Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-10-11 - Orange Coast PilotFreestyle skier Wayne Hilterbrand becomes part of the statuary at Ne wport Beach's Fashion Island as camera freezes him in mid -air. Hilterbrand was one of freestylers who put on an exhibition Wednesday at the DAILY PILOT , . * * * 15~.·* * * . . ~ , . -. THlJRSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 11, 1979 VOL. 72. NO. at, J SECTIONS, 41 l'AGES Mountain ~rash -2-Balloon~ts Die • in ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. CAP) -A hot air balloon was e n gulfed in flames afte r crashing in the Sandia Moun· tains east or here, and two California balloonists aboard were killed, offi cials said. "It was such a helpless reel- ing," George Welsh of Albuquer- que, a chase crew member, said or Wednesday's crash . "So- meone brought a little fire ext- inguisher, but there wasn 't a nything they could do. The flames just spurted every- where." The dead were identified by the state Medical Investigators Office as Richard Temple, 31, or Cucamonga, and Kathy Wiley, age unavailable, of Palmdale. It was the first fatal accident since the International Hot Air Balloon Fiesta began In 1972, said Brad Gibbs, a balloonist and fiesta launch director. A man in another balloon was Coast Weather Patchy low clouds and log along the coast otherwise variable high cloudiness Friday. Lows tonight 57 to 62. Highs Fri· day 70to78. INSIDE TODAY Want to be t~ qi.em of England? Tip• on Prince Charin' Well Ofld qsdrkt are detmi.1 on Pag. Al. Flames injured in a separate incident caused by tricky wand currents, and a helicopter was damaged when it made a forced landing in the area, but no one on board was injured. officials said. The balloonists were among 400 participating in the annual ballooning event, which attract- ed representatives from 32 states and fivecountn es. Capt. John Sand s or the Bernalillo County sheriff's office s aid witnesses told him the balloon that crashed was 1,500 to 2,000 feet in the air when a sud- den shift of winds occurred. "It burned a hole in the (See BAU.OON, Pa1e AZ) Irvine Police Seek Suspect In Stabbing A Garden Grove man waa stabbeed 18 times on an Irvine street early today and police are searching for a man be gave a ride to as the prime suspect. Lt. Gene Norden said Jose Pinto, 21, was treated and re- leased from Tustin Community Hospital after the 2:30 a.m. at· tack. He suffered minor lacera- tions to the chest, back and arms. Norden said the assailant, described as a man of Latin des· cent ln bis early 20s, used a screwdriver ln the attack. . Norden aald Pinto aDd the am· peel had been in a Santa Ana bar earlier ln the evenln1. The man uked Pinto for a ride home to the Irvine area. they drove to the Colony boul· lnl tract on Walnut Aveaue west of Culver Drive aDd pulled OVeJ'. However, when tbie two.SCJt out of the car, the suspect. pulled tbe screwdriver and demanded Pin· to'a watcll and t¥ keys to bil car. When Plnto refused to live him the keys, the man attacked him. The suspect then fied on foot. Offlcen found Pinto at the in· tenec:tiolr ot Walnut and Culver and he wu taken to a nearby fire ~ station for flnt ald treatment/ o.lly ...... ,_.., Lee ...... shopping center's Stage Court. They took off from a .ramp set up for the show The statuary that HHterbrand momentarily became part of in this photo 1s call ed "The Skydivers." Stahhlng , In Irvine Investigated 2 CalHorDians Die in Fiery Balloon Crash Clemente Police fluiet Rubber Strike Rally Dao,,.. ... -" •k.,.,.. K_ PICKETERS AT REEVES RUBBER COMPANY IN SAN CLEMENTE JEER AT WORKERS INSIDE Police Arrived Later To Kffp Order at th• Scene of Six-month Strtke Where 150 Carried Signs Clemente Police Calm Labor Rally San Clemente police were called ln to quell a minor shout- ing disturbance at the scene of a slx-montb·old labor strike followinc a peaceful rally by about lSO walkout supporters Wednesday. PoUce made no. arrests ln front ot Reeves Rubber Inc., 415 Ave. Pico, where about 100 gasket manufacturing workers have been on strike since April 9. Communication Workers of America union members ataaed a a p.m. rally where national president Glenn Watta, allO an AFL·CIO bou, eocoura1ed the 1trlken to continue lhelr atrua· 1le. Budget Veto Loom& LOS ANGELES <AP> - Mayor Tom Bradley baa 10 days to decide whet.her to veto the Sl .143 blllion city bud1et ap· proved by the City Council Walts left for a San Diego m e e ting while some or the placard·carryln1 unlo~ sup· porters marched around the plant shouting. Plant officials bad earlier ob- talned a court order that Umlta picketing around the factory. Police arrived at 3:47 p.m . to re· mind the demonatraton of the court order:.. Tbe picket.en left. Police i aid the atrikera had been callial plant employees "scabl" and other oblceolUes while lbe workers were cbana· lnl 1hilb. No ODe WU bwt. CW A union oftlclala said tbere appears to be ao pro1pect ol a contract settlement at lb1I time. They claim plant omclab rtlule to "take a reasonable poeltlon" ln contract talkl. Union oftlclal Reid Pierce said CW A represeataUvu spoke to plant manaaemeat brletly tut week but no Pl'Oll' ... wu made. The 1asket plant employs about 170 workers. Gold Slides Below $400; Buck Stable LONDON <AP> -The dollar was mlxed but UtUe changed on the world's money markets to- day. The price of 1old slid back $11.SO. In Tokyo, the dollar finished the day at 225.90 yen, somewhat bilber than New York's clOli.ftl fl.l\lrel ol 225.80. There wu no tradln1 in Tokyo Wednesday becaU1eol a utional holiday. London's five m~or bullion bouH9 ft.xed the prlee of so&d at MOO • ~ for tbe mondq t.nclUaa 1 z 1 icm, after an earlier bltb of$«>8.50. Tbe afternoon fix. ln1wutto1.so. In Zurich, Europe's bl19est 1otd market, tbe price slipped below S.00 to '3t7. Tbe metal finished Wed· Hiday'• tradlne at ,MOB ln Loa· don and MOl.50 ln Zurich. But dW'lQI a brief nrp early Wed· nesda1 the Sold prtee soomed to t.Ut.IO. • Trading Heavy NEW YORK <APl --Stock prices bounced back and forth erratically today as the market'\ of Wall Street contmued their convulsive reaction to the FederaJ Reserve's new olans for clampmgdownon credit Trading was running well be hind Wednesday's record· setting pace. but was still heavy The Dow Jones average of 30 industnals. up 2 pomlS in early tr ading a nd down 12 at mid· mornmg, -.as off 8 71 to 840 61 after three hours of trading but was off only l.88 to 847 .44 after four hours The widely recognized average fell more than 48 pomts from Monday through Wednes· day The New York Stock Ex· change had by far the busiest day an its history Wednesday. with 81 62 million shares chang- mg hands. eclipsing the previous high of 66.37 million, set Aug. 3, 1978. Bond price s likewis e have broken sharply since the start of the week as they absorbed the s hock of unprecedented in· creases m interest rates. <See STOCKS, Pa1e AZ) Nose Eaten, Seiood Back COPENHAGEN, Den· mark (AP> -A 2~·year· old girl had her nose bitten off by a German shepherd, but plastic surgeons sewed ll back on after recovering It from the dog's stomach, d~tors reported today . The chief .sur1eon, Sig Boland, told r eporte rs blood was circulating through the nose, but It would be some time beCore d~ton knew if the opera- tion OD llie Olaen WU 8 complete tueceu. Tbe dot wu rushed to a veter•nai:.y clinlc lm· mediately alter the incl· dent Wednesday and was forced to rerurgttate the nose, whlcb was then rusbed to an operatln1 room trbere Boland and other surceoos reattached It. 7 r L t Killidg SusPect's Wife Testifies MARTINEZ (AP) -A ta)e ol MJC ·1tran1ulaUoa rttuala. de· mandl for the um• of • .,... vict lma and mlnd l'OOlrOil baa bMo toad by the wUe ol PblUlp J oHph Hushes Jr . the man &ar1ed with m urderina lhreo wom n. .. PblUlp bed coat.rot °"' me:· Suaanne Pttrift tauned at a Sep t. U t'loaed p rellminary court hearlna. "l • aa Just .ort ol . 2 Officers Nab_Suspect With 'Coke' Two policemen from Newport Beach and Huntington Beach teamed up late Wednesday night and arrestA!d a mao they aUqed was careying an ounce of CO· eaine and $1,600 in cash. Earl Robert Aden, 26 , of Para· m ount was booked into Newport Beach city jail on charies or possession of cocaine ror sale. An ounce of the oarcoUc is worth about $2,500 ln illiclt aales, a ccordin1 to police. Newport Beach pa trolman Todd Seiders was called to a trailer park at 7200 W. Coast Highway at a bout 11:30 p.m. because residents aald there was a prowler in the park. Huntington Beach Offi cer R ichard Wright was nearby on West Coast Highwa y issuing a traffic citation to a motorist he'd followed into Newport Beach from Huntington Beach. Wright told Seiders he saw Aden leave the trailer park an~ head for a parked car, so he de· t ained him. Seiders said the cocaine was found in a briefcase in Aden's car The officer s~ud he became curious a bout the briefca se when Aden told him he was to deliver it as a favor to a woman whose name he didn't know fie told the officer the case wai. to be left in the offi ce of a trailer park on Coast Highway, but he didn't know the person it was to be left for , or the name or address of the park. F,.._PageAI BALLOON • • balloon, and it started down rather rapidly," Sands said. ·'The pilot attempted to tum on the power <propane), and it was tonoavail. lt crashcd " Sands said the balloon was one of three that appa rentl y ex· .pcrienced problem!. with wind TUrrcnts. - One landed in a picnic area near the scene of the crash, and "one subjeet in that balloon had an injury to the back and bad to be helped out," by a rescue unit, Sands said. He was taken by ambulance to an Albuquerque hospital but there was no word on his identity or condition. The other landed safely on the east side or the Sandias, Sands said . No injuries were reported. Sands said a helicopter leased by KOAT-TV of Albuquerque to aid in news coverage of the balloons made a forced landing in the same area. The pilot and a reporter on board were not in· jured. The landing "tore the h elicopter up pretty badly," Sands said. Aubrey Cookman , a fiesta s pokesman, said about 13 balloons participat ed in the fli ght over the 10,000·foot San· dias, one of several fiesta events. Prison Site Moved SAN DIEGO <AP) -The idea of a new state prison within sight of Mexico on the Olay Mesa is reportedly being aban· doned in favor of one near .Brown Field, near the edge of San Ysidro. ORANGE COAIT !> DAILY PILOT r-. o.-c..i o.11. PllOI, wllJI ...,1<111• <- IM-t"" -""'°''· "--O• •,. Ot-Co•n• PvW-...c_,. ~"' .. ""-"'• 9~bll•Md -· ""°"°" "rl<My let c:..t• M•U, H.-oot1 94-N'"°• ... Uftt~Oft .. edt/"°""" ••'"' V•H•'r. 1rvtM, l ....,. 8t4Kh1'°"1h Ge.Ml A ,,"Of•,.,..... lld•t~ ft CMAMftNre $ttti1t•n _,.... .,._•¥• ""',. ___ ,,...,. -I\ el DI w.~•8•¥SlrWI , .... -.. ,., .. _.,_ .. _..,._ PIH••ftt_f'\1911_ JaO II. c:.ttf Y"tl"t-ftt--fll-.- T-tC..-11 '-''°' .-.-.11. ......... ,...._Hit ..... ~.If.I.Ht .. _ .. _ A.H itt Mi Ai\itl\.cll"I I.•'°" TetepMne ("141..,._, a.NM9d AcN.nJlllrlf ta.lt?I ,,_ .... Otftf!llt •tMIOO f:.~~.mmed to do certain M1. P.mn laid Abe decided to tell her 1tory to police after lho met another man who convinced ~r lo t.tll a friend who wu a pollre alftrer "J've had thll cooped up lnllde me f« IO loal aod have been barrlns all the OODMqueacee." llhe t.tifted "I Just feel that In order to Uve with myaeU any . .............. N.-1 w•••H~r P r o f. A llan M ac L eod Cormack or Tufts Universi· ty has been na me d co· winner or a Nobel Prize in medicine. See Page 1\4. Medium Surf Due in Wake Of Storm Forecasters for the National Weathl'r Service said today they m ay have overestimated the 1m · pact of a north Pac1f1 c storm in pre dicting h uge s u rf for Southern California. "It 's not quite as bad as we tho\.aghl it would be," said a s p okes woman in r evis i ng downward the size of the waves that were onginally anticipated to bring 12·fool s urf lo the coast on Tuesday. The weather forecas ters today said the surf should arrive, but it 1s expected to be in the four to six-foot range Orange Coast lifegua rds said that forecast may be stretching the point a bit. One Huntington Beach Jileguard described the surr as "an1t1e srappers~ ana said there was no indication it was going to get any bigger. Weather forecasters hedged their prediction for the Orange Coast a bit by noting that the storm Is generating swells from the west. Because Orange County's beaches are either in the lee of Catalina Island or aren't west racing, forecasters snld the im· pact on beaches from Seal Beach to San Clemente was like· ly to be limited. 5,000 Pot Plants Seized in Raid WARNER SPRINGS <AP> A marijuana pla ntation with about 5,000 growing plants was raided by 30 federal. slate and local law enforcement officers Wednesday. Two men running from r anch house and two inside the build· ing were taken into c ustody. T h ey appeared to be u n documented aliens. Ute Tent• Forme r United Mlne Worke r s president W.A. "Tony" Boyle has been sen· tenced to three consecuilve life terms for hiring klllen to a1sa11lnate union rtval Joseph '(ock" Yablonski ln 1969. k>aa•t -I had to diad on tbla.'' 111 . P t rrln'a t u tlmooy beeame pu~e Tuesday, when a Ltaucript of t.be htarina wu nted wtlh tbt ~·Jn lbe doeu. ment, lbe aa,y• ahe ,ave H\llbel namn Ind deseripUom ol paten .• tl1l murdt r vlctlm1 who re· , aembled bll former 1lrlfrlend. "Generally, be would Juat ~u me tbal he"wu becomln1 more upset and that he didn't want t.o kl ll Cathy , who waa bis 1trlfrieod, you know, for fear tbat be would 1et caught ll be kllled her," M1 Perrin telWlecL "So be wu wanUn1 t.o uae other people to relieve bis anxiety and tension." Huahet la accused in Contra Costa County of the March 1975 slaying ot Letitia Fagot, 25, and the November 1W72 murder or Mau reen Fiel d . He is a lso charged in Alameda County with the death of Lisa Anne Beery. 15 , who disap peared while hltchhildnJ in 1W74. Hughes has been bound over t o Superior Court in Contra Costa County ror trial and is scheduled to enter a plea Fri· day. Under cross-examination, Ms Perrin testified Hughes applied a strangle-like hold to her at least 230 times before and dur· Ing their marriage. She said the r itua l strangulations ''were usually associated with sex." She said Hughes a lso per· suaded her to pose for pboto- graphs "depicting scenes or women who had been murdered in varioua means ... because I was trying to help him." She s aid s he hop ed t o pr event Hughes from murdering more wom en . She said she helped' Hughes bury the body or one woman Nov. 16, 1972. the s a me dav Maureen Field disappeared. Ms. Perrin al.so testified she was with Hughes when they picked up a hitch.hiking girl on the same day Lisa Anne Beery disap- peared. She said they drove the girl to their home and Ms Pemn waited upstairs while Hughes al legcdly raped and !>tabbed her to death. .. It seems lo me very com plicated, the whole thing ," she added. "But the fact that I was going along with all these things he was doing to ml', there had to be some sort of control because tt wasn't an ything I enjoyed . And I was afraid. The fear of him helped. "I wouldn't do anything without asking him ." she con tinued "Not even go out and spend $10 on mysl<'lf .. Gold Theft At $200,000 SAN FR.A}liCJsco <AP> -A coin dealer here says he 's lucky he wasn't robbed eight months from now but Wednesday was ba d enough. Three gunmen escaped with nearly $200.000 worth of gold and s ilver coins. Don Lee, owner of Don's Coin Shop, pred.Jcted that gold will re· ach SSOO an ounce by J une and his loss would have been much greater then . The ·three m e n posed as policemen and alter tying Lee up, took about 500 Mexican gold coins, 40 krugerrands and lS Austrian 100-crown pieces. They also took some gold necktac~ and eight bank bags filled with assorted coins. Servicemen Face Payless Pay Period WASHINGTON CAP) About two million men and women in un· iform face a payless payday Mon· day unless Congress acts before then on 1t.alled leglslaUon provid· in1 the Pmta1on authority to spend money ln the new flacal yeartbatst.artedOct.1. Howe ver , aboul a million civilian employee• of the Defeme Department would re· celve a week's salary because their current pa y pe riod in· eludes lhe laat week in Sep· tembeT, juat before the 1979 flll- cal year ended. Tbe Defense De partment would be powerlesa to advance money pend.in1 conere11lonal action on 1llO tllcal fundln1. However, otnclall said they would encouraee service relief or1ant.uUonl, credit union.a and almUar lnltltutlont to extend ln· terut-f ree loan• to service mem bert left temporarily short of funds. The Derente Department It among seven Cabinet a1encle1 whose 1pendin1 authority bu been aldetracked becauae of wranlllnl between the House and Senate over abortion and con1re11lon1l pay r1l11 pro· vl•l°":f\ ln the ovtrall 1pendinf bill. Intense J'oters ... __... Sens. Robert Byrd. D-W.Va .. rront. and John Durkin. D· N.11 .. vote on a procedural matter during a meeting of t he Senate Appropriations Committee in Washington. The panel is considering an emergency runding bill to keep the government an full operation Foreign Students Face TB Testing About 250 foreign.born stu· den t s 1n the Ne wport Mesa Unified School D1stnct are ex· peeled to undergo testmg ror tuberculosis next week, offmal.s said today. "The Orange County Health Department has identified the high risk group as ind1v1duals who have ente red (the U S ) dur 1ng the past l2 months," noted head nurse De1rdne Douville That group 1ncludei. nnt JU~l Souttwa:-t A:.1an rdui.:ct:!>. but ne"-t'<>mer. from ~11•x1c11 Ct.•n tral Atm·rH',J, !-.outh Aml'rit·a Afr1c·t1 and any island countr~ exclui.1vl' of New Zt.·aland and Great Hnt1an. she said District health officials are now screening all recent 1mm1 grants Mrs Douvill e said about half of the 500 s tudents in Uui. category wtU require testing However. she downplayed the Attack Shifts To Rescuers SAN FRANCISCO <A P , Two San Franc1 sC'o -S tate University students were beaten Qn a city bus when they tned to help a middle aged woman who was being pushed around by a young man. Ma rian Prime, 23. and George Gaboury. 22. were riding on a Municipal Railway bus Wednes- day on 19th Avenue when Ms. Prime saw a teen-ager grab a fem a le passenger a round the neck. Ms . Prime said the youth got mad when she told him t.o stop harassing the wo man and began slapping her in the face. Al that point, Gaboury stepped in and was abo rut several times in the face. Neither was seriously In· ju red threat OI a sen ous problem Wllb tubercuJaats. oouog that maay Southeas t Aalan s tude nts a lready have undereone a pre· ventive vacdnat.ion progl"am ln· alituted wben l')-ance ~cupied the area. School nurses 1n the d istrict are qualified lo give the TB tes~ at ~chool. but the county health dl•partmt-nt ~Ill be providing \Upph<...._ .~2 .. 'J Million Staslz Lost TAMPA. Fla !AP I -Police we re seardung today for a well dressed tra\•ell'r who nect Tam pa lntemat.Jonal Airport in a hurry leaVlllg secun ty hold.mg the bag with S2 3 mallion WOrth Of ("()('8IO(' in It A su1tC'ase C'onta1ning 23 4 pound~ <if cocaine wa., !.c1zed at .in a1r<.1dt> seC'urity checkpoint J ' pac,i.e ngeri. 1A•ere going throu~h radar SC'reen1ng to hndrd 1-:a~lem Airline!. fbghl.l>. poll~·~ Ai. for lhe t''lC'a~. ht.· fi ts th.- dC'~cnpllon of hundn'ds of men, police s1ud young. short dark heir. suit, button-down shirt and tie Probe OK'd LOS ANGELES <AP > -A Superior Court Judge has upheld the state attorney general's right to use tax funds t.o m vestiga~ financial affairs of the WorldWlde Church of God. The deci s ion by Judge Norman R Dowds said the at· tor ney general has the power to see how nonprofit corporations are complying with the trusts they set up · INTRODUCING THE : STOCKS ••• OD '!Wldu 1DM1 ol dae u- tloa '1 banks ratHd tb1lr bftctaman priJM leodlnc ..._ • full ~ Point to 1'~ 1)9rceat. Toda)''• drop came = a ltroq ~ by t.be ln torel1n excban11, r1vertln1 WedJMeday'a decUne, and a drop ot *11.50 1D the price ol 10&11 tn Loodoa. Gold wa quoted In New Yotl at '* an ounce, down mote tba.n IZI from Wednelday. AmJd all tbe conlulloo and Wl· c.rtalnty, boweveT, many Wall Streeters were unahaken ln their loltial approval of the Federal Rffervers declaloo lu t weekend to uae 10me powerful new am· munition ln it.a battle a1alnlt ln· nation. Many ot them conceded the n e w s te ps i nc r e aaed the possibility o( at least a moderaU! rece11lon i.n the moot.ti. ahead, STEEP MORTGAGE RATU SEEN IN STATE-A 11 RECESSION TO OEPEN IN EARLY 1980 81 and that raised the specter of some tough going for such Im· portant industries as housing and con.st.ruction. But the~ arg_ued that such short·term pain could bring with it the looger-term reward of pro- gress against rapid inflation, which many eco nom ists and President Carter regard u the No. l threat to the future pro· gre11 OI the U.S. economy. The ma rket's decline s this week, bow9ver dramaUc, eome nowhere near the proportiooa of a "cruh" Uke the devastating allde ol 1929. when 1tock prices lost nearly SO percent of their value over a few short weelca. Tbia week 's drop, by contrast, bu represented a loea of leas than 6 percent, u measured by the Dow Jones Indus trial Aver•ge. '1'bere la ao earthly reason for a stoct·market panic," said H~nz H. Biel. a veteran market ana lyst with the brokerage fi rm of Janney Montgomery Scott Inc .. What the Fed 1s doing 1s a ver y constructi ve move H 1t ·s '\uccessful. 1t ~ill avoid a ma1ur depre!>s1on in lhe future " The Ft·d. undt·r chairman l'J ul Volckfor '>aid 1t would shift tht· t•mpha:-1., in 11!> ant1 -1nnation strategy toward directly con trol ling the supply. rather than the cost. of money ft 1nd1cated 1t would let interest rates, Wlltun broad hmit.s, go wherever t.he market took them Sniper Saga Uncovered • SAN FRANCISCO <API Tht• '>nl~r who hanged h1m:-elf aftt•r c;hootmg up a downtown c;trc>l'l fnr nt'JJ I> 2<t hoU1 s 1nud-for-ht. ~un Jnd bullt.•l:-~1th a i.tohm American Express card lssut-d unde r an alias. a ccording to police Wayne Cullinane. who hanged himself in Jail Tuesday. bought a shotgun, M·l carbine and am· munition wtth travelers checks bought through an American Express card issued under the na m e ot Gary Mclntoeh, accord· mg to police Inspector Bruce Lorin Cullinane took one woman hostage and fired more than 40 rounds of bullets from a 16th noor office buHd.ing starting Fn· day and conllnu.ing until he fell asleep and was captured Satur- day Ed~on Electric Packet Vi na ll\'. Dt'•'FJ F.tD YACHTS or Costa Mesa has joined forces with the most classlral bay launch ever built. The beauty of a bygone e r a b rought back ·to ltre in conjunction with the reliability or electric power. Df'posits ror orders a re now being taken for the new Edison elf'ctrlc PACKET. The Commodore model package Includes: PACKET hull, with new spacious Interior, aJl natural bronie dt'ck ha rdware. te ak trtm, full surrey top wltb tassels, clear curtains. cockpit cushions, run cover, carpet, teak bar, stereo, rull t>lectric propulsion system, wheel s teering. bilge pump, running Ughts, e lectric horn, ~k lines, fe nde rs. antl·foul bot· to m paint, paint name and CF numbers. Owne r's choice of col· ors. Introductory price : $12, 500. SP EOFICATIONS: l.t.-ngth Overall IK' Waterhne Length 15 9·· . r. I '~-, ' ' . ' ; : ..... -~-=-: .. _ -------.. Beam 6'5" Drart l '6" Weight 1500 lbe'... approximately -·--. -- DtJFFIELD YACHTS, _, W. ntb Street, Co.ta Mesa.CA 9262'1(714>645·0715 • ., ......... . 7 Orange ~oast 'ED ITION YoarHometow• 8 .-f .. \ Daily Newspaper ~ .. VOL. 72 Nt 'ltA, 3 SECT101f. .i PAGES c FtFTEE~ CENTS ' . / Carter NOw _Raps Interest Rates· SAN DIEGO <AP> -Prell· Ht promlled tbem. "I 1ri11 not dent Carter, only two de.ya after fi1bt lallaUoo with JCM&I' Jobi," IUJ>portin& erroru to U1bten the ln • uUonally broadcut newa naUon' a mooey supply, bla coafermce Tuelcla)', Carter en· the Federal Reserve Boa to-doraed the Federal Reaene'a day for lntereat rates he sal acUon to tipteo the money a&q>- too bjgh, ply and puab up lotereat ratea, . "Interest rat.es are too biah. sayin& be would do "whatever lt >nOation rates are too hl&b." takes" to atop lnllaUon, even ii it Carter said In a s peech to hurtl him poUUcally. leaders ol the nation's buildin1 But apeaJrlng here to the COO· trades mions. structioo union leaders, Carter * * * Stocks .Up, Down Again NEW YORK <AP> -Stock prices bounced back and forth erratically today as the markets of Wall Str eet continued their convulsive reac tion to the Federal Reserve's new olans for ~lampingdownonc redit. · Trading was running well ~eh ind Wednesday's record t elling pace, but was still heavy The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up 2 points in early STEEP MORTGAGE RATES SEEN tN STATE-A11 RECESSION TO DEEPEN IN EARLY 1980-86 vading and down 12 at mid· morning, was off 8.71 to 840.61 after three hours of trading but "'as off only l.88 to 847 .44 after four hours. The widely recognized average fell more than 48 points from Monday through Wednes· clay. The Ne w York Stock Ex· change bad by far the busiest day in its history Wednesday, with 81.62 million shares chang- ing hands, eclipsing the prevtous 'igh of 66.37 million, set Aug 3, 1978. ' made lt clear that be does not t.bin.k their industry should suf· fer and that be places the blame for b!lber lntereat rates on the boerd. "ln ftpting inflation, we do not aacriftce con.atruction jobs,·' be said. "While int.rest rates have been riling because of de- claiooa made by the Federal Reserve Board to record·higb levels to cool inflation. we took special financial measures to sustain credit for construction, especially for housing construe· Uon.'' The president made no re- ference to bia statements Tues· day lo which be backed the board's ded.aioo to increase ita bank lending. rate and tighten the availability of credit. Carter sai d those move s b ad strengthened the dollar, and . .. moderated gold prices. Carter did oot elaborate on the "s pecial fi nancial measures," but appeared to be talking about steps taken lhia year to allow savings and loan iDBtilutions to raise money for mortgaee l.oans by offering savings inter~t tied to Treasury bill rates. ln his well·received speech to the 60t.b annual convention or the 0-1., ....... -.. .._ ...... Bond prices likewise have ~roken sharply since the start of the week as they absorbed the ~ h o-c-k "1)f 11 ftP'f'-e1?ff e nted ~ n- c re ases in interest rates. Freestyle skier Wayne Hilterbrand becomes part of the shopping cente r's Stage Court. They took off rrom a ramp set up ror the s how The statuary that Hilterbrand momentarily beca me part of in this photo is called "The On Tuesday many of the na· tion's banks r aised their l,)enchmark prime lending rates a full percentage point to 14'h percent. Today's drop came despite a strong showing by the dollar in foreign exchange, reversing Wednesday's decline, and a drop of Sll.50 in the price of gold in London. Gold was quoted in New York at $392 an ounce, down more than S23 from Wednesday Amid all the confusion and un certainty, however, many Wall Streeters were unshaken in their initial approval of the Federal Reserve's decision last weekend to use some powerful new am- munition in its battle against in· nation. <See STOCKS, Page A2) 7JIRJLLS FILL MESAN'S LIFE At an age when most teen· agers' idea or a thrill is to ride s t omach ·c hurnin g r o lle r coasters, J anet Helton goes in lor t he swooping thrills of another sort in Costa Mesa. See Featuring, P3ge Cl. Coas t Weather Patchy low clouds and f og alo ng th e ca.ast otherwise variable high cloudiness Friday. Lows tonight 57 to 62. Highs Fri· day 70to 78. INSIDE TODAY Want to be tlw queen of England~ Til>• on Prine• Char'-•' ua. and qtdrlcl Q~ M'4ilai on Pao-Al. statuary at Newport Beach's Fashion Island as camera free~s_ him in mid·air. Hilterbrand was one of .. freeslYJers w o pu on an exhlbtttmrWednesday at-ttre Skydivers." -_ _ _ Irvine Police Seek Suspect In Stabbing A Garden Grove man was stabbed 1B times oo an Jrvine street early today and pol.fee are searching for a m an he gave a ride to as the prime suspect. Lt. Gene Norden said Jose Pinto, 21, was treated and re· leased from Tustin Community Hospital after the 2:30 a.m. at· tack. He suffered minor lacera· tions to the chest, back and arms Norden said the assailant, described as a man or Latin de.<\· cent in hls early 20s, used a screwdriver in the attack. Norden said Pinto and the sus· peel had been in a Santa Ana bar earlier in the evening. T he man asked Pinto for a ride home to the Irvine area. They drove to the Colony bous· Ing tract on Walnut Avenue west of Culver Drive and pulled over. However, when the two got out or the car, the suspect pulled the screwdriver and demanded Pin· to's watch and the keys to his car. When Pinto refused to give bioi the keys, the man attacked him. The suspect then fied on root. Officers found Pinto at the ln· tersection of Walnut and Culver and he was taken to a nearby fire station for first aid treatment. Gold Theft At $200,000 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A co~ dealer here aay1 he's lucky be wasn't robbed ei1bt moatht from now but Wednesday J'U bad eooucb. Three ~men escaped with nearly ,000 wort.ti ol told and silver com.. Don Lee. owner ot Doo'• Coln Shop~cted tbat 1old 1ri11 re· acb an ounce b1 June ud bl• loa would have been much 1reeter then. The three men poaed 11 policemen and after tyln1 Lee up, toot about 500 Mexican Sold colna1 .o kru1ernnda and 15 Auatnao 100.crown plectt. n Bandit Robbed It Just Wasn't His Day An alleged would-be robber's luck went from bad to worse Wednesday in Huntington Beach when he was rebuffed in a fast· food restaurant robbery attempt and was then robbed himself while trying to run away, police reported today Officers said the man's luck took another sour turn when he ca lled police t o a Beac h Boulevard tavern to report be· ing robbed. He was arrested. Shane Clark Mitchell, 22, of 116 Main St.. was arrested on suspicion of attempted robbery when an employee of Kentucky Fried Chicken, 5005 Warne r Ave., identified him as the man who tried to rob her. Officers said the man alleged· ly walked into the chicken stand at 8:55 p.m. and told the woman clerk he was armed and wanted i.•el W'laaer Prof. Allan MacLeod Cormack of Tufts Univenl· ty has been named co- wtnner of a Nobel Prize in medicine. See Pa1e A4. the day's receipts The alleged would-be bandJt dashed from the r estaurant when the employee refused to hand over the cash. poli ce said. The neeing man, they said. was reportedly tackled by a pair of men several blocks from the restaurant. They removed an undetermined amount of cash from his pockeLc;. Mitchell is being he ld on $25.000 bail al Huntington Beach jail. Seroicemen Face Payless Pay Period W ASl-DNGTON CAP) -About two million men and women in un· I form face a payless payday Mon- day unless Congress acts before then on stalled legislation provid· ing the Pentaeon authority to spend money in the new fuical yearthatstartedOcl.1. Ho wever , about a milllon 1 c iv l lian employees of tbe Defeoae Department would re- cei ve a week's salary because their current pay period in· eludes the last week In Sep- tember, just before the 19'79 fui· cal year ended. The Defense Department would be powerless to advance money pending coogreaaiooal action on 1i9> flacal fundina. However, ottlclala said they would eocourqe service relief orta.nizatioDI, credit Uftionl and similar lDltitutlona to extend in· tereat-free loans to aervice members left temporarily abort of fUDdl.. The Defense Depertment la amona seven CablMt aaeod• wboee apeadin• aut.bortty bu been aldetracked because ot wraa1Unc kiween Ute HouH and Senate over ·abortion and con1reulooal pay ral;:Jt: VlllOOI ln tbe overall I bUl. 250 Students In N-M to Get TB Tes t s About 250 foreign-born s tu dents in the Newport ~esa Unified School D1stnct are ex peeled to underJ:o test1 nf? ror tuberculosis ne xt week. ofCl c1aJs said loda) "The Oran~<' Count~ llealth Department has 1dent1f1cd lhe h1gh·risk ~roup a~ tnd1\'1duals who have entc>rl'd 1 the L' S 1 dur mg th(' past 12 month~ · noted head nurse Dc1rdne Dou\ 11le That group includes not 1ust Southeast Asian refugees, but newcomers from Mexico. Cen- tral Amenca. South America Africa and any island country exclusive or New Zealand and Great Britian, she said District health officials are now screening all recent 1mm1- grants. Mrs. Douville said about half of the 500 students in th.ts category will require testing However, she downplayed the threat o( a senous problem with tuberculosis. noting that many Southeast Asian students alr~ady have undergone a pre- ventive vaccination program in· stituted when France occupied the area. Sebool nurses in the di.strict are qualified to give the TB tests at school, but the county health department will be providing supplies. $2.3 Million Stash Lost TAMPA, Fla. <AP) -Police were seatthinc today for a well· dressed traveler who Oed Tam· pa International Airport in a hUJTJ Juviftl aeeurtty boldinJ the bac -with $2.3 million worth ~cocaine in it. A 1wtcaae contalnin1 23.4 poundl ~cocaine wu ael&ed at an airlide aecwity checlrpoint aa pa11en1era were going throu1h radar sc ree ni ng to board Ealtem AJ.rllnea fiiehta. police laid. A FL -C IO 's Building and Construction Trades Depart- ment, a conglomeration or 16 construction craft unions with nearly 4.5 million me mbers, Carter vowed to work to in· crease construction jobs and to reject any anti·inflation strategy that relies on tugher unemploy. ment. •·I wiU not fight inflation with your jobs." he said. Irvine Co. to Sue NB 8} JOANNE REYNOLD. Of tlW O•oly l"olot S~tt In 1m• Company offic1ab !>aid today thl') would file a law:.u1t tn Orange County Su perior Cou rt to forte Ney, port Hf'ach city of f1 C'1a t-. tn dppr11\ c· com pan} plans ror the.-:'llnrth ford bu~· n1·:-.s and indu::.tnal pro11•et \ 1·ompan; '>P~lkPsman -.;.wl l hl' ... ull Y.J" to tw filed 1n ~dnla \na b; th1: clo~c of the Y.Orkmg d..1\ Loda\ lit• ~;Hd 1t ,., th1· fir<;t law::.u1t ,., t'r fil ed by the comp1rny JJ.:ainst :"'ey,•port Beach and he ::.tressed the point or the hllga· t1on ts to merturn the city coun· c·ll ., Sept 10 rt.'Jl'Ct1on of the ' o r l h I''" rd p r 'IJ (' <' t N 11 monelar~ damJj.(l'" ;ire ::.ought The proposal wa~ rejected on a 4 2· I vote with council mcm· hers Jackie Heather and Don Mclnms dissenting and Coun· c1lwoman Evelyn Hart abstain· mg. At \.be Ume ol the rejection. the council majority lnd.lcat.ed that It wanted to see low density residential development on the property located north or the Ford Aeronutronic c;1te on Jam t)Urec Hodd The property 1~ in Newport Beach, but lies witb.m the Irvine Unified School Dis- tract. Mayor Paul Ryckoff at the Sept 10 meetin~ s aid lhe legal 1mplicauons of the council's vote w,eu_ "liul,yJl.Ol.ed " Today. Irvine Co mpany Presi:- dent Peter Kremer said "we regret haVlng to do this but we have no other cho1cl' .. The swt allei;::t:~ thl' council ·s J l' t 1 on .,., a s a r b 1 tr a r Ji • d 1 <. l'rimin.1ton . unconst1tut1onal .ind un.,upp0rtc.•d b~ legally n· q uired findJn,e~ <Set> St;JT, Page A21 BANK R<JBBED IN NEWPORT A man who claimed to ha\'e a gun but didn't shoy, 1t escaped ~•th an undetermined amount of ca:.h at nbout noon today Crom a Newport Beach branch of the Bank of America. police said They sa id the robbery oc- curred in the Westcliff Shopping Center at Irvine Avenue and Westchf! Avenue. next to the Costa Mesa city li mits The man m ay have escaped in a red car police said. · j ' .,.,_Ute Te .... :·-~ Fo rmer U nit e d Mi n e Worke rs president W.A. "Tony" Boyle bas been sen- tenced to three consecutive life tenns fo r hiring killers to assassinate union rival Joseph "Jock" Yablonski in 1969. Thvfld•x oSsobtr 11. 1111 .. Meeting ~t On Bayc Plaill Stale and loul otnctaa. wW meet ln La. ~ In P'rid-r_ to flod a 90Au&.ion fot" Newport aq polll•Uon probkoma T1Ht 10 a m meed.q ta CM d o wntown oftlcee of the Southern California AuoclaUon ot Go vernme nta had been 1ca..duJed to take plac. WedDee· 4ay. but connJda ln meetJn1 l chedul• resulted ln It.a CM · tellalJon. Re preaenllUvea from lbe citiet d Irvine. Cotta Me11 and Newport S.,acb are e.apecled to alt :nd lhe HUion aloq wtlh Oranae County offlclala .ad repreaeotaUves from lhe ataw •• The plan to be dilcu.ued Fri day generally aJma al livina rontrove r s ial Ne wport Bay f',...P.,.eAI STOCKS •.. Ma ny of them conceded the n e w s t e ps inc r e a s ed lbe posslbJUty ot al least a moderate recession in the months ahead, and that ralsed the specter ot aome t.OUlh going for such Im· po rtant lndUBtrles aa housing and construction. But the~ arc..ued that such abort-term pain could bring wit.b il the longer-term reward of pro- greaa against rapid inOaUon, which many economists and President Carter regard u the No. t threat t.o lhe future pro. gresa ot the U.S. economy. The market's declines this week, however dramatic, come nowhere near the proportloaa of a "crash" like the devastattne slide of 1929, when stock prices lost nearly so percent or tbe1r value over a few short weeks. This week's drop, by contrast, has represented a loss of less than 6 percent, as measured by t he Dow Jones I nd us tri a l Average. ·'There is no earthly reason fo r a stock·markct panic," said lll'an z II. Biel, a veteran market analyst with the brokerage firm o f J anncy Montgomer y Scott Jnc "What the Fed is doing is a very constructive move. If it 's auccesaful, it will avoid a major depression in the future." The Fed, under ch airman Paul Volcker , said it would shift the emphasis in its antl-lnflation i.tr ategy toward directly con trolllne the supply, rather than the coet, ()f mooey. It Indicated it would let interest rates, within broad I.units, go where ver the markt>t took them. Thal amoWlted to an abrupt c·hangl' an tht' rule!i or the game for many re~ular p a rt1 c1.JU1nl:> tn fhc m arlcets. For example, a n umber of analyst.~ said it prompted a sud· den change of strategy by in· vestors who had been trading stocks on margin, or loans from thei r broke r s With intere!it rates on those loans soaring above 15 percent, many traders decided to sell margined stock lo c lose out their debts, thus con· tributing significantly to selling pressure on lbe market. Mr. Queyrel Flllleral Held Memorial services have been h e l d for Willi am Gerald Queyrel, a 19·year-old Newport Be ach resident who died in Costa Mesa last week. He attended USC laat year aa a freshman and achieved a 3.5 grade point average while study· ing engineering . He transfered to the Univeraity of CaUforrua at Santa Barbara this fall. Fr iends said the sophomore had left the school three days prior to h1a death in order to take a year off. Services were he ld at Sl. Joachim Catholic Church in Cotta Mesa. ORANOS COMT c DAILY PILOT ... '"" Or-Cenl o.ltr "'ttee, wtlfl-fl It<_ .,....., ___ .. ~,-.. , .. Or_ , .. ~ ,,.......,.c-. tfMrel•Nll-... W.H• .... -.., lllt ...... l'rt<lay ... C..&. i'MM,......., _fl, -11\1191°" ... ,,,,_ tolfl Y•li.-t, lrolM, l -~l.....,,C:..14 A ................................ _ ... _"_ ~.~ "'*~--.......... -...... Wtil ... ..-.~-...c-1 ... 111 • .-. ,,.=.!;=- , .... c-ttt """""" ____ ..._ __ .... ....... ,_.~ ~l*f O...W.M~ -"'-llt~Jl.,.IMtNtll"fhlttn . T ... pfieM (114,Ml-4»1 ce......-Mtef1111iint....,. ~i: ""°':i".,':i.~...:'~~ ~ •• , .. ~,::11 •• -.. h ... ,..~ ... .., ~ ~f.:i:t~'-' _., •• ,.,.,, ... , ... fl t\~ .. t!"tiAYl-tt. ~ r-t~::._· = .. -:. :'Jl::,.~~R~ "'' Rudi• on alltatioll cet\ll\caUoo bJ UMI ataw U fftl&ln CODdtUoal are m.e.. ,,,_ owW lacb•: F'Of'llll•U. ol • m...,.. ment ~1 tor UM ,..,.._. ol monltoriq and Nvlewln• lm· ple mentatioa and reauladon ol 1ource ~ll'Ola ol 1edlmenta· Uon 1be ..-el' would be com· pated ol d Uea with I aLake lD wat.rtbed pla.anint aetlvtU. u well 11 the county and tbe Re tlonal Water Quality Control Board ContlnuaUoo by SCAO and local acencte. of work aimed al developlna a propoeal for an el· tecttve dcaUtaUon facillty for the bay. -ContJnuaUon by SCAG and the mMna&ement aaency of ef· fort.fl to resolvts the remaining deficiencies ln lhc Newport Bay plan eubmitted to the state. The 11tat.e 11 Wate r Resourcct1 Control Board in July had re- fun d to certlry the plan on wa t er quality pro ble ma i n Newport Say and also voted to bealn proceedinga to at.rip SCAG of lta planni:Og authority lo lhe watenbed area. The~ plan had been sharply critic ln Newport Beach by resldenta who fell lbere abould be mention of a deslltation baaln upstream u a means of curbtna pollution flowing into the bay. The water board la expected to aoon decide wbelber to eroceed wllh It.a "deallflatlon" of SCAG or cbooee aome other agency or even Itself t.o handle the studies. Local officlals want to tee the reaponalbWtiel tor bay planning matt.en kept ln local bands and not handled by the state. The meet.lnC i:O Los Angelea Friday ls meant to try to find a 1olutloo acceptable to aU lidea. Their respective agencies would then need to vote on whether to participate in or accept the plan Nose Eaten, Sewed Back COPENHAGEN, Den-mark (AP> -A 2~-year­ old gir l had her nose bitten off by a ~rman shepherd, but plastic surgM>ns sewed 1t back on after recove ring at from the dog's stomach, doctors reported today The chief surgeon, Sig Boland , told reporters blood was c ir c ulating through the nose. but at would be some time before "<im-t-ors lmew if the OJJCTIJ taon on Mae Olsen wa~ a complete success The dog was rushed to a v e t erina r y c linic i m - mediately after the rnci- dent Wednesday and was forced to regurgitate the n ose , which was t hen rushed to an operating room where Boland and other surgeona r eattached It. Gold Slides Below $400; Buck Stable LONDON CAP) -The dollar was mixed but lltUe chanaed on the world'• money markets to- day. The price of gold slid back $11.SO. ln Tokyo, the dollar finu hed the day at 225.90 yen, somewhat hither than New York's cloti.ng fi gures of 225.60. There was no trading in Tokyo Wednesd ay because o( a national holiday. London's five major bullion houses fixed the price or 1old al $400 an ounce for lhe morning tradtns seaslon. after an earlier high of $406.50. The afternoon fix· ing waa$401.50. tn Zurtch, Europe 's bluest gold market, lbe price slipped below '60() to $397. The metal flniabed Wed· nesday'a trading at $408 ln Lon· don and $408.SO in Zurich. But during a brief surge early Wed- nesday the gold price zoomed to $419.50. The record for the metal was $444, hlt In Zurich trading Oct. 2. But profit·taklnl bu set ln alnce then and depressed the price. ( &.mper Held SAN QUENTIN <AP> -A Su Quentin lnmat.e ,.ho allpped out of the hl1b·1ecurlty prllOO i:O women'• clotblnl baa been re· captured In Grapevine, Tn., 1ft.r a abort chue. prison of. rlcialt Hid. Outhier Danowtkt walked away from the prtaon Sunday ln clotbln1 appar9Dtly brou1ht ln bi 1 woman vllUor WHrll\I two dHIHI. .... .,.... ... _ · BalkJon Crmhes; 2 Killed ALBUQU ERQUE, N.11. CAP> -A hol alr balloon wH en1uUed lo flamu after cruhlal lD tbe Sandi• Mo.~ taint eut of here, and two Callforni• balloonl1ta aboard were killed, offtclall aald. "It wu aucb a belpleu reel· in1." Geor1e Wei.lb ot Albuquer- que, a chase crew member, tald of Wedneaday'a erath. "So· meone brouJ)lt a little flre ext· lnaulaher, but there waan't anythln• they could do. The flamea Just 1purte d every- where ." The dead were Identified by the state Medical Jnveat11at.on Office 11 Rlcbard Temple. 31, of Cucemonca. and Kalby Wiley, age unavailable, or Palmdale . CalTrans workers hand out questionnaires at Pacific Coast Hiahway and Dover Dr ive in Newport Beach. Activity this morning ls part of state Department of Tra nsportation effort "to dete rmine bow to better serve yo ur travel needs .·· Motorists in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine are being asked to m ail in the questionnaires with appropriate aruswers . .U was the first fatal accident since the International Hot Air Ba lloon Fiesta began ln 1972, said Brad Gibbs, a balloon.lat and fiesta launch director. A man in another balloon wu lnJW'ed in a separate lncldent cauaed by tricky wind current.a, and a bellcopter was damaged wben tt made a forced landinl ln the area, but no one on board was i.ltjured, official.a said. Condo Conversion Eyed The ba.Uoonlata were = 400 particlpatiq In I.be aDDUI ballooning event, which attract· ed repre1entaUve1 from 3Z a tat.es and five countries. Newport, Council to Take Second Look Sanda said the ballooo WU one of tbree lbat apparently ex· perleoced problems with wind currenta. Newport Beacb'a law baltin& converalon of apartment.a to con- domlnluma, which went into ef. rect thil week, la going to come unde r City Council s cruUoy again. The a~ look, slated for next month, la the result ot a chan1e of heart by Mayor Paul Ryckoff who supported the meaaure the fint time it wu before the council. But Tuesday. Ryckoff said he regretted aupporllng the or· dinance and that he feels "I didn't give It proper considera- tion at thetime it came up." Police Nab Manon Drug Suspicion Two policemen from Newport n each and llunt1ngton Beach teamed up late Wednesd ay night and arrested a ma n they allt:ged was carrying an ounce uf co ca ane and $1,600 in cash. Earl Robert Aden, 26. of Para mount wa' booked into Newport Beach city 1a1l on cha rges of possesston of cOC'airle ror~lc An ounce of the narcotic as worth about $2,500 in l1Uc1l sales, according to pollce. Newport Beach patrolman Todd Seiders was called to a trailer park at 7200 W. Coast Hi ghway al about 11 :30 p m because residents aald there w8ll a prowler in the park. Hunting ton Bea ch Officer Richard Wright waa nearby on Weal Cout Highway issuing a trafrlc cltaUon to a motorist he'd followed Into Newport Beach from HunUngton Beach. Wrl1ht told Selders he saw Aden leave the trailer park an~ head for a parked car, so he de- tained hlm. Seiders said the cocaine was found in a briefcase lo Aden's car. The officer u ld he became cu rio us about the brie fcase when Aden told him he wu to deliver it as a favor lo a woman whose name he didn't know. He told the officer the case was to be left in the offi ce of a t railer park on Coaat Highway, but he didn't know the person it was lo be left for, or the na me or address of the park. Slwts Slay Grove Man, Hurt Woman A man waa kille d and a woman wu injured criUcally In a shootina early today at a Garden Grove apartment, poUce reported. An unldeoUfied 38-year-old man wu dead al the scene trom a 1unshot wound to the bead, police aaJd. The woman. about 20, also •uf· rered a aunabot wound ln the head and ls In the lnt.enalve care unit al St. JOMPh '• Hospital ID Orance. Police aald they received 1 telepboM call shortly before s a.m . from aomeone who heard the woundtd woman calllnl for help. Pollce u ld 1 amall-callber ptatol wu found In the apart- m.at at 128U rlower St . Tbey farad tbelr way Into tM loclctd apartment a.tt.r heartn1 lb• woman'• cri• for balp, 1 spoke.man said. Namee aN withheld untU tM next ot ldn aN notlfled. Poliee taid they did not know at thta Ume who fired the 1hotl . ., Ryckoff'• chan1e doesn't neceuarlly mean repeal ol the meuure which was pan ed on a • 5-2 vote with council m•mben ·Don Mclnn.la and Jackie Heather dluentine. Jn fact, an attempt Tuelday by Mclnn11 to have a public Medium Surf Due in Wake Of Storm Forecasters for tht: National Weather SerVlcc said today they may have overestimated the 1m pact of a north Pac1f1c stonn In p r e dict ing h u ge s u rf fo r Southern Cali!om.l a. "It'• not quite u bad u we thought ll would be," aald a s po keswoman In r evl1ln1 downward the size or the wave!\ that wen· onganally ant1c1pated t.o bnnl( 12·foot s urf to the coa.-;t on Tuesday The weather fori·casters today '>aad the surf !ihould arrive, but It ,., expected to be 1n the four to :.ax root ran~e Orange Coast hft:guardS sai d that forecast may be '>tretching the point a bit. One HunUngt.On Beach lifeguard described the surf as "ankle slappers" and said there was no andacat.Joo at was gotna to get any b1gee r. Weather forecasters hedged their prediction for lhe Orange Coast a blt by noting that the storm is generating ewella from the west. Because Oran1e County's beaches are either In lhe lee of Ca talina Island or aren't wMt facing, forecasters aa1d lhe im - p a c t on beaches from Seal Beach to San Clemente was like· ly to be limited ~arinc for formal reeonalde:ra· lion ol the measure wu defeat· ed In a 4-3 vote wilb the mayor tldln& with Mclnola and Mn. Heather. l'rwtaP~Al However, Melnnh and SUIT Ryck.oft were able to persuade • • • Ulelr councU coUeacuee to bokl an lafonnal study aeuioo on t.be law that affects about 12,000 rm- taJ Wlita lo the city. The ctilc:ullioo of the measure ca me up Tuesday because ol • variety of agenda It.ems wtuch ~lated to condom1n1ums and the new law. CounCJJmen, fa«d with an ap- phc a taon for con version of a La d o l a te t rip le x r o un d themselves de bating the new la w rat.her than the conversion of the lnplex-at the openmg of the meeting That's when Ryckoff aaid he'd chanced bl.a mind. ··0ur obli&•Uoa la to t.be re- •ldeotlal •pect ot the city and \.bat outweighs the obUaatJon to ba lant'e our ~ang stock," he said. Ryckoff indicated that he re· sentt>d efforts by t'ounty. i.t1itt• and federal offi cials to mandJi k City Council efforts to keep a ba lance between owne~hjp and rental units In Newport &!ach The council m e mbe rs who £Uppol1ed the ordtnane~ -P&W Hum mel, E veJyn Ha rt, Ray Williama and Don Slrau.u -an d1cated Tun day they haven't changed their minds. The triplex convenjoo wu turned down. But the four said they'd be walling to talk about changing prov1s1oaa ol the law aa long a.s control over conve rsions as maanta.med The law at present prohlb1l5 conversion of duplexes or con- Tbe suit notes that the five· bu.ildJ.nt multi-tenant office and small warehouse project con. forms to clty zonin11 , to the Reneral plan and to the tralfac phasing ordlnance. "We 're ta.lu ng this matter to <''JUrt with some reluctance,'' Kremt'r '>ai d "Ru t 1t ., -.o methlng Wl" ft·el W P mu:.t do 1n order to clearly <>Sta blish that th•· r ul.-s of the pl anning and 10nan g proc~s apply equally to .Jll nf W\, city and private pro 11erty own ers alJke " A pnocapaJ reason "lvea by the t'OUl'lcal maJonty fo r It.ls re - jection d the company plan, the suit aays, wu the "poeslbllJty" or future 1eneral plan amend-ment changing the North Ford 'Ile from commercial and an. dustn.U to residential The t'ompany contends that b.uung a land Wit• dec1s1on on a possible general plan changt' l'O n •n1 tut es an 1l l ega l moratonum "Whal we'rt> seeki ng is .,h ~4!£\t.&nee -Of--th.e. ruJ4l8 ," Xl°~mt'r !>aid "Pnvate property ownerR must follow lhem. as we did on the North Ford site, and we tl11 nk tht> city <'ouncil majority sho uld follow them , loo "We hope it 11 understood by lhe commuruty that our la~ust isn't directed at the community . but at what we consider an un fa ir and 1UegaJ action taken bv the city council " struction~ new condomlruums Gtation Issued on Iota ol lesa I.ban S.000 square feet. WASJUNGTON <AP> -The It also proh.lb4ta council mem-feder al gove rnment Issued a be r1 from approving a con-citation Wednesday against the version If the vacancy rate o( American Cyanamid Co. for al rental uruta Is leu than S per-leged violations at Its Willow cent ________ Island. W Va , plant. INTRODUCING THE: Edison Electric Packet Finally, DUF'FIELO YACHTS of Cos ta Mesa has joined forces wllh the m~t classical bay launch e ver bullt. The beauty of a bygone _.,. brought back lo life In conjunction with &be re lia bllity of electric power. Depo&its for orden are now bel.ng taken for the ne w Edison electric PACKET. The Comnaoclon-model package includes : PACKET hull, with new 1paclou1 Interior, all natural bronze deck hardware. teak trim, full 1urrey top with ta11el1, clear curtaw, cockpit cuahlons, full ~ver. Hrpet, teak bar, 1tereo, full electric propulsion .eystem, wheel steering, biJge pump, runoln1 U&bta, c•lectrlc horn, dock Unea, fenders, anti-foul bol· tom paint, paint name and CF numbers. Owner's choice of col· on. lntroduc&ory price: Sl2. 500 • SPECIFICATIONS : Length Overall: 18' W1terUne Len1th . 15 9" /···.ri ·7 -~ .. I • > \ ; ' '-·~= -·-- - ----- -- Beam · 6'S" Draft 1'6" ~ Wtl(lht: 1500 lb6 1pproxlmat.ely ·-----.. -.. .-.. ---- DUFnELD YACHTS, MO W. llt.h Street, Cotta Mesa, CA 92621 (71 4) '45·0111 > 1 .. _... . ... .,.... Aue1. CASTRO 'HAPPY TO BE IN UNIT!D ITATE8' Cuben Dtctator Ore9ted by Demonetratora on Artiv.I Castro Says 'H appy' With Visit to U.S. Nl!:W YORK CAP) -With the familiar cigar tucked in his mouth, Cuban President Fidel Castro arrived in New York to- day, tipped his military cap, and ~aid · "I'm happy to be m the l's .. Castro. facing death threats from Cuban-Amencan groups, ~as greeted by a 2,000-man security force. one or the largest ever gathered to protect a Grounds For Rape Narrowed ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -A woman who submits to a man Just because she is frightened by the way he looks at her .does not have s ufficient grounds to prove rape. the Maryland Court or Special Appeals has ruled. The decision caused one dis- senting judge to predict that vic- tims may now become reluctant to report rapes. In an 8·5 vote, the court re- versed the second-degree rape conviction or Edward S. Rusk. who bad been accused or as- saulting a woman alte r asking her to drive him home from a Fells Point bar two years ago. In its ruling Wednesday, the court said a woman must have a ··reasonable" fear that she could ~fer harm al the hands or a m~n order for submission lo sexual intercourse against her will to be caJled rape. Her fear <1bout "the way " the man "looked" -even if she testifies that he was ''li ghtly choking" her 1s not enough to prove rape, the court said. A dissenting opinion, written by Judge Alan M. Wilner, said the decision has "perpetuated a nd given new hfe to myths a bout the crime of rape that have no place in our law today." Durmg Rusk's tria l, the vic· t1m who was not identified. t estiried Rusk was known to a (~male friend of hers . She agreed to take him to his home. but upon arrival he asked her to come m The woman said she refused, but when Rusk took the keys from the car. then walked to her side of the car and repeated his request she agreed because he had her keys and she was afraid. She testified that once inside, Rusk asked her to go to bed with him , and she said, "If I do what you want. will you lel me go?" She said he agreed so she did what he wanted and added that be choked her ''lightly.'' In its majority opinion, the court referred to a 1960 decision by the state's highest court which said that force is essential for rape, or al least the woman must be prevented from resist- ing by threats to her safety. foreign dignitary visiting New York. He is to address the Urul· ed Nations on Friday. The C uban dictator wa s dressed in green fatigues as he descended the stairs of has Russian-made llyushan·62 jet and was greeted by U.S. 1mmi· gration and U.N. 0Hic1als at Kennedy lntematJonal A 1rport An angry group of about 30 an- ti-Castro demonstrators shouted "Murderers ! Murde r ers '" in Spanish as the Cuban leader's 42-car motorcade arrived at the Cuban Mission to the United Na lions about 2 a.m. As two bodyguards tried to cut through the crowd near the mis· s ion . som e de m on s trators grabbed at them and one guard pulled a pistol. Police wrested the gun from him, but he was not arrested. More demonstrations were ex- pected. Police said pro·Castro g roups and anti·Castro groups - including those from the more than· 90,000 Cuban-Americans who live in New Jersey -would be separated. The United States and Cuba do not have diplomatic relations, and Castro is officially visiting the United Nations, which is headquartered on international soil Castro wiU stay al the newly acquired Cuban mission less than a mile from U.N. bead· quarters on Manhattan's East Side during his two-day visit. .. When Castro came to New Yorkl9 years ago, hotel cham· bermaids were reported lo have said they found smtes occupied by Castro's entourage in a shambles -littered with trash, wrecked furniture and a "dread· ful mess" of chicken bones and feathers. "l can assure you that l' m not t a king c hi c kens with me," Castro said in a taped televis ion interview lhis morning. "I am taking som e lobsters that I personally caught in case I have som e guests for dinner. Then l will invite them to eat lobster I did not brim~ chickens in 1960." Castro was intervie wed by American joumabsl Jon Alpert a board his fli ght Wednesday from Cuba to New York and ex- cerpts were shown on NBC-TV's "Today" show today Girl, 14, Killed By Cf' in Orange A 14-year -old resident of Orange died Wednesday at Ca· nyon General Hos pital from traffic injuries she suffered Oct. 2. Police investigators said Ellen Hayes was struck by a car while walking in a marked crosswalk on her way to school. The driver has not been charged, police s aid. Santa Aaa Ca se • PY*, Octobtr 11. Jf79 s DAILY PILQT u Housing Rules Tightened Development Acreage Around El Toro Reduced ar P&EDRIUa( ICBOSll ... -......-............. Acu.t tb8l wlU ~ nalet rerulattni botw•n• ctev.1opment around !l Toro lhrine Corp8 Air Station while at ~ same Ume redueln, the acreace to whtcb they wiU apply were ap- er o v ed Wednesday by the Oran1• County Board of Supervllon. Under tbe new re1u.Jations, which opens 1,500 acres of land for poclslble development, de· velopen no looger will have the opt.ion ol daallenging the loca· tlon ot tbe '5 Community Naise Equivalent Level (CNEL> con· lour and possibly winning de- velopment rights. Al the same lime, the 65 CNEL ''footprint" will be re· duce d in size from 25,000 lo 19,000 acres based on new noise studies conducted by lbe Navy Department at the request of marine base and county or ficials. Cons truc tion o r homes. hospitals, convalescent homes, churches and schools are affect· ed by the action. A former 65 CNEL line, based on past studies. included more than 25,000 acres, but land de· velopers had the option or challenging the location or the line. C h a ll e nges will not be permitted under the new regula· lions. Al Bell, manager of general planning, told supervisors that the challenge system would be "unnecessary " because the Navy Department noise studies have accurately pinpomted the location of the 65 CN EL "foot· print" surrounding the base. The 65 CNEL area runs in a north-south axis from Sheep Hills and Aliso Canyon in the south to Rattlesnake Reservoir in the Irvine Ranch on the north and on an east-west axis from the Irvine city limits on the west to the Live Oak Canyon-Trabuco a rea on the east The revised noise standards were strongly supported by of- fi cials from the Community Planning and Liaison Office at the El Toro base. Board Chairman Philip An· tbony, who ultimately supported the new rel&Ulatioo.s, expreaed concern that the rules miCbt be too ln.flexlble. tn som e areas , Anthony plu, Ule new noise standards may be nmewed and amended up to tbret times per year. Periodic evaluatlooa of the 65 CNEL oolae contour wlll be made by county and marine cor- ps offtdala every three years, aceordina to the board approved package. Wednesday's bearing brought a call from Irvine City Coun- c i Im an Art Anthony for the board to witbbold approval of the amendments and thereby help the city gain negotiating strength in a battle a1ainat the marines over jet noise. Antbooy indicated the city is attempting to convince the marines to sign an agreement lbat WOU1d help reduce nohle cauaed by lncreued traininl ac· Uvilies to quality pilots for aJ rcraft carrier landings. The board rejected Anthony's plea. Supervisor Thomas Riley, however, promised Anlbooy that he would •·try to be persuasive .. in helping the city lo ita battle over the noiae issue. K y P ledges Cooperation Refugees to Subm it to TB Testing By &OBERT BAUER OI • o.6t• "*' SUff Former South Vietnamese le ader Nguye n Cao Ky said Tues day that refugees from Southeast Asia will cooperate fully in tuberculosis screening tests in Orange County. '·w e do not wish to carry any disease to your people and we do not wish to become the object of undue concern." he said. Other Vietnamese leaders at a Santa Ana news conference said they were sur prised by the "overreaction a nd exaggera lion" or fears that a health emergency exists Ky. now a Huntington Beach resident , said there already have been cases or Southea5t Asian children bemf( ostractzed out of rears lhat they are car- riers of tuberculosis. He asserted that a soccer player was demoted from the starting team in Garden Grove a nd made a r el>crvc by the coach "He was only 16 but un derstood the satuatJOn and he re· signed from the team. "I hope it doesn 't happen again." Ky said Ky also said that many people might see political or com· me rcial gain in e m phasizing potential health dangers . He said he is arranging to m e e l with M a yo r E le.rt h Erickson of Garden Grove after statements from that city that about SO percent of the refucees hav e active or latent tuberculoela. "Tbe retuaees came to uu. land "" freedom and opport.unit. not to be a burden on any person PLEDGES COOPERATION Ex-V1et Chie f Ky or government serv11·1· Wl• sha ll bl· m or 1• thJn gra teful to have the chance to clear ourselves or this blemish on our health record,·· ht.-said Ky said he wouldn't mind 1( alJ Viet n amese children were screened for tuberc ulosis County beallh officers and school leaders have adopted a pl an to screen a bout 2, 135 S(\ulbeast Asian youngsters who ~rolled in sdlool for t.be HBt kme in Seci4ember. Scree1una alao wall be performed for eb.i1dren from un- der-developed countries who a lso fall in the "hig h ris k category." Dr. Vu·Dinh Minh, an as - sociate professor in pulmonary disease at UC Irvine, said that mc1dences or tuberculin reaction have been misinterpreted. Minh said that South Viet- namese who are immunized with BCG (bacillus Calmette· Guerin) show a positive TB skin test. but do not have TB infec· uon Minh said that active cases can be detected by chest X-rays and analysis of phlegm. · A t o t a l Gf 3 3 a c t i v e luberculosb cases are reported among refu~ees through Sep- tember co mp<1 red to 'l:l cases an 1978 Othe rc; attending Tuesday's press conference included Tran Minh ConJ:. the.Re v. Thom a!> Ha l!nd Dr Richard W. Light, an as- -.ocaatt• professor of medicine at I C lrvanr a nd chie f o f lht> pu lmo nary section al Lon g B(•ach Veterans Adman1strat1on Medical Ct'nll'r 2 Men Indicted TUCSON. Am tAPI -TwQ Arizona ranchers. accused of torturtnJt three Mexican workers in 1976. have been indicted by a federa l grand jury on robbery charges lO connection with the rnctdent. A grand jury bandeC up a three-count indictment W edneaday ala.inst Patrick and Thomas Hanigan. ownen cl a caUle r.eb near the Arizona border town or DouJtla:c- claimed, the location of the 65 -----------------------------------------CNEL line WU "not certain" and that the county was putting itself ln the position or saying, ·•the line is great and we're gon- na defend it." Bell, however, said the new line would help put to an end ··constant h aggling that bas b een very expenSive to-OOlll public and private parties." As amendm ents to the general Dart Tossers To Compete In Clemente Prizes totaling $.5,000 will be offered in an Oct. 20-21 dart· throwing contest at the South Coa s t Boys C lub in San Clemente. Doors of the club, at 1304 Calle Valle. will open at a.m. for both days or the tournament. Some of the proceeds from the event will benefit the South Coast Jaycees who arc co-sponsors of the con- test along with Anheuser-Busch, Inc. Admission for s pectators is free. Entry fees for contestants range from $6 for the ladies singles competition to $24 for four-person teams. Registration for contestants will be accepted up to mal<'n time. Contest times are as follows : Saturday, Oct. 20 10 a .m. ladies sin gles; 3 p.m. open doubles; 8 p.m. four-person teams . On Sunday, Oct. 21 10 a.m. mixed doubles ; 3 p.m. open singles. Heritage Upholstery Pro01otion I ~ j Sa£ {JerioJ lkroug/i Ocl. 281/i 25 % Savinqo! • 5 Custom lengths • 9 Se.at cushion options • 7 Back pillow options • Hundreds of sumptuous Heritage fabricsf Heritage Cuatom Deslgnjiofas and Love Seats -plm CoordJnated Chain ·State Can't Shut School SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state Department of Education cannot close a private Santa Ana school for paramedics for al· leged violations of slate or na- tion wide standards, says the ~tate attorney general: T be opuuoo, which aoes not carTy the force of law, applies to all accredited private collqea. ll was issued Wednesday by At- torney General peor1e Deukme-Jlan after state schools cbJel Wilson R1lea asked whether be could deny, auapend or revoke state operatloa autboriuUona for olfendini poet-1eeondary in- ltltutlom. A IPOhlman for Rlle1 Wd tbe qutr)' lnvolftl an attempt to cloM tbt American Colle,. ot Parameclcal Alta and SdlflC91. Rues~ accusations include the lack ol proper facilities and in· struction, and "miarepresenta· tioa with respect to gettin1 IOV· ernment loans for atudenta." De~mejlan said lbe is1ue la whether Riles "has lbe statutory authority to deny, suapend and revoke -for cause -an autboriution to operate where the imtitution demonstrates tt has the requisite accreditation." He eoncluded that Rllea could invest11ate alle1atJon1 a1alnat such a tcbool and refer evtdlnce to the aceredlt.lnf a1ency, but could take no actlon blmaell. ··u tbat falW. u.. s...,....... dent may consider pubUcld.aa tbe retulta ol bll ln""11atioa ad ol tbe facttUt tbe accrecllU., ..-. cy refused to take-appropriate ac- tion. Re may abo submit the ~vidence to the attorney general for possible court action,•' the~­ nlon sald. Ro1er Wolfertz, assistant cblef counsel ln Riles' depart. ment, said lhe opinion would make Riles' duties aa the 411· penser ot z•linf. au~risa· Uon1 "mea leas.• Wolferts said Rlles could sea a court nal1q or JepaJaticm to insure that be bad the power to deny or revoke operation autbortutiom. Tbe 1Chool'1 prealdent, Grq Cowdm. deferred c<>mmeat to h1a partner, aclmluiou director Gerald Ste\'9, who wu out ol town. ,, l;' Your F•vorite ~ Wtll B• H•PP'I To Auitt You. H.J.GAR~ElT fU~Nll1J~E PAO'!SS*ONAL INT!AIOR DESIGNERS ZJ IS HAlllOI ILVD. COST A MISA '46°0l7S M DM.VPILOT ~ ...... ~ Te•~~''' M11rplll•e Going to P o t · GaSDI ftlll .. DSn. -DwiAI ... , recent vialt to I.be rUllld aorUMn CMatllae of our Ool4ea Slate •Mn ••MPlal ... viewa areet tM .,e aad dear air ~ \be IWl&li then WU nenl"thea.a evktMce thal UM ...... la troub eel C.u.ln aartculture of \be Met.ton la in deep dltnculty. You could tell thl• wh..-you 1eanold the local periodic• ol Meodotlao eo.ty. 0.. yous womu. • 1rower. bad appeaNMI Wore \he County Board ol Supuvilort She wu an1ry SM claimed t.b•t IOYeromeot har•a.ment wu Ukely to be Ole ruination of her far.min& 1ntereat11 "WE RAVB 9BEN loUmidated," abe toad tile board "Our conaUtuUooal rl1hl¥ have been vlolat.od. We are 11m_ply lt)'Ull to make a Uvinc from the land. "And," she added, "you sboWd remember t.blt we are the fulW't' of t.hi4 country.•' Tbe aupervilon apparently Uatened to her plea with grave concern. After all, in her agrieulturaJ ente.rpriae. she was talk· 1ng about what ooe United Slates 10vemment survey North State PohtK:14n P<mdenng Agnculture Enterpn se estimated IS the loth l~l cash crop grown an Calirom1a It ranks right between almonds and strawberries. The crop is sinsemilla. Oh well, to most of us, it's bet- ter known as mariJuana. Or .pot Or grass Some people smoke it. Estimates indicate that the crop, grown an Mendocino, Humboldt, Lake and Del Norte counties dunng the season from April to October. may have been valued as high as $900 million last year alone In Mendocino, it developed that the county s heriff began using airplanes to search out these crops, grown ln the inaccesible backlanda, and then began taking action against the growers THAT'S WHAT PROMPTED the young woman agricuJturi1t to appear in heated protest before the supervisors One board member agreed and made pubhc statements indicating he feared the farmers were being harassed. Similar reaction came from Humboldt County where the shenff was also using aircraft to locate· sinsem11la crops. Only this week, llumboldt supervisors voted 3 lo 2 to reject a U.S. grant and' form a task force. aeaLD.SL the. ~r~~r S11nrY'arson5,abeled the proposal ··overkill." Supervisor Danny Walsh earlier said such ac· lion might do grave damage to the local economy. TROUBLE WITH ALL this northern agricultural en· terprise ls that it is illegal. Against the law. Growing mari- juana is a felony crime punishable by a three-year term ln the slammer and a fibe of up to $5,000. This fact, however, seems to be of less lmportan~ than the local economy, in the minds of some northern local officials. Thus it is possible for one young grower to appear before a govemmental body and declare she and her fellow farmers are the future of our country You are left wondering what that future is I NATION /WORLD Hain ltolts Cuba 'Haid' llORIHSAD CfTY, N.C. CAP> -Bad weathtr bu fu.rUMr de· Jay .. ....,,:;: Of Marintil for • moe.~ .... ult Oil Guutuamo B•Y. Qlk, ml tary ofttelall H)'. ,,_ ~. Of'deNd by Pttilldent C...Ur lut week u a show of UD.le.d ..... .W..,, llJUfflt lD UM fle9 ol Soviet trOQPI Ill· t.loMd lD C\aba, WM eaw.t "()peraUon Retnforcex." 8ul MWW'al Mt.b.e.b cropped up aloq Ule W8)'. The three abl.,. for &be Ul*llUoe w-. 111lped oa Oct. 2, but they arrived TuetdQ It Mer1b11d Qty -one week late. It bed t.Uen four day. a to toad food Md cme •bllf'e.nived wltbout tbt required combat aup· pli••· aA.D W&A'IWIUl e&aATED bltb 1ea1 Wednnday, makint It tou1b for plJota to land crafta \Wed to ferry Marines and equipment tolh• ..... The wl.it wu acbech&led to move into the Atlantic late Wednea· day nJpl fort.be trip to CUba. but offlclab aald lbe lo1d.lo1 ot sbipa U.S. Physician Shares Nobel STOCKHOLM. Sweden tAP) -Tbe 19'19 Nobel Pri&e for med1cine was awarded jolnUy today to an American and a Brit.on for developing computer· aasiated tomography, a revolu- tionary X-ray technique that gives medical science a striking- ly clear iniside look at the living human body. The winners are physicist Al· Ian McLeod <:ormac k. SS, a native or South Africa and a member of the physics depart ment at Tufts University, Med ford . Mass .. and Godfrey Newbold Hounsfield, a research engineer with the British com pany E MI. THE TWO, who dad the basic research on the "CAT" system Brzezinski Vows S upport For E u r ope WASHINGTON (AP> In a i.pel'ch reminiscent of the Cold War era, presidential adviser Zbigniew Brzez1nsk1 says th<' United States would not hesitate• to use nuclear weapons against the Soviet Union in the event of u Soviet a ttack on Western Europe Brzezinski told a State Depart· ment gathering Wednesday the Soviets m ay be tempted to declare war against the NATO allies unless they match the Sov 1et buildup of nuclear weaJ)C'n~ in Europe Brzezinski is PreM dent Carter's national secu:-tt) adviser. Hi s s peech lo the Atlantic Treaty Association, a pnvate group that supports NATO, was RWen agaimt a background or growing European concern over the reliability of the U S. defense commitment. The Western European allies have been debating the issue an connection with a U.S. proposal to deploy medium-range mis· . slles in Europe to counter Soviet d e ploym ent of comparable weapons. "Let there be no question about our commitment, nor of our determination to help defend Europe by all means necessary. nuclear a nd conventional," Brzezinski said. Independently or each otber, were cboeen by the faculty of the Royal Caroline Med.ico-Surlical lnatltute. Informed sourcea said the selection of Cormack and Ho uns field for tbe record $190,000 award. which they will share. came after the lnsUtute, i n an unprecedented move following a lengthy debate. vetoed the choice of it.a own Nobel seleetion committee. The identity of the com mltt.ee nominee or nominees wu not publicly known CO&MACK SAID b e w as "amazed" al hla selection. "I've alwaya been in my UtUe ivory tower,'' he told a Boston re- port.er ln a telephone lnterview ··one can never hope to wm the Nobel Prize. I have been teaching and working." The medicine award wu the first of the six annua l Nobel prizes to be announced. The phy sics . c hemi s tr y and economics prizes are to be a warded next week . and the literature and peace awards an tht' followmg weeks President Carter has been nominated for the J>('ace prize Six of la..,t year·~ nine ~obel laureates were Americans The med1 c1 n c prize h a !> been dominated by Americans in the post-war years. and 29 of the SO winners since 1959 have been rro m the u n I ted Slate•. Cormack i..s lhe 53rd American to win the medicine award THE SYSTEM developed b> Hounsfi eld and Cormack 1n volves the X·raying of i.uc cessive cros~·sect1on:. of tht' body to bwld. with the aid of a computer. a highly detailed im- age for examination In gener_..I ho8p1tal mw for on- ly about i.1x yeari., 1t ha!> represented a breakthrough an mcdicul d1aJ(nost1c method~. particuJarly an the examination of the brain and nervo ui. system. ena bling quicker a nd surer diagnoses of brain damage and detection of tumor:. and other 1r· regularities. coot1J11Mfd put mJdnlaht. ''Thll wu a complete surprise to UI." said Navy Commander BlU Shannon, ln cbar1• ol auppU. oo U.. U86 N111au. ooe of the thl'M aldPI. "It took U1 four da)'I to load the food." Bl MID FOOD WAS loeded from bar1es at sea near Norfolk. UaueUy, t. aald. It lJ lo•ded.trom a dock. where it can be driven •board by tracton. 1 q~ker p.rocea. The actuaJ date ot the mock attack ·ll belnc kept ¥ secret, ac· cordlot to Col. Lou Plantadotl, commander of the operation. The Mari~ becan moving equipment into Morehead City from Camp Lejeune Tuaday ni1ht. and troop1 rrom Camp Lejeune. the New River Alr St.tlon aod Cherry PQiot arrived by bu. on Wedneaday. The Karine Wl.it la mede up of l ,2.00 combat.equipped person· nel, a 300-member logiatie1 aupport unit and • 300·member helicopter aquad. _ ............ FRED KELLY (CENTER) HEART TRANSPl.ANT OK'D Son Fred Jr. (teft), Nephew She re Hit Rellef Dad a Heart Taxes for Transpl ant OK'd FRAMINGHAM Ma!>!> 1AP1 The governing body of this city of 70 000 has decided lo ra1se taxb ~o Fram ingham can prov1dt-S60.000 to a 'ilCk. retired far..-hghtl:'r who needs a hft-'laving heart transplant After a 45 m1nutf• town meeting debat~ Wednesday night ml'mbt·r~ lifted their hand~ and voted 11)4 13 tu <tlJ µrrn t• thl' dppropnat1on for 1-'reden t' t<elll'y a 39 year 01d falhcr of fl\(• "flu: \l/tt• ... 110 .... <•fl th1 1,.·opl1-of FramtnRhcim hav1· ·• heart ._,Jld J"hn lh·IPrett.-chd1rm<tn of tht Fra minRh..ilT' Bo'ard of Sdt•t'tnll•n .,.. ho.,, d••c·1-.1on' ar<• rc.ttf w1~ tn I h1 210 ml'mberto .... n mt' .. ltn~ DOCTORS HAD G IV t:!'lo Kt•llcy .,1x mon th~ le, « yt·at 11, llH· without the OJ>('ral1on lit· had i.uffered two heart J: tacks on the JOb :,tnec Jul) 1978 and relJred on d1sab1ltty last mOlllh. "It's over ftoaJly." said Kelley. who s tayM home from the debate becaWJe ph ys1c1ans feared the tension m1J?ht hr ang on anoth1•r h<'art attack It v.as ci long 1111a1t but 11 wa~ .... orth 1t II .., tt11 btl-!~•·'t thini. Lhat e1;er h&ppl'ned 1n my ilf l' K1·1lt>\ ·,.,,, 1lt• I'.\,.,, n JX Jnd naughter KJthy 21l -.1lcn 1 h WJlched th1 dl'l»~tt· ·1n tht Framingham Memonal l!all Mn; Kelli:) trnnbled a-. tht· \Ott• 1o1.a" taken. and wher. 1t wa' over. cned out an rl'l1 er. l·mbrCJc·rtl her d3ughter and wep1 "I CAN'T~,\\ t\S\'Tlll1'G," -,he ~aid "I jUl>t want to ratt-my husband :.ind kit him ·· Alt.bouJ(h mo-.t '>~aker-. (a\Ored g1VIOJ( K1•1ll:') lht• mont"y. the to\o\n meeting membe~ had demanded " di bale to dli.cusi. i.elt1ng ~ prcc·edent ror other mumc1pet1 t"mployee~ 11111th extraordmar} med1cetl expense~ "I am wondenn~ what flood~ate), we art• openanJ( u~ here." said Jay Gordon. who voted in favor of the JP propnat1on "On<•e we vote th.Ji.. lhcre are bound to ~ other requ('SUJ · Apple Growers Setback A free press. Who needs ii?-- Damage Fe are d From Freak Snowstorm Te-81p~rat •re• "' Le ~. ... ,.,..,., •• tt ........ ,. '1 4l llaltlmOff •1 • ·" llol~ ,. .. ~IOft ,. n .u lluffelO ... » '" Chey-,. " Clllcce90 ~ .. 01 Cltelnf'eto ,, 4l Cle,,.,_ •• JS Dal FIW!to 10 ,, Oen••• '° ., Detroit SI lO .07 Ma,_d " 21 U1 " ...... ,. .. Honoh1lu t7 11 "°"''°" n "' INl'ati00s u 41 -· Jao s·v11i. ... '1 .11 IC-City .. St USll99M ti ,, ~ffU•I'-,, . ~· ....... IS .. "°"In Ille S1 .. .01 *"'"'"' u St llillefftl IS '6 lljlltwalll<• " ... ... _..,st" ... it .. IUM\Vllla ,. .. ... w()rlM 1' .. .... v ..... 4' ,, •• Olla Cltv n u °"' .... 6J ,. l'llllatl'!Jfll• ., " ... ,.,_nix 100 .. ,..~ ·~ ,. . .u "....,,,,. , ... " .11 ,._Of• •• ~ .. " s.i.-• "' ,, '-41 Ult• " 41 ""~ 1$ .. S.. P'rafl ,. ,. MIJPWo.I....., hkau tu c• y ...,,,, ''"111 ti -OU "°' -V'"'' 0-.,., • 30 0"' (Ml .,.._ 1 ...... .,., """'~, .. , .. .,..,.~.,.,., :..., .. .,.,.,-~ llyOOodOl'OI .... ..... ~ ~ Dy •• "' di! UOtl ~" t I t"' MIO o;Ouf <ooY "'" D* ~h¥f'fflltJ ' •t .... ' (mIJ . ., ~ s s ,..., •• SaaHI• 44 U .JI 1t • r..,, .. '° ,. Watfll ....... so .. ·'° CM.IPOWNIA ... '"'.., ... '5 .,..... 11 91yttlt ., ., ,~ • 51 Matnvllto '° ,. ~. 1J 61 NtMNt .... Oelllancl 14 ,, ....... .. ,. sa<ra!Mflto ,. ~1 Saftla ..,.,,., • 11 J6 Sloc:'ton • 61 ,..,.,..., .. n ea,.,,.. t1 eo 1110~ ,. .. GM.•llM 1' '9 II COll4N '4 U L.°"'IMOI 11 ti Newwt llMcll 70 ff Ofltarle H ).I l'a1"''4W"'9t .. ., Sotll~... ., ti s.nJ-. " u leflt• AM 11 Jt .,..._c~ " ., teM•M«l.t 17 • , ... " .. "" " " v.a.s .... .,, • c •• , ...... Af'w GobW a llfeQu.trd •t Mnt• Mont<• w.a .,_ \Uf1 klo'f'G IOU\Y et dawn I""" ll'e ''"'~" .,,.,.,_ POlnt. El-heff, llW H~ IO<•'-' no jlfKIC>ltellOfl In Soo.ot,.,n (•lllo<n1• tl>rovth Frldey • Temperat.,,.. In tlw> .,.._., .. •l\ould •PCH""OM.f'I ............... ~, .. •hlllf' th• m•r<ury in rn•troPOUt1tn t n~ AngelK ll>Oukl hit I"" IO\ Coasfal lt'~a dtftr Soma cc>nt•I too nl9fll ~M morn lnQ PIOUfS, ot-IN talr ll>rOUOfl Fri Oty EIW"'hert llghl ve •tel>lt winds n10111 encl mornlno "°"'' becomlno wot lo _ _,. e+olll lo I~ ~ftOh 11th •''-· with -10 ,_ loot Wlftd W-Teelef'I \-II I\ M OI tit• WKI .. ._to hi<>• , .. , with -,..,..., ... ""1 lllleiy .,. -well ·~"" ........ coastal,,.... n w1111 •1 ,_. hlOfl In l•ncl 71, -"· w ........ S••• /fle e•, Tift~• TOOAY SKllWI tow 2 Up m. • • SK-"'-' t 40 O m 0 I l'•tDAY 1'1,.1 lllOfl ~'Ot •.m H ,.,.., .... •·.a "' J ' Sec-""" l :tl 0 "' • t it<~IOw 10:1to.m 0 1 5'Hlrl1Kt·•~•m , ... 1t t>pm -,..._ 11 i7 o-m~ Mb •~• '·"'· ,_, ... lcl ••• '9ftltM S..rl ·-· ....... lft .... MH· lmum lleletot 111 IHI l"erloo Ill le(-......... ~ J • t• I • 14 t • " • 1 •• Sftll 1 A.-'11' Mllftl Ill twt MH• ,_ ...._"' .... Olrt<tNll. ........... Dir ' • w t J w t I W J • "' Oll11-llW f'rlcley Llttla <Mflet IAMlf'fll ...... ' 'V/fly should freedom of speech and freedom of the press be allowed? Why should a government Wiich is doing what it believes to be right allow i~f to be criticized? It would not allow ~tion by lethal weapons. Ideas are much more fatal things than guns. Why should any man be alk1Ned to buy a printing press and disseminate pernicious opinion calculated to emborass the t?" -... ""'" .......... -...... governmen · -N1kolo1 lenin Your right to know whet government is doing is assured by on active and free press. DAILY PILOT National Newspaper Week October 7 to 13 1979 ' CALIFORNIA All Safe In Midair Collision SAN JOSE (AP > Two 1ln1le·enaln• planea collihd over San JOM MunietpaJ Airport and nobody wu Injured, r.romnt!Jut aulhonu .. to ca.Uthe qc\dMt 7 •m1rad •· A11l1tant alrporl director J act H..-~r aaJd Weclnetday that a Beechcran bad Jwit taken off from lbe runway when It wu ( STATE ) i.truclt at an altJtude of 200 feet by a Ceuna trymg to land. The severely damaged planes with one person eitch landed wilboul incident . .. It's impossible that neither person was injured and it's a miracle that no ooe was killed," said San Jose Fire Department s pokesman Dick Wattenbarger. He said the prope lle r of the descending plane sliced into the cockpit of the other plane, bare- 1 y mi ss in g th e pilot N~ Pia•• Clo•ed Minorities Barked Tlu'ld9y. October 11, 1979 DAILY PILOT il . • TV Pers9~ality~ Sued by Befttles. ' .. LOS· ANGELES <AP> -The corporate remnant of the S.-tles IS goinc to court •&ain to fl&bt hnitaUODI of the ftOW·delunct British aln&iJ>g group. Attorneys Jor Apple Corp. Ltd. aalted Superior Court Wednea· day to Luue an injunction preventin& producer Dlclt Clark and tbe American Broadcasting Co. from ualng either the names or employin& look-alikes of the Beatles in a planned movie "Birth of the BeaUes." ! THE CML SUIT SEEKS $tO million in 1eneral damages and $100 million in punitive damaees. I Apple Corp. bolds the rights for former Beatles John Lennon. • P aw McCartney , George Harrison and Ringo Starr TIDS WAS THE SECOND tJme in the past month the former : Beatles have taken legal action agains t portrayal of the group by J im itators. f Apple Corp. recently filed swl to stop the long-running stage , play "Be.atlemarua.'' which uses four men who look like lhe I Beatles at various stages an their career and sing Beatles tunes. Guyana Survivors Sue' Ryan Estate SAN FRANCISCO <A Pl The SACRAMENTO CAP> The Rancho Seco nuclear power plant is closed for installation ot an earthquake safety s upport on a pipe in the e mergency cooling s ystem. a spokesma n :.aid Wed nes day. Act or s Willia m Sch a lle rt a nd De nnis Weaver were am ong 500 who picketed the Academy of Motio n Pictu re and Tele vision P rod uce rs office Wednesday de noun c ing the film indus try for 1b portrayal of wom e n and minoritae.., on ti"c s creen. Screen Actor -. c;u1ld i-.poke..,(\1oman Kim Fc lln('r ... a id unfa ir labor c:harge.., werl' flied i:lgarn ... t tlw ut adcm,> estate of the late Rep Leo Ryan 1s being sued by fi ve People-. Te mple survivo rs and thret: re l<1tives of dead cult members who claim t hat Ryan 's action.., ht.>lped bnng a bout tht.' Guyan<l lr<:igedy Tht.' ~wt, hlt.'d an San Frein n :.c.·o Superwr Court. chargt::. tha t Ryan had "a wanto n and reckless d.lsregar"-Lor the conse· quences" when he tried to lead fl ee ini< c hur c h m e m be rs t<> freedom Ryan and four others in h1~ pa rty or reporters. Temple re; lat1ves and departing cult mem- ber.., were shot and killed as they prepared to n y out <1f Guyana , Port Kwtuma airstrip near the Pcopl~ Temple community hf Jonestown on Nov 18. 1978 The spokes man for the plant, J eff Marx or the Sacramento Municipal Utility District. said Wednesday the U.S. Nuclear Re,Jt ula t ory Commiss ion or dered the 913-megawatt plant c losed during the re pairs, which will take a few days. Stilled Cable Cars No Deterrent ~ori> than 900 members of thu l'l'Opl~ Temple then co mm1llPd .. u1c1dt· or were murdered <i t Jont•l\lO"n al tht· behest of the h·adt•r of thl· cult. the R£'v J im Jone.·" Bl"01en E'und Slim Tourists Continue to Flock to an Francisco WASHINGTON CAP> Gov. Edmund G. Brown fa ces an up hill climb to raise funds for his presidential campaign, accord· mg to the first offic ial contribu· lion and e xpenditure re port filed Wednesday by the California De mocrat. The report showed Brown the self-described "third force" i n the r ace for th e 1980 Democratic nom in ation with total contributions of $261,519 81ne•C C'••trlb11il•n WASIUNGTON <AP) -The biggest s ingle contribution to Gov. Edmund G. lirown·s unan no unced presidentJal campaign s o far has com e from the POiitical arm of the d iversified Service Employees JnlernatJon a l Union The union s political action ~om m ltt.ee donated $5,000 -the ----m.aK1mumallowed-Oy law- Of li'°er• to Re pf fl L OS ANG E L E S (AP ) Policemen Edward M. Hopson · a nd Lloyd W. O'Callaghan will be given a chance to comment or the P oli ce Commission r epor1 c riticizing their handlin g or the Eula Love case before the report 1s placed in their personne l files. Comm1 s s 1o n Pre s ide n t Stephen Reinha rdt m ade the commitment after the pair had asked for a court orde r allowing the policemen to s ubmit their comments SAN FRANCISCO <A l'> Del\p1le the doomsayers who prto dieted lour1l>t~ would M<iy away 1n droves. v1s1tors continue t<J flock to the city despite an t•xtt·nded -.hutdown of the city's symbol, the cable cars. Phone Firm Granted $1.3 Million Hike SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The Calltornla Public Utilities Com· m ission. correcUne a July 31 declalon, baa a.ranted Pactflc Telephone a $1.3 million rate increase Instead of reducing Its rates by S42.2 million annually The PUC earl.Jer had re1ected a Pacific Telephone request for a $470 million a year rate increase and instead ordered the cut In rates It received six petitions ror a reheanng and reJected all of the m but did modify the de c1s ion. The--new--er~ .--tS&ued w~ nesday, corrects a $26 million com put er e r ror m cid e by the PUC s t aff a nd recalculates Pa cific Telephone's expenses for such things as e lectric power and operator's wages The order said Pacinc has ;m additional revenue requirement of 'S43 5 million over that found reasonable in the ori ~ana l d~ CISIOO THE RESULT 1s ci Sl 3 m1l110n annual rcite hike which will ar fe<'t the rates of some Pacific T e l e ph o n e a nd G c n c rul Telephone cw.tomers For example . there will now be a ne w cha rge of 25 cents for a request by a c<:illing party to ve rify that a hne 1s busy or to tn· terrupt a convers ation in pro- ~1:.ll AND TIIE rates a nd charges for key tele phone equipment. -.uch as phon~ with buttons for va rious lines, also wall be tn· crea sed beyond tha t authorized m the J uly 31 decision The PUC also scheduled a rt .. hearing on Pacific Telephone's ~ osl or bor rowing funds t o ttna nce the current demand for ;o,a v1ce It said this would con· sider the rap1dly-n smg interest rates on tht• company's plans to fi n a nc e nt.'w a nd impr oved l'qu1pmenl THIS WEEK, COME VIEW OVER $250,000 IN PRECIOUS JEWELS ... ROBINSON'S HEIRLOOM COLLECTION AT NEWPORT AN D WESTMINSTER, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, OCT 11 -12 This unique assortment of heirloom 1ewels has been assembled from the estates of many prestigJOus families and leading 1ewelers. Most pieces are in the If onginat settings, and represent the exqws1te work of world-renowned craftsmen Listed is only a sa mplmg of the overall collection. All items are sub1ect to pnor sate Robinson's FineJewelry, 100 2. 56 ct. marquise diamond solitaire with baguettes, $!WOO 12ct. diamond brooch, $18,500 3 ct. emerald and 1 ~ ct. r:liamond bracelet, $3,950 Removable diamond, 5 ~ ct., and coral pml eamng combmatJOn with attachable turquoise. 1 BK gold and plat mum sold as set only, $10, 250 3 ct. diamond cover-case watch, 1 BK gold, $4,950 1 c t. round diamond solitaire, $1,350 2.84 c t. diamond brooch, $2,4 50 2 ct. diamond and 8 ct. emerald earrings, $3,950 5. 75 ct. diamond bracelet, $7,500 ~ ct. diamond and 9. 46 ct. genuine star sapphire, $9.500 3 ct. diamond and c ultured pearl bracelet. $3/)00 All weights 10101 Robinsons Robinson's Newpon Fashion Island • 644·2800 Westminster Ms/I • (714) 898·4331 Out-or town fulb <lrt' sat1'>f>in ~ themselve!> by chmbang a board stal1onaQ c·ars puked <Jt lerm10 cil turnta bles and having thl'lr pictures <,nappt•d by rn endl\ re latives or strangers The ancient re lics. not mut·h changed since they started l urchm~ and clanging up and down Sein f'ranc1sco's hills in 1873. were shut down l wo weeks cigo ror long-overdue syste m overhaul a nd repwr • The three cabll· car lines have earned up to 13 million ~rsons a nnua lly in recent years, mor(' than 70 ~rcenl or l.bem tounsts. at two bits a head The cars a re freely conteded by officials to be dangerous con traptlons that regularly toss n ders off 10to the gutter . effectively act as tar&ets for other vetucles. and draw hundreds of expensive injury claims each year Io thla apace age of soptuallcated machinery. these d.lnoaaura are lighted by oJd at.orage batten es and braked mainly by wood ahoes t.Ut pres11 3J!a lnst tht> o;;urfar.-of thP tra<'k'> Occasionall y they 'itop ~here the gripman wanlS In ca.~ of real em ergency. l.be gnpman. who operates the mechanJsm that grabs onto a cable m oving beneath the pavement, d rops a gwllotinc-hkl-steel slab into l.be cable slot s topping the car as 1f 1t weresla mm10g into a bnck wa ll T he problem is the sy:.tem 1s so decrepit. the underly111g struc lures SO flO~J.?cd b} yea rs Of us e. that It is dangerous , Sa} Municipal Railway offt c1als niere r!m'"t -:my 11oestton m my 1111111'.t'ttnrt-it isn't a -nfe systl'm.'· s:mJ Oral Moore. ch1d engineer of the city PublJr L'tihtae:-. Comrn1~Mon. ~ho rccommcnd<.-d the shutd~wn THF: SUIT. flied Oct. 4. ask:i uns pectftl'd d<imagel\ a~ains( R)ci n ·l\ est ate for w ron~ful dt>ath. nl•ghgence and negligent 1 nfl1 ct1on of emotional stress. • Hyan's estate. given a pre1 hminary value or S264,000, would have finished probate in the next fe w months if the lawsuit had not been filed. Ryan's attomeyi Me lvin Ke rwin s aid it no-.. <'Ou ld r e main unsettled fo( yeani i Kerwin. of Menk> Park. saict the awl Is comp'9telY wi~ merll and borden on harass- nwnt II<' l\a1d 1t angered hi m so m uch that his views on it are ··unprfot.able " • SAN FRANCISCO attorneY. Robert J Bocke lman. who file<\ the suit. said Ryan was re • peat edly wa rned of the ··ex- tre m e danger ·· of the Jonestown.. 'et tlt.'m e nl 1n ve s t1 ga "'ti~o~_·. ___ .._ U t'spale UlOsc warmngs. he said Ryan went ahead with a v1s1l to lh t.• 'lt>ltlt•ment GIBULTAR SAVINGS FOR OUR ORANGE COUNTY OFFICES 26-WEEK CERTIFICATE 10.6623 4NNU4 l 14TI 11.137 3 4NNUJ.l (H!CTIV( TlllO CERTIFICATES ISSUED OCTOBER 11 THRU OCTOBER 17, 1979 $10,000 minimum. Rale based on 26-week U.S Treasury 8111 rate [flect1ve yield assumes all funds at maturity are redeposited at same ra te and remain for full year Rate may c~1anR,e al renewal f ederal regulations prohibit compounding ot interest on the account and impose a substanllal interest penalty for early withdrawal NEW CONVENIENCE HOURS SATURDAYS: AU Gibraltar offices are open from 9:30 to 3:00. MON. thru THURS.: Most Gibraltar offices are open from 9:00 to 5:30. FRIDAYS: Most offices are open from 9:00 to 8:00. HUNTINGTON CENTER office OS*f Mon.-l"n. 10:00 IO 7:30, Saturday 9:30 IO 3:00 GtlRALTAJl IAYINGI AND LOAN AllOCIATION Founded 1886 • A...ts ~•r $3.5 bftllon • Offlces tto .. wfde FULLERTON 255 W Orangethorpe 871·6101 HUNTINGTON ltACH Hunt. Cenler 898·9666 NEWPORT IEACH 2700 W Coast Hwy. 631-2611 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 318n Del Ob1spa 493·5011 SANTA ANA/COSTA MESA 3925 s. Bristol 979-7580 SMTA ANA 14 Santa Ana Fashion Square 834·0717 .. . ........... I ~ .. ~ ~~ ,.,_ Rot>m N. Wted/Put>ll•her Thomas Kwvll/Edffor orangeeoa , o 11v P1101 .mu•tvrsul Pg,1e••••••••Th•u•'9dll)'••'•0c•'°'*••'•'•· .'..,.••••••••••a.••rt>e•'•••K•'•'•1b.1c•h•'•e•e11•'°'•1'•'•Pll!l• •• ee1•1•'°'••• Caution Needed In Rent Control Mobile home park reaideota raiHd the old i.,ue or rent l'Ontrol ln Fountain Valley thla mooth by 1eekln1 a law eatabllsh.lna a mobile home park review board. lt l1o't rent control that they want, apokeemen claimed. lt'a a "1tabWuUoo" law similar to one ap proved tn San Juan Cap trano this year which they seek. The Mission City' ordinance. passed ln March, cslabUsh a Ctve·man board to revlew mobile home puk rent hikes when a majority of lel\ants protest The board make~ recommendations to the City Coun ral, but the bottom line riv the council the power to zap r£>nl hike:; m ex<'es of federal Cons umer Prire lndt'x mcrea.ses. San Juan omc~als note lhut tenants have &one before lht> new review board twice Uus year in protest or rent hlke~ but that dirrerences were settled long ~tore the board had to rule Fountain Valley 's council encourages meetings bctwt:en pork owne rs a nd tenants. and councilme n have t.•vcn volunt~red lo o bs erve s uch proceedings That's about a s far as they should go Direct rent controls usually generate more problem~ thun they solve by drying up investment funds. hence the development or needed new housing. But if a procedure can be worked out that s erves to get landlords and tenants together. making it plain that gross inequmes will not be tole rated, it could be a s tep in the right direction. Sign of Balance? A new Huntington Beach massage parlor ordinance setting tougher training standards for masseuses and limiting hours of operation appears to have ruffled both police and parlor operators. After listening to the concerns of both sides, the City Council modified and adopted the police-written massage Jaw last week. The parlor law, which languished for 13 years on the drawing boards, doubles requirements for school training of masseuses from 100 to 200 hours. Police suggested 750 hours of training (almost 200 hours more training than police themselves receive). Parlor spokesmen said 100 hours was sufficient. The law forces massage e stablishments to close at midnight instead of 2 a .m . Police urged the council to close parlors at 10 p .m . Police Chief Earle Robitaille said regulations had to be strict to give officers a tool for keeping massage busi- ness legitimate. He claimed prostitution is still common at some Huntington Beach parlor s. Robitaillr c alled the law "sa tis factory ' but g reatly wate red down from what he had in mind. Parlor owners claim he had something e lse in mind with the ne w law -putting m assage shops out of bus i- ness. lt appear s the law won't do that because the council weeded out more onerous propos als that could have placed an unfa ir burde n on o wners . The dissatisfaction from both sides may be the true indicator that the ordinance is in the public's best in- teres t. ProbleDI Emphasized Pubbc a ttention has bee n drawn to the growing con- cerns West Orang-e Courny scfioo omc1a1Shave ror the ht!alth and welfare of Indochinese refugee students. In conjunc tion with the Orange County He alth De partment, Huntington Beach Union High School Dis - trict leaders began screening student immigrants this week to insure proper health standards. School officials r eported about 250 students will be ex· amined by school nurses and pupils with health problems will be referred to the health defart.ment. The health concerns, schoo officials said. represent only the tip of the problem. They said a larger and equal- ly immediate concern is the education needs of the stu- dents . Approximately 500 Indochinese pupils are enrolled in district schools. The figure increases weekly. School representatives ch arged that the federal gov- ernment has hampered instruction of non-English speak· ing s tudents by not funding a program that was expected to put $450 into the district for each refugee student. Communication and learning problems have grown serious. Only two bilingual instructors have been hired to a ssist at the district's seven schools . Ironically, the concerns over health issues would be a lmost a blessing in disguise if they draw federal authorities to produce the promised financial s upport to the educational programs . • Opinions e xpressed tn the space above are those ot the Daily Pilot Other views expr essed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comme nt is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O Sox 1560. Cos ta Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321 Boyd I Brain Waves ByLM. BOYD Our Love and War man ls looldnc lnto the remarkable claim that an encephalo- grapb, the instrument that meuures brain waves, can a lso measure affection between two people. Theory la that bow well people meet mesh with one another di on the brain waves send out and receive. What the youn11ters call Dear Gloomy GuM Ho w can a Me• dowJart'a nest batch ao man:r dtve·bornbln1 butcberblrdl? J.C. vibes. And the Instrument supposedly can detect these vibes and figure out their in· tensity. Would think a couple all wired up that way lo a machin~ might have a little trouble transcelvlng. but maybe not. Anyway, there may be a market for en· cepbalographs among mar- rl age counselors, a nd the medical auppllen ought not overlook. Slck children of ancient Ecypt were red s kinned mke. Q. "In which state. do Pef> pie on the aver aae make the most money?" A. Alaska, COnn.ecUcut and New Jersey. 'J'hal'• income per penon. And the stat.I wber• the people make the least mooey are MaJne, Mi•· 1i11lppl end Vermont. Wbn Cbaucu wrote of "bones," b• meant dJce. Wbn be wrote ot "1oou." be meant thup. Tbat •lUI bll bem .,,..S for quiW I 1pell ' Rowland Evam/Robert Novak Carter vs. Kennedy in Florida 11 IAlll -The 1urprt1ln1 amount ol poUUcaJ power that Pre1ldent Carter baa focused here to avold defeat by Teddy Kennedy tn the Oct. 13 caucUH1 belies the moribund at.ate of bils prHldency. ·'If Cart.er would only work Con1reu or the Ruaalans over like be 'a working Florida, be would have ltH to worry a bout," one neutral ob· server awed by the sheer power of the C arter performance told us. There are reasom lo spare for has doing so, even though the muscled drive for success here 18 raising eyebrows or politicians und voters dismayed by the atrlng of Carter failures in other codeuvorsofhis presidency. REASON NO. I: A loss to Ken- nedy. who's a lmost-candidacy could be damage~ but not Mailbox p011lbly destroyed by even a blc Carter victory, would flnlah Carter olt .. a natlonaJ lelder. It would render the balance of his presidency all but superfluous. part!culnly in view of Carter's natural constituency in much of the state that borders Georgia. Thal eq>laina the phenomenal -and aeemin1ly effective - political eoimeertne plotted by HamUtoo Jordan ln hea<fing off Sen . Edward M . Kennedy. Jordan's work in the stretch drive to the non-binding but psychologically important Oct. 13 caucuses proves that In the game of elective politics, the flawed While House chief or starr is still very much in com- m und BY NO MEANS is a Carter victory posjtlvely assured Ln the obscenely confusing process that will select 879 delegates at 67 county caucuses Oct. 13. These, along with 838 non-elected del· egates, will then choose their favorite for the 1980 Democratic pres identia l nomination In a legally meaningless straw vote at the party's November mock convention. Next March, the leJ.al Florida primary elecUon will select the actual dele1atea to the party'• New York conven- tion next summer. But tlae Oct. 13 caucuses ("a wild animal" in the words or Rlchant Swann. Carter's chief fund -raiser here> contain so much potential for ~arter'a political demise that be has galvanized his whole ad - mlnistration to help bim. He bas also commandeered 99 percent of the higb)y effe<:Uve state ad- m lnistration and political ap- paratus or popular Gov. Bob Graham. while pulling in money and workers from all over the country. IN THE PAST few weeks, ous ted United Nations Am· bass adol' Andrew Young personally telephoned three black delegate-candidates on slates committed to Kennedy. His stem message: Don'td~ertJim· my Cart.er now. Two at once re· moved themselves <one of whom. peniuaded to risk Carter · Young wrath, later agreed lo get back on>. Scores of Carter and potential Carter backers have been flown off to a full day of frilly ''brief· in1J11" on world problems in the White Hou.se -all expenses paid -to IOf'ten them up. A Kennedy leader in Jacksonville's Duval County told us that a contributor to the Kennedy campaign asked to be relie ved of his $1 ,000 pledge on grounds that Graham wais about lo appoint him to a state comm1:s~1on WHAT IS UNIQUE IS not such routine political arm-twisting but its eye-poppin g volume. "What we really want," said one o f Carter 's c hief po litic al operatives h<>re. "1~ not just to defeat Kennedy but lo Schapp h1 m '· Carter's spectacular as- C'ent four year.t ago started right here in F1orida when he swept the party's moC'k convention His only serious opponent was the n·Gov. Milton Sc happ of Pennsylvania. Carter swamped Schapp with bi percent of the vole The "Kennedy '80" le aders. stripped of any public help from the senator. will pull heavily in Carter-hating Jewish precincts, pa rllcularly the thre e large C'ountlea of Dade <Miami>. Broward (Fort Lauderdale> and Palm Beach. That is Kennedy country. Capturing the cauc~ in all three big counties would give him 43 percent of the elect- ed delegates. and his t op managers disenchanted 1976 Carter act1 vislJi -are trying to «Ul anto the traditional. non- llberal vote 1n central and nor1hem Florida to show broad Kennt.'