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1975-09-16 - Orange Coast Pilot
·lodge Ends .Unification :Eleetion~; Appeal seen TUE!!OAY AFTERNOON, S.EPTEMBER 161 1975 r "'°'-••Jt1t,ttacnOMS. tlPMU • • • • • - Chief Admits Lethal Stockpile -~ Suspects NafJIJed 2 -Persons Shot . InNe~rtBar By ~HN VA.L'fERZA described as a struggle that even tlle~lly ~........ invotved a polict' aog. __.A1t _p....r.gwrumt.__oyer a 25-cen_t. __ Offkers identiliecLtbe_mosl pool game at Smokey Stover's seriously injured victim as discot~eque ill .Newport Beach Becky Bengstom, 21, or 994 ended in a blaze of gwlfire early Valencia Ave., Costa Mesa. She today, seriously wounding a suffered gun~hol wounds in the Costa Mesa woman and inflicting back and side and underwent lesser inju~es Of! the manaf!er. . surgery early today at Hoag The closing time shooting in Memorial Hospital. the tavern at 32_95 N~wporl Her condition today was nol Boulevard at 1:50 a .'m. lriggered immediately known. a inanhunt which ended with The club's manager, Fred more gllnplay in Huntington Cisneros, 31, of 600 E. Ocean Beac~ a sh9rt time later. FrQnt, Newport Beach, suffered Pohce arrested two suspected a minor wound in the wrist •te gunmen after what they wa~ treated and rele ased at Hoag. Judge Halts VnificatWn Elections By TOM BARLEY Of u... 0.11,~llel s..n Judge Claude M . Owens signed a writ today that puts an end - barring appeal -to plans for un- ification elections Nov. 4 in Hunt- ington Beach and Fountain Valley. The Orange County Superior Court judge made his decision Monday night .after nearly two days of keenly fought arguments between five lawyers in his courtroom. And he tiluck to his ruling today despite iJ1 determined last ditch attempt by Deputy Attorney General Patrick Hooper to delay the decision. The state lawyer • said he w.ill immediately file an appeal with the Fourth District Court of Appeals. Hooper added today that he believes the controversial elec- tion can be salvaged if he can ob- tain the relief he predicts he will get from the San Bernardino court. . . Officials of the Orapge County Registrar of ·Voters· office· are placing more faith in Judge Owens' decision. · Ten minutes after witness re Ports of a license number and car description were dispatched b; police, a patrolman in Hunt ington Bea·ch spotted the suspect carat Beach Boulevard and Ellis Avenue. Patrolman Bob Jeffrey, driv ing a unit occupied by a police dog, stopped the car driven by James Joseph Haas. 24 , of Hollywood. Also in the car was Timothy Carl Elliott, 22, of Cov- ina. As Jeffrey and a backup officer approached the car, Haas as- sertedly plunged both bands between the front seats, causing the officers to sus pect that he was reaching for a weapon. One shot was fired at that point by an officer but the slug traveled over the car and into a vacant field. Officers said a struggle ensued when the pair refused to leave the car, and at one point Haas broke free from an officer ooly lo be subdued and chewed by the dog. The two men were lxK>ked on charges of assault with a deadly weapon. B3ck at the nightspot in ~ewport Beach, police were still piecing logelher the story of the shooting. · Detective Sam Amburgey said (Sff GUNFIRE, P•ge,U) COPS W WDE ON 'CODE 3' They have abandoned previous plans that called for the printing today of ~ample ballots which were to be mailed to voters in ST. LOUJS <UPI) .... -Two Huntington Beach and Fountain policemen, responding to the Valley. same prowler call from different Judge Owens made it clear im-directions , crashed into each mediately before ruling Monday other in their patrol cars. Both nigbt that he was satisfied that were.injured. the state deci.s.ion to_ call the elec-Patrolman Charles Hegel suf. lion was .. arbitrary and fered a fractured left.thigh and capric:lous. . · possible head in;uries Monday. He. acr~ed, twath attor114?Ys Patrottn-an John Rice was treat- Jameo Obl:ieWd Davld Lar$cn . -ed for a fractured left wrist and illat unification el~he11d-cu1tr.