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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-09-10 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • • 0 e • • • I 24 Milllonaires --...-......... .. . • In U.S. ·Taxes ' - ... . . ~. ' ·WEDN ESDAY AFTERNOON, SE PTEM!'IER 10, '1975 • Uaki11dest Cut ... ' . • ~ 1 J • r, .,... Pel ,, .... ...,.,,..... -~be\.·Bert Murri.eta ~:\~Ji.aired et4to.dl~ .. - . visited his Coata -'Ml'SIJ Sllop T\lesjlay qn ordels:. fro!I'' · headquarters, ,mellnjng .thfi• c~·· lnotJll!i'.' KeV}D 1\finto, J.O, -..as taking ·cate Of a lm -mihi.ite a91'ai,l1ber<>T)! gomg ba£k . b> sc!hciol tbday:T9 :sei!:liow I 1l!L=ne~Qff, . turn·tollage'A3. · • .• • • I · , Rough Life ~ • 24 Millionaires Avoi(l U.S •. T~es .wASmNGTON !AP) -Twen-ronner Gov. Ronald Reagan to ty.foµr A,mertcen • mlllionaires pay no 1970 statt income taxes. m&naged.toavoldpa.yinfapen· (The ~ea,sure by As· ny in federal taxes in pne recent' semblyman Dan Boatwright (I). year, acCording to Intetna.I Concord),would reduceot.bertax Revenue service data reieased , shelters and seek to increase ttte by a member of Cotigress minimwn taxes the wealthy mun Rep. Ch11TIU A. Yanik (D-pay.) . Ohio), said in a Bouse speech In additio~. there were "54 in· Tuesday that s~v.e» 'of tbe dividuals with ~djusted gross in· millioaaireS had a w!aJ ad!~ !See TAX~S, Pqe AZ) 0"08• income of $17,1831008. an average . ol $2.54 million per penon. "There were also 17 -(olher) millionaires who avoided any tax wr calculating their tax deduc· Oona and credits.'' •cconlln& to l,RS information for 1973, Vanik said. He did not ldentlf1 tbe mil· Uonaire' o~ explain the t~ctlcs they usllil. Income taxes for some 6,000 · weaJthy Colifornian> would be boosted by • total or $25 mlWoll'• year under a bill approved by \he 11111• alle.to bly 54-17 'l'lleldaY-n d.lm!nl1hel the "renUernan rarm .. deduction thil. able4 MA_YBE THEY NEED PRWA.CY DUNCANSV!1-LE, Pa. !UPI> -T he Duneansyllle Police Ilepaftment ·hu a new telephone number -unlisted. Tbroulb •Ji oversl&.ht. the number was not included ln the oft telephone directory ror the borou&h. Ma yo r D 0an Kinde said llllcken with the pollce plloll9 liumbor will be lisuod to re11: ....... -. I I Man soil Member Sought By United Press l nternatlonaJ Federal authorities plan to k>cale and interview· a onetime member of the Charles Manson "Family" who formerly lived in a New Hampshire town that President Ford will visit Thurs· day. Officials indicated. they wanted to talk to the former Linda Kasa- bian, a former Manson Family member who once lived in Millord, N.H., one of the towns on Ford's motorcade route. Mrs. Kasabian has remarried and state and local police declined to discl<M5e the location of her new home. Ford 's appearance Thursday to help Republican Senate can- didate Louis C. Wyman will be hi.s first trip among the American people since he was threatened last week in -Sacramento by Lynette Frofl\me, a Manson Family member. Preparations for a presidential visit already were wider way in the nation's seventh smallest state Friday when Miss Fromme aimed a loaded .45-caliber pistol at Ford from two feet away. The Secret Service and other law enforcement agencies say they plan no unusuaJ precautions tor Ford's visit. "We always take the same pre- cautions,'' said Thomas C . Smith, special agent in charge of Secret Service in New England. ''I see no reason to change.'' Authorities also indicated a check would be made on Richard Pavlich, 88, of Manchester. a former postal employe who spent six years in county jails, federal prisons and finally a state mental hospital for allegedly threaten- ing the life of President-elect Kennedy in Palm Beach, Fla., in December, 1960. ''Both of them are of interest to us:· said Smith. "I'm not saying what we're going to do." Meanwhile, it was reported that Miss Fromme told one of the judges who sentenced Manson (See 'FAMILY', PageA2) F our Die in Fire FAIRMONT, N.C. (UPI) Four persons, three of them children, were killed Tuesday in a rire at their rural home where bare wi,res from two fans had been stuck directly into an elec- trical outlet. Robeson County authc)rities identified the victims u Willie Dial, 49: Warren Con· non lll, 7; Virginia Ann Hunt, 6; aJl!l Trena Ann Hunt, s. . ' • ' • ) --. - . " Free ~at Ag~ .82 • -· • ~reedom at 82 Mwderer Servps 48 )' ea1} • SAN QUENTIN (AP) -Odd G. Corhell, a double murdettr:lm- prisoned nearly a half century ago, is a free man at age82. Cornell was sent to San Quen· tin Feb. 9, 1927, where he awaited execution by hanging for the slay-. ing of his wife and 14-year-old step-daughter in Bakersfield. He had turned the gun 'on himself after killing them and suffered a gaping wound in the chest. After arriving al San Quentin, Cornell spen't hours howling un - der his bed. The warden had Cornell tran.sferred to Mend~ino State Hospital. where he re- mained for five years, sWI facing the death sentence. A dde d Trage dy The death sentence was com- muted to ltte 1mprisoi'imenl without .. posslbllity of parole in 1934, and the no-parole clause was lifted by former Gov . Ed- mund G. Brown in 1966. fornell was subsequently paroled but complained that the family 1 he was living with in Oakland "stole everything from me." lie asked to be returned to San Quentin a few months I.er. Cornell was releaaed from prison again this wee)\ and authorities said Cornell this time will stay 'fith the mot.her of a fellow inmate in San Francisco. "I'm not going to loaf." Cornell said. ",She's got some odd jobs f can do.·· Newport Boy, 9 , Killed by Auto A 9-year-old West Newport youngster running home from his. las t day at the beach be(ore school started was struck and fatally injured Tuesday after- noon on Coast Highway. Steven Scott Harding, son of Mrs. Sylvia Harding, of 235 Cedar St., apparently failed to heed the screams of his playmates and darted onto the busy highway near 61st Street about2 p.m . Police traffic investigator Jim Donaldson said the bOy ran directly into the path of an auto heading eastbound. driven by Robert Arnold Armstrong, 47, of 1019 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach. The investigator said the driver had no chance to avoid. the 'FI FTY CA/LED ABOUT 1HE AD' ''Your newspaper definitely re- aches the public. Fifty people called about the' ad." That's the ady.ertising success experienced by the Corona del Mar woman who placed lbil ad in the Daily Pilot: So. or Hwy, old ·cdM. pvt. entry, hot plate, $100 mo. XX.X.·X.XX.X. lf you have a room or <\part- menl to rent, call 642-5678. It only takes a few words in the right place to spark response. Along the Orange Coast, the· right place ls the Daily Pilot. impact. lie was not cited. Patrolman Chuck Olmstead and Patrol Sgt. Reed Gloshen had been eating lunch at a nearby res taurant when the tragedy occurred. "'I looked out the window of the restaurant and saw a citizen try . ing to get into my patrol car:· Olmstead related today. "I went dutslde iind looked over to see the boy lying on the pavement and the citizen was trying to reach the radio to call for help." Olmstead t hat he and Sgt. Gloshen immediately ran to the yowigster who was already being attended by two nurses wbo hap- pened onto the accident on their way to work at Hoag Memorial Hospital. The two r;aurses and the officers gently loaded the gravely injured boy into the back or the patrol car and sped him Lo Hoag Memon al Hospital. Hospital spokesmen s aid Steven never regained conscious- ness and that there was no response. He was pronounced de- ad atJ :40 p.~. or m assive head and intemal injuries. (See MISHAP, Pag~ A2 > Melee Probed ASHEVILLE, N.C. CAP) State prison Buthorllies launched an investigation today to find the cause' for a1disturbance that len. eii,ht prisoners Injured and three dormitory arca9 destroyed at Craccy Prillon. 'Ehe disturbance broke out Tuesday night after an inmate stabbed another prisoner, Donald Kantner,'n. ' Strategy ·To' Sop Jet Plan ByDOUGLASFRl'l7SCllE ot !ti. o.nr PIWI 54a1'I The Irvine City Cowicil intends to try to annix El Toro Marine Corps Air Station in an efrort to block county supervisors' at- tempts to add commercial jet Oights to the Marine airfield. The strategy session at Tuesday·s council meeting re- sult.ed in or.d~s to Gity Manage r William Wollett to begin work on a four-pronged assault on thr county scheme. The steps include : -Get ting s u pport from "anybody who is anybody .. in the area that would be affected by noise and crash danger from in- creased use of El Toro to lobby against c:"ommercial fli~hts. -Threatening the supervisors with legal action and outlining for county government the likely cost the county. "They might have to buyout the Ranch or Tur· tie Rock or whatever:· Coun· ci)v,.oman Gabrielle Pryor said. -Having the city transporta- tion commission study the mat- ter and come up with more strategy recommendations. . -Anne:s:ing El Toro Marine Corps Air Station lo give the city (See EL TORO, Page A2) Coas•. \l'eathe r !'.1ostly cloudy throug:h Thursday, according to the weather s&vice. but some sun shine inland areas in the afternoon. Continued cool with high~ rro1n the upper 60s at the beaches to near 70 inland INSIDE T ODi\ Y The little Pennsylvania town of Elysburg has been abruptly thrust onto the map °"'one of the pl.<Kes thoughl to be th~ refuge .of /ugitil.lf: Patricio flearst See Poge A/6. lnde,. AtY-o;.r.,lt1 A~ _.,i., 111) lJ llNO"" SS Muslt 8"1 Sil LM. .. yd 9 10 Moll:MI l'"\lfldl &• C.lttonoi• ... , ,,..,1 .... 1 ,.. .. , ...... } 0.Hlfhol 01·10 ()r1 .... C.10lll'f Al,IS c.m1r, an """11 Cl s <:nu-rd "'" Sy1.,11 Ptlrter llH 0..1,.Nellr" Al 5"111 RI·• EdltlrtltlP1.. .t.6 .O...'Sl.Ofll(!""Ollfl CH l!.flff<Ul ...... 111 811.11 S111t•M.1 .. 1h ··-' A-I 8•·1 TM.,lslen •• ,.... c,.,, "Tl!Nter' e1t-1a "'"'SUfl C4 'Mft""' A4 -W ... o Ct Wwld ""'""' M ,SS Mtlllop .... , " • -· ,• " .42 OAILVPllOr ......... Congress May Let TapesOut WASHINGTON COPll - Congrt.>ss acted today to make forml'r President Nixon's White I-louse tapes available for public broadcast despite Nixon's objec. lion:;. The llou~e adm inistration sub- committee on printing rejected rules proposed by the General Services Admin1stralion wh1ch would have made the tapes available to r esearchers but banned their r eproduction . GSA said it wanlt."li to avoid rommercial e xploitation of the tapes. The subcommittee. by 1:1 S.1 vote, adopted a resolution and a report whic h said, "That is the risk or a free society. II 1s a ris k the founding fathers at·<:epled in adopting the free SJ>C'ffh proteC- tions of the First Amendment. Any researc he r ean announce to the world the findings o( his re· st~arch ... ' • ' .... ' . .... .,,. .... ..• The same resolution was ex· peeled to come before the Senate Government Operations Com- mittee later today and before the Senate for approvaJ later this week . Under a law adopted late last year, GSA was to propose regu.Ja- tions for the disposition of the Whit e ftouse tapes and 42 million ot h('r Nixon documents. Congress had 90 days to accept or reject the proposal s. ~ ltlomma's Boy Today's action was the first step toward rejection. Disap- proval by either !louse makes the proposals invalid. However, the law's constitu- tionality is unqer chaJlenge in a court.suit broutht by Nixon. Responding to his complaint, the Justice Department said in a brier fil ed with District Court Monday that Congress had re- ason to conclude that Nixon "would not be a trustworthy custodian, e ven temporarily" or the tapes and documents. It i s expect ed that the materials will not be madeipublic l!Dlil a fter the Supreme Court rules on the law's constitu- tionality. Alice C.OOper Pays the Bill MUNICH, West Germany (AP)-American rock musician AJi ce Cooper and his troupe were detain,ed at tbe Munich airport after • local hotel •aid they left without pa7ing an $M0 bill and took towels, rugs and shower cur- tains from their rooms, police said today. Cooper•s chartered plane was not allowed to take off Tuesday anerooon, and the musicians were drdered o(f while police searched their baggage and re- covered the hotel's property. The hotel agreed to drop the complaint after Cooper paid the bill. Then the group Dew to Lon· don. l'r~• Page Al 'FAMILY' ••• that she was ••goina: to do something desperate" about two months ago. Miss Fromme wrote a rambl· ing letter in June to Superior Court Judge Raymond Choate, in which she seemed to blame herself for Manson's imprison- ment and seek atonement. About a month later, she called him at his home, talking murkily about "all th.is killirig," the Judge said Tuesday. She talked and wrote in the sometime incoherent manner of members of the Manson Family. The judge told the Los Angeles Times he thought she might be threatening him and his family. ORANGE COAST s DAILY PILOT Tl><' °"'~" (O.\! o.n., P<lol .... 1.,, ... ~.(~ It ""'b·-tlW ....... 1 ,., •••• " publ•\l .. d b¥ tt>e v••"ll'I CGIO•! P<1bli""•"Q C<•'""•n• S.CO••~t• •<Ill">""' ••• p<1bl '>hed MOt1d•¥ '~"""'11' I'·~~' lor Co\I• Me ... i>l•*Po'I Boo«~ •<unh"!llon ll••O' Fa...,l•I" v~n~,. l•vtn• . .,._,NM<- Y•tlll• •M t.•1;1""• !••c~ ''><>u•~ C""" ~ ••"01' , ........ 1 •<ll!lofl I\ P<1bll•~•d S.!"'""" ... ~ ~.,.,_ <l.tf,. 1.,.. p•1t>t•P•• putll!\~!"'11 pl•n! " .i )JC wttt B.or \tr•el. Co•1' M•••. C•••'"'"'• ~•la. Robert N. Weed P"''°""' •t><I l'utli•V..< Jack R. Curley V•c• f>• .... oont • .,., c.~...-... ....,.....,11'"• Thomas Keev il [dllor ThOmas A. Murptilne ,,...,.,,.,.. [dolor Charlj!S H. Loos Rlcttard P. Nall Tippy, a white rhinoceros al Lion Country Safari in Irvine, stands g uard over her 100-pound baby boy born Monday. The ba by, as yet unnamed, is the first rhino conceived and born at the animal park. Father's name is Dutch. Wh en he grows· up , baby will weigh about 7,000 pounds. Suspect in String Of Burglaries Held A suspect in scores or Costa Mesa car burglaries, including many at the samf' large apart- ment complex. was in police custody and under questioning today. Roy D. Linds ~, 24, address unknown, was arrested about 5 a.m., as he assertedly strolled down tbe street nearby, CBIT)'ing a bucket full or car stereo equip- ment, police said. Lindsay was taken into custody by Officer Paul Cornuke and boo~ed on suspicion of auto burglary, pending further inter- rogation by Detective Tom Boylan . lnviestigators said a dozen car burglllies w•fe sut.equentJy re- Porfed.8y tenants of the riearby apartments at 525 Victoria St., and they expected more reports later in the day. Detective Sgt. Sam Cordeiro said 13 were also reported last week in the three-story units at Harbor Boulevard and Victoria street, which has a protective Burglar's Conscience Interfered From Wire Services ZILLAH, Wash.-A burglar who police allege became cons· cieoce-stricken after breaking into a home here returned the loot along with $15 or his own money to p·ay for the broken win- dow. If it was perhaps Bruce A. El- ness, 24, or 6682 Tillamook Ave ., Westminster, he will have a chance to explain his actions in court. Yakima County Sherifrs de· puties announced Tuesday they had. booked him on suspicion or second degree burglary in the break-in at the Christine Farmer home. He was arrested when s potted sneaking out of an orchard not far from the burglarized re- sidence. Whoever broke i n , in - vestigators said, lugged a $1,300 stereo set outside, along with sro in cash, but then abandoned the console and hid the $90 under a rock where it would be easily found . He added $15 cash to boot to cover cost of the window. electronic security gate. "They keep cars out, but not thieves ,'' quipped one in· vestigator. Lindsay, who is a transient, is not a tenant there, said police, who estimafe residents' losses in recent weeks amount to several hw:idred dollars. - TAXES ••• comes of between $500,000 and $1 million who paid no federal in- come tax and 292 individuals with adjusted gross income of between $200.000 and $500,000 who paid no individual income tax."' · Vanik, a member of the tax- writing Ways and Means Com· mittee, also said that 15 major oil companies paid foreign govern- ments about eight times as much tax as they did to the United States in 1974. He said "it is appalling to note" that the companies listed payments of $9,S.54,U2,000 to foreign countries, but only re- ported $1,309,136,000 in U.S. federal income taxes. Vanik added: "I have great dollbts that the federal treasury actually received that amount of money in U.S. taxes." He said the companies which reported that information to the Securities and Exchange Com- mission in usable form had ap- proximate net incomes o( $18,lm,023,000. Bandit Calls The Police OAKLAND (UPI) -A robber at Flint's Barbecue cal led police because his spare ribs began to burn on the grill. Two men entered the restaurant Tuesday and ordered ribs. One produced a gun and an· nounced a holdup. Two cooks and three customers were tied, and sud- denly the ribs caught fire filling the cafe with the smoke. One rob- ber grabbed two bags containing $600 and fled . The other, a teen-ager, freed the victims and telephoned police. "I'm not 'going to take this rap myself," he said as police took hirn into custody. Mini-Dignity C'lerk Won't Skirt Issue HALSTEAD, England (AP) -Town Clerk Gale Watson has resigned her post rather than give up her mini·Skirts. "I am not prepar~ to change my style of dress to suit a few old.fashioned groaners," said Mrs. Watson, 32, who was chosen in preference to five male appli· cants for the $6,6()().a.year post 18 months ago. "I was first ticked ofr by a senior member of the Town Council for wearing a bikini al a seaside outing. It seems the sight or my legs was too much for some old fuddy·duddles." Mayor Kathleen Jones commented: "The posi- tion or 8 town clerk i8 rather special and there should be a certain dignity attached to the office. There are no comolalnts about her work. She l,s a very good worker.'' \ 'Don't Be Hero' Irvine Visitor Robbed of $200 A pair of armed robtJers stole $200 from a travelin,g busi- ness man in his Airporter Inn room in Irvine l•teTuesday. 'l'he rastals bound him with his own electric shaver cord and ten· ni.s shoelaces, forced him to lie 'face down and urged him "Don't try to be a bero" in the 10 :20 p.m. attack. EL TORO ... primary jurisdiction over the facility and strip it from supervisors. Marine Corps Public Wormer lion Officer John Shotwell at El Toro 4ald today the council a.- lion "is a shot out of the blue for us. We really are not prepared to romment on it.·' Councilman John Burton at Tuesd•y's session pointed out that the Marines traditionally have oppc>5ed joint commercial and military use of the field -so- called "joint use." The Marines and the Depart- ment or Defense, he said, are likely to "snuggle 1up to the municipality that mo st represents their point or view ... County s upervisors last month touched off the furore among Irvine councilmen with an ap- plication to the U.S. Derense Department to make El Toro a ••joint use'' airport. Supervisors, including Fifth District ·supervisor Thomas Riley, claim they filed the ap- plication only to put an end to speculation about commercial use or El Toro. Riley is a retired Marine general. But Irvine Mayor Art Anthony, a harsh critic of the supervisors' move, contends the onJy reason for such an application is that they want it. Similarly, Councilman Henry Quigley described the "obvious bias·· of the document on the pro- posed expansion or use of El Toro. "The thing that really con- cerns me," Quigley said, "is that they obviously slanted it by de· voling less than a hall page to the impact on the local community. l rear those who took a~ it wjJ.l say, 'Yes, this is what the local com- munity wants'.'' Annexing the Marine facility, Burton 8aid, "will make it pretty much <!Ur ball galne If they (Marines) go along." Other plusses, Mrs. Pryor said, are sales lax revenues for lhe ci· ty, ability to exercise some con· trol over access to the base and ''shutting out joint use.'' The council's opening barrage in the anti-aircraft campaign begins today and Thursday with distribution of a city-funded pamphlet In 39,000 copies of throwaway newspapers in the area likely to be affected by com- mercial flights at El Toro. But that, promised Anthony, . ''is just the opening row'ld. '' Clyde Lofdahl. 38, of Los Altos told police he vlsiti Irvine •bout twice a month on business. He was returning to the room after dinner Tuesday when tbe men walked up to blm in the hotel hallway. Lofdabl told police one of the men stuck a short.-bUTel Coll ..38 revolver in his ribs as be wa5 un· Jocking his door and said. ''Get in. Get in. Get In.•• As Lofdabl opened blJI doo<, the men pushed him Lnside and forced him to th• noor, be told police. While one of the meo)leld a gun on the buslnessm an and 1wit~hed on the television set tQ cover the noise, the other bound Lofdahl wi~ bis own effects. The men spent about 15 minutes rans~cking the room, I.ofdahl told police. They took on- ly cash, assuring him, ''We didn't take your credit cards," Lofdahl said. He described both men as in their late 20's, or mediwn height and build. One had black hair, a full beard and mustache. The" 'other, Lofdahl said, had a blond afro an inch to an inch and a ball thick. . The men fled down the hallway, he 1pld, · afteo telling him, "Doo't be a hero. Glve'US45 minutes." ' Except for the few inatructlons to Lofdahl, the men searched the room in silence, he told Police. After the pair left, Lofdahl squirmed loose from the electric shavtt...,.,...d,-bindlng biLwrills and worked his way free from a towel used to tie bis ankles. The shoelaces proved more stubborn. He went into the bathroom, found his shaving kit and cut the s trings with a fingernail clipper. A police lookout throughout the nlght failed to turn up suspects for the crime. Sanitation Meet The boards of directors or Orange County Sanitation Di s· tricts Nos. 1, 2, 3, s, 6, 7 and 11 will meet tonight at 7:X> at 10844 Ellis Ave., Fountain Valley. New Jag: $18,690 LONDON (UPIJ -What fu~ crisis? What economic . . , cns1s . ......._ With an ey' firmly on the American rrfarket, Jaguar has unveiled iU; new model -called the XJ-S, with a Vl2 engine giving a top speed of 150 mph. Fuel consumption was estimated at 15 to 18 miles per gallon, and the sell.tng price of $18,690 makes it the most expensive Jaguar ever. AC'forS~ Funeral services are set Thursday for TV, movie a nd stage actor John McGiver who died at NY hospital Tuesday of heart attack. The actor, who ha~ roles in 'Midnight Cowboy' and •Manchurian Can· didate.' was 62. Marine Vet Facing Trial In Homicide . SAN FRANCISCO CJ\P) -A veteran Marine sergeant will be court-martialed on charges or negligent homicide in the hand grenade death of a shopping m'all security guard, a spokesman .said today. Gunnecy Sgt. Edgar A. Puot, 38", a 19--year veteran, will face a special court-martial in connec· tion with the death last month or Lewis Anderson, 18, of Merced, according to CWO Ronald Frazier, the spokesman. Anderson died six days aft.er he was showered with white-hot phosphorus July 26 aft.era haod grenade on a Marine Corps recruiting display exploded while he was examining it, of- ficials said. Frazier said Post also faces charges of failure to obey Jaw(u.l regulatiOl)S and dereliction ol d.u· ty. No date for the court-martial has been set. > . Post is assigned to Company K,:. 3rd Batt'llioo, 23rd .Mmnn in St.6cJt.on. · MISHAP ••• The death of the youngster, who would have started school today at Newport Elellientary School, was an added tragedy to a family hit recenUy by mis· fortune. Steven's father, police said, died a month ago. Funeral services for the boy are pending at Westminster .Memorial Park and Mortuary . Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort SPORTING GOODS • BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES ' BACK TO SCHOOL Gym Pants • Reversible T-Shirts Shoes for School & PE Warm up Suits Sweat Suits V Neck long Sleeve Orlon Sweaters-6. 95 Open 9 to 6-:. Closed Sunday , I • • SPECIAL CLOSE OUT SALE "Abco" Brand Warm-up Suits Reg. 24.95 Sale Price 15.90 Tops 8.95 Pants 6.95 Subject to stock on hand 535 Center 646-1 It f - • • ~· S.p1emb9r 10. 1975 DAILY PILOT A1 ·coast Families· .tJ.~ait Adopt~ Rule ~ SJ DOUGLAS FU IZ!iit1Ut or .. ..,-,.. .... TH new adoptive paftllls cl 11 Cambodlan cbllclrtn are ~~-t next Tuesci.ir. A Loo Anaeloa jud(o wW ru.lo lbell on a w•u •• that could remove tbe ehllclren hom Uie!r-.. and ~lbem with•-adolJUn parents. · Thole walling Include two Irvine families and a Hlllltlnatoo Beildl couple. all cl -adopted children who arrived Ill a planel!WI cl 20 Cambodian cbiJdren April 12. '.l'lie child.rm were lroolibl lnlo tbe co\llllQI by w ... ld Vil oo. a Cbliltlao relief o....-. They were placed IA Americao .bom .. i!x 'li'amlly Mlnlstrl .. , an &v..oi!&ellcal Cbrisllao adoptlm aienc1 aod tam Uy <OUllldinl orcanlutiOn: - Till£ SMOOTH COVISE ol eventa Wal Interrupted l>y • ault llledby a Los Anceles HUltb Department physician. Dr. Richard ; . A ~ "W@M [f @@[[WO©© The toolumn 1ppean dally except Saturda ys and M'ooday1. 01'1f u prohl1·n1·• l'/u>tr ri.:rltt' f'ut f'>u1n1 />a1 u·111 tu/ r1•rl roJ)t•. <Jt'I 1/11• H11s1i'erlJ: 011d ac-- /1un you IJ<'l'<I fu soll.:1· 1r11·r1111f1f!s 1n !'.J(it'errun1·11r onrl IJU.'(17lt'SS ,\/(1// .11111i r <1t•~'8/1or1s fri l'ri l l>t1n11 ·A1 \'11ur Sert:1ct'. fJr cing1· Cou .~1 f)U1/y l '1/t1/ /' () /'{IJ /.li'11. ('•1Sla ''('$0. C ,\ 9:111:.lli. /111·/111/l' l/OIJf /1•/1•/)J11111t! /1l jH1/11•r. Pants Srarre DEAR PAT : La.St Christmas I ·took advantage of a special gift certificate offer at Pants Galore Jnc., in Huntington Beach. WhiJ~ 'waiting for merchandise I want- , ed, my gift certificate expired. A due bill for $14 .85 was given to me.._Now J_ find that the store is ·closed. Would this due bill be honored an at another store or at the firm's centra l office'? r - -. Gile of a ~am o1-..n Wllp mot Ille ,_.,.1ei. at u_. ~. atumpted to aclillll nw Ven. -cl I.be CamlloclWll. J:>t:. 5e<Jtt bu flied a1ult m1l~lokll that tht ecloptlon qen· •1 rellllecl Ill .Uow lllm .. ado!>t n.p V• ae nl!llO\Ol -ds. Mean*ll!le. e Gordoo Luna -Dould Powell famille1 cl lmDo. llul Gordoa Cribbs famll7 "' H11n11ncton Beach IOd 14 other tamill .. In the Loi Ancel .. and °1an&• County ar•u are wlitl.nc for ~e.outeome.cllhe 5ult. . .. ' ' . .FAMILY MJNl8Tlll£8 olalmJ'that If Dr. Sc<lll'I nil Is auc· .... 1111, th<lchildren may be taken rrom the homes oi their new adoptiveparentaandplaceclebewhUo. lllll Anthoq)' Gluaman. Dr. Scott"• 1ttorney. slid that is only one al aeveral joulble result. of tbe suit. 1n an iDtei"vlew. Glassman said U..t it Dr. ScoU'1 su.it is sue· ....rut, the cbDdren would be Pol{ unller the control of another ' • adojlClon q .. cy. Thal ....,.Y may decide to let the lT'dllldrm pl.aeed with adoptive ~ta stay where they are or move them. Three of the chlldtet, Including 1'rop Ven, are with f- famu1 ... - 'the 1utt. 11ld Glusman, <ont•nds that Pam'U7 lllAlllrie9 a>.«llod ol cbooolnc adol)tlve parent& dlscrlmlnated aialnlt Dr. Scott. Family Ministries requires a statement of adhereoceto an Evancallcal Christian faith before begjnninc adoptioa proceecl- IDp. BUT FAllllLV MINISflllES •Pokesman Peter Klln1 ..,.._ tendl Dr. Scott did not even complete the preliminary papen ~l•amlng 1,200 t<>UPles were on the lils t waltlncto adopt the 20 CambodJan children. Tbe 'Children. •aid Glassman, likely come trom Buddhist or Ca.tboU.c famUtes, although no documentation l• available. Plac· in.I them exclus,vely with Evangelical Christian families .. be claims, violates the intent ol a catifornia law aJJowtnt rellcious selettlon In adoption pJO<eedings to allow compllance with \he wishes or the child's natural F.ents. Family Ministries 13 qwck to point out the large number o( denominations covered by the Evangelical Christian label. Otthe 17 chlldten placed·tn adoptive homes, the denomint· lions or the Camilies included : Lutheran, Baptist~ Church ot Chcist, United Methodist, Presbyterian, Assembly of God. Nuareoe. Brethren, Independent F\Jndamentallst, Disciples or ~Slz Reform Church. Interdenominational, Evangelical Free. Unit.ea Brethren and Free Methodist. AT THE IRVINE HOME of Gordon Luna, Cale Pen Luna- once Pen Luong -has been part of the family since June 26. The year-old boy who has been shutUed around the globe no doubt doesn't understand the legal maelstrom revolving around him. Said Luna, "Once the child is there, even for the first day, it's aJmost like going to the hospital . Once you've seen the child, once he's in your arms, he's your child." Said his wife Rhonda, "The only way they'll get our adoptive child is over o ur dead bocUes. '' $15 Million Offered to Refugees • Ill Aid By LAU RI E KASPER Ot HM O•llr .. llel ~ Cranston's and Tunney's bill would cost an estimalfid $12$ million. · W.M., Huntington Beach 1 Pants Galore, Inc., bas closed all of Its branch stores and Its two main offices in Santa Ana and West Covina. Your only recourse ·at th.is time would be to maU St for the names and addresses of •the firm 's officers to the Secretary of State, 111 CapltaJ . Mall, Room 32', Sacramento, CA t5814. The Department of Corporation's status section re- cords indicate that the fmn is C'IUTent in Its tax payments and 'that DO legal action to dissolve ·the-bmineu is under way. You al• might want to request in· Chalk One (Jp for /flom The Ford Administration has offered to spend $15 million lo help school districts ofrset the cost..of educating Vietnamese.re- fugees but Sen. Alan Cranston CD-Calif.), contends that more is needed. Cranston. with Sen. John Tun- ney (D·Calir. ), is spansoring a bill which would give to the school districts $1.560 ror each re- fu gee child this ye ar and half that next year. The administration's plan. which would pay $300 for each of the first 100 children enrolled in a district ana· $600 rore&Cb. one beyond that, is estimated to cost $15 million. Cranston, however, said that falts "Car short of a clearly documented need." During a Senate Education Subcommittee hearing Tuesday, he argued that local taxpayers should not be rorced to bear the financial brunt ot a national resettlement policy. ~formation about the firm's re- . poned 1174 mer1en wttlli other •'leeta-pilatlff-· lf eoatact with of. ficen is not helpful. Addltloftal fees wW be requested for tbi\' data. A_YS waa told that the firm is operating under a different name, but Its fdentlty was not learned. Mldtelfe Agenrfl DEAR PAT: Which state agen- cy is setting up the rules to re- gulate certification of persons authorized to be midwives? What training is involved, and just what could a midwife do? G.L., Costa Mesa Tiie Board of Nursing Educa- tion. and Nurse Registration bas . developed rules on training re· 'uirements for aurlft &o become ln.Jdwt•ea and to specify the con· 1UtioDs a.nder which they can traetlce. The s tate Health j)epartment anticipates local Jl•raing scbooJs establishing ~ own programs to offer the atr1 12 W 18 months of tralaing ieq1llred for certification. H.dwives 1111der the new state r e- ~atlons wW have to work in .coaJanction with a physician. ~planned procedure would in- ~ye a pregnant woman inltlalJY.: /lf!IDC.. eumlAed by a docfur. If ~ bl classified a low·risk pa. lint, by virtae of ber health and 'tecoi-d of past births, lite doctor hald sa11e1t or reeontmeDd tllat )be be attended by a midwife. ,.be nurse-midwife would ad- minister all prenatal care. Bar· ,ring romplJcatlons, the midwife .._ performs the delivery and ..-abseqaent trealmenl. Lost Corf!t' " DEAR PAT: I 6rdered a handm ade patchwork director's l'hair cover June 1 from Blue Ridge Cottage Industries in Boone, N.C. My $9.95 check has been cashed, but no answer has been received to my two letters of inquiry. All I have is a new director"s chair still in the box. Can you get delivery or a refund for me? M-K., Irvine PoUy Capps, man ager of Bloe Ridce Cotta ge lndustrie9' retail division, bad responded lo yoar letters, according to her records. \'MU' chair coyer wu sent to )'OCll' rormer •ddress beeaase the firm was u.n•ware that 1otl bad moved when the order was nipped. A tracer ls being re-- q•e1ted from United Parcel Servlce re1ardln1 year c1t.ir cover. If It bas been loM ill the mall another wUl be made, bl ac- cordance to your spectncatlons, and mailed to your cu.neat ad· tfret1. It ••• 1trew.sed that all items offered by tbla Rrm are handmade by cratt,men in tbelr •omea, tbereby req•lrtn1 • •<er tlaae to deliver U.u mus Prodaced mertllaadlle. Kevin Minto, a s tudent at Paularino' School in Costa Mesa. began c lasses today with a new image. His mother insisted. Kevin grimaced a bit Tuesday as barber Bert Murrieta clipped, cut and combed. And he didn't seem overwhelmed with joy when it was over. Kevin said his last haircut was in January. Barber Murrieta said the day 'before school opens is one of the best days of the year for his business. The total number or school-age refugee children is estimated at 45,000, about 14,000 or whom are estimated to be in California. Water Off Catalina A~trtJ:c.~ing Spy ·ships . . SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Where the spies are today, it seems, is just oft the coast or Southern California, between Los Angeles and San Diego. American and Russian s py ships may soon be crowding each other in the waters between San Clemente Island and Catalina if all reparts are true. The zone is within sight o( the s horeline that is home for Richard Nixon and ·generations of surfers. The Navy confirmed Tuesday a Soviet spy ship has been opera\,;· ing for "some months" there, a1f area used by the Navy for missile tests . The Navy has been watching the ship but "the vessel is Ml international waters and the}"'tan do whatever they please as long as they stay outside the territorial limit," a N ~vy spokesman said. The Navy would make no further comment, but the San Dieg9 Evening ·Tribune iden- tified the ship Tuesday as the G. Sarycbev. a ''research vessel'' over 200 feet long and equipped with sophisticated electronic e.aVesdropping devices. Man Probes Mystery Fate 0£His Wife HONOLULU (AP) -A Santa Ana man filed a petition in circuit court here Tuesday, seek- ing police records on the in· vestigation or the mysterious dis- appearance of his wife in Honolulu in 1974 . Betty Harkleroad, 54, of Santa Ana. arrived here Feb. 6, 1974, on a two-hour stopover before she was to board a Oight to Australia to visit her daughter, police said. Her purse, containing more than $2,000 in travelers checks and a small amount of cash, was found at a Waikiki Beach bus stop 12 miles from the airport that same day. Her husbapd. Neil Harkleroad, reported his wife missing Feb. 9, 1974, after it was determined she had (ailed lo board lier flight to Sydney. Investigators using photo- graphs found a number of people who saw Mrs. Harkleroad in various locations over the Cew days following her arrival, but the trail ended there, said Capt. Edwin Roth of the Honolulu Police Department. Harkleroad reported that his wife had a hl1tory of menlal ill· neu, Rolb aald. The rust on its white hull in· di~ates it has been oo station for a lengthy period, the repart said. The newspaper reported earlier that the Glomar Ex- plorer, used by the CIA to retrieve part of a sunken Russian submarine. is being readied for a mission in the same waters to re- cover or destroy listening de- vices planted on the sea noq-by Russian spy vessels to gathet" in- telligence on Navy missile tests. Some of the devices may have been planted over 12 years ago, the repart said. The Defense Department has confirmed that tests will begin later this year in the area of San Clemente Island of the Trident, a multi-warhead miSsile with a 4,000-mile range designed to be fired from submarines. Other new mfllsiles have been test.fired rrom ships there throughout the year. The Glomar Explorer conduct· ed secret tests off Catalina Island last month. Chinese Sign --Bat;k at Curb At ·DMJ? Office SACRAMENTO (AP) -The "No Parking" sign in Chinese is back on the curb along a service road at .t.be Department of Motor Vehicles headquarters. And it gave D MV Director Herman Sillas a lesson in bureaucratic red tape. Under a new program "to help people if they're unramiliar with English," DMV workers last week painted "No Parking" in En$1ish, Spanish and Chinese. A photo o( the Chinese lettering appeared in the Sacramento Bee last Wednesday. and the next day it was gone -painted over. A DMV grounds supervisor saw the photo. checked and found no work order for the new messages, so had them painted over, said DMV spokesman Calvin Pitts. When Sillas learned of the s upervisor's 8.ction, Pitts, said, "'He muttered something about bureaucracy, threw a letter he was holding into the air, shook 1ti5 head and called the penon · responsible." Sillas ordered the signs re- painted, and lhey were. but not until the necessary work order waa obtained, Pitts said. Sillas, OMV director since last February, had "hiJ: r1n1t real ex· pertence with bureaucracy and· he loot It to the P•Pof pushers." Pitta •aid. l School's Not In Session For Refugees Orange County Department or Education orricials have no final (igures on the number or refugee children in local schools. As of July 24 , hot.-ever, JM school-age children had settled in the county with their families . ·"These refugee children, whom we welcome warmly;. come to our schools as a direct res14lt of federal policy.·• Cranston said. .87 tbe Assoe:l•ted PrtM Instead of clanging, the school bell is sounding dull thuds for about 3,500 Indochina War re· County Girls' Gym Co"ch Charges Bias rugee children still living in tents LOS ~NGELES (UPI) -The at Camp Pendleton. head of the girl's physical educa- AJthough Southern CaJitornia NORTltRIDGE (UPI I -tion department at Fullerton schools are filled with youngsters Two bandits -one wear-High School filed a class action starting another year o( classes, ing a Richard Nixon mask discrimination suit against the the relugee children aren't being ~ r 0 b bed a bank school district Tuesday, charg. enrolled while they remain at messenger or more than ing male teachers were paid their temporary marine base Sl,000 as he was attempt. more than women to coach after· ho ing to make a night de-h I rt me. sc oo spo s. And with 11 ,700 refugees still at posit. In her suit, filed in U.S. District the camp and leaving at a re-Police said Douglas Red·. Court, Vernie Marie Ford al.so lativetrickleof24 a day, officials ding, an employe of the char ged that certified female ·fear it may be month.s before Woodbury Company, had employes in the Fullerton dis~ some youngsters start their first gone to a Bank or America trict have been denied promo- day of class. • branch to make his de· tjons during the last three years. posit. ltowev e r , in · She said that while 38 percent o rticials say this delay is vestigators said. wh en of the employes al the district 's heart-rending to refugee parents. Reddjng tried to open the s ix. high schools are women. "They are keenJy aware of the deposit door with a key• he females hold only three of the 40 value or an educat ion and the im-found it was jammed. administrative posts. portance of a good start for the Redding told police as he AJso, male coaches are often first year in a new school, .. a returned to his car a while allowed to coach girls' sports, the Pendleton spokesman said of the van pulled up and a man, suit alleged, but female coaches parents. wearing a blue ski mask, are never allowed to coach boys' ordered Redding to give rt Of• ·a1 hi h spo s. 1tc1 s say some 45 percent m t e money. The driver She asked the court to issue an o( heads of famiHes have high of the van, he said, was injunctionorderingthedistrictto school diplomas -with many wearing the Nixon mask. end discrimination in all employ-,'.h~a~v:'.'in~g'_'a'..'l:'.'te"'.n:'.'d'..'e'.<Jd'..'u:'.'n:'.'i~vc':'r~s:'.'it:'.'ies::._. -----=-==========::::'.:_--'1m~ent practices. Gem Talk 1~!/.I C ll l '.\IPllR/1':...; LEGEND OF THE BLAZING RED GEM There is a Burmese legend of ''bla zin g red '' stones in the ''bottomless valley.·· and how n atives threw meal into the valley to lure vultures, hoping that stones y,·ou ld cling lo the meat, to be r ecovered from the vultures. Perhaps this ancient legend makes sense, as some dauntless natives still use crude methods in their constant search for the ruby even though modern mining method s h ave proven unprofitable. The ruby mines of Burma are practically the sole source of our rubies, and Rudy ard Kipling su ccinctly expressed the mining difficulties when he wrote, "'And they were stronger' hands than mine that dug the ruby from the earth, more c unning brains that made it worth, the large .desire of a king!'' Marriage Makers COAi NTH CIRCE . ArtCarved Wedding Rings You'll find the perfect expression of your love in our complete collection of ArtCarved w edding rings. Styled for today. Handcrafted or 14-karat gold. For a l1fet1me of love. c.Art Carved ,....., •i.. m•'"" of <••o• °'""'" t C'>"<of 18 23 NE'NPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS Ba nkAmericard-Maslf'f'Charge 27 YEARS IN TH I SAME LOCATION PHONE 548-340 1 • . -·ir:=i!All • ' • . I ,tf DAILYPILOT ' . Just • '. ~. '-..~ ·"( wl•h Tom arphioe '·- • 2-city From Wire Senitts lncreued school attendance is . r eported ln Boston and Louisville, Ky .. area schools un· der court-ordered-dl!'!egregaUon employin& massive busing. Police in Bo5ton skirmished with rock· and boUle-,throwing demonstrators in the Charlestown section Tuesday night. but only 18 arrests were re· ported durin1 lbe day. • • I -··-.- ' ' BuSfug Protests _W eake~=.-,-, IN XENT\JCKY, Jellerson Kndlng 1,000 Natioul Guard County Poll•• aald !our pupils trooPI and llate police into Jef. were arrested as the result of lenton County early Saturday, minor lncklenb, a far CO' from a.ft.e:ran11htofdemo0strations. the almost 500 persons who were Bo1ton police also brolte up a • •arrested during foµr da.ys •0 r 7S-car antibuslnt caravan tn the violent antlbusing aemonstra-city's largely l~b Charlestown lions aft.er the new school term area Tuetday nl&ht, and they re- started Th!!fsday, Ported (h"al a flrebomll wu round Kentucky's Gov. Julian Carroll said he would ask the federal ,government to assume the cost of and destroyed In South Boston, another largeily Wbite section that has been a center or antibus· Ing sentiment. • CANINE CAPERS: It was not- ed in the news only yesterday that the Newport Beach City Council, in i1s idfinite wisdom, has introduced a new law that . would ban dogs from municipal beaches at all times. Some dogs J know would be insulted. l..ots of our Orange Coast cities from Seal Beach downcoast to San Clemente have varied laws which somehow restrict beach dogs. They have to be on a leash, or they can only be in the sand at one time or another or they can't be there at al.I. Bloody Tripoli Boston school ornciala repOrt. ed, meanwhile, that attendantt at the city's 162 public schools on Tueiday"waa.up to IS percent of the 75,000 pupils. coinpared with an attendance r-ate-of-59 percent on the opening day ,of. the new • term on Monday . Battles Renewed OBSERVERS SAID today's at· lendance appeared about level with the number attendlne: Tuesday. Coastal history illus trates that cities have been passing canine beach restriction laws for years and then paying no attention to them. DONALD ELDER. a building contractor, Balboa Peninsula re- sident and former vice mayor of Newport Beach, once suggested to me that the dogs themselves do not pay too much attention to these laws. "Dogs do not come to our beach ror solitude just to get away from other dogs," Don ob- served. "They come in groups- sort of like an army-about at · divisional strength." "What do you do when all these ddgs show up," I asked. "Call the dog catcher, .. Elder ex.plained. "What does he do?'' "Well, he comes out and looks- at the dogs. Then gets back in his truck and goes away." You have to guess that one or the troubles with these dog beach laws is that nobody ever tells the dogs about them. ALSO, VERV FEW people de· rend the practice of allowing dogs on the beach. Opponents of beach dogs have all kinds of re· asoos. FirSt, some mean canine might bite a kid. Or, a dog might leave a mess on the beach and you might step in it. F\lrther, an enthusiastic dog might kick sand in your face when you're trying to get a little sun. Also, dogs might fight with other dogs. On the other hand, we ought to put all this in some kind of perspective. -First of all, why do dogs go to the beach in the first place? To have fun and maybe swim, just like people. Most of them aren't interesting in fighting or biting. I've never been bitten on the beach but I've seen plenty of fights. Most of them between people. Besides, a dog will -be bard- pressed to find a youngster to bite on the beach this winter at 6 a.m . or maybe JO o'clock at night. ADDITIONALLY, I've spent a few years plying the sands of our various Orange Coast beaches and I've yet to step in anything left by a dog. I'm sure others have. But I haven't. Maybe I just look where I'm going. But then I've stepped on a lot of other things of beaches-like old rusty nails, broken pop bottles, dis- carded tin cans and half-eaten, gooey candy bars. You cannot convince me that these items were deposited. on the . beaches by dogs. Also, how much of 'your tax money do you figure goes for the beach lifeguard service? Ever hear of a swimming dog that needed rescuing ? NEWPORT'S NEW anti-dog beach law will come up for a second reading Oct. l.f. You can expect a lot of people will discuss it at that time. Too bad dogs can't talk. - ZGHORTA, Lebanon (UPI) - The lull in the fighting between rival political factions in Tripoli exploded in a hail of mortar fire today and the Lebanese cabinet met again to decide when to move troops in to stop the 10.day· old battle. Known casualties reached At least 320, when 10 bodies were re- covered in the morning, wit- nesses said. THE NEW OUTBREAK of fighting was centered around suburban Kobbah in Tripoli, hometown of Premier Rashid Karami and political stronghold of leftist Moslem groups. Militia units from right-wing ~Chicago_ Teachers See 'Long Strike' By Tbe Asaocl•ted Presa Teachers in New York and Chicago, two of the nation's largest school systems, re· mained on strike today while contract negotiations continued. All public schools in Chicago were closed. In New York, a school board spokesman said the system was shut down for all pracfical purposes, although some schools opened for small numbers of students. OTHER STRIKES closed schools or curtail~. classes .jn dozens of smaller cities across the nation. Teachers in.New Yock City de- fied a state judge who ordered them back to work. The city's 67,000 teachers struck at mid· night Monday when their con· tract expired after the ftrSt day of classes. The New York public school system, with 1.1 million pupils and 950 schools, is the lariesl in the nation. Tuesday, about :n ,000 pupils showed up for class, but most were sent home. ln Chic1go, a week-old strike gave the '90,000 pupils in the na- tion's third largest school system an extended summer vacation. None of the city's 660 schools has opened for fall classes. In New York, Where teachers earned $9,700 to $20,350 last year, the salary scale was not a strike issue. Instead, in that metropolis which has stumbled from one financial crisis to another, negbtiators were bogged down on •working conditions. Teachers fought against school board at· tempts to enlarge classes, reduce preparation lime and sick leaves and eliminate sabbaticals. "We're not striking for money, because we're not going to get any,'' said Ralph Fuchs, an English teacher who was walk- ing the picket line at the New York School of Printing, one or the city's many specialized high schools. Frost Threatening Michigan's Crops CaUlonlla Tlll.l!>den._..,1 I~~ • bU bu1 c°"''"'-'1 1n "-nortt.f'I deMrt •NI mounlal11 M<llom tooa , MWll .. ,1,., tor.-c1si.r, w1r1MC1 °' t11w fll!lll llold· '"911'1-lf'llJ Ot-ltrl•1 ana llgtil 11'1o-•1 1h.o a...,_d <ll91t.i ..c:llofts lhh .._111119. bu1 ii.<Uy \.....,, 91ft _... •111MitlMI lfl 1111-Meti.,. 1tt1t •Pit:• -· ~"'" ~ .. .,_, ....,....._,...,.,.Pf'fClkt· •Jotlllund•r. T,_ ltigll lfl °""""ktwft Los 1.ngell'I -e•Pi!'CIM '9 m;i.,. -.. Imo,,.. low 1111; ,,_, •Nehlno 1..-•t T"'"'°''· lflll .....,,, ,., lh9 er.,•~" Kccwa1,. 10 ,,,,, .. _., ... \lltltlk• 111..._, ........ "lehl will -lfl IN WllPll' Ml! •lof!O -~''"""'""'·•1o mld•illt.w..1 ... e1...-llttM Pltll'I""' ,,_11'1•11'4 ..._,. ,_ ... ,... ..... ~ "5kllttw•wru, • r~s ••on.IMO 111 thl MNllhHi.t a1on9 I .. Allill'tlk llf'ICI IM Gulf of Milxlco C011h. ~ti with OCC:ll'-1 tluldl•111'1o"11 I P9t)• Pitted the upper Ml1.1IS1lppl Velley 11 WI 11 I,_ 'Jlllltr.rn A:oclo;let; 11119 tflit Pl1l111. 0.. Tunci.\r, k•< .. IMI OOflCls and ~lllll'IQ ltotlf NI cropt.,,,01 111 nortl'tlt°fl M~. Ttlara at"' ~lfHI of lr"l lllftort,..rflWI~ A wioi.M ~-t1Wnffr1W'"T~ ~ -llolollol'I ol iii NCI 11 C..... C-.at ....,...., .-•cr--n In 1 c-ldowllfllr tlwl-111"0 of a Ylllol119 •oc•.t to M.,(h tor ltte °" """"' 8vl e. ... tlWr Cit~ ilif'ld ,,.. riliCUt l'OM lftlolllol .ir OllidwGui.o. c ... ,., Wealller ..... "' (...,,ffodli., '"" nwnor,. Lltl'lt "'li'lllf>ll •ll'IOI 1119ht ill'td mornl11111 ~ ~ toolv 1111,..upp1r 14'•· COllt.11 ~Pl'lt\lr" "Ill,_,..._.,_,. 10. I~ ~11\1r11 wl!l r .. llelwtiotflM ..... n.. TNw1t.r~rlhlf'•wlHD9.,. THURSDAT !: .... ,.... •1"•·"'· ., ... ... " u ... Christian factions were spread out around Kobbah preventing any attempt by Tripoli ~men to move along the five-mile road toZghorta. In Beirut, an earlier meeting of the six-man cabinet did not result in an announcement on t.be use o{ troops. There wag no fighting around Zghorta itself, The village was peaceful Wed· nesday, and, except ror the pre- sence of hundreds of armed men, life appeared normal. .. The villagers stressed that the political overtones in the batUe overshadowed the religious issue. nGHTERS SAID they had been forced to take up arms to •·protect our property from thieves and looters from Tril)Oli. .. ---niecliSlieSl>etWeen Moslems and Christians in Tripoli , 50 miles north of Beirut, spilled over into neighboring villages Tuesday and threatened to touch off a full-scale civil war in the country. Hundreds of Moslems from Tripoli, seeking revenge for the massacre of a busload of com- patriots earlier in the week, at· tacked Christians from the nearby town of Zghorta with rockets, mortars and machine guns. WarMng militiamen sealed orr the area with roadblocks, but re· ports reaching Beirut said the Moslems fought their way to the outskirts of Zghorta .. Con!rontaUoos h~ve OCC"'1'ed at Charfe1to\Jn High School; abou~. n~ du~r.g pie past two days and m scatt• areas on · both rtilihts. Hund~ofmothers challeng'ed Police lllles Tuesday nigli . near Charlestown High, plecfalng" to continue tbeit pro- testa,until the busing of students is han.ed. Six school buses with 1218-studenu --atiOiit""the same number as attending Tuesday - arrived quietly at Charlestown today. Police were in position six reet apart, but not in the strict, ready formations of the past two days. There were three cblldren of other minorities and Z1 whites aboard the buses today. · Skipper's Protesting NORFOLK, Va. (UPI) -A Naval o£ficer relieved as skipper of the nuclear- powered submarine USS Finbaek be'Cause he let a topless go.go dancer perform aboard his vessel says he thinks his action was not improper. Cmdr. Connelly D. Stevenson said he has re- tained a Naval attorney '!l'dJs aifpealing the loss of his command. Ut"IT ......... BQSTON OFFICER.SHOUT.SAT 500 MARCHING MOTHERS '. Busing Fo•• Uler.~ by Double Police Une Ex-LBJ Aide Scoffs:· At. Pro · osal Story ~ ·1 :I FORT WORTH, Tox. (AP) - Lyndon B. Johnson may have on- . ce proposed marrla1e to a eon- ' fidante but the woman was naive if she took him seriously. says former presidential press secretary Bill Moyers. MOYERS SAID at a news con· ference Tuesday that it should be remembered that Johnson bad a flair for va.st exaggerations. Moy,r's remarks at Te:s:as Christian Univenity were the outgrowth or a boot being written by Doris Kearns. now an ·as. sociate professor at Harvard University who was a close as· aoclateol Johnson. Moyers said. ''LBJ said man_y · things to many people in the beat· of anger. in the wiles of · persuasion and in the passion o(· frustration which every presi- dentfaces. •• . Daily Pflot Dtli•.,-Y lsGwarllldeed Monday.f'nd1y: II you do f10I have your paper by 5 30 p m., call beloie 1 p.m. and your copy will be de- livered. SatUfday and Sunday: If vou do r'IOf receiYe 'fOUf copy by 9 am. s.tUt"• day, or 8 1.m. Sunday, call belore 10 a.m. and your copy •111 be de+lvered. Clrc.i.tlOfl Telfplla 111 Under a complice\ted plan that apportions government posts by religion, Moslems and Christians have shared power in the divided nation of 2.9. million since in - dependence from France three decades ago, "I'm in the middle of Navy pr~eediogS in my behalf and I'm already concerned that the press just has not done my cause any good and it's certainly m~ intention not to COD· tlnl:le, £he pr•s fctivity," Stevenson said. She said recently that Johnson once said he loved her and even propaeed marriage. Most Or11nge County Areas t•1-4J2t Nol'th#est Hunltngton Beach. • and Weslmirister ••.•.... 1-.1110 SanOemente. Capls1raroo Beach. . , I San Juan CaDlstrano. 0909 Point South Laguna. Persons must realize that ''hyperbole' was to Lyndon Johitson what oxygen is to life," Laguna Niguel • , .•• , •••• 4fMtlO :· . ./.-----''-~ .. • §eniurcitizens • ar-e special at §uuth· Cuast· ~ati()nal 13ank! mJ e "Someone ~pec ial." Open an account m.J and you 'll automatically qualify for...all these money saving South Coast National Bank· An'd you'll pay no service charge for; <CASHIERS CHECKS TRAVELERS CHECKS service,: ~ FREE CHECKING ACCOUNTS MONEY ORDERS DEPOSIT BY MAIL POSTAGE PAID AUTOMATIC SOCIAL SECURITY CHECK DEPOSIT SERVI CE There's sit-down banking for yot/T convenience and Senior Citizens can ride OCTO busses to our door free ••• take Route 51 , 53, 57, 65, or 146. J Think young. There'& no prool of •9• required. Open your new aecount wllll ua tod•Y •nd dlacover courteous, efficient, per90nallzed 1anrlce •t the bank that really carea about all Ila cualomers. Member FDIC 8~9 Sunliower St., Cosla Mes'JCa. 92626 1 ' • \ • • .. , • 11 ,r ! 1 • i ( I • i I ' ' I ' .. :· . • ! ' • • ' I I I • t ' • • . • • t • i I I • • t ! . - ' L .• • 11 . • I Police 1.Chief Resi~ · SAN l>lEGO (AP) - Jl•Y Hoobler bu r• 111,....S u Sllll Dies!>' J>Oltcor cmr, fhe su Diet!> Union aaid, quot-il!I. uoa•med city of• lldlll. -.Tiie p•per •aid :l'raobler turned .Ill bis ,.. al111tation Tuesday 1111« ~Jii.,;i~~~=~ meetlns •ltb City ~•pa '(, State ) Singer Diana Ross _. -escaped-when flr .. '------~. ~e out in her 30- lf ao ager lluah room· house in McKlnley for an hour. ll-a 11 bu Tu es day llqobler, 48, bu-. causing $45 ooo baa.Uy crlUoind foe bis· damage to the home role In the seizure of and its conteots private psycbologlcal · ijles t .. pt bJ' rolice • c4,1nelor Wl llam N 10'.:'.::~· CtJllll· avy ll.uin .~Defeated s B' ·SACRAMENTO (UPI) ays e 8 -'Jbe Sen.ate bu ovef\o • wbelmlncly defeated an 'B• -----1' ~u_embly-approved _J8eAUAI measure asking the federal sovunment to SAN DIEGO CAP! - reopen the lnvesUgation The f~eral govemnient of the assassination of is seeking dismissal cL a President John F. Ken-suit by a Naval Reserve nedy. The resolution was officer who says the killed Tuesday on a 6-27 Navy is trying to get rid vote. of him because he is a 5en. Dennis Carpenter homosexual. CR-Newport Beach), a U\sst. U.S. Atty. Peter former FBI agent, said Bowie-said Tuesday that the only purpose of re-the federal court suit by openingtheinvestigation Cmdr. Gary Hewton would be to discredit the Hess is premature and il- FBI. He s·atd -that no -lepl~inee-none-cf-tbe-de­ crjminal investigation in fen~ants. live in Southern history bas received so Califonua. Hess, 44, says . much discussion as the he ls not a homosexual Kennedy assassination. but a .bisexual and adds .. Flash Floods Sweep Desert llJ'U..Aml•--- J\alo.y •ealher In S..dbem CallfomJa, tr111er-m, ileoeit lllbtnln1 at«ms that claimed the life of one-.oman, m expected to clear up by the weekend. A Callfomla Hlellway Patrol spolcetmm said 1!21ubelb Nufeld, 23, d llont.rey Park. wu kllled when bu car wu •truck some 20 mlles oortb ol ll0o lave by •~Ifft wide wall d water that wu "at eut eilblf....t deep."' Oflfcer Robert CUpenter said tbe car wu wabed mon! than JOO feet away from Califomla lf, the main route llnklnaLoe Ancel.es and Re.no, Nev. Tiii: WOlllAN'S llODY was low>d two mn ... east oltbe roadway, authorities said.1. Carpenter aald !be llllltning wu \o lntuse, he -olf. his badge and other metal on bi5 cloth .. befoo9 plunsln& into three-foot water to wade to the woman,. car. · Waft crewa from Tehachapi, Mojave., Inyokern and Blolbop worked tbrOQgh the ni&bt to re1cue atrMdecl motorists, whose ~ehicles were mired in mud.that wu five. feet deep in some places. ' TRESPBCl"ACULAlllllbtningstormawuhed oat lnaDJ' str..tches. d other desert roadways and California Hlshway Patrol olficus atruscled to kffp-nc moving. Meanwhile, SU Bernardino County sheriff'• depuUea re.ported the rescue of . a 16-year-old Bantow youth Tut>Sday afternoon aftu be and a friend were swept away in rushing flood waters while ridlnl motorcycles across Lenwood Wash. five mUea south of Barstow. ' Officers said Rudy Jaramillo and Roland O'Ne.al, 17, of Barstow, were riding their cycles in an offroad vehicle area off Interstate 15 when the in- cident occurred. A DEPUTY SA.ID the youths were struck by a wall of water five feet high and 50 feet wide and car- ried downstream about. 50 yards. O'Neal was left on lo land bar. sun -cbed on bi5 cycle . .Jaramillo, however, was carried farther downstream a..Qd was hanging on to a limb. , StruHlfue toreaailili friend, O'Neifloot his cycle. ,After being cut off by the stiff currents, he dove underwater, swam 10 feet to his bike and rode back for help, the deputy said, ' Ne.o PoQey •t . · that his sexual tastes are nOne of the Navy's busi- ness. ••1t was scary," Jaramillo said later. "The water kept r;ising and l could see it was a matter of swimming for safety or drowning, " when he dove in and swam to a spot where O'Neal and deputies plucked him from the waters. I BURBANK (UPI) - Lockheed Airer aft Corp., stung by a bribery scan- dal, said Tuesday that it will apply U.S. Jaws to overseas sales transac· lions, refusing to make payments to foreign gov- ernment officials il such payments would be il- J eg a1 in the United St.ates. A Navy review b>ard in San Diego recom- mended last June that Hess, a Santa Barbara educator, be discbatged from the Navy as a homosex ual. NEITHER VOl.1'111 was injured, said Deputy Walter Mcilvain, "butthey'realotsmarter. ~· California 395, the major route linking San Bernardino and Reno, was flooded in sections especially in the vicinity of its intersection with California S8 and near the Boron Air Force Station immediately lo the north. ' A ''stringent new L J>Qlicy" has been a,dopted , In! the selection, use and payment of foreign ••!laJes consuJtants," the company said in a state- ment. Hess is attached to a Naval Air Reserve unjt at Pt. &tugu. He says his sexual preferences have never affected his performance as an pf- ficer.' ' He also accused the Navy of persecuting him because of his -public support of gay peopl~t'6 c~uses. The Death Valley Nation.al Monument was re- ported.taolated with roads washed out 80 percent to the east and west of the park. Major Ooodi.ng was reported along the Warmagosa River. A160 affected by the flooding were California 136, 127 and 190, ~tween the Lone Pine area and the Nevada border, while California 178 Extension was closed between Trona and Panamint Valley. ~ . .. ! . . :: Penney I ~j ------~----~ ....... ------------------~~~....,;;;.._ ______ ._, Rockwell electronic calculators give you The Answer. 39.95 Model 31R slide rule memory with rechargeable batteries Invaluable for anyone working with reciprocals, square roots, percentages. ' Especially helpful in college math, marketing, retailing. Addressable memory; automatic constants and repeat; sign change. With better/es, charger case. • 89.95 ' . Rockwell 63R slide rule with scientific notation Performs complex calculations such as fac torial computations, degree/ radian conversion, parentfietical operations. Extra large display. Ideal for engineers, scientists. Batteries, charger, case included. 19.88 18R electronic calculator with percent and memory Ideal for everyday use at home or in the office. Perceot key solves add-on and d iscount prob'lems. Algebraic logic; automatic constant and repeat. Floating decimal and negative indicator; dual clear entry/clear all key; 8 digit display. :1:MiXO·A CADIA CANOGA PARK CARSON DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH KEWOOD • MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLLYWOOD NORTHRIDGE RANGE •THE CITY' PUENTE HILLS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO TORRANCE • Y~NTUllA VfHITIWqQD I l I DAil Y PILOT .ti Bro'UJn 'Says Sclwol Officia'"ls <h?erpaid LOS ANGELES'(AP) the United Teacben ol -.llaDk -ldeota. col-Lot Anaelos. leae cban~ellor1 and Brown told the ,. • .,_. lbould ha.., to teacben that school ad- PV for tbe prl.Uece ot minlltralon shollld be bolclln6 1ucb lnterestiDC paid no more than they jobl., ••11 Gov. Mm\md are and ,that Willi am G.BrownJr. .Johnston. lbe Los •'The mOl'e eompUcat· Aqeles schools superin· ed your job, then tile tendent who makes '--------. moce learnln& you set $56,983, ls overpaid. out ot It and 7ou oucJil to The aovemor said pea. 8'art ba.U., to P•Y a tul· pie wbo have meaninsful •·because there·s a gt<rW• inc number or peopte in thls society who don'\ ha\'e work and lhe.re·a an. -even larger number who don't have meaaln&ful work.'' Brown told th·c teachers they, too. mwst "lower your ai&hta'' in salary negotiations. ~,,the aovernor said work &hould have to pay The saJ-3ry or the gov .. ;;;;:::================'1'11esd~ ... ay~-ln-..~1D~pe§eci~h~to==='=o=r==t=h=•==:!P;r;l;v;l;l;•~C=•==erno==='=ls==S4=t=-1=00=.=======: Save an extra$'li0 by opening · your tax-defened account in September Now two gOOd reuont IO open your tax-cltlerred Retirement account earty: 1. Open your account ln September and Fldellty Federal w111 absorb your entire $7.50 lruslee fH tor1975 2. The ~r you do. the more interest you'H earn tree from 1975 Income Ta.1 .. l.R.A. (Individual R••iro"*1t Account) -FOR ANY EMPLOYED PERSON. .. II not CO¥ered by a qualillad retirement plan, ser •side up fO S 1 ,SOO earned income each year &Kempt from curtent federat Income tax. No lax on current Interest earned. either. fir ample: $1.500 dapos11ed In an t.R.A. wlll reduc• your 1976 Income ta• by a minimum of S330 If you are In a 22% bracket. "Keogh~ accountl for the self-employed also available-lrustee fee frH In September. Do it now. ¥ F•D•UIW~!!~.'!"IS COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH: 1855 Harbor Blvd. 19 offices to aerve you statewide. ml GRAND OPENING I Wards all new Costa Mesa Store I opens Wednesday I September 24th ~-------~ BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FWY. n your ''Charg-all'' account today! Shopping is easier with a T\.Tonlgomt'ry Ward Charg-al l account! You can enjoy convenrent shopping al. any Mont· gomery Ward store. Take advantng<.• of the terrific sah·..; with no money down. As a ''(>referred Cu~tomcr" you art· eligible for advance notice of n1oncy 1'av1ng C'VCnt ..; und special sales! You'll enjoy you1· nc\v Charg·all acc11unt.. Fill out the application below and mai l it today. dlarg@DD CREDIT APPLICATION FORM PRINT NAM•~-----------------------AG"---- SPOUSE'S FIRST NAM"----------·---PHONE __ -· -·------ (Area Codel ADORES-~----------------_ ___ CITY ------'- t J OWN ST ATE ________ ZIP _______ _;•.: RENT HONlONG ____ --- IF LE SS THAN 2 YEARS. PREVIOUS ADDRESS ____________ _ SOCIAL [MPLOYEfl.___ _ ---------------SE.cun1 Ty NO _____ _ EMPLOYER'S AOORES~-------------- SAOOOS111oon s 1uOOQ.s17 llflfl ANNUAL r J Under $4 000 NUMBER Of DEPENDENT~---------INCOME I J ~ 000.;1; 000 0 $6.000·513 000 l, Ov(l r s 1; 000 YOUR BAN"'--------------------11 CHECl<INC. f8r~l'lj OTHERCREOIT ______ ::;ccc:---------~--·----- ACCOUNTS (Nam<IJ t~ccount N""'~'I {If ANY) • YES, I would like the convenience of a CHARG-All Account at WARDS and authome you to process my application for an account in accordance with your established credit policy. SIGNATURE Of APPLICANT------------------------- !;0uRC£ C.(11J£ • '~ MAIL APPLICATION .TO: MONTGOMERY WARD, AlTENTION MR . HESTOR, CREDIT SERVICE MANAGER, P.O. BOX W-50, ~ORWALK, CA. 90650 • I , 1 I I • --.... • I ' I ! ! l 1 • A8 0 . .\11,\' PILOT EDITORl . .\I, P . .\GF, Hillside Protection Before San Clemente City Council voted approval of an ordinance to regulate hiU..ide development in the city. Councilman B. Patrick Lane said he was re- minded of what happenejl In the Mother LQde country in the 1880s. He recalled that miners disregarded much of the natural environment in their thirst for gold. But, he said, this didn't have the lasting detrimental results he now sees hillside building causing in the city. I laving said that. he moved to adopt an ordinance. which is much more stringent than the proposal worked out by the planning commission with de- velopers. Developers attending the meeting complained because about 85 percent of the city's undeveloped land fits under the requirements. But the ordinance doesn't stop development. It merely controls it so that the natural topography and landmark features are retained. Granted, it will make life more difficult for de- velopers but they will find a way to meet the require- ments. In the end, they wilkome up with a product that's profitable for them and more pleasing to most. Police Priorities Laguna Beach, the town once known as the drug capitaJ of the United States, today has a one-man narcotics investigation force. Until Sept. l, the city had two narcotics in- vestigators. Now, one of them is working on investiga- tion of burglaries and thefts. The manpower switch would appear justified in light or statistics which show crimes against property • and persons are QD the upswing. Durlni the past few months, there have been scores of burglaries, and several assaults, robberies and rapes. _0 • Police officials hope lo soften the elfect of the Lransfer by attowingthenarcotics investigator who re- mains to draw upon ()th.er personnel for assistance as needed. How well thi!I plan will work remains to be seen. The department's response to crimes against persons and property is in order. BUt a close eye will have to be kept on narcotics to insure that former pro· bl em doesn't rt are anew. Buy ers' Backin g Buyers of new homes in San Juan Capistrano can sign on the dotted line with more confidence in their in~ vestment, thanks to anew city homebuyers' warranty program. The program, adopted as official city ordinance by the San Juan City Council, guarantees new homes against raulty workmanship and materials for a period of three years. Contractors are being asked to pay one percent of the construction cost into a revolving fund as security that the warranty work is actually being carried out. Although San Juan does not have a-particular re- cord of shoddily built homes, the city's size is estimat- ed to double in the next years. New developers will be coming in. San Juan's bomebuyer warranty ordinance represents the city's entry into consumer legislation. Its aim is laudable but its effectiveness remains to be tested. . - • l s Don'LBlame Spee.d __ · For Traffic Deaths A Bappy Welt are State To the Editor: This letter is a response to your editorial or Aug . 19, entitled .. Back to Normal?" which con- cerned itself with ... "The ·steadily increasing tendency o( drivers lo cheat on the 55 mph speed limit . ·· You claim that ... "the result o( the cheating is showing up in statistics on trarfic ratalities . . .:· citing an increase of 26 -deaths' over a similar period last year. The thrust or your editorial would seem to indicate that the eause of the increased fatalities ·is the fact that people are in · creasing their speed on the freeways . WIO LE THIS may indeed be the case, I feel that it is incum· bent upon you .to show not only that the increased fatalities all · occurred on the freeways, but also that a majority of those 26 deaths were caused directly by drivers exceeding the speed limit. ' As you may have guessed, I disagree 'l''ith such a contention. I feel that a proper study of the matter might show a greater in· crease in fatalities on surface streets rather than freeways; also, that some factor <notably alcohol) other than excessive s~ was the cause of those ac- cidents which did occur on the freeway . In fact. if you were to in· vesfigate the matter I would be willing to bet. you a steak dinner that the increase in Orange Coun· ty traffic fatalities is not due to an increase in traffic speed. Perhaps this is a rather grim subject on which to base a wager, but it seems far less grim than ig· noring the more direct causes of traffic fatalities in favor of re- venue.producing speeding cita· lions. PETER B. MARCUS Pia"' Disregarded To the Editor: !'lot a sin gJ(' mail box is left di the South CoR :-t area or the Q>n- tral Basin. The sweep of the Forest Ayenue Interest is so com- plete that not only has the substa- tion been moved, but the mail boxes as well. The closest mail box for me now is at the Security Bank on Forest. Of course, I do believe in walking. But, a walk to Forest Avenue amid a sea of automobiles cannot exactly be called walking. ll is better termed dodging or smogging. WE ARE full on the "'·ay, in spite of the voters. to a one·slreet downtown with all the other vital properties in the Central Basin reduced to a parking service for Forest Avenue . Having emur:ulated the library for a sum of 34 parking spaces, having fouaht ofr the l..owcr Library Plata for7 spaces, having gaiiied ll more spaces by restriping behind their tree facade on the first block 0£ Forest, having iained 75 more spaces by reslrip- inl on upper Forest and Third and Second, and having emaaculated Ocean Avcmue to JArAi• status wllh lhe helv or ·Lacuna Federal 's denlotit1on• and 111• on·•il• parkt111 for lhe Lumber Yard and th .Forest Mall, lhe Fores! Avonue lnttte<t lo oow mei;cileuly depriving lhe ld.l .. 1111 ,....,, even <ii. tbeir post .._. :ne root or us~ allowed • (.._ __ M_A_I_LB_o_x __ ) Letters from reader• are wtlcome. The right to condense l~ters to fit $J)OCt or eliminate libel U restrotd. Letters of 300 word.! or less will be given preference. All letlers must in· elude signature and mailing address but names may be withheld on re· quett if 31.lf ficienl rea&on is apparent . PoetTJJ will not be publi&hed. to become dodgers and smoggers for the privilege of posting our letters on Forest. All of these mercenary and myopic measures aiming toward a one·str eet dominance are counter to the General Plan, the Transportation Element, and the voters' latest expression in the May election. They are counter to common sense and common law concern for health. "'eifare and safety of citizens. They are counter to the Parking l\1anage· ment Programs of the .coastal Commission and EPA. If this trend C'ontinues, there is only di s- aster ahead. A few trees covering an increased array of machin('S should not deceive the citizens: the trees \ltill die in time and after them the citizens. Possibly. the basic question that should be asked is : "Does the PO talk to EPA? .. JAMESW. DILLEY To the Editor: How wi l l Congressman Hinshaw vote wh-en Mr. Kiss- inger gets back from his peace talks between Israel and Egypt? Are we to allow American civilians lo be placed in the mid- dle of a potential time bomb? In World War I. the British asked the French, who "'ere fighting the Germans, "How many men do you want us to send?" And the French replied, "Just one, and we'll be sure he's the first one to get killed.·· Are we to be drawn into a re· peat performance? I EDITHC. EWENS V•fairteGqs To the Editor : A copy of the Aug. 2S Daily Pilot is on my desk. Christ Chapel has a special mission to gay people. I have served aSi pastor for five years here In Orange County. As a citizen and spokesperson for gay people I voice a strong objectioo to the way in which the names and ad· dresses of innocent people ap- peared ou page one under the streamer headline: "8 Nabbed on Be act: Gay Sex Raps." Do you realize that pro- fessional people can lose their jobs merely by such sensational publicily? This ts Indeed uruair when the accused have oot even gooe to trial. What Ir all .,.., ac· quitted? The truth al the matter is: that a 647(a) corwictlon is rare. Tha&e of us who live in Laguna Beach choose to do ao because we love our rrelly little ¢ily beside the sea. like to lhlnk lhat we have some of the ~Ucatioa and co1m.opollt•nl11m of San Franclsco. We are not unaware or the plur.Uom or our com- munity. Dear -Gloomy Gus The city of Laguna Beach has an Economics Com - mittee and it cut the tax rate 11 cents. The school district rate went up. May· be the school district could use an Economics Com· mittee, too. S.F. GIMmr Gut tOml'l\tftU •r• IUbrnt!IM by rNdoer• •nd oo ltOI nece11.,rlty r•l'-'<I lfW v••w• ol 1n.e new•P•PI•· ~nd your Pll'I PH'ltl loGloamy GUI, O••IY Pilot. r object to the poor taste shown in your story. Why did you not play up the knife attack. or the purse snatchers, or the two marines who allegedly tried to rob a-man and steal his car, or the man who was arrested for battery against a Laguna1Beach Police of- ficer? All of these were on the Laguna Beach police log, but you chose to headline another inci· dent. Since you have a special edi- tion ror Laguna/South Coast I would ask that you root out the anti.gay bias, at least in these editions. Sexuality plays about the same role for gay people as it does for non.gay people. I would appreciate more fairness in your reporting policies and better taste. RODGER HARRISON Pastor, Christ Chapel Cfti:-•' A ttlellde To the Editor: Ignorance of the law, it is said, is no excuse for its violation, yet ignorance in the application and . enforcement of law, particularly. victimless crime laws is a con· trover_,ial ques tion. Laguna's citizens number amongst its population a well- represented diversity of human sexual behavior which includes homo s exuality ; yet th P homeosexual in Laguna Beach. although it i.s generally agreed that laws against bomose.Xual behavior do not significantly in- hibit that activity, is continuing to be tareeted for har~Jt\ent by what any good high school psychology student would know to be the "projected"' hang-u~ or males goaded by a degraded sense or self -esteem. VICTIMLESS crime laws and their selective enforcement in L.aguna Beach only confer an al· titude of social unconcern aboul discrimination and exploitation of the homosexual, blur good in· terpretation or the law , com- paund citizen ignorance of social roles and lire.styles and com· promise respect for the law. The Americ'an Law Institute. the American Psychological/As· sociation, the State of California <amongst other states of the United States) have activel)' en· dorsed and passed legislation that removes the prerogative of law enforcement to intrude upon private sexual behavior. . The police of the City" or Laguna Beach and, ultimately. Laguna's city council, have emerged beautirully from an earlier er-a of red·nec~ bigoted. city council-mania and a responsibility ror good,_ public morality and law enforcement lies now as mu.ch uPon the cltltens of Laguna Beach as it does upon cf vie orrtclals. BRUCE S. HOPPING I The-Optimistic Swedes STOCKHOLM -I have spent the past week here in Sweden looking for a really angry person. lt has been a futile search. For the Swedes, in contraSt to almost everyone on earth, are brimming over with good will and op- timism. Their self·confidence stems es- sentially from one overwhelming raclor. They live in a social democracy that provides them with both political freedom and crad J e .-to · g r a v e security. As a coose· quence, they ,_, seem to have no real worries - at least as far as t heir liberty and material comforts are con· cerned . Mor eover, they ap. proach whatever minor dif- ficulties they may have with dis- arming placidity. "There are no problems we cannot solve,·· Prime Minister Olof Palme told me the other day, and that was not an idle · boast. WITHIN receht days, ror ex· ample, the media here have been focusing on a government pro- gram to build ramps and widen doors so that invalids in wheel chairs can navigate into and STANLEY K ARNOW around public buildings. It ·s the sort of issue that would J:>e.buried in the back pages of the newspapers in the United States. But in Sweden it's the kind of sub-- ject that arouses attention, large. Jy because there aren't any big· ger problems. Wages are high. Medical attcn· tion is rree and excellent. There are child care centers for mothers who work. And most or all, unemploymerlif, bent:!tits are such tl\at a worker will receive almost full pay if he Joses his job. In short, this is the welfare state par excellence. Yet welfare is not considered ooerous. BY OU R standards taxes are excessive. They mUst be to cover the cost or the country's various welfare projects. But most Swedes I have talked with do not complain. For one thing, they are fixed on the notion that everyone must be equal. Thus they raise no objec- tions to efforts to provide all citizens with a similar standard of living. Secondly, they fervently believe in the concept of "solidarity,'' which means that they are prepared to make personal sacrifices in order lo ' improve tb,e lot or others. So, in many respects, Sweden is very much like a big family in which everybody feels responsi· hie for everybody else. THis al· titude even extends to con· servative politicians who criticize the socialist regime. One right-wing politician. for .instance, looked at me in ~tonishment when I asked il he would cut back welfare pro- grams should his party enter of4 lice. •·we are also dedicated to social equality,'' he said. THESAMEistrueCorbigbusi-' l ness, which is given special tax advantages by PaJme.:S 'Socialist government on the theory that in4 dustry must function s.moothly in order to assure jobs an·d economic success. This need for business tranquility is un 4 derstood as well by the trade un· ions, which are careful to avoid ctis~tive strikes. I thought that I might hear a bit of indignation when I went to see one of the leaders of the Swedish Communist party, and I did -up toa point. He complained that workers, while well paid, are not earning enough to buy summer homes, sailboats and second cars. "I riever thought that I would hear a Communist register a complaint like that." I told him. He smiled pleasantly and replied. ''This is Sweden." An Exile Dreams of Glory The lonely figure stood on the "' ( ] sands staring out over the end-A RT HOPPE less gray sea. 1t had been more than a year now since he had been forced to "------------.J resign his high office. yet he still \\"Ore its symbol over his breast. Once he had been the most powerful man in the world, his every word. gesture. ex.· pression and tone a subject for intense di scussion by the high and the mighty . No man had been mor(' hated and feared by hi~ en('mies, nor more fa'l'•ned on and admired by his allies and followers. He had dwelt amidst the panoplies of power and ordered kings about. But he had Jen office in humiliation and defeat. de· livering one last sentimental speech to his staff. There had been talk of bringing him to trial. The government had intervened. He was free lo !('ave his hous~ and grounds, but he seldom did. He had been ill. •lis once·large fortune was all but gone. His aides had de:;erted him one by one. 1t seelhed the end. And yet.i,. 111 ~\ENEMIES still feared - Nm. They Jlad written him ofr before as a btoken. hopeless man. lte had stunned them by rising out of political exile and once aa•in seizing the reigns of power with the brilliantly pragmatic tactics that marked his career. Thef knew and dreaded this Phoenix·llkc quality. They • watched him-closely. At any hint he still thirsted for a role in v.'orld affairs, their outrage knew no bounds. So he dwelt quietly in his estate by the sea, virtually a recluse in this prison without bars. On rare occasions old friends would visit lo reminisce about past cam4 paigns and the dead victories. He fell into a routine. The one task he placed above all others was writing his memoirs. He may have made a few errors in judgment. He admi~ted that. But ir there was one thing he had made perfectly clear it was that he would appeal over the heads of hi s enemies to history. THESE MEMOI RS would be his appeal. In them, he would re· count the alliances he had for ged, the treaties he had signed. the glorious central role he had played upon the stage of mankind. Passions would cool. scorn would fade and history would absolve him. Eventually, he \l.'ould lake his rightful place among the great Jeaders of the past. To all appearances he seemed to be Jiving in the dust1 yesteryears, his only possiblo Quotes Peace. if it ever exists, will not be hosed on the rear of war but on the love of peeee. -llerman \\'ou.k. It LI no disgrace to start alJ over. It is uaually an opportunity. - Geor1eM.Ad1m11. I future a generation awa\· And yet ..• And yet those who have onC'e tasted power dream s trange dreams. Some said he was mere· ly biding bis time. Somehll, :iOme day. his enemies s 11 feared, this all·but·penniless, J- but·friendles s. broken, defeated. humiliated. physically ill. closely·watched man might yet in somf!Sqperhuman fashion r· e once again out of political exil o cut h~s swath across the world, AND SO it WJlS qn that an r• noon in ,1817 that Napole n Bonaparte stood on the sands or Saint ilelena stari.Qg out over the endless gray Atlantic -dream· ing who knows what strange dreams of glory. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed . Publi.!her TMmai Kerin/. F.ditor Barbara Krtibich, t:d1tonol Page Edtlor • The editorial page orttte Daily PUot seeks 'o inrorftl und stimulate readers by pre5e11t1ng 9'l lhjs page diverse cOmmeot ary on topics of interest by gyndjcat· ed columnists and Ctilrtoonlsts, by providing a forum for-1'eacter~· vie'>''I> and by presenting this newspaper's opinions and Ideas on current topics. Th~ editorial opinions or the DDlly Pt1ot oppcur only In th~ editorial coJumn at the lop of the page. Opinions ex· pr~sed by the cotumnisU: and cartwnists and l~ll~r wrilert ure lhe:ir ow}l :ind no enct.orsemcrnt or lhtir ''ifts by tho Da'lly .rtlot. s~kl be inferr.ed, ~ , Wednesday, Sept. 10, 1975 ' ' j . ' I I i l • ' . I ; I • • ' • -----------·---' • • 'Rotten' o,,J,y Ripe 'IY Shoiv Men Face Prostitute Rap,T® SACRAMENTO (UPI} -The A11em bly h11 puMcl on a 51·2 vote and -!lo Gov. Edmund Q. BkJllY8HAUU1T ( ]~ Brown Jr. a bill thol o:ay~ .~~;_Kt!:t~";-TV REVIEW =:i:=:io~~ l Jl I _ _ stltuUOn al already ap~ new 1er es neup a z 1..,to "Doctor's Hoopltal" on by Jlllllflre and ceuet.... ., women. NBC, '"Kale llcSbone" &ire-bumlnli 1110-de-lluemblym an Ari on CBS, and 'tWbon cllue-~l11nce turna by ~:d°"T~~;~ 1.'l=el.:l'\{ Tblnga Were Rotten•· Slalnlty. who can"t even <Alll'38) wu desl--' and "Star1ky and: doalllOcorrect'"· "'~ ~io;;;;i~~~~~~~ ch • ABC t.z to ••ctean op" the ,_al . ut ' on . . "Wiien TblD1a Were ~· r -.. Tbe 1111 (Olfdte fr-J14tten"ll0ii a10ii<ltum oode and man It "more ... we P .. ieRle' "'Rotten,'" the Mel tonld>t In •bowlnl -equitable." su1...; .. ~.... 18 .. _ _ Broob-created takeolf R 0 61 n H 0 0 d ( DI ck Under tbe bill, a mm I _ti-"""'• --··~ on-t°lre Ro'btn Holld Gautier) and bl• meny convicted of prostitution Te a onahlp 101ng l~ctncl lta humor ii so men save tbe Sherwood would be subject to a with White House tirood you'll need a 25-Forat peuanta from ye misdemeanor fine and a phdtographer, David foot wide set to catch II unjust ta••• and ye county Jail term. In odcn· Kennerly, 28. but It ts all, so dub out and g.t a wicked Sheriff of Not· lion, a second offense "not a romaUc one" 25-foot wide set. (Chan· tln1bam would be punishable by• , r DAILY ""-OT ,ll,IM . TEB short.stuve Cf"CNI neck, collar and plticket. longsleeve crew neck. AT solids and st.ripes, sizes 4~20, vibrant colors. I I according to a nel7,8p.m.) At tl~es it strains .o manctatory jailterm. • eeda Pimping by males spokesman for the ••ncSBANE,t• with hard for lauahs it n would also become a 44 fashion island , newport center 644-5070 • family. YeOldeTruase. felony under the bill . Anne Meara ~s a feisty --;i:::::;:::::::::=::::::::;;::::=:;--•--:" ... '""'I tawyet, is a salute to Torres s aid the bill over-acting and bad I Dll.ILY PILOT would help break up writing. Its plot concerns CLASSIFIJD ADS tings of young male pro- a yoWlg ex-radical lady '42•5818 stitutes. who bu a good present but la arrested f« an ex- plosively bad past. (Channel 2, 10 p.m .) .One comment from the .radical gives you an idea ol it all: "I just guess I'm not ready to hold hands with the Establlsh- menL '' NBC'S MEDICINE show, starring George Peppard as a chief neurosurgeon. has com- petent acting. But it suf- fers from a dread TV dis- ease called re - h-a sh-pt o---rttl s , compounded by ------.----switchitis. lChannel4. 9 State Eye'" p.m.) "" If M.D. rehashplotitis Sunshine Rulings spreads, this'll be the year the entire nation turns its bead and coughs at the mere sight of a sawbones. Alas, the diseas e already has spread from SACRAMENTO (UPI) surgery to fiatfootery, as -A bill sought to open witness ABC's ''Stanky more government meet-and Hutch, .. a hip young ings lo the public bas undercover cop series been sent to Gov. Ed-emitted by the makers of mund G . Brown Jr. by ''The Rookies'' and the Senate. "S.W.A.T." (Channel 7, The measure (581 ) by 10p.m .) Sen·. George . Moscone IT SfA.RS DAVID Soul (0..San Francisco) was . _ approved Monday on 8 ~d Paul Glaser as with· 33-0 vote to accept ,.._ 1t fuzz wbo tonight chase sembly amendments. .a.aalt·and-pepper (black The legislation, among and white) due of holdup other tbina:s. would re-men. . , qUire city councils, coun-,, In Tuesday ':~ght s ty boards of supervisors ~oe Forrester pre- arid'other local auncies m1ere on NBC,. Lloyd to cottduct .open 'Jneet-Bridges, as a wise old ings whenever they con-beat cop, also chased a sider apPointments lo salt-and :pepp~r team sucn things as planning wh.o, disguised as commissions, coastal plaJnc~olhes . cops, also commissions or vacan· comm1~ted slick.ups. cies to elected orrices. . Desp,1le a stram~ end· The bill, sought by the 1ng, F~rresler. had California Newspaper good acting, a,fa1r plot, Publishers Association, r .ea s on ab I Y . good also for the first lime ~alogue and believable would allow .payment of characters. attorney's fees when NOT SO ''STA.RSKY citizens have to go to and Hutch.'' It is an court for access to meet-amateur hour of acting ings. and dialogue, accented ·I ~Beach International BoatShow Show of'Power: In the Water. At Newport Dunes. , The Word 11 Out:Ttie Newport Beach International Sall Boat Show was fust h•lr or the most exci ting nautical event or the season. Now you can see power bo•ts from around the world. Many power craft wllt be In Iha watar. so you cen climb aboard and enjoy. Get rltedy ror the Show of Power boats! Big: Largest ln the water power boat show on the West CouL Six acres or craft and equipment. Flral: Premier showing of 1978 lines of power craft and • equlpmenL V1rlety! lntemtlional and lraUerable power craft. Hun- dred• of nautical exhibitors. Excitement: Dally attractions. The Oueen and Her Prin- cesses. Hot air balloon. Boating demonstratl.:ins. And morel Convenient: In nearby Newport Beach. Acres of rree parking. Or take the ahuttlebua from Newport fNhlon Island to the ahow. · Newport Beach lnternatlonal Power Boat Show { . ' When: Sep .J .1·14 Where: Newport Dunes, Coaat Highway at Jamboree, Newport Beach Houra: 10AMto10PMOally .Admltalon: Adult• $2.60, , Children e-12 $1.25 IBS05 .. L .. ' •• ,· r I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I· I L ' Tack this up. It'll remind you of some of fhe things .you should be doing to save natural gas. 1. Forget about such things as firepits·, patio heaters, and tiki torches. 2. Make sure your house is well-insulated. T_hat'll keep it cooler in summer and warmer in winter. 3. Set your cooling thermostat no lower than 78°. . 4. Cover pots and pans when cooking. • 5. Plan oven dishes that you can cook together. 6. Turn down the thermostat on your water heater. 7. Run your dishwasher only with a full load. 8. When you wash dishes by hand, don't run the hot water continuously. Use a stopper in the sink. 9. If a hot water faucet leaks, fix it. ·10. Take a fast shower instead of a slow bath. 11. Install a water flow control device in your showerh~ad to save hot water. . ' 12. Wash and dry only full loads of laundry_ 13. Turn off your decorative gas lights or call us and we'll be glad to come and shut them off for you. 14. Make energy conservation a part of your lifestyle. There is an energy shortage and we have to live with it. Energy is our business. Conserving energy is everyone's business. ' • ·1 ·· :\ ·---..... • .. I I I I I I J I I I "I I I I I I I I _ .. ) ' ,. I l l • I I I - i l I Al DAil y PILOT Wedf?!!d!y. S!ptember 10, 1'75 2nd OC Horse Race Setback 11y ALAN DllUUN plication for a lwo-week I Of .. OllllY ...... t&ftl' b bb d ( LOS ALAMITOS _ t oroufnl re mee in The Oranie County Fair Nove~~r 197&. Si~ce Board h11 been dealt then the borae i:acm.g another Ht back In !IS bid board bas met •l•'f and to spocuor tbOl'OllChbred -ed tha COUJlty I 11" hone racing at ·the Los P,11c1Uoo for such a n:w:« Alamitos track. fit November 1977. Just over a month ago, HENRY LEWIN, the ' . that he has not yet """' told wby lhe original ~ pUcation wa1 denied. He demanded flndln&• fpT the refusal, and was told that they would be sent In writing In 30 days, bul theyllre now overdue. Lewin noted that he had to present an ap- Why Ibo bid lot lb• lll'lil dates WIS ~tjffted. Lewin would noi spet'ulate on why the 1917 racin1 calendar was fixed so far ln advance,*'- but. insiated, .iThif was the lint time they have ever sel the calendu so far ahead.'' I the . California J:lorse attorney representing Racing Board re1ected the Orange County Fair 1 the Orange County ap-'Board, bas confirm~ plication for the 1977 · LEWIN llAS already dates without knowing stated that he believes Arthritis Meet Set SANTA ANA -The. j tint meeting or the newly elected Orange County Arthritis Foundation ad- vJsory committee will " take place Tuesday at foundation h ea d · quarters , 900 N. Broadway here. Orange Coast resi- dents on the committee include H. Lawson Mead I of Newport Beach, Claire Trevor or Newport Beach. Mrs. James Ferrell of Hunt-it in&to_n Beach, Mrs .•. Richard Fuller of Newport Beach, Jack Quigley of Newport Beach and Mrs. Gordon BerllnofNewPort Beach.£ Appe al N o w Tax Deadline Soon SANTA ANA -Monday is the deadline for taxpayers to file an appeal of their 1975-76 property assessment. THE REQUIRED forms can be obtained from the clerk of the Assessment Appeals Board in the Assesl'IOr's ofrice at 630 N. Broadway in Santa Ana . A petition for appeal can be filed in person with the clerk up lo 5 p.m. Monday. UNDER RE.CENTLY adopted county procedures, appeals are first channeled through special hearing officers empowered to resolve disputes. _._. ........_ Ir the assessment problem is not straightened out by the Rearing officer, 1t is sent to one or the two appeal' boards. liquor licenses On Rise SANTA ANA - Orange County·s population growth has entitled it to 47 new liquor licenses this fiscal year, according to the state Bureau of Alcoholic Beverage Control. The county 's entitlement is the largest in the state, followed by ,.. San-Diego,-Santa-Clara,' Ventura and Los Angeles Counties.. • I A TOTAL OF 202 new ... mMPaldlilif'P" -liquor licenses will be I . issued thi1 year in ·E H d u Li t California to 139 nergy ea s p s ~~·~~1·:·1~~.t~~n~'.h:~ 11quoc stores or other RECENTLY, THE f•ir board approved guidelines for the study of a master development plan for the fairgrounds. One guideline that the board did not approve - though it bad been .r~ commended by the board's grounds commiJ- tee -was that the study confine itself to the pte. ·sent site of the fair· grounds. This restriction was left out, and open~ I.IP the possibility that the fairgrounds may be located elsewhere,· perhaps through a land swap. · v ~ __ I SC· ~G 11."" _ •fl·sil• l&:aljon• •• d. 17 :l.!-O r 1'UJBU.8--t-t-.., . .,.. ~-_ '-.lf~-e.l new liq"".', wholesaling , r-A-t-11:-G-'11:11H:tmt-9--• • Such Proposals have been mfde to the board in recent years by of- ficials or the Irvine COm- pany, the Grubb and El· lls Company. Coldwell Banker, and others. LOS ANGELES -Tbe Sou~ California Association of Gotetn- menls CSCA,G) will convene its an- nual general assembly Sept. 17 •and l8 at the Hyatt Regency Hotel hete. The key topics ror discuSsion at the two-day meeting will be energy, en- vironment and the economy, accord· ing to Los Angeles Supervisor James Hayes, president or. SCAG. Willta_,, A. Sullivan, m a n a I e r J l m counties in soluiion of these pro. directol'-of the state forterfield said that all ~ bleri\s.," Hayes said. ABC, said prospective t}lese proposals haye' 1 Features of the annual confab in-licensees can file t>een turned down, but elude: applications starting the board wanted con- -A panel, Sept. 18, on the -energy Monday. firm at ion rrom the issue featuring former Gov. Edmund . ·~ rpaster planner that the G. "Pat'' Brown, now chairman or The •umber of new J)resent fairgrounds site the Council on Environmental and licensesissued in a given. was the ideal one. Economic Balant'e and former As-year is based. on the "The feeling is th"'at it sembly Speaker Bob Morelli, nOw population growth or a is the ideal s1te, but we commissioner on the stale Energy county in the preceding w an t t h a t t o b e SCAG IS A REGIONAL planning Resources Conse'rvation and year. Orange County's doc um en t e d , ' ' and policy-making agency comprised Development Commissi.91J.-population growth rate Porterfield added. of county supervisors, city coun--WO RKSHOPS SEPI. t7 on ob· has been the highest in The prime contract.or cilmen and mayors from all Southern taining federal and state grants roe the state for several in the drawing up or a California counties except San 1>iego. human services, law enforcement years. 20-year master develop- "The annual meeting is designed to and environment~\ protection. ment plan is Caudill. examine problems that go beyond the -A meeting or the SCAG ex-OF TH E 4 7 new Rowlett and Scott of Los ability of one jurisdictiorl. to sotve by ecutive committee to discuss grant-licenses to be issued Angeles. Porterfield said 1 itself and to hammer out regional ing of funds for a regional rapid here, 25 will be for that the first phase will 1 ·policies that can guide the cities and transit starter line. res taurants or other cost about $43,000, and ~, 1 g m f ,----------establishments that sell that the study may cost Deaths Elsewhe~e · i Add1t•-•1 f.:~~!:9~!i.1fe~ill~ ;~:~n..v~!~0i~~2 :,,r;: .. lt ~ .._ ~· c-iv Net1J• seven will be for pleted in about three · " "' ; " • ~ oa Pa9· e A l 5 wholesale ouUets. · years. LOS .ANGELES (A "'riib<le f~d~rations, died-;::::::::' ::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;I -s11mand Aeywlll, 61-1'1\eiclaY.of l)ln apparent ·1 w bo rose fr.om. a bear( a'.tt ack: He was , · secretary-treasurer of 1 J;>utcher s helper to bead the 150,000-member Los · ! of one of the COl!Jltry;s .~ngeles, Cou~\Y AFL- 1 most powerful local CIO Labor Federation . • Costa Mesa 646-2424 NUhOADWAY MORTUARY 1 to Broadway, Cosla Mesa 642-9150 McCOIMICI MO ITUAIY Laguna Beach 494-9 415 San Juan Capistrano .. 95-1776 PACIHC 'lllW MIMOllAl.PAll Ceme1ery Mortull'V Chapel 3SOO Plcitic View Drfve Newport Beach. r-- C.lifOrnia 844-2700 PUBLIC NOTICE DOM~ MISS cost A MESA P.OLICE. ASSOCIATION'S ANNUAL ' VARl~TY SHOW STARRING MARTY AltEN - AND featuring TANI MARSH aod,-Her P~ YNES,AN "REVUE Plus ~ ~lost~ H>r:e.p!1t lalu21,11t Clll ' . I Show Tiine 's:ao I !Gates Open 7:301 , . . OH! ~ts~ls.HsJr.2~~1LY AT (' • 88. FAIR DRIVE ' COSTA MESA j . , ' - \ For Information Call: 548-51 .35' • • l " ' \ ' " ' • ' ' . • ' _____ , . EARL'S _ ... _ ... -........ ,,~ ···--............. ... ,c....~ ... Jo..,. .. ._ ""' Exclusive Flip & Sew ' 2·way sewing surlace. Other exctusives include magic button-fitting one- ~ttP lei . CLASSIC GUITAR INSTRucnoN J~nK. ent Hunting n Beach 1245 I ·----.... ._ .... _ .. _ ;o0a98FM --· __ .. _ ' OllAtll ....... .Kf 640AM. I i..;.1o i<11 -• ~HIS IS IT! A GREAT NEW ZIG ·ZAG MACHINE Model 241. •9wa AT AN INTRODUCTORY P.RICE! Carrying case Of cabklet extra. '~- SINGER As refucta.nt as we are to make this change, we f ind,Jt~mpossibi~ to offer this service for an indefinite period. Continually ris ing costs, now being experi enced by every industry throughout .vie nation, have forced us into this change of policv.r However, because we lhink that the citizens of our area deserve to have a chance to enjoy Lifetime Free Checking-now used by thousands of deposjtors at the Citizens Bank1of .Costa Mesa- we are ;xtending thJ.s opportunity to Sepfember 15, .1975. ·' ' ~ If you open an account at Cit izens Bank Of ~osta Mesa on or' before Seplember 15th. you will recei'(; Lifeti!ita free Checking ,with no mini~u.m balance. Join-us'-~ get,'~d .. .',J the annoying monthly service charge. Thousands hav~so.stiould you. 0 'CI TIZENS BANK OF ·G:OSTA MESA • - • • • • T ' • ' • • _......,. Sep-be< 10. 1'15 DAILYPtl.OT ---'==.:..::='--"'"" / • Starts Wednesday, September 10. ' Sale prices ~ffective thtough Suo., Sept 14 . • Special ·3as Lon\.: •olkt .color gown in sol! pale paslflf,, 1fi easy.care nylon 1r1cot S·M-L. • ' -. --l-"'.:_-~S~h<>1,t shift le~th, Specl•I 2.11 a ijdotf slYle, SP!Clil"'3:11· • , Ou•ntlUff Hmlled on 1pedal ' rnerchandlN • Speci.al 1299 Cardlg•n 1nd w .. 1,_..,e,,,., ,._,. Fairs. ncwesl'swea1er combo. Long sleeve icwcl neck. cardigan and ribbed u-nec;k. ves1. All iJCryl1c Fa/1. colors. S-M-l. Ouanllll•• llrnlt•d on spitetal m•rchiirfdJH. • ~· Special 99¢ Print •nd -.olld 11e1rl sefacllon rn s11k-10ok v1nyton and acetate/ nylon. · 011enlllle1 llmlled on speclal merct111ndt1e. • • Cable knee hlgtl ot Orlon· acrylic/atre1ch nykJn. In basic and fashion colors One size lits 9 to 11 12?,,, Cl•••IC •rgrl• knM high Hi 01lon· acry11c:s1rc1ch nylon Tr i-color cl cs1gn One SILC l•t5 9 to 11 499 Exolle plllfa shelt1 from H1w1ll.. Tremendous. value! Bceut1lul. popular puka shell neckl~e with _..<(:s:£~ sterling s'lver clasp at a low, low price. Available e.t l1rger Penney stores. - !Value . . ·.gss.·. I dlgft calcut•lor. Pocket size and completely •• Pof't•ble. Adds, subtracts, multtpltes and dl"lfdes. Operates on one 9 voU battery. ' Greet lor aclloo! work . AC adapter 4.tl Lake.rs Basketball! Kings f1oc~ey! .FREE sport clinics at JC'Penney! . ' 110 " a..kewood,'Saturday, September 13th ••. 1.0:00 A.M. Arcadia-Santa Anita, Saturday, September 13th ... 11 A.M. FREE! PEPSI ~ AND DRAWINGS FOR FREE 1'1CKETS AND BHketb all clinic M.C.'d by Lynn Shackleford with Laker stars Hockey clinic M.C. 'd by Dan Avey with King stars and coaches PRIZES! t and coaches -assisting. to assist. Watch for free sport clinics coming soon to your area! ! A~allable in Los Angeles, brange1 Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties • • I • \ ··I • ~ . I , I ( I j J I • ' • I ( • • , • . -• • ; • •• I ! ..-1 JO DAILY PILOT Wednesd•Y Sept•mber 10. 1975 Special 11 88 Double knll polye1ter p•nl sulls ill iJ 1.1111.0 .l•C in .... 111 • ' ! (>!'9 '.I~·( b•rj ·,I'>• I ·,t, I« !l•f>c, c.oord•nl'll•' ...,.,n. ••!..i"!" w , •.. \ pants A <;<,or lt•d sty It" 1" r'ew !Hll COI01!. <Ind D.Jl!Cr<l::. ,M•sses' , :>1lCS 8 to 16. Ou1ntllle1 llmlled on 1pecl1I merchandlM . • Special 27sa AH -weettter coets et e r.,,ta1tlc low price! Choose from three beautifully detailed styles. All are ol smoo!hly woven 1exturized polyester, with ma1ching nylon .linings. so lhey can be machine washed Misses' sizes in fashion colors. Ou1111tltle1 llmlt9d on •PKl•I merchendlM. 3.-pc.sets. Ml••••' ••I has ribbed sleeve- less V-neck sweater with skinny belt, matching puU-on pant with stitched c rease and coord1nat1ng print blouse Polyester 1n heather tonC's. Sizes 10 to 18, Junior•' ••t has long-stcc11ed crew-neck swealcr w1!h multi- color stripes Long-str('11C'd blouse and elasl1c wa•$1 stitched-crease pant completes the coordinated group Poly- ester In heather tones Sizes 7/8 lo 15/16. Speclal 23.88 OuanUtle• llmlled on 1peclal marchandt111. U1e your JC Penney Charge Card. ---------- Lllkera B••k•tb•lll King• Hockey! FRll! aport cllnlca •t JCPenney! Lakewood, Saturday, September 13th -•. Basketball clinic M.C.'d by Lynn Shackleford with Laker stal-s and coaches assisting. Arcadia-Santa Anita, Saturday, Septembet' 13th ..• 11 A.M. Hockey clinic M.C.'d by Dan Avey with King stars and coaches to assist. FREE! PEPSI® AND DRAWINGS FOR FREE TICKETS AND PRIZES! .. ~ .,,,.. ... -~~··' . •· Watch for free sport clinics coming soon to your areal 349 Shetland •ly ... ••••ter of soil Csshm11on~ acrylic Cardigan style wilh long sleeves and button tron1. In great COIOl'S. sizes J lo 6X . Sizes 7 to 14, 3,ff Special 7sa, Women'• ~tural ... •lher 1trap •Nl•I with dark-stait:ied wood rocker platform. Synl~tic sole ertd heel. '1)'omen's sizes. S~tjal. 3ss~ ·. WomM'e ctOl8oO\'et' eandel wllh sling back. Cushlony '!lnyl with rubberized wrap-aroul'ld sole and heet. OuentlHM lmlt.d on 1peiclal merchandlM. Special,,355 Beginner'• •-*'nt'lctt.·lnOtudn dress- makers' tracing paper, needles, ttllm blo, straight pins, tailor•' chalk and more. Ou.nUll•• llmlted on spect.l m«chandlu. 0 5ss JCPenMJ Llghrw.fght"' acl190r1 weigh' only 3 ounces. Scandlna11lan stalnlees surgic;al steel blades cut most any fabric ·-even slippery aynlhettc9. 6r'l'IOO!hly, evenly, -:;; I ) • I . I I ~, '• . ' I ~;) t?,-JB . Fun toe •'Yi• knee-hlgh1. A great syle in. greal colors. Striped pattern. Girls sizes M-L- I I 20% off fabric buys! Sale 3 9,~d Reg. 4.99 yard. ai.n.~ nylon WeTp knit prlnts. Sett end lu)(urious fabric in new fall pas1el, dusty and dark 1one prints, Machine wash, tumble dry, ne>-lron. 60/62~ wide. - Qiana! nylon warp knit solids.. reg. 3.99 yard, Sile 3.11 yerd .Sale 2 6,~d hif, J.it yard. Po1,9.,., J"9eY pt'tntt. S;eauliful new Uor11s and junlOf·tbOk prlflts • perfect IOI' blouses .artd drenet: Macl'llhe wa9h, tumblo dry, no-Iron. 58160" wide. ll$ ~·· •ffectlve llvOQllh Swpt ,._ Sale 559 ~-~---.50% bff ~ow 99c yard 9'111· .... ,.,... Flocked llogham -· lft .... conttnuR ...,...., ... No· lton Oacro,,. potyester/ cotton. Ciisp, bright ging· ham wllh perl flor8' flocking. 44145'' wide. 299 , .... print T-eNrl. An eoljon T-shlrt wtth print from tho hit movie. White only. Glrl$' sb:es S-M-L • 399 Polyester pull-on pilnts in easy-car& polyester kn its. Solids, patterns. Stretch waist, flare legs. Girls' 7·14, Sizes 4-6X, 2..99. UHyoutJCPenner CMrgeClrd. Special 3aa Soft prfnt T ...Nr1 irl polyester/rayon. :Y• roll-back sleeves Blue or pink print Sizes s.M-L. Special 5aa , QI"'' pf.wnta d•nlm' Je'"'" Banded zip front. au cotton. Faded blue. Sizes 1 to 14. Qu1nthlt-• ftnl11td on7 •pec:.lel merchendlM, ' . ·"' . ... .. .-.,..1r. Dultont Orton• Krylle hind kntltlng ,....,. • ·o:r. Pe ins in , loads ol great color a. Reg. e.11. 7-ln·1 afghan kit. lndudes 28 ot. ot acrytlc 2-ply afghan )'~tn to knll 01 crochl!t • plus lns- trucilons IOI' your c;:hoice.,ot 7·•fghan 'petterns. 1 Special 1.44 yard -- p ................ Llght· wetghl lllngle knit In e great group ol eotbrful lloral and scenic prints. Mlchine wash, tumble dry, no-iron. 58/80~ wide. ' QuMth ... llmll.d on cla..out and tpKlal merchanclltt. J 11-r Available In Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties. . . . • ... • --- • • I ·--"'1 --• __. -· • ---· ,. • . · • Save on these Penneypets®. ~ Sale Pftcff .n.c11w. through / Sundlly, 5op1. 1, 1m Sale 260 A. Aq, S.25. Girls' tong .... .,. fffhton polo •him. In soltds •nd pt1nls. Choose from wide collar or cap shoulder-look Otf Patterned body. All ~yeatettcotton. Fashloft colors 2T to -4T, • Sale 32Q 8 . a D. Reg. SC. P9nnena-t• tlM;ka fot boys or gtrfl. Great patterns and SOltd colors. Slzes 2 to 4T. • Sale 220 C. "-1· 2.75. Toddler boy'a ~lld turtleneck with rib-knit cuffs In polyestertcouon. EmbrOidered Penneypet• animal on Che.st. Fall colors. 2T to 4T. • Sale 223 E. Reg. 2.71. SoUd.oc:olor lurti.. neck knit thlrt. Potyeslerlcotton . Ribbed culls. and Penneypet embroidery on chest. Con- trasting color on turUeneck Fashion colors Boys' sizes. F. Reg, SS. Corduroy pant with belt loops and hemmed bo1tom. No-iron durable soft polyestei7 cotton c0<duroy. Fashion colors. Boys' 9izes regular and slim. Sale 160 G. Reg. S2. Bop' .olld color crew necll; ahlrt with short sleeves 1n polyester/cotton. Boys· sizes Sale 3 60 H. Reg. 4.50. Woven pleld llllre- leg Je•ns. Po!yesler/conon. Belt loops. 2 front pockets and snap front closure Fashion coiors Boys sizes regular and shm dto7. Special shirt. 199 Pre-school boY'I' screen print •hlrt. Wh11e. blue or gold cation knit short sleeve shirl w1lh Walt Disney character on front. Sizes S-M-L. Special jean. 299 Pr .... c:ho°' beyt' corduroy Jean. Polyester/cotton mid· wale with holster pock.et styling. Flare leg. yoke back, wide bett loops, white contrast st1tch1ng. Big color se lection. Regular and slim sizes 3 to 7. Ouanlltles llmlted on apeclal merch•ndlse. Boytt" crew n~k polo shirt. Shorr sleeve tuck and bar stripe pattern All cotton FashiOf' colors. S·M·L-XL / / R-a. a.so. Bore' hooded • .,..,_ •hlrf Wlfh full lronl zipper. pouch pdi::kets and long sleeves Creslan• Kryl1ctcotlon S-M-L. Special 399 Boys' corduroy le•n w11 h wes1ern slyting Hemmed bottoms and belt loops. Fashion colors. Polyester/ cotton 6 to 18. , ., • , . "'-. ~pecial 27 88 ,your choice w .. hed denkft .....,. autt. Today"• rnOst popular ca Ml look. in 100'1. col1on , ot course. Western styling with snap dosures down front and on !tap pockets. Men's sizes S-M-L-XL. DoulH knM pol,...., • .._.,. fUM. Populaf CPO style wilh skfe venfS. Handsomely tailOfec:I in your cholce at f{llhlon colors. Men's sizes S-M-L-XL Ou•nllUH llml1ed on IJMClel tMrc:hllndtH. ' Special gas Special 13ea Du• Dlgg9f" oxford. Split lea1her upper. urethane sole Mocha brown. Men"s sizes. M.n'• side-zip boo!. PVC sole and heel. Leather u~per. Brown Special 12ee M.n'a wing-Up orlord. Leather upper. PVC sole and heet Antelope brown Boys· sizes 3•, to 7. Specie! a.ea Limited quantities on Special merchandise. Special 5 99 Young men's cotton co,duro1 l••na. Per leer 1or the cooler weather ahead Wester" slyhng 111 rash1on colors Mens s1l es Ou•ntltles llml'-d on spec .. ! merch•ndlse. • Wtdnf!!d!V. September 10. 