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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-10-12 - Orange Coast Pilot.. ootout TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 12, 1976 ._ YIM-.. MO. -.1 HCflOMS. '6 PAGES • • • Ill l 3 Suspeets .Jailed In. 1ffarket Slag~ng • • • • •• r - Fuels Crow-d's Ire! ' 3 Jaile d , 1 S ought , Market Slaying 1 . !~Suspects Held I .1 Anaheim police now have three Albertson ·s mark et <lerit Jack !suspects in jail and are seeking a W. Mason of Stanton was shot at ourth man in the fatal shotgun point blank range by a suspect hooting or a market clerk last wielding a sawed-off shotgun last unday. Thursday night. Meanwhile Costa Mesa of· 1cers, circulating photographs the suspects, say they' believe l least two or the men In· olved in a market robbery in ta Mes a last Tuesday night. Police arrested Richard F. An· erson, a 29·year-old transient. t Westminster jail, where he as being held on drug-related 'barges. ·Tiley arrested George Louis sma, 19, of Westminster and · 1$-year·old juvenile Sunday. th those m en were also in estminsler jail on drug ' barges. .. We expect to seek charges or mlcide and robbery BJalnst all ee suspects later this week," aid Anaheim Sgt. BW Wright. ~Fugitive n Slwotout 1'1.ree police officers and a urder suspect from Florida ex· hanged ~unshots Monday lght outside the Watergate otel in Anaheim but no one was Jn.hued, officers said today. r-~Pollce had been called to the ~otel, at 1211 S. West St., at 9: 18 after Jacksonville, F1a., of· s a sked them to apprehend ee murder and car then sus- ' police said. About 15 to 20 witnesses at the Anaheim m arket, at 610 S. Brookhurst St., said Mason did not pr9voke the gunman, who then fltd will;l bis partners after scooping up an undetermined. amount of cash from several cash. registers. Costa Mesa investigator Gerry L. Thompson said today several witnesses to a robbery al a Ralphs Market in the Harbor Shopping Center last week, have looked at photographs of two oltheAnaheim suspects. Thompson said photos of Ledesma and Joseph CabraJ, 19, of Cypress, were also shown to several customers and clerks at Ralphs. Anaheim police are still seek- ing Cabral, but provided Costa Mesa police with his photograph. "It looks like the juvenile wasn't involved in our robbe'y," Thompson added. Three armed men took more than $1,000 in cash and several thousand dollars in checks and food stamps from the Ralphs Market last Tuesday night. Witnesses at that time described the trio as being or Latin descent, and carrying a shotgun and two pistols. Costa Mesa police said today they are trying to contact several other witnesses to tbe Costa Mesa robbery to help identify the photographs. B1•rned Out Bes I AP Wtr•illllelo A city bus in San Diego smolders after it was destroyed by fire Monday. It was e mpty except for the driver, who got out in time. Police blamed a blown tire which ignited the gas tank. 8 Seized • ID Drug Raid An undercover police officer and that two others may be ar· planted at an Irvine manufactur· / rested before the investigation is ing firm resulted in the arrests or concluded. eight people and the confiscation from a Costa Mesa apartment of $7,000 worth or drugs, Irvine Police said today. 'rvlne Police Lt. James Blaylock said the arrests oc- curred during the past two weeks Those arres ted i nclude Richard Lee Jones, 25, and Elida Jones. 20, of 241 Avocado St.. Costa Mesa# both accused of possession o cocaine, I.SD and amphetamines !or sale; Patricia Smith, 26, of Orange, charged with three counts of sales or drugs; James A. Homan, 21, 9652 Pollack, Huntington Beach, sales of m arijuana; and Terry Wightman, 19, Tustin, sales of marijuana. Also arrested were Dale R. . Officers took Jane Alice Wbert, 30, and Timothy Charles !Palms, 29, both transients, into :C..Stody in the motel parking lot. 'C!Uce said. · • But a third, Ronald Michael Equal Time Ban Uplwhl Spillman, 20, of 4841 Heil. Hunt· ington Beach, three cout\ts or sales of PCP (an animal tran· quillier> and one count sales or mariju ana; Benjamin A . Arebalo, 29, Orange, four counts !al~ of LSD and amphetamines; an t! Devid C. Jones, 18, a transtent. four counts of s ales of I.SD, amphetamines and PCP. aight, 32, also a transient, al- edly attempted to run from motel room, firing two shots a revolver at pursuing of- ftcen, police said. · r-si raight purportedJy ran .~~ West Street as Officers ~five shots athlm. tbeln1le al· • lepdly fired once qaln, before fleeing into a housing tract north : d \tie motel police said. • l Officers rlred one ~e shot at • ~the man as be fled, police said. t ~Straight was spotted later by a e helicopter and arrested tboat further incident. • The trio were •rreated on ~urder and car theft chlrges, police said, and a car they aJ-hled1Y stole In f1orida was r~ eo.ered In tbe motft park1ns Jot. Strlicb&,. in 8dditiCft. waa ar· oa a tbar1e of assault on a 8elte0 olflcer wltb the intent to .~-~i_..r, po&iceukl. WASIDNGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court today refused to review a Federal Communica· tions Commission <FCC> decision that political debate and news conferences by candidates are ex· empt from the equ.i time doc- trine. Jn other acUori lc14aY, just.lees agreed to decide wbetbe:r adefen· dant's rights are vkbted If the rovemment delays for 18 months obtaining an indictment against hltn. Also to be reviewed ls a test of the power or atatea to tax sales conducted through the mail by out-ol·stateorganiiAtions. Denied aSUpremeCourtreview was the case of a SeaWe City En&lDeerl ng Department empl°" who charged rev .... dlscrimlllation when be claimed be as passed over .loc promo- tioo to foremu ia faYOI' of a minority race employe who setted less well on a civil service test. The S-2 equal Ume niling by the FCC was announced Sept. 25, ms. and was upheld last April by a 2· 1 vote ot the U.S. Court ot Ap- peals In W asblngton. The decision wu appealed to SUPREME COURT MULLS SATURDAY WORK-M Voters, sponsor of the debates between President Ford and Democratic presidential can· dldate Jimmy Carter, urged the court to let the ruling stand. . The equal time princl~le says that if one candidate is given use of broadcast racllities other quallfled candidates foe the same atnce mu1t be affonled equal op. portunlty. Tbe indictment test Issue arose in tbe case or E u1ene Lovasco Sr .• the bith court by the Democratic who~wM indicted ln St. Louis National Committee. Rep. March8, 1975, on federal cbaries Shirley Chi1bolm (D-N.Y.), th• o1 pouesstni materials stolen NationalOrganlsationforWomen tram the mill and tt.allng ln and the Office or Communications firearm• without. license. oftbeUDltedChurcho(Chrlst. In the state tu case, tbe court • The Socialist Workers party ~ced lt will he• artuments ultedtbecourttoupediteitscon· or. an appeal b)' thf NationalGeo- llderatlon of Ute appeal&. That re-srapbic Society from 1 tax allel8· q\Jeltwasdenled. mm qalut It bJ the Calilarnla The televl1lon netWCl'b, tile $tale8oardof Equallsatlon. FCC ..S U.. i....-of Woma J . CSee COUKT, PaceAJ> ( . ' According to Blaylock, the un- dercover agent was hired as a stock clerk at the company for a sbt·week period. during which tlme be allegedly purchased narcotics from the eight employes arrested. Police wlUihel4 the name of the fl.rm. One pure~ase resulted in a search wl.l1'ant Mini obtained for the Jones apartment at 241 Avocado St., where police al· legedly found 12,000 am· pbetamlne tablets. 850 tablets of LSD, a half-ounce d cocaine and a small amoa1lt of hashlsb oU. Tile str• value of th~ drugs was set at f7,000. Blaylock said the investJgaUon began when the personnel manacer of the company re· queated police aubtance bec1u1e be napected a t•1e scale drag problem at tbe com· pall1. Jeers Greet Plans .. A large, unruly crowd lnundat.. ed the Huntington Beach Civic Center Monday night, drawn bf an explosive public hearing on the downtown redevelopment. plan. About 400 people flooded the council chambers and a crowd· estimated to range from 250 to ll>O milled around outside, pre- vented by fire marshals and police from entering the over· . crowded m eeting place. Officer D. J. M cKerren said the people outside were were at best unruly as they reportedly backed up Ught against two glass doors leading to council chambers. - "I've been in riot conditions before," McKerren said, "ani' this situation see'med to have all . the ingredients of one." "All that was lacking was a catalyst to setit off," he shld. The crowd was chaotic and boisterous and could be heard shouting and pounding on gfass doors and windows as proceed-: ings went on inside amidst ~ cheers and jeer s. -: Beverly Rodgers. president Cit the Dwyer PT A and a resident'* the proposed redevelpment ar~ was one or those caught outside. She said the crowd outside numbered around 8>0 but was generally well behaved. She said the people were about equally mixed between young and old and middle-aged. · Mrs. Rodeers declared that some of the people had homes in the designated redevelopment area and tbat there was a threat that they would be demolisbecHf redevelopment were carried ouL "I'm very distressed." slle' said this morning, "I c an't <See caowo, Page A2> Coast We a t h e r More night and morning tow clouds and fog Wednes- day with temperatures on the coast of about 73, low about60. I NSIDE TOBI\ Y The 'Nao Soalh': Doti it ' belong in .ony polUidon'• podcd bt 1976': Both partia bcn1e reGIOtt tc beltft)f tbm it dou -.and tbot u doeln't. SHeogeAJl. l•dex AIY-lerYl<e At ,_U,..." .,_ .....-.-a1 .....,T,_ ~ :i=....., OHIHl9 ... , ............... ~ .. =""""" A• Oe.ui•IM :: _,.. :::t• MIWMI,..._ M MecaMerb19 Al .. n ._...llMMll At T ..... Slea AU ....,.._. Alt-II ,....,.,.. At ...._... a1 •llllli9f AA ........ .._ ........... M ' r l ' ,.~ .. ,..,.... UNDER ARREST? M•o'• Widow Chiang Chinese Name New Chainnan TOKYO (AP) -A Chinese government spokesman an- • nounced that Premier Hua Kuo- feog has been· appointed to sue-~ the late Mao Tse-tung as chairman of the Chinese Com- munist party. Japan's Kyodo news service reported today ftom Peking. The announcement followed r eports that Mao's widow and three other Pohtburo officials were under arrest. Wall posters appeared in Pek- ing las t week reporting the suc- cession of the 57-year-old Hua, but there had been no official an- nouncement. The spokesm an said it had been delayed to allow the entire Communist party or- ganization to b e informed in advance, Kyodo said. The J apanese agency said the spokesman made the announce· menl to reporters just before a reception for the visiting prime minister of Papua New Guinea, Mic-hael Thom as Somarc. There sti 11 w a~ no confirm a ti on or unofficial reports from Peking that Mao's widow. Chi::mg Ching, and three other high ranking or. f icials associated with the party's r adical wing had been ar- r ested , accused or plotting a coup. These reports suggested that serious infighting was going on and that positions still might not have solidified since Mao died Sept. 9. The oUicial Hsinhua news agency had not reported Hua's appointment. In a communique on the establishment or dip- lomatic r elations with Papua New Guinea, Hua signed as pre- mier, Hsinhua said. However . in a story Saturday, Hsinhua referred to the party Central Committee ''beaded by Comrade Hua Kuo-fen2." Hua, a big, friendly man r e· latively unknown to the outside world, made his name in party circles as an agricultura l s peci ali s t and l ocal ad- ministrator during the 1950s. Al some point, he came under the wlng of Mao, who named him public security minister in 1971. Last April he was named pre- mier and firs t party vice chairman, second only to Mao, after Teng Hsiao-ping was fired as vice premier and party vice chairman. Teng, who had been expected to succeed his menlOt', Chou En·l ai, as premier, instead became the target of a massive campaign of criticism, accused ol trying to restore capitalism in China. Chou's death Jan. 8 touched ore a power struggle between the moderates led by Teng and party radicals led by_ Chiang Ching. Foreign analysts saw Hua as a compromise candidate, and it seems unlikely that his elevation wlll settle the inlraparty dif- ferences. Chinese broadcasts cqntinue to insist on deepening ttie criUcism campaign against Teng. ORANQI! COAST s DAILY PILOT =:t.~~~~;r.:=;::=:;.:: 0...t PvlMl\l>l"'I~~· ~ ... ..i •• -... .,...i1-Mo,.., • ., , ... _ l'flc;,,y .... (0\1• Mew.,.._. lloa<I\ """'"-' '"'"'"'"...,.,. ta&tt v.o,,. '"''"'· S..detMCM<-. v .... , •I'd ~lloa<•ISOul•CMtt ,..,...,..._..,. 1-I• -·-S.l"'O•Y' --.. -. .,,,. t~~-=,.ri~~ Jill wt\I n.., "_.. ...... ____ ,...., J•dlt.C..W, ¥"-'"'*", ..... °""' .. _ ,,...,.'"._ eencw TM-t A.~ Me ............ °""""·""' • ._.." ... ....,_llM•llQl ... ldltttt Ottlc!•• ClttYMet.t: J>tWt"!Wrl~ ...... ~-=.~::~~~~ ..... a-"-11 wttey: u101 I.A Pee lloOld ••*Of ... ,_ ,._MnetTH>~ 0•...n.clAdv~~ W.~ Vallty-()fl"~ M14att ,_s-c .. ....,_ -.oao "'-~Or-C......."""""""'• IM0-1220 QloolrltM l'Wlt °' .. °"""' --..... ~ _,, ... -ttttlfl. ·-··-_, .. ""9ttH 9f .... r1He"'•fllU ,,.,..,~ 'ft .. M .............. , ..... , ·-· ..... 1114 .. _ .. ~-· t.t-c••u "''•r. .,.,. II\ CMte •M ~11tert1I• '"M<' .,..,. •Y ctoi.r t.J.M ......... ,: •• -· t4 ,. _ .... .,; ......... ., Ull,......_ .... _,. Tuesday. October 12. 1976 Mangers Blasts Revamp By O.C. HUS'TINCS Ol ti.e Delly f'llet SUit Redeve lopment of t he downtown Huntington Be.ch area was denounced Monday by slate Assembly candidate Dennis Mangers. "This is the most scandalous ripoff I've ever seen," Democrat Mangers declared dwing a de- bate with Assemblyman Robert H. Burke CR-Huntington Beach) at Golden West College. His incumbent opponent, a 10-year AssemblY veteran seek· Ing his slxth term in office, of. fered a qualified agr~ment with Mangers' colorfully worded ob- jections. "I'm just as opposed to what is going on as Dennis Mangers is," Assemblyman Burke said during what was a largely low-key con- frontation between the two Hunt- ington Beach political foes. Mangers s pecifically men- tioned a projected 22·story lux- ury hotel envisioned on Pacific Coast Highway. He maintains it would obliterate tbe present Golden Bear Cafe, a youth- oriented night club. Mangers claimed before the au- dience of about 50 tha·t As· semblyman Burke has said be knows very Jittle about the 're· development project. \Tm not tot.ally ignorant. .. , " Assemblyman Burke countered sarcastically. He pointed out ihe proposed 22·story hotel is only an idea that easily can be alter e d or eliminated. "l feel that there can be de· velopment in the downtown area that can enhance the value of the beach," Assemblyman Burke said. The audience in· Forum II of the College Center was primarily youthful. One middle -a ged woman sat in the last row mak· ing audible comments on the de· bate and occasionally booing Mangers. She also cl a pped for As - semblyman Burke. Mangers stressed issues o( in- terest to a collegiate audience, attack ing t he in cumbent legislator's voting r ecord on such matters as women's rights and environmental matters. Assemblyman Burke said be is against the Equal Rights Amend- ment. He said if sexual discrimina- tion exists, it s hould be attacked and corrected. through statutes, not cons titutional revision, because the U.S. Constitution makes no mention of male or female gender. "I can't imagine anyone living in the 20th century being opposed to it (the ERA)," Mangers declared, bringing a chorus of female cheers. Mangers pointed out that be narrowly lost to Asseaiblyman Burke Jo 1974, by 1,600 votes. Mangers called Burke a negativist and obstructionist jn the Legislature and predicted he will take Burke's 73rd Assembly District seat away from him this year by 3,000 to 5,000 votes. Assemblyman Burke told the group be is an admirer of Mangers and his family, but simply believes his opponent ts in error in much of what be says to voters. * * * E'ro"' Page A J CROWD ••• believe tha t the city council would not bold the meeting al a bigger pl ace to accommodate all the residents. "I am just so disillusioned. 1 have lost faith with all or the city council members," she said. Mayor Harriett Wieder said to- day that efforts were made to hold the meeting at a larger gathering place but lhal an at- tempt to stage it al ~untington Beach High School didn't pan out. "We also tried to hook up speakers for the benefit ot those outside but that didn't work out either, •i sbe said. "We d idn't realize that the crowd '!Ould be so overflowing until it was too late," she declared. The audience included an un- usually large number of students ot appa.N!nU:y high school and collece aae who r aucously op- posed redevelopment plans while chttrtng on Lhose who attacked the plan. Mrs. Wieder, who sparred with the young audience members throughout the eveJlin8, said she had received some inquiries on whether the young people were sent to council chambe:ra to Inter· ruJ)l proceedings deliberately. City Countll members took no a.ctloo on the redevelopment plan Monday· nlRht other than to tcbedule a second bearin& on Oct. 28 for a larger ~ poalbly at Huntington Be acb Hlgh School. Trio R escu ed PAClrtCA (AP> -A ftre de· panment team rescutcl two men and a doe from a stttp cUft as a tuDbltblnS nude beach cl"OWd and a traffic·Jammins UM ot Columbus Day tr atflc walched. Justice Delivered An errant Huntington Beach youngs ter who chose to pocket something he didn't pay tor won't 10 fo Orange County Juvenile H.UI al least not this tJm1· The penalty meted out in the parJdnc lot of a conve- n i enc e mark et. on In- dianapolis Avenue Monday night warmed the heart of ilt least 011e observer who believes as the twig is bent. so grows the tree. "Juvenile was released to father, who ad- ministe red 'Street Justice'," Officer Dave Goss noted in bis report. DA Probes Camarillo's 100 Deaths 3 Deaths Shut Flu Shot Sites PITI'SBURGJl CAP)-'the Al- legheny County Health DepJJ"t· ment shut down all 13 oC its swlne nu inoculation sites today follow- ing the deaths or three elderly people hours after receiving the vaccine at a Pittsburgh clinic. "As a precautionary measure, we have closed the sites pending a study by the coroner's ortlce and the two physicians who are here from the federal Center for Disease Control,·• said a Health Department spokeswoman. "'Al this lime, lber~ Ja no known factor linking the deaths with the vaccine or the im- munization program," said the spokeswoman, Miriam Blair. She added tbat all three victims were elderly and they all had his· tories ot heart or lung problems. County Coroner Cyril Wecht bad said earlier that the stress of getting the shots may have con· tributed to the deaths. In Washington, the national director of the swine nu lm· VENTURA CAP) -More than munizalion program, Dr. W. 100 deaths at Camarillo State Delano Meriwether, said, ·•we Hospital O\<er the past three have absolutely no reason to years are being investigated by believe there is a specific pro. the Ventura County district at· blem with the vaccine.'' torney's office, and officials say The victims, who died withJn some hospital workers may be hours of receiving their inocula· c harge d with murder or lions Monday, were Charles manslaughter. Gabig, 71, or Mount Oliver; Julia Meantime, another investiga. Bucci, 75, of Whitehall, and Ella lion bas been called for by As· Mich a e J , 7 4 , o r Mou 0 t sembly m a n Art Torres (D· Washington. Monterey Park), to look into They had been immunized at charges or patient abuse at the South Side clime with the Metropolitan State Hospital in combination vaccine used for Norwalk. older peop\e and people with In the Ventura probe, Assistant chronic illnesses. The combina- County Dist. Atty. Mike Brad-lion vaccine is desi~ed to pro- bury said Monday hi s offi ce has tect against both swine nu and spent eight months looking into the Type A Victoria nu that was the deaths al Camarillo and is prevalent Jast winter. taking a "hard look" at 79 de-The closing or the clinics is •·to Seven-year 1'igll This black vulture perches atop skull impaled on a stick in Tucson 's Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in which he has exercised s quatters rights. Museum officials say that seven years ago the vulture enter ed the -walk-in aviary at feeding time and later refused to be escorted out. Carter '-Affair' Tale To Cost Leaker Job albs. be on the s afe side pending He said many oC the deaths further investigation," a Health By The Associated Press Anderson said Ford's cam- were caused by drug overdoses, Department spokesman said. The chief spokesman for the paign sources supplied h.lm with asphyxiation or negligence. Officials rrom lhc federal President Ford Committee says the name or a woman they sug- Bradbury said he hopes lo have Center for Disease Control of he will fire anyone who triE'<i to gested had had an affair with the investigation completed by Atlanta w~re dispatched to Pit- spread a rumor that Jimmy Carter and that they later offered the end orthe year. tsburgh today to investigate the Carter had an extramarital af. him the names of four other In vestigators from the district deaths. fair. women. attorney's office. assisted by a The center. which is ad· No one has p roduced any Panel or medical ex""""'• have . . . ev1'denc"' to support the rumor. He said he checked the rumors .,.... ..., m1nastering the government's " d r d h dl dug through tens of thousands of $135 million program to im-which Carter's spokesman said anc oun l em gro1un ess. pages of materials. including munize most of the population came from Republican officials. art~ .meanw~e continued medical records and autopsies, against swine flu. reported late Willia m Greener, the Ford campaJgnmg, urg g swift, pre- and are intervie wing th e last week that it had r eceived no c ampaign comm I lt e e ~lection aiodd for Armerican wheat hospital's staff, Bradbury said. reports of severe reactions lo the spokesm an, said someone will armers t ay a ler a campaign Camarillo State HOSPital was nu shots. have to name the person who swing he called one of his best investigated last year by the spread the rumor before that and President Ford's worst. state Department of Health after Six Sentenced person can be Ci.red. The Dem~ratic presidential the V..entura County branch ol the Existence of the Carter rumor nominee said he ia iDtentio•utlJy American Civil Liberties Union ATHENS, Gree« CA P) -Six and the a.IJegatton that tt came tempering his campaign attacks <ACLU) complained ol alleged men who were securitf police of. from Ford's campaign stMf sur. on the Republican President, instances or physical abuse and ficers under the former Greek faced Monday during columnist figuring he has made bis point violation or patients' rights. dictatorship were found guilty lo· Jack Anderson 's regular ap-about what he calls discrepan- T he slate investigators con· day of torturing political pearance on ABC television's cies in Ford's account of U.S. eluded that there had been no prisoners. "Good Morning America." foreign policy. gross abuses or violations of jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii rights. Those findings were dis· puled by the ACLU. In the last two years, the hospital has been the defendant in three wrongful death suits. One of those cases involved a drug overdose and another a mentally retarded p atient who burned himselt to death after having been left alone with a pack of matches. In the third case, one patient, later ruled in· sane, strangled another patient to death. In a Los Angeles news con· ference, Torres said be will ask the Assembly Criminal Justice Committee to investigate charges leveled against the troubled M etropolltan State Hospital. Those charges include techni- cians Illegally dispensing drugs; sexu al overtures m ade t o minors; patients denied food, bedding a nd baths; and physi· cians working while under the in· fluence of alcohol. Strike's End Up to Vote DETROIT (AP) -Hopes for an 'end to the 28-day-old Ford Motor Co. strike remained clouded by a possible veto from skUJed workers, as union of- ficials began tallying votes from around the country. United Auto Workers leader11 have given the 25,000 tradesmen authority to reject the new thr~· yeat accord even lf a majority of the 145,000 UAW Ford production workers r atify the agreement. "There's no question it'll be a close vote," one union official conceded Mond..ay_after early re· turns showedrt:ndesmen accept· Jng the proposed pact only by very slim mar1lns. But another UAW spokesman said, "It's not down the tube yet." Fr.,,. Page Al , COURT ••• The Caltforola Supreme Court upheld the power ot the board lo collect ulea and use u.x on the ult of meJ)I, atJaaes, &)abet iDd boob tbrouch tbo mails to customers in the atatc. Thuoclely, wbJc:h hal tta head· quarters tn Was~oa, D.C., paid appro-.im1tely Sl.800 In lax· es under protest f« tbe year 19&4 and u.uuecff&fully aoualat a re- fund. WIN LUCKY BUCKS $100 to $1000* SPONSORED BY FOUNTAIN VALLEY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE All Fountain Vall ey shoppers with proof of previous week's purchase from a participating business listed below are eligible. Once a week members of the Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce Commercial/Retail <?-omfTlittee will ~islt a selected shopping center. If the shoppers can produce a legible sales receipt less than 7 days old from a participating business listed h8('9, they will win $20. Five shoppers a week will win. For ten weeks shoppers will have the opportunity to be winners. If there is no valid safes .receipt from any of the shoppers the "lucky Bucks" total is Increased In the next week's total. -Money will awarded in script redeemable only at participating businesses listed on this page. · Employees from participating businesses are not eligible. "BE A DILLY DAllY" •••• SHOP IN FOUNTAIN VAUEY AND BE A LUOCY BUCKS WINNER ~KY IUCKS .. PARTICIPATING IUSIMESSES Akoublans Ann's Crossroads Auto M&nne Supply Bad! Alley P1ua Btrcity'a Bank Betty Lou Boutlquo Bon Amie C&S Auto Ptl1s Calleo Country Ttxtll• Croc:lcer Bani!. Classy Clnlne Clbblo .. and Kings CtoMl'Olds Rtst1ur11'1t Del<ors Diiiy Petch Donut Hut OletWOMhop Fountain Ll<1u0t ' Fountain Valley C.mera Miiier's Outpost Fountain Valley StatlonetS Mlle SQun FIOl'lst Fountain Valley BoWI Pecille Photo Fountain Valley Bike Pltnts N' Planters Fountain View Flowers P9t Palace Fran'1 lnt8'1ora Oualltv Clotlloaout Funky Junk 2nd Debut Gemoo SuperYa.rn Mitt Guys and Gala Halratvflno Sovtllwest Savings Gem Meets 6Qof1aman Center Gad+Bout Travel Buffs Hoberg Jewelers Tennis Recquet Hlif MlatlQue Two Guys from Italy Instant Print Thrifty'& Jefemy's Hair Fashion Union Federal Savings JeancfHour Jewele~ Valley 0.dens Nu~ery Lin Brook Hardware Valley ol Flowen FV c Mite 8qun o.&nert Vllley Printing FOUNTAIN VAUF.Y CHAMBER OF' COl\Otr.Rr.e Wllt~r Clllw -,.-o.-.,-x-,-,-n-·-.. -,u-1-.00-K-HU-.-IT-8-t-.• -l'O-U_N_r Jl-,-~-VA_l._IL_'l_.-(.A-.-,-,o-.-.... "-1-.-, "-,-.• -.. -, -· I ~.'Pirates' Still Plu 9)' llJCllABL PMll.S\'ICll Of .. .,...., ........ Pirates 1WJ 0per11te ~ our eoatltne and plunder boa in 81Ufthofrlches. • No, they're not tbe old ftubbuclder types with eye Pl&ebes, P91 le1s and a ~ant lar rum and a lutb' llClllC accom- panied br, • coacmina. da•aced boats ud ml11lo1 .. aublea. Tbou.aa.nda fA boats are tied up a1oQc tbe Oraqe Coat. rUline from di.Dthles to oeeaa lolnc yachts. In Newport Harbor alobe, there are nearly 10,000 veuds . Tran.afernid into cash value, the potential booty from· them ls •taaaertna. 1'oday s pirate• ve probably junkiee ln aearcb of a quick l>Qek tor their next fix or a band ol. bored youths wlth nothiq better · to do. But the results are the same-ransacked bolds, At present, the number of burSlartes from boats hu not re- ached crime wave proportions, accordlni to Newport Beach de- tecti ve Pat O 'Sullivan. The coaatwide average is about 15 per I ' ' Cmmtg Cliairs Free Vaccine For Children Orange County children may receive free v acclnatioos against seven potentially severe diseases fl'ee ol charge at any fA 10 county Health Department clinics at various locations. In addition, county health of· ficials pJan to offer periodic 'clinics at all county school dis· tricts, along with their daily clinic in downtown Santa Ana. County officials are emphasiz· ing the need for immunization aga i nst polio, measles, diphtheria, whooping cough, tetanus, rubella and mumps dur· ing Immunization Action Month throughout October. • Dr. GeraJd Wagner, direct.or ol the county child heaJth pro- gram, said a check fA county kin· dergarten students last year showed between 65 and 95 per. cent, depending upon location in the county, did have protection against most of those diseases. Before a child enters school . Rats Show .Sex Effect ;From Pot Wagner said, be must have been vaccinated against whooping cough, diphtheria, tetanus, polio and measles. But immunizations against mumps, rubella and measles a.150 are rttommended and are anilable in one combined vac· dnation. Wagner said until 1973, theonJy place the free immunizations were offered were at the county cllnic,64SN. RossSt.,SantaAna. CHICAGO <AP) -Experi· · ments with rats have proved that , marijuana interferes with sexuaJ 1 development, s ays ao army sur· . geon. . Dr. John W. Harmon of the Walter Reed Army Medical Center at W asbington presented bi~ findings in a report to the Clinical Congress of the American College fA Surgeons Monday. But today clinics are available at 70 locations throughout the county at least once monthly. In January county officials will Of· fer late afternoon and evening clinics within e ve ry county school district. Those interested in lea.nUng clinic times and locations may dial county health fAficials at 834-3171. He r eported that Delta Nine Mr N• . Tetrabydrocannabinol <THC >. Se IXOD the ingredient of marijuana that produces the high, caused ex· perimentaJ rats lo develop smaller·than·normal testicles. He conducted bis experiment with Dr . M e nelaos A . Allapoullos, professor fA surgery at th e Univ e r s ity o f Massachusetts at Worcester, and Diana Locke and Dr. John M. Maclndoe ol Walter Reed. Sixteen rats were given THC for 40 days, a period correspond· iog to their adolescence. They were compared with two similar . groups of rats that had not re- ' ceivedTHC. · At the end or the experiment. the rat.s that bad been given TIIC bad smaller testicles, although the weight of their bodies and livers was unchanged, and two of the 16 were unable to produce sperm. Harmon reported also that levels of testosterone. a male sex hormone, were lower both in the blood serum and the testicles of the rats given the marijuana de· riv alive than in the others. These data, combined with re- suJts ol other studies, prompted bim to say in an interview that ll Ls no longer speculation but acer· tainty that marijuana interferes with sexual develo.P.ment. He and Ali~ocs previously reported cases of breast enlarge· ment in maJe patlenu who were Recovering On Schedule By the Associated Presa Patricia Nixon, wife d former president Richard Nixon. is im· proving according to scbeduJe from a stroke she suffered in Ju. ly, her physician, Dr. John Lungren, said Monday. Mrs. Nixon, 64, is recuperating at her San Clemente home. She bas not returned to Loog Beach Memorial Hospital since July 23, when she left after a 1.5-day stay. Mrs. Nixon had suffered a small hemorrhage on the right side d her brain JuJy 7 as she was reading on the patio d the estate, once the Western White House. She went to bed without telling anyone, but woke up the follow· i.ng d~ visibly ill and was taken to the hospital. Her speech was impaired and she was moderately paralysed on the left side of her body. She underwent occupatiooal therapy at the hospital to strengthen and help com'di.nation in her left arm and band aod bad exhibited marked progress when she was released. heavy, chronic marijuana users. Ships Needed Some required surgery CO correct . the condition. In others, it disap· SAN DIEGO CAP> -The na· peared alter they st.opped smot· lion does not have an adequate ingmarljuana. merchant marine to meet Subsequently, the two sur· military supply needs if there's a geons produced similar THC· major conflict, says the ptesi· induced breast enlargement in dent of a group influential in rata. maritime affairs. "As far as Other researchers have report· U.S.·fiag cargo ships, we're at ed lower levels of testosterone Irv-about tbe s ame position we were tbe blood of chronic human mari· at the beginning of World War · Juana users, and others have re-11," said C . Ray North of ported obaervlng smaller Pblladelphia. president d the testicles and enlarged uten.tses Propeller Club of the United 1 · lnlona·term, heavy users. States. Rags to Riehes (;aa Jockey Wina Big ---... EW YORK (AP) -A year and a half ago, Robert Netto dropped out d high school to pump gas in Watertown, N.Y-. Now the 19-Y'81'-<>ld has become a millionaire as New York State's first $1 millioo ins· tant lottery winner. ·•t was content with him just as be was, a gas sta· tioo attendant," hls lS-year-Old wile, Judy, said Moo· day night as she helped him oo stage to accept the first $1,000 of his reward. . He can look forward to receiving that much every week for the rest d his llf e, and lottery officials estimate that, at his age, Netto could live to collect $4 million from the $! lottery ticket he bought at the sta· Uoo where he works. Netto said he's not going to quit that sro-a-weet job, at least not right aw•Y· "My bla~est dream bas always been to wln SJ,.000," be said. ''I'd li~ to own a gas station some- daJ. Now maybe I 'U own a llne d them." ' moMIL Ill Nt'WpOl't Beath. 9.4 percent d a1J bur1lartes last year were from boats, according to Lt. Ray Graham of the Oraree County Sheriff's office. Graham estimat· ed the total loss in euess of $a>,OOO. Law enforcement officials uree that only half ol. all thefts from boats are reported. Lt. Graham says the number of boat burglaries is likely to in- crease substantially in the future' for two reasons : lack ol concern by boat owners and the relative • S11 lafatt '33 Dirigible Crash Blamed On Mmerials W ASIUNGTON (AP) -His- tory's worst dirigible disaster, the 1933 crash of the Akron. was caused by structural f1lilure rather than crew error, accord· ing to a new, privately published book by Thom Hook, a federal aviation official who looked into the lncident on bis own time. The 785-foot-long Akron cras hed into the ocean off Bamesat. N.J ., during a swm on April 4, 1933, kllling 73 fA the 76 men aboard. After a court of inquiry. the Navy concluded that the ct~ thoucht the dirigible was con· siderably higher than its actual altitude and, battling the storm, flew the CraftinlO the Water. I But Hook. in his book "Sky Ship: The Akron Era," conten4s that the actuaJ cause fA the crash was failure of the upper vertical fin at the rear of the AIQ'on. Hoot ls an employe of the Federal Aviation AdminJstratJon <FAA>. but his atudy was not officially sanctioned. These fins were weak and col· lapsed because of the force ol tbe willd. Hook contends. Tbe struc· tures bad been modified when the two ainhlps were built and the fins, 11 feet thick and 41 feet high, bad been incre ased in height and were less securely at· tacbed than originally planned. Boy DroWD8 InOC Pool A 3·year-old Newhall boy drowned Monday evening in a 1wtmmJn1 PoOl tn Stanton. Oranae County Coroner's de- putJes said Carl Robert Valle II was pronounced dead at 7 p.m. at . Stanton Community Ho•pltaJ after efforts to revive him failed, depuUtaaaid. , Tbe youncster and his rnothtt, Judith, we.._ vlsttm, at the home ol Harold Sell, 7443 Bock Ave., Stancoc, •b.en the acctdent oe- cuned. Tbe boy wu round float· In& race-4own lo the pool by Sell, cteputJeuaJd . . .. ' Tuesdey. October 1~. 1976 DAILY PILOT AS Orange Coast: HM wtth which a thief can enter a boat and haul away valuables tor quiet dtspoul. Newport Beach detective O'Sullivan says the prime target (or thieves is liquor Md elec· tronic equipment such as radios or depth finders . But police re· ports aJao sbow such items as life rafts, anchors, wetsuits, clothing, ship's bells, propellers and outboard motors are st.oJen. Even with hired security pants, self-contained docks and night lighting, there is no foolproof way to prevent a Tragic Ending burglar from gainin& acceu lo a boat, pol ice and marina operators agree. Once on tbe boat. it's clear sail- ing for the thief because man1 boats are ten unlocked ar are equipped with an ineffective padlock. Lt. Graham said. One or the main reasons for the eASe or access to boats Is th~ general reeling of trust that ex· ists within a harbor. Fellow boatowners and even the sheriff's harbor patrol have few reasons to question a st.ranger on a boat. Some 17 people •. inch.~ding .travel ~gents from the u~~~ States, were killed in this ''Railroad to the Pac1f1c passenger train crash in the Sierra Tarahurn~a M~un· tains of Southern Chihuahua <map). The tram collided head on with a freight. • Tax Man Throttles Love's Sweet Song ELLICOTT CITY, Md. <AP) - Mr. and Mrs . H . David Boyter are preaparing for thei r second divorce, to be followed by their third marriage. Boyter, 36, a nd hi s wife. Angela, 31, say they get along !111 right, it's just that they are in· compatible with the Internal Revenue Service. The Boyters say their divorces are a way to protest the "absurdi· tyofthetax laws" which required married couples to pay higher federal income taxes than single persons in the same tax bracket who live together. The Boyters. married tor the first time in April, 1966, had their first divorce in Haiti last Dec. 9. They remarried Jan. 9, at the Howard County Courthouse here. This year, they plan a mid· November vacation in the Dominican Republic, with a stop at the capital of Santo Domingo for a $350 quickie divorce. They will wait untU after the first or the year to remarry. ·•we take the trip for a vaca· lion," Mrs. Boyter said. "People spend over $1,000 just We recently added a bf· color, catseye Tourmaline to our e state collection. This particular Tourmaline has red on one side and green on the other and a catseye running right down the cente r . Without the catseye, ft would be called "wat er m ellon" Tourmatlne. Much of this varl<e>fored gem material is found right here In Galifornla In the Mt. Pala area. When the conclave ot the American Gem Society was held In San Dleoo a couple of years ago, a group guided by Dr. Peter Ban-aoft toured the Swoboda· owned Stewart Uthla and Tourmaline Queen mines. I htertlly recommend It to all you rock-hounds and mineral crystal en· thuslasts. Even without the prlvllege of the noted author, Or. Bancroft, as guide, t 'm sure It would prove an Interesting e•· per1ence. · Tourmaline Is the alternate (to Opal) bfrtnstone for October. It comes In a wide ranoe of hutS, tones and lntensltleS. The most popular ge m varieties are pink to dark purplish-red, and tight to dirk blulsh-ilrffn. Tht ln- tense green <c hrome TOurmallne> ls otten ml,_ t"*' for Em.raid. to do what we are going lo do - swim and get a sun tan on the beaches. "Only, we are also getting a divorce and expect to pay at least that much less income tu as single aduJts." Both Boyters work for the U.S. Department of Defense and earn about $23,000 each annuaJJy. "They <the IRS) have not bothered us, even though we filed as single adults, paying $1,:o> less than a married couple wouJd," Boyter said. He said the IRS ruled earlier this year "not r ecognizing divorces like ours. ··But, until that ruling is upheld in court, we have no plans to slop getting annual divorces until the tax law is made equitable." Racial Survey LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Angeles City Board of Education bas voted to complete a controversial racial survey aimed at providing the informa· lion for any districtWide integra. tiooplan. @ &EM WISE .. Thus. lt'squite sample to row~ a moored boat -wher~ at lea.sf half or all burglaries occur _;. climb aboard and take ever· ytlun1 that isn't nailed down. • It's not because theH piratete are a sopbiatlcated l&OI th Newport Beach poUce analytic ol'ficer Greg Armatroaa decl~ that enforcement ls dUtlcuJt. • Armstrong said that tbe ma .. jority of thefts are a«ampllshed by using a pry tool to gain entry .. The thefts are crude and, abo~ all. easy. eel Last year police arrest '!, heroin addict who committe«;1 between 30 and 3S burglaries bj' pryin1 open hatches with crowbar and Armstr<lh« r~ ed that a small band d local boys aged 7 to 10 were found with a garage full of equipment they took ''just for run." What happens after a loss'! A re- port filed with local police is then forwarded to the nearest Sheriff's Harbor Patrol substation. The police report becomes an~er burglary under investigation while the Sheriff's copy becomes another statistic. A police spokesman said tber~ is no investigation by the Har~ Department although they are closest to the scene of the crime .. There is a ready and versatile market for stolen marine equip- ment. Lt. Graham said. Goods that aren't taken out of tbe area for resaJe at another resort area often wind up in swap meets or garage sales. The current big sellers are VHF r adios. ~tsuits and small outboard motors. Still another possibility is the. resale or stolen goods as used equ1prr.ent to tocaJ marine supp. ly stores. Owners of such outlets deny their stores are used to dump stolen articles. CollectiveJy, they say they keep a close watch oo· suspect characters and usually onJy deaJ with known customers. However, unJike pawn shops, marine salvage or secoodband stores are not bound by city or· dinance to list all purchases d used goods, so police believe the possibility or stolen goods finding their way back on the market through legitimate means does exist. But Ernie Minney of Minney's. Ship Chandlery and Dick Mueller• of Sara's Marine Salvage both said it's rare for someone to try to. use this means. "It's obvious," Minney said. "We make a low offer and if the guy accepts it's a tipoff. Besides, we take things on consignment so . the guy bas to produce 'identifica- tion and we contact rum when we sell it." Mueller, who believes many burglaries take place between boat owners. said a youngster OD· ce walked into bis business with a $400 marlin pole. "He wanted $S for it so I kicked him in the rear and told him to beat it before l called the police." Even though ft is relatively easy to burglarize a boat, law en· rorcement orticiaJs believe that a widespread increase CIUl be pre- vented. "There are a lot of things that can be done," Lt. Graham said. · "People invite burglaries. We go around and find unlocked ha tches because owners are afraid of having them tom off hinges." Graham suggests that all boat owners firmly secure their craft. and close curtains so a burglat can't get an easy view of what's inside. Graham also s ays that owners sbouJd pressure marinas fOf' bet- ter night lighting and take the time co place their license num- bers on vaJuable equipment. "Unlortunately, people just don't seem to be concerned," Graham observed. Does astrology tum you on? Even If we don't take It seriously, most all of us know what our sign of the zodlak ts. Mine ts Pisces· and I share that sign with four of the forme r U.S. Presidents, namely: Lin· coin, F.D.R., McKinley and Harrison. I discovered that when the Larter Co .. the • firm that makes our die struck slonet rings for us, sent a new display. It has h•ndsome heavy signet rings engraved with the l..odlak slons, and there are pictures of a II the presl· dents clustered around the appropriate ring s representing their birth sfgns. These signet rlnos Q die struck, as I mentr~ned before. That means the gold Is formed Into the ring pat. tern by repeated heating and striking. Consequently, the meta I ls much more dense and does not allOw f« any porosity as ts pasllbte In cast rings. The advan. tage, of course, Is that die struck nnos are much more durable end longer lastl!_'9.. The cost for the man s heavy Zoellak signet Is $235, and we have a daintier version for women at $105. These rings are also avallabl• tor tamur crest orttlng and persona .,..,... vr•'l"s.. There Is en .oct--tlonat cherge, ho..wr, fOr cuttlno to Individual pet, -' ,, . DAILYPfLOT Tu!!CS!y. Octeber 12. 1975 ~ Water-ate Insigh~ _ ,. ~ w!!!!!!!f<!!~!!!°.!1:J~l~ ~w!!u~ry · ::t~·~. wl• Dean '1 W ateraat.e book often no troot ... y. "It wu then belni Uled for a "'..,,·:·. Te• new bombsb.U., butbia•l.$-pqe ... ~-"!!~:.....~.ean let.s JO wWl 1peelal Ebrllcbman·approved memoir la sprinkled wttb humor ._._,~"'AH uaipment which required a lux-!ID'Pldile and detail to fascinate coaftrmed -SborUy after 0... joined urtoua ambience. and Jack bad •,1,.,. Watersate lddlcta andotben. U>e Nboo White Houae. be st.rt-deacrlbed it a.a 'quite a pad.• John nJlltJLT • SBOvnNG: Hun· ttncton Beach's city brass bas been pondering what to do abwt its decaying downtown sect« J« nearly a decade now. Last oi&bt they started to do someth.J..ni about it and got Into immediate trouble. They bad a meetioJ. of the City Council which was sittiog as the dty's redevelopment qency. Ao ..timated crowd of 750 cltheos lbowed up to voice their views m tbeplan. . There was room in the chamber for an estimated '50. That meant some 300 got locked out.aide. Rifht away, you get the notlm that this ls not going to be a con· genial gathering. The people inside are mad at what they are bearing. The people outside are madder because they can't bear anything. FOa THOSE OF YOU who ha· ven't been following the Hunt- ington Beach downtown re- development proposals, I will oversimplify it for you. Plans are to set up the redevelopment agency which is actually the City Council itself. The agency could then decide that the downtown Is in a coad.ition where it needs to be refurbished. Land could then be condemned, old buildings tom down and the property sold for redevelopment. Roughly, ther e are three re- develo pment plans being studied. Redevelopment could take as long as 3S years. That was what the chaos was all about last night. Now, any time government at any level suggests it is going to take away property and then sell it for redevelopment. you can an· ticipate that the government agency is going to have some damn unhappy property owners to deal with. They had a whole chamber full d them last night and a lot more out on the street. ONE TELEVISION station showed up to cover the th.ing and its approach was interesting. Tbe TV cameras f'lJ"St gave you some pan shots d downt°"1\ Huntington Beach while the com- mentator bl atbered on a bit. Then they showed you the packed council chambers. Then the cameras switched to the multitudes gathered outside. Two citizens were interviewed briefly. They were not redevelop- ment boosters. And that was it. On to the weather report. Meanwhile, inside, after the tumult setUed down, the City Cooncil wisely decided not to do anything except set another public hearing for Oct. 28. At that time, they hope to hire a larger hall. IT IS P80BAllLY to the eternal credit of aJJ parties that the gathering did not degenerate into violence. Fiddling with people's proper. ty can cause strong feeling to erupt suddenly. I once covered an urban r enewal session where two ch a ps l eaped upon a cafeteria table and started slui- gingitout. t was sitting at that table with my big old press camera. It was just like being rintside, but with no ropes. I aot a beautiful shot ot one combatant delivering a right cross. Tbe former Wblte House eel coUectin1 inteWcence of in· Ebricbman was Nixon's chief counsel's book, "Bllod Ambi· terest to bla bos"8 ad came domestic affairs aide. tion," being publlabed by Slmon acroes a report that a pGt.entially and Schuster, plows the already embarrasaine address boc* kept "THE APAaTMENT was well-cultivated &roun4 ot the by Xaviera Hollander, the "HIP-meant to serve aa a boudoir; break-in at Democratic bead· PY Hooker," might surface in Tony had enlisted acquaintances quarters ln the Watergate com-New\'ork. of amorous reputation in a mis- plex bere and the ensuing White "I began asking tbe more ad· sion to seduce there some ol the House conspiracy to keep the lid venturous men at the White women who had attended Ken· ontbescandal. House if they might have nedy's Chappaquiddick party. But Dean's plow tuis uneartbecl IDYthiu to fear from Xaviera The women would. 6CCOl'ding to a bit ol sex, a d of drama and Hollander's address boot." Dean tbe plan. volunteer some details even a hint of ~. "When I wblspered my of Kennedy's conduct la a tno-mystery to StcJl'Y to Press Secntsy Ronald mentoftenderness, or under fear fresh.en the Ziecler. bis face went white u a ofextartioo. .. ~ "~ .. ........,, ... OOUn 1 nY MUSIC'S f'EMALE, MALE VOCALIST& OF YEAR 1,-,., familiar soil. sheet. " .. I walked to the apstment " ·rll deny it,· be said quickly.. with my blind date. . . . The Dotty P•rton (left), Ronnie Mllaep With Wife et Aw•rde t.i' • DE AN, whose re- velation of White House involvement in the coverup was a major breakthrough in the investll•· tion ol the scandal, recenUy re- vealed that a member of Presi· dent Ford's Cabinet m.se an ob- scene sl\U" against blacb. Other sources later identified the Cabinet 1Qember u Acriculture Secretary Earl Butz. who thea .... '111 deny it.' woman. wbo bad high apecta. "BE TU8NED and walked lions of the counsel to the Presi- away. But over the next few dent. bad one quick drink and weeb Ziegler kept up a steady left. Tbe apartment looked like a stream of calls to me. astiq for Chicago whorehouse -red further developments. ma tone velvet wallpaper, black 1.ce cur- was so urgent I could scarcely tains, white Salvation Army keep from laughing. Tbere were furniture, and a fake-tur rug." no further developments, except -Dean was sent to talk to that mJss Hollander did quite tben-Asslatant Attorney General well as a public figure." Henry Petersen about trying to -When Dean was in New turn off some Justice Depart. York, be was offered the apart-ment iovestlgationa of suspected ment of a former aide. John J . • labor racketeers. CauUield, and CauUield's in· Petersen i1 said to have told Milsap, Parton Feted Tillis Named Top Country Performer .... Syrians Open New Lebanon Offensive Dean: .. Tbe only time a case could ev~ be stopped is before an investigation bu com-menced. NA.5HVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Moments before the nationally televised 10th annual Country Music Association awards show, Mel Tillis was still trying to find bis wife and bis assigned seat. It's a good thing he finally "BELL. I'VE GOI' a recom-found them, because sr> minutes mendation right here m my desk later he was chosen entertainer that I authori1e an investigation of the year -the CMA's top of Lyndon Johnson on some Uttle award. banking violation down In Texas. But the most bon«s Monday Now, I'm not going to autharize night went to e ntertainers an investigation of a ronner pre-Waylon Jennings and Wlllie sident. Tb1.s ls a case that will · Nelson, who shared three awards neverstart,aodneednotstart." • -single of the year foe "Good MILSAP, BUND since birth and a country singer for only• three years, and Miss Parton ' were voted top vocallats, Mia• Parton for the second atraiibt,.: year. li' Kitty Wells, "the queen o1 •• , .. country music," and the late r• .,.._; · cording executive Paul Coheo •l. • were voted into the CounU, .,, .. Music Hall ol Fame. • : Other winners were: ~· · BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> - Palestinian guerrillas claimed Syrian forces launched a new ~­tensive today toward the port of Sidon. Tbe reported attack came boun after Syria threatened to punish the Palestinians for at- tacks on Syrian property over- seas and half a day after a new cease-fire agreement was an. Court Studies Protests on Saturday Jobs WASHINGTON (AP) -Your employer says you must work on Saturdays, but u·s agalmt your mictoa. Should you llaten to the boss or your conscience! 'lbe Supreme Caurt is being asked today to decide that ques- tion. In a case stemming from the f'uin.g of a supervisor at a rub- ber seal plant in Kentuck.Y, employers are challenging a federal law and guidelines thal say an employe's religious beliefs must normally be accom- modated. The dispute bas attracted the attention of Seventh Day Adven· tlst and Jewish .organilatioos, which have flied b:tefs urging that the law and guidelioes be up- held. Although the case involves Saturday wort, the SynagOIQe Council ol America argues that the Jaw could also be invoked by Christians whose churches couosel aaainst wortaaa m &an· day. The J ewish and Adventi&t groups support the argument of Paul Cummins, the fired supervisor, who claims the re- ligious freedom of employes is at state. The Parker Seal Company, wbleb employed Cummlna, says the challenged law "requires employers to discriminate ln favor d individual employes oo the basis of their religious beliefs." ( /NSHORT ) nounced in Lebanon's civil war. A guerrilla communique said the armored assault got under way at midday after a six·bour barTage Of artillery and rocket launchers on guenilla positions eight miles east Of Sidon. Syrian armor is attacllrtng in two columns to the west and southwest from the Christian town ol Jezzine, blasting posi- tions of guerrillas and their lef- tist Lebaaese allies on roads leading to the port, the communi- que said. N~~ar Arilllerfl1 WA.5HINGTON (AP) -The Russian army is being equipped with new heavy caliber artillery that may be capable m firing nuclear shells, U.S. intelligence sources report. The long-barreled 203mm guns, equivalent in caliber to the U.S. Army's eight-inch bowitser, were seen recently at Soviet anny bases for the first time, sources said. U.S. armed forces have bad artillery capable of firing atomic weapons for years. Experts now are working on improved eigbt- incb nuclear ammunition expect- ed to provide longer range and better accuracy. . \ India Crull Kiib 95 BOMBAY, India (AP) -All 95 people aboard an Indian jetliner were killed early today when one of the plane's two eng:i.nes caught fire aod the pilot crash-landed at Bombay 'a Santa Cruz airport. The Caravelle jet was taking mf f oc a domestic Oigbt from Bombay to Madras, and an in· itial list indicated nearly all the 89 passengers were Indians. A larger Boeing had been scheduled to make the ru,ht. but it developed engine trouble dur· ing a preflight check. The smaller French plane replaced it, and 20 passen1ers were bumped from the flight. -As Dean's climb up the Hearted Woman," vocal duo of White House status ladder con· the year, and album ol the year tinued, he confessed: "I broke Off for "Wanted -the Outlaws" with Maureen Biener, tbewoman alOQI with J essi Colt.er and Tom- i bad been living with foe the past pall Glaser. two years. Our relationship and JENNINGS WAS Nm' present my love for her had been a for the awards show at the Grand godsend to me, but sh~ wanted to Ole Opry House because or get married and I did not. Not ''personal and private reasons." now. The versatile Tillis -a singer. "I WAS ENTICED by my pro-songwriter, comedian and spects as a bachelor; I wanted no television personallty -was hindrances to my career . chosen over Jennings, Nelson, M aureen w en t b om e t o Dolly Parton and Ronnie Milsap California, and I resolved to con· for the most coveted award. quer as many new women as ''I was completely surprised," lime and power would uant. said Tillis, known to country Henry Kissinger ooce remarked music fans ,as the entertainer on power's properties as an who stutters except when be apbrodlsiac, and I found It true." sings. Maureen later returned from "I bad no idea I bad a chance California, married Dean and with Waylon and Willie being so lived through Water.eate with popular and Ronnie Milsap and him. "Blind Ambition" is de-Dolly being in there," the "3· dicated to her. year-old Tillis said. "Rhinestone Cowboy," writtAln• by Larey Weiss and reeorded by , • Glen Campbell, song d the year; ·• ", · the Statler Brothers, vocal group of the year; Roy Clark and Buck ~. · Trent, instrumental grotq> of the ,, year. and blind pianist Hargus ''Pig" Robbins, instrumentalist .. · of the year. , MILSAP WAS selected over i1•• Jenntnas, Nelson, Conway Twit· ... , ty and Don Williams fer top male ., vocalist. Miss Parton's competi-•. lion was Crystal Gayle, Em· , mylou Harris. Barbara Mandrell and Tammy Wyette. It marked the first time since.fl 1971 that Loretta Lynn railed to win an award. She and Twitty' were finalists for vocal duo of the • .. year but Jennings and Nelsoo b became the first male duo to win'•• the category. 11 Miss Lynn and Twi\ty bad been 1"·~ top vocal duo for the last four<:ld years. Additionally, Miss Lynn:··: was entertainer of the year iD 1972 and (em• vocalist of the year in 1972 and 1973. ). ~ Northeast Goe~ 'Brrr' W1.d CanadUm A.ir ChillJJid.t <:oaat Nobody said it was going to be easy, :~· Democracy bas·never been, right judgments for yourself. Te.,....ac•rn """ ..._ ""--" 4l ... ., 40 *' .... st ., u » 10 SI ~ .Q u ., 1S «I a ~ .... ~ ., Q ,. '° w . ,, ,, " n ., .. .a • SJ " .. ., SJ ti 45 ,. . ,, Cl • s. • • I and never will be, an easy form of government to live under, because it is a government of the people. As such, it makes each of us responsible for the way the government works. If a crisis develops, if the system falters, each of us shares in the blame. In times like this, the role of the newspaper becomes even more important to the democratic process. It is not our job to just report the news. We must reveal everything you need to know to understand the news. It is not our job to make judgments for you. We must try to give you all the facts you need to make the ' ..... ., . • As responsible journalists, we have an obligation to inform you- fully, accurately and honestly. As responsible citizens, you have an obligation to use that information. Our country was born in a time of crisis. We have lived through dangerously troubled times throughout our history. If the democratic system fails, it will not be a crisis that kills it. It will be the ignorance and apathy of the people. As Thothas Paine said, "Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must und~go the fatigue of supporting it.,, • Tue5day.Ocloberl2. 1976 DAILY PILOT A§ Political Potshots Fly Martian Rock May Hide Life Tunney Blasted; Carter Praised PASADENA (AP) -Soil from under an oddly shaped Martian rock nicknamed "Mr. Bad1er" wlU be studied by Viking 2's laboratory, as aclentlsts begin to run out, of places near the lander to aeu life. B1 Tlae Anoe lated Presa Republican S.l . Hayakawa Hid today that US. Sen. John 1\anney "bu forsaken the middle families," a statement his oppo- nent's camp called a "repetiUoo <JI bis pr~vlous d.ls~ons." Hayakawa, who is seeking Democrat Tunney'• seat in Nov- ember. spoke at a Sacramento luncheon to wind up a two-day olthe Sacramento Valley. BE Al.SO A'M'ACXED Tun- ey's record. s aying the lncum. bent •'has been flunked on the re· port cards of the COO$Umer and tax reform organizations." lfunne.y's s pokesman John Fl.ink, asked for comment, replied: "We see no point in com· menting on Dr. Hayakawa's r e- petition of his previous distortions of~n. Tunney'srecord." ALSO JN CALIFORNIA politics, Democratic U.S. Seo. Birch Bayh of Indiana began a three-day lour or the state for presidential nominee Jimmy Carter . In a Sacramento speech, Bayh s harply a ttacked President. Ford's vetoes of jobs, education and social welfare programs. TUNNEY VS. HAYAKAWA: TURTLE & HARE?-A7 Bayh is one or a dozen Democrats whose presidential hopes were dashed by Carter. He said too many Democrats are now sitting out the race when there is .. a light·age of dif- ference'' between Carter and Ford. HAYAKAWA SAID Tunney's record "is the major issue of this campaign." "ffis record of absenteeism is appalling. It is the picture of an absentee landlord who does UtUe for his tenants except COUecl the r ent," Hayakawa said. He cited criticisms of Tunney by three consumer groups on absences and votes oo the bills they favored. Bayh, Joking that his own pre- sidential campaign "never got out or the bathtub," said he and other liberals in Congress have no quarrel with Carter. CARTE R HAS BEEN described as a moderate who ls at odds with liberals. But Bayh said the question now is the dif- ference between the Democratic and Republican approaches to economic and social problems. Bayh said Republican light money policies caused the re- cession, which Ford's vetoes of public works, education and other programs is perpetuating. Said Bayh: •·Despite all the fancy rhetoric to the contrary, we are still suffering under the longest recession since the Great Depression." Scientists hope to begin analysis Friday on a scoopful of soil scraped from tho protected eo\tiron· ment underneath the rock lo see U lt contains or- ganic molecules. VIKING Z'S TELESCOPING arm gave the rock a shove ~nd apparenUy scooped up the sample, of. ficials said today. Beneath rocks, where soil ls protected from the withering solar r adiation glaring through Mars' thin atmosphere, ''is really the only different en· vironment accessible to Vikings 1and2,'' Dr. Klaus Biemann said. SCIENTISTS WILL WAIT a few days t.o en~re that the diBg111g was properly done before ordenns the robot lab on Friday lo begin analyzing the soil sample. Biemann, h ead of the Viking molecular analysis team, reported Monday that, once agaio, Viking's organic analysis instrumeml bad failed~ find any trace or the carbon-based organic molecules r elated to all forms of living or1anisms found on earth. ro Prop. 14 Has Edge AP Wlrepl>olO TOURISTS FIND PRISON NEARLY RUINED State Is Seeking Funds lo Rebuild Alcatraz ALTHOUGH IT WAS THE latest in a long series or negative reports, scientists said they were not ready to "throw in the sponge" in the Mars life search. Chief Viking scientist Dr. Gerald Soffen said that would not be an "heroic" scientific move. And, he pointed out. "There's a very important analysis still to be done," referring lo the test of rock- sheltered soil. SAN FRANCISCO (/\P) - Although Prop. 14 mav be the most publicized or this year's election issues, a statewide opi· nion poll shows that less than one half of a ll California vbters have heard a bout the farm abor measure. The California Poll a ls o bowed that sentiment 1s run· ·ng slightly in favor of Prop. 4 among those who are aware f the Cesar Chavez·backed easure. Pollster Mervin Field said on- Y 46 percent of 1,044 registered oters surveyed in late Sep· mber had heard or Prop. 14 . ong those aware of it, Field aid 51 percent were Jirung up n favor or the measure. 42 per· ent were opposed and 7 per· ent were undecided. ut: Appeara11t"e Hit LOS ANGELES CAP) -A group of black le~slators has barged that continued public appearances by form er gricuJture Secretary Earl Butz onstitute a "direct affront" to lacks, and would most likely d Jimmy Carter • . ( S tate ) Butz. who resigned Oct. 4 after the publication or a racial slur he made, addressed two trade group·s i n Southern California Monday. His ap- pearance brought s h a rp critici s m fr o m U.S. Rep. Yvonne Braithwaite Burke (D. Calif.>; Los Angeles City Coun- cilman David Cunningham; Compton City Councilman Max· ie Filer; stal e Sen. Nate Holden ; and st ate Assembly · candidate Maxine Waters. Re11ear<"h Ignored ., SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Billions of dollars are spent each year in the search for dis- ease cures, but the fight against pain has been virtually ignored by Americans, a physician has told a meeting or the American Society of Anesthesiologists. "More than $800 million will be spent this year on cancer re- search alone," Dr. John J . CSEA to Oppose Bonica said . "But there will not Repo;rs Needed be a single bit of data on the ~ pam, which is more important to the patient than the oncom. On LTh R k' ing death... • e oc Se.r•f:'ha11ge SkirJRl#h SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Alcatraz Island, one OAKLAND (AP) -A popular of San Francisco's top tourist attractions since high school gym teacher who public tours started three years ago, needs at least was surgically changed into <-a $2.S million in r eprurs i£ the tours continue, the Na· man was headed into court lo· tional Park Service says. day for a preliminary skirmish That is the cheapest of three alternatives the against the school district that Park Service outlines in a still incomplete report on wants him d eclared unfit to the future of all federal parks near San Francisco. teach. But no final decision on the future of the island Steve Dain, 37, was scheduled will be made until after a series of public hearings to go on trial on a misdemeanor in the spring, according to Doug Nadeau, the Park charge of willful disturbance Services' area planning coordinator. which arose from a public con-THE $2.S MILLION ESTIMATE is for frontation between Dain and "minimum preservation costs" to crumbling Emeryville school Supt. Lewis Alcatraz buildings to insure the rocky outcropping a Stommel, who had Dain laken mile off Fisherman's Wharf will be safe for the into custody on a citizen 's ar· public, Nadeau said in an inter view. rest when Dain tried to attend a Another alternative estimated at $3.5 million teacher orientation session. calls for demolishing all except key historic struc· Coronado l•le11 Open lures such as the lighthouse and cellblock that housed such notorious criminals as Al Capone, TIJUANA (AP) -A Mexican George "Ma chine Gun" Kelly and Robert official says the Coronado "Birdmanof Alcatraz" Stroud. Islands 17 miles southwest of The third Park Service alternative costing $5.5 San Diego's Point Loma will be million would include a major restoration of major NATURING MANNING'S BEEF FrOl'll Eadem Meat Co. • PIM FfD-4.6 MO. • MO IMJl<:TIOHS, HO D.t.S. TO PlOMOTI FAST WEIGHT GAIN • ova 140 GOURMET. SIAfOOO l'TIMS • MEATS CUT FHSH DA.Ill' 'J'O YOUlt Sf'ICS. • HOME Ol OFflCE DWVBY • SPECIAL GROUP RATES ----THIS WHIC'S SPECIAL ----FlOI£M.UHcoono MAIN-WHOLE Reg. s39s LOBSTER $5.98 LB. LI. WITH PURCHASE OF STEAK ORDER PHONE: 768-5137 FOR RADIO DISP'ATCHED SERVICE re·opened lo the public during prison facilities and avil Warfortiftcations. the second week in November. _:_ _ _:__:_....._._:..__.:__ __________ .......::::..:........: ________________ _ ~~ I State's Pay Plan If your ''Pssst! OCTDjust doubled bus service. SAN DIEGO (Al» -The Cali£ornia State .Er&ployes Association says it will oppose any effort continue Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's across· the· board pay raise into the next fiscal year. Al its annual meeting Monday, the 86,000· ember organization also refused to endorse Prop. 4, and elected William Craib, 51, a state highway ntineer from South San Francisco, as its presjdent or 1977. THE R ESOLUTION to endorse Prop. 14, the . ann labor initiative sponsored by Cesar Chavez' J\iled Farm Workers, was recommended by the A's operations committee, but it lost on a voice ote. Craib, a slate employc for 18 years, won a sur· rise runoff victory over favored Yolanda Solari or tockton. He replaces Robert Spiegel, a highway nftoeer from San Francisco. AFTER HIS ELECTION, Craib pledged be ould play the role of peacemaker and heal what he ctnowledged were severe internal rifts in the or-anization. Brown's Oat across-the-board pay raise for ost stale employes was the source of much of the ssension. He gave them an extra $70 a month, but y for fiscal year 1976-77. THE FLAT RAISE was generally favored by wer·paid workers. but opposed by those in higher· aying jobs. There had been one vote of the CSEA 's ea, but opponents said the vote wasn't properly en. figure isn't becoming to you ... ....... You . should be coming to us. I M p E R I A . L Pass it on.'' People all over Orange ~o.unty a~e telling each .other about Orange County Transit Distrrct s new improved service. We've nearly doubled bus service county-wide. :JIA·~~ E~tronlc Prf11tln9 irilluB Colc11lator WITH MEMORY 1200 p SP a We've added more buses to almost every route, and streamlined the whole system. Many areas now have 15, 20 and 30 minute service. It's the biggest improvement we've ever made. No wonder everyone's talking about it. $12995 ~ ••b... ..... 0 ... ... • c ....... . . ..,,.... ·~Off • Miwthtiltw · * W•Aho C..-yt Ol..ttf, Ylctor, ...,_, ~ T....._ -9 Mor-. Laguna Office Eqlipment Co. 22t0CIAMAYL LA.ut«A' llACH 494-Hll "the place for averyWy'' C8ll 982-1388 18030 Magnolia Fountain Valley • Vow metn.,.raNp l'RC• If you oan flnd e.iai taolUtl•• ana .. rvlo•• tor I•••· .• • To find out for yourself what the good news fs all about, cell OCTD Information. Now is the time to discover how easy and c. onvenlent riding the ~us can be. 547 ;3311 And by th e way-pass 1t on. • . Call 547-3311;'or toll-free • ZENITH 7-3311, 6AM to 10PM weekdays, or SAM to SPM weekends. Good news travels fast. ' l I A6 DAIL~· Pl OT EDITORIAL PAGE Flood Funds on Way 1''unds needed to safeguard most of Orange Coun· t y from the potential ravages of Santa Ana River flooding are included in an omnibus public works bill t hat Congress passed at the last minule. Neigh boring Riverside and San Bernardino coun- t ies !inally s upported a compromise flood control plan, although they felt some projects in the package were not in their best interests. But the expenditure of $750 million for the proj· els certainly is good news to Orange County. where it will protect about $3.6 billion worth of property. And there is no way of measuring the potential toll in suf- fering and loss of life if the project does not move ahead. There has been, however. one major inconsisten- ~Y in Orange County's Jong battle to gain approval of the fl ood control project. That inconsistency has been city and county plan- ning that has continued to permit development in areas where the flood threat has been greatest, such as the Santa Ana Canyon. So.· while some leaders called for greater flood protection, others approved projects they knew to be in flood plains. Now a substantial part of that $750 million in public funds will have lo be used to correct the mis- judgment. A Bigger Voice Orange County supervisors were right last week t o insist on a great er say-so in operation of a new $600,000 m<.1rine studies institute in Dana Point. Harbor bcf ore s pending county funds to help build it. Four community college districts h ad asked supervisors to join them in building the educational facility on 3.76 acres of county land. And they h ad asked the board !or $400,000 of the initial $600,000 building costs. Supervisors dld agree to apply for their $400,000 share from state tidelands fund. But they based their approva l on a yet-to-be negotiated agreement about the proposed instltute's governing board. Tha t agreement would give supervisors power lo appoint five of 11 trustees. Community college dis· tricts could each appoint one member and the county Department of Education a tenth. Tbe nth would be selected by the other 10 trustees. Under the earlier proposal, supervisors would huve had only five representatives among 15 seats, in- stead of 11. But considering the amount of money the county h as been asked to contribute, the ~tronger voice given by the revision makes sense. 1.ine Up for Flu Shots Orange County·s m ass swine flu inoculation gets under way this week with the opening of vaccination clinics for the elderly and chronically ill. These so-c ailed high flu risk people will be t:ecei v- ing a special vaccine that is designed to protect them against the swine nu and last year's Victoria flu. The rest of us wiU have to wait until November to get our shots for the swine flu. The three· month long immunization program will be the largest of its kind ever undertaken in Orange County. Business and volunteer groups are being asked to sponsor immunization clinics so that the free vaccinations may be r eadily available to anyone who w~tsooe. ' The project deserves community s upport Resi- dents should take the time to be immunized and become protected from what could turn out to be a deadly virus. And those willing to volunteer help at clinics or at the end of information telephone lines should contact Hal Maloney at county health offices, 834-4768. Ho.nds AetOS~ the Se~ Your Turn To U>mplete Other HaH Dear· Gloomy Gus Loan Policy Out i11 the Open ~SYDNEY HARRIS) We haven't had a qwz of "In· completed Quotations" for a long time, so here's a juicy dozen for your delectation. Score five points for each quotation you can complete, and another five if you can identify the author. Half right puts you near the head of the class. 1. "The play's the thing .. :· 2. "Power tends to corrupt...'' 3. "Shoot if you must, Uus old. .i.tray head ... •· 4 '0The s1" they do by two and two .... 5. 'Gather ye rosebuds while ye may " 6 "Strike while the iron is :·nt. .. " 7 ... Take the cash. and Jet the credit go ... ·· 8. "But there is no joy in Mud· ville ..... 9. "Things are seldom what theyseem ..... 10. "When the frost is on the punkin ... " 11. "Tbe young man who has not wept is a savage ... " 12 ... If Cleopatra's nose had been a little shorter ... " ANSWERS: 1. • ' .•. Wherein l '11 catch the conscie nce of the king." !Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act II. sc II l 2. " ••• a nd absolute power I don't think the s t ate needed lo spend time on '"The Right to Die Law." Who can afford treatment? ME Gloomy Gus commf'nts •re 'ubm41ted by r••dtn tl1'd do no1 rir-<es.s•rily rwflect IM V••w' ot "'' ftf'W\paper Send YOW' prl't Pttvt to Gloomy Gus. O•llY Piiot. corrupts absolutely.'' (Lord Ac· 1mt.) 3. " ... ·sut spare your coun· try 's fl ag.' s he said/' (John Greenleaf Whittier, Barbara Prietchie. Stanza 18.) 4. ". . they must pay for one by one." (Kipling, Tomlinson.) 5. " ... Old time is still a fly ing." C Robert Herrick. He8J>erldes.) 6. " ... for delay breeds danger.·· (Cervantes. Don Quir· ote, Book IV.) 7. '' ••• Nor heed the rumble of a distant drum." ( FitzGerald, The Rubaiyat of Omar Kyayyam, Stanza 13.) 