-------.-- oalled fo~ b6~ •. cities without . Each 1"atd he could not dist- tlte «~at•-be1ng fully-l!lnu-., inguish the 1lasbinTliilits Of bis • of h·~mJ~fli'Y ,lif~Ct!~~sed_ arfrnmtboseattbeottw:rcar. ·~ -. . • •• • ... Three in a Tub • ·oartGun Displayed ' By-Colby WASHINGTON (UPI) -CIA Director William E . Colby, dis- playing a deadly electric dart :1--:g:;:un::; that he s aid could kill silently at 100-yards;-today-admttted ·to-- Congress the agency for five years illegally maintained a stockpile of lethal poison and weapons. Sunny s kies and warm le mpe ratures brought out the be ach crowd this week , in- cluding thes e "Three-persons-in -a -tub" at Newport peninsula's M Street. Young Debbie Rui z, of Newport Beach, looks lik e f)he's trying to get bac k over the top of the wave as her inner -tube companion eyes the coming fall . Just sit back, De bbie, and enjoy the s lide t o the bottom. Long Beach Cop Killed in Chase Burglars Hit Cos ta Mesa Medic Office . By AR.THUR R. VINSEL •• 1r-.a1~nt:. He was booked for in- °'""0.11,Pll..tMatt vestigation o( murder and· as-Burglars who pried open the A veteran Long Beach sault with a deadly weapon on a doors of six suites at a Costa policeman stalking a kidnap-policeofficer. Mesa medical and professiona l robbery suspect in a bac k yard of The charges could bring the de-building made off with valuables a Signal Hill area residence was ath penalty if he is convicted. tota ling nearly $2 ,800, yictims rc - shot to death e arly today. Police said Officer Birchall, a ported to police Monday. A task force of police. includ-1.5-year veteran of the force, and Losses to tenants of the struc- ing some 100 office rs and 27 cars hi s partner entered the area lure at 440 F a ir Drive, near plus two police helicopters, ~or-about midnight, after 3 woman-Ha rbor Boulevard, took mostl y doned of( and covered the area in contacted them from a liquor electric typewriter s, pl us sta mps , which the suspect was later cap-store. reporting s he had been kid-and in two ca ses, a stenorette di c- lured without incident. naped and robbed. tating machine and refrigerator. Barefoot and bleeding from A description of the suspect Hardest hit was eye doctor and foot cuts, he was take n into (See OFFICER, PageA!) surgeon Dr . Lionel B. DeSilva. custody without cft.tempting to who had two typewriters, the fire a .38 caliber wi apon believed P_o o l Cue Weanno s teno ma c hin e and th e to be the ctc?ath ga,.used on r...-refrige rator stolen. with a $1,090 Patrolman Robert R. Birds_aIL F k>M,-according to Officer Harlan Officer Birdsall. 40, was pro--o r FiiiiifBeiting Pauley. nounced de•d at l :J2 a .m . in St. J Mary fdedical Center in the BURBANK (UPI) -Roger A. Vic:tims and their los ses, .-downtown area of Long Beach, Starkey, 21, has been charged besides that or Dr. DeSilva, in- He was shOt in the chest at with beating a 270-pound, six-cl u de d p s y c hi at r is t and close ran11:, after he and his foot-two·inch man to death wilh a neurologist Or. George Prastka, partner, Office"r Wilbur Poston, pool cue. $670 ; radiologis t Or. Philip ~pUtupinthedarkenedregionon Police said Monday that Winsor, $524 ; d e ntist Dr. David the·~ Beach·Signal Hill city Starkey got into an argument Dudley, $30: dermatologist Dr. bOrde[Unting their suspect. -With quy flan11ran-;-38;in·a-poo)· -William Bailey. $524.60 and Janel ~-et-er&-ttlentified arr~~ be.r -last--week1· Hartman ~--M-ac-l..00n1 of IJ.io-Feed~k BU'daall'1 alleg~ slayer as Fred was apparently dragged rrom Autogenic: Training, no loss ex- Harvey, ·24 , Long Beach, a thebarandbeateninanalley. ceptaoorO am age. ;4 Colby s aid his predecessor. Richard Helms, was aware or the 1970 requirement that such material be dis posed of. But Colby did not s a y whether Helms had knowledge of the illegal stockpiling. Under ques tio ning by Sen. Howard Baker (R-Tenn. ). Colby s aid r e cord s s howing who authorized the development and s t o ckpilin g of the d e adly biologi c al w e apon w e re destroyed three years ago with Helms· knowledge . In the glare of televis ion camera lig hts, Colby showed the Senate Select Committee on In- telligence a telescopic-sighted, bl ac k d a rt g un which h e descr ibed as "'a ve ry deadly weapon.·· Sen. Frank Church <0 -Jdaho), chairman of the committee, gingerly inspect ed the we~n. s li ghtly larger than a .45 pistol a nd h anded it along to other mE"m bers of the pa nel. Co lby sai d the da rt· gun , powered by electric batteries , was one of various methods or in- jec tin g letha l doses of s uch (See CIA, Page A.2) Coast Weat her Mostly sunny through Wednesday, according to the weather ser vice, with continued wa rm inland but cool at the beaches. llighs near 70 at the st r and risin~ to the mid -80s in north county areas. I NSIDE T ODA 'l' Julie 1Viion Eisrohower i1 putting her life togel heT agmn and he-ginning to have some /un. She 1ay1 pre1surt> lo perform pu blicly h01 lessened and she i1 beginning to "/tel • ry Oge "A IT.-T l •41ex ... , 'l'Mlt s.nkt •• I """'""'··-~ lr ...... mMlli •t ,_..,T,... LM ... ,... ... ,. """"'" •• c;.11,.,.,_.. ... ' ,.,,,,.... l"llflh ~ OtMIHN .,.,, MlllltilMt ..... _ ......... ., Or-..Cffflty •• --• .. _ •t·t DNtt!Metk ft .. -· .... ......... ,. ... •• Dr.~ ..... A~! l.flt~lll •• s.tMli-111 ... .. _, ... , .. ,, T ......... ...,== ... , ..., ,_,~ .. -':t.T Wl"l!MT -•t ...,... ....... .... -, I • ' • l ,. . - --' s Tuelda , I • 4 ' SEN. FRANK CHURCH HOLDS DART GUN ALLEGEDLY EMPLOYED BY CIA OPERArives 0-.ders to Destroy Lethe! Toxin• 'Directly Dl10beyed,' Panel Charges ' Hayden: Pat Refugees on Nixon Estate " " " ~•I .. " . " ,. " ,., ... u " •• LOS ANGELES (U Pll - Senate candidate Tom Hayden quipped' i\fonday that Vietnamese refugees who cannot be sent back to their native country should be hou sed on Richard Nix - on·s estate at the former president's expense. 1-l a yden , former "Chicago Seven .. defen· dant and husband or ac- tress Jane Fonda, is oppos- . ing Sen. John Tunney for the Democratic nomina- tion . Hayde n s aid Monday that ir elected he would do all he could to encourage Vietnamese refugees to go back lo Vietnam. The United States has no choice but to help those who do not wish to return, he said. ''But I think the burden should be maybe carried by President Nixon and they should live in San Clemente." t:r.'1,-Pfllfle ;l.( ~~.OFFICER ••• ,, -n , ,,.vehicle .and license number led •--~,~-t"liem -ro-the Sign&l Hill ,,neighborhood where it was dis· 1 covered and Officer Birdsall was h.then slain when be apparenUy ..• found the suspect. •: He was shot in the chest, ap- ~-parently without warning, '-although it was not immediately .-!fetermined how many times he was hit. ... Flrsl reports of lhe killing of .)he IS-year Long Beach policeman said it sounded like an ., automatic weapon, indicating , JDultiple shots were fll'ed. l~ Some shots may have been· ;.fll"ed by the victim. The immediate area of Signal ·11-flill, a tiny oil and industrial city completely enclosed by the city f Long Beach, was immediately 'lfl"aled oll. .1LJ Teams of officers dispatched :.Yom a command post were sent into the region to track down the ~lpopular officer's slayer and . ,rm ally succeeded within three f1Jlours of his slaying. 