1975 Special n ¢ Men'• cushion sole socks or Orlon· ;icryhclstrt'tcn "'V!on. Fiish1on colors 0,..,., <;•ze Iris 10 to ~·I. ( Special s13 We111rn-atyle shirt 1n assorted prints. POlycster/COl!on w1!h wes1ern snaps. ~lf'n s s11es S-M-l-XL. Ousnlllle1 lt mlled on apecl•I merchendlae. Use your JC Penney Charge Card. Casual Ban-Lon • shirt ot 100°. nylon lor P<l<;v-care. Placket rr onr sno!\._steeves. Av:.ortf'd co)ors 1n mf'n <; S•Zt'S S-M-L-Xl, ' Long-sleeved drea• sf'tlrt of easy-care polyesicrl c.otton. Assorted lash1on colors. Men's sizes. •. Quantities limited on special rnercMndi••· 20°/o off! Sale prices effective through Sunday, Sept. 14, 1975 le 560· . S7. Long-sleeved fsshlon Pf nt shirts. No-iron polyes1cr/ combed co!ton w11h 4"" banded co11 ar ~Quilr l" bottom. l'.lcn:. -..11e'> S-M-L-)(L W1th •.hort <,lecvcs. reg. $6, Sale 4.80 Sale sa Reg. S 10. Bold l•shlon print shlr1s. long-sleeves. lon9-po1n1 ,~, r>PP" IP·<,ur" collar, squ11r t! t' 'tori L·qn1wr1qh! I.nots 1n • a~v-c;ir'i blends Mens s11C"·• <;.r-.,1.L .XL. Sale 6 38 Reg. 7.98. T11lurlt9d Dacro"· polyesler 1hlrl. lu•1111ouc; C•rcular .kn•" !w•!I w11h shon c;1rrv('s tono po1n1 4'" bRndr>d i:ooar, souare bottom Fac;n1011 sohds. Men s sizes S-M-l-XL. W•lh lono slr><?ves. reg. B 98, Sale 7.18 Use your JCPenn1y Chsrge Card. •Jll-t Available in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties. ~ ' ' • ' • • ' . . Al .r DAILY PILOT Save 51.90-81.90 on these wa~her/dryer teams --------- • , . ,.. -~ Sale $224 Sale s154 Reg. 241.95. 3·c~I• automatic washer. Reg. 179.95. ,_.atchlng .rec:trtc Choose regular. short and soak cycles. dryer. Three temperature sen1ngs. Adjustable water level selection. four two lime cycles. End-ot-cycle cool· tabrtc programs. Porcelain top and down. Porcelain drum. baked drlpless lid, two front leveling legs acrylic top, 4-way venL .f.4420 end po1-Gelaln-lub, In while and Mlltchlng gas dryer. Reg. 209.95 decorator colors. Sale $184 11520 " i) " .~!l)i J ii..==·="=·='=' =·=·==='·=fl=.~ Sale s254 Reg. 291.15. large capa- ctty 1-progr1m wnher. ~~========::if========~I Setl lngs for speedy wash, exlra rinse. wash 'n soak anrl hand 'o\'aSh. In Save 50.95 to 80.95 on . . solid state color TV's. Sale s559 Roi 629.95 25 ... console TV with all solid state chassis. Chroma-Brite~ negative black matrix picture tube. Mediterranean or Early American cabinet. 14901 14S02 "pk:turo mo..,.od dlogonoly ( Sale 5579 Reg. 159.95. 25"• consOle. Color T.V. Mediterranean style with pecan veneers or Early American maple veneers. •4914 14915 Early Amer., dark pine veneers, reg. 669. 95, Sale $599 14916 .> Sale$399 A ... .tat.SIS. 1r• color port.. abfe TY with solld state chassis and 12 plug-in modules for las1er, easier service. Chroma• BntO" negative black matrlit picture tube, Chroma-Loe• controls. Plastic cablnet.122t1 19-• color table model TV with simulated walnut decorative accents. P.eg. 479.95. Siie $399 A2214 Sale s329 white and greal colors. 11555 I . ! Sale s194 • I AlfV. 379.95. 15""' color porlabl• TV with soUd state chassis and 11 plug-in modules for laster, easier serV1ce. Chroma-Brite• negative black matrix. picture lube and Chrome-Loe• contrOts for cotor, tint, contrast and brightness. Plastic cabinet. 12001 I Pl:eg. 229.95. Matching large cap.city 6-progrem Save 50.95 on color TV with remote control 19··• solid state portable. Control volume. on/off, channel . se lection without leaving your chair. Walnut color plastic cabinet. 1 elec:trk: dryer. Automatic . I I lime control and optional time cycle, adjustable signal sentry aMt end-of· <;\'Cle coot-down. In w1'•1e end great colors. 14551 ~chlng large capacity gas dryer.-f!:eg. 2SS.9S 911• t224--- • Sale 33995 Reg. 371.15. •1mpwl1I' 15.e FU· tt. no-f,ost rlfrlger•tOf". Pc>Wef' economlter, glass fiber Insulation. Three cantilever sleel shetves. ABS plastic meal pan and two vegelable crispers. Four wheels, three lull-width door shelves. 1n white and greal colors, ;fOS1~ Sale s299 Reg. 331.tS. 'Cuetom' 15.e cu. ft. rtfrtger1tor. No-frost throughout, power economizer. Three full width steel shelves Bnd one pla111e lhelt over ABS vegetable crispera. Four 1evchng legs and glaaa fiber lnsulehon. While. 1'0119 Automatic icemaker available tor all refrige- rators on this page. 150 plue 1n111J11Uon. Sale 5449 Reg. 499.95 Sale s129 Reg.189.95 Deluxe AM/FM/FM stereo tuner/ amplifier. Solid state chassis, push- button contrOls, 2- or 4-chanhel matrix. 13200 Sale s47 Reg. 59.95. 3-piece solid state record player has BSR-136 turntable. •1103 121147 . Sale s39 Reg. 49.95. 8-track tape deck plays 2-and 4- channel tapes automatically. 13400 Sale s54 Reg. 69.95. 3-piece a-track tape player. Manual or automatic.channel selection. #1204 •picture measured dlagona~ Sale s79 Reg. 1111.95. 8-track tape player! recorder. Recording level meters. control. #3325 Sale 49.95 each Extension_ speaker with a··. 5", and 3" speakers. Wood product cabinet, wood grained vinyl trim. #8188 Sale '46 Reg. 59.95. BSR 3104XE 11M turntable with magnetic cartridge. #8375 Save 20°/o on typewriters and calculators. ' ' Sale 191.96 Reg. 239.95. JCPenney cartridge typewriter. 12'' carriage, power return, auto-repeat keys, add-a-type keys. Made for us by Smith-Corona. °'1841 Sale prices effective through Sunday, September 14, 1975. Sale 71~96 Reg. 89.95. Rockwell 63R scientific slide ruld calculator. With charger. 12250 ...... El •maaa aama a ••••a ••••• Sale 23.96 Reg. 29.95. APF hand-held calculator with 4-key memory With charger. #2020 • !llU·T Lakers Basketball! Kings Hockey! FREE sport clinics at JCPenney! • Lakawood._Saturday, September 13th ••. 10:00 A.M. Arcadia-Santa Anita, Saturday. September 13th ..• 11 A.M. FREEi PEPSI~ AND DRAWINGS FOR FREE TICKETS AND ! Basketb611 clinic M.C.'d by Lynn Shackleford with Laker stars Hockey clinic M.C.'d by Dan Avey with King stars and coaches PRIZES! and coaches assistln . to assist. Watch lot free sport clinics comln soon to our oreol ARCADIA-8AHTA ANITA CANOGA PARK CARSON DOWNEY FULLERTON HIJNT1NGTON BEACH LAKEWOOD MONTCl.AIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTifllOGE ORANGE 'THE crrr PUENTE .tllLLS RfV!RSIDE SAN BERNARDINO VENTURA WHITTWooo • W11hon, dry-reftlgoratora 1loo at HUNTlNOTON i'ARK NOllT!f HOLLYWOOD TORRANCE Cafculatoro 1110 11 NORTII HOLL YWOOO TORRANCE • TV1 ond """° comPoMtita •Ito •I HUNTlNOTON PARK INQLEWOOD NOllT!f HOLLYWOOD TORRANCE WEST COVINA (pj3rtables -component1 only) A I • • ~ I • ! • • t • ~ • ~ • • l ~ I I ' •• ,• • t ,. I • , • .. • . Save s40 t()-S68 . . " on 4 glass belted radia1s. 25~ oft JCPenNy 11 ... bell.cl r•dlll Uru. 1a.se"e1 wwte Ur• With two glass fiber beltt oYer a 10Ugh 2-ply potyes_ierc;ord body. Agore:nN• tl99d design. ,,,._ ....---lili ~ce 8R7S..13 .. ... ... DR7S.1C , .. a .11 EA71--tC S5f U.21 FR78-1C S5• 40.SO GA78-14 $57 42.71 OR78-15 ... ... HR7&.15 $62 ..... LR7&.15 $68• 151 No I~ NqUlted. No .. tra ch9r1• tor mounting and rotation. .:+.P.l..T. 2.07 2,. 251 2 68 2 ,, 2 95 3 17 3.48 25°/o off Highway 78 truck tires. W5d• highway 71 ttuck tlrff. Perfect for Nght ttl>Ck• and · RV'1. TOugh nylon cord body, high tracllorl tread ONlgn. Available In special Wge afze especially detigned tor campers. ,; ·- 30% off Sale 69.88 Reg. 99.95 B·track tape deck with F.M s te reo r adio. D1g1tal channel indicator light and man ual repeat button. Equipped with burglar iilarm. #0161 , 13/e" super '1~.i!VY·duty .. shock abs.orb.er_ ~ ___ ~~~~ 9.99 each Ip; 1,:VS " d iameter piston (over "Y.i more working area than our regular heavy dutsr shock) for more resistance to . , · rebound. lower internal working ... ~ ........ pressures. 60°/o more fluid than regular " heavy duty shocks. Specially engineered valving and s1,1per large piston area help provide comfort. stability and safety. Expert ln1t~ll11tlon avaffable. Compare our low prices on these famous name brand guns. ~-'@' - _-:_ _~ @?: ~c~"''i.--·· -·--·~ ~ ---~ ' ..,;-~---Rem1ng1on"' 700 BDL Now _... bolt-action nfle, 30.06.194 99 . 5 shot. Hooded sight. • Winc hester® 670 bolt- act1on w ith 4X scope. 30.06 b ig game rifle. Now 164.99 Wincheste"" 94. lever-NOW action deer nfla, 30.30 cal. 6-shot magazine. 89.99 -r~·.tffei!h:~ r ='•'' E~~~ Remington® 1100 '£.;r .... semi~automatic. 12 or Now : 20 ga .. full or modiliad209 99 choke. • Winchester@ 1200 ·vent nb shotgun with Winchoker.>. 12 or 20 gauge. Now 145.99 T1r9 Size ..... ~ ... • ... Prtoe +,.l.T. H71-15/6 56.00 41.00 3.55 L7S.16/8 6 3.00 47.25 399 G78·15/6 .ss.oo 41.25 3.44 H78-15/6 5B 00 C3.SO 3.55 950-16.5/8 "00 53.25 ... S... Pfk•• effective ttvu Sunday S.pL 14 Combination lube and oll change , 8.88* Drain old oil, replace with up to S qts. of heavy- duty 30-wt. oil, replace oil tilter, lube chassis. • ~Moat Amerlc•n. many foretgn cara. Wheel alignment service 8 88* Here's what you get: suspension • inspection, set camber and caster. @.djust toe-in. road test. -Mott Amettcan, many foreign c•ra. Add $2 for cart wtth toralon ban and tmct air Special 59.95 Enginie tune-up kit has DC 'pow8red timing light and ehgine analyzer for 4, 6 or 8--cylinder cars. Bought separately, 77.90. 64.95 Mobelec -Ironic Ignition will help your _car.....run....smoother,....b.etter:...more efficiently. Expert ln1'8llallon avallallle. 36.99 15•8 Mojock4' oft-road and AV wheel in all-white spoke design with recl/btue stri pes. 39.99 15•8 Mojoc~ in sllining chrome finish. Off. road and RV use. Weaver" 4X scope. Increase your accuracy with this versatile, full-size scope , .....•......•.. 29.99 F•mou1 brand duck and pheannt lo•d•, 20 gauge, box of 25 ...................... 2.99 12 gauge. box of 25 •.. ,, ................. 3.39 Famous brand rtfle ammunition, 30.30. box of 20 ..........•..•.... Special 4.99 30.06. box of 20 .•...............• Special S.99 0uter•1a rifle or shotgun cleaning kJt ..•..••••. 3.99 Rltkt case to protect your firearms. tor scoped rifles ...•......•............. , ..•........... 8.99 For rifles without scopes .................. 7.99 20% off Cranmere0 twist-together shelving The wtrm look of Medlterraneen styling. Polystyr ene spindles. Shelves of vlnyl laminated ha rdboard can be asse mbled without tools. Choose a kll or buy pieces tndivldually. 3·Shell kit Reg 58 95 S•I• 47.11 5-shell step-down k11 Reg 90 95. S•I• 72.tl 5-shell room divider k•t Reg 97 95. S•fe 71.31 7-shel! stereo kit Reg 114 95. Sii• 91 .11 7 ·'Spi ndle Reg 1 59. Sale 1.27 12~ spi ndle. Reg. 1 89. l•te 1.51 15" spindle. Reg. 2,49. S.I• 1.11 .. DM.YPILOT .4Ja• • Clearance! 50% off all our exterior paint! Now4.49g.1. Orig. I .ff o•I. One Coat exterior latex paint is ideal for wood siding, shingles. stucco, exterior masonril aluminum siding and trim. Resists fading, · chalking, t>lliti rtng. Great colors. Now5A9ua•. Orig. 10.99 911. One Coat P1us exterior flat latex 1~1dea1 for siding, wood, shingles, slucco, masonry. aluminum siding and trim. 'Stain, fade, chalk, blister and mildew resistant. Many colors. Now 6.49 ga1. Orig. 12.99 gal. Par EJ<cellence latex house and trim covers in one coat. Resists staining, fading and chalking. Hands and tools clean up in soap and water. Dozens of custom colors. Save s3 a gallon! Sale 4.99 g•" Reg. 7.99. One Coat Interior flat latex is washable, durable. stain and fade resistant. Choose from ready-mix and custom colors. . f../lt ReQ.7.9-9 gal:-One 00al'semig1oss interior ta lex is ideal for kitchens, baths1 playrooms. Washable. durable, stain resistant. Clean up with soap and water. Many decorator colors. In custom ml•ed palnl1, beefill• colot lnlentlly dltfen, the volumeol pt Int per can m•y, In some calff, b9 &lightly l•N lt\lln • lull gallon. All aale price• effective through Sunday, September 14, 1975. QuanUtlea llmltad on clearance merchandlae. Save s7 to s12 on these power tools ' Sale 29.99 Reg. 37.99 cordlesa drill and screwdri\ler goes anywhere . High-torque. 300 rpm motor. With batteries. recharger. *'0015 -~~;{ l< Sale 39.99 Reg. 49.99 7'1/4" circular eaw, double insulated. 2 HP, var/torque clutch. sawdust ejector. #4938 Sale 27.99 Reg. 34.99 dual action aander, straight llne or orb ital. 4000 orbits/min- ute. 14961 Sale 239.95 Reg. 279.95 Black & Oecker/DeWalt power shop. Fan-cooled direc t drive 115V motor. Includes steel stand. 10' combination blade. sawdust elbow. Easy to ·assemble . .+7743 Nol at Canogai Park Sale price• effectfv• thru Sunday, SepL 1•, 1975 Sale 42.39 Reg. 52.99 'h" triple ac• tlon drlll also chisels, hammer drills. 0 to 800 rpm. 10002 ' . ' Hand tool sale. Your choice 4.99. Reg. 6.39. :Yi. by '.:li~jW::O 16' powerlock tape. Reg. 7.99 26 " 8- pt. crosscul saw. Reg. S.99 16 . tool box, l1ft·ou1 tray Reg. 5.99. 7" low angle block plane. R011-7.119 16,oz.--) claw hammer. em'"'"· """· 99'· •••• 7" Save 25o/o now on all Clearancel 25% off 3" leg. Peg. 1.1Q • ..,. es· Winchester<> 1400 soac••· Reg. ,... .... ... wall coverings on extension ladders semi-automatic ~~~~ c:.;:r,or end shell. Reg. 1 i.99. Hundreds of patterns. colors. Many Save now on all JC Penney shotgun with NOW are washable. Normal charge for aluminum extension ladders. many i : • ' • ' ' I i • I ' r I • ' • • • • • • • • . • • • • • I I l ! • • j • l ' l l I I • I • I • I I l I 11 hie pric•• ett.cttv• thru cutting, shipping on special safety features. like die-cast tocks. ~~~~~ike · 12 or 20 174.99 = SundeJ, Sept. 14, 1179 orders. Allow one we ek delivery. skid-resistant Cycolac19 end caps. t , 31•ll·~ J' • ARCADIA-SANTA ANITA CANOGA PARK CAflSON.DOWN!Y FUL.i..ERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACll NORTtifUDGE ORANGE 'THE CITY' PUENTE HILLS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO VENTURA WHITTWOOO Auto centefa alao at BUENA PARK (Orangethorpe et Volley View) but not al LAKEWOOD I , • ' I • ' . • I l • • Al4 DAILY PILOT ' Save now on every· decorator sheet in stock! Reg. 3.IUI. "Part•l9nna" no-Iron d.c:oratOt •M•I•-Macti1ne wast1nble polyes1erlco11on must1n 1n a variety ol colors Full Sile !lat or l1tted Reg. 4.99. Sale 3.24 Stand,lfd S•ze pillow cases. Reg 3 -lg pkg ot 2. Sala 2.21 pkg. or 2 -:~ t. -.·. ' :~: •• .f-, ·'· . ,,.~ '.">!:• • ' ,~ .... ·, :...-- ' • ..... -, . -· -. • . . .. !{.~ s,. .,. . .. • .'( • • + .. . r • .. .. ' ··~ - , -- .. Sale 24! ...... w . R9g. 2.H . "N~nt" no-- Iron rnwlln •heet9 In pOfyester/ collon. Colorful design adds 10 any decor. Full !lat or lllled. Reg. 3.99 S• 3.4' Standard size plllow cases. Reg. 2.79 pkg. or 2. late 2.41 pkg. of 2 Sale prlceo effective through SUnday, Sept. 14, 1975 ' ... ,, . ... ' ' • ~ •• ":1\~· ..... ~....,'!h.....,....," • • • · . Sale Special 4aa· 242~- A-a. SS. -ntan 1r •.• thick, .thirsty un-. sheered terry In lusclouS SOlld colors. All t'OtfOfl Of' CO~n/ po,Y..stM~ Hand towel, rea. s2. S ... t .IO ' Wash cloth, reg. $ t. t Sal• ao• Sale 396 ..... ,,_ Dude down and fMlher pltlow. SOft and luxurtous with covet or durat>Je cotton ticking. Standard s!ze. R ... C.71. "Dlmhr°' no-.lron pMU .. ct.cor.tor th.etitof combed cotton/ pof'(ftter, Nostalglc patterns In ctoeorator <:ok>rs. QUMtftiH Dmtted °" .,. .. ,~ 34! .... Full aite fliit or ~tted. Reg. 5.19. Siie 4.H Queen tile t1at <it fitted. Aeg. 9.79,'8• I.Cl Soft and durable m11ttreu pad with pOlypropytene cov.er bonded to polyester lill. A great value. -Slandlr-d si.ze piUow cases. Reg. 4.29 pkg. of 2 ..... 3.71 pll:g. of 2 Queen Size pillow cases. Reg. 4.79 ~kg. of 2. s ... S.H pkg. or 2 ··u .. your .i~CPenney Ch•ge Card. Save 25°/o on 20°/o off! .. Sale Twin size fitted. 4.41 Full size !lat. 4.11 Fuit alze fitted. 5.11 selected edspreads. 3 ~~2•" conlow Sale 97 ... ~ ... Reg. 113. "Rochel .. ' ... tully q\lllled lhrow-style bedspread. Polyester/rayon blend In an Intricately detalled print. W1lh ·po1yeSter till and Cere11.• backing. Choice of decoralor colors, Full size, reg. $16. sas. 112 Oueen stze, reg. $22. Sele' 18.SO King size, reg. $25, Siie -11.75 Reg. 4.tt. 'P•rf•tt' bath rugs. OuPont9 nylon pUe with Ouragon• wallle back. Handsome deooralor COIOfS. 24x36• oblong, reg. 4.99, Sal• 3.tl 27x45n obk>ng, reg. 8.50, S.I• 1 .10 l id cover. reg. 2.99, S•le 2.31 20°/o om . .. \It R*V. 131. 'Sheron' ... tully" quilted lhrow- s1yle bed spread. Big, bold floral print on cotton. With polyester lilt and cotton backing. Choice ol oec:orator colors. Machin~ wash, tumble dry. Sale 41.!. ,..~ ....... I.' ~ll-1 I !-t < • ' ' q . • t t .. ~-. .. . ' .,. .\ :• • .r: ~ ' ••• ~.,, >;: • • <:: •• • • ,. ;:, :..: : -· -.• ... ~ -·,· \ t ... :> ' . ~ ".': . Queen size. reg. $38, Sele 21.50 King size, reg. $44, Se~ $33 Sale priceo effective through Sunday Sept. ·14, 1975 R90. 5.H, 'BomblJ' thoww curtaln. Shantung- •mbossed vlnyl In beaulifut decot'alor OOllds. MatcNng wfndOW' . curtain, reg. 5.99. U.4.7t•ec:h ! ~ ~ . ~ .: . ;-;, 1 ,. -· ·.·i &! : J ;,'.i, .,-". \I ~ : ii -~ ";. :· • :~,v .. :. .. "l~~ i~i~·:~ 't•;."" . " •, :, \). ~. • • 31~T , Lakers Basketball! Kings Hockey! FREE sport clinics at JCPenney! Li.k-ewocid, Saturday, September 13th ... 10:00 A.M. Arcadl1·Santa Anita, Saturday, September 13th ... 11 A.M.. FREEi pj;p51,.' AND DRAWINGS FOR FREE TICKETS AND llQketbell cllnia M.C.'d by Lynn Shadkleford,wlth Laker stars Hockey .clinic M.C.'d by Dan Avey with King slars and coache• PRIZE9f- and beaches -lalfng. to assist. · Watch for free 8port cllnlct1 coming soon to rour •N•I Available In Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bemardino and Ventura counties. . . . . i -~ I • • r I ( r I J • ' - . ,1 ' I i I ' ' I t eHtleal Notes Badharn Seat Sparks Hopes 1110.c. BUmNGS Ol-OM ........... BUT DESPITE Badham Jeaving an open field in the heavily Republican distr·ict, most or the talked about potential candidates are still sniffing the political bceezes. Probably the moot ac- tive 74lh Disgrict non· candidate has been Irvine C..ouncllman' Henry Quigley, who In recent times emblazoned the district with signs proclaiming ''Henry ROY HOLM, mayor of Quigley -Leadershlo." Laguna Beach, said, ' Ai1·port N * DAIL y PILOT A I$ ise Hearings Set ..,_ Nenfrom all over Callfornl• 11 round•d up '---••chd•y In the DAILY PILOT Quigley still is not re-"'That's very Oa'tering, ady lo move his CaQ'I.· but I'm not planning to paign into the open. run for anything ." Asked o"er the weekend Badham does not plarr l~!!====!~===!~==!=:!=:!t"; whether he was ready to. to heJp any of the can. make an announcement, didates who may try to he said, ''Yes ... I bad a take his place in great vacat\on. . Sacramento. -However, one active ..;:;:~==~~~===~ Orange Coast Republican told of the existence of a ready- made campaign or. ganization looking for a candidate to support. mE GROUP'S name: the ABQ Club. ABQ. lhe Republican said, means "anybody but Quigley." Other candidates. for the 74th were mentioned by Badham and othen. But only one rnan has made up his mind to nm. Richard Wessman, a life insurance agent and S8n Clemente resident, said, "I have not made a formal a nnouncement, .. BAD TIME . FOR HOWUP PARIS <UPI) -Three bank robbers had to wait 20 minutes for their loot until the cashier got back from lunch to open the safe. Police said the robbers1 forced employes and customers of the bank in s uburban Boulogne- Villaiicourt to stand in a coi:ner while lhfY waited for the casttjer. , They made off with $20,000. ' . Dean's Widow - '" Mabry Steinhaus [ Heads VCI Group ,_ Mabry C. Steinhaus of Newport Beach has suc- ceeded John M . Rau 0£ Orange as president or the UCJ Foundation. · The UCI Foundation is a non-profit corporation organized ror the purpose of developing priv~te S~P· port for the UC Irvine campus and coordinating . community organizations afflliated with the un - iversity. Mrs. Steinhaus is the widow of Dr. Edward A. Steinhaus, founding dean of biological sciences at UCI . She has been a member of the foundation's board of directors sinci! 1971 and receqUy complf?;t· ed two terms as foundation secretary. A former president or UCI Tmm and Gown, she ~urrently is serving as president of the UCl Interfaith Founda- tion board and Is a member of the board or the University Club. RAU WILL SERVE AS ex.officio member or lhe UCI Foundation board and wj.ll be the foundation 's representative· on the governing board or Thesaurus Linguae Graecae, a campus project ~o create a computer-based data bank of .ancient _Gre~k language. Rau is pre.ident of David Industries, in· st.rument manufacturers. Foundation officers in addition to Mrs. Stei~haus include Paul Ma~x f Corona del Mar, partner m the Rutan and Tue w firm, as vice president for administration nd atrick Cadigan of Newport Beach, president of Electronic Engineering Com- pany as vice president for development. SeCretary is Leiand Oliver of Newport Beach, president of Leland Oliver Associates advertising agency. Dr. Jordan Phillips of Downey, a gynecolo1ist and obstetrician, is treasurer. John Spear of Irvine, a director of development and alumni at UCJ. serve& aS assiltant secretary and executive direct<>r. NEW DIRECTORS, ELECTED for two.year terms are Lloyd Ankeny, regional manager of Mark~ting Industry, Xerox Corporation; Gary Bur· rill president and general manager of Radio Sta-tiOO KOCM · Robert Hamoo, managing partn~ of .. Arthur You~g and Company financi.al consulting rirm and Richard Reese, vice president or plan- ning: Irvine Company. All are resident.a of Newport .Beach. Re-elected as directors are four residents of Newport Beach: Lout:; Heilig! vice president _and general manager, Aeronut.roruc-Ford Corporatu~n; Roy La Hue, vice president or th~ lnfor~ation Systems Group, Xerox Corpor,t1on; Richard Stevens president. International Bay Clubs, and Robert 'weed, pre1fdent and publiSher, the Daily Piiot. OTHEllS llE·ELECTED AllE Carl Milcbell or Laguna Beach an attorney with the law firm or Paul Hastings' Janofsky and Walker, and Virginia Thruj,p or Sant'a Ana, past president, U~I Medical Faculty Wives. . . , . Named to the UCI FoundaUon'1 adVllOry council are Agnes Blomquist of Newport Beach, trustee of Newpvrt Harbor T':""t; Thol_DU Wolff of Newport Beach senior vice pres ident{ Irvine Com- pany; .Aubrey lforn or Corona de Mar, arthitec· tural and raclllllcs consultant; Muriel Reynolds or Lquna Beach, a founder of tbe UC! Friends of lhe Libr8ry, and Santa Ana Pottmaster Hector Godinez. PURSES & HANDBAGS .,.. and currtnl •tv•••• mo1tly n.w !of \Pring and 1ummtr 111 a lrtmtl'ldows \l•rltly ol 1tyl1s. Lt•fhtrs, ptltnls, 1W0.1, tan. .,.,. la kt rur, ttc. -J--S2.00 & Sl.00 All OTllU TO $H.M 1tOW 'h ""1 LADIESWRA . SANDALS Trtmo,.dov1 grovp ol wrop o•ovnd tondol1. lootho•1. ,.,.d•t. polt,.11. lilll• ho•I•. l!oh, wod.9i••· Whito, block, o.o-. ~ Al JIU-.. $ ·RIG $1·$12.00 1 sal1 prico •••••• , •• LADIES RACK SHOES ). Ont" IDAOG PAtfilS, ltlfltlrt •II !ht .,,,., 1•1•11 styles, mot! H1irtd tolor1 1n • biq \l•rltty ti dr111y •nd ca1111I sl'lott, 1c:l'llol 1hot1, plttftrrn 111ot1, Ul'ICl•ll •M cl191, and mucn, much rnt4"t. SIJt1 411 11, l 9r1ups it EG. s 11. tt to'''-n $3.s5.$7 LADIES · CORK PLATFORMS 8'1M Mw c: .. rren• 11110 1181""' ..... "' ........ °' ~ .... ,,,., Oii llllft pllolb'ln, •Ir•• .. 10. e_1 ~~.s500 .. ~ ' SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY 333_E._] 7Jh_S.t, Costa Mesa 464 S. Main St., Orange • . LADIES . "U.S. KEDS" ESPADRILLES Dtlwit t•""''c11u•l1· witl'I roPt st+ts in a bit "arltly of ctlOrs. Si1t1 S to 11. OUR ENTIRE STOCK Sale Items And Prices Available At These Two Locations Only • ''Business As Usual'' At Our Other Stores! Shop Now. LADIES SANDALS & CLOGS Drt11y ind c11111I, high, .,,ftl1um ind low l'lffl W111dal1, ~ new11t in cl091, tic. All 1r1 or1nd ntw currtnl 1lyl11 Ill '"'"-''· "'"'""'· 1"611, 1tc . Tr.m.ndo\11 Mt<Kliofl In Mltl 4 to 10, H ·M·W wid01$. 4 lllreutl'- LADIES CLOGS Spoci•I g;ow,p. OVER 500 PAIRS whitt1 1l'ld t•n• only, Hurry, thay won't I.rt at this price. All tbtt. SOOCIPAllS MEN'S DRESS & CASUAL SHOES lrtmtnctous 11ltct1on. 100'1 of 1tyt11, color1, tic. 1hp·o•u, tit,, beet lf\llt1, tf(. llztl ' ta It. llKll•."i.IUOO $6-$8-$10 MEN'S WORK SHOES . & WORK BOOTS 1'.,_ llG $10 $ 2 00 :!!!~~-~.-$6.00 .... _ .... __ ,... __ ._. __ • ___ -! 1 ~========::.J·---$ 00 • 55.00 ~IH WEDGIES "ACME" "SANTA ROSA" "GEORGIA .. l'lwgt 'lotk hi· cludts woni o•ford1, •..and I Wlch worlc boots, 1111ul1ltd boots. 1t1tl lots, 11ntm•111, boot1, •ntlnMr boot$, w1lllnglon boof\, t111nh11g •nd h1lc111g books, lie. 1iJt1' to lJ, J 1poc11l 9ro11p1. 1,,, ..... ~ "' ro "'·" 8. . LADIES """"'-·-- DRESS SHOES "ltFE STRIOE" "JOYCE., "RISQUE" "MAOEMOIS• SELLE" "'AVANTINI .. "L.AOY FLAIR" othtrs. High, Mtdium, 111d low httl drt51 stio.1 in a trtmtndou1 Vffitty Of Ill ntW \tyltl Ind Ult moil Wa11ttd tolofl. L.t•lhtrs, pattnt1, 11M'Ot1, tic:. Ntarly all •rt br•nd ntw for 1pri~ •nd 111mmtr 1915 •nd v••r •round ........ ,. Silt\ 4 lo 10, AAA to c widlhs. S huge group1. ~T:2J."_$ 10.00 ::T:~~ 12.00 LADIES SANDALS & THONGS 1pec:l•I group, OYtr lSOO pairs''' 1lzt1. m•ny tolors, stylts _,Am MENS SHOES IOO's et style1 '" dross '"°"-c•suob, llleets, a.ft. dol1, tt1tl'Hlr1, p1tot1t1, su.ct11, hute ••ltctltn. SltH 6 te 14. l:EG. Slt."teS4S.IO $6-$8-$10 MEN'S ,_ ... ,_.,_ ... _ • 11 ......... ~···-...... ..... ., ·-.._... Ill ....... •-. w-. ......,. "41••· All ..... "' ,, 5.11." ......... J.4 • .., ft' 10 SJ •. ff ~,, ... $12.00 $15.00 !:!·~1~!·~-·-· $100 J.4 .... $1.9.00 t-;:=====:;:==;1 "' fO $J4.ff ... ,.k. MEN,'S . BOSTONIANS Mos t w.anlt"O w.ll'1-tblr Cd " Y.ll Sl•O·l)n bl .. r Of"n•M ... Wfhlt, rub~• IOlfi. MEN'S RACK SHOES I ·-$ 00 ~~.:: .. ___ $3 & $4 DRESS SHOES :!!!:'.~--5. ...__L_A_D-IE-S---1 & DRESS BOOTS 1--------n "IAITISH WALK!A" "ITAL· '"' 'i'ri· •• $7 00 CAS s I.I." "THE A OLEA SHOE" Sn11 •· ll. REG. Iii DO s•le Pritf ss.oo 100'1 of sly!t1, drtll and c1111.al, includf1 booll, tic. AU •rt fram our rf9ular SIO<lc in •II ''''~ but not in ttCl'I slylt. Sirft i lo 14. :!rlu--:···----• UAL "LLOYD& TAYLOR" "BALLI" "SAN MARINO" ,,. ,._ $9 00 "HAT. ADV . IAANDS" A All l:trtnd MW very lllrsl stylts lfG TO $11." lr1m1ndov1 111ec:t1on ol rtw vtry lfl<lvd11 1llp-ort1, 1tr1p1. "''• .-.,ni•·--·-· • ltltil In c11u1l1 includir19 ti1t1, buckl11 , boots, In bltck1, ~T:~~-.. $11.00 ~!IT~~:~~·-S 13.00 LADIES DRESS & CASUAL SHOES Ila vo•:"Y af cktg1, Molt, Mei llott. flnt (-t. fi•lt Mt ......... _,..,_, lo1Jy1I Votltty of 1tyi.. :~::i;;~" N S20.00 ' 1 .. ,. ,,;"' --. ·- I 11r1p1, little hHll, w1ll1bi1 bf"own1, whites, tins, colors, tic. l!yl11, short boot1, p1nl 11'1ff1, Ltt!Pttrl, p1t1nl ltalhtr1, tic. In w..og. hffls, '""'• tit. Silt$ 4 11111 6 lo 14, AA to EE E widlh1. s lo 11, 5 hu9t 11roup1. hu~ gfovpi. :E:.~~:~ __ ss.oo ,,,.... $ "' .. ...... 12 00 ... ,.it•-• =~~~:~ .......... $6.00 ~-: :Oi"..LH $14 00 .... ,nc.__ • ~~ ft111.H $7 00 -.,,ic. ___ .• ,,. ,..., $ ... ·~ "'·" 1 5 00 .. '"" ·--~-. =~ r.Ti •. N $8 00 tok,,W.•-··-• "'·-$9 00 "' Tt SJJ.01 _..,.. ... ___ . MEN'S CASUAL & LEISURE SHOES OVER lOOO PAlllS REG. 'lt .tttostS.DO H119t 1tleclion of lht "'~ 1•1111 11.---------' '" 1moolll •nd rough·oul l1•thtr1, bru1lltd p tg1kln1. w1ll•bi1 styltl, mtsh c1t111••· tic. 1000'111pot1 1000's of lht vtry 111111 1tyrt1. (Olors, fie. 1n 11Jt\ 6 to 11. N·M·W wodlhs. 4 1'11191 9roup:1. "'•... $ :~:•s.•• 6.00 PLEASE NOTE EVERY PAIR OF SHOES IN OURS300,000 STOCK IS ON SALE. Since we aro closing out at this location , 1hoes are advertised on a first come first $ervfd ba'is . Nothing reserved, nothing held back. All shoes advertised are sub-- je<t to quantity on hand and too orior sall!. Shop now for best sele<tion . I l ' f I /lJ8 DAILV PILOT Wednesday, September 10, 1975 'D ead End~ 1l'Star 'Frosted' At Tesu 'Enema B andit's' Trial. Set P atty Hearst 'Lead' F ai/,s EDITOR 'S NOTE: T~ !feorch /vr P.olty Hearst ha.t cri.s1-croa1ed the coun.iry. as. anonymou.s tip!. and unrel.io- bl.e. P.alty ".Jghtings" are reJayed to tht FBI. Mo.st in· formation doe.m'I pan out. but nearly all i.s checked. All torite-ra Lindo neut sch. and J.ee l.indeT tell about one such F'Bl''lead'' that Jailed to1.01ot:"Or1h P.atty. ELYSBURC;, Jla. IAPJ -The FBI has gont! down many dead end roads ln its hunt for America 's most wanted woman -Patty llearsl -and one of those trails upparf'nliy wind:-. up here. Jn this remote rarm town, v.·h(·rc big news usually is the price of rom, lown.s folk sltll wonder whether Patty Hearst was hiding here . THE FBI REf'USl:-:S TO SAY. BUT il is known that agents hav(' had their eye un a roller-coaster operator the past four months, and their 1nve~tiga­ tion may not be over The targel of this lat('!';t FRI effort is Jim Paul. 32, an unlike ly charact£•r 1n lhe ll('arst case. A ~e lf· slyled 1ndiv1dualist, he hves in a sl'cludcd mountain cabin that has neither C'lectricity nor run· nini.: w<:iter and claims he's hap· µit.'St giving kids rides in the ;.1 mus l·me nt p&-rk where he works. F'or years, Paul was a footloose wanderer who roamed the country, marri ed and divorced two women. fathe red HEAltST five ch1h..lrcn, tried many jobs and finally returned to this central Pennsylvania region where he was born. He says he "'anted lo .. t•:<periment" in living like a pioneer in a quiet forest glen. But he was n "L expecting the FBI. TllE f:XCITF.MENT Bf:GAN AtlER ag(•nts received an anonymous tip that the fugilive newspaper heiress might be holed up in Paul's shack, or that she was headed there. "All I know is that I want to be le(t alone~" Paul says. "Patty Hearst was never here at my place as far as I know.·· The FBt won't say whether it is -or ever was -interested in Paul. "I can't tell you anything abOut any investiga- tion or how it came out,°' says Robert Marc h, the agent supervising the flearst case in Pennsylvania. "This is confidential information in our files and nobody's business." All they'll i!Cknowledge is that they are seeking the 21 -year-old daughter of San Francisco E>t· aminer President Randolph ~learst on bank rob- bery and weapons charges -and that they follow every lead. Miss llearst was kidnaped from her Berkeley apartment Feb. 4, 1974, by the Sym- bionese Liberation Army which she later said she joined. ~ow THE HUNT WJDCH BEGAN in Berkeley. and rzig-zagged futilely across the country has come to Elysburg, population 2,000, where the notoriety has everyone buzzing. ''Glory be. We're celebrities," exclaimed one farm woman. \ Paul doesn't appreciate the attention. He says he is a nervous wreck over the matter and trembles -atthementiono(tbeHearstcase. . What happens when the FBI investigates a lead ln the Hearst case? This is what happened in Paul's case: -Two FBI agents visited Paul·s landlord in May and said they believed Patty Hearst might be hiding in his place. -On the evening of July 8, agents came to the town hall seeking a police report on Paul. -During the week of Aug. tl, Paul's boss was questioned by agents who mentioned Miss llearsL again. -In all this time, Paul was never contacted although he was watched. And nobody seems to know who involved Paul. "I AM A RESPONSIBLE, CONCERNED citizen and not an outlaw or criminal like the FBI -made me out to be to my friends and neighbors." Paul says. ' To Wed A gal• Actor Mickey Rooney, 53, said Tuesday he has ··round the girl or my dreams'' and will make Jan Cham· bcrlain, 25, singer~ composer, his eighth wife later this year. LONDON CAP ) British television personality David Frost, who had his car stopped by police and was forct(I to take a drunk driving test before being re- leased, says the whole affair was Ul\flecessary. Officers said that the test disclosed he had on- ly six percent of the legal level of 80 milligrams of alcohol in his system. ··t'm happy the analysts have proven how ridiculous it was to stop the car in the first place, ~i Frost said. • £y U.S. Government regulations we can pay you the hiohest.1nterest on lnsured savings. And We do. Right now you can get World·:;. highest interest: 8.06%•!7.75% on $1.000 certificates held a minimum of six years-maximum of 10. This exceptionally high rate means your money will double in less than 9 years when interest and principal are held in your account and compounded continuously. What's more, this high rate of interest is guaranteed. So you don't have to worry about recessions or marke t fluctuations. And all accounts are insured by an agency of the Federal Government. ~~ ~f~ Besides getting the highest interest on insured savings, you also get a world of valuable FREE services with qualifying balances. Check the chart below. See h o w much money you can save while you're saving. John Campbell is Paul's landlord as well as his longtime friend. Campbell's 25-acre farm includes · Paul's one-room, rundown cabin that is 200 yards from the nearest road, encircled by trees, and is just steps away from a bubbling creek where he Nf.'W."_,j ,"f41.Y.';I.'\ draws water and fi shes. The area is 11 miles west of Aha.mokin, a tired old . anthracite coal town. 60 miles north of the state capital of Harrisburg, and 14 miles from Danville where Campbell and Paul grew up together. When FBI agents walked into the Campbell kitchen in May, Campbell thought it was about the cabin which police and weUare officials once con- sidered un!luitable for Paul's 6-year-old daughter - a complaint dropped last winter. Campbell recalls: "One agent finally said. 'We're investigating Patty Hearst>.' They said they had a report that she was around Jim·s place. "I TOLD TllE FBI l'D KNOWN Jim all my life, and there was no way he'd be involved with her ... They scared the hell out of me.·· Campbell said the questioning so unnerved him ·that he forgot the eggs he was frying on the stove, and smoke filled the kitchen. ''Al the same lime, a bunch of little chicks 1 had in a box got loose and started running around the kitchen:' Campbell says. "l was chasing them around. It was really a sight." Fnie Money Oi;der:i . F:l-ee Notary ~vtee Remember, available to all Wofld S avers are free direct deposit o{ Social Security checks, free Check-a-M onth plans, ffee postage-paid Save-by-Mail envelopes, extended office hours, free refreshments and ample free parking. And ask how you can qualify for c dr rental discounts. too. CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) -A cbange or venue tblftln.& the trial of a man accused ol be.in.I the "enem1 bandit" r""" OWnpeicn County to Coot County has betn ordued bf a Qrcull Coortjlldge. Judge Birch Morcanordered the tran1reT at the reque11t or Raymond Massucci, .an Arlinston Heights attorney representing Michael Kenyon of Palatine. A TlllAL DATE IN COOK County bu been set tentatively for Dec. 1, a spokesman for tbe Cham· paign County state's attorney's office said. Massucci. who CSMJJ.d not be reached for com · ment, sought to change the trial loca.tjon becaU¥he said it would be virtually l.mposslbla for Keo)'ot\ to receive a falr trial ln the Champal~ea. Kenyon was charged with the May 3 armed rob- bery of several U.ni'lersity ol lllinolJ ~~ Police said a gunman wearin& a sktina.slt adm.in{stered enemas to tbe women before taking their money. POLICE SAID THE INODENTS were similar to about a dozen 6thers which have taken place near ' .. • '1 • ~j~j][~!) ~~~~~l World offe rs You the flex1bil1tt o1 many high interest, insured s"avings plans. Choose the ooes that are just right for you. (!:I ilQ\i Hib/~ Gu .. anteedon ~~~"1{.Q $1 ,CXXJ minimum ba.lanc:e . Term: fOJ~% 6·10 years. Guaranteed on $1 ,CXXl muumum b.ll~c:e Term· 4·6 years Guaranteed on $1,000 nrlrumum hi.lance Term: 21~ .4 yea.rs. Guaranteed on $1,000 rrun1mum bcllance. Term: 1-2112 years. Guaranteed on $500 minimum balance Term 90 days C'*""'1: illlnual ra~ on pa..ulX>ok accowit. SS.00 mm1mum balanc:e. · 'EHecti..-e annual yield when principal and interest are left in the account and compound111d continuously. trlOTE: Federal regulation• require a lubatanlial lnterott penalty tor early withdrawals h orn certificate1. • the ChamoalJtn·Urbana campus at Intervals ti.nee 1917. The same man also is belleved responsible few attack• on coeds in Los Aq.teles. Norman, Okla .• and Manh11tan. Kan. Kenyon, 30, YIU arrested in Glen EUyo, a 1ub-- urb of Chlcago, ln J\Dle on two cb.a.r&es of &r'Sled robbery in an unrelated case. Tfanster students can enroll at any tlrne all year Hawthorne Christiu . Schools Kindergartep thnfath Gracie • Ttactlin( tht 4 R'.1wit-11h1nics • Door·tl·DDDr Bus Stnict • 81for1 and Afttr ~•ti Care • Rtaionahle T11ttit1 II foualll• YJlllJ: 16835 Brooltllurst.Sl,/ 714-962-3312 If you are either not covered under a retirement plan or are sell-employed, we can start a retire1Dent plan that will: (a) Give you a substantia1 tax shelter now; (b) Build a substantial retirement fund that will let you retire in style. For instance we will show you ho w you can deposit up to $1500 a year in a World Individual Reticement Account (IRA). Every deposit will be deducted from your gross income on your Federal Income Ta>t retucn s'o you won't pay a penny of Federal tax on the pnncipal or mterest earnings until you take distribu· tion of the funds {between the ages of 59Y, and 70Y,). If you are in the 25% tax bracket, you col.ild save over $400 in taxes the lust year alc ne, while in just 30 years your retirement fund builds to an incred- ible $171,750! Based on an earning rate of 7X% compounded continuously. If you are self-employed, we'll help you start a tax-sheltered Keogh plan in which you can deposit up to $7,500 a year. We'll also fill you in on little known facts like how lo make 1975 Keoqh deposits as late as April 15 of 1976 . • Come in to World Sarin9• today ' ' . : ... .. and aee the many W&J'8" you ca..n get ifi,•. more out of thi ... World. If: Next came the July vi sit to the office of Elysburg Police Chief Harold Benning. Agents , ac· companied by a stale policemen, asked lo see the closed file on the primitive living conditions at the cabin. "They came disguised. as hippie$," s ays .the white-haired Benning, adding he made the report available. ORLD .SAVINGS Get moreoutOf thisWorld· J • Paul came to police attention in 1974 arter he re· turned. to this area from New Mexico where he P!llDped gas. Before that, he managed. a F1orida mght Cit.lb and picked fruit and vegetables in Georgia. Hi! family stiU lives in nearby Danville. One brother I! 11 college student; another a · psychology professor in New Mex.ico. PAUL VOWS HE HAS ALWAYS been apoUUcal and "I've never voted in my life.'' It was his. New Mexico license · plates that ori&lnally arowied curiouslty, Benning says. That led to the brief wtlfare probe of bow he was caring (or his yo11n1e•l ~hlld. All agreed that l'ioul was • . loving and attentive father. Finally., last month, Ron Knoebel, Paul'• bos6 et the amusement pa('k, was• •lted by two aaenll who asked about Paul Md l.'•ltY Hearst. Knoebel 1aya they were In shirt aleevet ana 1lackt and CNually ob&erved PauJ -king at the roller cOu\er and nearbi/ ferris wheel. (8eePA.1TY,P"'°ll5l Yorba Linda 18503 Yo\ba Llnda Blvd. Lakeview· Plaza (714) 993-1440 Fountain Valley 16123 Harbor Blvd. South of Zody's (711) 839 2851 Huntington Beach • 6902 Warner Ave. (714) 842·9356 SOnta Ana 3698 South Bristol South Coast Plaza 171 4) 556 -0322 ., -Irnne 18100 Culver Drive. University Shop ping Center (714) 552-0200 Laguna Beach · 292 South Coast Highwqy &>uth of Vic Hugo's Restouranl 171 1) 494-9481 Offices 1n Antioch. Arcadil, Ar1esla·loe C.rrito1 Center, Auburn, Brentwood. Citrus Heights. El C3jon, (ooen1ng aoon) Fount•ln Valley. Hemet, Hunllngton Beach. lrvlne, L•layettt, Laguna Beach, La Mesa, LQS Angeles . Lynwood. Nor1hflctge 10f')t8rio.-PaloAlto, P&acervllta. Ran cho Cordova, Rolling Hills Estates. Sacra- mento: Folsom Blvd., Pd(',;t Wtat ~au. Fk>fln AOlld; s,n Bernardino. Sin Oiego, San Jose. (opening soonl San Maleo. San Ramon. Santa Ana-South Coest PIN.I, South San Francisco, Woodland Hills, Vort>a Linda. ' ' , ·1 1 World Sa~9s and Loan Association J Serving Cilifornia .since 1927. --;--. 32 offices with -ts over $570,000,000.00.. ,J Offices open Mon. through Thurs., 9 to 4. ' .. Friday, 9 lo 6. Saturday, 9 to l. • n ' J ' .. • l 1• ' , I __ .. _,.._ • as~fJall-'.l'lafeee._ ,..,-· ;ii• --:.---. The Phillies' Mike Schmidt upends St. Louis' Mike Tyson (photo above) while Mo.ntreal 's Pepe Frias leapfrogs over NEW YORK (AP)-Jtwasdll- ficult to sort fact from fiction to. day alter a published rePQrt th~t baseball"s franchise corilmittee · would recommend that the Min- nesota Twins move to Seattle and the San Ft ancisco Giants shift to Toronto. Committee members appeared a& mystified regarding the story published Tuesdi'y in the Toronto Star that the committee would suggest the moves at a meeting in Kansas City on Sept. 24 . "I called the American League office and asked them what the hell was going on," said Min· nesota TWins owner Calvin Grif· fith, who added that the commit- tee. bad not contacted him ion a -possible move. "I haven't heard anything like that,'' said New York Mets board chairman M. Donald Grant, a committee member who labelled the story "erroneous." , ' <\ " ' ·;:.i '_ ~ ~- ' ' . ~ ... _ -'l---·- Dave Kilsm.,;,,.,;·the latter' ~tole second foe the New York Mets in photo below. ' • Giants Bombed .,.,,,_.,., Septamb9f 1D. 1975 OAILYPILOT #l SC to Use Evans • In Running Role LOS ANGl!;Ll!:S <AP> -Tbe UlllvenltyofSouthemc.Jifomia -the football ....... against Duke Friday night with an extra nmnlnc back In the backfield - thequvterback. Coub John McKay 11id Tues- day bis quarterback VU.... l':vans ii a h&rd·cbar&lnl runner with "bi& lep and be'a rwi the 40 in 4.6 aeconda. He'll do more run- ninl ror us than we did last )iOIO'." The Trojans were 10-1-1 last year with Pat Haden al quarterback . Haden, an ex· eel.lent passer, rolled out on op- Uon passes aud "made some sreat ftnl downs ror us when he dropped back lo pass and had lo scramble, but Vince~ be doing more planned running.'' However, Evans has worked hanf on his passing this pre· nation and McKay said use will throw agalJuit the Blue Devils. ''We apend a tremendous amount more time~ OW' pasa- in& awne in practice than we'll __Jver uae in the a:~me, but we do it for tmeuOns-:-Fifst, it"s 8go0d ......UU-r for the players. They have to run 40 y frcls on every pass we throw. ··Second, there will be times when we're behind and we'll bav.e to throw. "You mu.at throw the rootball when you want to, not when they want you ·to throw It. but sometimes you're forced to.·· McKay said a lot ol his inex- perienced players wouJd be r e- ady for Duke and even though he fell they we.re taleated, '·the in· experience of being in the pre- ssure cooker will be tough." He said he hoped lo be able lo gel t11 lead "so the youngsters can gel· in there. "You don't ~ut them in when the other team 1s on your 10-yard liri'e," he said. "You put lhem in when they're on their own 20. You uae the fres hmen lo spell the regulars when you have lbe ad· vantage. ln Duke McKay said he'll be facing a team that uses a slol·l format.ion with a split end - "basically a two-running-back offense." McKay said he had heard that senior split end Troy Sade was "a definite pro pro- sgect." Slade is a 6·fool ·2, 180-pounder who caught 31 passes last year Sports in Brief for '89 yards and returned 39 punllfor W> yards. The Blue Dev Us quarterback Is pre.law student Hal Speus, a 6-t senior who doesn't often throw long but throws accurately. . "'They feel they have their best team in JO years and in the.past rew years they ha've beaten a few teams that were suppa;ed to beat them just like we are. ''They beat Stanford 9-3 ln 1971 and stanlord. went on to win the Rose Bowl. And last year they ended the longest scorins streak ln major college football by shut· ting out Georgi a Tech M ." It was'the first time Tec.h had (ailed to score in 108 consecutive games. McKay said he wasn't too Sur· prised at Missouri's 20-7 victory over Alabama Monday n11ht. ··Good teams sta)' with what they usualJy do and· underdogs tend to change things. so Alabama didn't know what they were 1onna see but Missouri proJ)sbly had 10me idea what Alabama would look like.·· he said. '1'trat'S why you see a Jot more upsets in the first two weeks than any time else." _Vandals Wreck Colise um Boar--tL -- LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Angeles Rams and the Oakland Raiders may find it tough to get on the sroreboard Thursday night because someone broke into the Coliseum press box and took a hammer to the computer equipment that runs the bi g board. . Charles Colbert, 19, of South Los Angeles was booked fo r in· vestigation of burglary Tuesday alter police found him asleep in a press box chair amid all the clut· ter o( smashed equipment, of- ficers said. Officials estimated damage al up to $1 .5 million. Besides the corriputer equip· ment officials said teletype and videotape machines were a.Jso broken. /lfadlork Bart PIITSB UR G H -Bill M·adlock or the Chicago Cubs, the NationaJ League leader with a .362 balling average, has been sidelined in· definitely with a cracked bone in his right thumb. backwards because he didn't play anything but basketball at Utah Slate where he averaged 20 points a game. The Cowboys drafted him as· a rree agent in 1962. Green made both All-pro at strong sarety and comerback for Dallas. R alston f'anril11 OK BAKERSFIELD -Tennis star Dennis Ralston led his wile and three children to safety Tuesday after a (ire broke out al his home. Fire officials said .Ralston was awakened about 6 a.m. by smoke in his home and got his wife and children out or the residcnce- without'incident. The fire. which caused about $'l3,000 damage, started in the garage and spread to the attic above the kitchen before being controlled. Ralston's new 197~ auto was destroyed. Officials said the rire may have been caused by an electrical mallunctipn. ' Dogs Sfafn "I flatly deny this story," saio Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. "The franchise committee has not made any recommenda· tions and there's qo guarantee it will happen in Kansas City.'' That's where conflicts begin to aris~. Griffth said: "'There's no , ·question th"ey"ll be meeting on I this." ! Giants owner Horace Stoneham told The Associated I Press: Top Seed Eliminated King Lambert, the top seeded player in the .ts men's singles competition at the 49th Pacific Southwest seniors tennis tourna· ment being staged at the Newport Beacti Tennis Club, was forced to default his opening, match Tuesday because of a bad back. Hooton on Mound As Reds Invade Madlock was struck by a three· and-two pitch from Bruce Kison or the Pittsburgh Pirates in the fifth inning of Chicago's 6-5 vic- tory here Tuesday night. "He could be out a week. He could be out the rest of the season,·· said Chicago manager Jim Marshall. LYON.· France -Thirteen dogs died or poisoning on the opening day or the hunting season a fter eating meat soaked with str yc hnine, police said Tuesday. Police specu lat e d th e perpetrator or the poisonings could have been a hunter angered at being refused a hunt· ing license by authorities. I ''We're not ready to sell, and if I and when we are, the Giants will be sold in place. They are not go--1 ing to leave San Ft'anci.9co." However, Stoneham was quot- ed by the San Francisco Ex-! aminer as saying: "If the new owners want to move, that's not my concern. The Giants will be sold and -that's right -there will be no stipulation that they can't be moved." "I don't know where they got anything on Minnesota going to SeatUe," added Griffth. Writer Neil MacCarl's story quoted a well-informed U.S.· based source who asked not to be identified. There is evidence that the move is pC>Ssible: -Baseball 11 lookin& for a te- nant in Seattle to avert.a lawsuit arising from the transfer or ·the Seattle Pilots to Milwaukee following the 1969 season. -Baseball also wants to break up the SF Bay Areacfogotteams. I M cLain ~till i In Base ball I MEMPmS (A Pl -Qne.time Detroit Tigers mound maestro J)enny McLain, involved In a bookmaking controversy five years ago, bu fulfilled a long- time dream, a front-office iob in baseball. "My playing days are over." the two-time Cy Youn& Award winner said as be tollted ol lick et sales, promotion• and iqaldn( baseball a success in Memphis home of the International League's Blues and a city that ·has seen more than one sporting failure. -McLain, brleny au1pended from baseball five years ago after being accused ol involve- ment In bookmaklng, llu been play-by-play radio announcer fer the American A110clatlon'1 lgwa -Oakl since he hunc MP bil •--1n tbe mlddle of the 19'13aeucri. I ' Lambert and Sam Match are also seeded first in double5 ac· lion in that age category and were scheduled to play \heir first match today. Ed Kaudl!r is now top seed and Match is second. Dick Leach, the top seeded player in the featured 3S men's singles, defeated Bill Haraden 6-1, 6-1 in his first match. Tournament direct.or George MacCall, playing in the 55 men's singles, was toppled by Allen Cheesebro. the No. 1 seed, 2·6, 7~. 64. MacCaU bad never Jost to Cheese bro. Ml:N'SSINCM..ES :lS--1..tkll dlf H•radllr '"'· .. , .. flenl,,. dtl T•8P' ~ ...., ... 1; 0. .. 1, del Ftt'loPl'lrklt •s. •1; Leltle•ITl•n Cl.t Po-11 1.s. •·S; GHbt<'I def Ashl:r•n ...,_ .. I; .Jorlt10 a.1 Noble •I, 5-1, Ml; Leet.it def .Hil'l'9n•:J.. •·1; N•:slloel ao.t,.,...., •1. u , .. J; Sotrtbrlw def Dowdle •2. •l. .S-Wllffr Mt H•,.erli91a •1. •t; Lewh Oitl Attrklge •l. 74; J . $lie• de! l"lshtr •1, .. 1; CMci.rw.ocl Mt ktlT 6·1 ••• ,; Mc.IC•y dirt S.kltl, u, ... ,, 1-4; Nllltc11 de! Perm.rt, &-0, •l; BIKl'I def ~···'-&. )1)-fhHI• o.f Hlll-n, 6·1, M; C. HlppeNlltl mt welsh ...i, M ; O.•lo'ft•• *' ..ll'olwn, .. 4. :i.., •J; llr.., cMt 8'K.ltey, 6-l 1·S; C.S-mt o. .. 1s. ........ .SS-T~ -"'°"'JI~ 6-4.4'"1; ~ •MKc.ua._r_...,.... ~r *' f'11tSMy .. ,, •1: • ..,, • Gl'adll'·•z. •SJ Ctloltl'I ftf ~ Ml,. H I ........ , 41tf-J , 0.'11~ 1:.t. J..1, M ; u .. -1 c1111 St-•'· .. I: F*"'te •J.'91'1, W , H. 10-o-Mc ......... lllelcNtl M. 5-7, ..... WOM•flf'ISINCM..llES ~t~ clel H!Ai,ev, '"'• •t; Schw•r1J ., °"'.'!!: 1·S.1 ... LOS ANGELES-Burt Hooton will be on the mound tonight when the-Los Angeles Dodgers boat National League West divi1lon champion Cincinnati in the rint of ·.-two-game series at Dodier Stadium beginning at 7:30. Hooton was named the Na- tional League's pitcher or the month Cor August alter finishing the period with a 6-0 record and an earned run average or 1.06. He's two victories away from ty· ·in« the club record for con- secutive triumphs or 11 held by Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale. Lee Lacy's tie·breaking single . in the eighth inning touched orf a Football Poll TNI TOP 'T-nt119•ms lfil Tiie AM<XiM.-1 Pr~' coo.,. IOOltNIU oo/I, wlln lir'$t~IC<I! Wf<l!l' '" ,..,.,,Oieses. w•!D!I recbrlh.•na101•I polnh 1.0*1....,.,,.JI 04<1 !,lot 2.. Midll~, 0-0--0 ,,. 1 Ol'llo st.it J 040 711 •.use o.o.o 1• J.MihOUl'll 1.o.cl Jlt •• Nebrna.• fl.0.0 521 1. Auburn fl.0.0 l'f7 I. 'Te1111s AlM 0-0--0 m t. Nllltrw O.me 0..0-0 JOO 10. Pi9M,Slale 1..g.o al 11, Mktl\fl911 St.-e 0.0.0 *' lJ. 1'11pb 1 ff.a 151 tS. AlaM!lnll ~ 1.(1 t• i... Mlr"l'IMd 1..-.0 1is fs..~C.retlN~ 1~ 1M It.UCLA e.o.a tJ 11 . .,,._ o+o n )e. PltblM'fl'I 1.+0 6J It, l"i.kM ...0-0 " lD. ,__ 0-H '° five-run rally and triggered the Dodgers ta an 8-3 victory over the San Francisco Giants Tuesday night. The wirt moved the Dodgers to 19th games behind Cincinnati. Charlie Hough, the knuckleball pitcher, tossed aside his favorite pitch and threw fastballs. And he won. Hough, with the help o( ~three· run seventh inning and a five· run eighth, earned only his second victory in eight decisions Tues- day night . * * * SA" l'ltANCl5CO •II r II IH J 0 l 0 ) 0 1 1 JOll ll ( 1 I II ' II 1 I '0 1 0 ~ ....... ,, 0 Tr-Nl1b '"'°"'91.0n rl -ft-\11 Mari\_, 10 9 . NllHit< lb u .... 11<'• '' J II o o s..t<t '1!0 .. ,. ' u ... 1i.p C. Wllillm$P .....,,,., 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 LOSA,..GELES •II r 11 ltl LOPnlb 3110 l.MyU '111 W. CrlwfO•CI rl J 1 1 0 M.lrMl•pl'I 0 0 00 H.ter1 01100 c;.. .... ylb J111 Ce1Jb J111 Cnucl 3 00 0 ~Mul!enpl'I 1 (l 1 1 Si""''°"'' 0, 0 0 Y'~rc '011 RuU<Oll!' 'o: o Rlluo 10 00 HouQllp 1000 'Tot•ls 31 J 11 l Tol•ls JO I' I SM! Fr...ciKO 000 !!XI 200-J LO~Angel<I! 000 000 JSx-11 DP-S•n Fr•,.Cl:l<O I. LOB~n Fr...cls-r;o 'I, lOI A"Otltl J, 28-Monlerl<'l, 0 . Tr.om•\, .McM<Mlt11.. J8-Gwvty, Ye-oe•. ~R -ee, (1lL A-0. ThotNt, L.eft'\9Slet, 1..Gpn. S-R,,11, B•rr, M.MDI•. .. H Jlt:J188SO 8-r IL.11·131 11·, ' ' ' • • ...... ~ • , ' , ' (..Wllll-'• ' ' ' ' ' .... • w ' ' ' ' ~IW,J_..J ' ' ' ' ' • S..tk-"•u. T-111.A-l•,JM. Gre..,.R nires DALLAS-Dallas Cowboys coach Tom Landry remembers well the first time Cornell Green s.uited 011t for practice at the Thousand Oaks. Calif., training camp or the National Football League tea m. "'He put hi s hip pads on backwards and wondered why he was getting all that pain in front.'" said Landry Tuesday after the 13·year veteran st rong safety decided to retire. Green, 35, put the hip pads on ·A'• Top MUUon OAKLAND -The Oakland A's reached the one million mark and broke their single season at· tendance' record Tuesday night when a crowd of ll, 124 turned out ror the game ai'ainst the Kansas City Royals. With eight home dates remain- ing, the A 's have drawn 1,001,179. Chicago Lets Halos Ste al Three More CHICAGO (AP) -Mike Miley drove in two runs with a single and sacririce fly and Bruce A n gels Sl ate Alt G•mes 011 ICMPC (1101 Se-pt 10 C1111!01111• •I Cll1C•{IO ~I . l1C11lllornl11111 x .. nu\C•tr Sepl. llC111Uornl11 '"' "'""'"'\ (ity ~. ~5 P.f.,, J ~s" .., }l~p m • Boehle doubled home the even· tual winning run in the seventh inning Tuesday night to lead the California Angels lo a f>-4 victory over the Chicago White Sox . Miley singled in a run in the fifth and drove in another on hi s sacrifice ny in the sixth.. Boehle doubled in a run in the seventh alter Lee Stanton had walked and stolen second. giving the Angels a 5-2 lead. The While Sox closed the gap in the bottom or the seventh when Nyls Nyman and Brian Downing both singled, advanced to second on an infield out and scored on a s ingle by Jerry Hairston. The Angels stole three bas£:s to give them 205 for the season They now have stolen Z1 bases against Chicago in JS attempts. We're All Pros, Says Shorter CAl.IFOANIA C.olllM II Are ... yl'b ltlwrscf --rl 9od•le1ti illl r fl Ill ' 0 0 0 J 0 1 I '0 0 0 4 I I 0 J 1 1 ' 4 1 I 0 l 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 I 1 3 I 2 2 011 0 0 0 II 0 0 CHICAGO •• r II •1 P,K<'ltyr1' '0 1 1 1-Ulntoll ll l 0 I 1 on.Job •020 0., Johr5on Cit! ' 0 I 0 WASHINGTON (AP) - "We're all professionals," says Olympic 1old medal winner Frank Shorter. "Tbeni is no dis- tinction between amateur and pro1 ... 1on.m in tract and field." ,Sborte.1', winner' of the Ditta-In Munlcl> In 1972~uid, bowevir, tbat U. S. amateur ·athletes aren•t treated as well, even with 1)101.i auloeldies, aa their Eurostean counterparts, e1peolaUy t hose 111 Western Europe. Alked durt11c the ope111ns ... sioo of bearings by the Presi- dent's Commission on Olympic Sports bow he would bave been treated after winning the gold medal bad he been from a Com- mlllliJt country, Shorter replied: ••1 would have ratbor been a Finn.'' Yffad I been a Flllll and won a gold moclol," be told the 22- ~ember panel Investigating amateur athletics, ''1 would have bad my bouse built foc me and an auto compan)' wilWd have Iii••• me a car, aJl tu free. I would I hllve gotten endorsements and subsidies suc::h ~s $2 ,000 to set foot on a track. Had J been a busi· neumao. l wouJd have had all llOl'll of cub Oow coming Into my " company." Whal aid you receive in the United States after winning?, Shorter was asked by Donna de- Varooa, a commission member wbo oJso ll a gold medal winner .in 1wln11illn1. ''I haven •t even received my OIJ111plc ring from the commit- tee yet/' he replied. ''1 won the Sullivan award which J really ap- preciate. I always thought only swimmers won that award.'' Shorter, who de9cribed himsetr as a lawyer in between training for international competition, was among the four Jeadoff wit- nesses, all Olympians, Tuesday before the commission which opened lts year-long study into the problems of amateur at..hlelic1 in the United Stales' especially in Olympic and in- ternational competition. "'°""' "•leflll .... dl'I Boll••Ol'I ~•retie Ml1'eY1\ -· ... _, MtltGf' Jb • ' ' 0 ~S5 4000 Sqyimlb 2 0 01 s.lnP. 1000 Ny""'-'lcf 3 1 i o ~-.,.. 100 0 °'1wrll .. <: ' , ' 0 Woel;lp 0000 HMnillOn p 0 0 0 0 ,.01••1 :w s 10 5 lol•l1 lo! 4 10 • CMttornl• 010 0)1 100-) OllC.990 010 010 0'00---. E-Oowlllng, ,..,,...,., $1.-n'°". DP-OUtoml• 1, ~c990 1 L.OB -C•lifOI'"'• •. Otk..,.e S. 18- )i'ltllO!'I. P, fl:f!lty, 8•'"'''· S8-E1clle ... rren. IMm,, !.1•,,lar.. s--CAIUim.. Sf-&qvlr'<'\, Miity, ,,. " " !It •• so ,......,,. fW. 13'111 61'\ 10 ' ' t J .,.._~ 2 ..... 00001 W6cxl CL. l"ltl • 10 S ) • • HaonlllOll 1 OOOOt s.w-1,. .. r (J), WJ'-11-~ T-2.2', ,tt.-2.tlt. ' I ' ---. -•' .. -• 82 DAil Y PILOT 'hodnesday. Sep1emblr 10 1975 Offensive Outlook i Eagles Don't Lack f Experience, Depth Depth and experienc e dominate Estancia H.igh 's of. fensive picture as the Eagles of roach Ken Kiefer continue their preparation !or the 1975 football ,season. Estancia, which operates in the Centur y League, s rrim- mages at San Clemente Satur· day, then tackles Marina and Rancho Alamitos before circuit play. Considering how many of- fensive candidates were starters ·ror Estancia on offense or de- fense in 1974, however. it would seem the Eagles hardly need a warmup before league play. Eleven candidates for starting duty on offense were starters in J974. Leading the list is quarterback Larry Hall, who appears to have recovered from a skiing accident in the spring that was responsi- , ble for two broken bones in his left leg_ Hall. a 6·2, 190·po under, is backed up by junior Kirk Langdale (5·10, 170) and senior .Kevin La Rue (5·10, 170 ). A couple of 190-pounders are fighting it out at tailback in the Eagles" power-T offense. Kenny Williams returns at the position and is being challenged by Mike I Faulkner, who was a starting safety in '74 . And newcomer l .arry Englehart (5·8, 150 sr.) could be a factor at tailback. Willi ams is also being counted on for fullback duty if Faulkner or Englehart can fill the bill al tailback. Another solid candidate at I fullback is John McPhail, a 6·1, I 170-l)t'.fund senior. Win gback duty is Moe Fiem- 1 ing's as he r eturns to his spot in the Eagles' lineup. Fleming 1 (S-11, 160 s r.) is backed up by Chris Himmelhaber (155, 5-10 s r.) and Gary Confer . Confer fi gures at either wingback or split end if he can fully recover from a separated shoulder injury during the sum- mer. ''We were thinking of Confer at t ailback during the spring," says Kiefer. "But considering the in- jury J don't think he can take that much pounding.·• Another returning starter at split end is Scott Wilson (S.7, 140 s r . ). Added depth at that position is s upplied by David Adams, the younger brother of Orange Coast CoUe-ge standout Steve Adams. At 6·1, 165, Kiefer says he has ex~ cellenl speed and catching ability. Dan Collins, a 6-4, 200-pound senior, returns as a starter and is a cinch to open al tight end. Also Robert Donnelly (6-4, JM sr.) could help in that area. no b Morgan (6·0. 200 sr.) is another returning starter and is the No . 1 tackle in the Estancia camp. The other spot , however, is up for grabs between Paul Troxell (6·0, 245), Scott Sutherland (5·11, 165) and Tim Hundley (6-0, 205). Hundley was a parl·time starter in 1974 and Sutherland is a tenacious sort who started at 150 pounds last year. At guard there are three who h ave impressed early. Junior Robert John (6·0, 180 ) is up from the sophomore team. Pressing him are Fred J ones, a part-time starter at 5·9, 165, and Ed Meeks. Meeks, 5·8, 171 , is another return· ing starter. Fred Nichols was a starter for Estancia in '74 and returns at center. The 6·1, 18S·pound senior is being challenged by Gary McLane (6-2, 185 sr.), a part.- time starter last year, and junior Lee Parkinson (6-0, 185). The kic king game features Adams as a punter and Toby O'Brien in placeki cking. O'Brien (5-11 , 175 jr.) has a 4()..yard poten- tial according to his coach. JIM HAGEY Mustangs' Baseball Coach Quits Jim Hagey has become the third Orange Coast area prep baseball coach to call it quits in the past few weeks, retiring from his post as varsity coach at Costa Mesa after a six·year reign on the Mustangs campus. Earlier it was Newport Harbor High's Andy Smith retiring. And Fountain Valley Hi gh's J ohn Cole h as announced the '76 season will be his last. No replacement has .been named for Hagey, who will coo· tinue at Mesa as department chairman in physical education. "There are no teaching open· ings," says athletic director Bob Hunter. "However, we are open- ing up the job to people in our dig. trict and from the outside. We ex- pect to close tbe applications by Sept.19." Veteran Redcoats Hagey says he wanted to make the announcement of his retire- ment immediately following the 1975 campaign when his Mustan gs rallied with eight straight victories to claim the Century League co - championship. H agey was named coach or the year in the circuit a fter guiding the Mustangs' comeback. , Open With Cypress '']wanted to stay with the peer gram through the summer," :says Hagey. ''to keep things in order before the start of the school year." An experienced Orange Coast 1 College football team will open • the 1975 season Saturday night ' against Orange County rival Cypress at Anaheim's La PaJma Stadium. Kickoff is at 7:30. Coach Dick Tucker, blessed with 32 Teturning lettermen, 14 of them starters a year ago, will have 10 monogram winners in the lineup on offense and nine on defense. The lone freshman to dent the offensive lineup is Keith Josephson, a 200-poWld tight end from Costa Mesa High. On de· fense, Mark Link will start at outside liiiebacker and Al Korn opens at linebacker. Link is a Marina graduate and Korn is from Foothill High by way of San Diego State. . Tucker is looking for a baJanced attack on offense and will start Tony Accomando and Pete Brown at running back with Dave White at quarterback. Af.- comando a nd Brown gained almost 1,100 yards between them last season. "~ White has taken over at VOLVO .SALE Al c ..... -..... priced at below lo·. cr1•1of..,..t25., 66 TO CHOOSE FROM ------------TOYOTA SALE COMPLETE INVENTORY MUST GO •COROUAS •CRICAS • IAHO CRUISERS •CORONAS •MXs •11-1.UX's ·Wm!>Je: ?SCOltOLU 2 Door Sedan.•-· Ill ~$2876 BUY .. LEASE c.. .. quarterback with Mike Magner from the 1973 OCC team ready to spell him . Both will see plenty or action according to Tucker. Backing the running duo will be a pair of freshmen, Don Cornell from Edison lligh and Chris Hulick from Pittsburgh. Lone OCC casualty in l ast week 's scrimmages is Jim Parsons, a lettermarl middle guard on defense. He suffered a knee injury and will not play this week. Orange Coast.has won all four previous meetin gs of the two teams, posting s hutouts each of the past two seasons. 'The Pirates will be favored again Saturday night. Tucker is looking for the' fres hman-orientated team of former Newport Harbor High mentor Don Lent to do quite a bit of passing. "They were more impressive throwing the ball in their scrim- mage with College of the Ca- nyons last week and I look for them to throw a lot against us.·• Hagey says his main reason for turning it in was to devote more time to his boys, Jon (12) and Scot (9). The former Downey High, Orange Coast College, UC Santa Barbara and Cal State (Long Beach) player coached at C05ta M~s a for six years after a four.year s tint on the junior varsity level. Amon g the standouts who came out or Hagey's program are pitchers Dave Barton and Dan Quisenberry, infielder Rich Fielder, ('atcher Dennis Delany and Steve Bernhardt. "I'm leaving with a good taste in my mouth after our comeback this past silrson,'' says Hagey. "But I'm sure I'm going to regret this somewhat when the season rolls around ... FV Tourney Nears Raul Quezada will be oot to de· fend his men's club championship at Fountain Valley Mile Square Golf Course beginning Sept. 20. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division Boston Baltimore New York Cleveland Milwaukee Detroit W L Pel. GB 84 59 .. 587 79 64 .552 5 73 71 .507 1112 69. 70 .496 13 62 83 .428 23 54' 89. .378 JO West Division Oakland Kansas City Texas Chicago Minnesota Angels 87 56 .608 80 . 63 .559 7 71 75 .486 1712 68 75 .476 19 66 74 .471 1912 • 65 79. .4Sl 22 1'> 'fMMl••'•k- T1u1J..4,Ml-SOl•0-2 ci. ... 1an11 i, Bo11on 2, 101nn1~ Hew York t. Detroit• &.t1lmor1 t, Mllw•wktt I C.lltorfl.I• s. Cl'lltego• Oakl.nd2, tc.m.a1Clty 1, 1• lnnl!'lgl . T ... .,.,o._ O.trolt (Ruhl• 1i.10 ...ci ArTv¥'lt 1-01 .t 9o$!00\ (Moret 11-land Pole ).!II 2 S.1tlmor1 ~c .. 111r 1•·10) and Gtlm.I.., 10.13) 1t c1e ... t1nd !Eck1r~ty 1 l·itnd 8"""" .. ,, Mltw..,k" IOM:wrn 0.0111 ~Yori! CClobtoft 11·10 • C.llforrllt (T1Mn11 .. 1111 O\l(AOO (KIM 21).11) T1U\ !Ptrry 1S-lt) ti Ml-llOt.tl Ullyleftft 14-1! • ~ftMI Cltr l81.11by lt·IO It Olkletld 1111• 1 .. 111 Tl"wM11r'• 0-0ttroll 11 8eslon s."1""'" ,, c11 .... 1anc1 Mliw.utcff .-t ,..,. York Ol'\l'1'.-nw1KMdlll9CI NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pel. GB Pittsburgh 81 61 .570 Philadelphia 76 68 .!528 6 St. Louis . 75 68 .524 612 New York 73 71 .Sf/7 9. Chicago 68 TT .469 1412 Montreal . 64 79 .. 448 17lf.I West Division Cincinnat l 96 48 .661 Dodgers 77 68 .531 19¥.J San Francisco 70 74 .486 26 San Diego 65 a> .448 31~ AUanta 64 81 .441 3212 Houston 56 90 .384 41· ,. ..... , •• kWff Ptll!Dl!ll'lle6, S.I. LOUlli 1 All.nle 4, H0111ilon 1 Ollcava •· Ptt11ibur9h 5 MonltHt 2, Ntw York 1, 1011'11111'195 S.nOlevc> 10, C!nc;ln~tl 2 l.otA"91ltlil, S..n Fr•n<hc:o l TMt'l''tO& ..... SI. Lo11ls lllte1m1111itfl 4-2) el Cl'll<aoo (It. RwKlwl 1~15) NPw York !S.evtr 21·11 et Pllbbllr'Vh (Cerl- 411etl• 7·Sor Rook1r 11·•1 Pllil~!phl• !S!mp$Ot1 0-0) fi Monlrffl lR"*o S.1tl At lento (MOr'IOfl lf·ISI 11SenOit901-""""'t 1M) Clnc:i-11 (Oerty '-SI 1\ Lea Angiltltl CHOllCan ,,.., Hous1ofl (Co1111ro .... 0-1) et S.n f'rainc:ltc:o (Helltlll .. lJI • Tlllllf'Mey•1 0- St. Louis ti Cl'llt l90 HIMntOll •Is... Fretw:l'KO Nlw York., '11hbuf'tl'I '9il~lllhl• •t Montr ... Atw.Mt flt 111'1 Ologo OntinN!I 11 LOI Afllltlllll DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO 1966 HARBO R BLVD .. COSTA MESA 646-9303 \,.f'.,,.,. Pert\. ftndy \hop OP""' o; Ooy' o ,..,.,.., Pot I' Df'prf'"""' Op_,.,. Saturdoyi 9 om 1 p.., " . '.. . '.' •, Wl MA~l OVERSEA \ DELIYERIE\ .... I .1 Nagging lnju1ies Slow Edison Defensive Unit 117 llOGEll CAllUION Ol .. D.i..,l'fllllllllt Edison Hiib '• Bill Workman labeled this year's defense u strictly a guessing same-end at this stage it ·a a aueuina aame who'll not be on the Injured Ult when the season bepm Sept. Ill. After a week's contact there have been nine potential atarten sidelined for one reuoo or another -moat notable cuualtiea being tailback Bill Balch, fullback Romney Fuaa and guard Jim Dyer. Balch fractured bis big toe In practice. but abouldbe readyJor the Chargers' opener. Fuga 11d'· fered a bad ankle sprain and Dyer Is po .. lbly out fa< the year with a knee injury. '"We have bad a lot of groin and s prain injuries," says Workman. ''We 're having a bard time breaking a huddle without\ sprainin& an ankle.•• Workman's crew scrimmages at Macnolla Saturday morning at 9:30 and he'll get a better look at his defense, which features only one returning starter up front and another al linebacker. Addi· tiooally, Workman says be could be s tarting an entire junior secondary. , All-Sunset League returner Jeff Robinson anchors the linebacking corps. He's a 5-10, 180-pound senior and was redit- ed with 111 tackles in '14. Aho big at that pa.st is Rob Romeo (5-9, 190 sr.), prime candidate for fullba . Other linebackers are Randy hwartz (5-1~ 170 jr.), Vic R bani (&-3, 203 sr1) and Royal O gb transfer Jil'n Judd (6-1, JW jr. In the secondary are Bal h (5-8, 160 sr.) and.Jim11ogart15'8 171 ar.). Both figure heavily jn Edison's backfield, however, and Workman woul~e to work In juniors Jefr Smith U. 160) and Tim Nichols (5·7,154. Strong safety candidates in· elude Ray Cano (5-9, 164jr.) and Ed Connell (6·1, 155 sr.). Quarterback Rick Baahore is the obvious choice at deep safety, but again Workman would like to work in someone else. He's hopeful that junior reserve quarterbacks .Steve Rakbsbani (S-1, 170) or Jlory Renish (6--0, 1601 can fill the bill. Delly""",.... EDISON HIGH RUNNING BACK Bill Y BALCH. Jim Williams figures at noseman at 5-10, 180. Hls major competition for the starting berth is Mike Dresser (~160jr.). , At guard a re Bob Flanne1ly (6-1, 185 sr.), a returning starter. plus Manteca transfer Steve Holmes (6·3, 195 sr.), Mike . Witherby (5-8, 170 jr,) and Jim Dyer (5-10, 180 jr.). • • Up front at defensive end ls ~ turning starter Paul Radish (&-2, 195sf.), who ls joined byKenlWI (1-3, 190 sr.), Tony Lima (5-"'9 1n n.) and Joe Allen (5-9, 170 sr.). Offensive line positions ·are tentative with Haynes Ailey (6-0, 205sr.), Radish, Holiday and Hill in the picture • Bcb Wilson (5-11, 190 jr.), Scott Hayward (6-1, 184 'jr.) and Seymour are vying at center. • . -Tackle candidates include Skip Fraser (5-9., 185 sr.), Joe Seymour (5-10, 180 sr.), Randy Holiday (S-1, 214 jr.), Ray Sheeks (5-8, 180Jr.) and Chuck Thomas (5-6, 1S3Jr.). OCC· Rated Third iri. C-ridP'Oll A's Topple Royals OAKLAND -Bill North's run· scoring single with two out in the 14th inning gave the Oakland A's a 2· 1 victory over the Kansas City Royah Tuesday night. The victory boosted qie A's lead to seven games over the Royals in the American League West. ...- Orange Coast College is ranked No. 3, Saddleback is eighth and Golden West is 11th in the Daily Pilot's pre-season JC football rankings. Defending stale champion East LA is top-rated with El Camino ranked No. 2. Both are in the Metropolitan Conference. Golden West opens Its season Saturday night against East LA while Orange Coast takes on Cypress. · Pre-season Top 10 Pos., College Pis. 1. East Los Angeles .;n . 2. El Camino 34- 3. Orange Coast 29 4.R.io.Hondo 21 S. Pasadena 18 6. Fullerton · 16 7. Citrus 14 8. Saddleba'ck 13 9. Bakersfield 12 10. Grossmont s Others-Golden West 6, Santa Barbara 3, Sa n Diego Mesa 2, ~liege of the Canyons 2. INDUSTRIAL/OFFICE DEVELOPEBSAREINVITED TO BUY LAND. . I lrvlne lndu sMal Complex·TusUn now t.as se1~ndustrial/ office sites available for sale to dev lopers. These central I)' located sites are f ly Improved, Including curbs. gutters, nderground utlfities and rall service, ancf range in size from one to ten acres. The new llC·Tustin sites offer excellent potential for development of: • Single or dual·tenant Industrial buildings • Two-story office bulldings • Multi-tenant buildings • Mini warehouses • Public storage warehouses llC·Tustln is conveniently located on 1he Santa Ana Freeway, near Orange County Airport an d the Newport and Sare Diego Freeways. For sales information. contact your broker or Dan Curtis. Manager of Sales and Leasing, at (714) 633·1010 or (213) 628·4204, or write Irvine Industrial Complex, 2122 Campus Drive, P.O. Box 4404, Irvine, CA 92664. " + AVAILABL NOW AT IRVINE INDUSTRIAL toMPLEX ' r·· .. --.... , I • ' ' ' • • -"""-1 •, ·- ' I OAJLYPILOT n , Men's Goll for Orange Coast Area . .. .. llob Cotlinl]lam _, lirlt pla<e In A fli&bl In• net tournament tor the Lquna Beach Golf M.- aocbtlon ln ecllon at Willowick GoU Course In Santa Ana recently. . Cottin&b•m flred a 74-ll-Q to dereat Ray PIJtts (76-11~) by twp strokes. In third place in A flight was George lo C night. Ille winner wu Bill Allard with 87-21-68. Ken Kirby fin\sbed second with 89-22-67 and John Barnett was third with 118-~. • El l\'19•1 l>'Arey IJld Chuck Krul· · cik; John Levy, William In • better b•ll o! ll<'own, Robert Vaualw> fouraome eom1et tlon ..t Dlek BUliD&•i and ror the 02en's club at El Chuck Watts. Norb Niguel Country Club Myers, Bob Morrall and over the put weekend, a Wade U:ampton. foursome of ~Roger 1n_atw9betterballaof ~lelroe, W~'!l.•m -Ta.y'Jor. foursome mixed couples Williaru FOOle and Don evertl, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wind took. llrst place Bordwell teamed with witha57. .Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd were the Hans .Rossens -Other committee and.the Ken Woods. members include Woacty SmJlh, Fruk c~. I ' Dick Ewm. ~De Davis. Qualiryiog for the Buck Fisher, Rich men 'a: club president's Bassett, -Kathryn Fis· cup competition will take bback and Mrs. Lester place &lturday and run Aderer. for five weeks. Deadline for entering •. Fowler with 7~tr-66. Richard Rois. Jr. was the winner in 1)1. night with 92-24-68. Harold Falkenstein· finished second at 96-27 --69 . Thrtt players tied ror third including Elliott Lifton (93-23 -70), Wilbert Lowr y (93 ·23 -70) and Sid Pearson (94-24-70 ). Four team1 tied tor Carleton lor first place serood with 59 lncludlng at 133. Charles J. Fishback or the event is Sept. 20 with Balboa is chairman of further inrormatlo11 tM Orange County Heart _•_•_•_il_ab_l_o_a_l_6_7:i.-_•1_3_1_. __ 1oll classic to be heJd o.11rP4Mt ..... GWC LINEMAN MARK NICHOLS. East LA Rustlers' Foe • Loaded Agai·n LOS ANGELES-East ference last season, ,t.A.-College had its best -althou.g.b--i:.unlling in 1botball season in history Cain's s.hadow. in 1974, recording a 9"1-2 ''Fike an_d Cain are ~rjf, going undefeated quite· similar. He'll re- in Southern Cal Con-mind people of Cain,'" ference play and winrilng says Padilla. thestatechampionship. A second team all- And although the conference choice last Huskies lost All-year. Fike gained 595 American running back yards in 105 carries for a Lynn Cain to USC, they S.6 average. figure to be just as tough Gutierrez earned All- this season, says East sec and All-American :tA coach Al Padilla. honors last year and has ··we have a number of already signed a letter or returnees and some good intent to attend USC . freshmen,•• says He's6-2,215. Padilla. ••we think we'll Two other tap linemen bave a good team.'' returning inc:lude center , The Huskies and Frank Orozc:o (5-11, 205) Colden West launc:h the and middle guard season Saturday night Richard Torres (6-1, (7:30) at East LA. 240)_ . · ' Padilla has reason to Last season East LA. be o pt i m i s ti c -captured a 34-27 victory e s p e c i a I J y w it h over Golden West in the quarterback Walt conference finale and Ramsom, running back Padilla says it could be a A Iv in Fike and high scoring affair linebacker Ed Gutierrez again. f.eturning. All were ''Both teams have starters last season. good offenses, so it could Ransom, who Padilla be a continuation of last Ca1ls "probably the best year's game.'' JC qua rte r back ''We've heard that around,·• is a 6-1, 100. Golden West is bigger pound ex-pro baseball than it's ever been. I player. Ransom, 24, know that Ray completed44of84passes• Shackleford usually last season for-576 yards doesn't have a big team, and five touchdowns. but I under.stand he has Fike(ff-0, 195) was the big, quick, mobile people sixtbleadingballcanier this season,'' .says in the Southern Cal Con-Padilla. Gauchos' Defense tarries Big Load I Saddleback College's 'Cle£ensive front has been , abeled by Gauchos foot .. ball coach George Glartman as ••potentially 01.e of the better lines in our history_'• ' . I Because the offense 1s generally inexperienced, lthe defense figures to 1carry the load in the ~opening part of the season. J The Gauchos. who scrimmage Santa Ana Friday night at Santa ,Ana Bowl. open the _season Sept. 20 against 'Cypress. ' ''We're just glad we don't open until tbe 20th,'' says Hartman. ••tt"ll give our young players a chance to get acclimated. to JC foot- ball. •• Hartman's biggest problem. defensively, is 1the secondary, where ,All-Mission Conference t;tars Jim Poettgen and Drian Hester performed. the last two years. Lettermen Jim Goldstone (S-0, 170) and 'J<evin McGarry (5-8, 160) figure to be starters ~with George Gay (5-ll, 1 l7S), Larry Jordan (f>.l, 1175), Jim Davey (5-10, '175) and Rick Smith (5-11, 175) bidding !or the other t~o positions. Gay'" ih letterman, ,Jordan is from ClnciJ>.. natl, Davey prepped at Foothill and Smith Is lrom El Segundo. Up front, the Gauchos ave two pretty good ''"''"In Jerry Wi&bl (6-3, 221) and Rich Force (6-3, 223), both of whom are experienced. Wight earned All-Mission Con- ference laurels two sea.sons ago, then sat out last year with an ankle ifliury. The tack1es figure to be Tim Murphy and Hughie Roberts (6-l , 200). At the linebac"ers will be Rick Curtis (6-0, 192), Mark Dobis (6-0. 205) and Bob McQuire (6-0, 195). All are sophomores. Dobis was the leading · rusher for Saddleback last season and probably will see some duty again in the offensive backfield this year, says Hartman. Hartman also bas been impressed with the play of freshmen Jeff Green (6-1 , 195), from El Toro and Mike Knapp (S-10, 100), from Tustin. Both are linebackers. "'We feel we have five good linebackers. We'll have one of our better lines, and it '11 be one of our quicker teams. also. But the secondary is re- ally going to have to come along,•• says Hartman. SHlll..._11 kllffui. S•t., S•11l. JO -c.,or•'' IL• ,..,,,.....,, S.I., S.llt. 21 -•\ 9trttl, 1 l 'tlO(.ll. set.,Ot-1.•-b~. S.l.,Ckl. 11-•IC~lftY.• S.I,. Ott, It -Souttiwwslffn (flofn91.• S.L,Ckl. u -11 $Ion e.rn.nllr.o.• s.I., "'"· 1-•l "l.,.r•lcle,• s.t.,....,,l -Pe1'o"""r (homtl.• s.t.,No't'. l,._.IS.nOle90CC' S.l., "'O't'.tl-Citl'~ (tloft'tel.• ..,......,._,.,..COf\ __ • ..,.._ All_._. ltfol11 e1 J1JO '-"'·· lll\lltl4 otMn!'ltl ll'ldkAotld. Keith Thomas cap- tured B night with an 80-17~3. followed by Charles Schroer (81-11-60 and Lyal Keur (113-~). William Beesley F1oyd The Ray Wells and Werceland 'Tom John Hoptons tied witll Sweeney and Dick th~ James Leigbs and Spruill; Phil Rhorer, V1c Campbells for "Dick Bollinger. Jim second at 134. In at 135 Sept. 25 at Irvine Coast CC. He will be assisted by cc>-cbajrm,n J. W. ''Bill'' Kerv. of Corona del Mar and Clarence F. Miller of Beacon Bay. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 842·5S7'8 SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY OUR NEWEST PEP BOYS STORE & SERVICE CENTER COSTA MESA 2946 BRISTOL ST. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 549-1533 FULLERTON 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. PHOflE: 870-0700 SANTAANA 120 [. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547·74n WESTMINSTER l522l BEACH BLVD. Pt10NE: 1193-8544 CORNELL "100" TIRE ---·--- OUR BIG MONEY SAVER ---·--- CORNELL ''200'' A7a.t3 lUIEltSS llACkWAll BLACKWALL TIRES 11.ACl' f UlflfSS PRICE Sl2.f !78-13 $18.85 C7B-13 $20.85 f7B· 14 $21 .95 F7B-1-' $21.95 F7B-1 S $22.33 G 78-1 S $23.39 G78-l-' $23.95 H78.J $24.95 pi,,, SI 76 1a S18l 'fl ~CORNELL RADIAL ''800'' WHITEWALL TIRES 2 FIBERGLASS BELTS PLUS 2 POLYESTER RADIAL BODY PL VS ---·---27 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY• RADIAL TIRES SAVE GAS! BUY NOW SIZE WHITE TUBELESS DR78 14 ER78-14 FR78-1 4 GR78.1 4 GR78 -15 PRICE JI.II 12.44 14.n ..... l7.5' HR7B .1 S "·" lR78-l 5 42.tt AND SAVE ~----~-...., Pl,,, S2 J.6 ta 13 "8 f£1 FOREIGN CAR SPECIALS BUY ON CREDIT Joll PRICES Pl US F£0£RAl CICISE TAX j_l.J 1.1.J..t ·-·; ,_.__._. LIMITIO WARll:ANf'f' , .. , Oi• ....... r ........ ,,M,110 ......... ,, ~.~ ~':'·:~~!!::'.', ·;~:. ·:,',f ;'',Z, ~ •00\ •~~(I•~'< "l''"'~·U •t ~·I o ..... .,," ,,., .., ' " "' • ·~ .. .,~ •l'Q t •l!D M!) .. fM > •p ........ I(~! O•UO "" ''"~'" >lu·"o\ ototl &! .... 1 01 ... "'"'" • .o .. -_..,~., 1 ....... . ........... ..,~_.,.;_, • s-'""'' ""'"'"9 *"9'""· • Ovo<.W !>ff>.,., Applltobl• fef .,,. -O•"'" ...obol• ••• ca.,J.r!o•""I• w'"' da,. v,.lh . ••••••• cobl .. •h. •• 1 .. , ..... 0, ..... d ... h •• • .... _nl .,,;,., 1.1,;9•'""' ·;;~·t 99c "' CAM -~ o"' 99c QT. CAM UNDER COATING SPRAY Sp•<>r• a "'"'h ••bi...., ..... 01 M """•• .. d• ol con, ''"''" •'•· llOONC[ aac CAH RUST REMOVER LEVER ACTION TYPE NAVAL GREASE GUN JELLY O:"ol••• '"" 1,.,.., ,...,,.1 ••d<>t•• n~ri p•••~~" l ••l h•• '""'ng. s ... pt1 b••"' ''on o"d .. a1h '"" :~TTOUSl99c IOL SUPER SPORT CRAGAR MAG MASTER CUSTOM WHEELS WIDE RANGE Of SIZES AVAILABLE CAPS & LUG NUTS INClUDEO All(HIOME 3411 ! POLISHED AtUMINUM 2911 SPOl(E WHEEL M AG W HEEL 1.t"•6 EACli 14"',.7 EACH MllDQUlRT(RS FOR ll'Pll•l+t £ • • Cll&t;•R • llOCll(f' 11+01' Wlll ll~ WI TM TllMIMA.lS 97c -.---...:..--' 01 L TREATMENT RE DUCES OIL &URNING ••• FRICTION •• , WEAR • s.c.1 .... ,,., ....... • a .... h eng;n• • (on101n• lOP JS FL.OZ. FOR DRUM OR DISC BRAKES H~~~~BRAKE ~fl!~t· FLUID ADD IT YOUR· ~ ... ; SPRAY-OH ENGINE ENAMEL ASSORTED COLORS WITM OlD OtUGIMAl I lOUIUIA.tll PAIT IM ..... MEN'S & LADIES 10·SPEED RACING BICYCLE • 20 IN. SIZE A nooucf OF ONE Of AMlllU:S OUUST AMD MOST lfSf'fCTID a!Jl IUIUliltS. • 5.f'Ol>f PROIFCTUI • ~1(1:; 5fAND • tACl~G SAOOL.t •CA\"fllHAHD IJ:A~lS • CHlt(),<olE llMS .. OO'GN'1 """'°" 6888 20 INCH HI-RISE BIKE lc10s LOV( 'EM MODELS FOR o..:'. .. ,3995 BOYS or GIRLS "" .. "" MOTOCROSS KIT ril 1~rUJIHS .,,,.,,D~I &A•, OtrlPS,. &•I GU41D, NIJ,..lfl l \&Tt, ~/} NU,,.111~. ! • , --,- • l l ,. I/. I • 84 DAILY PILOT On Defense ··l;ni Seeking • To Fill Gaps~ ByR.OGEllCAR.LSON people," says Roche,· ot ... 0.11.,"..-''•" ''but there are some very ). · University High's foot-large holes to fill.'' · 1 ball team has thrived on Despite the concerns, a 6-1 defense that has Roche has few, if any, • limited nine of lbe past hesi\ations in coming up "'"""'_: 13 foes to one touchdown wit.b a defensive lineup. 1 \~ orless. At linebacker, where But it's this area-University is strong, is defense-where Trojan~ atl-l eague returnee coach Dick Roche iJ con· David Scroggins (6-0, 195 eerned aa his team girds sr.). !or a scrimmaee at Hun-Up front it looks like tington Beach Saturday Dave Axline (6-2, 195jr.) mom.inc 00) before set-and R .J. Switzenberg tliDg down to prepare for (S-10, 165 jr.) at the ends, 'the 1975 opener at Tustin Rick Baxter (6-1, 195 sr.) Sept. 19. and Mark Murphy CS. I, ··we have some good 195 jr.) at the tackles and Rick Niedermayer (S-10, 187 jr.) and Sergio D l · bins' Delgadillo (5-7, 179 sr.) O p at the guards. Roche h as Kelly Defense Strong Moran (6-3, 175 sr.), Cliff Nelson (S-10. 110 jr.) and Mike Egan (5-9, 170 sr.) also available al end, while Dan Mitchell (6-2, 100 jr.) and Mark Moody (6-0, 185 jr.) are solid can<tidates at tackle. Fetel'-M-acdonald (6.1, Tilent and depth at 100 sr.) is another good linebacker and defensive prospect at guard. • backs give Dana Hills The corners are set High's Dolphins a solid with receivers Sean UNIVERSITY HIGH'.S DAVE AXLINE. nucleus to work arOWld Graham ~5-10, 160 sr.) ---':..:..:.:..:__:..:_ ___ _;_ ____ ~--- as they continue their and Dan Hill (S-11, 150 preparation for the 1975 sr.) going two ways. football season. Mark Spain (5-7, 140 jr.) Coach Bill Cunerty's and Ron Dykes (5-9, 177 Dolphins host Torrance sr.) figure to back up College Grid Slate Saturday at 10 a.m . and Graham and Hill if c~;t_~~E ~e·u get a better idea necessary.. Ck*•~SOv\"-•"c•111orn1•,n1gttt 1ust how t~len ted and Eric Springer (5-10, T•u~....,,u"t:~!;u,nlght ---how deep-his defenders-155----jr:-)-·or Louisiana ----ilint are. transfer Bill Keever (6-1; ~~,~~,~~~r.1• Cunerty has four r e-~75 jr.) figure, at strong \'lll•nov••tS,•ecuM turning starters at safety (rover), while Ten"¥1l••IW•~~~r:1n•• linebacker and derensivc free safety belongs to Art e.,1o ro11,.,..1 Ap~111eh1 .. ~•. end in his multiple de· Heise (5-ll, 150 sr.). · n1vn1 I I I Men"¥1hlsStel••I Auburn Jens ve sys em· Heise is a returning all· Prnbvt•r•en.i Tne c1tM1e1, nlQflt • Running backs John league ,.;ick at that spot T~1-.1ci.m"°" Gill ('11 ]85 S ) and ,_ O.'fton•tE•1tern1Cenlu(kl' .r • r . and also p1ays SMUetFklrl<1•, .. 111n1 Ron Kosmala (6-2, liE quarterback . When Te-TKh•tFurm•n,n1111111 .r ) are among the squad k \'!rglnl•Tech•llCentUCkl' · Heise is at quarterbac "'""''n 1een1u(1<y ., LN$v111 •• of 52, which also includes it 'll probably be the night 'ghl t slers and 10 Ltll.ll5l•n• Teen et McN••M suu, e1 ran other quarterback, John nlOll• others who skipped foot-Halagan (5-10, 155 j r. ), at W•k• Fo,.~• •I North OrollM si., ball in 1974. safety. ""' ICenl St•t• •t NOrt"-•11 loul,i.n.. Also tight end-punter R oche has added """1 Rick Browning (6-1, 185 Barry Schulenburg to his Georgl• Teen •• 5o111n c.roiin., sr.) and John Pentz (6-1, staff. Schulenburg will ~ .. 11unols ., Soutnwes1 ... n 170 sr.) are in the fold, ha ndle the orfensive Lt1<.11M-.n~n1 al 'th B t D ,,.....,,enc1.1Te.,,..,He,"lont oog WI ren an-backs, while Dick Peter uT-Owll•~••''-'•""•11111 ninger (6-0, 180 sr. ), Rick · (offensive and defensive o.i.w.r••t \'Ml Battersby (5--10, 175 sr.) line), Mike Fazio (wide . Nfivv•\'lr11~::Wn1 and Ralph Modugno receivers and defensive c.a11bml••1eo1or.c:to -("10 16SJr) k NOrtnTei••,Sl•l••IO••k• .,. • · · backs). and · C!J.u .. c.. M1""11111•at1nc11.,.. • AddJtJonaJ depth is sorcabal (of (en:s1ve 1u1i*••••-• ·therem Steve Ray (6-0,: coordinator) round out :;:;:~i;;:i:.'!~.1~•,.,,• 170 sr.), Paul Bethke the staff. OhloSUl••tMlthl~nstet. • (5-10, 165 jr.) and Villa lSU•INebras~• • 01 Stet• llotlg Bee(hl •I Northern I lllnoi1, nlgrlt PWdue •I Nortl'lw.Sl•rn ~eoan atOklallcln'WI Wldlltl Stet• •I Ok l•hotn• St. t(._,Stete--ft-1'wha, .. 1 .... 1 Alcron•tWHtern Mlthl~n MldllgM•I WIKon1ln s.vt11-11 Air For<• •I Arkenws, nlQhl tdettO •I Ark•,...$ St•I•, nl9tll Al~ •t HOuston, nigh! W.sl TeusSlel••I Lamer, nlQtlt ColorecloSl•telllT•11n, nlwit Ml~sl,$lppl •I Tt11•1 AIM Flor Ide St.le •t T111•I Tec:ll, "'gtlt West W•s.t>lnolon et Arlmne St•te, night BoWll"ll Gt'ffn at &YU, night Tr••SA&l atH-•11.nlgM FresnoSt•te •I New Melll(O, night Sen oi.eo--Stete Ill Orqon SIM, .... UC 0.1<l,•I P•clfl(, nlglll s.tnl• Cl•r• et S.n Jou 5l•lt, nlo;ifrt lowt Sl•t• et UCLA, nigh I Ul_,, 51•1• •I Ut.h. nigh I Hew b\t!l-l(O Slat• •I Tex•' CEI P•1111l, lllthl , SO. MlululP91 •t 'Heber St., ni9N lclehoSllll••IWyomlng # .,IU"IOttCOLU!GI! ,, ... ., Los Angetes cc vs. Fullerton et u P•lmL .. ,_., Or_.. C-.'1 'IL CyprtU ft µo Peltn11 ' GO!Oen ...... 1111 E•1t LA Ml. SW! Antonio•! Clll'\IS SenoMQeMew •I El C•mlno ,_,.,...,.,.etGnlkrnont F't1Dtn11t •l Sin Ole90 CC: ... lornlr•I Gi.flNM,ARll. 51t!...,_rdlno•t ~•Mden• Park transfer John .......... ...,!!"''!!!!~ .. ~-==--=:!::~~-=~--':"":~:":'-:0':"'•' .. ~ Stamos(5- 9 ,l6Sjr.). OPE ..... S TODAY111 ae~r~'c!~~?~:t":/ wfJ: ("'111111 . ' · • • • a shot at starting. for Dana Hills. Chris W alsb (5· 11, 165 sr.), Steve Crape) (S.10, 160 jr.), Ealson transfer Pal Crowley (5-10, l55 .sr.), Henry Mikiewicz (6-3, 175 Jr.), Keith King (&-0, 185 Jr.) and Kerry Crabb (5-10, 175 sr.) pace agroupoflt candidates. Also in the picture are Scott Vomerdlng (5-10, 160 jr.), Sieve Telaneus (5·11, 185 jr.), Kevjli Sharrar (5-9, 160 jr.), nm McClure (5-9, 160jr.) and Scott Pessin (5-10, 165ar.). It's up front where Cunerty'11 major ques· tlon m·arks exist. However. three transfers bolster the group of candidates. At euard are Pat Sweeney (5-1, 180 jr. ), Robert Wa1oner (S.1, 212. ar. ), El Camino Real . Hieb trans.fer John .• Bachman (5-10, 185 er.), Nell Jensen (5-10, 215 jr.), Gary Hale (5-11, 200 jr.) and North Torrance transfer Ste-ve Facon (5-9, 200 jr.). The four top defensive tackle candidates are Brett Stevens (8·1, 195 "1 jr.), David Tattam (H, 200 sr.), Mike Mulv11ney (6·1, 215 jr.) and Al DeHaan (6-4, 205 sr.). . Wassman Coaches Hana Wassman of Laguna Niguel ser ved 'as "an u1i1tant coach for ' the American Youth Snc· eer Or1ani1atlon • <AYSO) boys team that • WOil ljx ohev*n matches In Welt Gennany recent· . • Jy while outscorln& opp> •nenta.lf.10. The-boys, averaglnf ii! "I• at 18, ""'t only to i:-er Suony Fodera· • tlon, J.1, In a prellminary contat to a pro maldl bfforeN,OOOfana. Tbe American girls team, wltb two players from An aheim and ' anotbu from Garden ' CroH, also won six and I"\.. tied another while OIJI.. ...,.,. oppo111nts, ae.J. • • Sept. 10 -14, 1975 · ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY FALL SHOW ••• PLAN NOW TO ATTEND! YOU'LL SEE .•• Motor Homes & Campers • Shells ··Trailer$ • Va ns & Van Conversions .• .Ski Boats & Catamarans • Motorcycles • Off the Road Vehicles ; Camping Equifi'ment' and hundreds of o~her exciting exhibits • SPECIAL FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT DAILY! YOU'LL SEE ••• Stan Sweet tlie National Fast Draw Champion doing his best as well as performing as show Master of, Ceremonies. Featured will be Willy Keo doing his Trampoline Fantastics & Dry Oiving Acts· for everyone's enjoyment. SHOW HOURS: 5 -11 P.M. Weekdays-Noon· 11 P..M. S~turday'-Noon • 8 P.M. Sunday AOULTS $2.00 (Children under 12 FREE with parents)· ~VE soc on an adult admission with your special d.lseount ticket ~ avall1ble 1t your p11tlelpat1n1 Alpha Beta Mukai or Thrllty Drug , Stores. 1 I Heldman Conducts MV1Clinj.c ·. • ~t;if ··~ tt.\.-~· .,., , . ' i . '. ' ' ,) ) '· . t '.\ ' .. ' \• O '" s·,. , •' r o , -I . .. ·~'· .. ar!, ... ·1zes . ...,. • ...... . ~.· ..,. \ r: .. ~. -~-I . DBig: .. 40,000 Ml).~ i>(!UILE STEEi; ill~~fED :f\ADIAL TiRE5 TH.!' TIR(iHAT KEEPS ITS FEET;l'V~:IN THE11AI". Tli~1e Coo8~0edr iteel be~ed radials . C;fS . .Sa te pricJ oh theseig~~~i,.. fl} i•;e money. (2) use less'rtiel. (3) slu1 are in effecJ Tblltfday, fCJSJA"'(" provide Jong mlleaii!1ltand. (4) help i!nd SaturlliitYv_,•1 ...... ;I 1 • ,(.•t .. cohsene AmlJU;.a'.tYe ~ ~~~.iGln Cb:eci-1[ we sellout Of.your i• \h9 lime to·fid}·"tb si'}OJstbiit' 1&1!e"-we willlsim yo11a'ral0Ch~k. Polysteel" radial lire1,1_hat are o~gl> ayurln&lU!Jite 4~~very at tho a~v1r­nal~ e~ul~~1JltVD~a~1'\lfS, nett .~!_d pik:e.-.. ' , 1 Whlt•w-111: • ,, Fits Models Of .•• Atcula_r Salt .. Slra , ' Prf)::t1 Prlct H~1B·!.4 itlM.MDr W1&011, Sfljrlw~, fi&ta Cfui!.«0 $89.20 $59.48 .. l.JM1 W~ CNtpr 1J011 &.~lt.15 ' J~78-14 1CheWoltt "''°"' OWs..98, P091~ Wllfl:ll. .. Ch !t T-8!1dc.-py $93.50 $62.33 ,GR78-15 . ~ f\)~ Gatnle, ~'"'· fllf)', ...... $85.00 $56.6& llRlll-15 . S,.~ Clllysl•. oidr. For~ 0!d5, .... $91.30 $60.18 -.•. ,. $~.'Is JR711-15 . $63.18 .! LR78-15 , ~j &tdlffit. Olllwolet w .n,._.tll, Pantilc & ~ 'P:iio!ntal $98.'JO $15.93 Pfus$t.96 to·M f .E.T., dePencitng on stte, ancr old tira. · Let Our Professionals Serii.c~ Due €at Now " ' • ... . . . . SALE Lube'& Oil CIJange SJ88 Up lo 5 ots.. of ..;or brud 11111111-tTHe olt. • Complele ch1s•l1 lubrication a -oil thange • llelps ensure lon.aer "'"r.1rln11111rt" ~smooth, q11let pet-- formance • l'le1&e phone for I P. puin1mcnt • loch1de1 li1bt tncb MLI: £NDI IEPT. )0 ··SALE . ·Front-End Alignment ssss .. D.S. .... Cit -lllftl Mn It ~ ~ trlllt wt.e.t drt .. r..rt. • Ollmplet• 1nelJsl• •NI 1ll1n- 1nent correction-lo lncre1le tlr. mllnta. and hnprove 1tr.erlng Nf1ty • PrftU:.ooequlptn1ot.utod by 1xperl1nced profe11lonltl1, helpt en1•ni a ,tecJ1lon 11!10· ment · • Ult lilDI ... ,.. 90 . • • - • GOODYEAR TIRE-tENTER COSTAME~llAC:li , '1596 He"'Piri ........ ,, .... 5t,' . '548-9383 • ' Hewl:M•~ .. 7 ~!4f·M. • Btakes-l:Our Choice ·.. Disc' 9rl>runi'TS'Pe. .. SJ69~ I :z.wt.eel Front P.(lc: ?nst.n new f?Qnt disc bralc-' p1·dp -• Rtjl•clr: and lupect fmnt whael be•Hii~ • Jn1~t hydr1ullo •Ytlnit and rotor\; {does not include rear wbttla) . . . . . • ()ltl ., ., "f•Whel.Ptut11!Trpe: Jn1la1I new br1Jce 'llnlnss ~ fout •\t'~lft!t. ~k, froqt wh9'!1 b'i!•rlngs •iu'P'ct &"rak:a !!Ydr1uUo 1 ~,jtifem .idd fhrld/ · ~,--• ' I I .. ' ., '' ., ' ' • • I • I I I I ' I I • I ! 1 1 J l I I • • ! - • ' ' I • tlldy A.tU.eked Bee Fam Duped In Taste Testing (CONSUMER) PHILAl)ELPHIA (/.P) -, T•levlllon 1'115, not yWr taste buds, ptollobll' de~e what -you Uk• beJI, a~a toa • study al Ill• Wharlcln School of ,.\ BUiin'" "1d Comm....,. - I ( I asked to select ..... ol one of the brudl Wh,lcb they would be giventotakeh.ome.'' .,,;,;,...;..-...... -.. .: .... ~~·--"'--'--,... T\11 atucty teli..,ot Z50 aular beet drinkers &1ven four d\r· Al'1'U INITIAL VO,YAGE ferenUy libeled •ans of beer ... ~11 1 tD :r.i.. tn.21 Deya 2sl ele«ed a flvorlt~ 1><ana. 1be. bttr can.1 were identical exoept for the names: Bi>:, Zlm, \ INSHOltT 4 l/ to • par.kins Ofkft arou:Jartll at loid· dlQ'. 1ets tlaao an, ... tater, Ille VitN a blaated """o( ... ~DIShiP- J' eaael in S. Pacific :;:i~~D wly ~ Ku A llano, a Down East-a cutter which left -.. -aft ~owed •• L. • !:f'"'port Beach ln late JIJU' Wiili be< new owner and ""; •·1a •1& , two enwrilen It> now=-ln~oon at ., unched 11early Afarealtu Moorea where II '-'·• r-a Weeki qq 00 an . ' _P,. -jcliat{cal mllslon In tbe • •NrinofmlulonaeyvoyageslntbeS'OutbPacllic: -. billion . ·~ yacbt, one ol. tbe lint ol. !be llbe. wu de- .,. ... P501tam, · -11.....e.l at ~a ofl ·l'!ewpoit Beach to · avoid the .. ._...._ .... _ A ' ' l .nt..e..:.....: ~ CellNmla use tax. 1119 .~II Louil ULoclt, a uazv:-wuu-:;-mncll~blli-wbir~bllute WA!!HJNG;l'ON (UPI} ·' .J. . ·!'• tomlsllonaeyworkfcrJebovoh'sWltneuas. -ConsresabUeopJpl.et-c· , ___ ,.i.i,. ...The Ctew OD tbelnttial YOYa&e WU Jean Ives eel work on a ,.,Ill to t41"41M.1'8 pelaooe of Papeete, TahlU, a.ad Jlll<e Ruah, rest.we Nov, 11, \he day " ~e. . the -iltlce was •10*! . • , • a.18, who Jiu reemlly retumed ""m the after World War I, -C••ri n_:.._ 'voya1e,sald,punge!n>mNewporttoNultuWva eterana Day. Preal4lent -.r" ~ w .. mlldeln2ldayaandaniWldlnP•peetealler28 'Ford Is expected to sign • • , .ro,.:ne voyage wu uneventful, with light winds • measure. DETROIT (AP) ...:. fortbeeotlredlstaoee. , 1-t the ursine of 'Goklen 1>asyotBayyie,o€ .ier~ns' groups, th<! Yaclat Cl'l!b . .ftOrJDfi4 """'°YOd Otola ;l>adr!rr... POll\d e,oriy p T m to ~1mfoato the tqday to defeat •· ~~sage Raee Set llree·aay l)o,li a'7 MaTaud•r by 2"' eekend in Oct.ober. :nie min-ill )be ihlh! raiee blli would 1ue'etr-:; 1n o1thic:.ada'•;cup ~-~v-. D-L.!.a· vo_.h·_.,el'S 649,..l.._ · , .The victory mo~..i D 07 .IJUlll; .I. M>V '"' -• · ""T.' Gol4en l>uJ' 'witbiil -. V.:AUlt.EOA'N Ill . .JIOUil of cllocb)n1 the The ~ unual Santa Barbara Passaae (AP)>-A top·olllclal'.(t ""'"""· •,. \ ~'W~ be .. --by Bahia Corinthian Yacht the seanillal·iiddel\ Eqili Marauder, 'out fll lbe .,qai.,·~ at 7 p.m. i.rrw.y, • ty Fqndio'g •Corp. '<>f Rbyill Canadl1'}1 YH~ . r. '.t!W.-..S nmolng oftbll major offshore con- Amerlca .h:l,I! heed len· <;tub,~ the (ead,ltlbt,. te1t will be blgbll&hted by a yachtsman special din· lfnced to throe to 10 start of'llle 76-milellilil!,; -bllf<re,the start, with. neet cif speelator boats ;.ara ln prleon after which rp l'rom th~ ~ tbe aklppers and crew to the lllartlog line for '!>leading guilty to aldof.llle~Qm tjje-f. fcrgery, • dumpln-g gi-ound1 ...,.-Dunne tlie Fridlly-.vm!ng dinner at-the Stanl y Goldblum, rounded tbe Thames clubbouae. aweatberbureaumariueforecasterwill Ofl_ll.er )lresldeot and • JllVer,buoy and clJamitl liveab<lef'mgonlheC.taJlnaeddy. aifinan of the board of marker near St. Clair The Alan Mell'ae l'erlJ<!tual•wUJ be awarded to finp; 4'0tered blsjllea LlchL -· ,.. the fi!'lt yacht to fllllsb the I-course. leavjng Tuesday liefore Judge ·Marauder Jed by "" Catalina aad San Clemeille islands to port and re- Uoyd Van Deuseo </I ~bas 7:56 on th• fitlt turnlnf to the tlnlsb lllle betweai the Balboa Pier Circuit Coilrt. The judge tinie atound the course, aud the" A" mule. impooed the maximum bUf Golden .J>uy, 1'ID-Perpetual lroiibies iriU be awarded to each sentence at the request Ding with ~be wind, clus, IOR, PHRJI', OCA, and MOR~ln-~Uon to cl At;b'. Geo. William J. moved Into the l~ad .,.. tab-home trophies fer ucb etau. uopoy presea· Scott: tbeaeeooillec. 1 tatlonwWbeheldatBC?YC,ap.m.Qmday. ..,, f A < d · Chairman Joe Manila! will pn>Ylde further In· -ra 11 ~I Jld t" l"lnaa locmatlonontberaceatllCYC,1901Jla)'sldeDrlve, WASHINGTON '(UPI) & ing ~ COrmadelMar,173-4382: -Inaface-to-facemeet-At. DanaSch' ool .• ing wltb-Pr"81dent Ford. l .George•Mean'y and " · Pa Fn.ITllJ_flt Leads >Maritime Union leaders Beginners; boatloc • • "":!. ~ . agreed Tuesday to re-classes will be held on 12 . sume loading of U.S.-consecutive Monday· l D Cl grain on SoTiet·bound evenlop starting at 7:311 n rflHil'll ass ships in return for ad-p.m. Sept. 15 at Dana • ~.., ministration concessions Hills High School, SS333 • . .. on the controversial is-8'reetoltheGoldenLan-• ROCHESTER, N .Y . "mile d.Kp'se amidst six sue. tem,D~aPatnt.. ;!AP)-BengtPalmquist fool waves whipped by. · The AFL-CIO boss U . R1cbar.,:) ~am :Woo both bea'ta in the .gusts as strong as 30 agreed to ·delay a of the Dana POmt. U .. &'.tirst di.y of the Dragon knots, a spokesman for longsboremen's boycott Power SQuadroo•will In· 1C)au North American ·the bolt.Rochester Yacht. cl the loading until mid· ·strucl n9-'i~~· on isamoc Cbampiooship -Clubreported. October and the Prell' .. am~bip, sea J safety ":1telatta in Lake Ontario : Only 11 of 20 com- dent met that with an ex· and rules of n.ilvli'-'l'u<lday 'Pelilocl full5bed in each tension. of the U.S. Indiv.iduals o,r entire : The vderan Swedish :race .. moratorium on grain fa1Di11es ar~ ,relcome. sailol' guided hJs craft · Americans finished sales to the Russians for ~.Is no •!W'ge· tor "'Galeiao 11" over the e.6 1«00d in both beats. theaame teogtb of time. tbe'eoune. ,. . .-r Tom Dyatra of Stratford, ~UBLIC N"'"CE PUBLlj: N011CE --PUBLIC N011CE ·Coon_ ... was s«00d In the ~--; _ operu.nerace. V. F . Cra1g PICT1T1ot1s•ulUl'I' · • N!OTICITOCJtl: TORS of Santa Paula, Calif., Tt11to1::'..!~"!~,tn:-. ..._, ·~~~~~!-r~':::s WNJ110Jtcou1tT0Pttuf rmisbed second in the -•: • i0 -Thtf0!1ow1n9p1,_,.,,c1o1notiwM· ':~~~~~~;:::~=· set.ond heat. Jaap Van f ROYAL CHARTeJt Sf~lltCE lllS5M; • N•.A .... U Eesteten Of ffoJJand ~ Mor•n St. W. t ' CAPTAIN'S l.OCKIER MUN · . . . • 'rf\lltf.ttr, CA. TINGTOH HARBOl,IR, 11]~ P•ll'i. ES1•teOfHAROLD E.McCl.USM:IEY, fllll5bed third both times ( .... HAll:Ol.0. EARl. MCCLUSKEY, I PIHi( eus IHC •• Callfot111• CO.st H ghw•r. Hunt/noton 8'kfl, H.I!, M<Cl.\ISKEY, •ka HAROl. Tuesday C•roor•llan, lltJi Mor•n SI Cllllf«nl•nMt Cl.US1CEY ,O.UaMd. . Tb f: b Wt1tmlf'lliltr,(A.ntel ' .. "l.••porl $o,1pply Comp•n"f' jA NOTICl!ISHERIE8YGIVEH11111N e 1ve-race cam-. ~This t11Wnn1 11 conlk>c:ted by 1 CDf· Ce4'11onff C«PG<'•tlon>. 11n1 Def""" tots et u. _,... IWlined ~• pionsbip rdns through .... Ian Slrwt, lrvlne, C.llfornl•ft701 Fr• d J PIMlkHll-Tlll•bust"'-••tondlKttdOy•c:or· .i•111Hsonshevl~c••1m1...i"'* I ay . Many of the ..... Mlicl ~ .... , ..... h'lld • AlvlflTevt•be•t,PrHia.nt paretlan. h'-'" with lh• n•c••••rr same competitors will Thh ~nwnt ••s tn.o with ti. NtwPOrtSl.lppt'fComC*lr , .. t1t•r•, tn th• •Ill<.• of the enter the world cham-c:oum., ()9n: of Of'MSI' c.wicr"" 8rltsPr...-nt l•rll •' Ill• ••ovo ol'ltltltd b ' A1i1g111t 11, HJS. • Tll/11 Sllt"'t"nt "'' fl1to11 with ttw ., " orOIOM tMm. w1tt1 pions ip for Dragon """' c-ty c~ ill Or.ngie c-.., on Sep. -i.n 1o v. cl bo •-b' h • -~-P'•••"" or.,.. c.o.tt o.i ... ,.,._ Wm11w4-1t1s.. .. .,.u ass a~ w ic S\.CU ~ """•· u,.,.. 5op1.J. io, 1•11 ··,,.,.,; ""''" .tu..:.'..';~;:o..~~At here Saturday. '" Pulltl.lflod 0r"91 CMS! C.ll"t Pllill.. hid\, C.lttontl• ~ ¥ lQ,.17, 1~..0 Oct. I, 197.f »1.n s uw "'"'' of O..slnoss of IN PUBLIC NO'dCE '"011 ""*'' ~ PUBLIC N011CE • PUBLIC N.._,...,. ~"' Mkll eauwrrt. wt..,. flCTITIOVS8UllNftl ..... an..o U.1in.I PllbfklltlDnolU'tls --;""'"""====--........ TAT•Ml:N'I" _..-· . .,.-. flCTITIOUS•USINESS Tho fitlttoolri"I por"" i.............. •1CTITIOUS8USIN~ 0.'9d~1'. tt7S, NAME STATl:Ml:NT Ntan: NAMS.ITAT ... EltT • ..IOMH A.M<Cl.USKEY Tiit fot~"I P""tOn h Gai"I 11u51. IE.l. TOll:O CHl"OPRACTIC OF· ""''°'IMriftlll' ......... *""O.· Adrfllttl1tr.tarorn..Es'-'° ~··: FICES 1D1 IEI TonJ Rd IE! T""' ,_,SM: """"'°""M-4:ictec.Henl BELGIAN '°°DCONSUl.TAHTS, oilfatnt.noo .. "" E " " y w E ~ T" E • PMILA.MANNA noo s...th CO.al Hloh••Y ......... • Ron•ld ••rm•l'I, D.C., '"'' PU8l.ICATtONS,U»20M;Lffll..... MQw • llffdl.CA.ms1 Mtod•l•n• l.•M. Ml••lon V"I• ~"llb,.C.ltt.,.l•nu> OHHDrtW,Sto.n CMrtr o. C.sl,., noa SoMltl co.st· COl"°"""'7l • ,,.,_ PM "Ut10f\, um°""~ """"" .. Kl. Clllll. tu.I H..,..,,UguN 8'•c:ri, CA. '26S1 ' This Minn• ls (.llflilSUCt .. by'" -""'· ~ Hlil~~':'.:&'.., Till: lfMl MM1<'7/MJ..ZM flits bullnts• I• c'1ndutt911 by .. In.. ~eltd "*™Ion oUltr""". TN1 busJMSI I• b'I'-~ ~-~~·w. di ........ '*1ftlnhlp. dfvldu9i. / ,,....,.. OrM\90 C.te O.ll"t PllD4.; Olrtt 0.C•stro i 11:.BIE•MAH,O.C. H•MrM.tktton 51pltmtMJ,tt.17,l4,1t7S na..7 Tllls ~ir.nt WH fli.d with tl'e 1'11• ••tlfl'IWll -• -IMd wlfl tf1t Tillt llalcl"-nl' w .. '"" ••ttll * '"" · C".outlty C .. rlt of Or•n09 c-ii., on ~ty Cl•rll of Or•n" (,eunlr on Otul'llY c .. rtt of Or•nf' c:Mn:r • AuolM 1S, 1'7s, ~1',iws. ~a.1ws. F46at •Hnat N7M PUBUC NO'l1CE PulllltMrcl °'"'°' c-st o.i1y ,.iot. ""'ltlled 0r-. COolSI ~ty Pt!Dl: Publl"*" 0rtr'ft c;o.q o.I" Plklt., ......._ 20, 11,•nd~.J, 10, lfJS JID-7S S.,11,,,..ri,.to.lf11 ... t.•ts JMl.75 SltltenotMrl, lO, 17,24, 191S ,_,,s ~---.-.--,.-. ----! l?Ull~C NO'ftCE PUllLIC}'°'nCE .MOTICl:1'0CllllEDITOttS • ----------M.IH•l::-:o-:ol"TME PUBLIC N011CE ....,. ....,, ITAT.O .. CAUPORNIAJOll llDTICl'.TOCltl:DITOftS . lllOTICETOc•aot1'09t , TMIC:OUNTYOPOttMifCM tt1PC•10ttC:OU•TOl'TM ll4Ml6 ..... ~ '" "" •n•r ,, I~ f:s"''"'. ITATl'Ofl'U.Ul'OlllllftA...,. SUN•IOICOUllTO,TNW IUNllll.o:~llTO;'fW. MIS'T'.1-DEMl.f.lt,~ 1"•COUN'l"Y0'~ ITAT•OPCALll"OaWIAJIOtt STAT•otr PCH(MIA'°" ....., Js.......,.,. •I""* t• c M4o,.._.... Tifl'CIOVlfTTOPOllA..... TMEC::OUfllTYOl'CNllAW ~ ..-IMt"" wilcl *'°"" NDT1Cl.Of'NU1t.l•OOl'Nflil0ll 1111 .. IMtw(_efW.IE ... tt"W tnW.Moftwo191i.E ...... MELl.k llltuoUWI t)ltftM lfttlW~ ..,_ l'lloaATS Ot' •1u ANO POa MANftlQUUJll .. DK .. 9". AUOUJTAMcO.URI °""""' dWtl " .... ....,.._ c#t.,. a.&TT911STUTAM8"1'Allt't' Ml:llkt: 19 _,..., 91""(1 .. --. ta .......... ti1W.. ~ "*"' .... llMlrM .. 1114" Est•t• •f ROSE 0 . ADAMS, twrlM_c'-&-~ °" Nll:l -.C.. N\4ft9 tW-, ....... -.... ~ ftic~ •I 09M:LIEll, ,lll:ONA ~ ...,W'tl&. .... <Hflttt lfl .. .,._ .......... M6d~"'·9ftlclt-.&ff O'"• II, a• 1t.'dC. ~I .ST HO'TJQll.Hl!ll:EIYOIVIENlllMH. -(JM'tl. of ... ..,._Ml"""'" .. ,,.,,_ .............. Uiwl..-to ;uc>ttlUKXt, aM l.ftlffa 11\ Q.AV .UAVISMtlllff~•lllrlJ. ....... llwfft ..... -==. ..... ~Mll'tttllt....,...._...... " ........ Kt\. lfl UI UMtw ........ .,Wlll•ndfot~ tlfnm._!'..,~::::-~-•Ille• •I AONE'"lllSHI ... t. ,wtlklllMotw.ntnJstllt .. """"'T~ to"-llll"J. :-~-...lill Or ..... ~. AllllMlTJtOHO, t6o M4o ... rt Cltl'I..,... .......... of Wll _,.,......., lft -.,, ~·" wltl<.h Is_. tar Wllltfl.._..nkiit ._ ... ,._,.,_..: OrM,lfl ... Qty .. ....,.,.......... tort 11Wt•lnl11141 t• ••Id 8'.t•. ,.._ .-,_ .. .,.._ Ond th.t IN 1im. .......... ~ll'l•ltlftllW1 °"""<lo1Mtf0 Wflkh '-"°'.ttlwll ~· cl•l"'I wltfl 11'1• fl•COS .. r -~•Mwlnl~,._f'llotr.l'I ~-...-.. w.. luellc .. ,....,.....,_..,'ltlo.,..,...Oi•• •~t.,.flltd• "'~ ..,.,....,,._,,._., tt1t,•t9;•&m., .... ... .......... ll04Khtn,....,. tllt ll'loll ~ ..,...."" ,, ..w........ wltl'llfl ... "*"....... "'""~of 0.ll'f1l'nMI ... lot. tltM., ••Mflli"' •• ._,...........,. lt!Ch c.l•IMI wltll till• ftK"tMry IDnollhllMllco. • Mlicl uwt, at 100 OYk ~Ori,.. ..,._...-, .. flr•pullt"°"'"• ..-...f!Wlltll0"'9o.-......... bt*; . 2t,tt'1J. Wnt, 11'1 tlle Clly ot S•111I• AN, MMllCe. l, ~wlttltft ..,,. ..... ....,_.. IOi.ION.J.011111..Elt ~ Ol"'A'*'**"'· 1'15. • ""'"*"MMn Of tfllt Ml.kit. .MC.._ .. u. Will 0....0 ;,.o,.,.,,ml'l'lbl .. t I, t•7S. .. stl"1.AHl•t.UJ!;""" ·o.w ..... t.!tmS -...... ••ldOKffoM WILUAMa.tlJDNN, MAN .. IOUEZ 1111.H,M<.""'vro --..LP•ltONA,lANOSlll., c-wya.... E.19drbo.otlfltMllOl .. ld • .,,.. ..... Win...... : ... OltliiST,U.UU.••OC::O *"' ...... ~ __...., ~ • .. ~ ........ ...., .. Lo.. ..atA•OLM<.MICHAN ~ _,Jn*llf,l'&A•Ml1'-•'-"' .-. .. wwr.Aw. ~· .,...,.,.... --~ ...a1 2•CAMrNOCAptlT•AJio 'M ...... c.a.f'Dmit ':-• ...._ :::.,a;:::..Wfllllnll•tmt -:.:JfiAJfCA .. fTU#O,CA.""' ............ c.llf, ato . ...., ... 1 .. V1'1rtt .... ~':.9.:=~~:,it'I'~ ~':.'-==~-::: .:.'l'J ¥~,r.=CNMo.I..,,:.~ ~ I 1· I Moot said they found oo~ beer that tut.a horrible. , ALL roua CANS coolained the same·brand of beer. ---;-- The study , conducted "b-Y Wharton Profs. R....il L. Atkoff and James R. Emshoff, wu IOWldly 1ttacked Jut week by· the luncheon crowd at Cav&11- nau.fb'1, a hospitable drinking 1pot • lily blocks from the WhartOOI School. "I ,O® "'!Ir can lute the <llf· ferdlce, I tan 1.mell it.'' said Hank Letherland, who ••YI be is alm<*t eQ·anct•hU been enjoying beer.~lnce ago 12 when he helped_ 1111 r&tber mix llome-b<ew in the tiiiement orthelTlfotne. . "EVEN WHEN I have a load on/• said construction worker Jimmy Brandt, 30, "I know wbat I'm drinking. I 1ive It right back to tbe bartender, sometimes in the !ah. He should ..,_ better than to give me anything but my brand.'' Ackoff and Emshoff are <Oil· sultanta to Anheuser-Busch, Inc., ~er of Budweiser and other been. They invited 250 proven beer quaffer• to what they said was a tasting session for beers that Anheuser·Busch was think· intof·puttlng-on.u...matket. . The participants were given a psychological test to determine what type or category or person they might be: heavy drinker. light drinker, extroverted, shy, whatever. mEN THEY WERE shown four television commercials. one fcs each of the four brands of beer. ~ach commercial was rigged tb approximately to one of four types of beer-drinking personalities: -The drinker who took his beer to relax. -The young adult who drank in a gro\lp, like at a picnic or party. . -The extroverted beer man wbo got high too soon and then drunk. -The introverted beer drinker. He got drWlk, too, but quietly. often alone. «AFTER BEING SHOWN these commercials the subjects were allowed to taste.the beers in the quantity . and manner that they wished," the study.says. •ne subjects were not on1y asked to ex press their pre- ferences, which they did with no difficWty. but they were also Wife's Tab At $5,500? WASJDNGTON CAP) - An average Arg,ericao housewife would earn about $5,500 a year if she was paid prevailing wages for her daily chores in the home, Social Security re· searchera say~ • A study published by the· Social Security Ad· ministration said the value of a housewife's work was a)Jout $4, 705 in 1972. lnlla· tion has pushed the figure to abOut $5,500 now, re- searchers said. ~ The study said the value of tbe work is higher for housewives, those in their late 20s or early 30s With · younger children at home and more housework. WuandBiv. THE STUD¥ SAYS partkl· pants who Wiled Into• particular per-tonality cale.gory us.uallY Uked most the beer that had been 'promoted In the TV blurb by • p<rsooality 1'ilh trails from the samecateaOl\Y. "Furtluormorc," the study uys, "aU the subjects believed that U.e brands were different anCI that they could tell the di!