8. " .•. mighty Casey has struck out." (E . L . Thayer, Casey at the Bat, Stanza 13.) 9. " ... Skim milk masquerades as cream.·· (W. S. Gilbert, .. H.M.S. Pinafore,'' Act.II.) 10. " ••. and the fodder's in the shock.'' (James Whitcomb Riley, When the F rost I& on tM Punkin. 11. • •. . • and the old man who will not laugh is a rool." (George Santayana, Dialogues in Limbo, Chapter Ill.) 12. " .•. the whole history of the world would have been altered." (P ascal, Pen&ees, Section II. No. 162.) UC Regents Knocked Off Perch . The State Supreme Court has tumbled the mighty University of Califorma from the lofty perch upon which 1t tries to sit. aJoor from all law excepting its own . The most recent comedown m· volves a loan of endowment funds without regard to state usury laws. The case involves a $225,000 loan m ade to a private party and secured by a d eed on roya l ties from oil lands owned by the borrower. Whil e it see m e d a straight away 6 percent per annum loan, an option de- manded and exercised as a con- dition of the loan for a one quarter s har e of the royalties. threw ;t into conflict with state law which prohibits any person from entering into a usurious transaction. That Jaw fixes 10 p e rcen t a s the maximum permissible interest. The University's contention that the law didn°t appl,>'to it was lost in the trial court. Now the Supreme Court has ruled right to the point stating, "The Univers1· ty, while a governmental institu- tion and an instrumentality of the stale, is not clothed with the sov ereignty of the state and 1s nol tbe sovereign." THAT FINDING must be a bit· ter pill lo the University and its Regents who have consistently· attempted to operate as though ( EARL WATERS ) the Regents were t he only law. For example. although state law requires all sta te agency contracts and purchases be ex- ecuted through competitive bid- ding procedures, the University has long maintained the law does not apply to it and even refuses lo disclose its cont r acts and purchases to the public. This has prompted an ongoing battle between the University and Senator John Stull of San Diego. For the past several years he has been authoring legislation to make it clear the law applies to U.C. The University maintains a high pow e red lobby in Sacramento just lo fight off such impositions by the lawmakers. But this year Stull won approval for a ballot measure which will ask the voters in November to re- quire UC lo a bide by state bidding laws and make public their transactions. Earlier the Regents bad re- fused to make public the terms or the contract u nder which it employed the U.C. president. It. contended jts disclosure would be "an unwarranted invasion of privacy." A court suitinfluenced a change of mind. Jt also in- fluenced Senator John Nejedly to author legislation which makes it clear that all e mployment con- tracts executed by any publie agency, the University included, are public records. The usury case however serves to once again point up the need for the Legislature to fulfill its r esponsibility and exercise its authority with respect to endow- ment funds under the control of the University. IF ONE wonders how it hap- pened that the Regents made such an unusual loan it only prompts speculation as to other loans as well as the use of the various funds, Already noted is the diversion of funds from .educa- tional purposes to maintain and operate m ansions for the U.C. president and chancellors at no charge whatsoever. In that alone lhe Rege nts are spending up- wards of a half million dollars :a year in a giveaway to a few top · officials, some of whom are paid salaries greater t han the gov- ernor. AND, although one must as- sume lhe Regents are all honora· ble people, the cloak of secrecy which surrounds its handling of investments trom funds ap- proaching a billion dollars pro- vides grounds for suspicion. Could It be tbat the wealthy Regents, with foreknowledge of investments to be made from the f Wlds, find some personal advan· tages for their own financial de- alings? Despite the clear provisions of the const itu tion th a t the Legislature shall exercise "such control as may be necessary to insure compliance with tho terms or endowments and the security of funds" no audit, ex.- amination ot review of these funds has been made by the lawmakers io many a year. if ever. Bubwa Gets a Scoop The debut of Bubwa Watahs on the XYZ Network's evening news as co-a n -( VON HOFFMAN ) Tentative title for this, the first flic• lo pre miere as a T V progr.am and then be made into a 10ovi4, is ''That's News." here? Anwar: Yes, Bubwa, I do. I've saved a little announceinenf just for your opening, debut program. I wanted it to be a little something or substance so the~ couldn't call you a gossiE columnist or a lightweight. Irish Bull Alive and Well c horpe r son is the biggest thin g to happ e n to bro a dca s t journalis m since Captain Kangaroo bad hi s 20t h anniversary. Harvey Bubwa•s ope ni ng week performance set an all-time record for exclusive interviews, bombshells a nd scoops o n consecutive non-weekend news days. Since the news on Bubwa's s hows i s copy righted and intended solely for home us' and e njoym e nt, .it may not be replayed , r e produced o r reprinted without the e~ress permission of the Commissioner of Baseball and the mayor or the city where the scoop took place. BUBWA: America bas no bet ter Criend in your partoCtheworl< than you, Aowah. So what die you save lor me, kid? The Trish bull seems to tram· ple most happily through the china shops of our legislative chambers. There seems an af- ftn i ty between outrageous solecism and m eaningless cant and the men who make our Jaws. This may not be accidental. Most laws read as if they hadn't want.- ed to be passed. The Irish bull, you will rerall, is a "saying that contradicts i'ts e lf, jn a man n er ,P a lp ab l y abs urd to listeners but ,unperceive d by the person w ho m ake ~ it." This form of speech i-. said to be the especial province oft.he Irish. Tms IS NOT SO, or coorse. The Irish have achieved an especial virtuosity in lhls speech pattern, as evidenced by the great Jim McSheehy, the San Francisco Supervisor. McSbeehy ooce in- terrupted a debate on buylng a gondola to dress up Stow Lake in Golden Ga le Park. "Why not buy two gondol as," propo!ied McSbcchy, "and let. nature take its course?" Another m caster d the lrish bull was Som Goldwyn -so. much so thet lbe bulls are now widely known as ColdWyn.isms: .. 111 give you a dcflnitc m~be." Ss one of Sam's more famous. A Jot oC bis 'malaprapisms, be. It. ,_ CHARLES McCABE said, were cooked up in the publicity omces of h.is movie company, nnd not a few wero cribbed fro m the aforesaid .McSheeby. THE lRISH BULL is alive and well in Wash ington. D .C. Searching samples of the art form h ave been collected by Lawrence Harrison, during two years in AlD's Latin American Bureau in Washington. Some of the strange figures of speech he has captured from memos, con- ferences and conversations with bureaucrats . "Now we've got lo flush out the skeleton." "He deals out of both ends or hlsmouth." "Let's do It and listen to how the shoe pinches. "Tbe project is going to pot in a handbasket.'' "We 're breaking :tnto pre. virgin turitory." "Tbey treated bl m as 1r he bad Blue 13onnct plague." HAltRISON RAS REA.RD t veteran bureaucrat 1~. ''.Don't rock the trough." And a govern· mcnt nack nnnounces. "We'll have to be backing and shoveling with tbeact pr~s people." A sltaln that appears to go through bureavcratic talk is the Jmage. bf anim als. :·0oo' nag dead horses." "It was a case of the tail biting the dog." "He's feathering his own bed.·· And, or anideahst, ''He's a Don Coyote.'' THESE ARE MOSTLY ju~t sloppy talk, the result of sloopy trunking. They do not have the ••pregnant" quality of the true Irish bull. Such as when the great Charles Stewart Parnell said at a Dublin meeting of lawmakers, "Gentlemen, it appears to be un· · animous that we cannot agree.·• Or the begging linker who asked for alms on the Dublin streets with the plea, "Help me. kind sir. J"m the mother of five children and a sick husband." When she got her litUepourboire, s he burst out with gratitude, ·'May you never live to see your mother a widow!·• SOME 0 F TR E B ETTE R known or lbe Irish bull smell sli~btly of the lamp. "He lay at death ·s d oor, and the dotlor pulled him through.·· "We find the m an who stole t.he horse not guilty:· "Half the lies people tell about me aren 'l true." Goldbrick. XVZ's board chairman. said that Bubwa is his network's a nswer to the Six Million Dollar Man -a Five Million Dolla r Woman. ..Just as XYZ bas forged into tbe entertainment lead by bringing the viewing audience the best In crime, so we're sparing no e~pense to give TV viewers the finest and most coslly in journalism." Mr. Goldbrick said in announcing Bubwa's debut. .. But even as grea t a journalistic s tar as Bubwa Watahs, with her knowledge. her experience, her brilliant news judgment isn't enough. You need depth to win in news, so t.hAt Miss Watahs is being backed up by two chauffeurs. a hair st ylist. Oscar de la Renta, a ward.robe s eam s tress. a cordon bleu French gourmet-type chef, t.hree r eporters to rhd the teletype· machines and t.wo writers so Bubwa will always h ave something to say.•• BUBWA'S DEBUT exceeded A few more from the district, H a rv e y Goldbric k's bes t as collected by Harrison: expectations. It. wu so &ood that "The problem started small, for the first ttme tn television 'but it was baseballing. •• tu "lt all becomes a mute ques· story a network will be selling ti .. Its old news l)rograms for on. afternoon reruns. The deal on ''I'm not going to bail out hts. rerun ayndlcaUon isn't. u t yet chestnuts." • becau,,e MGM is tryil1c to buy .. Tbey were raking hitn over the rt4hts lo Bubwa's shows so the ropes... th•t they c:an be ed.lt.ed for movie "Since we can't handle it now; house dfslribuUoo .s a sequel to Jct't lcave It to prosperity ·• t"lbal'a Enlcrt41.nment.•• . ' SO WE CAN only gife you snippets without having to pay royalties. XVZ does allow a synopsis and a few quot.es for people who don't want to wait for the reruns, so h ere is the juicy part of the opening night. e xclusive Anwar Sad a t interview: i Bubwa : Anwah , l 'm glad you're my first intcrwoo on the first nighL or m!1 big news sbow. This gray-haired man silting nei.t lo me is named .Rawie. He helps me. Anwah. 1 Anwar: Dellghted to meet you. Hawle, and Bubwa. my dear, everybody in Africa from Leso tho to Zimbabwe i s delighted that you bave got a show of your own. J' warms my heart and of Madame Sadat wbo longs lor a sbow oC her own also. almos t as much •• a new shlpmcntoClhe latcstmlsslles. Bubwa: Anwah, or Mr. Pwesldent. as I shQUld call you ~en lhouah you and I are on clo,,er terms tban my colle.,ue lf<r*ard Cosell and Muhammad All, Mr. ~~Id~ do you have ,any ne:-• for ~. Gomelhlng weally fweah ad aclt.log wblch will lntercat tbe people bact i' Anwar: I 'm t aking thh occasion to announce that in fiv( minutes we're going to war wlU Israel again. Bubwa: Hawie!!! DtdyoubeaJ that? Oh, Anwah, bowcanleve1 thank you? And so a scoop was born. bet that first d ebut woek wai stunning scoop after atunnlfta scoop. The next nigh.t the Cblnet111 u sed Bubwa's program t' i ntroduce Mao Tse-tun1•1 successor, Chairman Too Dant Fat, who asked Uthe decisloa a Nixon w as final or did be IUl have a chance? ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Room N. Wttd. P\lbll$h('1' Thomoa Kttvfl, F.dllor Barbaro KTdf>tdt, Editorial Paga Edltt1r 'nle editorial page or the Dru'ly Pilot set'ks to i nform a nd Sllmulate readers by presenting •on this page diverse commentary on topics of interest by gyndkat,. ed columnlst11 and nrtoonlsts, by providlria a Corum for rudt!t"S' views ond by presenUng lhis nrwspapct"s opinions and ideas on current topics. The l'ditorial opinions of the Oaily Pilot tip~nr only in th(' editorial column oi lhe top or the p:ice. Opinions ex· press{'() by the columnlsu and c:artoonJsts and lettu writtn are tht'1r own and no eY1dontmcnt oC lheir vlt>ws by tho Dlil.Y Pil°'-1thould be inferred. Tuesday. October 12. ms r- 1 Turtle, Dare I I ' ' I , r 1 ' l I • ' I ' ' l t r I I , ' I ( t t " . A ,, 'I ~ f I II ;,, l·· .. .. ... ••• ... .... • c '·' ·' .. , .. .. , Twmey Races, Hayaka'Wa Plods ... By DOUG Will.JS Al"l"•llU~.iWrl ... \J.S. Sen. John TUMey is on the at· tack lo his re-election campaign and running bard to stay even with the quiet and slow-paced challenge by R epublican S.I. Hayakawa. Que ideas, •• a reminder or his oppo nent's age. The GOP challenger is a surprising- ly strong 70-year-old newcomer to politics whose campaign is based on the national fame he won eight years ago when, as n ewly appointed college president, he que lled a violent student strike at San Francisco State College. I N RECENT WEEKS, Tunney has gained some ground and no longer trails in polls. But the incumbent's 5 ( NEW . ANALl'SIS ) , percentage point lead in the l atest California Poll is not enough to be comfortable . Republicans rate Tunney as one of the most vulnerable Democrats up for r e-election to the Senate this year. and the 42-year·old son of former world heavyweight boxing champion Gene Tunney readily agrees that he has a tough race. Although each candidate is viewed as a moder ate in his own party, an· tagonizing respectively the far left and far right, the Tunney-Hayakawa campaign revolves around traditional philosophical divisions between Democrats and Republicans. TUNNEY SAYS HAYAKAWA is in· sensitive to the needs of the people and that Hayakawa favors business and special interests. Hayakawa says Tunney is a big 5pender, and he blames Tunney and Democrats 10 g eneral for a bloated federal bureaucracy. Aside from that predictable cam- paign posturing, there are a few uni· que issues coloring the Tunney· Hayakawa race. Hayakawa d aily lists 10 issues on which Tunney switched positions, such as national health care and of· fshore oil drilling, and hils labeled Tunney "Sen. Flip-Fl op." He a b;o at· tacks Tunney'i. absenteeism from the Senate, citing in particular two well · publicized vacation trips during sessions TUNNEY llAS SEI ZED on }{ayakawa's proposal that juvenile crime could be r educed if child labor and minimum w age laws arc relaxed to create more jobs for youths. And Tunney recites a Hayakawa quote, •'There's no r eason to fear exploita· tfon if you destroy the minimum wage. The.moment you feel exploited, you can qwt." Tunney cites that as evidence Hayakawa is "an elillst" with "anti· F111tds Not Voted But the traditional roles of lncum bent and challenger have been r versed in the Tunney-Hayakawa rac IT IS THE incumbent who is putti in the 14 ·tO·l6·hour campaign da and is making a campaign issue of opponent's r eluctance to debate. T ney has taken to debating a tam shanter, Hay akawa's :.ymbol, dramatize the point that Hayakaj has turned down 30 of 31 offers of l9 appearances. And Hayakawa, the c hallenge parceling out campaign appeara acting confid ent the voters know and will vote for him on the b his record. The reason for the reversal roles, in Tunney 's words, is tha running against a folk hero " HE JS REFERRING to the m ing of Dec. 2, 1968. when Hayaka the newest in a series of interim esi· dents of San Fr anc1sco State, bed to the roof of a sound truck, o ated illegally by leaders of a stude 'ke and yanked the wires fr the speakers before a battery or t ision and newspaper cameras. ,.. Among Hayakawa support , nine out of 10 cite that incident f when asked why they support . And Hayakawa takes every op nHy to remind voters of ''the bat of San Francsisco Stale." On the slump, llayaka unlikely figure for a ca ate. A Can adian -born hem a cist of Japanese ance~try, he te lo give speeches which sound hk assroom lectures in a thin, almost ispcring voice, AFTER RUSHI NG TIUUGH lhe "Sen. f1ip·Flop" attack Tunney written by his camprugn nsultants, Hayakawa often turns s ubjects such as the historic pef1?clives of the two parties, wtuch hfys differ in psychology more th In objec· lives. or to analysis of t merican "national experience." But on most issuesf ayakawa sticks to the generally servative Republican party plalfor Tunney's ca mpui~n i ocuscd on traditional Democratic 1'cs · cthmc groups. labor. liberals, i! poor and students. But the campa• is in large part a n effort to p~h up dif· ferences with some of thqgroups. ALTHOUGH ENER~IC for 70, Hayakawa limits hjms to two or three a ppearances a da nd he rests or sleeps during most the travel time between appearan~. Tunney is a non-st~ampaigner and a traditional slu orator. An athletic, energetic, e nsing jog- ger. he sometimes era eight to 10 appearances into a day • Water Effort Drying Up WASHINGTON (AP) -Thirty.four states with water pollution control programs will run out of federal funds because of failure of the House and Senate to agr ee on continuing legislation, says Sen. Edmund S. Muskie CD-Maine). Muskie said efforts to --------- agr~ on a compromise bill to extend the federal water pollution construction gr ants for a year wi th a SS billion autho r ization failed because the House "in· sisted on adding to this s imple funding ex- tension bill a series of s pecial interest pro- visions which can only be characterized as en· . vironmental pork bar. rel." HE SAID HE hopes. the H ouse wil l coope r a te e arly ne xt year in passing leglsla· ti on. Muskie listed what he said were the states m a post-adjournment is· sue of the Congressional Record. He sai d M ai n e , Hawaii, Nebraska, New Mexico and Wyoming could be out of funds this month. t:AtU.lt:ST runoll1 detn lor oe• Sle4H -·· 11\t...i ·~ OK41mber, 1916. North 0.l(oq...., Ore<JOft. ~ry, Hn: AlebMne Al•~•. Aflt-. ColOredo, Del•••••. l<ldl>O. '""-· N..., Jer~y. Tn•\, VI•" -w.s111nv1on MA"°'· 1'17: llllnol<, Ml-I• ~n. "" Ar ... nw\, c.111orn1•, Mlulutoo•. Mon1~n• .,,d Nt w H~I,.., Mty. 1977· O.or•I• lu~e 1•11 · North C•roh"'1 <1nd Ono .),ily, 101 Flor•a~ low• N•w v.,,.. and Rllod• hl.\na S101~m~r. 101 W1\4on,1n THI ~AllOIAHAS ONLY COID CLUI • • • • ForMett&W .... Phone 31-2000 se ask for "'AY" .... _ "' ~ ..... . ~ off er to buy fUr old vehicle. WN ARO Chevrolet RUNNING FAST John Tunney .... PLODDING ALONG S. I. Hayakawa Tuesday Oetober 12. 1978 DAILY PILOT A 1 'America is Unhappy' Russian Audience Tours U.S. via TV MOSCOW <AP) -"Look at their races: nobody took his viewers down Broadway. "Here we see 'a is smiling. Life is not happy for the people who live lot of glitter anti poverty, rosy hopes and lost il· among the riches or America." luslons, noisy entertainment and silent despair,''~ With these words, commentator Valentin Zorin said. concluded a nine-part tour of American cities that To Zorin, New York is typified by big business has been aired here on Kremlin-controlled of Wall Street. ostentatious wealth of Fifth Avenue television during the U.S. election season, a time and thepovertyoltheuowery . when Russians struggle to understand their rich In the earlier installments, Zorln made these and turbulent riv al. observations about other American cities: -The proud history embodied In Philadelphia's A SPOKESMAN FOR CENTRAL Television monuments is mocked by the squalor of its slums. estimated that each program of the prime·time and the great ideals ot lhe DecJaraUon ot Jndepen- series was seen by roughly M million people. dence are forgotten. · "There is something very rotten at the core of a -San Francisco is n collection of ethnic ghet· social system which increases its wealth without re· tos, demonstrating that the American melting pot ducing poverty. and in which crime increases more has gone cool and that only a handful or •· 100 per· rapidly than the population," Zorin s aid, quoting cent Americans .. live privileged Jives. Karl Marx, in the fi nal installmenllast weekend. -And in California, Disneyland Is "a marvel of He concluded his series, tiUed "America in the kindness, joy nnd love·• that only emphasizes the 'yos," in New York City, which he said exhibits "all fact that "kindness is one of lhe most deficient the problems that are tearing America apart,": qualities in the United States." crime unemptorment, pollution, racial prejudke ~xx:i~:iC:>C=cM:iCM:>:=tlr-;;;;;;;--~~=:=:=:=-.-and crumbling cities. ~ WITH HIS CAMERA U NGERING on the faces ~ ~9;n THE of New Yorkers, Zorin said, "Their faces are im· ~'4, .-/ printed with their anxieties and troubles. There is NOMI AllNISH ... Gs little joy, it seems, not only for the poor but for those For the best deal who would seem to have no troubles. "Their faces are an illustration or the Russian °" ~ proverb, 'Money can't buy happiness'," he said. • WAUPAPERS The people of the Soviet Union are acutely • DRAPERIES aware of the gap in wealth between their nation and • LEVOLORS the United Stales; they often use lhe American • WOVEN WOODS standard of living as a gauge for their own pro· • CARPETING gress. BUT ZORI N RIDICULED THE notion that the !!!!j 030FOFYo! -average American is well-to-do, saying, "There are three kinds of lies: lies, big lies and statistics. Oh. 1500 4ct.is •••·· 54.lt• 205 those American statistics! They average out their Costa MeM rich and their poor and arrive at figures to prove ccw. Horttor & 46-s their prosperity." 2nd Roor a ... Emphasizing his theme that there is a spiritual CALL 557·5153 emptiness beneath America's gaudy exterior, Zorin PLUMllHG HEATING AIR COHD. n•••wt• .. .,__, Serv•c.e In You• A.•ed-Glll Ml!.StON VIEJO 189~2 Ciam1no c:.01 ·''Jl"U I '-ll"~t')f·-, '' !\,.,,r\••' 495·0401 COSTA MESA 1~~6 Newport 91vd 642-1753 KITCHEN Ir IATH REMODELING FREE ES TIM A TES See 01i't OtlPI••• al ,A"l,A'i(IM•Ml\IN Qrf'ICt. IS.ll\'I Ltn...u :i A," for l11i1 •• 772-3470 . • f • • J ! I ., ' I ' • I 11 ! ART AND TOM AND 'MIKE LEARN SOMETHING THAT CONCERNS YOU The business executive, the government official and th~ little boy wit h a problem, shared a lesson in Orange County. What they learned i~ something you should know-in your own selfish interest. They learned about the gift that gives back. That gift is your contribution, your full share to United Way, the community program that acquires funds to help finance 76 public service agencies in Orange County ... boy scouts, girl scouts, menta l health, family service, youth employment...agenci es that continually give counsel, care a nd comfort to one out of three residents of this county. Your gift comes back to you either in United Way services or in the knowledge that your co~munity, your neighborhood and your neighbor may be stronge r-physically or emotiona.lly~thanks to United Way. Art Fretwell, kneeling, is \i . prominent Orange County busi ness executive and currently chairman of the United Way campaign; Supervisor Tom Riley was chairman three years ago, and Mike, well, he really knows about United Way. Money collected when Tom was chairman provided therapy so Mike Martinez can talk today-well e nough to say lo udly and clearly: "Thank you:' A UnltadW.y ~ • of Orange County ~- 3903 Metropolitan Drive, Suite 500 Orange. California 92668 (714) 634·2252 (714) 834-1461 ' I I Number 31 li:t a series of public service advertisements sponsored by Avco Anancial Services, Newport Beach, ~llfom· r-1 u j f t I ' , J • I • ( f I l , ' ·- 'f ,• u. , .. t:· .. ,,, ... t" ~· ·-.... ~ .. Turtle, Dare Twuiey Races, Hayakawa Plods By DOUG WILLIS "' ,.i111ca1•1~ \J.S. Sen. John Tunney is on the at- tack in bis re-election campaign and running hard to stay even with the quiet and slow-paced challenge by Republican S.I. Hayakawa . The GOP challenger is a surprising- ly strong 70-year-old newcomer to politics whose campaign is based on the national fame be won eight years ago when, as newly appointed college president, he quelled a violent student strike at San Francisco State College. JN RECENT WEEKS, Tunney has gained some ground and no longer trails in polls. But the incumbent 's s ( NEWSANA L YS IS J , percentage point le3d in the latest California Poll is not enough to be comfortable. Republicans r ate Tunney as one of the most vulnerable Democrats up for re·election to the Senate th.is year, and the 42·year-old son of former world heavyweight boxing champion Gene Tunney readily agrees that he has a tough race. Although each candidate is viewed as a moderate in his own party, an· tagonizing respectively the far left and far right, the Tunney-Hayakawa campaign revolves around traditional philosophical divisions between Democrats and Republicans. TUNNEY SAYS HAYAKAWA is in· sensitive lo the needs of the people and that Hayakawa f~vors business and special interests. Hayakawa says Tunney is a big spender . and he blames Tunney and Democrats in general for a bloated federal bureaucracy. Aside from that predictable cam- "'f>aign posturing, there are a few uni- que issues coloring the Tunney· Hayakawa race. Hayakawa daily lists 10 issues on which Tunney switched positions. such as national health care and of- fshore oil drilling, and hfls I abelcd Tunn<'y "Sen. F1 ip-F1 op." He also at. tacks TQnney's absenteeism from the Senate, citing in i>articular two well· publicized vacation trips during sessions. TUNNEY H AS SEIZED o n llayakawa's proposal t hat juvcnalc crime could be reduced if chi ld labor and minimum wage laws are relaxed to create more jobs for youths. And Tunney r ecites a Hayakawa quote, •"There's no reason to fear exploita- tion if you destroy the minimum wage. The moment you feel exploited, you can quit." Tunney c ites that as evidence Hayakawa is "an elitist" with "anti· F111tds Not Voted ~ que ideas," a reminder oC bis oppo- nent's age. But the traditional roles of incum- bent and cltallenger have been re- versed in tbe Tunney-Hayakawa race. IT IS TH E incumbent who is putting in the 14-to-16-hour campaign days and is m aking a campaign issue of his opponent's reluctance to debate. Tun- ney has taken to debating a tam-o'· shanter , H ayakawa's symbol, to dramatize the point that Hayakawa has turned down 30 of 31 offers of joint appearances. And Hayakawa. the challenger, 1s parceling out campaign appearances, acting confident the voters know him and will vote for him on the basis of his record. The r eason for the reversal of the roles, in Tunney's words, is that "I'm running against a folk hero." HE IS REFERRING to the morning of Dec. 2, 1968, when Hayakawa. the newest in a series of interim presi- dents of San Francisco State, climbed to the roof of a sound truck, operated illegally by lead ers of a student strike and yanked the wires from the speakers befor e a battery of television and newspaper cameras. • Among Hayakawa supporters, nine out of 10 cite that incident first when asked why they support him. And Hayakawa takes every opportunity to remind voters of "the baWe of San Francsisco Slate.'· On the s tump, Hayakawa cuts an unlikely figure for a candidate. A Can adian-born hC manticisl o r Japanese ance:.try. he tends to give speeches which sound like rlassroom lectures in a thin, almost whis pering voice. AFl'ER RUSHING THROUGH the "Sen. Flip-Flop" attack on Tunney written by his campaign consultants, Hayakawa often turns to subjects such as the historic perspectives of the two parties, which he says differ in psychology more than in objec- tives. or lo analysis of the American "national experierfce. •· But on most issues, Hayakawa sticks to the gener ally conservative Republican party platform Tunney's campaign is foc used on traditional Democr atic bases: cthnie groups, labor. Ii hcrals. lhc poor and students. But the ramp;.ijgn is in large part an effort to patch up dif· ferences with someofthosrgroups. ALTHOUGH ENERGETIC for 70, Hayakawa limits himself to two or three appearances a day, and he rests or sleeps during mos t d the travel time between appearances. Tunney is a non-stop campaigner and a traditional stump orator. An athletic, energetic, earl)• rising jog- ger, he sometimes crams eight to 10 appearances into a day . -------- 1977 CARS & TRUCKS . Water Effort Drying Up WASHINGTON <AP) -Thirty-four slates with water pollution control programs will run out of federal funds because or failure of the House and Senate to agree on continuing legislation, s ays Sen. Edmund S. Muskie CD-Maine). Muskie said efforts lo --------- All makes! 833-0555 Please ask for "RAY"~ .. agree on a compromise bill to extend the federal water pollution construction gr ants for a year with a $5 .billion author ization failed because the House "in· sisted on adding to this s impl e fundi n g ex- tension bill a series of s pecial interest pro- visions which can only be characterized as en- Junt, ,.,, . Nortr. Caroh"" dnd °""' We off er to buy your old vehicle. . vironmental pork bar· rel." HE SAID H E hopes.. t h e Hou se wil l cooperate early next year in passing legisla- tion. Muskie listed what he sa.id were the states in a post-adjournment is- sue of the Congressional Record. He said Maine. Hawaii, Nebraska, New Mexico and Wyoming could be out of funds this month. llA .. LllST rultOvl d1tes for ot~ ~'al"M,.11\1~ H ! O.umber, ""' North O•k~ -Or... ' J•-•Y. 1'77: Al•lktma, Alot1i<•, Atlt-. Coloredo, O.l•w1re. 1c111no, ....-;MM, Now Jersey. T Ha~ IJl•h 411111 -~lnglOfl. MAllCH, tt77· lll•l'IOI\, Ml-t.t Alltll. lt17 Ark•""'· C.ll•om••, MIHIJ\IPol, Montan• •nd N•" H~••· .kily, 107 Flo"o •. Iowa Nt w YMll AM llr.oo. l•l•nc! StoltmMr, "" M1tll1Qan •nO Wl1o40M1n THI lllAllOI AHAS ONLY COID CLUI HOWARD Chevrolet For M"' & W~ -1 Dt1p • w.- ,, RUNNING FAST John Tunney _.. PLODDING ALONG S. I. Hayakawa Tue!day Oetobe< t2. 1076 DAILY PILOT' A 1 'America i,s Unhappy' Russian Audience Tours U.S. via TV MOSCOW (AP)-"Look atlheir races: nobody took his viewers down Broadway. "Here we see a is smiling. Life is not happy for the people who live lot of glitter anll poverty, rosy hopes and lost ii· among the riches of America." I us ions, noisy entertainment and silent despair," 'f With these words, commentator Valentin Zorin said. concluded a nine-part tour of American cities that To Zorin, New Yor~ is typified by big business has been a ired here on Kremlin-controlled of Wall Street, ostentatious weallh oI Fifth Avenue television during the U.S. election season, a Ume and thepovertyo!thebOwery. when Russians struggle to understand their rich In the earlier installments, Zorln m ade these and turbulent rival. observations about other American cities: -The proud history embodied in Phlladelphla's A SPOKESMAN FOR CENTRAL Television monuments Is mocked by the squalor of its slums, estimated that each program ot the prime·time and the great ideals ot lhe Declaration of lndepen- series was seen by roughly i.> million people. dence are forgotten. · "There is something very rotten at the core or a -San Francisco is a collection of ethnic ghet- soclal system which increas~ its wealth without re-tos, demonstrating that the American melting pot ducmg poverty, and in which crime increases more has gone cool and that only a handful of "HIO per· rapidly than the population," Zorin said, quoting cent Americans" live privileged lives. Karl Marx, in the final installment last weekend. -And in California, Disneyland Js "am nrvel of He concluded his series, titled "America in the kindness, joy and love" that only emphasizes the 'yos," in New York City, which he said exhibits "all fact that "kindness is one of th~ most deficient the problems that are tearing America apart,": qualities )n tHe United States." ~ crime unem pt or ment, pollution, r acial prejudice ~:X>Sc;;cxM:socXi~:iljO;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiii._;;;;;;;;;;o;;:;;;;;-. and crumbling cities. J1 WIT H HIS CAMERA U NGERING on the faces "7/ ~ THE of New Yorkers, Zorin said, ''Their faces are im-f"i~'4-./ printed with their anxieties and troubles. There is Ho.o!IJUa~s little joy. it seems, not only for the poor but for those For tt.e best deGi who would seem to have no troubles. ''Their faces are an illustration of the Russian °" '* proverb, 'Money can'tbuy happiness'." he said. • WAllPAPERS The people or the Soviet Union are acutely • DRAPERIES aware or the gap in wealth between their nation and • LEVOlORS the United States; they often use the American • WOVEN WOODS standard of living as a gauge for their own pro-• CARPETING gress. BUT ZORIN RIDICULED THE notion that the ~ 30°/o • average American is well-to-do, saying, "There are iiilil OFF! three kinds of lies: lies, big lies and statistics. Oh, 1500 44-n A••·· 5'.lt. 20s those American statistics! They average out their Costa Me.a rich and their poor and arrive at figures to prove c or. HwNr & A4- their pros perity.·· Zttd R-a ... E mphasizing his theme that there is a s piritual CALL 557-5153 emptiness beneath America's gaudy exterior, Zorin PLUMllHG HfATIHG All COHD. ............ .. ,__, Servk4t In V0v1 "'" t-Ca1' Ml!.!>ION Vlf JO 119~2 C.m1no c... "' ·" ,."'.> f Uf'I().. ~I·-• 't' A #I' ,.' 495-0401 COSTt.MCSI\ 1!1.:tfi Nttwnull OlvJ 642-1753 ICITCHEH Ir IA TH REMODELING FREE ESTIMATES $•• 0Vf OltPI••• at ""'"H(IM" ........ or (•Cl 1~33 .V L ' t A .to '<>' l ~f <t I 772-1470 •. . I )• . ' I • . '• . \ • i ART AND TOM AND "MIKE LEARN SOMETHING THAT CONCERNS YOU The business executive, th e government official and th~ little boy with a problem, shared a lesson in Orange County. What they learned i~ something you should know-in your own selfish interest They learned about the gift that gives back. That gift is your contribution, your full share to United Way, the community program that acquires fund s to help finance 76 public service agencies in Orange County ... boy scouts, girl scouts, mental health, family service, yo uth employment...agencies that continually give counsel, care and comfort to one out of three residents of this county. Your gift comes back to you either in United Way services or in the knowledge that your comm unity, your neighborhood and your neighbor may be stronger-physic ally or emotiona_lly --thanks to United Way. Art Fretwell, kneeling, is \' prominent Orange County business executive and currently chairman of the United Way campaign; Supervisor Tom Riley was chairman three years ago, and Mike, well, he really knows about United Way. Money collected when Tom was chairman provided therapy so Mike Martinez can talk today-well enough to say loudly and clearly: "Thank you:' A Un•t•dw.y ~ lllllllllJJS of Orange County ~- 3903 Metropolitan Drive. Suite 500 Orange. Califomla 92668 (714) 634 -2252 (714) 834 -1461 . • Number 31 In a series of public service advertisements sponsored by Avco Anancial Services, Newport Beach, Callfom· . . .. 4 8 DAILY PILOT T u°'d ey.October12. 1978 Buyer Stu•p ed 01.,er Tree• DEAR PAT: I have a complaint regarding American Consumer Inc.. Philadelphia, Pa. On March 21, I sent a $21 check for 10 trees and a nother for $4.30 Cor some plants. Both checks were cashed March 16. 1 waited untiJ June 12 to inquir e by certified letter. No answer was received. The same thing happened with four more certified letters. Seedless to say, no merchandise has been received. Sot only have I put out $25.30 for those orders, but l've also paid $10.20 for postage. J .M., Costa Mes a Although American Consumer bas been a r e· peat complaint source foe this column since 1913, Its customer service representative was most cooperative In tracking down your records. She not· ed that yoar certified letters, only some ol wbkb had been rttelved, did not bear "return receipt re· quested" markings. Your plants were malled July '.!, and your later letters were answered Sept. 23. If your plants still have not arrived, and yoa wish to receive a refund, this can be arranged. Direct your tefwrd request, with a copy of the lront and back of both canceled checks, to Phyllis Stevens at \merican Consumer's customer service depart- ment. Mall order plant shipments often are de· layed antU the most suJtable time In the growing 'ieHOD is reached. Mall order companies should ln· Cotm the consumer of this procedure, but they don't, Urlf n e Con1plaint11 Accep ted DEAR PAT: Do the airlines in this country have a trade association where consumers can sub- mit complaints? C. G., Dana Point Yes, the airlines' business and proresslonal as- sociation is called the AviaUon Consumer Action Panel. Its address is 13-16 Connecticut Ave .• Wasblngton, DC 200~. &crow A ddre1111 Cor reel.ed DEAR PAT: The infor mation that appeared in your Sept. 20 column about where to complain re- gar<ling escrow problems should have given 600 S. Commonwealth Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90005, as the mailing address for the Department of Corpora-tions. \ E.E., Los Angeles Thanks for the correctJon. The Department of Corporations also offers service to consumers in the regulation or credit anions, mooey order com- panies, loa11 companies, thrift and loan companies, Ucensed debt counselors, broker·dealers, invest· ment advisers and tradlng stamp companJ~, in ad· cUtlon to escrow companies, through Its licensing and examining divlsloa. The phone number in Los Angeles ls (213) 736·27il. Depo sit Bo.~e• R eally S ate DEAR PAT: I have heard that banks have a key to their safe deposit boxes, and that they can get. mto them whenever they wish. l s this true? I L.E Laguna llills No. A spokesman for the CallfornJa Banking Department. says that although the bank bu a I master key to one part of Its safe deposit Jock : systems, each box holder bas his own separate key. 1 The box cannot be opened unless both keys are used simultaneously. If a box holder does not r enew his rental after one year, or lf he should die leaving no one in char ge or his estate, other procedures go Into effect. A representative or tbe county assessor's of· flee must be present whUe the safe deposit bo:s Is drilled open and the bank uses Its master key. All contents of the boir then are held by the baat for seven years, U no claim Is made by a leglUmate representative of tbeortglnal box bolder. Death Notfce11 D e ath Notlce11 JAHLElt ti.11ortTlle\df'1•111•00-.0ttlet~I WllllAMA.2AHLf;A,pe __ .., An. ICW!ley l"rtnl.-n of Pflnu of Oct. II, 1'76. Rosi"""' ol Cost. ~ "-K• LU1,.,.r•n Cllurc,., lnt.,.,..nt M CA Mr. z.111 ... I\ JUrYIV9d bp ... ,. e.r. Hart>Or A"I Memorlaf P•rll. DI-• ByO.C. mJSrlNGS 0t..,.0•1t•f'l•Md Assembly candidate Dennis Maneers, the Huntington Beach Democrat who is trying to unseat Huntington Beach Republican Robert Burke in the 73rd dJslrtct , claims to have laid shoe leather on every one of lhe367 precincts in thedJslrict. Mangers ' walking campaign began last February and continued on a part·lime basis until the primary election in June when he took a leave of absence from his Job to campaign full-time. The 73rd Assembly District covers Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Huntington Harbour, Rossmoor, Seal Beach (including t.eisure World), Sunset Beach, Surfside and portions of Westminster and Costa Mesa. "I am on my third set o( shoe soles, have lost nine pounds and have b~en bitten by dogs in addition to encoun- tering other hazards raced by door·t<>- door sales persons," Mangers re· called. He says the purpose or it. all is to build up bis na me identity. • • • REPUBLICANS ARE planning a fundraiser Wednesday night in Newport Beach for Santa Ana school board member Peter Vogel, who is trying to unseat Democrat Richard Robinson in central Orange County's 72nd Assembly Distnct. Congressman Barry Goldwalt'r Jr. ts expected al the 6 lo tip. m. reception at the home or Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Hawkins. THE BALBOA BAY R epublican Women will hear from GOP can· did ates Robert Badbam and Jame~ Slemons when they gather tor corr~ at 1.0 a.m. Wcdn eaday. Badham ls seek in g the 40th Congressional District seat. Slemons is running for the 74th Assembly Dis· trict s~at that Badham is vacaUng. Wednesday's meeting lwm be at Glendale Federal SnviDjs and Loan ofrices at 100 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. The public is invited. ••• THE WEEKLY strategy meeting of South Orange County Democrats is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Tiny Naylor's Restaurant in San Juan Capistrano. Planning for a Democratic victory party is on the agenda. ••• DAVE WALD, Peace and Fl-eedom Party candidate for the U.S. Senate, will speak Thursday a t noon at Orange Coast College. Wald will speak in the OCC Quad. Admission is free. The pubU c is invit· ed. A question and answer session will follow Wald's speech . A former merchant seaman and trade union activis t (Nation al Maritime Union), Wald has also worked as a research scientist. and de· velopment engineer. He holds degrees in en g ineering and has taught mathematics at San J ose City College. The Peace and Freedom Party i'I affiliated nationally with the People's Party. School Trustees Seek County District Seat Two West Or ange County school trustees arc competing for one of three sC<tb open on the Orangt> County Committ ee o n School Distr ict Organization. Both Fountain VaJley School Dis· lrict Trustee Sheila Meyers, an in· cumbent on the committee, and Zita Wessa, a Huntington Bench Union High School District trustee, were nominated tor an at large committee post. OF.FICIALS OF the Orange County Department or Education said Dewey Wiles, a Westminster School District trustee. was nominated for a position representing tbe first supervisorial dJstrict. The nominations 'were made during a meeting by r epresentatives or all county school districts. The election will beheld next Wednesday. The county committee is responsi· ble for bearing such matters as school district boundary changes and plans for consolidating or elementary and high school districts. MRS. MEYERS was nominated by Fountain Valley school trustees, while 'Mrs. Wessa was nominated by a representative or her school board. Wiles was suggested by Ocean View School District trustees, county of· ficials said. Nominations for f~·year commit· tee terms include: " -At large, Sheila Meyers, Zita We!SSa and Donald Daniels of the Orange Unified School District. -FIRST supervisorial district, in· cumbent Phil Robertson of Santa Ana, Dewey Wiles, and Sam Sandoval of the Rancho Santiago Communily College District. -Third supervisorial district. in· t'Umbent Raymond Lanctot of Pl accn· Lia and Bob Simpson, Lowell Joint School District. Polka Club Plans Dance A masquerade dance will be h e l d by the Orange County Polka Club Saturday. OQO~£~ 9\~ ~""' The dance will be from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m . at the Santa Ana Moose Lodge, 171S. Lyon St. ( L. M. BOYD ) INFORMS In the IM IY 3 P.M. OUT IY I A.M. THE COPY STOP 430 I llrch-Wte S H...,.. IMdi Ct, Airp.rtl 751-1050 ty J. z.i.r ... ; de1191111r, Su~n MufOot" Belt 8'-o Mortuir.,. of ~ .. ~nt~ C•. ·~~·. ~~ CUTSINGEA L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Zelll •• o f Ml nno\Ol<1 ; \IC JAMFS c CUTSINGER. l)e\\"<I orendclllfd r•n ; """" 9 rf'.tl• 8wey 0tl 10, "'" A•~odonl o!Co<.la ~tnd<lllldr•n S.rvl(•\ W•dnoo'-""Y t i /Vll"VJ, Ca Survived l>Y "'I"' AudA 2 00 PM a1 s.11 Bro.,dw~~ Cl\8.pel, v•\· ~n Of ~n J~linlo; •-l>rOlhH\, ----------William Cul\ln<)f'r of Ju...:llon Otv. DAILY PILOT BAL TZ·BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 6 73-9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 BELL BROADWAV MORTUARV 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 McCORMICK MORTUARV l.aouna Beach 494.94' 5 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARI< Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Oriva Newoort. Caltfornia 644-2700 PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL .. HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893.:1525 SMITHS' MORTUARY 627 Main SI. HuntlngtOtJ Beach 538-6539 SMITH TUTHILL LAMB OUR W!STCLIFF CHAPEL Mortuary • • 846-4&888 4 27 E. 17th SL, CO.ta Mosa Kan, .. ; O.arln Cu"lno•r of Aafof'd, llllnoh. Prtval• lemllp \e"'k:" -. Mid. Tllos" wllo '""" may m•-• mtmotlal conlrlbvUons 10 The Hear1 rund. Directors Bell Boredwey WrlUMy, GLASGOW VIRGI NIA (GINO GLASGOW, •1"11• dl'nl ot Huntlnqlon fl~ACh, CA 9"1<1W<1 "'""And molfll>r. Survlv•d bV "'1<bftnd Fredric Gl•eoow; two !>Orn, l't!illll Gld•oow: Steve n Gtasoow; two dAUQl\lerl Cerol Sllullr: Sle!ll'•nl Mccord; one o renddauolllor Siie• ""'111; lhrM slst~rs Connie MMtln; Juli. l"lilll•.teh; end Vlclorle ~r ell OI Y'•"""°°· A°'41r'I •:OO PM T .. t- day Otl. 11, 1,7& MfU t :OO AM Wito- _..,Oct I), 1'16; llolll 81 Hol'I F-· ly C•lhollc Chu""· U 71h and Cl11r-del•, Arlf\IA, c ... Oe You"' Ari••!" Mo rlue ry d lreclon. 11131 li~IKJ. 0.MALIONON DORIS E ~ MALIGNOH, ...-S- ••Y Oct. t, "76 lle\l~nt Of s.r.1• "'""• Cl Suo 1"9ct by Pou•-H.trry Ot MtllQllOn ; lwo fOllJ, Rlcllerd; Ro bert O• M•lltnon, ,,. tr•nclclltt<l r •l'I: ten O•••I · O"tfldc:l'lllOrwn Prlv•I• s.,.,,kes _, ,,.Id •I Onc111y Brol,..n MortlNn'. ,"" &.kl'I 81¥d., Hunltnoton llHCI\, Cl. In ti... Of ftow.rs 18mlly ~ CIOnelloM '9 Hllftll119lon e.1e11 PUllllC Llbr.,., 110011. Fund, 1111 Telberl A-. K\lt'lllf>Qlon ll•Kll In _,,_., of0or1,e 0t1M11onon. ICUHLMEYElt, MV~ J . KUljlMEYEll, .--:1 .-.ey Oct. 10, 10• RtMCltl'll Of o..\e Mua, La. Survived bY slstff Milrle O-l0per1i.td of Co\tA Mua. Cl. "''VM• lemlll' ttrlll<tt .,.,. lltld. OIF1Ktort IMlll BroMh••Y Mortuery, TAYL.Olt MILORl!OO. TAVlOll,lonnH"~I· °'"'' 01 l •ouna Oeach, CA. Pe~ -•Y Ort 10. 1'7t. S... wn wtr. Of IM• "'f'OrlO G T•YIO.. Survlv"" /)\'ton, ~ 8 laylM of l O• A ..... Cll , Q•elldd•uolller. Ro!Hrrl• Mfrrllt of Nort11 Hollywoocs, Ca Two or•.C· o<8nOCllllO.•n; llllly and OI-MM 1111 ~ """' Mr' MeroarH ~ f/f Mllf\\l'l•ld, Olllo 111,., TaylcW ,..,. •Ill .,..., l'llMlllH' or ,,,. P e o : ~ .. A(ll l"rnt>yle<I ... Olutt ll. Momorial ~" t 00 PM flrldn Oct. u , 1'1Ut fl'lt<lfl< Vt.w 0-1 wllh 0. Altlef't 0. MlfrMtffltl.tt1"9 llllW,,,.....ltl'9Ctft< Join the Fabulous GRAND OPENING Sat. & Sun., Oct.16 & 17 Prizes • Entertainment • Refreshments • Busch Garden Bird Show • Bill Ballance of KABC Radio • Boat Show-R. V. Show • Saturday Night Dance Come get your value-filled discount book Mansion between Main • Goldenwest In Huntington Beach / V-~I "¥1'. PtKlllc VltW 11.------------.. -------9!!'---ll'!'---.. ._,.. _______ _.~c11r.c:t-. • ORANGE COUNTY Animal Service Set In Cou n ty A new service (or animal s is to be in- augurated this month at the Or a n g e County Animal Shelter when volunteers will be availa· ble to assist peopl e with pet problems. Pat Guiver, president of the Animal Assistance League. said the main object of the program is to educale the public to the nero for responsible pct ownership and pet populalton control. SHE SAID an effort must be made to reduce the tragic number of un· ~antcrl puppic•s and kit· tens born every year only to be kill ed. Mr s Guivct said lhal current!) many pets never are returned to their owners because of the finder·~ reluctance to 11lacc them in the pound. "It is hoped that the knowledge tha t volun- teers are in the s helter to help the animals will ove rcomt' this reluc· l anc e and change the public'!-. ide a of the pound as a plac-e of cer· la in death." she said. ANYO~F. 1nter<'sted in voluntccrinl? 1n the pro- ~ram '" 11w1lcd to a cof· rec session Oct 21 from !O a.m to 2p m. a t l6l52 Urimhall L :.i ne. Hunt- ington Reach Further information may be obtained by caJJ. ing the i\ni m a l As· s1s tance League office at 960·2900 or 644 -~5 l . L. ltf. B "yd Mata Bari: Grie tje Zelle You've heard of the remarkable Gr1etje Zelle. but posslbly only by her more ramoua name ot Mata Hart. Client asks how she came by that odd monlkcr. In Indonesia~ lt meant "Eye or the Dawn." She married a Dutch army otncer stationed there. His name was Rudolf M acLE>od. M er she left hlm, she took the Mata H arl tag and sot up operations In Paris. On Sept. 19, 1976, in the Daily News. Record of Miami, Okla .. &ppeared the follow. .,, Ing classified ad: "Bllrten- der-Wa.itress. Hattles Club of Commerce .•• We need honest, sober, reliable help. Would setUe for any two or the three above. named requirements. Call Norman Akin , 675·9926, Commerce, Okla.·· It's a fairly common belief among the miners of Pennsylvania that you can ease an upset stomach by chewing on a piece or coal. One out or every six men still single at the age of 24 this year will get married within the nexll2 months. First professional astrologer in America was none other than that descendant or John Quincy Adams named Evangeline Adams. Addreu mail to L.M. Boyd, P.O. Bo% 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626. '(:j~llii~,, ,, .......... , ......... -:•l\.,.,,.'."''•-l"•-'1'~ ..... ,. .... ,':., .. , ..:... :,.. ~\· ~ .• 4 • • .. .. t· . .;.,.. · ·~ ·.' : · ShO'on ,A.lien's .. .,: •• ~.:'> S"ERENITY :,~, \·.: Skin Care Center ~! l'f . ·~·~" 4l' \ .,~..i:"-C>" , . ·. ~,, ·· · · • Ar-. '" 1t1n w...-. • .; ·' Su ur foce? i ! · Come to Serenity and we will · ' · design a new m ake·up lo • .. com pli m en t your f a ll wardrobe. i ~:' ."' . r:.:r:::-.... ... ; f '•f"'l•t' r-1,.">0"1n ~ .. rhQO 1.1 .... "° ~ "'"" O•f!'f ~-11ea F~o! 6 90CI~ W111n9 j ' In lido Village i 3400 Via Oporto, Suite 6 ~ Stow Atch•"Q .,.. ,,.. _.,..,,, ... , .. ,.,_ ·a ~ Newport Beach .... ;.:-~ .... ·~ ...... ~ •• u ?..1.~~~~~:.s.1 ~1..~ Plans for bcith Individuals and Self-employed. If you work for someone else and are not covered by a qualified retirement plan-or are self-employed-Mutual Savings has a plan to help you retire with greater financial independence taking full advantage of the same legal tax benefits enjoyed by corporations and other large companies. One exa mple: Deposit $1 ,500 earned income at the beginning of ea ch year in a retirement account. Ten years later you will have $23,545. Without an individual retirement account, that same income would only grow to $15,756. Our retirement account makes you $7,789 richer. (Example assum~ you pay Federal Income Tax in the 25% bracket: deposit in a 7 ~%cert 1ficate earning 8.06% annua1y; mm. term, 6 yrs .. early with- drawal entails subst.mt1al penalties.) Let us tielp you plan for tomorrow. \There is no c~st o_r obligation. ,.Simply send rnthrs coupon, or come to your nea rby office of Mutual Savings for act!itional information. ·--------------· I Please send me l~Dfmetlon reaardlna: I O lndlvldual Re•emenlAccounts I O Retirement ~counts for Sell·•mployed I (please prlnl) Zto I I I I I I _________ .. MUTUAL SAVINGS ic. ......... a. ..... Cimino dt £ltntla/-..ss51 C....detl ... tl7 EM! ec..t Hlglwteylf7M010 """"'-'" v.., t1'oo Mlgnolle 5\~ Sll'llll AN en~ MIWM74741 ,open~ 101oM to 2 PM • CWL'tPtLOT ... Pickford Film Set El Toro Opens 'Spirit' Yule Shows Slated LOS ANGELES <AP) -Filming has begun on "America'1 Sweetheart: the Mary Pickford Story." a 90 -minute telemlon special. A film crew bas bqun shootln~ at Pickfeir, le,endary home of the allent film star. The documentary is being co. produced by the Poly. eram Group or London and the l>tckford Com· pany, headed by Matty Kemp. The mm will feature scenes from Miss Pickford's classic rums, as well as newsreel shots and up-tcHlate footage. An ntbl'RES-ORAHOE CO a. cmzees 51.51 SO COAST PLAZA )Ut ..... SlMl{Jll llCl'9.M 11MAIATHON MAN" -.. ,. ,.,. .. o .... ,,__ .. »........_.... • ......... S COAST PLAZA )Ut h ltlSI ~1111 llllUKlll( .. AUClk WOHDBLAMD" lXJ .... Tl~ .... ,,..,.._._ .._.,_,_ .. MARATHON I MAM .. 1.-MM:M ., .. ,_ CINEMALAND 1t10 • ...., ...,.m,.., ,.,,.. 11MARATHOM MAM .. •• ,, .... » ,_, .... CINEMALAND .. ALICE IN WOHDIRLAHD .. lXt -~ .. .. .,...._ ....... ... u,.,,........ 1 Bti Part Jack Haley Sr.. the original Tin Man d "1b e Wizard of Oz," Tbe Seddlebaclt Valley Commuruty Tbeat~" wbicb made lts debut a year q o with a production d "Ptaaa Suate" and then disappeared from sight. reappears t.hia weekend with a revival of Noel Coward's comedy ''BlltheSplrit." Directed by Patricia C\dlem, the show features Ben JuW as a mystery writer literally haunted by tbe &host ol hi. tlrst wife (Mary Beth Wilson) to the cba,rin of his present spouse <Eileen Fisbbach>. Completing the cast are Jeian Hyde as a crystal guer, Joe Cordio and Carol Kni1ht as lhe guests at a seance and Cyd Estes as the maid. Four performances ol "Blithe Spirit" will be liven, Fridays and Saturdays for two -,veekends with an 8 o'clock cwtain at the El Toto High Sebool theater. Reservations are being taken at 586-8342 or S.'U-9196. will make a brief ap-WINDING UP ntEUl respective engagements pearance in "'New wilh flnal performances this weekend are "South York. New York," Pacific" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, "I s t a r r i n g h i s Do, I Do" at the Forum Theater in Laguna Beach daughter -in-law, Liza (and openin& with another cast next week at Sebas· Minnelli. tian's) and "Harvey" at the Huntington Beach ----------Playhouse. "South Pacific" resumes tonight and plays 0 Sh through Sunday at varying curtain times at the din· 8C8r OW ner theater. 140 A venida Pico. San Clemente. Judy O'Dea and Richard Allen head the cast of the March 28 LOS ANGELES (AP> -Oscar returns to the Do r othy C tra n dl er Pavilion of the Music Center March 28, 1977, for the 49tb annual Academy Awards. Walter Mirisch, presi- dent of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, announced that nominations will be an· oo un ce d at tbe Academy's Beverly Hills headquarters Feb.. .lL Rodgers and Hammerstein musical. Reservations 49'1·9950. Doyle McKinney and Pat Manusov comprise the cast of "I Do, I Do," under Warren Deacon's direction at the Forum as a joint production of the Lyric Opera Association and Saddleback College. Final performances are Friday and Saturday at 8 o'clock. Reservations49C-0709. , "Harvey" rings down the curtain on a dozen years of theater at the "Barn" of the Huntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St.. with closing performances Friday and Saturday at 8:30. Phil DeBarros directs t he classic comedy with Rex Day, Greta Smith, Sherry Starkey. Dana Lawrence, John Starkey and Jack Wtllenbacher among the principals. Reser vations 842-5421. CONTINUING 'IBElll runs this weekend are: -"The Rullng Class" a t South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Performances tonight through Sunday at 8, Sunday 2001: ASpeceOdyssef <G> "THE FROMr' IPGJ ... MA nER OF TIME11 "MOl.MAM IS lHAT YOU1"' CNt "'HAaY & WAI.,.~ TOMIWYOlrlNt t. lntern1ission Tom Titus afternoon at3. ReservaUona6'8-l363. -"When You Comin' Back, Red Ryder!" at the Irvine Community Theater. Bristo! and Red Hill. Costa Mesa. Performances Friday and Sabu· day at8:30. Reservatlona6'6-3178 <days> or 557-729'1 (eveniJ'lSs). -"The Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild" at tbe Costa Mesa Civic Playhou5e ln the Communib Center auditorium on the Orange County Fair· grounds, Costa Mesa. Perform.aces Friday and Saturday at 8:30. ReservaUonsSS6-5391. -''Bell, Book and Candle" at the San Clemente Community Theater, 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente. Performances Thursday tbrou.gb Satur- day at8:30. Reservations492-046S. -"Come Blow Your Hom'' at the Holiday Inn Dinner Tb eater. 3131 Bristol Strftt at the San Diego Freeway, Costa Mesa. Performances Friday and Saturday at 8:30, preceded by dinner at 7 o'clock Reservations 557-3000. · * BACKSTAGE -Ann Lapp, Orange County ac· tress and r~cent winner of tbe Phyllis Diller lookalike contest. turns up Thursday on the Gong Sbow, tobeaired at 7::.>p.m .onABC,Cbannel7 ... New TV Cop Show LOS ANGELES <AP) -Just what television needs: anothercopshow. NBC Television announces production bas begun on "Bunco," a Lorimar mm intended as a future series. T_om Selleck and Robert Urich star as plainclothesmen investigating swindles, forgeries, etc., in a big city . ~ .:,n Ct .. ri:t ;:,,.f.,.A~ ... LA.,_., ~S'ft" t X.J G.O. f'Mf'/ ICfTV l>J', tXJ -... oemPOM" ... STIPJORD W1VU .. 1 .,,,,....., ..... "'flUl-wom..D-INI • '"TMl .... T SCOVJAte CA'IMOUSI 1-SDA'I'" "'TMI POM POM •nn..s-CID O -iw•nounr '"l'MI aACllllltD" fNf Special~"°' 12:30 to 2·00 0-"'· c-.,es-a· -. Sf.JS ()pen 0011-y 12·30 p m Will Geer is making a guest.star appearance as a -=~~~=~====~~!!!!!!!!~~!! retired con man and Arte J ohnson as a professional counterfeiter . ..... •'-SJMSIO _., ..... ._ Mo.tit• omLWIMN•t111 ... , ... _ ... CU..IOMltlClll OlllllM* ... .....,9"0.,... SMADOW Of TMI MAWI'"' ....... -... -..,. Of IM CM&a-INt ...... Mll•mO&Y & '*"'°°'"' --·--' cliY ;3=1 ! .... f;j _. ...... --. .. .- MOMlll@t omL wnMIN ... 191 ....... --. ...... , ....... JAWS"" -(.-MYOllNI~"' -·-·--· I llll ~o l --·~ii ....... _,, 1. euMIAl.1 llAUIT .,., 2. CANNONIAU "' a. WMn'I UNI PIVll INI ---...... CM&a ...... .... ftUIPIDlT l ........ ... ------.... ~ .... -.. .... 111 ~~1 -~=~ n~•:;~-;-1 crtll~fflii-;J °"'--OIMHION ... ~...,- lllMOW Of -........ 19fW. 51:.i:;.mr--tll IDCll'f --"'9 ..... Nit• ~"'' ........ .-•rt I .. ._ ..... -c.~ "' "' ... .,... "" "'900 e.AllU ~ ·~ •CMOI"-' ..... u..o .......... __ ......... ............. , .. ..,..._,.. a.-mss:w,.. . ' .CAR WASH: .... Where, betWeen the hours of 9 and 5 anything can happen. .. and usually does~ Pl.EASE, CALL THEATRES FOR SKOITllES INOellllllU'T e AUJl9 e ~ IAU I e GUii~ e COITU e COSU EA e E l£ST e lttlMISTU e IL. 01 e SMIT& IU e Dl elUIUe . l m U1 91S~1Ct 892-.Mti 531-1Z11 525-1521 ' I I I • I I I ·j •' I 'I ' ,. ! ,• .: ., .. "' ,, • f ,, ' '• .. .. .. .. .. I \ \ ' .. . . ' .. J • . :,tJf~LY P1LOT rueiscsay. Octot. 12. 1m RK 0 'Sak:' J Out From Under General Tue Heading Off SEC Ambushes at the P88s New Dodge ltlon~o The 1977 Dodge Monaco intermediates are available in tw~door hardtops, four-door sedans and six-and nine- passenger s tation wagons. The two-and four-door Broughams s hown here feature vertically stacked headlights in a new front-end style. By 1EL TON MOSK.Ownz ln 1~. lo a deal completed al 6;30 a.m. ln a Las Veg_aa hoed. the late lioward lluehes sold RKO Pictures to General T1re & Rubber for~ niUUco. Now. 21 years later. tbe com- pany that was once the fifth lqest motion picture studio lo Hollywood is about to undergo another corporate transforaia- tioo. Gen@raJ Tire believes it mwrt cut it adrift to save its We. 1111.S MOVE IS quite ln keep- ing with the tangled histor')' ol RKO, a company that emerged rrom the old Keitb·Albee- Orpbewn vaudeville circuit. ll has suffered under a Sue«ssion of owners. RKO went bankrupt during the 1930s, and Howard Hughes almost bankrupted it again after WcrldWarll. For a number d years the COO· trolling stock.holders were RCA. then headed by David SamoCf. and Rockereller Center, then beaded by Nelson Rockefeller. FOR A BRIEF PEIUOD it was run by a syndicate, some mem- bers ol which had ties to such un- savory op rations u ille1al puochboard 1amea. The onJy "Golden Ace .. RKO f!Uoyed was the 1Ml-19t6 atretcb wbco &be studio waa headed by tbe canny investor, F1oyd B. Odium. When General Tire acquired the company ln 191SS, RKO was the ooly film product.Ion com- pany in lbe red. That condition was attributed to miamanage- ment by Hughes, and the Akron tire maker ,•owed that It wouJd return RKO to prol\table mov- iemaking. THAT WAS NOT ro be the case. General Tire dJd make RKO a profitable operation - but not in motion pictures. By 1957, RKO was out d film pro- duetion, its Hollywood real est.ate sold off to Desilu Productions. The surviving company, RKO General, bas been a winner fot· its tire.making parent. Jt owns television stations in Boston, New York, Los Angeles and Memphis and radio stations in eight major markets. In addi· tioo. it bas a chain d 129 movie &beaters. cable TV facilities in 10 states and seven soft drink bottJ· i.ng plants In Ohio. Indiana. Ten-nessee and Arkanaas. P'tnally, lt owns 58 percent of n-ontier Airlines, lhe nation's tblrd tariest local·seTVlce airline. It all added up last year to net PfUits of $15 million. G«>eraJ Tire ls the fifth largest tire pro- ducer but it has been deriving more than 20 percent of its earn. ings trom the RKO opentioos. SO WHY GET RID d it now? Beeause General Tire bas been one of the many companies im· plicated in illegal and improper 1 payments. As a matter d fact, the charges brought against it by the Securities and Exchange Commission were the most ex- tensive brought against any com· pany. GeneraJ Tire was accused of maintaining off-the-book "slush" funds, paying "gratuities" to military and civilian employes of U.S. agencies, bribing politicians overseas. ove.rbilling foreign af. flliates and scheming in at least two countries to bar other U.S. tire companies from eotertng the market. General Tire seWed the com- plaint by accepting a consent ( BlJSINESS J __ MJ_RR_OR_ dec!'ee that pled•ea the company not to violate the law in the ruture. Many companies have followed the same coune bat not many companies own radio and t.elevlalon slallons, making them subject to re1ulation by the Federal Communications Com· mission (FCC>. A 80STON G&OUP bu asked the roe to revoke RKO's license to operate WNAC·TVthereonthe lfOU.l1d that it's not salutary to have a company linked wltb bribery operating a tiro.dcasting facility. Similar challenges may be expected in other mart-eta where RKO bas statioos. To bead off these ambushes at tbe pass, General Tire bas come up with a clever plan to disguise RKO. What lt proposes to do is spin off RKO General to the stockholders of General Tire. That would mate RKO an in- dependent company again.. Rising Costs Stomp Stamp Colleetors However. some observers see it as the kind of sleight of band tbat used to play the Kei.th-Albee- Orpheum circuit. 'lbe largest stockholders in General 'fire are 11.ichael, Tom and John O'Neil, the three sons of founder W.(). O'Neil. They own more than 8>0,000 shares. And if RICO is spun off to the stoc~ders, they would, df course. emerse as the largest stockholders ol the new RKO. WASHINGTON (AP> - "Stamp collecting for the run of it," is what the Postal Service ulls a program that's helping of- fset some of its large deficit. children and other new collec· tors. brought in a record $91.1 million in revenue dwi..ng the last fiscal year on an outl~ d $11.2 million. selling more and more com· memorative s tamps just to cater to the lucrative collectors' market. DONALD McDOWEU., stamp development manager for the Postal Service, said the service puts a higher priority on produc- ing stamps that are enjoyed by the public than on pleasing the seri<>U5 collectors. But some established collec- krs are accusing the service of profiteering by issuing so many commemorative stamps that it has become expensive to main- tain a complete set. Most or the surplus came from selling stamps that were oever used to send mail. 1be rest came from selling philately (stamp collecting) items such as starter kits and albums. THE PROGRAM, aimed al Postal officials deny the)' are "U a collector doesn't like a How to get stockbrokers to refund your losses Ca1Toda1 Tonrrw 800-52&-1445 .... .,..,..," ........ • t .... ~ .. .._ ... _ ~flth1 , ..... I IOl .... f ......... _'""" ....... ,..._,.,,. .. I ·-··~-lft ........ \ Puff Prices Pushed R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company has announced an immediate in· cr ease in prices on its domestic cigarette brands, except Salem Long Lights, by 75 cents per thousand. The price of Salem Long Lights will be increased the same amount but will be delayed until Nov. 1 since the brand was just introduced. The company also announced it will increase the price o( its W'lDcbester Notice of proposed Little Cigars by 75 cents per thousand. effective immediately. The new price increase brings the total cost of R.J . Reynolds Tobacco Company's cigarette brands to $13.50 per thous and for regular and king·size brands and $14 per thousand ror super king-size (long) brapds. Reynolds tobacco makes Winston, Salem, Camel, Vant.age, Doral, More and Now cigarettes. Tax Law Talks Set r.c=====;===~I TAX-EXEMPT H========;i Explanation or the tax reform act or 1976 aod a rorecut or 1977 economil' trends will highlight a daylong economic conference sponsored by the UC Irvine Industrial As- sociates aod the UCI School or Social Sciences Oct.20. BOND ISSUE Pr~ New Issue It is proposed that the bond issue herein described will be sold to underwrilers Lhrougb competitive bidding on Wednesday, October 13, 1976 at ll:OO a.m. POST. lnltt111t ,. erempt. m ttui oprnlon o/ 8<1lld Cov.lllld. from J'.uroJ mcmne fQes ullder nutmg Iowa, ond from Income tarea within the !tau of Coll/omio. $10.~.ooo IRVINE RANCH-WATER DISTRICI' for IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT N0.105 <ORANGE COUNTY) The Irvine Co. Development WOODBRIDGE VILLAGE is included in The District Unlimited Tax · General Obligation Bonds Bonds Dated September 1, 1976 All Bonds Due September 1, Proposed Malurity Schedule $100,000 in l~ $\05,000 in 1981 $115,000 in 1982 $125,000 in 1983 $135,000 in 1984 $14~.ooo in 198.5 $155,000 in 1986 $160,000in1987 $175,000 in 1988 $190,000in1989 $205,000 in 1900 $215,000 in 1991 $235,000 tn 11m $250,000 in 1993 $270,000 in 1994 $290,000 in 1995 $310,000 in 1996 $335,000 in 1997 $360,000 in 1998 $390,000 in 1999 $41.5,000 in 2000 $440,000 in 2001 $1,170,000 in 2002 $1,250,000 in 2003 $1,34S,000 tn 2004 $1 ,445,000 in 2005 and $1,550,000 in 2006 j nns NOTIC E ()()~NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER OF THESE BONDS The final d etermination of interest rates, and prices will be made by tbe winning UDderwritiog syndicate. For further information concerning this issue, please use the COUPon. • The conference, tiUed "Coming Trends in Finance and Taxes." will be h e ld at the Registry Hotel, Irvine. Tickets for the con- ference are $10 and in- clude lunch. They are available from the UCI Industrial Associates Of. fice, UC Irvine, Irvine 9'l717. More information is available at UCI In· dustrial Associates, 833-6424. 'Angel' To Speak Andy Etcbebarren, Anaheim Angel catcher and player represen• tative, will speak at the regular meeUng of the Orange County Chapter of the NaUonal Associa· tion of Accountants at 6;30p.m. Wednesday. 1bose interested in al· tending lbis meeting should contact Roger Myers at lbe Santa Ana otrtce of Arthur Young & Company. The dinner meeting wUI be held at the Quality lnn. Anaheim. Gas Firm n .Kidder,Peabody __ .;.. ____________ i Penalized 1 I 8 Co. rNcoRroRATco SAN FRANcrsco I 1 ... J,i1 '""s (AP) -A Palo Alto I Mmthtr• Nao York and Americoll Stacie I~ service 1tatlon owner has been nned $7,500 and I ordered to pa)' back I Newport Flnantlal Plua tfJ8.000 to customers in' I ••• Newport c"u' Dr. 811l1Ce IZlt overcharges from 1973 to I Neeport •_:~•Uf. _. 1975. I ~'. .~ie1~c: ~.~ fu.~ ~111or~~~~n .re'.~~~~~ .................... ,. J~sJ0~~~rAs~ci I ~~ .. :::~:: .::· ::. ::::::.:::::.:··::: · :::::: :::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::~;: Halt•s Pqe Mill Mobll I State ............................. 7Jp ................. Tel: ................. := f~l'I:~ :rtJne: L---------------------------J cents O'let lbe letal tell· Ing . --· • ~tamp. be doesn't have to buy it. We judge by the lines cl people at the counters who want to buy our stamps that they are a success," he said in an interview. The Postal Service bas issued 00 commemorative stamps this year, compared with28lastyear. Bicentennial themes accounted for at least some or this increase. THE INCREASE ln com· memoralives is being fought by a group of collectors known as plate block collectors. These col· ledors try to acquire a block or 12 copies of each stamp. Many of these people began their collections when stamps cost only 3 cents each. With postal rate increases to the pre- sent 13 cents and with an in· creased number of stamps, plate block collectors are finding their bobby increasingly costly. J ames Devoss, executive secretary of the American Philatelic Society. said the Postal Service "bas been taking collectors for a ride." AUGUST A. PIERCE. ~tor ol Stamps Magazine, said the Post.al Service bas ·:a merc:han· dising attitude." Over The Count~r MASO UStilKJS Now you see it, now you don't. Post l.ambasted SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A Post Cereals ofter of sports equipment for boxtops bas drawn a broadside from Consumers Union, which plans to petition state school officials Tuesday to ouUaw the give-away oo elemen- tary campuses. llps and Do..,.. MUTUAL FUNDS .. Tuesday's Afternoon Pricee NYSE COMPOSITE """' TRANSACTIONS VW 'Raid' Continues DETROIT (AP)-John Muter1on hn~ become the second General Motors Corp. executive In a month to be lapfled for a high-ranking post at Volksv. ttgen's new U.S. manulactur· Ing complex near New Stanton, Pa. Masterson, ll 26·yea.r GM veteran M t his Job aa director ol purcbulni at the Pontiac Mot.oc DM.alon last weelt to lake ovu u bead ol purtbu- lna for Volklw•1tn Manut1cturtn1 CGrp. ol America. Tuesday Oct9b&r 12 1G76 s DAIL y PILOT A 11 Fame's Price Monopoly Test Looming By IOUN CUNNIFF A• -...i-.... ftll Jn the bo&Ue of ~a.Lemon on the rrocn's abell 11 ton· la.lned not Just ll wid~ly used Oavcrins but a markeUnc drama that hu sbak.en the manulactw-er aad 1tuMedlOIJ\O anUtrusl and Ir adcmark lawyera. lt might chanre market.Int techniques too, becauae • Federal Trnde Commission (n'C) Judi• has n&led that Bord~n. Inc .. owner ol Reat.emon. must. llcenao othen to produce the reconstituted lemon ju.lee product. The decision, whk h is being appealed to the viewed by Borden as full commluion, Is ( J "an unlawful conflsca-NEWSAN.~LYSIS tlon or a valuable pro- perty rig ht ond is beyond lhe power ol the commission." The judge, lt maintains, doesn't understand the opera· tion of the market plac~ or the function of trademarks. But the administr~live l3W judge, Daniel Hanscom, didn't. &r· rive at his decision easily: it tot.ied 170 paces. BORDEN JNSJS'l'S THAT JN ReaLemon Jl offers customers a high quality product. and that Its strong posi· tion in the market is derived from the r espect and al· legiance or those customers. Hanscom, in his decision of Sept. 3. didn't see lt that way. He round that Borden unlawfully maintained a monopoly position in the processed lemon juice Industry, a position that sometimes reached 90 percentoCthe market. In doing so, he rejected Borden's contention that in measuring t.he market. fresh lemons should be lnchJded along with processed lemon juice, a position that would have reduced Borden'srelativeposition. HANSCOM FOUND FACl'ORS THAT he sald were "strongly demonstrative of monopoly power," one of them being "the overwhelming dominance of the ReaLemon brand. and its acceptance over the years by the trade and the public as the premium brand." Viewing that conclusion. other food marketers are won· dering ii widespre~'d acceptance, traditionally considered a measurement or success. now might be considered a markNing offense. Further obser vations by the judge perhaps added to that unrertalnty. Demonstrating monopoly, he suggested, were these factors . -"THE CONCOMITANT R ELATIVE impotence and small market share of competing brands except posaibly Golden Crown recently in some metropolitan areas;" -•'The pre mium price commanded by the ReaLemon brand;" -"The competitive necessity for other lemon Juice brands to sell al substantially lower retail prices on peril ol losing shelf space and being forced from the market;" -"TH•: F.XCEPTIONALLY HIGH prontablllty 0( Rea Lemon Juice over the years amounting to three to four times the rate or return on assets realized by other firms lo the. . . indusl ry l:{roup." 8ut Hansrom had other observations that tended tosug. gest that quality alone was not the reason for ReaLemon success. Borden's marketing practices, he said, hindered, restrained and even prevented competition. . Among other things, he said, the company used promo- tional allowances to combat retail competition, special al· lowances to restrict sale of competitive products, and selec· tive price cuts that left. competitors unable to sell products above their costs. FINDING THAT 4'Tff£ HEART of the monopoly power ... lies in the RcaLemon trademark and its doml· nant market position," Hanscom ruled that efCectlve relief "requires the licensing of the ReaLemon brand name. •• Borden r esponded by saying the Judge ignored the com· petition lhal exists between fresh lemons and froien and processed lemon juice, and lrustead created "an arUficiaJ market definition" that led to monopoly claims. The company i;aid also that the judge's findings were ID• consistent "in that they allege Borden obtain exceptionally high profi ts whill• selling at unreasonably low pricH." It said 1t did not cng age in anticompetitive practices. WHILE TRADEMARK LAWYERS wondered, some breakfast cereal companies worried. Four years ago Kellogg. G.-neral Mills, General Foods and Quaker Oats were said by lhe FTC to share an oligopoly that. might be broken up by trademark licensing. 8 orden has flied notice of appeal and expects shorUy to (ile briefs to support the appeal. The decision seems headed for review by the full commission, and could end up ln the courts. Federal Reserve: Consumer Friend B7 LOUISE COOK ~ .... d "'9\•W.- Hundreds <>f consumers are learning they have a friend at the f'ederal Reserve Board. The board has Ju.st finished setting up a form a) system for handling complaints on everything from Interest rates to mixed .up credit billings. And a board spokesman says consumers are becomlnf more aware of thelr rights and m o re ( J knowledgeable about CONSUMER the laws arrecllng them and their money. The Fe d era l Re s erve B o a rd l'R res ponsible for l m· plemenling a variety of consumer legislation, lncludln1 the Truth in Lending Act, the Fair Credit BilllnC Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Ad, the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act and the Fair Credit Reporting Act. THE OFFICE OF SAVER and Consumer Aff•ll'I WH established by the board a litUe over two years ago to help ndmlnl!