1 Harvey was caught" between tfl:'f"O houses by two officers simultaneously, according to U . Tony Maletich, and would have been cut down in a crossfire il be resisted. The slain patrolman is no rela· lion to Newport Beach Police Sgt. Donald 8'lrdsall, whose name is spelled differently. ORANGE COAST s DAILY PILOT • F,.m,.P~AZ CIA KEPT POISONS~ • • poisons as shellfish toxin and cobra venom in ''offensive targets." Defensively, he said, the poisons were designed for suicide pills for captured agents. Church opened the panel's first public hearings with a statement saying the investigation "in- volves the illegal possession of deadly biological poisons which were retained within the CIA for five years after their destruction was ordered by the President (Richard M . Nixon )" in 1970. Colby said "middle level" CIA officer s were apparently responsible for maintaining the stockpile of poisons and delivery systems. Helms, now ambassador-to Iran, was sitting in the back of the packed Senate caucus room, scene of the Watergate hearings. Helms, CIA liirector for almost seven years unt:il 19.73, is scheduled to testiry before the committee Wednesday. Colby $&d there is in existence a memo between Helms and Sidney Gottlieb, former chief of the agency's technical services division, indicating the records were destroyed by G<>ttlieb, in November 1972, before he re- tired. Colby con~eded GotUieb had been at CIA headquarters within th~ 13;st few day~ reviewing cer- tain files, but said no one had in- terviewed him to find out why be destroyed those vital records. "Then we run up against a stonewall," said Baker. Church's committee has pro- bed intelligence activities at length in closed sessions. During those sessions, the leftover toxins at the Army's ·biological laboratory at Fl. DetrlCk, Md. came to light. Instructions to destroy chemical and biological warfare . . --.. Fro.Page Al GUNFIRE ••• th~ tw_o alleged gunmen had sTaye<J late at "the club, playing pool and drinking. Then an argu- ment erupted over whose turn it was lo play. Cisneros assertedly asked several bouncers to remove the pair and after a noisy argument both men were out in the street. They assertedly milled around outside and argued in vain lo be readmitted and soon afletwards it was closing time. As 45 or 50 patrons were leav. ing. the men were seen to run across Newport Boulevard and witnesses said Haas withdrew a gun from ·his car. pointed toward the crowd, bracing his hands on the roof. Amburgey said the crowd scat- tered as five shots rang out from the city hall parking lot. across the street. The two victims were struck from behind as they headed toward the doorway. Amburgey said it was a miracle that no one else was struck in the flurry of gunfire. Coed Slain At Berkeley BERKELEY <AP) -A 20- year-old Laney Collece student was strangled over the Y(eekend -the third murder of a young woman in five days in the Oakland-Berkeley area, police say. The body of Nancy Huber was found SUnday under a boxcar on the Southern P1clflc railroad trackl here. She was weartnc on- ly a sweater pulled uPlohorneck. · Another )'OUDI woman was killed Saturday, 'Ind the body of a material at Ff. Detric.k were 1s- sued in 1970: ~But May 20, 11 grams of shellfish toxin and eight milligrams of cobra venom were found in the small vault. Colby also told Congress that during the past ZS years his agen· cy secretly developed "devices" for use in counter-intelligence ac- tivities, including a fountain pen dart launcher. Colby also Said foreign in· telligence agents are continuing to use· drugs on ''target subjects'' overseas and administered a