<fy strength THEY MIGHT concl'1vably do th al . in a pohllcal process thdt d1d1e-. accurate forl'ca stang , they might even do h<-ttcr H they du not f'artt•r wi ll haw· provl'd th<it 1•v1•n ..i pr .. ::.1dcnt rJa1t1•r11·d I>\. polit1cal n·vl'r'>t"• 1r1 Wa-.llir1•:1cm t'ttll 'till fnn" t h 1· .1\\ •"m1111 fXJ\\(•r of h1!-> off1t·l· t11 ~< ,,,, . .,. lol·,d \'lrtorv Sul'h .i triumph "'mile! portc•nd l1Ul1· 1r ;rn ythini: for the S(>n ous Kennedy contests n1•xt winter. nor would at visibly elevate the benighted preslden- <'V or Jimmy Canrr Free Enterprise Best Housing -Soluti To tht> Editor · In reVlewing various editoria ls and articles in local papers, 1t has become obvious that there 1s a great controversy concerning condominium conversions and rental housing. Some cities have enacted or· dlnances that greatly restrict a developer's ability to convert an apartment complex to con- dominiums by requiring un- necessary open space or parking areas. or by allowing con- versions only when the vacancy is 3 to S percent. I FEEL THAT this is just another atte mpt by governing bodies to confiscate personal property rights which have his- torically been guaranteed by the Cons titution. With these at- titudes, and the dragon heads or rent control emerging. we are eliminating lending institutions' willingness to finance new apartment projects and we are eliminating greatly needed af- fordable housing. It is obvious from the number of multi-family building permits issued in the last three years, that the construction of new apartments has not kept up with the demands for rental housing. I reel that If the governmental agencies will deregulate rather than Increase the regulation or condominium conversions and rents, the free enterprise system will take care of the supply of rental housing and affordable housing. DONNA R. NORTH Nnc 'Ert1' Sr•,,, To the Editor: Charles McCabe's article, Oct. 4 "Panama: End of an Era" la quite misleading . That parUcW&r "era" mn b!ll over. but, alas, a new one is just beginning. The ei&hth wonder or tho world, which Americans en1toeered, bullt, m anaeed and maintained since ill conception, wlll 1Wl be one which we wUl continue to pay tor throu.ah our taxes. However, now we uproot American f amlllu, leave million• of dollars Of not billion•> ln equlpment, 1upport lhroush m&lntenance and man- power tralnln1. and •Caln wtth taxpayers money. Acain beln1 a benefactor for another foretp country's proftt. t.otlna a strate1lc11ly locat.d mllltary po1ltloe, canal and m llltarp property. moral, psycholog1C'al and e motional s upremacy, the AmeriC'an tax· payer is becoming mortally depressed. fmancaally Insolvent and patriotically disillusioned. For the next 20 years we, the taxpayers. will s~port, train and maintain without any rights. other than our government's right to be repeatedly lnade- q u ate. And again to sell Americans short and at • loss. WE HA VE LOST a definite buffer to the ever-growing Com- munist Influence In South America, • strategic waterway. and pride. Americans had to feel something when the nag was lowered by jovial, jeering Pana- manians . claiming victory over a country 90 gillion times it's size and power And we the tax pa ye r s s u C'c umb t o th e hypocnsy of bureaucracy We sit like gluttons for punishment. and allow our elected rcprcsen· lalives lo implement laws that dis graC'c. undermine, belittle and destroy the very founda- tion or the pilgrims or thu; coun· lry. ft's almost enough lo make on e a s hamed of bc l ng an American. A shivering thought. one that borders on thl! momen· tum towards socialism. ELIZABETH LAUFORD Worst E.ra•pl~ To the Editor Re garding Tom Murphine's recent column crilic11lng the Coastal Commission ruUng on Blue Lagoon: Blue Lagoon was built 17 years ago on beach sand and riaht to the h.igh Ude line with perm its that were proper at that lime, but without any cons1dera- Uon for the publlc. How any architect and coo 'ractor could buJld on such a foundation, beach sand, and right to the blgb Ude llne with the constant movement of the waves a1aln11t the bulld1n1 la hard to understand. Such a loca- tion waa inviting trouble. By building rtght to the high ~Ide line. the public was Cteprlved ot Its exiaUng rlpl to walk on the beach. The 1m11l path left can be used only durtn1 low Ude and even then the walk before the ualY 1e.a wall la scary. U boulden are put tn1.thJ1 amaU ~•th wW completely m11ppear. llMK1LO TIR public cet 1.e- ce11 ~the ltnlclure, lt wt.II be a r replacement of lM natural beach walk . but at least a means t.o proceed lo the other beaC'h Signs. to wtuch Murphlne ob- jeC'ts. to invite the public to do so. wtll just replaC'e the ugly signs prohibiting the use of the "private property" -actually no t allowed <tny mo re on be a C'hes and s tructures on beaches after Proposition 20. It is bard to understand turn- ing the events around. ignoring the rights or the pubUc. speak.mg of blackmail and, above all. aC'· <:'Using the Coastal Commission. which only follows existing rules. Reme mber . •l was Blue Lagoon. as the worst example or how to abuse the public's right and destroy forever the natural bcaC'h U.'ie, which gave the most potent argument m the cam· pa1gn in favor of Propos1t1on 20 It 1s the locaUon chosen by the 1wner whi ch invited trouble. and It seems the consequences have to betaken . BETTY II ECKEL f 'o•ter Paread1tf1 To th<' F.ditor Gov. Brown has JUSt vetoed another bill! AB 385 on foster care training. In this International Year of the Child, when community groups are working overtime lo do their part to improve the quality of life for all children. he has killed a bill that could have Insured better care ro r the thousandsofrostercl\lldren living in thiastate. In this technological society we mandate that morticians. beauticians and mechanics have certifiable skills to practice their professions ... 1,600 hours just to become a beaul.Y operator. What a aast commen- tary on our priorities that we value the skills of those who would dress dead bodies. curl wi&• and install smog devices above t hose who care for abu1ed. molested and troubled children. In a society· when Hollywood ente rtain er& fall over Quotes "Murder ta murder, no matter what the motives or end.I." -hfe JIM Paal 0 at Dublin, rre .• commentlnt on vlolen~ 11 1 apon for chan1e ln Ireland. tht.>m'>('IV('' to • ru ... adt· fo r I.cw., pro t t>C'llO~ anima l ~. who ha:. C'Ome forward to spc:•ak for the unique net'ds of foster children? In an era when lhe completion or million dollar dams are impeded to prolect a few sna il darters. little I! anything 1s being done. leglslaUvely. lo l'lrotect and in· s ure the futures of fos ter children THEaE ARE those who say that being a biological parent prepares one for fos ter parent· mg Well let me tell you that nothing an my pa renting ex- pe rience could prepare me for thl' traumas of a three-day old baby born addicted to heroin, or a s ax -year old pre dehnquenl who steals an engagement nng and sells it, or a nine year old ~e xually prt'l'Oc1ous girl who tried to seduce every m ale on the block. or a 12-yl'ar old hard cor e mind th a t s te als a neighbor's gun and shoots the family dog, or a ts.year old that peddles more drug:. than the local Rx. To say that bccau~c you were a regular pare n t you will automatically know what to do 1s tantamount to !>ay in g that because a chicken lays an egg it must logically follow that it could qualify for gourmet o melet school is too abtiurd Then the re a re those who would say that love conquers all It certainly sounds nice a nd looks cute on posters. but it doesn't teach roste r parvnts. though well Intentioned. what to do or more importantly what not to do. fi'oster parent$ need trairung. Special training to meet and un- derstand the special und often Lra&UD.aUc needs of their Jost.er children. tr the governor does n 'l c;are for. and the Legisl11lure won't fl&ht for, the unique needs or a very special group of children in this state. who wlll? MR.&MRS. ROB.ERT STANLEY • Lr1tr r1 /rom readf'rs are wetcom1r Thr nf1hl lo rondense lellt'1'a to /It 'f>Qef or cl1mmate libel " ruerwd. Lttter1 of 300 wor<U or ~., will be glvn rmltr.,.CI AU lffi.r• mutt fn. cludfo nvnoturt ond m.oilrng oddrrn bllt namt• moy t>t wUMttd on rt'- qwrlf If 11Afl1c1nt rco•on l.t apparent. («''11 will not tw pubhaht-tf \ .. M:>AE OPINION DAK..Y PILOT BobG Are Sexy T-shirt Critics Ne11rotic and Uptight? "I wear lwo of tM T -ahi.U fOU Wl'Ote about," lbe ~om en aid Yea" "l'm ~ yean old," •h aald "l 'm married I havo two ebltdrcn And I don't IU anythloa wrona with wearln~ thr T-ahiru. · What d o your T -stw1Ji U)'! "One aaya, 'My B o d y 8elonic1 lo Me. But I Shore "' The othtr says, ·tr l Srud You H11d .t Good .. . ' Bod)', Would You Hold ll Atalnat Me"" And Vl>'hat doa >OUr husband say wb.rn you wear lhHe T 1hlrt.1 out on lh«.1 alrtt!t ! "My hu1band docian 'l HY anythln1 Thl' 'I huu •~ juat 1n 1ood fun. I'm not adv rtbloi for ~omt"Cme to l'om~ up to m11 and propo:sioon nio '· Dul whut 1f the) did" "The) would bt• fu<1lh1h " Thul, 1f }'OU h11vt' nol alrudy au sed, is one of lhl' rcwpOnsc:~ to the column thut oppea.red ht-rt• f't'CentJy bout T 1hirt.1 with obscene worc.h or 11exual re: ft·r~net~ m1 Uw t runt Jn the l·olumn I r t!UtJily 11d -~, I I milled lhal l didn't undenLIOd the phenomenon And I quoted Or. Roy R. Grin.ker Jr .. an eml· nent psychoanaly1l a1 1aytna that people wbo wear · auch 'f · 11hlrt1 may have certain ... problema HI NCE THE column ap· peared, doien or people who w Mr the dirty or 11ugcestive T· hlrta have written or called t.o defend their attire, to try to ex- ploln t.o me why they do it -or. In !fOme cues, to commiserate with me and say that they, too. are u UWe pu.zzled by lbe whole thing. "My root.he( 1s 47 years old," 11a1d a 22-year old man. "Sh.e wears a T shirt with a picture of " brea11t on the front " A breru.t? "'Yes. a pac-ture of a breast She hkei. ll and thinks tt's runny I m a hUle t"oncerned about her wt.•aring 1t, but I don't know whul to tlo " Why don't you tell your father to usk her to stop wearing 1t? "'I would. but my father wears ,, T sturt that says, 'I choked Linda Lovelace' on the front " MMt of the people who called or wrote me <:ou ld not un· 1fr rs land why <•nyone would think twice about wearing T shirt:-with ohsccnittes or sexual Hlflll('Odoes on them Typical or I ht• J>l'ilplc I talked to was a w '' m an who s t.• I lj ,. ca r o Id du u~htt>r wear:-. <lo :-.chool J a T :-.h1rl thJt Sil)'> • I'm So Happy I Could .Just <ob:-.<'l'IHly J • • TllE :UOTllt:R ~ate!. "'It's OK \\1th (Tit' I U!>l' the.It \\Ord. too It mak1·-. \OU frt•I fn•t• lo talk that .1 v. a~ it·~ dumb Hob. to gel uµ :-.et ov<'r wordl\ Why s hould words :-.hak1· you up"''' And then ..,ht• \\l'lll rm lo kll mt• that w<.1r v.:.i~. tlw rt•al 11liM'l"n1ty. that no om· ~hould be tmlhl'red by a T i1l11rt with a synonym for cxcrc ment or love·makln1 on lt when there are people out tbere ll1Wna one another, et.e. tbal the words are out there, and it's Q.ult.e another t.o have your plumber walk Into your house weattna that T·•hlrt. I feel very out of fasb.lon to say that I find this diataatdUI. but that's a fact. The words, after all, have been around for years. Only recently have people decided that It's OK to display lbem on the front of a shirt. And some are truly lrtt)lteni.DC. like the l6·year·old airl who wears a T-shirt that says, ''KiU me, Kill Me, Cuz That Would Thrlll Me." Well ... I don't know. Maybe lt't Just me, but there's aomet.hirlf • little dlsconcert.1.n1 about beln1 confronted wlth aome of these phrases when you 're out doing your dally routine. I HAVE saved m y favorite piece of correspondence for last. It is from a young woman who wrote: Take the man who wears the T·•hirt saying, "Don't Orin.le the Water -Fish (obscenity> In It " And I have another theory. ll's about the personal makeup of people who wear the'e shirts. They say they wear them because the shirts are clever and funny. but there's a dif· ferent way to look at 1t. Namely, that it's a lot easier lo wear a T· shirt than t.o have a personality •'I am a normal 19-year-old bisexual woman with no inh.lbi· lions or hostllltiea like your shrink friend thinks. 1 prefer older married women as lovers, but turn on with guys, also. My breasts are my best feature and the T·ahirt.s I wear call attention to them, and have started con- versations which often lead to deeply fulfilling relationships." Or the suburban plumber who shows up for house calls wearing a T -shirt that says, "Your <ob- scenity) -My Bread and But t.er ... THOSE ARE all real ex- amples, from the people I talked to. And I suppose that I'm hope- lessly behind the times when I confess that. yes. I realize that those phral>es cx11>t, and, yei.. I realize that thl'y are an common usage, and. yt:s. they have passed my own hp-; but th<.tl somehow it's om• thing to know Oh, well. Some or the people I spoke with gave interesting reasons, like the woman who wears a T-shirt that says, "Bet ter Small Than None at All " because she wears the same bra size that she dad when she wa~ 1.3, and she figures lhat she'll s ay it before someone else does The woman lben turns to the s ubject or Mr. Greene : "I don't want to insult you - but are you a typical, neurotic, uptight, middle-class male un· s ure of your own sexuality? .. J bet you went to a Catholic school " • TRS-80 ·Microcomputer Your Servant! Your Teacher! Prepares You for Tomorrow! Put It to Wori< Immediately with TRS-80's Wide Selection of Ready-to-Run Programs level I BASIC Course Level I 4K TRS·80 Model 1· Syslem as Shown Wds S599 in 1979 Catalog 1295 Le<w 1 how 10 proqram your TAS·SO MQdel I m1crocompu1er Teacnes Level t BASIC Includes 4 casseue tapes M-2003 4995 - ·Levei refers 10 ver&l()(l of BASIC language Level I 1s a beginners language. wtule Levet 11 1s very advanced Level and memory can be exoandeO All sys1ems in· auaa manu~a~ame cac;se11e II s only 37 ~.x23 • • bul II hOlds a TAS·BO cassette recorder CAT Expansion 1n1erface. Quick Prinler and single or dual disk drives 26-1304 The TRS·80 m1crocompu1er can Ir~ you from 1ou1ine las~~ that was1e many va1uao1e nours W11h •IS wide ranqe ol P']rsonal educa· ttonal and en1erta1ninQ proqramr, lhe TRS·BO will lake you 1n10 lhe world ot tomorrow tor less lhan a <;el l')f encyr1oped1as V1s1t your neartly Raa10 Shack Computer Center or any Radio Shack store tor complete detail'> .ind .1 free copy 01 our TRS 80 cataloQ 1The New TRS-SO Model II I Designed for Business! ~~~1:"5 s345Q We ve ad<Jed a 019ger. more power tul compu1e1 10 lhe TRS·BO 1am1ly II s TAS·BO MOdel II - a complele· ty new microcompuler for business apphca1t0ns Storage capacity from . -m1lhon bytes 10 2-milhon bytes Versatile Radio Shack Telephone Accessories Telephone Amplifier System OU6FONE • by Radio Shack Low-Priced Telephone Answerer OU6FONE. TA0-10 by Redlo Shack 2995 5995 Use 11 at home or al work for "'hands free" conve· mence. family or confer· ence calls. une powered. 43-276 Portable Hand Directory By Radio Sheck . ..,..~ Answers callers with your pre-recorded 15 second message and records up to 17 calls for tater playback at your convenience tniout switch for normal telephone use Battenes exlra. 43-2~ ·oo . ~ ..... -~--r. -. --.: 695 ~;,::" Book" Aulo-Oirectory r&pldly Memory Olaler Stores 32 Numbers 006FOHE-32 l>y Alldlo SNck ' .~ locates any of 390 names and numbers In forwafd °' \am•••_. reverse. Ba"eries eJrtra 43-112 RADIO SHACK HAS 01/flt 7000 $10fltES ANO OEALDIS IN THE USA AND CANADAI FOUNTALN 1v~LIY '4UNTINGTON HACH MISSION v1uo M0tt ••em• tmt "'' .. -• .,,., ........... -, . ... ....... .,..., ..... IMI,..... A.._ I 1Vlollb41 It J'I,' ~ LAGUNA HACH NIWPO•T llACH AedlO Shiel --~ ... -.,.. •. °"" ~· 0.11.,. --... DllL MA•· ,._a.....,, ....,. _ ...,., --~ w _,, SAN CLP,INTI LAGUNA NIGUIL looei tor th11 SA Ale ,.. ... II ..,. -er-"-" Joiiii9: ..., In ¥0U' ar7gL..o ~TA~ ~ • • ... ....... -= .... IA DM110H °' TAHO"I CORPORATION PRICES MAY VAAY AT INOIVIOUAL STORES ' ... I • ... DM.VPtLOT QUEENIE Got a prolkm? Then wnte to Pal Dunn. Pal wall cut red tape, gettmg the onawen ond. action""" need to iolue rMqUUies in goveniment and btaineu. Moil your questWM to Pal Dunn, At YOMr Sennce, Orange Coast DaUy PaJ.ot. P.O. Bo:r 1560, Ccmo Mesa, CA 92626. As many letlen cu poutble will be answered. but phona1 mqwriei or lelteTI not including the reader'• full name, oddreas and bu&ineu hourJ' phone numbercannol beconaadered. Thaacolumnappearsdai· ly e:rcept Sundays A 11to Adrlr~ GI rne IN Error DEAR PAT: The Sept. 20 A YS column had an answer provided by the public information officer at Department of Motor Vehicles headquarters m Sacramento which slajed that use tax did not have to be paid on a car that would not be registered in this state and was to be shipped immediately by the driver to Hawaii. This is incorrect.. a,ccording to California sales and use lax regulations OMV also said aJI that was required was a one -trip permit (from dealer to dock) from the DMV. After speaking to you. I contacted the public information officer for the OMV and explajned how the sales and use tax law applied to the stated transaction I've enclosed a copy of the law and hope you can correct this in· formation. W.D.F .. Santa Ana Hope you sent one to the PIO officer In Sacramenlo loo! A YS Thanks W.D. Flyna, district admllllatrator for tbe state Board of EquaUutJon. Aa esplalDed lD sections 3A ud 38 of replaUoa HZI, sales altd ue tax re,.a.Uou, "Sales tax ap- plies when the property ls deUvered to tbe ,.re•uer or Ilia reprellell&athe la W. ata&e, ......,. or.-u.e dlaea.M or ..._IHed bttea· .._ of tbe puelieeer ta lo &,..... a rt tM property lo • poilll OllUtde dab ata&e, ..ct ~ or '* tbe property b actually transport.eel." Sales tax "does aot apply wben tbe property pursuant lo the contract of sale, ls reqalred to be thlpped and ls sbJpped to a point oU1.slde lhJs state by the retaJler by means or facWUes operated by tbe reta1Jer. or delivery by tbe rela.llu to a. rter, customs broker or forwarding agent, wbether ~red by tbe purchuer or not for s bJpment to sacb out-of.state polnt ... An lndlvldual or firm aot otberwt!le so engaged does not become a 'carrier' or 'forwarding agent' within the meanlng of this regulation simply by being designated by a ,arcbaser to receive and sbJp goods to a point out· side tblu ta&e." Tbe DMV, which acts as agent for the Board of Equalization ID collecting me tax on vellJcles, apologbes for the error. Appareatly there was some eonfusioa regarding the term "canter," wbJcJa was ID&erpre&ed as being tbe pattbaser wbo ia&eaded to transport Ute car blmaelf. Tbe Costa Men OMV alto &old tbe car purchaser tbat sales tax woaJd aot apply lD bla cue, ao Sacramento Is not aJoae ID ita eoa· fusion oa tbe sales and He tas Jaw. • Non-ritize11• Can Get Sta•p• DEAR PAT. Does a person have to be a citizen to qualJ(y for Cood stamps, and bow much property can you have and still qualify? K. E., Santa Ana Heights II you aren't a U.S. clllRll, YCMI mjp& have lo sbow proof of statu from tbe llDmtinU. ucl Natarallulloa Semce. However, net1 If some members of YoV boaebold don't meet dlla re- •airemen&, u.o.e wbo do may qaallf1 fOI' food stampa. All houelllolcls may have ltP &o Sl,75t wortla of l"elOal'Cft • .bd, U at least OM penoa b M 1ears of age or older, boaselilolda wt~ two or more per .... m1y lane ap &o *3,•. Ullder tbe food stamp rales eome ftMVeet are ~Md UMI ••e are Mt. Koaey la d1eekta1 or uytqa ace.ate Is tou&ed, bat you llome Uld W , fln& car ud penollal beloqtap are DOt. Alld, except la certai. cues, all memben of '"' -..•ebold betwen Ute aps ti 18 Uld M m..t re1l1ter for work. If after leokla1 •'.J••r MmeMld laeome ud ••btradiq wU ez. pealft, &lie weUare worker ftada ,.. q•allfy, j"'U let feocl Ila•,. eadl .._... bued .,.. tlMJ dA tf ,.._ .... lelaold Hd YoV ....a, IMeme after le .. ca ... . 'fte 0.-S. C.Uty Welfue ~Is la ..... ., ....... , •Nik• ....... CeMral c.-tJ Dlllrtd Ofllee, .. w .......... Aaa. ... .,.,.. .............................. ~ ....... IM Z'Jlt. Y ...... 1UJ waa& te .... ,_.a tree USDA •• kl«, ....... te A"'1 Pw ... Ute ..... ....,_,. ~ wrtta.c to &M C...er la· ...... c..r ..... ..0, r.t11, c.a.. 11•. ~··---------- • -· Q~eea Role Still Open Moonlit• Sale No Top Contender for Prince CharleB ' Hand Sale of S11n tt\11 Fri nit~ T to 10 om at Hunttngton Center LONDON CAP) • A":.f: C'!:!ia;u:.-:!:';' ... : &Dal_, If CM wwer'• ,., roumtll!ll•lllafta-... . ....... '"-Ill lhrie-Attftl Of Lwc1sall 1 •I left IM Dlctaan IMt year, ao coatea(en bave 1m1rild tDr CM bud ot Prtnc. Cb•r•. ~a •w booll Oft Ute .,_,..,.... belt to tbe BrtUlla llltofte. "" .... ANT80NY Roldln malnUAm la tM ~1 "Chara.: Priac. Of ........ uiat tbouO tbe badallor" prtace hu bad a IOt of 1trlfrtend1 •Ince llarlt· A1U1d1 none bu been aerlOUlly conaldered u a mate. Holden, Wasbln1ton eor· r 11pondenl tor t he Sunday newspaper The Observer, said be eleaned a Jol ol bis inform•· lion from many informal chat.a with the prince. His book went on sale here today. II you Caney the job of queen, you might want to know that Holden says Charles is hot· blooded sexually a n d .. con · siderably to the right of center" politically HE AUK> HAS an occasional tendency to boast of previous a morous conquests, and when you're daling you'll be expected to caU him "Sir," even when alone with him In private. In public you will have to walk a pace or two behind him when protocol demands Still Interested? Well. Ho lden does n 't say whether Charles squeezes the toothpaste tube at the middle or the end But he does reveal that the pnnce's tenderness and con- cern have proven a s ure-fare way to the female heart. And he'll make a ra att>ful husband. "HE WILL NOT contemplate taking mistresses after he has taken a bnde," writes Holden. "Prince Charles's religious and moral convictions on the sancti· ty of marriage are firmly held." Meanwhile . Holden s ays, police bodyguards have been known to complain of long noc· turnal waits outside houses in various London suburbs when Charles has v1s1tcd girls after casual mecl.Jngs at parties or movie premieres. ............. NO BRIDE YET Prtnce Chart.a ........... OUT OF PICTURE P'1nceu Marte-Aatrtd tbe mtaake of trying to bout bis WE'RE :ti .. ,.., .. ~ ....... . '""_ ........ ,_ 1-C:•,. II ' _,..., RANITT INSURANCE 141-HM er IJJ.J4J7 ••14 ........ c .......... F ..... S IMSUIANCI o-.. MOW~ U.nAM ~ But Holden adds: "These ex· curaions are kept to a minimum, as the prince is well aware of the risks involved. Besides. 1\11 quarters at Buckingham· Palace are completely self-contained and an invitation there from the Prince of Wales is hardly likely to be refused." way tnto a lady's affecUOOI.'' ---------- Holden says. SUC H INVITATIONS so metimes h ave their drawbacks, however. "For al least one girl. an evening alone with the prince meant listening to a catalog of his conquests. Llke many other hot-blooded males, be can make His romance with Marie· Astrid is believed to have Cowi· dered over religion. Charles. oo being crowned king on the death or abdication of h is mother. Queen Elizabeth ll, becomes temporal head or the Church or England and by law wiJI have to take an oath that h e is .. a falthrul Protestant... Marie· Aatrid la a Roman Catholic. "Charles: Prince or Wales" b published by WeidenCeld and Nlcolaon Ud in Uus country and Atbeneum LO the United Stat.es. Chemical Problems In UCI Seminars Chemical problems related to the field of energy development will be the sub1ect or a senes of seminars at UC Irvine begmning Friday. Sponsored by the University's Department or Chcm1Stry. the seminars will Ix• aimed pnmanly at upper d1v1!>1on undergrc.dudte students but the public also 1s 1nv1ted Addressing the l1rst seminar seM11on <it 4 p m Fnday will be Richard Stegme1er. pr es ident or Union 01l':s Science and Tt.•chnology D1vis1on The lecture will be held in Room 104 in the Physical Sciences Building. All the subsequent seminars in the senes wall be held Fnday afternoons during the rail quarter. CORRECTION In th• Seen Advertl .. Ing lectJon or Oc- tober 10th there I• en ech•rtlaement tor 11313 Perman•• Traah c.n. T1'e copy In the heading la ln- conect. n.. conect heed&ftg ahould reed: 20 O•llon Sup•r '•r•..,.• Cen. We alncenit, regret thf• et'tO'. I Sears I Thousands have quit amokJng In 5 days wtth this guaranteed Medi· Health Method Cloo11 1n IU" llVf' DnP tlOUI ~ wolflOul ~llQ d QIOUCll l)f .. llerVOU'I .weo. Ol ~l'WllJ ~ u111o1 , (1/;'1Qle !n-Olll.g;IJ(J'I flle!'l1'W (714) 964-5204 ~ lllOOklusl SI Hi.-.•ncJQll Beacll WANTED DIAMON DS • GEMSTONES Jewels by 1osepn' •S searcnioo 1or Cl•amonds and getTl!IOflfl"I from private 1nd.v1dual1> arid e"a1es Care1 u1 eltal'nlndt1on and !"vlllulll•On by our t-• p+.:rl'I Highest pncw.i paid Celli !>4(}.9066 10 q da••v Saturday •0·6 Sun· Cldy CI05e<J ~•or Belly Gr act· or Frank VancterWalt iewels by ioseph Soutn Colt51 Plaza • 3333 Bri!>IOI Cu!>ra M P'>d • 'l4~'A>6€ Trucklo•d• •nd truckloads •r• errlvl"iJ at Carpet Town. bringing you a apect.I purch• .. on this !usurious $ 99 · SQ.YD. LIMITED TIME ONLY! SAVI! 30% TO 3N ON THESE OTHER SELECTED CARPETS! MYLOllta-LO _,LTI·TOMS •-&.0 100~ nylon In 1 M1btte carved 111ture 1f11ct, Witt\ 1 bf1ght llllltre. Lots of value for 1 low, low CUT & LOOP STYUI Contl!HIOU9 Alamlnt Ny· Ion In 1!9ht .tvld mufti· colon. Heet·Mt reme ere PfOllCtld bf Scotchfard lftd entl-11.t, with 1 S.. pttce. Reg. "·" TM ...... In oerpee tech- nolofY pfUI "" ,...., NltUfal IOOll lft 15 eollct ootorL Antl·ltlt lftd Mtl-'°" proleolef. R ... t13." s5!@ ::.-~unntr. Reg."·" suss so '1'0 llYLOll CUT a LOOP Lwtre and IUIUl'J In ...... ... ..,. ....... eidl. long WNr. ChooM from t mulll-oolon. Rto. ··~· sgw A UIOftJ ~ In I Wide 11111111111• ....... -..r . multl•tone cotoft.~ gMd and ltatlc l'Nfectecl. Aeg.111.• S11!.Q ,.OOIMQ AllO ~SllOHAL INSTALLATION AYAILAlll..E WESTMINSTER 11331 BEACH BLVD. SANTAANA 2911 80. BRISTOL t ""· North of lo. eo..e ........... ,."°"' Wfflidaya lite t •let. Ill I•''"'· 11•1 K..._. C..... at lllPlddeft Mott. -Ptf. ttl I • T....,, Wed., 'Tllwa. Ill t ••••lun.11-1 ... .,. ................ .,. --. -· ........ ,.t··-- SM 1217 wt,..OA .. ftU • • .. , ttU o • """°"•" \ • ,,_ ••• , ... , .. "' ~ M()ooll; Ul•\. ... Otl ltt<"I • Jll.tOtlCIAV'C>"''lllUI AC(.11 ........... ~•"'411111C-~.-....... I . ------------------ --=- Sportcoats in medium 1lnd lightweight fabrics of wool, wool blends . . . in our .authentic naiuralsboulder sty le. Imprint Your Christmas Cards This Year! S!'lf'1·t \llllr r.1\'nnl1· ""''J!n frnm our v.1rl1· c·olorful coflpr·t1nn nf ll.1llm,1rk Chrt'>fm." <·ard' \\, ll1rnfH '' '"t<hrar<lv.1fh\ulfr name• """C '""' d1011·" of n·d ):'n•1•n or 1?olc1 Irr 1•nnl!11\! µPr lio'I of 25 OHE LIME FREE! PAPER UNLIMITED Westcliff Plaza 1112 Irvine Ave .. 548-7921 ROYAL COACHMAN SheYelYa/ Glesandra Slut 6-14 Carnelian or Topaz .. 45.00 OPEN THURSDAY EVENINGS Authent1r. pure gold nuggets· somethini:? ver y old and very real. BcnkA~d • VllO • Maitn Olarge CHARLES H. BARR ....... ~ ,..,,,,_ ..... , 17'111.lrv\N PRE-HOLIDAY SAVINGS In-Stock Savings BLACX SOOL TUXEOOS /OOFF no alterations not all sizes available D1....-S'ha.,-'S....AIMl.IK. w-....,...'46oltt1 ,.. .. ,_...147-6141 I \ NATION I CALIFORNIA FBI Liberalizes Sexual Principles WASHINGTON (AP> -P'Bl Otrec· w • Jllia.m H. Wtbltu' .. UblrallQI tlM bureau'• IGG& tra41Uon °' hara6 rstabment for ....... wM ..... tn aesual NlatJonablP9 outaki• al mar· rl••·· ne cbanae mean• \hat an as nt Involved lo a premarital or ex tr•marltal r~latloo•hJp ootionter facee automatic dlsmlual r~( bureau IN TWO OTKE& areu ot Pfr50n•I conduct holn09exuality and man Juana use Webster bas ~nt thu old rulet ever so sUahtly 11s he dtv('lop!\ &be bureJau's rirst clear cut written p0llcl• oo aucb mallers Tboup he cooUnuea to ban prac Uclng h omosuuau from bure.u Jobi, Webster hu asked for the latest aclentilic data on homosexu.allt,y and says he's willing to ronsider re)axio1 the rule aome years hence As for drug use, Webater uys he won't tolerate It In the bureau. But, in one recent instance, he chose not to fire an aaent who smoked man juana while ln ·college several years before joining the bureau. instead, the agent was fined and placed on probation. SUCH CllANGt:8 MA\' Htm trlvial to burea u out•fdere H · cu.tomed to the reJaUvely eu1s«n1 poUdea ot muy orlvate tmpk>)'el'I But for the Al, Wtblter'• approacb represent.I 1 remarkable departure trom dtt.ades ol conae.rv1U1m. i.1re 1UU revllln1 a very ell n1iv~ overhaaul of our dtaclpllne prO<'edun11 to build ln mor due pro- c eu and put more cmphaala on honl'aty and inwicrlty rather than on p rtvatf' llfHlYll'!I," Webster Sa.Id 1n itn 1ntervtl'w Wc•bftt.-r u 1d he ordered th~ pohcy overhaul afkr noUcina a lopsided proporlion of ..lgenta w"re being reprimanded for 1.11leged personal misconduct / THE MIDDLE LEVEL offlcaats who handle most minor diacipunary matters were showing "what l thought waa an excess1 ve preoccupa- tion with people's hves." he said "l thought we ought to keep our eyel> on the .integrity or the men and women m the bureau." While the policy overhuul 1s under way. Webster said the bureau is treating ugent.s accused of personal mlaconduct on a Cate·bY·t&H bula. ''Wt lry to IPp,lY COMltt.enl..Dl'tD• cl plea," ht eald. · 'Conduct that 11 co. Ina to make an •aent ineffective bu to be d.lacouraaed. Tbat doeari't mean 1omebody 11 1otn1 to aet fired .,.c1W1e he bu en11aed in private conduct that la frowned on In the community But If hla effecUveoeaa has been impaired, we are likely go- m& to have to put aomebody else in hla place." THE TEST IN every situation, he 11aid, ts whether an agent's private hrestyle bru. bad a detrlmental effect on his work Webster tS treading cautiously on the h·omosexuaJity issue, partly because he sees some merit to the argument that even those who have publicly acknowledged tbel r homosexuality may still be vulnera· ble to blackmail, and partly because of the deeply rooted oppoalUon to homC>lftUal offlcen t.hrouabout the law enforcement prolt11ion. Neverthele11, Webater aald, "I have at leut placed the empbaals on conduct rather than preference. In the meanUme. I've been qWetly try. lng to find out what we know, wt;iat anybody knows, about tb.11 problem. ''WIBLE I THIN& the burden Is maybe on someone else to prove that we should change, I t.b1nk we should be interested in knowing whether our views oo th.la subject have support or a scientific nature." In the area of drug use, Webster tells agents: "We continue to view the use ol marijuana and other druga as something not tolerated in the bureau." But limited use of marijuana prior to joining the bureau no longer rules out an FBI career . ( __ \_H_T_t_H_H_, ,_, t_: ___,) SA Tl R IZ ES DAILY PILOT ln ttt. In Debt? The new Bankruptcy Act can give you a fresh start. 1 ) The new Id ts more liberal than ...,.,, Y04J CM eilrri~ meet debtt and kMP molt of your property, 2} BanknJptcy IS your ttght. It Is no dltgr11e1. OUR OFFICE Will ANSWER VOUR QUESTIONS .A80UT BANKRUPlCY WITHOUl CHARGE Our Fe•' Ale ReoM>noble 1300 DOVE ST sum 100 ALAN LURYA ATTOaNEY AT LAW (71') 955-3063 . HEWPO-T BEACH. CAUF 97660 MERCURY SAVINGS u.11d loo 11 IUl&-OCiat ion OPEN MO~. FHJ. 9 A .M . 6 P.M . SATlJHDAY 10 A .M . ·I P .M . Ex~ Huntington S.ach. CA 9~7 Southern C.llloml• R~lonal OlflcH ------ 89(16 Valley View SI . Bu«I• ParX. CA 90&20 t&M 1'rnelll Rd .. Camal111o, CA 93010 20115 S Avalon 81¥0 • Cat.on CA 901~ 23021 l.Me Cen1e1 Dt . (l.aQ ~Ol'llSI), El Toio, CA 92830 IOOt E. lmpetlal Hwy Ju H1bfa. CA 90631 Gl 4t40 Lono Beach BIYO . Long Beach, CA 90807 229311 Hlwttiorne BIYd . Tonance. CA 90505 • 1095 lf\lfna Blvd . Tuetln, CA 92e80 236 N C1tru1 Ave . WHI CO'flna, CA 91793 "Mercury Room" •va11aote on• reservt#d ou11 IOU•I "°'a 11tc l(N00 Punch ABBOTrS FABRICS • Corona del Mar D ylan Concert 'Lucky' Draw • SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The promoter who a rranged for a series of concerts by singer Bob Dylan here next month says, "We lucked out." Promoter Bill Graham said that Dylan, who recently released an album, "Slow Train Com- ing," will be backed by an I I p1ect• band durin~ his con<'erts Nov I 8 al the WarF 1cld Thl'alcr Tht' -.hows al th<: W.1rf1cld. .., 2.200-M•at formn v<1udt•v1 lh: · tJ:x-.bu1U, IO-W22, Wtl~ tlJc ---l.,.__.,__~rf"!"1r""":'sl by such a big name st~r in the city's downtown <irca in at least two decadl's It will kick off a rare na t1onal tour by Dyl<1 n , who doesn't make frequent personal appearances Graham said, "Just as we were made aware of the availability of the facility, we knew Dylan was m rehearsals. We made a suggestion itnd he accepted " Courts-Martial Mee t D e lay SANDIEGO<AP)-TheManneCorpsishaving a tough time deciding whether three drill instructors accused of assaultmg ll6 recruits should be tried together or individually. A decision has been delayed, reportedly until early November. After a lengthy pretrial hearing, general courts- martial trials were ordered for Gunnery Sgt. Charles Bryant, St.arf Sgt. Rockie Cross and Sgt. Joseph Lopez. Another 0 1, Sgt. Gilbert Speck, was ordered to stand a lesser special court-martial on a charge of f allure t.o report assaults. The problem In t.rying the three al the Marine Corps Recruit Depot together reportedly lies in malt· ina sure they all assaulted all the men in their pla· toon. Several recruits leaUfied that they were hi~ or shoved by only one or the sergeants. Come to "The Gallery" for an out· •tanding Hlectlon of candla in aD •~•. •hapa and decontor color• ... Juet in time for your fall entertaining. .. . P-0 1 1 1 M,-0 " "'lo,,."'<;""""" 1• 1 A Co1e ol SE ... SL, FIXTURES • SALE 4ND Sflt ~A H I.•' r~~ LOii e~ W •~I" 11\1 PATTERNS "VOGUE" "BUTTERICK" -~''McCAttS'' "SIMPLICITY" HUGE STOCK. ALL SIZES, ALL HEW A ND CURRENT OUR ENTIRE STOCK 3 FOR1 PAY FOR OME. ~ET TWO MORE OF AL OR LESSER VALUE FREE SELECTED COTTON & COTTON BLEND PRINTS Regulcrto '3.29 yd LARGE SELECTION COMSO DRAPERY TR IMS -¥3 TO '72 OFF POLYESTER KNITS ACRYLIC KNITS RecJUlar to '6.50 yd 5198 vo. 2610 East Coast Highway AIOUT 75 Y ilDS SOUTM-IAST OF THI IHTllSICTIOH OF M•cAITHUI AHD PACIFIC COAST Hl6HWAY-M.AMD SIDI OF STlllT -LOOI FOi THI SAU sa&MS ~-I OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 5:30 CLOSED SUHDA Y ALL ~IP~RS--- 4 VJ ORIGINAL PRICE Klopman-Wamsutto Olarter-Crown Cottons-Cotton Blends Polyester-Acrylic· Prints ReCJUlar tq '3.98 yd Hurry~ Fverything Must Go! ABBOlTS FABRICS 2610 EAST OOASI HIGHWAY CORONA· DEL MAR 5 ----· ..... ~ ... • NATION Mortgage Crunch Seen Worst in 24 States WAStllNOTON tAP) llomeownen will be Yirtuall.J abut out of mc:M'tt.q fu.nda ln nearly h.U the stat.ea be1bm.lnt ln January, sav· io.aa bank otfttlal1 predlet Twenty.four 1t ate1 wtll bt bit barde1t becau1e lbty have la...-1 Umltlnt mon,1,. ratet to about 12 percent or lell. makln1 It unpronta. ble for banks UMr. to lend mon.aie money becaWNt tMy mu.t pa.y even h11her lntere.t ratu to borrvw THOMA& P.\&LIAMENT, an economllt at t.be U.S. lAasue ol Sav in11 Auochatlona. paopolnted Arkanauaa. Wa hulfton, Oeorita, 11 llno1s, lowa, Kansas. Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey. New York and Texas as very mort1a1e·dry ··come the first part or nut year." And m those states without usury ceilings. b e said Wednesday . homebuyers may race mort1a1es carryin1 Interest rates of 12.S per cent or higher Steep rates will be particularly evi- dent in Cabromia and Florida, he said PARLIAMENT'S predictions were echoed by officials of the National A ssociation of Mutual Savings Banks. Down payments of 5 percent and 10 percent will become virtually ex· tinct, Parliament said. "Twenty percent down payments will have to become the rule," he added. "Moreover . banks won't let families assume mortgages if their carrying costs stretch excessively beyond 25 percent of their income." he said THE DRAMATIC mortgage crunch 1s the result of tight-money policies adopted last weekend by the Federal Reserve Board in an effort to beat back soanng inflation and limit ex· cessive credit. The board increased the discount rate it charges member banks from 11 percent to 12 p ercent and dramatically altered the way it con- trols the availability of money and cr edit * * * 2 California S&L Groups Up Men7 banllla lmmedlately ln· creaHd the brtaNll they charc• belt cU1lomer1 from 18.5 pereeDL lo H.5 percent. ud many eeonomJltl Pf•· diet that rate will NHb l5 JMtt'ceftt shortly TH&UT INSTITUTIONS that can tncrHH tbelr mort•••• ratea to hep up wttb the hllh•r coal ol money "may weather the ~mln1 months,•· ParUamentaald. He and other eooooml1t1 in· tervlewed Wedne1day beUtve the wont mortaa1e crunch will be felt ln February and March. But already, they note, banU have become atin&Y lo m aklng loans. ··Many atatea wlll have to do somel.hing quickly about their uaury ceiUop," 11ld William Wallis, presi· dent of the First Federal Savings and Loan Associatlon of Marttn County, Fla .. near Palm Beach HOWEVER, STATE legislatures do not convene until next year, Parliament said. "It will be four months to six months, at the earliest. before usury ceilings could be raised,·' he added. Congress 1s cons1derio ~ legislation giving the f ederal ~over nment powers lo override state usury limits. However. that bill is piirt of a larger package of bank reforms. and its fate remains uncertain Parliament, who monitors the sav ings industry closely, was unwillmg to predict when the mortgage crunch would loosen up. "IT'S POSSIBLE THAT som e banks could go out of business because of the crunch." he said "Conditions are ripe " He said the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, which offers thnft m stilutions loans to weather such credit crunches, will be crucial to the survival of many of them States with usury limits that are absolutely fixed are : Arizona, 12 percent, Arkansas. 10 percent; Connecticut, 12 percent. Hawaii. 12 percent. Kansas, 11 per- cent; Louisiana, 12 percent; Mis- sissippi. 12 percent; Nebraska. 12.5 percent; New Jersey, 10 5 percent, New Mexico. 10 percent: North Dakota. 12 percent; Oregon. 12 per· cent ; South Dakota. 12 percent : Washington. 12 percent: Wisconsin, 12 percent. The District of Columbia also has a fixed rate but It is 15 per- cent and so presents no problem at this time. ~ Prime to 12l/2o/o STATES WITH noatlng usury cell- ines are: LOS ANGELES <AP> Two large California savings and loan associa- • lions are raising their prime home mortgage rates to a record 12~ per- cent from 12 percent, making it more expensive than ever to buy a home. The announcements by Home Sav· ings & Loan Assn .. the largest S&L in ____ tpe United States, and Gibraltar Sav- ings & Loan Assn .. ranlcea "'NO. 7, came after the Federal Reserve Board took steps to tighten credit as part of a program to slow inflation and bolster the dollar. American Home Savings is report· ed to have gone to 12:Y. percent. Gibraltar said its lowest mortgage rate of 12'1:1 percent would apply on 80 percent loans for single-family homes up to $150.000 Dfl~tt) Georgia, lllfnois. Iowa, MiMesota, Missouri. New York. Pennsylvania. Texas. and Vermont. These all are currently at 12 percent or lesa. Floating usury ceilings can be ad- justed to the rise in other Interest rates but the process is slow ~Y-Namoo Prexy CAMBRIDGE. Mass . I AP> -Paul E . Gra·y, c h ancellor o r Ma ss achuse tts I n s titute o f T echnology since 1971. has been named president of the school where he has worked since he enrolled as a freshman 29 years ago Gray, who becomes the 14th president of the school. will succeed Jerome B Wiesner when he retires next July GOURMET MARKET STEAK and LOBSTER Spencer Steaks by the piece -8· 10 lb. avg. cut & wrapped free 3.99 lb. First of the Season fresh cooked locaJ lobsters 2·3 lb. avg. DAILY FRESH PRODUCE Local Large She CantatouPes .......................... 19C lb. Sweet & Juicy Honeydew & Casaba Melons . . . . . . . . . . . . lOc lb. No. t U.S. Russet Baldng Potatoes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15c lb. Xtra Fancy Beel Rome Baking Apples ............ 3 Iba. for 1.00 tst of the Season Large Penlmmons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39c u . COMPLETE LIQUOR AND WINE CELLAR lmport.ed Bombay Gin mt •P> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6. 79 Ballatlile Seokb <?St •ll> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . ..... 7 .19 CllerYO Jlilpedal Gold Teqalla (Tit mll> ....................... 5.n Delaney'• .,.._vate Label Wine Via llOR or ChabU1 mo mll> .....•..••..••................ 99( ea. DELANEY'S Thurldlly. October ' 1. 'm , DAILY l"tLOT A I J N . P.------•CLIP COUPON·------., lXOR I • Sp1ra1 sllceo tor easy HNlng I I • Honey 'n Spice Glaze •Cooked 30 hour$ I t( · · r • Nationwl<Se Shipping aervfce 'Love NY' 11 ff~y· · · ·Fu~ ~~;~~,~~~:::;~op 11 WI' •Sandwiches to go Ad Eyed ~ . B ~d HU°'>W' s2 _ A,li=·Nl'!;.;. ~::~ ~.) Qoun111d JUmP. .. iJrn rlo11 ·1 (,n·vr. tor, ~ to move back to ~ew O 0 York state and one state U C aenator says the state IMfl.Ano.t ,. .. rra CJ should use the former L We .,.WI~,... ~ · · · -~ Jet1_., .• c ... ur4 president in Its "I Love -' 5 0 c Rare taf'ltali11ng erend z .., .,,...._ ::r;1.J. or k • • c o m U °" ,.. LL MUST AID 1· S hef'lcff • OH OUI HOHIY IAUD HAM SAUCE Slate Sen Fred I 0tter~u11t11w-.1,.. I Terming it a "shock· Eckert said that, as a w1111 TN•c-11 o.P. ing and ugly pie· joke, be wrote to Gov I n oo L COAST HWY~ e-.. w.rf'MOMI 6JJ.tooo I lure," Gov. Pierre S. Hugh Carey suggesllng I 24601 •.•YMOHD WAY., a TOIO •~a TOIO. ""°"' n1.J1u I du Pont of Delaware Nixon. who Is trying to I 'o" IUCH I LVD ... GAIN&.D. HU"""6TOH ... eH. ""°"' 14Ml75 has released a pre-buy a home .In Manhat I Alc..o Anaheim Orange Rancho M1raoe La Hat><a. San Diego Nortn HollvwOO<J I liminary report tan. l?e used m the com .L.------•CLIP COUPOM•------..1 showing widespread mercials cri m e and mi s · management in the s~ate prison syste m. N I XON . WHO r e-.. --------------------------signed the presidency at the height o f the Watergate scandal, has 5 From Area been living an San Clemente. • "I think Richard Nix On Dean List on would ~ perfect," . the Roch es t Cf are a Residents from . f?ur Republican said ·'I re Orange Coast c1t1es m ember a time when were among the 299 un· everyone was moving dergraduate stu~en.ts f rom New York t o named to the dean s hst California." at Caly Poly San Luis Obispo for the summer quarter ECKE RT SAID Nixon They are Mark Drake would be a good exam or Costa M esa, J oh n pie of people returning Townsend Jr of Dana to New York. He sug Point. Teresa Gilreath gested to Carey that the and David Richie of Mas-former president might sion \'H'JO and Gary even be asked to sang M t•lzt•r of l:-'ountu1n the "I Love New York" Valle\ Jingle · Sever al attempb by Nixon to buy property an DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642·5678 New York City have been abandoned after protests from pot(!ntaal neighbors TRADITIONAL "FUROSHIKI" PRINT NYLON SQUARES From Japan Superbly elegant prlnls of tradlllonal Japanese mo1lfs on fine nylon make wonderful scarves. wall hangings or blouse fabrics 27 '11" square CRANE ON PEACH BACKGROUND CHRYSANTHEMUM ON OLIVE BACKGROUND WILDFLOWER ON DARK GREEN BACKGROUND HEAT RESISTANT COFFEE GLASS & NATURAL RATTAN HOLDER Glass and rattan gel together and add up to a neat and styll:,h collee cup· 9 OZ GLASS 3 '" .. tall .40 HOLDER From Hong Kong 3 d1a GIANT ROUND UNSCENTED CANDLES Rod, White. G1c~·11 Yrttow Orange & Butterscotch 3' DIA. 3 tall .64 8·tall 1.64 Iola Va al Wol Towa a Ce-•by lbopplag c..tn lat., Oct. 13 10 ...... 4 .... For the 4th Annual Santa Ana Police and Fire Department Vehicle Display Show. ~NGClNTlA PLUS take advantage of savings thro ughout the Center all day at the fabulous Four-Alarm Sale~ nu:t: BA.I.LOONS AND JUNIOR flRE: MARSHALL HATS FROM OUR GRAND 6 JINOL Y IELL V' OAMCO JEWELRY COUECTION FINGER C'tM8AUS COIN BAA • Fro'" Tai.,.,an From Hong l(onu Tuneful Counlfe .. embos· 1ooetu1 gold Mid gold aluminum co1ored me1ar come form • ECONOMY FESTOON BUT 1 71 unique gfltte<ing bta From Hong Kong • I ONE SIZE FITS Two 11ers ot tign1 we1ghl &el o 2 pairs PAACTICAUY embossed coins on looping ~ EVERY· l-=~~I chains will dance along ONE w1tn you g Gold aluminum 2.4 @ _________ 6_._9_1__,,u. 100% COTTON GOURMET 111"H":a.-...<. PAINT GROCERIES WRAPAROUND SKIRT From Pakistan a .. iow the ~net• !>"-HI has ~ lldc11t1onal ~ designed prints on black and rust on tan Comp1c1t• w•ll'l tunu l JI dOVl(.t o.1ntl prucwr IJIOPIW(.tCS JI. (J/ .36 pl.q t 12 .69 DARK (!) S 1 AINED WOOD -. CANDLEHOLDER .;A From Tc11wa n d', did .69 10 c;lo.HI length ONE COMFORT ABLE SIZE 6.99 C101h1ng St.>rton MOON PALACE INSTANT RAMEN NOODLE SOUP From tt.ored A tasty l m1nu1e meal' ORIGINAL. BECF CHICKt N CRAB !'> LOBSTER3 oz pkg .18 mal.<'~ '} nedrlY cups edcll NATURE'S OWN BAKING SEA SHELLS Fr<.m Jdpan ---.-- ~ wide 1.75 SCI Of 4 shells SPICY ORGANIZATION'-NATURAL RA TT AN WALL RACK From Hong Kong F-or ">O•C.C'S cosme11cs or kn1ck·knacks. CLEAR GLASS SPICE BOTTLE From Taiwan Wtlh snug l11t1ng plastic tined stopper 4 " tall .20 NEATLY NATURAL BASKETS GO FROM TABLE TO MARKET BAMBOO PLANT HOLDER BAMBOO MARKET BASKET 3 SIZES 9•;," x 14" 10 12 Vi"x18" 5·· to 5'~ .. deep From China ROUND BAMBOO TRAY 5 SIZES 121/J" to 17" dla. DECORATED SEAT WALNUT FINISH BENTWOOD BAR STOOL From Romania Handi,ome bar 11001 has molded ply seat with two tone ---11 natural atenc11ed design. TEA OR T.V. TROLLEY From Singapore BAMBOO SIEVE OR VEGETABLE BASKET 8 SIZES 3 SIZES 8" to 9'11" SQ. 5" 10 6'1•" deep 10•11" 10 17" d1a 2'1t .. 10 5" deep .59 10 1.99 1.44 10 2.88 COVERED --~'""'" BAMBOO ~-~~~ BASKETS 5 SIZES 5" to 11 Vt " dla. 2'1•" to 4" deep .79 to 2.29 NATURAL SEAGRAM AREA RUOS From lndla 2.29 to 4.49 Teak veneer top with matching ltnish nyetoh wooc:t reo• and frame. Handsome durable tightly woven area rugs go neatly n1utr1I In any decot. SOUA"A°EOA CIRCLE WOVEN DESIGN FULLY AS· SEMBLEO ORIN CARTON WITH EASY ASSEMBLY TOOL 18"' .. Cl4ltP 29'11 " Wide 29V." tall 58.99 Each style: 4'x6' 1·2.88 8'x9' 28.88 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK MON. TO FRI. 10 A.M.-1 P.M. SAT. 10 A.M.-8 P.M. IUN. 12 NOOH-1 P.M. IANKAM&NCA"D • lllAITUCHMGE AMPLI ,_.U PUKING I . .,_ IHOT IN lk•RMllH Prtld ... Devi• ACQUITTED IN CASE Cullen Devi• STAR WITNESS David Mc<;rory Bre~t Babies Saved Frum Crib Death? SACRAMENTO <AP ) Mothers who brcws t feed their c hildren may be guarding against one cause of cnb death, a researcher says Or. Stephen Arnon of the state Health Services Department s tudied 60 cases of i nfant botulism, a recently discovered disease that he and the depart· ment have labeled as one cause of the mysterious Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, also known as crib death. OUT OF 10 FATAL cases, all were primarily bottle-fed, with formuJu containing supplemen· t ary iron, Arnon said.' Of the 50 hospitalized cases, 30 were primarily breast-fed, 14 were primarily formula-fed, and the others were fed about the' same a mount each way. But hoepitalUed . infants who bad been botUe-fed became ill at a younger age than breast-fed patients , Amon said. Also, breast.·fed infants who had been elven l\lpplementary iron 1ot •lcker •l • younaer aae than other breut-fed infants. ··ova FINDINGS .u11eat that. la cues of Infant botu.llam. either breaat-feedlna confers some~ •1ain1t the pro- areulcm of dlHaae, or that formula·feedlAI m ay enhance ~ --:and -..ritJ"« the di••!f" Arooo Hid ln a tUmmM)' ~ bla report. "ID llddlUon, our data .u1ieat that 1~uey Iron lD tbe d iet m., ello enhance the ra.Ptd ouet a teVerity of d.lMaae due to lnlant botulllm. '' U IPSClllATSD THAT Im· muDhln• tnare~leata in moti.er'• mUk may protect ••8.lalt the d.lMue, ud also Hid Iron Jturturt1 betterla lllliia.. to ... tMl CHM in· fut' 7 Irr. ,,._.. •M prtMnted to an late,.........11 conf erenct on _~ ......... In r·· First Wife R . . em1n1Sces OALLA.9 <AP> Al 31, 1he l1 •Ulla atunner, with a robuat aenae of humor, a throaty. huaky h1u1h and .ireen eyet Uu1t aparkle like ti em 11.enea She Joel, coolf.1 . die la. &•rderu;, cleans house, raises two frlaky lHn-aaert and remt!mbtlr11 ANO WHAT SHE remembt;r" most iJ her marnaae to CuJlen Oav11, the an1ulah and aura ol lht' Tu~• auper ric:h and u honeymoon that "was like 11 latrytale " "We went to 31 rountne11 an six weeks," recalls Sandra Oavh,, the first of Cullen's three wives and the forgotten woman In the lurid Davis s aga "There was the Waldorf, and Europe and North Africa. .camel rides and Christian Dior s howings in Paris. a $10,000 mink." Davis is on trial on charaes of scheming to hire lhe murders of his divorce Judge and othcri; J UDGE JOE EIDSON, the j udge who wa1> to preside over divorce proceedings between Davis and his second wife, Priscilla, was not harmed. Davia contends that he is the target of a complicated con· spiracy involving his Priscilla and the state's s tar witness, David McCrory. A Houston jury earlier deadlocked 8_. in favor of convlc· lion on the murder-for-hire charges Davia was acquitted by an Amarillo jury on capital murder charges stemming from s hoot mgs ;;tl hls mansion. Pr iscilla's love r , Starn f'arr. and her dau~hter by a previous m ar rlag e, 12-ye ar-o ld Andrea Wilborn. died Priscilla w11!> wounded . us was a chance vis 1tor. Gus Gav rel .Ir OJ\ VIS HAO flEEN t hurJ(cd only with Miss Wil!).Jrn's dc·uth 1n that case While the tr11JI brangi. allcntum to Priscilla. his first ware re mt>n;ibcrs the Augw,t wcddmg, the Auaust divorce a nd lht> telephone call one Augui;t morn ing in 1976 that plunged her into a state of shock. "There's been a ahootang . ·· her mother told her "J'm nol s ure , but I think everybody'i. dead " Her mother was wrong THE MIDNIGHT antrudf'r at the OaVls mansion an fo'ort Worth kallttd two, wounded two and pe r mitted one Lo esc-.p~ un- harm ed The three s urvlvori. ide ntified Davis as the gunman an black Sandra did not believe them, nor did the jury In Amarillo thut acquitted Davis of murder But still. .. "Cullen is a bnlliant man." s aid Sandra. who divorced the troubled milUonaire an 1968 after six years, two sons and a settle· ment she now scoffs at "But I do think he has a lot to l~arn. I saw what was comrng with Priscilla. The women have ruined him. The women in has life have ruined him." SE RVING DRINK S and quiche to two late-night visitors at her Highland Park home, Sandra talked openly f<»-lhe first time of her Ufe with and without Cullen Davis . She obviously preferred the former. but with reservations. "I'm so different from the other two." she said. "They wouldn't live the way I live, and I'm oot so sure I'd live the way they live." The "other two" are the more visible Davis women, Priscilla, 38, and his current wife Karen, 30. About the only lhlng the three have in common besides the Davis name. is that they hate one another IT'S A HEALTHY hatred, without pretense. If words couJd klll, Cullen, al 46, would be a widower thrice over. Sandra on Karen: "In my book, she ls just following in Priscilla's foot.steps." Prildlla on Sandra: "She and Karen came out of the same mold. They are so similar it'a in· credible." Karen on Sandra: "Has ahe finally realized Cullea lln't com- in&: back tq,__ber!" "I HAVE NO re1ret.a, except that I wasted IO much Ume ear· tne for hlm1"' Sandra aald. "I waa very Ulvt when I lot mar- ri,d, and i;no\ltna from Hunt to m u 1 t l m1 I l I o n a l r e Rlvercreat ... wun't easy. "I didn't k.oow wbat eat.eren were. 1 didn't know ff JOU have enouab money, lb• llarcuat1 wtu come 1n and cir.., you. I dida 't ttallre uaat, eo r took It upoa 1ft1Mll to team all t.beM t.b.lnp." Sh• lllcl lbe took eoune upea courM to ac:quln tbe acceptable 1"1111, then Nallaed lbt could huve tured everything done ln- steud "YOUR llEADE &S," SHE i.a1d. laughing heartily . "will lhink it's a typo when they learn what J got. "Most people think I came out of lhe marriage with millions. I got S20.000 in cash, a house and S2,t50 a month. .and that's taxable I've reduced households four limes since then because or inflation A'* Wit~ HONORS DUE General Le May Five to Joi1i Aerospace Hall of Fame SAN DlEGO 1 APJ -Retired Aar Force Gen Curt11> E l.cMa} o f Newport Bt-ac·h and Or Walllam II J>1ckn1n~ an· t•>. p1.·ctcd lo bt> prefic nt Oct 20 for in1t1atton anto Sitn IJacJ(o'~ In ll'rnat1onul Al'ro:.pan· llall of f'a ml' 1'1cke ring retired a frw ycur., a g o a s h c a d o ( t h e J t· t Propulhao n Labo r atory 1n Pasudena The ceremony will induct three others as we ll Si r T h omas 0 M . Sopwith. lhe British aircraft designer who as 92 a nd in Engla nd : the late Willie Mcsserschmltt, designer of the Germa n fighter plan that bore his name, and the late Lawrence B. Sperry, pioneer aviator-engineer who died in a plane crash In the English Chan· nel in 1923 Dinner Slated For Alliance The Lai<una Beach chapter of the Alliance for Survival will celebrate its second birthday Saturday with a pot luck clinner m Laguna Beach Thi• anti-nuclear power group will meel at Guild Hall. behind St. M 1Jry's Episcopal Church on Park Avenue beginning at 5:30 p.m . The runner is free to the public and purticlpant.'l are asked to bring a hot dis h . salad or desse rt For more Information. call the Alliance at 499-3190 or 494 ·4568 Damned If You Do ... SEATn..E CAP) -Last February, the city build· Ina superintendent or · dered Meta Kaplin But- Ullck, to. gmove-!be or- namental brick facing atop her Pioneer Sq\lare bulldlna H a potential h11ard to pedeatrian1. The retfred widow com- plied, only to be banded an order by the city's Hla-t~rlc Pre1ervatJon Board that ah• restore the parapet. at an 11tlmat.ed COil o( t30,000. She It ,..a.unc t.be or· der la 1 lawult cballen1· la• tba board'• lt8al authortt1 to order ,...tora- Uoa f(W "..u..tic NUOGI oaly." . ' .... \ Reluctant Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons Jameb J erome . reigns reluctance as he 1s pulled' to the Speaker·~ chair tn Ottawa by Prime Minister Joe C lark. rig ht. and Pierre Trudeau. oppo!»1tion leader The reluc tan cl' 1s a c<:nturics-old traclition dating from the British Parliament · NYC to Broadcast Nmnes of 'Johns' NEW YORK <AP> Names of men convicted of patroru11ng prostitutes in New York are going to be broadcas t over the city owned radio station , says Mayor Edward Koc!h, wbo hopes embar rassmenl will do more to stop the sex trade lban some Judgel> have .. We're goan.c to call It the 'John Hour. · the mayor said u:o. mg the 1>lang word for those who hire prost.atutes KOCH SAJD P UBLICIZING THE names would be s1 m1l ar t'J the early Ame r1cun custom of lockinJt lawbreake~ LO wooden i.tocks and vuuann lh,:m 1)0 pubhc display "That wa-. u dcl('rr('nt because who w;,nts to be an !>lOCki. Kot•h s uad .. Hut wt>'rt> not allowed to put people an the i.tocks any more. M> 1n!>ll•Jd, what I m ~oang to do I'> to foc us public attent1110 by pull1n~ lht•ar namt• an the :-.to<:ka. meaning reporting them on th .. rad io." he l>a11l Tht> l·tl\ opNalt•l> radao '>tklHmi. WNYC AM and 1-M !-i.cJurt·c-. dose• tu lhl• rna}or i.a1d that nlJ ~pcc1f1t'> had ~en dett:rmanc·d cin the fo r~or -.ut·h brua1k.1'>l.., or v.ht·n thf") would '>tart KO«ll Al • ..,O !'\/\llJ in; hupt·d rn·v.-.vdrx·r ' v.11uld 1>riril rl1• nu mt•-. The mJ\t1r 1·rtfH·11t·d JUdJ.:c'> for fd1hnJ? lo t:nforr., J 1v.11 >• "' old '>tult' lav. an1·n·J..in~ lht• µ.·nitlt11·., for t·ui.lomer!> 1Jf PIYJ'>t1lulf·' lo a maximum 90 da}:, an Jail Ht• ~i.ad mi.n) JUdge:. ''>t:t I.hear fJl4 n standardi. on what the luw should be · .. , bd11•\1 · that at,., unf:ur !hut v.e a\se-.s r nmanal pt·naltw' fnr pr ostitute:., but thi.t wt> dim t lib'>t.-s.-. cnm1nal penc1lt1e., J~d lll'>t th•· JOhn1>, lhc me n who use pro:.lltutes,' Koch i.aad Tht• mayor '>tlld ht• cu mt· up wath lhl' proposal a fter a survt-) <Jf .. John ca.,1•:0.'" hmadh•d b} '1.rnhatlan Cnm1nal Court an April ~1 c1\ and J unl' found that d1.1 q 11·-. wnc· 1h.,m1s">l'<i in 311 11( ~ , ""'' Kcx·n·~ .. KOPOSAI. \\A~ PRA l~U> IJ) 1.Ju•·1·11-. ''"'r11 1 '' torn1•\ .John S:1nl t11 n but l4 J'-1 n11c111·d Ii\ J n ·hl!l<IU'\ l••Jd1·1 .11111 tht• !'i1•v. Yuri-('1\al l.tlw·rtw-. l naun v.har h ">Upport:. l'11m1nat1nJ., cruninal µcn.;.i_UJ~ lur i.irw.lllutJon Doruthv SamU1·I-. N\Tl.l 1·xt·rull\l' dar<'ctor. ~aid that whtlt -.ht> adnurt>d Koch -. utlt·m1.>1 to trt·at men and women equall) "Judge:. ~hould not tw tryin~ l'a:.e:. under polJtacal pressure from the mayor That'i. tht• real r1v1I hbcrt1e:s issue here ·· The Hcv lfowurd Moody. pn tor of the Judson Me monul C hurch . called '<oc h"i; plun "atrocious ·· Moody. who ha:, counseh.-d proi.lalulcs. stud lhc l(overnmt:nt should not get involved an r t:gulaling ~ex bet ween coru.cntJng udull!. BT HW ... ,. NATION/ CALIFORNIA Increase For Milk Asked SACRAMENTO <AP> Blamlna Inflation. dairymen have asked for another one cent per hall-1allon Increase ln the state-set minimum price they get for dr1nkin1 milk. The Consumers Union saJd it was unwarranted. because a new stale pricing formula in ef- fect s ince August 1978 had already boosted the price by eight cents to 81 cents a half gallon THE INDlJSTRV PROPOSAL was presented Wednesday by Jay Goold. execul1ve vice presi- dent o f the 1, 100-m e mber League of Californ1u Milk Producers. at a hee1ring by the state Department of Food and AgncuJture The department director, Richard Rominger . will decide [ __ co_N_s_u_M_E_R_J whether to grant the industry's request after reviewing the re- cord Goold said he supported the formula pricing concept adopted by the 1978 Legislature in an ef· fort to end the annual bickering over milk prices T HE t 'ORMULA ADJUSTS thl' milk pnce every two m onths accordJng to changefi in the CO!>t of producing 1t, the government· :.et pnce for surplu11 milk made anto powder and other producL'>, c1nd lhc real net spt>ndable eam - 1 nfP• or workers ID the Los Angeles Long Beach area II <· proposed that the out-or ctatt' fagur~ u.<sed for cost or pro duc·taon be updated hy an infla taonary inde x. and that th" n ·al nt·t '-P<'n<labl<' ancnmt· or workt·r-. fJ r tor bf> dcl<'lt•d (:1ttild told a n·1><>rtn his pro po-.ah would 1nt·r1.,..,e th•· Ill I II Im u m I> r I (',. r1 lJ Id I,, 11.111 'nwn h} •int· n·nt 111·r half 1-!.ol lon hut 1'i<J1m1•cJ th1 •v woullf ).!l"f must of lhc11 1·v•:nt u<.tll y Jn' 14 J \ v. h •· n t ht· r •H mu I J l«fl<'hh UIJ wllh the 1nflc1t1onary J(allop tli\RR\ ~/lioYDl::R Ot tht· Con'lumers l. nion '>cud Goold '~ r-..quest wa~ JU.'>t the la tc~l an a 't'rll''> r>f pnct• 1ncrl':J'I''-whwh th•· m'1u<;tn 1.1.11ul<l 111nt111u .. ''' 111.1k 1° In ,I I llO..,f ,J(I( hJ<,<,l1 v. hwh th1 · f11rmul.1 14 J s int1·n1J••d I 11 1•1111 \ t "'" n·nf p1•r hJ If gall1111 hoo-.1 v.J~ ~ranlt'd 1n A11rlf ;Jffi:1-- th1• 1ndu.-.lr) plcadt•d mountan~ l'1J..,I:. J nd daamed Cal1forn1C1 JJrt<'~'' \l;t•n· lower than the rest vf tht• natwn 'llow much do they wunt ·1 When wiU 1t end? When will the department 11ay 'no'.·· Snyder usked 06r fiomc ~unique! SA VJNCS ACCOUNTS: = The area around Newport Horbor and Balboa Bay evokes mellow, turn-of-th+> century nosllJgla. and rorma lhe foundo · Uon for the upbeat rhythms ot Nt'wpon NOWI IL'a the• high energy locaJ peoplt>" that make thing• happen here In o ur area. And you'U find the e 11anu~ people at Newport Balboa Saving• and Loan, from our founders, to our 1bareholder11, our ataH, and our depositors. People with an apprttloUon for Newport PHt. plus the energy and drive or Newport NOW/ Com• on In/ Jumbo, /11ontoy Morie('/, Tctm, Possboolc HOM E LOANS: Convtnllona/, Rel/non /Ilg, C.:Ondoa, P.UD.I SPIJCIAL ACCOUNTS 6 81lRVICD8 l/lA, K i?011/1, Co//ccl/011, Notary ESCROWS: Full Servlc~ tl1rrow Deportmc111 APE Dl!POSrT BOXES: Free wUh minimum bo/onn• CHECJONO ACCOUNT11 '"~· 01 cooperottng lorol bonlcl. wllh mJmmum l>alonc . MONEY ORDEJtl, TRA VllU!RS OtEOUIJSi Amerlron Bxpuin <>r 8o1Clay1 COMMUNrrY aooM1 M.-,. fl>LIC AWJJJoblt ln.,.10 119n prof/I groupa HOUUi Mon.-Thu,. 9-5; f'rldaya fMI. Sa.I (I.\ W..tclUT Orlvo 11 lrvlno AYt•., Newport Ueach ~I: 045-6,05 f . ______ ........ , ... , .. . == E t1tt•C .. t N~w Ham p hir e Gov. Hugh Gallen says state police and National Guardsmen used at lhe Seabrook power plant to fend off anti-nut lear de- monstrators wilJ cost the state abou t $200.000. Woma n G uilty LOS ANGELES !AP> A wo m a n wh ost.• testimony helped con- vict her brother or t hc rape-murder of a USC l ib r aria n h a s b l•en placed on five yeari.' probation for her role 1n the crime A Judge also imposed a o ne -year county Jail sentence on Gail Veronica F1eldi.. 20, but s he was freed after being credited with time already se rv e d 1n custody New Use for Clot Drug Medicine A.ids Some Hean Attack Jl'ictirru1 BOS1'0N (AP) -hOple re ~ver\Qa from Nvere heart at· t.ack1 face cmJ1 b.alf ta. UNal threat ol death lf tbey teb 1 medkl.De usually at•• to dis· IOlve blood cloll, a study 1hc>M Tbe dru1 l1 called 1trtp toklnaae. and Bu~opean re- 1e1rcben found lbat It IOmebow protecta vletlm1 of the moat Hrioua be.art attadr.1 rrom fatal compUcatJona for at ltaat aix months alter the r &e1sura. STa tFl'OIUNASE bu been on the market for several years. But unbl now it bas been Jiven to di solve clots an veins but not to treat heart attack victims Me mbers or-the European Cooperative Study Group lried out the medicine in a study of 312 severe heart attack victims a l 11 medical cente rs acroaa E urope. The results of their work are publis hed in t o da y 's New England Journal of Medic me IN 111E COURSE of the study, 155 people took streplokinase a fter t heir heart attacks. Of these, 24. or 16 percent, were dead with in si x mnlh s. Meanwhile, 157 others took sug- ar pills instead. And or this group, 48 patients. or 31 percent. died during the follow-up penod. ··w e conclude that s lrep- tokinase given unde r the condi tlons of this trial lo medium- risk patients admitted to a cor- ona r y -ca re unit -reduces mortality at six months." the re- searchers said. An accompanying ed1tonal. written by Dr. J ay M Sullivan or the University or Tennessee Center for Health Services. said atreploldnaae 1hould not be 11ven routlotly lo aJl heart at- tack \#kt.Ima. IN AN INTUVIEW, Sullivan not d that people who hi d mild heart attackl were not lnchlded in lhl1 ltudy. In fact, be aaid, earUer atudlea In Great BritalD and AutraUM 11u11eated that. tbtae people may not be helped by the drq. "The PtatUcina doctor 1bould not make the miatake of think· Hono N-d A m eriC'an author J a mes Baldwin. 55. a resident of the French R1 v1er a for the p ast 10 years. has been awarded an honorary doc· toratc from the University of Nice lnt lllll 11 what you are aup- poted tofv• to everybody who ha1 ba a heart attack." SUlUVIUl 1ald. The lateet study was directed by Or. M. Verttraete of Catholic Onlvenlty ln Leuven, Belgium. THE EV &OP EAN r e· searchers aaid they were not aure bow the medicine protected tbe heart victims . Ho wever, they noted that it lowered the patient..' blood pressure. Since their hearts did not have lo work as bard as usual, the organs did not require as much oxygen, and this may have arrested the spread ol damaged heart tissue. New heart attacks were the cause of death of 10 percent of the s ugar-pill patients who died during the study. But new heart attacks did not take the lives or any of the patients receiving s tre ptokioase Sudden heart failure and irregular heart beat were the most common causei. of death in both groups . P EOPLE WHO TOOK th~ drug suffered side efferts of c hill s , feve r and increased bleeding. Streptok.i nase is the latest in a series of medicines thut have been shown to help recovenng heart attack victims. No lndictm ~n t SA N FRANCISCO t AP I A San Francisco gr<ind Jury has refused to indict District At torney Joseph Freita~ on felony chargei. of ;.u:c~pting illegal campaign contr1but1ons from labor leader George Evankov1ch in 1975 WHOLESALE WORK ROOM" c~~~~~':.!J,.?.od~ ,., .. , . Laws May Block S ale of Hote ls SACflAMENTO (AP J California liquor laws <ippear to prohibit the proposed $6.10 milhon sale of the Howard Johnson hotel·restaurant chain to a British brewery. a state lawyer says • Fast Delivery • levelors • To 50 Yds. 8.C Inches •Appointments 7 Days t Eve. •Wallpaper •Custom Bedspreads At least for Howard J ohnson's California operations, the sale would violate a law against a liquor manufacturer owning retail outlets, said C.E. Cameron . cruef counsel for the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control. HOWUD JOllNSON HOLDS ABOUT 40 h· quor licenses 1n California al restauranta and bara in its hotels. I m perial Group, the proposed purehaser of the hotel-restaurant chain. makes John Courage, a popular British beer. Last month, Imperial Group. Great Britain's sixth largest col'J)Oralion with $9.9 billion in annual business, agreed to acquire Howard Johnson's, which operates about 1,000 restaurants and SOO hotels in the United States. for $28 per share. --"€arrl-hearabout Cameron said J ohn Courage is not sold tn California. as far as he knows. But under the &tat.a· s ·'tied-house·• ktW; -il-tlttlk~ of-alcohoh beverages anywhere in the world ii. barred from holding any California retail or wholesale lic1uor license. he said ... my boat loan by tomorrow?" "No problem? We can usually give you an answer in less than a day. That's because we process your application through one of the most modem systems in banking CALIFORNIA So, you see, things that might be I problems at other banks are no problem at California First. FIRST e~~~ WllDUCTIOH 24 IMCM IOI 11lllS o•••• ... ,... 0 MUIOAI 0 LITLAMDet CYNISS D 1U11UAM,.,.. O IY•._.B.M 0 11'91194.t.SH 0 5.'ICAM0"-0 ff A&.Wf CYNISS O HYOIA.t .. IATIH O YuccA • 0 COM&. ftll ..-MAMYMOll '59" ... .... .._. s4so P\AMTS •·•••• ~= ...... sl" THE LAW, WHICH DATES FROM thl· 1930s. was designed lo keep individual compan1ei. from controlling all levels in the liquor industry It 1s still an effect in a number or states. A number of exemptions have been car ved in California"s tied·house law lo allo~1milar cor· porate transactions. Several years ago Pepsico. which owned an overseas winery. was granted an exemption from the law in order to buy the Pizza Hut chain Cameron said that exemption was drafted to cover only a winery. and would not <ipply to the Howard Johnso11 sale . Tunes-Mirror Buys Courant HARTFORD, Conn. (Al') -The $106 S m1lllon sale ol The Hartford Courant to the Times Mirror Co. bas been approved overwhelmingly by holders of Courant stock {)11 Wednesday. 51 1,513 shares were voted 1n favor of tht: transaction, 1,203 against The Couranl has 527.770 shares outstanding THE 511,513 SHARES INCLUDE D 436,000 held by Times Mirror. a Los Angeles-based company whose publications include the Los Angeles Times, the Dallas Times-Herald, Newsday on Long Island , the Orange Coast Daily Pilot and two Connecticut n ewspapers . The Advocate of Stamford and Greenwich Time. Times Mirror gained control of the Courant with a $2()0-per-share cash tender offer in August THE COURANT, CONNECTICUT'S largest newspaper. will be operated as a wholly-owned sub- sidiary of Times Mirror. The transaction is expected to become final by the end of the week with the filing of leeal docu- ments with the secretary of the state's office. ~. OCtoe. 11, 1t7t Lido Marif}a Village THIS WEEKEND M•wport •ace. Rn Dept. Dl.,toy I 0 ... 2 P"' Oct. I 2 Costa Mno Art U.,.. Oct. I l o.d 14 JuM ~th of Pacific Coai.t Hwy. di Ncl.llJ>On Hlvd. dlld Vr..i Lido Free Parking with Validation EVERYTHING HOMEMADE WITH LOVE GO UR.MET SOUPS•SALAOS•SAMDWICHES•SPECIALTIES Prepared k1tchen-lresh to New 1n Liao your order 673-2130 A Man 's Wo rld of Fashion 3 439 Via Oporto 714-675-1717 WEAR A PAINTING each garment an original nationally known artist"s painting on the spot Vlcl or cS almone s sc ul plurcs 3420 VIA OPORTO 673-8091 ~~~E~:~=~z~~~ matching silk blouses. skirts and pants PLUS lots of other exerting new lall lash1ons1 3432 Via Opcrio 673-6669 " . " ., '• " ... ~4 cwt. Y PILOT s Thu~ay. October 11. 1171 CALIFORNIA • Punch Hollywood Museum Due in 1980 r r· I -1 l L.OS ANOELtr..t; IAV> llullywood hH never found It dllflcull t.u P•)' ho m11 t.o IS..ull, but one area of aelf promotion &hat h111 •lway1 eluded It IJ eatabliahhlent of ta bon• ftde film mu1 um And It'• oot for want of trylna. 1lnce 11 num~r ur mu1.,um pro p0ul11, 1tnnounr"d with all th fun tare of a m•Jor film prernu1re , h1tve taler-I urned out to lk' Jwn th•l pro po11•l• ALL nlAT MA y rnd thill Wffk, ac rordlnlC to llollyw11od Chamber of <'om nh·n-..· t-llt'<'ull Vt' dlrt:ct.or Mike S1n111, who told Thti A1116oc1ated Press lhut nn unnouoct!rncnl of a sobd J rnu"t·um Jnv1ect as 1mrnlr1t:nt Tht' muaeum site, "aomewhere on Vine Street" ln Hollywood, he added. wlll feature the collectlona of film memorabllla buff• Jane Wilbert, Debbie Reynold.I and othera. AN OPENING 18 plaMed for July or AU&Ull 1980. he uld. "We have to start 1mall and de· velop a package and pro1ram over an extended period of time," he aald. ·•we have to develop credlblllty and tourist potential. No one wants t.o put up blJ. money yet." A • major corporation" ii involved in the initial financing phase, accord- ing to Sims, who said $300,000 wiU be needed to kick off the project. coin Heifhll Jail. Gatherln1 duat in the jail are 1uch Items u a cameo wom by Vivien Lelah In "Gone With t.he Wind." Gary Cooper'• empty 1unbelt and ~lack boots In which be faced eunmen ln "Higb Noon" and a bust of Ronald Colman from "Double Life." The city Inherited the artlfacta In 1968 from the now.defunct Hollywood Muse um Corp.. a nonprofit aroup that once bad dedicated a museum 11lle near the Hollywood Bowl. The collection is valued at about 12 mlllion. TH IE CO&PO&ATION finally folded after coaling taxpayers an estimated 11 million .. , hope Ille doalh penally CIOOSll I comu bac.i. HdYU YCJU any idea whcU a ht!urly t.ireakldi.t t;OSls the~t1 dtty'>? Wt• huvl' a f11c 1hly and mat.Jal hnum·1ng i.t-c•d money." Sims said We need tu nail down w few more dt!ta1hs' "nor lo an offtc1al announce· Olt'OI ht• '>Wt.I ALL INVESTOllS A&E private. be noted, adding that he bu not ap- pr-oacbed the cily of Los An&eles to arrange a donation of a 200,000-ltem collection stored in the former Un Prime movers in the latest museum project are Dennis Lidtke. <'O ·o wner o f the newly opene d .Hollywood Palace Disco Theatre. Choice of M.eyer Letnon, Ganlenia , o r Aralia. Not ju.st another bit of oreenery, really n ice. STANLEY ~.' ELECTRIC GARAGE DOOR OPENERS ~--· ~t0~: ~~~h ... 1• H.P . •1005 f-\ \.f old wo~an to get 8997 ~ )., !:! ~,t~~:d:.., CHAIN DRIVE • -out of the car RUBBERMAID ----w a nd open the J Y" CERAMIC LOOI 129'7 11 H .P . #3005 \; r )> I -• ) ~=~:n:~ :~:may • }<G,~-};,. PLANTERS CHAIN DRIVE ~ be sweet but lf-<· 1.87 s he's n o t made of 8 INCH. .. .. 139 sugar. (Oh. 10 INCH ... 2.87 97 1 1 H .P . #4005 you 're buying 3 8 7 SCREW DRIVE one a nyhow 12 INCH . . . . • Good move. ) Ccnn .. in White, Ch.ocol.ate, or Clay color. • ~9Z ":1!t·:i:.P better than NORMAL INSTALLATIO N OF O UR UNIT 55oo ~ IOIWOOD IATB J; . .i~ ... : :·~-'\AID VAi CARPET ~,:O'.,t/ ·~''''!'. 2•7 '\ "'' 1! 1".rn ~ I UN rr - ilCO GIAPBITE ll1JL Tl -CUDE •OTOI OIL I - • and Jack Foreman, a nnlor el· ecuUve ot the Goldwyn Studioe. "It iJ a delicate 1ltuation and we have 10me aenout problems yet," Sim• said, while refualnt to dlvutce the names ot hil Invest.on or where the facility wiU be localed. The project i• t.o develop ln stace.s. Sims emphasized, with $1 .2 million to $1.5 mUUon needed for the second phase. Sima envisions phase three five years hence In which a 100,000 to 125.000 squure·foot facility costing upwards of $15 mUlion will be com· pleted. ( ___ ,._,_ .. _·"_._,, _____ ) STIMULATES In the DAILY PILOT FLUIDMASTER ULLCOCI 3~!A 5' Wide Very c uahy. In a choice of 79 ~ SAE l~-40 Very poe1t1v• ~hutoff ddJu!lt.ihlt! -coion-u .. ti~ 1JP1"1tY eetnent-.Ad-h.- your trunk o r van. 'm b.ck from vacation follu and wntano the stuff again. (And nobody evin knew I .... go ne. right?) wit b a t ouch to~ V')UL-Jlf"1.~----.--__,.._ level No corroding part ~ FLUORESCENT TUBES 77c Fluo....c.nt 4' llohting i.a very reaaonahl.a, but if the t ube i.a 197 hall ahot 8' where'• the economy. & OUTLET MUL Tl-STRIP 11!1~-6 You can't ha" enough outi.t. eometime9, but don't try to run ... l"J'lhmv at once. Limited Ouantiti .. BEHR PLUS 10 For thoee ruce runic at.aina, aolid or Mmi -tranaparent. Better than paint. ~-- POITLAID CEMDT R.member when thia wu ahort and you could,n't get it for lOYe nor money? VILUGE IUCISMITB RAID TOOLS 57:. Trowel, c ultivator, or tr&n.8pl.anter. (And you aU..dy bouQht them at the other plac.. ) Plutic woodgrain ha.ndl.e. LUFlll l "x25' TAPE BOLL YWOOD 11/z TOI IOLLllG BYDIAULIC JACI 34~ You can aay what you want, but ha" you ...... thouQh t a thinq w.. uu. would •ll for thia little? . . ' ,.,,.. ' ' ~ (J'/'I , 1111 'lln'E COICllTI ITAll 877GAL. (Cit[ ~ET£ STAI"'~ u plain old n.ot.hin9 m the oonCTete do.I\ 't do much for your hou.M, thMe tan.~. reel or or-n 9ta.ln.a will IUCllDICID ¥t l.P. IOUTD 26~~ IUCI I DIClll Z lfllD JIC SAW 12·~~ 12" ADJUSTABLE JACI STAND ..IA.A.~~( 2~ Ha ... a Yisi.on of the ent1r& country beino up on Jach stand.a. We 'we almost aold •nOU4Jh to do it. lllCIS ~~~:!!:~ ~~~. ~. 19· CA. ~~"I" MF0. USED . . . . . 25 • EA At thMe pric.e you ,..Uy can 't afford to throw any at anybody. N ... r aaw one that WON out. tel• LlltDI 1111.111 ' .. -..... --...... ,.... .... " " "" ........... ---.... -. .. ... ORANGE COUNTY '1'11111 Entrant Kim Rach, 7, of Orange, plans to enter her goat, "Molly," in the National Pgymy Goat Show at Orange County Fall F air Nov. 7 lhroligh 22 al the Los Alamitos Race course gtounds. Campaign Eyed Neatande lo Chal,lenge Milkrt 81 O. C. ll11ITINGI .... ..,"" .... Rr::can A•H•blyma.n Brute N• ..,._ ... ftadl It atplftcut tbal be II_ DelOI ..,.,~ to nm tor Orant• Count1 8upervl1or by Cllatrman PblUp A.Dtbony. But NeltADde •aid that be bu not made up bll lll1Dd whether or not to challen1e t:dl1on Miller ln the aupervlaorlal elec:tJoa next June. "I am Malyllnt problems ID tbe 3rd Ol1trlct,'1 1aJd Neatande, wbo Uh Miller, la a rald•l of Oraqe. "l 'LL HAVE TO decide wllat I want to do ln the next four yean and tr there la slipport from the com· munaty "All these factors will be con· sidered in my decision," be declared. Neata.nde said he expeda to make up hia mind Jat.e thl.a month or ID ear· ly November. N E STANDE SAID the endorse· ment by Anthony ls significant in that Apthony bad promised to do bis best to work with Miller since the lat· ter 's appointment by Gov. Brown la.al July. "Miller has not shown that he is a problem solving type of individual," Nestande said. leti.r urjlq him to enter the rec. aod procrilliQc 1upport. Supervilot Tbomu Riley alao bu lndlcated be would S'upport Nt1tande'1candldac1. Antboay 1ald MUler baa apreMt cbaoe and bu been a dlaruptlve ID· nuenc. OD the board. Miller replMd that be didn't value Antbooy'a support. · He aa1d Antbooy's poUUcal put and b1a "letal predicament" abow what kind of polltica Anthony eapouaes. Ant.bony, a former chairman of t.be Orao1e-County DemocraUc Central Como:Uttee, ia facin1 felolu' cbar1es in connections with the aUe1ed laun· dering of campaign funds in bi.a me campaign. Fishing Derby Due in Valley A fishing derby and clinic will be held at Mlle Square Regional Park lo Fountain Valley Saturday. Oct. 20, for youngsters 8 to 16 years of age. Members of the Western Bua As· sociation will provide instruction lo knot tying and caatlng techniques as well as the types and uses of boolts, lines and sinkers. ~.OotoW11, 117't DAILY Pk.OT AJ• Roger'• Christ1nas Warehouse Opens October 12th Chrietmas begins at Roger's ... Get a head atart on yoar Chriatmae ahoppingf Our warelloa.e ia filled witll cratea of imported ornament. aad ••iqae d ecorati•g co•cept•. Fi•d that apeciaJ ... dmade wreath or centerpiece for the laoliclaya. Nunery • ladoor Pl .. ta Be Floriat • P•tio F11rnit•r• • u•dac:•pin9 """ Jo.-q111n thll• Ad At MA1 At1h"' Hlvd NP,. P•tt 1 HP•• h t 714 1 Mil ""°" F1re Stations Schedule Open House Saturday He said he believes that Miller ls dominated by his acquaintance with Tom Hayden and Jane Fonda and left· wing elements. There also will be instruction on r------------------------- how to catch catf18h, bass and trout. Fishing equipment will be made available. ;- In recognition of National Fire Pn!vention Week county operated fire stations will bold open house on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nestande asserted that whether he runs against Miller or not be is ob- Ugated to work against Miller 's elec· ti on. "HIS BRAND OF po litics is perhaps acceptable ln San Francisco but not 0Tange County," Nestande asserted. Youngsters can get registration forms from any county regional park or may register with their parent.a on the day or the event. Depa rtment officials s aid t here will be television sets at most stations so baseball fans won't miss the World Series. The event, which will start at 8 a.m .. is sponsored by the Orange County Environmental Management I • For additional information call 538-3551. 4-year,Going RateAccount Rate: Annualized yield: 8.50% 8.871 % fur the period of 10/ I -1013 I Anthony Monday sent Nestande a Agency 4-year, Going Rate Account at A free safe deposit box , at the rate shown in the box. $2, 500. And our excl usive And megabucb , if you Sta tesman's Clu b, at selected put your money in a() mont h, branches, when your savi ngs .$10,000-mi ni mum T Bill · balance reaches $7.500. Certifi cate. For the high c.:st rates Now then . Lest anyone 6-month, $10,000-minimum ava il able from any fc:<ll'rally get the wrong impression. we T-Bill Certificate insured fina ncial institution. should poin t out that we.: <lo Rate: Annuali zed yield: That's what we pay in al 1 ·this glac.lly. &_.cause ifs good 10.662% 11 -13 7 3* interest, subject to a '.'.ubstan-for people and it's good fo r For the period of 10/11-I 0/17 tial interest penalty tor early busines.s. •ff#jt <lfldtposil/Ot'O'M,,.aJlhrnm r111lr11/1., withdrawal. So if this ad moves you to k~if.ur6mo1111is,s11!Ji«t wt1Nr11Jutbr11 We also spend considerable open an account at All sta te IW!.""'1i"I· F«Mn1I ng11'611o#s prob1b11 comfJ'JllMllfg . Of"'""''°" r .BJ/urlif1"W amounts on free services. Savings, we'll pay dearly all right. If you move your savings to Allstate Savings, it's going to cost us plenty. 5Y2%, when you open a no-mimmum-balarice passbook account with us. Even more, if you choose a With any Allstate Savings But we're.going to enjoy account, you get free notariz.i ng every interest-earning com - and document copyir:ig. pounded minute of it. But as your balance goes up, we add even more. Free travelers checks, money orders and note collection for a $1,000 balance. I FOuntaln \iilley 18798 Brookhurst Ave. <Valley Center Plaza). Fullerton 1107 So. Harbor Blvd. Mission Viejo 27521 Puerta Real. Newport Beach One Co~rate Pla7.a. San Oemente 911 So. El Camino Real. Sa,n~ Ana 1200 W. 17th St. 'lbetht 18232 Irvine Blvd. Westminster/Huntington e..b 540 \\estminster Mall. . • I. 0 $100 wtth High Resolution Fiiter that has 330 lines of resolution (compared to ordinary TV with 260) -for a 25% sharper, clearer color picture than ever before possible. Model 44 ll • 19" diagonal cable ready Touc h· Tu ne TV with remote con trot Focus on your Team In the DAILY PILOT 642-4321 AN DM..Yflt\.OT -.. ... _ .... I ~I -. ii - OFFICIAL 1980 CALIFORNIA EPA RATINGS SHOW FORD HAS: @ EPA EST. MPG IS HWY. EST. MPG .. 950 EST. MIW HWY. EST. MILES 1980 Ford F-100/150 with standard 4 9L (300 CID) Soc and ophonal 4-speed overdnve transm1ss1on-d1<. <>els and car-trucks excluded . LWB Styteslde equipped with standard 19-gal. tank plus optional 19-gat. tank. Total: 38 gals. Multiply by MPG estimates tor maximum est. range. .. ~Wt~~r4i!?f!! .. ;·~ ~~ ~J; ~ lat N 4114 pk' J ...w. Ford's new F-150 has the best EPA estimate among 4x4 pickups with \48's: 14 mpg EPA estimate. ... ... of_,_. Although not redesigned for 1880, Forde with 4.9l Six~ Uldard 3-speed nnemluk>n are rated at cm mpg, 23 highway. 111 .. ..-.r111e. I FORD Compwe fftlmei.t With olhef•. Your mHeege may dill« depeodtog on 19"(1. ~Ind ...ah«. ACIUll highwey ,,... Ind "W9 Wiii P'Oblb!Y be lell than eetlmllted. ~Ind cer-truc:M l'dltdect FORD DIVISION ~ .,, .... .,.-_.. .... _____ --··--·---·· ....... '. "'~,..~---·--·--•A '4 ... ._. •••·--............. ,,_.,,.,.,.,,, .... , .. ,.,.,_.. , ... ,~, •·--•• •,. -.-.-·-••••--•-- ·~===~~··--· c I riot~ L~ave _ Baltimore H08 Just Enough of Everything ALTllllORE (AP) -AU MUOD ••• Baltimon ~ haw bMD typed u ub lacklq ••ratan ._ a cf\ab that t.be U.Ck of dolq Juat .... tt takes to bat'• eucUy wb•• tbt AIPtrlcan tu• cbam,plona did In Wedneaday &'1 ftnt 1ame Of t.be World Series u Y beat the Ptttabul'lb Pltalel, ~ BB O&IOLE8, OP COUUE, didn't k w lt at tbe Ume. But they needed a orld Seriee opnln1·11me record of flve •in the ftrat lJuUnt to win nd tbal'a Just wbat they tot. it wu J\.mt ~b to hoJd olf tbe usual e char1e Of lbe Pirates, who bad won 2$ mes ln the refU)ar season iJl the ninth ina. -frbe key play and bia bit ca~ ln that oles ftnt lnnina, almost before a crowd 53,735 could get comfortable on a 41· ree night. HE RAIN AND SNOW that made the fi ld spono and the game doubtful for a part of Wednesday. took Ila toll on the ttaburlh defense in the first. ~ l Bumbry opened for Baltimore with a gle oo the first pitch from Pirates right· nder Bruce K.ison. Then, K.i80ll, who had ficulty with bis breaking ball, walked hitter Mark Belanger. e runners moved to second and third an infield out, and Eddie Murray lked loading the bases. Then, came E play. to IUA·b~ Phil Uarner at MCODd. Garner. however. w•led ud threw the ball loto left. lleld. two n&m ecortna. TH MU. WA.8 80AIUNG wet, Gamer aald. It wu like a bar of aoa,p. Klaon. 1 Septembtr hero with a 4-0 re· cord ln the Pirates' drtve to lhe NL East Utle, wu.sone before tbe lnnlq ended. He threw a wild plLch that allowed lllWTay to Te•I•••._ G••~ Pltcttera: .. rt 81y .. ven (,...ebw9h) n . """' P•lmer (BeftlmoJe). W••lMt: 30 percent ch•nce of l6ghe r .. n. t•m• ~turH In tM mld-40• with llght wtnd. TV: Chennel 7, I o'clock. R•dlo: KNX (1070). score, and finally delivered a J.1 pitch that Doug OeCtnces slammed for a two-rWl homer The Pirates could have wed ri&ht there, but that wasn't the way they got to the 76th World Series Slowl y but surely they crawled back against left-banded Mike Flanagan, the biggest winner in the major leagues this season with 23 victories. FOUR PITl'SBURGll RELIEVERS held the Orioles to just one hlt through the last 6'f.i innings. But the damage was done. DeCinces' game winning homer made him the 15th player to hit a home run in bis first World Series at bat. another record, one he'd like lo for1et. He waa charsed with two erron ln one lnnlnc. That tied a ,record set in 1910 by Harry Stelnleldt ol the Chtca10 Cube. Steinfeldt ia the answer to one of baaeball's molt famoua trivia questions. Who was the thJrd baseman in the Cube' infield that contained the Joe Tinker to Johnny Evers to Frank Chance double play combination! PJ'ITSBVRGB MANAGER Chuck Tan· ner admitted tbat the fint game was lm· portant. but he'd settle for a split by win· Dini tonight's second game in tbe best of seven Series. ·'Then we'll be going home for three games," Tanner said. Tanner said the Pirates were no way in a state of shock alter the Orioles' bi& f1J'11t inning. "We've been bt1hind by five runa before and come back," said the Pittsburgh field boss. who is in bis first World Series. What troubled Tanner was that the Orioles bit only two balls well of Kison. But the Pirates right-hander threw Z1 pitches in his one-third of an inning, 16 out of the strike ione and 11 in. KISON SAID it was a miserable night to play baseball for both clubs. He said the ball felt very slick, and he didn't have any sensitivity or feeling. ........ ,.... .. Jobo Lowenstein bounced what ap· ared to be an inning-ending doubleplay DeCinces. the Orioles third baseman who made only 13 errors all season, set "However. I seemed to be the only one who bad problems. The growid ball to me in the first inning should have been a dou- ble plav." he said. He was reff"rring to a <See ORIOLES, Page BZ> MIKE FLANAGAN AND EARL WEAVER CELEBRATE. Dave C11nnin gham Shhhh! Fregosi Secretly Picks • • • Girl Joins Prep Teain In Football -I ,Cleaning out the notebook for the pf ayoffs and World Series: 'Angel Manager Jim Fregosi is secret· ly picking the Pirates to whip the Orioles in the Series. Publicly he says, "I'm not an od· dsmaker. But it should be a helluva Series. Baltimore bas better pitching and defense, Pitllbu.rgb bas better bit· tin& aod speed." Prjvately, Frecot1l tells friends be doesn't tblnk th• Orioles stand a chance. 1be Angel skipper has a strong personal interest in the Series; less than two years ago be was wearing a Pirate \811form himself. ' I • • • RON FAIRLY MAY BE LEAVING as Red Willgs' Acquisition Foils Kings INGLEWOOD CAP) -Pete Mabovlich, a recent acquisition of the Detroit Red Wings, wast· ed little time in showing bis new team that they apparently made a good deal. Mabovlicb. who came to Detroit from Pittsburgh in ex· change for Nick Libett two months ago, banged in a re· bound with 24 seconds lefl Wed· nesday night, giving the Red Wings a 4-4 lie with Los Angeles in the ~ National Hockey League opener for both teams. a member of the KTLA broadcest team. through no choice of his own. Seems the higher-ups at Golden West Broadcast· ing weren't too pleased with h.is work. Al Wisk, who works one-year con- tracts only, may give up bis radio job with the Angels voluntartly. Like any good broadcaster, Wisk is findlnC more jobs thao be can handle, and be prefers football. He says be may return for cme more year wida the Aqela, but lf bll ,.,,,.. get.I too hectic. .._ wlll nllnquWI u.at coveted spot ln the Angel booth. Don Drysdale is very close to signin& a multi-year contract with KMPC. He will be allowed to continue bi.a odd jobe with ABC·TV and will broadcast as many Angel games as his sc.bedule al· lows. Steve Shannon could become a permanent part of the Angel broadcast team <he worked with Kansas City last year and filled in for the Angels> and rumors have also mentioned Don Sutton as a possible ad<lition-assurning be re· tires from the Dodgers. A better bet would place Sutton in a prestigious network job. His commen· tary on the National Lea,ue playofh WH poliahed, pro(eaalonal and boneSt. • • • n•ms &BUS, 'l'llS A.NGSl..8' 74-year-old coach who has seen it all , figured Frank Tanana 's career was over. ,.t mid-sea.son, be was spea.klnl of Tanana wu if he were dead. "Tanana, that young man could have been one of the greatest left-handers of a ll lime," Reese said in a bushed tone "Ile was the smartest young pitcher 1 ever saw. And then lh1!> thrng had to happen." "Th1s th.mg" was severe tendirul1s Tanana himself had to entertain thoughts that his career was firu.sbed "If I don't' see Keith Kleven Chis Lu Vegas therapist), I don't pitch agam this year," Tanana said . ··And next year. well. wbo knows!" • • • IF 1118 MSEBAU.. CAm fU:des out prematurely. will Tan:ana woader if may~ he chost-the wrong profession• A lot ot people thought he was going to be a pro basket.ball st.ar. Tanana was an All-American guard for Catholic CentraJ Higb in Detroit an 1970. A quote from the All ·Amencan <See SIDIH!, Page BZ> ~T LOIJIS. Mi ch IAP> - Ninth ):!rader Re~cca C Hum· phrey hai. won the right lo prac lice w1t.h t.he freshman football team at St Louis High School ill G rat1ot County Midland County Circuit Judge Tyrone Gillespie issued a lem· porary order allowing the 5· root·5. J.M.pound girl to praeticle with the all-male team for the lut two wee.ks of the ......,, A.utlm& today. The order wu lMued at a~ hm1naC)' hearing Wednesday. On Aug. 29. school officials told her that she would not be e hg&ble to practice with the team Her father. Marvin. hired a lawyer. Gerald L. White. who told the Judge that school of. f1 c1als were d1 s c rim1natiDg against the girl on the basis of .seg The school board acted legally when 1t proh1b1ted the girl Crom playing on the football team, Harry ZelJff. d lawyer for SL. Lou1:. schools. told the Judge. Zeliff also suggested there were other :.chool :.port:. that Rebecca could play The ninth grader told the Jud1i1e she wai. not interested in playml<! any sport except foot· ba II G 1llesp1e said that an light of l'Urrent more:.. the school board took J "natural path " in rl':.tnctmg her from playing on a bo):. · team He said. however. that !>Oml' women are athlet.Jcal· ly s upenor lo some men and i.hould ht' given the opporturuty to tr) Sht> hai. :.a1d she hopes to play nl'xl year on the :.chool's junior ''ars1ty football team. Gillespie set a full heanng for Nov . 8. "What we're concerned with now 1s putt.mg her on an equal rootan~ for continuing through the system," said White. "Let her try now " .. THE ACQUISmON of Pete will help us," aaid Detroit Coach Bobby Kromm after the opener. .. We nee ded a big man at center. Unlike Los Angeles (wbic;b doesn't have a big center), we're going to count on Mabovlicb to glve ua size and streo«tb ln the middle." WILLIE STARGELL KICKS THE BALL OUT OF THE OLOVE OF SHORTSTOPMARKBELANOERWHILESLIDING INTOSECOND. G1lles p1c's temporary order does not require the coach to aJ· low her to play m the team's two remaining games. The &-5. 210.pounder obviously made bil presence felt in the ft.Dal minute. 'It appeared tbat 1oals by qave Taylor ud Dou1 Halward e rly lD the third period would ve the Kings a victory, but th the Red Wine• enjoytna an tra forward on the lee, abovUcb eained control and u able to knock ln a rebound m nve feet away. ..... . . Edison-MD: Th.ey'll Loek Up Early Friday's. C lassic Slww down a Sure Sellout at Orange Coast By ROGER CAaLSON Of•Oelty .......... Mater Dei m&b's Monarchs and the Cbargen of F.dilon, Oranie County's No. 1 and 2 ranked prep football teams, square oll Friday ni1ht at Oran1e Coast C0Ue1e. and ii you're wonderine lf this might be a good one to attend, take Edison Coach Blll Workman's aclvtce : "I imagtne they'll locr ~ 1ates at 7:15." says Workman. ''The 1ame ls almOlt 1 sellout rt1ht now (1\lelday > and whether you have a ticket or not, the gates will cloq when capacity l1 re· ached." TBE GAME 18 8CB1£DULID to start at 8 and it pit.I llater 0.1'1 veer orient· ed attack, behind two-year starter Phil Spencer and 1peedy bacu Al Vartaeo ud John Kapener, a1alnlt UM com· binaUon ol l'UDDel' deluxe Kerwin Bell, quarterbeck Jl'rank Seurer, receiver Mark Boyer and a bolt of otber out· 1tandlaa EdiJIOll plaJen. • Coacb Wayne Cocbnm'1 Mat.r o.t ouUlt Is nmktd No. 1 wltb a 4-G ncord. Edi.son is No. 2 with a 3· 1 mark, the only blemlab a 28-27 lou at El Modena. EdPon returned to lta wtDninl ways with a 42·7 conquest of Pius X and Bell has upped bil touchdown total to 12. He's the CIF's leading scorer and top rusher (11.6 yards per carry). TBF.8£ TWO RAVE BBBN rolliqin the dust· for the put three yean with EdilOO eQJoytna a 2·1 advantqe. Here'• what each coach bas to say about Friday's same: Workman: ''Mater Del present.I a ta.m with no weakneaaea, there's no area where you feel you can attack. The defen1lve line ii active, the secondary la faat and lood and the llnebacken are 1uper. "Spencer ii a threat in that lMI breab tacld .. and pope the bll play. Mater Del IMIDI to ICON conalatenUy wttb tbe blf,~ ii a better thrower tbu 1•1 yHr, IDd untortwiatelJ, be ,,.. Jalt u well. I,..... \bat'• why•llater Dtll Is WORKMAN •COCtMUN No. t. We're scared a nd they're aweaome." WOUllAN SAYS he expects lo have tackle Chr1s Rowey back (muscle 1p11ma) ln the llne\.ij>, which should add fuel lo U.. Chargers' offense. Rowey ls a tt&-powlder with 4. 7 speed for 40 1ardl. Out, however, ls Din,""'-• who suf · ' fe red a sprained ankle in the Pius game . Bill Reimer will move to a cor· ner and Workman has been eyeinf Boyer and Greg Jones, among others, to fill Relmer'sspot. ~ Workman has been especially happy with the recent work or bis offenslte line. "It's really coming around," says Workman. We've got Tim Inman -and Boyer at tackle and Ught end, but the others are starting to do it." ... . THE at'HERS include guards Dean Jacano and Greg Preble, Scott Strosnider at center and Pat Ferrill at t•ckle. Defense. however, is the key question for EdilOll. "I was shocked at what bap.. pen e d at El Modena ." adrnru Workman. "But we bounced back a11imt Plus X." Bounclna back included boldt111 Kevin Nellon, a finl team All·ClF baet u a Junior. to 2IS yards on u carries. Cocbnm: "We feel fortunate to p&Q aomeooe the caliber of Edllon, ln our <See EDISON. Pace Ba) .. . .. ... ---.. -·--· .. - .. I l I . , ... DAIU PILOT FOOTBALL/BASEBALL Flaa gaa ODly Exelted About His Blittlrag ~ BALTIMORE CAP) -lflke '1= malo&almd b1I eGmpolUH wt.lie fi UM.._., IUW.. PIUa~rp PlrMM In Ith ftnt World Sett•, but It ... 1 dlf· fl'fHt •tot>' when tbe BaJUmon pjlcber 1ot • ,..,.. cbuee '° bet. "Wlilm J'O'a t..i 10". cu do \bintJ, I doo't \bliDk you aboWd ,. acli.d," '1uapa •IJd, eapla1Alaa bll ... mlo1 lack ol Del"VOUllMll wbU. p6&cJUai t.bt OliW. to 1 M vlclOq WedNIClay a.lpt In \be oPeftlnl same ol tbt Seri• &loo. But even after nUrln1 tb1 qq1rOU1 WlW1 St.ar11U for tbl ftaa1 out with tbl potential t)'lq ,,., oo tb1rd bate. P1ana11n wanted to talk about the hit b1 didn't 1et. With tM deslpated hitter nalt not employed lD th1I Seri•. Flanaau eot llil lll"lt at·ball .me. join· 1n1 tbe Orioles late ln 1976. Hid. "I ctidn't let any retpom.t from him. Later, ~ I went to the dueout. l wu •haklna everybody's band. but tbey weren't abakJ.na back. Then. I looked at the 1coreboard and found out they had scored It an error ... Baltimore llan.,.r Earl W.-wr allld becauee ,,_.,_ threw la pitdlel, be would have to wlit unUJ Prida1 befonde- ctdlns ti the 21-iame .)ldnAer would be avatlabletoatartGame Vlve. FJanaian did 1et some response from StaraeU at the plate when the big nrat baaeman. alter atrtldng out two of tu. rtrtt three at-batJ, crashed a homer deep lnto the right field bleachers for Pit- tsburgh 'a final run. "It wm be toueb for blm to come blck on three daya rest now." Weaver said. "I 'll have Steve Stone reedy ind wouldn't hesitate to use blm ... "I TllOllOlft' I COULD ... them out. HE WAI &.ftl&ED oo a upper ln front ol the pl1te to end BaltJmore'a llve-nm nnt lnnl.Da. then IJ'OW>ded lhe ball put ftnt baMman.Sw1ell whlle leadln1 olt I.be fourth. Jim Palmer, an elgbt·Ume 20-aame winner who posted only 10 victories thla season a fte r battllns variou.a arm. 11houlder and back ailments, will atart for BaJUmore in tonight's secood 1ame. He has a 7·2 record in poat-aeuon com· petition. including a 3· 1 Series mark. IO th~re·• no Nf\M l.n JumpAq up and down ... be a.aid. even tbou&h lt w11.1 oot that euy. u be allowed 11 hll4 and atra.nded 11ven ru.nn1n In aeorlo1 poal "When I tot to flnt bue, I WU flgur. ln1 out my battio11vera1e aod I aaked Star1ell ll they were 1otn1 to atop lhe game and give me the ball," Flanagan ''I TDEW WM SOllE GOOD pitches when I bad to," Flana1an said. "I faced him In the minors, and he wu one of the few players I knew something about.