 11 /l. 008-0652 aft 4 pm 842·9970 eVt'll a st. usl see. ew MOOOC1A1ur.HCWl'Otlr1u.cH 3 br + gu~s t apt . to sell ?<.:lasslfied adsdo carpet, no wu floors. ti200,000. Ownr. 675·5069. 1t well. 642·b678. bulll ln BBQ New O.W,. ll11vc• up lo $800.000. cai.h NEED A RENTAi.:' to 111v1·st 1n •11\lt,; & Wt'l1nvethem: I 4 ll<lrm S© ~dtllA-" t,!fos .. That Intriguing Word Gome .,..;tit a CltucUe -----14-1>t W T • ,Oll•ll O,_._ lett..., cf m. f.,.,, xro ... bltd "'°'d' be· ~ "' -'°"' .... pie -d• I tl10rl"1 I L NY S AP I i r 1 I 1 I . , ~_,,.H_A..--N .,..H_E.,.--11 1 I I I I Auiom11ion '101 4dd&d 6 l\4tw fHr TO ovr h..-•, r!W IHI --------. of lold,ng • -~rd. 10·" l GOHNJG I 1--...-, _,_, -...., _,...., -r-t 0 ~~~~ :"111:'::~~ 0:l .. _ ----· -------\'Ow ~ ,,_ -No. ~ b.Jow & Pt1Nf "'UMaUEO ltlfUS IN r11E1l sgy.t.m rrrrr1 I) ~~~1 .. ~~~E IJllUS I I I I I I SClAM-&.ITS Am to. Clnsfflcatlo. 5350 3 br. Oft, private yards, near schoola & park. bike trail to beach. Com· paratlvely low priced. Has assumable V.A. Call Coiled 7141968·4456. 20742 Spindrift $69.SOO HARBOR VIEW HOME Comm ·1 NOW' tl<IO 11300 Kids. pets. 11in).(lt• 11k I Ml. TO BEACH Original r o rtofln Nf:WER,\·fec 638· Va<'anl.lovcl~rww4 BR. It's been reduced in pncr Model. 3 Hr. 2"1 Bu. 4 • PLEX 2 Bu Frplc. I> \II $450. but lhe 2200 aq.ft. still re· +bonuii rm wt loft bdrm nerenlly t•onstrucled tn Im mac quiet cul de s11r. mo. 5'18·758G mains the palace it was & full bath, air roncl. San Clemf'ntt· overlook modt•rn 3 Br 2 Bu. A1<:.. --- $79,500. brings you the Spanish Ute, pool, lots of Ing golf cour~e Large bltns & sprnklr11. $4 $21:>. 3 br T . ll: Pool. large 4 bed rm family PRIVACY hrick work, new lndscp-units. $l:?5 ooo nrm m:i mo c·v~1wknd~ 832 ,1658 klds1petsnk. h •c, home w /super recr ea· Ocean side of hwy, 4 lnjj ~much more Calle Ca~pan11 owner, 8atbo lilancl Main Rentali.. ~0-5370 tlon area and Iara.: PoOI bdrma. 3 baths. launrlry OPEN llOUSF. ol96-527S 0 Br 2 Ba. nr Bushard & Priced to Sell! -~Ian REAL ESTATE 900 {,l1·nn1•r,. )I 4•4 91171 I \4') (1)lc\ that is becoming extinct area, heated PoQI, vu and SAT & SUN 10·4 or appt. -•••••• •:••••••••••••••• v RE A ts forthatpriceinthiscity. ideal patio for outdoor 1824PortShelfleld San Clemenle.l:?unilsonWlNTt:R. 2 BR horn ~l~~~/:io. acaot. . · gen Hurry! Call 833·3380, Red living. si48.500 Fee Land 5159.soo ~ .. built res·com ·1 lot. w1fpl. & pHlio $375 Mo. •--·--·------ TF you ar~ reading this. Carpet Rcollor~. By owner <714 > 998·2228 $21.000 gro~s. nr bch, WILLIAM WINTON ••Super Sunny house of checking for new list-$2JO,OOO. Ph 492·5078own RF.AL TOH e75 3331 Glass. 3 BR w/spaclous in.gs, and F S. B. O. YOU R BUILOABLE LOT Uke new 2 br & den. 2 I.la. lalbo p I --"-3207 Ms tr Su It c. brl aht may be one: ot the 2 TI ID OF 2 pati()l!. Corner w1vu. o en n-garden ram rrn & kltch. Senlk~ AfiE&ocllatcsl '1 a m ThCR.ACKER l~XES? Your dream come true sim.500. By Owner, 121'.ll DI f1tn,~sdPltr~perty! 3.B •• r •. •2••b•a•t•h•. •:e••r:_::•,•ro••m Lge party patio. bltns, & see ing. xc us ve oCA· en rome sri: lrlli; 2 br by building a home ol 876-5454, (2131 ~4·8958. can an .or you. " ..,.,.. frplc. $425. 84~ <1427 Uon In Westh1.1ven Plata. homi: in DeerHeld. AtC. your own. North Laguna Courtesy to brokers. Beach area 51'CC11.11ist Buy beach. 1,.ovely view. ---- at Brookhur6l nod Ed· Den, dlnlnii. area. $79,SOO. l"L"" d Probatcii. forcclosurNI, $490 yrly. 675·1304 orgeous 3Ur Seabury . lnger A commission pro· RANCH REAL TV ~ ,.~·I br. en.:\ bn bankruptcies. divorce -Nr bcarh ~ recreation i;mm unique rn the in· S.St-2000 PRICED R F:OUCED to lnvc:1tmen1 pl'OPl'r11e3 2 <or :\1 Hr. 11.? Ba. yrly, are41 $420 rno. 963·5678 dt.istry. Dial It-you'll MA y Q C K $162,500 Ownr dlrkr below murkel prtc~ S42.'> mo ask ( 0 r J 8 ck 0 r Ukdt! 531·5800 Turllerock Glenn. New 673-675fi Kftt John.on, lrokft' •173-9479 Rosemarie. G...,,....,e Welerbach 3-A mdl 4 br. ram.rm. '""ro"""n" ----------~-.. ( I l 'b 1.AGUNAWCJt 10°/oDOWN °'111714 '673'4M5 CoronadefMar l222 P ANTASTtC YO RK · WHtflaYeta Realty :/fr:I~ .. fiv.'rm ~1[,;,~~ (714)484·2148 3 + dc·n or 4 bedrm In ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOWN Vil.LA. 3Br. 2ba, Br-den-2 ba . N ear Marina Ht.gt\. Blln BBQ. •.900. 968-5700 Owner, bar. On Oreen Be.It. Npt. Shore~ Move-in EASTSIDEC.M. Homey 2br . frplc, put10, 1385 sq fi Condo. 2 car 'View Clubpriv S13UOO. <>cun Vu Portoflno. 3br. cond. $79,9SO. Also 4 '7 Units, l 3Br. 6·2B r . PJO, yrly. Beachcomber, loclted gar. bltns & pool. Qtmpteliondate,Nov. t. oew home. $1 25,000. 691 bdrm, $78,500 or offer. '210,000. 979·8538 agt. 1''ec SU. 631 ·2011 ; Nir beach, no P•l•, Ownt, 644-0688. Nyet, ()pit. 499-4ZIO. 6'2·38SO Property llouse. Prtn only ~7·2!i01 or879·1000 $385/mo. 963-4'66 ' ' . • r ...... U.fw ..... d U.._...ilNHt ...... Ultfwllli:tMd Aparlme"h F\,rnhh('Cf A.pcriMHh u..twr.. Aratw .. h u..tw... Monday.October11 1976 OAILY PILOT •9 . . . . ... . ... ....... ... . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... .. . . . ------------------------ .............. och 3240 tni.. · 3244 a.od1 3269 IGIM>a lslond 370 6 Costo Mtto 3824 Costa MHG 3824 4'• lw nt& &Ww.. A,_ t•Hh u.hnt.. oc.aKon Retdoh 4 250 ....................... ······················· ................................................................................................................... ······················· ...................... ~ ,. 3br.2 ba.Crplc,lgoynrd, NIV£RSITY PARK BLVPFSCondolAascs Buyfrunt·ytarly, 3 DR .. 2 -GRANDOl'ENINC-----otto Mn o 3 B24 M.wpori a.och 3169 MAUI, llAWAH. l.ux rul •• •• •• ••• ••• • •• ••• ••• • •• •• •• • • •• •• • •• •• • •• • •• 1Y furn 1 Rr Condo. 11'1" • 2 ur pr. Brookburat, prim" grttnbelt toe .. nr Slartma at S500 ba. low~r umt In prime s • the .8ulbard areL M2S mo poo. Is, park, schoollj, • A;e.ntt>44 1133 • S o . ba y f root Io c tep into 846-9088 11va1l lmmed. 3 Br 2 Ba . -... ------IS.•uullfully furn $675 Mu --------t lotm dine, $4GO. ~07 O~EAN l>'RONT VIF.W W ILLIAM W INTON gOod life .. B "''---•-• •-·· •· _.. or u .. ~S <;ON 00 z + Den, 2 car • • ~v~'c"a":t~i4"fs ~~~'2,,,-----------1 pnvJte park10.:. lull l<c.11 f~tntr. __ ~75 3331 Rbodcisla, ~3050 erode' br, rim rm , S«W"lty bwld111..:. Lease, Q ,~nsula 3707 ----------i dill rm, 2 ba, new crpL S500. p/mo. A~. ti44-7l!ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• S1mU rh1• 1Mthw.11f1 t)[ n pine fort.~ M1• mder P•!..'l .S BDRM ·2 BATH Lea.sc. Agt 541 ·5032 I ... LIO .o. I""' ... <.1ean comfortablo hme. lin11t ~lip avail with "' "' "" tumbling w.11..:rfolls .md qu1t.1. µools. l.i:.h·n to th\! Br. redecorated, i;arden p1t111, i.:•r, W I t> book up Mutu1 c ;utll:1 pre I. ')\'('nu1:i-1(1rl OK, sm pct OK. $230. M2-1i:J3 . r ARIC MEWPORJ ArARTMIHTS' l or:? H<-droomi. und To-..nhou,c!I "1'ht-Whaler " on Kaan11pab R<'h. Tennr~.-~ ~ llay, $J4S wk. 675-ZJIH or (213 )69!J.7219 t'rom $3..'>9.50 Luituriou~. furn. v1Uu t111 OJ,lt!n 9 tl l>ully Sllyulitu Beach fl<'Olr Sp,1 Poolii·Tt•nmll l'\wrtu Vullart11. 4 l>r, .a • $S3.S pu mo. Call dys WHJow Homtts, 3 br, :! bu, 3 BK. 2\.li b.i 'l'ownhome. 1 br lnl.'I ut1I Jo;q111pp!.•d .<0\u1d of bubbllny >trl'tltm •• md ~r<M'lrig thin•~-.. 114·963·6767 Ncnia, Agt. DW, fplc, c:ptll, drp!i, Nc11rbt•uch Phom! k1tcht:n, otht!r l':1.t111i. 'lourMlult .1rMrt1111!nl hun~<ll Plncovek V11l.i!Jc ls Evs/wknd52U·968·D767 '395/mo.~Aat.N llairy,MO·llSlAgt. <.:lo!lc to bus . ''1lla1tt' ul•,ldl 1.-trc<1L llc1~you cl'ln ~nJoyu11u)ual p11v41..y At•roi.!i from 1r ,1i.hion hu. $600. wk. 731·3'171 hlan<l ut Jnmborcu un lBr w/vutlo w/t.>nl'I Gur, San Joaquin lllllis ltoad. ental1 to Shon 4300 oml child OK. no pets &7141644-1900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------fee. ----Mores $100. mv. ti7S 8740 .ind luxury. ••Super spacious, aunn·..i----------1 We:.tcl!Cf. 3Dr, 2lla. frplc, bet 111. 11 1)4.6 $200. Ph 642-71QO Female 24 + lO sh11 re 3 l11 , 1----------1----------yrly • .t\cr~ll from lkh. 2 story. Lge lam.rm vein lrvme Vdh1~e. W 2 car gar, l'ndosc.'<I )'Md, HI:; AMONG TiiE A~'TTO CHOOSE I~ bl ... t bri'h• farden kllchttn, have homes available for qwet area. ~75. 548 7300 $100 co1y bar h fo'\Jrn 1\ll ~ 11. ill< •ll, th,· b..~t <>rronn.>n~nt, rhc coloi~ '"'U w..tnt. Huntlnqt0tt leoch 3 8 40 " lt!:ue tn· --ut1l pd lk•::tt·heomtwr 1i "" '-·-7-1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• steps to bcb & schools. WuJnut Sq 'l'he Hane l.ido l:ilc Lovely 4br • llb.i, I' t.' l" ~ 15 . Ii 3 1. :lo 11 ' Uo111 w<11!. wo h•nn~ courts. "1Wlmmmg pile> IY THE SEA br, 3 ba, 3 c•r gur. Im-Dt:erfield <.:ulvcrdalc bome. lt'rplc, ull eh•c kit, 547 l!SO I or 87\1 1000 plu!> UllKIU~ volk~ill pool..kicuul. 'l'W :l br dc•lu)o'.c lnh:.<', m ac cond. $499 mo. Cll..Homes Univ.Park dblgar.Avu1lwntror)I" -37-2 "-.rnt1wlk'\ol'<1ll r011rt,Mou111,11nlodqe ,lubhou..cwllh :!OlMthSt.~nt" 848-942'1. Collcac Purk ly. 613 1334 after SP r.1. C MOno del Ma r 2 l11cplo.1cc. ronwrwllon p11, h11l11srcb, !lYffi, ~llll••· --- HuwtWoa 3 Br your choice or m> 8albo p I --•••••••••••••••••• •• ••• l lllnv to 111\. ~Iii~· 11nd llwu r\!klx. ILOCK TO BEACH ~ 32 42 CromS38StoSSOO a en n Pt. 3 rm . 2 b:t. oecanlronl .1l ::JV'"" 2 nr. encl .:araj!t>. puUo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br your choice of (6) Prof. decorutcd 2Rr, 1 <.:dM MJ•ll IJ<'h. (;Jra.:I.' I-ROM $265 TO $3.'iS :JO.S 15th ::.t. 536·8729 or from S450to SS7S. ba $475/mo yrly lse. • I\' J ii· u 11 f urn· Stl!;t lncludiu!:J Heat & W,tter. No~~ Requhnl 5Jt>-l118. :J Br, 3 ba townhouse Sparkling new rond sno. Call ·•Lila", IW6-1371or846-5456 eves, Nof'ees b lk to Occao/Uay Wntr .• :)75o Y~arly. 8111 J).~~ C~B.!dto11111,Uti.•U..1lh RAHCHREALTY G7S-547S ----GrUJldy lUtr 67~~Gl _ r.!1~\...A.~~ ·1woBedNom.l 11.0B.lth ---------4 ----------I Let our :.pec1al1zed ren· l'vt. M alur~ pers on t1C'r<J'os from Or.1nge Cru~t Coll~'!}ll Deluxe 3 b1 , 21 ..1 ba apt w/washer-drycr hookuv Lge pal10. $375. mo. c.&11 846·1371 ask for lognd 01 PENINSULA ,T. N.B. $133. mo. incl'~ uul. 2 BH, l bJ unr ~ .>' rly tl75 3184. ~~-----~ OCEANFRONT o11e rmm11h· wt1nlcd tu ~ ttn.i bu,unf. $600 sham our nwllow hs1·. 3 utt.rurn.wntr. ~75 Wotcrviw. $1~/ mo. L.;>: 3 lllt,2 ua .. yl'ly. $715 lkh. At\11 ur J uson .11 ... EWPORT TERRACE 497-3805; or Norlns JUty, 3 Ult, 211111•11nlfo $S(JO 494·8057 SU WIMD CONDO 2 LIH, d l·n z bu $45o IA YAlOMT HOME 3 UR. :i bu. $2000 Mo yrly STEPS TO BEACH 2 BR, 2 baths. S400 Lady, 51. wanL'I to ~hart• home in c.<chJnac 101 l>orncstic &. /\ttt>ndant ('are + small 11alJ1 ~. Contact M ro; ll11r n1· 113il·2'Jl0 lx'tw ... en 11.10 ant 551·2000 :)mall bnch apl. Ul1l 1ncl ~ ]j(X}Ad.,ms Ave .. in Co:.w M~1. l"N 3244 NEWUnivPk,Pcters lal servict: find yo $155.U75·520S.675·3824 bclw\!enll11rlx>randfd1M~"W. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Twnhmc, 3 Dr 2Y~ Ba, quahried tcnunls. Cal Costa Meso 3724 (714) !Jl\0·1300. NH d a Roommott? Brand new 3 br. 2VJ ba, Plan C. Avail. Oct. lS BARBARA; •••••••••••••••••••••• NOW JlENTING Lie 2 B'H, l 'h lla, patio. !146-8413 a Clea• 5 associated xtras. $485. No pets. $.525. 547-7044 or 833·3215 lay and a.oc:h R•..at.. frplc, gar, pool. Quiet ~E·Cl2'ru i1Nw.uTw 8POl<.ERS-AEl\l TORS l O:", V. l c..lb oo '!lo1l )bbl -·1 S37.50 WEEK & UP 382 4 adult Townhouse. 1 Mi. A rrofessn'I Hoonuno.lt• 871-3471 or8J3.2105 TLEROCK President 6 75-3000 •Slullto & 1 UI<. Aptb Balboa lslond 3 806 Costa Mesa to beach. $285.1198~~·24~70~-1~~~~~~~~~~1 Heferral Company C':lll ---------•I presuge home w/pool. 3 ,.TV&Ma1dSt:rv1\\<1il ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --111-;LPYOU 1-'l"llOTH,\l' •RENTALS• moBr .. "~~~1'!'7 lcnnis. $62.SNEW 3 br tnh:.c, lge •l'honcScrv,Htdpool Ul::LUXE2lir.~un11'•ck ,Ncwadultwalt'rfrontapts2br,cpts,pool •• playyd.,Spec. View. 2 l>r, i::ar., RIGHTHOOMMATE .,.... ... J •Children Section prki.:. :.tep lo bch & bho1> m Mesa Verde. lleaul1ful n O Pets· 2 2 O ll A • bllns , new ca Pt. $275 1!32..i134 Stnco 1971 2 BR,2'h ba ••••••••• $525 rooms. frpk. pool. $550 Lo tli1 11111.:. ~i25. 548-4970 bet lands caping. Excep· Delaware.SJS..0959. Adults.642·6889 1 BR,den,2ba •• , •• $475 br.2ba,Gr~ntrcehome. Kidsok.6751666 • wmon yrat<'"· ,1 f !\ 11 . h . . -----1 28R.&Pool. ••••••• $475 Grt floor plan, lrg lot,-----2376Ncwporl Hlvd,CM _!!A., /a t71' 1 t1ona y rac Jnlcriors. HeorLakePark Yearly 2Br l "2 baths. Male/female, 25·35, ti.: ;J 2 BR Plan A $SOO $450. 833-2569 eves. LIDO ISLE 548.9755 or 645 3'-J67 • 3 1&2 bdrms from $275. : b h bdrm home $155 mo, 111· • ........ ---BolbooPen1nSldo 807 Mesa Verde Villas, 1555 Deluxe 3 br: 2~ b:s, att ~replace.~ blks to , r . bch,9G8·8700. 3BR,2Ba ........... S4SO 2 Bdrms., 2 ba., on ll:C. SUSCASITAS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa Verde Dnve East. dblgar.,pat10,frplc.1709 Carport & laundry facal. ____ _ 2BR.&Dcn ........ $4 lot..$7SOl\!0!1~1 .. Mmutes tc)Ntj.Bal'h&lNewer,Fr stdjn!!2br,2 Cos t a Mesa (714) Alabama, 536-3465 or $325mo.752·9031Bkr. t'cmale to share lovt•lv 3BR~it &. •••• 549 BilJ,Agt 546-5880559·0253 S Bdrms 41,., bu tlin BU furn .. \tJults. aw pct-. b.i, b.;lcorues, l.!ncl. ~ l'ar 54().8871. • 536-1718 Yrfy Ocean view 2 br. 1 2Br house in 0Jna }'0111~ San ey •··· • • " • ·· 2110 Newnnrt Rlvd CM i.car, walk to ferry. Yrly b· d. ' / '.,.. w/same. 49tH)965 "BR, FR •••••••••• $550 h rm.. lam. rm., :;tudy, __ "" ___ ._. _. s 3 8 5 • n -t 0 • 4 ,1 2 4 £A.5TSIDE adult l&2 Br. 2 BR, 1 &, newly decor at-a , ~I'· S3SO mo • .,.. 1-67!!0 ---------- 4 BR. • • • • .. • • • · •• .. $475 LOCJllna Beac lge. lot. $l200 Mo. Lg~""'· 2 Br l.'Vcs/ wknds, 838·4424 $200.$225. Like new. Pool, ed, garage. $200. mo. ~o~r~64~2:::·36~39~·~-----·1--~~~-~~~~~ Andwehaveothersror •••••••••••••••••••••• LAWSOMREALTY /\dlt:>,nopl'ls,w,w,drp;., wkdys nopets.l7?E.z2nd.St. 536-2888aft.6P.m. OCEANFRONT 2 BH, 1 SINGLES STUDENTS immediate occupancy LAGRU~TAABLESACH * 675-4562 *--_bltms, poo~2S~S~7 1 Nr. ocean· 2 Ull S28s:J 644-0ti78 1 Br. 1 ba, frplc, ~l the Ba, deck._ ~ar~ cµ~s: drps, ~~~~·~l~~er l~~~o~c:·;111~ " ' ' GR HD OPENING beach Gara~c Gas & no Pl'b. $31!5 645-36.t;.'i 4 DORM & FAM HM 4 Br Duple:<. St•<•::.hnr<' & S2SO. LarE:e 2 br, tlcan. BIL 5400; 1 DI< ~50 A water' pd S22S' mo N 1 . . . C'<>Si. Wl· tak1• llll' ha;.:-.11-red hill...:: .. 552·7500 bilt-in kitchen, lg~. &u~· 4Sth St. Yc.;rly h•Jsl' punf1t~ Y.atl'r, luls 11 _Man.hall Rily _67!H600 THE BAY LEAF pets. 846.!ioss o r !f00:23~ 2 Hr. :1tJull~. no pets, $200. uul or ti11d111i.: a ~11111! deckw/oceanv1ew·S4 CallS4&5684. ld~n. l Q\'('rt•ri ~ara.:c~':)l7' Lll d A. 1 N , !Bdrm S2 orseemgr apt9 42816th 2.121E.16thSt,N.Jlgts. {·omputiblt' roommalt. mo. o t r :-tr••cl IJarkrn i: L•,~: 1 P • vai • ow Bd w Pd S2 St ' 6461801 S1.'r v111g pt•oi1lc :.in<'t! ----------i OCEAN SIDE OF IIW ,\dulh, nu pt'l:.. 200! .... ., · . 2 rm :Iler ~ . l'l71. AT VICTORIA BEACH .. Very ~pJl'1ous 41lk ..,. Fullt•rlon ,\, c 11 blk E . ol Mam Renta~. 540 5370 Beautiful, s pacious Ut! 1 & 2 Bdrm llcal'l1/l'ool EASTBLUFl" lgc 1 Ur up T2errbaa,cuep~orwnadehdomcpet'. 2X~1r11' p . t th I d' Den. I' ark• be al' h & N 'W""rl Av l blk So ol I b apls. l'ool, P' t p.;tms. Apts. $1"''/up. A·'ults, no per. fpk. 1 rfnl!. l'J.>ts, (;ounty Wide Scrvic•• ., 1 nva e pa way ca in waler view. S600 vrl' l .. ~ c, · S375. Yr Y 2 r. :! bo.i. 2 Ad11lts,nope1~ ;>ti u "' S27S 614 6880 Roommate Fi-..1-rs toe. $315. 833·8481l, to beach. 1st Quahty lease. " ' Hay1.t;12.S\9<J !llory 2 l'ar ~net. ~ar '"'"A d c ~·r pets. 219 15th St & 220 ,.rps. mo. · f1V'C' IW-1972 BDRM. CEDAR IJOME. -----Ualc~ny.642·1603 ~ ~~-~j ·"' 12l.hSt. ~:::'i _______ 1 731-2961 ----------• :P.12 Baths. 2 l ge .. Best West Bayfronr ----------c !•--------- •LEASES * (some for 6 mos.) 2 BR, ram rm ........ $375 3-4 BR. Cam. rm .•••• $410 2 BR, deo, din rm • • $425 3 BR, 2 ba ••••• , ••••• $425 3 BR, din r m •••••••• ~35 3 BR, den, FR • , .... $450 38R,dinrm ••••••• S4SO 3 BR, din. rm ....... S475 3 BR, fam rm ....... S490 3BR,l''R, OR •••••• ss.15 3BR,FR,DR •••••• 552-70~0 THE ·,. ·:. · · VILLAGE. · ·.: REALTORS fireplaces. All bilt-1 location r''SOr' boal<lock J RR 1-'\Jrn :)19 Coron~del Mar-38£2 2 Br 11<. BI Twnhse l>r Lgc 2 l>r, 2 l>a. Garage & WATERFRONT kitchen. Stained glab. Sl250 yr Y {urn or un Lois of hllns. p<w>I, Y.alk ••••••••••••••••••••••• fplc. g~. l~e patio, adlts. yard. Brookhurs t & NEW 2 br & 2 br +den Hoommate for 2 Ur hou~·· windows. Must have ex furn) lO :.hoppini: .. '::ma bcac·h no pets. si7s. 2447 Eide llam1lton art'a. A,·all luxury apls . & vard. COM $137.5n cell. references. s750 Mo. Wattrfront Homes 931 \V.19th :st. .\ ,.e . 979_1658; Ev 10/15. 846-0088or968-Z743 •Bwltins Fem. only 21-29. 640·142\i 3 BDR~1 OUTSTAN 6 3 1 1400 5 18·0492 ~ .,._ · , .• 6.7027 •TrashCompador --" " ' · J .. "" -iBR. New carpel. d ral){'s. •Wet bar Gora<jes for Rent 4 350 DING OCEAN VIEW. 'ft t ~t"_C_s_ Adult living JO bpac. nl'W-paint. Cloi.e to :-.rhools & •f'lreplat•t• ..................... .. VLievr.y rlmge. w&lf!rp~·~·',~~es. Lido Isle· 2 bdrm. & den . OCC .!>f)cl'in I. S95. Uta I µ.. ~ -· ·-ly redec. 3 br '2 b · shoppinj!. Builtins plus •Private beal'11 l car gar:lRes nrnr • "' ~ . ' . • ' paid. F1•1• ' .. refng. Call 6·16·~125 aft •Pl • · •l I nl'o · n~ h & Ell' I I I' well d eslr.t ncd tum . ba.SSS0.2Udrm.,2ha , MainHl'lllll' ::i-IH·!>J7ll l'ORONADF:LMJ\H townhsl' w /pat10 ~ c:..1s:ass et1l'.JJ 1 s ..,.,ac 1:;, ~. home. $450 Mo. bayfronl 1·ondo, SlOOO. _ ' · ·~ 2 Hr Townhou:-ol'. rr1,k garage. $300. No J)cli. 5pm __ __ _ •Smoke detl'dors $25 m o. 817·2622 BDuu & '-'A•t RM Ag t'"" 1< ·• , . 045-3381 on 1;n !1517 •Slips a\·a1L lo tc•n,111\s 4 "'''· r n. ., en.,..;:,. :>th 1 BH furn. l'rt'f m.cl un • lool. lenm~. l'ontmcntul __ Sl9S. ul1I p1I I llr old1·r !ll9lla\,illt•Ur ti?J·lllll S111i:ll' gar3t;l', :>40. mn BATHS. Lgc. hv. rm. OLUFF'S-l·I • .• 1 3 llH ., '\111·h1fcl1t•11111 pch.1.\llo!) hn•akfo!>l. !')t)mc ot•eun & 3Br. <l<'ll. i Crph.', beam duplex. )anl: !H·a~ IJch - -----L'o:.t.1. .M<!sa . 7.H \\'l''l beam ce1hn.:s. f 1rcplaC(' C\I • -a,,I" )II IX t'J!ahna \ ll'\\.. l"lo.w to c ,. ii In.: b s 3 s 0 Ill 0 N (I <I oi:.. S.lh gs.19 Ill tilth St 673·77117 2 cargarage.SSSOMo. ba.,1fc,v.,e,I)\' ,.:.~~1'c1n111'~1'.11t & ~· ,h111.>1.11ng & l1m· hl'J<'h &12 09H ur 751 9255 ::!13_·3!.16 571:! j COMMERCIAL STORE -~IO ·""""' / g '' · · I llfl malun· .ulull uni~ -Office Rental 4400 11roff1ce rental. Separate HAR 0 ·r 11 L• 1 N u :>l:!.j :\lo11th t,.J4.zt;U 18 d '·I Nt•ar t>eu rh. l:11 gl' untls :1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r r, l'ph, rps, u tns, r u d bldg. & rest rm .. at Easlbluff f·''<l'l' home ,.\.:t·nl 8:J3 :m11 patio. $205. E ·stdc. ~r. :!'I• na, '!-' • ~I rno :! P1eadilly <.:1rcus . S160 b 2b. r.' Sof **" ON BEGONIA 1m &12·6213 Br, 2 Ba, S250 mo Mo ~LEC & W \TEH 4 r, a, am rm. 1 1 Hr furn, roomy. <1uiet maculate, charming 2 ----- --96J·8!>Hll PAi'o . .. ' '"a.ter. New crpts . drps. pool, udull~. no pttts $200 bet.I room apart rtlt·nt CASA VICTORIA ---- Mls.SIO .... REALTY paint. Walk t~ schooli., ut1l pd, ~ar. ;J83 W. Corner lot No pl'ts or 1&2Br,Deluxc Unfur. Sli5, 2 br, vool, garagl' rt shops , t ennis rlub Wi lbon 5-ta-768!1 "'"· / pd ltidl!ok. Fw WESTCLIH BLDG. NEWPORT BEACH lotnut V.1•\hhff 011~0 i1mJ h•1th• A'lfe tl8SS.Coast,Lagun.& $775/mo. Lse. Refs. l'h1ldren.S350monthly nrrurn.gas wtr . MainRentals,5405370 Greent ree Homes. Btfl Phone49 .... 073 l 640.677Sor645·22AO STUNNING l Br ~;mll'n COLEOFHEWPORT Adult.s-NopetsSecgate ---- 2br , country ktchn, frpJc, --ap\. Pool, r ec area. $21~ REALTORS Pool. rec rm, elevators DELUXE 2 Br, 2 lull lndscpd,nrpools,park Panoramic ocean view.Beauuful Carml'I model. 710W.J8thSt.CM 675-551 1 SZSVictona,642-8970 baths, enclos ed i.:ar, Executive Rentol • scbl.$37S/mo.SS1·2776. oew exec 3 br, 2'h ba, 2 3Br+Fam. rm in Harbor -• --------Bachelor 8 l unfuro lndry rac, ... uper location Service 1 frplcs. $650. 499-2807. Vu Ho m es • W ~· 11 Hunt1nqton Beach 37 40 2 l>r. l hu Jpt, South of Mature & ui~t Adults only n(f IJ"'b · sz;;, 1 lnm~i;. l'ondo'. a 11ts. Lease/Option, attrac.· landscaped w/pat1<1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• hwy. Adults . 110 pets. . .q & up. 84i·2tii!l or 121:11 trnm $1!00/~lu. Call Mr. Howard 645-6101 HR, 2 Ba home. Priv. Home, ~cean & canyon SS7S. Ph 640·4829 •Bach w/sho wer. Nr. rnl $300 mo. Call 642 5!153 Martuuque ~pts #2 592 5402 This W eek Special yard, air, comm.pool vu, pra v~t e._Ls yrtl . . , -;--It-I:~ Ut1l µd. $125. l)ng! wt.dys, ti73 ·3!lll3 or 27SE 18thSt.CM. . 111\fWOHVIEWllO\rn •lMOFREE RE~T • tennis. $385. mo. 833·1828 deck, bu1 It-ins. 3 !lr. 3 BR. R,.1-.J\SON~ H! .I-. ok. No pets 1133·8!174 1>4S·9399eves & wknd::. 6 3 1-3003 2 Ur. ) ard. S210. Kids & Palrrmo 11 lfr. 3 ba. frplr , 1·2-3 Rm. office:. from -----------i hurdwood floors. tJ!I UPP~RBAVVl ... W ----------sni:ls ok. &-achcombt·r . Sl2S p1:r mo AdJ. WOODBRfDGE ne Robert Mance. 752-6071 VACANT.640·5560 LOCJ11no8e ach 3748 SUPERSIM~LES \tlult2brtowohou:.t'. p , Fee S IS 63 1·201 I pool.edbana.S700 '"" A1rpurter llotl'I N0 Je;1w country twnhse 2 Br or494-3647 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RENTAL t>alh. patio. f?J ra )!t!, S47·2501or8i9·10fJO 673·7 6 01 re<.1.83J·J22JT1lnoon Bu,112961sq fl,tclu~pkm·3b ra 2b ---SanCle~nte 3276 naeh Near beach Utll J llr,2 Bd ,w1:-pcct11t'ulo1 dshwhr,644·0878 WAL"'l't>ll.1-:,\t'll 1.11x10f:l.UXE ~l11 i!bJ, 6o•PERS n -fT Jnc • c ose 0 a e , r, m.rm , a.Ot:••an o•••••••••••••••••••••• pd.$19S ·$22Smo:SG5wk. C & b frpk lo\•a m s. p .cl111 T swim/sail. $525. 551-0345, vu., lge yrd., frplc., 11u New Jbr l'ondo. rotJJ, Jae, 1435 N. Csl. 49 1 2508 'icw 0 ot'can ll) WHY HOT? 2 br. l ha, down. GM.I.I:<' clc·t•k \ 1 ..... i\illt.s .... ,.~,, 1617 WESTCLI PF~ H 213·546-1642 q>ls .• drps ... $\SO. he. Lennis ~/mo More lhun ll!OO sq II.. Sunken Ii\ in~ room s:!M 1146-00118 ;,:11; 1;;1111 '.. """' AGT. 54 t-:>032 ---------1 494·0174 eves. ' Ocean view $225. Ut1l pd huge i>alio. hardwood <.:athedral ccilin~ ti?S n.'I.';~ ----- 3 Br, 2 ba, frple, range, Lux 3br. wh1lcwater Sin~les ok.Fee firs. bcumed ccilinl(s, l!bedrooms.J\~buth.; AT THEBEACH Wt''llC'l1tl ~hr , :!''.J ba DELUXE OFFICES d /washer. Nr shops 2 Br lge fncd yard in \•iew, bch at·cess condo. Mam Rentals, 540·5370 wa I k to be a c h. Mr Attached garaiic I br. patio. end. g.1rai;1• Lown house. BJ m e;, tl/w' Comm I & indsll sput t'"• schools. $395. SS!M874. Laguna Cyn, $32S mo. Jst $500/ A h g I M 00 r e 61 3 -7 69 2 u r Washer/drver hook u1• :Jl9 J5th St. !l36·3'.!.t l 111 pvt pal10.~. /\-'It~.· 1111ly , 110 ""''to 2000 sq. ft. As '""' ----------t & last. -497·2292 mo. nc ora e n· Newport Beoch 37 69 W7·6341 ·" SJG-1718 ~ " ~ ~ WoodbridgeTwnhme 3 B vestments,496·7711. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----___ Pvtyardw1thpat111 _ ___ pl'l!>. li28 Bt•illord l,11 .1sJOCsq.ft.Lai;:N1~uel& 2 Ba, A/C, upgrades. Loguna Hills 325 L 2b t b I Re I l BR .... $3!0. mo>, Adults, $350. mo. ~Br. 2 ba. patio, gara,::C'. S32S mo. A' uil Nov 15 l\lisi;ion Vic Jo a rC'a~. lake &pool priv 640.8542 •••••••••••••••••••••• New 2 Br, 3ba 'fownhse. g r ap nr. c '· s 1 BR S280 m•> FOXHOLLOW S280. '"l·'.'l~ lo beach. 548·7533. Handy lo S. D. F"r111. '· -------· ---1 • Ocean \ ICW. Cpls/d~. ..1rea. Wrnter $32S-S3SO. .... . VlLLAG t; '-v". Call 831-1400 \) · Pk Viii I Redec. 3 br, 2 ba, cpts bltins After 5 ~a ll Incl. util, J:ar & laundr~ ~\ces~d~~li~~e~~~·'~:.'!i~ fill W. W1l!\On, C.M. 84~Hl088or 5~·4508 ARCHITECT des1g11 r:o;tm --------- •nto1vry' tnho.me 3barge2•L'b·i drpls,.,!J>5 1 1c, DW,,..;.3 n;,,~ 830·"".,,; facal. 962 0505, 1115 W, "12 991 642 4226 ( d I 1 Jllr 21Ja FOR LEASE " ' • .,... • · area. -N• mo • .,., -4...... <-1'u ----Balboa 111 Seavil'W Ln. Arthur, "' ·4. · or ·---NEii.ft Oct.'nn 2 Ar 2 Hn. , 111, P x u~i s.. : · furn rm, fprlc & s undeck Agt. No fee. Condo • 2 Ur. 2 BJ. 2 (•or • GiS-7660 art. 7pm. fplc newly painted .v.i ~ 31th SI. h73 7hlM 111 3 OFFICES xtra clean. l mmcd oc-1 •f , .. ., .. , 1 , • ll . Ir .• - - - --SISO. 1 brN. pool,,l acluJI suJ)l.:r clt.>an. Gar. avail li7~U!M:I $1 55MOEACH cpy. 552-0736 or 5S2 944 Loguna Miguel 3252 garaRe. ~ ~ r~ .ng, .....,.i ·~~ 2 r near . ·1 ~ "' 2 Dr 2 Ba UJ)!,ta1r-. apt, on over 2~· 0 pct~. 325 • Nov 7, S.300 8'11i OKl4 s-C l•ment• ---Fine COSTA M ESJ\ Loe: •t 0 mo.492·296-cvcs heach. Pool. Avail. now A"aci·a S iifllw\• Likn J7lhPlaee.aftllam. -· '" .. 3876 "r. unn ••••••••••••••••••••••• toJune30 675·11141 ' · · •· < 3844 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 752-1700 •••MONARCH UAY SanJuon - ---· -----new, :-.love. rcfrt).!, 2 <'Hr 1::1\STSIDE 1 Rr: ncwl l"fneo CHARMING 3 Rr up Vil.LA. Very plu.,h, ~ C-Jitrono 3 2 78 Balboa Hay <.:lub 2br. 2ba ~.ir, "Ir,~;,,. m t'I. ~o redec, yard, $225. 546 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ClorJ.(eous WhitewMrr \.u ~raded lwnhme-(Walnut BR, 2'1 BA, J850 :-.q . fl.••••:?:•••••••••••••••• terrace apt. A\•a11. 10 lS. c·h1ldren or p~b. S.115. 4253 1·492-3710 1.)!c 213r <"nmplr tPly rt' !\I ml SQ> park & pool $345 U r 675 92W __ . ___ Rancho Son 1kr, Adults . S2t1i 245 ; 642 9799 . Panoramic ocean 'icw. Zbr condo. P ool. patio, SI 100. mQ. n um. $575. • . --------~ Joaquin Aph W c s t M a r l.l u It n . . ' . J..case $700. lndry drps crvts gar 2J3,!J63 76111 ,213/335·3646 Costa Mesa l 8 24 EAST SIUE l & 2 Ur. hlu Renting from $260. '192 """7/416 5300 10 ..... D RE ... LTY ' ' • · ' -new Frorn S200 Adult """ Gree n Belt Jorati~n . * " "' * $240/n;to· Xtra nice. Beat·hfrontl brapt.SIOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• nop~lS.l30E.20th Sl. Adultapts. Leas ing pr<'· --------INVESTMENT orvrsroN Comm pool/p~rk. 4251 83HM11 Evc83t·p12 493-3406. No pets. Mature only LARGE211DRM 646·0505 view now is a prestige 2 Bdrm S22S mo. l Bdrm -----Vale.4Bdrm,2 ~ba.fam tBr2Ba lgeyard S..125 2 Sant0Ar10 3280 67S·J82,J Adulb-No pl'tS·SllO 787 Irvine community, ":/ucd• & \ICW $250 U!\YFRO~TOffic_e Uld i:. rm. Immed occupancy Bra Ba 'E Nine 'Nr golf ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---W. Wil son 110.642·0835or EAST SIDE Fabulou Twenty Pergola. Culver C:asy acc~~s to beach. SpuccAvall. lleas. $47S. PhSS1·3400 coorse $375 497.2370 2 B llli Ha Condo bltns Park Newport, 1 br, $4~ 524·8640X306 huge 2 Br, balconi.<'s & SandburJ:, 2 blocks so . .£311492·2891.. 675·8141 __ _ • • ---r • · • Sub 1-.t•. t.>qpd., tennis, beams. storage, hk of San Diego Frwy. Santo Ana 38 8 0 JRVINE-7 room offi< ,! RENTALS 2Br Condo+ lanai room. pool & sauna. Adults on· i.pa 640·0249, 644-508.1. 2hr. :.idlls, west~1dc &pt new, $300. adults only n 559-UOO •••••••••••••••••••• ••• :-.uitt> w /conferenl'c' rm. Sini:le 1-'amtly Home~ Ocean & llrbr vu Puc _!y. $270. S56·6290 ----$2 tO. 518 9500 afl<'r 5 OO pets. 646-0505 Jdeal for accl'ountant .... 3 flR, 2 Ra ........... $38. Island Villal(l'. Ad Its. Westminst.r 3298 W~nt ad re:;~!ts fj42·S67H l'M wkdays . Anytime 2 nr 2 Ba TwnhsE', pool & L 0 B d co11lructor$ $750 11111 . :1 BH,2Ha ........... $.'\9 S38S.S40·lM4 &S•lll·2li73 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wrl'ke~~---_ rec facil. patio, avail orge n~ e room 9711.3560 3 llK,2 Hu ... · ........ $42 ---3 fl f Nea Apartments ., ll ll , 11 t~ rlr 1• 11 /l/76. 752·10!13____ lltntt1n.;, inclutlin1t dis ------:Jlm,2n(l ........... $I J Br 21-.r bn townhonw r . ilm rm. • r U tum' h d " rco o~c. <' ' • I); h 3848 hwaslwr.S20Spermonlh.1----------3llR. 2 Ba ........... ~ Co~m pool Nr bch & );t'hOOIS. Lrl( rned yd $:1711 n IS e !11111\'C. Kills ol<. No pct!! LOCJl'"CI a.oc F1rsl 1:111rl 111>'1. /\~l'llt ~ 150 Month nR R .,. mo. <.:all 831! ISS8. •••••••••••••• ••••• • ••• $225 fi45·~7H ••••••••••••••••••••••• "•o 0555 • 4 u • 2 o ..... • .. •• fwy. Lensc Option SI-.. -.-• --Cifftffal 3802 .,... New llmall orricci. n1·:ir 4 BR, 21" ll.i ..... · ... $-l!ll mo. Vacant, 11u1 c k uc Condom1n1ums ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lantl' i br, 2 ba. s:!l5. Jn ~~~e es~~[:"~~f f b~~I~• -----·-·------• Un:.lol & Nt·w1><>rt 111,11 "BR, 2~~~~h~r;;t:;··~ cupancy. 495 ~!I._ -Uttfurnishe d l 4 2 S 1 ch1ht ok ht·r~ut Trr1•lonl' fnnt, ~ml P<'l ok. L~c l hr from m am bcb. No South LCICJU"a 3886 Roy McCordle 2 n R289 ~ MissionVie 'ao 3261······················· T<1WOhllUbC Apls, Only ~1!W .. 111funt,s mlpetok It.ti children $300 mo.······················· R..itorl810Mewporf u • "· • •' • • • • ·' •••••••••••••••••••••••Tustin 2 Br. 2 Ba. <'ondo, Sl9S. lo move 111• ''The ~2 ~·12 PtMECRl!im. 497·3232. Lgc, qul1•t, luxuriou11 <.'X· 2 DR, 2 Ba ........... s-1 I t l>lt I Ur 2 b 2 b Costa MHa 548-7729 2BR,2Ba ........... S.I NewCordova3Br,2bn,lrg ~· l'n.ms, ns, sc l!rcst1a:i1ous community". BAVMEAOOWAPTS UVIS Bach.all ut11.Klds&cat cc .. r, a :lllt.1---------- 2 RR, 2 83 ........... SS walled ) ci, ~real VIL $..125 54G·fi745 ~l' "~Ir furmshed modr.I. 1&2 br, gar, pool. Gas & TO ITS NAME olt. S218. lie9chcombcr, Elevator lo &cenic priv. --------- 3 BR, 2~ Ha ......... $4 Patios. cul·do·1oc. $200 3 Br. nr pool & llreenbclt, Spnt· wus 1100 sq. r.t. water. pd. No kids, no fee SIS. 631.2011: 547_2501 ~~·1 ~~~Y ~e~:~ ~~~; 150 I We1fcHff Dr. 3 BR, 2~ Bo ......... $4 Oct. Specin l $37!!/m o new paml & wallpaper. lownhou-.e apts n<>sllcrl pets. from $220. 646 0073 or 879•1060 or wknd retreat for th~ Newport Fln;1nclnl Ctr 3 BR, 2 Ba ...... ••• .. there a fl er. 0 w n er S360 752-03().1 In wlrle open spaces of I LeositMJ OHie• Space 3 BR, a Ba........... 768-3487. . grecnc•ry. 1111 2 br, 1'.lt ba LOFT BDRM An rreale a relaxing setU LOIJIMO Hiil~ 3850 adventurous adu t. $515. S M 4 BR, 2 Bo ........... s-n. At•aut. d<>r. quiet adult w Ith I.Cc P ri v n t e • rm mediate on·upancy. tor }Our spacious new 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. yrly. lse 499·2835 ~~:!~'42~;~ 11 !~:~~ 49R,2~Ba ......... $19 twwportleach 3269 <.:ondo.1nTut1Un.Walkto enclosed pa!los. N~wly l'vt patio. rrpl<·, full or 2 bedroom apart SUPERSHARP3BrCon-• ----* * * • * ....................... i;hop'g, center, 3 BR. 2 palnled & c\'ery luxury kitchens. llool & rec. ments. From $240. do Panoramic View Apcalntenh h"'11hed Corona Del Mar, ncwh Newport Beach Npt Hts/view 3 br, 2 ba, Ba, J\/C. nr fo)'wy, l sty. brand new Cpt~., drps, room. l yrl~e ~'urnlttarc uval!able. P~I. $365 mo. 830"894~ orUniurrtlshed 3900 decorated otficcs. Twn 2 BR a Ba f1un •••• S62 den. New paint, cpt. $465. SJ;,O, Wlr incl. 547·1450 ranl(cs. :ur cond1t1oning, HAYLOFT APTS Smull pets OK. /\dulls / k d!;. 834_3550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• with own buthrm t'Ui.\ ' ' 1144.3545 or 557-8968 aft. 4pn1. vinyl floor" 20 minutell only. Of fie~ open 11:00 t ~~:505~ r~r M~. Horn. THI!: BXCITJNfi outside acceiis. $\J2.5o In ----frl)m J\naht!lln o n 2113/\\(l('IHlll,('.M. U:OO. 2300 !o"alrVjcW Rd . .q. ---PALMMESAAPTS. clulll.675·~44 TIIEBLUFFSllcuut.entlsc: Sh11r1•1•l1ff V11l:i !!. fhvt't!i1dl'Frwyt0Gnnl1 ~1nnFri511m111 7prn Cos ta Mes a . Phon Newportleoch 3869 MrNUTF.S'fONPT --------- unit, 3 Dr & <kn, 3 lls, hranil nu ~ 3llll .. 21fa. offr9mp 285 South Sal&Sun Ill I 54S-2300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DCll. 21600Sqn.Attract1vcly (h• open beam cellngs, fplr, <lbk >?JI • r,1mrm. "'" \'m •nlla .. 1pl 2. CoronA M~·OJ4:1 -cor. Near oirport. Ca ll pal.lo, BBQ. pool,outo Pool. cubic T . nr heh. ll 17M-~1 It --------3 !Jr. Beaut. adult <'om· WATERFRONT dplx •. 3 Uach, l&2 AH. David Elliott, 833 9520 ,;1ropnr , 2100 i.q rt, avail 497 2:117 till. Jpm Qr Lo\'l'h 2 br. crpt, drps, plex. Pool, gas &. w•lcr Dr. tree boatdot'k + ut1I rrom Sl95. Nov. 1, Lsc, $700 mo wkcnds. Jtllf. no p1·t~. On•r 40. pd, End. garagt!, $3!!0. P0rtly furn, W/D. Adulls.NoPt'ts CORONADELMl\fl ~e!;!!:r!<tsdys, 640·2039 ownhouse WATERFRONT :;:~i.i260 1~la t·<'ntla 642·5073 ~:~1{61~~G9~ntr por (SBl~i:!~~1~:~port ~is;\?~~67~~.»mplt Unfumlshed 3525 2 BDRM, bltns, rnnge & -2 Br. Beaut. ntlnlt t'Qm• Blvd.) •---------DO ISLE1 3 Br 3 Ba,••••••••••••••••••••••• ov~n. rf'frl.-i .• frplc.,STUNNfNGLge2B1·2 ua plcx. Pool, Ftas &water '111'1.A,AIUSl ... ME* M6·9860 den, 2 fplc s, U!ed brick nR. new t'arpet, drapes, ws hr/dryt•r, new crpt. anrd«m apt. Pool, rec pd. Encl. aa.ragc. $250. 2 Bodroom untum. $240. OPEN DAILY patlo, $725 mo. Yrly Lse. paint. Clos<' to schools & ioa. lrg polio deck. pier & aru. $2'5. 710 W. 18th St . 64.2·5073 All electric. Fireplace. ROOIM 4000 I A.Ill. TO& P.M. 675-7"'""' d k I I··' d f CM HcJ!Wd """'I. Adulu, no ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------:-;..:.:.::...:.:-=-------! shop' it. 81 t ns. pl us oc: nc a.,;,e or your ----------,...~ R ancbo San Joaquln. refng.11.8. 646.5125 own boat. up to 25 '. W t s ·d 1 •. A 1 d . . 2 br, 1 bai E·slde pcts.97!M2G8or64s.t2GO ROOMS $25. wk up with ewport Shores, Sharp 2 $565/mo e5 1 e ur, n"w Y e Triplex, enc • gar, Acl'Ol'tsfromaolf<'oursc kitchen. $37.SO wk up Beaut.new 3 br,Z\.tb• BR+ den frplc .DuplexnUnflim 3600 ' <'Orated w/cpts .. drt>L balcony, near new. 2<M32SantaAnaAvtt aJ)IJl.5'8·9755or645-3%'7 TOP LOCA. TIONS Harbor area's best. JOO To l.OOOsq n. From~ REA.LONOM ICS. Corp. Bl"Qkers 675.e100 OFFICE S PACE Professional Arts Blda. tFnba,o on taoblf co'!!'se,. Designed for p~Uo liv101. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BDRM. 2 ba, bltn1, dshwllhr & rangi: View & rp c, we ar ... os Nr beach pool ·tennis 11 be h s.oo ocean brec-1.l.'11 $200 Ul.lla----------•Newport Shorn. llh blk S2S per week, l hlk fr popular plan. $650, mo. -·rt ••75° 1 ' A 11 gts 2 Br, beam near ac • Jmo. ...t, No p"lS S48·56fAI bet 0 tir c:pts drn• BJ•·· oce .. n. Sup•r loc. 2br •· hC'at•h. HB. Call Mark at 494·7292 644·5403; 640·7988 or .. ._ • " · yr Y· va · cc•I~~. puuo, aar, no 1"'' '" " • • ...... ., • .,, .. ' "' •• 1 ,....,. !'!.~~~ .... t. SU-1104 or pets S2m 61~ 1~2 2 non M & den plui-&6pm orSS2·9723 nft 6. 3225. K1dsok 3br dupt,.x apts. Ownf'r, 000-2626or leave m111. l.ARGE Furn office 1p .,. .._ ---OCUN Vll~W $32!i Nt•" 2 br.11'• bnth.1111rdan 645 2978 m4>B70·92G3 -La.auna Hills Condo kllrh prox S2S t1qft. Lobby, :i ll'AM ED OCCUPANCY p--•n Pt 3 "R din-rm JACOIS RlALTY r ou n l\dult:i, no neta 1 br, W"" l•e, nartly rurn. Yrly, l\te-' Lo bch. mod & nov•I priv. $135° frm. pY\ offices & IJll' :slora11.• poulble Highly up d~ . o • . .. ts Furnished L7S LL10 s:m 642-1603 ... c'lt "n,, G 2'b oo 'I tud'tp t 76&-i800 mom. Bay l.lclo Bld11 . adcd 2 B Sa Ca I . t!n. 2 Crpl $850 Moll~•. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ·•• . a .. ~ .. :~ .... pm. upper r. em cea . :-i en re.. -Ste 301.A. CAii GTS·~ ot fian 11t R8!cho ~on Jo~ A.ierttG73-9000 lalboa Isl.ct 3706 -------~~~N.w 3 br, 2 ba. drtoche<t .,.., """"' ~ .. ~;1:,r. opcra_tor. Gwst HCMM 4 I 501_1ec_~...,;'1&-.r_. ----- quln twnhma. Qul•l toe Br, 2 ba duplexes. S42S & ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEED A RENT AL• front house of ~ rlelC , br, 2 ba, encl p111t10, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Only $449. !Asa thun 1 yr "50 per mo. yrly. Ocean ttlc rutie' SJ 65 Utll pd Wehavetbeml H IMrm S38S. mo Dnvc by JST sara1e. frplc, no rota Clean & classy 1 b rvt rma, lovlna care, SELL Idle Items with rt lae pos•. Agt. 7"'°1'14, vlew, walk to bUcb. Rc-111~y 0<1w 1 Y.'t•f", Kldl..lpeta,slnalcsok. MontcVl11tn. $325. mo. Cull :afl a, w/balcon,y. Yrlyloaso. balane d diets, tovcl.J DaUy PUotCJ.asallledAd, ask for Laulo Shark nay. 6U-¥S() Aaent M nln Rentals. MO·S370 NEW t:RA lee 638·8300 Call 6'13·1181. 875--3577. $300/rno. 873.()89'1 paUo/ardna MC.all 642-5678. .. 8J 8 DAtL Y PILOT Monday. October 11 1976 Add lt...Bulld 11 •.• Diaper it ... Hammer it ... Carpet it...Cement it... Wire 1t ... Hoe it...Clean 1t. .. Move it...Prcss it ... Pamt 1t...Nail it...Plaster it ... Fix it .. SERVICE • DIRECTORY Plumb ate t... pc emode 1 ••• Roof it. .. Landscape 1t. .. Tlle 1t...Tr im lt ... Sew it... Haul it •.. Add it .. Plant 1 ... Alter it. .. Learn it... ~~·~~ ......... ~~~!