\ter these Jaws. A specific <'omplalnl ptocedure was developed early this year and waR formalfted late laat month. Any consumer with a complaint about an llle1al, unleJr or deceptive pr.:ictlce by a bank or other creditor may write to the Director of the Office of Saver and Consumer Afraln, Board ot Governors, Federal Reserve System, WaJhinston. D.C. 20551 . Complaints abo may be sent to the Federal Reserve Banlc for the d.lat.rkt in which the creditor ta located. The complaint should descrtbe the practice Involved and give the na me and address or lhe bank concerned and the lndivldual who ls complalnine. THE BOARD SAYS IT WILL try to make a su~tanUve r~se within 15 days after it. receives lhe teller. tr that la OC?t. possible, the board will acknowlqe the complaJnt wittUn 15 d ays and will set a spectrlc time i>er1od wilhln which a substa ntive response wlll be made. The board itself lnvestJcates only those complalnt.a In· volving state ·ch•rt.a'ed banks that are membert ol the Federal Reserve SYJtems. Other complaints are referred to the IPl)topriate federal office, such as the comptroller ol the currency, the Fedenl Depoait lruiurance Corp. or the Federal Trade Commission • .. ·Tonight's . TV ffighlights KTLA .0 8:00 -"Jesse James." Tyrone Power plays the legendary western bandit with Heary Fonda as bi~ brother Frank in this 1939.movie. ABC U 8:15 -''The Blue Max:• George Peppard ·is a young German aviator competing for air supremacy with a squadron of seasoned pilots in this 1966 movie with James Mason and Ursula Andress. CBS fJ 9:00 -M•A•S•H. When Radar is promoted -to lieutenant - everyone is s hocked, except Hawkeye and B.J ., who've engineered the eleva· tion. Gary Burghoff plays Radar. TV DAILY LOG TUESDAY I· EVENING 6:00 o rt1 (101 111r:1 1 m """ o \1l1 r&J m lle'IB U ~Star Trek (§) Gomer Pyle D ( 2'J re 1) 391 American Luaue BasebaU CJl1mp10Ml!ip Cont d lrom • SPM l•v~ towaae ol tile thud r playoff Ram~ between Nt N York Yank•es and Kansn Coty Rov~ls (lJ Gunsmott m P•rtrK11e flm11, I (i) Adlm·l2 m lledrl( C4mpany m utile llasuls -6:30- 0 DINh! Guests 1ndude Mo~t Dayan Ralph Waite. llJWJ Grtfflth (tO MffY GrrH1n Show m hmtly Affair I I 7 3 Ccl11$1110l e m Zoolll! m lo!ltrtet to Ad~enlurt 7:00 0 ~31 <11 mNews U Lurs Club 6 Mr Thrte Sons 8 To Ttff the Truth O Concentr a1ton (D I Lowe lu<y (i) The FBI W Amerru/l\uef Jewish Hour 126 Andy G11lf1th Eii) MacNeif/lehrer Report E!) Dramahc Strres W Addams Family -7:30. D Andy ltslte Uftams iiunu U Bowline for Oolurs (9) The Ocld Couple C8 )Th IMC Show 0 The Johr's Wild • 1 (101 Holl)'WOOcl Sq111res m Budy Bunch (111 ll) llaslrvlllt Oii I/It "°'' t2t Hoc111's Ktioa G) Ollnlltl U Ton11ht m Ara's $jlofts Wo!ld m fluh Go<doe 8:00 D ff1I m fll Tony Orlando and Dawn Bernadtl!e Puers ruests 0 i.21 6 ) 110) m Ila Ila 111.Kk : S/letp A Jap1nese air ace $1101 down • t by Pappy Boyington laces rou&h 1 . treatment di !he hands of Pappy's men until he clobbers them at ptn& oone 8oy1niton and his crew lmn of Colonel Arak1's (Ctvde t<us.tsu) pong pong p1owess short11 brfore a Seabee outfit armes to play the locals in a tabf, tennis tournament tor high slakes Bent on w1nntnR. the Black Sheep w sent th~1r capt1vt colonel as one ol their own. U Movie: (CJ (Zhr) "Jnse limes" (wes) '39 Tyrone Powu, ltenrv Fonda ( 6 l Mow11: rC'I (Zhr) "The Solid Cold Cadillac" tcom) ·~6 Paul Oou21as. Judy Holltdav 0 llo-fie: 1C1 (90) "tut of the Ski k"1s'' (adv) '69-Rob r unk m lo<tim l Ht11rielt1 Music Show (i) Perry MlSOtl ED lleWl/"'blrc All111s t 12' Tul1n Couftty Symp~ony ' Allctioll I fD ri«lldlly Circus ('Ml rfl) Grand 1'111 du M111Que m Clltspmto tlt Moone: C) "Cleop1t11~ Conti. (dra) 63-Ri.hard Burton. [h1abtlh hvlor R" Hamson, P1m,ll R1own, Hume Cronyn Roddy McDowall. m f'sytht< l'llenomtl\I -8:15- D Mow11: IC) "Th Blue Mu" (dra) '66-G~orae Peppard, fam,~ Mason. Ursula Andrm. Dunne World War ff a yaunR German, fresh out of aviation ha1nine school. competes for the covet,d ''Blue Mat" fly1n1 attard with other members of a squadron of seasoned pilots of lhr a11stocrat1c ut. -8:30-m ChilltSt f'roe""' ED Situatioll Comedy 9:00 8 CJJJ (]) (tJ M•A-S"H Rada<'s :suddln, inuolrcable promotion to lrtutenant st11ns evtl)'OM in the company but Hawkeye and B J , wflose incenu1ty was ttsp01U1bf1 !Of lbdlr's elentt0n 10 ran,, a (llJ m <~ m Nit• w..n111 MTnal by Pte1udl(t" Carol lJnley , cunts as a ltm1fe SUSl)eCt w11o accusn Sat. PePPtt Mdel'SOll of semfty moltstinc her. PSPPfl rs ~dtd liom t~e IOftt ind muSI undtr&o 1 dtpat1mtntal il!Yflt111· tion and hwin1 on the cllartt. Sht fmds her carttr fllrtlltt te0Plfdt1td Wiien t.o other ftmale pnsonm step tolwt!d and m1~e lht Slmt cllaflt. Q) The Stirs Are Out ha * Las Veps Wittl Cllit1 Rlwm 6 Lots Mort I QI lihf'f '°"'"' .De..,.,.. fD Y1nety Sllow ( .2tJ (fl The Budy lu!lcll m Cllampionsllip Wlesthnc -9:30- 0 Cf'D CV (JJ One Olf •I A Time The dl1lting Julie and Chuck learn a h11d lesson on fife from t/le11 "house· guests" while Sthne1de1 continues his etlorts to return the runaways rn par I 3 of a lour part episode Iii BilfJ Gnh1111 Cr11Slde fl) Chinese Drama fD Mcwie: "Summer Interlude" ( 291 re ) Partridge Family m EspeclA<vlar 76 10:00 D 111 • 3 1 a Switch Bevtrlv ('..i1la11d gue•ls i!S Mac , friend and business partner 1n a ranching enter prose whom ne and Pere help proltet from a rulhless land speculator. Mac pi.;ts as an old prospettor and and Pele a~ts lo the speculator s greed by Sdltong an old mine 0 1231 U 10 ID Police Story · lwo frogs and A Mongoose" Steve Lawrence and Joe Santos star as narcottCS 1nveshgators wflo bust a drug pushtf only to gel rap(>t11 by Sergeant Patterson (Barry Sullivan) for "'asttne hme on under•orld smalllry Ollews 16l 8o111nu m The hul Bowman Sllow ( 29 6 ) Bonlllll m B.111u de l'nmanra l9 Dinah -10:30-m mW News 0)24 Hom 11:00 D Q @!}ll9 ""s 0 teJ (.IOI (lt; (6) #ein 0 (~ (81) love Alllerrun s1,1e (Gl Sea Hunt llJ Celebrity lltYllt m C.thy Tries To find tr A Father & Loretta Looks To Another Man CD Mary H1rt111111. lhry Hartman O> T Ila el 111t lia.lfrt tU') t3J Sltnllp lht Stars ~ Fresno Fair !laces fD Morie: "The Blue ~I" -11:30- 0 Ci'll m Ce) CBS utt MoYtt : Ko11k-Cop in A Cage o rn11 e) 1101 m JolwWlf Carson I u The I'll Club U (12tl lfA OtJ Mysttty of the Week m 11ews ~ Tht 100 Club 12:00 U Best of Croucho 0 Movie: CC) "The Dtstruttors (dra) '67-1!1thard Egan, Palr1eta Owens. John £11cson, Joan Bfatkman. David Bnan, Michael Ansara (D lilowtt: "Tycoon" (dra) '41- Joh,1 Wayne. lara1ne Day, S11 Ced11c Hardw1cke ED Cinema 34 -12:30-u All·Nicht Show: "Captain Clrrn1," "fot Ille lot't of Mih ," "Sea Ticer" 0> Mme: .. ,_ AA Guilty" (dra) '63 Anthony Perkins, Jean Claude 811aly 1:00 0 @ ([) (IO! TOlllOff .. fl!) Tht I'll Cll1b 2 :00 O Ooubtefealurt Mow1es: (¢)"The Money lunate" (d1~) ·r,1 John Cr1cson, Lota Albrtghl, Nehemiah Persoff, Don 1!1tkles. "fool •illtr" (dra) '6!>-Anthony P~rk1ns. Edw11d Alber! Jr m Aft.Nicht Sllow: "Chicaco Sy"di· e1t1," "llfood Arrow" -2:30- 3:00 0 MoYit: (C) "I Died A ThOUSlnd l imn" (dra) '55-hcll Palance, Sheffy Winters, let Mar111n. DAYTIME MOVIES OCTOIEA ll lelow, ftr JOlll' ~-are die ..,., IM'lit$. 10:00 a "Moo11U41" (dra) ••2- fda lupillO "A '"'•t•'• Affair" (com) '59-Sll MllltO. ~ "'UtltlllU JIM" (td~} '42-Enol f'lylln, AleJ1$ Smtih • 11:00 D (CJ "St llis Is ,,,,, .. (com) '55-Glofia de Hmn. 12:00 .., • ......, ill Ille 01111" (dra) ·~t-Crttr Cmon. 1:00 t2IJ (CJ "DtH Melt w • hits" (susp) 71-Chustopher Ctorlr. Judy Came. 2:00 D Ce) "Katlly 0" (com) 'SB-Pattr McCom!icl 3:00 tm c.C> "lh F11ttst C:1t Alft'" (lltS) 'S&-G/tAn Rlrd. l:JO a Ce)""-' ~ (draJ '7'-Joll~ SarOll. Tfflfative """' Airs only it there's no b.seball play~p~. 'New South:' Who WJill Carry Ii~-. .By DON MtLEOD AP .... lllUI WrltH Beneath the contest between J immy Carter and President Ford in the South is another struggle. It may determine the political direction of the "New South" and the chances for a new Republican m a· jority. By nominating a native Southerner for presi· dent, the Democrats have done two things crucial to the future of the region: -They have ended a long free ride for Republicans ln the South ln national elections. -And they have made it possible for many Southern Democr at.s to stop doing their own thing at the local level while ignoring the party's presiden· tial ticket. Ever since the Dix· iecrats bolted the party in 1948, the once Solid South 1\ i· WS A :V.-1 L }' ·1s has been eroding for the Democrats. THE SPUT BEGAN OVER civil rights, but il spread to other issues on which Southern voters generally concluded that the Re publican presiden· lla l nominees were m ore conservative. and therefore closer to their own lradilions. Local Democrats, meanwhile, most of them just as conser vative as any Republican, simply ig· nored the national party, or even denounced it while campaigning. They ran on their own slrength and voting habits older than the Civil War. At the sam e lime they continued lo call themselves Democrats, keeping their seniorit:; in Congress and other benefits of national party sup- ' port. They had the best of both worlds. BUT A COU PLE OF TIUNGS happened that threatened this comfortable accommodation. For one thing, once Southerners had dared to vote against the party of their fathers at one level, it was an easier step to the next. Southern districts began sending Republicans to Congress for the first time since Re<'onstruC't ion. Sensing a trend. some newcomers decided to er:ter po1itics under the new banner, and some 01risi111os Sio111ps An 1855 Nathaniel Currier lithogra'ph. "Winter Pastime." and a 1776 painting called "Nati v ity" by J ohn Singleton Copley have been selected as the designs for this year's Christmas stamps. CM:R'NEIGHT? Learn What Makes The Lindora Method So E fiective A complete program to instruct patients how to lose weight easily. then how to mo1nto1n their lean weight. 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Ford's hopes. ot..avSn1 tbe South ror the GOP li~ in tryisrc to convln~ Southerners that as a con· • servatlvo he holds creater rieht lo their loyalties, even though Cart« wu born an<l raised' In their midst. SEGR EGATIONISTS WER E NO lotse,er aulol'Y}atically winning elections. Blacks begiln to be el,eded to public office. And white New South politicians, a ble to draw from both constituencies, began to appear. men like Carter in Georgia, Reubin "-skew in F'1orida, Dale Bumpers in Arkansas, WendeU Ford in Kentucky. Now, one or the New Southerners ls heading the Democratic ballot. "The South sees him the kind of presidential nominee they have been asking the Democrats for," said an early Carter backer. "For the first time they have a candidate who is nationally accep· table and whom th ey can accept and identify with." CBJ'ter's hopes lie ln Ute belle! that tbe "New South" retains its tradiitlooal regional pride while lt tolerates new ideas. "MOST' LOCAL CANDIDATES FOR the first lime are proud lo have the national ticket tied to their campaigns," said David Dunn, Carter 's Florida campaign coordinator. APwt,..,...• If Carter makes the national Democratic party WHO WILL CAPTURE 'NEW SOUTH?' respectable to Southern voters, the main advantage-;::==================== the Republicans had in the South will be wiped out. And most of them know it. Ford workers say they are surprised at the way Ronald Reagan's con· servative RepubHcan backers are pitching in to save the Ford campaign in Dixie. The kind of Southerners who are sticking with the GOP appear lo be in large measure those who wouJd have been Republicans all along if they had lived in another part of the country: businessmen, professionals, white coll ar workers, suburbanites. mis IS A GROWING a.ASS IN the South and couJd provide a reasonable base for a growing Republican p arty no matter who wins the presiden- cy, if the GOP can adapt its approach and cultivate these voters. On the other hand, one of the things that has stumped Ford's strategists is the way the rural South and the growing urban industrial working class is sticking with Carter. Despite their conservative bent on social is· sues, these people are closely affected by the basic economic issues that always have been the strength of the Democratic party. Recession and inflation in· fluence them just as much as voters anywhere else. THAT BASIC CARTER STRENGTH has not been lost on the Democrats or the old school. 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( .. . ., I Abuse: A Cry for Help • BEA ANDERSON, Editor TveSday,October12, 1976 81 By DENNIS McLEUAN Ot Ille D•ll' f'llOI Si.it The sUdes of battered babies and small children were not easy t.o look at. being only a problem of low in· come families. NOT IMMUNE That's not the case. Affluent areas like Newport Beach are not The camera documented the immune. black, swollen eyes, the dislocat-ed joints, the pulled-out hair. "It is not a poor person•s pro- There were fingernail gouges. blem," she said. ''It is my pro-. b d .... __ blem as much as yours. That is cigarette urns an uui Ill> on the bard for people to accept." lower torso caused by dunking the baby in scalding liquid. In the United States, she said, There were even human bile one out of 10 couples are abusive marks'. (mental and physical) parents. Even more dramatic were the In Orange County approximately eyes of the abused child: A wide-140 cases cross her desk each month and that's considered the eyed star~. seemingly out of · f touch with reality; a spaced-out l..Jp o the iceberg. Last year 11 quality caused by a total lack or children <lied from injuries in- parental nurturing. flicted by their parents. The goal of the Child Abuse The slides are not shown for Program is to prevent, identify s hock value, said Noreen and alleviate child abuse by McLaughlin, staff assistant with maintaining a county child abuse the Orange County Child Abuse registry, a treatment referral Program. • service and community educa- They are shown so people will tion program. think about child abuse and re-State law requires that certain alize they have the potential of professionals and agencies re- being a child abuser. port suspected, non-accidental S peaking to the Newport injuries to children, she said. Harbor Junior League, Mrs. (The law provides immunity to McLaughlin said whenever the persons who make such reports subject of child abuse is brought in good faith.) up people usually think of it as Yet, she said, it is difficult for Exercise in Keeping Young· 'Uncle Sam' a Leader SEATTLE (AP> Nurses at the old folks' home call him the Jack LaLanne of the Geritol set, but to the grey-haired legion he leads in weekly exercise, he's just "Uncle S am" Grossman, 75 years plus. Keeping the 70-to 99-year-old residents in shape at the Caroline Klines Galland Home for the Aged "keeps me young," he s ays. "Watching people enjoy themselves makes me feel like a better munan being ... As he sa.eaks, a bespectacled 88-year-old man app~'8c hes. "Come on." he urges Grossman. "Let's gclswtnging." Uncle Sam looks around the packed hall with a grin, gives his pants a tug, and announces the first exercise. "Is everybody happy? We're gonna warm up by clapping. One, two, three, get those hands up. Four, five." "One, two, three," echo the residents, some clapping, some nodding their heads in time. One man raps the tray of his wheelchair in time while another follows the action with his eyes. Grossman shouts. Somt' march in place, others sit and tap their feel. "Hup, hup. hup," wheezes a woman in a wheel ch air. A while-haired woman hurries in. "Have I missed anything?" she asks anxiously. "I was having my hair done. Did I miss a joke?" "A joke?" Grossman leaps at the cue. "Why I'd love to teU a joke. "You see there was this drunk who had to come before the Judge in C'ourt. And the judge said to him, 'Well , Mr. Smith, I see they've brought you m for dnnkmg. · "So the drunk sa1d, 'Yes, sir, hrinf out the booze and let's start dnnkmg ... Tht' jokt' ii; appreciated. Grossman's wife of 50 years. Helene, is standing nearby. ''Not all of them can do the exercises, but they love to come for his jokes." she says. Grossman strides up to a while-haired gen ti cm an. doctors to report cases or abuse. It's also tough for neighbors. .. They don't want to face the reali· ty of child abuse.'' EASILY DETECTED Battered children of school age are more easily detected by teachers, she said. But the pre- school ct\ild is not as visible. All those who died from abuse last year were under 5. "That's why neighbors are im- portant," s he said, adding they may report anonymously. Follow-ups are made within 10 days. Abusive parents are not crazy, psychotic or out of touch with re- ality ~said Mrs. McLauglin. The number one characteristic is that they have b een abused themselves. "They have been cheated from the time they were born," she said. They believe the child is go- ing to meet all their needs. They don't realize they must meet the child's needs. Because the parent is incapa- ble or responding to the child's needs, the child picks up on it. He' learns not to communicate, becomes isolated and develops a bad self-concept. The child also learns that be can't trust anybody • "Uyou can't Lrustyourparents who can you trust?" sai<l Mrs.. McLaughlin. CRY FOR HELP She said child abuse often is a cry for help. More than 70 per- cent of the parents bring their children to the hospital. In order lo help work with these families the Department of Social Services has initiated Volunteers in Child Abuse (VICA). The volunteers, according to coordinator Sharon Aebersold, can visit parents who are isolat- ed, teach them homemaking skills, help them understand their children's needs and simply be a friend of the family. Voulunteers are trained and supervised by the staff. Anyone interested in the progTam may call Mrs. Aebersold at 834-4703 or write t.o the department or Social Services, Volunteer Coordinator, P .O. Box 1987, Santa Ana. 9'l702. ·Reports or child abuse may be made by calling the Registry, 834-5353. AP WI Npllot. "Look alive," Grossman tells a lady who has dozed off. lier head snaps up and she smiles. "Hup, two, three, four. Lift those feel, .. "How do you feel today. Herman'!" he asks. "'Why, do you know. ('vcryonc looks five years younger today " "I feel five year~ )Ounger," agrees Herman. "By golly. that might make me 92." 'Uncle Sam ' Grossman advises members of exercise class to 1look alive.' UNA .Committed to Peace By JUDITH OLSON Ott11e D•ll' Pl lot SI.aft ~ "The United Nations is the ~world's best hope for peace. Without it, we stand a real chance or the world being wiped I out." Berniece Harris, a 72-year-old San•Clemenle resident, was , there when the United Nations f chatter was signed and she still , is ~dlve. io promoting the or- •. ganization. Now a vice president or the Coastline Chapter ol the United Nations Association, she says she will keep working for tbe or- ganization and ror world peace "'until I draw my last breath."· Mrs. Harris, who gradually gave up her other civic associa- tions to devote all her time to the 1 organization, is perhaps tJ:Plcal 'ol M Sftethber&ofthe lfOUP· l They are dedicated lo world peace and belihe the U. N. is the 1 best means of providing it. : "We have to have some 80rt of 'arbitrator that can handle pro- • b lems between nations," ex- ' plained Guy Taylor oC Mission Viejo, new prelS'ident of Coastline Chapter. · "UNICEF a nd the other ' .tJ.oups are another very Impor- tant part or the U. N. rt's one way ol havin1 people ln the world help ·each other." I .. The local vehicle I« \ovolve- ment in the association is the . Coastline Chapter. which covers all the Orange Coast cities from Huntington Beach to San Clemente. FORMED BY ATTORNEY It was formed in 1960 under the leadership of Ted Parker, a local attorney. For the last 16 years it has been busy providing informative materials. s peakers and pro- grams to local schools, organiza tions, churches and government officials. ·'Since we are a nonprofit or- ganization, we do not lobby but seek to educate and inform our governmental representatives,·· said Craig Beauchamp, a past president. "We are a diverse group with a single purpose, to study and pr~ mote peace with justice. "There is so much misun- derstanding about the U.N. The media plays up the controversy in the General Assembly, which Is only a ·speakers' platform, while the good things get passed by." Part of the job of the CoasUine Chapter is to help clear up thJs misunderstanding, Ms. Beauchamp said. About 60-70 of tbe ZOO chapter members are ac· tive in the cause, while the others Mlotig "because they believe in ·what the UNA iS _tryina to dp or want to receive the 'Inter Depen· ·dent' (a national tabloid)." LE'M'ER WRITERS The active members, s he added, are "faithful writers" of letters to newspaper edit.ors and congressmen. There are about 175 chapters in the U.S .. many of which grew out of Citizen groups in the early 40s urging the government to take a . leadership role in bringing na· tions together to ·'shout it out, not shoot it out," 1\ts. Beauchamp said. ''After the United Nations was created, the many like-minded groups combined to form the American Association for the United Nations. "The name of the organization was changed in 1985-66 to the United Nations Associations, with headquarters in New York ctt.y." Many of the members of Coastline Chapter are active becaus& of a long.standing, deep commitment to the U.N. lt appeals to other5 because it ls not the typical women's or men's club, with social activities liberally sprinkled on the calen- dar. CoasWne and other chapters maintain a lull schedule or in· formative meetings and events and members are busy speaking to and working with other • eroups. • Octobe~ is a particularly busy month for the chapter, Ms. Beauchamp said, with U.N. Day falling on Oct. 24 and the UNICEF Halloween fund-raiser the next week. YOUNGER MEMBERS . The annual membership drive also takes place during October. The board is hoping to double the membership this year, Ms. Beauchamp said. and attract. younger people from all walks or life. The chapter 's long·lerm goal is to have an international resource center which would be a com- bin a lion Ii br ary, bookstore, educational center and UNICEF greeting card sales locaUon. The problem, Ms. Beauchamp noted, is that such a center would generate little income to pay the rent. "We really need a 1ocaUon that would be af most rent-free or have a token rent. "If such a location can be found, we wlU have a series of fund-raisers to obtain money for· materials, mms, fiag.'J and visual aids and "lo pay the utlllties. Labor would be handl('(l by wlll- ing volunteera. '' • A central location is needed, she added, to provide easy access for teachen. students and or· 1anlullona and to offer in~ .c;reased expoaure f~t4cother U. N. agencies. GOING TO WASTE Besides. she said with a smile, it would give her a place to take all of the valuable printed materials she accumulated as president • 'J have half a· garageful of literature that should be used," she swd. Anyone interested in the chapter m ay attend a Mem· bersbip Tea by the Sea Sunday, . Oct. 17. Location and time are available from Ms. Beauchamp, ~ . 'Shout it out, not shoot it out,' urged by chap ters. -Ms. Craig Beauchamp Coastline members also Will participate In the Southern California U. N. Day Oct. 23 at the Altadena Country Club: Guest speaker will be Norman Cousins. editor of Saturday Review. The chapter will ~barter buses ror members and guests at a cosl of $2.50 per person. The lecture1 fne. Information on any Coastlh•e Chapter or U. N. activity may be obtained from Lyn Hicks, a ~ Jll'e5ident, t92-5078. / I • r tj.z DAILY PILOT Tuetday.October12, 1978 r 'Moon' Sheds. Light on Crime ~-.. ' t !:>,EAR ANN LANDERS: In a column. Please help me at once rtent column someone asked l( ou believed that the positions ot , •stars (at tbe time ol birth) or :Cb• phases of the moon had any !.,feet on people's lives. You were :QOncommlttal in recard to the :stars but said the phases ol the ·moon must certainly affect 'behavioral patterns and cited 'the word "lunatic." Nearly 35,000 criminal offenses were examined and the findings prove you wer e correct. Under a full moon there w as a disproportion ate number of rob· b e ries, r a p es , assaults, burglaries, offenses against re- latives , auto thefts and arrests for drunkenness and disorderly conduct. Does this sugges t s omethi ng t o you ? -A REGULAR READER I was engaged to marry a man J thought the world of. I was cer· lain he respected me completely. Now I'm not so sure. We aren't children. I'm a widow WlthJour children. G bas been divorced for fi ve years and has a married daughter. Last week G l>Uggestl'd that 1 mv1te one of my \\Omen fnends Ot d1dn 't m alter "lu<"h one) to <"ome to bed with ui. My chm dropped to the floor. II~ srud I shouldn't be upset be-cause every man has a i.ecret des1re to do this. many ways. Please, Ann. give me some answers. I am - UN A BLE TO THI N K SfRAIGHt CONrtOENT IA L TO WHAT'S HAPPENJNQ IN OUR COUN- TltYJ: Your •uess Is as good as He knew I didn't approve of ex· tramarital sex unless there was devotion, ad miration and a com- m itment to m a rry. We went together for over a year before we became inti m ate. I broke the engagement then and there and told him 1 never wanted to see him again. DEAR \JN: AU. 1MD are NOT Uke tba&, ba& ~ cloeta't meaa he lso't noaa.a.u~aj91S say M =. ln 1'75, the death rate was ._IC.~ the blJ'U) rate aha =mbv 9f "1 arriages as corn· •• .,1 am a serious student of the re· •11tlons blp between cosmic in- jtuence and m a n's behavior . :llecenlly I came a c ross a !fascinating s tudy made in :Jil(>rlda from 19S6 through 1970. ·'llhe researcher s also studied :Crtme statlstics in CUyahoga ~ty, Ohio, from 19158 through 'l.970. went a little llaywlre, •' with tM previous year. The divorce rate was up, however. 'lbt nwnbtr or legal splits has doubl~ in the U.S. since 1964. What dota l~ mean ? The scene is cbuitnt• We a whole new world ·out there. DEAR REG: Yes. People sboald take extra safety precau- Uom when tbe moon ls full. Tbey should also be aw are of thelr own &endencles to be a UWe "loony.'• DEAR AN N LANDERS: I have an ur~ent problem that I cannot.reca-4_ ever seeing in your I knew G was a man of lhe world and h ad known many women. But after we met he had no mor e affairs a nd spent all his free time wit h me and the children. He has been begging me to t ake him back. He swears he will never suggest such a Utlng again. I love him but I'm afraid he is not normal. Are ALL m en like this? Should I take him baC'k? I really do love him and he is a fine person in so .. You've made your IJGllUola abundantly clear. Now boeatehd tbat you don't throw Ult babJ M with the bath water. I believe Mr, G ls sufflc:iently chastened an.4 lbat he will behave bimseJ! frona •l'WlroftOto ~ Getting Into Fashions Vogue (' Celebrities debuting as fashions designers seems to be vogue to· day. Above, Rosi Mi ttermaier (center }, West Germany's winner of three s kiing medaJs in 1976 Winte r Olympics, designs sports fashions. At right. Shakira Caine, wife of British actor Michael Caine, models one of her creations. Weddings ~ and Engagements Fashions Flop Bubble Bursts AT WIT'S END Capricorn Slow Pace WEDNESDAY.OCTOBER 13 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21.·April 19}~ Check reserva- tions, instr uctions and directions. Relatives, well meaning. may garble messages. Know it and act accordingly. Short trip could be postponed without losing a thing. l'AURUS (April 20-May 20): C heck valuables. Take no unnecessary risks. Someone may want something for nothing and you could be prime target. Large hard decisions for another time. GEMINI (M ay 21.June 20): What seems an opposing force is nebulous. Know it and 1>roceed accordingly. However, in legal alfafrs, be aware of hidden clau&es. slick phrases. CANCER (June 2l ·July 22): Be ready -and willing -for change, romance, travel, v ariety, chance to underst and motives and potential. Be aware that something ls going on backstage. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): You could have romantic illusions. Enjoy them, don't look down on them -but don't depend on them, either . You'll understand! A family member says, in ef- fect, let's have a truce. VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sept. 22): Delays are tem- por ary. You gel green light, but not in manner expected. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22l: You can make right moves, make new, valua ble contacts. OldPr individual offers to lend benefit of experience. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov . 21): <.:heck re· sources, possessions. t1 nish rather than Initiate project. Gel over all view. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): What you n~ed is closer than might be imagined. Take your ti me, set your own p ace. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·J an. 19): Indirect ap· proach could bring most constructive results. Slow pace, relaxed attitude enc.ourages others. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ! Highlight mo~ility -r efuse to be painted into corner . PISCES (F eb. 19·March 20): Hidden clauses. leases, "trick questions" could be part of scenario. To avoid disappointment. prospective brides arc reminded to ha\'e their wedding s tories with black and white ~l ossy pholoi;:raph~ to th(' I>:iily Pilot Pt'npl(' Oepartm<.'n t one \\eek before the \\edding. By ERMA DOMBECK You couldn't have both. The Diaper Bikini would have been a real seller if wearers had been able to keep their wcii,:hl down to under 81 2 pounds. with a f:lke satin stom ach that ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ you tied around your waist for Pidurc~ rcrt•1\t•d aftr r that tinw \\Ill not hr u~C'd For t•ng,1gt'nH'nl announc<.'mcnts it 1s impt'ratl\ l' I hat the ~t or.'·. ulso accom· p.tml'O hv a hlat•k and \\hate glo~sy par· lure. tw .,11hm 1tt<•d ~IX \\l't'k!\ or mor(' ht'l01 c lhl· \\ l..'<.l<hng dat('. 11thl'n\ 1.,c 1t \\all not hl' tH•hh~hl'<I To hr lp fill rl'qwremt'nls on ?:"llh \\C'd· clinr:: and t•ngag<•mt•nt stonr~. form.; :ire a\',11l<.1bll-in all l>c11ly Pilot offices. Fur· lh<.'r questions "ill be an-.\\Nl'd by People l~partmrnt .,taff mc·mtwr<. at 642·432t. Look for Quality Down Sales Up The warmth a gar· tnent can provide de· pends on the amount of loft or thickness of the down filling. A higher loft gives more warmth. Yo u a l ways h ear about fashi on's sucC"ess stories. But what about the losers:' The fashions that <"ame in and went out the s ame day? The hopes and dreams of designers that were shattered by the sound of 50 million women ... laughing. Some stvles. for one reasQn or another, 'jus t d on't makl' 1l These are some of them. Scratch and Smell T Shirt . This should have been a smash. T he principle was great. you scratched and voila ... a scent was circulated that ran the gamut from perfu me to pizza. Unfortunately. there were too man y i mpos t e r s. People scratched for status <1nd l.tirrcd up only perspiration. This gave the official scr atch·and·smell shirt a bad name ... not to men· tion the sm ell. The Gladi a t or Boot s. Reme mber them ? They were the polished le ather boots that hit just above the knee. You could look stylish in them or sit down. Fanny Sweate r : This 1s one of the many knit styles desigm•<l to fit a hanger and not the human body. The name was det'e1nn~ It suggested that everyone who had a fanny should cover it with a sweater. Jn m :.inv instance". that's all the sweat('r ('O\'t•rcd and the sides and front were left wide open. Ry a<"tual count. there wt'rc on ly three women in the country who eould actua lly button a fan· ny sweater. They were ill. The Satin Pillow Stomach· J 'm not making this up. /\. few y<.'ars ·ago a manufacturer carnl' out thin girls who wanted to look healthy. I looked so healthy in it. two men on the bus hoisted me into th<•1r ~c at:> and ;inother called the police who reported I was in the final st;1ges of delivery. The "fake'' stomach now re· sides on the living room sofa. This year, once again, we'll be looking over t he nominees for the fashion losers. What will it be'! The cigarette jeans for legs that don 't need cir culation? T he jumpsuit~ for people who swear orr liquids after 4 p,m. the night bl'fore? Or the tube dress for women who want to be m ailed? May I h ave the envelope, pl<.'asc" NOW ... YOU CAN REALIZE YOUR FULL POTENTIAL! NEW YORK (AP) - With th e g r o wing J>Opu13rity of down.filled (arments for winter, the ;reather and Down As· :eocialion urges con· •IUmers to look for quali· :t y In de s 1 g n a nd ----------·-------------------~orkmanshlp. • Seam s should be well ltewn and the s urface of ~ garment should be :lrnooth. A fabric with a :fiany a ppear a nce in· ;'die ates possible down 1Jealtaa e. UPHOLSTERY W...,.T•W_. ....... IUZH.,._11•4. c.-...._,4..,." 'aAlml • WIDIMCOMI • U.CHS •I~• KMOU I. j ~ .. - HAVE A "OECORATING PROBLEM?" Our Interior Oeslgn9fS wlll solve It. suggest solutlons and arr•nge Wholesale Purchasing! INTERIOR OESIGN 1120 w. Coast Hwv. 71~1-0060 Newpor1 Beach ... -4 "' 0 ~ 0 ,.. -"' .. JOI.DAM • DA•ll • HICllOIT • AcU ariD PUBLIC PACKAGING SHIPPING CENTERS ~~ FRAGILE HANDLE WITH CAllE PACKAGING SYSTEM YOUR PACKAGING & SHIPPING MADE EASY! BRING IN YOUR ITEMS. WE'LL PACKAGE. LABEL&SHIP NIW FO~C:I MRHOO u.P.s.. c..._. c:..w .• .,.......... ..._ _...,. (714) 751-l412 COSTA MESA 3142 OOOPllSE AVl, COSTA EA, Cl S2S2S Come lo the ptofess1onals to cltvetop your lull perso11al pe>1en11al lor !Oday and lhc future Ifs easy and en)oyable. learn the lalest techniques in every1hm9 from Makeup lo Modeling. Spet1al Wolghl Control & Dance Work$hops. Teacher Training. F1ee Model Placement Agoncy are just some of the extra Powers' program benems. Women ol ~II aQes can oaln new poi~. btauly. conhdence m business, career or homema~lng ()llrsulls. C11l or come In today lor a (rff personal analy1l11nd progra111 dlacunion. John Robert Powers The Schools for Your Pmon.I ~nt ORANGE COUNTY U To-I ~ntry 547-822t SUCCESSFULLY SEAVlllG AlilERICAN W(V.lal SINCE 1925 The Penins1•la What memories! The train from Los Angeles. The Pavilion. The Balboa Ferry. Sandy beaches. But wha t about those miles of prime income properties th at line the seashore ? And the lovely residential area of Peninsula Point? . Newp ort Equity Fund s arranges equity tru st deed loans on Peninsula properties -and on homes all along the Orange Coast. If you need capital -and you.~re a property owner -call the Loan Oepartment at Newport Equity Funds for information on an equity trust deed loan . The number is 644-8824. Newport Equity '.funds ,Inc. Real Estate Brokers AVCO FINANCIAL TOWER 820 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE SUITE 211 NEWPORT BEACt-f CALIFORNIA Q26eO 71~ IOOMER . . tNSIDE WOODY ALLEN FUNKY WINICERIEAN TANI McNAMARA ca.~. JD wr nw nJ~1eaN tlCl TO al. ltJ ~ .... . - NANCY AUNT FRITZI PROMISED TO VE ME 50¢·-rLL QIVE HER A HINT --------~--. AUNT FRITZI ··· DOES THIS REMIND YOU OF ANYTHING ? by Wa F. lrowa and Mel Cauo11 by Tom latluk I lMINK tT'b llME UE HAD ~ um.E 1JU..J< ABOOT lHE mcffi OF lEAF I by Ernie lush111Uler YES. I MUST TAKE YOU FOR A SWINE FLU SHOT ---TODAY , TODAY'S CIDSSIDBD PUZZLB PEANUTS UNITED Feature Syndicate Monoeo Puuie sooe0- ~n~ CIMAIR ----~~~~ ~ 44Frtl' Informal 1 l.eb. 45 Give in ft ...... 1' IF I~ 11 11 A'"CI BA l L II Cflemk:al 4 7 Medicine f I• T A s•r-8 R £IE 0 s II Oawdlta applicators 10 Agta. 50 Red ··· 11 N ·-I' L1• IT R £ S I Ir s 14 Gtoma!rle 51 Shade of eolld tHown l$ Chou····· 52 Planes ~~ ~IL~. RS P]iljm T £ c II Pf I ·e:-1 1£ It -14 f U Chinese landing VIP gear 18 Principle 5fl Kind of 17 Condiment: arttit .. s2 WOf~-eo Liited w1t11 '• t•ve-• effOft germent fl 1 College 20 F1st1erm1n·s de1J:•• .ccauorles l'lolder 21 Keepsake e4 Once·-· 1 23 Theater lime Mating 65 Fill with ~oups pride 28 Grant flfl Expoe, e 11 pennlslion fl 7 Pronoun 27 Cen. 68 EJIQresaed deftnN excessive line love 30 Euanllat 69 Reunion polnla enendee PA c ;11'!il'll'ITTIER S PAN!; SPUR cp I CT l'IATI It E S I E .II J. u .Q~lJ NI T ll ~t .!~ J O E~ TR EN 0 .9 ~.! 7 Stale Abbr. consum91' 8 Produce 33 E1ects wllh crops c:onlempt 9 Gridiron 36 Regard with marking esteem 10 Metal pms 311 Eats 11 Biblical 40 Involved place 44 System of 12 Nulsll\ce Intervals 13Elsaku ••·•. 46Jtwtsn Japanese aacetic premier 48 Cleared 18 lndlvldual 49 Wm •••• Br 34 Roman date 35W.lndten tree group statesman DOWN 22 ~lat·l<>PPJ<' 52 Kind ol t German hllls salmon 37 Futzv texhle surface 39Htgheal noce 39 Tranalatea ff om cls>llera • 1 Mtnerat SUllll Olhr•IOl<I. Pr9flx 43 Wllhln: p,.11. Interjections 24 Respond lo 53 N American 2 F1rmefS' stimuli Indian g1oup: 25 C111. 54 Bath's river Informal heroine and 55 Agricultural 3 Again sh 27 ~a:~~len· bl11lding 4 Lowers In gelO worll 5 7 Narrow 5 ~.~1er In 28 Runs oul of mar on m nl gear 58 Sicily sigflt 6 ~;'. 29 Approaches 59 Grass stalk Onawa is. 31 Cause to 82 Jau devotee Abbr adflere 83 Midi season . 32Food ., J~:> r. -le -·. -.. (XAI( ATT~fl/. LET'S 60! -..... c::~lill JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH ~1s s.ru.D ae AA EASlf CA5€ F~ 'iW.~ TME'<'RE WRON6,ANO l'M ~16HT! THE VIRTUE OF VERA VAUAMT DOOLEY'S WORLD ., GORDO MOOM MULLINS t::==-=====::----;~ IT'S OOR NEW RSTl~E:MSNT PL.AN ." __ ....... by Charles M. Schub --------. IF ™E MONE'/ 15 Rl6HT. I CAA STAND A~IN6. Sli.IEETIE ! by Herold Le Dome THIS IS TOM Ar TlE FROHT GATE. Ml56 SPENCER! ~~ A GAA:f fitNOR ~TO SEE MtS5 -~ FAAHKUH ! 5AAL1. I LET HIM TI«OUGM? DAILY PILOT • ' byLM.SSpri .... by Gus Arriola ~~~-~~ ~E 3'~J by Ferd Johnson ll1S HELPIN<; US iOKt:E:PF~OM (JETTING RETl~EP. . . ~12 -M # "I hadn't planned on lookina at shoes today but with all t.he running around r ve been doina I decided I'd come here and )lat rest for an hour or two." ~ ....... - • 84 OA.ILYPILOT Laver .. Defeated • IJy Borg an.TON nAI) ~,. ~.c. -~8Cll'l.-wrp.a..ce of tome .. lt--.U~ ... ~tnws-~G,.iat•·a Jtql LaYet" to poet ••a, t-~ ~c­t.co in lh• firs.t cU,v et 'ae World in,ftatioaal ••.ts '9.aatc here Menday, · EvQftne Ga.lag<'.oc came from bebind to de(eal fJ1.1e Barter, 6-7, 6« 6·3 ia • WoCla'.!l'J's matcia. Lavw sa~ 11 break point in tile ()pffila& 'jame ~ bis rnatcti wtlh "1nW.cv.-cbam~on Bars bu\ two slop41 y sliced beckhMds cost him i'.i'.; Sttve tn the third ·eame. lorg dr•;>pped only one point ia wlbni~g. the las t two games. break11.1g Laver at love tG do6le out U°J'e set at 6-S. He \&Seel de· v••tiAc topspin~ PllSS'-f:ne shots down die line to ~ lrr.-n behind a Z.O ~to win tM! final set. 1t'wa ,. ~'"- Po aTLA No -V~t eran forward Sid.Dey 1"cb was sold today by the Pord•d Trail Blazers to the Bos too Celtics. 'nle sale was uncondiUGlllal and IOI' straight c~. Gre9•,,, A ITftlCN KEW YORK -Ja<* Ol"egory, a delensi ve eod far u.e New York Giant.s of the National Football Lttrtte, was arrested for dnanlten driring in the Times Sq_uare area early Monday, paUeesaid. Gregory was released, but is tcheduled foe a hearing in 10 d.,s. IAllcers Cut D•bnew LOS ANGELES -Tbe Los ~eles Lakers have cut their thlrd round choice in the Na- tion1.l Basketball Association draft, guard Mike Dabney of R\~ers. 1'he move Monday left the L akers with 15 men on their roAer, three over the limit they mu:st reach before the start of the NBA season Oct. 21. 8elr• fn Shakeup TAMPA, Fla. -The Tampa Ba)' Buccaneers' offense, wrucb ha.a scored only 26 pomts an llve ··es.. took on a new look today Col owing a shake-up in the co 'ng ranks and a tentative ~rnent to hire quarterback TefT)' Hanratty. John Rauch, offen si v e coordinator and quarterback coach. unexpectedly resigned Monday night shortly after the wialess National Football Le1CUe expansion team Bucs re- ached a reported one-year agree. meat with Hanratty. The form e r Pittsburgh Steelers' reserve said he expect· ed to sign today. Dfllb• A d.,anre• MADRID -Eddie Dibbs scored an opening round 6-0, 6-0 victory over Britain's Roger Taylor Monday ln a$75,000t.eonis tournarnent. Other results included: Jose Higueras of Spain over Steve Turner , 4-6, 6·4, 6-0; Britain's Buster Mottram over Jlri Hrebeek of Czechoolovakia. 6-2, 6 -2 ; Tom Okker of The Netherlands over Spain 's Salvador Cabezas, 6-3, 6-3; Nikki PiUc of Yugoslavia over Juan Muntanola of Spain, 6-3, 6-3, aod Karl Meller of West Germany over Argentina's Uto Alvarez, 6-3, 6-0. Mayer, Jordan Win NAGOYA, Japan -Gene Moyer won the men's singles ti· Ue and Barbara Jordan captured the women's singles crown in the 1976 All·Japan tennis cbam· pionshlps Mond ay. Mayer turned back Sachio Kato of Japan, 6-2, 6-1, 6-1 and J o rda n defeated Kiyoml Nakagawa of Japan, HI, 6-3. ea.pt.ell PlrH The Atlanta Falcons fired Marion Campbell <above) as head football coach Mon· day and selected general manager Pat Peppler as the interim head coach. I Silent Giant Hart Terrorizes Rams ~ LOS ANGELES <AP> -Tom· my Hart proved the silent giant or the San Francisco Gers as he smashed throuch the line, tossed Los Anaeles quarterback James Harris for losses on six occasions and didn't say a word. .. I didn't say anything to him and be didn't sa.y anything to me," was the response of the 251-pouod Hart after bis 49ers had upset the Rams, 16-0. in their nationally televised National Football League battle. tb1.nk It was power and sbe, ll w lS quickness." And for the r ecora. wuuams " listed at 8·3 and 256. so the 49er and his Ram opposite are about the same size. "We knew if we could slop the Ra m s running g._me , particularly on the fasl down, wr could beat them." Hart ex- plained. •'They bave the best run· ning lo the conference and usual- ly are good for four to six yards on that first down. We stopped them, and thal Is the difference.·· ball. whlued 73 yards in tovi pla.ys after lak.IQI the second ball kickoff. A Plunkett to D•I Williams paaa .1alned ID y_. and another etaht when the,.. celver fumbled out ot bounda. On the next play Plunkett bit McGee roe the touchdown. SC:OU 8Y OUA..,.9$ S...'•encltco O t ~ 0-" L.~~ 0 0 • ._. SP' -MCO.t 3' IH\\ ,,._ ~ I,.._ ~ ...... ~ .. , Sl'-Mik ... 116HtJfrCHOI ~ cr.-lelleal S" -l'GMlll•Me,.r It A-IO.m ITATISTICS ..... l'lrTl ...... S fl Au"'"-v•rds )MOI PM$f"I y.WOI tt.I ·-.. 2Mt * Quarterback Jim Plunkett threw touchdown passes of 36 yards to Willie McGee and six to Torn Mitchell in a third quarter blitz, but few defensive lines have done the job of the 49ers front four. Jn the first two league fames, both Lawtence McCUtchedo and John Cappelletti. the on4!·lwo running attack or the Rams. eainett more man iw YarG.S eacn pe.rgame. .......... .,.t'Cft » 32 • .............. LA'S DAVE ELMENDORF UPENDS JIM PLUNKETI' (16). Angry With Reds Rose Considers Playing for Phils CINCINNATI <AP) -Pete Rose, a red-blooded member of the Cincinnati Reds, talking about switching uniforms'? That possibility surfaced Mon- day as the Reds were auempting to eliminate the Philadelphia Phillies in three straight for their second National League playoff sweep. Unhappy over references to his age during recent negotiations with the Reds, Rose bas told friends be is disgruntled with an- nual contract haggling with the Reds ' front office and is con· sidering a move that could land tum with the Phils. "Sure I 'm unhappy. But it didn't just come up. I've been un- happy with , my salary a long time," said the 10-timeAll-star. Rose, who ironically has been the chief tormentor of the Phils during the regular season and in postseason play, could wind up in a Philadelphia uniform. Under major league baseball contract rules .Rose bolds the right to select where he woold like to be traded. A player with 10 years experience in the major leagues and live with the same club can veto a trade. The 35-year-old third baseman· outfielder, who was raised in Cin· cinnaU and became one of baseball's biggest drawing cards with his .. ustling, aggressive style, has been a thorn in Philadelphia· s side all season. He hit .442 against Pbils' pitching during the .eason and went into today's game with a > for-10 effort. Rose is reportedly irritated over the Reds' initial contract of· fer which called for a two-year lO•year Ban For Canada? contract at $200,000 a year. He is currently receiving $190,000 a year. Teammates Johnny Bench and Joe Morgan are the highest paid players on the world cham- pions. both at a reported $250,000 a year. According to a close source, ''Pete is tired or hearing that he is just a singles hitter. He reels he is as big a draw~on the club as Bench and Morgan, but the Reds' ollicials tell him th~y can't pay him the same salary.'' Rose would neither confirm nor deny the report, saying: "My lawyer has met with them and we're still talking. I don•t want to get into it now . This 1s not t.he right time to discuss it.'' They tossed the 210-pouod Hanis for losses 10 times, a 49er club record. and reminded the big quarterback when he was pJaying for the embryo Buffalo Bills. ''That," said the 6-4 Hart, .. was the . greatest game or my career." and no one wouJd argue with the nine-year pro veteran from Morns Brown College who has been Ute starting defensive left end for the 49ers the past six years. His greatest game propelled San Fr ancis::o t:> a .:..1 r~er·i:t a·1d ait< .. id of the 3·1·1 Rams in the NFC West after the Southern California team had been favored by 13 points. The Rams dominated the first quarter but picked up four penalties for holding. As 49ers quarterback Plunkett saw it, "That was the only way they could keep our defensive guys out." Coach Chuck Knox ol the pre- viously undefeated Rams ad- mitted, "They have one ol the most active defensive lines in the league. They just got us in situa- tions they would like us to be in. We tried adjustments in our blocking, but it just got to be third and 12 and here they come." Hart agreed, "They challenged us. but good, but we showed we could take it to them . I just ootfi- nessed John Williams. I don't * * * Rams' Streak Ends LOS ANGELES -When the San Fr anclaco 49ers shut oot the Rams. 16-0, Monday night, it marked the first regular season home game shutout in the Coliseum since the team moved to Los Angeles from Cleveland in 1946. The only other shutout at the Coliseum came in 1949 when Philadelphia won a playoCC game, 14-0, in the rain. The last time the Rams were shut out in the regular season was In 1941 when the team· was based in Cleveland a nd the Chicago Cards posted a 7-0 vie· tory. Tbe •9ers stopped McCutcheon at 72 yards on 16 carries and throttled Cappelletti at 12 yards in seven carries. San Francisco, after a 0-0 first fi'Gf!es Ellis "'""" "·'"' """" -Fl/l'IOlft.~I J.0 Pe,,.ll~nrds ~ INOIVIOUAI. 1.llAMIU ~11-0 Mt ~ 145 A~ING -SM Fr•l\(IKO, 0. Wl"l<wM ,,_.., w Jeck'°" 11·17. I.Os All9t-. wa..c-"""· C.-li.ctl1·11. AlCEIVINO-S..•r•ftCI-. W.J«.._..._ D Wllll•m ,.,,, Mllc ... 11 l·JI ..... a,...IM. M<Cutc....., ...... c._11•nlS.U.li J«ll-1·1 PASSING-S... Fr•"<IKO•~ ll·ll·l . "9 Y••Os. l..Oi""9itlK. H•rrlt , .. .,-4201."" Ex-Angel Hassler Duels NY Tonight NEW YORK (AP) -It is said that if you are going to make mls· takes. it is best lo make them all at once and get them out or your system. If that's the case, then the New York Yankees shouJd be in good shape for tonight's third gatne of their American Leacue playoff series against Kansas City. Dock Ellis, a 17-game winner. On Tt' Tordgltt Cltann~I 7 at d On T\' Wftfne•day Channel 1 at I 2: I.> gets the start for New York against Andy Hassler, 6-13, ot the Royals. Hasslerwastradedto the Royals from the California ·Angels m i d -way through the season. The teams are tied 1-1 in the best-of-five playo(f that will send the survivor into the World Series. There were a season-high five errors of commission and at least one error of omission. There were pop rues falling all over the place. There was a missed cutoff throw and base-running blun- ders. "Did you ever see anybody look good when they lose? .. won- de r e d New York catc h er Thurman Munson, who made two or the errors of commisslon, both bad lb.rows on stolen bases. "l don't pay attention to er- rors.·· said Yankees manager Billy Martin. "My players are human. It was juat one ol thole games." Alt.bough the five Yankees er- rors cost only one unearned run. they were symbolic ol the alopiM· ness of the game. Kamas CttJ'• gc>ahead rally in the sixth i.nnin.r was ignited by George Bretl'• tri· pie, a hit that started out looking like a routine fly ball. ··1 thought I was going to catch it." safd Yankees centerfieJder Mickey Rivers. who plays his position notoriously shallow. "It took off and there was no chance .·· Brett gambled trying fer the trinlP. stntf harelv beat the throw. He might not have if Rivers bad hit the cutoff man. But the throw sailed past second baseman Willie Randolph, and ahortatop Fred Stanley had to make the re- 1 ay. Earlier. Royals' shortstop Freddie Patek bad finessed Cbria" Chambliss on the base-paths. Chambliss was on first base la the third inning with New Yort leading 3·2. Carlos May bounced. a single into right field ando Chambliss took off for second. Waiting for him was Patek, fak· ing a play that sent the l'\UlMI' sliding, s ale by 200 feet as the ball bounced.. Into right field. Another mistake. In the eighth inning, the Royals wrapped up their vtctory with a ·three-run rally on a popfly attack or looping singles by Frank White, Patek and Buck Martinez. BARCELONA, Spaln <AP) - World sports officials are being asked to approve a l~year ban on all international sports events In Canada, and a five-year ban on tbe African countries which walked out of the Montreal Olym- pics. lltE RAMS' JAMES HARRIS TRIES TO ESCAPE THE 49ERS, WHO CAUGHT HIM 10 TIMES MONDAY NIGHT. ., ....... Tbe startling proposition came from Charles Palmer, president ot the International Judo Feder a· ti<ID. His plan drOpped like a bomb on the start ot a week-Jong meeting between the executive ho.rd ot the International Olym- pic committee and the 26 federa· lions whlcb control Olympic sports. Palmer. an EngUshman with a growlng lnfiuence in the Olympic movement, ls pursuing a militant line a1ainst the Canadian gov· emment. which refused entry to the athleteJ of TaJwan fot' the Olympics at Montreal last July. He also favors strong sanctiom qainst the 29 Afrtcan utions wtdch boycotted the sames on abclrt QOUce in protest 11atnst a Nw Zealand N&bY team touring Soulb Atr1ca. r .. . . . -.. Every Game a Dogfight··Donallue LOS ANGELES (AP> - UCLA fiaures to be a heavy favorite to whip W a.sbineton State this Saturday in their Pacific-8 football m atch, but Bruins coach Terey Donnhue s:-ys the game against the Cou,.r,." -and the rest nf lus tl am 's schedule - could tc to•.h'h·ond·co. "l tb1.1~< C"rrr gimc f'rom here on l'lllt I" c0Ji1 to be a dogtlght." Donahue commented Monday. "U l had to predict bow we'll plcy in the comina weeks I'd say we'll struttle every week. "Every game we ple,y, the op- ' ponent ls wan tine to knock us orr because we're nationally ranked. Everybody we ph'y will be sky· hiCh for us," the coach con· tinued. "But I think our players can cope with tt. '• The fifth-ranked Bruins have learned to cope with quite a bit of adversity already this season. UCLA's total first-quarter polnt production this r.u Is one field goal, and every week the Bndn.s have had to battle from behind. They've done that quite well, however, and only a 1~10 Ue with Ohio Stale keeps UCLA from having a perfect record in five contests. Thls put weekend. t.be Bruins made their most spectacular comeback of the year. as they went into the finaJ quarter of their P acific-8 opener down .20-10 to Stanford. But UCLA came to Ute and won 1olnl away, 38-20. Donahue, a 32-year-olcl rookie coach, joked after the Brulns' Ont same of the seaaoo thaf be waan 't sure his be art would bold up lf all his team's nmes were that excitln1. That <ipener wu mildly excltlna, a 29-10 victory over Arizona State. compared '° what bas come after. "I don't see bow 'ohn Wooden stood it,•• Donahue Nid Mond11, relerrlDI to the loaa·tllne UCLA buketball coach. Commenting on tbe StaDfCll'd same, Donahue said M WU parUcularly tmc;:aed wltll Cardinals quartv Guy Be• Jamin, who completed 35 ol ~ tbrowa for ST8 yardl. But Benjamin a1lo threw five lntereeptiOftt, a feet Doollbue • t.ributed to tbe ••celdUI eac..- tloo of the Bruin a' same plan. .,. :·: . " U· •I . • • • . Tuesday.October12.1976 OAILVPILOT -... ~~~:;:~~~~~;::::;L:;~~....::x=~~=~ El Toro DefenSive Players of .week Defense DAVID GAMBILL Corona del Mar ROBERT JOHN Eatancla Tough Defense At Aniat Coaches at Each Area School Select P1ayer1 of the Week STAN MILLER Coata Mesa BOBOXOLO Fountain Valley PAUL BETHKE Dana Hiiis STEVE HJELMSTROM Huntington Beach JEFF SMITH' Edi a on KURT WESTGAARD Laguna Beach BILL FAIRBROTHER El Toro Sparkles El Toro Hlah'a Chargers came up wilb thelr best derense ~ t.he year last week, but also came aw ay with their first loss of the 1976 cam· palgn against Laguna Beach. WIN PRIZES WORTH $3,~00 IN'76 * Reubc n·s ~l\10()~1\.:\l\.ER * Weekly Pigskin Pickeroo '76 winners will share prizes worth more than $330 by selecting their choices of the win· ners of 30 weekend football contests. The· Daily Piiot reader best predicting the outcomes of Pigskin Pickeroo '76 games will win a one-year membership at the Nautilus Newport physical fitness center, 4220 Von Karman Avenue, Newport Beach. Second place winners will enjoy a din- ner for two at the Moon raker Restaurant in Irvine, Reuben's Newport Beach or Reuben's Costa Mesa. Third place winners will be awarded free car washes by Metro Car Wash Systems at Harbor near Baker Street In . Costa Mesa and Beach at Ellis Avenue in Huntington Beach. P•••-i11 Pic-eroo h • '""''" ,, .. ,.,,.. ol ttw O~·•v Pllot $JIOl'11 ~<llOftHClt-IMUy, r ... ..sov .,.., Wed••ouy. RULES .. It '1 • t .. 'I '"' :i•• • y ·" t : ~·· •I . .. ,. 1.•• .... ,, .1 , . . , .,I .. • • • • • • • ' :.tt • • . • . . .... . . ... : I• • : 'I e ••I • • : I ,I : ~ •. . . • • • • • • • • • • • •• : %~ : !! _, ... . . • I I ~ ~ .. f. 88 O~L Y PILOT / 11 OakTree 1 .. . " .... ~:. . ' ,. ' ' or ... Racing Entries 4tSMtqAlllta hrw~, o.n, .,_,.... ... llm -_...., ~-s.s lluna .. ttlll, 1• ... M -· ~nll'ftl1:•.ClaM .... fftt FlltST llACE -Sewn f~ ) ¥H• Oki\ end up Pur" U,000. 0.1m- l"11 Claimu>vprt<U•.2.SO. VictorySllo<o IMd 1acoue) Walloon CPlt>ed•I 1'U.fl>OU9f'l IVel.sqved -rSo<l•k lPterul Con,,.lo CC.rnpul Bulbul CSl>oemell•r) Runfti119Poo1 tv1r~ral Ht~tungo l~ol $t.oble ,.,.Ince ll.embert) -yKl"il (N09uer1 N rlval Tl-<Me•llnerl 116 "' "' , .. 11• 114 11.4 114 , .. 114 111 SECOND llACR-One ll'llle.011~ lnQ. FllllH '"'" years old. Putw 110.000. Clalm lf\Q prl<e $20,000 - S14,0CIO. a.-i-.1>e1se .. u COlnlcole) WOolJ«kel IM<Hargue) '(MMoRolelPillC•Y) 114 D<•ltOnelN09uerl 1u Me11JW1 llt•m•rezl 111 TW<llve Ooflan IC.m.,.sl 114 5cll0n fMeM) 111 !.o•ver Slip IMahOf',,.y) 114 THlllO llACE -6 •nd DM·t.111 furlon9\. Cl•lmlnq. P urse 14.SOO. MaicHln colts •net .,e101,.qs. , ,,_, oldS bred on C.111 Cl••mlng price UO,OOO-S16,000. Flylf>9Mel IManlne1> AtM<.cas,,,.tldate IHarrh l Paper ASSC!f (Men• I Lou>am lPl-al Fire Arr-(Mucclolol Nav•I Palrol IV•ll .._wC.\f> IPonc•v> Gu-ICampasl L•llM>loml\I CTorcl 110 llS ~I· 111 llS 11• '" IU 111 Offensive Playe_rs of Week Co•ch•• •t Each Area Sc:hool Select Pl•y•r• of tM Wffk. Arti sts 4 th Barons Retain No.1 Ranki Fountain Valley Valley 2·4·5 in the 4- H igb 's Barons have cross country poll widened their lead as the Costa Mesa, Mission Vi No. 1 prep football team jo and University 1-6-1 in the CI F .c-A Southern 3·A cross country. Section following their 1 . .._1•1,.~~.:~.'.::' fourth s traight convinc· , Sou111H111i1..01 ~ 110 tSS Il l 10t '11)1 71 lng non·league victqry. ! ~"!~t~•~l01 The Barons picked up , PM x 14.01 15 first place votes and •Senta Mol'ic• l•-o> five second place votes ~::.~:Cr:;-,~~:• by Southern California · • s1. Peu1 '3·11 sportswriters to attain a 10 ~1co"1M •>-H . )·Al'MtNll 25-pomt margin over No. 1.So. Pue<Mn• l4·o• 2 South Hills or Covina 7 <nKenl• V•lley (t-0) • 3. Sen M.,lf'IO U.01 And Laguna Beach, 4.~1•AMV•11•y<..cit still unbeaten after four 5. "'"• P••" 1..01 games and 2-0 in South ;, ~:'!1\~1r''" t+ot Coast League actio!'• has, :.:0~~::.:~~1, moved up a notch m the 10.~1Hlg1o l•·o• 2-A poll to fourth place. u , .. ,-.11 The Artists face their ~ ~~!:!~;.0, toughest assignment to 3. "6one v1s1e 14.01 date Fri.day against in· ._uw-•uclll44• S E\e>e<MU 1..0) vadingSanClemente. • ••t•LMN c~> A th 0 Co l 7 RIC l•\O • 14~01 no er range_ as a. Kennedy 18,.~.1(3.o.11 area school, Liberty • An1e1-11a11ey1:J..0.11 Christian or Huntington 10 Aoou•• 13-11 41J S'f 11 • 4-AW••••P• .. Be a ch In 8. man l.NewponH .. bort.SunnyHlll'!. classification moved to U11lve•!lt14. Mir• cost• s. '-ewt1""' ' • · ._LB Poly J . eewrly Hiii~ a. a.attrt No. 8 after rolling to its '· s... Marcos 10 eosi. M•"· fourth Straight lop-sided H Weier,..,. tri h 1. Upland 1. Los Amigos 3. Cllill111fJ ump . • ._. s.r,,. s. Fooc11111 .. "'""* The water polo and Poly 1. vm. P••ll •. e1 0orei»-. cross country rankings erncen1• va11e., 1~. c1aremom. Miko Jon (Pierce I Olsert81esw<t (Ver9ar•) e1ueSqu.te1ron IN09uetl AIM Ell9ll>le • ~IHOt>tlullm<H••guel "' "' 118 DALE RICKARD Estancia DOUG THOMPSON Fountain Valley STEN LUNDQUIST HunUngton Beach NORM ANDERSON Laguna Beach • •·A erou c:..,.,,. as usual, are dominated 1 v1111 Pa11t t. ec11'°" >. ~· ------------by Orange Coast area V•llev 4 Matin•$. Founleln Valley •• Foothlll 1. We~tmlnster 8 Bu~k t. schools with Newport canvono1s.119u,10,KellMdyofLA Harbor and University or PalmundSAVellev. AON VALLERCAMP Marina I FOUllTHltAC£-Onemlle.Oaim • t; lnq Pu"• 110,000 J vu• old flfho. I fl c1a;m1nQOf'i(~I J70,000-S1•000. T ... 1 T,.., M.1m.t> ICaslant!d•I .. , C.Ultf>9C4u<I> IN09""t1 111 • 1 AS•TllcOueen(LamberlJ 111 Am1911 Mii CTorol 11~ Sw1nq1noH•l•s <Gcnzaletl '" Eh,.lt. I01nocotal ttl !onowyCa~IP1orce: 111 01avat1ou• IMal>Orney) 1 ll FIFTH ltACE -Abcut \tx....ciOIW- Mif furlongs on furl. 3 vur-olds and upward Allowenu PurHil4,000. Sano< Sloutll" IValder) 116 '-'""Olfl<trlTorol 116 CCru•str (V••11••• I 114 R1de0fl ISh~m•-•rl 114 Sola"'"' IMcHarquel 114 G411•~ fOln•<ol.tl 111 EzeQu1ellllP1erol •n Sunnlosi O•v ICcnzdlezl tlb Ea•lern Siar 1011•~'4'>1 116 Hasto Run fNoque1, '" \IXTH ft ACE M11'd•nl ffarold\ '' lbm1l1J\ Pur\P \ tO 000 8.t'f'' C',trt•·t 'M-'""''' '11 M.i 1a1 Tw1\t ·Camp•'' 11A Cro\' l'-'"'"' 1 Noqu• 11 , '" OtrtFrtrnd (~f'U'H'"mdll.fl'r) l18 A Brown Fo • t!,Pnn 1n I 11R A Go8.trt.tQV4'-tM• '\al ti\ Amalg•mate tC•\t"n~da • 110 \tr Altl~•ndtr •Mt Hnrqu,. • 't& A -A L W"4Ml~r tr.t1nedftntry SEVENTH ltACE -Altow~nct\ 11 lb mile\ Pu••~ i 13.000 Foille\ ar>d mart\ J vearold\ anct uP 1res81M'C tOh1t1 .. rf'') 116 PIM\eOLool<ITorol 116 • M<>n••m IGonza1~zl 120 A-84'11enobl~ tCa,IAnto .. l t 16 &. • ~· FflvolOU\M•S("t\•-'f CNogu~t) .,. ., t<ar•I01nq (0 •n •<.Ol1t) 10' f=l.Mt\Y P.t\\ <Mena• tu f1-<;on111nc l•vt IMc MarJlu•I II• \lf"H0Slf!d\on !ShO,.,,,dt.:~r' 11& A -EtlCry Nel""18 Hunt EI GI( T If "ACE , turlo119•. 1 '!f'M cld 11111._ Anoakoa Stake\ ISOl•I I~ <-I P\ir\t Sl0.000.addt!d E•.t<I" A.,t 9•1ouCountry tNoou~1) Cute-St'I"' I01tvarft'\ l A\,,..r,ticlt fM<HarQU .. ) Ill I 11 111 SCOTT SPEAR Mission Viejo TONY FULLER University MARK DRAZBA Maler Del CRAIG LYONS Newport Harbor MIKE DUNIVIN San Clemente SD Mesa Now No. l San Diego M es a College, off its unbeaten record and a surprise 28·24 victory ove r Fullerton College last weekend, has vaulted in· to the No. 1 position in the Daily Pilot's JC foot- ' ball poll of Southland teams. Mesa's Olympia ns were sixth a week ago. DUEL THURSDAY ... Top Driver Golden West. No. I last week, rell to the No JO spot after losing a 3-0 de- cision to Santa Monica. In k ey g a m es th i~ Continued from BS as most valu able player in the national tourna· ment that was won by the Orange County learn. She was also MVP on the CdM junior varsity last year . The other three starters were also on the Orange County s quad. Laguna Beach has four players back from last season, headed by Dawn Spurlock, a senior setter who was also a first team AJl·CIF selection. Karen Lynch. Robertson B dJ ff week, San Diego Mesa is a junior and Lynch a 8 y Ort· hosts Orange Co~st. No. sophomore. 4 Mt. San .A.n~onio (4·1) Three juniors round UPLAND (AP) -taJces on V1Stting Gross· outthe top performers on Veteran Can adian driver mont (4·1) · the No. 7 the squad and include Doug Moody remained in ranked team. Karin Lane. Nancy serious condition early ";>'s~,!er.;:.~~0•0 Tresselt and Dana today wit.h injuries suf. 1c11ru,11 11 Erickson. George Carey fered when his dragster ! ~in~'::~::~: is coach of the Laguna crashed iolo a retaining , s..n•• Mo""" 1• 11 Beach team. wall Sunday at 160 miles ~ t~~~;110•:J•:, Both schools are un· per hour . ho s pital q TA11uo1 defeated in league play authorities reported. 10 Golden w,.1 u 11 SEVIN ADVANTAGES OUI PAGll OFFHS ., •) ., 17 l7 11 16 " 10 Pr,._._.,r,.tJ M1,s•Tnrot 111 AMAT Tr tfer"'°'' tP•f'le•v) 11' I ••• Chri s Ande r son, a combination setter and hitter and captain Leslie this season and each has A spokeswoman al San lost by a narrow margin Antonio Community to Santa Monica, un· Hospital said, however , doubtedly the team that that the 29-year·old will be seeded first in the Moody, of Edmonton, CIF playoffs. AJberta. was "having a good night" in the Cage R esults hospital's intensive care. NINTH ltACE -'1/16 mllt\. Cla1~ •nq F1lhr~ •nd M8ff'S l 'f,.8r olOS •nd uo Pur\r \11,000 Cta•mtno prec,. S'O 000 Sl6,000. P"it\W1nchform I Pinc av I 111 O&•••\M1n '"•'aara> lt .. A.Qnl\HoOf" lM art1nt1) 10' Frt•h Fru1l IS1>1>emdker I I ll F',.1rWtl'f Phyllt\ fO~n1c.otal 116 "TurnOt Fa1• (P1,.rct-) HJ Rubta(OQU<'f6 IV•ll 111 F•ttt C.urrAgh ICamPa•I 111 Grid Poll The ToP Twenty tumt 1n Tl't ,.,. '\OCtal•d P•eu colle9e toott.311 l'JOli. w lff\ f!r\t pta.c.-votPs ""' S>Arenthev\1 w•'°" '"<ord\ and 1otal ,0011w~ 1 MoCh lCjal\ ~1 ~ 0.0 1 1'• 7 Po!hburqh l ~ 0.0 I 0\7 3 Nebr-"k• •·O.I &<II •UCLA c~1 W ~ Marvt•nd ~ 0.0 ..0 • Oltlohnma • f).t 611 1 Ml\\OUrl A· l·O A~\ 11 use • 1 o ... • Otl1o~t J l·I 411(, tO Tu~• T•ch J.0.0 JO'I 11. i;.orql" 4·1·0 301 11 Florlda J 1·0 710 I) T••a\ 7·1·1 11' 14 NotrtOa,,.,.. 3-1·0 1\8 u K•n"'' c4 1 no 16. LOU•\IOf\a SI. l ·t-1 47 ttt" Mi\\1\SIOCM •1: 0 •2 11 Af~An\O\ J.t 0 31 H Hou•lon J..14 ,. 20. Al•t>ama 3·1 0 11 Cross Country fr"i.,,..,, O<Nft View (16110) 1.e1 Alttni'" Ota•nvl•w 11211411 Paclll<• 1. R Oelg.Oo 10) 11·11; 7. \/lutnn (Pl 11 U ). M HolQU1n 101 II 2S f. B Oel9'1do 101 11 111; S. ~I IP> 11:n; •. R. HOIQuln 10) II .JS; 1. Farber fPl 11:•2; l .Af\nO (01 ll:Sol;t . Sl•NK IOI 17 00; 10. Allen (01 n 03; 11. Lamb IOI 12:04. Continued from B·S Wendel, a hiller are other starters back. Both a gains t Edis on last are seniors as is Leslie 0111LsusteETULL Go!Mf>We>tl1llUOMI SAC week, we'r e in trouble." Weber, a first-line hitter 19 11 p1 cp Amat's offense, in a and first r eserve who c;.1ru1h 1 o ' • pro set a nd some 1-gained all -leagu e ~:,bl'" ! ~ ~ 1~ form atio n, is l ed by honorable m ention last Burr~ 1 o 1 • q u a rt er b a c k J oe year. ~~n ~ ~ ~ 1~ Donofrio (5·9, 160 jr. ), Two hitters up from llo•\ ' ' o 1 tailback Nick Corso (5-9, the junior varsity and ~-=t•" ~ ~ ~ ~ 165 sr .) and fullback starters this season, arc M<Le•n · s • , 10 unit. Moody, competing in the 12th-annual National Hot Rod Association World Finals at Ontario Motor Speedway, crashed into the retain- ing wall after his dragster 's braking chute railed al the end of his Chris Spohn (5·10, 160 Linda Robertson and ~0~~;~.me: Gold;~ w':,1• !1•1~~ jr. ). ~n~~~~;;;:~~~~~~~~~~!!run~·~=~=~~n1 Lineman Pete Mitchell l'i (6-0, 190) is one of Amat's big assets up rront. F ish Rep o rt LONC 9EACH 10utefl'1 Wll.trl) -,ll;;l;it 67 an9I•" 11>arr~cuda, •• bo<>olo 1S1 ban , 107 r•d \nltPDfH 48 bl~ MU, :wit tnaOt<~I lllolmonl Plorl -51 •n<llf'<t • 310 •O<k cod, e cow <od, 1 ting <od Hole. ~~i:.r1~ .~~0N~~'~·; ~~1~~n~:·~~~~ -~~ 2S rock """ 8arqe lS •nqil'r\ co m.1c~ere1. JO rock .,,.,., 1 bonito. 1 fwtllbvl, I W111te~a bd\\ SAH DIEGO CMunltlp•I Pier) -31 ,.__,,,,,,,. lnQl,u· 1 yell-l•ol 1 blueflnluM, ll bontlo, 11 cel•<O M\>, 11 roe' 11>1>. 120 roc;k Cod. AVll.A IA"I' CPort s ... l.1111 s,orlfh111Rt) -51 •nglor~· II •t~or•. 7011"9 cod. •so•ock cod DANA WHAftf ~ 0 •ngt11r,; 61 ban. 710rock.(od. Sa~~ N•WPOllT IArt'1 U lldl119I -31 lnQle" ft 11..tlb Ila\\, 11 ••n<I bH\, l' rock cod. ID•vey'1 LoOer) -•3 anglers: t?O ro<k cod SIAL l•ACH -'4 anQlH•" 'kl roe" tod, 1 cow cod, l3 macto.e<>el, 1 bonito. LUBE. OIL CHANGE. that yours may not! 1 COMl"l.ITE ORANGE COUNTY COVIUGI llldudl•9: lAlt... a-•. Sot1 ct.-.., Mlulo• Vl•I•, 0 11110 Polet, • -11 .. Loll<J IHclt eflfl 111t1t ef LA. - 2 MONTH TO MONTH llENTAL IASIS 3 HO DEPOSIT alQUiUD ON APPltOYID CltEDIT 4 ONLY $17.10 PU MONTH TOTAL COST h11fi110ltecl ,....., 5 NEW COMPACT UNIT SIZE 11 "· I •• 'la I i YOICI MUSAGI PAGRS 0 ALSO AU AVAILAILE 7 FULL FHf MAINTENANCE ORANGE COUNTY RADIOTELEPHONE SERVICE IHC '7141135-3305 .. IO, SANTA ,., SANTA &llA 1-L..-... ,~, MIN• Vl•le• DaM N•I. lff Cl-le, I•~ J•~ ~,.tr..... II T-u l ... ,._ .... uu I . . 3 . h A >-A cress Ce<utry rvme go1ng l · ml e 4· 1. e.os1a Mesa 1. up1and 3. vatei>c.•• polo ratings, Huntington • Buena Pu ll: s. Hawtho•ne 6. M1,. B h , d. d '"'" Vlelo 1. Unlottr\lty 9. L....-C 9. ea c s E l s 0 n a n f*)lrP 0.l'IW of Sherman 0.lls 10. I.OS Marina and Fountain "'"""°' 111.1r11111 11111 Piii 111111 PRESENTED BY FIRST NATIONAL CITY TRAVELERS CHECKS , . . INTERNATIONAL RACE OF CHAWlf'IOltS: Does ii reany decide who's 1he best racing driver in the world? See tor yOUfSell when A J. Foyt, Al and Bobby Unser, Johnny Rutherford, Gordon John· cock, David Pearson, Richard Petty. Cale Yarborough, Buddy Baker. James Hunt, Jody Scheckter, and Al Holbert mix II up in two 76·mile races driving ldenlrcally·prepared Chevrolet Camaros ••. one race Saturday, one race Sunday. FORMULA 5000 CHAMPIONSHll'a: You'll see Al Unser, Danny Onga1s. Brian Redman, Bren Lunger, Vern Schuppan, Jackie Oliver, Teddy Pilette, Alan Jones and more; all In super-fast. 600·horsepower Ame11can V-8 powered, open-Wheel formula cars. II s lhe season finale tor America's premier toad racing series ••• three races, all on Sunday. TICKETS: General Admission $6 Saturday, $8 on Sunday. Grands1ands are FREE on Saturday, and all seats are reserved on Sunday al $4. $5. $6 and $8. General Admission to< Children under 12 is FREE bolh days; Overmghl Parking Saturday nlgtll ls FREE. Tickets are available at T1cke1ron (213·670·3111). Liberty Agencies, Walhchs Music C11y Stores or Riverside Raceway, 22255 Eucalyptus Avenue, Riverside, Calllornta, 92508 (714- 653· 1161}. ~­~ OCTOBER 16-17. 1976 111111111 llllllJ, •• FRoM Fa sh ion Island Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBO.R • , . ' . .. ... P BLIC NOTICE P BLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO'l1CE l'l('TITIOUSIU,INl.U , ,..,. S -.J1 NMl!aUATtlMUn NOTIC•TOCllEOITOltS SUl'a111oacou•TOl'n4I 1,,. lol-r>q 119"'"' '• °"'"'I O<N Ne A -STATE 01' CALll'OllNIAflO• ,...,.,, \Ul'llUOltCOUltTOl'TMI! TMaeo\INTYOl'OltANOC lf lM CU~trll '> ~•AST ~'"'NO UATIOl'CAUl'OllNIAFOtt Ne A ... 11& .,., llU•~ (o•IH.Wu c;.At?~1 TMl!COUNTYOl'OltANH NOTICE 01' MIAalNO 01' ""'9 I Kl"' IC•llll \ IC"" 10111 '" "'~ M•ll•< ot th• E•l•I• ot l'ITITION l'Olt P•OIATI ~ WIU. tlu11n1nQ \DrtnQ~ ~n . Hufttll•OtOn llE8ECCA H !>ULl.IV .. N 11'0~-" ANO l'Oll \.ITTtlt' TISTAM«M• e.1<" CAtt-.. llE9ECCA SUI 1 IVAN, •llO~-tAltYANOllUTMOltll.ATIONTOAO-TI•" b<o\iM\\ •• (OftOll<t .. O• f" on .. Q.ARt\SA AE8EC(.A SULl.IVAN MIMI IT I• UN 0 I a TM I O••·-· -•£8ECCASUl.LIVAN 0.........S INOlr .. INOaN1 J'Ol11UMl1TaATl0-1oun9 J ltllft Hol•<e '' ,...rllllv Qlvel'I to <<tO•IOO 01' UTllTIS AC'I' l(ellll\ Kim • hf••l'IO ct1im, ~ln\t lfte Uld ..... £\Ille ol INl!Z 1.0ltltAIMI! T'lll'-tlMt,...ftl we• '"'°" wttll ltw -.110 ltlo Mid <l•lm• '"I~ Olh<e Of HUTCH I UJ N , • k a IN 1 l L , C.OV..tv (lerlt ol ~--tOUf'llY Oft Ocl U• <•..--"' IM .. O•tW•G court Of to 14UTc;HllOH, o.< .. vd • 1'1• P<t,..nl t"""' to tftO un~'"<lflOd .t ltw ..OTICE IS HlltE8Y OIVl!N -... >Ut otll<e ot CHRIS R CONWAV_, llAYFUMllER ... tllledMreM•ll9ll •111111."'"' °'•""Co••• 0.lly "''°'· QAIS11.t.M, VANOEN8ER~. NOn. liGtlfOtPfobett9'Wlll•"'lo<l-e Ott It l't••ndHO~ t tU• CO NWAY ANO CANNON,• otl.et'9rTnt.,...,.IM'VendAul-I<• PUBLIC NOTICE 4141 'l't Pfol..,\10"11 CorPOtnll011, UO E OCHn llCWI 10 AOMll'llsltr unci.r the ,,.._ ---------------•11vc1 , Sult• 1000, In IM City Of ..._ ~t Allm!nlslullon ol E\l•lll'J At'-,.. lletltll 11'1 Los A"<)etn c;ounty Wl>i<l'I It.-. 10 wlHcll IS 1'1.0t IOt twit.er IAltft Olll<e I\ lhe Ol .. e 01 buSil'leU of !Nrll<\11.,\ en4 tl'lel lhe time ..... pl.C• ---------------lheUl\<lol•'"'"eo '" .,. .. m•tter\OH'UIO"' o1i.et1no1...,ume Nl•oetl'l•UCM'Oc• l'ICTITIOUSIUllNCSS l"OIOl-81Clt\lel• S..ch Cl•IM>..,thtl'le toOtr U lf7 .. •I 10 00 • rn., lft '"" NAME ,fATIMINT ........ ,.., vOU<Mr\ mU\I liot llleO ot courlt_,,010.pertl'MlllNo 30fWld ,..!~,followlru1 pet\011 '' OOOl'O-. o<e.~nl~O '" e•o••••ICI within tovr tout1 el 'OO Civic Ctftl•• 0<1"9 ~I. A8C ENTEllPR•Ses 1~1·'-1l1t mont .......... ,,,. hr\IC>uOhUIOOl'lof ll'llS lnlheCllyol S...I• An•, t•lllOt"4• -'...., not1Ct Olilt!OO<IODtr '· lt,. ...... Mlnlo<IV•e10,CA.,•7~ 0.ltdOcl 1 .. ,. WIL\.IAMI! StJOMN, "°"" Wllll•m lkn, 7&elZ Cnlll• MARK s SUI.LI YAM Colinty Cltrlt UN,Ml•'lo"V1e10, CA'1•7S E•~utorol tl'leW•ll MAllVINTINc;Hllt T111i IN•ln..w. I• <01u1uc:1..., t>v.,. ,,.. o1 _.10 Du•~''" •nw OC.•11 II•• Me. 4'• dlvlduel CHlllSlt CONWAY LMlt .. «11 CA ... t PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC N011CE .lohnWm Ben GltlSHAM,VAHOCN81!1tG • ..OT'T • -...-... uueoier 1111' ".,.,,,.,., WU hltd Wtlll ..... CONWAY ANO CANNON Pue>fl\htcl <><•"99 Coesl 0.111 Pilol, c• tlll Co\lnlvClt•llol Otel'~Coun1vonSt:e1 A ..... tuieMICor-•ti.A Oc1-1?. ll .. 1'1• CJC».11 ••CTtT10US8USINIJS 'lt,ltl'-lltE Ol .. ~11•• Wte.1... M4MESTATEMMO' ... _. LMlflu<.,,C.t. _, • PUBLIC NOTICE n.tot-1"Qpenoft$Me....._"""" l'uOll"-d Oranyo Coe~I O.•ly Piiot, PublilMO O••noe C61sl O.•IY P'llol, -H. _.., Ocl IZ, It, t•.anct NO• 1 191• Oct-. 17, lt, 1•. •nd Nov 1, 1'1'1-------S.-)Ot.)4--------1 Vil.I.A NINO$, 1Stt M iit Utlf, -----------~--7-• -74 SUl'EltlOllCOUltTOl'TME Ne-18Hcll,C.llfornl•._ STATE 01' CAl.ll'OltNIA l'()a Ololl<tM It s,,lllet, .It., 1'2• Mite PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE TN IE cou NTY 01' Olt ""OE Ulftt, Ntwpett 81.ch C.lllwnt.9'1'60 Nt A..,114 Pett• W. Perru1111, •» F1ffh su .. •1tlOlt COUltT Ol'THI! STATE 01' CALll'OltMIA llOlt THICOUMTYOl'OaANGI Nt A_.,llt l'ICTITIOUS IUSINES5 NAMIE STATEMENT NOTICE 01' MEllltlNO 01' A-.-Yon,NewY0tlllOMO l'ETITION FOlt l'ltOIATE CW WILL Tlltlbu>lneUho<Olldu<IAtdby .. llmot- l ht lo11ow111Q persons ••e -"G bu$1- nMus ANO FOtt LETTaltS TESTAMl!N ed1>11rt,..""lp TAllY 011 IN TME ALTEltNATlVI! O..erl"lt 59111er,Jr, MOTtCI 01' MEAltlNG 0" l'ETITIC* l'O• l'ltOIATI Of' WILL ANO l'Olt '\.ITTlltS TUTAMl!H• TAllY THE SCOTSMAN TIA( OUTLET ,,,. ,., .... Port 8oulevord, eosu. Mow, CA. l'ETITION '°" LETTlltS OF AO-<..M•al P•rtntr MIMISTaATION ThtS Sltltment w•• llltld '*''" the Est• I• '!} E L l,ZA e ET 11 0 <:oun•v Otrll of ~ .... qe COllf'llyCl<'Sop. STONE TIRE COllPOllATION .. SCHWAR rl eiso know" es i.Mn.r14,lt7• ELIZAEETH OIMANOO SCHWARTZ, 'VLOl', ltOUTON • Est1le ol AMANDA Elll)l.8ETH HOAR, Oe<Hs.d Tuas Co< po,.. lion, 6802 E••I W•l<,...r, Ctly ol Commerce CA. 90000 Ot<e•)e(I 1UltMS6MeltlTTlllClt NOTICE IS ME~E8V GIVEN INI Wll.LtAM E NOAA hn filed he,.ln a Ptllllon tot PfoMI• of Wt II .,,., lot 1 ... ....anct Of Leiter' Tesl•menl.,.,. to tiw Ptlll'-r, ,.terence 10 which Is mac1e tor fur1t>e• Pt•ll<ulars aNI ttlllt 111& time.,.., PIK• of .,.arinQ lhe s..,.. llas -ffl lor Oct<>""r 26, 1976 at 10 IX' A.rn.. In the courlroom ol Oepertmenl ..., Sot '810 <ovrt, •I 700 Civic Centtr ~1 .. Wttsl, '" lhe C1IY Of ~le Ana, GIMllon"• This bu'llness b <ONl..cle<I by" <or· porallon STONE Tl RE CORPORATION WT Brady Secretary NOTICE IS HE~E8Y GIVEN thtl ey1 O.vl•G laralll VIRGINIA P. SCHWARTZ !Ids filed AtterlleyUU.~w ~tln•11tlll10ft tor ProOateolWlll •nd •t•Mt<Art.,wllW 10<' 1ss..anco ot L•llerS TtSlarntnlotry .,....,_, lee<ll CA ~"l NUU PvblltlMtd O••"llt Cont Dell~ Pilot, StJ>1 JI, 21,•MOcl S. U, 1'76 399'1-76 Tnos st&leme"t wes toled With the Counly Cltrk ot Or•nQtl CoUllly on Oc IObef I 191• or lft Ille Alltrnatl•t PetlUOI\ lot Ut ters of Adm(nh,tr•tl~n, ret•renc• to Wf'llch Is m.odt tor tu<lllOr 1>6flkUlao, ltUllNM TUltNER,Esq •rd !Mt ll'le time and piece ol ht.-1"'1 ---------------levetlyMllls,ca 90211 RJJU Published OranC}e Co;nl ()alty f'l•o1, '"" s.me has o..en sel tor Oc-r u, 197' •• 10 00. "' • In lh~ CO<Htroom OI PUBLIC NOTICE Oct 11, lt,H,and Nov,,.1916 <lm-76 Oe119rtrnent No l ot s•ld court, at 100 --------------- OetedOclober7, tt7• Wll.\.IAM IE SI JO .. M, County Otrk l'llTlttCIA MIEllZOG A-yatLaw lMI Eat CNlt Hie"•r c:..-.. 1M1r,c.111 tun Tel: (1141'7~19%4 1111_.,1 ...... 11._ PIAlll"'" Or anQe Coes I 0.1ly Pllol, Oct. 12 u. " 1976 4)0t.76 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Cl'ttJI SUl'EltlOlt COUllTOFTME STAT& OF CA\.IFOltNIA FOR THRCOUMTYOFOttAHGE No A_.,124 NOTICE 01" MEAltlNG Of' l'ETITION flOll "ltOIATE 01" WIU AMO l'Olt l.ETTEltS TEnAMEN• TAllY ANOAUT HOltltATIONTOAI). MINISTElt UHOEll TllE ------C-,.-1'-J4------l~NFOE~~~~~:=~ AOMI H ISTltllTION SU .. EalOlt COUltTOf'TNE 0 E\laleol PETERG GAASEOELEN STATEO"CAl.ll'OltNIAFOll 81SO k-ft at P. G GAASEOEl.EN TME COUNTY 01' OltAHGE Oe<Nsed Mt A .. lU NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 1"'11 NOTI CE 01' NEAalNG 01" THE FIASt NATIONAL BANI( OF "ETITION l'Olt l'aOIATE 01" WILL ORANGE COUNTY ....... l•led Mfetn. ANO f'Olt LETTEllS TISTAME ... Pel•loon IO< P<Ol>61t ot Woll and tot •S- 1'AltY AMO AIJTMOlt IZA TION TO Al). \UM!Ce Of Ltllers lMlament .. ry to lhe loll I M I S T E a u N o Ii It TM E Ptlil•or>er •nd aulhOrt ta I ton lo ad INORl'&NOENT ADMI NISTltATIOfl monlSter IN! Ml•ltt under thl! 1_,.. OF lSTATIS AtT <ltnt A<lm4nl\tr•lt0ft ot E•lal"' Act, rt' Eslat.ol LULU MARVEL BEATON, ttrfft<t to Wl'l•Cll 15 mMJ~ lo< tur1twr •IS. -Mwn •• LULU M BEATON PMll<uler\, and lhel lht' 11-M'IOt>locr Ot>ctase<I ol ''"""'11,,. s.~ n~\ oeen set 1or O< Civic Ctnttr Orlve WUI, In Ille Oty OI Santa Ana QlllornlA O.ti!dOcton.•7, 1•16 Wll.\.IAM I SI J011N1 CoU11tyC1u1o. "CTIEllA.L.