· fettncita between them. Most rett that·at Jeaat one of the brands was notflliorbuman consumption." r.n.-. a..,__· Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr .. (R·Calif.) is the leading cl>Olce of his oarty's voters for next year 's GOP nomination· to the U.S. Senate seat now held by . Jobn Tunney, the California Poll reported. 'Suspects Get_Delay_ . . .In Obscenity Trial I . ' Los Angeles Star editor· Finley and Mick'eyLeblovic. publis hers · Paul and ,Shirley ALSO NAMED IN the com• Eberle were granted a one-week .plaint prepared by tbedi&trict. at~ delay of their Santa Ana municiP:al court arraignment on torney's office are the Orange multiple counts or distribullna County Newspaper Distributor obscene materials. Company, the Los Anceles Star Judge Edward Laird ordered ,and ~ee Star subsidiarle:t: Star. Eberle, 47, Mrs. Eberle,.-, and a . Family Press, Street Medi": Inc. group of other defendants named and Hotel Love. • in 11 felony clm'pno-~berle commented outside the his courtroom Sept isror further courtroom' that he plans lo place aCSion . before the Orange County Grand • ' Jury an account of what he said • 1JIE 17 A.LLEGA110NSofeon· was "inhuman tre~tm~nt•• met• spiracy to distribute porno-.~out to him arfd h!s wife during graphic materials specify "Slar'' ~ seven-hour 6tay 1n the county sellin1 points in Santa Ana. Jail last week. PlacenUa, Fullerton and at 1683 "I NARROWLY escaped QrangeAve.,CostaMesa. · . serious injury due to callous ?'Jam~ with the Eberles as de· treatment by my guards,'' he fendants are John M. and Joyce said. "Aird.seven houn of deten- M. Koepke, Horace Ortega, Lan· lion were enough to convince me ny Cohen. Harold Smith, Larry . that many othef prisoners are · . similarly abused and mis· treated.'' • Ralphs Given Mesa Sign . . Law Yariance Ralphs Grocery Company has been granted a variance in the sign code for the market it is re- novating in the Harbor Center,, Costa Mesa. A company spakesmBn told the city council that the firm is spendlna'~.~ In revamping the market, which it purchased from Food King, and that it will reopen Oct. 8. BASED ON THE sign code, the market is allowed 239 9QUare feet of signage, but the council approved 278 square feet plus anothei; 140 square feet for a sign that will be placed below the sign on the neighboring Thrifty drUg store. However, the permit on the 140-square-foot sign will expire ·'in five years. · As part of "the new program. the present pylon sign in front of the store will be removed. MAYOR ALVIN L. Pinkley expressed the hope that the new market will be a catalyst toward rejuvenation of the shopping center. Getting people to USe the re'ar parking Jot of the center has been regarded as a problem for several years by tenants of the back mall. The Ralphs spakesman said that the market chain hopes to generate more traffic flow from Wilson Street rather than from Harbor' BouJevard. F,.._PageAIS Eberle said he intends to name .several Orange County agencies as defendants in a federal court action that will allege violation of his civil rights. He and his wife are !ree on $5,000 bail. · County Cyclist Recovering · .) FromCra8h 1 A motorcyclist Who narrowlY' escaped death is recovering to· day from injuries inflicted Satur· day when he pulled out o( a Costa Mesa driveway and nearly col· lided headon with a car. John F. Lahman, 35, of Orange, was catapulted. head first over the top of the vehicle after his bike sideswiped it, Police said. He was listed in satisfactory condition Tuesday at Costa Mesa. Memorial Hospital, with multiple head lacerations. He had been listed ij critical c'?)ldition for a time after admittance. PoHce said Lah man's moiorcy. cle hit a car driven by Maria J. Berman.)!O, or 2286 EJden Ave., Costa Mesa. He was riding west on Victoria Street at Pomona Avenue at the time of the mis· hap. Maternity Leave ~ SACRAMENTO (UP!l Legislation allowing women workers in state government up to a year leave of absence for' childbirth, effective Jan. 1, was signed into law by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr • . PATTY HEARST HUNTED. • • "They asked me whether Jim was ever in California or Arizona," Knoebel recalls. ''They never asked me about New Mexico.•• Paul still didn't know he was being investigat- ed. Campbell says he didn't want to upset him, and Knoebel says the FBI asked him to keep the visit secret . IT WAS ONLY AFTER A PUBLISHED repart about FBI surveillance in Elysburg lbat Campbell finally told Paul. P,aul says he was incensed and UJ16et. He wrote a letter of complaint to a local nt!wspaper. "If tbo5e people wanted answers, why didn't they question me instead of everyone around me?'" Paul wrote. · He s•ys h' believes the FBI informant might be aomeone who doesn't like his lifestyle, perhaps a disgruntled neighbor. '*They figured it might be a pleasant sight lf FBI agents were crawling all over my secluded cabin,'' Paul surmised. "So a Up was given that Patty Rea.rat was conducting business out of my -· and they sat back to view the err.as or their action. They hung around for month>.'' PAUL SAYS ms EXPEltlMENT IN Jiving li~e • plooeer may soon be over. He's lookin.g for a d.i(:- f~tl1om•. · ( "'I'm tired of them bugging me, walkinr ar-:.·~c -J the woods behind my house ... U they w•-: ted U; breed paranoia they've certainly succeeaed. 1' ... ·a scared." . But rumors about Patty continue to spark new gossip in this prosperous rural area. "I hope they catch that girl for her own sake,·• says one woman rocking on the porch or her farm home. "Why, they can't prove she did anything anyway. What have they got? A picture of her in a bank? She probably was forced to go there anyway." Even at a remote general store. where nei1hbon gather to gab, interest in the case is evi- clent • TACKED ON A llUSJ'Y WALL, surrounded by. packages of cow medicines and bug poisons, is the latest FBI wanted po&ter for Patty and her two al· Jeged SLA comrades, William and Emily Harris . ''Everybody is coming in and studying the faces,'' says proprietor Margaret Jane Meiser. The area newspapers also are caught up in the Hearst story. but editorially lament its notoriet:v. "'Perhaps we should .all sit back and let ·Miss Hearst go her own way," said the Shamokin News-lte~·· "Maybe If there wasn't such an effort to find heT, 1he would resurface after a llme of her own YO . on.'' , • ) ' I ' I • - ! -I I -I' I I I ' ' ' I t DAILY PiLOT Tonight's TV Highlights ABC (7) 8:00 -When Things Were Rotten. Mel Brooks' rewriting or the I Robin Hood legend premieres tonight , with Dick Gautier as Robin, Misty Rowe 1 as Maid Marian and Richard Dimitri playing a dual role as a good guy and a bad guy. KTLA (5) 8 :00-, "The Big Sleep." Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall are ~ ·paired again in this 1946 drama on Chan-i nel S's Bogey week. NBC (4) 9:00 -Doctors Hospital. Another medical series makes its debut !1 Wilh George Peppard as the latest heir to i" Ben Casey's mantle. Zohra Lampert and r, Victor Campos guest in the premiere episode. CBS (2) 10:00 -Kate McShane. The lawyer is a lady in this new series as Anne Meara Cor Stiller and) takes on the murder conspiracy case of a young ""'om an who was a student militant. Si an Barbara Allen is thedefondanl. 11 .. ... "'1>'" TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening Friday DAYTIME MOVIES a:• n.,,.... ,.,..,... C"'1 '3'5-CimtM tow. ..,. ,....... 111111" (¢11111) '6l -ltn C.u1r1. ll:Olt(l)(C) .., .. Lii(' (HJ) 'il - ltliil Clrhtit, Sl...., ltllef. lJ:tt. ~ ....... {ffll '34 -Clutl«tll ..... 0.0.. ftlr· ....... J:OO 0 "Tiii U*"' (l'lof) 17 - , .. .,. Duilc.lft, llidl1r• Garteff. Oi ft) "lM .... Wflltll ..... (ta19) 'll -fClfllmy StMt, f1W.1t. J>ID ~ (C) 'YIN ,,_.. (Wt) '70 - AnM. rrMCb, HUO O'lttu. J:JI ~~~r.:~ 5-.:ill ... i"'i 'IO-,_ Po-tr, TO!tl lwtll. .. .......... '"""""' ,,,., '51·WMllMI llolftll, "*' °'*· 4:• 0 "llate FIM rat ....... C*•I '62: .. Doi .... ,.,, a.tatltlt Katf. ...... KOC·E Television (50) . . Sticking Around U.S. V acali{>ners Stay Neat Home "L!f UISE COOK ...... htt• .,. .... Americans rerused to let in.nation cancel sum· mer vacations this year, but they stayed closer to home, spent .Ume in one place rather than travel· in& around and searched tor barcains .at hotels and re.taurants. An Associated Preis survey or major tourist areas s howed the number of visitors in every area was higher than it was in 1974 when the gasoline shortage cut ~harply into summer motoring. THERE WAS plenty of gasoline this year. The only problem v.•as figur- ing out how to pay for the fuel, the lodgings, the food and the sightseeing that make up a vacation. Michael Fr_ucci, ex- ecutive secretary of the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce said 1975 "was a very good year." He said he expected statistics on over-all re- sort business to be up 12 percent from 1974, mak- ing this year the best ever. At the same 1 ii me, some restaurants report- ed business was off. "People are economy minded and are looking tor less expensive places to eat or are bringing tbeir own food, .. satd one operator o( a hotel with a restaurant. "Even at breakfast time, we found people eating Jess ." Florida officials said tourism ~usiness was up 01bout 10 percent front 1974. But they said that while the northern part of the state was doing well , the southern part, including Miami, was suffering. "TOURISTS HAVE tended to pull in their horns," said Hal Cohen of the Miami Tourist Development Authority. "They're not traveling FINANCE much .more than 300 miles from their homes. This has worked to our disadvantage. North and Central Florida can still draw on touri~ts from other states.'' The· Automobile Club al Michigap said a com· parison of 1974 and 1975 fiaures abowed routing requests by state resi- dents for Michigan only were up 11 .S percent for the Upper Peninsula and 44 .6 percent for lhe Lower Peninsula, in- dicating people stayed in the state rather than take a long trip elsewhere. The club said private campgrounds reported people were staying twice as long as they did last year and added that revenues were up for state parks, although no specifics-were avail-able; Bob Uguccioni, a spokesman for the Pocono Mountains Tourist Bureau in Pen- nsylvania. said the area had 17 percent more vis· itors this year than it did in 1974. People waited until the last minute, however, to make their reservations. ''IT PLAYED havoc on hote l and motel operators who plan with advance reservations,'' Uguccioni said. Teurists also spent less. · "~here the big ex· Learn at Lunch Education at Douglas The Coast Community College District and McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company have begun a cooperative venture or providing college· level courses for aerospace employes during their Juncb hours. lllcDONNELL OOUGLAS of Huntington Beach has set aside a personnel conference room to feature Coast Community College District. produced telecourses, the first four being ''Contem- porary Calirornia Issues,'' ''Cultural An- thropology," ''Freehand Sketching" and "In· troduction to Ps"ychology." The courses, produced by KOCE-TV, Channel SO, are presented via videotape andllarc facilit ated by instructors at Golden West College. Dr. Bernard l .. uskin, vice chancellor of educa- tional pl8.nning and development at CCCD said the addition or new facilities on campuses is hindered by appropriation cutbacks and inflated construe- . tion costs. "LEARNING OPPORTUNITIES are porta· hie," said Dr. Luskin. "There·s no reason why we can't get education together with the people at a lime and place convenient to them." BANKS CAN'T DO IT. SAVINGS & LOANS CAN'T DO IT. BUT WE CAN. Newport Equity Funds can earn you 10% on your investment dollars. LC)(lk •round you. On wery side tf'le yitkk ol T~ Bills, 6¥11!1<'\' At:e9PunoM trld C.Uflcata of Dl90lit ire de· clining. That'• .tty It wlll p-v VOi.i to Id ln10 HJ"" •n1lftst b9iirir19 Tnrtt Deed 1!1W'l11'M1'111 wrth NfWPl)rt Equity Funch. NIWPQft E11ui1v Fu•'th otfen you two elemerttl ¥h1I to •iiv 900c1 liw.stmel'!t: High yltlcJ ll'ld !eCUr!ty. Your mon.y u n 11rn 10% •nll1.lll!y wllt11 your •l'lvesim""I Is MCUll'd by l()Woot>I• ,.,1 •«•1e tigh1 Mr• In the ~ 681Ch tre• -ll'trt f•nt llJ'OWil'IO ..e1lon of C.llfOfni.1'1 llM•t lf<l'#lfti oounty. R19h1 nOw, VCkl cen lrl'lft1 1nywtllr• fro.,, S2500 "' 12!Q,OOO. Your li.1nd• wll l 1t1r1 etrninQ 1°" fro,,, the dey of dlpolil Intl> ttetow. All drft•ft•. MICll.ll'ltlfll Ind st•lltntnU .,. tllndled by NtwPort Equity funds. And doli't tor;et: 11 l1 l)OMlblt to wn mor• "*1 1°"-°" Trvtt OOllH ptld oll i»k>f" 10 1NtuM1v. In tnow Cllt'tlln can, tr ~ldtl frOr • bonut of sl11 montl'lt 9ddlllonll 1n1.-. u 1ltow.d by 1t1t11 lew. FOi' more i~lon, ull NtwPOrt EQUlfV Funch today. Our phont """""*it OA4.al500, A...rllblt to Cl!lF01"nl1 rt11dtnlf only. N~ort Equity'Funds • AVCO f"1NANC1Al. =:•......,. 110 Nf'/fPO"T CENTElt D" IYf ~EWP'Ol'tT 11.\~H, CAl.IF0ANIA 12MO pensive bot.els are-u.su&I· ly th• fant to fill up, this year the tou.riat1 look the le11 expensive hotel rooms," UauccJonJ said. ''Nice, but not the luxwy ooes .·· One of the exceptions to the general treDd ol ~nny·pinching was ii\ tl•W•li. Or(i~laJ•.••i~ the number of tourists wu11p from 1974 and re- ported no sign of people seeking Jess expensive accommodations. One Interesting foot- note ; visitors from the U.S. mainland stayed for an average of 10 days, spending $46 .20 a day, according to officials. Visitors from Japan stayed only five days, but spent $123 a day. One reason for the large number of visitors at U.S. resorts may be the drop in foreign travel because of higher airline fares and Increased prices in Europe. THE COMMERCE Department said at the beginning of the summer thh.t the number of Americans traveling abroad dropped by 400,000 or 6 percent from 1973 to 1974, and Eura. pean countries reported s maller numbers or tourists this year as well. Price in creases at home varied from area to area. A Washington, D .-c~-r-aar-e-?J-center specializing in travel and tourism said it cost an average of 10. 7 percent more this year to buy restaurant meals and snacks. 'Cheve~e Miniwar Inoming DSTJIOIT (AP) -One model ol a new mlaircar from Gueral Moton Corp.. the Cbevette, ls espeeled to retell •" $2 ,899. • ccord i oc1 .t:o Ward's Au.lomotlve Report . Wvcl• .. an Industry ~aLalooulcl tho Qloe•Clll• hal<hbodc woulcl oell for $3,091· Nld suggested a price war· may be de.-elopint beltw_, tbe American mfnicar and tore.l1tt -· THE LOW Ell· priced, AJnericad· made CheVette. known \IPJT....,_ as the Scooter, is a twi> seater with a less ex- pensive lnter'\or trtm than the regular model, Ward's said. Plertty on Hand Despite August droug_ht damage, t&e U.S. Department or Agriculture estimates the 197S corn crop wiQ be biggest~in bia\ory~.8 billion·bushels. Harold Cazel Is among first to begin harvesting, shown befe inspecting com. coming from a combine in Indiana. Ward Reopening ' Credit Program Montgomery Ward annow'lced it is re-<>~ning enrollment in its credit insurance plan. It will expand the present benerrts to extend credit payments from 6 to 9 months should the c11stome.r.'.s.income_a;topdue to joj) IQM by disc bar@_. JaYoff or strike accOrdi.ngtoT.T. Heste.r, manager of Want 's Credit Service Center in Norwalk. ,. The present plan inakes the monthly payments on Ward's charge accounts for"& months under the same conditions. Over The Counter HA 50 UlllftCP, MUTUAL FUNDS Spokesmen for GM and CheYTolet decllnaf comment on the rePorted prices. Chevrolet said pnoent plans call rordls- closinc prices at a pre- view to be h.eld ln Wuhlnctoo Sept. 16. The c-an are to be formally introduced Oct. 2. The Scooter's prin· cipal domestic competi· tion would be the American Motors Gremlin, tentatively priced • tz;B911, and the For~ Pinto, .not yet prlced, other sources s,ald. COMPARED WITH, i~orl~Jbe""Scwter woa1d be *260 higher tliat1 that of the D•tsun 8 ·210 Hooey Bee, billed as the lowest priced car in Airterica at $2'!"639. ' • ' " :IAJL y "10P I . • 0 r Fl'!an~!•lf Edtcratfon. ,Cost of College Tueeday'e ·closing Prices NEW YORK .STOCK EXCHANGE I [ · ~eans Shopping I •iJW "'YCMlJ • (\,j,11 ' -... • ~ .. w.. .. w.. .. r.~::.~ H°""(:lll.t .. ~~O... ~ Ntii¥0-0.,. NMllO-Ott, ~· .• f .,. --:: IDI ... '"' .. M "" •• .,.,.,..., ·?! • 2 IN• ,..._ ff:c .... c:!::. Mi""tl:l;11 1 "~···· 1=~1:1:.~ ,tl ff -;"" ~ltv''.il ~.,; =-·1' -I. ••• ,. "' •---ti= t • .... ... .. "U> .. "" • ... ... 1' I . . " J!"-.. ACPllWUI. n ..... _,; ,,. •:.:·i· in ,tt:.·~ ~:C't ~ "~.·~ :"' ~ ~ ·i -...=tt By~r:,,Y!_Ao~_!t:T,IU =~ .. ~--: ·1 ; ... ::-, •. sr diaJ;J!I= f._.,~;i .~-, J;:::'.,. ~·s 1" Jtt-~ '" ~ ~·Mtt •• U fl'l ••• M .. 11'11_,. 1 + ........ C# •• l • .,._,. =~· It 1•Y>+ \ti n..__ ~' 1 .• l M• ~ •I~ 11 14 ...... \o\ klt0111(.J1lfl .. ·~· ~ ll "j M )!,\ •t: .... pilero•ent-·t"'-'~11 1 ,....., .. "11s, _,., • M4 11 "' ••. e:n11 ~ •~·~ Rlt :a, • ..._. ._ ·---.f.Mt~\.VmJe~l.lC.l.tedA.tneJicans .... lfl".D •• 19 116 • l 'ilit' I ti "" ~IM t •"II i't4-\t e ' S r(I 11\.t • "° ~ klaln9 thelJ! econonUc advantq;e ov'llh• l-ed·~a·-.. ~11.• 11 stt ,. -·• c , .!! 1., ·:i 111.1111 '!! 'I"'.. .. 1\' .. 1 ~ 14 wc •vJdeoce Nm I.Ins ~le thll the ht~;;;; ~i f ~ ~ ~ 1:1,!l~J j 1 e;: :~~ ~ l~ lr.E ll =~·· 1\ H 'F=·= educaUon,thehl1h.Q:wlllbe)'OUl"lneomecJus. "'~'t nt u~ .. t!: ct • ti ~ !;!! • • • r ....... ., • 1:1 JW-"' lntheeate1oryolthe''rldl,"S4porc011lofalfhousehoid ~ • !I i~io :· ,;,i s· ."! 5':~-;a t"ll ~~·:: §,. ·1 • ~:':i heacll have colle•e •-.lover 8 w-kl•• llf~•-e ... _ .._ 1• .,. ~J;' 1~··· 1..1i1 • • '*"'-"' •ct~ I I~-· c.1t • " ,,. ··• 1f: 1 »no., .,, • ~·~ · .. ... .uu.1 ~ Altl-1 I 1t 1 lo\ 1.'6 t ;J ih-...,\111 .... 1~ ...._. •t•.u J 1N"• till 1 ·~ •II"'"° ~~'!!l.weentheeaml.naottMmUe o-4ducaled•n<1••·in~ ~ .. ·t uo tt ,... Lt.ti 1 ~ -•· a~.._ -.C..t.JOa a.11o11-M "' 11 11>) ... YIUV&l'Wl\h flftf\tmfuiii. ~;;:;::;.;;:;;:..;;•::;:.-;:.;:;,::.;;..1~;,1-li ;--t ··~~.. l !_~ ~ ...... .-.. ~ •. 14 1" '" ~,a,14~ ~- =~:~tendance Is ,Muflt1:.: 1r.11 ==a ._'r,·1: g1!i_:~ ie: .. i~-~ !!~~Sf~.! l1~~51.,f; ~ fJ; B If tJIO '' '-"<"Md .ito • S )! ••. a1 »" !l-~. ;e.:· 1~"'·i '~ ... 1M 11~ Mt1n '-'t"··''""'·· t t"-••• ut YOU're bead• ne:u s ~Ul .1411 J& n + "'~IJl!I' 1S \o't-.a"' •M ...,. 1111 , 12~,___11111 MlftMW:3 t I) I) '~ -'·grorcoUe•e•-n.-· I ...__ ..... '" s111i ••• ,.., "'' "-"" ~ •• • 1 ... ,... .1. s11i:s:tt ••• ......,..... ,, 120 -..1'1-•• ·u1 • -.-,_ .-•• IJ :I\\ ••• ca :a SI ...__"" ,....._.. q .. 1' , ••• ~·· t 11\\ ••• ,.,.¥::, 1• 101 N._~1\o\ rn:y~rr':~~~d~~i!~d Worth ~;.; ~ ~t~ ~'i ·~ .t~·~ D~~ ~ Ut·: =is.::i~ ! >t! ~5 eE:.'~.; ~ F=5 Al'9 .11t101 It'-•"' ... 'I 1.J\ " ..... v. s :ltf 1.lol'+ .. N(#l.•••iu __ .. a•t;•:ai s ....... lowering burden. Just .\1""°'11 .ci1' ,, '""'-\I .-ii ~ ,.. ·• '~·· l" 11" • • 11t1 ~""' •1 ,.._1" 1.n 11 w-..-.. .!!ince la~t year. total coUtp. costs hat'e-furoped 'to 8 per-ZC'.: ! 'Of ::.....: ~ ~°"'f:V\·l ; ;li 1!'-:=i~ .,.. , 1! 1~ ~: ~ t=!~u,:~': ;l: 1:~· .~ ~ ~~ ! ~ ~-.~ ('-:nt. ?o11Ulons or you ~imply w:i:•t ht able to man~e It -:11i.ctSt"'r.J I u ~~= ~ . ,~'i'ft1I ~ U\t ••. ~. .~ ~ 1;::: :: I nri:r~~:: 1f =".!. t: C"'~L1:!1 ·• : 1:~ .... "'1thoutcarcrulgu1·dunce •••h p "'111 ~t 10 t'4 ••• i10• 61 =-·-.: l'"Wl,.c.1.s.s i M ••• 1T1.rp11e, .. '°""'.. -..folH-.... ,"i • AUl,(M .:116 .S 42 10 ••• E111 '.») J 14\lo fic!Ulkl.,.O • J tt\a ••• ITTfMt'A ,. )t fl\~+"> J .JOll n JS'\-1 ... .,_..~..IWI' 1 I"" •.. lfNlwC. 17 Ft& •• '""?,iiMI 11\4 'I 12-.-.w 11& lll'OS •• t a'ii-"-Nale. 1'1 • .01'1 M ?t -'II THE BRIG • _ AkN 1.,,.11 ., ,,~. 1.11 ~,·, 26s ,.-.·~ ,1 :t: , --~ 1,..._ 1.•• ,,. •"'· ,.,. ...,c.o _..,, 1• 11 ... -v; . 1llT SID_i: of this week's Serie~, though, Is !::~t 1: ~ r.~ t!' ~ .. -~~ ..• ~ "'• " ~f,!.·,._ ! :; ~ -:! 1~~.f _.:. ! 1! :~=:-; ~ ~ ...... lflft~, : !i l~.:: ~ ' that th~re IS help available -$16.1 billion this year in AJMxp1sv. .1 1 '"""•'"' 1.cr Bet ,, 1~~ ~ Fl.-st• 1.10 • '° 19"' •. 1M\1Pw1.• • 4 14"" ••• ""'f""' .. • 11~-"' gr'ants,loansandJ"obs -ifyouknowwh""eandhowtolook. ~ ·"° ,, 11.-..-" ·-.>o ·s 1• 11 .. \1 '"°"'11S1t6a10'Ao-" 11111..,,...,1•• 1 •"-••• MtCM\1 4 » 10 _.., · '"'' Amc.ord .J!I ~ IO •"1.-"" --...,_ ;._ .., ---\It 'll :\111: .9' 1 :at lll'lt-1 ..... e..t lft :I IY '2'4-\o'J NI OI pl .. I 11-.-\lo JWit<'hoosln.11vourt'-'peot.co1lftgec••m·Leadi·rre-nceor •-rtc110 4 • '' _.,.. """•--·· ,.,,1 '':Ko'' 1tt ,.._ .. ._e:11.10,...aJ 11~ •.. NCMMri .»11 '3 '°"'-" " J .... , -"" ·~ .30Q ' M 114'-\1 °"'a;ntef' *I ., ~ ,.,_ ··• '" M .. j ., lll'oi> .,._ 1-IM) 1,,. 1 lj 16'4-Wt !<fl ClltL. ,,0 .. l ,....._ 'oli $2,000lol3,()(l0\n annual costs. Here'aresomeexamplesof AHKDfl't'I IS,, .... I u::rr.·· I; 1"' ... ,~~· 1$1 nv.-" "'-•PL.1 .... 1 ,. ••• N1ca.t11t.n ! I :v~-16 ctv-Jces,Crornlhelea.sttot•·-. te·pensl\•e·. AmAl•J=•·•'' •1 1•1oo=" .-...~·; • • -·" F:n"'' • 11•• ~ ••• ,_"'·" • 11 1 .... -.-. Huo.1111.20 1 .,. •41' ... "' uoe.......... ... AtnAlrllftts •. 1Cj 1h-" ~0-J.M t .. 17 _.,. "'"~'· • 1t .. ,,.._ .... llQ ..... tl11 M J~"lo f'Ctl,Wteht. 11CWr-... -A free, lowttultion, tw-year 1·un1·or colle' •e, w"" you ""'a... .a1111 io 1~• ~ ~·.a l"I'• • • "' '"" .. is ,.. .•• 1T• i,.,..n • n lt _. v. NU Gy• 1.os i •s 11\\+ l'I ..,.. • M,.11 ••1-1."1 •• .,._"' oe•···, .. a+-'l.Fuu11:. 11 ':J:··· •C.?i .. I' •-"~1.....,. .... 14 J"-1'1 Uvlngatbome; Am9'(\l ,eo 6 '° 11"1oo-11 hf..,.··mo se ,.,1..,........ • •. 1T1E1. • • s~" ,...11oot-..JO s ., ~"' ""'lllOll ,»1 15 l~\i liiT.if't fS 11\.\-·ili e ·l.lt 1 • ·~-lll_lfltl , t..JN 111-'1• lli,,._.lndpfAO .. 1 '"' •·• -Astatecollegeinyo"•ownstate·, A ean1.X1t 6 11 "~ ••• 1T lft1.20, S4 II"-•"' 1.io 1 ,~ H -t\.lil 1u1 • ..,1 ..... 1 ·17\0+ * rn...-c.n1s "'~" ""' A(Mipf1-., I-~ ... ~ •1111t:1 :19'11 -1'1 ...... ,-.«It II 11\ft-ltoll --.J ~ Mlllll'nl.tlot I 1 -"" -A private college, wilhyoull.\'ing at home; ~~'j ·, ~ 1~ ~ §'~1 .. • "° <INll• ... ~:n,; ~ lJ:!,,._ t: Sfi":t:: ,; ~== ~ ;::.':;!<~1: 'U .,.._ .... .-A propn·etary ··•-• (trade or v~a"··aJ school) pre-~ ,.., ' )Q ~ 16 . ::l ~:: D·-1 '-:·: M • ii • "' . ..,,G .. u • ... "' a.w ... l 1 nw. .•• -.uuus ._ uuu Anh.n~.1111•1 , 1 ••. IY llH ... ,, U) '""•.. .lCN> s JI ...._.... P1 ... 12n,,. ~-" l<Wlf Mt)..... ,. 1'1-\• ... panng you for a part.icular. business -iliOll or Indus•-·, =r:•..--»,1 ~-11!..= ~ §.l!w '".... •. • ,,.,. ... 1 ... 1 1 1n. ••• K"~"' .. ,,;o '°'"-1" ,...1 TH c. .. 1 ~"' killed t d ~ ", .... ~.... l ,,--;: ~ ty :i •I.. ,. 1Rlo+ 1\lo .. ,.,.. •• 1J1 .W + \Ill J QI . t,» .. ae IO\f'i •.. ......,.,.. 1.)0 • I ~ tii.-._ •. ra . c, serni·proless1on, pe-·nal servi·ce, -rea-~ .1 ··--1 1.11 • '""'•' .... "JM" lilt,,_... 1 .,, -.-,., c • .. ait '° ... ~" c. .11 1 t» ~-1 •....., • .._._ AnlEI<"""' I Ul ltlolt-"-. .• ... ,-y E CNJI t 11 'flt\ •.. JJtr (Pl.lif',. 11t )1 + -" ,.._,,_ .M I 4 U ••• tional acttv1ty or someot.her occupational trainino·, "".,,..1r.,4 • '° ,~ " ~ ,,.. 1 u • -'"-"• ~ ·'° • 1, ~ 11 _,,._..ct.• 1 10 1•,,., ••• *",.. 1.ie t 10 '"' -"' • -~-j~ll 11 ""• "' "'C .~ ·,.'° ·,· ,." 1! ... -\4 Fl•Pwr 1,tt I ts :Ml"-"'° ~ In .. 1 )~"' N~EI l 1•' II l111t• \t -A private college, wit.h you living a'llo·ay from home or A,, . ., .• ""° 1'-"-"" CiYCUtL"6 11 a'" ....... i~ ""-'""'l. 1 ... 1 1s 11...,_"" .JlmW•""' 1 9 '°' as. ... "" NIEG&a 1 n 1J """-•\ on camp"". ACft 1 • .cn. .•• • n.., .. "' o.vl.iJ.• • •s ~."' Fl•StH11toi, • 10 ~.""' Jln'IW•ftllll'·· m 10 -"' NEtTT1.»11 111• •• at .._ A 1.12 •. 11 l»t+ \l:o QrvE.lptl1 1•90l"i Fl-CllAlt 2tS ,,_.__"' JimWplll . .O •• 11 40 • \6 --II .IO t 1t ,, ..... ~ / AGnlns • .os ltlll'o•\•c!llr'llEpl'.0··,,00 , ,.,~J .. •• .. 1 JHnlnl,ISD •• •lt.,..-'4 ~l.60l110&fl""•"- AGnpf1.eo .• 11 tt~-1 . o-o.co:s1.ii 110 10 FMC; .n 6 112 ......._~ JH111 .. 1.dll •. 11 ,,.,.._"" """""""'''"'·· .,' n'-•"" AS ONE ILLUSTRATION or co•ts altendi·ng a AmHo•u .10 1 •• 1?\0 ~. c:twn 1>.>0 .• :n '"' FMC 1'4 .. 'v...,_,,., Jofw1Moo1 .:io10 w.1 ,,.., .• MYSIEG110 • 111"."" " ' Ant._.1721 61) l1\o .., c:Mi"\n .. C91 . II ." f90ll •• 20 .• II -'-"' .IOtw\6.J,IW:rtl lY •1"'-I \~ NY\[pfl.IO •• llO M'I • lo pMvately-o~·ned profit·making proprietary school C'an cost Am~.io21 "'?a" "" CHA'''*' ,, 111 ·w; ,,_....c•.eo 6 1 ~ ••• """"oi .eo • n ""'--. NYiEort.n ., 1 20 -1 "· between$3,000and$4,000foranine·monthperiod.Financial :"'~~,";;·; ~ :!.: · · ~'i"ft~:: !J ll~ ~i::,!:#2l ~~ ~1oro-1: ~~A~~~11~ ,.;''-~ =:L'!:t!:.~ ~ ~v.., • assis,tancelsavaiJableinsoinecases tohelpyoumeclthe"" ~-~~ 1 ,..•• •,~.-~ CNA ~ ... ft :: 1 1 ' ••• ,,.,."' 1·'° · s 12""• \.< .........,.,.u11e:1 ' '' ~. 14 ~Mfil''·"··•J10 n ···~ "'" ...,, ...,...,.... h· I" ~=i:r.t.IO , IC 6..,_-"11 F!Oltrn .'30 .• n 14\.oo .... JO\fMlgl ... 12 1>il lS-• "NW1i!!IO.t0 .. fl00D9'l't.-"° t expenses. . A.mto1G 1.14g 6 * llYt -.., 1 G..a ,, ''" 1"' " f'GttHwd ·" 12 "'° ,.""_ "' Jut.tk• 111110 .• 1 1V"i ••• "' .. s 1.1J11 .. 1' 'J""'• v. A ~~ .... u"', • ", .·,~ :1: OISGcir 1.lt •• 2 1J~ .... FoMrWI 1.10 • 11 11 ---« 1(-NL'"°"" I ' 1411) 11~ .... 1• .n.s another illustration, this one of the ......... tential dif--·~ ''·· .7-.. ~_,, ... ,Ill , 11~. ·~ F•UPt• .to' .. av.-1" ic.iwA11.20 s •1 """' ••• NLTCt11 .60 • 10 11 .•• H · --1.. ....., AmSllMl.IO • ?9 ll~• \.t ~iJaiO 141 11i;;-1~ ,,_..M.M15 n.J IJ -1'°" KaitHQ .j011 r ~ •.. Nllri.lloWiJ a 1• 61 -"l'i erenc.es ..lll_tUM.S.~ublic and pdvate colleges, consider NnS•dllfAll .• .. •• + .,., c..uBPtl •4016 t0i 6~ .. ~ F~M 1.to s 11 12.._,... 1Cet ..,11~ •• 1 ,,_.. "' l'<b'I~ 1•.t. , 10 11 •.• "° \l.'0 motior hi0 h} i"espected CoedUCational 1· t't -1.--' ~r:10n 7-?\'n .. ~,,......-n-,°'t Frwftllf 1M -· '9 IL •• ._ .IUNMll .14 4 IS It_.._ \4' Horrlt 1,1'0 6 lO II.,_ \Ito • ~ • • · . . ns 1 µ ions in Am s1orn , J1 11v. ... v. Col«o 11111., 11 , •·Yi; F...,. 111MJO .,. 1.,.. "" lGiiePCt i.•·7 • ?• • ~ ... ,.. coet .• n ~ .~ , ,. -I I i . ~ .. ' .. the same state: The Un1vers1ty of Pennsylvania in AmT&T1.e • ,., •1\lo-"" ~ ... ;.; 1es nlfi-.., --o ...__ 1t1i11CSo..a s 1 1• •.• NA Mio .• 6 1 w. .. "' P hil d I hi d p 1 . 5 AmT&T p1 • •• » i2v. ••• ~r&Al* •• , " l l't-"' o.-i. 11\dst s t ..... "" -..... oe ,_.. s , 1tw. ••. .u."'""' 1.:0 • 11 1"" ••• a e p a an ennsy van1a tate t,.Jniversity in ATTotAt. ..... ,, 4fV'i• v. c.11~,.._,, ,. S\o\•"' GAC c.orn·· .u 1 -"' K-"'1.no, 11 is ... NCMk .1Db s i..e ,..~ ••• UnJversitvPark. ATTpfaJ.1• .. 101 ~-"" c.o1.-.,...c 11 11 ,..11_._ GAP' c.. s 13 ~ ... hftP\.tt.ll 1 1 ,...,_"' NoCAAlrt"'1 •• 1 l't•l·I• .$ ""'W•tr ·" s 1 ttt-i,-. COit lndUt 2 1 • ,.__ "" E£ 1. • • 'I ~ "' K•ty lfldlllt• 1 11 Jlill .. n ~1ut 1,oi 6 tJt ,.,_ ... For the 1975-76 school year, the Universitv of Pen: •>M•P•1.•1 .. 1:100 1s ••• c..tto1A1.to •• 1 ''"'•"' Ski.• l n"' ... "'"'"'t·"·· ,.. 12 ••• NoCMG•.M 1 > '"' ··· J ......... In I s 11 ,. + "' Colth1 .... • ••• L I M:O 14 ;MW. • • K.tlltlft & •r .. ti 111-.. ,.. Ill o.s 2 6 11 J!ia-... naylvaniaischarglnganaverageof$3,800intuitionandfees .......,,Y 10to • , • ..,, •• TO ••• O-dO.ft.11i11,., 21'-"-"-''"'°1• 1 1•.., ••. 1<111Gtpr1t0 .. 1 11"-•" d ~.lelllnl I )I 11.\.oo ·~ ~°'-:.\:.~ ": n~=~ CMfiillt;I .... 1 U 11--..-., .C.rwrRM .. 10 12\:o ••• NP1ftl'Sl.>t I JJ 11~• ._ an estimates $2,700 for everything else {room end board, ........ lft 1.1411 * 11\lo-w c.iG flf i.• .. • si~-"" ~-" ,,. 1 M n~,,. K.-c...111 s 11 • ..,._ "" NoM1Gt 1.10 i ts "i~. ""' books and Suppl I.es trans~rt 1·0 d al ) -.m1K llW; 1 ' l3 1•"'• ... COi Pl<hir'ft 17 i• • .,,_ ~ o. s..c: 1.:i'll l 14 11 + ""' 1«11i.r '" .• 1 1 """. ~-..... ~ s.• •• uo l)~ll o r v 3 l n an person expenses . AMP Inc: .R JQ IS! 1'V.• YI c.tSO Ofllo l 6 •1 10-.-.,_ 0...--1 In .. • 1-"" ICelloel .10 11 11 tt -14 ,..NGof 1 . .a .. IJO .,,_ ·~ Total: about $6,500 a year for a resident student. Amii<o ""° > l '"1 .•• c:.oiw.11 Mtf •• a i"" .. v. GAT• 1.11 6 111 ~"' 1«1....-. • •• :a 100" •.• ""$] ' ... ' * 1'""'• lll ""-• Cll 11 )t Sllli ... (".Otftlldc:...'I s 1"1 t Vli-1 GATX pf1\o'J .. l.!00 • .. :V. ~""'ti l .IO I ll ..-. .. -. Pp! ).llO .. 1100 1111'.t.• :V. For the same vear, a iesidnnt or the state w" .... ch-es ..._.,,c.. ... · 1 2w. .•. Combe 1.t0 u: ,, u *t-,,.. GCA <PrP 1 is s . . . Kttw:t 1.• 1• 211 u ... • ..., NO _..,.. 4.•• •. 11e1 4S • '"" .1 '!"" 'l.U ""'"" """'~1.IOJ t1io•~-\.'I elf!Epl'l.Kl .. lolO -1 ~l'll(•p .• , t ''ot-\IO ltVUl:ll1.7•10..,t 17:V.-"ll""' t.IO •• dOll •II> Penn State ~·oul d be charged about $960 in tuition and fees ~· "', .... " .,. ,,•, ·,.•~.--,~ em..t:d 1.lO , m 11~, .. '• Ge,,.1 ... 1n 1• .. • n·, .. . ~, Mi:G 1 1• •• """-"' 1'<11rti.v•t .1so 1+? JI >" ... •thoth ' ..,,,.!edJ • ... <<•E<E>o• 111 oo lit Gft.Aml l4tl IJ t"ll--V. Klin,klMl• 3 t 1111• II .._,111rp1.60 I Ill 1t -Yt W1 er CO!ls running about $2,094. Total: $3,054 for the ...,,..,. 1ft .R ~ 11 6V•-\' c-E"•.,; r :: 6 11.:. •1~ GftAOt1 .eoo 10 a11 ,. ..... v. IC'°°' w .eo s .. , 1t..:.-"" N•S1A,,1 's 1 •lta , •• .,. - Y.ar . ~...U .to i ltl 1/\4-'• CwEOpflAJ s , • ..._ .. '• Gliftllnc:5 .IO i 2 t •,. .. , ICldlkWrof4 .. I ...... "'HWBan I 10 • 111 «I ~ '~ Anllll!Hcl.10 I Xt ~+ 14 CW. 1'°·· l tl \,.. ~Ol .n • .. 10''• "'> K.....,,.t.11 .. 1 43V.-\o> NErg Cl.00 • ll 11 .... +" A""•SC.I 1.10 6 11 lO ..... -IW ~d ' .. -g.,.. C• l,M I 2 1)'... ... Klfl'lllO 1.MI t .. 11"a-"II N*"I ln I 11 ) ... ~ • ~. IF YOU FOUND 'l'llAT both institutions offered what you \Vant. and you chose the state t.tniversity, your annual s~vings•w<ua approximate $2,446. Admittedly, ho>A·ever, a higher <'ostllltt.itution on.en has more private finan<'ial aid funds available to help you make up the difference in c;osts . Get the most current cost figures you can. Do not rely on old inlormation. If you already have selected your col- lege. cherk thp catalog for exact charges. Coant everything .as you prepare ypur budget: tuition and rees, room and b>ard, books and supplies, transj)Ortation, personal ex- penses, everything. If you are not yet ready to select one college, you can get t"xce llent estimates or costs at many colleges from the col - lege Scholarship Service (CSS) book, "Student Expenses al .Postsecondary Ihstitutions, 1975·76. ·• This is among th~.best guides or its kind and includes aver age costs at more than 2,000two.year and four· year cm. Jeges and many proprietary schools. To g£'t a copy, see your <'ounselor, librarian, or send $2 . .50 to CSS, College Board Publication Orders, Box 2815, Princeton, N.J. 08540. GETTING A HANDLE on costs is the first essential. .Now you can begin to estimate hoW much you can arrord and how much you·u need from other sources -such as stu- dent financial aid -to meet expenses. Most financial aid (especially a grant) is awarded only to those who can show they need i l. MARKET HIGHLIGHTS ...,.llc&.11 7 ••> ~-l'o (»mEdll:::: t : .·~ c;mo .... "' I Ill la:.,,_, Klirto\05 .CI I .ii I""'-"" Nw5llndw\ •• '\~·-~ A~I CP4~ ' 11 IJ~-..., COmwOll• ..... t"'-\oll Gn 0. .. tOp 4 10 4 •.• tUr1'J'IC..9020 I 1)'•• '• N~llo1'410 .. H 10'4 • l o ~"-<: !010 10. IJ"'°-1111 C#Qllflfl,'2 •. 1 11"'• ..._ Geft0yft•"' 6 1't 41 KLM...,.... .. S lttn-W. Nw¥!1 ,IMI I ?J ••10 "- AclcoOil 41 I l$9 7J •'II °'""'"s.1.1 a 65 ,,.,.,_1~ GnlEl1cl.6014 13' 0.0.-1"" ltftlel'llR .s.41• f2 M • .... N....Sll 1.«1411 "-~t tl _.o C..p .• J2 l'l't ••. °"""'4r• 7 n 21 ""-Yt Gn'°°'91 . .0l1 ISi 11,.., ••• K.....,lftQCo S 11 I"° •• N•tnC.al 10 1 I J' ... APLCtp .60' 1" 10\t\-""' Comp.l{rSC:ll• _.. '"' \o Gef!Gtt.ntil• t 1• -'"" "-r}AO I '5 n 1o,-~ NonOfl!tt .~10 flt lt'/o• '•• "-Piif 1.12 .• 1100 IJ -1\'ll COf'I ...,. lft • J 1.. • '"' GeMto$1 .lo(I l IS "~·. "" !(OCIClff "' .... 1no 4"14 ·I Vo NnSl pl 1 . .0 .. u ,, • '-""""*" ,· .. ·· 120 U -1 CoMMl.2QaS 6 tS""' '• Gl'ftltol•1-t 1' ..__14 l(.,._11111 a JI J -'\ .....,P'Cir.71 • t U • ~~ ,._Md MQ •• 1 11"-lo (.ar>91"' JOb .. \O>i. 'I'> Gin Med .?O 10 I ISV.-V. ICr.ttc.o 1.+? 10 1U JI~-:.. Po1¥F C£1,.,p I II lli!o-V. AWA S• 1.oi 11 1• lil)lo-.._ '-'Ml i . .O jQ 11 ll ... -'·• GsnNllll l.:IO 16 ]JO !>!'4-lo. krft99 .?• )1 HI JO\\-'---0 0 -AtUll•N .:16 S ?] I~-loo Conf.C: .10 1 I• 11V.-Vt GftMol 1.IO(I I) ICl'O 41V.-1~ I(~ Ml .. 2 ,,__ Vo Olk lnd . .0 5 • I'~-.... AtUtrO.Uil IS '' Xl>it. .. V. o.i IEd .'teltl ' t1J 1, + "'> Gff>llllllCll pt~ ,. 1 '1il't• _, Kl"PQlff 1..3' I 42 '°"° ... 0.llll•P• .M J l 10'-'-" A•<lk Ell~ •• 12 JV. ••• C-Edpl6 •• J SI'¥!•~ GenPoi"llnd •. 111 )flt-"' kJ'-lft .1011 II 514-\.'o OtcldnPt-11 J .. I II~•-'• A•Kl•r Inc;., 11 l""'-1'1 Oln\Edpl't .••• '] -v. GPubUl.e I 110 li ,;.;. ~L.-<>«•~· .. '~s·•-•.:. AtltPS!.J61 11J 14~-\o'J ttw>Epf •.6J .• t10 «IVt •I..., Gt1"9fr ,2ICI 1 1 ·1¥o-:... L.KO.IJ.l.O' J!S 1tl"ii •"' OuPIPI 60 •• 14 J}-4.-1 1~ "'lit...G I 10 6 J? ll>~• '• .cotli,-d 1..¥ t 111 11'' ~ GftSfon.I .,. II 1S·.Hl<lo--VJ l..M'NNISft It 3 l 13 1-11 ••• O«Pf SO ·· lO ,._ \' A.rl•nAl\o ..... 11 2\.o-'• ConFdpl•'ll •. 6"9 •.. Gf!Sf .. 11tw1• 14 "'•"" UN8r,.n. 111114•'··0C<d llWI .. 78 l~\.11 Arm«i•C.p' I 5 _,, e""F•ol.1010 t1 II• 'h Gl f !,9011 "121-. ••• L+IO'Sitv . .JlS 61 1 -Vo ~Crp1 l 41 1~'9 A.rlflC:.1,tola. s "'' ~·" CoMH~1.11 r u 24'1111 -\.'o GT'i•Pl1'• .. 11e0 UV.-\.\ 1Aar5pf1v •.• 11S'I)+ "-()Qdnpli.11 •• I ....... -1 A•mpf2.IO .. st n +.,., '°"~""''' 1111 -\.'o GTl,,ljlfl.JD .. 11"3 I~ ... LllM•1.tootO )1 ]IV)+ \.'o OlitPIEdl.'6t 111> !} ...... . Am'l.,rpf 4"0 . . J 10 45'"' . . . Con p pf'"' .• rl10 40~, 1 0 Tl-rt I. 100 I 11 "~• • . . l.Moft&H .Sf) I lO TO'"-V. Ol'IE pf 10.16 Arlfl•(k ,8013 » 1~..., COnP ptJ.f.lo •. dO u _1 Ge""coln( .. Sl 4'to ••• Lft'9M .60 I t 11... ... ..1?00100 +I -.rmt11itul>O\I IS 0¥1• ... ConPpfJ.72 .• l:JOO 6I +I (;en.,lnP .6411 1' »"" ..... Ul'l+"1C .IO 1 '2 10 -~~ Ol>Pwpl l4 .• lll01!4'h•IV, Aro(orQlnl 6 2 12•/o-\.'o C.0..Ppf l.1' •• t10 M .•• 0. P•C:.IOall 114 '1'"'-"-l.lt-!V.tll'!Olt 20 \!Ai ... Ol'lf>J)l81 •••. llO ti ·· Ar..,!n lndui 1S 74 tV•-'"' ConPwr Of 6 ) 6/l4-\lo Gorber I.OS t 1W tcl'ti-\lo UM'WI .6$ti .• 11 10""'-11.i Ol'IP pl' CI 6 o. rloO 6' -1 ASALld .IO .. JS8 JS.i.•T <;Pf1Ppf5·~·· 'S4 O.ltyOl/1014 "'''° ... ~Le-• eo ..• $ •.. ~eel ·'°' 't.llo -\.'o AUr<o ,60 I> ltl 14 • Vo (ontllU. IOI< 1; 52 4.. GrllYll'I 1.10 •• I It~ .•• Le• Fd C.p .. 4 •'<-\.'o .0 1.-IO 10 Zt0 I•\•-'It -.1.111n0111 ...,, J11tv.-1 .. O\lit:....tlOllOt1•11t -··v;Gl'·Qu,.,,, • •>to-'i'l U;.1St"'.M7 Ut1i\-.... GEJ)f .IO •. tJ0011) •·• AlOryG t.40 10 lSI 2•\0 .. 1. enueoc. ~!i(l ? " •"--v.. Gl.ntl'Cm ' 10 ... 11"' ••• ls;o!U '"'II • • '~ 4'1o •• . •NG '·'° • It 11 ·~. '" Al Sstro I .40 I 4 n-.. 'Jo <;PtltlQI 1,60 11 .. )lo\o-\lo Glfl• ,lnl Sii .s PO ....,._ .. LFE CM on I 2 ''"-.. Olhl cir 1.20 I n 1W.. 'h A1111-,411 J t..e 1'\1.-W Cn1l~p(1..., • olC) Gl#LW _.. J 2t I'• .,. L 0, Co .t0 t 11 11 '" • ·~ ()fl ...... ~t I I ISi 16~•• '" Al1c1Nl .1SO .. I ?'h-,,_. OllU 2.n ·f :II J'l\4-·;,; Glf1Hitl . .S1 S 14 t V-{' LOF pl'4.\.o .• 1 S1\,-'n &:;j'ln .$04 • 11 ··• AllCyEI I S4 7 11 17~;,.., \'. (IHI! W.. •1 1 ... .,. \lo GilMtW 1.JO t 11 ~ ... U~N'<NI 1 to J~• •.. •L .I• S 1 4'·• + 'lo AUlll:lcltl1"'1' -tS -:-.:. Ctl ill ifttv '· 1 t GI-Inc.or t '' '1-·-'• U p .co 5 l t '• , OMtiY Ml I •J 11~;.-•1o ..!Ac pl1.IG •. 79 ~~"" (oflllnUOil?'\O '67 61 .... -·~ Glenon W-.. • 1°;.o• '°" LI Lan •• 1t 2l t ••. AllAcltprlJ .. -•ttl-"° °""lnlT•ll 11116t 11'--"t GIPbll MM t 3S lJ ... til1yLrof ,. ' J'l't ••. -.11•1 l«ir .. ~ l ''ll .. \lo Cot>lrl Olli •. 117 16 _,.,_ GIPDe Uft1 7 J 11'&-~ My?V,a 1411._,_,__ AT0 1nc:.:ro 6 •0 1-.-14 Cot>Ol:pf•\l'I .. ilO 40\.lo+ '°" GoldWil,-<l t '~ .,. L yl!lll.1072 :loCI Sl"'-1111 ..... 10•1•.4016 19 Sl',_.I (O(lltr;U!dlill .. 41 >lll• "°' GPodrltl.11 6 15 1.,._..., l.lftcNUl.60 1 IU 24'\lt-1.li -.u1omtln6\ 4 lS 4'•-,.... C...lnl.1.1 10 101 51\0oo \lo GDoclyr 1.10 t l ll ,..,,._\._ l.~I c.or. .. 4 1\i•"" ... co Corp .• SI µ......."" CPcicil pl1'11 . '102 • I G«licft.I .12 ) II 10,.._ !,:, LUIOfl 2v ... 12 11 ... 1. Awco C.p w1s .• 2 I , •. C-• Ub .• 11 4~-y., Gouldln 1.10 1 Sii 1•1't-1 LJttn <"pf 2 •• t 16 + \I, A...c:oCorp pl .. •2 10''1 • ~ CPciciTI•• Kt 6 .\Ill Gouldpf 1.15. S 1''h--Iii UhPl\lftptA.. 1 • .,, AwryPr l010 410 ?J'•• '" CPQpTplt\I. .• I 11 4 ·v; Gf'K1'<ilfl60 J 101 1•'..-"' Loellleed '111 1 .. -.... """ ln<o•p I 10 •"-"-'A '-""" 60 ii ll 101/o Gr•ln91r .JO 11 .,. 11''1-~ l....c. l.:IO • •1 10\.:t-~ .,...,.,,...: 10 I llo' 1-v.. COcioRc .ilti .. 15 t.ltt.-i .. Ot"PltfU.IOl2 11 l•'h ••• LotN1J:"l .111! 'I • t ,, Aw<111Pr I ... 11 '1t) llo,,.__I'• C-ld I IO S l1" »'•-V. G••11"1 1 .~ ) )I 1'J t-\I> L"""O 2.ll'lll 1 l1 IJ • '4 Al1•cOG_.10 1.• ·-· 17'1'1--~ Coraur• (:p . ' !''It .. . Grant Wl •• S7 ]~. ... lncrt'MI .3lltl 4 )I ....... "' CPl'nG 1 U )I au •1'"-..., Gr'ilYDl'll .lo) S 106 11-. .. I• ~ ~ tncl 1 I 67 16""-\;, B.Ol+Wll .111 • 116 1••1o ~ >;, CPwV!. c .:i , 6 , .... ="' Gree! A&P .. n II ...... ~so 1 • .0 s JS ?J ..... BKllilG .:!OP 10 I• .S' •-'" Co• 8'd ,40 t 11 19\o-•.\ GIUO. I.JO S 1t i.o,,_. II> L!iCo pf 10.11 .. 1.SJOO 10) t-t 8 ..... In .lC I l05 l \'J-~o C.PC l"t J \I 10 107 •1 .. -¥t GIN It l .IOd II 1 I II~ . . . l...Pl'IQl!LI l'h 6 IW IJlt!i .•. 8"41.•rOtl .'I II 11• il t-.... c.r-CP "19 4 "4 '6>.•-'Ji GIHNSll l.IO S It l'I t I'" Longhi LI rt •. 2llO 1-64 •• ~ 8 .. dwln .llO 6 II 4111 ..... Ctrellt Fl .1112 13 J>io ••• GNN pl 1.60 •. 11 11 • \, LIL pl" N 13 .. 1100 IOl\1 ,,, 8611(.orp .10 1 J 17'"' ... 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'r'alttlnd"" t J 11. -TT-Z...liff;orp .IO I ltl 11"" •,t Tsf!Bcs\ IO 1 II 11'lto •• , l.11f<,ppt .to . lo,. \ 111to11 N•t . s ~,., z .... i. .1:1 1 11 1) '• 1111•• Ill .0 • JJ ....... l•¥r<I GOl'p •• :la 1"'-'• T1U11 P' I •. 'tG •'t le"l"'AMl1S1 ftl na.-1 r.mp~1.o.' n ~l'.-• """1nc1 .u.11 >1 ,...., ·~ -- Jobless Cities WASHINGTON CUP!) -Oklahoma Cit)' and News><>rt News-1-lampton, Va., were Augu11;t additions.to the Ii.st o( major labor areas with .!UbstanUal" unemployment. a liAt thal bu grown to record proportions foe fivo con· uculive monthic. The Labor Department said Mon- day that thtre were 133 major labor areu ~·i th unemployment of 6 per· cent or more in Auguat. Jn August. 1974, only 50 of the 150 areas recorded. .!ubstantial unemployment. ' ' ' I \ " I ' l I • • • 81 DAIL'\' PILOT • W9dn!!day, S!ptemb« 10, 1175 • I SEJIEN w ASN'T [. ! GOOD LUCK C mt Bans Snake .. Bandling,~Poison Drinking · ''Teml-bu tilt rlpt lo pan! •lalDll tu unn..-11'1 crealloD ol wl-and orpbana," the eourt naiad. talns near Newpc>r' • ...t tbat hoo ehurcb memhen died after drlDldDI otryellblne durlq a ...-vice. I I " 'NORTHAMPTON, Eo1land (AP) -Two years aco. Rodaey 'lJtUng, father of aix, bad a vuec- tDmy. Then 1111 October, bla wife grve birth to their seventh child. Now Utt1n1. 32, bu been Jalled for three months for making a hoax bomb call lo Noithampton Hospital after which some 400 pa· tients were evacuated and one woman died. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -In a ruJ. ln1 which It ••Id rips out "th~ theoloslF•l heart'' of the Hollne11 Church, the Tennessee supreme Cciurt hu banned snake handling and the . drinking of poison during reli&lous ceremonies. .. . The 5-0 ruling, written by Justice Joe Henry. held that public snake handling in the presence of other persons ls ·a public nuisance REYNOLDS ••we recojnhe that to forbid snake handling ls lo remove the theolollcal heut of the Holin ... Ch11tth and this haa prompted th'4 court lo lnveotl1ate and research this matter through an un- usually extenaive opinion... the court laid. It added, however, that the free ex· ,,-ercise of religion does not include tbe fl~t to break the law or to mal(ltaln.a nmsance. • Reynolds Wrap 48oz. RAGU Brown-In-Bag ALUMINUM FOIL Spaghetti Sauce Seals in fresh· See-thru b.'lgs for ness. Giant si ze. oven cooking. • Plain •With Meat 12"x200 ft. • With Mushroom Tile rulinl IUtllUDf>d -OD !DJ-· tlon ....,i.t ··-ua.. Paek, lay pMlor ol the Hal.bi-QIUttb ol God In JOIUI Nome, and his followen. Dtltrlct Attorney. Henry P. Swonn cJal med Hveral person• "ere bitten by rat,.. Uunalcu durln1 servleeo at Paek'• Church In the But T••' •"" 111-· ' _NESnE HOttocoa - MIX Just add hot water. BQX OF 12 Envelopes Tile Sltpreme Court lllllnlded a lower ,I court Judi!• to enjoin Pack and · bl,t I followon l'N>m "bandl•o1. dlaploYlnl. or n blbl!lnl, dODIO!OU8 -~ II onal<eo or from eomuminl itlycbnlne 10 or any other poisonous aubltaoce1 • ,.uliln the eoafiDU of~·'' oru DH " . To be sure . . • Reg., Un- scente d & Light · Powder. • SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK Cola, Root Beer, Orange, & Straw-: 59c berry. Y, GAL EA. BOSTITCH Stapler ·"'· ..... ,., """-..... TO SERVE THE COfllMUNITY ..... ~,,F LOCATED Al 9- Adds more efficiency to Mry desk, office, home or school. Assorted Colo<s. ,,,,,. ..... f:'. 1015 N. SAN FERNANDO BLVD. g ~ CORNER OF WAUIUT ANO SA/H ERNANDO ~ ;:;~ 9:30 AM WEDNESDAY-SEPT. 10th $! ..... ,,, .. ~·1'_ ·"'· .......... ~If. ~It. ... ~ ....... ·""·""·'''• ............................................. ·"" ,,.,,,, ;,,_., •,..< ;,,,< ;,,_..;,,:< ;,11< 'i1F"","" •,,,. •,,~ •.,, •,,,_, "••'" ::,.,• •,,.: ~.,.• •.,,: •,,,.: •.,.: :,,,: .,,,,. 2·.99 89 PANASONIC "TOOT-A-LOOP" AM Portable Radio Twist it. It's an ''$''· · . It' "0 " Tw ist 1t. s an · · · • fasy-grip roll~disc tuning & volume controls. lncolors • 6 95 . . . Battery not included. #R-72 • . 1 ''Fl"cker'' Personno I LA~tES RAZOR A shaver that Cuts hair • . . not your skin. Exclu- siye wire wrapped 1 09 b\ades , for a smooth shave. • " 'CARTRIDGE PlAYH ith 1Htth d twi• spuktr sys tem. Slide controls for volume, tone, balance. Au!_o or manual chan· nel selection .•. 6 watts music power ... features 5" wide rang e speakers44 88 #4840-&0l ONLY • AM Pocket Radio For b seb•ll c•mes, beach, etc. Easy carry with handstrap. 4 88 Operates on 9-volt battery,' which is included. #1164 • Old Charter • y, GALLON 7 Year KENTUCKY STRAIGHT 12 95 BOURBON WAS 14.95 SAVE 2.00 • I. W. Harper , y, GALLON KENTUCKY STRAIGHT 1299 ' BOURBON WAS 14.99 SAVE 2.00 , Y, GALLON 1140 WINE l BEEi ONLY AT CAMARILLO, FOUNTAIN VALLEY l SANTA ANA 3911 S. BRISTOL ST. GEMco Lazy Susan With FREE ,.onion ChQPper "'ristine white decorated bowls with 3 crystal clear acrylic "keep fresh" covers. Stackable & dishwasher safe ~~ ... Crystal clear turntable for easy reach of Jams, dips, nuls'n candies. ONLY Spice Set With FREI SPICE SHAKER Six 6 oz. glass 1ars with keep- lresh dial tops. Crystal acrylic rack & .hanging accessories. ONLY Salt & Pepper Set With Old fashioned pot wilh lid, dark brown and buff. Oven proof, dishwasher safe, and lead free. 44 11. Onion Soup BOWL With Cover Hand dipped in glaze, giving each piece a unique appearance. · 1DIL Cookie JARS An assortment of your fa. vorite Ole time coof<ie jars. Please lhe youn g and brighten 111' the kitchen for the haj)py holidays. • EA. NEW! CHARMIN NORELco Flame Fighter ;~~I~t" Toaster -~·. LUMAGLO LAMP All PURPOSE Protect yo•r home ond fomily TOILET .TISSUE • I You can't affo~ to be without it! •1 TOASTMASTER Wit~a mood of its 01111 ... .\ Sq11eu'11 soft R, Protects against grea,1e. elec-Wide> range toast color Direct liW't for any tast c ' ' tr~al, ga'IOline, oif control for tight to dark fits in anyw~re. Clamps ~-~ & paint 111111. selectio~ Removable crumb to tab~s. desks, sh~ves, ~ ' ' ,..;.~. ' #ot tl. tray for easy clea<lng. etc. Ass't Co~ra. Glistening chrome finish._ ,. f1 le-~, 1~.111 MtHIU 11111 #8U3P ·1!1.1111 Cl1111p . '.l • #l.$-4N • .. 111111111Totl MACH .. Sicta 'lf•& ........ ._ . ...,.._., __ .. t ' ' ; • ' • , SPICITONES 60 Ctuat 117"" y CUIPRU. r. NEW YORK IAP>-"Tbe ConC<!tt:" .,.. two-week oummll -km of thrM de•n1 of pop,1Jl•r met lt -Fr•nk Sinatra. Ella Fltllenld and Col&nt Basie ""-11 Playin1 1t Broadwa)l~ Orls '!11ellter. " • Mi.a FitJ&erald, 57;wu iittat Monday nfll>L Al .-. u be warmed• up and beaan'to sum at bOIDe'"<m staaeo Slnatre -INDEX~ SS tLtA,.tR RE Fill . Fit~ls steam ct ,,.._., · .build up • ·12 Dl. BOTILE . .., :L.I ... .'.~i~!;,~ 4.IHI J "'1' ~ ·~ \ '9. waa belt ... than bis "eomeback from ret rmient" la.Sl year. (Basieis?l.) With Uckets priced $40 to SU ln the nearly2,000.seat !beater, all8p.m . lllon· day throu1h Saturday performances are aold out. A few seats are left tor rnido.iabl lhoWs on Fridays and Saturdll)'s. The engatement ends Sept. 20, to be follc)wed by one·nl&bt stands In Philadelphia, CleYeland a.nd Chicago. .·~DOWI! FABRIC sonENER like your clean clothes soil? 96 oz. " . . i • ""'l'l!!d'.ax· Soplombt< 10, 1m • DAil V PILOT "' Tiie evelllnl l>et111 with tllree crisp nwnbe1'11 by the Buie Banc!. Then llllss FltJ&erald walked on and pounced on "Too Close for Qqm!orl," ttarlnl It apart with vocal excitement. She roUowed that with D~e Ellilon's "Do \ · Not.bin&'. Till You Hear (rom e,'' mak· Ina il • slow, tbouahtflll b "'1· sung with much c•re. She broke it up again with a wildly uptemjlO "Sweet G<!or&l• . BUE EE~ TABlETS Twice as fut as aspirin 100 TABLETS Bro.Jn .'" .-an f a medley from I Broadway's ''Tiie wu:• and et>ded with old-time blues mastery on ''Ain't ,t Nol>odY's 811Sine11 lf I Do." f. Tbe evenlna ~ded wilh a few mellow 1 duets by Sinatra and Mi .. FltJ1erald in 1 ooe QI wblth be sang "The X..dy ls a Tramp"andbowstoastandi~ovaUooln. l · whic~ they were joined by Buie. * ,, Family Size _ DnERGENT Powers out dirt •.. Powers In bric~tness 10-lb. ll·DZ . COLONIAL' DAMES 1886 Vitamin E ALL Over Had l Body L~lito A sensuou~ end to Ory • • • • • ' • . • • • 12 oz. CANS Regular or --5Jliarllee 7·UP we..ath erPd, rough 2 95 S~tr 3500 i.O. IJ Y, Ol. • PAK OF 6 DRUG STORES A Im l'tocl To Sllspl MIWPORT llACH-1 OH ll"TIM\ W · 1 - • Rose Milk Skin Care Cream A rich blend of nature's pures.t ~islun1er ~. 99 C I 12. BOTILE Diamon Deb Smooth Touch lP.aves s~in d~wv moist and saltly smooth. ffeJuph, J .<Jr 1 skin roll~ '1;h1 or! .. 3. 00 J 11. lUBE o Earth. Born · 8 oz. SHAMPOO or 8 oz. CREME RINSE CONDITIONER With "fREE" DAISY SHAVER 89~. ALBERTO Y05 HAIR SPRAY with Veron For a hold you can't 1 49 get witti any other hair spray. 16 oz. • r:i:a ,. •• ·•) ~ •l·-· ··-.... ~ ..,,. ::,,:::n:a:::ili;::;;::~:;;;;;;:r::::::;::::::;:::'.~ . COMBS f.: Sea Breeze ! . j,i ;. P' :!' ANTISEPTIC FOR " j; EVERYBODY . ' ,. ; ; S" Pockel or 'i ' All Purpose 1'' Teas inc 39c • Combs. EACH ·-· ' ; ~ !:i t "' Have ski• trouble? Get ;' ,,. Hi 1eliel from ""'t minor -'i H • :ii skin irritatioos ! Soothes " iii s~in-never dries " ht Tail Corl or Men's I" your ,; " Pocket Comb !) it! ' with Cl ip 39c i!f 1 .77 " EACK ,., l&oz. w BO TILE . . ,, .... .. FRI SKIES Assorted variety of flavors . "' "'TOI0~411l l loc•flolol l~ I l • I • I I --8 J 0 DAILY PILOT Wednudar. Sep1embef" 10, 1175 • I r I • • l • ' • I ' I I • LM.Boyd Yaks Give P ink Milk Am <.1dvis~d lhHl yaks give pink milk. JT'S S1\CCHARINE, not sugar, th.1l• makt>s :..um<' or lhosi: outhw:.i~hes , t ,1:-.tc SWt"t't. · Dt:M ltACV Q . ''Who said .' Dt•mocraev i:i; forrr1 vf r;·- ll~ion. the \•iorsh1~ of 1ackals by J, a ~:-.es "~ J-:. B. White? .. A. No. J.I . J •. MenC'ken. F..lt White said. .. De"n1ocracy i:i. the recurrt>nt susp1c1on th.11 more than h alf lhL" pl'OJ1l1· are right more th;.1n h.tlr tbetime ." , AS f~Nf:RGETIC" s ur '\'eytaker inter v1t'"'t•d nume rou s m<.1rr1a i.:t· c._·Owl!ielors. "fhose uµ nurth :-aid they get the most '1-.- 1ts from troubled couplt·" 1n ~1iir<'h . ·rhose dov.n :-.outh said lht·y l:el lh1· mosl v1 s1t~ tn Seplemb1·r. 'rht' survt•yl.ik t·r l'ouldn't fi gure 1t out. lit• i.:ot tht• c•cJun:.e lor:-!11 tllg det·µt_•r into their ret·ords Turned out thl' great rnaJor1ty or the unhJppv p<iirs had ju:-.t rt•lurnt'tl frun1 \d.Calions .,.,1th lht>ir youn ~Slt•r-.. CEEED To Add Speakers The Orang t> Counl)' Council or EnOJironment. Employment. Economy and Development, has announced expansion of t he group's s peakers· bureau. l.ATt:ST M«>'ITO or the anli·smokers in t:rt'at l:lr1ta1n 1s, .. Kissing a. girl who smokes is likl' k1ss1n~ 11 dirty ashtray." Doesn't sing "h.it ? • SIAMESE CATS Was rt•purted that Siamese c<its ror cen~ tur1t·..; 111 their native Thailand were trained to t.1kt· the.• lJlaC'c or watchdogs. Client asks how ~\1ch a litlle beast could possibly scare oft any J:f1)\.11nup human trespasser. Story is those l'.1ls wPrc taufi:hl to sneak silently up behind :1n intruder, then jump on said intruder's back, d1 g~ing in the claws jllst below the ~houldl'r blades. thus to stav oositioned so as to be a little h ard to swat. Thal'!!i the story.' Shru~ f,\1'11 .. :R or the American quarterhorses \\as 1111 English thoroughbred named Janus 111.1tl•d mostly \\'ilh native Spanish mares. 1\ COU!'i"TY l!EDICAL EXAlUNER tells rn<· lh;_it <'Xpt•rienCl'd bakers tend to dcvelo1> 1ll:->t1nel 1vc callouses on their palms and Jitlle f1ng1·r~. ' ·\ddre,~.~ rr1 ail la I . .\1. l3oyd. P.O. l:loI 1561). Costa \ll'~(J ~1?6?6 (.'vpyr1gllt 1975 L.,\1. Boyd The bureau is designed to assist comm unity , business a nd civic or- gan izations throughout Southern Califor nia by arranging speakers deal- ing with s uch topics as property rights. land use and cost or housing. r &elANESE l\,YLON HI-LOW ''WE'R E dedicated to balancing the desire ror a be tter environment wi th th e clear u n · derst anding of the social and economic costs," s aid vice president Mrs. I 00 Yo CELANESE NYLON PILE POPUlAR HI-LOW PATTERN THAT COMBINES BEAUTY AND DURABILITY. MANY COLORS. llOW SALE PRICED ••• <OMPAIAIU llTAIL .............. $4.H QU EE NIE ·--~4 • • .. . J~ t ::::::: ........ ~ ... --.. By Phil lnterlondi ... _. .. ,..__, BRUSH ... BLOWER SCISSOR STYLES HOW TO 00 -~ ST'EP B.Y STEP ~ Anyone cal:' care fOf' a Brush Blower nelr 1tyle. or our olher curl cojohr'KL_ tu~r.ee. full func:ll9f'tl • SCfSSOI S"rtLIS wh1Chlie as easy to doi u iu;t·~ p6ol. Our tamp cuts, linger lumbte outs. cuAlnt lroo cuts. wash towel dry, brush 'n fluff cuts or llmole wasn aoo wear culs are .SCISSOllD. •1 tak..ar.ol...youl'Mtl styles. Good for any age, any hair. No teatng. no rollers. no pins. no POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS. AUO: 1110 t.t• ,.,..._ ........ WAYU. fOll -·...,. W&MY to sn 1'09 ..... ··-o .... JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING -1 a•. 1 a pm SAT.& SUN.t·I 356S Tustin Ave ,Orange 9564 Ham111on Ave .• Huntington Beach :.t05 N. Harbor BIOJd .. Fullerton ILOCATE.O AT T..i£ FASCJNAf\NGVU,.LA DEL SOU tt7·1 ltJ t6a.JIJI t7f.Jl6J HERCULOI® COMMERCIAL CARPET 100% HERCULON IV OLEFIN PILE EXCEllENT FOR HIGH TRAFFIC AREAS. . . llOW SALE PRICED ••• COMPHllUllTlll .................. SS.H HERCULOI® SCULPTURED so. 'It.. SAVI S2.IO_ r· Sandy Berwick. "The l · best w ay to accomplish this is through comm uni- ty dialogue:· DUPONT NYLON TRI-COLOR SHA<i 100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. RICH. DURABLE SHAG IN THRH COLOR DESIGNS. BB 100% HERCULON IV OLEFIN PILE IN A TIGHT LOOP WEAVE THAT RESISTS STAINS AND WEAR MANY COLORS. CE EED l eaders re-> e e n t 1 y a tt e n ded House Conference on ·• Envir onme ntal a nd Ecmomic Ba lance. Af. t e rwa rd s, they con - c luded that the existing ·i' speakers· bureau needed 1 . el(paJ!ding . IN THE PAST year, E xecutive Director Gil F erg u son a nd o ther CEEED leader s have made m or e than 200 pre- sentations t h roug hout California a nd t he West. CEE ED can be con- t acted a t 620 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, or 644-9000. Film Critic To Speak Filrn Crtitic AndrC'w Sa rris \lt il l :;peak ;.it Orange Coast College at I p.m . Sept. 19 in Science Room 25. The public is invited to attend the presentation. t itled ''Internationa l Cinema:• There is no charge. Sarris, professor 11f <'inema at Co lumb1 <1 lJniversit y, wril('s for the Village Voice' <ind )lew York Times. I-le h;.is contributed artit'les t11 so major publications. Dr. Arthur Bletz lec- t ures at Orang e Coast ,!:olle11e begin· ning w edn~sday on "EnJar~i o ~ Your •• Bounda r ies." The fo ur-wee"' series, ' 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in OCC Auditorium , is free. J • llOW SALE PRICED ••• (OllPAUIU llUll ............. $4.H •t ~~~ ROOM SIZE REMNANTS LARGESIZES 600'0 IAVllGS UPIO . '' • 1 ST QUALITY llAME BRAllD CARPETS AT LOW DISCOUllT PRICES • SELECT FROM THE LARGEST CARPET lllVEllTORY Ill THE WEST ~DEL 1"1l'"Hl-LOW SHAG-- JOO KODEL lllPOLYESlERPILE ACLASSIC PATIERN WITH THE DIS11NC11VE LOOK OF PLUSH ELEGANCE MANY BEAUTIFUL COLORS ro CHOOSE FROM . MOW SAU PRICED •.• COMPAlllll llTlll ............. 5'.H BB 10. TD. SAVI Sl.00 KODEL Ill SCULPTURED 100 o KODEL Ill POL Y(STER PILE A THREE LEVEL PATTERN IN MANY ATTRACllVE TWO · TONE COLORS. LONG WEAR ING AND EASY TO MAINTAIN. MOW SAU PRICED ••• COMPUllll lllAIL .............. 5'.H INDOOR OUTDOOR CARPETS DO -IT-YOURSELF. CUT ANO CARRY llOW SALE PRICED.•. COMPllAILI matt ••••••••••••••••• •••••••• SLH so."· SAVE SJ.DI COMPLETELY INSTALLED OVER LUXURIOUS FOAM PADDING CARPET YOUR LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM AND HALLWAY YOUR CHOICE IYLOll HI-LOW 01 TRI· COLOR SHACi IASED 01 J2 SO. H S. DUPONT NYLON PLUSH 100% DUPONT CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE. THICK. DENSE PLUSH IN A MULTITUDE OF EXCITING, DECORATOR COLORS llOW SALE PRICED ••• <OllPHHU llTAIL ••••••••••••• SIJ.tt SQ. YI. SAVI $4.00 • • EVERY ROLL OF CARPET IS MARKED AND PRICED FOR YOUR SHOPPING COIVEllEICE •All LAIOI UICOIDITIOIALLY CiUARAITEED " - KODEL Ill TIP SHEARED 100% KODEL Ill POL VESTER PILE. LUXURIOUS HI-LOW STYLING COMBINED WITH A G~NTLE INTERPLAY OF DESIGN AND COLOR. A WELCOME ADDITION TO • ANY HOME DECOR. llOW SALE PRICED ••• -' COMPUAILI 99 m11. ............... St.•• UPONT NYLON DENSE SHA 100% DUPONT NYLONG PILE. EXTRA DENSE SHAG IN LAVI SH MULTI -COLORATIONS. BRINGS HJGtt FASHION TO ANY HOME. llOW SALE PRICED •• , <OMPllllll mAll . -·--· ••••••• $16.H LUSH GREEN GRASS CARPET - 100% POLYPROPYLENE OLEFIN FIBER . IDEAL FOR PATIOS, POOL AREAS. PLAYROOMS. WI LL STAND UP TO 100% POLYPROPYLENE WITH RUBBER BACl<.ALSO AVAILABLE IN CANDY STRIPES. A NATURAL FOR MANY INDOOR AND OUTDOOR USES. 89 -ROUGH TREATMENT. NOW SALE PRICED •• , •• COMPARABLE RETAIL. ....................... $3.99 so. 11. SAVI SJ.00 NOW~ SALE PRICID •••••• so."·· SAn $1.00 COMPARAILE RETAIL ...................... $5.99 ~-•""•~lliili""m'1 _~:lO=·•=O·='O=O=l'=l=l=HO=H=O=IN=H=•1=~~·_;:CO~Hf'~"="'~'='l=Dl=l=lt=l~;;.:l=ND=•=~=K~T=r~=1=.~=l=IL~~=L!=•....:(l=lL=f=O=•=fU=l=l=HO='·=M=·"=o~=...:l=llVl:::::(!_•~~=~='=o=~=(=~='O=•=D=U=n=n:....::0~=1=11=•1="=r...._r ..,....-'~---- NO. HOLLYWOOD VENTURA WHlnllR LONG llACH MONTCLAIR FOUNTAIN VAU.IY ELCAJON 7007 lourtl c .. ,,. JSOI I. Mohl StrHI I Stll l. Whl!litr llwd. 3001 lellllowtr llwd. Ult Moll 1too1 .. on1 Ut•S • ., .. , llw4 . 237 L .... St. 11¥4. -tU-HOO (IOS) •O-SUI •O·Ol•I. u1.1u• 71•) 6J6.JS17 111•1139-1700 714 «0-6262 HOLLYWOOD TORRANCE PASADlNA CANOGA PARK COVINA W. LOS ANGELES I UJ Vi•• 51reet 42Jl Artttie llwd. 2660 I. Colotedt llwd. 21 Oll 5h1t111.,.·Wa1 JIO l. Anow Mi1h""1 IOSJS v .. ;., 11u. ••2·6JlJ 542-Ht• 577·1'00 3'7-2ll4 t••·447l 55'-tStO ---~ ------- ... .,. __ NO. CAUFOINIA IOCAllONS • CAMNILL •SAN CAllOS • MIUHAf • •SAN PIANCISOO •MT. YllW I l • i • • • • • ' • • ' ' I I . . \ IOOMllt br Wa F. lroWll 8111 Mel Casioa I t I llOl.>I l,W'uE REAU.<,> GCJr I 'llll6 PLACE. FIXED UP " NICEf:I.UKErT! I •' FIGMENTS I, . ' 0 ' C> -= ~ I ESPEOAJ.Ll,l LIKE lHE . CJ$t./ <,IOc.J DECORllTEO "TllE CEILIN(:, Wl'lll IYIAGIC. llWlRKCRS/ rrs REl'l\IN\5CE/ll OF 1HE SISTINE CHAPEi... ! ' ' • ~- by Dale tia1e NANCY by Ei iH BushJlliller 'j DID YOU CATCH ANYTHIN~ ,TODAY~ ,, t; !* A~AOSS ' 1 t11uml111tlotl " ; "'"""' • Mad: Slang i ""'"'"' 14 Be ready lot 15 SNmrock , ... ll Llflgllly, In time 17 DIMrt pl111t1 11 Gr1"*9d:3 ..... 20 Oulllf'Hge 21 Pra!M 23 T;wo, for Ol'lfl 24 Noted Cltl. P.hr•lc~ 28 Greel1 mllilarily -29 Gift ,..i...,. JO,~··-..... .a Endurw:e • <19 Sl'll1>9in(I eo111alrw '°"" 61 Acqull• ~2 Mewed r1pldly S5 Rtaolut• SI Anc*ll GI* ...... eo Ac11Yt p«aon &1 Wlng•llM ..... 62 Ofllc. W!lfMr: '~"""" U Opet Htr9)1 MTV program 65 CivUtuU " .... DOWN 1 Dlllal• flbric 2 lnduballn Mii .. 3.Actor- 31 Swedllll ,,~ """" 32 """""" - Ye5ltrday'1 Piiule Sot'¥ecl; """"' , 42 0tc¥ lb I book Peterson or 22 Aero. ftlO•. 25 """'°""" Victor Botge 43 Emltlel tftOne4#Y unll .f5 Numerical 29 Ottectlng pr1h1 app¥11IUS 4t Sopft. lor one JUDGE PARKER SO If TllE5E JERKS TELL 'WOtl TO MNUtf N., 'l'OlJ 00! IF THE'l 5/tl NO, THEN YOO t>Ot4'T! IS TAAi IT? - FJ "' ' I // ~ I """" a Mldequlel 21 Seed OUlet 11 G«leral -· I M.o!IQWH -..... • 311 <:oln of m""mol """" 7 Toward Ille 37 MU\tlr)· _,, ""'"'""" I El-: 38 Betldl • _ ...... 31T"'* I Cardinal pCiflornl: t .. -..... 10 Negllcl "42: No ion,.. 11 ~!Joure """"' 12 Prima-........ _ -... COloNd 1l hratltlc ....... .., ·-· • ,,· . " """"'' 2t Boy'• natM 30 Frvll wine 32 Sotclfeu In """'°""' 33 M9ritlm« ,.,_ 35 CoNt9"• ~-31 Aull'lor --40 Lame PIOPI• 41 Sulboul ~I 4a Relin .Q .... tell«'• ·-51 °*''*· ••lenlly 53 --Misbe-N¥ln•M 54 AnTly f8"U: . ..... 51 Son ol .i.:ob 57 Slmll•lty 10: Suffix 59 EM; Pnll~ MISS PEACH CJ ! I a ! t o DICK TRACY. • ' t / l ' DOOLEY'S WOILD DR. SMOCK GORDO W!lERE1S TH.AT sriNNY SMILE You HA!) EVERYD.A'/ DURIN<J Y.AC.Ailoril, KAYO? 'Cc(- IS MY GIVW'l'I\ MAO! • .. be<10.1t!S DAll.VPll.OT .., ..... ••11• -MIS OOCli."' SAYS ~ES r...iir11 mv IN l't011U..ME'S ~M1SCOLO " ~· ' l ! ' -I OF 1115 JUST DE55arSf CoME ON·· Ll'T1S SEE "THE CO~ERS Of ')'OOR MOUTll l~N UPWARDS~ CoMEON •.. ~, ... ___ _ --- ANIMAL CRACKERS by Rodger Bolen . , $.)llE. by Mell "---------"'lo ,.,, i by ·chester Gould OOINU BOTH, CHIEF, WOULD BE QUIT'E AN UNDERTAKINO! J 9-IO ti!P II~ '~"1'•. ''I hav_c very good ncw'i ~rom ~he . trcawrcr-she managed 1u halancc our budget by 1n'icn1ngJus1 two tiny mi'ilakcs." DENNIS THE MENACE ·roo~.wn-IKH.ls, 'rr«s~a:HLl!l· i mY..~\l.61nr/asr a: IT: M ll /lt!Sltf •J#bl\l: ' I ' ' • r • I : • r . 8lf DAILY PILOT Wedneedey. S•ptemtMr 10, 1975 Douglas Directing • l11£ ULTllllTE II M~lfll SC1££1 PIOOUCTIOIS Will Sweep lou Oii !Dir fed-lill br l111·lm ll!ill !ti! l "NASHVILLE" w ................. "'IVNMY UDY"" IP,Gl ""OWL AND PUSSYCAT" lNI ""THI FOITUMI'" ""MOH'TI PnHOM A HOlY GU.IL" IPGJ "'01HH SIOI OF THI MOU HT A»t' ~WM HIU. U.Clr lN) '"NAMl:D .. ""DEA TH WISH'" llJ '"APPl:I DUMPUNG"GAMG .. SWISS FAM.IL T IOllNSON" IGJ gn Rarga1n J\1at1nees $1. 50 T1l 2:30 Senior Citizens , r. 50 at all times SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SO.COAST PLAZA ...... " Jtt.)3S1 .__eonr ..-o•tll , .. ..,. w S.1:41 ,,, .. ,.,... Ml l,i S-l>IMl,I.~ CllEIAWD THIEi ,.:~:-.G, "DON'T LOOI< MOW" IRI l:lO W S.. 1:1~0 "llEYOMli THE DOOR" f.:41 I •.JO w s.. ~ .... t:ll ~-600011MIS aou.• , ... .... _ ...... , .. ..... FR PARKIN ,,... ~THE 1•1"41 W,....W"''"' OTHER SIDE' PLUS 1111 ' OfTHE ~-MOUNTAIN' w•s.,.._.,,.....,., h •~ ... ll ......... ~·- lo.,,.., .i ........ -·- lo"''"' "' ........ . ~·- •n1t-••-Oo1>t1 UC& WITH THE DlVll lfOi1 --~ TH£ TlllOllSTS ll"t °""' ',,. "°°"' -OU!" • .,,,. •i.IOll LOVE & Df.ATH "°' ••• SLEl,11~ OIOfflf !J:JO HOOH ' IM'l 'l'-'l,ll•MI.&:· -JAtT n WALKING fALa.,.i JUNtol: 10NN11 rflCf OllfN 11:'° NCIOfrol --'-"'""' YOUNG FIAM(INSTllN WOOf''t •UO'I (Kt TAKI MONIT a. IUN ll'Ot .... ,l:Jt .. 1•,0•Tl•l .. ltt(• Clllltll• Ulllf• If lt£f' flft.i !'"''! r1i.1I 1 1 ltt ... • C•tllfto 1-11 Mil:•""" I''"' 1.-.,11 L'""•" "' ...... ..... ll•lfll TIDAL WAVE .. __ CHQSIN SUIYIVOIS""' ,.,,o,.;,.._ ..... , _,.,.....,,U.,l.Jt JAWS -c. . CA,IAtN MtMO oe. "''"'"~ , ... ,...,.., ,,. A"ll OllM'llNG GANG111 SWl5S l&MILT IOllNSON• ~f I I: -----·-VIOA IM1l II lllO l'llll -IL IAUllVA tlliUl ---,0-ltfOHD THI DOOi ttt -· PITll THI OIVIL H! .....-.t .-:lllft Mf ... WNml••mt,. --IT"'°8 WMI I"" I Comedy Writers Lash 'Family Hour~ Curbs By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP> -When television comedy minds meet nowadays, the No . 1 topic is the f~amily I-lour. "What have )'ou lost lately?·' they ask each other. PR 0 D UCE R DANN V clinical;" said Persky. "We did Arnold reports ABC refused to the show in what I thought was sch('dule <.1 "Barney Miller" good t<l!lle, but then the network show because it contained the :;aid we can't use the word line : "You got a helluva lot of 'vasectomy' at an. We're waiting nerve.·· Arnold was told he cou ld for a meeting On it.•• LOS ANGELES (AP) -Havins alreody made hll debut u a fillii producer, actor Michael Douclas 1' tunilna dlredor as wdl. · · Eltecuttve prodocer Quinn Martin am>oun<ff t1W Douglu will direct \be "si-s I°' salt"' seg- mentof the TV seriff '"Slreelsof San Froncisoo." .. TM tmilvilttl ,..,iiM pidurt from lite ltrrif ging No. I 1><81 ,,.U,.. .JAWS The "losses" are words, scenes and whole episodes which have £!n excise 1n the largest waV"e of censorship since thl' Hays Of· fire ruled movie morality . either e lim ina te the e ntire JamesKomack,e..ecutivepro- episode at his own cost or excise ducer of the n ew "Welcome tbe 0 'hell."lfechosethe latter. Back, Kotter,'' said ABC 's Lee Granl--,--titar.rin(l-in N-BC~-~<:e!.':O~Sl!'ft''.!i:"e'!:ie!fiC~l:'e~dc,;a~p!'ropooed~~l!-!"~'!ll-+ ''Fay," says that an exclamation for lhe classroom comedy io in the show was changed from "·hich a girl student is believed to "Oh God " to ••J)ear God," the be pregnant. It turns out she latler apparently considered less fabricated the s tory to stop talk -IM J - So far l£>1evision networks have not achieved tbe absurdities of the movie censors -kisses "'ere limited to three s econds and married couples slept 1n t"·in beds. Rut the TV comC'dy makers fe ;1r that sut•h un era may l.>e re- turning. · profane. that she was promis~. In the firs t show of the season "When the boys are accused of she as a divorced woman has a n-being the lather, they admit that ing "'·ith a s ujtor. Btlt'"the word they wt>re never intimate with ··affair·· "'as not allowed. her." said Komack ... J thought it was a beautiful slary, and I Tit•: CAU8F. t~OR new restraints on TV creators is the Family !-lour. an agreement bcl\\•een the nrt'A'Ork S and the 1-'CC to limit cntC"rtainmcnt before 9 p.m. (8 p.m. Central 'fime) to s hows suitable for the ent'ire family. This meant m oving the blood- letting cop shows to later in the evening. Most or the S..to·9 series for the new season are situation comedies. The situations -and the 1anguage -must now be antisep· tic enough to avoid contaminat· 1ng 10-year-olds , the comedy makers claim. SAYS CLORIS Leachman of "Phyllis'·: ··we had lo eliminate the word ·virgin .· changing it Lo 'totally innocent.· \Vhat kind of reasoning is that if virginjty is in- noC"enee, th en nonvirginity means guilt. "At Christmas time will they have to sing · Jlound yon virgin mother and child' after the Family Hour?" Bill Persky, co-executive prO-: ducer of "The Monlefuscos" and "Big Eddie," said the former show ran into trouble with NBC on a plot a bout one or the sons getting a vasel'tomy. ··wE WERF. told iL was okay ·but ·make :;ure 1t doe::.n·t ,get Carol and Nabors Lucky De'1ut Team LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jt"s a sure sign or a new television season. · When the n etworks unleash their blockbuster movies, the channels are laden with "pro- mos" for shaky shows -and J im Nabors makes a guest a p- pearance with Carol Burnett. On Saturday at 10 on CBS, Channel 2, Nabors makes his ninth appearance on the season's opener or ''The Carol Burnett ShO't\'." If be dido 't show up, it would be like New Year's Eve without Guy Lombardo. The Nabors-Burnett tradition bad its origins in 1964, when the comedienne wrote Nabors a (an letter in admiration of his work on "Gomer Py(e." here, they-asked me to be on their first show. "Now she says I'm her Ji.icky charm. That's all right with me. Carol's is the beSt variety show in television.'' NABORS HIMSELF is r eac- tivating his television career. He is s tarring with Ruth Buzzi in a Saturday morning show, •'The Lost Saucer," produced by Sid and Marty Krofrt for ABC. Wh y a kiddie show'? · "Bet'ause l love the kid au- dience,·· he explained. ''The networks are upgrading the Saturday morning shows, and l think that's a good thing. ··1 want to be a part of il. Ob· viously I 'm not doing it for money. I can make more in one weekend at a state (air than I can doing all 14 of this series." HE IGNORED il -··1 thought it had to be a practical joke." While on a press lour in New York , h~ stayed at the hotel ANOTHER motivation : "I 'where Carol was rehearsing her want to get back into TV . Last early TV series, a rotating seg-year I spent only three months at ment of "The Entertailiers." home. I,' like to travel, but gosh, ''We became immediate enough1senough ·· friends," says Nabors, "and our Unlike some television stars friendship has never altered. whose series end, Jim Nabors , When she and Joe (Hamilton, her ~as maintained a thriving husband-produce r ) came out career. argued with ABC. Finally they said, 'Okay -if it's done in good taste.' "'OF COURSE it would be ifl good tas te . J ·ve got a 101,.,.year- o ld daughter at borne who is my censor.•• Persky said One o:danger of the Family H our concept is "we started to censor ourselves. As a result, the s hows can become ·blander because we automatical- ly pull our punches. That's ridiculo'1s." · Norman Lear, the poobah oC situation comedy, has been a leader in the fight against the Family Hour, even though his · s hows have b een scarcely ("ensored. ••J DON'T GET a lot of static because the shows are suc- cessful," said the creator of "All in the F amily,'' ··Maude," and others. ··That proves that the whole thirig is economic.'' Lear said he asked CBS to re- view last season's "All in the Family'' shows to determine which could fit into the Family Hour. The result : two would be prohibited, 21 would require changes. one could pass un- . alterated. Significantly. ''All iii the Fami- ly " has been moved to Monday at 9, out or the family watching ·zone. FEARING LOSS <>f revenue when "All in the Family" goes in- to syndication -.JoCal\stations would prefer to show it in the early evening -Lear's Tandem Productions is suing the FCC and the networks. · Tbe Writers Guild has also planned court action, and it has been join~d by the Directors and Actors Guilds. They will charge that the networks succumbed to press ure from the FCC t o formulate the Family Hour in violation of the First Amend- ment. The litigation may take as long as two years. Meanwhile, TV's ("Omedy writers will be watching their "hells" and "damns.·· "TIDAL WAVE" SADDLEBACK PLAZA 0..w-.·· I J • .. Mika 1' "THI CUATllH ROMntl a.ACI. LAM>OH'" • .,,. CAMI HOM OlltaSPACI• • AT 1:45-5:05 U IOAOAOAOAIAOC ~lllt [I ~II' ~H!IO It THE SA&A Gf TME lllcCUU.OCHS, Tl1EWT Of!Hl~ LUSTY lMD _-f~-.~,·r~,·~ !l~'.~~~.Qh ~~··- AT l :JO ·~"'----FORREST TUCKER ...... CllllCICll At 112•'.•lS AT 3:25 -ALSO- "PAPll MOON" Al 1 t4S·SrOS.asH FOUNTAIN VAi-LEV • llllOOKHUll >I Al IO!NC.IR 8J9·1'.>00 S:2S .. :to JJ ·ALSO. "FOi PtTt'S SAKI" AT ~1S0.71lS FREE RESERVED TICKETS ••• SANT A ANA JAYCEES . AND ST. ANNE'S YOUNG ADULTS PRESENT a mu~1C"of host'd upon tht' 901pt>I "''ord1r19 to ~t. lt101thl'w Bl11to1 at 17th StrMt September 12, 13, 14, 19,· 20.~1 ·~· 1' } !!Zi &ii ·~ " ii l!ll!l IVl>.l!!'!.l r.~~(•,1•:.::I 5:1!'! ''l!l!'Ji ti\il:r ~<1-;..r-: il.t"l::.>."l"""-"'" '·""''"' ! ~4; ..... _a- ------c:t:r> · 1 '<.1. r AM.• ~<ll\ ! 1•; l()...,_ ... _ .. I '«~ ... (,jl!I- ~Aven.~•lS.A.frW'(. · 0r1,. •s:ri.J.3'28 NOT SINCE .LOJESIQRY. ... IRISTOl. IV -·-LC...~- . 540-7444 1helnr~<,.1111 Kinn1ool; 1111.· Ami."l'k·Jn OiyrnJ'IC ~1confm.lrr\vllCN:'tr~K i,11! i(1ok t'\o\"l'ythin~ but hrr 11!1·. Arll.! vd10 fo.1nr.l lhr ~Cllira~l· fo 11\'(' thm.1~h!hr love ol one \'fry :>J'tX:i,11 m.1n. NOW PLAYING IN ORANGE COUNTY 'l'ht· llu11eh11•r-J ,in:in TIM-\111rit•t ,..ho-i n"1trln'1 •'ill(t'r ht ni;1kr up for li\·r 1111· l~"'N'"'' I\(' i. ... 1 tlmr. 11rt111·~hout. NOW EXCLUSIVELY AT EDWARDS BRISTOL IV Co.HIT "SMILE" • , ' 1949 .. : 1 nut tlm1 to"' young! -tobe1 McCulloch! DNLYl>!LOT aJJ Mufeal Calendar JI Five Concerts at UCI O\lr recent analysis ot a p«t!on ot U.. <019lnl Orance County Pllilhormonl• Society aeuon -the ''Series A'' aecment -aeem1 to have lllled the 1\ffdaof a numberbfread\ltl1"bo•arelulll' presttve these pre-season 1\lmmarles. So let's take a look at Series B, five concerts scheduled for 8:30 p.m. in UC Irvine's Crawtord HaJI. On paper. we have five fint Cla.5$ programs comin1ourway. ' All five concerts will fea\ure the tbs Anaelea Pbilarmonic Orchertt.ra wtalch will, Oc .10, be un~er the baton of W a Iler Goldlthmldt for the '"He PY I By; • , TOM BARLEY Music Box r ' . own Alvaro Cassuto ol UCI Orchestra fame. His Elq'Opean con~ert tour this 1ummer included perfOf.m ances ln hls native Portuaal. He returns WlSCalhed, thanlt God. e wor · Mne Bowl ta tl1at the L1ric +.~-PU .. __. .......... • -w<ry1w-•r . -....:=-, .... .,.. t . ·w1 w• ............ !$,,. I.A.. flRWY IMrANCHISTI"" llXJ Marcel Prawy is the storyteller with soprano Dorotha Chryst and ljiric tenor Ken Remo as soloists. Opera Association of Orange County has a sure win·• • ~MIC 1 ... nE>r in its "Dark of the Moon," opening Friday at 8 ·~~~--~=·~'~T~•~""~•:,r;d p.m. Karen Benson and Brad David star ln this t 5 TllKlllEllCUBIAL JAMES Levine> ii the con- ductor with Paul Schenley as piano sololit Dec. 20 p k highlyre,gardedfolkapera. + ,,.,, ........ ,,.. ' ...... _ ...... ..... ___ ,__. ....,._~ for a concert that •bould e!rect.ively U!lhtt In the ec Beturmng• . Christmas season. Webern, Beethoven and Sibelius on that.program. On to our bicentennial year and Valentine's LOS ANGELES (AP) -After time out from Day of 1976 with that redoubtable Russian, Gen-acting to serve as a producer, Gre1ory Peck is oady Rozhdestvensky, on the podiudt for an all· returning to the screen as star of "The Birthmark" ail\DV.ky "°"cert .that illcludes the HamlFL for 20th Century-Fox. . IA "Wn ne MKl.IT"' "· ~ -'T•·-·- y o .. rture, tM eJorious F'.IRh Stmphony and Peek wlli play U.S. ambassador to Encland ill the ~DO eoqc:eito No. 2 wlth the conductor's wife, original screenplay by David Seltzer. The atory ls -""==== ittoria 1Wtnikova1 at the keyboard... described as ••a modem-day fulllllment of tbe tn'Mifit8Wi1115lbli'~k With-his orchestra M attb PNP-becY of the Boot of Rnatlana with the com.inc 6 for a Crawford Hall performance of Beethoven ·s of the anti-Christ.·· ,second Symphony and Aaron Copland's Symphony "'The Birtbtnark" will be directed by Richard DAILY Rll.01' CLASSIFIED ADS 842•5&18 I George 11911 ....... and playt thegmm with all the chambll's loaded! • ~ 3. No.series ~ould be complete 'IA'ithout a show· Donner in London. Jerusalem and Rome starting Ht"-Bovlevwd1tW1'-nStrHt ...,. by '"Zooby," 811 OCPSpatrons.wW oiree. _ _:Oef_'.t.~20~. --=---------------------..---'---L.;:=....,==-==·="=°"'='=' =:!..!:======;::;;:::J~ The series closes May 15 with concertmaster' !"dney Harth on the poWum for a program that has aot yet been .determined. · It's a better movie than'Blazing Saddles' or 'Young Frankensteln'. .• o11;,,. """ ' ' J1 '-'LL_._.._ 'L Marveloully zany"'"""'· -- DEUUERAnlE DOES IT'AGAIRI D1liu1ranc1 1R1 'Monty Pytllon ond the Holy Onll' la lnaplr.d, l1>s genlou1, lnlectiou1, 1nc1...im1nat1, lndulglnt, l1>s lmltlble end In q--tolll. Nollllng could make Pythonaftl•• Mpplm'. -.._" The movie I• • mult-*": The uny pace nenr breaks. It haa sonwtb6ng for everyone wllll 1 sense of humor. A JOHN BOOflMAN fllM Slairing , JON .VOIGHT· BURT REYNOLDS A cruy movie. c...--In 1 flln houll-• "'"'' 7 0 JACK ( ~· ro NK:HOlSON .• -f.WARREM f 1 IEATTY HA BOR H"-•IOI & T wa K>M, COl T "-Olt:'A '46·0171 64 .. JJU edwards BRISTOL CINEMA 8111\TG l t.T ""t.(All THUI! ~40 7444 1949 ... was a time to be young! - to be a McCUiioch! A time for drag racing, hayrides, booze. and strip poker. . .Then II all began to happen! • " ,.,..,.,, ' ""'"" ''"'""" AMo><B<>e< ~ocLclio"l°T e WILD McCULLOCHS"·~" ~$J.W,~ • MAX BAER • JUUE ADAMS •JANICE HEIDEN MD, "TWJQ.. ,_, .,.._ n.• r:T-...:41 IUT . ..suH. 2:-..:at-7:11Mo:• f< • s. • - " , __ _ " ,,. ,, ' ,. " I I ·, T>' • • . ' BJ.f !>Alt. y PILOT I • • en1n soon ••• • erv n's • 1n artment stores ran e ount I- employment inte..Views now in progress men and women-apply in person-9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. ' Inter-views for the HUNTINGTON BEACH store now in progress throu11h Friday, Sept.12th• rooms 208 and 207, Mesa Verde Plaza, 1525 Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa, Mesa. Interviews for the FULLERTON store will begin on Monday, Sept. 15th at Solomon's Fabric Store, 3208 Yorba Linda Blvd., Crossroads Center, Fullerton. What's a Mervyn's? We have been around for 26 years, and we specialize in clothes, shoes and accessories fOc snen. women and children, plus things you need for your home. We also specialize in offering value for your hard-earned dollars. As far as we can tell, we're unique in the department store business. ·over 2 million Californians shop at Mmvyn's every year. Our customers include all kinds of people ••• but families wiih children who are trying to maint1in a ba~nced budget really like us. They think Of us as a different kind of departmerlt store.· Here ire • few of the reasons~ '- Mervyn's means lower prices every day You'll find sale events happening every day, 52 weeks a year at Mervyn's. Our tabloid-size shopPing news will be d istributed every week in your local . paper. It's your guide to savings for yourself, your family and home. Mervyn's means greater selection You'll f ind Just ~hat you're looking for, whether it's dothes for the kids. a jacket for Dad or a dress for you. You'll find a great selection in styles and colors. plus an array of items for the home. Mervyn's·means famous brand names You'll find names that make fashion news, like Levi's, Carter, Revlon. Adidas, Prince Gardner •. Playtex, Bali, Buster Brown, CaMon, Burlington, Munsingwear and others. At Mervyn's you'll find the style, the size. the brand and the price you're looking for. •• :?"~ At Mervyn's we don't believe in "hard sell". We're here to help you when you need it. Exchanges. re• funds? No probCeml If you need help with a selec- tion, or an honest opinion regarding a fashion, we take an interest in you. We want to keep you as a satisfied customer who thinks of us as a real friend. Mervyn's mea.ns convenient charge account shopping t..'l fHVYN S --·-·-.. ··'A, • With a Mervyn's Charge Card. you'll be able to take advantage of special sales which are an- nounced to our charge customers only I Plus you'll be able to take advantage of all our ceaso.,. al sales even if you're 'hort of cash. employment opportunities in our 2 new Orange County stores SALES • STOCK OFFICE The new Mervyn's stores at HUNTINGTON BEACH, 9811 Adams, Huntirlgton Beach, CA 92646 and FULLERTON, Fullerton CrOSS('Oads Shopping Center, Yorba Linda Blvd .. Fullerton,., CA 92631. will offer a wide assortment of na- tionally advertised famous brands and popular priced apparel, shoes and accessories for the entire family, plus yardage, bedding, linens and draperies.. Positions for experienced sales per- sons are available, plus • number of opportu~ ities for inexperienced persons tn sales. stock- and office clerical areas. Mervyn's stores artrait conditioned. with attractive and pleasant SUflo roundings. A truly exciting place ta work. GENEROUSCOMPANV PAID BENEFnslNCl.IJD£l •LHelnsun!nce • Denltllflan •Pension"- •Employee D;scounu• Hospitellzatlon•-PaidY••·~ • Pmcripdon Drop •Major Mediclll end-ttalidly1 M:&:RVYH'S ' Ari equal opportUnity employer! Speclal !!91' to housewives: If vour childre1>0re pretty well grown up, and you've been thinklng about getting out of the house and supplemertt- ing the household income with a part-time P.>-1 we'd like to talk to youl No preyious experience .is necessaN: ••• we think anyone who has ma~ aged to raise a family is already well.qualified to understand the needs of Mervyn's a.istomers. • • I • .. ; •. ALAllEDA •• ANTIOCH,. CAMPBELL,. CITRUS HEIGHTS •• CUPERTINO •• DALY CITY,, DUBLIN .. FREMONT;, MERCED•, MILLBRAE •• MODESTO•, MOUNTAIN VIEW .. NAPA• ~D PETALUMA.,SACRAMENTO, POINT WEST AND FLORIN .,SALINAS,. EAS'TSAN JOSE ANO SOUTH SAN JOSE ,.SAN LORENZO •• SAN PABLO., VALLEIO •• VISALIA .• I opening soon ... 2 new stores in Huntington· Beach and in Fullerton • • 1 • t 1 • - .. - J ,., Oh, liow they hate to 'cet iii> in .-..1n1. bealinc lcr jlllt-•lnute more and olftrlna to trade eatlal time roe lleeptime. And mother may be in a hurry If 1be bu to dub out the door with the rat or the rani11y en her' ti11totlas1. , B11t a 1ood breakrutcanmean •loodday. Durllll September -Better Breakfast Month -experiment ~lb new Ideas ao the first meal _,rail Into.a dull niu11ne nr the...same e11a and ljaCOll or cereal andJulceday afterday. utest 1wp1bK:a.reU.O.• tbataremadeaheod: muffin bat·· ter .in the retr11erator, nut.bread ID the freeaer or Ingredients fer a i.omemade be.alth-.drtnk .. ar: unged the night before bOslde· tbe blender. Stand-upltaters will rmd these squares fresher and more economical than the packaged ~II. COMMlJTEkMllS < 1 2 ounces ~<2 squar•) un~ sweetened chocolate Mt cup shortening 1 cup::auaar 2eggs •• • "' 1 teaspoon vanilla "' cup sifted all;in1!Pose Dour • ' ' l teaspoon baiting PJW.!ler' "'teupoonsall -"'cup milk 5'\io cups cereal flak.,, -cna&bed • ~ C\IP chopped null GreaM and, flour f.lncb "I ba.klll& pan. , , In 1arce saucepan. m.ett chocolate and •hortA!nlnl over low beat. Remove from heat; ml.s: in sugar. eac• and. vaas Stlrlnremainlnl I~. Spread In prepared pm e in aso.de1r:ee....ov.1n about mfnutea; cool Cut into lt ban. l'or•atb vrying. wrap two bars Ip plastic wrap. Stoce overiilib in acool dry place. . ' ~ Wa(lle and panc.11<""r-oi1111t welcome a new •YNP> Combine a 6-ounce Pacltalt nt bulle.ncotcb morsels and V. cup corn syrup over hot (not bolling) water until morsels melt and mixture is smooth. Gradually stir in v .. Cl.lP orange juice ~ Y.t cup ral1ill0-Makes lMI •!IP'· Ser:ve warm. · Some family members mlight resist breakfast becaufe of the usual sweet taste. Offer them a C up of bouillon or tomato soup iUld a &rilled cheese sandwich to create'their reserve of energy ror the upcoming day. • -~ ---'-' _.;_' ~ f · NutritiQ~.s • . ' Pluu can be Just • PoPUI .. at breaktutas IMerilllheday. U1e Jloll1sh mutttu 8' lhebale. If ell-tomato-mushroom tGpplnp are ton *"'!J roe lb~ early bou.u. try browned aausa1e and canned pie rlllinp er alleed l!Auenater cbe•• and peanuts or abredded Chedd .. and tuna. On day0 when brealdut must poured ou..t of "-box, re· -MrtbeteCODlumet'tips: Firit take a look at the variety al 14<Jes ,..,.bot~ multi· ,....,,. puttfa;-flaked. abredded. cruola types, read)'·to-eat or ,. • cooked. plain or with sui1r, bllbly fortUled or nMuraL tlton consider nutrients, inire- dlonta -coot befoce mak!nc the flnalfflecllon. If nutrients are your goal. read and compare nlltritlcn labels 0.. several p_.ckoaes. Tbey will show you that cereals are good aourCes of vitamins and iron. Tbey also rumi.~ carbohydrates f«' eneray, protein, fiber, and aralowinfot. . If biah oe low pr<Min, high or low fiber, low, sodium; aller__jies or sugar. restrictions are a con~ aider1Uon, the list of ingredients 1 eop e BEA ANOl!RSON, Editor CAROL MOORE, Food~ -.y,Septembet10.1975 f>lgeC~- ~: Breakfasts f Hard-working rural peop~e-:elted -.. ~ \'\i . ·~· • ;,$ ..... ~ l.ever have (or-gotten the im· l Red Delicious •Jared~ 1>0rtance or a good breakfast coted and ctiopped .... · • , - such as Carolina Apple Pan-In a large bowl Sift tdg"ether )Cakes. Served with sausage and fl b k' d alt fried apple rings, 'they are a sure-our, a ing pow er, sugar, s and cinnamon. Mix eggs, milk fire way to fill up hung.~ ~ol.ks. and butter i add to nour mixture Whenselectingfreshapplestor and stir just until flour is raw eating or cooking, look for moistened. Sti~ in chopped apple. firm, unbruised apples that have Drop batter by 1f.t cupfuls onto *good color for the~ .variety. a hot, lightly greased griddle. The clear tone ,of Red' and : Cook turning once, ·WlW golden Golden Delicious apples and the brown. Serves 4. :five characteristic bumps on the 'bloswa eruLmaJi.e_tbem eas=•~w~_A_P_P_L E • s A ll S A G E ;~entify. llftBJ\KFAST FRY 'Apples will keep' well in the' 1 poUn4 bulk sausate, cut in· er · f t to lk·inch slice~ r ngerator or 'fO weeks or , 2 Red Delicious applea, cored • Jmore. ' ., ;t.1[ andeut tnw lneh rings ~ARO LINA APPLEPANCAKEJ! ·l?la.,.,.s!usage slices and a~pll 2 cuos sifted II rings on 'the bottom of• a large fiour l • a -purpose skillet. Cit may be necessary to : 4 teaspoons baking powder use 2 skillets or make 2 batches.) R:· 1 tablespoon s1~gar ~:· 1 teaspoon sa t l" 1h teaspoon cinnamon 1•·. 2 eggs, beaten r 1 If.a cups milk i. I< cup butter or margarine, ~.-. ~;; ~·· • Cook over medium }\eat, turn· ing occasionally, for about 20 minutes, until sausage is well browned and apples are tender. Serve with eggs, pancakes or • French toast. Serves 8. Deliciously different day-starters begin with the colorful crispness of apples. • ' The natural whole grain quality of this Orange Whole Wheat Bread is only one or its m'any attributes. It's also easy t6 prepare ... the ideal breakfast bread for anyone on the go who's concerned about proper nutrition. . Homemade cornmeal waffles were once a favorite food for frontier farming familes. This twen- tie"th century version is a modern·day brunch or weekend breakfast pleaser. Try it soon. ORANGE WHOLE wHEAT JIREAD 'h cup soft butter or margarine ~cup sugar 14 cup honey 2 eggs • 1 tablespoon grated orange rlnd 1 'h cups unsifted all·purpose flour % cup whole wheat flour 1 teaspoon baking powder ~1 .. teaspoon cinnamon ' % teaspoon baking scxia v .. teaspaon salt 112 cup light raisins 3/4 cup chopped walnuts, 1h cup orange juice . · In large bowl cream butler, sugar and honey until light and fluffy. Beat in eggs one at a time. Add orange rind. Mix flours, baking powder; cinnaJnon, baking soda and salt. Toss raisins and nuts with 1,1.a cup of flour mixture ; blend remaining flour mixture into creamed mixture alternately with orange juice. Fold in raisins and nuts. Turn into greased and floured 9 x 5 x 3-inch loaf pan. Bake in 350 degree F. oven 1 hour, until cake tester inserted in bread comes out clean. Turn out of pan and cool completely. CORNMEAL WAFFLES WITH ORANGE HAM SAUCE CreamedHam: · 3 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 'h cups diced cooked ham 1h cup chopped onion 3 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon chili powder 'h teaspoon salt 1 V.. cups or3nge juice 1 cup light cream In a heavy saucepan melt 3 tablespoons butter, add ham and onion, and cook until onion is tender. Blend in flour. Add chili powder and salt. Gradually stir in orange juice. Add light cream and simmer 10 minutes. Waffles: 1 cup unsifted· all-purpose flour 1 'h teaspoons baking powder '!<teaspoon baking soda ~ teaspoon salt % cup yellow cornmeal 2 eggs, separated 1 tablespoon sugar 11'• cups buttermilk 'h cup butter or margarine, melted and cooled In large bowl mix flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and cornmeal. In a small bowl beat lhe egg yolks and sugar until light. Beat in the buttermilk and butter. Beat egg whites until they form stiff peaks. Stir together the flour and buttermilk mixtures just until combined. Fold in egg whites. Brush a heated waffle iron with oil and bake the waffles untll they are golden brown. Makes 10 (5 x 3· Inch) waffles. ., will be helplul. lngredionts are listed by welaht in delcendlna or· dttofpredominance. Before p111ln1 up pre· . ..-weetenecl cer J1 becaustt of IUf&r cqoi.nt, Dairy Council nt Cal(focnla nutrition COOlultants remind that sug_, used in coat· ln& ready·lo-teat Cereals hu no sipiflcant erfect on nutritive value. . Cereals with the moot ! value at the lowest eGlt are cereals ·conked at bocne whole srain•. To ~ i value, cook in milk instead waler. Of the read1·to.eat-cereal plain varieties co:st ~per aerv "" ing than pre-sweetened products Cereal and mllt are th customary breakfast ~ combining two of the bulc i food groups. Make the pall!n even more a_ppealina: by ieiiriillill J4anulacture~1 nutritionally fO(t:lty almost all, cereals exeept aonie of the to·be·eooked varieties and .those that are called''i.11 natural.·~ Also. some ready-to·eat eals are forliCied with v tam ns an ron a lg er levels. These are called "'JDultivitamin and iron supple- ments.'' tjlemilkinadillerenl~ · · Pint-size family member might favor a &ervtna When cereals are fortified, a specified amount of nutrients is . added to • specified weight of t'ereal product. Whether an ounce is cOhlP.c:>sed of plain cereal or cereal with sugar, the pro- ducts will be fortified identically. Last but not' least, cOmpare ~ cost-per-serving. An average serving is one ounce. Divide the cost of the product by the number of ounee6 in tbe package. Then CQmpm:e fOOd values and cost for eacb product. chocolate milk, fruit yof.u thinned with milk or jam or stirred into cold milk.' When Banananog is serv with or over cereal, the comblna lion of milk. eggs, fruit an grains represents alt1 foo groups. BANANANOG ~banana, well mashed 1 egg 2 R:aspoons sugar l&li CUP cold milk Dash nutmeg Measure ingredteota into smal mixin'.g,.. bowl or 'blender con tainer; .M.ix until smooth. Mak 1~ cups. .. ' . • Well Worth Straight A's Fresh pears 1ook good enough to eat as is, so watch out for those quick raiders who can't wait for the cooked version. With a good supply, you'll have enough for Breakfast Bartletts. thick, cross slices rried in batter. Serve with honey or preserves sprinkled with cinnamon sugar. As shown, bacon and muffi are good go·alongs for breakrast These fritters may also be serv as dessert or meat accompanl ment either plain or with cream IOW'·cream or whipped·cream. Makes 4 lo 6 servings. No one insists that oatmeal jusf . be boiled in a pan of water. T.JY ...... combination of nearly natutal ~ food• -honey. oatmeal 11nd PEAR CRISP WITH A PUNCH. wheat germ -mixed with sugar 4.fresh Bartlett pears and butter and patted over a pan 11,. cup honey .. of sliced pears. ~teaspoon vantlla Lea~e that thin sliv~~f skio on 2 tablespoons rolled oats for a little ~xtra nulrili<l!l and a 2 tablespoons toasted whea ~of appe~~e_aRpeal . c_;me)'..__our __ germ__ oatmeal by baking 1n ~ 2tab)espoonsbrownsugar - moderatt; oven and itetve warm. 2 tablespoons butter o You might even freeze a cou· marga~· e -pie, unbaked. tp hold after the -.i:~ pear season his passed. • Wi~ nd .core pears.: quarte · and shce thin. Toss with hone BREAKFAST BARTLE1TS pnti Vanilla in buttered bakin J fresh Bartlett pears di sh. Dry packag~d pancake mix Combine oats, wheat germ Butter, margarine or bacon sugar and butter; mix with Co fat Honey, preserves or cin- namon sugar Wash and core pears; cut into rings about 1/.-·inch thick. Coat with dry pancake mix. Fry in butter. margacine or bacon fat until ,.browned on both ~ides. • lo crumbled consistency. 'Pa lightly over pears. Bake a t 350 deg rees about 4 minutes, until top is lightl browned. Serve warm or cool with cream, sour cream whipped cream or ice cream. Makes 6-8 servings • What look like pineapple ring actually are slices of pear. fried in pancake mix ' • 1' (I DAILY PILOT ' l Program "fopics EClucatiOnal 1• I ORANGE COUNTY CO"MMUNITY' DEVELOPMENT OOUNCL, INC.: A <apital . arant bu been received to buy six vans to ' transport low-lnc:ome seniors to Projt<t TLC meal centers. '! • Si.I vans, one ror each TLC center, will be purchased and operated and maintained by CDC. Seniors will be hired as part-time drivers, a CDC spokesman said. As sponsor of the program, CDC must provide 20 percent or the capital purchase cost of the vans or approxiamtely $14,000. Donatioos now are be: /ing accepted, sinc e the funds must be raised ,before the vans can be purchased. l CDC is a nooprofit organization which · ooerates Head Start. Nehlhborhood Youth Con>6 Community Alcoholism Senices, Pacific Asia.ii 1---;American-Center-and«her-procr-ams. I Anyone wishing to make donations may call Round Robin Registration is being taken for the .a nnual Advantage Tiara doubles round-robin tennis tournament~ 4 one- match-a-month benefit, which begins in October. Sponsored by Tiara de Ninos Auxiliary, proceeds will sup- port Children's Home Society. An- ticipating a big tur.n-out are Mrs. Stephen Yolm (left) and Mrs. Alger Clark. Peering Around . " I . ROBIN MINER, -daua:hter of Dr. and Mrs. GuY 1:: Miner of Newport Beach, will study n\ll"&o ing at the Doheny Cam.' of Mt. SL Mary'• College. J The Doheny site in downtown Los Anieleis-is the former· E .L . Doheny estate and includes a umber or historic homes. r FIV.E GENER· ATIONS <elebrated the 8()tb' birthday of Carrie Crabtree in her Rosemead home. . Present at the party were Frances Kunkel of Crescent City, Joy Bli>ck of Orange and Lisa Gillum of Costa Mesa I ·and her son, Jeremy. All five are native Califor- nians. CELEBRATING THEIR 4lst wedding an- ni vers ar y were Mr. and Mrs. Chari.. Brae Sr. of Huntington Beach. The Braes Jived in New York CitY for 39. years, where he played with the Ramon Argueso Band at land Dance City for more than 20 years. FIFTEEN Orange Countians joined more than 300 Pomona College alumni in Hollywood wl for a kick-off event o( fall activities for the Southern California group. • ( • Frank Budai at 1179-2050. ' · OUNGE COUNTY LUrtJS CIDPJ'ER: A national grass root.a campai¥D to make the public aware of Lupua Erythematollus willO.cin Fri· .day, Sept. 12, wfth an Awareness Day. Mr1. Gerald Ford is lionorary national chairman. ,, . Lupu.s is a chronic innammatoq disease of the connective tissues which mimics several other diseases from arthritis to kidney disease. Ao informational meeting is planned for Thursday, Sept. 18, by the Lupus Chapw of Orange County. Speak en Wi)I diseUl'• the djsease f Something Lacy + • • • . Fitting -G,ift. UCI TOWN AND GOWN: The Newpart Beacb home of UCI Chancellor and Mrs. Daniel G. Aldrich will be the setting for a coffee rece~ tioo for Town and Gown members and guests. The event is planned at 10 a.m. Monday, SeJ?l. 22. M~mbershipisopentoanywoman whose interests involve support for the university through joint cultural, educational and social pursuits . ' H.t.RIOI CINTlll 2300 HAUOl ILYD.. sum 33_C.0STA.MESA 549..0934 c r o •he t e d brld.aLfulllhed;_tb.e...t~ gowns, luxuriously "in'' parted when Mis. Scott for fall weddings. take a moved to Riverside. great deal of money .....:or 0 -This ye&r Wben1.Pif de-IAUIT·TAP..SPANSH planning. cided to becoiime Mrs. JAn & ACao&t.nc The featured dressq Boy<:e, s~·tlfought how for the marriage or Pa\ special lt would be to IK. hr MS... ... A' • Forrestal and pud,Boyce hav'e the bridesmaids' ~:::::::'.'.::::::::'.::":::,..:::::•:':.,..::::'~:::::•..,:::°'::::':,·=cA'.::::::'.~ Saturday at Newport drf)s&es.ocroc:heted. Harbor Yacht Club-start-Ttils time she and ed on a whim three years LayOt)n( called on Denna ~o. JAcol:M6n of San Diego . Stitch by stitch,· the fOr ~Ip beCauae 'ea.ch of handiwork evolved into' Uie.4ras~ takes at least the bride's traditional UlteeWeeks to make. collection of something ''Anyone wbO bas "old, new, borrowed and priced custom crocheted blue." oulflls knows thfY can The idea was borrowed cost a fortune,•• Pat said. from an Irish lace rose ''But a knit shop in Hunt~ crochet pattern Pat iugton Beach was n o t i c e d i n H o m e especi.ity helpfW fu find.. magazine in 1971. ing us a less ex~ive ''It was so gorgeous I nylon and raYon boucle knew it would be just that tui'ned out 1 very what I wanted -even-dressy.'' , tually," she said. "So I Every weddln1,has Its asked my friend. lastml,nuterusb..,andln Lavonne Scott if she this ·case it was the would make it for me blpc:kihg and lining ofjhe because she does such teal blue dresses and beautiful work." wblte town. After the dress was All the stitchery was - finillbed in time for !be nupjials per-IJaps because Pat chose a • • traditional veill.nateadof the crocbet~;_verslon shown In the 'oqglnal de- sign. Lavonne Scott . La<y hooded dresses are other' •fllul~-outs of models !he bridesmaid the fall bridal tasbiOllS. dress and admires the wedding gown, both of which she Jerseys, ,satins, pe~ and organzas are the re. commended fabrics ror the sophisticated and gra<eful JOWDS. crocheted for Pat _ IC xou _doJ!'~ _have~ a frlen ta <roc:liet ,..... Forrestal Boyce, right "'lace,'' there's ~till plen- ty of Venice an4 Al,..con trimming. ' .traditional cuffed corduroy . by~S., a"favorite forcasual wear-ordress,inanew wash"n'Wee.r blend of 50"4 decron andcoLlon. four colcirsl navy, li9hl blue,crGam and. brown. l!... 4 e HARBIS MPFL. @)~a@@)~@ 44 fliltmn illnl,nHPQllOW'MI' '044""&010 ' ' For Sept. and Oct. FREE-PAIR OF PANTS WITH PU IC HASE QF OUi. llGUAU $50.00 P~"SUIT., ~ IT +n'OIMTMIHTOM.Tl'H.116 423Z-IYMHGAYA,.ILAIUOHltlqllEST """'*' hoppen to hove node it krown ,...,. thoy ""'1f the some !ting then -liNi.=r,;"'' f;rd it hcnjng on 0 rod. IU 'TRUE. WE ARE NOT LOCATED IN A MAJOR SHOPl'ING CENTER SIUCTION OF , .... lwtH'"COLOl .. M.t.TalAL ' #() ro NOT rAY R1DICU.CIJS II.ENT FOR Sl'flCE WE DON'T'1'1EEQ -GU.t.L\HTHO RT. WE SPOR. YOU UD YOU H.t.¥1 M1Y11 (We""' apon by°""""'" .... orly_,., ono~ust drops in to Cc.de.,. ,.; ~ 5'01LID IEFOR£. We see« Y"" oprion _ tol<o the'm. to fond """' -fur on _ ..... locuio11 tflot.., cuotomii<s erd 1.p paying la.) "" ""'°' you role ord what )'OU don't llo. From infoo11atoo we 9't I.om 11 ~ STORE MUST STOOC TIOJSANQS OF DOUARS WORTH you "" make tlwee vetches (More if nood be) la-Y"" Mledion. We offer OF MERCHANDISE -Ml.Qt OF wHcH 1l'EY Yt1ND UP GVING irimited variety in color crd type of fabric lrom which "" construct your AW"iL..,_, 8K>JJSE Tl£Y G.ESSID ~ N-0 NOBOOY WANTS IT. selection. Beftte the -is f,rithed _ tehedule onother appointmert WE >tVJ<. NOlHNG -""""'°'of o.r wa\ -motoriol tCmples _ with ycu la-f~ When YO/ pick 1.p ycu Older it is as I"'°! porr.., in BUT.NOTHNG COMPAAID TO Wodcs"' any other mOjor sttre. WHAT ~ of wakmonship. matoriol ord desi<Jn as really qUal[foed humon ""' MAKE IS ~y SCUl -NO WASTE 1.'0TION -NO WASTE "'"1gs CDn make it. We use no auton'C>ted equplntnt. ~SE. c~"" a.I\ ~TISING BUDGET IS S1MU... 8ocouse HOW AIOUT THE TIMI F.t.CTOl77? FROM YOUR FIRS)'.' °""Of .... ~tomon cn r"*°'. They depe/d on us ord we depend on N'l'OINTMlNT UNTIL READY FOR PICK.-UP IS FROM TEN DAYS TO thonl. ~ 1 o l1lCJ ate•-crd ~°"cost da.!n. WE AAE A l'W'P'( TWO WEEKS. NEVER LCNGER. For 'f>OCial occ:osions we con cut o 1.., <:fJNffNY. ~ -WE H.4.VE SU:H i'ICE CUSTQ/o\ERS. I . days off ,...,. -just belae a rr-ajar hct~. llANKAMERICAAD #0 MASTER OiAAGE ~ M>- HOW CAM WI 91VI SUqt l'llSC»i.wza saYICil .t.T ~INfORMA~OR~NTMl1f'.ll:CAl..CS~n lllUOM.t.R.1 f'lllCIS111? ... ,,.., REASONS-IU IMfORt•.,.._ E..og appoitin...,,1oiail0iilo . . .~,, "'"' ~ 1 ' ) I ( ·- ' • • . . ' . ...... • ~.S!p!!mbot10.197S . ' DAILY Pit.OT . CF 'The club Is here top~ on cheerful -understandng . . and helpfulness ' to women who - ·are returning to school after a Long time.' A When Maree W111m to btt •ar. ahe WM op. pres ldenl of OCC's lion for Wo111en'1 Actiftt ntumed to scbool -lll'OO<hM b7 a smlllnC AWARE Club (Auod .. Retum tpEducaUon.) man tllsn 117'&r1, abe t ... wilhatoulleofll"U' ..::~:;:~~~:;:::;:::=====~=-.. --··peU1.t1ec1.~· cm top. Entorlnc the ad· "HI! Just aet re· . DONNIE. W~ mlWnnsWidlue_mtbe 1l1tes:ed?'' •h• was ~ ·1111n·uon Oranc• Cout Collece asked. : ~: ' ' • ~or· ahe wu "Im· "Well, no I didn't.'' 380 WES T WILSON,-?/,,,,,,,,,/ ri:,.t.,'/ ately astounded al llfar&e amwered. "I ll<lt , 1 the apparent comP!alt,y a bit Ured 1tandlna In COSTA MESA, CA LIFORNIA 92627 · :!:! nclatra\1°0 _. ~ IO l decided to wall she qulckl7 erabbed un_i:iy .. ; th b th an armf\11 of schedules; ou re roua e tal boo•J t d• worst nart," she wu as-ca 011. • e 1 an ..!.1~ ,,1•11 1~ untom,pleted rorm.s and Sur cu. W & "' )'OU deelded to io home to !ll1 back to admlaslona and boJ OU et throu b " ''Actually It wu an .,,....., to postpone what, As 11107 walked, she lot me, wu a painful ex. ootlced there were other perlence;• 1be said. olde.rwoa:aeoon campus. "Juat walklnc on ~ Sbebffantofeetmoreal campus made me feel -· WIO. help, re1lalr•· out of place. I was will· tlon proved to be a htl to accept any excuse breeze. to&ohome and foreetthe Tbis incident hap· whole thing." pened Just last year. Tc>- Aa she wu returning day. ~ie Wilson is jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii CALIFORNIA MAll:INATtD All:TICHO~t HURTS ' Make up-. can of cream or- chicken or mushroom soup. Add drained and quartered mllllnatod artichoke hearts. a pi,nch of nulmeg and a gqueeze ol *emon. Heal and serve. COST A MESA'S first family TENNIS aue • LIMITTD CHARTfR MEMBERSHIPS • REGULAR MEMBERS CAN SA VE ONE THIRD • Fl"t c-First Sene j Fountain ·of Fashion M SJUlff PlAlA --sa.-4121 CALL HOW 642-2000 r Madrecitas Auxiliary will present a luncheon fashion show, its annual benefit for the Holy Family Adoption and Counseling Service of Orange CoWtty. The event will take place at ll:30 a .m. Thursday, Sept. 25, at the Sheraton Newport-where-Mrs. Randolph Doll-{left) and Mn. Leonard· Je11S(lft check facilities. Tickets ma,y be re- served by calling Mrs. Doll. '. l Equ".JI Rights Susan Vorchheimer Thad eo<pected to be the - first female to begin classes. a.t ~Ui• 139 ear-old au.male Cen·· tral High School, Philadelphia, but in- stead returned to her old high -school. Although Miss I' Vorchheimer. 15, had won a· court battle in . U.S. District Cowt to I enter Central High , the U.S. 3rd Circuit Cowt of Appeals de- layed her admittance pending the board of education's appeal of the earlier ruling. The board appealed the ruling on grounds that a federal judge .does not have the authority to instruct a local school board how to run its schools. ~. UP'IT ........ Central was ordered to admit Miss Vorchheimer on grounds. that to bar her from the school violated her constitu- tional guarantee of eqU&l protection un- der the law .· The school district, plan- ning the arrival of Miss Vorchheimer, -had ordere d extra security guards SUSAN VORCHHEIMER HAS TO WAIT ~~'Rcnctl9SQDCI fabr(cs FINAL 2 WEEKS SUMMER CLEARANCE 50o/t; 0 -FF All Fabrics, Pattel'Dll, Notiom Everything MUST Go! . ~303 N•"·porl Bh-<L, ~ ~f'"·port Bt-atl1 . (acruss rrom City If all) 675-2457 I 0.5,30 r·"'· - \ . ~~~~-~!~l!!~§.~!P take a look at these values! ' . S-AVE37% -Nylon Trieot Long Gowns In Fetching Styles •••. I Regular $2.99 J 88 A fantastic buy an easy-care gowns in several feminine styles. Machine· washable. Assorted colors. Sizes small, medium, large. Use Sears Revolving Charge This Ad Effective through .Saturday, September 13 " .~ i ; ... I ' 1 f SUPER VALUE! Fine.fitting Knee High Stockings Sheer nylon knee highs with nude toe and ·heel. One size fill 8 Y, to 11. In fashion shades. Stock up! .---------------------~ SAVE30% Nylon Trlcot Half·Sllp RegularSl.27 Proportioned length" mini, short, average. Varied styles, White and colors. Easy-care Bikinis Acetate. 4 $ · White, prints, . for I colors . Sizes S, 6, 7. I Sears I So. c~.=-!! ... Plaza Buena Park. Orange 1150 Lo hlme .a. .. , . ......,_,._~ ...... , .. ~ \ 2100 N. lu1llnA,, .. -637-2100 • • ) r • C4 ' DAILY PILOT ;~.·Estates: A Relative Matter· ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: Thal letter lrem uoe the phone I 1aw drawOJ'I open and bo .. 1 -her ivavo If 1he knew what bas bappeaad. -the gal whose sisters, aunts and cousins strewn everywhere. The place looked as If tt had HEAllTSJCK IN: 80st'ON. descended on her mother's house like • pack of been burglarized. I couldn't believe it. D~S llEA.aTSl(J(: Yov leUer ~&YI tt far vulturesandpickedtheplacecleanhitveryclose When ''1l1'' left she bad all the jewelry, ~tllaa I eoald -ba& Ml •Ue IMC.lier at. 1 to home. The wriler slgned herself "Can't Stand slJver and every pl~e or art worth owning. She· t.emJ(. MAKE A WW... f&'1 tlae oalY way to be I Grabbers.'' also had her name taped on the best pieces of .ure yoar aoaey aad penaa.a1 lteJOegllp wW IO c WeU -Lhope your advice ''MAKE A WILL'' furniture. "I'll send you some of Molher:s nice to tWe yo'a waat tohantbem. Otbenrile 1'11le 1 was heeded by all those nice people out there who things," Sis promised as she left. Grabber1" wW movelafut. . I just assume their belongings will go to the people After the funeral, I received a dozen plastic Allo. 'tlle attorney la cla1rp: of the utate they want to have them. hangers, a jar of cotton balls, some old clothes 8hou.ld make certala nothln&lsremoved from tbe When my husband's darling mother died, his and a moth-eaten fur piece. boUle of the decealed anW t llle will bu beea sister arrived rirst. She was grier·stricken. For My husband adored his mother and so did read. about 15 minutes. Then she pulled herse1r-our children. They don't have one thing worth DEAR ANN LANDERS· I •t be al f DEA& B.: OM ..... i. eatall _,_ .. 8n'l!l'c'MP7..,...._. ...... , .. ,_ca. "-=""'-.tthp. : ... ,....., 17tl ........ "*_ f ...... --:-r· a , .......... r'. .-...... ·--....... -. ,..... ' lec11d:w .. ,_.lllL .... •~lll r, .. 0eaaduy,"Y-r:;'...,....._ ..., allolltlt •• .'~in.ea .. ,eh •••ell• nlnl: U•M•..Utedua.,..r-.ud rearru1e lbe fllnlllme -let ....... JM -U 1getaherala. ls alcoholllm ruining your llfef Know the 4an1er •l1111ala and 1!1bal IO do. Read the -.e1, "Alcobolllm -Hope and" Help.'! by ADll Lin· den. Enclose llO ceiila in coin with ,..,,. __ t and• Jona, •lamped, ICll'·-envel-."! Ann Landers, P .O. BosHOO, Eti1D.ID.901a!I. tog~ther_and went through th~ house like a streak keeping as a memento. Of course the poor darl-1 Pl hel all. can ____. , one n of lightning. When I walked into the bedroom lo ing never wrote a will and she'd turn over in my m s~Gthe~:...J.a~..u .. ·'--l:t.la-.z:; • Horoscope: Sagittarius CAUFOllHIA MM1HA no MTJCH()t(( H£AITI A~complishments Due year, is·coming to visit for two weeks. I could put up with her if she'd just be a guest. But Ule minute she arrives she begins to clean the house, rearrange the furniture and make 1ugge:1tion.s Oil how to improve the looks of the place. ("Your kitchen needs new curtains. The bat.brooms could use a coat of paint," etc.) She starts every sentence with, ''Why don't you?'' Now she has started to interfere with the way I feed and dress our chiJd. ''He's not getting enough roughage. He needs vitamins. His room is too hot. His play clothes are tacky -•. " Go11r11tet touch for abUclget Sllppet; THUllSDAY, SEPTEMBER II By SYDNEY OMA RR AR IES {Marc h 21- April 19): Worthwhile re- sults prevail because you are willing to make re- asonable , concession. Communicate. · TAURUS (April 20· May 20): Grasp a chance to replace old possessions with new ones . Kee-p a bright out- look despite a few pesky problems. GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Some of your aims could b~ misdirected by selfish acquaintances. Important to differen· tiate between sincere and raise motives. CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Think and act in the present, without undue worry a bout the future . Stress your responsibilities. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): A prosperous trend: Good for negotiation, signing documents, mak· ing Jarge purch a1es. YIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Inability to see is· sues clearly can make it an Wllortunate cycle. HAMS "So Good ... It Will 'Haunt' You 'til It's Gone'' a.c.T .. Sdioal SpKWI ."ip lrrll .'ll ired Whal<' "r Half oua 0 -HOMET I AKID S I l' HAM SPREAD . lo. · Tlllf ..... "'°' .... s-.lwlcMI ........ try • ...., to Ser.t wlfll H_,. .. s,kt Glue UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Self-restraint and wisdom. needed. Don't yield to any selrish whims, particularly those which annoy a loved one. I find myselr getting nervous before each vis· it. By the lime she leaves, I'm on tranquilizers and my husband and I aren't speaking. He says,. "She's just trying to help ... Get the picture? - SIGN ME BERSERK ' Toss undralned marinated artichoke hearte, ahredd4td Jack or Muenster chee1e and cooked turkfty or ham plices with hot cooked noodles. Serve with crisp green salad. SCOR PIO (Oct. 23· ~;;;;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;m;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Nov. 21): High tide ror .. ~:ri~~}~!ejri~~r~~ FABRIC WAREHQUSE SALE SAGJ'ITARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Finish mat- ters which have been hanging fire. Get rid of old correspandence. A sense of accomplishment inspires you. *NEW YORK GARMENT MANUFACTURER'S SURPLUS "NATURAL" FlOWER ~,~I~ FUU Bill TS POL VESTER INTERLOCK PAINTS & SOLIDS OISIOHI• LIHOfHJ RETA IL VAlUE TO $8 Yd. 65~o. 91~. OPEN TONIGHT ENTIRE SEUCTIONI 45" SPORTSWEAR Refut1r Retail 86C o $3 Yd. YD. • Gabardine • Ketttecloth • Sailcloth TIIEMENDOUS snECTION! · COTION PRINTS 2 JDS $I ASSORTED FABRICS FOR FRI. NIGHT TIU 9 • SpiN Slud fnNI Top t. • .._ • Wt Pocbp ..d SW, fr'Oll -Cont to CM1I • F.i1 5--rict McdffMtl • ~ CllMM1 -w-. CA PRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Don't be burdened by the advice of conservative friends, or frustrated by your fears and emotional need ror an authori'tative person to support your decisions. AQUA R IUS (Jan . COTTON Kiil SOLIDS 96 • INTERLOCKS • RIBS C • NOVEL TIES YO. RETAIL VAltJ.E TO $4 YO. FULL BOLTS •~~~:;ALL .$1 ~~ i -------------------! 20-Feb. 18): Ambition . WOOLENS & TD . ' and idealism struggle·. , __ ,.,c-_ Let the practical have 3700 E. Coosl Higlwoy, Corona del Mor -673· 9000 1222 5.troothlnl • .t Wld..A..._ 6JS.2461 sway. Go alter what you MAKE A TENNIS DRESS FOR 'I A 60" COTTON KNIT aoc • WOOL BLENDS $294 ~ RETAIL VALUES TO 19 ,YO. YO. ~=========================~ want rather than dream ....: of what might be. Better your income ii possible. TENNIS saNE PRINT! YD. EXCLUSIVELY HERE! $5 Yd. VALUE • ~n:e'O:.~Au_n $134 ·~ 45" WIOE. A $5 YO. VALUE YD • 1 P I SCES (Feb. 19· March 20 I : A broadened * DOWNTOWN LA. * COST A MESA1 HOURS poi.rit of view enables you 9.50 SANTEE 18111 & PLACINTIA MOil. TI.lS.. lllmS.. to share problems rruit-Corner of Ofympic (714) ~ .. SAT. lllM.-IPJl ......:~:..;..::.;::::.:;:__. .. ...... ·fully with others. (213) 627-«71 * AllAltEIM: 11 lM.. 9'.11. If today_ is your birth-HRS.: Mon.-Sot. 9:30-Si30 50f.C. L U1'RLA u f.W'r. MUT. SUtl. lZ-S, .M.. da h ual ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~s..ndo~~~ll~A;;:;:;;M~.~-~5~P~.M~.~~n~4)~7~l2~-44~71~"°'==,..