~ ............. ~~ ............ ~~~ ............. !!~!~~ ................ ~~!~~ ......... ~~~.~~~~~!':t .... ~~~~~~~!.~~~! ..... ~~~~~~4!'~ ....... . Adc.litions remudeb', rc.i'> MINOR llOM 1-; REPAIR L.t:;t: M JAH\'IS Exprd lluw1uan ~ardent'r. Jluululg/mov1n~. clt.."cioup \\'am,·• H Jo: ~Ll.Y,Cl.fo. \!I. l'u1nt Rcpuar 3S ~ ri. 1n •CUSTOM l'AINTl~li,. VF.RY.NEAT PATCI.' pricina . i.u~1 ~11ir l'a1J>(:ntry. Plumb1n1i1 Add1llon:1&Rt'moc1l'11n, Ydcleanups.tr1mming. S7up 1'recwork Hr~ llOlM:;> Lall G111~hi1m lrl.'ll, workm,1n~h1p Let:.tulk~1bou1 our JO~&TEXTURE. wurkmen~h•I': •n~ b(J C't•ram1rTilt'SdOMUO 962SS73 Llc3l7 prunina. LL llaul 'g t;.i11t fr~t-il8J2·4597 Gari Flcl'C.,l1>.t.1!>·5123 guur Takcadnmt ul 111) nel'd:.. B1ucc 546 0720 l-'recl-.:&t 8931.a. day romp I II~ • 3 I H45 00-008'7 • e~~r • 3tl 706tl ev .. 7506351f CJrpentry Fr,1m1n ~ & ••GeoraePllml'r&Son» -YOUllAV£lTHEl\l>Y Maintfltance " -.:..__ "9 .a......u -fo'1 n1:.h Add1llon:., Add)SrRmdl Purnt'Plall)SShac.lt-s or Green Yard J'l.l.llAULl'fA~t\Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'toh.':.i.1onalPainkr. •P111nlin~ l'u1Jl.'rin1t*' •••••••••••••••••••••• ~~one• Repair Rcmodcll>. <.:ummuc1.tl l:H·109600 SS7 6932 (,'.arc Huy11 I Ser\ I('('. 'l'IM 548-G:JOO c & T rlumhm..: & """'' lntri Exlenor l nll'Mlll & .. ;,h·1 aor 10 ••• ,,,, w/nd rlumblnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ph642 IS58 1-"'r' 6463315 l ~ G ~ Ll " . APPLIANCE lll-:Pi\IR _ _ _ _ ••ANOt;t<SON & A'>!>Ol' duw11 lo "Earth" 1-1r1ce:.• R.-"""VC ccmenl, a:.µhall 111~ Tup 11uuhl~ ~orl., 21 t'eei.um.ites · n.~urc 1 ~aru_11~1l·~ • c wtr syi;, lcakJS, bnthrc I' '' C t S I C I k & . li-W 94115 .. .,. hr 111•r\ u t• Nu Job ltK1111~ t'Xl'F.RT I'· t . I l & _22S39!1 Call ~ .. -~S:>H -encl Reas 832 2468 SlO -Serv1C·c<:all or,. et'V ce :1tm ir1t· stone dH'l, trcel>, etc Fr e:.l ur 100 1>1uull Wl• guua ·•. • ~an 1111:. n r , . _ -------- 171415·\9·4!422 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Work J'jl10 l'Ovl'rs. Wei.tlawn L'scnpc :.er. ij.a2-2624 L1c/insrd. ta 1 .11,.n tH:i ll:l:J\> t: x l 1 • 1' r l' o e i. I I uintlni.: • lnl. & 1'.xl. ----Shampoo & sle.im dean n.-dwooc.l deck:i. ~a.ctboi.. Cln up, hauling, reg 11" ""~ Workmun:;h1p ~u1.tr Cu:.l. 1>uintmG w/acr\•nl Rtmod.alrR•pelr leoutyS•rvices an~. \:nlor braGhtencr!o , 64().IH44 mulut. ·Fret1 c:.l. or Houucl•anl-Mas,_,.., 13420295 on n"utncss. 10 Yr:11.•xp. •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••• •• • • • • • •• • •• • • • • • • " .• ..,, -·-' ----1• r· ... "' t ~1· Id dd' I w l e u r I> l s . l O m 1. Orcrftl l'OUNiC 640·1880 nae hard ••• •••••••••••••• •• • ••• ••••• • ••• ••• ••••••••••• '"' ii ,. rel.' ... s • om Culllom l! rs. A . lt or Men. Lora h ;1 i. th :1 1 blea~.h. Clt1·lln hv rm, d1 ••••••!'!•••••••••••••• , ........ 11c,·o ,,_ Son• Fxpr llOUSECL 1·:1,\ N 1 N {; h F'rct• \'l't Slump~tnnt•, talt• ~avlrn! !~1rrlSCtay~~4•." J>ow\'11, H73·51~111 R(•mocM & Oeslgn. Frc personal touth tor your rm "' hul $15. AvK rm . '"'"" "' • "'. • ou a Uu1>llH'i.1o <' .1 I I bl11t·kwalli.. b111:k. plun ........ .,. .,., " 1 l:;st.6'16-4311/548·4323 huir.Celaqu11111L1•dnow. $750,couch t0,c·h;iir$5. R m ~dd1t 1 oni., n<:w s:urdcnt•r. Fr e~ts. re-Jani<'<":o;llaggcd' Ann:.. tcr:..Quuhtyworknara· 2·Sly$465/l nlr$45rm Palntlng/SCJft Spcc1;il orrc1 llct;ulur Guarcllmf)t!IOdor t:rpt homei;,,rt'nH1c.lel&n g , ui.onuble. 64641>5<\ aft !i75-655:l . :JI> prH'C!>. llc•b 7:;().:Jlal l'rices inl'lmlr'l/lahor ........................ T .. tvlslonRepolr $10. !tlyle for $7 00. w1Lh repair 15 )rs t•xpr D commer I. 2S yri. \!XI> 4pm - ---\'60·3953 Guar, in1>rd, free est. INTl-.lllOR & ••••••••n•••••••••••• .id rullLor1,Jo'ourW1ntls work myHll. Rel:. Rsn~l.:.!42._45:7 Gt'M'ralServices •llOUSf:C'Lt::A NIM;• 'r(.'<f636·7085or5520131 EXT!';H;~~1~1NTINU CANOl'YTVSVCCO. Ltd, 962·8960 !131 0101 -Roors ••••••••••••••••••••••• fly Hl'l1111.!leCoupll• Moving PL'TE•tS l'AIN1'1"'•', ------bl !<ate Service G··~·• r •I 1 ·r1r"· 5·11: 1111 •••••••••••••••••••••• c,,, '"~' C ...0.1---LI ••••••••••••• ••• ••• •••• ll cJ C t vvu t c ~ ~9 .,., F.•pr'cl rh •·. r"tcs free Patios at l"ulr Prices 960·1633 -tM-"9 1-'urn&CplCln'g IO)r:-in . . an y rnan ~rven r.Y. 1-'ncncil\ 'lmmi.: <.'n Ufi ~ ~ ...... ••••••••••••• •••••••••• hi.rbor Jrca Oct SP<-!eldl· l'rub & Wax K 11t•hen painting, 1ntl'rtOr rmdl &:· Unusl'<'ll·.amni.: & llu1ld1ng Cllml 1 ru:mlly i.cn I Cl' c1>t Call ~en<• 552 tHS8 1-f & I\' {;AB IN ETS i>avmgs 840 2135 Floor Sp er 1 al. Sl !I 95 repu1r, yd wrk 847 ·525't '1ainl. h·1 y H.1•<1~ onu l.o j)v:ii. 1 all'°' 1117 O'J'J::! ....................... y,.._ Service •Custom rat1oi.• Kitchen, bath, :.lorn At' --Call "Spurk lc ". 962-6011 ble 55!1· IS.'l2 Heas. Conlraetor:.Try" Dail y Pilot Cla:ls1f1ed Ads sell big Don't .:1,·c up the ~h1µ• "I.1st .. II Ill c•l,l!>Slfll•d Ship tu !>llu1'1: a esulll> 1 6-12 56711 Wood I' .11111 t'O\•<'rs •••••••••••••••••••••• Rt'<lwoorl O!'cb. I do my Rcmovah. lrimmlng I) w n w o r k Fr cc prunini;. fn·c est. I.ic'• welcome 5513074 & Clas1>1ficdAdtobuy,scl Find "h.•t you ~ant 1n items, :.mall it e ms or SELL idle 11l'm~ ~1th a 538-1641 !r rerll ~omethfog. Daily Pilot Clan1fleds. en) item 642·5678 Daily Pilot Cla~saried Ad '\Jl)VINC'> 1.••I :! t•xpr men mo' 1: 'ou. Hca, w refs l!li·fiH36 Esumale. Call~521:151!3 1-\ill!nnsu~. G-t2-262<l Office R.ntal 4400 lost & Found 5300 Hftp Wonted 7100 ~~!.~~·~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~:'.~t:.~ ••••• !!.~~ ~~.~.~.':.~ ..... !!~~ ~~~t~.~ ••••• !!.~~ ~!.~~t:.~ ••••• !!.~~ ~.~~ ..... !!~' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• F IBEHGLASS , Ol'c Rental an In inc In Loi.t . Gray Tii.:t·r Striped Answer• n I: Sc r \ I cc Beauty Operator Construction DEL TACO HEEOS Exper'd t'hOl>l'l'r Gun GLAZER, expe.r cl Apply dustnal arcJ. Phont• ca l , f> .. rl Pcri.1an Telephone <.>pr Uay P /Time. New operator Opr for non i.e.isonal 211 Los Mohnus , San LAMIHATORS Westsail Corp. sailbon manur. has l mmed vacancies fo r h a n . laminalors w /at least yr exper. We have opei: angs on the regular Mo thru Thurs shift of 7A~ LO S::IOPM + a part-tim sh1lt Fri thru Sun sam hour s . Apply to th secur ity gu urd, 27 McCormick Ave, Cost; ;mswenn1ti.erv1c<':l\a1I ".Sa:.h1". ~talc . Vic. shut. Exper'd only. 228 OK . 494.96().l & 9604485 COUHTERHELP shop. Many frin ge Clcmentc.492·619l Rent under Sl25. m o Placcnt1;i, nr fire sta. & F or est A\e Lu guna LagBch. SUPERINTENDENT Day~ Nl)(~l po:.1l1on:. benefits. 262l s. Birch, GUYS&G"LS 540-7714 i':'tlancaa Jl1 gh. Reward Beach. .1\ u1I Start.~ so hr App S.A ..., ~59215. Boot Assembly& COMMERCIAL ly, Del I uto, t720 --------Mission Viejo, t::I 'foro lndustrialRental 4500 ----. ASSEMBLER-TRAINI-:E ShippinqSupervsr SupC'rwr AH,<.: M FIGHTINFLATIOM arca.toworkafcwhours •••••••••••••••••••••••FOUND: F'emule Terner Trainee P . C. Bou rd 631 11131 Add extra money to lhr a day. i'vn Job. Earn $25 :'111SSION Vll'JO lll·lall max, l~n & gray, no Lail. Cables, & solderin~ 0 Mui.t have i.uperv1sory CONSTRUCTION fam1'ly budg"t. 1.u .. al to S50 per week. 1-'nr · • · • Vic Sunla Ana lll:s (.'A rpa l ·c· 9791021 expr. Al l Apply in • . • · r l h comm. or ind. Ill' Pl'r '<I 5-15 5807 . ._1_:_a~ a. . person. Sol Cal!>, 1932 E Dental \ l h d Amway distributor will more 111 orma iun pone rt. 548·o.520 or 58J.ti700. Pomona Sl. Santa i\na \meraca 's lcad111.: 111.! II l11nu. 'xl> :ay' ~ l' ... :,::.~. . truin. 673·4786. ijJO.Q'JlJ. -r ~ • Equal Opm·Lu111ly 2000 st ft Aero~~ from LOST l';it, d.Jrk brown. ASSEMBLERS n-lu1>cr of planrll'd Mm· Some Su ts. I I Il IMO 3MO 1·:rnployc1• O.C' ,~irt>drt. 2 ofrs, 1 b;i :.~.11:·~ h.aar m.1h•. Rc~;ird mun1t1es h.i:. Jll 1m ----- Balan<·e w.irt.·hou~c 2 11:<' 4.l.1.127.1. BOAT CARPENTERS mediatc opening fur a DENTAL ASST. FINANCE HOSTESS l d , 1 l\lin 6 mo's exper. an nny t:xpcr'd lligh pay~ 4 Construcl1on Supl•n1sor ··Ht• i:: 1 ~ t l' rt' <I ' e 'd 1. 1 l'O 1 up ours. 5 H1 1 llU I 5350 of the follo"1ng . PC As Du\• work week' Lois of 1n its non ""''1tlcnl1:.il SECRETARY r.XJ>er int inner iouscl~~~~~~~~~~ Ted lSrodentk ersona s . w nrthodon11,· l'XP<.'I work. Apply an person,•· Me:sa. 1.000' etc.in. !>Ct·un· Slorul(l' or light mfg S200 mun th 6·15 J:i 11 :t.IXlO sq It N(•W incl Fri·r :.pan l"m1sh for ,·ou. 7iti w. 17th 01 &1:1·0130 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s~mbly • Hurne~s. <.:on· Over l I m <' ' i\ P PI Y operations F tune 548 22\H 1 lfi4 s Coast JI w y , f..egul Secretary, Busy of• 32 F"'T WOME.... nec·tor or Solder. Color Wi•stsaal Corporation, lmmed1ute opcn1111: lor L· , na lleac·h in ll.R. General practice "" " t•odenotreq'd 1':xcellcnt 275 l\ltCorm1ck. Coslu Qualihedcand1datcs w1ll D c ntul /\=-~•~I ant . sec~ct.ary w /hcav) _ ill:U · 3 yr:.mfoimumexper re WANTED t·n. bent!f1b includci. I Mesa havl' 5 10 yrs o t l'X t>rthodonuc olt· ll DA stat1sl1l'~tl lyp1ni: & HOUSEKEEPER q 'd.!163·5657. 10 participate In revolu· wks vacation after ti l)t!ncnce m commercial Quahflt.<d. Xh11 working publH· cuntacl. Heal tionary new weight con-mo·s. 11 Paid holulays, ---construct 111 n w 1 l h cond. 6-14· 1281 estate t'1'J>(:r. helpful. Ex· Eng. s peak 'g · w /car A trol program. group in~urante i.tarl:. Bookkeeper/Re<'cpt1omsl. partkulur expoi.ure to -ccllenl co benefits. Cleaning, laundry, slurt LEG L SEC'Y •AtlatudeGwdence day of hire & manv Need ~lrong ofc peri>On· both new c·onstruction DentalChrsdAsst Call644-3389 dinner, transport ORANGECOUNT'f •Food Planning & nulri· more. . ncl w uect'g & EDP ex· and eommcrc1;.al rt:· Must have exper. Non !IA~l 'telNOON <'hildren. Mon thru Fri General practice at Business/Invest/ t1onal consultation. ,\pplv Per:.onnel per Salary open accord-modeling ~moker 64.1 0595 THE IRVIHE CO. I 5·30 pm. Refs. a mui.l Lorney desires perso1 Finance •Physical cond1t1oning DOCU. MENTOR 831 nf.21~~. ex pc r I e vel. 5:;() Newport Ctr Or ~o~~~c~ 064;::4~~ rar~ 1., ••••••••• ••• ••• •• •••• •• P Su . 10 In addition 10 ,1 lahci al Dt:·ntal office orppor~umly "N Be h w/cxper work for om • roper perv1s n <tarti'no • •lary ,~e nrr"r for re:.ource ul ... ( i..pcr • cwpart · al' pm man, 8 JO to 5:00 Bes For information t·all DIVISION BOOKKEEPINGCLERK " .. J... ' · h d t t 1-:qual Oppor £mployer --------1 equip. Xlnt bene{lts. CaJ Business Opportwilty SOOS .•••..................• •SCllOOI. Rl•ad1n~. ~kill. .,pt•cd. C'lt' l l'1l~la :'\11''J I •SCll lHll. 11 \ l Jr ~1 lhgh 1 \n:1h,•1m 1 •BOOKSTOHI-: •DR/\Pt-:HY \\'l\ll:\I •nn; l'Plll.<'1t•an1·r •FIJ H:-.llTl'HI-: Rd1n Contact /\gnt Sam Cr.inc l 7 M 16-15·4170 5 ltl IHiOll DRESS SI IOP For ~.1lt• Prime lurntaon 1'11 :U>tMI +inventory , 51!1 0.!2:J. &15·•1325 f:ST/\Bl.ISllED ,Jr. Wl•ur Store. Balb<w bl ~alt·., Sl00,000 + Rc11ly kox 755, Dully Pilot, P.0 .llox 1560. C M. 92626 BEERTAVERH NETS SISOO :'\IO ;\Jo-.1ly hdp run :\lh..,1on \'1t>Jo arc.J I lt'.1rt Mn1h llOll fnn't'' 'al1• t:oml terms ,\l!t 14.17 12t>tl COFFEE SHOP \.ros~ !.36.'>,1100. p 'r Plui.h & 1mmJl'Ulato· thru-out 014-ncr buying lurgc Cot'kl;i1I Ulllnl·r hou~c & m u ~t .. cl I Tcrrn::. ,\gl K.17 1200 Grocery-Beer· Wine GHOSSSl:J0.000 YH Neal Mom & l'op opt•rn tion. Troublt• frf'l• an•a. No ncarhy romr<'t1tum Henl onl}' S:Wo mu l·'ull p r I c e S llL o 11 o ,\ .: t K37·4~00 Money to Loan 5025 .....•.....•........... Choo~c ForYour!>l'l!lm: anoutstandin·i; put·k:ll!l' r air:.i c assas an lntersttng pos1l1on for of benellts ;.ind ;in op w pnv prat·t1t·r 111 11 H (7 14)644-6760 191 :w; I. Addressograph person w bookkeeping partunily to grow ,, eth ... 8-is 0231 HOUSEWIVES Mult1i.:raph cxpcr, preferably en ac-I d · · r Id Pl fo\Jm11urc Drrnkmi.: 1.1rob1t-m ·• 2921 S. Daimler count anal vi.as, ret'on· ea er in its ic l'<tst> Utt>tarv <'ook nct·lh-d 1m l',111 Aknhol lld 11h11e " appl\• 1mmcd1atclv b\· J 1· I SANTA AHA c1hallons & comm1si.1un · · · m.-i "~l'l'I .Jguna :!I hr:-.1 c.l:e) 11:15 311;10 E I U I' I .·1"•·ounl1n<> 10 k•·y prof1 · sending your rc"ime in lk:H·h ;\'u1 ,1111: llo rn,· MASSAGE FIGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCALL OHL Y qua ppor -.mp oycr " " " I I' • s· lary h1 tu ' 1----------1 c·1ency & late typ1ni:. e ut mg a :. '-1!14 llOi5 Sulury lo S600, und good lo DllY t'l.t:,\NINli l'l. \j\;T Allract1\'c ..:1rl with nice figure lo model a fl'w hours a week. Must be company bcnefils. Call MISSIO..._. :'\H;ll oran1-:,• en htat'h 833 ittSO ~ art•,1 V.1hd h1'l'll~l' n•q. VIEJO t:cl opportunity lo build luturl.'. S1•111l n·~umc & ~oph1slleatcd & O\'cr 21 1----------•1 Great pay . Strictly 631 -3811 -pnvalc & flcx1blt· hours. BOYS & GIRLS COMPANY rd to NWH lihX oll!lO. lrvi1ll', <.':1. !1~111; l'ltEti:'li.\N'f'! No expenencc bul prefer (':erir11: t'on ficlL·nl1al someone with floir, good ruun.,l'11ng & rdcrral personality & AOOd Ah11r1w11 , .11lopl111n & grooming . Write kt'l'IJlll~ <.:lassifi<'d i\rl !lf>!l3, Daily \l'CAHI·: 5 17·'1563 Pilot, P. 0 . Box 1650. Earn S20.SSO per week working arter school & on Saturdays. This b not a paper route . Tran:i;porlat1on pro· vidcd Call 536·9712 - ---Costa Mesa !12626 1----------1 ABORTION t'oun:.t'hng & Rdl'rral Prrg. l<'i>l ·a\ ail. wknds :!I fir llclphnc 5 ti 'll!IS •KAREN'S* 1H"fC \I.I. \I \SS \GE 11:111 lil!O EXOTIC GIRLS \l ,"~·•l!t' ~ \lr)drlmg Uutt .1 II On l) 51:! .11 b!I TllE (;J-::'\Tl.1': TOL'C ll Oull';.all :'ll ,bi><IJ.:•' i:ll 3!1:.11 Busy Exec needs am-AUTO MECHANIC bitiou~ people Full p t. Large clean well equlp For 1nte rvw 6H·0843 ped-dn~s. Lots of work. 6 8pm own hand tools. sor~. HUNT AuTO CENTl-:R 11125 Laguna Canyon Rd Laguna -194 332' AVON HaHA Very MflTY Christma' And Money CAB DRIVERS Menor Women ;\I u~t be 2.5 or O\ er Apply In Person Yellow Cab 112.51 Slater Avenue Fount.ain Valley Cofet•ria Helper 54.bstltute 24800 Chris.inlu .Mission Viejo C;1 !J2675 Equal Oppar Employer COOK Food i>t'r\'1ce supcrv1~or for acll\·e l'On\ wlcst·ent ho ~p Goorl ,.,JI & benefits. Send re:.uml' to: Cla~s1r1ec.l .id no 71;.1 t o Daily l'ilot. l'O H11' 1560 Costa :'llc-..1 CJ 92li26 Cooks D1sh~ashers Larr Stop. 2122 So J-:a :-l Bristol. S.A. Opening O<•t 14th. George Murph) COOKS Experienced Onl). HYPHO-THERAPY To Pay For It Start Now·St•lling be11utiful producls. Call 540·7041 or Zl!nalh 7·1359 for infor mation. Short hrs. 3 Jl r:. as needed. Must have car GOOD PAY! APPLY D l' IH l' .. ~ 111 n . w l' 1 g h l. 1-mok1ng. & 1m1lot1•111•t> II H. :!·Hpm. 51»·21iliO S.'l.ll hr. C.M .. N.IJ. & J OLLY ROGER CdM areas. /\pply at Newport Mesa Un1f1eri 400S. Coa!.I llwy 1---------111111 School District. l"ood La~1ma lkuch t::LJ<:(;THONIC ASSEMBLERS PRODUCTION WORKERS Fa~l growtnl! r urmt ure rompuny needs :.k1lll'CI producl1on workers with experience in :iandini,:. usst•mbling and patking Previous runulun• ex· pcrirnc!' vrt'fl•rabll'. Please apply GENERAL OFFICE (~al Friday type job. Typing, filin).(, postin g rrcei\'ablcs. phones & frontofr. 557-2744 Carol SCRAM LETS -----Scrv1rt• 11157 Placentia ---• RABYSITTER & Light CM 55(;.j 273. 'Counter per.son . Pa~I Housekeep1 ng. F ree --Lame. Apply Capt. Mike ~ GENERAL OFFICE ANSWERS room & board +:.alary. CALIFORNIA F'ish Jo'ry, SIS W. rnth. 17481 Redhill Av~ National educalinnal in· MICRODATA .111rlen•I ,,an.s• ln·ine. Nd resp per:.on BLONDES WANTED CM. lrviH, Ca 92714 st1tullon has opening for ' J for care of mv 2 ch1hlren . . E Io 1-· I Now that the kids ore back Ill school, why nol g11 to work'! Trainee i\s SL·mbly & Pal'ka1-:1ng Jolls now a\ ail. Loni.: & ~hnrl term :is~i)(nmcnll>. TOP SSSSSSSS Ncver A Fee /\l T1•mpo O tempo Tt-:MPOHAltY Jll':LP Call 540·4455 Equal Oppor Em1Jloyer Lido Convalescent Center f. V.N. P.M &Noc 1"/T1me & Relief <.:all Dirertor of Nurse!> 641>·7764 Ll ~UOH·Market. exper pref'd. Good pay. Appll in person before noon ai 3041 S. Hr1stol, SA. •Rtceivinq/Mech1 ~1AI D. full lime. somE 2 Yrs recent rxt>er. in housecleuning, a liltlt :.herl metal. plai.t1c & cookin g. Exp. nee. m:1t·hine parts. Some p"'l __ 848_·_ll_l_4 ______ _ expcr desired. MA INTENANCE l\tAN •In-Process Required. Laguna ruUE Mm I yr ex per. 111 in area. 830·3321. process or all cleclromtJ---------- inspcetion. Must know MAINTENANCE rolor codes. blueprints & Janitorial, elec, plumb> schemat ics. I:;xccllent ing exper. Fork lift & co. benefits includes J truck driving, 18·22 yrs. wks v:ic11 t 1nn uftcr 6 oldpref.Apply. mo·s. 11 raid holidays, USA CASTING CORP group insurance sturb 965 W.18lh St . C.M. • day of hire & mun) more Apply Personnel Marine Stdronic lli•nna Nu~gln J"CS 6_11 wkclys. 552 7845 Selling nal.'onal~r ad· CREW 1\11\:"lAGl-~H. Earn ,qua ppnr .mp oyer sharp indiv. w /detail OOCUMENTQR ht, 2nd & 3rd T.D.'s PU:'\Cll 0 ; ,213)291.8026 vert1soo llEAD Sf ART S200 lo ~Oil per wct'k ___ ability. Will answer cor· LOANS/\V1\ll.ABLE \utom.Jt1on h.•~ t11ldccl a v1lamms for your hair. ~uJ><'.rv1sang a <'rew of EmplQyment Ofrcrcd· resp. to home study slu Installer Rapidly growing com- pany has need of self· starter w/boal expr a musL Needs capabilities of working without supervision. 960-2441 Cred1tnot1mpartanl n''" ••·Jr tnour hH• ... thl• Babysitter for Vi yr old. Set your ~wn pace 1un1or sub~c rapt 1011 Small htc manur. needs dcnU;. Req's 45 + wpm DIVISION 673111R3Broker lt•arollold111gJ l'L:NC ll Newport. hvc 1n/out. wtgood profits, w/th1s salesmen . You mu1>l rchahlefrtamccmploycc typmg.Goodco.benefits Addressograph Mofi9c1<JH Tnnt < .1rtl Wk d > s p h · II o o d , lop notch produ~l. Only have a la rgc ~talion wii•xpt•r 111 welding & working conds. Apply Mulligraph D d • 503 5 . 644·6141or8332900 one reprcsenlat1ve per wagonorvanandheahlc s:en 'I shop. !179.2290 National Systems Corp, 2921 S.Doimler ff s \\nm.m 1·orn11..1naon "..1nt ----------• school or ori~amz~t1on al· Lo work with 10 15 yt•a1 w k d Y s 5 111 • ~ 8 0 1 4361 Birch St. N.B. MASSEUSE 08-28) legit. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cil. 'ti .Jll.!hl lllrc·rl 111 rold BABYSITTER & l..lG llT lowe<t. Call Charlie Mann olds. Phone 53n·H712 for C\CS/~·lmds Scmto Ano full time position lo LOANS 93 ~mtt·r> T1-.1chcr. nurse. llOUSF:WORK 2 to 5, (714 )1194·2312 interview. · · Ccn'I Ofc. Full or Part EqualOpporEmploycr Massage. No exp. nee. ~ado~ !)rd 30-~;) > r:i Mon-lhru Fri Must have ----tamt• tlcx hrs. light lYP· We lra.in. Call 540-2053 &i2 70l'J car. Hers . Unrlcr to. Carpenters ht.'lpcr . incl DECK HA ND t-:>q,l'rl lYPll>t parl lime. in(!.<.: M. 549·3942. ----------anytime. SSS/mo. 545-4197 pa1nl1ng Walling to F\lll ltmt•, mui.t I.Jc l''< ~lay s:o 10 full l1i~ne. Call -lNVESTMENTCASTlNG ----------Also 2nd TD loans Fmrei;I Tt'rm~ i.m1•1• 1!11!1 Satffer MtCJ. Co. Employment & 642·2 I 71 545-061 I P~paration ----------learn. $3.00 Jlr. 5-1 hr '' " n • 11 r u l' :. Girl Friday 21·30. Good COM P/\NY MATURE W 0 M AN per .. well groomed. t·ol 71 1 ~18 7769 r k 11 h h BANKI N<~ week. Apply In person legialc. belwccn 20_:14 · O c. s 1 s, eavy P ones. Looking for expcr'd woi< p /t amc t o welcom e SPECIAL LOW RATES QUICK CASH T.D.LOANS Jo!I Oorurlo Mortgul(<.' Co. t21:1 l 670·3161l cullccl or 1714)968·6546 NOTE TELLER wkdys, 419 Uw}'cr Dr. yrs. Gd pay & be nefit.. FACTORY HELP llarbor 3~a~~3490 injectors. Preferably ncwcomoril & contact Schools & Bank exper. Contact Bob _A_n_ahe1m___ Send resume to ad 111111, Co.'ll.i Mesa firm, ~hip-GIRL FRIDAY Enghshs1>eakin)(. Apply m('rchants. F1('xihle ~rs. I I 7005 h ·i •• 'o The Dai·ly Pilot I' o S 1 k , f ... USA Casting Corp. Need car, lite typing. nstruct o" Cre1g lon, rvinc Nu· CARPET LA YER • · · pmg dcpl traml'l' Coll panes t spea mi: or " 965 W I Ith St CM ~7.JOOS.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• t1ona! Dank. 833 3700 Call 752·6106 l:lox 1560, Costa Mesa. for appt 8·11om. 545 0101 smull C'ompany. Apply an • • • • · ----------• E.O~··-__ --------------i . ...:C::.:a:..:.·..::9.::26::.:26::.:.._ JX'l'S~m 1!·5. International Ja~it;;al -perm p/timc MEDICAi, IE A IARTEHDER HANKING •CASHIER* lluvl' somethinit to i.t•ll'! A~d10 17~5 L. Skypark eves. v'orlons' areas. F RONTOFl''ICE fo'ull or Parl·llme Pl t-:lt I IMPORTS W_a_n_t A_ds __ c_a_l_l_61_2_·SG_7_1 Classified ads do at well. Circle Irvine S2 50 per hr. 17182 Bookkeeper, .r~ceptionii;t Be n·ady to work as a UTILITY CLERK Mormnjl8 Mon thru Fri· H..a..W t d 7100 LoL..&..W--d 7 IOOH.lpWHhd 7100 J\rmslrong Ave, Irvine. w/medlc~l b11lingcxpe.r, proft.'11sional bartendcrin &COMM'L TELLER dny. 20·25 hr wk. Some ••r Oft e ~ -·•• 540-7814 needl!lt rn H.B. Good l week. 1-~rce job place· Manufacturer's Jlank ls retail expr. neccessary. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• [;'~yur1:( &714c)o~i.t~i· Mr. ........••••.•......... mcnt assi:i;tance. seeking a Utility Clerk & Must be hard worker & .. AMOUrtCemet1ts/ American Bartenders Commcrrial Teller for well groomed. 540-7337. JR. ACCOUNTANT Personafs/ School iL<1 Newport Beach ofe. ask for Mngr. FREE REAL ESTATE Medical FrontOrnce with expcr. :ra h rs per week. 642-4410 Lost & FoUnd Jl()..I F:. l7th St, SA The succri.sful apph ••••••••••••••••••••••• 834·1960 cants will have a min. 1-2 CLERICAL ASSISTANT GOOD lost& Found 5300 ---------•I yrs appropnate comm'I bankang expcr. ••••••••••••••• •••••••• Help Wanted 7100 I.OST • l\1 al1• Tcr ••••••••••••••••••••••• r 1ch1huahua ml'<. V1t· •AAAA POSITIO!'iS :-;outh II B. Oc·t. \-;t AdmSecyff/C likkp1 Block b1c~c markansii. Jr & Exrc. St'l'} s Cash Reward! 536 8280 Employers Pny All 1-'ccs I.OST: In Costu l\ksa Ma l e Collir Ml'(. responds to "ls h1." Blaek. 6 years old. I .17. Remders Agency 41120 Airch St. Ste 1()..1 Newport Beach 833-8190 Call for t\ppl/Eslab '65 The bank is also St•ekini: a p/limc bank exper'd person lo work Mon , Tues, 1-'rl. An attrart11,e salary & benefits 1!> offered. In terested persons should contact· healthy dog, Long Beach1---------1 t8ft. rtease call Jean, Mary J . Elder OperutioM Officer 1201 Dove St, N.I. 1714» 752-0600 Equal Oppor &mployer OPPORTUHITY F:xcellenl learning posi· tion for s harp person w/good typinf( (50·60 wpm1 assistant Mgr . of /\dm. m areas of person· nel, office m gmt, marketing & secretarial. Exper. h<.'lpful but not necessory. Starting saJary to ssoo. Good com· prany benefits . Call 833-8450 S48·74 16 FOUND : Black Lah pup. JrYlne/lS Sts, Newpo1 t lights area. 645·8412. LOST: REWARD male ('lipped silky terrier. Please Call I>nrlcne lllJ8..2636 HB ----Loet: Male Blk & white ShelUe Max. Clay I Santo Ana Ave. Wed, Oct 6 645.7044 Advertising Assist.a. NOW HIRING GIRLS & MEN Ho Ex,.,-. HK. 18 Yrs Or Older O}>enlnita f'or: • Mnrketlng Dept *' r uhlic RelataonR Tme •Customer Serv Tme CLERK, H. B. Drug 1-----------1 Store, min. age 2A. i;xp. IARMAID Neighborhood bar, n.ighta. Call 548·9242. AP· ply days. Vikki's Lounite. 1791~ Newport IUvd. CM not nee. 847·2S63 CLERK TYPIST rnterestlng & varied rcspon.slbllites for riJht person, con\fortable s mal l office. HAUTICIA.H Nc•wJ>O.rt/C.M. c1re4. Call HAIR CUnEttS Mr Kane64S-2&i0 Salary $115 lmmed. opening, can Companlon/Hou11oke<>per CAREER SEMINAR "No Obligation or Cost" MONDAY, OCT. 11th at 8 P.M. 16241 IHch llTd., H•tiltgtOR leoch IECOME PART OF OME OF THE TOP PAYING CAUIRS IN SALES • Advanced Marketing Techniques Sf[ ROBERTS:. • Audio-Visual Sates Training Progr1m • Amazing ERA Electronic Property Presentation System • Success Formula · HEAR ROBERTS·. 1978 career QppOrtunlties ' • Unique Proteaslon11 Training Program OP1N TO THE PUILIC COMPUMIHTARY llRISJ4MIHTS lntet 1ll1d,...---. k.-.d or ...-C.Md ... lll'flh.cl to ctl for lmhci ..... MCOO••diltfOftl 848-1688 General accounUnf:l func· lion for small rnnnur. to. 1 K11owlcdge o( compulc1 MF.DICAI. system !I <'UC n t l 11 I WE HEEO PEOPLE Rcspan!11blC' for audit ol Thniout So. CnLif. wilh comp_uter r~ns & pr<> medical <'Xper., :..auto, le parallon Of jllurnul en C)((rll l im e for pern1. tnes. Assist unounllng pt llme work. F'or in• st.C1 0SWITCH INC ~~v;.J'PPl phone HlO 1139 Baker Costa Mc sa 549·3041 F.qu11l OpJ>Or Emptnycr MOTEL .MAID Over 18, SAM to3:30PM. Newport Ch1u\11el lno --------i N.B. 642·acm LABORERS URelHTLY .HIEDl:O VOLT I I hU"fM d •••I,.._.,. MOT .El.. MAID Work. Neat, coeraeUc women. Laauna 8 cb r esort. t Day wk oc p/Umo. 494,u 96. MRS, HOMEMA ER, do you have 2 hrs a day? Earn xtra money & run your homo a t the same lime. T raining aiven. Call .. 5-3987 bet 8:30 & 10:301c from 3 :30-5:00 '• LOST Beloved female Si1me~c Cat, "Topaz" Dover Shores area Reward 642·0062. earn ~.-S300 per 40 hr w soc:h\I r; •curi\y, $$, to to $148 Week~ wk. Varntlonl! hcm~rtts. live In, ~k ror Ck!Mly Lo<'nted m bu!ly South lady. S200 mo. 675-1.932 F'or lnterv1tw C~I C<i11st Pinta Mall Regis · 642-SS78 549°9111 • Hair StyllnR. S40 8888. _________ , Apply ln ~"on Sell idle Items ------1 Ra~~~s~.IJ&,.~~.~~.y 3848 c.....,, Drf•• 546-4741 (Across from Ornnge Co. Airport> Equal OpJ)OI' Employer Vo\.I d6n 't need a &un lit ''draw fasl'' when )'OO pl"~ 1n1 ad in lbo Dally ---------. l'ilot WanLAds! Call now CJassiDed Ads -642·56'18. ~------·· --, r _w.W..ttcl 7 IOOHetpW..ted 1tOOHelpW•t.d 7100 ~r.~::t~:! ..... !!~~ ~~!:~ ........... ~~.~ ......... ~~~~ Monday.Oetobor 11 , 1976 8010 D:IL'<PILOT a90J~Jo r.;~r .•.•..•••...•.....• ····••·•·········•··•·· ··•···················· Mochl.....-y 8078 ...i~ttont°"' ats, .-o•..,. ~ ----------1rharmacy· Exper'dRt:Salt'S Sccrot1u•y, l!,en'l ufc .. Alltfques 800S **IBUY•* •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •'• . • . · '"ti d . ·• Y ht !Ir "· •• • •• •• •• ••• • • • •• • •• •• • 8 • r I B l Ir I N\JRSJ:: N!Sponaible drug clcrk W e 'll .. N~r I '°'' ln n:q" Ul' l "' Good u:.t'd fo\irruture & Mt'ta..l lathe bnt•k lil<'O.red WA ... TED I " <•nc·o. eau u '-LYN"'&RN'S f/timc. No night:o1 or whenyou jolnourtt'am brkroobuy646·055t Wonderland Appllonce8·0R I will w1st11nd.$-i001bci.toffcr. " l'Ond. Olds Jct. V·hull, .. •• .. • • . , ): •• C' !'t. 't f• ;). I " v ~: . - Intm\odiuhi opcnln11s on 3-11:.tnd11 7 :lhift:s in our 218 bed rehabilitat1011 rttlllty. Wu offer top WllJcti and our benefits package is excel lc-nt. Please appJy at. \l wknds. Must. have nca.t 1\4.lul to:iitatc zmlcsJX"ri.on s1-~cntn RY Of Anti•ques•. :scllorS•~t.LforVou. 1>12.37&'7. TOP CAS H OOl.1..AR 11~:.'.~~.·\~rrniraC~~ ~!~~ gppcor. & hke pcoph:. licensed prt'ft•rrcd. ~tatuti• woman P'rimt• MASTlllS AUCTIOM P A CO fo'Of< YOUR .... APP I Y t n Person. Many benerus lo ht'IJ) S('rn.>tnry·ltcg1s1 rur for n UGI!: w a r ch o u i. e 646-8616 • l ll-9625 MIK .. ICllMOUI 8080 JEW~LHY. WA'l't:HE.S. tunk & ladder. f1:\h & t•YERL Y MANOR 24452 Via Estr ada LAguna Hills. Ca An Equal Opportunity Employer N e w Po r l Cc n t e r you cu~rn top SS$ Tr4110 pre .1.dmol. St•ml rc•,,unw rr11mrnrd with over 500 --•••••••••••••"•••••••• ART OBJ EC1'S. GOLD foNt. 961111741 Pharmacy, 400 Newport in~q~roar;m + ~chooling <.; 0 t're School, <'i·ncnil mu~lc boxei., n1cktJIO· SAVE! Nt'w & uwd rurn, 1 d M . }~~'i;E~V~~nx r ~~ IS' G" Ci\UO'f !ikl or fi~ Ctr Or. NB av1Ul1ble for unhcensed. Ot•llvery. t'oron:i ikl <kon piuno.,, t1rr11s or· appl's. m1 ,. W1h1on ·~ r~1>~ufclqpWc~ut~1>1100:~~l ·riQU~. &IS·2' .. '00 · hinl: bout, 75 HP. slnt ROYAL PROPERTIES Mar.Ca.92625 ~arh, wull clorki;, BurJ.:ttin Nook, Now 2 tt.c.m• or s~l" /\ll near _ --t'Otlll.S2000.S.16·57'77 6421830or0084105 Rrandfnth\'r clock:s. Stor~ -545 & 1111 W ... " ..... "1..S - . . . ~ fa11cmttlirlP. antlquei.. 19th, C.M 642 7930 & ntw. lrt. <lrawlr))! board. LUGGAGE TA"' '75 111'-;:CltEf:TAU" lrl· PHONE SALES Phone Sales people. male or female.:. lG to years or age Cuarante waies or commhp11ons. 2$0 East 17th Street Suite O. Co:1t u Mos<1 ~·cy/8kkp1· ~ On·rSl.000.(lOOWurth ~·:\262, 2 T Squares. markers. rrom your bus int'1<1> curd. hull . walk t h ru . wh ,\rl't.n&Clk EU!' $7$4.) Arnerae11n lntl•rnal1onal ---off1l'c •·h~1lr, s tool. &•ml ont• ci1rd tor CJl'h ittl/motullic blue. 1J hr1> n. E. SALES PERSON t\r't Dept &•cy !!>750 Gallene~: t!l-02· T Ketter· St:t: ·ro i\PPRECIATI-: R11lcl.:h folding b1cyrle & tu..i plus one spu1·e. We total time, Votvo·t>cnta I. i c l\1 u s t be l•:tccTcchRadar s1r,uhr ini.: S t .. lrvlnl'. 1'cl Ortxcl ~ohd oak anl1.1 much more 201~ rt-turn permanentl y l30 Hf>, Jdcul ro.-skiinJ.t, knowh."<IJ;cable tn hold· li\•mc P<·rsonncl Ai:cncy 75"4·1777. O~n Wed thru Spaollih !l lit wr drci-i.cr. A1rnh1•1m St . Cost a ~t·uled utlrnf'l1\'c ta.: & fishing. Trailer, 12·21 Ing 0,..,0 house & htive :! 11111 1.; 11th <.:r>:.t.i \tesa S.it. 9 AM to 4 PM \ 1s1t' Ii· Ii; w .' rn Irr or & Mei.a. strup, meclln~ airline volt trollln1t motor, corn ---------•I between 5:00 & 8.30 p. m ,,~ Sult\: <!2-1 til:! 147 -----.-11rntchl11>1 Kni.: hdbl'd I D. n.•qu1remc11ts. ,l'rc· pm1s, rovl•r, cvnvL•l'l. top yrs exp Conhdcntta) · ----~Antique oak Amo1rr. EleJ;ant. S;il'. Also fi JH' Ounk beds mnple$65. ~~a· \'<lilt loss & theft! for 8 64-04100or6'&0.·I~ PM 3135 E . Coast tlwy, CdM ~~..wr=------85"high, 5U"widc, 17"dc-~pan. RH group, dm;:;c pie bl·boY dres11er $60. pcrsonalitcd tug enclose --- NURSES AIDES &f6-4223 Equal Opportunity 1-:mployer St!rvi('c stntion uttend.int. ep AntlQlll' oak Buffet, w1n11rror d1elll 2 nlk AM/FM enmponcnl wallpaper. Cllbric orcenturyClassic lnp11trnk•· , __________ .., l'JC1>cne11ceu. Full or part w1n11rror, 5S''wide, stnds. l\ihc tu'rn. 20 stereo w /<'.J'd tabll' "l>uy Glo" pu11cr & we bny haunch, needs work, time Apply Arco Stn 23"d\'L'I' lk1th pieces in Lugonla <upstrs) N\\pl speakers $l ~S, Maple will back & trim your mbonrd. sec at 2300 Restaurant twn 17th & lrv11H•. C :'ol . beaut t•ond. &40-2082 Shorcs. 642·3188 hutch $145. rhllds r(•<·ord tui.:s. Or trv two n 1rds University Or. N B. Bci..i GIANCAHLo·s -------player $8, 1 :swug himp lmcktobuck oCr m•l'r $1·100. hy tO l l. We have I m mediate ---------TWO GUYS SERVIC:t-:STATIO. Country English Antiques Herculon hide·U·bed.SltlS. SS.golddecoratortblw/6 PRIC'·'.S ,, 12 ,.,,.,,,. openings f?r ma t~re PLASTICS A1vn;Nl>ANT 1673 J>lact·n11a, Cl\!. <m Sofn & love i.cat. $350. sides SIS. moving must $2enor 3/~ c. "" "'""" •;:,ur·aresnecse Aisa~eresrerrf:,xd·. MOLDIMGMA CHIN! FllOMITALY 21 or oldl'r Apply in rear)Mon·Fr1. • P.P.839·5808. sell. Phone nCL 6pm, 60 lo'"""'•, Sail 9060 ,,~ v " UNDER NEW peri.on, Wed·~ton . lOAM 645.7857 4/5 tngs Sl. ea. .... but we wlll provide pnid OPERA TORS to .a p M 2!11!3 HarbCtr ANTIQUE PRINTS Fantastie SS" orta1ton ta 6/9 tags Sl.50 l'U . •••• ••••••••••••••••••• t rainin". l>ay and night Taking applications 101 s s .. 1,.c• •93.17~3 aft.5 bl~ . .i 1.:untarn's l'hair~.U .f:. l••e n efrq~. xlnt 10ormore$l.10cu 7n;tt1CSON:l~. .. h' MANAGEMENT C :\1 .. nt Baker. l. .. ., " ,.. " S I T I cl ded 7·3:30PM & 3·11:30Pl\1 moldingmac meoprson -----h<1ngingl;1mp,2endtbls. conct. lgc rrceicr aes ux n u &N.:wportMoonng shifts available £'least· all 1>h1fts. Modern, dean Ace-opting :ipiillcattun-; Sen·1ce St;.1t!on Alll•n S.1hd wood drn111~ l>l'l & 536·8101 'fl•lcph<>ne 1111swer1ni.: NOCl\~l>? 71-1·963·3S38.SJ6·5767 apply inp!!rsonut manu! plant. 1'11idgroup "r ... 1 "ltresscs dant. expn d Ouy bu!fr1 . ant1qul'rl hn1~h. -----machine w,remote & l)raw your own or send ----~ llfe & health ins. Gooll or w;;L ers, .'\ '1 · " Eves 1-'u II & p lfnll'. i\p 13c.,t vffer 550·7815 QUl::EN Sofa Sleep<'r !\Im• ofdurn. 971}.0Ul:.I. name."address. phone & Hobie 16, l rlr. new trans&: 8EVERL Y MANOR 2A452 Via Estrada Laguna llills. Ca vacation plan h 0 s l ~ 5 s • ~ u ::. h 1 er:.· ply, Sht>ll SLLl1011 )ith loose pillow,.. btCI <·ond, ----~ -----we'll muke one eanl pC'r more. SI ,.&25. 616·8255 or Applylnperson busl>OV~. Ir ine Nll :'llov111~. must sell': w111dclivl'r 55.&·1760 Nl::WDYN.\·GY\I tag.i\dd25"c1.u:h. 581·7505. California 10065 Gorlleld A n:. \ · <.;.,1ul'an1:111 Kelirn ':;, Oiscount $100olf Send ehct•k or mon1•y or ~----------An Equal Opportunity Employer I I t i M Id' Fountain Valle y S..•rv St•' Atl1•11d . F11 I I ' Tur le 1 ~ h K dim 's. · Hors~s 8060 493.1753 aft. 5 dcr to: 10· Wildcat. I Sail ~ :~1g~ Av~.~~. ·.~}t·L>Bonraldo ~~~z~ s tApp\~ ~~;;, ·~~~~~: i' ~~;.,11~ ~~~~~ !>. x Int cond. •••••••••••••••••••••••Zig Zug Sewing :'ll uchinr. PILOT PRINTING 5225. Raemg ngg~~·S!>Xl u Block So. Of "' 3 3320 SA.LE OR LEASE made by Srnger. Is 111 P.O Box 1sro Bakl'r,offRedhill) Mon-Fri ll :JOAM 10 - 67 _.'._ ----Appliances 8010 ;'.!organ Quarl l'r GC'ld · xlntcond.Comt>sinrcul Costal\lesa.Ca.92626 Catalina 22, clean & NURSES AIDES 3:00PM _ _ ___ Shippi'"J & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ing, mus t act immediate· wood 3 dwr Des k. all l'OI' WOVEN WOOD londed. S-1000 F/time & P ttime. Da}i--------1911111-I Rastaura11t. tnv•ntory Cl•r k J."'rc1ght Damage llolpoinl ly' f.45·79111 S15 or be!'o! offer . 1\lui.t &10·18-10 __ _ shift Ex,...r'd prer·d Ap· ,_ "' " SllADf:S.'fo ISO'·;, Olf .-~ PRODUCTION Female, ·I hr:.. :it on· Fri T.v PIO", filin•• & lilt• as· Sale 3308 W Warner'. --:-.ell! lSJl·2.)Sl afl. G or C 1 I.Ju It Islander ?l ~ly Pa~k Su~erior,~l:s Sandwich Shop. Call :-.e mb~v. Ex"pei"rl 11,., nearllarhor Santa Ana Tally Ho Farms wknds.'.\l bs1onV1l'jo. Call645·89~--~:r~mgoo1d ~onct. n_;_.; 6-1~~1~'.or vc. . WORKERS :\lon.979-11~~3_. -1.:1 :}(I 5.i7 .. \3!11. Will buy somt' rrfng .• 1µ l:lo~ stalls S90·SHJO. Plp&Large .. Gon•nors .. Oesk Used Sampson n omcx sails. includes s lq1. E 0 d t lilt.mrt·~ working or not . t·orrab S7S. w,c ft'C'd · 'Jlix60 w 'l'xl'C' chai r tali dii,·crs i>UJt. SCC1\ :ip· 499·3155 aft 5PM RIGG R . pr l')l cnm TE.\t'llElt n1•1·d, rd1.1 l'lt:an daily. English & • .' b • . nruvt•d. Approx meet -----.---ORDER CLERK Electroni~s Mfg has im· mediate opening ror ex· pcr'd mature ind1v1dual on order desk. l\l usl type 50 wpm. xlnt benefits, in · cl Med, Dental.Ins. ~qual OpP.Qr Emplyr DISC IMSTRUMENTS m i:.. :-.ew sail·cxp, r<•lia hll-. l't'SJttlll!'otblt• r11•r:.1>11 a1'•1 't-rap ml•lal 675 5:!5ll Wl'slern l('sson:-: & tt·u111 dticorawt tu le l~m~: .3 ,. . ~1;, S.11:1 1111-t6' llob1c Cat. hghl. fast. lmm~"1.alh ope1lin".'S for ble ;\Janner Y:ichl:-.. for h"hl ho11M'kl·•·11111" & 111 •'. t 72ti2 N1·whope. 1.'c Luggugr set filJ_ti.ltt? "11..·,~-· --' New sari,. w/windows 1 ''" " ... " ... :\l ,Hhl~ W;l~ht•r S30 . .l\l'n " S s ll ~l>l\l incent1 ve <piecework i (iiS-l:lfl.J -..1tun~ for Ith gr a cit• g irl. mori· nu:, l>n·c r ~:is. Fr1linta111 \':tll~'Y. 97\1·9,li5 · .t \: .~ 11 ur " 1 ·1;5 El Cam 1110 h11<· ktt trlr, su:io. Ii 14 M67. production workers --:!rla,,.a.,.I( S.l hr <xh1,,1 K j s7s - ----"'ca}s. Sl"ll:. 'lll'rd to he re· --- Minimum 2vcars r~ecnl RN.SPsyehiatr1c wkl Tr11n . .,1rnr t atinll l',1101?,rc .wa~.1~·~· '.''Pal11m1n11 mure. s ho ------~·o~er1..•ct:s1sror th1.·two.26' Thundcrl.nrd. \.'llF, J II ~IJ.: I.Ii'( clr~cl ~·10 • n11t1hl\' m11:-.t '>l'\.. .. tf) ap c-twarehouse . 1·~tt10 < l)t1••:-.1i;p1n . raclory Cxpcrioncl' re· N1.,hl rehd. /\lso, on·l'a ncNlcd to La .. un:i lh'a< It 1. u 1·., .•• , ., • -r-''"'0 .. w7t .. . " ... ,, ... .tlilr '"'"Ii'-11re1· Sb50.:.lti·5777 •CLEAR"' ..... CE• ""° -"nstol. N n. s11,,. $$()\)(). qwred. Must be uble to IX>Stt11>11s Contact D1rec· Hefs reri 1!1Ht02 • "'" o - 102 E. Baker St. C:\t 979-5300 work any :.hi(t + over · tor of Nur:.mi:, San.ta -. , , • . Fr11~1cl a tr1• Cro:-.1 fret Jewelry 807 220VdsChocolatc Brown \llNK Jacket . xlnt nind 673_:!~1.!~v~ __ time. Starting wages ,, n a P s ych tat r 1 c· Tl';l,l-:1 llON 1'. ~Al. fo.S r1•fng ~°''or hc:-<t oflt'r. •••••••••••••••••••••• Plush S4.SO yd 500 ytls Tourmaline. $71>0. 16. JI OBll:: CA1' w/lrlr from $3.27 per hr. Pay llosp1tal, l'.!12 !-~. -tlh St. Retirerl or dis:.ihlt·~I mrn 7.'>HlH17 _ ___ Hrn n) !Oil short shag SJ C;~l~gcv('~" & xtrns. Xh1t cond Outside Job. p/time. Earn extra Christmas money. Attractive well groomed girls. F l exible hrs . 842·7181. rangecani:owelloverS.