drug to a CIA operative within the past year ... In hi s testimony, Colby did not mention a report saying American ageflts tried to use lethal toxins to assassinate African leader Patrice Lumumba. The cache or toxins and poisons. Colby said, were found 1.1ay 20 in a small 8-by-10 foot vault which ha·d a stock of .. various materials and delivery systems accumulated over the years." They included "other lethal materials, incapacitanls, narcotics, hallucinogenic drugs, irritants and riot control agents, herbicides, animal control materials and many common chemicals,'' Colby said. The CIA had to carry out "ex- ploratory research" with su.ch substances to counter what Com· munist intelligence branches might be using or planning, Colby said. "You will recall," Colby told the panel, "our concern over the passible role of drugs in the Sp. parent brainwashing of American POW s in Korea and the haunted eyes . of Cardinal Mindszenty as he 'confessed' at a Communist trial" (in Budapest in1948). ' Colby said foreign intelligence agents were apparently still us- ing drugs on target subjects. "We believe that a drug was .admi,ltistered to one of our of. fict:rs overseas by a foreign in· telligence service within the past 1ear .• ''hesaid. As countermeasures. the CIA dev~loped "devices" to deliver poisons and other substances, he said. "Such dissemination devices as a fountain pen dart launcher and an engine head OOll designed to release substances when heat- ed appeared to be peculiarly suit: ed ror clandestine use,'' be said. * * * CIA Reveals U2 Spy Pilot 'Had Poison' WASillNGTON (UPI) -CIA Director William E. Colby said · today Gary Powers, pilot of the U2 spy pJane shot dowii over the Soviet Union in 1960, was pro- vided with a tiny poison needle concealed in ·a silver dollar in case he wanted to commit suicide. But, Colby told the Senate· Select Committee on Jn. teJligence, Powers ••obviously did not use it, and was not in· structed to do so. II WU offered to him to provide him with an on.. tion.'' .. Colby said an earlier "L-pill" desi1Ded for agents to commit suicide during World War II "look some time to work and.was agonizing ... · lfe said agents who might have the neecf to use such a pill would want ••i'rratantaneous'' resul_ts and that was why the poisons, such aa was supplied to Powers, were developed. The needle would ha•e enabled-... to in- ject hlm1elf With deadly shellfish toxin . Shooting Of2~ogs A Huntlngton Harbour worn·an charged today that her two pet dop were shot to death in cold blood by a security guard at a Seal Beach Naval Weapons Sta- tion. Mrs. Sherry Pilarski, 16912 Warren Lane, s aid the do1s. Gretel, It' female German· shepherd and Harrington, a male Labrador-shepherd were gunned down Sept. 6, on the grounds or the station but she didn't know about it until a week later. "We·re just looking ror help, .. she said , her voice breaking with sobs. "We don 't want anything like this to happen again." Mrs . Pilarski said she had given the dogs a bath Saturday and they slipped out of the gate that night and into the Navy sta· tion across the street without license tags or identification. She said that in accounts she had learned, a security guard saw the dogs out around the bunkers, one sleeping and one sniffing around. "They growled , but didn't at- tack," she says, "and the man shot and wounded both. He tracked them down ·and fired nine shots in all before they were dead.'' she sobbed. "They were petrified of guns," she says. "AIJ the man had to do was shoot once in the air and they would have run away." · Commander Harry Madera, executive officer of the station confirmed the incident. , ' He said wild dogs roamed the base for years and it could be as- sumed