·· r:t---------------------------------------------------- A Capaule Report From lhe World of Sport• From AP Dbpatdlee NEW YORK -The Italian Davis Cup tennis • team delivered a thinly veiled dare to the . American team It must meet in the Cup final thla • December. In a cable received in the U.S. Tennb AsaoclaUon omces Wednesday, lhe Italian team aald: "U.S. Davia Cup Team Conf.ratulations. Now come and beat us ln Rome If you ar~ real y ao tough." The competition is already aet to take place in the United States, whose team is lhe defend.ine champion. That presents a distinct !Advantage to the Americans, who prot>.bly will choose a sate with a fast, hard surface. The Italians prefer a low clay. Ed Fabricius. a spokesman for the USTA, appreciated the Italians' invitation but said he was preparing a response that probably would say: "Hope you enjoy Look forward to playing you on cement." ------Qttolr of llw Da11 ------ General Mana_ger Bob Bass of the NBA San Antonao Spurs . "Wes Unseld <of the Washington Bullets) has been in the three-~econd lane longer than Smokey the Be Cir has been tn the woods ." .ftita~lf Robbed ol 82~00 HALTIMOHE Police issued a warrant late Ea Wednesduy night for a µcrson who allegedly broke anto Uu: hotel room or first baseman Wilhe Stargell of the l'lttsburgh Pirates and stoic 01.bout $2.500 in ca:sh Tut:Sday night. Lt. Charles Milland or the Baltimore poli ce said the sub· ject was beueved to be a Pirates' fan. Stargell, team captain for the Pirates, discovered the m oney along with a caasette player and aix tapes miHlng when he returned to his hotel room Tuesday. the night the World Serles was to have begun, MiUa.nd aaid. . "We've laaued a warrant for this man's arr~t." Mllland said "We know who he is ... Dirk Alie•~• Fa•llfl Esrap«-• Fir~ Former Philadelphia Phillies' baseball player Ea Dick Allt>n, ha~ wafC', and their three children 1•scaped anJury today when a fire swept their home 1n P<·nn~ylvC1n1u Dallas Green has been of· fered to manage lhC' Phill ies next season. Green was named -ttn! m~ a~ Danny "lhan was fired. Green Is un decided as to whether he'll accept . . Doa McMaholi who pitched five seasons with the San Francisco Giants. will re· turn to the National League club as a pitching coach .. Holders of Baltimore Orioles stock can expect double or possibly triple the r ecent trading price when the American League club is sold Nov. 1 .... Crala Bey80lds, abortatop for the Houston Astros, was honored Wednesday with the Danny Thompson Memorial award for exemplary Cbmtian spirit in · the major leagues. illeap:tl f'na•~•a.a 8t•••le la •e•••• napeg were among the survivors of tbe World , Fl'ancbbes ln Edmonton, Quebec: and Win· m Hockey Association mer1er with the National Hockey Leaeue last aeuoa. but oooe survived their NHL debut.s Wednesday nipt. Edmonton's Oilers were turned back by the Chicasc> Black Hawks, 4-2. the Quebec NordJques loet a 5-3 decision to the Atlanta Flames and the Wlnnipe1 Jets were banded a 4·2 loss by the Pltlaburlh Penguins ... Atlanta's Garry U•1er, who was acquired earlier Wednesday lo a trade with St. Louis, extended b1a NHL re· cord for consecutive gamea played to 884 . . . Piil.i Eapo11U.o scored once and added an assist during a four-1011 burst in the third period as the New York Rangers stopped the Toronto Maple Leafs . . 6·3 ... De::J!!eman Man Hardy and center Doe ae have signed muJU-year contracta with the Los Angeles K.lngs. Also signing contracts with the Kines were Hl'OllTO center Doa& Crawford and right wtn1ers CIHcle Laroclilelle and DM1 Barvey. All three were assisned to the Kinp' Blnehamptoo farm club . . Yna Cotl.noyer nicknamed the Roadrunner by hia teammates and opponentS alike becaUMi of his blazin1 •lleed and dexterity, retired Wed nesday after 15 seasons wllh the Montreal Canadiens IAnaff S•oi Pa11• 8227 at Sa11ta A11lta A ll2·to-l long shot set an Oak Tr~ record for • biggest payoff Wednesday at Santa Aruta Touch O'Speed, ridden by Clluck Bait.Har, beat favored Score Twenty Four and BW Slloema.ker by a nose to return $227.20, $31.60 and $7.20. The two-year-0ld aJso earned its owners $25.~ in tbe El Rio Rey Stakes ... AP. parently, wearing a championship rln& does n't in .. ure longevity in lhe NBA . Two veteran guards who helped their teams Wln t1lles, Washington's l.'llarlu JolMlllOll and Boston's Kf'vin Stacom, were cut Wednesday as NBA teams conllnued to reduce their rosters for the opening or the regular season The Celtics also waived Ricky Man9a and WayH Kreklow Milwaukee waived Sam Smith, Derrick Mayes and •~dgar JODe"S The Knicks got down lo 13 player!I by re ll·a~11ng Glen Gondrezlck and John Rudd <iolden State cul 1l~ top draft choice. Danny Salisberry, and fref> agent J ohn Douglas . Wayne Radford was cut by Indiana Long Beach State grad Rickey WlllJams and Randy Ayers were cut by Chicago ... Former UCLA and Nevada Las Vegas center Bretl Vroman gol lhe ax from Ph1ladelph1a . AUantB acquired lloa ~ from the Utah Jazz for two draft choices and some cuh . . . The Lo6 Angeles Aztecs earned a 3-3 Ue with MVV Maastricht on their anternational soecer tour throu&h The Netberl.anch. Te~.,f• .. a.R•llle Following are the top sPorts events on TV tonlQht. RatlnQs are • ~ -1 " excellent; ' ' • ~th watchlnq ~ • fa ir, • forget 1t e 5 p .m., Channel 1 I I I ./ WORLD SERIES: PittsburQh at Baltimore Announ<ff~ Kei.th-Jac k.son, -Wow~ CoMJI .t.M eon. Drysdale. Oranoe County product Bert Blyleven <12·SI tries to pUt the stops to the Baltimore Orioles tonlohl when he takes the moond for Plttsburoh to oppow Jim Pat mer I 1G-6 l In the second oame of the World Serles In Baltimore. RADIO Baseball -PlttsbUroh at Balli~. S:JO p.m., l<NX <10701. FFootball -Santa Ana Valley vs. Canyon, 7:15 p.m., l<ORJ (94 J M ). Basketball Qinic Set For Women ,..,....P•twe•• Robbie Says LA Will Get Franchise Women's basketball coaches on the higb school and junior col· lege level will have an op· portunity to pick up some poin· tera Saturday at the women's basketball coaches clinic at UC Irvine that runs from 8 in lhe morning until 4 that art.emoon. Dean Andrea, women's coach at UCI, will serve as clinic director and will speak on lhe passing game. He will also have Mercer County College <Pa.) Coach Howie Landa, Kay Yow and Nora LyM Finch of North Carolina St.ate. Di ck Stricklin of Golden West College and Nori Parvin of Newbury Park High serving on lhe staff with him. The registrallon fee is $25 L.tnda wtll speak on the in· dWlduaJ player and how to teach' aa -offense, Yow will discuss tNMiUon drilh for offense and l"tach wt11 talk about defenatve drtlla. Stricklin will speak on the zone offeme and special play 1ltu1Uooa whlle Parvin will dis· cuss the fut break. For further information. con· tacl Andrea at the UCI athletic department, 833-6931. Botl8 Wins Playoff Rafe Botti, a former tourina proteaalonal now teecblna at Orttrlth Park in Lola Anael•. de· f eat.ed former U.S. pubUc Unka champion Arne Dokka of Oak· mont on the fourth bolt of a aud· den·4Htb playoff Tue1da.1 Jo wln tM Southern CaUforala PGA 1troke play champlonablp at Mt11 Verde Country C1ab ln .Cotta Maa. ~· _________ .._.._. ....... EDISON-MATER DEi. • • first four games we haven'tbadto worry about that kind of speed or passing. "EDISON IS GOING t.<>&et Ila points, but we tblnk we can move the ball on the m. The question is can we out-score them? With Edison, you can do everything right defensively, but you can't coach to overcome the type of speed that Kerwin Bell possesses. "BeU is the best running back I've ever seen. he's j ust an awesome football player You can do everything right. but with his ability, he can make you look bad. "He has speed" and balance. but he's tough, too. Jf I wasn't going against tum, I'd like to go see him play." COCH RUN SA VS tac kles Larry Williams and Ray McCay. center Monte Olson and running back Frank Vuittonet are ques· tionable. but Varisco. despite an ankle sprain, should play. Mater Oei'a Jut two victories have been without the aid or those three offensive linemen, and lheir return boost.a the of- fense considerably. Despite a 4--0 record, Cochrun saya, "I wiah we were a Ultle more consistent. We have to play four quart.en, and lf we do, It'll be a game. We aren't 1otn1 to run out or gaa. "We have three kids who are pretty equal (Spencer, the quarterback , and runners Varl1co and Kapsner). lt de· pend.• a lot on what the defen.te allow• ua. "If It were me. I'd 10 after Phil, because he'• our came· breaker, he makn tblnp hap-J>t'ft ••• Mater Del'• emer1ence 11 Oran•e County'• No. 1 came when F.dison was upset by El Modena. "lt'a nice to be there," aays Cochn&n, "but I'm not sure, yet. I know we're surely amone the top t.eama ln Oran1e County. We play defense and we aet after people." ,.,....ra,,e•• SIHIH! ... Hl ghSchoolYearbookt.hatyear: "Tanana averaged 21 points and 15 rebounds . . . Coach Bill Foley has stated flatly that this 6·2, 175-pound All·atat.er ls the best ballplayer in the Catholic League. Becau.se or his agility and ball-handling pro· wess. Tanana can play either guardorforward." * * * WHEN AL BUMB&Y drop- ped Bobby Gricb's sinkinJ liner lo the playoffs' tbird eame. a player oo the Anl•l beoch felt a twln1e ol familiarity. Wtllle Davia remembered the 19M World Series. when he wu in cent.er field as the DOd1ers were awept in four 1ames by tbe Orioles. Dam tel an unenviable Seriea reconl by maiinc three enon lo ooe lnnln1. •'I know Ju1t how Bumbry f~lt, '' Davls said .. "Tbe IUYS come up and try to conaole you, but lt doesn't help. It's one of thOtJe t.hinp )'OU Just 80\ta tb.lnk. about for a while." Tt1• same can be aaJd ror the An1el1' •eaaon. Despite their dlvi•lonal UUe. tbe playoff wu one of tboH tbtnp you Just sotta tblnk about for a wblle. "I don't think ao1oae tn thlt clubhouH It aatl1fled rt1bt now,'· f'recoel aald alter tbe nnal 1ame. "But we'll be b1cll. '' LOS ANGELES <AP > Miami Dolpblm owner Joe Rob- bie. after lookln1 over tbe Memorial CoUMum for the flnl time a1Dce the 1t73 Super Bowl. aald be mlpt not move bi.I team West but he'd do what be could to replace the Rama in Los Angeles. "We will be the Los Angeles Dolphins, or I will go public to help you get another franchi~ in expansion," Robbie told a Juncheoo gathering of local Of· fi cials Wednesday "I came to let Miami know I do have a place to go." The Loa An1eles Rams will play at Anaheim Stadium In nearby Ol"ange County in 1980, leavlna the Coliseum without a National Football League team. The Dolphins are one of a number ol NFL franchises wbo have expreued Interest in lhe Coliseum. Robbie told the luncheon eathertna he want.a to keep the Dolpbial ln Miami so Iona as "official bolUUty" by manatert of tbe Orante Bowl does not peralat. Robbie baa tons been em: broiled in diaputet with the Oranae Bowl over iaauea auch as lack ol Sood aeaU.01 tn the SO· year-<>ld facility atid too little or lbe concession money 1oln1 to hJm. "Our spectators have to all on b1ckle11 benchea," be 11id. ''I 've been ln dllcusalona about tb1t for 15 yean." Robbie bid not teen the CoUHUm alnee the Dolphina de· f eated Wuhtnston 14· 7 ln the 1t1I Super Bowl. -· -·. ..... - .... ,~. Bow Soon They Forget Wlth the World Serteh taklo~ place m Baltimore, you'd think ba&eball fans v.·ould be flocldn& to Babe Ruth's birthplace. a BalUmore row house converted into a museum But custodian Steve Spicer. surrounded by e mpty C'ha1r.,, sa)'> only an average of five persons a da) haH· \'1~1tcd ltll' mu~eum in the five years 1t has ht·t·n 01>t·n EH·n l'l l \ ri•..,,1denl!'\ havl· ~t<Jved away 1·ro• Pagf" BI ORIOLE WIN OPENER. • • Ken Stngleton topper tuwa rd the mound, a possible doubt~ play ball whicb turned anto JUSt .m out al first. Pirates captam WillJe Stargell Insisted everyone for1et the weather coodlUooa. "Flanqan bad a dam good fastball and a good alow curve," uld Stareell. In t.be ninth ln· nlng, with the tying run at ucond. Stargell popped out to end the 1ame. "IF I DIDN'T get under it," Stargell said. "it ml&ht bave been another home run.·· The Pirates' comeback lltart· ed to the fourth on stnales by Tim Foll and Dave Parker. wbo bad four blta. The run scored on a Staraell IJ'OW)dout. ln the alxlh, Parker and BUI Roblmon singled. and Gamer eventuaJly drove them home with a baaes·loaded slngle. Stargell made It 5·4 In the eighth with a prodigious home run over the righl (leld wall Parker singled in the ninth, and after being picked off first by Flanagan. slid lnto second and Refs Viewed In PROfile Football rans aren't the on· ly people who 1et upset when an official blows a call. Even coaches slna the boos. Saturday's edition o r PROfile "79 takes an indept.h look at the problems involved .. with officiating, from the coaches' view to the com· miaaloner's. ·""" Also ln the weekly pro foot· ball tabloid is a look at the 1966 Cowboys and where lhey are today. . Along with a scouting re· port on ever y pro 1ame scheduled to be televised In the South.land, PROrtle '79 runa do.rt the odds on all 14 NFL ••mes, giving a Ust of those sames which would be deemed Hfe beta. Road lt thl• Saturday, and every Saturday throu1h the end of the NFL aeuon, ln PROnte '79. l>.noC'ked lhc ball o ut of short.stop M<1rk Bela.ngcr's glove for an er- ror. But Robinson a nd Stargell C'ouldn't get him home. FLANAGAN SAID he won the game with bUI change up and side arm curveball. "1 thought I had a pretty &ood changeup." Flanagan s aid. "l wanted to go wtlb It because they are a pretty good futba.11 hitting club -I w as impressed lhe way they bit the fastball." Flanagan said the Pirates shot down the lefty-lefty theory. ·'They nan U.ke Kansas City and have the power like Milwaukee. Parker was tmpreHive. I didn't make the pitches on him. 'Ibey were down the middle. I was trying to go In and out on him," Flanagan said. Edmondson Has Easy Win BRISBANE. Australia (AP) - Defending champion Mark Ed· mondaon put the lid on bis temper and outclassed blexican Emerlla Montano to coast through his second round match, 6-3, 6·2. in the Soulh Pacific Ten· nis Classic today. The solidly buHt Australian served powerfully and rarely mined a first serve while also usine a blistering back hand to control Montano. Edmondson. who defeated fellow Davia Cup player John Alexander in last year's rain· delayed fin.al , broke the Mex· tcan's serve 1Q tbe routth--.ame or the first set and the first and Otth 1amea ln the second set. In fact, at one stage in the second set. after a bllndlnt re· tum from Edmondson, Montano looked at the crowd and said: "l don 'l believe th1a fellow.•' Soulh Atrtc1n CUff Dryldale, one of the pre-tournameot favorltes, couldn't handle 8rl1b1ne'a hl1b bumld.lty and lost to Auetralla'a Kim Wanrick 7·6, 6-2. "I cave the Ue-breaker all I had but 1 1lmply ran oul of steam," ho11id . -.... • 1 .. - f • ----·-~-:::-..... --., r-------- \ BOATING I FOOTBALL I WATER ... boatlq edctidl '° "° tea "° Jet awq_ hOlft U. fut·l*'td We ...... ,_ like &low ......... °' 10.bot power boeta on ..... \My can .-a~ ... ..s. Not• IM~ power boet rK· lq lnt.enlty ftldl ~ya noWna \Ml UulD ... mil• per bout OYer a rou,b, kldney-jarrtq sea. Speed·WtH, the offahore pow r boaUna IHI are a buneb ot l)lttn eompand to UM ~key1 ot the un- llmlted hydroplanes wbo coulder 1peeda ol under 125 mpb Uke clrivtn1 ln the ak>w lanes ol the freeway FOa EXAMPLE, A GENT named Bernie Little of Lakeland, Fla. is eroomlng bla new boat Mlu WELCOME AB0.4RD Budweiser and its driver, Dean Chenoweth, ror an assault on the long-standing 200.419 mph world mile straightaway record for propeller- driven boats. The attempt to break the record will be on SeatUe's Lake Wasb.ington Oct. 22. Chenoweth, 41 , of Tallahassee, Fla. is no stranger in the cockpit of the "thunderboats." He is a former two- Ume national champion in the un- limiteds and the winner or 13 major events. He m ade headlines last spring when he announced tbe end of a four-year retirement t-0 return t-0 un- limited hydroplane competition. by In Skw&k on· Lue 'fa.hoe ln I In U. Dave H..,..P9",.r'1 c• aran~. Pride of Pay N Pa failed tn Ttt bld wllb Tommy FuJ drivin1 at GuntenvtU . The IH ttempt waa m&-d• by Jlm M ck ln The Red Man at Oun· In 11'14 L TLE 'S NEW Mi as B u elacr u con sidered a van in hydroplane desl&n and 01 rinl It haa the advanta1e of ualn the Grlffon engine with an eatl led l ,000 more horsepower thaa e Me rilos used by other t.eana "T Griffon e ngine is an impor- tant r , but by no means the only edge have in our record attempt," Little 'd Eq y as important as boat pre. para is the selection of the driver "'and noweth was Little's choice from start. "De is much more than a brave, smart mpetil-Or." Little said. "He has thcemarkable ability to analyze the mt complex facets of design and opetion under stress. tr a slight adjustnnt is needed, Dean will be able lo1ake the correct recommen· dation > the crew It's a special talent t has made him a top driver in our rt.'' BO AND RAISED NEA R Dayto Ohio, C he nowe th was school in race boats. He started driving s father's outboards at age 12 and n mastered outboards and inboar ydroplanes. As a teenager he wo succession of national champ h.ips as well as elect.ion to the All erican racing team BOATING 5-K Run et A flv kilometer race t.o bendll Athletes ln Ac· tio.n will be conducted Saturday in Fountain Valley at Mlle Square (9 a.m.). TODl'S VODKA I 75Lllll-I llvldllJ, Ootot.r 11, tm FaH Gold ~ap Set Time wu wben Newport Harbor Yacht Club'• '" •ttiw ..... of t11e s.M......, IO•C&Ued "told cup" re~tu were noted for c.i...,~!JICMtllt:~':': br,edtn& all k.lndt ol wea r but Dot ne'eeaarlly .. :~..==.~­good aawoc Weather. C*lltt -..11 Y<Ktll aw-"ell The Fall n...1 .. Cup, scbedw-..t ..... _ ..._ .. -..a, ..,. ... No. t tt11 <tMMt> kNotY. VV.V '1:1111 WD --•-~ e.cto Y~ CIUb -ltwll• has on.a beea tailed lo bl~tery winds tbat ....., ........ , .. , cia.»t> SAlfMlllY, capelied 1mall boetl talllnc lmide the bay, and c.1....!l.-;="t.:'-...,, .. had reefed down lar1e boats 1bowln.1 tbelr ...,....., •. .....,... . "aarboerdl" Oft tbe weather'-ln the ocean. •Nit...,_ Y11e111 a.. -Tr-• ...... ~r ... ,S.C.Wci.r.~Y Then there have been the years of Utt.le or no M~ V«M ciuo -F•11 s.f1et, wind wtth saUboall making stemway in the jetty SuftNy. IMO._ on an ebblnc tide. In sUU other years there bu M1u1o11 .. ., v.a.1 c1ue> -S111t1t ~ ·-·""-'btllty fltUI. liwltM ....... ~ •• SuNr/. ..,..,..u -•v Y.UU .._ S...OieelY-Outl-Wet.,.,,..., All ol these or nooe of the above could bet.be Se rles 110111. ...... Serio cue Saturdav and Sunday when NHYC's Fall llfW>llA); l.Mlf·lll IJr. s.ciou s.tuf'· I dty; .. ...., IMttflN¥ "-"-• 54oft. Gold Cu~eta under way with upwards of 100 •v. bo ti 1-.-tde d talde s.ut~ VKlll CIUO -A-l I lllH ID OU courses. Strlft !PHii,, Slllurdo SPECIAL WlNE SELECTION BOTTL.£ JACK DANIELS UUA~I RETAIL Louis Martini LL"'\IH I> fl > ~.WP\. V ON HAND Cab. Sauvignon 1970. 150 "'L 6.66 F reemar1s Abbey Pinot Noir 1972. 7~ML 4.82 Charles Le Franc Johannisberg Riesling. 750ML 8.07 CASE RETAIL 72.60 52.80 88.00 Starting with the American Power Boat Association (APBA) Gold Cup rac e July 8 at Madison, Ind .. Ch'enoweth drove the new Miss Budweiser in six events . Despite the handicap of missiµg the season's fi rst three events. Miss Budweiser wound up third in the national high point standings. He his first unlimited class driving signment in 1968 when he i...ic;. _ _., 645 873 Krug Grey Riesling, 1'71 "'L 296 32.00 MISS BUDWEISER IS POWERED by World War II RoUs-Royce Griffon fighter plane engines and has at· tained speeds of 130 and 129 mph in qualifyi ng competition. With Chenoweth as driver, the boat set four speed r ecords o n t he 1979 circuit. The existing record of 200.419 mph for a mile distance was set in 1962 at Guntersville, Ala. by Roy Duby driv- ing George Simon's l'.S.-1. ln addi· tion to the mile record, U.S.-1 also set a record .of 198.168 mph for the shorter kilo distance. In the past 17 years there have been three unsuccessful attempts to break the strai1btaway record, beginning -with Tahoe Miss. driven was hi to drive for the Gale Team, ed by Detroiters Joe and Lee Sc nilh. Two years later he signed LitUe's Miss Budweiser team. on the APBA Gold Cup in 1970 973 and the national cham· pionsh.i 1970 and 1971. In o er to establish a ne w stra1g way record . Chenoweth must e two t imed runs from op- pos ite rections on a s urveyed course. e average of both runs will be comJed to determine if a new record ii been set Between runs. Miss B eiser will not be allowed to leave water . Officials wiU time th e m and kilo distances simul ly. Mini speed for a new lcilo re- cord is mph and the minimum speed fo mile record is 201.654. LIQUERS Amaretto Di Saronno. 12ot Drambuie, n uL Gailiano, 23-0z Kahlua, noz Midori Melon, 23oz Southern Comfort, 1 15 u rER Tia Maria, 23.oz. .. .. .. . .. . BOTIU. RETAIL 5.85 1 1.11 10.06 7.73 8.64 12.01 .. 8.61 CASE: RETAIL 132.45 125.68 113.77 87.40 97.73 67.96 9735 53.91 62.95 65.71 BOllU CASl RETAIL 5.52 10.48 9.49 7.29 8.15 11 .33 8.12 4.24 10.49 10.96 CABERNET SAUVJGNON Christian Bros .• '"1 • .... , 3400 Charles Krug. r,o "'' 44.00 L. Martini. '>'• "'1 36.00 Mirassou. ·" °"L 48.00 Simi. JI ''.~ 61.55 Stone Creek , / J'> ''l 35.75 Zaca Mesa. 1'Y1 "'I 44.00 SEBASTIANI TAYLORCAUF. WINES WINES MT BURG<J~O't' M 1 CHABUS Ml~ 1 'UTER 6.0 4.3 7.3 . 2.6 . . 2.8 3.E . 3.C . 4,( ~.1 ') c ..:;.._ 1.E \ \ Bl.ENOS Hiram Walker Imperial. QUAA'T 4.77 Kessler. 1 75-UTrn I I .12 Seagrams 7 Crown, 1 1~LrTER J 1.62 Vikes, Loar& Vie ~~·~~is~·c::~' BOURB015: D f bl H. WalkerTen High, 11surrn 9.42 66.55 5.55 66.60 5.55 53.34 8 .89 198 239 , , f . . Mesa Faces OS -1.W. H arper, OUAIH 6.09 -~-im-Beam, 115un 1-1 10.34 72.99 6.46 62.00-.034 By ROGBR CARLSON Ot-O.Uy l'llet Slaff The undefeated Marina High Vik- ings and Loara Saxons collide, Mis- sion Viejo risks a 3·0 record and No. 1 status in CIF ranking against Costa Mesa and lrvme High seeks its first victory of the season in tonight's three-game slate involving Orange Coast area football teams. Kickoff in each instance is at 7:30. Here's a look at each conflict: Marina-Loara Coach Dave Thompson's Vikings a re confro nte d by the passing wizardry of Bill Freeman and Bob Caffrey who s hare quarterback r esponsibilities for Loara in a game sc h e dul ed to be pl ayed at Westminster. Marina counters with a contrasting s tyle of play. keyed by the running of Tonight'• Odd• Loaraby3 Mlssloa Viejo by 7 Lagaaa Hills by I Jim Taylor, who bas scored seven touchdowns and chalked up 426 yards on 47 carries for a 9.0 average gain per carry. Taylor, however, is 1ust one-third of the Vikings' attack , a s quarterback Sam Aiello and receiver Mark Huntley have teamed up for considerable yardage. Aiello bu completed 50 percent of his 52 passes for 411 yards. Huntley bas caught 20 aerials for 333 yards, a 16.5 gain per catch. Linebackers Lee Knowles and Lyon Brandon, safety Matt Kaee (three interceptions) and a front line of tackles Jeff Aveoaltl and St.eve Fletcher. guards Steve AJoeio and Jeff Braun and center Lance Perry also l:ey the Vikes' assault. c.&a ............ Vlejt Costa ..... Hltb'• llUltanel...,. espeded to tackle the "Ctefel)dlne CIF Central Conference chamP6oll Kil· 1lon Viejo Dlab&ol without their usual -ttart1nl quarterback, Bill La, wbo 1111Jered a emeualon two w..U •· However, tbe Muatania ·•bowed promlle • witb Ore• Tereail beblDd the caaer a week aso. Te...P com- pleted nine of ~ attemptl for M yardt ln dltpolldl of Dani ltllll, 16.t. Cbril aartmua ii tM MUllanll' chlef ruHf, wblle Ute def•~ whlcb wtU be •ed to tODtabl a llluloa Viejo aalt, lt Jed bJ Ii~=. ~b, quuterback D••• Tuk• aad tailback RtcJt lueba, la ,,orkln1 OD an eilbt· I game ~ng streak, including a 10-0 vie~ over E l Toro The site of t-Onight'hme is Newport Harbor High. e-Laguna Hills Lagun ·us· Hawks invade Irvine High wit lhei r first-ever victory in hand aft 12 straight losses. while J rvme i ill seeking its fi rst win of this se . Coach uck Gallo's Hawks have another ing going for the m-a nearly i ct ·unit from a seniorless outfit of ear ago. Leading Laguna Hills is erback Rick Gliver and 8111 Rya(215) is a stalwart on de· fense. Saihrs Quiet Lio~ Without Ro '22-2 Two-ti defending CIF 4-A cham- pion Ne Harbor established its c us toma role in Sunset League water pol ction Wednesday as the Sailors ted Westminster High, 22·2, at 0 ge Coast College behind the sco · f Mike Grier (six) and Diggy Ril (five). .. The Sai exploded for 10 goals in the secon riod to put it away. Meanw • Tim Shields scored three ol five goals in overtime arid Jeff ne r taJUed both of his goals in rtime as Edison pulled away fro arina, 17-11, in another' game at . Univers scored four times in the final seg t to hold off visiting Estancia, , in Sea View League ac- tion a1 Campbell and Steve Hanle ea tallied three times. Campbe'U ce), Hant.rand Donot Hanson in the decldlna staid• to bold the Eagles, who were paced by one Hartun1's three aoai.. Costa M nicked lnvac:Unt Irvine, 9·l, u C Romabn scored from flv• with leaa than two mlDutel to to snap a tie. 8-abn and TOIU' ba• led Meta ICOdllt wttb tbree each, while Frank ~ acores for lrvlne. DaVtd 0 Ocean Vlew followed up after a abot lD a tlx-OG·Ove utuaUon MCODd ovettlme t.o 1lve the awka a '7~1 &tnplre Lea1ue vi over bolt CYP"A· Ocean ioalie Tom PaadaU bad 11 N Seahawks ...,.. led lo ICoriftl RJ Sabla, wttb three 1oal1. _ • BRANDY AND COGNAC Christian Bros .• 1 ,.., UTt.R 1 1.41 64.56 E & J , I UTE:R 7.04 76.79 Courvoisier V.S., 1~ "'L 12.54 14 I .95 Martel V.S.P.. 11 .96 135.25 CANADIANS Black Velvet, oww1 Can:idian CJub, 1 1surLR Canadian Mist, auART Seagrams V.O .• 1 75 UTLR Beef eaters. 1 7':J u r1.:.~ Gilbey's, 11511ru< Gordon, uu:,1n Seagram's, ouA1-1r Tanqueray, 11su101 GIN RUMS 6.02 15.49 5.93 15.49 14.35 9.53 4.98 5.53 14.70 Bacardi Lt. & Dk., 1 75-LITER 10.42 Castillo Lt .. & Dk., OUART . 4.26 Myers Jamican, 750ML 6.58 Ballentine, 1.75-U-TER Chival Regal, OUART Cluny, 1 75-LfTER J & B. QUART SCOTCH 14.72 14.83 12.05 Johnnie Walker Blk •• OOART Lauders, 1 1s-UT1:.R 9.59 12.97 11 .20 TEQUILA Cuervo White, OUART 6.34 Don EmilloWh. & Gold, 11~LTR 8.71 Sauza Gold, OOART 7.20 VODKA Crown Russe. OUAAT .. . .... . . ...... 4.22 Kamchatka, 1.15-UTER ..... 7.92 Popov, ' 15-UTER . . . . 6.99 Smirnoff, OOART . 5.68 Stolechnaya, OOARr ••.•.• .... 9.94 68.13 87.65 67.44 87.65 81.16 53.90 56.40 62.61 83.22 58.96 48.24 74.50 83.89 167.85 68.17 108.60 146.88 63.39 7 1.66 49.29 81 .37 47.75 44.77 41 .83 64.26 11 2.48 1 .7~ AMARETTO DESARONNO 23-0UNCE gso 1025 I 10.76 6.40 11 .83 11 .28 5.68 l4.6 l 5.62 14.61 13.53 8.99 4 .70 5.22 13.87 9.83 4.02 6.21 13.89 13.99 11 .37 9.05 12.24 10.57 5.98 8 .22 6.79 3.98 7.~ 6.98 5.36 9.38 Gamay Beaujolais Almaden, ., ... 2.73 29.70 2.4 Beaulieu, ...... 2.4 2 26.32 2.2 Charles Krug, .... 2.75 30.00 2.5 M onterey. 3.03 33.00 2.i R. Mondavi, .,. .... 3.13 34.00 2.E Parduci, ,, ....._ 2.72 29.54 2.4 Chardonnay Beringer, J \.\L 525 57.20 4.i Christian Bros .• "10) '\L 3.49 38.00 3.1 Fetzer. l'>·i ''L 4.23 46.00 3.E Giumarra, 7'Jl) "L 3.24 35.20 2.~ Monterey. ;?1.J ''t 4.88 52.80 4.4. BOTTLE: CHENIN BLANC BOTTtE CASE CASE' RETAIL RETAIL RETAIL Christian Bros .. . " 2.58 28.00 ~~. Fetzer, ., "l 2.91 3 1.60 Francisian, 2.63 28.60 2.3 Louis Martini, ~4 2.53 . 27.60 2.3 Mirassou, ,. 3.16 34.35 2.~ 6 P,.,CK 6-PACK 213 } 62 . . ZINFANDEL WINES Charies Krug, 1~ 2.75 30.00 2.5(. Inglenook.~ . 2.94 32.00 2.6 • Kenwood.~ 4.45 48.40 4.0( Monterey, ~ . 3.19 34.71 2.9( .. R. ft\Ondavl, ~ 525 5720 4 .77 We Now Offer a Limited Selection or National Brend GfOCer)' Items.- PRICES EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 11 ... . . TO OCTOBER 17 ~ r l9'79 6 HOURS le,,. ro·e f1f11f1•1 OAILY • I '• p I L. • Pa I • I' ~ i • ~ " for the ....,_ OJlllMl. ..... 4 _._ .. --..-.. .p.. .. .... ......... d t. te ...,.,,cf • I I t .... ,.. tttt ........ llOO ~.tt t I f t ""'""'" l t It e Mwl.lf i I It ::W'::.· t I I 0 ........ •ttt " ••• , ......................... ...... t f ttt Deelltt.a I I It ..,_,a • • a t •• ....,!!\.a t • 1 t lt'-'t t t i t , OMtt. a It I t j ~., I t t t °"""W. c f 0 t 0 StMlll~tll 1 t t t FIMl.tlll\ t • 0 0 0 ......... .... . &,.ecy,... I 0 I 0 ·~· .... -----,.,. ----· 0000 T...... 40 4 11 4 lMalt ac...., ..... ~ .. lOl • ..._.. ... ""'*" * ... ,._, E-0.,-. ll'etl. 51M .. ll, 0.Clfl<.M 1 .. ltt l e 11eer. 011'-ll'llhllllrt ll I. LOe -~ ll'ltt~ tO. a.lll!Mt• .. ,._ ... ,~ 0.-. Mlt-o.cln<es (II, StM•ll 111. S&-MNlrrrf.~. ~ Ill' .......... _. L 1Clte11.CL.•ll ~ .... ·-1.•o111-Je<ll-...._.. ....... '° • , 3 i • , 0 ,..,10 0 12 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 I I 1 , I I 0 0 O I 11'1 ....... IW,l~I t ti 4 1 Wll'-ICltiM. T....J:ll. A-U,n S. FootNll Odda . , ".,,..... ..... ._. ..... "-~ UCLA J>Y ISV. over WiKtll1>9ton St use bt 22-s!Mlforo Ctllf~ b'I 11-Of'990ll St ArttCNYt>ot i-~ WtsNflllOI\ by·-ArlrCNY St.le Otl.......,..T•llM-Teu&A&M l>Y I -HOUSIO<I Ml<llll!IM b'I 16 owr Mlnnetoi. .. orlll CMollM llV 1' over W•~• ll'Of'"I ClemMMll>Y•-VlrOfnlt h <ll Ytl• llY•-r O.rtmoutn 1 .,_,, b'( 11-r PenMylv.,,le BoSIOft ColleQ!I 11y 1 ov•r W•I v1rot11le Olllo St.it llV 13V.over lr>Oleftt Prl11<tl0ft l>Y 7VI owr COlum~ Cornell by• owtt Harvard PeM Stew llY 71.,...r Army LSU by l'h o,..r Geo<gl• AtalllltN by It o .. r Flor1da 1 owa by U OYer Nort,,we•trr11 I owe SI ·K•n"'• SI tv•n Nh<ho9an St by• over Wt•<C>fl>•n Puro~ bV 19 ovtr 111,,.o<\ Ml\SOV<I by 1l ov~r Oki•"°"'• SI Nl'l>,.•Y by J7o••r IC•n .. , T enne•-by 9 ovn c;...,rgl• T t'< I\ Notre O.me by 17 over Air Fort~ Flor Ide S1. DY 10 over MlnlUIPPI SI K entuov 11y 7 over M1s"uoppl Rtc.e..,,. o .... r TCU Arkan_ by • OVH Te .. \ Te<h 8eyl0f.SN\U .,,.., Pf'M O.lla•bYS°""'R-St L.oul• by 1 owr Ptlll-lotll• P1ll\l>U•Ofl Dy. 0-Cl11<lnnell Cffvel-by Jo...., W•JN"910fl T empa Bey llY • .,., _,. N-Orltell• Mle ml by 1 oYor BuffelO NY Glen" by S owr SMI Fr..-<lt<O New 1!"91-llY JI~ over Cl>lc9110 KanwsCllV DY 71n owr O...ver HouSIOfl by S over Be lhmon 59,. Ole9o by''" over S.en .. Oakl•no bys•, ow• Atl<tnl• Gr""" Bev llV l ov•• Detroit NY Jtl•llY •overMinne>Alla Men'• Croe• Country "'°"~ ...-WDllll,..,,..,. I. lllel --IMOI MCI EdOY IMOI 16.Sll J. Ger<I• (MOI 17:0S; •. U<llV'll IMOI 11: ... s. •r-n (MO) u ·M; •. MCSh-IMOl 17:10; 7. Pleftta IMDI O·IO. •. Md )OftMI 11111.t.; •. COllnl., CSI n.I.: 10. w .. r.1.111 11.t. Deeo lea Flettlnt NKW..0.T co....,..o -16 ... oler\ 10 llOnllo, 11 Mnd MM. '° ro<k eod, o rock 11$1>, JOO mKMftl. 1"'1'11 -JI 9f!OIUI In -Ito, S wnCI lloKs, !IS meck•rel, 1\'S rock Cod. SAN ll'e D•O (UM St. Lallel"'l -• •nv••": .. bonito. IS Cell<O beU, s Der· ttcude, 1 yelloWUll, 10 rock <Od lll'em 0' C.,11 .. 41n9lers: 14 bluefln t11M, 40J rock coo, t s c.41lko tins. m 11on110. OANA -A•ll' -1t enol•rs' .. ._ beu. 40 rock c.od, 1S m.cke••I LNA Mon.y Leeder• '· ·-•Ule• JIQ,7S) t.lerldl'•,.... •m ... J. .... ., ... , •1t1,9t1 4. lellyUnle .J .. .t2i S. JeM lllelotll t11U21 6 ~ClllOlll Y0\1119 '114.on 1. Amy Alelltt t t .. ,2') •. JI#/"*"''" '104.1'> t. Jo"-Ce<"'' ltt 1" ,, .. ~Oer>lel .... lit Klnea 4, Aect Wlnp 4 1ar •• ,...,_. Detroit LO•A,._.lft ll'lnl l'fftee I 1 1-4 1 I 1 -4 I LO& .,. .... SlmnMr I (HelwerOI, 11·13 1. Detroit. L•b•••I•" I !Miiier. Hedom...skyl, II ts ..... ,...,.,... -Oelclup, LA, :46; Mulflern, LA, t :'3, Le,_, Del. 10· ... Sec ............ l LO• AnQelH. Simm•• 1 IHelwerd. Olonnt l, 1: IO. 4. O.tr oll. Thompson 1 CFollono. Hut>e•I. s J1 PeNlllH -Joly Del, 7·,., 51.._., LA, t 24; Mel•c,.11<1• Oet. -. minor 10 u Autrwrtord Del ..,,..., by Polorwch. 11 lS TlllN ll'ene. \ LO\ ""'71M, 'eylor I I OIOftn• Som mer 1. 1 46 6 Lo• Anoe•u. H~lwMd I tOtorin~. S1mm..,rl. l SO 7 Oetro11 Tlwmp"'" 7 1Foli9fl0 Soocnu• >. 11 11 I Drtro 1t, M1ho-.i11ch t t frrlf•do""•"''•Y l •r-.on1 1~ ~ Ptooall•"' Joly, Del l JO H dlw•rd. LA • 0 HOSJ.,, tn\ LA dou«>tt- m1nor ~ )I u•\~ra l A w-• w-a by GolOUp 19 ,. C,flol\ on go~• O•lrool i & 10 7• lo· A119elM ~ IH>-H UO.tl•t~ O~tro1t Hutnto1 t or o lo\ ll<>otle\, Ltt<wrd I\ • 9,111 OtherNHLScorea NY "'-"·· Tor-o > Allente S, Outllec l P1thl>u'911 •. WIM•~O 1 Cr.lcego 4, Edmonton 1 Ptio.nlx CIH1lc '1ntlt_M,..~ Chrl\ Ewrl LIOyd Oii Yvoniw Verm .. , & 1 •·1. Ola.._ f r omP>Oltz dtl Ten;• Herford .. ,_ .... RelW<t Rklleros de1 \'(Iv•• Henlk• .. J. ,,.., Kele Letlltm Oel Rene!• Tomenove .. t. , ... 1 .. lln... ~"" dfl &et tine Bungo .... • J, Mime Jeu\OVt < O.I Berwra JordMI .. ,. •_.; ,.,..,., c..1110 dfl Slee y Mer901111 6·1, l ·1: Merline NevrellloY• def. T•ny Holleoty .. l . • > WellOy Tumllolll clef P..,. Slvlwtr .. l • ..0 Kerry R•ld def lllosl• C•"'' "'· • l C.rotlrw S4olt 0e1 Gr.., Swven• ...... , LA<ne DuPont Oel VlrOif!le Auric! S·7 ... . .... ll•M KtoH Oel Reoln• ,,..,,lkove .. ,. M . Pro Tournament lat Tel A•l•I *-..... 11 ...... Collft Olbl•y -lllt ........... 7-6. 1·S; Tom Okller o.i. l>r•ll Helm Artot.oroll .. 2 ... , Godo Toumement W....11-Sltot~ Anq•I Glment oet ••••n Terouy 1 .... 1. .. , • c.erlos Malta 081. Corr-Ba .. uulll bV oefeutt; Herold Solomo11 del. J'n KOO.• .. 4. .. ,. Ad•ltflO Panell• Otf. Jelro V•l•sco I·), C..l; Heinz G\lnlhtrdl def, Eliot T•lh<"er • >. 6 '. HM• Gll-lll•r CS.I Roger Gue«• •·•· .. 1 ... 1, llleul Aemlrt~ dff. Sten"' .. Birner C..• ... ,, Tomel Smid dtf lll•mlre Venevode\ •-1. C..•. C•r•o• Kirmeyr Otl Jose Lui• Cl•'< U , • l ... ,. J lrl tf'r-df'f Jose Hlguere• .. 1, .. 1. Edell• 011111\ ~ P•ul MCN_/,.2, •·l . Jelme FlllOI clef Ulll Pl11Mr .... 1·•. •·l . Victor Pecc I oet HPlnz ICery .. ,, i..1. lv•n Ltnol dfl Pevel 510111 1·1, rettrecl, Me,,.,.I 0r•n1H def Gabriel Lrpl ........ •-2; FtrNndO LUN def Jevl•r ~Oltr •·1, 6-1, 11·• Baseball Attendance AMERICAN LEAGUE Home la crease C11b 1t71 D'e>es AUeeduce Decrease Baltimore 72 l,~~1 + 628,837 Botton 79 2, ,106 + 32,463 Anfcelt 81 2,523,575 + 768.189 210,968 Cb caeo 73 1,280,132 Cleveland 74 1,011 ,444 + 210,880 Detroit 75 1,830,929 83,964 KansuCity 79 2,3U,CM5 + 6,552 Milwaukee 76 1,918,3'3 + 316,937 Jlinneaota 75 1,070,521 + 2.f12,6'3 New York 79 2,5.17.765 + 201,894 Oakland 17 306,763 220,236 Seattle 80 844,445 32,995 Texu 78 1,521,540 + 73,577 Toronto 77 1,431,651 130,934 TGYle 1.0'15 a,m.• l,IU,155 NATIONAL l.&AGtJE .... lacnue ~ tm Da&es AU_.,_. Deen ue Atlanta 75 1•:• 135,0IO Chlc•lfO 18 1,848,!17 + 123,278 cuaclnnMl 77 1.-.m 175,584 Housten 77 1,900,112 + 77,,187 Oodaen •• .a.-... .... 1 ll•irMl 72 l,Jll.1'13 + 674,1• N..,Yert 10 --m ,aa PbllMlr' .... 77 a.m.m + 191,m Ptttatstb ., .. i•.• + 470,m a .i.-'11 ..., .. + 141,llO ...... T7 n~ na,uo ... ,..deer> " ... na T_. -+ 1,.709 MOR: TOUll lleMd cm atltodtDOt ftl\INI la box ..... \ ... -. :e:r:::=-= ..... ,........,_......, ''''' •ea-flew le-IT ... ) L ... ••• t .... .-... S-1411 C0.-.1 f ... 4 OO; AnlfY• .. .,.,..... lk""'1WI t 40 ~ , .. "-""""""' (I( ....... ) 6.IO, J .• , t.40, c.ecfllln\t Clllef I '"°"99 I HO. J O ; ,,.,.,, ll'rlnu lht, 1t11t 001 10uvlero6oJ aoo. t.ae1eu., ..._ ,..,, ,... .... TMre ,._Allay, U4111 lo.vi.tel tJll, L ... J.•. Tlw GmMdy .. _. (ONN\r)' f .. , a. ... -.,, Oii CemlM ICl-1 tl/O; P ellt(i. O•ltticU1A I '~rUI r-.-L.o"'" To Tr .. l .. ylftt) t6.t0. UO, UO, 111-. MMlet CVtll- lnclMml 1.00, UO; Dfftrl OudWN '15Nrfl • 40. 1'11111 r41U-Oeu y $111-• lkufflttl U o, J 60, J 00. IC"""' °*"• IGr,,,..yl UO. 4 tO; Tru SC.. IS1oe9111.20; Q Q\llMlle 11·71 pekU7 .. 11.-111 ·~· ,.., ... , llCWOMrl uo. a 60, t to, Par11no <••~••ul • .o. u o; 1.ordllnt IL«°''" uo; u .. ec1e 1 ... 1 N ici tt.io. k vontll rec-FM(y 8-MH (Or11110YI 11.fO, 4.00, f.10. Hlllbllty Fiii' IGof'clonl J to. 3.to; t41110llly Nuttier IVtllenclCnof\Oml J to. Ut. El9fl(ll r«-oioi Gey /Gouclr-J 4.40, I 20, l .OO. W .. 18111 ~ IMoenoftl J tO, > 10; Sir Jim (Lofteol 4.00, n •&¥18 l~JI pelOSUO . H Intl! reco-Orenoe Juico I Perry I '"°· 4.00, J.40; FrOlltel Atteell (Wllll-0 1.tO, t .60; Akl>Md H-vt• CA<kerm ... 1 3.to. hnlll •ec-a..enao A IH•rd l•I 11 00, uo. J 40: P-Fell tW•sl!Our11I l oo. u o;' 81111• 8 ""' ISMell\I 4.60; U ••ecte 11 .. 1 pelO 7t.OO. ,. .. ~._.. ... ,, lantaAfttg ......... ,. ... _ .............. 0 2 --""'' Flral rece-"'tlo llun IMCCMrOftl 10.IO, 10.60, S IO; CulllllO ComnMnl IOll•erH I 16.00. t.JO; Miu ~·• IDtleflcHdwvel 4.40 • Sec-r-..--O<ey On Orey IM<C..rOftl 10 .... 6.60. 4 tO. Me Gin Te 1Mc:H"9#1 U.2', 10 JO; Dtl Mer OW... ITorol 1 40, U delly ......... 16-111PolclIH00. Tlllrd reco-T• OHltfl IHewleyl SAO • 4.JO, UO; 8oO ICelw (McCtrtOlll l .fO. s JO. TrU<.o CMeNI J.40. Fourtll rect-LNl's 0.-cve1..,1ue1tl 11*1. s.-, 3.2', V-llm Belle CSo..-1 6.JO. J tO; Glr-IMc:"-,.._l 1 tO. Fllll\ re.Ge S...0-IMc:Gw,....I 1•M. 1.00, 4M , -lt-erdlflo IM<Her .... I J IO. 100, Hiii $1-1 CAowlesl 4.00, l) H K te CM) pete 0 1.00 Sl•tll ·--OIKonu IMeMI ' ....... S JO; e 11110P ._.,,, CMcC..rOlll > 20. > 00. Time To T....,o CH-leyl, .. S.vent" rec• See$0nlng ,,.,.,.,.,•U ri f 40. • 40. J M. Artltll< 0..... C Pleru 110 00. I JO• Clll<k-CT0<ol l .O. u necte , .. , pe ld H t 50 Ei9lltll rect TO<K" 0 ' 5-<I C 8allerer I '11.10 J1 60, 1 10 Scort T *•"'' F'ou• CShoemekerl J 40 1 •O Ric h Ooclor CM<CerrOftl J 10 Ninth rec• Turvll ... ISl!Oemekt• I 1l JO, I 40, • eo Cotlmemorettveo IM<H•rg"") 1' 60 • 00, Tellll"<!n 10.leN>u• .. ;•I • 10 il ... , .. f .. 111pal<l2U 00 Allu•<len<e 1S M t J UNIOR c:ou..ao• _.....,._. Sed<llflM<k • 0 ' 0 1 1 0 1 •l EI Camino l 1 I 1 J ' 0 0 11 Stddl~~ Korono Cooti '· Ottm•n I. k r•m•r 3 GrOCK £1 C•mo...o St0<011q Chc!r""•" 1 C.M••' H~HrOO 1 ll"1r1f nfW"r AOC>•f\~ Wl't~\Olt"t , HIOH SCHOOL S-tLAe .... N~ ,,.port H•'t:lof J 10 ) 4 1'1 W"lmonsltr 0 I IJ_J__ N"~l\G '"Gr'4'r '· !101 .. S O•Vall• 1 C.ollordl Oe<•fll 7. H.,..~11 1. Tnom••l Wr,,•mtMlt'r "'°''no Yotour•. C0tn Eao.on I 1 l 1 S • If Mero"" 1 I 0 S 1 1-11 Ed•.on .cor•nci S..tton 7 f-ry Ocl\s-r 1. Sll•tld• ~.Mu<,. J w.-n, 0 wooa.n 1 lioltmen l Marine t«<lnq N._n1. Yee 1, Morebllo l , JHltr, A-~• suvi. .. u - E •l...coa l I 0 1 4 Un1vtr\l1Y 1 J 0 4 • £\1.w><I• w.oronq Beld1"9 1. 8•-l<tle. Herlunq J Unlvtr\llV t<O<lng H-. C•mlllMll J, McCormick. S. H•nlt l, J Henle I rvlllt ' J 1 1 • Cost• Me\t I l J 1 _. trvlM Kor"'9 Murptly 7, M<.Corm10 . lloflclle J, 0-lbO"""I Co•I• -\t Crensl\•w J ••rw-1. °""'"·-J R""'r•Lt-Ocun Vlf'W 1 o > o O 1 t-7 CvPr•n 1 J 1 o o • o--. Ocun View KOtlnq· Garr 2, Nady, S.111• >. Elllot • C;preu 11Corlftll Or1e99, Ltnlnve• w 11- Misc. Wednelday'a Traneectlon1 I AHeALL N"'-ILA .... SAN FAAHCISCO GIANTS -He""d OM M<Mehon pltclllnt <Mell. IASeCRTaALL Neti-l..--11Altee:iet- 80STON CELTICS A•IHMd IC••lft Stecom. lllk kY '°"""· •ncl W•rne Kr•k-. guerlh CHICAGO BULLS -Welvtd Riek•• Wllllt m•. !llM'd. encl Rencty """· forwerd GOLDfN STAT E WAftll lOR S - Relu sed 0.flny Sell•Dery, forward, etld Jofln Oouolei. ouerd. CHOI.AHA PACER~ AtlHMd We"" AeOford, f!*'d MILWAUKEE BUCK$ -Welnd S.m Smllll .... Ot«lc'I< Me"''· ,,_d,, HEW YOlllC ICHICIC$ -Welvtd GI"' Gond,..rld 8'111 Jot>n Rudd. '°""'"d' PHILA0£L..,.IA 7•EllS -W•lvtd 8rf1t vromen. c.e,.cer. PHOl!Nlll SUNS -Ple<td Beyerd 'l'Of'. rttt, ctnlw, Oii !tit Injured rtwrv• 1111 SAH "NTOHIO SPUAI -Pieced Sylv•Sltt -.It, centw. Oft IN lnjurtcl re· -11&1. u TAH J AZZ -Treded llOll 1.H, ouerd, lo , ... """"' ~\ for __ ....,.CMlfld drefl pkltt Ill .-. 1•1. elld futwo <Oft•-• "°"'· # ..... " ••• ~# .... ... • ~ ---· .. • I FOR THE RECORD/ OUTDOORS Jim N iem iec I Clam Seatbn Arrives • Wll.b tbe fllblng aeu on Just about end.ln8 for bil same analen along the aoutb couWne. the at· t.ntJoa ol eome outdoon men focuses on other aame that 11 found in our coutal waten . Pl.Imo clam teuon bu arrived and many Oranae County residents look forward to low tides durlnl the months of October. November. and December to rake the aborellnea of our local coast for these aood eat1n1 clama . Our lOweal tJdff of the year. usually occurring around the flnt part of December, bring out bun· dred.I ol clamen ln all types of outfit.a and loaded with a nriety ol clam digging aear . •Some clamen prefer to free dive for plsmoa wttb the ald of an inner tube and a wet suit, while other old tlmeh Just walk the very shallow watel' ln hopes of dlacovertna a clam. DUlllNG OCl'OBEa, OCEAN temperatures are warm enou&b to make for a very comfort.able afternoon bunt. During the warmer days clam- OUTDOORS mera can emerge themselves in deeper more pro- ductive water and not feel the sharp pain of seem· ingly freezing cold water. Last week saw a combination of medium.tow tides. warm weather and small s urf, all or which combined for a good clam dig for the very few dig· aers that were out along tbe south cout. Tradi· Uonally this fint low of the season provides llm it.s and near Umlts for all clammen. but lhls year it . waa a blt oo the slow slde with only those anglers out in 5 to 10.feet of water flndJng their llmil of 10 legal sized clams A clam haa to measur e from one extreme to another in a straight line <1reatat abeU diameter> rour and a half lncbes in Soul.hem C.Wornla and five inches In those counties between San Lula Oblapo aod Monterey. The sea.son on plamoa for Southern Callfomla ls all year and the UmJt la 10 per day, but the best conditions are durint the late fall months. THERE WE R E MANY seoaTS FOUND which should be returned lO s andy holes from which tbey were taken. If a clam is Urrown back in the water and left to the pounding of the surf and the currents of the tide, it bu no chance to r•dlg Itself before the sharks a nd other prey prevent it from growing to matunly Many times when there are hundreds of clam mers out hunUng these smaller pismos are washed up ob a drying beach and they meet the aame fate~ lbo8e that a re left unbw1ed la deep water. Eve clam dlgger should practice eooeervaUoo as fllbery could be wiped cM ln a short time, and en to date, hu seen a 'decline atnce tbia wrltf used to free dJve aloac ·the cou t 10 to 15 yeaaago. E WHO FREIE DIVE for clams uae a han fashioned after a small crowbar. Wben a cla viewed from above the bar is inserted alo1 side the clam and then forced below it and • the am ia then forceably removed from it.a deep ho~. Uthe dJver la hampered by poor vlsablUty, at.re currenta or la not quick to bring tbe clam to theturface tban many spotted plamos are not h a1est.ed. Most divers look to tbe two trey cirilar holes to identify the locatioo of a bedded cla. rhose who prefer to stay 00 the dry aide wlll enJt the help of a clamming fork lo their quest to• limit of piJ!mos. The commercially manufac· tutd forks run about $18 and are worth it after a re successiv.e. outings. Other shore walkers. UM a4hing from shovels, to rates, to pitct,forks to lof te the clams. The bes t way to work Ulese forks ~ walk backwarda and push the fora down into aand. When you strike something solid It is t likely a clam and then you work your tool und witil the clam Is f reed. EVE RY CLAM DIGGE& SHOULD also have a asuring device on his diuer. They are avail•· t at any bail store and sell for around $1.2:5 each . OCTOBER SPECIALS ONE WEB< ONLY SPECIAL ·BRAKE OVERHAUL For con witt. fro.d dbc/,.... bralln syste.s I lri I•'' Oo .c P;i<J 6 I 'long,. 8 ln.s(>flCl-brake-hose"o ' RH>t1• J N,, .. ,.1 ylmOH 9 ln•,pec! ma'llPr cyl 3 Rr Jrf 11 .. " t r , & ".!rum\ 1 O Add lluiri ti !1Pt;. • r. ·•' ~ ,,. 'I Nh• •• 11 P 'lad Tr>~f Fa m i l iar O pening : ;; ::r,····~" ~·Q,.'d'" For D eer Season '~.~~,i·:~;;: .. '. .. '.'. .. c, ..... ,.~J 599 Nimrods will find hunt.mg condilions and deer IU.6!~~ill!~~IJ.l;~~~~Lt;.flifilM!r!'tll habitat similar lO last year with the openin1 Satur- day ol Soul.hem California's abc-week·loal buck season. However, with feed and water in good shape, WITH THIS COUPON FRONT WHEEL ALIGNMENT deer will be widely scattert•d 1r.ic "' REG. 18.95 The season . covering mo~t o r Southern Cahfornia, wi ll run through Nov 25 lluntcr. Will r s 12'5 be pernutted one buck. rorked horn f)r ht•tlcr for ·• :·o. ,.., : the season. I t ff t The follOW.J.Il& IS . rundtJWll OlL PLO!>JlCc.l.S. m· W :'r\tlm'!1('( -... Ill~'""' co~~~~otLIS """'•r •uccrn .. _,.., 10 .., .. ~, ,.,, ... , ,.,_ 1t• ~Y'ff?1?11)l'fn1n?Prf'f'ff~' bu<._, were fAtll@'f'l 8•"''"'0 t••nt mo'' rOMt' ~ta bit liq· ~ o••~ .. ~' •lf~f\ '°""' M<Of'lrCMf'• rfMCh ••II rfl'OUir• k)ur .,._... Or•.,., .,.U'l'lt*'' •O ¥1W"d to <hf<.• *•I" J.(W"P\f S.rv1t.• end •"""" ~ ot••t.' O" • ., , '~'f'' tPK••I rKtrt<UOf\t ef'\O Ure•rm\ c k>t.urt\ O•A.... Evtin with flf• ctowr~\ •111 '' ••l)llllCtH to bl •t l••tt '' "*'~I\ I~..._.,., 101 &Ht l\untf"QI for une-n-.~ ~' •HI Q11' "" 1 r•ouco dl\ltltl of Clo""''-Nellonel For.,1 SAN DIKOO Eocei>t Of! Cemp Pe"°ltrion .....,,. flynUno "'°"'d bt ?~~~;": ~:'.::..':"~:~::.'~:.~~ .:."':~ ;-~= 1:: L-e • ...,._, C ..... a"" '°"11> of lfttwtlele I ~I fHr I -· .. II ••• 441. -tflt\ Y-l •••• '"°"'d "" -IN -"""'"' •-clle< • •llfl e~~~1offo< .. o1Clewl-Nell-IP'Of~lo<ll.-.<_.,_<-"'9r .. W•ITE•N RIV8 •SIOI , SOUTHWHT8•H SAN l l •NAllOINO u11i.u H rly r-.,.,,,.II lllllno of fire< '°""K· 1,,..,.• will "" 1111 .. l'"l>'O•,._ ,,,.,., of -fl In Me• _,... doer -lellOfl• re,.,.ln •t IOw ....,.,,, AmOflO llftW< ""' In S.i Bernerdtr>O -...,..,,,, .,, tN S-te A,.. 1111...,., a urro Flab, Cleqhonl Rl<IOt 5,.., --•If ~'"' -~·­Mol#ll•ln Sen4.e !tow -S... J t<lnlO. M M 81«• -T-lnOU'lte"" ..... -'°°" c~ .,_ -refUO" •r• .-Oft ....... evell-··-5•n ... .,.,,,.... He\-1 FOfftl ,._ •IOl- K AITl llM U.N •••MA.DINO" 1...-r ..... c-lt•OM -_.i lew11 •u,.,..vel Olve -t fOf lmprowo 11un11no tn N"" Yon PtoYI0.11<• •r>O Orenll• "'°"""'"' eftCI ,,.. Mid Hllll Pr,....,, uoe<1ed to "" rwnv 1n Pinto Ba.Jn. Gott°'"""'°° ki<fl'O•. Cut 5'><1~ •llO s...ct C•nt'Otl ,.,., ~•ZArO lll9h Duck Hunting Begins California's first 1979·80 waterfowl hunting season wtll open Saturd ay In the northeast with a limit of seven d1111cks per day, 14 in possession. Goose seuon will open In the area Ocl. 27 The northeastern season will continue through J an. 13, 1980. Shootina hours are one-half hour before sun- rise to sunset. Starting and stopping limes are list- ed in Part III or the California hunting reaulations for 1979. which are available ln booklet form at sporting goods stores and Department of Fish.and Game offices. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I 0-15 : • LAND TRACS 558.95: •FEt a•u : ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT STEEL-I EL TED • RADIALS F.l.T. 195/.75R14 539. '2.36 IH71al41 205/70R14 545.95 '2.52 IH71al41 5/7 I '48.95 '2.39 GR78-15 w.s.w. W.D. '49.9S. '2.73 HR78-15 '58.95 '2.96 LR78-15 . ,., s59;95 '3.42 TIGER PAW BELTED RAISED WHITE LETTER Advance reservations for waterfowl hunt.in.1 on the Tule Lake, Lower Klamath and Modoc na· Uon al wildlife refuges are required for opening weekend only this season. accordina to the U.S Flah and Wildlife Service. These already have SIZE beeniaaued. .... __________ ,.. ______________ ..._ ______ .. NICI fl.L T. '37.95 '2.lt '39.95 •2.s• '41 .95 '2.77 '41.95 '2.11 '41.95 '45.95 1171 I llACH a'9. TGNllACH • • '' .,. 1,) , ·--·---"Tell me about your nightmare in the morning I " "Don't you know anything, Jeffy? Those aren't raw eggs, they're opplecots." PIANUTI l'UNKY WINKIRllAN bj 01Hff M. SclMt IMl9E IF !(OU laWXED AllMIJ 10 THE SWE a: TME ROOM AHO STOOt' TMERE JJ5T A UTTlf lO TME LEFT Ck TME RAOIAT~ .. by Tom Batiuk nu.dlf, aeto1iet 11. 1m OALYN.OT . llG GEORGE ,..--------. :er«n~~~ ~EDI 10-1/ lT5 JUST A Lt1fl£ ~'I Tal l.JA ! "PH91'ftl TOMI" DRABBLE loll '/E '(OIJ l(EAftQ 1°1l~ (h)(J ~E~.MOl6AN ~0RAee,t..E IS OOR ..iEw Mo'J1( <'.~rflc ( CON&Ufvl.A'f10NS( MISS PEACH llJ14'4 OIOt.i'T' I 1lhtJI( 0~ 'fMAT? .. by Kevin Fagan - i.40W (O MC NO&OO'I f.../f.R l(rJoll.lS W14£ N 1·~ Ut .. ur rvN~l'H by George Lemont ve:AH ,eveN ORi"HOPE::DI s -rs HAv e Hoee1es, KI c::> DO .1 by Meo uurius llrA, VOL{ .. M 1t).MA'Va" CllONll" VWICY ~LL ON ~llf ~~ V..,<§f~. 1"VS SUN 7 TUPY1NG V&tr:'t OIL!ff NT'l-V. ----..- THI~ YEA~ •.. by Gus Arriola ~Mer .I. WOl.JJ..ONIT GIVI:~ TWO CE/.ITS FOR ANY OF/Tr . TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 48 Jrll I Hide 49 Eltl!f'l!>l•t! 6 T"'1Q 50-IM 11 B.1lh s: F 1l.1mt·nl 14 -1.1 .is1.1 !-b J.JP.Jn• • 15 Can.)(J1c1n r·~· 1Jm11,1I t" S7 f OfmJI attirP 16 PJll•d J 'WCl•O< 17 E •ties 60 NO<I 19 A<lft'ChYt' 6 I -Of UNITED Feature Synd•cate Wednesday's Puzzle Solved l\ " 0 • I I C I .. G •• 5 ' ~ 0 •• I a . .. l l I II c • • • ( .. c 0 •• ( . S I ... . ( • D . " I I • u s ' I It G --o . , ( . •II C [ S I •• [ .. I II DO l ' II I "I s • . [ l • ,. ' [ "I" I •• t I S I & I • s S I I I t eoo< l05T H15 JO&! HE WENT TO AN EMPloYMEHT A6ENCY Tiit5 MORNINC,/ ~EVIE ~LEPT HERE WllH ME LAf>T NIGHT ~UT WHEN l OOT UP. I FOUNO end1"'l 20 Smur 21 Numetoc.ill Pff'ftl 2'2 Pronoun 24 S1;i1e 6:' -Mu<ot>v 63 Sera• 64 Jlfqon 65 WOfld·wt'.1ry •• [ 0 .. I & • • • • -[ • l c • . .. l • •• l s I c l I I c • s l [ . I I [ . 0 [ • I S c • "I -a I l ' N I s u • .. c I fl ( . & f I HIM OONEt FOR YOUR HOMEWORK oo 1T aoo TIMES I rotlT CAR~FOR 11KICKAHAWK~ ANPWE'f ~t'lfr llPOOPOO!' . ( .. u . ' I 0 26 Dwellongs DOWN •• 0 • . " & I 27 Thespians 1 Ar11m g lath1•• 30 Race 2 VehiclP 25 L••ltove< 32 Goliath. e g 3 Sn.1kt>~ .!6 Conlidont 33 Oulburst 4 Po~" 27 Conltk:t 34 Seize 5 I OP(.l(.'f 28 Ftlm 37 Respoosib1h· b B.1ndJge 29 COIOf ty 7 FU(>! 2 WOfdS 38 Havin9 wings 8 Pro -30 A(>plaud~ 39 Venu~ <IC' -9 0es5efl 3 t Cereal 40 Fobef ~nol tO Movement 33 Hover 41 OuN Ol\e! 11 Adding sugar 35 To Sheller 42 Cash 12 Outdated 36 Tads 43 Chooses 13 S1ai.es 38 ~ 45 Overcharges 18 Ouarrets 39 ''You &aid a 46 Re1ig1o1J1 23 Posse.ye -I" men WOfd 4 1 Hates y l [ v t • I I • ! s II 42 Barn sound 44 Tlmbet 45 Valley 46 Plea 47 Wand 48 Peal 50 Arizona c11y 51 Prepos11ton 53 Radames lover 54 QstrlS Wtft' 55Synoman - S8 Alberta min era1 59 FISh . ... I \ -. .. .. , ., •'.: I - OM.YN.OT •• , ... EcOnomy Outlook Grim T~ Fiah Cat,ches SepM_mber Optimilm SaUI FaUe Hope NEW YOU CAP) -In UM pu\ few da¥t Americana learned that s.p.mw uempto1.-t declln.ed to S.I perctnt from Au1ut'1 t petttet, ~ ldded to lMlr cletlt and purpu· Int .,_.. .......... optlmbm Taken ~r. ~ btll ol rntelll.-ce hardly convey the Idea ~ ........ which IGCDI e conomlata maintain already has us in lta trip and wldcb many more aay Will pounff upon ua before the end ot tbe year A I bert Cox Jr.. pre&ldent ol MerntJ ~ EconomiH and rormer White House eeonoml1t. ts among the laUer. DID'nlE NEWS in recent days s h~ke his recession tbeor.y ? "No," be replied. "lf anytbing, 1t strengthened my conviction that lhe recession will wind up deep and long." In fact. said Cox. he was a lready this week writing a re- port raising to 60 percent the likelihood of a severe downturn. He said it will come by yearend, and reach its depth in lhe first half or 1980. IJJ tbl third quarter ol DUt year. bl tDAlnlalnl. unemllloJ· nt•t wUI have reecbed 8.t P't· ceat. and retall 1aln wiU bt otf blidly. It wUJ, be said, be '',,.Uy wtelsed." almmt H bad as in 1'T4·W75 Wbat ta It that makes men aucb u Cox IO coecemedt "The unde{lyinl t.rendl," b 11Jd Yac· ton auch 11 lbe natwnin1 out ol employment lncreue. aluQlah· sau• lo productivity. cooaumer tMaylna weakneaa. "THE ft END 18 weakness," he aaid. "Inflation is e ating away at incomes a nd con· fldence." September's figures mightn't look bad now, he said, but over tbe long term they'll be seen as oddities in a pattern. Cox believes they might even deepen the recession by giving busineu and consumers a ralse sense of hope. Purc hasing agenta, ror example, mlaht be inclined to build up Inventories, which then cannot be sold. That situation occurred in 1W74. Durini lbe ftnt .... ..oatbl ol lhe yevi:ompaalet built tblit loventorlea to "wildly H · ceaalve" levela. "I fear It la bap- penlna aaaln... be a aid. Durint July. be pointl out, inventones I H W about fllO billion, the bit· ceat ever for a month. Cox blamee what he sees as a woneninl llt.uatioo on aome ol be earlier foreeutl In wblch tbe word "mild'~ wu repeated over and over by ~mista. Co& l.D· eluded. He said it may have leat raise hope. AS HE SEES rr, lhe reffSSion wlll be in two stages. Tbe flrst part, in which we have been foe the past six moolhs by Cox's reckoning, will be mild, ita im· pact scatte red rather than pervasive. The second part will be "wicked," a word be used several times in an interview. Unemployment, traditionally the measure of severity used by millions of Ame ricans. will spurt. Everyone will feel lhe im· pact. Promotions, HOnors Told Balboa Island resident Lori Aa.e Good has JOtned ModvaUoaal Dealp Ir llarlletilll, be., of Irvine, as a marketing coordinator. Sbe formerly worked for Ponderosa Homes of Irvine. • Flytag 'nger Llee in Los Angeles bas appoint· ed Stephen G. Haab or Fountain Valley as dlrec· tor·ntsht operations administration. He Joined the airfreight airline in 1977. * Eugene L. O'Roarlle of Corona del Mar has been a named vice president, administrative services. for Soutben Callfonlla Gas C.. He as· sumed his new position Oct. l. * Lelgbton and Assodates, a n lrV"ine geottcbnical consulting firm that has prepared a report on the restoration of Bluebird Canyon in Laguna Beach, has added two senior enetneering geologists: MJcllael I. Bracher of Mission Viejo and Monts A. Bladerman or Dana Point. Irvine resident Pacifico Moataao has also joined the firm as senior geotechnical engineer. Equityl.omts1pto 95°/o Rice Crop of ApprolMcl v-. __ A Record -_-,,, T-SHIRT ··. •2.s9 ---~~ 2nd Trust Dffd.Heed MOMy7 MESA MORTGAGE MA~ ARAAN<lf PRIVAI( OR INStllUTIOHl'l rlHANC...0 HO 'REPAY .-...ALTY Prompt Courteous Service A C8Mo--n.e 8toMW 1 IJH l"IM ll•cl.. T_. CALL PAT WALLER IJJ-"80 .... Ht-51)41 , •• ,, J ftlf ""'° SACRAM ENTO <AP > -A record Northern California nee harvest ===========:::!.. appa rently is under way but officials say they don't expect the bumper crop to depress prices. Projections of the now half-completed harvest WHY SHOULD YOU CONSULT A P'HYStCIAH7 ByTeny Grant, R. Ph. abow the season's yield 11!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!~ between 30 million Jnd 33 TAX SHEL TBtED IHVESTMBfTS million hundredweight, R oge r S tr a tt o n . secr et ary.treasurer of th e California Rice G rowers Assoc1at1on. said Tuesday The pre vious record crop. in 1975, was 28 m1llion hun- dredweight, he said. Arf' vou interested in paying less inrome tax ~ h, I 1· r art 1r1 pat 1 n tz in a h i tz h I v pr11f1I mnll\:itf'd investment'? For tho"t' -.1·1·k ml.! an inH·<.tmrn1 ~hi ch has MronJ? •·1·11n11mu· m1•nl for future financial ,l!am. <1nd '·" -..ntnJ.!' m 1!17!'1 or approximately 400'' "<· 11fft·r an t'\t'1t1ng. un1QUl'. and proven 111\ 1•s1 m1•n t wh1<·h has heen ravor:ihh• rt•\ 11•1,H•d bv som1• of the nation's finest. mo...t prt·sm111111lf-1aw-:mct--:rrl'OUT1ttmrftrm~-·nre amount or this inv1'slment may be adJusted Sh;p..,.~nt to mt-et your personal financial situation. ., ••~ GetALD L IOlil FIMAHCIAL SBVICES l11•1•i111'l' vnu kno~ a 1th''"'11111 ha~ lo ~pend <:o m.111\ ''"''"' '" ,, m1'i'itc-al -.1 hunl .md tnlt'rn-.h1µ 1n ,1 hn-.1111 ,ii I h:tl ht• h .l'o l..n111' l1·d c•· .•hnut d1 -. 1 ,, .. ,., .111d lh1·1r tn·«I nw111 th.11 11111 1·11ulcl nut k nu" fl•'t'.•U,,. "ht·n 644-2507 'L , ~~~~~~~~~~!!' argest ~41r\-on ... bul ii ph~4't<' ..,t•l1•1·1~ a m1•d11·inf' lo tak1'. lh••y usu;illv do not lreat thP rause or the• trouhlt• but onl.v Irv to stop the pain or disC'om. rort That is why 1r self· treat ments do not help immediately. it is wise to go to a physician before a possible senous disease can devclap. l I $50,000 to $500,000 Offic ials of Irvine Datsun reporeted that they hav e r e · celved the largest ship· INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS .• meot of cars ever de· livered to a West Coast dealership in a single day. t • latae•I onl" ...,,_.., ··-· •Com-ml •Rakl-dal • Week.I"~_.._... .... _ ... "' ....... * • 6 -11aa to S v-n • S-·diera Callfo...U A J.S.truck convoy de· livered tbe complete line or Dataun 210s, 200-SXs. SlOs , 280·ZXs and trucks. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medtclne. Pick up your p rescription H 11hopping nearby. or we will de liver pro mptly without extra charge. A i r eat man y people e ntrust us with their prescriptions. May we compound yours? _, Cool.JC! OU loen ,.,_dolt Mnfke f.,, your lilldnc1ng n••1td., (714) 759-1515 AlllEl'tCAN HOME MO«rOAOE 230 Newport Cente1 Otove Oeaoon Plaza Newpart Beach. Caltlornoa 92660 Ontario Flights Set by Inland Inland Empir e Airlines bas inaugurated da ily air service from Ontario International Airport to Las Vegas, Los Angeles. Lake Havasu City, Ariz., and the Grand Canyon , as well as Palm Springs. Information numbers are (714) 593-2550 or, toll-free, 80CM72·7855 or 800·472-1718. rAdl.mOl'HAa.MACT ,..........,., Hl ....... I__, .....,... .... 642·1510 PAOfii.e 79 is your guide to pro football action. f1t1erY Saturday in the DAILY PltOT GUARANTEED SHORT-TERM RETURN. 10.662o/o Annual Rate = 11.137% Effecttve Annual Yield" Republic's Money Market Certificates Republic's Hlgh:Performance Money Mafket account •IO,OOOJlllnl• .. o.pojlt guarantees a high short-term yield on your savings. Then! 6-Nolllb .. ,.. (182 ..,., are no brokerage fttS or other charges. Call us. We'll ar- range for transfer of funds from your bank or other savings lnctltution. Above rate available Odober 11 tlaru October 17 '(flK llvt .tnn.;el y~ld-.n•umu 3<16 d•v~ IOI 14!op ~"' R.cH ••• tub1 .. < I lu < h11n<J" "' rtllt'W411 f~ttlll regvt.cK>n• rttQUtrt • 1ubslonllol lrtltrttl Pf'nelly IOI t <1rly ..,tthdntwtf end prohlbll compoundin11 .. £VCfJ dtM the Roo1ter Crows ~r Money Orows REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS •nd to.11 .tNOCl•f0011 Mln'A NIA 17tti St. West of f'fewport FreewtY (714) ~1·5286 ~ 202 ~ Ptua. '°° N. E\dd St (714) ~8290 IAGCINAl'UGQ!I. 302.32 Crown Velley ~Wt/ (7 14)49'-0MO ft.ST~ 134 Wt.ttmlnlUtr Malt/Bolte (, SM1 Ptego f~ (714) 194·"47 ..... omc., ALlM>ENA 2248 N LAii• /We, (213) 7'91· 1211 / 681·661 I fill) Pl~t 8.Uf DIEGO (AP) -U.S. tma tl•bermn, hit bard bJ poor cateb• in the tropical • .,.... P adllc Ocean, could autfer IOIHa ol more than tu mlmoD t.bil year, aeeordiq to a report by a lix·DMioa twu comerfa· lion poup. ,..,....... al lbe later-Amelie• Trop&c,al Tuaa ('.om•iMklD .lD· dlcate tbll catdtm an at liealt 34.U. km lower than at '* Ume lMt year. AccoaDING TO Ed Silva,~· ecutive 'rice president ot the American 1\maboat AuocUldoD. porpobe achoola •'just are not cart'Ylnl tbe yellowftn tuaa um year they bave ln lbe put." Yellowftn t.l lbe only apecifa al tuna that travel with porpciUea, and flabennen report tbat tbme are 1reat numbers of porpobes. but tbe flJh aren't witb them. be said. Despite the lower catcbel. at leaat 10 nations, lncluclln& the U.S.. are planning to acid 13 more tunaboata to their fleet. SILVA SAID TB.AT while last year's akipJack tuna cat.ch waa abnormally blab, the lt'1t t.olala are running 34,358tooa beb1nd Wt year. However. lbe bl~n cat.ch t. 908 toot ahead ol um·a pace. Sliva said. Although tbe yeUowfm catch haa declined, the porpoise mortality la up slightly, but ia still weU within the limit.a Mt by lhe federal 1overnment for U.S. tuna rtsbermen. The bulk of the U.S. tuna fleet is homeported in San Diego. . ... .... ,. ,. ,,, .... , .... This ~-like blade sure beats the average kitch~~~ knif e.~veloped by Chemetron Process Equipment ~i Louis , Ky., it's part ol a slicing and stacking systei$'; that c ~cut sausage and bologna at a rate of 20.00CI~ l poundsper day. • ~; ; ·-" . ·'~ ! Cout Ad, PR FirmSf}i •t: Sign New Clients :f -: Wal'Ten Development of Newport Beach h o.is retained Cid~ Publlcom lnc. of Irvine to handle its advertisin~. public relat.i,>Al ud marM.ing. • • ~ i Another lrviM advertisll'lg and puhht relations firm , C McKay. lac .• has been awarded membership m Western Slaws vertiainC 1gency. ll is one of 14 Orance Olmty ad agencies to bt- select.ed k membership Estey-llover Inc. of Newport Beach bad>een retained to han die adver11ing, public relations and ma•et1ng for M a rl1n Fiber~ Industries of Hunt in.gtoo Bach. wh ich maoufac tures hot later spas and related productB. O,·.-.r1~h•· Lountt·r l'&ASO Liitiftq~ The pub!Jc relations and ~: l'J 1 gn m anagement f irn· Hutcher·f'orde ConsultinC moved its offices lo 1881 Lan~ Ave . Irvine 92714 The n~\ phone number 1s 64 l·l390. ~ fir m's subsic:haries, BF Mailia; Lists and Tax Action Report, ari accompanying the parent fi"1 tn the move. . . . • J• ... ., 4• .... .... . '• ' .. 3 •• '"'. . ... l • • • DOWNS ...,.~',, '~. •'. ", ,,,., .... ,,,,, J ... ....... 1·~ 1'-. -~ .... JV, J ~ • I 1 .,, 1 ..., 7 .... ""' -.... ., -.vt IO'!J 1\lt , •• -\It i'"' . 1'9 ... , -1'11 11 • •If> )•1 ~ l"' ... 1 ,.,., ..... • JV, j f . .. l ~I ""• N• s.'"' Up ms~'l Up Up I uo • Ptt•" Ofl 11 I Ott 1' Ott 2 Off Ofl • Ofl g:: Off Off Oft Off Off Off Off • g;:. Off. Ott Otf • Otf . g::.: gi , ~. OctObet 11. 1971 s ONLYPff..OT . ., .• Pension Plans Often Lacking ITEll: Kn. Bemlce Trombly ol Clearwater. P'la. ll a widow wbole husband'• sreat error wu in bellevtn• wlaat t.be bookie& bit firm 1ave hlm Hid about Ill pentloa plan. Tbe lnformatloa ln t.be plan's aummary descriptioo booklet WU laeomplete. Jf r. Trombly thouaht his wife would receive a survlv· illl spouse's beoeftt ll be should die, but when be puled away uoe.xpectecl1y at 54 after 18 years oo t.be job, bl.I widow 1ot euctly not.bins. The plan claims ll la not at rault for providinl Iii· complete lnformatlon because the plan summary coo- ta.ined a disclaimer clause, aaytne that only t.be plan's formal docwnenta are completely reliable. Wltb the help of the ·---------.... Institute for Pub lic Representation in Wuhinctoa, D.C., Mrs. Trombly la challenglne the right of private penatoo plans to use such diacla.imers. Money's Worth ITEM: "I HAVE BEEN a succeaaful electrical engineer in research and development for 20 years, work· ing for sever~ different engineering comparues, but today have not one smgJe nickel's worth-of perusioo coming to me and my family outAlde of Social Security." This predicament is typkaJ.Jy faced by engineers wbo change jobs oo average every seven years. They and many other workers seldom stay loog enough with one firm to "vest" or earn a right to a pension. But since technically they are "active plao participants," they are not permitted by law to set up their own Individual Retire-ment Accounts . The. institute of .Electncal and Electronics Engineers in Washington, D.C. as one group that Is urging Congress to enable employees who fall through the cracks in the ex ist· mg pension system to provide for themselves ITEM : LLOYD MASON never worried about ha~ firm's perusion plan, for al was reputed to be one of the best Ul the U.S When, five years before his retirement. I.ht: firm announce<.! 1t was improving benefits. Mason took a close look at the plan. He was shocke<.t to learn that has lower·paid colleagues would receive Little of the increast-. m ost would go to the firm 's tugher-pa1d employees The reason ~ Present law permits plans to "mlegrate" or subtract Social Secunty benefits from the amount or private benefits workers bave earned. Mason was not personally affected by lbe change in the plan. but he resented the fact that employees who would need pensions the m06t would get mere pittance:. from tbe plan when they retired .• He sent out hundre<.ts ol anonymous letters of protest and helped push the company into modifying its plan somewhat. Now retire<.!, be bas formed the Florida-bued .. Committee to End Unfair Penaloo Practices" to educate the public about how "integration" formulas work. Small, graproots peoaloo reform organiutioos are starting to sprinJ up lbrouahout the country. The above are three ex.amptea: au.en are reported In a pubUcaUoc juat releued by tbe Peoalon RJ&hta Cent.er, which up lo no-bM been ooe ol a tl.Qy oumber amoq public In-.. Sl'OUPI coacemed wttb lbe ,...km ....... (Tbe ...._. •eh.Wd ~. tt• _.la available from the Ceater, Boom ion. IMS ConDeeUeut Ave.. N .w .. W a.r.hlngtoo, D.C. 20036. Bu.llt raiea available.) It's too early to describe lb.ls a a new "penaion ri.tht.a ·' mo.emeat. NeYel"tbeleu, tbere are real slpa ol a drive for re-- form amonc botb new and old actJviata. Praident Carter recently appointed a Commiaion oo Pension Policy, de· sla.ned lo come up with a comprehensive natiooal policy toward retirement income. At the same time, the Citizens Commiasion on Pension Policy <a kind of watchdog employee group) bas been formed to make sure that -C-e1U~ ~~'from "J>hlntW'tftflfanlrm\lrreurees. not just management "experts.· Pac Tel Offering Plwne Device A new automatic answer and record device called tbe AutoMatic TelePbooe is oow being offe~ at any one of Pacific Telephone's PbooeCenter stores in Orange County. The tele~. which comes ln three models, answers pbooe calla with an announcement in the customer 's own voice and allows the caller to leave up to a 20-minute message. IT ALSO CAN screeo LOCOUUDg calls so customers de- cide wbetber to handle the call personally or allow tbe message to be reeonted. Manufactured by American Telecommunications Corporation, AutoMatic TelePbooe is available with push button or rotary dial. Lease charges range from $12 to $18 monthly, depend.log on model and options. There is aJso an initial equipment cha.rge. The AutoMatlc TelePbooe bas modular Collnection Jacka, ao It can be picked up at the Phone Cent.er aod in· ~talled by simply pluggine into the ouUet at home. ALL BtJSJNESS installations, however. mu.st be made through normal buaineaa office channels. The aet la otrered with a decor panel of brushed aluminum and simulated woodcrain trim. AD optional feature la a remote unit that permlta a caller to receive re- corded messages from a remote telepbooe locaUon. Steam Used To Fuel Hardtop MEROM. Ind. (AP) -To puaing motorists, It looka like a Pord with a bolter ln the tnank. But to Berlin Bogard, it's hJa hol·water baldtop. · "Tbere'a not another one like lt in the ~rid, .. the n - year-old fanner aaya proudly of bis ate•m·PC>Wered c:ar. •t built tt from scratch, r11bt berc trom my mind, not a blueprlnL" Dotard UHi a 1anlea bole to fill the l.$-1alloa tank to fuel the bolter, which juta out ol the tnulk area ~ pro- duces 500 to 800 pounds ol steam presaUN. A burner power.ct by dle1el fuel beau the wattt ln boiler coils to about 900 de&ree1. be saJd. "Two-thirds to t.bree·fowtbs of this ls haod made," Bo1ard aald. "It took more Ume to figure out than It dld to build." Ahbouah be -.un·t bad • chance to test the car ex- ten1lve\J, Boaard atlmates u 1eta abo'lt 15 mllel per ralloa Of dl .. l fQel aDd reacW Lot> •l*dl ot so to eo mpb. "Jive bMI\ •steam man all my Ufe," he aaJd ... , us.eel to run 1 steam threahln1 machine for m.y dad." , • -OM. Y Pel.OT .one• ., .... __ ....., ...... ... , ....... , ::.=·· :::. ~.,:., . ...:: '*-M ..... A ..._ U:iw;::.•111 M z=.~ .. "" ..... mllllllll, ....., .... ...... _.,,,._ • • •• CiUCllC*ete •Ill ~ IOt ..., Of cMDott•llon -~ Mll'Ode .. ,.. to prow t<i .eftOe ,,... ,.. -"°" Ir~ .. ......,-• ..., • THllMDY_... ClllOy WllUnl-1 Ille lemi!Y t~ CIO e Miiie OI ui. "'°"' , .... -ww .... • l1'9T'I OP MN ~ '~·--~·••al '"''• •llatlla on 11to.11 ... , .. -0"' --· 10 ~ 1Nt.1 Stone llftd 1C .... IOllWt. .... "'r" ·1" ... ~1, ~ .,,...) .. 0011•' 11H41 lllHll HaylMltl ._... Oe4'lt Afttt I '-"'eo---lier lftOllltr '• lover. "'' OlllOloed oetenll bit*~ !Wllllt ti tw• I e cwa....,,. Nl/O ....... ..... ...,lie ,et'f'llN,.. ..,.lie ........... 0.-0·· • MCWl9 • • \'t "l lf•no• New WOttd' j 19111 JofWI .._,, Ket~ Mllltf. 11WM MU'oneul• f~ll IO I!.,.,, eltw llir'llo9I two --~ "'~.,.,._ca llfl I -~AT ·~ Seill 0.-ClONllllCI• Ille 8oelOI\ ~Oro­ ,, • ill\ 8Kfl.. Sinfonia tor DO<lble Of cllM tr 1 lll'd 'TrOll Pil411• UIUtglel" ~Ollvltt~ ...... TO~ HIA&.nt ·0en1.icar.·· Cl) THI 8AXT1N GrMOl!l4l ~In KTLA • 8:00 -"CapUin Newman M.D." Gretory Peek play1 the title role of an Army peychlatrtat lo thla movie comedy wttb Tony Curtil. KCET • 9:00 -Tutankhamun'a E&Yr· The role of the pharaoh ln an· clen Eollt.l{Ul civlliutl.On ls examined ln thla ~ffrat 1egment of a hiatorlcal series. ABC 8 10:00 -ABC News Closeup. Homosexual men and women d.lacuaa their views and lif eatyles in th.is special proJram. (Will be postponed if World Sertes is played.) e:ao. 9 '°"' B4lly mellM A de .. wolh hit INCMt 8urt end Saul tetutn to tne eo-e11 lllld Joel .. Mcome • llf'IQle paren1 ~al~ THIATN °' Wi eu1110t • !'led iu-t lltfoflNd !Iii pullllllw IN! ,,. ••~on "8lllnO with tOfl'IMne ..... • TONIGMT °'*' '-MMil' Mllit OUNC· JON FellCIMo I ~TINOU.. -~WQMAN Wiiie wdttllnO wnk-. ~..,,.,om.wt ... """ lnYol....a wlth .... we wflO le wottung on IM -c ... • HOGAH'lt.w:>ll COi kll!ltl II... 10 ._," Hooen'•--.r.U • MTIMM'f Smart 11 tQuateo ott •o••ntt 111t •nfernou• ~ "'4 NS -·· ant• ·~MC .... --~ 12'°°. TWILJQWf ZOHe Lui'* DinOl9 .. In. ""' ..... ly ~ .. OI.,. ..-. ••l*llMnl ...C.b llumtnt • MllltOM: t:tr•oo «*LATIMCMa .. _ .. ,......, .... 8o llNll. Wtw OoMn'I Ht , .. U. Wl!We Ht It?" 119731 ~ ~er, I.Ml"' l )'le. t;At1 ..... HO ,_.. ~ •• *'4 "Htgh TreM0111' I ( 11&21 LIMI ~mW~ Andre M0t•lll. , , I THI~ ~ 2:11 .... • :ttO "°"" . • • • "El\Cluelve" C 191~ ft.s M~r•y. ffellqllt '""*· o 111 • 2f l'l\ln I • MOYie ** • "T .. OfT~ Town'' I llM21 Ctty Gt int. ,._ Arthllr. • G9JIMMT =1 =~ 1:21 MCWll • • • ·1 01p1ome11c l'~IMV INT~ M>l.OOY Kbnager Tallc• e:ao I o ...,.,. THI ODO CX)Utll..I fella • ~I" an Ol)el'I ""09'. bul ..... 100 tfly 10 -~THML . ~· • fhe "'°"' anc:t I009I ~Of on<! OI Americ:a • • maior thoteo • orec>ner•. Anna ~ uw. Few Lyd•• Eoward Lyci.a and• orooo oi ''*' loendl ....... en up<CMlllOUt -ino II '"' ~·ty bell <lelpolt cw prOOlemt enO ..Cit .... • GOtMART 1 211TONIGHT ~eov • ..,.. 11es21 Tyrone Power. 81eptwtn McH .. y a:ao. CMllA T ~ 'al ..wa °'06stoon I) 088NIW8 AllCNIWS t:lO . MAUDE MIUOot llttOA Wal1411 •••y un< OOP6'•11"9 •• they pt•- 1>41111 to oo 10 • dinner petly • a LOVll LUCY fl:) DO< CAV£TT C..-1 JOfV1 CIMM (Pllll I ol 21 Q'i) OVEA EASY Gvest JON Gteco CJ) TIO TAC OOUOt4 MERV OAIFFIH Guetita J011JY 8i"11<lp, Polly Duke Astin. Toddy P4'1ldttf- O••H>. Gledy• Towhll• Rool 7~ 8 C88 NIEWS 8 N8CNEWI HAPPY DAVI ABAIH R1cll1e II ••l•Cl•d 10 b8COtnO • con1es1an1 on a l)C)C)Ulet game allow w•lh • ChllnOe to win $3.200 I 00-C ..::::. Wll.O M·A·a·H fo'ormcr Secretary of State Henry Kiss· anger will diitc uss his soon ·tO ·be - µublisbed memoirs with David Frost tonight at 10 on NBC, Channel 4. (See story below) 1¥n 10 lhe Army-HA•Y fJ'll'MI. tne 40 n m •• l:Klnl· t>wded and left wllll 11n u neaploded 1>om1> to delu ... .IAHflOAOAH090H C 21TONIOHT 6D MACHlll I l.EMRElt ""'°"' 7:aol THaGOHGSMOW INSEAACHOF ... HEWlVWEO QA.ME MATCH GAME I TlCTACDOUGM AU lH THE FAMILY ·1neu1.noe •• c~ • OOOOTIMES J J la 111e only v.11neu 10 an eulomot>ole K<:ldetll and n.1 lamlly 11 lllfown on turmotf wherl lie mus1141811· ly on court 8!)~ CJ) P .M. MAOl\ZINf A p<ohi. ol Georgia Hoo motnet o1 11nl"1-Clle< Bono Allrn<ln. Cepi c .. 101 d1acu1Mt Ille beMflclel etleci. of tne OOlor blue. me Fttwnan·• Muller OOM· pe1111on 11om Martne·a V1neyatd QI) 8100,000 NAME THAT TUHE I~ 8 THE WA1. TOH8 Ot•••• opens a d•V cti•• center 81 1141• nomo IOt lite cMdren OI Ille dehtnM plant• worluwa 0 9UCK AOGEM IN THE 26TH CEHTUftY Buck poaes ea 11 cromlnel lo pt-I e band OI dti504ttAdoea frOM Obll• lm&l•ng • ma10t ~llY (P1111 1 ol <'I •lnO "' pvbllc • ON.aNO oieco T,,.New Y0tlt Cll ~MWf"IM HO.I' R.il)h 1.ewlllt t:00 8 ()) HAWAIA fWE.() Mc:Gwrelt ,,,.. 10 11<1- lklllOe • l)Oilceman'• gf-· 1no wtdow (Sllaton ferrtllll lrom wegtng a ""'Y Pflf tonal C)IUUde 10 !Ind ,,., llul~ I murdotet• .. OUlttOY wnote 1mfe1tio111no '"' &u9')1CIOUI au<Clde Of A 1-..n-~ Ouoncy unco• 11<6 111 vtctOU• Chtld pornog , ac>ny , "'O 8 ®; eAAHEY MILLEA Bar~ gelti cavglll "'llltt middle wNln HWrt• ...-.11 Wojo learn • U N dtllegate • cn ..... lfftvf o> " Illa~ and dflf'n.,.0 1nul h• 11e .. ,,,,,. • MERV GAIFFIN G..0:.11 .1o.y S.at>OC> P • lly Dull.fl> ASltn Toddy P"ndfof gtau. Tom O<-n C.lu ~ I owle• Rool ~.(I) IWINA8Y .o.a 8etly ..... key Wll'-1 ao-nal • powetlul """det au•i>ecl l:>eGOMe• I he 00,.CI OI e tJw;t,. CMn· 1>'111" OI ,.,,°' • Nee ..Wt UIQAl AOORT fcwnier Secret.,., ol Slate Hllnfy Kouonger dlllWMM '"' -· "''" tl••ICJ FrCMI l e NeWS QI A8CNEWa ~ HomoM•u••• ~ .. ftf .. , •• OIY """" 4tl>d wom--n O• • <.us& t~t v•ewitl .1na <.<.Hl (Attn~ 10 P•-• en '"" mele tllt¥0Mtl•t19 1)1',,l, .. 1 OI now CAW'laJn '"~"-u-'• -•nemMllve\ Cl) HIGHT 0Ail.£111Y f!il WASTE.APIECE THEATRE JOHN DARLING Ly<11a a lhy,_a f Parl 3 Of t:.>l(R) 11:00 I .. . III! Hl'#S tiw<C .. LAlJGH MOYll • • • • rne Deep Sia f 19S8) Alan Lado Will<""' Benot• • M•A•t•M A m.,,.., nut .. wt>() haO .. ... '°". tel•tion"'4p ""''" ,, ..... eye Mier\ ""' • .._ '"'O" and ,,,.... -· "' "'• """ '-M"Of>9d 10 lhe 4077111 • 8EHNY HIU. tH0W Benny Q4111• ..... , .. Of "'' own medlcone -"' 11-10 •O<I • cieroyman fD OIQ< CA YETI <1~1 ~on Cko<lM tP"'t I <1111 ll 30 8 lf J cal LATE MOVIE • • ' ' C.Olutnt>o Put-o•\ll ()f p.,,.,, { 19711 p.,,.,, I .... J~ C......0y eoo.,.,.. bu tn•"t'OlllM Ir.to '""'Ge< 12.:30 MOVll • • ·s ou111 01 Pago Pego ( 19401 VoctOt McLA· gletl Jon Hell • MOYll • • • rne Ch•pmen ReoOt1 • 1 1 oe:n El•ern lJm.. o...., Jr . Jene fond• I TOM ANNOUNC8> 12:37 9 IAMTTA " younq womMt wno ..,,. .. lettor1Ut<1 Oy two •Ob-• •naa-he<'Mll l o O..ella le>t MCCJ<Tty I RI l'CIO 0 TOM<>fW>W Gouet.11 h•nk Palumbo .,...,.., c;I one Of Phol..0. Pflo4i \ O'OMI "'Qh IClubi l0t~ 1--. ldOI• 8ooOy ~~AndFat>tan U MAVPICK .,...,e.oe• Spt~ .MOW • • F a.i And S.iay t I 9t>() I C.!0<1 l otlOl:t<iOldlil ''" o .. o °" !>.c• tU FlAfHO UHE 4:00 UOY• * • .. Atnong T lie LJYinO'• t 19'111 Suutl Hayw.,O. Al~t 0.ti«. • MOVll • • •, ·T11e Golden 8ala!'llender ' Ct~ JMft.. Claude PHCal. Valene l,41 01111\Qe 4:acl fD THI ONCMNM.I: WOMeN IN ""1 f~rldalf'• Daytimw ;tfo.,I•• -AFTERHOON- 12..00 D ••'•"Joe eu11er11y" C 19S71 AuOle Motplty. Buf. Q4tH Mtwecl•111 A cunning Jap .. ne\e man 1'1lt• .od•ilnlaQe OI IOYe h*C*IM 0 •• WhO • .,,, 10 publlafl • -~aper 11 11r • 30 mtn,1 3.CIO ~ • • • "81oodl00f1'~ I t9 7 l l Ben JOMeon, Olly 8uMrt c 1 h• 30 '""' I by Armstrong & Batiuk w 1111e Mllhng down 10 Its f1i» MACNEJI. I LEHRER REPORT Cllannf"I Ll•t l n9• 8 t<NXT (CBS) Lor. Angeles 8 MOVIE •••'• Ca p l••n Newman M 0 · ( 1963) G•egot~ Peclt. Tony Cu•h• An Arm y P•r cn1a1,,a1 boeome• enot moullly ded ie:aled 10 "'• Pal•enta I? n•• I S) TUTAHKHAMUH'S EGYPT The Pl11111Wh Inf' '"'' P'OQ•am .n ll1•s l11\I01..-..i ""'°'"dealt wolh «n a"l)OCI OI dnt..,f>I EQyPI 111.it •t mott d••l1nct1v•• ttmono thH oW C•••~tahon~ lht' pa1 I Pli•yoo by'"" "'1••••<>11 JOHN. IN r¥of l'=>TIMAliON 11-i( ENCR6¥ PROOUM IS UNOUlSTIONAsLV l HE. M051 tl'\~R'T"MT ~ fKIN6 D t<NBC (NBCJ Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind I Lor. Angeles D l<ASC· TV (ABCI Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ· TV (Ind ) LO~ Angulo!> (lj KCST (ABC) S <111 0 11190 • KTIV (lnCl I LO!> Angele~ CJ) KCOP TV (Ind) LOS Ang1•h:S fm t<CE T fV (PBS) l O:> An quit"> '1!> KOCE rv 1PBS1 HunlinlJt on ~.1ch D ~ LAVERNE & SHIRLEY l ¥¥~wne und Sllulf!y ""' ~l\ot.~60 IU dol<.Ulffl' 111111 Int."' uld h>Qh W.1\001 ''ulJ '"" hJtnl'd 1nlO " g;mg OI 100~11"'~ iJ MOVIE • • woore l ,,,,& t1d-. '1!) THE LONG S~ACH 1"'1 Romlil\1<1n !>Ulutoon fS)'l cJ"'''"' ~"''""' o1nf.J 1nt.(J1unq c nor,,, "'"'"' ..... ft. 1mvt.ufan1 i•'.)f.;t11~ or Rorn.)rnJ .., "-uflur111t hf.tt1 t ll)t" ""'' , .. .,,. ' •cJ1•nl1lr lht US "T()Of,'(I Kissinger-Frost 'On' for Tonight .. • !'• ~ , Proud.Papa? Billy Crystal gets acquainted with his baby afte r an unexpecte d visit from the tot's grandmother on "Soap" tonight at 9:30 on ABC, Channel 7. <Subject to cancellation if World Series is played-1. Harvest Film Set HOLLYWOOD< AP) -Dennis Weaver and Kurt Russell star in "Amber Waves" for ABC, a two-hour film set against a grain harvest in the Midwest. Weaver plays a harvester facing a final life crisis intensified by hie ebbing faith in himself, his family and his country. Bustell plays a former· fashion model wbo finda purpose and meaning for hls lifeinharvestinggraln. By TOM JORY NEW YORK <AP) -NBC decided to go ahead with Its scheduled broad· cast tonight of "Henry Kissinger : An Interview with David Frost." despite Frost's Wlthdrawal from the project shortly before air time Frost. perhapi. best known 1n lhti. country for has series of intervtews with former President• Richard M Nixon. aired in May. 1977 , pulled out of the project Saturday. two days after taping the interview with the former diplomat. The British television personality eald NBC execuU ves had agreed to give Kissinger additional time to comment on one phase of the in· terview. that dealing with United States policy toward Cambodia. THE INTERVI EW WAS conducted Oct. 3-4, and NBC acknowledged a third session was arranged for Satur· day. Oct. 6, after Kissinger said that he needed additional time to check matetiala quoted by Frost. William Small, the new preaident of NBC News, aa1d the network had given Kiaeinger no assurance the ad- ditional response would be included in the bour·lon1 special. Last year Kissinger signed a five. year contract with NBC, worth a re· ported Sl million, lo prov1de oc- casional services to the network. F a OST, WHO COULD not be reached aft.er the dispute broke, sald after the second taping aesalon that although Kiuinger had been out of government for nearly three years. "In lerma of his views on current is- sues, I think has remained In the headlines in a remarkable, almost mysteriOWI way. His SALT testimony seemed nearly as Important u tbat or the current secretary of state. "And t.h1s ii partJcularly interest· ADVANCE llEGllTRATION NOW OPEN. ing." he said or the news special, "because it 's the first tame that he's accounted in any depth for hjs years tn power, during one of the mo!>l turbulent periods an Amen can ha!> tory ·· The special, to be broadcast from 10· l l p m on Channel 4, precedei. by two weeks pubhcation of the fa n.I volume of KJ sslnger's memoirs, cov· ering the years 1969 through 1973 FROST SAJD THE anterview was not to be confined to that period The two discussed. among other Uungs , Cambodi•, the Middle East. China and the Soviet Union, as well as Kiss· inge r 's lmpreHions of Nixon and other world leaders. "These are subjects that are vital lo Americans." he says, "because the country's Image in the world to- day stems in large part from that period." l',rost 's series or four interviews with Nixon. syndicated lo more than 150 stations In May 1977, brought con· siderable attenUon to the BriUab TV pereonallty and talk show host. THE flasT OF the Nixon broad- casts, the evenina of May 4. attracted the largest audience ever for a news interview show. "I was thrilled with the ex· traordlnartly positive reaction to the Nixon inte rviews." l',rost u.ld. "I think there is a dim ension only television can bring to an interview. which was clear with Nixon. and I hope the Kissinger Interview will do the same. "ln the case of Henry Kissinger:· Fro1t said, "he is ramous for belne brlUianUy witty. even indlscreet. ofr camera, but not so on camera. "I 'l1DNK WE 'VE drawn out some of the pasaion and the humor that he MOVIE RATlllQS FORMRallMD WM.a PEOPll Now 1s the time to sign up for ice skating lessons at the Ice Gapades Chalel Whether you've ice skated before or never ice skated in your Ide. one of these classec;. is for you. Classes fill up fast. so call today for all the 1nlormat1on Mar..::1110 ~,,,..,...__ ........ ot"""'11~ ! \ tOf the Whole family. ADVANCI llDlllVATIONS fOll GROUP FUNCTIONS. • Ice Capades Chalet 1s a great place for private or 1nst1tut1onal group functions. can now tor reseNat1ons. CJll now tor advonce 1eg1slrution ond 11d01tlOl'lol 1nl0fmohon ,\ \ shows In n!aJ life. and we see some or that passion when he ., answenng que:.llons on Camhod1d .. Fro~t sa1rl ha~ com er,C1llnn ""1th K1 s,1ngt•r on C:.mhod1 a ·1~ lhc highlight of Y.hat Wl' taJ.)t'd · Ka:.~ inger 'i. d1scu:.sion of has role 1n formulating American poltcy tow11rd Cam bod1a . the 1n terv1cwer .l>"yi., "will be important to those people what want to make a Judgment on Ca m bod1a and what ·s happening there today .. Froi.t first becamt-known to Americans tn 1164 as a creator or· ·'That Was the Week that Was," the British sene:. that made fun of cur· rl'nt evcnl!> and p<.•rsonalJlles NBC IJunched a '>hort lived American \ c rs100 lhat Yt:il r IN lta, HE began a slant as a syn. d1caled talk show host He attempted J ltve tnlerv1ew-varaety show for NBC lust fa ll . but the program fell vt<'lam to lhe ratmg~ ufler only .-few installments MOVING ... TO LARGER QUARTERS IN FASHION ISLAND !Just a few ooors ~outh of our present loca11on1 20°/o To 50°/o Savings Bedspreads • Pillows • Accessories Everythinq beavt•lul you v~ ever wanted hom Nellle Crat111 Plvs lots o t inoflqs yov never I.new we o lfcreo All <11 spoc.1al spot.1111 P"IAI" unlll w e move• ALL IN STOCK DI CORA TOA - PILLOWS 20°/o OFF ·~ \1. __. You can now 1a1111 yovr Mtec;llon honltf •nd HYt ~of ltlo cut1om ordof po1c. AOdlllOtltl l•brtc IVOlll Olt In moll l)tlt9fnt IOf Cll•Cltfl .. end llClOOUOf ... •I rtgula1 l)rlCRI ALL IN STOCK STOCK LAMPS 20°/o-50°/o OFF PICTURES · 20°/o OFF '1UI MANY, MANY MOAI IHMI THlllUOUT ITOlllll CMl lAaf fll lllT IUf(ftlll AU IAUI Ml nuu SALE AT FASHION ISLAND nettle CREEk SHOP ONL y (714) 844....0 23 FAINIOll Ill.MD · NEWPORT IEACH ••. ::·~;o~ 'Ni..fL:iJ.:~J!~~,._ ;; ENTERTAINMENT/ INTERMISSION •• . .. ·' 1'-Moe&~ .... ~OfAITlme ·: ~= ~TAZOO-;;EAR voui' fj OllAl!Gl lll&ll tllOOllMUllSI lOGl llllc:OU OlllYl·lll L1.1 q" t_ I ,.a t. r, • ~4J~ 8io1et\1Pi11._",l/-.. l ua CllllMU '°"'"" ·-""' U llU $1&DIUMOlllWHll Wr~'"''"''t:' C,' .at. • '•' • "r ~ " 1• (Jt~"Oe td1 ~110 IDWUIDS tlUSfot COW&llDI ftlJD CllllMA '..tnl4 At'I t Y i •uia M•\ .. 11()1'1 Vlf'~ 8'.\-1 ht\1"1 .. ~1io )~~~;'~~ au cu,,_ • u.-. cftml ~-a I 1T•!S::1 ~-------~··~·~·----<3•a~,IJ"ll•"--ai.,...2=1L:l ..... '"IWrf Mtrflfnfl"I -IMlll" W .. N A ITIANCMI CAW1111 lliMeJ ............. _ & IMJ _.,~ UH Of MIAH Ill U1MeJ.-1U ... IM111J & , ... _.,~ '"TMI UR Of •IAH" 1 RJ 7:11& t:tt ---('> .,.__,___,,_ llJ THI AMfT'YVILLE HOHOlt '"n41 f'ltOPHESr ., .... u.wsw "MEAT IAUSM lf'GI "'90CJI._ IOU ~ .. .,.. •r IUIT MVll IUl,.INI -, .. IUDS All ALalOHJl"I !.~eLa.,-e <. ...... !"le ·~,:-I 1Taa•~ow•c•1 '~ll'!!IJ!lll_!_l..!12~t~..a~ro!J. fOUl PUT CNI . . . li33I • 1:i r. ~mf':~ ..,_ua•u• a...aL ..... ll'Wt ..... ~ .... ___ ._,..__,. •• W-ONI'"' I . Drama, Musical Open Two playa that ranao rrom one end of the lbeatttral •Pttlrum lo the o~r -tho mualcal "Ollnr"' and tht wartim drama '1'he Buie Traininl ol Pavlo Hummel" will be openln& aJOftl the <>ranee Coaat neat w k. Bowiftl ln nrat, on Tueada)'lfor a five cvenlne en1a,.meot, la "Humm l," the nnt play In David Rabe'• Vletn•na Wu TrUoo, at Orange Coast Colle1e'1 Orama t...b Theater. William Purklss is dlroctlfta I.be productJon JON SIDOU PLA VS the uue role Whtie others in the cut Include Stanley Patrick, Carmen Vas · quei, Daniel Drlocoll, Ktchnd Riley, Andy Holland, Bnan Ayres. Keith Edwards, Kevin Campbell. Oy~uuu& Combe. Stephen Workman. Vince McKay and Kellie Oliver Curtain is 8 pm. with ticket lnlormallon at 556-SS27 "Oliver" amves al SebastJan's West Dinner Playhouse Wednesday on the heels or the long- runolna "West Side St ory," wtuch winds up with final performances ton1&ht through Sunday Gary Davia directs the musical. wtuch features Richard Tuako in the title role, Gordon Connell as Fagin, Eltubeth Savage as Nancy. Darrell Sandeen as Bill Sikes and Scott We~tmorleland as the Artful Dodger. "OLIVER" WILL PLAY nightly except Mon- days at varying curtain llmes at Sebastian's, 140 A venida Pico. San Clem ente. on an open-ended engageme nt. Call 492·9950 for reservations Winding up their respective commumty theater stints this weekend ure two separate pro- ductions of lhe Kaufman-Hurt c·omedy "George Washington Slept Here" at tht· Costa Mesa C1v1c Playhouse and the San Cle mentl' Community Theater. Tom Sm ith und Susun Kelly take the leading roles in the Sun Clcmcntt' production. which closes out Thursday through Saturday at 8 30 10 thl' Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 AVl'ntda Cabrillo, under the direction of Ro~1ne Offen Reservations 492·0465 AT COSTA MESA, l'at1 Tambcllim is staging that playhouse's version which ~potllghts Jack Willenbacher and Dc~y Jl e"Aett Performances Intermission Tom Titus are Friday and Sal\Jrday at 8:30 in the Cor¥amuoily Center auditorium on the Orange County Fair· grounds. Reservations 754·5159. Also on stage at local theaters are "Wild Oats" at South Coaal Repertory, 855 Town Center Drive. Costa Mesa (957-4033). "Under jhe Yum Yum Tree" at the Harlequin Dinner PJaybouse, 3503 S Harbor Blvd . Santa Ana (979-~11), both playing rughtly except Monday, and "Tbe Second Time Around" <tt the Huntington Beach Playhouse in the Seacliff Village Shopping Center1 Beach at Yorktown. Huntington Beach. running P'ridays and Saturdays al 8:30 (847·4465) • CASTING HAS BEEN announced for the Reginald Rose drama "'Dear F'nends," the next production of the Saddleback Valley Community Theater, whlch will open Nov 16 as the group's final production in the M1ss1on VieJo High School theater Pl::ayang the d1vorcmR rouple reunited against their will at a surprise p<trty will be Clark Burson and Kathy Brothen The other three couples will be portrayed by Arthur Winslow and Mary Benton. Robert MacKenzie and Beth Titus, and Elllii Estes and Joan Sidell. with Stephanie Southworth play· ing thl' daughter of Wins low and Mis~ Benton. 'Dear Frwnch" will be staged Nov 16 17. then breuk over tht• Th<Jnk!>g1vmg weekend. returning fur performann·:-. Nov 311. l>ec 1·2 and Dec 7-8. Advant'e reservations <.1n• bt·1ng taken cit 837 9680 {"ALLBOARD -Auditions will be conducted tonii.:ht and Friday from 4 lo 8 p m for the world pre rmere or a nl'~ curnedy. "Margo and the Girls," <tl Or:rngt• Coast Cullcgt• playwnght and OCC in structor John F<:rrn{·tJ will direct the show. which ralb for a caM of scvt·n women in the 20-4-0 cige rani.:e tht• play opens Nov 28 Actor Lew Ayres Teaches Philosophy Sills Farewell Show Canceled NEW YOHK 11\1'1 T h.- farC'wcll performance or Bevt'rly <.;dh for tht· New York City Orwra "Aa:-. ont• of -.C"vc·ral <"'an t t•llt·d bt•t·Ju:.e of a rontratl dis putt· "1th 11" m u s 1 c tan~. an opt-ra spoke!->woman say!; ROCHESTER. M tch 1 AP> -flollywood movie star'> arl· not. as a rule, widely acclaimed as philosophers. but Lew Ayres 1s not the typical matinee idol. Ayres, 70, rose lo movie stardom an the role of a youni.: German soldier in "All Qulet..,on the Western Front," an anti war film made in l930. Later In t.be '30s, he starred an a scnes of eight "Young Dr. Kildare" movies for MGM But for the past 25 years Ayres has taken on the role of legitimate relJgious scholar and phllosopher and he is teaching an undergraduate philosophy course at Oakland Univers ity The course, entitled, "World View," is a summation of the ac· tor 's studies or world religion. sdence and philosophy and their re· latiooship to one another. Mis-. Silb. tlw npt:ra·~ new director. had bl·<.·n ~cheduled to appear tomr;:ht in .. La Lora " A i,.p<>kc~wom.m for the o~ra s a cd th;.it can cell at1on was particula rly pa1nrul because 2.800 guests were to have at- tended lhe performance to honor Miss Sills for 24 years or City Opera singing. Susan Sarandon .David Steinberg Smnethiag &hert ··~,,.,, ......... ~~ ~ NOW PLAYING lOWUOS' MUllTlllGTOll IOWAllDS' ClllEMA ClllTIA '"HOT STUff" "THE 'YIUAIH0 "ltUST HE'YB SLEEPS" 1'HEKIDS AU AU RIGHT" CrG) .. THE AMITTVIW HOlllOR" Cit SIL.EMT PAJtTMa• 0 Pf N DAILY I I )0 THI S9UCTK* Of JOI TYMA .. Cit ............ . Dally Pilot classlfleds work for you. can 642·5678 forqufck cash sales. ' ''''''"'' Het -'C. •!" ,, •J1·~,,.,, i111· -------t 3n SENSATIONAL WEEK! 1---------, °"' 100 •OO 100. 1000 1" ...... 1(111 4illt trcl ICIOO I tlill) )(II) eOO tllO •lOO . FOf futtl'ler 1nfonnatloo call Entertainment Hotline 714·534·f'REE . . • "STARTING OVER" f.1 ,.. k•'' l'"'" . ~ ''"'''. •1>1 • ,,,.... ~· The.. r. ~ .. ~:, }lkh .MLJ ~~~J.l_" . -• Plus REVENGE OF THE PINI( PAH'Tt1ER Plus" AGATHA" Plu• JUST YOU AND ME. KID 1PG> ROCKY =D Pru, THE SEDUCTION 01' JOE TYNAN lJ 1 1~u~1. tmJn . ~ c;. O~l~;~T~O~ \ ~-~ OF BRIAN -~~~ 0 w -•tu ••• P1ua (PG1 .. , ""',·.~· .~:'" '"° ··MOONRAKER . MON-FRI 1:00. 1:15, 10:30 SAT/SON 1.15. l :lO, 6;00 1:1s, to~• -"'~' A IOOl>(tngly Ca:,telUI \ Comedy .. IO .. ~ .... Wh.Jt h~ppen~ ~n n,c~; ~~ 'd ... _.. ...... -\Plue "A MAN. A • WOMAN, ANO A IANK" MALCO&.• McOOWELL DAVID WA .. NE" , "WHEN "TIME LIFE OF BRIAN wto .. td1. 1:00, t :'I, 10!30 STRA~ AFTER CALLS .. 4"1 TIME" <N> •· . ,.. "AGATttA" 8Je DAILY Ptl.OT ~ Th\lr.day, Octooet It, 111'1 ENTERTAINMENT/ MOVIES ' . ·.: GeRB Kelly . ., Dancea at67 In 'Xanadu' I .,.,.....u HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Lwry o.r.. Md ,_ SU"r Md U. 4lrffm: tM, rt d to man a mo•le tU& would be llk• U. INlll •UllAeala ol tlM FOl'UIL • ...-. ......... , ..,. ...... Saeept for.,.... lllll:e ··o ....... " mualcala _.. losers l• U•• Aclt' .. 81 r Laurence OH vier Cleft> plays a scene with Richard Roundtree in the movie "Inchon." in which Ofivler portrays Gen . Douglas MacArth . W .... I COlllDY fO eOt NOW PLAYING UA TW• CIMMll MM"''"''"'"(... OWIMI' ..,., WH1m111s1tr 193•130~ 8utN P.tr~ 811 4010 CNKMI llt(I nlD C..UOMl Newport Beach 644•0760 Bred ~29 ~33ll Ot.inQt b34 ~~<,3 mark....._. Reeeet ~ lllM 19-. HU...s wtU- falhl,..: "At Loea Lut ~ " "Lolt HorilOla," .. New Voris, New '1.-, .. '"Tile Wt.." ----------------_:.--------------------~~=================~ ltill, Gora Md au .. ,.......... A..Dd now "Xaaadu" la ..... ftlllMd In Md UOWM1 Los Aqfa. wtU-a cut Maded by OUvta N•wtoo· Joba, 0... ltfib ud Kl~Mel &.H. Tbe ICON lJ by Jeff t.Jnne ol t.be rock 1....-.n Electric Llaht l Orcb•tra and by Jeff Farnr, c:ompo1er ol blta lor , Ila. Mewton·John ' I TBB Ol'll .. DAY ... "Xanadu" C()PlP,anY wu in t.be Beverly Hilla heartland at Florucci'a, a onetime movle bouae converted Into a bou· Uque. It wu a dance number in • \ wblcb Gene Kelly danced ' amon1 the clot.bes racka with • tbe clrl• who ml1bt have atepped rilbt out of "Sinctn' in the Rain." The lead dancer looked hauntingly like Cyd Charisse. That's why Kelly cboae her. uu. Y "On this picture J will not · · touch a toe," Kelly announced to the producets after be signed for .. Xanadu." At 67, be fliured he'd had lt as a dancer. Yet there be was, moving lo the playback music with bis oldtime grace. • Maybe not doing splits or somersaults, but danc- ing. Producer Larry Gordon watched the scene with obvious delight. ·•can you imagine what a thrill it is to be working with Gene Kelly?" mused the bearded producer. "And to see him dance after be warned us -after we had already signed him -that be • would not touch a toe. Gradually he agreed to do a little-dancing, then more. "NOT.nlAT HE'S EASY. When we met with him, he said, 'Now I want this, and this, and this.' He knows exactly the way things should be done." No one ls more aware of that than the director of "Xanadu," Robert Greenwald. A young veteran or theater and television, tbls is bis feature film debut. Between shots Greenwald remarked of Kelly, "This man is not just an actor and dancer, he's also a producer , director, choreographer and writer. It's not only a challenge to direct him on m y first picture. It would be the same on my 50th picture!" Gordon. who has produced "Hard Times," "Hooper." "The End'' and the "The Warriors," described the history of "Xanadu:" "JOEL SILVER WAS AN executive for m e with the assignment or developing projects. He happens lo be a real film buff, and be wanted to make an old-faahioned musical. We developed the story for Warner Bros., which declined to go ahead. Maybe they were ript to do so. A musical fantasy la cbancy. and at tbat lime we didn't have Olivia or Gene. "Now Universal h8d stolen Joel from me. He was still excited about 'Xanadu,' and be sold the studio on taking it over." The plot involved Michael Beck Cthe gang leader in "The Warriors") as a frustrated artist and Ms_ Newton-John as his helpful muse. Kelly , plays an embittered rich man who is persuaded to finance Beck's dream JOEL SILVER, W"O IS overseeing the film as Universal executive, cpmmenled: "Before we started shooting, I got a135mm print of 'Cover Girl,' I the 1944 classic with Kelly and Rita Hayworth, and •· ran it for the entire company, right down to the grips. Although lt isn't basically a fantasy, that is the kind of feeling I would llke to get in 'Xanadu.' " ' Universal Pictures la gambling SlO million that the Gordon·Sllver vision of "Xanadu" will succeed at the nation's theaters. The result will be known in August 1980. MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "APOCALYPSE NOW" <R> "MOONR KER" (PG) "CAPRICORN ONE" "ROCKY II" !PG) "10" (R) "STARTING OVER" (R) "WHEN A STRANGER CALLS" CR> .......... "10" "SHAMPOO" (R) "HOOPER" "THE WARRIORS" "UP tN IMOKE" (R) "WHEN A STRANGER CALLS .. CR) "LITTLE GIRL WHO LIVED DOWN THE LANE'' "THE MUPPET MOVIE" "REVENGE OF THE PINK PANTHER" (PG) "ANIMAL HOUSE" "PRISONER OF ZENDA" (PO) -~ .. o•uv•·•N• ONN 61MP.M......,.,' c,., .. u11••• t • r,.. u ..... • " ..... ..._,,,. ..... ,. r • ' • Allfh•e ·~' ',~ .. ......... ·--· ................... ..a. ... ,...., ~ ....... 17, "" . .. t~e ultimate doorman! · D 0 Automatic garage door opener by Stanley, closea & locks door too. Standard single, Reg. 139.95 ,..,..14..W., rtf.1SUS ................ 139.95 If the old helter can't get n .any llotts l\'1'['49 for • new one. De· pendeble. effldent gu wet« heet«a. O~IMCI tankt. rapid hot water recovery ayatem1. high -.niperature lhut-offs. Reg. 1oue. see ....... ,... uus .. 111.11 ...... ,... nltl ... 11 ... .._..,...IM.ts .. 1•• SANTA ANA "'II Son Ootgo frwy, ~ spred Spred Selin Latex wall pe1nt goe. on Ilk• tine 11lk and leaves along 111t1ng. good looklng ftnlth Reg 11 99 799 ,.1i... Stopa 1Queak1. protect• metal. 1ooten1 ruated part.t. and tr ... ltlcily mechanltmt. 12.oz. 'Size. Reg. 2.89 111 111111 Jiii Attrec:18 and kllll thoM peaty, cieetructlVe garden 111&111 and llUOS. Safe & .uy to uM Won't harm peg. ~. 2.49 1•• the rust remover to trust Sru.h II Otl & waan rust otf Workl on all metll 1urfacet II even prevents further rusting 18 II oz Reg 2 99 give your green stuff Ille two for one t>o 2 JOb1 at once with Scott'• "furl Bullelar tor grau o.v.fopl thlckneea & grMn· MM. 22V. lb beg COYefS 4,000 eq. n Reg 11.95 g•• be glad you got glidden K1d-te1ted Glldden Spred latex 11m1- 9toss enamel g •ves you a su oer-touqn non-yellowing t.n11n Rev ~59 don't be daftf -get deft Oeft's Sattn or 01011 •n· lertor t e xler lor Oellhane comes in handy Quart·llU cant. Goa on 1moothly. R9Q 8.79 adanlatlc llght control .Fat me ultimate In com· plete oontrOI Of eny out· door llght Eaay 10 Mt. dependable. 11<2211·8 Reg. 10.te 1·~ the do·lt·IH dish-master lmperttl 011nm .. 1er IV . 1r1 the neat Mat thing to never weaning dllhea at all! Scrap11 wethta. rlnaee. R9Q 85 99 4911 -----------• --- -,. --•• -•• "Ill ",......., ... ,. --""' ... .,, ••• -... -..... -• -• -- --.... -' • , ...... ·-----~~ ....... "' ...... I • 17 1 INSIDI!: •Cheryl ....... •Erma 8ombec:k •Ann UIRll1rs •Clnslfled ,,,..,...,, Or:toe.r , '· 1179 No· Fear of Ftymg Pilot Janet Helton 1s full of confidence and ready to take off for her third solo m Chuck Wentworth ·s Akro BJ OENNl8 Mt LEUA.N Of .. .,...., f'IMt l\Alfl At an aae when most high school stu- denta' ldea or a thrill ia to ride stomach· churntna roller coasters, Janet Helton aoea in for the swooping thrills or another sort. The 17-year·old Costa Mesa High School senior is already an experien<:ed aerobatics pilot whose repertoire of aerial maneuvers includes "loops," "rolls," "spins," "hammerheads" and "half-Cuban eights." "It's just like going on ndes in an amusement park.," says Janet. allowing that althou&h she enjoys roller coasters as well as the next teen-ager, "l'd rather fly than do the ndes " She's been flying ever smce she can remember-as a passenger-with her father John Helton, a United Airlines pilot, at the controls. BUT SHE NEVER R EALLY cared for it until she turned 14 and her father, who's a fight instructor when he's not flying the "friendly skies" for United, began teaching her. J anet was ready to solo in a year. but had to wail until she was 16 to gel her li cense, which she did on her 16th birthday. On her 17th birthday June 29-she received a private license wtuch allows her to take up passengers. Although she hasn't been flying much The 180-horsepower Pitts S-15 kisses the runway at Corona endmg Janet's first flight in a Pitts. since school a tarted in September. she says she flew every day when her father wasn't working to practice for her solo. When she's not flying her father's Pitta Special, a single-engine aerobatics biplane, she fies a friend's Acroduster JI . a 261>-horaepower biplane. near Lake Matthews in Riverside County. THAT'S mE PLANE she flew last summer for the CBS camera crew film· ing her ror a recent segm ent of "Raumatazz." a periodic afternoon TV special. She was picked for the show when the EAA <Expenmental Aircraft Msoc1a· tion > headquarters suggested her to the show's director. who was looking for a teen-age pilot. The aerial sequences were hlmed over Apple Valley in June and in July Janet was filmed v1s1t.mg an EAA Oy an ID W iscoostn or her camera debut. which included talking to other pilots. the blonde teen ager smiles and says ... I felt Like I was acting it all out hkc 1t was all fake "It was fun though. and 1t was a ~ood expenence ·· J ANET, HOWEVER. WOL'LD murh rather be a pilot than an aC'ln·" In fact. she plans to bccomt: an a1rlin1• pilot hke her fat.her But first she'll get her college educa lion. she says Although she-., thinking or attending UCI. ~he'~ not certain or a maJor yet There are. after all. no ma JOrs m airline pilot "I'm l<Jlng to the wliventty for tbe education," she emphul1e1. '1'bere are so many people who want to be alrlloe pUota that they're only blrtng so- meone with a college educaUon. • · She notes that United Airlines bas more than 50 women pilot.a. ·'The government says they have to hire a certain percenta1e (ol women)," Janet says with a smile ... That makes it easier ror me." AS FOR THE mGH-FLYING loops and spins she performs. she says she's long past the upset stomach stage. A certain amount or fear. however, is always present. .. You always get scared." she says. ..If you're not scared you shouldn't be doing 1t. really ... But she doesn't let fear deter her, she says. "because you know what to do in- stinctively 1! something eoes wrong." Janet says her mother "thinks it's neat I do this · · But. she adds, .. she was ~cared half to death when I first took her up ·· So far. Janet is the on ly member of he r family to follow in her father's rootste~ · 1 have three old er brothers and two older sisters and none or them fly," she says -.mJltn~ "They don 't mind being passenger'> but that·s about as far as 1t goe~ Janet ·s next goal 1s to get her instruc· tor·s ratmg -on her 18th birthday - and she plans to teach flying "on the side" while she·s in college. Singer Wins Battle of the Bulge Oally ,-11t11 -t-. 1..H "•YM ' . By JOEL C. DON Of 1111 C>allJ ...... Sutt Diane Pilcher, 27, has two lives. The life she presents is one or a slim, attractive, sandy-haired women, am- bitiously pursuing a career as a meuo- soprano opera !linger. The HunUDKtoo Beach resident car- ries her other llf e in her purse -as re- membrances -on half a dozen color snapshots or an unhappy. obese woman. Ms. Pilcher shed 114 pounds in 18 months. And she recently was rewarded for her dramatic a chievement by Weight w atcbers, the diet group that helped yank ber out or a 20-year bout with obesity. Ms. Pilcher says Weight Watchers played a role in ber radi~al switch from obsessive gluttony to moderated eating, but adds, "You los~ weight when you take responsibility for younelf. 1bat'1 when you begin to 1row. '• IN BE• OEBPEa&TION to lose 'wellht. Ml. Plleber tried amplMttmi" diet pills, shots, • popular behavior modification program and even COD· aidered major 1ur1ery throu1b in· testtnatbypala. 1111. Pilcher aaya Weipt Watcben played a role in her radical 1wttcb from oblealive tluttonY to mochrated utlnC. but adds. "You loee wellbt when you take respom1billty for younelf .