\ SA s.13.gunE.O.E and womt•n . 1-.x.l~a LESALir. WANTED yd. l .U '.\I Exec Mdl 673·3414&640·2808 per hr after learning ------money fnr tht' ~?~rda~~ •WHO 1::* TOP Ct\S ll DOLLAH ~llOHl::Sli\TERIORS -- period depending on RM-W eekends '.\.lorning or "'nin~ 22 New R efrigs , p ~\tD F OR YOUll 2640Avon,Nwpl.Beh. '.YPcwritcr. G.d l'Ond ~!ORGAN Ott 21!'. D:-1, ' • d t . • Good earning,., l'ho1w ' 5 150 Call I· rank1e A u .. 1. employees pro uc ion Day Supervisor &lt>-42'>..3 Washers, Uryt•rs, 01:. JEWELRY. WATCHES f..li!-22S!l & 6i5·5548 · d Curl gen, " ..,.,11uty. ry We also of~er exc~ll.ent Apply Park Superior, Equ..1l. Oppnrtunil) hw:1sher~. at t·n:.l w l ART OBJl-:CTS, GOLD ~'l3·MS.5I ays $211\1 Bkr.962-4180 PARTS DEPT. TRUCK DRIVER com/pa;i~~!~.~~~~s. ~~~z,~~erior AH'. NB F.m111,,~er 7~1~~~~"-Wholc~,ifc ~~~~E:}u71~nx1~~· ~1!~t~~~t~~to1i:;o;~1a~~. Miw:!:.C::ou' 8081 loot;, Slips/ 9070 Monday Thru Sati:trday ----Telephom• s,1ll·s. p t1m1• TIQt:ES.1J.1S 2200 µet· an wood w 1:.ll ar ••••••••••••••••••••••• Docks OrForThose ApplicanlSSales Carl•er·S lt'ady cxper rrel 'tl , 1101 lll'I' ;\t•wS..·arS l.Jcly l-\l•nmor~ -l'C'SSories s:JOtl Ph SHFOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Interesting permanent position. Must have l\ood driving record, b<! cons· cientious, ambitious. OP· portunity for advance· me n t . Sec Part s Manaj\ctll("lloward Chev rolci. ·Dove and Quail Streets. Newport Beach. WhoAreUna~le work,S175wk·UPIO!>lart S250hr&up.Ca11Lloyd w~hr.$350 .nl·wAdmir<i linstock 8075 s.l6·3&t2&5-l!l·ltii $$SC.A 551-'"t'.lloatdot·katl>o,rr To Apply Duri!'g Fuller Ilru~h 551 711.">I .t9;.3720 bet" n I ·!!Pm · rcfng. SISO. !ltill·655~ all •••••••••••• •• ••• • ••• •• ---C.ood 11:.t•d furn t refngs Shorl•S, N. H. U p to SHi~. Rei.:ular lntcrvww ----._-:i Jh·~ '1c•r1?11nmllrt•.brok IRVINE COAST GO!.F lr£r~'sto\'CS5-16·0768 mo1omo.tt·11ancy.21:J: Hours.Our Emplo}1l1cr1t S1\LES . 8• cles 802 to net•· & dri\'(', hlk memberi.htp. S500orbc~I ----024 .. 1.19;, ___ _ OHiceW1ll&Opt·n L o cal & :"Jat·Wtdc The Reuben .!~! ................... parade :\torgl\n )lt•lding. offl'r.CallG ltH>369. WANTED . 5PM-7PM tl'lephone sales, office . . • . .. Eng, Wcs tcrh 171.S ) . , I • 0 OHll':~T1\LRUGS N'wpt slip SO'.,~\'l h~ml" onTuC's &Wcd 11 roduets . no C'\l)l'I Nf.W&USl'.DUI KE~.ant~ 338•1011 Ruhbet r.1 l. II .::.3 . l'cr5 ian & Chinese also wtr & elec .. 3\31. needed. Slop hy & :-.1w us [. lee rurts. Cru1:>t·:·s. :\1 X ": _. • honey f•x t rat·t or .;:-1 on 'fapr.•i.tr). P\'l Pty·s only. 540 s 121 or G 7 5· !16 72 ~ Amteeh Corp .. li2!!2 & tO Sp<ls. Cydt· & < o. Machinery 8078 lllvl'S & i.upcrs $15 <!() Ip 1;w.7o11 wknds. ANPt F Armstrong Avc .. _lrnnt• ~IM :'\cwport Hlvtl . C M ••••••••••••• •••••••••• garden seeder $75. old ·----- PBX Am. S~rv Opr l mmed. openings ror mature people to work varied hrs & wknds. Paid train in g. App l y i 11 VOIT, IMC. SALESLADY ;\o" T Jkini.: '"2·71110 t·omprcssor on wd rail~ ...... -(cal Balboa Pen.insula d'!<',k • .,.. Printing l'rl•i;:;., 1250 ,._, Ibo ·13 i\pfJh\·a\11111~ h11 ~lulti. de livL•r1•rl in· wttank $85, chernhtry htt.tniments 8083 space forsui at lo :! . 380 I S. Ha rbor Santa Ana, Ca F time position a vat I. for a resp. woman w/slroni:: sales ability. Jo;xper. ncc BUSBOYS & HOSTESSES IM YS & NIGllTS lospd boys l)ike ...,o glassware. ult kinds ••••••••••••••••••••••• Robinson,675·8120 S.IS I lcrmd .,_ta~C'd._g~~.55-1·<..><>_4 d d I -------- • · x n 5¥00/all, re woo • a l Conn '.\lin·O·l\latic elec 60' SIDE 1'11:: at lht• C'oH•. Page Boy Maternity 557.5734 554·4760 Hoss i'"orklifl. hfls 5 Ton sizes, s~rfa.eed & priced org;m. excellenl condi· NB Call Ron at S5ti·3!JJ7, 8uild itM1 M aterials 8025 \'ert1 eal. $2350. Runs nght, '1 Jointer w stand lion $ti()(l P.P. 532·1259 sS2·W91 Fvs person, lSS Rochester St, An Equal Opportunity Apply In Person Only 3P:\1·SP:'o1 ••••• ;~~••••••••••••••• well. 645·1691 S75. 675·3175 ' · or · _._. ___ _ CM Employer M/f' Sales People, exp. 1'\111 & ----------~~~~~~~~~~I p/lime. Asst Mgr. Open P EOPLE PERSON . ing Nov I. Gift s & Exec netids p/time as Profession.al ~0t·k l"Ja~d~ Clothing, 540·551 t. soc. in whslesupply. Ful needs dnvers w /truck. Iv capitalized. 673·2223. Im mediately. No cxpcr Salespeople IS I E. Coast H wy Newporl Be ac h l':qual Oppor Employer CEDAR SllAK ES l>1rc<.'l rr Mill. Call '!.nytime. 503476 0121 Camera• & Equipment ..•.•....••...•...••... · necessary. Please c_rll Pick up sso. Eurn S300. Pfffed Worklnq 846-1653 <Glenl Call644·9410. LenH'S C'annon :!tJOmm , H -------------1 55mm I 2 FO S S (' OUN P /timc Sales. S40·S70sotes·Phonc.> No cxpcr lcnst's S120caorS2t10tor 8:30·2:30or wk/up. Men, ladies. stu· necessary. We will train, TYPISTS both &.ln·614H l)l'l 6 3:30·9:30 de n ts. Eves1 ·sat S250 to ssoo nverage in Work 6 hrs a day earnin1 554-7851. 839·7696. come. after training. DOCJS 8040 $.1·$9 per hr In pleasan Call Mr. Huber for in· R •••••••.-•••••••••• •••• s urround i ngs . Dea RECEPTIONIST /SECY terview. !l-1\HlOOl • epro lri:;h Setter Pups . withe public an ou1 Exper 'd front orrire, •Compo1er Opr ,\l<C. shots, worml'tl Irvin~ ore representinE w/poise, mllturc jucJt:· SALESPERSONS •MTST·MTSC &.15·7473 Time Life B o oks menl, pleasant phone Experienced. Mos EIC'1: •Clerk Typi1h Dyna mic per sona lit} voice & ability to meet & tronic Pos tal SC'alr most likely to ~ucceed work w I business ex· Draw+ commbsion. C;tll Interested housewives & e cut i ,. e !I. Ne 'NP n r t Patty fl;l;!.5677. students seeking perm Center. Call 640-6950 for positions call 833·8095. appt. bt'lwn 9a~-11~1----------1 PERSONNEL CLERK Reeeplionist Typist Full time, salary. S.550 Send resume lo Sun & Sail Club, 24752 Toledo Wy. El Toro !12630 . SEAMSTRESS W ith Experience Newport Beaeh dothtng store has opening ror a Part· Ti me Sea mstre:.!> We need a detail orient<' Please Contact per;>on to handle th Receptionist 1.itc typing. Tailor Shop Manager Before Oct 15. cleriral procl'dures i Sat/Sun. Yarht tllr & 644-5070 our Personnel Off1l'e brkr on bav IY1li·055t ~~~~~~~~~~! Pos it ion requires ---· --1 months general office ex RECEPTIONIST · t · r .. , l I SEi\:\lSTH ESS pertcncc. ypmg o .,. P r ogrcsslvc an ma Ext>ci"d . fnr woml'n·s 3848 Campus Drive 546-474 i 11\t·ross J.'rom Or<rni;c Co. 1\irport l Equal OpJ){ir Employer A.KC Golden Rl'lrlt·vt•r pur>!>. xlnt htmtl·1·s. show dOl!h & family pt•ts C:hamr 1wd1l.!~t'l. !fl:t 681il Al-\C n ·i.:1,.1crrd \fi:h1111 rup:., 2 malt•. 3 lem C'hamp1n11 ,.1oel\.1! Ill 0~6:l Slucl st.>rv1ce. t\KC. i.;11lfll'n rctnc' er 5-15s102 ----------____ -----_ F r m a I e G c r m a n TYPIST-C LERK shorthairc(I polntl'r. 2 . . \ r:.. old. papers. IOH•abh• Variety Ntcc phone & frisky nccd6 lot!> ol ~annl'r ~(·qulretl. ~ tO 5. rm. SSl·~j.i3 ;1ft tlPM Sml Engmccnni.: Supply __ Co. C'M. S6Hll to W50. Ph Fre~ to You 8045 5.lli (Wiot; • •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • •. • • • • A CON\l(NIENl SHOP91NC AN0'1-""ill_.._. SEWING CUiOC ,011 THE CAL ON THl CO. Warm Afghan free 'n' Easy :'llartin Guitar. 15 yrs old. xlnt l'Ond . 5500. Transporlation fl75·3S l5 •••••• •• •• •• • •• • •• • • • •• Offi_c_•_"'_m-itur~ & C~rs, Sale / Equipment 8085 •• ~~••••••••••••!~.~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Closing operation. Desks, 7'xt21~· Cabover Camper • eha I r s. t v pw ri ter. w/boot & Jacks. Cor 71ong credenza. dinette set. bed PU. $700. 548·858 etc. 540·3368. _ Moton.ct Bikes 9 140 S W E D A C ,\ S If ••••••••••••~•••••••••• REGISTER ;\I DI, '1fi . *FALL SALE * IA KE NEW 52 9 S · Srnlley Mo,,.ds $350 ' 1 9-1 · 453-1 CJcl• Worlcs Peh 8087 182 Hewporl Blvd. •••• ••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mes a 548.5783 Reese M aque female Monkey. born In captivi· MotorcyclH / ty Greut pers on:illty Scooters 9150 Very sweet & docsn 't • •••• •• ••••• ••••••••• •• bite . 64~:_982'!_ _ '72 \'am aha 2.SOcc .\IX dirt Pionos & OnJans 8090 blkt'. :'olany exlr:is. ••••••••••• ••••• ••••••• 835·9221 Player P111no. Englli.h '75 llonda400. Undc-; Works ok · ·c; cori:c warr Perf . cond. Slll95. Steck·· Light )I a hog P\1 part v. 6~12·8610. 197·381 l . -'69 Yamaha JSO. Ht'lllt eng. ferring. sad<lle Refinished Upri9ht bags. gd rond. s:rno. S650 644· 1836 8."13·5128 or 962·5 l:!<I <'Vt'!< Grinner Console. xlnt '74 Yamaha Enduro. Xlnt cond App rs 'd SI 000. cond. Knobby tire. $450 • ~pm. aplltud !?. r o hospital offers CXl't'P· ('llslom Llnthing. Xlnt lnp f1guresandtheab1lttylt tionu l future for t t ·hin• nl'C t;ootl deal will\ p~opll'.. Must versatile, lake charge. ~,' ~ s.ti.7200 TYPIST SJX'ClkOuentSpani~h. mature person Mind yr!> ~g~: ·-P •Tlmc. trvrne .J E Free klltt-n white with blue eyes 751·09811 or ' t11ghesc orr accepted . Call 979-11397 761H459 --------------Motor Homes, SportlftCJ Goods 8094 Sal•/Rftlt 9160 f'lease Call for appointment: C Of'Of Rvf lno 979-2000 ... 132 8.P. JOHN C(.)MPANY 546 0:112 ore cxpcr. req 'd. St•nd re· SE/\:\1STHESS. cxpN in Rich Co. 751 2600 suml' to Clas,.ll1l•d ad no. drC'ssmLJktni;t & .t111·r.1 · ·-------Fu"'lture 727 c 10 Daily Piiot, P,0 lions P tT1mc now Veterinary/A11t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uox JS60. Coslu Mc.sa <a !-'/lime l...ilt•r Srntl rr l''ront & back Expr'd II t)) i-: A HE D SO F 1\ 92626 sumc to P.O Box 106'J. senrl rc<1ume to 2341i t'nu,..,'<f. l'ost S.JOO sell Newport l'Wai·h.92660 M1nu1 cmnn Wa y CM s1f,'i &dcl1vc•r55·1·471lO ---!!2626 SECRETARIES Desper ately Neede1\ r'rnci \\ h:it ~·mi want m Daily l'llol C'la~~1fleds. ------ llcal F..state Sale~ TOP SALESMEN EARN $100,000 Yr + An Equal SITE ACQUIStTION ;;Op;;po;;rt;u;ni;ty;E~m;p;lo;y~er~l._:':R:O:K:ER I l8· I 12 5 •b ecuti•• •Administrative •T•chnicai Help W•t•d 7100 6 Ul\eM':ll. 8' ~oft ~O/a, cut vel\'t'l All wood i;:ame set. w /matching eofree this, ser\'Cr & hookcase lll·back cut ''elvot chr King or queen •Sales • Pwc hatlftCJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• hox spring & maltr('SS. L~ lamps. glass lop dinette. Hcrculon d('n furn. Wood coffee this ·•·••··••·•••········•• ....••....••........•.• SKIS, 200M:\t Brand 11c.>w. Rent 26' GMC. Pvt rty. Never ui.cd. No lilltd Cull 833·26l0 or 6·12··1097. ln~s . S35 or best ofr :'.l:ewport Rt-;1ch,Cuilf S.10·3891 -• --------Custom 22'. New cng, TV, Radio, tires. l>all, brks. & erpt. 3 HIFi, Stereo 8098 burn stove.oven. Bot ••••••••••• •• • ••••••••• rcfri~. '10 i:ial wtr. <elt1ct), Zenith 25" color TV. 50 gul gas. elect john. bc>uut. 1111·ture. Must sell. 673·9804. 4·6pm only. See S250 /make orrer. at4~W.Cst Hwy,N.n. ~'6 !lO!ll 25' OP EN ROAD. fully AM t V;\I stereo compo· self-cont. Wlntt•r rolt'S. nenl system w /table 644-~ Personnel Clerk R. E. SALES Free 14 day Tralni'") Course • Accountln9 11peaken .. xlnt. cond $125. ------&_..__ __ ;ilso chllcls rerord player A..to Service for all size reeords SS. P..ts 9400 J\ll le11s than 1 yr. old & in Givf & warm gift -surpm• I l d 5~ 1 4700 the family with a cor1 afghan P~Tirne $3.SO P..-Hour Division of a major corp. has a need for a person to work Mon. Tues & ·~du) on Wed. lo assi11t in in· surance, new hires. & other personnel C'lerll'al runcllons. T y ping 6C •Personal Instruction •Management op port)' 'If •to 80~~ Commission •On the job training •l\l\mY 1op oftu•1..• loc·~ wpm, ability to handle RED CARPET No Sh or Lite Sh Long or -.hort t1>rm assi~nrnenl5>. Tnp SSS. 6 tempo TEMPORAIW IH:LP Call 540·4455 Equal Oppor f:mployer confidential information. REALTORS 9'2· IO 11 Good telephone manner For details call Linda SECRET 1 RY & must like to work ----------'-1 " w/peoplc. Personnel ex· R E. Sale Immediate openlni: for per. not mandatory. • spenon secretary w /min 3 yrs of. Apply In Person Ne«led In prestigious of rice ex~rience & ability Betwn 10·12 & <H nee, xlnl location. llt· to work inde~ndenlly . Week of 10/U /76 tractive bonus plan. Must h<' pleasant, well Or Send Re~ume Wllh HESTIR·IROWM "t'OOmcd. Type 70, sh l!Q Salary Requirement.a • 133-9711 • or d1C'taphone. Call 644-3319 DOCUMENTOR 9AM 'til NOON DIYISION F Ad A • THE IRVIM& CO. Qf ctlOn 550 Newport Ctr Or Adtlressogriaph ' N<•wport Bc1J<'h MulUitraph Call a Equal Oppor Emp11>ycr 2921 S. Daimler sANr" ANA Daily Pilot &iual Oppor Bmployer AD-VISOR Don't drop the ball! Get • job wlth a low.cost Dally Pilot Classified Ad. PboneM2-5678.. 642-5678 ·i::cRET ARY for Real Estate Co. In Fnsh1on lslnnd Mw1t hnvt• 4 yr11 ('XJ>er .. type M·70 wpm, !lh 80·90 wpm. "rply TMI, 369 Slln M1gue Dr. #200. NB. EMPORARY RELIEF of A I I A c h c s And Pains Due To Lack .of Mon· ey & Hum-Drum ltfe Call tO~ Office "07 Overload 557-0061 X 11 eon · · · · ----1 Popular $hell itltch plus sin· Dining Sel/6 high back Queen·~ chr:\, hcuuttful walnut wood $350 546-3642&54!"1·l171 mtwlng, must sell. Ph: ••••••••••••••••••••••• New 11' ('11111cmp. ~ora . Thayer·Cog1t1n desif(ncr. Gruy hrn i.olid. 52!'>0 552·937!) --________ , MOVI NG . mus t se ll i\Mffl\J stereo w /tbl speakers $125, gold de corator tbl with pedC'11tal base sis. pair nf gold/white swag lamps $2.."i, camera SlO, mapll' bunk beds $6S • hl·boy muple dresser S60, walnut chair StO, sm wood cabinet. $10, black naugahyde reclin er chair $251 Spanl11h style .shelf for books or ? ~o. misc items. C:flll 645·78S7 aft 6pm wel'lc,lsys 2 Mcdil. w:tll uniti1, l comb. desk·bkca1H.'. l W/ sh.-lves. $.15 ea. Kna 11z IM'd cm plt, Mt'lllt. triple d~ll!ICr w/ r11ir, 2 2 dtwr nlte stmls & matchln1t hdbrd, $250. 645·1~ Hnvc something to sell? Clustncd ads do it well. ele crochet ridge5 in 3 colr· rrcdtC int~•est•ni: trilure. Cr·• rhel or ~vntliettr. wnr,teCI P,, . I''" 71 43: direcltno\ t~r al "Ir about 53~ 72·•nr.hr\ Sl.00 for e~c~ ~i:lern M~ 35,. eac'I r>.~'e·~ fer !•1$!·tb~: airma:• and ~an~'~:;;. Sen~ to Alice Brooks Neildlecralt Dept. 105 Oa 11v Pilot Bo~ 163. Old Chelsea Sia . New York. NY 1001 1. Print Nam e. Address. Zip, Pattern Number. MORE t111n ever belore! 20C' deti1t111 plus 3 free prl"led in. ~Ide NEW 1976 NEEDLECRAf"T CATALOG' Has ~veryth1rig. 75c Cm lltt with Squaru $1.00 Crochet :. W1rdrobc Sl.00 Nifty rlfty Qullts $1.00 Ripple Crochet . S 1.00 Saw -'-killt l ook S 1.25 Nudlepcinl look S1.00 flower Croc"'t lloo-s: .00 645·7857 aft6pm_. ___ '6S f;I Camino bucket scuts. Need lo be re· covered. SIS for the two. 008·.&971 8oat1 Ir Morine f41Uipment Sllow oll your l1gu1e to site~ ••u•••••••••• • ••• ••••• I Stock D11l~un truck rims pe•lecllon In this hthe da1\·, loots,, Manne & tarl'11, Gncxi tread lcrt shaoed 1ump5uil. fop 11 with d Equlptft9ftt 9030 S20. M93 ·:!073 Arter sw1ngioii. ,reeveless. contras• •••• ••••••• ••• • • • •••• •• 4 :30P~I ing 11cht. Sew for holiday,, '«<J h 0 OO llpmo'"r ·--------Printed Pattern 9349: Mine\' "" 0 ns n "' 416 820 SSOOoroffer. Autos forSale Si res 8. 10. 12. I . . I . 642·7005. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S•le 12 (bust 341 1umpsu11 1a~es ~ yJrds 45·inch. Stnd $1.00 for e~~h pattern. Add 35' for each pattern for first· class airmail, 11.indJlng look, ftow..-9040 Antique•/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Clotflct 9520 26' 1962 Ch ris Cabi n ••••••••••••••••••••••• Su d to: Cruiser. New eng, s ingle •OVER ~CAR.5• scre w . lop cond . IN INVENTOR\' Miarian Martin Pauem Oepl 442 ~/b1t. 543.()58\ dlJ~'..:..... Da11y Pilot 13' Bnston Wh11ler & Doi· 232 West t8th St . Now ly. 40 hp John1>on rhlt. v or k . NY 1001 1 P mi 1 elec shirt & elec start. NAME. ADDRESS. ZIP Teak benchct'. $1200 S I Z E. a l'I d S T Y L [ 675-2047 NUM8ER 1,..;..~~~~~~- ANTIQUES&. CLASSICS Rolls lloyce, Bentley & T· Dir&; From $500 lo $50,000 cars. Hairpin C1ocl11t 8ooll S 1.00 l1111Jtlt Creellet 1ool St .00 Oo you '"°w lltw to tel 2 Instant MtCl'Jllt l ook SI.CO ptlt1111 hu ! Send 111w for 30' Chris Crart Cla111<1c New tw i n cntt ll C<lmpletcly ovcrhaul«d. P edecl rondlt Ion. DUY-SELL-TRADE EL% FARGO & CO 8305. Main·Snntu Ana 10to6. Mon.·Sat. C'lo.-ccd Sundays fn1t111t Mot1•Y loo-SI 00 tut flt• f1ll·Wlnter P1ttcrn Co111p1tt1 Clft to.-$1.00 Ctttloa-cllp coupon lnildt . for Co111pltt.t •t1h•n• ~u S1.00 lrH eatttt11 of your clloite. 12 Prlrt Af1h1ns t 12 50, Send 7th 110w! loot of ti Quilts i 1 . 50.c Sew -K11it look ".2S MllMUlll Oullt looll $~ 50c fUJ•nt Min•• Crafts $ 1 1 •• ~ ts Qullts for Todly. U 50c l111t111t faslllo11 leoll i w ... _ t.f 1& Jiffy Ryp _ 50c 11,lfft Stwt•& look Sl.00 • 547.9709 * $7$00/bst ofr. ~""· for tcN.tfOftof qulckaale. <;all 642·1~.!.._ Vehicles 9Sl0 22' Perform er & trlr. tiil83S hull, m any JCtr aa, 1d flshinl/dln boat. Bit our. $38-9562/ 53$·7993. • ••••••••••••••••••••• bblO·Top Dodae. t ton. Mm<>ft you111. 20k ml., loaded. $6.000. 842-6252. ' r ' . JIJ,2 DAIL V PILOT Mond.ay. October 1 t , 197& t.pcM"W Aalto•, u.,d Ailto•, UHd .... Used .... UHd • Used •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 WM-el Drhes 9550 Aatto1, 1_,of't.d ....._, l•,ort.cl 9760 AMC 9905 Che•rol.+ 9920 Cougor 9933 Ford 9940 otdlMObfle 9955 ? ......•...•......••.... ·········•···•··•···•• .................................................................................... , •.......•••...•...•••.••.•••...•...............•..•..••••••••••••••..•...••. : CHOICE OF TWO IMW •7 I 2 Rot 9725 'i2 Sa b Aul-0. olr i dr 7" 2 d r \I at u" 0 r D -. S U Fir •71 MERCURY ;3 Font \\'1~011 Galu,11• 7t Cutia:..., ~ulon, toud(>cl, t •••••••••••'• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call 63-4 3630. dl.l)'ll. t'Vl'$, urouaham PS. AC. A \l °" " • st;.. COUGAR XR 1 :iot> I'S PA. uuto lruns ulr . lo mi. Ver)' ch•un I 1974TOYOT.A L.ANDCRUISERS lfUI lilllf> t:!l-d rll' Wt'lll'h ,'It J 11 l h I' I:()() c1 11' '\ I 1J66l.l(l)) ONLY $4597 Ml\RQUIS MOTORS J""Ul MtUl(..UfDtfl Pte.W1 \u,. 0•' \fut•• 'I· A#f'' 'f I•·' Ml\~101'; ~1110 <IJ1-1NllD 411) 1i10 Trucks 9560 ...•.......•.•......... '68 For'll II mpi.:. \11, 111~ bed, gd :-.h.1111• .1~1d1• I rom ripped !>l'Jl & 1ll·111111 lwu ~50 (1rm Olli lil IK hd ti ·75 LU\. h.1, rat k, "l1·11 bumpt·r. """' 111·1·1>. am £111 s2•1011 I 11 rn 837 -1117:1 HIS-I Chi!\ ) I 1 on I' ~ ( run:. 11dl s:1;1l1 llu\I• '' Pkuv ht•d '!.7;1 t.1.> 1m1 "Il lUUlll'I 11.·~t olf 1·1 ;111 tipm .. >IM ill.l~I '"41 Chl'' I' l On.:rnJI n111d111011 S!li5 trl:> OIH; SADDLEBACK BMW BUY OR LEASE HOW IMW TRADE·IN's '72 28(10<.'S 12:15C 1-'S I 'i22002 AU21 F'TQI ·n 2ov2 1 ..., w~15 > ·r~ 11111 .mu < t>oWO I" J ";:i ~2 A 1 ~:1:1 mo , 'i:J B11' uria ltl\tlJSI l 'i lB,l\aria <:11111.F:\I ) '7!i2002 A 12Jti\I M'-11 '7553011' A 170!1:-.l l.ll SADDLEBACK BMW MISSION VIEJO 831 -2040 495.4949 CREVIER '72 128 SL Top cood Xlnt &U SIJ7 FM 8 t rk 21.UIOll 011 II.ft SM Us LaJtl.I 1 I , & , \ Ii. . l A C 840 J l36 SJ.117~ C ;1 II 'I Otld ll) bu) Call $40 l93a dll)•. '74 s nh !1!11 F. A c S2395tl>llt ufr 540 ti!IS' •it You Don•t t:~~<; ~11u~~u~v Jlr l'OIA~ ~Mo -...! .. 99 .. 7 !Jti8 Ul7H ,, or&11.i~c1c!io ·" · • · · c1,.>'s S540l13eH·i. I Fr · "'""C• .. AM 1-'M. '4 spd , lie6l of ·' tiff Om powl'r :.1eer1ni,;. powt'r ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnto 9957 J '74 \2-1 S.>ctun, • bf)d. orfg fl.'r 002 lllSJ '75 AMC HORN~T CONHB.L bfukt::.. pawcr wim.low). 1974 MAVERICK ••••••••••••••••••••••• ownl·r, xlnt cond. I.A m1, WAGON ' . • .. M l>tCr(ln ra_d10. vmyl S to' 0 AN tl c v I '71 l'l ;\'TO '1 11tn 1 rm ll tl'rl'O tape-. oyota •765 You re razing roof.etc Ltc. 62TTNB. • . . • . .'11,N'f C'O~U I ~, ~ tn!'> . i4':! •••••••••• ••••••••••••• 6 C) tind~r. auto tr JO:. T M 1,. 53899 Jutomatlt. pwr ... 11 f'r .,.., • 5 1 ,...I.,., til' SOUTHERN IJO\\<'r ~tl!l'r1n1:. powe 00 UC • tnl). air t'On<I. v111,1 rool .x,lllO .. 1 It.ii• l Hondo 9727 OR.ANGE COUNTY'S br.,lm. 1 udw. lu1a:a~c CONNELL SJ.MT.A AHA & low mill's Thl' l)i:lll·Ct 74 l'irllo s.1111r\'. :ur ronct, ••••••••••••••••••••••• rul'k ;\1 rnt t·ondnwn LIHCOLH M!RCURY 2nd Clll'' <2087l))). au lo tra1111. lull rJd•. I Brand Hew •76 VOLUME Low m 1 I l· s I. 1 l' CHEVROLET 1301 N Tu:.lln HOW OML Y $2495 suix•r deun 61Hll03 • TOYOTA DE.ALER 02.!lM Wit Santa .Ano 547-0511 --' HONDA Cars Sl999 -.>i12x llurl>or lihi..1 ·n flunohout. :\t JJ:s , OVER I OO 1-:XAJ\IPLE Brunet 1ww SJ.HT.A .AHA CO.Sii\ ~U-:Si\ D~ 9935 !>ll'n'O, i.tu:k s htll c~tn\ 1976 'l'u)ola 2 Ur & lull) Ll .... C OLM MERCURY 51G t:..'00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mado. Sl ilOO 11-1:!· 13!17 I To Choot.• From! ,•q1.11ppt·d 1 1:-,i1~2n " -·71 Corunrt 500 w.:n. llkc --·...u.. 9a60 I 1301 N Tu:-lln I 973 CHEVY ymvvm ., UNIVERSITY ONLY $2997 SontaAna $47-0511 NOVALIFTIACK ~~~;f;~·~J.OOOmi.$24:!00 ••••••••••••••••••••••' Oldtmobil• -ATLAS H-do c--. GMC '71 Sµort;ihout .... snap11) \'tl . lllllllln tl\ll'. l)\i r ·~ Ch11ri.:er 383 cnl!. l\./C. M---9950 Ml\RQUIS MOTORS .,., ... " \ s I l' l' r 1 n.: u nu 11ua11' • et"Cury TrYCks ·x Xlnt l'11tld F ·;i1r . ,1" , tSl>?O~J · A!\1 f M :-.ll'fl'o ri1d10. 4 •••••••••••••••••• ••••• '""""llarborlll\d l'S. I'll , r.1 d111 llllOnH.LY$2897 ~pkrs ,,nl'\~ ho.t~~ry '74Capn2ROO\'Gt•ni.: t>lx Chry1l•r/Plymouth ' =->'' 714 G42 llti:I .-.11>00 I h \21315!:12·2776 ltll. 01110 tr:iil•, •\ttlrlu•I . 0 1>en Ouily & Sun. 'lll Ill JllMOJM AQ(,UIRlfl P .. W, \.c11• 0•1 q<>t••) Au·•,. I••' M l\\ION ., ti JO Cost ;i J\lc:.a 5.tO !J64 1 IB ~ ~ "' l'M ....................... 9730 llJI -Jll~O ~9~ -IJIO Buick 991 fu<.'t ;11r Xl11t merh «oml .. ...,.~ 541t-l4117 :?02!1 Ha1 t>or Ulvd . •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • '76 Cvl'c.forbn Loaded I.A ~ • · Co., HI ;o.11,~,,1 SIS E t)Pl' :!+2, c·hrnml' & I SI ~ UOAOWAY wires, A:\I l':\I. i:uoct In SAHIA AHA \ l'!>lml'nt car :;3.SlHI 835·3171 !)5..1238-l '73 Toyota Corona Detuxe Coupe I 'l>l'Cd . "ll•reo & pnl'l•c1 IO:.ell' l!J711.IES1 S.ADDLEl.ACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495.4949 197 I BUICK mihi~r. Silver )lra~ ·;3 ~l tO'<l\llS, loJdcd. :.upt•r 546-1934 CUSTOM LESAIRE ~· P~ ll35·9221 l'll'an. lo mi. S2.9!10 ·• <.:O l 'PF. Foll w1~t.' foc-d 9940 003·11818uf\5 ·1~ l'l)moulh Gnod b,11. v. ;i1rc11ml &u·u1s1•ron ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ .•• --9952 ll•rv, llrt>s. r.111lutor, ~ Ir 11 I Imm J. c· u I J l l •7 F rd T • I A ..... s OftCJ 11111,, need'\ v.01k :\l,11\11 T'4( UUIMAYE DfllYINO llACttlNE •USED BMW's* Karmann Ghio 9735 ..........•...•......•. 1:1 llJ' ana 1!1H:lll:\ \' J '69 K;irmann t;l11;1 11:.1 m, Cll21LJIO ori~o"nr Sli:141 i5 2tHl2 l ti2'J~ BK 1 "4i-15·!J280 da\). C lo sed On Sundays , _ _ , . -51 KG Cl;1:-:-.1t. nu t'lll!. ·75 Ch1n<M1l.. :\I 101 Ca mpl'r P I' C.1 ll lloh. 0 0 on no 2 ' r f tr ••••••••••• •••••••••••• rr. r.ltl ~mo thruout' lllli9ND='i I 73 MALIBU rnnct. PS PU, 1 own~r ·,;~ \I U'<I 2t!9 \'('rv ~d v 1 ~" · · HOWONLYSl695 ~lntt·ond S2.7011 l·,1r.lom11<.'.~t·~75·9_1~ cond Call for tll't.itl:. onhac 99651 Ml\RQUIS MOTORS 1:;, t..•!-J & "knd'. ~!JS t~2 ;u f-"ord \'an ., , ton, 2 g~~ ~1000 firm $Ut·630ti ••••••••••••••••••••••• Continfftcrl 9930 t.m, I..~. ,.tei:eo 8 trk .. ma1:s .. ;-!\! u~tan~.-Zll!J. JulU. iO Graml l'r1i. ~.I Sp<.'l'c..I 1n ho' l.tl tnl'(h rond ,_ .... cond Sl2UU 111,,1 c>I PkR. lcatht'r ,.cat:-..1 6S EJ l' .11n 1110 ;1 .. 0 Eni.: '!XI. J.:Ooll !lliM !1!1;,10 aft wku~~ 557 17i3 I 7:? B :\I W Ha,. ;1r1 a . paint, hod)' l!rt•at. lllll'r .\\I F:\l ~ur cund. PS. shot S80U 0041 4!>."il 'i2 Co1 ona ;\lark II, ..i cir, ?8802 MARGUIRlll P~Wl '>on 01rqofrwi.y -Au r r I• t Ml~~IO"' VII JO 8Jl-7880 49~ -1210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S2 195 518 1187 1!1""1 · Al\l I F'l\I , new tires & '74 LIMCOLM . for55l 5735 brakes S1400 l'h6-l4·0553 , CONTINENT .AL r.:1 Ford ti;il,1x"" auto \'8, .,.,, :\I t ng N"'w l11 ., & I Vans uulo tran .... '(lnl rnnd, --9738 .i11·. o.1u10 Xlnl n111d ~">1!15 1 tiXli 7:100 u~i.. 10 Mrnda Slti.Si) li7:1 3350 957o llutrh ti7:1 Kf>l!I •••••••••••••••••••••••. . '71 lluit·k Convl'rt1hlc. ful ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·73 HX2 Coup(', IU).! l':.ll'k, 71 (l'Own Wai:on ,\ l', u<1u1pped. S:l41HI P\I j)l). ·;i Ford 200 I' II, I' lo.. ORAMGE COUNTY'S mai:s. s pecial 101>. man) radio, auto. Ill'\\ hrak~,.. !162·2·122 l~>u 111 I 30 m oril! o""m•r S:UHlll1 h1·~1 OLDEST other Ktra,., 1!"16 1J83,1 I 1 l'l'.; 0r1 g 1111• n l' r • · " offer ot!H :?:IH2. l·11·" Runs look" i:rr·ut' ti7.000 :'lion frt 1 ·;1 :\l;wla HX3 Couvt.'. -l mi S1550 l'h U41 ti027 Cadillac 9915 15 Dod1.w Tra<lt•,ma11 21"1. .\1r. ro.11lwl-.. 1)\H, t Jiil'. c u ~ l • IJ I a 1· k IJ 1 En>!brl•hnn, 21:1 ;,!Iii !l!l!"1ti :-.;ilt·~ s,·n H'l' L ... a,.111,.: '\pd. undl·r '' rnty. \'er\ ••••••••• •••••••••. •••. dt·an 837 :1202 . ·;I Corull.1 S5. Xlnl C'ond, 1972 ELDORADO ,\lu~l .,I'll ~~1011 ulr. Mercedes Beni 9740 m~ m1~&'i:1:! 1n 1 COUPE . ..................... . PS, PB. a ir 5-1 000 n11 "'' • ui. .c ' l <Hrbird 9970 MARK IV Forml·r l'ld~rl\' 'Lcisur~ hrakes Call Sf>I 3980 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Full\· P0"'1'r e<1u1111w<I. World ownt:r . S775 l)(!twec115:30 &~ OOpm '7$ FORD i\\I F\I :-.ti•n•u I .qH', ·l!li 28!11 · · · · · s r THU ... DERBIRD ,·111vl 1111>. ll•athtT ~i·at~. (i(i l\I ust an~ .. u re .... l ii l -. l 1•1• 1 111 i.: " h n· 1. '70 Ford Cortina. :1.lnt run l'ni:tnc F;vcrylhtnl! ~·l.s~· HARDTOP 1·ru1,c l·ontrnl !'\1·1". nini.: t•uml t;1w1I bodv & hurtrn Sl'e t.o .~<.'ltcH \' 8, auto. trans .. fal't11ry ~l.'Ht:I int.. l1r~s S57.;. ufft>r. _:-.takcoffrr 612 4w71 air. powet· i>lecnn~. :.inc.J $7899 751·1050.aft 5!J632Hti3 Oldsmobile 9955 1><1\\<'r hr.1kt>s, poWl'r -- -w 1 n ti o w s . A :\I f F !\I SANTA ANA I 1!17:1 I.TD. "'t'l' l"<•r. Im ••••••••••••••••••••••• "ll,rl'<I, vi nyl root. rall)1} LIMCOLH MERCURY mar. Low miles. A c . 1969 OLDS whcl'ls Ser 13r.OOO. Roy Carver.Inc. 'ti-l Cht•\ ~ \ •111 II n; Hull ... fl mn· IHIW <.:11n clll• l'll).! \lu.,l "'II SIOOO 531i !Hii'I .trl fi '64 MBZ 220SE CLASSIC COUPE Triumph 9767 Ll'alht·r :-.1'ah, Ii l1al'k t il lh' & r u 11 I> II'"' r <577F\'i 1 1:m1 !'; Tu,,tm l!l't'l'n !>1600. or bc~t 01 CUTLASS COUPE $5499 Santo Ana 547-05 I I fl•r. l'\'l part~. 5I0·7~HI Air ccrntl. w low. In\\ K 5 wkcly),, or .1<!1-2157 mill's tZKHlll.S>. SANT.A ANA 1'1W JJmbot'l'<' '\1·11 purl lll'Jt•h I) 1H fi-1-11 1>.l l·'OHIJ\'A!li 1Windt1"'1 . b t•yJ Cpls. urp:-. .... tl'rl'O, Copn 971 5 rblt auto Iran' ,\ tarh ••••••••••••••••••••••• lunl' up 111 11 iG :>!!1 1976 CAPRI II l'.l!>h 833 O'J<:!I I 'lll'l'tl . air concL AAltos Wonted 9590 "1l'""0 1''1""l'lle Bu' 111 1t-.. ~t· llH3:\IWE>-. ••••...•••............. CASH FOR CARS! Top S DollJr S paid for d<.'an usl'<f l'ar,., trut·k, tit SADDLEB.ACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495.4 949 Cun<'lll'l>. Jhk ror l'aul .71 c· .. ,lM"t ''l' \\I L''l U'N •111 .11111 -" '-' •·" ~ • f;1l1111, I ,1lll'I \\ hb -.l('l' HOWARD Chenolet hc·lll·d r.1c1 1111, )2150 lm"l' & <Jua1I S\,. Ill:! ti~lll NEWl'OHT BEACll WE P1\ Y TOI' DOLi,,\ H FOR TOI' us1-;u CAHS FOREIGN. UOMESTJ<.' 7;1 l'.1p11. \ h, \llll \'1tnd I "" 11«1'. $:!,!IHO ht·...,I 111/cr :'ll.1rk ;,xt :!:11:! 11:11 ~ltlJO or Cl./\SSl<'S 7:1 ('Jpn. ·I :-.11tl, VtJ. reall~ If your car i!> t•xtr;i t'lc:1n ( lt·:in. Brii.:ht red. Onl.1 ~l'l' us fir!>l s:!.~lkl 5-lf>·:.!31K BAUER BUICK 29251 (Jrbor Ill''" l 'o:-.1 a :\h·~.1 '17!1 :!:>lH1 WE Ill\' •CSEDC,\HS& THLCKS• C:oml' in or l".111 FREE .Appraisal Groth Chevrolet l8:?11l~·:>lh 111\d llunt111i:ton lkJth 847-6087 • 5 49-3331 rn I' nrn 1.. \ u I'' II> I \I \J Jo;[)J \Tl-I.\ FOH \I.I. l''OtU :1<; N C i\ltS <·\LI. cm C0:\1~:1-.; TOSE~: li5 NEWPORT IMPORTS :IHMI W. Cst llwv. I\ B 642-9405 TOP DOLLAR PAID l·'Oh n.1·: '-.: IMPORT CARS 71 l';i 1iri. 21100. .i s pd \Ju.,l ~l'll bl·-.t uffcr. ~15 1 5~lli7 Dats un 9720 ......................• Sales & Leo1in9 TOP Dollar Paid On A l.L Trade-ms NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Do•e Street '\:c,1r :\lttl·Arthur t.. .L1mborre Roart... 833-1300 DRIVE A LITTLE •.. SAVE A LOT SllOI' & COMP A HF. BARWICk DATSUN ~:tn .Juan C;1p1~trano 831-1375 493.3375 TOP BUYER Sl•1• ui. first. & la,.t' Top dollar paid for imports. COSTA MES.A . DATSUN :.'H l:i llarhor JU,·d l'11,.t;1 \li•.,a 5~0 !illO 'j I :.!fill/. 'llll l'Olltl 111 m1 . 111·" H.JCl1.1b ,\ :\1 F:\I . Hare 1 ~peed. :.unroor. lt>athcr. !I lratk ..,tt·n·u & 250 enJ;llll' Buy or ll·a-.1• 1020NL1';J SADDLEB.ACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495.4949 1960 :\lcrcl'dc~ 220, I :.pd. .\:\I F:\I radio. nl·W Ill tenor & hn•s 25 m1 IJl!t ~al. ~l oHt>r or trade· for IJICkup or pant•I ti75·0!liU cldyl> or 6i3·96i6 aft Hpm Lease Mew· Used OVER 100 MERCEDES ON DISPLAY House of Imports AUTllOHIZ~;o :\I ERCEIJES Dt::ALEH 68(;2 Mam·hel>ll.'r, Buena Park 523-7250 On the Sanlu Ana Fwy. '73 M erc~cs 45() SL. 440-1004. .•.............•.....•. 197 I Triumph TR6 \ Olll' O\\tll'r «ar XLNT1 C5030TR) Hu} or lt•OJSl' SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS 83 I ·2040 495-4949 '76 Triumph TR7 I -. p c· l' d . \ \I F :'II mull1pll•\ 1·a:-.:-.l'lll'. t.1c· lc>ry Jlf 1·onct . orani:c• "' blark rntrrior & '"'"' than ltl.tk>O m1h•,., l.tkl• :-.i':W·:-.t1ll unJl•r r.1ct11r) w;irrant~ < IJ!jl'll.J > MOW $5695 BARWICK DATSUN San ,/u,111 l'ap"tra.no 831-1375 493.3375 ·75 TH7. mo' 1ni.: uut nf url'a Mu:-;t "'-"'' lk,.,t ol ll'r. •191 00\IK Volkswa9en 9770 . .................•.... '68 VW Squ;irch;itk. super clean. new eng, clutch. hrake!I, shocks. mai.;s. radial:-.. llur!lt ~hiflcr. Sl!JUO l-'1rm 646-80IW 2UI' Anahl'1111 St.. Co;. ta M<'Sa . l-:1 cs ·n 11i w J l(on. ''1 F)I. :.:1.000 m1 'Int l'Oncl S2.!150 IHll !16.'ll '76 Mern·de:. 2~00. llll' ivol"y, auto. ,\:\I F:\1 sunroof. 8000 m1"-.. War rant v 1:. tr ansrera blc SI t .sOO 675·1166.1 5K \'W \ .111 :\lus:s. 151le ens:. SW\J ·1;5 V\\' \'.in nc i5 450 SEL. 18:\l mt. "llrl. l'O~. S.'10(1 til-0·0151 ,,tc reo. St6.:JtHJ Xlnt l'Ond Ca II 495 66M!> 'fij Bui: 1mmJ1' ' H1•hlt en~ hlk "' l'hronH' i ttn!> MB '72 600 5!175 firm 1!l7 3!!65 Pvt ply. Lee, 114 998-2252 Wkdys 1714)642·2127 'tili VW BL'G. C.d C'Ontl ------Mu).t :-.t>ll. l\1akt• otrcr MG 9742 !iStl 171i ••••••••••••••••••••••• \'W Sumlwl l'ump1·r 'ti!I 1974 MG MIDGET Hudwb. F:'ll. Snrl . nu Super little sportst·;ir, t>11i: . S<!O:I!" ll HI :i:I 11 immuculall• lh1•unul' (OU LlN >. MHRQUIS MOTORS 2111101 MARC.UI lllTI PMWV ~,nOu·qof,.,.,t -Ao1t·•)'f .. ,t Ml~~ION .,,1110 '70 V\V l'np T11p ('.1 mrtr Van. StoH'. l>mk, H'l' hn:1. S2JOO. !~i8-:!0I:! Volvo 9772 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8JI • 2880 411S • 1 /IO .11110 '-l!ICHI 11:11 a 151; tla) I> --- UI 1~1;1;, llH l'\ l'~ & wkmh Porsche 9750 SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY'S VOLUME VOLVO DEAi.ER WANTED1 JUHk AUTOS ~\11•.Hll \'\ l't1Hl.l1.\ I It.II 1111111 1·.1,h 111.111 ,111111111 17 J I 1 I f, l.1 •I '11 111lull111·1•11 /1•1111h 'i'il'tl ;:1 'lllf. H1•tl. l~ptl . \l.11:~. ,\\I F:'ll, ;11r C .:.t 11(1 ti7J lli:ll 'ii ll.1l,llll !"1111 I'(• ~I ,;illCI I .1 I I ·~~ Hi!l:.~1(1 I l ,1 tn ..........•.••••.••.•.• 1973 PORSCHE 91 IE TARGA :; :.peed . <llr concl . ..,l<.'rl'e>. masts Buy or X l.;\1 lr<1sc plan 160011 PCl S.ADDLEl.ACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831·2040 495.4949 EXAM Pt.I-: Ur:in<1 n1·w 1!17G Voho 2 t2S Full.1 l'<IWPJX.'<I (l)IJC1t}l6l ONLY $6596 Ml\RQUIS MOTORS $4195 Nabers Codl8ac 1600 ......... cl C.ta MeiO 540 9\00 Nabers Cadillac Qu.&li1y .ind P1iet• l1UJl'<llllCCd I r.1"111: 'p1'l 11l1,I · p,, 1<-11,d K.11,•, I .11~<''' 'tkt111111 .. 1 "''"' .~ u,1·d ( ,1d1ll,IC\ Ill 01 llll:l' l •lllllh Op1·n ~wi.1.1\ C.idillac Master Dealt'• 2hllll H.1d1111 Bl\d ( '"'J "''-1'10 •111111 Nabers Cadillac 'iii SU~ LOi\UED !.< ;\I I . H I. l ' 1-: I w II T 5-lti 5075 AFT <tl'M PVT PT\'. '7fi f':f Dorado Con~ert Loaded. ~·uel 111Jl'l'll'd 11100 ;\Ii Bl' s t llflt•r ((),JZ~5!1l S lll-77H 01 IOHllGi 1968 CADILLAC DEVILLE Full pow1'r "ith tllt wllccl (\\' n:&1!1l MOW ONLY S I 199 Ml\RQUIS MOTORS '880~ MARC.UIRll( PNWf )onr•e-qoS,..,y -Av~'y l••' MISSION VllJO bJl-2880 49S·l110 1969 ELDORADO COUPE 1\ \I F:\I slr11·11 1.111111, lull ""~I 1or1 & 1 ill wh1•t'I l~KX!r.17 1 g;z195 1..,11,1. 'bi 911 Targa F<mt11st1c s:rnoo mech'l cond 1;1st1. 673-63'17. 7~h0J MAll<·Ullllll P1<Wr -,,,,, 01,·r1<'f,...,., A,.,., 'I 11111• Ml\\10,._ -.110 d.ll-1Hij0 49~-1110 HcilMtrs Cadillac .1600 ...... llY.t c.to Mew S40 '100 Autos. Imported •••...•••.•............ Alfa Rome o 9705 •••••················•• 'ti7 1\ll.1 llt11111•11 I tit ~1·d \HOO Su1w1 1•11i.:11w I \\hi d1:-.1• hr .1k1·-. \1 11 lll'hn rad1ah 1111011 l·11i11h11n11 $1750 Ill f1•1 1.i:. ;·, p Audi 9707 ...•..•......•....•.... '72 AUDI I OOLS 1,.ix·cu. J.ir uincl rd1u1 ll tr.ins & Ill'\\ 1111 ~ ,\ must SEE! 111:H:Ytt1 $nvr' Hoy ur h•,1,..• SADDLEl.ACK VI.LUY IMPORTS 83 I ·2040 495.4949 '72 AUDI I OOLS Automatic. 11unroof & 1111 l' 0 1l J I 5 3 !I II I) \ I Hrd11c'1'<l t111lllh sz49·s Ml\RQUIS MOTORS . )UOJ MAl uUllllll PMW• '°''" ('' ,,.~1, •y A~,..• r I,.,, "''"'ON Vol 10 • .. 1'· ]lllt-Q 4Q\ 1}'0 ' 9723 ......................• '!~I :l:IO CIT :!~ Z lforg/blk. llorrnni '~ :1.0011 mt 011 I hit 1•11i: f,.l 1·01150 / Iii'..! 00~1 ~~~ ........•••. !?.2.~ Fl \T BllYEHS A TTTF:NTION BRAND NEW • FIAT · 131 WAGON $4299 with atltomcrtic trans. i Tux & L1('. <Ser .15234 I ACT HOW! DICK MILLER MOTORS FIAT I ZO W. Womer ot Moin Santa Ana 557-2132 I '67 911 . Red & hlk Must:-.. 5·'11>tl. :rnp1•r l'001t. G44-08SO or fi42·1Hl5 I '63Super 00. Whl & blk, xlntcond. Cull 644-0850 or IM2·005 I ·75 Porsche 911 S. $12,000/bst ofr. Musl sell 968 213!1 ·70 Porsch<.' 791 tT. -.upl'rb cond. new ltrl'~. ncv. paint. AL'. 4!1U 1391 '68 911 ciw ~ cni.: ,\ C Askin~ $5.500 554 ~J arll'r 5pm ·n l Tor. 356 B Con H't l l)rau1. rehlt 1600, 11.\1 . rstor w doc S6799 1213 > 59'l·l838 '67 Tar~a 9115. New rblt eng, Konis & clult'h. Lik<' nt•w. S7400. Ph G44 R046 Rolla lloyu 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• #l DEALER IN U.S.A. mR ~~~VER ROllS·ROYCE IMfJ•mwtt '-WMft llH(fl \'-"---' ..0 t-644 ClOSlO SUNO"YS Oun 't drop the ball 1 Oct a job with e low-cost Olllly ORANGE COUNTY VOLVO EXCl.tJSIV f-:L Y VOi. VO Comoro 9917 CnrKC!"l Vol\o Oeo1cr ••••••••••••••••••••••• mOranJteCounty• ·;3 Cll.:\11\HO. :1r1orr. 4 BUY or L EASE iipd. PS, PB, AC, S:l.000. UIRECT 4!~1-1391 [!f :ft!l:] ~~:~£~;;·~~·;!~.~~ 2025 ~-Manchester ~OHZA 2 + 2 Anaheim 750-2011 '\ u tom ,1t1 ('. r ;1 d ICI ' •SALES •SERVICE •LEASIMG O•erseas Dl'fi••ry Service & part11 now open on Sal's 8 to 4 for your convenience. heater. »1>1•r1.1 I w twt'I"' ran 'I hr tolcl from :'\ EW • W801.W \I ONLY $2991 Ml\RQUIS MOTORS ~H.H}}MAflf.l•fl1 'lf P~W • ... , •• , t). ,,r.• ,,..., A ... ,. f. I Ml\\ION v•I JO tt, l -}H~O .1.Q ,. 1:10 USE THI DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT .. SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call 642 .. 5671 bt.n1 Pilot Clauiflc-d l\d SELL idle-ltt•m with a Pbond42 51$78 Dillly Palot Cla ltled Ad. ---------. a NOTICE ho\\ Ua1ly Pilot Uu:-.~ 1r1t>d ads d1),plav their messa~c~ "1th lq~tbllil) and 1mµa<•I ''Our :.icb. "'" Jrl' proud to ~ay. n~all) ~el rc:.ulb Phone 6-12 5678 11kncb . a~k lor Hud NOW ONL y S 1695 LINCOLN MERCURY IFYOU have a ~en-ice to offer or good~ lo sell. place a n au 1n the Ua1ly Pilot Classified Section . • . Phone 642-5678 Ml\RQUIS MOTORS 1«ib01 MAR<.,ufAlft P9'WY !:to,, Q.,.<1•.J f , .. ,. -A • .-1.,, ,,,, M l~~tON ""JO 8J1-J880 49\·1210 13010 N. Tuslrn Santa Ana 54 7-051 l Class.Cicd ads sell b1R items. small items or any item. Just call 642-5678. Gener of 990 I GeMral 990 I General 990 I General 9901 .......••.•••.•...••.••.......................••••.....•••.•••••••..