that Mrs. Pilarski's dogs were wild. "At the same time," he said, "we had been warned that a rabid dog was on the loose. We bad·gotlen the word that one had bitten a ~Y (Colin Rolsin) and to be on the lookout for it. "The guard had this in mind when he made his rounds " , . Madera said. "When be saw the two dogs, he got out of his car pnd they growled. He felt threatened by them and didn't think he could get back in the vehicle before they attacked," the commander said . Mrs. Pilarski said she has con- tacted Rep. Mark Hannaford about the incident. Suspect Held On RapeCount LOS ANGELES (AP) -An 11-year-old Alladena girl ignored a rapist·s 1death threat, and police say they h11ve jailed a man as a result. Melecio Alvarado Jr., 24, of Los Angeles, was booked Mon- day for investigation of rape following his arrest SU.nday in a downtown bar. The girl was rePortedlY r.aped Sept. 6 after her sisters put her on a bus in Pasadena and left in· structions with a passenger aOOut which stop the child was supposed to get off. The passenger took her off at an earlier stop, forced her into a warehouse and raped her. in· vestigators said. Guard at Prison NASHVILLE, TelUI. (AP). National Guardsmen have been ordered to the Tennessee State Prison following two inmate re- bellions in the past Jive days. ~ .,. . .., "-""' ....... SHE'S A JUDGE Betty Lou La more aux Brown Names Coa.st WoTnQll. Court Judge Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has appointed Betty Lou Lamoreaux of Newport Beach as a municipal court judge. . She will fill a new position in the Harbor Jydicial Di.strict, br· inging the number of judges on that bench to five . Since December, Judge Lamoreaux, 51, has been the traffic trial com· missioner in the district. The an - nouncement from Sacramento did not indicate who would fill the traffic commissioner's position. Judge Lamoreaux, who used to live in Huntington Beach and re- cently moved to Newport Beach, formerly was in private practice in Santa Ana, specializing in civil work. A Democrat, she is a graduate of San Francisco Law School. ·Her annu'8l salary as a municip.al court judge wlll be ~l ,677 . Fr-P~AI UNIFY ••• division would have on the lax bases of the school districts. Officials of the Huntingloft Beach Union High School DiS' trict and the Garden Grove Unified School District. also suc- cessfully alleged in three lawsuits filed against the state that they did not receive suffi- cient notice from the state on the unification proposal. If the election had been ap· proved, residents of Fountain Valley and a portion of Hunt- ington Beach would have had the opportunity lo vole on the crea- tion of new, K-12 school systems. The suing school districts would have lost a number of schools to the new Fountain Valley Unified School District if the state's plans had been al - lowed lo go forward. It was protested during the hearing that the existlng Hunt- ington Beach high school dist· trict would have become a "rem- -nant district'' and that its three remaining high schools would become overcrowded in the near future. Judge Owens commented near the end of the hearing that state codes call for tax bases in new school districts to be comparable to those districts broken up by wrification action. He said he was satisfied that this was not the case in the un·., ificalion proposals he has now ' Tr11stees ~ Oppose et Use B1 auDI NJl'DUDMI ... cw .. .., ...... The SaddJtback Valley l1nui.d S'choot ·District'• aovernlne board voted Monday Dl&btlo Joiii the ()ppoSlllOn to ~=:. Pl'>-poSaJ calling for co al • d the Jtl Toro KarlDt C!D!