• 1bat'a when you belin to arow. '' Her mother, June, who acta u a Nlf· styled public relaUona a1ent for ber daqbter, acnet· For 14 yean, the tried many times to 1et ber hyperteoalve, 1qar-8dclicted cblld to lole weiellit. Sbe even bribed ber dauClliter wttb a dOUar for~ pound lost. "But It didn't work,'' sbe coat ..... to a meetial ol about 40 w.._ Wllteberl membln. "lt'• aometblq tbM UDDeDI wWda ...... ud tbeJ ba" '° C)o lt u.m..1'91.'' M a cblld, lbe would ttMl IDOMJ from w mother tn order to 1.i her "fix" or candy and other sweets. And she recall11 gobbling a box of cookies at school, meant for a Girl Scout meeting later In the afternoon. Her adolescent years were a series of social traumas. Ma. Pilcher says she was never asked to go to a prom and never dared to ask a boy, even when the high school event specified girl's choice. "You want to be proud with someone you're with. They would enjoy my com· pany, but they wouldn't ask. me out," she says. And then there are the inconveruences of supporting a huge frame. She couldn't bend over to tie her shoes because that action would put pressure on her diaphragm, cutting off her ablll· ty to breathe. When Ms. Pilcher visted aomeone's house, she was sometimes shuffled to a larger or sturdier chair SHE DIDN'T ENJOY always having to sit in the front seat or a car, because (See BATl'LE, Page C3> -slim and trim alter losing rrrxe than 100 pounds, Diane Pilcher stands proudly beside the once- dreaded weight scales. Her 'before · • picture, taken v.fth a friend, is at far left. --------··••"t••• a:: C2 OM. Y flltl.OT CHERYLROMO /ANNLANDERS I . Story is Dime a Dozen The pretty woman with daft "'1llPt hair and weariJ\a f act.d dln.lma la a tD- year~old divorced motber ot tbrM la· te1U1ent &Del 9ilealtlly chlldr9. We'll call UU womu "Dort.." Doria UVH wttb ber chUclteD iD a Uny, renled apartment filled wit~ tuodmade rurnWUnp ud worn upbolat.el')'. Shortly afteJ' Mr dlvor~ -ber ex· huabud bu a1nce remarried -Doria re-- turned to t.be oo1y type ol W'OR ln wbJcb ahe bad prior experience: MCretarlal. 1A adibUoo to worlrln1 u a aecntary. ahe aupplemeoted her income by typin1 manuacnpts at home lo tbe evenings DOalS at:CALLS that durin1 thia period she felt Uke a fruat.rated machine. She wu unhappy belnc a secretary and to- day explains that It was a Ume ln beJ' life when it seemed of paramount importance to grow as a human being by doin1 aomet.hi08 abe really cared about. When she wu a t.een·a1er, she says, she always had wanted to be an artlat. Sbe also ertjoyed writing. Determined to pursue an artistic career. Doria now scrimped and saved and de· cided to return to colle1e. She did not do \ t.bb totally alone, however. A~Le ....... A LO.OK AHEAD -This unusual, eye. catching nylon swimsuit is red, violet and ___ r een and features a pony·taiJ to ~coY.ide good protection to long hair. It's part of Is· sey Miyak's ready-to.wear collection for 1980 spring and s ummer shown in Paris this week Drugs Affect lab Tests In Autumn WASHINGTON <AP> -For many people, rail Is the time for that annul physical, and medical experts say any druaa you may be tak- ing can have an effect on lab tests. Most physical exams include urine and blood tests, and doctors uaually ulr you to fut overnight before these tests because food can affect the outcome. BUT EXPERTS al the Food and Drug Ad· ministration note t))at any drugs you are taltlng also may change the outcome ot these teats. So they urge you to tell your doctor if you are taking such things as antibiotics, tra.n· qullizeni. aspirin, laxatives, cough and cold re· medies, oral contraceptives and even vitamins. Some of these drugs can cause false positive or negative results in testa. If the laboratory knows they are present it can account for this. FOR EXAMPLE, diuretics, the so-called water pills which reduce the amount of water ln your system, can alter the body's electrolyte balance. A laboratory, detecting this chan1e but not knowing you were takln1 a diuretic, might diagnose a kidney malfunction that didn't ex.lat. Other dru.1s. decreaaants or ltimuJants, can alter your metabo 'am and mQ cause fault readings ot thyroid function. There are many other wa)'J ~ can af. feet medical testa and ln some cues it may be wise to atop medlcaUoo for a time before the ,teata are IUde. but FDA omdala emsltluiae- tbat lh1a dedalop·•bould be made after cllacuu- ln1 the matt.er with your doctor. -'?SY-CHOTHERAPY AND SCHIZOPHRENIA" Aw.t111,,.,..,,,,., JACI IOSlm•, CUMtCAL nYCMOl..CHMST IAtmDAY -MOYIMlll 1-11 AM-I PM MIMWIWM4.NIWfOITllACH ~·-··........... . c.l WT.,...., CJ I• m-1i12 In order to make auN tbat her child.ren would be fed and tbelr medlcal need.I taken can ol, ahe awaUowed her pride and appUed t.brouCb Lbe county weUare depart· ment for a f.cieraJly funded prosram U..t allowed 1~le parents to receive tncome aupplemenLI wbUe educau.a, themMlves. Doria and her famlly Neetved SIOO a month ln addlUon to the SIOO a mootb in chUd aupport payments from ber former bu.a band. Shortly aftw retunllnl to ICbool, Dorta be1ao to feel a aenae of fWflllment abe bad never, ever felt before. StudYlal com· merclal art, 1be learned that abe wu. perhape1 an artiat ol no amall talent wttb a future anead. While most ol her income went to pay the rent, she wu able -through budcet· inl wisely -to scrape by. THEN THE a£f'81GEaATO• broke and the transmiaaion on the car went out. It was the Christmas of 1978. Someone Doria thought was a friend stepped forward to help her. He gave her money to buy a new refrigerator and fix her car. He also save her money to buy Christmas presents tor her children. A rew months later UU• same friend turned her in. The Department of Social Servle. dw'led Dorta wltla had ud for a time .... feared abe WOUid DGt cm1y a.. ID· careeraed, but tllat ber ,.,_... tWJdne would be plaeed in foeter bomel. Unable to afford eouuel. Dorta au.d· inl a beari.al r:r••UAC ..._., WI, la tbe meantbDt, welfare peJllMllU were stopped. So wu scbool. Doria WU Ordered to repQ all tbe pro: I 1ram m::7 lbe bad ever ncetYecl. Tbe cue la open becMIN Dorta bu DO moaey to retw"D. BecaUM abe la 40 yean old IDll bal a.act no pre\'ioUI wort npen~. lbe bu been unable to llAd work aa a commercla.l art.ill. She bu been looldac for ADOther aecretartal job. When abe does f1od wort, her pay wtll be 1am.llbed unW ber debt to lbe aovernmecat la repaid. Tbll week abe acr1mped t.ocetber' eDOUtb money to pay the rent and aft.erwant wu down to her tut $100. The telepbooe wu being abut olf and the family wu out o1 food. Doris tried to pawn everytbinc ol value In the apartment lncludln1 family heirlooms and what amall amount of jewelry abe had. Obvtoualy. thia 11 a story with a predic· table endl..ni : Everyone loses. Doll Show 8* & free tnfo chnic iiiiiiii thla Set & Sun Oct t31" eo11ec1ors 1 . 1ntioue de1ters preeet\f uf'uau11 doll• aoceeeones 1nd rou ... Hunt1ngto" Ce,,,., ~111 'OS Fwy I BelCh Blvd t-4 B Moonlite Sale Huntll'l9to,., Cenier , F antesttc 1 I ·hour sale Fri n•lf' trorT 7 10 tO P"' and contll'lu~ o,., S11 9Ub1e<:1 lo ,IOClc Of\ hand Beact• Btvo & Ed•noer a1 ll'>f' Sal' O•eoo F wv """'• ,,.. ............ <OSH •U ... ,...,.,, ..... Deal Abruptly With Insensitive Hulks DAILY ,PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS &42·5878 ..,.., ••• (1 ............ c.... '-"'IA llW IUU .. , ...... .... ••"'"',...."•'•. ~ .... ( ....... DEAR ANN : My older sister , in her 30s, re- cently died of suicide . We were only two ye{lrs apart. Paula Cnot her real name> had been see· ing a therapist for several years. Just when J thought she was getting well , this awful Wng happened. I am amaied at the number of people who have asked me to tell the m the details of Paula's suicide. I usually respond abruptly by saying I don't want to talk about it. Now, after having been asked so often, I'm beginning to wonder if such a question is out of lioe, or does it show genuine concern and caring? . Please set me st.raight, Ann. Am I being rude and Impatient with well-wishers? - SECOND 1110UGHTS IN MINNESOTA DEA& ION: b109e wM ...W &Ill for de· taU. ol • 8Ueer'• aaielde u 80 "~U·wialaer." Re <or Me) 18 a br ... ·pla&ed. lov..._ dod .W. 8Ne troellle. lueuJUn •aDLa ._ne &o be de· aJt wl&la abnptly, aad I IMpe yCMS wtu ~tJ.Due &o do IO. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'd like to com- ment on the letter from that nutty lady who was furious because so many people wear their cor- sages upside down The screwbaJl clipped out se v e r a l d ozen pictur es from vario us news papers and sen( Diem you prove er point. She's off her rocker. I've been a norist in Morristown, N.J .. for many years. and there Is no right or wrong way to wear a corsage. It de· pends on the size or the nower. the arrangement of the ribbon, the cut of the neckline (and even the sleeve> of the gown. Some corsages look best sideways. Please tell Mrs . Know·lt·AJI she's aJl wet. -HOTHOUSE HARRY DEA• HOT HAaaY; Yott already &old ber. A•• Laader• No polDt ln having ber mad at boOl ol u . Tbanka for writing. DEAR ANN LANDERS People aomel!mes write to say they took your advice and al didn 't tum out liO hot. Well, I'm writinl to say I DIDN'T lake your advice, and it wu tbe bi&· geat mistake of my life. The man I was In love with waa an alcoholic. He promised to •top drink1nc. I believed him. You adviaed me not to man-y him unti l he kept h la word. Joined Alcobollca Anonymous and stayed with the procram at ,.,,.. t.-n11 W rgtT\t "'°". ioo.. ~ bnt ~you re least six months. You said a year would be even -arnq.,.. .. 11e111oq N.11.1r.v.....,, 1 dSh""' At 1ti.-lw<te:h ,,. better honw lot tlw .,,,..,,~ .,...., • 1....i ~--1..,•l <1>nhdvn1 I was bull-headed and det'1ded love would rudy loo .,,..11 .r.q Tt..,1, t,.,, .. ...-.. N.,1ur~.,, ~ ~ conquer all -that he didn't ne-ed A.A and ('Ould wllh•WfV~"'""""'"',.. , m""' "4or11n<1r10 .,.....11w do ll alone N.turatwebr Collett•,,, h ••.W.I °" .. r\dlur..i ~,,Wt< .lfow we have lJu:ee amal~~ They-~-,...... never se<.> h.Jm I am only 27 and fttl lJke 90 The ball collectors are driving me nuts. He has mis· sed so many days or work (hWlg over > he 'll pro·' bably lose his job any minute. How I wish I could tum the clock back Do you have any advice for me NOW? I swear 1 ·11 listen-JACKSONVILLE. FLA . DEAR JACKSONVILLE: Loot 18 die plloee book mder Al·A.aoa. FllNt _. wktl die aeat meetla& la -ud 10. lt'a free. Maay •ne tot· t.e• &Mir lsubaadlt on &M ...._ 1aeea ... U-1 leal"Md dlroap Al·.UO. ltow &o •aJ wt&la U.a. ~, ...... 0e .... F ahtOnl by CAMP 361 H0$PllAL ROAD • NEWPOAf BEACH ~2·9 102 QEARANCES1'lt\ ...... .. , ......... c. ... w- L..rlANl lfmTI (Boys' Special Aaeortment) 16• =~-·.,. '12 =-cc:=.-........ '9 =~ ............. •13 =-....-.......... '2" =-=~~............ ::::.. .................. .. OCT. 10 to OCT. 24 UYICOIDS ~ '&99-51099 :s PUJDS $499 9M'l>'ed 11914 •OOICHUIST, FOUMTAIM VALLIY CAt Gllfleld behind McDonald·11 °"" .• ..t,. o.t, • ...., ...... Ca..M....., ...... ,., ~--•••••••Pme Shu,·.r Sin'~ 1903 ~Sandal Something pretty for fall. Graceful, high stacked heel, In woven brown kid. The f 1 rr-e s-r I t a I I a n craftsmanship. ~FrldlV ~ -- 1 • 11 • 9 p•.m•·--.ffldi~ SHOIS, _____ _. " ,ASH ION ISLAND, N•WPORT B•ACH • 71M111 PUT YOUR HAIR IN AN EXPERT'S HANDS . OUR MISS ROUX HAIRCOLORING , 13.00 An expert·s touch does-make a difference. turning dull. grayed hair to beautiful. glowing color. Make your appointment now with our colorists. Call (714) .759-1211. Hairworks Newpon1.~~datly. Mon • Tl'IUr$ ·Fri 1111 9. ""9.·"90.·Sat . bll e. Sun. 12 1111 5. > I • 17 ERMA BOMBECK I HOROSCOPE Thurldly, OCtobtt 11, 1979 \ Put the Shoe on the Other Foot Hey, llom You wi.. UM netledM "°°'8 •bo bM to lake • Jl1ceriM pill b9for'9 you IO ln· to your '°" '• bedroom . wbo bu epent a w.um. ot ~ ··we·u ...... Md wooden lf a coe~ will • a woman who considers Sara Lei a IOd. J W8lll ~ to lmaclM for a moment what it la Ilk• to '-a cbUd. 1t ml1ht help. S11ppoae 1ou were ao lnaecure about )'OUreelf \Ut YoU bed to caU your oetCbbor each •ornlal to ftDd out ll 1h1'1 .. .nna a 1klrt or Jeana tbal day. SOPP08S YOU THOUGHT you'd flatter your cblJd b7 lmltaUn1 hJa aplWnc. walna 1lang and belrtMnp openly and be said lo you, ''That's d111uetJ.na.' SUIJPOM your childnm never caught you .. belnc IOOd. .. SU9POM you bad lo eat a "aood breufast" while )'OW' children dieted ud when you said you weren't hun&l'Y they aald. "Tbat•a dlf· ferent." Suppoee your chlWren forbade you to touch their sames, bedroom, toUetriee, clotbes or hair dryers. but when tb•y borrowed your tbln11 told you. "ll you don't 1bare, you're selllab." Suppoee the child you k>ved asked you for the truth and when you told ber the truth she uJd you wtil'tl lyln1 and believed a woman she had n ver teen before and whose name sbe couldn't pronounce. SUPPOSE YOU TOLD your child aometblnl very penonal IA 1tr1ct confidence and later overheard her tellln1 lt to her &lrllrtmd OG tbe phone. SuppoM your child ctraa1ed you away from your favorite TV show to villt a friend and toad you and tbe friend's mother to 10 olf and learn to know MCh other unUI it wu time to 10 liOme. Suppoee a child named you "Larkspur" or "Unplanned." Would you be forSlvln.g? Suppose you lived in fear because an En1U1h teacher t.old you you'd never amount to anything unleu you could dlaP'am a sentence. Suppose someone sat•. "You're all crown up, aren't you?" and you sWJ didn't know what you wanted to be. But worse ... suppose everyone told you these are the best days of your life. Have a good day. ••• Battle Is Won ( (From Page CU friends thought sbe couJdn 't squeeze 1n· to the back seal "Now I'm the first person t.o say I'll sit in the back to show them I can do it ... Her love o f ope ra lead h er to bachelor's and master's degrees an mustc at California St.ate University at Fullerton. And she has won a number of awards in operatic competition. But. directors rarely gave her the leading roles she desired. She was constantly cast as the old grandmother. After all, she says, "Who ever heard of a fat Carmen? "Le ading fat people don't fall in love and they don't kiss. especially on stage." Ms . Pilcher adds. She would lose a few pounds one week, then plummet down an eating binge the next. The death of her father in 1971 thwarted one of Ms. Pitcher's major attempts to break her insatiable hunger. Weight Watchers, she says, provided Boros~ope FRIDAY• OCTOBER 12 By SYDNEY OMARR ) ARIES (Mar. 2l·Apr. 19) ! Direction, course 1s clear. Stay with what is familiar. Get facts straight -be positive of material, quotations. TAURUS CApr. 20·May 20): Accent on flex· i bility. versatility. a bllity t.o be optimistic in race of apparent setback. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You receive gift from one who desires to show appreciation for your efrorts. CANCER (June 21.JuJy 22): Define mean· inga, set goals. be rid or s uperfluous material. Streamline procedures. LEO (July 23-Au •. 22): Investigation could uncover labyrinth or details, subtle nuances. You'll have added responsibility. VDGO (AUJ. 23-Sept. 22): Learn something of value by studying Leo message. You attract individual who flatters, praises and wants something for nothing. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22): Accent on in· dependence, fresh concepts, ways of living up to potential. ---SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Good lunar as pect coincides now with journey, communica· tion, special emphasis on language and educa· lion. o· SAGl'M'ARIUS CNov. 22·Dec. 21): 1g beneath surface indications; you can gain in· formation leading lo solid profit. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·J a n. 19): If thorough, you make significant gain. Otherwise. you might have to retrace steps and lose valua· ble time . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18 ): Piece together clues. bits of information. You can come up with complete s tory. Pl.SCF.S (Feb. 20·Mar. 20): You receive news which stimulates, encourages you to im· print personal style. #54~ ........ ~IHctt11141 , ....... 22) #21 .... s.r..t, A.....-0 121 JI 212-5&71 IN only the guide lo a balanced diet. When sh e began the program, she came armed with strong self-motivation and prayer. Weight Watchers members often will cli ng around Ms. Pilcher hoping that the "magic" or her weight loss will rub off. And Ms. Pilcher now has to endure the inconveniences -both pleasurable and unpleasurable -of trimming off almost half her original body weight. She draws the regular attention from men. although she says "There's so· mconc spce1al in my life al the moment." And then there 's the unexpected aide t•ffects some areas of her body ug dut• to the stretching or skln during her obesity BEFORE MS. PILCHER considers plastic surgery, s he 's going to try to tighten up the flabby flesh through ex· crc1se Sht··~ also had lo discard a wardrobe of !-.IZ<' 26 dresses for a relatively more petite hnc or clothing in size 12. RUFF ELL'S UPHOLSTERY wtie.. y Oii w .... ttw lftt 1922 Hwbor IU•d. Costa Mna -541·115& Her singing career continues with engagements in local clubs and Ms. Pilcher plans to study opera at a six· w eek s ummer program at the American Institute or Musical Studies in Graz, Austria She still $hares, however, lbe emo- tions , yet contempt of her former obese life. "When I s ee fat people it really grosses me out.·· Ms. Pilcher says . ·'This is something I knew J would de· velop. "I want to RO up to them and say, 'Hey, I was where you are now .' But I would be intrudjng on them." She realizes the uselessness of being lectured. :.ayin~ "The more peoph.· talked about 1t. the more I'd eat about It " Losing the weight, she adds. was a matter of wrestling with a powerful. hfe·thrcatcmng add1ct1on ·'I never could kid about my weight When you can Joke about 1t. that'~ when you've given up ·· 0 Odellghtful 0 blend of cheddars with a nip of beerl 5ALr Available only whll• aupply la•t• Westclltf Plaza 17H! I 1,.,,IM M.wporl INCh I "42·0'72 Fashion Island Newport Beach ~30 U.Jlt . 101n<; M 1•1 vyn , 1n rr·u•n1.i1r<1It1• (,1,1nd UO••r.1ri-: o' our nPvJ .1orr , 1n Por11.111cJ 1"rl I•• 1t 111 · IJ ~0v"' !3.JI• <MA bt+rll!WuJ hu~u1nin0-0 1.o..1(.l'H-O l..J ..... !l •. 11.l!.. ..JL!!.l 1 1U1 • your t1qur1• 101 .t <J rt>,ll IOO~ JtHl• ·r •c>d.iv I 1 tw"ri A. Bal~''lo" beaucoup w11 11•r_,.,, ... n• 1 • v • • •" · ronrour w11t1 I •h"r r l1d l Itri 11; ' ·1 A '· · f~ 1 r .. 10.00 B.FlowerBali° fullfigure "'d•·•w•r••t1r11 1 ~··:•• •' cuo·~ w 11n 1n• ... 11it 1 .. 111ir1111" ·,,' I''• •11!1''""' •v S11o ·',·~.1-.mB ~'1-·lfJ( 10.00 'iv• : : 11 11.00 C. Sno-Flake' lace lllHJ.'fl'Jll .. t I I\'. I ., ,,., rJ ••• !1qur"" Nyl0n1L vr ro1 11•110• '" '' • c.111 • t 1 •11' , •• 1t ·.upoorr S111 • • ,.1 • ·1H 1°1 .: t 10.00 : : !) 11 .00 I . ~--=~l . .. ~,$ 'l 'M), $I:~} • _:,S •'If-I ~ . . ;r~ I . . I i I Just Shake It j and Let it Fall Into Place. ! The Precision Haircut. 1 Because your head is unique. the way your hair I grows is equally unique. Really Quite different • from every one else's. Precision haircutting rs a technique for cutting the hair in harmony with the way it grows. Your hair eventually grows out but 1t doesn't lose its shape wi th a precision haircut. Consequently your hair· cut will look as gOOd after five days as it does after five minutes. And because the hair falls naturally into place you won't have to keep fussing with It. Usually a shake of the head does it. At Command Performance we shampoo, prec1s1on·cut and blow dry your hair for sixteen dollars. whether you're a gal or a guy. And no appointments are ever necessary. We also offer permanent waves. coloring, frosting and condlt1on1ng. But we really shine with precision And so wtll you '-~~~~~~-r::_~'v '/·~~~~~~~~ Command t•erformanee All STORES OPEN MON.·FRI. 9-9 SAT. M NEWPORT BEACH-MARINERS CENTER 149 RIVERSIOE·(N•llt to Newpon Beech Poat Office) MS.7451 COSTA MESA · MESA YERDE CENTER Behind lee SllatJ~ Rink (Herbo1 & Adame) 540~153 BLACK SUEDE BLACK KIO BROWN KIO NAVY KID 141 Thrill to the dellabt of a &.her. pret· tier pump few fall! It's a whole now breed of pump from Joyr.el Stunning venatlllty makes It weer1bln for so many oc:caalonsl .A crltp. clean look that'• u important part or this Ml8&00 °8 neallf 1ppl'08Gh to dmsalng ... try It on andteel Shop Monday-Friday, 9 30-9 .30 • Saturday. 9:30-6:00 • Sunday. 10:00-6:00 t ANAHllM Anlhelm fltaza, 1100 N. £uctld St.-•1..-> CORONA 720 N. Mein St. In Bun.filkl Sttgt $qvet9-T.M-•10 CYf'MU 10201 v...., vi.. St. --..om 'UW"1'0N ~ Cent9f, 32()( &at YOtbl L.lnde--.00 HUNTINGTOflt 11ACtt •11 AdMll A..--m.m1 TUmN 111121~ &Mt. -....ol PM .. "'°'9 l10f9e to..,,,. you dwa u1tt.ut Maw. CMtfotM. ....,.. encl .... MHlcO I • . . Thunlday. Octow tt, 1m For the Record ....... ................ MOM'tTM. ,. ... .,.,. •• ,_ 11$11 ·-"'"" Ml .,.. Mn OeNtl llet<e, t•I• ~.-"" __, llln. JIM Ct.,...,,. N_,.,, .......... Ml ..... Mr'-•k-~ """' ........ 9-tl."'1 Mt aftel Mo . c e .... rOfl H•l'Cll•,. .... ~ ll9Kll. pl .......-wu.1m W <tftCI Mn Mark kr...,., (0\1• ,_...,9ltl .M;~,!':: Mn G"r ... 5wull9rO. N 8"cll,9trl ~ •"" Mn . c ... tlH l..Oy Cotta Ma;a,9lrl M,. al\O Mr\ Wiiiiam A•k•"' N~ 8Mccll, 9lrl "''· ...., Mn. 11o0en Hiii. l..•ouna e..c ..... ,rt ......,....,.,,.,. "'' •llO Mn Oouo•es '"*"· Co.la ..-. ... 9lrl II#, and ""'\ 0..-UI HVIM, HUlll ""Mt\ &M<f\, 9111 .......-rrT,1m 0.--....... Mr -'*' -........ II o ... ,...,., 91<1 ~J Ntr •M Mn lt•O.•I Wiiiiam 11 ..... \.aft c:aen-, bey Ntr a.-MU Gr...,y l..aYIO" --.s...c-...... POUflAOI VALL• 'f COMMUMIT'f MOll'ITAI.. 1 ,, ••• Mr a..0 ~ Gft9D'Y hlledlCI HU'lll~ 8M<f\, llOY Mr and Mr~,!::.v\0111t.or1, HVC'I tl"910ft 8"Cf\, "°' ~I Mr allCI MrL MIU•HI O.r1111199r $111 Juan t.9iltr-. 01r1 ~J Su .. n 1..-rO, FOUf'l•ln Vall•Y glrl Mr •ncl *'"' O.w kauen. C.otl• Mlla,llOV #r. encl Mr• Palrl,I• HHklM Hv1111nvton 11Mc11, 01r1 ~4 Mr and Mn . Timothy 1<1mbte Lat.,na Hiii•. Olfl #r allCI Mr" Jay Sene•. H"nt· TOWN'S OFFICER·IN-CHARGE FACES UNCERTAIN JOB FUTURE U.S. Poatel Service want• to eloH Ruth Liiiard'• poet to aave money . .,...._ M,. end ,,.,, O.•• klou Colla ~.Doy Mr •nd Mn ll091r Lau ... S.11 Ju•11 c•ttr-.lllr'f Mr allO ~ CltthwCI Fr-, Cotta Me ... 9111 ·~---... ,, Postal Complaints Rare Deatlu Mr end Mn. OelllH Sft>llll, ltvlM ' Q<'I ,,., and A.Vt. 11-.rt s.11ur, H""t l"'ltOfl~.boy Mt •nd Mn. (>¥elf\ Ml,.., Cotll -... 9111 ~18.tff9 Mr and Mr.._ f'k,,.rd ~. C.0.la ............ Mr •nd Mrs Georw Woocl>, H Ullt •"910ll 8-'ll, 91rt Mr and~ """"Martorle L•OUM S.all,Doy Mr •ncl ~ Jottll l•UOU~k I Hunt •"9t0fl BM<ll otrl Mr al\O Mr~ Mkl\Mt Cunn1119111m C«K .. Mesa.boy ~"·''"' Mr. Ind Mr• Jamn Wrl9flt, N•WPOr1 Be<K.11. boV Mr and Mr• Rkl.aro Brown. HIHll 1noton 8-'h, 9111 Mr and M•• Wllll•m Louoll.,y Colla M~ ..... bQy ~->t.1t7' Mr .tnd #W \ \llll(ent frtll Hunt 1ngton B•acn t>oy M f •nd Mr~ fhom•\ Houqhfl"; (Mta MeW q1r• Elsewhere WASHINGTON CAP> Job.a Nicholas Brown, 79, senior fellow al Brown Unive r s ity. a founde r or St. Dunstan's College of Sacred Music and a member of one of Ameri ca's o lde s t families, died Tuesday. PARIS CAP> Com· poser Paul Paray, 93. one of France's most noted conductors and a former director of the M r and M f"\ fhOmd\ lftwrrnt.,. N•wpor1 St-a<n. ooy Detroit Philharmonic. ,,., 1nc1 ,,.,, '"°"'"' ~o" '°''a. di e d We dnesda y in ~":~,. w1111•m M<e1<1wr, H11111 Monte Carlo '""-Bff<ll, 9"' Mr 11\0 ""'~ ~l•mlll l..01• HU111 11>9lon ll<t<Kh, 0111 SAN c.LaMuna GaNallAL MOll"lTAI.. ~11 Mr •llCI""" J-Golor111 SM! C~111e.tio,, .... ,,..,. M r •llCI Mr• Witt" 1..avton 11 s... "'"""'ntf'. boy "'' •"" Mr• Garv Cov,.rv. D•na Point Q•rf Mr ar\d Mt\ (Nt,1~ (,•ft°" I 4t.An Juan (4C)4\t'"""°· OO'f' A/tr drtd Mr' '1ob,.rt Hu,ton ''-'" Ju~nC.&e>•'"~ t>t1v ~-Mr 4r"d M r\ Jro\ofo> MIQUf'I ["4,Ut1.t, ';)~n Juan ~\lrtnQ Q•r• ~ Mr •no Mr• J .. r.,...., !><h•UC'r S..n {''"""'Ill~. boY M r ""°Mt'\ ttrM"UmH R4KJttno"lt Pioneer Kin Dies At Age 80 SAN MARINO <APJ Philanthropi s t K at h ari n e Bi x b y J:lot.chltia.-80..-a <lescen- d a nt o f a pionee r C alif ornia ranching family. died Wednesday afte r a long illness at her home. Mrs . Ho l chkis was ooNNA eo.:::~~RRv. ,....,.,., born in her parents' old ... c01t•MM1.c. Pu~•••Yc>t>Oc· Spanish adobe ranch -r 10. mt Born November 74, ,,.. house in what is now lft l..«K A~. ca Survlvtd llY lier b•olller Ronald !Koll of """"'•'"· L 0 n I B e a c h s H e r I Ore9on, IMIOvoO friend OI Sytvle g r 8 n d f 8th e r J 0 h n ~~:~ =~ !;:;';, ~._:c !: William Bixby, acquired ••Oe to IM ScllOOI Prooram SAM a portion or the ranch in ,,,._1•1 ,.,..,ocn •111 11e ,,.,0 •• 3 JO 1881 on a s1'te that at one PM "" Sah,,.Ol1. Oct-r I), lt7' at n. o.uru. °' 11.c1111o11t S<i.n<•. '°' time was part o f a 11tf\ SI , HuntlftQlon a..c11, c.a. 1" ,..., $ land o l ll•wef\ mamorll l COfllrlbVtlOftt paniSb grant. Tomi's Hub Still i11 Limbo, but Alive By J ULES LOH ·~ S..Co.M c ....... _a. .. 1 GRAV E..'i MILL. Va Thl· news from th•~ outpo~I 1n thl· Blue Ridge Mountain!> I!> that corn. a respl•ctable c rop. I'> ready for the silo~, the Hap1dan. troublesome after a hard min. l'> back within ats banks. and tht' post offl<'e survives. Also. Ruth Lillard had a b111h dav The way you ~l·t lht· n~·w.., 1n Graves Mall ,.., to go lo tht• po~l offict• and <'hat with Huth IT IS NOT Hi\RU to find lht· post offi ct' It 1!-t th<.· onl} publar building in Grave.., Mill and 1l as at tht> dead e nd of the only public road an Graves Mill, the o n e ,lane bl ack t op from Wolftown. "I don't know what the future holds ror our pc>st office." Ruth Lillard s aid "I 'm not thl· pos tmaster. you knov. M ~ t1l1C' is officer an charge I ~uess that means we're stall 1n limbo · In limbo. m aybe. hut all\t' A couplt' of Y•·ar.. a~1J, tht· 14 patrons of the c;ruvt·" Mall post office got the bad nl·w~ heard It rr6\n Ruth -lhal their!> Wa'> one of those rcmot<:, o utdated operations the U S Postal Ser vice aimed lo shut down Too costl y. LAST MAY , THOUGH, good news arrived. The Postul Rate Commission. which has the final [ ____ AM_ERI_CA____..J "''}. dt·cadt'd th1· offit·1· could stay open a:ter all Graves Mill and eight other little post offices around th<: na t1on , the comma:.~wn rull'd ser ve o larger function thJn nH·rc postal duties "Oh. I c;uppose wt· Muld gt·t .dong w1th11ut the poi-.l nfflc:t· · sa 1d the offi cer in charge. "but 1t ... urt· would bt' troubksumt> "This 1s whcre we mt:l•l Jus t this morning three rarmt:rs were hne to discuss helping each other put up corn. This as really the only place we havc lo mt.'Ct. but it 1s more than that "THIS IS THE only tangible <·onncctaon a citizen hai-. with tht> ~OVl'rnment To mc. that 1s mo..,t important of <111 .. Tht' tangible fcdl'r:tl prcscnr•· an Gr aH·s Mill a-; a 12 b) 14·foot om· room building v.1th11ut phont· or clectnc1ty Or flagpole· Ruth hangs lhl' flag on two naab driven into unc of lht.· three four by fours holdrng up the tan porch roof The building used to be a farm shed. lt was moved to the foun dataon or what used to be a l>ton· THE STORE CLOSED, alon~ with the school a nd the church. h:tl'k 1n the• 'JOs wh e n t he ~ht'nJndo<Jh ~ataonal Park h1Jught UIJ much or the nearby f..irmland and the farm ers pu~tal p<1tron~ moved away I n'i1de thc post of face lhe usual gll\ Nnmcnt notice:, and "want t·d ·' po ... tt•rs app ear So do. al<rngstdt'. items of local in It· ri·'tt J ..,naps hot of Ruth ·s hu~hand. Randall, and the deer h1· !->hot s<1mt• year!> ago . the pc wt r~ of Jcarinat.· La~ht 's aunt, v.hot..,&J Huth Lillard •~ th•· 19th an a lint· guing back to IH4 l. baC'k to .\i-.a c; ravei-. hamsl'lf. postmaster "in I. v.ho owned the mall THE MILL'S STONE fouoda, taon 1s stall there. hard by the brawling Rapidan lo back or the po:.t orflcc. behind the whale f<>nt'e keeping Arthur Molle's I lt•rt>ford.., off the post office pon·h nn the top rail uf thc fence, l'uriou~ly hani!" .1 lunch bo'< Oh. thJt," Huth l.111..ird l'~· plJ1m·d Well I m onl) OIJC'D Crum nin~ to noo n OoUy S1·l•kford t·an't com e by then lll'<'aUi-l' s he works all the way cl\ er an Reva. I µut Dolly 's mail in tht.• lum·h box ... o shr can pick at up after work .. Suffice.· it to say Ruth Lillard hears no complaints about the postal M~rvace in Graves Mill . Va . 22721 Arrest Jolts Campus . Denies 'Drug Factory' Charges ""'V be -In --to , ... .Jolln A r t e r s h e w a s. wevne ea"cer lle .. ercll, UC LA d led f V -Pr f Pa< Ille View MOrtuarv. Newparl gra U& rom as~af 0 es so r -=a-c~,;,;,".:.oi_,._'°'--""------College, she ma rned SMITH & TVfMLL MORTUAIY WUTQ. ... CHAPIL Mortuary •Cremations 427 E 17th Si Costa Mesa 646-4888 NIClllOTHIH SMITHI' MORTUAIY 627 Mam St HuntinQton Btlach 536-6539 1 --,.., .... y COlOMIALPUMIAAL HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 PACIRC Y•W MIMC)alAlPM• c.mtlMV Monuary CMC>el 3l500 Pec1t1c VtflW Drive Newpe>rt Beach 644-2700 • Mae~ MORTUAl•S LaQuna Beach 494-9415 ~unaH1lls 79&-0933 ' I San Juen Ceplstrano 496-1n& H•nm LAWM-Mf, OUYI Mol1'*Y • Cematerv Crem9torv lo.. 1625 Glai.r Ava . Cott• Mesa 640-5654 MLTZ•MIOM N9MMOMI 64&-2424 CoetaM-. &13-9450 .-ctllOTMmt m.A. llOAIWA Y MOITUMY t10 aro.ow-v Coeta Me9a ~9150 i ...... Prest.on Hotchkis of Los Angeles, now chairman of · the board or Bixby Ranch Co. Mra. Holchk.is was a community leade r , philanthropist, write r and historian. She served man y years a s trustee or director of Pitze r Co llege, Southern California Symphony Association , KCET Channel 28, California Historical Society, Los Angeles Psychiatric Services, Visiting Nurses Association and Weatrid1e School, She also served for several years on the executive committee or the California Republican State Central Commit- tee. MONEY DOWN DRAIN TANFIELD LEA , Entland (AP) -P-0lice ln t!lil northern En1land mlnlq area are looking for someone who is Ut.eraUy pouri.nl money downthedraln. Workmen at a.aewafe works ~ould hard y believe their eyes when torn-up money, lnclud· lnl J. and lO·pound .bHknotet worill more tbaa UO * ao apiece appe.,... Jn the town'• tewer171Mm. So far more than 300 poundl -tr7I bu bMn recovered • NEW YO RK CAP> -The New York Uo1ver s1ty campus Is abuzz over the arrest or John Buettner J anusch . the a n , lhropology department head ac, cused of converting a school laboratory into a drug factory Buettner -J anusch. 54, gray haired and a w cl l ·known sct\olar. denied the accusation. Tlt'E UNIVERSITY SAID Buettner.Janusch was ''innotent until proven guilty" and could remain al hls post unless he is convicted. His associates called it un, believable. "l find il amazing that he could be involved in anything like that. I find it impossible to believe," said Professor Peter Huber, who s ald he had known Buettner,Janush 12 years. "I doubt any of the charges will stand up," said Nan Rothschild, a research associate in the department. "And one thing which is certain ls the ans thropology department is no drug factory." A SIX-COUNT lndlcUnent handed up ln U.S. District Court said the professor arran1ed test, Ing of the products -which In, eluded LSD; a synthesized co· calne; and metbaqualone, a depre11ant fold commercially aa Qµaalude -on human guinea plg-'""Dr order lo determine the marketablllty" of the s ub, stances. Tbe 'J)rofeuor pleaded lnno· cent to the cbar1ee and j><»ttd '5,000 cuh to aecure a '50,000 personal bond. He allO 1•ve up hi.I pauport. · There wu no lndlcaUon ln ~· lndlctment of the acope ot the al· A,. ........ PLEADS INNOCENT Prof. John Bu.ttner..Janueeh leged enterprise or of the profit that was realized. ONE KILO, OR Z.Z pounds, or powder Identified a s metha, qualone was seized at the lab, enough to make about 3,500 pll~. a source ln the federal Dru1 En, forcement Admlnistntion said. He said the pills could be sold for as much u SS each. The account by the U.S. at· torney'• office uld Buettner, Januacb used university money and material to equip a lab on the fourth noor of RufUI Smith Hall for manufacture l')f the dru11. · The DEA sourct!, who 'M..,._.,. ' ' not to be quoted by name, said the required chemicals were bou1eht an such a manner that on· ly an auditor with a chemistry background might notice they could be combined lo produce narcotics. INVESTIGATORS SAID some studcnL5 knowtnl{ly participated in thl? manufacture and distrlbu· tlon of the drugs, while others were unwittJnl{ly involved . Buet- tner J anusch was the only person identified 1n the indict· mcnt It was all eged that the pro rcss11r conduc ted "researct :ses!laons" with students at which they studied books. articles and pamphlets on drug manu!ac, lure The government sa id money from drug sales was laundered throuah a front calle<! ~imlan Enterprtses Inc THE INDICTMENT ALso' said Buettner,Januach inaU1at-' ed a cover,up conspiracy to hinder Investigation of his ac· tlvitles and to inUmldate student participants. in the scheme and other witnesses. Bue ttner,Janusch became h e ad o f the school 's an- thropolo1t)' department in 1973 after holding poata al Yale, Duke Unlvenlty, Wayne State University. the University of Michigan and t.he University of Utah. He bolds doctorates from Michl1an and t.he University of Chtcaao. He la the author of a 18'$ book, "Orislna of Man," and la u- aoclate editor of the American Journal of Phyatcal An, lhmpol<>o. • NATION I OBITUARIES My maste r out furniture searched for weeks before he tried Daily Pilot classified ads . The firs t day he looked in th e Daily Pilot h e found a perfect den chair for me and a sofa for himself, He chose from such a wide selection that he found a great bargain right away. If you want a doggone good buy in furniture, dig into the Daily Pilot classified section. If you have furniture you want to dispense of, call the friendly Daily Pilot classified ad-visers. CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5878 I ·-----··--···-....... .. .. ""'., , ...... -... -... -.. ' .. , ' . -. ,. .......... --_,. -., . I ,, • .. • # • • ,. ~ > I• :':et ... ... 0 .. 17 ••• .... . .... nu.d9y, Oct~r It, 191'9 PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS 8U$1NISS NAME STATEMl!NT l 11• 1011ow1rro oerM>ll$ ••• 001no l><l•ln•••"' HRIC INVE'STNIE N flt, .,71 We\terly Piece, Ne wport 8uc11, Cahf~la f'1WO Jeff re~ .f ftOM, 2:1011 T •"""'" '--r Et T_,., CMff:Oml• t\»JO Erlt A Hanaen, 7Slt• Sleepylloltow "'"•<•. IE I Toro Cafltornl•m» Ill~ J. Ku,mer, 1018 E Bal1J011 Blvd., N-1 Beeclt, C•lifornl• ., ... , Tiiis IMKIMU i• conoucted by • ~,_,al -"-"l>iP £fl<A..._ Tllil \Wltement WIOS lllf'd wltll '"" c ...... 1, Ci.A of o.-. COUMyon Sec>-,.,,._ .. _ "" l"IUJU Pub11"'9d Or-Coeu 0.lly Piiot. Sept 7i>, 71 -Oct.•. It,"'' ll77·1' PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS 8UStNISS NAME STATt:MENT r "~ 1011-•no ,,.,....,, ••• C101nQ bu''"'",.. lltUtU Publl•heCI 0t•'9 '°"'" Daily Piiot Seot 11 .....,Oct •. 11. 11. 1•1• lit~-,. P UBLIC NOTICE ftJ8UC NOTICS 1111 Publt\""" 0rM9 C611\I D•lfv Octoti.r 4 II, 1e. 7S, "" P UBLJC NOTICE Cl"·ttU l"IC"flTIOUS 8USINl:SS NAME STATEMENT fl'lf' fottow1nq e>erwn\ 1tr• ao•"O bv\•ne\\•~ SUNSt<INE VOGURI & ~£ (RE AM CO 7" A f 1/111 Slt••I CO\ la M•"' ( •hlornla ~:H>:H> NOTICE TO CONTlllAOOllS Robert C. U ve,,.. S !Im~'""" CALLING 1"011 81DS ttvln•, C•li1orn1~ '711• S<-1 Dl\lticl NEWPORT MESA A'"""" F l•'""''' UHIFIEOSCHOOL DISTRICT Irvine C~IUorniA~)/I• Bid OHdllne 7 00 O'<IOc k pm OI ''"' l>lni'W'\\ " tc>n<lu< 1•<1 l>V ~n Ille'"" 0.y of Oc~, 1'7• •IWllv•du•I PIKe of Bio RK~. 11)1 P••onll• !).,.,_,, c. l•••M !.trttt, c~te Mltw~ CA .,.11 ... ,....,.,,~ F l• v• "" Projecl ldentUic•tlori Neme Ttt1\ ,,.,~ ... , .... , t1tf'd ""'''" ""' '"'"''"'1111/ln•l•lllno t<MnllChnM •• Counly Cl••-Di OrAnoo· {o.1n1, on Costa MeW Hlgn Sc'-4 Seotem1>e< n. •~~ Pl•G• Pl.tn• •••on 111 .. llSI Platen· G llOVlll ISCllOW tie Str"t· to.tot Me,._, CA '1U1 COll~O-ATION NOTICE IS HEREBV C.IVEN 1 ... t t-.tlrvlMlll ... ,,,. •bov-med S<'llOol DMrl<t ot Tuuh.,CA.-- 0 ••"9« County, C .. llOtnla .ct11111 llY El<,.... ... J.ISUJ.,C a no 11't011Qh II• Govern•no llo••d I' 11'1'11 "er• I ri •ft er r • f ~ r r ~ d to •" P ut>h\""'d Oranot CN \I Odil\' Puot "DISTRICT", wlll t~uiVP uo to t>ut S.pl 71 Ocl • 11 18 It~ ll'll> It not lal•r l!Mln 11'P ""°"" •l•IMI 11-MAled bl~ lor ........ ,0 ol o < onlt e< I for th• •bow prol<>e I P UBUC NOTICE Bid• •11.tll ~ re<elWd 1n 11'P pl.ce 1Cl<!nllfled --. . ...., \hall ee oe>etWO -oublicly ·~.., -•• llw -v· l'ICTITIOUS •U$1111ESS •lated llme-ol.tei NAME STATIMEHT Tl!••• wlll be .. N/A *"""' '"'"''.., TIW lollowinQ o--. " 001no l>u\O tor ••<"HI Of 1110 clocum•nh to ~·~~MI NION OEVElOP,,.ENT 0 .... , .... , .. lfw ,., ... n In (IOOd concllllon COMPANY. IS1S Sent• ''"' l..•O ..... ;~::•n N/!4 oey, •lier,,. Illa Of)llnlnq 8eecll, c .. 1-· ••st E•c11 1110 must conform •nd 1111 ICenN1tll Gooclw•• M•""""· UI~ ,.._ .. w tofflecOi'llt«l~,.,,...1, S.nte Crut ~Be.en, C.e1U0<nl• EKll Illa -II .. «com-IH lw 97611 ,,,. M<IH'lly r~ecl 10 In 1,,. <_,.ct Tllll ""'lneu " conoucteo llY en In· doc.,..... -bit -Int ol pr-dlvldo.l•I -Of!~ IC-G .....,_,. Tiie DISTllllCT r~ ,,_ ,_ to Tiii~ •I-,.. filed •flt• - refect .,.., or all ll4ct< or 10 w•low .... C-f ~ "'°'-,_,.."" ()( lrr~u•••lll~ or lnform•lillt• 111 .,.., to.,., 7 bldl or In ,,_ lllddlftQ. TM DISTRICT 11M obtained tr-. ,,,. Dlrecto< of ""' DeNrt,.,.nt ol tn- ~tri..t ..., .. ._,. --•I -Y•ll· 11111 ••I• of -diem •-• In t'- loulltv Ill -IN• --I\ to De oerlormed lor HCtl «•tt or ,.,.,. ol _,...m.., -to ••«ut• ,,,. con· lfacL Tlww ,_ •• Oft Ille •I l'- Dl STRICT olllce IO<•l•O ., U H Pl•ce ntle Streel, Co•I• M•u . C:.lllornl• "611 C01>"'1' me• .,.. of>. l•IMCI Oi'I rt!QUHI A <Of>Y ol ,,,..., ••Ill -"•II lie po>ted •I IM iOC> •II• T"" lorf!90ln!I \C-.1. Of P"' dl•m -~ I• -._., e --lnq Oey ol elQlll (I) "°"'' n.. ••1• for l!ohd•Y • ..., OYOrtlnw _... l Nll lw al leHI llm••n<l-f\elf. llttM4't Publl.-Or-c.o.nt D•ll• Pilot. Oct-f •. ''· ''· 7), ,.,. ,. ... ,. P UBLJC NOTICE lllCTITIOUS •USllllEH NAMI! STATt:IWIENT fh~ followlf'IQ ff'\On\ Ar,. dOt,,Q bv•lnen•\ THE !.PORT NOO .. FOR H£R •H E 11th '>1,.•I (0~111 "'~•A Cahto•nl• '7671 L••la M 1 •ytor 717 W )1•0 Str.-1 UC>I-0111orn1~ 9111111 J•,,,., P T•ytor 111 W 11'0 !>ltffl, Upl.tnd C•hfornM 911116 Thi\ b\N,,....\ '' (ondVCl~O ta A,, 1n OlvlOu•I lf'tlA M T Aylor Pll9LK' NOTICE P UBLJC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USINESS NAME STATEMENT , .. ..,, fOlfOW•no °""'°" •\ OO•nQ 00\t .. , LENNY S Rl:'iTAURAN l ••II W~''"''"'''" f\fvo Wlil'\,nt1n\t.-, catito1n1,, l •On•r<Jo ~ Rulh 011••1" ~• ,.,, *•il'W'"''"M'lfJ C>r1vf ttu11l1tMJlt>n lit•M.h (Al1torn1A fhl\ bu\1~\\ ~\ C.Ufldut lrd bY .t" If' 1:1•-•<kl"I Ruth Ol..-bt ,.1 fn1\ \lill""f'nf•nf ""'f''lo t1t"1 Wtfn ftlf' Counlv Cl•n ot °'"""' C<>vnl• on YO '""'bf'' 18 Jff/ff FtUIZJ PUbf1\"""'11 ()r,,nQI~ (Q.ct•1 0,.11¥ f•liot ~tPI ,0 11 MO ()cl • 11 1010 llJJ 7't P UBLIC NOTICE N 20'1' STATE MENT 0, WITHOllAWAl 'ROM PAllTHERSHll' OPl llA TI H(; UNDER l'ICTITIOUS 8USINIESS NAM( The-tollow •no P•r\On\ n-.v,. withdrawn ~' Qlfl'ftllllr3' p4rtn.r, flam tM o.,-IN>r""tP OC>f>r•••no ""°""' '""° ft(llt•OU'-~,,_, .. ""''"" ot SPRING TPFf PROPERTll ~JI t•l41 YO'"" Sfft•• T u~ltn Ctthforni.1 ~,... Th .. fie t1t1°"" DU\U'\f'\\ nctrn.. .... ,. Mf'nt for fht °"''""'""'P ,....,, l1lt*(j on NOVflmber 'n 1•11 •!" 1tl~ Countv ot 0.•f'Qe fhf' full ~ •f'liO rr\tctenc:~ ot tn. pi9r \Ot'I\ wUta .,.,"O ., 04t'lnt',-\ M•u~• o.-1-n1 Company • C•lltornl• c0<pou11on. t ... t .,..,,..,. SI'"'· TinfJn. C.•11orn•• •2'80 -..,., 0. ..... 1_,,1 Co A~E M•u'•' . P~I fl!il U..t-.... , .. .., *"" ,,.. C-ty Gi.n. of Or-Countv"" Sn lef!>Der 2t. 1'1• ,,_. .....,._Or-C-SC OellY Pt•, -•• It, , .. 2S ,.,. ,.,, ,. P UBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS •uSINEH H-1 UATEMEHT t f'tr fouevrtno "'"°"' .,,. 0011\9 bu\l'ft•\1" ., AMERICAN WAY MORTGAGC CO,,.PANY IS7) Mew V•r.-Dtlv• f' • 11 tO• Cou• M•t11. C•lllornla 976:N> Ch•tl«K R p,.A,VW\ P111trfn#r 2'10 Clubt'IOu)t AO•O Co\I• "A •'•· C•ltforn•• '1•16 Je\'\ 11 Guril~' Par-lnf!r 7.,0 C•vDP\OU\"' ~oJtO (O\t A M,.,~ Cahlorno• .,.,. f h t\. l>v\t,...\\ ·~ 1 Gl\du< ll'd OY ,. o~n-,•• PMtnrtt'-n•o CN ll•\ fl P..M \Of' frll'\ \latHnl'nt w,., fllH.1 w1tn '"°" Counh Clttl< 01 0"'"00' County°" O< tOC>•• 10, 1•7' PUIU..IC NOTICE P\18UC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE .. , .. l"ICTITIOUI 8UMNaH NAaMf STATEMaMT ~':t~°!-no pet1om ere 001.,. MAltlHE S P ECIAlflfS Co .• 117t Pl•ent•• Aw,,.., Soltl• E ,.,., .. M~, c:..tllomt• 91611 M • 1••11< Met1ne E It< 11.C c;o • C.1il0<nl• corpor•llon lift Plecl'llllaA-.Sol1l•E C06t.-v C•lllO•n1•'2t71 Tllh ~lleU 1• COftOUCl..S by • C.OtPO<<ltlon Mljntl< -·•iw Ei.ctric (ompen • R•yM Arndt, l'retl<Mnt Tiii\ , ............ Wot$ Iii.., wtll\ Ille Count~ Cler~ 01 Or•"Ot' Counly on !leptemDe< 7• "" · ru ... Pulll"""' Or ..... CCWl\I D .. ly Ptk>I, pe 11-0ct • 11 te t~ ,,_,. P UBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS 9USIHEH NAMI! ITATl!IWllNT fft9 IOflOWfnQ ~tOftS •r• OOlnq ,.,,.,.\~~ J!4l {A OAICLA~O t1J1 ,. •1vr ••tl\u4't lrvtf'W' ( •hforn1tt '"'' l1>9t1d 8 ..,,., Rey l Jonn'°" I• 11'7 ).Old• .......... P•lm """"'' 111to'"'" 910.,0 Oorotllv f 11n<1 JoM o """~''°" 1••8t VY1tn01>''"' l d'''" HuntinQIOn fl••ch C."l,f4?f'n1i1t•)6oot~ H,.lly l (IU •nd flu, n..rd • t o-.pfc.., l Vt\14' v .. •1rtQA ~.,,, ( lttm,.ntr •hforn,,. 'nfll/ M•''f' Artn ~ •rt'IOIO ._. ( ,.., .... 1'4>) F"tdmlnQO 0''""' (°'I• ,_. .. ,. c •llt0,,\14 ,,..,. N,.n19 "'"° Rov l: A'"'"n J~A, Kl•t • hf'•th ( l 'C ,,. W,.\IM•n't •r C 111IQ• noo •1~) lh1\ f>U\IM\, 1\ ronowt l,.ff u. • ~,, .. , ... Dltr1""''""•l R1,Mf'C1 I in., I"" '"'' \t1tlrrnrnt """ ••1.-0 •tl'1 Uwrt <oul\t• t It,• ,,. tHM•l)I r ·~'•'• "" ~f• h ""~' ,. t<n , f'llJt1' Put>••\llit-t1 ()r,~ C"o.tt\I lJ•1•• P1io1 ypi U 0t t • II I~, tQ/q llOI " P UBLI(' NOTl(.E NOTICE 0, \AlE OF ~E•SOHAI.. l"llOPFllTV rs.c tilt C.•hf C1v11 c-1 NOT1<f 1<, >t[ l>fRY C,1VEH '""' undf'-r •nd ourwont ,,, lt\f" h•w ,,,.04' noo Of'Qvi()l"d ltw-u,.._,,..,...-,.QN··O Pf' -.on OI lh• 00"' MARJAN MOVINC. ~ SIOR,,.GF llull<l1no •t 11111() h•i.•t f: 04J"""'" 'V•lloty CAl1f0t-n1• w ill ,.u •I oul>ll< ...Cl'°" •I MASTERS AUC llON 101\• N-POtl Blvd CO\l• ~w C..,••Ot""t• •t t lO o'cto<k om on '"" 1t111 o.ov of 0<1_,. ,.,. ,,.. fOUOW1~ OM('r1btd P-'f'\Oft•t ~ty o• \O my("' 1f\fr.-ot A\ m a y O• ~<•''-"'Y to vtiuv • ,...,. dw ow "'" °"''''"'~ tO' '""' •net 1nudritnt•t' th curred •t the •Dowe tntPf\1 .. ntO ..0 o, .. ,, '-',,.. with ~°'" Of ao·~·· 1.,.."° •• _ ...... o-.... eAlll!IAR!4 BOWEH , ..... P•r•tll••t (fr Ito""'•'" V•U•• C•h to'"'• Amoun1 o... ~n oo OeurloUOf'I CMton\ t•b•~ •"0 cn.tlr\, t-te<trtl l)t'oom. bUN:tl• boeirth. ch1n•f couc:h coo.,. i.bf•. •no ••~ h4tf'n~f Del.O 1"'' "" O•Y Of Oc:t°""' ltlt MASTfllS AUCTION Vt JCoutouir•\ Sf<r•t~rv Put>h\fWd Or .. tnQf> Co.\-t O•ll• P11ot 0<1 tO " 11 tm 4017 ,. P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS •USINESS HA.llllE STATt:MENT TM touow1nq Off'ilDn '' dOtfttO bu\.• ""''' ., wf\f COA\I CON~FCllON '"6fl BcM\.A Chir,. lll~n&# Hun1H'Q1"'n A~•'~ CaJttnf'n111 •?&"' P UBLIC NOTICE N•JllUI *1Tta TO CJtEOITOU NO.A·t91• SU~llllCMI COUllT Of' TMI ST 4' TIE CW CALI f'OltNIA •Otl TMI! OOUNTY 011 OllANOI 1,. ,,,. -IM°' .,,. eu ... of SAM GA RIAN ...... SAMUEL GARtAN ..... SAM UEL GAR&OOSHIAN, ~Oed l'lollce " llo•ff>Y 01" ... to cre<ill0<• ll•vl1>9 <le-_i.,.t IM U>lcl -• d ..... 10 Ill•...., <l•ll'M 1,. -Offl(~ Of ,,,. cit•-el Ille .,....,..,. .-rt .. to Pftt4tnt lhom IOU. ...-._a •I I,_ Otho ot ASf()41 ~ -llUPS lU S ><ooe Slrwl S...le lllO l°' AnQtw• C•hfor1N• 'lll071, 1n LO\ A-ltt C- ty "'"'<" 1 .. t.., Off~" 1, lht cM«t-o f bu'•''-~-\\ of tt. ~ UQntiO t#'I •II '"•t '"" Of"'1••f'tlt\IQ to Wtd ttf•tt SU<-P\ rl.a1m' •119' ..._.""'t"""'-f'V ¥0U<Mr\ mu\t bf' ttl«I Ot P,-nrnt..O ., ••o~•W•O w 1IP'ltr\ flMJ' tnc>f\th\ .,,,., th,. ft'\t O\tlt>h<-•liOn of tf'll\ Mhc t Oel•OO<I-. 1•1't MH ~· G•ttl00\1'11.t" Adfntnt\t'•~ ,.t fl'w E\t-'.,. ~ \••4 0.--C"°"'"' AJTO• & ~llll"" Altff,..y It l.ho UlS H-S'"'°t \ .. 11. J11• L•• ·~.cA-1• "uOh'\.IWoO 0r411W9' < 0int OA••• P11n1 0<1 II 1' n -No v l IOI" '<J'J ro P UBLJC NOTICE SUl"E •1011COUllT01' THE ST ATI: 011CALll'OlllHIA 1'0 11 T "I: COUNTY 0 ' OllAN(;.t ... A·•ll•l NOTICE 0 11 NE A•1H c; 0 1' ~ETITIC. f'04ll ~110.ATE OF Will AHO 1'011 LETTEllS TESTaME" TAllV f\1•1" of (t<ARLE\ M ii Llo ADAM!. IA<.•....., NOTICE I~ t<ERC8V GIVFN lh•f OOROlHY ANH MILLS ,_.., lilt<! ,,.,..In• 00111-lot Pr-of Will end IO< 1\-• OI l.Ct.f'\ T~ lety 10 -"-111-. r-.r-e to wfllcl! I\ -for ,_ DMtlclll¥• --I -II--_.Of ... ..W.. , ......... --.... ..,,.~ .. "n. •t IO·OO •"' 1n tne ~-o1 O.C...rt..-Ho I el •-<.-1. et 7eO Clvk C-... 0.1.,. -•I, •n ""' Ctlv o4 S-1.A A .... (<rllt-• D•-~·­'-A.9r-". Ciltut'lty °""' ~ ............. _ WOOUEY ..... C«LDG TKAYCMER _._...,... ....... _ ..._......._CA_ .. __ .. ,_ PuolW.S °'-c-.t 0"41y Piiot Oct-U, 11, 18, ,.,. ~f,. ----- PUBUC NOTICE l'IOITIOUS-.uiiM'iU-- HAME STATl ... NT Tll• toll-•no oPr_, I\ dOl"ll t>u•• ".,,, ., STOl..POW AOVEArr!>tNC. 171• H•wOOF• 81v0 GO\t<11 ~"" C.-.ltfOf""•"' 97•7' D••"• Jitl"t,. ~tt11ro ... 111 • Mf'adOWWOOO "'"I• Arw ( •hfO'PI•• 91104 '"'' ~•""'' ., rorduet~ ., ... •" •n dlYtdM•f O•.tf\I• J \talrow Ttu' \t•l~t •M ••trod •1tn tl'WI' Counh ,,..,. Of 0..""'1' Ce><mlynn.,.o INTENSIVE CAPE LANDSCAPE M AINTfNANCF. 703• Proldenl Pl•<o. Coile ,.,...,,.., CalllornlA 9:Ni71 Cll••les c Clln<ll, 1030 Pr~~"' Pleu. C~I• ~. C..llf0<nl• 9)671 M•n. C.,.,..., Brower 2'4'1 Rip hnq B•ootr. E 1 Toto. C.11torn1e•"30 Ml<Mel 0 Kuny, lllll Mt>OO• L..,•, Soutrr ~. C.llf0<n1• ,,.,, Th" bu\•M\S I• conOu<l•O bY • ~~•r•I partner\l!op II Sfl•ll m ...-10<y upon Ille CON TRACTOR to whom llw conl,.t<I ll ••••deO. •nd .-n any wbconlrector under l!lm, to pey not ''"' llwtn IM Wld •oeclflf!CI ••IH lo •II •o••,.,.., emplo.,.ct lw ll!em In ~ ••e<utlon ot ttle cOi'ltrect ~hi\ Sl•lttMnl Wd\ hlf'd Wil~ ll>fo COUl>tv C~O OI Or-County Of' 0c f'IHen P ubll\IWoCI 0.-oo> Co.t\I D•llv Polot f'IU .. S Oct 11,tt 714nclNO• t 197<1 ~1' ·-· 7 .. ,. Otvrl J~""'' (Pww, 1"8Mi ArJf\.ft (tu(a """"",. Muntlnoton ft11•<"' (•hforn1A .,._.. '"'' °""""""'' ,, tonouu.a ow_,,'" dlVtdu•I t ... mt>-r ••. t•ra l'IU11• PUOll\.l'W"d 0..M"iQP (M~I 0..tly PttOf Seot 7il 11...,, Ort • " ,.,., Jt.11 I• Ho 11._, rno wllhdr•• ,,,. lllCI ,.,.. Puo1,,...., 0.-C.0.\1 D•lly Piiot • period Of forly·ll•• IOI O.y• •II•• Oct~r i II II H l•I• Jil~I• ChA•l•>C Clln<n r111> st••-• "'"' lilf'd "'"" ,,_ County Cle<\ of Or-C'ounly"" ~P. lrml>ef 1'. 1'79 l'ltrn1 Publl•llad Oranoe C.0.\1 0..lly Plk>I ~pt. 10, "-Oct •. "· "1' 3171·7' PUBLIC NOTICE f'IC'TITIOUS 8USINHS Ill"* STATl!MINT r,.. tol'-"'O oenon 1, clolno Ou••· "'"' . ., '"" d•t• ..,. ,.,.. IN _..,no 01 bid• A PO"*" llOnCI •ncJ • perlo•m•nce -d will .,,. tOCl<Jl•...S prior to •"•Cu lion of ""' '""''«t Tr. pey,.,.nl -.o Sfl•ll be In tr. ~ w t lon11 '" ,,,. COi'llt8<1 OIX""*'h eo-ni..oeo.rd OorOllW Her-.'t F"he' CP M Pwcf\e•lng Director D•IM Oct-• 3, 191' Pub.l•MCI 0r""9t CCWl\I Dally Pilot Cktoberc. II, 1'7• J'f?j 19 P UBLIC NOTICE 8 A Y WA T E R S MA II I N E f'ICTITIOUS 8USINISS SERVICE, 1l40 Noni""°" Strttt. N-E STATEMENT Saftt• AN, c.Altornl• '710I Trre 1oi._.no ,,..,_, ,. 001rro """ $1•"•" H. M <W •ln, 1••0 neu .. N orl .. WOOCI ,Sir•••. Sanl• An•. S TE ... RN S CON5TAUC 1 IO N C.llforftl•'71'0C COMP14NY. JOH Ouall Strut. Tiii• butlllWJM ,. ~·"" by ... In· N••POf't Bt.te.11. C.lll0<nla ·~ Cllv._I, C•l>'korn Con•tr..ctlon Compeny, St-WW.In e C•lllornta corporation, 1016 0...11 TMs IUll-' .... lileel •Ill! ,,.. Strut, Hewoorl 8uc11, C•lllornle G-'r Owl of Ol'-. c-ty on Ck· 92..o toWr I , ""· This .,. .. 1 .. u h cO<ldlKtecl Oy • CO< "IU.. poretlon ~llMCI °" .... (OHi Delly Piiot, Cec>rlcotn Con•tr. Co OCtoeel' a, ti, 1', H, lwt Jtl .. 7' Philip A SIHf~ PUBLIC NOTICE Pt"Midltnl Tiii> \t.l-1 w•• lllecl •Ith Ille C-IY Glen! of 0r""9t COunly on S.p •mllffU,1'1' lllH117 Publl•'*I Or-CCWISI Dally Pilot, S.pt 21-()(t. 4, II, II, 1'7• JIH•1' PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USINfS5 NAME STATIEMfNT fti,. totlowlnQ pt'r\OllS 1tr• dOiftO busttWH ft PALI ORIGINAi..!> 16611 IC•lllt• l •ne, t<unllnvton 80<1>. Ca111ornl<1 t:l ... 1 Allee Oll•••/lhl!Mull """ P1t1 i<•e G Te•k•, 161117 Kottler lint, t<unl· ll>QIOi'I !Hec:n, C.lilot'ftla •XA1 P•lflCI• G Tf'ke, •39'1 W1rntt Avenue Munllnqton lleiOCll, C•lllorn1• ., ... , f Pu\ bu''""'\ h conctuc.t•d Dy • ~,..,., .,.rtne•\ll•p Atlee Ollvef/Tn11Mult Petrkla G T••U lrrl\ \l.ttemMI "'"' 111!'0 Wllh ,,,_ County Clef\ 04 0.""9" COunty on De toberlO,l'ln l'U .... Pul>ll\l'llld Or.w.oe COHI D .. 1¥ Piiot, Ckl "· ... 7S-Nov 1, .. ,. 40lt" P UBLJC NOTICE OlllAHOI COUNTY SU ~E•IOll COURT 1• 0¥1< ~ Othe -II ~-.~•mt PLAINTIFF FllAHCES SP 1£lBERO •nd AllNOlO SPIELBEllO DEFENDANT SCOTT WILLIAM HAVS •nd DOES I ll!rouQll IV, lnclu•lve P UBLJC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINlU NAM( STATE:MIHT Tn_. tot1ow1no Ol'f\Ot'I\ .9rf" oolnQ bU\init\\~ M & c !iERVICES 1100 C•nyon Ori¥,., (m l• ,,,,.\4 C•lftorn'"' •1ft11 '"'""'' M 1<ft41•I rrn;.11th 1100 C.tnyf>,, Or1Vflt (O\l• Mlr\4119 C•llfOf,,.A m 11 c,,.,.,, Vfi'OM• w11111m\on 1100 C•nyon Or'1w (O\ta ~ut, CAllfornlA .,.,, Thi'§ bust iv'' ., < onau< t•n ,,, " qr~r•t ~,.,,...,,n,,, C,...,.,1W+tl141"°'\0f'\ Thi\ \tAt~f"l"llP'nt w•' h tf'ld with 1'- County CIHll Of Or~ C"""1• on Seo t•mber n ,.,. f'IJJl11 P110ll•""" Oran90 Co.\I D•il• !'Hot, Sept 71-()cl • II, II,"'' lllll• PUBLIC NOTICE Orwt J41N'N"'\ ''"'""' ,,...,. ''-'~' ... , ftlt'd w1tn t~- Covnh (._o. of Or~ Coun,., on Ck loll*• 1 '"" f'U- Publ """"' Or .. no-( 08\1 D•• •• Piiot Octo°",. ll II 11 ''" ~ti It P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8 USIHESS NA.llllf STATEMENT fnll> fOflOWinQ 0t'\OI'\ i' OO•f'\Q Ou\t n~-\\ "'' fl •OIA110N P!>00U(1 \ A. INSTl>llM£NI\ :ltilJ W M.t<Allllur = &O• \41ntA A"" C•i1lf>fnt• •170< Roo-n I AMl\C)tl ,,.. RutQ"" o,.v .. (O\tA '1Ar...,. C"••tOf'rH• O?tt~ fr.t\ bv\H\f'\\ t\ <Of'OU<t"d by -' UmUf"O Oie""""'\lt•O Rol»n l A.-1_. ff\1\ " .. ~'""'nt ••' htf'ld With tM Cn,.nfy Ci.r• Of 0.#\Qo' {0unl• On ~0 ,.,.,.,.., ll .. ,9 '1Ji.Q Put>ll\,...., 0.-CO•l\I DAii• PllOI, S.p.!_10:..!!-0fl 4 11 ~ :til01' PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTITIOUS 8USIHISS NAMtl ITATIMllNT Tiie lolltwl"9 .,.,,on• ""' ddtno l>uliMH •• BOAT S WA IN~ lOCICCR IHVESTMl!NT (()MPANY 70 1 WHI Couf HIQl!wey N•wport B•e<ll. C•lltornte9*3 Htnr., -"-"111, ).IS Unl~ttl ty, Apt E·I, Co\1• ........ C..lllor"'e ttttl l11tllt• £0•••d G•lbblf', t5U Oo•otl!y L•n•. Newport B•e<1', Cellfoflll• tlMO Llitller IEdW•f Gr._.. H T•t.1•'" of ltllll ..._I~ l>y Wiii ol loll•lflorNo 'Midi!>"" GrlbOI• dated 1?•11 71, !SIS ~Olfly ....... ..._, .. OK .. , C.llfffnl•.,_ fllla -lfltu ll <~tao o. • ll't-•I _,,.,.,,,. .. L.&.Of' .... Tiii• ~ .., ... flied •1111 1M COl/ntV Oen ol()f ..... '-'Iv .,,s.., ,.,,, ... , JI, "" PUBLJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS 8UMNaM N-1 ITATIMt!NT I 1'• loolowonq """"°" ll dcH1111 11~• """ ., Ao W ( El'ITERPRISES Bl WEST WO•D COMMUNICATIONS ... Cl•• St••.. Ho A wun11no1011 ee.<11 C:.hfornl•.,.. Jorrn Ci t<emouc11. •H Cln 51r"1 NO A HU<lllnoton 0.a<ll. C•1ttotn1~ tl .... Tl•I\ -" •\ conouct.o bv '"" .., OHHdu•I J-He'"°"'h '"''\ \l•t~ W<W\ ftMd llWlf" IN> C-ty C••• Of ~""'7 COUf't• on Or 100.t ) "" fl'IU.14 Puol1\n..o °'~ Co.t'\t o.,,., PtlOI, Ot I t I •• l\ dncl Nov I •'1• 400J 1~ PL HLI(' NOTll"I·: I f'ICTtTIOUS •USIHEU NAMf STATEMENT r ""' h)Of.JWlff'Q p-r\,Qt'I ,. OOenq °""' ""'~' 4 \ - 2Women Honored By Club Two South Coast w o men ha ve been la uded for busines & ach ievement by tbe Laguna Beach Busineas a nd Pro r ess iona t Women's Club. Marie Cook, assistant administrator at Soulb Coa s t Med ica I Cen • t.er. and Frances Haller . vice presi dent and operations officer al La-:' guna Federal Savings and Loan, have been named "Wo men o f Ac hievement " They will Ix! honored Oct 18 al '1 dinner at Tortilla f'~latl>. s ponsored by the bus incsi-, women'~ ~roup For rcservat1oru.. call 494-Z732 I ('"'Hi ll ·. (I fA N I N(, 4if A 'ti/l(f l* ~, •• ~, 0f'IV'f' Hvnt , _____________ _ •"'Qton ~Mh C•t•totn•• ,,.... f '"'"'• \t'lyd,.,. lN \O•"" '"' (),,..,,. """'•nofot" ~.,.. c ... 1i•orn • .,, .,~ , ...... ~ .. "' '~'"0 0 1".,. '" OtWtOu•I c.,.,,,,, .. """'°'"' I '"•' \.,.,~, ••. ,,,...., .,, ... '""" (OUnl~ o .. ,.. OI Or-County on 0- l<>C>r• •O lt1'i FIJ .. 1' Pyf)f1\,..,., ()r.,._ (a.\t 0•U¥ PHoi ()tl It 18, tt-Hov I tU• 0037 1' PUBLJC NOTICE l'IOITIOU\ 8 USllllESS "-E STATEIWllHT T f\• f041°""'i"'0 p•t "°""' _,,. 001f\Q bu\tfW\\ .... M <><UCi H ~ \( .. VL/ C ERllFIEO PU8ll( ACCOUN REDS SET CRACKDOWN M OSCOW t Al'l Soviet authorille1> have announced :.i law and order campaign again~ akoh olism. narcotic:.. Lh1 evt!ry <1nd black mark el prof1tet!rang a~ • part of a crackdown or ·• dered by the Commun1Kt Party Central Commit· ~ lee I jl NT\ le" ..... 11111-4 0.•ft • 1•) N--1 ...... CAt·---,,..'"-s """""""· 1"11 , ... ... .._ l!ll0to.G.i_ .... ~ .... ,,. ' 1<_, n -f•v-c:.11..,...ie.mu ,,. ....... ~ u •• Oftd\K•.ct ••• _, .. ,__.,,... .._., """.-... r-__ ,.._ __ (looMty ow-.. Or-c.-ty -O<· -... ...,. ,.,_ PVC>t1.-Or-, .... °"'"' P•IOC Ori II II ,,_ ..... I ,.,. ..,..,.. M o ~<'OW s dail)"' newspapers splashed lbe :~ a nnouncem ent on thetr front pages. aaytna e• -.. rorcement would ent•O ~ beefed up palfl>I•. W: """ creased propa1anff·"· •«•Inst alrohol abu,.e. ~ and a l'IQM.!r ~ alt"h on student cnmei. ---- PUllUC NOTICE "K'TITIOUI MISf•aU • ..._ S"TAH-tfT nw.___.... .. ~°"'' ""'~ PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTlTIOUS 8 U$1NIU NAMa STAYEMl!HT G I HG l'lll!RE A O Jl~p r ,.., fofto.tft!Q °"'"°'"' lft • cto•H OU"\l~'H a'\ " Br~hur1t Str-.. t . AOt •ff Hvf'lt • ..., ..... 8-:fo.Cotl ........... _ (llti\IPft Oo-L•Wf'QW 11SS I 8rooti.f'lur\f \,,-...,., Aot •t• Munt lnQI"" 8-11 C.llfom•• .,_ ffH\ ~'\ t\ (~ b'i 4t1' .,, Ot•teu•t Ow•<>lm O lr_,.. ftu~ ,.........,..,,. ... , •••fll(J •• ,,.. 1~ c-t• ci.n Of o.-Counh on Or •-to ,.,.. F11 .. tt Pulll"""" Or-Co.nt OAolv P•lol Oct 11 11,ll..,,.,NO• I ... ,. -1• PU BLIC NOTICE I H 0 V '> I H I Al ,,. (J < l> L U f l l'lf'RGL~ .... JUI W••I C• IO• ~,,....,, s.nt.~ AIW C•1ttorn1-. '1110• t\t.-na-r fnfl'tnAft()ri4t 1'1• t •hfO,.,,•• • ,,,PO,.,.t•on IJJI W• ,. (' A\fDf ~, ... , SM\1A An• 'Ahlo,,,., '7104 tf\t\ C)u\.#""""\ I f~,11~ fl• A S)Ot•ftOt'* , .. ,~~ lnt•~~••(lit•dt hu Oonctld M 8.,t•"1 1 PrP\~f f ""' \l4fli>.,..,.nt ,..,,, t1h•O w1lh lt)fo Coun1v Cieri< OI °'""<I" <ounly Of' O'' ,_ io i'1• ~ tUOl t JIUOh~fwio 0rMM> (M \I 0.,n , P ot.' Oft It t8 2~~N()., I t•t .. AiJ:•t '\ PUBLIC NOTICE . . ' FICTITIOUS BUSl .. ESS H-E STATEMENT f ~-totkrMPWJ 0-"'f 'O" '' 001n~ DU\• M'\~ It\ DAVIS A.N O (l AH• RCAI F\I A T( I NV[\I M f N l 8ROICERAGE lo<~\>Oftel •••llOt\' -000 We<tef1y Pt«" ~ 11) N•wool"" euc:11. cautor"'" .,_ Willl•m J°""pf> Cl•" 111 ""O \trf'~t . Apt R Nt11~00,., e •. ,.,n C•llto•nla '766.l ffH\ bu\flW'\"' '' (onc:tu( tr-ff ow 4n H"l Oh"°"•I W1lliamS Ct•,. f"t'\ \t~ W.t\ f1f"'(I •Hn llW'> (oUfttY Cten. of 0r.tn9" County on Ck ,_, 10.1m 1<11~11 Publl"""' Ot.tnqe> Coa<I Deily Ptiol 0t I II II, H•nclNov I lq1' l'"6 1• P UBLJC NOTICE f'ICTIT10US 8USIHIEU NAME STATEMINT , ... followiftq ,,..,_, ,, "°'"0 "'"' ,...,, ., f>I ZZA PROOUCTION 17041> MolQftOll•. ,..,,,., A, Fountain V•llev C.lltornla frrtorfT\ln A 9r41'.1"' ~ G@r•fcu~ B, .... ..,. 111S7 Mllen•. flrlll•\-V1eio C:.lllornl• n.t? Tl!h llu\INO ,, C-U<l.0 bv ~ -···_,_.,,IC> Non'nanA ll••W• f!Wo \l.i-... lllect with t,... County Cler-d Or-Gounly on 01 ·-· 10 "" lllJ .. 1) ""911.-Or-Coa\t 0..lly P ilot Oct II, ti, ts-Nov t, "" l9't n PUBUC NOTICE -· . ' . .. .. "' .. '" ft\lelltftld °''""' CotM O•llr 111101 ()(I. II, ti, H .. Nov. t, '"' <!OM-rt 'PUBLIC NOTICE • ... ' Q OALYPtlOT Th.......,.Octotllt ''· ,.,.. The Blgg••t M•rketpl•c• on th• Orange Coan DAILY -PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS . You C•n Sell tt. Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Call Service Fast Credit Approval ....... EQUAL HOUllNO OPPOltT UHITY r or 0 ......... r. AIJ,..., .... eidv.tUNd ................... .i-t '° the .....,,., f'aar Ho1tela1 Act or IHI wllieb cmkel k We1aJ to advert11e "any pre lflf'ftWe, llm1lat1oa, or ~mmaUon baaed on rwie. cdor. retipoo, .... ar ~ oriJin, °' an ~to make any 5Ueb preference, laauta· tian. or diltcnminaUoa. · · Tbaa newspaper waU not knowu1fJY accept any advert 1ln1 for real state whlc.b la an vioia-ticln of the law ..,.., .. , .... CW,Slt,tOO Tbl• terrific buy 11> enhanced with freah pe!N, earUd.ooe carpel.a, wood and m i rro red walla . Tw o Slo r y ele&aoce. garages, pool and very upgraded. J uat lia&.ed and won't IMBl al tlWI pnce. Call 645-0303 FO~EST E OLSON ...,.S: Adt...tlMn ..... dleQ ...... .., ... ,..,.... ~ ,.... I .....,. n. --•-·~----c_ ... _, __ DAILY PILOT--• ...., ............ ... CGn"ecf ........ ..,. ..uc• $4000. Reduced for fut sale! Owner an .. oua and aacriflclo1 Uil• lovely home. Clean &I a Wbia· tJel ! Features• bedrnu. ...._fors.le l~ bath, 22 ft. game ··-·-················ room. partt like grounds. G 11 .. I 002 <Xfered al only $102,900. • ••••••••• • • •• ••• • • • • • • call now 963-7881 A55&»4Aa.I Dun.IX ,~,,,,,<I·,, ""'" N '· . ~ T.t~~~-;ii~· re 1~11 nants help pay the bills (lg fncd yard. copper --------plum b1 n g . & ~real SMOaCLWI •I H,000 A brand new beautiful brick·trtmmed tradltJOt'Ull home to be bwlt jus t for you! To ~ und~r construction next week The plans a re in our office so call today to see them The finished h omt-will be comp lete with landi:.<·apinit. c1>tn~. ek Select your own c-olors, etc 4 BR. f am1ly room . formltl DR & 31,." baths Wl SLIY M. TA YLOI CO ... ..._.. J iii S..J11, I ... ..... HIWP<>n CIMTll. H.I '44-4t I 0 ~(® Beach Realty llAL HT A Tl UCILLIMCI SIHCI 1 t4t COMl WITH US . . . To Corona del Mar. Just listed an attractive and well ~ocated triplex. Two units. with two bdrms 11"' baths each. The third unit h as 3 bdrms a nd 2 baths . 320 Marguerite OPEH FRIDAY I 0·2 .......... Uts.000. YOUR OWN .,.otn'H 40"' Well not qu1te! but this Broadmoor 4 bedroom s ingle story does seem to have a lot of land in the side and rear yards. It also has a bright. open feeling, formal dmin~ room. a piety room and just hop over to the secluded community pool a nd public tennis. Asking $275.000. you'll lo ve it! U ""'IC)U t: t1f)Mt:i REALTORS', 675 6000 2443 East Coost H1ghwav. Corond d~I Mar NEWPORT IAICH Spacious living, 5.000 sq.ft. 4 Bdrm. 2 bath hom e . Luge fa mily roo m . overlooking pool & i;pe. 6 car garage plus carports 900 sq.rt. guest house. magnificent yard with a va riety of fruit trees All on one acre in Newport Beach. Prin. only. Agent. <·ull .._ Loc ... _wer, 642·tHO. ABANDONED $85,000 ,,.,CM.AS s SlllMITY &!JOY the peaceful beau ~.~~·-·····~ ~!!':~ ........ ~:~ ••••• ~ .. Cite•,... I 00 Clit•r.e I OOJ •••r.. I OOJ ••.•.•..•.......•....• . ............................................ . ~*VETS* IN THE BLUFFS ~.~==••• "\OW NICI FOi FAST SAU" $145.800 Sensational ··x ··plan. :J Bdrm. 21 ~ ba. farruly kitchen. plui:. rorm<tl dinmg rm. Pool ·s tde lo<.:at1on .• Hug e .. wrap-around patJO .. end umt on lush greenbelt. THJS HOM E JS TRULY A BIG. BlG. VALUE. Just compar~' INothmg even d ose at this one-time price l. WI HAYI SIVSAL ... IA, .. °"' HOe4S WITH PIH & sa... BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR '~ t,(J'f"• ·l• (J, •' •• .... ,, '', f,161 LOANS TO ll00.000 UYfl I.NT. RATE. Let ua ...,. )'OU how toqultfy. , ....... c-... w.u.. 714-l 202 WISTsml COSTAMllA 2 Bedrma. .,..., carpet, ,.,.. dn.pe9. Owner will sell VA term•. Call m.o C»IN II• 9 •II\ lliN IOM .. <I• re:11111 ZSTOIY Shake rool, 4 Bdrm, 211. Ba. lt:JJ.500. Eaatalde C..Meea. Z•HOMI a.ice comer. R·2 r.oaed lot. Room to bui Id fJl,.IOO . .., .... ~ .•. 149-772' ... ISTAllt ....... , I 0 .. .. Bedroom + pool + hone •lall•. Gourmet ld&dam • coua1.ry UviA&! Muda. much more! ! Call m-. . (#"fl-f f'fQ•tf\l1tf'INtl'f ~j f • [~lfttll fin ancing avail. Yull pnce unly JJ00,000 Call 751 31!11. W&ting fOf' some flunl(, prime Ea:.ts 1dc , 2 ~l!ll!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lll!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~lml!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. bednn. R 2 lot Ownt-r NEWPORT BEACH 759.0811 ty d Uus hilltop homt: .._ _______ _ wtth mou.nta m ., ocean ,. v1ew11 6 bedroom'> • G...-IOOM txxn~ rwm. pool & "lpa An extra area l(IVf' ere-<' An exC4!pt.J011al orff'nni: tor sets. train" doll at 15116,000 ~. • hom1· Luo Tht!> WHAT?·- OHL Y SSS,000 TKUt: a pnc~ that 111 hard to find for this ctU&mul\'I .md c·~·ry 2 8dnn <Ando with 11 l111rge palHJ dnd C'ommun1t} poob .\"u ••·ll1•r will hrfp f1m1m·t' lit•lll·r J\t llOll>' • !mJ. ~o ~TOllACH Newport Beach duplex, 4 bdrms. up, 3 bdrmi; down. nneet l'ftllal lirl'll Clo8etoabop~. Pnced at 1212.SOO 673-3863 &42-~ Evt:11 c;::sELECT I PROPERTIES .., ... llSOTA IOUMD • Uw Miler need.I bia 4 BR. family rm home ao6d fMt. Juat lu1ted. Pnme dly d Oraqe JocaUon. VW. Park ICbooll • ol· feral at CJDJ1 W1 ,900 for gulchale. Call~-. ON bAVADERE, lrvin1• Terrace Absolutely dt· hghlful 1>l;,1ncd & etc h ed window s , hardwood flooris, ne w kitchen, new carpetmg: It s parkles Three bedroomb, 2/12 baths, larae yard, beautiful ,.00. Iota of elbow room. SNUOO. COU Of HIWPORT aEA&.TOIS 675-551 I OCEAHfftOHT BAY DUPLEX J IB>IOOM $97,900 Lvly Old Eoglu;h tutlor built condo complex• Highly upgrud cd , spac:M>Ua, adult only unit Catm color coordinated draperies • wallpaper tbruout. Jmmaculale estate like around• enhanced by communlty JIOQI • clubbowle. J '* lilted. .. T711. EXECUTIVE srECIAl An e n le r l '* ~n m c n t $55,000! VIEW! YIEWI special. 3 bt:drm. tr1 l'HICE REDUCTION • • I eJ T·-·-.. -bALJ:)(JA deluxe duplu, Panoramic Newport Bay .~: r...,,.,b.., me Super 1arue 4 bdrm & 3 bdrm. vK:WS from gorgeous J ""'" up or w.y person OCliHFROMT $55,000! PRICt; REDUCTION llA1..BOA deluxe duplex. lar&e 4 bdrm & 3 bdrm wvta, frplc each, now fe,0001 Try U\lltallment (IW'C.bue! OCIAHRONT HPT.LOTI Q.lllom deJu.u duplex; 4 • 3 bdrm. l.Dlita. aourmet kitchen in owner's apt.+ Iota of imported tale , lrplc each unit 6 Car garal(e +-muc·h mcrrt-' S8!*5,000' Try your t.enr~• ldboa lay Pr op. RHtton * 675-7060 * ,. End urut Lil pnmc loc;, wul.b, f'l>lc. each ; now ~rm upper un1l or Uon. Pnced t.oi.ell now at ~ W'"'TH YIEW "'9:>.<n)' Try mstallment spaciow; 2 bedrm lower '""' •.: "" purchase! wtit!NaturaJbrickfplca. ~OO . (;a ll now . 3 Sto r y . 3 bedrm • ..........__._._ w-.,. __ 4 Ca g aa bun&alow with pnvate --,r-rop. """...... r ar .e. tli'll•'• ,. , , .. , Redton Boat space. Stepa to I 11 beaeh.madeforloversof • '75-7060 • beach. 01a1 152.1100 ~ 1•U!lil jU ~~:U:~!. J;;:1°~~1r0~ ';'ff,f,'.,.,.,,~··JlllCJlllWI' 'O'HL' iF ~:d~;~~ I io.~'::owa 1•1~11 .. ~.!t!!~:,, •. [9 IPJJlid LMrge 3 Bdrm home lo ly. Profeas1onal aaeot -.:.:=-•••••••- desperate• Call646 7171 41f. "'I• ... UDOISU Redecorated w/pnde of awnenblp. Spac. 4 BR family ~ w 1gourme1 kiidL, Ira matr 1wle. beam celllna•. uaed brick frplc .. French ~~~~-~-­doon. etc. Move-tn re - ady • senstbly pnced at Pl&.SOO tlWPOIT'S .f1NEST bel( ~ lidrm homt> ho.11 Ut-11l prJtt'flU:..I r.,, our fJrruly Thf' homt-IVf·d U00 .and COOVt'nJl.'nt t' w11J IUl!IWff )OUr ~ Scf tiwl Nonh Coi.U M~ homr t.uday by c..Jllog our profesa10011I s1les penon.oel al $117 ,)()() S41Ml41 ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE . INC. ALLSTATE REALTORS OCIAMOUPUX s:m.ooo Huge 2,000 sq n owner .. un it 2 St'p aratt' bi&korue. lw.h o1tnum 1 associated llll'J ~CllS ll(Al•OllS JlJJ' . .,,. l oth••n t. t fJ6 I NICID RIGHT! For quack sale! J Bedrm, exceUent f amity home ~ftt' kJtmen. utr• lar'le patio, manicured 11r~dii A1oluo1 only -.,00. CalJ now 913-•t ,..._,,. •• , ~-ti\,,,.~ •t ,,., ,,.. , [~IR&IBI JACOBS REAL TY 675-4670 Decorator Palermo model , 11 a rbor \' ,,. 111 ltoml') J"cc 1., nd 4 1--------1~Ut'l'n ~1tt• IJdrm .. :.t"P•r.&te m .... 1 .. r w1nl( 11.ACH IARGAIM Hedrm..,, form .. I rlinmg YOU DID WHA T7 t.oo' ~an1sh 1Uylr a C' t·t:nted t1h: lmrn(-dlMte We JUSt llslcd it lernf1r OCCl.IP<ln<')'' Owner wall buy, th11t :1 what A Ollli&l)«'$2:1,000.2n<ITl>at bcaut.lful 4 Hdrm. 3 b111lh 0 home w ith new plush 1 '.\ Interest 1 '; pt>r moriLh pay back WI dUl' 3 carpeting, fireplace in ., ye1u •. 1''u 11 IH a<' e . cunly family room & 11 ~.000 A must to lit'C to- very attractive back d.ly•CaJl now7~1700 yard wJa 1parlclln1 e-:;1 "'"' ,,. , . ,. , ,,.. ,, . 1 ~~~~oac.i. !'! I~ Nlltl ALLSTATE -- REALTORS STB'S TO llACH wtl.h f1replact' & .,unkt:n l U -St l.500 Sllt.tOO lub Ji.t>t IJ~t....O t .;11 LU C'trrulM dnvc ltugc zz· dav' ~71 71 IJ ~ mom w1f1replan · Olarm111.& 3 bt-drm. bnrk (iournK't kitchen . Uin ~$.~~~ [~ lia!l~!l1 ~~gler~~c~1dS:~:~~t; , .,..,, ,,, ". ,, ",, ,,, "· , . ~ .-1!!!!!!_. m*ller IOUIW wnd 1uewt [~lftlitl ci:r=--~~~~~;:S~i~ 11/• INT. 2-llC,y, BY·T'be-SN. I or 1 j .... ltlmd I 006 BR. 3 Ba. Din. Rm . ••••••••••••••••••••••• w1pvt prdena. Sep den ........ w/lpk, MW\dl rm or Of Ml8UOCI great F.asuide locatlon. can aell your property E N Two 1 BR wuta add to in· · .,. pl and Prov 1 de ALL N ED A U you want your advertl1· COme. OWNER WILL .o acebefyoroure•~eaaage MrVlcelforonJy4%. Call lNV~MENT• ....., Own your own wpl m Ing message to reach --------- No qu&blymlJ. SUper l Bdrm. 1 '-bath. patio So. c:out Plaz.a area AP· pnlK 9 yra old. $17 .500 do. pymu $804/mo. Toti.I pnce 187,$00. 857·0~ Owls/A&! nee. Skylipu. Leaded 1.-.1-...1 c ..... .__ g)ua 1alore SUndeck IW 0 W baJrooy. terrace Sep. OJme see Um comptlte- RV 1tora1e So much ly remodeled 2 bedroom more. It '1 unbeboeable bome ldeaJ.Jy &ocated • •ont1 GZ.000. Call now. bbSa from bay froot iGGI02 8KR lndudea dell. eay care CARRY FINANCING. readiogpublic, Aaem.~11 Loni Beach area No m«e people at lower nu. la a mu.st Me at pbooe SELL Idle items with a qualify101. O W .<;. lsl cost, Classified I• the I WANT ACTION" O..lfed Ads &&2·5878 ll.50.CXM>. For detaUa caU Dally PUot n.lly Pilot Classified Ad T.O. $29,SOO. 7l•-84&--4l02 way to IO! Call Now• M0-11.61 Qeylfied, 842-5678 jiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiil--_M2-_56?8 _____ _ . · • :· HERITAGE REALTORS $1.89 per DAY Tha.t 'a ALL you pay fora 30day ad In the DAILY PILOT SEIVIE lllECTOIY 00 IT NOW1 642-5671 IAICllO SAN JOAQUIN Spacious 3 Bdrm uir <"ond .. San J.uls Rey model upg rad ed thruout . 1'0 11 1t1 vc l y pristine. Sl6S,OOO. •IBUIE IAYFIOllT PDITllm 1'llh uuf1 '' llw • .. WAM ......... .., ............. .. .................................. ...................... C':L ..._ wieM Jll I » .... ................. ~ .... _, ......... 2 ltt4. .. , ........ ,..~ .. ,,. . ..,. ··-·· .. ,., ... ,.., ................... .... EIE llDlll ILllllS ca. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE MAGHIACIMT WHrTE WATEI VllWI LAGUNA llACH Abovt' W01>di. Cove• Six Rt>droom., F'ivP Hath11. L11rl(r Ulll1 ty Room llurllwoml f'loori. Thrf'e ,.~1rcpf11n•11. t:cd&r CIOSl.'tl!. Three-Car Gurttlll' Privot<• Strrm To Sand Set'IUdt'd Gurtlton & P11l111 Arc•OH. Priced At $999.000 ® ·--..... , .. ,,. 631-lDO "' DOY• DllYI «iJ Coldwell Banker OPIM tM COIOMA OIL MAI Ocffa/.., .......... 4 ..... ..., ,... .. JhJO ,_.,.... SZIJ.OOf. Sii CAIOLI McMAHAM AT JI 11 WIMD0¥9 LUM HAllOI YllW HILU 4 bedroom Sandpiper wit h spectacular canyon &c ocean views. plus large exciting pool &c private yard. Formal d lnlnl(, separate family roo m & 3 car gara1e. Barr White Rea ltor :1901 N PwtJO•I Blvrl --------.... HIW USTIMG 1271 ................ J ......... ,....c ~ beedL C• I .._ cottep + ........... aa..•1ct.edto...,.. Olcler cte. ,,..,.,.., .. ... loc ...... $175,000. o,a. ._._. s.t/S-1.1 OCIAMRONT D..UX 7 ye ... ....: 0..-lt11•1d um •· 2 frpfct, If••• tie Ill lower ..... 4 '*" 2 IHI • l ... Z a.. lewer. S,.c._., cet ... .-... n1. •• .......... ...._ SIH,000. MllWPOU ISLAMO W ATllNOMT S-... ..., ....... RC •• l ......... d1....t. ¥111 ... IMlul aata.. ...... effw ........ SJ00,000. WIST IAY AY ... YecM C... 1.owaael•• _.... 1te macnab /Irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINE COMPANY HEWPOIT COUMTltY UTATE There is room for a tennis court & pool w1.th this s pacious 3BR Ranc h home m one of Ne wport's nicest 1treas . Cookil' All ison 642·8235. (If 97) 642·82JS 901 Dover Drive 644·6200 .... ,!>of View Center Irvine at CamPU\ Valley CeMer 752-1414 'YC:\\.~~-~£~s · That lntrlg•inv Word Game witlt o Cltudle Mlo4.., cu• • "*"" ----- ·=~ _!~ ..,. to ·-'°"' -.It ....... Aero ....... ~=...._ c••ef'Wto....... ......__. .,._.., ..... S)J0,000. I { i·E ,}j TI I SMAU. co .. t•CtAL W••• ........ .,.,. .... ..., ........ .., I FAR GT I ,. .. , ........ DM .. Cl ... ,,.....,., 1 1 r 1 1 Ow.r .. C8'rY ....._ S IJO,ood. · · · -· · } I f Wllat • n1011 olau UMUIUA&. Of1f11M It I F E A 1 re1taurant I ate 11 1 .. 1 night. tn LNo ..... ..... ... .... I .. , .... • I I' r I Ille rHlrOC)ITle lllty 1'11¥9 In .,. frMt ... t.I fw ..... • 11111 .... ..._.-..._...&-......_...J Z 11noant wllO writ" -IOf WATERFRONT IMCOMI NOP•n (• 1" Al/I" 11 Fl I ;·=P~ thud~-.- HOMES i.e. INNWWPORTC•NnR ,,..., ..... & ......,.. .. , 1ta11s;.. --=..::'t;.:_';1;:: '317,500 land included . • 111,100. Lee•unu o ....... O.t •al•, ~3bW.COd1tHl!tlway 64~060 Or-.··~ ....... 0 .... H •"m·~ttsl' r r r I' r r r I latchea with eat.in1 area. ~. Tutetully de· con&ed. Redwood dec.k for entertalo1n11. 12$0,000. BKR. Call n4#f.T.MO -.-&. -Clflltiw.._.1011 • •••••••••••••••••••••• GIEATTBMS Stoma throw to beach h'Om tlUa 1550 llQ. ft. 3 bdrm. 2~ ba. hom e. P\mly ol room for your RV. X1nt t.erma. Offered at $117,500. 4f3.-0llO 6 493·0202, Tom lies. .... C.-.. W. lOZJ ....................... lavflllU>r'I d11tplH + 2 1o~d rental•, pool , ft'ple9, cbann. 11$6, •• Prilldpel9oety ...... Realdence + Income . Oc--'de ol bwy. G.H. Robstaoa. RHr, 11S-05G. IYOWlt•I ...CmSIOOO ClaarmUai I Br bcMde • ~ remodd ed, z :W-:-&c!':·r::: ner kit w /edd-oe l*en· tlal to cre at e a PMOnmlc ocean ts Ba1 vt.w. New plumbla1 ~ appllanc11. SIH,500. m.u... wort •'71B. .lallD AH:oo ;-;:, ...,._.._.,.. !sc=~unu•1 1 , , , 1 , , , ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!~.L:~~======-;:_1_64 __ 6_3_0:===='==~_..sca_~·-Mit_Lln~-"-~ .... ~~•-c_•~·"'-... _•_ ... ~'-'~'o:.....i.~--------~ I . J_, ........ .. . . ... .. "' . .. . .. .. . . . " .. . . . ~ ' -.. ' 17 I ~.~.~ •• • ..._fwS. .._...,_,,. ,_Alt ..,.,. ..._..tPet'-'e ~.Oc1ober11,1979 QAaVPH.OT Cl a •• ••• ...... ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••w•••••• ,.,. ClilliMlle 1114 c....... , Hi4 ........ . 1144 .......... 1041 ... ......... '°" .~,...,...,.... '°" ........... ~ I OlllrlM..... Oliiir~ ... .................. ....................... ···~··' ....................... ....................... ....................... ····•······ .......................................... .... ...-.... ,_ LMllOPnOM ,, ...... -·c• woooa~··s CaL•HTMftWI 1--------.................. !~ ~"••n•r 2000.__,..,,.., ..,. ~ ~~loft • ~ "" ........................................... . ....... ... .. ....... '-. w , •• ,.., • Qna Abet dt1l11ed • 1.JllME EXECUTIVE IKDOWN OWC -..... ~..,.._ taoae. toner lot '-r&AIC,Vt•t'u . 'ruturu quality ~prt°!u~ ::::.' 01• PROPE.RTY ottered b' BY OWNER.·San l5U..i&CGmpln ._ t .N ..._. ta .... Wllo. IMloT171 _.._ aa..; 91•.aoo l la r_ o u I It o u t I .._. • -Y up-Mcbell Is Raat lov•l· a....e • ~. ll,• om. • .....,_._ ...... _. U. ... Call Frd Olbaon MJ~1lYlb abe. ti:::'d·Stevlew IBr wu. Tuatl• Wlla-4ti ~~~Do. '11119111tda1Pt~. ~ 8 o..r, CW.. It 1 ...... 0.1 LM w ' ~ pk ... PLUS ..... ~.~uboerlY rb•n· 3.-y1.11. UDO H 8 acre, 48r. ze a . pool. ~.Pria.OD.ly. ' 1: I ......... .................... Catelloa 1uo 1el1 ._..cl •-•• u .,, ~ ' · · ja c ua1!.:..i~J>~' ... ~! ,,........_.. ... _..., Aa.t.111.ml ii WI I .. *'-t, ... a .. l ... aMo-11 IN. .... new pmlnl• Cpb lla.ruout, ... & SUf' ldtcbm. ._ -.__. ~ ......-~ • • ,... u.,. w1a·~· A.l•a.1a ~Ylle9tl.I. nwdl dn teadln1 out• With a bdrma .• 2 balba, property. J217,500. :tBro.mer'nnitw/frple IASTlml to ... e~ll ~..-•mall)' te· 4f7·17{1 alcM to a newly pro. &Ub'lwtha.nmo.ooo t«>.ooo dMt, coatrsct ol •1BrlBaunk.t~~ ... o.rtllul~:J1::'·1 .. HlRITAGC I -.. •ID 1reat AKlll ON !!~•I~ lndecpd NAel~lnt.Ownenwlll tuau1bl• loan. 11'79.800 IG!SU-] ,..._ ntD '81*at •W IV OWNt:R·Vlctotl• Ii;";' 8 ck noorf l.n worit with YolL Buy to-twlprice. h ~·:,":'J, ..... ow .. r will help T11 •n M.. modlll'n, OC'ft VteW, .. H~ • kr· .. "~~I llACHlmlAT dayatthialowrateotlnt. 210f ,,, :\1 !( lft•, .,._._. Will lra<h. lBr. Z~BI. 1H oPtlOo. ji'f,=-~o!.a:~ ~~ A poelllve allurement Prln only. '42·tta& or ~ f· R~\T IG~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• u c lllaa ... erutlu W.loola by Pac..et· tltT ,500 O wnr /e at • .!!., ("1 ... ,7 ... 11-awa1ta you u you enter _832-_)lf11_.;...•S..W-..;...._9020..;.....___ ---~HOMe""t. Od.cie M·l lot tn eo.tt ..,.. ~ a11bmlt w • bedroom famU1 -..1 __,. ... -· v• ya. Into UUa aerene Newport .-.~ l &II off en. • boms In n rthlOM tol• l 7 1 4 > 5 a 1 . 5 7 8 1 Be a c h re t re a t. A UHIOUI ..... Take trade on p.-t tn Formal dWn1 room. OCIAM + e•/wlmda. Prin only. welcominl entry reveals Superb quality in this lteany bAl.aace. 942-46!0 .......... ··~ famll1 room. 3 c u CAMYOtilY•Wll _Sal-=--·-------a My free form pool CUltOmJohnLyttlehome msW.CoastHwy.NB &..hforS.. 2200 .,._.__ ,._...J I .... *' __ , .. _, I b I in_.,. ... ,..,. Castle0 at.e 6454646 ,......, .-ct ~ wUll _..._ • ...-• 10 Y••u .... 5IO,OOO. Brand new, ASSUMlf .75o/o lllllKIM us andscaping. ..--.. • n d b. I l• v n )' 0 r r mqnUicent, Ofte•Of·•· WESJU.JFF. 4 bedrm. 2 Ldb' celllilp"' m uslve area. Walls ol gt.us open bedroom Su!k!r •hiup lnndl Elec. aate, pVl bath, 2 patios-sharp, wrought aton e fr sparkling pool and ····21arov .. : ~· uoo ~n . lo etretcb aed 1 row f'clt-laal dlala1. lar1• butlt le lllt t ben . nntplate. LaDduaped ......... ..t...UO,tndt '"-· epridlen. CloH to~ acad sb()fW Don't ml111 •111.eou 8Ka.Call~1no MIMY .... Wnt l "1y 4 $ Bdnm, 3 bat.ha. ram rm. rrp&c. pool By OWD8f m 11«1 llbd ~¥U'll rl~an Alldoa roed. ~nnia court. POOi. Patrick, '3l·l2ll!6 enhance this exc ing secluded terrace in \.'.. 1121.llOO jll<'. wine cellar. nun•. new listing 10 e of acre yard. Luxurious BY OWNER -Lak e EW.oore. 5 bach uni.ta. + 2 br bouae. Sl.075 mo in- come. S149.000. 20% do. owe. a.211S>. 831·2822 .... ,. ...... ...... ,.. .. ,., SotDe bacll bay vie,_-. fantastic area ror huge ranch home + barn & stables. Call Jim Flan· den m•> 7S2-1107 dys. (714 ) 581-5787 evu, wblds. -.-.... -.. NICll•UC• Sellers motivated. Blfl 1ge 5 bd, 2 ba. Beal 1rea In a.ta ..... 963-5171 =:= Walkt!r & Lee Real Estate e--l,oll',11( Ht nl I Y ',., 1 ~·uou tOieS POI vns IDHOM!li IOON. 1S1,5102 Bkr. ~. air cond'd . 3 ----------1 BR det.ched h se NIWUmtM. S HAIP I /I A Y CONDO 4 BR. 3 Ba, w/W/encl patao. Steps to pool. spa. ~. and tenru.s. Woo 't tll8.900. 6'S 0776 onr bkr UN•enity Parts lm.mac 2Br Townhouse $87,500 By Owner ~1-2l608 ... at '82·900· TURnEROCK TOSEECALLJUDYAT 640.625' HIGHLANDS fAa~ Tucked in the corner or Home With ~'/// the lop street of th~ Highlands We have the A Wcrm R E A L T Y perfect large fa mily home! S bdrms. fa mily I leca lh ~~~~~~~~·I roora. 2 fireplaces ALL Upgraded 3 bedroom 100/o of the modern l'Onve· Mesa Verde home local Owner will carry fin anc-ruences. pool sized lot ed in elite area . Old ing on this Eastside, 4 and privacy galore Call world tile entry, family bd .. 2 ba immaculate usaboutlltoday! dining Toom . built in home on qwet cul·de·sa<' latcben. Pool sized lot $129.000 Ask for Craig. with cover ed patio . 631·12.165 spnnklers Wi.sh1ng well ~'f14~~~nt.B~Re ~:~i 1~~~1 ~:• ~lm -· 1'9Gt11111brook 5 BR + den + Family Rm+ Formal dining +3 car garage + 2 patios + balcon y and other • .unenilles. Asking only lllS.000. ' SCOTT RE.ALTY 536-7533 OAK GLEN REALTORS Haus.+ D.aex OWC 1st TD. 3 BR. 2 sty house & two 2 BR units. lf523 C.otPUSDa·fRVINE an xlnl cond. Zero vacan- cy. pnme Easts1de loc. Orangetree Patio llom e BALBOA ISLAND Plan 4. highly upRrad~'<l : REALTY 2Bdrm & den. 2 ba . 673·8700 913.500. Pnm'1pal~ Only I 026 Owner. 551-5189_. __ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rancho San J oaquin 2· MARIHITA sty. 3br. Twnh.o,c. Superb Spectacular hilltop Vlew, hardwood rtoors. homes. 2012-3206 sq. fl. Many.ext.res. By Owner. Oose to Marina. Selva lhru Sun Only. $175.000. Rd & Calle La Prima ~ _ vera. $166,000 to $245,000. Di s tinctive new 2 831-~;493-40068ldr. bedroom, 2'h ba con HwlfhJon leads t 040 dorniniums .. $97 ~ 990. ••••••• ••• ••••••••••••• OH THEW .A TEJt lBr condo. tort. cntrl air. frpl. Assumable loan. Prine only. Agt 5Sl-4682 evs. 2518Elden Ave. C.M. LAHDMAU 642-6734 ---------• with pool le s pa. 3 WALMUT sc;>UAIE 2 Bd.. Condo. $72.900. 38r. 2~Ba 2 saory lwnhae, bed.nm, 2 baths. family as 9 u m a b I e 9 ~ % . area. Nice fl"Ollt le rear _561_.:Ilm __ or_1_52-_17_22 ___ , Y~ Place,1nc ao-7481 Hun)' oo th1a one! .,.._ nllh I-story Wu.it 'hslefully ~ ~e bedroom Condo. ~'Side Costa Mesa. S72.000. Mary Jank. Reallor 83\·MN <>PIH HOUSE Oct. en .13/H Bu~ decal' home 3 BR. Fred Glbeon, Ul-12166 REALTORS lY. Ba, den. liv rm, fplc. Lmfl-._. t 041 tile Gr)'. lge kilch. Well ••••••••••••••••• •••• •• kept yard. Model perf_ C"' 'F a.•.r sic $94,000. Prine only. ,,_. • .-7lt IM8 :M8a l~ deg white w ater ~~~~~~~~~I view. nr beach. S Bdrm, SH.AlP-SHARP! 3'h ba+den. dbl lot. One Lovely 3 Br College Prk home, won't I ast ! SIJ'l.SOO. 358 Princeton Dr, ~7240 St:LL Look.a lite a model. 3 ol a kind. $i$00.000 is a Bedrm, 2 balh home. steal. $100.000 down. Best&dlool district. Only Easy terms. OWN ER SlO'l.SOO. C a I I r o r a p p t Park Place.Inc 842·7461 714/833-3S81or499-4247 WAU<TO I EACH Ocean vu. 2-sty . 3 BR .. 1 y mnasi um . s ec. Newport's mos charm· home features : 3 i.y11tt1m. billiard rm. ing & distmcti areas separate master suites. llbrary, maul qlrs .. huae ~ml 3\'.t baths. central air • bdrms ~ more. 6000 ~ HCiHTS separate family and cbn- liQ ft" Prine. ~•~. CaU ~ ing rooms. beamed ce1l- "''4Z 'J1Us b.tdden beauty LS On d h Patrick, 631·1266 mp an muc more. a dead end st. 2-sty. 5 Br. Real Estate PerfecUonfor $249.00Q, 3 Ba, smJ ocean view. --- FUll Swedish saunn Lg --------- REALTORS jllCUDl, 2800 sq ft Many extras Must see to ap preciate Owner wants L.agiima Hlls I 050 fast sale $199.950 r1rm ··~···················· ~ f n€cT G LelSure World, Gate 14 -_!!§ l I € Panoramic view. 3rd HOME~ floor. VllJa Nucva, 2br 2ba, 586·6879 AC. art 3333W.CoastHwy,NB 7pm -645-6646 •HO QUALIFYING• Only Sl0,000. take over fanta.wc opuon on 3 BR ex«. home Won t la:.t Owner Stl-0210 don osen rt>.·altur ""' inn E.17TH ST. 1'JSTIN 731-3111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mable..._~ -,. foorW. I 100 19UMITS Excellent Npt lkh loca-tion. 2 bib from Hoag Hoepit.al. AlJ weU ma in· I.a.med. Pn ce redll4:ed to 1799,900 O wne r has pu.n:ba.sed r>ew property &as ready to go. 3333W Coast Hwy, NB 645-6646 SPANISH RANCHO .i,. + ucre vie w lot, 4Br. custom barn. RV, lots more. ·Assume 9 ~ .. % loan. 831-7576 Owner openhse. ....................... ---------THEl&.UFFS Very lge. 4 Bdrm .. 3 bath , air co nd townhome : r ed. t o $1.S8,SOO. Best opportuni· ty, Wider market! Broker, 64().~ 1.a1J-a NicJiM4 I 0 52 ....................... --------- ......... Loan Fairway El Niguel 3br. $234.000 Custom Realty rro.9777 lllislion Viejo 1067 ..........•...•.....••. By Owner. Flmslera con- do. end urut, view. lake. goUcourse & mtns 2 Br 2 Ba. frplc, upgrade plush carpet & tile. lo down . will carry 2nd. Opn H.se DOLL HOUSE Olanrung immac J Br. 2Ba on Lido. pnced nghl $298,000 Agt 675· 1854 BLUFFS BEST BlJ Y 381", 2Ba. pool, great 10<' $127. 000. 64().8146 LE.ASE/OPTION 3 BR 2 Ba . Newporl Shores home $795 per mo. Sl25,00. 645-7272 Sun & Mon l·S. 979·6422 or LEASE OPTION SlllH>713 27961 Redondela Large -tbr. exec home IAQ( IA Y EST A TE Pvt 2 8 acrt.-cst.ite ~ IR house, 2 i:u~t houl>e~ 16 . stall hOf'!\l' b:im . huge rid.Ing nnk. pv1 ore. a groom':. room. m..ign1f1 cent view of the Back Bay. lush IJnd'>c aping abound:. (.;onlillt Jim Fland ers JKI t714 J n2 110 1 dy:.. 11 14 1 581 5787 e\ ~ . ..,. kndl> MOBlLEHOME IJUY-SELL -RENT - FINANCE MaWa. ..._Store "''°" wwwtio119 Cettter C~US661-102 1 COSTA MESA 20 Wide. ad.lt.s . ~pace rent $115 tS535S J $22,SC>O J&J 522-4CB> "LUE FOREST Ju.'l listed 2 beautiful homes under SJS.000' 31., \.on AC. 2 3Br. 2Ba. nice-st park Ill Orange Count) C all t o d ,;, rJP9646 J13491 likr mfl.l21 HEWPORT H.ACH 12 UNITS 1 DOOR from OCEAN Unbelievably low LOW PRICED at S425.000 Owner Wlll trade Worid Red Estate 556-7777 FOU. UMITS.C.M. ~ar new. 3 Br owner~ wut. 2 ba, frpl. 2·<:Jr ga.r • 3-2 Br. 2 ba. units TiiL lnv:.tm.t:. 642·1603 11 DS.UXE UNITS PRJ ME EASTSIDE. CM 2 BdrmseaC'h 1HE !:>7 ARN Jo;s C:O f>.10 5711 Prime R-2 Lot Xlr\l. loca- l.Ion. No. end Laguna Beach. Level. 2 blks to ocean.71~. llGCAHYON Custom lot approx. 108ft on golf course IS Deerwood. Prin. Only ~17 BUILDERS 36 estate view building lw in Ei5condido. 1s.OOO & ~.000+ sq ft. Gr aded, irus. curbs, electr.. gas water. cable TV, sewers all in. Ready ror con- strue ti on now. Have while slip. S2, 155,000. Armstrong Rea lt)'. 714(147 7909eves 74$-8508 TlUPLEXLOT Pn me location, com plett-with plans for tri plex Owner may carry 2nd & subordinate to construction loan. Sill (U l Call 752-1920 ~ QUAIL A.,~l~~~- 1~ TII 1:10 ,-"4,1 Unit 214 $10.000 for 1-yr opt to buy S.. 0-nt. I 076 3 Br, 2 ba, upgraded. al SZ20.000. Flexible lsc ••••••••••••••••••••••• view. 4 yrs old New 752-2550 Harbor Estates 4 bdr 211 IEACHFROMT Leucadia dbl wide Small. s ecure park . Ol'ean v1ev. Slll.SOO 43&8797 res 744·05~0. 744..Q99 NEWPORT HACH Duplexes on Pen1n & N'wpt ~hrs ,, v a ti A II amen1t1 e~ Presently ---~~'!_•_•_•_-_•~-­ crpts. $.98,900. 830·4949 ---------ba panor amic Ol'can eves. Vlew. $169.000 1-496 llS40 tillwpori leach I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BIG CANYON Spectacular golf course estale. 6800 sq.fl. 4 to 6 Bdnm, 5~ baths. Pool and IPL $1.395,000. Tll ST AINES CO. 648-5711 .-wPOtrT teGHTS Charmin& spacious 2 stmy. 3 Bdrm. family. dirung room. large living room. Masten swte with 2 dttl&s and ~pa~WI mirrored baths Warms woods. brick and stone Truly a decorators de- light. For details call ~11.Sl .. ~~~HERITAGE • • REALTORS WE WANT TO SHOW OFF this fantasllc 5 bedroom. 4~ bath estate with its commanding view of Back Bay. Fashion lslaod & mountains . Owner flnandna. Cull for details ~- BY OWNER. North Bay J BR 2 BA. Fam Rm. !onml dining, 1900 lq fl_ by cus tom b ui Ider Newport schools. big lot 8~~ loan. $20,000 below market al $145.000 Agt m8m VERY FEW of these dcs 1reablc models were buJlt Fan· Wtic townhomes, J.BR 2 ba end unit nr shopping. parks & rec. facll. Must seil I.bis week. $108,900. owner will bel p finance. Call for the location.· 9 > Vaca"-1 It lovat· met Propertlee. Inc. 493-tJI I 49M700 s.. ..... c.,1 ••-1011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE OPTION FabWous buy for t.hi.a ex· ecutive 4 bdrm. 3200 sq. l'l. home an prest.a~us Me ridith Ca ny on . Formal din rm . fam nn·, Wet bar k... Tent\5 avail. Pnced to move at $189.SOO Call ~ & "93-0202. Tom lies/Agent 1010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------SAVES3.SOO By owner no sales com m1ss100. ·79 20 x40 Goldenwest 2Br. 1"' Ba . rent $130, adJt DO pet. Appl. d.rl>s. 8x12 shed. 124.!iOO. 645-Z21A leased Tum key opera lion Property mgmt avail 67~12. BKR 16 UHITS Pnde of ownership Near beach in Hunllngton All unrt.s have r,,,1c·.s Only s yrs old. Owner wants q1.1clt sale. Will cany nnann.n& w !20% down al only lOC'k urterat. Call UVl .. taYIMI New 15M sq ft 1978 J..aneer. All extras l n ·-n. Groves". Sbown by ll(llll. OGly. Call DOW for WI'" --6----1~ all det.aila. lSJI007) mnf.eo-t Hwy, MB 9'n-8421 Bkr 645-6646 Pull OuL 61 Trailerama. ONE OR BOTH Uc. •DV670t. Dbl wt<k Z8d)OUJ.iq 10.P'eaes 2 0 x 4 S -S S 9 0 0 El Toro atta Re n a 1ssance Jll P Assume 1~.~ Ctnancmg ~ "Z" RJtr 494-8611 '79 Crown Pomt. 12x40. lBr lba. fuJ I s kirting. awmne Call· 518ffi. Apcwtwnh farSde 1100 ~. 2 Br 1 Ba ea. encl garqes. Assume 91,•; loan w/~0,000 down Fu.II pnce $1U.ooo Pn'n only 0wnr I Agt . 682-3380 RB>UCED Strategically located 4 Pl1:x lot:. 1n nearby Pomona. with a ll plans & permHs Subordinated fllUl.llc1ng available. Now ~.000. 1714) 671-4400 12111 u .. 1111 •' HARBOR A Olvt5"1n or 11 1-t;:arhor lnH....,lmr•nt ro tt ••Dewt . ..... 2400 ....................... FOllLE.ASE New 2 bedroom 2 baOt home M1ss1on Lakes Country Club. G o lf·· leon11 pool Bea1111fully land.scaped. no main- ~ yard ••••••••••••••••••••••• P'ri• Apcirtw.wh DV:N,IMITE 9690 Clubhouse Rd. J, R Desert HolSpnngs 213·378·2572 OR Tn .a. :?, IEACH BEAUTY ft.ADE. • Walk to ocean. 4br. 2ha. 2 Q.rte homes on lrge lot $ 1 21 . 5 o o . O w n e r . Prime Easuide location. 213-432-7728. art G 0 w n e r w i I I h e I p 964-2140. ram. rm .. 2"'°' ba., fire ~~~~~~~~~ pit. parquet fls.; sep. workshop, studio rm . Shutters. slid. glass. North end loc. A rare buy BEST CONDO BUY IN BLUFFS Split level 2br, attached gar on beaut. greenbelt Plus pool. lly Owner. Sl21.SOO. 2301 Vis- DELUXE CONDO 1lus tughly upgraded 3 Bdrm l~• Ba t·ondo features new carpets. Solarium floors and much more. A&kmg only $75.000. Call 546-S880 16 unit complex. Terms 11vailable. Positive cash flow S86S.OOO. Agent. !133-26SO T AJtANTB.LO & LEE EZ Terr~ $15,000 ~~~~~~~~ down. Costa Mesa. All 2 Under S00.000 in Rancho Bdrms King size lot Mirage. 2Br 1 'r.i Ba. WON 'T LAST Ca 11 appl. all xtras. 9'•'il. As- anyume 24 h rs A~l sum. 714 '568-1565. wtfmancing. For thlS or --------- other good values call IY THE SE.A ~7221 Must see this near new 4 bedrm. 2'h ba. with lge ramnn &formal din r m . Park Place.inc 842-7461 IYOWHER SBr, 2"'-iBa. form. D.R .• F.R. Low maint. yd. Nr. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;.;.! park, school, tennis. & beach. $139,500. 968-61966. $6500DOWN Ill QUALIFYING! 3 Bdrm, family rm, 1 ba. ffl)lc. Take over pay- ments. Call anytime . AIJ.. 541-0100 ~~.-.....--.__.~ ............ ...,. POOL 3br. 2ba close lo bch. S118,roC>. C·21 Agt. 964-4370 RMI Wk by Owner 3BR+den or 4 BR. Sgl s try , 1 mi t o bch. Sl25.000. 963-9176 pp ---------•BY OWNER, 4 BR 2 Ba. ---------1 assume 8~% lo a n . 1044 847-7363, aft 12 n oon. $101.500. EASTSIDE 4ftlX Townboule iatyte, walk to ••••••••••••••••••••••• sboppln(. Great area • .Assume super ~! Only $205,000. ......_ Call~9161 I._ Loan OPrn HOU'>t Rt Al TY / Use your present home equity to lake over low lmerest loan, payments on upended 4 bedroom home with approx 2260 sq.ft. Ent r y, dining. family room. fireplace. ~~~~~~~~~ Recreation paradise wit.b CQmmunit;.f. tennls, pool and spa for relau· tion. $127,950. BKR. Call ~ 4D/$79,500 2 .-,~.1~ • ea. comm pool, BBQ, llllll. dam. prtac. only. 5CW111ev..~ 38r, IB&. 2 st1f! ,,. old, ,,_., amenlt lDclud· .. lliol tub, sus.ooo. 9llO MOdjeah Circle. 'PP •1112•v• Tlmlll. WOODlllMI I Br $l.20,000 &Br$115,000 IO-Ol12.MM161'7 BY OWNER-a Sty home, • lllAUm..,.1 .... Verde, IC lot. cul· na. dH9e, oM nn. CUllOal J bedroom totmbome In ......... tllebat.bl,decll· hataatic WOOD· la1, bricll patloa1 II BJUD(lE. ASSU M E bdr91, l'OH •a l'Cllta, ... ,, io.ft and ellJoJ th _, U .... $150,000. LA K E. TENN I S . _.. POOLS. ·etc. Onl7 • llllllldll ...,t HUDY I at $215.000' Mission Really 4~·~731 Duplex 2 bdrm. Near ta Huerta644-6829. water & shops. S170.000 Family Home. 4 br, 3 ba. 2 assume. Call 893-3268. bl.ks to ocean. $152,900 Owner 642-9677 HAUOtt VIEW HOMES EASTILUFF TWNHSE 3 BR 2 ba By owner $142.500 759·0920 or -~.s~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS ...-SS PrOfMrlY 1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Restaurant Grossing 1265.000. On ~q fl! bl.IOA ISLAND! Outstanding lease. NO , Ml-Olm -<M of Cowrty owe 2 UNITS Property 2550 Nwpt, block lo ocn. 3Br ••;;;~;;·;;:;;;:;.;~;;; uorts. low rfl!l.9, $22:5,000 prod rarm land or ranch NtJ. Les Barnhart <714 ) 559-4475 site S3,SOO per acre 963-4703 aft 12 noon OCEANFRONT · New Modular T y p e Homes. pvt community. 2 bchs, 24 hr secunty. sub-letting OK From s:ll.000. Treasure Island Mobile Home Pk, 30801 So. Cst Hw y, Laguna Beach . RM P (714 ) 4!$3579 5 Bdrm "Somerset Plan" next to green bell Beautifully decor ated and landscaped w1tb large yard and pool. $29J.SOO mcludmg land. 213 /723-7101 T e rr y ----------1 Ag\ 1714 1641-0244 SMALL REST AUit.AMT sale by owner. Beer & wme IJc. Grt'al C M loc ~-1952or 557-2783 a!l!n li+iiiiY OWofState EMERALD BAY VIEW 4br, 4ba pliv pool & spa. llll0.000. Agt. 551-6427 _ WOULD YOU I ELIEVE In Laguna Beach. just liBted, 3 Bdrm, 2 bath family home. Large yard room ror pool. Mature trees. Xlnt neighborhood close to schools. Hurry cm this one for $139.SOO. Ca ll Danny Bibb for appt. to s~ these new llstmgs. ROGHS'REALTY 673-2311 SPYGLASS HILL IESTIUY More than SS0.000 less than any home on the tuU. A well loacated non· view 3 Bdrm Portsmouth Hams Mwpt Hh C--...r A home w1lh character• Sunken family room. pvt bonus room or bdrm w bath. eallng area in k1tch + formal dining 3 br , 2 ba. By age nt 642-9411or548-0333 OCEAN VIEW!! Assume 9.6% nice 4 bd, 3 ba. owe s~.ooo 2nd. Patrick. 631 l266 REALTORS Mdl. CALL QUICK . --------Can't last at $349,000. 644-721 I /Jn NICr[L l3AILE. Y & A551JCIAT£5 WATBAOHT Extra lge corner duplex in xlnl cond. Moorina avail. Spectacular view. Cote Re alty f only M5,000. --------& Investment llMniMlaylot 41 640-5777 ____ 673-6634 ______ ......... • •• ·.~ ••••• !! .. . ~ Coldwe_ll Banker GRACIOUS SITTIMG_.. ¥llW from this 4 BR family home in Laguna Niguel. Tasteful decor ating inc l udes custom wallpapers, handpainted tiles & attractive built·lns. You'll remember and rave abot1t the multi-level covered patio with sweeping views and attractive flower beds. $179,000. 496-7222 831 -0836 ... Three Mon1rch a., f'tau ~ La1un1...,.1 UHDBSTATID ILIGAHCI Olympic sized master beth;>ut out the cham· pagne and have room to eaaertain ! 5 Bdrm home cm one ol Dover Shore. o.lcesl 1treeu. All lhe ameoiliea you desire are here-tit for 1335,000 fee. 642-5200 ·------- NEW2STORY OM.Y $17,500 Exqais1te Lyons condo. 3 bdnm. 2 bn, air rood•· uoned. dble car garage Encl'd pal.lo 759-1501 $79,900 VA STEAL Doll bou.~ · 3 bdrm. l:\'• ba. lge fmly rm w 1frpl<' Fresh paint in & out" Located on a lvly tree lined street. Lge yrd w/rnJit trees. 759·1501 c. ..... 'f Lots/ Crypt$ 1500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Grade C lot 11184, 1wean- vlew, Pac1 f1 c Vie w Memorial Pk. (2 l3 I ~9926 ColtdoMlnhnt11 fT o wn· hoelMt for sale I 700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $68,950 Park Bristol Condo 2 BR i v. ba. A/C Assume l~. ln. Agt. 7141673·1020 Eves. 75.2-5710 1100 ••c ............... c.....,.. Property 2600 ··················~···· Share Big Sky Montana home. Good sports loca- bon Cal I 545-0324 . ....... HoMt + S lhtits t~Ficjhter 2 Bdrm 2 bath owne~ un ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1l. with 2 car garage. air ....... fwoahlwd C'OOd • ~ fin!pluce S ••••••••••••••••••••••• well maintained units lcAoa l"-d 3106 with bltns. long term le ••••••••••••••••••••••• nanta Ideal oppty to ex-IAYFROMT change the eqwty 1n your 2 Bdrm. 2 ba in super home into income pro location. Avail now for pert.y. Discuss 1l today. winterrenla.I. $795/mo. call 714-834·9393 Salisbury Realty 673-6900 5 Uafts ON WATER. WINTER Oftly SI 35,000 RENTAL. Exciting 3 Excellent terms! Owner Bdrm. famiJy rm, dining will finance al 9% with rm & stained glass win- 25% down. Good unit dows. Mooring available. mlx. ExceUent Oran1e 115()/winter. Sbort term VETS ••••••••••••• •• •••••••• Co .• local.Ion. Ideal iruUal rental avail. Salisbury 4 ..W UNITS investment. Let's dia Realty. 673-QM)() POOL IUUTY That you can gel first NY it! Call 714-834·9393 Goraeous up1raded userri-·011, our main 12 +Pool WloaP11d11 .. a 3107 .......__ ... ,__ e·-... tooe ......, ,.__...._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'"""'" .. ,...,._ .,..., ~ (.stoclt broken -MeM Steps to bll)' beach, 3 br, 2 crpliog lbruout. new &large ba.nb >d.lslrict of Scheduled to be at 9.1 X be. frplc. iarage. Compl. pa.int, new roof. Motivat-Santa Ana. oou al COE. Owner to furn Lov,..1u ~• .. --••., edowners!A slealaton· ~Plaee.lnc8'2·7461 help rlnance t 11 ~ · "43 ,.,...ucnu.., ly SU.SOO ! Huu)'l a · area.Av&il.oowtoJWlf Ne --------i SellCtlt~ Bdnn well 15U>. ms mo. (or yr1j ~ 'l nalnlaloed unlta. Ex cit· re 0 ta I $8 2 5 m 0 ) N'rlwrMNT Ing upside potential. In· C213)C7&-T131l • 58 R . 28A home. approx 16 years old 1225,000 with $137 ,000 assumable tst al 9~. Owner will carry 2nd. t.MNWllU vesUgate now ! Call ~ . llll£X 714-D4 81183 c.... .. Mw l 122 * -* 21 Ullltt + ... -·-········· .. WiU1 ..-Moua owoen un· lllb dalband unit.a + 3 • 2ba upper duplex. ··~·•1111111•........ commercial stores. E•· Avail. mid Nov.·Man:ts f()NES cella 0ra.oce Co .• loca· R.-plldlla. '800. 67W.U Rf.ALTY INC Uon. Full profeealonal 1_.._-1.. JI~ mmaiement for eue ol _,.... ~ ESt l'MO ownenblp. Ideal pasalve "'••••••-••••••••••• (714) e73·11210 inYeltP*lt wilb upelde t. Winter re~ ~~~~~~~~ potential. Call now. pvt beach • .POOi. 2 br..!....I :: 714-IM..-:t. be. oo kida-pets. a.asm RENTAL INOOll• PllOP &RTY ft'Oal ... -.. Modular ...,,. ..... JI MCUdt7. a l'¥t ~. POOi • =. 1'realure Ille Plr, I~ 09l Hw7 , La1Ua Bet.. R.M.P. (71')9.am ' "XII UPf'la.H.L Oceanlroat mothl.y re°" 4 Ude, aubalk on \enu, l.at9 SllO. llllP ! '149.000. Pr\o. oal.y. Bkr. a.3S'1I l IMMSS7,IAMto10P ll. tt..,,.tlNclt Jl6t 11 U* *el+ 2 bdrm ............ _;.i~ =.-a:.~ ~D: ... Zbe fn*, pr. llcl Cllud. pp SMO.ooo: 2 .. mot. ... 175-1111 J Down '140,ooo. a.w.c:e Udo w. a bdrm be• canted at 14'1. Oner ..... No¥. l \o J1me m~-• ..,,..,,._ HUDSON BAY REALTY , LTD '714184& 9950 ...................... •• .... Ut ..... ·--·--··· ...... , ...... , ... ,. ... .. ,.) ,.. """" ·~ .,. .....,. . ... i WU to Ot'JeUI. Diii Cir "" pr. fllllY ..a.. Jd Mutt., "o ~~lllUJ~ ______ ., YACAMT »w. -.. boat or trlr •,a.. 0 R , tnlltt lev•I a ..... I ... MC'WitJ ........ 1'11P10-OOH • wltlt•••t•r ..... ....... ..,._ ....... cau.a..,. AleGI riew. SHOMo ... _..,l4, Ai*.:;-· . ----•• ~ 1· J•.~ba.Nu,~z ------''' mmm es ... tprlc. • ~... 1210 11=115! = ~ ~~.;~a~r ·-····· ............ . ~~~~~~~~I m 'llll uJl for Linda 2 bdrm. del&ached peUo ..... ..._. JJN Aalll&e home. A/C, dbl a ar .• -pool•dblYe .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sb*'m +den, z ba., fam bid. llll9CW ree. See 9D IAY'90MT • bv rm , fireplace, 10/14 By appt 561-'1'5. 2 Bdrm, I be 1A •uper IW'OI lud1cape apa Ageatl(m Ava.lJ now for t..dUI patio 1.;.M; 4 Ir, 2 ba -...: V.U., WUJler ,_la) '115/mo. lad. 1 mile to beach. view, tlreplau, air Sdabury batty l7MIOO walk '° parti " •<'booll. cand., bw)t..la kite.Ian, a C..-.. ..._. lJll .., -.-Z ~~1e:.!.'C:1i ·o!!e2r~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8 E A U T I ,.~ U L 8'2-0UI. Available 1m· I.Arie 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, pvt SEA.SPRAY condo, a Br mediately. Pldo. oeuly 1IOO IQ. ft 2 Ba., Uviq, dlnill,I, pool, __ _..;;,_f __ A_C_d-bl ~So ol Hwy. Avail. t.eMaa, A/C, 1525. Collect 2Br, lBa, tplc. • Oct. 1. lJit fl last mo + 2U/882·2667 evee ii ,_..., D/W, pool, apa t250depoe1t. 9650 mo. 511 wtmda. S. + t.dil41M-OM Camatioo,M$-7800· New execullve beach ............... J21Z 3blkStobcb.4Bdrm,fam hoale, avail. 11 /1/79. 5 • .. •••••••••••••••••••• rm. No pets . $775. br, 2~ ba, ramJJy rm, 3 BRAND NEW 2 •ty hlle, C.onslder furn. 640·77'2 car garage le Jacuul. 481', 38a, ~em kit, in-----Gardener incl. WaUt to cludlna mJcrowave, In· Ha.rtlor View Hilla, 3 BR, beach. '850 mo. or leaae. door BBQ •self-cleaning I~ ba, Cam rm. All new 21861 Summerw ind. oven, Jg fam rm w/blln appliances. Lrg yd. Xlnt 983-085l or 754--6262 u k wet b&r, lndscpa. 2 car loc. 11200 mo. Bkr, rorauts. gar, rec area w/facll. ~51.U-a;o mo. 1 yr l.ae. Andrea Private bachelor apt, I 2.s'I'OR'&YI' 38r,,~n Le& ram ~ dys or 546-78218 rm. c, re s. a11e. .... ....... bl.k to ocean, S250 mo. 1125, nnle: 963-71181 & --------- m..o10. 9M-7119. '8r. 2~8a. ram rm, Uv OULttandin& . rm, golf course le tennJa Spy~iJ{j ;1:a· DolJ 's House lBdrm, Iba. clb oei,cbborbood, \la ;!:ty • formal 'dlnhli S2IO No peta. Call Macie acn. avail late Nov. S875 rm. $1700 pet' mo. ()peo 1182-11IO _mo_._881_·2.11115 _____ _ s.t fl Sun 1·5; #7 Mon· Sea Spny Condo 3 br, 2 ......_ V1efo 3267 tere:Y Qrcle. ba.. $S75 mo. No pets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool, tennis. security. HOMES FOR RENT Cail M2·7461, Park PJace 3 or 4 Br. Priced from Realtora. $8>~. Fncd yard 6 garages. Fami l ies Lovely 2br , den 21hba please, kids le pe ts Qindo pool, jac 2 car gar welcome. Call 964·2586 or & OIJDI'. Upgraded. $.550. """"'_. .... r Avail. Now No P e ts ,,,.,_,., ._.. 00 ee. ~5974 alt. 5. __ Mupart leach 12" N be h b 2b ••••••••••••••••••••••• r ac , 4 r, a. new NO FEE' & C d crpt flooring drps · Apt. on o 3 8r 2 Ba ..,e11 N W/D'refng.536-9463 'rentals. VIiia Rentals • • ...,., mo. o _ ·-------67~12 8kr. PlU Ava6~~~~. SHARP POOL HOME. 3 ----- """""' Br, 2 ba. cpl.II, drps, no Bhlfs Condo. 3 BR & den 2 RR, all newly <lecoraled, rplc, gar. gard en~r 1£?5mo 644·7400 pets Bushard/Adam&. + 3. ba, lovely greenbelt ~. 751 2060or960·5771 setting Nr pool S925 per -mo Bkr. 631·11100. ......... 11 1a1• l!!~~~ ....................... ~ ~~ .......... !~!!!:!~~-· ·.£!: ..... , ..... _ '·· -... II _.._. .... .THE ~ ......... Ir .............. .. .... ,,, , ... ~ ... .. GOOD ........................ ........ ,_, bt. LIFE" ._ • -. mtm. AA-.; CONDO I bd. c.:,1. YIAIMIOUleD ..,.., loo .. t ActMti.1 01• = A*f!or rt rec:tor• ,,... Sul\daY •·Im• 8ru11eh • 110'• • Pllr• l~IJP ... •• ~~MOl9. .-AT MCMATIOMI Ttnrut• Fflle C!'' (PfO 6 !Juo 1 op>• 2 ""'t:'t !f • 11 Tio. ...,ti\ .,. . SIUN • ~omaeuoe•Swtm-ming • Golf OrMng ................ ~ ...... Range Lld•LMIM• IU&mflUI, AN.ltf. MINT9: S.ncile1. 1 I. a "*c:..cwaom 2 Bedroom• • Fur· Tull.la ~· nl1"9d I. UftfumlaNd --•Adult l,.MnQ •No Peta lbw==~IHM, • ModelS Open d9tly ~. -.no. 9 to 6. -Oakwood a BlclnD, cwcom lllome Qefden~ta ,,..., .. ber. koi paad, ....... ltall .-0. NewPoft~/lo. --170016th St 4 BR a BA, Twtle. (Dove< et t6tlll rodl.iam rm, + loft! (714) 6'2·8170 JOOO~J)pl'OX. NewPoft~/No. Deeacbecl • Jmmed. 880 Irvine OCC\CNIDCY. 1115«DO. 181161111 712-1700 (714) 645-0550 Olf'< Ill 9 • II S flJH 10 91 NK'I' [9111 S,pedous beautitully fum. ..._ Overlookinl water. .. 67$-987T C1 •• I 11•1 1 Br, ut1l pd. $300. Adulta, no peta. Abo uofum. 3'21 ........ ~.d J4ZS E.18thSt, NB646-l801 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 3br, 2ba, fprlc, H.B. 2br, 2ba, fprlc, .car, pool /spa, tennis. No sundeck, gar, unit avail. now. till June 1. 2914 W Pela . S 475 M o . Oceanfroot, N.B. Cllll 21S-86S-8M6. 2 13 ·331 -5417 or Newport Crest Oce11n· 714-6t&-2030 view, 3Br 2~ Ba, $750 Retired M or F to hve in leae. Child, 11m pet OK. n.lce Apl for reduced 844-&nO rent. L•t~ chor es Uru~1ty Pk. Terrace 2 s.6-1801. Bdrm. 2 ba. fplc, dbl gar, Ste!>l> lo beach, 2 Br newty crpt 'd & punted. w/wshr & dryer + gi.r $115/rno. 7~-1908. MSO 982...S .,_ , __ ,_.IMcl Beaut. rum. 1 Br w ocean ••••••••••••••••••••••• view. dsbwsbr, gar. & lg .......... 3706 balcony. $400 mo winter ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-a4 bef 9PM Blc:b apt, I Rm with own .. S.O.