«WI :uo wasi.1,,.1..i s1 .... 1 s..l•t* Mln,...dtl ltey,CAt0n1 A ............... u .... , Pub!•""° <><•-Co.~t Oa1lv Piiot, Oclobtr 17 13, 1', lt74 ~1• PUBLIC N011CE "ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME ST ATE ME NT 1N! followlnQ perso" ·~ ~ buso nen•~ WEST COAST SERVICES, 4002 Ctn1a1 L.n Soln1a An" CA 417"" s1.,..,..n Ron Shutman 4002 ~tal Ln • S...IA Ana, CA ,7704 Tn•s ousintn " conovc •t<I ov .,. •~ d!VtCIU<ll Slev~ Sl'lulm..n Tf''h\ '\11'tt'tnf't\t Wll\ tllf(I w.th tftf' Cou<1ly Cl~r~ ul 0••"~ Counly Oii Oct 7 1•1 .. NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN 11'1111 ,_, 2' 1~1• <11 10 00 • m 1n !ho VIRGINIA LEA \.ARSON M$ llled covr•roomol C>eoi•lm~nl NO lot>atd 1"&:1111 l'lf•e•n. petlllon for Prob•t~OI Wiii •no court .,, IOOC.vtc Ctnltt O•l~WUI In Publt\nea OrMQt COA\I O•·I~ PllOI, "'"""'• ol Lener~ To•~mtn•MV ta lhe Citv ol Santa A11a, ca111orn1a Oct 11 •• io •nd Nov 7 '"'' 11\<l PtllllOM'r ,1nd aulhortt.1l•on to ao ();)ted0clober8 10& •7H lb m•nl\ler lh<' ~-•at~ undPr If\(' lnatoon WILLIAM E SI JOHN (ltnt "Om•n•\tr~l•On ot E\tAln Act rn Countv C•erK PUBLIC NOTICE tr••nc• to wn1ch t\ m&cli! tor lurtf\!'r Pl.UNKETT ANO PLUNKETT u.'lt h<u1~u ~ -..no th .. 1 tnt ftM" 11no p4;.c@ •n Olive Aven~ olneertN)ll'le~a<MhlH>eonwtlorOc p 0 &ht'9 l"ICTITIOUSIUSINESS ·-u 1•1• .... 1000 ~m •n ,,,.. Hunll .... onluc• CAt1MI NAMESTATEMEHT counronm 01 OeP••tm•nt No J 01 '"•Cl T•I 1110 l~JOor s~ I071 Tl'I~ tollowtnQ P<'''Oft •\ dOlnq M• covn •• 700Cl•IC Centn Orlv~w. ... 1 1n 11110<,.~slot """"""., ,...,,., '""Cllyot SMlaAn& Catot0<n•A Pv!>ll\l>t>d O<•n9• Coa\I O~ll't 01101 JAG JEWELRY lllJ 8•1\IOI o.1t<10c10!>!'• •. tUo Oc•o""r 11 ll It '"" •lt1H• A""""" Co,t• Mr\d CA •7•7& Wll.l.IAM E SI JOHN O..v• B•ec~-. JO•• A<M>Ui<O I..•~ <:ountv C••r~ V•Qa\ NV "11' l'LUNl(lTT ANO•lUNKETT PUBLIC NOTICE '"''bu\•,....\\'' canou<lo'<l l>v An 1n 4t2 Otlve Avenve tt.v1du1'I • 0 k•tt• """'l,,.ion lloaclo, CA t7MI Tel• (710 SJt.JOMtr S>&-tOll 1111-y1 for l'etllloftfr P\11111\lled Otangr Cool D~lly PolOI O«<lt>er 12 13 1' t'7• 011 16 PUBLIC NOTICE 5 l06lt SUl'EltlOlt COU-TOF THE STATE OFCAl.IFOllNIA FO- TME COUNTYOFO-ANGE No A At02 IO OT I ( E 0 F II EARING 0 F AME ND E D PETITION FO ii l'llOlllTE OF Wtl.L ANO FO-LET TEAS TESTAMEllTAllY ANO --------------IAUTMOllllATION TO ADMINISTER Cl' 2tt2 UNOElt TI4 E INOEl'ENOENT AO· SUPEalOlt COUltT 01' TME MINIUllATION OF ESTATES ACT 'TATE OF CAl.ll'OltNIA FOlt • E~tate 01 Cl.A~ENCE A DOUTT THECOUNTYOl'OllANCE Ot<H~fd ...... .,,,. NOTICE IS MEllE8Y GIVEN tMI NOTICI 01' llllllltNO 01' l.AllELOA S OOUTT lormtrlv l'ITITION f'Oll l'aOIATE o" WILi. I.ARE LOA s GERALD Ila• flied ANO "Olt LETTERS TISTAMIM· l'ltr~ln a" Amended Pet1t10" for TAltY AMO AUTMOltlZATIONTOAO. Pr..O..ltol Woll And lor fnuanc~of vi 11111 I M I ST E It U M 0 Ii It TM I ''" Ttst•me111arv 1no Ault\on1allon 10 INDll'IMOINT AOMINIST-ATION A(lmlnl\l•r under I"" lnClependef'lt Ad Ol'ESTATl!SACT mlntslrallon ol EsMIO\ ACI r<tertnct ESlaleof EOWA~O W 80Nl(OSl(V, lo whl<l'I 1~ mid~ tor turthtt Ot!<USfd 114r11culArs and IMI lhe t1meMldpface NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,,,., olllH•lnQthO~a-ha~~M~llotO< JESSIE w 80NK0Sl(Y .... , lllCd tooer n 1'7b at 10 00 am '" t .... l'lerPln e potlliOft lor Pro!HlltOI Wiil "nd coutlroom ol ~!Mlrlmenl No 3 of •a1<1 lor f~Slk'lnce Of I.titer• le.lamenl.try 10 Court 111100 (ovo( C~nlr< Drl•~ll\lo•f in '"" ~111oner and au111oro1et1on 10 eo· 11\t CHY of Santa AM, Calllorn1• m1nls11r the t\lat• under IN! Incl('~ DattdOclob<'rl 197• Otnt Admlnl51••Uon Of .,.,.,~, 11(1 •• WILLIAM E Sf JOMN, trr•nct to whtcl\ " made t0< 1..,,,.,., COuf'llV Cletk Pllrllculat\ And lhll ll'ltl 11""' M<lpfoce JOSEPH I MCMUl.LIN of h!'arlnq Int Hmt 11es *" ~110< oc tUl Ntn" Ltkt Avenue ·-· "· 1t7&, •• 10 00 .. m In ll'lc Alladena, CA tlOOl <ov<l•OOM of Oee>a•ll'Mftl NO J °' S3•d Anorno IOf MtllloM< com1 ol IOOClvlc Ct,.tor Ornf~ -1.1n PubllSl'INl Oranqe Coe•I Oatly Piiot, theCllyol'!..oftl• A"• <Altlor .. 1• OCIOl>!!r 17 1l t• 1976 '1011& 0.110 0<101>"• 1 t'76 • WILLIAM E St JOHN, COUft!Y Cler' Ja"'" IE WllMlm el KINOl!I. &ANOEllSON lnlll ... '1 .. l <»f•OY 8 .. JU ~"'·AN, c. •110 11141 ,,..1111 AIWll•Yt l'ff "•UlloM• 1'1>1>11\l'lecl Ori•n11t co .. 1 l>•••v P1IOI Ori 11 I) It tt•• •'IO'> 14 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE c• tttt SUPRltlOlt COUltTOI' THE STATE 0 1' CALll'OltNtllf'OA THE COUNTY 01' OaANGE Mt A .. n 11 NOTICI 01' S ALE OF tUAL l'llOl'EltTY AT PltlVATE SALE In lh• MIOllf'r ot ll'le E•l•I~ ot MAATIN T11EOOOllE MESECI( t'>wc•it\f'd NOTICE IS HEii EBY GIVEN 11\al tin S )OUI or •fl•r Oclobfor 11 1'14 '"" .. n SU " E It I 0 It C 0 U It T 0 F d"'"ll""d HER8E~T W MESECt< •• C ALIFOlt NIA COU NTY 01' A(jmln .. tr•tort>llM•\l•leO!MAllTI~ OllANO• 700Cl•IC Conlu l>f•••Wetl. THEOOO~I! MESECI( aecu<MI will -·•Allt,C•llttt'~I• "'" •• pr1ve•• ~·· In ,,,. hllil'lt"I ,,., CA$E NUMIElt 0 1041&1 bHlclM \ob1-cl lo co11flrm•ltD" llV lhe SUMMONS !MAlllllAGEI Mlove tlllll"O S111>Ml~r Court "II tt... In •• IM "'""'•Qe 01 """""'"" r1on1 111•• '"'"'"" anll e\l•te ol •~ (.lAOI. A. PLECM~ER •"d ll"pon "'ctde,.l•llllellmeol nl•d•otlh In and 0.itve-0,.M h't\ TPl1\ ~••l~mftnt w(t\. t1lf"d W•I" l"f' Cnun!Y Cit•~ ol Or3n9~ Cou"l'I' Oil Ocl I 191& F&JlS. Put>l•\lled OrenQf' Co~\I D•tly "''°' Oct 11 1• n And No• 7 "'• ,,., 1• PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC N0'11CE d .... t -•CHARO F Pl.ECHNER lo .... , Ctfltln ·~·· D•OP4"1Y louled •I • .,,, NOTICE! You llnt .,.,,. "'" T1'lt tsl& W Occl~nl1I, S..nl• AM Covnly NOTICE TOCAl!OITOt!S <ourt m1y do<ldt aq•ln.I you wlllMtvl ot Or•"Qe, Sl•te ol C•l•tO<l'lll CltEATIONOl'Sl!CUltlTY vour ..in, l'l•t<d unl•u you rostlON c11i.cr1i.01\fo11ow• INTEltl!ST wlrlllll JO fay• ltttd tllt ·~~-11.,. Loi 11, 81ot~ E ot Tr,.<t NO SO. \h'lthrU"llormc;em-rcla4 "''°'" .u per m<10 tM•fOI reco•dM In eoo« coc11 -eu1k Tr•n•fn1 AlllSO' U\ltd I'll •ltlO ......... -,. 11, ., O&Ott,. """ 77 ln<IU""" ol """ fo All '"°" MldlnQ cl••m• .oQOln\I ltlt..,..I tlle-• -•<1~11 tolll<• Ud "" c~ll-V\ Maps rtcorll\ ol O<-lh•~blo<""'"IMllrr n-•d,MWdOll •uotkMla ~ me no• aue Ud re•t>Ond• c;ounty, Sl•l•Of c111101n1a ''"n''"''°"' or e•tfll\ o<<vrrtnvootcwe fcolllr't to JI •lat LU II l11•~-c1.,. B•os pr otters_,,. •ftvll•d lor I,,,. oro Ille llu" lr~n<ft< ltlO\t rlbed i.1-h '"' \.J4W 0trtv ,.Nt mv\t t>f' •n wt111nq MWf """Y (on,umm,at1td I TolhllAt\OOM•nl l!.fo•tOOIMlf') bt<dellW<td 10th• Adml""''"'"'"' 10 P«lllC• I\ ""'fl>Y 01v•n ,,,,,. bul- 4' Tht Otfiftftft"'f ""' lftAf'tA"' lit~ ,,.. .,.,.,., nt '"' i\UOrn•y JAMES c. tran-\ftf bV WAY of ,,,.AllM of. MC.oft c~,.,.n,nQ vou r m .. ,,,,.Q,. Vou mdv BOOTH INC 4 PfOffl\\•on•• (MP')f.J tv 'ntpr9\t I\ AMu1 to fM' mtdt ,,_ fH• •wrlUtn '"''DOM·~ w if P\1" lni1'Y "" ,..,,.. 11rn e 0th Strti.•t Sutht 1()\ I'll Am -0' '"',. 0,.,,' 0,. , , now ll'W" d"'t lt\oett U\tt. \Um""'n' 1 '-t ••f1M Tu\ttn CAlitorn1• or m4, bf" f1lf'i'O It\ EOUCATtONAL OAT A ~V$TEMS IM "°" ...... ollt<P ol IN> Cler~ °' IM~·"' ........... \\ Mldr•\\ ot ·~· Cltl>tO' •• - b ,, YOU '"" •o h i"' ' ""'tUM' C.Ot.t'' .. , 4ny tlmft .... , , ..... '"'' 1611 L•na••v Aytf\~ Suitt • ,,.,."" 'f~nfo# W1fh1n \Vfh """" YOUt dftlllUll oubUc.etlOf\ of IP'Wl f\Ot•C~ ~f\d .,,..Of,.,,.. C•1tlofn1• ~"· \0 IA' •\ I~ kf'Owf\ to ""'Vt» enl•rod ..,..., IM <Ou•I ""'• •ntt< --•nQOl 1"" \ei. '"" 'le<urNI tMrly •••O tll!Olll' Ms\IV'<I ~ 1ud9n'Wl'f\t <t.>"'"'"'"q lft11..n t•'h Of r.,...,.., •nd UU'lditlOf'I\ ot ~-·f' CA\h 1n ,,. IOllO•t'WJ Othfi'r f>V\IM\\ ~ •"'9 "'""'' C)t~\<.onc•rn1n9 "t\fl\torl rtf OfU ... .-.ul ~., o• tht Uri•ted St<ltft\ Of tlddtf'\\#'\ Within thrt• ., •• ,, •• ,, ont P"f1Y '°°"'"' '"000'' ("•'O (V\l"Cf'I A""fr•<• tO' ot llW Amo""' bid to M; 8u\ln., .. N4me\ NOf'lft AdOr•\\~ tllllG --· •llO<""Y \ , ... , "''" tomo11ny ..... Ofter 6'\d 11\e Nl .. •O IOt!o' 11•• t S•. p,.," c I re I•, I tvlllt and •uch othe< ••ltot "' m•v !>.-°'"'~.., paid ul>O<I conlt<m•toon ot s•I• l>v t"" C.lttorn•• '7114 14U Wtnd•.Wd l.A1" by '""court, -ltll tOllHI '•'ull 1n tllo Suclforl0t Court Tun '""" ooorllllnQ Ntw-1 6•!0<1'1 C•lltrir,.I• "IMO, ltOP O<tfllt<ll~IOIW8Q'\ t•~•noOl ........ v -.... 1 .. 1..-•M• ••otllM\ ~ -D'--1VIOIJ'\llbl•rt•dlol .... _urlly or P<OIM'rtY, or ot""' rth•I "'"''"' on 1nw<1nc• •t <.-Pl.,ble to 1r... lftlMt\I I• now 1outM et •6a l11"Qi.y c II.,... WI~ It,..~ IM ....... el llY'tN"•' \hllll Ot orotalt<I ti Of IM A-. Sul~ A trvl,.., Oitl!ONWA .,. an-y '" '"'' nufftr, ,.., -Id mi. ot c6"111r1t1etlOl'I of ,...,. The t/I t?ltt 1r... """"'"Y 10 .. \u41~td 10 • • _,,. .. , .. Ul•I 1e11r _.._,. .,..,,..,,°" ot llllt •nd ••c:on11no <on· II• -.cu<ltv l11tt•t" mer.,.. de-\<<IWcl -·•.11•11¥.lftOMlllef ... 11-. ....., .. nc,, ........... , tht UpenWOI IN 0.,......... •• All tur .. ltufe, Datff0<'"9r It, ttn ourc,...urs or ourchts•• Tlllt 111 '"'"ltt•ll'IOl. ll•luru r11ac"1,..,, WILi.i AM I SI JOllN, •urtft<• POll<Y l)t'~m•vm '"•II I» oft Ille t<.111'-I ooo<J• ..... nlory, «couni• Cit<~ ••POf'MOllhe Hiler rtrelvtoble vthl<ln. Otntrtl In llY Fronce• L V•l•V> l11n mll\I W w1ttd 1rwl wlll bt l~loi.• Clltllf•<I r lol'll\ ell proc- 0.flUI• --•I th• olllu ot JAMES c ~eol "nd ............. c .. Pf'OC•""1 •Tnt ,.\POii .. fn(f olllftr PMrfllll~ llOO'TH INC ,• Ptoltulon•I Cor-• l!'lereon, MW and llettllltr ~ l)y l'lll>fl'• mu•I bl> ... wrlltno tftd on,,.. llOll, 11en £ 11th St•·~· Sult• 71)1,, l)j!OIO• Ill Wl\f(ll Otlllor f'IOW •rwl tor"" orucrl~d 1>¥ th" ("lllor"I" Tu\tln, C4111ornl• •I lht "°"r of 10 00 ...,Miit< hn AftY rlqhl\ and -•ver Ruin OI Covf'I Thn mu•I no Ill~ In a M Ofll""' tDOvao.~ llllu•ltd •"Cl whont""' acQ\lfr~ and lhi\(nttrl wllh lllft orOO"• thin(! I~ tn0 fi.t O•OO~rl'I' htrtl" dt•<:rlbod I\ ltttl Dlllk lr.it\lf'r hV W•Vol t~lor!ol • proo1 OI \er•l<t ot • MOY "' Mch "" cnmmonly ,..~,,td to •• 1m w oc '!i!'(urlt• lnter.-t n• I• to lie t-Mmoot l'ttlllOnf'r Th~ llm-whrn • ,_.,. r"twnl•I A••11u• S •,.I• AftA °"'<ti IM otll<t of ORANGE Fl~AN I\ de"""!-\•rW'<I Ol'I • <>•'ly ""'' v••v C..ilfOfftle Tllt uncl~rtlQ-re'W!n•u CI AL C 0 A P 0 II A Tl 0 N 1011 cltll"nd•llO Oii t"f' ,_t...,,I nl ••rvk• t""<l9hl1o••l .. h"V•t>d•llbo0\ MacA•t"u' llnul•u<d, Sulit HO, FM ·~3•1'•111" '"" CCP Ill 10 111<0\l'lll O..t•dO<IObe,. ,.,. • ... In• C...1t1o<nl1.,llS Ol'IOf•!ltrO< m tO Mliltll!ltT W ME~ECK •Ollfrn lt/6 •AltNIS, SMltM Admlftl\l<•l0t ol 0.1 .. Oclol>or 1, lt7& lL v ANO llWAOl.• ION ..... EaUll~ OI MAltTIN Mt-Perly .,..,.,...,,et L•w THEOOOltE M'SECK Oriwt~ 1'111•,.<••I Cor110,,tlf!ft lttJI ••-~"•Ml J 4MIJ t. eooTM, l•C. 8y 8rOl'I 0 M•lner .....,, ... ,., Wt. t1 AltlerMY.., A"•lllrew 0.AMGa l'll!lllNCIAL -t~ltKlo,,At7-11ml 1'1t!lt ,Jle M <:oltl'OaATIOtf Toi 17141 .. ,_, Tlr\1111.C.. n.-t•n•cA""°' Ill .. $ .. l• _, tw ,....ltltM< 1710 IJ~P• lnlM, C..l...,,..a fll IS "'*II•-0<•"0!' , ..... O.Uy "'IOI 11\M~ Ora~ Cont Otlty "'"" ll\lllltVllMI 0r•fl9t Coe~• OIMl't l'llol Oct U. It tt And No .. l ttf• •It> 71 ()(1 It I) It It/• dt7 ,. Oclo!>f< It, ltl• U61• e PtJ BLIC NOTICE ·h·-------....................... _.. ------ • PUBLIC NOTICE .,.,_ .. -....... _ ............. Tuesduv OCtober 12 197& PUBLIC NO'nCE ...,,,. Pul>ll-Or•noe Cou1 o.ur PllOI, Oct It, 19, U, •"" Nov. t 191' .,_ 7. PUBLIC N011CE flCTITtOUS 8USINHS N•Uo\• $TATEM EMT T~ toll-In<) perM>ftS •••doing busl "it\'\., METRIC MOTORS ?07J H1ttlor 81vO Cost• .oMll, CA .,U7 WUIPl\6111 Enttro<IMS 11'1< C•ltl .0 C-reu. Co•U. Mltw, CA '11>11 lh" llu\IMU I• con4ucled bV • <ot OCW'"''Ofl We\tPl'l•lt• EnttrP•·~ Inc: !hi; , .......... ,. ...... llltd With llW ""'"'• C••rk ot Or•n~ Co11111v on Stol IS 101• Ftl4off Puo1.,n~ct OrAnQ~ Co.elt Oa•'• Piiot Del 11, t• 76, anO Nov 2, 1916 PUBLIC N011CE FICTITIOUS I USIN ESS NAME ST4TEMENT Tr.e lot1owlr19 l>(!rson i. OOll'IO ous• ~U$ CLIP JOINT, 311.ol Co•sl -y HO 4 Soutl'I L/IQun• C1lltor"'• •2•71 Nl<holas C.OrM• J• Ulll VI• Grlllnde Mitt-viejo Ce1r+M...i.,4'tt7S Thi• b<JSlneu Is con<luclod by an In cllvldu.ll Nlcholl\ Corne• J• Tiiis slal•-nl was ltltcl wi111 trw Ct:>untv Cl•rk ot O••nQe County on 5epCem-JO, "" F.ue6 P\lbloshed Or•noe Co"'I O.tly Plkll, OCIOOOr S, 12, 19 n t91• 4193-1• PUBl.IC NOTICE .. \ DAIL V PILO..;..T__,•=7 Teens in Cars a Danger CHICAGO (AP) - ''Tbttre u; no doubt that we hand teen·agera a lethal wei.tPon when we hand them a car.'' Sl.YlS Dr. Derok Mlller, a p s ychtatrist. at. Northwestern Universit y's medical school Miller. who took part in a sympos ium on "Youths and Driving - the Road .to Death" - says 16 is too young for dr1vang and 18 as too young for drinking • particularly for males,· and that. the two combine to turn many an outing In a car into a teen-age tragedy. A car lS a "symbol ot power" that children learn about from fathers who speed and from television shows m which "automobiles are con· stantly portrayed racing along the freeway" and nobody ever gets hurt, he srud. PUBLIC N011CE Cl' 1'11 SUP•tttOll COUR:l'Ol'TNE STATI 01' CALI FO~Nl..CFOlt THI COUNTY O"OAAMOE No Altlto N OTICE OF HEAlllHG 01' P£TITION t'OR l'ltOIATI! Of' WILL AHO "Olt \.ETTEa S TISTAMEH• TAllY ANO AUTMOltlUTIONTOAD· /lo\INl $Tl!lt UNOElt TME INOE,EH0£NT AOMIMISTllATION OF ES TATES ACT Etlelt of GRACE J PEl(AREIC, Ot<to~ NOTICE IS 11E~E8\I' GIVEN l~t ~08EAT C PEKAREK h.ts lllrd ht!ftlfti!peltltC>l'llOt Prob•l•OIWlll- lor ,,\.,.,.tt 01 Lrttor• te.1.....,.n1.-v tottw-~Ut1ont-r •nd "ulrn>rt1ahonlo.ct mlnl\IH IM ••1•1• unon ,,... lno<'l)f!f'I ~t AOmtnl!.Jr~llon Of E\t•lf'\ Ac.l ~ ftt"n<,. lo wt"'"' '' m•dt tor tur1ht,.. ~'t•<ul&f\ .tnd '"~" tn• Umf'-MWtptaee of hl'Arinq I~ \•me hi\ been ~t '°' Oc· 1ooe• 7o 9'1• at 10 oo • "' .n '"" courtroom ot 0.rk'rtment No lot wid court M 100 Civic Cont., ll•I•~ wt>l, I" t""Cltyot SAn11 AM Calllornl• O..tvdO< lo~rA 1'17• WILLIAME $tJOllN, Countv Clpr~ THOMASI. l ORO tl5,l l'a\tode v •••n<1a, suu.iu UQ..naHtlll CA,IU l Tel 0 141\11 »40 AllOffttY ,., PttltlOfttr PuollsMd Or~noe coa•t DAiiy Pllol, Ocl 11, tl 18, 1q1• P BUC NO'nCE CP 1•1 STATIMRNT 01' WITMOltAWAL l'ltOM PAaTHl llS1111" Ol'lltATINO UNOI • l'ICTITIOUS •USIHHS NAME TM fo11ow1no Ptf'\Oll Nt wlthdr.- • • • 11•"•••1 pfrlntt 1tf"' Ill•' ~rtneN!>ll> oo-r111no uflder tllt tk· lltlCMIS Ou•IMU ftlf'llt Of Al_PO_T ltEPROOUtTIONS, •I lt<lt a 1rc" Slrtel, N•WPOfl 11••<11, C.lflofnl• .,... The llc1lt1ou1 bu\IMH ,,_ tl<lt11- _,.1 10< IM j)llflMr\1'111> '"'"' lllM Oil J1nutr11 '~ tt71 In l~t Covntv tf °'-Full flll'lle •l'ICI Acldr•ll Of Ille At~ Wltl'ldrewl"' Frtnk Stlltrl Ultl "'""' llu<.,. lll'i'd , Alv•r\lclt Cllllorllll Fr•n' ~lftrl Thtt \lltMfttftl Wf\ Ill.., ... Ill IM c;ounty Cler-ot O"•noo Cou"IY Oii O<- lobtl I lt'6 I'll.a NO I' UtS TVOHl'r eAllTONe"• MCOl!aMOT"T, IMC. ly. Wlflle"' M ea,_ A"'"'9'1"•tuw t•-Mtll>S4 , .. 1111.Ma,c.Attm .I. PWI"'" ~~ eo.J1 o.trr 111-. Ck ... T $. IJ, 1', >•, 1'16 ~ _,,. -... . . •• I ~.~!!:!.~~~c:': ........ '~'!':!!:!.~~~~~ ....... ~~:!:.~~~!~ ........ 1~~!.~~~.~ ....... ~~~:.~~!~ ....... . u • ..._...,... ... -.c-HousHForSaN HMtsForSc:N G....W 1002 Gftlffol 1002 G......,..a 100~GeMr111 1002 G....-.1 1002 DAILY PILOT luesc:tar.October 12.1976 DAILY Pll.Dl" CLASSIFIED ADS ....................... •••••·••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... . ~ c... s.. • ,..Ind 11. [ 642 5878) ON CMI s..c. CHMrol I 002 GeMrof I 002 HEWPOttT CONDO frMte • With • w.tl Ad . -. ,.. er...t ~ ••• • • • • • • • • •• •• ••••• ••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• . RedEstcrh ···••·········•·····•· ••••••••••••••••••••••• G.-ral 1002 ERRORS: Adv•rtl1ers ••••••••••••••••••••••• sho.lld ch~Q their acb l"IM Rocq11ett Clb • A..11u and ,..-... ..._, Dy Owner $73,000 -r. ,.-. • · 4122 Escudero Dr. ron tfMWdtotety. The 3Dr. 2ba, Cam rm, formal DAILY PILOT oslUIMt dmlnt: rm, pvt yd. C11ll llCllblllty for the first'"' for uppl·or Open House cornet in.-rtlon only. Son 1·5. Ph S5HS14 POOL HOME PubH'h~r's Notice: M 1': s A v i-; l{ 0 ~·. 3 THEIE'S A. LOT IN llG CA.HYON and tt 's 115xl90 rt. or more than 21.000 sq . ft. We know you'd like a home hl!rc. with 190 fl. ot view frontage over the lake & golf course. It's at $150,000, so dream no more -start on that dream house today!! 67J..4400 HARBOR DMslon of Hadlor lnnshntnt Co. WESLEY N TAYLOR CO Kr~ALTORS ~11 1u· t ~Hl llG C AMY OH -SZ71,500 REGA.MT -IEA.UTlFUl. -YllW A most luxurious & highly upgraded Versailles model by Deane Homes. Panoramic view or golf course, mountains, lights -also a view of ocean. Paneled Cam rm, expensive wall papers thruout, custom cptng & drapes, marble & air-cond. 2 Rue St. <.:loud Open Wed 1-5 2111 San Jaa'dn tlls lood NEWPORT CENTet. M.I. 644-4910 AJI real estate advertised t>e<Jrm, den, 2 bath, near in this newspaper is sub Country Club. l'ricl.'d t u Je<.1. to lhe .Federal 1''air i.ell toc.lay ! S87,500. <.:all G---..i 1002 GtMt'GI I 002 I llo us tnK Act or 196f ~ ~""'°' 1002GeftH'OI 1002 wruch make~ it illegql t· for op t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,,, ~ w ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• advertis e "any pre ~ ference, la mitataon, 01 UPERB discrimination ba:.ed on QMES race, color, religion, sex. '1...::--.;....;;;....;..;;.;.--...-.,, 1555 W. S.ker, C.M. or national origin, or an intention lo make an) such prdcrl'nce, lamala llon, or d1::.cn mm a lion." . Ne.at to Markel S.lllet S•9·8MS This news paper will not FOUR + BONUS knowingly .i.ccept an} Large •I bedroom. 2 bath advertis ing for r eal plus all n<'W bonus room l'state which is in viola with 1 2 I.lath. Over Sl0,000 _u_·o_n_or_lh_e_l_a_w_. ____ 1 in upgrJdcs in the la~t House' for Saltt two yc.irs. Own<'r 1s of fc1ing this Costa Mesa h ome in cludin ~ V .\ ll'rms at unly Sti5,000 C.:ALL 556 2660. ••••••••••••••••••••••• General 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 40MALOT C:::SELECT I PROPERTIES .In t:asts adc lot•at11>n where you can :.ilways k<.-cp'em rented. Park like selling. t:onvcni<•nt ----------4 ARTIST'S BEACH CHALET Charming s plat level :irt1st 's chalet a cross from pa lm llnetl park. Sun porl'h opens t o ~panish stucco 11\'ini: room . S ll'P ~.ive r kitchen. Gracious dantnf! room. Glass e nl'losl'd master with hrcalhtak ing 'iew of Ca lahna 1 Fr~:.h paint, upi.:radecl t·arpcl Dog run and NEED A SLIP putiu. 'J'wo car garnl!I.' Harbor View HomH Pi\Lt:RMO 1\1odel vo cul.d -snc slrct·t. 1..ir>:e side yard for boal, car, etc. l'ool Sl.tCIOL. Ci\IDU;r. MODl'~L Corner lot 3 !Jr, 2 ba, ram . rrn., prof. landsc-ttpc••I. a trium. Pncctl tu sdl now, Attention Builders Norco Are a 2', 1\l'll ES LARGE FAMILY ESTATE In the heart -Of Corona del Mar, high above the city, with a magnificent panoramic view; the 4,000 ft . home is beautiful, with its two thirds acre of privacy; for the large family or business entertainer, you have 5 bdrms .. formal dining rm., 7 baths, a large pool & loads of parking. $265,000 INCLUDING THE LAND! • • CORONA DEL MAR· 675-3000 Custom 6500 sq. ft. waterfront home on the point. 134 Ft. frontage with magnificent view of boats & harbor. Slip for large boats. Remodeling has been started -finish it to your own taste. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bo y~1d•· Q,,,, .. N B b l':J 6161 ~~ .......... ~~~~1 ~~! ........... ~~~~ MEA.R ntE IEA.CH, LESS THAM $75,000 Charming, beam ceilings, stone fireplace, barn wood paneling and 3 Bedrooms with 2 baths and just a block or so from the beach, in Newport Beach for less than $75,000. Call for the Hooker! (I beg your pardon). U~l()IJI: li()Ml:S REAL TORS~ 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar also in Mesa Verde. at 546-5990 I 002 Genrral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S65,000 \omph•\l'lr rcdt•\•Oralt'd w ,be~t u v'erylh•n~ 2Hr, Zhn. frplc. hltn ... Xlra nk1.• cpb, drps & v.allp:ipct'. Nr. Ull*Jor .shoppmJ: lmnrnr. JA.COIS REALTY 675-6670 Wl'!t. 111t.t\!.<. < •11111.1 m· . \ .. . llq CanyOfl &tat• 4 Dlt, 4 llA, Frenc h H('1umcy, cust home on Putrway. 5300 Sq.fl • marble entry. ~ourmcl k1l., ouk pllnellng, bl•ttul I undscpg & more. $$25,000. Dy appt only. i.-;xrluslve A~l'nl 675·6900 POOL-TENNIS JACUZZI $61.000 Sharp l"'o story Newport Ill\ lt.>ra 3 bt'<lroom. llui;c master suite. Family room overlooks hu!(e tropical garden pallo. Stone wood burning fireplace. Walk to I.emus courts, pool, Jaeuu1. suunn etc., etc., etc. J ust. 107o down. Call 962-7788, )Q.. KEY "iJ" P.€AL TORS K llEDROOM + FAMILY ROOM 11> A.CRE to bus lines & shopp111g. l\Iay be purchased sub· jccl to eiustin~ ll'iu loan New on market. 646·7711. for your boat??? Thr<'e blm·k" tu on•an. Will t ukc up Lo 40'. pie r and t1s han11.. Two Beaultfully upgraded be<lroum, t:'·n baths. Just CONDO. 3 Bedrms, 21 2 S5.6:!l5~. <.:all eollccl. Gfttffol ld~u1 fur ~uh~davul1nt:t or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• country estatl· Lob u( ----------1 1002 GeMrol I 0021--------BIKE TO BEACH Soper area, super condi· tton. super family home Tills 5 bedroom, 2 i.tory large family home on a corner lot is near all schools. shopping, beach and parks. Call 546·2313 hcfon~ it's loo late t o sec Jl ! Quiet tree lined street lo pnvatc drive ! Secluded entry to lavish living room. Epicurean kiteheJ\ scparute family room. New carpet :ind sparkJ- 1 n I{ paint! Sweeping master bedroom com· pk"<. Huge, huge rear > ard ! lloom for Po<>l and maybe tennis!! Seller bought new and must sell. Try $6,350 total down! Qwek! 847·6010 --- • bath:.. fplc. com pl c t &l2·2535. blln katchl'n. Shows hke '"'' " '·I' •' •; ., ,., 1' -H-EW-P-ORT H~IG_H_T_S_ ~:.~ £~'~,!g' oppt. [ ® lfl&ltll] HACIENDA "4.titl. S~ There 1s no end to thc ;;. PAIHT-H-SA YE pos5lbihtacs 1 ! Lovely 2 "f"fUHAll. 3 +POOL b e d r oom . 3 ll J t h ! REALTORS Spal'IOUS I 1vtn~ r oom .• .=;;;;;::;;::;;;:;;:;;:;;~ sm.ooo bu)" lht"' 3 litl. famil y room wrlh r c1-reat1un rni. 11 &~ lx:amed ce11Jn~. plus ex - ---pool. Need!:> .. • lttllt.: ·1 LC tra larJ.!C f11 cpl JC<' but \\hal a buy. Lm·;ill'cl F:very wom:in's dream VIEW LOTS on quiet tree ltm·d st reel. kitrhen + + + 3 car 2 lhlb1dl• Inti. in Newpnrt GI. F ii.\ buyt·r \\cll'Oml' ~arugc. 2 worl-.s hop!-llc•1J!hl-; with panornmu· ~5·!J l!ll J'ottmi: t nnrn uncl laritr llarl>or '1cw::.. ~ti2,50ll ~.!I'd. i\11 lur $11!!,WU full c.id1. pn C'l'. &lti-i I "i t. th'W c<.m:.lrul tllin In :in•a. U"nl.'r \\Ill hl•lµ rtn:ulCl' 1-\tll pncc $45,000. LaC)\lnO Beach '.\IYSTIC 1111.l.S 3 Br ;1 lt:i, ::.JUlh1, \.1cw, 'll'W, '"'"" ~ rCjl ex.cc hum~. Sl59,00\l M ission Vi~jo POOL Hern I·:\\' t\'IF:W 3 Br, ;! h.1, hai:hly up J:radl•d. Lob of paper & c hurm, JJl'U/ /1 & po<JI ()" 111· 1 an' 111\1::., h J ' houg hl .rnolhcr. 673-760 I ',. ' .,,,.,,, ,, l.:ir,.:l' ,~ •• tcrfronl Int. frt•, 111 Con~s. Pwr und VIEW OF WATER ~hp 1\n·htt1'l'l "s plans in·1.-.~---;;;;; _____ •I $I 59,500 Investor's Delight S48,900 ;\ ~h:irp ;1 bl'clrm hornt· with nl'"' pu111t 1n~1dl' .11111 out. J'\t.'\lo 1,1rpc•h und clrapcs Cin .. 1t l11t·;it1on on J;irge 110' ell'''I' lol l.ill !>16·51180 for t11ll ekta 1ls ~HERITAGE REALTORS BEACH COTT AGE 3 BEDROOM +JACUZZI l.a!\ten lo ocean ~urf from this bl•aut1ru1 :i bdrm. house with J.1t un.1 ~ur r o uncll·cl h) lol s o l rcd\\ood ckd.in)?. Nt'llr 111.'""' curpel thmughout L;iq;e co\'Cl'l'll patw. .lu:.t la s tl'd ul .111 Ull· bel1evablt• ~S:l,500 w /V.J\. ll·rrns. Hurry! Call !l63·67G7 0r1N llt Q • 11 1111; ro flt N' r • duded fnr l;iq;c home. ESPF:l'll\l.LY LAH<; E SI0.1100. $46 750 IH'PLl·:X \\Ith .1 nc" PETE BARRETT 1 "t'1'<lar l-'.11·1· .. on a 'I u I l' t ,. II I d • • " .1 c . -REALTY-2 fkdroom, :! h:ith, in Spacious 1 b,•d. 'I II.1th & 3 6~MlOO di\ 1llual Condom1n111rn :! rx•cl, :! h.alh 11011 "· Shown C:.1r gara~l' \\ 1·lt'<' d11or by J PJJO•nl ruL·nl ..,._.. ....... ~..._-...,_..Ml n11\·n1•r h1 g hl\ up 1!1 adl••I. c-.u pdlllJ! \\ ood -Wt\1 f lffHONT DISTRESS SALE!! 0 \\ :'> I·; H ,\ N X I ( > l' S San.:h· ... tun I ~r. :! h.1 ram r m & ~parkhn l! 211\·lll POOi. X Int rnml Fount Jan \, .1lll'\. S77.~1~o11 J-11 \ 111 \ \ ll'.rm '· l' .. dl S.15Ii121 \l!l'OI TUCKED AWAY 01111111t'l l'o~tJ !\te::.a cul 1k·::.•H:. 3 Bedroom. :.! h.11h . + huge bonus room (ideal for molher·111·h1w, tcrna gers, etr). Step down hv rm, fplc. shak" roof. l arge yard and mlll'h mnrc' Prin•d right hurry! 54fi·5880 ~HERITAGE p.tnl'ltnl! & m1rn11 s En· UO"'ll '- Jll\ tht• n11n n111111t \• JIOOI. fl(Al ESTATE J·•t:u.u1, ll'nni:. t·mrrh !.. 6Jl·l400 • lubhousc. Who·~ hr::.t' ~~i~liiil -ANYTIME JUST REDUCED $1900 Fantasl1l' 4 hcclroom. :! h.1lh, fa1111ly huml!. Ne" (·ttrpclini! & parnt Lilr!!l' 1•11rnt·r Joi. fir<'.Jl f111ant' in~ a\ allal1k. llu1 ry l 'lca~c c-nll For s.111' II\ owm•r. 1200 !.qrt, 1 llr I '· l•:i. w "' t pis, In.' 'd "iOIKI ''lfl lot on l' u I rl 1• ',1 t' <: <: :-1:!,IMlll t '.al I ~.:11 t.153 --------BALBOA PENIN. C hjrma n~. olJ c r J lldrm • .! h,1t hs: 3 car it:ir:igl' Pt•mnsula fam1 ly homl'. Ov.tll'f Jnxaou:-.• Sl 2.'..i.1Ml0 H73·~i:~ li7:1 R086 Eves associated BROKERS-REAL TORS J02~ W Balboa 61'·H>lt 1 REALTORS We're here t o he lp! [. •J-l'-fastest draw in the We!lt .:i l>aaly 1'1lot Lap of Luxury J>on 'l ~1ve 1111 the s hip• .. Last" al in cla~s1f1ecl Ship to ::.hon• 1e::.ull::.1 G-12 5671< Cl a !-Si r I cd J\ d. r hon l' ..... -;.:.-;.-;..----------i 642 5618. 1" ---------- Want :itlc; TOM SAWYER would turn on to tht::. p1 c sllgc 1800 mudt:I .fu!'tt :.how ham the pla) hou'>c outback "'1lh :. [Jnlao.,lll pool and jac·uu1 for :;k111· ny dipping. Mom "'111 love the sunken "' 1ni: 11111m, rorm;il d1n1n~ room and a lamtly 1·110111 \lo 1t h rireplacl· i-: ... en•bo d y ltkl'S the• :.p.1c1cius cul·dc·::.ac: Jot. HUGE 3 CAR GARAGE will please anv huo.,hJ111I anllJust wall til o.,lll' '<Cl'' lllal ma~ter Ll•tlrn11m -.1 true Sultan h1111'JWJ\' "'1th (tr'l•placc fur thoM' qwl·t C\'emng.;;. ·I l\1·d1111. fam n"1m. t11rm.ll dm IOR. 2 ~tory. jll'll'l'•I 1111 c1wck sail' llnly ssu, ;.,u • Roberts Realty 18• 11 Boch l ht flllnua(taa l•arn Tustin Decorator Just Reduced! $4600 ExP1•rience the pmk 111 nwnmg this ~tunning dl" t•orator's homt'. Jl 's conly -I 'cars old and loe:ill'd 111 a 'choare Tu~lln loc·at1011 EnJlJY its t J rp1•h, \' ,111 Lu1t p::apc1 s. wurk:-.hnp 111 gar<ll!<'· bc:1util11I 11:at1n entc-rt111nnwnt area with s purklinJ.! pool anti B 8.(l. No nt'l'il lnr im provement C1)SIS 1n, this home! A fa11Last1<: value ror $79,900. ... PS:-Tustin ~rhoob are superb. DONALD M. BIRD Auoc101.-s Rt'olton. EXECUTIVE BEACH EST ATE 5 BR +POOL/JACUZZI F'ormal dou!)lc door t•n try tu entertamer's de· hitht l'k•gant h vrni: room CtttheJt;il Cl'tltn.; anti cralkhn.: fareplJl'l' St\o'p do\lon IJrnily entertain ffil.'nt ('(.'Oter With "all o r J:IJ.o.,,,, \'ll'W of ~parkhnJ: pool anti J<1cu1.11. Formal chnmi: room con' l'O!Clll ly ISl.'r\ 1.·ll rrom hu~e l!OUrmcl kitchen S"' t't'll tnl! sl.11r !:I to IJ\ •~h m,1,,l1.·r ::.uatc + l>unui. aonm !or pool tal.ile .rntl 1·artl~ Hu r ry! 1-:aisy ll'rms' !l63 ifll!I. ...... t.::_::....- OMTHEWATER Sl9,500 Well maint:11 n ed 2 bedroo m. 1·11 bath mobile homl.' "1th room for l'Xpansaon. Spec· tacul ar lRO d l.'g ree hayfront Vil'\\ Thi-. 1s a Valley l'Xclu~n l'. Shown by appnmtmcnl. 640-9900 f~lk f-1/NJ/ (/ J./a/, ~ Valley Realty EASTBLUFF 113 ACRE Immaculate· :i hr, :l hu. ~pht le,·l'I. pool Sl.1:1.500. GENTLEMAN'S Open U;11ly 12;; 2n2<1 '>Pf"' ru o • n <.'ti"' rnttt ,.,_ ... , • [®lfl&IHI] DOVER SHORES One of Newpnrt Bench's fine:.t humc~ ! Unu~uully well de:-1i.:ned & full or amen1l1cs for the com· fort & prolcctiun or lhe ramily. L:1rgl', cle1rnnt d1n1ni.: rm.; kalchl•n is a Aourml'l '::. lkll i.:h t ! Poobaw lot, \"011 ciwn lhc lunll ~ Uy apv't $:.W:l,500 C. F. Colesworthv REALTORS 640-00:lO RANCH Carob . N II llJ rhour1·--------- CUSTOM BUil T Sales i;.11.1.1:!8 Trl'<' lllll'" s t r1•Pt 10 ,...._._ ..................... ..-.... ,Harbor View Home pnnw 11.::.till·nt1.cl an'<e PRIDE OF llq~hly eu::.tom 1tl•tl :l ~'l'IWll•<l •·ntr~ t•> hui.:l' bedroom ho me. L.1r~l' h\'tnJ: m um. ('rJd..l1nl! OWNERSHIP added fam11v room 111 111 l'l>I a\'l' :\It""' l" l.\.tc•pt 11inJI pr11k of ll·rs out~landang \ll'W or lurm.11 cl1111n.: 11111111 0"'1wrsl11p1n llm. 1111:ome the rolling halls. Thi-; H uge• <'uu11lr) :o.t) led prorx•r1~. \'<'rv flexible never-Lavl'<i in home h.1~ l..1t e h cn ~ ~lonl' O\lonl'r·s unit with 2 many decora lor uµ flrl'Pl.et'l'~ FJrn11, room bl.'droom l!Ue"t quarters. ~radcs. Sec to ap nq·rfnnl-.-. i.:111 u111ls. Fulf11l \Our la' shelter prcciatl'. l'r" ,1tt• rnnl nn h.ml 10 need:. ,~·11 h thl' .utilit 1011al 640-6161 111,1m thru ll1d1•.1wu'r 2 units l\ll 11111ts cl1•luxl.' ma:.tl'r s uall' & l'htldrcn·i. a n d s p a c 1 o u s . qu.irt<.-rs. l\luch more. Fircplac1•s, J>alius, and Steal this onl' for only s eparate garages. ~J.J(Kl. llurry !lli:I iSISI. $1·1!1,000 value. Call lu ~cc ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. Ol'fN "' 9 . II s lllN ro 8( wri. [\§IRlll TREMENDOUS MESA VERDE Lovely, highly upgraded h i dd en 2 s l ory I n Southern Mesu Verdl•. From the tl.'rrauo e ntry to lhc wet bar, lo the cov· cred patio beside the bl.'autiful pool and view, fill your eyes with tlu~ Lremcndous value. Cull 546 2313 TO Sl::F. 1'r NOW! Ol"t'll Ill II• tr~ lll'l lrlnt N•r/• • [\fl·- ••• HORSE 11!-;J\V l~N ~5.0110 An ACRE t1• • roa m \\Ith a .ireal a Hell m homt>. Outstanrl· 111~ locallon in Vista ad- J a Cc nt to '~ ide opl'n :-p.1ce~. Tack rm. 5 ton hay ba rn, 2 paddocks &. fenced pdslures. Great. ror kuls * Ul::HTllt\ IIENR \' • RIO:,\LTOHS 492·-1121 215 Del Mar, S:in Clem. BEAUTY SALON Tup location, ~ood walk· in' + l1otc ;.ipL over dblu i;ur. ['i'llill ~~,~~~''""" ,;,,;.,, · . " l i .UNiiil 5 BDRM & VIEW -_ _ _ . Out~landing m•w last ml! 1----------an sought artl·r cu!.l llluU w/ mu11n1f1Cl'llt decor. Tr<'ml'nclnuo.; ""· footage• & lrJ.!. cM1i:hllul l'OOL! Bell1•r ,._.c lhi:> one TODA\'! U.lli iii I. EAST SIDE C:ill clay 11r night 646·39:.!M, CVl'S 5·'8·3561 .Lachenmyer COVINGTON 4 PLEX Best lluntington Beach location. Let us ~how you hnw you l'an be Lhc proud owner or this pride of ownership unrt. Grt<al in· Vl'i.lmenl for the tax - ' Realtor shl'llt•r and appr eciation. Balboa PHinwlo I 007 Lovely home on t·ul·de· :1 Bedroom owner's unit ••••••• ••••••••• ••••••• sac Large beau I 1fully with fireplace. 2 liaU1.s. 7 UNITS. $295.000 landscpd y ard. Heavy Pl"" three 2 bedroom un· h k r 3 l d II ..., Reach Cottage· $64,500 ~ a c roo . >e rms, a its. For more anforma larJte, dblc car ~.tr., 2 lrnn call 9bJ-67G7. flc.>duced ! 5 Hr, 3 h a, nr. f1rcpl:iecs, boat gale :ind 1.••Nlltll••l~llJNh>~fN"f ' bay &0t•ean. Slfi4,SOO wall. 585,000. IM~IH•lt 2BR &den $J2'J,500 Ge.rot 1002 G~neral ca 11 fi42·56711 1002 MESA VERDE Spacious. ne.tl & l'll•an 1 bOrrn. + l,11n1h f1pk Wl•ll t.11111" ap<'ll. I'll' Shm\nb' ;ipp'l.Sllll.01101 llow \\flulil 'n11 l1kl• t11 en· JO}' :l hl•JIJl lllll. m.1ss1ve mnsll'r ..,11111• all<'r a long cl .IV or \\11rl-.? This bc<;ut1t ul hcJnll' h.is J 111 .1n1l IWW I u"Lorn de '"f.!11l'd. llM1 'I rt. rna-.h·r tw1lrm 1>11 \11t1 hk1• the \\,11111 :-..rnt.1 ,\n.1 tvpl' \\l'.tlllt'r \\e• ,tll' h,1\tnJ!" ----------~I 1to '"' 111'"' , •. 1 ,\11111 SOMETHING UFO!! t:nsJl1,.,rlt'd frd up ""' e· n:nt ' ~.111 Jilli I 11111 uul spat·c.Endu!>cdby block[~ ~. ~ 4UH,3ba.SIJ7,000 i~~~ll" • FORJ,1£7' '; Mar~hall Hlly ti75-4t100 OCEAHFROMT •...••........•.......•••..•....•..•..••.•...• cae:: IBDBGI BLllNS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE #l LIHD4 ISLE -HEW PIER & SLIP Balboa Boy Prop. Realtors \OU l l'lllfll '" ,.,.,,. t 1·11 SPECIAL ll .dh ,111 • ontl l111m1• \ 1111 • 675-7060. 1 •111 """'''"'"'hot, 111 ,.d 1 llt•dr<Hlm. :1 h.11h fam!lv \\lllTll • ouh1tl1• ,11111 11• honw. 011ly Si:!.11110 ----------1 111, ,.,.,, 1•111,,1 IJfr \\'ttlllil !'-J1.1l·11111" 1'll.l'l"Ul1\.1· honw \llU 111<1• 111 m1111· m 1111 with ~tc•p clown ll\11\j( COSTA MESA CLASSIC mt•ch;tll'h • It 1 ,111 ht• :11 roo111. \Jllltl•tl 1·e1hnJ.:,,, r.111j.!cd . t\1111111 JU ·•Pill l'XJiH11'"' ,. g la:.:. an·ai., 546•4141 ran1tlV rCKllll, furmul dlf\· ini: & 3 car i.:nr agl' Nl';it IU(·11t1on. Call 540·1151 for foll details. ~ n111rc• llh1111I lhts :1 ----------h 1 • cl r" 11 m , I , II ;1 t h har i.:.1111 1'111·1• rndudt•., Huntinqton Beach BARGAIN SPANISH ESTATE VIEW $169,500!! C'l:1~sir hl'al't1 h11m1• Top toncllt11111 ' • OPEN WED. 12-5 I 07 "G" STREET §aliHhttr!J 111\l.ll(li\ ISi.i\ 'I> "'673°6900 ... OPEN DAILY TH.RU SUNl-5 2 Story Custom Bui It Spanish Contemporary by Roulon Hodges. S Bedrooms. 3 Fireplaces, Wet Bar. Large Patio. Terrace Deck Firepit. $?75,000 Costa Mesa's h<'sl loc·a lion. H ug(' i1 lll'drnnrn f amity ho ml'. l\I aso.,I\ c Spanish tmck fireplace k:xtcnsivc upgrading t hroughoul. Ev ~ry woman's dream kitchen ~;s,soo full prit·c. As· sum able VA + + 1 (l(l\i hie f1nanl'1n~. l'all 64&7171. COATS& WALLACE ~~HERITAGE lrc-.h 1•.11111. 111.-pl.in'. <'11\ t'l l•ll 11all•1 "'1lh !Jar. hllRC ) :ml with plent v ul Jll1\'llO' ancl 11 uat Ire'<'!'. fl!wt ;Jr11t trnih·r a1·t'C.!>S. Why pay rt•nt '? .I ui-.t Silll.000. lluutinit tun llct11·h. <.:ul t nowl 8-12 2535. ()11N Ill 0 . fl n11N,,., nrtJl((I Assume 71/4 VA J\ssumr• 7·'' Cl loan with monthly payrnl•nlt1 of $236. per month . Compl ete . .Shurp 3 bedroom and family r oom. Great locatwn near schools ~rnd shop- pins.r. Hurry, this baq:;am can 'l lasl. 962· 7781S W 1 n d i n i.: d r 1 v t• l 11 ~c('lucl1•1l par11u1•l t•ntr) to chald ccihnit:-. 'OJI mi.: s ta1rcJSc & ,.,.,\J view p::at 10~ undl.'r rt'CI Ith• roof. Fomul din . & CIJICUl't!U n kit c hl'n ! Trapeze bakony lo sprawling bdrm .• com· plex. Sweeprni.t master bedrm. w/ roman tub. Seller anxious. 'fry S7,300'1•--------- REAL ESTATE, INC. IFYOU 631-1800 111 DOVEi DRIVE <.~ • '' •• , ·1 ·" " • ~ ' ho,·1• a !0e•1 ~ 1t 1'lo oUc>r or 'O' ll~aiHJ1 ~~ .. s~~r~: .. 1 1\~.~~7011 1 •• 11 • 0 ' [ca ~ J,!ood5 lo '11'11. pl.tfl' :in ;HI . --•-"••"•-'. l'hotll'4il2 ~JhiH $©\\.~ ~ -lt ~frS • GNera1 , 002 GeMro• 1002 That /nf,i9uin9 W orcl Gom~ wilh a Chuc~:e ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l-.t i., (lAT I •OUA,. ------1 G t-...__ <ti .... Inv< i<ro...01.d -ck I>. low "' """' """ ...,opje - I GOTSOE : I I 11 I I I ti/ i° i I i l Ii; IG 0, y Ip Al I i Our bocloes •r• ll~e dell· _ _ . . . _ ca•• flowers No meller flow muc" wo lev•i" ctr• on !liom, I H 0 B R E T I '"ey •1tll -lo -. ,. " I I I II I O C°"'«>'•'• ..,. chuckle (lllot9d bv 1.11°•9 •n ch. ""-9 -'*' _ _._ __ ...._.....___.___. VOii dov•lell Ir-...., ,...._ J !>.'°"'. 49 fltlNI NUM6llt0 lllltU IN THlSf SQYA•U r r 1· r r r 1 I ltol I I I I SCliM-UTS AMWWI .. CloHific..,_ 1010 macnab /Irvine realty MEW PfHIHSULA. POINT HOM! Just completed! Quality custom on quiet park street, 2-blocks from ocean & bay. 3 or 4 bedrooms w/luxury thruout. Compare & you'll1 want to buy! $1~.500. Clint Moses 642·8235 (H64) 642423S 644·6 0 tol Dover Or1w Harl>or Vl~w Center t rvlne at C.mpus Valley Ctnter 752·1414 •• REALTORS "'""'' '""'"'"" .,,,, , [ e IRtdtil] tot. down. tnhm. Call col CoroftG ct.I Mor led 714 /847·tiOlO. 1022 l>aaly 1•11111 c1.1 .. -.1I1t·tl /\cl 1::. a ~1mpfl• rnalll•r ••. Jt1\l t'.1ll 1.12.f.liiR 1\.-.SUM I-~ 7'.'~ VI\ Al. K€Y .. 'd" R€ALTOP.S t1C S F:Ll. 1tll" 1l1·m' "1th :1 0.111' l'tlot l'l,10, ... 11!,.11 l\cl 1'42·!"14i7K :i 01 . 2 ti:i. r :11n rm. clhl r1 llll. I·',\ h1'.1t hltn'I. Nr War 111• r to.I It r I ' t o I eMtal I 002 GftWral I 002 ~11 .!tUU ~f'('(l"t Y..Clr~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• (}\lo Ot'r, l;.12 : .. Iii.I G~ral I 002 Gftlfl'al 1002 ...••.•.••...........•• .........•.....••..... LIDO CUSTOM COllMB Magnifi ce nt 5 bdrm . ·home w /separate dining room , den &: family room. Quality refinements throughout. Close to club. $275,000. A COl.DWIU. UM•Y CO. 644-1766 21&1 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS ,_0 IN NEWPOATCENU~ HEW LISTIMG Lusk H arbor View Hills area. Dramatic J BR, fam rm w/open beam ceilings, great nook area. Better than the model, only one or its kind. Many upgrades. Park like yard. $145,500. OPEH DA.IL Y 3406 Catm1u an SPYGLASS HIU. Dest buy, hard to finds BR or 4 BR & maid's quarters. Fam rm, sep din rm, huge tile entry. Ocean view. $205,000. 675·3411 - L US K ij RF AL TY 1.1 ./1°/11; f> I.in/...,~,\' ..• , Cu ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR DUPLEX OM ORCHID Cull u .. ul>c)ui thi:. :! llclrm 1•harmc•r w /h:11 l\1 '\lr lltlrm. ~unn.v f).1t1n ,1n1I J-. ;f, 111 > l'll\ l1.1l'lwlor A 111 Onl) !'11115 000 Call 644-7211 /.JD.NIGEL llAIL(Y & A~SUCIAT[S ZBR&GAR.APT. 2 Cov. p otio5, nireJy furn .. So. or llwy. Only $107,500.1\.il.675·3222 FOR SALE IY OWNER Under market price new 3 llr, 2 na. scparule older unit. 2Br. IBa. +bach· c I 11 r a pt . $ I <I ll , 5 0 0 • ll40 1~26 11rt GPM Pran only' •HY OWNt:R, Cnnyon C'rl·~t Twnhmc. Lar,;cst. mod<'I, 3 Rr. wetbar. bcraul upl(roctc~. fee hind. $110,000. A ppl Only 644-1798 .. _ ... .,,. .. .,. ... __ _ .. . ...... -... , ~~!.':'.~~~ ...... ~!!.~~.~~ ........ ,~:!!.«!~.~'!': ........ ~c:'!!~!.~~~.~~ ....... ~C:-:!~!!.~~.~~ ....... ~~.~~.!!!~~~..... Tuesday. October 12 1976 DAILY PILOT 119 Corona del Mor I 022 Hw\Hnc)ton S.och I 040Newpori Beach I 069 Howport a.och I 069 San CkfMftt• I 076 Loh for Sole 220 HousH U"fwnl.hed Hot.set UnfYmlihed HcMtte• U•fwWa.d ~ ·····••····•··········· ••.••••..•............•..••...........•.•.••....•.••..•.•••.•....•..• ••••·••••·•····•······· •••.•.•.•............. ........•...••••••..... ....••.•..•........•..• ; TWO S ti p E R c L F. I\ ~ ••;·.~·;~·~;;·~·~~~~· Co1to Muo 3224 Huntinqton lrviM J.C44 • ! RESIDENCES • • gents Prl'l>1dcnt1;,I lle1i,:ht:. , PROPERTY n .•.•. l d"'JI S2"u ., '·r . I k •.. r R E A ofl1o ~ " ••• • • • ••• •• ••• •• • • • • •• HarbO-ur 314 2 ••••••••••• • •• •• • •• • •• • j • Condo, Ca th clg~. 2 Ur, ;i N D I "".. " .. .. u ••• •• •• •• •••••••• • •••• • I urt l'roc ,, ur, am rm, Un J IJrgt-r 1111 •ilJ H"l'nl If-' )nu .in· reuiltni: thi-.. ~ I! 11.3, Jllach g.tr. 1 ll'"l'l, ''"Purl 1'al 1 urll'.11!1 lod.ll 'J>t-l~ok 1-ci• J Ur. :i h.i lo" uhvu'" 1lt11 1111. 2 h.1, ni·" upt. lll \.\OO<hv p.11k ....... ~ 1h1·d.i11~ lnr "'"" '"I pool Joe. Priced ror In:.\ I~ Jla1:lo. lh •Y .iri•J MJlnlll'lllJh .. ~O~JiO S1l;11ld1111t n1•\\ IOIHI 1 .... .,,1 •• \.it Ml·~---· rm s. dtn, :1 IJJ '" lillnl>. 111.i ... uud •• s u o 'l>l• The charm of Lido Isle is reflected in 1 b ~" •I.CA (;ompll'te :.\'\of plan!. to , 1 ~u l ' 11 1 1 \ • ""ould 'vu "••11 .. , , •• 1 S•• l' Y ownt'r . ..,i,.,...,. "ld0~ & luyout "\ll.lllJ'·I .. r>'>< :> br d11"1 .. ~. "ar '"" ' • '1 . . 1 • ' W1llo" limn~:.. :1 hr. 2 ba. ,.. , '" • 111 "~ lw 11n1· 111 1hc 2 this s pacious 2 BR. 2 ba. home. Indoors 199 210!1 " .. .. u • ......, -.. ~A .. u... Kit n 1 1111 · 1" ·vt'" :..ewang mu<'11tnl'I, nl'"" !wnlllr '"'"'tall':I 1 urn • _ ·---~15·~1!>1 kid~ pebuk. fel.'. • ' 0 ' '" ·" 1>\\', f11k l'Ph. drps. "alnl, W<tllPJIWr &. fhll•r ~wk111i: l-:\l'hl,l\l' lol'J• IS accented by high, beamed ceilings & > ~lam Hl'ntal:>, 540 5370 ~I~ 11\ll :iu;i tj(j.'I AJtt . No ,. ('0\'Crlnl(,, urn1111ni.: llllOIOWt·,th.1\1•11l'l;ixa, profcss.decor.Theoutdoorsoffersh~e. Santa.Ana 1080 l"IM 1244 Ill' -1~ ~lora&l' & dbl ~..ir J i:e + at Brookhur .. 1 Jml t..d· brick patio, fountain & lattice garden ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 llll 'l'wnhsc. dbl !:·11 ••••••••••••••••• ••••• • • ·• tory " 111• ., t DOLL HOUSE " nuto opnr, pvt palw l.l\l' 111 In llll' \.'1ll.11t1" Wt! - 1 ·:>nh '-,,d .. ll ia 1n1u·1 \f11n11n":-.111npro room $165,000 l)W,$31091>31058 havclll)Oll·~.1n11lub!C(01" ow ousc t~1w we 1111: 1tra111 u11111111• 111 llw 1t1 LIDO Rl:.A.LTY ONLY $49,500 '*RENTALS* ll'!lM'lll "'Ith t!Hl'~lhtni.; A r:.111• 1Ju,t11 ll1.t1 it \IH,1'1 1 K;A Cl. fllA ll.'rm1> c.;h,irm Hl.ll l''~'s l.OT FAlll\t i\TMOSl'llEH~. 2 llH,:J•,h:t SS:!5 Walnut Sia 'fhcRanch 11air ul SHiO IXHI l1k1• ti ' !'>:II '.111011 3377 Via Udo. M.I. '73-7300 in~ 3 b<lrin, 2 liu honH• ('\I'() IH'll 111 . hors1• c•orr.il, bllns I Hll. ilt•r1. :! II.• $17!1 lkl.'11 l\•lil Culvt'rd.1lc. University p~olty 1;1•1111!1' \\l•11•rl>uch " hUj.ltl 1-'H on Ir•: lot \\'h1\cl\llll'I' \'u, :o.1 1:!.(KI() :i.1<!5 mo ~)lti 57i7 ;! rm ~ l'ool ~.n~. \'.1 llurtll'h l 1111v. l'a1k J001 i-; C.:a.l 11" v H73 ti.~tu We.tho•en Realty Sep luundry r111 w hnhh~ \, 't ,..,. l'l'I'' l' :! llH, l'l.in \ ~111 ~·ollt•"c 1•11rk ' l!l'lo '·"' · ·" ·_.\l':. A\ "Ila'·'" "'11" l'th. 1 '·11\ 11\I' "II "I' " rrn & l-t'f) bJth ,\Int u ... ~" • ., "' ; '· • •1 ~.>ti :i llr )-Uu r \'hoh•liur (IJ) Co1taMeso 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ENDANGERED SPECIES Almost 1:\tan1·t J trulv 1rndit1onal :! storv h11nl1· 111 pres11..:1ou... EJ,b1l11· looa:.ltnl! t uw h11m1•, ~11111 n1:1gh1Jur.,1 Thi~ t 111.'<.lroom, ;1 h.tth 1.111h h J,; Io v 1• Iv m J ... 1' ~· llrllt\\OOd ,\. 'loOI' lirl·plJt·c· m.irhk h ... 1nh l'LLS IJd l'p,11 t1li.:u l'll ln fo~1·r & plu!.h m.1'1l'r MUll' \ i:1·nu111P J md lor :.cll'lll\ l' """ m•r. •_,.Quail ~ liiillPlac• Pr ft'li•• Dp7S'2-1920 " 1400 OUAILSI. NIWl'OIT HACH .>wnc.•r, 2br, dl'n, J 1 .b ... l'mr, fm·tl) rel . 21117 Ma pie. St9,500. ·l!i-1 XK21S Elegant Spanish! lnint-t 044 LOCJ'lfta Beach I 041 buy. 545-!M9l. Mountain, De.erf, CdM 2 Rilrm. &•aml'll '.! lllt t\ lk11 $1~ trom $:1115to $500 --Resort 2400 C.'l'llinA!I & fr11k A~km~ :1111t,t·'lt.:!ll.. ~t!i: • .i 11r ~ow ('ho11·1•nr1ti) IS r d t• n ~ h a \ t• a r • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • \l.11111.1 ll11:h lllln llLH1 4 BR + FAMILY Walker &lee Auel f state ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1!\0 yr l.\' li7!'> !1-117 all S !'\.1111.,11., II<·\ ~I:! trum $1!10lo $57~. UA't'10 Tll "ll ll'' ·11~ --•I lllt, 1-'H ~.... '•1 1"1•1•.• ·". "n , . '-Ill "' "'3 br. lllCI! 1°<> '-('rd. "<I ' ,. ·' l I 1 I\ 3 II I I ... ~ "' "' 11111 Sli J RANCH RE"';TY <Ju11•l <'Ill 111• :.Jc i n onio. 1· ·1 cc.• U\i' :.l'1111ob, n·fng & ~10\l' \ruhH h,1\i•i•lhl'1,l11r "'L "'~' !oi> %>1 ;,;1~11 huwr S64, 900 ~ltm -I rr111E'. ~panhh arc hes funu:.hl.'d ili•:.l rnl>h 111 a v1.11I. ~ mo 6-lfl tll'46 5 SI ·2000 l I d fer'. "79·0"'.'l cl")'~·,__ 111111w1h.11<'th•llll,111C~ REAL ESTATE •'lit ry. .ar11e cnt• ose " " • u J 1ru11t\ anl µalt0 Smokey ~r Real Estate 8311 l!JOli E\ I'' 3Br. 21Ja. lilln,, Jrph• r11.·1.1 11111 10" .111ll rl.'c.h~ ood ••••••••••••••••••• •••• R ol Est t 1·pt t.lr.i111'' & pJml \ l'Q 900 Gl .. nn"Y'" !II 4114 114. J ~411 (I Jl6 111 ;111tl 1\l'W :i hr. 2 ~:a ba. ''' ·" :-4(jJ No p ets. ll71 I! 171 or 833·;!10[1 ·---Real Estate byML'VAY IH1.11tl llt•1•orJlnr ll\IOJ.: UNIQUE Mobile Homes e 0 e 1•li•a11 st:>O,.mll 5 1:> 3621 ru11111 plu!> S panish n .. 1. 1 For Sol• I I 00 Wont~d 2900 Jlt 11''1 I k f I , 11 n<I .... •am ce1 1ni;::.. ll l' c.•ntry •••••• ••• •• •••• • •• ••••• ••••• • • •• • • • • • • • •• • • • •• L'olh"'l' l'arl-. '.! Ur, lg l1~c.~I ·) k'.~'b'h~~~· Fa-:nil;. with sla1ned gl J ~:>. 2 UR hv rm & 1..ttlhen OCE.\'li (.',\fALl'i.\ \'1c\\ \ \C \:\T' 1-:.,,11t1• J br. :! --r.1m7h\' rm, 3 commum• red hill ·.;;:.:. 552-7500 JUST MARRIED,, room Um·t•n site ma:.ter l>~yhght1>, trnll.'d i.:las I ull ·bath 8x40 $1 250 moliile humc. l'Ol rll'r 1>P. hJ. frpk · dbl i:.rr 3.')J 'l\·rrJl'I' 1 O\\ nhonw 2 br I' 111111 I'· :-:n S m o . UJ' 111•, 3 ni I ll I t ruout & .:rl'.Jl 'us. 3 CAu "173 • p\'t ply, 1r:ille tor UceJn Woo.d land SHU i.73 JOU(I '.• 11,1 11p"r,1cl"<I l Ill. Xl111' ~; 11..1411 Pl•1i1·1t l11r nl•\\hl\l.'<il> " l' •" •irl' a r •Y lJdrmh.!)11:!.0UU ""'"' \'uhomcorl111 1!11811\11 -,.. ' · ,111 l<11) hi • h.1 ... UI> b1'<ltlr11l~llll» r~·Z hc~re 1'1•1Jbll• lo lk>Jch. 2 Hr 2 lol . l\J7.) 11:11 X IX 8 l Ill\ l'I.. \'1llJJ:e I, z ·1.1111-il '"'""'l'i a111I 11... \ ,Jf IJtllllJ.: ll'llC . ne· --Loquno's Best Ivy l\.i I pit• l'lhl dq" t.. ~ti l'li" 'ICll \ tnhoml'. 3bl. 2• . .,. ~ur itur ch,.,..,,, 'hdVl'" hwat,mf ~--~·'~c ad van WALK TO ALISO l\K\CH 2 HH. full huth. fJm·rm Meed Biscay Model q1l!. c .11h '1•11. :-di dn 'I \\ \ "" l'k 1• .. 1c1' h.1. t~m Im. fr1>lc & sun· JIU(/ ('lll1\l'r ... at111n Jiil. 1.1r.:~·. (. ;1.11 '"-.1.00.t?'t.ay. 3 '"•1lr1")nl, ., b11tl·1. r •m1 Ir\' rm. k I\ l h. PJ I Ill \\'l' ha\l' J hll\l'l' lor \11111 I Jlll!I'. "'"'"hr. lr.:e ram T\\11111111 ;1 HI -· . ll 1 1k1•k '\lra dl.'Un. lmml'<l ..... ~ ' " Storage bldg, 1'tr;1 1>rk " · 1 11 t I 1 •. 11.ho11111Ht111-.1w1l1·d r I ly r oom und l1rcplat·c. P arkS120mo.m cl.ut:i Woodbriugl' U1 !>cJ> rm. v1111 m.111.1urc1·µ l'lun c.: ,,,,111 th·t I• m·11l\.SIG5.111cl.tcnn1s. ~~~.·.1,;ll~1 ('11llc1l 1 .. 11,l l ~ lfJJjf!i,\ll ~~,·tl·,!,uSdlU('~."'l(lll.&I" pool 4~·~51 mudl'I If you \\Ulll to prcf'd. 6312111 or CIC!'>~">~') 5-li71111111ll:t1;l:!l.1 puoh & j .11·uu;1. 5!'>2·07116 i1'f.\i~ 'J: .,.., . v"' mok,• .1 hc.•;ilthy profit, •~tti b511J or 5~:.! !JI II \Ir Du_n~--· •• ~.l-:\1111>1 l !)Oi!,.JOU A Jay w. Yeats RPally 2h60 Goldenwcst. Lake <'all M.1.1·3380 A.,:<>nl 3 BR 2 6• f 1 lk :iur :!ha. ,;1 L•1·11l1 c1: h11nw • "63 450 1----------· a, am-rm, 1 1 en llnor 11hn Ir~ 1111 Loquno Beac h 3248 ,, , Jl709l'm•l>lllw\' l''urcst Gardl.'n!I. 2br, from g r ade sch I & s'.isu ~l''Sti'J'.\~· · •••••••••••••··~···•••• OR BEST OFFER! It \:'\rl 10 S,\i\ JOAQUIN So Laguna H1i1 22:17 furn rm, 2ba. 1.-tuu :.q. fl. Rentals ltillcrci;t Swim & T<'nnis · ~· ~ i. o .... nt'h hnughl nL·\~ l ll· :1 1\r ::•:Ila. popular SJn (\•nt air, $24.900 4!l:l·0771 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Club. $100. mo.546·1187 2 Br. torm 1hn, fpl, 2 1·a1 i.:1 Jlll·d 1 htl1 m + ,, ram Lu t' H ,., M u n y up· LOCJUna H ills I 050 S Houses Furnishtd El T 3232 g a 1· $350 mo I\' I.. rm. 1'dc1I 1·11ln'. '" ",1le r.:1.iclt•, \'u•w J!ctlf rnurs<> ••••••••••••••••••••••• CO TA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• oro 11111.r\~t 546·581:10559·0~:1:1 1.1111 11., ,1 ill. Ii 1.,11 11,1 j nl. •""-lal-.l· :-1 t.1 .OiKt 517 70'11 15xJ5 Uudgcr, New qil s. Bolbo p • I 31 07 ••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• p.1\10, \\h.1l a 1.dw• Call 11r1':l3 J:.!I."> drp:-. Adult park s,'i~l\J:\ •••••• ~.~.n:~:~.~••••••• Super 3 br. 2 b3, fpk, UW "'"'' 1711 t !If.Ii ·1·1~1h 1 • MUST SELL NQWI. i:JH72_7 . J\.tTl·{ (•rican :\thl C.:'h 1 !'pli-. t.Jrp:o. ::i:lll"I 11111 I Br, ,1m nn. d1n1ni.: rm .irmlng :1 I\!( :! ia, ... i!Oh:!I Ei:n•t ..,,,,1,450 J\ll 111 .. '"or' hu•. bnen _llm~_. _557_·_9390 !N~I 1:;m \j.!I ·'" 1t•1• Lee l•ll. s:!J,~:>u. l\o ~ " " .. ~ h111nt· w (rpl1• patio, 4 BEDROOM .1.,:nt!' 55:!·~3~-__ done for you 1n U11:. near-COST A MESA lndry rm W111t1•1 t l'lllJI. nl'W, h ighly u1>~n11!cd. . 11':'~1-:!XIH Ill 11:1:1 Ti1;1 BEAUTY Turt laut·lo.. Bio.id mnor l11.'1lrm l'an·,..l·llcr homt-. '77 Skyline, 20x 11. :1 llH. :? h:1 lh~ Supc·1· l,1mtly l'l.in ·I l'rnr \tcw Int .. fu~l mml.' tll & :.t.irl 11, .. adult park. n '.1:.1111.ct1k CosfoMeso 3124 honw :--:H.c ;;iru. Only lbr, :.:•~ha. atrium 1ng Ollcrcd .. t only ~p.1<·c rent : \ll7:1:i11 •••••••••••••••••••••• $.'111!150 ::.ui!.OOtt II\ ""'ncr. l'nnc. !)il.fHHt Anwrieun :\l lil llm~ . .! hr, I h;1 l'1•h 1l11ldll'll only IG3-8193. ~i •1:r.1U ok Yard '-l:!."i 11111 IJ FULLER REALTY n .. • -p ~ 1 "OO Santa b.1h1·I ·111> t~fo t nv "" nr l 111 vl'r~1t v I' ark DVS•ness rope. •Y .. WESTSIDE REAL TY INC. 848·2323 J:lll' ON Tiii': Wi\Tt-:R • :1 htlrm Ill'\\ 1111111<• 1•11 l.J~l' l•'ort•:-t \l \II'\\ 111 \\,11\'r 152S ~'l· ft. :t ha. \ l'. w~l l>ur, I rpk, pullv ,'\/ 1th! i:.ir l'luhhou,.1• ,.,.,1 '~ 11·11111' 1111 I S.t!I:; "'""" 1111\\ • 1: 11111:1011 •LEASES '* l :-.1111w !or Ii lllll!. ) ~ llH. 1 um r111 . . . S:l75 :1 1 BH, tam rm . ~tlll :! nn ct1·11. 11111 t m s12:> :1 tll! '! h,1 ::>I:!.'! :1 BH, d1111m S-l:l5 J Ill{. d1•n FH ::Ol!'i(I 3 Im. elm rm !<.l!i<I :lllH.il111 1111 $li·1 3 Bit l.11111111 ~l'MI J Hit Fil Ill( ~1.1:1 RENTALS LAGUHA BEACH I l\UH:\I . & FA ~I. H!\L, hilt 1n l..1tchc11, l,.:c . s un· ill'CK w 'llCl'illl \ 11.'W · S450 mo OCE1\N SIU!-; OF 11\VY A'I' VH'TOltlA BEACH. l'n\'alt> puth.,.,.,1v lt•adm)( "' l1l•adl hi l1uahty a LllHt:\I C EU.\ll 110:\I E, l 1 • II a l h :. . 2 I ~ e. I lfl'Pl.1t·~ .... All bill-tn l-.111 hl·n !>la1ncd g l:i:.s \\rndows. Must ha\'l' cx.' n·ll rckrcnccs. S'iSCt :\lo, StyH:-.h cxe1·11ti\ 1'. :-ur rounded by v1:-.ta:. of lu:.h i.:rl'l'nt•rv & a jon•,.1 ol ln11t lrN'S. S11hurh1.1 l\ksa Verlie it li1·dr•'l<11n "ith ram1ly room. tlm ln~. handsome f1rcplat'l' F'ull j!Ul'!.t d1mno! room 111 c h co Io r s ~ t t•' tu res. HK H, call ) Ill I i .!O 'fl\lllb1• \ 1ll.1gc• 1: Cam 546·0814 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOC)Uno B~och 3 148 Fountain Volle 3234 i----------•I bndi:1· mdl 3 br, 2 ba. lgel-----------c OfFICE BLDG ••••••••••••••••• •••••• •••••••••••••!••••••••• :J 1\1<, I• It Ult . . . &;,,o ~~~·:_ooo~ 3 l\Ofi:\t.. OUTST \N· ntNG OCEAN Vl ~W. I.I\ rm. "/fireplace. \\·1 y IJ.!c. & bpal·1ous, " 1· II tic:. i i: n c d r J m. honw ::.150 :\lo. TARBELL ";:I In California!" DELUXE COHDO HORTH MESA Assume V1\ loan :i Bt>droom. family Two JIHI nne hJlf ·baths SIH.5110. O" ncr, r\111·nt :;.JO 0.')55 3&DEM OR4 BEDROOM \\\·:-ls1dc.· :: hJlh. ~harp, sharp. 1\:.k 1n~ s.'1 t.rllt1l l'lLU'I lll'.1\l. l·:s·1,\TI·; 5hl II~:,.) EASTSIDE DOLL HOUSE (l11ahl\ h111l1 ' lwol1 n1 \\ :o.hJk1• 10<•1 h.11 t\\1)11<1 MARINER'S COVE :! Bit. adult 11111~. w11h p1111I 1.11 u111. t1•11n1:-. up i.:radl.'<l Firm al ~ll."'-'O 645-3474 --i-·IJ- ABANDONED \' ,\\'.\Yr Walk 1•1' l 1111' '11•11' h1k1· tu th•• h1·.11 h "I'll C'U:.l11tn 1lr:ip1 "• p,11111 ,, l'JI pl'I I ll1 1111ul I .11\\ 1•,1 pt i1" :1 lcr :! h.1 with tltn r 111 Ill ,1\\111111 \\I' I On!\ S";'1 'MIO \I U'l di . SCOTT REAL TY .1.it1 '1.' fin., (pk l'llllfl\ I pltt1lll1 -----------llll'. Ill'\\ 1-.11fll'h ,\· I l1Hll l"'1•rr11i.:• \II 1111. "" ·' l.ctj!C, h111lrl 1hll• H :.! lnl \,kmg c.i;:i '""l I 11r 111 1.11b on lhl'> lu ,1111' 1 ,ill ;, ltl 11;, 1 Dono Point 1026 Irvine 1044 ············~·········· Ranc ho San Jooquin I \Ill; I.~ I II I l\11-: :1 1\1(, :! h.1 • 11ol 111111. plu h •1'1 tl1111r.1111r .ippl ..; prol l11d,1·pg :'w.11 pool \ 11.'\l ' -.:1:1 111"1 11\STl'\l:,,\1'() II\ 1111 1111t nur alnum () h \\' '" I lJ f h I Hew-.6Beoch 1069 11 I l' <tll.'r .,C"l>0 rt r 11111 "11"' o r F1n•pl.11·1• :1 hi.:.! IJa. c1w '\1 punt-l1•1111i" rrt<; . ,.-•' lJ I ' I I I 111111 • I I '\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• l':tl' I. auj.H'l'll .II II l' ' \ l'I "' I '"t II µ.1t111 Ill'\\ • pb drps & • h1llin·11' p.irk \II l'lc1 , \ tll;tj.!<' Short I< ,1.,1'' l'l'I' <>111<'1 i'.1ril1•11 .,.., ll\\ '\o \\,I\ 11 ..... '-lllll'I ~111 h " 111 .11 Ill'" .. p Harbor View Homes ull'JI lur h1•auquJrll.'r' 1mi: 1!11 )i\ "' '"' 1·11 l•' l•w ... ix . mu !lliJ 1.llill ,\1:1 V ILL~ l)lt.1111 ,., :-1.>1 111111 J·:'c' J\ d1·l1 i.;hll11I 1 Bdrm b I II g I n ,1 11 1 r, 1111-:1 ,1111 ... """HI "l-.1111, . ~1.1:! 11:1:12 h1111\t' Ill "~10111.'I flume" '71111!!\2 Xli:!2 :t:!:11 l·. I lllllt:'ll. & FAM ll:\t • 3 II/\ r 11s. L i;tl'. h v. rm., l1eum ee11tni:~. fln•pla1:c. ;! l'ar 1.wrai.:t'-S.S5U :\lo. ('(1:\1'1 t·:H('I \L STOR1': 11r oft 1n· 11·111.1 I Srparale hid ~ & I l''l rm . at l'H'JlllllV ('11·1•11.;. SlOO \111 . l·:1}:l'. & WATER. 1'1\ID. II 'I O\\':'I: E It r1,11h11u,1• 1·111vcrs1l\ l'I. :I Ill'" !1.1, IW\\ C.'flb & p.11111 "'•·• lllNt h\.I O:'il!R Lowest Price! Rancho San Joaquin l :-\OllSTl!l CTED VIEW O'\ <iOl.F ('()ll HSI·: I\\ '""" t 1;.1.-1!1-11 lt·\1.'I ,1·~·p 1111\\ 11 1.1 n~ 1111. :! B1 .-d1•11 :.! h.1 Lu\ q1t'i.: ::!J Fltin·.., 11111 ,\1 h11I,•::. l 1;.w 11~1!1 "' 1..:1:1 :m1.1: l '1·11 111gs & wkmb 11;1:1 'llf;(I \\ kil~' BY OWNER \~'11111.ihl·· lo.111 :IBr. 2 h.1+1.11111111 ~1'1.:>1111 L'all i5:! o:.~ 11r 1; 1111111;1; ,\gnt l'ft-.•,,•' 1,.,1\ 1 n.1me & numl~·r Model Sales \\\ .1nl \\ IOllllll! l 111\'Cf'il I 1 l'arl-T11\I 11h1H111' h\ .I \I l'l'l 1•r' lo . Onl' 111udd rl'll1,11nt111! I Br 3 ll.1 . 2 sty. intloor atnum l'rnl1--·:-.1onallv dcc:oratcd I m m l' d 11 l:n 11> a n c y . I.' 1111u1t1 on 11 µI: rad~ d 111 g h t .1 n fl \, ,. s .111 "' man; fl'GlUrl'S 1-ce 81.'rnanlmo 'I:! 1111 l.111d Top ncrghborhood. SI 19,750. Commercial Properly 1600 NEWEL\.. Associates LAGUNA HACH 4t4-6St4 MEW LISTING! ........••.•••..•...•.. BAYFRONT ()tf11•1• uuild1111:. ~IJl0l' l•ll'Ul.11 I It'\\, 111\lll'llllh 1•\1'1'llll\l' oHICl'S. r\11 \Int 111\l•SI ml'nl al :$1j:IO.Ut~t BILL GRUNDY Realtor 6 7 5-6 16 I MISSION REALTY On the ~.1~1!1 t Jiit SL!tlCI ''•Hlll'I 11111•1· I l1r. 2 ha, _ Rl:.ALTOR , \ rl) or.~'"" "1111 _l liH 11, ,1 1·rp1' tlqh <\. p.nnl " lolt ,l.111 \i.;I 1•11 15!'>1 I ph :-lltt 111,1 'Mi:1 •15m \.n• .. ntn·1· Jlnm1•-; 11111 . \1-:t '\11 h 'l' :!hi 11111111 n kl 1'1111. I rplc. L11\11n1111s 11n .1nIr11111 111!1-.1 pil 111 l"'"I'. p.1rk .'t ll\'1ttli111t"' :1 llH \\ .111 I llt "liJlh" '\t '' h111•I ~ 'lhl :-:i-. .. 11111 .1.11 :!i7G. f\11\\' ~l(MKI '.\I 11 h 11 II p 1 11 !: 1· l' 11 l l' r 1\lmn~I 111<'.lllltntll. ~ '>lr111 tllU 5r,.1 ;31:171 :I tit· 2 h.i, r1pk r,111~l'. llll .!'111,1 s.1:.0:.\111 . II \1:1~h1•1 :-\1 ~h11p:-. & I 11111rn :! Jiii. 'h.1 l'Oll Hunt1n<Jfon Beac.h 3240 ,l'llo11l' ~:1:1.1 .•.• ~1 tHi l d1i.l '·till..,111 1o..i1 :-.1::..1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• !1K;1S.t'u:1!.\.Lal-(11na Ar.:1•nt 1!11 i:'olX 2 Stnry. 4 br, 2 ha. fplr. Sh.1rp :111r .. :.-ha. l~!t'.~:-: Phone 494°0731 .. . , l>W. t pls, dqi:.. l'kan. <~1<ol~""hr · ".".h .,-·':" .. . . . ... . _111 mohtl1 h1111it• HUI ::>l7:1 mo. ll6J . .ti/ti!I ,\ l ga1, c 111.dt• '·" ,1.1 J·5..!UI l.in11rum11 un.~11 ~le\\. PIT.Ill \I\•\\ ;\11 d11ld1 ('II :\11 Ip. ),; 01' !!'IR 2.1.17 11l'\\ <'\l'C :I lir, ..!' ~ bu. 2 or pd~ :!Kil Kll2li. ' 1 , I rpl1·, '-(;.';() •1!lfl 2807. N pl Shnn·~ .. ,\ lr.tml'. 1 'l),2 BH&ik11111·:1 1lH lllln'>. 2 p;.il111' Sll'I'~ Ill Vt'c.itl /!.:.pooh Slij,0110 CAYWOOD REALTY •548·1290• \p11rox 2200 sq. rt. \\'1·~1 ~'''\port s1~1.51Kl \;:1·111 Newport Beach 3169 ,, 1:! :~.~)'(. • •••••••••••••••••••••• •• l'.\t\I \C ·i Br., B· :ill Wr10C"lhrnl1.:1•Twnhm1• .1 llr ----111 , &. r ·, S.J6(la.. 2 Ua, ,\ l. lllll:l ••lfl', .. I Iii 1.tm rm , 2 ha. OCi.':11\ ~I n:-.. •hpl c , ·r, '."1° l.11..t· & 1111111 pn\ 1>111 Hf.I~ '11 . l!:l' ~ 11t lrplc., nu . mi ng, ., •n er11" 'pl-.. ilrlh. ~1;,o. l:.t-. 2000 'r l) :.!llH lll.1..!i .irpkj!, n1rnl 14111.l1~7 ('ll\H\11'\1: :1 llr 1111 t•t1n1~1 1 1•\•''>. I :! p .II 111 ' I 1111 m o lii'1 l'l!rl 1o.:l .!I l:1 ~hr l\111hw (.'pts, drp» .. r~"1'"1'111~"1!111h' 1,w ... s:1.~11~l .! fir I ••. lrwil \;lrll Ir\ BRING YOUR CLUBS Income Property \.\ h • l t' ,, 'l " •. t r (' n cl n ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• tr.111h· ... thr.. 1:r.1n•r11th COSTA MESA ..... mn J lic•hvom :! h.11h EASTSIDE hum I' 0111\ -.t1•p., lo ,1 l!OH 1, II ca u t 1 f u I l' 11 11 :.. . l'1111r"·' In pn nw Im ·•· S\1t'lh~h fr1>lt,. " 'c., oltl llllll tn ,I flt'ctpli• \\ho 1.11 l' l'lllH' 111\1\ :\l 11,l l!X· 11,·1i:hh11rh11od Sl.'l' 11 , h.1n).!1' ,\gt. 7.11·:!22.1 llll\\ $1:!.%0 •.PllQuaH ~ limlPlac• - ltrii•• Prap 75'.2-1920 1•00 OUAll ST. NIWl'OllT llACM 11.n,. 1111 to ~no.ooo. ca.;h In tn\l'Sl 1n u n1ls ,'(, l'11mm'I :-:OW! 640·8300 BUILD YOUR VIEW HOME 1111 d1•c.or, nr shop., ':"' .~~'·11 " '" 1111" '1 , ~., ,,,. . h I '.I. I I 2 I & ttl:!· ,..,., LJ}.;1111.1 l \11, ~I~.> mo. h t Houses Unhirnished '' '111 • · ,.. 1 J>Of• :-. --~ta t 1•17 .,.,,,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11•1·11111 ~1'111 !Hi2!175H 1i11•rn lh It l111·a t 11111, :-. ~-.. General 3202 :! llr. l·hiltlrt:n oh. Pl'h l:11r11111 p1111I 1:·" k 1::;.1 LOCJ""O Hills 3250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,, tlt·p S2!•5 010 ~l2,-:i.jJ.J \.1lc 1Bclr;u .. '. h,11• I 1t~l •••··~··•••••:··~·•••••-1 -1r 0321 rm 1111011 ii '" t 11pun1) lh'tll'l :i hr <! b.1, <'Pls. 11 "· • <;,1;:, l'h '.;!\I :lltlO llqlls, 1111<'. DW, new-•RENTALS• Sunta .\u.i I IL'll!hl:. I Br :.! 11.1. fpk. clhl )::Jr :J UH, 1 B.\ ::-,ig51 mo S:l>l,j mn F1r~I last & 3 BH, 1 I\ \ ~17,j/ mo d1·a111n!! !Iii:!· 71!11! L11:1111.1 lhl1<; 3 BH. 2 ba. vcrv priv yard 4 Rlt,3B\ • ~150/mn S·IOO 'mo. i.11 !1<!93: lrvuw 1111.11 l:!I) or !16:J 2-125 RENTALS ·"l'a S:l75/mO. Uti3·454D • \r.,'\ :-...n li'l' Stnl!ll' F.111111\ l l11m1·, ---- 3 Hit, 2 IJ.i .......... S:.11\5 Ai r cnl\<I :1 b r, l b a. 31lH,2 TI.1 , ...... S.195 !Jm rm . 1hn.rm. Conveo 3 Bit,:: II.• .. $12:i nic11t l•i Fwys. No pets.. 3 BH. <!II.I ~12:; 4!l'J 2J!27 or 5111 3106. ('ustom 1111•a11 111 :1 111• ,\ ~llll.')!Ml Sal1•,.. 011' l'h 1 ,1 111 r 111 h 11 111 1• 1----------•I .~:;1 11:•11:1. 111 .1 Dail~ .•••••••............... Rare view lol in Corona 11l-I :\t ar on'rlonki11i.: HARBOR VIEW HOME r :i h u 1 o u ~ N 1· w fl or t Or11.t1nu l 1'ortof1no ll.1rllt1r. Tlw .l1•1l\ anti ;\IHtlt-1 :1 1\1 :! ,., lfo, 01•1•an. Price rctlu~·cd 111 +1~11111 ... r111 " lnll bclritl ~.OIHl. Call for 1k•t.11b. .i llH 311 ~Oil/mo ---- l'o,t.1 .\tr·"·' :1 ll•h . 1 hlkl! ht•ach. $211.'\. J rm. 111.\ l>1111ll'/I S!!VO ;-..,, pl'ls. ,\vatl Od. l:, :IBll,:.!!1:1 ~un L H' -l--~25Z I Ill{ ., 11.. :-:111;; oquna 19ue •\BU: :!1 ..t H.t ~l~K> ••••••••• • ••••••••••••• l'111•pl,11·1·. ,,.11 I li-.11\ A TOUCH t'\l'rt, '"'' 111 .11111 1;11d OF CLASS? Rancho Son Joaquin !Hili IH;:l2 ;dl 4 lllll I lilt . ., . 11, sw111 Ilk:! Ba, l~t· yard. $425. 2 · "r11" ;1110111, , • ' Hr :! llu. E. N 111c. N r golf FULLER REALTY l), 1,;,.~, HO SIR ... ,-v lull h.1th .• 11r <'Ond, ll7:l·K.'>50. 546·0814 Spamsh Ith'. pool. lots o( »tt1•11•1·t1 ~iu·1 ~'" t• \'al'ant. lo\(•lv n1•w4 Bil . :1 1111 . '..! • • 11.1 Tnwnh1111sc. I \I tllt I ;1 n .1 !-. ;\ 111' t t· I Ml. TO BEACH ;! Lill,:! Jla ~!!j() l'Ulll'M'. S:17!i, '1!)7.2J70 -- ANCHORAGE IHVESTMEMTS 1714t 496-7711 Fountoin Valley 1034 ....•............•..•.. HELP! I h\IWI 111'1'11' .111 oll1•r \111:.l M'll """ Sh.11 p l1t'llroom ht•m• ;1 ', .... , 11111 lfrdll<'t·<l lo :-1'.X,'1.~I ln1rnmamtn 1mum 962·4471(r.l:)546·8103 Assumption Opportunity The WISC hll\l'I', \\.I\ to ).ave! Toke"' o·t . ~1111 ll'"I to exi!lli111: \' \ 111 Fl I \ loan . Nu q11.t11r) ini:. 1111 point!!, l11Wl'I •'u).t'I. 11 cloe!I lflkc.• 11 """ n II•" nl<'nl 111111 \\<' h.I\ I' .1111·\ !'«llent !\t•lt•ct11111. t'.111 '\UW ' ~JI !'111011 Westhann R~alty ·\ \\l111h-111111~11111' I.II\ lll') I" 1111: 1111111·. 1 IPi:.1111 11!•1tI11 lil · \ 'lll'll ' mod.-! \\ti h :1 htl1 m:-. , t 1111 ..... 11r f.111111\ room & :!' l 1 .... h ... 'l 11 ........ 11'1' Jll~l '-Oml• ut 1111' l'\11t111f.! l'\ 1ras 111 thr... lt11111 .. di .. '11:111'11 for li•t.11 II\ illl! llnl~ ~ih .. llHI red hill ·~:.: .. 552-7500 Here It Is! i..n :ltj'l 1•\'l'' SI05,(l1Ht . 2 In WOODBRIDGE II\~+ much mun· , lmmar f11111•t 1·111 dt· sac. 11111 :118 n111> [ -I 2 1\.1 frtlh'. .I) W. s.1.;11 ht 11'1-. \\01 k. Ill'\\ lndM·p· ~ , . T.1111· \11111' tlllk, Ulll' is,, Ol'EN 11ocs1·; ' • mnlll•rn :1 llr :: llJ. Ai<.'. S''I' ·1 I . T 1-1-Pool. ,11111 .. ·!o. lh111w fl•om la kt• Si\T & !..l'"I 111 111r appl. hlln~ & sprnklr'I. $160 k f ·, ' 1\ . 111 \\ 1111d 111 11l r:1• Pl.1c·l• Jl<:!-1 l'oi t Slll'rl u•ld -, ----. mo c\·~1wkn1b 1132 1658 11 ;, pets 11 • 1' l'l' Tlw othl'r, a h1•autllul ·I FC'<' I.anti SISS.SOO S~n Clcml'nle. 12 u~tts o.n ' l\la111 lh'ntal~.5I0·5:l'iO hll1111 Bn1,11!1111H1r p.11111 JI\ '''"nl'I' !illl'l!lS·Z22S ., hutll res·com l lol . Bolboolslond 3206 ••Super Sunny house of < ;J;1:.-.. :l BH w /:.pac1ous M ,..1 r Su 1tc. hri i?ht gartll'n fam·rm & k11eh. Li.:1· partv palm. hltns, & It pk ~l:!S >S-IS·!H27 l11111w ,\rt 11111\ & voo l'•lll S'.!l ,000 J?ro~s. nr h<'h. ••••••••••••••••••••••• p11lo.!'arvl'l1·11l111,. ----------•! S2l0.000 Ph1!12·507l:!O\.\n. WINTEH. 2 llH home BYOWMER!! lhi.: I '.1nynn ~wpt (kh C':-.lm h1111w '1llr. 4 ba. \)lH•I. lo1lh,1rcl rm. \'II'" S?'J:>.l'llMl<.'1111rt1'" 111 rl1r,. (',111 Ii II ll'J~7 ortd I 1621. Distress Property! I l-.m fmd it lor ~uu W/fpl & 11:11 tn $.'l75 :\lo. WILLIAM WIHTOH R t-:ALTOH 1,7:; 3:131 lll'.il·h art"a :o.Pl't'1;1hsl. Balboa P eninsula 3207 Goq:cous 3Br Seabury l'robatt•s, £1irl·•·ln ... 11 rt'' •••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ••• l'\r beach & rccrenti11n hankrupte1ci.,1h\11rn'. JUr, 2 hJth. Aero~~ from are:i. S420 mo 963·50'711 :! 1111. '1 1\,1 .Sl:!f1 211r Conclri+lunai r oom. :! 1111. '.! 1\.1 Sl:iO Ot'<'an & llrbr vu Pac :t BH. :.i 11;1 ~:!:i blanc.! Villu~c. 1\dlts. 3 llH. :!' .' 11.1 .•. ~:.!~I S1>15. lilO·Hl41 & 5~R 21<7:l 3 llH, 2 1 • ll.1 .~Yl[,0 - :! BH, :! 11.1 ~llHI :i Rr, 2• 2 ba t ownh11m1·. JIJH.:!LlJ ......... 'll~t Comm pool. Nr b<·h & 4 BH, 2 Ba . S.17!'> twy. 1;1.·a ... ~ Opt.Jon $42:: 1lJH,21 • B.. . . . Sl!l5 !Oil v .1c ant. quic:k OC• • • " • • l'Ufl.Hll'Y· 4!J5·671S!J. N1•wporl Jlt-.1d1 -----2 BR. 2 Ra. turn .... $1125 • • •Wl':ST !l lowcr comt•r unit on j!oH cour1'.e. 2 Bt•droom, 2 hath. r1•fr1)!t•rulor S3SO. lcasl', • BOND REAL TY • X.11 !1111 Eve 496·469l 552-70~0 THE -.. · ·~-· · \'J LL:\CE. .. REALTORS I n,·,•o;I ment pro1wt I 1t•, 1\,1 ~ ht•.wh l.m 1•1 \ \ ll'W J ~ k t o r J .1 l k o 1 Lil..t• Ot'" ::? hr & di·n 2 ha, lwlow market pru•t• li-1'Wl yrlv 1;75 1:101 1lo~1·manl' Minion Viejo 326 7 • :! 11.1111,... \ oruir "'"" Ken Johnson, Broker ---833 8600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• srn1 ;11~> B~ O'""'r. 12t:I) Call (714 1673-<ls.l:i 2 lor :II Ur. 1'' Hu. yrtv, F,\~T t\!'.TJI ' '()Ith.· • N1•wC'ord1na3Rr.2ba.lr~ • \11 111\1,11111·111 \1orth \11111 I 1111,11h•r ,1l11111 :'\1n t l11ilrt1tllll I 11,llh. f.1tlll h honw I . ..r~:.-, 1111111t )' Laquna B~ach I 04'8 I.lie IH II, 11111!1 Ill \\11 1).11'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pl11 .. 11\,111\ 11p1't"11l1•:.. •Tripl~Ylew Lot• K7t c 1r 1 t'•ltt i iiHH ... '8 Sl25 nlv TO\VNVILLA.3Hr.2l.Ja. ,,,d\,•tl yet . "r~at ,u. ! • ·' " · • · · _ r-·1 1111•1 1."".'1 .·q ft C11n1lo . ., "llr • • Cu11rtc , I h11 kc·rs "· · · "' ~ " ' 1 ,. l'alrm .. cul·<lc !1111' ~fl() ., " I ' --(, u A l L p L A c r; --)111•kt•d gar. hllns & pool lf5 31.AMPllSDa·IR'llHE lld. Sprrial $375/mo 10010 00Wu l'llOPERTIES. INC. CoronadtlMor 3222 Nr hl'ach. 1111 p1•1s ')l'l·· .. ~'l )i\l l.,. 1h1•r1•:rfler. Ow n1•(" • 1; 111 lt> t.<H.' I\ TI ON · lltmrock Conyon nt your , ,,. .. ., lo i.llopp1ng , ltd .ulJut·kdrnpofgrecn •.1·h1111l'< 11nt! l hl' n ew hills, & 1ll'eanfC'alalln a I h-Jll 111!1' I 'ark. Sci:!,500 sunset. vil'W'I, &15,000. MORIMS REAL TY * 494-8057 * ()(·ran Vu l'or1nrino Jhr. IW.,.,. homt', $12:l,IHKI. m1 NH·s. 01w11. l'l'l 42!~l NORTH LAGUNA 1' " M A N l\ G E M E N 'I' •••••••••••• • ••• ••••••• ~'lli:i mn. 963·44{ili ' ,, · !l + ll<'n or 4 bedrm in DIVISION. Profossional 2 Br. t •~ Ila. <lou hle -------11 \ :\1 TOli l' \1 7i.ts:l'11<?. -, Npl. Shoreii. Move·in ~partment, orfic<' build· garni::l-. t • · hlks t o 3 hr: 2 IJa '. frplc. IJ;:-c yard, R ant·ho Sun .l n.iquiu 21Jr. l"'oha <"nndn. t'rpl<-. ! 1•11n11. $79,950. Alsn 4 ml(s, & shopi>1rii:: n•nlcr h<.•:rch, lll'W p;1int. cpt11, 2 (fir gar. llrookhursl, Bciiul m•w 3 llr 2,12 ho hr i.thly upjlrudcd. <.:a U : :~~~~~SJ~;:rt~r11~~~;:: mana~e m~nl in t,.J\., drps. Av 11il 01·~ 15. No Rush ard area . S.125 mo. l nhsi! 1111 1!~11 1 ~·uursr. Sully,581·9444/'1\17·3704. -----<?ranJ:?C, H1~ers1dc a nd JlC_!:.'1.$-llOmo.fi44 21t9 846·9088 frplc. Wl'l h11r. Moiit ---------9- BACK BA y Sun Bernud1~0 counties. LEA~W 0 1, 2 IJR R I J & I populur plan gi;~o mo. HHtport leach 326 • Ol't•:N llOUSE Wl-~ll llohhy Hob1nson (71<1 l d ~:ti up ix N d ,+ 5 V ~,c2 ub~i. ~ "i 4 ;c;,. ~7,"~ 2 6.U ·5403. Ii 10 79116 o1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• : \'11•w hOffil' :1 IHl, 2 BJ\, 752 1920· A~~· l>a\ r s1711 7~'11 Oj!S. llhodl.'!lia, 545·3050 X.17 t15ll:J • LIDO JST.F: •• 3 nr 3 Ha. • "' - ---ctc•n. 2 rph· s. u~rd hr1c·tc • I 111. II! l.1t !'>to !1!122 6 Unit~lOllCJ Beach $325. 2 IJ1 , frpk. "ni.:lc!I 5 BDRM ·2 Bi\Tll Prive hy ~I \\'11111•w11ml palto. Si:.!J mo. Yrly ls1•0 t Only S79,000 ok. f l'<'. Clean comfort.11tll' hm1· Wav. t::ml Uflll 1111 i.:rt.•t•n m;111; .. :, ~ Will rnor1• 1han make the Mam llrntah. 511)·5370 s.'>JS per mo. 1 .Ill ch~ IH'lt Sh.1rp II .11111,·cr 3 - -• •Tllll'lt<>"J·B'r' o~ NEU lf523 CA,..PUSDt·IRVIME OCEAN SIDE l.;1r~t· n1•w lr11d1llonal I a 0\ I I \ h fl m •• I lfr1lroom:... jJm rm . ''""·'n 'IC\.\. ..,. ... , er oc 11.1,nwnh t'all i52·02R3 -_ -711-963 6ifli Nl'llJ, \)!I 111 11tn11m. ii• llnl\ Nc\\l>()rt Shorl's, Shorp ~ .~ or lo 111 011;,; i\j!nl. Please Reach d1arrn..r ~7~ 2 J-:\ ~ '" knds 213 !11>14 !lif.i l'k ,\)!l !i'14!·l7;Ci :1:1:> 01:11 H n I 11 l• n. f r p, ... , lc;l\i•naml•&nurnbcr. hr.((Br,!o.Olll"ok h•c Oc·"i.:1wct lor11:11io li\•m1i. '•1'" l'tllh. \lie, IMM\(' .I !\ft, :!' • l1;1 \Int lrn .1 111111 l>ny~.IU6!W:l7.C\l'~ ,\ \\kncb!M.;I JllJ Hwmnqton hoch I 04'0 .....•...•..•.......... S&S Resale Spel·1uhsti.. J, 4 or S hrlrm m11<lt'ls a' ;11! somew/pool<:. 96R IM2 Pennmitton r>roperl1t's J.ET'S MAKE A DEAL GLEHMAR By owner l!inl!lt• :.lory it br, 1n, ha. xlnt cnnd. 'many cxtrai;. Cnrnc r lot, lrlr or honl aret•s.; Open houH Sa t /Sun 1·5 S62.SOO. !162 :1 ;: I l nr ~-7007 WILL SELL IYITSELF 4 Bedroom, I '• baths. CAt'J>C?l.&. and drapca like new. Cood buy ul $65,V50 .Ph 962·7751. INT'LR.E. NJ::TWORK C)J'I':'\ IJ \IL' 11 \ '' ro1; 1• \I COUHTRY KITCHEN :1 In <:11•Pnl11'1' Imme in ln111l' Al1t1\I' L'11· cr.11l1•d clrp-, l..111 u r cov. 1•n«l p.1 llo tt,\:"('11 H E.\LTY S5t :!0110 ---- GREENTREE· C 1\~l llH IDG I·: ~parlnu ... J llrdrnom , +i.~udy, :l h ath . nlnum. l°l<'n1111r111 l1111chc.-a1>lng with 1<pnn kl1•r i.~sl<-m. Oc•!'lirnhlc· lcx·at111n 4 t02 llornl'!ltll&d St. Ol)<'n l·S or b y 1q 1po1ntm1•nt. Slii !1011 o wner. 171 4 ) 6:L:1 111111 Turtl• Rock Gltn :\1eln Hrnt.11'. 51il ~370 ••Super spacmus. su1111' FOR LEASE '\r twurh, 111H1I. t1•nni~ .. a 1t.ory Litc ram rm /1.1 Tht u Wrou).(hl 1i1111 ).!at1., rnurt "'17:i ~riv l\vatl. 2 llr I BJ .~ hlki. from IJrii?ht carden ktldwn &1:•11111 ~.111ll'1ltl\ IOOllt' ''" I lolh IROI Of' beach, P'l )ti & p11l10. i.ll'J)l> w brh & "·hoot... I nf lhi· tlll'llti·-.1 m o'll ti42·4Ui!l _ cooper &. associates ti I' I l' x <' n" t :i M e i; n l'llJ11Cd. lnp qunlity ~on· Bv ownC'r 5hr. 3h.1. drn str111•t r11.11 & uppoint· 1'ni.: den. '<tr." nv + menb Y. alk to Crescent boat stnragt• 518 :11118. $$25. 675-9513. 6i5 R78S l>r" :J I !l I 4 PLEX ----m ~u: ~::;.~t.l~J~l~t~: "' ··.\LL 'ft)(; .. :.T,llEll '" 3 Pcn1n. Pl.3 liR.din.ro1 .• llnmcy 2br. frplc. patio, mo hi•il roorn. ~'bo th den,2 frpl.$1\SOMo/lsc.. Sl7!1 01111 :; 10 3828 Owner \f.!l'lll l'nn. only Four (2) bedrooms. one SJOO. yrly. Beachcomber. X-1!4 !~27· 1.11" nhumi·~ '" llrtm•ho A11cnllli3-0060 I 076 an d o n e h a lf balhs. F ee $ l S . 63 1 ·2011 ; v ,\(..",\NT. L t kl' Ill'" San .Jk111111n --'----·------- &1.> lll.'ac h. $164,500 San ClefMftte ••••••••••••••••••••••• S92.500 for quick sale. s.&7·2501 or8'79·t060 house. 3 br. 2 b;i Clo~c to DV.COHATOH ha-; .u"cd 3 Br. 2 ba duplexes. M2S & -•" • B E A C II GET. A n a h e i m • bl'a1:h, only s..i7s/m o in· la\'l~h wall 1·1" t·nnics. S450 per mo. yrly. Ocean 831·0836 AWAY, $37,900. Pe rfect OWNE R /AGEN T 2 DrDuplexonnicesl. clds gardener. Scott 'mlrro r1, 1:1·or..:eous \iew. walk tu beach. 496·7222 1----------i rotlal(e for 2nd. home or S.10·055.5. S28.'> mo. Realty s:J6.7533 d r 11 Pc s &. :-. had c !I . M 2·38SO /\Jtenl rctirement Ownr must ----------1 640-4829 aft 6. Beautiful mlrrnr\.'rl wc>t· --------- SOUTH LA~UHA Perr hed high on the h ill ovcrlnoklng Allio Deac:h & p11•r. w miles or hn•alht11kmg C011!llline lH·aut~ Thi~ \\t•ll de 11l1tnrd 3 bedroom, 2 bath home hRs larfte \'le" del·k & prlvolc p atio arco Ser t od11y nt Sl27,500 go and will he lp w ith E4STSIDE •----F;imily Home. 4 Br2 Ila, bar. rcnec:t11 l11ri:c brick 2Br.2haCondo.pool ,l cn• financinl(. 6 HOUSES Costa MelO 3224 fplc, bltns. new ibhwshr, fln•placo on opposite nls courts. Newport •BERTHA H ENRY• , 0 OOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• di.JI car gar. µrtlnr , nr wall. Crest. $425. rno. Adults. REAi.TORS '1!12·4121 include!2~1c~ o~ncrs 3 Super <'Ondo. 3 lJr. 2 bu. 11chl$, Droo khurs l & Viewofh1ll11&Un iver11I· 673-77!M~v_es_. ____ _ 215 Ori Mar. San Clem. fiR h ome w /p ool & frplc, pool. clbhse. Nr Ynrkt nwn area Sl50 mo ly from hiAh C't>rncr lot WES1'CL11"~~ 4 Br 2~ Oa, privacy. Prlnr . only. Ex s hops . $375, 645-7953 : 714·008·87113 ncnr pool. S57S per mo . i·cc l'nl c·hurm &. Wc1&llY 673 4!332 For a11J)111ntmcnl call ' ~ ('hanl(c. Alt!..:]_~U ·22E..__ Nr bch 3Bdr. den. 2ba. X SJU 111147 dr1y11. 833 97":1 1.ncotl.'tl Vu.rant. $63;,, NOTICE COMIHOME! Lat• l,,R w/frpk. Outsidr evenings. !t73J.13.'>or Gl2·00G7 __ _ how Dally P llo• ''la&'<· Jlnvc n rt•ul home al Fo~ II (" sand shwr 220<12 RLUFFS .. B 2"'· B • " VIII i\I I h I "Il e 4 br fam rm ., 2 ha " r '" 3 • llied ads display th •Ir hollow 1'11(11, 4121 W. 1 a 1 u .n .. ·•· mo. • · •• • ' bcuul. decor , one ·or " MUST SELL NOW! " RR. t"hOll'I' lot Ready l"!f __ _ 'I r 11 r t h t' b C' a C' h , 3 bedroom, :.! hath <'U~tom home. Ju!!l reduced $10.000! l<'ull prl<'c Sl29,S()(). Age nt 493-5031, ('Vf'S 496-3500. mc1Sages with lcgibilily Wll11on. Co1t11 Mu n. 068·96IO pool, school . pll.k, $450. kind. 13xa.t maslcrsuite. and impact? Ourada, we Aclulb. 13SO. mo. Ope ~~. fP. Wt'tbnr. pnllo. BBQ. ON· lk11t orrer takc11. Own rr. S~t -493 1 or !>52·0100 are proud to 511y, reaUy 4-G.30 weekday"· t1 6: 3 br , 2 ba house. Urea J>MI, nvalt Nov 1. SS8S aet r esults. Pho ne w~kends. Avail. Nov. l . Pelahborhood. $385. SELL tdll' Items with a mt O "I' 7 5 .. •11 i· 6'.a.567a. 1976. 642-4991 847-2089. Doily P 1lol Cla sltled M .i-:v~iwk~s· &0-~ •· . • ..4 ,.• f • , . •18 DAILY PILOT ' . .._.tU•fwMthed .,. ••······•············· MC Newport leach 3269 • t. t ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.., liLUFfo'S tomln l..t'.1i.t•i. ' St.1n111~ ,,1 ~· '·• : • \1:1·nl Ii i I 11:1:1 fl OCEA;>; F HONT \I I':\\ CONIX> l! t l>t·n, :! t•.ar pth ulc 1>ark11l,.:. lull i.ecunty hu1l1hn.: LN•i;l' s.'"iOO. p , mo. ,\~l ti 11 i';! 11 l.ido h lC' Lovl'ly lhr . :!h.1 home f'1 µk .• 111 l'ln· l..ll dl)l l(ar '" .111 "'nt r or yr .... ._. I) ll?:l 1:131 .11lc1 .ii' \I 't Balboa Penin Pt. Prof. tll'rnrutt·tl l!ll1. I IJtl. S.175/mn vrh lw 1, b l k l o (h·;·ai1 B .1y ti7S 54iS Lei our ,.pct:1Jhfl•1I 1 cu \JI l>l'r\ll'l' f1nd \OU quuhf1ed lt:n.rnt,. l'.111 BA ll llMt A lay and Beach Realty 675-3000 ~F:W :l hr lnh!>1' li~e room:.. lrµI«, po<1I '1:>1J Kid!> ok tii:> llihh LIDO ISLE 2 Bdrm~ . :! ha 1111 1i:1· lol ::,750 :\lunth • • • • ;, Udrms , I' • h.1 thn rm. fam rm . .,lutly . l1:c lot. $1200 :\lu LAWSON REAL TY .. 675-4562 . t Br Du ple:.. Sl•a,hon· & 15th St. 'r't•a1 lv kliH' Call 541i·561H ---~ .... _ \'cry ~pac·wu~ I Br + U1•11 l'arl... h<'.H'h & \\ all•r \ ll'\\ :-1;1111 ~ 1 h h:•:i:.1· ,_ •• • r •''r" " l ~' . . • t llc,,t \\\• ... I 11.1 \I r1111I local1vn w ;;tt t.11.11 dnd, :-.1250 yrly <111rn or un· turn) Waterfront Homes 631-1400 -L1<fohll': :! b<l1 m ,v,, 1kn :! ha ~.)() ~ lltl rm . ' ha . hJ\'I runt t't111d11 ~lllOll \111•1111;1.; l~>lil HI.I FF~ I lt•HI :1 1111 . :! 11.1 J..on·ly gn·1·nlwlt & l"i.11 $5Ull .\gt ti ll 11 :1:1 11 \ H D ·1 O t I \ I> ~:.1,,tbl111f F\• t hu1111· 1111 . :!l1;.i l.1m 1111 ~oil l\.ll«r '\1•\\ t t p t <11 p •. IJ,11111 w .• u. '" ... , 11 .... 1 ... ... http". , ,. 1111 .... 1· I 11 h ~•i~> m11 1,..,,. 11..r" i;llJ-lijj.j IJJ' Ii j;) :!" l\J llt:Jttl1tul ('.111111•! 1111l((l'I :1 Br ..-F.1nt flll 111 lt.11 bur \' 11 11 n m 1· , \\' " I I 1.1 n d ... t· a p" ii " p .1 t 111. -.Si.'i Ph t~IU 111;:•1 Npl I lb '11•\\ :1 hr '..! h,1 . d~n :--;.-\\ p:1111I t pl S II•~> ' t>t I :l.31.j 11r .'1.'1 i ll~lltX Son Clemente 3276 •••...••............... '\1•\\ :! Br :Jh.1 fu\\ 11hsl' Ch 1·a11 '11·\\ ('ph div"· ltlt1n ... \lt1•1 :. •.di '\:~I :.!:l:!:I l 'undu -2 H1 . :! l\;1. :! C':ir ga1 ;1gt'. p1111I. rel rti; :-.:I.JU n111 l!f:! :..~ttl:.? ,,, t':"t Santa Ana 3280 .................•.•.•• 1 Hr I ' 2 Ila t 11nclo, hltns. 11001 & ~a11n;1 \tlult" 11n ly Sl7U ;,~j·t1:!'•• Westminster 3298 ....••................. :1 11 t • f ,1 Ill I Ill :'>< I' :.t I' 'd10<1b Lri.: rnt'll ~ti -.:110 mo l'all li:l!t 15:~ Condominiums Unfurnished 3425 •...•.•.•............•• T11st111 2 Hr. 2 11.1. 1·ontlo. 110111. temw .. hlln". bt• ~12:i alli Hi l!l l~'.111t 111·1 q111t'\ adult 1 '11111h1 111 T11.,t111 \\',ilk 111 ..,hop I!. 11·nll•r J IU<. :! ll.1. \ l . 11r Fn\\. I ..,,~ ...:J:itt W11 1ol'I ~tli 11.'itl .111 11101 ~ l' Shon· l'l 11 1 \'ti I ;1'. l11.1ml 1111 2 ;11111 • :.!Ila. illilt• i:ar . l.1111111 1. t'lt l'1••l. 1-.il1I" I\ 111 tu h. 1'17 2:1 I i ;ti I t I' Ill 111 "kl•nd, T ownMK!se Unfurnish•d 3 525 ....................... I fl II . n1·\\/ l'll rpl'l, II I'll ll{"S. 11111nt. Close lo schoob & ~ho p'g. Bl t n,. pl us rt•l n~ 11.R 616 !ll2S n anl·hn San J 11u11 UI n . l.1r~1· 2 bC'd room. 21 • IJ..1lhs. pool. s.>2" 1;.11 (WIG D..aHe1Unfurn 3600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nwpt Hgts 2 Br. beam ('eilgs, pa tio, j?ar. no pets. $270. 645·1682 Apca lments fvrnlshed .................•..... lalboo Island 3706 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Little culie! S\65 Ulll pd. Rcarly now! Fe<' ' Main Rentals. 510 $370 Bayfront-yearly. 3 BR .. 2 ba. lower unit in p n me So . ba y rr o n t l or . BeauUfuJly furn $1)75 Mo WIL.LfAM WltotTOH Real Estate 675·3.131 Tu4tS<lay October 12. 1976 Schools and Instruction • This Variety of Fine Schools could introduce Y"u To A New Tomorrow For Further information re9ardin9 poctt!Mftt of adnrtisiftq in the Doily Pilot Schools and Instruction Di~ory MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES 1.eam to ruUy use ym upe11sne investment.'' We tmh every phm of MICROWAVE COOKING Meats .. Fish .. Poultry .. Vegetables candy . Party Foods .. BBQ .. Sauces Baking .. Defrost .. Browni n g Recipes .. Etc COMftLETE I HOUR--4 Weoeti Course Aftemoons & Ev~ ONLY $30 ENROLLMENT & INFORMATION 768-5011 2400 I Alicia Pky, Wt• 226 (Upstairs) MISSION VIEJO I I Ottt's of a Mile No. of Ge.co IA AHcia ~ Cffthr @IJJ!j ~~9e (1JJ €> J~1~ Anna's DAY SCHOOL Pre-School Ages 2 thru 3rd Grade Open 6:30 AM thru 6 PM Reciistrations How lein9 Accepted for GradH K tfrough 3rd. Hot l.tmches & Sftacks ll~allfast H reqylr9dl ReadlttCJ & Math Stretsed Fvn LeCll"fting P'r09"wn Phoftics StrHsed Arts & Crafts Mllsic Sports AdiYitfn Came Visit 0. Wed&etlds Call For Appointment 2110 Thurin Ave., Costa Mesa Phone 646-1444 e@ @~ ~~S>e a PORCELAIN NAILS /"'-~?'''~ \ HERE IS YOUR OPPORTUNlTY TOIE TRAINED IHTHE ART OF APPLYING PORCELAIN NAILS l For More Information Call: MAGI'S MAGIC I \ COSTA MESA 642-MAIL Call 642-56 78 Ext. 325 QUILTING and APPLIQUE · BELVA LONG INSTRUCTOR Learn the beout1ful art of Q uilting and Applique from one of Calif ornias leading instructors, Belva Long, a woman of talent and creativity. W ith her help, design your own quilt, wall hanging, pillows, table cloths, clothing. October 15, 22, 29, Nov. 5, 12 and 19. 