• •······················ , MEET OUR MEW USED C.AR MANAGER BILL ''PAPPY" HERRERA Pappy has been In the automobile business for over 26 years selling & rrenaging He has been with Johnson & Son for some lime in the used car dept. PaPDY shares the same goal as we do; to otrer only the best & cleanest cars around at a lair price SOME OUTSTANDING VALUES FOR YOU LUXURY CARS '72 T-llRD V 8. auto trans . factory air conditioning, power s teer ing. power brakes. power win dows. powc•r !.Cats. radio. heater. whitewall tires, vinyl roor. tinted glass. wheel covers (920NQOl '3266 '75 MARI< IV Turquu1.;e f1n1 ~h. with white leather lnlenor. and while vinyl roof. Individual rronl power seals. power windows. brakes uni.I stecrin1_i. ddtlr lo<.'ks. air cond _ till -;teerin~ whee l. cruise control, AM/FM radio wilh 8 track tape dcrk. thi~ beauty has only gone 21,010 milt·~ See It today Serial #fi911.PY '9688 '74 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL 1 dr :-.cdan MN alhc hrown with matching leather interior and vlnvl roof Power window ... '>eat. hrakc'> and ~leering Air cont! . A~' PM ,,ereo and door II)(' ks. tilt sleenni.: wne<'I & c·rw .. e control. auto trans. A bcaut1ru1 famtlv 'cdo1n LIC 11645.IPP '73 LINCOLN CONT. CP. This dark ~rcen hrauty hos individual comfort lounge, power as!listed frt seats, loather interior & vmvl roof. tilt steering wherl. l'owcr windows. hrokcs. steering. nutomatil' tram1m lssinn. air cond., AM/FM ~ter<.'O & II track tape deck. sec this beauty today LIC. ~ 115H EZ '5188 IMPORTS •72 CAPRI 2000/SIRIES - I .;p V1nvl roor decor group Medium bluc I.I(' #29-tGOQ Sult' pric~ ot '2188 '74 COURIER PICKUP 1 speed, Jackman mal(s. tarp, yellow. C83208UJ. '2588 ~ 16 11A~BO~ UlVO cosr" vlSiA ~·o-~6l0 I • . OTHERS '72 FORD MAVERICK Autom ali(' trans m1 ss1on ractory air conditionm~. pawer stccnng. radio, heater. Nice car' Lie No 063ELV> '1999 '7 5 FORD RANCHERO V-8. auto. trans • factory air conditioning. power steerlnit. rndio. heater C IS696YI '5195 •75 PLYMOUTH FURY SPORT COUPE Auto trans . ractory air conditioning. power .,leennl!. radio, healer. vmyl roor. Less than 6.000 miles (2GlMMW l '4495 SPECIALTY CARS •72 COUGAR XR7 Light Arcen . w11h white vinyl roor ond lntcrior. air con1I . uutomalic lranNmi~sion, console, indlv1dual bu«kel seats, ll.M radio with 8 lrack I ape deck. A fine car for a Hmall . price. LlC. #435llGC. '2888 '73 MERCURY MOMTEGO CP. Sharp 2 dr. with• red exterior. while vinyl roor. and white intcnor , power atecnng and brakes. nutomatk transml'l'lion. air l'Ond. AM radio & tape deck. LIC. •2."i.1KRV. Onve ii home for only '2688 WAGONS 75 MHCUllY MAR9UIS WAGON Auto. trnns., factory 11lr conditioning, pawer stterlng, f)<lw~r brnkcs. redlo, heater. 9 Passenger. (SMNDV>. 1 4888 7 • D11ntington Beaeh · Fo1•ntain Valley ' EDITION rte.rnoo11 N •• Stcpeks VOL 699 NO. 285, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' i .TEN CENT§ 0 ·Butz -·'£loses Book' on Racial Sl11r ·, discussed free enterprise in the ~oy higher quality food than s uccess stories in the America I · B1J'ATRYCLA.NCY o.-.o.uyll'llel..,... !'onntt -.rtculture secretary Earl But.r...Mid an Qrange County audieaw!i today he "pald a tnmendcMls personal price" for wbat he said were indise!teet r~ marks about blacks. But be told the crowd in Buts was speaking to about l.SOO delegates to the National M · sociaUon of Conc~ssiOllaires and National AasociaUoo ot Theater Owners at the Disneyland Hotel. In a press conference af- terward, be also said be would not discuss the matter further adding the remarks were taken out of context Crom a priVate conversa-tion. - U.S. and what be said was the thoseinothtrnatioosandpaekag-story." . , finest food supplying and market· lne and marketing provides some ~caus_e Amencans spend re~ ingsystemintheworld. ..built-inmaidservice." latively little for food, they ~av~ Butz, who served 8$ agriculiure For example, he said, 60 per-more money for automobiles~ secretary since 1971, said t.J.s. cent of the potatoes consumed in t~levision s ets and other conve~ consumers spent 17 percent of the U.S. today are alread,y peeled ruences. theirpayforCoodtodaycompared and partially processed, work "U you listen lo some of the • Anaheim that be did not intend to discuss the matter further, noting "thatcbapteris closed.•• Butz. dressed conservatively in .a gray pin·strlped suit, blue striped shirt and maroon tie, said ot the racial slur which forced bis cabinet resignation a week ago, "lbave apologized assincerely as I.knowhowtodoit." He said he intends to do all he can to help congressioJ)al can- didates, Pre,sident Ford's re- eleclion effort as well as the draft· ingofnew Carm legislation. Partly referring to notes, Butz with 20 peroent in Canada and 25 formerly done in the kitchen. And political palaver tba~ is g<>!ng to 40 'percent in otber nations of be said similar conveniences are around YO!J g~t the. impression theworld. packagedintootherfoods. that America is falling apart at In addition, he said U.S. citizens ''This is one of the marvelous • <See BUTZ. Page .t\2) Mobile Park Top Decided A dispute centering on the esthetic appearance of rooftops of a Huntington Be acb mobile home park bas been decided in favor of the park owners by the city coun· cil. Council members unanimously decided that granular textured aluminum panel shingles will be acceptable for patio covers and carports in the park. Some homeowners of bluff areas overlooking the develop· ment bad expressed concerns that the aluminum-based shingles would constitute a glare. A number of residents in the bluffs had insisted that the shingles for the coverings be either shake, cedar or composi· lion as stipulated originally by ci· tycodes. It was determined, however, that materials other than the granular aluminum panels would be too heavy for the carports and patios to support. The rooftops of the coaches themselves was not an issue in the dispute. Councilman Ron Shenkman said that the rights of the mobile park owners had lo be observed prior lo the 6 to O city council vote on them alter Wednesday night. "They are being priced out of single residence homes and they are not second class citizens," he said. Mayor Harriett Wieder also !;poke in defense of mobile home parks. "These are the developments of today and tomorrow," she said. "People can no longer afford to buy homes. Attitudes will have to change towards mobile borne parks," she observed. The park is located at the southwest corner of Ellis Avenue and Newland Street adjacent to the Fountain Valley city boun- daries. New Missiles For Israelis Okayed by U.S . WASHfNGTON (AP) -The United Stales has agreed to give Israel a new, extremely sophisticated missile system for use primarily in antitank warfare, Israeli and U.S. sources said today. The deal does not involve an in· crease in the cost or American military aid now scheduled for Jsrael, but wilJ make new weapons available that were not previously offered. Israel is now set to receive $1.5 bUlion in direct military aide plus another $800 million in economic assistance. The new prorram involves a top-secret antitank missile ~ystem within that Cinnncial framework, according to an hraeli oCCiciaf. Presidential press secretary Roo Nessen confirmed that the U.S. would give ISTael "certain additional items of military hardware.'' adding that "it is in CJUr interest to sell these goods.·· Nessen declined to spell out what the new equipment would lie, though some details were ob- tained from sources elsewhere. Here's Right Flu Number ln Sunday's Daily Pilot story about swinf: nu vac- c in a U on clinics. tbe telephone number tor ln· ronnat.lon about the clinics was incorrectl.Y listed. The correct phone number Cor the Communi· ty Referral and lnforma- t.i.on Service ia 547-5178. '1be Daily Pilot f'fP"(& tbeerrw. ' S a v ed Fro111 t.lae Pyre .. A fireman rescues skeleton from haunted house operat- ed by Milwaukee March of Dimes after fire broke out in the building housing fund raising project. PoUce in Milwaukee say tbey suspect arson. Redevelopment Eyed by Council By ROBERT BARKER Of l1M Dally ftli.I 5Qfl Huntington Beach City Council members are expected to come to grips with downtown re- development tonight. The issue has confronted the city for nearly IO years. Supporters of redevelopment say that action to correct what they say are blight conditions in the city is overdue. Opponents of redevelopment say the plan could have an ad- verse effect on residents for as long as three decades. Some or them say that it will place too much authority in the hands of too few officials. Whatever the lomc-range ram- ificatlons, downtown recevelop- ment has been gaining momen· tum as an emotional issue in the city in recent weeks. Both sides have retained special counsel for tonight's showdown when the city council, doubling as the redevelopment agency, holds hearings on the plan and its environmental im· pact. The most intensive redevelop- ment plan would locus on a five- block area along Pacific Coast Highway between Lake Street and Sixth Street. Existing structures would be School Bids Par e nts Marina High School will bold its annual back to school night rrom 7:30 to 9 p.m. Wednesday. Parents of Marina students are ·invited to meet in the school cafeteria for a brief orientation followed by a toar of the classrooms. removed and replaced with higher intensity development, in· clu<ling a 22-story hotel, an office tower building and retail, specialty. commercial and park· ing developments. Th.is plan also would call for some development on the pier along with its refurbishing and upgrading. Tied with the high intensity plan is development of a four- block area along Main Street between Walnut Avenue and Orange Avenue. This four-block area would in· elude specialty and retail com· merciaJ uses and areas would be converted to pedestrian ways and a mall concept. Existing structures would be rehabilitated in accordance with a theme con- cept. A second alternative for the five-block area along Pacific Coast Highway would be of lesser intensity. Existing structures would be removed anct replaced with "moderate intensity develop· ment," including offices, retail and specialty commercial stores and parking structures. Several restaurants and beach-oriented businesses would be located on the ocean side of Pacific Coast Highway. The pier, however, would be upgraded only to retain its original character without any new development. The four-block area along Main Street would be rehabilitated in the same man- ner as the alternative with the highest density. A third concept poses the lowest intensity of all. It would concentrate on rehabilitation ~ the entire Cive·block area along (See ISSUE, Pace "2) 3 Boats Reached 2 Hurt as Cruisers Run Aground Two people were injured Sun· day when a dense afternoon fog caused three power boats to run aground along the Orange Coast. Bishop Moses surrered leg in· juries when the 21.foot cabin cruiser Centurion. with seven people aboard, went on the rocks off Crescent Bay Point in Laguna Beach. Moses was apparently in· jured while attempting to hold the boat off the rocks. He was report· ed in guarded condition today at UCI Medical Center after un· dergoing surgery. Officials '-Support' Programs A potel)tial controversy involv· ing two top Huntington Beach city officials over the Neighborhood Watch program is apparently now resolved. Police Chi.et Earle Robitaille and City Attorney Don Bonfasaid they want it clearly understood that they both fully support the citizen crime prevention pro- gram. In a legal opinion released last week. Bonfa challenged the al· !edged sponsorship by the cUy of the watch program. He also said expenditure oC city funds for its operation are not legally proper because they re· portedly bad not been approved by the city council. "We are preparing a resolution establishing the printing and other costs as a line itebl in the budget," Bonfa said. He said that if the city council approves the expenses it would be perfectly legal. ChJef Robitaille said the group will be asked to eliminate from its literature any references which could lead to a belief that the pro- gram is sponsored by the city. Bonfa said the watch program printed the name of the chief of police and the depar-tment's telephone number on a monthly newsletter. He maintained in his opinion that this s uggested city sponsorship. <See PROGRAM, Page A2) YOUAOTO TRY 7JIE PILOT ADS "Many thanks -the' ad brought a buyer within 24 hours d its appearance in the Pilot!'' That's the :idvertising success story of a Corona del Mar woman who placed this classified ad: CREAT C l\R : '66 Belvedere JI , 2 dr hrdlp, extra clean. P /!), P/B, lac. air. 361 V ·8 eng. gives real go power. Orig. owner, Under 73,000 mi. $850. ltXX•X:X.U For information about how you can put the Daily Pilot to work Cor you call: 642·5678. An unidentified woman was treated for minor shock after the 42-foot cabin cruiser Lucky Duck crashed onto San Juan Rock shortly after clearing the Dana Point Marina for Newport Beach. Harbor Department officials said the craft owned by A.E . Aiken eventually sank in 40 feel of water. A 21-foot motorboat with four people aboard went aground off Eighth Street Sunset Beach. No injuries were reported. A Harb o r d e p a rtment spokesman said the afternoon fog caught many yachtsmen by sur- prise and Orange County Harbor Department rescue boats from Dana Point and Newport Harbor were kept basy locating s mall craft in distress. Also assisting in the r escue operations was the Coast Guard cutter Point Divide. Despite the numerous calls ·from people expressing concern over yachtsmen who had not re· turned on schedule, harbor de· partment officials said all boatsmen were accounledfor. F or S e eond Time Huntington Family Struck by Tragedy Death has struck twice in almost the same spot on a Long Beach roadway in 72 days, depriving the same Huntington Beach family Cirst ofits wile and mother, now a friend and babys itter. Police went to the home of Ken· neth Winterbottom of 16082 Ballantine Lane to deliver another death message early Sunday, in the second such visit since July 31, when Mrs. Win· Trains Hit In Me xico; 17 Killed . CffiHUAHUA, Mexico (AP) - A passenger train carrying tourists. including some Americans. collided with a freight train in th~ rugged Sierra Madre Mountains of northern Mexico, killing at least 17 persons and injuring 45, police reported today. They said at least five of the in· jured were Americans, and there were unofCicial reports that one of the dead was from New York City. Some of the passengers were travel agents. most from Mexico City, making the trip as part of a tourism promotion, police said. The American Society of Travel Agents had been meeting in Guadalajara, though it was not known whether any of the group was aboard the train. One observation car on the "Railroad to the Pacific" tumbled into a 45·foot.cfeep ca- nyon when the passenger train smashed into the freight Sunday afternoon near the village of Pit· torreal about 200 miles west of Chihuahua City and 200 miles south or the U.S. border, police ~aid. They said rescue workers were still trying to pry apart the car's wreckage to reach passengers trapped inside. The rescue squads could not use cutting torches on the wreckage because spilled diesel fuel might ignite, police said. -·· terbottom was the victim. Sunday's victim was Diana L. Lanham, 26. who was planning to return home to Glen Burnie, Md .• in about two weeks after staying on as babysitter (or the Win,. terbottom youngsters. "It's crazy ... ,'' Winterbot- tom m used hollowly today when contacted regarding the fatal ac- cident that killed Miss Lanham and a companion, Kevin Barry, 24, of Oxnard. They died almost instantly on Studebaker Road in front or a Southern California FAison Com- pany steam generating plant.just inside Long Beach city limits, ac. cording lo police. Investigators said their car slammed into the rear of a semi truck-and·lrailer rig making an illegal left turn from the far right-band lane or Studebaker Road into the plant property. Truck driver William Parent, 54, of Chicago, was arrested and booked on s uspicion of manslaughter, then released on $1,000 bail pending arraignment. Winterbottom. a food technologist for Star-Kist Foods Corp., said today Miss Lanham was visiting from Maryland when Mrs. Loy Winterbottom, 29. was fatally injured July 3 at the sam·espot. She was babysitting for the Winterbottoms, while the food technologist was on a lengthy business trip for his firm.· She and another family ac· quaintance, Chris Wilson oC Seal Beach, were injured when their ~ar slammed into a power pole at that location. Wilson survived the accident. Winterbottom said today there was no connection between the two fatal accidents that claimed first his wife, then their babysit· ter. adding it is merely a matter oC coincidence. "Studebaker Road is simply a (See T R AGEDY, Page A2) Coast Weath er Trenching to Nip HB Odors Low clouds and dense fog expected again Tues· day morning with clearing by afternoon. Beach highs near70. I NSIDE T ODA V The prus cc1'1r UT'der acothblg. ottock from a former Ntzon. aid~'"' on Oro11ge Coun· tfl addreu. Stt Poge AT. Trenching work is expected to centration or rumes becomes resume thJs week on a construe· toxic. lion site which has caused widespread noxious odOrs in Hun· City Administrator 9od Belsito tington Beach. said tbe work Cor wat« mains Is scheduled aomettme this week at Supervisor Laurence Schmit the affected site, but only after re- sald today a county Health aidents or the area near Boin Department lnspector will be Chica Strt!et and Wll"Mr Avenue posted at the loc•tfoo to monitor are 1iven two dJ.11' Id ance tume.s apparently released by notice. eonstrucUoo wort. Tbe Informal acreement OQ and tbe developer, Frant Bue· cell a. The trencbint work i.S expected to be carried out u qui~kly as possible durtnc esrly momlog bou.n when prevalttng wtnds are blowing .-way from nearby re-a1clence.s. Bel.alto said that curb arld gut- ter wen last wttk un~ eoUJer small area UW. eml1ted noxloua f\Jmet. He said ther'ef were aeve.r •I complaints from re- lidcnta. The odor, Mlieved caused by methyl mercaptan ,gas, was first uncovered during grpding opera· tJons for a tract of four·plex dwell· fniunitsonSept. 8. Nearby residents complained of bead aches and spells of nausea. Health officers say the odor is nox.Jous but not toxJc tn low con· cemratJon. t.tYMrSefltk e .... ,,,. ~ 0.Hlti .. t:Mlk• °"~ Dt-91~1< .. . ......... ~._., tll-.e ...... -.c.,.. ...,~ l •d ex ... ltefttCWe ., Al AMu-ra i!' AT ... ,.. .... AS ...,._, ...... .... IM2 =CellM• 4" ., ·~· ., l.,wle~r .... i ,Al ='~I'll .. ~ "' Al '" TeMflt6eft •• Al ,.,....,.. .... .. ....... ... . At WM'NMewl •• Tbe llealtb officel' is em· workproced14reswureachedre- . powered to stop wort ii the con~ cently by clty and ccunty dftc:ials· " - . --J"-i-...-·---.. h- The area ~ponslble ror tbo 1arUc·llke smell Is believed to be either from an old dump slt.e or on \andadjacenttoo e. AZ DAIL y PILOT H /F 2 D e ad, . 11 Hurt In Riot CARSON CITY, Nev (AP> - Two black lnrnotcs were stabbed to death and 11 others were in· jured when a group or white prisoners attacked the blacks in the dining room or Nevada State Prison, officials said. Onewhiteinmalewashurt. The attack occurred Sunday, one day after officers began a partial release of inmates who were locked in their cells after racial fights broke out in lhe max- imum security prison Sept. 27. About 415 inmates were locked m their ceJJs after those fights. wbicbleft36inmatesinjured. Authorities said no arrests were made pending a probe into the slayings. Howard Pyle, head prison counselor and duty oUicer Sun- day, said Lear gas was lobbed into the cafeteria to force about 125 in· mates into the main prison yard after the fighting broke out. Pyle said whites and blacks were forced into opposite ends of the main prison yard as they came out of the dining room but hedidn 'lhave exact numbers'. "This is apparently the af· termath of the incident two weeks ago," he said "But different in - mates were involved, because the main people involved two weeks ago we are still in lockup. "Two weeks ago, blacks at- tacked whites. This looks like re- taliation." Cops Probe Occult-style Cat S laying San Clemente pohcc arc in- vestigating the occull-style slay· ing of a small black and while cat that had been cru<'ified and left in the yard behind a policeman's apartment Sunday. The animal's throat had been cut The cat was tied lo a cross and at its feet, said police. was the drawn figure of a death's head or devil. Around the figure were the words "Sun, Earth. Moon. Air, Sea." The paper with the ~ords also contained astrolog1caJ signs. The remains were found by the wife of lhe San Clemente police officer beneath her clothes hne. Police said the yard, surrounded by a high fence , serves four apartments. Investigators do not believe that the slaying of the cal was linked to the fact that a policeman lives in one of th" apartments The front verandah or the apartments, in the northwest sector of the city, was covered bv blood. Police said the animal had apparently been throttled there and earned to or thrown Into the backyard. Police could not give a reason for the cruel act China, So vie t Enmity D eep WASHINGTON CAP> The distrust between China and the Soviet Union goes too <leep for a reconciliation, former Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger thinks. Schlesinger, m an inter view this week with U.S. News and World Report, said. that during his recent 23-day tour of China he round the border with the ·Soviet. Union "chronically rest- less." ''The Chinese state there is firing or artillery rounds across the border by the Soviets with both high-explosive rounds and propaganda leaflets. Also, they speak or the introduction or secret agents across the fron- tier," he said. ORANGE COAST H ' DAILY PILOT n..Of_C .. •I 0•11• P110t,..lhwN< .... c_ bl"-dt"9flft-. P'"' •\ovOtlv-ooi,.tM()r~ ~~' Pvttl'"'·""O c.,.,.o•"• ~'4''" ,..,..I°"' .. ,. pubU\MCI M4'1'tt.ey Utrt'VOf't ''"""" ,,,,, (O"t• Mnt, ...... OOt, 89~1"1 M\l"'tl"O'~ lYMP'I '°"" ••lrt VeH•• lrwl~. $.tctdlf'btll 9' V•ll"y "M ~ :;,:,:..Sovt,:.'!:~1,~~~I~ Of•ft(iOlt .-...-1~~ ot•nt a ., )JI> ""''' a .. ,. 'il.-. CO\ta Mtw. C.01110.,>10~ "-~­..,.,..,. .. 1_ Pw!MtW.. Jte.•111 ~ l/l(U•t .. ldoftl el\d 0.-ao W_.. ,._ .. l(- Eclit6' n..-111 ..._..,..... _...,0•"9 Edllo< °"""""·'""' Ill< ........... , 11\\1114~ .... ...,Ol"'I IClllOn. "•fMrt •• , • ., w .. 1 O<•-Collftlv (dl1or Huntlnoton l•Kfl Otne. ,,,,J ... t .. "°" .. ...,,, *" .... "'""'*"' .. 0. ... ~.,... Office• ~:::: ~j_,MW~~\,~"t ~·••l'•lle!WIO ll•llfV HMl l • ~'Ao.., ·•~01..,..r,_.,. Tel.,tlone (714)142'°'"1 ClaHlfled Aclnrt111119 lq-S.11 ·-~ .. 0.-c...m,~1 .... M0-1220 0..,..ttM ,.,. °'-c.. ' -.. """' ('J<ft ,..,_, Jill "'t~ '*""' ltM.,AI~ ~1tort,_I "'•U•r •r ••••ttlittMtflllO ""'•'" m.ty ..-r••rtifVC't• •H~vt '"c.•t ,...Mht">f\ •t -·-· &-tc.-tlau .,. ..... M lf .i (..U ,.,,....., C.tlt•r~I• S11••trlall•" "" '""" u 10 -.:.:r.;...~:~:~~ """''"'' "'""••Y Dally ...... StaH ""'4• 'AMERICANS PAY LESS' Food Expert Butz From Page 1\ l BU TZ ••. the seams," Butz continued. "You get the idea that you bad better crawl back in your shells and sit on what you have." But he said it has been free en· terprise and an ability by gov<>rn· ment to let free enlcrpnse work that led the country to where it ls today. He referred to this year's federal budget which will exceed $400 billion and said that 1t 1s bound to be inflationary. "We have got to face up to the questions here in America," Butz said, "and ask if we are going to rededicate ourselves to that wed- ding or economics and political principles which bas worked so well in the past 200 years.'· Unlike an appearance last Fri- day in Mississippi which was tn· terrupted by hecklers, Butz' ap- pearance this morninS? wa~ broken up several times by laughter and applause. He joked about his expenses for the trip to California saying now that he was a privale citizen he hoped the associations were pick- i~g up his tab and in referring to his age of 67 he srud "there is plenty of life in me. I am the same age as Wilbur Mills and I am just one year older than Wayne Hays.'' * * * Butz Def ended By Connolly LOUISVILLE. Ky. CAP) Former Texas Gov. John ConnaJ ly was defending Earl Butz' con· troversial rem arks about blacks and criticizing Jimmy Carter for "more offensive" remarks in his intervi e w with Playboy magazine. Connally, a former Democrat who switched parties and was Treasury sec r etary unde r Richard Nixon. referred to the Playboy inter view in which Democrat Carter admitted hav- ing ''commilled adultery in my heart many times." Connally s aid that was "far more offensive and reprehensi- ble" than Butz' remarks about blacks whick led to his resigna- tion. The remarks included a de- rogatory characterization or what Butz said were the sexual. dress and bathroom preferences of blacks. "WeaJltell 'em Cracialjokes)," Conn ally said Saturday. "Everybody tells jokes on the bl';l<:ks, and so the mere telling or a Joke on a nationality or racial group doesn't dis turb me.'' Jail Inmate s ' "IJDked' BY ':Artist By STEVE MITCHELL otU.. O.lly .. 1"4S~H Costa Mesa police said today they have found several links between an attempt.ed assault on a Laguna Hills woman a week ago, and t he murder of a Costa Mesa housewife last month. A description of her assailant by the Laguna Hills woman is very similar to the one provided by a witness in the murder or Pam Davis, who was shot five times at close range in her Costa Mesa home Sept. 10. "At this time, we think both suspects may be the same man " said Costa Mesa Police L't George Lorton. Pam Davis received a phone call at her home, which was for sale, at about noon Sept 10. The caller said he was interested in loo.king at the home. which had been a dvertised for sale in several newspapers. The man. posing as a potential buyer, s howed up at lhe home at 2867 Velasco Lane a short time later, wearing a black r aincoat. black trousers and a hat pulled down over his face. Mrs. Davis apparently allowed the man to enter her home, and a short time later, a young woman in the home heard shots and a scream. The witness entered a hall in the home and saw the suspect standing at the entrance to the master bedroom. She ran out the back of the home and sought help. In last week's assault attempt, a 26-year-old Laguna Hills housewif e told Sheriff's deputies a man knocked on her front door and identified himself as a re· aJtor. When he entered the home. the taU suspect said he was not real- ly a realtor. ·'What l really want 1s you." he told the woman. The victim. who was edging toward a rear door. asked the man what his name was and he said, "Earl.·• Fro• Page A I PROGRAM Mike Relic, a police liaison with Neighborhood Watch, said that printing costs for a newsletter to about 1,000 members cost about $40 per month. He said that in addition he was paid overtime for attending the meetings which <'ametoabout $50 monthly Erich Matthews. an ad ministrative analyst for the city. s aid that f inancing of the Neighborhood Watch Program was addressed in this year's budget. Bonfa said, however, that specific amounts weren 'tlisted. The Neighborhood Watch Pro-- gram was formed as a non-profit organization in 1975 and Is credit· ed with a reduction in the city's burglary rate. The group is apprised at meet- ings and in newsletters of basic crime prevention methods and is told when and whattoreportln as- sisting the police in apprehension or criminals. The organization meets mon- lt_lJy to discuss ways to stop re- sidential burglaries and hear guest speakers on law enforce- ment t.opics. Two Suspects Held In Holdup Slaying Anaheim police have arrested two men held on drug charges in Westminster jail in connection with the fatal shotgun s hooting of an Anaheim market clerk last Thursday night. Police said today George Louis Ledesm a. 19, of 143.11 Olive St.. Westminster , and an unidentified 16-year-old were arrested this morning following their jailing earlier this week on drug related charges in Westminster. Costa Mesa police said today they are interested in the two men, ~om they assert may also be responsible for the armed rob- bery of a Costa Mesa market last Tuesday night. The pair is being held on suspi· cion of murder and robbery in the holdup of Albertson's Market, 610 S. BrookburstSt., Thursday. Officers said they are seeking a third' suspect in the market murder of clerk Jack Warren Mason, of Stanton, who was shot at point blank r ange by a suspect wielding a sawed-off shotgun. Mason died at West Anaheim Communlty Hospital three hours after the shooting. The throe bandits entered the Albertson's Markttat&bout10:30 p.m. Thursda.y, forcing about 1$ to20cust.omer~ \olleon\bcnoor. Aa the trio acooped up money (tom cesb drawtB, one suspect alle1edly sbot Mason at. b1J cash reiJ.st.e.r. , • Witnesses said the clerk did not provoke the shooting and was ap- parently cooperating with the bandits at the lime of the shoot- ing. Costa Mesa police today are ob- taining photogr aphs of the two Anaheim robbery suspects to circulate to witnesses of a Costa Mesa market robbery earlier last week. They suspect the same gunmen were responsible for the robbery of Ralphs Market in the Harbor Shopping Center. last Tuesday evening. ln the Costa Mesa robbery. three bandits took more than Sl,000 in cash and another $3,000 in checks and food stampt'J from the market. The shotgun-nrmecJ suspect a1· tegedly s truck a market clerk with the barrel of his gun before the three mend fled Into the dark· ness. Costa Mesa pollcesatd lhethree men are very similar in descrip- tion tolhc Anaheim robbtrs. Meanwhile, the executive board of Retails Clerks Un.Jon Local 324 have offered a $S,OOO re- ward for lnforma\lon leading to th arrest. and conv1ctlon or the Jrt.Ucrsolre~•UclerkMa.son. Albertlon•a Market earlier or· fercd a slmltar award ror tbe •P· prthcnsl nor thesuspect.s. ,. .... ,. .... SMILING, HANDCUFFED PALESTINIAN TAKEN FROM SYRIAN EMBASSY IN ROME Terrorists Surrender After Falling to Take Ambasaador Hostage ' .. • l Ten·orists Free Five • .. • c l ' . ~ Three Palestinians Slwot Way Into Embassy . \ . 't ROME (AP) -Three Palesti· nians protesting Syrian interven- tion in Lebanon shot their way in· to the Syrian Embassy in Rome today but surrendered to police· after holding five hostages for two hours. F ro• Page A J ISSUE •.. Pacific Coast Highway. Typical uses would include offices, a motel, restaurants and speciaJty shops. Rehabilitation would dominate the area. The pier would be refurbished only to retain its onginal char- acter without any new develop- ment. . As evidence of the mounting in- ter est tha t redevelopment is generating, about 100 citizens at- tended ~ seminar Saturday m orning s ponsored by the League of Women Voters of Hun- tington Beach and Seal Beach. Lance J acot, a n opponent of re-. development plans, told the au- dience that the plan djdn't have the benefit of adequate citizen participation. He said that the ProJed Arca Committee, an advisory group on redevelopment. was supposed to represent the interests of citizens bul that s ix of the 11 members were not residents of the project area. Jacot said that input from the citizens didn't warrant projec- tions that could result in "in- credible density." He said that decisions would be made fl[ter that fact and that too few people will be making the decisions. "Once the en abling legislation is enacted, it will be in force for 35 years," he said. "Limits. restrictions and controls don't exist." He added that redevelop- ment would displace a number of residents and businesses. Jerry Shea, a member of the Project Area Committee. offered an opposing viewpoint. He said that development of the downtown is badly needed and that the area along Pacifi<· Coast Highway is long past iLo; prime. Shea said the area along the beach has been called the front window of the city "but it is on£' that we can't look on with much pride.·· He said redevelopment offer s a chance to satisfy the top need of the city and t hat is to revitalize the downtown. He said re- development will enhance tax re- ceipts and serve to hold down taxes. Dr. Gordon Shanks, a member of the Seal Beach Project Area Committee, sounded a warning on redevelopment. He said there are almost no legal remedies ff the redevelop- ment agency makes a decision that citizens don't like. He said that redevelopment agencies, if given the choice, will almost always opt for the most intensive a1temative of devel()pment to get extra r evenues. Crash Injures County Pilot BAKERSFIELD <AP) -An Anaheim man who crashed in mountainous terrain while pilot· ing a small aircraft over eutern Kem County remained In critical condition today at a hospital here, authorities re~rted. The pilot was identified ai> Peter Pilling, 20. Hecruhed late SUnd&y afternoon In mountains ne&r Lako Isabella. He wa• dls· covered by • U S. Fc:nst Service employe and token to Mercy Holpi\al here. Authoc1Uea don't know what. caused t.be crash. F\u1.berdet.ails wer~available. PolJce said one hostage, em- bassy counsellor Hunen Hatem, was seriously wounded in the leg. The guerrillas a llowed him to be taken to a hospital where he un- derwent a 1 lh·bour operation. A Syrian official said the Palestinians surrendered after they realized they bad failed to take the ambassador hostage . Ambassador Farouk al Sharae had left the embassy earlier to attend a ceremony. About five hours after they stormed the Syrian Embassy, the PaJestinians were jailed and charged with attempted murder. taking hostages, violent action against a private building and its occ up ants, a nd import, possession and use of explosives and war weapons. A Palestinian, identified as the 25-year-old leader of the group, was quoted by Italian radio as saying they were protesting what they called Syria's ·betrayal of the P alestinia n cause. Syrian forces allied with Lebanese Christians have been fighting lef- tists Moslems and Palestinians in the Lebanese civil war. The attack came two weeks after Syrian authorities hanged 1n public in Damascus three Palestinian terrorists who had raided a hotel in an attack in which four hostages were killed. Youssef Miro, an embassy of ficial who was among today's hostages. said, "The three came in, leveled thei r guns at us and said they wanted to revenge the massacre in Lebanon." He said there were about 10 people in the building, but five fled by jumping from windows. Taken hostage, he sald, were three men and two women. Jn his radio interview, the HBShooting Being Probed; One Wounded Conflicting stories among wit· nesses to a shooting in Hunt- ington Beach that left one man wounded in the leg, apparently not seriously, wer e being evaluated by investigators to- day. Details of the incident that oc- curred at 14th Street and Orange Avenue were sketchy, since com· plete reportJ of the gunshot as- sault had no! yet been compiled. Officers said in early stages of their probe the assault with a de- adly weapon episode apparently involved two men, at least slight· ly acquainted with each other. "Apparently it was a tossup just who wait going to shoot whom," commented one officer No arrest was made and in - vestigators say they have not yet established a specific motive for the predawn incident in the westerly downtown residential area. r .: Palestinian leader said the euer-- rill as were m embers ol the Black ~ June Movem ent, which is named ,. for the month when Syria sent an ~ estim ated 13,000 troops a nd 't s everal hundred tanks into f Lebanon. 'i The guerrilla leader said the ' ' embassy attack was designed to "draw the attention or the world .. to the betrayal of the Syrian gov· ' ernment and the plot of Arab ~ states against the Palestinian ._ people. ! 