•• 3776 b&, pvt ent. prk·g, rfrg, no cook ',c. I quiet resp ••••••••••••••••••• • ••• adlt. $!25/mo87s.-0.149 OCEAN V1EW apts. 1275 & Up. (98-2722, 492 1720 wtute Water Rlt Inc IAYFtlONT I _____ Y Very large dplx apt. 4 4f. hwllh Bdrm. 3 ba, laund.ry rm, u.twwlMd CflllJOrt. <Boal mooring •••••••••• •••. •• ••••••• possible>. Winter S800 orl lcAoari•tMla 3807 Sl2n> yrly Agent 675·3331 •••••••••••• •••• •• ••••• 4br, 2ba, frplc, crpt.s & So. Bayfronl 4 br, 2 ba. up. I drps 100 steps to oco 2S per Garal(e Winte r. steps to bay. $700Mo 6Th-6829 Moo to Mon. S48 Ba I boa Penn. 548-2008 or 759-8949 !Am .............. -... ... .................................................................. ,. Cllilll.._. MM ........ ._.~ IMIOA••• ............ -....... ....................... 112..-... ........... ., .......... ID 161 ..,.._ New deluu Ml«ll -,,_ • ..... tow•••••••. l•a11ll -. ....... ,_, mllrt, .... MCUrit,r,DeV ~ Qwt futo, rt1--------..... -..-a..Clrtlt. rm /la , llltclaea a...._ 2 Bil. l be, -.mtor71J·-........ pr, llOOI, I.ft· ......,.,, ... ..,._ w ,1 .. • •ma.aft.Mt.JM .-. JCWI OK, • ;._:et C-Jl42 Naeh m· •I. C. l'Wa1....;;;.~;;::i,;;..;;;.;;..;..;;;;;~.;o.,;;;-=~ ., •• Ml-1''11 ••••• -········ .. ••••• ........ ,,.,,, .......... . ...... ...... •ateffl'ODl coodo .... ,. ... Nl-111'1 ''ftDRVIU.&" w/tioat allp. Deluae • , ......... •2IO ... w/pt, Mita-, ...., immac. 11100 mo ....................... . .,.. • .,., bl&m, fntd ~'· d.aya llli·ZS.l; Home for,,_ Bia Bear )I'd. --~-.ia. .,,....... ""-: . ':!. -... . --···a·· ·--'tlfllY v: DDmll ...... . --------...;;"°;;;·· .. ;.;:-~ ,._,bt&toa Harbour CcJG. • ty pr cpt Call WALLACE ST APTS do. OD lbe wat.r. 30 ft. aft« 3 p,m.. 541-a.. JOetW&UaeeSt Ilia>. lGO 14' ft., 2 bdrm. T"" .... TI HIWl1 deeot.c.d, beam 2-"6 t.. din. rm. le kit. 2 _. ~. 2 br, 1 be, '3'70. CM" pr. JIC)Ol, '*u.aa, Ja· Modern 1or2 br eottace fide.Away otftee. No dlpolitl Aqd. CbUd qur. t.eaai.t. Call evet. on beech GD Tabit.l wftb Obl1 aG/P« moot.b. Va· 4*.,m,.ta.MS-44u '114~. car, row boat. waab ceet. •No. Brotldway . machine, complete Senta Ana. Hlatoriul Adil Dk, open beamed .,..... Jl44 kil.cheo, etc. For more Bide. P'Of' more Info c•ll ~ Lbruout, liota ol "-•••••••••••••••••• info call 979-399 eves 6 Sein Warren _..,. or waod. no pets, Sl20 mo. 2 BB eondo, Tiiie I.aka, •eekmdl, Rmllla5M-'M0'1 .,,._... rec ctr, *· 151G. call a.fl .._ --------1 1Pll 2JJ.4D.._ i..,... Oceaalroat, pvt PremUlioulnew a-. l Bdrm, pat.lo, nr ' bNcb. pool, 2 br, 2 ba, No DICUTIVI SUITIS &m•l&Grel. Adlta. 1275. "'911a.._. Jl4' ~.4119..1579 available n~r . OC ... ._ -················ Airport .... -·~ Larp Bia Bear cabin.· ~· ,_..a"" • ,......, 2 BR ud kidl OK OranltoatLc year-round fr:! tbJ, color TV. 2 recept.loQist, law ~. a ' w. Ham.ilt.oaoo !_~ laS/mo locJ ulJ. "-'-•'-...,. .. _ ,. library, conlerence rms. ~ ._.,._.,.14 .......... 1 .. secretarial service, • .car.•2111. v-r iut a p ALM SPIUNGS, CA "'"'ro" ac y. .. or a EASTSIDE nr Uruven1ty SBr. ZBa, nur beach. SS8S <X>ND0 RENTALS penooal tour 6 further Ave, 2 Br, pal.lo, S3:iO mo. mo. 4M-Ul66 dftaJJa inquire at Vortac 8154717 Lwwry Condominiuma. Auoc, 95~·2288 or ElimJde nwl decor 2b Ml ,,... IMdt JI" Completely Yurnl1hed. _&.3800 _______ _ Iba ~M Y ......._. • r, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Country Club Sett1n1. • o ...,.,., adult., rAlll MEWPOn Gdf. Tmois ava1Lat»e at 1 un f1£E RENT No Peca. 6*-0838 aft 5. Ba c be Io r a , 1 or 2 Spe(:1aJ Rates for our lllU 3Br 2ba, fplc, bllnl, encl Bedaooms6Townbouses Chenta only. Weekly, DIC. sums patio. lndry, dbl gar, F'rom$:119.50 Monthly, and Weekend MIWPOll'TCINTU SMO. 398·A Woodland Spedi.cuJar spa. total Rerllalb. ""Uaervice. From$225. • Pl.ace 675-2150. recreation proira m , Newport Reaency Corp . --eoci.alprogram. 7ooola.8 Ca.II : Dommlqueal m06'4-7\89 Beaut. l very lg bdrm, tawa cowu. At ,aahwn (7Jf )328-8911 plush. laundry, 1mmac 1alan4. Jamboc'ee 4c San COllOM.A DB. MAI ~ 1826 Pomona JoMqUin Hilla Road. CA'nlEDRAL CANYON Dtluxeolfice, $150 mo. S325mo 838-8086 0141644-1900 COUNTRYCLUB Realonomica67~00 2 Br. l t;o, ba studio type, pvt patio, bltru., newly decor. Cfl>l.S , drpg. pool , ut1I incl 1978 Maple S340 mo ~ Duplex 1:-; s1dl! 2br. bluru.. pti.UO No Peu. Adulu. ~-~Ogle CM 2 BR 1 bath Yard, garage $350/mo+SlSO ~Ca.JI Renata 5.56 ncn 2 & 3 Br. near new. Costa Mesa. Huot Bt·h All tittn.. paUo-yard Some w1rrp1c. end garaRe . laundry rm or W / D booll 2"3 Bdrms oceanrronl dup lexe1 . Yea r ly m.t912Btr -----BAOIELOR UNITS from 1225 per mo unfum 100' rrom ocean 201 E Balboa For morf' info call Renal.A at~ nm 2 Br, 2 ba condo . .,., blk to beach. 2 car ear ... uw op- or Beaut. bay view. $65() yrly TSl..Mgmt ---642-UiOO OClifRONT b . 2ba w1otr1ce. Vrly. flii'c. 3 car gar. 11050 up $425.to~ TSLMgm~ 642 loo.l 'r.il.. Ypnt 642-l603 Large bach urut. t'rpl.11. d.rp8, ollrus, adults. no pet., S260 mo S48-4069 OHTHlllACH Bach. lutcb. bath. uuJ pd. Hoe.el ApU. PIO yrly & i.., IM & I asl Zl06 W 2.Br. crpt..s. d~. bltn'>. Oceanfront 673-41~ _ end gara.ie Adults. no 3 BR. 2 ba, 2 n r itar . up-~ S340 mo 5411 40tll pe-r, deck. yearly $b(J(J X1.ra lrg 3br . 2',,ba. df'P!>. N\l. 67s-6670, 631 ·:;s.s,() l'fl>~. frpl('' 1.1.ke m·~ Newport Heijtht.s 28r I B.t Ocean View 1l>b . ~l'> k d CH. 34-587 Ca~ra.l CaoyooDnve PalmSpn.np Newport Beach ok/apt. Camery section 17~1.2 BrokeP CaWorru.a 92262 12x l 5 o (( i c e f u r n . OeMr1 Reson Rlty Inc. MacArthur Blvd. View of Tbanks g1 v1n g & New all1>ort. S'SOMo. 7~·~747 Year'1 weeb avid, Lake Altp>rt Aru ex.ec ofc.. Tahoe. 3Br, 3Ba Condo. SllD exposure on Bruwl Abo q\lle4. aeason rates, wtjrC:rt ~rv. 22S t.o l2IO Nov/Dec. 95ir>-33M eve.!' 9qf\. From$175.~·7010 ..... to SMre 4300 .... becalff,,. ....................... Movule" AvOtd dePoSfU & Wtn cul hvtng expenses' ibere ls a difference. Proleuional servicu ror ~feu1onal ly s 1nt'e the company executive HOU~lb...O.a.ns 1n a setting with a .,_..A manageable number or ____ 832-4_ 134 wuta. 2082 Michelson. Roommate to sba~-l91_e_2 I r v I n e . C a I I Bdrm home In CdM nt4 1752-0Z34 __ _ Bead:I. poof. pallo, frpk. G.dfw OfflcH flJ&I' 1275 incl ult! Call 51ng1 c s tory , pro r m,51Jgt __ _ _ cent.er 2850 "'11..'1.a Verde Prof F'~ t.o sbr w '"»me 2 Dr~. C M. 847 ~. Bdrm lrvUM: Condo. rully 650 Sq ft view . under furn Avail Now S2S4.I ground prkg, devator. Mio ~ 9131. 990 8811 U!\k Coast Hwy v1s1b1hly. Air forJunlDlf' 1·ond Laguna B~ach OK I I.JO Vtctona Shown I pvt pauo. 1 ·-· • no wkdy ~ 30 7 ao wknd' Pf"l.S SJ66 00 .,,22 ... ,,m :.J -t.!i l·lu'< 2br C1111 J().l IBrl"ondonearbt!at'h All do ~t·i ll·H«' \.i d 1714 )54~ 11116 ; wknd-. «JS..'.B?2 lBr ~-each sass Ut1l rncl. Winte r . 404 E. •bdrm lba CollOO New Ba.lboa.1'7s.3110l atu ly renovated. ~ mo ~~I or 482-8700 new llllr $450 mo Qi II I fl Is S2 :-i. 0 + '. u I ' I Sub-lea.-.e ..UI !>Q fl 1.11111 Jan or R1t'b 11 14 1 ~= X 217· art 5 MannaV111age.3rdnoor ~. CZJJlS»-2323 --YleW.~ Fem. no1H m<*er wold to FOR •"''"""'So • - 3Br, 2~ condo. No pets. Pool. tennis s-. Sierra Mcmt. 641-l~. Nl .. MU.AVBDI 3 BR. 2 ba, bltn lritch w/d•bwar. ulll room, ctpt • drps. Formal din· lng rm. $585. Ask for Ne, 751·1191. SELECT PROPERTIES. Le 3 BR 2 ba, frplc, rear yard, trees, qwet Npl HI.I. ~s. 875-1225 Room.)' 2 BR hie, lr1 fncd .. 523 CAMPU5Da~IR'l ... E air, 2~ba Npt. Terrace yard. 2 tool sheds, paUo, Qindo. Highly upcraded. $125mo.646-Ul55. 48r, 2~ea. Broadmoor W/lovely patio. Comm fU.m "' unfum w 'Side 3 Turtlerock, nr scbls & P o o I , s a u n a , le BR. 2ba, frplc. $485. pool, -50 mo. including Jac.$550w /yr lse. No &1734, Of''31--0854 ..,..._, prefer no pet.a. Peta. 631-1317 ror appt. Avail Ocl 15, owner ...-.. a&AftalS CONDO 3 BR, 2~ ba, 'lSZ-011'1 ~~ • ~ •NEAR 5 POINTS · 2 br, l l..arge studio s.T7S Also I \hr 2br 2ba a pt CdM ~.,,.. ...... gtu1a lbr Luxunous Coodoi. l.»25().:>SO sq ft. 49S-448l. vSuille the BluH frplc. pool. lcn 1·rh a33l~ on s. Si!OO+UUI 75&-0312afl s --------~ eves • wlrnds ----0111 I rm. Offlt'e adJ ~ _ Fem rmmatt• to :..~hr At r porter Hotel N11 ~ ~ Pvt bdrm. den I 1133 3223 9 12 2 Br I ba. partly furn &r ba S200 + , , ulll (' M ea.~ . to Yeorly $450 mo ~ 95 • · AKt.>nt 6'73-~ 91 O ioic:•t'. l '"l" M<."l>:t ~>P o--t . , . .A u L' PIJUt Center :-,paces. 5*J & ~+ne+-uh~-&t ru1u11 l' wan~ •'"-"' llS1 sq f1 ,,,,.3 & ST;'lll & relng JS«» Dalbo.a Ill g lU* · gJr ' bu-. Nt?W dt.>cor . qwck occp) upl>lalrl> Agt Gus 1213 1 lme lo OCC 64.S.Q.4 J Harbor Haker Center. !lllS-1712. Noo-smobr sh.r 4 UH CM ~11 3Q23 Harbor Blvd WES'OCUFF 2.Bdrm 2bi.. fpc. pool. AduJtA OnJy Avat.I Nov 1st. SSZS. homP w 1poo1 , Si200 mo + at BaJter St Agt. ~· 13!6 UUI (..ltarlu.•. 7!>4 6630 Roommate nded for ()ieolakind ... eaua1,sa. Newport Terrace S225tmo . Call (days) PENTHOUSE SUITE 71417S 7083 ----- 435 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1Wo car garage wanted. O:llta MA!IM/Nwpt area. lAcated within the uni· 54M3157; 642-1422 que European desiped ---------•Lido Manna Village. 3 BR 2 Ba. 1 bl.k to beat'b, newty decor R.eq credit 6penonaJ refs. lst "last EASTS&OICM Dllllo 631 ·2222 4400 ....................... mo.. clo dep. No pee.a. <ftal V~ space avail. llli()mo Evs.&M-9726 moMo. Lse 4918-2722. 4111Z-l720 IMMA CU LAT E & Wb&teWater RJty, Inc. fP900UI 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, balcony. Pttcbed 00.m EXEC. sums cellnp. Near beach 4c H . b in acrau from water. Qwc:t uiwneu ts av II your nealbbomood '6'75/mo place of bu11neu at .,... •·-Baker Center. Recept .• 1 .. Y ,_, conference room , phone Watelfront Home• cove ra«e Close t o 631 1400 aarport, fine rest.aurants . s.ca.-• 3176 Secretaria l services ava.tl f'or more info, call Bevat~2161 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIOO FREE RENT 3 Br, z ba. pvt patio It garqe. Lot.a of 1rass. 614 Calle Campana. $445. Weekdays after 2pm phone 492·1567 o r 496-5275 . Anytim e weekends. lllO C.fice " maU shop space. 210 Main St 8. l office SJONlo. I offi~ S120Mo. 1 dfice or storage apace t:I() Retail shor space: 18-0 The M in Ma ll. •l.SiS8. 832· l859. Comider: 2.400Sq. Ft. Private Elevator Wet Bar, Lounaes Panoramic Bay v.ew Covered Pat.JO Decorator Amenities Ask about our FREE RENT OFFER &75-8&&2 W-.Ch1.--ce ..... To ebare Newport Beach Real Estate olfice. Acent: 8'1W170 700 sq rt office s pace avail. sns mo incl. all "'11. PCH 6 &2nd St, NB. Robbie days, 548-0757, e'Y!JI '60221 micro elec 1ar opnr ---------38R,2ba,yearly,pool6 many xttu. New:WoodbrtdgeCoodo.New3 tennl1 prlv'1. 1850. .SO/mo. 779.2373 dy1, BR end unit. Lie patio. mew,"' 175418. eo.a1n. ~· privU. 552-80IM aft ... w....,s,.cw. ml/f"lfS 01 ~ 11151tdofurn pe-.. .......... datliDI duplo a.sit out! Woodbridce. DIOBaiboalbrfW"D br MU l b P'16 • BR. 2 sty condo. $5500. 3 MIO 2br kidl pd.I, ree 2 ' r · BR, mil fam detached •*clullila-arbcll eo.alJOCll'..... bae, $150. Botti fnCJ *HOKEl'INDERS• I • 2 Bdrm trailers S250 llo + uUJ's. No children ordop. &U-9183 .............. J740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Duple& unit, Ea1l1ldt. Cll.. 2 er. pr .. tee. pvt . yard. o-ider one child, pet MOO. Bkr /Own. Call Qmie al.QUI OI Jolia-S.mt be. $2115 + PIO deposit. Z •••••••• • •••• • • • • • •• • • • lddao61. Nopeta. Call Bob Exclusive So. Coast at NJ.JM or IO cllnct to WIM, 2 Br 2 Ba coodo, '1171 Commodore Circle pvt patio. rec fac1l., 13, RB. ..... p&a, avail Im· "THI" mcunv1 sum FulJ Sft'Vice officea in Newport Center NC)..5470 t.wroaT llACH omcE OR RENTAL SPACE, W. Cat. Hwy., llariDss lllle. m.ca. n. m .. a111 a ......... 4450 ....................... llOdel CGDdo New 2br. fplc'a, AC. microwave. 557.-z2 2~. den split level lnddl Mnnls, spa it lake. ........ ...... J7 4' Lower 3br. 2ba, Mesa de.I rrplc, 1ar •tOOllo. Anmaallle. 8-81112 New Tel'!· Condo. S BR, •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Mar area. $400. No peta. 8JS.4f7l ...-~ 3 ...... _ 2~ba. VMW, PoOI. ••un•. • •GUNA BEACH llTR _m_·Zl.58 _____ _ ..._ .... _______ ,..__...,...., ~~· cen-tlDOmo.MZ-aaa ~ s Ill. l be. ddJdlwl OK. tral air, mlcro-wave. -=-------INN. llUl. _.v., color &ede.2'1r lba. new apt. s.amtt• ,..... -mo. 9lllO mo. aea.e. 111...a UdoW.: 2br,2bli, TV, beated pool. Ut11. •,.int. ia;ii. Encl 1ar. ar -.-Pat. .Ewa.Atmt '1181Do.J.Jr...... ('7J4)tM-529'. 115 No. Priv. yrd. No Pua. " m.aat 0-llwJ. Adulta Ooly. UIO. .,_.. J2J2 ~· Twtlervck. •BR . 81W1l1 _ ........... -.. lbl, A /C, 2 atry. Newport Studio Coado. IJ'eu&. decorated, mald --------- R>llDPOaaBM'J' •tmo.MWl17 Nr . ....,~. Pool, ..mce, DOOi. utn, • ar. 1~ Twobl. P/P, 1 • 4 Br Pne.d tNtD spa, aaua. hourttr. wt.-.ili1 paUO. .el .. r. Mita No a.\l 2 •a Bn rrom *'°° ...... pools, tennla. wDeyball, um. NC:rea· lion .£0om1 + other a ....... ••·'hod Jard• .ahl~verynlce, Great 1roaad1 ... 00 • .._. ..... 1769 Na.Prom~5.MMOJ• :r:.~~'1i1l.·:·~~~: ta.&ARLi .... ™' _211_ ..... 1::-.~ ...... --.-.-,...,.._---._-.:;: .............. ~,' :;.. i~: 1111iiliwtll West w1c1r1 .cau•-· ........... .J141 ft.o, I -..-WIHAft ..... 1741 ... ~.tEclwardl -.rt.Ala•.... --•••••••••!• .. ~••a • ••· ca.aro• antrlNG1'0 CH *"·•Bit + klft., pool. ftAILY A WT• Eutaide 1 br ullfara. 111 BEA '.!.!./.;'!~~~ .... c.llTlm.m-mt WTAU ~.-mo.CaUafter MWJt · ·a.. to dowatowa • Tllllllltl ,._ ••-, ...... 0.... 1_:; :-.=:-:... .... I ... I ...... -~. • •• M ... 2 frples..t ram ..... I ... f)plcL.. J. HI' _/ ... Ma.1111. I• 2!.:..,.~:=.'u: ___ U_AJ.;_:TC_D_m___ ftrm. Mldaa ~~.·= ... tnL mo ..... , a ~ IMll • br, IM...... •· ..0 ----· Add.I .:'la No I It • ~, ...,, ""Oii b1iilt -P'l'PGllll. ..................... ......,. .....Call.. .. -.'a•,..._:-...... flllllldc...,_..Ll lcli'1a. peiat. Anll Oct II. Jlll\l't 11•1'¥¥ lo ..Ut lllL ... lw wD a .... flll'-Jrtr ... mr -1-.•-a ., .... .,ttw.u. IWIJNatO 'WM. ~aa.1-..w 2 bdrm. 2 ba. Condo. pool, jac. etc. $C25. Im med. OC· cupancy. Call Bob ZJ.J/llM'T7' ~ l»G5Zl. Wnl I 1t• lit ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 a-2 •t.orY apt urou rrom park. $HO mo. SIMnllne Mamt Corp., Nf.-S *41 1w•M1ll1ll ........... ,, .. ....................... S11.m11111n New lM .... """"ila";.ey adult apU lo IA plaM troy $HO, 2 bdrm to ... , • from -+ ............ wtalls, ~o~r.=:c ~ .. ~ :-c:: to McP'Mdea .._._•»crMdea co leawlod vmaae. (nil-- 1 roo '411-... For ..... omce 1paceat n ei Cb borbood at . reMOUbleratea. ~. con~nt to IOO .. 2700 S. ... San Die10 frwy. near MESA VERDE bR Fairview/El Caml•o. PLAZA CM. 51' eq ft. 7•1101 J.SZS .._.Verde E, C 11, POVNTAJN VALLEY • 14MtH WA.RN.ER/II AONOLI A omcE SPACE AV AIL. •1 ut..,.u.e, ~.B. Store lN SAY ON rBNTER or afftce ll*e, UIOO Sq. • ,. . P\. $lOIO mo. =·r:e ~!tfi:'n!'d 8. Onmct:y Rltr17Mltl ulte. Prer~t R .E •• Nftlat Hur Poet Ole. aervw, llortca1•. etc. Moaam a eq ft atoir. ot 'hDMt JllQS uWt • aa• ofe. 2IUO Avon·C US/ Humeolt. Vllla1e CTMOOJ ~ Mcmt. Atnt. -------<Mll'INm. ... SAM ... 0 ICHLOC.AnoM STOPU l3llO eq ft lD m!Dl·mall. TaU time to ...... ud 1·814111 cb9, 2'7 .. l2U .., • ...._lt'ulmple ewa •Itta D a 11 r P ll o t ---------a..lfted Mtl. Md lf -...... Ot omc:.. Xlot. ,. ..... IC...... to loc. s..w. CM. MU, call e friHcllJ a1111o. tll·IZD QMeln.d Ad·Vllor et SIU. idle tt-.e with a ....,. Dlll1 PUat Qeylfted Ad. 17 Cull111hr .. ' I I .... N1 111t1 '! ...... p, • l1"Bf•,,... -·················· ··-················ _.... ........... ............ .......•. ---····-······ --··-············ C.ll•a ••••ll•I• JMX>mOONCllrft O.' 'II, ........ • 0CC .&Toalnltk ..... Ona .. m1a. You ao vl=b)' TB& 1551.1...._. 111AGD8YIKJ: ....... 6•h•e••i '""""'0Cltl"l1IUCT1(,)IC ludua,la1. q,orae ,.,.... a.rtm. Ou nppl1 cnaterlala . ftAJl C COLLEGE A" WE'Rl!SP!CIWS'FS IM'llilleilif0f'9~. al ..... ..-a,.. •W.WUb 6 llNlllli.•1171 -' .. ._..,_ m.1D • l!xp, lr1 c.eo.nPa1e&.1a1 CAU.MMJIU I ·.:::;,,at ........ nu l.AWM~ce.laDd· , dump 1ru1k Reatoaab'•· rellable, tNck.M.a~ a.::-.... ":a'a!>"'t:.'i478 ......,.,..,..,. ao o.&n. co. 1en Kt1P9, c&eu-.. '"· tn.e. )'~ -°""' trw. lloalc:a •• ,....,""'"" _ ................. . ~ t'Olltroctor, com· UW&q,Ma.-.r .Dl•Ul7 ....... ......,. ••-•••••••••••••••••• r.r.tY ... C-* Na&P9td*•tellturet =. ... /rHld .. Hl·Utl, Oardertlt.1. ,lrH tra-· Ha:t•· cloaouu. ~ IM>lnel,-OI· .PSTDSPAJNnNG ~· Fre. eat. Lie ... IST. ltS.t4lt -.•• I I !:·' "'Omple'• c.Xpr 'd. Reaa aatea. ·-~· Gu.r. Ref•. Ttd. . ._ .. 'L-. --, --'=-&&•.A•n&. .... ..... .E.9t. a I •n• .......... or . ,_, n I --...i.. •.. •---:: ... --1-•. ~ av romo•a a, ~ • .... ,.._ c l ... -U l J,_ • -LI 'Plllk) covtrwi urporta, wv. Arft1e l4 . 5MC'll .. -, --..,_,,,....., ........ '"'·'"' 1' b ti I' Gtve ..._ Ufe to You1 •-•••.••••••••••••••••• ~·.::!v~c~Y Avll• Oa.idenan1. Trt• 1 ·1illnc• NISlHtup. -. I,.... AU.'AIMTtMG ~!int/Ext by Llc'd Remodelin1, copper re lJod coatroctor Don trhnaln1 • re.movala, &at rlnupt. ll'ree ....... •••••••••••••••• Nutt73-5'1I lnlured contractor. Freo plpe., le.all dete<.1.Jon • d /lnsrd. Tomin (lunn ywd 1n1lm.a .. 1prtnlller f l4)I0.4.5t7 lll&ure witter, 52, non· ZldlnS lnt$37S &t. New Ufe Painting. .....,. loc8t1Qa. Top Hat Ill.all • y 1 t • ia, , t 1 w n a . 7 amour. noo.cfrinker. 1d. ~H071. Phambiq, 517-31.M dewllll.MM4'74. •• ' I n0Nonma.4it-l327 Prof. ~I-Ext• Int. •a .. .._..., ·r t I I ... /.••••••••••••••••••• L •11 I I U1'1Sl5. Low rata. free ,_,_IW> p~~NTINli GR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• roe r mm na • rti· "" • ._..,.. "''" extr, .. .,,,. ngs en· rLllCTlllCIAN ·Pncttd rnoval . eleaa u111. haul • BEAU..Y CLEAH ••••••••••••••••••••••• .S31--4a83 ta1reaovatioo 1peciaU11t. Repair • Reroor. All n""'free .. umit Oh awa}'. landacape Dave~ ~7 ~~&-m Ludaeape, lrrt1at1on , Palntlnc. INT/EXT. Small commercial JOI» type1 ·1han1J e11 · i.,...cramalljobl __,.. ~· ce cloup, reu lO yn exper. Neat, booeat. reu .. 12 atterbours 1192.2004 roc:ltabakes·compo·tar. l.K' dlf2l54 871 ow • uar_. s.rtlc.ff bln '1 Houaerleantnc ~~t.i=~orbona yrs. exp. Llc•d. Dave Im/Ext. pal.ntln1 -.-ho-m-e ~:'1. eat. 541·5930 Fin. •••••••••••••••••••••• Srvc. for a t.boroucbly 9114-l~. repairs. Reliable • rees. llata quallty l'Mid. com m 'l ' ind wlnnii ut iow.:st coat Tom or J oel ~l "91'111rowen cleaobouse ~7 hlaad L a nd1ca p tn1. QuaJ. work. •'reeesl. Aft s.wt.)/AlterttHo.s Oalf Snow u......---1 lot/Ext. 1pnolne rt in· s. ~s:!ll6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A n,-• -~ eamni s talled It r e p a I red. Expert Dressmallang " 0 C c:ontrarta. ar• f'nr a bome lhataparkla eros a 0 n c 0 nlro1 , _____ _..; ___ 1Pa1nt1nc. RestComml. AJtttaUom. Catm work party idea ~7-8390 • like SDIJllW. m-0076. bydromulch, bn ck & ce Pamtlng • Reiaonuoo, Servuig ColilitaJ comm. II Erm" Haa 's. IMe-7322 forJan Nariee f'or E xcell e n ce t n mentwork,yrd c:ln-ups& "Par Excellance··. at. yrs Highest quality ------- Venetia n Bllnds f housecleaning: CleanlDg pruoln1. 18 y rs exp h c11oa/ref1 Rac ha rd work Rsnbl L1c'd T•vltlo9a.p.lr I i ~ U-•~-:..-...a c..t..e 4W4Mt Lic' .... /Bond___. o.tl 7711 Sinor.~<ca.c: Dave~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• t' ean ng aervac ,..,U»......__.. .. ,_. • ~ . .....,. . - Yen-taun blinds 646-4811 P-ll I L' --"I Cl.ARENCE 'S TV. V yr!> ~ · · MRS. <.1..EAN makes It -------Wallpaper haQguii. raist aJn ng. nt1c.xt "t' ly expe r . Oayi.. e ve!>, ~~~teolr,s, 15~!1 ~~ Gleem . Bac h .. a pls, .._...., servlce,qualltywork Le mat., work, rei1ld & '° wmdi ~.95+.957-1096 ,..,.,..,., ace.'""' homes $49.9372 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Papler, 714-sa&-2350 dust Fret!est 646-1252 - 4PM 1 . Brickwork. Small Jobs WAU.l'Al'HI~ CUSTO--M INTR P AJNT· T~ ......... AJ ce s Housec:lean1og. Newport. Cost.a Mesa " "-1 NG •. u R y W ALL ••••••••••••••••••••••• -rw ..... Reasonable. rel.table & lrvine.87S-3J7Sevei. Qttalaly wo rk . Eves • ••••••••••••••f m a. 673-12166, 640-4871 -----631·:1m QwWty mak~ the dlf· FREE tnal lesll-On o.rpentry fenc:f roof ..W... ---ference 24 hr:> R1t·h credenlJaled, readmJ(, ~,/~~f~ . Papa ~Y :et!~\.~:k~~:~ •••••••••• .... .. ... .. . . £w~\~1~; ~u~: nw~r:, .:!,_-w_1 _ 1111tth_&_P'r_e_n~h-67_3.-60_ 13 . 4 yrs exp. Refs . Call Bob· reas Free esl. Steve ,....,_. WIRduw Ct.CIRHMJ Home Re~ Elec bie: 750-47•1 before IPM. LEVELOR BLINDS 547-4281 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• aJSTOll fNTER R CAllPENTRY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Let us hand·stnp or re Ne wpor t D ay Car e pa.Ir. refinish your nnl1 Cente r. Ages 2'r•/up. quc pianos & fine furn t.ncaJ. plu . c"rpcn Get the best for less ------Custp m De,,1gn wood College !ll\~enLs, window t.ry, etc 642• an 6PM O eanupis on rentnla. lses. f'reemt ~13 PAJNTING pauo coveri. &. deck!\, washing Het11d/s tores By J ay 642. apta. empties. Free est -Free fill 20y~exp Cree quot,e, M7 9211 ;,rt Xlnt work. 642 5449. Se!lidle ate r 642-:;&78 _2rgCoonJy._~11645·9&66 Wl&lllAdllelp" &425678 CaJJ Larry 847-6194 &pm 64:>-M 2 Pla nned progr u m 631·2l22 2424 Newp()rt 6'1S-4llOI Bl, CM -----............. hmH Mllf~.Trvst °'' nrtwwity 5005 Deedj 50 l5 ....................... Commercial s pace. o r flee. shop. retail&hobby. S90Mo . 260-520sq . Ct. cycle Shop, Xlnl Ot pty. 548-T.M9 ~o. O r a nge Cou1ly e for details tu Ground floor, high tra ffic lfied Adll-494, ~1ly count, 2 stores avail PO Box 1560, Co!IW Priced below market Ca. 92626. RedhUJ Rlty, Udo Offc:. -673-7300 tCrea~. Npt Heh ------t locaUon/potent1al COMMHCIAL tsell! Ma.keoffer 1100 sq ft, neichborhood m S35·586.'i ••••••.......••...•.•.. Sattler MhJ. Co. All types or real el.tall' anvestment.s since 1949 SpKlalilincJ "' lndTDs 642-2171 54S.06 I I .-.....C-1•nh/ '~I Lolt&FoiMd ..................•.... shopping center, near Fairview/El Camino. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5100 Lott & '1' ••...• ~~.~~ •••••••• I.mt Mt.black leather bag In JI Bnstol J am boret' 4 parking lot nr SiuJlf~t No que:. I.Ions ed for return of bag/ pen.onal items RF.\'_D Days !>49·1277 ~.N1ghlS 499-473S 1.i..Jack Lab, Newport B1.P1~r Sat. rule 1016 rid up by muil ake f ies fle\.'<i motber No ;uons asked Please• 4l!i9 Cll. ~sq ft. 739·9501 OptorfuNty 5015 .---------······'io·············· · LlSoOOc·~siseWttt'AtRaDp"11. ................ 4500 Pravat; investo r for [dee .. ,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rapidly growing bicycle bel ''The Wedd1nl( ·· MEWPOITIEACH ma nuncture r . l OOK, PENNY allen an Laguna &ach 3000 ft, 1000 fl office 67~ ourg.lary space, quiet liLe indus . ...__..._. __ 5025 PINCHER NOQUESTIONS ASKE D area. No automotive or ..._, "--1f you can recovtr tape flbertlaslng. 645-3323 •••••••••19•••••••••••• ADS tu."WARD to be -ven for d;p. lnformalaon leading to SWI_.. LOAHS the recovery ol UC! tape. Warehouse apace for ~ ONLY t"> AakforVan54~UC17 lease. 2:tiC> sq ft avail. 2nd"'--t n.._ .. Lo ~ Lease rate 22t. 29CI Ran-~' -...,.,,., ans 00 lJJll: BUt Lab-O>lie ma•. ~Ave, CM. 979-2290 resjdeaUlt property Srll any item « ( blli.twhl chest, cu-ly tail. cu.tom.l.ze;l to meet binatlOfl ol item• tar "Poolr". eo lbs. Vic. Laa ... W_.... 4600 )'ourlMedl! or leaa wrth 11 P~ Bch.M-0193 -.. -••••••••••••••• R.E. DCPr. Pincher Ad. 3 Unet Responsible, workan o SAH'rtAGO IAHIC oon'~utiv" dJyi. ~h Lotl Re ward, Cham· " ~1tl(lnal line l'l for r writer aeek• one 7W832-Sl00 pa&ne blo od em .. bedroom collate ia ~~~~~~~~~ t.M>:tdaya Charg~ Oocller·Poodle lJPC! doa. Corona del Mar Coet.a ~ No rommuc1a call 9n-7162. 754·71112 ~.w~~>'Cl~r~edP.id /NEED and Lo p1ace yw, .11 i.::J'wti'::.r'::~lt.o:~ Bo • ....,. C M V oolJar. no tags f\n.i. lo ~~~ ......... ~~.~~ ~~~ ......... ~~.~~ ~~~ ..... !!_~~ Hatp•••••W•••ante'd••••••••••7••1•0•0• H1tp W..ted 7100 WANTED 1-·~malt• lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• shareexpenst$ of 2 week I REALLY lXJ LOV~ Accaudiwg Ct.rt. stay IJl Tahiti, Dec 22 10 YOU CAROi. Acct.\ payable clt'rk. t-ll f'RO M J F. R R Y pen.meed 111 process int Jan Sth Cull Barry vendor!>mvoicl'l!,OPan 979-1017 Pet._... ServlcH Sl60 put & l'Odulg Mui.L ll<- Energmn(C MASSAG t: lt>bJames-Llc Masi.cur Outcall 9-11, 494·5111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W\lhng lo work nex1hh: MICHBJ.E'S •OutcaO• llAM-2A M 83S 3749 BRASS KEY CATERING TO YOUR SOCIAL Afl·'AIHS EX"UISITE ~ORTS • 661 -2111 • NOW HIRING PREGNANT? Caring, t'On!idential counseling & refe1TaJ Abortion. adop ~~~pang. ~7-~ fa'¢.=! ......•.......•..... ••• Spiritual Reoder lBlSS. El Camino Real San Clemente: Fully Ile For Appl. 492· 7296 O.C. AIRPORT 'SICT"f & E5COltT •~ICI• Speclal11ln• lo bual· neasmen. Te1ldent1 ~. 70 75 ................••.• ••• m e N ee d part t 1 aecrtltanal work eves wknda. Work o ut home . Equipped w IBM typewriter .Norelco dictating eq ipent. Cat.by IH· I Moo Uaru Fri. I : 30 to 5 • or ltb • uit· I $ pre· ,,._ llUl'M,.t. lly•·lD, IOOd lacal ,.,, \,;en&liC9 fernd. 4't·szt4 739-5241 24HaS. HlfpWmhd 7 100 ••• pre ed o p Cir'911tCa .. _, •••••••••••••••••••• ---cAU. AB Didi.,, ex,per'd -• u operator want 3'hrs &U-0180 Comm'I print s h 1og m· hri> Excellent fnn111 benefits Corporate or fir.• 111 Anaheim St.id1um area Call for appt !I 12 ~Y 7_!4 ~ sooo_ Betty JI ACCOUKflttG a.EU 1be Jolly Rofer . I nr hai. a n ext'e lent up porturuty for a bnght ambitious person as a Jr Al'counling Clerk. the posiuon i• entry level Wl1h the opponunlty for ~cement . Ex as bel"ul, but DOt requl ,.ed. orkaag coodtUom ll emplO)'t-e beDeflta are excellent. Wary la diepe..s.t on ~ ltsveJ. Apt>ly •..--.oramdere ..... : n.=•...-t.c. 1'*2 tJleUe A Ye Lrvtoe. c. 92'714 OJ4tl46-0lU ACC~ a.IU I ASSEMBLERS l.1w<1J \t1..,..,1on \'1eJo c·ompan\. 1n 11r ... -.uµport mNl1<-;1 I 1·lccl r on1c!> nee<h A ~s£·mhlt•r' Rf'qu1n·' grxK1 manuCJI dr·xt1·r 1t' 1!CH1rl 1•vtt s 1g hl n c'CJ I ap1w .1 r.in<·1· & cl1•1w ndut11l 1t v. W 1lltnJ.! 11> trmn <;ood lwr1.,f1 h <>n l ~ 1 1.·~pon r,1bll' p l' r ' o 11 .., ' " ., k 1 n ~ p l' r m a n e n t t•111plo~nwnt nc·t·d i.!pplv Day shifts Call Stw1 \I ( 7141 581-3830 -J\pplJBJ)('f! Installer. must *a... ....._ * have own tranapon.auon. IWflliAiil IOOd paymg Jobs. we will ST AaT tratn. c.u 1H426-SM20. MAIUMG $$$ APT llANAGEB TODAYlll . ~55 E':e~·Jn~~ n. l>a&I)" P\lolL IMl9d6 a W lf e b Ii k p a • • I) • Pl!l'la. for our 0..Uled H-band mah:at. eap . Adverllale& Depen· C.ll MZ·IOU or "Ul ~ 'ftle ~~ ... 8l& '1151 ~et'k i bo u ld t'nJUY ~ sale9. be able ARCH DRAFTS MAN· &o lype 45 WPM i.tec rmn 5 yn exper/comm & lricJ. bave a pleu ant indlast C714J~ "rson a hty 6 enJO Y ,.,0 ,_....,.ECTURE .• • '1110rk1n1 w1lh I g r eat """'"' • 1UOUP ol P'OPlt-• OfACI Hara We offer exrellcnt com DILJVBY IOY lilsa QuielM9:" ei&Sen fl Por more infd'llOn x .......,, osla esa 642-SF Br a ndy 66 1·1235, !lr/JBa. · AloN~v-..4QIMJ4"~~ Omire lselrent or house I V lfl [. po u No t• e m a 1 e , cpl look.mg for unfum 2-3 German She phtrd. 12 MC/VISA Varit'd " inte rest work. No Sat 'b Co G0¥Ell ti-till.-Ave. CM.~~ * tSJ-0771 * ay BaptdJy growmg uilerna . I ~ --~ - --, ~--.--L.. ail'll -thuaautJc. self·1tart1n1t indlvtduaJ for poslilOD In pall,)' benefit.a tn<"lud1ng N'ewport Arcbaleclural medical. dental. lift' '" rtnn ~ ruJJ or pa rt ~ p-.t:-m PU.:S cumm1~1on• Ex have own transp lmmed penence prefern-d. I.tut 1JIX'fllfli 644·5670 bdrm w /encl yd for 2 wk.<. old Owner nust call mature dogs. Have good I e d r ef's fo r all o f U!I. sc111ETS or we 'll call the poun . ~51-9100. l.2·4 pref. Steve1 CRB>ITMO ~ 642 9281 or Jean. PROILEM allf(RS Found lrg. long hared cat Semi.retired Senior nds 2ftd & lrd TD locmtt NV w/ green eyes, ~nlblk. 2Br un/urn. S m . well 547-5402 Esta~ G raft w h l p a w !I I>• v e r behaved poodle . Xlnl Arrangedby Ali~· ;fT~ Or /Ma rin e r s , NB n!l'1. Upto~.979-6771 ,. __ ..... _I--· ~-0137 vuua .--ww -..... Wha l 1g h c l a i:is restaur I ate at lut FOUND. Blk male Lab. rnght the restrooms Vic Pacific Coast tt.¥y & they ·tF a.n attendant Warne r . II 8 7 14 J who ~ GRAFJo'IT I 847-07:J'J _ __ _ ....................... .. -.. O"rwtw.ity SOOS ....................... Semi·tet.ired gen. contr deslna assoc w /local gen. ,ontr. Can furn. some~pital. 644>-761S._ TBMSSTOU Lo ovenead. bi profits, Newpo area . O nly 121.soo. trick' 631-12166 BUSI.NESS LOANS Any Amt. Any Purpose 2nd T.D. '11 842-0455 ------- MONEY AVAILABLE any purpose. SI0.000 mm. Mr. Hargrave951-3S35 Mmtg JH. Trmt o.edi 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• for yoO" a lap. l.olflc-ct 5300 ..................... FOUND !"ace Pellnese type Bm .blk. whallhair Awf'O>t 1'1'l Vi<' tJC.M 31th & S1erks !>48·2f6 Pound 16 9 79 KJtt.e ap l :ouMO ADS prox 6 mo. M . blk/11lvtr Tabby w/wht neck. Vic IDE FREE Harbor H 5'48~0 _ TD's "" .. ~ound Cockauet b1rt ... c Pn ..• &all· ~· o u n l e I n \I I Y CASH FOR neap ... 955-3454 • Brkhrst/Slaler 961 SMI HOMEOWNER LOANS 642-5671 cv11 ARRANGED r&.in-d--l'·e-m-ale ~den SI0.000 to $250,000 L b ~ n r •AMORTIZED tor Found a pet? caJI ' ab . a t ea c •INTERF.STONLY Anima l Asslstan c.'i Goldenw esl.~ -· - •SHORT TERM 1,e ........ s:rr 2273 no c •e f'ound Engh s h ell er price ror a uick sale. Call Bob Williams-Agent --· · ~ · 546--2 o 540 iii ~tobli•be c u11tom 731.m1 or960-1957 Found or f0&t a pct? Call pup 17 · ·.r -tl'Ollb1 ~'lo San -Special Pals Hotline Lost. Bassett )ound <Jemeoi•. Priqincludes 2 day approval fu~d m 714/972-1235,2131258·7398 ··Dai s Y '·Yi t' · aewU.~-.Sequip· days . N o p o 1n l 1 Wllson/Placenl/· C M. romll. _, 000 $10.000-i?S,000 2nd T,. LoBt Siamese mixed male 5ot8 3134 ~ A.AllACH TIS loem. Udo Newport ,. c al. Blue e yes, tan .:.. - 307No.EIC• Real fTS.7585.Zthrs. wtaome grey markings . Lost . 10/10 ises & SANQ.EME 125,000 2nd Tt> wa,ed REWARD. 968-878S CalcuJator <Jn ses I 976 4tJ.2tOO from pvt. pty. 611 .... _ "··II Presidio Dr Dra ke ?M/64.5-3883 Want 1'UI) ""' &42-5678 Collt.a Mesa J_ FOUND. La.hale dog, blk • gray-~ted. H .B area. 538-f!! llM E I WI~ DpR NEW DI · -LIN E FOUND· ~In a bot· Ue ne~r ford and r>ier Cal nd tdent:lfp, 979-3063 I 24 Hr Outcall Service PRE LAW student needs 125.<XX>. Will do anything Leg al. Confide ntial DVM. P 0 . Box 3242. N.8 .92663. 'THE" ELITE ESCOIT SERVICE .. S&HE:RS WENOVIDI . ..... ".....,..,.. 972-9904 24 HIS rk (' h Account.a payable cle N e wp o rt B t'a Mort&aite Farm hai. 1 m mediate opening for al' cou nt» puyable clerk Experienced Must tyl)t' 40 wpm & operat.t' 10 key by touc h Good t• o benefits & 11ulary f'or appt call 640·4580 u t :m. E OE ACCOUHTltfG CL.Bk Proc.-ess 1nvo1ces. handle mail, IJgbt typing, a1>S1.1>l w arcout1nR duties 540·7639 A Kendav1s Ind EU E ll<rl W 17th St, Santa Ana ---------~ CIHt MASSAGE AGUUMODElS ESCORTS OUTCAUOMLY o.,. ...... ... Ul-2140 GOLDa.GllL Lonely" Need to talk? Fooe·A·Friend Club now ronninc. 558-2441 for m fo. Male& FEMAl.fo: •FOXY LADY* <>trn::ALL ON I. Y •972-1 Ill• "COMPATillUTY" ''Open Lilesl)'le" people s.incere warm relallona Couples c:all 750--0674 Singles caU 750-0677 Recorded Mae. any hr A French ))ell &ht LEMAN DI LAIUI mcoRTS 3' HRS 9153-laO 1138-0104 •LORI'S• WE'RElfl OPENatbnOAILY We are ~klnit a reliable person with an aptitude for numbers. typing, & caJcul.awr s kills to JOID our Accounting Ot>part ment Some accounts re ceavable e x peru•n<·e helpful EilJOY UCt'llPnt oomi><u~y benefits mclud 1111 a free meal per day Apply 9am noon. Mon Fri, Personnel MAUIO'TI HOTB. 900 Newport c;e nter Or Newport Beach Equal ()ppor Employer ACCOUNTS PAYAIUQ.111 The Jolly Roter. lnr .. ts a profitable growln a lnfJd.lum sl1e company with excellent benefits & wcrtioa c:oodillona. We curftlll11 have an open· 1111 for a Ac:counta Paya · ble Qerti. Salary ii com men1urale w llh ex· perieoce. Send r111ume ar ..,.,ty In penon: .,,..., ........ 110'2Gufet~ .\venue lrvine, Ca 1112714 ll53-9laO us.-0104 , _______ _ Sebool f« e...u. w.rn '11owToU~e Wllb Your ,.....,., ••• 545-1732 Accounung Department an corpor a t e head quarters ln Irvine. Good l y pan g ai 1 0 ke y capa b11llles req uired Excellent o pr><>rtunit) fM ad vancement. out stand.lnlt compeni.ataon &: heneflL'> in a plea:.ant workinit env1ronmf'nl <.;on tact Per sonntd 567 fml E 0 . E ACCT OI R ECTOH Uruon Home Loans Thl· nation!> large!>t hum•· loan brokerage firm ~ LndJVJdWil W lrUl>l deed or stock broke r u e exper ror invt-!llml'nl counseior J>05•llon Calif real est.ale he reqd ~nd rmwne t.o 17$52 Beach Blvd. Ste D. H R 92646 Acctg Bkkpng TEMPORARY l~1ster today to work on vanous al'counung & boo kkeeping ass ign menls Work c lose to your home. Acctg clerks, bookkeeper s. accoun t.ants are needed thruout Orange County. Call us for more UlformalJon. Robert Half's ecco•t• ' 2333 No Broadw1ty llD>, Coldwell Banker Bide .. Sant.a Ana 1714tUMIOl Admln/Prof. Adlt s . S&cnil. aJt. lnc. pit. f/t Ow n bu s Mitt lnltMnamt. 1 'ntf /local SlOO refund. invest. 55HOS2 Adolmcun Urut needs full Ume RN days • nagbts Pwt Ume RN days PM & niJhta. LYN'S • LPT's tuO " put time AduJl! nt oeedl C!Wce RN· P911WA U.oe6~Umt RN n l i b t I. A p I! I y C.SUtrano by the Sea lfoA*a.l,•510a not e.seauaJ - Pleai.elall for mler111"v. I Per..onnel f>t>Jll ASSf:M 6LERS 642 5678, l!xt Z77 1 WAREHOliSI'.: ,_ .... ~E CO .... ST 1-'ACTORY ~ "" , •i.1-;cn<.0N1CASMK DAil Y '9L~T 1 · ~.iUJe or No Expen encc l:ll W H<ly St I op Pay Paid Wt:>ekly Co~ta M l!MI MORIB.L l:.Qu.t! Oppurtunit> I rc·mporary St.>rv1ce:. __ ~p~r-I lrv1m· 752-6661> -----~ l!XH·; M F ADYEITISING !,~ST S llOP OR D EH SALES I l1dk. w train. Lile typ I mx. package order:o. 1 TI!(' Daily Piiot h.i' .1n d.1y work week Paid 1mmed1alt' 1ipf'ning for .1 I ~·nt'f1L' 979· 7660 Mon ... a I esp er 'Ion v. 1 t h 11lur. new-.paper dhplu) Jll Autl ,,_. 1 ,.,.. vt·r11 o;1nl': experit'nrc 1....,.w er wanto::u. will G oud ~el&r\ cum 1 train. mu.'tl have dnven. nu.'ISKn>. Jnd · ~iu·ellenl lu ~1 cellent gruwlh •IP AlfTOM(YfJVE fr1nii:e henef1L'I ... 11 I ponwi1t1t-s for a pt>r'!on SYVICl WllTltl wi th care('r amb1t wn1> F.xpencnced prefen-ed Call for appoantnwnt I t;ooo mt>d.acal insurance ~ Cocnt plan, profit shanng & Daily Pilot paid vacat1oos. Apply an 714-642-4321 penon to Ken Campbell. bt277 Affas t::.qual ()ppty Em plyr Ortslw-l'ty...otrth ----292§ Harbor Blvd. ~arm COb~A M ESA Mature 1nd1 v 1du al needed u a Central St11 Alllomollve IJOl1 Operator Npt Heh Parts r unner w I ll bkkp1t area. Plei..~ call 631 5164 Elq>er. good driving re ask for Steve cxrd. Steady Job. oppor -for advancement. AppJy Ambit!owl7 Be your own m person 1'1 E . 17th St, bou Work your own hn1 <: M Details call~ Sl22 ----------AUTOMOTIV E AM~ Senlc• IOOY SHOP PBX ope rators for a MAMA&H telephone an s we ring Experienced onl)'. Good Mf\'lce upenen.ced or medical U\Suran<-e pla wUl lr.U.. FL&ll tame or profit 1har1n1 a paici part ume stulll avaala· vac:alion1 Call Nick ble. Days. afte rnoon Vwult al ewn&ngs or grave y ard Must &e able to work Atlea l'IOIJle weekends. T1PU'I. ~ 35 wpcn. required M1ny 2'1126 HarboiBlvd. co benefit. available COSTA MESA PlelMc.allMcm·Fri. &46-ltl4 FNhioO lllaod area eo.ta ll••m• Airport .,.,. Al!J'OMO'l1VF. Ca1154M230 ... all1hg S.. M/F E.O.E. Tdepbone •PKe ...... ..;..._ _____ ..;..._ IOOYSHOP SICID'AIY Some experience helpful. utM \.YPUal, anawerlna ~~Ir teoeral omce work. Con\act David ~at Aidvstblnt e•~· ftec . Annwl.n& NrVic:e needA 1'.t1 trade pubUca"°" operator• lor v1rlou1 •tll'OUftd noor ~ lblftat If ~ Uke a Job lltiit be ~1-. 1114 a wD • eba1Je1111•. apply _,,., dOeilr Coqenlal tn Pl'10fl at 228 f ore•ti t t m o 1 p b • r e . f:!.Bcb. Alt for Caro 8 a I a r y + e om · ---·------m.+..._. .. • '"••• ..... Qill4lil1 btWll I a If you waat your adwutt.. l..l'll. l'llU Immordlao iGI maa•&• lo roach 9.-i mon J*>Pl• at lowt r SllL .._ lielDI with 1 COit. Claullled 11 the OIAlf PltatO ... illedAd. ~~JOI Call Now! NABERS ~ 2600 H.\lt>Or M Cotr• Mc\.\. 540-9100 • • . . I . ~ • I .,, . Cit DAH. v PtU>T T!!ur!d!r. Ooto-.' n, '"' ... Wms f 11 H . ~ ...... -...... ~~ 7tOI ~W_,.. 7100 ... Was• 7111 • ~~ ..... ?!!' l~llM1*•7'•• .. • .. ·.,-'•.t 0 ·-.?!~ ~?.~ .... !!~ OOMIT a u .... S!J ~ .! DIUVC'= ~ .. :·:~·:::: ::_ -ri •••• .. ••••••••• ..... ••••• .. ••••-•••• ,...,~n•• ;;; ~Jml!lllll!lllll!!I._. ___ llMl.Jltl'9C--.. --r '""' ...__ ~ cal CoatractofJ 0...ral l llrl ottlce, •N•'•ll• .......!,8.;.llU!ll~llim•=.••e.•, a.te.a --=,..-.rt•· t ••CJ· tf•rt ~·.apw,: be1f1aer, llt• l1P•, 19wca~J **I.I•..,.,.. Al· l•IOela =·i~~~ mO..U ilOI.' on· vacation. hoJ~i • ;;;;::=mo.()( .....,..._ r:::.-:..-:a ~.~~ •••ALOtflCI ... !.. on DllJVElTOPPAV -::.~Ha . loquiu ~------ OliUllMMa .. AaTT1M8 ~ ~"ifuat be •••• ::..,.,'..'7:C.::. tn.:t COOIC l)a19, Perm•· ;'.a':.e°:~ ltan., Plet'tronlc.;;~~I ·~·.-:.~= pttaop lo,.,,:~. =-~~-~:"1~, aia.-u <ton •frl =~ ·~~~~,~~ MORE.WITH atott'a-. •a111 r.-n. .... lllltid ..._la U.. i,,_.;.. --"-m ... •• lron1c: lo1tr ... • EXPU!ENC£ ..... ,...y~ Ket'• ..__. cmo.. A'f::• i':v":"'" --..-. " .. SGlrtOftu:. p.,. b I e . m •••• I Hiil llwluJd ..... II· • •OMm~Oll ~ir""' Catttl r opp Varied ActlvitJe9 ft-ta.. 1"'· co. tnv rorunent, W ww-a, ..._ car aet·read ...,.,.u.. P'OIMJoe ope bl ~ 1Jdlla, llMtalth· Worts--.;-lpm. Jcco. -..nu-wk. cl01e • •••in .. ....,.. .. 1 Dliee Pt. FOf' Job ln· 9ifltt• • be able to •COOi• = 1cJ..bome. ly with NIUor eo&J.neen Q)mpaoypaJdbeoefiu ....,.._,...hi,...._, worlr Mo-n-rrl, morn· Ell:peri....t t'OOk oyater uC.. 7,.i!~.~u •IClltopp, toupud ywr l!latablilbed OM .. ,. prerorrtd. A*lorMoralu. ..... AIPl1 Ill peraon, blltpenouel ormf.M0.?000~71 knowlecJ1e ••d ulary 'MlolelaJeCompany P1 • ~ '*J h•·ooon, lllon°11'rl , •Mlc:ro·proceuor •P· Callbelween8-2 diem. ... J• W DM•llPINO 0..DK Pwwl. Need lmmtdlatel)' tor DmTAL AISlsr;;;; f;!t' •bfacb area 414.WJallnNewport Al,.'°"· Sae.,J•1 -~ ~ aot MAMIOnHOT& ...._olucitlQlkt:W wtcha1JUle._ . t.lftla.°r.'.for -v• mt._,.t'O a.-.~. DNRpor(Ota&erOr ~ ~.~~u:::e TICHMCIA.NI GENERALOFFICE ~. •l. •• S.nlc1 ~::U~~ · NewpariBNdt, &.0£ IHT~ Cu 1~ Exp. 0.2 yn, 1ehool: mil OPPICITIAINH COUWILI. ...._ llllOIMTW. 1 MOltNA .. CO. -~~!!!!~!!!!~~~· On Newport Bay you belp? 541-51'""' orotber Permanent put-ti me DENTAL-Career .'!Y -.oa TICH pllition. Excellent typ. IOC191&• A Coldwell Banker Co. An Elual Opportunity Empl())'e' MOWAID 'Ca I.,., DDw•O.U• Nl:W'P()RT'Bl!ACH f' /C for T1.1aUa CPA Firm. Mu.at baH ea ........ *°" f~Hll 'l'-e •1.s..d ume AUTOllOTIVE •IUlt aalary r q1.1lr• SHUnU IUS ...... '° p O. lOIS. .... 1'11lin.----- Mmt ... .., llOOd e~ln& ~ full char1c record • valid Calif for ama11 D\11 co thru Giwr'a 11ceme. ~ K triaJ bal w /lmld(l ol •c OlmpbeU. cru•la. A I R_1 A I P . .._ ~. lob coauna For ~,. lmroed oPllllinl. Jou of ,, ... varlet1. exper ne<' Harbor Blvd. Vahee eorp, 646-0206. for COSTA M~A biterview. Blbysttter (Of' 19 mo ojd CAFETERIA WORKERS girl. Npt Hla area cw in all depta, cashiers, ~home. ltloa Ir aaJad mailers, cook 'is 2:3M, alao other tlm helpers, line servers, asoeeded.&&s.9258 6AM·2:30PM Mon-Fri. . Nwpt Bch area nr Bllyaitt.in1 & Ute hous Fashaoo lale. (71') clean1ng. Grandma-type 581.sJ40for interview for 1Yr met. P tr. 9U-0&96. · Referencesreq. Cafeteria Employees, daya, sal ad exper. •BANXIN--·0----• ~pfuJ. Good beneflu. Cail for appt. 731-5100, TB•• extae. Commercial bank Teller ------.--- experience neceuary for C A R P E N T E R · S :=1W1'on~o~~:! HELPER, band tools, Q.l!RICAL •SICllTAl•S WU 6 Without SH •TYPtsn •PIX OPaATOI •A.CCTQ. .. S •IOOICal8'8S *llYPUNCHOPB •a. .. s ALSO •&••..ULAIOI •'ftHI ASSIMILHS •ftA.CICEltS lcnl & short Lerrn. boU day & vacation pay. fbpilaliuUon avalla '. VOLT , "·'f ll1A'1 .1 11 1 o 14M741 31M8Campus Drive <Acrou from Jolin Wayne Airport> Equ.aJ Oppor Employer quires. cour teous ~amust,2yrs work q uaJi ty aervl ce t _1S4Dl7 ________ --------· cwtomers. CAA WASH HB.P We oiler a lood salary fr benefits & exceJlenl worttnc coadWooa. F\JU Ir Part Time u•over llETRO CAR WASH ail) Harbor Bl. CM Applicanu 1hould COD· CllSbier·fuU Ume, exper Uld pre'd. Ap_ply in penion: Wells Supermarket _.,...AU.Bl 33f7 East Coast Hwy. 714-752-0600 _Cd_M. _____ _ lbt23 CASHIER for quality 'MAJ«JFACTUIER! men's st.ore. Full time, • .&...., expr'd pref. Call Mr. ~ Tigert for intervie w 1201 Dove Street NB Garrys & Co. 759· 1622 119 Equal Oppor Employer Fashion Island. CA5HJF.RS FUii lime, Banlung; will train , G 30am Southwest &nk requires 3:00pm, Newporter Inn, t: x pe r1 enc e d Bank 644-1700 Sandy Goodman Personnel for M1ss1on Ext558. E.O E. Vie.lo. El Toro & Laguna Beach offices Please CA.SHIH <LERICAL CtalSTMAS MONEY file Clerks, l to 2 month asaipment.s m lrvloe Openings now. Top hour ly pay + wedlly chances on a trip to Puerta Vallart.a for two. CAU.NOW! 557-0045 Cf\-Llr\:. TIMl'OllAPY PlllSONNll ~llMCI S 3723 llrch Sfrfft Hewpori a.aca. _,_..._,,,.._......_.,,. ............ _, contact Joan Gore, OYer 18, exp. pref'd. Co. Oenc.al 4WMT71. bene. lletro Car Wash, Aja & 4HML 0FC lledrinc _ail) __ Hu-'_bor--....;;B;..;;.I;,,:. .. ...;:C.;;;M;;.;,· __ , P8'm p tr G.O. Lovely M "-Teler, ,_.., ________ = ~~·ty=: "-T.,ler, LtNJ•• .itCASflEIS rtlin1. figure aptitude Excellent eom pan y for biebly motiva"'°" Exp 4 yra and AA or lnl skills required. Call benefits 4r wortrlaai ron· thuaialtJe RDA. 2 yra. equiv. "I> between a:ao A.II. and dltliaN Apply lo pereon pa, frtnp beoefita, , fHSPICTOI S:OO P.M .. uUor Dian . weekd&199am-4pcn & bonus ayatem. Var Esp w/PC board aa· 759-0653 HOUSEJCEIPER . Lo~· ICIYPUMCH .... in&. ar1&11ed person to manage 1ouaebold Ir ToNllU~~-L~~ care for I Utlle boys. w.... UI ....,, • ..,... .. With MD. Mom 6 Su .Juan C.~•lraoo •• lawyer Dd .. F\Jll·Ume. CaUlll·ml. It Amyx llll W. C.... Hwy hie 11111& U'I a fun ori eembly Ma a,a:rt ..... ed ofc. Call us at 547 · W ASSIUta a Cea 1 Olfc 6 Typist, SUrt --~~~~~~~jDIDal otftce oeeds patExp ti mo, cep, of quah· ~75. For Appt. Call '~ time ci.t typist o~Y wk m_32lfl0 ______ _ drive. ~b. bveln. In IU1'CH9t _,.. ....vvn.-> WIU train Part typing akills reqwred & C""1. '45-0145 Gu1 f'rklay for intenor or fulJ.ume Rest. 211198 attention to delall. Ap -decorauni shop. Open & _lrv.~.S5l·571o Mature pe•oo pre- Npt Blvd CM pro.'l 12-1~ hours per ELECrRONIC cl08e store 9-5, handle week. fl B. 84.2-U31. ASSEM BL y c u s t o m e r s 1 n HOUSEKJEPER . Lavein f.-red. full Ume, xlot for eldely lady lo S.A. ~ 4 wftiq coed.. May bwe olber day Bayvtew Oav. Hosp. e!DPloneat. Call aft. ~ Tbu,. St. C .M. COOK TuesthruSut llam-7pm Ideal l<'h t!dule. Ex-celleot company benefilS which Include: medicaJ. dental, " Ufe Insurance. profit sharing " pension program. Apply lo peraonto: J.C.rlNNIY 24 ,_..,.,. ....... Newport Beach E.O.E. M/F Cot.mter Penoii, PIT, af. temoons 1·5, & Sal. Stu- dents, Housewives & Ret1nid welcome. No ex· per necflSSary. 646-1735. COlmter Girl experienced in quick print shop. Sir Speedy, 3744 W. Warner Ave., Santa Ana. Call f'19.z:Sl all 4pm. __ _ COUNTE R LADY drycleaners. 3 dars week Located 10 Newport Beach. Ca II ~7621 COUPLE WANTED to help m&n.ae am. bw11 - ness part·tJme. Must be willing lo learn. 642.2247 CUSTODIAN Inside & out Priv Sch <.; M basacl 'y clng & yrd <'arl! Retired OK 642-0411 CUSTODIAN Part tame for llarhor area church Late aftl'r noon & eve?>. Call t"rcd 631.., Data Wry Opn mpany locllted nor salespersons absence. DIMTAL an net'da full lime Duagn fr coo11 truct Periodonasl needs full ~"' fo r mnf& shades. some record lime assistant. Ex-I . Earn while you ~-WUJ trau>. Call panded duties mponuru. .s...s. Many benefits 613-7830 Custom Shade & _6PM 8751180. 542-1.IMt. _ecz._311G5 __ .E ... )_._E_. --- Ly. X-ray certi cate re· 31132. Dr@er)' Shop, 3S3S E . q\i.red. Experience pre-a.st Kwy Cdm Terred. "Excelle:'ll ISCIOW ' · Rouadzeper. live-ln.•----"------ beneflta. Salary open ~~~le poaataons Girl f'raday. part tame. lrvint. References .~~~ flB. ana. 842-6631 otfit"';ret.ary & Tract approx 20 hrs week . En&Ua• speaking pre· EDER • The Mao Aaaresaave co Houn flexible. Lite typ-rened. Ml&St dnve. Non fant1Ulc field of Call -eoeflu. F. 0 . E 1111. Neat appearance. smoker. Care ol 3 yr. old hydl=-edlnt ls offered · DENTAL HYGIENIST Garden Grove Office 638-7111 Dental Assistant, X-ray lie required. Garden Grove olnce. 638-1111. DENTAL ASSISTANT · Chairside 4 day work week. Xlnt.pay w /bene. Pnv. Npt. Deb. olface. R.D.A. reqd. 64&-4868 DENTIST experienced Great opportunity. Dr Flaozer , 642·0112 or 6"-f687 DB'UTYC&.IKI Clerical position avail. immed. Reqwres I y r clerical expr. and type 40 wpm. Start.in& aal $3611 tJi .wtJy. Olll 833-0411, ext 332 for appt Orange Co unt y Harb o r Mwuc1paJ Court. Equal ()pport 1':mp'!r Design c..•nlcr, yng ~ale:. ass ·1. p rr ~mt• ex per Shores Jntcnor... 642-22SS DESK CLERK' l'UX S:.111 Clemente Inn 1<!5 W Avenida t:s pland1a11 , San C.11!m DISllWASllER Part 1.lme. 1111m to :Jpm Hours some what rll•x1 ble. 0 .C. Alrport url'tt S4 ~Call Ron 2 Lo Spm DOG GROOMER Ex DJcrJ Street, Calif SS . hr R WR Assoc, girl. Ute housekeeping. to I tr 2 men. Lea"' ~ce. ~ZIM2 Newport Beach. 97S.l2A4. ~. abou bydromulchin1 EXEC wiUli larp laodacape co · :c. · Im med Want.eel: fUU lime live-In In flu . Viejo. Good openlnhra exper tiiou.eteeiier. s days, for beo. All poeiUom run =r\tldual able to GOOD JOBI two 4'ckrly people. So. tid • permaneot. Good Typin: pon1lbllity s.mor-CitiJem men: 2 Hun1101ton Be ach. drvto1 record nee . comm ?uat Salary ~per week, car Call 9IZ-Oel. 7&41Slfor1Aterview. Oemente xper Sao STJ.Z21t llwMwlves wanted PIT LEGALSEC'V eiiply at ?' Call or ~~~~~~~~ Suales. ,.Curl Wet -for c.afcteria work, 9 1. ~ for busy UUga , • So El r ..... ..a..1 "-' p Pb11MSUl2fora,..... ,\on farm an F'asha on Oa_JJUDO_ Re&..-.;;.__. .._ ...,. .. c .uao1gnet I aste """ -~ up Artut 4i free-lance Mm lyr Hper, Fabric Cha~vl~ arllat for advert ls IMhfEDIATE Conuct Jane t at : inc for ma ent & 1n11pubUsblnl co. For p _...,..TIME ~.-·-----sales pas. P or re 1 n le r v 1 e w c a I I . ~I IN MAJD need min ~~~I Mra m•HSUU.2 OPEHINGS 1·2 yr exp .. free room • GltOOMa FOi HSI> on Saturday & &I· brd. 15o40tmo. Call Barry FACTC>aY~y DOGS <M&-morrunpt.odelJvt' BNf1s:z,11.ll3. 91op trainee 1~a"' MU6t oo aJJ breeds F1 ut( DAILY PILOT openu1g for ngbt~ale dry & 1c11sor fan a:.h to our carneu alJ!oit Excellent co ny 642·S522or~l.99+ have llood dn\•ane re Live-In Hoiuekeeper- benellla & mont re ----cord. laritl' st~aon Cook Oriental between Views Dellronlc rp GUARDS W1l£OO or \an Hooly + ~;t.5:, ~d. Some ~-f'\.111 & part lime All maleal(l' l..:Jll larry ·~~~~~~~~~ FASHJONSAI.~ area " U nif or m s Sede}at I ALT t: RAT Io N ~ fum15hed I\~"~ 21 ur 642-4]J, C:ASIUt:llS uvc:r lk't..lr~ wt·koml' - John lfoJCan 'i. woml• "lt.> t-xpt.·nencl' nt-e App lnsuJataon an!ltal~" for 'i.-·1alty ,tort• wall 01 ly l 'ruvcr,.al Pmt1·<1u1n l'll"W <UlSlnJ<"llOI an Or 0 1·l ol>t'r 2\l tll' 1 ~ni<·t'. 1226 W Slh l'l) ·1raaneei.start at N t• w 110 rt " 1-· a , h 1., !'il.n't'l Santa An.t In M !°):! hr I; .. ~ l>ent·f1t.i. blJJld "nlt·r oi~nani:to·r.1t•"" lw..1Ur.. !.I I.! & 1 ~ Gtlll'o Jn,ulalun. Lag for \Uffi(•n 111 '•lli•._\1unthn.i f't1 ltl -. 5illfi'IUJ :.t.oc:k. (J,hacr, Ul.,plJ)' &unir1·-...-.er .. follu...,1na. ~~ altt-rutvn d~p11rtm1·nt, ('aJIM47100wt•ekduy 10 ~lmn :n Jal for rt'nt •I T~ to 4 for •PVt ' ~ ,. \' I 11 a If. l' F" t r f''lhng & le.-n rallnJC & l(WUI Beach. t94·JWO d attn'> m.'437 ·~· 111 persen r v1ew only. Haar Lo. "-cetlOr FHA VA·Conv. Min 2yr c 1per Contact Lee <>Uen 754 1801 Orange O>asl Savings & Loa.n. Y. 0 E ---- MACHINISTS Cla.~' A I.st & 2nd Shaft la~ & mall Up Lo $10 hour t benefit:. Cull 991 1331 Maacb. apply The Inn at Latun•. 211 N. Coast Hwy. t.aiuna Beadl .... office. •Jbr X1nt opportwUty at local u M -· Savmes1r1.oan.Mature. TDTE ~f::,cc::i1/~:~Y responsible persons to Stez.24 642 1470 fill Uiese positions Mu~I MARKETS type 50 wpm Many c·o -benefits For appt call Uerk -- lfnmedjate operunits for akllled DE operators. ~m locaUon. Ex· CllUent •lartin1 waae .. e~yer paid benefits which include dental plln. Opportwuty for ad· vaocement Apply to General Medical Center. 2121 Town Center Pl Anaheim 921106 714 1937 OI HO E () t-: penenced for new store 1n Laguna Niguel IM'7·54J3 , s:U-9679 Domesllc F'e mal e fa c t ory pacugtrs. sus per hr lo stall Ment raise'! lS37 MU1r0v1ti Ave N B S«-5125 fJe,,. 70 Fasbaen -~NB ""°'RESSER •---F'etnale l\t~ndant, l•> "'' i.on ~.,, IN SU tA NC ~ PERSOl'AL LIN E S l'ND!:RWRITER • Nin 2 yrs exper T>f.tng req James 6 Co rv Call M-.anoe 7S2-0'JllO E 0 E s1~t dhabll!'d wom1-n --. Owner You.al(, M u II t d r • v t• I 1 t <' ~H' !>alon Tram lnMirantt hovM..1cu-µ1 nl( ~ ~IO'J 11111 "rdm 646-7197 'lici'*-~w t'•n launth a ~ man want· , " ed. labnr dispute In pro-d gnu. Pf.as-lies. 1500 E . Cbe-atnut. Sant11 Ana. ~Bob Kendall e r M1F'1H i...oy nt>"' care,·r whale ; ou •' .· .~ Mike ()perunr now available Dupl1 cat1og Clerk . S ... 'DDlir.•&CI( for fuJ tame assistant Operallon.'i Dept MaJor """ ..._"" mana8fl"&~• Ir 3r4. Stack Brokera,_ ,,.""'1 SAVINGS shaft. NO~xperien<'e nee. near O.C. Airport Hrs DATA PIOCHSO !';eeded Soml'fme lo help t•lderly lad; with m••J I vrc.-parata o n lt l(ht ht)US('k~pan~ &. ~hOtJIJlnl-! w !he evenings Cu.tl 14.u' informatio n. lJpJohn Healthcar e Service:.. 752-0993, f''IU: llLf':HI\ l'.art F1.1r!>" I MAH kt..o("p)our l>(•~·nl ]Oh' 1---------u~ mml'<I OPt'OUl~ -' ht-, e t'f'tront<'' 111 a.·..w,ffttt... 1-,~~"" fllMMWutoMANfffMA~fltC1IE----------~:r11 TiiTTw.1 M.ar111 t• 1~11.,,,{ton:l Uulot'' (;roup wit. Iraan )OU & Rerulurant <'ham needs 49'7·3363 Wetrain.Start$3.10to$4 Hpm. Call Mr. DuRan E.O. E .... M I F'. per hour. Advancement 54().8121 BanJdngtS&L oPPOrtunity for manage--a-...,--A--R>o..1-Elt-... L ment positions to S.S.50 -_........,. "" TB.La per hour tr qualified. For fUll lime, permanent F\illerton S & L seeking more information " in· Pollition. eat. firm. Type full lime t.eller for N.B. tentew, 4195-9950 or call SOwpm, 10.key, filing, op· office. Typing 30wpm re· 714/537·4840. Will in· pt'y for advancement. q'd. Exper pref'd b\lt wlll terview on Saturdays by Ouiaty Foodservice Ent. train. Call <714)871-044 ~t. 751-5743 for appl. E .0 .E. co·-··• n....... Employer -----------...::-=--------• ......... "'""'" Oerk Typista. Prior office Banldng ~ence, good typing Cc rcW T...,. OUld care for 4 mo & 8 yr llldl.la fr ability to operate Experienced old boys, Mon-We d . 10 key deai.rable. Good 3:»S:30Pld, occaa. Fri. co. beneflta. For appt. Cn4lt Cltecker N. Mesa area. 557-3182 ca II e 4 o • 4 s 80 ext Experience helpful but aft 7PM · 312..E.0.E . not u.tndat.ory • Ute typ. ----C-J•_il ____ C-o-c k-t a_i_l_W_a_lt_r_e_s_s_ inl 19 required. Spani&h speak1n1 pre' UHITEDCAUF ilJlni•er/Dftiper ferred. Over 21. 7PM· 1.,._ Career opportunity 2All'Jbun..Sun. Apply in 2Z20cean Ave. available to Wented in· person at14 S. Fa1rv1ew. Laguna Beach dividual with night COD· Santa Ana. Ask for Mary tro1 &storm design back· • -· 494-6546 IP'CIUDd. Apply ln person UJU. £.0.E. with resume & work --COtL--WIHO---.-S-- Bartler Styliat to manag samp&es to Mr. Fuentes Eect.ro mechanical U · pert·time. 631·9577. Tues· al Robert Bein, William semblers: Fn. ~ Sat/ i>S. eves. F•·o1U1Aasoc. 1401 Quail Growing eolenold rom. 681·3028. St. Newport Beach. pany has immed. f /lime Bart.ender, full Ume. App Cleani";I: ly in person to: 22771 Now hirinc pe~nel for Ceo&n Dr, El Toro. housecleaning an Sad· -----------1 dleback Valley area. llLUN& Cl.RIC Full-part-time. Great 1YPina & bllllng or in· start.Ina wage. Regular YClfcee~ for fast growing raises. Call Sandy al Lhe flll'Diture mfg. eo. Ex-Jl\nal Toucl'a. 951-7008. cell. typlna a muat. Must know 10..key by touch. Good company beneftu. ec.taM .. uea. Ask ro H!len.557~ CLalCAL Securities processing secretary for Fashion lalud Investment firm. --------~Good skiJJa, ability to ..,./l'YPtST w o r II: w I I I I h t n.tiD CP.4 farm. Good ~-CaJJ 640-0123 opportaaitJ 4 beDefllll aertc.J "aUfted person. Teani1 Club requires --------1 1*t time clerk with Ute 8)ll buiWer with Sood lldUI. Tbun t.bru Sat & C91Pdlbf back"irouncl ...... ii ......... 9-5. c.u Sam L. Moue Co. fonppt.MS-7158 •JIG C,_.ICAL BOOIDLCEPER • lmmed. T7pln1, telephone & ~for Mii motlvat. mile. Accurate typln1 & ed ia~hid•al. Pu II ..__..•bHilv a mwit ~-u, ••PG91• -'# • fioo •I ~•ly 4 Girl Office ~ :ot ...,..0 1 ~j oXlnlc .a1~ ~,... ..... locllld· ~d'·8=: i a I co I J • e t i o a 6.Auoe. ~. SoUd co. 71'/MJ.1896 .... far ........ ------_...;..;;..,__ ~--,.,., .. _....._ __ ~Xllll-ce. bene. o.&la om. .. eget". Ta~t. Corp. 0 .0 . ----C1 9.ICAL PMnTla. openings for trainees &tor exprd. personnel. ~oi;k with s mall pre· c1s1on parts . good manual dexterity a must. Gd co. benefita & worklng conds. Salary open, Apply In person or cont.act Charlene at S.R. ENGINEERING &M Producllou Pl, NB 64M514 Collection Expedltor . POlitiom are now open lor our collectiona dept. e11per helpful. 530-1661 &0.E. COME JOIN US! dYIMraY OPllATOIS Expandla1 firm bH opei*'O for data tnt.ey QPlnlklr. l yr. m.Ui U · per. required. Full " part Ume houra av all. for 1JL 2Dd. or hb1ft and /or weekendt. Some tem· (IOl'ary poslUont avaJI. Ollll f« appt. SAFEGUARD ltJIDfDI llYIT&lll IMC. •r..,...M.c.11. -- Two CRT Operator s needed immediately for proj ec t an Newport/Co11ta Mesa area. Call Pam, 556-1520 Day Bartender, ex· perieoce only. apply in person. bet 4:30·5:30 Mon-Fri. J P. Muc 's 10142Adams Ave, HB. DB.I Part Lime weekdays on· lY. Fa.st depend•ble lady (or sandwich-dell shop Newport Buch Ms.&401 bel4:30 DEUVERY. Auto c11rner needed AM & P M La1una Beach , So Laeuoa. Dana Pt. San Oement.e areas. Depen· dable car a must. Ca II The Reaist.er. 95 l • 71 LJ Delivery P /Ume AM . L.A nmes. $100 per week. Lquna Bea<'h. 494-8496 DELIVERY Person. LA nmes car routes, COsta Mesa t Hunl 'g B <'h . :J.6am. $350·'400/mo + bonus. Also need Carrier Supervisor. 546-4481 or 964-411182 Delivery /warehouseman Full lime, work 1n warehouse 6 pickup/· deliver articles In <'Om· = van. Must have driving rttord & be over 18. 64J.1.380 DElJVERY MAN · f'or early AM. L.A. Times home delivery route Econo car required AduJt.s Only. 2\.'iHr per day. No collectlnlf MIOMo. net lake home +1a1 allow+ bonu .. Wtllltmimw, 0 .0 .. H.B mz.sru. DILIYllY We are looktna for •n outaoinl penoo with a ._, drivtni record to rmke dellveri• ln com· ehtcle, full limo available. M·F , lease ap9ly in penon Mon U\ru 1'rl 8-5. DRAFTING Arch-Struct .• 2 yrs man exp. Floyd E Weaver . Structural EoJ(r. 3839 Birch, N.8 . 566-&5() •DIAFTSMEH * Eirperienced·full time or part time. Career opport Exlnt beoef. $5/hour MWC U&btmg ltsl S fUtchey. SA 547 -1643 Drapery Workroom. seamstress Deeded. Near OC Airport Salary open 968-8'35 Driver, lite deliveries , Harbor area, neat ap· pearance, good dnvlog l't!C'Ord, fuJJ Ume Master Blueprint. 234 Fischer. CM. :wo.-4174 DRIVERS · Checker Cub good driving re<'o rd Mature Individual s . 493a!B. Driver/Gardener, com· binatlon person. Have valid Calif. II<'. Good driving re c o rd . Minimum age 20. Apply P e nnysave r . 1660 Placentia. Costa Mesa. DRIVER, (van) 21 years & over, good dnving re cont. LA/Orange CO. de liveries. 213/592·1353 ardt ure for a ppl U"Uck 11ic· up anrn pa;youh~l <"Ommt\'Uon' 1nd1 v 1dual with 549-967L Jo: 0 E Mt l" 11 h •k.i11an1: \1 u-.t ""tuJ<' ;ou le.irn fkfon · knowled1e of restaurant 11.ivt-vA"<.:a!Jf dn "'"'' "OU k it 11 "'· E ---' Floral J:Rsagncr. 2 yr~ t'X r ' c 1 ,. / 00"' you .,._, eq\apnwnt. xpenen .. ~ per. Inane p rr S)'!llt-m.<1\~!Al '<..:o~d~r 1rnk.1~ wave. an J rt· tn efedncal ft plum bin~ 7sz 7040 Avt' F v ward.log bfe tam•• pro nipaar. Good benefits fcB1on C all Gene Company truck pro-Fol!Mlmt Dri•e Thtv Hardwart' ~.Apply an Diiiard for full deta1l11 vaded. Apply at: Sale1 Clerk for d ay J't!d s 0 n Cro wn ~-SUI. 0.-.,.c-ly shd\s Apply at Fotomat. Hwy.'a>M."7 E Coast IMSURAMCE lul-wt Senkft 17lh ~ange, CM ---Acaetc:Y 2110l D&UnJer&reet s I r II d f' 1l I II Full tame, perm .. a«rea.naJ PoS•Uon for M!SP!JSible & accurate prof11aional Irvine area. Salary open Fr •n«e benef1u 9.5 Mon Fri. Send COMPLETE resuee to Dana Point Ma.rUa Co . :M70l Dani ~ ~nt4ta ne~a . Fltt & casualty. com 1~~Sant.a~~~Ana~~·~~~~~ 6pmatei~rlr. after merc.-aal lanes u n I· derwnter. Experienc.-e Manqer!Seeretary it HIC•O.Y;~S re q · d . R o be rt so o lrvme arch. ()(flee. JS fir. e- Dr • Pt 921821 •ALRIDA.Y DE«>RATOR SALES· <ENERALOFC Vi.RJ ED Dtrrl ES ~I r ct Co n ee d s ul, well groomed I 'or Inside saJes & lalqrmeral om<'e work Sal• & decorallog n · perin<'e helpful Call Billllall 549·8181 for appi ~----- 4......iOfflce yart&dullcs to include lite l g, mnal , fllln g, Presley of So luctSharon __ .__0.0500 ---- Has PArt·tuue e opp Insurance Assoc Joe. -""* f\llJ time .,., " :; day tame fo~ture 875.Q5Q. benefits. Sue 8:31).3:30. • .rt 1~ Wby not I d: to ftna A.CTIYI _m._· ia ______ _ ~-~n a P t In· PllOGLUitMING TrameeforRen-. M"o';'.;"Y~~el tl;! We ar;e a medical ~~r!ii~;::li ~: ~ ~~ r l:::t1:,r1no1:.n~:,•.:i10: Ume UICI. weeit . Ap-IS. ~U>werMaJl 1\>ul look1n1 fo r an ex ply 1705 S. Cod Hwy. 911• -·---:;.:;.;..""'--perienced pro1rammer Lacww Beach. t ,!: floetes1 Xlnt opp\ to to ass1St m development M • n a g er e 1 1 h t • s upplement ancoc nl an mter active com· energetic. sonable • Welrome new res1d~ p u t e r s y 1 t e m penon to ma qe new N Penn p/t. f1ex hrs.~ Knowledee RPG I l. bualneu ae int ex· ' • cHar & t1ype wral l COBOL, & BASIC Is dumivecli eln_pro. ·co. ~01pce1t.~~y H. 01t.. helpful. Apply lo. cklrtna • 1 Typ. oa Servic ..,., 3095 General Med.Jul Center, lD& IS ma an 'a11et. ' Cor H o t c I E X E c\ 2121 Town Center Pl. Plealanl s In . f; HOUSEKEEPER Sa Anaheim 92806 Irv. $100 o to start Clemente Inn. 125 \\ 714 /937·0l80. E .0 .E . +fut.ure it sharto1. Avenida Esplandaan \ M/F/H Sl.artNov .8'13-0818 : San Clem 1 IMVIHTOIY Hotel . Front desk clerk. CooaDINATOI exper pref'd. 1·5 & HI. 4 . headquarters for <lY!I a wk. Call for appt ale wide financial 6673S8. ' ·c:es firm · Fubkln II" ed. ply law • >on !ES Housekeeper, fuJI time for retirement ho me . ~Villa, 642·51161 To run inventory 1118U room operation.•.--'-I'------.. -eer ~eeper. babysitter. 7 year old boy, Mon Lhru Fri, some eves. Own car JlB. Call 847-5622 aft 6 Houaekeepin.1 couple. Unusual opportunity. Live 1n eaclualve Newport Be•cb eom· munlty. new bome. Mature. El'>1lisb speak· lng, tl On ·1moller, w1relere.e.. Spttcio1.11 exceptional private quarters, llvln1 room. bedroom, la111e bat.b 4 color t v. 642-5351 or M)..OMO. "Jll, receJVtng, aup. IMAlllM.IJIK' ~ring, Inventory ~~-IS . mail proceulne lat projects . Ex· pe ence requ1 red. 9·30toS.OO ex v I I . " und Ian· rms. tply. unp 1irs. o te· •rit· i1n. \I & ODS. l n:· 1plet berl ll ft St. . . .. ' \8:f lt:!c ...... ......... ~ ............ ..... ...... Tl PAITTIMI OPa•MG &a. ............. Driwr'l'b o.n...- IWL Y ... OT &o ow l'antWI In San J'*'-a.~ .8eath . Dena Pol n l , Sa n Clemente arH Muat ti.ve sood drh101 re cord, Iara• atallun • • • ! N . WO M I! N w-.oa or van Hourly <HJ M.Df. ltoUywood pay + m 1 I e • R ft 11 I • ....._ .... ~. '4>w•oce. Call Harry AdHIHS. NO E XP s..yat MSC. Kue,lloaal M.1-4UI. ~~atloa for ---time to break Pan Time Clerk Sec'y. 4 In l o mo• • 1 / com 1.mmecba&e open.in& for mer<:1ala. nt.1080 Sm maUvaled work oriented r e e . S creeo Art11 1 penoninloa.nbtookeraae lilpml_ 00, A.bl.lily lo Cope With p re11 u re . va r ied Iii I C • c o . n e e d s penonallUes, & w11Ung fabricaton. 18 +. Apply lo learn. Promotional op ~·am w. 181.b St, pt'y. Salary open. ~II KaUe. 640-9350 MODllLS, ACTQaS Part time he lp wanted. Portfollo1 done pro -Mon &/or Tues. nighls f....V,,,,,Uy, reasonably. l o~ produc t ion . Alao occ asional jobs . Millirnum age 20. Apply R icitard Ke p h a rt at Pe nnys aver , 1660 8'13-8D7 l>tacenlia, Costa Mesa. MODll.SfwlSCORT PART·TIME, age 16 _or & C A T E a I H G over to help in family ~--E business, wk:nds & l or 2 -""" afternoons. 548·24S4 * '61·2111 * ---------f Part ume clerk for Liquor Modlm. Female. Sharp. Ma1uine oaly. $2S per hr. ~5122 or 642-8282 &>b. - store. Apply in person, Holiday House Liquors. 2937 E. Coast H~y. Clim Rent·a-car near airport, IOSAM.INC. 114/M&-UD Npt. tsch An1Qu1I 1M111 ""EmplOl_tr R EA L. l\STA1't; SALESMAN WANTED EARN UP 'fO 15% COM MlSSION NET. 1 C»n earn from ~ to SIOOK aonuaUy i. Plod wt why new lit. earn big HS here Coml\ talk with them 3-0ur produl· l 1n e xptns1vl' land/budaet terms <a Pre Set lll'l'hl (ClllOrt• ~Find out why "we've p the best Ouog goan1f' N 8. w-e11 Ask for Mr Howard 965-3402 ltHllshftStMa Openina for l1censl'll uletpeople, luc1tlly owned, wlth naUonaJ re ferraJ system. Excellent wor kin g con ditions . Earn 100% commillSion. For confidential app't. call 759·0226 Exccu· Systems Realwrs Real Elltate WOMEN!! Take c ha rge of your life!! A u n iqul' 1n dividua.lued concept pre· pares you for a future in real estate. Study at your own pace. Award win- n 1 n g real e s tate educators on video For free placement oppty call Louise at 673-3248 MODILS-ISCORTS Allractive Females Only ~wk+~ seeks serru·retired man Real fill.ate to help in offi ce. help EHJOY mainLalo vehicles, meet MOTOR IOUTE the public. Hours nexi REAL ESTATE DAILY PILOT routes In bie.Callbeforenoon. That's right' We 111 So. Laguna & San 752-2526 Walker&Leeeruoy Reul Clemente now available. Estate Our Milliu n Aft.eroooode1Jvery Mon-Party Consu llant1 DollarlocalJonorficchas c:t.y t.bru Friday. mom· Counter Person, fu ll time pride, enthusiasm & iDp s.turday & Sunday. including Sat. Apply 202..5 gtidance If any or these Excellent e amlllgs for Newport Blvd. C .M. sound imPorta nt to you. ;..t a few hours of your -then call now & give your ASCSPTIONllT Part Ume for b:::.:J .....,_W.re pnf Th H air lfaodle r 1 ....... ... •u.oc1s WILll-Mls,..,..._.. ~It.I boillda1 -by IDvklQI you to .. I pelt ol '*I' V"1' lPHlall&td tu m . Our Perw d Office will be ac~ appllc aUoat r. flil iad part Uroe ... 6 •al•• IUPl>O'l e mp loy m e nt - advmcen:wnt ln Clrett •• •/11 .. I...... ()llllOrtunk.ia M &hru F Ttclltls'-from Wpm. M 11or N allo n ii l HJ "spl.a-d lnalo"rtu, Fir m lo Mew-rt •ecti lrvfAe bu mmedlate 1~~~~·~~~~~~ Ol*lina for i&hlarp, ••U I· lltanar' to mamt.aln ~ SaliM Clm . lallric 1tore. «rill ayate m locludio& Cl(perpref. C.M. Ubraty. correspondeo~ IM6-4CMO •p l an fi les RaoooaibWUs al.o in· Sale.cler k n eeded for elude mialot.eoance ol 1n· marine hardware atoce. ~ blueprint ope. ra· Ma rine e•perlen ce U<lft lncludl.na runaln& necessary. Immediate GAF Blueprtnt machine opening. Full compa ny <Wl.lJ tr ain) " orderina ben~flts . Call Balboa blue pri n t machi n e Marine. 549·9471 for i;lOck/sllppUes. Orgaru· lllJllt. E.0 .E. M/F/H taooal Aills a m1.111t. Xl.nl oo. benefits. Salary L'Om SALES mens ura te wltb ex DktridM•sJtr pcnence. Ask for Valane T,..._ at 7S4-8222 · E 0 E Dally Pilot newspaper Keslaurllllt dtculatioo departnfent The Rusty Pelican 11 This highly successful looktni for a Night Cook. local newspaper h.u an Full Time for the right openiJli for a trainee an pe(':.M. Apply between the circula tion sales 3-s 2735 West Pacific service &collection area. <.:oa!lt llwy, N B. Selected applicant will Refitaurant All around kitc hen worker needed wit h dnvers he. Salmaguodi Rest 549-9267 Restaurant Me & ld'1 ,Ina Immediate part time optning11 avail . for Delivery Drivers . Must be21 & have a good driv tng record Start from S3 2.5 hr + lips Able to work evenings FUii time po:.11Jons also 11va1l a~c 1B &over Apply daily art Spm. ME& ED'S PIZZA 4210 ~ 17th. St C.M R~'TAU RANT MANAGER EXPERIENCED lrvllle area Xlnt. career opporturuty Send rephes to Box 621. Daily Pilot POBOX 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 receive a liberal starting sa l ary. r egu l ar l y scheduJed ra ises, bonus opportunit ies & many fr. inge ben efits s uch as paid vacations. paid group msurance, hfe in surancc & dental cov erage. Tra1J1ee will alsu be provided a company car with peri.on11I use pnvileges. Applicants mu. .. t lw Ill have a good dnvmg re rord !loon. are general ly 11AM·9PM Monday lhru Pr1day. Saturday overtime av&1lable as needed U you are quahf1ed & are 111t.erest.ed m learning the newspaper t·1rcul at1on business. come to the• Dady Pilot orr1re. 330 w Bay. Costa Mesil Al>k ror Harry Seele y or Ken Goddard Only appl7 before I IAM or 11rter 2PM Mon-Fri. E.O E dly. NominaJ cash de · ,ASTE.UP Real Estate career a Restaurant SALE.5 FUl.HITURE DUSSlS CAMBAS p01it require d . Call Experien ced , Full or 'Real" cha nce. Ask for Mature worn.on wanted 6G-4321. Aak for l''oster P/I'. Photo-type setting Al Stellato. 963-5671 for sm. rest. Good hrs. Oueilet. A+.M8--0293. (~1Wfil?!J i$1Qij ~~:ti~~1ie~d::~ Nurses Aide, llpm·7am PBX Ans Svc. Will train 649-7011 Eves 631-0208. shift. Newport Villa. 3-ll sbifl. Plea.a. ore med ReaJ F.atate Scott. 80-5161 bld1 . 2 wks pd va c. Real El SaJ RA!st_a_ur_an_l ___ _ NURSES AIDES. SmaJI, 81l-!IMO Mon.Fra 9-S. G901 ;!"'a.:... Iffy Sandwich penoo wan led every other wknd off. NX OPB. Ude Ille & counter help wanted. Def. comp. ol t&O after 8 Ea.m wb1.le you learn. Our expwlon ::yam SI.art.lo& w /aood H Jary. mo. P r ee denta l T elephon e Ans we ring bas creMed a foe Oall~2193. madlcaJ Im. after proba· Service full time /part aaJesP90Die witb tbe p ro-. I e.&.aurant tima ....,,.meat. AJIPI¥ lime. Va ried sbtlts · ven abi.Jity to sell both CASHI• ...... trlar. N .B. o.,.., ~or even-new & resale properties t.nlS-Loca1ions an: Excelle nt comm1111on Mt AMI• .... ,_,. NUBSESAIDES. 7·3, 11-7, FASJDON ISLAND llChedule. lovely offices. Apply between 3-5, Moo Ft .. JIWIUY SHOIS ...-ssufT,s Hil.DWAll AurOMOTIYI c~s SAlHOllDEI l:lq)tmdl ... product 11H have ,_...tect Oda lm· med.li lt opetUDI wlU1 pMt potmti&l for ad· v.....a. Familiarity with M!UplCC fu i.ntnt would be very be lpful. S.lary commo n1urale with expe r ien ce • knowled ae of the i n· d\.W)'. ROSAN.IMC. 71A/$41•M33 Newpon Beach. An Equal ()pportwuty Employer ~PERSON. perm11 - nml fuU time, will tra1J1. R.M. Abrabms Cauloa Showroom, 1819 Newport Blvd, Costa Mesa SALES PERSON Stereo dept exper Pf"ef Permanent fulll1m e, R.M. Abrams Catalog showroom 1.819 Npt Bvd CM. Salesperson, expeneoced for beautiful Jewelry st.ore to start immediate ly. 014 )891-~1. __ _ SALESPERSON part· lime selling , genernl cleiining, decorating Tues. & Sat som~ Sun Accent Interio rs , 333 Ma rine Ave. Balboa ls.land 673-2860 ~.Ootobet1 1 .1879 ~!!~:.~ ..... ?!~ ~:'!'~:! ..... ?!~ w .:.t......... . SCTIY TO' .P. S!CJlSTARY /Ore MOR nu.•• . Part· Um•. ......._ lllOCiatJoe ...... QPMilal fQr U • ' TypJa1 , aome S J H , 2 tr-J#. "1t·Umt t.tUer. J f bual c om p aa)' ..., ~ aJ.2:!· .,1-,_...,. rea.-beoeflta. Sad r nume Ute bld!N. _,...,._, - w/eapr. •••~er r•· -.to•.to·llll U-l&Utudt to work ~lo ol ,.. •• li'l'bun. Coe· Lid t., Oraale Coal : Calif. P.O. Bo:& DDO, * tlCllTAml . Su·I a~ • Lo. D . • N.B.IMl3.AUll:8eY. ~ .. ~-.. •,o.• : Llltl ....... ·-·-.. -• S!ICRJ;TAJUAL . Matun S.C/Btcpll. Sl.J,000 1°'1A&BLADY • ~ for bua1 Stat. G.O./U .._Ill.GOO I ..__ ood Falm Apncy to Npt . G.0 .1ourofflit Slo.100 .bclu ve •uvp, I 8c!b. 8tai1ina aalU')' to ~ bedr.sround. toocl pay. llOOO per mo. Is wUllq 1o SaJet Our Office• Plrt})\all ti.Im. ltl-1007 . train ria bt peraon. ~/Free IDW..CCWfDr.NB M.S#74. ~Blteb. r.~:-2 Tow Truell Driven H · SECRETARY !rYPlST Newport Beach. UNdO l*''d. Top r:" · AppJy Lt bookkffpinl u~r 0 6W T ow 111. HOB helpful. 8 h1'9 preaent, ·-------•I <lama Way. C.lf. 60-1252 f\111 t.lme future. Nr OC 'h'alDeel, no experience Alrport. ~ 7117 SICalTMY mtelMr)'. Mundacture Entry Level P<JUUoa ,J~ aJ -ta SECRETARY /TYPIST For restHranl dea11n .. c comr--·· . needed for CPA ft.rm in firm. T y pina1 varied 7: .J::IOPll. 2 Sate. • Npt. Och. Part·t.ime posi· cMiel, coagerual 1m all per mo. overtime. SS.SO lion. Prefe r •ftem ooo office. E xce l l e nt hr.LocatedC.ll.Ml-G30& hours. llon·Frl. Stronfi medical, dental packa ae. Traloee Youna man to t.YPi.n& skills a m ust. Ca 1 Call ~. tntn '°" precialoo tnatru-_otbbf __ 4e_a_t m.8084 ___ . ___ 1~~~~~~~~~~1 meat repair <no elec· SECUTARY Ex1nt erowtb opp()rt for sloJJed Jr. Secy who des. career adv. CbalJenging di versified, biuy ofc. Corp hdqrtrs for real estate synd fir m·Faah lal. 640-0123. SECUTilJES Uruted Cerebal Palsy bu 2 pogitioos open "for MCr'elaries. Reqs good clerlcaJ sktlls. accurate typing w150+ wpm . Prer. well organu:ed , systems oriented a ppli · cant. Billlng exper de· sired for I pos. Xlnl vac. beneflt.s. $850/mo. Apply DO West Harvard.SA SICUltrY Gate a uarct required by private community in 1.-.una Buch area. Day sbi1L Call Mon·Frt for appt. 4M-8571. See 'y /Clerk P /I' Immediate operung for motivated work on ented person in loan brollerage a;> Ability to Cope With p ress ur e. varied penonahlies. & wilting to learn. Promotional op- ~ ·y. SaJary open. Call Kalie &t0-9350 Service Station Allen· dant , pt-lime. days & tronica > Muat be rella· ble. have manual dex· teri~ "excelleot vision. l.aia training period. On· ly seriously ioterea&ed need a~. CaJI ro r in· tttview a ppl. between 7 ·9AM ooly. 546--0606 TUYa.AMMT Eltab&bed retail travel ageoc.y has immed open· ing for e xper'd sales agent. Computer l raan ing desirable . Buay or nee with every oppty lo procress. Pd. medkal1 demal benefits. gl'nerOUh aatary range . Call (714 1 833-2977 _________ , 5'65-5780 eves Neat appearance & TYPlSI' . To type loan in bandwntinl(. Apply 2590 fo. tolo Burroughs Docu· Newport Bl~d. CM ment machine , adjust SALESPHSOH Everung.a 4' Saturdays So Coast Plaiu lMlgner Boutique Mu!tt be mature Potsed & sophJsUcated CALL 54'·221 l Salesperson wanted full & SECRETARY Independent. spec1ahud }Oba.ss1gnment reqwnng secretarial skills. or g.aruz.a l.IOrul I ex per. I e g 11 I bkgmd help(ul Jnve!tl ment sen ices r1 rm 64fMllZl part Ume Salary+ cum S E C R E T A R I A l. O\Jss1on. co benef1ti. . PERSONN~L Hoom for g o od w o rk1ni: .it ddvancemeot mos phcre A1J1JI) 1n S56~ person STANUARUSllOES :Km S Bns tol, C M Secretary for bu:.y order desk Good typtnR skill!> 662111 Lana SE C RETARY l''OK LAWYER Strong s k1lli1 & good language a b1llly rt' qared, but legal exper not essenual. Mr. Myers &t0-3510 SECRETARY Servioe Station attendant forms for print-o ut & t>Xpen enced. rull time make corrections when Appty !ZIN Coast llwy nt.-ce:ssury. Pnor orr1ct- l.ag1U1.a Beach exper. & typing of 4S·SO wpm r equired. Docu ment machine expcr helpful but will tram lhl' right candidate fo'11r appt c 11 IJ 640-4580 c JC t <m EOE Sen·1c.-Station A tten danl. serv1ct> cars & light repair 2800 W Cou:.l Hwy,N R • StGIKoll A"a d.t Seif.serve Per m po!ll I.Jon Pl-tJme & full time avail ="eat appear & re· hablUt} " must Advun cement oppor Apply at Palm 011 Co . 1740 Newport Hl~d. C .M hetwn9am-4pm SERVIC~ STATION AT TENDANT·full ti m e. hght mech knowledge. benef1U1 Ne at t.andwn t· mg & appearance. Apply ~Newport Blvd . CM Typtst Reccpt Lile ore dutlei.. 60 wpm, NB. Mri. Ha'\S 67~30L2 Waitresses lmmed1-.1 ... ~"fW'lg for exper d inner & JCT11vey11rd Paid vac11 lals, good lips Apply Taylor 's Res taur a nt . Redhill & Santa An .. Frwy,Tusu n __ Sales, Planob·Organs Gould Mw11c C.Ompimy is lookmg for expenen<·c-d ptano & organ people lo staff our new ~lore H you have been w111tm1t for u great career oppor W/a growing co . thU. IS 11. CalJ Marshal Kee at (714 ) 529·8761 for in- terview ------ SAl.IS PlllSOMS Service Slation Ma r. Ex· ( E • CJ i • e • r I • CJ penence oa1y. Apply m Dept.) ~ 141 E. 17\b Sl. WaitrtSS & Cook. 8 :30 to 5 or 5 to 9. No experie nce. Apply m person. Tlno 'i;. 30242 Cro wn Va lley Parkway . Lag u na Nll\ld. Penonallty plus adults t o w o rk wit b a n d ~reaideotialbuilder motlvate kids. Ove r 21 locMed in ltvine Is aeek· In a...a,wu.. Capi•lrafto, 101 an experie iaced S-Clemmt.e ....... aec:nu.ry lo work i ft ov _.._ __ ...... blay ~Dir dell(. r-~• •-1be Ideal candidate will IVMMGS have 1·2 yrs. secttt.a.rial PttOMI: experie nce with pre · M2-4321 or ~ lerT't!d expQSW'e in a COD· Ext 250 Between t-5PM. slrurllon enaineerina Servlte St.allon Allen· daat. Mobll s.rv Station. Aall for 1loe ~5655 tnt.a. SERV. STATION Exper . lube mu needed. Hourly + ~-Xlat opp. 813-3S:a0 - Wailreuea. P /time dY11. Over 18 Gasll f'ht Br o iler . Wtll tram. . .541-7'IMI WAMllD om•• SUieAYOMLY ="= ~~~: COSTA MESA/IRVJNE m e mbe r of all local Uvu Fri, Rusty Pelican, Cg 1 C e nt e r D r ·I TUSTIN tioardl. aecretanal staff, I 273S W Pac Cst Hwy, HUNTlNGTON BEACH congerual group, paid U1· N.B. 17 C.M..E.O.E. I Ideal for atudents & surance plan • bonus op· Nunea hou.aewives. Maoy co. portwtilles. Rest.Alurant P\d1 and ~ Ume open· lap in coauniaalon .... in the above depart ror q u ali f ied sel li n g specia11su. Bene fits. dis· count privilege, medical. dental lo life 111Sur .• profit sbarina & pension pro- gnun_ Apply in person J.C.NHMlY 24 F.W0tt Ill.cl Aa.k t~orAndrea dept No s b o r tban d necessary but above Sales Rep to call on re average typing • com ader ad busineai. at· mun1cation sk ills are SEWING /Dbl N eed le Piece work. on your m ach i ne 5 48 2985 anytime __ To deliver Dad y Pilot bundles to carriers. Re-qwrw van ot large sta- tioa wagon and a good drivin1 record . P hone 142.4321 a nd ask for Harry Seeley or Don Williams LVN beoelita incluchng paid For confident ial 1n •'b 'll* .. Dl'Llln~,._1 _,00DG.-....1&'u:QM .. N•~11t-v a c a ti o n s . T y p i n g te v a.w. .RJ e.u e. call Be A Part Of The Exerting. 1!.EW. --N.wllll!ll~l.fl!ich~-t-eoimts-1'or--adveTtt•<rmr.r-h....,...•nir'5'". •St&l MP' A.La _ _.&Q,UAL.. ---....,_ -3 wpm... . . . a Chuc k Dreyer, (714 > shift. full lime or 543-4230Mon.thruFr1. 675·6050 o r Barbar:.i SPIMDRIFTER RESTAURANT E.O.E. Mon thru Ftl 9am ·5pm the qua!Jfled mdl\·1dual Base + Comm1ss1on. m ust be h ighly o r Company benefits Will ganiud. a self start.e r ~ train Neat appearance have a pleas ant & &gocxl spellini,: esst!nllal cooperalJvt> person'allty. Apply Pcnnyuver , 166() We ocrer an oou..taoding Placentia Ave . Costa compe~sation bener1t Mesa. pack.age with JCl nt work ..... 11ch 'r•n·'ow.r OPPORTUNITY E MPW YER wlmdl day shift. Apply a ,._ p ./Ume. Part Um ftiaa.., <714 )67575l2 I Flagship Conv. Center , PIXOPB.AToa RECEPT/ MEDICAL 46 6 F I a~ s h i P Rd Good opportunity ewts Exper. pref Costa Mesa Overlooking Newp()rt Bay Sales lnternauonal marketing firm expan d 1n~ 1n Orange County looking ror ambit ious people F\JU or part lime. Send resume to PO.Box 601, Hunt. Bch. 92648 Im mediate rep I y. ... Set up ex per req 'd Heater Mfr 1040 W 17th St C M 548.2245 •WAREHOUSE• Fast growing eleetrom cs distributor m l''ountain Valley area look mg for mature person wanting a pos1t1on with a good future. Rece1vmg, order hlhng. s h1pp1ng, light maintenance Com petJtive earnmgs & full fnnge benefits . Please <'OnL8C(-'1'l_m. ~9-0433 Newport Beach, 462·~ for relia ble person with Area I --- Nurses Assist . Certified Aides need ed on a ll sbifta. Classes a vail. fo non certified. Good st a rt· ing s alary & x ln benefits . Apply a f1apbip Conv. Center, 466 F l agthi p Rd . Newport Beach. 462·8044. NUJLCilNG Uve-in Tues thru Fri Lilbt nuning experience helpful. $40 per day. Call for ~Uon. Upjobo Healthcare Ser v ices, ~ Office lllanaaer for small h ai!MM, Ml.alt have ex· perienee maoaatn& ac da/rec .• accnta/pay. col· lediolll 6 be persona bl oa the p•ne . Salary buecl on experience. Oall lar ... 549-2U6. ~bodoNU. Cbalnide All· silt. ll*ioo Viejo, RDA pref 'd. lleldble bn, right pay (or rl Ot pers on. Come Is lDler vlew WI. &Yl·lm. Owl' ll, woodwoddng ex· .... AllPlY um Placentia A•, on.ta II•• V OLT pleasant phone manner 631-3863 I Appltrat1ons being ac L1!pted. Thurs & Fri 9 am to4pm SHIP PING REC CL ERK Growing f irm need <. re;pori person ru11 lime warehouse dullt•s. Rec Incoming i.h1pmenti.. stock .,helves. pull or able lo work 32 flexible h o u rs 13 p m & 2 graveyar d s hifts per week). Excellenl com- pany ben e fits . Apply 9am·noon. M on Fri. Persoonel. MAUJOTT HOTR 900 Newport Center Dr Newport Beach Equal ()ppor Em ployer 'ena••I S.Cy No akilla needed, but an outaoing personality. You will asstSl the Direc· tor ol Personnel who 1:. a V I P . C o h a s medical1denlal1grt vac & sick leaves benefits. Salary $900. Call Rita Coastal Per.;onnel Agency 2790 Harbor. CM 540-«>SS Never A Fee Pest Control Service m an, guar !lala r y +Com- mission. 546·9339. RICErTIOMIST Weekends on1y Yacht sales ofc. U do Village Must type & be good W/publiC !!~·~71 1 RECPETIONIST Ag gressively g r owing aud.il>-v1suaJ co m 0 <.: has immed opening for a resPonsible ind1vudual Pbooe exper. & good typ ing skills reqd Xlnt. co bene . Contact Office Manager. Tapetle Corp G.G. 714.Q8-71160 Rec.,t /Ofc H ... r Permanent part time, Recept & o re helper wanted Mon thru F'ri 12:»Spm. Car req. Will train. $3.50/hr w /rais e 10 3 mo. Student ok. Call Deanna S49-8466. f'or I hgh <,tualtty t.:xpenenced o()>0ks •llostesses •Wmters/Wa1tres11es •Cocktad Wa1tre!>sc-. •Bart.enders •Busboys • Dl.s hwashers Apply Ln person. llll w. Coast Hwy. .... wport ..... RESr AU RANT ---- Sales SIMS.DE SALES$ Full time position Ex perience helprul , will train Some c leric al work involved Pre r mature Individual Call ~~ SALESLADY FUii time. over 18 yrs THE SHOWOFF it22 Fashion Island Sales Retail -lnfl sur roundings For 1mmed1ale cons ideration please call 9·12 or apply m pel"liOn to Gena Me zo MGMNTTRAINEE Great oppty ror t•apablt>, depend pers on w 1ex pndng Lad1e~ Boutique chain f'lne pay & bener Mr Edwards 493-0752, 4111-lOlB flOMDlltOSA HOMES ders. prepare out1tomg .,.._,Business Center Dr shipments UPS & Postal ""°' CXJ>(!rience prefcr rrd WIU'ehouse Dnver Musl lrvmc.Ca 92715 c.aJJ~J632 have good driving re 714 975-1609 ------cord. Co6ta Mesa area SALES/RETAIL SHl'PtHGCLYK Apply . The Earl or Office supply & sta· Afftrmali,·e REWINDER Plwnbing. 15'26 Newport t 1 oner s need s ex At-tioo Employer W1ll tra.U1. Mon tbru 1'T1 Blvd ~.M. 642·1iS3_ perien c ed retail St:CRETARY F\JUUme64S-l350 W are h ou s emJO . salesperson FUii time fo.:Xpenenced with stron~ SHOE SALES Pt full 111t.'chanically 1nchned. Phone ror a~PolOlment t •-h l h d M yp1ng .,. s or an "'op c'·enl•le Good in -~~·...c•na formula:.. 557-9212· As for r k·"· full ,, u ... '""''....,... ........ We s t Newport Sta s '""· lime career come+ bene Ch Id m s Local resident preferred. tJOners lnc opp()rtun1ty Apply in Boo tery Npt Bc h Tamc o C h em ic a l s _ ---person to Mr F\Jentei. 644-2'64 Mr Milter 2035-A Placentia Ave. 5*t 1,..-.. at Robert Bern. W1lhum CM 642-9160 Sal Bo Frost & Assoc 1401 Quail Sp A ATTENDANT . ---.-. SALESLADY ary + nus St Newpo«1 Bea~ men's spa. pnvate club W~EHOUSE PERSON IE A STAR MAllure, Hallmark Gift & w:~~m=J~~~:eop Must be 21 yrs. All shifts Needl•d fu 11 t 1 me· wittl Party Shop in H.B. FUii port unity ,for a n a m· SECRET ARY available. Call for appt. lmmed. opening. Full co. t.ime. 5 day week Pr1 bllJousself motivated tn· lmmediate open1J1g now k')..7358 bene . Call Ba l boa •CARL'S JI.* thru Tues 840 1557 or available for Secretary Marine H a rdwa re for RECEl'TIOHIST 9112-8910 dividual who Is willing to m a leadmg Orange Co. SPA ATTENDANT . appt. 549·9671 E .O. Jo: Full t ime Mon·Fri. 35 work hard Our trainin1e Construcllon Office near woman 's spa, private M/FIH k lnu:ucla=Drt.ity program will enable you lbe O.C. Airport Good club. Must be 21 Y"'· All -------- hrs. per wb1. Must 'rj Mar "-todevelop a hlg.b incom e lYPIDK :!lu lls, pleasant s hifts avail. Ca ll for Wareh~usc help. M/F . p e r son a e. w~ ..W TAUllAHT Sales : Managcm,e nt producer . l"ancy r e ~allty •. 8 willi'ng ,..,... ~7358 Expene nce pre ferred. groomed1. enjoy mcctani; T r a inees p / t . / l . sumes unnecessary. Call ..... ~· .,. .._.. · Slarl $4.00 per hr. Apply Petition ClrcuJator the public. No typing. OPIHIMG Dynamic, positive 18 + · me ror a personal In-neu lo learn & grow with SPRA y OP ERATOR . we Vollrath Co. 2424 McGaw •MONEY• phone experience pre· MllllOllVl•to Devaltb1.111 1nc.S57·3062. tervtew.GeneGaynor. company essential. Ex· arelookincfor l or 2men Ave. Jrv1nc. See Don Set YoW' own hours. Ex-ferred. Full co. benefit& Mtl 557.z.363 c e 11 e n t c om P ll n Y P E STIC IDE S P RA y Brannon. tra caah working full or Apply Pennysuver , 1660 ~ aMfts IVBCOPY benef its. Please call OPERATORS Tramable -------. P(r. You make $2000 or Pla centia Ave. Costa s.lel/Ma.iruenance UlnlSky Park Cir. im <714) 833-8680. eJCt 38 for position . Full l ime . WAT ER R ESOURCE S more pr mo. Muat be 18 Mesa. IHDOOI PLANTS lrvlnc appl Pwmaoent. Good bene Fl'JCJNEE~ING Career or older. Call for Im-COOICS _Equal()ppor Em_y~yer w/a growing co If you opportu nities for eit· mediate job. 549•8730· Rect!onist/ COUMTBHE:LP We are l~ma for an SALE S WO MAN ro r SECIETilY are a m bit iou s . call p e ri e n ce d Ci v il &-12 411u.-.,-tIJt1Mln&penon toaell• jewelry atore. Irvine. "".1 ....._______ 70.475 1 btw n 8 • tnalneers. Desipers & valst ~· ~ indoor plants. Must be over 21 foe Illa -~-•:30PM. Atii Landscape pran.arna.n back1round PHOTO STORE Mature. ~'rrJ, person, SWIRVISORS Full Ir part ijme pogl· ~-Muat be able to Muat be fa miliar with Inc. Miu Viejo a an cleiaian or maste r plan· +PROC QPerienced as Rece.P· l io n s ava Plabl e / work 1 nl1ht a week. VA/FHA proce11in1. · ni"8 ol w•ter ayatems, maoa1er, ala o C It Uon.i1t. Heavy phones. lxctll•1tt b•••flh , weekends ~equi-red . tll41UNl.47M MWmum I yrnpr.req. hldudhlc water •~y, emplo1ee. H .8 ./F .V. type 50 wpm.1 invoices. Aeaee apply ln person Prwley olSo.CaUf.Con· S.n.::MIOAID aewaae deslsn. pump area, after S P M . oroe Fr ........... COMI-MonUl.n&Frla..5 SANDWICH SHOP 1HB. tact Bev OPllATQa atallona Ir retervoirs . IG-m>. ~aran~~. T°:~ -. tf ,_ .. ...... · lOAM to2PM. Call btwo 3 54MSOO. Esperlenced o pen tor Experience deslnld lo re- PnMcbool aide, Irvine, atlary &Jbeneflta. lrvlne ....... l ... Dymllf IOGa*S "f PM.~ for busy reaJ estate of· PCllt6spedficatioowrit- exp e r . p ref erred . :::..~fr. Ca ll Karen . ._, -'•:...!!!.• op• . CiAIDINS SAUTICOOk ficle. Coalofe board. Call ~.11~~~~~!!.:'l MMMI •7.. ..-lwlfr . ....,...w• 211>!..~=Uln Wll.b French ConUne ntal SICalTAltY for a ppt. Coldwell com pute r operationJ • .. QWJ>rtve. ....,.... ~ ac:.TJOM5T _ u p. All9lY Am.broala. ~~!U1:'e'n;i~e':r~ ~Clarie Jobwq. ~tn Pf'IOD ~re· OMNii'trom Pr-.,..._ Deeded in OUrnew~ateoffice Oc11•1r 11·11 COM M0-5864 50IS Jlltla-St .• Rm. au, =Lr uc tion expr . w Is wort aamplel .w.w.,..Al.rporO ll'OWlnl Oraace Cot.a0ey tn Newport acb needs 10..te 1,.. N.B. . Prestey ol So. ~:. "'wi•wntH , ~er.~ !pl!O,,......,,_ Cb, KfD. a JUn t.rade a re c=nlst wit h a Oootaetlllrbara ~ lootl U you are ... -. am .... ,., • -f11CD11Haee on Multi'• le IPICS pel'IOftaJlty 'Z7000C:.....V-M-Sa19 S.retary1· General Of. MO-OIOO m.clltimbedteaclatror Auoc, 1401 Quail St. aiaf 17wtus1'51 beada. is cood com mand or ·~ -r HeetlbtN nee, t1p nc. Lt offlce coli.. tducaUoo maJoc' Newport'Beacb. PAltUTI: Tt 1ellt ra, m: F'-ppt t11.o..;;;i1 ... ·u•• t-lna " -~··-~· .urt. Mk fOf' Timmy, w1111>a..t..P /l'emplov. -Pert• t t Co m m • GPM· ... a · .,...._.. "' '" MISSIOM ¥11.10 _.._ ,,_,' m• )965--M02 N 8 o f ,_. w /treat ..... y, call WINS CLERK W-'•r•: 'aarn xtrt OCP tlqf79.2338. Frontotftce Apptarance O>alllo,R.Jll. Abram• Oat . . . • llALISTATI Sitters U nllmlted a n P\alldmepo1iUonontbe _, I• Qlrtatmu .......... For A~ Call ~~ty Ca\lloc aowroom, 1119 . DJt.1"9c111•. ~atlon&ll)' oriented ltlffolOr. Cty'a leadlna ......., F/P time laJee cu.n ~work ~1:Mila / ~1t -v•~:,,:nf!i. P it . SECRETARY Mmt be Cam.liar with claUd allllna aae nc;y. wi ne shop , Hl·T l me W1!!'.L~~U al i J -,.,-~ VA/FHA proce11ln1. --GourmelolCotta ..... O>. .._ _... • ..UC commere • Realdentlal Mort1a1e SaUmalltr need1 first Office., .. ......_ Mlnln.1m l ytupr. ttq. C Hdld ale muat be 4*I Vlqla1 ....._ Pamlltar wttb Co. lQaUt peni 'da~ll, 10 Sal9 ~ 11119dquarten ......, o1 So. Calif, Con· T E L S P H 0 N g lltkuba, l*tOMble 6 --.t&~&.O.S. ~PMT •ar:.. f.:ll .~~~~trCoCo. ln dlY M·~ lime .-.. ~ "for ltate wkle ln• .. t· tactlff,_.., IOUCITOJtS, 4 d1 wt. llaaw a IOOd worltla1 ,_ -..._. m · Cllllr,C.U...-J. _, mtDl HnlcHJlrm. -= ao..U..""'u· ........._ot....UC • Per'i•t AttH daal Co. · Applf ,.., Saltt.PtOPI• attdtd to rultlon l alaDCl,.,..Xla t lteretarJ tBooPllt~MP•~ "''" .:...m1a+~. l m por ttd wlnu • ...,,.... ft 6 f.ci-Pn•1n•er , lHO y 1 1 d d lllll/Dlti"'7 · Dst op. ..USU. Semlnan . We cww ~ wlda Sl1ary open. ...ant a .MtlUa..._ Pr-.. lo111 retail ea· M a. IMl SelaM · Pl...U• A H . Oo•t• ,,,°J{1 ,',:_0a:.r&.. ,., ..... .._._..,.., .w train JOU to Nit, so c11 ..... 1l1 • ~. ~= t_=:: T 1 0 __ n.1.1 pertene• preftr red. M. CID._ l._. ..._ •••• t il er •••.~ ..,.ftalllillllilt li p/Um9 JOD cu bt more MC· lalll,.... top ....... ·-I •....--. ·• Sal~ry dt adtat on ..._ • PkBC IDaill.ThJ1J •ftlll. Y•tla wa caHf ul. Ce ll DHn .ate. affrttarfel ea· compaar . Newport Illa ...... ·Awb 8r)lct &se.iltnt .:::;:;.;::;;:... ___ ~--I ........ JGa •ut " tell JOQ Ito• .. u It • to ... ,., br. c.au llowm'd: m.-a, tor • ........... ..... ll·l"rt. CH ttr. )Ir. Otrrie. SmllhJ. Sao. CftlHDt• ... Call Jlm It DIQrPllltQwwtllede. ..Wfor\lwml 81..Ubtwnl:tpm. llllltr'rutur.. t :»S:IO. --flln.I.\;. _., • ...,. .... . l •• .. • Thuradav, OotCIOef II 1111 ...................... -...... ,.~ . • ttr 0 1 am lllO ., ...... lff4 .............. ,........ ;i., ••••••••••••••••••• CAIK PAID for 1otd. lil¥W.cli•..,..,rullr&el ..... , ....... ,, .. ,, ... ltl4 Oold &•c•nc•. MIW ~ atm 10 lrooa 4 wooda. 0 llc Oulre t.&BeMotfer.ue. ... •emc.tlfor__.;i...,,_,_ Oolf tl&lbe, JhaOre1or CAL 20, Cleu. wlth Amerlun Alrllnea ~ 4llO lfQlll 2 t..hru t. Good 1'-llillr. S.Crinte. IDWll y......._ Trwwtl tl70 Drit.• diacowtt eot.tpon r ondltton ''O Cal I ..U.C.U71J.clll ••••••••••••••••••••••• J!!._£aUM6-lJOT --..._ 17' SORF.NSON SLOOP. le a.a.ta Trtr w/pori. .._. V.,. Swim• Tee· ....., ......... Oompl. w/ulla fi aux potty. ll:..O., NIOWl mt ... lffl 91111-'800. Bobl'1HOZ'7 'M ... .................. ••••• 'Tl t ----... I II k ... Sew ..... , .... n ~&oft IA CrHm or -';ic':i 7rir~ell t.=.' & Aoccu ..Cet 9400 StlUnt Dull Collecllo Yoaurt machine. twin Bob.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8omo 8'.IQw, Alexander. he.cl model m z yean a...•tm • Mod•rn Calltn-ltlSforappt old Like n•w $3)()-0 . .., 1091 Lido 14' U22 C lean D.200. Cover Trlr. sas.TOM 947.f621 DAn.ac PAUS Hood. 4 lood Ure.. Ill 1.9'12 1800. Beat otter. Call ~5721 aft.er IP M iCRt:VIER ••••••••••••••••••••••• C•rpet, 7 lr1 rooms. wlllow &.r'Mfl, prvt home, llU(ICI t'Ond.. Ct W ~r yd 0.U to teu, 4.118· lUO. Nieil.'2'" ~ruLh color T.V. lldn1. t11blt'll. desk. 1wflt. ~. 2 Yr Warr f 'rl"t! pwllabh1. J.1l11nta. wtr Del. 646-1788 Zl • Amttlcan Sloop, ·19, U>ropl w/aaUa. t.rlr, OB. ~~~~~~~-I PAJd SJ.4.872, pay off loan of $9,SO 968·937 l a ft Tl DODGE Tradeaman 100, PIS, P/8, c~ paint • interior. c•sUin cha.In, port.holea OP eic:letJ front It rear vent.a. map w /new Wlde Ure.a . 32.000 ml. XJnt. 95.:IOO or bat ofr C11ll 870-4564 **I IUY * • C.aod lolled Pumlture & Movtnti Mu11t 111ill furn. hi.hid lttNi, t y1. tlil, ffillll' l"'i "Sal atnll t•11mon11, C:M !>cl uf Ho1m1llo n ~ Mw p 11e N>llbaneet -OR I Wiil ..,t·ll ....................... or Sf!l.J. for v OU I~ "lU'lll(t-o,iah•' Anl1 <lllt'l'l. furn . Jlh• ware motorcyclt.-p11r li. tup oven i.tovt' $125. m1sr fl'n . Sat . & Sun 204.J President Pl 648 7039 ....... 1005 MAST•s AUCTION ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... , & 133-96%5 Reauut ~ Mu11r Hox AnUque With 20 du;c:. XJot co nd 550(IO Ca 11 673-3750 " 414·22'.ll CASH PAJD fo'or tid ~ furn, ;m l1 ques ltclr1V's ~7-8133 ~ )>.t llt!d, t•ha1ri. . ..inll ---quc tlrt!S!st:r , 1:ht•i.1. Uftfttl HOME !>IA!~ 11lltnd, 0111L table. 4 lftUUl,L ctuun1, bufr<.>t. !>mall 11p NOS£-OUJ SAL£ pliance11. lot11 of misc "'-Everytlung must be soltl bed. ml.at 988 8119 - 4 rooml ol lihll& <'IU"1>4•llnt¢. Vt!I}' Kood l'OOd M2 2llMn C~Stain Ornate ca1>t iron t•arc a ltl32 froro courthouse Tombeilunt', Ariz Be!lt otrer oo 3947 Ra mpart Athlt'l1<' Clu b tRa1:qu e l bdl1 I m t.-m benlupt> ~ I SUl5 each 646-5201 or 642 ~!i after 5P~ ~gnavox &ereo consol~. AMtYM a. rerord player. Prov i.tyle. duk color 1n good worlung order Sl5C> c.at I 646-1307 WHYBUYNEW''' Several ret.'OOd 1v ·i1 All modeb & SI .i.e5 WAR R/\NTY 642·5340 21 C'OWR TV 195 T WO YEAR WAH RANTY 642.s.34(1 Gerrard Type I\ Chanl(l"r wllh new nel'd le. h k1• new $3S 646-6621 Te.ac A344<14 chunnel t .. pt> recorder (S1mul Sync 1 hardly used Original :.tupp111g 1:arton & ~ year 6PM Catahoa 22. un11. traller. '018, Iota of xtra.i. tooOO 63l·Unl 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUPS AV AIL.AIU YAC Newport Mll-0551 Will u ch .. nl(e use or Wdl for slip space• Npt Bch ltl'ell SSl-4400 ll>at :.Lap wantt'd lo a1: l'Omtl'lOOatl' 36 Sailbout 111 Sewport .irca Plc<i:.e contact J l. Golfo:. .. t !ti7 f(l'T'l ~IP! Avail (';alt Judy or l h11 HY li42 4644 ..w PARTS &SERVICt; HOUl.S Open 7a.m . 'tll 8p. m Monday tbru Frida y CJoeed Sat. It Sun Elfective Mon. 9124 179 SADDLHACIC FOID zaeo s MaU>. Sant .. Arus Al Lbe Corner of W a m e r 546-7070 J Porscne 6x 15 11lloyi. w Plre lli P7 lire:.. new. 911 twn ball . Jac k & !JllSC ~ ...••••...•...••....... IMPORTANT NOTJCETO READERS ANO ADVERTISERS <.tUllertoo I P_. P __ _ ·77 Ford Van Fully loaded, P/S, P/B, Air, CN1se control. ste reo. st.eel radials & maas Low mileage ~ Call ~46 is Ponl Econ 100 Xlnt rood Rallied roof. sleeps 4 , + xlras 552 4344. MX> T1 OOdtce Van. xJnl cond. lo ma, mu.st i.et: Lo a ppr 6-74il3 alt 6pm '76 GMC. Spt:c t;d1t1on. x1nl rood. cu. .. tm truer . many xtrllb 33,000 ma 'i., IS.'Uunl( ~ 75!:1·93S9 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! L.AaGI SUCTIOM OflMF# "" 12ora s211•a WISTMIMSTH AIUY AHT19UE MALL Open Thur Mon 10·8. 11751 Wt!fitmmster A\ e GG. C714 > ~103 Oecoral-Or furnlturt! & by S11l llM5 Anaheim. ucCtllliOl'ies. Cedi.r Glen 118B, C~·­ Townhomes. 2554 Elden Patio furn. chma. lamps. Ave, C-081.Jl Mesa. I l to 6 hemp rope, Maple hdbrd, d&ly 64241734. ong. oU painlinp, power t'tm rh prm-111«1ul C..:hma «11IJ111el, 11nl1que bra:.:. fltc scrrt•n. !!tamed gla:.:. windo w. p • .11n t 1n gi., :.t.oooware. never out or IJu x. s erv ice for K 8Sl-008 Prvt ply Uruled A1rhnc 1) price dl11c-ounl coupon $50 645-5313 Pacifi c 11tereo wurranty loah. s,.H & + r e m a 1 n d I' r 11 f SW 9010 The pnce ,,r 1tcm11 advertused by vehic le dealers m the vehicle classified adve rll)>mg cohunns does not include any applicable Laxei.. hcen.se. transfe r fees. r~ charges, ltts for lW" polJuUon cootrol de· Vlc:t' cerulic al.ion.-. or de al.er documentary pre · parauon char&ei u nl~ ~IH 1pec1f1ed by Lbe lldvertaer '78 ~conollne . totally l'Ulilomued, bubble top and top cond Lo m1. &st airer 646-1472 ALSO 633CSi 'i> IM STOCK! rnanl.tacturel"'s warrun ••••••••••••••••••••••• ty. Sl.050 C...11 731 4451 Kawulu jel silt approx. -----Ask for SWve T1 Dodge 8200 ac. J)ll, am1rm ciu.s 318V8. 36 i<al fu e l Mint cond. 642-<XJ76 <.:all today . We alao may have that pre -owned BMW you are looking for' Antiques & Mu1c SlO lo lllde ·a -bed dblSl5~. mower, clothes. re fri1. SDJO. 1830 Irvine Ave Ethan Allen king 0 FritSat 2016 Paloma Dr. Sto re counter, unique ----30hr s u s e II .600 Oak, cash drawers elc. ... & ~ 548·2008or759 ~9 ll 1 ·2040 495-4949 N.8_. _ 631·3961 hdbrd$7S.9M-1644. ~---_ OaJt table 4-chr. & buffet, JbV1er;Sota, -tradilao~al 4 Fam.aly Garaa~ Sale. $2011/mk ofr Aft 5, .. dp .t JetSki'78x.lntcond MJJt ~-9777 ••••••••••••••••••9•0••1•0• aeU ammed. bet otr. Call i'6 Oodg.e Tradesman JOO. l9'1& 811W 2002-4 speed. 31.8. P /S, AtC. xlnt cond . A M I F .. I t e r e 0 M.JOO 642-69216 w 1~. sunroof fi 10 Orea 1930 re/mashed $800 style. full slpr, like oew fUrnllure It m111c. 401 i;et. 9112-9642 aft 5. ...""' 7 ... ~ ,.....,. lrvine, Newport Beach. ----G 11 "~ Jefr 66H1111s King sx wate r b e d ••••••••••••••••••••••• · - -~ ... 11'1. _......, Th It Fri 8'5-48.12 PERSJANTAPESTRIES HIDE·A·BED . loose _un-.---·---- w/fnnge . ~each. 0 80 . pillows, or new. cost Goodies collerted for 50 w /heat.er & padded rails i8 l8 · Custom HOT• 454 $'10. 953-5845 OM!vy, Basut hcltden . beautif u! condlUon ! Pn. ..._ W.e.d 9590 ply Call 646-9038 evm· Wendy. 6'5-1700 N> lell l250. 891 .5224 yn lo be sold Sat fi Sun ' · !188PlerPond, CM. t ... mces 10 I 0 Di.ning rm set beautifully -- ••••••••••••••••• •• •••• carved w/glaas lop. 8 SUN0 lb~ll4·79,h9am . Tres-C~H PAID velvet uphol c bra. pd e t w/c rv. stereo. S'oB)() u S800 546-1428 sofa. surfboard. weaght.s Ws hr1dry rs /Re fr1gs. .se · & m uch more 4900 worlang or not 957-8133 _ Nice walnut coffee tbl $70. River. N 8 . 675-2898 Freezer, Jorge upright, Walnut end tbl SS Vince - - - I ood ,._ 54.S-1756 B.R. furn . sofa bed. runs re11 g · oorl(ain lamps. patio c hairs, utSll5_S47·3182. Couch, r ocking ch1ur. tools. & nusc. Ill Via GE dbl oven 111.l>vt•, :.If maltrcAA All m gd cond YeJla , Udo Isle l''r1 & clearung. l'ood condition Make offer 67S-53211 Sa~~5PM . 673-3429 Sl50 biJ..3779 S.wi:itun• rPfnl' :w <·u 161 Rtll rond One or All ~ Solid Oak des ks w t•hrs., ~ IOIO kl' m:1ker J d11ori. L1k1: JIOCl1set 661 3101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ww $11!10 7!Y.! l~I f'\Jm, din rm. bdrm. frn~l LUCiGAGE TAGS rm. r nlPrtainml r l r from your bu.smess l'urd l!o.,t"(f 1{1·rn1wru111ro., Wa)>ht•r-, & Dry1•r-. SlO.MSO. 964-GIJS Send one card for eac-h -tag plw; one s part: We Nt:w c ui.tom Ba r 1•a r e turn permanently Lounger modul:.ir i.ora sealed attrul"t1ve lal( & w1rccltner ends Earth !>trap, meet1nl( airline 25' AMANA refnK New tone texture fabnc Co:.t 1.0 reqwremenls. Pre· Mdl ' d t' / F h $1700 SelJ SSOO. 551·2340. vent lOtlS & thefl' For a BA IH;AINS SEHVICE liesl Appham·t· J:J()·O!ll I Ala lJ<Amii & !\dams. llU 2 r, · c oc. ---,_...,..alized lag enc lose br wn. $400 646-37911 , ...--· ~ Bantools,end tbl.coftbl, wallpaper . f abric o r IChool desk, reasonable "Day Glo" 1>9per " we U.sed 19 c ubic roo t prices, <'all :.in 5·30 evs. will back & tr1m your refrigerator w /bottom 64.S-9866 tags. Or try two cards freezer S75546-4754 __ Pine wood c h esl o f bedttD~a~JkCES Cats 1035 drawers 125 S2 ea or 3/SS ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ 493·94611_ __ 4/5tags$1.60 e u Siamese k1llt'n)>. )>hut:.. 2Naug rouc:h.' 1 ·gray :;·' 69t.a.gsS1SOeu ~U!I S.·rv111· .. s u Sales Tilx lndu<fr<I t u 132 <!hl • l c ... ..,,., L 04 114&"7H7 ,~CAR > ' DofJ' 8 0 ~u~_your own 11r :.c 4 UAL coupc>oa SSOeach 912-7:rz4 26" Ross l~sp wom ens Ille Xlnt. Double bed & frame 760-06SJ Onental rug Yxl2 Saruk. Appraised Sl ,800 64.S-4.586 Won on l(a m e s how Every Uung for kitchen & dinmg rm Cry:.tal, stoneware, ffiJl·ro·ware . ~· o.118 Carpet ing. 21JO+yartb . u~""kold twttd l>hllg 64< .. 032~1 John Wuyne l:lub Tennis mt•mbcr:.h1 p fur !>:.tie $1000 + lranb f ee 494 7191 Membe111h1p Irvine Coabl Coun try l:lub, re WHITHH BUYING or SELLING Thi111 Yow- DAILY PILOT IOAT~RT To plau your ad ca1 642-5678 loatS., MariH ,..,...... 9010 ••.................•... asonably pncoo Eveb. 1!1n Mere 10 HP Elect 646-'343 st.art. 0 /8 motor I.Ake 1011 ............•.......... Oxy a cetylene welding ng. Sm.I home computer 641 M27 ORJEHTAL RUGS WAMTED new~. 758-1520 Avon l2'6"x5'6" & 25 HP Johnaon in perfect cond. Sl500 494· l 966 loah.Power 9040 •.•...•..•.........••.. • :J>' Se& Hay Wt~kendN 1'wn inbd Uni.lol 1·on1I $:0.(UI 213 ~!ft! LIJI Persian or C..:h1nt•..,1• ru.c~ f' 1* onty ~ '---'-57~c;;~. -rn-c-·r-a-r.Jl..-w . pl .,(, J> Bay ;et. tandem trailer ~.ll300 Trn 111 t..._, •...................... 9120 •····•····•············ '72 VW Cmpr Rd cond It trk. AM, Xtru ~ ~6orM10991 Cab over w appliance•. d.anwged Sl.SO Ca II 646 6M4 ----Motariwd llkH 914 0 .........•.......•..... '79 Puch Mux1·Lux 2,000 m1les Uudcly e.cul. fool ~. ht.>U\')' dUI)' ltrt'' Like nt>"' 54(11 4~111·G7~ F11r ... ul« hr and llt'"' S•H'h." rnoJ.",'ll ti7=t~ MM•u/ ~. '520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S MC MM:t1tt L2 ·wire wls. 125 ea Corvaar headJI . 125 a pau 64of>.4i621 a.a .. 11o d Veliid9i 9530 .....•.......•......... '96 Doct&e Tr:i' co motor home 27 · I ndusuul en.: XlnL oond au cond on root . pwr pfant, awning. l"lt'W <'tplS. :.eab " din 11\g Sp!!t 6 comlon a bly Abo ·m Toyot.a dt! ~ .. n w to14 bv Air t OOd, & gdcond ~~I 4 Wheef Dri•es t550 •••....•............... ii> GMC Jo mm). '>dmt· J' (he\) Hl .. u-r Lo 1111 ., Jllnl l'Ood ~t) ~ •olf>t n Jo'250 Ford ~•m11er 4\1 I ~~~/ 9150 perf cond Lo m1. 4 .. pd. ••• •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • stereo. XlJ"M Sf&OO or bat '72 llonda 450. t-llllndt>d dr Dys, ~UOOx29 __ rmt met. chromto run" Tn&b 9560 &real ltiOU ti4t> 4M 7 I • • • • • • •. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '74 Yamaha TX~ 6 soo lnLem I '74 J•,t Load .. tar m1 l't•rft't1 111n1I ~.Kl lib> 16 \an xlnt t'11n11 d.1) 11 33 2231 , \t''I Sen 1<'e rec _.,.,11 lh ~ 14!ltl 774 1330, •'\ l''&"' lrn1J 1Cti-i'UI K irk I lond .. 1 ·ux 1111JC1 •· '• 1111 .. 1 1 I ;.l\.WKI m 1 It-'. -.h 11"' ru" 111 '7'.J 1; \11 I~ I' H I\ "1 t-\1 nwwl kt"d ~ ~u"t ...,..,,. ... , ,.,.,... "' "" \4 .. ~ .. , wll "'2 ~14! •t f..r f>4f> it>lt, ,111 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1n& 1f no anisw e r . WEPAVTOPOOLLAR PLEASEkeeptryln1! " for top UMd c&r1 fore11n. Oii +MGI COUNTY'S doml!5t.Jc:s °' clus ac:i. tr your car 1.1 extn cleMo. OLDIST -us F1RST' & ~ • I l11 Of-.. C.-ty 2!'1'l!>ILl.rbf>r Rlvd ~,-A Ml-~A 979·2500 CONMllL CHIVIOUT .o0I H.;irr .. r HI\ fl nt.T·\ \1 t_, \ S4'-1200 c.n·t~Jl Your<.:ar ,. Cft\i-9MW I'!\\ STOP f.)(11,LAK For<.1~.in L'>t"Cl lmp11rt,, <...Ill M1kt or Oon 8JS-ll71 WANTED! 1,,,l•' 111111hl l 11~11t ..... \Ul\<a. !~~""' ..44U. l •,,JI u.-. lu•JJ ~ Saks-St!t"V1ce·Lea11ng lov c.-.er.IK.. Rolls floycc BMW 1540 J amborf!f" ~Beach_ ~6444 · IOI Mcl.AIEH's >SS()!" Beach 81\ ti LA llAHRA l.S -'it ~o or S,\ t'w > I '714 t522-5lll ~ndioly b> Appl '7S 5301. A 1T . A 1C. \ AM/PM. Superb cond. S7 99S Ht'nry 730-0760 tlllys "n! J20I 2ll.OOO m1. <:oun- roc.I payoff or take over 1 ..... 644 ~LJ STl-~\J.' .)JI/ I B~W i1o, ..,.IH•r ma ~.lo 1111, n11n l UJlld... '10.:JlJ. l 'H l~U- 1'\l..., I07 ~IH $351142 0771 l"rt>)>t Pt bmwn Hot.h ex m niJ $451 JOormore SI 40ea ••••••••••••••• •••••••• MJ\:tlOGl'\NY I u(JJ1· & 4 natne, addre!>'>, ph1m1• & KEF~llOND l'up:. AK<: l'haar., u1 be rer1n1s ht-d. W\:'U make one l'ard iwr l.'hamp sire M t' l'ct & 4H"xJ6" -t 12· lear. $100. ta,g Add 25" each ~ h o w I' v l P l Y Ulromc kitchen Lubic & 41 Send check or money or s:'B.SW or ~l l!IW sip-, WANTED {.JUJo:EN S IZF: JO, I' I' 67'12172 '73 lntl111n 1:!5n qre• I bed rrnml' w hl'adboJ rd t.J Ch .. \\ l!lh 11ri ~ •1J111 bu) for ~I "'. I s~~"1 .. rrrn111111 itJ 4Dl2 run.-. ~oo<.l Nl~Js pamt Nu ru.-.L Sl.650 or llst li73 Zi 50 :.!131W1 1345 aflfi pm duurs, 36" round + 12" derl.O. &·or foo l board Prl'f 15· bout & tilt tra iler 12!>0 l~ul :lllJll llnq rTll •!•Hwl Brai.i>. alsu rattan. ormake olfcr <'000 S3SO ~'4H l!Jllll.tfl • ·~ !1115 J i.k f111 l'.wl I AKCGldn Hetncverpups, leaf SlOO Cull aft 4PM. PILOTPRIMTIMG Hunters. wtr dogs, 80 ~ . P.O. Box l560 wicker . o r Kd wood __ 548·lf'81 '714 llond .. 5~h ~ooM 1 it;( be•\ , lrm ""'hi \lnl I .,_-.;.1.-t..;.u....;;;..;H.;;~..-..;;.ll.;:.;.•&.___. Ccipri 9715 '' h f> d " Costa Mesa. Ca. 112626 "' 3 m P c 1 " re c · Want Ad Resulls 642-56711 Pncc must be reasona· ~l OH er th t·r $I .!IOI.I ble' 'I Ca ll between llM8 DITTMAR 34 rt 75.2-0383 5·»10PM 96Hi947. dil!l'lel cruiser. AP. VIW. f'alh .. Pl11t h. Anchor <'ond l'\l part) Juhn C•••• ...... • •••••••••••••••••••••• 5S7·7400, ~-4UIJ l'\t':o. "''4•·UOl -S40·tU7 '77 Capra Ghia Sharp. 