~~~·~·~~~~~~~ y you ave an unus ,_HARBOR CENTER---.... ' 1)9/~ .... PANTIES ... Reg. s1 .2s 10 s2 opportunity to develop precision skills and in- vest them in revenue- yielding projects. Testing Revealing Chifforl Margarine has I ma~wa stofool · ; Mother ature. :~1~~~~a~~k1t~:~t~i::1_e_1~-_. _ ....•.•.... __ .. : .· ............ _.99c PRINT SHIRTS, Reg. s11 to s16 Sensational group, new knits $5 99 $8 99 and nylon sheers . ----... -.......... -. • to • SWEATERS, Reg . s12to 516 cardigans, pullovers. novelties $6 99 $8 99 all top brands .. ___ . _ .. _ ... - _ . _. , . . . . . • to · • . PANTS, Reg $12 to $20 " polyesters. cottons, denims, $'8 99 · $12 99 top makes from our 21 stores............ • to • DRESSES and PANTSUITS, ... 40 to 60°/o ·OFF . . Entire Summer stock from all our 21 stores. Prices start at $10 OPEN SUN. 12--5 PITTSBURGH (UPI) -Men with some feminine traits are more intelligent, healthy and creative, a former psychologist at Carnegie-Mellot\ University says. And women are better off if they share some or the traits of men, accord- ing to Dr. Sandra Bern. Dr. Bem wrote in the current issue of PsychOlogy Today that society denies men the ·right to be tender and sensitive and denies women the right to be in- dependent and asf.ertive . According to tests in- volving intellectual performance, strongly masculine boys and strongly feminine girls tend to have lo~er in- t ell i gen c e, lower creativity and less ability lo carry out tasks de- mand in g a sense or spatial relationships. AL'S CHOPPING BLOCK 1 ·soo Adams Blvd., Costa Mesa (Next to Edwards Cinemal MOit. thru Sat. Store Houn: 9.7 ......,._. ..... s.,1.11 . 546-8196 usDA CHOICI SIDE .of B•EF 98~ 1o .. lo ............................ s 1 ~ s12• lone-111 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ....... USDA ralMI HIND ' SIDE of QUARTER BEEF HIND QUARTER s1.091L s1.051L ~1.15 IL. ~7COFF I · Goodon 10nePounct I of aray I ChiffOri ' I Margarine. I , l17C Chifforf Margarine has flavor "Good . enough to fool Mother Nature'.'• -And Chiffon's sweet, creamy flavor CO!Jles in so many delicious. varieties to_ please a variety of tastes. Try Chiffon Margarine Regular Soft in half-pound or one-pound sizes; Soft Whipped; Unsalted;·or Diet. Chiffon has many delicious ways to "Fool Mother Nature'.' '· ChiltonWarW ---'For BOOd taste Inside and out. "I thought it was my sweet creamy butt er!" ~--------------------------~ ' I • ( ' ' ' f t I. I I r 1. f , . I ! I • l • .. i ... ' 1· I Ii: m ., al d i bo st Y• b l B Cl is ., tu m .. •• Cl b1 er :.i J J 1 ' .. ) Spirited lamb stew has the flavor of a liqueur guests will find intriguing. ' Lamb's. Spicy Mexican mystique recasts or- f 'dinary lamb stew into a deep, ex-!. otic, brown glazed meat that is f tender, moist and deliciously r-.flavore:ct. The rich glaze of im-1 . ported-from-Mexico .kahlua ! _1 worksthemagic. Relatively inexpensive, lamb f is always in season because it is i always available. So try this new recipe today and perform your [ • very own Ufltr0r-mll'acle. BRAISEDLAMBKAHLUA 2 pounds boneless Jamb stew T meat• . 2 level tablespoons flour I teaspooil paprika I lea spoon onion powder Oil for browning 1f.a cup kablua 114 cup water t 2 tablespoons red wine f 'Vinegar 1 glove garlic, pressed · 111 .. teaspoons sail J ' " i ' ,,- I' If.a teaspoon rosemary, crumbled i.i teaspoon pepper ¥z pound fresh mushrooms 2 tablespoons thinly sliced green onion. Lemon wedges for garnish Cut Jamb in 2-inch cubes, re- Meal in Dish moving any fat. Reserve any trimmings for browning meat. Combine flour, paprika and · onion powder. Add to meat and toss unW coated. · Heat lamb fat trimmings in a large skillet to render fat. Add oil, if needed, to measure 2 tablespoons and brown meal well . Meanwhile, ~combine ..k.ahlua. water, vinegar,. garlic, salt. rosemary and pepper. When meat is browned, discard any fat remaining in skillet. Add kahlua mix\ure to meat. Bring to a boil, cover and turn heat low. Simmer l'h to 1~ hours, or until meat is tender. Cut mushrooms in halves and add to the skillet last 5 minutes meat cooks. Remove lamb and mushroom$ to heated serving plhtter. Skim off any excess fat from sauce. Pour over the lamb, or serve on the side. Garnish with sliced green onion and lemon wedges. Serve with rice, if de- sired. Makes 4 to 6 servings. • 3 pounds lamb blocks, boned and trimmed, yields about 2 to 2v .. pounds. · Barley Sparks Soup When you don't feel chicken broth flour, then the broth. like going through the 1h cup pearled Coqk, stirring con. meat or fish, potatoes medium barley stantly, until boiling. and vegetables routine in cup milk Add barley; cover and at dinnertime, a single 11h cups cooked simmer until barley is dish that is a cross dicedchickenorturkey cooked through -about between a chowder and a Salt and white pep-· 1 hour. stew may be just what per to taste Stir in milk, chicken you would enjoy serving. In a 3-quart saucepan and salt and pepper; re- To this category melt the · butter; add heat. Serve in soup b'elongs Mushroom mu s hrooms, onion, bowls. Recipe may be Barley Tureen, a. celery and carrot; cook doubled;inthiscaseuse creamy concoction that over moderately Jow a large saucepot. Makes isacombinationofbland heat, stirring often, for about llf.a quarts -4 and savory flavors about 10 minutes. Stir in servings. -Barley and chicken or !:..k:~,~~'!i ~~· .1::~: __ S_E_A_F_O_O_D_S_P __ E-C-. -IA_L_S_ ... celery and-carrots the savory. ' With the Tureen, offer crusty bread and good butter; follow it with a crisp salad and' dessert. and you'll have a satisfy- ing supper menu. .MUSHllOOM BARLEY TUREEN I 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 112 pound fresh mushrooms ' ¥.ii cup diced onion J,-2 cup diced celery 'h cur, diced carrot 1 tab espoon flour 3 cups clear fat-free 'Entert•lnri'terlt Happenings ••• • Films Theater D•nce llnlJMMCll Televl1lon In the DAILY PILOT RESH ....... ..,..,,_ w..a.s.,t.11~ WYl-S es· el.mlll COMPARE ·ouR PRICES! .SWORDFISH Steaks EnL\ L.Ufil MEXICAN SHRIMP -'°-SOLE FILLET The FISH MARKET Jim ... Saody c-. 145 E. BROADWAY, COSTA MESA 64!0-SUJ . ' • ' ew • ...... -'!ft -t/IS WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS ness • . PRODUCE SAYINGS I 854 NEWPORT BLVD~ '~W::~~t~·~ OPEN 7 DAYS 9 to 6 Phone 642·6025 HEW CROP.-IX11lA FAHCY-«ED DELICIOUS PULS . • MEDIUM SIZE BROWN OllYUllS 10~ YOU'LL HAVE TO TRY ~·s OH£3' 9c PlllK HOllEY DEW ... LOCAL HARVEST 2 IOMAYIOES ... c • .. , ..••. I I ~ • • • • • ••• I t l . ' I l I ' 1scove an ave c "But PLEASE don't squeeze the CHARMIN!' , • "I know New CharmiriBathroom Tissue is so deep-down, squeezably soft, it's irresistible. I know you'll want to save30¢ on your next package of New Chci.rmin, but ladies ... whatever you do, PLEASE wait till you're home before you squeeze the Charmin!" l CUT ALONG OOTIED UN£ ' ~07690 _____________________________ _..: _______ . ~ TAKE THIS COUPON TO YOUR STORE SAVE 30C ~I ·l when you buy one 4-roll pack I Charmin ! LIMIT ONE COUPON PU PURCHASE I '""'."" .... -....... -... -~.-.-·-·-.. ......... _ .... _ ~ ·--..... -.... -...... ~I ..... 19..,._,., ___ ............. _ .. ..._ ........ , ... l't••·-..... ,, ...... -....... --..... -·ei 1 ----·----·--·-· .. ·----·---... -.......... _ .... _ -=..:..-=::t:.=r.:=::...-:.:: • ..., .. ··---------..... -··--"'I ··-···-· .. -·--... --~-... -·---· .. 111-"·-·=·-"" :!: --~ ... -. ""'--•110•11 ' i;if I 0 -... -... ,. .. _ .................. ____ ..,_,. .. __ .., ___ .,. __ .......... _,_.,.., ... _ (II ~~~...:W----------------------------------aeg39Fl" • .. -. --uJ ' -· .... • • • ' . • "' .(.!I DAILY PILOl" • I NESTLE'S QUIK CHOCOLATE s 1J~O' CAN SfMl-SWl~T 99( CHOCOLATI •1 ot (NIPS ~KG 7-UP 6~A~zs$1~ 1". 01--iuGH m1 ;~~ 6 SJ09 ODA ~1.~\ CORONET KITCHEN TOWELS BIG ROLL ' ' 43< • • Wednetday, September 10, 197'5 • Reading Label Saves ~i - By BARBARA GIBBONS How a squinty-eyed labe l· reader saves calori es: Jy 11 grams ol wotein per 22S <'alories can·: previously it coo· • tained 16 .S grams. lurer charges you the lame Ill. calories t "ptliar hard ....ieu1:20Gperhalf...,cam· prlce,thenyon'rebeingf~to clitaet ~Wltbl60fort.o~ ... . -Canned "slewed lomatoe.s ' • contain sugar ... but most brands ·or "whole tomatoes" are sugar· (ree. Canned corn also cont ai ns sugar. but rrozen com doesn't. ''Di e t '' and, ''prot ei n ~ enriched " breads may contain anywhere Crom 3S to 60 calori es a slice. Regular white bread is about 60 calories. suboldl•e other people'11oda. '-Biaclt co(t•• d-baye -Some Jow.calort• j ... - -"Dietetic'• peanut butter ls ctloriea ••• ·~four per e:up, jellie1 and pre•e" .. '•-re made without salt. Tb~1 no f« instant coffee. Bo•e~. the 1wectened witb au1ar.ICIDeare other dllference between that big eaJorie-adder•· are table not. -Sugar is the m ain ingredient in Pillsbury's "Fig urines," a na· tionally distributed 27S calori es "diet" wafer me al. and regular peanut butter. Both cream (30 calodff per tabl_.. Sl.rl•f·free varietlee llaTe have about 95 calories pertatiea.. PoOft) and sugfrt 11 cal«l81 per about ~calories a t•IM~ poon. _, levelteupooa.. wblletbetuaar·ow \low-Despite new labeling regula· lions. some manufacturers still li st th eir calorie counts per pound or per loar, instead o( per -Of the most widely available NondalrY crea,a,s still coataln calcrle~" ln>eS are tllK. ready-to-eat brealtlast eereals. fat, eyen tbougb they're but-However~ .regu\ar Jma.· and the brand that provides the most terfat·free. Most-are just as fat-jellies are •bouti-80 •l«IM • ... -Today. som e di et me al r eplacements contain substan- tiaJJy less protein than they did --~everat-years ago~when liquid diets were in their heyd 8y. sli ce. · protein for the fewest calories is tenin& as cofteecream. What the ~e@90IL • • ' -J~ "Special K.'' The cereal wilbthe label c!Oesn't ta! Jou is that the • "-Caano4 im~"'°1: la -C he c k the price o( your fJ vorite d iet soda and see hew il -COm)Jarl:'r'Witlr sugm"•sweetened sod as bott led by the same manufacturer . Ir the manufac- most calories per cupful is ·-·-·•lry tat is h1~1ysatura1ed.. aY4llabl" .two Y~ J?Plu ''lfearlktndl,J. "-'--------· ........ be.~h•w-aod:-(frOlnwbOI• milk) ~Lt. -Some bard cheeses made ·serve cholesterol-free eag wt.. A~-ounce~iDdf°*utbit6 from part-skim milk are no lower 1µtute .._has more calories than aular i• m cajo..,,.,. •• whlle Carnation slender contains on· ' ' , Fresh California Grown FOSnR FARMS FRYING CHICKEN WHOLE BODY 49~. 65~ FRESH GROUND BEEF • A.!cordlng to a reliable publishecl onsumer sur· vey taken on August 28, 1975 Pantty•s grocery prices were tower than Lucky, TreaSjltv, Albert· ,on's, Von's,\.lfa2Jo's, M~rket ,saske.t, Th~iflymart, Mayfair and many others. BREAST 95·,~. DRUMSTICKS 89•,._ PAN TRY SEl CCTED OUAllfY \PANTRY Sf l f CIED OUAllTY ~L;~T~~E~! s1 1~! BEEF ROUND s11"'~ RUMP ROAST 80ME·IM -lhn•I••• lum' er - Empre!.5. Brand (Frozen) 12 oz. Pkg. FANCY WHITE TURBOT FILETS Williams Famous 59( :a ........... URtl Stffk $1.29 , ... 19'1•tw leund IN1I Sl.19 Ni. CORNED BEEF $ 29 tT., lewRtl Sleok1 s1.•• •· W•lffmei... C,1 a-,• S1 .l9 I\. ROUNDS Swl11 Sleok $1.29 ~. l•Q .. l!.INI Slrlol11 Ta, Steak Sl.79111. Swt.111 ti, 1 .. ,, Sl.H I\, ·lb. -lreollfo11 Steoti: $1.91 •. IHeln1Stewln1l..t St.•••= or BRIS-KETs- Sweet, Virie Ripened :::"MELONS 12~. ~ STE ERO BOUILLON 21~ CUBES ~ · 12 CT. PKG. · PRl-SOAK AXION 2SOZ. 79(' PKG. Fresh, Sweet Italian PRUNES 4~s1 WOL .. CHMIOT s499 ~ VODKA ~ OU ART ~ HAMMS: § DAYIESCOUNTY s39 ••• !: WlllllllY 9 12 12 oz.$ 289! 5th CANS i. lllltltlllllt1MllllUllHIHllMllllllllllllHIHlltl!UUlllllHlll11111htlllllllllHlllllUMIMl!llllll lllllllllj, ' \ •IUITIN 111aw ........ Fresh, Crisp Thick Mealed =~~ERs29!. ' • ~DELICATESSEN 1 Mll•r<1•~· M&M'I, S..it-... 1 • >MuK-.. ~" lhf, ••lc•WI-c ... _ 11.H ,._,, 1.IMIT' I •kt.~ ... Cu1-• • C-~T-Sff!. II : MEAT OR BEEF 9 = · ::ira;il~;j13!p, ~ MANHAnAN BOLOGNA ~.0;.-7c ~ r,;PmRY VALUAll.H:CUOll g_ MANHATTAN § lti"' Wllll'INl9C""" ~ cono SALAMI • '~~:. 97< ~ .. , aooa ... '-9 ~ " I FILLER ·6 ( ~ Bllf'd•n'i 5.lri9le.Wri Budd lg J OZ. ff KG. ~ PAPER ~ CHSLIECESEDE " oz. 8( SU CED 3 9" ~ 'l :.::-::.~>;i;.~r, ~ FOOD ' • g ~-T""'..,.·'~ = PKG. MEATS .. ,. L L .... IT : '·~·-... c ... - ~t111tlllltltllllllllUllHll1111UIHlllUl1UlllllUIUlllHIHllltli1111nll1nw1111n111111111111111111111111111J . :~11Efi: FRISKl'ES' DOG FOOD ALL VARIETIES 5 1S1h OZ. CANS efULllRTON Ult ... tlauk•• ...... \ \ l'IKIS &R<Ttvt Sept. to, 11, 12. 13, 14, ts, 16 • • • Carnatiod.1 'ldmilied evaporate<! !"ilk Is only 32f calories. Tbey ean be lntercbaa1eable-lft anyredpe. · • ~··D1etlc''. candJ• are olteo. .llq, Jess /au.en. ing lh&l> reg~'!!' candy. And "Sugdr-Fi'•~" 1 e cream may be m 1 - tening than low-fa milk that's sweetened with sugar. Read the fine print. I I Diabetic prod•ds sweeteped with sorbltol instead of sJc:c)lari11° won't ,ave yuU calories.. Sorbitol bas as many calories as sugar but tt's less .sweet sq It tokes more catori~s~ wortb. to achieve t~aaine sweet• ness level. , B~t it is _phsorbec! more slowly lfl ... •n sugar, an asset fqr diabetics,. but not for dieters. ~ad those rnayon. naise substitute labels and choose a brand that's low-fat and low in. calories (if the label won't say; don't buy!) Some ''low-cholesterol'• or ••polyunsaturated'' ,rpayonnai~e subltitutes merely omitege Or sub- otitiJte on~ l!Slldo'l?f-oil; for anothel°! 1 ' I ' s o 11"1. ~ 11\o n ;f'rl e a Chicken, Chicken la King, Chow Mein and more! For slimmed· dow'h yersion& of cbieken , fav.oritesJ .send. .. a aelf· addresSet\ envelot>e•and 25 ci.ntJ; to SLiM. GOURMEYJ' CHICKEN FAVORITES in care of lhe Daily Pilot, Sparta, N.J, 01871. :ti Bfueberries . ·-:1 · . . - . Recipe ·.~ Encores Repeated on request. VERMONT BLUEBERRY PUDDING 2 cups flour, fork-stir well to· aerate before measuri,ng 2 teaspoons l>aking powder ~teaspoon salt 31.i cup sugar '/" cup butter or margarine !egg 'h cup milk 2 cups fresh blueber· ries Topping. see below Thoroughly stir together flour. baking powder and salt. Cream butter and sug .. ar; beat in egg; add flour mixtiire and milk and stir just until dry ingre.~ dienls are dampened: fold in blueberries. Tum into a greased g,. inch square cake pan; sprinkle with Topping. Bake in a preheated 37s.degree oven 45 to 50 minutes. cut in pan ~d senewarm. Topping Blend together ¥.. CUJ> sugar, 1h cup nour, ¥z teaspoon cinn~mon and •'A cup soft butter Ol"' ,margarine. \ i l j Recipes t~ add 1 dining pleasure 1 while subtracting ~ calories. i Wednesday In th9- DAILY PILOT . ' I • l 1 l ' 1 I ' .. • • I I'!", Ql:ll Y PILOT 3'At ·• For Bus y Days Ahead .. Smile ·an·d Say Cheese A Jiffy cuaerole made wlth versatile wheat germ ii lhe ultimate in convenience cooking. Its many vlrtuea in· elude minimum prepara- tion time, top nutritional value and are.at navor. too. wheat aerm and other versatile ingredlents MEXICA LI WH EAT ~ cup pitted ripe in chili with beans, un• GERM CASSEROLE olives, cut into wedges drained corn and ripe: likely to be found in the zcupchoppedonlon pantryorrefricerator. \~ cup cb.opped It I green pepper requ res only 20 1 tablespoon cooking minutes in the oven -oil enough time to toss a 2 tea spoons chili ~ cup vac uum olives. packed r egular >A'hcat . Turn half the mixture ger~12 c up s grated into 11:.i ·q uart baking dish . Sp r inkle with sharp cheddar cheese wheat germ . Cover IAi lb' Sautc onion and green remaining chili mixlure., pe ppe r in oi l over Sprinklewith cheese. m edium h eal until salad and set the table. A powder An excellent example eood, busy day casserole 1 (IS-ounce) can chill lender crisp. Add chi li Bakt" in 400 degree po"•de-r . Cook. st1rnng, oven 20 minutes or unui.- can about 30 seconds loniie r. hot 1n center. Makes 4 : L~"'jij'ltireative connntence can oft en be a1sembled -.ith beans I ~-.n----attnd, too;-itthat u1ak -(--1-o-u.nc.e) aked dish of life easier for the cook. whol e kernel corn Remove from he·a~'"ir-se-rving6·~-------1. SWORDFISH tAS-.-..U(·POIMT OYSTERS UT1UMECll QAMS BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL •BANANAS •APPLES •ORANGES 10~ " I 18~ 75~ .. BROWM -10 Otil.1.0MS -~ . PINTO BEAMS 33~ U.S.#1 WHITE ROSE IOlb. 59c ··POTATOES C.::.0 All Sole It...,. Limited To Stock On Hond ~--._,..__ ___________ ·~· -----~ • lllat Alf A FIW Of OUR THOUSANDS OF ~~~ DISCOUNT PRICES ' la .i -i fllll WAT<HYOUI MAIL IOI ..• , ___ ... _ ..... _ ..... =·~1-:.:-.:-:.":.:::: ... _____ _ ....... _ .. ___ _ TOlll ~ollt~fol(llOH ; -. GUAJol NTH ."I j, ~~ ··~····· ...... " ·~·" ., ..... ......... .• ... .... ,,.,, ,.,.. . ....... ,.., ........... ~·····"' • ........ ···~ '"'" .......... -.... ,. ... , ......... , .... ... ""' ....... fW ...... .. ..... ,,~ .... , ........... -----·-..... ' ..... ~ ... '" ........... -...... ,_, -.. ,..,.,. -.... ,, ... _ ......... , ........... , ~ .. ,_,,,,, ,,... ................... ,_ -.. ,_. ... , ......................... _, ........ ... ............. ~ , ...... ~. ~~-· ,.,,~,, _ ... .... , .............. ---~ ....... -.. ,,. ....... -1tu.~ VEAL Ill OIOPI, U~IOUWO IOA.lt, LK Mll.otl IOAST HEINZ OSCAR MAYER MEAT OR BEEF BOLOGNA' NIB LETS CORN •---------------,~--------------, MARKn BASKET I . : I (". MAYONNAISE I I CHICKlll OF THI SU : ' . 1!11"\\ 79;. I I • CKUU ll,HT 29J. I ·"'-A\.11·: ~· 'I' I•"' A\.•.: TUNA "1··•L 'I' l 1l"'P L'..-/ '!-~I. I ,, .. ..,., l' [.:.. ,,. I 110 * ..,.,, ooo• ,.,,, , •• "'""" _. .. .., .. ........: .... ~ I I 19 * ' ... , "~' '. "' ' ...... , .. " ........ u.. I ••<:.co· .. ~ ""uo• •C••((C , .. o "'''' I •u""'" ,,,,.,o...., "°""' "'""''" "'" I .. ,_.,,., ""' '"""""" "' '""" ""'"'" I r '''' ttOOu<'• ""' t CUoO" '" ''""' I woo "" •• ,,,.u '"°" "" " "" I ""'"" "''" .... •• •••u'""' "" '' ''" I . . ----RED-XCOUPON ·---· 1---RED-XCOUPON ---..! F~o1,1 Fash ion Island • -, T . Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR • . J ' • . I ' • • . p CAIL Y PILOT ,. ' • • I --·-~---t Weonaci.x, Stpt•mber 10, 1975 •. :. . . ' : • t • ,. • • ' .. ,\ • t. ;1 ... :'Ii ·,, ........ . ••.•• ''/'. . t • ' • . , 'I • While the Warm Summer Days Last -......... • Celebrate With Uncomrrlon· Sala8 Tuna·Freah Pear SaJad is so named for the fresh quality the California Bartletla br· ing to a tuna aalad that otherwise might seem rather run-of-the-mill. The do-it-yourself oil· and-vinegar dressing b livened with thyme, onion and garlic powders, celery and pi- miento. To this you add chunks or fresh pear and tuna, and serve in a let- tuc•lined bOwl. TUNA·FRESH· PEAR SALAD 6 tablespoons salad oll 3 tablespoons wine vinegar l~ tea1poonsthyme ~ teaspoon onion powder V.. teaspoon garlic powder :V. teas~n aaJt 1 fa6Jeipoon -Ma.k~do.._ Dessert Flipped re ng •• ' I I 'I ; This iS a quick, easy, economical recipe that Was born of desperation on a rainy day when the cook had no canned pineapple. · · The best kind of con- tainer is a 9-or lO·inch iron frying pan with an iron handle. PEAR UPSIDE DOWN CAKE 3 tablespoons butter or margarine .\~ cup brown sugar 1,2 cup raisins , 12 cup or less ! chopped walnuts : I can pear halves 1 1 9·ot.nce box o{ cake mix Melt butter o r margarine· in frying pan. Dissolve and spread around the brown sugar I until the pan is covered. Remove from heat. If the sugar mixture looks I dry, add a tablespoon or so of pear juice. Arrange pear halves in pan, cavi- ty up . Sprinkle with ra1s1ns and nuts between pear halves to make it look at- tractive. Preheat oven to 350degrees F . Prepare cake mix. ac· cording to directions on box. Carefully pour over pears. Bake according to box directions. Let cool ln pan for 10 t o 15 minutes before inverting pan onto serving plate t'o remove cake. Serve with 'tream·if desired. Serves 8tol0. ~fudding Updated l r Latest version of a de. led.able and economical dessert. PINEAPPLE PUDDING 2 eggs, separated ~cupmilk V.. cup sugar 9 tablespoons flour Pinch of salt &-ounce can crushed pineapple in un - sweetened pinedpple juic~. undrained. In a medium mixing bowl beat the egg yolks until thi c kened and lemon color; beat in y,. [\CUP of the milk ; add sug-lkr, flour and salt and beat J.o blend ; beat in remain· l~g.V.. cup milk. Stir in the pineapple. 11 With clean beater in a ~mall mixing bowl beat •egg whites until stiff; radd to pineapple mixture 'and !old in . Turn into an ~ngreased round 1 Y.z. ~uart glass casserole 1'h by 2 Y:i: inches) or imilar utensil. ' Bake in a preheated ~50-deg:ree oven utttil f.lden·brown -45 to 55 nutes: There will be a ake-like topping and a ustard layer un · ~~rneath. Best ~erved ~arm . Top, if you like, with whipped eream. Makes6 ervings. LOSE WEIGHT OR MONEY BACK ... t.llnkll tnti ""''* ... " • 11\t;ot unMrllty ~ ''°" U.t ttlt OOfUMU "'-wiD W, !1C11 1DH ... wt!Ot qllk:k~. ' OORUiU cOllllllt • amUillf ,.,..., --tllll "'*"Mt 1111 _[ ... lllrio""-'"' •Git IMJ OOfttNt:X "'*'t ....... "'"' ... -Mlit -· ,. .. -""""'-""" -.... ............ hW·wlflOI _,.._, <00\ -. lttl lollw ""'""' ..._ .. ,._._wtUIODNNU. s.u.fkiiol ....... « """"' ... • IHR lllY : • , ·~', ... DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED AD~ 1142·- ' Our customers exped low prices from Ralphs, bUt they don't want to give u_p quality, So, we anake sure quality goes lnto Ralphs products when they're made. The result is 16 gold medals in tile 1975 Los Angeles County Fair. Award winning quality an~ everyday low prices. Make the Switch. 1;t111; @tit@a;tftf) Freeh-FrOz:en -Deffottff I Se.concl Week n , .• . • 11 and a Half'' ' • &.ef-Llfter Removed Rib ~steaks Super Bakt~ry Super Produce New lealand ·~ 1 78 n1ea O ···amb] 09 ...... -.,..kl••" .... , • ..,_ .. I~.... . J .... Loln-Bonete11 lb. • ~~uj\F!oo-o.1~-AH:~...-Date rtrl • ........ • ·.. '! . A1as1canS1KM · , ., ~Loaves 1 ." •• 59 ~Red Apples':.29 . Top Slrloln ~Steaks I" 2.19 ~Crab Legs 1 ... 99 . DAi1·s:;"' "::..29 bcr~e;s -:.29 ' 1 1. D Wlll~Whe~ieh orSplflTop 2A 49 !~SWMt.ljleGowflll•or.d ':.'. .10 ...... 10 ... ,,~_,,.,, . ~..... 99 Ralphs Bread .... ~Honeydew Melons . BllilAless Blfef ~ BlaCt<ICod'Fillets ... • ~ .,,..,_.,..k,..,· . . ; !,"" •. B:i;'!t' ke. 1· 1 28 &2ltiilrenecke111ms · ... 1.18 ~eeaec1a;· . ~.;75 .. EJ~~bers ~ PIS lb. • ~c01•'f>!••"'·"-:'-'"""'"" 79 •i;jfiftj j{.f!jtj¢.. rn ............... ,_.,.,. D Bo61C--ShooldH ~ Quilrtered Fryers lb. ' .... • • ••--o ••••• -LJ Bell Peppers D ~1ssBoneBeefR~ .. 1.19 64~;;Q"Cti'icicens , ... 79 ,,... '.-. .i , ''" §e;.;;squash StewBeef lb. l,38'H•· .. --....... ~.... . 75 ·~eutAst . r·.s· .: '87 ................ . a111c;,,,._0,.11,.c., · i'lll Butlelball Turkeys , 10. • r,.......,... "'·Bone Chuck' Roast 95 ~ Rk.-o-w....,,.,.n,,..., """'' • . d_... ;;,,_ .... ..,.. "1· ·58 ~Fresh TurkeY Breasts lb. 1.49 ~Piggybac"' k D1....... · ~ba Melons liop Round .,.__k lb. ' ~B"M;P'""'"''"~o• ,-"'!''"' ""'1.27 ~LC!il Polish Sausage 1 09 frtt!L-Le1twltlt.~ .. of~C411Aowlft D M1de from Boneleu Beil Chuck 115 lb. • Ground Chuck lb. • D M•d• only from BNI Rownd 1 29 Ground Round lb. • ": .10 ~: .10 Super Grocery Super Deli ONF1 ... lontd ~ Sik::i"Beei Liver lb .89 Cli!ll'll •11-~ ~Steak Tails 10. 1.49 ~ 0Pti as 1111 ... .., __...... .. ~~.39 Dice Cream~.79 • • knlft ~ Beet Plett Sttort Ribs or Ct111c:k D R11pftt-Chl.ink Style ~ Engftsh Ribs 1b •• 79 Mild Cheddar ~;·v;.t 15teaks lb.2.49 DH&~·~; i ' . Imitation - i12.;..29 ~---~~89 Health 6 Beaub' , Pantry tillers -"ound 1.49 lib. 2.89 ~ Freah Froz:en-Oelro1ted 1 29 DPT.ck>u1 Br•nd-Mou1rell1 ~ Medium Pork Spareribs lb. • Cheese ~ Hoffy-Porll.Shoular 99 ~OtcarMtJ•rM111or ~ Sm6ked Picnics lb. • ~ Beef Bologna 160L 1.49 ••... 75 ~ MColgateouttlWllh A 01,00111!9 I E_!,t_: ,87 ~Royt,1-Altortld Fl••ors-Rf9,Ullr ft O 21 ~ -·-~Pudding Mixes · •m• :.;. , ~G'~r0ottlpas1e'. :.:.84 ~G~~ ·~~·.48 ~ Hot or Mlld-1 lb. pkg.-Pork 1 09 ~ 01e1r M•Jlf Sllcld M••I• ~ Fanner John Sausage 1•. • ~Variety Pack ~ Porll Shoulder l 89 ~ OIClt Meyer M••t or ~ Pork Steaks lb. • ~Beef Franks 12oL 1.49 lib. 1.13 D PoBLolfl-c-1~e..•,...,c...-.. 188 ~ l(raft-5'itgle Sllc•Food Mixed Port< Chops lb. • ~American Cheese , .• ,,lb. 2.09 [A USOA Chokt Rib or 2 49 ~ 01nol1 Beet-H1m-Turlley ~Lamb Loin Chops lb • ~Chipped Meats 30L .41 rA U.S.D.A. Cholce-fre... 99 D Relph• Pure ~ Lamb Shoulder Roast . lb. • Orange Juice I: tii! (?§II·' c l'lili"' ,,,,! .85 Super Spirits Mldlty Mou11-1M Shtttl Old Glenwood-I y,._. Old Flier Straight D Paper__ ....• n~,B .. ,Pllv.,. •• r~on. .::~4.89 ~ "5o1'~ko-'co'u.,ps" ~ ~ :,":; .9 ~ lmpol'ted Tequila ""' 3.99 D A8fal•'t:..~..;!ull9b_ti-'!7'•W:• 4 99 olantl~bi-Llflhtotp,trt , ......., .... • Imported 'Rum ... 3.69 D Robfnton-SU1lnl1a111fft 1' 72 DUmtledTlmt-Slve.IO Kitchen Knives~ .... • Canadian Dew .. ~ 4.99 Prlcta Effective September 11 through September 17 ~iq~"N;H&ir$p,ay ".~.75 ~i-*li'S:e~. ~ForMen · ~flnal'TIMtCn ·• ~ Sqft Hair Spray -'':,; 1.10 ~Fabric Softener, ~a.nt-Nonn1IOl'Oily lot.135 LJ1Mott'1-N1tur1I ~ HertJal Shampoo ..... ; ~Apple Sauce ~ Mldlcltld .. ,., °" 95 ~ ~talfin1 8r1ftld t ~ FOstex Skin Cake* " .,, • ~Stewed TOmatoes • • ~ Nelttl-Wlth l•l'IMHll l "19•r Frozen Food • ~Ice Tea Mix · ~M0range""'loMald-JuFl~1 I 80 ~ ... ,.S.bllHUll . ~ UICe . • .':.; • ~Sweet N Low ~Binhlf9-W1'11pplldltlpplnt 1 89 ~lllldWIM«G1r1lcW1t1t ~Cool Whip , ....:; • .~ Regina Vinegar L:J Blrduyt -, .... ChOpptd lroccoll Of 10 OL IJft ["]II Entlchld Pre Cookld ' ~ CUt Com f Pkt• olilll ~ Mlmrt!! Rice ~ei~ Awake 12~: .39 !el~°'ou~·· · ~i.;i'Sf;i°Mcli ~~ ,.21 ~~Mate ~Qlno'1-Ht1t&E1t • •oz. 99 ~IPtCCtl-..JSOftPsc:ll:-Uct'*' Cheese Pizzas . .... • Wisk Detergent , ' . . ' C,:.89 ,, ... 79 ....... '"i!.47 14'h oz. 37 can• 120L 89 jar. ... ... 89 1 .... . ..... 84 -· 21 .::: 1.83 :.:;; 1.84 ...... 1- )lr •'"' ~.1.93 .AtttdakeCI Items not IVlltlble ="=" ... ~=::.::,..._ In the fellowing store1: =::::::'-::..":':"':~- ........................ .......... ,.._ .... _ ... ....,_,."',._,_ ._.......,,_w.,....._. ......-..... .. l!lr--............. :n_ _...,,. __ _ ..... .-.....,_,_ -. .... _,.,_ -l"°'IA ....... -......... , .. ,.._ ------_._, .. ,. __ ~':~==-We l'fleNe the rigf\t to llmlt or -.....-••'-.......,. r•hl•• ..... tocammertitl __ ...._.._ dHlenOfWhotffllen.. --.1111-.., _ ...... ~ .... ....--L--_ .. t•l.... --···-....--lllW.----_....., __ .,.. ___ !..-.,.. .... ' ._..... ........ ---.c.. . r••i«&··-.. r-·~1 --.. r--~•·--.. I . "" ... ---11 w9sso1i""-"........ "" 11 -.a ....... -.......... I: .,... ... on,.c11 ..,._AllWt-.....,.hw IDM II 1•IHllM "" I 1 a.soap :.2711 OI ~.881 PantyHm .491 , I UMll Olle ttM w Onlii Cou,oit '•' ~ 11 Llllllt Otte tt...-1nd ai.t C.-hf c11e-.r 11 Ullllt One .._ •IMI OM c~ ,., atltDtlllt' I • • C...,.. lttKW\11' ... " ltlr"'llt ... ,, COujMNI lfftelvt .... ffthfOlltfl .. 11 ~ r:n.cttv. ... t1 .,_ ..,._ ,, L auP•A couPoN J L auP•A couPON · IL BUllP•A couPoN · IJhe !1?! with •-> Yf. -ti ••··~---••••••··~ ••••••••Ill ~~r ~..!!! .,."'es . KAlPHS STORES AR£ LOCATED AT: 380 E. 17th ST., COST4 MESA 9901 ADAMS. BLVD HUHTll(GTOM ilEACll ' ' •I ., 24167 PASEO DEV.W~IA, LAGUNA HIUS 17261 17th ST .. Tli$TI,_ . 'f 1 N. LOARA. ANAHEIM 6942 WARNfj!, ,HU~ON BEACH w~E S~~~:.~~~~ilff:!t'J..~ • • I l l I I ' L • ,·,I i 1 -.. - ---1 • . • " There is a tremendous s e 1 e c1 ..t o ln t n superm~rkelS tOday of • commertially-frOzen na- tionality Items. Rangtn·r rrom entire _ dinners to specialty side 1 dishes. there is a wide ( variety or exciting ethnic dishes to choose from. For those who prefer . to use their own r ecipes ~ for foreign specialties, ~ the--tr.-diti~l-versions ~ can be stre lined coo-l siderably b using con- ! venient frqzen ingre- ;, dients. I (. CANTONES,E SHRIMP I . 2 pactage1 (I pound i each) frozen cleaned peeled shrimp 1 tablespoon cooking oil - 1 clove garlic.· minced ~ cuv frozen chopped onion l can (111 v.. ounces) chicken broth l <'ail (5 ounces) water chestnuts thinly sliced i 1r.i: tea poon pow- dered ginge 1~ teasPoOn salt 2 lfbletipoons soy sauce 2 tablesJX)OnS sherry · l table~poon cor- nstarch • 2 table;spoons water 1 package {10lf.: ounces) frozen tiny peas Cook shrimp accord· ing lo package ditections until thawed (about l ' minute>; drain. thoroughly. • Heal oil in skillet; add garlic and onion an·d saute until onion is thawed and tender. Add chicken broth, water chestnuts, ginger, salt, soy sauce, sherry. and cornstarch blended \11ith wat_er. Cook, stir· ring until sauce is clear and thickened. Add frozen peas and shrimp. Mix lightly. Q)y. er and simmer, stirring ·occasionally, 2 to 3 minutes, or until peas and ahrimp ar~ leader. Servewithrice. l I ;. . Down Home Greens Tender A Georgia family's specialty. BACON KALE· Two. JO -ounce pa"ckages frozen chopped kale 2 tablespoons bltter or margarine · 2 tablespoons cider vinegar V• teaspoon cayeme pepper Two 3 -oun~e packages s)iced Cana- dian bacon 3 tablespoons light <r dark brown sugar 1 teaspoon dr mustard 2 tablespoons water Cook kale according package directions drain if you like. St1r · butter until melted, th vinegar and cayenne. Turn into an 8 by 8 by 3 inch baking dish; slight Jy overlap .bacon slices ov..-top. Stir 101~ the remainl ingre clients and n ov bacon. Bake UllCOY ed In preheated 375·degree 1 oven about 15 minutes. Makes 6 servi sJ I [ .... __...~_· _M_._eo_Y_D_~J .. INFORMS In the ' DAILY PI LOT • • .. • • ' • OAILYPll.OT E?eli: Sensory Feast A Delleateuen. Web1te'r descrlbn It as ''a ...... HIDnC loods already prepared." Cer- tainly torrect, but a deflniUon that doesn't bellD to clHcrlbe a "dell." 111-. of foodl made "rad)' to _ I can (I~ ouncet) con· • So·" A ~ner with• tr-of denMdcream of celeJ)l aoup That's t>eeause\fl dollcateaaen is more than Just a foodstott. It's a leelina. • .a collection ohlgbts and smells. and a memory of lbe corner dell back b.ome. It's tbe beady aroma of aged cbeean and •. moked m au. A cteamlDI Wblte scale and cascadH of bm&Jnl sauaages. '.!'he wooden bamol with plump, buoypt plcltles. It'• blna of bard rolls arul !Qevff of ilark bread. And a dell hu lta own.sounds . th in wra in and German, l>ol11b, or Yiddish ~oup water dialect. A hotomer dlcktrl"-2 cups cooked alboW' over prlou or the quality of macaroni meat. Iii pound bard salami. cut In Try cleli·abl• •atine rl&bt ... cubes .. your own .bqme. Traaatorm 2tablesPoQnswhitevinecar elOOw · muaronl, bard selaml, llii.aspoon salt canota,, ireen Jl"Ppef. and onion Iii teaspoon su1ar Into Dou.style Sala~. Iii teaspoon pepper Foe an Int re1Unf salad plate, Combine 'Ill maredlei>ts ; toos add a hard roll or bagel, cherry and chlll. Serve on crisp salad tomatoes. arul scallions Wrapped IP'ffDS. Makes abouU cu.-. in prosciutto. Hot VenlolllJ Jn saucepan, cook carrots, green pepper, and onion DEU·STYLESAl.-'D in 2 ta~leapoons butter or i; cup shredded carrots · -marearlne until just tender. Add "'cup rreen pepper IQ"81'a remaining ingredients. Heat: limit •savings with coupons ·and specials. pped ooi<m cllr~caaiona ~=====i--lt1 ffer .•. ... It'"• really quite simple! lnsteod of limiting r,our sovings with coupons and apecial1, lucky offers ower prices Overall. At lucky you con dep&nd on greater ~vlngs 9Yery 11me you shop. lucky .• •, ~ for lower prices overoll that ' reduces youi total food bill. o~• Monie, Cling I Lady Lee StrawberTY . ~!!'t!!~J.AJC · ~~~serve,a~ -!!'<• Peanut ~~!ro,t1 69 ~,. Treesweet. Grape it Juice : ~39c P!NK,4tOZCAN ........ ~ •••• ~...... ' ' Niblets Whole -,,. Kernel Com <i'4 99" . 120ZCAN ...•....... I .. ~--.--~ Harvest Day , ,,. Tomatoes ~35" 2tOZCAN ....•.•...•••••..••. ,r -=-~~...-... -. .... ...... .... ......-, .......... , .... ,. .. _ ~., """i..toi ................. ....... ......................... "-... ~ ........ --........ -. Top Round Sta11i 11a BONELESS. IEIEF •••••..•••.....••.•.•• , ••••. l8 Rib Roat, Sm1I End 1 '' PEEf ·~·······················•·••••U ••"''L8 .~'. s~~~ ............ .l.z2• T~ .. S1ull ~• 8EEFLOfN .,,,,, ............................ LB ,. ~'S;'t=: ........ LB a!c 1 ANV"SIZf:l!ACKAGf ·~·················••·•·•Ll!l 1 • . Lady Lee Shredded . ~l!!!.!.~~{.7gc Lady Lee Catsup , ' Bettv. Crocker · ~~~~~~~;·~"~~~~157c 320ZBTL •• ,., •. CHll". Al"l"LESAUCE "AISIN. ~·-CHOCOLATE FUDG!,. 14-\,_Mg BOX Lady. 'Lee., 7 ,,. -·voglirt · .... 7 .... 1 ' 320ZCTN ~ \ Bonded Meats. Blade Cut, Chuck ~~,~~ ........ aac Larg~ End, Rib ~.~~~~-..... :'" 1 sa Boneless, Round Rib ~~~-~~-..... " 138 §!~.~~ ....... " 1 ea Cross Rib Top Sirloin ~l!!!!R O<C<D lO 138 ~!~!~.. "221 ~;!~.~ ...................... LB 98C -~.st11k,~l~~·~ ....... LB8!f ~!~CM~, ~~L~ .............. LB 131 Frying Chicken 52c FAllH, WHO ...... S OA. GR A OE A •••• ,, .LB !~ltTJON ...................... , ..... la 1~1 Tlliby Drvm11icb c fAfSH ••·•••••••······••••··•·•·····•··•••·LI 63 !~~Yllli.~ ................. LB sgc !~~ \".~ ...... , .. , ....... lB 57c ~~~-~.~ .............. l·l BPKG 111 Fillet of Ocon Perch ge e FAfSH. FAOZllll •• : .••••••••••••••••••••••••. L 8 i~E=l2-0Z'M<. ..... tU•KG 1:: LADY LEE, THIN •••••••••••••..•..•.. l2·0Z PKO 1 • ITEMS BELOW AVAILABLE AT DISCOUNT CENTERS DNL Y l • . ... "'\ . 'fO'I' trip ..,,1.,... Soft Split 47 o.int bock to K~? Mok• 7 -'$ Uttr SHlln Uothitr. CofflfOftoblt, tu~ <OmpCMlllon to1••'1 " "*'°'tH: tfffti, S.led 0 •hort tiff .... "'"" prlnl knit on thlt •.at0n•" ~· rnollft. Sile• S-M-l·Xl. 3e1 Lady Lee M·edium AA Eggs 62C DOZ'N CA"TON . . . Health & Beaut~ Aids Produce ~;;.;~ .... "1 oc -15'" .. z Bananas Y '··~ CENTAAl AMEAICAN LB . -.::: • Bell ' ~~~~~~UFF<N" .. lB 25c Golden Delicious or .J. Jonathan Appl~,69\i ;, NEW CAOP, CALIF , .BAG ~~;~~= ...... LB19c • FILM DEVELOPING -"• W...Hll .. (AMf toAO Al lA ,II "'"''" ml U'm.LA A'L ...... ~ Mlll'I• US "°· llKUD mJrT ...,..,..... "'°' ""' llOlllllmt STtllt ' . "'~· "~ MMI .0"'91G CllllTll •• L CMrMAll AYUllll """'·-. • •• »tt st. •llT9l '"'" • • ! . ' . • UUI .wfOlf AWDllK • WUlMllSfe .... •l!IT-ftl ........ lllWl ....... Mllftlft . ...... lMH L •\ll.llllf H . DISCOUNT SUPOMAUm 111 OUllGl'COllllTT •llA fO SllYI YOU .••• I ! • • l " '• r: ) ; ~' ' I ' ,, •· ti fjWine ~Melds ~1 Sauce \1 Tht• sut·cess or a meal ' is orten dc•tcrm ined by lo. the dessert ... since it 's the last thing eaten. • ! Often th~ unique and ) el,ega nt fin a les th at m ake dinners memora- ble arc compa r a tively \ simple to prepare and ti serve. Rhine Butler Sauce 1 1 m ak es j u s t s u c h a ( • i dessert, r efl ecting the 1 characteristics for which , German wines have Jong 1 been known . . . li ght, ! fruity bouquet and soft, 1 refreshing flavor. ~ Rhine Butte r Sauce turns ordinary pound cake into a truly elegant \ ending to any dinner . J,. Creamy and rich. the I sauee can be made in ad- '"Vance and stores weJI in the refrigerator for .several weeks. A perfect complement to this new dessert is t--\l Sekt. the sparkling wine from Germany, which embodies the same frui- ty, full navor. RHlNE 1. B U1TER SAUCE 2 whole eggs . 2 egg yolks lcup sugar % cup Rhine wine · ~ pound butter; melted -In top o( double boiler, · beat eggs. egg yolks, and sugar until thick, 3 to 5 minutes. Slowly beat in wine and butter and con· t tinue beating until · blended. t T't!en place over sim- •.menng water and cook ' and stir until thickened. This will take about 10 to JS minutes. Cool . Stored covered in ·Yefrigerator, Rhine But- ter Sauce will keep for :;everal weeks. Makes 4Y.a cups. . . . . Cookies , Crunch : Added · • ,• The drop kind that are ...-iomake. t PEANUT COOKIES 1.,.. cup nour ; ¥.I teaspoon baking . .soda t ¥..teaspoon s alt · * cup butter or margarine .. % cup firmly packed dark brown sugar legg 2tablespoons milk 11f.J teaspoons vanilla % cup chopped (medium-fine) cocktail peanuts On wax paper thoroughly s tir together the flour, ba kin g sOOa .and salt. Jn a medium mixing bowl cream but- ter and sugar; beat in egg, milk and vanilla. Stir in flour mixture until blended; stir in peanUU. Drop a few in- 1 , · cbes apart onto greased : cookie sheets. Bake in a preheated 3'/~ee oven about 8 ~mlllute1. With a "Ide metal spatula remove to 'Wire racks; cool com- pletely. Stqre In a Uchtly cov· ered 1tin' box . ,Makes about 3 dozen. Fly UI. Anywll•r• D l!lltle Wodn!!d!y. Sept!ml!!! 10, """ . . .. . . . 'lltrlftiin~rt OOl l'Q.ICl eiijAIN(IH$ THISf LOW l't!Cl$ TO N fffKl!¥I ~l 1.LUT 1 OAT~, WED., SEPT. 10 thru TUES., SEPT. 16, 1975 . - FRESH U.S.~ CHOICE AMERICAN SQUARE CUT NECK OFF .... ' . • • ---. Sweet eptem,ber Storewide Savings! LambRoa t I Shoul er ~ L b Ch SHOUIDO s129 am ops ••.•••••• ~LA~ • LI. Dover Sole ..• :~~~. 814! -cint,r Cut Chuck ~'!'~ ... ~'..': '85~ ~ ·1 St k """"" $159 -flmt y • ea e .. e .-,-. • '!1f •CM~'! 1-u. Lamb Shoulder •..•••• ~~·. s1 3J. -,- . """ $155S9 · -8ainbow Trout-.,.;~~"--'-hl . 5-0Z . PKG. OL' VIRGINIA •MEAT BOLOGNA AND LUNCH MEATS •BEEF SOLOGNA • DUTCH • SANDWICH • OLIVE & PIMIENTO • PICKLE & PIMIENTO • SPICED . ~- Kralt Cheese · · .. ,., a Crackers ••••••••••• II •.•. I MC. D Fruit Drinks ·.~:'". ~~\ 6i99c D Sliced Swiss •.••• ~:,: 79c .. "'°"11 I Ol t D M IP. • .. ""'""· · 4•99c 0 Y rt ...... , 27c 81 18S ~ :u";-; ':Ol!" I ogu r.• ., •••••• :o:·. , . . • DP I B II , • .,,,...,-~ ... ~. 79c eanu U er ··~·····~--"~' " • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Ul. .Karasov $ II VODKAP~~F LUCKY LAGER C.C. VINEYARD BEER WINES Jl .oz. llAPK$,ll NON -RETURN BTLS. •BURGUNDY $, •• •VIN ROSE' • CHABLIS or IA. •PINK CHABUS G'AL. Fresh Flowers FRESH age FLOWER BOUQUETS •..•••• 6" HANGING POT, BEAUTIFUL s3ee COLEUS PLANTS •.••••••.. INTERESTING-EASY GROW 6" POT $398 DRAGON TREE PLAHT •.•••• P1!ETTY, <" POT . $l 98 NEANTHEBELLA PALMS ••••• Clairol ·Herbal Essencell' Shampoo ... a.oz. Of: UC ATE, HOl:MAl DRY, Olll wrrw 20c0ff lA&El "' o Candles ..... ~ .. 29~ D Contac . ; ...... :o:-•• ggc D Crest ...••• 1~~~~ • 38~ . QUART BOTTLE • Kraft .Imitation ' ' . -MAYONNAISE JANE ANDERSON ~ FRES BREA POTATO KING FROZE~ GREEN ·GIANT 12-0Z. -CAN 24-0Z. BOTTLE LIGHT 6)\-0Z. CAN I I WHITE or WHEAT l ·LB. LOAF CRJNgLECUT POTATOES 4~6~· I . ' ROSARITA 30-0Z. 1 1 sgc MO!!EHousr. 9-0z. 15c REFRIED BEANS •·• • • • • ~: . MUSTARD ~"!c .••••••••• BELL Bl!AND • b ·age . WISHBONE !TALIA!< B·OZ. c VARIETY PACK ; ••••• 1 l~A. ~ ' DRESSING ••••••••••••• 49 BEECHNUT STRAINED. ' : . 13c All VARIETIES, ll·OZ. OVEN GOLD c BABY FOOD • • • • • • • • .'~. COOKIES .............. 79u. SKIPPY PREMIUM, All VARIETI ES 2sc OUAILPINKorLEMON.32·0Z.t1 0 UID 49 DOG FOOD ! • ~ .'~ !5.P: • .. • • • u. DETERGENT • • • • • • • • • • • • C HUNT'S SNACK PACKS v.:i~ •••••• ~ ••• 4 i 69~ Bell Peppers sr~;~G •••••• I I' 2'h•lftlllta•t• ' •Mesa Vtrdt Center, H~ at"Adi1111s. Costa Mesa • 13922 Br.ookh~nt, Gardtn G Yt •238 II 'El Toro, B Toro · ' OA;,V 0110 1 ' •1$01 W. Edinger, ~anta .Ana •5858 Warner, Hllllincl Btacll ..:;=::::::.!::=~---~~-. . i \ • • ( • • • / l . I • . . ' • .• • llDE , SCHllJJ~ II.ACX PEPPE It 16 n. i 6Pcili 1 ..:;:. J CAT CHOW . -~fl$H •1Uf ·• •. CARNATION INSTANT , "" BREAKFAST E .. , . T " ( IULK STYLE --t ' I - ByCECU.Y••o~ Omar !Cbanam tlloulbt 11111 a Joe ot wille. a l.,.r oflriad and a f .. miteeompanloa waspandiw . At tllll ..,._ ot the :rev _,. Cblak tb1t a Pitcher of kid 1 ... a loaf ot bread and bait a -SoOd friends U pleasure "'Ollll> . Witb tbeae at band one can en· Joy offerln1 a platter of antipasto fqr a noontime m~aL Antipasto ii easy to &SMmble • and can be ·tbrtft.y or luxurious .. Because it ls usually composed of · pieat, flab. eggs, c.beeae a.a.d 1ve1etablea, there's 1reat latil•uk. . Meat tint. The choice cao be · the llirillleat ol cold cuta inatead of the traditional bla mor-e ex· pensive Genoa 1alaml Ill' pro. a<lutlo. /< croup of U .s. D6pt. of AJricullure staff m'!lllben who recently made a aurveyolready· to-e'lt meats in New Y0<k found that the most economical ones were "chubs.. (chunks) of un- sliced bologna and liverwurst, often priced between 79 and 99 cenll per pound. The &h aerved with antipasto ROYALYAMI YOGURT "'"' CAaTOM . I .• CARESS BAR SOAP BERNSTEIN ITAllA N -LAR~I "~'°'"" DR ESSING 'JELLO DELI SPECIALS ... • ~-s.p_.,., •o. ,.,. oAJLv PILOT c~ 1 ia mually e ..... ed -bovies O< dreainS. Cooked 1n1p belDI llld abdlnea or both. cooked eelery alao -to-tbe Kord-eooked •II•· cut in mminode~tm t. quarters. ollen op-with an· Oberry tomatoeli or rec !lpalto. But the egp can play ..,.. ue Cood to kne .W. more att....Uve and llllilli JOle ve10tables. Ripe 0< lll"'Otl 1'8 on a °"!,~ platter ii you halve tbou1b traditional, m1y o them, m the yolks witha litUe omitted. : mayonnaise, muna.rd and leDlOQ T~ loaf of bread? Wbetbor and pile the mixture bad< inti> home.baked or bought, It shoqld tbee&8•WhiteeaviUes. · be a crusty variety. 1Wh It J!l'I For cheese, eboooe a semll'()fl mlgbt offer crunchy bread at!_,. mild va,rlely. , that al.oo may be bfl<ecl at qe For a ve•etable you tan choole or bought. · , carrota rrom your market o'r And DO\\' to that pitcher ol . garden. and serve them raw or .. Brew it by your favorite metbOd cooked and marinated in French for serving it iced. ·10MAIOES 29!· t LARGE MEATY HAAS EXTRA FAHCY WASHIHGTOH STA GOLDEN DELICIOUS """' APPLES 4 . ~s1 LBS . • • MOUHTAIM GROWN IARTLETT \ PEARS l 29c LI. RED, RIPE. JUICY SWEET EXTRA FAHCT LOCALLY GROWN KEHTUCKY _J GREEN BEAN ' ·5 . ~s:1 LIS.R ALKA ~SELTZER 69 ~ Store Hours: 8 to 9 Daily-Sunday 9-8 ... ,,..c ... fffectl•• Thursday thru Wednesday Sept. 11 -17 Pric" s.ttfMf .. Shci: ....... W• Glacly Accept Food St-· -~OUR STAR llRAFT GRATED SWISS BACON !!.1.59~ AltlilOUR STAI AU.-MEAT AU IHF WIENERS !~ 69! CHEESE , 9•c OL •• EA. KRAFT AMlllCAH SIHGLES CHEESE FOOD 12 .... 99~. COSTA MESA l9th and Placentia PLACENTIA 'I I 0 ~· Chapma' ~ .,.. t# • I ~ .. ,. . l OSCIJI ·MAYB--~ 1~89· FRANKS . our chnire -meat or beef! l lb, Claussen Kraut gg c Great \.1.'ith franks! 32 oz size Sliced Swiss • • • 59c c ;:he va lley -the cheese people! 5 oz ' ~y~~~~b~;,:;! 's ~'gc .,zzarella SlJCID • • &gc Sajidwich idea from Frigo! 6 oz • • l<nudsen 49·· c $ALADS fotato, Macaroni, Cole Slaw! pt. .. . ' ~ ~iquor Dep't Values! • VE $1.00 On . I RANCHO'S $399 UM our choice -light or dark! Quart · ff s11 4o 1mo •..•.. d Forester ••• s&99 · r Roses •••• s5 99 8 tided whiskey reduced 80c quart ·Ila Wines •••• · s21• y Burgundy, Chablis Blanc! lf2 gal (Ground meats fro m El Ran cho . • • more value equals economy) When you're looking for ways to save, and still offer your folks the quality you want them to enjoy ... that's the time to shop El Rancho for ground meat! Lean, juicy, tender ... and priced for value! • Ground Beef ~Wt:. .............. 79~ Here's proof that you Cati enjoy El Rancho quality and still stick to your budget! Use some and freeze some! ' Ground Beef ff: ................ 99~ Our most popular ground .• , and you choose from convenient patties, or juicy bulk pack! They'll love hamburgenl• Ground Veal ••• s1•t Extra lean -Wisconsin veal! Meat Balls ••••• s129• Oven ready! Made 'With fresh eggs MEAT LOAF 99~ We use fresh whole egp! Oven ready Ground Beef ••. s1 1t Our very leanest grind! ChoiJped Steakss1 1t OUr leanest ground beef. 3 per pound CABBAGE4· 9c ROLLS= IL Stuffed! N t. wt. Soz. ea. with f mihegp Made fresh on the premises! Sausagerr11111m11. sis~ We make it by our exclusive recipe! HAM . LOAF ' ~14! I Oven ready! Made with rr..b egp! . ' Round cut of btef! Tender 1teab . Beef Roast~-. 12't R<iund cut ol U.S.D.A. Choice bee£ Stew Beef •• .' •• s11~ Extra !eon! Boneless! U.S.D.A. Choice Chuck Steak • • • 99c. Center cut! U.S .D.A. Choice beef1 Chicken=~ ••• &9i Extra large meaty fryers! Grade .. A .. With Cubbiaon'a Dressing CllATEAU s319 BRIAND • Tenderloin U.S.D.A. Choice Beef (!UT -••• SUt .. , Favorite Fish ! CRAB $129 LEGS · · • • Meaty! From big Alaskan crabe! Fillet of Sole • • 79c. Fresh frozen to lock in flavor! Fillet of Turbot 79i From icy Norwecian waters! Jumbo Shrimp. s3~~ Extra fancy Mes:ican white (shell on) Snapper,MR .... 11''• Freeh fish , •• and £reshly filleted! . Halibut Steak •• s24t· . Center cut! Great for broiling? Shopper Stoppers! • u1ce UBBfS TOMATO. •••••••••••••••• Frozen Food! ORANGE 23c JUICE S hopper S toppers! I MayQnnaiseQUaRT ... 39c t rich flavor that comet from vine-ripened tomatoes! That'a Libby's! 46 oz. can 1'1'} Springfield -be plea&antly aurpriled with the quality ••• love the savings! Treesweet, from Florida! 6 oz Macaroni .. Cllm· •• &sc Tomatoes : ... · ... 29c d PREMIUM 3 9c rea WHITE Oft WHEAT •••••••• big 11/1 pound loaf at this special price! --and it's Springfield for value! Morton's -family a1ze 20 oz. package Plump and red-ripe ••• 90 juicy and flavorful ••• and eo reuonably priced! No. 3Q3 can Stuffed Pies • • • 49c Van de Kamp's chicken! 10 11: oz Lemon Juice • • • 49c Scotties = ........... 45( So so~ . and yet ao abng! ShoWdn't you get an es:tra box or two at this price? 200 ct. ' h , HEINZ 33c ' . etc up 14oz. aTLE ••••••• y Heinz 1pells it thi1 way -and only Heinz m,,akee: it this good -so rich and·th1ck nack Pack • • • • &gc nt's -all varieties! Ctn, of 4 cans Cottage Cheese 59c Regular or lo"·.fat! Springfield -pint Minute Maid convenience! 7 Y2 oz. Cream Pies IMTQll's • 49c Variety ·Snacks ggc. Laura Scudder'a -15 little.pack& BreakfastlSn•r ..... 79c Carnation -all flavors (Ctl. ti six) tt Towels • • 49c roll in U10rted colors! dwich Bags. &sc Cocktail cumr1 •••• ggc ~ Ocean Sprar ... big 48 ounce bottle Lunch Bags • • • • 39c Banana, Chocolate, Lemon! 16 oz Enchiladas, ... UMP 39c Beef, Cheese, Chicken! 7 YI oz . Wheat Chex.... 59c Breakfast treat from Ralston! 15 oz Oreo Cookies • • 77c C • 0·1 s1-&9 . nsco 1 •••••• Save on big 48 ounce size! Downy ••••••••• s231 d -170 count "bonus pack'' Just in time! Zee -pkg. or 50 Nabisco's perennial favorite! 15 oz Fabric Softener -96 oz (lSC Ill) · · bble-Up m ra. • 51°9 Mushrooms • • • • 59c Green Giant -who~. sliced! 4 Lfl oz. STOUFFER'S s 139 STEAK Lawry Dressing · 45c Ice Cream • • • • • ggc . . ANTY 69 OSE ~. nweve Happy Le1t1 -all ehades! OOTH ASTE , RELL 89~ hampoo Ooocmt,.14 ~ os. tube !«JC oil) • HONEY· DEWS 12~ Lutciouely •WHt and mellow! With green peppere! 10 th: oz Eight ounoe --. --51$) • Super Fresh Produce! Peach11 ~ ... 3· 11 Large size ... we invite you to compare 1ize and quality! Sweet ..• :ellow meated! Cherry Tomatoes 39c Red ripe little gems! 12 oz. bekt. Valencia Oranges 5 ... s1 ~eavy with sweet, juicy goodne11! BELL 29 PEPPERS ·~. Brown2 .4t9c Onions .._ ,Fresh! Large! Thick Meat.edf U.S. No. 1 Quality! All pu._ Springfield half-gallon! All flavon! Pricu in effect Thur. Sept. 11 1'hrct'l:h ~·ed. Sept. 17, 1975 Open daily 9 to 9 Sund<ly 10 Jo 7 No salea to deai.rs ARC AD IA PASADENA SOUTH PASADENA HUNTINGTON BEACfi NEWPORT BEACH lASTBLUFf IRVINE ''""'!'"''''' '''' · :, •:.olrn,1ik1tll••I f<f'rnon1.111c1 l f11• '•' W.1rn<'r 1nllAlqnto•ll•"' .·.·-..,.,..(.._1r1!1t,(j 1 ,,f', '''·' '• •ndf\li.r,.1,,,, fll•u•h•'''' I o!Ot 1riqt>QIU~l· ~J .. th•·.i'lf<,,, Bo,urlwnlkC.,nl••1 lnlrt<'~•run~ut,1 !•I"' hi• •"· ~,,, "'"'11•., .......... .i-111b Confidets ...••.••.•.••••••• $1.29 Recular Mnl~ upkin1! pq ot 2' Cocoa· Puffs . . . • . • • • • . • • • • • • • 590 Cen:•I Lhrit kid.I lovt! 8 oa pQ, 1est1e•s Morsels •••••••••••• $1.89 Semi_.. Chocolato chlpol 12 "" --1• Pl1i111 , .......... Silt ~ cw Lemoa 'T'' 14 oa btle . SIClll'll l.llPd .......... , ... $1.49 . l · Supr r Salcldn' Ciika •••••••••••••• lk Bttt;y Crocker -all ~avonl l.f. ~ oa · .... Uqiid ...... ;. ....... 7tc Cold ··1':1 cart lo.; r-r1brlctl am." j ~ --- ' ! -v .. ·u~v11....iacni­are woarln• a ~ llnft. y.., map uaume fl'cm the eelor that llM!y are unripe but act...uy thla meou Ibey malra-r!pe. OOLDENAULE e t • IWID'lflCKSl'aJ!AD I n l tahl .. _ ,..... snte4 . ""-r ::' ... ff l>eeled. diced. " dralned • • r • • -.. ~ cup cllopped cabba(e ·A~A:• I d • ? 1iutt~ cup chllllk at,yte .,.-_IV\IS e<;J Ing • r•~:~::.:0ons •hopped • • 2 tablHpoons ma,.,.,... • • SsllcH buttered bread Mix peel, oranges and <&l>- baae. · Blond together --Ill ~ner, raisins; -and H r --+.----'-----'--"'--...;..J.--' ...... -~:,_-m..,...oam1e:: combtne with .. .Spreader «Pretty 'n I ,Powerful I A raty 111read to keep mhand. ·. I ' I . WEESE CROCK I -ounce package I cream cheese 14 pound blue cheme I 1A cup maYQnnaile 1 teaapoon Worcestershire sauce 1A cup minced panley .y,. cup finely chopped toasted walnuts Let the ,~eam cheme and blue c,heese •land at , room temperature until softened; with a apoon thoroughly beat • together; add mayon-n a i s e a n d . Worcestershire and beat to blend. Pack into a 2-cup crock" " 1 or souffit dish. Cover 1 and cbi'lJ. Just before serving, inix together , the parsley and walnuts; • : press o\rer top of cheese mixture. ' Serve from crock with a spreader and ~crackers. I . '.Dinner ts tacked I Foithe~upeerti~ey04 feellazy! ~ PANCAKE PLATES r 1¥.a cups wholewheat panca,ke mix 1 l lf.r cups milk ~ legg l J 1 tablespoon salad oil , 3 cups applesauce, ·heated 12 pork sausage \ links, cooked and drained • Lightly sti'r together 1 the pancake mix, milk, . egg and oil until fairly : smooth. j For each pancake: , · pour a scant ¥c cup bat· . ter onto a hot lightly : greased griddle to make ~-, i l2 pahcakes; when tops ' are covered with bubbles and edges IOQ)< cooked, l turn and brown. . For each se_rviog. • : sandwich it. cup hot ap- : plesauce betwee·n 2 pan- cakes; top with another : Ve cup apples1'uce and 2 1 , saUsages. Serve at once. · Makes 6 servings. ! ( ;Berry [Thirsty? • Add more sugar if you : want a sweeter drink. . , • CRANBERRYTEA Hi cups bqiling water ! &teabags ·• 1 cup sugar 1 f:UP lemon juice 1 1 cup cranberry , jtilce·cocttail • 1 quart club soda, I ebijled .. ; steep teabags in boil· . in.g Water for 5 minutes, , 1 remove ball•. -'lu~ out liquid; add s111ar, , lemon juice and cran· berry juicl! cocktail, 5lir· ring to dissMve.sugar. · Just before serving, sllr in· club 1oda. l'ollr . ov~ )~• cube• 1ll ~ · glasses. '.Mal<es 2 quarts. Slower It la untortunate tJiat. ., older persbns ftt<iuentlY tbink-the111Hd 1eaa pro- tein beea~ their bodies are ''llowi8C down '' Aa we 1et cild~r. " • uaually need fewet' · caJariea because we ue · lMa ..UV. and are.ulllla· . Ing l"• eoergy, but ..,. woieln need• do J!Pl • ' · decrease_ 1 • In fact, older penons may need •or,ewbat , more prote n due )loulbly to somewhat J)OOrer uUUzatton. 'I \ .. \ • oranre 111h:t11re, Wend well. Sklttad °"buttered..-. OUNGll SaowNIES 1orlllle.~ ~~le (15-ki•• ,...,,.,., r.- r..~-.:_Vt;CUo lrnll ~u 12 s 1 onnce Juice 1ea 'l cup chopped •all>uts Cruse oll1J bottom of 13 it 9-!Jicb baklnf pan. To puree orance. trim a tllia slice from both tnda fl unpeeled &uit; cut in ball lenltbwlae. Wlt.b a •bollow V-shaped cut. ftmove 'Wblte center oore. Cut halves Into . wediu, removln1 any .-: tbm cut into ebunk1 so Ibey will pureeeuU,ylil blO)lder. Combine wree witb ~" tnix,-or-Jlliee, 1IDd ._ A wahmt:s~ ~mbinll'.ll ' . -~ -!!!d!y.S!p-10, 1179 OAlt.YPllOT CJ!' l Into bKl!lll · Z t~DI lnoh &raUoil Balta al decrees P. for 40 cnnre Jll!8I min~ eoor at Jeut 2 boura 1'llon' bolll•I ••*' _. i- blfore mtlns lnto~U1ara. Jul ~~ eaiilino~ O~GS·CAVUPl.OWZS r!Dpoov , ·~ ~ pepplr W llBLlllll· • r, -••-WJ\Ue I BolU..-•ater Y1De1arm1xture, Jtabh•-.fl'tlhaqi--1 Combine v1necar. ·.~·~,..~·:; '-lmee · ar, ult and SJ't<a In , 1 medium caollfiower, GcatepeeUromloftho4 broken Into small nowaet.s te mouure 2 teu-; add 1 larae onion, sliced and vinegar mlJCture. Brin& tq ~lalorlnp r educe beat and simmer . l ,._ pepper, seeded and minutes. • mtlntoatrl1>1 PHI ora111ea and cut Into U.. l cup while vinegar size pieces'; 1et .. Ide. Drain .. "1M cup water . water from caullnower: add "cupsuaar cranae pie<u. Pour hot Yloeiar '14 teupoon salt mixlllr.e oy r eaullllow<r mil<· , apepper~m• lure. \\_toupoon ~elery seecl Cool, cover and cbUI -~·~:l teup0on tarTa&onloaV«1 hours or ovornlaht. 111an1 BEEF TRIM ·• • I ' , • • • U;S9A t .HOICE ... at Safeway ... the l\B is Yours! "FRESH FRYING CHICKENS u.s. s •• ,. ABC Inspected 61'1de 'A' Soutflem 3-Llls •• Under lb. . Whole lb.- .FRESH GROUND BEEF 7-Bone Roast $109 Cenls Clll. USDA-loll_.._ , Short ·Ribs . .=-$109 Any Size USDlCllllclGndo.llrmMora. .... 11. ~adl•ge lb. ' ' --------!!!!.!!!>.~~~ ..... •111 i ALL SAFEWAY STORES HAVE'AN CUbe Steaks'..;......$199 ·"' 1,1 ~~: . EXPRESS CHECKOUT STAND · USDlCllolc:eGtado ... , Yohn~ lb. ' lb. Porterhouse-s23s USDA Cllolc:e 6tado lell Loln ....... 11. !!'J!.~~---$198 • Beel Brisket:.::= $149 -or-CUI. T_&_,.._... !!.~~:E! .. !298 BEEFROAST . ::;~SOACl*ce I0.$149 • -·'\,'For Customers With B ltams or lass! BOneless Steaks $149 ~ !!!!!!!"'!~U .... SDACllolc:e--Chudl ... lb. ~===-=== ( KING SIZE . · 0 NIBL~S • • • ~ lb. . , SANDWICH BREAD •• FRENCH $ Btl-AIR • !~m: . CORN ~~.. FRIES WAFFLES ~:$3-Tu . ._ .... B'Mfl2 · . · Scoll:h t •pop 'Em Into ~~ _, ,_ ....:J 12-az. " 1 : • ..; ., Treat Your Toaster"' .. !'_ ._ ~Vi=~'::. '.:J :'f.11 ~ Cin • I ill . .....-~ ......... ,_..... -~ Jl1 ;.. ' i:( -... 7~·~ Jt-·~· .•• , n"':" · · 5-oz. .......-...---~iil'ib. ·p11g. -···-Pkg. !itlMlxed Vegetables ... * a:.-:-age ___ -._ 1 •Sara lee POund Gake '~;";ggc ' .. flstew Vegetables .... *'::." 59e I ---cotCh Treat Corn •:;:-2gc Manor H~use Meat Pies .~ 2ge jlBel-alr Peas '= 31;:· age ___ _, ~ ....... .. ' • • l • • ' ' BANANAS .... '· ·Fancy ......... , ..... ,;#'Quality -· Armand Golden Lira• Size l'ropical Treat. each lb. c ~ BOSTON BARTLETT PEARS . FERNS ':,.=tr,.~ · 1b 25~ . ~-':"s3 99 GREEN CABBAGE t Pllnll'::"t ·'3". ldlllforedq 1 oo ~ or For SIN 111. . . • ............ ..._.-.,,. .... c-t.....,,'-..... W..AM:e..,c.. ... •Jll L 17 'ti.,Ctilh,.._ • WHITE-MAGIC ETERBEN . ·\ . c BAKERY BUYS! BREAD , =~49c 11holl.Lalf I N OUR DAIRY CASE -·--···--, CHEESE I )= $1!_9 Chedd• Style LB. I .... L111eme Yogmt ~ , ~sc .lfCRAGMONT :SODA POP c llletPop2 ·=21° -Quart i1QuoR & ~INEs IBest Foods · i. ..... __ ' llllclht In 1-..i ...... ,.. ~ldwlclln ~ 98 c ?. --. ·ilwmwsc;$2g9 _ = 'c:; 15C ·~ 1.;bi;wine ·flFruit Juice • TllUWlll 49c t:x=Parl) $199 Pinll Gnplfrult ~ -61110n Ice Cream ·1. @Tequila ~ ,..s3n SnowSlll' 79c J&B Scotch ~= .:11845 er..mr-s-t111 S:. · Lucerne 'large Eggs G=~:· I Oven joy ·Flour . Enriched Nu-Made Salad Oil Star-Ki$t Tuna · ClftllkStyle Velkay Sh'ortening •a~ I Purex Liquid Bleach 1-doL 65 ~ Ba!~am Trend .. ClltDn , fi 111s11WU11er 22-az. 45c ;· 5~ 59~ tCOifee:'Mate :. 2.4-GL 790 c.maUon 1• -s119 Boltlt llort-Dalry Product jg a·~ 39° · .. Heinz Ketchup . 3,c!i $1 39 f =:!t.fllnr =39C = 69° IHetty Bags i_~= .. "" 990 •AN..,llled'foA ~ FooH'llA• · I Shampoo COUPONS :;_v1on,... .. , =-$139 .. •24_..., __ '-'·--11.....j .. i.,.,_...... 1 . . ·•is ......... __ ' . ..,. \ ", . ' . r ~ ... ·-... " I I . . . . . ' . . . . . • • • I l I i a innama Yl:l rifty . Strel:J s I A bit oolf~at• lhat bu o aNNl\llON qornE:CAU to& Iller tbe 1111••· batlntt ID the er ootp.eo out clean - l*lted· fl.UIDJ ~= uo 3 cupo all·~ flour, &1lt poll' .... ktina aOd-. ••"1f&:· abau\45mlputea. tbat 11tore1 well may be utt ~--•·aerate•-r~m•--'•• a·_.._ ••d n·~m·• ... • e ,._ ~ ~ ~· -.... --•• .._.... • •••A o·•e ln ~·· on a w•L. you would enjoy havlna .n band • I teupoon bald.as powder mbrl"" bowl deani ~ llld L.-.--~ "" clla!n1 warm ~ealbet-to -lteupoon balclqlOda 8Ulifrbeat In eqi cme at a Ula• ,..... f<!(IO m.Inutea; With a small th teed tea or cotf•~'fruttadel ~tea.spoon salt ablcwitbthevuillla." met •p•tul1 loosen cake ormilk. ' 3 te11poon1 1roU11d cln· SUrlnnourmlxtureln•addl· aroanded• and tube: turnout H-e tben a nn for n•-ti It 1 1 I'h on wire rack; with another l"lldc; ' ~ -· 001, • •~na • Y w' sour "-n··•tllldeup. Cool comple•· lr ..,I t ~ ·• "' • ' • "·. "' dealred, stir t~eUter 2 I al •ll·tl"'e favorito, 1oilr P. •···poon~rowxtbuttn-crea-•n milk j~11 until -· -~ ~am• euse col eecake. cup butte ormar&uine smooth eaob time. Tum'balltbe " ..., ·• Thi• version hu c:lnaaa.,on cup sugar batter into a creued •inch UblesOOOP9 confectioners' sugar Ila-tbroucliout the llatttt In· 2 eus an&ellood cake pan: uftad b41f ;:.ttll 1 1:"P<f" water and 4'"" llead of llllt In tile ~ and 2 teHpoon& pure .. nUla the Slreuael over the batter; ~ e over P 0 calce. > ll'1 11101' eeooomleal I.ban tile tract remaU>lna ~alter; top with,.,... Store In a tlgbUy covered tin .,.U,U reell>e. beea-lt C1llJa f<W ~cup milk mlinin1 Slffusel. --~boll; U rolriaerator.stored. bring .....,. 10UJ" tream and ball milk in· 6tttusel, lff below Bake in a prehea~ 350-derr-to room temperature before serv-~ cl altMUr cream. Oa wu paper tllonJu&bly stir °""" unw a cake teller inlerted Ina· ea 'n Shore ·Protein Extends For heigbtened,exclte- ment and lowered costs, a,erve the ladles a ltancheon of Sei.1hore arata. Eg1s cause this ~role to rise regally U1 the oven and also serve as an inexpensive · protein ex.tender_ SEASHORE STRATA ~~~~~~~~~~ ' NOW OPEN 'ti MIONl&HT in 11l1:WJoedoel; -Co .... ~ ... --....... -.. " Jew prices .,.-wrtud to be 1H.ctl•t 5-p1. 11 -S.p1. 17 . ~ ........... .... Al l s rO .. (S O'IN, ... M ...ONOAV THAU~ TU .. OA 't' n.1 N it A"' U,i'Ot01•s ST-t: IL , 14 •lll> ~or mU11"""6 2 te1•poon1 arou.nd cln-namon \II.a te11poon iround nutmeg YI cup lltmly packed dark brown•ua•r 1 cup choppe~ <medium· fine) walnuta . ~ In a small aaucepal) or skit civer low beal, JDell the bUI slit tn cinnamon, nutmeg brown sutar; remove rrom bea~ aad sUr in w alnull. Prepare tbi• before •tarting CiMamon Coi: feecake and set aside, then u.ae d dirttted. •• 1 1 6 slices day-old Dread, buttered J ' I cup shredded Ched· dar cheese 1 package (6 ounce) frozen crabmeal, thawed and well drained or l package (8ounce) frozen shrimp, ttfawed and welJ drained 6 eggs, slightly beaten l Y.i: cups milk 1 lea'ipoon dry mustard VJ teaspoon salt ~. _14 teaspoon pepper I i Cut bread into small cubes. Alternate layprs of bread cubes, cheese and ca'abmeat in but-IP!!TR~EEMEET~~~ .... ~.!".~WHITE~~ ..... ~ol!!z!".CA!!'!'!'•!"'"--i tered 2-quart casserole. REDUCED 1oc Blend to1ether eggs. GRAPEFRUIT 'llilk.~nd seasonings; JUICE pour"'Over -layered mix· lure. Cover~ refrigerate overnigllt. ' Bake In preh.,.ted 350 11'!'~!!!"'----------­de g re e · F . oven 70 =AETUANABLEln.s. minute~ or until puffy PEPSI and bniWa. 'Let stand s . lliinut.es. ~fore serving. ,..OL ... . Maket:Gservings. ¥ ~ • Dogg.on Simple HALVES • SUCES · 28-0Z. CAN • YEU.OW a.iHG ,. Prepared foods help you take this wholesome A!DUCED 4c -i LIBBY'S PEACHES appetizing dish out of the oven in minutes. Add a wed'ge of lettuce, Grocery Reduced Prices garnished with a tomato -01JNCE CAN slice, and dinner is re-HUNT'S ad ' • ~~t Dogs ·N Stuflln' is PORK & BEANS not only a time saver,.but ~CAM · EVVtVDAY PRICE at 40 cents a servidg\ It i& HUNT'S economical Ion! OMATO SAUCE • HOT DOGS \ " 'N STUFFlN' I package cornbread MATO PASTE stuffm& mix for top ,of 1-ow.ca CAN stove IBBY'S I pound hot dogs S lS·o·unce can· chili :Z·OUNC:e.JAR beelsoui/ • 8-0unce can tomato BBY'S sauce SAUERKRAUT 2 slices cheddar 21-0UJrfCf'"CAM cheese B&M Prepare stuffing mix· BAKED BEANS according to d1rect1ons 24-c>uNCE IOTnE oo box . steam hot dogs. REALEMON Lightly grease casserole. line bottom LEMON JUICE and sides with stUfflng 1c-OUNCI! cAH mix. Cut bot dogs Into KAL KAN thirds and pile in . center WHEL-PUP of stuff mg mix. Mix soup R . 1s-112.0tJNCE: CAH and tomato sauoe KEN L .. •TION together and pour over ""' bot dogs. DOG FOOD Slice cheese in 8 strips 1"V£RY"FlA\IOJIS -1CH>Z.CAN and lat 1n 1¥1Uce design SEGO LIQUID on ,top. Bake at aso DIET DRINKS d'egrees for 20 minutes. · ·Serves&. ' ~, .45 .18 .49 .37 .56 .63 .58 • .32 .21 .25 " ALPHA BETA • FAMILY PACK · 6 VAAlfTIES '1/2..QAU..ON SOU ARE AL.PH BETA 8 RAVORS · 12-0Z.CAHS DIET BEVERAGES 5·L8. IAO •' AEDUCHJ toe • PILLSBURY FLOUR . ZEE · UST. OR~· 4·PACK NICl:'N SOFT TOILET TISSUE !GO-COUNT IOX •• KLEENEX CASUALS FACIAL TISSUE WHITE · AAOflTED · 200-COUHT BOX SCOTIIES FACIAL TISSUE FOR l"URMf'1'UAIE . 9-0UHCI! AER6. ,KLEEN GUARD POU SH KRAFT • t ·OIMCl aom.E 10001SLAND DRESSING 24-0UHCI 90TTI,.E WELCH'S GRAPE JUIC E 2·0Z. CHIQllEN NOODLE · 1·,14-0Z. ONIOf\I WYLER SOUP MIXES ORY ROAST!O · t2·0l.IHCI: JAR PLANnR'S PEANUTS o•ooou;n CHIP · COOKIE .IAA 49ST. • FUOOl ·'N CHIPS ·OATMEAL 'H CHu>S •ltJ-~IAG MontER'.S COOKIES • • 8 .32 .46 .47 ~46 .65 .16 .89 .. 99 • 88 L8 FRESH FROZEN · REDUCED 5 tc: LB COOKED ANO PEELED S~LAD 188 SHRIMP • ca. Grocery Reduced Prices . GffffN • WHrTt: • 5-0IMCI IAR LIFEBUOY BAR SOAP .29 1·0UAAT JAR · hltn'DAl' ""la BESTFOODS MAY9NNAISE .98 Frozen Food Reduced Prices lO-OUNCI! 80)( BIRDSEYE PEAS & ONIONS .43 PEAS W I CREAM SAIJCf: · I-OZ. IO)( .4) PEAS W I POTATOES & QllEAM tM.1C1! • l ·OZ. BOX Al REGULAR · ILIJEBERRY · 8UTTERMlt..X • 1&-0Z. CTN. KWIKMAKE 59 PANCAKE BATTER • 12·~ECAN TREESWEET GRAPEFRUIT JUICE Bakery ASST. FAMILY PloCICS TASTY KAKE -.56 SNACK ''"' 79 ""· 99 CAKES "' • '·" • tJ-OUNCE 8011 • l ·eotA'tT · REDUCED 10c ALPHA BETA PLAIN DONUTS 4·1/2-outK:ff PllCKAGt: • EVEffYDAl' Pf!ICE LAYMAN LUNCH BOX PIES .59 .20 " • 1, •· t • ' ST\lfAIQ SIZE _,ELL EPPERS lltlCK"""TED BANANA SQUASH GARDEN FRESH CUCUMBERS • • .19 LI- . ' .5 l8 . ' , PWft..OOEHDRONS · AU88ER Pl.ANTI DIFFENBACHIAS • fl" POT GREEN 3 99· PLANTS • ... ' Delicatessen Reduced Prices SOFT · 1&-0UHCI. BOWi.. NUCOA MARGARINE .59 Non-Food Reduced Prices !·OZ.CREAM ARRID DEODORANT 3 TYPES · II-OZ.AEROSOL NOXZEMA SHAVE CREAM 36-COUNT PACK.llGE ALICA S ELTZER FOIL WRAP .57 .98 .97 . 11.4-0UNCI" TUllE AIM ' TOOTH PASTE .79 l ·Ol»ICE BOTTlE ALPHA KERI BATH OIL tl·11!-0UHCf 80TTL!: KERI LOTION 2.77 1.88 Wr rt<n'"• lllr '11M In ,.(u"' .. le• In <t'"'"'"'io.I !leoltt• ~>IM "' OQ!lt<IN "" aU l•n •hlot o!e"ll ,\>11\fKhtlM '" Y""' _,,.. .. •of~...:l..i. ,..,,,.,,,~, ,,,. !lrl,u /Id• ( ,,,.,,,.~, .111,,1111 ""l•"•J. FOfll CONSUMER INFORMATION-CONTACT Esthctr Cr•mer, Dir•etOf' of Consum•r Aff•irt 777 S. Harbor Blvd., Le H•bre,CaUf. 90&J1 ' • I I • • \ • • ,. : Mental Peace . ·Helps By DR. STEINCROHN .Dear Dr. Steincrohn: I heard an interesting J"adio program in which it was suggested that control of the mind can ' cure cancer. I s there I anything to this? -Mrs. r c. COMMENT: I heart! a ~imilar program recent· iy. l agreed with many of ·:the points made. In my own practice I've 'found • it undoubtedly true that "patients who can induce a state of tranquility and ? less tension can help ; their illness problems. For e xample, I 've found this true in pa- tients who suffer from u}.. DOCTOR IN THE .HOUSE ;cer, hYPertension:-heart disease, diabetes and other major illnesses. ~ .J,essen their tension and ~ they a meliorate (not • necessarily cure) their ·~~~:~n~AN LOWER ";heir blood pressure. · .,.E.~en spill less sugar in ~ their urine. · ~ t But, as is often the <Case when a good theory 1s expounded, the practi· l': tioners oJten go over- . ~ard, in .. their claims., ::oie o.pe I heard on the to.radio promised t·hat her . method of relaxation r.io:ouI<I. cure cancer. Such statements im-l· mecijately lessen the ~-eredibility of their other : 1 claims. And they. ibstill' r 'alse hopes in people who .-re sick enough to ·F• «.quire medical attention 1t'ather than f 3ith cure . • ~. N~'fJ:Jt'l;KE(.US .• , faith m recovery can tie t <\uite helpful in the course of many illnesses. r Surgeons have told me tliat patients who are op- ~mistic befQre actual . 1 ~urgery do better than o~ose who are "sure they -..:are not· going to get' ('Well.'' - ~.Years ago, Dr. ·eoue ~rtad 'the need for op- .1 timistic expectatiori 1ri. p8tients who were ill. It J went like this: "Day by day in every way I am , get.Qng better and bet· . 'ter." · ' :':-And patients did im-" :, prove because the mind f has a powerful effect up- on body functions-.. Modern-day variations are called biofeedback r.Md Mind Control. As I 1 ~iay ;. they have their •ytace in helping people. .. IN TIDS COLUMN I ; have at times put forth ~ my own variation on the ~ theme that the mind can help the body: "Faith is ,a powerful antidote eagainst illness. Keep re- .;peating and believing, "I ewJLL get well," If you ~ELIEVE, you h elp ~our d oc tor AND yourself.'' " But when I hear that ~ relaxed states of mind also can cure cancer, ~ch overly optimistic , theorists turn m e ort. It is like throwing mud in rthe eye of the innocent .believer: MEDICALETTES (Replies To Readeni l . Dear Dr. Slelnciobn: lty doctor says I need an operation. 1 h2ve what be calls a fallen bladder • Which ii giving me ymplom• o! frequeni !!ttrtiii" on and burning. Ill. ....... lt~ -Mrs. t • Wednetda . Se tember 10, 1975 97c· FORMER TOP HITS ALBUMS Guess Who. Rock1n; Wayne Newton, Daddy Don't You Walk So Fas1, Perry Como, Dream Along : B. J . Thomas , Songs: Herman Hermits, Hrnd On! 1'7 SUPER SPECIAL! 8-TRACK TAPE Bdl W1!he1 s, Live al Carnegie Hall: Charlie Rich, Enter1a1nmen1 Ctlarlle Rich; Fats Domll"lo, Here Comes Fa1s Oom1110; Jerry Lee Lewis, A Living Legend Jerry Lee Lewis: ·Johnny Cash. ano more! 1'7 FAMOUS ARTIST STEREO ALBUMS Badhnger . Badhnger, James Last. M.0 R . Black Oak Arkansaz, E'11rly Times; Elion John. Friends. Oannr,' ·Davis and the NashYll e Brass. Dottle West and mOfe! ' . 8 TRACK TAPES 297, • WOMEN'S FA$fll8N , COTTON KNlr TOPS ' • • PRE-WASHED IENIMS RAG or SADDLE.STYLE Solt: curvy toppings o1 beau!iJu! co non kn11 and a Thnlty easy· Choose horn oor 2 pre-wasl'lecl cotton denim styles. Saddle style . ; ...... . r• . JI> ,,. I ; SPECIAL BIG SAVING .ON ' PHOTO FRAMES Reg. 99' 5x7" Gold Metal Reg. 1.09 8x10" Gold Metal Reg. 1.'19 Gold Engraved L METALPHOJO FRAMES Top quellty frames in sxrl or tx10" size.s. Choos8 gold·tone beaded design Or gold-tol'11t decorated border style. Each is~tamish proof • #\ti has suede finished bacil and ~ay 'easel, • Value! -~ Richard Bens, Highway can: Gregg Allman. On Tour: Todd Rundgren . Todd, Van MOfnson: St. Dominic's Prevles , Byrd$, Byrds: Floyd Cramer. Class or '11: to·take price makes !tlem one ol lhe "lop" values ot !he w1!h modified Hare legs, belt loops & slllChed saddle seat, rag 1-'-"_'_""_· c_""°'_'_"om_'_'_'""_•_m_'_"'_'_'_"'_''_"'_'°'_"'_'_· __ L':~;;";;""";;:. -':'":""'='':;":":'.:"'::'"":'.""•""':;;:;:&:;::boc:--k-·-""'-'-'-"·---1\ SAVI,~: ' REGULAR 4.94 Dolly Panon & Pof1er Wagner, Jotlnny Mathis, UP. UP and Away! SOLID STATE POCKET RADIO Fine reception and great l)erlOl'manc:e with this \'Vindsor portable radio! Great military styling, solid state ad ion and with bllltl~ries included. -Costa fSO Santa Alla lllG.- 3.79 WESTAB 'ORGANIZER' 3-ring tri·fold binder includes a-11-inch nOle pad, 3 pocket manilla folios. A school must! ' . REG. 29.95 20~PIECE DINNERWARE SET ·Co.'elle Livll'IQWare. A sensational se~ !or 4 which includ8s: 4 -10'MR dinner plates, 4 _ 8'll" plates, 4 -18-0z. bowls & 4 cups & saucm. Macie by the world famous Corning G~ss people. 2-year repl~nl guaren,tae. dishw tale. Use in your oven too! oro • .. : ASSORTED SCHOOL NEEDS ,2.00 REG. 5.99 ~··- HEAVY ~UTY PL~STIC 32'GALLON TRASH CAN De!ux:e heavy duty trash conlainer of durable piailfc wi1 not crack or break under norn:iai use. Smooth ribbed, easy cle11n &.ex:tra strenglh wllocking lid. 101 Of •• 1 a.ou1u sac sac 89~ STAY.FREE Q.TIPS SCOPE MlllPADS cono• SWAIS MOUTll WASll FEMININE INCL 18c PROTECTION BONUS SIZE OFF .LABEL FOIL WRAPPEp TABLETS SURE Anl.,.11$1. 1~4 HEAD& lllOUlDEI RfGULAR ~ tJlTlON 7-0t. UHSCENTEO TUBE •·O~ UJ E. 17111 St. Jl251ristallf~ ~ountaill v allty M olTillltn 11r ... 11aodlfl1i.I · HilntincJfon Beach ,a& .................... , fosta Mtsa Santa Ana 2J 0-11Wi9-1406W.Eli glo llritlll I t . I I Foiilitain Valley 16141 ...... llUi gor I Westminster W1ollllloiloi If Wnl HuntinQton Beach •s~•Clllhr • " ••...OOWS IN -HllWl'Clrf tECMfT'S . ...___ 2 boll\, -- -...... 1. e':i 7room. Alley -1or -. 11e. s54,9tl0. cau IT1. ' t ASS~ ~OAN r IRYIMEADULTHOME ---- DAil Y Ptt.OT • • OPEN 'TIL 9 ';.. .. • . t· • ' MEWUSTIMG f. HAllORV.W t Spacloua four bedrqom hom•. Oualff'f carpetlno-c11hedr•I ceillng1 with •?CPO•.M . be1m•-P•rquet lloon In dinlng room a famlyt. room-lmpecc•ble 1and1c•pln;-oce1n & vairtw. ,._ prioed llt t118.SOO. c.tl 8J'3.&5!0 S-YAWE 7::f . IM nlE ILUfl'S • =l!O ec1"'1 oecu-,,.,..,-Plan 7 cautomla honw. ftOPICA&. PARJoDISE __ location. ,..,.._ Comly•-""ICIM"-'O..-t-""T'.==~~~IES.AJ181DI ~ 1. Lawn sprink*a. An•iOut 'OWner wantt Trop1ctl letting located on Quiet cul-de-11c. "O"L' SPANISH EST.ltr ~M:-oou~. 4 .u,...,., bed"OO""' ~baths. Walk.fn closets. Vaulted c:elllrigs. Mu.lve fami~ ty room with C(acidlng fireplace. Largt gourmet kltci;.n. Laundry center. Party patio ehl)anced by 1rc.plClal Excellent location In -blutfa on one of tlMt llneot greenbelts. Beautiful -P•tlo with ••cep.tlonal . 2\0-................... luooil-''-~ to $75,000. Cell 873--8S60 . • ,. ' ' fut aale~ As1ume 7% VA kttln S23,000 remt(nlng IMPECCA8L Y DECORATED. 4 bedroom. RARE FINO. taiat.nce-wlth payments at $229 mo. No qualifying! R:lm'9I dine. RUMPUS R>OM. Lott of oaneling' & OM'Nw~mll)' htlP finance °' try "250 + coacs .to new ~en. POOL IUn'OUtldld by utenreMtfy c:iowr.O ...._SeelObeli___,,..17~1700. -3CAR GARAGE.-toPM<. Finl 10 coll a-ia tolE!e! Better l'luny to see. cell 54&-2313. 4 IR.+ DIM DINE IRYINI 56190 IUYS! PrlrM Univetalty Park location. Quiet cutJOt..ue, Front a _, ,.,. pctk>s. 2 1t0ty tiled entJy. Massive brick fireplace. Formal dining. Gourmet kitchen plus breakfast bar. Secluded muter suite downstairs. Winding stairway 10 3· mote huge bedrooms plus Oenl Separate laundry room. Gorgeous greenben off patio"! Qtmant curwd drive. Just $&250 plus costs bu19 U\la lrflr)8 barg.1inl Call 752-1700 .. _ 2 STOllY -POOL IEACH-$24,000 Pifme beacfl town IOcatklinf Bike or too· to beach. All "'81nut panelled living room. AnliQue mirrored decor .. O>Zy patk> kitchen with large dining area. Refrigerator indudedt Winding • atalrcase to Queensize hideaway master suite. G;ant endoeed patio. 6% loan of S 12,600 -pay S150 mQnth. Townhome includes olympic size J)OOI & cabana. Tpke advat\tage-call 752-1700. 4UHITS MES.A $64, 950 Four bread & butter unitsf Fine Costa Mesa location. .Two-2 bf' at S165 mo. Two-1 brat S1"45 mo. Gross $620 per montft total. Oller seoo spendable on 15% down! can add a more unitsl Must see -call now 752-1700. "AIANDONB)•• . CALIFORHl.A CLASSIC . Spacious three bedroom beach home -just across from lush country dub. UniQue livlng and dining areas with cnckling country fireplace. ENORMOUS SUN SOAKED KITCHE~ SURROUNDED BY ·GLASS. Separate master and children's wings. Manicured rear grounds. Walk to school. Hurfyl! This can't last. Just S46,QX). call 963-6767. 1.UILD YOUR DREAM HOME One block from BIG CORONA BEACH in charming OLD CO_RONA DEL MAR. Prime bullding site - offered at S69,500 -call for mo~e details -673-8550. PRICI SL.AS- ASSUME-$261 PER MONnf ffM11culate Belmeadow& &tatet etd English charm of lavish wallpaper' and walnut panelling! Franciscan dining room! Galloping gourmet kltehen -spacious lam·room and-endosed"P9t1o-1Udorlft8Stfir IUlle 17 ehildren°s retreats -walk to sdlools & shopping! °"""" llOughl .__Can &07-<!0IO. HOUSE Of' CiLASS-¥1EW Country atmosphere of fields and farmhouses. adhechl ceilinga Ind WALLS e; GLASS & overlooks the coastal valteyt Enter tile ..,_..nk into pillow-like carpeting! lavi~h dining room, cozy living in Scandinavian fam rooml Sweeping rrester bdrm suit. with aeperate breakt.t Plllio:I 3 chikkerl's retrHtil ~total down!. Hurry call 8'7-8010. SU.CLIFF OCE•M V.W J • llnCl9cCfing. 3-cargarage, Tileroof,NelrthebelCh. Must 1M to8C)Pteciate. E ..Z l8f'Y!W-Call today 842-2535. . •J.IAMDOMED DECOllA TORS YILU. • $54,900 Rlmbting two story four bedroom villa teft vacant bV decorator owner. Spacious living and dining rooms chmeed in .8RANO NEW PLUSH CARPETS. Gourmet kitehen. Freshly painted and wa!lpapered thl'Oughout. Oversized bedrooms. Two master suites. Large a.k:te-tac lot Sae this rrodel today! Call 983-6787. AIAMDONID COLOHl.AL 5 IDR-Z-STOllY -RACH Winding tree lined street. Raised brick hearth. Enormous FORMAL DtNING ROOM. Bright country ldtdten. 40' COVERED DANCE PAVILION overviews sunken t8n'90e separate "hot house ... EniO)" ocean view from mullMevet grounds. 5 Jumbo bedrooms. maeter Ute Yrith bath & dormer. C'.atl 54&-2313. CAPE COO ·~· ... THE IEST VALUE ., ' IN MESA VIRDE . One--ot·a·klnd. former modal home fe•tur1r'IO :i. • bedrooms.. formal dining room. breakt•t nook and family room. With 3-car garage and appro'XlrNtefy :MOO square leat.ol living .... and priced at onfy se1.eoo. Phone 546·2313 for appointment and addltlon1t i information. bul hurryf 546-2313. i MEWPORTWATIRflOMT t 4 IBIROOM · ".·. 64' on_ the water with new private pfet I float A'~ charming naulical two story tMwport Beach home ~ of life. Just reduced thousands. Prl<led to eeH •t ll!Qr:: $1~m.ca~M;;~~:;::n~ 11~ OWMHRl44MCIO . ·7 .A Pmtloe area. T'98 studded it-. Huoe IMno ..U. Mammoth FIESTA ROOM with CATHEbR1'L CEILINGS. Warm country kltehen with orandml~ pantry. Separate SftwtnQ room & utll~ toom -1e• veranda overviews Immaculate nnlcUred Qf'OUiw:fs, ONCE IN A LIFETIME BARGAIN. F.P. only M9.~. Huny call now 5484313. • • · · ' ~ STOP!! LOOlllMG AllOllHD We specialize in reloeattng people k>okfng for tiorr.1- atl ranges available -$40,000 and up -YOU NAME THE TERMS -for -UNUSUAL HOME. cau oow to $98 54&-2313. MIWOM $$$ YllWtl ::,:' Ycw must see to believe! Spocioutl 4 bdrm• bell> In-. stigtous Dover Shores. A Hmust sell'" sltuatioR. l~ price for area. Owner must vacate. Take advantage c:alt" now 546-2313. • LAST OF A lllMD : i ~ CHAIMl.DUPLEX · • ; '· ~ ' ft:-f'OOL GOLF COURSE ESTATI + POOL New Orleans 2-stQOt. Atrrospheric country club aetting around golf course. Only bkx:ks to beach with ocean view ... 6 king ~ !ndUding 9"t_e81: ·tacillty with bathr ·Famtty .. ·ro~m-Formll dintnQ. room. Huge recreation room. Separate sewing cltnter. Balcony landing off master qusters.. Fence pool/Jacuzzi so rnucJi. mof'e. Just oome & see it Call 8"2-2535. 4 tt-IEACH Fcwnw.I doublt door entry. Huge sunken living room with massive fireplace. Raised banQuet sized formal dining room. Laroe garden view kitehen. Family entertainment room overlooks: covered summer pavilion & lerraces. Sweeping stairs to spacious master suite & childrens wing. Call now for the lowprice&E·Zlerms. 963-7881. Much sought after, RARELY AVAJLABLE N~ .Beach duplex 4 bdrm up 3 bdrm down. ~ blOQl(J.6 channel & 1 BLOCK TO OCEAN. Excellent ~ pride of ownership. A RARE BEAOi BARGAIN. Fnt . to call -gets to see itl Call~ 546-2313. • ~ MJ.IAMDONID FIXll,• •· i IEACH GIANT . ~ Walk lo I"" beach. 2..iory. 4 bedn>om flt 3 + doft..8 bath. Family room with fifePace. Raised flvtng room. Big country kitchen. 18" master suite. Utge gn:iund8 and patio. No-qualifying. Assume S302 rronth at nw. interest ind. taxes. Immediate Po6SftSiOn, Be 11t to -. $6,ZOO DOWl4 • • ~ Prif'l'it Nactl cltyt Make SSS by'euy paih1ing and fixing. ! 1, ••• < I Rare, pOOI included witb owners unit. Seller leaving state. Must have Quick sale -try any offer. S6,900 gross income yearly! Great Potential for investor. Quick, grab your checkbook and call 847...0010. "ABANDONED'' llEACH ESTATE GUEST HOUSE Plantation charm of soaring pines -fragrant Mimosa line tranQuil boulevard leading to fenced estate! Winding oottage walkway to lavish colonial entrance to perlorl Earty American. Family room with Toasty ··old world" fireplace -gourmet kitchen -elegant master & children suites! SEPARATE GUEST FACILITY rear entrance to grounds and BOAT HOUSE -vacant - QUick possession. Owner will finance -try any offer! Call 847-6010. IEACHRXER .AIAHllOMED $47.500.. Price slashed ssooo below market! Vacant-owner desperate! Needs minor paint and fixing! Soaring beamed ceilings -European kitchen. Walls of glass! Sunshine breakfast patto. 3 Monster txtrms. Steps to sandy beach & pier! Prime beach location -won't last weekend-Hurry! Cell 847«110. J~~~'t~':a-~!!~o Walk to surf. Artistic elegance is carefully blended with carefree beach community life styte. Spacious living room with massive stone fireplace and adjoining temtee. Banquet sized dining room is conveniently served from modern gounret kitchen. Interior galley. Separate wing for hideaway master suite & large diildrerfs quarters. Owner OOught another. Doesn't want 2. Must sacrifice. Call 963-7881. MIHIRAHCH AIAMDOHED 3 IR SACRIRCE-$33,900 Q:itnpleJely r~ated like a rrodel. Prime residential nelghbortiood in prestigious community. Large famlly sized living room. Country styled kitchen. Rambling grounds With fruit orctwd. Secluded rrester retreat· & generous sized children·a suites. Hurry. Priced to sell last! Call 963-7881. SPANISH AXER 31R-2STY-POOL IEACH -$21,500 large entertaining sized living .room. Kitchen large enough to prepare banoJat and large enough dining room to serve it. SyrteePing stairs to bedroom suites. Huge hideaway master. Take over 7"' FHA. NO NEW LOAN COSTS. $196/l'l"O. pays an. HURRY FIRST TO CALL GETS THIS BARGAJN. 963-7881. SOPHISTICATED COUMTRY Atmosphere -gracious l1frium fayer -hfgh beamed ceilings -formal dining room -country kitchen - •share our excitemen,-call 646-7171. • SHORECRESTTWO STORY FAMILY ROOM call. Dial 8"2-2535. : :··~ SPAMISHIEACHYIU.A , ':, PrivatefY fenced with gated entiy. 4 bedl'CIOn'I. ~ dining. Courtyard garden family room. ~'beame. Romeo master suite off glass garden atrium open to the : sky. Spanish fireplace. 'Net bar. Red ttle root FM blocka to golf course. Near beach. Take OY8f tow interest loan. No-qualifying. 1373 nonth paya alL Clll today. 8"2·2535. • . ' HOME+ IMCOME IMYESTOR"S DREAM Country living in the city. Very unique plece of~ on ~ acre. Loaded with trees. Red barn. ServJce buildings. 2 Duplexes, 2 bedrooms each, 2 story; private yards and patK>s also on the ground&. i endosed garages. Room for m:>re units if desired. Live in the home & sui::ipterrent your income. Ne•:tne beai::h. Owner w111 help finance. Call lodar tor '°""lhing dilleren~ Dial &02·2535. ~ 3 + POOi.. $3,600DOWN Light & bright airy feeling - 3 bedrooms-CCll'l'W'l'U'tf POOi -no yard work. Financing arranged. CUI w-at 64&7f7f. un;que entry to spacious formal living and banQuet PictureSQue set1ing in prime beach area. Private .assuM•-~ ~·-SIDI! rooms. Sunny gourmet kitchen. Rambling game room circular approach. Ora1TBtic entry to sunken living • A .....c ~• with oraekling fireplace. Gracious guest bath and large room. Banquet sized formal dining room. Huge 7o/o -$345 Pill laundry room. Sweeptng stairs to king size master. and gourmet kitchen. Family entertainment room with Ouiet tmelined cul de sac street -eBDfllda Cotta separate children's suites. Lush landscaping. Very massive fireplace & bar overlooks dance pavilion & Mesa -4 big bedrooms -gourmet kitchen -used private grounds.. call for appt. today! S58,500. Call · grounds. Open stairs to spacious 2nd story suites. brick & rough wood. Help create a chatmin9 • ,_...;;963-6:;;;;.,;;;.76;,;7.;.. ____ _,,...,_,,,..,~,..,,..,..-.,,..,,,.....,....,...,..,=mast-"!8<=",.'d,..•,,•,.w,,ay,..:Ow,...ner:-:""mus":":::t:-sacn-·_fi_ce_!_9_63-_788_1 ___ -I atmosphere tor very private PoOf. Oial .646-7171 fol" r appointment to see. CORONA DEL MAR SELECTIONS ,j SEA ILllE. SAIL.WHITE GARDEHGllHH All your dreams come true -two Bedroom seaside oottaoe with room to grow. Located in the Bay Shores • oommunlTy. Great location wilt'! private beaches. priced well tor quick sale at only 173.500. Call 673-8550. . . Corona def Mar. Almost new. magnificent five bedroom home. ~wo blocks from beach. Separate dining room plus spacious family room. Two bedroom rental in rear unit. All custom built. This is a new l1st1ng and must be seen to be appreciated. Call 67~550. - * * * * * * * TOP PRODUCERS * * * * * * * • IETIY IUR.URT • RANDY FOX • PHYLLiS IRVINE • IRVINE JOHNSON • ANNE KOEN MIMI RANCH 'J MAXI VALUE • Private drive to secluded ranch house. Rambling l'ftllin house includes three big bedrooms. parlor, and farm Jdtchen. Brick terrace leads to sprawling ground9 covered with fruit trees. Price indudes: separate mak:ts quarters, wood shop, chicken hOuse, bird aviary. storage sheds and much much more. Get bad( to the basics. Only 151;000. Call 963-6767. Don't waitl SEAIURYESTATE ' 4 IDlt-IEACH - Quiet tt"e4Hined drive to private comer lot. Format nnfry to elegantly decorated llving and dining areas. UniQ'ua garden kitchen. Separate utility room. Spacious mastef'. children. and guest suites. Liberal use of mim:n end ., fine walfpai::iers. Covered patio. aose to i::iattc. beach, • and tennis. S5350 down. c.au 963-6767 tor rrore info. • But huny•! I •JEANINE PA9'1ETTE •MARIO PILLEGRINI •ED PENNINGTON •MARTY PIKE• COIY WARD• JEFF YOUNG • • BEACH OFFICE 1700~Blvd, &4&-7171 COSTA MESA 2790 Hltbor' Blvd. 548-2313 _., ·-... CORONA DEL MAR 332 Marguertt• 673-8060 tRVIHE , __ . 7s:l-17Ulf .... ·x l t ': . ·~ ezzledSl27 ~·;:~_Ex-'Ink Spot': ~::.:·On Probation f • F romWlreServfres PriDce Bobby Jack, former member of the Jnk Spots singing group, pleaded ,Wlty to embeu.llng .'121 from a musicians' union he headed In Albu- .~ue, N.M. and wu gi\len thrtt years proba·, -. • U.S. Dblricl Judge Howanl Bntlon cranted 1 J)r'Oba~1on after Jack's attorney told the court a ~ychiatric report indicated incarceration would be 1destructive'' to Jack as an individual "I deeply reiret the wrongs I c~used " Jack ta1a lhe judge. ' . ;... .. " . .. . Npyen Cao Ky, former premiei-and vice Presi· .:..~.of.South Vietnam, will begin his-eollege-spea.k- ·J·ng tour next week at the y'!_i.v~rsity or Virginia, the un- • .JVers1ty announced. · ~-Ky will speak there Sept. 17 , bn Soulb Vietnam's struggle and fall in a speech entitled ''1955-1975 -The Turbulent Twenty." , Ky lives in Northern · •. Virginia. . ,, Jerome H. Hollanid. a former U.S. ambassador to ~weden, has been ~ppointed national vice ~:dlBlCman o! the National Council ot Christians and • Jews. • --~,--------~ Holland, a former (, PEOPLE J president of Hampton ~nstitute, served as am· '----------bassador to Sweden from 1970-1972. He received the ~ council's highest honor, ~.~he. Charles Evans Hughes award. in 1972. Holland 11 a.former All-A merican football player at Cornell. • ,. .: •. ~eer_ executive Joseph Coors assured senators ... ~ if b1a nomination to the Public Broadcasting ~· is approved, he will not ~"'me it as a vehicle to censor ... "Views opposed to his con· .servative political beliefs. He also saw no conflict of fn. -~·-~ -·~M ~-~ .. • ·fhc:t bis t.,o.year-0ld Television -\....../ ~ News Inc,. ~cause he said TVN ~ i. i 1)ttSents only "hard news" and ) P.BC does not. The S7-year-0ld executive -"1.-lfill vice president or the Adolph COOltS Coors Co. of Golden, Colo., is one o( eight nomina· ti"'!" w lhe PBC board. PUBLIC NO'l1CE PUBLIC N0'11CE PUBLIC NOTICE _,, HOTICI!: TOClt•DITOlllS N0.A-MM4 SU,.t:lllOlt COURT 01' THE STATt: 01' ;CAl..IPOllHIA l"Olt THt:COUHTYOl'OllAHGE lft the l'Nlt•r of tr.. £11•1• of MAL!IEL M..~WILLIAMS, 0.c•Med. Nolle• h l'lt••'Y 91-..n lo trtdl!M'i '""''"" tl1lm1; 191ln'it ,,,. wk! .-U· Otnt to Ille' 'Illa tl1ln1'i fl\ 11'1• Olflc• of lhe clerk ol 1111 •lor•w!a court or to pr-I tMm 10 U11 _,,14_, 11 IN ollk1 of ALFONS BAUER 11'1<1 MILO MARCHETT £, JR., 11 ) MoNrch 811 PIMI, s.i1t1 101,. In tfll Clly ot ~ N1g.,..i, In Or~ county, wnoc:h tltl•1 ol'llc1 ts h pl~• Of ~I-of lhll..,.. Otn19...a In lit m1t11r1; Pfflll"l>lng to 'illd 1~1111 5u<h cl1+mt w1tn tn. ""'"wr' "°"',.'' mu'il o. 111111 or l)rt"llH!d 1~ 1lor1t1ld wHhlr1 lour ,.,...,,n. 11\tr thll llr1t publlc•Uonol tn1s r!Ollt•, 0.lldJ.u;uUJI. lt1S OLl'lt: M . RQL!ll,.INO E•Kulrl~ of lhil WUI of wlddK•oent ALfl'OHS lAUt:lt 1tt41 Mll..OMAllCHt:TT•, Jll • Antnw~ll ~W l~ll lly P'llU W•IN U,.. HllMI, ~Ill. tt•n Pl,lbll-Or•n-:.. (OIU 01Hv PllOI, Aug. 17, Ind Sept. J, 10, 17, 197) Ull·1S PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUllLIC NO'DCB PUBLIC NO'l1CE ·-HOTIC• TOCltt:OITOftS ....... ..utt SUP't:ltlOll COUltT 01' THE STATt: 01' CALlllOllHIA l'Olt THt:. COUHTY 0" OftAHGt: In Ult M1t11r of lh• t:1tlt1 of DOMENICO CIVFFO, O.c11tM, Nolle• It hlrtDr gl.,.n to cAC1Uot1 hl\llfllJ ti .. _ •91111\1 the .. Id dil'al· °"'11 lo flit t•ld cl1lm1 +n the otlk• ol lhl cllrk of Ute •IO<'"itW l.:1 COUl'I or IO pr11;.111I !him lo Ute unatr11""° 111tw office of JEFFREY 1 . OL!IERMA"I, '!'° WhSl'I!" 81\"CI, SUl\t 1420 In !hr 0\y ot LOii Ange••s. I" LOii AllQlle~ County, WftlcPI 11111r ot1k1 11 IM pl1U of °""""''' of t,,. unO..-slQroecl In 1H m1n1rs pert•lnlnt to wkJ est•-· 54.lc.h ct1lln$ wllh lllt' tlf<lttllt'I' -.cl1Pr$ muit bl 111.a or preS1nt•d •1 -. .. oc1 wllP1l11 fo11r monlhl 1ll1r ,,,. lir~t put11!,1tlotl of this 11ol lc1. c.1.aAuguit2•. 1t1s S.(Vl"il'f P•clllc N•llOtloll 81n~ • Mliot\.11 Dll'lktr\Q lli«llllOll E•e~utor of theWIH o!Ul,,(leeedenl Jal'f'lll:Y T .o•t: llMAN JUOWltllllll'fi l1¥d... UIA ..... I, Clttit. Pullll~ O••noe C:o.111 Dallr Piiot, Allll. Z7. ancl S!pl. l, lCI, 11, ltl~ ;i::JOl.I ~ PUBLIC NOTICE I• '"ALOHA. EVERYOHE11 " . . . ~ . : .. . : . . . . . ., '"'.~ . .. ·J •• •''· '·. . : ..... ~ . , .... ' ' , ,., ... ....... 1• ..,,,,1•" • ~·. ' "''"' ,., Welcome to the world of the Hawaiian Luau ~n~edby Tiie Saddlebac:k Bocrd of Realtors • Saturday-Sept. 13 • 7:00 p.m. lo 12:00 a.m. • Ccrousel Room at the Hewporler Im • Door Prizes • ""-. PubRc Is Welcome • ' 1st DOOR PRIZE: A WEEK FOR TWO 'N HAWAII The ev1'"ing will include dinner, an Hawaiian noor show and dancing. In addition to the 1st Door Prim of a ~ for two In Hawaii, many other dOOr pl'tas wlll be drawn. Door prize tlc:Qta •are a 1.00 eech oc six for '5.00. Dinner .tlcketa art1 1M1flill>Je from any eommjttee mem&,S for 10.00 CAU. IJ'i.tlOO a II' 6IOO SEE YOU Tt&i- 11 ALOHA'i' 1 PUllUC NOTICB I I ftJBLIC NO'l1CE • • -·--Ml•" .... S. __ jH1•MFor~ · .. ........... , •.••••• :-:1···· .. •••••• .. ••••••• .. •1•0.. IOOJ 91•:.. 1001 ·-···-······-··~!('-.. •··-··--·-· llaOADMOOll ll4U'f This sparklln,g 4 bedroom, 2 story home has got to be on.e ot the mDtlt de· sir11ble ln Harbor View. nie master bedroom loob out over Bay &: Ocean. The absolutely beautiful landscaping boast.s a putt!Qg gre&i, f15h pond I< decking. Well priced at $121,000. It's a beaut! U~IVUI: liCMt:S REAL TORS•: 675.f!OOO 2443 East Com: Highway, Corona del Mar . • IG•...... 1002·G-• 1002 1 ••·················~··· ···•··········•········ UOOISU Waterfront 4 BR., S ba., rumpus rm. . Pier & floi1t. sandy beach. ~.ooo ' lleaut. 6 BR, 5 Ba, or 4 BR, 4 Ba with 2 · BR, 1 ba. Apt. Sandy-beacb;-courtyard, Reduced to $265,000. -Attr. 4 BR., 3 ba., Lido Soud. TI Ft. waterfront, sandy beach. $275,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 3-l l Buy,•d• Or•v•· NS b 7S blbl I Gt•ral I 002 GIMt'Cll. I D02 \·············· .. ······· ....••••............... ' PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP ... will show when yotl own this spacious 3 bdrm., view home in Cameo Shbres. Formal dining rm.; view den; &: family rm., overlooking lovely pool area. Priced for quick sale at $157 ,500. Vl~AR BAY ANO BEACH 675-3000 - 240! f COAST MWV CORONA OEL MAR b llo•H .... s.-111•" ... S* )'l!!d111j!J,!!!p-bor1Q,tm ll'• DAll.VPtLOT • ••-••••••••• .. •••••••" ••••••••••••• .. •••.-••• ....... ,.,.S. llJU ...... .,.. tfllfft'-'°~ , ... '"..,~ . ,_.S. •11114 1002 ••• .. · IOOI , .. •-••••••----•-••••••••••••••••_. ••111•••••••· ..... -~[o ··-·······--.... •••• .... _. ... _ .--····· .. --., ........ ·-············· ..... 1111 ....... • ... C-.W... ...,.,.. IOU •11lr~ . tMI * * DUPLIX• * •••••••••••••••••••-.. •••••••••••••--...... ••• .. •••••••·--..-•• .................... _ ............... --·; oc~ vMDaMAlllT 111CU1W1'Mo1• ~~ SAU.CASH$ ~ • rurol•'•d l·""'•m. · fORTIU!AUA Ot&'t'l67,,.. SHOillS ;;(!.!:._~~'11:'2.~t. . '·'· ' -. . . 'TAYLOR CO. 1, i. \ 1 j I 11 '' ' I I ; I; _,. PWT T Mal&-....... Beaut. "Wide opm spa-.." Vlew of bad: bay. Prof. decorated ltllidllY up- grailed. Walled patiog, lge ,1ot,_lam rm w /Wet bar. 3 Bdftns, IOrmal uR &: 2'>; ,baths. s"'ac!Olls end unit In Bluffs. JlllS..J11IE ... ._ ' H11""W""IPOIJnri C"4'111-tU. 644-4910 • • ...., 1'wo 1--+ -L•~o famll• boroe ' PRJCC .II; EDI la u~. e,, • apla, Gara&•• Ii --s• -· " -•r~ • briP& balco•I••· S•m • •pllY.tltda.11111-or --lbaU.. ~ 11 • IMSTAHTCASH .; mer/wl•ter realal•. nda1.,..vp. formaldla.lQ:naD.plm I be4room. •fl.ID 1 ForY ........ ' ..! 0.-wlU u.1e. Priced b~ , PYUMD ~ m. .. 1=..o;i:: =•i:'amt la = F1aU 1ppt ..... -,,J. •ll11$.IOO -11rs'US.l76' l! IT All ort1i1op1 sbapo.JPatlol -1o ea11 .... r ... 11ee .. -.. m-.s 5*1Sn~ 51.... ~ Ua ·=•-= '°"'Art£'~~-tlon. Aat for JlJD ,.,._ ,. suai::,. to 11' llNUll:TT Nldlolo. lllllffaLL•ocC4••w• YA. Cab L • ~.,....,_ • Cefttury21.-l IAS't'IUGAMCI · -......... 1· il. c~,~=:,0=:r:'4~ ~52'1 ... -'1'.S:eHt t~.·.tN~~·~:.~ie;i 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1-•ad """" Wl4e $411.900. 551411" •• ,, ·-belt+bl.Y-11 ..... ,..... 1006 . • HAADTORHD 8drm1 .• 2Mt ba. DbL ·-•••••••••••••••··-· D-Pohtt IOI& associated .. .. . .. ~ ' -. . . formal dlnln& f1itPU'9te SIMGULIY& br, rant.. inc. All Ju». Aveil ..... oa•d~ famil.l room 4' larc• l.Jada ld:odel · 38R..Zba. SlM.,$00. By ownr. 212 In Dana Knolll·18'14Ba· 4. 8EDROOllS-wlth patlol. Now*11,1'5t ., NEW Deluxe Dplx. 4 le 3 ••••••••••••••••••t"I.•• lilt•li•• eatll>JI area. BriJbt e1ICI uftlt bt b<old ' D11mOlld,11s.a. I.rs ya~ w/paved ..,., GalllNI _ ICIOJ GaMr~ IOOZ QaMom fu\Urel t.hruout rolliDI 1reenbelt, l .. a•P• tzdr 1007 ortrlrstorage ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-··••••••• Jnclu4li covenid paUo, orl1ln..al aeciloa . · • DELUXE DUPLEX -cu1tom. wallcoveriQI, 'l>r'a.maUc espmed. beam I07 KAlllGOLD AV'f!.. ••••••••••·~•••••••ci••• .r..,. CALIFODIA 411.FAM.iM. and up1r•d•d ap -celnn.11.t'lS,OOO -CorooadelM.arJuistane , LARGE.CBDRM sale by owner, ~an-• UHCta · ._..-.00. ptiaaca. A INlltaeeal Ill b&oektolbeocunbeack. $1JO,l(D ap~. uk· vlew.Openlloulo~lc. ONLY MS,000 1-d~;: No. Coate IS4,ICIO.Call?40-IUl C. f. Col8SWOI ~ Frooch doon open to iaallll.--Suo. 2 .. Sl LaC..,ta,. •M ---' • 0 flU(eChlnneebnalhad• '81-7a&:9 '•I St<ps101hor,•Dina""'11er. Mesa. Huvylhal<e~. ......... 640-00 lal the brick...,. and Dela•-...,.c -~.,....,. '10•4 Bil beaut (uJ -College bltm.Nv'd.patlo. 1 Wood p u 1 :-~ ~ "' ParkhOm~. lfyouhavea DOVERR&\LTY Wl'RILOOKJN• awn. U ane .0 d' Near Bay 6 Ocean.••••••••••••••••••••••• bo•t Of cam~Ulil cnay Sheryl MS-907 beam eel Alo t>ellt Complete1,y redecorated .•.. ,,. l -·· 1 ·~~~;;.~~~~,;~~~~~;;;;;;;1 ··roraltade,ortndeson noon• picture windows 1c laodacaped w/auto -c be or yo u. • •o.Q IO\lely a 4 moalb old completely add charm to lhis three ai>rtln. New rJ)t. dnr.pa, •SUPER* . ~=~>1 11~~=ki:i:::.2&g.~ IEFUlllSHll> cuatomlzed Spytla11 bedroom , lwo bath ille. l69.500. Exocptk>nal Transferred F,.xec...•QR. &· 8 C'07.Y fireplace. Thia~ Bdrms .. JIM. b,a. +-MlWCUSTOM home.$8$,000.Equity. bome; three car carag1 rlaaaclna. 1826 w. FR. Jrg rec. rm .• r-:eL .1 1 1 11 loci , added boo\.15 rm.; 1n the JIOMES-2 beautiful JACOISREALTY pl'u1 paneled hobby Balboa Blvd. Open ban. 3 ca.r Kar. f'l:'etn . wo "5 · ca •>· very finest cond. Beaut. new quality Wit euslom 61& 8870 oo:n TWO LEGAL s.• Su lZ s' l)on G ....... cor lot won't la1t •al 9491 ho rl I · r · ~1 n · · •~. -.1~. Call...,•-. Art· · · Monticello. with pool & roes ne• n1 comp e-LOTS make thia a best Brier. 6'13·3891 ---....., Walker & lee Raal fstute clubhouse. $34.500 lion . Custom qua.lily WALK TO IEACH buy at $121,.600. 5 PM 839-MSB -""'• •k VIST A''SUBTE everywhere you look. From this tpacious 4 Bayfront Condominium 2 for Ed Barber • o,; The Bluffs, N.8. l·Level BuynowandchooleyOUI' bdrmSbat.hfamilybome 'TIT-CORTLAND DR., Br I Ba, DR, pool, dk, .. f'-+ ..C..·tMO lbdrm .. 2ba.endunitin favorite carpet color. wltb Jusl under3,000-. Cameo Hlgblanda ; seeurity213-384-4283 49F--r• • " Pool alui Iota wlth olf -Fteahl lnted fre&hl.Y •••••••••••••-••-...,. _;.......:====='--l A·l cond. Vacant; ready street trailer parklng. n. of comfort. c.omptete. dra-1, ,;:, ..... ~ .. __._. Bayview. walk to beach . • ... MESA DB.MAI forimmed.occupancy. PreaUgious·Newport ad· ly remodeled. Only fr f~b fruit"~.;;: $72,500. 2 Br, Z Ba, + L I Glen MaJ ·Bil, bif 5 bedroom. 3 dreu. Call -11S1 tw $69,SOO. MS·l71L Open SpacloUI patio I< ,.,n1 )\iru. 17 .. 7961 by owner. 0Y8 Y ' • tfath. two-story.onquiet morelnformaUon. Evu. ... areal; four bed.room Openllousei·SDaily. Juat reduced on•y 5Lreet, E·Z walk to shop· home or three a. c.ui.vert.-313 E. Bay $31,950. Gre•t 3 bedrtiom, pin9-aod all schools lbni ed den. Prlttd bes&. J.n t~ bath home with lQL'4 College. Full price YAUE.Y REALn areaat$15.IOO. ~BAYVIEWCONDO• ot extru. Fresh paint&. ~.OOQ.C/\LLS*~ ·-s ~~~~~~~~~r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~J •Bed zn·"• o1rpeL1. Covered pello . • SELECT . PRl~1 102 ACACIA. South of * room, .. ~ Nlc=e •rea. CklH to ev-er-* SHORECUFFS HJgbway inve1tment •Pool,Sundetk• y t ht n g • 0 w n er ;;;;;;;;;P;;R;;O;;;P;;E;;;R;;;T~l~E~S;; 0 , e • n v i e w . 1 us h EASTSIDE FHA APPllAISED buy. Older home oo R-2 •Sltp Available• transferred &anxlousf NEW LISTING OCEANFllOHT Delu'xe duplex + guesl room + extra parking, S159.~! CALL 67$.7060 ,ER l ~.~ 1-~ n lot B~ a1·~·-'1pn'ce •2CarPar'ki!l8* 11111 I lal1ds~aping plus 3 b4:1rm . FIXER UP ... a ..,. ,...,... .-w... · · _.,, "!"~'~ ~ ho · of home. 4 bedroom. 2i,; and but d yourdelwr.eun· •Adult Bktg-$88,000•r h\'d &'dining room me in Needs work but creal baths, lar&e family room it& lat.er. Juat about lbe . Olive Wiaaenborn. Rltr 9e2~4'71 ,;:_: 54 • lovely Shorecliffe . potentlal.3Bdrm,lbalh wllb bltn bar, Uving lowntavailab&epriceat~~~~67~$~"1~60;~~~1~~~~~~~~~ $189 500 house on R·2 zoned lot .•. E~CH with room roradditional room. dining. Eating $1M.OOO. •IY0-.1. .. area in kite.hen . Colt~Now-t I 2BR, BA. n GE unit . Only $34 ,900. ......11 .,.. r-Edna ce. 2 on BeautiCu.l Deane Bras . CO A ••• 7711. Open Eves. Hardwood Doon. •• Y l•4111on over wide lot. $80 ~ Walk to surf and Lido.,..,.. alr conditioned. Won't ""'E ~~~ /W~ d . bome •• br,2ba~2. ', s~ops fram this cute 2 lutaLlbiaprit:e! ~1.o1167·~51•1••T • 5'0·l571• eye& •• 1 "veryprlvatea GOV,. OWNS> A'E -" gq 87lH31l with elegant I • bdrm. 2 bath cottage. UPERB ~--~-•u-l022 paUoo,loenLry,Foa Hunt. Bch 3 Br, 2 ha $62:500 J ~llRI--- 1 home.$34,900Lodnpyt. 'co· M POOL. OMES THComlel"I.... ···············-······ ~·!,!e mb~~L'!~ ~~· C4LLSSM800 • • • ··u ~an ••• -·~~·· HOME 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;j,... c.....,. NB Mt•MSS Invites your bid ca tblt. -,. By owner, Prin. Only. Balboa ll-. Prnn.. I• lovely view home in 4 II D~ -1 900 862-J Roa'ii:..." -~ Quaint COM cottage. z SrARKUNG Irvine Terrace, Lhe Udo SO.OFIAYSIDE ~ • · . "'~~~~~~~~! bdrms, 2 baths plus pool. USTSIOIR Jetty barbor~v'lew is viii·' with a 3 BR, 2 BA rental. Great starter or retire· Extra .. large master METICULOUS ble from the hnae li\llna 'h $66500 -Only ii,s years old. EASTS.DE men~ ome. • 72.25 bedroom In this re· .. is hardly the word for room,• dining ·room & Featuring beam ceilings, CALL 6 75-modeled and enlarged this la\llshly refurbished master BR suite. (lt has natural wood and brick $30,500 home on qu.iet cul-de-sac home In Harbor View 4 BR. 3 Ba). Here la how textures and perfect with mini.view of Back llills. Designed &: de· to bid. First impect lhe , __ 1.ion. Call....___7211 . R2aJ. Estate. Perfect starter home, Bay. Bright and clean. co rated by Dorothy home ; If you like it, """ '"' '{'O"""" byMtNJ«•' ,' · needs a lillle·fixin'. Fan· Call today for appoint· Wilke. The lot is 210 n.. make an offer. tr your of"· . -. - tastlc in vestment. Call l ••& ••~ ( Is · I ~ lo"' • .~ii~~~~~~~::::::::~1 -a~·~~·r~~~~~~~:111gg~~lllll men ...... ·-· wide, orfering an un· er sat1s .... -..ory '"''e TH SETTING '" obstructed \liew or bay & conservator, it will be E FOREST OLSOH IMC. ocean. This mint condi· forwarded to I.he court SUM :' ~ tion residence offera for approval (no pro-1~========-t .. b•the9 the beach j!J.$,. NOW IS THE TIME for job 1eekers lo check the Daily Pilot i-lelp Wanted classUic.ation. lJ BIG CANYON gorgeous ganlens with bale). That'• all then> I• SHORECUFFS H.B. location. £~y IY oWMEi Open Wed 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 greenhouse,4 BR.--Zba.lt to it. Truly • rare op-v t 3 Bedrm. z bath malntenanee )'-artl. • the job )'OU want is not there you might consider ofrering your services wilh an ad in ~e Job Wanted cate~ory . Phone 642-5678 ERRORS: AdYerfisen •hould chedl llleir ads daily DGd report ... ...,... imme<liately. The DAILY PILOT as...,,.. UoiiiUly far""' !int .... corTect insertion only. Gorg,_eous stone & stucco j. powder rm.; 2 frplcs.; 1o'°s"ee""i.ltt.y. Call flX app'L wa~. Ocean & eanvnn brand ne 1 w n~ng,~f.R 4 Br. home. Highly up-12•5 FRESH•-~W! Jibrary With special of. .'.....,._Tr m~-pot"~ carpets. Owner mWv_-t .. graded. Divorced &mo,·-376 RowerSt. •~ • fice closet at. exquisite view. e ~ eel 968-4456 • ing. Situation worth Upgraded3br.Zbahome. foyer. Call ror app't. to Ual.AskinC$139.SOO.Agt. THERELUCT.ANr LhouS8ad$ to buyer. Pool+ 4 C.Gcr. Built-ins, 2-car garage see. $183 ,400 875-8900. Worth $195,000 -wiU take are just 2 or the features w/ enclosed back yard. COZY 2 br house 00 R·• IUYER ' $169 ,500. Ci:lll 644-2466 in l h 1 s sec I u d e d One mile rrom beach. Id · t t•I• Eastside. Costa M('Sa. 3 Low upkeep yard. Walle COM~ANY lot, room ror other unit .•. wou Jump a '' · NOW ! . b••droom home. Other d l • K'"ALTOllS $71,000. Owner67:J.4199 price. Newly listed Ii' will G<Mrel . 1002 G.......i 1002 ... to own own par.. r:. l ..!~===:.:.:.:::..:=-1 sell quick! 4 bednns, 2'h appointments include $45,000. Our best value. SINC£1944 BYOWNERlg,38r,2Ba bat.ha ; 2-Story; vtew...o( •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HOME ON C·l sh utters. charm,. panel-CaJltOsee. COM~ANY ~~~~6~7~J..~4~4~0~0;...,.~~I + den. North of Hwy. park! Mlle to betlJch . ,_ Located on 19th Street is this older 2 bedroom home & garage. Lot is 48 xJ 40 d ee p . Cal l now .. .it's a real rind. ing, s tone fireplace. 5l6.a8l6 .. Rfo~ALTORS 968-«56 '' hardwood Ors, custom SINCE l94-1 $'19,750644-2877. .. '' kitchen & dining area. a-m~ 671-4400 IAHCHSTYLE 2Cozy1Brhousesoneor-HlLLTOPlBr,2ba.,trp\c, macnab I Irvine realty Garage would be ideal =I -'· loi , .' ·;· _ $62,900 ner lot, Part. furn . corner lot. By ownfr. ror studio or workshop. ~"""'"""'="'" Palos Verdes stone $87,500. 10% down. $48,500.962·2798. , 0 n e -or -a -kind and galore. This beautiful 4 Owner/Broker. 673-2823 nestled on ll5' deep lot. MOUNTAIN bdrm z bath 1lngle story $33,500 Close to 17th St. shop-1•-------•I home has over 2,000 sq. BY OWNER ping. Call now for •ppl. AUTUMN ft. Can be purchased aul> Dl11rft1 ScM ' $39,950 ~~·4?-uif COUMTllT KITCHEN ON THE IAY Sonny, windfree Linda Isle Lagoon. Marvelous family home w /extra playroom upstairs. 4 bedrooms, 51> baths, formal dining room, 3 fireplaces + fire ring. Dock for 3 boats. Appl. only. Dona Chichester 642-8235. <U71 l .. ANYTIME . 54<·5880 On The B& jed.. lo existing 6% VA Duplex 2-2 br units. Won't last long. so citl · lo.an.Call545-9491. Choice loc. So. of Hwy. now! On a big IOt, Beaulilul new 2 s LEAVES 1 ~fie:•·:::"°"=· ""'=·5306='---I se<luded back ynnl ;wjth -HERITAGE CUSTOM 1,EAUTY Single-level· spectacular w /4 bedrooms, family room & billiard room w /walk-in wet bar. Many built· • • REALTORS I 002 General 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ins. Great maste.r suite. $.150,000. OCEAN BREEZES Bob0wens642-823S. (U"l2l & Mountain Vie'f. FHA/VA, no 60" DOYER SHOIES IAYROHT down. 3 Yrs. old, 4 bedroom, + fami- Beauti!ully designed & tastefully de-ly room. Huge balcony for just sittin' corated. Approx. 4000 sq. ft. incl. & rocldo'. Steps to schools & park. stunning family room, formal dining $S7 ,900. Cal) 546-4141 room, 4 bedrooms. 41-> baths. out-· HERE rT IS! door entertainment area w /lovely Spacious 4 bedroom. Mesa del Mar Pool & jacuzzi. $395,000 incl. land. home. Urge family room. delightful Vee Stinson 642-82.35. <IJ73 ) kitchen, suo washed patio. block walled for privacy. Asking only EJ.CEF'TIONAL VALUE-$49,995. Call 546..4141. EMCHANTlNG YIEW OWNER ANXIOUS Almost new, quality constructed 3 Transferred owner must sell his bedroom, family r<iom home. beautiful 3 bedroom Spanish style Beautiful custom drapes & wall cov. enngs. . Spacious kitchen. Superbly hacienda. Walk to Mile Square Golf Course & Country Club from this one landscaped. Flexible Cinancing. year old home. Great for family liv· $122,000. Lois Egan~ . .(lJ.74) 'ing with 21 acre park and 3 pools SACAIFICE-HAI-Y11W HOMES nearby. $56 •. 950. ~61 Lowest priced Palermo model + im· .... l• BIG CANYON mediate possession! Located on 1 of Highly ·customized 4 bedroom the best streets -richly decorated BROADMOOR home. 3000 Sq. ft . of interior. Carl Butler642-8235. n.ns) living space includes expanded MEDITBlllANEAN SPUMDOI Dover Shores VIEW home on pool - size lot. 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, ramily room + billiard library or 5th bed- room. $159,500. Larry Dyer 642·8235. (U16) 'WWING GOLF COUISE YIEW Can be seen from mcst all rooms•in this luxurious Deane Rome. 2 spacious bedrooms each w /own bath · formal dining room w /Wet bar opening onto picturesque, gar~en patio. $132,500. Mary Lou Manon 642-8235. <U77) family room, living room and master bedroom. Professionally landscaped. Air Conditioned. See to appreciate. $171,900. ~161 DRAMATIC WOOD Paneling in entry and living room With comer brick fireplace sets the romantic mood in this beautiful 4 bedroom, 2 bath, CENTURY SHORES hO!{'!'· Can be YOURS for $t6,900. Call DOW 962-4454 COZY COTTAGE Near beach and EdiSoo Hi, less than '3 years old. 3 Bedrooms, 2 batlis, separate master wing_ .Whole home bas upgraded carpets & tasteful wallpaper. Hurry, 962-4454. Otf1ccs locat~d in Co'\to Mesa Hiatt .. qton Death -Hrwport Beach ·--- -· 4 Br, 4 Ba & Gallery 1 · party P•lio. Extra largu 2 fireplaces. wetbar ~acres -fee land. Perfect Costa MIN .... 1024 family room is g.aml! Deluxe kitchen get-away spot, llh hours ••••••••••••••••••••••• sized. Full dining J'botn, Pier for yachtlOOO' away. $12 ,950. Terms NURSERY SCHOOL sunny breakrasl aren . You may select the available. Cent r a 11 y h ea t ed . fi . h' h Pre-School, nr. downtn. 1 1 d t & 1n1s 1ngtouc e;, ••••JUMP•••• Costa Mesa. Care for 24 nc u es carpe s 67~8120. at the chance to buy one $1 0 _ t drapes, new t.itcb;?n at 00 mo. "u.IUI" oex-lloorln•. Extre mely of the few remaining pand Incl lg e lot nrly • · ' · ' · sharp! But you beUl'r completely refurbished 2 new bldg .• comp. equip. hu~, BKR,call bedroom. 2 balh single $85 ooo · • .1 Sell idle items story Townhomea ln San-Gr~ha~ Rlty 646-2414 842·8854 G_.... I 002 G .. erol I 002 La Ana . Still only $21.950. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••"•••••••~•••••••••••• Ask for Frank, 839-8321 MESA VERDE ... Pool. ...aBlll!l l•aJlll l ;;A;ge;n;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 3br,2ba.Ownermustsell I~ ·~~i TARREL~. ill . 1926-1976 VlEW UPPER BAY: Newbort Beach giant, tropical landscaping, waterfall. Staired entry, roman pillars, 25 foot family room, 3 baths, banquet dining, asking $89,500, call & save! MESA VERDE : Just reduced. Big rooms thruout. 3 bedrooms. family room, double fireplace , bu.ill-in vacuum system , rich wocxl. features, formal dining, $62,000. take advantage, call! s4o.1120 2tl5 ............ Alnclke"1 lcwtcA Home ...,. C.,,..1 ., G0Mn4. I 002 G1•ral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Kt~,\LTttKH 644-7270 CAMEO SHCIU5 ... SPACIOUS 4 bedroom, 3 bath. ."31 massive formal dining room, gourmet island kitchen, king size POOL. Third tier OCEAN & J ETI'X' VIEW! Highly upgraded. By aP,- polntment only. Presented by our ·specialists Shirley and Marshall · Rieb. Offered at $189,500. . 2121 f , Coast H. , Corona del Mar ltOMlS fQI lMNC NfTWOIHl M UI "!'' , .. lfl. lfll, .. II, .. """'.ill ,. , .. ·~"" I *$38,500* ALL TERMS 41RTowiAiaHN Luxury country living. Air conditioned. Tennis courts. Swimming pools. Large green bell. 646·3928. eves 549-1532 Lachenmyer Realtor quickly. A stea l at 1926·1976 $46,900. Make reasonable'l.-~'=======C:. offer. Vaeant. Move in at once. Pay rent until close of escrow. Call anytime for details. 548-7111 ; aft 8, 644-0072. SPANISH HACIENDA. NEARIEACH A quaint older home in :t super location. Walk" [~ (I Camino 'ilealt ~ down towering lrCi'·hnt'<l street to beaeh. l .ari:1· lot. Only $34.500. !11:).1-!Jh-:"l or 5.56· 7035. $50.000 2 BR house & 1 Br apt. 646-8853 nr 548-9441 10-12 & e\leS 1111 · •• 3-BR. formal dining,/;;;.;;;;;;;;:;;;:;~;;;,,...; l---------I nice low-traffic residen-l• tial area close to sehls. Meredith Gardens ~ We Speclalise In On The Water Near the Water Vi ew of Wat.er WJlmlFllONT • HOMES 26.llW.C.-...._ __ .... park, shop'g. ~l,000. 999 Large home, formal en· Che y en ne St. BOB try, dining rm., [amily OLSON REALTY, rm. with frplc. S<1ueakv 642-9448/546-~18 clean! Xlnl f1nanc1n~ tc::::..::.:..::=:.::..:=---1 a\"a il. Pr1eed to sell Jl For Thost ._. 40 500 S75. thousand buyers, sec Lhis Corbin~Mariin Inc.. sparkling 3 bedroom Ro-&a.--644--7662 Ranch House with ._.___. pool eiie backyard. Veteran ~ welcome-Lo down. Rltr. Call today for detai Is. 540-3666 IMPOSSllLfDREAM? 17141631 1400 ASSUME7°/o ~=======~I $31.090 Buys 2 •t y. t" sparkling home, lovely 21D FOR $28,SDO Existing $161 mo. p:t) 't includes taxes & 111- sur<in cl' 2story, hudt tn._. include d1 sh1.1.ash1•r, carpeL-;, & drapt'" (;u, ... I t'OOdilion . O"·ncr houghl. a nother home & mu~L 'N••• ...... . ., .. ,, ..... ,r • . ...... For a..lfkod Ad ACTION c.u A DAA.T '11.0T --... yd .• p ool. 646-4848. 556-7756 . sell. f1ex1 ble term.~. Uu &-itsJda r~ lhe early bird &: ~cl lht: --·...,..,-wonnnow-fast!897-0J21. 3 Large bedr.Q)S. Country 1tyle kitchen. dbl •. g•rage. Huge lot for ~ .) ~~· Subm.i~. ~down . IWjll . ~,,_,,<:,' ~· LIYEINONE ,-~.t'~ &RENTOtlE!! talrview & Biker Ck ECONOMIZE! I Cozy :\ bedrm owners home witll f~~~~S4~· ... ·~~ll~~~~1 country kitchen & chnP, I· warm wood (loors & ~arpet, 2 vanity balha, • PLUS a I BR. I BAre~l. brings in $200. per ~ Bu.ch area. 91$2-551 J ll BYOWNF.R Vnique 4br Mesa Verde home. m a ny xtr•s. ..... ""° ....... 72 \ I • • iahezzled Sl27 . ~=.Ex-'lnk Spot' ~;; .. On Probation . From Wire Sttvltts Prlaee Bobby .J.S. former member of the Ink , Spots singing group, pleaded auilty to embezilinC .~ from • muslci-' union he beaded in Albu· ~ue, N.M. itnd wu given three years proba· -.· U.S. District Judge lfowud Bntlon cranted 'lJC'Obatlon after Jack's attorney told the court a lJllyctJlatric report lndicated incarceration would be . ''d~~rucUve'' to Jack as an individual. , · I ~eeply rerrct the wrongs I caused•• Jack told the Judge. ' . .... . . . .: . Npyea C•o Ky, fo.rmerpremiei-and.vice Presi-:. dent of South Vietnam, will begin tus colleee speak- Rtng tour next week at the University or Virginia the un. · jyersity announced. ' ~-Ky will speak there Sept. 17 . bn ~th Vietn am's stnJigle and fall tn a speech entitled ''1955-1875 -The Turbuleni '.rwenty." Ky Jives in Northern · .. Virginia. * KY Jerome H. Holland, a former U.S. ambassador to ~weden, has been appointed national vice ·:.cbairman or the NalionaJ CoWlcil of Christians and ·Jews. - '-·., ... _·--------~ Holland, a form er (, PEOPLE J president of Hampton Institute, served as am- '----------bassador to Sweden from -·· 1970-1972: He received the . council·s-hi ghest honor, I the Charles Evans Hugbes award, in 1972. Holland ii a.focmer All-American rootbaJI player at Cornell. -* ,. .