11 "We did not want to harm • anyone," he said. "This action : marks a new s tage in the strug-: gle of the Palestinian people." I' . Police r ushed to the scene : ;~~~;~;,Y :e;~~r~~ r~'fd~: ~ with a garden on a quiet tree· • lined s treet. :! Police surrounded the em· bassy and placed sharpshooters on terraces and roofs or nearby buildings. "'ro• Page A I ... • .· . ; • i ·I TRAGEDY ' •• =· route we use consistently," said the north Huntington Beach resi-• dent who works in the Long · Beach area and has two children. He said after his wire was killed, Mi ss Lanham agreed to stay and help out with the ~. youngsters before returning to Maryland to give the widower ' "' lime to m ake long term child • ... care arrangements. '~ "I guess she was going back in •, a couple of weeks," said Win- terbottom. Funeral a rra ngements for ·:. Miss Lanham will be handled in "' .• Glen Burnie, Md., with Dilday · FamUy Mortuary of Long Beach .... handling forwarding arrange· ments. She leaves her mother . and father. Barry's r em ains were taken to South Gate Mortuary in South Gate, pending completion of .:. funeral plans by his family. . > ·, .... Police Probe -··· Knifing Death Anaheim police are seeking the killer or an unidentified stabblng victim whose body was found on a ~ily street early Sunday m~· lnt. ' The victim, believed to be an alie n. reportedly died i r Anaheim Mem orial Hospital' about an hour after being dis· ."'· covered lying at 1 a.m. in the ·· street In the 100 block of Wills : Drive. ~ Police said the mortally , wounded man was treated at th6 "\ scene by paramedics but died \ shortly after a rriving at the ":... hospital. ' ~ •l•. . '~· • . ' . \ ' Turkey Trot """· Payclwck Wins Top Trophy CUERO, T ex. (AP) -"Gentlemen, start your turkeys," was all Ruby Begonia IV and Paycheck need~ to hear . With that, they began a frenzied foot and air race to decide the winner of thfs year's Traveling Turkey Trophy of Tumultuous Triumph. When the feathers settled at the end of the 150· yard contest Sunday, Ruby had the fastest time in the final leg of the Great Gobbler Gallop. But Paycheck won the six-foot trophy. Ruby, the Texas entry, f a.iled to overcome a time loss s he suffered against Paycheck in the first leg of the race last month at Worthington, Minn. The gallop was the highlight of the annual Cuero Turkeyfest. The town of 8,000 bills. it.Self as the Turkey Capital of the World, a UUe nlso claimed by Worthington. . I ' ,. , ,• ' ~ ... ~ •; t I ~ ;\ r l'l -'1. .cl4 -..:.1 . "• I ~\ I t.e.l . ;,, ""' ~?4 .. ,4 l~I J ""' '::JI J J • Irvine eo t TION ·'· To day's Clo In~ N.Y.Stoeks \lfOL. 69, NO. W, 2JECTION S,_~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENT, Butz was speaking to about . In a press conference af. enjoy higher qu'alit)' food than UiOOdele1ates to the National As· terward, be also saidb.ewouldnot t.boseinothernalionsandpacka&· 1 Former agriculture secretary soclation of Concessionaires and discussthematterfurtheradding ftnestfoodsupplyingandmarket· in&andmarketingprovidessome Because Americans spelMl f Earl Butz told an Orange County National Association of Theater the remarks were taken out of ing system in the world. ''blillt·in mald service." latively lilUe for food. they bav audience today he "paid a OwnersattheDisneylandHot.el. context from a private conversa-Butz, wboservedasarriculture· For example, he said, 60 per· more money for automobile tremendous personal price" for Butz, dressed conservatively in tion. secretary since 1971, said U.S. cent of the potatoes consumed in television sets and other conv· what be said were indiscreet re· a gray pin-striped suit, blue He said he intends to do all he consumers spent 17 percent of the U.S: today are already peeled niences. ; marksaboutblacks. stripedshirtandrnaroootie,sa.id can to help congressional can· theirpayforfoodtodaycompared and partially processed, work "U you listen to some of tM But he told the crowd in ol the racial slur which forced his did ates, President Ford's re· with 20 percent in Canada and 25 formerly done in the kitchen. And political palaver that is goi~ Anaheim that be did not intend to cabinet resignation a week ago, election effort as well as the draft· to 40 percent in other nations of he .said similar convenJences are around you get the impressi discuss the matter further. noting "I have apologiied as sincerely as ing of new farm legislation. the world. packaged intootb~rfoods. that America is falling ~part •'thatcbapterisclosed." Iknowhowtodoit." Partly referring to notes, But%' Inaddition,besaidU.S.ciUzens ''This is one of the marvelous <SeeBUTZ,P-.el\2) ~, Perfe c t S aturday Irvine youngsters cool off at University .High School pool Saturday before taking part in a marathon fund-raiser for the Irvine Aquatics Club. U.S. Olympic team membe rs Bruce and Steve Furniss were on hand to d e monstrate strokes and participate in challenge races. Funds raised will help send the club's senior. swimmers to national competition. Sudden Fog Hides Coast ; 3 Aground Two people were injured Sun· day when a dense afternoon fog caused three power boats to run aground along the Orange Coast. Bishop Moses suffered leg in· jur1es when the 21.foot cabm cruiser Centurion. with seven people aboard, went on the rocks off Crescent Bay Point in Laguna Beach. Moses was apparently in- jured while attempting to hold the boat off the rocks. He was report· ed in guarded condWon today at UCI Medical Center after un- dergoing surgery. An unidentified woman was treated for minor shock after the 42·foot cabin cruiser Lucky Duck crashed onto San Juan Rock shortly after clearing the Dana Point Marina for Newport Beach. Harbor Department officials said the era.ft owned by A.E. Aiken eventually s ank in 40 feel or water. A 21-foot motorboat with four people aboard went aground orr Eighth Street Sunset Beach. No injuries were reported. A Harbor department spokesman said the afternoon fog caught many yachlc;mcn by sur· prise and Orange County Harbor Department rescue boats Crom Dana Point and Newport Harbor were kept busy locating ~mall craft in distress. Despite the numerous calls from people expressing concern over yachtsmen who had not re- turned on schedule: harbor de· partment officials said all boatsmen were accounted for. ~OU AUTO TRY 1DE PIL<¥r ADS ••:auny thanks -the ad ht a buyer within 24 hours its •Ppearance in the Pilot!" That's the advertising success of a Corona del Mar woman ho placed this classified ad: ·GREAT C AR · '66 ~lvedere 11, 2 dr hrdlp, extra clean. P/~. P/B, rac. air, 361 V·8 eng. «hte1 r eal flO power Orl1. owner. Undrr 73,()()() mi. $SS(). X XX ·XXXX r/ . For lnformatlon about how ' you can put the Dally Pilot to wort for you call: 642·~78. Palestinians Fail In Embassy Kidnap ROME (AP> -Three Palesti- nians protesting Syrian interven- tion in Lebanon shot their way in· to the Syrian Embassy in Rome today but surrendered to police after holding five hostages for two hours. Police said one hostage. em· bassy counsellor Hunen Hatem, was seriously wounded in the leg. The guerrillas allowed him to be taken to a hospital where he un- derwent al 'h·hour operation. A Syri an oHicial said the Palestinians surrendered after they realized they had failed lo take the ambassador hostage. Ambassador Farouk al Sharae had left the embassy earlier to attend a ceremony. About five hours after they stormed the Syrian Embassy, against a private building and its occupant s, and import . possession and use of explosives and war weapons. A Palestinian, identified as the 25-year-old leader of the group, was quoted by Italian radio as saying they were protesting what they called Syria's betrayal of the Palestinian cause. Syrian forces allied with Lebanese the Palestinians were jailed and charged with attempted murder, ta.king hostages. violent action Christians have been fighting lef· tists Moslems and Palestinians in the Lebanese civil war. The attack came two weeks after Syrian authorities hanged in public in Damascus three Palestinian terrorists who had raided a hotel in an attack in Crash Injures County Pilot BAKERSFIELD (AP) -An Anaheim man who crashed hi mountainous terrain while ,Uo~ ing a small aircraft over ea.ttern Kern County remained in crtUul. condition today at a hospital bere, aulboritie.s reported. The pUot was identified as Peter Pilling, 20. He crashed late ~~ afternoon in mountains near Lake Isabella. He was dis- covered by a U.S. Forest Service employe and taken to Mercy Kospllal here. Authorities don't know what caused the crash. li\lrlher details were unavailable. which four hostages were killed. Youssef Miro, an embassy of· ficial who was among today's hostages, said, "The three came in, leveled their guns at us and said they wanted to revenge the massacre in Lebanon." He said there were about 10 people in the building, but five fled by jumping from windows. Taken hostage, he said, were three men and two women. <See HOSTAGE, Page A2) * * * 3 More Raid 2nd Embassy ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP> -Three Palestinians Monday at· tacked the Syrian Embassy and the ambassador's residence to protest against Syrian involve- ment in Lebanon, informed sources said. The Palestinians were in- tercepted as they forced their way into the embassy and they exchanged fire with police guards. Unconfirmed reports say one of the attackers was killed and the others were n injured. The attackers also threw a hand grenade into a room or Syrian Ambassador Mohammed Shahir Dreii 's house and it ex- ploded but ca used no injuries, the sources sajd, The attack coincided with a raid Monday by Palestinians against the Syrian Embassy in Rome. Two months ago (5 Palesti- nians, mostly students, stormed Lhe Syrian Embassy in Pakistan and set a room afire. Here's Right Flu Number ' In Sund~'s Daily Pilot story about swine nu vac- cl natl o o cli nics, the tel~phone number for in· formation about the clinics was incorrectly listed. The correct phone number for the Communi· ty Referral and lnfonna· lion Service ls $47-5178. The Daily Piiot recreta the error. .. >. Train Disaster 17 Killed, 45 Hurt in Mexico CfUHUAHUA, Me)tico (AP) - A passenger train carrying tourists, including some Americans, collided with a freight train in the rugged Sierra Madre Mountains of northern Mexico, killing at le ast 17 persons and injuring 45, police reported today. They said at least five of the in- jured were Americans, and there were unofficial reports that one or the dead was from New York City. Some of the passengers were travel agents, most from Mexico City, miking the trip as part of a t.oorism promotion, police said. The American Society or Travel Agents had been meeting in Guadalajara, though it was not. known whether any d the group was aboard the train. One observation car on the ••Railroad to U1.e Pacific" tumbled into a 4S·foot-deep ca- nyon when the passenger train smashed into the freight SUnday afternoon near the vWace of Pit· torreal about 200 miles west or Chihuahua City and 200 miles south of the U.S. border, pol{ce said. They s aid rescue workers were still trying to p.ry apart the car's wreckage to reach passengers trapped inside. The rescue squads co.uld not use cutliJlg torches on the wreckage because spilled diesel fuel might ignite, police said. The frehrht train was· east• bQund from San Rafael en route to Chihuahua City, and the passenger train was westbound on the same track, poli~esaid. Two Crimes Linked Suspects Similar in Police Drawings "By STEVE MfreHEU.. Oft-• O•lly Pilet S~tt Costa Mesa police said today they have found several links between an attempted assault on a Laguna Hills woman a week ago, and the murder of a Costa Mesa housewife last month. A description of her assailant by the Laguna Hills woman is very similar to the one provided by a witness in the murder of Pam Davis, who was shot fin limes at close range in her Costa Mesa home Sept. 10. "At this time, we think both suspects may be the same man,'' said Cos ta Mesa Police Lt. George Lorton. Pam Davis r eceived a phone call at her home, which was for sale, at about noon Sept. 10. The caller said he was interested in looking at the home, which had been advertised for sale in several newspapers. The man, posing as a potential buyer, showed up at the home at 2867 Velasco Lane a. short time later, wearing a black raincoat, black trousers and a bat pulled down over his face. Mrs. Davis apparenUy allowed the man to enter her home, and a short time later, a young woman in the home heard shots and a scream. The witness entered a hall in the home and saw the suspect standing at the entrance to the master bedroom. She ran out the back of the home and sought help. In last week's assault attempt, a 26-year.old Laguna Hills housewife told Sheriff's deputies Jai l Inmates SOUGHT FOR ASSAULT In Laguna Hiiia Case a man knocked on her front door and identified himself as a re· altor. When he entered the home, ·the tall suspect said be was not real- ly a realtor. "What I really want is you." be told the woman. The victim, who was edging toward a rear door, asked the man what his name was and he said, "Earl." Sheriff's deputies said the wornan then ran to a neighbor's home. Costa Mesa's Lt. Lorton said today the Laguna Hills woman Two Suspects Held In -HOidup Slaying Anaheim police have arrested two men held on drug charges in Westminster jail in connection with the fatal shotgun shooting or. an Anaheim market clerk last Thursday night. Poli~e said today George Louis Ledesma, 19, ol 14331 OUve St., Westminster, and anunldentifled 16-year-old wer~ arrested UUs morning f ollowlng their Jliling earlier this week on dnJC related cbar1esin Westminster. Costa Mesa police faid today they are Interested in the t.wo men, ~m they assert may also be responsible for the ar--1 rob- bery of a COila Mesainarttet last Tuesday n14ht. The pair ts being held on SUS~· cJon of murder and robbery in tbe hold\Q> of Albertloa'allarUt, 610 S. BrookhuratSt., ~'>'· Officers saJd they ant Mtklnf a thir d suspect ln th' market murder of elm J9Ct Wln'en Muon, of Stanton, 1'tto was ahot at poi.nt blank ran(e by a 111spect wleldlnc a aawed·offlbotc•· . Maon.dled at w•~ Community Hospital three hours after the shooting. The' three bancUts entered the Albertson's Market atabout10:30 p.m. Thursday, forcing about 15 to20customers tolieontheOoor. As the trio scooped up money Crom cash drawers, one suspect allegedly shot Ma son at his cash register. Witnesses said the clerk did not provoke the shooting and was ii>· parenUy cooperating with tbe bandits at the time of the shoot· lng. . Costa Mesa pollcetoday are ob- taining photographs of the two A.oahtim robbery, suspec\S to circulate to witnesses of a Costa Mesa-market robbery earlier last week. They suaped the 1ame gunmen were ttapOUible tor the ro*1'f d Ralphs Mpr-et ln the Harbor SJn>pplng Center last Tuesday evening. In lhe Costa Mesa robbery. three bandits took more lban $1.000 ln cuh and anotbel' •ooo . <See8tJ8PECTS,P•.\Z> SOUGHT FOR MURDER In Costa Mesa Case provided a descriptlon of the as• sault suspect before viewing an earlier drawing provided by the witness in the Pam Davis murder. "The two drawings are very similar," be noted. Police are circulating the two drawings in bopes Ute suspec~ might be identllled. The man is described as being between 27 and 35 years Old, witlt short black hair parted on the left. He wears square clear glasses with thick dark frames. Anyone who can provide clues as to the man's identity is ask.eel to contact Costa Mesa police or the Orange County Sheriff's OC· fic.e. I Cahbie Critical SAN DIEGO (AP) -Cab driver Floyd W. Trammel. 63, was listed in critical condition lQ. day a!ter a passeQ&er slashed Trammel'~ throat with a knife, Sund->', police said. Coast We a t h er Low clouds and dense Cog expected again Tues- .day morning wlth clearing by afternoon. Beach hlghs . near70. ·1NSIDETODA~ Tb pru1 oame wndeT' teat1ling. attack from o forma Ni%on. ~ f7' an Orange Coun- ty odd.rtas. See.P.age A7. ••••• •• ~ •t Ai Mfl~n at AT ...... At AS ~I,.._ A4 af.1t ~ c..tr AJ 9J...... . ... h tl'Vle ""'"' •• ~! =:-...... 81! ... ftlft..... •• Al .,,.._. At :; ='·"'-:: -----· '-'---..... ------·~£ ...................... ; ....... __ ..... .._ ... ""'-\.._? __ _.._._._ -·~--------~ k f ., 'f. Al DAILY PILOT 2 Dead, . 11 Hurt In Riot CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) - Two black inmates were stahbed to death and 11 others were io- JUred when a group of white prisoners attacked the blacb in the dining room of Nevada State Prison, ofltcials said. One white inmate was hurt. The attack occurred Sunday, one day after officers began a partial release of inmates who were locked in their cells after racial fights broke out in the max· imum security prison Sept. 27. About 41S inmates were locked 10 thefr cells after those fights. which left 36 inmates injured. AuthoriUes said no arrests were made pending a probe into the slayings. Howard Pyle, head prison counselor and duty officer Sun- day, said tear gas was lobbed into the cafeteria to force about l2S in· mates into the main prison yard afterthefigbUngbrokeOU\. Pyle said whites and blacks were fOf'ced into opposite ends ol the main prison yard as they came out of the dining room, but hedidn 't have exact numbers. "This ts apparently the af. termath of the incident two weeks ago," he said. "But dirferent in- mates were involved, because the main people involved two weeks/ ago we are still in lockup. "Two weeks ago, blacks at- tacked whiles. This looks like re- taliation." Cops Arrest Sex Seekers JnSanDiego SAN DIEGO CA P> -A crackdown on female prostitutes is aimed at discouraging them by taking away their customers. Police arrested 40 men ranging in age from 19 to 67 last weekend for investigation of soliciting sex. Five hundred males have been arrested since May. Among the latest 40, who later made bail, were 19 servicemen. A police spokesman said none of the worpen working on downtown streets was arrested. Three women police decoys joined in. At one time. he said, "guys were driving up to the curbs to stop and talk to girls. 'fhe traffic was b acking up bumper to bumper on som~ streets." "It got so bad out there that we had to concentrate on taking the business away from them," the spokesmal\ said. .. ,. From Page A l SUSPECTS • in cheoks and food stamps from the market. The shotgun-armed sus~ct al· legedly struck a market clerk with the barre) or his gun before the three mend fled into the dark- ness. Costa Mesa police said the three men are very similar in descrip· lion to the Anaheim robbers .. Meanwhile, the executrve board of R etails Clerks Union Local 324 have orrered a $5,000 re- ward for information leading to the arrest and conviction or the J<Ulers of retail clerk Mason. I Albertson's Market earlier of. fered a similar award for the ap- prehension of the suspects. Fighting Flar es BEIRUT, L~banon (AP) Fighting increased in south Lebanon today, threatening the latest round of peace talks seek· ing to end the nation's 18-month- old civil war. The Palestinian , guerrillas accused the right-wing Chris\ians of raids to blow up houses in Palestinian strongholds n ear the Isr aeli border. OAANOI COAST DAILY PILOT TMOr•-CoAH 0•11• ............ ~ ...... ~ ... ...... bl-the'""" P.o\\ I\ tNIMl-11'¥ tne Or ... oo COi'' "'*'"'tnoComoan., S.0ttli•f'ld1ttoftl.,• _.,,., ""°~"' ,,,,.....,. ~""'"' lot CO.t• NW-'6. ... -.on ht<h .... ""'"~ ,,..,,.,,...,., tal" Vlllt• ffyt,,., S.ddl•b«" V•ll•v •rwl i..._ll .. C!tfs.vlft(H\I ..... _,._,..,, I-I• C>Yltll-s.lu<1trn -..._.,, r ... ;!~~='.1.~~~.llO M\4 8 .. ··~-­........... ,.,,.,,_,,,,., J•O• c..n.y Vl<•-lcltnl-~,...#...,._.. "--...... , 1•11•• ~~~J'.::• ~M.l .. 1 lll<tll .. ~ .._. ......... l'I ~'*ill"tf:-. Office• ~,.,.. .. now."...,,,,... .. .;.-=-O'l -::c~~ ! ~~~=:!:;::1..-.. s.Mdl--Valloy: !11011.,.t "91 !l-at,.,. Olt9Q ,,_.., Teleptlone (114) 142-4321 Cla .. lfled AdvMltlng M2·5e71 -··--Yann """'°'II'" Nt-6110 .,,._ '°" c ........... 415.ot30 0-i:: ••H 0.•"'I• <M" """'"''"'' ~ :::r,., .,,.:.::~~~~~~~;-:'':~~ =~:; ,. ...... c.o wttMvt \••U•• "'"'•" .. " et <~-., M<•"8 CIHI ~·· .. ••of fl C..I• MeH. C•Hter1tl• 'wttur1•Utft ._., ,.,,,,,. U M -·~·· ........ ,. ,. -·~··· fllllll••• .,.. ..... ,_u ,...,...,hi, °"'' ~ ... $t•ff ~· 'AMERICANS PAY LESS' Food Expert Butz F rom Page A I BUTZ •.. the seams," Butz continued. "Yw get the idea that you had better crawl back in your shells and sit on what you have." But he said it has been free en-terprise and an a bility by govern· ment to Jet free enterprise work that led the country to where it is today. He refer red to this year's federal budget which will exceed $400 billion and said that it is bound to be inflationary. "We have got lo face up to the questions here in America "Butz said, •'and ask if we are going to rededicate ourselves to that wed- dirig or econ9mics and political principles wllieh has worked so well in the past 200 years." Unlike an appearance last Fri day in Mississippi which was in- terrupted by hecklers, Butz' ap- pearance this mornin~ was broken up sever al times by laughter and applause. He joked about his expenses for the trip to California saying now that he was a private citizen he hoped the associations were pick- ~g up his tab and in rererring to his age of 67 he said "there is plenty of life in me. I am the same age as Wilbur Mills and I am just one year older than WayneHays." Auto Cause s ArtDanwge SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Authorities say a stainless steel statue r esembling a Madonna. rendered by the late San Fran- cisco sculptor Benny Bufano, has been knocked flat and damaged. The 12·Coot·tall statue, which has a hammered bronze head and mosaic facing, was hit by a car as it stood in a parking stall at Ford M asorl, site of the Golden Gate Recreation Area By tbe AsM>daled Pres:. Jimmy Carter today attacked President Ford's claim that the administration supports efforts to thwart the Arab boycott of Israel. Carter released copies of a leUer he said proved con- clusively that Ford opposed Congress' efforts to impose tax penalties on American firms that cooperated with the Arab boycott. The letter! from Treasury Secretary Wi Liam Simon, was written last August. It called the proposed tax legislation ··an inappropriate and dangerous response lo a delicate foreign policy problem.,. During last week 's debate. Ford :.aid he had vtgorousJy op· posed the Ar ab boycott. Carter ::.aid Simon's letters shows that Ford was deceitful. Both candidates are observ· ing the traditional Columbus Day memorials as they enter the home stretch or the presiden- tial campaign. Ford was to mark the day by placing a wreath at a statue or Chri s t o pher Columbus in Washington, while Carter was a'ttendin g Columbus Day services al Our Lady of Pom- peii Church in Chicago and walking in the Colwnbus Day parade there. As the campaign enters its fin al th ree weeks, the Republicans and Democrats are F ro1n Page ,, I HOSTAGE. • Jn his radio interview. the Palestini an leader srud Lhe guer· rillas were mem hers of the Black June Movement, which is named for the month when Syria sent an estimated 13. 000 trooP'S and several hundred tanks into Lebanon. The guerrilla lel1tler said the embassy attack was designed to "draw the attention of the world to the betrayal of the Syrian gov- ernment and the plot of Arab slates against the Palestinian people. "We did not want to harm anyone," he said. ''Thjs action· marks a new stage in the strug- gle orthe Palestinian people." Police rushed to the scene when they heard shots from the embassy, a four-noor building with a garden on a quiet tree· lined street. P olice surrounded the em· bassy and placed sharpshooters on terraces and roofs of nearby buildings. Turkey Trot Paycheck Wins Top Trophy CUERO, Tex. <AP) -.. Gentlemen, start your turkeys," was aJJ Ruby Begonia IV and Paycheck needed to hear. With that, they began a frenzied foot and air r ace to decide the winner of this year's Traveling Turkey Trophy of Tumultuous Triumph. When the feathers settled at the end of the 150· yard contest Sunday, Ruby had the fastest time in the final leg of the Great Gobbler Gallop. But Paycheck won the six-foot trophy. Ruby, the Texas entry, failed t o overcome a time loss she suffered against Paycheck in the first leg of the race last month at Worthington, Minn. The gallop was the highlight of the annual Cuero Turkeyf est. The town of 8,000 bills itself as the Turkey Capital of the World, a title also claimed by Worthington. Malpractice Firm Sues OC Medics A company that specializes in malpractice insurance sued the Orange County Medical Associa- tion for $250 million in damages Friday and accused the or-• ganizatioa of disrupting its malpractice business in this area. Lawyers for the American Medical Benefits Inc. group cl aim activities by the OCMA and secretary-treasurer Everett Bannister have inflicted con- siderable damage on the plain- Uff's malpractice and arbitration business in this county. The SUperior Court lawsuit claims that doctors have been urged not to subscdbe to the ~lalnlifl's plans under which many .physicians have saved as much as 40 percent in prevailing malpractice and arbitration pre- miums. New Ambassador Up and O v er woomg lht· nullon'!> ethnic and religious voting groups, which form big blocks in major :.w111g s tates. And both Ford and Carter tried to exploit the perceived blunders of their op- ponents in seeking support or one group or another. In Chicago, Carter continued to pound away al Ford's state· ment that the Soviet Union does not dominate the nations of Eastern Europe. Speaking to a banquet of Polish-Ameri cans, Carter pledged that no word or deed of a Democratic White House would even hint at acceptan<'e of permanent Soviet dominat1011 of Eastern Europe Ford, meanwhile, wa:. seek· ing the votes of Southern Bap- tists. a constituency some nave conceded to Carter. In Texas, Ford attended televised ser vices at First Baptist Church of Dallas, the largest church in the Southern Baptist Convention. Its pastor, the Rev W. A. Criswell, publicly endorsed the President. The Rev. Mr. Criswe ll, u pastor with a ha\)it of speaking out on politics, was s harply critical of Carter in his sermon because or his interview with Playboy magazine. The minister called Playboy a ''salacious, pornographic magazine." He called Ford a president who "seeks godly wisdom in making worldly de- cisions." Ford, he said, had been asked for an interview by Playboy and had refu sed. The congregation or 6,000 persons applauded. Campus Child Care Cente r D ebate Looms An issue that was a hot potato auring summer budget delibera- tions -a campus child care center may heal up again tonight at the Saddlcback College board or trustees meeting. A report from the architects assigned to des~n t he facility in an existing "lower campus" building are due to make their re· port. Trustees wi II be a!>ked to i.ct the project in motion The proposed center became an issue in June when several trustees voiced philosoptucal ob· jections to the concept. They c laimed s uch a center en- couraged mothers to neglect their children . The total project will cos t $21,000 and the architects were paid $1,900 lo design il. The college board meeting is. due to begin al 7:30 p.m . in thc college library. Jews P e n Letter MOSCOW CAP) -Two leading Jewish dissidents have written an open letter to President Ford asking why "that just during your presidency, Jewish emigra- tion from the U.S.S.R. drastical- Iv decreased." Mark Azbel, one of the writers of the letter, said their purpose was not to embar- rass the Pres ident before the election but wanted him to recon- cile his concern with ''the fact he has apparently done nothing to help our situation." Sav ed Fro111 the Pyre . . p A fireman r escues skeleton from haunted house operat- ed by Milwaukee March of Dimes after fire broke out in the building housing fund raising project. Police in Milwaukee say they suspect arson. . . Carter to Revise . /"\ ' i l .• Campaign Manual \ r -f' •• .· WASHJNGTON (AP) -Jim- my Carter has ordered his staff to revise a manual that suggests such tactics as stalling traffic to create crowds and using fic- titious names in telephone sur- veys. The manual was written for the Carter campaign's advance men , who prec e de th e Democratic presidential can- didate to campaign stops and tak«: charge or planning and pro- motion. Some or it • 'is not in line with the way I want to see this cam· paign run," Carter was quoted by hi s press secretary, Jody Powell. Powell said Carter had never seen the m anual. The campaign staff's r eview or it, he added, was hurried and inadequate. Some details in the manual were ''never intended to be taken seri ously." said its author. chief Carter advance man Jim Kfog. The manual is a guide to draw- ing and pleasing crowds. "These techniques wiJI enable )Ou to draw a substantial crowd through organization in a re· latively invisible manner which will lead the press to infer that the candidate drew the crowd ·· rt said. ' One method mentioned is stall· Police Probe Knifing Death Anaheim police are seeking the killer of an unidentified stabbing victim whose body was found on a city street early Sunday morn- ing. The victim, belie0ved to be an alien, reported ly die d ir Anaheim Memorial Hospital about an hour after being dis- covered Jying at 1 a.m. in the street in the 100 block of Wills Drive. Police said the mortally wounded man was treated at the. scene by paramedics but died . shortly after arriving at the hospital. ing cars to create a traffic jam. ~= Another is to •'invent a fictitious ·• name like 'Resort Marketing • Inc . .' " to use in telephone sur· '4 veys to determine whether peo-• pie intend lo be home on the date •• of a campaign appearance. ,· The manual is very specific'" about the physical arrangements .· for a Carter appearance. It touts •, Carter's hair as his best feature, ;· a nd it tells how to arrange • television lighting to creale a ra-• di ant circle around Carter's bead #. to highlight it. • Whoever appears on stage with # Carter, the handbook says,; "should be Middle American in • appearance and balanced by : race and sex. • "Don't leave enthusiasm to • chance • . . Encourage pan- demonium by scattering bard· core enthusiasts through the c rowd ..• Organize 'spon-. taneous' cheering .•. Instruct• the claques to clap, chant, and cheer when the candidate ar- rives," the m anual advises. · The handbook tells Carter's : press aides to dribble out in- formation to reporters to insure maximum publicity for the can· didate. "Never te•· people more • than they need to know to perform their runc'ion." it adds. "By restricting kr.owledge you will be better a~~e to control what happens." • Car ter, the manual states, "dislikes being hustled around by excitable people. He needs 15 to SO minutes of private time to prepare for every major speech. There must be a decent private holding room with bathroom · near where be will. speak." Trio Seized In Clemente Jewel Holdup Three men face armed robbery charges in San Clemente today alter they were chased down by the wife of a jeweler who'd been robbed and maced. Police said Michael Disieno, owner or Michael's Jewelers, 139 Avenida Del Mar, called police Friday afternoon to report he'd been robbed. As police cars sped to the · scene, Dlsieno's wife took ort on , foot a(ter t he three men and . chased them down the street to.· another jewelry store, PhJlllps Jewelers. . Police spotted the suspects,.· and the worn an chasing them .. · and made arrests. Booked on charges of armect . robbery were Thomas 0. Irving. ts, of Vis alia, Helen Q. lrvlng, 26. or Porterville, and Blll W •. Pierce. 26, of Hermosa Beach. A 9mm Wa l the r · semiautomatic pistol was booked • into evide nce ns the alleged.• weapon used to hold up the store. '• Ford Opinion J'- ~ .. Chided by Pole .. ... JOHNSTOWN. Pa. CAP) --.. •. The top r a n k Ing Po Ii sh· ... American in the For d ad·,; ministration says lhe Pres1dent'a,: statement that the Soviets don't , • dominate eastern Europe was an. inadvertent •'overstatement." , CANBERRA:, Australia jAP) -Alan Renouf, 57, will bec()me Australia's ambassador to the United States early next yeal'. the' government announced te>- day, Russ Kruse of Laguna Beach leaps over the cros~bar in the high jump, one of 15 events In the fourth annual UCI Anteater Olympics held Salurday 1n Irvi ne. More than 100 ma le and female athletes from the community took part. Kruse is a lawyer fdr the Irvine Company. "The President recognizes,'~ and he must recognize, that'. Poland Is in a sphere of inlluence) by the Soviets. He certalnl> knows the reality cl East an< West," said Mitchell Kobellnsk' L /ti. Bogd Beekeepers In Demand Only school ln the country where you can t a de1ree in beekeepln1 is the Ohio cultural Tecbnlca.1 Collete. MAlce mention o this because there's a s hortage of beekeeper• now. No beekeepers, no control over tbe bees. No control over the bees, no planned pollination of the fruits, flowers, veeetablea, frasses, whatever. Without planned polllnatlon, you wind up with haphazard crops. Do you realize the shortage of beekeepers eventually could ruin our food supply? Enroll today. QUERlt:S F ROM CLIENTS Q. "What's •stargazy Pie"?" A. A baked flsh dish. Out of the hot pie crust across the top are supposed to protrude the numerous heads of small sardines, each look- tn1 straJ1ht at you . No, thank you, my dear. I'U plck up a snack at the club. Q. "What's the world's longest street?" A Some claim ll's that 30-mile stretch of Figueroa between Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena and the Pacific Coast Highway of Los Angeles. But debate goes on. Q. "Can you identify I.he first lady newspaper editor?" A. Wouldn 't that be Anne Franklin? She edited the Mercury in Newport, R.I., in 1762. A recent survey in our prisons reveals a predominance there of convicts born under the algn of Aquarius with Capricorns next and then Tauruses. Fewest were those p™oners born underthesignof Aries. Probably no other animal, including man, ia so fond of chewing tobacco as is the elephant. Did I list Mrs. Andrew Jackson as one of our First Ladies? Wrong again! She died before her husband was inaugurated. KJNDNE~ Item No. 684C In our Love and War man·s file labeled "Kindness•• IS a quotation from ac- tress Lauren Bacall : ''Women are kinder to men than men are to women. If men knew the power of kindness, they'd have to beat the women off with sticks .•' Not counting birds, what marine creature tJ'avel the seas with the wind for propulsion? Some jellyfish do. And so do right whales, using their tails for sails. President George Washington's eggnog re- cipe called for whiskey, rum, brandy, sherry, spices and a bit of honey with the eggs. It's a matter or record, too, that a certain EgypUM pharaoh many centuries ago was particularly fond of freshly picked cherries. But the nearest cherry orchards were400 miles northeast at Baalbek, Syria. So at the outset of the picking season. a flock of 2,000 carrier pigeons was shipped there. Each bird was har- nessed with a sack only large enough to hold one big cherry. All were loaded up with fruit and turned loose. Those cherries picked in the mornin1 wound up on the pharaoh 'stable that night. Did somebody say "race car" was a rare phrase inasmuch as it spells the same way both backwards and forwards? Not at all rare. Consider: Bird rib, bomb mob, party trap. Uve devil. seven eves. girl rig, daft fad, diary r aid, elite tile and gate tag. Addrtu molL to l...M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1560, Coala Meta,92626. D eaih Not i'°e• 81EN01Elt lorment '""be 1 00 PM Tu~y Otl HAAOLO P . 