4~1 AKC ve ry tiny Poodle pup. Male I -Whal~ I· Black 99'l·2178 Siberian Husk1e puppies, 5 Fem. Good homl>s, big yrds, serious buyers on ly --3681 7 wk Beagle. male. AKC. Shot.b SS6--8S87 ---Beautiful g uard dogs AFGHAN. Fee l safe P\lp6 & adults 557 9397 Al.dt. Shep blue mcrle & tri, dbl regis .. S7~Sl2S. 631·2384 Classified Ads, your one· i.1.op shopping center A FICllllOll• 811alnen H•m• St•t•ment flied Wllll Ille County Clerk le valid for ""' re••• •ti•• wlllcll time continuing butln•ue• mua1 refile Publlc•UOf'I I• -H•ry only If tll•r• ••• clleng••· Cell th• L•g•I O•p•rlmenl •I 1he DAILY PILOT for lnlo rme ll on end n•c••••'Y I01m1. 642-4321 Eit. 332 ......... IOOS ......... IOOS ......••• , ......•............•................ ANTIQUES SALE SALE SALE . G1gantit antique warehouse sale now on. fantastic bargains that you may never see again EXAMPLES: Armoires S89, buffets $69. oak tbls $79. halltrees $69. clioing chr set $79, was h stands $79, clocks $44. lots of bric-a-brac & accessories. Wander down row after row in a forest of antique furniture, a truly :1::'1Jen~~ection. several con· EXAMPLES: Oak player pianos roll top desks, Victorian china cabinets, magniCicent hand carved oak buffets. , C~H I VlSA / CHECKS CERAMICS OHlc.e Fwwitwe & wmch, bail & fish t.anks, ............ 8015 ruU canvas. swim step Handpainted ceramics. plaques. nativity sel. plat e s. much misc it.ems. Ahlo special or den & colors done al re asonable cost 841>-5745 t!Ve5. •••••••••••••••• • • • ••• • $14.900. CT14 I S.'W 1~5 FORMH COIN DI.Al ER u .. ...., Lefto•w Stodi AtWIMlu• (gray sheet "Ask ") 1833 i,; cent VF 124 .SO IJl64 2 centa X f' S20 00 1834 Bust \l'J dime Xf' $57.50 COPY MACHINE Uses any paper '., Pnce 962· 7033 1017 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fl.nches Amazon Parrot w/wrought iron cage Hand lamed S300 Mary 7S2 1940 d ays . eve S3M1l6 ----..... & 0,.,... I090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •100 '1 of NEW & USED pianos & organs. $895 up Dealer 751-1121 1.937-03-legged Buffalo New Kawa11 Consolt: or t'$U7.SO jpln. re1iul1Jr S899S. s ale tndlan&wheatcents. price $61511 linmhull 14' Seawatch (Whaler copy I New 40hp Johnson lrlr Sl .7 5 0 dy838-2982,ev631 ·S:W - 16' DUFFIELD BAY BOAT Mochfied from elect lo elect start 0 .8 1n well lncld. trlr SS.000 UNITED Y ACI ITS BRKRS 714-631-3133 27...,'. 1977 Baylmer Vic toria Oybrdae-du .. 1 sl11 tion. Volvo V-8 I 0 f-"Wl: VHF' -Of' 1 ll&C w a t e r / a I I 1· a n vasses1labs 1charger/3 ball H 'IY!l lem 1s lpi. '69 Triumph 2511 'ery c l ean ·74 \';.i m 11ha 250 MX x lnt t'u nd ~6364M1kt> '72 Honda SOOct· 4 '>l ruke, gd cond $.50() bt•st ofr Call Make 968-28UI RENT 24 ' ~ Wtnnebago salver. ¥unroof. 4·s p. '63 RM.DChero Rood b<Jd>. M.al0.1080. ~7736 or =o~··l~t;{lor Nt!etl i. PORSCHE'S I ..:.531::..:....;.3;..:.1..;..17 _____ _ G .., • K I I '76 V6. 4 s pd. PS, s unrf. 1 3 ... c .... to n 57 m1 WANTED AM / FM cass. X lnt. 350en ir Ne w t1 r.e<:o ~.ooo rru. $3700. S40--064.J AM FM 8 track SJ.200 Al.low , .. _ .. ~ S2'1·:1MO us u""' opportunity ..., .. '74 Owvy Pick Up. oew tJreoi & mowr . xJnt run NnR rond &. mpg S2000 m.~ to COOSJdtt lhe purch ase or trade an of your clei.n i'6 Capn, 6-cyl. 4-sp. lop Portche Check with U* d hne Gh.ia, Eve ry Xtra . Today' M.'50. M2·3344 Sir-s S200 wkly + 6" T.J '"ton f'ord Pack up. rme. 913-2135 vs. 54,000ma. long bed. ;a fiJdtil ~ ........... !?~! _:_ o ro U:1..) •LUM i8 29' fo:XeC'UtlV!: Low mileag~. idnt l'Ond f'ull ~es l or ll ktnd anlr 129.500 PP Dy.., !J57 8191 . eve11 41M 1237 RF.NT 23 · FllU-:lli\LI. auw • lg tn. tJ box Ruru. Xlnt' 559.5025 ·~ Chevy , , T . 6·«yl. l 1.1631 HMbQI Ho.a c .. .-c,..,.. ·~ &Jl-Dl) spd. runs weU, body good AMtoa. lmpwted S975 1o rr 6 73 4317 , ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~C\'t'l> G.•-' 9701 S EL,.. <.:ONTA I N t:u . !lave something to sell" Rt.:A';ONABLF: 1>4S-228..1 Oass11led ads do at well l•-------.... -••••••••••••••••••••••• SILICT10M Of A&.LMOOB.S SHOP & COlllP ARE BARWIC K DA nuN . ' 831·137S 49J.JJ7S Uberty & buff. Nickels. 751·1121 early lypes, Morgun & Organ, Wurhlzer, 43110 Pe a ce dollars all al Deluxe Xlnt cond Home "Ask ''.-For. co!"~lete or Profes !'ionai use s1Bnst.o1 RJ.000 or bt•11l lwlio LecnMcj 9510 Awto t..miMJ 9510 offer Dys 634·4601 . eve~ •••••••••••••• •• ••• ••• •• •••••••••••••••••••••. ATJENTION M c rt•edt.'e.. RMW . ~he. t:las111(' & Ex oll<' We wlll sell your car on c•oninicnment at your pncc. Best location 111 Orang~ County For tn· formatmn coll Jim cur· ran. •DATSUNS• LArpW.d ... J,'.dce hst lg S .A.S.F .. LO 982 ~ C.C. Box 2:i06. Npl Bch · _ _ - - 9l!llll3 New Kawai! Console or- RAii SPANISH TREASUIE l(rul. regular $2850. !!ale price $19011 Rramhall 7Sl·l 121 561-$5 ' Otnacraft. 6 cyl. w 1 a1·e· gr bx. oltauled and run rung. ssoo. 646-6621 GLSPR l!i sprt Lido, new ·int, 35 evnrd elect. bt tnk, compass. rad. trlr. xtr11 Slfm 548-8424. Approx.. 1000 oz 11alver Elegant Anltquc i\ustnao bar dated 1654 from Grand Piano 1891 Ebony "Mara Villa" $45,000. "'Art Case" Piano an· '77 23' Mako. turn key 28-3> ox bars SUOO ea. eludes a ben ch 41 xlnt equipped. $14,000 firm AJao gold bars & escudo works. 12385.00494-0466 Gr eat Marlin bo11t Ht from 17l!i plate neet _673-_all ____ _ wreck. WiJI trade for un· New Kawa1I 5'1 Grand IMh. WI 0 circulated U.S. coins . ptano. reaular SS880. Sale ••••••••••••••••••!~~ •• ccml. or lnduat. R.E .• lsl price $4140. 8n mhall TD's e. Cove P .O Box Plano7SM121. 2!i08. Npt Sch 92663 Se..t.g Mec211R11 1092 u · FlberaJaa wood spa.rs ma In • JJ b 84&-MJll PERSIAN carpet.••••••••••••••••••••••• Handmade. pure s ilk. SAn&er' w/~le, 30 or 40 Hobie Cal on trlr, w/bclx Qwn. Xlnt qwil. rr ply yr old comm ·1 $200. Early model. fast. Sl.450. 561-0Me ISM703 all J.2 noon ...,e..;.;..oz......, _____ _ ...,.Secrifice 17' WlnOfta SJ ...... 1094 SHOWIOAT canoe, anUQue bdrm set, ... •••••••••••••••••••• EXTRAS end tbl, l coffee tbl. Joaetaketeaforaale, un· Coranado2S. Faahailer. ....-z. limited selection. buy xlM cond. Fully equip . Npt. Bcb. Tennl& Club «Dt pair get two movie Priced rilbt. By owner. Family Memberahlp. =u~':.t~1call 4' ta.3'631. All. S,175-7512. lllO. 14' waT WIGHT POT· M4-0'782 S 0oU e.r,, •. TEil, abin al .. 2. AmH· Har rua a· wide,~· de· .. o.. · inc comforts. 1t.bWty • e p • a ii rt d w o o d , ..... .bfndliq. Good for lake Teledyne htr Ii pump , NEW & US.ED; toedini ca,. OOMD. SUOO Incl. tl'lr, _.. .... mbly, SllOO. equip. 1cope1, rtrlea. atpJolmaon . ..__ ---. .. u. ~U..8:° .. aaiOtb a. am. .: s.lliDc aQYt.hlft1 with • (UJ) DE CASA mem· Dllb' PUot CJ ... lllecl Ad blnltlp.,.C.UJou1t ... a 8'._.. 1mtitr •.. S7110blt.W. JUl&caU.01171. r-----------, I LEASE ANY MAKE I I ANY MODEL I I I I PAY ONLY I I FIRST MONTH I I PAYMENT I II Mo DIPOSfT o~ LAST MOMTHI I WE TAU.ANY TRADE I trAfD 'Joi 01 MOTi I I .. PHONE CREDIT APPROVAL I I '79 CAllUAC '79 CWCA S 114 MO. Par 1'1 OI •9 1Ja1,.,.n1a ol 1114 H • tu OAC Yalvt 16* "-1)17) fOtet ........... 16.MSl .Woh••lertM IJOO W C.oast ltwy Nwpt Sch 642·6763 9705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUAIOMIO SALIS. SBVICI ~LUSfMG OICMOSALE NOW IN PROO RESS• IEACH IMPOITS 8411JOVeSti NEWPORT BEACH 712-0900 OfAI,..._ WI SPICIAU:U IMGOOD SBVICI COSTA MESA DATSUN 284$ltARHOR BLVD 540.'4 I 0 540.021 l V7 o.e..r-ltl9 lloiicbtw, wht bdtp re movable, needs paint fi Int work. INOO/beat olr. 541...a '87SPYDER Claaalc. '11 ate> z: Xlnt cond. New Mual see. $4.600. paint, am/fm cauette. -~~67S-~~IO'l7..;.._~~-1 t:DIObestofrer.MO-!!Oa6 9707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• P.P wanu to ~ Data~ '11· '74. Have c:aa b. RepAlrable OK. 54$.'1414 17 ....._..,,,... ....._hn•irW ........ ......... ....._ UM4 .a.~~ u •••••••••••............ .......................••nw , -· Md ....._, Ulff ~. OCtober 11, 1979 OAll.Y PILOT Cll ...... ..... .. . .......................................................................................... . ........... ._ .. .!!! -! ... ~~ .... !?~ ••• n 51 9'170 Ck:••* ttlO C. v1tk ttU ,_., tt40 ...... UHCI ...... UM4 UM4 ....................... ••.•.•.••••............ ....................... ....................... .................•...•. ..•...•................ . ............. ~·· :ii;:r.,°*. ,., .. ,,,'° ,.c .... vw ~· :,,a111r.111 1'7tl*ie0 ia0irv .. r.uyloedecl.bt1i:' MAllll u... n41 •••.. nll "»• • "'° · · w• • lo • Q.hl*MC• m blk, 1u mi. auto. AUTO C9fTB ....................... • .. •••••••••••••••••••• ·-.. •·•••••••••••••• --------.. Ill m. • ca..,., Capri~ A/C. AM /P M l ·trk NCmO.NO OV'&R "11 Mart IV, new UN., '?1 .. &bell. alot b.a,, '1' Pbaoutlt Arrow -C..,., tlualt. .. .... u: ..._ .. /119 .._. carao., MaliWI • .._, ma1 wbla, belt ... ,,, btb. IOUd wbt, alat 11.--. •ltd. PS. P • lo/mt a-. •. 100. aft . .. ... ................. ..... u •• alt, ....... ~ ... DruUe rMllC · .... 11'15 .,,.., cond.aU5.MO-al3 AC, AMtrll. 11 .. PG • ..;. .. _.,....;....;..m;.;.._•-· ---- • P'll. "' All/FM, ...... "'...., -1 ,.~ SOver Aaolv. Mauakt& tt47 :::Z.~-"* °"· ..,. Plyaioutlt Sanoto. !!.~ll ... n .ooo . ---'--SAYINOWlll Lit Blk utr/lU llllr. lt71fOID " ................. -.. ... cand. J\IUu ICNtded • • ,_ .. II 'pY'SJ •• -D. IDWll ~ .... ~·uo. •Y•"' ·--....... _... ... , -~~...;;.-;...;;;..;;::::;::.1 •• 1 ~· -., ••• _. "10 ..__.. uav--'..._ ....... -•ID•& I ttll *l:.aUlea1e.lntol· ,.-· •-"' -·---_... ..-. 974• • • . a -. -+ -l'-. l ..... ' .,,,, •W'-1 --..~---... -....., _ .. _ _ • ~&\Ill' .. _ ~ _,., - -·-power, a.,.ory 1lr trw, J..dr, IOOd coed. __ .................. . . .,. 562-8'11 -............... ,...................... ' · owotr. Sl2,000 . Pb ccmd..t.~ power...... .-is . ._ M4£•S -..:.:.aa-9961 ....... 'TT ...._: red. OoM • VW .,. , .... a-~ t11t , Llnd•na top • • .--,. ...._&JO. het~ co ... "lt,IOO ml lu. ::.:,.rh ... Nl·l llt ,._ HJJ ID Wiii NEW condition! MMlti...rcay-ttlO ~CIMOOV!f9R --•••••••••••••• -~ C.11 ~--......-9T'WZ). H•H•H•H•••H••••••• nvuu.n ., .,, .. ., ... warraa&1 ••o• ol . -••••••••••••••••••••••• •2fft .......... ., ....... wltb blue AJC ... · 6 Hl•TOtl Wkda11 • VW Bui xi.t. eood ~ ORANGEcomo'Y'S a..a999 r.-.. .,. ........ .=.'°"' ...._ · 11.-.r11ll1. taH•OJ, P.P. want • to b uy •61COUGAl .-wtsT .._ luede JatMtor. 8-.eket _.,,.. OMtvrolet. Have u1h. S'TOO * &f.5..9'90 UN00LN llERCURY Mati, IS' /S, p /Bi ex· n -. , ... ml AC "llllO 111.1dc9l. perf. lpor• R4!Palr1bleOK 5'5 7~ DEALERSHIP 19760&.DI ,. alJellt cond. vtny top, 1Uel, All /I'll ~ ... · U'COllaiflan 1a1mi. "t18UG.NEW T RAN -----Dodp ttJS . llt•eCYSIDAM AMIP'll casa, lo mUet . ........ U1 lOIO ""all ea, bell over Ooocl OoadiUon S200tl ••••••••••••••••••••••• RAY FLADEIOI Wit.ball oltbe98 1uxunes Good Miieage. Ca ll ...;;..;;....;.;....;;;;;;;...::::::;• a-aee 5115117 ~122 :!~~C.rlo. fuJI pwr, '74 Monaco FUUy pwrd UNCOLN-MERCURY PLUS AW /F M stereo, Ml-38Maft.6PM. "11-.-mt toad~ ;;r~ •new lares. Snr(. Air.F M Hatch. 16-lBAut.oCenterDr. Ull wbeel,cnaiseconlrol. • ....... ~ ..,.0 -n,,MMla«OO . red. a.Jot rond 1'0 VW 8'11 nau alot ll. 17UW. M.uat Sell. $2,085. SD~·Lak• For•lexil ...J;l pwr. aeal.8 •· low '7R6 Flreblrd Formula. --. .t ma AM' FM , t i .U O.or b eat offer. IM-llZl '7Z Pinto wap, air, roof. IRVINE :iJes. <748PHJ> • ac1n1 mirrors, ma'I IUllO 541-0'm ..,_,orNHM5. Cl&.... ttJS rack, ndl work .• .,.,,. IJ0.7000 whla. 4 new Uniroyal .,. .,.._PIO :dot..,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• '70 Charger 500, 383 _.,,., $3499 ral.led whl leath Ures. -..,.. ""' ·--N , ood cood, xlot ma1oum, new lran1, 74 ""-•'-wa-r-•-y /FM 11te~ 8 track, -, .. ._...,... 9744 ,.,.... ,,., -·-~ -. . 0 a 3710. AM --· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,._., .. , n •· ··-aft. ·•-~ ...-. """... NAlllS c -..,.... "" -t.nullpaJ1auuu car ~ a&llo. new rear end. • '7-4 LTD full pwr delu.xe Pk. 9 pua PS. PB xlat Al . 56,000 m1. $6000/bst 71 MOB, perf cond , &PM or bat oh. MtrsaOs aft Urea. $800. 661·05lS pric:edtoaell! ' · cood. o ni owor.' P P. ch 714 /337-89EBev. ' 7JI !,_~1~!-l olfer Dys. 7pm. anytime •.494-831.S• $2.195. E va /wkods AUTOCEMTH --------~ ...,,._. 'Ill VW oew paint, Urea. seo.·-1'2!i Baller Streel '78 Trans Am . Fu lly --............... rebtl t!111 Aaktn& 11 ,750 C ti I twl 9930 Ford tt40 '65 Van Ford S.cyl 200hp/ ,_, COSTA MESA loaded Gd cond. Must • Wp I.II, aood coad, P1 I ot 9741 &T7·.99tl ....................... ••••• .. 0 •••••0 ••••••• Stick XJnt cond S8SO '75 MonarchGhla 540.9202 selU&500~l 957-14!1J ~~·.~Must ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vot.o 9772 77 Marti V Chrome ware .-P HIL 714 964 l921 Lulhcr ~.000.~=· S28SO ,, __ _ --'-llhl ..... ...,.. PIUGEOT wbls. moonroof. 31,000 ......,........, T7CutJass&.apr, AtC. vin ~c0y'67s 640GT~,,~vxtert17 . ....__.._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ma .--.... pp .... ., ~1 or LONG '62 Falcon w0 n run., ---top tit ~hi A M /FM -""" ....., ~ .._ t727 SALIS. SHVICE VOLVO 962-mi"' _,......, FORD eood $375 .. ....WM) 9952 ~.Sa; 8'6-iw1 cves644-684.2aft 7 . ... •••••••••••••••••••• .._~1 ••••UA. 631 OUM ••••••••••••••••••••••• i ..... Mew 79 ,,.,_ -"9 14 Formal Limo. bas bar. 1979 FORD i3 Vast.a en.user wgn very 1 Wg.n runs good, DEllOSALE SALIS, SHVICE 1V, new Ures. aood cood. ~ u.colit 9945 lo/Dll P/S, P/8, air. bei.t loaded. S250. tDilDA CS"I NOWINPROGR~I AMDLIASIMG m.51.U. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUSTAHG TUllO olf~over S1.750takes it. 962 7374 MA.MY OVERSEAS DELIVE RY •• J•IOll & Soft 4 speed, TRX radials G3172 TT Lemans. low m.Ueaae, 11ACH•~1TS EXPERTS ecrr.th 9932 '• • w/mags , s tereo & .. ToQ1111Prelm ~ ....................... eo~...... UHCOLM-MaCURY moomoof. (Wl23081. PIS. P/8 , AIC Will ac· ,..._..VERSITY IMIDoveStreet IA.ILEl11E •COttYITTISI!! '°Spe<'aaJof lbeWeek" $7811 PWo 9t57 cept low book. Call Vf"llll NEWPORT BEACH " 71 U .... "'OL.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5Sl 678!t aft. 5:30pm o..-a.11e 752-0900 11166 1~~boVrOUl vd !j~~eota&r~!f~~~~ ~~~.-:..~~~~°' ... :;:;:; TOWHCOUrE i3SqrWagon.4·apd,new ~~-~.~s. any tame on ..._,_._ ,,._ G uu ....tu lJrcs. lo rru. late blu. ~ood w,......,, .._ ~ • MC Pandit 9750 COSTA MESA ~ for lmmedlute de· BeautJful luxury car a.n rood 832 IH2'7 aft 6 --- Thlcb ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-9303 540 9467 Uvery! See US '72 LTD. Air, automatic cryst al apricot with 9970 BOHarbor Blvd. '78 911 SC. A n awless • TODAY!!! Xlntcond. $1750 leather IDtenor. Low 14 Ford Panto Hunabout ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.a..11.. 540-9640 white beauty with many OIAHCHCOUMTY HOWARD Chnrol.t -~-4046 mileage Une owner l.Jj1nu A C, New tare~ '78 Diamond Jubilee. extras and only 6100 mi. VOLVO Dove & Quail Sts <IKll.931 I Sl.700 ~l400.afl 4 '1.1,000 rru. S62ll0. 675-6578, '75 Civic CVCC, 2 dr , gd 63 1304 NEWPO Make you r s hopping $9200 640-6444 eJCL5 tnlal.$1.IOO.Bm . l· -----EXO..USIVELYVOLVO 13~5~EACH eas1erbyus angtheDaily 262J6llarborBI C M 65 MusUlllg Qinvertlble 19Pinto.8K M1. ___ '1_»_..:.1520:.:: i0911Tw/'76TurboCar· LargestVolvoDealt:r 5 PakltClasslfiedAds . 540 5630 · 6 l'yl ·low mileag e 4 ~pd.$4.500 Sl'.l.L idle items with a Dailly Ptlot Clas:-.afted Ad. rer a factory body & a.nOrangeC-Ounty' -- ---· -751 6666 A!ter ~l'M f.61 34H7 '79ACCORD WC turl>o leath antr. $18,000. BlJY or LEASE 4&.rtos, Mew 9100 Autos, Mew 9100 Wot Hew 9800 Bronze exterior' gold ,.,_,I days '"""' .. 780 DI RECT •••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •11tos. M•w 9800 t.vto1. H•w 9100 t.vto1, H•w 9100 vel ve t interior. Air. ,....... ......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-=.~.::=~'"!=tr~~ [flM't~~ ....•.....•...•.....•.. ··················•···· Bye-Bye Honda. $7850. ------- Call 91112-3087. Weekdays. '71 911 SC, red ta.rga, low 2025 S. Manchester Aft.er6PM. aaJea, like new, loaded. ~heim 750-2011 list 132. 000. se II 125 ,500. '1 7 ff on d a C a v a c 714:988-6563 i3 u.x>ES, AIR. Overdr, Hatchback, must s ell ___ ;..:..;.:;.______ leather, lo ml, xlnt cond 60-tm eves. 'T1 lli':M, copper. lo mi's, S'T.350 673-Z7SO air, auoroof. 4-spd, sler ~--· --------.! ,,.._. 9730 eo tape, a lloys, $8795. 7 7 VOLVO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 557-8710. 79 XJ IL showroom con· dlUon, fa ct. warr .. $Ul,'150. IS7~7570 ---------' 242 DL s d n. 4 s pd, i8 9U SC Targa, 11.000 AM/F M cass . st ereo. nu·s, showrm cond. a ll velour int. good Ures, drk power. $25,900. 642-0502. blue ftniah. Xlnt cood. Good au mileage. Pvt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1957 Cabnolet pany leavlna area & ;•~Jemen Healey conv. Convertible, beautiful. mustsell.963-~ 9732 Yelttan. RadlalA. cass . alJ records since new . ..._ ..... ..... -• G S8500. Mwsl sell. 6'2·0502. '75 lME, xlnl cond. A/C, ""'·..,. ni ........ arm. rt red/blk · l ood JDPI. xlat mech cond. in · i 111 Record a. $60001 O B o '6t T AR•A ml&. $6300. ~3097 n4l2l8 n-t.b engble, offer or --------_tr_llde_._64.$--....;.._n.86.:...:...:... ____ I ...... UMd CRBtVD. mJNTINGTON BEACH ••~zooo 9738 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MAIERS AUJOCEMTER N011UNO OVER $4999 1974MAZOA IX4COUH 4 speed trans., radio & air oond.. aMKSY ). $1999 .......... '740 ....................... •Mn '6' JIOSL COUPI M>ADST• a-le coupe r o11d.lter, orlpul eondition, local· ly owaed • ser viced , .u. .,..,.., air cond .. llUlt .. t.o appreciate. az>OB) J1Maae0MS IWOl'l'S 1l'IO HARBOR BLVD. OOl'I' A llDA 6Jl·l276 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ttlO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Im IMdt Skylark 4 door __ .;....;;. _______ , sedan, 70,000 miles. Assume leue oo 1979 Por. Silver Wllb red lnten or 9USC Tarca'. 8K mi, blu Power w i n d o w 1 • w/bel1e int. Mo. JI•>" ateertnc. Al(/f'll 1tereo, meal $513..;;dlu.ll .have air condltifnlne. delux ltrOQI crecUt. 4M-6SU. trim <ffl fide. custom Don trim lnaide. Priced at ... ._... wboleule blue book •••••~•••••••!?.~~ SZ175. call Dally Pilot •1 &EA&:E.A t ~. Ext._210. CLOSED SUNDAYS nus 1974 Silver Shadow U belonged t.o a T. V. and cinema celebrity. is cream ii> color w ith brown \eatber interior a nd bas only 31,000 miles. Condition ex~ep· taonal. (10109 > Roger Mille r I m p ort s, Rivennde (7)4 l688-!K20. 9760 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sill SALIS, SBVICE AHDLIASIMG DEllOSALE NOWINPROGR~! 1976 CADILLAC B.DORADO F\a.11 power. factory a ir cond.. AM /FM stereo & 8 track, Wt wheel. cruise oootrol, split pwT. seals, Cabriolet top & leather inlerior. <Ser .Z737~ ). $5195 NABERS ~) le:AXJ H.•rtx:x Blvt I C<Y.>tc\ ~. S40-<>100 '74 Cpe de Ville. 12975. 1 owner. xlnt cond 61K 6'4-4888 after 5. '78 Seville W /sunroof. Cloth int.r AM/FM tape full prw. Lo/mi. 759-1867 IEACH IMPORTS i9 Eldorado, an equip + 848 Dove Street sunrf, cedar fire m lat, NEWPORT BEACH 7IZ.OtOO w/lthr. 9,000mi, $14.500. ?M-77112. TOfOl9 9765 '78 Seville. Perfect condl· •••••••••••••••••••••• • lion. low miles. $8450 or '74 Celie a, sharp, new tnde. Ca.ll 831-11829. tran1, auto, MUST SELL! Xlnt cood. S2500 '75 Cad, muat tee, s uper 'JM.Q:115. sharp. 1 owne r . Call __ _.;_........_ _____ ,Mac k 982·7788 o r 1174 Oellca GT. Excellent 646-3083. .....Wkla. ~--------Call n&-aM7 "19 Sevllle, loaded, low 1 90E, atllalllc mllan --.. ...;;.;;;;:OO::..:.:.BO:::...:.;N;.;;.A;__ __ , mUeqe, ukina Sl.5,000 • . : ........... -1, IDlf. XLHJ'OOND' "95 _17J.311i5 ______ _ ::A.111111 c....U., HW AadWGrtllill 147582. "JO 2 door Devtlle. 63,000 ::urea, lmmae eond. niles. One Owner car . .; .., .... m.mi. '15l·lm "' •• 9767 $1200.646-1704 . . ..................... . '11 ll*ftn. ao m.ues. s Qe;;a.t ttJO (W -IL, I tafl, mim lope: rolf bar Call •••••••••••••••••H•••• : coed. l'\llJy equlp't . ...-,,abspl 51Ml"7' ·• 'Tl Nova Ooocoun, 4 dr, Cutlass Brougham Sedan llOW Oii DISPLAY Al • Wlllilellllk lalr. 17UClll din brwD 305 VS aut.o tQJ·=-=-¥1D 1 A I -t.11 N;, .... cl1•ide4MaC 'Tl • C: Oood eond. .. ............ ••••••••• ~~ond. 1 owner. ·.,... ....._...... VII · Harial trouble sell· a&o1eve1. __ _..;;_..;;;.._:;;..;.;;....._ _ __. ... 70U1 car? TrJ WI Top '11 ... c1dll llOIL wblw dllll#' • PaAd for or Not! .• • * • * ~ 11..,. low =::.f 70UI car to Jlm 19'1'1 Nova Compact • mUea. ..... ' !!!. ~0~~1dwa1ent, tDeluaa.APCSJP1B, auto ..;.;;;;=.....;..;;;.;;.~----1 _ ... --" ., Hun · rana, I • own~r . ••'•..S.prtmeeoM, ...... Beach · Mk for 22,000 mllH. A1kln1 .....,,'-' wM w /lllk f'bak llarloo or Tom tllOI). MHDl • -nn. .... -AildlL. • • "12 Nova. Alr. aut.o. XlDt --------1JUJ. llUST SELL. Nu CODd. Good Urea. '1400· ·llBZ"1•.-,wb&tbl• ~-.AM/nit.ape ~ ::~.:::.. ~ __. _'71_t_an_C_be_v_et_te-•--d-r-, .... w. A111P11 *· '"_!:!:!!...... ~~· ~A111dni rb~k>. -~ ._ ~ !_~......_--. IOO mllee. -, I ru ..... r . ............ _... =M~ud11 .............. ···•· , ... '""· .. "'11lafr• rm ' \ . .. DRIVE O•E IODAYI • ., s 1980 PHOE•IX COUPE 1979 •EW SU•BIRD FACTORY A IR CONDITIONING FACTOltY ~UTa aETAIL DISCOUNT SJ023 1428 SALE PRICE 54595 . EXAMPLE 2E27197530910 1979 •EW IRAllD PRIX SJ FACTORY SU&GHTED RETAIL DISCOUNT $9039 '1500 SALE PRICE Sf 539 l!XAMPLE. 2H37H9P~6620 1979 •EW TRA•S AM FACTORY SUGGESTm RETAIL DISCOUNT $8695 '1000 SALE PRICE SJ 695 FXAVPL E 7W8 71(9L 1 59984 1979 •EW LEMA•S SAFARI FACTORY SU&&ESTED IET AIL DISCOUNT $1245 '1400 SALE PRICE SU45 EXAMPLE 2035H9P573070 OYER 1M •EW 1979 PO•llACS TO CHOOSE FROM 17 'i'••rBe•etew• Dally New•paper .~ i·Beekman Works to· Free F~ployees 8.J"'WDTM&KD ..... ...., ....... Beet.man lnltnameaa, lDc. of· flclala Sn hllertoD aald tod.-)' tbey are bopeful tbat two emplo,.. wt.a be f'Ned after the firm puN&abed newspaper Id· vertlJ-nenta dllm•nded by an El Salv~dor revolutionary ";ffi· Fowler, a spokesman for Beckman, said tbe company la do101 all It can to free the two executives kidnapped in an am· ..-a.mw •• =.n ....... U*U., wtU bee.t frW," M .-S. TM~rMW..S.: wdu la tM la A..-'" TllMI ad M.w Yon ,,... Md an ICMftitd to be ••blilbecl la ............ ...,.... .... c.. tnlA.mea. TIM Ol'laa.luUoa called tbe Rewlatianary Party olc.tral America Workers demanded that the ads be publlabed exactly u giveo to Beekman officiala. 'Trading Heavy t ,,.., ltipllllted that tbe ..., OD U.. t~ ad be prtm.d Jn Nd, blMk -,....,.. lat but tbe two new..,..... were unable to COIDPb. ··••.,.. da6u ·~we cu,",__.aakl, TM a:.i:i.:~blll· ty tor of Deania R. llcJ>rn•ld. 37. and Fausto Bucbell. 41, eutslde the San Salvador Airport. A bod.ypard, Joae Lu.is Paz Tratara, wu killed in the am· bub . McDonald la Ille mana1er ol APLAR. an acronym for Allan Paclllc Lat1n American lteCion. It la a ReckJna• aubskUa.ry and manufactures general electroaic compGDenta ln San Salvador. Bucheli' 11 an electronics eneineer al the Pul.lertoo facility but •• on a business trip to the San Salvador plant that empJoya about 500 persons. In the newspaper advertise- ment, the revolutionary group claims responsibility for lhe capture of the two men, de- nounces North American lm- perialial!l and urges support of revolutionary cauaea. Beckman officials declined to comment on bow the text was delivered or OD the cost.a ol the two ads. But other sources Aid the company paid S2'7.220 in the Los Angeles Times and $34,830 in the New York Times. ,,The advertisement is headlined "To the People of the World" and accuses the govem- m en t of El Salvador of repression and murder. It recites statistics of people who have been asausinated, im· prlsooed or missing and is U- lustrated with grisly pboto- llraoba ~dead bodies. It urges proletarians of aJl countries to unite. Stocks Rise, Fall In Credit Reaction ' ~ NEW YORK (AP) -Stock ,prices bounced back and forth ._erratically today as the markets of Wall Street continued thejr ·convulsive reaction to the 1,Federal Reserve's new olans for ~Rape Trial \ tFor Alcala :'On' Again Rodney James Alcala'• off. agaJn, oo-..-In RJvenlde Coun- t)' rape triaf la oa qalD. A'ee'I ~ .... Sa beillS blld iD 0raqe ~ Jail GD ...... that be murdered Robin Christine Samsoe, 12, of Hunt- ~acla. GriliaallJ wu '° faee btal Sept. 11 ,for alleledb raplq a J.5.Jnl'· old l1rl near Bannin •• t When a Riveralde County •Superior Court Judce ordered a clamping down on credit. Trading was running well behind Wednesday's tecord· setting pace, but was still heavy. The Dow Jones average or 30 industrials, up 2 points in early trading and down 12 at mid· morning, was off 8 .71 to 840.61 after three hours of trading but was off only 1.88 to 847.44 alter four hours. The widely recognized average fell more than 48 points from Monday through Wednes- day. The New York Stock Ex· change had by far the busiest day in its history Wednesday, with 81.62 mHlion shares chang- ing hands, eclipsing the previous high of 66.37 million, set Aug. 3, 1978. Bond prices likewise have broken sharply since the start of the week aa they absorbed the aboc k of unprecedented in- CHeMlt ln la&erest rates. OD ,....., IDaQJ' ol the na-San Clemente uon'a banJu railed their fa B .. tiagtea bencbmartt "1.me lencliq rat. Strik M d a full percent.age point to 14~ e arre •psychiatric test for the p~y, .-~~-'-llefled-r~1eum-r,-erie-01&ap-~ J>eared. C Riverside Cou..'\ty prosecutor ~Dan Bacalski subseque ntly -~-......- pef~~;.s drop came~ 1d~es~p~ite~·:--~Cuaa.1Du.1.1p~a~i~g~ru11.-.1llLL .. OnDL.&JO""-r~s;:,__:BR,y~ffimifiruY--:--stl'Ong-sbowtllg-by-the-doHm b:t foreign exchange, reversing t postponed the trial four limes as he searched for the girl, con· sidered the key witness in Alcala's trial. • She was found by juvenile authorities Oct. 2 in a Los Angeles trailer, Bacal.skl report· ed in announcing the trial again was on. But the girl walked away from Claren Hall where she wu lodged. A hopeful Bacalski said today that his vanishing victim has telephoned him a nd apparently will appear for the trial -now scheduled to begin again on Monday. ·'She baa indicated a willing· ness to come in," the prosecutor said. "She won't say where she ia but I'm expecting another call to set up a meeting." Bacalsld said the girl won't submit to the psychiatric ex- amination ordered by the court when Alcala's lawyer contended the girl was fantasizing when she claimed his client tied her up, raped her and beat her. "My position is that the court 1 can't order her to do anything, that it has no jurisdiction over 1her. She is not charged with any t crime," the prosecutor said. • "The defense will object, but .. that's my poeltioo." ~ Alcala who alto awaita trial lo 'the Samaoe murder cue wu ar- '°'re1led by Huntin1ton Beach 'police July 24. nearly a moath after tbe younger girl's body ' wu found near Sierra Madre. '111.-ee Lile Te,...• Former United Min e Workers president W.A. "Tony" Boyle bas been sen- tenced to three consecutive life terms for hiring killers to assassinate union rival Joseph .. Jock" Yablonski in 1969. Valley School Trustees Eye Sale of Land Fountain Valley school trustees are scheduled to con- sider a $2.86 milllon bid for a piece of surplus acbool property when they meet tonight. Cyrus Bastanl, president of Bastex Inc. of Newpert-Beach, submitted the verbal bid at an auction conducted a week aeo by officials of Fountain Valley's tlementary district. The land -11.3 acres -la off Cordata Street and Tanager A venue in southwest Fountain Valley. It wu purcbued aeveral years qo by the acbool dlltrict as a alt.e for a adlool that district oiftclala N1 DOW llD't needed became ol decllDlna enrollment Trustees will meet at. 7:30 toellbt 'at diltrict headquarters, Number 1 Ugbtbome Lane. It Just Wasn't Hi.a Day wbo to rob Mi. om .. uld tbe man alleted· 1J wallled lato the chicken stud at a: 55 p.m. 8Dd told tbe woman clerk m WM armed &Del Wuted tbe daJ'• rece&p(a. ......_.&&A Tbe a1Jeced wonlcl·be ~ dashed from the rHtaarant wbea the employee retUMd to baDd °""the cub, police aald. Tbe fteelal mani ~1 ·said, wa1 nportedlJ tacluea bJ a pair of m• enwal bloeb from tbe rHtaurant. TheJ removed u uncleta'miMd amouet of caab trom .... poeb&I. llltebell 11 bela1 beld on 111,000 a.ll at H11Dt.tqtoD leeeh - Wednesday's decline, and a drop D • d F • 1 ~~~~in the price of gold in Irecte to I e Gold was quoted in New York at $392 an ounce, down more than $23 from Wednesday. Amid all the confusion and un- certainty, however, many Wall Streeters were unshaken in their initial approval of the Federal Reaerve's decision last weekend to uae some powerful new am- munition in Its batUe again.st in- flation. Many of them conceded the ne w s teps increased the possibility of at least a moderate receasion in the months ahead, and that raised the specter of some tough going for such lm· portant lnduatries as housing and cooatructlon. But the~ ar(_ued that such ahort·term pain could bring with it the Jioaaer·lerm reward of pro- gre11 a1ainat rapid inflation, which many economists and President Carter regard as the No. J threat to the future pro- (8ee STOCK.8, Pa1e AZ) * * * Gold Slides Below $400; Bock Stable LONDON <AP> -Tbe dollar wu mixed but little cbaqed oa the worid'1 money markets to- day. The rtce of gold slid back $11.50. In Tokyo, the dollar finished the day at 225.90 yen, somewhat bitber than New York's cloalnl fi&uret ol 22:5.80. There WU DO tradt.01 IJl Totyo Wednesday .Mca ... ol a utiona1 boliday; London'• five m-1or ~ • bouHI flsed the price ot IOkl at S400 u ounce for tbe m~ trad.Lai 11Tlfaon, after an earllw blp cl_... Tbe afternooaftx. tnawus.tauD. IA Zarleb, Su.rope's blH•t told marbt. t.be price slipped 6elo,, MOO to_.,, , Tbe 111et1l finished Wed· netday'1 t:radlaa at Moe ln Lon- don and teoe.ao ln tuficbLBut durtn1 a kt.I ~ early wtd-needaf tbe IOld prtce aoomed to S.11.JO. . TM....,. IOI' die mNI WM "'4, ... ID lmtdl ~Oct. I. But"~ U. Mt ln llDee ..... .. II JI 111 I. tM friee. Two Huntington Beach de· velopers and a pair or city employee unions have been added to the growing list of 1978 campaign contributors who failed to file proper forms. City Clerk Alicia Wentworth said Wednesday she asked de· velopers Frank Mola and J im Foxx this week to submit ma1or donor statements. She said both Mola and Foxx contributed more than SS,000 in the last murucipal and COWlty eledion. The Huntington Beach Police Officers Association and the Huntington Beach Firefighters A11oclallon were directed to submit a joint contribution state- ment. Mrs. Wentworth said the employee unions joined together to spend more than ~ suppoi:t.- ing city council candidates in 1978. Huntington Beach Mayor Don MacAlllater and Councilman John Thomas were requested N9iellrla...,. Prof. Allan llacLeod Col'JDMk of 'run. UDJ..m. ty bu been aamed eo· wbmer' of a lWil Prtle ID medicine. see Pate A• . last moolb to correct errors and omissions in their flo a t 1978 campaign statements. Mrs. Wentworth said Thomas has corrected bis statement to show be fina nced b is entire $21.000 campa.ign out of lus own pocket. MacAllister. asted to amend his statement to show rinanc1al support be received rrom the Huntmgtoo Beach Chamber of Commerce Politi cal 1\ction Co mmittee, ·said he requested orric1al word on his om1ss1on from the Fair Political PTac· tices Commit.tee. He said he will correct bis statement if the FPPC directs hlm to. • The City Clerk also asked and received major donor statements from Huntington Bea c h de· veloper G. Louis Gradadio and the Chamber's political comnut· tee. Shou Slay Grove Man, Hurt Woman A man was tilled and a womaa was lnjured ~.rttically in a ahootinc early today at a Garden Grove apartm~nt, police reported. 'An unldentilied 38-year-old man was dead at the scene from a 1u.nsbat wound to the bead, pollceaaid. Tbe woman, about 20, allo auf. fered a pnabot. wound in the bead IDd la ln tlie-lnlemlve care unit at St. Joeepb'1 Hospital ln Oraqe. Police said they reeelved a telepbcme call •bort.11 before s a .m . from 80IDeODe wbo beard t.be wounded woman caWq for help. Police 1ald a small-caliber platol wu round iD the apart. ment at i.-Plower St. Titer forced tlaetr~aJ Into the locked .,.,umat r beariq tbe ..,..., cri• r help, a ......... Mid. NUD11 are ~d until the neaof 'in .. DOUfted. Pollee .... tbe1 did not mow at t.bll u.m. wbo ft.red tbe lboU. San Clemente police were called in to quell a minor shout tn(( disturbance at the scene of a •.ix -m onth -old la bor s trike rollowlnJi? a peaceful rally by about 150 "1alkout supporters Wednesday. Police made no arrests in front of Reeves Rubber Inc., 415 Av e . Pico, whe re a bout 100 ji?asket manufacturing workers have been on stnke smce Apnl 9 Communication Wo rkers of Amenca uruon mem bers staged .t J p m. rally where national pre~1dent Glenn Watts, also an A FL·CIO boss. encouraged the stnkers to continue their st.rug· gle Watts lert for a San Diego meeting while some of the placa rd-carrying union s up- porters marched around the plant shouting. Plant officials had earlier ob- tained a court order that limits picketing around the factory. Police arrived at 3:47 p.m. to re· mind the de monstrators of the court order. The picketers left. Police said the strikers bad been calling plant employees "scabs" and other obscenities .~ while the workers were chang-'t Ing shlJI&. Noone was hurt. l Coast ·) Weather Patchy low clouds and fog along t h e coast otherwise variable high cloudiness Friday. Lows tonitbt 57 to 62. Highs Fri- day 70to78. INSIDE HO-A Y - HnttnQCma Bea.cit ,,,.,_, D'4M PUcMr ~ .. almott half ,.., bodil .,...,,., "' 11 monthl, attn a »'90" bout 1Dfth obatt11. SH Feahrilg, PoflC CJ. l•tlex ..,.,.,......,,.,. .. .,..~a L.M..... ... ...... ~, ~ Al ~ ~M c-ec. ., Oen •• • ==--,.: ....111 .... .......... cw "'" it a .....-nl I 16 f • MARTtNEZ <AP) -A t&le of aea·1tranpl1llon rltual1, de· mud.a for the nam of m\ll'der vicUma and mind coouot bu been told by the wife of Ptillltp Jonph Huah a Jr • the ml{\ tbaraed wllh murdenaa lhrtl! women . , ''PblWp ~ ('QQ\n>J OHt' me," Su.anoe Perrin l•lllled at a S41pt. U cloa d prtUmlDar-t court bearlQI. "l wu jut aort ol 111. Pwrill Mid • deddild eo tell ber ...,.., Lo PoUee .,... .. mtt another m• who coovtae.d her to tell a friMCI wbo .wu a • poUc• olftcer ''I've bad lh1I cOOl*I YI> 1ftl1de me foe-"° ~ and hav• been baniftl all U.. eouequenca." ah• teM.lfted ''I just feel that - In order to live wtt.b 1:ny11U MY ~• .. r&, B••tlagtea Officers Team Up To Arrest Suspect Two policemen ftom Newport Beach and Huntington Beacb teamed up late Wednesday nlaht and al'l'9ted a man t.bey alle1ed was carrytn1 an ounce ol co- caine and Sl,800 lo cash. Earl Robert Aden, 26, of Para· Medium Surf Due in Wake Of Storm Forecuten for the NaUonal Weather Service said today tbey may bave overestimated t.be lm· pact ol a north Paclfic storm lo predlctin1 huge surf for Southern California. "It's not quite aa bad as we thought it would be," said a spokeswoman in revising downward the size of the waves that were originally anticipated to bring 12-foot surf to the coast on Tuesday. The weather forecasters today said the surf shouJd arrive, but It is expected to be in the four to six-root range. Orange Coast lifeguards said that forecast may be stretching the point a bit. One Huntington Beach lifeguard described the surf a.a "ankle slappera" and s.i,d there was no indicaUoo lt wa1 &ob\& to get any bt(Cler. . Weather forecasters hedged their pred.lctlon for the Orange Coast a bit by noting that the storm la generating swella from the west. Because Orange County's J,eaches are either in the lee of Catalina Island or aren't west facing, forecasters said the Im· pact on be a c hes fro m Seal Beach to San Clemente was Like- ly to be limited. Servicemen-·-- F ace Payless Pay Period WASHINGTON (AP) -About two mlllion men and women in UD· iform face a payless payday Mon· day unJess Congress acts before then OP stalled legislation provid· ing the Pentagon authority to spend mane> in the new fiM:al yearthatstartedOct.1. However, about a million ci villan employees of the ])efense Department would re- ceive a week's salary because their current pay period in· eludes the last week in Sep- tember, just before the 1979 fis· cal year ended. The Defense Department would be powerless to advance money pending con1reaalonal action on 1980 fiscal funding. However, official.a said they would encourage service relief organization.a, credit unions and similar lnatituUona to extend in· terest-free loans to service members left temporarily abort of funds. ORANGI COAST H/f DAILY PILOT 1 ... 0r-~o.11,,.le4.•ltfl .... l(~ .. ,- I>'-• ... --.··-·-·''"'°'-CoaU Pv ........ C-"'-... tcllll•""'" """",... _.,. ,........., ,.,, .. , '°' c .. i. -..... _______ .. ,,,_ ,.,ft..,., .. ,,,,_,~ a-.c~,_~c-,. ................. -.. -·-~,.­_,, ""ll'ift(lpel -1\111 ... .,_ It .. J:IO -. .... -.~-.Cl41t9f'Ma._ -··-~ ........ ..._,.,.._ ,.~ •. c.rtPf 1110-.. ........ -0.-.. .._ ~ ... ..... , .. ... ~~-=- a.rt.It. ......... "'_ Aa\IM~IMt,...i,,.e.... _....., Wttl ~-°"""YUW HM:llr,t. IR .. _..Ofllee "' _,..........., MtllfAl~O: ,,0 ... ""- Otflce• '-(:,~,.::.; :::tic::~·::::: ... mount was booked lnto Newport Beach city jail on charaee of poaaesaJon or cocaine for sale. An ounce of the narcotic ia worth about *2$0 lo illicit sales, accordlq to police. Newport Beach patl'olman Todd Seiders wu called to a trailer park at 7200 W. Coast Hitbway at about 11:30 p.m. because residents said there was a prowler ln the park. HunUn1ton Beach Officer Richard Wright wu nearby on Wnt Cout Highway i11ulnl a traffic dtatioo to a motorist be'd followed into Newport Beach from~ Beach. Wrt8bt told Selders be saw Aden leave the trailer park aDC! bead fer a parked car, ao be de- taloedbim. Selden aald the cocaine wu found in a briefcase lo Aden's car. The om~ aaid be became curious about the briefcase when Aden told him be was to deliver it as a favor to.a woman whose oame he didn't know. He told the officer the case was to be left in .the office of a trailer park on Coast Highway. but he didn't know the person it was to be left for, or the name or address or the park. Irvine Police Seek Suspect In Stabbing A Garden Grove man was atabbed 18 times oo an Irvine street early today and police are searching for a man he gave a ride to as the prime suspect. Lt. Gene Norden said Jose Pinto, 21, was tre ated and re· leased from Tustin Community llospitaJ after the 2:30 a.m. at· tack. He suffered minor lacera· tions to the ches t, back and .a.rm.s~ Norden said the assailant, described as a man of Latin des· cent in bis early 20s, used a screwdriver in the attack. Norden said Pinto and the sus- pect bad been lo a Santa Ana bar earlier in the evening. r The man asked Pinto for a ride home to the Irvine area Tbey drove to the Colony bous· ing tract on Walnut Avenue west of Culver Drive and pulled over. However, when the two 1ot out of the car, t.be suspect pulled the screwdriver and demanded J>ln. to's watch and the keys to bis car. When Pinto refused to give him the keys, the man attacked him. Tbe suspect then fled on foot. Officers found Pinto at the lo· tenectioo of Walnut and Culver and be was taken to a nearby fire station for firat aid treatment. Sea Burial Set for DB's Walt Pittillo Walt Pittillo, a retired Hunt· ingll..'n Beach city yard foreman who died last Sunday, will be buried at sea off the cout ol Morro Bay. A spokesman from the Chapel of the Roses Atascadero, said Pit· Ullo requested the private ocean burial in bis will. The 67-year-old former Hunt· lnstoo Beach resident died at bis bome in A• aacadero, wben be bad lived since hll retirement from tbecityearlierlhiayear. Pittillo, a naUve ol Covina, La survived by bLa wife, Mildred; IOU, WW1am PltUllo of Colt.a Keu, ancl -Tom..dkllwain. ol Salem, Ore., and a dautbter, Terri Jean PitUlloof BawaU. He allolaa\D'Ylvedby a~ James PltUllo ol Atueadero a slater, Marian Copeland of Claremont. Home Burglarized P'ountaln Va8•1 rt1ldent Ralpb J . 8*r toW polle• Wed· ......., tb8t ...... •lubed tbe 1creen on an ~ batbJ'OOID wlDdow to llt blto bit llllome at um 111. llltcMU Clrde. u.. made oil wttb camera equip. mMt wortll about tao. " , • I ......,_, ............ J' "'!!Ila. Perri•'• tHUmoDJ beeame pubbe ~ay. wbm a tranaerlpt of tbl buriDI Wll flied with tbe court. ID tM ._, cnent, .tie 111111M 1ave H~ 01mtt ud ct.eftptiona of poteo. tlal mutder vletlma who r•· Hmba.d bAI former prllriend. "G ... ally, he would Juat ..U me dtat he wu becomlo• more upaet and that be dldn't waat to kill Cathy, who was bla 1trlfrlend, you know. for fear tbat be would •et caupt U be ld.Utd her.'' Ml Perrin t.etUfted. "So be WU want.tn1 to UH other' people to relieve bis anxlety ud teuion." Hushes la accU1ed in Contra Costa County or the March 1&75 alaylDJ of LetiUa Faaot, 2S, and the November 1&72 murder of Maureen Field. He ia also cbaraed ln Alameda County wit.b the death of Liaa Anne Beery. 15, who disappeared while bJtchbilrin\ in 1974. Hu1bes as been bound over to Superior Court in Contra Costa County for trial and is scheduled to enter a plea Fri· day. Under croea-examin1tion, Ms Perrin testified Hushes applied a atranaJe-Ulce hold to her at least 230 times before a.nd dur· Ing their marrlate. She said the ritual stran1ulatlons "were usually aaaocJated with sex." She aald Hughes also per· 1uaded her to pose for pboto- g raph1 "depicting scenes of women who bad been murdered in various mea.na . . because I waa trytq to help him." She ••id abe hoped to prevent Dupes from murdering more women. Sbe aa1d abe helped Hqbes bury the body of one woman Nov. 18, 1972, the ume day Maureen P1eld dlaappeared. Ma. Perrin also testified she was with Hughes when they picked up a hitchhiking girl on tbe same day Liaa Anne Beery diaap. peared She said they drove the girl to their home and Ms. Perrin waited upstairs wblle Hughes al· legedly raped and stabbed ber to death. "It seems to me very com· plicated, the whole thing," she added. ''But the fact that I was going along with all these lh1ngs he was doing to me, there bad to be some sort of control because it wasn't anything I enjoyed. And I was afraid. The fear of bJm helped. "I wouldn't do anything without uting him," sbe con· tlnued. "Not evea fO out a.od spend $10 oo myslelf ' E',.... Pflfle A J STOCKS ... gress o( the U.S. economy. The ma rket's declines this week. howeverdramatic;-come nowhere near the proportions ol a "crash" like the devastating slide of 1929, when stock prices lost nearly 50 percent of their value over a rew abort weeks. Thia week's drop, by contra.st, has repraented a lou of leas than 6 percent, as measured by the Dow Jones Industrial Average. ''There Ls no earthly reason for a atoclt·market panic," said Heim H. Biel, a veteran market analyst with the brokera1e firm of Janney Montgomery Scott Inc. "What the Fed la doiq la • very cooatructive move. U it's succeuful, It will avoid a major depression in the tutu.re.'• The Fed, under cbalrman Paul Volcker, said it would ab.ift the empba.ala ln its anU·lnflatioa strategy toward directly COO· trolling the supply, rather than the coet, ot money. It indicated It would let interest ratea, within broad limits, go wherever the market took them. That amounted to an abrupt chan1e ln the rules of the game for many regular participants in the market.a. For example, a number of analysts uid lt prompted a 1ud· den chance ol atratety by In· ve1ton who bad been trading stock.a on marsin, or loam from their brokers. With Interest rate1 on thole loan1 1oartn1 above 15 percent, many traders decided to 1ell marlined •tock to cloee out tMir debts, thus con- trlbutlq silDlflcantly to Mllin1 preuure on tbe market. LA Oeeegregation 1n.I Poe&poned. -LOS ANOZLJ:S (AP) -TM ............. U1al fof' UM Loi An••ltl ~ Unlfted School Dlltrtct. baa bem delayed one week ~ tbe dlltr1d •atben ftnal ftiuret on tbe awnber ot enrolled white and mlnortt1 atudetlts. In ~tine tbe delay Wednes· day to Oct. 22, Superior Court Judie Paul Ealy of L•suna Beacb accused t.be Board of Sducatton of actln1 ''lr· reepomlbb,'' but refUHd" to turn • reepo111U1ilit.Y tor deH,....atlDc tbe cll1trict o•er to a ~ 1ppoi.1Md ldmJntmator. Intense \'oters Sens. Robert Byrd, D·W.Va., front, and John Durkin. D· N.H .. vote on a procedural matter during a meeting of the Senate Appropriations Committee in \Yas~gton. The panel is considering an emergency f undmg bill to keep the government in full operation. Westminster OKs Cable TV Access The Westminster City Council ha• ratified an alfttmeot to br· ln1 •n underground cable televlalon network lo West Oran1e County and two other cl· ty councils are expected to follow suit early next week. Huntington Beach councllmen are expected to approve the franchise agreement Monday night, wlth Fountain Valley scheduled for agreement Tues· day night. The documents would grant Dickenson Communications Ltd. and Canadian Cables ystems Ltd a non-exclusive franchise to serve homes with a 35-channel system rn the three.city a rea Groundbreaking for the system tentaUvely baa beet'! set by the Public Cable Television Authority, composed or couocd memben cl tb4t tAr'ee c:iU• for Oct. 23. ' .'12.3 Million Stash Lost TAMPA, Fla. (AP> -Police -wett searching tnd1ty ior It' weH~ dressed traveler who fled Tam· pa International Airport in a hurry leaving security holding tbe bag -with $2 .3 million worth ol cocaine ln it. A suitcase containing 23.4 pouncla of cocaine wu aelaed at an airlide aecurity checkpolnt aa pauengera were 1oin1 through radar screening to board Ea.Item Airlines Ollbts. police said. ~ ror the escapee, bents tbe description of hundreds of men, police said: youn1. •bort dart hair, suit, buttoo-down 1birt and tie. Completion o( the project ls expected In three years, but some residents are expected to be on line by January, a system spokesman bas reported. The agreement approved Tuesday by Westminster will al low the three cities to collective- ly buy out the cable system at the end of lS years or grant a five.year e:X'Qmsion and obtain ownership without cost at the end of ro years. Ybe cities also will receive an annuaJ 5 percent francbhe fee which could amount to as much as $500,000 for ea ch ~lty per year. Nose Eaten, Sewed Back COPDBAGU, Dea· mark (AP) -A 211..,...... old girt blld ber DOM bitten off by a German abepherd, but plutic surgeons sewed it back on after recovering It from the dog's stomach, doctors reported today The t<b.Jef surgeon. Sig Boland. lold reportar.a b lood was c1rc ulatlog through the noge, bul it would be some time before doctors knew ii the opera· lion on Kie Oiaen was a complete auccea. The dog was ruabed to a veterinary clinic im· medJately alter the incl· dent Wedneeday and was forced to regurgitate the nose, which was then ruahed to an operaUn1 room .mere Boland and other surgeons reattached it. INTRODUCING THE: ALBUQUERQUE, N.11. (AP) -A bot air balloon WH en,ulfed in flamH after cru~ tn tbe Sandia lloml· laiu Hit of here, aad two Callforala ballooal1ta aboard trtH idllldt 9'ftdal.I uld. "It Wll aucb a belplesa feel· lo•," Georte Wellb of Albuquer· qu., a c:bue crew member, Mid o• Wedft11day'1 crHb. "So· mec>M broupt a little ftN m- ln•ul1ber, but there wa1n't aoytbina they could do. 1be flam11 ju1t 1purted ever)'· where." The dead were ldeatlfied by the state Medical lnveatiaaton Office as Richard Temple, 31, ol Cucamonca. and Kathy Wlley, a1e unavailable, of Palmdale. It wu the first fatal accident since the International Hot Air Balloon Fiesta began in 1912. said Brad Glbbe, a balloonilt and fiesta launch director. A man iJl another balloon was injured ln a 1eparate incident caused by tricky wind currenta, and a helicopter wu damaged when It made a forced landing in the area, but no one on board was injured, officials aaid. The baJJooniats were among 400 participating In the annual ballooning event, which attract· e d representatives from 32 states and rive countries. Capt. John Sands of the Bernalillo County sheriff's office said witnesses told him the ballooo that crashed was 1.500 to 2.000 feet in the air when a sud- den shift of winds occurred. "It burned a hole in the balloon. and it started down rather rapidly," Sanda said. "The pilot attempted to tum on the power (propane). and it wu tonoavail ltcrashed." Sands said the balloon was ooe of three that apparently ex· perienced problems with wind currents. One landed in a picnic area near the scene or the crash, and "one subject in that balloon had a n Injury to the back and bad to be helped out," by a rescue unit. Sands said. fte was taken by a mbulance to an Albuquerque hospitaJ but there was no word on hiJI identity or condition. 'Horseplay' bi Grove Injures Girl What s he riff's deput ies descnbed as "horseplay" led to <1 fractured skull for a teen.aged girl Tuesday evening when she was t.oued I~ ille -hood4-a--- car driven by a friend in the Garden Grove area. Evelyn Ann McKeman, 1.5, of Garden Grove was In critical con· diUoo Wednesday at Westminster Community Hospital Sheriff's deputies said the young woman and a girlfriend jokinsJy jumped on the hood of a car. When the driver braked suddenly at about 20 miles per hour, the girls new off the car. The second cirl s uffered scrapes and bruises. The driver wu arrested on suspicion of as· sault with • deadly weapon, sberifrs deputies said. Edison Electric Packet Finally, DUFFIELD YACHl'S of Costa Mesa bas Joined forces with the most classical bay launch ever ballt. Tbe beauty of a bygone era brought back to Ufe In coajundioa with tbe reliability of electric power. Deposits for orden are now being takea for tbe new Edison electric PACKET. The Commodore model package lDclude1: PACKET bull, with new 1pacloaa interior, all natural bronze deck hardware, teak trim, full 1urrey ..., wttb tassels, clear curtains, cockpit caablolll, full cover. carpet, teak bar, 1tereo. full electric proj»ulslon system, wheel 11teertn1, bUge pump, running Ugbta, electric bom, dock lines, fenders, antl·foul bot· tom paint, paint name and CF numben. Owner's cbolce ol col· ors. Introductory price: $12, 500. SPEC1f1CATIONS : Length Overall : 18' Waterline Len(th: 15.9'\ ("'"fi1. ' . ~. '-y~= :.'_ -----... -.., Beam: 6'5" Draft: 1'6'' Weight: 1500 Iba. approximately ---·-- DUFFIELD YACHTS, • W. 17dl St~ c.o.ta Mua,CA t2CZ1 <n•> -..tt11 I --......--. -.. , ---.. -....... . lrvhle 'l' .. r Be•etew• Dally New paper · CD ITION VOL.. n NO. 2M, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES Fl FTEEN CENTS " ~ . l1·vine Co. Plans to-Sue Ne ort President Talks • in San Diego SAN DIEGO CAP> -Presi- dent Carter made a 2~-bour stop here today to do a little fence mending with big labor in a speech before 400 delegates at the annual convention of the AFL-CIO Building a nd Construc- tion Trades Department. It was the fi rst time in 12 years that a Democratic presi- den t has v is ited this con· servative naval city. traditional- ly a GOP stronghold. A handful of demonstrators covering a variety of issues greeted Carter as he arrived at the Islandia Hyatt House for the speech, including a pro-Castro group shouting "H ands off Cuba; U.S. out now." Three men were spirited away by officers and ·questioned at a nea r by police van b u t a uthorities would not say why they were detained. Carter told the A FL-CIO con- vent ion that he rejects the theory that "the only way to cure infl ation is to throw millions of people out of work." In the speech just five days after the Feder al Reserve Board initiated credit-tightening moves tha t are expected to sharply c urtail construction activity. Carter declared, "I will not fight infJatioo with your jobs." Without livtnc detalla, Carter told memben ol tbe umbrella organ.iutloo for 11 craft unions. "While interest rates were climbin& to record levels to cool inflation. '" took special finan. cial measures to suataln credit 'for construction, especially houai.ng CClOStnlctioo. • • Carter's brief Califomia visit c ame as Go v. Edmund G. ____ __,B,._r;...;o.._w..;.,n;.;.....;,J r? aJ05sible presiden- 1a r1vaf to 1981>-;-was in Oie East .and San Diego's Re publican Mayor Pete Wilson was on vaca· tion in Washington D.C. J In addition to trying to gain s upport Crom big labor on economic policies, some saw Carter's visit as an attempt to head off growing support for Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., another likely Carter presiden- tial rival next year. California's first draft-Kennedy group an· nounced for mation he re t wo weeks ago. Carter arrived at San Diego's Lindbergh Field precisely al 9:30 a .m . -his scheduled arrival time -and was met by a smalJ delegation headed by City Coun· cilman Tom Gade, representing Mayor Wilson. Also on hand to greet the pre· sident were six Boy Scouts wav- ing American n ags and a crowd of a bout 2S carrying two signs which read, "Thank you for be· inti honest" and "Thank you for helping education." Accompanying tbe president from a previous stop in Albu· q uerque was Con gressma n Lionel Van DeerUn, San Diego County's only Democratic con· g r essman. T he area's tw'> Republican congressmen were at thetr desks m Washington. Coast Weather Patchy low clouds and fog alo n g the coa s t othe rwise variable h igh cloudiness Friday. Lows tonight 57 to 62. Q.igbs F[i· day 70 to 78. INSIDE TO•A Y Wead to lw tlw qwcn of Eaglolld? ~P• °" Pnace CltorfW W.. Giid Qldrb ON ddcUW °",,.Al. llltle.x Botdogging It Rejected Project Cause By JOANN E REYNOLDS Of -o.llJ .. IMt llaH Irvine Company officials said today they wo uld fi le a lawswt m Orange County Superior Court to force Newport Beach city of f1 c 1als to approve company plans for the North Ford busa ness and indust rial project A company spokesman said the suit was to be filed m Sant<t Ana by the cl05e of the working day today. He srud at as the first lawswt t'VH fil ed by the company against Newport Beach and he ..,trt.>Sl>ed the p<>1nt of the hllgCI t1on 1s to overturn the ctty coun r1rs Sept 10 reJcctaon of tht· ~o rth Ford pro1ect No monetary damage~ are sought The proposal wac; re1ected on a 4·2 l vote with c-ounc1l mem bers J ackie !leather and Don Mc innis dissenting C1nd Coun c1lwoman Evelyn Hart abstain 1ng Al th(· tamf' of lht• re1ecllon. lht' l'Ounc1I ma1onty and1caled that it wanted to <;et· low density rei.1dent1al development on th1· propert\ loc<1led north of th1: Ford Aeronutronac sate on Jam boree Road The property 1s an Ne" port Beach. but hes within the Irvine Unified School Dis· tract Freestyle skier Wayne Hilterbrand becomes part of the statuary at Newport Beach's Fashion Island as camera freezes him in mid-air. Hilterbrand was one of freest.ylers who put on an exhibition Wednesday at the shopping center's Stage Court. They took off from a r amp set ~P for the show. The stat uary that Hilterbrand momentarily became part of in this photo is called "The SkyW:vers." Mayor Paul Ryckoff at the Sept. 10 meeting said the legal amplicatioos of the council's vote were "duly noted." Today. Irvine Company Presi· dent Peter Kremer said "we recnt bavinl to do this but we Tr.ustees Okay Ririse Irvine Superintendent Gets $5,000 More Trusteeu>.f. the lryjne Unified School District gave Superint.en· dent Stanley Corey a $5,000 a year salary increase Thursday night, but the vote wasn't un- animous. The board raised Corey's salary from $44,000 a year to $49,000. It is lhe first pay in· crease the superintendent has received since 1976. Voting to approve tbe nearly 11 percent raise were trustees E lizabeth SicoU, Fred Gahm and R. Dean Olson. Opposing it were trustees J une Foley and Fran.k.lin Hurd. Mrs. Foley said that, although s h e b e l ieves Co r ey h as performoo well in hIS jol>, slie was in disagreement with tbe amount or the raise he was given. "I could not support that much of a t81Se:· she said. However . Mrs Foley. the school board president, deelined to say what figure s he would have been comfortable with. Hurd said he believed ad· ministratlve raises this year have been too high, exceeding anti-infl ation guidelines laid down by President Carter. Pay increases for teachers, he said. were kept at those anti-inflation le . Top administrators in the di.s- trict were given pay raises up to 12 percent last month by tbe board. Teachers tn the district were granted eight percent pay tukes and non-teactung employee~ re- ceived 6.5 percent increases. The board voted on Corey's pay increase after an executive session Wednesday night. Corey has been supenntendent of the Irvine district since Nov- ember. 1972 His contract wtth the dlstnct runs through June 1982 Stock Prices Up, Down NEW YORK CA P> -Stock prices bounced back and forth erratically today as tbe markets of Wall Street continued their con vulsi ve reactio n t o the Federal Reserve's new olans for clamping down on credit. T rading was r unning well behind Wednesday's record· setting pace, but was still heavy. The Dow Jones ave rage of 30 indualrials, up 2 points in early trading and down 12 at mid- morning, was off 8.71 to 840.61 after three boura of tradiD1 but was off only UIS to 847.44 after four boura. The widely recognized average fell more than 48 polnta from Monday tbrou1h Wednes· day . Irvine School Pact Granted 1 rvlne ..s chool tr11uees awarded a conatrucUoa contract Wedaeaday nl1bt to Noyes- Roacb Co. of Los Anaelea to build the Northwood rt e&emen- tar>' ldlool. Noyee-1\0acb bad submitted a low b6d ol '2.27 mlJHm for COD· atrucUon of the school at 28 Canon St. Two other blda were received. The school will be built to ac· commodate 540 children in permanent clutrooma. Anotbel' 120 atudntl could be accom· modated ln portable fa emu •. Ortldala bope to bne tbe acbool completed and opm by Gal.fall. The New York Stock Ex- change bad by far the busiest STEEP MORTGAGE RATES SEEN IN STATE-A11 RECESS.ON TO OEPEN IN EARLY 1980-86 day in its history Wednesday, with 81 .62 million shares chang- ing hands. eclipsing the previous high or 66.37 million. set Aug. 3, 1978. Bo nd prices likewise have br~en sharply since tbe start or the week as they absorbed the shock of un pr ecedented in · cr eases in interest rates. On Tuesday many or the na- tion 's banks raised t heir benchrnarlt prime lending rates a full percentage point to 14 h percent. Today's drop came despite a st rong showing by the dollar in foreign excha nge. reversing Wednesday's decline. and a drop or Sll.50 in the pnce of gold rn London. Gold was quoted in New Yo:-k at S392 an ounce. down more than S23 from Wedneiday. <See STOCKS. Pase A.%) Bandit Robbed ltJwt Wasn't His Day AA alle&ed would-be robber's luck went from bad to worse WedDeeday In Huntington Beaeb when ~ was rebuffed lD a fut· food restaurant robbery attempt and wu then robbed himHlf wtalle trytns to run away, police reported today. Ofllcen said tbe man's luelt took another aour tum when he called police to a Beach Boulevard tavem to report be-- lnl robbed. He wu arrested. !bane Clark Mitchell, 22, ol ue Main St., wu arrested "1 auapldoo ol attenipted robbeey ..... m employee of KeatDdl:y Pried Cbicbn1 • 5005 Waner Ave., Wlndfted mm u the mA wbo tried to rob her. ~ Officers aald tl\e man allesed· ly walbd into the cbickeo stand at 8:55 p.m . and told tbe woman clerk be wu. armed and wanted t.be da,y's receipts. The alleled would·be bandit dashed from tbe restaurant when the employee refUMd to hand over the cub, police aald. The Oeetna man, they said, waa reporiedly tackled by a pair of men aeveral blocks from the rutaurant. They removed an undetermlDed amount ol caab from Ida pocketa. Mitchell la belnc held on ~,oao be&l at Hmttnatoa Beaeb Jau. Irvine Police Seek Suspect In Stabbing have no other choice." Tbe Ml alleaes tbe councll '& action wa-s arbitrary, dis cram ioaLory. unconstitutional aad ~ by leeally re- quUed ftndin1s. Tbe suit notes tlult the live-buildi.Q& multi-tenant office and sma ll warehouse project coo- f orms to city zoning, to the A-Garden Groye man7r;~~,grte~n~e~~~alr1'1pnlanti.t111:anneid~to_t_h_e_tr_af~fi~1~c---~-ll stabbed 18 times oo an 11 ne street early today and police are .. We're takmg this matter to searching for a man he gave a court with some reluctance." ride to as the prime s uspect. Kr e m e r s a 1 d ··But 1 t · s Lt Gene Norden sa id Jo!>{' someUung we feel Wl' must do an Pinto. 21. was treated and re order to cle:i rlv Cl>tabla!>h th<1t leased from Tustm Community the rul~ of the planmng and Hospital after the 2 30 a m at· zoning proces~ apply equally to tack He suffered maoor lacera· all of us. city and private pro t1ons to the chest. back and perty owners a!Jke ·· arms. A pnnc1pal reason given by Norden said the ass arlant. the council majority for als re described as a man of Lalin des· JCCt1on of the company plan, the cent an his early 20s. used a s uit says. was the "poss1b1tity" screwdriver in the attack of future general plan amend Norden saJd Panto and the sus· m<.'nt changing the No rth Ford peel had been 1n a Santa Ana Silt' from commere1:.il and in bar earlier an the eveninlo! du.,trial to rt>S1dent1al The man asked Pinto for a Th(' rnmparn contend ~ thai ridl' home to the lrvant.• area b<i~in!! a land ust.• decision on a They drove to the Colonr houi.· tStt Sl'IT . Pagt' A:?l an g tract on Walnut A venue west of Cuh"er Drive and pulled over However. when the two got out of the car. the suspe<:t pulled the serewdriver and demanded Pan· to's watch and tbe keys to tus car. When Pinto refused to give him the keys, the man attacked bim . The suspect theri'Oed on foot. Officers found Pinto at the an· tersection of Walnut and Culver ond he was taken to a nearby fire ,talion for first aid treatment Servicemen Face Payless Pay Period WASHINGTON (AP) -About two million men and wom en in un- iform face a pay less payday Mon- day unless Congress acts before then on stalled Jeglslalion provld· Lna the Pentagon authority to spend money In the new fiscal yeara..tltalUdOet.1. However, about a mllllon clvlltan employees of the Deteme Department would re- ceive a week's salary because tbelr currentp ay period in· eludes the tut week In Sep- tember, Just befOl"e tbe 19'79 fis- cal ye~ ended. The Defense Depa rtment would be powerless to advance money pendinl con1reaaloaal acUon on lllO ftlcal fUDdlna. Howner, otndala said they would mcouraae Mrvlce relief or1an•ntiom. creel.It UDJona and similar tmtitutlona to extend ln- terHt·free loans. Guerrillas P e r sist LONDON <AP> Guerrillas at the threatened Zimbabwe Rhodesia peace talks main tamed today they wall not give British Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington the final an!>wer he has demanded on a proposed an dcpendenc~ con:.l1lut1on N.wllt'l••~r Al"WI.._.. Prof. Alla n M acLeod Cormack of Tufts Universi· ty has been na m e d co- winner of a Nobel Prize ln medicine. See Page A4. , -----·------------·----~-~---v-/ ----------.----~-·-·--···----·--- CalTran.s workers hand out questionnaires at . Pa~ific Coast Highway and Dover Driv~ m . Newport Beach. Activity this morrung 1s part of state Department or Transportation effort "to determine how to better serve your travel needs." Motorists in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine are being asked to mall In the questionnaires with appropriate answers. ~oreign Students Face TB Testing A bout 2SO foreign-born s tu- dents in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District are ex-pected to undergo testing for tuberculosis next week, officials said today. ''The Orange County Health Department has identified the high-risk group as individuals who have entered (the U.S.> dur- ing the past 12 months," noted head nurse Deirdrie Douville. That group includes not just Shots Slay . Grove Man, Hurt Woman A man was killed and a woman was injured critically in a shooting early today al a (;arden Grove apartment, police reported. An unldentiried 38-year-old man was dead at the scene from a gun.shot wound to the head. police said. The woman, about 20, also suf- tered a gunshot wound tn the head and Is in the Intensive carf. unit at St Joseph 's Hospital in Orange. Police said they received a -klephonc can s ortfyoeTOre 6 a m from someone who heard the wounded woman calling ror help Police said a s mall-caliber pistol was found in the apart ment at 12652 Flower St. They forced their way into the locked apartment after hearing the woman's cries for help, a spokesman said. Na mes are withheld until the next of kin are notified. Police said they did not know at this time who fired the shots LA Desegregation Trial Postponed • LOS ANGELES <AP> -The desegregation trial for the Los Angeles Unified School District has been delayed one week while the district gathers final figures on the number of enrolled white , and minority students. Jn granting the delay Wednes- day to Oct. 22, Superior Court Judge Paul Egly of Laguna Beach accused the Board of Education of acting "ir - responsibly," but refused to tum responsibility for desegregating the district over to a court- appolnted admlniatrator. OttANQI COAIT DAILY PILOT fM Of-c-t o.llt PtlOI, Wiii\ wfll(I\ I• C-1)1 ___ ... "'·"-I-llt I,_ Ot_ CoMI ..._,_,.C-t ~ot .. 411-.,-• _ .. ,...., _.., ,..._ ~ .... , "" ~ -...._,-... -............ "'~ teJftVel'-f,l,_,~8"c"l-CtMf A ................ eo11 .... •·-•-S..ll<' .. Y\-""'41•r• r... ptlfle-_,.,,.,,. .,...,. ''et JJll W.•t ley S0-4, Coolot Mow, C .. 11-• ""» ._ ...... ----~­lee•• c..y Viet ,..Mtdonl oNI Go-• Mt- ~~ ...... ,_, .......... /M~lflt ,,,.., O.ltM ... .._ """""'~. -Mllllenl """' ............. T~• CN4)MMll1 Clualfled Acl'lertt .. MM•n , ......... ~ ...... '-''1l'~ ,.,. O::.l: •. ~,,i:,Yt!!.!':1'3i= :r.'Tt•t .,"'!2..!f..,,...fth fMretft M •f '9 ,.,, .... , .. ~·-· -''•' ....... u ...... '*'·--· r.'~m-r..~~::.::i~ ,.,..., ,, t i tF ... """""'· .... ., .. ,, ,..,. , ' • Southeast Asian refugees, but newcomers 'from Mexico, Cen- tral America, South America Africa and any island country exclusive or New Zealand and Great BriUan, she said. District health officials are now screening all recent immi- grants. Mrs. Douville said about half of the 500 students in this category wlll requJre testing. However, she downplayed the threat of a serious problem with tuberculosis, noting that many Southeast Asian s tud ents already have undergone a pre- ventive vaccination program in· stiluted when France occupied the area. School nurses In the district are qualified to give the TB tesL<s at s chool. but the county health department will be providing supplies Crash, Fire Kill Pair In Balloon ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP> -A bot air balloon was e ng ulfed in fl ames arter ~hing in ~andn1--Moun, tains east or here, and two California balloon1sts aboard were killed. officials said. "It was such a helpless feel- ing," George Welsh of Albuquer- que, a chase crew member, said of Wednesday's crash. "So- meone brought a little fire ext- inguisher, but there wasn't an ything they could do. The flames just spurted every- where." The dead were identified by the state Medical Investigators Office as Richard Temple, 31, or Cucamonga, and Kathy Wiley. age unavailable, of Palmdale. It was the first ratal accident since the International Hot Air Balloon Fiesta began ln 1972, said Brad Gibbs, a baUooniat and fiesta launch director. A man in another balloon was injured in a separate incident caused by tricky wind currenta, and a helicopter was dama1ed when it made a forced landing in the area, but no one on board was injured, officials said. The balloonists were among 400 participating tn the annual ballooning event, which attract- ed representatives from 32 statesandlivecountries. Sands said the balloon was one of three that apparently ex· perienced problems with wind c urrents. Snow Skiing Wurse Slated A lour-week course on pre· paratlool for snow slilln1 will be offered beginning Tuuday through Saddleback Colle1e's North campus in Irvine. Tbe cowae will be tauaht from 7 to 9:30 p .m. on auccesstve Tuesdays tbJ'oUCh Nov. I. 1be eerfet will covet' equipment compatibility, clothln1, maln· teoance, repaJr, •Id leaaon1, rm· tala and When and where to 10. Fee for the ctu1 la $20. For in- form allon and re1l1tratlon, phon_, 831-4648. Railroad Sale? CHICAGO (AP) -A federal J«dl• orct.red tbe ftnanclaU1 1tru1allnl Rock laland Railroad on Wedne9day to 1ubmlt a re- or1anlaatloo propoeal within eo daya or make plans to HD tbl railroad . E',.._PagetlJ STOCKS ••• Amid all the confusion and un- certainty. however, many Wall Streeters were unshaken ln their initial approval of the Federal Reserve's decision last weekend to use some powerful new am- munition in its battle against in· flatlon. Many of them conceded the new steps increased the possibility of at least a moderate -recession in the months ahead, and that raised the specter of some tough going for such im- portant industries as housing and construction. But the~ aqlued that such short-term pain could bring with it the longer-term reward of pro- gress aga1nst rapid Inflation, which many economists and President Carter regard as the No. I threat to the future pro- gress of the U.S. economy. The market's declines this week. however dramatic, come nowhere near the proportions of a "crash" like the devastating slide of 1929, when stock prices lost nearly 50 percent of their value over a few short weeks . This week's drop, by contrast, has represented a loss of less than 6 percent, as measured by the Dow Jonea loduatrial Averap. ''There la no earthly reuon ror a stock-market panic,·· said Heinz H. Biel, a veteran market analyst with the brokerage firm of Janney Montgomery Scott Inc "What the Fed is doing is a 'Vn"Y cornsh active mov~ --ff It! successful , It will avoid a major depression in the future." The Fed. under c hairman Paul Volcker, said it would shift the emphasis in its anti-Inflation s trategy toward directly con· trolling the supply, rather than the cost. of money. It Indicated It would let interest rates, within broad Um.its, go wherever the market took them. That amounted to an abrupt change In the rules of the game ror many regular particlpanta in the market5. For example, a number of analysts said It prompted a sud· den change of strategy by In- vestors who had been trading stocks oo D\argin, or loans from their brokers. With interest rates on those loans soaring above 15 percent. many traders decided to sell margined stock to close out their debt.a, thua con- tributing significantly to selling pressure on the market. Gold Slides Below $400; Buck Stable LONDON CAP) -The dollar was mixed but little changed on the world'• money marketa to- day. The price of gold slid back $11.50. ln Tokyo, the dollar finished the day at 225.90 yen, somewhat hl&ber than New York's cloalne figures of 225.60. There was no trading in Tokyo Wednesday because of a national holiday. London's fi ve major bullion houses fixed the price of gold at $400 an ()W)Ce for the mominl tradlni eeUJon, afteT an eu'tler blab of $Q.50. 'Ibe alterDoon nx- ln1wu-..01.50. In Zurich, Europe'• bl11eat 1old markft, tbe prtee alipped below MOO to '397. The metal finl1hed Wed· neaday'a tradlq at .._ In Lon· don and ta.50 In Zurtcb. But durin1 a brtef 1ur1e early Wed· Jtetday the 1old price 4001Ded to '419.50. 'l'h• record for the metal wu '"4, hit 1n Zurtcbttrad1n1 Oct. 2. But protlt-taklnc hu Ht In since then and depressed the price. • Me.eting Set On Bay Plftn Stat. and local of'llelals wUl meet in LOI An1elea rttd-r to find a IOlution for Newport Bay polluUoG problema. Tb• 10 a.m. m..un1 in the downtown .. offleH of the Sout.bern Callforala AMoeiatioQ of Governments bad been scheduled to take place Wednes- day, but confllcta ln meetin1 schedules resulted in it.a can-cellaUoG. Repre1entatlvea from tbe clUet ol lrrine, Coeta MM& and Newport Beads are expeetect to attend the seaaioa alon1 wtt.b Oran1e County offlclals and representatives from the 1tate. The plan to be d.iacuaaed Fri- day 1enerally alma at livinl controversial Newport Ba)' studies oo 11ltaUon certification by the state II certain condiUooa are met. These could Include: -Formation of a mana1e- ment asency for tbe purpose ot monitorinc and n!viewt.n1 im- Medium Surf Due in Wake Of Storm Forecasters for the National Weather Service aaid toda7 they may have overatlmated the lm· pact ol a oortb Paclflc storm in predictlo1 bu1e surr for Southern californla. "It'• not quite u bad u we tbou1bt it would be,.. aa.ld a spokeswoman lo revialn1 downward the size of the waves that were originally anticipated to bring 12·foot surf to the cout on Tuesday. The weather forecuten today said the surf should arrive, but it is expected to be in tbe four to six-foot range. Orange Coast lifeguarda said that forecaal may be stretcbine the point a bit. One Huntington Beach lifeguard described the surf as "ankle slappers" and said there was no indication 1t plemeatMloa and replaUoa fJI source cootrola ot Hdlmeata- tioa. Tbe aiency would be com· posed "' cw. wtth • stake .ID watershed plamtna aetl.W. u well •• tie eo~nt)' and tbe Regional W.._, QualltJ Coatrol Board. -Cootinuation by SCAG and local asencles of work aimed at developlq a proposal for an ef. fective dealltatioa facWty for tbe bay. ..:... c.u.altioa by SCAG and tbe ~ ··~)' "' el· forts to resolve tbe remain.las deficiencies 1D tbe Newport Ba)' plan aubmlUed to tbe stat.. Tbe at.ate'• Water Raourees Control Board la July bad re- fused to certify the plan oo water quality problem• ln Newport Bay and al.lo voted to belin proceeitinp to at.rip SCAG of lta,..Q'nln1 autborlty in the ••te .,. •. The bl.)' piu hd been sharply eriticiaed lo Newport Beach by residell&a wbo .fell there abouW be mention ol a dellltaUon bum upstn!am u a me,an.a of curtitns poUuUoo flowtq into tbe bay. Tbe water board la expeeted to aooo dedde whether to proceed wltb its "desipatioa" of SCAG or cbooee aome other agency or even itself to handle the atudiea. Local officiall want to aee t.be responsibilities for bay plannint matt.enkl:pt in local buwb and not bllDdled by the state. TM meetinl lD Los Anplee Friday la muot to try to ftAd a tolutioo acceptable to all Adea. Tbeir respective agencies would then need to vote oa whether to participate ln o.r Heep! the plan. Noae Eaten, Sewed Baek COPBNHAG•N. O.o· mark (AP) -A 2~,.ar­ old ,ut bad .... DON ..... olf by a Germaa 11Mpberd1 but plutie ............ lt back an after~--. lt from tbe ......... . doeton NPONd toda1. • The cluef aur1eoa, Sic Boland, told reporter• blood waa e1reul•U•1 throQb tile DOM, but It would" be IOIDe time before docton knew ti tbe opera- Uon on Mie Olien wu a complete aucceu. The dot wu ruabed to a veterinary clinic tm· medJately after the incl· dent Wedneeday and waa fore9d to nsursttate the •OH. wbleb waa tbea ru1hed to an operating room' where Boland and other aurseom ruuacbed lt. lnJine Eyes Legal Fight Over Dump Mayor David Sllls said today he bas aaked City Attorney Jamea Eric0on to find out what te1al optlona the city bu left in the wake of tbe county's ap- proval ol a dump site in Bee Ca- nyon oortb of tbe city. Silla aald be aaked Erick.Ion to find out what tbe city can do to protect tu interesta and lnaure adequate measures are taken to aUevtate ~potential problems a dump could cause. Councilman Larry Agran. who baa abarply criticized plans to build a dlapoul station in the hUla nortb of the city. had want- ed tbe Clty Council to diacuaa tbe 1saue Tuesday night. However. because the JDeeting had run beyond the midnight c utoff time, the council ad- journed to Oct. 23. Agran said waiting until then to take up the matter could deprive the city of whatever leverage it has left in in- suring adequate measures are taken to curtail dump problems. . was going to gel any bigger. Weather forecasters hedged their prediction ror the Orange Coast a bit by noting that the storm is generating s wells from the west. New Slwpping Mall Opens in Mission Viejo Agran has said a dump site In Bee Canyon could lead to noise. odor. traffic and Utter problems. . ' Because Orange County's beaches are either in the lee of Catal1.oa ll1and or aren'l ...c. fH1q, IDnc ..... W41 U.. l.-. pact on beach• from Seal Beach to San Clemente was like- ly to be limited. f',....PapAI South Orange County's newest shopping mall complex opened in Mission VieJO thia morning. A mall apokeaman aald today the l mWi&m ~ure-loot sbop- pln1 complex Oii ••r1uerlte Parkway near \he San 1Me10 Freeway and Saddleback Collete will baft fou.r major de- partment stores and 13SspttJalty shops. ~-----He said at)nut tll lo..A.S....41~ • • • possible general plan change co nstitutes an illegal moratorium. "Whal we're aeeking is ob- servance ol the rules," Kremer said. "Private property owners must follow them, u we did on the North Ford alte, and we think the city council majority should follow them, too. "We hope it la undentood by the community that ou.r lawsuit isn't directed at the community, but at what we consider an un· fair and illegal action taken bv the ctt.y council." s mall stores wouJd be open to- day whi~ a tot.al of 90 to 100 would be open for the Chnstmas season. Mootgomery Ward and May C.ompany opened stores al the mall earlier thLt year. The apolteaman 1ald a Robinaoo 'a store would opm la January, 1JIO, d11e a Bullodr's store woWd belin operadoa la M arcb, 1JIO. Tbe new sbopplnf complex will evem.ally featun lbt to elsbt ntllUuran&a, be aalcl. but onl7 two wtl1 be open today Tbe complex haa about S,000 parking spaces. INTRODUCING THE: Sills said today he had the authority to ask the city at- torney to look into the matter and simply did so. In so doing. he said there 's no need to call a s pecial council meetin1 for next Tu••day, wbicb A1ran ba~ want.d to taclde the dump quea-Uoa. Silla said P!rickaon will return in two weft.a with a report. Coune-SID'#----• /11 Cooking A lour-week course In "Creative Mlcrowave Cookery" ~1io1 Friday on Saddleback Collece's North Campus In lrvtne. Tbe clua wW be taught each Friday from 1 to 3 p.m . in room 301 on the campus at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. Fee for the course is '20, or 96 at the door ol each seaaioa ii apace la available. For registra- tion or lnformatlbn, phone 831---. Edison Electric Packet Flnall)', DUFFIELD VAClll'S ol C:O.ta Meta ... joined forces with the most claulul ba)' launch ever bllllt. The beauty ol a bygone era brou1bt back to life la coajunctlon wt&ll tbe reliability ol electric power. Deposits for orden are now belag taken for tbe new Edison electric PACKET. The Commodore model package includes: PACKET bull, with new spadou llltenor. au natural brome deck hardware, teak trtm, fall 1urrey Cop wttb tauel1. clear curtaim. cockpit cusblou, fall cover, carpet. teak bar, stereo, full e&«trtc propulaloD a yum, wMel 1&eerla1. bllge pamp, running Ugbta, electric llon. clock Han, fetlden. ••ti-foul bo&~ t.om paint, paint aame ud CF aumben. Owaer's choice of col· ors. Introductory price: Ill.SM. SPECIFICATIONS: Length Overall ; 18' Waterline Length . 1$.9" ,. . ·-J't ·~ -~-· I : • • ' . . .... •:': ~--'\.: -----.._ Beam· 6'S" Draft: 1'6" Wei1ht: 1!00 lbs. approximately ..-- . -. .. DUFFIELD YA CRTS. • W. nu. Street, Cotta Me11, CA t2U7 (714> 645-0715 ' "' --~ _...._ __ ---c-•• .. _ .. _ _......,. _ _._.,. __ ............... _ .. Beek •• Empleyee l(Ulnap Return Hoped Soon ' •1 aoes aT haKga .... """ ..... Beck ... luvumenw, loo. ol· flclala .. run.no. 1ald today tb•Y are a.opeful that two employee11 will 'be fNM aft.er the flrm publilbed newapaper ed· vertisemeota demanded by an El Salvador revolutaonary group. Will Fowler. a apokuman ror Beckman, aald tbe company &b PLEDGES COOPERATION Ex-Viet Chie f Ky Ky : Vie t s Acce pt TB T est s Former South Vietnamese leader Nguyen Cao Ky said Tuesday that refugees from Southeast Asia will cooperate fully in tuberculosis screening test.sin Orange County. "We do not wiab to carry any en.ease to your people ancJ we do oot wiab to become tbe object of undue concern," he said. Other Vietna.mese leaders at a Santa Ana nevn conference said they were surprised by the "overreaction and exaa1era· lion" of fears that • health emergency exists y . -now a Huntington Beach resident. said the re a lready have been cases of Southeast Asian children being ostracized out of fears that they a re car· riers of tuberculosis. He asserted that a soccer player was demot<.-d from the starting team m Garden Grove and m ade a r eserve by the coach. "He was onl y 16 but un· derstood the situation and he re· signed from the team. · · 1 hope 1t doesn't happe n again," Ky said. Ky also said that m any people might see political or com merc1al gain 10 e mphasizing potential he alth dangers He saJd he 1s arranging to m eet with Mayo r E le rth Erickson of Garden Grove after statements from that city that about 50 percent of the refugees hav e active o r latent tuberculosis. ~ all lt can to rue the two executives kidnappt'd Ui an •m buu ••El Salvador s.rt n . "We ltope and expec t.hat they wlll be set tree." h• aald. Th• advett.laemen .. ran Wed nhday la Ute Los~eloa Ttmt!11 and New York Tim" and IU'e scheduled to be publi1hed In newspapers an Euro~ and Cen tral Amenca ·The organuataon called the Re volutionary Party of Central America Workers demanded that the ads be published exactly as aiven to Beckman officials. They stipulated that the logo on tbe two-page ad be printed in red, black and yellow ink but the two newspapers were unable to comply. "We are doing everything we can." Fowler said. The IJ'OUP claims respoosibili· ty for the kidnappings of Denrus R. McDonald. 37. and Fausto Bucheli, 41 , out.side the San Salvador Airport. '-A bodyguard, Jose Lws Paz Tratara, was killed in the am buah. McDonald is the manat(er of APLAR, an a cronym for Asian Pacific Latin American Region ft is a Beckman subs1d1ary and manufactures general e lectronar components in San Salvador Bucheli 1s a n e lectronu·!> engineer at the Fullerton fac1hty but was on a bus iness trip lo the San Salvador plant that employl". about 500 persons. In the newS'paper advert1!>e me nl. the revolutionary group c laims responsibility for th(" capture or the two m en. de nounces North Ame r1cC1n am perialism and urges support or revolutionary causes. Beckman officials declined to comment on how the text w:J~ deli vered or on the costs of tht- two ads. But other sourcl's said the company paid $27 ,220 m the Los Angeles Times and $34.830 an the New York Tunes The advertise ment 1s headlined "To the People of the World" and,accuses the govern· menl of E l Salvador of r epression and murder. It recites statistics of people wbo bave been aqaulnated, im· .prisoaell •·mi•.._ and is n. lustrated with #J!hly photo· sraphs of dead bodies. It urges prole tarians of ;ill c~to~~ Church' Urges SALT !lider WASHINGTON <AP> -Sen Frank Church, D-ldabo. urged the Senate today lo hnk CIP· proval of the SALT II treaty to assurances that Soviet troops in Cuba "are not engaged in a com bat r ole" and will not threaten any other country In a Senate speech, Churrh. chairman of the Senate ft'ore1gn Re lations Committee, s aid: "It will be said that the adoption of this condition will m a ke thl' treaty hostage to a satisfactory Russian response respeclmR the brigade. "I sa y that without this condition. the treaty cannot ga rner the two -thirds vott• necessary for iLc; ratification .. Church proposed t h C1l lhl' Senate attach bis conditsons Cls a binding "wtderstandmg" to the resolution of treaty ratification The proviso would reqwre the president to certify tbe cond1· lions had been m et before the treaty could lake effect In Nell' York Citg PICKETERS AT REEVES RUBBER COMPANY IN SAN CLEMENTE JEER A,T WORKERS INSIDE Police Arrived Later To Keep Order at the Scene of Six-month Strfke Where 150 Carried SIQns More Land Available In El Toro By ••Rt;DF.RICK SCllOEMEHL OI lht Dally 1'1191 Stall Act1on8 that will toughen rules regulating housing developme nt around El Toro Marine Corps Air Station while al the same time reducing the acreage to which they will apply were ap- proved We dnes day by the Orange County Board of Supervbon. Under tbe new regwatiOM, which opens 6,500 acres of land for possible d evelopment. de- velol?ers ~o lona~r wtu have the o9ll9" c:I t hallfllglna the Jc)ta. lion, of the '6' ct>a1munfty Nol.Ml EQtiivalent ~el (CNEL> con· tour and possibly winning de· velopment rights. At the sam e time, the 65 CN EL "footprint" will be r-e- duced in size fro m 25,000 lo 19.000 acres based on new noise studies conducted by the Navy Department at the request of m arine base and county of· fic1als. Co n s truction o f h ome~. hospitals, convalescent homes, churches and schoob are affocl· cd by the action. A former 65 CNEL line. basl'd on past studies, included more lh:.in 25.000 acres, but land d(.·· veloper.., h:.id the option of ch:.illcns.tmg the location of tht< hnC' C'hallC'nges ~•I I not bl• µt•rm1llcd under the nl'w rcgul<i t1011 .... Al B<'ll. manager of gcnl'rnl planning. told su1Jerv1sors that th" chC1llcngc systt·m would bt- · · unnecessary " because the Navy Department muse stud1t-s have accurately pmpoanted the location or the 65 CNEL ··foot print" surround1n~ the base· Cops Quell Flap S<.1n Cll•mt·ntc• pol11•1· wf'r•· 1·al11·<1 an tn qu1·ll ,, rn1nor ..,h11111 ing d1sturlwnl·c .1l thl· ..,,·1·m· 11f J ..,1;.. month old labor ..,lr1kt· follow1ni.: 4.1 p<·;11·pful ralh hy about 150 walkout ... upµorlf·r.., Wednesday P olice made no arn•..,ts 111 front of Reevei, Hubber lnl' . 415 Ave. Pico, whe re about IOU gasket manufacturing workc.>rh have been on strike since Apnl 9. Commu01cat ion Workers of America u.nion members st.aged a 3 p.m.. r ally wbere national µn•s1dt'nl Cl1·nn V. alt... <1l-.11 .Jf' \fl. <'II> tio ... -.. •·n< 11ur:J I.!• rl 1111· .... 1r1k1·r-.. to eonlinu•· thr·1r -.t rui.. glo v. an ... ll'fl for u S.in f>wit11 m1·1·t1ng ~htle .... om1· 1Jf lh• plJt·itrd C'arry1ng union "U I> purll'r.., marrh<:-d <1round th•· plant s houtmg Plant officials had earlier ob tamed a court order that hm1l.!> p1cketmg around the factory Pohce a.rnved at 3 47 p m to re mmd the demonstrators or the court order. Tbe picketers left r'olice said the strikers b-1 ... h1·1·n 1 alhnL· pl .ml •·niplo~1·1" 1· .1 IJ.., J 11d nttw r oh"·<·n11 w-., ~ hli1· 1 h1 1.1.11rk1·1 .., w1·r1· 1·hJIW 1111! ..,h1fh '\1111n1· wa.., hur1 ('\.\ t\ unwn 11f11t·1ah; said thn1· ·• PIH'tt r.., to bt• n11 pro..,fH.'Cl of a 1·11nlrJt'I wlllt·m•·nl Cit this tanw Th1•v 1'1C11m plant 11fhc1als refww to ··takt' a rt>a1><inable pos1t1on ·· 1n contraC't talk-. l n1on orfa c1al Reid Pier re !>aid CW A representataveh spoke to plant management briefly last week but no progress was madb. The gasket plaol employs about 110 workers. .. Safe Period through Oct. 28th 0 1 • 5 Custom lengths Castro Arrives 'Happy' 25 ~ Savi nq8o :~~~:=r:£ /O Heritage fabrtcst Heritage Custom Design Sofas and Love Seab • 1• I . ~ ....... ADIL CASTRO 'HAPPY TO II IN UNITED ITATU' c-.. ....... ., ....... .., D1•an£l Ura Oft Ahltill . -.. NEW YORK <AP) -With the familiar cigar t ·e ke~ an his mouth, Cuban President Fidel Castro arrived in New York lo· day. lipped his mili•ary cap. and ••id: "I'm happy to be in the U.S." Castro, racing death threat.s from Cuban-American groups, was greeted by a 2,000-man security force, one of the 181.Lest ever gathered lo protect' a foreign dignitary vis1t10g New York. He 1s to address the Unit· ed Nat.ions on Friday. The Cuban dictator was dressed In green fatigues as he descended the s tair s o r bis Ruula n-made llyushin-62 jet and was greeted by U.S. inami· 1ralion and U.N. ofriciala al Kennedy lnt.em alional Airport. An angry lfOUP of about 30 an- li-Caatro .demonstrators shouted "Murdere rs! Murderers!" In Spaniab u the Cuban leader's 42-car motorcade arrived at tbe Cuban MJulon to the United Na· Uon1 about 2 a.m. As two bodyguards tried to cul through t.he crowd near the mis· 1lqb, 1omt1 demons trat ors ara bed 1t them and one guard pulled a pistol. Police wrested . \be IUD from him, bul be wu not~ -plus Coordinated Chairs • ~ Your Favonte dcn1gni,r Will Be Happy To Auist You ·H.J.GARRETf fU~NITU~E PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR OCSIGNERS 2215 HAllOR ILVD . COSTA MISA 646·0115 I l.. .,,. . nw,.-,.~ ''· 1111 NATION I WORLD Riiin HOits Cuba 'Raid~ GllSDI ftlVldl Mft. -~ ., ~ Ylalt '° tM .._ WU.a toMtlu of ow Oolcll8. ltate. wbent •••llliil .... ftew8 """" ..._ .,. and clear air fUla Ulll =-~1.: ............... ..w.e. u.a& tM rep.. Oll'a6a ......... ot u. 9lcUaa ii ..... dltfteWty conUnudd put mldJll&bt. '"l'bia wu a eomplet. IW"1M &o ua," 11Jd Navy Com..,..r Bill Sbnaoa, ID cba.r .. ot aupplj• '1111 U.. USS N .... u. Me of tbe three lblpa. "lt took us fcMar days to JoQ9d UMa fOocl," HE &\JD POOD WU loaded from barce1 at Ml Mar Norfolk . U1u1Uy, be 11Jd. ft la loaded trom 1 dock. where At cu be dltvea aboard by tract.on, a quicker proceaa. Tbe aetui dat. ol tM mock attack la .,.... kept a MCNt, K • cord.lnf to Cot Lou Plutadoft, eom.maDdu' ot tM operatlola. Tbe M artnee be1an movial equipment iJlto Monbead Cit.¥ from Cam.P LeJ.une Tuellday nJ.itt, iJMf" troops ftom Camp ~. ta. New River Air Station anc1 Cherry Polnt arriveclby IMaa on W•e141q. The Marine unJt la made up ol l,200 eombtlt-eqv.ipped penoo-; nel. a 300-member lo1iaUn s upport unit and a JOO.member beUc.opter 1quad. Y• eoUt tell ~la wt.. ,_ aeUMCI U.. loc1I pen1•e• of MMdodao ec-ty. OM JOWl• womu. a 1row~. bad appeared Mfwe Ute County Board or ~a. wu UIYJ. Sbl clallntd tbal foverameot bar•....,. .,.. likely to be ta. ndnaUon ol her rarmla.a lntenlta. ·•ws RAVE UBN U.t.lmklated," abe lold tbe board "Our C'CIDltitutJoftaJ ricbtt bave been vlol1ted. We are •Imply ttyial lo make a Uvt.na from the land . .. w :· .. eddied, "you ihould ~member t.b&t we are tbe fUblre a1 wa cowrtry. · • U.S. ·Physician Shares Nohel I I '111e ~ •PP•rtotb' u.teoed lo ber plea with crave~. After all, Ln bier •sricultural eo\erprt.e, 1be wu talk- lnl about what one \JDited Stat.et 1ovemment survey North State Politician Pandenng Agriculture E.'nterpnse estimated ls the 10th largest cash crop grown in Califom111 It ranks right betwee n a lmonds and strawbernes The crop ls sinsemilla. Oh well, to most or us, 1t 's bet ter known as marijuana. Or .pol Or gra~~ Some people smoke it. Estimates indicate that lhe crop, grown an Mendocino, Humboldt, Lake and Del Norte counties during the season from April to October, may have been valued as high as $900 million last year alone ln Mendocino, it developed that the county shenff began using airplanes to search out these crops, grown 10 the inaccesible backlands, and then began taking action against the growers THAT'S WHAT P ROMPTED the young woman aaricuJtu:riat lo appear ln heated prot.Mt ~ore Uae aupe,..,..., One board member aaned and made pubUc au...mmu ladie1Un• be feued tfie farmen were belne haraaMd. SJmilar re.ctlon c•rne from Humboldt County where· the sheriff was also using ajrcratt to locate sinsemllla c rops. Only this week. Humboldt supervisors voted 3 to 2 to reJect a U.S. grant and form a t ask force against the growers. Supervisor Sara Parsqns labeled the proposal "overkill." Supervisor Danny WIHSh earlier said such ac lion might do grave damage to the local economy. T&OUBLE WlTH ALL W s northern agricultural en- terprise is that it is illegal. Agaln.st the law. Growing man· Juana is a felony crime punishable by a three-year term ln the slammer and a fine of up lo $5,000. This fact, however, seems to be of less importance than the local economy, in the minds of some northern local oftlcials. Thus it ls possible for one young grower to appear before a governmental body and declare she and her fellow farmers are the future of our country. You are left wondering what that future is. STOCKHOLM, Sweden <AP) -The 1979 Nobel Prise for medJctne wu awarded Jointly today to an American and a Briton for developin1 computer- ant1ted tomo1raphy, a revolu- Uona ry X-ray technique that gives medical science a striking- ly clear inside look at the living human body The winners are physicist Al- l an McLeod Cormack, 55, a native of South Africa and a member of the physics depart- ment at Tufts University, Med- ford . Mass .. and Godfrey Newbold Hounsfield, a research engineer with the British com· pany EMI. THE TWO, who dJd the basic research on the "CAT" system Brzezinsk i Vows. S upport For Europ e W ASHlNGTON CAP I In a speech reminiscent or the Cold War era, pres identia l adviser Zb1gniew Brzezinski says the United States would not hesitate to use nuclear weapons against the Soviet Umon in the event of It Soviet attack on Western Europe Brzezinski told a State Depart· ment gathering Wednesday the Soviets may be t e mpted to declare war against Lbe NATO aJUea unJea they match the Sov- iet buildup ol nudear weaPM-S ln Europe. Bnennakl la Presi- dent Carter's national aecurlty adviser. His speech to the Atlantic Treaty Association. a pri vale group that ~upports NATO. wa)\ given against a background of ~rowing European concern over the reliability or tht> u s. defense commitment The Western European alhes have been debating the issue in connection with a U.S. propoul to deploy m edium-range mis- siles ln Europe to counter Soviet d e ployment of comparable weapons. "Let there be no question about our commitment, nor of our determination lo help defend Europe by all means ne<:essary. nuclear and conventional." Brzeiinski said. Apple Growers Setback IJam.age Fe are d From Fre ak S nowstorm Te.per•••re• "' u ~ Alllel'Y 4A ,. Alla.,ta ., 4J e.ium.,. 41 • . Sl 89'M 14 Cl ~-,. n .u 811ff•lo ••• .!6 aw ... .,,,,. 1' " Oll'41110 ~ .. 01 Cln<lnMll u 4) Qwel .... 4' 3S Oel°FtWtt. 10 S1 0.-r .. '1 Oelrolt St • Jn H¥ffotd ., 21 4.01 ... _ 11 .. "9fl0tllhl 17 11 MevstOfl n '2 , ......... ,. u ., •• Jec111'11tll• .. " ·'* ICe,.JG"y .. SI u.v .... ,, " Little ... k •t .. lM~ 1J " uutnlll• S1 -.01 _,,......, ., JI ~I tJ 7• Mllwatlk .. '5 ... ·°' _,...,.,, .. ... lt .02 ,.,.,. ..... fl ... Ntw0t1flt 7) -NIWY ..... 41 ,, .. °"'• 'lty n )S °"'--.. ,. PMIM'llN• tt " ... ,........ , ... ~ • JI .u '"'':::S,... ., " ·" '"" Or• • '° ,__ a " ......... ~-sett~ " ., SMOlitet 7S .. SM,,.,. 1• ,. ...... .....,, .... t ,. ~tyfnoty If yO;i CIO ftOI rwtW --""6$0p111 GlllDa!ortl '"'----!Ml~-IWutdrr -.,,_., 11 'fl()li 00 "°' ,_.. --Dy'""' ce- O.W lt 11 • "' -,oli' COOi' ., 1 °" Cl'!llW<.0 Qlllltf9f~ AllO•• t>Mlll9 Gollflt• ·-..... 11. --""~h..., .......... _Wt!M._...... .... .... ... ~c..-a-n .... .-~-~""""' ~ ....... Ull.illl .... ... ,, .JI n • 10 ,. '° 41 io .. •S es " 61 . " '° .. n " .... 14 ., .. ,. .. SJ 11 " =~ " .. 1• Ill ,, ,. t4 N 11 • 10 M H S4 " N 17 SI ,. H 11. " " ,, .. II 19 IJ.§.8 .... ,.. TM sternl, wflKll dumPH M "lllCll .. U Iner. el _.., ,,. porl*t of Ylf'91tlla Ofl WMM•y. !let IM99f'I' -klM -1Y ..-.,, wttll lltM -,...,.eel .... .,,,, .......... Ofld ·~· Mah ... HOW.WI', .......... ~ ,..,,_1,.0 <llllly -mutll Of ti. Mtiofl, •Ill\ ...... .._. lft .... Ir.,_ Mh,.•Hota .,..,.. .. CkMt lMi.. -Wt .... ...,,.,.. Atlar*c c-t . Helf .._._..er• ramefM to lie plc:ted lfl Illa SNNN-... veun. -or-It'll ~ flf Tll" Tep l'Nlt ~..., ...... _,... tf\111 ~Ollld M Iott II t~r.t.,,.1 tell ... .....,.,........ TM Dte Miff Ntw<etl for '"•Y .._,, ......... ~ ........ llOlntll\9 -w.tti.,..""' l\ffnfft· !flt ""'" ...... ,,., ~· _, ... __,, erotloft . TM H .. ._., w .. ,.,., S.rwlce, w••Qllfll• "'""2.-mlletout 111111t l"MlllC, llMI ~ llltfl _. 119 to " .... .., ......... "-t-Ill _...,.c;.i ..... . '"''•'' -· "'''""'' llo••d• ~ .... ,.., ~ ... ,. ··-··,.. wlltttler • llW ........ 9111 tM Dlt ....... ,., _..,, llW U11 IO *'11-" 111111,.,. lttlttl '*""· • ,..,......_... .. wllll tM Hwt.. -.le IM latKI IDl"•U•I ~· ... fw•,,......... _. ''TM llWtn IHn'I ...... U1it MIKI Ill .... """ .. Nod ......... .. . ..... ,... Ao ~. • lot-d •' ~'• ~I<•, Wld llw wrl IOOUO IOU\y at dewn trom , .. ,..,.,.,.., .,..,,_ 901nt El\ew-. '"" NWS 10<•-' no Pf"<Klplt.lllor\ lfl ~i'letn C.flle><nl• lht-11 Ftl<My T•tnlNf .. "'" In 1tw _,, \llOuld ~...ell .... ~ ........ """''" th• merc"ry '" ~rooolU•" LOt 1'r>09IH -1111 UW '°' s.o,.,. <oet4•1 IQ9 nlqhf •ncl ,._n lnq "°""· ot-lte , .. , lhrOVOfl "" Oey Ehe-r~ UOftl •••lelll• wtncl• nloftl -mon'li"9 -. llKomlflv ,..,, to ,..._.. ~ to U ~"°" 11>11 ell-. •1111 -to two •-5 ....., T-y't ,_, I• OU'f II' t fl twototo..r teat"'"" -et• turf 11u1y on -_ _, le<l"I! ......... Coeti.t lli1lfl 11 wttfl U •-, lllfll In 1anc1 11. 1ow,. wet ...... S 1111, /fie••• Thi~• TOOAY 5ec0fldoow 'Up m • • ~lllOI\ • .Opm 0 I l'•IDAY Fl"' lllQll s.ou.,., J , ~Int-t :IDem JI SK-11'911 J·n P.m • • Se<Ofld low IO.ff P m o I Sllll rl-• tte m . Mttt »IJI m ~ ,._ 11 J1 ""'··tel\ 1J 4'I •. ftl. 8•rl..,..rt l'ore<..llM ~Ml tot...- S\lfi ·--............... Me•· '""'"' .... ~, .,. ... t ..... .., Ill "!(_, • ... -.Pw , 4 ,. 1 4 14 ' 4 14 4 I 14 $ .... II A-• Mltflt I" Mt MH ''"""' MltM 111 , .. , oi-tleft A ... M .. Olr , J w , i w , 3 w • • w .. independently or· ea~b other. were cboMo by the faculty al tbe Royal CVol1ne lled.ico-Surlical lrultitute. Informed aourcea aaid the seleclloo of Cormack aad Hounsfie ld for the record $190,000 award, Which they will share. came after the lnaUtute, in an unprecedented move followina a lengthy debate. vetoed the choice of it.i own Nobel .election commltlff. The ldmUty o( the committee nominee or nominff! was not publicly known. COaMACK SAID be was "amazed'' at rus selection "I've always been in my UtUe ivory tower." he told a Boston r~· porter in a telephone interview. ·'One can never hope lo win the Nobe l Prize . I have been teaching and worlcing " The medicine award was the first of the six annual Nobel prizes to be announced The physics. c he mi s tr y and economics prizes are lo be awarded next· week . and the Uterature and peace awards 10 the following weeks President Carter has been nominated for the peace prize. Six of last year 's nine Nobel laureates were Americans. The medicine prize ha s been dominated by Americans in the posl·war years. and 29 of the 50 winners since 1959 bave been from the U n ited States . Cormack ls lhe 53rd American to win the medicine award. TBE SYS"l'EM devek>ped by Hounatleld and Cormack ln- volvea the X·rayln1 of suc- cessive crosa-aectiona of the body to build. with the aid of a computer, a highly detailed Im· age for examination In general hospital use for on ly about s u ye<.in~. 1t has represented a breakthrough in m e dical diagnostic method.5- parucularly in the examination o( the brwn and nervous system. e nabling quicker a nd s urer diagnoses of br&Ul d amage and detection of tumors and other ir- regularities. AP ........ FRED KEU. Y (CENTER) HEART 1RANIP\.ANT Qk•O Son F.-Jr. (left). NepheW ..... tla "elef dad a Heart Taxes for Transplant OK'd F RAMINGHAM. Mau <APJ -The governing body of thU city of 70.000 hu decided to ra.ise ~xes so Fram- ingham can provide $60,000 to a · sick. retired firefighter who needs a l.Jfe-uvtng heart transplant Alter a 4~minute town meeting debate Wedn.;sday mght. members hfted their hands and voted 104-13 to ap prove the appropnallon for l''redenl' Kelley, a 39·year-old father of fi ve "The vote sho"ed th<> people of FraminRham have a heart." !>aid John ()elPrete. cha1nnan of the Framingham Board of Sele<-tmen. wbost· dec1s1ons are ratified by the 210 member town met.