-'~..Beer e.r.ecutive Joseph Coors assured senators ~ if. hi.a nomination to the Public Broadcasting ~-u approved, he wiJI not · -W. it as a vehicle to censor -views opposed to his con- servative political beliefs. . He also saw no conflict or in· ter~ts between ~his nomination ·~ bls two-year-old Television l:lews Inc. because he said TVN . .presents only "hard news" and PBCdoes not. . .. The 57-year-old executive vice president of tbe Adplph coo•s Coors Co. of Golden, Colo., is one or eight nomina-°"'1' to lbe PBC board. PUBLIC.NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ........ PUBLIC N011CE fllOTIC• INYITltllO l•ALeD ... O,.OIAL.I l•IDl1 •OI "IMI CONITaUC-TION D• COUMTaY CL\la DalYI tTOaM D•AIN lllfif'\.ACIMIMT POiit TMI toUTI' LADUllASANl,.AaYDllTalCT NOTICI II Hlal•V 01\' H 1"'4 ............ t>itt(W\ •t Niii OWtkl lflwltin .,.. '111111 ""''" ""'*' ,.... ....... ~' ...... ,,.. IMlut ti' 11 :• """'"""' lttll...,. .. "'"' ....... '"" ,., fw'lll"'""9 to t.tld Oktrlct .... , ".......,•llttl. _ .. ,i.11, ~ ltbor, Ml"Vktl, •nd MIOCllitl """"""' WI con•lfll(l IDI' IAIG 011lrlct, MIO-• tt wt>l<ll U"" wie Pt'9"•tll ""II 19 ..... k. • ., ...,,,.. ~ ··-••l'Ud ti .,. eHl!C• ot lr.f ~II L'flllW: SMIWY Obtrkt. JtM2~A......­...,...i..t_., CA. ntn $tlcl 111'5 U..tl (Ollllll'!n t• tlld t.. ~·.,. to '"-eon1r.c1 ooc..,..nt• kw Ykl _,k •• htt"t11'I01'1 tPQ11!WtObJ lol~ Ol1l•i<l t11G tl'IUll '-tc:C~llod by t .. M<Uf lt't r•t1rrM110 ! ..... tin. c.ooi.t 01 IM con1rtc1 OOC:UFTWN1 .. .., tli.tllld ~Y b41 t••ml......, h'l lt>I ot· lk • M 1111 Dl•lrlcl lt>d 111 IM ottlu ot Boy it Efl••-•lno Corp0<1llon, tM1 OW.11 llrMI Htw .. rt h1ch, CA. t1"° (.oploe\ ,.,., b9 O(ll1IMO lrom lol~ DIMrkl, TM DIUrlcl r1qu.\h that the1' ,. •'1...,,.., In 900Cf c-lllOfl wlll>ln 0 Ciay\ Iii.' lNP Opefl!IWJ ot 0101. \JnOtO" -P' O'll1loll1 Of lllt CtlUorllMI ~ C:-, fM 6fffd ot Olrt<:ll>l'I 01 \lie! Ol1t•kl "'' dtllrmh1o10 IN! Pl'•· ~•llifl9 fllt ol wtqt• !or'"" 1«.tl!lr tn wllkll IM -•II II to tN ~·tor.....t l'I coflt1l....O In,,,. -c1flt1ll0'>1 F'uolllllfd Or1noe Col•I 0111y Plkll. 5oftrt. S, IO, 1t1S :MOS.-IS PUBLIC NOTICE . .... ,, HOTtCf;. TOClltl!DITOlltS NO. A·Ms.M · tUl'l llt IOllt CC>UflT OJ' TME STATI O• CALI l'C>lltNlA K>ll THI! COUNT., Ol'Ofl.ANGE In Ult Mlll•r ol \M £••••• OI Mll8El M. Mt.WILLIAMS, O.c11wd. ~Utt 11 hl•lb' 111.,.en to cr~llor1 IY'llfl9 cl•I~ 1111ln'I lllt Mid diet· del'll 10 1111111d t.l1lnl$ In Ill• otflt• of lllf clerk ol lhl 1lo••wld collrt O• 10 pt-I ll>em lo !I'll undlrf,IQtMo<I 11 the olf!(I ol ALFONS 8AUE.R Ind MILO MARCJiETT£, JR., 11 l MoNrch U.w Pl•i1, ~1'9 101. It! t ... City OI ~ N!QUIH, In Oftn91 C.Ounl y, wr.."'1 i.11ar olllt• It '"' l)IKI ol bU$IM$\ ol the un· den.IOMd In 1U m11te•1 ~•l11n1nljj to •lld tUllt Suer. cl•lm\ w•lll !hi ntcl\""' ~ouc:he•t mu•I IHI liled °' ""'enled .., llfo••,•kf within lou• "'°"T"' 11ter the I or•! l)Ubllctllon ol lt'llt noilct O.led AL>Quti 21. 1•1s OLIY£ M RD81,.lNG E•l'(ul•u of Ir. Wiii of '1lddec10.nt ALJ'ONS•AU1Eft1 .... WLO lriU.fl.CMETT•, Jfl. A-M'(lltUw J,,.....,cll••.,~1•11 '"'M"' l..-it Ml9 .. I, C:.111. t24n Publl,,_ Or•nge Co1•I OIUJ Piiot. AUQ. 27, Ind Sept, J, 10, U, lt7J U:Ol·IS PUBLIC NOTICE STATEMENT 01' AllAN DON Ml!: NT O"UIEO"' flCTlTIOUS •USINE$$ NAME The tollowl1111 ~r'°n' hiive ttwn- ~ lhe U\.I Of Ille llCU1oOU$ ~lflH _, ' tt.rbo!rt H•wll.ln• R111to•t, «lO Eatl Hin Strttl, Coita M111, C111tornla '"'' Tr.e Flcllllou1 Bullne'' Name ••· ll't'rt'd to 1bov1 •I• 111e0 1n Drln(le County on Mll•cll 12, 19/J Trl H1rbor Re1llor1. In( .. «XI Etil I 1tl'o STrnl, Coit• Mell, 01 llornlt '1611 l 1111 bull""' Wll COAd\IC'.lld b., I (Of. llO"lllon. Tri HtrbOf Re11tor,, Inc. !h: s,1v1 Krom1dnlk,Sec:. Tiii$ $late1n1nt w11 IHt'd will! IN County Cltrk ol Or•nge eounc, on Augu'.t.I :rt,·1•15, ,.,,., PubUsllold Orenq. C911I Oall~ Pilol, 5'tpl1mtier J, 10, II, 1•, 191S JJ11-1S PUBLIC NOTICE NOTIC•"IOC•S DITOlllS IU~1Ea1oa COUlltT DI' THIE STATIOP: CALtP:OllHIAfllOllt TMECOUNTYOP:OaANGI!: ,.. ......... E1!1le Of ELIZA8ETH MOH!tEA e1EHL, Dlc••Md. NOTICE IS HE RE BY GIVl'.N lo 1111 cr.ollor't ol IM Ibo"• nt,,,.d ct.<:l'Oenl 1"'1 tn Pl•-fl.ll'llfl9 cl1lrm f9alm.I IM:stld decedent Ire rtQu!rwd to Ille llllm, with 1111 net•••••Y vovtherli, In t,. otlke Of llte Cltrk ot lhe ~ ..,_ tltlecl c-1, or lo pre\ttll '"""· Mttl - lltCHMrY 'IOUtri.rs, lo the UndlrtlQnld tt thl offke Of OAVIO R. •MDE. At· tor,.., ~ Ow, 410 N•WJ>Ot1 C...ler Ori"•· ''"""°'°'' 8••<11, C•lllonll• '2MO,wfl.lchlllllllp1Keof ~ntSliGI tl'll ynoditrslgl'ld lft 11! m•l"n perttln· lf>gNtt.1nt1l9 of M~ of<: Idol' tot , ""'IN~ 1-rnontrts .iter lllt !If" pUblkttJo.i ol lhl1notk.1. O.l9CIS.pt1mo.tr•, 1•1s. WILLIAM CLI l"FOJl:O 81 EHL EittUIOf" ol lhe Wiii Of It .. -1>0'11 Nmeddol!c""""L DAV10• ..... •01: A"'""" '1 Uw 611~ C»ft"r Dr I'll ~---lli.CA.•HM Tel: UMJ .... 1MI ...._.,,..a.neut...-. PIAlll...., Or•"'OI co.st 0111., Piiot, StJl'.10, 11,24,•nd()(.t.1, ,,,s ~1 I. : . ... '"ALOHA. EVERYONE" .. ,. <:~· "J. J(, ~:. , .. · .. . .:.·· "; Welcome to the world of the Mawaiian Luau • Pf'.esented by The Sadcleback Bocrd Qf Realtors • Saturday-Sept. 13 • 7:00 p.m. to 12:00 a.m. • Ccrousel 1-at the Newporter Im •Door Prizes • The Public Is Welcome PUBLIC NO'IJCB PUBLIC NOTICE ...... NOTICE TO cal:OtTOlltS Nt.A-MM1 SUl'ElllOa COUllTOf THE STATE Oft CALll'ORMIA l'Ollt THIE COUM"IV Of OlltANGt: In Ill• M•ll•r OI th• E•t•t• ol DOMENICO CIUl"FO, Oort••lff. Notte• It ti.rib., 111 ... n to cf9dllon l\e'llf19 tltlrm •t•ln" tM Yid dKt· llilrll to Ille li41d <l•imli In the ottlc• ol the c1er11 01 the 1lottwld court or to pr-nt them to tM UftC1t1sl9'*11l ll'll ofllc• ol JEFFREY l . OeEAMAN, J!SO WH'lt\lrt 81'1d, SUlte 1410 In ttM' Cit' of Loi. Angeles, In Los Arvtfe~ Count,, wt'llcll l1tler off kl It tM Ill.ct Of bullre1s ol 1 ... un0ef"sl8l'lf(I In 111 '"4tt1n pe•lllnlne 10 wld e1ta1t. 5'.lt.11 t11I"" ,..un 1111 nK••~Y _,,,.,, rnuil tl9 lllMI Of ""'Mftlld IS ~kl wl11'1ln looJr inonu11 1f11r tllt llrs1 po.obllcetionof this notk1. 0.led A""'ullU, 191S Stc<WllY P•Cltlc N•llDNI 81fllr. 1...,llon•I b..,klnO •!sOcltllon E••culor ol lhlWIU Of ~kldtcf'den1 Jl!,.J'llET T. 0111 RlriU.H JSSO'Wlhlll ... lll'l<l. L.tsA,... .. t,CaHI. Pwblhlltd Or1nfjl C..-tt Dlllly Plkll., Al& 11. and !j:!flt, J, 10, 11. l•1S pal.IS PUBLIC NOTICB ..... ,. NOTI!=• JqClltEOITOJIS SU1'£RIOR COUltT O"' TME ST ATE 0 ,. CALI J'OlltNIA C:OU"TY O•OlltANGE No.A.....S E1t•I• o l H. CHRIS NELSON, Otc .. led. HOru;:e IS HEAE8V GIVEN to 1111 t reolton.C>f th* •bo'h ·..-n'iiitlli&aenc lhtt •II PlltlOt!S N!'ll"O cMllN ._.in11 IN wkl cite-..\ llrt ttQulreO tit flW lhtrn, •Ith the r\ICt,M!ry VOU(Wllo, In !ht otlkt ol lht clttll. ol Vie ..iio.. en· Htllod c-1. Of" to or1Mr1t tl'Mm, with lhl nKnwrr ,.ouo;;lltrs. to !tie \lftde<'Sfgni(I Ill thl Oltke ot NOAH NEO JAMIH, Suitt I, 161 So<tlh Cl"lc Ori..,., P1ltn Sprll'IQS, C•lllotnl• '2142, wflkll "' IN p/ICI ol buslrlftS ol the u~ In 1H ,...O•rs perttlnlllo to lht Ht•!• of wkl dl'Cedefll, within lo\lr ~•I'-!" lht llrsl P<ollM klllOfl 01 trils notk e. 0.tt'd AUllUll It. lt1S kJHSF.NElSON E••t11!0f" ol '"" w 111 ol lht lll>o'"T n•med OK~ NOAHNEOJAMIN St. I, 161 Setitfl Owk Orl'lt """" *""""· C..111. tUl2 Tel: 014)*2$-tsll "'*-' ._ EJCIQlttor P\ltllllMd Ori1119R CN1I O.lly Pllol, Aue. t1, 11111 Stpt. 3, 10, 11, 1tl5 Xlm·15 •\' ,t .... ,,. . r.!' ,,~ ...... ,,~. ,,;,.. . 1 st DOOR PRIZE: 1··· ..... "' , ~· -·· .. .,:r .. ,-1' A WEEK FOR TWO IN HAWAII Tiie evening will include dinner. an ~lian floor show and dancing. in . addition to the 1st Door Prize of a ~ for two In Hawaii, n-eny otnet door prizes will be drawn. Door Pfize tldceta . .,.. t 1.00 each oc six for ~:00. Dinner tickets are avallabte from any committee members for 10.00 CALL IJ7·fl00 A SIUaod SEE YQU THERi- 11 AlOHA '* I 1 • PUBUCHO'l'ICJI · ' I • PUllUCNOTICB •OADMOQl IUut This aparltllng 4 bedroom 2 story borne ~ got to be ooe cl Uie most de- alr11bie ID Harbor View. The master bedroom loots out over Bay & Ocean. The .absolutely beautiful landscaping boasts a putting gl"ee'I, fish pond & decking. Well priced at $121 000 It's a beaut! ' · UllWIOOI'. tl()Ml'.i REALTORS~ 675-6000 2443 East Cotst Highway, Corona del Mar !Go•rol I002 .G1Mrll 1002 ! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·············"········· .LIDO ISLE W~ront 4 BR., 5 ba., rumpus rm. Pier &float, sandy beach. $295,000 • Beaut. 6 BR, 5 Ba, or 4 BR, 4 Ba with 2-· BR, 1 ba. Apt. Sandy beach, courtyard, Reduced to"$265,000. Attr. 4 BR., 3 ba., Udo Soud . 77 Ft. waterfront, sandy beach. $275 000 . . Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR 3-1 I Bo y~"i' D'"" N B b75 blb1 / li••rol I 002 Goooral I 002 1······················· .•••......•••.......... .............................................. PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP .. , will show when you own this spacious 3 bdrm., view home in Cameo Sbbres. Formal dining rm.; view den ; & family rm., overlooking lovely pool '!l"'a. Priced for quick sale at $157 ,500. BAY ANO BEACH 675-3000 . ~·.ao 1 r COAST HWY CORONA OEL-MAi=I GoM.al 1002GOMr<ll IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·. ill macneb /irvlne ~ realtg COUtfTllT KITCHIN OH THE IA T Sunny, windfree Linda Isle Lagoon. Marvelous family home w /extra playroom upstairs. 4 bedrooms, 5112 baths. formal dining room, 3 frreplaces + fire ring. Dock for 3 boats. Appl. only. Dona Chichester 642·8235. <U71 l CUSTOM IEAUTT Sing Je.IeveJ , spectacular w /4 bedrooms, family room & billiard rooltl w /Walk-in wet bar. Many built· iqs. Great master suite. $350,000. Bob Owens 642·8235. (U72) 60' DOVER SHORES llATRIONT Beautifully designed & tastefWly de- corated. Approx. 4000 sq. ft. incl. stunning family room, formal dining room, 4 bedrooms, 4\-2 . baths. Out- door entertainment area w /lovely J)ool & jacuzzi. $395,000 incl. land. Vee Stinson 642·8235. (U73) EXCEl'TIOMAL V AWE - ENCHANTlMG YIEW Almost new, quality constructed J bedroom, family room home. Beautiful custom drapes & wall cov- eringS. Spacious kitchen. Superbly landscaped. Flexible financing. $122,000. Lois Egan 644-6200. (117 4) , SACllRCE-HARIOR ¥lEW HOMES Lowest priced Palermo model + im- mediate possession! Located on 1 of the best streets -richly decorated interior. Carl Butler642-8235. (U75) MBllTHIAHEAH SPUMDOR Dover Shores VIEW home on pool. size lot. 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, family room + billiard library or 5lh bed· room. $159,500. Lany Dyer 642-8235. (1176) 5-..& GOU: COUllSE VIEW Can be seen from most all i'oomi;.in this luxurious Deane Home. 2 spacious bedrooms each w /own bath; formal dining room w /Wet bar opening onto picturesque garden patio. $132,500. Mary Lou Marion 642-8235. (U77) 641-IZll tot Qllwr~ . •aRCT ...,.. wo-.-....... • Beaut. "Wl<le open spaC'I'·" View or bad blU'. Prof. decorated & hWilY up, graded. Walled patios, Ige lot, lam mi w/Wf!f. litr. 3 .Bdnns; tonnaI-DR-lrtl!r .. baths. SpacloLfs end unit In Bluffs. ·ZlllS.J1l;' ....... MEWPOllT Clilmlllo tu. '44-ttll 1002 G:••••• Walker & lee Raol lslale HEW LISTING OCEANf!IONT Deluxe dup(ex + guest room + extra parking. Sl.59,500~ CALL 6 7>7060 ROME ON C-1 Located on 191.h Street is this older 2 bedroom home & garage. Lot is 48x140 deep . Call now ... it's u real find. $39,950 ~~·4~1ii~ .ANYTIME. ~HERITAGE . REALTORS Getteral I 002 G11nerol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN BREEZES & Mountain View. FHA/VA, no down. 3 Yrs. old, 4 bedroom, + fami. ly room. Huge balcony for just sittin' & rockin'. Steps to schools & park. SSl,900. Cal) 546-4141 HERE IT IS! Spacious 4 bedroom, Mesa del Mar home. Large family room, delighUul kitchen, s un washed patio, block walled for privacy. Asking onJy $49,995 . Call 546-4141. OWNER ANXIOUS Transferred owner must sell his beautiful 3 bedroom Spanish style hacienda. Walk lo Mile Square Golf Course & Country Club from this one year old home. Great for family liv- ing with 21 acre park and 3 pools nearby. $56,950. 641Hil.61 BIG CANYON Highly ·c ustomized 4 bedroom BROAD MOOR home. 3000 Sq. ft. of living space includes expanded family room, living room and master bedroom. Professionally landscaped. Air Conditioned. See to appreciate. $171 ,900. 64(}.6161 DRAMATIC WOOD Paneling in entry and living room With corner brick fireplace sets the rbmantic mood in this beautiful 4 bedroom, 2 bath, CENTURY SHORES home. Can be YOURS for $46,900. Call now 962-4454 COZY CQTI'AGE Near beach and Edison Hi, less than 3 years old. 3 Bedrooms, 2 batlis, separate master wing. Whole home has upgraded carpets & tasteful wallpaper. Hurry, 9624454. \ ~~tiI~n~!!~ · 4 Br,4 Ba &Gallery 2 rircplaces, wetbar Deluxe kitchen Pier Cor yacht to 60' You may select the Cinishing touches. 675-813) Sell idle items · . MOUNTAIN AUTUMN LEAVES S acres-fee land. Perfect get-away spot, l lh hours away . $12,950. Terms available. 1002 . ...................... ··~·······~············ -~~, TARREL~. rn 1926-1976 VIEW UPPE.R BAY: NeWj)ort Beach giant, tropical landscaping, waterfall. Staired entry, roman pillars, 25 foot family room , 3 baths, banquet dining asking $89,500, call &save! ' MESA VERDE : Just reduced. Big · rooms thruout. 3 bedrooms. family room, double fireplace, built-in vacuum system, rich wood features formal dining, $62,000, take advantage' call! 14o.1120 ' JfSS...._....._ _,......,. __ ~ G ... .,.. 1002G.uorol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• -Walker & lee Raal lstale BY OWNER Duplex Z-2 br-units. Choice Joe. So. of Hwy. $79,500. 548.5306 Costa Mesa 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HURSERY SCHOOL Pre-School, nr. downtn. ****JUM'**** Costa Mesa. Care for 24 at the chance lo buy one at $JOO mo. Room to ex· of the few remaining pand. Incl. !J(e. iot, nrly. completely refurbished 2 new bldg .• comp. equip. bedroom, 2 bath . single SBS,000. story Townhouses in San· Graham Rlty 646-2414 ta Ana. Still only Slt.950. -=-==:.::::""--:='.~::'. Ask for 1'~rank, 839-8321 MESA VERDE ... Pool. l ;A;g;•n;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~ Jbr, 2ba. Owner must sell quickly. A steal at $46,900. Make reasonable offer. Vacant. Move in al *S38,50ll* ALL TERMS 4 IR Towni-H once. Pay rent until close of escrow. Call anytime for details. MB-7711; aft 6, 644·0072. , $33,500 Dl1ln11ScH Won't last long. so cAtl now! On a big lel, secluded back yard 'w!th party PJllio. Extra-iai:ge family room is ••me sized. Full dining l'botn , sunny breakfast ari:i1. Centrally healed . In cludes carpets '& drapes. new kilckp n flooring. Extremely sharp! But you beU!!t" hurry, BKR,call ,_. 842-1854 SPANISH HACl~DA. NEARIEACH A quaint older home in :i super location. Wal k Luxury country living. Air conditioned. Tennis courts. Sw1mmini: pools. Large green bell. [<i> ti Camino 'i!ealt ~ down towering Lrce-l1n("(l street to bench. J.arJ!t• lot. Only 534.500. 96.l-5ti":-t or S!iG· 7035. 646-3928. evcs549-1532 Lachenmyer Realtor $50.000 2 BR house & J Br apt. 646·88.58 or 548·9441 10-12 & e,•.•::•:__ -~- •• J-BR. formal dininJ:. --======== nice low-traffic r~idcn·j.;,;;;;~;;;;;;;;,..; tial area close to sch ls. Meredith Gicw dens ~ We Speciafiu In On 'the Water Near the Water View of Water 111~1Ulf1IONT ' HOMES :?6XIWC.-~ -..... .. ~ 11141~11"""1 park, shop'g. $')3,000. 99!l Latge ,,ome, formal en· Cheyenne St. llOU try. dining rm., family 0 LS 0 N R EAL TY, rm. with frplc. Squeaky 1..:64.o2:.·94:c.::48:.:1::."'o.:6..:·20=l8:_ __ 1 clean! X In l fi na ncinl{ a\"ail. Priced to sell LIL $75.500 Corbin-Mcrtin Inc. Roaltor1 644-7662 For 1'1101• "'*" 40 thousand buyers, sec this s parkling 3 bedroom Ran c h House with pool l\lze backyard .1~~~~~~~~~ Veterans welcome-Lo down. Rltr. Call today for detai Is. 540-3666 IMPOSSlllE DREAM? ZID FOR $Z8.SOO fo~xistin~ $161 mo. poy't Rl~,\LTORH 644-7270 ASSUME 70 / inc ludes laxes & 111 -~=======~I /O i.urance. 2story, hwlt in~ 1-$31.090 Buys 2 sly. include dis hwasher. sparkling tlome. lovely carpets. & drapes. Gonll yd .• pool, 646·48411 . condition. Owner bought CAMIC> 5HOllES ao6i ·SPACIOUS 4 bedroom, 3 bath, -~ massive formal dining room, gourmet island kitchen, king size POOL. Third tier OCEAN & JEI'TY VJEW! Highly upgraded. By ap- pointment only. Presented by our ·specialists Shirley and Marshall Rich. Offered at $189,500. 2921 I . Coosl H" hwo , Corona del Mo; NOMU HMt lMtfC NUJ¥OttK WI tte "'" '" '"· ll•t M ll•N ••1'UCf -,., "'' .. Nee• aperta ••ufp111e11tf . ., ... .-or C'lllllnf'd M ACTION C11t A OAR.T f'n.OT ... .._ 441·U1' 1-;;;""';;"';;'66;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;j ~nolher home &. mu~L I• :&ell. F1e x.ibte terms. nu . &itdde ~ the early bi.rd & get lht! 3 Large bedrms. Country worm ftOW·fut! 891-0321 . style kitchen, dbl ii 1•r•ge. Huge Jot for l'!'J I ~~-Sub:~~~-. ,6 : ..-...;("!'~~· LIVEIHOHE ~~~ &RIHTOHE!! Fairview&: Raker CM ECONOMIZE! r Cozy 3 S49·951J bed rm owners homo with [~~~~~~~~~1 counlry kitchen & din&, J· w•rm wood floors & BYOWNF.R ""t.arpet, 2 vanity balhl • Unique •hr Mesa Venle PLUS a 1 Bit. l BA ren home, many xtr•s. hrihRs in $200. per SSJ,500. 546·5412 Bea<!harea. la.5.511 B I • ' I ' • . , ~ .---..--..i I , -. ,-r . -·-.-, I OAtlYPILOT * Wtdnetdliy,S!ptembM to, 11151 tt1•1n .... ~ •• • _,, •• 4 ' • ...... .,.. ••M•••••••••ff•••• • • • • 1' • • • , ,.._/.it' ,, %l00\Atls,... _ 2200 • .. .:r I ••••••••••••!• .. ,.,..... •••-••••.••• ~ -M11111 Usks '+s• ~ lklu '' • H1al1u.fw 'AF I II ••hrS. Ho.itHFors,le ~ tt1u1nhrS. 1-.... ,.,. .. _. IMt • lal •••••••••••••.,_ ...... ••••-•••••••••--.... ·-·•1• ,,,,.,...,,,,_, , ........................ ·············--···~····· ••• -. ••• 1.e;,, •• , .... ., ••• •••••••••••·•··....... R·I l•slclaol Lot 1 ...,. 1m · ,,... m1 ·~· tt•IHcll 1040 ... .,.,.. ... .,..,.. lfft Mlwportleecla 106' IASTIUJIF ~--~.....:... l•1rll 1192 ••••••••••••···-·-· ---·•••••.._ ..... ~···••••••••••••w• ••••••• ••••••! .. ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br· c1 abll tnnt dht -r1il'I"' .._.. .-' •••••••·•-·•••••-..-• BR c:teaa MW cpl.I Br 28• ram.. aoom ·HUNTINGTON .. 11 .·s::;.,8011oro! Excellent LocaUon in ca.ta M.eaa, ~ : I 1· -P.1aLVae.--: Pal.J, eU4'mo. 4•,,; _ : T~~~l'.°~E * * PRES,..GE * * ~:,~;~,'65,SOOby a~acent to Baleez:ut. ~art'111~ j~•lG ... -ortee~ m-tJQfr_ .... °"""" •••w abort walk ·• • 8,40q Sq. ft. cleared and level c .... ~ .=-Like Now, ma.,,. a ..... lJ61 1.08~ae,h . &au~.", lrl(, ~ f4MR.YD .... HT 1 reldy for bulld.blSbome. Santa AN $1..&lbteot· Br, croLI, drpe, frplc, •••••\••••••.,.•it••••• J·...-. S.bmltall otters. Unique contemporuy claaak; Finest 1n0tdCdlf,IOI011qft.4 • .. ,..,..,..,. -.pat1o,dbl1ar .• OWNHOUSI!: ZBr, · ~,500. use or Oak wood, A warm, adaptabJ( .• Br 1ultu, a, ... new. Hunt. Boacb 1 lr, lllce -.1 ... Owllr. --ZliBa, pool, blld'i, ; t family Jiome. Ii Bdrms. + famlly'nn., Slln1blne ga ·lor~. • Sll,OI0 ...... , ... '-',•,71 , area • M'!.-•ulo/drJ, pr.No pets. l g d Ck ith'ja-••-' "'"-o(the Spaelolll court' yard. S. ~hl&lll'f. Colla ...... _ 2 br, T--~ v-,.m:«ll8~:;:;;.-='"7"::c:-::~-ar esun e .., ....,... • .,.... •I Hwy .... Orchid. .. .... ··•1pd -HuuLHbr w-·--r-UDO I"" .. I ;·, I Lidolslani1HomeTour1$1S7,500 flU,5oo. By o.,.ur. C•l7141d6-10 ii:u-.zbrlddll<_. occupied, 4Br, ll1>0, Ill' I - . t . 615-<IUe, ·tor ... IF ........ llldfw& '* -' ,.., boat allp, -· Poal. ImelJ 4 b., z be-· _,,. • RE<ALTYINC. LIDO RFA".--Ce"411~.c J r,w-.DWild-Ycna-0..U-'2lfl.Jllr J.1clWl,l6!0Jao_._NJ4'75 p1110,a11-.1<11.. -. 714/1-1371 . ----• 1·· HIW10RTCll$1' • '77,_.DrM,~ ...... C:..tUZ6 wit I< 1 or673-k15: . ,.r.-t/1·8/lor "J'EtiNIS ANYONE• 3377YlaLldo,H.I. ·+n-1100 •••to.Hilo•·~ eo.: 11 ... SM$., 2 br, '550 Yrly. •1•·1114; 1 Adult Condo, 2 yrs. old. Plush 2-Br. den, 3-ba.' ..a ... ~ • famUywekome · VJUageRealir..ta&e h~~=='"""""'-:'.""'."=,-.,-- Lc.•2 br, 2 ba, new epts, Walk, to bcb, 2 tat 1ar'.l CD:.11"!~!954 1700 H11111 ...... ~ -Gansen Gro•e-.,2br, Noa•omtfee -i EANf'RONT.2br,Jr1Y. ~~t. drps, frml: din rm, CIC)Ml'l01eoch 1048 Ml11iottYJ1Jo 106~ pool 6 teonUs et. Wil tor........-••••••:i;•••••• .. ••ii•&.l n,1ceyard.5eeNow! •Edinger/It.poll& blt.u •.• &aft&• $370 No "II·· patio, tenrus, pools, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• trad~·Lease optlon. Sell ••••~··•.••••••t:~···~·· G1e111r Sl.antoe.aais.,atr,kkll&r 4 BR t8A. saz -· i:t,s;.18$5 ' • wltb low down. Jmmed ,. s.SSSTEAL~S$ , ••••.••••••••••••••••••• petot • • .. ~~,~~~~· ~;h,;;;b;;;;;;;;:-·J:at~i. Full sec. $J1 •900· . OwMt' y,..fel'NCI o ~cup "'all c y, c ALL it 1-•• t Pttct&&i--.....· t -BR house t85. 1-BR Hw:&&o Be1dt·f2'15~4 br.-a-• Ed.lnre_r_nwta tii baui~' e boaMtJ:o•e~ l • ..iD•.'.4729 La.rge 4 Br. on cul de sac ~ .o .... _,..._.. bll c t M -2 I I'"' -,aa~BA. .. $US ul •-·•· 1 83 ·tMll ¥~1pla.~.\CP+U1>1'6'• mo e os a eu-. ba, nice area, am..,. •Sliter/Beach ror2-3 r.Hpt. bH. ·-Starter Home street. B It in ...... ~ .,ar n BOND REAL INC. "61.tlave .a l• 1(n&le Br Laguna .Beach $340., wekOrne. .low:MYman arpenter. 1 1.·~, ~ family room ror enter· • ._,,a~· bath util .pd. Bachelor unit. Member •Board of 4BR,ZBA....l345 "•1 .. ttnc coolr. •On. , ··• ~s~ume s~o.OOO taining, large pool·siied _...,. 1 b $100 Balboa ( B I •Slater/Newtancl'-, .,. '~bhng one level w/4 yard wa·th trailer.......... Townbousep: at on y Hunt Beac • b Real ors, Belter Ill · •BR,2 n• -$3$-325~ , --, ~1-. •·k (.,.frank, •uo. Newport Beac _.Bureau,aiamI>erol • -·· rs. lge den.play room Six Remain & view or Saddlebac)4: ... ,_ ~ p 97$o8CJO •Brookbunt/GarOekl A I for t, _.C!Witom addilion). coun · mounialns Msume lo ·f39.l.32tA1ent. Slt5. Act. ee. Com~e(te. BR l BA.-$2IS 3 b ' d ni;tlla. ::. try style kitchen & big ~~~;cc~~~~~~0fxt~.i:d int.loan, : 4 _ JOUKIY-' lalboalllmd , 3106 1304101,_At# ~or-l71!16 · p~-t;un:eCk,ablka tc) sunny, breakCast rm., homes, priced to !ell, MISSIOHYIEJO -, IMIAYCREST ,..,,,,., ZOOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• HEYLOOKUSOVER! beacb;. Wlll consider *"'fim'!ml hv rm. warm wood w /many extras. Open REALTY ••••••••••••••••1••••••• LIKE new 3 hr 2 ba, all We have fumilbed Ol'Ull• y---MQO. mo. ~ a.m. paneling. Freshly de· Spacious 4 bedroom DEL.UXE <C •P exe1 , elec kitchen ~/dlhwhr fgmllbedl ZlcSbdrml BRAND new --.-...-u only: ~ated & neat as a pin! ~~~ ~.~' but Tue!:!. 511.,000 family home withaparkl-w /b1:au,tifu1 pool. 3br, frpl~. patio, bbQ. 9 mO Allareu'.AJlpricet. · Vill!l& coodo,a br, Zba. 2i..::=''------- .A.uu ma b I e 8 'Az ~,~ VA Fo-•-~--· i1nag1.0f!1D11 a&re°"a.tdoorOpene;nt:,!!'.: 2ba, fireplace, tor1downer1 i.e. $385. mo. s.:J&.8831 See ya 80001 car aara1e. dedt. paUo, BR, % Ba c:bm-net;r-~J.P, balance with Jow •• ... .,._ .... .,., occupancy. Pr e· o • pooJ,""'clubbou.se: • .,,,, beach & PoOL $125. mo. OOwn. s:JOO. mo. pays all! FAMIL y DBJGHT Thick shag carpets thru· ner location on auiet ownership nr. major 4 BR. 3 Ba. all bltnt, $600. ~ :1~ mo.C-119G·atfl Yr-t1'..-tTS-9oooNantJ" I Bkr9&2·5Slt For th e Cam ily who ~~Rt~~L18~ely h~r!!: $t~~.,M : orrere. 4t ~tg~lQ'ifa "a~AtfY: · ~J)~.S:O~ 0 n 1 Y • lil~!l811~!ll l!;il 'BR Hunt. c.Otlnenta1 botVl<W-.4llr. wants everything! This Tastefully decorated, 644·1766 5:5H17lft i!~ 111 • !J ~;-Cond6". pool. clbb1e, Jba, close to ~beltk. SUPER 3 BEDRM 2-story 3 bdrm., 3 bath, nicely l.indscaped. · 3br,, 2ba, blt.-lns. fipce. . lrlda./pet OK~ $295. :IC!bools. ~mo. Jelme., 2 Bath. 2 story ... pri ced to fbamilydroo~1 • bom1• h1a.s Priced to sell fast at ... EWPORT I ~W~1~nl.!•~r.~8~7S~·=761:..3..:.'._0pe:._n~:::'::3::M':"5~0;;17'P•:c•o.:A':".'#:::1~ri~9-~7~881~:2i;;:-i(i;j;;i).;j'M0-0327~~~·~;;ftM~--sell at $l5,9SO. New plush ea me ce1 s., rp c., $43 900 OCEANFRONT 2 Bd + 2 " 1_Su.D.120Topu.. ~ carpeting. Fania.lie central air-cond. & elec-'uiSSIOHYIEJO Bd garage apt. $125,000. l'"'COME • . 1 ·s~-ba 1.,111_. _ _. .,.06 $125. 4br. 2ba. Kida O.K. HARIOll ... h 1 C 1l tronic air filter. Large '" Owner, 645-36M " Winter or yr Y uui-1 1 ---.aA Avatl !low. Alt 6 qll 2 Bdrm a BaU., aear ome .•. comesee. a heated & filtered pool REALTY , FOUR·U111TSi. pride.ol-cbarmins co.t..tage. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 842-50639-s;rt&:'JOtO. Park • Pool: Kida . 4..:-.1~~:.~ with spa. Lots or private 581·1000 TbeBluffa; early area ownenhlp.,-p~ area PaUo/garaJe.6"-58117 3Brava.llfor71'1Y.lblock welCOJl\9 $415 1110 '..ti..t.t~~ ~~~~tt~u1'W!f~a::P~~: BYOWNER"Spac. 3 br, 2 ~;,=r:;.~~ -~d~48:f·m~JOO~ t;ovely 2-sty.-fam.-bome; ~~:.'SAtp'auo. SPAllCIJMIJHIW--1G01AaCDt • • ' · ~ with sprinkling system & ba "El Dorado", A/Cun· · cALL • 3 BR, 2 ba, patio, gar, 1 DELUXE e Bluftw* 3 BR •·lam. Beach & Ellis,llB fenced yard. One of the der $50's. 831).8298 S..Cle........ 107 •RISTIGEHOltES Small family or COQJ>le Coroeo .. Mcr 3UZ 3 Dedroom. 1% bath, "Greenbelt''. Avail.now. I ,. · 003·8316 finest homes In the area •••••••••••••"•••••••• Wt'tlffon 645-6646 onl~ (no students~. •••••••••••••-••••-• fireplace. bltns. $325.& ParUyfu.rn.,1$15Mo. I & only· minules fro m Mewportleach 1069 Twofixeruppenonlarg Avail. now. $.150 + util. 2 Br cottage w/frple. $380. per month. 2 Agent6t0-5560 ·BY•OWNER. Adult 2· Niguel Beac.h. A rea1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lot . Ocea" vi e w ••4-PLEXIS Wntr.Agent6'f3.8900 Smallfeneed?ard..S300 Bedroom,1'4balb,$265. . l'."!ftn'Y condo. 3br, 11,2ba. jewel at $92,500 BA YFRONT Fireplaces. $33.~ each. Sp ac i o'U s -w /bit n s • lalboo Penilllllla 3107 mo. Hal Plncbin Realtor, Cl?ff to •Cbools & park. EAUT~ B~"'l: eoc:J°• ~ z1!ther /dryer. rerrig. m~11Gltrt!l 2 Custom Homes Make o(Cer. spi'inklers, xlnt Costa ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-4392. B\cy c 1 e tC> .bea..c b. ::; ~$0. :&i-.':.T.!133~ j)PEN HOUSE Lg. cust. IJJm&IlGW Excellent location on the ' ing for a good buy mun· carports. $250 monthly. •••••••••••••••••••••-202Springfteld.= FORLEASESbarpH.VH JfJ·~·546·5472· . BALBOAPENINStrµ J AHCHOIA61 ~ea.a loc.lCyou~look· Winterrental,2 Brfum,3 CotfaMelO 32%4 ChlklrenO~. . i.Pool w /spa & patio. •9e~2eoo . Bay &only YI block to the INYUTMIMTS its: SSS.000. 714871-9517 Super sharp, 3 BR. 2 BA ~~~c~&~abaC::a 3br,2b8,lg.yd. r:JMaut. 4 hr, l :Yt ba. frpl, 4 Sale By---Ocean. Each home has 4 17141 496-7711 D•1 Mluthf1-. 3 BR 2 B .-. .. ~en bo~e. Disbwasber, new SprlngfieldDtates 844·5366 l l k & hi N """""1'ln'" bdrms, 4 bu.tbs & AgentM9·08121646-6710 • a. Y~Y· --· n.••nt. $365. Ast for Bev nx · 0 par sc · r. 2 Houses on 1 Lot. 2 Gallery 2 ffrepleces s..taAfta tOIO DWLEX funt. Can rent unfum .. ~;-Joe. 983·4569 or x..tRCMJlft~ BR* 2 BA ·open beam :~~~gOo~t~ 1 ~Yt~~::,e::. Oversited garages. sun· wet bar,' ultra moderO ••••••••••••••••••••••• IEACH I Michael Rlly,673-6880 963-1786. f6o.31Slor Ceilln1i. poo.lt,. tennis 3 65 ~s2 Pi D deck ovrlk'g ocean. lti'·b· & ·n·v •-I D 't~all 2 BR·&1B°Ron1\.9Lots. · 1••.a•-• crts.CloseioBcb. Yrly. -1 •""' oneer r. $65,000,494-8170 · "'en r a-per. ·*** Oft ""'"' *li'* Tremendoda poiential. Coronad .. Mcr. 31ll .MesaVerdeBu::cUa.3br, ... ~ $150.64S.1531.or631·1400 II I 1044 Fee l~n~bo SeeBl~ 1200 Forpricesandlnt.erestto Lot 1,ize will acc~m· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2ba. fam rm. Wee. bu.I~~~~~~~~~!~=~=~=~;::::: .:;..::_•••••••••••~••••• THE OLDE :aif~t5_:120 ~ormof;d~~ come down. ~~ 1:'!_111 modatelargeduplezw/4 China Cove for Lease 2 $t85mo.54.S-ml. ERSh sbr·wlfiPI BAYCREST bome•Move l l " tails pf9bably keepcou;ig~ .. · car •1ar. Valwe in lot. Story, 4br, great view of blk ll~lt $290• in today. 4 br,3ba, ltplc,. l.<-.'1 HOME LEFT.I GRAY MARE · .. not down ! 2 lledrm, 2 Sl>l,SOO. AgeoL549-0l12 water & your own beach. 2!;!.or)'3brduples.Zl!oba, • wa M Jit · 1625. mo. Coll P- H..t.>:: DOH'TLIFT ba single atory $1150mo.lse. form.dlnrm,2 cargar. 963-3812or 7· • · Co.,642-8012 ;..1Jlis new free standing SHE AIN'T WHAT SHE Townhouses still at only HEW LISTING Waterfront Homes Pvtpat. Ma07xtl:aa..$l25 BEA c H · s &: 4 Brs • .r-CI 1 3276 J,liome in UnJv. Park has USED TO BE ! And A HAMD!! S21 ,9:i0. New carpets, . 6 UMR'S · 631·1400 mo.6'5·7888. Children/pets OK. Mdl .-. IMIB1' . .., . Mfox. 2500 sq. fl. of Jiv. neithe r is this OLDER rt·s spotless and easy to new drapes etc Ask fpr e'se ol Uk b $350-$375 •••••••••••!....... •• .-1ng !pace. It includes 3 SP ANIS H STYLE keep that way. A recent· rraok, 839-s'l2 .\renL ~ ~~s!~~lj! ~t edsi~~i~~ OnThe leoch EASTSIDE. 2 br, crpts, Caell 0':C:i. or Ca~i LOVELY ocean view ad· )rg ·BR'!, finished bonus J-lOM E. Detailed ex· ly redecorated 3 DR end . Eastside Cosla Mesa. 3 2Br, 2Ba, Dplx, frplc. drps, stove, yd, eoc1 gar. 963-1sal j~cent to. ~ar:h. .~ br. Oti 3'h: Baths, formal t er i or of HEAVY unit townhome ne8r pool bd. 2 b th , $WO mo winter.673-Sl32. No kids or pets. $250 mo. kitchen. d~ ~living , •dining rm & Camily rm. PLASTER. RED TILE and clubhouse with over· VACANT rm, a •owner s ' --.Agt646-1456 I lile 3244 2 patios &.fai'deauea. l»ilfe pr~ ce is $~4.500 ~RiilE~ ~JR~~JiEN~ si.zed ,?1:ste~ ,sui.~1 and P , eM 5 US1T1.sE8LL1. 0 u 8 ~~~~·s.• c::~:ieb.nd re~ P!._EAtrf. 3 br. 2 ba/ fully 2 Houses avail. 3.Br .':!.•-•••••-•••-•••• $325, Jnc tuti!;,_.~!.t -re hol &thebui der is :;1ghL.,.g t v1~ .,,~ built 2 years old. Actual '-'Pt d, part. urn , $280 12.Br $2lS, Ph: BEAtJ!.NewRancbo'San .mana4eme~ -OP.--·1· ~ ... po~sRtKolsleHU!OMES . , TR11vh. bForm~ldoliv. rhm . •11'44·7~11. 11 -: 1 n e i 11 h b o rh ohold . 3 rents , sie,Q20 anp.ually. ~!_!drt615, ~~·adllstu. lasNt 6'5-50&8 ukforLis. Joaqwn Twnhome. 2 Br, tyavail.492 6S1I ,. A w ay win w, us Bedrooms wit arge ThlsisaQb!Ut fltaceex· •-v· ... ,..., . o 21,;ba,2story.Overlooks S..Ju. r· 552-9300 · CENTER FIREPLACE cozy Cir e p I ace . cluslte. Plede"call for pets. 3 BR. 2 Ba,. Fam·rm, golt course&: lake. $j,7S. Caplstrcmo· 3278 e ~oOo~e~ !~~l~c~ r~ I e eds~ n.a ~~ an apJ>C)lntment. ·PS. 'lbe l.agulla leach 3141 bltns, :fits• drps, frple, 547·70'4/552-G(li5 •••••••••-••••• , l 'h BA, dining area •. 0 L D-E , , 0 A.KEN p. ~c'.;.~a .. MP ·a•'.e' ~1"""'er· '· •, units on Santa Ana sold, ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar. pa obols, gardener. Red--ted 3 BD ... ""• gant upgrackd Oiodo. )lar.Frpl,fmt.&back . o icu 11 "' butUieonuonOgleand . ClosetoSc .$425..mo. ,............ .. ... <&>~ .. Ba gtetios.551·1351 FLOOR~ THRUOUT. • S~On REALTY O a :ae are sUll rthere LEASE $160,000 Beach .548-1953• 648-8111 home. Nu Jandspg. $350. Air cond., 2 B~ 114 • l-"---------1 Middle corridor leads to BIG CAMYOH 536 7533 Wr: n ld li i Condo. fof SOOS mo.. un· ' mo. Asll: for Bev or Joe D/W,Rance.~drps. ~ ..-TURTLEROCK 2bdrms.&.central bath. Lowest priced home in · oi e 50 so some 5 • fur .. Or· $950 fur. $150.2Br,chll4.7ard 963-4567or963-l'l86 pool. dbl gar, patlo., TOWNHOUSE FORMAL DJNlNG the Canyon. 3 Br, 3 Ba. 1"9-IJl:.Ofo~h~rb~that OceaDfnt. 3 br, Z ba,2000 3BR,kldl,'Pet;p.rage .Adults, no pets. ~O. '.Sb'"?. &'den. Former ROOM W /MOORISH fuJJy Jaridscaped, ,paUo MOl>UeHomes we ~en .. t ""&~JHX ad-sq.ft~wetbar~frpl,Sec. Pool,,br,3ba,klds,pet, UNIV .. PtttTerr.o~ 4£13.3.&29 , · -ADOdel. Air Cllndilioned. ARCH, opeoa to long cover, l • story, 3 ,car f'or's• • !1ff i}rtisiQ . g•at<l.Adulu.6'4-7678 fncd,garage. % br, 2 ba. Beau,&. ~maticsprin.klersand kitchen & separate sarage.$124,5(11). . •••••••••••••••••••••·•· u~I . Mesa Verde3br,2!ta, Greeablt. Comm. lacs. U_....._tshecl 3425 :t::t'C~Ung. A MUST §EE. servh:erm.LOCATEDA M t*S8 riffi a -lOl.-Bt ' ~ lbr house & patio lor kld5. pet, fncd,.gara,ge $360. S52•1389 eve&: Q•--- JM,950. FEW BLCS. F ROM b~. ~an:~iacceu'. Plap9rtl••., salaried older person.. Fee.Agt. 2~-722·6810 dl:ya Kr. ·~B·•.•3••8••R•,••2•;::••+·~:e• BEACH in central sec· $2500 or best offer. .-751•1920 · 494·8170· $1B5 HOM~ l-Shi=:;;PP:;_ ______ 1r;::. _., .. CALL NOW ~~nc~~~~e Fv~i~R~T'& 751·6275. ''°° OU41La. •UCM Winter Rental. 2 bd. •642·9900* RENTALS ::!~~ 'p':int:J~ ::r~; 752 ·7315 NEGLECTED. Needs • v1•'-o•• $45,000 Sll(ALL trailer hoyse, 2 blks Beacb & QUIET COTTAGE lo 2BR,2Ba ........... $360 drps, 11vail now •. $300. PAlNT, YARD WORK& N~WPORf ....., park <!owntown Desert toWn. Frplc., newly de-SePl Cl I partl II 3BR,2Ba, ...... $f0014Z mo.96Uf71Ageol G E N E R A L H"'"'-HTS , Fully Insulated, added HotS_prings lOspaces+ corated. Nature adults, f o~ t~n,cM..$Ul 4BR,2Ba ••••••••••• $1S01-======~-- RESTORATION. With a FIX=~~1..a1 :::;.~lh~~~':j~x:1tr:S 2 tra1t~rs .f, 2 pools + $385.494-0273. ~loa::s~ 4BR.2¥.I ba.wntr •• $800 3 br, l~ ba. fplce, ndrig • little elbow grea!e & ~?'·v.-..,-5" '"$l0,500. owner s apt. Sf.I down. $350. Super 2 BR, 2 Ba, nr LE RAISOR ~~~::;;~dryer. $310 111o. know-how, you have "A 3 ·Br .\b.:o-~f'eeds R'oyM~C.. O.W.C. balance. Owner, Town & Beach. Adults $225. 2 BR. $350. 3 BR. HORSE OF A ,DIF-creative b11Y<twllll,1@1$ ' GU-2657 . no pets 499.ZJ02.,.(2l3j Cpu, drps, baclc ptd. • REALTY ownllott1e FERENT COLOR!" Of. o.r ambition. &>perl~a-Roal!Or 18T0t!owpoti 23 UNJTS.Needs outside 769.7!Yl5 6'8-8885or642-SZ70 . • U-llhed 3525 fered for t1on , pnvate yard, 7 de. Costa Mesa548·7729 paint. (l4J 2BR & (g) 2 BR w/Stv & ref. gar 4523CampusDr .. IrviDa •••••••••••••••-•••••• $63.950Fut1Price e p Doughboy pool. l2 OO!lf bll bo ZB l lBR Gd fin cing l WhltewaterW!wCOndo. " W:~,R~· CampmV·alleyShopQr. to 2BR zn-ee --:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 SEE TODAY! Transfei'red' owner will x 0 e me. r, • •. . an 8 S«JOmo tum 2BR,2BA $200 mo. 2020 1&WM.-.:, CALLlll-1600 m. • · ~ ~· 1 GONE TOMORROW! help finance. HWT)', take Ba. Adult .Pllf~· Cosia 8.1h'70. Pr1nc1pal5 only. A ent6"-727;, 842-7311 · tral air. Mlasim Vie10 .,: rARK II LOYB.Y MISSIOHREALTY advantage,•$55,llOO. Call Mesa.Nope\g.&16-8812 . Bkr.556-8171 & =•on4br -"•~Avl •RE-•••* area.$295.544-IOll .t!fhey upgraded the in· _ _._ 3169 ~ ,.uuu.<-. "'~ .~rtpr,theyaddedtimcd 9858.CstHwY,haguna 982·7718 • 1 Br. In Nwpt, 8c.1l.· 16UHITS wpartlle...., 10/1 Quiet Cul-de-sac. THETEJUIACE VlllageSan~uan.3Br,1"' ....... ~rin.klers to the PhOne•t4a0731 ··-KE:Y park . 50 Yds. from ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fa~only.$350.557·'1668 3BJl,,2Ba ••••••••••• $US Ba Townb.Ouae. $295 ~·~·, d h 1---------1 ocean.$7:i0.536-0l30 · Alladult,.,Juxury.2br.1~ DANFRONT 3-Br + . . UNIV.PARK lease.495-5438 "-'""4scaping an 1 ey u • --~•-11.E:ALTOP.Sfi , ._ + ~z·H ba.uoitl,ln~$4l,340. aull1'£Wlcb, z-ba, Ja-e College Part. Super •BR b ~ 1~t-ari--oversized Pl!tio. -~una ~ en•·'""'•..-,-J Prl,ce4;•-P15,000; . ·-L~me. iilif, IWVI.-;.t. -c·tean. ab:rt -2ba boma. ~ •• 1 a. •· • •• ••• ~~ 'lbe fa&t.est draw in lhe " .. '!I, Bdrm., 2 bath, with Nr Beach & town . .._,,E~ORTSHORES , ~.. uu ~ -I I aBRTU.,2RBTaLE. ···R·OCK···• tlOO West ••• a Daily Pilot ""' · " n.-•••••••••• ••••-•···~ ".· ••.673 .. ,o $375. lat, ao , •ec. ~~e·sac location' near Tripl e x -3·2Br, 2 R Al I ,_.. ._ Cl ifiedAd.6f.2.6618 pool and recreation. w/frplc. 3 car gar. by 3 B ' · rame .+ ge. VOCADO LAND.• $&,4il80 ~ctptesonlyl!Jeue.. 642·1495. <18R,2~Ba ••••••••• sns us 1 • $1:500 owner. 352, 858 & 362 !!,°!;..rm. Top cond. per/AC. Rancho' CAI. LIDO ISLE .Good 3Br bouse. Illes• 4BR,2Ba ........... $S75 Dlpltxos.,_ 3600 u· ', ~· Thalia . (SS ft lot). 3Bi, 2 -sty. Hu.ge 80%SellerFin.8"%lnt.' Watchtbeboatsgobyt VerdeSSSOmo.545-1491. GREENTREEHOMES •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• • ' $119,500. 675-6224 & Ti&bt .J J orCes •Ile. Wntr .-3 br, a ba 3136Gibraltar,CM _38R.,2Ba ••••••••• $115" EWE& Newport •aclt n;._ 642.3099. garden -type patlo1 Owner'114..-Z&S134 Bayfront.&75-4&16 3BR.,3Ba .••••••••• $12$ yearly rental. eai;ima '.';"· .: VI · leH ~,;:;>WOOOlllAl.n lnffsrr.,...,..1400 · · 1 Room bouse, fireplace, COLLEGEPARK viewfrom3BR.2Ba,up-.x,; a'IALTY Bv~::w~T~;:,~KlliNviGn~&~: *.541,.1290 * ••••~•••!••••••l••••••~..soCn·Pl'.azaarea. BR,nlcelyfumdplx. stove, refrlg. $125. 3BR.2Ba.+D .•••• $125 per. laclds car •• 552-7500 ing & Mstr. Bdrm. 3br, 2 PRIMllAl«.~. , &eliprtrade.Ownolvnt .Just steps to the beach. st86680 Includes gardener w/opener, frplc. beam ba. frpl, bltns, wetbar, YIEW OF u•••oR Gre'at Newporflocation. area. 2-211r;1i.; frplc. $450/lfoSST-O:llB Charmin a~ i~ tree DEERFIELD HOMES· ceilings, 2 patiol, lio liv· -·A ·Red Hill Company .._,.... • .. 1B I g • -. 3 BR, 2\.\ Ba •••. ••••· $125 rm Ule kit ch & bath. No skylight & planters. By Second to none:4000 sq tt1 $170,000 yriy. $1,050,000. le ,k r. enc gar, new lined cul street. Ocean Rancho San Joaquin i; Sub it cldldre owner. $66,SOO. 1045 home. All lUJCuries in· Ted Hubert & Assoc.,. cptJ'. $54,000. 84&-813Sor Unf•nltlted Vlew.$S25mo.~ :ZBR .ZBa ••••••••••• $575 ~5• :S-:o n. Balboa., 675·3606 or eluded. $210,000. Realtors.675-8$00., ' t M$-8798.By0wner. ••••••••••••--•••"• , Br • 8 dbl ••-o .... ·mo. 494·7670 $40,000dpwn.Byowner& • · .,. lmstrlal/ filftef'Cll 3202 •"" .3 • g~ • .:3W ... e Beautiful Large Ocean ~~~J!Pr::i~~~L EMERALD BAY ~~~~cior -builder . Office IWa.. Property · 2100 ••••••••••• ... ••••••••• ~~~·oo:v•1l l0/15, . View 3 Br. 2 Ba,~., "°;Jl.-M'HS. Deluxe aree. Spaciou! 3 bdrm .. 3 ba. FORSALEOfti.~E ••'•••••••••••••-•••••• FREE FREE YISleJC t washer/dcyeri2cargar. '410)' VA for yourse" or home. Large dining & !->ACRE By ()wnm:,4 Br. 6.000Sq. F\.Delux **·PRIME** •ProCessiona15ervl... &Toro 3232 UAl.TY $42S. Adults. No pet" ·l(US«' aa inve!tment pro--family rms .. bonus loft Raochslyle,lat'gepines. PRICEDTOSELL·. •LANDLORDS* ••••••••••••••• .... •••• ss2-7500 675"4962C.d.M. · ~)'.Vacant · fa..c;t OC· for extra living, with 5·48·0995 .•No agent11 . M.UtrR,t ... Oll& lndU$trtallandreadyfor Heme·ffeders, * S375. Mo. lmmac.3bro2 ARect'HillCompany Apral11wahFtlnlished o ..CU11*1\Cf.$8S,CO> ~evator. Close to beach ~m.(Ba~Ba· il9) E. 23rd St. ~an11\Q911tll~~--::;:!0fn~~!t~2!rtv::,c~! 64M900 ba, lge cPrner lot, close ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~•:,; L'rRAISOR wpark.$1'9,500 c. Y. 14 94,...493 industrtalareooflheCi· • C.Ufornla-.t.ar&est, tosbops.A(t.839-<623 HilhlooSanJoaquinGolf lolbo•l1latld , 3706 ~ L_ . TURMU ASSOC. 3L'g bdr, 3 ba. FeelaJ)d. l MD' ti or Or'ahge. All utlUUes • •Rental~ce!• •---1.-1-Y-"-3z•4 Crae. 2)lr .. ,de-.. stn,ie; t•••••••.•••t•''"f'M••• •n -. REALTY i1~N cstHwY •--... RI I ... nth .1~~ ......,_ -• • 1eve1,centra1aif.'55G.,.·• .88 ·"•t•v 1 ~~·: . '494.11i7'u.u ::~eQ~nr~ ver · ·9 rr;: youe ':1eed:"'Pri~; ~ ~-3"8'a···:·b·i··:·· .. ••••••• 11:.,s-.cos9• -rr 1,lbct~..,..._ -l.o. n~ Campu! Dr., Irvine , t"•!IOO. pe• •ere. :renna · •,. • • C!ar Pra&•. · · • · 213-195-6400 • "C in v n --Cit bllM, comm owlmminJl ..... 1lolldl 32411-"'' ::;..;.~.===-i c .. .P pu! a ey~..,... • , $1.S.9.000 • -the riaht P8JV • .P.or pool. ICidl cit...'.No fee. !\••••••••:•••~M\••• Best Bayfron13br, • "'• CALLl3J.8600 .._-Miguel 1052 BAYF~A .. ,.. . . furtberlnfo.~COll; • •• • -. " $279.mo.A(t.SCWW.. QCeanfrqntNortb~& View lrom eve , .. SUIMn OFFER ' .,..................... "'"I :nr:lo~~~-Flft SHVICI Lerge • br + tam rm Cove •• Bd, 3 ba. f,Plct W1ntet''4i5.497..J.74 ' ~r wants fast action Oae atory, 2 br, 2 .ba. E1 HOME lltff fo:r sale-• . 1700 541·2621, eves le wlmds, TO LANDLORDS super abarp & cleaW. dtekb patio, eteps to ci.rrE1 2 'br house+ c ar • .a#,lhis 3 bdnn., family ~i.&uel townhQUle~ Fplce, with a •••••••••••••••••••••1 6S3-69'14 Member of Board of Xlnt neighborhood nr ~ac , newl.y painted. Yrly $3lO gu&wto, pd w~ .. 21> bath hom•, elec gardoor.O{leller, ful· $1,000,000VIEW HORTH LAGUNA Realtors, Betterl'Busl· everything Moveinnow SHO. Winte•, $1,000. m.s&esatUPMwkiiai • •l<l•~ted I n the new ly upgraded. $49,950. Sallillwy...., • CONDOS Lollfors• 2200 nessBureau,Cbunbefof S<OO mo 'Call 982.147; Yoarly.Nopets.494-6<52. · ~~ield Park Village. 495-1920. . • 673-6900 . •••••·-·••••'• .. ••-••• Commerce. .Aaerit. • EMERALD Ba wotr Coty,charming.ntreat.z ~ingonly$S4,950 By owner. 2 Bit. & Con· 675·5016 .. , l"ff Wl)itewat.er=..:r:~&3 HUGIMl.WPOITLOT 530-8505 . . Rental.2br •. w~iewa~ Br. ttre place,JP,"e W "'-' rt bl d El N' I bdr~. uruu -·~ $8.0 000 flrql. Cap be 3 Br, 2 ha. dln rm. cipt, view. $415. 558-3030d""" carpets. wallpaper etc. -:.WE HAVE RENTALS-C~U-:tr~ b~~b co':d!. Brand Mew&hlpfei 420 Cy.prees, Nortti dt';/ded,~nto-, th 4 lots. N'Wpl ac·h 2 br, appls, drpl, bltn1. fenced yd A , ._.. Avail lete Sept. ~14 n tt-:A s t 0 v e • r e f r i g , t ~ Blk from ocean. Laguna Trade. {,r Joca.I income child, pet pat. $365. 8'6-8291 View • .Emerald Bay Ter· Coral. 213·788-662Z •;; ,.it",;r.. -552·7000 washer /dtyer ~ ff dis· Quality eon1t tuctlon. : Call 4.75,.1225 property 1Wlll be Con· CdM 1 br, appls, utiJ pd, Sharp s Br 2 ~ b• ·~ce.'' Bd, 2 ba, $&50. GHARMlNG 2 br "1rJ:tJc hwasher . .Carpe~1 Ct $1l7,000. Owner will take ... .. ' sidered. 8) owner. Mer pet. • townbouae. Try s.coo. ere, 623·5678. S265. yrl,y. lnct\at.iL105._.; drapes li ke new. $53,500. l0% down and carry 2nd 6.546-9$56. Cd,M 3 br, 2 ha. a"ls, 875-70800r6'71-9187 Art, C6ra1Ave • t ,<>Pen house Sa~ •-Bun!, T.D. Thi• Otter will ao l"WlofS cbikl ' J 10 S360 Uh"L t IU.1 ll:Ht Nine~ (11ll) lasL Loe. aUUHIOthSt. ..,..,, po·'.""1, Z600 El Tora 4 br, 3 ha, llds.S ... lfltl• .... 3240 • • ' ...... PHl•A'e 3707 4'7·2191or (711) 1657. . le I ~"ti . . pet. ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• C:::loso-ln.4'1-3517. ••••••••••••••••..-.... '-'-;.;.;;=..:;:..:.c:7=-'---'-IBayf · ... if:1••••••• ••••'••i..:..• H ' 9 ·b I+ r • -• ' " ropt estate; en r· ...1 .,.. ""~ -amnn•• •SPr101d&1e"IWl,Hlll. L•• 1H..... 3212 IOr,3"1""""'SIO& ' LJlleN•WYlilwl tain on• .ar.,xt scalej 5A .Of'.nlntclp~t. ha, appl1, kids, pet, 2 lSA llome. ltnolace .... ••••••••• ..... • .. ••• 13ll;t_p/mo.114E.~a Lr; ...... 1041 IB 2b ll'd'd er'• luxurlou1 ·2·•lY .i 4 'ocr ... h . Ro.,.. Riv. Valley,.nr, 1I01i<I load .....ut1nn, e!Jildn!ll Bl\'d.1-179-11991 · .................. ,, d r. •· •s: ~ Bdrm• ' baths• ~ · mw . ~ llitUont. .o ..... .,,GOO. ,FURN. Balboa3br,:&bli, OK,Dofere -.eanaw Ci'UllT &COOL! r · -N-SaL" !Ml. i::~·.~1!15. 1 frplu.,''tormal dln,. AJJULTCOllllUNl'O' 11/W/ll'f<ll• frplc,cltlld. ar lo~ in.nu ot 111(\~,~hacarpt.~, IAUOAIMM..-lo$11m. 21m Allll Laauna • . family rm., utendea HEAR OCEANSIDE FURN. Bolboll CIOWIC• tll-11... I l.'l!.!~......,~-Ualquowllltttl'llllltl.lOs' Bfv4. A I Bel. -amid *WI•"""'* lleck & •lip '°'.t: boal. 2 br, 2 bt, qoe *""1. eni1 • ZIOO SW, uUI pd a!Jl•1u. •-1ar. _., ao pets --•-St -· -~ taU UNI le :l&tlhll old """,,.... ~ '"-1lct 1 .roa' Fee.A..... • _. · '• or cbUclrtn. '115. mo.'+''"'-===-·"'=~=·-=--..._ • a . • LAtlVHA.NHM& $16$,000.N~-t;er avunelrl1.oolcCh1:11c!.a,oc~ ••••••••••••••\•••••••• Ho"'MIFI.-$ PN1U1e family hOt:De, .._ .l'><A12th&t ia,BR~ A'··1ar-· 'l\.Q,1'. •rea. flf,200. ~ llST -llYlllLYCM9'0H .. ,. ''°""~-TR•"'~ E"UITY·~-,_ l•rte4 BR,SM,fonool ..,.._ • U ll,......I · -.. w. -'"'"~ 4'1·170 or f'ORll!R ~o*o-L 1 1 ~UA~~LT!O~R~S~64!.4!:1!04~6~j with &limpH °'.,...... nu• '< ~... •64M900• din rm, If• fem rm, 1.0VELY 4 br ~· e '. ncl. Near.tt•r· ~ -L ,, Sf\orlwalktoclubhllul.!t ;a.Br borne,"···~· highly upgraded 'WwJew •~~ 1'l"' rtj11n~~Wfl9 . '¥<!room Wllb view. Aa· i Br+den pool sif.e lot poo), Jacuut. !'~ u lleub, •J panoum1c z llR Costa Mesa .,_'II 2 •• -....' 1 clodod-!!5&0' • • • ""t"-./llllt • • • IJiog ••1thlnc wltll a !!"011t.110,_":",..~-~-r ... eo~ ovolootitla aew ••II Cluiltno ~l~aa """"pijli ylew1. 1115,000. val•,•• llr ~-New"°" llea~h, =:c.:lf~.:''oppt. to,..: ~· ·~!~1:!; hi" 1 i!'R, 1t door to,,btlich. PUOICIUllll<d'M •• ...... ·-~ • 184995.6*"* canler I<; bus lioes, 30 I<*·l~nd • .,_,., m ·,, •tilflli oil a Br Iba -.. ,,.. or.,...~· • ort mnrootal.l\'"1<· 'I almL-... •lr•et. Prl<od rt&ht at ........ • 1111Dut a from Sanj)lego. "'"!'l~.home,H.B._lf·M · Huntinctoo' Beacb, lddo. -nit· l 811 Family bomow/IC, JYorm ... thly;m-•• --~'-'-1.tt..-_o __ ...,.s.. ___ 1 $$4,0QO. 31Lr, 2 ba, fa,n rm, Har1xw llJ.neas forcu qufr:k •aJel ::0•Ra • ZS u b0~ ~:_. pell. Horse ranch, catUe Brand oew ktCS)' _. BR. YJtnl. 1.11$ mo. 1st A lut On The Beactt. new dl:l l ~Mi.,i View Carlhel. $75,fGO. 81 ow._.,r t_U .. U . ::.;_,?D K.Y, .-a•-· ok, f200. All. l'u. IWt ba.; a car pr;. Up-+ -.Si cl•il•'I· feo. ~I ... D/W, ~c adl Cdl!a.11111 ·-• -.OWner.IU•lt. ··-_., "~ --l!raded.$650110•1112 --oi' ----· .> ; PONALD M. llRD • 'J!'i,._'A••ocl•tH. l.olto't. INVEST I I . r • • I • . ' DAii. y Jiii.OT' tfal •••Ctf • ; ''' -.. ••rt 4000 14.1ft 1"•' ... &"8 '•~· .,., I ' "• I I • _._....... ...................... ..................... • ,... ...... , ... ,.._...... a • • • I k;, .... .... Jl6t llStlll. ...-OMNI..... IOll I C..-...... •• ...... _,,,, ...... , ·r19•••••• ..... •-•• •••••••••• .... .,... ,,,..., .. ,,,, ... t le~••· 1541•1'151 or ,,, .. ,,,,,,, ...... ,,,, •••••••••111'"''' ...... -. ..... --17Je Na11rt..... 37 Pis' fl ... &taut 18• 6 •· 190, •t AT VU. _.., "&'WPORT ..,...,.ottkrrf '''''''''"''''''*''' PRKGN'ANT? -····-······· ...... ·-···--..................... ~~ MWil Jtlo ...... bl i....~. aa. 2 Bl,..... ..... frqm OIQd.. UIJl. Lou•s ...... MG( Cirl1111 eonfld• ..... ' 1J ois z br I IJo -balc .. 111, cptal --,..._, --8'!<1,_ It 8-lh, TV fl S<>m• wer-a•ell lift •p Ill au/O oouaHlln1 " ttl .... ,,fl~&UP •l\BLI<.OCEAH.. bl!lll, niY ifo pols' rolrl1 . •••I ob•·"!=!!' . , . J.laeN 1\111><~ hQme. '5l.cl081. htTDlo•I~ A\t"rtlon, allopllOA'lt '*•~•'°11"•.B.llAfu ,., •• '"· >INI. trpt, .,...;.-oii-..,. . ,.,.,.,,,19, ... ,wlll< -·Clf·"'"'••:v !!!~·· A .. n. •111. •TTD•CTrvE ·--" ~. WTD1-kffplu. •• •ldSeni,..nU w"""'· $1a.m-. • ~· onr¥tb101. fdul I P-·---n ~ ~ -• -~• ~-Al'CARBMl.ZU •PboQelkY,ad~ 11~ Fro• beacll oa. mlddlo •I* CoYpl Dtine 3-W J.bl ... . n"' OD Matt ..... m.lle • ...,..._ret .. OrMp-. ~O n:a$Miicm u.arront Ap.rt,. l'OIPP fl!Jr)ore Dr, N& ...... 2 lttMl.$1'56tlttt !!,!•· SG111 Nept11ae. • ... & ...... 4JIO AvaU. Oct 1tC "JS. fad.al ~ .... Co. CDrillakJnJC .. '=r~· t ""tw f'Fweek'tl'9QI. decor A -''t"• nt br trehi& llv tANft' ~aaq tom W:..,. ••••••••••••-•--• b.-7. Call Lar1on ICJ.:1111 56-llU I Altobol~ w/H • • •au ~ ... &.01,_, A.:. .. , u· .r..i-$l1S 2 BR Jlln«l• porch, 1•00 + uUl. Fem•I• 21 -. ,..1 .. -. arf~•rd, ....u or SerYlq: Rart>orarea24 Mbn•dal--22'9 S1tO mo. Call ~lf'tl, ......,.. 1 0 w, .. _ ol bea°m cell c..o ... ._,_. · .._ -· Nh'pOlta'l'd,.Q( Z.U.3Sl·$4GI. offaa.._ Yrl1. '300/mo. "D"Walla • •i't 5 ,;:=z......-aeal., emp1ofed, po ..._ )' .. l'W SPJRITUA.LK&AOD ...-riuor..,_ Slobl• teonta orur. '"· · 1 :-:-.;:..,~ ..... ..:."': Rllllllc Small Sllop for ~TDt.-W-OoaollOAlllolOl'M. • 21JI', llA.Clol 1t!'~b•::; .. ~=i:: •41.aUl -Gl-Oll5 $115.GJG~Ulr,ll'> OC.,.,..,..., •iu~ ulll;;;i"" .. -Jo ll"IL '80 -Newport WBllAVBCASHl Ad•lc.oaaJl-. lllR Fil.I'll 2.ir.~ coroltd Yrf.1 ,.,01111 ,... uoderpr(ced. Cloa. ~·B.I\. •llU. -lo-~J•Mnn....,, .....,.,._ . Blll'llidT.D.'• SUN.EICamiaolleal • queaaala• liped. pri•. fllO • .O:Av~<k\.~ c ..... .._. JIU ~!fr~'. ~fA:;.'r.'!;a. :U mo .. wtabir.l·BR. -Fu:hJoo hJ nd. View of 1.oanon2nc!T.D,1s .~~mente.~ ~ln& rm, fflra 1rc Call 871,,•1• ot •••••••.-•••••••• .. -·~· aar•IM 'PwiftedJtttMr' .~~~moJ#'& '=~~:~~~~ B•Y· s:~r•l•r1 ~u1~Tn•=-T~.;·• ~i.'I::;. ·~ ~· <a»lJSl-44\lti;ollo(t. ~w i bdr1a, 2 bt, ~II ai;e•t _.ra,klu . ITWS TOM*CH 11 ... ni-nmalls luralohed' Plentr ol BAllNBTTltl'G.00. -~KJ1'!"'1'~1• ~.,.. noJ)dl • • &ACH'f~ON'I'lblr: Jba. lkr•I•· BltQ&. ~ /\dultt. QO "(lieti. IBK ... nk'WlQt.er perk•••· For IQfO .. ~2JS4. .--RVtV-•lil••-. " • bltm. I•• • IJldrY ;.c·a ti•, Cdll. -°""· FUllertoo ••· • llll< I&. • IAY;:;.... Fomo1e roommate•-* e<a .. nu. ..-i. tar 11a1J 1113 Full.erloo. SUSC:ASlfAS -mo.. Yrl)I ""'""" Ill NeWPo<t /;vo, lllll<S. .._.., ed. Two--· -.... A tt•ce•Hh/ lOAll·U Pll,at·•J'!! l.attenic.t11ftan1.hldL s.sM.2ZJ • iac UI 1 Br, a_part. Bay, Costa ..... I 2 _, frbtJI. LalUAL .... +-u-rNJ.SUITES (t··· + ......... , SPIRITUAL ADVlSO-ll ......_bo--.Ad alk to b~acb, CrJ>U, •• •o ..uuun. Mona.•·J.SG. .,. .~g ~ & ...., A..tvl _,1 - ••• 0., WLt GGl,y, ao ;-"J !Ir 'l'_. beH.b 1~ _prpa. Crplc., pvt. jallio. roomal. Xeros • aec:y ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ... ce on ._. ~· .6-U. i .. ftPOrtll: •IPlllo' .N'o peg. -.-\tl#wwklwlla.81'-JUS 1Q:'le, cleao ~apt Lady w/3 chUdnmwlsbel ••r•lce av•ll. On C.Pool llSO Jira. JOam.JOpm..:ntl'.., 'JJACH AllL, !'Um. '1251.sl mo. Jncl. ,n.r. • Clble Jlr _l___ a.. ato\tt, aun Sl60et Uv~~l. lncl. ~ .. l~tJ,embo~ ~~ ~:.';rt.a HaBarboook 'e~dl: ... ••••••••-•·--•• .. •• Main.SA ... , 1300 • .., lila:l.lifustbe'cleen6TV. Wn'l'r.-Di;y1 : dect,1a'r-.... 1 ....... tobncb, mo. -~~ -~ae 0 Nd Id Nt Bb YxyGil OtCll .oMr,A: over IQ. 21n1 M2·ao8,EYH:t31-01'M IZIO.M&_.U\ LC•lbr • .2b1,pr,pofth, Part, Jrvla•. $125 -IQO>; 60 .. 44 c:lltati, ~ ~i Ma11a1:. \, ~11: W. ~Hal;J>or Blvd. (Acroaa lta h ard • e11t.Jde, 2 cllUdttn OK. llACM YIAM.Y .,_1'1L d1010£ hecutiveauite. abate ea:p. J>leuo call Come. Spee.l•H-a\ii • . ~m1'·Mart) view N~w "'•totpvt. ,!_,._,, 6 Lrc tbr ~t-Jow hlway. No pets: $190. 1..-..s Deluxe 3 hUCe bdrma. 2 , WANTtoaharebouseat S tie offitu & storage, ~Meve1. P•rapleglca.acz...aue ·"I E • pd ve-~(1•· l!'rpk,Taa1e-.retr.wu-le or5'6·3116 b .. __. r ~ b I b I fU ~ h'-=sz<IS. GIGAN'TtC2 Br It's lee. • Ok$tr lln&Je II~ paid $23S. 6'73-1418 • a, new •n•J "'.,..• rplc, ..... ac wt otber(I) "nt ... eff'port ll'll'JiC --· Lost & Fomd 5300 ~ & , '' underp'rfced, c18aa. pe!r'Nftonlt.mG'18 'Evealnp0t-.knds. Duplex. lb ', qu!et, n 1tepa~::~C::.~ a.e11ea,tl87-38ttAM :af:>e&o~~ Dove,••••••••••••••••••••••• ·'"'ti; ~'.!°lloedtawna, tarages, NTER, by ,.rt. 2.bt, :z ;._U .t.a ITV ·-d o I -' 'o e a t-. o tm:. REFINED Lady aeeU LOSTJf'OUND ••••••••••••--•••_. r-• . waler, Clftllreel ~$300. mo. , ,,.. ~· • _.,. rnotortyc1es.S..1'120. STEPS to beada. dtluxea 1lmllar lo ahr. lovely 1.1. SlNGLE> • Double ()(. APETt Sdl:ools • '· ~ Pll ... !Jjg. Ad~ no pets. 5411...,.. S.noy aou lpadoul 2 br, bltlll, bu, ouodeck. NJl.apL fo. nominal lee. n-loctlod In --2100AdG¢olt,Low ....... tiaol 7005 2020' PUUerton Avo. i tta: bedrcn w h>•riL &t bay S.190 2 Br· R IR. CID. many altu. Yrly lff. M0-1491 cent.er. UUl...b&robbed. Coat Spay /Neuter lnlo. •••••••••••••••••-· ... -. E. ofNe'!J!!>Ct Ave, t bl.It E CLEAN ,t II<, Bst Yiew. l!.lntappolalmenta. corporti;l'.rt pallo, 111 B. $'2S. (fU l722-olsS or B tit tit I\ 1:-:":=.:.=::='-~==::::::::-i;..;.;._;;.;._;~;;,,;.;;,,;.;;,ii .. S. of Ba7. CGata Mesa Bay -b loc. ..Adulta, no Ji.arae garage. Adult.I W. lltb 173-Tm 12Z-2'188 (J,t)$41C'?O NEEDRoommatefor2bf-~~ mon '25" SQ. · Loat: Nr. Bay Island. llA. ,~.•c ( I &a-8890 · , Piii, Yrly. $195..873-Gl113 Wt-mall pet OK,. $l50. 2 Br ci-pta drpa' util'a house: In Hwitia,t.on Bch. UJht blue sabot. tan ln· • l ... iwg!.._llHdo 3740 Br, furn •part.'l blk.to 1110.A(ent675'e!OO .,..;.,Slts'.Over<O. · ~!~:.·~:r 2 .";Jt -. l.tllOF,RliERENT• Ii e.REWARD.615-1810 TRAVEL AG£Ht..:; •·•-•••••••••• .... •••• beach. Co~ ?edee:orr. I Rlt.+ aep, guest rm. & M2-t41J yrly.f4.S.-<< pell TIDY M or F over JO to l·2'-S Rm. ofDces from LOST. Blond maJe 'old ,. ' ·-----y •· -U b lh pa A L 9115 .,.,_ obr II tOlY Cdll bo SIU per mo. Near dog, U yra, "Ham". Vic CLASSESSTAR:I! .• Wlll&.YIA'llS ~;'Ji1:'$4~ ,Goliad. ~ii•1evff. v ' Ch!klrff~OI( EASTliL1:1FF1br$2tO.,Z NoKOOk•ordnae~: Alrpon.Note-.sereq. S.n Clemenle Reward MONTHLY •. 1 IUMtfv Wes • coshldtCJ ,. br siso. Ftp\c, 1)001, 11'1J+ utils.6H--Oet8 833-32239TUnoon 492·0082 ' EarncommlulQG.;, • · BR__. ~ blk. to beach Cost. MHfl • 3124 SpaC. t br. dupleJC. New W-t'767 • DELUXE olflt'!O 1pece for while )'OU Jeani ' "' 727Yf>rtsto.ltYtl W-111.r. er pollibltt Yely. •••• .. •••••••••••••••• cpl, 1200 m WIMIOO atA.NS5to601hr.2bl:._2 lease Crpt paneUna FOUND : Surfboard. 'lte•cbBlv~1lYorktown t'IMll'»JIU:ttt-~. uL2279 .• 1 • • NIAUAYAIACH" b• ap t. $1155 mo. muaJ.c· v·ew's.sqft.835 Describe IN DETAIL. _ p•ci-.·. 53~·1 Baehelor-Sl .. -MN532 Oakwood So. NB. • 1 • . Wrlte lo ''Loa "" ""' EANFRONTll.PT.tb< Offh-Paltt . STUNr;l!IG IC:2b<.2ba "45-Sltl ' ... n.Pleaae~$4N8U. Surfboard", Gen. Del., TIAVELSCHOOL . I STUDIOS I: I Ill S200 per mo .. lJtill J:nc. J~: & 3-.lr,Adulta: t1'> dwastrs. Q4rden apt. Yearl1·Be•cll·2 ,Br, 2ba. ext.2'3,ot83T-491.l S•n Clemente P.O.. IS10E17tbSt.S.APa ==t~~,!f 1 ·wntr. S48~1930orfn3..1'8M plta. dshwh tba& epU. PWl, etc. S2i5. '710 18th ·$404 Seashore.Lower. Relph female, 24 or c»'ft', PreaUge bldg Newport 92672. Include PH. &/ ~ 14S·661S - I •LaundryF'a<!Wties ROE 2 br, fum. ·~ tloted garage, frplc, SL SJISfmo. gar. tt•le. t •are 38r DuplH: in .Bbch Luaurypvtomcei..:•::d:::d:.:'°::':::'·:_ _____ 1 AceNdltedbyNATIS.... -~eeUUli11·es t b h ~ vi .S$Q. Gaa &: water pd. tJ N 'port HM-•'..:.. 54B·OWaA6pm. ewport.8'73-6598after5. ln1u1te 6U-3100 FOUND •n Y l EatabU1hedt96S -r1 o eac ; vvean ew. p I ~·r. ew .. ..,,ts ..... -... · : • ng, ma e Fi cl dPrva: •f.'reeLinens Hug•Patlo, Wnt.r. rental r. MAMCHkAPr 1! b r l'~.b a· pa,L.I ~ Newport Hgts 1 Bt. aaa; fora..t 4350 Airport Off' Building Blk. le WhL cit. Vic. nu al Al ra.,.. •"'I:V 'Maid serv. avail $275. YTiy . )'Clltal 1375. S encl'DseO-ga"\age n~ sml yard. $115. 548-Uti •••••••••••••••••-•••• Su"tea 1Jce 'Z'I0/31' Balter, btwn Had>or & •llar-·B·Q1.1e 3980 Seaabore Dr .. NB. .'77SScs:~t,:,cM' carpet, uduJts, nO Pets. atl. 7;30 ' I Gar $30; Sn&I Gar &aJ aq ~ .. Free rent: Fairview, CM. ~'1032 W..t.d. 1J7s •Phone Service 6111-3818 $22:S. 288A £.16th Place. D£LUXE 2 •. ~-3 ..__ SW. onlY, motor cye:le Nov.Act.9'19-8533 . "n.4PM ••••••••••••••••••••'"•• R. OCEAN new DplJ:. 2 wwutn. . ROO, patio. 'Home ke CM.67~'778'7· SPACEAvall.J.nqufetolc. FOUND: Germ. Shep, x n ---.... I •I Mlle to ocean LI•• at ..... _.ar..... MS-3515. 1 w -U.,., OK~ $20 731 W. l8lb St. E celle t houaecl ..... 1 .... BEAUTIFUL t br furn br, l ba. Garb. d(Sp, Mwf~~ #2 BR, l~ ba, new cpts. aettlnr, x1nl. Jot!. Adtilll, w IT el ex• e 1 e c . Female, vie. Weatcliff done ry iagy. ~~:'j ·apts$165&Sl'75.Spanilh D /W, gar. Y.rly. $310. 2 ~rms, 2 baths, w/w pal~t. drps, 11. rm1, nopetl.548·lan6'2-0&M DOUBLE ~ar. foe rent. typewrller. By oc area,N8.IS42-5T19 regu ar aa •· ~ stylebldg,pvtenclgar, ChildOJ(.. c}t\1,--drps, bltns 4 Ch1~d ·re-n·-().K .. -•:z.10., •D&UX... tupermo.CM.Area. alrport'752·8181 FOUND. Female tranap.MT~· .:·: pool, aatana. lndry, ~ta. 675·06421642-0696 R.t\'("at.e ,.pati03. Lovely 545-6375 ..-. 64&-57$1 ' miniature Schnauzer nr Bab,.ttter, lie ~-.- 1'7301 KetlSOfl Ln. t blk · spacious g•rden-llke Ea1tbluff 3 br, 2 ba, R al 'IRPOIT .&.D&.a. fanLI thru 7 ar V. W. pf Beach olf Slater. Facina Otean. specious aJ>ls. J:teated "'pool . At· l Br! new paint,~ & townhouse, Jae. Inc.L· • ftt 4400 A ""-....,.._ ~~1'•'olld/962&9904Warner. Elem Sc:hl,' M1f. •. M2·7M8 sharply tarn. 2 Br, tractive ren,l. Adulla refng. Adul\j, oo J)etll. apac master suite, dla •••••••••••••e.••••••••• *OFFICE* .,._ TJ.lbert963·3823 tfi.-1l ll ST''DlO apt, like .new, ~~[· $300 Adults. ~Y~ ,, . • Only$13S.548-EB20 rm 6 dbl 'garage. Auto llOl'Welh:lffDr. 912 Sq. ft. on giound Found: Young ·female ~ J>.' Y \275 E . lBthst, C. l\o1. VILLA MESA Garden door opener avail. Pool 6 Newport Financlaletr noor. Corner location of bla ck German Sbe Student Help Available. ir rrplc, )aeu:izl., pool,. l· blk . 631·3003 A b , retrtatlon area. Adult.a a,,.-1-o Q.&a--c__.., newer t W 0 • S l 0 r y -twhte under markin"" ~OU desire .Lhe beJp of 1 tobeach.968'=5'700 Nice! Br, I Ba,sundeck, Pts 2 r, patio,~· only popeU .._, ~....---court.yardWlding,adja· Ma.37,2HB -fine Cbri1t.1an peb~r. . , gar, furn., close to bcb. MEDITERRAMEAN playground, garage rom ' $3.32 Cal,lonSiteMaoager cent to reataur•nt.s and call office, SoulW•~n SMALL BEACH HOTEL 67,_6233 ~05 . 719 W. WlJson . •. ' (714)6t2·lJ11Ul3'8 r· r aoo 522..SO k VILLAGE 846·1251 86SAm1gosWay,NB · one block ott Sin Diego FOUND male Germa CaJlfornla Collete t .-.Apts_:_~ mo . .si~~ Duplex 2 Br &3 Br Winter l Br, l Br & Den. 2 Br. 2 Managed by Frwy. Short lease terms. Shepherd. vie. N 545·11'78, ask for lira r--'-".."-"-'.C..C--"CC..:=:....1 lse, SZ!.5 & S21S. Ist &: last Br Townhouse. Carpets, SEL:L id_ le items. with a William Walters Co. CALL PHJL BROWN f{eighls area. 631-0797 Evans. SECLUDED 1 br dplx. &cleaningdepostt.New drdpes, fireplace, 3 Da1tyP1lotClass1fiedAd.Lid 1714J75Z..7300 FOUND: Parakeet.u.a-W ... ed 11io) ~~ Noehildreno,~· crp'· • paint '""'"lo pools. 4 tenn1·s ,....,_u . 642-5678. ' o,wlnteror"5(Jonyn I ·~,. __.-. to-'""· "" ,. · Y2 ...... .,...,.., ~ I f unt B •••lhRtal Di¥. . Found pn Balboa Penn. ••••••••• •••••••••••._.• Gad.,ull&. 96 w 2 .t 8996 r. pd._ Prer. l Beach.879-9404aft..8 &Ym ·sauna's J ease, urn/ · 2 r, ..z~,...... Green/ blue marcm· ••.••cc·• $6-s-ol 2400Harb0retvd .._tilM)tOft._3140 den , ll!J Ba.· patio ~ ...... -• -,.. "' ..,.,,.. ,~ LG . Bach w /frpl, steps to Costa MeJa tn<1>~7.8()20 •••••••••••••••••••• .. •• 875-5291 ~._,. ...,...,..... 6'15·370S. 100~ Fee Paid '• ~ l09Mahach 3741 bC'h.·S160. ~206 Neptune, Lo~eAt tltliM S.Cle t 317 .,_._...., FOUND : Sml Male Brwn PayrollJComputer/AfP ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5<¥1·5473 Adult 2 huge bedrooms 2 Br 2 BA from-'" Uni' . "'fR • 6 . ' .t" _, ....._ ...._ .,,tbr'd Dog, Balboa Conslt/Gen'I toT.B. • . $1'7Q no pets. lnq ·re a t _. --· ••••••••••••••••••••••• " ..... ..,ni-, See ' ~$1.m'. .AJt_ract1ve2bd,~ba,apt. WINTER. on the sandal G568W.Wllson r Ji' queadult.apts.:Nolease.Beach, com. centf:T. enin.9n8'15-6517 *LlzyRselndersAgene:t ·· Right OQ. ~he Be.ach. 1628 Oceanfront. l br Sorry, no thlldreo or 1,100'. 2br. l~.4·plu. FOUND: Yn1 Gray Cat, it020BirchSt,St.ei~L.; Fabulous view, Winter $210, Studio $lSO mo. NEWLYDECORATED Pets. Mature adults. LeaJe lniMsal...... 4450 renlJll. No pets. Days, Utils pd. 963-4888 2 Br, w (gar. erpt. $18.5. APPL~ AP'.J'S 1195. 49'2-S799. • 55' Plll~Ff ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cmlale, Vie:d. 51.ormedCoast Plat.a NCewportall forBea-•c!'83:141tG i • 49t~lOSS. Night.s,Ol-3834. Water -pd . 2176 . ·c ·· !700 Warner Ave, H.B. nema, e paws I--"'""'""-===="-~ 'Wt IM MAC, off oce..ao Place1;1tla 6-36-4120l·S l714J841-6047 S-.S.-1617WESTC ~-NB THE · 548·1948 AccomtlagCleft: .: ;i. t>c"bte~ r;ntalOt, one l>vl~~ .wLvlew. 8.eayt. w8"1 . · ' llll&TO l&•~H C..,.1h-Mo 3171 "A.GT. 541· FOUND: Cat, solid gray 3 y.ears exper. in book ~ WD. ean ll!W, 1Wi0eck, au bltn&, Ill(':. '2 BY., t ha upper, shag cpt, Ii ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' COLONY I v · Wilso & . fo>lt, 2br., 2ba .• beams. dahwabr:. 3 br upper, garage, si-,s. 1009 A Mi;i· MEAi SHOPPIMG z BR Condo cpt.a drpa ll'6 up ~tore4fices cpt.s ~·g mcM· s;;c~ n keeping. Must ha'l-c $350 mo. ~lso furn LOWER 3 br, 2 ba, $275 sion, art .5, 5~6 1,2 &3 Br apts, bltns. dU.: wash/dry, t!'nc. nr. t2Z drps air bath. 17301 30 RETAIL SHOPS iner , I . qpulealleiflcaaclcloonsunt1·'n°"g ...,,data. bachelor avail. $145 mo. ea. All-blt-ns. Pvt. court hwashers some w/[rplcs mo •dulls oaly Aft. Beach Bl, H.B. 842-2834 Prime reasonable space WST Large male Sable . Call weekdays, Patty, yd, gar. 112 3'..ilh St.. BN~~~lR:~o~:;rspd & 2 car g~rages. From 6PM,55t·t537 . . PROFESS'La..ASSA available large&smalL Collie. AnswentoDuke. processing. Salat'y: $40-8920, weekends, OpenSal.&Sun.643-3109 ac f o . L, ,, 1200. Lions Eslates Bldg 3 sto y 2790 Old world ch;Jtm with Vic. No. Laguna. Call negoliable.Call752-Uii4. 494-5145. eves, 642-4~ wkdys ~PP I n;.s ·a· 9g3aHr. ~ol o I , 536.2579 • Apm lw1ent1 ,_,.IMd Haroo'r Blvd re M Air Fr'ene:b windows, '8bles 497-1644 or fKB·9052. Ask for Irene. Jatuzz1. am1 ton, orUmndshltl 3900 d 1 • · · 4c trees. Adjacent lo Oe:eantrOnt. Spacious. OCEANFRONT Jge de· 1545-4411 · WALKTOBUCH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~on .,eev .. panelwall5, Festival or Arts LOST : small blondeA mm unit ('Q. Winter $325.·~25. inc. corated, clean 3 b'r 2 ba ,_., b drapn, carpet, elec,~ Grounds. Cocker 12 yrs old, aJ Warehouseman La'tf: • util. or Yearly.497-1082. & lge l br. 6'15-4688 ' IRAND HEW lau r, cpts. drps, blLnl, THE EXCITING muaie:, janitor, parking. 580 BROAfJWAY . ' m e. torcement Medi ~ Eas~ide 2 bdrm & den -garage.205&2121Sth$t. PA.LMMISAAPTS. M.R . Stever, Mgr . LAGUNA BEACH Vic. Cosl.a Mesa SL~ Dental T~hs. LVtf's & BACH . utll pd, $185. mo. S275. S48·7431 536·SOS8 or SlS--4259 or MINUTESTONPT 557-0136or64&&196 :•Yf1ondbl CM • .H~s Musicians. Part-time. up /$60.wkCresceo.tBay. A.portm1t11ts 841-3957 BCH. ear. pr.o em, nee s age 17·44 $50--$75 per 143SN.CstHwy49i-25M Unt&rwiihed NtGE 2 br:1 ba, pool, "UIETl..COOI.. Bae:b, 1&2 BR. from SUPERspace,reas.rent. 494•7915 hedic~~~0;411c-;,:fn~l weeke~d. Ar'rily , crpt' d....., Is to ever ""' $172 50 Pvt bath, AfC, htd, drps, car· · • • Reserve Training ~ Lav.Furn. StudiO. Oc.Vu., ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ... ~. . 2b h d . A f 646·1940(aft.4) . . ,...". Walk lo Sch. Carp .• nu G...-al 3BOZ Ything. $190.548·7986Afi. r,news agcrpt, rps, Adults,NoPets new t'rpt. cros1 rom v1ded. Long Beach (213) • 5 newlypainle<l,ga5stove. lS6lMesaDr. Stull Shirt. 2tOO W. Cst ELUXE office, comm'I LOST male Irish Setter 594·0219, Orange rCo. pets, Yrly Jse. $210 . ••••••••••••••••••••• • closed gar. Sorry no peU HwJt, 544 -8618 &: Industrial spa~ Also 499·2927 or 497-1040. i\NAHElM HUGE 3 br, 2 1/~ ba studio, or child11en. $185. mo.-+ <5 BJks East of Newport mini warehouses in Vie:. Bristol & Cypress <7 J. 4> 527·303l. . Y~S! ~PpRTS! cpt.s, drps, stove, no pets: dcp. 425'A t2lhSt. ~J~~ •NEWPORT L~1una Nlguel&Mission :.,~~4~!,.~~ward! A.SSEMILERTRM!" OW~~anfro1nt 4 Br, apt. NewC~yo~Rirp..Aplsin $2$.5.545·SZ70 ;546-6895 IBRCONDOJde 11 CENTER* Viejo areas. Hantly to Loe:al alternator re· tnter ease. no pets. Anaheim Hills give you . a or re-• • ExecuUve ane:e Suites San Die10 Fwy. 200 to LOST: Sept. 5, Blk fem . manufae:turer. Dutiei m.~ SUlS . .CM-7011. all these abundantly! 111 LOFT ONLY ti~. Wash/Dryer. pvt. D ' '• w/1ec .. 1adal serv;ce 2000 sq rt. As low as 30' Peke/Schnauzer v;c. elude soldering, cheek· Oceanfront 2 br, 1 ba. util Country Club llving. 11vt patio, frpl, 1 yr lse patio, e:lubhse, pool. ~e available. Stan Amon. per sq ft . 831·1400 Fairview & Adams CM. ing or parts, assembly of d Al Golf. 11 tennis cts. Avail.~pt.lSth Blng,o, lrlps. Walk 10 .. ~~1860 M5-836Saft.SPA1 al•·malors. M"•l s-ak P :-· so yn:r: ra....nd shop • CLr $195 642-8768 -· $80. Mo. Ideal Newport l .o.;;~==c..:.=---1 ~ -~ b h 536 032 Horaeba-ck rtdjng. 1,2&2 HAYLOFT Afll'S •· · · __J -some English. sz,ia hr. ac · · 1 "' brm + den For info ZBJ • ~-CM · EXECVTJV E suites on shop avail in the mall at l.<ISt: Irish Setter. C.M. Ask for~ k ~.91,. · 3769 637-4300 ' "''foe-. 3 or MORE BIG! Newport Harbor. 400 to The Factory for: Coon-Male. Approx. l yr old. rian ,......-.· v-1. He>wporfleoch 645·0143 Huge 3 br, 2 ba beach 2200 sq fl. 642·••••.· try. store, bookstore, de· Call968·8105. , , •••M,••••••••••••~••••• • ..-..... .. Illa-~· 3806 l I --.. nu ap . • &tS-4405 1,etc.67J-9606or673-939J ASSTMGRTRMe ~ ... WK UP.1&2 &dr .Ii••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br, 2 ba, crpt, patio, nr Call ror additional info, FOUND: Contact. lenses. ' Bac·h. Color 1V, maid . OCC. $225. 1009 A M.is· 17!<) 8'7 4387 p I Hunt .• Sch. loc. 3200 Sq Ft C-2 store front vie. 9th & Balboa, NB. on Needed at Del Taco, S.rv. pool. THE MESA. Veafly. Charming 2 Br. I 51·0n·, .. ..,4576 8/1 6 · r me beach. 675.9953 LaRuna Hills. Will train b T Co td .-.· ~. . from $125. mo. incld. util. with 6 drive·in bays . .C15 N. Newport Bt, NB a. errace. mpcp · L:a:rge2BR,lba.$165/mo 5075 W:irner Ave . Jdeal for auto or tioatl -'===~=----lag!iressivepersoninfasl 6'6-9681 $Z7$_.675-2733Aft5. lBRGARDENAptw/stv. •Closed gar, stove/ref, Oakwoqd offers the 846-3"29 service. S35 w. 19th St, FOUND Iris h Setter, food mgmt. Goodoppor. •-'"'-a•-•"-~-3107 & refrig. New pnl &drps. near stores. QUld OK. (fnest in country club liv· CM. Days S40-5TIO, eves Harbor Vi.._ew Are a. for right person. Apply. Ocean Frnt, W"ioter $270=::: •• ~~ •••• e~. L~h-shag crpt. Adults, Nopet5Rltr67$-6700 inaataprie:eyoucanaf· llOOKHURST M&-0681 644-8685 25252 La Paz Rd, Lag. mo.Adults,nopets,gar, ' no pels. Only $175. ford. There's $1 million Hills.581·4720 28r, tba. 673-31'.&. WALK to bay/beach 2 br, 548-6920 NEW Lg. 3 br, dshwshr., in ree:reatio'nal fae:iUUes. · AHAMCIAL SEP. bldg w/gar. lOOOsq FOUND: Fem min Poo-1---------- 1"'2 ba, ga.r.age, laundry, b . enc. g'ar, 2 ha $2'75 nt0. NIGHT LIGHTED TEN· PLAZA ft. 213 W. Wilson, CM. die, silver, poss preg. A TI"ENTIO~ Owners gorgeous 3 Br 2 patio.~ to $275 yrly. QUIET .z r w /pat10. New lg. 2 br, patio, lg. NISCOURTS.AfuUUme Now leasing-NEW, 645-2020&642-6560. Los Coyotes Diag & " ,'Ba upr, beaut furn, Refs.-5'8-7.SSS;MB-3607 Youngchlldorsmalldog closets, enc. gar. 1225 activities director who custom executive office Woodru£[ 540-0583 TRAVB. ocean view·, upr patio. ok. 610 Joann. $195 . mo. Gd. loc ... 7.-.1. or I 1· BBQ' · ndustrial Rental· 4'500 213·4Z9-8265 Slep' lo beh. Gar SPAC.lbr,2 ba,frplc.'h ...,... pans par1es. s, 1wte1.Largeandsmall !-'"'-=="'------! IB&OVER · • • 548-9573 ., .. "·1172 tripo •· more' ~ .. Sun u•ers accommodated. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 W.h.r /dry •. No pets. blk to bay or.'bcb, views. .,._ ,. · ~· · FOUND: Key chain w J 10 Exciting job opply 'for · M v daybrunch. Lease includes all 000 SQ FT, 3 ofcs, 2 Winter. Avail now. ll9 So. of Bal. Pler. No pets. •2 Br upper. esa erde. ~a leach 3848 Plua bea_utifu( single!&, ame n It i es. Leasing baths, immed. across .st keys. Vi cin ity of the those seeking something JOthN.8.8'73-1889 $450.yrl)'.494·1795 Adults. $185 , Garage ••••••••••••••••••••••• l&Z bedroom apts, agent, Donna. on pre· fromOCAirport.96.1·7878 Wed~c .Ba l boa .646-2673. difrerent. Mustbcsiri1t:lc . , . avail., no pets. 833-8974 Drop a pebble into the f . 8 & free lo travel at a ran· Colh w... 3724 Costo Mna 3724 ·2 BR & d Ocean rrom your Apt. Ourkn11hooded &GunfdumWtAed. mHl•e,•1· 20901 2 Berool<hhurst, NEW llo1· l Newport, Costa F 0 U N D : M c n s dom intinerary. Return ••••••••••••• .. ••••-·~•••••••••••••••i••••••• r .h1ne~ c.rptsed 1rps, Lease Luxllry securi'"' a w ar en pt.a un ng on ae: • nr l\.1esa 1000 1200 1440sq Eyeglas!les, prescrip· trans. guaranteed.' No res y paint , eec. · • 'V• offers a'! exe:lusive "No ,,.tlanta.963-8981. ft.54j.314s~r646'.zoos lion. Vic. Bayside & e xp. nee. On the job AMBASSADOR 'INN · BRANl>~EW • No Cleaning ~eposit $ 5 Q . No Luse Required s· I Sf d. • t rng e u 10 .. p. • WHkly -w ..,•k• i •1tcM1t t.tllit~ ,.,.11, • hutli¥14uel ,.,..,. oaN1tr.I • T~i.it-1,.ltt. •'IWlk .. "'-4~ • JM~fll ,.OI ' .o.. tto'1 .w...r.'"'"'"'" .... ''· ......... '"'· •OfNCtdMl~••-11. WRERFAUS•STliEAMS•LAGooNS 2909 BRISTOL AVE. . SANT~ ANA (Al Soulh C:O.ol Plaza) 540' 2300 l bltn range &. O'len. No Mature adults. 31755 Cst. Reot Raise puarantee". Jamboree, Bal. lsl. Sun. · children or pets. 117~. Hwy._.C99-2835. We guaranttt that your SINGLE .to 6 rm suit.es. 1200 Sq Ft M·l space, 675·5200 ~~~~::.-~~at~~ n~ p I mo. 111 esa Ve rde. ON THE WATER . 2 8d rent will not be raised for bAldvall. lOCD Pl~ ofFuhc1•1 front office, drive-in rear barn er. Must be able lo M9-1058 .. • • I FULL YEAR&: stiJJ gnr. .-....vvrt. door $185 mo 629 LOST: Fem . 1itrey-blk l 'h ba. Widen over the have the flexibility of s.ervice inti; Recep· Ternlinat Way,' CM . part Silky. Wh ite on s tart immed. wh.en Lg.1&:!Bedroom,2Ba Whltew.:i-ter clif(1 in pionthtomonthoccupan· uonlst, conference rm, Days 540-5710 eves chest,ne a,chokcrollar. hired. For personal in· WaUrlOSh~&Bus Lag.una.-Unbelievable cy..ModelsopendailylO xerox, automated typ. 646·0681 • ldent, li cense. Mandy. l e rvicw & appt.c8 11 filoPeis.Mgr.631·3847 \ux"11')'onl,yS50Q..permo. lo '7. Sorry, no pets or ing,et.c.CaU833-3640 Reward. 613 -3856, Kathy 551·3000bctwn .. JO d to rlght ten-ant. Yearly. children Month to month G d 11 'th StorCICJe 4'550 673-1948 &5Wed, Thon&Fri . Wante -Young Married 49'·17 .• ' occupa n~y & roommate roun oor WI or w/o ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . . ASS MB CoUplei t h"ild OM:, no . service available. sn;>rage, panel_. shwr, RENT,ZOO'X:JOO'closedin LOST. T1J:er stnpped cal. l E LY WORKERS· pets, 2Br, lba, dsh~br. Recentlylru11t3story2br, fr.1g, sink, air , CM yard, Hunt. Beat':h. M·l Hlk & Jilrey & orange. I-I Fl mrg r requires bttn1 encl gar Cncd 2 ba luxury con · Oa.kw'ood. 5"8·9'766 zone.Ph:556-1017 f'!ca collar. 9 yrs old. soldering & small lbOI 5>alio.' $20$'.mo., nl Q-lsl. dominiutDs. Xlnt Vlews, , Vic . of Sl.ater & Newland. exp. Startin1it $2.50 hr•+ 968·3'18$ from~yr\y.494-1795 Garden OFFICE or store avail. Ve hi c l e or Tra i le r Reward.847.954 1. be nefits. Apply B.E .s . NEWLY Decor 'd . u-wport•-~ 31'9 Apartments 100~ sq f~. New~ort Storage,$t8perQuart.er . lnc.,34S Fise:her,C.M.nr ,_ _ _.. o !'!'1...,1n 00 . Cbo1ce location. W.l7thCl\1.548-0358 LOST : Reward for lost thca1rporttower.8-4:30 Eastside 2 br, pvt. yd.••••••••••••••••••••••• ....., Mal e Do bie, ans. to ene:. gar. Pool.. adult.a. PAIK Ml'Wl"OIT Me•pwi •.cti Rentals Wented 4'600 "Cer... red collar. 212 Automoti•e ScHs $225.5'6·8739 APARTMENTS 8~~r;;~e FOR SUBLET ••••••••••••••••••••••• Santa Is a bell a , CA-1 . Need youn11:, aggressive CASA VICTORIA s&cbelor lor2 645 ,550 Exec. ofc-'t. at Fu.bi6n Su e . L EA s E park 64S·0358 Iv. 1nfor. mfn to sell fast moviniz d ~ N 1 8 h. 1 BR vehicles. Top ·1· 1,2&3br, DeluxeUnfur. Be rooms and ~and, NB. WeOa Fargo ewpor . at or . p---.... 5350 missions & benefi~ ~ li'ti Juol,.""" Townhouses " .n...ea f t A~· From nk Bldg 1 •-2 1-apt. 640-6344 aft. 8. ~s ,. 'Ad~1l's':~Ofe~5;.i~te Fr.$229.SOOpeoM "sl&s t~ G~. tl'W: inckl. tnorunfam~A~: 2B h D..>l~A .......................... r~~~~~~:nl now g Pool,recrm,e\evators Daily Newport8ctt~or ~I .ft 2pvt. olc'a."&: r ouse~fgar.~""' auca1ia n female 45. SZ5 Vle:torlar, &12.a?O Spa-Pool.s•Teonls 8'75-S205or'8'71-8f71 Set-r~tlry /re0ce:t~·on ~J · f' ch~~·~· Ref. 5'2", 120, s ingle wants to Co~~·~~ 1~~.-A. 1-...:::::..:c:.:.::::.:::!.::=c::::.:..-1 Across from Fashion area. Jntemat.lonal oap · pm. · relo.cate In area o r '10SE to Shopping, 2 BR. Jtlaod at Jamboree on LAIGE & LOVa Y Products, 660 Newport lnlHtl/ltt•tst I Newport Beae:.h to San SSWOOO .... '~ 2 BA. pool. Adlts, no pets. San Joaquin I-fills Road. M vdern '3 bi:J, 2 ba, Ctr. Dr., Ste. 285, NB. fin-.c• Diego,. Wants smcere, ar. !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj;; Cpt., drps, slv, rd. $195. . 1714t6~4-1900 D"plex ~ block lo ('714)S4&-GIOlaft5PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ree:tlonate Caue:asia n 1 8 8 7 M on r o v i a Bea cH . • frplc. S375 . 14ittlRlll male working or retired. AVON 548·97•3 1644 •9419 Bayfront ~ Bd,"2 Ba, Pvt. wtnter. '450 yearly. Day NO. ~ta M~ Denlal 0 rtwdt 5005 I like traveling, home Bch & "piet.-¥50 yrly. ..-.-...... E 491 1136 ' Med1cal/Ofc ""tes avail. ppo 1 llre. Reply Ad. 502, Daily LARGE 1 bl', newly dt· 9'79·193S&84•-4$t0 -·-vu, · · From $3f5 /mo ~ Mr.••••••••••••••••••••••• Piiot, P.O.Box 1560, coratM. cpts, drps,, mtl· > RoaMf 4000 O'Keefe, 5'9-8138 Beauly Salon. ·4 .statlonl'.1.:C..:::::•::•.:M::•::•::•::·.:Ca:::.:. 92163J=::...-1 . ~' ' ' rared wall, ueepUonal. UPI ER OCEANFRONT ••••••••••••••••••••••• brand new, -a'es1gned ror tDWaUace.960--3633 Dpla:. Suodeck,2br,gar. c· I NtWLY Decorated , Co nte mporary Hair FUND RAISING? Sell warld ramous .pco-. WJD.StvJref.641-2830 OC ma e sludentdcslret carpeted 2 room ofnces. Dn!sser. Located in new Xlnt project wfJ.OOd n?· d h · ( (y Garden Apt. 2-Bt, lba, . 1ame,to 1bare house ex· taay to find, ample building w Jfree. parking t f 1 b uct.s l e entire ami encl g a r . S200 fmo. f330. Yrly 2 br, 2 ba. 2 peoaet for 1c6ool year In parkinil, xlnl IOcaUOn. Laguna Bch. Ownef g~rn~z:l~:n~~~eube~cfi~~ t an use, enjoy. txceHent. Adu It s'. 631 ·I2•9 J 1tory. 2 tar e:ncl 1ar., Newporl Beech. Call '711 'II. 11th St., 175 &: SM. m\&ll sell due to iUn~ss. fn& the City o( Hope.1bls eamin1s. Call ~704l.·or '!..t:::"'=:·=7l29=::·:::::~::::::;=::::::±=b~•=le=o=•Y=·= .. =:~=1eo:t=::::::::::::::.!;"(Z~l~3=1'l~97·36~l6'¥;:;;;:=;=::::::::.l:::sa;::·•=""'~o=r=S4lf.~=11154~::::::::::~'~"~·~Sl~63~1~n~.~·~·====::±'::!~m~o~n~1~h~o~nl~y~.~7sz~.7~1TT~::::::=J:~z.;o:::n:ll~b7·1359 Days .. -~ .... 1 )~ -- I I .. ·~-,. . .. . . , • • • • • .ltl CW\. Y PllO I * Add lt. .. Bulld it ... Oiaper it ... Hammer It ... Carpet lt ... Cement it ... Wire it ... Hoe it ... Clean it ... Move it. .. Press it ... Paint it... Nail 11...Plaster lt ... Flx It ... SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb 11 ... Plltch lt .•. t'IPll u ... Rllll"\00111 "-· Roof 11 •.. Landscape lt .•• Tlle lt ... Trlm lt ••• sawlt •.. Haul IL •. Add It •.. Plant it •.. Alter lt •.. uarn 11 ... lilccomiltz1 c.....,..,. c...,.1s ... 1u -""1 ;li•••lllt ........ M••, ' , •• ..,,., ...... "'"•• ' ••••••••••••••••••••••. ••••••••••••••••••••••· ...................................................................... i. ...................... ··············-··· .. -................ --•• , .......... , ...... ·--· J'o Sookke1pln1·fiaancla Carpentry -Custom .John'• Carpel & in Exp.JapaAt:teGardentt.luoUSECLEANINGli~ ,,:replaca~ WA.LLCOVEIUNGS• ... 1111•111 •l•teaieDU·lncome tal Remod, repair, udd-on. Upholi:lery.Dri1hampoo SCRAMu1S Complele )Id malnl. 8u.1fneu. Call Janice• Btiek·Coaeniit.Pa&lo lnst&Uedf Is-••• ~yneicp.Da-*20t Insulate. Dt-..i.na. f'tee (1011 retard11ntJ). ANSWERS Sbnab., Uen, l'ree IM. RauedyADN..~ · llloc.kW&lJ.l.BBQPlta a.moved ..-~-.._ -~-~-----1 est.OO.:M39 t>eireaurs & "11 color-546-0517 sd-. IEsta.-.otM J .£.SWEJllSON Water b ealen. dla I labpltff'") b i h & 10 I W•nl a RF.AL CLEAN poub. dtalDI., faueett ••••••••••••••••••••••,All types carpentry. ble~c~e;~~s your w~t~ Oetave -Unity -CiflwrolSff"ltc:tt HOUSE?CaUCiinabam Mo•lllt R.,tliablo 5PaloUa.~ ~~· eopper replpea.. Sam ChDdrn 2~ lo s yrs. Jlo trame, finish. remodeJ . 1 S b Hunch -l>epc6e-•••••••••••••.,.-•••••• Glrl. Free ult. 645-5123 ••••••••••-•-•••••••• ~-•ee at. pee, r¥-, ur prtces dt.Y • Dl&!iL W Ju.neb , fenced backyard repair. AU work guaran-!!~rn: s. m:"~t~~~ Y PAUNClt .. THINGS'' by Moo1e. MOVJNGf 2 expr men l/ul. lake MIU: CUrla.' U1 Rererence1.646-0l60 teed. Tony Palombo. Cl ,. log oom dining Mlddlea1elst.hetimeln Gcn woodwon. repain, We Do A.nY ~ype move you re . lta.MC-4370....,~ ~. IL I l Member BBB. 962-8314. rr:o~ hvoill $15 An" rm life when you I011e yuu1 plumblrl&. etc.IG-581.S ~~usecleantDf. Ph.JC~~ aaonable/refa. W.8481, Patfot JUSTPLU..•,... ov n& care. g )'d · 1 pun eh but "H.lo a ,. .. m .owneqwp. "1~· 6757572. •c••• -••w• Hr/day/Wk . nltestwkndJ MASTER Craftsmans $1 .~. i:ouch S'IO, chuir ~. PAUNCH. e I DO IT AL1! 2PM. 541 .. 1081 . ••••••r•••••••••••••••·1 ~---~--~---- 0K. Ref1/llc. 556·03•f Speci11lty. Remodeling, 15 yrs. exp. ls whul ~ . I Pl bi p.r...i-tp '--CUSTOKWOODPATIOS ~eannie. fini~h work, refs. l'Tet! count.II. not method. l dn Gard4tftlng F.lectric.11 • UJftDlft&, E"cellent boasecleanlng ••• :":::"? •• !!.~'.'::!! ...... Detlin/Bbllda1Jabapes •--..Ill . . est.Gu.11r-.·ork400.3105 work myself. Gd . rcfli ••••••••••••••••••••••• etc. Reaarata.642-4867 done by lady. ~anuow°"n EXTERJORS SAVE 68I~Lie'dt113-88'5 =.'!'!••••••--••• .. Licensed babysitting i Sll-0101. JAPANESE GARDENER HANDY?dAN-Romo&: retular basis. ., TYP my home. C.OSta Mcsa.Cstm kitchen & balh.. 10 an.u.... C 1 1 trantp.M7-3831 R .L. Slaor State P'l•hr/I.,.. R.EPAfft.,..AJ...L ES 931·1929 Remodeling, alterations Carpet ln1lallatlon , yrat1x~r, r-aea Apta. onsc eat oua Licen11ed J411,1red Cal •••••••••••••••••••-•• Reaa.freetlll.Uc. & repair. Unique & un J\op.11.lrs. Free estimates Reasona le/F.Mllma.te. Craftsm•n.~aft4. L..c:kcapht9 979-3335 W&ltSSO.SOZOanytime I Child care IOI' workin usual work welcome. Guar. labor 645--3274 C.11ll 75l·l93'1. The Handy Man. •••••••••••••••-•••••• PATCH PLASl'E8,RJG --mot be rs ActlvlUes fo , • • • F ~· L _ _._:.. . Prof. P•ir.ttn1, clean wric L TYPES •, •-. Mbr888ureau962·83I4 •STEAM CLl'.:AN• M 0 ST LAWN Can .. on11 ai-.&IM:ape & reu Jnt. 6 Ext. tree ••AL ** ••••••••••••-•-•••., little 1lrl.s Age 3-4. My &10WED /EDGED s: ~ Sodlawna/Sprtnklen t 751~.1162.-:5425 F'rffEtt stO-mS hol'ne .Slhr.~. Carpenlry,rmdl /repalr C"rJlf'l&Upholslery wk , CM/N IJ ONLY. ffomeRepa.1 ' DesianSvs ~OOZ.181.,. es . VERY NE T.P•TCHCERAMlCTILE.New. Cstm work n :specioilly Insured QuaUly84&7811 G 9 2015 lm US 4T n. n--"-I -.... •-I luslnes1 S."k• 25yrscxp~>S91S ChlklC eorge!M . proveme Ea:perienced J11panese HO EPAINTJNG . JOBS & R'ESTUCCO. n.cdl'UU'll:" • .,,...,. ._ ••••••••••••••••••••••·~--~~-~·'"'"-''-'-'-'--I ... C 1 l G d T Denni• Gardenin"' & landscan-Inside/out. lli qualllow Fr 1 .... ,~.... jobswelcome.538.aaB ••• ••••••••••••••••••• omp e e at en-re St Clair • r rates Bruce84S-5378 ee• · --Copying: Xerox 3600. Ex· Carp~ n try · Paneling • Ser v . Commer cl Pb· ~l ln1. t"ree esL 6'5-l:BS. · ' op Soll pert serv, reas. C.B.S. shelvini:. sml remodel. Costa l"ol es a Pre-School Residntl Estimates, Dob. ' • u-...--Cu• tom pa Int ID g I ,..... ••••••••••••••-••••••• I78758each,}IB.847·5111 Nojob too sml.£!60.3949 open ti :Joam -tipm . 557·9180 HcUI-...._.."' lip .u.n Pint int ••••••••••••••••••••••• T • Soll•~-· I .. ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• wa a-, ns. a • Any plumbing water serv. • ·op _.. • ._.. .. CablMtMakhtig Custom Carpentry Planned pro11:ram. llot Rady' Garde · a••••••••••••••••••••••• WILLIAMS&:Sons $20rm,ext$249.uv&Jbr le11k 1 , marollte •Mulcb•Redwood• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Frumin11: or rinish. lunches.$25for5duywk. Cl:anu: f'rec est~1ngte Hauling Anythin&. Masonry. Brick /Block& 968-74:i2. enclosures, reaa. CALL~ lt e model /<tddilioH Al so. p i t sc hedule . · ima s. Garage cleanup. Reli•· .,_,.1f /ad. Cl'itm ca bi nets. bo<1t s, 642.40!i0 da ys. 83M·S2Jl 645-0394 t:!ves, 897·~14 ble fa&t service. 963-6'52 Stone. Call 581·7829 PETERS PAINTJNG 1132-2468. 10'.-v .... w TNe Set"YICI' patio cor, kitch rmdl , lal ~9·4159· eve!l./wknd.s. day& ' Jnt/E:lt.· Re:•. r.11.tes ORA.JN CLEANED$6.!i0 •••••••-•••••••••••••• ticework646·5219 ---. College Students have Masonry&Concrete c;a11Geneal!i52-0l58 Ev&t'WJmds-Re~ova~, Umbla,g, top • · -C-tS•r•iu El lri I Quality Maint /L~ndscpg Pickup. will httul . Work.AskforJake, k Sam•~-pin•, prun.lnf < IC ·· nt -· r -ec ca sod, sprklrs, 5011 cond G 1 1 u ht 549 laM Pror painter, honest wor , r1...... • arpe tr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• cl a u 642<ll31-646-'1908' arage .c e.11.nng. ll · reas. Jnt/e"l, free est, Guar · 558-1380 Firewood. licJ nsi ••••••••••••••••••••••• CARPET XPR e n p moving, 548-&IOI ' 642·21624 . 1 . • TS-16yrs ELECTRICIAN. Sml Flreplaces-Planters Refs.541·2159/&U-3913 JUIN'OR HOME REPAIR~ Gel it Really Clean jobs, mu.int/repairs. 22 •HJ\UL1NG• Brick-Concrete Pat lo PAPERHANGING MARV'S PLUMBING Plumbing, carpentry, WILLIAMS549-8115 yrs.exp. CManups548-6142 YARDCLEANUP Block Walls·BBQ Pits Profeaalonal R,easooable •M6·9E01• Ford'• TreeSenico E.xpr Crew, Ue, bonded & insured~ 963-1817 ceramic tile. 540-5560. Sales-Repair-Install lie 233108. 548·5200. Compl ma int.George • • 556·0341 •• Refs., Ests. 646-0464 Free Estm 631-~aft. 5 NO JOB TOOSMML ) ~~~!.':! ..... !!.~~ ~~'r.'!!~.~·~ ..... ?!~! ~·r.'!!:':!.-:'. ••••• !!~! ~~"-~!":!~ ..... ?!~! ~~~.-:! ..... !!.~! ~~~~:!.~.~.?!~ ~'!!~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!!'! ~~~.e:! ...... !~~~ ' CASHIERS CLERK TY PJST for Fire hl"r• Liquor CIHtL ffOUSEK EE PER. Fine MAID wanted over 30, Ex--Reception1at./Nune Are you at least 18 yrs & ca s 0 a It y De pl, l''•mily w /2 good bo)'I 9 ec u ti ve Suites, 7 27 Nurses Aides, all shifts. Animal Hosp. Exper. de-. old, bondable &. neat in Insurance Agency . 40 hr.wk . Laguna Beach & 15 jn Huntington Yorktown Blvd, H.B. WUI train, Men. Verde ~irabl rers.needed.Ap-ADVERTISING We are seeking a person to augment our Classified Advertising department for inside telephone sales. Classified experience necessary. Excellent com· pany benefits. Salary commensurate with experience. ! Q;IUlllMIMTS INCWDI: , •Must type 45 WPM (electric) ·1 · •Dependable •Good speaking voice 1 •Pleasant personality If you are ambitious & want to be paid (or your efforts & have opportunity for I advancement please apply in person .. to: i -ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT f 330W.hy51.,~MoN , An.Equal Opportunity Employer appearance? Enjoy Newport Beach. Ex· area. Write ad no. 447, Itarbour.Requiresapn> 538-0411 Conv. Hosp, 661 Cent.er ply P.tlsalon Vlej9 working w /people & out· perienced. 645-9007 p~~.Y C~~I~~· i.f~O~. ~~ fesslonal t:ng. speaking MA ID WORK M t I St. Costa Mesa. I Hosp. se&-1220. side in the fresh air? If le . bouaekeeper who drives, 0 e · so. we want to talk to you OOK, for h~p1Lal Apply 92626. cooks, ahops, washes .&r Neat, energetic. Lll&una Office......._ -R.l.SA.US about being a <'ashier in at 1501 E . 16th St . cleans w /i ntelligence. Bch. Resort. 6 day wk. Fine jewelry ~-:T.' Full HewOfficl'o one or our self JJervice Newport Bench. Btwn ExSecyAdmAsstto$12K Xlnt aalary lo right 41M·ll96 time, permanttnt pos:i-We've just remodeled gas stations. We need ll:JO& 3:30 Pl\1. F /C Bookkeeper lo S800 J:.non. Call 714-866-0011 Management . tion. Exper pref'd. APPIY our office & we now have several full&: p/timelehef to SllOO mo. Sid's OrderDesk $725 rAppt. PEOPLEPERSON inpersononl.ybelwnto& openings for 3 n ew people Im med. In Caita Blue Beel 107 2at. Pl PBX Recepl/type toSl).:)O HOUSEKEEPING 5 af-~xec. looking for J?<ari 12noon. salespeople. Xlnt com· ~1esa .& llunt. Heh . 1''or NB. 67.s-333Jan 4pm. ' IRVJNE PERSONNEL ternoons wk. r.tust have time bualness associate J. HERBERTll.ALL , mlSslon jplit and lots or 1nterv1ew call &rbara. SE CES e.11.r . Call aft 6PM in wb.olesale aupplles. JEWEILERS leads. 213/925-0431. Counter Help R\/l •AGENCY 644.5694 ' B u • J n e s s f u I t Y So Coast Plaza. Lower ForinterviewaJ>Pt, Needed. Full or p/time. 488 E. 17th Street ·· . . capitali:ied4 Jnterview Level. next to Bullocks THE ION TAYLOR CASHIER 11-3 or 11·5 shlll, ?ilon (atlrvlne).CastaMcsa lnsorance·Multiple .lines 673-2223 GROW Full·time only. Age 20+. A Wt 224 642--1470 agency. Ao attractive 3 Offic-Serious appllcant.S. thru Fri. pply, Del e gir l agency office MAMAGEM&ITTRME ...-671-7601 ~ Good Loe Taco. 2$252 La Paz Rd.. f;rlmarlly commercial Yo .. ng man to work in General cJericat , pay.5 aUons. Laguna l-l ill5. 1 ted OC " mlnlmum3ynexpr.incl~•--------• M.tro CcrWmh 1-====='-----IFemale Help waoled. ~es. oca near · · growing tool rental busi-bookeeping. Tues thru 2950 Harbor Bl, C.M. COUPLE needed for al?l Mostly daytime hrs. Ap-Air.port needs a n ex· neas. Must be neat in ap-S.t noon. Mr. Shaw.4day 1-------'-'--m11nagement, semt· ply Kentucky Fried perience~ person with 3 pearance &: have very Tire Stores. 1762Z CASHIER retired. 55 units Costa Chicken 2929 E. Coast general insurance back-neat handwriting. 6 Day Armstrong Ave. Irvine. LeadingN.B.Hotel.Ex· Mesa, 642·5073 or Jlwy,CdM Mround & management wk.Prefermarriedman per·d Jn resLaW"11nt work . (213 )86S·38SI a bili lies· Cleri~al & for perm. responsible 1..c."c.c9.c"c.c1cc17c.c· ______ I Call Barbara, 64-4·1700. 1-'==.:.c:=c....----IFulJ or part time. Fast m a T k , e . l . 1 n g position. Exper. not re-Office girl part time 9 to ext 525, E.O. E. DELIVE.RYM.AM fpod & ice cream. Apply rEe s P1 on s be1b 1 lfi1.: i es · qui red. Apply 9-noon. 3. 5 day;. Lt. l*JtPg & ---------1$315 Mo. Early AM &twn 2·4 PM at 2966 .mpoyee net"6 pro-1930NewportBlvd.CM typini.640-0020 Child care, my home, 2 newspaper deliv. Irvine Bristol CM. Or call v1ded. salary open. Send children. 2~yn & Smo. area. P.fust have lrg car. 545-0353 resume to 'Classified Ad MAMAGEMEHTTIME Office Girl for general of- $40. 7:15 to 4'45, Mon Sta. wag or ran prcrd . .._ ________ •I No.249,DailyPilot,P.O. &SALESPEltSOM flee duties. Neat. thru Fri. No hoU&ework. No collect. 962-4633. ,. Box 1560~ Costa M~ Electronic sales ex.....-. personable &:. ambitious 0 t t ti GENERAL 92626 r-· · -'--1 ·•--..-n r an11por a on. r "1 ta.II . pref'd . Radio Shack. more 1mpo1-uu1 uwui ex· REUBEN'S L-aNllt HICOHT IUSIOYS . I Apply In Petsoo. Mon thru Ftj 3-5PM' 24001 Ave de La Carlota LagunB Hilla Equal Oppor EmplQYer 642-8957 De1very ns ationol •S.CrefariH INVESTMENT AN'.l 32lE\1 Cumin o per. Apply 9.5. 1615 twp W.tecl 7100 Help W•ted 7100 Child C~r for 8 r old AMpphl!l•nbceks & t v's. •Typists R ES I D ENT I A Ca Pis l r ano, SJ C. ;..;.:Al:.:•:.:b.::•.::m:.:•o.•:.:H;;;.B:.:· ____ ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• bo R e 'bl Y d ec ae ground & 0 4!)3..4424 *RM 1---------•I y. espons1 e La y hand tools req'd. Davis *K h n..-. SALES PERS N · PAINTERS. for aparl -BAIYSI'M'ER needed ror llAUTY SAL.OH afternoons & some even· Brown Co. 646-1684. •ypunc -,.. • WANTED 65 to 10""k S men ts. Need own Dfffdoro+ • a ftt..r 1chool. 2-5:30. . ings. Mon .-Fri. in Nwpl l-'-'-'--"--""--'--'---"-'---1*PIX0Dn Commis1ion. Dynamic, M.AHIC~ T tranaportalioo. 960-3221 NunlngSeniC. • • -· "' .. Ca"'meo H ighlands. Needs .exper1e1'."ced 1-lgts 646-1514afl 7·:x> DENTAL ASSISTANT NEEDtDNOW! prestigious, baJ)pyoffic Part·time. PnvateCoun· fo rappt. Exper·d in Geriatrics, 675-4351 Managiog-Stylists, · · · Jo'ront desk &chairside. TempoTemporaryHelp with~e11vyunstructure ~Cl1;1b.Call644.-5404.for 1.:.::.:.;=.:.:.-------l rehabililatiQn & .1 ---------1 Beauty Operators . CLEANUP Boy for meat ea:perienced, non l7802SkyParklrvine learning environment J interview. Parking Attendant, over Medicare fn a sicl)led "" BABYSITTER needed for Gua r a n teed Sal~ry -mkt. Exp'd. 462 "A'" E . smoker.N.B.644·9211 CaJIM0-4455 semi·P!ivat~olfi~, h.ai Atedical assistant,. back Ul.Calif.driverslic.call nursing facility. Very \wo ~hlldreq ages 5 and 6 Comm. , Pal~ vacations. 17th St., CM.. See Mgr. No 2 o.pen1ne:1 1n residential offi~e . 0 B·G VN ex-betwn l & 5 P.M. 6"-1100 good benefit5. Medical, after 11chool until 5:30 Free l1fe .1nsur11nce. phone calls. DENTAL Recept. Sec'y. orinvestmentsales NB extSSS 1·r 1. · dl bill' PMweekdavs.They will Store discounts . Exper'd . 1120 w .Generalorficesecretarv, . · · · perience required · ie--.income sa ty , •1 nr airport. Call Don 5815533 . insurance. Park Dido be. attending Harbor Hospitalization avail. Warner Santa Ana (1 no dictation nee. OC Berman at (714)752-1920 · -PART Time eves & Sat Conv. Center~ .4 66 V iew Elementa r y ApplyPersonnelOffice CLERICAL Ml.No.'or So.CstPla:ta) Airport area. (714) Medical Assistant -A~. perf. for students, FJagshipRd,NB.Phonc I School, COM and would Montqomery Wcrd 551-4500. 833-9441. Rec.eplionist. Front of· insi~e work, guaranteed f t 642-5861 bO/happy to go to your 3018 lrittol SI JA...,ITORS fice experience. Phones, wage. Call Al, "2-0013 or app .• . home or their's. Please llyland Laboratories has De ntal Recept. Highly GEMERAL OfC 1""111 11 · · · call 675-0342 rnornlngaor Co1l0Mna immediate openings and qualified. Must have Need f /lime accurate. Mature individualscapa-co ections, typing. in-'I' A R T • T I ft,f E eyenlo11 after8PM. Special consideration interview11 are presently chairside & front ore. ex· mature person to Lype , ble of geoeral office surance &. Dictaphone. T E L E P K 0 N E i~~~~~~~~~:1~;F;or~th~o;••;w~/l~ol~l;o'"';·n~g~ being conducted to fill per. Sal open. Non file, an!iWer phone. We cleaning. Supplement 581·5533· SOLICITORS· WORJi Exper''d RN openings Ba~ysitter/HOU!lekeeper, lhefollowingpositions: smoker.644-0595. orrer paid group, health. your income with 3Y.i t-4t'dicalSecnt~ FROM YOUR HOME. Med Surg, Concentrated live in or out. Laguna 1..:==::.c.::.:c...:::"'----I paid vacs, profit sharing. hours work in f\lUert.ofl E 'd Fro -1 . $ 2 . 2 5 / b r. p LU s Care, ICU, &: CCU on Nicuel.493·3132eves leautyStylisf DEMTALASSIST. $425 per mo. sLart. Typ-area, 6·9PM. Monday xper · nlurc. BONUSES. Nosellingin-evening & night shiflli. _..._ ________ I Expr. In cutting & quick PAYROLL Orlho. chairside, ex· ing lest will be ~ivcn. through Friday. $2.SOper typist. H.B. area. Call valved. CALL SIU.. AT Also, exper'd LYN open~ 'BLaabgyusniallBeer8.,oh."!3hdoa~•ea. ser\•ice styling. Must be per'd. P /lime.552·7800. CaU Barden's Pest Con· hour. Call 542.0073 andll::':8'-:7::·~254:::'7:-:--:-:-:-::-:·l-'556-"'!:~lill'!!~o'!:r.!839-83:"!:~11~.--1 ·ings in Med Surg on v J proficient in all other trol for appl. 546-5.572. 006 leave your name. ad~IM EDJ CAL Assist. Npt. evening &: night shifts. , w",k. Ok to bring l beauty work. Also need CLERK DENTAL AssL pL lime Randolph St,CJ\1 dress &pbonen.umber. Bch. front ofc. Min. 1 yr. PIX Allswer. Stt'"r-Xlnt salary & benefits. I you.a& child. 494-7657. manicurist part lime. back ofc. assist . ror·1;;;;;=~::;::==:::::::;:;:~ l'"""""""""~""""""""""""~j Computer billing exp. de· Aftn & eve shifts includ. Apply lo: • Babyailter, mature, rella lii8'11iiii-4ii7ii4ii3ii&ii8'11iiii·iilmiiii9ii. iiiiiiii Part·TirM c~hildren :s dental ofc:lc IRL t'riday. versatile, sired Spanish lang wknds. EOE. 543-7787. St Joseph HoAlff .. ble, my home, part time. Exp. pref d. $8l·5800 serviC'e & sules office. * * JAMITORS•• helpfu't . Send resume to: PersOnnel Office , I Htn .. Bch. 536-1768 Bo'!,S & Girls 12 :45 lo4:45 P.io.1. Dishwasher & kitchen hvy phone8 , good ofc Exper'd only 3-4 hrs per · Box 448, Daily Pilot. P.O. PIX OpetalOI 1100 W. Stewart Dr h 1 s·ct· BJ Beet. skills, sal open. Box 2124, night. 5 Days wk. Irvine Box 1560 Costa Mesa Leading N.lt Hot.et. Ex· Orange bafij"Sllter ror school 10 to 1 years of age. Dai· Appficant should have 1~7~:~t j,1,5 NB U:,s-3333 1..:.N:.:ec:w.<po=rl:.:ll:::•::h:.:"'"63=::...-~ ."'.'"'~·~· ~C~•-ll_~_'_°"_thru __ l'r_-_i.J, _c_a_._926;-:;26;;-,;--;--:-;-;::;---·I ~pe~r:!"d~.)(]C':_!:al':'l".J:!ane~-Ellen,-_J cb{ldren. Lite house ly Pilot delivery routes experience In payroll ac· aft 4. I 752-7292 644-1700. E.O.E. SALES, Art interested work. Mon-Thurs. 2-Spm may be available in your tivity and proficiency in 1..::.:.:::._ _______ l'!irl Pff 9:30-12::.l Dai y. METAL MAN male/fem . 22 & over. Needcar.Call645-1025 area. Earn profit for de-use of adding maC'hine. Dlshweshen11t. .. a..-.. 'Pleasant wrk, need car Jani~or, part time, light Exper'd. 2076 PlaccnLia Perfect Sharp~ energetic. resp. liveries & cash, trips or Duties include auditing 1-r• S3hr.64S•0145 \1 duties Apply Mr. Scane A C t M Wortdng extroverttoworkevain. B~~YSITTER. 2:30-5 h d' r Ill ~W-MI I-'----------or Mr. w1·111·amo. Silver·. ve. os a esa or akl bo I So mere an 1se or se ng time cards. processing 642 0632 rug m ng s P n . p . daily. 6 Yr. old boy, new subscriptions. For payrolls, new hire and ostesses GIRLS-GIRL~IRLS wood s. 45 Fashion · · HOIWS Coast Village. Must. like Jll.rbor Vlew School. information please call termination documents. Apply In Person E a s1 Y f u n ' j o b . Island. NB Mgmt trnc. Route sis co. 9-ZPM or 4-9PM retail selling. Fun at- Ct,M area. Yourhomeor 642-4321. From San Exposure to com · M:uldoon's lrishPub Legitimate. Workday or Future. Age 23-39. Car, Earn $4 hr puttlngyoor mospbere. Call Rug ~e . 640-'1426 aft. 5, Clemente -San Juan puterized payroll system 202 Newport Ctr Dr. night. No exp. r\ee. Must phone. $160 wk. 848-1004. personaut·y lo ,:work. All Crafters. 546"6340. -5000ext. IDI, ber. 5 Capistrano area, call desirable. Fa11hion Island, NB Uke people and be at KEYPUNCH I 1----------495·0630 and Mission Vie-1---'-'--'-'"-''--1 least 18. Apply any aft. or MODELS work done rom ourl1ew SAL ESMA..., Bqysitter,ChrisUanlady jo-EI Toro area, call DOCTORS ASSIST. eve. 2930 W. Coast Hwy, Creative firm seeks pro-Irvine ore. You ' must n ~~good bealth,5$-62; 1ov-581-6310. SECRETARIES Young lady (UJ..28) to as· Newport Beach. OPERATOR fessional model5. all possess a pleasant clear Qualified Retail Paint & lDg grandmother type. Equal Oppor. Employer sist in Health Spa. No1..:.:.:.::=:.:.:=='---1 types. Compo5ite re-voice 6. a confldeptman-Wallpaper. experience. Refs. Own transp. ?.Ion exp~ req. we train. Apply HELi ARC WELDEI I qwred Ph. 675·5SOO. ner. Perf~ct. ror students For new store opening in thr\tP'ri. 8-4:S)pm for 11 (2) noon· 8 pm. 2112 Harbor Production type welding ISwinCJ Shift) 1 & house..-1ves. No actual Cost.a Mesa. 549-0812 or moel4airl.BySept15lh. BoatAisemblen Blvd,CostaMesa. Apply, Max Vac Inc ki . . MODELS·MASSEUSF.S i1elling involved. For 645-4203,Mr.Miller. Calr Tues & Wed eves Apply in person. Must 1 --~-------1 15591 Computerl..ri.' llB A pos1t1on is available at Figure P.1odels, ~corts. more Info., 83J.8098. 1---------- 5pm.-7pmonly,OO-OOI6. have own tools. 1919 E. DRIVERS o8ur Nhe,wportKCenter masseuses needed. Top Ph 1 .. t. "l't Reol&tcrt.Sales Occidental St. SA. 2·3 years general office tC C~I Housekeeper rorsmall ex· ranc or a eypuneh money. New s tudio one so 1c1 mg°' I elyp-Woman Sales person for BABYSITTER en -1~~~~;;;:;;;:~;;;;;;;;;; experience is required. ~11 . , · elusive J\1olel . 5 dey Operator with 1·2 years 631-3811 . · ing.CootactRoyWilaon. Costa Mesa/llngt Bch tbuiastic & reliable ror I-G o o d t Y ping 1:1 n d No special he. req . Ap· week incl. weekends. InJorex experience to $49-9429. area. Pleasant ofc, grad. Otlf Oaughter age 8. 3 l06 Boat ca..,.Htet 1 shorthand skills a must. ply 10am-2pm only. Wed . 494-8521 work the swing shill. {5 MOTEL MA.JD • comm. stnJcture. sm•ll wkdays. CdM. Own Exrwor.Inter/Exter. SeptlOth. PM-12 :30AM). F/timc. Top wages. _PLUMIEI.. staff· personalized trans. 642·1463 days, r-MacGregorYachlCorp. Housekeeper. Live-in. PleaseCalt Newport Beach Travel -A min 5 yrs exper. managemeftt4 na .. 675-4723eve!I EricsonYochb SR. GENERAL 1&31 Placentia.CM care for elderly lady, For Appointment Lodge Coast Hwy NB Service le Repair. Call Top Pay & Benefits South Laguna. Car re-Dana Habigor 1;~:'"·:..:::::::::.:::::!.:.' '.::'-µ6<5-3~~130~--..:_--~~~67~3-;::3695::~· ::;;:--;::':;:::;:: 0BabJsitter, mature Dental/Prescriptions DRYCLEANER.Presser, quired, Refs. Salary (?lt.)s.:58-6000. INu.rse s 1 t k pe~ to alt lor 2 &iris Optieal CLERKS (2) ex per .. 40 hr wk, apply in open. Phone aft. '7pm. PRINTER. exp. AB Diet a _ espe.i:son °t wor ag •tf,.5, 10.PMto9AM. Apply: pe raon or phone . 494-6793. Direcf¥" 360 & Itek A/C/J/D/i olc. counter l o drycle~ners Ci btwn•PMlslO PM. 1931DeereAve,SA Newport Cleaners, 1 GREAT ofHUl"HS 830-0890 • Apply , Newpor-t BO PeOJn area. m,8506. General secrelarial or Tustin. N.B.5'8·2221 HOUSEKEEPER WES...,n\,.o A cballenglngpooitioo in . .Cleanen, J06'1\J8tin,NB Jl•rmald wanted full BOATS clerical experience re-Earn $for Christmas. In· Experieneed, s d ays, 1 ~ •large skilled nursing&: p PRINTING SALES ttaqe. 438 E 1 11th SL CM. StockroomClntr ~~~· d~~ed~t~~?c: troduce your friendt-& own car. 840.2178. SAVINGS rehab facility in the M~ti·ex~~:;:~~~:.S: Sharp'A99'ftslYe ~. Sailboat knowledge. Ex-, neighbors lo Tri ·Chem . . 4SON ....... QrDr Orange-Santa Ana area. up,de .... ndingon a bili ty, Gds workin~ with schedules, Llquid Embroidery Housekeeper, l1ve ·1n. ew-~ Must be motivated r-W h • , f BAl•AlO BriUsh Girl to per'd. Will pay top wage. chart$ and graphs. Must Craft. C 811 979_3488. ~efs. Mu.st speak 1'~ng. l'CewportBcach toward rehab nursinl seasonal. full Umo for 3 e ave opentnl(I qr wttic In British Pub, part Apply In person-.1919 E. be highly orgnnizl?d. 963_2300_ Xlnt sat 675.3770, NB equal opp f.lmployer m/f R 0 &: behavorial mod moe. Non·smoker, apply M • nagers & A ssi~~. tl-..... -~..... Occidental.SA. . .,· 'ell a edi 10-2. On Site Photo-P.1 gr s . Must ha V~ .,_.,, Call for w s m ~arc pro-graphics. 1240.K Logan, knowledge of womr.:'• Bartender Experienced Bookkeeper, experienced more information: Have somethin~ to sell? HOUSEKEIPY KitchenHclp cedures. Excel .salary. ·cM.540·0668 high fasl'lion clothiil &. P ·-tlm•". d•-. A~-In. Copy Cats. 33.1 3rd St. Classtfied adsdoil well. Momin(Ca will train call benefits & Incentive pro--. management exper-4 l ... --l"Y'J La Re h 8·4:30 f /lime. Conv. nun-549-9'44 ror appl. gram. Call 532·6848. P It male. fem. service !or o'nt•rv1·ewappt. IH!ft9n, 14&4 So. Cst. guna ac · Dona Leverett ina home. Park Lido N Aid Top esta.b .llccls. Eves/Sats THI LOOK llw,JtLa1.Bch. BOOKKEEPER (714).540.5000"201 · lf••• ..-rt• Conv . Cenltr. 466 **Lodfe....&frfl•• urses eJJ.·exper. $?S wk+ Mr Levi BAll'TENDER J)Olllion Part~~~~FRID~ HYLAND •t•l•••"tf ~i"~:5~1 P Rd, N.U . Madseu0•e dneeded iryi1-1 ~~;~84~.C::OO~f.'laConv. 848·1004 -• 6«~1. __ : lor alta call for .ppt..1----------1 A . me · oo pay. w1 Saleswoman & IDIUMIC:CI', .O.tpm,$0-9"4 Bookkeeper needed Mon , Housekeeper. mature ~·.:.e. 645-0880 or HUltSESAIDES R~~=TE tlft abop. So. Qoa•t ~~I, g.L $2-20 AA LABORATORIES penon !or I-' bome. . . •LYN'S &.per, fantastic opp. !or Plua. E1~r'cl. mature. ~Us~mlAMS . 3300H•landAvenue .f~~ llpm-Tamahlf\.646-8116 L<1 '''1s.c1 rentalryt. Exp.h Od Alhhllla. Expor. ""'1"d. the go.getter! Current ~=-Medlte~//ii • •w 1 HOUSEKE_EPERUve-ln, YP s • c ap one. but .will train resp. In· .1t1ffin1. Yery active 1mif0ris. ll.M E.ttN{St. ro.-t2>N~B.Mlorw.w/Or BRAKE' fRONJ CollaMna,CaUl28 non·imo~er, pvt. rm, S.l.aryopen.496-CMll. dlvldual•.APPb'at,Park local Red Cupe.t Rltr. SA.oreall838-38J.'. 1 w}Mft foll. CID &M-Oml b th TV Sotne En..ttab. Superior flfi81thcare, Ea1er to work with MW'l -"'-"~=""'..;c.'°'"--or5f0r..ISl:I Aaequalopportunlty a • · 8 .. Uv•in wom&n. room Ir 1445 Superior Ave, NB. people.NoUt-.nec.toa~ Sale•wocnan, f/tlme END MAN . arnrmatlve Jiction Sllaf'J open. 642-53511 board + $125 In e~ E.O.E . ply, Free tra1ninf. For t'nn . .Dahn ken <:I Colla .· luunctAN For PEP BOYS ~-pply~~~~·~m~p~lo~y~er~~~ Hou1elteeper, live.Jn . chance children's cook· lnfor c•li Lind N • ., • c u 1 """ "-· 1111 +llto ho.uaework. Nuni..... · • : a taa, 1819 ewpor., ~, ........ ••ctn . Store. lmmedlater••me • ..,... Widow1r,chUdren8&10. ·~ SSS.1SM Blvd • G () d '"' student ok a. s da-are LV.M. · ' . eptr,•t •tll uate openln1 Good t•lary & s~ day wk. fl.lust have , .. P • FUllf pJlime or worktni cOl'Mk. Liberal Top,aceyourmessage : c.r.833·9601. free. fJDalboa PCnin. 3·11 :30&7.a:IOf/tfme. RffflktateUamM SA .. ISWOM&f ( '' Mip,a ee,.__Jl_•Jl• empl07ee b'enit:lltl. before the Fot Cllilaltllfd A4 f ;:;:=::;::::::::-;;:;:::;::::f~6!!73-0~I~<!:·------' NURSF..SAlDES Hll 11 e M cCorm •ck, we nMd 5 more exper'd ••'l,ltJ'fJ., arL 7,pm, Apply lnPelwn readtngpubUc, • • ACTION Houaeke.eper·Babysltt~r M•tD W"'.-All shifts, exper'd fn R.Wtor bu an .......... 'n•, a•-pla ,_ ·-.....,L SST·IUll. ~ 15121 .._.,.d phone . Olll • forteather. tl:JOto•:JO. "' -.n•_,,, Geriatrics. Park Lido with tfoor ttmr-'Su~-!.J':';:b ln 'On'::ia "a SEJ.C ldlt lleml wlllt • . WHfQf la VallyPltot A=-~t ~::!~~~~i~: 2~"N~~==~6~ Conv. Center, 468 ~ullynrvlD&Ltguu Call ~Sl..(MS4 .. m.Spm Dtta1'UttC1WlledA4\ , , Cl•ulned.642-5679 "'""" 112-ltllf # • ., C•UNZ-28'70 ~5~tp Rd, N.B. ~.;~~ •illco 1903. !:ts.~ MOoZIOSevem• .. '. I J I I I \ J l I , I -r IOJO ~ .. ,.,,. aoso Mioal•n • IOIO 1 11m * DAIL v P•LOT , • • ! •••••••• •••-••••••••• •••••••••• •••-•••••••• •••••••• ••,-••-·•-•••• ~ a ~/ Tratl fMt • ~ W.-W JI _..._., 7111 'W......._~ 711t • ...... M.11 II ._.. • . ' -... _.. ' ..... A~T• TrON·ft-"'O• "' la ll•lt s.. I b pr. .___.. • -tf20 ••••••••••••---... •••• ...., .............. ··········--···· ....................... _ " ........ .,_111 d ~~ 4 ell~ a.••• •••Jlty "''d la•, I .8• rraos~ • ........... _,,,, • .,. ••• ••••••••••••••-••••• t ~~!":ot~ .... STOC•llllll "·•· Sa• ••• on romli .... ,.... U'"1 ...... ..... .... I ... llOA'l' RIOOl!n...,..i..i MU STSILL 7_ ·.~~~'!;!) 0 :· .,.....Jn ~ M-.it. be "34 w/pepec Ta9tlCIMI BkYc• • Mr:•Mi• ieaeJ!ltNtctoo'\..au.o 8"'!_ ... ~ln :t"r~ 1.aper. bl wooe11 .. aiw, t-sr•nd oew 117s t' ......-~ .. 1rt,pb)'. fu t •rt. :ork .. hav• 1ome soucnoas.-W.Ul lak• Ill)'~ botheNOm• ...... eaU. ~ .... be. ·as au lD J.1.1'1,& etea. •• ,, ... fftb.. -~ eabover r•mtt•I". .. •• rrp••••llilca dr•• n1 ,~;!__'!'~•of 1!'.oft)tn'a iu, plu&&DL.eVeblnl •DYlb.l.QJ~ontnde. or &raffle: lhre, your=---Y1dl~ f."91 EoeklHd hnd.~I. • mir acl<-~ mazda ,._Ml --M•boablcto hn4pm.tpm,&mlllna C\'Cl.l!lllORKSL"'l'D, bocne?Wt ...... knw ....... '1!15.l»HIW " c::1'r"~~~~· •IL T"oun.a.11,...br.·Neocl ~.~;"!1s':.~ yoo..,coul-=~~ TWO llUR1"L PWIS al -'fO]D '1f Camper Sboll. e• bod or n~-.--. ti) alrll • .c..u ,,.,_1111 · rortnrorm11Soa.~ PttlClc Vk=.w Cemec.ny •••• ,,;.-~~;\•••••••-•• itepside. poo . .Ph : .. $VIMS .... SIS TI41LOCllC llelW1Slj)m60pm. DIESJapd,liU-. M TTRESS 64f.it:n. u •• Sabo<lnold and--· -~~-·~··-· ~eed1d.'lfuil btt t • iN•aoo a BoYt Zt''.12$,. * A * Oeh.ix.eMale4-hnWelO material. Belt o(fer. "49W-----... -· .. !. per'd. oa tower U<h•r·Pr•·S•hool. THU.TU tlubo,SIS .... _ •MA.DHEsS• •Pd P••••• BlkH ; •1111«11. 10' El Oor"4o aunper. •nt:1Camloo01Una:it.i..-~· ·-- ~etu!_~ ~~h Moa·P'H. Ul>m. DOOtM,Ufl lea a 21•• V•J'•tly '*_.LL...... W/bUketaetC'. Likenew. Ja .. JM ~li:f•i-owei: $1i15. '!'!:,~•l{P•TfQt,. '•'~ , · ... W ..J."hh: c.JL•.:::-=='·c.:14:::N12:::=:'11~--1 O.u..lL-Al'llll..1111..&. Scbwlu • .MuJ. $10. .. _,,. Sl.25 u . Podded •wl•l'l S"LE * ~~ • ·· ape •• •" !~~ •• -· .. r Balboa Bl Bal..___ ........ -..aced:toMowf roCkiir, $15. Hid.abed, * A LO'" Dolphin ca-,;;;r. vtnyl top, aholL SZS'lk -;t -~1-EPllONE SALES. • ---· 11J.t.J5AMMn• 13$. Stul'<ly --"' IOHPLclaf,*"5· H';d. Jh. Portl ';&U, __ ,_ • . ••. tperienoldh Pf'efernd. Tow True.Ir l>dW.. want· llot obtc•l\e JO•tpted, port. homemade Pina 15 l~PSbott,-. •,Shower. Xlr• ... $3:.'ISO, pickup•~ •• , Chev.; , SICllTAAY t>>' '":!ar:i:',ucw ~n!O ed. Exptr prr:l'd. Good meo1 b1ke. Uk• new, t' Sota, Cof:rw& 2 End pone t1ble, sz~. 2 uHPLonaDec."96. w.mt.6'5'71178 ORlOJNAt... •e;z Dodae.~· I Forsmlcivll-l:neerin.. So ~~ pa1 + btlMfill A-1 .. S-t ofter'13-mt Tbll. Dlo. Tbl ft 4 Olrt, druaen, $2.00 ror both. 25 HP Loo& Elec.$1W. ORIGINAL& lea _ & l••d aurffYloa C:, ovtr utben. Oran1t · · ......., & Twin Bed, a S&ereo. AftytlmeM~nt9 &2-TllleC'. si-. Camper I l •. Jact1 , c: n. pll-. ' t ~ County from an air con, 1009lrvlne.6DU5Z. ••res ~e•• South COdtMarino rltt/au rerri«, ruae.i 2 !~~-No.cw nos L.· ., I Muat bo x n.t rec:ep,· dll1oned olfi~e. Two TowT,_.Ort..,. ..,,_... 1030 Cb lo :~. fi'-..... AirCond. 5 momo&d . 10,000 WW. J.HtbSl. 51nlt!i. lillr. 9112-ai:z. _.......... , tioniat. bJcll:pr. lYPbt. A ab.lft.s..lO•m Ml lpm or El t --'erncL •••••••••••-·•-••••• rome w..-____., Blu'a, Slli; OM'ivertor, Costa u "5-TW uddin' macb. operator. $ftm to lpm. Mooday 914 ~ ·1~1Jb~a.' ru CAM£.B .a.· 5 book cal.el, co/Jee lbl. sis. 1S41 .. B .. Orange "!""••· "73 \\ T CheyeoneC.mper 'Tl DATSUN ft:up.. ~ • Sal opeo. (all lime . .._f'Ob«bYriday;-A»obat • oA<~-· ~ . .lamp lbL Bl fi...equfp 6 Ave CM tlh..Power 9040 Specl•I, I' cabover, 1<l$1.Z006ts:rm :.: ' c-:.::~l=l=AS:;.... _____ -12$0 E. 11th SL "to.la TYPIST; P•rt time, U· Jounaalfal aettini Rollfl IP•. k. ti. Cbeap. . . • ..................... alee)lll 5. MU.SC.MU. make . I • 's.c......,. & Glrf Frkhoy Sd>loDliu, or ull Tony tttmely llexible hf'I. On· ~i!-r.8~: :".i..!"m m-.M. . · GREENHOUSE •· t~berslan boat. lrlr. offer. Owner. 1183-5410 -ts1o:~: • for amall MamlaawiPI • at6te-tlOO, I.)' fut/accurate lyri•t $150; ISmnt Topeor I a.~. Coucb, z cbe.lra. kiac size Plant S:•le/ Bargain Evin rude mtr, tank. Moltile HOMeS 9140 •••••••••••••••••••·~ Company. Xlnl lJPlnl need •PPIJ. 1'esl wU bo 11$; 200mm Tepcor r $.$. bdrm set •nd lamP11 . Prices All •izes Ir l)'pet. ~cta•let:SS0.'91M189 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'O!JlcyJ. Chevy V~n. Statt.'"•C s.kills "tome work ttX• Telephone sales alven. 7$2-7177 '8$; zx «ioverter. $15; 640-4.118afterlpm.. ~toSZS0.~7·LZIM ie· Allen Boal & Tnliler With C11bana fumi~. dard trun11. JAll'lg body'! .. "':' I pt!r. required. 956-9630 P•rt-um, work evail. Typl•l/f1lc1 I Niii' 'lite rt • nd focusln1 t h. PIANO uprl•ht w/bench 25ll P Evlnrude. c:om'. llayshore Pa°rt. Sl~ mo. 4~13. ··::J I. SECRET•uy momlQ&I or attemoon.. ac:reent. $35 ; Vivitar par. plua :S mac IR6' walnut' w..::". col. tbl·. ptete. 7' wide. U...lt tank. 966·~29. f2J3}. •vwVAN IU' ,ort-n.. 11Uto fla.sb, DJ; Omnidll Sloob. illdl aJnd. lµO. uuu T2 •7_, • ·••· F.xcellent typiQg. s h . Hourly wa1es 6 comrn. 'Ple•aanl phone Yo1co, c•ie. ~. Consklcr tr 6'2· 1718. Maple ; Chetr)'wood oval Sfl()(). orofrr:r. 213-431·75 Auto. • ~~ .. transcrtbln•·.~. &enttal ~v,.•~ For detail.¥ call. &ood typint; req'd. Call ror Leic•tlex or l•rt ...__uble n-d, Compl•te. tbl w /I chn. Zteavca. old 18, Evinrudtt lBtD wtV-6 MoScforcycln/ ' 150 Citll •R. 6' U7$$)16 "-;~ ore skills. HllQlll.le ofnc:e ......--...1. 145-8981 Mn McClarty r m•t _ 1_, on'u vu uc trunk, old ouk music 110 Bit b ·l tank rull ooten , bod & take phooe Otdora. LosAaa:e1e1nawc-· · or " .. u ,........... ~-Hdboltd, coveriel. dU1t d k c 1111 after 6 l'M · n ai · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 69 Oodac. Joni( >'•. Le I a I background 1375 SuntJower, C:M~ Upholstery Loadnum 49'1·3S4l orSB.l.UUZ.. ruffle, pad.~ M: 7&7 ' ~~tr• t'!i"Che Xlot. CO:: '12 Kaw.,a.kl 750 qpt'd. p•n~led, new cnr1 , / help(u_I, but not nee. 2 yn ex ...... nee. APPlY ANON rr 'Mtt.h 200 mm · · •Ull or s 1· rry · t t cond .._, Or SlOO 615-4059 "l ....-· C.M. telephoto lelll et-ronic TWIN BEOS.MAPLl-~ J928 fo,ord R'oadster S2t00. 675·34~ (5-~m· x n . . . , :S· :oC. R$36-ETl~R-Y /RECPT. ~~w~l'if:t :v:;:J08:: rl11h p'hoto-°mJi'iipller SU. Between 5&6 pickup. Concoune cund.. Brm) wkdays. be11I ofter. MS-2511 Wo• W.ted 95tp ~ :P "" ,. M lh Th and 1ripoc:1 mo. 4.99-14.SS. 4171-IOU 1913 Studebaker I.Owing. '12 Hond• CL450,'"'7,000 ml •••••••••••••••••••••-.. :_.. private recreaUoo club. on ru urs. Cl1•11 unuauad rarecar AIMHrsoa'•Ytaelth Makeorrer. WE PAYT~PDOLLAR Lake Forest. StaMlng oh H tiood cond' Akai . video tape w t ..-~ ON• .. ~ ~ ~ -. C .OJS 2 PIECE sofa ,. & 4' • I Weekl~SnlW'hd. "'""·4101. ~R.TOP slll'r.c .. a~ •.•. $500. mo. S86-0860,Jerr. * a'N0'9'1!l.."'* •••••••••••••-•••f •"• ~v~f,~· · camt!ra fr accessorle•. 32' 1980 h1risVCr~ft. 1 FOR.ElOM, DOMESn<; ''i VI. 1....-t.Ovt)Y Kllt~nf. Ana0l'a -... 642·9574 . Days, &M.·2494. Obi plnkd lw n -8 s, A· '73 ltarley Davidson 350 or CLASSICS •, SERVICE STATION has 2 ~PLO't..-r Jhek cro•nd. $1,S: sa5. ..... Sole 10$5 Sll,500. ....90()0 Sprint. $600, Elec guitar If I/OW' car Is extra cl<lQ!..;;,. I openidgt, ~par\~llme. OPPOITUMITWS Go&d, Cit!to, TcnJe. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 26 101 rim tank & all ac-18\oi' Blain Boal, w/6 cyl w /case $10096().3416. He .,,.1 ~raui'·a ••-.,, : .. _-;., 1 Weekenda & Eves. Must P\IUor Part.Time T~b.)'f.11. BJacl!:·Jlihttc_, f\l~t~, RoberU4SOre-. cusones & 2 O&l'ars. $75. Enalne 0 /0, trade Ior 1969 Kawatiakl .500. t'llM "" _....,... ---. ....., be clean cut&: compc. NoEaperNeceuary Somc ~older kittens. ~o Or~ln i.:si:.= M-7J04 . Motor home + cash. good, new clutch. chain, 2925H•rborBl¥d. · .... I tenl.N'PPI·)' in perioon, A ... n~Ellil)le---COnaider rree lO ICOOd sora"& cha~ Sli Cotrce" FOR Sale orTtlKleShelby 548-1815 11pr0-0kel•. Exl)Jilnaion Costa Ne•• m='t.- 3600 ewport Blvd, N. B. CONTROL GO'loTheNuftst home. 979-8973. 