10:00 to 12:00 or 1:00 to 3:00 $10.CX)' (supplies not included) Cloues ore limited so register early. ==ebba. J NEEDLEPOINT DESIGN 2628 E. COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. 92625 (71 4) M4-7904 · HOURS: 10:00 to 5:00 IRVINE EQUESTRIAN CENTER 7385 Etu C011St H1ghw1v Corona del Mer, C.hl0<nia 92625 ClassH How F«1nitMJ For Teem & Adults For lnfonnation Call: 17141640-1710 1714) 640.1712 Balifornia .Jnaf ifufe of cJJ&assa9e 4'ec6nolo99 REGISTRATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED C'i)uall~ as o Massop Technician • ppro••d IMfnlctlon 13 123 lrookhunt, Garden Gro•e 534.5494 Member of A.C.E. (Association of California Educators) I lolboaPettinwta 1707 •••••••••••••••• ~······················ MAPLE AVENUE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL DAY CARE 7 AM·6 PM Tuition -$65 Very reasonable rates for extended day care I Beginners Spanish /Phonic Approach To Reading /New Metric Systems /Planned Activities REGISTER NOW FOR FAU SEMESTElt KIMOHGARTIH & I ST & 1MD G«ADES 1070~A•eNM C....Me-141 646-4334 IMTERNA TIOHAL MONTESSORI SCHOOLS ELEMENTARY CLASSES CHILDREN 6-11 YRS. • FULL ACADEMIC PROGRAM • INDIVIDUALIZED HELP • EMPHASIS OM READING, MATH, LAMGUAGE EMROUMOW Your child needs to work at his own speed and level We soec1altze 1n 1nd1v1dual help OPEN 6:30..6:00 P.M. NEWPORT 979-924 1 20211 Cyprn.1 St., S.A. SANTA ANA 540-4753 2515 W . s..nflower, S.A. ' LEA RM ALL THE LA TEST DAMCES A lifetime Of Fun Thru Dancing Singles or Couples. All Ages View Studio or Your Home No Contracts Satisfaction Guaranteed ~~CHA-CHA . ~ e,,.O ,~ . ~ 645-0758 Richard's Beauty Colle9e .. TUITIOM_SPECIAL Call For Price htformatiOft Classes LeadiftCJ To Ucenses In Cosm.tology & ManiCuri"CJ Witt. TrainlftCJ In~ Art of Sc..tptw.d Halls (Open For Customer Business) 20% Disc011nt to s.Nor Citfnns T1Msday, Wedftnday & Tllursdays 462 CE. 17th Str.H Costa Mesa 645-3850 r ,\It Work Is Done Rv .Stufll'"''' Newport Air Associates Flight School & Flying Club LEARN TO FLY $650 , .. , ... Itel ........... * FAA APPROVED * c-r .. hoclttdu: 35 I tour~ ll:_Qhl t1rn e 1n ~~sna 150 s with 20 hou1c; dual 1n ... 1r11ct1on CluO membership Ftee d11e ; lnd1111duat 1l'l'>l•uc11on tailored to YOUR ab•hly 20 AIRCRAFT AVAIL.AILE AT LOWEST RA TES IH ORANGE COUNTY Leartt to ,fty now --and ha•• fun! * Speciaf RotH for Commet clal cw lnstrvmHt Shtdents. For Complete. D.taits Call MOW 979'-1 I 55 19! 11 Airport Wfl'( South Hut tott.•T........,.....,_ Or-,. c_,,., ....,_. I IDB CRIFTIRS IUGS AMD WALL HANGING CLASSES Cowse isl two how lfflOftl completed In OM wftk. Montl•tcJ• I 0·12 EnftitMJS 7.9 I USI OUR TUFTING TOOLS s:ttEE TOTAL COST OF COURSE $26.95 <Materials Included) Acroee the •er.et from South Cout Plau at lkaJ and Sunflow~r. Learning Problem? ....... >ehool ., -~9 learning • become confused easily • daydream in school •feel lost ... • feel like a failure • !'lave poor grades • learn slowly WE SPECIALIZE IN DISCOVERING AND HANDLING THE BASIC BARRIERS TO LEARNING. ~ '---( .. ... . we can help THE STUDENT IMPROVEMENT CENTER · Call 642-9088 Cenler 90 1 Dover Drive Newport Beach FIRST SOUTHERN IAPTIST CHURCH 650 W. Hamlfton St., Co.ta Mese 642-1426 PN-School & Extettdect 0., Classn ForTiwhlT.,_ MILLll HEO@.M>lltlCTO. BEACH. View. pier . 2 Br $400. 1 Br $270. J\dlts. uUI lcAoa ltenlnwta 3707 Corott0 det Mor 3722 CoroM det Mar 3722 Costa Mesa 3724 Costa Mesa 3724 osta Mesa 3724 Costa MHa 3724 Costa Mesa 3724 pd 303 E Edgewa ter ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··~··•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0~1-2866. .. IALIOA IHN 28r. CclM m nin b<'h Wnlr OCfa 9~eclul $95 l t1l 1 BR . malurt· .11l11lt onlr t Br rum. room y. quirt. SUS CASITAS ---1 br inl'I utll E ui d 3 BR 2 bJ ocrnnrronl at ~) rly Sf.SO. No p(·l~ I BR F\Jrn Sl9S pn ·fr\' Sl2.'> Monah pool, adult.5, no peL'I. $20() Ml t to NB B h & SIOO.co2yl>nl'h f u rn All kitchen. olhl'r ~x rr':11 Cdr.i Moln b<'h Garaitc. nrs.67SS3ll ., Lot.sof bltn~. ~I, walk ~1nmRrnlnl11.~0 5370 A.icntll33!171\\ util pd, Kar. 3B3 W lHtfu~ Adults ~c l l ut1I pd. IX:11chcomhcr C IOSl' to b us . vlllajlt' A'' II ii 11 n fu ~n S63t -.-lo shopping._'~ mi hl'ni·h 1 BR hJrn l'rt•f mutur('. STUNNING 1 ttr gnrdl'n Wil~n Mll-7683 21lO Ncwp0rt Bivd~~ s. F'ee $I S 63 1 2 01 1 stores SlOO mo. 67S·ll7 t0 ~ntr . $?50 Y1 .. 1rly 811 SEU .. idle items w11h 11 931 W, l~h SL No ch1ld1 en or JX'IM. SIGS upt Pool. re(' nr<':i S215 ~~·l<M;.0 betwn 9&6 __ , (,rumly ttllr 67~-6161_ Daily Pilot Cla ssified Ad 548 (}192 642·511\li 7111 w l8th St C'1 Sell Idle items 642 5678 Want ad rcsulL'I 642·5618 -• .. . . . .. ' f ' -- Irvine Colkge of Business k lllf H•••• M CDlllfldetlce .. y...i wfttt • ...... , ...... wt1 paid ... , At ......... W• c. .......... ,_ .......... 9004 Iola .. Yo.t ... teMYe. W•'IWpy•to,.tftMn. T••yow~of~ SICltET.AIY • UCWTIONIST - STINOGUPHER • M>OeC1CHPH G88AL OfFICI ASSIST AMT 0MIDICAL-LEGAL SrtaAUliTION TYPING • SHORTHAND IRUSK-UP DAY AHD EVEHIHG PROGRAMS A ,,...... .ct cOf'T"Kf ......... ••lr•a .... , located M tt.. .._ of tt. Mewport..lni.. ....._ .ct lftdintrfal COWlpl•x. Jolt Plec....t Alslst.ce7 Moat ~•"f.Wj'! a. HM last I 5 ...tlu oHr 400 ...... w•n .... ,. ... aied '"'-9 , ..... C• MOW for mare information Md broc~s.. 1700,E. GARRY AV. SANTA AHA 92705 • .......,_.fwy ... l>yff l&l • 556-8890 ART CLASSES All Mediums ly prize wilwtifig & well known insfnlcton. Children•s Classes en s..-., Ti Art Colopw Club l 436 I (ir'ftft LCll'lhnt o ... Polld, Ca. 495-7877 or 493-7111 CHINE$E COOKING LESSONS Small Groups Individual Attention And Participation Experienced Chinese Instructor Authentic Recipes & Techniques For More Information Call 752-7 638 Irvine YMCA ' SWIM LESSONS REAL ESTATE LICENSE SCHOOL YUR ROUND CLASSES HU TED POOLS CERTIFIED A.R.C. INSTRUCTORS SMALL Cl.ASSES SPECIAL Register by October 18th for classes starting October 20th and get 1;., off Regular Price for non-members. ' For F.rther lnfoa nwllOft can Or~ Coast YMCA 642-9990 Suzanne 'flew (Master of MIJ.'Jic Degree) has a few openings left for private voice lessons, concentrating on proper vocal technique. 7!68-4045 • Up to 7 Classes weekly • Small classes • Individualized instruction •Testing Program * Text & Tests provided • Tuition $69. Refundable Coll Linda for Details 963-9891 CAL-COAST REAL ESTA TE SCHOOL 111SJ•a1't a at Sf. s.tt.c•-••v.-., MAKE YOUR OWN CHRISTMAS PRESENTS POTIBY CLASSES NOW FORMING In Handbuilding & Wheel Techniques. 6 Week Course. Earth Fot 11a ... w. ••street c .......... . CALL 645-4950 ,.,.. ''""' ~· Oft the ar.w. Coett DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ~ ~ ~ :·= ~ ( 642•5878) Fest ~I~ t Apartments F\lml1h•d Apcrtn.Hta u.fww.. Tuesday, Octobor 12. 1976 DAILY PILOT 8J f ··.········•············ ....................... ' ~ :.c!!~~~~!!' .••.•.. ~?!.~ Ccwoao cW Mor JU ~.·.~t:.~•••• ~:.~t:•=•••• ~:!~•••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••• ••••••• c M Jt24 Newport hach )169 Sl7 .SO WEEK & UP Coda Mt$o 3824 osta .ao ••••••••••• ••• ••• ••• ... •st.UtHo & 1 J)U ApL"i •••••• ••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••• •TV&M.tldServA,ull ..., --cRANDOf£NING PA•kHEWPOltT • Phont-Ser,., 111.d J>01M r6' -,.. the AP ART MINTS •Ct11ldrcnS4•ct1on 'll... •,~~~.~ SteP, JD• to 1or21:Mdroomic11nd •Low monthly rate:.. t,, ; ~;-;·~ 'l'ownhou e111 607GNt•wp0rt Bl vd, CM COllONA DF.T. MAR gOOd 11•fe •'l'o1n $329.!IO 5'&8·9755 or 615 3tl67 Open 9.., Daily 2 Br Townhousc, frpk Spit•POOhl·'l'ennii; &..ge "'l"ft. 2 Ir Pool, lt>nrus, conbinenl11l Across from Fnhion AdJ~.no pets. w /W. drps, bre11kfast. Some ocean & Stroll the pathways or a plnc f0tesl Meander p.l.St Island al Jamboree 011 bit ms. pool. S225. 645-3971 Catalina view:-.. Close to tumbling \.\'Bterfa11s 11nd ~ukt pools. Listen to the San Joaqu.ln llllls Road • shoppina &. fine beach. r d h 171 ... 644 1900 $250. Lari:e 2 br, clean. 644•2611 sound o bubbling Stl\?clO\S .:in growing I lngs. , • punf1ed water, lots of 'tbur .1dult .ip.>rtment home ,,t Pirwcreek ~11,,gc Is lawn. Covered UJl'ugeb, 11 totc1l 1~h\?llL Here you can en,oy unusual pnvjcy off s treet parkini; •••ON REGONIA: im· ."1dluxuiv. Adults. no lH•ts. 2020 maculatc. t·harm1ng 2 BEAMONGTHEFIRSTTOCHOOSE1hebest Fullerton Ave (1 blk E.of bedroom a p.irtmcnt Newport Avt·, 1 blk So. or Corner lot No pcl!I or luc.:illon, 1h1t best ananyl'mcnt, the c:olo11> yau want. Bay). 642·8690 children S3SO monthly. Dorlt w.,11. Two l<'nnis court'>. &v1mnung pool C:OU OF NEWPORT plus uniqut' volk-yball puol J,1culLi. G igantic I Ir . REALTORS S..ind voll~ll court Mounlo1n lod~ clubhouse with $205. You bN they're un· 6 75-551 I hrcpLlce, l:onveisation pit, b1tlwds, gym, s.luna. derpriced. Cleon. That':.--------- why this upt won t la~l 2 Ill . 1 ba apt, South of Huny to the good life and then rela.'<. long. Purified water, hwy. Adults, no pe ts. FROM$265T0$355 laundry, Jots or green $300. mo. Call 642·5953 tncludJng Heat & Water. No l ease Required. lawn, covered guragcs. wkdys, 673·3983 or ~ · h off-st. parking. Adults. ~S-93!19 t'\'CS & wknds. pP~ One Bedroom, One Bal T"'O Bedroom.Two Both no pets. 2020 Fullerton --Cos M Ave. (lblk E . or Newport 1 BR .. S310 mo. 1300 Adams Ave., in ta es.l, Ave, 1 blk So. of Hay, 1 BR .. S280.mo. across from Orange Coast College C~ta Mesal &t2 8690 Res1dcnt1al area, gd between Harbor and Fairview. --· ---view or ocean. 2530 Hwwtinqtonhoch 3740 Seaview Ln. Arthur, (714)540·1300. NOWRENllNG PlNlt'4SULA PT. 2 an. t ba unt ssoo yl'ly OCEAH~OMT 3 BR,2 bu,unl. S600 3 BR.turn,wntr. ~7S 3 BR.2 bu., yrly. $7<&5 NEWPORT TfflRACE 3 BR, 2 ba condo s.'l-00 SEA WIND CONDO 2 BR, den 2 ba $450 IA YFROHT HOME 3 BR. 2 ba. $2000 Mo yrly STEPS TO IEACH 2 BR, 2 but!t!I. $400 associated 811 0 ... EA !>-~~A l TORS ll.ll' ~ l\Ctlb00 b' I Jb& I •• ••••••••••••••••• •••• 67S-7G60 aft. 7pm. -------------------,_ ________ _ •Bach w/showcr. Nr. _col· Costa Mes;-3824 Costa Meso 3824 Huntinqton luch 3840 Spec. View. 2 br. gar. lei;c. Utrl pd. Sl2S. Sugl •••••••••••• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• bltns, new crpt. $275. ok. No pets. 833-8974 New adult waterfront apts Lte 2 br. 2 ba. Garage & Adults. 642-6889 2 Br. 2 ba. frplc. n ire E~SIOE1 _&,2 Br.like ioMesaVerde.Beaut1ful yHard_.1t8rookhur~t ~SanCI ...... 3876 facilities. S3SO mo. Call n!"w. Fr~m .~100. Adults landscaping. Excep. amt on area. vat etnem~ 968-9738 no pet:.. 130 E 20lhSt. tlonally rich interiors, 10/l.5.846-9088or968·2743 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · &16·0505 1&2 bdrms from $275. Near beach large units 2 Bdrm·S225 mo. l Bdrm LGCJUftO IHch 3748 Mesa Verde Villas, lSSS Br 21h Ba 'yd $350 mo w /deck &: view $250. ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTS I DE Fabulous Mesu Verde Drive Eas t, Bf, 2 Ba, s250 mo . Easy access to beach. Bach. Near beach. Ulil huge owner!. unit 2 Br, Cos t a Mes a . ( 714) 963-8588 Call492-2896. ~" k b a 1 con I es, b c ams. 540-8871. pd. Sl95·S225 mo . ...,5 w . storage, like new, $300. ---------•$175 2 b I garage s..taAno 3880 14:lS N. Cst.494·2508 adults only no pets. EASTSIDE adult 1&2 Br. kidS ok. ~~:°0 ' '••••••••••••••••••••••• <kean view $225. Ulll pd. &t&OSOS 8200-$225. Like ~cw. Pool, Maio Rentals. 540-5370 Smi;les nk Ft•t' no pets. 177 E. 22nd . St. --=~=-:=....;..;.:..:.::.:-:..:..:....;;._...;....i•--------• Marn Rcnlab. 5-10 5370 t>44·0878 DELUXE 2 Br, 2 ru11 L~ One ledroo"' Newport Beach 3769 baths, enclosed gar, Builtins, including cfo ... GRAND OPENING lndry rac. super location. hwa.sher. $205 per month • ....................... Li: 2ur apt nr. heh B1·~t urea. Wtntcr s:J25·S3SO lnt•I ul1l , gar & l;iundry fal'rl. llti2·0S05. 1115 W THE BAY LEAF Adults only no pet:., $27 First and lost. Agent. l Bdrm $230 & up. 847·2622 or (213) 540·0555. 2 Bdrm Water Pd S2GO 592·5402 --!~~~~~~~~~ Uc:auu,ru1, s~acious . new 2 Br, yard. S240. Kids South Laguna 3886 apt:.. /\I Ol:t 111• P' l patio:; :.ngls ok. Bcuchcombei;, ••••••••••••••••••••••• { u ts, no pets L' ~1s 631 2011 · · 329 Avocado. c M. ,. ee " · · • Lge, quiet. lull.unous l'~- Balboa BL PIHECIEEK Lge 2 Br ncar bay & LIVES UP beach. Pool. Avail. now TO ITS MAME to June 30 6i5· 184 t &16·0883 SH-250lor879-1060 ec. 2 br, 2 ba apt. • WALKTOBEACll Elevator to scenJc priv. 2 llr 1 •; Ba Twnhse brk 2 br, 1 ba, down. Garage. bch. Party & game r~m. llalboa Bay Club 2br, Zba lffrace apt. /\vurl. 10/15. $1100. mo. Unfurn. $575. 213. 963. 7681,213/335-3646 Over 500 tall trees and 10 £pk. i:ur. li:e p;itio, adlts, $260. 846.90881536-4508 total sec. Perfect hvm~ s treams with watcrf~lls no pets. $275. 2-"17 Elden or wknd retreat for the creatcarelaxinJ?settrni: Ave. 979·1658; Evs ATTHEBEACH adventurous adult. $515. for your spacious new l 646·7027 1 br, pali·o, encl. "ar age. mo. yrly. lse499·283S Beachfronl 1 br apt. Sl!IO. No pl'IS. Mature only. 675-~24 o r 2 bedroom apart· --"' me n t s l"r o m S2il0 . Adult living in s pac , new· 319 15th St . 536-3241 or Apartments Fur"fti1hed Furniture Jvailablc ly r edec. 3 hr, 2 ba 536·1718 orUnfwonl1hed 3900 Small p<>ts OK. Adults tu\l.nh:.e w /palio &1 • 3944••••••••••••••••••••••• only. Otf1c·e open 9 00 lo ~Jrai:c. S300 No pl'ls. r-ttrte THE EXCITING P;.irk Newport. l hr. $400 Suh lse. eqpd.. tennis, spu. 640-0249, Iii-I SUKi. 6.00. 2300 Va1nicw Rel , ~IS·:J;)ijlt1r 8J1·95l7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PALMMESAAPTS Co~tu :'ti l·~J . Phone Rancho San MINUTESTONPT. ~5.2300 JRr. dl•n. 2 fr·pll'. hcam·d Joanuin Apts BCH. e1•illni;s $350 m o . ,-· S21JO 2 l>r I hu 1· s1d • &12 097'1or751·!l2S5 Rcnlm~ lrom S2UO. Bach, 1&2 BR. ~nts . · • ·•·. 1: ------/\dull apls. Leasing pr<'· from Sl95. Unfum·1sh'"'d 1 ri p I c x . ~· n "l. ~ J r. . l' ,.. b 1 CASA VICTORIA '1cw now 1s a pres 1g1: 1\dulL<i, No Pets ••••••••••••••••••••••• a t•o ny. n e ar new. f 1 ly d I 2 1 H t&211r.DduxeUnur. r v1 nc com mun1 . l561MesaDr. ~al 3802 " u ts · i;r ~: or 1'\1rn ~as/wlr pd. Twenty Pergola, Culver (5 Blks E ast of NewPorL ••••••••••••••••••••••• br, cpts. drP!.. Bltns. Adults-No pets Sec gate & Sandburg, 2 blocks so Blvd.) I child ok here al Trcelaoe $225. K1cb uk Pool. rec rm, elevators or San Diego 1-'r wy. 546-9860 Townhouse J\pl:.. Only 6-IS·29iK 525 Victona, 642·8970 559-UOO Sl95. to mon• rn ... The ---------------- prestigious rommun1ty ". 1 br, vc.ry ll!C. pn.rtly furn. Bachelor apt unfurn. LGCJUnO hach 3848 See our furniithcd model. C;.ill aftt•r b pm. Mature & quiet. • •••• •••• •••• • ••• • •• ••• s 1ou · 1100 sq ft S.lll llli38 Martini-Apts #2 Quiet. charm mg 2 In t::ncbou:c apls 0nl·~tll'<i ---275 K lBth St. C.M. twnhse style apt. l blk rn wide OJ><•n :.p;.iccs of LAllG1';2 llDIUI 631-3003 ~rhoi~d~~mS 3b0c0h·m~~ grN:nery. all 2 br. ti J b;.i Adull-. No Pl'ts 5210 7R7 - w 1 l h I g c 1> r 1 val c. w. Willlon :i I> 612 08JS or Adult 2 br townhouse, 11 ~ 497·3232. enclosed pJt10' Newly 52-1-S&IOXJOI; bath. p<llto. gar;ii;e, Barh. all util. l\..lds & cat painted & every luxury - -dshwhr. 641-0ll7!1 ok. S2IS. Beacht•ombcr, brand ncw-<:pts, drps. Large 2 br. 2 ha. S215. In ----rec SIS. 63l-2011; 547.2501 rang<'s. air conditioning. fant . s ml pct ok. Ll(e 1 hr WHY HOT? or879.1060 vinyl floors. 20 mrnutes SlllO. lnfcint. sml pet ok. Sunken livinJ? room --------- r r o m An a h e 1 m on 642·6612 Cathc.!<lral cc1l10g H•wport Beach 3869 H1versidc 1-·rwy to Grand -B-'Y "lE/\DOW \PTS 2bcdrooms, 112 bath~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• o t fr amp. 285 South " " '. Allachedgaragc Yrly.Oceanvicw,2br, V1centia. apt 2, Corona. l&2 br. ~ar. pool. Gas & Washer /dryer hook-up ba dup. SlSO/mo.110 44 (1)73S-Sl4-i w1:1tcr pd No k rds. no Pvt yard with patio St. s.14.6780 or 642·3639. pets. From S220. &16-0073 Adults. SJSO. nm. t---------1---FOXllOLl.OW WATERFRONT LOFT BDRM APT VILLAGE lmmedi:ilt' occupancy. ti21 W. Wilson, CM. OCEANFRONT 2 RR, Ba, deck, gar, cpts, drps no pets. $385. 645-3655 BEST BUY IHTOWH , Singles, 1&2 Br, furn k unfurn . There 's $1. million in r ecrcation: TENNIS (pro &. pro· shop) complimentary lessons. s wimminJ:. health clubs, partiPs, BBQs & Sunday brun<'h. Sorry. no one under 21 & no pets. Month to month occupancy. Models open daily 10·7. Oakwood Garden Ap~ Newport Bcarh North ll80 Irvine Cat 16th) (714) 645·0550 Newport Beach South 2 BDRM, bltns, rang<' & P vt p atio. frplr, full 642-4991 or642·4226 oven, refr1j.! .• frpl(' .. kltchens. Pool & rec. wshr /dryer, new crpt· room. 1 yr lst• S180. J br, pool, 1 adull l blk bch, lrg 4br, 2ba, nw 170016th St Cat Dover) ing. lrg patio deck, prer & HAYLOFT •PTS O\'<'r 21. No pets. :125 J. doclc included for )Our "" 17lh Plarc, aft lla m. own boat, up lo 25'. ;lSJJ\\•ocado, C.t\I . SSGS/mo. i\1on-Frr 5pm lo 7pm E/\STSIDE l Br. newly $;.it & Sun 10·4 rcdcc. yard, S225. 546· 3 BDRM, 2 ba, bllns. 1;4$·014:~ 4253.1·492·37_1_0 ___ _ near beach, S-100/mo. Huntinqton BHch 3840 2 BDRM & den plu:. Lovely 2 br. ~·rpt, drps, ••••••;;·;;;~~;~··•••• OCEAN VlF.W. $325. gar, no pcti.. Over 40. JACOBS REALTY St~O. 2260 PIJcentia. New :J hr deluxe tnhi.c, 675-6670 646-3160 ----20114thSt.536·17J8 ly dcrtd, no pets, yrly lse (714) 642·8170 SS75. 642·3443. Rooms 4000 2 Br, adults. no pets, $200 •••••••••••• • •• • •• • • • • • 2421 E. 16th St, N. Ilgts ROOMS $25. wk up with 646-1801 kitchen. $37 .50 wk up WATERFRONT apts. 548·9755 or 645-3967 NEW 2 br & 2 br + den S2S per week, 1 blk fr luxury apts. beach, HB. Call Mark :it •Builtins 960-2626orleave m sg. · •Trash Compactor . -:--*Wet bar Laguna lhlli1 Condo, k1tch •Fireplace & pool .Pnv. $135 fem. 1---------STUNNING Lge 2 Ilr 2 Ba BLOCK TO BEACH *Private beach student pref. 768-8890 --------gardl•n ;.ipt. Pool, rec 2 Or. end "arage, patio. •Pleviglassencl palios · I Balboa Island 3806 area. S23S. 7IO w. l8lh St. 205 ISth s"t. s·•c.8729 or " · l Br w/k1tchen new y de· "" •Smokedetect-0rs corated. $125 m' o.· ,,_ bl'" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------536'91718 T4. I\.. DELUXE dean 2 nr. i.un-West Side l hr, newly de· ---· -•Slips 8.vail. to tenants bch. NB. 673·1451 uft deck, prkg, strp to bch & corntcd w/tpts., ~rps .. Deluxe 3 br, 2~ ha apt 9i 9 BaysrdeDr,673·841" 4PM r.hopping. $325. 548 -11970 dshwshr&runi:ic. View w/washcr·dryer hookup. WATERFRONT dplx. tH~ 4150 aft 7PM ocean breC!zes. $200. Uu Lge patio. $375. mo. Call nr, rree boat dock+ util. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---pd. No pets. 548·5668 bet 846· 1371 ask for Ingrid or p t 1 f w / o 2 RH. 1 ba. gorai;:t' apt. &6pmor552·9723afl6. 84684l3arter 5 ar Y urn, 'Pvt rms, lovinl! C<Jrc. $:lSO Includes ut1ht1cs. -----$49S/yrly, $395 wntr pe balanced diets. lovely Wmter. (Will furn > Ncw2 br. l'/1 bath. g:mle Lge 2 DR, l'h Ba, patio. mo. CallG75-6JG9. patio/grdns54it·3833 WILLIAM WIHTOM patio. Adults, no pct:; frplc, J(ar, pool. Quil•l Newport Shores, J lh blk - REALTOR 675-3331 Si!45.6-12·1fi03 adull Townhouse. 1 Ml. ocean. Super loc. 2br VocatfonRentall 4250 -be h $285 898 2470 d ••••••••••••••••••••••• lalboaP-..insula 3807 New 3 hr. 2 ba, detoehcd to ac ·. . . Jbr uplex apt:s. Owner, MAUI ~AWAll Lux tul- ••••••••••••••••••••••• front house or 5 plex.. 2 br, cpls., pool, play yd., <714>970•9203 ly ru~ l Br Condo. ll\ Newer. Fr stding 2 br, 2 $385. mo. ,0 1 rive by 18 n o pets. 2208 A, Yrly, s teps to bch mod. "The Whal er" on ba. balconies, e ncl. 2 car Monte Vlst, · Delaware. 536·0959. upper 2 br, bca;;{ ceil., Kaanapali Bch. Tennis. gar, walk to rerry. Yrly Call673·l181. H Lak p rk frpl. Gar. dr. operator. $55day,$345wk.675·236 l $ 3 8 5 • 6 4 0 -4 4 2 4 E-Side 2 hr, 2 ba. ~ncl gar. ~ar • 0 $325. 642-3490 or (213)69fJ.72l!), eves/wknd:s, 838·4424 1 Child ok. $275 mo. ~II~~~.~ p~~io~~r:i~: l~~ Clean & classy 1 hr Luxurious, ·rum. villa on wkdys 979-8533. Alabama, 536-3465 or w/bnlcony. Yrly lcasc. Sayullta Beach near Nr. ocean; 2 BR S285~ 3 Extra lg rooms. 1 Br, 1 536·1718 $300/mo. 673·0697 Puerta Vallarta. 4 hr, l ~~~~j ~~YR $250 Ba_. 2 car gar, S250 mo. no 2 BR, l Ba, newJy decorat-LIDO DELUXE 2br, 2ba, bo. $500. wk. 73l·3777 -----'---67_5_·4 __ 1 chU~ren or pets. 646-4757 ed , flarage. $200. mo. frplc, beams, patio, $175. Util pd. Avail. Now! avall Nov. 15• 536-2888an. 6 P.m. deck. View. AdJts. $5SQ. Rtfttafs fo Shor• 4300 Fee. Newly dcroratcd. clean. B b c I t th 675-6359 •••••••••••• •••••••• ••• Main Rentals 540-5370 l 1 2 b Id al loc 1 r, l 8 • rp c, 3 e Lady, 51, wants to share ------·----1 ge, ower r . e · bench. Garage Gas & ho · b r $375• Yrly 2 br, 2 ba. 2 Adults only. No pets. wawr pd. $22S. mo. No Westcliff 2 br, 2Y.r ba Do~~s~rc e'tc_c A~r:~da~~ story. 2 car encl. u r . $225. Mgr at !>79·2531. pets. S46-9088 or 960-2325 townho~se. Bllns, dfw, 11 1 Balcony. 642· 1603 2885 Mendoza, Apt A or sec mgr apt 9, 428 16th pvt patios. Adlts only, no Cftre + sma 18 a ry. . . St pel'I. 1728 Bedford Ln. Contacbet t·Mrs .. Horne 1 br Bay view stove & $190, spacious qwet, new· · $325 mo. Avail Nov ts. 834-2910 weon ... lOam. •. ;., U . ly decor, 2 Br. pool, encl Bd Be h/P 1 ..,., 7533 • rerng. Yrly . ..-.40, tll ch'ldren pets l & 2 rm ac oo _.. · HffdaR""""ate? paid. 675"8764. ~27~ 1 ' · Apts. $190/up. Adults, no ARCHITECT desi~n cstm •--------•pets. 219 1.Sth St & 220 ·ts .. 8 2aa P\... ... t:.02m.J1LtuM:rm> Yearly 2 Br twin polio N 12lhSt fin dplx um ... r. • ~ apt $32S mo.'218 20th, NB Z BR• n ° Pet 5 • 0 · 206 34th St. 673-7684 or A Profcs!lft'l Roomm;atc 673-5415. children. $185. mo. stv & 1 Block to Beach. Lge 1 673-4)943 Referral Company can ---------t Refrlg. Cum .968·8064 Br. Renting nowt With HELPYOUFlNDTllAT Corona del Mar 3822 Harbor T wnhouse pool. $185. 212-220 Hunt· RIGHT ROOMMATE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 I n. -e logton St. Call mgr 832·4134Sincol971 2 Br, 2 sty, 1 1\ »11, -~ 960 2812 . 2 Br 2 Ba upstairs apt, on mo., or 2 Or snn) level 1 . · ~alelfemale, 25-~, lg 3 Acacia, S. of Hwy. Like n. $21" Al ·i bdrm bo .-.11:5 lri ._, " mo. new oe· 2 Br 2 ba patio garage me, • ..., mo, nr new, stove. ~ g, 2 car cor. Mature adults only, $2sO. Close t~ beach: bch,968-8796. gar. wtr /gas Incl. No 00 pets. 646·0392. 2217 846-9088 or 536.4508 rhtldreo or J)C!ts. S41S. Harbor Blvd. Mgr D·t. 675-9216 E R Oc B e fastest draw in the N A can 2 r 2 Ba. $150 1 br dpl:it. Murr. cpl. West a Dally Pilot fplc. newly painted & No children. Stv, refrig. Classlflc.d Ad. Phone super clean. Car. avail Non 11mokers only. Refs &42-M78, Nov. 7, $.100. 8'6·0814 req. 9S4 W. 17th 548·03S8 flavc somcthlna you want 3br, 3ba, nr beach, at· to sell? CIAs11iflod ads do t.achod a car aar, trptc, cl.Asst FI ED will aell it. il ftJI. 642-5678. ~121M or960-1903 •• becutfnRental Serlfc• )tomes. condos, apta., from $400fllonth. 673-7'01 emale to share lovely 2Dr house in Dana Polnt wt&ame. 496·0965 FREE room In beauUM Irvine homo to a lady tn exchanio for Hto housekeeplng. Call Ken all tPM. $$2.mz '· BJI DAIL y PILOT Tuetdey. October 12, 1976 Add it...Bufld lt ... Oiaper lt...Hammer rt ... Carpet SERVICE DI RECTORY Plumb it. .. Patch it ... 1pe 1t. .. e mo e • .•• it...Ccment it... Wire 1t...Hoe it ... Clean it ... Move Roof It... Landscape it...T1le it. .. Trim it ..• Sewlt... it ... Press IL.P aint it ... Nail it...Plaster lt...Fix ft... Haul it. .. Add it ... P lant it... Alter It... Lea rn It... MW-A-a009l leGMty S..-.ius C.,.t Senlct Gcrdtnl1MJ H~ Ho.Mck°"""J Mo•"'9 Poifttf1MJ/Popfffn9 Teft•lslon bpoir •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Additlona-remodel:1, r<'ns Mrn. Lora h~a &hat F\lrn&CptCln'110)r"n Exprdl1J¥.11an~ardener YOUUAVElTREAOV c L ~ 1\ N I NG & MOVIJllG' Lel 2 ~icpr'd •CUSTOM l'AIN'rtNG• C1\NOrYTVSVl'CO. Jl r 1 c: In a• a UP e rt 0 pcn.onal tour h for your harbor art'll Ot't Special Yd rlcanup:;, trlmm1n.:. I'LL llAUL IT AWAY M A I NT F: N ,\ N C F. men move you. Bea Leta. tolk .100111 vour Isl Hute ~r\'lt'U workmenahip, av!( 6 h111r Get •qualnted now. irav~840-2135 prun1nii Ll Haul 'G TIM 548·6306 &-nu·~ All l)J>C!rt. L1r'd w/rcrs t!M·6936 nreds. IJrut·e ~~u U721 .it 1-\ur l'nc~~000-1633 ~ay compl. Uc. 1131U45 Spl•CIJI offer .Re&ular C·__._od 645 tll87 1168 7UI I p...J-1J._-1, _ __.:1tn ~vs T '"'--'c• 150-6358 SHI 11tylc: for $7 oo with ""'"' or --Hemove cement. aspball. -..... ..,..... • 'JI ,... ...,..,,., • .t.....Oanct R-lr ad. call Lon, 1''our Wlnds ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shadrs ot Green· Yard dirt. trcei., etr Jo)' est. XJnt hou:,i•df'anlng done •••••••••••••••••••••• Painting • Int. & EAl ••••••••••••••••••••••• -rr-~r-Ltd V62-8900 LEEM JARVIS Care. Ho:vnl service. &&Z·2'!i4l..k/insrd. by lauy w/t>'<l)r. de~n· Palnt-Rcpi.lr-3S yrs I <.:ust. painting w/11('c:c•nl Rcmova,ls, tr11nn11 n1t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• --·--Additioos&Reinodellng down to "Eutb" prices• dabl1i.ownla.lns847·3637 a r ea. workmanshl Oil nc-atnuis. 10\tri. exp. Jll"\lnlo.i. free l'"t. l.1c'd APPUANC~ RErAm Cabinet Mak.lag 962-~73 • Lir 317856 640·~5 Ho4necS...iftCJ --i:u:ir. Take advant. or m Nef's. Free F.sl. Tom 1-'ully 1t111ut'~d. 642 2ti2' $10 -Servic:e Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• M41fnt...anc:• ~7066 Powell, 813-5130 1714)S49·2422 ll&FC/\DJNF.TS ••GeorgePll~er &Sons Cubellero & SOns. Expr llOUSECLEANING Is ••••••••••••••••••••••• e"-pe_r. ____ ·----1 hb----,-..,.--------1 Kih'hen, li.alh, hlorage. /\dds1Rmdlil tunt/f'lans Jiardenl•r. Fr ests, re· Our Bu ~in ei>s Call(; & T Plumhini: & P ;11nl l'rurcssional Painter. PoirrtllMJ/SICJn 1g:~~s~f?:.<'~~~'!ft,~~w~~I~? , ..... .., l'"'as Contractors BH0964lt 5.'7·tlll32 asoooble. 646-465.a aft Jarucc's Ra••oedy' Anrus 111)(. Tu1>11uuhl)' \H1rk.:.!I lntr/Exterior. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----••••••••••••••••••••••• 'g 4pm 0 " • S3 INTF.ftlOR & Child care, llrensl•d welcome. SSl-3074 & ••ANDERSON&All!ioc. 6iS-65S3 hr st>rvict> _No Joh~oc!l"!I Frceest1mntes646· 15 E:\'Tl!:llH)n PAINTING home, 3 yrs or oldl!r. 53!1-1641 Cstm Brick & Ston Expr Japanese gardener •HOUSt:CLEANINC• ~~u;fat.:i~~~1k,5~~!l!;UUI EXPERT Painting. lnlr 536-H)tl:? VlcinltyHeil&Edwards crpenter Work. Patio cover:.. Compl ma1nlcnnnre & By Rl.'hablcCouple l:<;xt r . Free es t . 846·0966. ••••••••• •••••. •• •••••• redwood decks. gazebo:. t'lranup, fr ei.l/re.as lliro Good rcferl'nces 536 7711 Mosonry w orkman s ~Ip g u 11 'affoJ ---------• M OR llOM ER EPA R _640·Sl44 ..,1 1937 •••• •• •• •• ••• •••••• •• •• &&2·0295 ••••••••••••••••••• •••• Babysit ting my home •. 11\J , · 1 • • llOU&erteanin" & Building L'I I l'I •Cu11t.om Pullo~· Mother of pre-schooler: ~aqX'ntry · I lumbing • DrafhftCJ G~ S•nlns M t V 0 R r rl!P url'">· anters Paint Your Cosff• W d l' ll <,; 111 bab Ill • L'"l C<>ram1cT1h:S40-SS60 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• am. cry ea& ona · llnckConcrcl"l'al10 E S ""'5 oo a o overs w ~ .,ume. r u -. ble. ~9-1532 Block Walls HUQ l'iti. /\\·rg :1.tr 1 ty...,.. Redwood Derlcs. 1 do rny Umepreerred 642·05JO CarpetSe-niu hRmeAsddr1etlmonods.e ln1:.~t~P~~Y:-JoAnN·21oem1•eso· & W t RL'A'LvCLE\N Hrr.E,.ts &lti04&i 2·Sly~/lnlrS4Srm own work . Fret' ••••••••••••••••••••••• om • .. · "" ,,1 1,1 us an a .:.M.W • ' ----J'ric~sinrlmtr'l/labor Estimate Call5S2·llSH:l Mature Woman Sh & t 1 c-ommer'I, 25 yrs exp <'raftsman. 6-15 6558. HOUSE? Call G1ngh11m Free t>St Slurno-.tonl' Ille ('..uar msrd Cree est Will Babys1l ampoo " eam r ean· Rsnbl sn 4557 Girl Free csts 645 5123 t k. · '11 11"-• I h. ' ' 34 645-4329-NpBch. 1n~. Color bnghtcners: · · Handyman·Carpcnlr). · · · b <X;' wa '· mrk, Pa _Tt'd636-708SorS52·0l Ploster/~tpoir . -----------i wh t car pts 10 min Roors p.ainuni:. mtenor rmdl'g Generalilousec:leaning. ten; lluahtv ~01 "-·•,l. re· l'£TERS p \INTI'.'IG ••••••••••••••••••••••• You don'l need a gun to blearh. Clean liv rm, din •••••••••••••••••••••••~~yd wrk847 S25-l ' Own lransportallon. ·~-~~c:. Ho> 7~1 9~1· E1tpr'd rl'a.t..' r~tes: frl't P.\TCll l'L.\STEHI ~ti "draw fast"' when )'Ou rm & hall SIS. Avg rm Scrub & Wax K111:he n Hauf 7~H8SO l''>l. l°Jl1Gene~2-04~ ••ALLTYPES• • place an ad 1n the Daily S7 SO, rouch $10, chair SS Floor Sperial. $19.95 1"9 Movi..-----------1 Free Est 5111 h/125 Pilot Want Ads! Call now Guar ellm pet odor. Crpt Call '"Spurkle". 962·6011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CleanilWI .. ~ <>oily "'* Delly Piiot ... "' , .... ,.... ""'*'" -lnyc>llf !«el c:omm11n11r ... -rr ~ -642·5678. repuir. IS yrs expr. Do llolullng1 mo\•ing, dcanup s.i5.79j8"7 ••••••••••••••••••:··:·The fastest draw In the VERY NEAT PATCll ----------•work myself. Refs Find what yoo want in $7,up Trel•work. Reai., MOVlNG"! Let 2 E-cprd West .. a Da1h· Pilot JOliS&Tf':XTl..'tlt: H.jj\lijMI Sell idle items 642·5678 531·0101. Daily Pilot Classifieds. Ca~t. tree t.~l 842·4597 CLASSIFIED will sell it. R':r~. ~o~Jlou. lt\laS, Clru.sihed Ad 642:5678. Free fat. 893·1439 ...._ _______ __. Rental• to Sh°" 430 Industrial Rental 4500 Lod & Found 5300 Help W•ttd 7100Hetp W•t.d 7100 p Wanted 7100 Help W•hd 7100 Help WOftted 7100 Help Want•d 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1i.ooo• c lean, secur e. FOUND : Pointer mix ~ Boolts G..,..rol Offlu_ SINGLES STUDENTS Storage or light mfg. female, _blk/whl paws Restaurant • StudHltJ ConalJ'\JcUon DENTAL ASSIST. Perm anl'nt, part-tame. S~NIORS DIVORCED S'Z001month 645·3544. chest: vie: Crown Ilse HEW COLONY KfTCHEH RESTAUIAHT Hou1ewlve1 & Part·F/timl'. X·rny rcrt l\lulu Million Dollar corp Live better for i12 the . P !i rking lot. Laguna --•· ht SUPERINTEN ENT n <"c:. Expc r . prcf'd. s taff111i; new ofc in cost. We take the hassle 3,000 sq .• rt. New ind. Free Niguel. 492-~29 Is Interviewing For,· Moun11g ers 0 Salary open. 6-12·6880. Irv i.n c .. N ~e d . ~ n. . span. !'mash for you. 776 Million Dol l ar Corp t hu:.1ast1c po~1t 1vo out or findini: a i:ood w.17lh c~l. 645·0130. FOUND: Mon.ey Sun. In Waitresses Hostesses needs men & women of COMMERCIAL DISHWASHER mind •d pc~ple ·lo in· 1·ompatiblc room mute H.B. Call & give amount Bus Help Cooks any ai?c w htl cnJOY od ~ · •. , ·iv a · Serving people since Cons,tructinn yard !or & dcsc:npton of cont:uncr Dishwashers Cocktail Waitresses speak in~ w/othcrs & who CONSTRUCTION ~~'~t~t:,1~·~;\;1;.J~;~'~t~ ~lon~lll~ ~~tl~n;r~u~ls t97t. lease. Fenced area, &12·6186aft4PM areborcdw/thea,cra••e r a·ol· L'rc•park· · S 100 ISO' 1\11 t " t>pm rum 011 c ,-l C:ounly Wadc crvire . x · or par Found· Small female Jnlerviewing Tues-Thurs 9am·5pm runofthe mlllJOhi. · in~ & othl'r hcncfit s. Roommote flndera ~~anta Ana area. c.oui.e.°ioth &Irvine. C.all America's leading de· pleasant surround111~s & 73 l·Z96 I · toidentlfy ll42 O!IOS 23701 MwltwPartwoy No :il'lual selling 1n· veloix•r or planned l'Om· DRYCl.EANING PL/\NT rd.ixed almosphl're. _'Nu lusiMn/lnvest/ LOCJ19M1Hlh volvcd & no seltm~ !IP munllies has an im-l\IGH. Orani:<' Co. beat·h e-cper nee. & nt> ~cJLin(t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·! Finance LOST : CM. Ort 8. Ladies E<iual Oµj)Urtunity Employer Pomlmenls. Work "/one medmte opening for a arc.a. Vahd license rl'q. involved. Xlnl oppor for Roommate tor 2 Br house ••••••••••••••••••••••• wrist wutch. Reward of lhl' moi.t popular & Construction Supervisor <:rl opportunity to bu11<1 ~1d v ,1nremcn l. Call & )arrl COM $lJ7.so lud~I &12·J389aflSpm. ~~~~~ succc~,.ful products on in its non-residential future l->cnd n·~Unll' & >O:J.tl09S. F I 2 29 ,,.0 26 the markl'l loday. An in· operations. rd to NWH lklx itl'IO -------em. on Y I· ,.,., ·l<I Opportunity 5005 B V od h • ' •••••••••••••••••••••••LOST: Male asset. . 1c Employlftfl'lt & Help Wute-d 7100 expen:.1ve pr uct w ose ln·ml'. c .1 :J2711i Gcroq.s for Rent 4350 R di k'll Lake Forest I Sun & Sail Preparation ••••••••••••••••••••••• name is a household Qualified rand1d att>s will ----------• GEN ER1\L OF'FJCE ••••••••••••••••••••••••SCHOOL· eCa ng,.1s '>· Club. 10·6. 581·41.61. ••••••••••••••••••••••• word thruoul the world have 5·10 yrs or ex· ELt::CTHONH; Musthuvet~pmg&math 1 rar garages near speed. etc. ( osla" esa Reward. Schooli & Auto Merhanic: Foreign & Work 111 a youthful. pen enrc in l"Omml!rc1al ASSEMBLERS ability S48·s:JOO. Bearh&Elhs,H B. •SCHOOL·P\•t Jr/Sr 1 ti 7005 or domestic, clean shop. friendly .1tmo:.phere & ron:.truct1on wllh 11.lgh (Anaheim> LOST: Saluki, male, 6 nstruc on Sll'ady job 646·8310 have run while you cam particular e:.posurc to Wean• a rap1rllv ~ro\11ng GENERAL OFFICE S2S mo. 847·2622 •BOOKSTORE mos, reddi5h tan, Ing ••••••••••••••••••••••• · t.op p:.iy. You receive 11 both new roni.truclloo compult•r mr~. rompun) National cducat1onal In· Single garage. S40. mo •DRAPERY WKRM ta 1 I. T 111 N -Ii kc BABYSlTTt:R & Light guaranteed salary+ ex· 11 nd commc1 ct ill re· w 1mmcchall' opcn1111o:i. st1lullon has opening f~r co~la Mesa. 731 West •RUG 1UPHLCleancr greyhound reward. OCC BEA IARTENDER llousekecpinl!. Free trcrm•ly ltlicrul l'Otn· modclrni;. for 2nd shill llrciulres 3 sharp and1v. w/deta1I I8th St. 673.7787 * FUHNITUR E Refin area. 751 ·9-ISl evs, or Jo'ull or l'arl·t1me room & board +salary. rnl:.:.ion & bonuses. Con· mo's mul l'Xl)CI'. in tout•h 11b1hty. Will answer cor· Contact /\gnt Sam Crane 833·6378dys Be reu<ly to work as a lrvrne. Nd resp person lesls & lllhl'r incentive. In addition ti) a ltheral up & no work or P C rc~p. to home ~lucly i;tu- 4400 (7141645·4 liO S-10·0608 professional hartcnder tn fur CJ re of my 2 children X 1 n t a cl va n l' em c n t Martini: ~alarv, Wl' orrer bo;irtls or assi-mhhng or d<'n\s. lh'<t's .i5 + wpm Lost: Abys~inian Mllll· I ¥.l'ek 1-'r<'e Job plal'c ages ii·ti wkdy:. 5S2·71W po:-.s1bilitics for both men an oulstandin~ package J)(l\\l'r s1111phl·:.. Ah11ity lYfllnJ!. Good 1:0. hencfils Office Rentol ••••••••••••••••••••••• DR~:ss SllOt> (<'or -;;ilt• (.'.it FriO<·t8.IUmo~old me11la~s1::.lancc or1213 ):!91·8026 ' &women. or benefits <ind an Op· lo l'flmmun1cale Ill &work1n).(l'f)1His.1\pply Prime lm·alion Sl2.(1()C1 Big Cuuyon ar<'.a. l'lc:a~e · :\m\•rn-.111 n"rtcnclers Porlunity to ~row with a t-:ngh"'h c:.scnlial Xlnt Nnllon<il Sq;H•ms Corp, WESTCUFf-BLOG. + rnvrntory · 548 0::!2J . call 1'44·6223 aft 3 pm. ~rhool Uabysittcr, li\'e in. N.H. No ex per nee. You re· leader 111 its field. Plc:1se working t'o11ds 111 a11· ·t:kil B1n·h St. N ll. 1345.4325 ~----llO..I E 17thSl St\ Hef':-.. n •q. Call Diane, -----------Lost, grey Cat. nr 31!.t & ,;.:,, 1,..,;, • • G75.2182 orlHS·7575 ce1v1· full pay while bt>m.: a111>IY 1mml•tliulely hy roncl., l'aq11•ll•d pl;int. cn'I ()fr 1-·ull nr Part ESTABLISHED J r . Wear Nwpt Ulvd, N.U. 1018, .,.,.,. ""' t.n11ncd . You 1•an work sending your resume in· 1'~1ingc hl·nd11s mclude h 0 I 'd · k I 'd lune. t"lex hrs. light lYP· St.ore. Balboa Isl. Sale~ male. 673·2097 Babysitter for 2• 2 yr old mornm.: or eve rs. n Y rludmg salary history pa1 sic (•avr. pa1 ini:. C.M. S.\!1·3'J'12. Sl00,000. +Reply Box h f HelpWante-d 7100 Newport, live in/out. lOmm byl-'wy.fromall Lo: emp l oyee: g r o up 75S.Da1lyPilot ,P.O.BoxLOST Puppy, wt act>,••••••••••••••••••••••• Wkdys ph: H ood . s urroundi n g co m · med1c:al.pa1dvacs,puidGirl Friday 21·30. Good JS60, C.M. 92626 brnlbl~. female. 11 \\'.ks \\/\POSITIONS 64-1-6141or1133.2900 mun1l1es. You owe 1l lo MISSIO...._. birthday holiday & stock olc. skllls, heavy phones. -------•old. Vic. Newport P1t>r •A, 1 • • • yourself lo al lca~t in· ~ purc hase progr a m . lfnrborarea.642·3490 IEER TAVERN area, N.B. 673·3360 day~ Adm :Sl'~Y i F'i C Bk~pr B11bys1llcr Needed for in "eslilfale this unusual VIEJO Related exprr. i.:1vcn ex NEWPORT BEACH \.• rnotW+• .. 111111 l'·•~t· trtd hw1neAwe r-a:TS S1SOO MO. 640-8586 eves. Jr ~ ~X('~· ~Cl')' ~ C a n l • M • F • n c a r oppor C:onl.at·l J cnclll' tra t·onsttlt•ral ion + 2nd --------•Mostly help run . .Mission -Emplo}Hitl a) All 1-ee:. L1nt.lbt>rgh Sc ho o l Taulbcc.!\.13·811!18 COMPANY sh1ftprc•m1Ums •I MO l"REF. H ENT• Vil·Ju area. llearl condt· LOST female gray & brn Li~ fll.'mdi•r;; 1\A<'nl'~ 5-111 7112 art. 5 MICRO DATA Of'FERS <.:all Mr. How11rd 645· 6101 GIRL FRIDAY Spanish ~fl<'aklng for a smull company. Apply In • fl\•r:.on I! 5 Internatio nal \UUIO L 7005 J,. Sk) park l'1rrle I r\'inr I 2 3 Rm. OCftl'l'S from lion for<•1•s sale. Good i.haggy dog. 40-tSlbs. Re . -IU:N li1rl'h !'ii. :St.e 11>4 ------Unu~ual grrrn lh pol~n S 12 5 per m 0 • Adj 1 , \ ,1 837 4..,00 1·enl hair rut. Newport i"l'" p.lrt lka1•h 833·11100 Rabysilll'r. our home for BOYS & GIRLS 24800 Chnsanla liJI. ,\irporh'r llolt>I No lea!> crms 1 J.: 1 -hl·h hl' on rollttr. Lo~t on Call for Appl E.o;lab '6.'i 1wcasional e\ enmgs. Stu '\hso;1on V1l'JO CJ 92675 Apply 9A~I SPM rPq.8J3.J223Til noon COFFEESHOP bch on <x·t 7th PkJ:.C -rlt>nlOK.G-16Rf;69 Earn S2US.">O per ¥.eek EqualUµporEmplo~<>r Grn5~SJH!l,OOO.p yr c·all,675·2:!_12REW\RD i\Chl'rt1 .. 1111ot 1\s:.1st:.. Babys1llcr my home ¥.orkm).! ,1fter ~t·hool & -----MICROOATA 60'PERSQFT Plu:.h & immaculateu>ST malt' S1am<•se vi<· 2:wlllµm L11Pmor out onSaturcla)" Th1~1snol COOK 17481 Rt!'dhlllA•t!' 1617 WESTCLIFF·NB thru ()Ul, Owm:r buyini: OrJnj?c &. t<~ll C \t Jo :i NOW HIRING Refs rcq. 6 12 11611. J P " Pe r r n u 1 l' Food ~t>n·1cc supt>rv1sor Irvine. Co 92714 '°;1rl Friclav, r::<•ncral ofc cxpcr, answ!'r phom'. lite bookkt>cpmg knowledge. 64U-3248 AGT 541·5032 lar11c Cnrktall1D1nner Call d·,i•·· 9•76, .. ,.... T r an>.port,1 t 1011 pro· ---i J~ ., • •"' G RLS & MEN d d ,. 11 ·.,., 17 ., for ,1cl1\'t• t·onvalesl·ent "'.riiial Oppor Employt>r hou ~L' & m us t sell "IS·''J3. I UAHYSIITt-:H,formf.rnl. "e '-a 01...,! 1.. r. DELUXEOFFICES "' .,., ho s p . Good sa l & :;raveyard C°l<'rk. flt1 mc Terms A(rt 1!37·-t200 Tue & Thurs mormnt:s. benefits. Send resume ---for 7 I l !>lure al 2150 \omml & mdi.ll spacer. Found: ~I ale Poodle mix. Ho Exper. Hee. Cd:'ll arl'a <'all f).m·2867 B-okfo•t Cook to. ClassHted ad no. 7&t Emplnyml.'nt ocrered· t'larl'ntiu /\vc, C.M. 200 to 2000 ~q fl r.s low Grocery-Beer-Wine-\\'hill.!, .:ray ~ars & tu1I 18 Yn Or Older ---•.. .. s II 1 t manuf needs as 30< sq. fl. Lag Ni~ucl & C ROSS SIJ0.000. YR Fresh dip. Baker/Beur, """nini:s For. B:ibys1tter, my home for C.ood rt'l 1 a blc person r /o Daily Pilot. PO Box ~a bl I f~t" , .plo er __ G_U_A-RDS Mi sswn Viejo areas. Neat Mom & Pop opera· C:\1 S-10·72l2. ';~lurkctmg Ul•pt Inf.int. no housework wanted for weekends. =Costa Mesa, Ca !;,:xp~r i:;"~~~in/ & llandy to S. D. l"rwy, tion. Trouble free area. •Public llelutions Trnc ~hort hrs. good pay. licl Salury UJH'n. Appl)'. Thr _ gcn'I shop. 979 .2290 Coda~esa Call831·1<100 No ncarhy competition. Found : F emale Sl •Cu:.lomcr~ervTrnc 5, 5-10·7131. i\sk for Uick Grincl~·r Hestauranl, 1400 COOKS. BARTl':NOF:R!::i, wk cl Y s. 5 411 • 9801 ~crmancnl. J·ull & pnrt. ---------• Jlcnt only $200 mo. t"uli llcrnard & her male pup. Aft 5, 556-2918. W ( 11,1 ;.t II w y. N II UlllVEHS. I' lime. O\'er eVl's/wknds time. Ph~nc & transp re· Ofc Rent al in Jrvine Jn· p ri cc $18, ooo. A gl 2261 Orchard, SA ll~hl" Salary $115 G42·11klll A~k For Hogc·r. 21 vr:.. lmmrd. openings. --q'd. Het1rcd w<'lcome. dus lria l oreu. Phan<' ijJ'7 4200 751·5590 lli\NK /\SST MAN,\C; l'~ll will BXEC./PltoGJli\M C.:all 5 1G·027'1. ofc hrs 10.2, answennA scn·1ce av111I lO ~148 Weeki' *TELLER* BUS BOYS train. imnwd. opening. •. DJH~·:CTUR , t;losed \'fr<l. lh•nt under $125. mo •DllY CLEAN PL/\NT FOUND: Pre~rription ~ ,\pplv in person, ~I C! 11 Cnr Girls llub or I· V./ ------- !l-10·7714 wtA<;NCY. Capo Bch. G lasses, wn ma n s . For lnlervkw Cal PART Tl:\1 1:: J8orovcr, full lime. APP· &Is Pi.tza 410 1':. l?th Sl, 11n.,5-1!H34<1or !JUR·lil!l4 GUYS & GALS ---------i Net to owner $30:\l /YR. Jlullock5 Wibh1rc L"asc 549-9818 Iv m vcr'lon. 24031 El c· ,1 ' -------Mbsion Vil'Jo. El Toro Of'l-'ICE SPi\CJi: SJOM dwn. Submit. Leo CdM. 675-276:! 1 !1'1 m<'di .all• open mi:. '° Tori1 Htl. l..1~11na J11lls. " FlllEHG l.i\.'iS Jrca to work a Crw hours T'rofessionJI /\rts Bldg. Maas Co. (COLL> (213) Cn:.tJ :\lc5;1 11H1t•c . Sav -COOKS F.xpcr'd Chopp1•r Gun a day. Fun Job. Earn S25 494.7292 937 33RO FOUND S"h auier '"~" .11111 Lo.111 or b.rnk B11sv E-.:cc n1•<•cls am-Opr . for non se.1sonul •o S50 P"r '' <'"k. For ----------1 · · ·mm.·' n · cxpcru!nt'l' prdcrrcd tntiow. 1wopll• J-\1ll '1>1l h M v f g ' • " ' FOR LEASE Money to Loan 5025 male, crry /hi k. V11:. ASSEMBLERS 'lli'il Ill' "illlnl! to work 1:ur I nl"t' w •·I:? 11111: k:-:pcric1ired Only. s op. • . ~.n. . rt n l more inlormul1on phone Magnolia & llam11tnn. • • GOOD PAY! bt'nel1ts. 2b21 S, U1rr h. t!J(I 0!113. 3 OFFICES ••••••••••••••••••••••• H.B. 636·68'n 537 Sl60 ;\1111 G mo ... l''(llt'r 111 an,\ s.itur<I .. ,.... E\t•ellenl ti·8pm s A L'u11~1 Onnrlun1'ty SI 55 MO EACH ht, 2nd & lrd T.D.'s ext/280. "' of lh<' tolln\\ an~. PC /\~ ,.,.al.try· work in~ l·onih -,\l'PL Y . c • .., '' ,~. F1neCOSTAMESALoc LOANSAVAILABLE ---------1 sembly, 11.irnl'ss. Con tmn'i and hrnef1hls. C..ill CABDRIVERS JOLLY ROGER FIBERGLASS 1':mplu~c_r __ _ 752-1700 <.;red1t notimPorlant The fastest draw .1n the nectnr or Soltll!r Colo1 nr.ipplyat.hranc · ;\lcn,~_r25Womcn 400 S.CoastHwy PRODUCTION llardware-llous ewar e fi7:l.4AA:l8roker V" l 0 1 Pl t <'<i<ll'1l•ll 1<•1td l'>crellent AMERICAN 'lu:-tu.: or o,cr LagunaBear h G<'l·roat&ChopperCun Sa les. M&F, perm, ---'"es · · .a 111 Y 1 0 co. brnt•Cils andudt•:. I Applv In l'cri.on man. Hollers, Trim & p/tlme . l\lu:.l \I.Ork 1 [. li~~illi~ll Mort0_~s,Truat 5035 ~1:,~;~~ed Ad. Phone' wks \JCallon alter 6 SAVINGS Yellow Cab Counter person. Part DnJI. r /time pcrm.Jobs wknd d ay. C r o wn --·-.......... -1":'1• mo·s. 11 l'md holidays, 825 Sunflower Ave l 12Sl SIJtl'r Avenue lime. Apply C:i pt :\tike's to <'XP<'r'<l people. All Hardware, 3107 E. Coaat ·• i ....................... j:roup msuranrc starts Coslu Mesa 1-'nunt.11n Vnllry Fish Fry, 815 W. l:.lth. molcls, tools & equip. re Hwy, CdM. _L,-NVE::!::STMENT:..J!!!!l*"o~rv!!!l!tS!l~O~NfJ LOANS 9% .=~•••••••••~~.~~ ~a/re.of hire & many l\lr.!luizenga 97!1·9800 Carpcntt'rs hl'lpt•r . incl. CM. , ~~;: e8~~ ~i~~c:J1~"ci _tl_O_ST_ES_S_,_f_/_U_m_e ___ G_ood_ B.WFRONT Orrirc Dldg. Spaee1\\'a1I. Hens. 67."> 8141 IRVINF.·7 room Offi<'C suite w /confcrcn1·c rttt Ideal for arcrounlan{s. rontrnctors $7~0 mo. U79·3560 /\p1,ly Personnel Eq,ualOpporwm,ly palnt1111(. W1lltog t CREW Mi\NJ\Gfo.H. Earn F1be•"IAss Co., 213S Co· pay. Appl_r Del Taco, A1102ndTDLoons Drinking problem? 1:-;mployr·rM /1-learn. S.100 llr. 51 h S200 lo s-100 pt>r weckr ., ""'rlr (' i\1 ALk for 25252 La 1-:17. Rd, Lag. Fairest Terms since 1949 Call Alcohol Helpline OOCUMENTQR wi•l'k. /\µply in p«r~on i.u1>t'rv1~111i.: ;1 <'rcw o n,on • 1 • " 1111 Sattl•r MtCJ. Co. 24 hrs a day 83.C,·3830 wkd~'· ·11!1 l>wycr Ur.. l" n i1tr su hs n1 pl ion Bill Spurr. fll5 535:1. I '-· ------- 642 71 545 0611 DIVISION BARMAID Anaht>im i.ole:-.mcn. You musl ----lloll'I ·21 • MASSAGE Nei Ahhorhoorl bar. hav<' a large bl:itlnn FIG~T INFLATION P.B.X OPERATOR J\11rlr('sso~ruph nii;hts. Cull 548·9242. /\p CARPET LAYER wagon or van and be ;1hlc Adel t xtra monry lo lhl• /\ le I II l I SPECIAL FIGURE MODELS Mullii:raph ply clays, Vikki's Loun~c Call 752.6106 to work with 10·15 yl'ar fo mily h~ul ~l·l. l.0!·111 11~;.~~~0 r C n~ L '\: • Low RA.TES ESCORTS 2921 S. Daiml•r 17\11~2 Ncwpm·t Blvd. <.:M olils. Phone 536 -9712 for Amway cl1strlbulor will lfannnn • on or r. OUTCALLOMLY SAMTAAMA BEAUTICIAN cu:HtC/\LASSISTl\NT l11tc•rv1cw. train.li7:147M. _. ----- QUICK CASH 631-3811 Equal Oppor fo:mptoycr HAIR CUTTERS GOOD DECK HAMD FIRST COOK llousekcrpl'r for 11pry Ir 150 Month TD LO"" .._.S OPPORTUl'tlTY E . I 1• 1 elderly woman to help ~ • • "'" lmmed. openin1c C'&n Exccllt>nt leurning posi F'ull timt>, mu:.t l)c C'X· x p ef r 1 • 11 P 11 ar hcr !J·JOto l<!.:10. 4 ors New s mnll offices neor f.I DoniCfo Mortgage Co. C earn ..,50 .,.,,"' ""r 4() hr l"'r., wl'll "rooml'd, i·ol· wntcr ronl rc·~t auront d y ~ k J l213) 670·3160 collect PRE NANT? l\ltruct ive girl with nice ..,. ..... ,.,,,. ,.~ lion for sharp peri;on .. XI b C I a s " we e . 4l n e Bristol&Newport lJlvd orl7M)968·6 .. ·'6 Caring confidential figure to model 8 few wk. Vacations benerils w /onod typing (50·6( ll'Ai atc. between 20-34 ntpay& enclll:.. a I 67330.'iRmorns. RoyMcCordl• _______ ..,.. ___ ,counseling & r eferral. hours II week. Mu11t be Located in busy South ") t M yrs. Gd pay & bencifits. f or ap p t. Uutty 's1----------Rfflltor I 810 Mtwport Abortion, adoption & r.ophistieated & over 21. Coa!;l Plaza Mall. Regis Awdpmm lnas3iir18ea1 5ngof pegrrs.n on S<!ml retrnme to all !1781, Restaurant. 640-alZ:I. llOUSEK.t-:EPF.R, live In. Hair Stylin" • .">40·8888. · " · c/o The Daily Pilot, P.O. ·---------i No smoking. ReCs. net'. CostaMCHa548-7729 keeping. Greol pay. S trirtly ... n cl. o ffi ce m1tmt, p b h 'I' y ---------•IAIWIOUIM:ftM'fth/ APCARE 547-2563 privnlc &. n cxiblc hours. Apply In person. markclin" & sccrrt arial. Hl>x 1560, Costa Mesa, Furniture vt room, at • • • P~~--I N b t r .. Ca. 92626. WalcrCronl N.8 . Xlnt ....--.--s o cxpen enrc u pre er 8-auty Operator Expcr. helpful but not salary. 678·5666 1501 Westcllff Dr. Lod& FoUnd AIORTIOM someone with flair, good Pfl" N t nerl's sary. Starlin --------•!PRODUCTION Newport Finonr1al Ctr ••••••••••••••••••••••• CounseUng & Referral pt!rso n n Ii t)I & good • ame. ew opera or salary to 5500. Good com DEl T .ACO MEEDS Housekeeper. Siller, af· Leotl-Offtc~Spoce-LCKt&Found 5100 Preg.test-ava1l.wknds g r oomi n g. Writt> OK. 49""1·9604 & 960·<1<185 p nnv be nefllii. Call WORKERS t~rnoons. Non-smoktt. ••7 24 Hr Helpline 547·9495 Classified Ad 11003. Ua1ly Lag Rrh. 83J s.iso COUNTER HELP Irvine. "33·0929 art. 6 Qlll on Site Manager ••••••••••••••••••••••• p I t p 0 llo 1650 -Day & N11thl positions (714)6'12·31llext246 LO~T · Mal e Ter · •SPIRITUALRE/\DER cos1~~Mes.., 9202t;x ' Shlo.atA.ue-tSulllbty& CLEHK. ti. n Dru" av:ul Start S250hr /\pp· Fast growin~ fumlt11rc1---------r /r hihuohua mix. Vic ~·11 LI _... .. o l T Corona Del Mar. newt)' South ll .B. Oct. 1st .. u Y rens .. " lppt'"J ptrvt.r Stnrc. mm. ;i1:c-24. ~itp I>-e u r o, 1720 company nl·cds sk11lrll HOUSEWIVES ed Cr T 3l2N.EICaminoReal AUTOMECH""MIC Mu.st have su•..,rv isory notnrc.847256.'J Suprrior Ave. C.M . product1<1nwotker11w1t h decorat o arcs. wo Black/b1ege markings. SanCI t F l "' "'" Ith b th m as)' emen e. or app: Larae clean well equip· t:'\pr. All Apply 1n ------• 631-1831 expcriencr in sandtn)(. f'ow that the kids are :nsid~:Cce~s. r$9i.~ in· Cash Reward' 536-8280 492·903<• 4!>2·0136 ped~aya. Lots of work, person. Sol Cats, 19:l2 E . Clerk. 7 11 Store, JO: ---------•I asscmblin.: nnd pnrkinl!. hark in srhool. why not cl util. 675·S444 Lost : Male Blk & white own hond tools. SO?:.. Pomona Sl. Santa Ana pm· 6 30am. Full or par1 Previous Cur111turc ex· ~"to work? Trainee ~ • ShelUe Mix. Clay/ Santa *KAREN'S* HUNTAUTOCENTER t lm<' s2 .5o. hr. 675 Dental Asst , c hrsd , pe ricnrc preferable . sembly & Packaging 2000Sq n. Attr.actlvcly de Ana Ave. Wed, Oct 6. Otrl'CALL MASSAGE J82:> Laguna Ca nyon Rd. Bookkeeper/Receptionist. Paulurlno, C.M. 751-46.~. J!l llme. X·rays. Eves. Plcase npply J obs now avail. Long le cor. Near ani>ort. Call 645-'1044 La 494 3322 Need strong ore person· Some Sats. HS 8'16·3540. ho David Elliott, 833•9520. 838· 1780 gu.na . nel w /acct ·g & EDP ex· C erk Typist /Gen Ofc. Re· s rt term assignment&. f'OUND·FemaleTerrier EXOTICGIRLS per.Salary openec:c:ord· c c nl cxpcr. req'd . DEMTALASST. B.P.JOHN N TOP$$$$$$$S CORONA DEL MAR mix, lu~ & gray, 00 la.ii. Ing to ex per level. F tUme. 556·1905. •'R eg l s t ere d '' FURNITU ever A Fee Al T empo $150 01" sull" ample Ma""'aoe~Modelin" AVON 8312131 w /orthodontlc: exper . RE 0 · .. "' Vir Santa Ana Hts . "" " " --·--·------Companion/Housekee""• ... 1u .,.o 2""1 I Pkn AIC 67~"""" CA .,_ Outcall Only 542·3169 ..--.. me .....,. ,;;, 20()1 ~· Dver ltd ~ ... . . ...,..,,,. ....s-"""7• .........__., ...__ SS IOOKKEEP1"4G CLK w /~ial S('eUrity I l'S, to . . .. : Santo.~~. Callfornla e m n 0 • TOPLOCATIO.-.S FOUND: Boy'IJ bkycle nlEGF.NTLETOUCH ..__ xrrv Interesting position for llvc·m. cook fnr elderly Dent a l A ss1Rl ant , --fl'- llorbor are1t'1 best . 100 644·2795. Vic EastbluCf Outcall Muuge To Malet person w /bookkeeping lacly. $200 ino. 57s-a932• Orthodonllc ore. H. O.A. An Equnl TF.M PO RARY HELP .., 000 ,. co.. ••" N o-h 751·3931 C'-J ..___ M---1 7 f bl I Quulifled. Xlnl worklnll Op 1 L' 1 Call 540 4455 , o l . sq .... -.. , om ~· cwport ....,,ac , ""'"'"'' lffT'tr ex per, pre era Y n ar· Contractor n<'<'d& exper'd nd 644•1281 portun ty c.mp oyer -D~k~NOMtcs67~?.rfoo FOUND· Ft'm lnsh &t & HYP.-.O-THERAPY Earn about $'10 on every coun~ analysis, rr<'on• hou.tc palnlt'r to help In co · · F.qual Oppor Employer ~ml Cl\lhutthunfommlx Depression. welJh\. SlOOyou acll11&anAVON clll•l10f1:"' & c:omml~iilon overlo:idpcnodlnlx-a<'h Denial ortlcr opportunlt~ ~-Lot ... ...._._. 4500 Edl:1on Hig h llf('a. smoklnf , & Impotence RC'proenlative. Sell aceo1.mting.lllOkey prol Cl area l..<1(•nl n•fli n•q'd (or r('~ourceful. cxper.Oen.Ofr.C~nstniellonl'x Housewlfc1Stud<>nl. P .T. -'" "........ H 8 ., • """".,.,.,,. buuUtuJ J:ift!i, Jewelry. rlcncy & le typ na 675·5110 11fl 5.30 week i:halrslde u11ls\o n per req d Ex per '¥.hll" kl"• arA In school ••••••••••••••••••••••• OOO...eo27. · ...... pm. ~r•vvv· co1m~tlc11, more. I 'II Salary to SOOO. und good nlt<'t w pnv. pr11ctke ln H.B. phone!I, bkkpnf Lhru TD. w 1" "lo " . U • M1SS10N VlEJO. Retail. Retired aenUcman, Si", s how you hnw . Call rompany bcnrflt11. C.ll · 848-023-4 ty pe, u c'y dqUl'K , • rr co r or pain nii comm, or Ind. 18• per sq. Doo't drop the b•ll' Get a 150 lbs. wl hes to me-et M0·7041 or Zenith 7·13St. ~ Selll lhl Ith Career minded depcn backgrounrl helpful. rL:WS-o520 orS81'6700. jOb with a low-<"O&t Dally aurac\ive lady 60orovcirt---------SELL idle item:s with 8 oaS: P~l';X c1:!.1oed A~ ClaasUled Ada sell bl dab lc. n exlble, warm C.M. 54_9_84_2_1_· ---- Pilot Clauiflad Ad. nol over 5'5" for com pa. Dall.y Piiot Classd1ed Ad is a Jimplc maller ••• items, s mall llema o penonallly. Sal SG:i0-$700 HO\'t something to sell? 'Clauilled ACS. &42· Phone 142-5671. nionsh.ip. 673-3062 Want ad result.a 642-MZ·se78. ju,,t rall 842 5678 any Item. "'2·56711. mo. 642-4328, CM Cla.,Jlfled ads do It well. .. - I I ' • • " ft " • . ~ . ' ~.~~ ..... ?~~ ~.~~~ ..... !!~~ ~-~~ ..... ~!~~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~~!.~:-!·~ ..... ~!~.~ Tuesd!Y, Oc:tober 12. 1979 OAILY PILOT 8J1 KtTCHEHHllf' LIVE IN needed '°" HURSISAIDES .-.w.t.d 7100 Alltf.-S I005 FwMtw• 1010 71 •••••••••••••••••••••• INSPECTORS Part lJmo rook uper'd ~'!1all schhoool chlld.'!~~ !'~meE " ~d/ll~~d 1)Aay Reslal!ratll •• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I G 1 '.o C uoiauna me. 4.,_ ..... ~. 11per p.,., . P· on y. .arf t'lu o nv . alt6PM Pb Pult Superior 14U S«retarits Counlr)' Enallah Ant\quea **I BUY•• •Rec .. •1-/M•ch1 Hnc.p,771U G:uitelc1A ve. Superior Ave 'Ne ~ llB 8'1·9671 LYM J.tf:30 ~ :WlO. ' 2 Yu recent ex(M!r. lni----------ChQTl:e Nuni~ & Medin· THE JOLLY ROSER RESTAURANT SOUTH COAS 1873 J>laccnll.1&, CM lln T rear)Mon·l'"rl. __ _ Good uaed Furniture t.; Appll1rnces OR I will 1cll or St-:U. for You. SOlld wood dmin& iitt f& sheet mct11l. plai.t1c & lion. t"/ume. Apply Park :a;~~ee~i~~ Some PC LABORERS Supcnur. 14 is Superior ... UltSIHG Aidi:s 11 7 wuh cxper. LVN 11 7 with c>.pcr Ap ply. G11rflcld Conv llo~p. Will be accepUng employment applications lOam-Spm starting Tuesday Oct. 12th at the1r new restaurant located in Lake Forest. PtAZA HOTEL ~~e!ic~~~~~~ti:1'101~h. MASTHS AUCTIOM 64646'6 & 133-HU •lft..,roctH URGENTLY Ave. N ll 642·2410. MACHINIST 7781 Garfield Ave, H ll Hu Immediato OpenlniS f or : Movln11. mu1\ 1«1111 351\VEI New & used furn Cauc a1h1n Kell m,'•· 2 1ppl'1, ml11c. Wilson's Turklih Kellm s. Oaricaln Nook, Now 2 c iHpol•, xlnl cond. Stores -545 & 81-l W. .&94~ 19th, CM. 643·1930 & ft11n 1 yr expcr in in HU.OED process or all electronic lMpectlon. Mubt know color codes. blueprinlll & schematics. Excellent co. ~nc!il& lncludci; \ wks vacation oiler 6 mo's. 1l Pajd holldiays, group 10surance slort11 day of biro & many D\Ore. Apply Personnel VOLT 'l ......... ,, ...... ~ J ........ . 3141 Campus Drtn 546-4741 <Acr053 fron1 Oran2e Co. Airport) t:C1u.d Oppor Employer SHORT RUM 847 961 1. ---~~---Proto-l Y l>C & eJ<.pertmcn Out.bide Job, p/tlmc:. t:em tal, mUAl be reluiblt! llnd ntra Cl\J'Utmaa money. w o r k w J m l n Alll'Dctlve well groomed supervl~iun. C31l for In 1t1rl1. Flexlblo hrs . terv1ew. Jl't. Vly. area. Sl2·7l.8l Positions Available For: W~ CodtalW.........,. llaai.,. Dltltw.....,.. SALES S!CHT ARY Above a verage op portunlty & benefit 11 v111l a ble to most quiallllod &Ps>llcanl. App ly, 666 Anton, Cou· Ml~11. Cu. m26. 549-4778 , ____ . _____ _ Part lime. $100 /mo + Coob Hoateun l'hone S40·2SOO, xt4l •• rt ...... SHIPS L.AMTllMS MB·3262. 640·5829 or673-4339 Herculon hlde·a·bcxl, $16~. ApplloncH 8010 Sofa & love seat. $MO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• P.P.Jl39·~- MAID, full .lime, some Type & deliver lo('ul Equnl Opport-;mplm/f housecleanin&. a little mbllagea. Studenl OK. Freight Damage llotpolnl Fant111Uc ~ .. ncte.con ln· cooking. Exp. noc . 838.7076 22873 Lake Forest Drive Sale. 3308 W. Warner, bk. 4 cu.plaln's chairs, OOCUMENTOR DIVISION MIMlU 1---------t;l Toro SECRETARY for Real near H11rbor,SanlaAn11 h11ngln111amp,2endtbla. MAINTENANCE M N PIX Anl SerY Opr Ei.lale Co. in l''ashlon 536-8701 LADlt:S. earn money in A lmmcd ope nings ror 16lond. Must huve 4 yn Frlgldalre frost lree1---------- your :.pare lime. W Required. Laguna JUll mature.people lo work .-.w.t.d 7IOOHetpW•ffd 7100 ex~·r., lype 6S·70 wpm, rehig.$2000tbestofer. QUEENSofnSleeper train. Call Thurs & f'ri. _ar_e_a_.830 __ ·3.12_1_. ___ --1 variudhr6 &wknds. Paid ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• sh 80·90 wpm. Apply 7S1·0817. I006e ~illows. blfl cond, Addressogra ph Mulligrapb 2921 S. Dolmltr SClftta Ano Equal Oppor Employer _&iG_-0056_;__· ------1 MAINTENANCE training. Apply 1n REFtHISHIHG SALESLADY TMl, 300San Miguel Dr, •WHOLESALE* willde ver~·4760 1 _________ .. J;initonal. elec, plumb· person, 1SS Roe best.er St, shop nds full time help. 1-·1t1me posll101n wa1Uor #200, NB. 2 2 New Re h'J 19• Hl DE A BED SOFA L.AMIHATORS ing exper. fo'ork lifl & CM + pkk·up & delivery. a resp. woman w/strong ~~....-:.. W:ishers, Dryers. Dis Unu.scd. ~ost $300. sell Westsiiil Corp. s ailboat t.ruck driving, 18·22 yrs . PEOPLE PERSON 640-3868 sak·s ab1hly. 1-:xper. nee. Secy/Ukkpr $800 hwashers. at cost w/l. $165 & deliver ~-4760 m anur. has immed. ole~~c~t/.t~~GCORP Exec needs p/t1me ns-Page ~~-~~;:.!1.!rnlty C~mpProg /C.E. $14K+ Allison Who\esale News• Contemp. Sofa. INVESTMENT CASTING vacan cies for h a nd soc. inwhslesupply. Fl.II· R. E. SALES t~tcln$!Clk/EDP $750 75().4441 Thayer·Coggin designer. luminators w/ul least l __ 965 __ w_._I_8th_S_t_._c_.~_t_._, lycap1tal.i1ed.673·2223. Fr-14"'-Sales People, exp. Full & Ek<'Ti·i·h Radar S7.50hr Gray·brn solid. $250 )' w h n -1 Hccl'Pl hlc lype SS50 New Se11rs Lady Keonmor COMPANY Looking for exper'd wox Injectors. Pre fer a bly Enghsh speoking. Apply r expcr. e ave open· MA.5SEUSE 08·28) legit. Troi.J,_ Coune p/llmc. Asst Mi:r. Open lrv1nl' Personnel Agency wshr, $350; new Admiral -~-·_9_37_9 ______ _ mgs on the re$(ula r Mon full t lme position 1n ·--~ i ng Nov 1. G 1fts & 488 E l7lh Costa Mesa re!rig. $1SO. ~aft. USA C~ti'"J Corp. 965 W . I 8tti St. C.M. ~~~~~~~\sh;'~a~~.~:~1 ~~=s~~!f~. ~:1rx£j0.~3 Personnel •Personalinstruction Clolhing .54o.ssu. SU1tc2.2.1 s42.1410 5. HUDDLE TOOB Bed. ~lufl Fri thru Sun sam anytime. Clerk •Managementopporty's Salespeople ....,..-~......-~ Frigidaire elec dryer Uk Red /wht/blue $125. 3 hour s l\pply to lht! •to80'10Commission Pickup SSO. EarnS300. SERVICESTATION new $125. 546-0610 ~ner green vnyl bar stools securi l y gua rd, 27 MATURE W 0 MAN ,arl--Tlme •On the job training Call 644·9Ql0. ATIL'NDANT 6PM. $IS/all, SS7-40fl6 Janitorial, perm. p /llmc McCormick Ave, Costa p /tim e to welcome ~3 50• H •:\la"ylopoff1'celoc's "' eves. Variou'> areas • • .-er our · " Sales-Phone No "xper 21 or older. Anply in · · Mesa. newcomers & contact " .. Like new $600 electric $2.SO per hr. 1718 21~~~~~~~~~~ merchants. Flexible hrs Division or,. major corp. necessary. We will train, person We<l·Mon lOAM Garoc,ie Sal• 8055 Armstrong Ave, lrv1nc.1. has a need for a person to ~ to *""" average ,·,,. lo 4P~t. 2~83 1iarbor, stove. $1~.~a37sh6·7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Need car, Ille typing. _.,., ...,..,., ~ 540-7814 Legal Secretary. Busy ore ~7.3095. work Mon, Tues & 1.2 day R CAltPET come. a fl et training. C.M. at Baker St. · lanl Garage Sole: Oct. in H.B. General praclice, on Wed . lo assist In in· ED Call Mr. Huber for in• Service Station /\Hen· Ws hr, dryr, dlshws~r. 15·16·17. Moving, ever· Janitor 1 needed ro 3 r pre· 3 yrs minimum exper re· MEDICAL surance, new hire:., & REALTORS 962· I 011 tervlew, 5'10·6091 d.anl, exper 'd .. Day & S1Ha25n.·~.7s3t.5g190old, sacrifice ylhing must go. 15751 schoo • p/limc, ·7pm. q'rl.963·5657. FRONTOFFICE other personnel clerical Fordeltuls callLinda ... Aul nay Lane(Spr. ·Mon thru Fri. S. Coast _.:... ________ _. Bookkeeper.receptionist functions. Typing 60 Sales,P(flmeinTuxedos t.ves;l-\ill ,&p/time.Ap· ingdale/McFadden). Plaza area. $2.60 hr lo LEGAL SEC'Y w/medical billing exper. wpm. ability to handle lt.E.Sales Dept. of Westminster ply, ~hell Station, 17th & llcyclH 89'.MIOH. start.~0-4751. twcded in H.B. Good confidentialinformation. We'lla.Humberl Ma ll. Mornini,: hrs & lrvlnc,NU. ••••••••••••••••••••••••---------- ORANGE COUNTY ~alary & conditions. Mr. Good telephone manner when you join our team. some wknds, no cxper Scrvit:e Station Help ex· NEW & USED BlKES and wlns ize headboard & JR. ACCOUNTANT Gene ral practice at-Davis (714 )5'14·2967 & must like lo work Real Estate salesperson ne cc ss~~Y· Apply in pcr'd Older man pr~f'd. parts. Cruisers. MX's, 3 fra me $5. Folding cot lorney desires person ----------w/people. Personnel ex· licens ed pre fe rre d. person, lhc Seurs Tux· Day!. nr eves lo lOpm & 10 Spds. Cycle & Co. w/matl. $3. Pendulnm Generataccountingfunc· w1expcr. ¥.Ork ror one McdicalFrontOHice per.notmandatory. Many benefits lo h~lp c..'tioShop 6.12.'ouio. Park Lid~ 2i88Newport81vd.,C.l\1. pool game $7. Hanging lion ror ~mall m anuf. co man, 8:30 to 5·00 He~ ¥.ith uper. 32 hrs per Apply In Pl'rson you earn lop SSS. Tri~m· Sales person . 1,.•x pe r . Unio n S<.'rvice, 371 _642_·_79_1_0 _______ ,orange lamp $5. 2 blue Kno wledgu of com•mter l'QUlp. Xlnl benehls. <;.ill week. 642·4410 Uelwn l0.t2 & 2·4 mi:: pro.:ram + ~choohng Jewelry Uoutiques Ciro Superior NB 10 ...,. bo b'k eOnd loble lamps, S6i pr. ~ • 1714 )"A 6760 Wet.'k oflO/ll/76 ava1l.1blefor unhcense<i. Sou • ' ---s.,.. ys I e rapes & curta ns. s y~te m s cssen ti JI -"'"1. MEDICAL COMPANY OrSendRcsumc W1th llOYALPROPERTIES lh CoastPlata . Serv Sta Alt.end, Full & $45,xlnt7cond. Art1f1cial Xmas tree $8. Responsible Cor audit 01 LIQUOR·Markel. exper. needs full·lime Clt•a n Salary Reqwrements G.12·1830or968·44U5 SALESPERSO.._.S P.irt·T1me , Da ys & 554-'l 60 Revolving tree stand S2. computer r~n~ & pre prcf'd. Good pay. Appl room assembler. Good OOCUMENTOR " Niles. Salary & Comm. luikli,_ Mot.rial 8025 Revolving color for tree p~rahon ~r Journal en in J)l'rson before noon a manual dexterity rl!· R. E. Salesperson Experienced. l\tos Elec· 673·3320 ·~ s $2. Santa C laus $6. tnes. -!'ss1~t accounting J0.1l s. Bnslol.SA. qUJred . No exper. nee. Needed in prestigious of· tronic P osta l Sc ale ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-0377. 333 E. 18th Sl, SSUTIM!.rcvlososr.WITCH 1uc 556-1905. DIVISION fice. xlnl lo<'alion, at· Draw+comm1ssion Call STOCK & DELIVERY I CEDAfRSH~KES C.M. 1139 Baker (.;o~l.1 ~le :.a 549-3041 "' " T Pl tractive bonus plan. Pall)' 642·!i677.' XJnt opporlunily for ag D r~ct r M 111. Call1---------- o a ce your MOTEL M Al D Work. Addressograph HESTER·IROW..... gressive young person to anytime. 503-476-0121 2 FAMILY SALE "Fast Result" Neat, energetic women. Multigraph 8339781 " learn & grow. Start al cameras& Sun0rtl7.10AMto4PM. Equal Oppor Employer Service Directory Laguna Bch resort. 6 2921 S. Dolrnler 1r • * SEAMSTRESS S2.80 p/hr. Advu.ncc;m.ent Equipment 8030 8951 Balnford Or, HB. Nr ad .... Call Now Day wk or p /time. SAHTAAHA Restaurant rJp1 d for qualified ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ad a mFs/Magn.olia. Rbedd 494·1196. Equal Oppor Employer CIANCARLO'S With ExfMri..,c• per!lon Call 9i>:J.6702 twn errara car e SEL L idle items with a 642-5678 New rt Be ch cloth' , -Lenses Cannon 200mm, frame, twn ~ sel, all bt.l2Z MotelMaid,exper or w11l ---TWOGUYS po a mg TELEPllU'J t-: SALES. 55mm 1.2 FD. S.S .C. kinds of furn, lamps, DaJIY Pilot Cl_as_s_i_fi_cd_A_d_. 11 ._ ________ ~ train, full or part time. p h 3 rm a c y : E x p c r • d FROM IT ALY 51'!~e ha~ ope!''"!: ror ~ . lll't1red or cli,,ahlt•d men lenses. 5120 ea or S200 for toys. clothes, opplianccs, He4pWarrled 71 oo HelpWonted 7100 C.M Call645·9137 rt•spon.~11>1~ drufl, tlerk 1 artrT::~~~~~.~~rcss a nd ~·omt•n E x tra both.6-16-6l48bef 6. orfice s upplies, ett-. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••:\IRS HOMt:MAKEH 011 r kl1mc . No n1 ,::hl11 ,,r UNDER NEW TJilorShop MJnJ!Jl'r mom>~ for lhl• hohdays. (',\S il only, no checks. · 'you.have 2 hrs 3 d~y·! :' n~;'i·. M ~~l ha \t' nl·u,t 644 5070 .Morn1ni: or l'Vc n111 ~. Earn xtra money&. run .ipplal & hkc pcopl i MANAGEMENT . ~~~~~.J·.irnit1~• .. Phom,~!!!•••••••••••••••••• 't;1r1s 10/13. Antqs, misc, Uunc an Phyfe Tbl. Corner Sl ater /Van Buron. llB. FOR PEOPLE WHO WANT A CAREER IN SALES, GETTING AHEAD MEANS STARTING FROM THE RIGHT PLACE. Tod;iy, nr.111nq ahead means starting trom the right place. Knowing about lhe options available. And not being afraid to try something new. Merrill Lynch is ottering you lhe chance 10 discover new opporlunll1os now available 1n the security Industry lnlormatlon about positions as ~ecuri!les sales Account faecuhves. About lhe training you'll rer.01110 al Merrill Lynch. Whilt it takes to be successful. And how gro<it tho rewards can bo. Yov'l/ llnd out about: • Whit tho Hc:urlly lndu1try la really 111 about. • How you c1n earn wh1I you're wor1h. • Jual whit 1 aoc:urillH .. lea Accounl EHcutive really doe• • , . 1nd how you can do it loo. • Whit lclnd ot oarnlnga polonli1I 1 poraon on W1llSlrHth11. • Whit It takff to be auceeaaful. II you'll lnvrsl a few houis of your lime at our Career Seminar, we might be able to open up whole now career vistas that you may never have considered. And you II hea r II stralghl From people~who aro succosslul ORANGI! COUNTY Thured•y, Oct.14 7PM-9PM Alrporter Inn Skyliner Room 18700 M1cArthur Blvd. Irvine ~ ==&Smllhlnc. vc1ur home ut the ~ame ~ r P 1 Y 1 n ~.'' r " 1') n · i\cceplin~ applications , --E I o l t ln sh Setler Pups/ time. TrJ101ng 1:1vt•n ·~c wp o rl 'e n er for wailers, waitresses, S1•ams tress cxpl•r 'd. quu 11 11o r uni Y ''all 645 39 .. 7 1, .. t 8 .... 0 v l.hurma~y, 400 Newport w 0 men• s l: 11 s t 0 m Em rl•'~ er AKC, shots. wormed. .._ ., • ·' " , hos t e s i. , c a s h i c r s , 64~ 7473 10.:JO&from3.30·5 00 Ctr_O_r..:.,_N_R ______ , busboys. c l_o lh~ng . XI nl .1 ll l Tclcphom· Sale~. p/lime, -----·-----fl~r>es 8060 HEED CHRISTMAS MO HEY Tempor ary help, (ap· prox. 3 mos.). Must lype well and be able to ha n· die HEAVY phone lraf fi e. 10:00am·7:00pm Mond ay thru Friday. C all 6 -12 ·4321, P a t Stephenson, for appoint Daily Pilot. 3:lO W. Ba) St., Costa Mesa. Equal Opportunity 1-~mploycr PHONE SALES Phone S a~es people. m.dc or female, 16 to GS years uf age. Guaranteed wages or commissions . 250 t.:ast 17th Street , Su1l e 0. Costa Mesa. bet wren 5.00 & 8·30 pm. 6'l6·4223. l::qual Opportunity Emplu>er PHOHE SOLICITORS I0065Gorfield Ave. stitchrn ~ lh'l (.ood exper prl'l'd . not nee. AKC regis tered Afghan ~tain Valley wages. 548 7200 S2.50 hr & up Call Lloyd, pups. ~ male. 3 fe m. SALE OR LEASE 8 l 8 r ook11 u r s t . in 4H7 :n20bet"n t-8pm. Champion stock. 848·0563 Morgan Quarter Geld· Md)onald Plai a. Appl)' SECRETARIES Stud service, AKC, golden Inf/., rr:JSt acl immediate· Mon· Fri 11 : JOA M to relrie\'er . 1-l..:.y_l_64_5_·_79_1_s ____ _ ll ooP~t. .:::=;,~~ly Needed TYPISTS 545·5402 Tally Ho Fanni . Retired vehicle checker. F e m a I e G et m a n Box stalls S90·$l00. Pipe part time work avail. •Admlnlstrati•e shortha1red pointer, corrals $75. We feed & Good pay. Short hour.. •T.chnlcal •R~ yrs. old, papers, loveable clean daily. English & Call 673 8617 11rSalH •Compose,. Opr & fnsky, nc!l'cls lots o Western lessons & train G 'R •PurchasilVI •MTST·MTSC rm SS1·!l343 afl 6PM In g. 17262 New hope. HI GE : Opr de pl com· ··'7 *Cl rlt y., · t Founl:un Valley, 979.9475 mis New sa1l·el\p, n •ha •Accountlnq e ,pis 5 Cute mi'< pups. Med siic. ble Manner Yachl~. NoShorL1t1•Sh 6wks.$5eoch. Palomino mare. show 6i5· 1393 LonJ? nr short le rm :>46·0021. Quably. must see to ap· a!>s1~nmc11b Top SSS. prec. 5650. S46·57n RN'S Psychiatric WHU: Fox Terrier pup· pos1t1ons. Contact D1reC· up. !128·0224 (714 J ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exper. pre(. S3. p/hr. + tmmedlalc openin~s 011 bonus. Evening hrs. Call 3·11and11·7 shift!i in our _J_a_ck_._1_s_1·_M_1_1 ___ _ LYN'S & RN'S Ni~ht relief. 1\lso, on-call 0 tempo pies, AKC..:. 11 wks, SlOO & Jewelry · 8070 tor of Nurs ing, Santa 3848 Campus Drive 111o...1 An a P s y c h i al r i c T EMPORARY llELP 546-4741 Labrador Retriever, 2 yr WA" TED Hospital, 2212 E 4th St, Call 540•4455 <Across From old, male free lo g T 0 P C A S JI SA.S.13·8481E.O.E. Oran"cCo.Ai'rport) home.673·0593. 001,LARPAID FOR 218 bed rehabililution ---------· F.qual Oppar Employer .. y Ou It JEWELRY RH· Weekends Equal Oppor Employer Free to Yot.1 8045 · • PRODUCTION •••••• ••• ••• ••• ••• • •••• W A T C JI ES • A RT facility. We offer top wages and our benefits package is excellent. Please apply al: BEVERLY MAHOR 2''452 Via F'"'5 trada Laguna llllls, Cu An Equal Opportunity F.mployer NURSES AIDES We have immediate openings for ma ture Nurse s Aides. E x · pericnce is preferred, bul we will provide paid training. Day s hirts available. Please apply in person ot · IEVERL Y MANOR 24452 Vin Estrada Laguna llills, Ca. i\n Equal Opportunity Employer Da" s.-.rvisor s 1·:c1• L'.'l'AJ' ._. 0 DJ E c Ts' G 0 L D. , -r--"~ '' TYPST ToywhilePoodle,frce lo SILVER SERVI CE WORKERS Apply Park Superior. ;\l;iturc woman l'/Ttmc I ·CLERK family with lots of love. FJN E FU.RN •-AN. 1.i.i:; Superior Ave, N B. Sccrrlarr Bei;1slrar ror Varil'ly . Nice phone 640.8750,644·!'>400evcs "' · MALE/FEMALF: 642 24 10. pre school. Send rc~umt' munncr rcqU1red. 8 to 5. TtQUES.645-2200 C/o Pre School. General Sml ~n1:mel·1·in14 Supply FREE DIRT E t · K Immediate O""nings ror Sal es Care er·s te ady (' ngagemen ring Vol ap-,,~ k S k Oeli vcry. Cor ona dcl o. C:\l , S600 to S650. Ph YOUIIAUL 6462607 cd t S700 l Incentive (piecework) wor • 175 w -up to start. Mar <.;a. 92625 546·0600 . . pr;us a accep produc tio n wo rke rs. Hiller Brush 554.71\St Castrated Gray Tiger Cat. best ofr. 642·7958 Minimum 2 years recent Sales Clerk ma ture SECRETARY TYPIST J yr old. Nice disposition. Mcxiran silver jewelry al factory cx~crience re· ~rson da)'s. ~u~t he c!<· P /Time·Permanrnl ro P /Time. trvt,n c. J .E Shots. 548·2553 cost ssooo. All or part. quired. Must. be able lo pcr 'd . J\pply Mon-Sat m a1or fond manufac H1ch Co. i51·2600 Fumit~ IOSO Evcs.499·1526 work any sh1fl + O\•er· JC~·tl'M . Sho\\case Cards lurer S/ll·Typing req ------tlm<.'. S tarling w a~e~ & Giru,, LaJtuna Hiils Call <it 1l 554 1R11 Veterinary/ Asst ••••••••••••••••••••••• •estoc:k 807S from $327 per hr. I iiy l\lnllSRl·4950 f'ronl & bac~. Expr'd MOVING. mus t set1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rangeconl(o well overS4 -S•curityGuord Send resume to 234G AM /FM s tereo w /tblfieg.Morganmare,broke per hr ofter lcornin ~ SALES F /1 1me. Swini: s hift. Minutema n Way. (;;'It speakers $125. gold de· lo ride & drive, blk period. dcpe nd1n1t on Loc al & Nal·Wid e Malure.rN1redman prc 92626. coratorthlwithpedeslal parade Morgan gelding, Pmployccs production telephone sale&, office f'd. Uniform furn. l'honc ha s e S1 S, pa Ir o t:nl(. W cs le rn (714> We also offl'r cxr~llenl product s. n o ex pe r & car n•q'd. 1-·acihly in Women. 25 & older. to ~old /while swa~ lamps 338-1011 company paid benefits. needed. Slop hy & see us . C.M. Call Sl(l D1ck111son. work !or hous<.'cleaniog SZ5. camera SlO, maple•--h-.------1-0-7-8 Apply9am·12noon J\mtech Corp .. 17222 51!>·1277 Tuec;.t-•ri s<>rv1ce P(f1m<.', i:trl hrs bunk beds $G5 hi·boY ac •M"Y Monday Thru Saturday Arm~lrnngAve., Irvine. 9am.Jpm. !i7SGS:;:1 maple dresser $60. •••.•••••••••••••••••••• or FnrTho~e i\pplicanls ----~ . --wa lnut. cha ir SlO s m Printing Press . 1250 Who l\rcUnable 1lave som,cth11~~you want ~l.hng a nything .wllh :q WOODWORKING wood cabinel $10, block Multi, delivered in· ToApply Durmit tosl'll?Class1heduds do D.uly .P1lol Class1flccli\d SmallMf,:t.Co necds full naugahyde recliner slalled,guar.554·2384 Rt•J;tular Interview il well -<.:all NOW • •S a simple mall<.'r t1 mc/permnncnt young chair $25, Spanish 11lylc f llouts. Our Employmt•nt 612·:W.78. Just cull 642·56711· man " i l h c x P . i 11 shelf for bookfl or ? $10, ll~ Forklift. II ts 5 Ton OfficcWillUeOpcn HttlpWClftt•d 7IOOHelpWattted 710 woodworking w/manirnl misc itcms.CullGl5·7857 vcrllc ~I. $2350. Run~ 5l'M·7PM 1>k11l~. Good 011porlunlty '-fl"pm wr"kd·,1yr. well. 64a·1_69_1 ____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• v V ~ n on Tues & Wed for energetic, h;1rd work· Mlsctlloneous 8080 Res taurant ing mun. in n 11rowinit Used 8 rt. custom burnt •• ••••••••••••••••••••• Company. l>cp<.'nllahillty orange n11ugnhydc H.tpWanhd 7100 H.lpW•t~d 7100HtfpW..t.d 710 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1s u must. Ct1ll for u11rt. couch, $100. '191·3379 WANTED 6 <15 ·6777 W i\ I.TO N MOVlNG MUST si-·J L TOP CASll DOLLAR con1<wooo. 931w.17th nv FRi.' Solid. teak di~. PA 1 o t' on v o u R St. Costa Mesa . lbl t d ft 4 JF.WELRY. WATCHES, FREE REAL ESTATE CAREER SEMINAR "No Obligation or Cosf' MOte>A.Y, OCT. I Ith at I P.M. 162411Hch11Ycl,H•"'MJl•hodt llCOME PA.RT OF ONE OF THE TOP PA.YIHCi. CAREERS IM SA.LIS SEE ROB • Advanced Marketing Techniques ERTS: • Aud o-Vlsuel Sales Tnilnlng Prooram • Amazing ERA Electronic Property Presentation System • Succ.u Formula HEAR ROBERTS: • 1978 Cereer Qol)Ottunltles • Unlqu. Professional Training Progriun onH TO THI l'UILIC CdMPUMIMTAIY llRISHMIMTS l .. ••••d hnw. le .... w .lc:lllMCI _.. hlTfffd to~• far lllllthd ....... ec.c.o• •• ...._. 848-1688 Ra~~~ssn~····~:~~y ... ... ~ .. . . . . VOIT, INC. 380 I S. Harbor Santa Ano, Co An Equal Opportunity 1'.:mployerM /l-' Professional Rock Dand, needs dnvers w/trucks lm mediately. No exper necessary. Please call 848-1653 (Glen ) P/tlme Sales, $40·S70 wk/up. Men, ladles, stu· dents. Eves / Sot 554-7851. 839-7696. RecepUonist(fyplst FUii time, salary, $550. Send resume lo Sun & S111l Club, 247S2 Toledo Wy, E l Toro 92630. 8cfore Oct 15. ------·· RECEPTIONIST rro1trt'11111v(' nn1 mal hospll11I OHNIC exc.'t'P· tlonal future for vt'rutlle, lakr <'h11rge. m tu.re person. Min 4 yrs olc cxpcr rcq'd. Sendro- 6Urnc tO Clol!11lflcd ad no. 777 c/o DaJlY Pilot, PO Box 1560, Coit• Mesa Ca pm. FAR WEST SERVICES Has A New Exciting Concept In Restaurant Service. It is to be named SUNDAY'S And it is located in Mission Viejo at 27750 Crown Valley Parkway on the East corner, off San Diego Freeway Now Interviewing For: Coob .. , .......... Interviewing Mon Thru Fri. 9am·5pm At Our Temporary Office In The Trallcr On Premises We .,.. an equal opport\.W'llty employer • Young married mnn to learn all phases or lhe grO<.'ery bus. Gd future. grl work 'g cond in 11 friendly atmosphere nr the bch. In person only, 3.147 E. Csl. Hwy. CclM. .• ex en s to R , chairs, $1SO. Rosewood & /\RT OBJ ECTS, GOLD chrome correc toble $20. S l I.VF. It SERVICE. 2 Rosewood occ. <'hairs t•INI'; i''UllN & AN· SLS ea. Rrown & Jordan TIQUl';s. 645·2200 patio furn. S30. Trundle LUGG "'GET "'GS bed frame, as new $20. '"' '"' New queen size bed, ex-from your business card. tra firm, $125. Whirlpool ~nd one ~ard for each Merchandise frost.free rerrig,. l6 cu. lag plus one spare. We ••••••••••••••••••••••• fl. $25. Triple dresser, return permanently AnHquH SOOS Pecan. $50. Small boat sealed attractive tag & •• •••••••• ••••••• ••• ••• $25. Other mlscell. Items. strop, meeting airline 644·0400 (Keep try lnii ! ) I. 0 . rcqul rementa. Pre· Wond•rland vent lo,,s & lhciftl For a ~ Med.lterrAnean dinette. 6 personalised tag enclOH Of Antiques' cbu, vinyl coverln1. wallpaper, fabric or RUG E warehou~e 5Sx40". Howell malte. 1 "Day Clo" paper & wo crammed with over 500 leaf, 12" 847·1917. Btwn will back & trim your music boxea, nickelo-1_&-_u ________ , tap. Or try two cards deon plano11, circus or· AnUque deslc, sbAg Dxl2 back to back. gana, w,ll clocks, orange&brownrug. F.nd PRICES: grandfllther e locks , tbl11 , easy·e halr. $2eaor3/$5 fA.'lclnu.lin1unllques. Noritttke China, misc. 415 lags s1,60ca. Over $1,000.000 Worth ·rurn. G4$-4S32 6/9 t11ga $1.SO en . i\merk;in lnlernatlonal --10ormore$1.40t'a. Galleries: 1802·T KC'tter· HIDABED, S25, llerculon Sales Tex Included I n11 St .. I r\'lne. Tel. green & itold NO CARD? . 7~4-1177. Open Wed th 002·4051 Drow your own or send Sat. 9 AM to 4 PM. Visit! -----numc, addr(',S, phone & Mal('hln~ sohi & t•halr. we'll make one r 11nl per Anllqut oak /\moire. choc brn c-orduroy In· to.a Add2l'cacb. 8S"ttl•h• 56"wldo, t1''de· dlv1du11l pillows. 10' mns Smd check or money or· p. Af\Uqu• oek Bullet. old. Pd $7SO. Asking $36$. derto: •{,mlrrOJ', 55"wld e Stereo & components. PILOTPllMTIMG 23 dMp. Bolh plecu l AM/FM tape w/at•nd, 3 po Do l......,. bHot cond. 64().20$2 moe old. $170. ~ · · 11 _, c.c.ta Meta, C.. 92ID8 ' ..,._ 1. - : . .. . .. ' , • Stooge Op<'ra (:audy lk!lhea· GO to SEED Our hod 1cs <ire like de· lac.ite flower~ No maltt·r how much we la' 1sh care on them, tht•y ... till GO to Boots, Soll 9060 SEED. ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------i i ERICSON 35 ·75 .Toyota C2200cc· > 14,000 & Newport Moonni.: m1. cng. & 5 spd trans 7t Hl63·3538 536·571>7 '74 Courier. Ji<.o.,t ofrl•r art 1;µm. S.