-tan~ DOCTORS HAD GIVEN Kelley six mooths to a year to live wit.hoot the operahon He had suffered t wo heart at- tacks on the ]Ob since July 1978 and relJred on d.Jsability last month. ·'It 'a ove.r finally.'· said Kelley. who stayed home from the debate because phys1cLans feared the tension might br· mg on another heart at~ck . "lt was a loog wa1t but 1t W&.b worth 1t It 'a the b1&gesl thing that ever b.appeoed in my Ute." Kelley'5 w e. t;ve.tyn. 38, and daulbter Kat.by, 20, silent· ly watched the debate ln the Framio&ham Memorial Hall Mrs. Kelley trembled as the vote was taken. and when it w~ over , <'nedout m re her. embraced her daughter and wept "I C-AN 'T SAY ANYTHING," s ht ~aid ''( JUSl want to r ull m) husband and tt'll him Although most ~peaker:. fa vored giving Ke ll t!y l~ money. the town meeting member.. had. de.m.a.n.ded ~ ~ -b&le46 ~a preee<lent for other municipal l'mployees Wl th extraordinary me<hcal expenses "I am wondenng what Ooodgates we are opening up here.'' UJd Jay Gordon. who voted 10 favor of the ap· proprtauon. "Once we vote this, there are bot.Ind to be other requests. " A free p ress. Who nee d s ii?-- ''llny should freedom of speech and freedom of the press be allowed? Why should a government Wlich is doing what it bel ieves to be righ t allow itrielf to be criticized? It would not allow ~tion by lethal weapons. Ideas ore much more fatal things than guns. Why should any man be olfo.Ned to buy a printing press and dissem inate pernicious opinion calculated to emborass " •• -Nikolot Lenin the government?" Your right to know what government is doing is assured by on active and free press. DAILY PILOT Nabonal New1paper Weak October 7 to 13, 1979 • -------------------~-----------------------· CALIFORNIA All Safe In Midair &llisio n SAN .JOSS (AP) Two 1ta1IH:'J!:! planta colnded over lllD llunlclpal Airport and no¥ed1 waa Injured. prom.,_. •u&boriti .. lo call tbe lnetdellta''mlract.." A11l1tant airport director Jack Harper aald W~ay that a ~raft bad Juat \a.ken otf from the nanway when it wu ( STATE J struck at an altitude of JOO feet by I Cell:Da trylq to land. Tbe aeverely damaged planes wltb one person eacb - landed wit.bout incldent. ··1t•1 tmpoaible that neither pel'IOD wu lDJured and it's a miracle that no one wu killed," said Sm Jose ~ Department spokesman Dlck Wattenbarter. He aald the propeller of the descendln& plane sliced Lnto the coclicpit ol the other plane, bare- 1 y mlastng the pilot N~ Plaat Closed ·---------.. ....-.·- f lflinoritles Bar k e d . . Al'WI ....... Thur'1d9Y. Octobet 11, 1979 DAILY PILOT Af -TV Personalityt Sued by Beatles LOS ANGELES <AP> -The eorporate remnant ol tbe Ba~ is aoinl to court 11ain to ft"1t lmltat.lou of the OOW·defunct I Brltiab ainC1Dc lrc>UP· .. Attorneys for Apple Corp. Ud. uted Superior Court Wednea· I day to ilaue an lDjuncUon preveoUna producer Dick Clart and the , American Broadcasting Co. from ualq either the names or employtng look-allkes of the BeaUea ln a planned movie "Birth of : tbe Beatles." ' THE CIVIL SUIT SEEKS $40 million in general damages and i $100 million ln punitive damages. I Apple Corp. bolds the rights for former Beatles John Lennon. t Paul McCartney, Georae Harrlaon and Rln10 Starr. • THIS W A.S THE SECOND time in the past month the former • Beatles have taken legal action against portrayal or the group by ' imitators. I Apple Corp. recently filed suit to stop the long-runninc stage I play "Beatlemania," which uses four men who look lilre the ' Beatles at various stages in their career and sing BeaUes tunes. Guyana Survivors Sue Ryan Estate . l , t I I . I I I that Ryan had "a wanton and1 SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Rancho Seco nuclear power plant is closed for installation 01 an earthquake safety support on a pipe in the emergency cooling system, a spokesman said Wed· nesday. Actors William Schallert and Dennis Weaver were among 500 who picketed the Academy of Motion Picture and Television Producers office Wednesday denouncing the film industry for its portrayal of women and minorities on the screen. Screen Actors Guild spokeswoma n Kim Fellner said unfair labor charges were fiJed against the academy. SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The estate of the late Rep. Leo Ryan is being sued by five Peoples Temple survivors and three re· latives of dead cult members who claim that Ryan's actions helped bring about the Guyana tragedy The swt. filed in San Fran· c1sco Superior Court, charges reckless disregard for the conse·, quences" when ht" tried to lead' fl eeing c hurc h members to! freedom , • Ryan and four others an rus party of reporters. Temple re -{ lataves and departing cult mem-1 hers were shot and killed as theyl prepared to fly out of Guyana·~! Port Ka.ituma airstrip near the Peoples Temple community of' Jonestown on Nov. 18, 1978. · The spokesman for the plant. .Jeff Marx of the Sacramento Municipal Utility District, said Wednesday the U.S. Nuclear Re_.gu latory Commission or dered the 913-megawatt plant closed during the repairs, which will take a few days. Stilled Cable Cars No Deterrent More than 900 members of thei Peoples Temple then committed' :.u1c1de or were murdered at: Tourists Cont inu e to Flock to San Francisco Jonebtown at the behest of the• leader of the cult. the Rev Jim I Jone., B l"'Olml fi'MM d SU ... WASIDNGTON CAP) Gov Edmund G. Brown faces an up· hall chmb to raise funds for has presidential campaign, accord· ini;t to the first official contribu· tion und expenditure report filed Wednesday by the California Democrat. The report showed Brown the self-described "third force" in the rac e for the 1980 Democratic nomination -with total contributions of $261,519 --e•t C'••trH1•d•• WASHINGTON <AP>· -The blg1est single contribution to Gov. Edmund G. Brown's unan- nounced presidential camprugn so far bas come from tbe POlilical arm of the diversified Service Employees lnternalion· al Union. The umon s Political action .:ommlttee donated $5,000 -the maximumallowedbylaw. SAN FRANCISCO IAP> Despite the doomsayers wbo pre· dieted tounsts would stuy away m droves, visitors continue to flock lo the city despite an extended shutdown of the city's symbol. the cable cars. Phone Firlll Granted $1.3 Million Hike SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The Cellfornia Public Utilltiee Com· mission. correctl.n& a J uly 31 declalon, baa ara.nted Pacific Telephone a Sl.3 million rate locreaae lmtead ~ ~inc it.a ra• by '42.2 million annually. The PUC earlier bad rejected a Pacific Telephone request for a $470 million a year rate increa~e and instead ordered tbe cut in rates It received six petitions for a rehearing and rejected all of them but did modify the de· cision . The new order, issued Wed· For example, there will oow be a new cha.rte of 25 cents for a request by a calling party to verify that a line ls busy or to in· terrupt a conversation in pro- gress AND ntE rates ana charges Out-of·town folks are sat1sry1ng themselves by climbing aboard stationary cars parked at terminal turntables aod having their pictures snapped by friends. relauves or strangers The ancient relics. not much changed s mce they started lurchmg and clanging up and down San Francisco's hills in 1873. were shut down two weeks ago fo r long-overdue system overhaul and repair The three t•able car Imes have earned up to 13 malhon persons annually in recent years. more than 70 percent of them tounst.s. al two bits a head The cars are freely conceded by officials to be dangerous con traptions that regularly toss rlders off mto tbe gutter. effecllvely , act as targets for other vetucles. and draw hundreds of expensive injury claims each year ln this apace age or sophisticated machinery. thew dUM.au.n are U1bted by old storage batteries and braked mainly by wood shoes lhal prest apinat the 11\U'face of the track&. Occgionalty they at.op where tbe grtpman want.a. In Ca.st' of real emergency, the gnpman. who operate-s the mecbarusm that grabs onto a cable moving beneath tbe pavement. drops a euWotlne-Uke ated alabiot.o tbe cable alotatoppln& t.be ear u 1rit were 1lammin1 lat.o a bridr wall. The problem Is the system is ao ~repit, tbe underlyin& struc· lures so flogged by years of use. that It is dangerous. say Municipal RaJlway off1c1als. "There isn't any question in my mmd that at lSn 't " safr system." said Oral Moore. ch1ef engmeer of the city Publ.Jc ULi hties COmm1ss1on. w o recommen<rtalhe-shtrtdown THt: St.JIT. filed <kt. 4. ask:. un:.pecifaed damages aga1n~1 1 Ryan's e.;tatc for wrongful death, negl.Jgencc and negligent, 1nn1ctionofemot1onal stress. , Hyan·s estate. given a prt· l hmanary value of $264,000. would j have hrushed probate in the next 1 r._.w months if the lawsuit had I not bffn filed. Ryan's attorney., Me lvm Kerwin. said 1t now : l'Ou ld remain unsettled forl years KerWlJl. of Mento Park, saJd \ the suit I.a completely without merll and borders on barua· \ anent. He.aid it. an1ered lailn so much tbal b1a views on it att "unprintable .. SAN. FllANCISCO attorney Robert J . Bodlelmu. ....., filed the 1u1t. said Ryan was re- peatedly warned or the "ex· treme danger" or the Jonestown :.ettlement 1nves tigat1on Despite those wamang~. he said . Ryan went ahead with a v1s1t tQ the S'ettJemenr. Oflirer • t o R e plJI LOS ANGELES <AP> Policemen Edward M. Hopson and Lloyd W. O'Callaghan will ..nesd~)' corrects_a S26 million computer error made by the PUC staff and recalculates Pacific Telephone's expenses for such things as electric power and operator's wages. for key telephone equipment, -----------·--------- such as phones with buttons for various lines. also wilJ be in· , be given a chance to comment or the Police Commission report criticizing their handling of thE Eula Love case before the repot1 is placed in their personnel files. Commission President Stephen Reinhardt made the commitment after the pair had asked for a court order alloWlllg the policemen to submit their comments The order said Pacific has an additional revenue requirement of $43.5 million over that found reasonable in the original de· cision creased beyond that authorized an the July 31 decision. The PUC also scheduled a re- hearing on Pacific Telephone's ('OSt of borrowing funds to finance the current demand for service. It said this would con· ~1dcr the rap1dly·rising interest rates on the company's plans to finance new and improved equipment .. , THE RESULT as a $1.3 million annual rate hike which will af feet the rates of some Pacific Te lephon e and General Telephone customers THIS WEEK, COME VIEW OVER $250,000 IN PRECIOUS JEWELS ... ROBINSON'S HEIRLOOM COLLECTION AT NEWPORT AND WESTMINSTER, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, OCT. 11 ·12 This unique assortment of heirloom jewels has been assembled from the estates of many prestigious families and leadmg jewelers. Most pieces are in their original settings, and represent the exquisite work of world· renowned craftsmen. Listed is only a sampling of the overall collection. All items are subject to prior sale. 1 Robinson's FineJewelr..y, 100 2.56 ct. marquise diamond solitaire with baguettes. $9800 12 ct. diamond brooch, $18, 500 3 ct. emerald and 1 ~ ct. diamond bracelet, $3950 Removable diamond. 5 ~ ct .. and coral pin/earring combmation with attachqble turquoise. 18K gold and platinum sold as set only, $10, 250 3 ct. diamond cover·case watch. 18K gold. $4,950 rct. cound diamond solitaire, $ i350 2. 84 ct. diamond brooch, $2,450 2 ct. diamond and 8 c1. emerald earrings, $3950 ... 5. 75 ct. diamond bracelet, $7,500 ~ ct. diamond and 9.46 ct. genuine star sapphire, $9,500 3 ct. diamond and cultured pearl pracelet, $31)(){) All wo!Qhts tots/ Robinson's Robinson 's Newcort Fashion Island • 644-2800 Westminster Ms/I • (714) 898·4331 ... GIBRALTAR SAVINGS 26-WEEK CERTIFICATE 10.6623 11.137 3 ANNUAl tfffCTtVf flflO CERTIFICATES ISSUED OCTOBER 11 THAU OCTOBER 17, 1979 $10,000 mln.tmum. Rate based on 26·week US. Treasury 8111 rate Effective yield assumes all funds at matunty are redeposited at same rate and remain fOf full year. Rate may change at renewal. Federal regulations ptohtb1t compounding of interest on the atcount and 1mPoSe a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal. -----·-NEW CONVENIENCE HOURS FOA~ ORANGE COUNTY OfFICES SATURDAYS: All Gt>raltar offioes are open from 9:30 to 3:00. MON. thrU THURS.: Moat Glbnlltar offices ~re open from 9:00 to 5:30. FRIDAYS: Mast otnc;r are open from 9:00 to 8:00. HUNTINGTON CENTER ofb ClPt'\ Mon.·Frl. 10:00 90 7:30, Saturday 9:30 to 3:00. GlllALTM IAY .. GI AND LOAN AllOCIAftOtt __ . .........._ ~ 1116 • .-....--$3..5 WIHOn • Officll~ FULLERTON 255 w Orangethorpe 871·6101 HUNTINGTON IEACH Hunt. Center 898·9666 NEWPORT IEACH 2700 W. Coast Hwy. 631 ·2611 SAN JUAN CAPll TWO 31877 Del Obispo 493·5011 SANTA ANA/COSTA MESA 3925 S. Brlstol 979·7580 SANTA ANA 14 Santa Ana Fashion Square 834-0717 •.. , I i f I t . , .,, ... . . . . ... MI . I .. .. ,,. .. .... . .. • I ... I Orange Coast Daily Pilot Editorial PM,.e .. _ 1 _____ Th_u·tf#r-·· Oo-'°'*-·'·'··t·m·-----·R·~--=-·· w.-.Mct •.• ~.7:.1.b.:~.h./E·d·l'°'·T~~-·.p .... _:.:.,.~.'.,u..· - Water Board Plan A Good Solution The transiUoo plan to wblcb Superior Court Judie Edward Wallin bu fiven hll approval la a moet aaUlfac· tory blueprint for the chan,eover of lbe INM R.ancb Water l>Utdct to publicly ele«ect repretfftlaU\l•· 1be plan calla tor the immediate resJpaUon of two Irvine Company executives from the board -parinl lta membership to nve and elections in November to pro- ceed oo scbeduh~ to aave votM~lecled dlrecton a 3·2 ma· Jority on lhe panel. By June, 1980, t.h rtnaJ two landowner-picked dil"' C· ton will re tgn and the e:ntire five.member board wlll be answerabh.• to the wishes of the voters aft~T that election Water l~ u powerful plannang tool in Southern Califomla and the policies and decisions of the Irvine Ranch Water Oistnct board wtll bear as much on the future developme nt of lhe cat)' as an)' city council de ciaion. In these circumstances tl wa~ simply no longer ac c:cptablt> or phtui:uble for a company dominated board to be in c harl(e or the wa ter planning of a city of 70,000 res1· dent.8. AU parlles in the case the IRWD board, the lrvtne Company, the-city of Irvine and Irvine Tomorrow - should be commended for working out a plan to ample· ment Judge Wallin 's ruling. Saddleback Funding Saddleback College officials admitted last week that the future looks dim for obtaining state funds lo build a sorely needed classroom building. The problem is clear. Current state regulations re· quire college districts to contribute matching funds for any capital project. Since Proposition 13 cut into the col· Jege's property tax income. local funds aren't available for building programs. Yet, Saddleback College's district population con· tinues to swell in the South Orange County land develop· ment boom. New residents who want to avail themselves of course offerings through the community college will find room won't be available. And if they are forced to drive to another college dis· trict the energy drain and air pollution is bound to m· crease. The classroom building has been on the drawing board for years. It's become a victim of the twilight zone between local tax support of community colleges and total state funding. The college, however, needs the space. Local legislators will have to produce state support for funding the new c lassroom building. There appears to be no other source . Looking to Future Irvine has often been described as one of the best master-planned communities in the nation. Great care is taken to insure that every development in the city meets strict criteria in terms of use and appearance. What. then. is the necessity for setting up still another bodf to study future development in the oily? Acoordiq to its chief proponent, Mayor David Sills, the teak force will be an lnatrument through which to de· termiile the all-import.ant synchronization -o:r timing - of development. His approach has merit. Sills said the panel can "look at the future o( our city by examining all of our needs as they relate lo each other and plan for that future so that the city we create today will be a truly beautiful place in which to live during the com!n~.d~. ·· Sills wants the c ity to consider such matters as a performing arts theater and additional park lands along with the phasing of future development. The City Council voted unanimously to put the task force lo work. This approach is recognition of the fact that more than just housing goes into making a thriving communi· ty. Essential recreational, commercial and transporta· tioo services and facilities also must be there and ready. The timing, or phasing, of development is as impor· tanl as the quality of the development itself. The new group can help bring it all together. • Op1n1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Ptlot Other views expressed on 1h1s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Addrns The Daily Piiot, P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd I Brain Waves 8yLM. BOYD Our Love and War man is looking into the remarkable clailJl that an epcephalo- grapb, the instrument. that measures brain waves, can also m easure affection between two people. Theory is that bow well people meet and mesh with one another depends on the brain waves they send oul and recejve. What the youngsters call vibes. And the instrument suppoaed.ly can detect these vibes and figure out their In· tensity. Would thlnlt a couple all wired up that way to a machine mlcbt have a litUe trouble tranaceivlng, but maybe not. Anyway, ther~ t Dear Gloomy Gu Wouldn't. lt make more 1en1e tor the Sad· dleback Community Coll•t• Ol1trlcl lo mer1e with or Imitate coastline Community Collea•'• "college wllbout walls " con· dpt? G.A.L. may be a market ror en· cephalographs among mar· riage counselors. and the medical suppliers ought not overlook. Q. "Doesn't Venice have more bridges than any other city in the world?" A. No, sir, that. distinction goes to Amsterdam. With 636 spans. ... Sick children of ancient Egypt were fed skinned mice. , Q . "In which stat.es do peo- ple on the average m ake the most money?" A. Alaska, Connecticut and New Jersey~ That'• iDcome per person. And the stat.es wMre the peopl~ make the least money are Maine, Mis· sissippi and Vermont. And it's noteworthy, too, la ll not, &Mt Koeeeo'• ntatlon..t orchetlra lJ larrer tl\an ltl army? Appea ins, tbat. Music before military mlCbt. Some service stations have set up coin-operated di•· pensera to eeli compreued alr. A quarter will get you four mlnUU.' worth. When Chaucer wrote of "bon11,'' h• meant dice. Wbn M ~of "aoooa,•· be meant thucs. That •lane bu been around for quite a apell. Rowland Evam/Robert No~ak Carter vs. ( Kennedy in Florida 111 lAMI -Tbt •urprlalnc amount ol poUU~al power that PrHhMnt Carter hH fQCuaed heN to avoid defeat by Teddy Ktanecb' lo lhe Oct. 13 caucUMa bellff the moribund •late of h1s praldency "ll Cuter would only work Cons,.... or the RU5alans over lik e he 's worklne l''lori da. he would have le11 to worry a.bout." one neu~ral o b· s~rver awed by the sheer power or the C art er performance told us. There are reaso~ to spare for his doing so. even though the muscled drive for success here is raising eyebrows or politicians and voters dismayed by the string of Carter failures in other endeavors of his presidency. REASON NO. I : A loss to Ken oedy. who's almost-candidacy could be damage d but not .Mailbox # poulbly deatroyed by even a blC Carur victory. would fl.niah Cartu olt u a naUonal leader. It would render t.be balance or his prealdo ncr afl but superfluous. particularly In view of Carter's natural conaUtueru:y In much of the 1ute lhat bordera Georgla. That eicplaJns the phenomena! -and aeemtnc1Y effective - political engineerinf plotted by Hamilton Jordan in headins orr Sen . Edward M . Kennedy . Jordan's wodc In the stretch drive to the non-blndin& but psycholocically important Oct. 13 caucuses proves that in the game o( elective politics. the flawed White House chief of staff is still very much In com· mand. BY NO MEANS 1s a Carter victory positively assured in the obscenely ronfuslng process that wilJ select 879 delegates at 67 county caucuses Oct lJ. These, along with 838 non-elected del· eaates, win then choose their favorite for the 1980 Democratic presidential nomination in a legally meaningless straw vote . al t.be party'• November mock convention. Next Marcb. the lecal Florida primary elect.Son will select the actual dele1ates to the party's New York conven· Uon next aummer. But the Oct. 13 caucuaes ("a wild animal" in the words or Richard SwaM. Carter's c:hlef fund-raiser here > contain so much potential tor Carter's polllical demise that he bas galvanized his whole ad· ·ministration to help him. He has also commandeered 99 percent of the highly effective state ad· ministration and political ap· paratus of popular Gov. Bob Graham. while pullinc in money and workers from all over the country. IN THE PAST few weeks. ous ted United Nations Am · ba ssador Andrew Young personally telephoned three black delegate-candidates on slatu committed to KeMedy. His stern message: Don't deserf Jim my Carter now. Two al once re· moved themselves lone of whom. persuaded to ris k Carte r· Young wrath, later agreed to tel back 00). Seorea of Carter and poteoUal Carter back.en have t>ooen flown off lo a full day of frtUy "brlef· ina• ·' on world problems Sn the White Houle -all expenses paid -lo soften them up. A Kennedy leader in Jacksonville's DuvaJ County told wi that a contributor to the KeMedy campaign aaed to be relieved of h is $1 ,000 pledge on grounds that Grahum was about to appoint him to a state commiss ion. WHAT IS UNIQUE IS not such routine political arm-twisting but its eye-popping volume "What we really want.," sald one o f Carter's chie f politi cal operatives bere, "is not just to defeat Kennedy but to Schapp him ." Carter's spectacular ~ cent four years ago started rigHt here In Florida when he swept the party's mock convention. His only serious opponent was then-Gov. Milton Schapp of Pennsylvania. Carter swamped Sc happ wlth 67 percent of the vote. The "Kennedy '80" leaders. stripped or any public t>elp from the senator, will pull heavUy in Carter·hating Jewish precincts. particularly the three large co unties or Dade <Miami >. Broward <Fort Laude rdale} and Palm Beach. That 1s Kennedy country Capturing the caucuses in all thr~ big counties would give hjm (3 percent of tbe elect· e d de legates, and h is lop managers -disenchanted l976 Carter activists are trying to r ut into the traditional. non liberal vote in eentral and 11orthem Florida lo bhOw broad Kcnn<."<iy l>Lrength THE\' MJGHT conceivably do that : tn a pe>lit1cal proc~:-.:. th~•l der1es accurate forecasun~. lht'V m1J!ht even do better lf they do not. Carter w1 II have proved th al t'\ en a president fl attf'ncd h' poht1 cal revt•rsc:. 1n Wa-.h1n l!t<1n "an .;11 11 focus th<· J Y.('o;omt· power of his offict' to '>C(lrt· a local \1Ctor} ~uc h ..i triumph Y.ould portt•nd htllc 1C .1nyth1n~ for the senous Kennedy conU•!\h next winter. nor would 1t v1s1bly t'lev ate the benighted pres1dcn cy or Jimmy Carter Free Enterprise Best Housing Solution To the Edltor In rcv1cwmg vanow. c dlt.onal-" and articles in local papers. 1t has become obvious th11.t there is a great controversy concerning condominium conversions and rental housing. Some cities have enacted or dinances that greatly restrict a developer's ability to convert an apartment complex to con · domintums by r equiring un· necessary open space or parking areas, or by allowing con· vertrions only when the vacancy is 3 to S percent. I FEEL THAT tbls is just another aUempt by governing bodies to confiscate personal property righta which have his· toricaUy been guaranteed by the Constitution. With these al· titudes, and the dragon heads of rent control emerging, we are eliminating lending institutions' willingness to Clnance new apartment projects and we are eliminaUng 1reatly needed al· fordable housing. It is obv1ous from the number or mulU·family building permits Issued in the last three years, that the construct.ion of new apartments has not kept up with the demands ror rental housing. I feel that if the governmental agencies will deregulate rather than Increase the regulation of condominium conversions and rents. the free ent.erpriae system will take care ol the supply of rental housing and affordable housing. DONNA R. NORTH Nfte 'Era' Sr•'"IJ To the Editor: Charles McCabe's article, Oct. 4 "Panama: End of an Era" ls quite misleading . That particular "era" may be over, but, alas, a new one ls just beglnnlog. The eighth wonder of the world, whicb American• en11neered, bullt, managed and maintained since Its conception. wlU aUJI be one which we wttl continue to pay for through our taxe1. However, now we uproot American famlliea, leave mllllona of dollare Of not bllllona) in equipment, support throufh malntenance and man· p0wer tralnina. and aaat-. wt.th taxpayen money. Aaaift belna a benefactor for another forefan country's proftt. Lotinc a stnteJlcall,y located mllltary poaltlon, ea.cal and mllltar1 propertr. morel, psyr holog1 r ;il and e mo tional suprtma . ~tre AinerTc.ran tax payer 1s becoming mortally depreMed. financi'ftlly insolvent and patriotically disillusioned For the next 20 years we. the taitpayers. will support, train and maintain without any rights. othe r than our government's right to be repeatedly lnade· quate. And agai n t o sell Americans short and at a loss. WE HAVE LOST a definite buffer to the ever-growing Com· munist influence in South America. a strategic waterway. and pride. Americans had to feel something when the rtag was lowered by jovial, jeering Pana- manians, claiming victory over a country 90 gillion limes it's siu and power. And we the tax· payers s uccumb to the hypocrisy or bureaucracy We sit like gluttons for punishment, and aUow our elected represen· t atives to implement laws that disgrace. undermine, belittle and ~estroy the very founda· tion or the pilgrims of this coun· try It's almost enough to make on e ashamed or be ing a n American. A shJVering thought. one that borders on the momen· tum towards socialism. ELIZABETH LAUFORO ...... ,, ...... To the Editor: Black Monday, Oct. l , was not only blackened by Panamanians ripping up our lowe r e d American nag as lhey raised theirs over the Panama Canal, wrested from us by our preal· dent. lt was Abo darkened by Newport Beach's shadow gov· ernment ripping up American rights, as they wrested their pro- perty rights from them. They were intransigent to the owners, thal they allowed three mloutee to, to plead for 1.he Te· tention of their property's valu.e and use, while tbe UtUe clouds ot their power 1at.hered lo the •IA· dlence to cast their shadows ov~r them. What the clouds really cov· ered was lb• view of a dlmlnlahlng democracy. They cast a shadow over lh• future ot the freedom of a country. The freedom to be aecure ln your propert)t. And tbe freedom to dream and plan for • better nature without the oppretalon"' aovernment, like In un·free countr1•. WlU Americana ever ... pin th,11 fn"('dorn .utaJn • _ GOLD I f: JOSEPH Geed ll~p•rt '"• To the Editor: The first Daily Pilot reporter to cover the new community of Irvine in 1972. George Le1dal. was the fi rst reporter to me ne ws reports on the basic con· stitullonal issues raised by the landowner·run Irvine Ranch Water Di s trict. In late r editorials. the Daily Pilot point· ed out the Inequity of such landowner control, given the di.s· trict 's broad governing. taxing and planning powers over res1· dents. This early and continuing cov· erage culminated in the com· prehensive coverage by staff writers David Kuumann and Fred Schoemebl of the fastbreak· Ing legaJ events that resuJ~ in the court-approved agreement to ins ure pubUc control. Congratula· lions on the fine reporting. WESLEY MARX f'••n-P•raatlr19 To the Editor: Gov. Brown has just vetoed another bill! AB 385 on (06ter care training. In this International Year of the Child, when community groups are working overtime to do their part to improve the quality or ure for all children. he has killed a bill Lhat could have ins ured better care for the thousandsoffoster c.1111dren living In thlsstat.e. In this technological society we manda~ lhat morticians, beauticians and mechanics have certirtable s kills to practice their profeaalons ... l ,600 hours jus t to become a beauty operator. Whal a sad commen· tary on our priorities that we v.lue U-. skins of thoR ~ would dteas dead bodies. curl wigs and tnataU 1mo1 devices above those who care for abused, mol~tAMI and troubled children. In a society when Hollywood en t ertai rura fall over Quotes "Murder ii murder, no matter what the motl\'61 or ends." -.... ,... .... u •t Dublin. Ire., commentlbl on violence u a weapon fOI' chant• • ._. lf'llland. Ult>mi.~ to CT'l>!rad'e ~or !av. prutectinj! c.1n1mdb , who ha:- <'ome forv.ard lO speak for thl' unique ne<.'<i!> of foster children'' In a n era when the completion of million dollar dams arc impeded to protect a few snail dartcn.. little 1f anytJung is being done. legislatively, to protect and 1n s ure the futures o f Cottte r children. THEllE ARE those who say that being a biological parent prepares one ror roster parent· Ing. Well let me tell you Lhat nothing in my parenting ex· perience co11ld prepare me ror the traumas of a three-day old baby born addicted to heroin. or a six·year old pre-delinquent who steals an engagement nng and sells it. or a nine·year old sexually precocious girl who tried to seduce every male on the block. or a l2·year old hard co re mind th at steals a neigbbor·s gun and shoots the family dog. or a 15-y ear old that peddles more drugs th an the local Rx. To say that because you were a regular parent you will automatically know whal to do 1s tantamount to saying that because a ch.icken lays an egg it must logically follow that it could quallry for gourmet omelet school Is too absurd. Then there are those who would say that love conquers all. It certainly sounds nice and looks cute on posters. but it doesn't teach roster parents. though well intentioned. what to do or more Importantly what not to do. Foster parents need training Special training to meet and un· derstand the special and onen- traumattc needs of theit foster children. ff-the per nor doetm't ca~ for, and the Leilslature won't flebt for, the unique needs of a very special eroup or children lo this s tate. whowiU7 MR.&MRS. ROBERT STAN1 .EY • Vltfr11 from reader• or.-Wt!lc()mf flw nghl to r-ondtftlt Urf(fTI to flt JJ>OCt or f"hmmot_. ltbel u rt•trwd teuns o/ 300 word& or "" wm bcr givtft prt/ef'fflCf All lttttrl mu.tt in· ctudt fjgnaturt end moiling oddreu bl&# namt• mo11 be wUllMld on r~ ~·•ff tvl/ldtnt rt¢ton f1 QppQr11tt. Pof'f PJ """"°' ~ pu~ 17 --' -- Lag1•na/South Coast IVOL. 72 NO. 2M, 3 SECTIONS, AO PAGES , .. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1979 FIFTEEN CENTS Slide Victim Gets OK to Rebuild ~ r . Up, Down Again NEW YORK (AP> -Stock prices bounced back and forth 1erratically today as the markets of Wall Street continued their convulsive reaction t o the federal Reserve's new olans for clamping down on credit. • Trading was running well behind Wednesday's r ecord- setting pace, but was still heavy. The Dow J ones average of 30 industrials, up 2 points in early trading and down 12 at mid- 1mornin~. was off 8 . 71 to 840.61 after three hours of trading but was off only l.88 to 847.44 after 1four hours. The widely recognized 1average felJ more t han 48 points from Monday through Wednes- day. f The Ne w York Stock Ex- change had by far the busiest (See STOCKS, Page A2) * * * Gold Slides 'Below $400; Buck S table LONDON CAP) -The dollar was mixed but little cha&nged on the world's money markets to- d ay. The price of gold s lid back ,11.50. ....."""~ .. --...... In Tokyo, the dollar finished !be d•Y a t 225.llO yen, somewhat hiper than l\lew York'• cJosini IJiures ol 225.80. There was no trading in Tokyo Wednesday PtCki!fi!R8 AT~,..._,. COMPAMY IN~ CLDIPTE.IUR AT WoRKDa tNW PoMce Antftd ...,,,. "--~ .. the.,..,., ... ~ ....... ~ 1• C..lted ... cause of a national holiday. London's five major bullion 9'0U.M!9 fixed the price of gold at an ounce for the morning rading session. after an earlier high of $406.50. The afternoon fi~­ lng was $401.50. Shouting Mars Strike Cras~ Fire Kill Pair In Zlff'ieh. Eut"Ope's biggest 80ld market, the price slipped below $400 to $397. CL.1H:ente Police aue1l ~ Dislur'"'1an.ee~--=~~~==---~ v .......... oon The metal finish ed Wed· nesday's trading at $408 in Lon-. non and $406 50 in Zurich. But during a brief surge early Wed- nesday the gold price zoomed to $419.50. T he record for the metal was $444, rut in Zurich trading Oct. 2. But profit-taking has set in since then and depressed t~e price. San Clemente police we re called in to quell a minor s hout- ing disturbance at the scene of a six-month-o ld labor strike following a peaceful rally by about 150 walkout supporters Wednesday. Police made no arr ests in front of Reeves Rubber Inc., 415 Ave. Pico. where about 100 gasket manufacturing workers Who would know betf,er that reading 15 fun than that nc- tion favorite the Cat in the Hat, portrayed by Joan Ben· ford, at left, Ulla morning at Laguna Beach's El Morro Scbool. She and J oan Grilfi'!.t rl&ht, underline the£: gram for Scott Krinsky, 12. ~lebration of the Rea ii Fun procram included releue ol balloons and f NI bookl for children. The ceremony also coincided with the IDternat.tooal Day of the Child. have been oo strike since April 9. Communication Wo rkers of America unJon members staged a 3 p.m. rally where national president Glenn Watts. also an AFL·CIO boss, encouraged the strikers to continue their strug· gle. Watts left for a San Diego meeting while some of t he placard-carrying union sup- porters marched around the plant shouting Plant officials had earlier ob- tained a court order that limits picketing around the factory . Police arrived at 3:47 p.m . to re- mind the demonstrators of the court order . The picketers left. Police said the s trikers had been calling plant employees "scabs" and other obscenilles while the workers were ch.ang· ing shifts. No one was hurt. CW A union officials said there appears to be no prospect of a contract setUemenl at this time They claim plant officials refuse to "take a reasonable position" in contract talks. Union official Reid Pierce saJd CWA representatives spoke to plant management bnefly last week but no progress was made The gasket plant e mploys about l70 workers. ALBUQUERQUE. NM. <AP I -A hot air balloon was engulfed 1n fl ames after crashing m the Sandia Moun· tains east of here. and two California balloonists aboard were kiJJed. officials said. "It was such a helpless feel ing. ' George Welsh of Albuquer- que. a chase crew member, said or Wednes day's crash "So meone brought a little fire ext· 1ngu1s her, but there wasn't a nything they could do. The flames just s purted every where." Beckman A waiting Kidnappers'M:ove The dead were identified by the state Medical Investigators Office as Richard Temple. 31 , or Cucamonga, and Kathy Wiley: age unavailable. of Palmdale It was the flrst fatal accident s ince the International Hot Air Balloon Fiesta began in 1972, said Brad Gibbs. a balloonist and fiesta launch director. A man in another balloon was Injured in a separate Incident caused by tricky wind currents, and a helicopter was damaged when it made a forced landing in the area, but no one on board was injured, officials said. By ROBERT BARKER Of llw D .. ly ,._ S~tt Beckman Instruments. l nc. of- fi~ials in Fullerton said today t hey ar e h opeful that two employees will be freed a fter the firm published newspaper ad- vertisements demanded by an E l Sal vador revolutionary group. Will Fowler, a spe>kes man for Beckman, said the company is doing all It can to free the two executives kidnapped in an aui - bush in El Salvador Sept. 21. "We hope and expect that they~ will be set free," he said. The advertisements ran Wed· neaday in the Los Angeles Times and New York Times and are scheduled to be published In newspapers in Europe 'Ind Cen-tral Ammca. The orgJnizaUon called the Revolutionary Party of Central America Workers demanded that tbe ads be published exacUy u 1tven to Beckman officials. Tuy stipulated that the loso on the two-p.,e ad be prtnt.ed ln red, black and yellow ink~ tbe two newspapers were unable to complJ. "We are doln& everythlq we can," Fowler said. Tbe 1fOUP claim• reapooalbW· ty for tlM lddnapplAp of Deaala · R. llcl>on.sd. 37. and Fausto BuelleU, ,l, outllde tbe San Salv Idol' Airport. A bodrsuard. Jose Lull Pa& T ratara, was killed in the am- bush. McDonald is the manager of APLAR. an acronym for Asian Pacific Latin American Region. It is a Beckman subsidiary and manufactures general electronic components in San Salvador. Bucheli is a n e lectronics engineer at the Fullerton facility but was on a business trip to the (See KIDNAP, Page AZ) The balloonists were among 400 participating In the annual ballooning event, which attract- ed representatives from 32 statesandfivecountries. Sands said the balloon was one or three that apparently ex- perienced problems with wind c urrents. Bandit Robtied It Just Wasn't His Day An allesed wo~ld·be robber'• luck went frorp bad to W«H W edoeeday 1n Huntlnaton Befcb when be wu rebuffed in a fut: food nistaurant robbery attempt and wu then robbed blmaell wblle tryinC to nm away, police reported today. Offlcert ul4 &be maa'• luck took another eour tum when be calle4 poUc:e lo 1 Beach Boulenrd tawrn to r.port be-lna robbed. lie WU arneted. Sb .... Olen M.ttdlell. .. ol 111 Mala a ., wu ~ oa IUlpiciaa of attempted robbefJ wbla • emolorM of K...aucky Fried Chiehnt. aoo. Warntr Ave., ldentUled nun al a.be mu wbo tried to-rob her. Offlcen said the man alleged- ly walked into tbe chtckea ala.Dd at 8:55 p.m. and told the woman cl~rk be wu armed and wanted the d•Y'I ~ipta. TH aUeaed would·be bandl.t d11bed fro111 tile restaurant wheo the emplo,ee r.tued to band owr the calb, poUee Mid. Tbe Reelq mani they uJd, WH reportedl7 tacked b)' I pair of men NYel'U bloeb from the restaurant. T1My ren10Y1d an undttennlned amouat of cuh from bla pockett. Mltcbell ts beloa held on 821.000 bAU et HwiUnitoo Beach jail. Bluebird ~ Rulings Softened Laguna Beach resident Dick Harley received approval t.o re- build his slide devastated Bluebird Canyon home today provided he d oesn't s ue the South Coast Regional Com · mission if another disaster OC· curs. Commissioners. meeting in HuntingtonjJeacb, also required that Harley. the first slide vic- tim to try and rebuild, provide a geological history on his proper- ty so future owners will be aware of the sUde that devastat- ("d the property in October, 1978 The comm1ss1on staff noted that the provision for Harley's rebuilding project will not pre- vent hJm or other arl'a residents from applying for federal funds to rebwld <>n their property or federal disaster funds in case of another s bde The coastal commission meet- ing follows a controversy and s ubsequent agreement worked out between attorneys for Bluebird Knolls and the state coastal co(nmission regarding a condition placed on the re construction proJect. The coastal commission staff initially recommended Harley give up all rights lo seek state or federal dJsaster funds before ap- proving his building permit. This touched off a furor and caused concern among other slide victims who hope to rf- build. The vaguely worded condition came \mder immediate attack by Harley and other Blueblrd re-. 1ideata, and the homeowner atked for a two week conti- nuance or his hearing In the meantim~. attorneys for the BlQebird Knolls AasocfatJon met with coastal commission al- tomeya to won out • solutJon to the requirements lmposed by the panel. The restric ns wou d av nc u ar ey's agreement to waive claims against other gov- ernmental agencies in the event of natural disaster. but did not specify 1f that referred to past lands lides or future occur· rences. In addition. the condition said Harley wouJd have to "eliminate prior encumbrances except for tax liens.·· before issuance of a building permit Harley read that to mean he would have to pay off the mortgage on his former homl:! before building a new one, and predicted that would mean no one m Bluebird Knolls would be able lo rebwld. And though regional coastal com mission officials said the clause was not intended to in- c I u de trust deed s or taxes. Harley called for a legal in· terpretatton of the condition. Attorneys for the coastal com- mission agreed with Harley, and are recommending the .com- miss ion approve the building per mit without the condition. Janet Tulk. an attorney or the state coastal commission. said Wednesday the problem was "a misunderstanding on lhe part or the homeowners." ln recommending the clause be dropped, Ms. Tulk said the state commission w ill be re- <See SLIDE, Page AZ) Coast Weather Patchy tow clouds and fog along the coa s t otherwise variable high cloudiness Friday. Lows tonight 57 to 62. Hlgha Fr i· day 70to 78. INSIDE TOD,.\ Y Want to be the qwm of England? Ttp1 on Prince Charle•' ~' and qvirlu ore detou.ed on Page Al. ~· • t 1 l • --=-..-.. ~--. ..._ ____ --~------------~ .. M.x Pl.OT uac ayless Monday Feared WASlllNOTON (AP> Aboul two mlllloeunenand womeotau iloraa face•,,.~..._ P•>'d•t::; da, W\Mlea concnu act.a the. cm ltalMd &tstalaUoa profld· lna lhl ~ •uUlorttJ to •pend IDOIM)' ill \be MW flleal Ytart.hatat.a.reedOd l However, about a mllllon 1clvillan omplo)'eH of th• Defeue Oepartm•nt would re· celv• a .,..., 1ai.,,. became thelt' curreftt P•7 period tn· C'IUdH lb laat W4t k ln Sep lt!mkr. iuat ~fore the 1'79 n •. cal year mcMd. The Oefenae Department would be p0werle11 to advance money pendln& con1re11lonal action on 1.0 flacal Cuodina. However, officlab aald they would encoura1e service ~Uef or1antuUons, credit unlona and 11imllar lnatltuUoOI to ext.end In tereat·tree loans to aervlce members left temporarily short of funds · The Defense Department Is among seven Cabinet agenete. whose s pending authority has been sidetracked because or wrangling between the House a nd Senate over abortlon and congreaslonal pay raise pro· vtalorus tn the overall spending bill. l'....,P.,,eAI KIDNAP ••• Sao SUvador plant that employs about IClO pel"BOlll. Jn tbe newspaper advertiae· ment, the ~volutlonaey IJ'OUP claims reepooalbility for the capture of the two men, de· nouncea North American lm· pertalllm and urgee support of revoluUonary causes Beckman official.I declined to comment on how the text wu delivered or on the costs of the two ads. But other sources said thl! company paid $27 ,220 in the Los Angeles Timei; and $34,830 in the New York Times . The advertise ment Is headlinc.-d "To the People of tht! World" and accuses the govern m e nt o f El Sa lvador or repression and murder. ll recit.ea statistics of people who have been auaasinat.ed, im· pri10ned or miu1na and la 11· luatrated with 1d1ly pboto- graphB of dead bodies. fl urges proletarians of '111 countrie. to unite New Shopping Mall Ope~ in Musion Viejo A mall spokesman s aid today the 1 million square·foot shop- ping complex on Marguerite Parkway near the San Diego Freeway end Saddleback College will have four maJor de· partmenl stores and 136 specially shops. He aald about 40 to (S of the s mall stores would be open to- day while a total of 90 to 100 would be open for the Chriatmu season. Montgomery Ward and May Company opened at.ores at the mall earlier thla year. The spokesman said a Robinson's at.ore would open in January, 1980, while a Bullock's st.ore would beain operation in March, 1980. The new abopplng complex wlll eventually feature slx to eight restaurants, he said, but c>nly two will be open today. The complex baa about S,000 parking apaces. . Students Prote8t PEKING (AP) -About 2,500 People's University students and teachers boycotted ctuses today to back their demands that the army clear out or their campus. ORANGI COAIT 1.IK DAILY PILOT T ... Or-~Oefl\tll'llel ..... l~wflKJtlH­ t>;Jl•!Cll ... _ ... _,11 ..... 1-•r '""°'-co ... 1 ..., .. ,.,.....~ .....,., • ...,,._.,. ............ -· ""-"""' ,., , .. ,. M•w. N--· ................ «Mf-lo..,\1•11•, 1r.-,l -IH<Jt/...,.h!:....i A ............... -........... ~~ .. "-~·~ r ... ,...,.~ ,....._,.. ,...., ",. Jll Wu• .. , 51,..., C.I•,,._.., c.i~.,,.i.~ ..... :'.:.=- -·"·°""" Viet~~·---·~ y_ ....... , .. , ... ""=• ... '1'J:::r °""*""'-......., .. _ ........ ~ .......... -. ,..., ...... CT1•>to4111 C1111NIMU1•,....~ L.atuft• .. .-M DlfJl,._Mll , ... , ..... ......... ,,,_ ... c- ~ '"'"'11:: ""~ ~.~~= ::r'!1.!r ;;:m.M,;..~ n•···~, "'f.\' ~~..,~·-_ .. , ... 111 .. ~J!:~:l:?&~a», Betdoggiag Ii Freestyle skier Wayne Hilterbrand becomes part of tbE. statuary at Newport Beach's Fashion laland aa camera freezes him in mld·air. Hilterbrand was one of freestylers who put on an exhibition Wednesday at the s hopping center's Stage Court. They took off from a ramp set up for the abow. The atatuary that Hilterbrand momentarily became part of ln th.la photo l8 called "The Skydivers." Revealed llARnNEZ CAP) -A tale ot ae1·1traaauJatlon ritual•. de· mandt for-the n.amet ot murder vlcUm.1 and mind cootrol baa betn told b)' the wife ot PbllUp JoHpb Hucbe1 Jr., U>e mu char1ed .Sth mur.S.rtns tbrM women, "PbiWp had control over me," Susanne Perrin te1Ufled at a Sept. 25 closed preliminary ceurt bearing. ''I waa juat aort of pro1rammed to do certain things." Ma. P~rrtn said abe decided to tell her story to police after she met another man who convtnced her t.o tell a friend who wu a police officer. "I've bad tbia cooped up lmlde me for so long and have been barring all the consequences." she tetitifled. "I just feel that - in order to Uve with my1ell any longer -I had to diaclose t.hla." M a . Perr lb • s tea ti mo n y ~came public Tuesday, when a transcript of the bearing was riled with the court. In the docu· ment. abe ••Y• she gave Hughes names and descriptions of poten· Ual murder vlctlma who re· sembled bit former girlfriend. "Generally, he would juat tell me that he wu becoming more upset and thal be didn't want to kill Cathy , who was hl1 girlfriend, you know, for fear that be would get caught lf he killed her," Ma Perrin teaUfied. 'So he was wanting to u&e other people to reUeve hla anxiety and ten1ion." No Progress In Teacher Salary Talks , ...... _ .. J Drug Charge Jails Man Hulhet ia accuaed In Contra Costa County of the March uns slaying of Letitia fagot, zs. and the November 1972 murder of Maureen Field. He ia also charged in Alameda County with the death of Ula Anne Beery, 15, wbo disappeared while hitchhiking ln t974. Capbtrano Un111ed School Dia· - trlct negotiators and teacher representatives faJled to reach a settlement Wednesday lo the lateal round of contract talks. Robert Knapp, district person- nel chief, sa1d pay talks with negotiators for CUSO's 750 teachers broke off after three hours. The talks were the first in two weeks. No future talks are scheduled. Knapp sald teachers have sof· tened somewhat ln their pay de· manda by now uklnc for one. fourth of a percent. lua lhan before. 'Mle teacben' current pay demand Is for an increase of 11.5 percent, be said. Dl11t.ricl oegotJat.on are at.and· Ing firm by otfertne all CUSD employees a 7 percent pay ralae this year. Knupp said teachers have not yet declared 1mpusse, a move t .hJU_ W DJU d_ b c ID I~ a ~at-e. mediator into the pay talks Teachen, picketed the Oct I school board m eeting and threatened t.o strike tn an effort to break up stalled pay talks. Housing Woes For Seniors To Be Aired An exploration of South Orange County's housln1 d.llem· ma for aen lor ciliuos wlll bigbllgbt a day-long present.a· lion Frlday at Saddteback College. Fifth Di1trlct Supervisor Thomu Riley will join federal housing official Earl G. Ftetda and housing consultant J amea McMillan in a 1 p.m. dlacuuion or houaln1 problems al the cam· pua'a Flne Arla Theater. The day set.a under way at 8;30 a .m. when aenlot'1 can sian up for campus tours and participate in the various enter· tainment opportunities, includ- ing Polynesian and folk danc1n1. The Emeritus I nslltute Chorale will perform ln the Lil· tie Theater on the upper campus at l :lSp.m. Fire Station Sets Program An open house la scheduled for Satun:t.y between 10 a.m . ud z p.m . at the San Clemente rtre Station, JOO Ave. Presidio. The open houae Ls to be held ln conJundJoo with the clty'a Fl.re Prevention Week. Dlaplaya of fireflghUnc equipment, •mok• detecton, fire pnvenuon mov· le• and • vt1lt by Smollq tbe S.ar wtU be lncluded ln tb• open bouae. Firemen wUI •Ito provide refretbmenta, a poeter eom.t for aecond and third 1rade IChool eblldr-.., prlHI aJMI home flrt •*Y tJpe. ObUdren must be ae~ bJ an adult. Refugeea Aided WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbt United aa... la contrtbuUnl" million for Ute ftnt m,. fl aa tntern1Uon1l effort to Hve mlWom of lluqf1, alUD• Cam· bocllu NIUS"'· STOCKS ERRATIC • • • day Jn lta blatoey Wednllday, with 81.82 million abara chanc· lng bands, ec:Upslna the pnsvtoua blah of 88.37 mlllion, set A\lll. a. 1918. Bond prices likewise have broken aharply since the atart of the week as they absorbed the shock of unprecedented in· creases In interest r ates. STEEP MORTGAGE RA TES SEEN IN ST ATE-A 11 RECESSION TO DEP£N IN EARLY 1980--88 On Tueaday many or the na· \ lion's banks raised thelr benchmark prime Jendin1 rat.M a full percentage point to 14~ percent. Today's drop came despite a stroo1 showln1 by the dollar ln forelsn excbanee. reversing Wednesday's de<:llne, and a drop of SI 1.50 in the price of gold in L-Ondon ....Q.oltLwaa_quo&OO in Ne-w Von ul S392 an ounce, down more than S23 from Wednesduy Amid aJI the confusion and un· certainty. however. many Wall Streeters were u.eahaken in their initial approval of the Federal Reserve'• decision last weekend to use some powerful new am- m unlUon in It.a battle a1ainst ln· nation. Many of them conceded the new atepa i ncreased the poaalbiUty of at least a moderate receaalon In the mon\M ahead, and that raiaed the apecter of some tough 1otng for aucb Im· portant indu1trlea aa hou1ln1 and construct.Ion. But lheY. arc..ued that aucb abort-term pain could brtns with ll the lOf\ger·term reward of pro- gresa agairu1t rapid innauoo, f'....,PffPAJ SLIDE .•• considering the u.e of a waJver or dlaast.er fund.a when lt meets m November. "ll may have been a problem of wording On the condition) but certainly not ln the Interprets· lion," abe said. She said the commlsalon will be advised to lack on a hiatory of the slJde damage to ~Is property in the event he aella the hOUle lo give future owners fair waminc ol the potential danaer. She alao advised the com· mlaalon to order Harley to hold the panel blamelesa in lhe event of future earth movement ln Bluebird Knolls. And, llDe *&Id, future Bluebird re1ldenta attempting to rebuild their homes may not have t.o 10 thro&lib ~ coulal commlaalon. "Right now, ii anyone want.a to rebuild tbetr bome up to 10 percent lar1er, they don't need eoHUlcommlllionapproval." But la Harle)''• cue, abe aald, hla pl1n1 call for • 50 r,rceat in· create lo tlio to b 1 former bomeal921Meadowlark Lane. Bean Elude Fire WASHINGTON CAP) -A 1mall ft.re brc*e out in the panda houat • tM NatJonal Zoo Wed· netday, Dlltrtet of Columbia ftn olftclall ...,n.d. Thtf tald UM paodaa were not lnJurtd. Ptre .... NJd tbt bl ... , wblch erupted iD tome 1t1aw, wu ~ ............. ,. · which many economlata ud Preeldent Carter reeard u the No. l threat to the future pro- 1res1 ol the U.S. economy. The market'• declines tbil week, however dramatic, come nowhere near the proportioat ol a "crash" like the devaatat.ang slide of 1929, when stock prices lost nearly SO percent of thetr value over a few short weeks. Thia week's drop. by cont.rut, has represented f1 loss or les& than 6 percent, as measured by th e Dow Jones Industrial Averatte ·'There is no earthly reason for a at.ock·muket panic," aaid Heinz ff. Biel, a veteran ma.rtret analyst with the brokera1e nrm of Janney Montgomery Scott Inc. "What the Fed 1s doing is s. very conttnacUve move If 1t'a IUCCHaful, It will avoid a m.;or deprHSlon In the future " Thl' Fed , under chairman Paul Volcker. said 1t would shift the em.()llo.ms m.JJ.s anu-inOatioo s trategy toward directly con· trolling the supply. rather than the cost, of money Jt indicated 1t would let interest rates. wit.tun broad limjts, go wherever the market took them That amounted to an abrupt change in the rules of the game for many regular psrtjcipanta in the markeu. For example, a number of analysla said il prompted a •ud· den cbaqe of 1traten by in· veaton who bad been lradlne stockl on margin, or loans from their broken. With lntere1t ratee on those loan• aoarlna above 15 percent, many traders decided to aeU mar&fned atoct to cloee out their debU, thua coo· tnbuUni 1ignificantly to aellln1 preaaure oo the market. In Laguna Laeuoa Beach police aM"elJt.ed a man at ere.cent Bay Beach early this morning on 1utpk100 of aelllna amphetamines to the l&·year-o&d girl be wu with. Philip Roderick Parker. 28, of Long Beach wa s Jaile d fo r possession of dangeroW> drugs, tranaport1ng and 1m port1ng a controlled substance. and c.'Ofl tributing to Ult-debqnquency of a minor followmg hla arn.-st at l t:tm . Officer Fred Mart.ino wa:. on foot patrol along the dark stretch of beach thi. monung when he observed the auapect.& sitting on the &and M urtmo said he noticed a tm contalnlng 10 white tablet.I. and said tbe glrl admitted Parker 10ld the tablet.a t.o ber. Parker was being held on $10,000 ball and the girl, who ar nve<t r~nUy frr>m Oklahoma . wa11 In Orange County Juven1h· Ha ll wtth bail :.ct ut SI .WO Rummage SaJe Set For Capistrano The San Juan Capistrano Chamber of Commerce Is 1polllOl'fnl lta second annual old taabioned country style rum· mate sale Saturday from 8:30 a .m . to 4.30 p.m. in the Miak>o City. . TIM aale wUJ take place fn a vacant &ot on Del Oblapo Street across from OeNault 'a Hardware. west of the Ortea• Hl1bway. For information, pbone.,..700. INTRODUCING THE: Hughes ha.a been bound over to Superior Court In Contra Costa County for trial and 1s schedWed to enter-a plea Fn· day Unde r cros11·examinat1on. Ms Pt'rrin testJf1ed Hughes applJed 1.1 'trangle·hke hold lo her at lca-,t ~ times bt!furc and dur ing thc.·1r marriage Shf' said the ritu al '!trangul a tH1n~ ··were u:.uall) :l.'1!\l)('1alt'd with sex ·· She.· said llughes 1.11!.o per '>Uad~d ht•r t.o r;o:.e for photo graphis "de picting sce nes of women who had been murdered in vanoua mearuJ .. because I waa trytna to help hJm." She said she ho ped to prevent Hughei; from murdenng more women . She aald she ~lped Hushes bury the body of one woman Nov 16. 1972, the same dav M atJreen P'\ell1 dh appe a red M1> p,·rnn abu tt•st1f1i>d hh1• w3!1 with llughn wht-n lht·y picked up a htlchh1kmg girl on the 'ame da) Lii.a Anne Heery d1sap peared She said they drove tht> girl to their home and Ms Perrin waited upsla1rs while Hughes a l· legedly raped and stabbed her to death ··It seems to me very com. pltcated, the whole thing," she added. "But the fact that I waa 10101 along with all these lhillas he waa doloa t.o me, there had t.q be aome sort of control because 1t wa1n't anyth1ne I enjoyed. And J was afraid. The fear of bJm helped. ·'I wouldn't do anythlne without uJdna hJm," abe ton· tinued. "Not even fO out and spend SlO on myslell. • EdUon Electric Packet Finally, DUFFIELD YAarl'S of Costa Mesa hat joined forces wllh the most claaslcal bay launch ever built. The beauty of a byg_.e era brou1ht back to life in coa.juncUoa with tbe • rellabtUly ot electric power. Deposits for orden are now beln1 taken for the new Edison electric PACKET. The Commodore model package Includes: PACKET hull, with new spadoua Interior, all natural bronze deck hardware. teak trtm. full 1urrey top with &uaeta. clear cunatns, c~kpt& cU1hlom, full cover, carpel, teak bar, 1tereo, full electric propul1lon 1y1tem, wheel 1&ee rln1, bllce pump, running Ugbts, eledrtc born, ~k lines, f enden, anti-foul bot· tom palnt, paint name and CF number•. Owner•• choice of col· ors. Introductory price: $12, 50t. 8P£Cl"CATIONS: Length Over all: 18' Waterline Length: lS.9" , ·-.It - I '1 ~'• I : 1 \ I t '-·~=:.'--------- Beam· 6., .. Draft: 1'6" Weight. UOO lbs approximately -4 -.. --. .. . ------- DtJFnELD l' ACHTS, ... w. 11th Street. COit• Me11,CA t2W (7H) 141·9'715 . . . ' - • . I . . • . .. • .............. .., .... ". .. -------··---.. --------------·--\.. --------··. ·------·------.....-.... --------....-- CALIFORNIA All Safe In Midair Wllision SAN JOSS <AP> -Two 1ln1t•eQ1Lot plaAea collided o~r SM Joee llualdpal All'POft and aobod1 waa injured, c~ ~'°call tbe Ideal ... mlnlele. •• A1111lut ••rport dtreetor Jaek Harper Hld Wedaeeda)' that a Beechcraft bad Just tMeo off from the ruoway wbeo U w .. ( STATE J struck al an altilude oC 200 feet by a Ceuna trylq to tand. The aevuety damaaed pJanes -with one person eacb - landed wit.bout incident. ''lt's impossible that neither penon was injured and it's a miracle that no one wu killed," said San Jose Fire Department spokesman Dkk Watt.enbu'eer. He said t.be pro]>eller or the descendiDC plane sliced into the cockpit or the other plane, bare· l y mis s ing tbe pilot Nfllce Pla•a Clese .. ltfiaorities Barked ···~ DAILYPILOT f TV Personaliti : Sued by BeatJ ..... LOS ANGELFS (AP> -The corporate remnant ol the Bea~ t ia iotne to court •lain to flebt lm.ltatiou of tbe DOW•cletunct 1 BriU,:=~,f~:ple Corp. Ltd. asked SUperior Court Wedna· I day to iuue an injunction prevenUne producer Dick Clark ud the American Broadcast.in& Co. from uahla either the names or t e mploying look-alikes of the Beatlea in a planned movie "Blrtb of • the Bea~." , · t THE~ SEEKS $tO million in 1eneral dama&es and ; $100 millloll in puniUve dam.,es. • Apple Corp. bolds the rights for former Beatles John Len.Don. ! Paul McCartney, George HarriM>O and Ringo Starr. ! TIDS WAS THE SECOND time in the past month the former : Beatles have taken legal action against portrayal of the group by · imitators. l Apple Corp. recently filed suit to stop the long-running stage ; play "Beatlemarua." which uses four men who look Hke the ! Beatles at various st~ges in their career and sing Beatles tunes. Guyana Survivors Sue R y an Estate SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Ran c ho Seco nuclear power plant is closed for ins tallation ot an earthquake safety s upport on a pipe in the emergency cooling system, a spokesman said Wed· nesday. Ac tors Wilha m SchaHert and Dennis We aver were a mong 500 who picketed the Acad e m y o f Mo ti o n P icture an d Television P roducers offi ce Wednesday denouncing the film industry for its portrayal of women and mmont1es on the screen. Screen Actors Gwld ~pokeswoman Kim Fellne r sa id unfair labor charges were filed against the (;!Cademy SAN FRANCISCO <AP ) -The estate or the late Rep. Leo Ryan 1s being sued by fl ve Peoples Temple survivors and three re· la t1ves of dead cult mem bers who claim that Ryan 's act.Jons helped bnng about the Guyana tragedy The s wt. filed in San Fran· c1sco Superior Cou rt, charges that Ryan had "a wanton and: reckless disregard for the conse -· quences" when he tned lo lead· fleeing churc h m e mbers to: freedom. · Ryan and fo ur others m his' party of reporters, Te mple r~­ latives and departang cult mem -. bers were shot and k.illed as th~y prepared to Oy out of Guyana's Port Krutuma airstrip near the- Peoples Temple community of Jonestown on Nov. 18, 1978 . The spokesman for the pJant, . 1f'fr Marx of the Sacramento M unicipaJ Utility District, s aid Wednesday the U.S. Nuclear ReJ?ulator y Commission or· de red the 913-megawatt plant closed during the repairs, wh.ich will taJce a few days. ' Stilled Cable Cars No Deterrent More than 900 members of Um Peoples Temple then committed ~uic1dc or were murdered at Jonestown al the behest or th(.> lt>ader of the cul t, the Rev. Jim Jone~ • B ro1CJ1 f'1tad Sli111 Tourists Cont inue to Flock to San Francisco WASHINGTON (AP) -Gov. E dmund G. Brown Caces a n up- hill climb to raise funds for h1s presidential campaign, accord- ing to the fi rst official contribu- tion and expenditure report filed Wednesday by the Cahforn1a Democrat. The report showed Brown the self-described "third force" in the race f o r th e J980 Democratic nomination -wiLh total contributions of $261.519 SAN FRANClSCO <AP> -Despil<' the doomsayers who pre dieted tourist!. would st<1y away in drovei., visitors cont.Jnue to fl ock to the city despite an extended shutdown of the city's symbol. the, cable cars. Phone Firm Grante d $1.3 Million Hike ·~t Co•t rUu1tloa SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The Callfomla Public UWltles Com· mis s ion, correcting a July 31 decision, baa granted Pacific W '5JUNGTON (AP) -The Telephone a $1.3 million rate lncreue instead of reduclq Its rates btggeal aJaeJe contrlbution to by $42.2 million annually. Gov. F.dmund G. Brown's unan-The PUC earlier bad rejected a Paclflc Telephone request for • nounced presidential campaign $470 million a year rate increase so f a r h as come from the and instead ordered the cut In P<>lilical arm of the diversified rates Service Employees Internallon It received six petitions for a al Union. rehearing and rejected all of The uruon s political action them but did modify the de· .!ommittee donated $5,000 -the clsion. maximumallowedbylaw. The new order, issued Wed· 1'~or example, there wiU now be a new charge of 25 cents for a request by a calli03 party to verify that a line is busy or to ln· terrupt a conversation in pro· gress Oul·Of·town folks are sat1!>fying themselvei. by cli mbing .iboard stat1onar} {'<ff~ parked at terminal turntable:. and having their pictures snapped by fnends. relatives or strangers The ancient rt>hcs, not much changed since they started lurching and danging up and down San Francisco s hills in 1873. were shut down two weeks ago for long-overdue sy~tem overhaul and repair The lhre<• cable car hncs have earned up to 13 million per..on<, annually m rcl'cnl year:., mon: than 70 percent of them tounsl'>, lit two bits a head The cars are freely conceded by offi cials to be dangerous con traplions that regularly toss riders off into the gutter. effec\Jvely act as targets for other vetucles. and draw hundreds or expensive injury claims each year. In this space age of soptusticat.ed machinery, tbeae dinoeaurs are lighted by old storage batte ries and braked mainly by wood shoes that press against the surface of the tracu. Occuiooally they stop where the gripman wants. In case or real emergency. the gripman. who operates the mechanism that grabs onto a cable movin& beneath Lhe pavement , drops a gwUotine-like steel slab into the cable slot sc.oppme the car as if it wereslamminglntoa brick wall. The problem is the system is so decrepit, the underlyutg struc· tures so flogged by years of use. •thal it ia dangerous, say Municipal Railway oUicials. ·'There 1sn 't any question m my mind that 1t tsn 't a safe TH f. SUlT. filed Oct . 4. ask!> un~oec1f1ed da m ages again:.t Ryan s estate fo r wrong ful ' death. negligence and negligent. 1nfhctionof emotional stres:. . Ryan's estate, given a pre ltminary value or $264 ,000, would have fi nished probate 1n the next ft•w months if the lawsuit had' not been Ciled Ryan's attorney: Melvin Kerwin said 1t now' <:ou Id re.m ain unsettled for' years Kerwin. or M enlo Park. satd: tbe awl is completely wit.boot: merit and borders on baraas·t menl. He said it angered him sol mucb that h1a views oo It are ··unprintable.·· : .._ '-------.u~£ci.s_a_.$26 mjmoo Ofli~er1r to R qffl computer error made by the P UC s taff and rec alc ulates ------------&Y4iLem," aa1d ..Oul Moore chief enemeeL..Q!__JJu:_ tJU'... u 11c AND THE rates and charges Utilities Commission. who r~ommended the shutdown SAN •'R ANCISCO attorney , Robert J . Bockelman. who filedS the suJt, said Ryan was re· f peatedJy warned of the "ex·• treme danger" or the Jonestown : s etfJeme nt inves tigation.; Despite those warnings, he srud. : R,.ran went ~ead with a visit w_: __ _ LOS ANGELES <AP) Pacific Telephone's expenses for Policemen Edward M. Hopson such things as electric power and Lloyd W. O'Callaghan will a nd operator's wages. be given a chance to comment or The order said Pacific has an the Police Commission repon additional revenue requirement for key telephone equipment, ~uch as phones with buttons for various lines, also will be i.n creased beyond that authorized in the July 31 decision. criticizing their handling of thE of $43.5 million over that found T he PUC a lso scheduled a re· Eula Love case before the repor1 reasonable in the original de· hearing on Pacifi c Telephone's 1s placedmlheirpersonnelfiles cision -1os t of borrowing funds to Commiss io n Pres ide n t ttnance the current demand fo r Ste phen Reinha rdt made the THE RESULT ts a $1 3 million :il'rvice. It said thi$ would con· commitment after the pair had annual rate hike which will af. sider the rapidJy-rlsi ng interest asked for a court order allowing feet the r ates or some Pacific rates on the compa ny's plans to the policemen to submit their Te l ep h o ne and General f tn a nce ne w and im proved com ments Telephone customers equipment. ~~~~--~~~~_..:....-~~-~~-~-~~-~~~ THIS WEEK, COME VIEW OVER $250,000 IN PRECIOUS JEWELS ... ROBINSON'S HEIRLOOM COLLECTION AT NEWPORT AND WESTMINSTER. THURSDAY AND F RIDAY, OCT. 11·12 This unique assortment of heirloom jewels has been assemoled t rom the estates of many prestigious fa mil/es and leading 1ewe1ers. Most pieces are in their original settings, and represent the exqws1te work of world-renowned c raftsmen. Listed is only a sampling of the overall collect/on. All items are subiect to prior sale Robinson's Fine Jewelry, 100 2.56 c L..marquise diamond solitaire with baguettes, $9800 12 ct. diamond brooch.. $18,500 3 ct. emerald and 1 V2 c t. diamond bracelet. $3950 Removable diamond, 5 3h .ct., and coral pin/earring combination with attachable turquoise. 1 BK gold and platinum sold as set only, $10, 250 3 ct. diamond cover-case watch .. 1 BK gold, $4,950 1 ct. round diamond solitaire, $1,350 • " 2.84 ct. diamond brooch, $2,450 2 ct. diamond and 8 ct. emerald earrmgs, $3950 5. 75 ct. diamond bracelet. $7,500 ~ ct. diamond and 9.46 ct. genuine star sapphire. $9,500 3 ct. diamond and c ultured pearl bracelet, $3,000 All Hl{Jlltl total Robinson's Robinson's Newpart Fashion Island• 644-2800 Westminster Mall • '714) 898·433t ' I , .. ' the settlement ~ -- -. GIBULTAR SAVINGS FORQUR ORAr-ltlE COUNTY OFFICES 26-WEEK CERTIFICATE 10.6623 11.137 3 ANNUAL fHf(ltllf YlllO CERTIFICATES ISSUED OCTOBER 11 THAU OCTOBER 17, 1979 $ 10,000 minimum. Rate based on 26-week US Treasury 8111 rate.· [flecltve yield assumes all funds at maturity are redeposited at same 1ate and remain for full year Rate may ctiange at renewal federal regulations prohibit compounding ol interest on the account and impose a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal NEW CONVENIENCE HOURS. SATURDAYS: AM Gibraltar offices are open from 9:30 to 3:00. MON. thru THURS.: Most Gibraltar offices are open from 9:00 to 5:30. FRIDAYS: Most offices are open from 9:00 to 6:00. HUNTINGTON CENTER alb Of*" Mon.·Fn. 1000 to 7;30, Saturday 9:30 IO 3;00. GIBRALTAR IAvtNGI aND LOAN AUOCIATION Founded 1186 • ,._.. fW« $3..S WHIOn • Offices atatww\de ' FULLERTON 255 W Orangettiorpe 871.StOl SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 318n Del Obispo 493-5011 HUNTtNGTON BEACH Hunt. Center 898-9666 SANTA ANA/COSTA MESA 3925 S. Bristol 979-7580 NEWPORT BEACH 2700 W Coast Hwy. 631·261 t SANTA ANA #4 Santa Ana Fastoon Square 83-4.0717 • __________________________ ,_, __ ,_,, __________________________________________ ; ··--------------· ..... -... -.......... ~-· ·-·--· ¥" •• .....,, •• I Roe.rt N, W..OIP\lbll\her '"'°"'-ti ICMVll.ledltor Editorial Pgr~e;••••••Ti•"•"•~-•. 0ot.o••-·.···'•'•"'•••••••••a.•r'W••••K•'••'.b•'c•,,•'e•d•1tot•1•.'•p··-·~•d'·'°"~-· • use Orange Coas1 o 11v Pilot Saddleback Victim Of Fund Short~ge Sadd&eback eou.,. amdall admttt.ed tut week that tbl' future looks dlm oc: oblalnln1 1tate fundl t.o build • sorely neetted clauroom bWld1ftc. 'the problem 1 clear. C\anenl at.ate re1ul1Uona re qulre colle1e dlstrlcll to C'Ofttttbute matchinl fundl for any c•pital project Since PropollUon 13 cut into the col· lc1e'1 property tax rncorn.e, k)cal f\lnda aren•t available for bu.ildin1 pro1l'am1 Vet . Saddleback Co~1e'1 diltrict population con· Onuea to s~U ln the South Oranae County land develop· rnent boom New rHidenta wbo want to avaH themaelvea or co~ off enna1 t.hre>ueh the community collese wm find room won't be available. And lf they arc for<:ed to dnvc to another colle1e dis· tract the eneray drain and &lr poU"t.lon aa bound to ln crease. The cloasroom build.U\1 haa been on the drawing board for years It 's become a victim or the twillght zone between local tax support of commumly colleges and total state fWldin& The coUege, however. needs the space Local legislators will have to produce &late ~upport for funding the new classroom building There appears to be no other source. Aliso Checkpoint Forces who want a portion or the 20,000-home Aliso Viejo project screened by the California Coastal Com· mission have a friend in Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy. Jn comments made last week in Orange County, the Assembly speaker vowed he will not support legislation to remove the lower Aliso Canyon portion of the 6,600-acre property from Coast.!ll Commission control. ' McCarthy•s ref uaal to support the deletion probably means death to a bHI by Assemblyman Richard Robinson, <D-Garden Grove> exempting the canyon area. McCarthy said the Legislature does not need to change the Coastal Commission zone boundary. He said items such as the number or housing units. preservation of open space and the amount of tow-cost housing are now being discussed between the Aliso Viejo Co. and the commission. A project of such magnitude at that location should come under Coastal Commission scrutiny. The end result will aff eet current residents in Laguna Beach and other municipalities in traffic congestion, air quality and services. Another checkpoint along the way cun do no harm. Pay Offer Fair Although no official impasse has been declared between Capistrano Unified School District negotiators and teacher representatives, pay talks were stalled this week. Dislrtct and teacher neeoUat.ors have been haggling over the dlstrtct's 1 percent pay hike offer. Negotiators for the district's 750 teachers are de· manding an 11% percent pay boost this year. The possibility of a teacher strike has been raised. The dlstrict 's 7 percent pay hike offer seems to be a fair one in light of recent federal guidelines. The dls· trict 's contract offer a lso includes added fringe benefits. It would seem unreasonable to stage a work stoppage ov<·r a 7 percent s alary boost for teachers The district is . o!for!ng <A similar pay package to non-teaching and management workers. It is understandable that tea chers' initial pay de- mands would be high and district officials' offer might be low in the process or collective bargaining. But it appears that in light of generally accepted wage guidelines, the district negotiator's offer is not that low. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors arid artists. Reader comment is 1n111ted. Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. PhonA (714) 642·4321 Boyd I Brain Waves By L.M. BOYD Our Love and War man ls looking into the remarkable claim that an encephalo· graph. the instrument that measures brain waves, can a lso meas ure affection between two people. Theory is that bow well people meet and mesh with one another depends on the brain waves they send out and receive. What the youncsters call vibes. And the instrument. s uppMedly can detect these vibes and figure out their in· t.enaity. Would think a co11ple all wired up that way to a machine olight have a little trouble transcelvln1, but maybe not. Anyway, there may be a market for en· cepbalop'aphs among mar· rla1e counaelon, and the medical 1uppliers ought not overlook. Q. ••Doefn't Venice have lkar Gloomy Gu Wouldn't It mue more 1en1e for the Sad· dl•b•ck Communtty Collete Dhtrlct to mert• with or lmltate CoaatUne Community Coll•C•'• ''colleae wltbout wall•·' con· cept? O.A.L. more bridges than any other city In the world?" A. No, sir, that distinction goes to Amsterdam. With 636 spans. Q. "Where 's the body or John Paul Jones, our first Am erican nava l h e ro buried?" A. Now, at Annapolis . Aul it took a bit or doing to get it tht!re. He died al age 45 in 1792 at Paris. tic was penni· less. And the hislortcal ac· count J just read said il"s believed he was ve ry sick, too . How a bout that , Sherlock'! Anyhow, It wasn't until 190~ 113 years lat.er that the U ~ Government <'hose t o t rnck down the body . Ancient records led to u cemetery long since cov- ered over with bul I dings : !lhops, a factory, a hospital. Cr ews excavated s traight down. and miraculously, they found the remains. re· portedly preserved well enou1h to prove Identity and ustablillh he had Indeed been sick, ofBrtght's Disct,a!'le. And it'a noteworthy. loo, Ls lt not, that Monaco'• national "orcbeatra ll larfer than ita army! 6ppeaflna. that. llutlc ..are mWtary mlcbt. Some .. rvice 1t1tlon1 have ut up coin·orerated di•· '*''.,.. to Hl compretHd alr. A quuter will aet you four minutet' worth. Wh•n Chaucer wrote of "bonH," he meant dice. When be wrote of "1oona.'' h• meant tbup. That 1lan1 bu beert around for qutte • •pell. Rowland Evam/Robert Novak Carter vs. Kennedy • m Florida - MIAMI The 1urpriatn1 amount ol pollUcaJ power tbat President Carter baa focuaed htr• to avo6d defeat by Teddy Kennedy ln lhe Oct. l3 caucuaa belles the moribund state ol b.ll preatdeocy "lf Carter •ould only won Con1re:aa or the Ruaailnl over llke h e'a worklna Florid•, h e would have leisa to worry about," Ol\e n e utral ob· a,erver awed by tbe sheer power of the C arter performance told us. There are reasons to s pare ror his doing so, even though the muscled drive for success here is raisins eyebrows of politicians and voters dismayed by the string of Carter failures in other endeavors of his presidency REASON NO. I : A loss lo Ken· nedy, who's almost-candidacy could be da maged but not Mailbox po11lbly deatroyed by even a bl1 Carter victory. would n.nllb Carter olf u a nallonal leader. lt would rroder the balance or hla prealdency all but 1uperf1UOU1, particularly In view of Carter's natural coNUtuency ln much ol the atat.e that borden Georgia. That explains the phenomenal -and seemln•ly effective - political eoatneerfne plotted by Hamilton Jordan In headin& off Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. Jordan's work ln the stretch drive to the non-binding but psychol<>Ctcally important Oct 13 caucuses proves that in the game of elective politics. the Clawed White House chief of staff ts aUU very much In com· mand. BY NO MEANS ts a Ca.rt.er vlelory positively aHured m the obiscenely confUBlng process that will select 879 dele••tes at 67 county caucuses Oct. 13. These. along with &18 non-elected del· egaU?s. wlll then choose their Cu vor1te for the 1980 Democral1c presidential nomination In a legally meaningless straw vote at the party'• November mock convention. Next March. the lesal Florida primary elect.loo wlll select the actulll dele1•ta lo the party's New York convea· lion next aummer But the Oct. 1.3 caucuaet ("a wild animal" In the wordl of Richard Swann. Carter's chief fund -raiser here) contaln ao much potential for C#lrter's political demise that be has galvanized hi• whole ad· minlatraUon to help him. He bas also commandeered 99 percent of the highly effective slate ad ministration and political •P· paratus of popular Gov. Bob Graham. whlle pulling in mooey and workers rrom all over the country. IN THE PAST fe w weeks, ousted United Nations Am· baaaador Andrew Young personally telephoned three black delegate-cand1datea on s laU!a commltled to Kennedy. His stem message: Don't desert Jim· my Carter now. Two at once re· moved t.hemaelves <one of wbotn. persuaded to riak Carter·YounR wrath, later ucreed to eet b&CK on>. Scores ot Cart.er and potenUal Carter backers have been flown off to a full day of frllly "brief· lnga · • on world problems ln the White House -all expenses paid -to loft.en them up. A Kennedy leader In Jacksonvllle's Duval County told us that a contributor lo the Kennedy campaign asked to be r eli eved of his Sl ,000 pledge on grounds that Graham wag about to app()lnt him to a s tate commission. WHAT IS UNIQUE IS not such routine political arm ·lwiaUng but 1ls eye.popping volume "Wh at we really want," said one o f Carter 's chief p olitical operatives here, ··is not just to defeat Kennedy but to Schapp him." Carte r's spectacular as· cent four yeari. ago started right here in Flonda when he s wept the party's mock convention Hia only serious opponent was then-Gov. Milton Scbapp of Pennsylvania. Carter s wamped &happ with 67 percent of the vote Th~ "Kenned y ·so·· leaders. blripped or any public help from the senator, will pull heavily in Carter·hating J ewish precincts. particularly the three la rge fo unties o f D a de <Miami>. Broward <Fort Lauderdale > and f'alm Beach Thal is Kennedy country Capturing the caucuses in all three big counties would give tum 43 percent of the elect e d delegates. a nd his top managers dl:senchanled 1976 Carter act1v1sts -are trying to cut into the traditional, non· liberal vole rn central and northern Florida lo show broad Ke nnedy :.trenglh THEY MIGHT conceivably do that . in a political process that defies accurate foreca~ting, they m ight even do hell<'r U they dn nol Cartt-r will hav1· proved that 1•\ l'n a prc'>td<'nl fl:iltl'n1·d Ii-. polt11cal revt•r!>c-. •n Wai.htngt1111 l';1n ,till f1wu' 1 h" .iwt•-.111111· puwl'r 11( ht i. 0H1ri· 111 ''''lrt' a 111(',tl \ll·ton :-,uc h ,, t riumph 1o1.oul<I port1·nll IJtll•· 1f J1nll11n14 fur lht' '>t•nou' f\1 •11nt·1h 1·11ntt''" 11l·~t v.rnter . nm v.ould 11 \ 1s1hh l'IC\'alt' the bcnrghtcd prc:..Hkn cy of Jimmy Carter Free Enterprise Best Housing Solution _ Tu lhl' Editor In n·vu·win~ \ <H111u~ 1·d1lnnal-. ;rnd art1l'le~ m lm:ul papt'r~. 1t has become obv1ou:. thal there 1!> a great controve rsy concerning <'Ondominium conversions and rental housing. Some cities have enacted or dinanceis that greatly reslnct a developer's ability to convert an apa rtment complex to con· do minlums by requiring un- necessary open apace or parking ureas, or by allowing coo· versions oo.ly when the vacancy ia 3 to 5 percent. I PEEL THAT this ls just another attempt by governing bodies to confiscate personal property rights which have hi&· tortcally been guaranteed by the Constitution. With these at· tltudu, and the dragon heads of rent control emerging. we are elimlnatlng lending Institutions' willingness lo finance new apartment projects and we ure eliminating greaUy needed af. fordable housing. It ls obvious from the number of mulU·famlly building permits Issued in the last three years. that the construction of new apartments has not kept up with the demands for rental hoWllng I ft!el that If the governmental agencies will deregulate rat.her than Increase the regulation of condominium conversions and rents. the free enterprise system wiJI take care or the supply of rental housing and affordable housing. DONNA R. NORTH NftD 'Era' S~arw To the Editor: Charles McCabe's arttcle, Oct 4 "Panama: End of an Era" I~ quite m isl eading . That padiouJllr "era" may ~ over. but, atu, a new one is Just beclnnln1. The eighth wonder of the world, wblch American& enitneered, bullt, managed and maintained since Its conceptjon, will 1Wl be ~ which we will continue to P•Y for throuah our taua. However. now we uproot Americ•n famtltea , leave mllllona of dollars CU not bllUOM) ln equipment, support throufb malntenanct and man· power trainlnt, and aaeln wlth taxpa)'ert mone~ain btin1 a benefactor for er fonlp country'• proflt. Loelna a 1tni.itcally louted mttUary poaltlon, canal and military property, moral. . ' ' - psyrhologu·ul iind cmotwnul :.upremac). the AmerH'Jn ta:ic payer 15 becomtn ~ mortully depressed, fmancially tn!>Olvent and palnotlcally disillusioned For the next 20 years we, lhc taxpayers, will s upport. train a nd maintaln without any rights. other than our government's right to be repeatedly inade· qual e . And again to s ell Americans short and at• loss. WE HAVE LOST a definlt~ burrer lo the ever.growing Com· munist Influence in South America, a strategic waterway, and pride. Americans had to feel something when the Oag was lowered by jovial, jeerin1 Pana· manians. clalmfog victory over a country 90 glllion limes It's sii.e and power And we the tax· payers s u cc umb lo th e hypocrisy or bureaucracy. We ail like gluttons for punishment. and allow our elected represen- tatives lo implement laws that disgrace, undermine, belittle and destroy the very founda· lion of the pilgrims or this coun· try It's almost enough l<) make on e ashamed or being an American. A shi vering thought, one that borders on the momen· tum towards socialism. ELIZABETH LAUFORD W'orsf Eza•plft To the Editor. Regarding Tom Murphln1.."s recent column crillclzins the Coastal Commission ruling on Blue Lagoon. Blue Lagoon was built 17 years ago on beaeh sand and right to the hlgh tide line with permits that were proper at that lime, but without any consldera· tJon for the public. liow &by architect and ~· tractor could bulld on such a Coundallon. beach und, and right to the blgb Ude line wilh the constant movement of the wavea a1a1Mt lhe bu.lldlnc I.I hard to understand. Such a loca· lion waa lnviting trouble. By building right. to the tli~h tide Hoe., t.be pubtrc was deprived of Ill e:itJ1Un1 rt1bt w walk on the beach. The small path left. can be uaed only during low Ude and even then tbe walk before the UC\)' sea wall 11 scary. 11 boulders are put ln1.thla small path will completely maa'1>eu. .SHOULD TB& pubUc 1et ac· CHI tJuoou(Jl th• ILl'UCtureJt will e,. a bad replacement of the n,111u.1I hc~1rh "'.ilk. hut .it lcJ-.l :1 rn '"in' to µroct'\.'O lo thl· ot.h1•r b(•;u'h S1gnl\. to whlC'h M urphint! ob J('C'ls. to invite lhl' public to do ~o. will JU.'t replace the ugly ~1gns protubstmg the UbC of the "private propcny" actually nol a llo wed any m ore un beaches and structure1t on beaches alter ProP<>sition 20. It is hard to understAand tum· Ing the events around, Ignoring t he rights of the public. speaking of blackmail and. above aJl. ac· c~ing the Coutal Commlssion, which only follows existing rules R e m ember, 11 was Blue Lagoon. as the worst example or how lo abuse the public's right and destroy forever the natural beach use. wttich gave the most potent argument in the cam· paign In favor of Proposition 20. H 1~ the location chosen by the owner wtuch lnvited trouble. and it see ms the con.sequences have to betaken BE'M'Y HECKEL f 'Nfer P•reaCl•9 To the Editor· Gov Brown has just vetoed another bill! AB 385 on roster C'are training In thla lnlematiOftal Year of the Child. whe n community groups are working overtime lo do their part to Improve the quality of lire for ult chlldrt!n, he has killed a bill that could have Insured be tter care for the thousand.I otroster children II vi nae In thlut.ate. In UUe technolo11e1J society we mandate that morUclans, beauticians and mechanics have certifiable Bkllls to practice their professions ... 1,800 boun Jua-t to become a beaut.y operator . What a .ad commen. ta?')' on our prtorlUea that we valuo the skills or those who would dress dead bodies. curl wi11 and install amoc devices above those who care for abused, molested and tr1>ubled children. In e 80Clcty whee Hollywood e ntertaln e r a r a il ove r Quotes "Murder ll murder, no matter what the mot!•• or nda." -Pope J.u P111.I H It Dublin, fre., commenUea on vtol•te u a wHpon for chanae ln Ireland. tht•m,t•ht·, In 1 ru,uclP 101 1~1-... prol1•1·1111).! ,1111 111.i h wh11 ha' uinw forv.m 11 to "IH'Jk for lilt' unique m.'\.'tb uf fo~ll'f d uldrNl"' In an era 'A hen lhc complet111n of rntlhon dollar dam~ urc impeded to protect a few ~natl darters, little 1r llilytJung ts· being done. legislatively, to protect and in su r e the futures or f oster children. THE&E ARE those who say lhat bemg o b1olog1cal parent prepares one for foster parent· ang . WeU let me te ll you that nothing ln m y parenting ex· perience could prepare me for the traumas of a three-day old b•bY born addicted lo herom, or a six-year old pre ·delinquent who steals an ~ngagement nna and sella it, or a nine.year old sexually precocious girl who trted to seduce every male on the block. or a l2·year old hard core mind that s tea ls a neighbor's gun and shoots the family doa. or a 15-year old that peddles more drugs than the local Rx To say that because you were a r egular p a re nt you will aulomatJcally know what to do 111 tantamount to saying that because a ctlicken lays an egg ll must logically follow that 1t could quaUCy for gourmet omelet school la too absurd. Then there are those who would say that love conquers ult. ll certainly sounds ni ce and looks cute on posters, but it doesn't teach roster parents, though well lnt.entioned, whut to do or more importantly what not to do. Foater parents need tralntna Special training to meet and un- derstend the "pedal ond ollen ltaumallc neodl of thttlr loet.er children. " the 1overnor doesn't care for. and the Legislature won'\ rlghl for, tbe unique needs of a vel'f special 1roup or children In thl• atai.e. whowtll? • Mft.& MRS. ROBERT STANLEY • LA'tltra from r.-odera nre ~lcnmt Tht nght to condtnac-ltrtttr1 lo ftt JPQCe or tllminatt lt~l u rturt.lf'd. l.ftttrt o/ 300 worm or If~ wW4et gfVftt PNffr'ftCf. All l«tn• ""* m· clt.tdl lfgnofurt and malling <dctrtH but nome1 mat1 bt untMfld °" rt• qwff •f "'fjldnt rtcuon itapp!JMll Porr'll wdl not bf publi1~. I~ -· .... -,... -.,.. ..... ---.... -----.. -.. -.... , ---., .,, . ---., . --.... ,,. -. . . -.. . ·-... ·~ .. ..,.,.., ........ --•" .. ·-·· ... .-. .. ·---··.......,.·---~----.-.-. £.-CiN1 New Hamp s h ire Gov. Hugh Gallen says state police and National Guardsmen used at the Seabrook power plant to (end off a nti-nuclear de· monstrators will cost the s tate about $200.000. W: oman Guilty LOS ANGELES CAP) -A woman whose testimony helped con- vict ber brother of the rape.murder of a use librarian h as been placed on five years' probation for her role in the crime. A judge also imposed a one -year county jail sentence on Gail Veronica Fields, 20. but s he was freed after being credited with time a lready s erved in custody. New Use for Got Drug Medieine Aida Some Heart Attack J/ictims B08'l'ON (/\P) -...... ,.. eoverilll fl'Oal MV.,. btut at· lackl f.ce OGl,y ball U.. ..S threat ol death U they lake • •edldme ....ur ,._._ to ... eohe blood clca ..... , ...,..., The dru1 ta eallM tlrep· to,tnaae, and &uropun ff ... ~ ........ '°'*' &IMlt lt eomebow prolena vteUm• of lit• moat Mrioul heart auacb mm fatal compUuUooa for at leul llx moothl after their Mburea 8TaSPTOIUNA8S bu been oo U.. martt.elfor Mveral yoan. But UD&il now lt bu beea *1veo to dJuolve clou lo veinl but not lo treat heart attack vicUm.. llembeta of lhe Europe.n .. Cooperative Study Group tried out tbe medicine in a 1tucly ol 312 severe heart attack victim.a at 11 medical ,.centers across Europe. Tbe resulls of thelr wort are published in today's Ne w Englaod Journal ol Med..lclne. IN 11IE COU&SE of the study, 155 people took atreptoklnase a fter their heart attacks. Of these, 24. or 16 percent, were dead within si x moths . Meanwhile, 157 others took sug- a r pills instead. And of this group, 48 patients, or 31 percent, died during t.tie follow-up period. ·'We conclude that s trep· tokinase given under the condi- tions of this trial -to medium- risk patients admitted to a cor- onary-ca re unit -reduces mortality at six months," the re· searchers said. An accompanying editoria l, written by Dr. Jay M. Sullivan or the University or Tennessee Center for Health Services. said 1treptoklD1H 1bould not be 11ven routinely to an beart at· tau vtctlmt 1N AN INTS&VISW, Sullivan noted that pwple who had mild btart attaekl were not lncludfd la t.bl1 1tud1. ln fact, he aald, HrUer 1tudl• ln Great Britain and AUJlraHa IUllHled that the10 people may not be helped by the~. "The practlclna doctor ahou.ld not make U. mistake of think· lfo11ored American author James Baldwin, 55. a resident of the French Riviera for the pas t 10 year s. has been awarded an honorary doc - tor ate from the University of Nice. lftl Ulla ta wh.at you are 1up-~ed tofve to everybody" who bu b• a heul attack," Sulllvao eald. Th• ta&e.tt atudy wu dlrected by Dr. II. Verstraete of Catbollc Univenlty in Leuven, Bel1lum. THE EU&OPEAN re- aearcbers aa1d they were not sure how the medicine protected tbe heart v&ct.hna. However. they noted that lt lowered the patient.a' blood pressure. Since their hearts did not have to work as bard aa usual, the organs did not require as much oxygen. and this may have arrested the spread of damaged beart tissue. New heart attacks were t.be cause of death of 10 percent of the sugar·pill patients who died during the study. But new heart attacks did not take the lives of any of the patients receiving streptokinase. Sudden heart failure and irregular beert beat were the most. common causes of death in both groups P EOPLE WHO TOOK the drug s uffered s ide effects of c hills. fever and rncreased bleeding. Streptokmase 1s the latest in a series or medicines that have been shown to help recovenng heart attack v1cllms No Indictm~ot SAN FRANCISCO <AP I -A San Francisco 1-:rand Jury has refused to indic t 01s tnct At torney Joseph Freit;.is on felony c h ar~e~ of acceptin g 11legal c·amp<ugn t·ontnbutsoni-. Crom labor leader George Evankov1ch in 1975 CUSTOM DRAPERIES Lau;s May Block WHOLESALE WORK ROOM" C~~~~~':.~J,.?.od~ Co•p•• . • Fast Delivery • Levelorl •To 50 Yds. 8~ Inches • Appointment. 7 Days t Eve. r---~ • Oro ries •Wallpaper •Custom Bedspreads -----------hearabout-4 my boat loan by tomorrow?" "Np problem!' We can usually give you an answer in less than a day. That's because we process your appl ication through one of the most modem systems in banking CALIFORNIA So, you see, things that might be I prot Calbleifms ~t oFt~ert banks are no problem • a om1a 1rs . FIRST BA~'-5 2Jld .-VCTIOM 24 IMCH IOI 'RIIS O l•H•IPMa o suo.aa 0 Ll'WUMNI CYf"llll ·O IHDl•M .... 01¥••-•&M OIY•llWAIH QSYC•M"ll 0 rJA&.We CYPllSS g ~=~:lftll QCOIM. 1119~·...otll 159" ...i., ~=-.... ,.~4so ~= .... ~r· Sale of Hotels SA CRA M F.NTO <AP I Californw liquor laws appear to prohibit the proposed $630 million sale of the Howard Johnson hotel·restauranl chain to a British brewery. a state lawyer says At least for Howard Johnson's California operations, the sale would violate a law against a Uquor manufacturer owning retail outlets. said C.E. Cameron. chief counsel for the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control. HOWA&D .JOllNSON HOLDS ABOUT 40 ll· quor licenses ln CaWomia at restaurants and bars ln ita hoteJs. Imperial Group, the proposed purcbuer of the hotel-restaurant chain, m•kn John Courage, a popular British beer. Last month. Imperial Group, Great Britain~ sixth largest corporation with S9.9 b1lhon in annuaJ business, agreed to acquire Howard Johtlson'a, which operales about 1,000 restaurants and 500 hotels ln the United States. for S28 per share. Cameron said John Courage is not sold tn California. as far as he knows . But under the state's "tied-house"' law. a maker of alcoholic lHweJ:a~,anywluu:a in....t.he world ls baued LL.U.l~-­ holding any California retail or wholesale liquor license. he said. TQE LAW, WHICH DATES F ROM the 1930s. was designed to keep ind1v1dual companies from controlling all levels an the liquor industry. It 1~ still in effect in a number of states A number of exemptions havl' been c11rved an California's tied·housc law to alfoy, Mm1lar cor· poratc transactions Severcil years ago Pepsa·o. wtuch owned an overseas winery, was granted <in exemption from the law in order to buy the Pizza Hut chain Cameron said that cxcmpt10n wa-; drafted to cover onJy a winery. and y,ould not applv to the Howard J ohnson sale. Tunes-Mirror Buys Courant HART1''0RD. Conn. IAP> The $106.S m1ll.1on sale or The Hartford Courant to the Times Mirror Co. has been approved overwhelmingly by holders of Courant stock On Wednesday. Sll .SJ 3 shares were voted In favor of the transaction, 1,203 against. The Courant has S27,770snares outstanding THE 511,513 SHARES INCLUDED 436,000 held by Tim~ Mirror, a Los Angeles·based company whose publications Include the Los Angeles Times, the Dallas Times-Her ald. Newsday on Long Island, the Orange Coast Daily Pilot and two Connecticut newspapers, The Advocate or Stamford a nd Greenwich Time. Times Mi rror .,_gained control or the Courant with a $20()-per-share cash tender offer in August THE COURANT, CONNECTICUT'S largest newspaper, wtU be operated as a wholly-owned sub· aldlaryofTtmea Mirror. Tt\e t.ransactioo la expected to become fm al by the end of the week wlth the filing or legal docu- ments wttb the secretary of the at.ale's office. , ... I.lido J\lari9a Village THIS WEEKEND Mewport le.cit FJr. Dept. Dlaplay I 0 ... z P"' Oct. 12 Co1ta MffO Art UOCJM Oct. I l Clftd t 4 Ju•I ~ulh of Pacific Coa•t Hwy. ctl N\'wpon ,Ulvd. dOd Viet Udo free Parking with Validation EVERYTHING HOMEMADE WITH LOVE GOU•MET SOUPS•SALADS•SAMDWIC HES•SPECIALTIES Prepared kstchen·fresh to New rn Lido your order 67l·Zll0 A Man·s World o f Fashion 34 3 9 Via o,orto 714-6 7 s. t 71 7 WEAR A PAINTING each garment an original nationally known artist's oa1nt1ng on the s pat Constantifto-V alewte Oric)inals Viclor 6a lmones sculptures 3420 VIA OPORTO 673-8091 ~~~E::~~~z~~~ ma1ch1ng silk blouses. Sk irts and pan1~ 'lUS rots o f o ther exciting new tall tash1ons1 3432 VIG 0,..to 673-6669 ~' . · .. ' -.. .. ,. . .. ' .. . . AJ4 OM. v PILOT use: LOCAL I CALIFORNIA .. 1980s: Tight Jtloneg, High IJtfkltiod SACIAllD'ro CAP) -la 1 period ol MO lllneUoa, UCltt mooef1 pr 'mllm ud dtuatilladlaa, u.. .._.of A..tca.,.... dicta \M -.art ol the 'IOI will ..... _.. of .......... MW cbaaeea,tor IOdety and UM.,.,,...._ ao do .u•ethf•f allout tt. Don l look for uy mlrK..a-....,....., ...._ ~ Erk P. n.or-Jr., ol Ute ..,....., ,.,.... privete .,.__. told UM California Tu Aueuort Aani.aal Tea Conte~ u lot.rat ratn be11n • ~ble cbmb to 18 pettent al:SIGN YOVllS LVU. TR TOP eto00m.lal ol the 1.100 btlntl\ benil Hid , lO a "ma\u:rtal eeooomy baMd 00 leu IJ"Owth " A<Uust to~ world'• new econondc and pol1Ucal reaJJUoa, htt c:oun eled. Adapt to new or e._paoded m ethods of flnancln1, re co1nlae Eurodollars. n exlbl exthanae rat.et a nd n w accounlina metboda. In • tt'POrt a1ao r lttaaed in San Franclaro, Thor aatd ev«1ryone with a •lake ln economic' tH-aJth, which 11 everyone. m1&1t look to th\I cban1a ol th., paat 10 ynn hl•her lnnatfon, hither lnleNt1t " Tokitag Aim Christina Persson, !J. of Irvine. takes h~r time before making a shot a t caroms in University Park Many childre n Crom nearby schools come to the park in the afternoons aft.er school to take advan· tage of games and autumn sunshine. D e n sity Opposed Newp(>rt May Annex «J-acre County P l ot Citing "horrendou~ den!>1ty," N{•wport Beach City Council mem bt>rs have launc hed an attempt to annex a 60·acre tnangle of county territory. The area in question is localed off Superior Avenue near Hoag Me morial Hospita l and 1s completely surrounded by lhe city. COUNCIL MEMBERS voled unanlmoU11ly Tuesd ay to begin the annexation process which will require the a pproval of the county's Local Agency Forma- tion Commission and the County Board of Supervisor s The most vocal proponent of the m ove 1s Councilman Don Mcinnis who has repeatedly brought the s ubje('l before his council colleagues County zoning will allow up lo 40 units to the a cre in the a rea Monday county planning com· missioners approved a 26·unit condominium on l.3 acres in the triangle. CITY ZONING would allow a maximum of 12 units to the acre. but that density is calculated on the a c reage re m a ining afte r Police Seize Sµspectin CM Burglary coat.a Mesa police arrested a 2•·>'••r·old Irvine man on buralarJ char1ea after an un· dercover officer allegedly wat.cbed lhe man and a comp•· nlon twalinl 1tereo equipment from an apartmenl. I• .U.-.Unt to make bls neape, police 1ald Earl Leelna backed a van into the un· dercover. police vehicle and 1maabed lDt.o aaotber car owned by a re1idenl al tbe lllediLerra· nean V1Ua1• compllx at 2400 Harbor Blvd. No ~ WU iQJured, but ID· vHU11ton 1ald Le1lna '• ac· .,compllee fled from the van ud MCll*i· Lff!Da, of M Streamwood, 1"1M,.,.. ~ lDto euatod)t at S p.m. aad booMd al UM COIUI lf•a dty Jail. He WU bttq uld t.odaJ bl Htu ol N.ooo ball. ' - streets and o~n .11pace arc de· ducted . County zoning 1s based on gross acr eage Councilmen agreed lo launch the annexation try In spite of a city staff report which said lhat the financial Impact of such a m ove 1s unknown Confusion about the future government finance us a result of Proposi- tion 13 and the possible passage of Proposillon 4, the s pending limit irutiallve, was cited in lhe report. · Mayor Paul Ryckofr, the coun ell's most fiscally conservative member, said he would back the ;rnnexal1on i n Hplte of the possiblUty that the city may e nd up spendin~ more to provide city services than it will recover in tnxes. "THESE A.RE MOST unusual c ircumstances." he said of the continued rc11ide nt1al construe· lion In the area. Homeowner:> from Newport Crest we re on hand al Tuesday's discussion to back Mcinnis and Ryckoff. One note of c aution was sounded by .a representative of S PON (Stop Polluting Our Newport) who said the organiu· Uon ta concerned about the, s torm drain ay1tem In the triangle. The organizat.ion~ goal ls to end the pollution of Newport Bay and storm drains that empty ln· to t1te bay are amon1 the group's tar1eta. CIUna Set Stoleq rrom Laguna Home t.a1una Beach resident 'nlelma Placido returned from a one·we6k vacallon and told pollc• lht found • MSG china Ml mlatlq from her home. Police utd the unknqwn. thi4tv• removed a window ll tht 318 Hawthorne Road home to let inside. A I rate1, decllnlnc dollar, elowtnc eccJaOllUe 1rowt.11. aearctty ~ ,... aourcee lncludJnt land, opeo apace IDd wat.v. .... THOa BLAMED GOVl!llNllltNI' AND the hllh cotl of •ov· ernment poUct ... "Irreducible elementa," tor t percenta1e point. of the lO.ph.111 percent ol lnllaUoD now ua1uilln1 tbe land. "Thil lnchadel Indexed w..