2 end t..blca $.io. Mitt. Maas, Uraao JO spd. • hATT ERAS AAA Ch.imberii:. 833-15218 TOP DOI I Alt .Service Station Atten. FJ;.1~~~-~~o DOl)t 1040 Pini pong labl~ S25. 6"1J.02Sl/t9'1·236& 4~ooking for lhe best Yamaha 360MX dirt bike. . !b I dant, ror hard working CA.REH. OR CALL ('714)642-7702 •••••••••••••M••M•••• Aletalshopc:art~SAT. Newport Be~l'h Athll'llc w/lerms. to mulch. all Good cond. I>eK!rt Tank PAID '"·1 ~~~~~J~572 Junipero Enll>loymltlt AqacJ Tic Toe System., Inc. •PET WORl.D'• CONMLV .( 69101 C.ppitWil St. Club Membership for xtras Incl. Radar, ADF, Inc. $400 . .54~ IMMEDIA.l'K Y .,_ ,--S'E·RV ICJNGAu. Cockera, Chihuahu•. , · 0 omo~ ii !lale, $l75.644·7H97 wlr. mlilker. air. Bob -FORAU. "" Lt.'VELSOF Poodles, Shib·Ltu,Doxt·e. bittween -Wil.llOO & Vtc · IJenry , Okr. 714·646-0551 '7J Maico 400. $1.Wor best FOIEIGM CARS :.· '. Ser'tice St11lion Atten· I dunt, exper'd. Day & l!:ves. Full It p/lime. Ap. 1 ply Shell Slalion, 17th & 1 lrvlne. NB Service Station Alt.end., days ; also, night men. part-time. 3928 E. Coast Hwy ,CdM . SfATIONA~Y STORE· in I CdM, needs Salesl11dy. i'"'!t',.5 days. Xlnt work· ing cond ·s . Especial!}' fine cllentele. fTanci:.· Orr. 875·1010forappt. EMPLOYMENT Waitress. expef. r /time. pt l 8 u 11 s , m In i . tori a) loby hnlifure . ptter. ~ Sld'sBlueBeet,10721sl Sh Po Alm-tNew·"'· .. ..-.. 16·1 ·• Bait.on Who.ler,55 Call848·8908aft.6pm CALLORCOMEtM '• c: n11·ur.er •. ms . MlsceU1neous It.ems 626 _:.;:c=~~=--'~"--'~=c.....11tP_Newtr.xtras.Ut90 TOSEEUS ·'1 Sec:Ntery $600+ Pl. NBaft4pm. P ~kea, W~sl1eic. 100 Calle Vicente. San PEN BALI..& FOOSBALL llarbor BISp93G.Grove unc ll011d11 CR 250, xtras '( Good secretarial skills WAITRESSES mixed puppie>.Slud sV& Clemente' Pri J S~l Machines , 11.lnl cond. . '65()orbcstoffer. ~ necess.Fi,eureabllity. · mostbreeds.Z5.25W.17lh lo-4Pt4 "'"O-OHIO BEAUT. o11 y Boat&Sk1. 5'4·7868 Droftilftan $700+ Exper'd. F\&llorptt ut Fulrview. SA. Open ... 1 8 • Ch r i • c r art •--------NLWPlJl{T !f·lf'[ JI{ l ~ . Exper. in Schematics. Good hrs. Neal appear. eve:s . )J\·SOZ'I'. · m . maple book cue $lS. Membershil> tr,·ine Coast Supers port.. Mint rond. 70Yamsha 250CC 2 Yrtr. electfo.rne<=h.I Su~~e;~oin Dog Obedience Class to ·rr•nl. radio $10. Utll . Country Club. 673-2828 or Lo enx. hra. Reu. ol"r. $100 drawing e:tpcrience. 5930 W. Coaslllwy,NB start Thurs. Sept lll, 1:30 Cf'rt. ~&misc. f'ri·Sat. 558·0424 6'7S-3080 l ·ZPM wkdys. 645·0051 lnsld•Sal•• $600 +1 --"-'"'"----""-""--~"'----1 N l I . Z541Yairw•)'Dr,C.M. --NOA·~cc 0000 llOOW'···•"-11.l pm . ewpor -rvine Mlscl'llGMOUS VEGA 30 Motor/Sailor. 72 1-10 _, • 1 • ,--..,..,. ~'· Xlnl communication WAITRlSS.'/I' area.546-4928. Goro,-Salto WanMd 1011 400 hrs. VllF. Anxious mlles. lmm11culalc.$425 642·9405. skills. Apply In Person S"lLKY Terrier Puppies, 8 Furn ., ApplzaQ("es, bikes, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $29,950. PJ>. 6'2·5775 -6~15~·~"""':;::~·------c l-----------Sales ex per. necessary· No Phone Calls Please k 6url boards. waler bed. SSC •sH SS FOR :' M · 400 N g' Client followup . Ancieet Msi1Nr w s . a.tisc galore ~Calle ""' . 2 O . C R U l S E R S 70 a1co . ew en . Or"CllM)e C.-Y• l. __ 30~!~N~o~.T~us~tin~·~·~S~A~-JJ;::-;;:-:;:::-:"'==:"·=1~7!;;'::'4:::;;:::;-JSalida tne.ar Grants Gooduscd .fum /reCn~ Lapalritke. 135J:IP Xlnt cond. Mu!it. sell. HlfhntSlepr • .. 3400 lr\i!UO' ih Ttu pups. Bundles of Plaza) Palisades. Frzrsislo\ es. 546-07QJ. Johnson. Cust .• mint SUO. 546-4109 . oa l,..pai Ii Suile109"lr· WAITRESS No exp.nee, joy. ch11mplon sire. OOLLl!OUSEwooden.~d rond. S3,000orbest.olr . ..,3Tric:kHusky"50+Ex.· T Steno jRecept Newport Beach 21 or over. Apply : Hunl· shots. ~1.4247 New. up hul .. Sor aa & rond. ror 10 yr. old gjrl. 6t().I168or 549-8875 lras. $950. I ll Mu., OYOia •' Min 2 yrs exper. in 556-8505 lngton Lanes, 19582 Chairs; all kinds. from Bil t nQugh for 9·11 .. loat S II 9060 646·75.28 Call Roxerorkill. f general ore work . Ability 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~cBec;ca~o~h~B~l'~d~.~· ~HB;-.;;;;;--1 Lhasa AKC, male show sz.s. to $95. 557·5176 dolls 1! possible. 1Not •••• :: •• ~•••••••••••••• ---''-"':':'=c-:::::~1---....!84~l~-8"'5~~:__--' to maintain plcasu ntl ~ WARDCU:Rk quali'l9z~=·01d . Antique round oak lble. nec.>.963·6862uCl S Cor. 27, 3 sails, inboard ·72 Suzuki 380 (&F2822) HEEUPIAISAL 1 manner under pre&sure i... • ._. Medical records. 8-4 :30. ---dishes, silverware &. 1; Rf.:. T F. r· N <: i r 1 s engine. $8.600. ~;.r·~oodS48~i Zst:r, 3 We buy used cars ~ I. while greeting clients OPPOl1Ul"lllTY f /l\me. Park Lido Conv. Can01.dian lr~h Setler misc. 17532 Slater& Van Clothes w':1n't.ed a~prux . 837-7874. :;.~·.=.=:·.=::...:=::_ __ trucktr.. Call G ROTK both in person & on the knocks o ften ~hen you center, 466 Flagship Rd. Pups, A KC reg. ch am· Buren. ll.B. ii:z 8 64;.8780 ' ----~--· c.z 250cc 10 hns on eng. CHEVROLET for a fTeo l phone.Accuraletyplstat use result-gettJng Dally N.B.642·8045.· pion line. Lo\•able & Hon. 8060 . . -Coronado 15 wtthrlr, X1tlnt Mik unl, Alum Swg/ann •ppra1s11I. ....._ OOwpm . Pilot C\assiOed Ada lo bc01.ut.581·S843 5 Wanted : 4x4 posts. g• to cond. S950. P : { •> boge $SOI), 831·2412 Pr GROTffCKEVROLt.T reach the Orange Coast Warehouse helper. Part -••••••••••••••••••••••• 16° chain link roo1..-e & 847·8209after6pm. Ply• l82118eatb8lvd. {-of+ market. time. lh Days, SJC,. ilkie 1'erri~r , male, Bea u l~ru l S .Y.t old posla'. Must be n.>uona· SAMA•_..~ lfunllnatoolleach .,,,.I • Phone642-5678 493-8t22 Ext.33 AKC, 5 mos. shots, palomino. Sptnled & hie. Also. l'hlcken wire & _..._,. '71 Husqavarna new Ml-6087 549-3331.tJl • • hsbrkn.$15.962-8377 sound.l650.75J ·7350 stttlfencepoRts.751 .1163 55' Oie:oief auxiliary lhroughoul$500orlrade , 1, • -_:_ _ _:~~~---1~~~~~~~~~1·WHO WANTS TO WORK'! schooner. Bit '34 in N.B. ror VW 496·8421 b8toff $H.LIH(f" YQW CAl1. -, DRIVEAC;!AB! OY POODLE PUPS. Pive-Galed Gekting Pin· Wanted: El t:'~ri--;. bySo.Co;,astC.0.Just.re· ---RICESP D • Step In And Go! " i STIP IN AND GO wlle rt 't'tr your lllls1 dil)i like yw! f>"olict tht 1flllt!d ~t-shmrn1"I dt· fill Ol'I , 1riurttr lJrnplf slrp- tn. StW Ind ~Ytl Print•d Po1Ue111 IWl81 HtJI Slni IDY2. 12\.o:. 14111. J6V2 • JS Y1. Sln 14 Yt ltwsl J71 11~11 JY1 r•rds 4!14nch fabf 1c. Seiid JI.DO for elCPt p•!ltm. Add ~ lot eech p1l\ern !or f!nt-cl1s1 mall •11d Nndlinr.. ....... --.............. , ::•=., .. I t. M.w ,. ..... , •••••. hflt ~ ADHISS. X.., 1111 .. mu ..... It ,., k.. Mw II 111 I ,.tttnl frttl Stllll HW ftr •• ..,. f•fl.Wllltr '•lttrll CtU11t-t"-"•• l1tlM l1r ~' ... ~., ,. .. '""'· r.:.• "i.;; .:.. i"'' ~ .. ~,,. .. _ , ... . "'*' , ..... ""-t,• .............. lJI Snuggly Crochet st1e·u love lllis col)' sn for pl1y sport and Khool! when COid "111ds bl01¥, she.II snuggle watmly n'li1de !his set. Croc;flet pompori cao. si:;1rl 1nd mittens ol l'IOtSled. Mainly t:ISY sl nglt croc;htl. P•ltttrt 7148· sins S. M. l included. $1.tO for tich !)lllem. Add 15¢ 11th pattern for hrst-c1ass 11\111 and h1ndlin1. S111~ II: --, .. I tlfthpl IOI --.... ,,ow~sa-. Mrw T-'-. NT I N ti. f\oW ............. llp.P...._ -· MORE thin e'ltr brlo1t! 200 destcrrs plus J free trinted In· Iii» HEW J976 HE1DL£CRAn CATAl.OG! His f\llrythlnt. 7St . Cl"IClllfl mttll J4"r1s --ll.DD trKkt I Wlf1"H -11.GO N1ftY Artr Otllts --1.11 lfHlt Ctecll•t --1.• "" + llltlt.. _l lJ5 ..... 1,.111 lilt _ SIM rt1Wlf CtteHI ltll itOO """"' CIKlttl .... $1.10 ldi.t tl'ldl•t .... _$1.00 hnt11t .. ,... ... -!' .. f"lbllt M11n lfll -I.ID t111111l1t1 Utt .. ff: $1 .DO Ct111,1't1 Af,Wt 114 _$1.00 • 12 '1111 Al111111 112 . .50f '"' ,, 11 Qlltt• ,, -Silt • .... hlll ~ 12 '°' 15 Witt "' ,,.., Ii . H t w ,, '' Jiffy •111 -51, CHOOSE your hours, AK C . 'Y~ red bred . lo. Gentle. xlnl health & typewriter in good rondi· turned rrom 20.000 mi. 8UL TAC<) '73 Jlurs1'ni;r TOf' P Al work roi-yourself. be 54J ·S092 spirit. Tack&. equip. too, lion. 586·7l30 So. Pac. cruise & ready 350. xlnl cond, xtras. p~fJ /;:;~ your own boss. Men or ~ $650. 64f>.4495 ---to go .again. See .al our $700. fi rm, 558-1343 ' I Women. Can be sli~hlly SCOTTlSll TER~IEII. . Large aluminum trash dock now. 1..:::.::::.::::..:::.:.;=c.=.::c ___ I DemtL•'i'l1"'9ort& handicapped. Neal · Reg. male. 7 .mo.sold. 2>'.r· register~: TB r111y. cans. new or used. Mi , Yacht Sain 1910 Moto-Guzzi,760 CC l966 Harbor,C.M. .'j Clean Appearance , All shots.Lovcsch1klren. ~rt dl.spos1t1on. C_on· 645.6081 afler5:l-5PM '2J;r:~~oa~tJlwy.NR newenglne,fairing,sad· • 648.m.,1 V ts t' ed Age 25 to Asking $17.5. Call Len· r1rmal1o n. Xlnt ch1ld!i. --,--die bags, $150 Eves or•----------•" 70~St°J;;1 ~~e~lyourin· ny .(bef . 6 p .m .) hu n ter prospect .Musical 548·4191or-S48-172$ Wknd.9.846·70 / come. Drive a cabs hrs 646-44461aft.6)545·9500 494~792. lnstrum~nt1 8083 lipper-26,whitewithgokl '"'4 Ha•ley D•v: .. __ ·,.ui.. ··w EPAY ·~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..d • 25 h • • .......... -CA $H or more a day. Apply in AKCAfghan, Bluemale.2 For Sale; 16··crt.16hyS11d· TROMBONI':, like new, non s 1 • npprox rs SL Sprint. Low m1. . person, Yellow Cab Co .. yrs. Just clipped. $25 to die, gd cund. w/fitllnJ:~. $l7S. on reblt OB. New bottom, ~S7~00:::l=bc=·s~"l~o~r~r~.6:l::.:l~-l~l9':.:.._.1 186 E. 16th St., Costa gd. home. 8'Z·OW8 S250. 644 .0553 paint. In the waler orr ,. FOR USED CARS •.. Mesa. --96J-m>7 Via Lido Dr. $5009. Pvt. 8ACK. TO College. Must AKC Golden Retriever Jl'welry 8070 10 S"I F1 l 1---; fly 1-993-1400 · sue. cherry CRl25 PHILLIPS • ,:i Wig Stylisl needed pt. Pups hunters pe ts •••••••••••••••••••••••SOL C 1 vcr Ude. MYd 1· Elsinore, All tr-lck BUICK ·PONTIAC·OPEL· lime,J/dawk. · 9J 686 · old, eme1nhar L · SA ILBOAT ood. Su ( Best Zt888AliciaParkway1, ---~·~48'!:·.!:1344~---IO:"':":'•~'=d~o~g=•~· S1'0::=;:_ 4 ___:___ 1 WANTED No. M2S. lleaul tu11e . SAl~ESMANneeded !rr. ;;'a6o:i:n. 6';:~ LaJ,tuna flills . 837.2400 ·-Free to You 8045 TOP CASI! DOLi.AH Xlnt. cond. $325 or ofr. Experienced. Mariner Women n ~eded ~or ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAID FOR YOU!l Ca se~cr~ ~~10 Yal·ht.s .675·1393 '41 Harl e y Davidsonl\UTOS W ANTE D .. housecleaning service. a.tu le puppy rree lo Rood JEWELRY WA1'CHf.:S Offl Fu ihre& ---Knul·k lcht-ad Good anything running or not.! Robbie's Rug A Mop. home. Extra cute spr· AltT OBJ £t.'7S GOLD. E,!! rn 8085 16' llob1_e Cat. hlue~wh1t~. cond. $2000. 64&7104. S25. S.SO. $100. Fa.<it serv.' 548·0757 . d I b 8 ••k . . . · .• · .,..pmot w /lra 1le r &. sailbox . ----· 1nRer an a . Wt'c s SIL VE It S 1-. Jl VI C F. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $15-00 96J·S59G .71 YAMAflA JOO En(luro & l(rL-en C11sh ! 892·5011 &. WorkinR Mom needs af· old . has had s hot s . FINE:~ 1-·uitN &. A N F:xt· svl c:hrs $15 135. scy ---· --Mint cond 1650 mi. ask· 892·1047 ternoon siller for girls, 497-2655. _TIQV F~S.645 2200 _ ch rs S8 /UJ.1. st•y dks Cor· 25 ', J .-.ails. 9': 1nK ssoo. must see lo ap. PVT. PARTY needs reas.' 1().6-5 Mesa Verde areu. Free Kittens. ExJra toes. Import~ c.-i-Ma chine cvrs. Pierce-861 Johnson . $6,900 !JSl-1688 preciate. 9634442:eves. transport a lion car from. _ . 751 ·6370 8 k -·.,......-... w 19th C1.f si5·7411 After6·00 Blk . tiiter. w s . Genuine Burma Jade · · · -Motor Homes. P.P.536·Xlll=. ___ _ MH"Chondi1e Message642·1lt68. __ La~ender & fine ,erecn.\Standard Metal Offi ce •73 15' Venture <;at. _w/ Salt/Rent '9160 , ._ •••••••••••••••••••••••FEMALE Germ. shorl Pohshc~ Cabachons . All Desk &Chair.S75 lra1Jer. Selr furhn,e Jib. ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOP ... / Antiques 8005 hair 4 vrs nt."l.>ds ~d. sizes Willsac.558-7275 645·243.'> gd cond. $800 . Ouys See t he US.A the RV .-•••••• • • • • • •••••••••••• ' ti. · d · & r 492· 7440 eves 493· 70f0 · 11 . C: 84ho1m4~;1 1 s e nce . MiKellaneous 8080 Office Size Wood lk~k . · wRay . 1 B &0 6 Motor omc ., · '" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gd. cond. $45. 13' Minisail. fast. fits in enta s 64 c·~"'c'~''---·I Darling ten \\·eek old grey WANTED 496-00-15 hack of Pinto or on car --· --Paid and wh 1te kittens. To top. S200.: a4M·0153: FOH. TOP CASI-I DOLLAR Pianos & O r CJGI"' 8090 Autos fo r S• goodhome.968-2647. PAID FOR YOUR ••••••••••••••••••••••• O' Sa ilboat . 2 sails.••••••••••••••••••••••• --.. >HE 01 MONTHLY BIG I SWAP MEET ' THE WORLDS GREATESI' SWAP MEET! Darling male Shep. mix JEWELRY. WATCHE.5, Spinet Piano Fayette. s chrome hardware. cov· Antl.-ei/ l'uppaes, to i.:d home. ART O BJ ECfS. GOLD Table. xlnl '<·ond . Sf~. crs: ~f ukc orrcr !">.\2-1563 Clo1sic i. 675·8.12"1 SlLVf;Jt S ~:RVI C F. 348·4196 _ ul . 26 MKll .. Full ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,520 Used VW's '.1, Paid for or Hot SUN. Sept 28\h, 9am·4pm tnsidCThe .. Ontario Spffdway Onl;ir10, Calif -----FINE 1-~U RN & 1\N Fvmitvr. 8050 TIQU ES 645·2200 UprtJ,;hl \'1;.i no for sale race /cruise ~.500. Pvtc ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---$n5. lioo<I Con<!. pa rty &46·6700 ARREY Rl-":N1'S FURN. Kng 51 .. Bed New. com. 897 ·8217 FLIPPJ-:R 60"l. (;d. <And. '54 DES(JTO. nL't.-d-. minor work. J,;<KKI cond. Askin~ $400 675·3284 Harbour V.W. 192511 \RBORBI CM pletc s till pkgd. Xtra h ff -· 3·~1 ' ' firm 's19o iwnrth $425). Sewin9Mac:hines 8091 Sl75,.0r ~t u l"r .tii;:o·,c.a 4Whee1Drives 41550 Huni lk·h 11424.\33 . . .. .. A 1'TEN1"10N SELLERS l'~OR lNFOllMATl<lN Phone 213 15'90· 79'l'7 -CJ\L~ 714.!. 645·4?_.72 Qn Sz $170, usua lly home. ••••••••••••••••••••••• urt ' •••••••• • • •••••••··~··· Autos , Imported ' Quality sofa & loves1•at. incldel.835·226.1. f"eatht'r wi>iJ;?ht port;ibll· 'i2 lf(llllr·: u; w1trlr. Gd , '66 Jeep 4 whl drive.•••••••••••••••••••••••· bcuutilul. never used. EN~--; h. -l S1ni.:cr W/l'arry 1ng cast· cond . :'lle w Tr;1mpohnl.'. camper she ll 63.000<)ng Audi 9707 lea\•ing area. 962·2562 T mem rs ip. op Xlnt cond S50 ~'63·1351 . SI 450.6i5 J.<;91 m1 ·s. $1 700. 49J·3.'i.\5 ;1fl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Vuotorian Love &>at. Cof 1 --~ loc<tl club. Make of(er. ----~ -· ·-----3 rv Rad• pm·__ ·11 •uo1 fee Grinder. & misc Sc:de offvhlitw e 833·J6.Uor581·7800 , 10, ats.Sl ips/ .._ Cust. Bed·in·one54S-6.S21 AcctatoriH . H iF;, Stereo 8098 Docks 9070 '.56 WJLLYS Jeep Sta .. Aulomati c Transm~sion , Membrs hp Irvine Coast••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Wgn. 283 . Xlnt. me<."h. (847CQR) .: *JOMATHAMS AnticplH Country Club. i750 + RCAMaple """'.-olorTV. cond . ~1an y extras. · •· r All s 30 pm ""' ._ lip ror small boat up to ANTIQUES • FromMoclltHomeo ... ans er. er : ·Owner redecoratin~. 16._ $25 mo yrly. Bal. Sl,400firm.84!>-8Zl7 orrers a fine s"lttlion. 8uilder or beautirul hex· 644·5244. Will sell for $150. Call Island. Call 67J.9Jij8 eves -.,-2-8-,.-,-"-3-,..,-:·4'~.s=p(l.:..-1-, IS-.-.' We buy & sell. 422 31st St. eculivc home in 1-18 us For Sale 23 channel 5 eves 673·9388 an 6pm. aft 6pm soldrinal unitandisnow ll cB d" m b·i· . · 1'/B, air, whls. rotl bar, miracle mazda .. cN_.~8.:.·c6.:.13.:.-600c..:c.:.1 _____ , offering lb the ~l}lic lhe :ith mi kr:. 1~o·a°xi1a~ Les Paul <'~PY w /Grbson fDE Tl 1-:; fnr Sailboat. cus . lr1m 2 t()1JS, immac 2150 H.-bor ll•d. . Applianc:es 8010 rine decorator rurniture r & I humbuck1ngs. blond 21 -27 '. 611 l.ido Park Or, S45·3766or.~1 ·5fm. _ ,..__..._ MeMI 645 • 5700 _ ••• .. ••••••••-••••••••• from the model home at poL"kwcr incS200 a~~~: Fender Bandmas ter N .B.54S·l608aft.~ ~-__ _ . di i e new. or o IJBL·s 6460088hcr 4 •74 Toyota llrol\x (' C'olor \6 . srro"bms ~a0n011.•a111e--'w'·,o11ubent ~36·2350~ftcr5pm w • · .good __ 1 SLIPS WANTED·SAll.. 4YSti-..Healty 9709. rerr1J:e rat or frcc:i:e:r ._ """' RC \"ol TV w ck IN f It L d • ••••••••••••••••••••••• -$125. Owner rt'decorat· sold on a fir.it rome.first Be" u t 1 ( u I 26 ,: a I Io n ' "' or · o . 2 5 . 4 5. ~I 1\ H · an Cruiser •n• c111 u e,·es 673·9J88art ser ... cdbasi!'I for t·ash. sho wca s(' a quarium. in.: cund 1\1ust :-;ell. 9iC) YAC llTS675 JJ9:1 W 67 J.OOOMK . 1.o mt M1ot . " · f MO b or offer 846-5028 --Q~ c-ond. ~-tu~t ~('II. Bsl orr. .!_P_m: __ -----EYl'rythirtcJ""'tgo. rdtf'r. 1sh. etc. or st --Nttdcd lm mt'tl Slip for , . 1 67!">·8617 64 4 H722 Drive lo ~todel 1-lome at ofrer lloys dar~ bro"·n loots & Marine 24. gailboat, Ni·wport 4 Spt-t·d. A• F.\I r.ir '"· -- -.. T\' color .$21JO.orlx'Stol' ~6172 Intrepid Ln. lfunl· aueda: .J"C~cl. ltk.e new Elflllpment area prcf·d . lmmu<· ta pe. warren hubs.Extra IMW 9712 f er. Refri..: $30. Gall inxton Beach. Localed w /r.1p 1n l1n1nJ!. s11.e 14.••••••••••••••••••••••• boat. consideralesallor n1ce!!l60KltT. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stove. $20. Twin Beds, near the intersectAon of $15. 536·5014 hctwn 5 &: 9 Gi'Mral 90 I 0 552· 7472 $5176 ORANGE COUMTl'S $10/p fset.645-4038 Pacific Coast Hwy & p.m . weekdays,to!Jµ.m. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -OLDEST Elf'c.Slove self·cleaning Broadway. JOAa.1 to weeke nds. SID~: Tie (or l>wr. boot. J>erut terotA• . $ Encyc Oyo;:ul&.S. • sc Nwpt Bc:h. 6'7S-3.'$9l hwasher. Bolh Bronze. Dasseltbednnset, subjs . s c i library , ncedboats. ~ •. ~··· •ven . Kenmore Dis· GPM . I --•· h" hooi BOYSCOUTS al' ma.ll . $2.25 per ft. eJ In good cond. ZZl Olnal 3 pcw /m.in"Or, privileges, etc 4!&1938 :and airplanes. Tax look, Speed & ~ TQYQ~ A Sales·Servi l'e·LensinJ(' NS. . 833-34-47 or&'17-6056 Camera. Gum. car, lli· ad want ages. 546-4990 . SkJ 9080 . Roy Caner, Inc. . .-, REFR1G /FZR 197316 G U FISHl....._7 ••••••••••••••••• ... •••• 1_966 HarbOI'". ( M 646 9:]0] Rolll l:toyce BM.W .. . cu. MOVING-Quality items. Fi. Ofc. Eqlllp.. 0 ~ ti• SCHl1\0A Ski Boal .....:o=:..::::.::~c.:::..::::::..::=i fl. Whirlpool. Perf. $150. foTigidiare. sola. custom Clubs. Compress.or, Cruiser ror rent. F\llly w /trlr. Needs drive Trucks f560 Costa~:;.· t7th~4444 642-2210/67~·5548 lamps, patio furn .. lge Home Bowling Mac:hine, equlpl . $40 day. 4 shaft, best offer over •••••••••••••••••••1.•••,1c:::.:::::.:::..::.:.::..... _ _:.;;:_c.;... Auction 80 IS potted pl a nu. paintings, etc. 546·7206 or-552·3.110 penon1. 645·2898 $350. S4S·Z43S •74 ToyohPU ••••••••••••••••••••••• etc.6l3·4l69 p t bl I at M 1~ ~ Short bed. mags & wide or a e compu er s, Cl n1....-u Transport .. lon **I BUY** Solid Oak MediL dining termin al w /coupler. S.rYice 20 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llres,radio,4sp,16Mmi. CREVIER -.. " ; . Good used furniture & room s~l w /8 chm rs. Call S350/best. ofr. 64.'>·4840. •••••••••••••••••••••• Aircraft 'I I 0 Mint! 752·1591 appUancea1 or I wUI Sell 495>5907. · Rm 622· Scorpio Mm-I• ••••••• ••••••••••••••• '7t Dal.Jun PU. wflh abell. · &' 1' • UOA~Y 1 .' for-You . FURNtTtfttE, many 21"Color-1v. need9wortc, £nglne·ltadios-Elcc. Hot all"' balloon seminar. 16,000 ml. AM /F'M I · SANTA"""' MASTERS AUCTION misc. itl!m!, clolhin)?. m . Power mower, $2.'i. FireSystrn-Plmb"g lnlf'oduce to the Sport. track s:tereo. $3900. ~ 835·3171_ T(,: 6464616 & IJJ..t6ZS etc. Anytime. 846-5912 C.11.541-6723. Rerr1. rree ~5'8-9704 Sept 24 ·~·27 66-6120 9152·5916. "-......,_•RMlfO"ACMl!'I, . • -1 I I t ------- .. Fulty Factory Equipped inctuding steeM:>elted .. fl!dial tires and tinted ghm -full cwpeting -rear window defogger -reciining bueket seats -front ~ disc brakes -o4 speed trans., and morel 128 2-DOOR WITH FRONT-W·HEEL DRIVE ' t ' • ' • • ·' . ' . . . ' .. • • • . • ' .. ' ' ' I ' . ' j • ' ' ;, s2•99~_ HURRY! MOST COLORS AYAILAILE. UMlllD TO STOCK ON HAND. SA1•S & SERVICE No. 1 ·In The Nation WE ARE PROUD OF OUR OUTSTANDING RECORD WITH THIS OUTSTANDING CAR! . Before YOU buy COMPARE OUR SAVINGS AND IN_SPECT OUR COMPLETE HONDA SERVICE FACILITIES NEW 1975 HONDA Civic·· cvcc ' MILES PER GALLON \ • L .. '73 LeM ans. V'myl t~. p /1, p /b , fact/atr. tilt/wb.I : Perr. cond. $3,300. 64f .. G.'12 • ii '73 Grand Prix. air. ptn-. ·new rad. tires. Top «1fkL st<ireo.13,550. 673-461& • '73 FIREBIRD Elprtt.< A/C, vinyl root, rallY'a ;t 'l'hlB. 31000 ml, 1d. cop4. 14S-9897 • • ·~~, ..... t'1i ......................... . " ' ): ' I f: 5 • .. • • • • • ' • .. • I! ·-f ••• • •• • • .. , .. ' ·"' ,. . .... ~· . • . .~, '. . ~ . 2240 S. MAIN at WARNER, SANTA ANA, 546-7070 • . I . • . ' • • . . . -·· .. -.: ... . . , ... , ~ ' ' • ' • • . . ~ . • • • • . • • • . • . • • • • . • • . . • ' • • • . • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • ' • ' ' . . . . . .. '76 F 100 PICKUP Custom Styleside, gauges, spilcial engine emission package. body side mouldings, AM radio, 5-G78x15 4 ply tires. #F10BRA00461 •' ·. :·:·DISCOUNTED' ;: .TO '•.· ... ...... " .. . :·: ' .•. • • " . " .. :-... . . . NEW '75·GRANADA 4 DOOR SEDAN. Vinyl interior, pfn stripes. white wall tires. dlx. bumper guards, fully fadory eQUipt. Cw. 238863)" · . . ~ b' •Mk ""' dowft. Cath priol [ft:j. taa I ~l 111 "\" &31&H.M.. Otlemlel Pfl\I. proce ill 14688.84, APR Ill 1a.ol'llo. °"~ CJ9d~. ·.·· , ~e.W 176 VAN 351 v...e engine, res door glass fixed. cuelom trim option. reduced eound exhmJst systen1. gauges. fuel S)'Sta'n, ...., with control. Cruise-c:MNtic bWllmission. 4 H7&-15 08PR PT BSWtfrea. awing kx::k mlrrorl. AM rmdio. · tinted glau. sliding side cargo· door. $4887 paaenger IHt. auper cooling '**"""'· auxiliary fuel tank with atandard tank. ··' power steering plus more . . · '·: tE14HHA01055. 59Z3oNTH · NEW 1 75 PINTO MPG ' SEDAN. 2300 4 cyl. eng;ne, Iron! & re• bu"-gumm, plus ....,, •. (Ser. K111382) 52777 $65~ !er 4111 -. IOlllo doMt. C.&h 111tc. lrld. 1D I ~ it 12'9811.12. 0........., Oflll. 1Pfk;'9 i., "3724.18, APR 11. 1).61 .... 0n~u.dll. BRAND NEW COURIER 1800 cc engine, 4 speed, viny4 benCh tut and more. (Ser. 187823) 52899 s71at.. tar 41 -20'll. down. c."' om lrld taa I ic..... 11 13100.7 .. Oe .... ..O P"'I ~ 19 13182.32. l'PR "' ,~On_.,..... Ct96ll. '72 PINTO '71 VEGA '73 FORD '73 CHEVROLET '69 FORD TOllMO IMPALA D.l&LAME 4 q191(1. 1ldlo. ""''·· 34,000 ,.,... Ado. ....... (MOUJWJ _,,, I qt,..-, Ir.,.,, r9dill, l'lfft•. 12,000 Auto tr-.. tadotY •Ir condillcring. Aolt<I. tttn1., -tlt.,1"111. -....._(31SJFHI ..,...... 11..ino, ~ bf ...... tlllliD, bf1k11. r•dlo, h11t••· vinyl root. .................. , .... (2&i>MJ O'CU240I s1777 s1.677 S2677 s2777 5 1477 '72 BUICK '71 MATADOR '71 PINTO " • U SAUi IUHAIOUT , , ,"'f. IU!O lrlfll.-.1-dorY .... condfbwtQ. =-1-=cr-~ .,.,..., .,...., W powir ••-•ng. po-• ll•tc brll<n. ........-. ; Aueo..air OOlll!--· ~lop. lld.lo Ir.-. . ...... "-· ''°'°· ._, .. ll'OllCJZ)ll ~ s2477 s1177 s1977 • 5199 '74 DODGE '73 DATSUH '71 VECiA ' '69 CHEVROLET '71 FIAT : ., ......... "'*"' COUPI 4DOOISIDAM lllCOUl"I Dow~ ' j r;yt., -..to. ttww.. K t*lditlDllllle. 'flt" e.,rnper -"'"· 4 ....... Ndlo. lw/lo lr11\1., .W Pllflllltlofllnl, ..._ ....... ~ . - -ll ... r11dio, ....... ~ n • • • r • • • • • • • .. • •' ..#. -. ••• ~ ... : ••• •• ·:: ... ,3 .. . . ·f· , . •• 'l :ti :;i ti -::. :·: ·:· .. i: •' •' .. ·: •• .. .· .. :· .. . . . . . •' . . . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . -RENT-A-CAR ~ "\'tHICEND SPECIAL" : PINTO •••••• sa> ·-~-+.~.,..._1 MAVERICK •• '2'l ·-...... MUSTANG •• '25 , ,..,.....,.1111-.i1 , ,...,__...~111rM..1•n»o ........... wiama.--.11...caJ .-. ,, __ """°' ...... _ "·~ s4477 , . 52677 · 5977 5877 s2177 DELIVERS 1__.,,,.,,,, ..w,.......,..~:.;._~--1~~-'-~--"'--t-~---~~~+-~--~~--11--~~~~-t CashorTrade ' ' • GRANADA •••• s~ :-1 I 50 ~ • ..... ~...,,.. ... _...__........... FREE ··'6;.CHEVROLtt '72 FORD '74 PIHTO '73 FORD 74 DODGE o.•.,•••MC.O. •' IMPALA NHSJAll IUICAIOUT .. ltolllPLOIR MAXIYAN • • • . <~-'¥l!J. -...;, lkl!'9' .......... I~ NJJio, ~. "'cofldlllOlllll9. oo.-_.., . .._ '-"'• IUlo. ~. IMtorf' ... f'O:~ ...... ,.......; 199111'). 'l'Oll1I .. ... Ai*l"wri:' ........... :~KY) .............. ,.... ....... .... • ewe.. ..... tr'I,. ..... OOftdlllcw ... Sor. 0;, , :..:'~:!i•~11 -t:::·:·:::::f.::lrJ , MI LES ~ • tlMtl!'ll,rlldio,-.;,('t'YM'l3tl ... !PM21 .... ,.,..,.(MtMUt ; s1177 _s2777 • 11 'Y2 Acres of Cars & Trucks ' • l . • . . • • 1 ' Atlas WINDOW STICKER PRICE '5638,, DISCOUNT •300 BRAND MEW 1975 FURY4 DOOR V-8, automatic. power steering. power brakes. air conditioning, split-back bench seat, easy-eye tinted glass, vinyl root. TRAIL DUSTER ·--· v.a, -.11c:. $ 519 5 -gt-.--removabl• hardtop, S :::.;.:."C:=ng-.35 ~UllD. CAR SALi~ . ' '75 OLDSMOBILE '74 PLYMOUTH '73 BUICK '74 CHEVY •TAii . SATa&lllCUUOMW-aeALCOUPI VEGA HATCHIACIC \'8. ado. tnnl.. •r conditioning. 9i1111nger, V-6. auto. trw.. Bir power ateertilg, power brakes. conditioning, pow1r ·1teertng, V-8, alto. trans., power steering. 'C cyf., auto. tr1na .• air power wlndowl, radio. heater. power br.akes, radio, heater, power brakes. heater, >Mlitewall conditioning, r.idlo, heater, wflilewWI tires. Yinyl rod. power whitewell tires, luggage rack. tires. vinyl roof, AM FM stflr'IO. whitewall tlrel, rallye wheels. door lock1. cruise control. (4MKZW} lto3323l (854KYBJ '$3920 •3295 •2595 •2400 '69 OLDSMOBILE '73 CHEVY ~TOMC .. tBI• Y-8. arto. bans.. air oorditlonfn;; power steering, Power brakes. NA/FM stereo. heater. tin wheel. (03475R) . '75 PL YMOunt -. Economic:olecyt.,.,...trw., PoWer steering, redio. heatar. whit8Wlll tiret. vinyl roof. tow -tmory extended-· (137581) '71OLDS98 COUPE V-8, Mo. trans,, •r NC01-1Cfi"'itiof""'i&IMllg, power ateering, powa' bnMt. power windows, power Mitt, radio, heater. whitewall Urea. vif"1I roof, tilt steering wheet, taipe •3065 •3250 ii3ts . ... .. .... • • IRAHI> MEW 19-75 JNTERMATIOHAL 1/2·TON PICKUPnUCK $ ·v.304 engine 12 v. 70amp. Inc. Ci8P battery, 11 In. 65PG dUtch, qitiol1lll " ratios. exhaust • enisllon label. BRAND NEW 1975 · INTERNATIONAL SCOUT 11 Front axle locking hub, heavy duty RR step bumper, power st-ing. increased cooling, '2 speed transfer case, deluxe exterior trim pad<age. COMPl.SE "HEAVY DUil" SERVICE AVAIL.ABLE • for y.-LY. 0.. of'• filtst ""Ice facilities I• Orng~ C..tyl Op• Sula clays 1:00 • A.M. ta 5:00 P.M. Mallday .. Frldly: 7:30 A.M. lo .5:30 P .M. llAASOR 81.VD, ~ 0 .. ~ ... " ~ Q .... • I • • IFORNIA . Ill 10, 1975 ;'rEN ENTS • • 24 lJflll WASHINGTON (AP) -hen- 1.J'·(OQJ" Am•riean ID!lllooalrn :al-eel to 1 .. ld ~Ir a pen. ny In tederat tues In -'reeeal year. accol'dlnc to Internal Revenue SetVie• dlta l'tln•ed by1lllelDberotconiress1 liq. Chari« A. Vaalk ()). Ohio>, said In •· 11ou1e 1oeedl Tuesday that a-eveq of the mljllonalres bMI a total adJusted -- sron Income or '17,711,0lll, ., _...~••• or $3.54 mil"°" r --~ -"There were alto V (olher) mjlllonalrff who a.voided any tu after ellcW.ttn1 tllelr tax deduc· tloas and eredlto," ICCOnllns to IRS inlormalloa r ... U73, V...U. aald; He did not ldenWy lbe mil· llonaira or explain the tactics . • • a Free·doni: at 82 'Murtkrer .Serves 48 Yean· SAN QUENTIN (A~) -Odd G. The death sentence was com· Comell,,..ai double mtirde.rer im· ·mUted to _life imprisonment prisoned nearly a . ball century witbOut p0&siblllty al parole in .. aeo. ts a fr,~ man at age 82. • 1934, · and the no.parole clause Cornell 1"U sent to San Quen-was lifted by forbier Gov. Ed- F mund G. Brown in J,961.··: 111 • Un eb. 9, 1927, whft'eheawaited Cornell was subsequently execUUon:byhangingfortbeslay-parOled but ~omplained that tbe inl ot hi.I Wife ~Dd t4-year-old family be was livin1 'with in step,-daua:hter in"'Bakersfield. He 0 .. "1 .. _ .. "stole eve.-.. i .. g from bad \lll'.lled the gun oo bimaell' ......... ~ ''~ after JCllling t'hem and .suffered a· me." He asked to be returned.to ganiog wound irithecbest. San Quentin a-few months later. · 'T Cornell was released from After arriving at San Quentin, prison again this week and Cornell spent hougrhowting un-authorities said Cornell tliis time dtt his bed. The ¥'ardell liad will stay with the .mother of a COC'nell transl•rred to Mendocino fellow Inmate In San Francisco. state Jfospitalt . whue he re· ••1'mil0t going to tOaf, ""tomell· mained for five years, still fa--cing said. ''She's got some odd jobs l the death sentence. can49~· ~~~ Bjf ~octbrs • • Lag11nan. Held on ·~ . I ·-·- Hash, .Rap . Re1pondin1 to reP,C)l1s of a person screamlnc. Lacup,P- Beacb police arres.ted a man Tuesday and claimed tbe~selied laboratory equipment used lnlbe product.ion of hashish oil, • ae- rivatjve of marijuana. . orncers booked -Allen Cecil, 20, o 2940 S. Coast Highway, on multiple drug charges. After he wtlS booked, ~ecil was transferred to tfl~ psychiatric unit of otange Coun· :r Mecl!cal Cent~r for oboerva-. on., • . Police said they diScovered ~ glasawue coaled with residue Strike .. C·ould Close . !'~~~i~i!..~=t-:.~ • I. . ,, . -~Jd, ~ Clemente .Hospital ~r1if~r~r.b~•~. r t ... -Police sa1d. •l'~:?r.;:~-,,~~j~~~~ By JACK 6HAPPEia. Tue.day, -• h t -•• p-.~lifyP1i.1Slalf Everett ipoke before about'° T e suspe~ was ser11:am ng and runnlnlt around the' !Ailde of San Clemente General pen;ons "'at the San Clemente the ~e when officeft llhived. Hospital could be forced to close CIU\!Dber or commerce Boar" of li Id I down should a threatened doctors Directors-meeting, He talked on po ce sa · strike in protest of malpractice ni'alpractlce insurance rate,, and insur~ce rate increases halt ad-state legj11iation designed to bead mission of new non-emergency off any strike. Laguna Panel patients, James Everett, 't We cannot arrord to keep our hoSpftal administrator, sald doOrs open for emergency cases I Making Nixon . Tapes P;oblic Intheworks " ' WASHINGTON CUPI> - Congress .acted today to make 10..,,.er )'resident Nixoli's Whitl!, nou,i'tapes available tor ptfblic bnJidcasl despite Nixon:s ob~eC- -tioos. The House administration sub- comtnitlee on printing rejected ruleS proposed by lbe General Eces Aclrqinisq-atiC?f' Which d have made the tapes table' to researc8.8rs but' j>anned thelr'reproduction. &SA said it wknted to avoid commercial exploitation of the tapes. The subcommittee, by a 5-1 vote, adopted a resolution and a report which said,' "That is the risk of a free society. It is a risk the founding fathers accepted in adopting the free speech protec:· Uans of thi First Amendment. Any re"earcher caa announce to the world the J'indinp of his re- M~ch." only. • ••A strike could affect us to the point whtre we might have lo closeourdoors"" Everett said. He Sald proi>osed state legislation c:urrep.tlyjs ''not as good as that of other •If\"'·" .Despltl state attempts tn hell soiD.e m&lpractice insurance illl, Everett sald insurance-premiuin hik& for doctors will average tbout 468 percent. Some docton; "however,, will pay ,much mOl'e. He 'gave ..an example of some physicians. whose premiums will go from $700 to $9,000yearly. . A'-strike by doctors threatened a inonth' ago is due to at.art Mon- dat. • Members Eyed The Laguna Beach Planning Commi'ssion bas urged':~t local civic groups· appoi\tt. members to serve on 1'D advisory cmnm1tt.ee that ... m write the eelsmie-ancl public Safety 'el.e~'n'-of; the _£.it ·s G'meral Plan,, ... . The element will examJ earthquake factofs thatex.ilt and public safety provlOed bY !lit _city'SJ°ll'e, police--,'lilekMftd ~ munictp•l services depat\m9:8. Further in'form ation on ~ad­ visory committee may be Ob- µined by calU..g Ju,dith Ron~ ·at city ball. ·. .. .; 1-Evetett said he had nio idea if a f "s&ike coutd 6e prevented. Dr. r. ;·· ': ." Chari,. Plows, president ot the , 'Luncbeqn PJamied 2,000·m•ll)ber Orange Countr • ~ • , . . , 4'leclicll AiiociatiOg,· bas cill"'-F .,. ' T ." • fdr physicians to cdnttnu. work-' or New eachers ing and bas saicf any Slowdown or " walkout would be ''counter-Seventeen teachers who w1)1 productive" for physicif,ris. join the Laguna Beach Unified Everett said continued opera-School District staff when scboQI I · ot osierus Tuesaa,y will be l>onon~Jt Uoo-of the..bospita, m event a a chamber· of comm.erce strike would depend on the dura ... lion and the extent of physiciflll lmicheon al noon Thtriday at the involvement. · Hotel Laguna. Elaborating' today on remarks The traditional lwtcheon .!.will be niade at the chamber meet~ inclµde welcomes from dl•fc ing. ·'Everett said the hospital leaders and gifts from downtbwn would probably begin by cutting merchants. ... · back . on personnel and services ' ~ as its patient load declined. .. . Mamma's BO,, . ;;;. ... Tippy; a 111hlte rhinoceros at Llon. Country Sa{ari ,in Irvine, .Jltands guatd over her JOO-pound baby ooy bOrn Monday. The 'li'ab1~ ~ yet wmamed, is the Ci.St rhino conceiv41d. anil'l>om al tl>e animal park. Fa.ther's nam~ ' is ~tcli.. .hen b~ws up, baby will weigh about 7,bop JX)W\ds. + ;. ' ' • .. • ?* -11 .: i ·' " , ' ' , Lf.g1~~-~~s 'Villag~. ~ilr~'-~it ~-a*"~~~ f~a .Beicb will celebrate · .. -i. 9 a!m ,: One-mHe,,~ean being "La"gana Beach during Cl swim beginnin,e at ~~Ufe&uar'd day-lpng "'Village Part~· SXtur· toVt:er. sifn-up5 at '~ a.m.; day al Main Beach Ji"arlL breach volleyball tournament; A sky divj,nc e•htbition featur-.. beach basketball tournament. Lne:· Mayor ROY. ·HolQ). ramilY • 1r-10 a. m.: Sandcasting, check games. athletic contesl.f, a !)arid lo at north end or the. Pai;.; rat;t concert and fireworks di9Jllay ,11\afing contest, sicn up .at> yie are amoogJactWitie,' !scheduled.. lifeguard .tower;, paddleboard dwing the 16-holir cerebration. raCe, signups al the li/eguard , The ci(y-sponsQ.rAd party will lower. , · &mmemOrate tbitdedication or -10:30 .a.m.:.Waterskiingex- .llilaln ,l!Jlcl\ Park one yeai ~go, hibition. i• ~ ~ or .. tbe summer tourist -11 a.m .• Dory race featuring s~on ,and the Jlarf Of the La;\ma Beach, Newport Beach pe~an itevOlutUJn· Bi'centen-and.San Clemente lifegua.np. niaL · ·• -Nopn : Skydiving exhibition · FC:tiowii:ii f'I the sehedule of (weather permittinf).- heptA! , · -1:30p.m.:Kite0}'in&..exhibi · .... 1t01(.a.m.; l\Vl.ior W0'11en·s lion. Qu.b 'pin.cake-br~ast. $1 .50 -'2 p.m.: Family games, in- ailulQ'; Slebildren under 12. , cludil>g balloon toss, wheelbal'- -8 a.m. : O~e-mile beach run roW r-ce, gunny sack bop and trP'l;l\_ north end.of the park, sign-tug-of-war; Ballet Pacifica upo'at1:30a. m. · cS.. PARTY, PageAJi · I . '· . The same resolution was ex- perted to come before the Senate Government Operations Com- mittee later today and before the Senate tor approval later this -week. · ''Jt would be difficult fLSCally ror us to remain open on an emergenc1-only basis. Only a physician can admit a patient to the hospital. If they are on strike, Bridge Battle. Readied I ,, --------~----wecan'tstayopenvery!ona. 'FIFTY CALLED ABOUT 11lE AD' ''Your newspaper defmitely re· aches the public. Filly pe(iple cal.led about the ad.'' That's the advel'tUing success experienced by the Corona del Mllr woman who placed Ibis ad In the Dally PU~ So. of llwy, oldCdM, pvt. entt,y. hotpl•te, $100 mo. su-pu I If you have a room or apart- ment to rent, call 842-5678. It only !UH a few words In lbe ~cbt pf ace to a park respon1e. Alon1 the Orange ~ the risl>t place ~ tile DaJ/1,!¥1" .. \ ' I ''We will maintain operations as l()lflg as we can. It depenm on fbat our patient load is. We have such an overhf:ad (f!91l). we have to hate a certain vOlume to stay _<See DOCl'OllS, Pace AZ> • Wo~n v,,te_rs Host Cl~mente Kickoff Tlie Leaaue or Womeo 'vot....; ol Capistrano Bay Area wlll l\00! a memberstWp-in.(ormatloaal l<lekotf party Thur-43.Y from 3 to 4 :30 p. m. al 1011 Buena Vista, Sao Clemente. Fwther information may be 'obtained by calllng Kay Walton af 418:-·or Wilma Bloom at --· . I ·• " Capo V cilky Residenlil Op]H,ae 'New View' By RUDI Nlf:DDELSKI ... ClitMJ,..tlll .... ~ ' . Capistrano Valley restdeftts in- terested in joinin1 t!\_e legal stru_tgle against a highway bride• project have been lnnted to pool their dollars in a defense tune!. Contributions lo .the. Jio Dirt Oee111 BddC• "111!1 may l>J oent tn P.O. ~ 2':1'1, .ae«irdins lo Jlln Y 'II' rllool, leader of a cltlzen1 gr~p oppoo,ed to t)le br1dt:e over San J•an Creelc. Tlie nearly.J;.::~ed 6 mUllon ~ Trans II p lllonoflramp, ~.., Diego Free"*' wttll Pl< ( c.. .. t HJ1bway n-. y ' ( ••• ' ' • . • • ! . : 1! ported s1.aot.1N,OOO io u.~.: f"""ll lncom'!_ tkes. - 1alk addeG-: "I 1'aw ' doubU tita1111e r.-.i.~: aetually ~,... lbat }iiiiiioint ol · money lD U.S.~._ ... ·~ ~ He said the com~ wbl~; reported.that~ tn piio : ~11.-enc1 1ta~ eom-~ mission in l&llbte "'""niod lllh; rroxlmate net ineorv.es of' .. · 000:. t 18,807,023., • --. . -• -. • ' • Ass~~~ :f. • Granted .· Delay _. - B1 GAliY GllANVD'.Lt: °'"l"Oellf ........... Venturi\ C01111iy 5-rlor Court Jud&• Robert Shaw refllsed today to overturn ·the conviction ol. Or~ge County Assessor Jack Vallerga. . Simultaneously.-Judge Shaw refused to dismiss the Grand Jury indictment that.charged Valierga Wearly May witb"11even felony ea'imes. It was la&;t month lhala Ventur• CoQnty jury convicted the ~ year-<>td•assessor of six charges, inclpdtng conflict of interest, miS.. use of public funds and embezzle-I ment .. The best ·Vallerga's attonreys rcould get fOr tbeir efforts in court today was a 48-hour delay in sen- ~cin&. , ~ JI!:. !llll'• ,are<il •• the. 11~ l-• MDt.enclnC-date back from Sept. 11 to 5el't-Ill U> allow petitions tor a n~ trial to be beardln.theatateS..premeCourt. .;-V~erl'i '• aJtorne~. Richard JllJiWPll.Y. ·riled his .. -aiOn last w~.; but tQ.ld Jud11e ~aw the ~ would not be able to con· sider it until Sept. 17 at the earll.,t. Should the high court deny · Vallerca 's appeal and fail to or- der a delr.y in sentencing, the as- sessor will automatically forfeit his elected office next Thursday when sentenced. • The penalty on the s~ felony <OURts !pr wlikb lie ~ COfl· >id.cl c0u1cl 'se!l!I V.Uefia to 'cSeeVALLERGA,PageAZ>. I ,> , ·'Kea{> wa8hes up mi-La~ Sanils ~ A large amount of keJp d1µnped on Laguna'.• Mlll't ..Beach Park aands has been washed up by ocean storms aa4 b(o.cA1tse cily equipmeot. is being repaired, has been alll>wed to. accumulate. Doug Schmit&, munJoip81 services ad.minist·r8tivi assJS~ lant, said today. .,. Schmitz-said tbe city had re- ceived nume~ iqquiti~ 81;ij'ut the kelp. He said t~ dt)"'s tr3c- lor wJpjch ; norm ally keeps ttie beach raked free of the sea weed would 'be r~paired and operating Thunclax, ,, .. · Weaute ... ' Moslly elou.iy lhrqUl!h ThursdtY. aoe'lil'dlnjl tn the weather sel"'Vice, but 50D>e sunshine. 'nland areas in ' the afternoon. Continued cool wit!> hlitha Jrom the upper sq. at the beaches to near 70 inland. INSIDE:TOD.4. -y The littl•· PenMylvo;o lown of ElysbUrQ bol bHn · obr'MpUJI thnut Onto the n:iap a.r one of the Plocea thoaghl. to• be the ref~ of /vgifiue P.otricio Hear•t. See Page All. • • • iol DAll Y PllOT J • '~ ~ t ... . . ·.Pilot Logbook Trevelyn T~ench 1 Died in Mystery • ~ormnce, " cV8-80P." -~·4 -p.m . .; M •llfabt "'BUch '4"'~l...i"!'<•·' coofeot 1~'by Ibo !l*'Y . l Cl,ub. ' ... , ,, .. ' -s-p.m · Gltts.iut~ tf'llt~tloo"'! Conc•J1 Choral•• perfoi'in an·ae-: • -• •·Ang ma"'' dfQfh ~t rrw. bttawe I.am inool\Jf'd in nJ<JNafkf orw:f thn.Jore.ltt'W'f -1 to bow for whom tM bcU tolU ; JI toll.t for tMf' .. -•• 117AJITRUR11. VINSEL • GI .. Dlif'I-P'lt.11 ..... No man is an island entire ot itself, as John Donne the poet wrote. but some exist ~t wcy, and so no bells tolled Tuesday for Trevelyn Trench. a tired old man of mystery and misery Ill' "'·as 7S nnd died last Wednesday. Death came to him in a Costa Mesa C"Onvalescent hospital and -chances are -he wouldba~e welcomed it. TRENCH WAS COMMITl'ED lo a simple grave in picturesque El Toro Cemetery, high in the rolling Santa Ana ;\1 ountains east of the San Di~go f'rtt"''BY, where it is silent exc-ept for the buds. . The man moved through lire in such a "'ay he left no knmitt mark upon It, no son, no daughter. WHO WAS TRE.VELYN TRENCH! Was he a poet? Was be a hobo? Was he a vtNSEt. mechanic? Was he a lumberjack! Was hl' a f<trmC'r. a merchant, a laborer? Was he once wealthy? \\"as he a churchgoer? Was he a drinking man? Was be a m<'mbcr of lhe Elks Lodge somewhere? "SO ONE WAS EVER able to learn anything," says Rill ~1cConnell , of the Orange County Public Administrator· C.uard1an's Office, who handled the meager estate of Trevelyn Trench. "He had nothing. He died leaving only a residual amount in his patient fund ." says McConnell. A $700 funeral was agreed upon between the county and Bell Broadway Mortuary and after that, Trench's estate ronlained only a paltry swn. HE DIDN'T EVEN LEAVE a toothbrush. Trench's last l ,460 days of life -give or take a few .- were spent at the Bayview Convalescent Hospital. He was transferred there in 1971 from a ~ea hospital specializing in mental illness or neurological pro~lems and sometimes senility. ,. / Records mostly lost or misplaced It.ow h• w~admitted ,,. as a traps ient, appar..ently taken into eustod)r by polic• at some point in 1971 for bis own weUar'~then tur;ired:oveP'tot.M county. · ~ · ' HOME FOR HIM BECAME 350 W.. Bay SL, Costa Mesa, where the days and nights sooo blended into one another. The sparse life story known G Trevelya Tren~ was un· broken by highfi1hts or excitement. He didn't converse with anyone. tYlr. '"He: ne•er recei•ed any 111ail."' UJS McCc:mnell. tbe county public administrakr to wtxa tbe affairs ol UM: un- known er anw anted are cc:nsiped WOii death. _ ''Mo ~ ever came to visit bim.. •• '' says • bo5pital spokesman. THE LA.TE KL ftENC& bowe•e , wu not ak9e for tjlefinal OYenl inalilell~eil l~in~ty and pertsa.,s loneliness, and lbe tostness of those men wt.:> try to be isl.,. UDtothemselves. ''There was somebody from the mortuary for s:raTmide committal ser1i.c:ea,'' said mortician Neil Abrams. And there was retired minister Rev. Jim Cotton. 61, wbo presides at Public Administrator funerals for l«al folks free of charge, out of Christian duty and just to keep in prac· tice. , "He said a prayer,•• Abrams remarked. "And that was it. • Stal"'ted as Clerk · Banker Paul Dodtb Succumbs at 83 Memorial funeral services have been held for long-time· banker Patil D. Dodds, who began in 1910 ·as a minor financial house clerk and became president by 1954 of the California Bankers As- sociation anddled &mday. Mr. Dodds Was D&nd made his home in the Laguna Beach area. Born in Fontanelle, Iowa, he came to California in 1904, attend- ing schools in Pasadena and Los Angeles, then joined the old L.A. Trust & Savings firm in 1910 as a clearing hoµseclerk. He remained with the firm - which later became Security Pacific National Bank -for 48 years, r etiring in 1959 as senior ORANGE COAST "'' DAILY PILOT '"• °'""'IJfl CN1t o.n1 11•1ttt. wtt11wftk11 1ico- b""" 1"' '"'"' ll•eH, •P<IMl~IVllW0..,,Qlll C:O.tl PuOU ... ll>Q COmF•"V ,._ ... _.,,,_, ••e llO;b!o\t>Oll M(>h!lf y !ht ..... gl\ F"<MV loo (~I• Mf.u , '-•""~1 8-•<ll, H11nll1'fl<"' 0.Mll r.,..... '•'" ~•Ii••· ''""'• S•ll<lltPH<• V111oy fnO 1..,,.,,.,. se .... 11110u1.11 t•••• A """'* n.,iono1 e<1!- '"''' " ~ul>h\11..:I Sa!u•llt~~ -5wnMTI. lhe ptlt><:il>ll 11<1lll""lllO P••nl u II 1IO Wul Bil' Sl•••I, COil• M•W. Cllitorn+• n..a. Robert N . Weed ~ ... IWft •• ..., Pulll•- Jack R. Curle\' \.'!(t Pr1110ent Incl c;..,..,11 M.,_r Thomes Keevil vice pres\d~nt . .He was head olthe Californiil Banfcen As&ociation ln 1954-55 shortly arier becomina: a member of his bank's board of directors. Community services ine!lude work for the Community Chest and Americ.an Red Cross, while Mr. Dodds was a nin~yeardirec­ tor of South Coast Community Hospital, South Laguna. He has been a director and pre- sident of the Emerald Bay Com- munity Association, and in 1969 was appointed by the 0.ratige County Board of Supervisors as director of the Emerald Bay Services District, a post he held forttireeyears. He was also a member of the board of directors of Midland In- vestment Company and of AVCO Community Developers Inc. Survivors include hts wife Delights. Dodds, a daughter Mrs. .John W. Kenney, granddaua;hters Mrs . Stanley Evans and Mn. Janice Kindred and · two great· iranddaugbters. Services were held :at Pacific View M'•m,orlal Park C~ape\, wlthlnurnmennbere. DOCTORS •. open,•• he Bald. · Ant clooure would.be only !or the duration of any atrlke or slowdown, be 1ald. • Io addition to pliyalclon In· er.Un !or medlcll.molpractlce insurance pr,mlum1, Everett 11ld tlMI bOlpj\al too wu bltng bit b)I ra!HI ... o-~ oow cna· ta llMI bolpit4J about .. per pa· l!IODI per U1 illlt for mil practice illlur~eailllm1. -5:30 p.m .: Folk dancers' ex- hibition, -7 p.m. to 11 p.m. Band con· ce rt and dance, featurln& '"Magpie" aad l'Scratcb." -8:30 p .m .: Fireworks dig.. play. · tlot doe and soft drink 1W1ch€s will be st-rved by the Kiwanis Club and Boys· Club from 10 a.m. to4p.m . A buffet supper of prime beef, roast turkey and baked ham will be served from 4 to a p.m . by the Laguna Beach Jaycee$, $2.50 for lldulu, SU l.S ror children. Throu1hout the day, booths will be manned by the Laguna. Beach Parent'Teachers Aaoeta- tion , Community His(orical $Miety, Girls' Club, Exch¥-ge Club . Cali fornia ReHred Teachers Association and nirl Scouts. .. Euge.µe Alder Rite~ S'iated On Thursday Services for Eugene M. Alder, • focmer vice president of Avco Financial Services who died Sun- day, will be held Thursday at I p.m. in Baltz-Bergeron Funeral Home, Corona del Mar. Mr. Alder, 56. worked !or the fmancial company, where he was in charge of sales, for 26 years. -An avid golfer, he retired to or- ganize a world golf associa- Uoo which was r'portedly about ~to be incorporated. ]lr .. Alder, formerly a Newport Beach resident. died of natural causes in Hoag Memorial ffoaplt~. I He is survived by his wife, Eunfffj two sons. Craig and Cary; a brother, Sidney, and two lf1'Ddchlldrep, __ ·- PriYSte en tom bmtnl will be in ln&J ... 'OOCI Pa.rt Cem<tery. The famil~· sq:gesu tributes in the rorm ol ('Ofttribuliom to the CUrtis AldPr lllemorilll SandKtt Flood. 1llira Co.ota mp. 1'11 S. • hd. Manhattan Stach. or ~ Or-•County E~SocM<..v. 2730 N. Ma.ill. Sanr:.a .U&.. Fire Slarfed By Cleirtenle Jai.l PriMJnen Two pnsoners in Ute San Clt'mente cttJ jall aUeteclJY be'gan a fire. in their celJ block and SIK!ceeded in bumioil a mat· tress and Korcbin& the ceiling of thecellTueoday. San Clemente firemen were 'called to the jail and the fire was quickly-extinguished without in· cident . Botb men were tranaferred to Orange County Jail. Police identifred the prisoners as Timothy',fol;. Borup. ta, of San Jose, arrested 'bn suspicion of at- tempted rape, and Robert A. Zagers, 19, artestea on suspicion , I ' olburg ary. , · <The fire was started by first ig- niting toilet paper with matches. There w fl no official esUmate of the cost of the dam age whlcti was considered minor. FroMPageAL . . VALL~RGA state priso\i from onetolOyears. Today, Judge Shaw •Bid he could not find a ba;is lor revers· ing the jury's verdict iJfthe er1u· ments presented by Murphy. Included among them was a charge that so-called sec re£ funds handled through Orange County Superior and Munjcipal· Courts · are equivalent to the mishandling of P\lblic monies chareed to van.,., •. "I! It's all risht there, On the courts) it's all right in this case,'' Murj)hy argued. · But a rebuttal by Assistant Dis- trict AttcSrney Michael Capizzi put down Murphy's pleap as Judae Shs._w agreed to do no more than allow Vllller!IJ!i'S attofneys the additional 48 hours to begin their last-minute flurry of. ap- peals toblgher courts. Threjjweell 110, the Fifth Dis· tricl Court o! Appeal in Los Ane<les quickly denied similar motlm)S (or a reversal, anew trial and a delay,.m ~~ntenclng. 5 HeJa ~ !J~st Bewaie, F~J at Play M.;i.,rlsts. driving along.·£1 Toro's Ridge Route now are warned {0 watch out for ducks. Sign was placed opposite Duck Pond Park tiy homeowners to protect web· footers straying across divided road. • lrviiie Seeking ~nex Air Base Control Would Quash OC Plans .: ByDOUGLASFllft'ZSCllE Ol .. D.llyP'llet ..... The Irvine City Council intends to try to annex El Toro Marine Corpe Air Station in an etrort to block county supervisors' at- tempts to add commercial jet flights to the Marine airfield. The s trategy session at Tuesday's council meeting re- sulted in orders to City Manager Willfam Wollett t.o begin work on a !our-pron&ed assault on the * * * county scheme. The steps include: -Gettln& s•pport from ''anybody who i& anybody" in tt»e area that would be affected by 119ise ahd cras.h danger from in- creased ule of El Toro to lobby against commercial fiigbu. -Tbreatealng tbe supervisors with legal action and outlining !or county government the likely cost the county. •'They might have to buy out the Ranch or Tur- * * * 'Attila Doney' CoUncihroman Tums Ruthless "Instead of ju.st opposing it. we OQlht to t.va our evil minds to =.:~:n:::~~:;;:.~~.~ lrviae Cou:lllc:il•om1n G,t..._~~~t:*W5tialoa <ill' ~ --"' ..... ~ .iJIUIC ••. .,. 3Dll_ c.QD- maruail lid:tsod.Jm'Jrc. ........ C<11111"' <la -.., ~ -edlam .... ~ sntJd?ima$-awm:uraua; stm-~ ....a-t1ftllbJ•·~ilt. a;.•aeiJle fll, !bur' cunrr, MR CJi•••ifnm• l!Mlo." IidEniel .. IDB' ____ _,,_- £ .. IN lfr•, P'Tyor du.rat· ..rued ba; .,...illoo towaidll a count1 ·~· :oppllcatlon to add commttciaJ OJ&hta tn El Toro u "rutblna." Su11estin1 that retired Marine ayer Mayor Art Anthony re· 1earcb potential commercial plane flight paths, she said, "Maybe we can build a very high build.in& there.'' "What e11e could make, like, the radar not work ?" she wondered. Anthony quipped back, "Have )"OU ever heard of SAM mis- sil , •. ... Urging th~ council to its even· tual four-point barb at the ~·•·joint use" S<:heme. 9iesaid. ··y.·e·ve got to get ready "'liPl-'""lre'"'w gal to make it tl91" -wt will bald -building ... 1t111iM dial mo-. er wbatner we Uftlodo,.'' she said. -11uite to be so ruthless, Wt we -OOOJething to threaten them with.·· 111e •aid. Mn. Pryor 1u1gested the two major point• of the cotincil strategy: annexing El Toro to the city and threatening le1al action. The threat of a 1uit against the county, she aald, 1hould include a delineation of what areas might be affected and what it might eo1t the county in court co.cits and a mammoth conde.Dlllation rul- ing. BACK TO SCHOOL tle Rock or whatever,·• Coun- cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor said. -Having the C!ity transporta- t ion commission study the mat- t er and come up , with more strategy recommend~tions. _ -Annexing El Toro ,Manne Corps Air Station to giye the city primary jurisdiction over the f acility and strip it from supervisors. Marine Corps Public Intorma~ tion Officer John Shotwell at El Toro said today the council ac- tlOn "is a shot out of the blue for us . We really are not prepared lo comment on it." Councilman John Burton at Tuesday'.s session pointed out that the Marines traditionally have opJ)Osed joint commercial and military use of the field -so- called "joint use.·· The Marines and the Depart- ment of Defens e, he said, are likely to ••snuggl~ up to the municipalit y that mos t represents their point of view.'' County supervisors last month- toucbed off the furore among Irvine councilmen with an ap- plication to the U.S. De!en~ Department to make El Toro a '"joint use'' airport. supervisors, including Fifth District Supervisor Thomas Riley, claim they rued the ap- plication only to put an end to speculation about commercial use of El Toro. Riley is a retired Marine general. Sanitation Meet The boards of directors of Orange County Sanitation Dis· tricts Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7 and 11 will meet tonight at 7:30 at 10844 Ellis Ave., Fountain Valley. SPECIAL CLOSE OUT SALE Gym Pants Reversible T-Shirts "Abco" Brand Warm-up Shoes for School & PE Suits Reg. 24.95 Sale Price 15. 90 Warm up Suits Tops 8.95 Sweat Suits • Pants 6.95 ' V t,f tck Long Sleeve , Orio~ Sweattr._s-'-6.95 Subject to stpck on hand •· " ''Tlla GOlir tblna the phyllctan ean do, Ille 0011 1111111 ft.can clo 'II lq -tbat OD to I.he COO· --"',"be11ld. OCEANSIDE (UPI) -Five Loi An1e,J.e1 area men were ar· rested on 1u1plcloil• ol,~ after a police sera~ant 'tX· chanced shots wl(h them early Tuesday, poli~e 1afd. Four l(l !bl\ s uapect1, Robin T. ·Setui, 22, Daniel J. Senn, 20. Tlm.iu.t, ti; and 01"1J'1.m1worth,191 w•~J.1: ~~ x:-;o;.~~ ~~.1;,;,. to 1 -Open v 9 to 6 •,Closed Sunday 535 Center, 646°I~19 · clieck\I, a1Po1tnm11111ld. , L.---------------.;...-.1-_..,. ____ ..;.. ________ ~ _ _, I • • • • I , \ .. "Se•eol Fl•aae ... • 'lVeed ~ly~is' • Determines Aid , • Money's Worth Tbla commoft .. method of need analysla waa.-e ofMld y tbe l{.ollonal Tak Force on Student Aid Problem1 , f.ZS...:member &roup or experts, chaired. by Francis K8ppet, former commissioner of education. II macle its """'°"iill In lfay 1&'15 alter mo~e an a year of deliberations. • THE ASSUMPTION ON Which the new method la bued II still that your parents have an obllpllon to finance your educaUon to the ex,tent th8t they can. For instarite, let'• s17 that In your family one parent II wo<itinf. there an· two ehlldl'e11 ~one la In college. ; "Ball park" esUmates of the CSS ore that at a iz,,ss income or $1,000. no cootribuUon from your parenu would be~; at i11,QOD. their contribution WOUid be $1,130; at ..... ooo. '3,270. • <lr"let'1 uy there are four cblldnn, ..,.. bl <Ollefe. Eve!> at the f!0,000/tou income level, no contribution from your -6 woul bee~; at '1%,00Q, It would be just fCO· 111 sis.ooo. it w9jlld ~ '810; and at ~.ooo, oaly-#~oo. · • ~OU CAN ESTIMATE your need liY using the --ubeets and tables In another CSS boolciet "Meeting ,College Costs. A Guide~or Parents and Stud~nts." This guide is free and outline$ step by step the CSS 1yat.em used to anal11e the need ot over l miWon families each year who eomplete the Parents' Confidential Statement. Both the form and booklet ~ av~able from your high school ~r; commuru9 agency director or colleae financial aid administrator. ~ Don't-rule.yoursell out simply because you lhlnlt your family's Income ls too higl) to qualify for llnanclal aid -lor ~lD4 ii not the only factor In calclllating Med. Need allo depends on assets, number ol children in the family, debts, ~pe~es and college costs. You must subtract the family contrib\ltion (your _parents' plus your own contribution) from the totaJ cost of the college you want to attend. So, if the need.analysis procedure indicates )'OU and your parents should be able to contribute $2 ,000, you would not show need at a college that annually costs $1,900, but you would have considerable need at a college coating SC,500. It would then be up to the college to decide bow much and what form of aid it can offer you. TO ILLUSTRATE NEED analysis, consider the case ol Mary who wants to go to a school lb at cos ta $2,0CO a year. Mary's parents have a combined income of $12,515, but alter deductions for such expenses as medical and dental, taxes~ allowances fOf' bousekee,Plng and living e"Xpen.ses (totaling $13 ,119), Mary's family is left with minus $604! . Mary's family also has a home equity of $15,840 and $900 in s.avtngs -but after taking retirement aDci other allowances into account, they are left with SC,135 m asseta. This total of assets is multiplied by 12 percent to derive the income supplement of $496, which is then added to the available income -that negative $604 . Mary's family clearly cannot alford to contribute toward her expenses but Mary herself is expected to use · some of her savings and swnmer earnings to make up part of the family contribution•. In her case, 35 percent of her savings and other assets ($140) and $500 from her summer earnings (more is expected after the first year) make up her total contribution of $640. This is subtracted from the $2,040 of her school costs to arrive at her need for aid: $1 ,400. THE FINANCIAL AID ofncer at the college always makes the final estimate of need and may adust the CSS's recommendation, up or down. He then decides on the total to be awarded. uiually in the form of a "package," .or combination of grant, loan, and work. Snap-in Engine Parts In Chrysler Future? Capitol News Service SACRAM.ENTO -A re· volution in the replacement of auto parts may be the side ef. feet of the new lean bum engine being introduced by Chrysler in its larger '76 models, according to the cur· rent issue of Motor Magazine. The only manufacturer US· ing this lean gas/air mixture approach in the '76 model yeu, Chrysler looks forward to expanding its use if federal emissions standards remain static for 1977 . This new engine opens the way for the heavy use of elec· tronic components such as electronic fuel control, choke, automatic transmission and many others. The use of such electronic parts would mean two very important things to the ·motorist: Firstthltinsteadof an old or defective unit being laboriously repaired o r replaced. it would •i!"P1Y be wtpluqed and a new part ptu1a:ect.back in. ' ned to such an electronic breakthrough would be the • • ~N HIGH GEAR) widespread use of computer analysis of your car's pro-- blems. Such systems are already in use and the Chrysler breakthrough may make it a more generalized system in the very near future. • While the arguments of the use of the ''air bag'' safety de· vice continue in Detroit and Washington, auto m akers have put together dollar estimates of what it would C05l to repJ ace a bag after the original unit was used. Estimate&. range from $500 to $900. Mllny motorists are uptight about spending $150 to $200 for a set Of new tires. The thought of spending $500 for a new air bag wonld not be a pleasant one for most drivers. In the two years that General Motors offered them as an option on its big cars it sold only 8,000 units. GM had . expected to sell more than S "-L to Open· 100,000. Although they may be ~ ireat safety devices, the cost · • · factor is obviously going to ~l SeacJiff =:~ a great effect on their flome Federal Savings and • ~an A11ociatlon of San· Major trucking operators Die10 plans to open Its tem· have found a way to get i;:ary Huotlngton Beach of. around government red tape ce Sel)t. 29, according to in a completely legal and ef- KJm. netcher. Home Federal feetive manner. Many con- pru1den,. sider new aoycrnment st.an. Construction s,i 8~2 darda, applicable to trucks .Manalon Ave., In lbe. new and not to autos, so obJec· Seaclltf Vlllago, w\11 be i.:n>-Uonabie that Ibey are not l>W· .porary until co~pletfbn ing new equipment. ln.!tead of ~"~neat. off1ee in lbe the major truckers ate bav· SeUll{f Village bl 197&. in.t!Mlrotd u.olll rebuilt. . 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"'°"""<O .to• •S 1.-.... \.I "'""' fflOl 11 llt JJtll-~ Oil Find NEW ORLEANS CUP!) -Shell Oil Co. struck add1t1onal oil and gas tn an area oil the Louisiana Coast where the water is more than a>O reet deep company-orflciala ~ ~ day. The strike was 100 miles soutb- soutbeut of New Orleans and two miles from a previously reported oU and cas dlacovery. Engineen said the new well was part of an effort to de- fine lbe discovery site. C..-.tt 11: I 10 1 I 12'11 •. l:G 'G .1114 » l•i.-'Ao flt f'wr 1.:ICI i 12 11'1»-"°' ,.,...,,......_ .. 0 0< ·•• M J -"" """"-1.M 10 1 II"-"' " CapCIUf1Clt 11 l~"-Vl EMct /utK •. t Jlh .. , 111 ... "'t.CM •• rtO 11 -1 bl 111• -Wit ._,,k,_.. ... • 1111 ... -Wlt C.OHokl .M 11 •2 :llll'o -.... eos h• .,. ,, ,, 1 Yo-" Ill~ J.t1 •• ''t ,, -t ~'l'Cr11 .till • ' ~" lllll !JM '° ) 'I"-,, 'Jaws• Bite ''","','' !n,.• ·,· ,' ,'"'-~ l~~~ :: ff ::.!= ~ :~rt :~ '1 •2 11"" _·;,\ =.::,;.." ; '~ w...I"' ::: t:t:.·~ :: 1 : 11 ~-.~ HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -''Ja-•• 0 ·. J • ~ ••· 11111111, ,..,1,. ~ 1,,,. ., .. 1H.\Cfl·'° 1 611 11 -1i~ --.....,••,·.,'",s .?? ~·-~ lto!G-"''·'°·· • '"' ... b wo '•"'""' .. ·,· ,•, ,,' ·;:. 1r~r ,,.. 1 f!lt-v. ,,..,.,,,.. ·"·· t ,,....._"" n -... kC• J ,.. •""-" as become the bl t "" 11o-... 1 ... .c \·" I , c:t=" .,,..,.uf.J 1 • ..,. ""'°"'"' '~ .. • No ""'""'s·'° • 1 •~-~ • • 1cea a.one .. f."'-1::1, 114 1•""-ti. 1!!11,.c.,.. ,, __ ~ ·t 11 ''"' ::: 111111ontoi.1.o. • s ,.,_. v • ...,...1""'·· ,. 1,., •. • mak1n1 movie In cloema .. 1_._! r",.,,·; fJ r,"-t .,_11 ,litt t02 -1-ff'lli"w\.I, • ,. "-\lo ,...,....,.l.IO 1 11' vt\-\j, ~r1..o. I"' '1"'-l 'h Unive al St di -""7 r11":c :i111 111 := ... E,,.,.,Al, .... ,. '2 ~~ ..... MatJ1.•21 11 IJ\lo• ... MOflt$l,IO.a ., "''"' ••• ""'"""°''·'' 1 Ill llAo-\\ r 1 u OS &nnowlced .... ~· ... •. 11 II -.. ''""'"lfl .olO t .... .__... I~ Oii •• 11· 1"'-Mo """"""'-.)49 t It •'h . • ._...ICr .. l I J lt... •. day. &_. E"""11,ft: •.as,;:-" 1 ... Jtro111.A112 1 n-.--.. ....,...,.,. • * •1"'41" At..c.os e1 1•,. 11~ •• "' ~:.:11 I: ii:=-.~ 8MI U .I .. I ti ... lflQA,,J.11 ,. p .. .,,-tlot _,..~1 .•11 171 U"'-Vl,ftew'l<:.UfllO 11 .!~•"" I· .. j ' • • ' • • • .. ' ~ ~ ' ' , ,. DAL y Pk.OT W9dnMc!!y. !!ptemblt 10, tm, r 1 SEJIEN w ASN'T·, GOOD LUCK • qoun Bans Snake ·Handling, ·Poison Drlnlmig ' . NORTHAMPTON, 'E-ortand <AP) -Two yean ago, Rodney 1lltlnc, falbeJ' or lb<, bad 0 Vuec• tpmy. Then last Octol>er..hia wife aave birth to their seventh child. Now Uttlnr, 32, bu been Jailed {w tbrft montba 1 .. maldn1 a boax bomb call to Nortbamptoo Boopit~ ~er wblcb BOme too P•· tlents were evacuated and one woman died. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPl)-ID 1 ruJ. lnr wblcb It 1ald rlpa out "the tbeolo1lcal beart" or the Hollneol Cburcb, the Tenn-9.!fnm• COurt hu banned analce bandlin1 and the drlnkin1 or p01Jon ilurinr rellrloua · ceremonies. • . .. . The l>O rullng, written by JuaUce Joe !Jenry, held tbat.J>ubllc !lftak• handling In the presence of «her penons is a public nui1ance · M1f4t _...,.. .. tluit ... """" .... bandli::f la to rem"" tbe tlMolacical lieut tbe Rolin., c.urch and tbia ..... prompted tbia court to 111-. ... ond reaearcb tbla m-tlirouO ....... ,.usually extensive oplnkJD.'' tlae court laid. It added, bow.ever, tllat the rtee u- erclse of religion -DO& Include ~ riib.t to break-the law or to malnt•ln • nuisance. • 51~~ SPECIAL REYNOLDS •"!Wnctt!I bU die rlatat to .... acah11t tho .. ...._...,. UUlloa al lridon and orpllam," tllo court ....... 1be tu11n1 .......... tram ......... tk1ll IOU&llt ~--LIRm ~-.... Poll« of the lfollaea Clluftll al GOd ID JelUI Name, aa4 Ida follc•m1. Dlltdd Attorney Henry P. Swann claimed -era! ll§flOU -W.tr:e. bitle Iw UI• Uesnalces durill1 lerVic• 4tl 1>ac1<'1 Church in the &alt. Tarr•• .._. NESnE . ARRID Reynolds Wrap RAGU Brown-In-Bag 48 oz. Hot Cocoa hti-Perspinllll Sptllf . 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Exclu- siye wire wrapped 1 09 blades, for a smooth shave. • . CARTRIDGE PLAYER it~ 111tched twio speaker s1steR1. Slide controls for volume, tone, balance. Auto or manual chan- nel seleclion ... 6 watts music power ..• features 5" wide range speakers44 88 ;1!4840·601 ONLY • Far baseball (llHS, beacft, etc. Easy carry with handstrap. 4 88 Operates on 9-volt battery.· which is included. #1164 • NEWI CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE '' I s,ueezably soft .. ..... ...... .,,... • I IN BURBANK TO SERVE THE COMMUNITY LOCATED Al 1015 N. SAN FERNANDO BLVD. CORNER OF WALNUT AND SAN FERNANDO ' Old Charter . V. GALLON 7 Year KENTUCKY STRAIGHT IZ 95 BOURBON WAS 14.95 SAY£ 2.00 • VODKA WINE l BEER ONLY AT CAMARILLO, FOUNTAIN YALUY l SANTA AHA 3911 S. BRISTOL ST. ' ' • PlaiQ MIX Jvst acid i.it mum ... Tobe • water. sure . . . 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MHl!lf ,, • CltMJ tlllMll • .I .... ' ' • • • ' I I I l I I - 7 .. Sadtllebaek • . VOL. 68, NO. 253. 5 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES -ORAN9E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNJSDAY, E.PTEMPElr-io, 197> :TENl:ENTS - ) . • 24 Millionaires -Escape V.S. Taxes ' . l .. . ,,, VASHINGTON (APl -'!'Wen· 1t-,.four Alnertc1n mlllionakft manaaed to avoid pa)'inJ a pen- 1\Y in federal taxe• In cme reeent -year, 1ccordin1 to lnter11al -... Service data reteas<d by a member or eo,,.._ · 1\cp. Charlos A. Yanik (I). Ohio), aaid ln a House IPttCb Tpetday that· seven Ol" tbe· mllllooalna h•d a totOJ ..u..ai..1 a ....,.. ln.-e of '17,'lSS,OOI, .., ••erace of $1.54 million ptt --"'lbere .,.,.. allO 11 (Giber) milli._IOi .... wlao avoided 1111 tu · Iller <'alculallD1 their tu cleduc· --endlU:· aetwdinl lo • IRS tol-1tlon .... 1'73. Yanik slid •ae did not identify the mil· **11'~ OT ex-plain the tactics ~=-. -fol'·_:. 6,000 waalllly cawon.1ans -1cl be -eel by • total ol $25 Million • y-under a 11'11 1ppowod by the -•umn.b!TM-17~-at dimlnilbes the ··pn11.man farmer'' dedDC"Uon thet enabled lonner oov. Ronald Re11an lo 11"Y no lrlO at1te i/lcome taxes . <The . measure by A•·· sem1>1¥man -Dan .Boatwright (I>-. Con<ord), wolil~Mduceothertu lbeltert and.-,•dt to lncte-~ mltllm'lllf lues the w~althy mus! poy,l , In addition, er' were "St In• cll.tduafs with a<IJ-0-in-comes of between $500.000" and St mllllon wbo paid dO lodotol In-• come tax and ~ Individuals with adJuated S<OS$ 18Come ol between $200,000 •04 "'1,000 wbo paid no In dniot ln<ome 11 '' ., tai.'' Yanik, a member ol the t~: writlnl Ways and Meono Com· millee. m,o 1 d that1~m.,...o11 ...,,pa1 .. paid foreign 10vern• meats about e:i&.bt Ume..u much ta u theJ did lo tho United Stata in 197•. "' ~fie Said "'1t is •Pl'&l1ina to note·· tlial the compOJtleo llltad p1ym~nt1 of $9,554,112,000 to fori;ir counlrtea1 but only ~ ;t' -----------... .---~ ...--_ _;_.:.; ... ;i • ._:;t','-~-.:.,.·t.J•L.....:_;_ _______ ,.... _____ ._ __ :'-'-,.....'::-:-:-~~~,......,,....:.,-_ ---~...-~---• ._!LWLW--U r ..,.. •:+JI -' ~eedom at 8~ ~· Mit~on Murderer ServeS-48 Yean Memh) er ( SAN QUENTIN (AP) -Odd G. . Tbe death aentenee wu com· Corn.eU, a double murderer im· mutefii to life imprisonment , , prisoned nearly a hall century witboUt PQ!5'tbnity of parole in s gh ago,isa~reemanatage82. 1934';' and the no-_parole ·dause OU . t Cornell was •ent l<l San Quen· "(35 ~i!teCI by lo1'1t1er c;o.. Ed· tin Feb. 9, 1927, where be·awalted mundG.Brown In lse&.,' _ execution tu' hancincfortheslay~ "Cordell was subseguently 'By Ualted Press hdenl8jioul ing of his wife and ·14-year-old paioled l>ut complained that the •edera\ autborl.Ues plan to s•_...__daugb:rr in Bakersfield. He tim'\)y 1le Was living with io °" -..-' O•r•and "slot rytblri" ( locate and interview a onetime had twile the gun on himself ~; · e eve I rom member of the CbUles Manson after killing them and.suffered a ,me .. He ~sked to be returned. to .. Family'' who formerly lived tra gapingwoundinthechest. • ,5fnQuentmafew montMlater. a N·w Hampsh'•e town lhal Cornel'I was released from ~ ..... After arriving at San Quentin, • prisOn again t)lis week and ·~estdent Ford will visit Thurs· Corne~ spent hours bowling un-authorities :.aiq Cornell this ~me day. der his bed. The warden had will s ay with the mother Of a Officials iadicated they W"1ted Cornell transferred to,iM.endocino fellow inm8te in San Franclsco. to talk to the former Unda Kasa· State Hospital,~ where he re· ••]'m not going to loaf,'' Cornell bian, a former Manson Fami~y m~ for five y~ars_. still facing ~aid .. "She's__(Qt some odd jobs r m~mber w~o once ~ived tn lhe'aeith sentence. can do.·' -----Milfotd, N.H.,one efthetownson Ford's motorcade route. Mrs. Kasabian has remari1.e4 and state and local Pl'lli:e decliqed to dlsclooe the lo<al,ion of her pew '· In .J'et Fight · ' • l home. Ford'• appearan~ 111Ursday I A · to help ~ubll,can _5el\ale can· . rvine to · ttemftf. • ~1 ... t -i~1p"~ .. ~:: ·f' •American ~le sii'lce. he Was -threatened last week in T ... __ i._ . A_ :twt6 JI (, J.acramernt~ by; ~)"hette 0 a..IJ.IJeX . _a'._,1,.1.-ase 'fJ'omtbe, -p' Manson fa(llily m<:mber. tL •• t Pfeparationt ror a presldential By DOUGLAS FRl17.scHE represents their Point of view," visit already wei-e under way in 0tn1e t>•llr "n•5Utf County supervisors last month the nation's seventh smallest The Irvine City Council intends touched off the fW'Ore among state Friday when Miss Fromme to trY to annex El Toro Marine Irvine councilmen with an ap. aimed a loaded .45·caliber pistol Corps Air Station in an.effort to plication ,to the U.S. Defense atFordfromtwofeetaway. ' block county s upervisors' at· Depart.ment to make El Toro a The S.cret Service and other t.empts to add commercial jet , "jointuse'!airport. law enforcement agencies say nights to the Marine airfield. Supervisors, including Fifth they plan no unusual precautions The strategy session at District Supervisor Thomas for FOr'd's visit. Tuesday's council meeting re· Riley, claim they rtled the ap-"Wealwaystakethesamepre· suited in Orders to City Manager ~'ELTOBO, Pa&e.U) . cautions,'' said ·Thomas C. William Wollett to begin wOf'k on * *J.I * .,, Smith, special agent in charge or a four.pronged assault on the Secret Service in New England. count~ scheme. " Co••...,,,,.:[•.v.man "I see·no reason to.change." The steps include : .....,....,.., ~ Authorities also indicated a -Gettin1 support from ~ ., " checkwouta be madeoo Richard -;--,mybody whoi.,,nytlody''irrth..---~O>lllJ/E-" 'Pavlic,h;-88,-of-M11J1cbeSter;-a· area that would be"atfected by,. bel.3 .1.4 -eR , former'postalemployewi19spent noise and cr&sh\danger from in; • \ six'·years in county jails, federal creued use of El Toro ,to lobby -f'l..i. ~ "": Ai rt prisOns and fi11ahj a state 111ental against CO}'lmercial Oights. V~r 1'JIO hospital for allegedly threaten· -'(hreatenlnt tbe supervisors -.'f' . ing ,the life of President-elect with legal action and outlining "'"Instead of just opposing it, w~ Kennedy in !Im lieacb, Fla., in for county government the likely ought to turn our evil minds to .. Decelilber,1· ; , ~ ',,.· cos..t the .county. "They might l some snealE.y Way toi>revent El '• ·~Both°'t en:i are of interest lo have to buy out ti);e Ranch or Tur-Toro from turning commercial." u.5, •· iaid Smith. ''I'm not suing 1Je Rock or whalever,''',Coun· lrvine .. Councilwom a n whatwe'regoin·gtodO.'' l , cilwoman Gabrielle l'tyor said. Gabrielle Pryor's entrance into a Meanwhile, it was report~ -Havllll tbe city transporta-city ' council a1scussioo . Of re-that)ti.sS"from'me told'Ol'leof &he tlq,n commission !Uudy the mat· quested joint military and com· judg'" w11o sen~ced ~ tU ind ~orD.e up with more mereialfllgbtsatEIToroHarine that abe W4~ ·going (0.-do strategyrecom'me.ndations. Corp ~ir Station Tq~sday -something de~perate•• abod\!two • -A.nnexta1 El Toro Marine touched off a sometimes-serious, months age.. , t .. r: Corps Air Statidn to give the P,ty • som~imes~bumOrous st.rat~ ,. :>Miss f'r'cV'Dme );rote a ~~l- pri91afy jurisdiction over ihe sess100o~bowtoopp(lsei\. in&,. letter 1n June to 9Jpertor faclli ty and s tri p it rrom Ref~g to her stance, one Court:JudgeRaymondChoate,in supervisors. ~cil!"an later ref~ to her which she seemed to blame Marine Corps Public Informa· as Attila the \foney. hersell {or Manson's imprison· lion Officer John Shotwell at El ~ven Mrs. ~!yor charac· ment and seek atonement. About Toro said today the council ac-tenzed her ~s1t1°!1 towards. a a nioalh later. she called him at tion "is a shot out of the blue for cotmty supervts<?rs ~pplicatiOIJ,. his hoine, talking murkily about us. We really are not prepared to to add ~?mmerc1~! fiighte to El ''all this killing,'' the Judge said comment on it." Tor6 as r_utbless. . . Tuesday. Councilman John Burton ~at Suggesting that retired Manne She talked and wrote in the Tuesday.'s seulon '°inted out nyer ·Mayor ~rt Anthony ~e· sometime incoherent manner of that the Marines trat:litionall sear1ch ~otent1al commerc~al members or the Manson Family. have opposed joint commercial P,lane fl1gh\ pat~s . she. sa;td, The judge told the Los Angeles and militar y use of the field -so-~a~be we ca?. bwld a very high Times he .. \hought she mi'ghl be called .. joint use.·· bwlding there/ threatening him and his family. The Matines .an.d the. Depart-''What else could we do lo ment of Defense, he said, are make, like, the radar not work?'' 1'Jomma's Boy Tippy, a white rhinoceros 11.t Lion Country Safari in Irvine, stands guard over her fOO-pound baby boy born Monday. The baby, as yet unnamed, is the !\rst rhino conceived ' and born at the animal park. FaUier's nam'e is Diitcb. When he grows up, baby will weigh about 7 ,000 pounds. E,l Toro Residelits " Pushing MAC .. Unif • El Toro residents are planning to launch the ir petitli:>n drive Oct. l ror a municipal a'tlvisoty coun- cil (MAC ), homeowners assOcia· lion President Bill M00060n said today. Petitions will be carried to as many of the commwlity's 4,000 registered vot ers as possible with the hope or signing up the re· quired 10 percent. Mon06on , presidenl of the El Toro l:;lom.eown ers Association , said ·his organi:iation today was planning to secure petitions and support materi.ts suc cessfully used in Mission Viejo to f6rm a 'MAC eigh~..rnonths ago.~. 4.'We hoi>e to get the petitions approved by the Counly Board of Supervisors by the end or the year and to put the question on the March primar y ballot." he added. The El Toro llomeowners A\· sociati on soon will make a public appeal ror Volunteers to carry the petil!_on, according to M~h. Prans ar@ to e xtend the. MAC's boun~arie s· tb all o'r county Service Area 6, bouftded by Baker Parkway, Trabuco Ro ad and Cherry A 'Ve. MAYBE THEY NEED PBfJ/ ACY D\)NifANSVILL E , Pa. (U PI ) -'Jib e-Dun ca n s ville Poli ce Department has a new telephone number --ianlisted. Through a n o versight, the number was not included in the new telephone directory for the borough. Mayo r Do nn Kinzl e said stickers wit h the police phone number will be issued to resi· dents~. ' likely to ''s nuggle up to the shewondered. • muni c ip a lity that mo s t Anthony quipped bac.k .... "Have 'FIFI'Y C4ILED you ever he.rd of SAM mis· siles?" Orging the council tb its even· tual tbur-point bat.'b at the 1 upervisors' ••joint use'' scheme, she said, "We've got to get ready ~C Urges Center Delay • ABOUT THE :4D' ''Your newspaper cterutitely re- aches the public. Fil\y people c:alled about lhe.a " That's the adv~isin1 success experienced by tlie Corona del Mar woman who placedtbis•din the Daily Pilot: • So. of Hwy, old CdM .. pvt. f!nlr}', bot plale, $100 mo. 'ux-u1:x • .. . If you h a ve a room or apart- ment lo rent. call '42·1!678. II only takes 1 lew woYds in the rl&hl place lo 1park res-. AlonB the Ounge Coast, tilt riCbl p!ace i1 the Dall1 Pilot. • loligbt. "We·ve got to m.ake it clear that we will build that buildlnt or build that moat or whatever we bave to do,'' she said. "I bate to be so ruthless, but We J need sometbj"' to threaten them • with,•• 1he slid .. Mrs. Pryor suggested the-two major points of the counc\l .,, trategy; aM~xing J:I;l'orolothc ahd threallenlnil local action. ' threat or. sllll qalnst the coun y, th-esaJd, should include a delinutlon of what areas ft\lght -lie affected -what M.' m11bt coot the ~17 In court~ iibcl a mammoth tondem.ilition ruJ. ..... ,; I ' • Panel Says Roam Slwul.d 6o11W First The Mission Viejo Municipal Adviso~ Council (MAC! b .. re-oommen'aed against the con· struction of a regional shopping center until roads are improved lo ~~te1~e tratllc- The P"'l'9••d center on Alicia 1P,arttWay end Cllullncla Drive In the Aegean Hills area Is not within the MAC's Juriidlcti<ii, but councilmen said the fratfic ....uJ affeet-thett-commuoll7. of a Gem.co store and a service station, councilmen asked the county noL to issue building permits until Alicia Parkway is improved. 'J'ha~ would , require the in- ..Uation of iratric &ignals at the ')~rland1"'• Bou rev ard inlersec· tlOI\ and lhe widening of Alicia f'rbm the San Diego Freeway to rout lanes. codncilnien noted It was their Polley to ~~mmend &iainat lhe Colllli!tl!'~ of com~lil deo ~ent Oh Alltl• until tratnc coaaJtioN-are l'edlfted. l \ The Gem co sfl opping center re· cenUy became enveloped in con- troversy when Aegean Hills resi· dents complained lo county of· ficials. Hb m eowners char ged th at trucks eoterin1 and leavin&. th~ store Would endanger 'he safety of school children waiting ror bus.e4 on ~harlinda Drive. Chaftgei an the service access to the store have rflmedied that problem, but the homeowners sUJI "I""" 't happy ·-having a ser1>1ce 1t1t1on, tire and blltery at<>Uact.t•• nttothelrproperty. • / • ported $1,309,138,000 In U.S.' federalincome taxes. Yonik added: · "l -,_,. creat· ~bl-that UM !e4fl'll treUUl'Y, .aetuollr receiYed that .mount or -~ tn tJ .S;tax:e1. •• lie Hid l be companlM wblch ~ t'at (tllo.....Uon to Ille, Se<\irl-arid J:llellanle Com· mi.Slon In uable lorm had ap-· Vf~Xlmate .p•t incomes of ·-.971.023.~ . . Assessor .. Gran ··ed . . . Delay •• : ' ': llyGARYGRANVILLt; • Olt•O.ltr"'4•a.tt • Ve~tura County Superior Court -... Judge Robert Shaw refused toda.Y to overturn· the conViction of Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga. Simultaneously, Judge Shaw ref' used to dismiss the Grand Jury indictment that•charged VaJ ler ga in g.arlr May with seven felony crfines. ' ~It-was-last month that a Ventur.a. _ County jury convicted the 53- year-old assessor or s ix charges. including conflict or interest, mis-- use of"Public funds and embezzle- ment. · The best Vallerga's attorneys c:o\lld get for their effort& in court today wu a 48-hou.r delay in sen· lencing. Judg Shaw agreed to set the · assesso sentencin1·date back from Sejot. 16 lo 5<1pt, 18 to allow pet.itiohs for a ne w trial to be beard in the state Supreme Court. Vallerga's attorney, Richard Mui-phy , filed his petition last week, but told Judge Shaw the court would not be able lo con· sider it until Sept. 17 at the earliest. Should the high court deny Vallerga's appeal and fail to or· der a delay in sentencing, the as· sessor will automatically forfeit his elected office next Thursday when sentenced. ' (See V/\LLERG/\, Page AZ ) Artists.Plan Pot Luck Meet The Mission Viejo .Association or Artis ts a nd Cr•ffsmem will hold a pot luck dinnec:. from 7 tolO p.m . Thursd ay f according to club member Ma rgie l!restwood. The group wa~ organized to en· courage local interest irt arts and crafts , she said . WorJtshops and monthly meetings are held and scholarships a wa rded to pi'omis· ing local artists. · Thursday night's d ner will be held at 25422 Terreno in Mission Viejo.lfickets are $1..50, p~eeds to go into the schol arship fund. Addition a l inform ation is a vail a ble b y c a lling Car ol Zubris, 830·0979, or SJ0.2351. Orange· Coast Weather Mostly c loudy through Thursday, accordirlg to the weathe r service, but some sunshine inland areas in the aft ernoon. Continued cool with highs from the upper 60s at the beaches to near 70 inl and. INSIDE TODA. Y . The little Pe11ri111lvanfa town of Ely•burg bm bHn abrirptly thrwt onto the map a.a one o/ the ploct 1 thooght to b(' tht Tefuge of f ugitive:" P.atricio Hearst . Stf! Page .416. I f I • • AZ Oo\11. y PILOT SB W«in!!d!i• &!ptembet10. 197.S ' Pilot · -· ' Logbook-. -...;~~~~~~.::....~~~--"·· • • .. Tre~elyn .Trench ~ . Died in Mystery "An~ man'a death diminishes rM, ~u.sr I .am involved Jrt mankind.and thrrt:fore ntver atnd to know /or whom tM beU toU.s: It tOU.S for thee. . " -JohnDonM By AR'l11UR IL VINSEL -01 W. Dally '1'9'1 Sll.-tt No m an is an island entire or itself. as John Donne the poet wrote, but some exist that way , and so no bells tolled 1·uesday for Trevelyn Trench, a tired old man of mystery and misery. He was 75 and died last Wednesday. Death came to him in a Costa Mesa convalescenl hospital and -chances are -he would have welc omed it. TRENCH WAS COMMITTED to a simple grave in picturesque El Toro Cemetery, high in the rolling San(a Ana Mountains e a s t of the San Di ego Freeway, where it is silent except for th e birds. The man moved through life in such a way he left no known mark upon it, no son, no daughter. WHO WAS TREVELYN TRENCH? Was he a poet? Was he a hobo'! Wa s he a v•~~IEL mechani~? Was he a lumberjack? Wa~ he a farmer, a merchant, a laborer? Was he once wealthy? Was he a churchgoer? Was he a drinking man ? Was he a member of the Elks Lodge somewhere? "NO ONE WAS EVER able to learn anything," says Bill ,,_1cConnell , of the Orange County Public Adm inistrator· Guardian's Office, who handled ~ meager estate of Trevelyn Trench. "He had nothing. He died leaving only a residual amount in his patient fund,'' says McConnell. A $700 funeral was agreed lUJOn between the county and Bell Broadway Mortuary and after that, Trench's estate contained only a paltry sum. HE DIDN'T EVEN LEAVE a toothbrush. Trench's last 1,460 days of life -give or take a few - were spent at the Bayview Convalescent Hospital. He was transrerred there in 1971 rrom a Brea ho spital specializing in mental illness or neurological problems and sometimes senility. Records mostly lost or misplac~ show he was admitted as a transient, a,pparently taken into custody by police al some point in 1971 ror his own welfare, then turned over to the county. • , ROME FORWMBECAME350W. Bay St .. Costa ~esa; where the days and nights soon blended into one another . The sparse life story knowb or Trevelyn Trench was un- broken by hiibllgbt.Sorexcitement. He didn't converse with anyone, ever. "He never received any mail," says McConnell, the county public administrator to whom the af(airs or the un- known or unwanted are consigned upon death. ... "No one ever came to visit him ... " says a hospital spokesman. THE LA.TE MR. TRENCH, however, was not alone ror the final event in a lire lived largely in obscurity and perhaps loneliness. and tl1e lostness or those men who try to be islands WltothemseJves. " "::There -.yas somebody rrom the mortuary ror graveside committal servfces, ''said mortician Neil Abrams. And there was retired minister Rev. Jim Cotton, 61; who presides at Public Administrator funerals for local folks"' free of charge, out of Christian duty and just to keep in prac· lice. "He said a prayer," Abrams remarked. "And that was it. Newport Youngster Ki-lled on Highway A 9-year-old West Newport yowtgsteT running home rrom his last day at the beach· before school started was struck and ratally injured Tuesday after- noon on Coast Highway. St.even Scott Harding, son of Mrs. Sylvia Harding, of 235 Cedar St., apparently failed to · heed the screams of his playmates and darted onto the busy highway near 61.St Street about2p.m . Police trarric investigator Jim Donaldson said the boy ran dirertly into the path or an auto heading eastbound, driven by Robert Arnold Armstrong, 47, or 1019 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wftd Pr••-1 •M P-1- Jack A. Curtev Vk e Pre11Wf!t etwS Ge-91 ~· ThOm•s Keevll ..... Thames A. Murphlne ...... _l"lllCll ... " QlrletH.Loos Alc:ha,.dP.Nell AUtM•lll ~ .... Irle E""°"' The investigator said the driver had no chance to avoid the impact. He was not cited. Patrolman Chuck Olmstead and Patrol Sgt. Reed Gloshen had been eating lunch at a nearby restaurant when the tragedy occurred. "I looked out the window or the restaurant and saw a citizen try- ing to get into my patrol car, .. Olmstead relat1?d today. "I went outside and looked over to see the boy lying on the pavement and the citizen was trying to reach the radio to call for help." Olmstead said he and Sgt. Gloshen immediately ran to the youngster who was already bei-{!g attended by two nurses who hap-· pened onto the accident on their way to work at Hoag Memorial Hospital. The two nurses and the orficers gently loaded the gravely injured boy into the back of the patrol car and sped him to Hoag Memorial Hospital. Hbspital spoke5men said Steven never regained conscious· ness •nd that there was no response. He was pronounced de-· ad at 7:40 p.m . or massive head and internal injuries. The death or the youngster, who would have started school today at Newpart Elementary School , was arr added tragedy to a family hit recently by mis· fortune. Steven ·s father, police said died a month aco. ' F\lneral services ror the boy are pendin1 at Westminster Memorial Park and Mortuary. Rates Reduced? SACRAMENTO iAPJ -Peo- ple who use small arnounts of gas and electrtcity would set • break 11!.the!r llllllty bill• under the .... callad "lifeline" bill,_ on Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'1 desk. Cur- rently, larae conunerclml uaers ol-• 1et clllcounted rq. ' Tapes May Be Let Ollf., WASHINGTON (UPI) Congress acted today to make former President Nixon's White House tapes available for public broadcast despite Nixon's objec. lions. The House administration sub- committee on printing rejected rules propased by the General Services Administration which would have made the tapes available to researchers but banned their reproduction. GSA said it wanted to avoid commercial exploitation of the tape>. 1be subcommittee, by a S-1 vote, adopted a resolution and a report which ·•.•id, '"That ia the risk ol a free society. It is a risk the founding rathers accepted in adopting the free spe«!C"b Protec- tions o·r tbe First Amendment. Any researcher can announce to the world the nndlngs ol b1s re- search... .. t r· The same reaolutlori was ex- pected to come before the Senate Government OperatlO'ns Com~. mittee later today and berore the Senate for approval later this week. Under a Jaw adopted late last year, GSA was to propose regula· lions ror the disposition of the White House tapes and 42 million other Nixon documents . Congress bad 90 days to accept or reject the proposals. Today's action was the first step toward rejection. Disap- proval by either house makes the propasals invalid.. However, the law's constitu· lionality is under challenge in a court suit brought by:Nlxon. Responding . lo his ciomplalnt. the Justice Deparlptent sa:ICI in a brief liled with District Court Monday that Congress had re- ason to conclude that fiixon ''would not be a trustworthy custodian, even temporarily" or th&tapes and documents. · ~lt is ·exlf"ected that the materials will not be made P.Ublic until after tbe Supreme €ourt rules on the law's constitu- tionality. ' Paul Dodds, Banker, Dies In Litguna Memorial funeral. services have been held for Jong-time banker Paul D. Dodds, who began in 1910 as a minor financial house clerk and became president by 1954 or the Cali(ornia Bankers As· sociation and died Sunday. Mr. Dodd$ was 83 and made his home in the Laguna Beacb area. Born in Fontanelle, Iowa, he cametoCaliforniain 1904, attend- iug schools in Pas a den a and Los Angeles, then joined~ old L.4. Trust & Savings firm in 1910 as a clearing house clerk. He remained with Ute .rmn - which later became Security Paciric National Bank -for 48 years. retiring in 1959,__.as_senior vice president. He was bead of the California Bankers Association in 1954-55 s hortly arter becoming a member or his bank's board of directors. Community services include work ror the Community Chest and American Red Cross, while Mr. Dodds was a nine-year direc· tor of South Coast Community Hospital, South Laguna. He has been a director and pre- sident or the Emerald Bay Com- munity Association, and in 1989 ~ was appointed by the Orange'• County Board or Supervisors as director of the Emerald Bay Services District, a post be held for three years . He was also a member of th~ board or directors of Midland ln· vestment Company and ot AVCO Community Developers Inc. Survivors include his wire DeligbtS. Dodds, a daughter Mrs. John W. Kenney, ffanddaUWhters' Mrs. Stanley Evans and "Mrs. Janice Kindred and two great· granddaughters. · Services were held at Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel, with inurnment there. Dancing Set For Vi.ejo's Celebriltion U you like to dance, Mission Viejo Days will Jive you a chance to show off yoor footwork. The Sept. 17·21 celebntlon wlU be hlghll&hted by a dance Sept. 20 In the Montanoso n......at1on Center featuring both square and , round dancine. Popular m"'lc wW 'be pl,.yed , In the multl·P..,_ r'oOtu by "F1ax'' and squar~ dance tunes on the tennis coWU. J)y, the "Rambl1n1 Rogues•• And caller Ernie Wal.Ion. - • ' - • Beware, FOJD~ at Play • • ,, Motorists driving along. El Toro's Ridge Route now~·are warnecVto watch ou{ for dqcks. Si'gn w"s placed opposite Duck Pond Park by homeowners to protect web- footer.; straying across divided road. , ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - ... New/t;ig: '. t $18,6'9fJ, LONDON CU Pll -What fuel crisis? What economic crisis! With an eye firmly oo the American market, Jaguar has Wlveiled its new model -called the XJ ·S, with a Vl2 engine giving a top speed of 150 mph. Fuel consumption was estimated at 15 to 18 miles per gallon, and the selling price or $18,690 makes it the most expensive Jaguar ever. f'ro• Page Al EL TORO ••. plication only to put an en'ci to speculatlnn about commercial use of El Toro. Riley is a retired Marine general. Quigley stressed that the situa- tion c~not be underestimated. "Thi city manager e~essed to me that maybe eVen this city council is taking this too ligbUy," he said .. Annexation of t:l Toro .)V<¥11d require 1upport fFom the Marine Corps and Department of Defense -the landowen -or well as approval from the Local Agency Formation Commission· ~an arm of county ¥~vemment. ' Democrats Rapped USBON, Portugal <Ul>IJ - Portugal's Communist,party tc; day attacked the left-of.center popular Democrats, jeopardizing the military gOvemment's ef- forts to rorm a new coalition cabinet. Bandits Roh Man ' At Airi)orter Inn A pair of armed robben stole 1200 from a traveling busi· nessman in his ~irporter Inn room 1n Irvine late Tuesday. The ras~all"bound bim with bis D'Wlt"electrii; shaver cord and ten· nis shoelaces, forced him to lie face down and ur1ed..6ini "Don't try to be a hero'' in the 10:20p.m. attack. Clyde-L6fdahl, 38, ol Los '.Mtos told police he visits Irvine about twice • month on business. He was returning to the room after dinner Tuesday when the men walked up to him in the hotel hallway. Lofdahl told police one or the men stuck a short-barrel Colt .38 revolver in his ribs as he was un- locking his door and said, "Get in. Get in. Get in." As Lofdahl opened his door, the men pushed him inside and rorced him to the floor. he told police. While 01'\e or the men held 8 gun on the businessman and switched · on the television set to cover the noise, the other bound Lofdahl w;itlthil own effecta11 The men spent about JS minutes ransacking the room, Lofdahl told police. They took on- ly cash, assuring him, "We didn't take your credit cards," Lofdahl •aid. He described both men as in their 1ate 20's, of medium height and build. One had black hair, a run beard and mustache. The other, Lordahl said, had a blond afro an inch to an inch and a half thick. The men fled down the hallway. h.e said, after telling him, "Don 't be a hero. G\ve us 45 minutes.'' Except ror the few imtructions to Lordahl, the men searched the room in silence, he told police. After the pair left, Loldahl 5Quirp:ted loose rrom the electric shaver cord binding his wrists and worked his way free from a towel used to tie his ankles. ·f'ro• Page Al VALLERGA · The penalty on the six felony counts ror which be has been con· victed could send Va\(erga to state prison rrom onetolOyears. Today, Judge Shaw said he could not (ind a basis ror revers- ing the jury's verdict in the argu- ments presented by Murphy. Included among them was a charge that so-Called secret funds · handled through Orange County. Superior and Municipal Courts are equivalent to the mishandling e! .Public monies charged to vaijerga. "If it's all right there, (in the courts) it's all right in this case,'• Murphy argued. But a rebuttal by Assistant Dis- trict Attorney Michael Capizzi put down Murphy's pleas as Judge Shaw agreed to do no more than allow Vallerg:a's attorneys the addition.al 48 hours to begin their last-minute flurry of ap- peals to higher courts. Three weeks ago, the Fifth Dis- trict Court of Appeal in Los Angeles quickly denieCI similar motions for a reversal, a new trial and a delay in sentencing. Lynn Hart HART'S Joh n Ha rt SPORTING GOODS BIC YCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES Both dances wlU be beld con- currently lrom 8 p.m. to J. a.m. Tl<k.ta, 1>rlced at SS por <o11Ple, · are 1v&U1ble at all Mlulon VleJo ·• Opell 9 to 6 • Clo,secf.Sundnv 535 Center 64LI 919 l"fft'UU...ceaten. • ._ _________ ,;.._.;.. __ -.:;..'...JL...-----------.:..;.;,..;_;.;.,;..;,,J I r. l • . ---···· - A8 D . .\IL ,. PILOT EDITORl . .\I~ P . .\GE ~all_,y Un~y Fades The dream of keepint tbe Sadd!e\ack Valley In- tact as a political eotlly is fadin& rapldl,y with the an· nouncement by El Tero bonf-tO push for their own municipal advis«y ciouncil (MAC). Formation ol asecoDilMA-C;InaifdfUooiOlhe one In Mi.sslon Viejo, will alniost c!eltainly cause f~ fragmentation of the Valley.·• • • ~ut El Toro residents cannot~ faulted ff1r Uieir desire to have some type ol ~·eo:remment. The auc· cess ot the Miaslon Viejo J(A.C41a' clearly de- monstrated the effectiveness of a i>ublicly elected COWl!y liaison group. . . ' .. . Perhaps It would ha• 'beeo..advisable to place the entire Saddleback Vallq Uniler one bl& .MAC, as had been proposed earlier. nus would have preserved the valley as a political uniL However, tile unwillingness or other communities to join wllb El Toro made it 'ppew; that homogeneity was only wishful thinking. With Mission Viejo and El Toro broken away. perhaps the division ol the Valley into its component communities is a matter or inevital/ility. 11 Housing Puzzle The cost or housing is a persistent question in Irvine. After a few months' respite while councilmen heeded the city attorney's advice to keep mum while a pair of housing suits are in progress, it has come up again. Still no solutions. I• Efforts to ensure the availability of lower·cost homes have been rationalized as the mandate or some I sharp-fanged higher level of government. The boogie, supposedly , will step In if the city fathers don't handle the "housing problem." Closer to home, though, Irvine has a high degree of self·interest in lower cost housing. With the planned Irvine Industrial COio(iler-"East a m-.Jor•OW"Ceoltu- ea to finance the cil,y's future, residents might ponder where employers will find the needed 54,000 • employes-<naoy ol whom can't live in Irvine. · Tbereis a real concern that employers might not · wanttolocatefarfroaulreadylaborpool. Aodlbereis the bm.a.-erquestioli ll(lbe morality or a city llvln& oU its lndJ1Stry and consigning the bulk of its workers to other towns .' Holding down oil consumption an~ air Pollution through sliOrler .~rk commuting also ls In ihe p\itilic Interest. Ar. Councilman Bobort West pointed out recently, it's time to buckle down the bow of lower-cost homes. Thewby speaks for itself. • ~ Taxpayer Help Financial responsibility to the taxpayer seeming- ly bas become the cornentone of the Saddleback Unified School District's administration under Supt. Richard Welte. The cost-cuttinll pbilCJ60PhY has even manifested itself in the district offices, an area considered sacrosanct by someotberscbool districts. As of this month, for example, school officials are no longer allowed to make personal calls from district telephones. Callers must charge all personal calls to their home number$. . Jn addition, Dr.Welte bas 'ordered all ad- ministrators to return their telephone credit cards in order to reduce the district's monthly billin{· The move may be mostly s1mbolic m a multi- million-dollar budget, but i~could cause a good nick in the S;lddleback ValleyUnified School District's annual $25,000phone bill. The school distr1ct•s leadership in promoting C05t efficiency deserves the attention or the taxpaying public. ' -. , I • SB Don'i, Blame Speed A Happy Welfare State I J • • • For Traffic Deaths ! To the t,:rl~'..-:;,·: Th.Y" . .:tler is a response to your editorial or Aug. 19, entitled "Back to Normal?" which con· cerned itself with . . ''The steadj1y increasing tendency of drivers to cheat on the 55 mph speed limit . . You claim that ... "the result \ of the cheating is showing up in statistics on traffic fatalities ... , .. citing an increase of 26 deaths over a similar period last f .)'ear. The thrust of Your editorial would seem lo indicate that the cause of the increased fatalities is the fact that people are in- creasing their speed on the freeways. WIULE THIS may indeed be I the case, I feel that. it is incum- bent upan you to show not only that the increased fatalities all occurred on the freeways, but also that a majority of those 26 deaths were caused directly by J drivers exceeding the speed limit. 1 As you may have guessed, I disagree >A'ith such a contention. 1 feel that a proper study of the matter might show a greater in- crease in fatalities on surface streets rather than freeways ; also, that some factor (notably alcohol) other than excessive s~ was the cause of those ac· c1dents which did occur on the freeway. In fact, if you were to in- vestigate the matter I would be willing to bet you a steak dinnef that the increase in Orange Coun- ty traffic fatalities is not due to an increase ii} traffic speed. Perhaps this is a. rather grim subject on which to base a wager, but it seems far Jess grim than ig· noring the more direct causes of traffic fatalities in favor of re- venue-producing speeding cita- tions. PETER B. MARCUS Eleed-Sll•• To the Editor : This letter is in regard to your Aug. 26 editorial expressing con· cern over the lack of candidates who have filed for special district board elections. In some of those so-called e lections, such as that for the board of directors ot the Irvine Ranch Water District. there is no point in anyone filing for election if he or she truly wishes to serve. The number of votes is b1sed on one per dollar of assessed "taluation, so the Irvine Company votes determine the • outcome or the election. It doesn't matter how other people vote; any election is in actuality an appointment. AN ELECTION is only held ii candidates file to run; otherwise expired terms are filled by ap- MAILBOX ) pointment. Therefore, there are only two purposes to be served by anyone filing as a candidate : to educate the voters as to the method of choosing these direc- tors who affect their lives in terms of water and sewage rates and in terms of city growth potential, and, second, to put up a front that representative govern- ment is being carried out. While the former appears to be a worthwhile endeavor if the system is ever going lo change, the latter appears to be purely a waste of the taxpayers' money (about $20,000 for the last such election). While I applaud the intent of your editorial, which [ interpret aS' encouraging citizens to stand as candidates for boards that directly affect their lives, l feel it would have been more responsi- ble had you identified those dis· tricts in which an election is onJy an appointment in disguise and encouraged citizens to run only for those where they would have had a chance of winning without being selected in advance. Sure- ly, our tax money can be better spent on things other than the mere appearance of represen- tative government. NINAE. WEST Y-•S~es To the Editor: The article in the Pilot of Sept. 2 entitled "Teen Justice Uneven·· discusses variations among police departments in referring juvenile offenders to probation and then on to the Orange County Juvenile Hall. Follo"'·ing tht• Saleeby report, the article m('n- tions that the Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach police depart· ments have conspicuously low rates. At the other end. with ex · tr a-ordinarily high rates. arc the departments in Santa Ana and Fountain Valley. While not a s pokesman ror 1 either Costa Mesa or Huntington Beach departments. I can pro· vide ap important clement in aC'- countihg for their outstanding di vers ion records -and de- monstrate that diversion from the court system has carry-over to diversion from a criminal style of life. TWO VEA RS ago, the cities of Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach. under the influence of their innovative chiers of police. joined to form a Youth Service Program. <The city of Irvine became a participant late r). The aim was to provide family counseling and crisis interven- tion as an alternative to r eferral to probation and the Juvenile Collrt. " In operation. program staff work directly with the police in the respective police facilities - , a juvenile officer thereby bas a member of the protram stafr directly available for referral and consultation. '/bring bad tiding$, President•. A coup is Imminent I' Using a controJ or untreated group to assure objective evalua- tion. we found that recidivism (as measured by Lhe arrest •• Dear Gloomy Gus If it is true that Coun- cilman John Burton works !Or the developer lobby CEEED, doesn't he have a conflict ot intere.st whenever he votes on a land use issue in Irvine? T.F.T . c;._, G"' t'"""'"" irt uatwnitll>lll by l'N-1 incl clo ....... <t11a"l' rfllec:l UW "''"'' ol ti.. 11t•!o9•!>9•· s....o '°"' "1 peeYt lo Gloomy G"'• Dill, Pilot. rates) \\"J.S reduced by 48 percent by the.program . Thi?' Costa Mesa and Jl unl · ington Beach police departments are outstanding in general terms. so the Youth Service Pro· gram is jus t one factor in their low referral rates. But it is clear- ly an important one. ARNOLD BINDER Dire<'tor, ,. outh Service Program Costa Mesa. 1-luntington Beach and Irvine Poli~Coel To the Editor; According to recent newspaper reports the officers of the Irvine Police Department showed re· markable restraint wben they were confronted with shots com- ing from ,a locaJ resid~nce. Rather than carry out the kind of instant, massive attack we are so accustomed to reading about, lrvine·s police decided to wait it out after having assured themsel,•es that neighbors in possible danger had been evacuated. Their patience was rewarded by being able to apprehend the s hoo ter without resort to methods which could easily have led to loss or life, but which still would have been found accepta- ble under the usual rules. We wish to express our confidence in Irvine·s police and its chief, Leo Peart. ROLANDandJANE SCIIlNZINGEB ' Economics Clarified ( THE BOOKMAN ) MONEY: WHENCE IT CAME, WHERE IT WENT, by John Kenneth Galbral,h. (lloagbtoo Mifflin, SIOl Jr anyone is going to make you understand the economics of money, it is John Kenneth Galbraith, whose knowledge of economics didn't automatically wipe out his understanding or English. He doesn't talk in economics, a language whicn perhaps is understood by other economists. Here he has written the history of Western money, from ancient Rome to the Washington. D .C .. of the 19705. He writes with his uau.al wil, acerbity and iconoclasm . Galbraith is at his best discuss- 1.ng the diverse factors that led to our current financial mess, un- raveling the mysteries in brittle, clear prose. Joan Hanauer. UPI • The Optimistic Swede.s • SfOCKHOLM -I have spent the past week here ln Sweden looking for a really angry person. It has been a futile search. For the Swedes, in contrast to almost everyone on earth, are brimming over with good will and op- timism. Their self-confidence stems es- isentially from one overwhelming factor. They live in a ~ial democracy that provides them with both political freedom and cradle -to - g r a v e security. As a conse· quence, they - ·-' seem to have no real worries - at least as far as their liberty and material comforts are con- cerned. Moreover, they ap- proach whatever minor dif- ficulties they may have with dis· arming placidity. "There are no problems we cannot solve.·· Prime Minister Olof Palme told m£' the other day, and that was not an idle boast. WITHIN recent days, ror ex- ample, the media here have been focusing on a government pro- gram to build ramps and-widen doors so that invalids in wheel chairs can n avigate into and ( STANLEY J ~-K_A_R_N_O_iW_ around public buildings. It's the sort of issue that would be buried in the back pages of the newspapers in the United St.ates. But in Sweden it's the kind of sub- ject that arouses attention, large- ly because there aren't any big- ger problems. Wages are high. Medical atten· tion is free and excellent. There arE' child care centers for -:-mothers who work. And most of all, unemployment benefits are such that a worker will receive aJmost full pay if he loses his job. In short, this is the welfare state par excellence. Yet welfare is not considered onerous. BY OUR standards tIDCes are excessive. They must be lo cover the cost of the country's various "''elfare projects. But most Swedes I have talked with do not complain. For one thing, they are fixed on the notion that everyone must be equal. Thus they raise no objec· tions to efforts to provide all citiz.ens with a similar standard of living. Secondly, they fervently believe in the concept of ''solidarity,'' which means that they are prepared lo make personal sacrifices in order to improve the lot of others. So, in many respects. Sweden is very much like a big family in which everybody feels responsi· ble for everybody else. This at· titude even extends to con· servative politicians who criticize the socialist regime. One right·wing politician, for instance, looked at me in astonishment when I asked if he would cut back welfare pro· grams should his party enter of· fice. "We are also dedicated to social equality ,·· he said. THE SAME is true for big busi-4 ness, which is given special tax advantages by Palme's Socialist government on the theory that in- dustry must function smoothly in order to as s ure jobs and econo"!1c success. This need for husiness tranquility is un - derstood as well by the trade un· ions, which are careful lo avoid disruptive strikes. I thought that I might hear a bit of indignation when I went to sec one of the leaders of the Swedish Communist party, and I did -up to a point. He complained that workers, while well paid, are not earning enough to buy summer homes. sailboats and second cars. "I never thought that I would hear a Communist register a complaint like that,'' I told him. He smiled pleasantly and replied, ''This is SwC'den. '' An Exile Dreams of Glory 1 The lonely figure stood on the sands staring out over the end- less gray sea. It had been more than a year now since he had been forced t f1 resign his hi gh office. yl't he still "'·ore its symbol over hi s breast . Once he had been the most pov.•erful rt1an in the world, his rvery word . ges ture . l'X · pression and tone a subject for inten se discussion by the hi gh and the might y. No man had been m o r(• hat e d :ind ft">ared by his enemil"s , nor more fa\\•ned Qn and admired by his allil's and followers. He had dwelt amids t the panoplies of power and ordered kings about. But he had left office in humiliation and defeat, de- livering one las t sentimental speech to his stafr. There had been talk o( bringing him to trial. The government had intervened. He was free Lo leavC' hi s house and grounds. but he seldom did. He had been ill. •lis once-large fortune was all but gone. 1-lis aides had deserted him one by one. It seemed the end. And yet._. HIS ENEMIES s till feared him. They had v.