\8 ill3'1. S500; EnJ,\hsh :;addle/bit, --· i etc. Nu pd. 5450. ;icccpl llob1c Hi. trlr. Ill'" tran~ & 0;~1~~r:-or~;~.:111;1 • S300. (213) 860.S750 afl. 6 more. Sl,425. tHli K255 or ~s IHS 0015 &' sr a H OADWAY CREVIER t _pm. 5111 7505. SANTA AMA 2nd llancler Thrart Shop. ltl' W1l1.kat. 1 Sail t>.5 El Camano. :i;,o Eni.:. 1 835·3171 120 i:: 2.1td , CM. Uchind RUl:lllJ.: rigged. wd. i.:ood. !IUK !l~30 urt G fH~LTIMATE OlllVIHOMACHIHE Feed Burn. 'rues·S.it 1(}.5 $225. 5Jt. K5Kl \\kdyi.. Trundle bcd w/framl' 16' Hob1t• Cat hi:ht, t,ii-.t. mullrci-.sc~. S-10. New i-..a1b .,.., ,.,.. mdow~ -t 6'1-t 074.t lrlr. SI 150. &l4 8-lti7. t 'onn M 1n O :\f 11111• 1•lt•1· 11r1:11n 1•x1·1•llcnt c11ml1 t1on. StiOO. I' I' 532-125!> ~lurtin Guitar, t5 yrs 1•1<1, lnll'Ond. ssuo. i.1· ix11H•r nr 1-,111 ho.it Wt r & el1•1•l 11\ .111. Nw1n t Bay. t.13 :J.'JS!I (Ill 1rm 675 3515 SAIL 30' m:i\, ll11l'k i.idc Office Fvmit-;r; & t .i ,. s 1 0 11 • :i 0 :s , F. • Equipment 8085 _f,d~cwatcr. (l)H71-21lllf>_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bernt Mooring Ava1la1Jlc. S W E D A l' A S II S2.2S per ft. Call l'Vl'~ REGISTF.ll MDL 46. 673-53.19 l.lK f; ~ EW . S295 ------ 494-45.34 Transportation S.C.l't1. mdl 144 Eire ••••••••••••••••••••••• lm&Lnlic Copier. gd cond C~rs, Sai•/ U>O. 492-0661 It..,. 9120 ....,...._._ -----...................... . Pianos Ir Onions 8090 8. Caml>(.•r w/!llove rdilf ••••••• •• •••••• •••••••• sink, wnter. tank'. bed' 8 n • h d U ..1 ht Must sell $225. 545·3702 "•nn1s e pn9 - -S650 644·1836 M.foriHd likes 9140 ---------...................... . Grinner <.:onsole. ;(Int cond. Arprs'd s1000 H ighest orr n l'Ccptc•rl 768-1459 Baby Grand piano. 5 '4 ". Sl,600 673-1001 Brand Mew '7 6 HONDA Cars OVER 100 To Choose From! UNIVERSITY Oldsmobile Honda Cars • GMC Trucks 285() llarlJor Hhd L'er..ta Mesa 5 IU·~U Joguor 9730 ....................... CLOSED SUNDAYS Saab 9760 ..•.•.••..•.•...•••.... ·72 Sa;ib. Auto. air. 4-dr. Cull 63.t-3630, day~; eves. li44 ·5117. ----oyoto Ml\RQUIS MOTORS 1b801 MARC.UllllT( Pl\WY ~un Oo"qolrwy •A""~''I I••• Ml~~ION VII JO 831-1880 49~ -1110 ORANGE COUHTY VOLVO . 1-:XCLUSI V ELY VOLVO Lai l(c~l Volvo Deal.•r 111 Orange Count v ! HUY or LEAS1'~ DIRECT I .11~:"'' S1•lrl ti• •II ot Nl'"" ~": u,cd C.1dlll.i1' i11 <.>r.111go Cuunly 0Pl'O ',undJV CJ<.lillac MJ\ll'• UcJkr :'hDO llJrbor Bh .I. (" o\13 M•''J 540 4' I 00 Nabers Cadillac Chn rolet 9 920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCUR'I' 16600 Bt.,1c h Blvd Huntington B<'~1ch 842-8844 Dodcje ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·1s t'ordorbn. J.Q:tdC!d. Lo mila~e. Silver cruy. SUSOO, PP. 8»-922 J '68 Dart..6·cyl, very clean, ttd cond. $625/bst offer. Also, '63 Comci. 6-cyl. runs .:ti. $:?75/bsl ofr. • 642 5531._ ----- Ford 9940 ...........•....•...•.• GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd Huntington Heach 842-8844 1975 CHEVY MOMZA 2 +2 ,\ u ll1 m .1 l 1 t.:. rad i o. Mo;;rick -9941 h1::1ll·f, ~Pl'l'l:.tl wh1•1'IS· ••••••••••••••••••••••• t·an 'l lw luhl f 1111n N t-:W ! \!IXOl.\\'1\ I. ONLY $2991 1974 MAVERICK SF.l>AN. H cy t •• aulornutic, pwr. stccr- inJ.?, air cond .• vinyl roof & low miles. The perfect 2nd car! {208795). · HOW OHL Y $249~ Mercury 9950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY'S i••lllllll ....... Don't See Us First ••• But See Us Last!!! .. If You Don't Buy From COM NELL, You're Paying Too Much!" '62 Mere Meteor. Sml V8. ncnt valve Job & tires. Great 10/out. $600 . 5'15-2575 VOLUME •SALES CONNELL TOYOTA DEALER •SERVICE --------MustoncJ 9952 KXA \lPLE: Brand nt•\\< l!lili Tovola. 2 Dr. & futlv l'(IUllJIX:d. 1158527 ), • ONLY $2997 Ml\RQUIS MOTORS 18801 MAllGUllllH PKWY ~nOu•qoFtwy .. Avt. .. tyl••t MISSION VlfJO 8Jl-28HO 49S • 1210 •LEASl .... G CHEVROLET 1""'11 '66 Mustang. Super ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 2828 llarbor llh d. engine. E('(!rything ellle •eneas '·osTi\ 1•1 ESA · ..., .. . hurtin. Sec to believe. Delivery 540-1200 Makeoffer.642-4274 t ~·rvi('c&purtsnowopcn '-------• ~ or1 Sal'~ H to 4 for yuu1· 197 3 CHEVY ·115 Mustang. 6 cyJ, 3 s])\I. l'OOvemencc. NOVA LIFTBACK ~. .,. ' VOLVO 556 30()9 I V!I, :1ulomul1c, pwr. ---------- :;tt•t•rani;·unusuall y '67 Fastback, 289 4 s pd, dl•an • <Sl>7028 >. mags $795. ONLY $2897 s15.001sart.s. Ml\RQUIS MOTORS 18801MAllGUllllll Pt<WT ~nn 01rqof1 w y -Av1•ty ( ut MISSION Vil JO 8ll • 111110 49S • 1110 Oldsmobile 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'ft6 Delta BR. 4 speed, 42S c.i .. runs l(ood, body Cair. Ca II G75.JU08. S350/offcr. Pinto 99SJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7i1PfNTO XLN'r. COND. S:!, JOO 545-4~ ATLAS Chrysler f'lymouth Open UJ1ly & Sun. 'til 10 l'M 292!) mwoor Jllv11 .• C~ta l\te)\a 546-1934 llt•ntington Beach . Fo11ntain Valley EDITION Afternoon I N.Y.Stoeks '.* * * VOL. 69,. NO. 286, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES , 1976 TEN CENTS Revamp Fuels f Ir~ i Crowd's A tarp, unruly crowd Inundat- ed tbe Huntington Beach Civic Center Monday night. drawn by an explosive public bearing on the .downtown r~evelopmeot plan. 800 TurnedAway; Hearing Reschedukd that they would be demolished~ redevelopment were carried otf "I'm very distressed," sli said this m orning, "I can~ believe that the city couoc· would not hold tbe meeting atj bigger place to accommodate.., the residents. About 400 people Oooded the council chambers and a crowd estimated to range from 2SO to 8IO milled around ootside, pr&- vented by fire marshals and police from entering the over- crowded meeting place. Officer D .J. McK'erren satd the people outside were were at best unruly as they reportedly backed up tight against two glass doors leading to council chambers. ''I've been in riot conditions before," McKerren said, "and Happy IOOth Seal Beacher Celebrates D•llf Pilot Stall Photo AT CENTURY MARK Seal Beach's Duvall Trustees Eye Salary Hikes For Teachers Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees will con· sider ratificalion or a six percent 'salary increase lor861 teachers at their 7: 30 p.m. meeting at Edison High School this evening. The 665·membe r District Educators Association, the 'teacher s' bargaining unit, voted . 509to 10 Monday to ratify the ten- tative contract reached Sept. 28 between their representatives and district negotiators. Under the pact, this year's sala ry range for teachers, ret:roa('tive to July 1, would be from $10,000 lo $24,228. Last year's salary range was from $10,000 to $22,857 and included an 8.5 percent pay hike, district of· ficials said. The one· year contract includes increased payments by the dis· trict to covl'r higher medical in· surance costs. The district has yet lo reach an agreement with administrative and non-t eac hin~ personnel. However, lf a similar six percent pay boost is granted all employes, it will cost the district $1.6 million. Riot Injures 50 MA NILA, The Philippines (AP) -Police clashed with de- monslr a tor s during an an- tlgovernment rally or some 3,000 persons, including priests and nuns, and at least 13 policemen were injured, authorities said Monday. Estimates of the total injured ranged up to 50. Coast Weather By RAY ESTRADA OftlleO•llr PllOtSU" John F. Duvall's daugbter·in· law was excited as she brought the Seal Beach man a letter from the White House. Duvall, 100 years old this week, was indifferent at first and mere- ly said, "He only wants MY.vote ... Elsie Duvall, wife of the cen- t enarian's 71-year-old son, Frank, opened the letter and r ead a birthday message from the Presidentorthe UnitedStates. Mrs. Duvall said her father-in· law was still not impressed, but took the card eventually and, despite his failing sight, tried to read the message through a light- ed magnifier. As he did, she said, shecouldseetbat hewastouched. But the retired painting con- tractor expresses more concern for the future of the country's natural environme.nt than for its political figures. A Seal Beach r esident since l~l. Duvall said he has seen most of the natural beauties in all the states in the Un.ion except for those along the north Atlantic coast. "I don't understand how people can take a plane and fly over the country and say 'I've bee.n there' -they don't see anything except what they left at home," Duvall said. An avid bicyclist since his ar- rival in the Los Angeles atea in 1886 from Missouri, Duvall said his memories of hunting, camp- ing, fi shing and cycling are his fondest. "I r emember when what they now call Huntington Harbour was just a big slough. I used to have the best times hunting and fishing there,'• he reminisced. Although h e believes his memory to be poor, Duvall said he can still recall the Seal Beach and Huntin~on Beach coast as it (See lOOTH. Page AZ> Mardian Gets New Tri'al; Others Denied WASHlNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Court or Appeals today up. held the Watergate conspiracy convictions of three onetime close aides to former President Richard M. Nixon but ordered a new trial for a fourth defendant, RobertC. Mardian. Mardian, a former N'ucon cam- paign official and an assistant at- torney general before that, was convicted on New Year's Day, 1975, along with former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and the two men who once were Nixon's c losest a dviser s, John D. Ehrllchman a nd H .R. Haldeman. A firth defendant, Kenneth W. Parkinson, was acquitted in the cover·up trial, which lasted four months. All were accused c:A attempting to thwart investigations into the original Watergate break-in on June 17, 1972. Dist . Judge John J. Sirlca presided over the trial. Nixon was named as an unin· dieted co-conspirator by the saine grand jury. this aitualion seemed to have' all the ingredients of one." "Alf that was lacking was a catalyst to set it off,'' be said. The crowd was chaotic and boisterous and could be heard shouting and pounding on glass doors and windows. as proceed- iogs went on inside amidst wild cheers and jeers. Beverly Rodgers, president of the Dwyer PT A and a resident of the proposed redevelpment area, was one of those caught outside. She said the crowd outside numbered around lllO but was "'" ......... Seven-year Vigil This black vulture perches atop skull impaled on a stick in Tucson's Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in which he has exercised squatters rights. Museum officials say that seven years ago the vulture entered the walk-in aviary at feeding time and later refused to be escorted out. Three Deaths Laid To Swine Flu Shot PITTSBURGH (AP) -The Al- legheny County Health Depart· ment shut down all 13 of its swine nu inoculation sites today follow- ing the deaths or three elderly people hours alter receiving the vaccine at a Pittsburgh clinic. "As a precautionary measure, we have closed the sites pending a study by the coroner's office HBThieves Double Up Thieves whom ay be stretching their luck a bit are sought today in two separate burglaries at the Huntington Beach Police Depart· ment pistol and firearms train- ing range. Investigators said Monday so- meone broke into a soft drink machine al the range office, steaUng the undetermined sum of money inside the coin vending machine. Someone also burglarized a car belonging to a private securi· ty policeman engaged in target practice on the premises, involv· ing a $150 loss. The loot included the victim 's wristwatch and s tar-shaped badge. and the two physicians who are here from the federal Center for Disease Control," said a Heall.fl Department spokeswoman. ''Al this time, there is no known factor linking the deaths with the vaccine or the im· munization program," said the spokeswoman, Miriam Blair. She added that all three victims were elderly and they all had his· tori es of heart or lung problems. County Coroner Cyril W~ht had said earlier that the stress or getting the shots may have con· tributed to the deaths. In Washington, the national director of the swine nu ilJl· munization program, Dr. W. Delano Meriwether, said, uwe have absolutely no reason to believe there is a specific pro- blem with the vaccine." The victims, who died within hours or receiving their inocula· tions Monday, were Charles Gabig, 71, of Mount Oliver: Julia Bucci, 75, of Whitehall, and Ella Michae l, 74, of Mount Washington. They bad been immunized at the South Side clinic with the combination vaccine used for older people and people with chronic Ulnesses. The combina- tion vaccine is desiimed to pro- tect agai~st both swine nu and <See FLU, PageA2) generally well behaved. She said the people were about equally mixed between young and old and middJe.aged. Mrs. Rodgers declared that some of the people bad bomes in the designated redevelopment area and that there was a threat * * * 'Blight' Noted "I am just so disillu&oned. I have lost faith with all ol the citt council members," she said. f (See CROWD, Page AZ) • * * * ~ ~ HB Downtowll' Project Voiced By ROBERT BARKER Of Ille 0.llf Plloe sa." Amid poster s proclaiming "Save Huntington Beach -Ban Tourists," Huntington Beach ci- ty officials presented their case for downtown r edevelopment Monday. Acting Planning Director Ed Selich and other staff members pointed out blight conditions or the 688·acre redevelopment area bounded by the Pacific Ocean, Golden West Streit. Palm Avenue, Hartford Avenue, Al abama Street, Chicago Avenue and Beach Boulevard. Selich a nd other aides declared that the area is in need of r epair and that it is prone to flood ing and h as high incidences of crime and fires. Selich said the plan is flexible and general and be can't lay down at this time what specific developments will take place over the 35 years that it is scheduled to be in existence. Sellcb said there are guaran- tees that legislation won't give the redevelopment agency a blank check. "There are zoning regulations and changes will only be made after adoption of the plan. There will be controls," he said. Councilma n Ron Pattinson told the audience that he is no longer interested in high intensi- ty development that includes a 22-story hotel and office towers in a five·block area along Main Street next to the pier. Pattinson asked Selich if that is the plan "we'r e addressing tonight." Selicb said no amidst a wild chorus ol cheers from the au· dience. Lance Chacot, a founder of Save our Seaside (SOS>,. at· tacked high intensity i:edevelop· ment plans, saying they were for the benefit of the few at the ex- pense or many. Chacot said the area Is grow· ing on its own initiative without the benefit of a redevelopment plan and the city doesn't need one. "I personally would like to see some changes but they can hap· pen without police powers and the l aws of redevelopment legislation," he said. Edward Dilkes, an attorney for SOS, said the city's r e- development plan is a "con· sumate non-plan." Edison Band Tops In Azusa Parade The Edison Charger Band and the school's Drill Team took sweepstakes awards in their respective categories as they braved lOO·degree h~ to march in the Azusa Pioneer Parade Saturday afternoon. The 165-piece band is under the direction of Gary McJUton. The F.dJson Drill team is directed by Leslie Oehlm an. "It says it is for high intensity and it says it is not." he said. "The plan is all things for all people," he declared. "It is so indefinite. incomplete and unstructured that it would not be foisted on the public," be said. <See DEVELOP, Page AZ> * * * Revamping Denounced By Mangers ByO.C. HUSTINGS OftlleO•llf Pl ... sc.tt Rede velopme nt of the downtown Huntington Beacb area was denounced Monday by state Assembly candidate Dennis Mangers. ''This ls tbe most scandalous ripoff I've ever seen." Democrat Mangers declared during a de- bate with Assemblyman Robert R. Burke <R-Huntington Beach) at Golden West College. His incumbent opponent, a 10-year Assembly veteran seek· ing his sixth term in office, of· fered a qualified agreement with Mangers' colorfully worded ob- jections. ' "1 'm just as opposed to what is going on as Dennis Mangers is,•• Assemblyman Burke said during what was a largely low-key con- frontation between the two Hunt• ington Beach political foes. Mangers specifically men• tiooed a projected 22-story lux· ury hotel enYisioned on Pacific Coast Highway. He maintains it would obliterate the present Golden Bear Cafe, a youth· oriented night club. Mangersclaimedbef'oretheau· dience of about 50 that As· semblyman Burke has sald he knows very litUe about the re· development project. "I'm not totally ignorant. • .," Assemblyman Burke countered sarcastically. He pointed out the proposed 22-story hotel is only an idea that easily c a n be alte r ed or eliminated. "I feel that there can be de- velopment In the downtown area that can enhance the value or the beach," Assemblyman Burke said. The audience in Forum II of the College Center was primaril)' youthful. One middle-aged woman sat In the last row malt· Ing audible comments on the de· bate and occasionally booing Mangers. She also clapped for As· semblyman Burke. Mangers stressed issues of in- terest to a collegiate audience, <See RIPOFF, Pase A%) More night and morning low clouds and fog Wednes- day with temperatures on the coast of about 73, low about60. INSIDE TODAY The 'New South': Doa U belong in .any poWiclon's pockd in 1976? Both porffe.t bave reGIOft to beUeot tbat tt dMs -. and IMt U doma't. See POQe AIZ. County Income Boost Reporte~ ]mike Delivered An errant Hunt.inaton , 1 Beach youngste r who ! chose to pocket something .... he didn't pay for won't go :) to Orange County Juvenile 1 Hall -at least not this time. ladex .. V-Sef'Yk• •• .... .....a ., ~:J: ~ ~ .... ~ ., ~ N ---lffe ,.. .......... _ ,.. ... ,..._. .. --.... ,, ........ .. --. ,.. From Anoeiatecl Pnsswtres Per capita lncome in Orange County averaged $6,210 in 1974, up from $S, 790 iD 1973, the Com- merce Department reported l-0- day. The county, officially dubbed the Ana.helm-Santa An•Garden Grove s tudard metropolitan statistical area (SMSA). ranks 26th in the nation. The Brtd1eport-8\amford· Norwalt-Danbu.ry area ~ Con- necticut remained the Mdan's richest metropolitan 1tta. Jrith an annual personal tncom• ol $1,781 per person, tm increase~ 9.1 percent. The national average, reported earlier by the Commerce nep.t. ment, was $S,449, en Increase ol 8.5 percent over 1973. Workers in the Anchorage, Alaska, r eiton jumptd from Hth place ln 1973 to seeond place in the next year, with a 22.9 percent Jump to an neup income ol ST.151. Wblle the Commerce Department offered no~· UoO, Ute ch•n1e pr=reftects workootbeAlukapl e. PttlOClal lncome ~ Gt wages. salartes, i nterest. dividends and other mOM)' te- celved by lndlvlduala after de- duction oC Sodal Security taxes. Penonal income tu deducUons are not conaidered. Rankins wltb Bridgeport and Ancborqe tn tho lop 10 for 1974 were Washington, D.C., with awrage 1Mt1al per capita ln· CQme ol $7,lOZ, up t.4 percent over 11'71; Nas11u&fto1t. N.Y., S1.ol4, up T.I ~rcent; San h'aa- claco-Oakland, $7,030, up 10.8 percent; New art, N . .l.. SS.Ill, up l .T ~l; Cbkaio-'Yts.•. up 10.J percent; New Yett, 18.688. tip t percent; West .,aim 8each- BNa Baton, Fla .• ts.m, ~ t.s percent; and Reno.. NeY., '6.620, up 3.6 percent. • The Los Anleles·Laaa Beach SMSA rants 16 ln the nation, with m• Income at M;343, aa htcrease over the 1m tally d.$5.m . Tb• San i>lego area ranbd IO in 1974, with averare i.ocome d ~. compared with tm 1.D- come o( $5.204. The RIYerlide.San 8enlll'dino- Ontarto area ranks ta&, wt.th 1974 income at u.asi, ~ fl'am tm's M.'41. Jfl The penalty me Led out in the parting lot of a conve· nlence marke t on In- dlaqpoUa Avenue MCIDday • Ditbt warmed the heart ol at leut ~ obserwr wbo believes u the twls ii bent, IO IJ'OWI th• tree. "Juvenile 1'H releued to hth•r, wbo Ad· minis tered •street J111ttce' ." • Officer l>a.a GGMJllOt.ed ill -report. r A2 DAIL V PILOT H /F Fro• Page Al IOOTH ••• was before buildings OI' highways .in the area became plenWul. •'The beaeb could be c:ovtncl wttb erabe. 1runlon and 1ea Ille but not any more," Duvall said, commenting on elfect.s of popuJa- Uon. ocean out! alls and oil der· ricks. "You could see porpoises in the breakers and sea lions in the sand -now that's beautiful to 1 me,•• recalled the former Mis· sourlan as a tear rolled to the rim of bis eye(lasses. •'YOU Can't see nothing now but a bunch of naked women and anyway. I can 'l see 'em," said Duvall. "Ob, I know you can't go back to the past." said the man who aice could fish just 40 feet from bis front door. ''But man just seems to destroy Ure," be sald. Dlstru~tluJ of most doctors. medicine'!> and vitamins, Duvall claims be bas alw&y$ enjoyed full health until a cataract opera- tion ln 1968. "He has aged a lot more since his sight loss," said Mrs. Duvall, "He never sat around until then. He would exercise or be doing something in the garage." What would Duvall call his formula for good health and longevity? "Luck, .. he said simply. No special diet or routine is claimed as his secret for reaching his 100th year. "I just used common cirdinary horse sense." be added. The man's long, fingers touched his temples as he re· called his m any morning bicycle rides in the Los Angeles-Santa Monica-San Pedro area. As a young man and even through his later years, he enjoyed mem· bersbip in a number ol cycling and athletic clubs. ' · One of bis best recollections is d a San Ft unclsco to Tijuana bike ride which took a month in 1902. He has many memories or Los Angeles to Corona bike runs as well as one r ace in which he and several other cyclists cov- ered the distance before a train carrying the judges was able to. Duvall said he made many trips to the Orange Coast before he and his wife settled here ln 1961 in order to be close to their children. His oldest son, John C. Duvall, died eight years ago Mr. and Mrs. Frank Duvall, 30-year residents of Seal Beach, Jive a few d oors down from .. Grandpa" Duvall, as some neighbors call him. The elder Duvall lives al 16895 N. Pacific Ave. Duvall, who did not retire from his contracting business until the age of 7 5, h as three lfandchlldren and three great- grandchildren, all girls. "They come lo visit him and he really enjoys that." Mrs . Duvall said. F rot11 Page A I FLU •.• the Type A Victoria nu that was prevalent last winter. The closing of the cU,,Ucs is "lo be on the safe sidli pending further investigation," a Health Department spokesman said. Officials from the federal Center for Disease Control of Atlanta were dispatched to Pit- tsburgh today to investil{ate the deaths. The center. which is ad· ministering the government's $135 million program to Im· munize most of the population against swine nu. reported late last week that it had received no reports or severe reactions to the nu shots. Thief R ansacks H untington Ho me A burflar who galned entry via an un ocked gar age door ransacked a Huntington Beach home Monday, stealing a variety or household goods valued at nearly $1,000. accordlns lo Police. Victim Vera Mlller discovered thewbirlwlnd bur1lary, in which many possessions were yanked from closets and drawers, upon arriving home. ORANOlCOAST ~• DAILY PILOT Tuesday October 12. 1976 ,,.,, ....... UNDER ARREST? Mao's Widow Qtiang Chinese Nam.e New Chairman TOKYO (AP) -A Chinese government s pokes man an· nounced that Premier Hua Kuo· Ceng b as been appointed to SUC· ceed the late Mao Tse-tung as chairman of the Chinese Com· munist party, Japan's Kyodo news service reported today Crom Peking. The announcement foll owed reports that Mao's widow and three other Politburo officials were under arrest. Wall posters appeared in Pek· ing last week reporting the suc- cession of the 57-year-old Hua, but there had been no official an- nouncement. The spokesman said it had been delayed to allow the entire Communist party or· ganization to be informed in advance, Kyodosaid. The J ,apanese agency said the spokesman made the announce· ment to reporters just beCore a reception for the visiting prime minister of Papua New Guinea, Michael Thomas Somnre. There still was no confirmation or unofficial repor ts from Peking that Mao's widow, Chiang Ching, and three other high ranking of· fi cials a ssociated with the party's radical wing had been &r· rested, accused of plotting a coup. These reports suggested that serious infighting was going on and that positions still might not have solidified since Mao died Sept. 9. The offi cial Hsinhua news agency had not reported Hua's appointment. In a communique on the establishment of dip- lomatic r elations with Papua New Guinea, Hua s~ed as pre- mier, Hsinhua said. However, in a story Saturday, Hsinhua referred to the party Central Committee "headed by Comrade Hua Kuo-feng." Hua, a big, friendly man re· latively unknown to the outside world. made his name in party circles as a n agricultural s pecialist and local a d - ministrator during the 1950s. At some point, he came under the wing of Mao, who named him p\,\blic security m inister in 1971. Slajring Suspects Jailed Anaheim police now have three suspects in Jail and are seeki.ng a fourth man in the fatal shotgun 1hooUng of a market clerk last. Thursday. Meanwhile Costa Mesa of· ftcers, circulating photographs or the suspects, say they believe at least two of the men in- volved in a market robbery in Costa Mesa last Tuesday nigbt. Police arrHted Richard F. An· derson, a 29-year-old transient, at Westminster jail, where be was being held on drug-related charges. They arrested George Louis Ledesma, 19, of Westminster and a 16-year-old juvenile Sllnday. Both those m en were also in Westminster jaU on drug charges. "We expect to seek charges of homicide and robbery againit all three suspects 1 ater this week," said Anaheim Sgt. Bill Wright. Albertson's market clerk Jack W. Mason of Stanton was shot at point blank range by a suspect wielding a sawed-off shotgun last Thursday night. About 15 lo 20 witnesses at the Anaheim market, at 610 S. Brookhurst St., said Mason did not provoke the gunman, who then fled with his partners after scooping up an undetermined amount of cash from several cash registers. Costa Mesa investigator Gerry L . Thompson said today several witnesses to a robbery at a Ralphs Market in the Harbor Shopping Center last week, have looked atphotograpbsoftwo of the Anaheim suspects. Thompson said photos of Ledesma and.Joseph Cabral, 19, of Cypress, were also shown to several customers and clerks at Ralphs. Anaheim police are still seek· toe Cabral, but provided Costa Mesa police with his photograph. "It looks like the juvenile wasn't involved in our robbery," Thompson added. Three armed men took more than $1,000 in cash and several thou.sand dollars in checks and food stamps from the Ralphs Market last Tuesday night. Witnesses at t.bat time described the trio as being ot Laun descent, and carrying a shotgun and two plstala. Costa Mesa police said today they are try inc to contact several other witnesses to the Cost a Mesa robbery to help identity the photographs. "Pirate' Raide r Grabs Boats TV A stereo and television pirate boarded a boat under construe· lion in Huntington Beach Mon- day, stealing $500 worth of audiovisu al equipment installed aboard the vessel, police said to- day. The theft occurred in a vacant at 18151 Beach Blvd .• where the big sailboat is being built. ac· . cording ~o vlcUm Sue Conroy. Undercover Narc Nabs Eight, Cache An undercover police dficer planted at an Irvine manufactur· ina firm resulted in the arreats of eight people and the confiscation from a Costa Mesa apartment of $7 ,000 worth or drugs. Irvine Police said today. Irvine Police Lt. James Blaylock said the arrests oc- curred during the past two weeks and that two others may be ar- rested before the tnvestigaUon is concluded. ' Those arrested include Richard Lee Jones, 25, and Elida Jones, 20, of 241 Avocado St., Cos ta MesaJ both Accused or possession 01 coc aino, LSD and amphetamines lor sale; Patricia Smith. 26, of Oranee. char1ed with three counts of sales of drugs; James/\. Homan. 21, 9652 Pollack, Huntington Beac'!J. s ales of marijuana ; and ·1·erry Wlghtmnn, 19, Tustin. sales of marijuana. Also arrested were Dale R. Spillman, 20, of 4841 Heil, Hunt# lnlton Beach, three counts of sales ol PCP (an animal tran- quilla.er) and one COUJ\t tales of marijuana; Benjamin A. Arebalo,~· Oraoie, four counts sales ol usD and am~: and David C. Jones. 19. a transient. four counta ol salea of LSD, ampbetam lntt and PCP. Accordin1 to Blaylock, the un· dereover •sent was hJrtd 11 a 1toek clerk at the company for a sht·•-period, cturtn1 which tlme he allecedly purchased narcotic• from the •llhl ernp lo1ea arrcated. Police withheld the named tbe flnn. Ono purchase resulted ln a Hlfth 1'1llTAnl betq obtained for tbe Jones apll'tll"lont a\ JU ATOeedo a, wbere poUce al· lesedly round 12,000 •m· pbetamlne tablets. 850 tablets of LSD, a half-ounce of cocaine and a small amount or hashish oil. The street value of the drugs was set al $7 ,000. Blaylock sald the invesUgallon beean whe n the personnel manager or the company re- quested police assistance because he suspected a large scale drus problem at the com· pany. E'ro91 Page A l RIPOFF ••• attacking the I ncumbent le1ialator'a voUn1 record on such matters as women's ri1bts and environmental matters. Assemblyman Burke said he is against tho Equal Rlshts Amend· ment. He said If sexual discrimina- tion ellists, It should be attacked and corrected through statutes. not constitutional revlslon, beeause the U.S. ConsUtutlon makes no menUoa of male or female sender. "I can't Imagine anyone living in the 20th century being opposed to lt (the ERA)," Man1ers declared, brlneinc a ebor'ul of female cheers. Mancera polnted ciut that he narrowly lost to Assemblyman Burke In 19'74, by 1 800 votes. Manaera called Burke a MCaUvlat and obltnlcUonilt in the LetlaJ atur• and P"Odlcted be will take Burke'• 13rd Aaembly Dlalrtct aeat •way from him thls year by a,ooo to s.ooo votes. A11emblyman Burke told tbe 1roup he la an admirer of Man~rf ud b1a tam.lb', but almp V.Una bl• OllPJG«ll la iD tt1"0I" n much of what be SQS to voters. •• Burned Out Bus A city bus in San Diego smolders after it was destroyed by fire Monday. It was empty except for the driver, who got out in time. Police blamed a blown tire which ignited the gas tank. FroaaPageAJ DEVELOP. • Dllkea also questioned the city's procedures in establishing a need for redevelopment and ils definition of blighted conditions. He declared that the plan will add to sewage, utility and police and fl.re demands. Dilkes characterized the plan as a tax grab that wW bring in lots of money from building de- velopment. ••What concerns me," he told the council that also sits as the redevelopment agency, "is that you will squander it on develop- ment elsewhere." Tom Whaling, a member or the Project Area Committee re- commending lhe redevelop· ment, said the plan orrers hope f~r the "beleaguered taxpayer ... "I am opposed to a Miami Beach. Redondo Beach or Long • Beach type development as much as ~yone," he said. "I am in favor d creating a family atmosphere where all. can enjoy the advantaaes and beauty of the ocean," be added. 100 D e aths Investigated At Camarillo VENTURA (AP) -More than 100 deaths at Camarillo State Hospital o"er the past three years are being investigated by the Ventura County district at· torney's office, and officials say some hospital workers may be charged with murder o r manslaughter. Meantime. another investiga- tion has been called for by As- semblyman Art Torres (D· Monterey Park), to look into charges or p atient abuse al Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk. In the Ventura probe, Assist ant County Dist. Atty. Mike Brad· bury said Monday his office has spent eight months looking into the deaths at Camarillo and is taking a "hard look" al 79 de- aths. He s aid many or the deaths were caused by drug overdoses, asphyxiation or negligence. Bradbury s aid he hopes to have the investigation completed by the end of the year. F ro111Page AI CROWD ••• Mayor Harriett Wieder said to- day that efforts were made to hold the m eeting at a larger gathering place but that an at· tempt to stage it at Huntington Beach High School 4idn't pan out "We also tried to hook up speakers for the benefit ~ those outside but that didn't work out either," she said. .. We didn't realiie that the crowd would be so overflowing until it was too late," she declared. The audience included an un· usually large number ofstudents of apparently high school and college age who raucously op. posed redevelopment plans while cheering on those who attacked the plan. Mrs. Wleder, who sparred with the young audience members throughout the evening, said she had received some inquiries on whether the young people were sent to council chambers to inter· rupt proceedmgs deliberately. The council took no action on Redevelopment other than re- ceiving sworn testimony. It has scheduled another public hearing on Oct. 28 at a larger place to be selected later to accommodate an expected large crowd. Investigators from the district attorney's office. assisted by a panel of medical experts, have dug through tens or thous ands or p ages or materials. including medical records and autopsies, and are interviewing th e hospital's staff, Bradbury said. City Council members took no action on the redevelopment plan Monday night other than to schedule a second hearing on , Oct. 28 for a larger area, possibly atHunlingtonBeachHighSchool. WIN LUCKY BUCKS $100 to $1000* SPONSORED BY FOUNTAIN VALLEY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE All Fountain Valley shoppers with proof of previous week's purchase from a participating business listed below are eligible. Once a week members or ttle Fountain Valley Chamb er of Commerce Commercial/Retail Committee will visit a selected shopping center. If the shoppers can produce a legible sales receipt less than 7 days old from a participating business listed here. they will Win $20. Five shoppers a week will win. Fot ten weeks &hoppers will have the opportunity to be winners. If there Is no valid sates receipt from any of the shoppers the "lucky Bucks" total Is increased in the next week's total. •Money will awarded in script redeemable only at Plrtlclpatlng businesses llsted on this page. Employees from participating businesses are not eligible. "BE A Dill Y DAU Y'' •••• SHOP IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY AND BE A LUCXY BUCKS WINNER "LUCKY IUCIS .. PAmCIPATIM5 IUSIHISSES Akoubfans Ann's Crossroads Auto Menne Supply a.de Alley Plua Bardav'e Bank Berty l.ou Boutique Bon Amie C&S Auto Parts c.1100 CO\lntry Textiles O'ocker Bank Oassy Canine Clbblget Ind Klngt CrowOldt Rttteurant Oet<ora DlisyPatch Donut Hut Diet Wontlhoo Fountain LIQUOC' Fountain Valley Camera Fountain Valley Stationer. Fountain Valley Bowl '°""aln Vllley Bike Fcuntlln View FlOWetl Ftln"s lnterlol'$ Funky Jun!( Oemc:o Guva Ind Giia Halrttyllng a.in Meats Gld+Bout Hotlet9~ Hair Mlltlque lnttent Print Jertmv'I Heir Fashion Jent'Hour~ Un Brook HtrdWn ~ SQun ONnef1 F v FOU'ICTAJI' VAl.LF.Y ('JtA~DDl OP COMMF.Rct C·'·O·IO·l·"'-·.·.·.·· .... '.llOO·ll·HU·Uf·IT-· ·.rotnn •• Al.~.·.AW •• Y .• C.A.•2•'°'•"•'·"···'".".· .... ·-~'J.•••111 ·' ' ! , r • I Irvine EDITION Toda,·'~ Closi11J! • '\'.'. Sa ueks . ~I .~V~O~L~·!69~,~N~0~~~286~,~2~S=E~CT~IO~N~S~,~2~6~P=A~G~E~S~----------------~O~R=A~N~~~E~COU~~NT~Y~,~C~A~L~l~F~O~R~N~IA:.:,_ ______________ :__ ______ _..;. _____________ T_E_N_C_E_N_T11 Weighs Skateboard Park Fat~ e O••lv P.tot Stall Photo SKATEBOARDER RUSS MANN ZIPS AROUND FENCING OBSTACLE IN IRVINE New Skateboard Course Adjacent to New Homes Provokes Controversy Narcs Grab 8 • m Irvine $7,000 in Drugs Seized; More Arrests Eye<J, An undercover police officer planted at an Irvine manufactur· ing firm resulted in the arrests of eight people and the confiscation from a Costa Mesa apartment of $7,000 worth or drugs, Irvine Police said today. Irvine Police Lt. James Blaylock said the arrests OC· curred during the past two weeks and that two others may be ar· rested before the investigation is concluded. Those arres ted include Richard Lee Jones. 25, and Elida Jones. 20, of 241 Avocado St.. Costa Mesa. both accused or possession of cocaine, LSD and amphetamines for sale; Patricia Smith, 26, of Orange, charged with three counts of sales of drugs; James A. Homan, 21, 9652 Pollack. Huntington Beach, sales of m arijuana; and Terry Wjgblman, 19, Tu.stin. sales of marijuana. Also arrested were Dale R. Spillman, 20, of 4841 Heil, Hunt· ington Beach, three counts of sales of PCP (an animal tran· quilizer ) and one count sales of marijuan a; Benjamin A. Arebalo. 29, Orange, four counts sales of LSD and amphetamines; a nd David C. Jones, 18, a transient, four counts of sales of ISO. amphetamines and PCP. According to Blaylock, the un- dercover agent was hired as a stock clerk at the company for a six-week period, during which time he a llegedly purchased narcotics from the eight employes arres ted. Police withheld the nameotlhelirm. Six Sentenced ATHENS. Greece (AP) -Six men who were security police of· ficers under the former Greek dictatorship were found guilty to- day or torturing political prisoners. Coast Weather One purchase r esulted in a search warrant being obtained for the Jones a partment al 241 A voe ado St.. where police al· legedly found 12.000 am· phetamlne tablets, 850 tablets or I.SD a half -ounce o( cocaine and a small amount or hashish oil. The street value of the drugs was set at $7,000. Blaylock said the investigation began when the personnel, manager or the company re- quested police ass istance because he suspected a large scale drug problem at the com· pany. 1,375 Toro Acres To Bear Houses? By GARY GRANVILLE Of Ille O•llY ~l!Ot S~H Orange County planning com· missioners voted 4·1 Monday to recomme nd a 1,375-acre zone change in the·north El Toro area aimed al eventually accom· modating 6,000 dwellings and roughly 20,000 residents. Rancho de los Alisos, a com· munity planned hr Occidental Land Company. hes north of Trabuco Road between El Toro Whites Face Rugby Fines JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) -Minister of Sport Piel Koornho( says eight whites who played in a racially integral· ed rugby match at Port Elizabeth have violated South Africa's race polities and may be penalized. But by late Monday there were no reports that any of the whites involved in Sunday's match hac 'been arrested. Legal action aaainst whiles violating the Group Areas Act rarely involves more than a minor fine and judicial rebuke. The match was played oerore sqme 10,000 black s~tators in tlte heart or the city's black Kwazakele Township despite at· tempts lo have the game halted by government sJ)A'ts official~ politicians and secunty pohcey Road and Bake Parkway. The Planning Commission en· dorsement or the zone change needed to develop the communi- ty wm go lo the county Board of Supervisors where final approval is vir' ually assured. Only commission chairman Shirley Grindle opposed recom- menaing the zone change Mon· day. Mr~. Grindle based her objec· lion mainly on a still unsettled d1sprte over the impact of jet noise on land use near the El Toro :\farine Corps Air Station. lier position was no different than 1t was six weeks ago when she said residential construction 5hould be banned in areas a con· sullunt's study says is probably adversely impacted by jet noise. And her fellow commissioncri. • position was no different from when they opposed Mrs. Grindle and said a home building ban shouldn't be imposed in some of the areas defined by the consul· tant. Now, the noise issue is de· adlocked on a 2 ·2 Board of· S upervisors s tale mate, a stalemate that Supervisor Thomas Riley says he will end in two weeks when it again comes before the board. Roughly 1,800 of the planned homes in the Rancho de los Alisos will lie within the consul· tant's noise impacted area. Planning Com missione r William Mac Dougall led the move to approve the zone <See REZONE, Page A.2) By HILARY KAYE Oflll•O•llvl'tltlt~ Irvine City Councu members will attempt to decide tonight if the new skateboard course in University Community Park should remain where il is, be modified, or moved els~where. Young skateboard enthusiasts have already discovered tbe skateboard course even though it is not yet completed and ready for public use. But even though it is not yet of. ficially open, residents of the ad· j acent new J. M. Peters townhouse d evelopment are already voicing concerns to the city about anticipated noise. The decision by the council Is expected at tonight's 7:30 o'clock meeting al city hall. Assistant City Manager Paul Brady explained that even though the course is not yet com· 4 States Order Halt plete, hundreds or skuteboardet4 have already tried out lt.s curveJ and banks. 4 The contractor has been unati ble to complete his landscaping of the total park area with ~ constant crowd or skateboard~ so the city bolted chain ~n1c fenc· ing onto the concrete surface t<> slop the skateboarders from us~ ing the course until it is open~ <See SKATE, Page A%) Swine Flu Vaccin~ Suspect in 3 Deaths By The Associated Press · State health officials in New Mexico, Wi sconsin, Louisiana and Vermont today ordered tem- porary suspension of the swine flu inoculation program after the deaths of three elderly persons just hours after lhey got swine flu shots in P e nnsylvania's Al- legheny Count~. FluSlwts To Continue In County Despite closures of flu immunization clinics in the east, health officials in Orange County said today they plan to keep offering the vaccine here. Dr. J . R . Elpers. the county's newly appotnted health officer issued the following slatJment: "We have heard reports of three deaths in Pen· nsylvania which occurred subsequent lo receiving the flu immunization. "These reports are being investigated but at the pre· sent time there is no in· formation to indicate a direct causal role of the flu vaccine. "Considering the ex· tensive testing this vaccine has already received, we feel it is appropriate to continue our program until we are advised further on the inves tigation being conducted by slate and federal health officiaJs.'' According to the As· sociated Press. the vaccine used in Pittsburgh is not available in California. Both Pennsylvania and federal health officials said there was no link directly r elating the Pen· nsylvania deaths to the inocula- tions, but all 13 inoculation sites in Allegheny County were also shut down as a precaution. Of· ficials said the three who died had chronic heart conditions. Stale health officials in Countv Trial • Michigan said vaccine from the same lot used in Allegheny Coun· ty was distributed in Michigan and ordered th at no more vac· cine from that lot be ad· ministered. They added there have been no reports of i1l effeGts among some 6,000 Michigan residents who C~ee FLU, Page A2) Bribery Not Intent, Architect Testifies By TOM BARLEY Of Ille D•lly Piiot Staff Obviously wearied by a long cross examin aUon, San Clemente architect Leon Hyzen again told a Superior Court jury today tbat bribery was not his purpose when he attempted to contact Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley last May. And the witness made it clear under interrogation froRl Deputy District Attorney John Conley that he might not be in a courtroom today if he had been able to speak to Riley rather than the s upervisor 's chief aid<.>, former journalist Peter Herman. "I learned a long time ago that you don't speak to the second in command if you want accurate information on any project," H~en told the jury in Judge JI. Walter Steiner's courtroom. The 66-year-old architect is be· ing tried on brib.e.r.Y..~harges c:on· tained in a grand jury indictment which claims that he attempted to offer $1,000 to Riley as a cam· paign contribution. ll is alleged that Hyzen sought favorable consideration when the county board decided that it was time to seek an architect for the proposed San Clemente public library. Hyzen told Conley today that no such idea was in his mind when be first spoke to Herman "because J knew the supervisors did not even h ave a San Clemente library in their budget." Herman has t estified that Hyzen offered $1,000 lo Riley as a campaign contribution and further offered to solicit votes for Riley in the San Clemente area. The jury has listened to tape recordings of telephone con- versations between Herman and <SeeHYZEN, PagcA2) Mardian Gets New Trial; Others Don't Happy IOOth WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Court of Appeals today up.- held the Wntergate conspiracy convictions of three onetime close aides to former President Richard M. Nixon but ordered a new trial for a fourth defendant, Robert C. Mardian. Seal Beacher Celebrates By RAY ESTRADA 01the01ily Ptlol S14tff John F. Duvall's daughter-in· law was excited as she brought the Seal Beach man a letter from the White House. Duvall, 100 years old this week, was indifferent at first and mere· ly said. "He only wants my vote." Elsie Duvall, wife of the cen· tenarian's 71-year-old son, Frank. opened the letter and read a birthday message from the President of the United States. Mrs. Duvall said her father·in- law was still not impressed, but took the card eventually and, despite his failing sight, tried to read the message through a ligh(· ed magnifier. As he did, she said, sbecould see that he was touched. But the reUred painting con· tractor expresses more concern for the future of the country's natural environment than ror its political figures. A Seal Beach resident since 1961, Duvall said he has seen most of the natural beauties in all the states in the Union except for those along the north AUanllc coast. "l don't understand how people can take a plane and fly over the country and say 'I've been there' -they don 't see anything except wtiat they left at home," Duvall said. An avid bicyclist since hi s ar· rival in the Los Angeles area in 1886 from Missouri, Duvall said his memories of bunUng, camp· ing, fishing and cycling are his CSee lffTH. Page A2) Mardian. a former Nixon cam· paign official and an assistant at- torney general before that, was convicted on New Year's Day. 1975, along with former Ally. Gen. John N. Mitchell and the two men who once were Nixon's closest advisers. John D. Ehrlichman and H.R. Haldeman. A fifth defendant, Kenneth W. Parkinson, was acquitted in the cover·up trial, which lastttd four months. All were accused of attempting to thwart investigations into the original Watergate break-in on June 17, 1972. Dist. Judge John J. Sirica presided over the trial. Nixon was named as an unin· dieted co-conspirator by the same gr and jury. More night and morning low clouds and fog Woones· day with temperatures on the coast or about 73. Jow aboul60. INSIDE TODA 't' TM 'Nt:tD South': OMs it b•long in .on11 poUUclon's pockd In J976~ Both partiu bavc rt<Uon eo bcU.vt that u ·county Income Boost Reported Near Miss For Betty . LOS ArJGELES (AP> -.. A chartered jet carrying First Lady Betty Ford was involved in :l n('ar-miss over Southern C:.iltfornia last Friday, one of two · such Incidents caused by a· computer bllure, the FAA , dot• -.4nd "'°' it doun't. Stt P.age A12. Index f A4 "-s.ttk : IU Mii \.t•n e1 . ~,:~ :: =.::, :~: 0.Hlflff •• ,. NUIM.tl ... _ A• Cltoflk' • , Or-c:io-ty •• ()tis.... ., ,...... ... , ONt!IMilllc" •• '"'1• •• • ...... ~-•• '*'*"'"' .... ., • .....,,._., A• T-.riWtl AU "-• .,.,. n.~ •• *-<-It Wt~ A• ·-~..... "' ..,. ...... .. ... From Associated Press Wires Per capita income in Orange ~nty peraged .$6i210 in 1974, up from $S, 790 in 1973, the Com· merce Department reported lo· day. The county. officially dubbed I.be Anaheim-Santa Ana-Garden Grove standard metropolitan statistical area <SMSA>. ranks 26th in the nation. The Bridgeport-Stamford· Norwalk-Danbury area of Con· neetlcut remained the nQUon's richest metropolitan ar~a. with an annual personal income ot i-7,781 per person, an increase or 9.1 percent. The national average, reported earlier by the Commerce Depar:t· ment, was $5,449, an Increase-or 8.5 percent over 1973. Workers in the Anchorage, Alaska, region jumped from 14th place in 1973 to second place in the next year, with a 22.9 percent jump to an average income or $7,159. While the Commerce Department offered no explana· Uon1 the change probabl? refltctg work on the Alaska pipeline. Personal income consisl'l of .... wages, salaries . inte1 sst, dividends and other money re· ceived by indlvlduaJs after de· duction of Social Secipity taxes . Personal income tax deducUons are not considered. Ranking wlth Bridgeport and Anchorage in the top 10 for 1974 were Washington, D.C . ., with average annual per capita in- come of $7,102, up 9.4 percent over 1973: Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y., $7,084. up 7.9 percent; San Fun· clsco-Oaltland. t7,030. tip 10.8 pe~eot; Newark, N.J., SI.Mt, up 9.7 percent: Chicago, $6,?S>, up ---..a-------·----{ 10. t percent; New York, $6,668, up 9 percent; West Palm Beach· Boca Ratoo, Fla., $16,622, up 6.5 percent; and Reno, Nev., $6,620, up 3.6 percent. The Los Angeles-Long Beach S,MSA ranks 16 in the nat.lon, with 1974 income al $6,343, an increase over the 1973 tall)l of $5, 7Yl. · The San Diego aru ranked 90 in 1974, wilb average lncome or ~-482, compared with 1973 in- come of $5,204. The Riverside-San 'Bernardi~ Ontario area ranks 184, with 1974 income at $4,851, up rrom um•s $4,441. reported today. Mrs. Ford's chartered BAC VCl01 a four-engine jet., was descending into the Los AnreJes area Fri- day wtien it came within 3\4 miles of a Ceama flying , level at about 9,000 f~ an FM1pokt1man said. .• t • ... ___ ,,.,If/I: . ~ I Al 01\IL v PILOT Tu9'~!)' Octo~r12. 1978 3 Jailed, J SougM Market Slaying Suspects Held Anaheim police now have three suspects in jail and U"e seekjng 11 fou.rt.b man in the fatal shotgun shooting of a market clerk la.st Thursday. Meanwhile Costa Mesa of· ficers, circulating phot.ographs of lhe suspects, say they believe at leas t two or the men in· volved in a m arket robbery in Costa Mesa last Tuesday night. Police arrested Richard F. An· derson, a 29-year-old transient, at Westminster jail, where he was being held on drug-related charges. They an-ested George Louis Ledesma, 19, of Westminster and a 16-year-old j uvenile Sunday. Both those men were also in Westmins ter jail on drug charges. "We expect to seek charges of homicide and robbery against all three suspects later thls week," said Anaheim S~t. J:Jill Wrieht. Albertson 's market clerk Jack W. Mason of Stanton was shot at point blank range by a suspect wielding a sawed-off shotgun last Thursday night. Chinese Name New Chairman TOKYO (AP ) -A Chinese governme n t s pokesman an- nounced that•Premier Hua Kuo- feng has been appointed to suc· ceed the late Mao Tse-tung as chairman of the Chinese Com· munist party, Japan's Kyodo news ser vice reported today from Peking. The a nnouncement followed reports that Mao's widow and three other Politburo officials were under arrest. Wall posters appeared in Pek- ing lasl week r eporting the suc- cession of the 57-year-old Hua, but there h ad been no o!Cicial an- nouncement. The li Pokes man said il bad been delayed to allow the entire Communist party oc· ganizalion to be informed in advance, Kyodo said. · The J apanese agency said the spokesman made the announce· ment to reporters just before a reception for the visiting prime minister of Papua New Gwnea, Michael Thomas Somare. There still was no confirmation of unofficial reports from Peking that Mao's widow, Chian~ Ching. and three other high rankjng of· ficials associated with the party's r adical wing had been ar· rested, ac<'usec ..;! plottinK a coup. These reports suggested that serious infighting was going on and that positions still might not have solidified since Mao died Sept. 9. The official Hslnhua news agency had not reported Hua's appointm ent. 1n a communique on the establis hment of dip· lomatlc relations with Papua . New Guinea, Hua Si.ttned as pre· , mler, Hsinhua said. However, it• a story Saturday, HsJnhua referre~ to the party Central Committee "headed by ' Comrade Hua Kuo-feni:. '' Fro•PageAI HYZEN ••. Hyzen which, the prosecution claims, m ake il clear that bribery was the motive behind Hyzen's calls. Riley appeared to defend Hyzen, however , when he was called as a prosecution witness by Conley. .. I am sure Mr. Hyien was un- aware be was com milting a I crime by making those com- ments," Riley told the jury. ORANQI COAST DAILY PILOT n..~ CH•1 0.11¥ _,, .. -"'-~ '1 t-NMrllll • ..-,.,. • ....,.., '' outt'itl'llM.,. ttrrtOr-oe CliM1 PvOl•\'-tfto9 ~"'· kOI" ... "''"'°""" -· f"'1tl.,_. MoNtw-t~ovort Fridllf ~ CO'\t111t ~ _, 0.~f\. H--8ooc.IV-UI" Y6t'9• f•vtf'\f'. \.•Hl•twr<~ V•ll•v •"<I ~et•llll,,.,.tnCa•'' .,,~~~•>• ,_" ..,..,_ !Mtur<Joy• --, .. ..-11141 _..... ..... ,.,,, ,, .. , 1JI ........ -1.c:a.w.-. Ct•HO<Nt--._. .. _ ~·---·-Viu ~.!4=-~ .,_," .... ....... '-tA,lljl ........ ... ,...1 .... ·..i-~ About 15 to 20 witnesses at the Anaheim market, at 610 S. BrookhW'St St., said Mason did not provoke the 1unman, wbo then fled with his partners after scoopi,ng up an undetermined amount of cash from sever al cash registers. Costa Mesa investigator Gerry L. Thompson said today several witnesses to a robbery at a Ralphs Market in the Harbor Shopping Center last week , have looked at photographs of two Thom son said photos of ofthe A~im suspects. Ledesm and J oseph Cabral, 19. of Cyp ss, were also shown to several customers and clerks at Ralphs. Anaheim poli ce are still s~k· ing Cabral. but provided Costa Mesa police with his photograph. "ll looks like the juvenile wasn't i~volved in our rObbery," Thompson added. Three armed men took more than $1 ,000 in cash and several thousand dollars in checks and food stamps from the Ralphs Market last Tuesday night. Witnesses at th at t ime described the trio as being of Latin descent, and carrying a shotgun and two pistols. Costa Mesa police said today they are trying to contact several other witnesses to the Costa Mesa robbery to help identify the photographs. Dally l'ltel Sia" ""°'o AT CENTURY MARK Seal Beach's Duvall From Page AJ IOOTH ••. fond est. "I remember when what they now call Huntington Harbour was just a big slough. I used lo have the best times hunting and fishing there," he r eminisced. Although h e believes his memory to be poor, Duvall said he can still recall the Seal Beach and Huntinl'tton Beach coast as it was before buildings or highways ln the area became pl entiful. "The beach could be covered with crabs, grunion and sea life but not any more." Duvall said, commenting on effects of popula· lion. ocean outfalls and oil der- ricks. "You could see porpoises in the breakers and sea lions in the sand -now that's beautiful to me." recalled the former Mis-!><>Uri an as a tear rolled to the rim of his eyeglasses. "You can't see nothing now but a bunch of naked women and anyway, I can't see 'em," said Duvall Fro111 Page Al FLU ..• already have been inoculated. A spokesman for the Michl.ran Health Department said the vac· cine in question was manufac- tured by Parke Davis & Com· panv of Detroit. At Parke Davis, a spokesman sajd be did not know if the person s who die d in Pen· nsvlvania were inoculated with Parke Davis vaccine. ''0( the tnore than eight million doses of iDlluenza vacctpe dis· tributed by Parke Davis, recorm iod!cate some has been shipped to Allegheny County, but accord- . ing to health officials on the .,...... ... """ ·-" ..... ............ ,.._. ........... ..,., Offle .. °"'•""''•· now."....,!ol,.... ~ .. tC .. t llM-~­....,., ....... _. .. , ll'tlJ .. lf~ ... .,•v•rd t..#i.ot<• .,.,... 11"'1 lAI ••• -., * OI_ ,.._.. • scene, t.be Incident does not ._.,.. pear to be related to the Im· munhatJon program," the spokesman suld . T~n• m•IMMnt a .. eeftM ActYettteiftl to-M1'1 ~ .. , • ., ...... -Olnt • • $11 .. 210 '"'-S...C-4tl..ot30 ~ ttrt °'-· ~ ""'""'"' a.... _, --........ 111 ..... _ •• ,., .... M6tttr •t •f.,.f"U\fM~\ ~·" ,,.... ~ ..... -... •ltl•••• ... ti .. -""'"'.., •• ~-V<C°'f'OI ~·-· ............ , °"" .... .. C-"•·te™• ,.,,,~,r,, .• " bv <•,_ • ._, ,, t.o =.:.r.;...-. ::.:...r,: _ ......... lll•fY In Harrisburg, Pa .. State Health S ecretary Leonard Bachman said his department has found no connection betw_een lhe deaths and the flu vaccute. He said the Pennsylvania pro- gram will continue as scheduled Alleeheny County health of· fidaJ~ described lbe closlnc ol the 1l clinic! there as a precau· tlooary measure. ' • Bid Okay For. Child Center The two-year controversy over a child care center on the Sad. dleback Colleee campus was brought closer to a conclusion Monclay. With a split votEt, college trustees agreed to accept bids to convert an exis ting campus bwldlng into the center and nuthorized the center's operation durlng the spring semester. Trustee Frank Greinke or Tustin opposed the move. "l don't believe we should have the responsibility ol caring for children," he explained. "I think that belongs with parents. It belongs in the l)ome and not in the college." Trustee Robert Bartholomew, also of Tustin, voiced no vote on the issue . M•ssion Viejo's Donna Berry, the third trustee who has Indica ted disapproval of the center In the past, wu not at lbe · meeting. Contractors' bids for the re· novation project may be r e· turned within a month, said William Blurock, architect on Uie project. SIX NEARLY DONE-Map shows bike trail routes planned for Irvine using bike trail bond money. Broken line shows first six projects either completed or nearing com- pletion this year. Solid black line shows projects to be completed in 1977, 1978 and 1979. Ref er to chart for exact locations, costs and status of each project. If the bids are within the $21,000 allowed in the college's budget and if the trustees award a contract ror the job, the center may be completed and ready for use in three to four months, be said. Fro• Page Al SKATE ... Irvine Bike Trail Projects Detailed The following projects are included in the bicycle trail bike bond implementation program . Listed under status. UC. s\ands for under construction, Comp. stands for com· pleled, Des. means design and Plan. is planning. COMP. WCATION COST STATUS YEAR 1. Edison Bakeway. Yale Bridge, Motocross $330,400 u.c. 1976 2. San Diego Creek -Phase One 254,692 u.c. 1976 3. Culver -San Diego Freeway 4. Turtle Rock Drive 5. Culver-Campus 6. Von Karman 7. San Diego Creek/Peters Canyon Was h -PbaseTwo 8. Walnut and Myford 9. Hicks Canyon Wash 10. Yale A venue ·Santa Ana Freeway 11. Mason Park · Riparian Connector 12. Yale Avenue 13. University Drive 14. Campus Drive 15. MacArthur Blvd. 16. Michelson Drive 17. Red Hil! Ave. 18. Jeffry Road 19. MacArthur Blvt!. 20. Jamboree Road 21. Culver Ori ve 22. Bonita Canyon Road 23. University Drive 24. Irvine Center Drive 25. Barranca Road 26. MacArthur Blvd. 27. Culver Drive 28. A.T. and S.F. Railroad 29. Ford Road · U.C.I. 30. Alton Ave. 31. A.T. and S.F . Railroad 32. San Diego Creek 33. Sand Canyon Road Police Nab Fugitive lnSlwotout Three police officers and a murder suspect from f'1orida ex- «' h a nged gunshots Monday night outside the Watergate Motel in Anaheim but no one was Injured, officers said today. Police had been called to the motel, at 1211 S. West St .. at 9: 18 p.m. after Jacksonville, f'1a., of. ricers asked them to apprehend three murder and car theft sus· pects police said. Officers took Jane Alice Albert, 30, and Timothy Charles Palms, 29, both transients, into custody in the motel parking lot. police said. But a third, Ronald Michael Straight, 32, also a transient, al- Jecedly attempted to run from the motel room . firing two shots from a revolver at pursuing of. ficers. police said. Stral1ht pur portedly ran across West Street as officers fired rtve shots at bJm, then be aJ • le1edly fired once agaio, before neeing into a housing tract north of the motel, police said • Officers fired one more shot at the man as he fled, police said. Straight was s potted later by a police helicopter and arrested without further incident. The trio were trrested on murder and car theft charges, police said, and a car they al· legedly stole ln P1orida was re- cov~red ln the motel parking lot. Straltbt, in addition, wu U'· reated on a charfe of auault oa a poUce olAcw w t.b the intent to commit murder, pol.lee said. 4,000 Comp. 1976 1,000 u.c. 1976 12,000 Comp. 1976 1.000 u.c. 1976 118,000 Des. 1977 1,200 Plan. 1977 40,168 Plan. 1977 310,000 Plan. 1977 Plan. 1977 15,000 Plan. 1977 500 Plan. 1977 34,760 Plan. 1977 !2,000 Plan. 1977 12,500 Plan. 1977 2,000 Plan. 1977 1,000 Plan. 1977 75,504 Des. 1977 . 12,500 Plan. 1977 1.500 Plan. 1977 52,!0C Plan. 1978 59,500 Pl an l97P 1,000 Plan. !978 2,000 Des. 1978 1,000 Plan. 1978 1,500 Plan. 1978 11,250 Plan. 1978 30,200 Plan. 1978 40,168 Plan. 1978 1,000 Plan . 1979 121,200 Plan. 1979 30,000 Plan. 1979 60,000 Plan. 1979 Fro• Page A I REZONE .•. change. MacDougall said approval shouldn't be delayed while the noise impact issue Is debated and urged his fellow commJssloners to endorse Occidental'& applica- tion. Along the way, he lnslsted that posalble school site and popula· lion problems in the area are too distant to plan for now. Before voling to recommend lhe zone change, planning com- missioners considered nine ques· lions raised about the project's environmental impact statement raised by the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council. And Included in the council's ctiallenge was a ·recommenda- tion that a d ecision be delayed until the noise impact issue ls set· Ued. Whil e the commission bypassed the noise recommenda- tion, it did attach planned com· munity regulations to its vot.e of approval. And, commission endonement of the requested zone chance is no more than step one in an elaborate planning process that will cover the phased develop· ment of the project. Once supervisors approve t.be 10De change, each SeC'llleDt of the 15 to 20-year development plan must pass ln review before the Planninc'Commlssion. Commlasloners already made a dent In Occidental'• plan when they deleted a planned shopping center In the community. They also reduced tbe number ot restdenllal dweW.nas ln the plan by almost 200 unlw but went. a«ainst a atalf recommendaUon that plans be shifted to move Ute uniU out ol the so-called nolse llDpaded uu. Six Irvine Bike Trails Near Finish More than $600,000 of the S2 million bike trails bond money approved by Irvine voters in 1974 already has been spent by the Ci· ty on six different bicycle trail projects. A'sslstant City Manager Paul Brady explained thatsix projects are already completed or will be finished by the e nd o( this year. They include tr ails along the Edison right-of-way between Cul ver Drive and J effrey Road. the San Diego Creek. Culver Drive over t h e San Diego Freeway, Turtle Rock Drive. Culver Drive a long Campus Ori ve and a s tr etch or Von Karman. Fourteen more trails are on line for nexl )·ear, with nine more planned for 1978 and the final four expected in 1979. The basic plan involved in the massive bike trail project is to connect parks. schools, shopping and work, so that potential con· ruct with cars is minimized. Organizers of the bike trails system are also attempting to provide a r eal alternative lo travel by car. The initial projects were chosen to form a loop made by the San Diego Creek, E dison right-of-way, Jeffrey Road and Michelson Drive. The other bike trails, as they are completed, will tie in provid· ing access to other parts o£ the c1· ty. according to Brady. next month. Even SO, Brady said some or the new r esidents, whose homes are close to the skateboard run, have asked the city if it could pro- vide sound attenuation measures such as landscaping and fencing. or move the run elsewhere in the park. Br ady said that to add addi· tional hard surface and more landscaping would cost the city nearly $10,000. Moving the skateboard run to a new location in the adjacent adventure play- ground for children would cost about $8,800 to demoHsh the old course and about $11,000 to r e- build it. Brady said that while his staff is prepared to do anything the council orders. he is recommend· ing that the course be len where it is for the lime being to see what, if any. problems develop when it is opened . Other items to be considered tonight include : -The request by the A. J . Hall Company for approval of the 165-unit condominjum project in Turtle Rock. The project was postponed last month when Coon· cilman J ohn Burton appealed the plans because he obj ected to the view of the Turtle Rock being ob- structed by the new houses. More dis cussion about the fencing of the bike trail and motocross course in the Edjson Company right-of-way between Culver Drive and J effrey Road 3.Jld possibly fu rther talk abo~t the motocross. -Council m embers will al· i tempt to develop a current posi· tion on the extension of Culver Drive from Bonita Canyon Drive to the southerly end of the city. -Consideration of the Yale A venue overcrossing at lhe Santa .Ana Freeway. Seven-gear Vigil This black vulture perches atop skull impaled on a slick in Tucson's Arizona.SOD01'a Desert Museum in which he has exercised squatters r ights. Museum officials say that seven years ago the wllurc entered lhe walk-in aVJary at feeding time and later ref used to be escorted out. • --1 •• •, Tuesday' Closing Pric~M NYSE COMPOSI'IE TRANSACTIONS Tuesday. October f2 1m l /N DAIL v PILOT A JI Fame's Price Monopoly Test Looming 87 JORN CVNNlFF ,_,..,.._.....,,,_. In the botUo of ReaLemon on the arocer's shell ls coo· wl.ned not Just a widcly used navorlna bul a marketinc drama that bus shaken the manufacturer and stun11ed some anUt rust nnd tr ode mark lawyers. It might chunee marketing techniques too, because a Federal Trade Commission <FTC> judge hu ruled that Borden, Inc., owner o{ ReaLemon, must llcense others to produce the reconstituted lemon juice product. The decision. which is b('ing appealed to the full commission. 1s ,,,.-------------..] viewed by Borden b ( "an unlawru1 <·ont1sca· NEWS ti NA LYSI !Jon of a valuable pro-_ perly right and 1s ------------beyond the f)<lwer of the commission " The Judgl' 1l mainlains, doesn't understand the opera· lion or the market place or the function of trademarks. But the adm1rustrative law judge, Daruel Hanscom, didn't at'· rive at bis declSlon eastly; st totaled 170 pages. BORDEN INSISTS THAT IN ReaLemon ft oCfers customers a high quality product, and that its strong posi· Lion m the market 1s denved from the respect and aJ. legiance of those customers Hanscom. in his decision of Sept. 3, didn't see 1t that way. He found that Borden unlawfully maintained a monopoly po1>1t1on m the processed lemon Juice industry. a position that sometimes reached 90 percent of the market. tn doing so. he rejected Borden's contention that in measuring the market, fresh lemons should be mcluded alone with processed lemon JWCe. a position that would ha\'e reduced Borden's relative position. llANSC01'1 FOUND FACl'ORS TIIAT he said were ":strongly demonstrative or monopoly power," one of them being "the overwhelming dominance of the ReaLemori brand, and 1t.s acceptance over the years by the trade and the pubhc as the premium brand." Viewing that conclus1on, other food marketers are won· denng U widespread acceptance, traditionally considered a measurement of success, now might be considered a marketing offense. Further observations by the judge perhaps added to that uncertainty. Demonstrating monopoly, he suggested, were these r actors: -"THE CONCOMITANT RELATIVE impotence and small market s hare or competing brands except possibly Golden Crown r ecently m some metropohlan areas;" -·'The premium pnce commanded by the ReaLemoc brand :" -"The compct1tJve necessity for other lemon juice brand::. to sell at substantially lower retail prices on peril of losing shelf space and being forced from the market;" -''THE EXCEPTIONALLY HIGH profitability uf ReaLemon JW<'<' over lhe years amounting to three lo four times the rate or return on assets reahzed by other firms in the. industry group " But Hanscom had other observations that tended to sug gest that quality alone was not the reason for ReaLemon success Borden's marketing pracllces, he said, hmdered, resLrained a nd even prevented compet1ti on. Among other thmgs, he said, the company used prom~ llonal allowances to combat relall competition, special al· lowances lo restrict sale or competitive products, and selec· Uve price cuts that left competitors unable to sell products above their costs. FINDING THAT .. THE HEART or the m onopoly power hes m the ReaLemon trademark and its domi· nant m arket pos1llon," Hanscom ruled that errecbve relief "reqwres the licensing of the ReaLemon brand name ... Borden responded by saying the judge ignored the com- pellllon that exists between fresh lemons and frozen and proces!>ed lemon JWCe, and instead created "an artificial market defin1llon" that led to monopoly claims. The company said also that the judge's findings were ln· consistent "m that they allege Borden obtain exceptionally high profits while selling al unreasonably low pnces." 1t sc.id 11 01d not engage in anticompetitive practices. Market Continues 2-week-old Plunge NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market continued ran- 1ng today after an unsuccessful effort early ln the session t.o br<'ak out or its s lide or the past two weeks. Trading remamccl fairly hght. The Dow Jones average or 30 industrial stocks, down 72 31 points in the lastlOtradmgdays, wasorr another8.47 at 932 35today. flp• a11d Doten• NEW YORIC (API -Thi' followlnq 11\1 '"°~ II\~ N•w Yor~ Stock l:McMnQ!' \lot~' """ warr~nll IMI ,..,.. -uo !tie mo\t '''"' down the m<>ll bllsed °" ~c•nl ot thanoe r•o•rdl..,~ OI "<>I"""' for , .. ,o•y ~ 1:.r~':::i::;~~;:ii.;~o:~~~ O•Htrt"'• Oo>twun Ille o<ev!O<A tlo\1nq orlc• Ind IOO•Y ' ~ p "' prk• price ~"" tooov s 4 p "' prl<.e UPS I UnlvLul T 18'-• ~ Up ". H 1 CCI Corp 111t t V• UP 3 ~~rJ·;,~ =~ .. ~ l~ ~g H 64 > 1 SS S1 so so 49 ,, \ Ar,..,.641 Cll •'4> • V. Up ~ =~,,~, ,~;: : ~ ~ • Nt•Pw lol 11~ • I\ Up 9 Nortslm pl "" • t'At Uo 10 Ell•lr IN! SI\ + v. Up II "d'"'' Orci 1W. + 'At Vo n AllHn In< ,.. • "" Up IJ LloMI Co•p 1V. + 'A UP •• 48 H P""blO Int 1>\ + 'At Ur> •• n HIOll Volt '"· + v. llD •• 1' Pvrlln I',..,, 2 Mt + '"' llll 11 M<M!Sq C..r H o t 1 • VII . ~ •• 43 ,, 1• Ctttt_, Worl 1 + \4o UP ;: ~~.~'(:., tt~ : t:: ~: OOWNI •l 1..4,1 a.a '" ...:. ,, I -·~ 71'1' -21. . -.. ,. •• -a•._ I. _ ,,,, ,., -.,. •W~ -S'J\ 13-._ _ ,.,._ )O\'t -tvt 4" -,.. " -t ... ,0 -"'' •O -2 \\4, -.. S1' -°' ~ -" ,, ... -'" l" -.... 19~ -114 Pitt Ofl 101 Oii • , Oii • s Oii '' Otr •o Olf •• Ott '° Off 11 Oii I 6 ()If 76 Off , ' g: a Off '0 Ott H Off II' Oii • ' Off .. , Off • ' Oft u N1'W Yor111API f'IMI Dow.,..._..,. noc•n ao.n HI-Low Qqte a. 3111nc1 .,.,. "4fl '1171 m.u-14' 20 T rn 1'0\ 03 206 1' 10? .. '°3 IS-1 •1 " uu ., ll ".. .. .., '7 ,,_ 0" t~: ~~ .1~.~~-.1~~-~ .. ~~,;,'Jl Tr... • ....... •••••" •• ...,,~ UIU\ •. u••••• •••• n~~ U 5111 •• ••• • " • • • JI 6, Stocb In The Spotlfght NEW VORIC IAPI· 5'1 ... 4 P,11\. tl"C8 "4d net ,,,.1199 of Ille "''"" most -t1¥t New Yori!: SIOC.k EMc.l\er9 I~ :~~t'rft~•t~~'.~~. 7M,IGO JO---V. Tt•~O Inc tn,100 ~ -Klddtl Co tOMO Jiit+ '-UAL Inc 2JO JOo 22•4-lit Llnon 1nc1 2'1 400 u -V• Oow C11 • • ... • 221,COO .a"+ 14 ~\~:ors .. "..:. ~~:·!J: ~:Zv. Gulf-In ..... , • , 1"-,«IO ,..._ \It Gt• E*···· ....... 117,IOO ,,,._. V. ~':X:.r ·.::::::·. a~::: ~~· ... W.,IQh El , •••• , IU 'llO 11'1>-~ XtrO• Cp • •••••• ., 141 100 ~I NII Mol°" • • • .. • • , 131,200 'V.-"'- M'hat Sio~b Did HEW YORI( (A"I WHAT AMl!X 010 HCW YOltlt (API ' . •' Tuesctay.~r 12.1978 • ·Tonight's . - TV IIlghlights KTLA .0 8:00 -UJesse James." Tyrone Power plays the legendary western bandit with Henry Fonda as bis brother Frank in this 1939.movie. ABC 0 8:15 -.. The Blue Max." George Peppard ·is a young German aviator competing for air supremacy with a squadron of seasoned pilots in this 1966 movie with James Mason and Ursula Andress. CBS .f) 9:00 ·-M•A•s•H. When Radar is promoted -to lieutenant - everyone is shocked, except Hawkeye and B.J ., who've engineered the eleva· tion. Gary Burghoff plays Radar. TV DAILY LOG _f _T_u_E_s_DA_v___.I' EVENING 6:00 D (() CfOJ Ll1l OJ In News U (11) (6) OJ Ntw1 U (24) Star Trek W Gomer Pyle U (ilf> IJ)) !>tl Amerlun lurue Bueull C~mplonsllip Cont'd hom 5PM, ltwe comage of the third playoff game between New Yook Yanken and Kan!Ml~ City Royals O Guns1noh m l'Jrtridee hmily 0>~·12 m (Jectrl( Cotftpan, m Uttle bsuls -6:30-u Dlnlh! Guests include Moshe Dayan. Ralph Waite. (I) Andy Gritfrtll (!A) Mtf'f Gritfift Sllow m fJlllily Affair (fD(])&u~t fDloom! m Journty te Adventure 7:00 U ~~ rl) m News ' U Lian Club 61 My Thrtt SoM re1 To Tell tltt Truth 0 Concenl11tJOft m I loYt Lucy aJ The Fii W Ameriu/lsuel Jewrsh Hour 1111 Andy Grillrth fD Maclleil/Lehrer Report 0) Dramati< Series W Addams family -7:30s D Andy Leslie Ufhms IUe.\ts U Bowline tor Dollars m Tiit Odd eo..p1e < 8) The Golie Show 0 Tiit Jot.ef's Wild • 10) Htltr-oocl Squares m Brady hncll f7) (1) '™"••Ill 111 the Road (if 14opt1 's Htrou tD Clla..t ?I To1111ht m An's S4*ts Wofld W~6ordon 8:00 U l!' 3) If Tony Ortando 111d ~"" Btrnadette Pete<s auests , U 113 fP 10 m Ill Ill Black Sllttp A Ja~nese air ace shot down by Pappy Bor1ngton laces rouch trtalmtnl al the hands of Pappy s men unttl he clobbers them al p1n2 pong Boyonaton and hos crew learn or Colonel Auk1's (Clyde llus.itsu) pong pone prowns shortly before a Seabt• outlol arrives to play the locals on a tablt te""1s tournamenl lo< high stakes Btnl on winning the Black Sheep presenl their captive colon•! as one of th"' own. U Movie: (C) (2hr) "Jesse James" (wts) '39 -Tyrone Power, Henry fond a (6) Movie: rel (2hr) "The Solid Gold Cadillac" (com) '56 Paul Douglas. Judy Holl1d1y 0 Movit: c ('°) "Last of tht $kl hms" (advl '69 Rob runk , m IMelllO & Hennetta MllSK Sllow 1 Q) '"'' Mason W Nns"11bl1t Atbirs 1 '26 Tulare CouAIJ SJmphonr Auttioft fD hmd1ly Circus ( 29 8 ) Grand P111 du lita~uc e> °""into Jt Mme: C "Clttp.alra" CollCI (dra) 63-RKhard Burton (hubeth lavlo<. Rea Hamsan. Pamela B10 .. n. Hume Cronyn, Roddy MtDowall m Psychte P11t1101111111 -8:15-u Movie: ct) "fht llue Mu" (dra) '66-Geo<&e Peppard, limn Mason, Ursula And1m Ou11n1 World War II a younc German. fresh ovl ol aviation lratntng school. competes lor lhe coveted "Blue Mu" fly1n1 a•md with other members of a ~uadron of seaSO!led pilots of lhe a11s1oc1ali<: set. -8:30-m ChlneH rroer•m O> Situalton COllledy 9:00 D lf1l Cil r f) M•A•S.