8ENOER, rH•O.n" Of 11 19/b •I Tnt F•tr"•••n M<omoro•t Hunllt>gtOft .,.(,., C• "'••-•w•v P••-on hnte Ana. Ca. Smll"'' Ott 10 1'7• al I ... -of U . tit i. \111' ,,..,,,.,.,. Otro<!Or\ "1wdbv-da11Qllltr, M,., J-!Mitt KIATOIO o!Or--ae.c. ,al"M>l•••ol"r••\l\lfr\, !'RANI( MICHAEL I( EATING,, .. , ANs.. .J. MMtr,,. ot Reolancu, GI Mrs °"'" Co\I• Me••· C• P•nfl1 •..,•Y0tl c Olloleyol ll•'llUr•, C• • M" s Yoo;no 10 ltlb SUr•l•t '1 by •If• ,., ..... 11. R Of ••k•r.ileto. C• • lourlttn K .. 11"'1. lwo O•uQ"''" Oo"M """''' ll'...ckhllll••n. '' 11rut 9,~,.uar..... KOU"'! ano l(•lllv ""•ro•a Ku11no Ml, .. ~••• tmo•oy•O by The SfMI· '°" J•m•• Ml(,. .. t l(u!lnq ••lot Coil• CNrd Oii ComOfny fl)r J1 Vt•rl. In lltv Moo~• C. Two l><Ol,,.rs Oonald l<tAI OI ''-" don•l•OM mo be -to tn9 of tthnol• • Jolin l<••l•no ol t"9 <lllrlllt• ot tour ChOto P,.lv111111-~ryt•nd o,,.. '"'•' All(• 8'on••• o• Man1Cl'lu'''" Vt\ltat10,, T~t,,•v .----------Ott 11. !tit ti l 00 PM 10 t llO PM BAL Tl·BEROERON ,UNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 673·9450 Costa M esa 6 46-2424 HLL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Bro11dway Cosla Me-;.:i 642·9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach 494-94 15 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Monuary Chaoel 3500 Pacific View Onve Newl)Ort. Caltlornia 64 .. 2700 PEEi( FAMILY COLONIAL lfUNEAAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3526 I MITHI' MO"TUAAY 627 Main St. · Huntington BiJach 636--6539 SMITH TUTHILL LAMB OUR WHTCLIFF CHAP!l M0t1u1rv • • 849-4888 427 E. I 7th St., Costa MOH RO\try W•dr>t\dAy 0< I t l 1•1& ~11 )II PM St JoM l htt 8•oll\I Cnu.-ch, t.Mu Tllur><l•Y 0< I II 19/t al 10 00 AM \I JOf\n Tn.-Ba p l 1\I Cf\tH'" A•t11 ,_,0"'0"' FuMHat Ho"l'\fl co,t• IN'• dlre<l<><s CLAYTO!I llERTMA (ll\YTON, rHld<'nl ol NtwPorl 8•A<ll. C• P••1•d •wav Ott. •. "''· Surv1v•d by lllrt• •ltll• """'"'•"· Dorntl\y Colby Of N•woort llo<ll, Ca , Oloret G<lorQ~ ot '"'*''•· Ct.,""" CnlO 8Hcllltr of S~n GAbrl•I. C.. : •-b•oll'"''· w111._m Mo!•~I• ol Nor!PI D•-ola; Altc -"'•••'• ot Nori" I 0.kota, !,ervtt" will ~ MIO 11•00 "'"" Tue1d11y •I Pec•llc lll•w Cneoet. F"otml· ly 'uQQUt\ contribution' 1., tflt r t\.trU••\ nf fP\!'1r rJ\01c1 V1\1IA·tlon tram ~ 00 PM lo • 00 PM MorotUY Oct ll, tOt, lnttrrnt'll Put11c lltew M,.morl-1 P ar1c:, P1cU1c. View Mortu4fry dlr•<fors (ALDllt JOSEPHINE P CALOl!lt. '"""""' ol CMlt ~\t, C. PU\•d •••Y Ott 10 ,,, .. s.tv1cn """"'"II Ptclhc vi-,.._,,, Pork Mortuary. THE ,..u ........ HIAT1"4~ All CO .. O. '"-·-,,,,_-1 8""'<•1n'ff)Uf A••t"""""ll "'tSSION VIEJO 7~9'1 C•"''"° c..o .. ,,•~n ~•w•1 J ., • • ~.' • ., 495-0401 COSlAM[f,A 1~?6 N1""1)0tt B••d. 64Z·l 753 IUTCHfM & IATH HMODELIHCi NU ISTIMATES ... o ... 0t-.i•r• .. ANAHllllMolAJN OJ"C(' 1$,))W ~"'Cf)!" A1-'°' l•t ., ., ' 772•)470 •I '"" Monday October It t97'6 DAil. V Pll.OT £1 'EleCtronic Junta' QUEENIE By Phil lnterlondl Former Nixo1iA.ide Blruts Media in County Tal,k 8y MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ol llot o.lly 1"111111~" Former Nlxon aldc Bruce Herschensohn says blru; in the nation's news media led to lhe fall of Richard Nlxon, the rise ol communist influence in southeast Asia and the purge of the Central In-telligence Agency. Speaking before a meeting of lhe World Arfairs Council of Orange County, lhe 44·yea.r-old author and former film producer said, "The nation ls dangerously close to an electronic Junta. There is a need for more selC-d.isclpUne and restraint on the part of the peer pie operating the news. The public should raise a furor." Herschensohn called the re- cent Ford-Carter debates on domestic and foreign policy "a futile exercise.·• "Il isn't the President who directs our Hn5cHu1so"" foreign and domestio policy," he said, it's the na- 1,jonal media." ALTHOUGH THE FORMER deputy special as- sistant to Richard Nixon denied that there is a con- spiracy in the media, he said lhat there is a definite strand of liberalism. Herscbensohn said there is a need for more d1 verse views and less selectivity. "'What is and what isn't reported is the most im- portant aspect of the news," he s aid. "What a newsman thinks Is a wrong in society may not be." Herschensohn cited lhe unemployment issue as an example. "How can that be lhe h1&hest priority when 92 percent of the nation 1s employed?" he asked. JN CONTRAST, HERSCHENSOHN said lhe media failed to give sufficient coverage to an Aug. 22 incident in which n pastor Jn East Berlin burned himself to death to protest Communism. "In my mind. anyone willing to kill themselves is worthy or media attention.'· he said. Herschensohn rcfered to TV newscasters as "performers" whose artistic orientation ca uses them to use phrases that provoke negative images. "Was the Saturday Night Massacre <Nixon·s dismissal of special pros~utor Archibald Cox) re- 2, 150 Join County Easte r Seal Unit .\lore than 2.000 Ornnge County residents have joined the Orange County Easter Seal Society dur- ing the organization·~ current membership drive. Additionally, about $12,000 has been donated as a result of the membership drive. The money will go to the Society's Reh abilitation Institute (RIO) in Orange, an outpatient fac1hty that provides re· habilitalion services to the county's handicapped. Six classes of membership are available, rang- ing from supportinJ.: member at $3 to patron at $100 and above. Those interested in membership should contact RIO at 633· 7400. ally a massacre? Did Nixoo really work 1n a smtil, secret hldeaw ay? '' "The same thought process runs through au TV networks," he said. "When you have the responsibility of tellin1 the naUon the news you sbouldn 't editorlaliie." HE RSCHENSOllN SAID durin1 bis talk Thurs- day lhl*t the recent prinUna or classified documents on lhe CIA formed •·a fuuy line between scoop and treason." "Daniel Schorr went above the will of Congress and the American people,·' he said. "Yet there ls a different set of rules for re· porters th1tn the Nixon AdmlnlstratJon," he said, commenting on the lack of lnvestJgaUve reporting Into the Schorr case. Herschensohn described the Watergate scandaJ as "unavoidable" but sald that Imbalance in report- insr can be sloP-Ped_. ''There will always be some damn fool who s going to do something illegal," he said. "It's just human nature." HE NOTE D THE CASE of Utah Congressman Allan Howe. who was indicted on charges of solicit- ing prostitution. as another example of lhe media's "phony morality." Herschensohn drew applause when he said : "Since Watergate we judge people by mistakes while we judge ourselves by our highest accomplishments. You can't judge someone by one night's foolishness." Herschensohn cited the three major TV networks. the Washington Post, the New York Times, Time magazine and Newsweek as the media ouUets most responsible for the bias he believes plagues the news. Two Joining UC/ Chancellor's Club Two members of the Orange County busmess and professional com- munity have been selt.'Ct· ed as officers In the Chancellor's Club at UC Irvine. Sanford L. Brickner, a Santa Ana attorney and certified publlc accoun· tant. will serve as vice president and chairman or the program commit· tee. Named as vice pres!. dent and chairman of the membership committee president of Philco-Ford Corporation. and Dr. Norman Nixon o f Laguna Beach. The membership com- mittee is composed of James Gianulias of Corona del Mar. founder of Cameo Homes; Brian Lawrence or Tustin. chairman or the board of Burt C. Gentle Company. and f o rmer Congress man James Roosevelt of Newport Beach. is Patrick Cadigan. pre·---------- sident of Electronic Engineering Company of California, Santa Ana. Members or the Chan· cellor's Club progrum <'ommittee are Mrs . Ralph Gerard of Corona de! Mar; John B. Lawson "Money grubbing has been good to me " FED UP WITH FAD DIETS'? SCHICK HAS A BETTER WAY! lot's of people are discouraged with quick weight \ loss plans that°"" seldom produce lasting results. Schick Center's new Weight l oss Program doesn't Many happy Schick ~ customers are. ~ !: . • reporting that they 1 not only lost ..._.the pounds but are having no difficulty MAINTAINING use pills, shots b or fad diets! dietin& or unusual willpower. for 1nformat1on or free Weight Analys11. call 558-8404 of Laguna Nigu e l ,-----------------------------~ former executive vice THE WORLD'S BIGGEST SEWING ru~~~ MACHINE SAL AT SINGE OFF REG. PRICE ON THE ~'2000 MACHINE. \11d1,I101111, lt1.11ol tlo.11 I, I\ I 1•11 .l.1 1111 t •'\\'I\ 11111•' .II IJ 1• le111, l11 I I hell •II fl 1 o\' ~ 5 '" "h'lll \Ill, I,·, .1111" 11.111 •• 1" .111I1'\1 I "'"'""'''I 1111' ,1 1•k'' ,, 'I•\ II di \IJd, 111 I S \ < .rr 1 ,. \.I~ ••l. I " I\ I' NOW ONLY I \ \ s999s SAVE S30 OFF REG. PRICE '"-.. f A~lllO\\I \ 11 • ,\l,\C'lll"I M11dt'I '''~ \\tlli 1111111 J111p·111 h11hh111. h111la 111 ht111.I h('l\1 \llldt. JI\ ~\llJ \\hl1 llf '·'~ •JllJ•ll)'. CJrl ... lll~lJ\C 111 •• 1h1111·1 C\11.1, . OFF REG. 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CID@ o © /II (ill~ As a Los Angeles Federal Saver you'll receive higher interest than paid by any commercial bank, plus interest day in to day out plus security ot your savings insured by a Federal Agency plus all the special tax- sav1ng programs plus extra hours and convenient parking. Plus, with a minimum deposit you II receive a free safe deposit box plus a free checking account at a com- mercial bank plus income tax service plus document duplication plus travelers· checks It takes only one minute and one signature to start your savings ac- count. It all adds up fo~ Los Angeles Federal Savers All Interest Compounded Daily Annual Yield Annual Rate 8.06% $1000 for 6 to 10 years 6.72% $1000 for 1 to 2 years 5.39% Pa id day-in to day-out tr1tr11 rt\lUhah ns Pt'tm 1 tntty w11hdr1wt1il hon1 '""" er ,,~r-1• aub,ett to 4'i"'u"H•I tt·lot Oi l f0.1ut11on Newport Beach 3201 Newport Blvd. -across from City Hell,. 675-4500 OPI N M MON.·TH U,.S. • 9-8 FAI. HOid OJ11ee : loa Anqelet Fednrar S11v1no1 ond LoM Astoclat1on One Wllahlrt, Loe Angeles 90017 •Caner olltct s throughout lhe ereo ! r "I 1 1 ., !J .. 'J •I ·1 •I .; .• •' t. 1; q 'I ., ft '\ I 1 I I I / , .. !w 8 DAILY PILOT l /N Monday '~ Clo"ing Pric~*S •• f I ,!do, I I tu Monday, Oetoe>er 11 1976 NYSE COMPOSfl'E - TRANSACTIONS .. I • Ptatience Helps Used-car Buyer Needs Caution BySYLVL\ PORTER An eshm uted one mllUon used cars wlll be sold this year lo people who previously have never purchased anythln1 but a new car. rcp<>rts lhe N:atlon&l Automobile DeaJen A~n. · Buying a U1>ed auto can brinc personal sausractlon and considerable s11vings to an e)('pertenced shopper. But to an amateur It can be a scenario ro frustration, loss o/ money and dissatisfaction . Yet. "muny of Ute problems experienced by the buyer of a used car are of has own mak· tng," says the N ationaJ Highway TraHac SaCety Admuustrataon of the U S Department or Transportation. Money's Worth WITH COMMON SENSE, MOST of these problems can be avoided ll 's not th\lt tough \o find a good, safe and depen· dable used car, even though an appalling number do contain uncorrected safely defects or may be m~hanically un- sound . Know-bow and patience are necessary. These weeks mark the start of the new car season, which trad1l1onally means an upsurge in trade-ms on the used car Jots. Thus. some common sense guidelines: -Under no circumstances shrug off the safety aapecrt, even though pr1or1ties also may be pnce, gas mileage, st.Yle. appearance, power and desired equipment. -00 NOT ACCEPI' WITHOUT question state,;,ents by a seller regarding a car's condition and performance. Rare. ly does a first tame used-car buyer inspect the auto for naws, araely does be check the deta1Js or the warranty, and rarely does this shopper even check whether the dealer JS • equipped to r epair the car when it needs serv1c1ng. As a re- sult, a used car buyer may be stuck with an unsafe car that reqwres costly rep8lrs to eliminate defects that should have been corrected before .. -If possible, have the used car run through a diagnostic center before purchase. Or have it inspected bJ a competent mechamc -Don't buy at rught, m the ram or under any conditions that could discourage you from examirung the car, inside and out. Cr awl under the car to inspect it. Rainy-day shop- pers may not check for a rusted-out frame, worn steering or suspension parts, leaking brake flwd and curb-bruised tires What's more, ram can make dents, patches and re- paints shme hke new. Jnvesligate for rusted-out doors, noonng and tailgates -DON'T BUY THE CAR without gav mg it a testdritte. Don't buy 1f you're refused a request to let your own mechamc check the car. Don't buy tf any promises for mecharucal adjustments are not wntten and signed in act. vance of purchase. Jnsisl on a fmal test dnve or mspection after all promised pre-purchase repairs. -To protect against unrepa1red safety defects ignored by pnor owners, call the auto safety hotline or the National Highway Traffic Safety Adrrurustrat1on (800) 42'·9393 and g1ve the make. model, year and vehicle identification number This toll-free number 1s available lo residents of every state except HawaJt and Alaska. The call can net a r&1 port on defect recalls for that make -Take into consideration that depreciation red~es value of US ·made cars about !50 percent. dunng the first IWO years of Its ltfe Wnle the Consumer Information Center, Pueblo. Colo 81009, and request brochure 293D, "Common Sense m Buying a Used Car." It's free. \ 4 Dow Dips Sharply, Broad Loss Extended NEW YORK {A P>-The stock market dechned sharp• ly agam. toats lowestlevelsmceJastJanuary. The Dow Jones averageof30 mdustrial stocks,orr80.7Sfn the last mne tradangdays, closed off another 11 56 at9t0.82to- day Trading was qwet by usual standards, but busier than had generally been expected; most of the nation's m~or banks were closed for Columbus Day. Analysts said mvestors were stiU troubled by recent signs of sluggishness m the economy and the inflation wor- n es raised by an upswing reported last week tn the govern• ment's wholesale pncemdex. They also cited uncertainty over the approaching pre. s1dent1al election and what it would mean for the businese ch mate over the next four years. lips cued Dtn""" N EW YORK IAP) Tht loliOWlno 11~1 '""'"' '"" New York Stoc:k Eactwnge •IOC:k\ •nd warrants ti.at hAW -UI> ttw> most and down llWt mO'll !WI..-<! on rn:cent of c hanQ<> n>Qordlin• al otOlumot or No ~~~Ttt tr&d•no be•-U •r"P liw;t-~ Ntl ""d percenlaQe c~ Me I~ diffftf'nte «>-twee" '""" .,,,._..OU\ tlM•nca CY•Ct" a'lO ttwJav \ • p m pr•<" Of'I(" dnd taday \ 4 p m P'+<.- 1 ' I • \ • , • • 10 " t? IJ t• I) . ,. 11 18 " 70 Na,,,.. I Oull>d ,,,,., 7 flWr Ind J Mocmlll.on A OtllO•\i• Cp \ U"LI"" pf 6 PoonnrCHI pf I R~dm..., 1"4 -CLC Am • Vtl\do Co 10 Mohwk 031 :~ ~i;.::; ~r, 13 lltm•dlt '" U ~•" Sloe> tS US Le.n•no I~ ltCSou ti! II ConlAlrl1n tt f t•n\W A1t I• VS lndv\I 22...J!-Punt UPS ""' 71 '> \'lit 7 q, ,.~ n 10"• ... ,. ' .. t"\ • •• '" I \ '" • t I(; I;, \It 10 ... -10'0t 31,., .... . ,,. Up UP Up UP Up Up uo Up Up Uo Up Uc> Up Uo uo "Pit >"" '"' . 11'. 1'1'"9 U\• 17 7) 11\\ DOWNS '• ~ "' Up ''> Up \,, Uo Up '1> Ui> IH> 16 11 67 ~­so •? l.I 31 l.7 J 1 3.6 l • l • 3 • l • ]J H l I 7t L•,~1" • (~ • ()ftPt 't• 0 , • .,. .. ()ff 10 . 6'> " 011 10 J ,.. .. Oii ., ,,... ,,,,. Off • 1 3... )lo. Oii • 1 ,.. '• ()If • 0 Al;, l\ Ofl 1 'f ''-"' Oii " " V.Olf 77 ·~ .. Off 7 l ,,.,. 2:\11 00 •• 1"41 ~. Oii ". 11 1 '• OU & 1 ~lo '• Oii !>I 10'-'_. " OU 6 S s.. " Oii •> 9"' 'to Off A J '" "' orr • > ... ~-"Ol,:.:-1_,,6~1- .4itock• Ira The Spotlight NEW YORK CAP)• Salet, • p .... ll'b -net cM~ of ,,,. mt-most «-- ""' Ntw Yorlt StoclL &xdWflOI i--. ='&~'~~:·~:. OHIO "'h-'* Pl>l•rold • •• •• '"''°° ~·~-Aamacw '" • • ... • 1:n,6GO ~"' Am T.,• .. Tet ..... • U0,6CIQ ~"" TtlAl(O Inc: •• , • • • • 127 «lO ~ ... Natomots • • • • .. 1171671~ 2t~it=•-~ OeeroCo •• •• ..., ..,... OuHWstn .... • tl•,900 16 e HoutNa GH... • • 110400 ~ Am Alrlln •• •• • • 109,IOO 12 -Gen Motors • •• • • • 104,100 71~-lie WHIClll El ··•·••.. 100 400 17..._ ~ AtlAIC:MI..... .... .._~Ito RCA • • ....... , • -,1a0 fJ,._ W. Pttt:s.ton CO .......... • .,.. it • ••• • What Stock• Did NEW YOAI( ("Pl WHAT AMEX 010 NEW VORIC ("P) . --. , \ ' Lag una/South £oast EDITION iteruoon N.Y.Stocks NOL .. 69, NO. 285, 2 .SECTIPNS, 22_PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA M ONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1976 TEN CENTS. ~ . Butz 'Closes Book' on ·Racial Sltir .; BJK~TRYCLANCY Butz was speaking to about In a press conference af-discussed free e nterprise in the ertjoy higher quality food than success stories in the American! Of1Mo.11,~11.u4aft l,SOOdelegates totheNationalA.s· 'terward, be aJsosaidhewouldnot U.S. and what be said was the tboseinotbernationsandpackag. story." . Penner agriculture secretary sociation of Cpncessiooaires and discuss the matterfurther adding finest food supplying and market-· ing and marketing provides some Becaus.e Americans spend re. J l Butz told an Orange County National Assotlation of 'Jbealer the rem arks were taken out of ing system in the woild. "built-in maid service." laUveJy lilUe for food, they bav,e audience today be "paid a OwnersattheDisneylandHotel. contextfrom aprivate conversa-Butz,whoservedasagricuJture For example, be said, 60 per· more money for automobiles.1 menclous personal price" for Butz, dressed conservatively in lion. secretary sJnce 1971, said u.a cent of the potatoes consumed in television sets and other conve-? t be said were iodise.reel re-a gray pin-striped suit, blue He said he intends to do all be consumers spent 17 percent of the U.S. today are already peeled niences. . arks about blacks. striped shirt and maroon tie, said can to help congressional can-their pay for food today compared and partially processed, work "~ you listen to som_e of ~e 1 But he told the crowd in ortheraciaJ slurwbicbforcedhis didates, PJ'esident Ford's re-with20percenlinCanadaand?S formerlydoneinthekitchen.And political palaver that lS go~c Anaheim that be did not intend to cabinet resignation a week ago. election effort as well as the draft· to 40 percent in other nations of be said similar conveniences are around yo~ C~t the. impresston discuss the matter further. noting .. I have apologized as sincerely as ing of new farm legislation. the world. packaged intoottier foods. that Amen ca as falling apart at •'thatchaptertsclosed... Iknowbowtodoit... Partly referring to notes, Bult Inaddition,hesaidU.S.citiz.ens ''This is one of the marvelous <SeeBUTZ.Page.U) )Sew-age Spill Closes f . Clelllente Beach \,,. Up atad O eer Six th Tiine In 1976 Something happens on holiday weekends in San Clemente. It happened July 4 . It happened Labor Day It's h a ppe n e d ag ain this Columbus Day holiday. For th e si xth lime since January , a sew age spill has closed a section of prime beach. The sewer backup occurred Sunda y afte rnoon a fter a citizens band radio enthusiast, trying to raise an antenna. knocked the a ntenna into three 12,000·volt power lines. Ru~s Kruse of Laguna Beach leaps over the crossbar in the high jump, one of 15 events in the fourth annual UC I Anteater Olympics held Saturday in Irvine. More than 100 male and female athletes from the community took part. Kruse is a lawyer for the Irvine Company. One of the lines broke, result· ing in a blackout for five hours to hundreds of San Clemente homes and businesses, and a failure at the Linda Lane sewer pump s tation , wher e new pumps were installed after the Labor Day pump failure there. More than a mile of beach. from the municipal pier to Estation Be ach, was ordered closed by the county health de· partme nt a t le ast through Thursday. Laguna Rape Try, Trio Seize d M de L . k d In Clemente Mesa ur, r in e J e we l Holdu The Linda Lane pumps func· tioned for two hours after the power failure, but beat and tension wore through drivebelts. According to City Engineer Phil Peter, · the Linda Lane pumps were out only about an hour during which raw sewage bub- bled into the sea. By STEVE MITCHELL The witness entered a hall in p OtUMD•llyl'li«Sl.ltt the home and saw the suspect Costa Mesa police s aid today they have found several links between an attempted assault on a Laguna Hills woman a week ago, and the murder of a Costa Mesa housewife last month. A description of her assailant ' by the Laguna Hills woman is 1 very similar lo the one provided by a witness in the murder of Pam Davis, who was shot fi ve times at close range in her Costa Mesa home Sept. 10. .. Al thls time, we think both suspects may be the same man," said Costa Mesa Police Lt. George Lorton. Pam Davis received a phone ' can at her home, wh.ich was for sale, at about noon Sept. 10. The caller said he was interested in looking at the home, which had been advertis ed for sale in several newspapers. The man, posing as a potential · b\G'er, showed up at the home at 1 2867 Velasco Lane a. short time I later, wearing a black raincoat. 1 black trousers and a hat pulled down over hls face. Mrs. Davis apparently allowed ( the man to enter her home, and a t 6bort time later, a young woman ~ ln the home beard shots and a -eueam. r ' . [. •• f: ' ' Here's Right Flu Number In Sunday's Daily Pilot story about swine flu vac- ci n all on clinics, the telephone number for in- fonnaUon about the clinics was incorrectly listed. The correct phone · number for the Communi. t)' Referral and Informa- tion Service is M7·Sl7&. Tbe Daily Pilot regrets Sbeerror. Three men face armed robbery standing at the entrance lo the charges in San Clemente today master bedroom. She ran out the after they were chased down by back of the home and sought the wile of a j eweler who'd been help. robbed and maced. There was c onflicting in· formation about just how much sewage poured into the ocean, and for a ctually how long, however. In last week ·s assault attempt. a 26-year-old Laguna Hills housewife told Sheriff's deputies a man knocked on her front door and identified himself as a re- allor. When he entered the home, the tall suspect said he was not real- ly a realtor. "What I really want is you," he told the woman. The victim, who was edging toward a rear door, asked the man what his name was and be s aid, "Earl." Sheriff's deputies s aid the <See.LINKS, Page A2) Crouxls. Big, SurfS~ll OnS. Coast Sunny weather and tem- peratures as high as 93 degrees in Laguna Be;acb brought SQm1'ller· like crowds to the South Coast beaches over the weekend. There were however, relative- ly few rescues made by San Clemente and Laguna Beach lifeguards. Although the crowds were large lbe surf was small. Laguna Beach guardc; rescued 73-year-old Mildred Juarez of Redlands after a mishap at the . Diamond Street beach. The elderly woman was knocked down in the surf and broke her leg Sunday. She was taken to South Coast Oommunity Hospital where she was reported in stable condltJon today. Police said Michael Disieno. owner of Michael's Jewelers. 139 Avenida Del Ma r. called police Friday afternoon to report he'd been robbed. As police cars sped to the scene, Dlsieno's wife took off on fool after the three men and chased them down the street to another jewelry store, Phillips J ewelers. 'Police s potted the suspects, and the woman chasing them, and made arrests. Booked on charges or armed robbery were Thomas G. Irving, 45, or Visa Ii a, Helen Q. Irving, 26, of PorterviJle, and Bill W. Pierce, 26, or Hermosa Beach. Lifeguards r eported sewage seeped for several hours. Peter said only about 7,200 gallons of sewer water and solid wastes entered the ocean. but county health official estimates were as high as 100,000 gallons, which would have made the sp\11 oneoftheworstoftheyear. Firemen, meanwhile. report· ed that Wayne Lile, 1016 Buena Vista, whose work with the CB antenna allegedly initiated the power failure, was lucky to be alive. They said he was fortunate not to have been struck by the broken electrical wire. Two Trains C·ollide In Northern Mexico CWBUAHUA, Mexico (AP)- A passenger train carrying tourists, including some Americans, collided with a frelgbt train in the rugged Sierra Madre Mountains of northern Mexico. kllling at least 17 penona and Jnjuri111 451 pe>lice reported today. in Guadalajara, though it was not known whether any of the ll'OUP was aboard the train. One observation car on the "'Railroad to the Pacific:" tumbled into a 45-foot-deep ca· nyon when Lbe passengei:-train smaabed into the freight SUnday afternoon near the village or Pit· Uln'eal about 200 miles west of They said at least.five or the in· Chihuahua City and 300 miles j~ were Americans, and there soeatb of the U .s. border, police were unofficial reports that ono said. of the dead was from New York They said rescue workttS were City. stiD trying to pry apart \he car's Some of the pusen.gers were wTeckage to reacb jtlQeQlen travel agents, mostrrom Mexico trapped toslde. The rescue City. maklng lht trtp •part ol a squadJ~ould bOl \de cuttlDg touriam promotion, poUeelaid. torct.ff oa the wreckage berwse So ued Fro111 tlae Pyre A fireman rescues skeleton from haunted house operat- ed by Milwaukee March of Dimes after fire broke out in the building housing fund raising project. Police in Milwaukee s ay they suspect arson. Fog Hides Co~t;. 3 Boats Aground Two people were injured Sun· day when a dense afternoon fog caused three power boats to run aground along the Orange Coast. Bishop Moses suffered leg in· juries when the 21-foot cabUi cruis er Centurion, with seven people aboard, went on the rocks Cops Probe Occult,.. style _Cat Slaying San Clemente police are in· vestigating the occult-style slay. ing of a small black and white cat that.had been crucified and left in the yard behind a policeman's apartment Sunday. The animal's throat had been cut. The cat was tied to a cross and at its reel, said police, was the drawn figure o! a death's head or devil. Around the figure were the words "Sun, Earth, Moon, Air, Sea." The paper with the words also contained astrological signs. The remains were found by the wife of the San Clemente police officer beneath her clothes line. Police said the yard, surrounded by a high rence, serves four apartments. Investi1ators do not believe that the s laying of the cat was linked to the fact that a policeman lives in one of the apartments. The front verandah of the apartments, in the northwest sector of the city. was covered by blood. Police said the animal had apparenUy been throttled there and earried to or thrown into the backyard. Police could not give a reason for the crJ,tel act. Drug Thieves Bit · Pharmacyi* Laguna Laguna Beach Police are in- vestiaating the theft of '3,054 wot1h of dru1t• from Bushards Pharmacy. 2'4 Forest Av~ue. Police.. sugpect the theft late last weet as committed by so- meone who bid inside t.be store aft.er it wu cl0$ed foe business. 1'be theft included large amounts d nareoUc and other presmp- Uondru11. off Crescent Bay Point in Laguna Beach. Moses was apparently in· jured while attempting to hold the boat off the rocks. Hew~ report· ed in guarded condition today at UCI Medical Center after un· dergoing surgery. An unidentified woman was treated for minor shock after the 42-foot cabin cruiser I:.ucky Duck crashed onto San Juan Rock: shortly after clearing the Dan- Point Marina for Newport Beach. Harbor DepartmentofCiciaJs said the craft owned by A.E. Aileen eventuaJJy sank in 40 !eet or water. A 21-foot motorboat with four people aboard went aground off Eighth Street Sunset Beach. No injuries were r eported. A Harbor dep a rtment spokesman said the afternoon fog caught many yachtsmen by sur· prise and Orange County Harbor Department r escue boats from Dana Point and Newport Harbor were kept busy locating small era/tin distress. Also assisting ln the rescue operations was the Coast Guard cutler Point Divide. Despite the numerous calls from people expressing concel'Q over yachtsmen who had not re- turned on schedule, harbor de. partment officials said all boatsmen were accountedtor. Weath er Low clouds and dense fog expected again Tues· .day morning with clearing by afternoon. Beach lllghs near70. I NSIDE TODA. Y The preu car:;c under aca1hhlg. attack from. a /"""'11' Nizon aide in an Orange Coun- ty. oddrtH. Su P,age A7. l•dex .....__ ., l"V-SeNke ,.. .... , ... AS AIMl&.a•r• u L.M ..,_ ,., Mtvlff ~· AS ... tlt!M ...... ,.. ='·'" II M t Or-.eC.•ly "' ., ...... .,., o..-.i ., '" ... ~ Aa o.•-· "' ::'.,. .. ..., . ..... ~ •• "' •*"-'-l ,.. Te!"'ltiell •• ...... ,. . ~ ,.. ........ •• ..... ... . ... ~ At .......... San Clemente lifeguard,, re· .JJOrted makinJ 54 reKues over the weetend as an estimatfld 12,000 Pet'SODS went to city beaches. The American Society of spill~ diesel rue! might lpite, Travel Aaents had been i:neetl.Da pee said. ----\;~.--· --,. .{ ~-.,._._ l . . ' .. A.2 DAIL y PILOT L/SC Anaheim police have arrested two men held on drug charges in Westminster jail in connect.Ion with the fatal shot.gun shooting ol an Anaheim market clerk last Thursday night. Police said today George Louis Ledesma, 19, ot 1'331 Olive St., Westminster, and an unidentified 16-ycar-old were arrested this morning following their jailing earlier this week on drug related charaes in Westminster. Costa Mesa police said today they are interested in the two men, ~om they assert may also be responsible for the armed rob- bery of a Costa Mesa market last Tuesday night. The pair is being held on susp1· c1on or murder and robbery in the holdup of Albertson's Market, 610 S. BrookhurstSt., Thursday. Officers s aid they are seeking a third suspect in the market murder of clerk Jack Warren Mason, of Stanton, who was shot D•llY 111 .. 1 S~lf l'Mlo 'AMERICANS PAY LESS ' Food Expert Butz f'rotn Page 1l l BUTZ ... the seams,'· Butz continued. "'You get the idea that you had better crawl back in your shells andsitonwhatyouhave" But he s aid it has been free en· terprise and an ability by govern· menl lo let free enterpri~e work that led tht· country to where 1t 1s toda) llc referred to this year 's federal budget which will exceed $400 billion and said that it is bound to be inflationary. "We have got to (ace up to the questions here in America," Butz srud. "and ask if we are going to rededicate ourselves to that wed· ding of economics and political principles which has worked so well in the past 200 years.·• Unlike an appearance last Fri· day in Mississippi which was in· terrupted by hecklers, Butz' ap· pearance this m oroin.ll was broken up several times by laughter and applause. He joked about his expenses for lhe trip to California saying now that he was a private citizen he hoped the associations were pick· ing up his tab and in referring to his age of 67 he said "there Is plenty of life in mc. J am the s ame age a:. Wilbur Mills and I am just one year older than Wayne Hays." Suspect Killed Mol\day Oelober l1 1978 a( .,olnt blenk ran1eby ~IUJJ*t ~ Costa Mesa poUce said the three wielding asawed-offahotgun. men are very slmilar in descnp- Masoo died at West Anaheim tiontotheAnaheimrobbers. Community Hospital three hours Meanwhile, the executive atterlhes hooting. board or Retails Clerks Union The three bandits entered the Local 324 have offered a $5,000 re- Albertaon's Marketatabout10:30 ward ror information leading to p.m. Thur~ay, forcing about 15 the arrest and conviction of the to20customers tolieonthenoor, killers or retail clerk Mason As the trio scooped up money AJbertson 's Market earlier of· from cash drawers. one suspect fered a similar award for the ap- allegedly sbot Mason at h.is cash prebension oflhe suspects register. Witnesses said the clerk did not provoke the shooting and was ap parenUy cooperating with the bandits at lhe time of the shool· ing. Costa Mesa police today are ob· taining photographs of the two Anaheim robbery suspects t o circul ate to witnesses of a Costa Mesa market robbery earlier la~t week. They suspect the same gunmen were responsible for the robbery of Ral{»hs Market in the Harbor Shopping Center last Tuesday evening. In the Costa Mesa robbery, three bandits took more than $1,000 in cash and another $3.000 in cheeks and food stamps from the market. The shotgun-armed suspect al· legedly struck a market clerk with the barrel of h.is gun before the three mend fled into the dark· ness. New San Juan Traffic Panel Member Seated Gary Hausdorfer, 30, has been sworn in as San Juan Capi strano traffic and transportation commissioner. Hausdorfer is no stranger to the traffic co mmission. For three years he has battled for improvements to the narrow. winding Via de Agua, sole ac-· cess road lo the Alto Capistrano tract in south San Juan. The past two years he has served as president of the Alto Capis trano homeowners' as- sociation. Hausdorfer, vice president of W.R. Campbell Company and manager of the Laguna Hills business park, said he views lhe main task facing the traffic commission as r evision of the circulation cleme nt in San Juan's general plan. "It is extremely important, as the valley continues to grow." he said, "that we have a traffic plan to handle the increased load "In the meantime, we'll be working to assure our existing roads are safe and new sub divisions have well-planned ac cess routes " San Juan's Council OKs Traveling Van The San Juan Capistrano City Council bas approved funding for a van and two recreation leader5 to carry the city recreation pro· gram to the people wherever thev are. Politics LOoming In Report The Laguna Beach Planning Commission will review a report Tuesday suggesting all buildings and nonemergency vehicles be banned from city beaches and parks. The meeting 1~ at 4·30 p.m. at city hall. The report by the city's parks and r e creation comm1llee shapes up as a political football. The commission has been in- structed by the City Council to ig- nore the matter and defer the re· port until the Recreation com- mittee defines its goals for the year. Implementation of the r eport -or even its acceptance by the commission -could have an im- pact on plans for construction or a lifeguard headquarters at Main Beach Park. plans the City Coun- cil has given informal approval to. Some members of the city planning commission are known to oppose development of the lifeguard facility at the park. The commission under its own rules has been prevented from talcing a stand on the m atter which has generated a head of steam at the city council level A previous atte mpt to put a · tifegu ard facil i ly at the north end of the park where a sewer pump station 1s located was killed once by the commission more than a year ago when il voted construe tion would not be in conformance with the city's general plan because it would "encroach on the park." The issue currently :.hapes up as a bit of pre liminary parl iamentary wrang l ing between the council, the com mission and the parks commll tee. Other commission bui.iness in eludes development or a specific plan limiting development at Crescent Bay Point and applica- tion for federal housing and com munity assistance fund~ YOVAVTO TRY 11lE PILOT ADS "Many thanks t he ad brought a buyer witrun 24 hour~ or its appearance in the Pilot! .. That's the ~d\'ertising succes5 story of a Corona del Mar woman who placed this classified ad· C.REAT \AR 'fifi JldvcdC'rc 11 , :! dr hrdtp, t•xtra clean P ~. I' II, fll<' air. :16 t \" R en~ gl\res re;il ~o po"'cr Orig O'o' nC'r. llnrler 7:1,000 rn1 Stl.'