·ritten him off before a:s a broken, hopelesf' man. He had stunned them by rising out of political exile and once again seizing the reigns or power wilh the brilliantly pragmatic tactics that marked his career. They knew and dreaded this Phqenlx -like qualit y. They • ( ART HOPPE J \1:atrhed him closely. At any hint he still thirsted for a role in v.orld affairs . their outrage knew no bounds. So he dv.•elt quietly in his estate by the sea, virtually a rt>cluse in this prison without bars. On rare occasions old fril'nds v.·ould visit to r.eminisce about past cam- paigns and the dead \'ictorics . He fell into ;:1 routine. The ont.> task he placed above all other:-> "·;ts writing hi s me moirs. lie may have made a few errors in judgmt'nt. I-le admitll"d that. But 1f tht're \\':J!' one thing he had made p£'rfectl y clear it was that he v.•ould appeal over the heads of hi s enemil's Lo his tory. TllF:SE :ltEMOIRS would be his appt>al. In them, he would r e- count lht.> alliances he had forged , the treaties he h a d signed. the glorious central rol e he had played upon the stage of mankind. Passions would cool. scorn would fade and history >A'ould absolve him . Eventually, he would take his rightful place amo:ig the g reat Jea~ers or the past . To all appearances he seemed to be livin g in th£' dusty yesteryears, hi s only poss ibl~ Quotes Pence. if it evl'r cxisL-.. will not be based on the fear or "·ar but on the love of peace. -llcrman \\'ouk. It 1 s nod 1sgrncc to st art all OV£'r. It 1s usuall y <in opportunity. George-~1 . Ada ms. future a genl'ralion. away. And _yet . • . And yet those who have once tasted power dream strange dreams. Some said he v.·as mere· ly biding hi:-time. Sorncho~, some day, his enemies s t ' l ·feared, this all-but-penniless, al - but-fri£'ndless, broken, de£cated. humiliated. physically ill. closelt'-"''atched man might Yl'L in some superhuman fas hion rise once again out of political exile l(> cut his swath across the world. A!'.10 SO it was on that afte • noon in 1817 that Napoleon Bonaparte stood on the sands of Saint llelena staring out over the <"ndles:-g r ;_1y Atlantic -dream- .in g v.·ho knov..s v.·h::•t s trange drC"ams of glory . ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Hobcrl i'rJ. \\'eed. Pubblhrr Thomo;s l\ct>t•rl. f:d1l0t Rorboro Kre1btch . f~drlonal Page Ed1/or Tht> editorial page of the Dailv Pi lot s eeks to inform and stimulate readers by presenting on this page diverse commentary oo topic~ or interest by syndicat- ed colt~mnists and cartooniats, b)" pro,·1d1ng a rorum rnr readers' '1c•·-. und by prcllenllng this nl'•·spaper·s opinions and ideas on. c.urrenl topics. Th<' editorial op1n1ons of th~ Daily Pilot appear only 1n the editorial column at the top of the pa•e. Opinions l'X - pressed hy tht columnlsta .J'Qd t·:irtoonists and lt'tter "-1ilera are thf'1r o•·n and no cnd~l ot their \'1tws by the Dahy Pt10l ~hould be inferred, 1 Wednesday, Sept. JO, 1975 • ~ I I l ; ' olice ·' Chief Resigns SAN DIEGO !AP) - Ray Hoobler has re- signed as San Diego's .ROlice chief, the San !... Dieao Union said, quol· . ing unnamed city of- Jlcl,als. -' 1 The paper sai d 4 # ~. ~ \> Hoobler turned in his re-;• ~ · .,,.-.; · • ' signation Tuesday after • _.._ ~ " -· ~· • · • meeting with City Est!apes lnJ....,, (: Stale J Singer Diana Ross escaped whe n fire '--------broke out in her 3(). Manager Hue:h McKinley for an hour. Hoobler, 48, bas been heavily criticized for his role in ttie seizure of room · house in Malibu Tuesday causing $45,000 damage to the home and its contents. private psychological---------- riles kept by police c Qunselor William C~pps. . Probe Defeated Flash Floods Sweep Desert B1 llleAaoclaled Press RalnJ woalller In Southern Calilorhla, tri11er- lng desert Ilchllllog ·-that claimed the Ille ol ooewomaµ, Ia expected to clear up by the weekend. A Calllomla Hl&bway Patrol spokesman said Elizabeth Nufeld, 23, ol Monterey Park, wu killed when her car was stnlck some 20 miles north of M<>- jave by a 250-feet wide wall ol Water that was "at least eight fee! d~p.'' Officer Robert carpenter said the car was washed more than 200 feet away from Cali(ornia 14, the main routelinkl.ngLosAngeles and Reno, Nev. THE WOMA.N•S BODY was found two miles eut of the roadway, authorities said. Carpenter said the lightning was so intense, he took off his badge and other metal on his clothes before plunging into·three-foot water to wade to the woman's car. Work crews from Tehachapi, Mojave, Inyokern and Bishop worked through the nia:ht to rescue stranded motorists, whose vehicles were mired in mud that wu five feet deep in some places. '111E SPECTACVIAB llghtning storms washed out many stretches. ol other desert roadways and California Highway Patrol officers struggled to I ~ A Id!)', S!pteimbel' 1Q. 1175 DAii. y Ptt.Of .41 BroUJll, Says School O/freials Overpaid 'ws ANGELES (AP) the Uni~ Teachers ol "bee&111•ther•'•a-1· -Banlt -1<10011, c:ol· X-Aafeles. Inc 11umber of 1*11110 In • leae cbaneellora and Brown told the this eoeiety who -don't f>O•e1rionalil)U1dhH•to tncllen that 1chool"lld-bllHworti:and-•- pay (or the l'r(vllep of mlnlatratora llboUld be ·-tarpr DU.lllber -· bolcllnS auch lnterestlna paid no more IJum tbe7 don't have meaolnll\ll )Qbl, ·~ Gov. Edmlln'1 are and tllat ·WJIIlam work." G.!!!'o!raJr. Jobnaton, tile Lo• B t 1-' ''Tbe'more com-pll..t. Ana!'les ocboolo ouperln· rown o d the ed your Job, then Ille tendetit who makes ~cben the7, loo, ~iat IDOl'O. leunlna you eel ·•11a. la overpaid. . lower ,.,ur •l&btl Jn • out of I\ and y<>u ouJbt 1o · '!'be eovemor u,ld _. •olary ne1ot1at1ona. start bavtn,c to pay atul· plewl!'>bllve meanloctul --al Um," the governor uld -1bould have to pay UK • ary or th• IOV· Tuesday Jn a speech to (qr tho privilege emorlsf(t,100. Save ID extra $750,byopew•ing yom tax-defeJred acccM•nt In September Now two good reasOna 10 open your tlX-4eferred Retlremitnt account e•rtt: 1. Open your account ln 5eptember and Fidellty Federal wlll ablorb your entire $7.50 truatea tee for 1975 • 2. The sooner you dO. the more lotarest you'll eam tree from 1975 Income Tax. I.A.A. (lndlvldu•I Retirement Accounl)-FOR ANY EMPLOYEO PERSON. . # If not covered by a q1.1allfled retirement plan, aet asld• Up to $1,500 earned l1tcome each year exempt from current federal Income tax. No tax on current Interest earned, either. E1tample: $1 ,500 deposited In an I.A.A. will reduce your 1P75 Income Ja1t by a minimum of $330 if you are In a 22% bracket. · Keoah Retirement ec:ovnts for the self..amployed also available-trustee fee,,.. in September. Do tt now. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -1be Senate has over- whelmingly defeated an Assembly -a pp roved measure asking the federal governm.ent to reopen the investigation of the assassination of President John F . Ke n· nedy. The resolution was killed Tuesday on a 6·Zl vote. Navy Man Says He's 'Bisexual' SAN DIEGO CAP) - The federal government is seeking dismissal of a suit by a Naval Reserve officer who says the Navy is trying to gel rid of him because he is a homosexual. .keep traffic moving. Meanwhile, San Bernardino County sheriffs ,, FID•U y -:Z.J •• _, deputies reported the rescue of a 16-year-old • O'~!.~~.IJIOS Bantow youth Tuesday afternoon after he and a COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH: 1855 Harbor Blvd. friend were swept away in rushing flood waters 19 offices to serve you statewide. while riding motorcycles across Lenwood Wash, '.:=======================================-five miles south of Barstow. !- Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newporl Beach), a former FBI agerit, said the only purpose or re. opening the investigatioo Would be to discredit the FBI. He said that no criminal investigation in history has received so much discussion as the Kennedy assassination. J\'ftl> PoUf!fi Set . · BURBANK CUP!) - Lockheed Aircraft Corp., stung by a bribery scan· dal, said Tuesday t'hat it will apply U.S. laws to overseas sales transac· tions, refusing to make payments to foreign gov· emment officials if such payments would be ii· legal in the United States. A ''stringent new i_. policy'' bas been adopted , irl the selection, use and payment of foreign ''sales consultants," the company said in a state- menL Asst. U.S. Atty. Peter Bowie said Tuesday that the federal court suit by Cmdr. Gary Hewton Hess is premaiure and ii· legal since none of the de-- fend.ants live in Southern California. Hess, 44,'says he is not a homosexual · but a bisexual and adds that his sexual tastes are none of the Navy's busi· ness. A Navy review board in San Diego recom· mended last June that Hess, a Santa Barbara educator, be discharged from the Navy as a homosexual. Hess is attached to a Naval Air Reserve unit at Pl. Mugu. He says his sexual preferences have never affected his performance as an of· fleer. He also accused the Navy of persecuting)lim because of his public suppart of gay people's causes. •• ' . Officers said Rudy Jaramillo and Roland O'Neal, 17, of Barstow, were riding their cycles in an off road vehicle area orr Interstate 15 when the in· cident occurred. A DEPUTY SAID the youths were struck by a wall of water five feet high and SO feet wide and car- ried downstream about so yards. O'Neal was left on a sandbar, still perched on his cycle. Jaramillo, however. was carried farther downstream and was hanging on to a limb. struggline to reach hia friend, O'Neal lost his cycle. After being cut off by the sWf currents, he dove underwater, swam 10 feet to his bike and rode back ror help, the deputy said. ''It was scary," Jaramillo said later. ''The water kept rising and I could see it was a matter of swimming for safety or drowning, " when he dove in and swam to a spot where O'Neal and deputieS plucked him from the waters. NEITHER YOU111 was injured, said Deputy Walter Mcilvain,' 'but they're a lot smarter.·· Calirornia 395, the major route linking San Bernardino and Reno, was flooded in sectioos, especially in the vicinity of Its intersection with California 58 and near the Boron Air Force Station, immediately to the north. The Death Valley National Monument was re· ported isolated with roads washed out 80 percent to the east and west of the park. Major flooding was reported alone the Warmagosa River. Also affected by the noodlng were California 136, 127 and 190, between the Lone Pine area and the Nevada border, while California 178 Extension was closed between Trona and Panamint Valley. ' . f ! "-~ Penney Rockwell electronic calculators give you The Ans~er. . · 39.95 { Model 31R slide rule memory with rechargeable batteries Invaluable (or anyone working with t reclprocals,<1quare roots, percentages. Especially helplul in college math, markellng, retelling. Addressable memory; automallc conslants'and repeat; sian ctT&nge. With batterlea, charger case. 89.95 Rockwell 63R slide rule with scientific notation Performs complex calculations such as factorial computations, degree/ radian conversion, parenthetical operations. Extra large dis~ay . Ideal for engineers, scientists • Batteries, charger, case included. 19.88 18R electronic calculator with percent and memory Ideal for everyday use at home or in the office. Percent key solves add~on and discount problems. Algebraic logic ; automatic constant arid repeat. Floating decimal and negallve Indicator; dual clear entry/ clear all key; 8 digit display. 296.XB·A ACADIA CANOGA PARK CARSON DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINQTON BEACH KEWOOD MONTCLAlll NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLl.YWOOO NORTHRIDQE llAHCE 'THE CITY' PUENT!! HILLS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNAADINO TORRANCE , lll(NTURA WHITIWOO • • I I BR GRAND OPENING Wards all new Costa Mesa Store opens Wednesday September· 24th \ • n ··yo~ ''Charg-all'' . actount today! I Shopping is easier with a Montgomery Ward Charg-alt acoount! You can enjoy ronvenient shopping at any Mont4 gomery Ward store. Take advantage of the terrific sale~ with no money down. AB a "Preferred <:-:ustomer" you are eligible for advance notice of money saving events and j special saJes! You'll enjoy your new Charg·all aro.>unt. Fill out the application below and mail it today. charg©100 CREDIT APPLICATION FORM PRINTNAM'~------------------------"G"---- SPOUSE'S FIRST NAM<--------------'PHONE~· .,..--:-..,-,------- (Aru. Code) AOOR,ESl'---------------------CITV:-------- D OWN STAT<---------'IP-'·--------U RENT HOWLONG~-------l IF LESS THAN 2 YEA.RS. PREVIOUSAOORESS---------------~=---------SOCIAL EMPlOY..._ __________________ SECURITY NOo_· ------ EMPl.OVER'SAOORE:;s._,.------------------------ ANNUAL 0 Under $4.000 0 18.000410.000 NUMBER OF DEPENDENT~---------lNCONE. 0 $4,000..$8.000 D $10.000..$12.000 a -.OQ0.$8.ooo o °'*" s12.ooo YOUR ON<,~-------------------0 CHECKING 0 SAYiNGS ,......, OTHERCREDIT------.,,-------------~--------ACCOUNTS (Nfi-1 (IF ANY) --t~I (ACOOutll Number~ YES, I would like the convenience of a CHARG-Al.1. Account at WA11PS and authorize you to process my application for an ~ccounl in accordance wilh your established credit policy, S~NATUREOFAPPllCANt:., ------------------------SOURCE COOE •10!' MAILAnLICATION TO: MONTCOMERY,W,ARD; ATTENTION MR. HESTOR, CREDIT SERVICE MAN ACER, P.O. BOX W.JIO, I;IORWALK, CA. 90650 4 Q I i • • ' ~ -• TENC§NTS T~es .. ported $1,309, (.38,000 In U.S. fedt:ratlhcolne taxes. Vanlk addld: "I have peal. <!Qu'bti that the I era! trcuury actually received that ainounl of moM)loin O,S. taxes.'' .... lie said the Cc>ili;.hles whl.ch reported ,that l!'if9nn~on to (lie Secwili.. ...S Bxe!lanfe Com· mbsion ui -torm had • .,. proxim ale n•t ineomes of $UUI07 .cm. • . • ·--...... • m . as.e --n · o . . V allerga Convicti~n Vp"!le'ld .. ' •• • I ByGA~YGRANVILLE from Sept. IS to Sept.18 to allow Included among them wu a otur.0.11.,1•0•""" petitionlf for a new trial to be chargetbatso-calledsecretfunds Ventura County SUperiorCourt heardintbestateSupremeCourt. handled through Oran~ Colmty JudgellobertShawrefmedtoclay Vallerga's attorney, Richard &lperior and Muijicipat Courts •to overturn, the conviction of Murphy, (Ued his ~tion 1.,t areequivalent(otliemishandling Orange County Assessor Jack week, but told Judgi Shaw \he of public roonies charged to Vallerga. CO!lrt would J10t be able 'fo con· · Vallerga. Simultaneously, Judge Shaw sider it until Sept. 17 at the "If it'1 all right there Un the refused td dism lss the Grand Jury earliest. courts) it's all right in uJs case " indictment that chargedVallerga Should the high court deny Murphy argued. ' in early May with seven felony Vallerga's appeal anc:s fail to or· But a rebuttal by Assistant Dis· ttllmes. I h ' deradelayin11oep,te~·al theas-lrict Attorney, Michael Capini twas astmont lhataVentura sessor will 'automati l forfeit ~ut down M h • I County jury convicted the, S3-bis elected office n ursday ,.,..,_ urp Y s P eas as year-old assessor of six (barae&. when SeQtenced. _ . udge .;maw agr~et!_ ~do no nwe including coonict of interest, mis-. . . Uiart aJl.O!' v allerga s aU&ne~ use of public funds andemhezzle-'l1le penaltr on tbe ftx felony the additional 48 1!ours to bepn ment. ~ ror which be.bu betrrcon-their l~-mmut~ ftun'Y ol. ap- 'Di'e besi V:allerga's attorneys victed ~d send Vallerga to pealstohighercourl.a. could get ror their effcrts in court statepnso:nfrorn ortetolOye~. Tbreeweeks a10 •• tbef'ifth Di~ today was a 48-hour delay in sen-Toda)', Judce Shaw said be trict Court of Appeal in Los tenciJ11. could natJillll.a bailsJor revers· Ana'1ea quick~ de'!i<!d sinlllar Jud's• Shaw qr..a lo 14 e .... ..__,.,..,~lnllle11rgu. melt0i10forar441lill,anewlrbl _assessor's sentencing date back men&..Preseotedbf~urphy. andadelayinsentendng. . . ~ . ~ Confllt!t ~tion " " , 1 ', Makmg· Nixon . .. . Irvine· Councilmen Tapes ·P,ublic · · · . In the Works A wait Guidelines • Irvine cou'ncilmen plan to heed the advice of their City a"'91'ney on conruct of intt:restl.questiOl)S and let it go at that. . ~ Wrapping up loose ends ofieon-ruct of interest charges that ~ave l;>e:en flying for the past two weeks, t he council Tuesday Cit-ci~Q.( to ~~eltn iru!estiUUti 7 into each of their interests by the sta\e Fair Politic f'factices Commia"'-ion. ., , · They plan to'wai\ UJllil the Fair P.olitjcal Practice$ ~Ssion ....... the group designed ·t4. ov~r the new Proposition 9,cOnruct °" in~erest a·nd·financiaJ discl06W"4! law -works up some guidelines J>eCore asking it anything. 1 The guidelines detailini wb~t i_s a con(lict of interest may be fortbcom.ing after a -commissioo bearingSept.17 . ' . • Meanwhile, councillben will abstain from voting oo issues in wblcb City. Attorney James Erickson says they have con- nicts. Proposition 9 defines a finan- cial conflict or inte~t as a vote Coast Weather Mostly cloudy through Thursday, acCO!"ding to the weather service, but some swt!hine inland areas in the afternoon. Continued cool with hi1hs from the upper 60s at the beaebes to near70inland. INSIDE TODAY The little PennS1&1l nio town of Ely1burg bun abn.ptlJI th,..,, onfo t map "'°"'of"•• pla< .. l/wiught to be th< r<foge Of f.gitt ... Patricia Htar1t ... Sef 'Page Alf. WASHINGTON CUP!) - Congress acted today to ma4e -1 ..___ fOrmer President Nixon's White concerning a person or firm from House tapes available for public which an official receives $250 a broadcast despite Nixon's objec-ytar« fl\ore. lions. · • The mauer came up in Irvine 1be House tdmin~atf'on sub-~o weeks ago<When Councilman ' 't _. · 'ected J'ohn B'arton abstained from vot-comm• tee 0 ..-• ~n reJ Miles proposed by the General l!>g ~ two development-relate<j -Adminlstra•'-whlclt r•tWtS. . would have mack u;-~· --'---~· a consultant for ttie available to-res4!Wcber1 but-pnHfeftlopment Council on the banned their re~oductioo. ~ :-En vironm eut, Employment, GSA isaid' it wa'nted tQ ·evold Ec.1>nomj and Development comr:qercial ex1Jloi$.liltiori i the" · 5~EEEDt > •• i'81as .•cruc111ct~ _ofterhaestv-tapes. ~ ¥ ... , . _ ~ / mg a}lO en,. con ~ m Tll'l, sullcommitlee,~by 11.;¥ ill votes <:Pn~fmln«, ~ gr'5lip's, vote; tdopted.a reooliiiciii"' ..,.,. members. :. . report:"'whi(.b .•ai&. • .,_,,,. "tfi ~ilman H'enry Quigley, at risk of a free society. It is the irgmg of Councilman _Robert the founding fat.b'.e(S'-4ccept Weit alld Northwood ZOfl.\Dg foe adopting the free sHecti Ch'!':k Winslow. Pbol)ed .\lie fair • · li004 of, tbe 'First.. · t. politics croup for an .os;nton 01l.-Any researcher can announc9:ito llurtonln . to th cit --ii tbe worlcftbe findingl,of•bia re-a mem~ e Y '"'"""~c search." · '· · Tuesday. Qwgley denied haVlng The sJtt\e resol~was ex- mentloned Burton's name ~,hi& pected to come before tile Senate 4~-'. Gdvernment Operqtiooi: Com-Qwgley emphatically backed mittee later today and before the down fro~ t~e charges of two Senate for approval later this weeks ago 1n his memo. . week. "It is clear to me that John ts · beyond reproach in this instance Under a law adopted late last because be inquired of the city at-year, GSA was to propote regula- torney's office. They gave him tlons for the disposition of the their best judgment which I White House tapes and {2 million think: is better than most in the other Nixon documents. business and John pi-oceeded in Congress had 90 days to accept or good faith. reject the propQsals. .. I feel anyone who criticizes Today's action was the first John in this instance is in a most step 'toward rejection. Disap- reprehensible position. In fact, it proval by . either house makes could only be the type of person the proposals invalid.· who bas •n unhealthy attitude However, the law's constitu- towards . all l>Q'liticians or is a tionality ia undes: clfallenge in a person trying to destroy our free court suit brought by Nixon. democratic institutions,'' Qlqley said. . Mayor Art Anthony asked City Attorney Ericklon. '"In your opi- nion do any of us have a violation (of tbe general prohibitions in Proposition 9)?'' ''No,·· answered Erickson. The council, 1he said, can get advice on areal of potenUal con- flict from many IOUl'CeS includ- ing the stat~ attorney general, a !See CON FUCT, hge AZ> Trails Group Me~ts A status report on Irvine's bike trail bond program ~ a dis· cuSsion on a school bike safety P."JIT•m are to be pn:sented by .the ltiltne mcycle Tl'alla Com· mitt~ tolllght et lbe home of Juwta Moe, 1,8111 ll'OM St., at 'FIFIY CAU;ED ' ABOUT 1HE AD' > ~·vour newaP;.Aper definitely re-- aches tbe pu~c. Tiily people call1ahollt ti>• ad." • Tb '1 lbe advertiaing 1uc"'*i expe enced by llie Coran• del Mar woman \who placed this id in the Dai(¥ Pilot:' • • So. <ll ""1 old C<IM, ..... «W:y1 ho(-1lt:,>:J.OO mo. t. laJC•lXU • , If you hav.e i i-oom 'b, t;part.:. ~ ment to rent, calr&U,~ It Ol\11 takes a few wordor-in tho ri~ placetospark-r~ . , trategy T.o ~t.op Jet ·Plan . ~ By OOVGLAS FRrnSCllE r 0tawo.11yl"I'-'"'" .'t))e IrVine City COuncil intends to trY )R annell' El Toro Mari/>• Coops 1.lr St•li"!I In an effort to bl~k county, s,upervisors' 'at· t'~Rts to a.4d commercial Jet nlihls to the Id •r,in• airfield. The strategy sesaion at Tuesday's council meeting re· su11,ed in O{ders to City Manager W'tlliam Wollett to be~ work on 1a fciur-~ronged' assault on the • c:Ounly ~cbejne. ' ' 'The ateps iq,cl11de : · -Gelttnc 1apporl from •· ar\ybi)dy who is anybody .. in the area ~at would be affe<ted by Doise and crash daneel from in- . creased use qi El Toro to lobby acainlt cor:nmercl~~ghts. -'ftri.•..-blg t upervisors ·I!!: al lctioa ind Outlining. ,,.. y apv~.pent the likely COst the cotlnty. "They · might have lo bey out th11lanch or Tur· tie Rock or wh tever," Coun · cilwoman Gabriel!~ Pryor said. Monanaa's Boy ,-i -11•vlric &he tity transporta· l»tlr""'"'...,, . .....,.. Uoq commission study the mat· ter and come up with more Tippy, a white rhiJlpceros at Iililn Country .Safari in Irvine, stands guard over h~r 100-pound baby boy born Monday.' The baby, as yet uonamed,.is~e. first."rhino conceived and born at the animal park. Father's name is Dutch. When he gnSws up, baby will weigh about 7,000 pounds. • Bandits ,Roh M~n · ·;. , ' '"": • ' '\ Ill A:t· Airp~rter Inn . . . ' ' A pair of armed robbers stole 1200 fr,,>m a traveling busi- n,,es1man ,1.in his .Airp()rter Inn 1)>!1Ulln lryine late:tuesday. _\!!J~'ascal1 hound tum with his "T'" electric shaver cord and ten· rus shoelaiceS. forced him to lie 'faee doWn anct.urged him uJ>on't try IQ be a hero" In the 10:20 p.m. attack. ,. · : ~ Clyde Lofdahl, 38, or Loo AIW. told police he vis1ts Irvin~about twice a month on t>utiiness. He '4ifas returning to the room!after dinner 'l'uesd~ when th~. nlen walked up to bim in £he bot.el hallwly. ,,.. . 8Dll ~uild. bne had.~lack hair, a -Cull ~ard aracl mustache. T,he other, Lofdahl said, had a blond afro an inch o an inch and a half thick. The men fled down the hallway. he' said, after telling him, "Don'l!be a hero. Give us 4S minutes.·· 1 ... ~ .. , , Except /or t.be,few instructions to Lofdahl , t~e men searched the room inailence, he told police. ... Arter the pair a.en , LOfdahl ·squirmed loose rrom the electric shaver-~rd binding his wrists arSd worked his way free rrom a towel used to tie his ankles. •. !Sff.ROBBID, Page.\%) stfategy recommendations. -Annexing El Toro Marine Corps Air Station to give the city primary jurisdicti•n over th e facility and s trip i t from supervisors. Marine Corps Public In!onna· lion Officer.John Shotwell at El Toro said toda)\ the council ac· tion ··~ a shot out of the blue for us. We really are not prepared to comment QP it." · -CoUncilma .. · obn BUrton at Tuesday's sea-sion pointed out t.hat{the MaTln8 traditionally hayt opposed joint commercial anQ.mili~ use or the field -so- caJled "jWJ!t use.'' The Marines and \he Depart· mt!flt of· Defense, he s11ifJ, are likely to ;•snuggle up to the municipality that p1.o s t reprase11ts their point of view." Countf sup~rvisors l&;St month touched off the furore among Irvine counciJmen with an ap· plic.atiqn t9 th"e U.S. Defeme Department {o make El Toro a ''joint use'' ~i~pcrt. Supervjsors, P'c;luding Biftb District 'super i1oc Thomes Riley, claim tlte)' riled the ap-pUcatiorf only to put an end to speculation about commercial use of El Toro. Riley is a retired Marine general. CSee ELTOllO, Page A2 J * * * Lofdahl tcild ~lice one or the men stuck a·shqk·barrel Colt .38 revolver in his Obs as he was un· locking his door and said, "Get in. Get in . Get in." As Lofdahl opened his door, the men pushed him inside and forced him to the !loqr, he told police. -'"'ttila Doney' While one of the men~1~d a gun on the busine!lsman am switched OQ th'e teleyisidn set ~ C!OV'1" the Miae, tlle otller howid Lofdahl with his own effects. .11 The m•ft..;.spent about 15 minutes ransacking. the room, LOrdahl tola ._lice. They toot-on· ly cash, -.surin& him. "We didn't take l(Olirf...,.iit cards," Lofdatil said. ~ He dmrlbed both men as In their !-1• 20'81 J>f medi'\tm height • ' Gr:. eif..tree Sch~l Groundbreaking Set . " i)(,....,..,,dbreakln1 ("""Irvine's ¥'!' wmaneet G<'een\fte Sch<OJI ,.;ip be held :J'hundlQ> at 9 a.m. at ~sit •• WIJ2~Pi~SI..: .... ~11 h~·· """" . ..-. u., cte..n~ ~l'Mtllnt'· s.11oo1 '"' lblif iitt'e ig.t: t'lto ~ while ~w ;,tins cJ!llpU-ucl.kl"'"r a pennuen icbi>OI. '.11\e insteht g I (I' e of pre-ta rt- lJ~ltWman Tums Ruthless· "IMtead ot'just-opposing jt, wt: ought to turn our evil mitids to some s9eaky ~ay to prevent El TorO from tum inc Commercial.·· 1rvine C'o'uncillfoman Gabrielle Pryor's entrance tnto a ctfy council discussion of re- quea-ted joint aiilltary ahd com- mercial flights at El Toro •arine Cos::ps Kir Sta'tlon 'Tue day touched orr a s'Ometlmei-sedous. sometimes.humorous stt8fegy se&ilon on ttow to opposiit. . Refetring to her stance, one coiancilman later referred to her as "Attila the Honey." E:fen Mrs. Pryor c=c· teriliod he!' (lositlon tow a county supervisor!· appljcatlon to add commetcial ffighta to El T<ioi.ao "ruthlo~•·" • Suit~~& that{etired Marine fiyef May'or Ar Anthony re- ~ 1~arc~ "tentl\I eommercial P.lane CU1~t pUhs1 1he said. ·at ... WI Ofll' buila. very high 1 t,llere." at else could we do to make, like, the radar11ot work?" she wondered. Anthony quipped back, .. Hav~ you ever heard o( SAM mis-siles? .. Urging the council to its even~ tual four-point barb at th• supervisors' "joint use" scheme. she said, "We 've got to get ready to fight. .. 'We've got to make it clear that we will build that building or build that moa\. or whatever we have to do,·· she said. ''J hate to besorufhless. but we n~ somethinc tp .threattn them with," ahe •• d 1 • Mn. Pryor OUC!lested tbe two major points d( the council· sJ,rate11: annexlng ~TorototM city and threatenlng leg~ action. Tbe l,hr .. t or. allli qalnat the dcounel. f.J\o.•1 he pldrllho¥Jd in elude a 1ne •• on Of what areas m1Cht be al(.,:!~ (111~ Whal lt mlllh\ cost the count.Y In -and ~ mammoth condemnlltkwl n.a1..,. 1ng. T:JOp.m . - IJOOJ tbe Ora~~ ~ u;.· rilht plate i•tba Dall1!'1"4 ,, ~ .. , • lnga. / l • • r ' I DAii. 'V PILOT 10, 1975 "'An~ mon'1 ~II~''"'· btcou3a I .om Jnvolwd in -opd thff'•~•....,., Hftd to lmow for whom th< ti<U t.U.; II tolla }or floe< .•• " ll1ABTRURR. VINSEL . °' .. Deilt,I ...... Stttf -,Jo/mDouM No man is an island entire of illell, as John Donne the poet wrote, but some exist thal"-'ay, and so no bells tolled Tuesday for Trevelyn. Trench, a tired old man of mystery and misery. He was 75 and died last Wednesday. Death came to him in a Costa Mesa convalescent hospital and -chances are -he would have wel comed it. I . JRENCH WAS COMMITfED to a simple grave in .picturesque El Toro Ce,metery, high in the rolling Santa Aoa ~1ountain s e ast or the San Diego Freeway. where it is silent except ror lhe ... I /( birds. ' The man moved through life in such , ~ a way he left nq kl1oW1) .mark upon it, no ... ~ ~···· ., .... ~ " · I son, no doughurl · · WHO WAS TREvELYN TRENCH? " Was he a poet? Was he a hobo? Was he a v1HseL. mechanic? Was tie a lumberjack? Was he a [armer, a merchant, a laborer? Was he once wealthy? Was he a churchgoer? Was he a drinklng man ? Was be a member of lbe Elks Lod&e somewhere? . ''NO bNE WAS EVER able to Ieu:a a'n~ng," says Bill McConnell , or the Orange County Public Administrator- Guardian'a Office, who handled the ,meager estate of Tre.e4'n Trench. • . ''He bad nothing. He died leavihg only a residual amount in his patient fWld, ··says McCqp.nell , A ~00 funeral was agreed upun between the county and BeJ.l Bi'oadway Mortuary and "'-er that, Trench's estate cbn1ained only a paltry sum. " ·-JIE DIDN'T EVEN LEAVE a toothbrush. ~ench'a last 1,460 days of life -give or take a few - were spent at the Bayview Convalescent Hospital. He was transferred there in 1971 from a Brea hospital specializing in mental illness or neurological problems and aometimes senility. · 'Records mostly lost or misplaced'Show hew as admitted as a trarisient, apparently takeft into custody by police ~t some point in 1971 for his own welfare, then tw:ned over to the county. HOME FOR HIMllECAME1S>W. Bay.St., Costa Mesa, where the days and nights soon btendeCI into one another. The sparse lire.story ktlown ofTrevelyn Trench was un- broken bx bigbli&hts or excitement. Hedic!h 'tconVersewithany~e.ever. ~ r ' "He ne\ler received any mail/' says McConnell, the county publlc' 4dminislra\or to whom the affairs of the un· known dr unwanted are consigned ui>on death. "No one ever came ti> vi&it him ... " says a hospital spokesman.. THE ·LA.TE MB. TRENCH. however, was not alone for the final event in <1tllf~llved largely in obscurity and perhaps lonetlness·, and the fostnessof those men who try to be islands wito themselves. • "There was somebody from the mortuary for graveside committal services,'' said mortician Neil Abrams. And there was retired minister Rev. Jim Cotton, 61, who presides at Public Administrator fwierals for local folk s free of charge, out of Christian duty and jus' to keep in prac· lice. I "He 11: d.a pr.ayer,» Abrams remarked. "And that wu ~ . ~ewporl Youngster ,. ~illed on Highway • I ~LTO . • • • Qullle1 ~"4 lllO! Ibo lilu' tion coobGI be ..,..'"l!meted. '"1'11• 1 lnlll.O#r llQllWHd to me thot maybe even lbll elt1 eounelltsto•larrbtslOO.~" Iw1ald. .... ' ~ An~exatlon pf El Toto would roqulre aupporLll'om ~Maria• Corp s and Departm-nt of Defense -the lan~f!n ~ of well as approval from the local. Agency Formation Commission; an !>cm of county JOvemment. . · . . Fro•Page~l CONFLICT. • judge through a lawsuit, rumielf and the Fair Political Practices Commission. Erickson said he p'referreil the attorney sener al to the pc)\itlcal practices group. Tge. latteJ\ he said, haa yet to develop itf ruJes and guidelines. And, he said, "the attorney "general is more lawyer·like." • Fro• Page Al_ . r . .::: ROB~EQ·•,\ • • . . The shoelaces proved more stubborn. He Went into the bathroom, found his4 shaving kit and ~t tr.e ,strings with a f111gemail cJipper . A police look~ut tbrou&hout the night failed -to• turn •P sus~ for the crime. Scott Seek.8 Aid Program , For Refugees . . . WASHINGTON (AP) -Senaie Republican l«;ader Hugh Scott in· troduced two bills today to speed the permanent setUement of In· dochinese refugees in the United Sta\es. One bill would permit rovern- ment agencies to employ In- dochinese aliens who worked 'for U.S. agencies in Indochina for at least three years~ Thos8f-efugees would be able to attain permjl· nentcivil service statuS. · The other bill would permit the attorney general to classify re- fugees as permanent residents, reD\Ovini a legal barrier some have faced in seeking~~: ...... tt Meanwhile~·ati"ord.aaministra~ \ lion offer to spend some $15 .million to help school districts in areas withrheeiv.Y .. CffJlceJltfl(tions of refugee cbtJct,ren was termed insufficien•by one Senate critic. Burglar's Conscience Interfered From Wire Services ZILLAH, Wash.-A burglar who police alleg~_ became cons· cience-stricken lt.fterr breaking into a home here returned the loot along with $15 of his own money to pay for the brokep win· dow. • ' • I ' . . Bewa~ Fotbl at Plag • •• . .. .... Motorists driving alcmii .El Toro's Ridge Route nbw are warned tiJ watch out for duel<,. Sigh w ps placed opposite Duck Pond Park by homeowners to protect'w~b­ ' footers straying' across divic\ed road. ... Ex-Manson G~l Sought Ford w YisitLinJa Kasabum's Home Town By Vaited Press International Federal authorities plan to locate and interview a onetime member or the Charles Manson "Family" who formerly lived in a New Hampshire town that President Ford will vhit ThW'S- day. . Officials indicated they wanted to talk to the former Unda Kasa- bian, a former M_allSOQ Family member who once 1tved tn Milford, N.H., one ofthetoWnson Ford's motorc•de route. Mrs. Kasabian has remarried and state and local police declined to disclose the location of her new home. Ford's appearance ntursday to help Republican Senate can- didate Louis C. Wyman will be his first trip •mong the American people since he was threatened last Week iJ'I: Sacramento by Lynette Fromme, a· Manson Family member. Preparations for a presidential visit already were Wlder way in the natiort's seventh smallest state Friday when Miss Fromme aimed a loaded .45-caliber pistol at Ford from two feet away. The Secret Service and other law enforcement agencies say they plan no wiusual precautions ··------.l.... ----------~~WJLWJLW.JL.W:h-~~ Freedom at 82 Murderer. Serve.s 48 Yean. . ' SAN QUENTIN CAP.J -.bifd G. Cornell, a double murderer im- prisoned nearly a half century "j!O,i.s~!~~emanat~s:!.,, ., CorD<ljl !'189 sent lo San Ql!en• Un Feb. t, 1927. Where he awafted execution by hangingfortheslay- ine of hla wife ond 1'-yeir-Old step.daughter In Bakersfield. He had tumed the gun po himself . after killing them and sufl!"""" a pj>lngwound in the chest. After 'arriving at San Quentin, Cornell spent hours howling un - der his bed. The warden bad Cornell transferred to Mendocino State Hospital, where be re- rilained ror five years, still facing the dc,at.b.sentence. .. . . . The death sentence was COQ'l- muted to life imprisonment without possibility of parole.~in 1934, and the no-parole clause wa5 tilted· by fbl'mer G,oV. Ed· mufld G. Brown in 19&6. Cornell was subs-:quently paroled but complained that the family he was living . with in Oakland "stole everything from me.•• He asked to be returned to San Quentin a few months later. · Cornell was released from prison again this week -and authorities said Cornell UUs time will stay with the mother of a fellow inmate in San Francisco. ''I'm not go~ng to loaf," Cornell' said. "She's got some odd job!J I can do.'' :. • \ I I .;, for Ford's visit. ''We always take the same pre- cautions.'' said Thomas C. Smith, special agent in charge of Secret Service in New England. "I see no reason to change." Authorities also indicated a check would be made on Richard Pavlich, 88, of Manchester, a former postal e~ployewbospent six years in county jails, rederal prisbns and finally a state mental hospital for allegedly threaten· ing the life of President-elect Kennedy in+ Palm Beach, Fla., in Decembu,.1960.- "Both of them are of interest to us," said Smith. "I'm not saying what we're going to do." .Meanwhile, it was reported that Miss Fromme told one otthe judges who sentenced Manson that she was ··going to do something desperate" about two months ago. Registration Scheduled . ,. .. . Registration for Irvine Recrea- tion Department fall classes will be held at Town Center, 4201 Campus Drive, Thursday from 7 a.m. to :noon and 6 to 9 p.m. aJtd Friday from 9 a.qi. to•p.m. Classes range from .balJet to yoga and include interior de- corating, macrame, guitar. dancing, arts, crafts, and the l.lfti. quely tiUed "kar'au/beelnning life flrawing. '' FOr more information call the recreation department at 1133-3840. . - A 9-year-old West Newport youngster running home from his last day at the f>each before school started was st.ruck and fatally injured Tuesday after- noon on Coast Highway. Steven Scott Harding, son or Mrs. Sylvia Harding, of 235 Cedar St., apparently failed to heed the screams or his playmates and darted onto the busy highway near 61.st street about2p.m . The il\.vestigator said the driver had no chance to avoid the impact. lfe was not cited. . Patrolman Chuck Olmstead and Patrol Sgt. Reed Gl06hen had been eating lunch at a nearby restaurant when the tragedy occurred. ··I looked out the window of the restaurant and saw a citizen try- inc to get into my patrol car,·· Olmstead related today. "I went outside and looked over to see the boy lying on the pavement and the citizen was trying to reach the radio to call for help." If it was perhaps -ex. El· ness, 24, or 6682 Tillamook /t.Ve . ., Westminster, he will h,aye a chance to explain his ad.ions in court. ·... . Yakima County ShOnfr• de- puties annQun~ed Tue$f«Y. t!J,ey had booked him on suspicl<ill,,o! second degree bUrglary in ·the break-in at the Cllrts(loe Farmer home. . -"· · Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart ,; SPORTING GOODS Police traffic investigator Jim Donaldson said the boy ran directly into the path of an auto heading eastbound, driven by Robert Arnold Armstrong, •7, of 1019 Emerald -Bay, Laguna Beach. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Tr.om. A. M..rph!,.. ... _......._ 1 Olmstead said he and Sgt. Gloshen immediately ran to tbe youngster who was already being attended by two nurses who hap- pened onto the accident on their way to work at Hoag Memorial Hospital. The two nurses and the officers genUy loaded the gra•ely injured boy into the back of the patrol car and sped him to Hoag Memorial Hospital. Hospital spokesmen said Steven never regained conscious- ness and that there Was no response. He waerrodouncedde· ad at 7:40 p.m. o massive head and internal injuries. The death o! the youngster. who would have started school today at Newport Elementary School, was an added tragedy to a family hit recenUy by mis- fortune. Steven's father, palice said, died a month ago. · Funeral services ror the boy are pending at Weslmini ter· Memorial Park and Mortuary. Rates Reduced? He was arrested wben.:JPotted sneaking out of; an orchard not far from the t>urglarized re· sidence. Whoever brok'e In, in- vestigators said, lugged a $1,300 stereo set outside,-hlong with $90 in cash, but ttten.. abandooe'a the console ap.d bid the $00 Wlder a rock where it wOuld be easily found. • He added $15 cash to 00« to cover cost of the window. Paper Drive Slated Irvine Boy Scout Troop· 608 pl8Jl.s a paper drive Saturd8.y al St. Matthew's Lutheran Church in University Poi;k fl'OJD 8 a.m .. to noon . For more lnf~t.ion or paper pickup call 554·7420. .. NeliJJag: $18,690 ·' LONDON <UPI) -What fuel eri,oit? Wbat.ecoaomlc crUia? . ' With an eye firmly,an lhi American market, • .,,... tiQ unveiled lts·new ~~ -ailed the XJ·S. with a . · ;¥12 eni!De 11•111,1· • top SAC'l\AMENTO (AP) "-Pt'Jo. •'. 'lpeed o(;150 mpb. · • ..., elftlriclty would ~et a break ·" •Umal!d' al 15 lo 11 , In tbllr utlllt7 blllt uniler th-so-per 1a110n, and the BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES • BACK TO SCHOOL \ Gym Pants Reversible T-Shirts Shoes for School & PE ' "wa~ up Suits l Sweat Suits l V Neck long Sleeve Orlon Svveaters-6.95 • SPECIAL CLOSE OUT SALE • "Ab.co" Brand Warm-up • Suits Reg. 24.95 Sole Price 15.90 Tops8.95 Ponts6.95 Subiect to stock on hand . ' 'J>I wbo~tmallamounuoraas Puel coil1ump~~ .. .u .... ut,Un•"'blllnowonGov1 prf.~ of!.~ ill~ I ~~~ .....;.::,_,_~..;.·_...:... p~;~ ~-""'•.r.•..:'....-"""'··_.., 1-1' :o-• ._0pea __ ,_to_,_~_C1osec1 __ ..... s_ ... _•_.r;.._.._s_J_s_c_en1 __ ... _____ ,_4_'-_•~~-' '_. • • VOL. 61~ NO. 253. 5 SECTIONS, ,66 PAGE~ ByWILUA $(lllUll)IEA --........ lllil7 19 or Oran1e ca.intj. IO•· _.m•a 50 top adaillilotraton were 1ranted pay r ..... by Ibo' -.i ot 1upervlson today ofter an hoW"·long euc.utlve sesston.. 0 n e ad m i n·l • t'r at or , Acricultural Co111miuioo.er W!Dlam Fitclltn, ,. .. glwin a pay cut beeause of tbe trans.ls of his ,.,.,,. .. Air Pollution Cootrol Di• b1ct reoponslblUUes lo Ille new E,pvtr.oameatal Mana,.ment Aceoc1 <EMA). Supal'Yllo<"• 111......i... pd County Administrative oro- llobert Tbom11 wm ..-.. no paybtt.reuca tbla year, P'ollowtac lhe closed-door a'es&iOD, Thomas rerommanded ~ pay IMreasn Oftly be liven to ~ou.atf ea: e.iU"~ wbo•• '-fO(ll'.lplC~ bu beeo OOtstand· Lil; or wl>ose ruponslbllitleo bave lncreued or Jf the pay level · Wu not on 1 par wttb Gm.Ilk )Pi,lnotherJare•~ • ' ' ~ --~-.1r•Ommo's. BO!I . ' . Tippy, ..... .bite ·minoceros 4_t)J..ioll cl>imiri §ffari in Irvine, stands guard over her 100<pol!ll(l 1>itlly; '60y; ~ Monday. The baby, as yet uruiaQie!l, is th~ first rhino conceived and born at the aniDlal paj<k, F~ther:S 'oaDle is Dutch. When he grows up, baby wil wei~h about 7,000 pounds. ' State Aide Cites •• Brick Credentials 'FIFTY CAILED • ABOUT THE AD' • ''Your riewspaper definitely rer aches the public. My people called about the ad ... 'nlat'S the advertilina success experienced b)!.. ~.corona del Mu woman who pla,c!dlhis ad in the Dally Pilot: So. of Hwy, old C,dM , pyL en1171 bot plate, SIOOmo.-• XU"SJl:XZ "' .. lf you have a room or apart· mentto rent, call 642·~· It only talieo o few 'l'•rdl In (be right place to apa.rl resoonse. Along U. Oun1e Coast , tl)e • right pl-11 tbe Delly PlloL ' ,( • MBER 10, 1975 TEN CENTS . ~ , Ca ~'s ':· • • efs &rftnted • . o"raly Recorder W)llie [Jle, an i.creau from $2.UO 19J!l·IJI. • a1ses • -Personnel Officer R: A. "Burt" S..Ott, an incre-from s:!,'1'4010$2,824 . ounty Airport. Director R<ibert Breonsllart, 1111 ~ '"""$2,%71td$2,31'. ( -Veteraaa, ~rv~ces Officer. Ben tie Leo<I. an lncreue rrom, $2,044 to$2,lQCr. • • ~'Gli,ilt',: • • -Up~lil,: . Free Clink Staff -Supported !1 • • NEW O,RLEANS ~l r Tbe • 5tb u.s. CU-cwt CQwt iJI A--1& Ibis often\000 revened a Jillln& that oxtemlve pretrial publlclty made It impossible lo try WIDiam L Colley, Jr. fortbemunlerof22 Vietnamese civilian& al ¥j'T..ai. and,einstated Ilia CGRvlctloft. Colley, 32, llaa been livlai as a .civilian' In Columbus, Ga., since IJ.S. District Judie J, Robert El· Uott overtm:ped llis conviction Sept. 25, 1974. ... The Army appeued Ellioll's rulin&totbe5tbClrcuit<:qwU 8711.0BEll.T BAJIKER Ol .. 0.lly " ... "-" Huntington Beach Free . Clinjc EJ:ecuti.ve Director~ Cr•wford and bis eq,tire staff were given a vole of confidence and full time contracts Tuesday night. • Crawford and staff memJwl'S ' have been aerving oo six-mODth temporary term fo~ aius r:esllnaUons• a.t .. the clinic last f'January. ' ~ · l!l-: pther actio!l. at Tuesday nilh\',• bo111d of chrectors meet· ing; M.ra, ~ie NeWma.n. was ' name<t .President of the board, replacing John Copeland. who re· • A cenlral issue in the apPeal was whether anyone ac~ of a notorious c~me becomes im- mune to triaJ because ot bilge amounts ofl>ubltclty. · Elliott cited massive pretrial publicity In the My Lai case to overturn Calley's coorictloo. 8¢ tbe Arml'-'li1ued thil lecolpre-c~t aet by sucb o rullac could make it impossible-to seat jurtea ;sicned. ~ Copeland, i . Wintersbu~g scbool tea-Clier---;--i'aid Ule--mly ~ ason for his action was that be couldn't handle Free CliniC-d,._J tails u they should be oo a di.ily • "OOMYnotoriouScase. <t;-• I C.U.ey was convicted lni Army ~martial on Marcb..21, 1'11, of ltilllnli "not less ~ 22 Viet· rraioeae civilians o un--..0..M ace ..,d ·u - ~ ' amesee · basissinc,e.cl~ses~~--• , "I niade that clear this spnn,g ,;~,. ......... when I took the job tllat I'd bafe Wl'4fl CQNTRA'cT •; to sl•e it JIP In Sei>t•mber;· B•rry Cr.wtonl, • Copeland said .. .He remains a • member of the board. resi111ed th,is week. ... • Mu'. N'ewD)an had ~-gh. aLse :.. "Bol;h Berry and Pete did &ood for Crawford, whose liip. jojxl 111\d t"'y're good guys," she ba4 lieell u.esti.oned by staff slid. "I think some l~*iithiiie,ij,difji,. I ~ egai'd ,,,liq dlliil lie a ~ (. r « r ,. "· • C01>nirt." Arguments• against Crawford were found id be Un!lubstanUat~ by (Ile board, accordinl to Mrs. Newman:.• ' "M~h of ~em were in. the form~gr 195sip, 'shf' said. 'Fr'ee Clinic staff members also given.permanent employment by the board Tuesday night were Doug Elson, project director: Maggi Mahoney, pregnancy and abortion coun ~eling ; Dawn Hanien, medical coordinator: Dr. Bemard.B. Goldsmith, di tor of coUinseling ~· Jld11 Santhez. co11n1eUng aft..d ,help lin• coun,e.lor, and L--a Donna Johnson.aecretart·receptionlst: Mrs. Newman 1aya it's ber goal 'fortbe cllnic;'wbicb cle ... lnolnly with the 14·25 yea,r -group,-to become more broatUy baeed. ~ "There's a aylna """' to ex- R•nd ser.,,ices for senior citizens,· M"rs. Newman l'aid. "'lbe)l. need so much help in ttie fi<ICI of nutrition and In hearina' and high blood pressu<e tests .and health screening." Mrs. Newman s aid U\e clinic is in good sbape and jt ~ seeking· to offfir services that are needed 1n tlle. commun.it.y. ·-0a11ey waa th•PlilY aoklier ein- yicted..,,conileoi.!on with lib Lal, tbougb cthe ,ArjllY'• IOO.C·se<fl!t Peers RePQ<t ••i4.,possjbly 3'7 men. women ~ e~ were killed by tllre~ ~laloclllir, not just the one led by Collty1 duf!DJ the three-hour raid. • ---Meeiing Set Ou 'School Unification Eighty-five pages ol Elliot\.;s 132-pageTUling, wblcb gr1111tec1 a writ of habeas corptl.s. dealt .with the publicity issu.e. In addition to publicity, otller iasues included whether Calley's defense was cjamaged by its In· ability to subpoena the secretary of Defense. the secretary of"the Army Md the Anlly cblef ol sU(t ' • • ., ~ Matfiey: Cht;irges Rowlands 'Lied' Huntington Beach City Coun- dlman Jerry Matney charged to- day that 'City Administtator Dave Rowlands' le.ngthy resPonse to re cent allegatiOns contained lies a nd d~ortions. The two men are locked in a ci· ty hall~ battle over Matney's charg~f that Rowlands was in- volved In a conspiracy to prevent the city council and public rrom knowing of city operations and expenditures . Matney made an agreement with the city council not to dis- Cis3 any new allegations untU the Sept, 22 council m~tin&. He emph-asized be 'Y" as onlJ,Ieacting to Rowlands' r eplies gi~en to the council in e xec.utive SfS8,ion last Monday. Matney said that de.spite Rowlands' denial, he can prove there's a coverup. DF.S Use Banned WASHINGTON !UPI) -The Senate has '/Oted to prohibit the use of DES as a growth stim\tlant for cattle until it is determined scientifically that ~ating beef from animals fed on the drug will ndt ('Buse cancer. The bill also would lim it the use of DES as a ··morning after·· contraceptive for women in cases of rape, in- cest and oth'r m edical erne-rgen· cies. ,. The HlJ.rltington Beach Union High Sch6ol Distri ct h as scheduJed a special question and answer meeting Thlll'6day night about the south Huntington Beach unification propOsal. All lnterested cititens. ar~ in· vited to the 7 ;30 p.m. meeting jilt .the Huntington Bea'ch Centi.al Library, Golden West Street and Talbert Avenue . Di_sJrict officjals will_invi~ any questions from the audience and di!H:uss details of the proposal. The unification plan will tx- placed before voters Nov. 4. If passed, the new K·l2 school dis- trict will follow boundaries of the current Huntingtori Beach Cit-Y (elementary) Dist\; ct and -the HWltington Beach section or the · current Fountain Valley ..elemen~ lary district. ' Sanitation Meet The boards of directors or Orange County Sanitation Dis- tricts NOs. 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7 and 11 will meet tonii'ht et 7:.:ll at 10844 Ellis Ave., Fountai,n Valley. Coast Weather Mostly cloudy through Thursday, according to the weather service, but some sunsh.ine inland a reas in the afternoon. Continued. cool with highs from the upper 60s at the beaches to near 70 inla nd. INSIDE TODA y I The little Penns-ylvcmici . town of Ely•burg baa berm , obnlptlu lh""' onto 111< ""'P °'one of the place• thot{ght to be th e rel"'1e di fv.gitiue P.atricia. Heor1t. See Page Al6. " ··: ...... •• • Ma on Member ' , ' Sought w By UnJ&ecl Press ln&eruatloaal Federal authorities plan to locate and inter"l.ew a oneUme member of the Charles Ma.J)SOn "Family" who formerly lived in a N~w Hampshtre town that President Ford will visit Thurs- day. Officials indicated they wanted to talk to the Cormer Linda Kasa~ bian, a rorrq ~r Manson Family member who once lived in MiUord, N.1-1 ., one of the towns on Ford's motorcade route. Mrs. Kas abiari has remarried and state and local police deetined to disclose the location of her new home. Ford's appearance Thursday to help Republican Senate can- didate Louis C. Wyman will be his first trip among the American people since he was threatened la ~t week in Sacramento by Lynette Frpmme, a Manson Family member. Preparations for a presidential visit already were wider way in the nation·s seventh smallest s~ete Friday when Miss Fromme aimed a loaded .4S-caliber pistol at Ford from two feet away. The Secret Service and other law enforcement agencies say they plan no unusual precautions for Ford's visit. ''We always take the same pre- cautions,'' said Thomas C. Smith, special agent in char_Je of Secret Service in New England. ''I see no reason to change.'' Authorities also indiCated a check would be made on Richard Pavlich, 88, of Manchester, a f';>rmer postal em ploye who spent SLX ye&rs in county jails, federal prisons and !in ally .a state mental hoSpital Co~ allegedly threaten· ing th8 lire Or President-elect Kennedy in Palm Beach, F1a ., in December, 1960. .. Both of tl\e·~ are ot interest to us;•.• said Smith. ''I'm not saying what. we're going to do." ~ ~Meanwhlle;4-'il ·was reported ~l ~ils From me told one, of the Jud.izes ,.qo sentenced Manson tha1 sbe was ··going to do somettU.ng desperate" about two monthlago. Miss Fromme wrote a rambl· ing letter in June to Superior Court Judge Raymond Choate, in whieh stt.e seemed to blame _hersel! ror Manson's imprison- ment and seek atonement. About - a month later, she called him al his home, talking murkily about .. all this killing," the Judge said Tuesday. She talked and wrote in the sometime incoherent manner or members of the Martson Family. The judge told the Los Angeles Times he thought ~he might be threatening him and his family. • '~~et~ ~~nch · Die~ in Mysterjr "An11 man'1 d~atll diminUhel me, bt<'ou.I' I .am fnllOlotd in monlci:ndand thne/orc NWT" .wnd to Im.ow /or whom tM bell tou.; 1 It loll> /or,,,..' .... -John Doan< By AllTHUR R. VINSEL -OI ... 0Mt1 Pi loo'! StMI No man Is an island entire of itself, as John Donne the Poet wrote, but some exist that way, end ao np beija tGlled Tuesd~y for Trevelyn Trench, a tired old man•f mys~ery and misery. He was 75 and died la&l Wednesday. • Death came to him in a Costa Mesa 'cc>nYalescent hospital and -chances are -he would have welcomed it. , \~..,. " TRENCH WAS 00MMJ1TED lo a simple grave in pictU:resque El Toro Cemetery, high in the i:ollinC Santa Ana Mountains east of the Sa~ Dle10 Freeway, where it is silentexcept.!or the birds. The man moved through life in such a way he len no known mark upon lt, no son, no daughter. WHO WAS TREVELYN TRENCH! ... · l Was he a poet? Waa he a hobo? Was be a v1Hse:i. mechanic? Was he a lumberjack? Was he a farmer, a merchant, a laOOrer? Was he once'wealthy? Was he a churchgoer·! Was he a drinking man! Was he a member or t.he Elks Lodge somewhere? • . c•NO ONE WAS EVER able to learn anythin1,'' says Bill McConnell. of the Orange County Public Administrator· Guardian's Office, who handled the meager estate of Trevelyn Trench. ·:He h'ad nothing. He died leaving only a residual aJJ)Ounl in his patient fund, 1° says McConnell. · A $70Q funeral was agreed upon between the county and Bell Broa<lway Mortuary and after that, Trench's estate contained only a paltry sum. HE DIDN'T EVEN LEA VE a toothbrush. Trench's last 1,460.~ys or life -give or take a few - Were spent a~ the BjlyView s;onvalescent Hospital. He was t\l'.ansferred there in 1971 rrotn a Brea hospital specializing in mental illness or neurological problems and som,etimes senility. Records mostly loet or misplaced show he was admitted ·as a transient, apparinUy taken into custody by pblice al some point in 1971 for his own welrare, then turned'-overtolhe cowity. ..1.,. HOME. FOJl !ll~M BECAME 350 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, where ll;le days and nights soon blended into one another. _vl'he sparse life story known of Trevelyn Trench was un· bri>ken by highllghts ~ex~lement. Jle didn't con verse witb anYone, ever. -"He nuer received "1Y mail," says McConnell, the county public adrotn;.arator to wbom the affairs of the un-· known or unwanted are consigned upon d~ath. ' · "No one ever came to visit him ... " says a hospital spokesman. THE LATE MR. TRENCH, however, was nol alone for thefmal event in a llff!livedlargely Jn obscurity and perhaps loneliness, and the lOStness or lhose men who try to be islands ~thell).lelves . ..~ • · ''There was somebody from the mortuary for graveside committal services," said mortician Nell Abrams. And there was retired minister Rev . Jim Cotton, 61, who presides at Public Administrator> funerals for local·!olks ~ee of charge, out of Christian duty and just to keep in prac· t1ce. . "He said a prayer,'~ Abrams remarked. "And that was lt. ~ • .... . • E'ro•PageA1 TEACHERS . ,. F ouniain Valley rr•• ta,,e A, Calligrttphy ~~ ~c~; ~els con-the Community School!: Program and speciol maintenance pro- grams, Plum said. Rule also raised questions about continuing the bi-lingual pre-school program al Masuda School and a goals program al Bui hard School, which once were fedc:rally financed,• but now cost ~ $83,1'.>00 in district money, Plum said. China Blasts U.S. HONG KONG (UPI) -China has accused the United States and Soviet Union of ''blood- s ucking exploitation and plunder'' in world trade. The charge by the New China News Agency Tuesday came as a ~Chinese trade delegation toured the Un\ted States and wl.s re· eelved by President FQl'd. ' ORANGE COAST "" DAILY PI LOT ' Class Given ~~~.~~:.rirming the leaching She said the county does not Youngsters, age 9 through 14, can learn to draw fancy; script lettering· in a special calligraphy class being o!fered this fall in the Fountaip Valley Sehoofl>lslrld's Commtinity Schools Program. Their parents can take advan- tage of a special do-it-yourself caf!lping crafts course, golf for ladies or a "golden age or radio" works.bop, district of!icials noted. In acJdition, this fall's com· munity schools class schedule in· eludes two tiny tot science courses for youngsters 3Y.i: to 5 yeanold. Registration for classes begins Sept, 16 and ruos through O<t. s at district offices, Newland Street and Talbert Avenue. Complet'e schedules are being sent home w ilh children to parents. . There will be a course in ex- ploring the coastal environment for youngsters age 9 through 13, another about animated film making for 8 through 14-year- olds. . Among creative crafts Classes for adults and children above 1 i years of age, is statue ma.kin& and tin can crafts. , There also are gardening courses and those on house paint· ing and wallpapering. Registration wilt be rom 9. a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays, Many classes are ~ree of ch,,-ge, with ~ r~g1n.g from SJ. to $10, which district orficlals ex - plained, covers the cost of cl&SHS and instructors. • New Board Office The HunUniton Beech Union Hiib School Board Will hold Its ftrst meetinl al the liew dlslrict offtcH at 7:30 tonight. The new office, a't Bolsa Avenue and Bolsa Chlea Strett, l1 l1><111ed In fl'O<lt or lh• lilcJ)onnell Dou1las A....,.paee f1clllty In HuntJn&ton Be~ check beyond that level, then forwards all materials involved to the state. . ~rick now serves as buslne$5 ~e~or for the Fountain Valley distnct and does not require any teaching credential. However, he earlier served as persorinel director and superin- tenden.t, which do require credentials. He voluntarily left the superintendent's post last December, saying he wanted to spe~d more lime with hisfapiily. Since the Grand Jury matter arose, Brick has remfined. silent and refuses to in ake -any pubUC statements. Read also haa declined to dis- ClJ45 the matter and will neither confirm nor deny haVing bad any contact fr9m the Grand Jury. He dJd say ,.,boweyer, that Brick's personnel record• were sub- poenaed bylhe Grand Jury. Plum, who originally wrote the Grand Jury abOut the matter in April, contends Brick may have been paid illegally as superinten- dent and perso1V1el director. In the loller to the Grand Jury·· h• .-Id Briel<'• credential "may have been obtained ille~ally." Alice Cooper. Pays the Bill • I -· • ..,ects I 2 Dnigs Munlerer Serve. 48 Yean nli1111e. M!f Qtf.Di 1 rw (AP) -.Od40: n. a..ila ..-•• ....,.. CGrndl, • .double )11111de<e Im· muted to life lmprl1onmenl ~ ne.rt1 a llalt COlllury without PoOSlbUlb' of porole ID . 111ao1111aT11.uKEJI ot .. Detty .......... aco,llafreemonal.,.IZ. 19.14, and the no-pon>le dame 1 Cora n ..... -lo San Quen· ..... Wied by former Qw. Ed· "· F b 1927 .... .._ ID@clG. Brown In 111111. ' HunUnston Beach will coo: tlnlM partlcipatioJl for a third year In a_.eountywide project for "l'!!trol 01 dangerQ\11 dnlp. Chief Earl Rotillaille of tbe -• · 9• ••--... awaited Cornell wa1 1ub•equenlly :,ec;::ic:;,11~~f:~~'1t~~ paroled but eomptained that the step.cla.,bt~r ID Bak.;;&id.~-r...,.lly he_wa• llvlnJ with In had tumed the 1un on hlmsell Olkland "•lcile eveeythlnCJtom oller ltllllnl them and •ulTered a me." He uked lo lie returned lo • Jiuntinglon Beach )'oll ... Depart· ment said the Narcotic Index re- cently paid off ii') his city with perhaps the bia:ieat cocaine bust ID Oranee County llUl«Y- He said lhat assistance of un- dcrcover officers from member a1enclea was insl('wriental in the arrest of three suaped.s and the confiscation or Sl million in co- caine at a trailer home on Pacific Coast Highwi:y on Aua. 29. ·1api"lwound1Dtheebmt. San Quentin a few iDCllllhslller. Cornell was released from After arrlvlna: at San QutnUn, prison. again this week and Cornell •pent houn i-11ns UD· authorlU .. uid CorneU thia time der hil bed. Tbe warden had win stay with the~ of a ComeU lranaferred loKeodo<lno fellow illmate In San Francil<O. "We're too small a fot'ce by ourselves to -=onduct aucb in- tensive aurveWance, and withoMt outside help the aprebenslOJl would not have -PoUlble," Robitaille said. · RobitaUle 1ayt Oles ar~kept,ln the index ori both JhaJor ... narcOdca dealers and mln.,..peddlero and distributors. tfe-~•11 ,the ac- tivities or all member a,g.ehc.ies are coordinated and that each in.- vestlgatlnR unit la keptJnlbrmed on what the other ls doing. ~ He also adds that clty can withdraw large amO\U'lU ~cash from the index. with the district attorney's approval, to bankroll major narcotics purchases. City council members this week approved ~ontinued participation in the index. The index office is maintained in the Santa Ana Police Depart- ment and is used by most or the police departments in Orange County. The U ,!;.. Department of Justice Law Enforcement As- sistance Administration gives fWlds to the project. Scott Seeks Aid Program For Refugees WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott In- troduced two bills today to speed the permanent settlement of li'l- dochinese refugees in the Ubited States. · One bill would permit govern- ment agencie1 to employ In- dochineae aM.ens who wOrked for U.S. agencies· in Indochina tdr at leui three yean. Those refugees would be able to attain perma- nent civll1ervlce statu6. ' . ' The other ~ill would permit the attorney general to classify re- fuaees as permanent residents · removing a legal barrier aom~ have faced in seeking jobs. State Ho•pllal, .wbere lie re· "l'mnolgotnitQ!oal,"C«Mil malned for ftve yeara, il1ll fadng Hlcl. "She's 1ot some odd jobo I the~atb1enten~. : c~do.'' · ~+"""'"~ Three School Board . Trustee Races Set There wlll be s~bool board races ln only three of five trustee artfl,S In the proposed fOUth Jluntlilgton Beach unlllell· Uon election Nov . .C. Only nlne candidates ftled for ·t¥ sealrb)' the Oronie County Re&llU'ar ol Voters' ~ o'qoel< deadline wt rtJclay. nve .,. the lilt are cur,eril elemOlllll'Y or hich school truale<is. ;· Uncontested in tb8fr areas are Betty Mignanelll, 9142 Bradham Drive, a p;irent in the. Huntinlloo Beaeh <olrip ol the current. FountaJn Varley .. elemeniary dlatrlc.t, ~o(l K. Dale Bllib, J220 Main St.; a cur· rent Huntlnston Beach elemen'· tary trualee. • • Candidates by area lnelude: -Area l: Betty Mlananelli, a housewilei '8.nd ~n 8ct1ve Parent in PACT <Parents Acting for Children and Teachers), a · group orl1lnally hoping lo win· a choice election over whlcb un~ ified dlslrlcl lo join. -Ar'ea 2 ~ Wllliam ... L. Thom ... 20801 Sparkman Larie, an engineer and member or the Orana:e County COmmittee on School . Dielrict Organization, and Andrew Studdert, 10092 Stoneybrook Drive, community· volunteer, salesman ·and 19~ year-014 college student. Studdert ran unsuccessfully last spring for a seat on the Huntington Beach Union High Sc&ool Board. -Area 3: Brian Garland, 21852 Seacrest Lane, an Edison lllgh School teacher and cur- rent Huntington Beach elertlen- t a r y trustee, an·d Norma Vander Molen, 9472, Mokihana Drive, also an elementary trustee. -Area 4: Don MacAllister, 1121 Park St., sales engineer and high school trustee, and Stephen F. Holden, 949. 10th St., insurance manager and an unification plan as it now reads. Voter& .in the proposed De'( district will vote Nov. 4 on Wl- ification and wil' elect their trustees. The trustees will be elected Crom geographic areas but will be chosen by voters in the en~ Ure dlstricl. After School . Activities SetforKU/s A new after.school ac.tivities and educational proeram is be- lllg"olfered this fall tor 6 lo 10- year.olds Jn the Fountain Valley Scbool District. The after-sehool program will ~ from 2 to 6 p.m. dally ~t F~untain Valley School, 17911 Bushard St., although chUdren throughout the district may enroll, ~lrld officials said. There will be four one-hour dasses daily: Story telling, with ~kits. movies and vocabulary improvement from 2 to 3 p.m cooking and nutritiqn from 3 to 4 p.m., math and reading improve- ment from 4 to S p.m.--and creative arts and crafts from 5 to 6p.m. The fee for,,each class will be $12 a month, and children will enroll on a month-to-mouth ... basis. In addition, a walking field trip will be offered from 1 to 2 p.m. each Thursday at a fee of $2 a month. · District ofricials said parents must 'provide transportatiop for children from outside the Foun- tain Valley School attendance area. M_eanwhile, a Ford administra- tion offer to spend some $15 million lo help sehool d!Jslricts in areas with heavy concentrations of refugee children was termed in&u!ficlent by one Senate critic. ,.. elementary trustee. Tb~ program is designed to provide extra opportwtities for children wanting them, they not- ed, and to give youngsters with wor~ing parents after-school ac- tivities. -Area 5: K. Dale Bush, an attorney and school trustee. Both 'Garland and MacAllister have taken stands opposing the The classes will begin Oct. 6 and reg is tr a lion will begin Sept. 16 at district ofrices, Newland Street and.Talbert Avenue. Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES ' SPECIAL • BACK TO SCHOOL CLOSE OUT SALE ·Gym Pants Rever~ible T-Shirts "Abco" Brond Warm-up Shoes for School & PE Suits Reg. 24.95 .. Sale Price 15.90 Warm up Suits ' Tops 8.95 Sweat Suits I V tj•ck i.opg Slee'.f'- Orlon-~vye<lfer$495 Pants 6.95 ( Subiect to $tock o~ hand ~ ~. • <?"'! 9" to. 6 • Closed Sunday ) I , . • DAIL V PILOT .If 'I I Police Woman KIUed Brown Says Sclwol I Chief Resigns SAN Dll!:GO !AP) - Ra1 Hoobler bas re· lliped .. Saa Dl-'s eoll•• eblef, tbe Saa D!QO--Ulllcm. said. quot. lnl )IJlaamed c1t1 of· •J>..~i'll'•!'',,. Ila.JI. . , Tbe pa per •aid (loobler turM4 Ill Illa re-,._.~>&;:.,J)l,,t,...;;.::.,.~: ...,.atloa TlleldaJ after " meetia& wltb Clly Eac!qu.Jfd-. ·~ State ) Slncer Diana Ross escaped when fire . broke out In her :io. Ma a a 1 er• H 111b rcrom ' house In llcXln!eyfor an boar. ,JI all bu Tues day '~· o, bu -ttusing $45,000 _Tll,. erttlclnd fer bis 'damage to the home rpl• Ill th• setilll'I! ol and Its contents prbate 1>97cbolo1lca1 • flits; i:ept by rollce • c11u•••lor 'WI llam. N · Man" ~· avy . PNh Defetlletl • $ACRAl!IENto (UPI) Says He's -The Senate bu over-. t:1!"!"f.~.4:~~a~::: ~Bisexual' measure ,a1kln& the federal 1overnmeat 1o SAN DIEGO <AP> - reopen the lnvestl&tlion 'Ibo federal goyemment al the assuslnatlon of is seetlng dlsmlHal ol a President Jolla F. Km-suit by a Naval Reserve nedy. The re.olutioo was officer who says the killed Tuesday on a g.27 Navy is trying to get rid vote. · of him because he is a Sen. Dennis Carpenter homosexual (R·Newport Beach) a Asst. U.S. Atty. Peter former FBI agent. s'aid Bowie said Tuesday that tile only purpose of re-tile federal court suit by apening the investigation Cmdr. Gary Hewton would be to discredit the Hess is premature IDd ii· FBI. He said that no legalsincenoneoflhecte-. criminal lnvest11atioo In feadanta Uve In Southern history has received so California. Hess, 44, says much discussion as the he is not a homosexual · 1 Kennedy assassination but a bisexual and adds · that bis sexual tastes are I N-PoUqf Set . . none of the Navy's bllai· ness. BURBANK (UPI) - Lockheed Aircraft Corp., stung by a bribery scan· dal. said Tuesday that it will apply U.S. laws to oveneas sales transac- tions, refusing to make payments to foreign gov- ernment officials if such payments would be il- 1 e gal in tbe United states. A ''stringent new A Navy review board in San Diego recom- mended last June that Hess, a Santa Barbara educator. be discharged from the Navy as a homosexual. Hess is attached to a Naval Air Reserve \Dl.it at Pt. Mugu. He says his sexual preferences have never affected his performance as an of- ficer. Flash Floods Sweep Des~rt • • .,. ..... :' ........ '.RalD7 ,.. .. ,...., la Soulbenl Calllornlo. iru.- lq doselt lil:btnlac -tbot el•lm4d the llte of _ _,,,Ia u.,..sed lo clear up l>J.tbeweeltead. A Callfoml.a JllPway Palnll apablmlD Hid JlliAbeth Nllfeld, 23, al --Park, wu ldll4d wben berearwu--..e211mll•-alllo- lave by• zso.reet wide will or water that wu ••at eut ellht Ifft deep." Oflfeer Robert Carpenter said the ear wu ·--thau3DOfeetawayframc.Jlfomla14, !he male row. 11n1<1nc Loe Anllel• llld a.no. Ne•. • Tll1I: WOllAN'8 llODY was fOUDd two mll• eutoltheroadway, lllllhoriUesuld. Carpenter aald tbe lllbtning was ,0 intense, he '°'* oft'llla bad1e 1Dd other metal on Illa elothea l1lfore ~UDCIDI Into lbree-foot water to wode to the wmnaaacar. Wan .,..,.. from Teliacbapi, l!loJave, ID10lem and Jlilllop worked through tile ol&bt to reseue ltr'IDdedl motorlsta, wbole vehicles were mired in 1111111-wu llve feet deep In aome plaea. • • ·Officials Ovet.Paid • ''because the.re's a CfOW" c in& number of people Ill this society who don't have work and there's all ·-even larser number LOii ANGELES (AP) the United Teachers ol -llanlt presidents, col-J..oo Aacelea. te1e cbaocellora and Brown told the -.,..._. allould bave lo toaeben lbAt acbool ad· ~ for tbe prlvU019 ti mlnlstrators should be lililtllnl 1ueb llltenotlnf paid ao more than 11>ey jol)a, u:rs Gov. Edlnund are and that Wllllam G.~nJr. Johnston, the Los "Tlie mOl'l' eomplleat· Aa1eln s cboolJ superin. ed your Job, then the teoi:lent who makes don't have meanln&M • work.•• I ~ '-------""· -IMraial you set $18,913, is overp•ld .. out al It ud you oucbl ~ The 1overnor said _. Brown told tho teacliera lhey, too. must ••tower your alchta'' Jn salary nerotlaUooa.. ltut bovine to pay a tlli· pie who have meanln&ful • tlon. •• tbe covemoc said work should have to pay The salary of the IOV• ,.,,,.,..::;;:=======Tl=-=Al In a speech to tor the pr l v ll e g e ernor is $49,100. safe~exlril$i50byopeillng · tom tai-defd1ed acco11nt in September Now two DOOd rneone to ot*'I your fax.O.•red Retirement account ••rty: • 1. o-youroceount 1" ~oembef and fidelity Fodorol w111absorb your enllre $7..50 tru1la• , .. ,.,,975 2. The 100Mt )'OU do, the more lnter.t you'U earn,,.. from 1975 Income Te.:. I.II.A. (lndlvldual ReUrement Account) -FOR ANY E'*PLOYEO PERSON. • 11 not ~red by • quallU•d reliremtnl plM, Mt •Ide up to It .500 earned l~me each Year exempt from current feder1l lnoome taK. No tax on cunent lnterett eemtd, either. Example: $1,500 depoahed in an IAA. wfll '9duc. 'fOlJf 1915 Income I•• by a minimum ol $330 If you are in a 22% bracket. • Keog" "'"'llll*••o~MMnt ccountt tor the e8H .. mployed also avalleble -lrll!ltee fee ""Jn September. Do H now. , T1111:•PBCrACUL.Ulll&btnla1stonmwu.bed aut m1D7 -b ... al ltber deHrt roadways and callrorniil Hlpway Palnll oflleerw 1lrU11ied lo ieoD trallle movlnc. "l!leuwblle, Saa Beraardlno County aherllf's ¥ ..... "2...J. e deputl .. reported the rescue of a 1g.year-old r1D•UIY~~~.'!'9• ~=~ ... ;~ ~hlnlall~e=...: COSTA MESA-NEWPORTBEACH:1855HarborBlvd. while rldlng motorcycles acrosa Len.wood Wub, 1 ====='="="=-='='="="=rw=you==-===·=· ======================-ftvemllessoutllof Banlow. ~ Officers said Rudy Jaramlllo aud Roland O'Neal, 17, of Barstow, were ridiac their e:rclea In au olfroa4 vehicle areaolflaleratatellwbea the In· cldeat occurred. A DEPUTY SAID tile yooiths were atruct by a wall of water five feet hill> and 50 feet wide and car· ried downstream aboot 50 yards. O'Neal was left on a 1andbar, still perched oo bis cycle. Jaramillo. however, was carried farther downstream and was hangin& on to a limb. Slruglllag to reacb his friend, O'Neal Jost his cycle. After belllg cut o(f by uie atlff eurraata, he doVe underwater, swam 10 feet IO Illa bite IDd rode back for help, the deputy said. ••Jt was scary.'' Jaramillo said later. "The water kept rising and I could see it was a matter of •wimming for safety or drowning, " when be dove in and swam to a..•Pot where O'Neal and deputies plucked him from the waters. NEITHER YOUTH. waa injured, said Deputy Walter Mcilvain, "butthey'~alotsmarter. ~· · _ California 395, the major route linking san Bernardino and Reno, was flooded in sections especially in the vicinity of its intersect.ion wttb California 58 and near the Boron Air Force Station immediately to the north. ' The Death Valley Naticmal Monument was re- ported isolated with roads washed out 80 percent to Pl.l'IB GRAND OPENING I I ' I-policy" has been adopted in the selection, use and .payment of foreign "sales consultants " the company said in a 'state- ment. He also accused the Navy of persecuting him because of bis public support of gay people's causes. the east and west of the park. Major fJoodina was reported along the Warmagosa River. Wards all new Costa Mesa Store opens Wednesday September 24th • l >,Jso affected by the fiooding were California 136, 127 and 190, between the Lone Pine area and the Nevada border, while California 178 Extension was closed between Trona and Panamint Valley. t Penney ' Rockwell electronic calculators give •. " you The Answer. . ---8·•~, ~. pli.' ' ••• ,,~ .\ \1~-. -·~~ ~·v.¥· ·~~-. •"9~· ·--. X····'~ ·\~ ~~.~-·~·\ t'· f~· --_ .... ~·~- 39.95 89.95 Rockwell 63R slide .rule with scientific notation Perfdrms complex calculations such as factorial computations. degree/radian conversion, parenthetical operations. Extra large display. Ideal for engioeers, scientists. Batteries, charger, case included. 19.88 18R electronic calculator with percent and memory Idea l for everyday use at home or in the office. Percent key solves add-on and discount problems. Algebraic logic; automatic constant and repeat. Floating decimal and negative indicator; dual.clear entry/clear all key; 8 digit display. ARCADIA CANOGA PAkK CARSON DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOU YWOOD NORTH RIDGE ORANGE 'THE CITY ' PUENTE HILLS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO TORRANCE VENTURA WHITTWOOD , • •• l FL -~~~------~------BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FWY. nyQur ''Charg-all'' account today! Shopping is easier with a Montgomery Ward Charg-nl I account! You can enjoy convenient shopping at any Mont- gomery Ward store. Take advantage of the terrific sales with no money down. As a "Preferred Customer" you are eligible for advance notice of money saving events a nd special sales! You'll enjoy your new Charg-all account.. Fill out the application below and mail it today. dlarg ~OO CREDIT APPLICATION FORM PAINTNAMn'----------------------AG"'---- SPOUSE"S FIRST NAM"------------l't<ONE.c· -~-------­(.A.rea Code) AOOAESili--------------------C!TV'------- D OWN STAT~-----~~·IP-------D RENT HQINLONG, ______ _ IF LESS THAN 2 YEARS. PREVIOUS AOOAes ...... __ SOCl"L EMPLOYE~-----------------SECUAITY NO: _____ _ EMPLOTER'S AOORESS•-------------------- ANNUAL 0 Under $4,000 rl SROOO·S10000 NUMBER OF DEPENDENT"'---------INCOME: n S• OOO-S6.000 1 1 S1 0 000-s1' 000 lJ 16,000-SS,OOO I J OV'!!r .$1 2.000 'YOUR BAN~------------------Li CHEC1<.ING U SAVINGS (&.ntnl OTHERCAEOfT _____ -;:;::::::---------------- ACCOUNlS 1""""1 \l\ccount N""'™"'l (lF ANY) ....... , YES, I would like the C1l11Venience of a CHARG-ALL Actounl al WARDS and authorize you to pro cess my application for an account in accordance with your established credit policy. SIGNATURE OF APPLICANT•------------------------ MAIL APPLICATION TO: MONTGOMERY WARD, AlTENTION MR. HESTOR CREDIT SERVICE MANAGER, P.O. BOX W·50, NORWALK, CA. 90650 ' . . ' ·~ • l --• • Info ~ . ' · Assemblyman Robert Burke· CR-Huntington Beach) deserves credit.for pushing special legislation • aimed at giving Fountain Valley residents more In· formation about unification before their Nov . 4 elec-. tion.· Burke has sponsored a last-minute bill that would provide voters with detailed cost and financial In· , formation about the proposed city boundaries school .. district. " It would require the Orange County Superinten- ! dent of Education lo prepare a 500-word analysis of the proposal and place finahcial information directly on the ballot. · · Before Burke's action, such information would not have been available from any official source. The county Department of Education. acting on legal ad· vice, had refused to prepare such facts. And both oppo- nents and proponents of the issue were using cost figures the county said were outdated. As a res ult of Burke's proposal, county officials already have been calculating much-needed financial data about the proposed new school district. Burke, who seems to have the support of both sides of the un- ification issue, obviously saw a need for information and has come up with a wise method of providing it. ~ · Conflict Question " Conflict of interest charges have been leveled against Fountain Valley School Trustee Dick Plum. who also is employed as director of traffic and safely forthe Huntington Beach Union' High School Dtstr-«t. Carl ''Bud'' Jones, leader of the Fountain Valley ~-- • g the· Voter Ullifteation effort. contends Plum cannottake an obiec· live stlll!d on the school ~eorganizalion issue in his city because his employer ls strongly opposed to it. . J.ones said be believes Plum is lnv'llved In a morjli conflict: 1'erhaps-U...sameconflict charge-could apply to Brian Garland, a high school teacher who sit.son the Huntington Beach elementary school board. Garland and Plum are the only members of their boards opposing unification. . The charges may have some merit. We are not sug- ·gesting that either man bas been lnfiuenced In his de- cision on unification because of his school position. But the danger exists. lt would seem hard for a school board member making such a decision to entirely divorce his own income and future career from his thinking. I r Both trustees said recent state legislation now al- lows them to take stands on unification, despite their places of employment. But Jones has asked the State Fair Political Practices Commission to investigate the matter further. . The high school district and trustees involved have emphatically declared there is no conflict of interest, and they' never have been pressured to take a stand on .their employer's side. But they do seem to be in a delicate position and might be better off to refrain from taking any further stands. It has long been an accepted practice for city coun- cil members and school trustees to abstain from voting on issues in which they might have a personal.interest. It seems the same approach may be called for here -partlcuJarly-on-the-llnlttc-ation1Sliile -despite the apparent sincerity of the two trustees involved. . ~ . .... --' • H Don't Blame Speed For Traffic Deaths Dear Gloomy Gus A Happy Welfare State 1 • • To the Editor: This le~ter is a response to your editorial of Au.e. 19, entitled "Back to Normal?'' which con· cerned itse.Jr with ... ''The steadily increasing tendency of drivers to cheat on the 55 mph speed limit ... " You claim that ... "the result or the cheating is showing up in statistics on trarric ratalities . . ., " citing an increase of 26 deaths over a similar period last year:-The thrust of your editorial would seem to indicifthat the cause of the increas talities . ·is the (act that peop are in· creasing their speed on the rreew3ys . WIBLE THIS may indeed be the case, I reel that it is incum- bent upon you to show not only that the increased fath.lities all occurred on the freeways, but also that a majority of those 26 deaths were caused directly by drivers exceeding the speed limit. As you may have guessed, I disagree v1ith such a contention. I feel that a proper study of the matter might show a greater in · crease in fatalities on surface streets rather than freeways; ~ also, that some factor (notably I alcohol) other than excessive s~ed was the cause of those ac-l cidents which did occur on the ' freeway. -f -Jn f.-act,-if you were-to in-vestigate the matter I would be willing to bet you a steak dinner l that the increase in Orange Coun- •J ty traffic fatalities is not due to an increase in traffic speed. I Perhaps 'this is a rather grim f , subject on which to base aw.ager, t butitseemsfarlessgrimthanig- 1 noring the more direct causes of traffic fatalities in favor of re- venue-producing speeding cita· tions. ' I PETER B. MARCUS To the Editor: · ·I would agree very much with your editorial of Sept. 4 that the apparent destruction of a valua- ble archeological site during con- struction of Ocean View High School could have been avoided if the Huntington Beach Union High School district had followed proper procedures from the beginning. What bas not been mentioned J in news articles or in your editorial is the treatment meted out to members of the Eilviron· mental Council at the pu·blic healing on the school's· EIR. Htte is a group of citizens who ~ gave up the last days of summer ln order to review the EIR and al· 1 bring b•d tiding&, PrH/dent•. A OOf/P. ~. lmminlltttl~. (..._ __ M_A_I_L_n_o_x_~] Letters from readers are welcome. The tight to condense letters to fit lpOCe or eliminate libel is reserved. Letters of 300 words or less will be given preference. All letters mu..'t in · elude .tignature and mailing address but names may be withhekl on re· queat i/,sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be piJblished. low construction to procede in as short a time as possible. The law provides for a :tO-day review period; the council did in in 12. i\IEMBERS of the Environ· mental Council offered their hones\ and experienced judg- ment<Jlthe EIR, as you reported, and their position was supported by other citizens speaking at th e hearing, but they were met with belligerence ~and attacks to belit- tle and discredit their sincerity and competence by members of the high school board of trustees. In addition, the board chose of· ficially to ignore all of the mitigating measures suggested by the Environmental Council that would have alleviated some of the impact the project will have on the surrounding com- munity. Such hostility was hardly ex· pecte d by members of the En- vironmental Council ·and it leads one to wonder what it gained for the Huntington Beach Union High School Board of Trustees. "DAVID M. CARLBERG v-•s~- To the Editor: The article in the Pilot of Sept. 2 entitled "Teen Justice Uneven" discusses variations among police departments in referring juvenile offenders to probation and then on to the Orange County Juvt'nile Hall. Following the Saleeby report, the article men· lions that the Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach police depart- ments have conspicuously low rates. At the other end, with ex- tra·ordinarily high rates, are the departments in Santa Ana and Fountain Valley. While not a spokesman for either Costa Mesa or Huntington Beach departments, l can pro· vide an impartant element in ac- counting for their outstanding diversion records -and de- monstrate that diversion from the court system has carry-over to diversion from a criminal style of life. TWO YEARS ago, the cities of Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach, under the influence or their innovative chiefs of palice, joined tn form a Youth Service Program. <The city of Irvine became a participant later). The aim was to provide family counseling and crisis interven- tion as an alternative to referral to probation and the Juvenile Court. In operation. program starr work directly with the police in the respective Police facilities - a juvenile officer thereby bas a member of tbe program staff directly available for referral and consultation. Using: a control or untreated group to assure object.Ive evalua· Uon, we found that recidivism (aA me.a1ured by the arrest • Will ~ome knowledgeable person please explain how the city or Huntington Beach saves $180,000 a year with just one pick·up of trash a week? It takes twice as long to make each pi ck-up, motor running, long delays for the driver and reduCed service to the taxpayer. W.O.R. GIOOmy Gus common!$ ;aro •11l•n'•i1tl'd •~ reidff'1 <1nd do no! ,..C•l•irlly .. 11.c11tw viewi ol tr•• newip;aper. Send rour poll _,,.lo Gloomy Gus. Dillly PllOI. rates l \l!'as reduced by <18 percent by the program . The Costa Mesa and Hunt- ington Beach police departments are outstanding in general tt>rms, so the Youth Service Pro- gram is just one factor in their low referral rates. But it is clear- ly an important one. ARNOLD BINDER Director, Youth Service Program Costal\1esa, ~luntington Beach and Irvine PoUreCoel To the Editor: -.> According to recent newspaper reparts the officers of the Irvine Police Department showed re· markable nestrai'nt when they were confronted with shots com- ing Jrom.. Lioc_al residence. Rather than carry out the kind of instant, massive attack we are so -accusto,med to reading about, lrvine's police decided to wait it out after having assured themselves that neighbors in possible danger had been evacuated. Their patience was rewarded by· being able to apprehend the shooter without resort to methods which could easily have led to loss of lire, but which still would have been found accepta· ble under the usual rules. We wish to express our confidence in Irvine's police and its chief, i.eo· Peart. ROLAND and JANE SCIUNZING ER Economi,cs Cla rified ( THE BOOKMAN ) MONEY: WHENCE 'IT CAME, WHERE IT WENT, by John Kenneth GaJbralth. (Houghton Miff Un , $10) · If anyone is going to make you understand the economics of money, it is John Kenneth Galbraith, whose knowledge or: economics didn't automatically wipe out his understanding ol 'English. He doesn't talk in economics, a language which perhaps is understood by other economists. Here he has written the history of Western money, from ancient Rome to the Wuhlnston. D.C •• ol the 1970s. He writes '!Ith his usual wit. acerbity ·and iconoclaim. Galbraith is at his best discuss- ing the diverstJ factors that led to our curre:nt ffnandal mesa, .uo.· raveUng the mysteries In brlWe, clear prose. JoaaHanauer,UPI / • T h e .Optimistic Swedes , STOCKHOLM -I have spent the past week here in Sweden looking for a really angry pers!iftl. It has been a futile search. For the Swedes, in contrast to almost everyo"e On earth, are brimming over with good will and op- timism. Their self-confidence stems es.· sentially from one overwhelming factor. They live in a social democracy that provides them with both political freedom and cradle -to - g r a v e security. As a conse- quence, they seem to have no real worries -t- at least as far as their liberty and material comforts are con· cerned. Moriover, they ap- proach whatever "'inor dif- ficulties they may have with dis- arming placidity. ''There are n<J'"> problems we cannot solve," Prime Minister Olaf Palme told me the other day, and that was not an idle OOast. · wlTmN recent days, for ex- ample, the media here have been focusing on a government pro- gram to build ramps and widen doors so that invalids in wheel chairs can navigate into and C STANLEY ) ~-K_A_R_N_o_w_· __, around public buildings. It's the sort of issue that would be buried in the back pages of the newspapers in the United States. But in Sweden it's the kind of sub· ject that arouses attention, large- ly because there aren't any big- ger problems. Wages are high. Medical atten- tion is free and excellent. There are child care centers for mothers who work. And most of all, unemployment beDefits are such that a worker will l"eeeive almost full pay if he loses his job. In short, this is the weH are state par excellence. Yet weUare is not considered onerous .. BY OUR standards taxes are excessive. They rn.ust be to cover the cost of the country's various welfare projects. But most Swedes I have talked with do not complain. For one thing, they are fixed on the notion that everyone must be equal. Thus they raise no objec- tions to efforts to provide all citizens with a similar standard of living. Secondly. they fervently believe in the concept or "solidarity,'' which means that they are prepared to make persqnal sacrifices in order to improve the lQt of others. So, in many respects, Sweden is very much like a big family in which everybody feels responsi~ ble for everybody· else. This at· titude even extends to con· servative politicians who criticize the socialist regime. One right·wing politician, for . iostance. looked at me in ·.· astoni'shment when I asked if he would cut back welfare pro .. grams should his party enter of .. fice . "We are also dedicated. to social equality." he said. THE SAME is true for big busi·• ness, which is given special tax:. advantages by Palme's Socialist government on the theory that m .. dustry must function smoothly in order to as.sure jobs1 and economic success. This need for business tranquility is un· derstood as well by the trade un- ions, which are careful to avoid disruptive strikes. I thought that I might hear a bit of indignation when I went to see one of the leaders or the.Swedish Communist party, andl0.id-up to a point. He complained that workers. while well paid, are not earning enough to buy summer homes, sailboats aild second cars. "lrnever thought that I would bear a Communist register a complaint like that." I told him. He smiled pleasantly and replied. "This is Sweden.•• An Exile Dreams of l;lory The lonely figure stood on the sands staring out over the end· Jess gray sea. It had been more than a year now since he had been forced to resign his high o~fice, yet he still wore its symbol over his breast. ( ARTHOPPE ) Once he had been the most pawerful man in the world, his every word, gesture, ex- pression and tone a subject for intense discussion by the high and the mighty . No man had been more hated clnd feared by his enemies, nor more fawned on and admired by his allies and followers . He had dwelt amidst the panoplies of power and ordered kings about. But he had left office in humiliation and defeat, de· livering one last sentimental speech to his staff. There had been talk or bringing him to trial. The goverftment had intervened. He was free to leave his house and grounds, but he seldom did. He had been ill. His once-large fortune was all but gone. His aides had deserted him one by one. It seemed the end. And yet.,. IUS ENEM~ES slill feared him. They had' written him off before. as a broken, hopeless man. He had Stunned them by rising out of p0litical exile and once again seizing the reigns of power with the brilliantly. (ll'&grhatlc laallcs that marked his career. · They knew and dreaded this Phoenix-like quality. They I~ \ I I , I watched him closely. At any hint he still thirsted for a role in world affairs, their outrage knew no bounds. So he dwelt quietly in his estate by the sea, virtually a recluse in this prison without bars. On rare occasions old friends would visit to reminisce about past cam· paigns and the dead victories. He fell into a routine. The one task he placed above all others was writing his memoirs. He may have made a few errors in judgment. He admitted that. But if there was one thing he had made perfectly clear it was that he would appeal over the heads of his enemies to his~ory. THESE MEMOIRS would .be his appeal. In them, he would re· <'OUnt the alliances he had forged, the treaties he had signed1 the glorious central role he baa played upon the stage ot mankind. Passions would cool, scorn would fade and history would absolve him. Eventually, he would take his rightful place among the great leaders of the past. To all appearances he seemed to be living in the dusty yesteryears, his only poSslble Quotes Peace, it lt ever efuts; wiU not be based on the fearotwar but on the love of peace. -Herman Woak. It Is no disgrace toslartallover. It is usually an oppottunity. - ·GeorreM.Adam1. · I I future a generation away. And yet. •• And yet those who have once tasted power dream strange dreams. Some said he was mere- ly biding his time. Somehow, some day. his enemies ¥ill feared""this all· but-penniless, )111- but·friendless, broken, defeated. humil.iated, physically ill. closety~watched man might yet in some superhuman fashion i:ise · once .'1g,aln out of political exile to cut his swath across the worlcl} • AND'60 it wa• on that arler• noon in ?817 that NapoJ,on Bonaparte stood on the sand$ of Saint Helena st3.ring out over lhe endless gray Atlantic -dream~ ing who knows what strange dreams of glory. ORANGE COAST 1~u11gn.11 Rc>Mrt N. Wei'd;-Publilhtt Thomo1 Keevil. Edilor Barbara Kreibich. £ditori41 Pa.ge E,dilor The edltori111I page of the Dally Pilot &eek$ to fnfol"nt and sti01ulate readers by presentina: on thi~ page diverSe commentary on topics ot interei~ by ~_padicat· ed t'Olurnnists and eirtoonista, by providing a forum for readers' views arrd by present.lng this newspaper's opinions and ideas on current topics. The editorial opinions o( the Daily Pilot appear only in lhe edltortel totumn at the top of the page. Opinions e.x• pressed by the columnists and cartoonisLI and letter writers are their own and no endorsement~ their views by the Daily Pikit should be mrerrtd. , • Wednesday, Sept.10, 1!175 -·--- . --• , - .. . -• T4!1day's<1I 1 N~Y.Stoeks VOi;. fill, NO. 253, 6 SECTIONS, 7e PAGES ORANGE COUN-T¥, CALIFORNIA -WEONESDAY,SEPTEMBER 10, 197S N TEN CEN-1:5. e . . ' 24. ltfilliDnalres Eseape· ·v.s. Taxes ' ' I WASHINGTON <AR>_.......,. .,._ ID..ao o1 $17,1'3,0lll, an tlleyUlell. Ooac:onl), would recb-othertu tax:• \y·foOr Amvlun mllllonalno avera e or p .u mU)I <lacome.tutJ.lor.-&,000 "'"''en and Ifft to~ _ Van••, a member ol I.be la· manasod lo a•olcl paying a pen· -· iultJi1 Call{oniw Would be ininbumtuesthewultllymust wrlflllll Ways and llew Corn· ny ID feileral taxes ID ...e reeent .".nlere ., al 17 (other! -ed by a total oCSISll!IWGn a pq.). mlUee, lllaoaald lbal15mojoroll Jtor, ~ccordlns to ln\ttnal millloDU...: w:O .:i.w ll!lftu year UDder a bill allll"M!8 by the lo add1Uon1 there ~ "54 In· com-lee paid forelsn aovern· lleyeilue Serviee data rti......t after ealeulaUns thelrtu<ledue ••-mbl.YM·171'1oodq, divliluals wltn adjusted cross in· menb about ef&~t tlmeo u much byamomberofCongress Ilona and credlla .. ..-.., i..; (It dlmlnlshe1 tht ",.,Uen\an com<!Solbetween $Sl0,000and'1 tax aa they did to the United · ''"' lnforni u f.ir ·-Vanlk :i:tt•• iledueUon tbat,eoabled mlllioftl who paid nq federal In· statea In 1974. Rep. Charles A. Yanik (D· J.'id. • on _,., • ~ at Gov. Ronald Reapn to come tu and 292 indlvjduala He rald ••it s appalllns to Ohio>. sallt In a H°""' speech ·,. oolt!Ostateln'"""'!taxes. with ec}justed "'°"" inoome of note•• tllOI the companla lllled Ta,.~ay that seven of ftle 'He did not ldenWY the mil· (The m•!••re by As · betweep ~OOQ ihd $S)OOOO payments of $9,554,llZ,OOO to mllliaftalrn bad a lolllj odjUst.ed lioilalres or e~plalll the uctlcr -blyman Dan Boatwrilht tD-who paid no individual incOme lorft8n countries, bul only ,.. . ~ ~ A.nMxi,,.g ' Of Marine Base Eyed ByDOUGIASF~ Of ... Dtillf ""' .... The Irvine City Council intends to try to annex El Toro Marine Corps. Air Station in an elfort to block county supervisors' at- tempts to add commercial jet ·Rights to the Marine airfield. The strategy session at Tuesday's council meeting re- sulted in orders to City Manq:er W'tlliam Wollett to begin work on a four-pronged assault on the cowtty scheme. The steps include: -Get.ting support from "anybody who is anybody" int.be area that would be affected by noise and crasb·danger from in- creased use of El Toro to lobby a1ainst commercial Qigbts. ' -Tllreatealac Ute supervisors " will! le&al actioo and outlining f~ county government the likely cost the county. "They might have to buy out the Ranch or Tur- tle Rock or whate:yer," Coun· cilwoinan Gabrielle Peyorsaid. -:-Ravine tu elty tranaporta. tion commission study the mat- ter and come up with more strategy·recommendalions. -Annez:ln1 El Toro Marine Corps Air Station to give the city primary jurisdiction over the facility and strip it from supervisors. Marine Corps Public lnforma· tion Officer John Shotwell at EJ Toro said today the council ac- tion "is.a shot out of the blue for us. We really are not prepared to comment on it." Councilman John Burton al Tuesday's session. pointed out that the M8rines traditionally have-Wl>Osed joint commercial and milital}' use oC the field -..,. called ''foint use.'' ;~ ,The Marin~es . and the Depart- menf of.! Definse.~ he said, are ll~eit to. "snutgle ·'up to the muoJcip.a-lity ,that mos,t 1lprtsents'tbeir point of View." CountY superVisors last month touched off the furore among Irvine councilmen with an a~ =c Uon to the U.S. Defense meat "to-'make El Toro a use" airport.· Su'fjet:viaoQ', inehiding Fifth Di1tl;ct 'Sul>ervisor Thomas R!Jey, claiin tlley filed the ap-pllCation only to put an end to speculation about commercial (See EL TORO, Page A2) Coast Weather Mostly cloudy through ThW'sday, according to the weather service, but some sunshb)e inland areas in the afternoon. Continued coot witb highs from the upper 60s at the beaches to near 70 inland. · INSIDE TODA~ The little P•nn111lvcmio town of ,Elyaburg bal lwn obnqJtly thnm onto the ruop m one o/ the ~e• thought to N the refugt Of' fug1tivc P.otrida Htar•. Sec E'ogco AM. •·•ex M'f_.llNke Al ....,._ , ., .. ,, .... ., Jilmlc;.... •11 ............ .,. ............... .. ~· U ........ MfwsM,M ~ Dlolt Or ... Cllillt, -. .. 1J '*'*' •11 """'-Cl .. o....... •tt-....,.,.,. ., --~ ....... ., .... .......... ... Dr ......... (It • l ,, -· 11t·tJ 9'1C11Mttbb ~ ...... IM-t T...,...... 96 ,... Cl-1t .........,. ., .. u .... ... (A....... ,.. •u.n . C4 ......... ~ -.. I ' ~ 1 • • • ~ ' -. .. • -• -·· a et • -. ··-RllUNG REVERSED My Lal Slayer C.Uey Calley's • ColiVJ:ctton· • Up~eld NEW ORLEANS .(AP) -The 5th U.S •. Oin:uit Court ol Appeals this aftenioon reversed a ruling that extensive pretrial publicity made·it ~possible to try William L. Calley.Jr. for the murderol22 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai, and teinstated his convictiT. The_ votewas8-5. Calley, 32, bas been living as a civilian in Columbus, Ga., since U.S. Distr!et Judge J. Robert EJ. liott overturned his conviction Sept. 25. 1514. The Army appealed Elliott's ruliaitothe5tbCircuit~ -n,, ._uage.court·s:ald<"''Tbe effect ol the Publicity on the American public in general is of course uncertain, but material contained in the reoord belim the District Court's conclusi6D that anydrie familiar with the news re- ports surrounding the My Lal massacre would automatically convict Calley_'· A Central issqe in the appeal was whether anyone accused of a notOrious crime becomes im- m\Dle to trial because ~ huge amounts of publicity. Elliott eited massive prdrial PlllJlleity In the My Lal case to overturn Calley's conviction. But tbe Army argued that legal pre- cedent set by such a ruling could make it impossible to seat juries on any notorious case. Calley was convicted in Army court-martial on March~ 1971, of killing "not less than 22 Viet- namese civilians of un - determined age and sex and as- sault with intent to murder one Vietnamese child." Calley was the only soldier con· victed in connection with My Lai, though· the Army•s long.secret Peen Report said possibly 347 men, women and children were killed by three platoons, oot ills! the one led by Calley, during the three-hour raid. ~' DOW POUNDED A.GAIN; OFF 10 NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices closed sharply lower along a broad front today in moderate trad.Lng on the New York Stock Exchange. Tbe Dow Jones industdal av~ase. a 12.36-palnt loser TUes.. day, waa off 10.09 points to Slt.68. Declines outnumbered ad- vances by about an ll·t.oo.two margin (TablH, 87). Prices were lo"'er in mOderate tradina oo the Amerieao Stock Exdwtle. · ' . • .~ I r Newport Yo11ngster Killed A ~year-old West Newport youngster running bom~from his lut day f.l the beach before achool started was struck and fatally injured Tuesday after· noon on Coast Highway. Steven Scott Harding, son of Mrs. Sylvia Harding, of 235 Cedar St., apparenUy failed to heed the ac_r_eams of bis pfayma• and darted ooto the busy highway near 6Ist Street about2p.m . Police traffic investigator Jim Donaldson said the boy ran directly lntO' the path of an auto heading eastbound, dtlven by Robert Arnold Armltl'ong, 47, of 1011. Emerald Bay. Laguna Beach. The intrestigator said tbe driver bad no chance to avoid the impact. He was not cited. • ..P•tn>lman Obuek Olmstead and Patrol Sgt. Reed Gloshen bad been eating lunch at a nearby restaurant when the tragedy occurred. "I looked out the wlPdow of the restaurant and saw a citiaen try. tng to get into my patrol car," Olmstead related today. "I went outside and looked over to see the boy lying on the pavement and the citizen was trjring to reach the radio to call for help." Olmstead said he and Sgt. Gloshen immediately ran to the youngster who was already being attended by two nurses who hap- pened onlo the accident on their way to Work at Hoag Memorial Hospital. The two nurses and the officers gently loaded the gravely i.Qjured boy into the back of the patrol car and sped him to Hoag·MerrMlrial Hospital. Hospital spokesmen said Steven never regained conscious- ness and that there was no ·response. He was pronounced de- ad at 7:40 p.m. ol massive bead and internal injuries. The death of the youngster. who would have started school today -at Newport Elementary School, was an added tragedy to (See MISHAP, PopA2) KIDS RETURNING An estimated 25,630 students returned to Newport-Mesa schools this morning and district official" reported everything went smoothly, despite prior con- fusion over bus schedules and rumblings of possible teacher _ .. ts. • • '· • • Summer Is Over Barber Bert Murrieta greets long-haired customer who visited his Costa Mesa shop Tuesday on orders from headquarters, meaning the customer's mother. Kevin Minto, 10, was taking care of a last-minute detail before going back to school today. To see how it all came 'off, turn to P3ge A3. Newport to Chip In On Oil Challenge The City of Newport Beach will chip in for legal costs in a suit to kill the U.S. Interior Department plans lo lease oil drilling sites off the Southern California coast. City Attorney Dennis O'Neil speculated that Newport's share in the legal costs would be minirnal -perhaps no more than $400. The aim of the suit currently be· ing prepared in Los Angeles is to win a judicial declaration that the Interior Department·s environ- mental impact statement is flawed and premature. Yet another goal would be to hall any lease 1ales until a na· lionwide energy policy is arrived at. Los Angeles City Attorney Burt Pines is leading the court effort and O'Neil said today that most of the original cities which earlier rought the lease proposals at hearings now plan to join inlhe ac· lion, along with the states of California and Alaska. The federal proposal calls for the opening of federal waters beyond the three-mile limit for fresh oil exploration in a region off the Orange County and Los Angeles County shorelines. 10 Chiefs Get Raises Supervisors Limit Coumy Salary Increases By WJLUAM SCHREIBER °' .. O.lty " .. ..., Only 10 of Orange County gov· ernment's so top administrators were granted pay raises by the· board of supervisors today after an hour-long executive session. One administrat~or , Agricultural Commissioner Wllllam Fite hen, was given a pay cut because. pf the transfer of his former Air PolluUon Control Dis· trlcti respoo&lbiliUea to the new Environ.mental Management AgencyCEMA). Supervisott themselves and County Administrative Officer {\qben 'Ibomu wW receive no pay lncreues thla year. Followlag the cloae4-door ~. Tliomas reoommended th• PaJ' lncreuea only be 11veo .,to •county execative1 whose perfonnaoe• hu tiearcM!ltand· ' .. l ing, or whose responsi bilities have increased or if the pay level wu riot on a par with similar jobs in other large counties. Another kev factor in de· termining who received salary hikt:S was a series of "report cards" iskued four months ago by Thomas' office. The .. rePort card" rated the top county administrators on a scale of oae to five based on their perfondance on the job. F1tcben..'s salary will be re- duced from its current level of t:!,458 per month to S:Z.404. The monthly salary increases granted by supervisors induded: ~btilrlff ·Coroner Bradley Ga~ Ao irlctease from $3.106 to t.;;'ld'j>er month. -Tr.a Col\cctor·Treaaurer Robc!rt (:llrCJ!I', •an lncreau t:!, tz1 to '2.tioO _per month,. l • -County Clerk William St. John, an increase from S2.592 lo $2,620per month. o -County Recorder Wylie Carlyle, an increase from $2,120 to$2,158. -County Marshal Don Rhea, an increase from $2,619 to $2,756. The pay lncrea1e was mandated by the county court judges. -Environmeo.tal Management Agency Director H. G. "Geor&e'' Osborne, an increase trom $.1.143 to $4,040 per month, rellectinc: his new statu.s as a super~acency chief. -General Services Aaency Direclor R. I. "Cuba" Monti, an increase from $3,3116 to $3.468 . -Personnel Officer R. A. "Burt" ~ott, an increase fiom t:!.740to'2.llZI. <See JlAJSES, P .. e AJ) I \ ported $1,309,ISS.OOO In U.S. fedor,ol lneome taxes. Vanlt added: "I have areal cloubla that the ledor,I tnoasury actually reeelved lhlll alDOllnl o( money ln U.S. t.1.x.e1 ." He said the companies W'hieh reported that lhlormatlon to the SecurlUH and E•~· COin· llllrlloo ID .. able lann had ap- proximate net Incomes or *18.IO'f,023,000. ' Assessor Granted . . Delay By GAaY GllANVll.U: Ol•Oeltypt ... IUlf Ventura County Superior Cowt Judge Robert Shaw relll5ed today to overturn the conviction of Orange County Assessor Jaek Vallerp. Simultaneously, Judt:e Shaw refused todlsmlas theGrUMIJury indictment that charged Vallerga in early May with seven felooy crimes. It was last month that a Ventura County jury convicted the 53- year-old assessor of six charges, including conflict of interest, mis- use ot public funds and embezzle- ment. The best Vallerga's attorneys could.get for their efforts in court today was a 48-hour delay in sen- tencing . Jud&e Shaw afr'!"'I to Ht the· assessor's sentenclnt dt.te back from Sept. 16 to Sept. 18 to allow pet.it.ions for a new trial to be beardinthestateSupremeCourt. VaJJerca·s attorney, Richard Murphy, ftled his petJtjon la.st week, but told Judfe Shaw the court would not be able to con- sider it until Sept. 17 at the earliest. Should the high court deny Vallerga's appeal and fail to or- der a delay in sentencing, the as- sessor will automatically forfeit his elected office)llexl Thursday when senten't'eck" The penalty on the six felony cowit.s for which he has been con· victed could send Vall~U.. to state prison from one to IO years. Today, Judge Shaw said he could not find a basis for revers- ing the jury's verdict in the argu. ments presented by Murphy. Included among them was a charge that so-called secret funds handled through Orange County Superior and Municipal Courts are equivalent to the mishandling of public monies charged lo Vallerga. "I! it's all right there, (in the courts) it's all right in this case."' Murphy argued. But a rebuttal by Assistant Dis- trict Attorney Michael Capizzi put down Murphy·s pleas as !See VALLERGA, Page A2l Senate Fails To Override Veto on Oil WAS!IlNGTON !APl -The Senate this afternoon upheld Ford's veto of a crucial energy bill, assuring higher prices for fuel, food and most manufac- tured goods. The Democrats, who control the Senate, were unable to mmter the votes necessary to override Ford's objections to a bilJ extending controls oo oil prices for six months. Tbe vote was61 ·30, or six votessbort.. The vote handed Ford a m.;or victory in his eight-month-old battle with Congress over energy policy. The next step by the Ford,ad- ministration would be to ask Coogress for a 45-d~ extension of price controls. ~ that period, Congress would' be e.x- pe<ted to adopt • sndual pb-. out of controls along the lines Of the 39-month proposal otfered by Ford. The end result of suc.h a move would be that u .s. oil pricu would rioe to the level ~ ~-~ oil-elQ>Orlln1 nations, ~ ·-'13.50a barrel. u.s.~­ selll for an 1verace ol*9A • I 'Af DAIL V PILOT N Wednetd!)', Stptember 10, t975 [ Pilot Logbook ) Trevelyn Trench Died in Mystery "Anu man's death dmriniahes tM, becawe I .am involved in manJdnd. and therefore. never .send to know /W whbm the bfll tol.~ ,· Jt tollt for thee ... " -John Donne By AR'1111JR R. VINSEL -Of ... O.Uyl"lle'ISl&tt No man is an island entire of itself, as John Donne the poet wrote, but some exist that way, and so no bells tolled Tuesday for TreveJ}1l Trench, a tired old man of mystery and misery. He was 75 and died last Wednesday. Death came to him in a Costa Mesa convalescent hospital and -chances are -be would have welcomed it. TRENCH WAS COMMITTED to a simple grave in picturesque El Toro ·~ Cemete ry, high in the rolling Santa Ana Mountains east o( the San Diego Freeway, where it is silent except (or the birds. . 