<\>I Air Station. • Trust-oilopted • -- by unanrmouo ~...ung neighboring _1ch~ · and govemmental vet to block the county s application to tbe Department of Defense for joint civilian.military use of the base. ' Their action was based on the belief that "'airline traffic woulrt subject Saddlebact Valloy 1ehoo1 children to excessive noise and expose them to unnecessary danger. The Saddleback Valley Schools resolution follows similar actions taken recently .bY tM-Mtssion V-iejo Municipal Advisory Coun- cil, the Saddleback Republican Assembly and the Irvine City Council . The resolution was pushed through by Trustee Loa Young who said that although it appears the county has little ctjance of winning approval for the pro- posal, trustees, as elected or- ricials, would be remiss in their du.ties if they did not state their dissatisractioo. "Commercial planes would be absolutely devastating," said ~trs. Young, pointing out that some schools in the vicinity or Los Angeles International Airport had to close because of the noise factor. Her comments were echoed by Trustee Carole Neustadt who said, "I too feel very strongly about this. We cannot sit back and as~ume this w\11 be denied.'' Although the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council <SACC) has not yet taken orriciaJ action on the renewed airport proposal, a representative of the council in- dicated to trustees Monday night that such action is imminent. Radcliffe Ash of the SACC aviation committee told board members that there is no other airport in the natioo which is jointly used by military and civilian ail"craft. He described the F-4 fighter jets flying into lbe El Toro base as "hot rods'' with twice the speed potential of commercial .. craft and said that .bis conversa-· lions with civilian captains in- dicate they would refuse to fly passengers into El Toro because of the added danger. Ash noted that a petition with ''lhqµsands of signatures'' now is be~ng circulated at Laguna Hills Letsure World in opposition to commercial traffic at the base. In a reference to the contention that El Toro·s ·expansion would relieve noise problems at Orange County Airport Ash said, "Yc;ru'i:e not solving anything by taking the noise from one place and puttirtg it another.'' Fisherman Beaten, Robbed Near Pier A 21-year-old San · Clemente man repOrted Mond3y he was knocked unconscious. and rObbed of $138 in cash and $120 worth or · fishing tackle near the city pier. Officers said Daniel L. Hub· be.rt, 430 N. El CaminO Real, was struck from behind. When he re- gained consciousness, his wallet and, fishing gear were missing. The incident occurred at about nullified. .-'?· 10:;39p .m. Sund<\)'. ........ • :-;:::> Let Us Put You On The Map ' ' • • , --. ·Near the en_trance. inside our store. is a giant new map. We are in the process of identifying all of the l\omes we have C811'8ted since 1965 on this map --with colored pins .. IA different color for each year.) • Close sc~utiny will detect some interesting facts: ·firstly .. "l'e have carpeted homes on virtually every street in the area. Secondly. the pins are in bunches, ,ind1catlng WORD-OF-MOUTH advertising. Thirdly. the number of homes we have carpeted is ~genng. - It-you desire hone"sty, experience and · recommendations lrom neighbors we have ~orked \ Jor.Jhen Alden's Is THE PLACE! • t ' d eollege stude!)t_wu ound Fri· •1 . O~ldan4 llomlclde 'set. Fred P1rku1 1ald there was no evfdmca linl<b>t tho three aJay. "the _Eowen~ fll&ht.-wu the Ytlme we wert;a.tn.r· 1 ... .---1------- toxJn wu u1ed fer ~atklaal uee, althoufh th~· L-plll wos m1de ava.1 able for eartter Olllhta." Colb1.1ald. IDPo .l-,· 1663 ;LACENllA AVENUE • -. COSTA MESA, CAllf. 92627 uc. NO. 2!04 n PHONE 646·.4838 -646-2355 • ' ·I 7 ·. . . - • • -. 1 • • T I DAILY PILOT 41. . .P Tax Rate Status· lll'WILLIAM !iCRKBOIEa t,..'hot'3'1!