•tf Radar's wdd•n. 1noplit1ble prlimolton to h•ulenant stuns everyone 1n the company but Hawke1e and 8 J , whose 1ncenu1ty was rupo11siblt IOI Rwr's ettvatton 1n rank. D IUl Cl) (Jt tD ~ W.a• "Tnal by Pre1udtee" Cato! lynlty CUUls IS I female suspe<1 who · acwws Set. Pepper Andel10fl o( se1111fly moltsl1n1 htr. PSPPff 1s .susptndtd from 1!1e force and must •lldtfeo a de111rt111entll 1nm1tca· bon and hean111 oa the char11. Sitt finds her career fvrthtt ftopJrd11ed wllea two otlltr ft1111le pnsonm step forw11d and make Jiit Sime c11.tr1e. m Tiit Stars Ate Out In * Lis Vq1s With Chit1 hn ' Lots Mtrtl at ...., Griffill • Tlll llrchilM fl) Variety Show ( ttJ lV) Tiit If My 8wK'll CS CllalllplOllSllip Wrestkn& -9:30- u [l) Q) m One Dly at A 1i111e The dnfhn& Julie ltnd C11uck lu rn a hdrd lesson on hie hom the11 "house· euests" while Sc~neoder conttnues his efforts to return the runa ways 1n. part 3 of a four part episode. Ii) Idly Graham CrllSilde m Chinese Orama fD Mo.le: "Summer Interlude" (ltti (In) Partndce Family m Esptdacular '76 10:00 U (!11 (~J Ct) Switcll Beverly Garland euests llS Mac's l11end and • bu~1nm partner ma ra11Ch1ng enter· pr.u 111bom he and Pete ht.Ip pintect from a ruthless land speculator. Mac poses as an old prospector and and Pete appeals to the speculator's &reed by salting an old mme. 0 cttJ ~ m Police Story • lwo Froas and A Mongoose" Steve la•rtnct 1 Joe ~ntos star As nltrcotl(.S • . t11ators who bust a drua pushtr only to re' 1ap~d by 5e11unt Pittmon (Barry Sullivan) lor 1111sllng tome on under.,orld smalltry Ullrws 6 • lonallU W The !'Jul Bowman Show < 29 ln BonallU m Banta de Primavera \llJ Dinah -10:30-m mm 11tws OJ 24 Horas 11:00 U D m 1'tl News U CJ) (tOl Ill! m NNS U ( ~ (j)) love American Style t6J Su Hunt 0 Celebrity Revue m Cathy Tries To Find * A Father & Loretta looks To Another Man m Miry Hartman, Mary Hartman CE hies ol IM lliurre 111) Stinp tilt Stars ~ F11S110fatrbus m Morit: "The 8111t An1el" -11:30- D 1' (f) (81 CBS late Movie: Ko1ak-Cop on A Cage u Ql) u 1oi m 1o11nny eanoa (U The PTl CJvb U (1Jtl ( e ) Jt MyslefY of lht w .. , m lltws <Ml The 700 Club 12:00 U Best ol Groutho O Movie: c~ "The Destructors (dra) '61 -Rochard £can. Pal11c1a Owens. John £11cson. Joan Blachman. David 811an, Michael Ansara. m Movie: "Tycoon" (dra) '47- Joh11 Wayne, Laraine Day. Sir Cednc H11dW1tke. m Cinema l4 -12:30- D All·Ni1ht Show: "Captain Chrna," "fOf tllt lM of Mike," "Su T11er" m Movie: "Two Art Gwtty" (dt~l '63 Anthony Perkins. Jean Claude 6111ly 1:00 u 1131 re1 1101 T-row m Tht PTl Club 2:00 O Dou~ltfuture Mowru· C "The Montr Jun(le" (dr~) 67 lohn (11cson Loi• Alb11e~t. llthtm1ah Persoll. Don RocUes "fool 1111111" (dra) '65-Anthony Pr1~1M. Edward Albert Jr m Al1·11"'1t Shotr: "Cllicaeo Sylldi ute," "Bloocl Arrow" -2:30- U llews 3:00 8 "'"'•: (CJ ~1 Ditd A TlwMlsand Timu" (dra) '55-Jack Palance Shelly Winlers, lee Marvin. ' DAmMl MOVIES OCTOIU U lltlow, lot ""' C01Mnit11te, are the daJ's llllMi. 10:09 D "Mt0Rlldt" (dra) '42- lda L up1110. "A l'rimt's Affaif" (com) '59-~ Mineo. !Kl "Gentle111111 Ji111" (adv) '42-[nol Flynn. Alexis Smtih • 11:00 0 CC) "Se This Is Paris" (com) '55-Glof" de H.tvtn Jl:OOID wlllmolb ill die Dust" (dra) '41 -Gmf Carson. 1:ooa ~ wDeH .... , .. "' Tales" (suso) 71-Chnstopher Georie. Judy Ctnle. 2:00 • CC> "laltlJ 0" (t0111) '$1-l'aet) McCormid. ' 3:00 (I.I CC) "Tiie F Hits! Gii MM" (wn) '56-Glenn ford. J;J(). CC> "Pinet &r111" (dra1 '74-John Saron. Tentaltve - Airs Diiiy if there's no bueball ~1 Oii (lmt. ..... ' ••a 'New South:' Who W'jill Carry Ii? · By DON McLEOD ... ~-- Beneath the contest between Jimmy Carter and President Ford U\ the South is another struggle. It may determine the political direction of the "New South" and the chances for a new Republican ma- jority. By nominaUng a naU ve Southerner for presi- dent, the Democrats have done two things crucial to the future ot the region: -They have ended a long tree ride ·tor Republicans in the South in national elections. -And they have made it possible tor many Southern Democrats to stop doing their own thing at. the local level while ignoring the party's presiden· Ual ticket. Ever since the Dix· iecrats bolled the party in ( ) 1948, the once Solid South /\' ,.; U 'SA \. • l l SI ' has been eroding for the Democrats. THE SPLIT BEGAN OVER civil rights, but it spread to other issues on which &outhern voters generally concluded that the-Republican presiden· tial nominees were more conser vative, •and therefore closer to their own traditions. Local Democrats, meanwhile, most or them just as conservalive as any Republican. simply ig- nored the national party, or even denounced it while campaigning. They ran on their own strength and voting habits older than the Civil War. At the same time they continued to call themselves Democrats, keeping their seniority in Congress and other benefi ts of national party sup- port. They had the best or both worlds. BUT A COUPLE OF TtDNGS happened that threatened this comfortable accommodation. For one thing, once Southerners had dared to vote against the parly of their fathers at one level, it was an easier step to the next. Southern districts began sending Republicans to Congress for the first time since Reconstruction. Sensing a trend, some newcomers decided to enter politics under the new banner. and some Cl1rist 1110s St 0111ps A complete program to instruct patients how to lo se werght eosrly. then how to maintain their lean w e1ghf. Daily therapy with audio and sub-liminal vrsual a ids to promo te m otivation and encouragement H.CG. a ta1 mobilizing substance. makes 11 easier tor patients to lose weight w ithout fatigue or excessive hunger Lindora's very special diet. designed for ropd weiglt m end rl"'p"oved eatng habits. Behavior modification techniques to learn weight control. Undora·s easy-to -follow maintenance program to prevent regaining. The entire program i's under the strict supervision of medical doctors. specialists in boriatnc medicine. Coll tor 1nformo1ton Mondoy thrv Fndoy 9AM T01PM-2PM 10 6PM. NEWPORT BEACH 640·6831 I 0 h.:nt:i .. n I COSTA MESA 557-1893 IV' -, V1 .,, .. I 1ntr • oner Sl'11 San Bernardino • E long Beach • MllSlon Hills .. awthorne · Orange • Newport Beach • Gorden Grove • Long Beach • Pasadena ta Habra • Woodland Hiiis • Sherman Oaks West Covino • Fullerton • Riverside • Santo Monico Costa Mesa • Pomona • Cerritos • Hollywood 1t,,d;;~~ L ndoro MedlcOI Ctoes are owned end oc;tTii\lslOlod by Mecliccll Doctors that restncl l'1et proctlce to Sonotra. ALL C1lnlC Personnel Doctors ond flU'ses · or" iOanled by lhe Stole Of Calrl~ lilet~ Democrats, like Sen. scrom Thurmond ol South Carolina, who had fi rst defected as Dix· jecrats, completed tbe switch and became Republicans. But just as the conservative mood ot the Old South was leading it to what was seen as the more conservative party, the old patterns were being broken by the 1~ voling rights act, wb.lcb brought thou.sands or new black voters onto the rolls. Ford's hopes of s.vtng the South for the GOP U~ in lrylnr to convince Southerners that as a con· servattve he holds great.er rt.gbt io their loyalties, I even though Cllrtcr was born and raised in their· midst. Carter's hopes Ue in the belief that the "New South" retains ils traditional regional pride wbileit • tolerates new ideas. J SEGREGATIONISTS WERE NO lon1er automatically winning elect.ions. Blacks began lo be elected to public office. And white New South politicians, able to draw trom both constituencies, began to appear, men like Carter in Georgia, Reubin Askew in F1orida, Dale Bumpers in Arkansas, Wendell Ford in Kentucky. Now, one ot the New Southerners is heading the Democratic ballot. "The South sees him the kind or presidential nominee they have been asking the Democrats for," said an early carter backer. "For the first time they have a candidate who is nationally accep· table and whom they can accept.and identify with." "MOST LOC~L CANDIDATES FOR the first time are proud to have the national ticket tied to their campaigns," said David Dunn, Carter's Florida campaign coordinator. ,. .... ,. ..... If Carter makes the national Democratic party WHO WILL CAPTURE 'NEW SOUTH?' respectable to Southern voters, the main advantage ;;;;===================-= the Republicans bad in the South will be wiped out. And most of them know it. Ford workers say they are surprised at the way Ronald Reagan's con· servative Republican backers are pitching in to save the Ford campaign in Dixie. The kind of Southerners who are sticking with the GOP appear to be in large measure those who would have been Republicans all along, if they had lived in another part of the country: businessmen, professionals, white collar workers, suburbanites. THIS IS A GROMNG CLASS IN the South and could provide a reasonable base for a growing Republican party no matter who wins the presiden- cy, if the GOP can adaplits approach and cultivate these voters. On the other hand, one of the things that has stumped Ford's strategists is the way the rural South and the growing urban industrial working class is sticking with Carter. IMMEDIATE OC.CUPANCY 48,072 SQ. FT •. OF INDUSTRIAL SPACE PLUS RAIL SERVICE, DOCK·HIGB LOADING, DOCK LEVELERS, PROTECTED ENVIRONMENT, EASY FREEWAY ACCESS& MORE. For rnformalroR on this or other bu1ld1ng alternatrves. caU your broker Of CrJ1g Lyon. Manager of Sales & Leasing. at (213) 628·4204. (714) 833·1010. Despite their conservative bent on social is· sues, these people are closely affected by the baslc economic issues that always have been the strength of the Democratic party. Recession and inflation in· fluence them just as much as voters anywhere else. THAT BASIC CARTER STRENGTH has not been lost on the Democrats of the old school. While Ford is picking up some Democratic support in the South, he is not getting it in the measure that Nixon, Goldwater and Eisenhower dJd. There are people lining up behind Carter who haven 'l backed the na· tional ticket in two or thr~ decades. AVAILABLE NOW AT :~weSTRIAl COMPLEX Yes you can! Systematic savings is the way you con reach your sovrngs goal, whether ifs $25,000, $50,000 or $100,000. Systematic savings can pay for a vacation, a college education, a new house- and so much more. How Much You C.n 5nc. It depends on the type of account and the interest paid, how much you deposit every month, and the method of compounding. At Imperial Savings, the interest is compounded daily-360 days a year-and paid quarterly. In our booklet, you'll find out how much you con save in a given period of time. You'll see, i1 pays to save at Imperial. 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M"1 • Oow.,lown Loe Angel .. •E•t Pa .. dena • •Glendor1 • Hunllnglon P8tk ·•Newport Beach Newpot1 Center · Paaadena • Redlands · • Rlveralde • •Santa Monica Sierra M1dre ·•Simi Vlll•Y ·•South Gate · Studio City · Topenoa C1nyon ~•Del Amo/Torrance · •weet Loa Angel .. • Weelwood Vlll19e Weet Covin•· •Whittler· Wllahlre ·•Woodland Hiiia Over 15 Calllomla olflcee to Mrve you. SM tti. while PIO•• of your telephone directory tor the office neareat you. •Offlc .. Open Satiudaya-9·1 ••Offfc•• Open Saturdaya-10·4 A WHOllV 09/N(O SUISIOIAJIV OF OVFR' l fll ION OOlLAR .~.Al COfll'OllATION Of AMEltlCA am O ICA 1~16 ..... t • I ' Lag11na/South Coast Afternoon N.Y. Stoek.~ t. I .. ~OL. 6t# NO. 286, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FOR NtA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1976 TENCENT$t He ijHyzen · Insists t BY TOM BAaLEY And the witness made it clear anformation on any project." 11r .. o.tt,,. ... ,... under lnte.rrocatlon from Deputy Hyien told the jury in Judge H. Obviously wearied by a lone District Attorney John Cooley Walter Steiner's courtroom. cross examination, San that be might not be to a The66·year·ohlarc.hitec.·tisbe-Clemente architect Leon Hyzen courtroom today lt be had been Ing tried on 'bribery charges con- qain told a Superior Court jury able to speak t.o RJley rather than tained in a grana jury indictment today that bribery was not bis the supervisor's chief aide, which claims that he attempted purpose when he attempted to fon:Qer journalist Peter Herman. to offer $1,000 to Riley as a cam- eo n tact 0 c-an c e Count Y ''I learned a long time ago-that paign contribution. SUpervisor Thomas 1\iley last you don't speak to the second in ll is alleged that Hyzen sought May. (Ommand ii you want accurate favorable consideration when the Didn't Try county board decided lhat it was time to seek an architect for the proposed San Clemente public library. Hyzen told Conley today that no such idea was in his mind when he first spoke to Herman "because I knew the supervisors did not even have a San Clem\lnte library in their budget." Herman bas testified that Hyzen offered $1,000 to Riley as a campaign contribution and further offered to solicit votes for Riley in the San Clemente area. The jury has listened to tape recordings of telephone con- versations between Herman 'and Hyzen which, the prosecution claims, make it clear that bribery was the motive behind Bribe·; t • ~ Hyzen's calls. 'f Riley appeared lo defend1 Hyzen, however, when he was) ~al.led as a prosecution witneu: by Conley. .i "I am sure Mr. Hyzen was un., aware he was committing a., ' crime by making those com·:. ments," RUey told the JW'Y. ~ . :; 3 States Cut Flu Shots~ ' D eaths in P e nnsylv ania Prompt Action Seven-year Vigil This black vulture perches atop skull impaled on a stick in Tucson's Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in which he has exercised squatters rights. Museum officials say that seven years ago the vulture entered the walk·in aviary at feeding time and later refused to be escorted out. Clemente Council Eyes Water Hike A38percent water rate hike and discussions of city sewer pro- blems that could lead to more tban doubling of the sewer fees charged in San Clemente will be before the City Council meeting al 7:30o'clock tonight at city hall. Those and other items o( city Whites F a ce Rugby Fines JOHANNESBURG, South Africa CAP> -Minister oC Sport Piel Koornhof says eight whites who played in a racially integral· ed rugby match at Port Elizabeth have violated South Africa's race policies and may be penalized. But by late Monday there were no reports that. any of the white~ involved in Sunday's match bac! been arrested. Legal action a1a1nst whites violatin g the Group Areas Act. rarely involves mord than a minor fine and judicial rebuke. The match was ptayea Detore ISOIJle 10.000 black spect.ators in the heart of the city's black Kwuakele Township despite al· tempts to have the game hailed 11)' government sports <JlClcial~. pollUclans and secuncy pQlicey. business which were to have been handled at a meeting last week were reschedwed for this meet- ing. If the council approves the hike in water rates requested by City Manager Gerald Weeks, the minimum monthly household bill wouldgolrom $S.70to$7.87. Water charges are assessed on a de-escalating scate that gives a per-unit price break to heavier users. A plan will be discussed that would levy a flat rate to all users. That could give a break to the homeowner. Residents have been told pre· viously sewer rates would jump by70percent. But under the plan facing the council tonight. the homeowner, who pays $4 per month sewer fees, would be paying $8.40 per month, allOpercentleap. Weeks said increased costs are due to unexpected expenses in- curred because of sewer improve- ments mandated by the regional water quality control board and theclly decision to rejoin SERRA, a regional waste wate.r disposal pr<>1ram. Besides the increased user fees, those costs will be borne by federal grants and aproposed$7.4 million revenue bond the city will pay orr over 25 years. Other agenda items include: (See FEES, Page AZ> BULLETIN Vermont and Louisiana also have temporarily baited swine Ou shots in the wake of three de· aths. By The Associated Press Wisconsin health officials to- day suspended for three days the swine flu inoculation program througbctut the state following the deaths of three elderly persons just hours after they re- ceived swine flu shots in Pen- nsylvania's Allegheny County. All 13 inoculation sites in Al- legheny County were also shut LB Co uncil To View Project The Laguna Beach City Coun· cil will consider a formal city position on a $28.6 million, 1,285 unit development OC) 472 acres next to Top of the World when it meets at 4:30 p.m . Wednesday at city hall. The development known as the ··Marcroft project" is on county territory next to the Laguna Beach City Limits along the hilltop property. As envisioned by the d e· veloper, the l ,284 units would be contained on 160 acres, with the remainder used for clubhouses, maintenance and open space. The units averaging 750 square feet wouJd. proponents saJ\ be designed to sell for $22,257 and sales would be r estricted lo the elderly. The project hJls been promoted as a low-cost housing project for senior citizens and has generated support from county s enior citizen organizations, although <See PROJECT, Page A2) Laguna Beach J ewel Theft Loot $16,135 Laguna Beach police a .. e in· vestigating the theft of $16,135 worth or diamond and jade rings taken in a daring burglary or Warren Imports, 1462 South .Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. The burglary of 27 rings was committe d during business hours while four employes and perhaps as many as 30 customers were in the store. The rings were taken rrom a locked display case which was forced open. The crime occurred sometime between noon and 2 p. m. Thurs· day. A complete accounting of the missing articles is still pend- ing. Susan Lawrence, manager, said today store security ar- rangemenls are being r evised and strengthened in the wake or the theft. down , altho ugh health authorities said there was no link directly relating the deaths to the inoculations. A spot check with state health departments across the country indicated that Wisconsin was the only state to take immediate ac- tion to discontinue or cut back the inocuJatioo program. Wisconsin's acting state health officer, Dr. Edwin Larkin, said swine nu shots at 110 local clinics would. be suspended !Gr 72 hours while the federal Center for Dis· ease Control jn Atlanta in· vesligates the deaths in Pen· L i 11da Lau e nsylvan.ia. Two doctors for the center, which is administering the na· tional program, were dispatched this morning to Pennsylvania. In Harrisburg, Pa., State Health Secretary Leonard Bachman said his department has found no connection between the deaths and the nu vaccine. He said the Pennsylvania pro- gram will continue as scheduled. Allegheny County health of· ficials described the closing of the 13 clinics there as a precau- tionary measure. "At the same time, we are talk· S C S ewage Spill Closes Beach Area San Clemente city ofCicials scrambled today to find stronger replacements for nve drive belts that aoapped at the Linda Lane sewer ~ump station Sunday. and caused what couot.y health ol· Ocials are calling the biggest sewage spill in city history. More than a mile of beach s tretching north from the municipal pier is expected lo re- m a in closed through next weeke~d. The Lind a Lane pump automatically switched to aux· iliary power Sunday after a power failure caused by a citizens band radio antenna that fell onto 12,000-voll electric lines. The belts that drive the twin pumps -they are similar but larger than the fan belt that drives a car -overheated and snapped. With the pumps out, sewage spewed into the sea through a ne•by culvert for hours. Estimates or the amount of raw wute materials that &Polled the beach varied widely. While City Engineer Phil Peter figured 7,200 gallons seeped into the sea, county health officials put it at "100,000 gallons; maybe a little more, maybe a little · less.'' · En.vir o nm e ntal Health Specialist Mike Wehner said the s pill was probably San Clemente's biggest. and the big- gest in the county since 1969, when the Santa Ana River flooded and destroyed a sewage station in Huntington Beach. The backup was the sixth this year for San Clemente. Laguna 'Better Ofj With Krishna Ruling The city of Laguna Beach re- ceived an it was asking in a suit against the Hare Krishna sect, and "got a better deal" by ac· cepting a stipulated judgment against the organization than if it had proceeded with litigation. That's the view of City At· lorney George Logan, who framed the agreement -now. a Superior Court order -requiring the Hare Krishna to halt use of their Ramona Avenue temple for religious services and to halt their public feasts effective Dec. 31. Logan said Monday that while the agreement bound the Krishna lo halt the practices - violations of the city's zoning code -they did nol admit they had been doing what they agreed they will not do. Logan said the stipulated judg- ment was the best arrangement which could have been made for the city, for three reasons. -The city was not guaranteed that its suit against the Hare Krishna would be successful. -Even if it were successful, "I have my doubts any judge would force any religious institu· tion to shut down immediately." -Even if the city had pre· vailed at the Superior Court the sect could have appealed and de· layed the effective date for at least a year. "l believe we got a much better judgment than we could have gotten bad we gone to trial, .. Logan said. The city's legal action against the Krishna began in resPonse to complaints from neighbors many of whom said they were awakened by pre-dawn chanting and gong ringing, who said they suffered incidents of vandalism, and who said their property was littered after the Sunday public feasts. l:onnty lneome Boost Reported The sect's temple at 641 Ramona Ave. is in a commercial zone, although the character or the neighborhood is residential. For it to conduct religious services lawfully, the organila· lion would have to seek and re- ceive a conditional use permit fromtbeclty. Tbe council ordered action <8ee &IUSBNA, Page.AJ) f Pro• A.uotlated..-e.Wlnl Per capita Jncome ln Orance ty averaged $6,210 in 1914, from $5, 790 in 1973, the Com- ee Department reported ~ py. 1be county, orndaJl.y dubbed Anabelm.Santa Ana-Garden rove !tandard metropolitan LlsUcaJ area (SMSA). rank.s la th~ natlon. Tbe &ridgeport·Stamford· orwatk-Da.obury area ol Con- nectlcut remalned the nation's sricbelt metrOpOlitm area. with 48 unuaJ peraonal iDcom• ol ......... .,,. $7,'m per person, an increase or 9.1 percent. Tbe national average, reported earlier by th& Commerce Depart- ment. wu $5,449. an increqe of 8.5 perceat over 1973. Workers in tbe Anchorage, Alaska. re1ion jumped 11,"0m 14th place In 1$73 to seeoad place in the next year. with a 22.~ percent Jump to an average income of S7,1S9. Whtie the Commerce Department oUertd no explana· uon, the chJnae p.robably reflects workce the Ala.aka pl.pelin.e. Persoaal liac:Ome coas1N ol wages, 1alarie1, interest, dividends and other money re- ceived by lndJ\tlduals alter de- ducUon of Social Securit~ taxes. t>ersonal Income tax dtducUons are not considered. Ranking with Bridgeport and Anchorage in the top 10 for 1974 were Waehin1ton, D.C.1 with average annual per capita in· come of $?1102, up 9.4 percent over 1973; NUUu-Suffolk, N.Y., $7,08', up 7.9 percent; San Fran· clsto-Oakland, $7.030, ~ 10.8 percent; Newark. N.J;. 111.181. up 9.7 percent; Cblcaao. ta.m •. up ·~ ~~~..---~~-) ,, 10.1 pereent; New York. $8,668, up 9 percent; West Palm Beach· Boca Raton, F1a .. $6.822, up 6.5 percent; and Reno, Nev., $6.620, up 3.6 percent. . DA Hieb to Speak At Laguna Meeting The Los Angele4·Long Beach SMSA ranks 16 ln the natlCQ. wtt.h Orange County Dlatttc:t At· 1974 ln tu ...... in tomey Cecil Hicks wlU be the come a .,.,,.,._, an creue feat·-ed ~-"'er •at a l•--beon ove.-lbel913tallyof~757, ... --The San Diego are. ranked 90 meet.int Laguna Fac:ta at noon in 197' t•a. I or Wednesday at. the Hotel Lqw:ia. ' w wa average neome Hlcka wlll speak on the dut.les ~·~8;o, ~~(Id with ma Jn-and res~nslblUUcs of t.tie di.s- The JUveralde an Bernardino-trict att.orney'1 offke. Tho me«- Ontario area ranks 184-with 1914 in& ls public. Tickets "'o tyo .. income at -..ss1,..., trom im•e .Reseo'aUooa m~ be IUdo by .fM'L 4 • _ ~ . ...__ ... -~ , tele~g ...,.2241. in~ about three deaths involving the same facility within houl'$ after inoculation, and the odds oC that happening are formidable,•• said County Coroner Cyril Wee ht. AU three of the people who died had chronic heart conditions, Wecht said1 and the stress of.Jr~ ting the snou may have 1Jon- tributed to tl\elr deaths. A spo"kesman for the Center ol Disease Control said there were no plans to curtail lhe nationwide program aimed at immunizing up to 200 million Americans against swine nu. Parking Permits On Sale Permits allowing motorists to park at metered spaces i.D Laguna Beach without depositing coins in the meters are now oo sale at city hall. The permils available to resi· dents and nonresidents alike cost ~and are good through Dec. 31. They otrer considerable adva~ tageto motorists who frequent the downtown area especially since the increase of meter fees from 10 to 20 cents an hour, Stan Scholl, a direct-Or or municipal services, said. The $5 permits requires that motorists adhere to the two-hour time limit at most downtown meters, however. The SS quarterly permits are good at all city parking lots and all meters installed in the city. There are two other types of permits as well. -A $15 residential parking permit for people whose homes are by meters. The permit allows parking irrespective of residen· ti al meter time limits. -A $15 per parking permit de- signed to accommodate downtown employes allowing un· limited time parking at meters along Third Street, Mermaid Street and Clilf Ori ve. The permit system is part of a packa'e including in~reased meter fees, revised time limits and stepped up enforcement ap. proved by the city council. Its intent is to frJ!e up parking spaces in the immediate downtown area. Nuclear Sites SACRAMENTO (AP) Merced and Madera eountl .. have been chosen as alternate sites for a nuclear Power plant. Pacmc Gas and Electric Com· pany officials have announced. The company's preferred site is 20 miles east of Modesto. Coast We a t h e r More nlsbt and morning . low clouds and toe Wednes· day wilb temperatures on the coast ol about 73, low ' about60. ~ INl lDE TOD/l Y t The 'Net0 SoutJl•: Don It bflMSQ il'l ,OftJI polftfcfaft't pock.ft flt 19161 Go'.:1 ~rl!"' haoe "°'°" to btU.ve that H • don -and that it donn't. Su Pa,ge AJ2. •••e~ ' .. .,_~ M MllU..... ., . ,,... ..... •• :;a.;."'" Alt ~ .... ·j •• ....... ~ .... a-1 .... ... 14 .............. c.lc• .. =~ .e: ~ ., O....Neek• •• ::= ... .-..,A~ ............ "' ............ At T~ •1t ....... A• n "'""'°" At :...::.. h---.. "'' Wlrtll ...... .. ' A2 OAtl Y PILOT L/SC Tu11saay Oetotw 12. 1978 Center· Approved Saddleback Oka,,_ Qunpus Building Use The lwo-year controversy over a child care center on the Sad- dleback Colle1e campus was brought closer to n conclusion Monday. With a split vote. college tnaatees agreed to accept bids to convert an existing campus building into the center and authorized the center's operation during the spring semester. Trustee Frank Greinke of Tustin opposed the move. I "I don't believe we should have the responsibility of caring for children," be explained. "I think that belongs with parents. lt belongs in the home and not in the college." A•WIA-10 UNDER ARREST? Mao's Widow Chiang Chinese Name New Chairman TOKYO (AP> -A Chinese governm en·l spokesman an· nounced that Prl!micr Hua Kuo- Ceng bas been appointed to suc- ceed the late Mao Tse-lung as <'hairman of the Chinese Com- munist party. J apan's Kyodo news servicc rC'ported toda y from Pekin~. The announcement followed repo~s that Mao's widow and three other Politburo officials were under arrest Wall posters appeared in Pek· ing last week reporting the suc- cession of the 57-ycar-old Hua, but there had been no oCCicial an· nouncement. The spokes m:m said it had been delayed to allow the entire Communist party or- ganization to be informed in advance, Kyodo said. The Japanl'se agency said the spokesman made the announce· ment to reporters just before a reception for the visiting prim(' minister of Papua New Guinea. Mi chael Thom as Som are. There still was no('Onfi rmallon of unofficial reports from Peking that Mao's widow, Chiang Ching. and three other high ranking of fi cia ls associated with the party's radical wing had been ar· rested. accused or plotting a coup. These reporlc; suggested that serious infi ghting was goin~ on and that positions still might not have solidified since Mao died Sept. 9. The official Jlslnhua news agency hnd not r eported Hua':. uppointmcnt. In a c·ommuniquc on the establtshmcnt of dip- lomatic r elations with Papua New Guinea, Hua signed as pre mier, Hsinhua said. However, in a story Saturday, Hsinhua referred to the party Central Committee "headed by Comrade Hua Kuo-fena ... OAANOf COAST l ">C DAILY PILOT =::t'~~·~~:,1.'r\ :: . .::;·:';~~ ;;.:~ CO.-st Pvc.t1\ftlno Como~"•· y~,. .. ,,.~lf'Of'l\lf#• out>ll~ 1"'90l"OtY •hrOVl!tf\ • rnS..y ,, .. l~nf"' -· '"--1 e .. d•, """""'I'"" llo ><h r...,.. t•tft V•Uty. lr•IM . s..d-d~O.C.8' Vtllfl'y "'"" ~91ac1'1Soutt.CN\t /lt.\lf'lq'•r~1-.., fllOf\ tS °'*'•....O St1""011Yt ...a ~' fl¥ _, .. , -~ .. _ ,, "' 110 -.. 11 .. '4'9t\.CMt•~w.C.11t0t"'•"~ ·--·-~-~·•.,.,PWCllt~ Tnaatee Robert Bartholomew, ailo ol Tustin. voiccid no vote on the issue. Mission VleJo's Donna Ben-y, the third trust~ who has indicated disapproval of the center in the past, was not at the meeting. Contractors' bids for the re- novation project may be re- turned within a month, said William Blurock, arcb.itect on the project. If the bids are within the $21,000 allowed in the college's budget and if the trustees award a contract for the-job, the center may be completed and ready for use in three to four months, he said. The center will use about a Wrd o( the space ln J Building, a portable structure which was used for the physical education department for seven years. The space has been vacant since the college's new gym compl ex opened in September. Bluroc k said m ost of the needed work will be rehabilita. lion of the building ... 'There's a lot of disrepair in there now," he told trustees. The project will Include con- verting restrooms so they can be used by children, enclosing a play yard, providing windows so the play area can be observed adding walls and r epairing floors. Front Page Al FEES ... -A request from the California League of Cities that the council talce a position on so-called in· terference by the Orange County Human Relations Commission with the internal affairs of cities. -A decision on a bid from Horticultural Services of Tustin for parks maintenance work now performed by city employes. Weeks recommends the bid. S355.000 over cst1makd city ex- pen~es, be rejected. A priority list of public works projccts, including nearly a haJf. million dollars in municipal pier improvements. a $450,000 water reservoir and $350,000 in sewer improvements. The city would apply for federal fundjng under the $2 billion public works jobs bill FroHa Pag«' A I KRISHNA. • • againsttheculton Dec. 3, 1975. Rumors h ave at the organiza- tion is seeking a location in Laguna Canyon for in which lo hold its ser vices, however. this could neither be confirmed or de- nied through spokesmen for the Hare Krishna. The temple president today re- fused to speak with a reporter. saying through an intermedjary that newspapers were "only in· tcrested in printing lies ... French New Ooh Leader Marcia French has been elect- ed president of the Laguna Beach High School Booster Club. Othe r o fficers a rc Gar y C.ompf. vice prl•sidenl; Liz Wetsel. secretary; Art Fong. treasurer; Caroline Dodds. member ship c hairman; and Mary J o Mancuso. telephone chairman. Board m c m bcrs include Willia m s Evans and Vince McCullough. Al Its first meeting this school year, the club presented $878 for the band, boys' basketball, girls' and boys' swimmin~ and water poJ03nd the girls' track Black Vote Drive ATLANTIC CITY.NJ. <AP) - Pro-casino forl'cs are making a strong effort for the black vole and h ave hired a prominent black California legislator, As· semblyman Willie L. Brown Jr . 0 -San Francisco. to lead the drive. The committee to Rebuild J\Uantic City ls paying Brown to help organize black voters in northern New J ersey cities to vote in favor of the Nov. 2 caslno gambling referendum. Two truate;s ques tioned wbelhe-r the childr~n·is noise will disturb classes. Admi.rUstrators ~.however, that the building is adjacent to the physical educa. lion play fields. . Women, some of whom have been pusblng the need fOf' the center for two years, filled the meeting room. They made no comment other than to tbanJc trustees after the vote. Plans made by a campus com- mittee call for the establishment ol a board of directors lo oversee the center and to charge a small fee to make it sell-supporting. The center is planned for 60 youngsters. DA Probes Camarillo's 100 Deaths VENTURA (AP > -More than 100 deaths at Camarillo State Hospital o~er the past three years are being investigated by the Ventura County di strict at-torney's office, and officials say some hospital workers may be c harged with murde r or manslaughter. Meantime, another investiga- tion bas been called for by As- semblyma n Art Torres <D· Monterey Park), to look into charges of patient a buse at Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk. In the Ventura probe, Assistant County Dist. Atty. Mike Brad· bury said Monday his office bas spent eight months looking into the deaths at Camarillo and is taJcing a "h ard look" al 79 de- aths. He said many of the deaths were caused by d rug overdoses, asphyxiation or negligence. Bradbury said be hopes to have the investigation completed by the end of the year. Investigators from the district attorney's office, assisted by a panel of medical experts, have dug through tens of thousands of pages of ma terials, including medical records and autopsies, a nd a r e interviewing the hospital's staff, Bradbury said. Handicapped Group Plans College Meet Saddleback College officials and r epresentatives of the Southern Orange County chapter or the California Association for Physically H a ndicapped <CAPH> will discuss plans .and programs for the handicapped from 2 to 4 p.m. Thursday in Room WS-1 on the campus. Caroll Richardson. coordinator of physically handicapped pro- grams at the college, said the meeting should be of interest to all people with physl~al limita- tions. A film on activities and services for the physically im· paired will be presented by Shirley Ric hard, a counselor with the State Department of Rehabilitation. Details about a symposium for people with physical disabilities and plans for improved services at the college also will be dis- cussed. Crucified Cat Probe Nixed San Clemente police have de- cided not to investigate the mutilation killing of a cat left crucified in a peace omcer's back yard Sunday, a department spokesma n said today. The cat 's throat was slashed and it was tied to two cross stakes. A drawing of a death's head ligure with occult symbols and language was left under the remains. The spokesman said a heavy c8$eload of other climes pre- vented more than cursory in· speclion of the incident. t Burraed Out Bus A city bus in San Diego smolders after it was destroyed by fire Monday. It was empty except for the driver , who got out in time. Police blamed a blown Ure which ignited the gas tank. Murder Suspect, Police Trade Shots Three police officers and a murder suspect from florida ex- c ha nged tt uns hots Monday night outside the Watergate Motel in Anaheim but no one was injured, officers said today. Police bad been called to the motel, at 1211 S. West St., at 9: 18 p.m . after Jacksonville. Fla., of· ri cers asked them to apprehend three murder and cat theft s us- pects, police said. Officer s took J a ne Alice Albert, 30, and Timothy Charles Palms, 29, both transients, into custody in the motel parking lot, police said. But a third, Ronald Michael Straight, 32, also a transient, al- legedly attempted to run from the motel room, firing two sbots from a revolver at pursuing of- ficers, police said. Straight purportedly r an across West Street as officers fired five shots at him, then he al· legedly fired once again, before fleeing into a housing tract north of the motel, police said. Officers fired one more shot at the man as be fled, police said. Str~ght was spotted later by a Fro• Page Al PROJECT ••• many seniors in the Laguna Beach area h ave opposed it in county bearings. The Marcroft project has been the subject of county planning commission consideration pre- viously. Public hearings on General Plan Amendment 76·2 of which Marcroft is a part will be held Oct. 18 and Nov. 2. The county planning commission is expected to vote on the issue Nov. 9. police helicopter and arrested without further incident. The trio were arrested on murder and car theft charges, police said, and a car they al- legedly stole in Florida was re~ covered in the motel parking lol Straight, in addition. was ar· rested on a charge of assault on a police officer with the intent to commit murder, police said. South Coast Area Crime Talk Tonight South Orange County crime trends will be discussed at the second session of a special Sad- dl ebac k College crime sym- posium tonight at 7 in room 1390{ the library. Laguna Beach Police Chief Jon Sparks, Tus tin Chief Joseph J. Kelly and Lt. Jack Devereaux, commander of the south county sheriff's substation in Laguna Niguel will make presentations on the problem and answer ques- tions. The first session this week featured a talk on national crime problems by a federal narcotics agent and a representative or the CaJifornia attorney general's of· fice. Plans for the third symposium session on Oct. 19 include talks by a Superior Court judge, a representative or the county dis- trict attorney's office and county Sheriff Bradley Gates. They will speak on the causes of crime. And on Oct. 26, there will be a debate on the issue of gun con- trol. Rosie the Cat Missing; Fear Of Catnaping For a dozen years, Rosie the tJger cat was a companion and good luck symbol. Rosie walked in the door t>f Shields Realty the day it opened for business in Laguna Beach and over the years she made friends with just about everyone and every thing, even dogs which came ln the door. Now, Rosie is gone, missing. "Nobody can find hide nor halr of her. Our only conclusion Is that somebody took her," Peggy Johnson, Rosie's friend, said Monday. Miss Johnson said nobody knew bow old Rosie was. "But, we've looked absolutely everyplace for her. U she had just gone off someplace to die, we'd have found her. "Besides, she was in fine fet- tle, chasing files and playing tn the office the day before," Miss Johnson said Monday. . Rosie was in the office Satur· day. The cleaning man let her out, nothing unusual, but she didn't come back. Miss Johnson said there would be a reward for the return of the striped cat with white paws al\d bib, but she said she feared Rosie bad been c atnapped perhaps lo be sold for research. "We just feel terrible. Even if she did go off someplace to die, at least we'd know. "If we only knew," she said. Minister Dies OSAKA, Japan (AP) -Mrs. Masa Nakayama, Japan's firsl woman cabinet minister, died in a hospital Monday of throat cancer . She was 85. Mrs. Nakayama served as heaJth and welfare minister from July to December 1960. She retired in 1969. Laguna Beach has b een criUcal or the project and the council has taken action to pre- vent use of city streets to it. The council is expected to ham· mer out a formal city stance in opposition and to authorize Plan- ning Director Douglas Schmitz to represent the city at the county hcarin~s. San Clemente Signs1 Water Agreement Other council business in· eludes: -Restriction of parking along Laguna Canyon Road from the Laguna Beach School of Art to El Toro Road and Installation of turning lanes. -A report by City Attorney George Logan on r esolution of ci· ty zoning litigation SJtainst th•~ Hare Krishna sect. -A request by the Laguna Beach Council on Aging for use of the city's two vans to transport elderly citizens to its Health Fair Nov. 7 at the Festival of Arlc; grounds. -A report by Vice Mayor Jon Brand on negotiations for acquisi- tion of Laguna Canyon property. Brand sees the Irvine land as a potential art festival, park and parking lot site. The San Clemente City Council has sign e d a l o n g-t e rm cooperative agreement with Tri- Cilles Municipal Water District to furnish water to the San Onofre nuclear generating station und San Onofre State Park. The city now provides water to San Onofre, with a temporary line. Tri-Cities is expected to begin construction of a perma· nent water pipeline next week. Portions of the line pass through 50uthcrn San Clemente. The agreement settles a long. time dispute between the two agencies over providing woter to the revenue-rich power plant. Tri-Cities expects to generate $400,000 a year in taxes when the two new reactors In San Onofre push the property's assessed value to well over $2 billion. San Clemente officials tried long and hard to annex San Onofre to the city so it could capture the tax revenue. At one lime the city even tried to secede from Orange County and join San Diego County in which San Onofre is situated. Cities cannot a nnex territory! across county lines. Wate r distri ct s can. rn December last year, Tri-Cities did. San Clemente will conUnue to provide water . to the power sta· lion and s tate parks until the Tri· Cities line is complete, according to the agreement. The agreement says the city and water district will "actively cooperate in future years in a continuing effort to maximize th<? areas of mutual benent relating to additional water 11upplies. reclamation of water, 11torage and ground w ater manage• ment." Mutual benefits include the lri teroonnection of both water dlt tribullon systems. Co8t of that will be borne by Tri-Cities. Additionally, each walel ayatem will be available for ~ as a backup to ln!lure unlnter rupted service to San Onofre. JMllll.Cwloy Vice"'-' ..... '""" 0. .... 11--~" """'' 1:011 .. ._, .. ,,. ........... ~-•"9t.illlw a.41M".l--~ -A<tl\1-............ ldi~\ Planners Okay El Toro Rezone ThP. Trl·Clties oallsadea re provide water to the power •t• pJementing water for ftrc filbt-inl purposes. That provision ~ expected lo improve the clty 1 fire insurance rating, which wl mean r educed ins urance pr~ mluma tot.he city and residents. ~111 .. Hfl~ -""" ,, .. ~Z'Vo' :.-:-~ .,.u omc .. C.O.laM9u·lJOW.lt~91~ _._ ... (~."">IN<•-.... , .. '"'°""--1/•l"'f l\llll~P., R-1• "4•01tftl'rte"""1' Tetepltone (t14)14M321 Cl....mM Mvettl .. t4Mt71 ~leect.4M~nta: T ... ptlon•4t4-MM ,. __ a. ..... ir ·~ c.-..,. Or-C..-.t .............. c-....... Jet ,.,.. • ..,.i. .. u1 ... 1ra1-.....,.,., llltl..., ~ ._,,,.,lltt"'•~I• ""ti~ MO .. ",,.._,c« wllheut tti9<••• -"'"''"" •• ......... -. I«-<IHt .. u_ Nl4 ai ~It Mo~. C.111•"'••· lutncrlatf•• "" <.,,,., u so IMfttlll~ bT Moll tu• IMM!lfy. """'.,' ........... _ .. ,. By GARY GRANVILLE Of~Dall'yl• .... IWI Orange Count~ plMnlng com· misslonen vote4 4·1 Monday to recommend a 1,375-acre zone change in the north El Toro area aimed at eventually accom modaUng 6,000 dwellings and rouably 20,000 residents. Rancho de los Allsoe, • com· munlty planned by Occldenta.l Land Companf, Il es north of Tra.buco Road between El Toro Rofd and Bake P •rtway. 'Jbe Plannlnf Comml$Slon tn· donement of the ione chaqe ' needed to develop the communi· ty will go to the county Board of Supervisors where final approval Is virtually assured. Only commission ebalrmnn Shirley Grlndle opJ)n3ed recom· mending the zone chan•e Mon- day. Mrs. Grindle based her objec. Uoo mainly on • sun unsettled dispute over the Impact 0( jet noise on lend u11e near the El Toro M nrine Corps Air Station ttcr position wu no dilfttenl than lt was atx wffka aco when she said rtltdentJal eonsttuctJon should be banned Jn areas a coo· sultanrs study says Is probably .. homes In the Rancho de los adversely impacted by jet noise. Allsos will lie within the consul· And her fellow commissioners' tant's noise impacted area. position was no different from Planning Commlaaloner when they opposed Mrs. Grindle Wllllnm MacDougaJI led the and sald a home building ban move t o a pprove the zone shouldn't be imposed ln some of ch:mge. the areas defined by the consul· MacDoug11l said approval tant. shouldn't be delayed whllo the Now, the noise Issue ls de-noise t mpacti1Suc ls debated and adlod:.cd on a 2·2 Board of urged bJ a fellow commissioners Supervisors stalemate, a t.o endorse Occidcntal's appllca- stalemate that Suporvisor Uon. Thoma& Riley says bawlll end In AlonJ t.be way, he lrudsted that two weeks when It aaaln comes possible school 1-tte and l>OP'l)a· before the board. Uon problems tn the area are too R~ 1,800 of the planned d1ataDt t.o plan ror now. .. \ A ten mlllton gallon reservo to be built behind PresldtnU Hdghts by 1985 ts ln lhe wor under the agreement, again, I the mutual benefit ol the city anr water district . Tri·ClUes further agreed base a long range capital budi for works and projects des\gn to lmprove the quality and qua tlty of water to cunomera on pro.rata share by area. San Clemente claims ~ cenL Of the water district's aesaed valuaUou. Orange Coast EDITION I 1. -. * * * . \VOL. 69,.NO. 286, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES Hyzen Insists He B1TOM BARLEY °' -0.11, ...... MMt Obviously wearied by a long eross examination. San Clemente architect Leco Hyzen again told a Superior Court jury today that bribery was not bis purpose when be attempted t o contact Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley last. May. Premier !Named By China TOKYO CAP) -A Chinese government spokesman an· t nounced that Premier Hu.a Kuo- 1 feng has been appointed lo suc- 1 ceed the late Mao Tse-tung as i chairman of the Chinese Com· I munist party, Japan's Kyodo 1 news service reported today • from PekinJt. ' The announcement followed : reports that Mao's widow and • three other Politbw-o officials l were under arrest. 1 Wall posters appeared in Pek· l ing last week reporting the s ue- , cession or the 57-year-old Hua, ; but there had been no official an· · nouncement. The spokes man said it had been delayed to allow . the entire Communist party or ; ganization to be informed in 1 advance, Kyodosaid. The Japanese agency said the spokesman made the announce· ment to reporters just before a reception for the visiting prime minister of Papua New Guinea, Michael Thomas Soman?. I There still was no confirmation , ot unofficial reports from Peking that Mao's widow, Chiang Ching, and three other high ranking or. • ficials a ssociated with the • party's radical wing had been ar· rested, accused of plotting a coup. These r eports suggested that serious infighting was going on and that positions !>till might not have ~ohdiricd since Mao died Sept. 9. The official fb inhua ne ws agency had not reported Hua·!> appointment. In a commuruque on the c stabhs hml•nt of dip. lomatic relations with Papua New Guinea, Hua signed as pn .. mier, Bsinhua s aid. However. in a story Saturday, Hsinhua refer red to the party Central Committee "headed by Comrade Hua Kuo.fen~ " Hua, a bi~. friendly man re· latively unknown to the out!-1dc world. made his name an party circles a s an agri c ultura l s pecialis t and loca l ad · ministrator durin~ the 1950s 1\t some point, he came under tht: wing of Mao, who named him ~ public. security mmi!iter in 1971 Last April he was named pre mie r and fir s t party v1c1• chairman. second only to Mao, after Teng Hsiao-ping was fired I as vice pr<'mier and party VIC<' t chairman. Tt'ng. who had been I expected to s ucceed his mentor. ~ Chou En-lai, as premier, instead ·became the tar){<'l or a massivc· campaign of criticism. accused • or trying lo rc·1-torc capitalism tn i China. ~Ford Tells ['Mistake ' \ i OnSoviets r· l WASHINGTON <AP) -Pres1· dent Ford told 18 leaders of American ethnic groups today h<' \ had made a mis take in saying ~ Eastern Europe is not under Sov · And the witness made il clear under interrogation from Deputy District Attorney John Conley that he might not b e in a courtroom today U be bad been ·able to speak to Riley rather than the supervisor's chief aide, former journalist Peter Herman. "I learned a long'lime ago that you d-"'t speak to the second in command if you want accurate information on any project.·· Hyzen told the jury in Judge H. Walt~r Steiner's courtroom. The 66-year-0ld architect is !)e. ing tried on bribery charges con· tained in a grand jury indictment which claims that he aUempted to offer Sl,000 to Riley as a cam· paign contribution. It is alleged that Hyzen sought favorable <'ons iderau on when the Seve11-year \'igil Al"WI ......... This black vulture perches atop skull impaled on a stick in Tucson's Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in which he has exercised squatters rights. Museum officials say that seven years ago the vulture entered the walk-in aviary at feeding time and later refused to be escorted out. Carter '-Affair' Tale To Cost Leaker Job By The Associated PrPss The chief spokesman for the President Ford Committee says he will fire anyone who tried l o spread a rumor that Jimmy Carter had an extramarital af fair. No one has produced any e\·idence to support the rumor. which Carter 's spokesman said came from Republican offi cials William Gree ner, the Ford c ampaign co mmitte e spokesman, said someone will have to name the person who spread the rumor before that person can be fired. Existence of lhc Carter rumor l\nd the a llegation that 1t caml' from Ford's campaign staff sur faced Monday during columni~t .Jack Ander son 's r egular aµ pearance on ABC television·~ "Good Morning America." Anderson s aid Ford's <'Urn paign sources supplied ham with the name of a woman they ~U~· gested had had an affair with Carter and that they later offe red him ~he names of f~r other women. He said he checked the rumors and found them groundless. Carter meanwhile continued campaigning, urging swift. pre· election aid for American wheat farmers today afte.r a campaign swing he called one of his best and President Pord's worst. "I think it wa s a good week," Carter said. He also said he con- sidered it Pord '~ worst week of the ~hate Bouse campaign. Whites Face Rugby Fines JOHAN N E S BURG, South Mrica ti\P) Minister or Sport Piel Koornhof says c1~ht whites who pl ayed an a racially integral- l' d rui:b y m a t c h at Po rt Elizabeth ha ve violated South Africa 's race policies and may be Pl'nahzl'd But by late Mond ay there were no rf'ports that any or the white~ anvolN•d in Sunday's match hac! hcen arn'slcd . Legal action ::i~ainst whales violating the Group Areas i\c:. rarely involves more than a minor fine and judicial r ebuke. The match was p1 ayeo Detore some 10,000 black spectators in the heart of the eaty's black Kwazakele Township despite at- tempts to h ave the game halted by government SJ>(lrlS official/; polilicii!ns and secunty policey. Didn't Try county board decided that lt was time to seek an architect for the pl'OpOSed San Clemente public library. Hyzen told Conley today that no such idea was in his mind when be first spoke to Herman "because I knew the supervisors did not even have a San Clemente library in their budget." Herman has testified that Hyzen offered n,ooo lo Riley as a campaign contribution and further offered to solicit votes for Riley in the San Clemente area. The jury has listened to tape recordings of telephone con- versations between Herman and Hyzen which, the prosecution claims , make it clear that bribery was the motive behind 5 States Order Halt • Today's Closin~ N.Y. Stot!ks C TENCENn \ Bribe; llyzen's calls. 1 Riley appeared lo defen~ Hyien, however, when be wru1 called as a prosecution wilne5$ by Conley. I ''I am sure Mr. Hyien was un~ aware he was committing a crime by making those com.' ments," Riiey told the jury. ' Swine Flu Vaccine Suspect in 3 Deaths; By The AsS«lated Press Stale health officials in New Mexico. Wisconsin. Louisiana Vermont and Maine today or· dered temporary suspension of the swine flu inoculation program after the deaths of three elderly persons just hours after they got swine flu shots in Pennsylvania's Allegheny County. Both Pennsylvania and federal health ofCicials s aid there was no link directly relating the Pen· nsylvania deaths to tlie inocula· lions, but all 13 inoculation sites in Allegheny County were also shut down as a precaution. or. ficials said the three who died had chronic heart conditions. State h ealth officials in Michigan said vaccine from lhe same lot used in Allegheny Coun- ty was distributed in Michigan 3 Suspects In Slaying Captured Anaheim police now have three suspects in ja il and are seeking a fourth man in the fatal shotgun shooting of a market clerk last Thursday. Meanwhile Cos ta Mesa of· ficers, circulating photographs of the suspects, say they believe at least two of the men in· volved in a market robbery in Costa Mesa last Tuesday night. Police arres ted Richard F. An· dcrson, a 29-year·old transient, at Westminster jail. where he was being held on drug-related charges. They arrested George Louis Ledesma, 19. of Westminster and a 16-year-old juvenile Sunday. Both those m en were also in Westmin s te r jail on drug charges. "We expect to seek charges or homicide and robbery against all three suspects later this week," said Anaheim Sgt. Bill Wright. Albertson's m arkct clerk Jack W. Mason of Stanton was shot at point blank range by a suspect wielding a s awed-off shotgun last Thursday night. About 15 to 20 witnesses at thl' Anahe im m arket, at 610 S. Brookhurst St., said Mason did not provoke the gunman, who then fled with his partners after scooping up an undetermined amount of cash from sevC'ral cash registers. Costa Mesa investigator Gerry L. Thompson said today several witnesses to a robbery at a Ralphs Market in the Harbor Shopping Center l ast week . have IOOked at photographs oflwo of the Anaheim suspects and ordered that no more vac- cine from that lot be ad· ministered. They added there have been no reports of ill effects among some 6,000 Michigan residents who already have been inoculated. A spokesman for the Michigan Health Department said the vac· cine in question was manufac. tured by Parke Davis &. Com· pany of Detroit. At Parke Davis, a spokesman said he did not know if the pers ons who di ed in Pen· nsvlvania were inoculated with Parke Davis vaccine. "Of the more than eight million doses of influenza vaccine dis· tributed by Parke Davis, records indiC'ate some has been shipped to Allegheny County, but accord· ing to health officials on the Flu Shots To Cominue In Coumy Despite closures of nu immunization clinics in the other parts or the nation, health officials in Orange County said today they plan to keep offering the vaccine here. Dr. J. R. Elpers, the county's newly appointed health officer. issued the CoUowing statement: "We have beard reports of three deaths in Pen· nsylvania which occurred subs equent to receiving the nu immunization. "These reports are being investigated but at the pre- sent time there is no in- formation to indicate a direct causal role of the nu vaccine. "Cons idering the ex- tensive testing this vaccine has already received, we feel it is appropriate to continue our program until we are advised further on the investigation be ing conducted by state and federal health officials." According to the As· sociated Press. the vaccine used in Pittsburgh is not available in California. French Policy PARIS CAP) France has re- affirmed its intention lo continue making its own decisions on ex- ports or nuclear power planL-;, but offered to help reinforce con· trots on use of peaceful nuclear installations to produce weapons. The reassertiort of French policy was made Monday after the second meeting of a council for foreign nuclear policy chaired by President Valery Giscard d 'Es- taing. · scene, the incident docs not ap~ pear to be related lo the imy munization program," the spokesman said. In Harris burg, Pa., Stale Health Secretary Leonard Bachman said his department has found no connection between the deaths and the flu vaccine, He said the Pennsylvania pro- gram will contlnue as sched1lled. Allegheny County health of· ficials described the closing of the 13 clinics there as a precau- tionary measure. "At the s ame lime, we are talk- ing about three deaths involving the s ame facility within hours after inoculation, and the odds of that happening are formidable, "4 s aid County Coroner Cyril Wecht. DA Probes Crunarillo's 100 Deaths VENTURA (AP) -More than 100 deaths at Camarillo Stat~ Hospital o .. er the past three years are being investigated by the Ventura County district at· torney's office, and officials say some hospital workers may be charg ed with murder or manslaughter. Meantime, another investiga· lion has been called for by As· semblyman Art Torres (D· Monterey Park), to look into charges of patie nt abuse at Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk. In the Ventura probe, Assistant County Dist. Atty. Mike Brad· bury said Monday his office has spent eight months looking into the deaths al Camarillo and is taking a "hard look'. at 79 de· aths. He said many of the deaths were caused by drug overdoses, asphyxiation or negligence. Bradbury said he hopes to have the investigation completed by the end or the y ear . Investigators from the district attorney's office, assisted by a panel of medical experts, have dug through tens or thousands or pages of materials. including medical records nnd autopsies, and are Interviewing the hospital's staff. Bradbury said. Or:::Q,:asl Weather f iet domination and added that the ~nited Stales "never. will r~­ cogruze. accept or acqUJesce m this Soviet domination." f The et.hnlc leaders told re· t porters arterw ard they were r satisfied with Ford's position and County Income Boost Reported More nithl and morning low clouds and fog Wednes- day with temperatures on the coast of about 73. low about GO INSIDE TODA l'. The •New South': Does it belong in any poliUdon's pockt!t in 1976? Both parties have rea.ton to believe that it does -and that it doesn't. See Page AJ2. l his clarification. The group met with Ford in the Cabinet room after the President donned a campaign button that apelled "tord'1 In Cyrillic, an r old Slavic alphabet used in some East European nations and In the Soviet Union. The ethnic leaders wore the buttons, too. I As they sat around the Cabinet table. Ford read his statement lo them, declarin g : "J want to set the record straight oo an Issue 1 t.bat bas receivrd prominent at· 1 tenUoo tn the past week -the , question o( Soviet domination ol I £tit.em Ew-o~ ... .From Associated Press Wires Per capita income in Orangl' County averaged $6,210 in 1974, up from $5, 790 in 1973, the Com merce Department reported to· day. The county. officially dubbed the Anaheim-Santa Ana-Garden Grove standard metropolitan statistical area (SMSA), rank:. 26th in tbe nation. The Bridgeporl·Stamlord Norwalk·Danbury area of Con· nectlcul remained the nation's richest metropolitan area. with an annual personal incotnc of $7.781 per person. an increase of 9.1 oercent. The national average, reported earlier by the Commerce Depart- ment, was SS.449. an increase of 8.5 percent over 1973. Workers in the Anchorage, Ala!lka. r egion jumped from 14th place in 1973 to secondplaceln the next yeQr. with a 22.9 percent jump to an average income or $7,159. While the Commerce Ikpartmcnt oftercd no explana· Uon. the ch ~nge probabl)' reflects work on the Alaska pipeline. PcrsonaJ lncome consists or wages. s alaries , interest . dividends and other money re· ceived by individuals after de· duction of Social Security taxes. Personal incom_, tax dedu~tions are not cousidered. Ranking with Bridgeport and Anchorage in the top 10 for 1974 were Washington, D.C., with average annual per capita in· come of $7,102. up 9.4 percent ov~ 1973; Nassau-Suffolk, N.V .. $7,084, up 7.9 percent: San Fran- cttte>-Oakland, $'7,030, up 10.8 perceut: Newark, N.J ., $6,881, up 9.7 percent; Chi~aeo, $6,7i.>, up • 10.l percent; New York, $6,668, up 9 percent; West Palm Beach- Bocn Raton, Fla .. $6,622, up 6.5 percent; and Reno. Nev., $6,620, up 3.6 percent. The Los Angeles-Long Beach SMSA ranks 16 in the nation, with 1974 income at $6,343, an increase over the 1973 tally of $5. 757. The San Diego area ranked 90 in 1974, with average income nr $5,482, compared with 1973 ln· come or $5.~- 1bc Riverside-San Bernardlno- Ontario araa ranks 184, with 1974 income at $4,8$1. up Crom 1973's $4,441. Index ' .1 A10 .. ,. A10 A4 Al . .., ..... .. , .. ,, AU •• A4 A4 . -----------••• __ ....._. _____ I& _________ , ... -. ..... .,.,., ..... _____ ..... -...... -... -----...;:,.~---- A2 DAIL y l'ILOJ c Mesa Membership In the Soutbttn California Assodntlon of Govern ments (SCAO ) would give Costa Me~a more advantage:, than d1~ advant::iges. rouncih11en were told Monday. Costa Mesa 1:. one or only four cities in Orange County that does not belong lo the re~ional ai. sociation, com.or1 sed of 126 clUel> in six counties. Councilm~n askt!Q represen· tatives of SCAG Monday lo out line their programs and discuss the advantages or joi ning lhc or Tue~day October 12 t9Tti M11Jls 1anaadon. Barton Meaye5, deputy ex· ecuUve director ol SCAG, told councilmen there co three ad· vantases to cltlff participating 1n the aasoclaUon. "SCAG gives cib~ locaJ con lrol over r egiooal issul'=>. · Meayes said. "It also prova<)ea you with a local voice a t the state and federal level." . He ~aid SCAG membership gives c1Ues "more accci.:-. lo stale and fed eral legislation In term:. Happy IOOth Seal Beacher Celebrates • By RAY E STRADA Of 11\t OlllY f'1kll St." John F Ouvall's daughter-in law was l'XC1led a!> ~he brought the Seal Reach man a letter from the Wh ite I louse Duvall , 100 years old Uu:. wC<'k , was indifferent at first and ml'r1.• lysaid, "HeonlywanL'>myvote" Elsie Duvall. wife of the ccn tenarian's 71 ·year-old son. Frank. opened the leller and read a birthday mcs~age from the President of the United States. Mrs. Duvall said her fathcr·in- Jaw was still not 1mprci.sed, but took the card eventually and, despite his failing sight. tried lo read the message through a li ght· ed magnifier. As he dad, she said. she could !>Ce that he wa!. louehed Dut the r etired p~unting con- tractor expresses more concern for the future of the country':. natural environment than for its polihcal figure-.. A Seal Beach re~1denl ~incc 1961 , Duvall said he has seen most of the natural beauties in all the states m the Union except for those along the north Atlantic coast. "I don't understand how people can take a plane and Oy over lhl' country and say 'I've been there' -they don't see anything except what they left at home," Uuvall ~aid. An avid bicyclist since his ar rival in the Los Angeles area 1n 1886 from Missouri. Duvall said his memories or hunting, camp· ing. fi shing and cycling arc his fondest. ··~remember whrn what the\ now call Huntin~tnn llarbou"r was just a b1~ :.lough. I used to have tho best times hunting <•nd fishing there ... he r eminisced Althoug h he believes h1 :-. memory to be poor, Duvall said ' he can still r ecall the Seal Beach ~nd Huntinelon Beach coast as it was before buildings or h1Jthwa)' in the area became plentiful. "The beach could be cover('(! with crabs. grunion and sea life: but not any more." Duvall sa11J. <'ommentmg on effects of popula· t1on , ocean outfulls and 0 11 der ricks. ndes in the Lo~ Angeles.Santa Monica.San Pedro area. As a youn g m an and even th.rough his later years. he enjoyed mem- bership m a number of cycling and athletic clubs . One of his best recolledions is of a San Fra ncisco to Tijuana bike ride w hich took a month in l902. He has many m emories of Los Ange les to Corona bike runs as well as one r ace in wruch he and sever al other cyclists cov- ered the dis tance before a train carrying the judges was a ble to. Duvall s aid he made many trips to the Orange Coast before he and his w ife settled here In 1961 in order to be close to their childr en. His oldest son, John C Duvall. died eight years ago Mr. a nd Mrs. Frank Duvall, :JO.year residents of Seal Beach, li ve a few doors down from "Grandpa" Duvall, a s some neighbors call him. The elder Duvall lives a t 16895 N. Pacific Ave. Duvall. who dad not retire from hb contracting business until the age of 75 , ha s thre e grandchildren and three great· grandchildren, all girls. "They come to visit tum and he really enjoys that." Mrs. Duvall said Atmrd Ends "Pow-um.vs' TAMA. Iowa (AP) -Aller 30 )'<'llr:-. of legal pow-wows. the ~k-;riuakie Indians have collect· l'<i S6 6 million from Uncle Sam ..is settlement of a centurY·Old debt for 17 million acres ofla.nd The tribe that li ves in Tama·s pine.forested hills got the money for land it once owned in Iowa. Missouri. Illinois and Kansas. The U.S government acquired it in 10 treaties betwe<>n 18>4 .ind IRG7 SCAC Membership ot monitortn1 legJslotion at that level,·• Meiyu nld. Ho nJd an or,anlaat.ion oI c!Ues and couAUes can cauy morr weight by banding locether to )Upport an &Hue. "By not joining SCAG," he said. "Costa Mesa cannot sit on regional committees, aucb as the Regional Tranaportatlon Aten· cy. and therefore cannot take part in decision making on items lhat concern Costa Mesa." lie said that Costa Mesa and O•llr f'ilol St." Ptlolo AT CENTURY MARK Seal Beaeh'1 Duvall the city or Glendale are tho only two cltJu with populations or more than 30,000 thal do not beloni to SCAG. He added that 96 percent or th< population ln t1lx countit:s 1:> represented by SCAG, and thut 126 cities out or 151 belong to the organiiaUon. Meayes countered a complaint that Los Angeles often dominates SCAG. saying, "That's just not true" ''Los Angeles' coun c il representatives to SCAG never N·ltl Teachers show up for meeUnas," he said "'Their city council meets every day, and they don't want to mu.::. lhos~ mcclinss. ·· lie s aid it was the Orange County board m embers that always m ake 1t to regional agen- ry meetings. "and Orange Coun ty carries a lot ot weight in SCAG." City Man ager Fred Sorsabal told coun<'ilmen membcr:ihlp in SCAG would cost $901 a year. based on population. Representation Vote Expected More than 1.000 Newport·Mesa teachers are expected to vote Thursday to selec:i a repre9en· tative for negotiations with the district under a new state collec· live bargaining act. T eachers fac e a c hoice. between two competing teachers groups : The N ewport-Mesa Education Association, a branch of the California Teachers As- sociation. or the AFL·CIO af· Ciliated Newport.Mesa Feder a· lion of Teachers . Teachers also have a choice or voting no r epresentation but spokesmen for both teachers groups said chances are slim that such a vote would gather the necessary 50 percent majority required for victor y. A run·off election will be held in November If neither group re· ceives a majority among those voling. The slate Education Employ· ment Relations Board CEERB> will oversee the Thursday vote. Undercover Narc Warsaw Pact Chief Named MOSCO W CAP> - Colonel Gen. Anatoly 1. Gribkov has been named ch1ef or staff or the Warsaw Pact. the military alliance of the Soviet Union and its Communist partners in Eastern Europe, Tass re· ported today. Nabs Eight, Cache An undercover police officer planted at"an Irvine manufactur- ing firm resulted in the arrests or eight people and the confiscation from a Costa Mes a apartment of $7,000 worth of drugs, Irvine Pohce said today. Irvine P oli ce Lt. James Dlaylock s aid the arrests oc· curred during the past two weeks and that two others may be ar- rt>::.ted bdore the investigation 1s concluded Tho!>e arr ested 10c ludc Richard Lee .Jones. 25, and Elida Jones. 20. of 24 1 Avocado St . Co~ta Mesa, both accused or possession of cocaine. LSD and amphetamines for sale; Patricia Smith, 26. of Orange, charged with three counts of sales of drugs: J ames A. Homan. 21, 9652 Pollack. Huntington Beach. sales of m arlj u a n a: a nd T erry Wightman. 19, Tustin. ~ales of marijuana. Also arrested were Dale n. Spillman. 20, of 4841 Heil. Hunt· ington Beach, three counts or sales of PCP Can animal tran- quilizer) and one count sales of marijuana : B e njam in A. Arebalo, 29, Orange, four count::. sales of LSD and amphetamines; and David C. Jones. 18, a transient. four counts of sales of LSD. amphetamines and PCP. According to Blaylock. the un· dercover agent was hired as a stock clerk at the company for a six-week p<.'riod. during which time he allegedly purchased nar cotics from the e i g ht employes a rrested. Police withheld the name of the firm Gribkov, 57. was pre· viously chief or the Lenin- grad military district. He replaces another Soviet of- ficer. General of the Army Sergei M . Shtemenko, who died April 22 while holding the Warsaw Pactjob. Gribkov became first de· puly commander of the Lenin~rad military district in 1969 and was promoted to commander in 1973. Most r ecently he received attention with his election to candidate membership in the Communist party Central Com m ittee in March and for command- ing, military m a neuvers June 14·18 in the Leningrad area. "You could sec porpoises In the breakers and sea l10ns in the sand -now tha t's beautiful to me," recalled the former Mis· sourian as a le ur rolled to the rim C1f his e yeglass(•:- .. You can 't sc~ nothlllg now but a bunch of naked women and anyway, f can't sec 'em," scud Minor Parties Lose Equal Time Ruling Panels Plan Open Meets WASHIN GTON CAP> Dozens or federal commissions and boards arc prcp:inn~ lo hold meetings that will ope n their operations to public view for the first time. The federal pant•!:-. arc r e- quired to begin holding open meetings by next March under the new "Government in the Sunshine" act. which 1s <11med at opening tht' business of at least some public agencies to the public. Mardian Gets New Trial; Others Do1i't WASHINGTON <AP) The U.S. Court of Appeals today up- held the Watergate conspiracy convictions of three one li me close aides to former President Richard M . Nixon but ordered a new trial for a fourth defendant, Robert C. Merdian. Duvall "Oh, l know you cnn't go back to the past." said the man who once could fi sh JU:.t 40 feet from his front door "Hut m an just seems to destroy life." he said. Distrustful or most doctor:.. medicines and vitamins, Duvall claims he has always enjoyed run health until a cutnract opera· lion in t 9tUI "Ile hns a~rd a lot mon• since his sight lo:-s ... ba1d ~trs l>uvall. "He never s at around until then He would exer cise or be doing something in the ~arage." What would Duvall call h1:- formula for good health and longevity? "Luck," he said s imply. No special diet or routine Is claimed · as his secret (or reaching his lOOth year. "I j ust used common ordinary horse sense." he added. The m an 's long. fingers touched his tempi~ as he re- called his many morning bicycle ORANGE COAST <- WASHINGTON CAP> -The Supreme Court today refused lo review a Federal Communica· lions Commission <FCC) decision that political debates and news conferences by candidates are ex· empt from the equal time doc- trine In other action today, JUSt1ces agreed to decide whether a def en· dant 's rights are violated if the ~overnment delays for 18 months obtaining an indictment against him Also to be r~viewed is a test of the power or states to tax sales conducted through the m ail by out-of-state organizations. Denied a Supreme Court review was the case of a Seattle City E n gineering Departme nt 1.•mploye who charged reverse rl1scrimlnalion when tte claimed he as passed over for promo· tion lo foreman in favor of a SUPREME COURT MULLS SATURDAY WORK-A4 qual1f1cd candidates for the same office must be afforded equnJ OP· portunity. The indictm ent lest issue arose in the case of Eugene LovascoSr .. who was indicted an St. Louis March 6, 1975, on federal charges of possessing m aterials stolen rrom the mail and dealing in firearms without a license. In the state t ax case, the court announced it will hear arguments on an appeal by the National Geo· graphic Society from a tax assess· ment against It by the California State Board of Equaliiallon. The California Supreme Court upheld the power or the board lo collect sales end use lax on the sale of maps. aliases, globes and books throu~h the m alls t~ customers in the state. The society, which has its head· quarters In Washington. 0 .C .. paid approximately $3,lm in tax- es under protest for the year 1964 and unsuccessfully sought a re- fund The new l:.ew affoct s only the 50·odd federal regulatory agen- cies. It does not apply to ex ecutive branch agencies like the White House or to the Congres:-.. which enacted it Rival Gangs Clash FONTANA CAP> -A clash between about 50 members of rival gangs near Lytle Creek Ca· nyon has ended with the gunshot death of one m an and minor wounds to i.ever;1l others. A Sari Bernardino County sheriff's de- puty said the two ivoups one white and the other Mexican American -were partying ncur each othe r when an exchange of nnRry words led to the outburst. M:irdian, a former Nixon cam paign official and an assistant al torney general before that, was convicted on New Year's Day, 1975, along with former Atty. Gen. John N. M itchcll and the two men who once were Nixon's c losest a d visers, J ohn 0 . Ehrlichm a n and H .R . Haldeman. A fifth defendant. KeM eth W. Parkinson. was acquitted in the cover·up trial, which lasted four months. All were accu sed of attempting to thwart investigations into the original Watergate brcak·in on June 17, 1972. Dist. Judge John .J ~irica presided over the lnal. Nixon was named as an unin· dieted co·conspirator by the same grand jury Near Miss For Betty LOS ANGELES (AP) - A chartered jct c1vrying t"irsl Lady Betty Ford was involved in a nO!lr·mlss over Southurn Call(ornia last Friday. one or two such incidents cau~t.