-. rillna C041ll ol aovemment re 1ul1tlonl, and tbe lnOaUon biuee lmbeclded in many 1overnment pro1rama from the paat," he 11ld.' Anotht!r S percent can be blamed on ~u~ producUvlty. and yet another 2 perc:ent on the atructural chan1ea In the U.S eronomy "~akneaa in the U.S. dollar and rt1ln1 ener1y prices whtch, W\fortunately. will be .w'\th ua for IOD'le yean to come." IN ADDITION, HE SAID, •'ftlEal! 18 widespread fear that, •ome wtwre down the road, the fedeTaJ 1ovemment may Impose mandatory waee. price and profit conlJ'ola. That fear may be rc1ponalble for another full percenta1e point or more of lnllation." Thor called for the adoption of "conalat.enl year·a!ter·year NB Delays Ordinance On Parking In orde r to give concerned re· sldenta time to study a pro~ed parklng ordinance. Ne wporl Beac h City Council members agreed to delay fina l action on it until Oct. 23. The delay was asked by Coun· cllwoman Jackie Heathe r who said she wanted it discussed at ,the same time as the proposed building size reductions In old Corona dcl Mar ~cause the ls· sues are related. polJclet ol moderate economic and monetary 1rowt11 IO tlaM blfl8. Uoo can be held back and people can plan ahead 1DteW1eatJy lD terms of purchuea, inveatmenta and loo1·term productJvtty ... He advlaed lon1·Lenn tax lncentlvn "to encoura1e 11vtn1 and lnveatment by lndh1duall, entrepreneura, companln ud iovetn· ment itNlt." HE CHA•GED THAT GOvt:•N•ENT anal11ta and ~uu. clan1 "IUl'Vlve by find.Ins new waya to create new problems, ' pro- moted on the bull "of the number of employeee tbey bave under them." Hls advice: avoid qulclde tax cuta or flddlln1 wtth the federal deficit; reduce government spending; aoften or scrap fovernment reaulationl that "devour capital but produce no wetJth, Jobi or 1overnmenl revenue.'' 0 The next decade, said the economist, should strive for "atimuJaUng Increased s upply and production in our economy In· stead of increased demand and consumpllon." BOTH THE BUILDING size proposal and the parking or· dlnance h ave r eceived pre · llminary council approval. The second hearing for each now will be Oct. 23. If a pproved at that time, the measures will go Into effect 30 days la ter Traffic S toppers The proposed parking o r· dlnance a ffects the whole city It incr easc8 the amount of off s t r e e t parking r equl r ed for single fomily ho mes of more thun 2.000 squa re feet as well a:. duple.xes and multiple units Ouplexeb will be required lo go from the prcst.'nt three spaces to a total of four More bpuccs v.ould bt· requ1rt.'d, hasc:d on tht- "11 uare fool agl· of lht· un1ti. TU 1-:SOA Y'S HEARING on the propoi.al wab atta<:ked by re tir ed newspaper publisher /\rvo llaapa who said council mcm be rs were trying to ··root" rchl de nts by not clearly e xpl&ning what the parkln& re&ulaUona are 1oln1 to do to the Uvlna apace ln Newport. Beach ho mes. llaapa i,atd he calculated thul the livmg space in duplexes in old Corona del M ur where lht· buildin~ size reductions will ··compound the effcl•t" will !.)(' n•duc<'d by 1,800 '!quan· frl•t Mayor Paul Ryt·koff. <i propo nPnt of hoth mca..,urt•., .,tn•..,.,t•d that c11urn·ll mPrnl>crb h ud fol lowt•rl . ·no 1neorrcet pro· Ct'durci. "THERE'S NOTHING un· derhanded he re. nothing smelly. It's not like that, .. he said <.:ounl'ilman Paul Hummel, another s upporter of the two measures. t1a1d he wanted the continuance "to J<lve everybody a chance lo understand what the rules are and what will be at lt•mpted " C lementean Reimbursed For Dead Cow A state law one 0Hlc1al called a throwback to California's turn of the century ranc hing days has netted a San Clemente man S360 for the IO!'ls of liis cow Or ange County ~uperv 1sor11 approved the payme nt lo Roy Visbcck. of 201 Via San Andreas, S'an Clemente. to reimburse htm for the Aug. 12 kilhng of a He reford cow THE COUNTY IS requjred t.o pay livestock owners the value of animals killed by s tray dog11, according to J ohn Sibley. a co unt y animal c ontrol s pokesman. ·'The law Is ~achronism back from when Cal1tornla was very rural country," Sibley said. "When people made the ir Uv- ln1 from livestock. one animaJ killed hurt their l\veUhooci. The law simply hes ne ver been rescinded." THE UVE8TOCK loaaes are paid for out of dol llcenae fees, wblch amounted to $1.2 mJWon Lbiayear. But out of the $1800 bud1eted for 1uch louea lut year, only $900 waa uaed to pay ,_back livestock owners, Sibley 1ald. 5 Wor ker8 H u r t AGUA DULCE <AP) -nve workert were injured wtwn a chemical uaed to m•kt tatrand narea wu accident.ally lplted at Space Ordnance 8y1tem1, cau1ln1 $3,100 dama1e to UM faclllty . CulTrans workers hand out questionna1res on Newport Boulevard near Orange Coun· ty Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Activity Wednesday was purl of a study being con- du c t e d by the s tate Department or Trans oort.at1o n . Ma1lct1 answers to Que::.· t1onnaJr~ w ill help determine future of Newport Boulevard and Cost a Mesa Freeway. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Mesa Verde Lease Eyed N-M Trustees Join Coastline in Negotiations N1·wpQrt Ml'Sa s1•hQ<>I trustPt·'> vull'd un animously lo n1·~ot1Jlt· '41th Coabtll nt' ('ommun1ty Collt·gl' for the lea!>c of 'hH·anl Mt•su Verde School Two rtffi1dcnts of the ar ea said they were op~ed to the lease beca use of n ight c lasses Coastline Intends w offer al the Assembly l...••ad•'r Asks Gas Tax En(I SA<'HAM Jo:NTO I/\ l' I Tht· H l ' ,, u b I 1 ('an , ,. J 111• I II f I lw Cal1rumia A.,..,t·mbl:r ., .• y:-t"11 ''' ht•r l(CIUb rwxl yeur "Ill bt• r•· pealing lhl' 7 cent a J(!Jllon i.tal•· gn,olme tax and l'hon~ing Ow 1nherilanc-c tax Assemblywoman Carol lfall1•1 of /\lascadcro told lht• Cah fornw /\:.i.essors /\s:.or1ut1on 10 u s peech W<.'<incsduy. ..Tht-:.tat1· continues to rcup unfu1r and un Just taxes ·· rarll1t\ :it flJk•·r ~lr1·•·1 .1nr1 1\11• .... J \1•nJt-l>rtH· llO~f.\/F:K . TRl ~TE f.~ • .. 1111 th''Y dJdn I '4-dOt to l1•a\t· th•· srhool vacunt and thlil Cou:.l11n1 would prove LO be a good tenant At the suggestion of Trusltt Ken Wa)'ll)all, du1tr1ct om c,.ls added a lease provi•lon that Coastline provld~ •ufficlent parking Ut th<' SC'hOOI for 'ilU dt·nt-. ( 11.1.,t llnt• 11H1<'1JI-. ,,1111 th1•\ t10p1• 10 work uul Jll .q~n·•'m1·111 '4 tth nt•arby <·hun ht•-. 10 u.,,. ••\ ''''""° parkin~ .. pa<·t·.., al th"'' fot•thlll~ ("OASTl .INt: Ot"t'I C l..\1.~ mu.,1 rt'l"l't\t' approi.al from ('o::t<;t (·ommurut:. ('l)ll<'ge 01s tnc-1 tru.'>lt't'11 befort-rinahzing lht· lt•aM• Th<'y ho()t• to hold a fr'4 lt•('tUTl:'b al the ..,chool bt•fon• ~Nt1n.: .J full .... pr111g .,t·mc..,lt·r prngr.1m OJ>t'ratin~ 1n f-'c•bruar) Coai.thnl' ha~ ~ubm1ltcd u bid of $70.000 a year lo lcu:.c tht• Now you can share the secrets of America's best restaurants • JUST ARRIVED ... Rull Stock of Calphalo&e Cookware OPEi 7 ••• ,. • •• -< I ' ..,1·ho11l th.ti "'.1 1 111 •·ti tw1.111•1· 111 tit l hn111 • • 1111,JJrr .. 1 r 111 Iii• ,, \.\ IJ•Jll \1• ,, I 11 f1• ti '.'.1 h11 .. I I 11 ... t ri I I ,, .111111 "·"" , . .011il 111111 1 .. ch.tr):•"' \.\Ill 1 '''' t 11.1-..tltn1• u1Jc1111 S l 40 000 11111ro· Jit·r Yl'J r SaJe Lead T•> Arr~st I· I( ~ • ...,'I I 1 \I'• \ < 11 ru• II t• I l' h I I I I I " 111 I I 1 I II I I " l' '·'"''"'"ll "'·' .tt ,. • ..,,, d ''•I fl \ l"''l(lj!,JllUfl 1,f ).(I .tlltf 111..fl frH lt11 l11•n 111ntra1·1 "·"' 11f .111 .111 "'"'"' t111nt-r In an rlrt1•rl\ tllln1t, •111pl1 H tJ h1· I I ..., JI• 111 •. , I I I .,;ih•:-mJn for ·1 r.1111 · I 1111111• < 11111 for1 ( 't•Oll'I \.\ .1._ .11f1·•,t1•1J °W•·tl nt'.,d:t\ .tftl't 111 · .il lt•g1·rll\ m1 n·pn·-..•nlt-<l Jiit! 1111.,f• II llw 1·1111 pit· into putting .1 l1t·11 ''" lll1 •11 pro1wrtv lo hu " lh1· ;111 1·1111tl1 t1on1•r pol w•• '·••tl ,ii~L ·~ ""' ~ '"' la a good day to advertise in the Dally Pilot Classified Section. - ( 7 ' .......... t . · Oraage (;east EDITION ... -.. " . ; Today's CI091ag .. N.Y. S&eek8 . , VOL. 72 NO. 2M, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1979 ,, . N Fl FTEEN CENTS ~ . Ca1·ter Now Raps High Interest Rate SAN DIEGO <AP) -Preu· dent Carter, only two days after auppol"tina elforta to Uabt.eo the oaUoo'1 mooey supply, blamed t.be Federal ReMrve eo.nt to- day for inteteat rates be aaid are too hieh. "lnLereat rates are too hiah. infiatioo rates are too bieb," Carter said in a speech to leaders of the naUoo 's bwlding trades unions. He promlaed them. ''I wW DDt nabt fnnauoo wtt.b your Jobi." ln a nadoo•Uy brotlckut MWI contermce 1'leldaJ C.,.._ •· doned the Pederai R....-w'• actioa to t1lbtea tM moaey aup- ply and pmb up lntelWt r.._, saytq be would do "what.ever tt takes" to atop loftatioo, even ii it hurts him politically. But speaking here to the con- struction union leaders, Carter made It clear that be does not t.b1U tl*r lnduatry should sul- fw and lbat be places the blame for blaber' interest rates oo the boanl. ''la ftlbtinc loftation, we do not aa~ce conatnaction jobs," be •aid. "While interest rates ban been rising because of de- cisions made by the Federal Reserve Board to record·big.b levels to cool infJation. we took s pecial finaoclal measures to suataia credit for construct.loo, especially for bouainc cooatruc· Uon." The preaident made no re- ference to Im statements T\ae$- day in wbicb be backed the board'• dedlion to increase its bank lending rate and tighten the availability of credit. Carter said those mov es bad strengthened the dollar. and moderated gold price& · Carter did not ·elaborate on the "special rlDanclal measures ... but appeared to be talking about steps taken this year to allow savings and Joan institutions to raise money for mortgage loans by offering savings interest lled to Treasury bill rates. In his well·received speeeb to the 60tb annual convenuon or the AFL·C lO's Building and Construction Trades Depart- ment, a conglomeration of 16 coostructioo craft unions with ne arly 4.5 million members, Carter vowed to work to in· crease con.<Jtruction Jobs and to reject any anli·in!Jation s trategy that relles on higher unemploy. ment · · 1 wlll not fight inflallon with your jobs," he said l1·vine Co. Plans to Sue Newport Stocks Up, Down Again NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices bounced back and forth erratically today as lhe markets of Wall Street continued their convulsive reaction to the Federal Reserve's new olans for clampingctnwnoncredit. Trading was running well behind Wednes day·s record setting pace, but was still heavy. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up 2 points in early STEEP MORTGAGE RATES SEEN IN STATE-A11 RECESSK>NTOOEEPEN INEW.Y1• 81 tradlac 8Dd down 12 at mJd· morning, was off 4.70 points to 844.62 today. The widely re· cogai%ed averqe fell more then 48 poi.nta from Monday throUlh Wednesday , Tbe New York Stock Ex- change had by far lhe busiest day in tts history Wednesday, with 81.62 million shares chang· ing hands, eclipsing the previous high of 66.37 million, set Aug. 3, 1978 Bond prices likewise have broken sharply since the start of the week as they absorbed the s hock of unprecedented in- creases in interest rates. On Tuesday many of the na lion's banks raised their benchmark prime lending rates a full percentage point to 141"-r percent. J'oday's drop came despite a s tr&ng showing by the dollar m roreiJtn exchange. reversing Wednesday's decline, and a drop of $11.50 in the price of gold m London. Gold was quoted m New Yo:-k at $392 an ounce, down more than S23 from Wednesday. Amid all the confusion and un certainty, however, many Wall Streeters were unshaken In their initial approval of the Federal Reserve's decision last weekend to use some powerful new am· munition in its battle against in· nation. Many of them conceded the new s teps in creased the possibility or at least a moderate recession in the months ahead, (See STOCKS. Page A2> Coast Weather Patchy Jow clouds and fog along the coast otherwise variable high cloudiness Friday. Lows tonight S7 to 62. Highs Fri· clay 70to11. INlllDB Tea" Y Wmd to bf U.. O*ft o/ g,.glalld? Tfpa on PrfM• rla' IUlin ad qldrb ON llMfau.td oa Po(le Al. Botdogging It ·-· .. Freestyle skier Wayne Hilterbrand becomes part of the statuary at Newport Beach's Fashion Island as camera freezes him in mid·air. Hilterbrand was one or freestylers who put on an exhibition Wednesday at the shopping center's Stage Court. They took off from a ramp set up for the show. The statuary that Hilterbrand momentarily became part or in this photo 1s called "The Skydivers." Condo Conversion Law Viewed Newport Beach's law halting conversion of apartments to con· dominiums, which went into ef· feet this week, is going to come under City Council scrutiny again. The second look, slated for next month, is the result of a change of heart by Mayor Paul Ryckoff who supported the measure the first time it was before the council. But Tuesday, Ryckof( said be regretted supporting the or· dinance and that he feels "I didn 'l give it proper consldera· lion atthelimeilcameup." Medi11m Surf Doe in Wake Of Storm • Forecasters for the NaUonal Weather Service said today they may have overestimated the im· pact of a north Pacific storm in predicting huge surf for Southern California. "It's not quite u bad u we thou1bt lt would be," aald a spokeawoman in rev~11n1 downward tbe 1lse .of the wavea tbat were Ol'lllnallY antle .... ted to brlna 12-foot aurf to tbe cout OD TueldaJ. The weather forecuten today sald the turf lbould arrive, but tt la expected to be in the fOW' to slx·foot ranie. Oranp C'out llfesuarda aald tbat foncat ma1 be •tretcbinl tbe palm a bit. ODe HuntialtoD Beacb Ufepard deeeftbed tbe aurf u "Ink.le alappen" ud lal4 tbln ... DO iDdkadaD it WU ... t.o •et U7 blaer. R yckoff's c hange doesn't necessanly mean repeal or the measure which was passed on & 5-2 vote with council members Don Mclnnis and Jackie Heather dissenting. In fact, an attempt Tuesday by Mcinnis to have a public hearing for formal reconsidera· lion of the measure was defeat- ed in a 4-3 vote with. the mayor siding with Mclnnis,and Mrs. Heather. However, M c innis and Ryckoff were able to persuade their council colleagues to hold an informal study session on the Nii-I ••••er "'i.-or. Allan MacLeod Cormack of Tufts Unlveni· ty bas been named co· wlnMr ot a Nobel Prue lo medicine. See Page A4. ., .. 11 la w that affects about 12,000 ren· tal units in the city. The discussion of the measure came up Tuesday because of a variety ol agenda items which related to condomlruums and the new law. Councilmen, raced with an ap- plication for conversion of a Lido I s le triplex round themselves debating the new law-rather than the conversion of the triplex-at the opening of the meeting. That's when Ryckorf said he'd changed his mmd ·'Our obllgatJon 1s to the re· s1denllal aspeet of the city and \hat outweighs the obligallon to balance our housing stock," be said. Ryckoff lodicated that he n?· sented efforts by county. state and federal officials to mandate City Co1mcil efforts to keep a balance between ownership and rental units in Newport Beach. The council members who s upp0rted the ordinance Paul <See CONDOS, Page t\2) Foreign Students Face TB Testing About 250 roreign·bom stu· dents ln the Newport·Mesa Unified School District are ex· peeled to undergo testing for tuberculoeis next week, officials said today. "The Orange County Health Department bas ldentilied the hllh·rilk eroup 81 individuals who have entered <the U.S.) dur· Ing the put 12 months," noted bead nune Delrdrte Douville, <Relatedst.oryPapA3.) That poup includes not Jmt Soutbeut Asian refu1ees. but newcomers from Mexico, Ceo· tral America, SOutb · America Africa and any island country exclualve of New Zealaod and Great BrlUan, she aald. D11trtct health orflclall are now 1creenlna au recent imml· 1rant.1. Mn. Douvme ·~ about half ot lbe !IOO ltudent.a in tb1.I cate1orJ wlll require t .. Uq. ffOWftW, lbe downplayed tbe threat " • aerioUI problem with tubvculolla. ~ that many Soutbea1t A1lan 1tudent1 already have undergone a pre. ventive vaccination program in- stituted when FTaoce occupied the area. School nurses in the district are qualified to give the TB tests at school. but the county health department will be providing supplies. ~K ROBBED IN NEWPORT A man wbo claimed to have a cun but didn't show It escaped with an &mdet.ennlned amount or ca1b at about 0000 today from a Newport Beach branch of the Bank of America, police said. They uld tbe robbery oc· curred ln the Weatcllff Sboppina Center at Irvine A venue and Weatclilr Avenue, next to t.be eo.t.a llesa city limits. The man may have eacaped ln a red car, police aald. Rejected Project Cause 8> JOi\SNt: RF.Y='IOLO!-i Of'"-O•tly """' St.IH lr\'1 nt' Company offl('lab :.a1d tod ay they would file-a lawsuit in <Jran~t· Count} Superior Court to rorct: Newport Rl'ach Clly Of· r1c1al:. lo approvt: company plans for the North Ford bu.o;1. nt"'S and industrial project A company spokesman said tht· !>Ull wa!> to be filed m Sanw Ana hy the close or the "'10rkmg day today. He srud 1t is the Hrst lawsui• ever filed by the company agalrut Newport Beach and be strused the point of the lit1aa· Uoft la to overturn the city eowl· ell's Sept. 10 rejection of the North Ford .Project. No monetary damages are sought The proposal was rejected on a 4·2·1 vote with council mem· bers J8dde Heat.her and Don Mcla..aJ8 dJMenUng and Coun· dlwomm Evelyn Hart abstain· Ing. Al the time of the rejection, the council majority indicated that it wanted to see l<ur density residentlal devefopm~ on the property located north of the F'ord Aeronutron1c -:1te on J am bo r<'<' Roart Tht:' property 1s an ''frwJ>Qrt Rt•ach. but lit'" within th1· lrv1m· lln1fll'd Sl'hool 01!'> lr1<·t Ma vor Paul H vckoH at th<> St-pt "10 met•tang ·o;a1d the legal implications of the council's vole ~t·re "duly noted " Today, Irvine Company Presi· dent Peter Kremer said "we n•grct having to do this but we have no otht•r cho1Cl' .. The ..,Ult Jiit•~(·<; the council' ... .1 c t 11 1 n w ;i.., <i r h 1 t r a r y. d 1 s c riminaton un1•cJnsl1tut1onal <inct un)\upportt•d by lt:'i:ally rt> quired findtn~., Tiu.' suit null:'.., that the five building multi tt'nant office and s m a 11 warehouse project con form.., to city zonan~. to tht- general plan and to the traffi c phasing ordinanrt:'. "Wc'r<' taking this matter to court with some reluctance," Kr <'ml.'r sa i d . "But it's something wt.• foci wt• mus t do in order lo clearly establish that the rules of the planning and <See SUIT, Paite AZ) --- 11aNe £lie Te,...• Former United Mine Workers president W.A. ''Tony" Boyle has been sen. tenced to three consecutive life terms for hiring killen to assassinate union rival Joseph "Jock" Yablonski In 1969. ·. ' Stat.e and local oltld•l• wut mHt ln Loe Ancelet l"rid~ \o find • llOlutlon for Newport Bay pollution probl ma Th 10 •.m me-ellnt m lhe downtown ortl~e• of the South rn California AaaodaUon of Government• had been 1cbeduk-d to teke piece Wednes daJ, but ronlllcu lo mff'Un1 ae•edwN r~Bulted ln Ill <'U "11 '.>n .Repreaentatlvu from the dUea ol lntne. Cott.a Meu and ~twport Beach are expected to ittl•nd tho ae11lon •Iona wtth Oraniie County offlc:l•I• and ,,....r,..,,, STOCKS ... and that riused the specter of some tough going for such Im portanl indus tnes as housing ad construction. But the)'. ar(_ued that such ~rt·teTm pain could bring with U the longer-term reward of pro aress against rapld inflation. "hlcb many economists and President Carter regard as the No. 1 threat to the future pro- tress of the U .$. economy. The market's declines this week. however dramatic, come nowhere near the proportions of a "crash" like the devastating slide or 1929, when stock prices lost nearly 50 percent of their value o14lr a few short weeks. This week's drop, by contrast, has represented a loss of less than 6 percent, as measured by th e Dow J ones Indus trial Average. ''There is no earthly reason for a stock-market panic," said Heinz H. Biel , a veteran market analyst with the brokerage firm of J a nney Montgom ery Scott In<.' "What the Fed is doing is a very constructive ~ove. If it's successrul, it will avoid a major depression in the future." The F'ed. under chairman Paul Volcker, said it would shill the empha~1s in its anti-inflation strategy toward d1rt:ctly con trolling the supply, rather than the cost, of money. It indicated it would let interest rates, with.in • broad limits, go wherever the market took them. Thal amounted to an abrupt change in the rules of the game for man,y reauJar participants in the markets. For example, • number of aflalyata aaJd it prompted a aud· ddn change of strategy by In- vestors who had been tradin1 stocks on margin, or loans from their brokers. With Interest rat es on those loans soaring above 15 percent. many traders Clt:.etdcd.W sell margin~ clOl!c out their de bts, thus con· trihutmg significantly to selling pressure on the market Mr. Queyrel Funeral Held Memorial services have been held fo r Willi am Gerald Queyrel, a 19-year-o ld Newport Bea c h resident who died in Costa Mesa last week He all.ended USC last year as a freshman and achieved a 3.5 grade point average while study- ing engineering. He transfered to the University or California al Santa Barbara this fall. Friends said the sophomore had left the school three days prior to his death In order to taJ<e a year off. Services were held at St. Joachim Catholic Church m Costa Mesa. Students Protest PEKING <AP) -About 2,500 People's University students and teachers boycotted classes today lo back their demands that the army clear out or their campus. DAILY PILOT t1wo.-c-o.u,~ .... •ttll-ft1u-._.,.._ -·''"""'"""""' .. °'-, ... , Pv .. l.,.....C-• ...... rattMlt'°"'o<• p..,bfltMd Motld•Y tN""" ''klity t•r CO\t• Mtw N•...,.., -· .._"'ti ........ ,,_ ..... ., .. ..., ........ l_ ...... ,-c.. .. " ,..,.,., . .-..,.,...,,,_,_,.,..., .. n_ ,,......,, fM ll'Hl<IHI .,.....,.,_ .... Pl-I••• 1JO wot I•' Ml'MI, C..l• !Nw, (•IHo<•IO,.,. . ..., .. .... ,.,_, .... ~·- ~···~ Yk• ........ '" --•MeMtot -"-... ,., ,,.... .......... Ma~·-­ (NtMtll, L-' .-..,..-"' ........ Mt~-- . . . -. ttpr91•atlv• from UM 1ta ... Tb• plan to bl cllaeUHd rri· day 1enerally aim• at 1lvin1 rontrovtralal Newport Bay 1ludi• on 1lltaUOn certlne1Uoo by , ... ttalAt if Cft'talD ~dkloot are met. '1'MH cO\lld inch.tde: rormet.lon of • m•nese· mtnt -.mcy for the purpo1e ot monltortni and revlewln1 Im· plementatlon ud re1ulet!Gn ot aource conlrOll of Hdlmnt.a· tlon. 'I'M aaency would be com· poaed ot dUe11 wilh a stake ln watenhed plaooJna acUvlUes u well a1 the county and tho Re1lonal Water Quality Control Board Continuation by SCAG and local aaenclea of work aimed at developing a proposal for an ef fecllve dealltatlon facillty for the bay ContinuatJon by SCAG and the management agency of ef- forts to resolve the remalning deficiencies in the Newport Bay plan submitted to the state. The state's Water Resources Control Board in July had re- fused to certify the plan on water quality problems 1n Newport Bay and also voled to begin proceedings to strip SCAG of its planning uuthonty 1n the watershed area. The bay plan had been sharply criticized in Newport Beach by residents who felt there should be mention of a deslltation basin upstream as a means or curbing pollution flowing into the bay. The water board is expected to soon decide whether to proceed with its "designation" of SCAG or choose some other agency or even itself to handle the studies. Local officials want to see the responsibilities for bay planning matters kept in local hands and not handled by the state. The meeting in Los Angeles Friday is meant to try to find a solution acceptable to all sides. Their respective agencies would then need to vote on whether to participate in or accept the plan Slwts Slay Grove Man, Hurt Woman A man was killed and a woman wu Utjured critically in a 1bootln1 early today at a Garden Grove apartment, police reported. An unidentified 38·year -old man was deai:f at the scene from a gunshot wound to the head, police said. The woman, about 20, also su!· tered a gunshot wound in the head and is in the intensive care unit at St. Joseph's Hospital in Orange Police said they r cccivf'd a telephone call shortly before 6 a m from 110meone who heard the wounded woman calling for help Police said a sm a ll-caliber pistol was found in fie apart- ment at 12652 Flower St They forced their way inlo the locked a partment after heanng the woman's cnes for help, a spokesman said Names are withheld until the next of kin arc notified Police said they did not know at this time who fired the shots. Gold Slides Below $400; Buck Stable LONDON <AP> -The dollar was mixed but little changed on the world's money markets . to- day , The price of gold slid back $.11.50. ln Tokyo, the dollar finlabed the day at 225.90 yen, somewhat higher than New York's closing figures of 225.60. There was no trading In Tokyo Wednesday because of a national holiday. London's flve major bullion houses fixed the price or gold at $400 an ounce for the morning trading ae .. ion, alter an earlier high of'$406.50. The afternoon fix· inJ wal$4i01.50. In Zw1cb, Europe's bigaeat gold market, the price. slipped below S400 to '397. The metal finished Wed· neaday's trading at 9408 in Lon· don and MOl.&O..ia..Zuricb-BuL durlnc a brief aura• early Wed· netday UM pld price soomed ~ $419.50. The record for the rnetaJ waa '4••. hit in Zurich trad.in1 Oct. 2. But proftt.·t.akina bu Mt ln llnce lhe.n and depreued the price. Citation Jeaued WASHINGTON (AP) -The federal 1onramHt. l11ued a ctt.atioq W.-...S.'/ a1a1Mt U. Am•r1can CJ...amld Co. for aJ. le1ed .W.Uoea at Lt.I WWow lllud, W. VL, plML ,. --------- CocaiD.e Suspect Nabbed Two policemen from Newport Beach and Huotin1ton Beacb teamed up lat.e WedaMClay aiCbt and arreeted a inan they alleled waa ca.rryin• an ounce ol «>- calne and Sl.800 ln cub. Zatl Robert Aden, Je. of Par• mount wu booted lDto N.wport Beach dty jail on chart• of PotHMion of cocaine for sale. An ounce of the narcotic l• worth about $2.500 iD llllclt tales, accordinC to pollce . Newport Beach patrolman Todd Seiden WU celled to a trailer park at 7200 W. Coalt Highway at about 11 :30 p.m. because residents aald there wu a prowler in the park. CalTrans workers hand out questionnaires a t Pacific Coast Highway and Dover Drive in Newport Beach. Activity this morning is part of state Department of Transportation effort •'to determine bow to better serve your travel needs ." Motorists in Newport Beach. Costa M~a and Irvine are being asked to mail in the questionnaires with appropriate answers. Huntin1ton Beach Officer Richard Wright was nearby on West Coast Hip way iasulng a traffic dtation to a motorist he'd followed into Newport Beach from Huntington Beach. W rip\ told Seiders he saw Aden leave the traJler park UK! bead for a parked car, so be de· tatned blm. Selden aaid the cocaine wu found in • briefcase in Adee'• car The officer said he became curious about the briefcase when Aden told hJm he was to deliver It as a favor to a woman whose name he didn't know. Bandit Robbed F,.....PageAI CONDOS .•. . It Just Wasn't His Day Hummel, Evelyn Hart, Ray Williama and Don Strauss -m· dicated Tuesday they haven't changed their mind.a. The triplex conversloo wu turned down. He told the officer the case was to be Left in the office of a trailer park on Coast Highway, but he didn't know the peraon It was to be left. for, or the name or address of the park. An alleged would-be robber's luck went from bad to worse Wednesday in Huntington Beach when he was rebuffed in a fast· food restaurant robbery attempt and was then robbed himself while trying to run away, police reported today. Officers s aid the man's luck took another sour turn when he called pol ice to a Beac h Boulevard tavern to report be· ing robbed. He was arrested. Shane Clark Mitchell, 22. of 116 Main St., was arrested on suspicion of attempted robbery when an employee of Kentucky Fried Chicken , 5005 Warner Ave., identified hJm as the man who tried to rob her. Offi cers said the man alleged· ly walked into the chicken sta1111 at 8:55 p.m. and told the woman clerk be was armed and wanted Irvine Police Seek Suspect In Stabbing A Garden Grov~ mtn was stabbed 18 times on an Irvine street early today and police are searching for a man he x::av • ride to as the prime suspec Lt Gene Norden sai ose Pinto, 21, was treated and re leased from Tustin Community Hospital alter the 2·30 a.m. at· tack He suffered minor lacera· t1 ons to the chest, back and arms. Norden said the assailant, described as a man of Latin des· cent in his early 20s. used a screwdriver in the attack. Norden saJd Pinto and the su.~· peel had been In a Santa Ana bar earlier in the evening. T~e man asked Pinto for a ride home to the Irvine area. They drove to the Colony bous· ing tract on Walnut Avenue west of Culver Drive and pulled over. However, when the two got out of the car, the suspect pulled the screwdriver and demanded Pln- to's watch and the keys to hls car . When Pinto refused to give him the keys, the man attacked him. The sWlpect then ned on foot. Officers found Pinto at the in· tenecUon of Walnut and Culver and he was taken to a nearby fire station for first aid treatment. Nose Eaten, Sewed Back COPENHAGEN. Den· mark <AP) -A 2"'·year· old aLrl had her no.ae bitten off by a German abepberd, but plaatlc surgeons sewed it back oo aft.er recoverinc It from the dog'a stomach, doctors reported today. The cblef aur1eoo. Sla BolaDdr told reporters blood •a• clrculat.lnc tbrou.lh the noee, but. it wowdbe aom•tlme before docton !mew U the opera· tJon on Mle Olten waa • complew auccas. The do1 wa1 ruahed to a veterinary cllnlc Im· medlatelr alter the incl· dent Wednesday and wu forced to reauraitata t.bt note, whlcb was then ru1hed to an operaUn1 room where Boland and ot.btr aura.ant reatiacbed It. the day's receipts. The aJle1ed would-be bandit dashed from the restaurant when the employee refused to hand over the cash, police SaJd. The neelng man. they said, was reportedly tackled by a pair of men several blocks from the restaurant. They removed an undetermined amount of ca.sh Crom his pockets M Itch ell is being held on $25,000 bail at Huntington ~ach jail. Seroicemen Face Payless Pay Period WASHINGTON <A P > -About two million men and women In un- iform face a~ ... paydar Mon· da)' ~ ~ ac" betqre tben on 9t.alled leSS-latlon pf'O'fid· in1 t.he Penta1on authority to spend money in the new fisceJ year that started Oct. 1. However. aoout 11 mlllion c1 vil1an· employ e~s -Of th~ Defense Department would re· ce1ve a week's salary be<.'ause their curre nt pay period in eludes the last week an Sep· tember. JU.'ll before the 1979 f..s. cal year ended. The Defense Department would be powerless to advance money pending congressional action on 1980 fiscal funding However. officials said they would encourage service relief organluaUona, credit unions and similar institutions to extend ln- te r est-free loans to service members left temporarily short of funds. But the four said they'd be willing to talJc about changing provisions of the law a.a long a.s control over conversions 1s ma1nlalned. The law at present prohibits convera1on of duplexes or coo· 1truction of new condom1ruums on loll of less than 5,000 square feet. lt atao protublts counci l mem- bers from approving a con· version if ~ vacancy rate of rental uruts Is leas than 5 per· cent. That vacancy factor 1s to be established by a city staff SUT· vey of 15 percent of those 12.000 units made 10 October and Mav. This month's survey 1s going to require the hmng of addl · taonal employees 10 the city's Community Development Department because the four councU members who support the ordinance refUMd \.o 10 &1on1 with utatfplantoaurveyonlyun- it.a on Iota of more then 5,000 square feet The sugaesllon was made to .u \'.e. time 10 the 5urve y by re- du c 1 n g the number of unalb lO be checked. Hummel saJd the point of the Jurvey is to find out what "the vacancy picture is so we want all the rental uruts included. not just thoee on large lots." Ryckoff. clearly unhappy with the council's refusal to tight.en the staff's workload observed that the lar1er survey is going to mean that the 175 bulldln1 ~rmll application.t currently on file with the city "are just going to be held up that much longer" while employees work on the survey. INTRODUCING THE: F,.....P~AI SUIT ... t oning process apply equally to all of us. city and private pro- perty owners alJke " A pnnc1pal reason g1 ven by the council majority for its re · Jt!Ction of the company plan. the 'u1t say~. was the "poss1b1lity" or futurt· general plan amend· ment changing the North Ford ll1te from comme rcial and In dustnal to residential. The company contends that basing a land use decision on a possible general plan change {'ons t 1t ut es an il l egal moratl>n um ·What we'J"e seekmg is ob scrvan<.'e of the rules." Kremer said "Private property owners must follow them. as we did on the North Ford site, and we think the city coun cil maJOrily 11hould follow them. too. "We hope It ls understood by the community thet our lawsuit Isn't directed at the community, but at what we consider an un- f a1 r and illegal action taken bv thl' city council .. Newport Man A Suicide? Newport Beach police said to· JAy they believe Balboa resident Chuck Huus. 23, died of a self· inflicted gwushot wound to the head. HuUB ' body was diacovered Tuesday afternoon in bis re- s 1 den ce at 430 E. Bay Ave. Police reports indicated Huus shot himself late Monday n11ht with the weapon that was in his band when his body was found. A coroner's report la ~ndtu. Edison Electric Packet Finally, DUFf1ELD YACHTS at Costa Mesa bas joined forces with the most classical bay launch ever built. The beauty of a bygone era brought back t.o Ule lD coQjunct•oa wUb the rellablUty ol eltttric power. Deposits for orders are now belng taken for the new Edison electric PACKET. The Commodore model packa~e includes: PACKET hull, with new spacious interior, all natural bronze deck hardware, teak trim. full surrey top wtlb tassels, clear cunalnl. ~kpit cushions, full cover, carpet. teak bar. '"'reo. full electrtc propulsion 1y1~m. wheel steering. bllge pump, running Ughta, electric born, •k Une1, fenders, and-foul bot· tom paint, patnt name and CF numbers. Owner's choice or col· on. Introductory prke: $12. 500. SPECH1CATIONS : Length Overall: (J8' Waterline 1Ao1th. 15.9" I , • --.rr .; ·~·· I ' ' , \ . . Beam· 5·5" Uraft: 1'6" Welaht: 1500 lbc!. approximately --. --- .- ' .. 'f:': -"'---- ------5011 (580 .. w. 17lh. Street. Costa MeH. CA 921627 (714) M5·0711.()717 DUFFIELD \' ACHTS, I ... ~,, -------------------------- ' -. CALIFORNIA All Safe In Midair Wllision SAN JO E (AP> Two •lDtlMnl.£: PIH•• colOded ov•r S. Muidpal Alrpol't aoa nobod1 wu lajured, prom,.-. au&llortUee to call U.. lneldell& a " IQlf'aCle ... At1l1tant airport director Jack Harper aaJd WedMrlcky that a Beetbcl'aft bad J_..t tat• olf from the nmway whee It w ( STATE J struck at an altitude of IOO feet by a CeMM lryiQa to lud. The aeverely dama1ed planes -wttb one peraon eacb - landed wit.bout lnddeot. "It'• lmpoalble that neltber persoa wu Utju.red and It'• a mlraele tbat no one wu killed," aald San Joee Fire Departmeot. 1poke1man Dick Watteobaraet' He aald tbe propeller of the deseeodint plane sliced into the cockpit of the other plane, bare· ly m iaalng the pilot Nllllce Pla•I Cl••ed Minorities Backed .. ,. .......... l'h&ndlv. Ootobef 1 t. 1979 ~ TV ;l'ersonalit};~ ~· Sued by Bead " LOS ANGELES (AP> -The corporate Nmnant of the BM It loi.ni to court Alain to fii!lt imltatiooa of tbe DOW·def\aad BriU.b t.1.,,t.o1 IJ'OUP· I Ata.orneya for Apple Corp. Ud. uUd Supertor Court W4ldnel·. day to tAue an UtjunctloD preveoUnc producer Dlek Clark and tbe Amerieu BroadcuUn, Co. trom uain1 ettber tbe names or ~ employtq look·alikea o the BeaUea in a plaa.ned movie "Blrth of ! t.be Bealea." I . TB.£ CIVIL SUIT SEEKS S40 million in 1eoera1damaaeaand 1 SIOO mllUon In pun.ltlve damaA4:.· 1 Apple Corp. bolds the rt for former Beatles John Lennon. • Paul McCartney, George Harrilon and Rlnao Slarr. . . THl8 WAS THE SECOND Ume In the paal month the former Beatles have taken legal action aaalnat portrayal of the 1roup by • imitators. Apple Corp. recently med awt to at.op the loft&·nmninl stage play "Beatlemania,.. which uaes four men wbo loot like the Beatles al varioua stages in their career and aln1 Beatles tunes. Guyana Survivors Sue Ryan Estate • that Ryan had ··a wanton and SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Rancho Seco nuclear power plant is closed for installation 01 an earthquake safety s upport on a pipe in the emergency cooling system, a spokesman saJd Wed· nesday. Act ors William Schallert and Dennis Weaver were among 500 who picketed the Aca demy of Motion Picture and Television Producers office Wednesday denouncing the film indus try for its portrayal of women and minorities on the ~crccn. Screen Actors Gwld s pokeswoman Kim Fellner s aid unfair labor charges were filed against the academy. SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The estate of the late Rep Leo Ryan 1s being sued by live Peoples Temple survivors and three re lut1ves of dead cult m embers who clru m that Ryan's actionb helped bnng about the Guyana tragedy The swt . filed 10 San Fran· Cll>CO Supenor Court. chargeb reckless disrt:gard for the conse- que nces" when he tried to lead fleeing church me mbers to freedom Ryan and rour others in ru:. party or reporters. Temple rt:- lataves and departing cult mem bers were shot and killed as they prepared to fly out of Guyana'!. Port Kaituma a1rstr1p near the Peoples Temple commuruty of Jonestown on Nov. 18. 1978 . ,.,- The spokesman for the plant. . leff Marx of the Sacramento Municipal Utility District, said Wednesday the U.S. Nuclear ReRulatory Commission or dered the 913-megawatt plant closed during the repairs, wtuch will take a rew days. Stilled Cable Cars No Deterrent More than 900 members of the. Peoples Tt:mple then committed 'u1c1dt• or were murdered al• Jon~~lown at the bt:hesl of th•· l1•Jdt'r of tht· t·ult. the Rev Jim fllnl''> Brotmt "'und Sii• Touris ts Continue to Flock to an Francisco WASHJNGTON <AP> Gov Edmund G. Brown races an up· hill climb to rruse runds ror tus presidential campaign, accord· ing to lbe first orflcial conlribu· lion and expenditure report filed Wednesday by the California Democrat. The report showed Brown - the self-described "third force" in the race for the 1980 Democratic nominallon -with total contributions of S261,519 .... nlC•••rt•••le• W ASRINGTON CAP> -1be bi11est 8qle contnbuUon to Gov ....... LIDd G. Brown'• lllWl· aouncecl sw-tdenUaJ campalen so far bas cotne from the POiitical a rm of the diversified Service Employees lnternalion· al Unioa.. Tbe wuon a polltical action ~mmlttee dooat.ed '$5,000 -the maximum allowed by law. SAN FRANCISCO I API J>c:-.p1tc the doomsayers who prl' dl<'ted tourists would st11y awiiy in droves. v1s1tors cootmut> to Oock to the city despite an extcnd1-d :-.hutdown of the city's symbol. the cable cars. PhoneFirm Granted $1.3 Million Hike SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The Cal.llornla Public UW1Uea Com· miasioo, corr ecting a July 31 declaloa. baa .crant.ed Pacific Telephone a tl.3 million rate lncreue lnetead at reduclq lta rat. by 14.2.2 mWJ.oel anoually. Tbe PUC earUet bad rejected a Paclflc Telephone request for a S4"ZO million a year rate Increase and instead orde red the cut an rates It received six petillons for a rehearing and rejected all or them but. did modlfy the de- cision. For example, there will now be a new cbar1e or 25 cents for a request by a calling party to verify lbat a line la busy or to in- te rrupt a convensation in pro- gress Out-of town folh a re sat1i.fy10g themi.elves by chmbmg ;iboard stationary tors parked at terminal turntables and having their p1ctun>5 :.napped by fnends. relat1vet. or strangers The anc·1cnt relics. not much changed st.nee they started lurching and clanging up and down San Francisco's hills tn 1873. were shut down twf) weeks ago for long-overdue system overhaul and repwr The thrc~ cable car lines have carried up to 13 million persons annually in r ecent years, more than 70 percent of them t.ouriata, al two bits a head. • The cars are f1'eely conceded by officials to be dangerous con· traptioos that reautarly toss riders on into the autter. effectively act as targela for other veb!cles, and draw hundred.a of expenatv~ injury clalma each year. In thla apace qe or aopblatlcated macblnery tbeM cnna. .... are lighted by0Adstora1e balte~and braked miiD.fy by woodaboes that ptesa a1atnst the surface or the tracks Occasionally they stop where the gripman wants In case or real emergency, the gnpman. who operates lbe mecharusm that 1rabs ont.o a cable mo~ beneath the pavement. drop• a guilJot.lne·Uke •teet lflabtnto Ute cable slot Stoppi.og the ctr as 1r1t were s lamming Into a brfclt wall. The problem is the system Is so de.<:ttp1t, the underlyuig struC' lures so nogged by yeara of uae, that It is dangerous. say Municipal RaHway ofric1ala "There isn't any quest.Jon in my mind that 1t isn 't a sale system." ~wd Oral Moore . chief engineer of th~ city PublJc Tift: SUIT, fill-d <kt 4. etbkl> un.,pec•1fl ed damagt-:. ajitatn!>t1 Ryan ':. e~ta te for wrongful death. negJJgence a nd negligent 1nr1tctlonof emotional s tress . : Ryan's estate, gaven a pre -I hmmary value or $264.000. would: have finished probate ln the oextl rew months if the lawsuit had not been filed. Ryan 'a attorney· 1 Melvin Kerwin, aaid lt now could remain unsettled for years. Kerwin. ~ Menlo Par'lc, said the suit. ls completely without! merit and borders on h<ir11:.-. 1 mt>nt llt• :.aid it «ingered him sol much that hJs vie ws on ll are J ··unpnntah'e .. I Oii~• te Repllf LOS ANGELES <AP) Policemen Edward M. -Hop60fl and Lloyd W. O'Callaghan will be given a chance to comment or the PoUce Commission report c rltlcizlng their handling or lhc Eula Love case before the report is placed in their personnel rues. The new order. 'issued Wed- nesday, corrects a S26 millJon computer error made by t he P...UC.. -ata!L.aad recalculaleS, Pacific Telephone's expenses ror s uch things as electric power and operator's wages. UlllHfos Commisb1on. who recommended the shutdown AND mE rates and charges 1.ar _key telephone....eq . .wj· ;unew ........ ----,,..-------------==---==----====---Huc h as phones with buttons for SAN FRANCISCO attorney/ RolMrt J . Bockelman, who filed the suit . s aid Ryan was re- peatedly warned or the .. e.11 l tre me danger" of the Jonestown 1 ~ettl em e nt 1nvest1gation Despite those> warnings. he said. 1 Ryan went ahead with 11 v1s1 t to : tht-settlement Commi ssion President Stephen Reinhardt made the commitment after the pair had asked for a court order a llowing the policemen to submit their comments The order said Pacifi c has an additional revenue requirement of $43.5 million over that found reasonable in the original de cision THE RESULT 1::; a $1.3 m1lbon annual rate hike which will uf feet the rates of some Pac1f1(' Telephone a nd General Telephone customers THIS WEEK, COME VIEW various lines. also will be in- creased beyond that authorized in the July 31 dcc1s1on. The PUC also scheduled a rl'· hearing on Pacific Telephone'!> cost of borrowing funds to fin an('e the current demand for ser vice It said this would con o,1dcr lht· rapidly rtbing interest rat(•s on the company·s plaru, to f1n anC'e ne w and improved equipment OVER $250,000 IN PRECIOU S JEWELS ... ROBINSON'S HEIRLOOM COLLECTION AT NEWPORT AND WESTMINSTER, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, OCT. 11 -12 This unique assortment of heirloom Jewels has been assembled from the estates of many prestigious f amil1es and leading Jewelers. Most pieces are in their original settings, and represent the exqwslfe work of world· renowned craftsmen. Listed is only a sa mpling of the overall collection. All items are subject to pnor sale Robinson's Fine Jewelry, 100 2.56 ct. marquise diamond solitaire with baguelles. $9800 12ct. diamond brooch. $18,500 3 c t. emerald and 1 V2 ct. diamond bracelet. $3.950 Removable diamond. 5 ~ ct.. and coral plnleamng combmat1on with attachable turquoise. 18K gold and platinum sold as set only, $10, 250 3 ct. diamond cover-case watch, 18K gold. $4,950 1 ct. round diamond sol/ta/re, $1,350 -••--' 2.84 cl. diamond brooch, $2,450 2 ct. diamond and 8 ct. emerald earrings, $3.950 5. 75 ct. diamond bracelet. $7,500 ~ ct. diamond and 9.46 ct. genuine star sapphire, $9,500 3 ct. diamond and cultured pearl bracelet. $3,000 Allwolghta total Robinson's Robinson's Newwrt Fashion Island • 644·2800 Westminster Ms/I • (714) 898·4331 ., GIBRALTAR SAVINGS II FOAOUR ORANGE COUNTY OFFICES 26-WEEK CERTIFICATE 10.6623 11.137 3 ANNUAl ffPfCTIVf YlflO CEJlllFICATES ISSUED OCTOBER 11 THRU OCTOBER I 7, 1979 $10,000 minimum. Rate based on 26·week U.S. Treasury Bill rate. - Cffect1ve yield assumes all funds at maturity are redeposited 11 stme rate and remain tor full year Rate may change at renewal. federal regulations proh1b1t compounding ol interest on the account and impose a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal NEW CONVENIENCE HOURS SATURDAYS: All Gibraltar otftoes are open from 8:30 to 3:00. MON. thru THURS.: Moet Gibraltar offices are open from 8:00 to 5:30. FRIDAYS: Most otfioes are open from 9:00 to 8:00. HUNTINGTON CENTER al'lloe ~ Mon.·Frt. 10:00 to 7 .30, Satutdey 9.30 lo 3:00 I • GllllALTAI IAVINOI AND LOAN AllOCIATlON~ FouncW 1186 • A-. over $3.5 bllllon • Offk.t 1tatewlde FULLERTON 255 W Orangethorpe 871-6101 HUNTINGTON BEACH Hunt. Center 898·9666 NEWPORT BEACH 2700 W Coast Hwy. 631 ·2611 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 318n-Oel Obispo 493·5011 SANTA ANA/COSTA MESA 3925 S. Brtstol 979•7580 SANTA ANA 14 Santa Ana fashion Scu1are 834·0717 • \. . , & •• ~ . "J. L • ,. " ... A8 N ' Orange Coast Daily P1101 I Robert N. WMd/PubllJhlr ThoMU K•vlt/EdtlOI Editorial Pgaie;; _____ ,,,•"•'*'..i".·Oct-°'*-•11•.•"•11-------·a.-..mr-·.K·"•1•bl•c"•'•e"'-'°"•'• .. 111P!ll•ll!l•!lldl••~'!llm Council Finally Sees the Light L.asl w ck, Newpon Beach Clt.y Council memben had a change or heart and decided to talce 1 km1 overdue, common s ose approach to their next bearinl oo the buUding standards tor old Conloa del Mar. Last month. lhey voted down a p.roposal to aped nearly $200 to moal nolloes to the 1,900 affected property owners The deca ion wu bued on the t.enuou.t reuon1n1 thul the re had been o much publicity about the 1ubjeet they needn't bother Councllmen al.lo noted that plannin1 com ml~loners hod already notified property own~l'I of 1 heurmtc in Auaust, so at was unneceuary to do the same for the hea rlng at the cowicll ln October. Thut allltudc led to what has aot lo be a low water mark for the democrauc process In Newport Beach -a private cauzon assumed what ahould have been a clty tas k of sending notice to j>ropeny ownen This tame. thincs wUI be different. Council members huve a ne w-round belief ln their duty t() inform the elec· tor ate and so 1.900 notices announcing the Oct. 23 hearing arc being put into the maal at city expense We can only offer a heartfelt amen to the born agiun views of the coWtcil It's a gospel thl:lt took a long tame to sank in Oumging Philosophy In the past year and a h all since the last city council e lection in Newport Beach, there has been a steady de· parture of employees from city hall. The most recent res· ignations came from the Community Development Department where Director Dick Hogan announced hts retirement and grading engineer Jim Evans resigned. Some of those who oppose the views of the council majority elected in 1978 are saying all the recent de· partures are evidence that the employees are being hounded from their jobs by newly elected council m em · bers. But there's a nother way of looking at the situation. Philosophically. the new council majority holds a no· g rowth attitude, one that is diametrically opposed to the pro.growth point o f view held by the coWtcil majority that was in power when many of these employees were hired. As the employees of that pro·growth council. it was their Job to sec to it that t hose views we re translated into ac· 11011 Now. lhey are faced with the task of putting a no. growth philosophy to work. Sometimes that means their earlier ({forts arc no w deem ed invalid . It's not difficult to :-cc ho\.\ any worker could become discouraged in s uch a "1lu<1t1on It's trulv unfortunate that the city has lost t hese ex· t·c llent peopie. but it isn 't the end of order in city hall. Un· doubtedly. there are other quahfied people who can be hir~d who will find it eC1sicr to cope with the directions coming to the m from current city council members . City Needs C o ntrol Mayor Paul Ryckoff of Newport Beach wasn't over · · stating the case Tuesday when he said the buildup of apartments and condominiums in the triangle of county territory near Hoag Memorial Hospital is "borreodoua." That's why Ryckoff joined Councilman Don Mclnnis, who long has advocated annexation of the area, in urging their fellow council m e mbers to approve the filing of an annexation application to bring the OO·acre parcel under city control. The vole to approve the application was un· animous. Fo r Ryckoff, 1t was a rather remarkable m ove. He is tht touncil's arch fiscal cons ervative Any proposal that 1s goin~ to be a long-run dram on the city treasury usual· Ty dra~his-opposrtion However, Ryckoff correctly noted that the case of the county triangle, where county zoning allows up to 40 units to the acre, is a special circumstance. The surrounding city property has a m a ximum density of 12 units to the acre and the continued county approval of high density projects is pos ing some real problems in traffic genera· t.ion and police and fire protection. We hope members of the Local Agency Formation Commission and Board of Supervisors -who must a lso a pprove the annexation -will see the situation in the s a me light and let t h e city assume control of the triangle. • Opinions expressed in 1he space above are those of lhe Dally Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 Box 156'f. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Pho ne (714) 642·4321 Boyd I Brain Waves ByL.M. BOYD Our Love and War man is' looking into the remarkable clalm that an encephalo· graph, the instrument that measures brain waves, can also measure affection between two people. Theory ls that how well people meet and mesh with one another depends on the brain waves they send out and receive. What the youngsters call vibes. And the instrument supposedly can detect. these vibes and fil\ll'e out their ln· tenaity. Would think a couple all wired up t.bat. way· to a machine mlabt bave a UtUe trouble tranacelving, bu\ maybe not. Anyway, tbert. Dear Gloomy • Gus Nouveau Beach resl· dents drive their own Rolls . wear other ~pie's initials on tbetr clothes -and elect the 1\up1deat council ma· jorlty known to man. J f • may be a market ror en· cepbalographs amon1 mar· riage counselors , and the medical suppliers ought not overlook. Q. "Doesn't VeD1ce have more bridges than any other city in the world?" A. No, sir, that distinction aoes to Amsterdam. With 636 spans. ..-. Sick children or ancient Egypt were fed skinned mice. Q. "ln which states do peo- ple on the avera1e make the most money?" A. Alaska, ConnectJcut and New Jersey. That's incorpe per _person. And the states where the' people mate the leaat money are Maine, Ml•· stsslppt and Vermont. And it'I noteworthy, too, la It not, that. Monaco'• national OTcheatra ii lar1•r lban ita army? Appealln1, tbat. Music beloni military mt1bt. Some service •taUona have aet up coln·operated dl1· penaers to aell compressed alr. A quart.er wlll aet you four minutes' worth. When Chaucer wrote of "bones," he meant dtce. Wbtn be wrote or "1oon1," be meant Lbq1. That 1lan1 bu ~ around ror quite a a pell. Rowland Evan1/Robert Novak Carter vs. Kennedy • m Florida MIAMI -Tbt 1urprl1ln1 amount .°' pollUeal power that Pr•aldeot Carter bu focused here to av~d defeat by Teddy Kennedy lo tbe Oct. U caucuaea beUt1 the moribund 1tale of blJ prealdeMy ''If Carter would only work Cootraa or the Ru111lan1 over llke he 'll working f'lorlda, be would have leas to worry about." on~ neutral ob 1erver awed by the abeitr power o( the C arter performance told Ull. There are reasons to spare for his doina so, even though the muscled drive for success he.re Is raising eyebrows of politicians and voters dismayed by the string of Carter fallures in other endeavors of his presidency. REASON NO. 1: A loss to Ken· nedy. who's almost-candidacy could be damage d but not Mailbox po11lbly destroyed by even a blf Carter victory. would llnlab Carter oft u a nau.a,ial leader. It would render the' baJance of bl• pres iden cy all but 1uperfluoua, particularly to view or Carter's natural conaUtuency In much of the state that borden Georgia. That explains the phenomenal -and aeemlntly effective - political engineering plotted by Hammon Jo?dan to beading off Sen Edward M. Kennedy Jordan's work in the stretch drive to the non-binding but psychologically Important Oct. 13 caucwies proves that in the game of elective politics, the flawed WhJte House chief of staff is sWl very much in com· mand. BY NO MEANS is a Carter victory positively assured in the obscenely confusing process that will select 879 delegates al 67 county caucuses Oct. 13. These. along with 838 non·elected del· egates. will then choose their favorite for the 1980 Democratic presidential nomination in a legally meaningless straw vote at the party'• November mock convention. Next March, the le1al nortda primary elect.Ion will select the actual delesates to the party's New York cooven· lion next aummer . But the Oct. 13 cauc:UHS ("a wild animal'' in the worda or Richard Swann. Carter's cbJer rund-ralaer he re) contain 10 much potential for Carter's political de~ise that he bas galvanized h is whole ad · mmlatration to help him He has al110 commandeered 99 percent of the highly effective state ad· m lnistration and political •P· paralus of popular Gov. Bob Graham, while puJUng In money and workers from all over lhe country. IN THE PAST few weeks. ousted United Nations Am bassador Andrew Young personally telephoned three black delegate·candidates on slates committed to Kennedy. His stern message: Don 't desert Jim my Carter now. Two al once re· moved themselves <one or whom . persuaded to risk Carter· Young wrath. later aaned to get back on> Scores of Carter and potential Carter backera have be4'n flown off to a tull day of frilly "brief· loss" on world problems in the White House -all expenses paid -to soften them up. A Kennedy leader in Jacksonville's Duval Co unty told ua that a contributor to the Kennedy campaign asked to be relieved or hla $1,000 pledge on grounds that Graham was about to appoint htm to a state commission. WHAT IS UNIQUE IS not such routine political arm·twiatlng but its eye.popping volume. ··What we really want," said one of Carter's ch ier political operatives here. "ls not juat to dereat Kennedy but to Schapp him." Carter's spectacular as· cent four years ago started right here in Florida when he swept the party'!! mock convention. His only seriolis opponent was then-Gov. Milton Schapp of Pennsylvania. Carter swamped Schapp with-67 ·percent of the vote T he ··Kennedy '80" leaders, stripped of any public help from the senator. will pull heavily ln Carter-hating J ewish preclncta. particularly the three large counties of Dade <Miami >. Broward I Fort Lauderdale I and Palm Beach That 1s Kennedy country Captunng the caucuses m all three big counties would gave him 43 percent of the elect· ed delegat es. a nd hts top managers -disenchanted 1976 Carter acllVlsta e1 re trying to cut into the t raditional. non· liber al vote in central and northern 1-'londa l.o show broad Kt-n nedy str ... n1Hh Tttt:Y ~IGHT cr>nce1vably do lhJt. m a pollt1cal proC'ess that defies accurate forecasting. lht'y might e'en do lx'ttcr If th~y do not , Carter \\<'Ill have proved that t'\ l'n a pn ..... 1ctl'nt flJttcned by poht a·al rl'n•rl.t·~ in W ;1~hin glon r .in -.t ill rm·u-. th1· :t~l''llm1• pow1•r or h1.., 0H1t·1• to ..,<.,,,,. " lncal \·1l·t11rj ~ul'11 .1 tr111mµh \.\IJUld por11•i1tt l1ttl•· 1f ;111ytt11ng for tht• wnou.., K1·nni·1h 1·onlt•'>b next w1ntl'r. nor would 11 v 1~1bly l'IC'vah• t tw IJCm~hh:d 1ire:.tdl·11 cy of Jimmy Carter Free Ente rprise B est Housing Solution To I he EdJtor In rrvicwmg var1<111~ t'd1ton:JI'> and art1clt'!-. in loC'al paper-;. 1\ Alt!Y beoomf" ~ th:.i.t Uum .• u.- a great controversy concermnJ! condominium conversions and rental housmg. Some cities have enacted <Jr dinances that greatly restrict a developer's ability to convert an apartment complex to con· dominiums by requiring un· necessary open space or parking areas. or by allowing con· vers ions only when the vacancy 1s 3 to 5 percent. I FEEL THAT this is just another attempt by governing bodies to confiscate personal property rights which have h.is· lorically been guaranteed by the Constitution. Wit h these at· titudes, and the dragon heads of rent control emerging, we are eliminating lending institutions' willingness to finance new apartment projects and we are eliminating ireatly needed af. fordable housing. It la obvious from the number of multi·family building permits issued in the last three years. that the construction of new apartments has not kept up with the demands for rental housing. I feel that If the governmental agencies wUI deregulate rather than increase the regulation of condominium conversions and rents. the free enterprlae system will take care of the supply of rental housing. and affordable housing. DONNA R. NORTH Nete 'Era' k•"IJ To the .Editor: Charla McCabe's article, Oct. 4 "Panama: End of an Era" ls quite mhl eadtna . That particular "era" may be over, but, alaa. a new one is just be&inning. The eighth wonder of the world, which Americans en&ineered, built, managed and maintained slnc. IU conception, will 1Ull be one which we will conUnue to pay for throuch our taxes. However, now we uproot American ramilles , leave mllllon1 or dollar• <U not bllllona) in equipment, aupport throulb maintenance and man· power t.rainin1. and a1aln with talCpayera money. Asato being a benefactor fot-aft4ther foreign country's pront. Lottna a llrateilcally located mtllUry poalllon, canal and military prop.rty. moral, psycholog1(.·;.il and cmot1onJI suprt'mac~. thl· American tax paye r 1.s becoming mort;1 ll~ ~pr~. {10.anc1ally 10<.nl\·enL and pat r1 <Jl1cally d1s1llus1oncd Fnr the next 20 years we. thl· taxp ayers. will i.upport. tram and mamtam without a ny nght!.. other than our government':, right to be repeatedly inadc quale. And again lo sell Americans short and al a losi. WE HAVE LOST a dehmte buHer to the ever.growing Com· munis t influence in South America. a ~trategic wate rway. and pride . Americans bad to feel something when the rtag was lowered by jovial. jeering Pana manians, claiming victory over a country 90 gillion limes it's size and power. And we the tax payers s u cc umb to th<' hypocrisy of bureaucracy We si t like gluttons for punishment. and allow our elected represen lattves to implement laws that disgrace. undermine. belittle and destroy the very founda· lion of the pilgrims of this coun· try. It's aJmost enough to make on e oshamed of being an American. A sh.ive ring thought. one that borders on the momcn tum towards socialism. ELIZABETH LAUFORD llJgltts l"adb19 To the FAltor: Black Monday, Oct l. was not only blackened by PanamanillnS ripping up ou r lowered Amen can Oag as they ralaed theirs over the Panama Canal. wrested rrom us by our presl· _ dent, it was also darkened by Newport Beach's shadow gov· el'nment ripping up American rlghts, asJhey wrested their pro- perty rights from them . . ' They were intransigent to the owners. that they allowed three minutes to, to plead ror the re- teoUon of their property's vaJue and uae, while the little clouds of their power gathered in the au· dience to cast their shadows over them. What the clouds really cov ered was the view or a dlmlniahln1 democrac1. They cast a shadow over the future of the freedom or a country. The freedom to be secure in your property. And the freedom to dream and plan for a better future without the oppreuloa ol 1overnment, like in un-free countries. wm Amcrtc1.n1 ever re1aln th.JI fn·l·dom JJ:a in ·· GOLDI l-1 JOSEPH WU-r'HY.ra•p ' fo thl' Editor Ht•gardtnfi? Tom ~1 ur ~h1nc '.'> recent column crit1c1i1ng tht· Coastal Comm1~~1on rult ng on Blu{' I.agoon Rlut· Lagoon w a~ built 17 years ago on beach sand and right to the high tide hne with permits that were proper at that time. but without any cons1deru tion for the publ.Jc How any architect and con· tractor could bwld on such • roundat1on. beac h s and. and right to the high tide line with the constant movement or the waves against the buildmg 1~ hard to understand. Such a loca· t1on was inviting trouble By bujlding right to the high tide line. the publiC' was deprived of its existing nght to walk on the beach. The small path left can be used only during low tide and even then the waJ.k before the ugly sea wall is scary If boulders are put in. this small path will completely disappear SHOULD THE public get 8C· cess through the structure. It will be a bad replacement of the natural beach walk. but at least a means to proceed to the other beach. Signs, to which Murphine ob- jects. to Invite the public to do so, will just replace the ugly signs probibitini the use or the "private property" -actually not a llowed any more on beaches and structures on beaches after Proposition 20. It Is bard to understand turn· Ing the events around. lsnorina the rights of the public. !'lpeaktng of blackmail and, above all, ac· cuslng the Coastal Commlaalon, which only follows existing rules. ' Remember ,;-It was Blue 'La1oon, as the worat example Of how to abuae the pubUc'1 ri1ht and destroy forever the natural beach use, which gave the most potent argument in the cam· palgo in favor of Proposition 20. It ls the location chosen by the owner whJch Invited trouble. and tt 1eema the consequeocca have to •betaken. BETTY HECKEL Otmeer•• l'•lld To the Editor: The Sept. 27 Dally Pilot. l'd11or1al headed · lt1 gnt Mt~ U 'it.'d " ~.1rranh romm1·nt fo r "' l'r anfi under '1m11llf1t«1t111n 1 ntt('CU rn CT"11ITT1'""tir.t' 1 >tlJ ('I i' .... tl.,..,on..,...,- 10 tht-Kt'rckho<r l.1 h con~trur t1on were ba.,t•d in J)Jrt b<'C'JUSc Thl' KerC'khofr lab 1.., on :in R·:l parcel and 1s s urrounded by R·I and R·2 reside nces A Use Permit had bt>en issued in 1965 tor the c·onstruct1on of two apa rtments. This J.9-year -old permit wa.'I changed to allow construction or o ffices and laboratories. Use permits may be granted for institutional de- velopment m a residential area for ··quasi·pubhc" use. Tbe Kerckhoff lab is not "quasi· public·· -1t 1s very private In· deed KERCKHOFF lab represen· tatives stated that 20 or more people will be working in the of· ri ces and laboratories. The in· creased traffic and pa rking will congest even more this extreme· ly restricted area. Kerckhoff lab representatives also stated that this work could be done in Pasadena in existing facilities. Tbe Daily Pilot objects to an "Individual" taking the time of the regulatory agencies and im· plies that only i-. large organiza. lion is deserving of their time. No reference was made to the ract that severa l others were similarly concerned and made their objections known at City Hall. If there ls a special in· terest group. it is not lhe resi· dents who objected to the con· struction of a private com· m ercial fa c ility in thetr neiihborhood bul KerckhofC lab, which was exempted from the building and zoning regula· lions which aiovem th~ rest of us. The unfortunate ract ls that an individual is accuaed of misuse of hls riehts when be attempt.A to retain the quality of life h,e abould be entitled to enjoy. The re1uln>ry ac-ci. wer._ crU&,. ed to better lM quality or life - but whose ? O. MASTERS • Letttra from readera a~ wtlc::omt. Tht nght to ccmdfnlt tftttr1 to /U .,,act or ehminote •lb<'t ta rtanwd. Letttra of 300 wortU or lfu will be gtvni prtf~nict All lnrtrt mu.st.,., clMde llpQIMrc altd mailbtQ...., bul "°'"" ""'II N wtthhlld on rt· qw11 f/ tul/tcint rfoton u a,,pomst Pwff"JI wfll no« ~ pubUtllcd. I. ... Oone" CtN41 luHn ~ ...... Olwla. ·"··~--Nt mot llet • lo v et. lier TUBE TOPPERS Of .,, eutllot -'IO hid ;ii.t lnlOt1nlld .. ~ 1hel he-~ Clll '911"9 With IOIMOfte ..... tit1. <IJ a. &..\19..,.. ··~ ........ ·~ 8o ._,,, Wtir '*-''' .. ..... ........ .-.... !!!.!..! .. , ... l'1:'!J•• ;;"";i.. .... .. =~~ •1r&:;~ .· . .. . " --.-~~ ,__ C11nl LC:. .. .,,. ........ "TN FMlll't.'' "The HolloW ...... Ol.Mwd •• KTLA e 8:00 -"Captain Newman, M.o:· Greaory Peck plays the title role of an Army paychlatrlat in t.b1I movie comedy with Tony CurUa. • TOMCaHT au.1 llOel ...,.... ~ Ouett JoM ,eliclitfto, I OAT1NO QAMI OllOlJOI~ Wl"6I wottUno l#ldef~. Tel U. ~He i.r (1973) 0-.. .......... " ..... "~ =1:::. ***'It .... Tt9MOll" ( 1952) u-............ NUftlM AA ...... .._""'°-"• ._ ...... ..._ llO ----...... polloe .MCMI • •tt "•tr•noe N•w World~ I 11161 Jolwt Suon, l(elll._, Ml._ TllfM Mlron!IUW retwn to f.wlfl llft• ..,._, lwO Ciel'ltllf ... 111 ~-'IOl\12 hfa.) KCET • 9:00 -Tutankhamun's Egyft. The role of the pl'laraoh in an· clen EIYPllan civilization is examined in this -ffrst segment of a historical k series. ,,.., ~ '°"'*"'• C.ily lrNotved With • detec;. ttW wi.o It -""'Cl on the umeceee • HOGAN'S HaOE8 Col IOlnlc trlea IO ...,,. Hogan'a Ncrell Andre MOfelll. ./ I TNe"MOI• f' 2:111 ..,. 2:80 MCWll *..., °' ~Mllln • MtOQA ~l,_lO ~IO .... tf\llllNw-..~ • "'9MGAT lvwt40NV ABC 8 10:00 -ABC News Closeup. ., OITSMAM Smar t 1• •Quared oft •0•1n11 th• 1ntamo111 LMdAlde and Ille ..... 81111. • • • "Ell~" ( tt:37 .. Fred MecMurrey, Freno. Fa.-. (111t •• 2&f'llin.) tnerwt .. ~ "*'"'° .,,.IMO¥ .... ~ 'llO!Un .... .,,. ,emly IO CIO e MIQ Of the lllirt ...... ..__ __ .. 611~ OUwe OOl'IOllGta the iot•on &~Ot~ Ire ln 8ecft't Sinfonia l0t Oout>le O•Cl!Qtre end • lroia Pell\" UturgiM" ~OlttMf'~ • Homosexual men and women discuss their views and lifestyles in this special pro,ram. (W'lll be ~stponed if World Senes is played.) • • CAl'T'IONID MC ... • MCWll •• • wltlk Of Tiie TOWI'-' c ltM21 ~ Otani . .-. Ar~. • ·GIT~ • & aTWiaOPIAN ~!10800 ,~;..,.,... °' •••ti _.,... ........ Oft pto.ti-. tutea. -Oift __.. IO ...... lltOM W'CI K.- IO tN ll*er ·~ lllOLOeY "Dlo-tklwl. ~== e:aoll MAUDE MIUde finds WAil• VfllY uncooc>etall~ .. ,hey pt'a- C>At• to go to a din'* petty • lt.OWWCY • C*:*( CAVEn Gu.I John CleeM (PAii I ot 2) G9 OVPEASY au-1: JON Gteoo Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH Q'I ME.AV OAIFFIH • au.sts Joey Btsnop. Patty Duke Astin, Teddy Pendur gran. Gla<1v11 Towloi Root 7:00 G C88 NEWS 8 N8CNEW8 G HAPPY DAYS AGAIN R1ch1e 1$ se1ecte<1 to tMICome a contestant on .i pOOUlar game snow wotll a ell~ to won $3.200 U MCNEWS G Cl) JOKER'S WILD • M'A'8'H . 't .. ~ . . ~~ . ~ ~J •• ,. KUdager Tallc• Former Secretary of State Henry Kiss- an g er will discuss his soon-to-be· published memoirs with David Frost tonight at 10 on NBC, Channel 4. (See story below J. ten to the Army-Navy game. the 4077th ia bom· barded ano left ""*' an une•ptod•d bomb to 081\.oM 8)SANFON>AH080N fn 21TOHIOHT lD MACNEIL I l.EHAER AIEPORT 7!30 G THE GONG SHOW 0 IN SEARCH OF ... 8 NEW\. YWEO GAME D MATCHGAME G TlCTACDOUGH ID AU.INTHEFAMILY lnsYranoe Is Cancelled" ti) GOOOTIMES J J •• the only witness 10 an automot>1te acc1dent, ilnd ll•s family 1s thrown on turrn0tt when he mu,st testo- ly on court e NIWICHIC* (I) P.M. MAGAZINE A P<Ollle ol 0-gl& ~I. mot'-" ot entert....., Chef Bono Allman. Cepl. Carrot doSCuSMt the beneficial elfect• OI Ille colot b+ullt tile F1reman'a MualOf c:orn- JHllll1on trom Martr11'• Vineyard Q)) 1100.,000 NAME THAT TUNE 8.-00 I) THE WAL TONS Olivia opens a day core center et hOt llOme '°' Ille cll1k11an ot Ille oetentoe plants' w0tke<1 0 BOCK AOOEAS IN THE 2STH CENT\JAY &H:ll poses as a cromonat 10 P<eYenl a bend ot dtnQ41fadoos from oblo- •1e.atong a ma10f city (Pan I 0171 • HIM'8TOYOUA HIALTH •Dentel Car•' Cl) r-.. 8AXTER8 ·ar-u-1n l:.IO 19 IEHIOH T-.. 000 COUPU ,. ... ~ .. .,.opera lif109'. but lhe ·a too .ny 10 -oonpublic 6ti) DAHCING Dl800 • The Hew y °"' Cl) C&Jl'9EM SIOPPEM HOal' R8lpll Lawltw t:00 8 Cl) HAWAII R\1£-0 McGanett trl05 to 01s- 11Uade a polioefnan'• gnev- ong wtdow (Sharon Farrell) ltOt'l'I wag.ng e ""'Y pet· aonal cruuoe to 11n0 lier llusb&nd's morde<e<s 0 QUINCY While 1nveshgallng the SUspjel005 SliiClde Of 8 toen-ag.,. Quincy uncov- ers a voc1001 child pornog- 111pt1y t1ng D l1D) BAANEY MILLEA Barney gets cauglll on the mlddle wnen Harm. and W o10 learn o U N delegate s Gllaulfeur os a slave and demand that tie be set lrM ID MERV GRIFFIN Guosts Joey Btsnop Pa11y Duke Astin. Teddy Pende<· gra&s Tom Oreesen. Gt11- ~ Tow1M Root ""°. lll ICAP Biiiy malta • O.I• wrtll llol teecller Burl end Su return to I~ ~afl and Jodoe ~ • IHIQle P#.,., • CAMEM T'HAEE . ar....,.,,. The WOf1I and M>Clal plltf0900lly bf one ol Amenc• • • majot c:noreo- g1 llC>f* a. Anna Sollolow 10:00. Cl) llMNA8Y JONa Betty. Ille lley ...... ,_. agaitlll I powerful mu<ct. suspect. becomes the obiect ol a blUfre cam- patgn of tetrOf 0 NBC NEWS 8PECIAl. ~T Format Secretary of State Honry KIM!flgt!f dlM;U- lloa memoirs with 01v1d Fr oat 80 NEWS fl ({Q) A8C NEWS CLOSEUP · Homose•u11ls • Suve•el gay mon ond women d•s c:uu tlletr v-s and ton cern~ 10 put-.1 an onto mate. 1evea1tno portra11 o4 llOW certain llOfn<>MauaJ• see themselves ti) NIOHTOA~V fiil MASTERPIECE THEATRE JOHN DARLING v. 1o:aol~ MAllW'lfCE THeATM ··Lov. FO< Lyd• EdWatd l ycl18 end a OfOUP OI tl\elr lnen<IS ll1V8 In U(ltoanc>us -000 a1 IN c:l\aloty ball dele>'le ca< p<oC>lem& and l yOia s ~ (Pwt 3 ol t21tRI 11:00 I D • Cl) Q]l N£W8 MAKE WE LAUGH MOW • • .. . · t 119 Deep s. •.. C IQS8) Alan Lacki, Wllkaln Bend•~ • M'A'S'H A m.,...'80 nurw wt>0 had ii -oou• reletoonl/WO Wtlh Hlwl<8)'tl wllen ~ WH ••not• and they -e on ,,,.. SllltilS •• aw;onod 10 lh<I 4077111 «I) BEHNY HILL SHOW Benny gels a 1as1e ol hr\ own medoc1ne wll..n Ile tr-10 rob a c:Ae<gyman fD DICK CAVETT c.-1 JOl'ln c._ .~ ... l IOI ?I 1 UO i) ({ CBS LATE MOlltf • • • Columoo Puo .. sn Or Peto,.,., t 1G7lt P~te• I .. 1. J..r.• cu .. dv CQivm- t:.o 1nvf!'Sltgille5 t~ mur06t' -----~-----12:00 8 7WIUQHf ZONE Luther Olng18 " the uni~• l'f can41dale Of en alien n.,__., wrtll humans • .....aN; Nl'Ol8l8'.E a> OETSMART fD 2t TOHIQHT 12:.30 8 MOYIE • • "Soutll 01 Pago Pago ' ( t9<IOI ViC10f MCU · glen. Jon Hall G) MOVIE • • • The Chapman Reporl" ( 19621 Etrern Zom- balost Jf J-Fonda fD TO BE AHHOUNCEO 12:31 D 0 BAAETT A A YOUtlO woman 1111110 wa• letrC)ftled by tWO rOOben .mac:nes lletset1 10 Bare111o 10< aecut1ty tR) 1000 TOMOAAOW Gues11 I ran• PaJumoo owner ol one ot Pholr.de- phoa s oldest ntQll1Cl\Jb6 •0<~r •eet> •<IOI& Booby Rydell .;ind ~dDrdn 0 MAVERICK M.tveroe• S1><1ng\ ID MOVIE • • ~.t•I And .,...,V 1 J<.01 r. ,.a 1 OllOb•·~·o .. I II•·••<) 0<• ~ot• tl:) FIRIHGUNE 2:6t I NIW8 • MO NIW8 : TOMAHNOUNCID ' 1:22• MC1M • • • "01p loma11c Couri4W" I t952) Tyrone P__., Stephen McHally. a:ao• OMAT ~ S:N I NlW8 4'00 MOYIE • • Among The Llv"'O" ( Ul411 Sunn Haywerd, Alben Dekker G MCME • •" "Tiie Golden Salamander" (19681 ~ Claude Paac;al, Vlllene La C:..aoge. 4:30 flll THE ONGINALI: WOME.N IN ART f"rida11'• Dayti•e Mo.,w• -AFTERNOON- 12,00 0 ••. >''Joe 8u11e<lly" (19!>7) Audte'Mu•phy, &if. QO•'tb Meredith A cunning > .. p .. nese man take• riOv..ntage ol lova haoleU (," wno want 10 publltfl a ·-soeoe< l I "' . 30 mtn I 3 00 10 •••. BIOOdsoort" 1 1')7 >I Ben ~. Gaty Bu~ (I hr. 30mm.I by Armstrong & Batiuk White settling 00wn to h~- fD MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT CJaa1111el Lbring• 8 KNXl' tCBS) Los Angeles 0 MOVIE • • • •,. Capt ain Newman M 0 ' (1963) Gregory Peck. fatty C<H11a An Army paych1att1.i t>ecom~ onormoualy decJ. oeated to 111a patients 12 hrs I tll) TUT AHKHAMUN'S EGYPT . The Pl'laraoll . The llfSI p<og•am on tM; t11storocat '4tfoes oea11 With an asoect ot ancient Egypt that '' most d1s11nct1ve among me Old crv11trat1ons . the pan ployed by 1116 pharaoll JOHN, IN l'W [5TIMA110N, THC. (N[R(W PMelEM IS ~Sll()NASlV Tl1£ MOST IMPORlMIT ISSUE fKIN6 G KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA tlncl ) Los Angeles 8 KABC TV (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) Sctn D•eqo G KHJ· TV (Ind) Lo& Anqoles ®) KCST (ABC! San Diogo 18 KTTV (Incl ) Los Angele& • KCOP-TV llnd I Los Ang1:1les 9 KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles 8!) KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunt111g1on Beach D Q.O) l.AVERNEI SHIAl.EY Lavl!fne dnd S11111oy ore slloc~eo to <11acover that lheor old high achoo! cluD has lurnf!O onto a oano ol loose Qtrls Q MOVIE • • ' • "WhOte Love Hu lI:) THE LONG SEARCH The Romanian Solution Bywn1one settings and 1nsp1nng Choral music are 1mportan1 aspects ol Romania s cullurat he<•· l!WJO end ethnic 1deo1oty. (RI US"T(){)A'(I Kissinger-Frost 'On~ for Tonight Proud Papa? Billy Crystal gets acquainted with bis baby after an unexpected visit from the tot's grandmother on ''Soap" tonight at 9:30 on ABC, Channel 7. <Subject to cancellation if World Series is played). Harvest Film Set HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Dennis Weaver and Kurt Ru1seU1tarin "Amber Waves" for ABC, a two-hour film setagainsta P'ain harvest in the Midwest. Weaver plays a harvester facing a final life criaia i.Dteo8ified by his ebbing faith in himself, bis family and his country. Russell plays a former· fashion model who find5 purpoee and meanin1 for hls' life in harvesting grain. ... ByTOM.IO&Y NEW YORK <AP> -NBC dedded to So ..... wttb jt.8 •cbeduled br'GM· cut cc.llbt of 'lffeo.ry KlNl.qer: An IDtervtew with David Frost," despite Frost's withdrawal from the project shortly before air time. Froet, perhaps best known in this country tor h1a series of interviews with former President Richard M. Nixon, aired in May, im, pulled out -~+re • I alt.er taping tbe interview with the former diplomat. The British television personality said NBC executives had agreed to give Kissinger additional time to comment on one phase or the in- .. terview. that dealing with United States policy toward Cambodia. THE INTERVIEW WAS conducted Oct. 3-4, and NBC acknowledged a third session was arranged for Satur- day, Oct. 6, after Kissinger said that he needed additional time lo check materials quoted by Frost. William Small, the new president of NBC News, said the network bad given Kissinger no assurance the ad- ditional response would be included in the bour-loog special. Last year Kissinger signed a five- year contract with NBC, worth a re~ ported $1 million, to provide oc- casional services lo the network. FROST, WHO COULD not be reached after the dispute broke, said after the second taping seasloo that although Kissin1er bad been out of government for nearly three years, ~'in terms of bis views oo current is· sues, I think bu remained in the headlines in a remarkable, almost mysterious way. Ilia SALT testimony seemed nearly as important u that of tbe current secretary ol atat.e. I' And thls ia particularly interest• ADVANCE llEGllTRATION NOW OPIN. ing," be aaid of the newa apedal, "beca ... ll'• u,e ftnt time that be'a aceouated ID any depth for bis years in power. during one of the most turbulent periods in American his· tory .•• Tbe special. to be broadcut from 10-11 p.m. oo Channel 4, precedes by two weeks publication of the first volume of Kissinger's memolrs, cov- ering the years 1969 through 1973. FROST SAID THE interview was not to be confined to that period. The two discussed, among other things, Cambodia, the Middle East, China and the Soviet Union, as well as Kiss· inger's impressions of Nixon and other world leaders . "These are subjects that are vital to Americans," he says, "because the country's image in the world to- day stems in large part from that period." Frost's series of four interviews with Nixon. syndicated to more than 150 stations in May 1977. brought con- siderable attention lo the British TV personality and talk show host THE nasr OF lbe Nixon broad- casts. the evening or May 4, attracted the largest audience ever for a news interview sbow. "I was thrilled witb the ex- traordinarily positive reaction to the Nixon interviews," Frost said. "I think there is a dimension only television can bring to an interview. which was clear with Nixon, and I hope the Kissinger Interview will do the same. "In the case or Henry Kissinger," Frost said, "he is famoua for be.Ing brilliantly witty, even Indiscreet, off camera, but not so on camera. ..I TlllNX WE'VE drawn out some of the passion and the humor that be Now 1s the time to sign up for ice skabng lessons at the Ice Capades Chalet V'Jhether yoo've ice skated befOfe or never ice skated in your 1ne, one of these classes is tor you. Cfasses mrup fast. so catr tocsay tor all the informatlon tor the whole family. ADVANCE llEllllVAnONS FOil GROUP PUNCTIONS. · Ice Capades Chalet is a great place for private or institutional group functions. Call now for reservations. Call now for advance registration ono addltl0t'ltll 1ntormatt0n ICI CA8\DESCHAlET 2101..__9aulnen:I, C:O... Meie, CA ..a Hot Line N....., (714lll'Mll1. I . abowa lo rea.l llfe, and we see some of that passion when he's answenn~ questions on Cambodia .. Frost said tus conversation with Kissinger on Cambodia "is tbe hlgbllgbt or what we taped." Kiss· lneer 'a discussion of bis role an formulating American policy toward Cambodia. the interviewer says . "will be important to those people what want to make a judgment on eambodt:ramt-wtnn s Hap~ the re today." Frosl first becam e known to Amen~ans in 1964 a~ i{/ creator ol 'That W~ the Week lhat7,Was," U. British senes that made fun of cur~ rent events and personalities. N~ launcbe4 a abort-lived Americm.. version that year. IN 1919, RE began a stint as a SYD· dacated talk show host. He attempted a ltve 1nterv1ew-var1et • ..__.......,.~~---11 N"BC ast ran. but the program fell vktun to the ratings afte r only a few mstallment.s. MOVING ... TO LARGER QUARTERS IN FASHION ISLAND 1Jus1 a lew aoors south ot our present 1oca11or11 20°/o To 50°/o Savings Bedspreads • Pillows • Accessories Everyth1n9 beaurolul you ve eve1 wanled from Nettle Croek Pius lot' ot things vou never knew Wl' olttm'd All at SP8C1al Special prices until Wtl mo¥o>I ALL IN STOCK DECORATOR - PILLOWS 20°/o Off . -l~ l •. ---, ~ '~ SPECIAL ORDER PRICE! 'You een nowJliie your MleCUon home 9lld Mlle 50'A_ of fife euttoftl onJw Dttu. Ad<l•IJONll lllbrlC avetleble '" matt l)ettetn• for dreperin •nd -.ct,.• a1 regul•r pricett ALL IN STOCK STOCK LAMPS 20°10-50°/o OFF PICTURES 20°10 OFF l'\.UI MANY, MANY MOAI! lttMI THAUOUT I TOAll C-.l*Y ftl lllf SlUCTIOll ·All WU Atll RHU SALE AT FASHION IS~ND nettl.E CREEk SHOP ONLY 23 FASHION ISLAND -NEWPORT BEACH tuai • ' ~. Oc10Cler ''· 11r1'9 8 Reto .... Neettefl Pension Plans Often Lacking ITEll: Mn. Bernice Trombly ol Ourwater. Fla. ta a wkSow wbole bulband'a peat error wu lD belle~ wMt the booklet Ilia ftnJI save blm Mid about lt.a ...,,'oa ptu. 1'be lnfonnadml iD the plan'1 gumm1ry de.cript&oa book'9t, w .. ~. llr. Trombly thoucbt bis wile would receive a IW"Vtv· lq apouN'I beoeftt 11 be &bouJd die, but wMo be p&Med away waexpectedly at 5' after 18 yean oa the job, b.11 widow toteudl:yoothln,. Tbe plu clalml 1t la not at fault for pnMd1Jll iD- coa> plet.e lnformaUoa because tbe plu aummaey COD- ta.iaed • diacl&lmer clause. sayine that only t.be plu'a fonnal docwneotl are comp&etely reliable. With the belp of the --------lutitute for Public Repreaent atioo 10 W WUnctoo. D.C .. 111'1. Trombly ls challenging the right of private SM9Dlion plana to use aucb diac•atmers. Money's Worth ... ITEM: "I RAVE BEEN a succeasful eleetrical engineer in reaearcb and development for 20 yean, work· ing for several differeot engineering companies, but today have not oae single nickel's worth of pension comine t.o me and my family outside of Social Secwity." Tb.la predicameot la typically faced by engineers wbo clia.nce jobs oa average every seven years. They and many other worken seJdom stay Joog eoougb wttb ooe n.nn to "vest" or earn a ngbt to a pen.sjoo. But a1nee teduucally tbey are "active plan participant.a." they are not permitted by law to set up lheu-own lndividuaJ Retlre- ment Accounts. The lnsUtute of ElectncaJ ~ Ele<:t.roo.ics Engineers in Washingtoo, D.C. la ooe group that i.£ urging Congreaa to enable employees wbo fall through tbe cracks in the ex.isl· UJg peosloo system to provide ror themselves. ITEM: UAVD MASON never worried about tns farm 's pena1oo plan, for lt was reputed to be ooe ot the best 11'1 the U.S. When, five years before b.is retirement. the nrm aJlDOUOced It was improving benefits, Ma.son took a close look at the plan. He was shocked to learn that his k>wer-paid coUeagues would receive little o( lbe lncrease. moet would go to the firm's higher-paid e mployees. The reason: Present law permits plam to "integrate" or s ubtract Social Security benefits from tbe amount of private benefits workers have earned. Masoo was· oot personally affected by the cb&nge ln the plan. but be reseoled t.be fact tbat employees who would need pea.s1oos lbe most would get mere pitta.nces from tbe plan when they retired • He sent out bundreds of anoo~ letters of protest and helped push lbe rompany into modifying its plan somewhat. Now relJred, be has formed the Florid~-based .. Committee to End UnfaJr Pens&oo Practices" to educate the publJc about how "llllegration" formulas work. _ Small, gra!)l>rOOt..s pensioo reform organiulloos are s tart.JOg to spnng up throughout the country. The abo\-e are three examples: olhers are reported t.0 a public at.Joo JU4t released by tbe Pension RJgbts Center, wtucb up to oow bas been ooe of a Uoy number among public LDte~t groups coocemed witb t.be pensioo l.ssues. (Tbe 23-page t.abk>td costs ll.50 and LS available from tbe Ceoler, Room 101.i, l34i6 Coa.oecticut Ave., N.W .. W ublq&oe. D.C. 200:9I. Bulk r-. awailable. > lt'a too earl) to de9crt.be Cb.la u a oew '"pena4m ri&bC:." ~ f'a UC N~. tJwlre ant real U,. ol a drin tor ,.... form -. botb MW and old eeti~ ~ c__. recently appolated a c.om•._.,,, cm ~ ~ey. c1e- s1goed to come up witb a comPfthemive natiooa.I po&iey toward retirement income . At the same time, lbe Ctti:tens Commlaaioo on Pension Policy (a lund of watchdog e mployee group) bas been formed to make sure tbat Carter's panel bears from plan partJcipant.s and ~. not Ju.st o:iana.gemeot "experts.· Pac Tel Offering Plwne Device A new automatic answer aod record device called tbe Aut.o!htic TelePbooe is oow being offered at any ooe ol Pacific TeJepbooe's PbooeCalter stores in Ora.nae County. Tbe telepbooe, wtUcb comes io three models. a.nawen pbooe calla with ao anoouocemeot in tbe customer's own voice aod allows tbe caller to leave up to a 20-mi.nut.e meaaage. IT ALSO CAN screeo uxom.uig calla so customers de- cide wbetber to handle tbe call personally or allow the meaaage to be recot'ded. Maoufactur~ by American Telecommunications Corporation. AutoMaUc TelePbooe is available with puab button or rotary dial Lease charges ranie from 112to118 mooLbly, depending on model and options. There la also an lnlUaJ equipment charge. Tbe AutollaUc TelePbooe bas modular connection Jacu. ao tt can be picked up at tbe Pbooe Center and In- stalled by simply phaggin& into tbe outlet at home. "1L IWSINE88 illatallatiom, however, must be made t.b.roacb oonna1 business omce c.bannels. The let ls offered with a decor panel ol brua!Md aluminum and atmulated woodira1D trim. An opdooa.t feature ii • remote wlit th.at perm1U a caller to receive ~ corded ~1es from a .. emote telephone location. Steam_ Used To F~el Hardtop MEROM, Ind. (AP> -To pautq motor11ts. It 1oob like a Ford with a boUer in the trunk. But to Berbo Boeard. it's b18 bot·wat.er hardtop. "Tbere'a not another one lilre jt in the world," tbe n. year-old farmer aaya proudly of b1I st.eam·powend car. "I :=r;~;;;;~;~~~ -G~bcM to 800 poauds ot awm pnuure. A bainilr- powered bf dieeel fuel beats tbe ••ter tn boiler COl.11 to about toO decree-. be saJd. '"Two-tbirda to three·fourtha of UUa La bod mM.," Bol8rd aa.ld. "ll lOok inore time to ftsun out tbu lt did to build." \ • -OM.Y fltLOT Thut'1d9r. October 11, 1171 .... .................. .. '" ........ :~.r~ .. =-:.·-· .. e:-:r:J~ --~ .. tinOt ,.,. ...... ~ ....... ---·--,._ eo cnu• 'Miii ...._ .................... ....... ...... .._ .. pro... to ..................... ~ .. ~ ... ,... •. ,.. IMO'f 9'INCN ~ ........... .,,. tMlll¥ •• do ....... QI ""' laory ................ &:::'°" .. 'CJlooMnG a --OI I.ill llllltt enect.• e111 ~-· ..,..._ -(ljtt ...,_ IO llOIP!Mdlione..al( ... 10tN ..... I OYl"IA9Y ~ONG ea.oev . oio-ion~ ~!,?== uoBMAUM ~ llnda wan.. _,, UftCOOPet•ll ..... lhe\I pre. pare 10 go IO a Oinnef petty e 1LOVEWCY • C**CAWTT a-1 JOM C..... jP1111 1of2) • OVDllASY a-1 JoM Greco Cl) TIC TAC OOUQH (fl .-W OIWFIN GUMl.1 Joey 8'ahop, P1111y Ouk• A111n. Teddy PeoOOI grau, Glady• Towlu• Root 1en to the Armv·H•~Y oama. 11w1 40771h ia t>om- bllf'o.c:t i8nd lttl Wiii\ iltl une11plod•d bomo to deluH eaANFON>AH080H fD 21 T'.a.f!ONT • '1?) MAtHtll I LEHAEA ~ 1·ao I THE GOHG SHow IN aEAACH Of' ... NEW\. YWEO GAME 1~ e oea NE'WS I MATCHOAME TIC TAC DOUGH ALL IN THl FAMILY IMUrancoi IS Cancell@<f' II) OOOOTIMEB \. I Hec:HEWS HAPPY DAYS AGAIN R1cn1t •& a111ecl11d 10 t>ecom• a contea1;;in1 on .. pooular 08"'8 ahOW Wllh Ii ~,o_,$3,200 I AeCNEWS CJ) JOe<EA'S WILD • M•A•&•H Wl\14e aellhng 00wn IO Ila JJ 11 tl\fl only wllneu 10 11n autornob•le ltOOIOent. and l\fs family 11 tlltown 1n turmotl wnen he must tMlt• ly1ncoun ED MACNt.IL / l.EHREA REPORT Cha1111~I Lbfh19• • l(NXT cCBS) Los Angctu5 D KNBC (NBC) Los Angoli15 e KTLA (Ind ) Los Angele& 8 KABC TV IABCt LO!o Angelos (() KFMB ICBSI S.in D•eqo G KHJ TV (Ind ) lo!. Anq1:1I&!. OJ KCST !ABC! Sdn 01ugo I KTTV (Ind 1 Los Angola!. KCOP TV (Ind I Los Angelt-!o m KCET· TV 1PBS1 Los Angelus e KOCE·TV 1PBS1 Hunt1ng1on Bticlch Proud Papa? Billy Crystal gets acquainted with his baby after an unexpected visit from the tot's grand.mother on "Soap" tonight at 9:30 on ABC, Channel 7. (Subject to cancellation if World Series is played). Harvest Film Set HOLLYWOOD <AP) -Dennis W,aver and Kurt Ruuellatarln "Amber Waves" for ABC, a lwo-bour film set atainat a grain barvestln the Midwest. Weaver plays a harvester facing a final lite cri1i1 lntenl1fied by h11 ebblq faith in himself, bis family and bis country. RuueU plays a former· falb1oamodelwboflndapurpoeeandmeaningforhi5 life in barvettlna grain. •• -'\lr . I~~ •' '-::-~ ~ • %-. I ,..,, -..... 1 . . t ~~ A ()<ofQ of 0.0.gsa Holt. mother of anl*'1-Che< Bono Affm•n. (Apt Carrot 01.wiM11 ,... bettalll:llll ttfll!C" ol 11\e COior blullr" the Fweman'1 Muller cc>m· ptil•hon from Mtrllll'I Vlnll')lard l10J 1100,000 NAMl THAT TUNE 1:00 8 THl WAL TONS 011v1a OQOna ll day G11rt center •• ,,., hOme IO< the cMdrlln ol 111• dalenM plan11 w0<~era 0 8UCf< ROGERS IH THE 21TH CENTURY Buck po5e1 u • c:t1m1na1 10 p<-1 • band Qt dMj)et 11ooes ''°"' obi!· 00110" c , ... , 1111011 ...,..,., ..... 09wit, ................... "'0111or'• tovor, llor .., • ..,.,.,. btl~ , .... 111wa1 ~=--..... -r---'",.,. .... •·T ... '""'1f,' "Tiie Hollow~--0.-d .. ..... • •.,. "ltreno• N•w WOltd .. I tt71) Johll luOft. Ket!llMll Miiiet. TllrM •rOl*ltt ,.._,,,. to IMttl .,.., elllloat !WO o.tur• ln~~l2 II<• I ·~·' ..,..,,.ION'/ lei~ Ouwa ~t• th41 lloeton ~ Orctioe. tra In a.ch' t SW,fonit t0t ~Ole Orc•tra and TtOll PjlltlM litutgiH" ll!l_O-..~ • HIN'I TO YOUfl HEALTH • Oental <M• (l)nte~ • Gt andma Mg.,.. In ecao I Cll ..,.,.. l*OOO~ '•• OieCOYeft' ti' opera 9ll'04lf but the'• too .ny to M'CI In publlc; Ci> DAHaHO DllCO 'he New y °"' CJ) ~ SIOPPEM H09I RM(>ll u- 9:00 9 (I) HAWAII RVE-0 Mc:Garretl triea to dis- ~ a poljcetnan'a grtev. orig widow (St\aton Farrell) lrom waging • rotlly pet· tonal c;runde lo ltnd h8' hulbjlnCl's mutdere<a D OUtHCY White 1nvea11ga11no the au•ptCIOUl IUIGIOe Of a llH!fl·aget Ovoncy uncov- Otl a lrl(;IOUI c;hold l)Ofn<>g- ral)hy rono a o~ BA~EY Mtlill' Bar,,..., gets caugt11 1n '"" m1<1di. wi.en Hatr.. and Woro learn 11 U N dl!l6gol c • c;noulteur '' " &lavf' ilnd dftfnand 111a1 Ile b&Mll lr&e TUBE TOPPERS KTLA • 8:00 -"Captain Newman, M.D." Gre10ry Peet play1 the Utle role of an Anny ptychiatrttt ln th1I movie comedy with Tony qurt.11. KCET • 9:00 -Tutank:bamun's E&Yf t. The role of the pharaoh ln an-clen EIYPtJan clvtuzatloo is examined ln this -ffrst segment of a historical series. ABC 8 10 :00 -ABC News Closeup. Homosexual men and women di1ct..a11 tbelr views and llf eatylee in th1I apeclal proJram. (Will be postponed if World Sen es is played.) 9';aG • Cll IOAI' 8111 mail .. a date Wtlll Illa IMeher 8uf1 Md Saul 1eturn 10 the IC)8ICKl•lt and JCl(lle ~ • tl#>gle C>*ent • CAMIM™"O ~ The ""'°"' and fOC.ral pN60eoj)hy OI one Of AmetlQI I majOr ~eo­ gr.,...,a. Anna Soio,olow 10:00.e (I) llA#IA8Y JOHD Belly ,,,. key .. ,,_. again11 • ~ul muroer au1!)4KI. t>eeorna• 11\e ODl!K1 of a tMMr• earn. pa;gn of ,.,rO< D N8C HlWI aP£CW. A90RT F0<mer Sectetary of S111e Henry Ki. .. llQ(tr d1e<:u- h11 l'T\4lrnOlra w1111 Oevtd Froal Bl =~EWS CLOSWP · HomoH•ual•' •S@v,,ral gay men urnl women d•• CUii 11\tt<f YI-I llnd (.()<\ ""'"~ IQ pre_.1 en 1nh rnatl' •evelll•no porl•an of "°"" cer 1a1n nomc>M•v••• t..-.el,....,,lelvff «I) HIGHT OAL..l..E.RY till MASTEAPIEGE THEATRE I NEMCHliCK 10'-*> ~ ~.,... Love F0t Lydia Edward l ydla and • groui> of 11\81• !fiend•....,.. an ue>toenc>ua *Vlfl*'IO .. IN -•IY 1>611 OMClfle CM prOOleml and Lydia 1 ~ (Part 3 of 12)(RI 11~ ID. (I) ®J NEWS MAKI .. LAUGH MOVIE • • '• lne Deep s..·· 1111581 .Ai.n LAOd. Will<am Bend•• • M'A·S·H A mwneo llUflO WllO nao " -t0u• 1111auonan1p "'"'" H•wk*'f41 -~ w.ta 11ngt<t ano 111ey _., on thf' ••••11& '' ~ 10 ,,,.. 401711'1 G) KHHY HIU SHOW Eklnny oc•• ....... QI n .. own m<td1G111t' .. nen "" 11 .... to roo"' Gl<frqyma11 m DfCK CAVETT (,uni JOl'ln (..-fP.,11 I Ol ?t 11.JO f1 " caa lAlE WOVIE • • (.otumt)r, PulJ' .,,ri Or SJw1"1"1 f llif/l1 ~ •• ,_,f , 1_-Jw • (..a...,'1., C'>'•Jm ,,,, .,,.,,.,..,"'Jdft,.. ,,.... ""''°"" of M MftOt wN .... ~ ...._.. .. ,......., ..... __ ....,.._..,.. .... ... ........... • io1111rr a... ..... ...,... ,.. au..-.~ I OATINGeM9 9"°'*WOMM .... WtllillO .,.....,,..,, ,..,., .,.,.... ,~ U#y lfwolvtd ..tti. ~ ._ wltO .. ""°"'"-°" lhll Nm9ClllM • HOOAN'a HMOll Col l(lfnll 1"-10 ...,,. Hogan'tMClet• • OITIMMT Smatt 1a tQVareo ofl •g•1n11 the 1nlamoua L..0..0. and ~ lllMlt• ..... • cwnoHIO A80 NIWI -----....oHT-----12100 e TWIUOHT ZONe l ulllef DN'Q1e ill the unlllt• ly ~ .. of..,. ...... •#l)er..,.,.,.I wolll humanl -~ ~ • OeTSMART fDNTOHIOHT 12'.JO 9 MOVIE • • sou•" 0 1 P•ott PllOO ' ( tllAOI VIC1or MGL.t gletl Jon H~ ., ,,.,..,. • • • The Cl\apm•n "'9pot1 • j 11162) Elrem /ltn bald! Jr J-For\da fE)T08E~ 12:37 8 9 BAAETTA A yOlinQ w<>mlH' wtll) wk~ tQttO<•l6d by IWO rOOD<•tS .. n~Mt. ,_1811 IQ & .. r .. 11« IO< i.ecurtly tRI HJO Q TOMOAAOW Gues•• f rQnk Pstumoo. r1•ne1 01 '>"" OI Ph1l..O..· Ph•• ~ l)l()(nt O"JhleluD\ tr,,,,..., '"'"' 10ota bOl>l>y f.fy<Jutl Jf\d J.. ,.t'>•1•n t) MAVERICK 'A•V@IK"~ ',prlf19\ m WOVlE • • t J f And •1y 1 t+ 'J t, I ,f l Cr('°")fJOf''td•f /•11f H(J (Jt• t" 1(.d W FIAIHOUHE ••ff•• ml&.AT9MOM .._ ............ lo e.-t. Mir Ooolll'r .. T• Ue _,..,. He la'r' c ,,.,,, OeoflO ~ Leallo L~ ··1 ... ...... MCMI . ......... , ........ lfH2) LI-l'eMI..._ Allclro Mer•. l ,....,,.oe• 1:11 --l:IO M0\119 . .... ~ .. ,,.,,. Fred -...CMYrrey, ,,MOM Finn«. " ht .. 25 rntn.) .MOVm • •• M, .. Ot The TOW!'-• C 19421 C.y Ot_., JoM Antluf . • QllflMAA'f • 2!111 NIWI I •• NIWI I TOM AHNOUNC8) 1:12 • W0V. I • • • ·01ploma11c Cour..,.. ( 11152) Tyrone P-. Stepnen MQqjty. 1:ao• QMAT ~ 3661 NIWI 4'00 ~ • • Among T ne L"""O" ( lfl4 II Suaan Harw-o. Albert Deilker Q MCWW • • ·, The Gordan ~amanoer· ( llNMll .,.,._ Ctauoe P111C91, V..,,. Le ~.,. 4:10 m THE OflCMNAla: WOMl:H'" ART f 'rldatl'• Daflf i•~ .tfo"ln -AFTERNOON----- t2:00 0 •• ' .. JQ8 Butlfif"fty . ( 1'1'>71 AuOte "6..rphy, 8uf. 9" .... Mered1lll A CUMMng J,•t14nP .. ., man takttl .. a • ..,.•"9" of tove II~ r ,,, w'1Q .. ant •n publlsti " ·~-.. ~ r 1 "' 30 m•n I 3 00 IQ • • • BIOCIO!>PO'l ' ••'II H BM JOhnaon. G"ry huwy t 1 '" 30 mtn I • tfl••hng a mator Glly I Part 101'1 m MERV GRIFFIN Guei.11 Joey S.anop Pally Ouke Athn Teddy Fend0t gr•'5 Tom °'_.,, Glo· ~ l °""* ROO! JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk 0 MOVIE • • • •-. c .. ota11• N-m•n M 0 111163) G•t!QO'Y Peck. Ton~ C...ma A n A•my p1ych1111ro" 0<.come. en0<mou11y deO -c.il«d 10 n•• pa1ten11 12 fL') TUTAHKHAMUH'S EOVPT The Ptut•<M)I\ T!Mo ltr•I program in '"" n1'90<1c;111 -Milo OC!•lt wttl\ an 11~1 or an<.14!<11 f gypt ,,, .. , '' mo•t Ooahn<.hve amon<OI ""' Old c1w11e1ions lne pJrt pleye<I by thf! pl1Gt110h JO~N, IN t"W C5TIMA1ION, THl l NlR(Ji( ~ri IS ~SllOMASl.V TH[ MOST 1MPOR"TAM'T ISSU( fK tN6 "") 0 ~ l.AVEAHU 8HIAl.EY l"•'Jf"" .. no 5,,,,,.,i ar11 SllCJt'-~ 1n d•ac;ov;;r 1'101 1110" old l\1gn ac;nool civil llH lurno<I 1n10 " g&ng ol l~gl(ll Q MOVIE • • , '"Whele Love H11> {I!) T~E LOHO SEARCH The Aom..tn•dn ~olulf<JO 8y1dn11n1t i.•1t11no' .mo 1nttr.>1t109 C.hOfdf mu&•C dtft 1mpot1ant ttspect\ ol Romur11J "1 c.unur.-tl hf)ft liOQu und 111tt111c; 1dent•ty (RI US 'TC>Of-,VI . • .· . .. Kissinger-Frost 'On~ for Tonight B1T0•,0&Y NE W YORK <AP> -NBC dedded to ID ebe.S wttb tu acbeduled broed· eut ~ ol ''fletu'J K.lulnfer: An Iotervlew wttb David Frost," despite Frost's withdrawaJ Crom lbe project shortly before air Ume. Fr09t, perh•s» beat known in t.b.1.11 country for hUI series of lnterviewt wltb former Pre.ideal Richard M. Nixon, aired lo May, 1977, pulled out .the projec.L Saturday~ t.wo .day.&. alter taping the int.erview with the former diplomat. The British television personality said NBC executives had agreed to give Kissinger additional time to comment on one phase of the in- .. tervlew. that dealing with United Slates policy toward Cambodia. THE INTERVIEW WAS conducted Oct. 3-4, and NBC acknowledged a third session was arranged for Salur· day, Ocl. 6, after Kissinger said that he needed additional time to check materiah quot.ed by Frost. William Small, the new president of NBC News, said lhe network had given Kissinger no assurance the ad· dilionaJ responae would be Included in the bour·long special. Laal year Kissinger signed a five· year contract with NBC. worth a re- ported $1 million, to provide oc· casional services to the network. FaOST, WHO COVLD not be reached after the dispute broke, said after the second taping aesalon that although Kissinger had been out of goveromeot for nearly three years. '.'In tenm of his views on current Is- sues. I tJlink bu remained in the beadlinea in a remarkable. almoet myaterklua way. Ilia SALT testimony seemed nearly u lmportant u tbat of tbe cuneataecretary of 1tate. '•And UU. la particularl,y lna.ereat· tn1:· be •aid of t.be ... •pedal. "bee._ I&'• tbe tint Ume that be'• aceowlled ta any depth for b.i5 years In power. during one of the most turbulent perloda in American bis· &ory." The apeci.al, &o be broadcast from 10·11 p.m. on Channel 4, precedes by two weeb publication of the first volume of Kissinger's memoirs, cov- ering lbe years 1969 through 1973. F ROST SAID THE Interview was not to be confined to that period. The two discussed, among other things, Cambodia, the Middle East. China and the Soviet UnJon. a~ well as Kis~ inger's impressions of Nixon and other world leaders "These are subjects that are vital to Americans," he says, "because the country's image in the world LO· day stems in large part from that period." Frost's series of four tntervle~ with Nixon. syndicated lo mori! than 150 stations in May 1977. brought con· siderable attention lo the British TV personality and lalk show host THE 1'1RST OF the Nixon broad casts. the evening of May 4, attracted the largest audience ever for a news interview show. .. I was thrilled wllb the ex· traordioarily positive reaction to I.he Nixon interviews," Frost aa.ld. "I think there is e dimension only televiBloo can bring to an interview. which was clear with Nixon, and I hope the Kissinger interview will do the aame. ·.in the cue of Henry Kisalnger." Froat said, "he Is ramoua ror beJng brilliantly willy, even Indiscreet, off camera, but not so on camera. "I TlllNK WE'VE drawn out some of the pauloo and the humor tbat be 1bow1 lD real llfe. and we lee some of thal pauion when he's answennli( questions on Camtxxha " Frost s&ld h15 conversation with Klu101er on Cambodia "is tbe hi1hllgbt of wbal we taped." Khs· ln1er'1 diacuaalon of his role 1n formulatin1 American policy toward Cambodia. the interviewer say~. "will be important lo those people whal want to make a Jud1ment on Cambodia and what's h•~ng there today " Frost first became kno wn to Amencans in 1964 a!> a creator of 'That Wa!> the Weck that Wu," ta. Brittsh senes that made fun ol cur; rent events and peraooallties. NBC launched a short·llved American version th.at year IN 1"9, HE began a stint as a SYD· dlcaled talk show host He attempted a live 1nte rv1ew ·variety show for NBC tan nm. but th'e pTogram fi v1cli.m to th~ raungs after only a few 1n11tallmenlb MOVING ... TO LARGER QUARTERS IN FASHION ISLAND -(Just d raw door:i soutn oc our present roc..1110111 20°/o To 50°/o Savings Bedspreads • Piiiows • Accessories Everythono t>eaulttul you .,.,,. ever wanli•O h on• No11111 Cr,,e~ Plui 1019 OI tn1nqs you n~t>f ~ l>l!W Wl' OlftJ11"1 All 81 Sl)0(.•111 1>Pt1C.1<tl proCu'> urilol wu movr" ALL IN STOCK DECORATOR PILLOWS 20°/o OFF -~ \, ADVANCE lllGllTllATION NOW OPEN. Now 1s the tune to sign up for ice skabng lessons at the Ice Capades Chalet Whether you've ice skated before or never ice skated in your l~e. one of these classes is for you. Clesses fill up fast so call today for all the Information r • for the whole family. ADVANCI llDlllVAnONI fOll GROUP PUNCnONI. Ice Capades Chalet is a great place for private or institutional group functions. Call now for reservations. , t ' - ---·ii*, Yov can -t.a11e "tlOUf .Mleetion ,_MO..,,. ~ ot ll'le W9'0m °""' prlCo AOdttlONI l•l>flC ff•tlable '" fllOtt .,.tW<n• fOf Cl,.,.,. end ttOCeUOfltt et ro0ur1t prt04tll! All IN STOCK "~~J~ LAM PS 20%-50% OFF PICTURES 20°/o ·OFF "-Ut MANY, MMY MOfll ITIMt nutUOUT ITO"ll c.-'*' ,.. 111r scw:r.-. Ml uua Mt r•.u SALE AT FASHION ISLAND nEttl£ CREEk SHOP ONL y 23 FAlllOI Jll.AID • IEWPORT IEACH ,.,. •