>O xx\ xxx.x For inform at1on about hov. you can put the Daily Pilot to work for you call : 642·5678. APWlre ..... tot SMILING, HANDCUFFED PALESTINIAN TAKEN FROM SYRIAN EMBASSY IN ROME Terrorists Surrender After Falling to Take Ambassador Hostage TeITorists Free Five .. • ) 1 Three Palestiniam Shoot Way Into Embassy· ' • • . •• ROME <AP) -Thr~ Palesti· nians protesting Syrian interven· Lion In Leba non s hot their way in- to the Syrian Embassy in Home today but surrendered to police after holding five hostages for two hours . Pollce said one hostage, em- bassy counsellor Hunen Hatem. was seriously wounded in the leg. The guerrillas allowed him to be talcen to a hospital where he un . derwent al lf..r-hour operation. A Syria n official said the Palestinians surrendered after they realized they had failed to talc e the ambassador hostage Ambassador Farouk al Sharac had left the e mbassy earlier to attend a ceremony. About fi ve hours after they stormed the Sy rian Embassy, SOUGHT FOR RAPE TRY In Laguna Hiiis Case against a private building and its occup a nts, and import , possession and use of explosives and war weapons. A Palestinian. identified as the 25-year-old leader of the group, was quoted by Italian radio as saying they were protesting what they called Syria's betrayal of the Palestinian cause. Syrian forces a llied with Lebanese the Palestinians were jailed and charged with attempted murder, taking hostages, violent action Christians have been fighting lef· tists Moslems and Palestinians in the Lebanes e civil war. The attack came two WIM!'ks after Syrian authorities hanged 10 public in Damascus three Palestinian terrorists who had raided a hotel in an attack in SOUGHT FOR MURDER In Costa Mesa Case f 'rotn Page ,1 I LINKS TO CRIMES?. • • woman then r an to a neighbor's home. Costa Mesa's Lt. Lorton said today the Laguna Hills woman provided a description of the as sault suspect before viewing an earlier drawing provided by the witness in the Pam Davis murder. "The two drawings are very similar," he noted. Police ar e circulating the two drawings m hopes tile suspect might be identified. The man is described as being between 27 and 35 years old, with short black hair parted on the left. He w ears square clear glasses with thick dark frames.' Anyone who can provide clues as to the, m an's id.entity is asked to contact Costa Mesa police or the Orange County Sheriff's Of- fi ce. r which four hostages were killed. ?- y oussef Miro, an embassy or. • ficial who was among today's ~ hostages. said, "The three came ; in, leveled their guns at us and ': said they wanted to revenge the : massacre in Lebanon.•• He said .. there were about 10 people in the : building, but five fled by jumping ~ from windows. f Taken hostage, he said, were l three men and two women. :' Jn his r adio intervie~·. the ~ Palestinian leader said the euer· : rill as were members of the Black t June Movement, which is named , for the month when Syria sent an ~ estimated 13 ,000 troops and ~ several hundre d tanks into • Lebanon. • The guerrilla leader said the ~ embassy a ttack was designed to : "draw the attention of the world ~ to the betrayal of the Syrian gov· ~ ernment and the plot or Arab •. slates against the Palestinian ; ·people. : ··we did not want t.o harm anyone," he said. •'This action : marks a new stage in the strug-: gle of the Palestinian people." ,: Police rushed to tbe scene-· when they heard shots from the embassy, a four-floor building with a garden on a quiet tree·:· lined street. : Police s urrounded the em· ' bassy and placed sharpshooters on terraces and roors of nearby • buildings. : Clemente Hospital ~ Hosts Blood.mobile ~' ··'. San Clemente Gener a l · •. I Ios pital is out for blood. The hospital, at 654 Camino De '· Los Ma r es, hos ts the San Clemente bloodmobile from 2:30 to 7 p.m. Oct. 15. Prospective : donors. who must be 17 to 66 · years old, in good health, weigh at least 110 pounds and not have donated blood with.in the past eight weeks. may call 496-1122 for appointments. 60th Veto Cast DALLAS (AP> -President Ford has cast his OOth veto, this one blocking leglslatlon that would bind American ships to an international agreement aimed at preventing colllsions at sea. The veto was announced Sunday. PAMPLONA. Spain <AP) Youths demonstrated and some businesses closed their doors in mourning today after police shot and k\lled a robbery suspect near this city in the tense Basque re· g ion o r nOT'thern Spain. Author ities s aid Funcisco Alonso. 24. was shot as he climbed a fence. His companion escaped. The van , carrying craft materials, tumbling mats and la· ble games, will visit San Juan parks, school sites, and cul-de· sacs In housing tracts on a rotat· ing schedule. so that residents citywide can ·participate, said Thomas Baker, recreation direc· tor. The program evolved out. of a summer r ecreation sessidn in which staff transported equip- ment in their own vehicles. More than 3,000 youngsters participat- ed in cr afts and games al five cl· ty parks and San Juan Elemen· tary and Marco Forst er In· termed.late Schools, Baker said. Handicapped Fight for Rights ORANGE COAST l sc DAILY PILOT tfw Or&nO! (M\• 0Ally '1il°' W1tP\vrtt\i(h l\tG~ b•ntd OW H"w' Prf'\\ l'-GtJbt1~by ttw0..•"41fi CM\t "-bt'"''""' C.Mo,..nv \a»tlttt td•ttaMM• OWOflW<f AAonl'f•Y t~rOUOfil ,., ... ., 10' ~·· ,,,,,_.,,,,,. NtWOO't IW6C~ H\,f#\\1~ ... .,,. ... ~°"' t.WI\ vau • ., ,,.,"' \AiOdlf't>M• "•"•' •"<f l~ ketf't Sou1ft(N\t •\.t"Qlltf'f"t)'Of'elitdl Onn n out>tti"-3 ktuird•n tt"<f ~s f M ~;::~c!,.~=~~.~~-;~i':.:;,:lU Wt'l 8fY ..... " .. _ Prtt ... fll•"'9 -IW• J•Oll.C ...... \lot• ,.,.,1..,.1----'°' .... _. ,,. ....... -. fO!tOI' T-•AM ......... _,..,,.,.edlw ~M'--1 11-P .... ll .'"'''*"' "'61"1•<1'"0 C::~t•-s L.aauna Beach Olflce n .. G,....,._,.S4,,,., ~"'"" ........ p 0 ... -.,." Ottle•t c..11.,..w now.11...,S1""1 .. ...., .............. ,,.,,...,.....,._. .s.Mldl•MC• lltl .. , UJll LI P•t-tl Sot<I oi.oe ,,_ Telephone f714)tlM»1 ClaHWecl AdHrti ..... 142-5'71 &.ag11na leach M1 ~nta· Tel.,ltone ~ f lOl!I "'"Clo-Mt 416""30 =-i:: :,::. o:.:r. ~..:..~~':.~ M•lttf' ., H~tf'th•~•11111' ~·'•11\ '"e'f W ,.~ .. wtM wu.-..wt '"'t•f •• ,,._,,.titift •• ,_,...,._ WtNI <ltn M •I-.• M lt 11 CMI• """u Ctlllorfl .. •vHtrlOllOft llY u .. l.f' u i4 -\Illy tY M•ll '4 H _ .. , •. mHhl Yf ---UM-MJ ·- The Capistrano Valley Llons Club will donate funds toward purchll!!e of the van, which has been dubbed the San Juan "aamemoblle." Components, Cash Taken in The!t Stereo components and cash with a totaJ value ot $858.04 have been stolen from a Capistrano Beach home by burglars who en· tered via a sliding «lass door. Orange County sheriff's otflcers said the loss was reported by carpenter Gary Paul Michelin, 24, of 28862 Vista del Mar. He was away on vacation at the time of thet.beft. Strikers Replaced CUPERTl~O (AP) -School oaiclals have lssutd elber1ency credcntial1 (or 77 ol more than 800 1ubstftute teachers so they can repla~e eµikia& rflU)ar lft· strvc:tors In Call(omia·1 lar1ttl elementary schoo\ district.. --~ --"-·-~-------- By ANNE COOPER Of l~e OtllY Piiot Stall The handicapped figure the best way to make it convenient for them to get around in public Is to put civic l ead e r s in wheelchairs and let them see how far they can go. This is just one project planned by the South Orange County chapter or the California As· socialion or the Physically Han- dicapped <CAPH). "People don't realize how dif- ficult it is for a handicapped person to shop or attend school or go to the beach -activities other people take for granted," said Cleova Weinert, chapter presi- dent. Mrs. Weinert. who was crip- pled by polio as a young child, said people have asked her wh y the handicapped should have the most convenient parking spaces. "It's not just to save us a few steps," she said. "Those spec:iaJ parking slots are reserv'ed next to an open space, because it takes o lot of room to get a wheelchair out of a car." Mrs. Weinert, who can get around quit. spryly with the help cA a cane. traveled to Hawaii entJrely by wheelchair, in order to dl1cover how the trip could be made easier for someone unable to&nvel an_y other way. "Our 1oal ls to make as much i CJ.tit• ,. ... , ............ ing from fighting for pending legislation to developing projects (or those confined to a wheelchair. One of her current projects Is worki ng for a dial-a-ride system • to assure local handicapped stu· dents are not prevented from at- tending college because they lack transportation. The local CAPH chapter is cooperating with Saddleback " College on Thursday, "Awue- ne~s Day," to, present an in-• lormational program from 2 to 4 p.m. at the campus foe the ban. di capped. The local CAPH group alto holds monthly meetin1s at ~ Marco Forster Junior Hieb School in San Juan Capistrano. THEIR GOAL tS A.BETTER LIFE FOR THE HANDICAPPED Auocl•tlon M•mb9t'• Cleova Weinert, Ellen TrujHlo "Our meetings feature a ~ speaker, who presents lnforma· lion helpful to the handicapped, •p:• ' said Mrs . Weinert. "Mik• !' Kevoian, a LoDJ Beach artist who teaches the handicapped, · '4 also attends each month wit.tr • 1 ~ some of bJs studentl for palnUQC ii demonstrallons . 1 .i "Perhaps t.be most valuable t part of the meeting, tbou1h, la 1 the opportunity to share with one l' avallable to the handicapped as to the non·bandlc apped person," she said. ''Our or gani1Qtion welcomes all people interested tn help.inf us meet this aoal. Not everyone ln the Heart As5'>Cia- tion bu heart problems, and we . . , don't llmlt our membership to another in an atmosphere where t thehandlcapped." we don't bave to feel self· One non·handlcapped person comcloua." who ls active in the south county Additional lnformation on • chapter ls Ellen Tn0Wo ot Dana CAPH activlUes ta avaOablo by t Polnt. She ls involved tn pr<>-calllng Mrs . Weinert, 41W836. or blems of the handlupped ran1· .. Mrs. TruJWo, •96·3938. • ~· . ... • f l· Orange Coast EDITION 1VOL 69, NO. 285, 2.SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ·Butz 'Closes Chapter' on ll7J(ATRY CLANCY 1 Otl91e0.llfpji.tMtft Former qriculture secnrtary Earl Bub told an 0r8Qle County audience today he "paid a tremendous personal price" for what be sald were indiscreet re- marb about blacks. But be told the crowd in Anaheim that he did not intend to discuss the matter further, noting 1 "thatcbapterisclosed." Butz was apeaiiog to about. 1.500deleeates to the National As· sociaUon of Conceatonaires and National Association ol Theater Owners at the Disneyland Hotel. Butz, dressed conservatively in a gray pin-striped suit. blue striped shirt and maroon tie, said ol the racial slur which forced his cabinet resignation a week ago, "I have apologized as sincerely as lknowbowtodoit." Jo a press conlerence af. · terward, be also saJd be would not discuss the matter further adding the remarks were taken out of context..from a private cooversa· tion. He said be intends to do all be can to help congressional can- didates, President Ford's r e· election effort as well as the draft· i.ngofnewfarm legislation. Partly referring to notes, Butz discussed free enterprise in the U.S. and what be said was the fmestfood supplying and market· ing system in the world. Butz, who served as agriculture secretary since 1971, said U.S. consumers spent 17 percent of their pay for food today compared with 20 percent in Canada a.nd 25 to 40 percent in other nations of the world. In addition. he said U.S. citizens Today's Closing N.Y.Stocks 4 i N /C TEN CENTS Racial Slur enjoy higher quality food than thoseinothernationsandpackag. · ing and marketing provides some "built-in maid service." For example. he said, 60 per. cent of the potatoes consumed in the U.S. today are already peeled and partially processed. work formerly done in the kitchen. Ansi he said similar conveniences are packaged into other foods. "This is one or the marvelous success stories in the American story." , Because Americans spend l'C• latively ,Ultle for food. they bav)t more money for automobiles, television sets and atber conve. nieoces. "U you listen to some of the political palaver that is going around you get the impression that America is falling apart at (See BUTZ, Page A%) !Mesa Murder, Assault Try Tied l . i --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- R111a Oeer by 811.~ Paramedics aid Rose A. Powers, 51. of 133 E . 16th St.. Costa Mesa, after she slipped under the rear wheels of an Orange County Transit District bus Sunday afternoon while trying to stop the vehicle to get on. Witnesses told police the woman r a n alongside the moving bus, then stepped off the sidewalk on E. 17th Street in Costa Mesa, falling in front of the rear wheels. which crushed he r left ankle. Sh e was r eported in fair condition today at Hoag Memorial Hospit al. 1 Israelis to Receive Sophisticated Arms WASHINGTON (AP> -The United States has a~reed to give I s rael a n ew, extremely sophisticated missile system for use primarily in a nt1taok warfare, Is raeli and US sources said today. The deal does not in volve an in· crease In the cost or American military aid now scheduled for Israel. but will make new weapons available that were not previously ofCercd. Israel is now set to receive $1.5 billion in direct military aide plus another $800 million in economic assistance. The new program involves a top-secret antitank m~sile system within that findhcia l framework, according to an Israeli of(icial. Presidential press secretary Ron Nessen con/irmed that the U.S. would give Israel "certain additional items of military hardware," adding that "it 1s in our interest to sell these goods." Nessen declined to spell out what the new equipment would Here's Right Flu Number ln SUnday's Daily Pilot atory about swine nu vac- c hut.ion c linics , the telephone number for ln· formation about the clinics was incorrectly listed The correct pho n e number for the Communi- ty Referral a nd lnforma· tion Service is 547-5178 The Dally Pilot regrets the error be. though some details were ob· tained from sources elsewhere. Sources from both govern· ments. including White House of ficials, ruled out any Israeli ac· quisiUon or the Pershing missile. however. The Pershing is a lac· tical system capable or carrying nuclear weapons. Word of the development was confirmed as Israel's deputy Prime Minister , Yigal Allon, conferred with President Ford. School Board Sets Meeting Over McN ally Trustees of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District will meet Tuesday night to continue dis· cussion on the relocation of McNally continuation hig h school. With the pending sale o( the downtown McN ally site, trustees plan on closing one or more schools in order to r elocate McNally students. Deputy Superinte nde nt Norman Loats will present slides demonstrating what boundary changes may be necessary and where students would be placed lf their school is closed. · At present, trusteses have con· sidered the following schools for possible elosure: Kaiser Mjddle School, Bay View, Lindbergh, Mariners. Woodland, Harper and Monte Vista elem•mtary schools. The public meeting begin~ Tuesday at 7: 30 p. m. in the Newport Harbor Hilh School audJt.orium 3 Boats Aground In Fog Two people were injured Sun· day when a dense afternoon fog caused three power boats to run aground along the Orange Coast. Hi shop Moses suffered leg in· juries when the 21-foot cabin cruiser Centurion, with seven people aboard, went on the rocks off Crescent Bay Point in Laguna Beach. Moses was apparently in· iured while attempting to hold the boat off the rocks. He was report· ed in guarded condition today al UCI Medical Center after un- dergoing s urgery. J\n unidentified woman was treated for minor shock after the 42·foot cabin cruiser Lucky Duck· crashed onto San Juan Rock '· shortly after clearing the Dana Point Marina for Newport Beach. Harbor Department officials said the craft owned by A.E. Aiken eventually sank in 40 feet or water. A 21-foot motorboat with four people aboard went aground off Eighth Street Sunset Beach. No injuries were r eported. A Harbor d e p artment spokesman said the afternoon fog caught m any yachtsmen by sur· prise and Orange County Harbor Department rescue boats from Dana Point a nd Newport Harbor were kept busy locating small craft in distress. . Also assisting in the r escue operations was the Coast Guard cutler Point Divide. Cops Arrest Sex Seekers lnSanDiego SAN DIEGO (AP > J\ crackdown on female prostitutes 1s aimed at discouraging them by taking away their customers. Police arrested 40 men ranging in age from 19 to 67 last weekend for investigation of soliciting sex. Five hundred m ales have been arrested since May. Among the latest 40, who later made bail. were 19 servicemen. A police spokesman said none of the worn e n worki ng on downtown streets was arrested. Three women poli ce decoys joined in. At one time, he said, "guys were driving up to the curbs to stop and talk to tirls. The traffic was backi ng up bumpe r to bumper on some streets." · 'lt got so bad out ther e that we had to concentrate on ta.king the businest away from them." the spokesman said. SOUGHT FOR MURDER In Costa Mesa Case Trains Hit In Mexico; 17 Perish ClllHUA HUA, Mellico (AP) - A passenge r tr ain carryin~ touri sts. inc lu ding some Ame rican s. collided with a freight train in the rugged Sierra Madre Mountains of northern Mexico, killing at least 17 persons and injuring 45. poli ce reported today. They said at least fi ve of the in· jured were Americans, and there were unofficial reports that one or the dead was from New York City. Some of the passengers were travel agents, m ost from Mexico City, making the trip as part of a tourism promotion, police said The American Society of Travel Agents had been meeting in Guadalajara. though it was not known whether any of the group was aboard the train One observation car on the ''R a ilroad to the Pacific" tumbled into a 45·foot·deep ca· nyon when the passenger tr ain smashed into the freight Sund ay afternoon near the village of Pit· torreal about 200 miles west or Chihuahua City and 200 miles south of the U.S. border, police said. They said r escue workers were still trying to pry apart the car 's wreckage to reach passengers trapped inside. The r escue squads could not use cutting torches on t he wreckage because spilled diesel fuel might Ignite, police said. The freiizh t train was east· bound from San Rafael en route to Chihuahua City, and the passenger train was westbound on the same track, police said Turkey Trot Payclwck Wi1is Top Trophy CUERO, T ex. <AP) -''Gentlemen, start your turkeys," was all Ruby Begonia IV a nd P~eck neede<:f to hear . With that, they began a fretf'ifed foot and at~ race to decide the winner . of this year's Traveling Turkey Trophy of Tumultuous Triumph. When the feathers settled at the e nd of the 150· yard contest Sunday, Ruby had the fastest time in the final leg of the Great Gobbler Gallop. But Paycheck won the six-foot troph~ Ruby, the Texas entry, failed to overcome a time loss she suff,ered against Paycheck in the first leg of the race last m o nth at. Worthington. Minn. The gallop w as the highlight of the annuaJ Cuert' Turkeyfcst. The town of 8,000 bills itself as the Turkey Capital of the World, a Ulle also claimed by Worthington. -·· ~--· Artist's Drawings Similar By STEVE MITCHELL Ol llM O•lly PilOC Si.ff Costa Mesa police said today they have found several links between an attempted assault on a Laguna Hills woman a week ago, and the murder of a Costa Mesa housewife last month. A description of her assailant by the Laguna Hills woman is very similar to the one provided by a witness in the murder of Pam Davis. who was shot five times at close range in her Costa Mesa home Sept. 10. "At this time, we think both suspects may be the sam e man, .. said Costa Mesa Police Lt. George Lorton. Pam Davis r eceived a phone call at her home. which was for sale, at about noon Sept. 10. The caller said he was interested in looking at the home. which had been a dve rtised for sale in sever al newspapers. The man. posing as a potential buyer. showed up at the home at 2867 Velasco Lane a short time later, wearing a black raincoat. black trousers and a hat pulled down over his face Mrs. Davis apparently allowed the man to enter her home. and a short time later, a young woman in the home heard shots and a scream. The witness entered a hall in the home and saw the suspect standing at the entrance to the master bedroom. She ran out the back of the home and sought help. In last week's assault attempt, a 26·year-old Laguna Hi lls housewife told Sheriff's deputies a man knocked on her front door and identified himself as a re· al tor. When he entered the home, the I all suspect said he was not real · ly a realtor. '"What I really want 1s you," he told the woman. The victim. who was edging toward a rear door~ asked the man what his name was and he said. "Earl." Sheriff's deputies said the woman then ran lo a neighbor 's home. Costa Mesa's Lt. Lorton said today the Laguna Hills woman provided a description of the as· sault suspect before viewing an earlier drawing proVJded by the witness in the Pam Davis murder. "The two drawings are very similar,'' he noted. Police are circulatini:t the two drawings in hopes the sul>pect might be identified. The man is described ns beinJt between 27 and 35 years old, with short black hajr parted on the left. lie wears square clear glasses with thick dark frames. Anyone who can provide clues as to the man's identity is asked to contact Costa Mesa poli ce or • the Orange County Sheriff's Of· fice. YOU AUTO TRY mE PILOT ADS "Many t hanks t he ad brought a buyer within 24 hours of its appearance in the Pi.lot:·• That's the advertising success story of a Corona del Mar woman who placed this classified ad: G R EAT CAR· '66 Belvedt'rc 11, 2 dr hrdtp. extra cleun. r ,i;, PIO. fac. air. 361 V 8 l'n~. l{\VCS real Jll'I PO"Cr Orig. owner. Under 73,000 mi $850. XXX XXX'( F'or information about how you can put the DAily Pilot to . work for you call: f142.5678. • SOUGHT FOR ASSAULT In Laguna Hiiis Caae Burglars Hit Trio of· Eateries Three Newport B each restaurants and a delicatessen were hi t by burglars over the weekend, police reported today. According to reports, in two or the burglaries, thieves made off with cash and goods valued at more than $1,170. In the other two, appar ently nothing was taken, investigators said. 'fhom as Arconti, owner of the Chk ken DeliJ?ht at 500 W. Coast lrfigbw ay, told police he lost a meat slicer and $28 in rolled coins when burglars pried open the rear door during the hours or darkness Friday night andSatur· day morning. He told police he had secured the door by nailing it shut, but the thieves apparently were able to pry the door open <invway. The second loss was reponea Saturday morning by employes of the Smashed Potato, 101 Palm St., who said an overnight burglary cost the restaurant $156 in coins and cigarettes. Police said a second Peninsula restaurant, the Tale of the Whale at the Balboa Pavilion, was broken into but apparently nothing was taken by the thieves who were frightened off by the burglary alarm. Employes of Gallo's Italian Deli. 3900 ~-Coast Hi ghway, also reported an attempted break in from Friday night but police said that burglary was apparently foi led by the door lock that the in· truders could not break. Weatlaer Low clouds and dense fog expected again Tues· dav morning "ith clearing hy afternoon n1..•ach highs ll<'ar 70. I NSIDE T ODAY The preu r tim(' u11der scathing, attack 11" . Niron. aide ii\ on Oranye Cwn· ty address. See P.agc A1. Index AIY-fer¥1Ce A' "'"'"'-.... ,1,,. Al AM l..l..-.n L M.l tvd At Mt•ftt C.lllMllla u N41llOMI '"'°' ., IU A• A• At O•nlltea 17" o. • ...,. c.""'' ~(\ .. """'· •t·l O'tt, ... 1'11 ., Stl'fl•~'1•r Al Oe.tlll ... 11< ... A7 =·Mltllt!I eu 1f4!i.ritth'" A6 At , .. ,_,_.,, A• ,. ...... 1 ..... •• ,, ..... u Al ,.,,. ... " At .. lllellK-.. ••1M A4 "'~ A• Wtflflffwi ... • I ' Saeed Fro111 the Pyre A firema n rescues skeleton from haunted house operat- ed by Milwaukee March of Dimes after fire broke out in the building housing,. fund r aising project. Police in , Milwaukee s ay they suspect arson. ·Newport Council To \Fill Empty Seat Newport Beach councilmen a re expect ed l o a ppoint a replacement for their late col- league, Howard Rogers Tuesday night. The council meeling, normal ly held on a Monday, has been put off lo Tuesday because or the Columbus Day holiday today. Councilman Don Mclnms, a U.S. Steel Says It'll Meet Rules PI'ITSBURGH (AP> -US Steel Corp. said today that it will comply with clean air stan- dards at its Clairton plant, a project the firm s aid might cost as much as S600 million. The compa ny said compliance with local, s tale and federal clean air levels at the world':; biggest coke plant by 1983 would involve cosUy moderniza· lion or reduced production or a combination of the two. U.S. Steel's agreement was designed lo end long·standing air pollution suiL<> against the company. "We a r e r elieved that a n agreement has finally been re- ached," s a id U.S . St eel Chairman Edgar B. Speer. The plan calls for the retire- ment or modernization of all ex- isting coke oven batteries at Clairton and construction of three superbatteries equipped with new air pollution control de- vices. The company would be granted limited immunity from prosecu- tion for violation of clean air standards if certain. control equipment is installed yel falls to 1 bring the plant into compliance with laws . A public bearing on Ule pro- 1 posed consent decree to end the 1 lawsuits will be held Nov. 22 I before Allegheny OlUnly Presi- dent Judge Henry Ellenbogen, In whose chambers the agreement was announced today. t Speer said, " The environmen- 1 tal controls required by the I decree will r esult in an over-all , reduction in coke, coke oven gas and chemical producUon capaci- ty at Clairton work.<1." He also said it will "undoubtedly have a negative effect on Ule creation of new jobs for young people ... " ORANGE COAST \ DAILY PILOT =:i:.~~~'~'':, :!::1::; :::: :;,:; CM\1 P\lblhh•n-Q COft\o•nv SePitt4t,. ect•hOf'I\ ~'• Mlb41\hlld MOM•1 tftfC!iUOft ~'tti.t'f ft)'" Co•'4" Mtw ,...,DOf1 8e•<fll, Hunt~ S-.-c:"' ~oun f•I" v ... ,,. trwlt'H $toe1••bAO. v .. 11.-v Af\!t ~8UKh"°"'tl\COHt A J•"lfefeoqtOf\41.idl t1on '' DUbAl"°""d $.aturn•yt ""° \~H'' Hu• t)rU~CINI OUbtl\f'hftQ Ot•nt I\ ,tt1 J>) ~t "•• Sl'M~ C.0\te llVw. 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A\\l\f•~C "''"•t•no l.ditet\ Ofllcu ~t•Mtu UOW•u,t94,-.~~ L•QUn•ftf'•rt'I t1a.G1t~tfl~tr"I HW!fl"CJ'fort ft••<h 17'7' 8tMf\ Ooul•"•'d ~Ocll<lllAHV1il1~ 11)011.0Porll-•t S.n D•-.o JS,......., Tel9ptlone (714)142-4321 CIHelfled Advertlalng &42·5678 i~lets.K_" V1U•'f' ~ Qthft 511-e310 ........ ~ .. , .. _ .... 4t5-0630 From Notttr\ Of•"9' <~•~'"''~ 540-1220 ~·~t ,,..,, Or•n-o• Coe\t f\~·~t"O '"..,. ~y ffo ,_.,, \tOf'I•\ iflil'l'o\llM' .... l~l•I "''"•' ., .... ,,.,.""""" ,,.. ... ,., ,,,. ... -f1Df'4Hhl(f'f 'llflt~eyt \Ot<••I a.rmtOi~ et c.,.,~, • .,,..., r.c.~;:,,.r:,':''s::::~?;, ,:~·~:' ,~;::. ~·:e fNintl'lilV flily l'ft••t ,. \l rnont~ly "'''1'"'P ., ........... \) •MOfl'llflilly ' member or the Ulree-man council committee on appointments. declined today · to reveal the name of the person who wul be recommended for tbe First Dis- trict Council seat. But he did say that he and com- mittee members Paul Ryckoff and Lucille Kuehn had in- tervi ewed 13 of the 14 applicants for the city council seat and they are unanimous in their recom- mendation. Should the council fail to ap· prove an appointment -it re· quires four votes -the seat will , remain vacant until a speciai t!leclion can be held next March. Inte r viewed by the council committee were Rogers ' widow, Trudi ; former Newport-Mesa sc hool board member Don Strauss; Rogers' opponent from the 1974 election, Peg Forgit; planning commissioner Paul Belalis, and Elaine Linhoff, a member of the city's Community Development Ci tizens Advisory Committee. Also interviewed were Bill von Esch, former chairman of the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Co mmis sion ; Alber t Irwin. physical education instructor at UC Irvine ; Robert Allen , a marine businessman; William Marlin, a McDonnell Douglas employ e ; Kae Ewing , a stockbroker and J . Douglas Lynn, anofCiceequipmentsupplier . Other committee interviews we re conducted with George Bissell, an architect and Walter Ziglar, president of a ceramics firm . Mcinnis said the onJy can· dida te n ot interviewed wa s Penins ula resident James Fortune who was out of town. The appointee will serve until April of 1978 when Rogers' term expires. City councilmen are selected by d istrict. The first di strict. which Rogers represented for 10 years, includes all or the Peninsula up to 32nd Street and all of Lido Isle. f Front Page A I BUTZ •.. the seams ," Butz continued. "You get the idea that you had better crawl back in your shells and sit on what you have." But he said it has been free en- terprise and an ability by govern- ment to let free enterprise work that led the country to where It is today. He referred to this year's federal budget which will exceed $400 billion and said that it is bound to be inflationary. "We have got to face up to the questions here In America," Butz said, ''and ask if we are going to rededicate ourselves to that wed- ding of economics and poUtlcaJ principles wblcb has worked so well in the past 200 years." Unlike an appearance last Fri- day in Mississippi wh.ich was in- terrupted by hecklers, Butz' ap- pearance this morninR was broken up several times by laughter and applause. He joked about hls expenses for the trip to California saying now that be was a private citizen he hoped the associations were pick· ing up his tab and in referring to his age ol 67 he said "there is plenty of life in me. I am the same age as Wilbur Mills and I· am Just one year older than Wayne Hays." Carter Attacks "Deceit' By Uae Associated Press Jimmy Cart.er today attacked President Ford's claim that the administration supports efforts to thwart the Arab boycott of Israel. Carter released copies of a letter he said proved con- clusively that Ford opposed Congress' efforts to impose tax penalties on American firms that cooperated with the Arab boycott. The letterl from Trea sury Secretary Wi liam Simon, was written last August. It cailed the proposed tax legisJatioo "an Inappropriate and dangerous response to a delicate foreign policy problem." · During last week's debate, Ford said he h ad vigorousJy op- posed the Arab boycott. Carter :;a.id Simon's letters shows that Ford was deceitful. Both candidates are observ· ing the traditional Columbus Day memorials as they enter the home s tretch of the presiden- tial campaign. Ford was to m ark the day by placing a wreath at a statue of Christopher Columbus in Wasb1ngton, while Carter was attending Columbus Day services at Our Lady ol Pom- peii Church in Chicago and walking in the Columbus Day parade there. As the campaign enters its final three weeks , th e Republicans and Democrats are woomg Ule nation's ethnic and religious voling groups, which form big blocks In major swing states. And both F ord and Carter tried to exploit the perceived blunders of their op- ponents in seeking support or one group or another. In Chicago, Carter continued to pound away at Ford's state· ment that the Soviet Union does not dominate the nations of Eastern Europe. Spe aking to a banquet of Polis h -Am e r icans, Carte r pledged that no word or deed of a Democ ratic White House would even hint al acceptance or permanent Soviet domination of Eastern Europc. Ford, meanwhile. was seek- ing the votes of Southern Bap- tists, a constituency some have conceded to Carter. In T e x as, F ord attende d televised services at First Baptist Church of Dall as, the largest church in the Southern Bapli!it Convention. Its pastor, the Rev. W. A. Criswell , publicly endorsed the President. * * * Ford Forces Hoping for Good Week WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Ford's campaign manager says he expects to see Ford "get som ewhat more aggressive '' after a week acknowledged as "less than outstanding." As Ford flew here from Dallas Sunday to end a week-long Wes t e rn t o ur, campaig n chairman James A. Baker III told five reporters aboard Air Force One: "In the five.week campaign, we think we've had four out- standing weeks . We recognize this last week has been less than outst anding. We think this is something to be expected . . that there would be peaks and valleys." Baker s aid. "We would acknowledge that we hit a bump last week," with the resignation of Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz under fire and Ford's re· pealed efforts to clarify remarks he made in Wednesday night's televised d ebate with Jimmy Carter about the status of Poland and other Communist countries in Eastern Europe. "I firmly be lieve." Baker added , "we have r egained whatever mom entum we've lost." He said Ford recouped during weekend visits to Oklahoma. where he criticized Carter's de· fense posture, and Texas, where the President grabbed for the coat-tails of the late former President Lyndon Johnson. The Ford camp felt the can- didate's chances in Texas have been enhanced by Carter 's criticism of Johnson in a Playboy magazine interview for which the Democratic nominee has apologized. When a reporter suggested lo Baker that Ford seemed to be Uking a more aggressive posture following Wednesday's debate, the campaign chief replied: "I would expect to see Ule President get somewhat more aggressive in his campaign ap- pearances ." However, Baker contended that Ford would not be ag- gressive "to the point Gov. Carter has reached when he1 called Ford more secl"etive than Richard Nixon or a worse presi- dent than Richard Nixon. It seems to me those are rather desperate-type tactics." APWl ........ te SMILING, HANDCUFFED PALESTINIAN TAKEN FROM SYRIAN EMBASSY IN ROME Terrorists Surrender After Falling to Take Ambassador Hostage , Terrorists Free Five Three Palestinians Slwot Way Into Embassy ROME (AP) -Three Palesti- nians protesting Syrian interven- tion in Lebanon shot their way in- to the Syrian Embassy in Rome today but surrendered to police after holding five hostages for two hours. Pollce said one hostage, em- bassy counsellor Hunen Hatem, was seriously wounded in Ule leg. The guerrillas allowed him to be taken to a hospital where·he un. "derwent al ~-hour operation. A Syrian offlcial said the Palestinians surrendered after they realized they had failed to take the ambassador hostage. Ambassador Farouk a1 Sh8,fae had left the embassy earlier to attend a ceremony. About five hours after they stormed the Syrian Embassy, against a private building and its occupants, and impor t , possession and use oC explosives and war weapons. A Palestinian, identified as Ule 25-year-old le ader of the group, was quoted by Italian r adfo as saying they were protesting what they called Syria's betrayal or the Paleslini an cause. Syrian forces allied w Ith Lebanese the Palestinians were jailed and charged with attempted murder, taking hostages, violent action Christians have been fighting lef- tists Moslems and Palestinians in the Lebanese civil war. The ai.tack came two weeks after Syrian authorities hanged in public in Damas cus three Palestinian terrorists who bad raided a hotel in an attack in which four hostages were killed. Youssef Miro, an embassy of- ficial who w as among today's hostages, said . "The three came in, leveled their guns at us and said they wanted to revenge Ule massacre in Lebanon." He said there were about 10 people in the building, but fi ve fled by jumping from windows. Taken hostage, he said, were three men and two women. In his r adio interview. the Palestinian leader said the guer· rill as were members or Ule Black June Movement, wh.ich is named for the month when Syria sent an estimated 13 ,000 troops and several hundred tanks into Lebanon. The guerrilla leader said the embassy attack was designed to "draw the attention ol the world to the betrayal of the Syrian gov- ernment and the plot of Arab stat.es against the Palestinian people. "We did not want to harm anyone," be said. "This action marks a new stage in the strug- gle of the Palestinian people." Jail Inmates Pollce r ushed to the scene when Uley beard shots from the • embassy, a four-floor building with a garden on a quiet tree-~ lined street. Police surrounded the em· bassy and placed sharpshooters on terraces and roofs of nearby • buildings. • ' I Two Suspects Held In Holdup Slaying Anaheim police have arrested two men held on drug charges in Westminster jail in connection with the fatal shotgun shooting of an Anaheim market clerk last Thursday night. Police said today George Louis Ledesma, 19, o[ 14331 Olive St., Westminster, and an unidentified 16-year·old were arrested this morning following their jailing earlier this week on drug related charges in We5tminster. Costa Mesa police said today they are interested in the two men, ~om they assert may also be responsible for the armed rob- bery or a Costa Mesa market last Tuesday night. The pair is being held on suspi- cion or murder and robbery in the holdup of Albertson's Market, 610 S. BrookhurstSl., Thursday. Officers said they are seeking a third suspect in the market murder of clerk J ack Warren Mason, of Stanton, who was shot at point blank range by a suspect wielding a s awed-off shotgun. Mason died at West Anaheim Community Hos pital three hours after the shooting. The three bandits entered the Albertson's Marketalaboull0:30 p.m. Thursday, forcing about IS to20customers tolieonthefloor. As the trio scooped up money from cash drawers, one suspect allegedly shot Mason at his cash r egister. Witnesses said the clerk did not provoke the shooting and was ap- parently coop erating with the bandits at the time of the shoot- ing. Costa Mesa poJicetoday are ob- taining photographs oC Ule two Anaheim robbery suspects to circulate to witnesses oC a Costa Mesa market robbery earlier last week. They suspect the same gunmen . were resPOnsible for the robbery· · of Ralphs Market in the Harbor Shopping Center last Tuesday evening. ~ In the Costa Mesa robbery. •• three bandits took more than $1,000 in cash and another $3,000 in checks and food s tamps from ·• the market. :; The s hotgun-armed suspect al· legedly struck a market clerk with the barrel or his gun before the three mend fled into the dark- ness. CostaMesapolicesaidthethree men are very similar in descrip- tion to the Anaheim robbers. Meanwhile, the executrve board of Retails Clerks Union Local 324 have offered a $.5,000 re· ward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killers of retail clerk Mason. Albertson's Market earlier of. fered a similar award for the ap- prehension of the suspects. New Ambassador .• CANBERRA, Australia (AP> -Alan Renouf, 57, will become Australia's ambassador to Ule United States early next year, Ule government announced to. day. Garage Converslo11 Burns Costa Mesa firemen extinguished a t>lue barbecue beside the building, caused in a game room, converted from a garage $4,000 damage to the building and another in the back of the Community Gay Center $1,000 damage to the contents of the game of Orange! 215 23.rd St. SUnday night. The room. F.ire officials were investigating the blne, beheved sparked by coals from a .blaze this morning. .. ~ ' Saddleback EDITION ,, Afternoon N.Y. toe8' . . VOL. 69, NO. 285, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 111 1976 Tl;N CENTS t I 1 Butz 'Closes Book' on Racial Slt1r i l OftMO.lly"lltUl•ff 'r-· BJ KA.THY CLANCY ~~ormer a1ricuJtuce secretary J!'U'l Butt told an Orange County audience today he "paid a tremendous personal price" for what he said were inruscreel re- marks about blacks. But. he told the crowd in Anaheim that he did not intend to discuss the matter further. noting "that chapter is closed." .. Bulz was speaking lo about 1.500 delegates to \he National As· sociation of Concessionaires and National Association ol Theater Owners at the Dis.neyland f(ott.l. Butz. dressed conservat1vely 1n a gray pin-striped su.it, blue striped shirt and maroon tie, said of the racial slur which forced his cabinet resignation a week ago, "I have apologized as sincerely as Iknowhowtodoit." ln a press conference af- terward, be aJso said he would not discuss the matter rurther adding the remarks were taken out of context from a private conversa- tion. He said he intends lo do allne can to help congressional can- didates. Preside nt Ford's re- election effort as well as the draft· ingofoew farm legislation. Partly referring to notes, Butz O•lly Pilot Sl•H Photo KINDERGARTEN TEACHER MECHAM AT WORK IN HIS RANCHO CANADA CLASSROOM The Public Sees Him in a Different Role-Chief Negotiator for Teacher Organization Double-edged Teacher Negotiator's 'Sharp Edge Gone in Class Bill Mecham. president or the Saddleback Valley Educators Association <SVEA>. seems a dif- ferent person than Bill Mecham, kindergarten teacher. He usually is seen and heard by the publk as s pokesman and chief negotiator for the 700 teachers who have not yet re· ached agreement on a contract with the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. * * * Appearing as an adversary or trustees and administrators, he is assertive, stern and Wlbenda- ble. He seems to .have a singular interest -getting what the teachers want. But inside hi~ classroom at Rancho Ca nada Elementary School in El Toro, he is friendly, firm in an easy-going way and watchful only of the 24 5-year- olds in his class. * * * Sclwol N egotiator Wears Several Hats (Editor's Note: The /ollOW1ng atories of two school of/icJalS are an .attempt to look beyond the protract- ed unsettled negotiations betW('en. Saddlebock Valley Unified School District and teachers by pre.~mtmg a look at the two negolwtors m their pro/essional roles J By LAURIF, KASPER Of lflt O•lly ll'UolSU" Rather than a jack or all trades. John Coopcr S<'ems a j ack of many tasks in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. He currently carn es the tilles of assistant to the superintcn dent. director of classified personnel and ch1er negotiator for the dis trict in employe bargaining sessions The latter role is an important one now since ·negotiations with ,the district's 700 teachers remain unsettled. But Cooper said he is proudest of the work he did in a two-year stint as coordinator of research and development, his first as- signment after spenrung a year as an adminis trative intern. The accomplishment for which he admits pride was the creation o'f a d e m ogr aphic analysis s)'stem to predict the district ·s gowth and trends. ;The system, one of the first of its kind, was less than one-half flercent off in its ,.>rC1fictions. It is still being used by the district to-4taY · "It really wasn't anything m background, just something ed in the district." Cooper . To do it. he went out and arned computer prognmming. o do his present work in egotlatfons. he went out and kearned about labor law. He'll fj>robab\y go out and learn about whatever else he's given to do as wdl. .j "I spend a great deal of time • becomJng acqua inted with ever- • )'thing I deal wilh, ·' he C'XPlained. I He said be triell \O be as broad as • pouible in approach and as com· 0.llf ll'tl<lt $\all -·· CHIEF NEGOTIATOR John Cooper petent ln as many areas as possi- ble. "My philosophy toward Jobs is very mucn tempere(fby my own pel'sonal philosophy," Cooper ex- plained . He ascribes to the enli1hten· menl philosophy and bis descrip. tlon of It and himself aresimUar. Mecha m recognizes each child as he or she turns in a "leaf man," the class' first major cut and paste project . . . "Oh my goodness. here's Christie's" ... 'Thank you. Sherie" ... "Oh. look at Robbie's·· ... "Everything they do is right, even if it's wrong," he explained. A youngster may not have cut the lea! properly bul he did it and this alone warrants congratula· tions. he said. • "The overall goal is that the child will meet success in ever- ything he does," he said. Altttough a part of kin- dergarten is becoming ac- customed to working in groups, the children also need a lot of in- dividual attention. "You have to give that to them . That's a must." Mecham said. Besides. the children give him little choice in the matter. They besiege him with the repeated dem and, "Mr. Mecham. look at this." He looks, if only for a second. before he turns lo the next child. One of only three male kin· dergarten teachers in the dis- trict. Mech am. a big, bearded man, does lhe things most kin- dergarten teachers do. He tells stories with gasps and groans and high-and low-pitched voices to add emphasis. He sings. He sits with the girls 1rrl<\ lets them crown him with a string of wooden beads. He gets down on the floor lo inspect the building constructed by a group of boys. He thinks his students are all . "gorgeous." And he easily explains the purpose or kindergarten. Puules. building blocks and wooden beads are not just toys. They'r e educational t ools . "Before a child can read. he has to learn to do with his fingers." he explained. "Everything we do, from say- ing good morning to singing . to sand playing to tricycle ridlng, has a significant effect on what they learn later on," he said. "We have to try to bring about a real learning feeling in the child," he explained. "The child wants to learn, wants to do." He beUeves, "Kids will love school when they leave kin- dergarten." Mecham, a 29·year-old Viet- nam veteran and graduate of Cal State Fullerton, decided while working in a parks and rec~a. tion program that be didn't feel comfortable with children who were 10to16 years old. And, he admitted. it was easier for him to get a job in the prtmary grades because there were so few men leachinc at. that level when be d41rted. Now in bis littb year as a teacher. be atuted bis career Jn (See MEACHAM, PaieAZ> discussed free enterprise ln the U.S. and what he said was the finest food supplying aGd market.. ing system in the world. Butz, who served as agncuUure secretary since ·1971, sald U.S. consumers spent 17 percent of their pay for food today compared with 20 percent in Canada and 2S to 40 percent m other nations of the world. · Jn addition. he s aid U.S. citizens enjoy higher quaUt.y rood than those in other nations arid pack at· • tns and markeHng provides some "built· in maid service." For example, be said, a> per- cent ot the potatoes consumed in the U.S. today are already peeled and partJally erocessed, work formerly done in tbokitchen. And he said similar conveniences are packaged into 9th er foods. "This is one of the marvelous success stories ln the America l story." Because Amerlclll\$ apend re- Jatively little for Cood, they havp more money for autqmobiles., t.ele~on sets and Q4her conve· ·; nlences. t "II you listen to some of the ~ political palaver that is goina around you get the impression 1 that America is. fallin4f a.part pt .i (See BUTZ, Page..U> f i "J Slaying, . ·I Ass·ault . Try L.inked? Artist's Drawings Similar By STEVE MITCHELL 011"9 O•lly ll'iltll St•ff Costa Mesa police said today they have found several links between an attempted assauJt on a Laguna Hills woman a week ago, and the murder or a Costa Mesa housewife last month. A description of her assailant by the Laguna Hills woman is very similar to the one provided by a witness in the murder of Pam Davis, who was shot five times at close r ange in her Costa Mesa home Sept. 10. "At this time, we lhink both suspects may be the same man,·' said Costa Mesa Police Lt. George Lorton. Pam Davis received a phone call at her home, which was tor sale. at about noon Sept. 10. The caller said he was interested in looking at lhe home, whkh had been advertised for sale in several newspapers. The man. posing as a Potential SOUGHT fOR RAPE TRY In Laguna Hiii• Case buyer. showed up at the home al 2867 Velasco Lane a short time later, wearing a black .rai.ocoat, black trouser s and a bat pulled down over his face. Mrs. Davis apparently aJJowed the man to enter her home, and a short time later, a young woman in the home heard shots and a scream. 17 Dead in Collision SOUGHT FOR MURDER In Coste M esa Case The witness entered a ball in t.be home and saw the suspect standing at the entrance to tho mai;ter bedroom. She ran out th• back <'( the home and sought help. ln last week's assaµlt attempt. a 26·year-old Laguna Hills housewife told Sheriff's deputies <See LINKS, Page AZ) Trains Crash in Mexico CHIHUAHUA . Mexico (A P) - A passenger train carrying tourists, including som e Americans. collided with a freight train in the rugged Sierra Madre Mountains of northern Mexico. kiJling at ieast 17 persons and injuring 45, police reported today. They said at least five of the in· jured were Americans. and there were unofficial reports that one of the dead was from New York City. Some of the' passengers were travel agents, most from Mexico City, ma'king the trip as part of a tourism promotion. police said. The American Society of Travel Agents had been meeting in Guadalajara, though it was not known whether any of the group was aboard the train. One obser vation car on the "Railroad to the Pacific" tumbled into a 4S-foot-deep ca- nyon when the passenger train smashed into the freight Sunday afternoon near the village of Pit- torreaJ about 200 miles west of Chihuahua City and 200 mil es Fog Hides Coast; 3 Boats Aground Two people were injured Sun· dav when ~ dense afternoon fog caused three power boats to run aground ~ong the Orange Coast. Bishop Moses suftered leg in- juries whe n the 21-foot cabin cruiser Centurion, wtth seven people aboard, went on the rocks off Crescent Bay Point in Laguna Beach. Moses was apparently in· jured while attempting to hold the boat off the rocks. He was report- Here's R ight Flu Number In Sunday's Daily Pilot story about swine nu vac· cioation cJiniu1 the telephone number ror ln· formation about •he cUnJcs waa lncorrecUy Uated. • T h e correct. pbone number for the Com.munl· !-r lleferral and lnlorma· UonSe.rvice is 547·S178. / Tbe Daily Pilot AIP'~ the error. ed in guarded condition today at UCI Medical Center after un- dergoing surgery. An unidentified woman was treated for minor shock after the 42-foot cabin cruiser Lucky Duck cras.h ed onto San Juan Rock shortly after clearing the Dana Point Marina for Newport Beach. Harbor Department officials said the craft owned by A.E. Aiken eventually aank in 40 feet of water. A 21·foot motorboat with four people aboard went aground off Ei1hth Street Sunset Beach. No iJ\juries were reported. A Harbor d epartment spokesman said the afternoon fog caught rnJny yachtsmen by sur· prise and Orange County Harbor Depa(tment rescue boats from D~a Point and Newport Harbor were• kept bu&¥ locating small craft in dist.fess. , Also assisting In the rescue operations was the Coast Guard cutter Point Divide. Despite the numerous calls from people expreblng concern over yuhtamen wbo had not re- turned OD lcbedule, harbor de- partm en t effici ala said all boatlmtn were accounted for. south of the U.S. border, police said. They said rescue workers were still trying to pry apart. the car'5 wreckage to reach passengers trapped inside. The rescue squads could not use cutting torches on lhe wreckage because spilled diesel fuer might ignite, police said. The frehtht train was east-' bound from San Rafael en route to Chihuahua City, and the: passenger train was westbound; <Jll the same track, police sald. Motorcad e Fatal WATERTOWN, N.Y. (AP) - An eJderly woman has died or in· juries suffered when she was struck by a car In a campaJgn- motorcade for Mrs. Walter Mon·· dale. Authorities said SUnday• that Doris Kingsley, 68, oC Watertown, died Setutftay after· noon. She-had beenctt criUcal . condition with massive cuts anct head Injuries since the accident last Wednesday, Coa~c } Weat her ;l Low clouds and dense i fog expected again Tues- day morn1ng with clearing by afternoon. Beach highs , near70. INSIDE T ODA "t' The preu came under scathing. attack /1'0m. a forrMr Nizort ~ i1' on Oro• Coun-tu oddt'eu. 5" P.age A 7. lade x 81 '" "' "' I ' .. ' . S14 .~ t •• •• ••• •• M (See COOPEB, Page A.I) • ••• • ...... __ , •tllllli'lllt•f1.1i::t11okm111!--...__.-............ _ .... ____ •• ______ .... __ -_...,...._ ____ _ -.. · . . , Al DAIL y PILOT 58 . Fro• Pag~ 11 I COOPER .•. He sald men or the enlJghlen mtnl had broad tASta and l:n- te r u ta. parU~uJarlr !'o Ut.erature, art, musfc\ history and politics subject.a wh.lch ill ler6t Cooper l''oJJowers of this ph.llOSOphy also share a love for tho world of the mind and wor1d ol Ideas. Cooper, who has o scholarly manner about him, t;il14 he1 bis Wife and two youn1 soas "are. all very heavily Into re•dlng books." He also said tt is "sort ol a natural" for him to be involved with Freemasonry and public education since both c•me out of I theenllghtenmentperiod. 1 A UCLA gr aduate, Cooper, 34, has a masters degree in political science. Re started teachlnii in 1 Watts in 1~. 1 Although he liked mching there. he sald he moved to Mis· sion Viejo because the houses were cheaper than in Los Angeles at that lime. He taught in Orange and then started at Mission Viejo High School in 1968. Arter rour years, including one year as chairman of the Social Scienc& Depart· ment, he moved into the ad- ministration. · "I still love teaching," he said. He regrets that this year be had to give up a part-lime leachiog job he had at Saddlebaek College. He gave that up, however , because he is now spending three evenings a week at Claremont Graduate School. With the help of a Scottish Rite fellowship, he is working toward a doctorate in educational administration. Someday, he hopes lo be a school principal and -)¥hen he is older and wiser -a district superintendent. Both education and ad ministrat ion are alike in that they involve pract1cmg "the- art or leade rship," he said. He advocates a "string principle'' of leadership. "You can pull a slr ing but you c~'t push 1t," he ex plained .• Cooper said he enjoys "an in- teraction of minds and bringing people toward the realization of something they haven't seen before." Jn the classroom, he said, the teacher draws new ways of look- ing and thinking from the minds oCtbe students. In negotiations, it is the draw- ing out of each other's point of view. "Since it's a mental pro· cess, which education is, it has its own challenges." he said. However, he is not so ap· preciative or the state law, the Rodda Act , which manda ted these negotiations. "l think the Rodda Act has sapped energy and money that could go into education." he said. One reason for this, he ex plained, is that the law came into effect on July 1 In the middle of the traditional negotiation season. Aod, he said, neither the dis· trict nor the em ploycs are used to the collective bargaining concept and process. "It's tough," he said. "It's tough ror them and it's tough for us." But he quickly added that nobody should ever assume li'fe is easy. Israelis Aid Lebanese METULLA. Israel (AP> -I raeU medics treated wounded Lebanese Christian soldiers hit in a weekend battle in southern Lebanon. Israeli omccrs have said. One or the wounded Lebanei.e died in a helicopter en route to n.n Israeli hospital alter he was first treated at a clinic nca.r thls com· munity on the Lebanese-Isr aeli frontier . Medical workers said al least seven Lebllnest: soldiers were brou~ht to the clinic. Reports from s outhern Lebanon said lsraell soldiers were fighting alongside Lebanese Christians. Israel's military command refused to comment on the reports. repeat· ing only, "Israel Is not involved in the war in Lebanon." OlllANQI COAST ~1 DAILY PILOT ll~N-­p,..-",~•M~·V..• ,.,,. c ...... Vt<t li'ttt\tdtr.t •...:I G9"t'f .. MifWIOll'' , . ..,." ""··· F«tlt., , ... _,4 ._...,.. ... Mtft~Qt~t,.. ... C.U,....tN .._.... ftllNI" • .,_ ... " 4)i•tf11'tl\l M.tn•tH'"I l«Mt.#t Saddl•b•ck V •114r1 OHie• 11101 '-• ....... .., •I""' Oi"OO ,, ...... OttlcH Onta Mo•t alO Wt\l llev St- """li'ltlOft .... ft. tllllftt~ft~···· .... ...,.. .... ft 11 .. G-...vrollrwt Ttltphone (?14)1Q.4321 CIHalfled AdHnla•nt SU·M'TI ~'-" \101,., l'lt-omo Mt.fS10 l 0.tly l"li.t li.tt ,..... 'AMERICANS PAY LESS' Food Expert Butz f'ro• Page .-t I BUTZ ... the seams... Bull continued. "You get the idea that you had beUer crawl back in your shells and sit on what you have." But he said it has been free en· terprlse and an ability by govern· ment to let free enterprise work that led the country lo where it is todav. He referred to this year's federal budget which will exceed $400 billion and said that it is bound to be inflationary. "We have got to face up to the questions here in America,·· Butz said, "and ask if we are going lo rededicate ours~Jves to th al wed· ding of ~conomics ·and political prinetples. wbich has worked so well in the past 200 years ... Uiilike an appearance last Fri day in Mississippi wruch was In lerropted by hecklers. Butz' ap· pearance this mornin~ was broken up several times by laughter and applause. He joked about his expenses for the trip to California saying now that he was a private citizen he hoped the associations were pick· ing up his tab and in referring to his age or 67 he said "there is plenty of life in me. J am the same age as Wilbur Mills and I am just one year older than Wayne Hays " MEACHAM .. a kindergarten at Gates Elemen tary School. Although at first he wasn't sure that's what he want ed. in the end he decided. "I loved It." After two years at Gates, he taught a third grade at Glen Yermo Elementary School. Jle "jumped at the chance" to get back into the kindergarten when Rancho Canada opened this fall. He likes that grade level. he said, because the youngsters ace anxious to be there. "l makes it all worthwhile to me." , Mecham admitted his role as teacher and teachers' leader ap· p.e a r t o b e c o n t r a s t i n g personalities. ''I don't think r am two different people though." he said. He explained that he carries out the things he believes both In the classroom and the associa I.ion. "Anything we can do to make education better for kids, 1 thinJt we should do it," he said. The classroom is one method of as· suring that it is the best possible process and the association 1s another, he said. He said his goal. which he beheves will help in his role as SVEA president, is "to be the best possible teacher I can be m lhe classroom .. Police Probe Knifing Death Anaheim police are seeking the killer of an unidentified stabbing victim whose body was found on a city street early Sunday morn· ing. The victim. believed to b{! an alien , reportedly died ir Anaheim Memorial Hospital about an hour after being dis· covered lying at 1 a.m. in Lhe street in the 100 block of Wills Drive. Police said the mortally wounded man was treated at the. scene by paramedics but died shortly after arrivlng al the hO!'lplLal El Toro Res~dent Beeon1e Citizens Two El Toro residentB have become Amqrican cititens ln re· cent natu.raliiatlon ceremonies conducted in Orange County Superior Court. Jogiodcr Nith Jatwant, 24635 Calle El Toro Grande. rormerly ot India, :tnd Yoshiko lizuka Sellers. 22821 Loumont t>r1 ve, f ormtdy o! J •P•llt were amoni 196 former aliens 1nnted c:i\iunsblp. Parents o( sludcnll> who will be attending Laguna Hills High School are invited to discuss the phllosophy and programs they would like to h uve at the new school at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in thl' multipurpos e room at Lomarena Elementary School. The new high school will be built next to Leisure World. op. posite the deadend of Alicia Parkway on Paseo de Valencia It is expected to open in Sep· tember with about 700 freshmen, sophomores and juniors who live in the Valenc ia. Lomarcna and San Joaquin Elementary School attendance areas The meetin g ha s been scheduled lo inform lhe com· munity of the school and to find out what parents would like to i.ee in terms of academics, a~hlclics and activities, ex- plained Donald Ames. assistant D•llr 11110( $1•11 P~• FIREMAN OF YEAR Montanan Rod George Firefighter Glad to Be in From Woods Fighting fires amidst the sub- urban sprawl of south Oranef' County is quite different from responding to the rural volunteer fire bell in Monlana·.l> tall limber country But Engineer Rod George of the Orange County Fire Depart- ment's Mission V1eJo station says he's glad he gave up life in the woods two years ago to bring his w1fe and two children to Southern California George, 30. who li\eS in Buena Park. was named "Fireman or the Year" r ecently in ballot ing by his fellow firemen 01 Hat talion f'our, which serves the Saddleback Valley area. He received a plaque and con· gratulatlons from County Fire Chief Carl Downs and Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley during a luncheon in his honor at the Laguna Hills fire station. Back m hi s hometown or Mis· soula. Mont .. Geor~e was alum- berman and memheroflhevolun· teer fire departmenc lie notes that of the 28 firemen on the roster, only lhe chief was paid $200 a year for doing "ad minlstrallvejobs ·· ''I've always been interested in flrefighting and it seemed like !lomething J C'Ould do after com- ing out here ... G~rge said. "I had been out to Orange County on vacation and really liked it." The burly, blond fireman, who spent most of his first two years in the department working at the Laguna Hills Station. was transferred to Mission Viejo in August when he was promoted to engineer. He was cited by his peers both for his own prowess as a firefighter and ror-his willingness to help in the performance of other duties besides his own superintendent of the Snddleback Valley Unified School Qistrict. "From that input, we are 1oina to try and tel a prtncjpal to brinai them that program.·· he ex· plained. Ames, the former principal of Mission Viejo High School who bad been named principal of thu new school before being given his present position, said other meet· ings or random mailings may be used to obtain additional In · formation . He said this is the flrst Ume the community is being involved In a new school before a principal ls selected. It is being done, he ex· plained. because state and local• educators and the district's trustees believe a community's school should be a renection of the community. Ames uid the principal pro· bably will be named in January. The first phase or the project, estimated at $8 million, has been designed for about 1,400 students. he said. When the second phase Is completed. he said, the school will hold 2,250 students. The com· pleted project is expected to cost about $14 milUon. Trio Seized In Clemente Jewel Holdup Three men face armed robbery charges in San Clemente today alter they were chased down by the wife of a jeweler who'd been robbed and maced. Police said Michael Disieno, owner of Michael's Jewelers, 139 Avenida Del Mar, called police Friday afternoon to report he'd been robbed. As police cars sped to the scene, Disieno's wife took off on foot after the three men and chased them down the street lo another jewelry store, Phillips Jewelers. Police spotted U1e i.uspccts. and the woman chasing them, and made arrests. Booked on charges of armed robbery were Thomas G. Irving, 45, or Visalia, Helen Q. Irving, 26, of Porterville, and Bill W. Pierce, 26, of Hermosa Beach. A 9mm Walther semiautomatic pistol was booked into evidence as the alleged weapon used to hold up the store P sychologist Sets Session For Parents Psychologist Elnora Schmadel ~;u discuss how people fall and succeed and how parents can support healthy behavior in their children in a lecture series begin· ning Tuesday in Mission Viejo. The series will meet from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Oct. 12, 19, and 26 in m ulti-purpose room A al Mission Viejo High School, 25025 Chrisan· la Drive. Dr. Schmadel. executive direc· tor of The Lea'rning Center in Laguna Hills. is a credentialed teacher and !lchool psychologist. Her lectures. s he saJd, will help participants develop greater se lf.fulfillment an d m ore positive techniques for working with their children. The tuition .free series is sponsored by the Saddleback Community Mental Health Clinic and the Saddleback Valley and Capistrano Unified School Dis- tricts. AddHJonal Information is available by calling 831·9fl60. Cabbie Critical SAN DI EGO (AP> -Cab driver Floyd W. Trammel, 6.1, was listed in critical condition to· day alter a passenger slashed Trammel's throat with a knHe, Sunday, police sold. Bearff119 . Kitty Bluhm, 11, of El Toro, a sixth grader at Olivowood Sc hool, is . squ~ezed by Smokey the Bear after winning grand prize in the fire prevention poster contest sponsored by the Exchange Club of Saddleback Valley. More tha~ 2,00<? posters were . entered. First runner up was Conn.1e Frailey, also an Olivewood sixth grader, and Janet Richardson, a third grader at Linda Vista Elementary School. ' .) :· .• . ·~ ;. Women's Coaching Staff to Add Ten A ; \ , l ;.. . • - Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees have ap- proved 10 new coaching positions !or women's sports at the high school level. John Cooper, assistant lo the superintendent, said the addi· tional coaches will put the dis- trict in compliance with feder<1l regulations prohibiting sex di~­ crimlnation. "It brings us equality at all levels," he said. In the past , explained Herman Schmidt, El Toro High School principal, coaches worked with both the varsity and junior varsi· ty teams. Now. he said, there will be a coach for each team, just as there has been in the men'!> SP<_>rts program t:oacnes u s ually are full·time teachers. They receive sup· plementary pay for the coaching duties. Cooper said the new coaching positions were included in the district's offer of a contract lo teachers. Since negotiations arc continuing and the sports pro· grams have begun, he said, Viejo Women Set Harvest Brunch The Rancho Viejo Woman's Club's annual Harvest· Membership Brunch will begin at 11 :30 a.m. Oct. 19 in the Deanne Swim and Racquet Club, Mission Viejo. The event will in elude a style show. AIJ women living in the Sad· dleback Valley are invited to al· tend the brunch. Further in· formation may be obtained by calling Kathy Salmon at 581-3549 or Connie Cork at 586·5132. Monarchs Guarde d PACIFIC GROVE (A P ) Danaus plexippus is no joke to Pacific Grove folks. Just try fool · ing around with one and see what happens. The town council has voted a $!iOO fine afainst anyone disturbing a go den-winged Monarch butterfly, expected to arrive here by the hundreds next weekend on their annual winter migration from Alaska. ; trustees agreed lo go ahead rmd t approve the pol:t1tions. ; Women's sports have been ' becoming mort.> and more 't popular in the last few years. Z Schmidt said. Up until two year~ ai:?o. the : young women at his school could .- participate only in hve sports : through the Girls Athletic As·~ sociation. Now. the women participate in ! Cal1ro rni;i Interscholas tic' Federation <Cll-') comf)<'lilions in basketball, field hockey. softball, swimming, volleyball.; tennis and cross·country track. : "It's really building. It's great for girls," he said He es ti m atcd that about 25Q women and 400 men participat~ in sports at his school. Men. he s aid, have m or e sports, including w:iter polo. soccer. golr. wresU- mg and football f 'ru1n Page A l LINKS ... a man knocked on her front door and identified himseU as a re· • alt or When he ent<•rcd the home, the n' tall s uspect said he was not .('eal- ly a rcaltor. "What I really wanl • is you," he told the woman. • The victim, who was edging , to.ward a rl'ur door. asked the man what his name was and he said, "Earl." ShenWs deputies s nld the ,. woman then ran to a neighbor's home. Costa Mesa 's Lt. Lorton said today the Laguna Hills woman ~ provided a description of the as· sault suspect before viewing an earlier drawing provided by the witness 1n lhe Pam Davis murder. "The two drawings are very similar," he noted. Police are cir culating the two drawings in hopes the suspect might be identified. The man is d escnbed as being between 27 and 35 years old, with short black hair parted on the left. lie wears square clear glasses with thick dark frames. Anyone who can provide clues ·· as lo the man's identity is asked to contact Costa Mes a police or • the Oran~e County Sherifr's Of· fice Handicapped Fight for Rights ... ·. By ANNE COOPER Of ltlt Dally Pllol Sllfl The handicapped figure the best way to make it convenient ror them to get around in public is lo put civic leade rs in wheelchairs and let them see how far ttat-y can go. Th1s la just one project planned by the South OranJ(c County chapter of th<' CaJirornio As- sociation of the Physically Han· dicapped (CAPH). "People don't realize how dif. OcuJt. ll Js for e bandlcapped person to shop or attend school or go to the beach -activities other people take for granted," said Cloo1'a Weintrt. chapter presi· dent. Mrs. Weinert, who was crip· pied by polio as a young child, N1d ~ople have asked btt why Utt> handlCRl''lf'"rt shoold hav.-the moat convenient parking space.s. "It's not just to save us a few steps," she said. "Those special parking slots are reserved next to an open space, because it takes a lot or room to iet a wheelchair out of a car." Mrs. Weinert, who can gel around qulte spryly with the help oC a cane, traveled to Hawaii enUrely by wheelch..tr, ln order to discover how the trlp could be made easier for someone unable to travel ony other way. "Our aoal ls to make as much available to the handlcapped as to the non-h andicapped person," she said. "Our organization welcomes all p ople Interested ln belpln1 u1 meet thb soal. Not everyone•tn the Reart ~la· lion bas heart i>roblems. •"'1 w,. dnn't limit nur memberahtp to the handicapped.'· One non·handicapped person who Is active In the south county ' chapter is Ellen Trajillo of Dana Point. She Is involved in pro- blems of t.he handicapped rang. Ing Crom righting for pending lestslation lo developing project~ for those con fined to 1:\~ wheelchair. One or her current projects as working lor a dlal·a·ride system to assure local handicapped slu· dents are not prevented Crom 8t· tending college because they lack transportation. The local CAPH chapter is cooperating with Saddleback C0Ue1e on Thursday, "Aware- ness Day,'' to present an in tormat.lonal program from 2 to 4 p.m. at the campus for the han dlc1pped. The local CA PH group also holds monthly meetings aL Marco F o r s ter Junior High School In Son Juan Capistrano. "Our m e€'t1ngs feature a .. speaker. who presents informa· lion helpful to the handicapped," •c uid Mrs . Weinert. "Mik~ f<evoian, a Long Beach arti11t • 1 who teaches the handicapped, , , also attends each month with some of hl9 students for paintine ~. demonstrations. • "Perh'ap11 the most valuabl-e "' part of the meeting, though, i& •' the opportunit.>• to share with one another In on atmosphere where we don 't have to feel self· conscious ." Additional tnro\-matlon ort CAPH nctlv1lles is available by calling Mrs. Weinert, 496-2836, oc Mr11 Truilllo. it~.~ ~ ,