-d by a computer h\ilure. the FAA r~porled today. Mu. Ford's chartered BAC VC10. a four-engine jet. was desceoding Into the Los Angeles area Fri· day when it came within 311,. miles of a Cessna flying level at about 9,000 feel, an FAA spokesman said. Runufeld's ·Travels Cut WAS HI NGTON CA P> De f ense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has canceled plans for trips to California and several other states t o avoid the ap· pearance or political activity, Pentagon sources report. OHicials said the trips were in· tended to familiarize Rumsfeld with research·belng done on the n e w MX intercontinenta l ballistic missile, Army tank de· velopments. a nd activities at North Ameri can Air Defense Command headquarters and the Air Force Academy. However. orticials said, the trips were called off when Rumsfeld became aware or speculation linking them with President Ford's election cam· pa1gn . Climbers Off Everest Top KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) • All members of the American Bicentennial Everest Expedition have arrived s afely al their base camp after calling off plans to put a second climbing team on top or the world's highest moun- tain. according to an American Embassy official. The official said he did not speak with the two men who climbed to the summit. Or. Chris Chandler and Robert Cormack, because they were having a "big breakfast" and d id not come to the radio. Chandler. 28, of Seattle, and drmack. 30, of Boulder, Colo., made it to the 29,028-foot summit Friday a fternoon. Expedition leader Phil Trimble called off an attempt by the s econd team because the temperature had dropped to 20 degrees below tero a nd there were winds of mor e than 100 miles an hour TONIGHT NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL BOARD -Regular meeting, Harbor High Auditorium, 7:30 p.m . Dedication of main school building as Theo Robins Hall, 7 p.m. "BEHIND THE HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T . Brown, OCC Forum, 7:30p.m . COASTLINE CC LECTURE - "Meditation." Barbara Bullard lecturer. First United Methodist Chur<'h, 7 :30 p.m . "THE RULING CLASS" - South Const Repertory Theater. Tuesday.Sundlly through Ocl. 30, 8p.m, WEDNESDAV, OCI'. 13 OCC LECTURES -"Aviation Safety for Pilots," Fine Arts BldJt.119, 7·30 pm DAILY PILOT ..... °' .. ,..,.,..., (,,Al\t 0.UY P16~ -.i~ ....... lff\t\I~ b""'°'.,_.,..~ Pr•u h~l"""""'1D-.1.,.o..~,.. ((M t """'•""•ttO (Of'N)•flllY ~.ttt f'd•,~\ .,., ""b41\,_.. Me"49•'t fl\f'QV.f\ J-tiM't .., (1t\t I ~"" ... -~· ~·t" .... .,., ~,., ~"t.'t J(lol·"' tl•l'I V•h•• tr"I"• \•Odlt-DM• V•Hf''f .--.1 t4~....,_.," '°"'""1"Wf'\I A'-'"it'•f't>Ool'W\ifl•ft "-"' II\ ~l\Md ~Uhi'dlY\ M'Kt ~·¥\ f PWt minority race employe who scored less well on a civil service test. The S.2 equal Ume ruling by the FCC was announced Sept. 25. 1975, and was upheld last April by a 2·1 vote of the U.S. Court of AP· peals in Washington. Planners Okay El Toro Rezone :::;::N~~~:~'1.t1:0~~1~'.r.,.l)\ W.~I ~,, ••MriN-ftt•\l~l'lf•Mlirwr.11......., JH• I\ , ...... "'" ~ ... """' t l'\J """'"··· M.t~· r--. ..... ,."··· '" ,., ,,_.~,A M~ AA•n•l\tf'Q """''"' 0••'" It \.-~ ......... I' N•ll .,,,,lr"I M•""0'""0 f 11•....- Cott• MIU Qfl~ tMWti t h•y \tf'f" t M•ttl"'~ Act.1f'f"\' 11 0 "'• 1"60..-,~,.. Tt~fte t'T1•1 .. ~ CllH!flff Adw1n1.inotf.~M1I CM-o•• ........ °'-( .. \I """'"""' ,_ ---· ....... #\ ttM~•\ tl""h•t~ ...... , :';~~·:;":~ ·::::~~~· ~'<l.t~~~~ ~ .. .:. :: , ......... ,_ t'.~::'~ft'.~"\::::!?;, 1': 111 ..:· t ~~~:. ~·~. ~\"It t 'f' '°""' \t '0 "'*""''• "'lllUt~ Ot'\1•"'1t..,,...U >0,._..'-1"'" The decision was appealed to the high court by the Democratic National Committee, Rep. Shirley Chisholm CD·N.Y.), the National Organization !M Women and the Office o{ Cornmunlcations of the United Church of Christ. The Socialist Worlten party uked the court to c xpedJleltscoo· sideration of the appeals. That r e· quest was denied. The television networks, the FCC and the Leaauo ol Women Voteri.. sponsor of the debat6 between President Ford and Democratic presldenUaJ can· dldate J lmmy Carter. urlfd the court to let therullntatand. The equal time principle says that tr one candidate Is 1lven uic of broadcast ftcllllles other • By GARY GRANVILLE Ol IM 0.11, ~ ... $C.tff Orange County planning com· mJ11loners voted 4-1 Monday to recommend a l,375·acre ione change in the north El Toro area aimed at eventually accom· modallng 6 ,000 dwellings and roughly 20,000 residents Rancho de los Allsos, a com· munlty planned by Occidental Land Comp:\ny. lleR north of Tfabuco ROAcl hetwof'n El Toro Road and Bake Parkway. The Planning Commission en. dorsement or the zone change needed to develop the commu.rU· ly will 10 to the county Board of Supervl1ors where final approval ls vlrtuallt assured. Only commissloo cbairmat1 Shlrl9' Grindle op~ recom· mencu.n, thci &one chlll\le Mon- dt,Y · ' Mn. Grindle buf!d bC!'f ob1cc· tJon mtJnly on a still unsettled dJapute over the impact or Jt?t noise on land use near the El Toro Marine Cnrps Air Stal1C>n. Her position w as no dirterent than it was six weeks ago when ~he sald residential construction should be banned in areas a con· sullant's study says Is probably adversely impacted by jet noise. And her fellow commissioners' position was no dmcrent from when they opposed Mrs. Grindle and said a home buildJng ban :shouldn't be Imposed in some or the areas defined by tho coniml· tant. Now. the noise Issue la de· adlocked on a 2·2 Board of Supervisors s tale mate, a s talemate th a l Super visor Thomas Rlley says he will end ln two week• when it again comes ~fore the board. Rousbly t .800 or the planned homes tn the Rancho de los Ally." will lit' within the <'Onaul tant's noise impacted area. Plann ing Commissio n er William M acDougall led the m ove t o approve the zonr c hange. MacDougall s aid approval shouldn't be delayed while the noise Impact issue is debated and ,11·ged his fellow commissioners to endor se Occidental's applica- tion. Along the way, he Insisted that possible school site and popula· tion problems in the area ar41 too dlslant to plan ror now Before voting to re<:ommend the zone change, planning com· missioner s considered ntnc ques - Uons rahed about the project's envlronrnenta_l impact 5Latement rai1ed by the Saddleback Area Coordlnatins Council. And Included ln the council'& challenac waR a recommend•· tlon that 3 decision be delayed unW the noise impac\lssuc ts set· '"' l Whtie the commissiob bypas1ed the nolse recommend• tion. It did attach planned conf. munity r egula tions to Its vote di approval. And, commlHlon endorseme~ of the requested zone change I no moro than step one In elaborate planning process th · will cover the phased develo mrnt or the project. 1 Once 11upervlsors approve t)\e zone c ha nge, each seement of tije lS to 20·year de velopment pl.-i must pass In re vlew before the Planning Commission. , Commtssloner s already madP :i dent In ~cldenlftl's plan whet\ they deleted a plonn~ shoppi,_ center In the com munlty. 1 They also r educed the numb* ol residential dwclUn"s in I plan by almost 200 units but w t •irunst a ft tafr recommenda that plan11 be shifted to move e units out of the so-ealled noise ampac:ted are11. ( I Qr•nge Coast EDITION \voL. 69, NO. 286, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Closhalf . . Y. Stcwks N TEN CENT$ an el Urged to Nix ~ay Sewer Lind Game officials told the sanitati~ district that the project had to compJeled by November. By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot Ille D•llY 11'119C SUft A request to build an Upper ewport Bay sewer line, slated to be beard Monday by the South Coast Resional Zone Conserva- tion Commission, bas been re- commended for denial by the comrnlssion staff. Bob Joseph, a spokesman for the regional staff, said today de· nial is r ec om mended because the stall believes the benefits from the project do not outweigh "the destruction of the natural en- vlronment.'' The project, according to sanitation district officials, is need~o augment the existing sewa e ne that is running at ca ci y. Without it, the existing pump station in Big Canyon could over- flow. sending r aw sewage into S~ve11-year l'igil This black vulture perches atop skull impaled on a slick in Tucson's Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in which he has exercised squ atters rights. Museum offi cials say that seven years ago the vulture entered the walk-in aviary at feeding time and later refused to be escorted out. ·Carter '-Affair' Tale To Cost Leaker Joh By The Associated Press The chief s pokesman for the President Ford Committee says he wUI fire anyone who tried to ~pread a rumor that Jimmy Carter had an extramarital af. fair. No one has produced any evidence to support the rumor, which Carter's spokesman said came from Republican officials. William Greener, the Ford campai g n co mmitt ee f spokesman, said someone will have to name the person who spread the rumor before that • perS(ln can be fired. Ex1slencc of the Carter rumor and tht' allegation that it came , Crom Ford's campaign staff sur-f faced Monday during columnist ' I' For~ Tells '~listake' \ il On Sm'iets WASHll\'GTON <All) -Presi- dent Ford told 18 leaders of American ethnic groups today he had made a mistake m sayin~ Eastern Europt> is not under Sov· J ack Anderson·s r egular ap- pearance on ABC television's "Good Morning America." Anderson said Ford's cam- paign sources supplied him with the name of a woman they sug. ~ested had had an affair with Carter a nd that they later offered him the names of four other women. lie said he checked tho rumors and found them groundless. Carter m eanwhile continued campaigning, urging swift, pre election aid for American wh eat farmers today after a campaign ~wing he called one of hi s best and President Ford's worst. The Democratic presidential nominee said he· is intentionally tempering his campaign attacks on the Republican President. figuring he has made his point about what he calls dlscrcpan· cies in Ford's account of U.S. fnreien oolicy. "I thought it was good to pursue those for a couple of days until somebody noticed it, .. Carter said Monday as he new home from an eight-<lay cam· paign stint that included the San f)oancisco debate on foreign and defense policies. "I think it was a good week," Carter said. He also said he con- sidered it Ford's worst week or the White House campaign. the Upper Bay wildlife preserve, according to the sanitation dis- trict orriciaJs. The battle over installation of the new line bas been brewing since June when the coastaJ com- mission application permit was first filed. Tbe line, sought by Orange County Sanitation District Five, would run under Back Bay Drive from the Dunes to Big Canyon, 'than along tbesouthsideoftheca- ·nyon to connect "ilh the existing .line at Jamboree Road. The line would band.le all of the sewage from homes and busi- nesses lying north ol San Joaquin Hills Road. Ray Lewis, chief entineer for the district, said it has been laid out over that route so that it will use gravity to move the sewage, r ather than electricity. 5 States Ord_er Halt But the proposed route crosses the wildlife refuge and has brought the opposition of the f)oiends of Newport Bay as well as some restrictions from the Stale Department of Fish and Game, the landlords of the re- fuge. Because of the potential danger of silting in the bay from the run off of rain water over ex- cavation for the pipe, Fish and Swine Flu Vaccine Suspect in 3 Deaths By The Associated Press Slate health officials in New Mexico, Wisconsin. Louisiana Ver mont and Maine today or· dered temporary suspension of the swine flu inoculation program after the deaths or three elderly persons just hours after they got swine fl~ shots in Pennsylvania's Allegheny County. Both Pennsylvania and federal health officials said there was no Unk directly relating the Pen- nsylvania deaths to the inocula- tions, but all 13 inoculation sites in Allegheny County were also shut down as a precaution. Of· ficials said the three who died had chronic heart conctitions. State health ofCicials in Michigan said vaccine from the same lot used in Allegheny Coon· ty was d istributed in Michigan Architect Reasserts Innocence By TOM BARLEY Of lM OallJ ...... SUH Obviously wearied by a long c ro ss e xamination, San Clemente architect Leon Hyzen agair. told a Superior Court jury today that bribery was not bis purpose when he attempted to contact Orang e Co unty Supervisor Thomas Riley last. May. And the witness made it clear under interrogation from Deputy District Attorney John ConJey that he mi g ht not be in a courtroom today if he had been able-to speak to Riley rather than the s upervisor's chief aide, former journalist Peter H(!rman "I learned a longtime ago that you don't speak to the second in command if you want accurate information on any project.'' Hyzen told the jury in Judge II. Walter Steiner's courtroom. The 66·year ·old architect is he· (See HYZEN, Page A2) Burglars Hit CdM School For the second time since the st art of school, burglars hit Corona del Mar High School, stealing equipment used by stu- dents. police said today. School o fficials told in- vestigators thieves broke into the school 's woods h op over the weekend, making off with a variety or wood working tools valued at about $500. In SePtember, thieves stole a number of band instruments stored in the school 's music de- partment. That loss totaled mor e than $4,500. and ordered that no more vac· cine from that lot be ad- ministered. They added there have been no reports of ill effects among some 6,000 Michigan r esidents who already have been inoculated. A spokesman for the Michiun Health Department said the vac- cine in question was manufac- tured by Parke Davis & Com- pany of Detroit. At Parke Davis, a spokesman said he did not know if the persons who d ied in Pen· nsvlvania were inoculated with Parke Davis vaccine. "Of the more than eight million doses or influenza vaccine dis- tributed by Parke Davis, records incticate some has been shipped to Allegheny County, but accord· ing to health officials on the FluSlwts To Continue In County Despite closures of nu immunization clinics in the other parts of the nation, health officials in Orange County s aid today Lhe} plan to keep offering the vaccine here. Dr. J . R. Elpers, the county's newly appointed health officer, issued the following statement: "We have heard reports of three deaths in Pen- nsylvania which occurred subsequent l o receiving the nu immunization. "These reports are being investigated but at the pre- sent time there is no in- form a ti on to indicate a direct causal role of the nu vaccine. "Considering the ex- tensive testing this vaccine has already received, we feel it is appropriate to continue our program until we are advised further on the investigation being conducted by slate and federal health officials.': According to the As- sociated Press, the vaccine used in Pittsburgh is not available in California. French Policy PARIS (AP> -France has r e- affirmed its intention to continue making its own decisions on ex- ports of nuclear power plants, but offered to help reinforce con- trols on use of peaceful nuclear instaJlations to produce weapons. The reassertion ot f)oench policy was m ade Monday after the second meeting of a council for foreign nuclear policy chaired by President Valery Giscard d'Es· laing. scene, the intident does not ap- pear to be r elated to the im- muni za tio·n progr a m," the spokesman said. In Harrisburg, Pa., State Health Secret ary Leonard Bachman said bis department has found no connection between the deaths and the nu vaccine. He said the Pennsylvania pro· gram will continue as scheduled Allegheny County health of- ficials described the closing of the 13 clinics there as a pr~au· tionary measure. "At the s ame time, we are talk· ing about three deaths involving the same facility within hours after inoculation, and the odds or that happening are formidable,·~ s aid County Corone r Cyr il Wecht. Chinese Name New Chairman TOKYO <AP) -A Ch inc!)e government s pokesman an- nounced that Premier Hua Kuo feng has been appointed to suc- ceed the late Mao Tse-lung as chairman or the Chinese Com- munis t par ty, Japan's Kyodo news ser vice reported today from Peking. The announcement followed reports that Mao's widow and three other Politburo officials were under arrest. Wall posters appeared in Pek- ing last week reporting the suc- cession of the 57-year-old Hua, but there had been no officiaJ an- nouncement. The spokes man said it had been delayed to allow the entire Communist party or- ganization to be informed in advance, Kyodosaid. <See CHINA, PageA2> Pmrels Plan Open Meets WAS HINGTON CAP> Dozens of feder al commissions and boards are preparing lo hold meetings that will open their operations to public vi ew for the first time. The federal panels are re - quired lo begin holding open meetings by next March under the new "Government in the Sunshine" act, which is aimed at opening the business or at least some public agencies to the public. The new 1 aw a ffects only the 50-odd federal regulatory agen- cies. It does not apply to ex- ecuUve branch agencies like the While House or to the Congress, which enacted it. · iet domination ••nd added that the United State~ "never will re- cognise, accept 01 acquiesce m this $()viet dominatlM." The ethnic Jeaderc; told r e· porters afterward they were uUsfied with Ford's ~;tion and h1s clarification. County Income Boost Reported The group met with Ford in the ,Cabinet room after the President donned a campaign button that spelled "Ford" in Cyrillic, a" dd Slavic alphabet used in some East European nations and in the Soviet Union. The ethnic leaders wore the buttons, too. Al thf'y sat around the Cabinet table. Ford read bis st•tement to them, dedarlnc: "l want to set the record strll1ht on an issue that baa received J)f'Omlnent at- tenUon tn the past week -the quaUon of Soviet domination 0( · Eastern Eutopo." ..... From Associated Pre.~!' Witts Per capita income in Orange County averaged $6,210 in 1974, up from $5,790 In 1973, the CCll'l'- merce Derartment reported to- day. Tbe countv, olficiaJlv dubbc<! tl-e Anaheim-Santa Ano-Garden Grove standard metropolitan stntl!tlcal area (S){SA), ranks 26th i'l the nation. The Bridgepo rt-Stamford· Norwalk·Danbury area of Con· nec:ttcut remained the naUor.'s richest metropolitan area, wilb an annual pel'Sonal tncome of $7,781 per person, an Increase or 9.1 percent. The national average, reported earlier by the Commerce Depart· ment, was ~.449, an increase of 8.5 percent over 1973. Workers in the Anchonge, Ala~ka. region Jumped from 14th piece in 1973 to second place ln the neX1 yen. with a 22.9 percent jump to an average lncome or $7,159 . While the Commerce Depanment orfered no ~plana­ tion, t!lts change prcbably reflects work on the Alaska plptUne. Person al Income coculst.s ol wages, salar ies, i nterest, dividends and olber money re~ ceived by individuals after de- duction of Social Security tues. Personal income tax deduct.ions are not considered. Ranking wlth Bridgeport and Anchorage in the top 10 tar 1974 were Washington, O.C., with average annual per Cti>lta in- come or $7,102, up 9' percent over 1973; Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y .. $7,0M, up 7.9 percent; San Fran- cisco-Oakland, $7,030, up 10.8 percent; Newark, N.J ., $6.861, up t .T percent: Cbtc410,, $6.'18>, up _______ _.., •• ~TZ' ......... ~.., .. ·~·.._ ........... ~ ........ ~ •• ~ .... ~ .............. .-... __ ........ ....,. ..... .-..._ ..... ~-,, • 10.l percent; New York, $6,668, up 9 percent; West Palm Beach- Boca Raton. Fla .. $8,622, up 6.S percent; and Reno, Nev., $6,620, up 3.6 percent. The Los Anieles·Long Beach SMSA ranks 16 in the nation, with 1974 income at $6,343, an increase over the 1973 tally ot $5, 7S7. The Saii Diego area ranked 90 '" 1974. with average income of $5,'82, compared with 1973 in- come of $S,20C. The Rivorsid~.San Bernardino. Ontario arta ranks let, wlU\ 1974 lncome al $4,8Sl, uo from im·a SU41. Fish and Game officials als~ said they wanted workers out <?1i the area so the migratory birds\ would not be distur~. I Demands from the coastaS commission for more infocmail Uon about plants, animals and; archeological sites along theC' <See SEWER, PageA2) 0 a: c:i w ~ w a: co a: :::> % ~ < 0 < ~ Wide11h19 Plaru~ed Thick line indicates section of Jamboree Road that City of Newport Beach plans to widen to s ix lanes. City councilmen are expected to award a $12,000 contract for the design work tonight. Construction is scheduled to begin in August, 1977. -· New Mayor Tops Agenda In Newport Newport Beach city coun· cilmen race a variety of issues tonight ranging from the appoint· menl of a s uccessor to the late Mayor Howard Rogers to private use of public beaches on the Balboa Peninsula. Councilmen will meet al 7:3() p.m. in city council chambers at city hall. One or their firs t items of busi; ness will be to name a successor" to Rogers from the field of 14 ap· plicants for the job. I! they fail to get four votes for an appointment, the seat will b&- filled by a special election to be held in March. One or the agenda items CX• peeled to take the most time is the report from City Attorney Dennis O'Neil on encroachments on the beach b ay on Buena Vista Boulevard and Edgewater Avenue. Councilmen are likely to refer the controversial subject to Ute Parks, Beaches a nd Recreation Commission before they take ac- tion. Also slated for consideration tonight is approval of specifica- tions for the leases of tho con· cessions on the Balboa and. Newport Piers and approvaJ ot' 'plans for the Newport Center library. Weather More night and morning 1 low clouds and fog Wednes- day with tem~er~l~s on the coast of ~J, low about60. INSIDE '[ODAY ·rhe 'New South': Dou it belong in .any politician's pockd in 1916? Both parties • have rtc1on to believe tbat ~t • doe• -.end that it doem't. I See Page Al2. Index •• y-s.t•lff At Mf>Le,...., IJ ,._ ..... lllKlt •2 .....,.,... Alt L~ •• ~ At C..fl • AJ ,.,..,... ,_., ... oauHl• ... ,. ~ ......... ., •• CIWftlc• ., =C.VMy ... C>.w---II aM OtMll ..... '" •• .,. .... ......... ,. ... .... tletUN11rtO Alt-1( ·~-llt •• Tettwttie41 All "-At•ll TllMttn •• """"'-It ,......_ •• ...,,. ...... •• ..,....,.. A4 ' i ,12 DAILY PILOT N TuHC111y October 12. 1976 N-ltl Teaf!hers Representation ' Vote Expected More than l ,000 Newport-Mesa teachers are expected tt) vote Thursday to select a represen- tative for negotiations with the district under a new sl~•lc collec- t1ve bargaining act Teachers fa('C a c h o ice between two competrng teachers groups : The Newport-Mesa Education Association. a branch of the California Teachers A~ sociation, or the AFL·ClO af fiUated Newport-Mesa Federa lion of Teachers. Teachers also have a choice of voting no r cpre!lentalion but spokesmen for both teachers groups said chances arc sUm that such a vote would gather the necessary 50 percent ma;onl) required for victory DA Probes Cmnarillo's 100 Deaths VENTUR/\ <AP> More than 100 deaths al Camanll o State Hos pital O\ 1.•r the past three years arc being investigated by the Ventura County distnct at torney's office, and officials say some hospital work<·rs may be c harged with murder or manslaughter. Meantime. another mvesllga- tion has bl•cn c ailed for by As· semblyman Art Torres (0- MonlC'rey P ark). to look into charges of p<1t1cnl abuse al Metropo~itan State llnsp1lal in Norwalk. In the Ventura probe. Assistant County Dist. J\ tty Mike Brad· bury said Monday tus office has spent eight months looking into the dl•ath'> at Camarillo and is taking •• "'hard look" at 79 de· aths. He said many of the deaths WC're caused by druFt overdoses. asphyxiation or negligence. Bradbury said he hopes to have the investigation completed by the end of the year. Investigators from the district. attorney's office, aJ>s1stcd by a panel of medical experts, have dufi? through tens of thousands of pages of materictls, including medical records and autopsies, and Jre 1n tcrv1<.•w1 ng th£' hospital's st.arr. Bradbury said Mardia1i Gets New Trial; Others Don't Wi\SlllNGTON C/\P) The U S. Court of Appeals today up- held the W ntergate conspiracy convictions or three onetime close aides to former President Richard M. Nixon but ordered a new trial for a fourth defendant, Robert C. Mar di an. J\tardi:m. a former Nixon cam- paign official and an assistant at tC\rrey general before that, was l'C"'victcd on New Year's Day, 197!', along with former All). Gen. John N Mitchell and the two men who once were Nixon·s closest adviserc;, John O Eh rl ichma n ::1nd 11 .n Haldeman A fifth dcflondant, Kl'nnf't~ W Parkinson. was acquitted in tht• cover-up trial, which lasted four months. AJI were accused of attempting lo thwart invC'slii;!ations into the original Watergate break-in on June 17, 1972. Dist. Judge John J Sirica pres ided over the trial. Nixon was named as on unin· dieted co-conspirator by the same grand jury. ORANGE COAST " DAILY PILOT lM,(\.f..nt)ll CtM\t 0.it't f•1t1tt wUf'\Wl\01" 1\f~ f•.. ,.,.. N,.w Pre\\. '' oul't~•"""<I bw •"" t\f' ~,,_.,. c 1·tr,,,,n •w"oCom,.,.n., ~t11t•~M~ H• D ,~· ""'1 Mo'Mf•W' '"'°""~ ~' ft.ty t(lo' ,.,. '" Nil .. N•woort R•4'Ln. M~tl"4""" &--"""' • OVf'll '-''" ""•""" ''"'"'". \.utct•rb.9rt. v_.11~• .. ~ l "r•"• ~.,.. h """""'" r ,,. t A \•""'J• oq.0'\-41 .. 1 tllt'f"i ' ~nltV\•O ~'"'"•'' M"<t \1.1f'W'JAv-.. tlW' f''t.,.1't~I l)VfUl\flll"Q ol•'°" " M l)0 v.1111-.t k.ot .... ., •• , (O\IAM•\.• CAl1lat,.,.~,l. ..... ,., ... w.., rr•\11M"t .a"Ct Pvof,,,,.... Jn• .. cwr .. , "•4• ,.,.,..,.."f .tt\ft(.,,,.~M ~ 1•...,. Tt\~t\tCHVtf t Otftt' Y-"4Ma\A M..,,.....,... ~l't•"J*"O f d4tcw ci-t•ltt 14 '-"' lllCNnl I' "'•II ,.,,,,, .. ,.., M•"'••ifllel l 111ftw\. OftlcH (Mt•~\· )1C"IW.,l l\4,, \hf'tl l .. ,,"""' e""'h ••••r, .... ~ .. ,,.,,,,.,,,, "~lf\H"CllM k•ai P\ 1111\i tt.•' Jr\ l\IMJIC'IP'Wn1 \.(j4Wlff'f\.t • y,.11 .. ~ }\~It tC>ttfl· "'1 4H\.\1"10u•i)•••1 *'" lelet>hilll• f7141fot2-4.)21 CIH•lfled Ad11enl•l"O 642-S.71 c~·~t ,.,, o. .... o-c .. 1" '*Ubti ~,"Q c..,,, ~' .... ""' .... .,,...~ ..... ,,.,~ ... ,.,~ ""'''"' ,, •e•••t ,,..,...,., • ., .,.,,.,.." ..... .,.. ,. •• ,.fhf• f'ft •ifMwl \.t••t •* •"''"'''".,. •t t,...WflJtoiO~•r \f"t l\d I•'\\ ff\1•'1• O• d "'' C~t• .... ,. (•' ., ...... , ,_. .. ,, f """'--"" .. ,.,... •> ,., ~"''"'•• ... ...... ,. "" ~..... ... ....... .,. f'tfl''t•M f•Of'\\l \Om ~tr\• A r un-off election will bt• held 1n November if neither group re ceives a majority among those voting. The state Education Employ ml'nl Relations 8-0ard (F,F.RB) will oversee the Thur-,day volt Fro•PageAI SEWER ... path or the pipeline forced delays in the permit bearing. Sanitation officials say they now have no plans to start work until the close of the migratory bird season next spring. Newport Beach City Coun- cilman Ray Williams, president of the Friends of Newport Bay, said Monday the organization will probably modify its stand against the project if the sanita- tion clistrict agrees to a number of proposal!!! related to restoring damage done by the excavation in Big Canyon. Williams is one of three directors of Sanitation Dis· trict Five. He and Steve Donaldson, the man exp ect e d to s ucceed Williams as president or the en- vironmental organization, have drafted a letter outlining the steps they believe are necessary befor e their group can agree to the project. The friends have no clirect ap· proval powers over the project, although their objections arc Likely to carry a lot of weight with the coastal commission. Both Williams and Donaldson agree that the area o( primary concern lies outside the boun· daries of the Upper Bay preserve in land that is presenUy owned by the Irvine Company. But they say the uplands are as important as the bay itself. Both men say they arc con- cerned with the possibility of permanent damage to Big Ca· nyon and maintain that they still want the district to consider alternate proposals such as builcling a larger pump station or taking an alternate route on the north side of the canyon. They say the district is over· playing the po\\-cr-saving aspect of the project and charged of- ficials with using a sewage over· flow as a sc arc tactic to win quick approval of the project. Lewis, however. stressed that the plan was devised to provide lhc clistrict, which he described as broke. with a cheap, reli able way to move the sewage from the uphill developments that are already built or are under con- struction. .. We have consider ed other possib;titics. but this was the least expensive w2~ to go and still get reliable service. That s key -to provide reliable service," he said. From Page Al HYZEN •. ·. ing tried on bribery charges con- tained in a grand jury indictment which claim s that he attempted to offer $1,000 to Riley as a cam· paign contribution. ll is alle~ed that Hyzen sought favorable consid eration when lhe county board decided that it was time to seek an architect for the proposed San Clemente public bbrary. llyzen told Conley today that' no such idea was in his mind when he first spoke to Herman "because I knew the supervisors did not even have a San Clemente libr ary in their budget." He rman h as testified lhat H\"1en offered $1,000 to Riley as a camoaign contribution and furthe" C\ffered to soli cit votes for Riley In the San Clemente area. The\ jur) has listened to tape recordings of te lephone con .. versations between Herman and Hyzen which , the prost'cution claims. make it clear that bribery was the motive behind H,yien's calls. Riley appeared to defentl llyzen, however, when he wa called as a prosccuUoo witness by Conley. "I 3-lll s ure Mr. Hyzen was un- aware he was committing a crime by m aking those com ments." Riley told the jury. Rape Rates On Rise-MD PHOENIX. Arb. (AP) -Rape is increasing among crimes of violence in the United States. Or. Leon P. Fox or San Jose. Calif.. told a meeting of doctors and nurses Monday. OT. Fox. addr essing lhe Ois· trict. vm rail conference or the Nur!4u A s5oci a lion of the American College of Obstetri· cians and Gynecologists, said lo 1970, FBI fl1ures showed that 9' 783,800 crimes of violence :r the nation, 37 ,900 were rape e&es • O.lly l'li.t S\f" f'M4• SKATEBOARDER RUSS MANN ZIPS AROUND FENCING OBSTACLE IN IRVINE New Skateboard Course Adjacent to New Homes Provokes Controversy Skateboard Track Eyed Council May Clwose Move, Modification By HILARY KAVE Of tht O•llf Pilot Sl•ff Irvine City Council members will attempt to decide tonight if the new skateboard course in University Community Park should remain where it is, be modified, or moved elsewhere. Young sk ateboard enthusiasts h ave alr eady discovered the skateboard course even though it is not yet completed and ready for public use. But even though it is not yet of· ficially open. residents or the ad· jacent new J . M. Peters townhouse d evelopment are already voicing concerns to the city about anticipated noise. The decision by the council is expected al tonight's 7:30 o'clock meeting at city hall. Assistant City Manager Paul Brady e xplained that even though the course is not yet com- Minor Parties Lose Equal Time Ruling WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court today refused to review a Federal Communica- tions Commission <FCC> decision that political debates and news confe rences by candidates are ex- empt from the equal lime doc- trine. In other action today, justices agreed to decide whether a defen- dant's rights ar e violated if the government delays for 18 months obtaining an indictment against him. Al so to be reviewed is a test of the power or states to tax sales conducted through the mail by out-of-state organizations. Denied a Su pr em e Coor. review was the case of a Seattle Citv E n g in eering Departme n.t employe who charged reverse discrimination when he cl aimed he as passed over for promo. tion to foreman in favor of a SUPREME COURT MULLS SATURDAY WORK-A4 minority race e mploye who scored less well on a civil service test. The 5·2 equal time ruling by the FCC was announced Sept. 25, 1975, and was upheld last April by a 2·1 vote of the U.S. Court of Ap· peals in Washington. · The decision was appealed to the high court by the Democratic National Committee, Rep Shirley Chishol m <D·N.Y.), the Nationa1 Organization for Women and the Office of Communications c' the United Church of Christ. The Socialist Workers party asked the C'l'Urt to expedite its con- sider ation o< th{' appeals. That re- quest was dcnie~ The television netwerks, the FCC and the League 01· Women Voters, s ponsor or the det-ates between President Ford and Democratic presidential can· didate Jimmy Carter, urged the court to let the ruling stand. The equal time principle say:; that if one candidate.is given use of broadcast facilities other qualified candidates for the same office must be afforded equal op· portunity. The indictment test issue arose in the case of Eugene LovascoSr . who was indicted in !it. Lows March 6, 1975. on federal chargel> of possessing matenals stolen from the m ail and dealing in firearms without a license. In the stale tax case, the court announc€d , t w 1!! hear argument~ on nn appeal by the National Geo· graphic Society from a tax assess- ment against it by the California State Board <'f Equalization. The California Supreme Cour~ upheld the power of the board to collect sales and use tax on the sale of maps, atlases, globes and books thro ug h the mails t~ customers in the slate. The society, which has its head· quarters in Washington, D.C .. paid approximately $3,8>0 in tax· es under protes t for the year 1964 and unsuccessfully :.ought a re- fund. AuxirdEnds 'Pow-wou;s' TAMA. Iowa <AP) -After JO years of legal pow-wows. the Mesquakie Indians have collect· ed $6.6 million from Uncle Sam as settlement of a century-old debtror 17 million acres of land. . The tribe that lives in Tama's pine-fores ted hills got the money fo~ land, it once owned in Iowa, M1ssour1, Illinois and Kansas. The U.S. government acquired 1t in 10 treati es between llKW and 1867 plete, hundreds of skateboarders have already tried out its curves and banks. The contractor has been una- ble to cpmplete his landscaping of the total park area with the constant crowd of skateboarders, so the city bolled chain link fenc- ing onto the concrete surface to stop the skateboarders from us- ing the course until it is opened next month. Even so, Brady said some of the new residents, whose homes are close to the skateboard run, have asked the city if it could pro- vide sound attenuation measures such as landscaping and fencing, or move the run elsewhere in the park. Brady said that to add addi- tional hard s urface and more landscaping would cost the city nearly $10,000. Moving the skateboard run to a new location in the adjacent adventure play- ground for children would cost about $8,800 to demolish the old course a nd about $11,000 to re- bui ld it Brady said that while his staff is prepared to do anything the council orders, he is recommend- ing that the course be left where it is for the time being to see what. if any, problems develop when it is opened. Other items to be considered tonight include : -The rec;ttest D:t the A. J . Hall Company for approval or the 165-unit condominium project in Turtle Rock. The project was postponed last month when Coun· cilman John Burton appealed the ~lani> because he objected to the vtew of I.he '!"urlle Rock being ob- structed by the new houses. More discussion about the fencing of the bike trail and motocross course in the Edison Company right-of-way between Culver Drive and J effrey Road 3.lld possibly further talk about the motocross. -Council members will at- tempt to d evelop a current posi- tion on the extension or Culver Drive from Bonita Canyon Drive to the southerly end of the city. -Consider ation of the Ynle Avenue over cr ossing at the Santa Ana Freeway. Minister Dies OSAKA, Japan (AP) -Mrs. Mas a Nakayama, J apan's first woman cabinet minister, died in a hos pital Monday of throat ca n cer. She was 85. Mrs. Nakayama served as health and welfare minister from July to December 1960. She retired in 1969. E'ro• Pa9tt :I I CHINA ... The Japanese agency :>rud the :.pokesman mnde the unnOWlcti- ment to reportert Ju.si belOfe a reception for the visiting prlme minister of P apu:i New Gulne--. Michael Thomas Somare. There still was no confirmation of unomcial report.'l lrom Peking that Mao1s widow, Chiang China. and three other high runking of· flclals associated wlth tho party's radical wing bad been~ rested, accused of plottlnf a coup. These reports S\lgge.tted that serious lnflghtlng was aolng on and that positions still might nol have solidified since Mao died Sept. 9. The official Hs inhua news agency had not rePorted llua's appointment. In a communique- on the esta blis hment of dip· lomatlc r elations with Papua New Guinea, Hua sipted as pre- mier, llsinhua said. Howeve r, in a s tory Saturday, Hslnhua referred to t.be party Central Committee "beaded by Comrade Hua Kuo-fenJ:." Plaque Slated For Jamboree Scowing Site The Newport Beach Historical Society will dedicate a plaque Thursday m arkina the site of lhe 1953 National Boy Scout Jam- boree for which Jamboree Road was named. The historical plaque will be" placed in front of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce at the corner of Santa Barbara Drive and Jamboree Road. Ceremonies begin Thursday at 6 p.m . with dinner and cocktails to follow at 8: 30 p.m. at Irvine Coast Country Club. The pro- gram will Include a mm portray- ing the growth ol the Jamboree Road area. Tickets are available at all libraries or the Chamber or Com- merce. The $8 ticket. price in- cludes dinner and cocktails. Climbers Off Everest Top KATMANDU, Nepal (AP> AU members of the American Bicentennial Everest Expedition have arrived s afely at their base camp after cal1ing off plans to put a second climbing team on top of the world's highest moun- tain, according to an American Embusy official. The official said he did not speak with the two m en who climbed to the summit. Dr. Chrfs Chandler and Robert Cormack, because they were having a "big breakfast " and did not come to the radio. Chandler, 28, of SeatUe, and Cormack. 30, of Boulder. Colo .• maoe 1t to tnc 29,028-foot summit Friday afternoon. Expedition leader Phil Trimble called off an a ttempt by the second team because the temperature had dropped to 20 degrees below zero and there were winds of more than 100 miles an hour. Butterfield Alleges Plot WASHINGTON (AP) -The man who revealed the existence or the White House tapes says President Ford and bis staff t°'>k office with a mandatetofirehim. Alexander Butterfield claims that the staffs of Ford and former President Richard Nixon agreed that he would have to be fired, but he offered no bard evidence to back his statement. Ford's news secr etary, Ron Nessen. said the c l ai m w as "jus t ludicrous." Butterfield, ln 1973, told the Senate Watergate committee about the taping syst em he helped oversee in the White House. The tapes eventually forced Nixon to resign. But· terfleld, meanwhile, had been appointed head or the Federal Aviation Administration, the job from which he was fl.red. Planners Okay El Toro Rezone Ry GARY GRANVILLE Of IMO• llf •111ui.11 Or an{:f' County planning com- missioner~ voted 4·1 Monday to recommend a J .37S·acre zone change in the n<.'"th EJ Toro area aimed at eve nh•ally accom- modating 6,000 dwellings and roughly 20,000 residt'n~:o. Rancho de los Alisos, e com- munity planned by Occ1dtf\taJ Land Company. lies north of Trabuco RMd h<'twe<'n El Toro Road and Bake Parkway. The Plann1ng Commission en- dorsement of the zone change needed to develop the communi- 1,y will go to the count:J Soard of Sus>trvlsors where final approval Is virtually assured. Only commluion chairma n Shirley Grindle opposed rceom· mcndina the zone change Mon- d~y Mn. Grindle based her obJ~ t:lon m11lnlv on a still unsettled chspute over the impact of jct noise on la nd use near the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Her position was no different than it '!VBS six weeks ago when she said residential construction should be banned in areas a con- sultant's study says is probably adverselv i mp acted by jet noise. And her fellow commissioners" position was no different from when they opposed Mrs. Orindle and said a home building ban shooldn't be imposed in somo or the area!' defined by the consul· tant. Now, tht r.oise issue ls de- adlocked on n :>-2 Board or S upervisors !'l tal errDte, a st alemate th at Super v•bor Thomas Riley says be will end In two weeks when iL ttialn comes before the board. Rou1hly 1,800 of the planned homes ln the Rancho d los AIJSOS w'11 JI" within th~ COMUl- ~ tant's noise impacted area. Planning Commissioner William MacDougall led the m0ve to appr ove the ione change MacDougail :sa:d approval shouldn't be delaye<i wtul~ the noise impact iss ue ts debated an<t ui·ged his Cellow commissioners to endorse Occidenlal's applica· lion. Along the way, he insisted that possible school site and popula· tton problems In the area are too distant to pl an ror now. Before voting to recommend the %one change, planning com- missioners considered nine ques- t.ions raised about tho project ·s environmental impact st.at.emenl raised by tho Saddle.back Area Coordinatins Council. And Included ln tho council's chal1en1e was a rtt0mmcoda· Uon Lbat a decision be delayed unUl the noise impact luue ls eel· ti""' .. • While th e com mission bypused the noise recommenda- tion, Jt did attach planned com· munity regulations to its vote of approval. And, commlaslon endorse ment of the requested zone change is :lo n:cre t!lan step one lo an elaborate ptanrung process tha& will cover the phased develop. ment of the ero!ect. Once supervisors •pprove th zone change, each segment ot th 15 to 20-year development pl must pass In r eview before th Planning Commission. Commlssioner11 alreMty mad a dent In Occidental'& plan when they deleted a planned shoppi center in the community. They also reduced lhc num of rosidenUal dwellings ln th plan by almost 200 units but wtn qalnst a stall recommendaU that plans be shlttM to move th unit& out of the so-called noJ lmp11ctf'd "reA . • Saddlebaek A.I ter110011 N.Y.Stoeks EDITION '* * * \VOL. 69, NO. 286, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTJ '·----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- .Planners Approve El Toro Rezonin B7GARYGRANVILLE 0t-.O.My .... t4Mf Orange County planning com- . missioners voted 4-1 Monday to recommend a 1,375-acre zone •change in the north El Toro area aimed at eventually aecom· modating 6,000 dwellings and · roughly 20,000 residents. ' Rancho -de los Alisos, a com-tmm!ty planned by Occidental Land Company, lles north of Trabuco Road between El Toro Road and Bake Parkway. The Planning Commission en· dorsement of the zone change needed to develop the communi- ty will go to the county Board or Supervisors where final approval is virtually assured. Only commission chairman Shirley Grindle opposed recom· · Seven•gear Vigil This black vulture perches atop skull impaled on a stick in Tucson'.s Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in which he has exercised squatters rights. Museum officials say that seven years ago the vulture entered the walk-in aviary at · feeding time and later refused to be escorted out. MAC Urges County To Install Signal The Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Council <MAC> will urge the county to instalJ. a pedestrian-activated traffic signal on Trabuco Road al the en· trance to Glen Yermo Elemen- tary Schoql. .. Michael Walsh, Seville Homeowners Association presi· . dent. tolr;t MAC members Mon- day the recent extension of Trabuco Road to El Toro Road has made speeding motorists an ~ extreme hazard !or t he 400 ~ children who live in the Seville 1 t ract and attend Glen Yermo ~hool. "I myself witnessed a car turn 1*> degrees and go through the I crossing backwards," said Walsh. "Trabuco Road has become a primary access route. Commuters coming off the ~ treeway have a fixed milld·sel - A they're 8'most home, and their [ • attention level is at an all-time low." Walsh said curreJlt safety pre· cautions at the school crossing, l I [ Co ast W~at)ler More night and momlng low clouds and fog Wednes· day with temperatures on the coast of about 73, low about GO. INSIDE TODA. Y Tlw ~N"" South•: Does it bflong fn onr1 polUicUin'• podtd fn 19761 Boeh partin baoe noaa to~ tbot U 4ocl -oftld that it doemtt. S..~AIJ. •••e~ MY-""tcie At MeU..... •• . ,.......... . . .......,,.... ... ~=· .. ...... ., AJ .,.....,...., .,. =-..,,. .,...._....,. A4 =:..:U. ~ =CMMIY ~ ........... M ._...._. A•n 1 ....... 1111t At ~ A\I ...... A~tt ,,__.. At ~ u-... ,.. ............ , .......... I including a blinking amber light and a crossing guard, are inade· quate. "Motorists approaching the school from the north see the amber light as they drive up a grade which prevents them from seeing the school or the cross· ing," he said: "They don't see anything to slow down for, so they maintain their speed." The crossing guard is not on duty alter school hours, Walsh said, when many children are re· turning home from after -school activities. The amber light goes off at 4:30 p.m ., making late af· <SeeSJGNAL, Page AZ> MAC Seek ing Applications For Neve Seat The Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Council <MAC) is look· ing for a few good men (and women ) interested in serving out the remaining term of Coun· cUman Cal Neve, who resigned in September. MAC members agreed Monday to aeJect N~ve's replacement Nov. 8 from among those appli· cants who submit their qualifica· lions to the MAC office by Oct. 29. The of!ice, at 26161·8 La Paz Road, is open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to4 p.m. Ap- pUcants must be residents ol Minion Viejo. Neve, the top vote eetter of eltht candidates when he was elected to hls second MAC term in •areb. aaid in bis letter of re- alpaUon be was ctuittlng lor ••re- asons ot a personal nature.'' Ill the same letter ,.he endorsed f 61ow Orange county Sherifts Deputy Vito Ferlauto to succeed him. Coatacted today, Neve said he will soon make a public state- ment, explaining more fully bis reaaons tor resigning. Since the flrst MAC electldD ln (See ME MB Ell, Pace A2) mending the zone change Mon-day. . Mrs. Grindle based her objec- tion mainly on a still unsetUed dispute over the impact of jet noise on I and use near the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Her position was no different than it was six weeks ago when she said residential construction should be banned in areas a con- suJtant's study says ~ probably adversely impacted by jet Doise. And her fellow commissioners• position was no different from when they opposed Mrs. Grindle and said a home building ban shouldn't be imposed in some of the areas defined by the consul- tant. ~e>W. the noise issue is de- adlocked on a 2·2 Board of Supervisors stalemate, a stalemate that Supervisor Thomas RUey says be will end in two weeks when it again comes before the board. Roughly 1,800 of the planned homes in the Rancho de los Alisos will lie within (he consul- tant's noise impacted area. Planning Commissioner William MacDougall led the move to approYe tbe cbange. MacDougall said approva. shouldn't be delayed wblle tb4f noise impact issue is debated ancl urged his fellow commissioners to endorse Occidental's appli~ca.l ti on. · Along the way. he insisted tha possible school site and po <See REZONE. P~eAZ) . 4 -States Cut Flu, Shots; I Action Comes .After Pennsylvania ·Deaths · By The Asspciated Press State health officials in New Mexico, Wisconsin, Louisiana and Vermont today ordered tem· porary suspension of the swine nu inoculation program after the deaths or three elderly persons just hours after they got swine flu shots in Pennsylvania's Al· legheny County. Both Pennsylvania and federal health officials said there was no link directly relating the Pen· nsylvania deaths to the inocula· lions, but all 13 inoculation sites in Allegheny County were also shut down as a precaution. Of. ficials said the three who died had chronic heart conditions. State health officials in Michigan said vaccine from the same lot used in Allegheny Coun· ty was distributed in Michigan and ordered that no more vac· cine from that lot be ad· ministered. They added there have been no reports of ill effects among some 6,000 Michigan residents wbo already have been inoculated. A spokesman for the Michh~an Health Department said the vac· cine in question was manutac· tured by Parke Davis & Com- pany of Detroit. At Parke Davis, a spokesman said be did not know if the persons who died in Pen· nsylvania were inoculated with Parke Davis vaccine. "Of the more than eight million doses of influenza vaccine dis- tributed by Parke Davis, records indicate some has been shipped to Allegheny County, but accord· ing to health officials on the scene, the incident does not ap· pear to be related to the im· munization program," the spokesman said. In Harrisburg, Pa •• State Hyzen · DenieS B.rihery Cle mente Arcmtect Testifies in Tria( By TOM BARLEY Of the O.tll'f Plklt St.att Obviously wearied by a long c ro ss e xamination , San. Clemente architect Leon Hyzeq again told a Superior Court jurj . today that bribery was not his pUl'J>O!e :Nhen he attempted to contact Orange Count y Supervisor Thomas rutey last May. ' And the witness made it clear under interrogation from Depu~y District Attorney John Conley that he might not be in a courtroom today if he had been able to speak to Riley rather than the supervisor's chief aide, former journalist Peter Herman. ''I learned a long time ago that you don't speak to the second in command i! you want accurate inform a ti on on any project." Hyzen told the jury in Judge H. Walter Steiner's courtroom. The 66-year-old architect is be- ing tried on bribery charges con· tained in a grand jury indictment which claims that he attempted to offer $1,000 to Riley as a cam· paign contribution. It is alleged that Hyzen sought favorable consideration when the Whites F ace Rugb y F ines JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP> -Minister of Sport Piel Koornhor says eight whites who played in a r acially integrat· e d rugby match at Port Elizabeth have violated South Africa's r ace policies and may be penalized. But by late Monday there were no reports that any or the whites involved in Sunday's match ha<! been a rrested. Legal action against .whites violating the Group Areas Act rarely involves more than a minor fine and judicial rebuke. The match was pJayed oetore some 10,000 black spectators in the heart of the city's blac.k Kwazakele Township despite at· tempts Jo have the game halted by government sJ>(lrts official!'. politicians and securtty policey. county board decided that it was time to seek an architect for the proposed San Clemente public library. IJYaen toJd C~pley tod~ thai no such Ile~ was in his mind wJMo be first spo~f! to Herman ''because I knew the supervisors did not even have a San Clemente library in their budget." Herman has testified that Hyzen offered $1,000 to Riley as a campaign contribution and further offered to solicit votes for Riley in, the San Clemente area. 'fbe tJU'Y bas listened to tape recordings of telephone con- versatio~s between Herman aod Hyzen which, the prosecution claims, make it clear that bribery was tbe motive behind Hyzen's calls . Happy IOOth Seal Beacher Celebrates By RAY ESTRADA . 01111• O.tll'f Pilot Slaff John F . Duvall's daughter·in· law was excited as she brought the Seal Beach man a letter from lhe White House. Duvall, 100 years old this week. was indifferent at first and mere· ly said, "He only wants my vote." Elsie Duvall, wife of the cen· tenarian's 71 -year -old son, Frank, opened.the letter and read a birthday m essage from the President of the United States. Mrs. Duvall said her father-in· law was still not impressed, but look the card eventually and, despite his failing sight, tried to read the message through a light· ed magnifier. As he did, she said, she could see th at he was touched. But the r etired painting con- tractor expresses more concern for the future or the country's natural environment than for its political figures. A Seal Beach resident since 1961, Duvall said he has seen most of the natural beauties in all the states in the Union except for those along the north Atlantic coast. "I dof\'t understand how people cant~ a plane and fly.over the country'and say 'I've been there' -lbey don't see anything except what they left. at home," Duvall said. An avid bicyclist since his ar- rival in the Los Angeles area in 1886 from Missouri, Duvall said his memories of hunting, camp· ing, fishing and cycling are bis fondest.. Dilly ll'llol Staff Ptloto AT CENTURY MARK Seat Beach's Duvall "I remember when what they now call Huntington Harbour was just a big slough. 1 used to have the best limes hunting and fishing there," he reminisced. Although he believes his memory to be poor. Duvall said be can still recall the Seal Beach and Huntington Beach coast as it was before buildings or highways in the area bee ame plentiful. <See looTH, PageA2) Health Secretary Leonard Bachman said his department has found no connection betw~ the deaths and the Ou vaccine~ He said the Pennsylvania pnr gram will continue as scheduled.~ Allegheny County health of· flcials described the closing of the 13 clinics there as a preca\f• tionary measure. "At the same time, we are talk·. ing about three deaths involvini the same facility within hours after inoculation', and the odds of that happening are formidable,'' said County Coroner Cyril. r (See FLU, Page AZ) Near.Miss For Betty LOS ANGELES (AP) - A chartered jet carrying First Lady Betty Ford was involved in a near-miss over Southern California last Friday. one of two sucb incidents caused by a ' computer' failure, the FAA • reported today • Mrt. Ford's chartered BAC VClO, a !our-engine Jet. was descending into the Los Angeles area FTI· day when it came within 3¥4 miles of a Cessna Oying level at about 9,000 feet. an FAA spokesman said. MAC Seeks Park Name Suggestions Members of the Mission Viejo Municipa• Advisory Council (MAC> are seeking community input on park names before mak· ing recommendations to the county. Bob Monroe, MAC parks and recreation committee chairman. told councilmen Monday bis committee recommends the following changes in park names: -Sleepy Hollow to Aurora Park. -Santa Maria II to Barcelona Hills Park. -English Canyon to be in• corporated in Wilderness Glen Park. • The committee recommended that the Cardova tract park be called Cordova Park and the Madrid tract park. La Mancha Park. No changes in name were sug. gested tor CasUUe, Loyola, San Gabriel, Santa Lucia, Alicia or Wilderness Glen parks. Santa Maria I Part would stay tho: same, witbomlsslonotthe'1I." · Comments on the committee•s- recommend a Uons for part- names can be brought to the MAC office. 26161·B L:l Pal Roacl, weekdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The MAC phone number II S81·7610. County Income Boosf Reported1 Prom A1socl1ted Preti Wins Per capita income in Oranee County averaged $8,210 in 1974. up from $5. T9I> ln 1973. the Com· merce Department reported to- day. The county, orfidllly dubbed the Anaheim.Santa An .. Gudeo Grove standard metropolitan statistical area ($llSA), ranks 26th in the nation. · The Bridgeport-Stamford· NOl'Walk-Danbury area ol Con· neeticut Nmalned the nation's richest meb'opolitan ana. wltb an annual personal income of $1. 781 per person, an increase ol 9.1 percent. The national average. reported earlier by the Commerce Depart· ment, was $5,449, an increase of 8.lper~ntoverll'IS. Workers in the Anchorage, Allllka, region jumped from 14th place in 1173 to second place in the next year. wltb • 22.9 percent Jump to an nerap income ot S7,159. Wbile the Commerce Department offered no explana- tion, tht chance probably rel'lects wort on the AJu.k apCpellne. Personal income conataC. d wages. Sill aries, interest, dividends and other mooey re- ceived by individuals after de. duction of Social Security taxes. Personal income tax deductions are not considered. , Ranking with Bridgepmt and Anchorage in the tq> 10 tor 1974 were W asblnston, D.C., with averaae annual per ca,pita ln· come ol $7t102, up t.• percent over 1973; Nusau..su.ffolk, N.Y., $1,0M, U.P 7.9 percent; San Fran· ci.tco·Oatland. $7,030, up 10.s percent; Newark, N.J .• '8t.8Sl, up 9.7 percent; Chic.ago. ts.'lS. up 10.1 percent; New York, $61888,' up 9 percent; West Palm Beacbt • Boca Raton, Fla., $6.622, up s.s· percent; and Reno, Nev., $6,620)-• up 3.6 percent. The Los Angeles-Long Beact.· SMSA ranks 18 in the nation, "1~ 1974 income at $6,343. an inCl"Clase over the 1973 tally of$$. 757 • The San Diego area ranted 80 in 1'74, wltb average income of SS,.482, ccppared wlth 1.t13 IA• comeof $$,204. T\1e Riventde-SanBemardlno- Ontario area ranks 184. with l'7• Income at tc.ui. up from 1973'•• $t.4'1. ,. • • • o ++ _,..., •• or .. r .. h ...... -......... -----.,,-~ ---- • Al OAILVPtLOT ~5 Bid Okay For Child Center The two-year conlroversr over a child care center on the Sad· dleback College campus was brought closer to a conclusJoo Monday. With a split vote, college truatees agreed to accept bids to convert an existing campus building .into the center and authorized the center's operation during the spring semester. Trustee Frank Greinke or Tustin opposed the move. ··1 don't believe we should have the responsibility ol caring for ddldren," he explained. "I think that belongs with parents. It belongs in the home and not in the college." Trustee Robert Bartholomew. also of Tustin, voiced no vote on the issue. Mission Viejo's Donna Berry, the third trustee who has indicated disapproval of the center in the past, was not at the meeting. Contractors' bids for the re- novation project may be r e· turned within a month, said William Blur<><:k, architect on the project. II the bids are within the $21,000 allowed in the colJege's budget and if the trustees award a contract for the job, the center may be completed and ready for use in three to four months, he said. The center will use about a third of the space in J Building, a portable structure which was used for the physical education department for seven years. The space has been vacant since the college's n ew gym complex opened in September. Blurock said most of the needed work will be rehabilita· tion of the building. ''There's a lot of disrepair in there now," he told trustees. The project will include con· verting r estrooms so they can be u sed by children, enclosing a play yard, providing windows so the play area can be observed, adding wa lls and repairing floors. Two trustees questioned whether the children's noise will disturb classes. Administrators noted, however. that the building is adjacent to the physical educ a· tion play fields. Women, some of whom have been pushing the need for the center for two years, filled the meeting room. They made no comment other than to thank trustees after the vote. Plans made by a campus com- mittee calJ for the establishment or a board or directors to oversee the center and to charge a small fee to m ake it self-supporting. The center is planned for 60 youngste.rs . From Page A I IOOTH. •. "The beach could be covered with crabs. grunion and sea life but not any more," Duvall said , commenting on effects of popula· tion. ocean outfalls and oil der· ricks. "You could see porpoises in the breakers and sea lions in the sand -now that's beautiful to me," recalled the former Mis· sourian as a tear rolled to the rim of his eyeglasses. "You can't see nothing now but a bunch of naked women and anyway,, I can't see 'em." said Duvall. Toro Homeowner~ To Elect Officers New otflcers for the El Toro Homeowners Association will be elected during a meeting begin· ning at 7:30 p.m . Thursday in the community room or the People's t·eaeraJ Savings ano Loan As· sociation building. All residents of EJ Toro are eligible to Join the association. O"ANQ! COAST n DAILY PILOT =-~~~~-·r.::: . .=::::~= =:.::"=~c:...~.:.·."",,;.~;: :!'v':.:~:.~:~== ~~:'.~ ~.:..~~~· ... ·;::r,;:•;: =~...::.!:-u:.::..~~Jlll-... "-" ..... --•..O "'*·-'"' "-C...., Vk• ............. "° c;.,_., __ n.... ....... llcNW ,_ .... _ ~-•"t£cNIOr 0......M.~ llk-~-Ault(..,I ~ ....... fd, ..... Seddtebecll Vlllln Offtce ""4""' '-• llO ... •I~ °"9o ,_ OfftcH C..\1-: Ullw.t4 e.r-... """41"411 ... 9'•0: '""IHc'll......._. ... _ .... ~ ···~14 ..... Tel1,lll'"9 (114)~ 011 NIMA~elngto.Mn --.C:llV•llrf'-Olfltt 111.a10 ~,..,a.- 4"'°'30 =r.t: ::. °:..."":t.c:'...=·~= Moflt• tr .... '11H"'ff'lll -··· Ill ..... ,.,,,_ta Wit-I lMci.I -Mitt! .. If ~-. =-~~ .... :=~.:.._"".::::.. ~':. _,# .. l'Mll .... _...,, Mllf1M'J • ., ...... AJI ......... . Merry Colutnhus Day Heidi H are (left) and P am Presley launched the Nina. the Pinta and the San. ta Maria in a gale ·of giggles Monday to celebrate Columbus Day. Students in Liz Derdzindke's third grade class at Castille Elementary School in Mission Vi ejo con· verted milk straws from lunch to ships' masts for three dimensional pictures of the famous Spanish ships. Undercover Narc Nabs Eight, Cache An undercover police orficer planted at an Irvine manufactur· ing firm resulted in the arrests or eight people and the confiscation from a Costa Mesa apartment of S7,000 worth of drugs. Irvine Police said today . Irvine Police Lt. James Blaylock said the arrests OC· curred during the past two weeks and that two others may be &r· rested before the investigation is concluded. Those arrested include Richard Lee J ones, 25, and EUda Jones, 20, of 241 Avocado St., Costa Mesa, both accused of possession of cocaine, LSD and amphetamines for sale; Patricia Smith. 26, o{ Orange. charged with three counts of sales of drugs; James A. Homan, 21, 96S2 Pollack. Huntington Beach, sales of marijuana: and Terry Wightman, 19. Tustin, sales of marijuana. Al so arrested were Dale R. Spillman. 20, of 4841 Heil. Hunt· mgton Beach, three counts of sales of PCP {an animal tran· quilizer) and one count sales of ma rijuana ; Benjamin A Arebalo, 29. Orange, four counts sales of LSD and amphetamines; a nd David C .. J ones, 18, a transient, four counts of sales of LSD, amphetamines and PCP. Accor ding to Blaylock, the Un· Mardian Gets New Trial; Ot,hers Don't WASHINGTON <AP) -The U.S. Court of Appeals today up- held the Watergate conspiracy convictions of three onetime close aides to former President Richard M. Nixon but ordered a new trial for a fourth defendant, Robert C. Mardian. Mardi an, a former Nixon cam· paign official and an assistant at· torney general before \hat, was convicted on New Year's Day, 1975, along with former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and the two men who once were Nixon's closest advisers. John D. Ehrlichman an d H .R . Haldeman. A fifth defendant. Kenneth w. Parkinson, was acquitted In the cover-up trial, which lasted four months. All wer e accused ol attempUng to thwart investigations into the original Watergate break·ln on June 17, 1972. Dist. Judge John J. Sirica presided over the trial. Nixon was named as an unin· d ieted co-conspirator by the same grand jury. Road Signal Meeting Set Traffic signals being planned for El T oro Road, between Rockfield and .Muirlands boulevards. wm be discussed during a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Great Western Savings and Loan building. dercover agent was hired as a stock clerk at the company for a six-week period, during which time he allegedly purchased n a r cotics from the eight employes arr ested. Police withheld tbe name of the firm. One purchase resulted in a search warrant being obtained for the Jones apartment at 241 Avocado St.. where police al· l egedly found 12,000 am- phetamine tablets, 850 tablets of LSD, a half-ounce of cocaine and a small a mount of hashish oiJ. The street value of the drugs was sel at $7,000. Blaylock said the investigation began when the personnel manager of the company re· quested p oli ce assistance because he s uspected a large scale drug problem at the cofn· pany Police Nab Fugitive In Shootout Three police officers and a murder suspect from F1orida ex- changed e uns hots Monday night outside the Watergate Motel in Anaheim but no one was injured, officers said today. Police had been called to the motel, at 1211 S. West St .. at 9: 18 p.m. alter JacksonvilJe, F1a., of· ficers asked them to apprehend three murder and car theft sus- pects. police said . Officers took J ane Alice Albert, 30, and Timothy Charles Palms, 29, both transients, into custody in the motel parking lot, police said. But a third, Ronald Michael Straight, 32, also a•transient, aJ. legedly attem pted to run from the motel room, firing two sbots from a revolver at pursuing of· ficer s, police said. Str aight purportedly ran across West Street as officers fired five shots at him. then he aJ. lcgedly (ired once again, before flee ing into a housing tract north of the motel. police said. Front Page Al MEMBER .•• 1974, Neve has often been at odds with the council majority, sj>ecincally on development is· sues, tra!fic and growth. He was the only MAC member to support the lowest growth alternative or the Southeast Orange County Circulation Study. At Monday's MAC meeting, Chairman Richard Lowcock sug- . gested two alternative methods for selecting Neve's replacement -accepting the new member from among those who ran in the March election or selecting a councilman from a major MAC committee. Councilwoman Kathleen Kelly proposed naming George Simons to the position. Simons, 67, is the only candidate from the March election who is still available and interested, she said. Mrs. Kelly said selection of Neve's replacement should reflect the will of Mlssion Viejo voters . Philosophy and personality of the candidate. should have no play in consider- ing the replacement, she s aid. Councifman John Noble OP· posed selecting the new coun- cilman from among March can. didat.es because the situation has changed in the interim. he said. "Some people would have run if certain others hadn't been run- ning," he said. "We should make a concerted effort to find the person best qualified for th<.' job.·• The person selected to serve out Neve's term will be up for election in March, 1978. E'rone Page A I FLU ... Wechl. All three of the people who died had chr onic heart conditions, Wecht said, and the stress of get- ting the shots may have con· tributed to their deaths. A spokesman for the Center of Disease Control said there were no plans to curtail the nationwide program aimed at immunizing up to 200 million Americans against swine flu. Burned Out Bus 3 lailed, I Sought· Market Slayµig •1 • Suspects Held Anaheim police now have three suspects in jail and are seekins a fourth ma n in the fat.al shotgun lhooUng of a market clerk lut Thursday. Meanwhile Costa Mesa of· ficers, circulating photographs of the suspects, say they believe at least two of the men in· volved in a market robbery in Costa Mesa last Tuesday niJbt. Police arrested Richard F. An· derson. a 29·year-old transient. at Westminster jailL~bere be was being held on a.rug-related charges. They arrested George Louis Ledesma, 19, of Westminster and a 16-year-old juvenile SUnday. Both those m en were also in Westminster jail o n drug charges. "We expect to seek charges of ho~icide and robbery against all three suspects later this week." said Anaheim Sgt. Bill Wright. Albertson's market clerk Jack W. Mason of Stanton was shot at point blank range by a suspect wielding a sawed-off shotgun last Thursday night About lS to 20 witnesses at the Anaheim market, at 610 S . Brookhurst St .• said Mason did not provoke the gunman. wbo then fled with his partners after scooping up an undetermined amount of cash from several cash registers. Costa Mesa investigator Gerry L . Thompson said today several witnesses to a robbery at a Ralphs Market in the llarbor Shopping Center last week, have looked at photographs of two of the Anaheim suspects. Thompson said photos of Ledesma and J oseph Cabral, 19, of Cypress, were also shown to several customers and clerks at Ralphs. Anaheim police are still seek· ing Cabral, but provided ~ta Mesa police with his photograph. "It looks like the juvenile 1WO MISFIRES SAVE DRIVER DETROIT (AP) -Beer truck driver Gene Barr escaped a holdup attempt only because his would-be robber's gun misfired- twice. Jus t after Barr parked hls Stroh Brewery truck outside a bar Monday a!ternooo, be said, a young man thrust a gun through its open window and said, "Open the door or I'll kill you." Barr opened his door and rolled lo the pa vemenL As he did, he heard a click from the rob- ber's gun. Enraged, the assailant ran around to where Barr lay on the ground, saying, "This time I'm going to kill you." The gun misfired agaln. School Night Set for Viejo Parents of M issioo Viejo High School students are invited to Back To School Night beginning at7:30p.m. Wednesday. Shortened versions ol classes will be featured. During an assembly, Donald Ames, the former principal. will introduce John Daywalt, the school's new principal. The school's band, drill team and pep squad will entertain. The program will conclude with the kickoff for the 1976-77 PTO Membe rship Drive. Refreshments will be served in the multipurpose room. waan'l involv~ in our robbery, .. Thompson added. Three armed men took more than $1,000 ln cash and several thousand dollars ln checks and food stamps from the Ralphs Market last Tuesday night. Witnesses at that time described the trto as being of Latin descent, and carrying a shotgun and two pistols. Costa Mesa police said today they are trying to contact several other wltneS&es to the Costa Mesa robbery to belp ldenWy the photographs. Fro• Page A J SIGNAL ••. ternoon crossings eveu more hazardous. SevUJe homeowners who monitored the crossing recently between 8 and 6:30 p.m. logged between SSC> and 615 cars passing the crosswalk each d~ in the 30-mlaute period. Durina the same half hour, between 30 and 40 children crossed Trabuco Road from the school. ' "It is only a matt.er of Ume un· tll a child is hit ... David Whitcher, Glen Yermoprinclpal, told the MAC. Dr. Whitcher. who was prin- cipal at Valencia Elementary School when it opened in Laguna HHls in 1969. said concerned parents convinced the county to install a traffic signal where school children crossed La Pu Road at Paseode Valencia. "The situation there wasn•t nearly as bad as it is at the Trabuco Road crossing,•• Dr. Whitcher aaid. "There was almost no tra!fic. but cars were travellng at high speeds. At the Glen Yermo crossing. we have 2,500 to 3,000 cars, also traveling at high speeds." Whitcher said trying to get children to walk south to the cor· ner of Trabuco Road and Los Alisos Blvd., where they could cross with a tralflc signal, is un- realistic. "The kids just won't do it. .. be said. "Children don't think like adults. They don't see danger the way we do." Fro• Pag~ A I REZONE ••• lion problems in the area are too dlsLant to plan for now. Before voting to recommend the zone change, planning com- missioners considered nine ques- tions raised about the project's environmental impact statement raised by the Saddleback Area : Coordinating Council. And included in the councU•s challenge was a recommenda- tion that a decision be delayed until the noise impact issue is set· tled. While the commissi on bypassed the noise recommenda- tion, it did attach planned com· munity regulations to its vote of approval. And, commission endorsemetat or the requested zone change ts no more than step one in an • elaborate planning process that will cover the phased develop- mentor the project. Once supervisors approve the zone change, each segment of the 15 to 20·year development plan must pass ln review before the Planning Commission. Commissioners already made a dent in Occldental's plan when they deleted a planned shopplne cent.er in the community. They also reduced the number of residential dwelUngs in the plan by almost 200 units but went against a staff recommendation that plans be shifted to move the units out of the so-called noise Impacted area. MAPS Now 2 Years Old The Mission Auxiliary for the ' Providence Speech and Hearing Center <MAPS> will celebrate ita second anniversary Friday in La1W1a Hllls. Tb' celebraUon ls scheduled for9:30 a.m . in the Hostess Roorp at Great Western Savings an4 Loan, 24100 El Toro Road. A luncheon will follow the regu)• meetinc. MAPS provides volunteers tp the center, located in Orani .. and raises funds for scbolarabiPf' and equipment, accOl'd1ng to Peay Shea, president. Additional information or luncheon reservations arp available by callln1 Bel~ &rebel, 588-1664, or Peggy Sbef, 588-64l3. Six Sente~ced Bob Voien ot Ute county Road Department wlll discuss the plans. Members of the Cbamber ol Commerce and area residents are invited to attend the meetina which has been arranged by the Saddleback Area Coord.lnaUna Coancll (SACC). SACC bas opposed three 1ipa11 planned for tbe area ll'OUDd Sllddlebact ValleJ Plaza. A city bus in San Dlego smolders after lt was destroyed by rire Monday. It was e.mpty except fol' the driver. who got out in Ume. Police blamed a blown tire which lpited the gas tanJt. ATHENS, Greece (AP) -SBt ma who were MC:uritf police!i Ileen UlM!er tbe former G dlctatorshJp were found fllllt..r day of torturlo1 political 1lrilonen. 1 J