'f The man moved through life in such , , a way he left no known mark upon it, no , .. :t son, no daughter. .. , WHO WAS TREVELYNTRENCH? , .. Washeapcet?Washeahobo?Washea .. ., . v11<o1SEL mechanic? Was he a lumberjack? Was he a farmer, a merchant, a laborer? Was he once wealthy? Was he a churchgoer? Was he a drinking man? Was he a member of the Elks Lodge somewhere? ''NO ONE WAS EVER able to learn anything," says Bill McConnell, of the Orange County Public Administrator- Guardian's Office, who handled the meager estate of Trevelyn Trench. . "He had nothing. He died leaving only a residual amount in his patient fund ," says McConnell. A $700 funeral was agreed upon between the county and Bell Broadway Mortuary and after that, Trench's estate contained only a paltry sum. llE DIDN'T EV.EN LEAVE a toothbrush. Trench's last 1,460 days of life -give or take a few - were spent at the Bayview Convalescent Hospital. . He was transferred there in 1971 from a Brea hospital specializing in mental illness or neurological problems and sometimes senility. Records mostly lost or misplaced show he was admitted as a transient, apparently taken into custody by police at some point in 1971 for his own welt are, then turned over to the county. HOME FOR lllMBECAMEJSOW. Ba.ySt., Costa Mesa, where the days and nights soon blended into one another. The sparse life story known of Trevelyn Trench was un- broken by higbli1hts or excitement. He dldn 't con verse with anyone, ever. "He never received any mail," says McConnell, the county public administrator to whom the affairs or the un- known or unwanted are consigned upon death. "No one ever came to. visit him ... " says a hospital spokesman. THE LATE MR. TRENCH, however, was not alone for tbetinal event in a life lived largely in obscurity and perhaps loneliness, and the lostness of those men who try to be islands WltothemseJves. "There was somebody from the mortuary for graveside committal services," said mortician Neil Abrams. And there was retired minister Rev. Jim Cotton, a1, who presides at Public Administrator funerals for local folks free of charge, out of Christian duty and just to keep in prac- tice. "He said a prayer," Abrams remarked. "And that was it: Banker Paul Dodds ·succumbs at 83 Memorial funeral services have been held for long-time banker Paul D. Dodds, who began in 1910 as a minor financial house clerk and became president by 1954 of the California Bankers As- sociation and died Sunday. Mr. D<lddlwas 831!Ild made his home in the aguna Beach area. Born in Fontanelle, Iowa, he came to California in 1004, attend- ing schools in Pasadena and Los Angeles, then joined the old L.A. Trust&: Savings firm in 1910 as a clearinghouse clerk. . He remained with the firm - which later became Security Pacific National Bank -for 48 years, retiring in 1959 as senior vice president. He was head of the California Bankers Association in 1954-SS shortly after becoming a ORANGE COAST • DAILY PILOT member or his bank's board or directors. Community services include work for the Community Chest and American Red Cross, while Mr. Dodds was a nine-year direc- tor of South Coast Community Hospital, South Laguna. He has been a director and.pre-sident of the Emerald Bay Com- munity Association, and in 1969 was appointed by the Orange County Board of Supervisors as director of the Emerald Bay Services District, a post he held for three years. He was also a member of the board of directors of Midland In- vestment Company and of AVCO Community Developers Inc. Survivors include his wife Delight S. Dodds, a daughter Mrs. John W. Kenney, granddaughters Mrs. Stanley Evans and Mrs. Janice Kindred. and two great- granddaughter.s. Services were held at Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel, with inurnrnent there. Mamon Member Sought By Ualled Presa lolenaalioaol Federal authorities plan to locate and interview a onetime member of the Charles ManlOll "Family" who formerly lived in a New Hampshire town that President Ford will visit Thurs- day. Officials indicated they wanted to talk to the former Linda Kasa- bian, a former Manson Family member who once lived in Millord, N.H .• Qne of the towns on Ford's motorcade route. Mrs. Ka.sabian has remarried and state and local poJjce declined to disclose tbe location ol her new home. Ford's appeararu;e Thw-sday to help R~publican Senate can- didate Louis C. Wyman will be his first trip among the American people since he was threatened last week in Sacramento by Lyuette Fromme, • Manson Family member. Preparations for a presidential vi.sit already were under way in the nation's seventh smallest state Friday when Miss Fromme aimed a loaded .45-caliber pistol at Ford from two feet away. The Secret Service and other law enforcem..ent agencies say they plan no unusual precautions for Ford's visit. "We always take the same pre- cautions," said Thomas C. Smith, special agent in charre of Secret Service in New En&Jand. "I see no reason to change.•• Authorities also indicated a check would be made on Richard Pavlich, 88, of Manchester, a former postal employe whoapent six years in county Jails, federal prisons and finally a state mental hospital for allegedly threaten- ing the life of President-elect Kennedy in Palm Beach, Fla., in December, 1960. "Both of them are Qf interest to us,'' said Smith. ''I'm not saying what we're going to do." Meanwhile, it was reported that Miss Fromme told one of the judges who sentenced Manson that she was ·'going to do something desperate" about two montbsago. Miss Fromme wrote a rambl- ing letter in June to Superior Court Judge Raymond Choate, in which she seemed to blame herself for Manson's imprison- ment and seek atonement. About a month later, she called him at his home, talking murkily about "all this killing," the Judge said Tuesday. She talked and ')Tote in the sometime incoherent manner of members of the Manson Family. The judge told tbe Loo Angeles Times he thought she mlght be threatening him and his family. E'ro,,. f'age Al VALLERGA Judge Shaw agreed to do no more than allow Vallerga's attorneys the additiQnal 48 hours to begin their last·minute flurry or ap- peals to higher courts. Three weeks ago, the Filth Dis- trict Court of AppeaJ in Los Angeles quickly denied similar motions for a reversal, anew trial and a delay in sentencing. E'ro,,. Page Al MISHAP ..• a family bit recently by mis- fortune . Steven's father, police said, died a month ago. F\J.neral services for the boy are pending at Westminster Memorial Park and Mortuary. Rates Reduced? SACRAMENTO (AP) -Peo- ple who use small amOW\t.s of gas and electricity would get a break in their utility bills unller the so- "alled "lifeline" bill now on Gov . Edmund Brown Jr. 's desk. Cur- rently, large commercial users or power get discounted rates. Robert N. Weed Freedom at 82 ,.,..,'*"~ ... 1"111111- Jeck R. Curley Vk• "'~"' •"" c;..""' .. M."9111r Thomas KHVll 1!111or ThOmes A. Murphlne ........ lllQ e:c111or ChlrlH H. Loos Richard P. Nall AUlot_,,I "'-fllillltt E ...... ~ Murderer Serves 48 Years SAN QUENTIN (AP) -Odd G. Cornell. a double murderer im- prisoned nearly a ball century ago, is a free man at age 82. Cornell was sent to San Quen- tin Feb. 9, 1927, where he awaited execution by hanging forthe1lay· Inc Of bis wife and 14-year-old step.daughter in Bakenlleld. He had turned the 1un on hllllleU after killing them and suffered a gaj>lna: wound in the chest. After arrlvln1 at San Quentin, C«neU spent hours howllnt! un· der hil bed. The warden had C«nell traoalerred to Mondoc:ino State Hospital, where he re· malned for five years, atill facing tbe'dl!ath sentence. I The death sentence wu com- muted to life imprisonment without possibility ol parole in 1934, and the no-p.arole clause was lifted by former Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown in 1988. Cornell was subsequently paroled but complained that the family he was living with In OakJand ••stole everyth1ng lrom me." He asked to be rttwned to San Quentin a few months later. CorneJJ waa released from prison again thi1 week and authorities said Cornell this Ume wiU atay with th• mother of a fellow Inmate In San fianclaoo. "I'm not coin• to IOI!," Cornell Hld. "Siie '1 1ot some odd Jobi I can do." I . ' ;i ltlomma'sBoy Tippy, a wblte rhinoceros at Lion Country Safari in Irvine, stands guard over her 100-pound baby boy born Monday. Tbe baby, as yet unnamed, is the fttst rhino conceived and born at the animal park. Father's name is Dutch. When he grows up, baby wW weigh about 7,000 pounds. Fro.Page Al ' EL TORO BID use o( El Toro. Riley is a retired Marine general. But Irvine Mayor Art Anthony, a harsh critic of the supervisors' move, contends the only reason for such an application is that they want it. Similarly, CouncUmari Henry Quigley des'Ui bed the ''obvious bias'' of the document on tbepro- pased expansion of use of £1 Toro. "The thing that really con- cerns me," Quigley said, "is that they obviously slanted it by de· voting less than a hall page to the impact on the local communJty. I fear those who look at it will say, 'Yes, this is what the local com- munity wants '." Annexing the Marine facility, Burton said. "will make it pretty much our ball game if they Burglar Gets Two Tickets to Knott's Detectives investigating the Tuesday burglary of Newport Beach furniture upholsterer Robert Desmaris' Jensen sporUcar may stake-out ~e front gate at Knott's Berry Farm. Desmaris, of Balboa Island, said whoever entered it behind his shop at 1831 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, stole two multi-ride ticket books containing passes to the Buena Park amusement center. ••• (Marines) go al!'llC·" Other plusses, Mrs. Pryor said, are sales tax revenues far the ci - ty, ability to exercise some con- trol over access to the· base and ''shutting out joint use.'' The council's opening barrage in the anti-aircraft campaign begins today and Thursday with distribution of a city-funded pamphlet in 39,000 copies of ·throwaway newspapers in the area likely to be affected by com- mercial flights at El Toro. But that, promised Ant.bony, ''is just the opening rolD'ld." Fire Rages In Apartment Flames that swept through the bedroom of a Balboa Peninsula apartment Tuesday night caused an estimated $.1,000 damage, ac- cording to the Newport Beach Fire Department. The fire began about 7:30 p.m. at 000 E. Ocean Front, in the fLTSt-floOr apartment of a two- story building. Firemen are still checking the cause of the blaze, which began and ended in the bedroom . Damage was confined to that room. Dr. Edward O'Neal is the owner-occupant of the apart, ment. Congress May Let Tapes Go WASHINGTON (UPI) - Congress acted today to make former President NlKOO'I White ·1ou1e tapes •vaUable fOf' public broadcast d•splte Nixon's objec- tions. • The House admlnlstratJon sub- committee on printina rejected rules proposed by the Genttol S.rvi<es Administration wblch would have made the tapes available to reaearcbera but banned their reproductlao. GSA said it wanted to •void commercial exploilatioo of lbe tapes. The subcommittee, by a S.1 vote, adopted a resol~ and a report which said, '"I'bat ii the risk of a free society. It is a risk the founding fathers accepted ln adopting the free speecb protec- tions of the First Amendrnent. Any researcher can ~ce to the world the !indlnp"ct bis re-seuch. •• The same resolution was ex- pected to come before the Senate Government OperaUom Com - mlttee later today and before the Senate for approval later this week. Under a Jaw adopted late la.st year, GSA was to propose regula- tions for the disposition of the White House tapes and 42 million other Nix-on documents . Congress had 90 days to accept or reject the propasals. Today's action was the fU"St step toward rejection. Disap- proval by either house makes tl;le propasals invalid. However, the law's consUtu- tio,nality is under challenge in a court sUit brought by Nixon. Responding to his complaint, the Justice Department said in a brief filed with· District Court Monday that Congress had re- ason to conclude that Nixon "would not be a trustworthy custodian, even temporarily" of the tapes and documents. It is expected that the materials will not be made public until after the Supreme Court rules on the Jaw 's constitu- tionality. Fro• Page Al RAISES ••• -County 'Airport Director. Robert Bresnahan, an increase from $2,271 to $2,313. -Veterans Services Officer Ben de Leon. an increase from $2.044 to $2,100. Thomas stressed that all the raises were based on merit and must be earned againonext year to be retained. Democrats Rapped LISBON, Portugal (UPI) - Portugal's Communist party to- day attacked the left-of-center Popular Democrats, jeopardizing the military government's ef- forts to form a new coalition cabinet. BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL CLOSE OUT SALE Gym Pants Reversible T-Shirts "Abco" Brand Warm-up ' Shoes for School & PE Suits Reg. 24.95 Sale Price 15.90 Warm up Suits • Sweat Suits Tops 8.95 Pants 6.95 V Neck Long Sleeve Orlon Sweaters-6.95 Subject to stock on hand Open 9 to 6 ·,Closed Sunday 535 Center 646-1'919 t ' > f g ) SW,er Diana Ross L' ~le escaped when fire • ~ -. llroke out in her ..., ii1n11er &•1• room· house In KdClaleyforanhoiiz' llallbu Tuesday- lloolllor, •i.:;a -causing S•s,ooo ht'l'll1 crlUe f« 1111 dllznage to the home "'• In the ·~ .ot and lts contents. PtlJ•l• pa7eholo1leal --------- !Ilea ll:e~ by rollee ... ~""''".WI llam N M -;r-._ , . avy JIU .• ,...,,.. ... N!e 11e1-u.. s· B , I ~(UPI) ays es -Titre Senate ba1 over· wbelinlDCIY defeated an 'B" ual' Auembly-approved ISeX measure a1kln1 tbe federal 1ovemmeat to SAN DIEGO (AP) - r-llie invesU1lllioo 'lbe-fedoral government of the uaasalnatlon of Is seeking dlsmlaaal of a Praldeat John F . Kea, suit by a Naval Res«ve nedy. The resoluUon was officer who says the killed Tuesday on a g.27 Navy is tryinf to cet rid vote. · of him because he is a Sen. Dennis Carpenter homosexual. (R·Newport lleacb), a ~t. ~.s. Ally. Peter former FBI agent said Bowie satd Tuesday that the only purpose ~f re-the federal court suit by 9penin.gtheinvesti,e:ation Cmdr. Gary Hewton would be to diacredit the Hess is premature andil- FBI. He said that no legalsincenoneofthede- criminal investigation in fendants live in·Southem ~ lta1 received so California. Hess,·«. says much ~cussion aa the he is n!=»t a homosexual ' Kennedy assaasination. but a bisexual and adds that his sexual tastes are NftlD PolJq ~. . none of the Navy's busi, .ness. BURBANK (UPI) -A Navy review board l.ockbeedAircraftCorp., in San Diego recom- stung by a bribery scan-mended last June that dal, said Tuesday that it Hess, a Santa. Barbara will 8pply U.S. laws to educator. be discharged overseas sales transac-from the Navy as a tions, refwl:lng to make homose~ual., payments to foreign gov-Hess 1~ attached to _a emment officials if such Naval All' Reserve urut payments would be il-at Pt. lr1ugu. He says his legal in the United sexual preferences have States. never affected bis A ''stringent new ~ormance as an or~ 1.-Policy" has been adopted cer. . , in the selection, use and He also accused the payment of foreign Navy of persecuting him ''sales consultants," the because of his public company said in a state-supJ>Ort of gay people's ment. · causes. I DAILY PILOT 4§ .. Wo•an KUl.ed BroUJn Says School • ' I Flash Floods Official.s <J:verpaid I I • ,;, . Sweep Desert ~s ANGELES (AP) the United T .. chon "' -Bank presidents, rel, Loe Anceles. le1e chancellor• and Brown told the ..,...._.. should ha"' to teachers that school ed, •1111tA•,h'odPtaa !In f<lf: th.e prlvUece of mlnlltratora should be bOldin.,C aueb lntoreottng paid no more than they JlalilJw .. IMr biSoulbena Callfonila. tn11or, Jobe, alQ'S Gov, Edmund are and that William fllldolertllOtallur-lhatdalmedthelUeol G.BrownJr. Jobn1ton , the Loa anewoman, II eapided. to d•u-¥P b7 tbewMkend. •"Tbe more compllcat... Angeles schools aupertn .. A Calllomla fllchway PalrOl apakeoman laicl ed your job, then the teadeot wbo makes Elllabelh Nufeld, 23, of llonteft7 Part, waa twed "'-------. more Jeamlng you &et $:16,963, lsoverpaid. 1'hlm ber car wu struck IOCDe 20 miles nortb ol Mo. · out ol 11 and you ought to The governor said peo- ..... ••because there's a crow· , .. l Ing number of people In• thll society wbo cloo't ' have work: and there'• ~Jucernumherwbo . don't have meaollldlll:,11 work.'' .~ ... Brown lold th · teKhen they, too. must "low~r your 1l1bta•• in salary netoUaUons. , Jaff ~ a ZSO.feet wide wall ot water that waa "at start baYIDll to pay a tuf, pie who have meanin&lld leutetp.tfeetdeep.•• Uon,'' the 4overoor said wort•hould h•ve to pay Tb.e111alary of the rov· .~ Qflleer Robert Clrpeater .. Jd I.be ear wu Tueaday ID a •P<jech to r or the pr Iv 11e8 e omor '49,100. waabed more thlD 200 feet away from Callfomla 14, $7. thema1nrou1e11at•aci.o.Ance1e11DdRooo.Nev. Save·ID Awtn ~by Opening . ! 'IKB WOllAN'8 BODY wu found two mllea ~~T -=~:.!x·:=r:;!'!:..01n-. be your tax-deferred acccn•nt in Seplember look oft b11 b1d1e and Giber metal oo bis clothes befme plan11D1 Into three-loot water to wede to the womu'1car. · Wort erew-from Tebaebapl, llojave, lnyoliorn ""II Blabop worked throu&b the nlgbt to rescue ~ motorllll, -vehicles were mired In mudlluit wu Qvefeetdeepinaomeplaees. t · TBBSPECTACUIAllli(hlninjratcrmswuhed out .ln.ID1''-bea.of olbu desert roadWIQ'S and Callfornla Hlfbway P81rol offlcera atruslied to keep trlfQc movln1. " J!lunwbile, San Bemardino County aberiff'a • F ~ deputlH reported the rescue of a lf.year-old ID•U If ~ ..... ~!.!.~• ~i,.':'~ .. :i~ ~:ii~·w~ COSTA MESA·WEWPORT BEACH: 1855 Harbor Blvd, wblle ridin1 motorcycles across Leawood Wasb.. 1 ====='=9=0="=1c=es=t=o=H="="='°="=·='="'::•w=ld=•=·=======================-llvemlles IOUlb of Bamow. !- Officers aaid Rudy Jaramillo and Roland O'Neal, 17, of Bantow, were ridin& their cycles in an offroa.d vehicle area oft Interstate 15 wben the ln· ddent occurred. A DEPUTY SAID the youths wore st.ruck by a wall of water five feet bigb. and 50 feet wide and car· ried downstream about 50 yards. O'Neal wu left on a aandbar, still perched on bis cycle. Jaramillo, however, wu carried farther downstream and was hanging on to a limb. Strug91ing to reach bis friend, O'Neal lost bis cycle. After being cut off by the stiff currents, be dove underwater, swam 10 feet to his bike and rode back for help, the deputy a aid. "It was scary," Jaramillo said later. ••The water kept rising and I could see it was a matter of swimming for safety« drowning, •• when be dove in and swam to a spot where O'Neal and depuUes plucked him from the waters. 'NEITHER YOUTH. was injured, said Deputy Walter Mcilvain, ''butlhey'realotamarter -~· · _ C~omia 395, the major route linking San Bemaraino and Reno, was flooded in sections especially in the vicinity of its intersection with California SS and near the Boron Air Force Station immediately to the DOrth. ' The Death Valley National Monument was re- ported Isolated wilh roads washed out 80 percent to the east and west of the park. Major flooding was reported along the Wannagosa River. Also affected by the flooding were California 136, 127 aod 190, between the Lone Pine area and the Nevada border, while California 178'Extension was closed between Trona and Panamint Valley. f'm GRAND OPENING I Wards all new Costa Mesa Store opens Wednesday September 24th I • (:".-~ .,,, , ' ~, ~ I I Penney I . , Rockwell electronic calculators give you The Answer. .39.95 Model 31 R slide rule memory with rechargeable batteries Invaluable for anyone working with reciprocals·, square roots, percentages. Especially helpful in college math, ; marketing, retailing. Addressable memory; • automatic constants end repeat; sign 1 change. With batteries, charger case. ;. CADIA ~ CANOGA P.ARK CARSON 89.95 Rockwell 63R slide .rule with scientific notation Performs complex calculations such as factorial computations, degree/ radian conversion. parenthetical operations. Ex.Ira large display. Ideal for engineers, scientists. Batteries, charge~. case included. 1BR electronic calculator with percent and memory Ideal for everyday use at home or in the office. Percent key solves add·on and discount problems. Algebraic logic; automatic constant end repeat. Floating decimal and negative indicator; dual clear entry/clear all key ; 8 digit display. DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH EWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLLYWOOD NORTHRIDGIE ANGIE 'THE CITY' PUENTE HIUS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO TORRANCE VENTURA WHITTWOOD I I n your ''Charg-all'' . account today! l Shopping is easier with a Montgomery Ward Charg·ell • account! You can enjoy convenient shopping at any Mont-l gomery Ward store. Take advantage of the terrific sales with no money down. As a "Preferred Customer" you are eljgible for advance notice of money saving evenL<s and J special sales! You'll enjoy your new Charg-all account. 1 Fill out the application below and mail it today. charg @OD CREDIT APPLICATION FORM PRINT NAME.__ SPOUSE'S FIRST NAMo~-----------PHONE·~~-------­ tAroa Codei ADOAES,_ __________________ crrv ______ _ nowN STAT ___ ZIP·--------DAENT HOW LO""-------- JF LESS THAN 2 YEARS. PREVIOUS AODRES>---------------==-------- SOCIAL EMPLOYER_ ________________ SfCURITY NO,~·------ EMPLOYER'S ADDRESS------------------------- ANNUAL n Under S• 000 n $8 000-SIO,OOO NUMBER OF DEPENDENT~--------INCOME. n S.t.000-S6.000 IJ $1 0.000-$12,000 0 $6,000-$8,000 lJ Over 512.000 '!'OUR BAN'(... __ .----------------0 CHECKING. 0 SAVINGS fS•.-.c:ll) OTHER CREOIT------:;:=:--------------- ACCOUNTS 1"'-1 I~~~ ii~ ANY) (Ac:o:o.o"4 Nwmtle<I YES, I would like lhe convenience of a CHARG-ALL Accounl at WARDS and authorize you to process my application for an account in accordance V¥ith your established credit policy. SIGNATURE OF APPLICANT----------------------- &OUACE CODE I 105 • MAIL APPLICATION TO: MONTGOMERY WARD, ATTENTION MR. HESTOR CREDIT SERVICE MANAGER, P.O. BOX w,so, NORWALK. CA. 90650 ' I - • • 'lt8' D . .\11.,~ PILOT EDITORl . .\I_, P . .\GE ! An ·Encouraging Vote . Following lhe strike vote taken among Newport- Mesa teachers last week caine the good news that they would be back in their claurooms when school resumed today. 1 , It's refreshing to learn that fewer than 100 teachers out ol the l ,100 in the district believed that a strike would be th" be::t route to take, in light of their salary discontent . ' . Most te".chers apparenUy believed that a dis· ,'trictwide s tnkt would cause mote damage to the educatmn proctss -and to their position -than it would b<,"'ortn. Wethinkthey are right. . Tl1<• dos•ppointmeot ol many teachers with the dislnct ' final pay in"1'ea5e o(fer of 6 percent is refle<tt<.l •n the fact that slightly more than half of the ttc.tl't1£::r., voted to reject the pay offer as a matter of pnnc1pie, even though they 'ejected a strike. They also did coosider other possible actions such as staging a sick·in. or "ithholding their services l1on1 non-classroom activitit:°:), or contributing money tu c.tdvertise their position. or taking no rurther action. Al tonight's school board meeting, they may re- "eaJ whether they have rurther action in mind. A major unsettled issue is the teachers' demand tt1at the some 540 teachers at the top of the experience l<:1<lder receive increast:S beyond the 6 percent, since they no longer get the yearly experience step in- creases. The proJ>(l5a1 would cost the district another $320,000. The t eachers have been advised the district can consider no further salary adjustments until after thE: official state enrollment taJly i~ taken in October. This is the figure on which state aid is based. If it is less than forecast in the district budget, it can significantly cut the district's finances. Thi5 fias hap- pened before. One thing tl1at apparently has beer1 taken into ac· count by the t eacher~ and the school trustees thus far -and appropriately so -is that while 6 percent pay increase isn't as much as teachers wanted. or as much as some others in public or private employment r~eived, many in public and private employment re- ceived less. And, some whose property taxes also go to help f111ance schools received no increases. And more than the usual portion of the taxpayers have no jobs. Holding further negotiations in abeyance for a couple of months seems reasonable. Costly Afterthought As originally envisioned, the project was to have been a routine undergroWld ut,ility conversion along Newport Beach's Coast Highway, Jamboree Road and Bayside Drive. But the red tape and added expenses are becom- ing staggering. After fighting for eight months for coastal com· mission and state transportation department ap- provals, Southern California Edison Company and the city finally saw,the contractors arrive for work. This week they hit a new snag -one which would add $43,()()(; to the project's original tab of $340,000. The new impediment amounts to an afterthought by the California Department of Transportation -if any travel lanes have to be closed on Coast Highway from the bay bridge to Jamboree, it will have to bt done at night. That means premium pay for workmen and an entire new contract. The latest provision has stoppEd \\Ork, temporari· ly , and all because of an aftertbm;g ht. The agency delivering the edict should reconsider the provisicr •. The autumn traffic load is no! all that Wlmanageatl~iJ' lhatstretch. -- ' . , \ • I ' . ' . ' • Don't Blame Speed For Traffic Deaths A .Happy Welfare State ., " ., ., ., To the Editor : This letter is a response lo your editorial of Aug . 19, entitled ··sack to Normal?'' which con· cerned itself with _ .. "The steadily increasing tendency of drivers to cheat on the 55 mph speed limit .. :· You claim that .. _"the result of the cheating is showing up in statistics on traffic fatalities . -.:-citing an increase of 26 death..: over a similar period last :year. The thrust of your editorial would seem to indicate that the cause or the increasK. fatalities -l::: the fact that people are in· creasing their ~peed on the Jreeways. WIDLE THIS may indeed be the case, I feel that it is incum· bent upon you to show not only that the increased fatalities all occurred on the freeways, but also that a majority of those 26 dealhs were caused directly by ~ drivers exceeding the speed limit. ~ As you may have guessed, I disagree "'ith such a contention. : I feel that a proper study of the f j matter might show a greater in- crease in fatalities on surface streets rather than freeways ; also, that some factor {notably alcohol> other than excessive s~ed was the cause of those ac· ctdents which did occur on the freeway. In fact, if you were to in- vestigate the matter I would be willing to bet you a steak dinner that the increase in Orange Coun- ty traffic fatalities is not due to an increase in traffic speed. Perhaps "this is a rather grim subject on which to base a wager, but it seems far less grim than ig- noring the more direct causes of traffic fatalities in favor of re- venue-producing speeding cita- tions. PETER B. MARCUS T-"'*'" 'l'eaaur To the Editor Recently you have run stories on the fee tennis system that drops the net to the ground after the metered time runs out. You quote the commissioners as say- ing they are not interested in the reveµue but in seeing that players have a fair chance at get· ting on the courts. This is an ad- mirable objective, but the solu- tion involves an oversight of the major problem : confiscation of courts by the Parks and Recrea- tion Commission itself for the purpose of teaching tennis. Those who play the game for enjoyment {which is who the public courts are for, right?) are continually prevented from access to the ~ourta Or are kicked oC( after only a £ew minutes or pl·ay (preceded by a lpng wait) by public lessons administered by the Parks. Beaches, and Recreation Com· missiOn. · IFlll'E admit lhere areaoinsuf · ficjent number of public courts avail~ble to meet demand (and we must if we entertain qse of this net-dropping system), then the o~jectlve or these day-long and evening.long (Wlder the. few lighted courts available) series of lessons becomes a mystery. Not only are the courts ·pre· ~mpted for th~ lesions thtimse1ves, but presumably an appreciable Percentqe ol those who have taken ttie lessons, come back to l'urther .Wavate tbto overcrowded court condl· ; ( MAILBOX ) Uttu.s from readn1 are IOdcomf' The right to condenae ldtns to fi1 rpocr or eliminate !ibd is resertlftl. Utters of JOO word.t or leu will be given pre/nenee. AU Letters mll.3t m- elt.Ide signature and mailing address but names may be wU.hheld on re· quest i/ sufficient reason is apparent _ Poetry wiU not be published. tions. So the sword that cuts the tennis·playing public from use of the public courts is double-ed&ed. Provision of cheap lessons for an already overpopular sport (for the facilities available) is not the function of the PBR com· mission. On the other hand, where sports, and recreation facilities are available and are not being used, cheap lessons to promote more use of the facility is indeed a public service. The Commissioners should ex- amine the obvious and abandon their vested interest in the ad- ministration of an endless series of cheap tennis lessons. Then, in · stead of contemplating the pay- ment of $2,000 per court for in · stitution of a policing system they s hould contemplate the pay- ment of about $6.000 for addi- tional courts on already availa- ble land. LES WAVERLY ca-D-..,,ed Tothe Editor: At a time when all the citizens of Newport Beach should be unit· ed in an effort to eliminate the airport noise problem, Mr. R. Duitman (Mailbox, 9-4 ), an Eastbluff r esident, instead sees fit to create dissention between east and west bluff residents. His contention that Westbluff residents get more Political ac- tion due to higher property values is petty and in fact un- substantiated by the facts. ~tr. Duitman has damaged the cause he professes, instead of directing his venom at his fellow Newporters, he s hould continue to protest to those in power who ean make changes. W. F. LOWANCE u-ef'o-d To the Editor: The membership or Coast Camera Club has requested that a big thank you be extended you for exposing our need for a meet- ing place one night per month, after Cal Stewart of the Newport Beach Recreation Department and the City Council, (with the exception or Councilmen Milan Dootal and Pete Barrett), de· cided that we should pay a fee of about $21 per night for a meeting place. These added charges would have forced many of the senior and youth memben to drop out of this twenty yeat' established photography club. AA a result of your publicity on our club'• sltdatlon, state Mutual Savings and Loan or Newport Beach ifrered ua a delightful meetin room with adequate aeatln for 80 )>eople at no chars•· We cannot undenland the ttrance atance that the City Council and the head ol our rec:reaUon deJ>t.rtment have U· aumed oo this matter or di .. couraclnc the growth and booerll I Dear Gloomy Gus That· s not a bad idea to change the name of the Ne'>''J)Ort Free\o\·ay to the Costa Mes.a F'reeway. A name lite that could really cut dov.·n the traffic. DJ.A. G-y G"' c.rnmenU lte 1 ....... tteo t,. •NM<' I Ind do "'ell roeces»rlly rTllKI llW ¥1twl Of I~ lltWIPl~r, !otr>d 1'0Ut IW! """to Gloomy Gltl, 0111, Pilol. of such a recreational group in the community, when, as a mat- ter of comparison, in an actual telephone survey from Santa Monica to San Diego, not one of the cities contacted charged any fee for the use of a meeting room for photography groups that were open to the public. FRANK KINGAARD President, Coast Camera Club To the Editor: · On the Sept. 4 ectitorial page you 'Nere the one who made a "'Dilly of a Mistake'' wh.en pass- ing ofr a distinct violation or the city charter of Newpart Beach as a staff error that (to you) seems clearly an honest mistake. Just how do you know it was "an honest mistake"? When we have been bombarded on all sides of government with hankv- panky goi ngs on from the vefy top to the very bottom echelon you can't be sure of any such thing. With five eouncilmen (includ- ing Mayor Pro Tern Dostal -a topnotch attorney), the city at- torney and city clerk all passing the ordinance. it v.·ould appear to be more than "an honest mis· take ... They know the require- ments. ELEANOR D'AMBROGIO Repeat Perf•,...•-'1 To the Editor : How will Congressman Hinshaw vote \\'hen :Mr. Kiss- inger gets back from his peace talks between Israel and Egypt? Are we to allow American civilians to be placed in the mid· die of a potential time bomb? In W9rld War .I , the British asked the French. who were fighting the Germans, ''How many men do you want us to send?'' And the French replied, "Just one, and we'll be sure he·s theJirst one to get killed.·· Are w ~ to be drawn into a re- peat performance? EDITH C. EWENS UftB-r.s- Tothe Editor~ While I am in favor of the city upgrading and maintaining the existing animal contfol racllities. 1 would hope that they would carefully reconsider tbp pro· pased ban or dogs from the beaches on a year-round basis ... I, for ~one, Ill resist paying a SIO Ileen•• fee for my dog to sit in my backyard while the beaches are nearly empty, l would even su1ge,t tl'ley C!Onsider lifting tho ban during the daylisht houn during winter months. I J .FERGUSON , The Optimistic Swedes STOCKHOLM -I have spent the past week here in Sweden looking for a really angry person. It has been a futile search. For the Swedes, in contrast to almost everyone on earth, are brimming over ~lth good will and op- timism. Their self·confidence stems es· sentially from one overwhelming factor. They live in a social democracy that provides them with both political freedom and cradle-to- g r a v e :security. As a conse- quence, they seem to have no real worries - at least as far as their liberty and material comforts are con· cerned. Moreover, they ap- proach whatever minor dif- ficulties they may have with dis- arming placidity. .. There are no problems we cannot solve,'' Prime Minister Oiof Palme told me the other day, and that was not an idle boast. MTIUN recent days, for ex4 ample, the media here have been focusing on a government pro- gram to build ramps and widen_..._ doors so that invalids in wheel chairs can navigate jnto and C STANLEY ) ~-KA_R_N_ow __ around public buildings. It's the sort of issue that would be buried in the back pages of the newspapers in the United States. But in Sweden it's the kind of sub- ject that arouses attention, large- ly. because there aren't any big- ger problems. Wages are high. Medical atten- tion is free and excellent. There are child care centers for mothers who work. And moSt or all, unemploymer:it benefits are such that a worker will receive almost full pay if he loses his job. In short, this is the wellare state par excellence. Yet wellare is not considered onerous. improve the Jot of others. So, in many respects. Sweden is very much like·a big family in which everybody feels reS)>onsi· ble for everybody .i.e. This at· titude even extends to con .. servative politicians who criliCize the soCi8liSt regime. One right·wing politician, for' instance. looked at me · in astonishment when I asked if be would cut back welfare pro- grams should his party enter of- fice. "We are also dedicated to social equality,'' he said. THE SAME is true for big bus;.~ ness. which is given special tax advantages by Palme~s SoCialist government on the theory that m .. dustry must function 'smoothly tn order to assure jobs and economic,:;uccess. This need for business tranquility is un• BY OUR standards taxes a.Te derstood as well by the trade un .. excessive. They must be to cov.er ions, which are careful to avGid the cost of th..e country's various disruptive strikes. welfare projects. But most Ithoughttbatlmigbthearabit Swedes I have talked with do not of i(l4ignat-ion when I went to see eomplain. one Of the leaders of the Swedish For one thing. they are fixed.on Communist party, and.Id.id-up the notion that everyone must be to a point. • equal. Thus they raise no objec-He complained that workers. tions to effo'rts to provide all while well paid, are not earning citizens with a similar standard · enougb,"tO buy summer homes, of living. • sailboafs and second cars. Secondly, they fervently ''I neve,r thought that t would believe in the concept of -hear a Communist regis~ a usolidarity;'i....wmch means that -complaint-like-tbaP,1-Hold him. they are prepared to tbake He smiled pleasantly a.nd personal sacrifices in order to replied, ''This is Sweden!' An Exi/,e Dreams of Glory 1 The lonely figure stood on the sands staring out over the end· less gray sea. It had been more than a year now since he had been forced to resign his high office, yet he still wore its symbol over his breast. Once he had been the most powerful man in the world, his every word' iesture, ex - pression and tone a subj ect for i nten se discussion by the hi gh and the mi ghty. No man had b ee n more hated and feared by his enemies. nor more rawned oo and admired by bis allies and followers . · He had dwelt amidst the panoplies of power and ordered kings about. But he had left office in humiliation and dereat, der 1ivering one last sentimental speech to his staff_ There had been talk of bringing him to trial. The government had intervened. J.Ie was rree to leave hiS house and grounds. but he seldom did. He had been ill. ltis once-large rortune was all but gone. His aides had deserted him one by one. It seemed th.e end. And yet. •• HIS ENEMIES stlll feared him. They h.ad written him ott berore a.s a broken, hopeless man. He had stunned them by rising out of political exile and once again 5eizing the reigns of power Wltb• tho rllJlantly pragmatiC tactics th.at marked his career. t They knew and dreaded this Phoenix·like quality. They ( ART HOPPE ) watched him closely. At any hint ·he still thirsted for a role· in world affairs, their outrage knew no bounds. So be dwelt quietly in his estate by the sea, virtually a recluse in ' this prison without bars. On rare.· 'occasions old friends would visit to reminiSce about past cam .. paigns and the dead victories. He fell into a routine. The one task he placed above all others was writing his memoirs. He may have made a few errors in judgment. He admitted that. But if there was one thing he had made perfectly clear it was that he would ·appeal over the hea~ or his enemies to· history. THESE MEMOIRS would be his appeal. In them, he would re- count the alliances be had forged , the treati.es be had signed, the glorious central role he had played upon the stage or mankind. Passions· would cool, scorn would fade and history would absolve him. Eventually. be would take his rightful place among the great leaders of the past. ' · To all appearances he seemed to be living in tho dusly yesteryears, his only posaible Quotes Peace, if it ever exists. wtll not be based on the rearofwarbuton the love of peace. -Herman. Wollk. It Is nodillcraee to start all over. It Is usually an opportunity. - ~rgeM.Adam1. future a generation away. And yet •.• -And yet those who have once tasted power dream _strange dreams. Some said he was mere.. ly biding his time. Somehow, some day, his enemies still feared, this all-but-penniless, all· but.friendless, broken. defeated, humiliated, physically ill, c:losely·watC!hed man might yet in some .superhuman fashion ~e 'Once again out of political exil~to cut his swat II across the world. j AND SO It was on that an4r- noon in 1817 that Napoleon Bonaparte stbod on the sands of Saint Helena slari.ng out over tho endless gray Atlantic -dream:- ing who knows what strange dreams of glory. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed. Publishft' Thamat Kuoil, Editor Borbora Krribich. Editorial Page Edilor The editorial page of the Daily Pilot seeks to inform and stimulate readers ·by presenting on this page d~verse commentary on topics of interest by syndit'at. ed oolumnlsts and cartoonists, by providin( a forum for readers• views an(! by pres~nting this neWs'paper's opinions and ideas on current topics. The editorial opinions of the Daily Pllbc.appear only In the editorial column at the top or the page. Opinions ex- pressed by the columnjsts and cartoonists and letter writers are their own and no endorsement al their views by the Dally Pilot. Mould be Inf~. Wednesday, Sept.10, 1975 j •e.et.g Thia eommori r Money's Worth method ol need~afysil 'fll . 1be NU....al TMl<ForceoaSt Ald-.a25-member~ol aperta, chaired y Fraocil Xepslel, r~ OODl'!l'I"' ...... ol education. It made its ptupMoil In llar 1m -more llwu year of dellberaliona. • 1RB ASSVllPnON ON whlcll the new m.ttiod ii baud ii a1l1I that your plftllls ha"-' an obli&atlon to ftllance,.,.... educ&lloa tl>-1n eJrtent thal they can. r...1mtance, W'a.., that In your family oae parent ii worl<IDI, there .,. two children and one i1 in coite1e. "Ball patk" estlmates ol the CSS are that at a '"'°' -·or $8,000, no eoatrlbutlon rroin YGllr -ta would he ~; at $lf,ODO, their eontrlbullon wOllld he '1,UO; atsu;ooo, '3.210. , . • • · Or let'• Hy there ... rour dllldHn, oae In c011.,.;. Eno Ill the '10,000 '""'" income level{no eontributlob rrom,.,.... parents would be eiq>ect«I: at $12,000, It would he jlllt •: at$11,000; It l"6uld be$870; andat~OOO,onb .;fOO. ' YOU CAN ESTIMATE your need by wine the .....Ubeets and tables in another CSS -let. "llleetlnJ Collece Costa, A Guide for Parents and Students." Tbil Juide ii (ree and oullin .. ·ie.i:,m; step the css 1yotem used to analyz.j the need ol over I ·on tam.ill• each year who complete the Parents' Confidential Stateftlent. Both the form and booklet are available from your hl&h school couuelor, community agency d1rector or colle1e financlal aW administrator. Don't rule yoUfSelf out simply because you tiunlt your family'• Income I• looblgb lo qualify (or financial aid -for income b not the only facl<lr In calculating need. Need alao depends on aueu; number of cblldren in \be family, debts, expenses and colle1e costs. You must subtract the family cootrlbution (your pareota' plus yonr own contribution) from the tot~ co•t of the collece yob want lo attend. So, U the need-analysis procedure lndkates :J<)U and your parents should be able lo CCJl!trlbute $3,000, you would not show need at a coflesethal-==· but JOU would have consider•* Med at_, _ SCMO. 11 would then be up to the rollegeto'decide.bow tnaeb and what rorm of ai4 it can offer you. TIHLLUSTRA TE NEED analyob, conaider the case of Mary who wants to go to a school that ~ti 12.CMO a year. Mary 's parents have a coMbinect~me of $12.511, but after deductions for such expenses a5 medical and dental taxes; allowances for housekeepinc and llviD& espen.sU (totaling Jl3,119), Mary's famlly ii left with lillnus $111)(1 Mary's faro Uy abo bas a home equity ol.$Jli,840 and $900 In savings -but after taking retirement and other allowances into account, they are left with $4,US in assets. ThiJ, total of assets is multiplied by 12 -coot lo derive the income supplement of $496, which Lt then added to the available incbme -that'negative $60f. Mary's family clearly cannot afford to contribute toward her expenses ~ Mary herself la expected to use· some of her savings and summer earnings to make up part of the family contribution. In b8r cue, 35 percent of her savings and other assets ($140) and $500 from her summer earnings (more Is expected after tbe flnl year) make up her total contribution ot $640. This is subtracted from the S2,040of her school costs to arrive at her need for aid: $1 ,400. THE FINANCIAL AID orficer at the college always makes the final estimate ol need and may adust the CSS's recommendaliOn, up or down. He then decides oo. the lot~ to be awarded. usually in the form of a '1paekage;'' or combination of grant. loan. and wort ... MARKET HIGHLIGHTS I INDEXES Due to late transmission today's listing will not appear in the Daily Pilot • Ntw Yortt (Ul'I) -Tiw ftnowil'lll HM .._,. U. stocks 11'1•1 11 • .,, .-....0 PnO$l ....i lost tM most N$ed °" ~ ot 11tf1W19t on IM N•• YOf't! 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IJ I• J • 'NOfm(O .~ I Jt 11'--'<> WoodsCp .oll • lS 1'~-"- 'WOOl-1,ilO 1 11' 1S-l•o • • Wootlll:t.10 . 1116''>· World Alrw • 10 J >,o-\, WTIOly J ... 10 • SI +-~. Wl#fu.... c. . . ' ,.,. ............ c.r. .. ,. l -'· -•n-xeni• QI 1 " Mi '1\lo )(Ire lftC 11)1 6 11 I~-> v .... ·~ ' ,, ,,.. -~. Y"'O'MO.. Ml ' 11 ,,.,_ '0 Z..1tCorii .111 I ) 11"" 2-1• .JID ' 10 1•\f)-•, ;i.y,.. Orp •• ' S'h-"" :t~tl'IRICI I S2 J06S :>!>'·• · 1'• l:Wll l...t :t2 10 I\ ''•-10 NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Shell Oil Co. struck additional oil and gu in an area off the Louisiana Coast where the water is more than !KIO feet deep company officials announced Tues: d11. The strike was 100 miles south· southeast or New Orleans and two miles from a previ~ly reported oil and gu discovery. Engineers said the new well was part ol an efJort to de- fine the discovery site. 'Jaws• Bite HOLLYWOOD Cl.JP!) -"Ja •" ha1 become the big.est mo~y­ mak.ing movie ln cinema history Unl\'Onlal Studloe llMOW\ced Tues: day. .1 --.:r- I • • , ' Bans·· Snake ·Handling, Poison Drinking: • NORTHAMPTON, . t!ogland !AP) -Two yean ...,, llodney "Uttln&, father of •ix, bad a vuec:- tomy. Then la1t Oct<>ber, bJa wife gave birth to their 18ftlltb child. Now Uttlng, 32, bas been Jailed for three montbo far making a hoax bomb call t6-Nartbampton Hoopltal after wb,lcb oome 400 pa· tienta Were ev~u~ and one womand.Jed. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -In a rul- tns which it 1ald rip1 ou.t "'the tbeoloatcal heart'' of the Holine11 Church, the Tenneuee Supreme'Court bu banned snake band.ling and the drinkina of poison dwing religious ceremonln. ·· . The il-0 ruling, written by Justice J.., Henry, held that public snake handling in the presence of other penons ls a _public nuisance ' ··we reco1nize tlut to· fcrbld 1nake . bandHng b to rem.,.., tb..-~cal heart or the Honn ... Church and this baa prompted thl• court to lnve1t11auo and research tllil mlltter throuab an un· usually extensive opinion," lho court said. It added, however, that the free ox· orcbc ol reliJlon does not Include ·~ · rlgbt to break tbe law or to maintain a nuisance. ' S~u~~ SPECIAL Reynolds Wrap ALUMINUM FOil Seals in fresh· ness. Giant size. 12"•200 ft. REYNOLDS Brown-In-Bag See lhru bags for . oven cooking. BOX OF 8 10"x16" 48oz. ·RAGU Spaghetti Sauce • Plain •With Meat • With Mushroom 1.19 • '.'Ten ... •ee bu tlle rlCbt to ,...m acatnat the unnee.aary creation of wldowl and orpbam," the court l'1lled. The nillnl 1temmed from an llll-- llon -"1 a1a1not Ullm Paek, li1 ~ ol the Holln-Qiurch <4 God IA Je1ui Name, and bb fallowor1. l>illrict Attorne:rffenr P. Swana elalmod several persona were bitten by rat- tle1nako1 during ffrVICOI at Pack'• Dtllreh Jn the East Tm.1=uee IDOUD· • 'NEmE Hot Cocoa MIX 1 oz. EA. • Just add hot . water. BOX OF 12 Envelopes ARRID Anti-Perspirant Sprar 1 . ElllA DIY •.• To be sure . . . Reg., Un· • ·•ctnle4' & light • 8 oz. 'EA. Powder. . PRE-CONDITIONED :.J~~ BRECK SHOP 7 DAYS A WEE K Shampoo-in HAIR COLOR Longer lasting co-- lor . . . gives you 1 19 so~t. silky hair color , uniquely your own. • NO DEPOSIT -NO RETURN Mother's Pride SOFT DRINKS Cola, Root Beer. O"nge. & Straw-59c berry. Yz GAL EA. PANASONIC "TOOT-A-lOOP" AM Portable Radio Twist it. It's•• ''S" · ·• 1r "O" Tw•1t1. san ••· Easy-grip roll-disc tuning & volume controls. In colors 6 95 . . . Battery not Included. #R-72, 1 Peno••• ' 'F Ii ckerl_L LADIES RAZOR A shaver. that cuts hair .. _ not your ski n. Exclu- siye wire wrapped 1 09 b~des. for a smooth shave. • •n,,.....,.,.,..1 Stereo DELUXE I-TRACK . CARTRIDGE PLAYER llh matched twia speaker system. Slide c;ontrols for voluftle, tone, balance. Auto or manual chan- nel selection ... 6 watts music power ... features S" wide range speakers.44· 88 #484D-607 ONLY o AM Pocket Radio For bneball ca111es. beach, etc. Easy carry with handstrap., 4 88 Operates on S"olt battery, whic h is included. #1164 • NEWI CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE \ LUMAGLO AU PURPOSE LAMP With a n-.od of its own ... Direcl light for •nt task. Fits in anywhere. Clamps to tables. desks, shelves, .etc. Asi't Colors. ' ' llHlftr Cl111p • #LMlf • - • & TOll0-1711-~ \ ' ' Today's Clo In~ • . s•oeks - - ' q ~ 5 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 197S ' '" OR•NGE CoUNTY., CALIFORNIA c TEN CENTS •• ill~aires ·Escape • l!.S. Taxes -1-e ol $17,'183,0Cll, an aVua1• of fa'.::$4 mfillc:m pu ~ . ''n«e were alto 11 (odler) mllllonalres wbe> owtcled -tu after eolewotlllg their tu ileduc· -...a end I ta," llCCOI dine ... :lRS')Dfbnnotio'? lot 1"3, Yanik Hid. • .Be dJd._Jiot ldentllY I.be mil· l:""alrFS .ot-~P,l~ '1be tac.tics .. ....,,.... ........... ytlkMN~ ROOFTOP TABLEAU SHOWS" FIREMEN FIGHTING BLAZE Ch•rcoat LlghttM' Bi-Foi$13,!IOO Reatde~tt•I Fire . . . ' •• , o .ufs· · Mesa Fire Losses ' ' . By AllTBUR II. VINSEL Ofa., Delly 11"1114Staff Quick thinking by a fU"e. cap- taih was credited today with drastically cutting loss in a $13.500 fire which raged through Anwa.r Sadat Escapes Deafh _!ll>t in EfQPt ' LONDON (AP) -President.. Anwar Sadat of Egypt escaped • an usauination attempt at bis Jliadclu.alters in Alexandria, the B"t.lslt Broadcasting Corp. - .B,llC -mOnitoring service quoted Vo'ice · of Palestine radio in Baghdad today. The brief report said two of ~t·• guards were shot. -the bi:oadcast gave no other Cletaill. . . Sadat., 86, became Eni&•s pre- tident aller the <1eath-ot'.Gamal Abdel Nasser in i9'7o. Three ;ears later, he led Egypt into the Octobtir' war against Israel. Tb.e war ended without clearcut militar.y victory for either side, but it greatly elevat- ed Arab self-esteem and led to U.S.-sponaored negotiations between ~gypt and Israel on the occupil!CI Sibal. Howe.ver, the Sinai disengage- ment agreements hafe earned Sadat bitter enemies among Palestinian guerrillas and ,radical Arab governments who ch.ar•e. h&. -is 4.bandonin1 the P'alestin[8n · cause by dealing aeparately with Israel. the roof of a Costa Mesa home early today. lnvesUgators said two firemen sustained minor injuries when they fell from the rooftop while baWng lbe 3:30 a .m. ~aze in northeast Costa Mesa, bizt the oc· c\q)ants of the home escaped un· injured. Fi.re Inspector and Battalion Chief Ed Lewis said neither fireman tejl,uired medical treat- ment, altbough their tumbles will prc>babl)t lea•e them with bn&ises, acbH and pains for 'a fewd$1.ys. Damage lo the Richard McMillan residence al 3742 Drake Ave., could have been far more severe, if not for the quick thinking of Capt. 'Larry LaFresnaye. "When they arrived on the scene, they found the roof -the whole top of the house -totally involved in names, .. s,aid Chief Lewis. Firemen burst-into the blaiinc house to determine if any occu- pants were still Inside ancl found the names had1 not yet burned ·down below the ceiling level into the home it.self. Ordering bis men to work at top speed, Capt. LaFresnaye told them to save the furnishings, shrouding everything with heavy rubber salvage cloths. "I feel he did the right thing," said Chief Lewis today . ''otherwise the McMillans would tlave lost at least $10,000 more in contents oftbe home.'' He also said the blue was an unusual one, if his theory about its oriain is correct. "l feel it was started by an electrical charcoal fire starter,'' he explained, although the , (See FIRE, Pogo AZl ·~=· ta.xet for~ 1,000 ~ ealifornlans.......Wd be -by • total o( *5 lnillion a year under a bill •J>ll"'ved by I.be llote usem 1>11 5'-l 7 'Iloe9day. <II dlmlnlsbet the "&enlleman farmer" deduction that enabled former Gov. Ronald Reagan to pay no 1970atate income tu:-. lTbe measure by AS · semblyman Don Bootwr!gbt t[). Coa<ordl. would reduceotberta.x abelten and aeek to lnause I.be minimum tax.,. the wealthy must poy.) ' lo edilition lber~ were ''54 in· cll.tdual• with ocijusted .,.... In- com .. of belwttn '500,000 and $1 million wbo paid no federal In· come ta.x and 292 indi\!i.duaJs with adjusted croaa ine«ne of between $200,000 and ssl>o,ooo who pa.id no individual income tu." Vanlt, a member ot the tax· wrilinl Woys 'nd Means Coln· mittee. al.so said that 15 m.IJor oU companlea paid forei.ln govern· ments about eight times as much tax u t.bey did to the United States in 1974 . He said "it is appaltui1 to no\•" thot the companies listed payments of $9.554,112,000 to foreian countrt.es. but only re· ported $1 ,309 ,130,000 In U.11. fedsal lncome taxes_ Vlinlll added: "I have 11r.!,I doubU.ib•t t~e federal lreal~ 8ctually reeelved that a-mt of money in U.S. taxes.'' He Hid the companies which reported that lnformation to the Se<w1tles and Exchange, eom. mission In usable form ti..! -ir proximate net incomes of Sll.80'1,023,000. v;allerga Guilt Upheld Judge Stands Firm on Conviction B7GARYGJlANVIU.K ot_ .. CHlty ,. ... _.. Ventura County Superior Court Judge Robert Shaw refused today to overturn the conviction of Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga. Simultaneously, .Judge Shaw refused to dismiss the Grand Jury indictment that charged Vallerga ~ early May wltb seven felony crimes. Kidnaping In Mesa Reported One kidnap and auault victim 'Ii.AS bein,g_.questioned.. by ~ta Mesa pqlice shortly after noon to- day and another'• whereabout.5 were still unknown, following a downtowq area incident. The second man w-. hustled into a van at the Union 76 service station at 19th SJ.ireel and Newport ljoulevord.lii(,Jour ?.!' i~ 91< 11 a.m. pilode, pOU.e Hid. 1 ~ His rompanion, wno was not identified by detet'tiveJ , managed to etc•~ the quartet. but not before Ile was brutally clubbed with a large tim6er. "They knocked him around pretty good," said Detective Sgt. Sam Cordeiro. InV'estigators said they had de· termined at least one of the vie· tims was acquainted with the suspects, who fled in the van with the hostage. Fears were growing for the safety of the ktdnaped man, although police thought at one point the suspect van had been stopped by police in the Anaheim . · area after a radio broadcast of its description. PatrolSgt. Don Casey said in- vestigation-provect-tt-to-be--the wrong vehicle and tile driver and occupants were released. Investigators -said they un- derstood the beating ana.. abduc· lion involved ·s oU\e sort of monetary transaction that left certain parties le·ss than satisfied. Gun Law to Browrl SACRAMENTO "cAPl -The state Senate narrowi, approved ·tegislation Tuesday •that would force customers to wait 15 days before t-aking possession of a pistol purchased from a gun de· aler. Under c urrent law. a five· day waiting period is required before a handgun buyer Olin lake po!Ssession or the weapan, KIDS RETURNING An estimated 25,630 students returned lo Newport-Mesa schools this morning and district officials '""reported everything went smoothly, despite prior con- fusion over bus acbedules and rumblings of possible teacher protests .. It waslut month that a Ventura County jury convicted the 53- year-old aases1or of six charges, incluclinc conOict or interest. mis· U&eoipublic funds ~embeu.le- ment. , · ·The best VaJlerga's attorneys could get for their efforts in court today was a 48-bout delay in sen· tencing. Judge Shaw agreed to set the assessor's sentencing dat~ back from 5ept. 16 to Sept. 18 to allow petitions for a new trial to be · heard in the state SupremeCow1. Vallerga1s attorney, Richard Murphy. filed his petition last week, but told Judge Shaw the court would not be able to ron- sider it until Sept. 17 al the earliest. Should the high court deny Vallerta's appeal ~fail to or- der a delay in sentencing, the as,. Panel lflenaber Ousted New Charges Arise • In Mesa Water Flap ..87 ALAN DlllKIN Of .. ~ly ~liot ..... New developments, charges °"" r~ttab heated up the con· troYeny over the Costa Mesa Coull!J'wate'< District today. Herearethi!developmenfs: z-:'f'vice. station dealer O.lfy ..... staff,..... HE'S DISGRUNT\..ED Ex-commlasloner Evans Senate Fails To Override Veto on Oil WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate this arternoon upheld Ford's veto or a crucial energy bill, assuring higher prices ror fuel, food and most mamif'ac· lured goods. The Democrats, who control the Senate, were unable to muster the votes necessary lo override Ford's objections lo a bill extending controls on oil prices for !'lix months~ The vote wu61-30, or six votes short. The vote handed Ford a piajor victao in· his eight-month-old balUe with Congress over energy policy. Phillip Evans, an announced candidate for both the water dis- trict and the Costa Mesa Sanitary District elections Nov. 4, protest.- ed that he had not been re- appointed to the Costa Mesa Traffic Commission and charged that Ile was dropped becaUM! of hi• c*ndld•ol .. , while anotber unitary district candidate wu not dropped ; -Costa Mesa Mayor Alvin Pinkley, who is also a director of the water board, corllirmed that Ev8Jll had not been re-appointed because of his candidacies, but added that the action was also taken because Evans had been a council candidate in 1972 and he was expected lo run again next year. -Evans responded thal he had not made up his mind to run for the council again, but now he was determined do so. -Water district mana'ger Ray Hudson defended the work of the water agency and maintained that water us ers would not benefit if the dislrict were to be consolidated with the city and rWl as a city department. -Assemblyman Robert Burke (ft -Huntington Beac h) con- firmed that he was still holding a bill whose amendments had sparked the controversy, amend- ments which some regarded would make it more difficult for the district lo be operated as a ci- ty department; Burke said that he would not let the bill, now on the Senate floor, go forward with the conlroversi al I anguage in it. -Costa Mesa City Manager Fred Sorsabal r esponded lo criticism that three waler dis- lri ct candidates were cit y employes, a nd derended their right to run . Evans said that he was sur· prised when he heard that he had not been re-appointed lo the traf· fie commission. an advisory board whose m embers are not paid, when his two.year term ex· pi red Aug. 7. "The first l knew about it was when I got a certificate of ap- preciation, .. Evans added. He said that he contacted Mayor Pinkley and was told that the re-appointment was not made because ~e was running for the water di.strict. Evans said that he was not satisfied with that <See WATER, Page AZ) senor will automatically forfeit his elected olflce next ~undoy, when sentenced. The penalty on lbe slx felony counts tor which he-bas been cc.· victed could send Vallerga Jo state prison from bneto lOyears. Today, Judie Shaw said he could not find a basis for reven· ing the jury's verdict in the arcu-menta presented by Murphy. lSft VALLEllGA, Pai< AZ> ··-RULING REVERSED My Lei Slayer catley Court Upsets Calley Ruling; Guilt Upheld NEW ORLEANS (AP) -The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals this afternoon reversed a ruling that-extensive pretrial publicity made it impossible to try William L. Calley, Jr. for the murder of 22 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai, and reinstated his convictien. The votewas 8·S. Cailey, 32, has been living as a civilian in Columbus. Ga ., since U.S. District Judge J . Robert El· liotl overturned his conviction Sept. 25, 1974. The Army appealed Elliott's ruling lo lheSth Circuit Court. The appellage court said : "The efrect of the publicity on the American public in general is or course uncertain, but material contained in the record beljcs the District Court ·s conclusion that (See CALLEY, Page 112) Coast Weather Mostly cloudy through Thursday. according lo the weather service. but some sunshine inland areas in the aft ernoon . Continued cool with hi ghs rrom the upper 60s at the beaches to n'ear70inland. In his three ,Years in office, Sadot bas CJ'USbed ot least Olle in- ternal plot to overthrow hipJ. That wu seven months after be took office. DOW POUNDED A.GAIN; QFJ'' 10 · Coast Took Part • ID History INSIDE TODAY The little PennsyioonJo town of ElysbMrg bw been abruptly Ihnat onto the roop o..r one of th11 plac111 thoughJ to bl! the r11fuge of f ugitive Patricia Hearst See Page Al6 • NEW YORK <UPI) -!'mes clOled sharply lower alonJ a broad front tOcfay ill ·mciderot~ lrlldlng on the New Yort'Stoclt Ezchange. The Dow Jones industrial aver1.1e. a 12.36-PointloierlJ'ues.. day, wuof.f 10.09pa1nt.sto817.66. Declines outnumbered ad- vances by about an 11-to-two marp (Tables, ,87). ~ca were lower in moderate lradln&. QD tbe American sto& .E>:cbant•· • Tbe editon of tb8 Costa Mesa BiCt!ftlelmial G•~etle do not want ' Ca I I f o r n t a n 1 to I e e,l poycboloctcaJJ~ out ol ll when It comeS tp commemorating the AmtriCan Revolution. Tbou1b Tueaday, Admission Day ln California, served al a re-. minder that Callfomia wu one of 71 Aatea that joined Ute lUlioo alter 17113, lhe'GHette's editors have unearthed a blltortcal link that estobll.sheo California u • "United States Re-lonary _JMll'ther.~·' ... .. No tonger& we bavetothink • stirring events that took place on San Juan Capistrano made one of the eute171 seaboard," writes the most significant contribu- editor Henry Panlan, a history ·lions -$229. professofl at Orange Coast California's Jink to the revolu- C'dlege, in the latest issue of the ,. lion was provided because Spain, Gazette. a publication supported Uke France, was bent on helping by the tity of Costa Mesa . "As a the colonist s as a means 1of co1°"11Uell, ntabliahed formal-wounding its old advenary, • ly bf Spain in 1769, Calllomla England. editor Panian explains. ~a direct contribution to tile ~ accepted the invitation st:rug:gle.'' ol two French conspi.raton to It was taxed by the Kini 61 .,iab,liab a aearet fwid to send Spain to pay lor arms for the all· fl'Pll lOlhlf colonl1ta. onl1ta. • • A '11um"'7 Jradlng company, colonists in 1776 and trn. But the Spanish monarch, Carlos Ill, went further : on Aug . 17, 1780 he issued a royal order to his American subjects to collect donation s for the war on . England. All persons under 18 were exempt. Others who were Spa.nish were to pay S::Z each plus Sl per Indian. The order, receive d in California on Aue. 12, 1781, con· • tained instructions f« the tru.it and grains of the annual harvest to be sold to raise the money. All missions, presidios, and pueblos lades At Y-~k• AJ Mntff ..,..,"' as Moak .. • t'::i:-.r'. .,. ~ ~· AJ MIM .... tl ..... 0....it!W 0 ,.,. °' ..... c.-t, ~ .,,...._.. °"'_.. .,, lyMt,......... D;oMfl "'-'k" ... """"" I[........... ,,. °'· Sffoiow;l"Oflft l:lltltN9-ftl l•l·IJ ..... MIA.'11 "'-• k-1 T•wl1 .... ..... Ct-tf ni..t9" ............. cc .. ...... AMIW ... n Cl.,...... ... ..,, -· .. .,,.,, ... .. A4,., Al.If Cl•t ., ••• "' •.. , .. . 111·iJ ~-.; •• M .I) ' I ' af -... -•Port rr..,. tbe ,ADd lbe 'W!d•co t\lmed uP in called Hortalfz et Cie, was set up r~orch ftiid'1 tba! llae !'lth'1 . I<> p~e munitiOOI and these the Jwis4l<tlon 'at-llif<l"'l I llreanna and powder llided the <SeeIDSTOllY, Page AZ) •, i • ·~ , r '\ I I lYPllOT c Wtdnetd1 ' ·-10 1179 ... Piiot . ' • lO ·CQunty ' I • :r;;~p~~:~'-~ ............ h • l w:· A'." Annexing ' . Logbook Heads Get 'OE Toro Treveiyn Tr,eneh Died in Mystery -.•• c~\e1'dtlf Pay Hikes . .u...=. ·' =TO~~NIG;;:::::er .::=::::;. Ni!:WPORT·MESA SCHOOL' -. •,• .• ...._ beeauae anoiber tnlllc commission membff, 0 Ro1ar n.a, .a m..,l(emftlt Clllllllltant, ~blae~telnlJl*OMll"7 dlsb;ld, had been,....,.,..__ Plilkle1 PObrted out lliat EYaM wu a ctinaldate In -diltrldl, bad bMn a couneU condlclate la Base Eyed -- By AJITllUll ll. VINSEL ~ ot .. o.uy~•st.tt No man ls an island entire of itself, as John Donne the ~wrote, but some exist that way, and so no bells tolled Tuesday for Trevelyn Trench, a tired old man of mystery andmwery. . He was 7S and died last Wednesday. Death came to him in a Cost.a Mesa convalescent boSpital and-chances are -he would have welcomed it. TRENCH WAS COM!lllTl'ED to a ' simple grave in picturesque El Toro .Cemetery, high in the rolling Santa Ana M,_ountaios eas t of the San Diego Freeway, where it is silent except for the birds. The man move4 through life in sucr:i l a way he left no known mark upon it, no . ;, 1 son, no daughter. '; ~ WHO WAS TREVELYN TRENCH? .E. Was he a poet? Was he a hobo? Was he a Y1NsE1. mechanic? Was he a lumberjack? Was he a farmer, a merchant, a laborer? Was he once wealthy? Was he a churchgoer? Was be a drinking man? Was he a member of the Elks Lodge somewhere? ''NO ONE WAS EVER able to learn anything," says Bill McConnell, of the Orange County Public Administrator- Guardian's Oftice, who handled the meager estate of Trevelyn Trench. "He had nothing. He died leaving only a residual amount in his patient fund,·· says McConnell . · A $700 funeral was agreed upon between the county and Bell Broadway Mortuary and after that, Trench's estate contained only a paltry sum. HE DIDN'T EVEN LEAVE a toothbrush. Trench's last 1,460 days of life -give or take a few - were spent at the Bayview ConvaJescent HospitaJ . He was transferred there in 1971 from a Brea h.ospital specializing in mental illness or neurological problems and sometirnes senility. Records mostly lost or misplaced show he was admitted as a transient, apparently taken into custody by police at some point in 1971 for his own well are, then turned over to the county. HOME FOR HIM BECAME 350 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, where the days and nights soon blended into one another. The sparse life story known ofTrevelyl'l Trench was un- brok.enby bi&hligbts.Qr ex~itement . He didn't converse with anyone, ever. "He never received any mail," says McConnell, the county public administrator to whom the aftairs of the un- known or unwanted are consigned upon death. "No .one ever came to vislt him. __ " says a hospital spokesman. THE LA.TE MR. TRENCH, however, was not alone for the final event in a Ufe lived largely in obscurity and perhaps loneliness, and the lostness otthose men who try to be islands unto themselves. ,•'Tb.ere was somebQdy from the mortuary tor graveside committal services,•• said mortician Neil Abrams. And there was retired minister Rev. Jim eottpn1 SJ, wh,. presides at Public Administrator funerals for local tolks free of charge, ollt or Christian duty and just to keep in prac- tice. "He said a prayer,"· Abrams remarked. "And that was it. l"ro•PageAI VALLERGA Burglar Gets Two Tickets to Knott's Included among them was a charge that so-called secret funds handled through Orange County Superior and Municipal Courts are equivalent to the mishandling or public monies charged to Vallerga. "If it's all right there, (in the courts) it's all right in this case," Murphy argued. But a rebuttal by Assistant Dis- trict Attorney Michael Capizzi ' put down Murphy's pleas as Judge Shaw agreed to do no more than allow Vallerga's attorneys the additional 48 hours to begin their last-minute flurry or ap- peals to higher courts. Three weeks ago, the Fifth Dis· trict Court of Appeal in Los Angeles quickly denied similar motions for a reversal, a new trial and a delay in ~entencing. ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT Detectives investigating the Tuesday burglary of Newport Beach furniture upholsterer Robert Desmaris' Jensen sportscar may stake-out the tront gate at Knott's Berry Farm. -Desmaris, of Balboa Island, said whoever entered it behind his shop at 1831 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, stole two multi·ride ticket books containing passes to the Buena Park amusement center. FroMPageAI FIRE •.. McMillans denied they barbecued anything for Tuesday dinner. Chief Lewis said the hoop-like incendiary device was hung near the family's firewood supply out- doors next to the side of the house and fairly close to the wood. Burn patterns showed the fire was a long time starting and originated near the firewood pile in the vicinity or the charcoal starter. · By WI LUA M SCIDIEIBEll Ot-. 0.11-, Pitlol:MM't Only 10 of Orange C.ounty gov- ernment's 50 top adminb¢raton were 1ranted pay raiael by the. boud of 1upervisors today after an hour-long executivesession.1 One administrator, Agricultural Commi1sioner William Fitchen, was given a pay cut because of the transfer of his former Air Pollution Control Dis- trict responsibilitieS to the new Environmental Management Agency (EMA). Supervisors themselves and County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas will receive no pay in creases this year. Following the closed·door session , Thomas recommended that pay increases only be given to county executives whose performance bas been outstand- ing, or whose responsibilities tiave increased or if the pay level was not on a par with similar jobs in other large counties. · Another kev factor in de-termining who received salary hikes was a series of "report cards" issued four DlODths ago by Thom as' office. The "rePort card" rated the top county administrators on a scJl,le or one to five based on their performance on the job. Fitchen's salary will be re- duced from its current level of $2.451! per month to $2,404 .. The monthly salary in~eases granted by supervisors included: -Sheriff-Cororier Bradley Gates, an increase from $3,106 to $3,168 per month. ~Tax Collector·Treasurer Robert Citron, an increase $2,127 to$2,900per month. . -County Clerk William St. . John, an increase from S2.59'l to $2,620permonth. -County Recorder Wylie Carlyle. an increase Crom $2,120 to$2,158. · -County Marshal Don Rhea, an increase Crom $2,619to $2,756. The pay increase was mandated by the county court judges. -Environmental Management Agency Director H. G. "George'' Osborne, an increase from $3,843 to $4,040 per month, reflecting his new status as a super-agency chi et. -General Services Agency Director R. I. "Cuba" Morris, an increase from $3,366 to $3,466. -Personnel Officer R. A. •'Burt" scott, an increase Crom $2,74010$2,824. Fro•PageAI HISTORY. • • were to comply.,. But records show that crops were poor that year and the San Diego and San Juan Capistrano missions pleaded poverty to gain exemption. Mission President, Junipero Serra, approved the plea Crom San Diego, but nClt San · Juan Capistrano's and the mis- sion paid $229. The pueblo known as Nuestra Senora la Reina de los Angeles de Porciuncula (now simply Los Angeles) managed just $15 of the $4,6S3 California provided. -pa.man reminds readers that Spain did not order the donations out of dedication to the principles ot.the American Revolution, but "to strip and embarrass a rival power." Panian credits Fr. Maynard Geiger, archivist at the Santa Barbara Mission Library for pro- viding the documentation on the royal order and the contribu-' lions, and Dr. Robert Barger of Cal State, Long Beach, for pro- viding another source of in- formation. Service Oarified Memorial funeral services for Prof. Joseph M. Guiel, who died or a heart attack Monday, will be at 2 p.m . Thursday in the Newport-Mesa Christian Center, 14822nd St., Costa Mesa. Monday, the Daily Pilot incor-recenUy reported the Set'VJ.ces time. • Robert N. Weed P••ikH!lt •IOCI Pllbl+11wr Jack R. Curlev VI<• P1e~1oe~1 • ...., C..11e• .. 1wo.....,.f ThOmas Keevi1 l:O+IOJ Thomes A. Murphlne • .,,.91!'1Q l dilW O\lrles H. Loos Rkhard P. Nell •u o.1..,1 Mt,..91"9 l'.dlton. Freedolll at ai Murderer Serves 48 Years SAN QUENTIN (AP) -Odd G. Cornell, a double murderer· im· prisoned nearly a half century ago, is a free man at age 82. Cornell was sent to San Quen· tin Feb. 9, 1927, where he await~ execution by banging for the slay· lq of bi. wlfe and 14·year-old step.d3]ter In Bak.,..fleld. He blld turn d the gun on hlmaelf after g tliem and.-uffend a gapinaw undinthechtst. Aller arriving at .San Quentin, Cornell spent hours bawling un. der his bed. The warden had Cornell transferred to Mendocino State Hospital, where he re· malned for five yeara, stW facin& the dellt.b sentence. • The death sentence was com · muted to life imprisonment without possibility ol parole in lltl4, and the no-parole clause was lilted by former Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown ln 1966. Cornell was subsequently paroled but complained that the famlly he was livinC with in Qaldand "stole everythlaa from me.'' He asked to be retW11ed to SanQuentinafewmontbslater. ' Cbrnell was released from PTison again tbls week and authorities said Cornell this time will stay with tlie mother of a felJow inmate in ·San Frandsco. "I'm not going toloal,''Comell said. "She's aot •ome odd jobs I can do." BOARD -Recwar meeting, Mariners School mol!U·~e room, 7:!0 p.m. COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Reeular meeting, 13711Adame,11!.m. OCC LECTURE -"Enlarfdnc your Boundaries,•• Dr. ArthW' L. Bietz lecturer, OCC Audltcnwn, 7:30p.m. · 'l'llUMD/\Y; SEPf.11 UBRARY 'FlLM -Laurel & Hardy a11d "Seall," b.Y Ja<ques Cousteau,. Coot a Mesa Ubrary, 7:30 p.m. Free. Story hour, 10:30 a.m. Ex-Manson 19'12 and would p~ be a B1 DOV GLAS F1111ZllCllE council candidate 8'11n. "I lhinl< -·Irvin"'•. C...,.ity~~. in'··•· It's better '"" hlm and the elly ·-""""'" =,,.. bolllforhlmnottobeCfttbecoal· totrJ to annes El Toro Marine mlsslm until the el-are Corpe Air Slatton in 111 effort to over:'tbe'fn= added. -block county 1upervlaon' at-,.=.~Of~~ for~1!':!i;:; ·~i:u..e":aJ~.f jet dlltrlct, and be did not believe ·~b'; strategy 1e11lon at Hot! would seek a comclheat. Tllelda)''a council meetial re- Evano.saldlbat be wu lllU not suited In orders to City Manqer satisfied and \rowed tliat be ~am Wollett to bel!n-on would campalp I.or a council a four·pron&ed assault on the seat next yeU'. county ache me. Water dlatrict mana1er Tbes-include: Hudloo made several polDl!I in -Gelling s•pport from behalf of.the agencytoclq,....,. "anybody who is anybody" la the ing that there i. no dupllclllloo of area tliat would be alfecUd by services between ~t;J: depart-noise and crash danger from in.: ments and the dll~ maintain· creued use of El Toro to lobby int tliat special dlAiictl are the atainlt commercial Olghts. purest fOl'm Of local JOVC111DeDI -Tbrealenlng tbe supervisors Member Set · ataUmewhentheb'end,beUla, with !ecol action and outlining , . > i. to'. larger govohunent, aDci for county government the likely " cl•lmtnathatlhedlltrlctmuot.. coft the county. ''They might F Inquiry wellnmbecaW1ellwerateaona bavetobuyouttheRanchorTur-or 111er fee IJld not a tu rate, and Ue Rock or whatever," Coun- that tlie ~aeon there have been ell woman Gabriell'I Pryor •aid. · few c811dldateo at electlm time -HaYinl Ille city tr-'•· B v-u~ --•-•-·"--II in the put indicated that water lion comlJlwlon stully the mat-Y -.-.-.~s•A..QM:l-users were sathfied with the ter and come up--'Witb more Federal autbo!'Jlles plan. to -aervice. atrategyrecommendaticns. locale and Interview a onetime ' . , -·Aaoex1n1 El Taro Marine member of the Charleo llJIMOD He said that tlie districts bill· Corpe Air station to give ihe city "Family'' who lormmYJlRd.Jo_ ..J.N_pmc;edur~!t_--1.doneOD~-primary -jurisdictloe-over -the a New lfampsblre town that Iy ~., a11d coiilillioflie.Jll'>' !aelllty and strip it from Preoident Ford will visit Thurs· 8'&Dlm.ed. tb~ ul)I ~e clt7'1 supervisors. day. . . _ computer. , ~ • .-. Marine Corps Public Inlorma- Offic1als md1cated they wanted In Sacra me B\&rke....:a&fd lion Officer John Shotwell at El ~talk to the lormer Unda ~a-that be was awmrtiwont On Toro said today the council ac- bian, a former Manson_ Fam~y wtlat to do with the bill that has ti.on "is a shot out of the blue for m~mber who once lived 1n nowbecomeahotpotato. us. Wereallyarenotpreparedto Milford, N .H., one or the towns on · _ comment on it •• Ford's motorcade route. Mrs. He ,aid that he~.,. w!Wng to Councilman' John Burton at Kasabian has remarried and move it forwud 111114 «lllall Tuesday's session pointed out state and local police declined to fc:rm -one °' red'IJninl the dis· that tlie Marin ea tradiUonlll disclose the location or her new trlct's boundariei1-JPC)eq11•llztng have opposed joint co~erci.) home. the number or Nolen in each andmilitaryuseoftbelleld-..,. . Ford's appearance Thursday division -bun1aid ~be bad called "joint use " to help Republican Senate can-heard some officials in Coda · didate Louis C. Wyman·will be Mesa were unhappy Mt_b the his first trip amorig the ~amendment&, and Ile WoUld not American people since be was move it on with th05e amend· threatened last week in mentsinit. Sacramento by Lynette Fromme, a Manson Family member. · Preparations for a presidential visit already were under way in the nation's seventh smallest state Friday _when Miss Fromme aimed •·-loaded AS-caliber pistol at Ford from two teet away. The Secret Service and other law enforcement agencies say they plan no unusualprecautlons for Ford's visit. "We always take the sanie pre- cautiona," said Thomas C. Smith, special agent in charge of SecTet Service ln New England. ''J see no reason to change." ' l"f'Offl Page Al • CALLEY .•• anyone ramiliar with the news re- ports surrowiding the My Lai massacre would automatically convict Calley.•• A c·entral issue in the appeal was whether anyone accused of a notorious crime becomes im· mune to trial because of huge .amowits of publicity. The -amendments would-re- move ttre district-fro-m; tbe jurisdiction of the Local Agency Formation Commission. It has been claimed that a col'isequence of this would be that it would be harder for the district ever to be consolldateil Willi the city. Water district directors will meet at S:30 p .m. Thursday and may-decide then on what to do with tlie bill. City manager Sorsabal said that be rese~t~ a question that has been raised in the Issue on whether city employ-. could nm for election in the waler, district. ''To me that ·mufts tliern second-cl .. s citize~·~ 11le !Said. ''On the contrary. I encourage them to take part in 'the com· munity.'' He ·contended that ·an argu. ment that there would be a danger of water fees bein'g spent on other city services if the water agency ever were to become a ci-ty department, was not ~alid because, he said, the tees CQUld be put into a water utility account and kept out of th,e generol fund. Coast Youth Hit, Killed OnHighim,y ~&,y.ear,olcLW.est-Nawport youngster running bouie from bis lailt day at the beach before school started was struck and fatally inju~ed Tuesday after- l\OOl1 on CoasfHighway. Steven Scott Harding, SOD ol Mrs. Sylvia Harding, ot 235: Cedar St., apparently tailed to heed the screams of his pla)'mates and darted ontl> the busy highway near 81st Street about2p.m. • Police traffic investigator Jim 'Dodaldson said the bof' ran directly Into tlie path of an auto heading eastbound, driven by Robert Arnold Armstrong, 47, of 1019 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach. The investigator said the driver had no chance to avoid the impact. He was not cited. Patrolman Chuck Olmstead · and Patrol Sgt. Reed Gloohen had been eating lunch at a nearbf restaurant when the tragedy occurred. -' Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES 'BACK TO SCHOOL Gym Pants . Reversible T-Shirts Shoes fol'.' School & PE Warm up Suits • Sweat Suits V Neck Long Sleeve Orlon Sweaters-6. 95 , Open 9 to 6 .: ~ Sunday SPECIAL CLOSE OUT SALE "Abco" Brand Warm-up Suits Reg. 24.95 Sale Price 15.90 Tops 8.95 ' I Pants6.95 Subject to stock on hand 535 Center 646 19l9 • ----'- _j_ • . ' I . . I oli(:~· ;''Cliief • . .. ...... .Kiiied ~ Flash Floods ·. i • ' 4 - Broun.Says ~hool · UfficiO(;s · Ovelpaid • • l " ,·. R S D IOS ANGELBS-(AP) tbe United Teacben ol "b'ecauaethere'1a_. esi.HnJt w~p esert -s...lt PretlAeDll', ool· .Lo&Aqel -illl number of people Jn ' I ~·~ 'ii\.'-' lere cban.,.llb~• u4 Brow.ft told tbe thla aoc:lety who -doo't ' ,.,..,..... abould bnoto .......,. that acbool Id· bl,,..wOt'lr. and ther-6'1•. _ -SAJl..J>ISGO--(A.P) = •tlllr11 11 ld•d""-pq tor ~r.~•=::fU... ar ~1e.i1traton sboul~~ 4veataraernwqberwtlo ; · JI ~ B bl II ~ ......., ...., ~-...--no more-than _, dm't-hne llneanJncM •r 00 er 11 re-...., .......... la Saul...,, ClllfGnda, triu4t'-~ 1119 GoY. __ are and •that. William work." ' :1'it! ~5rt~1"t: lll~~l•SllAlrmlQuitclalmedU.lffear G.lllowoJr. Jobnaton, t)le L~• ?f:~u~ oald,equat.. --111,llai;r,;:.m:b7t!leweetend. , ,·-n. ....... .,..mpll..t• Anpleaacboohsuperin-Brown told the ' ........-d cl ~ A~· , ....... _ ... aald ed your-job, then Ille teadeat who mates teacbers they, loo, must 1111 llllllllDe IJ .,.. -"'-'• --....._,_ JOU pt ... -•· aid "lower y0ur s••h'·" in' A• P•P•.r ••Id ~;r.;t;:-,:;:i._:aomf.:'.:C::~~ · ::'Jit;d',!..~to -,;;-~=ulitJ>OC>-aalaryneaot1au:i1':' -n'"""'""!" turned la Ida,... jlft=l250-feet wide :irall oit water that wu "at etart lia-rinr to pay a bj-· plewbo ba•e mell1incfld ilipatlon TueldaJ aft« ,1eMt feetdMp." U..,"lbe1ovemoraald WOt'lr.1bouldhaveto1M1¥ Theoalaryofthe8X>V• meetlna wit-JI. ett1 Bt1e , pn ..,_,,. ~ -Qu:penler--~ald-lbe-car wu-• 'l'lmd!l in--a apeecb-to for the privilege .,._il$49,100. · • • ) ''sin'•er Diana Roes =..~~=~_;,~=.i=~~· ~ .... illl exb• ftrft. . •a..-ing . ~ State .. ::r-!t wi!'eb'erf~ JU WOIWl'SDY w,a fOU!ld two miles iJllwi .-.~•I ~-·-=.i:..~·~~~-'~-: ii'.~~~b~:·::d!~ ~~~:..Tl·==:~!..01nt-.be yourtax..-. aed_aca __ 01lntmSeplelllber llaobler, 48;'1iaa -causln C $45 ,000 ta art bl.t badre ...s other metal.,.. Ida clodiea 1----------...... -...------'-=-~~-------=------­bea.tly' cr!Ucbed fOt' 1111 dam_,e to the hQme =r.!':'!':"l lnto .~fod. water to wade to the Now two g-,_, to ..-'Ill"' tax-deler'"" RMINment ......,., e1<1y: ...... Jn the ulaure ar ~ lts contents. wori: ........ from T-•apl, Mojave, ~em 1. °"""your aOc:ount .. Septembo<.,,.. FldoRty Fode,., Wiil lbtorb your enill9 $7.50 trust .. priYate paycholoslcal · m1o4 lllalloP worlr.ed lllroiicll the nlcht to rescue '" t0< 1175 flloa·k•pt ""i rollce _ __.... --~~----··d • I i II _..._ -Y~, ~ ea were ml!ed ln 2. Tht _,.,__,do, tht more,.,...., rou·n eem tr .. lrom 1975 lncoma Tax. coa11aec or _ am N 'ILW'.:....:..• -...1•~-wullbef~"-lll•-·pl...._ v~ ~ lY.1.111.l ';"'""'-' • -'"""".· -. LR.A. (lndlYldual Ratl19ment Accocmt)-ioR ANY EMPLOYED PERSON • . ,. ~ . -, . avy . ' 'ftlslPSt'riatLASD&htnhtlatctmswasbed ' If Mt ~td bY• 1'911tfled Ntlrement plan, Ht "Id• up to $1,500 eat'Md Income each year •xempt • 11'1 eh »ef-fdR S • B cot 1D111J .atietcbea.ar otber desert IQlldwQS ...s from cu""nt _,.,Income tax. No tu on..,..,....,,,_, ••mod, either. Enmplt: St.500 deposited : 0 .,... •• -n_, ays e's .· Callfanda HJ .... w•~ 1'111111 clllcen .._ •• ,_. to In on I.A.A. will reduce your IV18 Income tu by a minimum ol 1330 If you ore In a 22% btaellat. ~-.c..&."tJ.V '"'c·u keeP1rafftc..:;mi • .........,_ 'KMI" llelli••ll eccountt for the tetf..emptoyed afeo 8YlllabJe-trustee fee,,_ In Septemt>er. Do It.-. 'Wllelmlnllt dete•ted ... 'Bisexual' depatl• reported the ..... or • a.1ear-old -u• v ~~~pa !,~"a~':rb~y~::r..r,o~h~·· · · · '-19Uth TueadaJ allemoon after be and a . COSTAMESA-tlEWPOllTBEACH:1855HarborBlvd. -The S..ate bu .,_. • , ;)leanwb!le. Sall BenmdlDo County aberttra ¥Fl federal foveniment to SAN DIEGO (AP) -flientl were •wept tnray Jn l'U5blng Oood waters 19ottlc:eato-youatalowldo. Teopea-tlie-lnvelltlpt,lon "Tbe federal-1overnmerit five~~~"""'"' Lenwood Wub, 1-==================================-of the assasslllatloa of b aeetlng tlllmlssal ol a: Offi aid R·..... .J amlll President .John F Km-Stilt by a N oval Resene -••rt • _, ar o and Roland nedy. The resolutl.;.. wu officer who s'ay1 the O'Neal, 17, of Barstow, were riding their cycles.In killed Tuesday on a g.21 Navy Is trying to' get rid an offrood vehlde area off Interstate 15 when them- vote. . · · of him because be ii a cident occvred. . Sen. Dennis Carpenter bomooexual. -A DEPUTY SAID the youths were struck by a (ft-Newport Beacb), a As~t. U.S. Atty. Peter wallolwaterfivcfeetblgb...SSOCeetwideandcar- former FBI agent, said Bowie said Tuesday that ried downatream about so yards O'Neal left the only purpose of re-the federal ~ourt suit by unc1~· · WI _...,. .,; ·• wJ as mlllon Operiingtheln•esU-atlon Cm-Or . Gary Bewtoa ~.._ ~·-• ..-~on.mo cYwe. ara o, ~--"d ~ to d'· tlf't the Heaa Is )>l'emature d U-._ .. ..., wu carried farther' downstream ud was wvw ~ ~credi ha•&l!lf<Gtoallmb. FBI. He said that no te1alalncenoneoftbede-Slru«&liag lit reach bis liiencl O'Neal lost bis criminal jnveatlgatlon In Cendan~ live Ill Southern ·c{de. :After bebig cut !Jff by the iutt currellla be his\Or1 has received ao Callforrua. Heas,.'4, 5"1S . dove imderwtter, swam 10 feet to bis bike aiid .:..ie much discussion as the be Is ~ • bomooexual hack for help01be deputy said. Kennedy assassination. but 8 bisex,ual and adds ''It was 1cary."' Jaramillo said later. "'The that bis sexual t~tes ~ water kept rising and I coUld see it was a matter of : !Wete PoNc!tl Set . . = ot the Navy s busi· awlniming !Or safety or~· " when he d~,,. I BURBANK (UPI) -A Navy review boar4 Jn ...S swam to a spot where 0 Neal and deputies Lockheed Aircraft Corp., in... San. Diego teco111-pluckell him from the waten. stung by a bribery scan-mended last June that NEITHER YOU'l'R was Injured, said Deputy dal. said Tuesday tbat lt Hess, a Santa. Barbara Wal M 11 . "butth , 1 · will apply U.S. laws to educator, be dtSCbf!"ged ter C V&Ul, ey "fa otsmarter-'.'. oY.erseu. sal.es......tr:ansac-from the Navy as a · California 395, tbe major route linking san tioos refusing to make bOmosexual. Bern~ Keno.. :was OOOd:~ iii sections, payoients to foreign gov-Hess i~· attached· to1 _a especially in the vi~y al its intersect.ion •With emment officials if such Naval All' Reserve mut ~~onda 58 and i'lear the Qoroo Air Force Station, payments would be ii-at Pt. Mugu. He'says his unmediately to the nc:rib. legal in the United sexual preferences have ...... The. Death Valley Natiooal Monument was re- states. never 8 ff e ct e d ~ i 5 ported isolated with roads wasbed out 80 percent to A ''stringent new performance as an of· tbeeutancl..westoftbe.JWit."Ma)Orfloodingwas "-policy" has been adopted ficer. . . · .._ied alonrthe WannagooaRlver. , in the selection, use 8l)d He also accused the ,• .. payment of foreign Navy of persecuting him Aleo dected hr the llooding were Catifor,nia ••faJes cOlllultants, '' the because of bis .public 138, 127.and 190, betweeq the Lone Pine U'ea and the cdmpany said In a state-support of gay pe\)p)e's Nevada l>onler, wbilecaJlfcrala 178 Extension waa meot .... , , _ •. ~ r ca~. . ~>· ,~r~w~ Trbna antran~0>int. V_alley. J ·. .._ ~· .... . ' ';!nney .,.. . . Rockwell ele~tron1c ~alculatprs give you The Answer. 89.95 Rockwell 63R slide .rule with scientific notation Performs complex calculations such as factorial computations, degree/ radian . conversion, parenthetical operations. Extra i'°"'"""~--~ larg'e.d tsplay. Ideal for engineers, scientists. Batteries, charger, case included. 39.95 Model 31 R slide rule memory with rechargeable batteries Invaluable tor anyone working with • reciprocals, square roots, percentages. I Especially helpful in college math, marketing, retailing. Addressable memory; automatic constants and repeat; sign change. With ballerles, charger ca~e- 19.88 18R electronic calculator with percent and memory Ideal for everyday use at home or in th e office. Percent key solves add-on and d iscount problems. Algebraic logic; automatic coQstant and repeat. Floating decimal and negative indicator: dual clear entry/clear all key; 8 digit display. , 29MD<A ACADIA CANOGA PARK CARSON DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH K£WODD MONTCLAl!I NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLLYWOOD NOATHAIDGE RANGE 'THE CITY' PUENTE HILLS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO TORRANCE VENTURA WHITIWOOD -~ -' I • I -GRAND OPENING I .. Wards aU-new Costa Mesa Store opens Wednesday September 24th ' ' BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FWY. n your ''Charg-all'' account today! Shopping is easier with a Montgomery Ward Charg-all account! You can enjoy convenient shopping at any Mont- gomery Ward store. Take advantage of the terrific sales with no money down. As a "Flrcferrcd Cut<tomer" you are eligible for advance notice of monl'y :o;aving C'vents nnd special sales! You 'll enjoy your new Charg-all account. Fill out the application below and mail it today. charg@OO • CREDIT APPLICATION FORM PRINTNAME___ ____________________ _,,Q ___ _ SPOUSE'S FIRSTNAM~-----------PHONE_· _ ADORE SS _______________ _ D OWN (Area Cooe1 _ _cnv STAT~--------ZIP _______ ,Q RENT HOW LONG IF LESS THAN 2 YEARS, ------- PREVIOUS ADDRESS______________ -------- SOCIAL EMPLOYE"------------------SE.CUAITY NQ_· ------ EMPLOYER'S AOORE""----------- ANNUAL n Under $-4,000 ( 1 SI! 000·$10,000 NUMB£R OF DEPENDENT~-------"~ INCOME: 0 $4 OOO·SS.000 r ·1 $10 OOO·S 1 2.000 0 '6,~$8,000 I l Over $1 2.00Q VOURBAN~-----------------Ll CHt:C l<iNL. 0 SAVINGS (B1aoch) OTHER CREDIT _____ --,-----------------------ACCOUNTS (Nitmel (If ANY• ("'--1 (.t.oc:OU<ll ,..,,mo.r) YES, I would like the convenience of a CHARG-All Account at WARDS and autho1ize you to process my application for an account in accordance with your estebl ishe d credit policy. SIGNATURE or:'APPLICANl:----------------------- SOURCE COOf 111'08 ' MAIL APPLICATION TO: MONTGOMERY WARD, ATTENTION MR. HESTOR, CREDIT SERVICE MANAGER, P.O. BOX W-50. NORWALK. CA. 90650 I . I • I I I ' j l I I I I -, I . ' • A8 I . D .:\11_.,. PILOT EDITORl .\I; 1• \G•~ ' 'An .Encouraging Vote I Following the strike vote taken among Newpart- 1\lesa teachers last week c811)e t)le good news that they would be back ln their classrooms when school resumed today. It's refreshing to learn that fewer than 100 teachers out or the 1,100 ln the district believed that a strike would be the tiest route to take In light of their salary discontent. ' Most teachers _ •p:rarenUy believed that a dis· trictwi~e strike w<lfl~ cause more damage to the education process -and to their pasition -than it would be worth. Wethlnktbey are right. . / Tbt; dis.appointment or many teachers with the district s fmal pay increase offer or 6 percent Is reflected in tbe fact that slighUy more than half of the te~ch.ers voted to reject the pay offer as a matter or principle, even though they rejected a strike. also did consider other possible actions such as s a sick-in, or withholding their services from ssroom activities, or contributing money to advertise their position, or taking no further action. At tonight's school board meeting, they may re- veaJ whether they have further action in mind. A major unsettled issue is the teachers' demand that the some 540 teachers at the top of the experience ladder receive increases beyond the 6 percent, since they no longer get the yearly experience step in- creases. The proposal would cost the dis trict another $320,000. ·The teachers have been advised the district can consider no further salary adjustments until after the official state enrollment tally is taken in October. This is the figure on which state aid is based. If it is less than forecast in the district budget, it can significantly cut the district's finances. This has hap- pened before. One thing that apparently has been taken into ac· count by the teachers and the school trustees thus far -and appropriately so -is that while 6 percent pay increase isn't as much as teachers wanted, or as much as sorue others in publi~ or private employment . received, many in public and private employment re- ceived less. And, some whose property taxes also go to help finance schools rece>,ved no incrt;ases. And more than the usual portion of the taxpayers have no jobs. Holding further negotiations in abeyance for a eouple of months seems reasonable. Unusual Interest All the early signs of a large field of candidates entering races in Costa Mesa's two special districts proved valid: the turnout was huge_ Thirty persons registered as official candidates for three seats at stake in the Costa Mesa County. Wate r District, and 24 will vie for the two eligible seals in the Costa Mesa Sanitary District. Those totals are exceptional. Typic3lly, incum· bents arc s imply re-appointed to those boards because of (:ii lack of opposition. But this year doo.rs may be knocked by candidates all over town as they try to separate themselves from the crowd in time for the Nov. 4 election. The cause for the large entry is not clear. It pro- bably is partly a result of the publicity which painted out that remunerations of $50 a meeting are paid board m ember s. But also it may be that some can- didates have organizations behind them, bent on opening up these low-profile agencies. Both agencies do affect the growth and development of the city. And both affect the taxpayer's packetbook. The picture will becoui~ clearer as the campaign gets under way . Right now-it is intriguing and shows promise of heightened citizen interest in hometown government. , y f • I • • • c Don't Blame Speed For Traffic Deaths A Happy Welfare State To the Editor~ This letter is a response to your editorial of Aug. 19, entitled "Back to Normal?" which con· cerned. it.Jell with ... "The steadily increasing tend ency or drivers to cheat on the 55 mph ---s peed limit ... ·· You claim that . _ . "the result of the cheating is showing up in statistics on . trarric fatalities ... , "·citing an increase of 28 deaths over a similar period last year. The thrust or your editorial wou1d seem to indicate that the • cause or the increased fatalities -ls the ffict that people are in- creasing their s peed on the freeways. WWLE TlllS may indeed be the case, 1 feel that it is incum- bent upon you to show not only that the increased fatalities all occurred on the rreeways, but also, that a majority or those 26 deaths were caused directly by drivers exceeding the speed limit. As you may have guessed, l disagree "·ith such a contention. 1 feel that a proper study of the matter might show a greater in- crease in fatalities on surface streets rather than freeways ; also. that some factor (notably alcohol) other than excessive s~ was the cause of those ac- cidents which did occµr on the -. freeway. In fact , if you were to in- vestigate the matter I wou1d be willing lo bet you a steak dinner that the increase in Orange Coun- ty traffic fatalities is not due to an increase in trafric s peed. Perbapa this is a rather grim subject on which to base a wager, but it seems far less grim than ig- noring the more direct causes of traffic fatalities in fav or of re- venue-producing speeding cita- tions. PETER B. MARCUS B-eF-d To the Editor : The memperjhip or Coast Camera Club has requested that a big thank you be extended you for exposing our need for a meet- ing place one niJCbt per month . after Cal Stewart of the Newport Beach Recreation. Department and the City Council, (with the exception of Councilmen Milan Dostal and Pete Barrett), de- cided that we should pay a fee or about $21 per night for a meeting 'Place. These added charges would have forced many of the senlor •nd youth members to drol> out or this twenty year established photography club. M •result or your publicity on our club's s· uation, State MutuaJ Savings an Loan of Newport b o! ed us a delightful with adequate P1111C"h J ) ( MAILBOX ) Le!ler1 from readers are weloome. The right to condenst leUer1 to fit space or eliminate libel is re1erved. Letters of 300 words or le11 will be given preference _ All le!lers must in- clude signature and mailing addres.! but Mmei may be wilhhtld on re- que~ if sufficient reason ii apparent. Poet'll will not be published seating for 80 people at no charge. We cannot understand the strange stance that the City Council and the head or our recreation department have as- sumed on this matter or dis- couraging the growth and benefit or such a recreational group in the community, when, as a mat- ter or comparison, in an actuaJ telephone survey from Santa Monica to San Diego, not one or the cities contacted charged any fee for the use or a meeting room for photography groups that were open to the public. FRANK KINGAARD President, Coast Camera Club Rqeat Pn-fo""a-"! To the Editor : How will Cong r essman HinShaw vote when Mr. Ki~ inger gets back rrom his peace talks between Israel and Egypt? .4.re we to a llow Am e ric an civilians to be placed in the mid · die of a potential time bomb? In World War I, the British asked the French. who wert• fighting the Germans. "How many men do you want us to send ?" And the French replied, "'Just one, and we'll be sure he"s the first one to get killed.·- .'-\re we to be dra\\Tt into a re· peat performance? EDITHC. EWENS l'-h Ser11kes To the Editor: The article in the Pilot or Sept. 2 entitled "Teen Justice Une\"cn·· discusses variations a mong Police departments in referring juvenile orfende rs to probation and then on to the Orange County Juvenile }lall. Following the Saleeby report, the article men- tions that the Costa Mesa ond Huntington Beach police depart- ments have conspicuously low rates. At the other end, with ex· tra·ordi naril y hi gh rates. are the departments in Santa Ana and Fountain Valley . While not a spokesman ror either Costa ~1esa or 1-luntington Beach dt'.'partments. I can pro- vide an important element in ac- rounting (or their outstanding I Dear Gloomy Gus-- That·s not a bad idea to change the name or the Newport Freeway to the Costa Mesa Freeway. A name like that could really cut down the traffic. D.J .A. Gloomy G"' co""'""I' ••• ,.,....,.ltf<I by ,.,.Clffl •nd t:lo ''°' ntt••••••IY rtlle<l IM YltWi ol l~t ..ew1p•~r. !>er>d your Pf'I -Yt lo Gloomy Gui, 0.iilY Pilot. rl1vers1un records -<Jnd de- monstrate that divl'rsion from the court system has carry-over to diversion from a criminal styll'Of lif{'. TWO YEARS ago, the cities of Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach, under the influence of their innovative chiers of palice. joined to rorm a Youth Service Program. (The city of Irvine beca ml' a participant later). The aim was to pro..vide famil y counseling and crisis interven- tion as an alternative to referral 'lo probation and the Juvenile Court. In operation. program staff "'ork directly with the police in the respective police fa ciliti es - a ju\'enile officer thereby has a member or the program starr directly avail&ble ror referral and consultation. Usi ng a control or untreated group to assure objective evalu a· lion, we round that recidivism I as measured by the arrest rat C's) was reduced by 48 percenl by the program. The Cost a Mesa a nd Hunt- ington Bt'ach police departments are outstandin g in general terms, so the Youth Service Pro- gram is just one ractor in their low rC'rerral rates. But it is clear- ly an important one. AR:-.IOLD BINDER Director. ''outh Service Program Costa Mesa. Huntington Beach andlr"'1e Ecorwmics Clarified ( THE BOOKMAN ) MONEY: WHENCE IT CAME, WHERE IT WENT, by John Kenneth Galbraith. <lloalhlGtl MUflin,$101 · If anyone is going to make you understand the economics of money, it is John Kenneth Galbraith, whose knowledge of economics didn't automatically wipe out his understanding o( English. He doesn't talk in economics, a language whlCh perhaps is understood by other economists. Here be has written the history of Wester;!) mont;y. from anci ent Rome to the Washington, D.C" ol the 191111. H• writes witH bis usual wit, acerbity and it"onOclaim . Galbraith Is at his best dlscuu- toi the diverse !act°" that l.a'to our current financial mess. un- raveling the mysteries in britUe, tlear prose JouU..-.UPI j 11 The Optimistic Swedes STOCKHOLM -I have spent the past week here in Sweden looking for a really angry person. It has been a rutile search. For the Swedes, in contrast to almost everyone on earth, are brimming over with good will and op· timism. Their self-confidence stems es- sentially from one overwhelming factor. They live in a social democracy that provides them with both Political freedom and cradle-to - g r a v e security. M a conse- quence, they seem to have no real worries - at least as far as their liberty and material comforts . are con· cerned. Moreo.ver, they ap· proach whatever minor di(· ficulties they may have with dis-. t arming placidity. "There are no problems we cannot solve," Prime Minister Olof Palme told me the other day, and that was not an idle boast. WITHIN recent days, for ex- ample, the media here have been focusing on a government pn:r gram to build r_.mpg and-widen doors so that invalids in wheel chairs can navigate into and ( STANLEY J ____ KA_R_N_o_w_· -- around public buildings. It's the sort of issue that would be buried in the back pages or the newspapers in lhe United States.' But in Sweden it's the kind of sub- ject that arouses attention, large- ly because there aren't any big- ger problems. Wages are high. Medical atten- tiOn is free and excellent. There are child care centers for mothers who work-And most of all, unemf.loyment benefits are such that a worker will receive almost full pay ii he looes bis job. In short, this is the welfare state par excellence. Yet welfare is not considered oneious. BY OUR standards taxes are 'excessive. They must be to cover the cost or the country's various welfare projects. But most Swedes I have talked with do not complain. For one thing, they are fixed on lbe notion that everyone must be equal. Thus they raise no objec- tions to efforts to provide all citizens with a similar standard oruv1ng. . Se~ondly. they fervently believe in the c:oncept of "'solidarity,'' Which mean& that they are prepared to malte . personal sacrifices in order to improve the lot o( others. SQ, in many respects, Sweden is very much like a big family in which everybody feels respansi- ble for eve.qybody else. This al- titude eveb. extends to con- servative politicians who criticize the socialist regime_ " One right-wing politician. for instance. looked at me in astonishment when I asked if he would cut back well are' pro-• grams should his party enter of- fice. "We are also dedicated to social equality," he said. THE SA.ME is true for big bosi-- ness, which is given special tax advantages by Palnle's Socialist government on the theory that in- dustry "must function Jmootbfy In order to assur'e jobs and economic success. This need for business tranquility is un-· derstood as well by the trade un- ions, which are careful to avoid disruptive strikes. I thought that I might hear a bit of indignation when I went to see one or the leaders or the Swedish Communist party, and I did-up to a paint. He complained that workers. .-while. well paid, are not earning enouib to buy summer homes. sailboats abd second cars- "!never thought that I 'WOUid hew a Communist...regigter a complaint like that," I told him. He smiled pfeasantly and replied. ''This is Sweden.'' An Exile Dreams of Glory The lonely figure stood on the sands staring out over the end- less gray sea. It had been more than a year now since he had been forced to resign his high orfice, yet he still wore its symbol over his breast. Once he had been the most powerrul n1an in the world, his every "'Ord , " gesture, ex -~ pression and _ "y t, tone a subject a for intens e ~ di sc ussion by · the high and the mighty. No man had b een m o re hat e d <.ind feared by hi s enemies, nor more fawned on and admired by his allies and followers. He had dw elt amidst the panoplies or power and ordered kings about . But he had left orfice in humiliation and defeat,_ de- livering one last sentimental speech to his staff. There had been talk or bringing him \0 trial. The government had intervened. He was free to leave his house and grounds, but he seldom did He had been ill. His once-large lortune was all but gone: His aides hod deserted him one by one. It seemed lbe end. And yet... RIS ENE•JES still feared him. They ha~ written him o!! before as e broken. hopele .. man. He had stunned them by risi.na out of" political exile and once...a&ain aebin1 the rei.gns..ol po er wlll\ th~ brilliantly pr8"11aUc tactics that marked hJseareer. They knew and dreaded th.is Phoenix-Jlke quality. They ( AJ{THOPPE ) \l.'atched him closely. At any hint he still thirsted for a role in world affairs, their outrage knew no.bounds. So he dwelt quietly in his estate by the sea,_virtually a recluse in this prison without bars. On rare occasions..,old friends would visit to reminisce 8bout past cam· paigos and the dead victories. He teu-fnto a rou'tine. The one task• be placed above all others was writing his memoirs. He may have made a few errors in judgment. He admitted that. But ir there was one thing he had made perfectly clear it was that he would appeal overtheheadso( his enemies to history. THESE MEMOIRS would be his appeal. In them, he would re- count the alliances he had forged, the tre aties 'ht: had signed, the glorious central role he bad played upon the stage of manki.Qd. Passions would cool. scorn~ would lade and history 'tlt'OU.ld absolve him. Eventually. he would take his n,btlul place among the great leadlrs ol the past. To all appearances he semned to be living in the dusty yesteryears, his only possible Quotes Peace. tr it tver exist&. will not. be based on the fear of war but on the 'Jove of peace. -Jlennu ~oak. Jt is no di11r11ce tottart all over. It i~ usually an opportUfli\,y ... - Geor&eM .Ad•m1. - future a generation away. And yet ••• And yet those who have once tasttd power dream strange dreams. Some said he was mere- ly biding his lime. Somehofr, some dar. his enemies still feared , this all-but-penniless, all4 but-friendless, broken, dereated. humiliated. physically ill. closely-1'atch~d man might yet in some superhuman fashion "-e once again out of political exile to ..cut hls.swath across the world. , AND SO it was on that aftet· noon in 1817 that NaPoleon Bonaparte stood on the sands of Saint Helena staring out over the endless gray Atlantic -dr.eam· ing who knows what strange dreams of glory. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. Wttd. PMblilhn' Thomo:i Kf!nril, Editor Barbara Kr~bich , Editoriol Pa~ Editor The editorial pace ol the Daily Pilot seeks to inform and Slimulate l'eaders by presentJng on this page diverse commentary (11'1 topics of ioterat by A)'ndicat- ecl columnists and ('artooniats. by providing a foruoi for readers' views and by pte"senting this newspaper•• opinions and kteu on current topit-s. The ed.H.orial opinions of the Dail)' Pilot appear only in the editorial ('bfumh at the top of the paae. OplnklM u -pressed by the ('olumN5U: and c:artoonists and Jetter Wliten are tbdr own .00 no <'-nd~ of their \rieWJ by the J>aib PUnt lllould be lnltrred. Wednesday, Sept. to, 1975 , I I I I