&r and -" to Dude• -value, whidi 1s-.rowth Homeowners whooe po_.ty -Jl'ountaln Valley with a toW . IrVine ";;';"'.::..,,.. wn1 ~~ Beaeb ~ ~ tbe llbttom ottbe 111arket value, If. $1(000 In val11e may be above or below rate or $10.48, almoot unchanged &gllinbavetbehi1heetcomblned -~ • the caa.._..r-Heim!s . ..SlQ,ooo HeJm's '40,000 avera11L~.n from last year; totaltuhlll$8M. ™ .. rm of any city In Oran&• Beim's avera1e tox bill &190 "''"'"· ·l'\lUCblydetorminelbeirtotaltax includin( 1512 for scbool1, $.IM 1---.:c:<oo<illRliiij'IHUli'Mht--,,;ee•arnlllll!ii.IH.i.rieOiw;;;j)&;;;rt;-~•1aa11t~w,._1111Moc ....... a .. 01to•o""""'""'•-:lb"wl•eH$11!~:-ll811&--JHltcoillimn-o"'*'li'illdt-ttie-1lo"!w"'neret;r"<'Ooiff-;t!•,--iitilllDj>fJi"'b}i';ll6iiimii'pi>uiiitiffnffignU1eifi'lassiiiiSiediiiiiii-T.rorif:COW11"Jiffi:!:ifyv',"'ltm fdr City and • Beacb wlll have the 1owat ..,..-lioalei'lwncn ••emption, which $40,000 home in Irvine would. valuei dividing by 100 and forspecialdistricts. ,.-conlioc to V. A. Holm, 0r:.n,., ~ e«eetively IO'!tt the 81· ba .. a.total property tao bllltbls mu!Up ylng that result by the -Hunllnrton Beoch with a County audllor·cootrollet. -...i value al a $40, .ooo home lo year of $1,003. fuclllding 1SQ9.fot total tax rate. total rate of $10.•S;dqwo 16 cents The total rate ·ror athoolo, ~·aotflc ___ _. t bl ochoola,$1UlorCOUD1.Ytues,SSl froml1111tyear; totaltaxbill$860, eounty government, elty .........,. • ,.. ._. ... • • e for eity ta.ses •Oii PlllJor special Tu rates ond bills for a $40,000 including 1513 for schools. $134 ment and special d.iltricts i.o Of COID~1Uv~ taxes and rates diatricta such 'i.I ~WIJB, sewer, home In other Orange' Coast for county, $13.f for city and f18 ~,W:.:~~ ~a1~J!.~ ~~~ :~~~ ~~'.!i:' ~ Prt".::.!'~!~~000 iii the ciU"!Sinclud~: forspecia)districts. doWil" about six cents from Jut blthest as1e11ed valu~. Tbl8 Newport Beach code area with -COSta Mesa with 8 lot.al rate . -Laguna Beach with a total yearwbeollalaoloppedll!elilt. :year,, llelm la using a $40,000 the bllhHI valuation would have ·Cll 18.76, down 41 cents from last rate of $8.93, up 27 Cffll.S from last NeWJ>ort Beach's combined home as •iaverase'• for t.be a toUJ bUl of $134 .tbis year, in· year; total tax bill $805. including year; total tax bill of$737, lnclud- ' rate will be $8.90 per $100 cit u-county. . cludiq $C39. lbr schools. Sl34 for $468 fot' schools, $134 for county. ing $339 for schools, $134 for coon- .sessed value 26 ceotal.,......tba.n . Tbe actuaLwea pa)d·on tbot COUDty. 1911 for city and~ for $80 for city and $123 for 'peeial ty, $161 for city and $101 for ' average home are based on u-· JPeelal districts.~ districts. special dlstrict~. -san ci.mente. with • tccal rate al Sl0.20, up so C<nll fn>111 lasl year; total bill 1841. lnclud- ing.$481 for schools, $1.'4 lor ewn- iy, •u• 1w oii.y w-.i.011-1or--1 special' districts. -8al1 Juan Capi•lrano, wltll p total rate of $10.38. up so ceai. from last yeari total bill $8$7, In-, cllldlDI $487 for scboels, $134 !or county, $81 for city and $148 for special districts. ' -S.al Beach. with a total rate ol $9.98~ down ZS ~ents from 18lllt. year; total bill 1823. inclodinc $478 for schools. $134 r... cwnty. $133 for city and $78 for special districts. l 8~ '\'?'@(ill[[ ®@[[WO©® 4 · Palestinians ·surrender ' The column appears dallyncept S1&11rday1 ~Dd lloadays. . _ ~ "''a problem' Then wrile Pal Company DunrJ. Pal will cut tl'd tape. gel the answers and ac- tion you need to D H • . solut inequities in ·•l'Mlll~ ·m government and • illl 11/llV SI business. ,_fail • your questions to ,., D • :__ J _? ~~~T ~~~~~j~~~ .. 0 niur,. Qranye Coast Daily 1~1101. P.O UoI 1560. Co3ta Mesa. C1\ 92626. Include your tt/eplior1e number. DETROIT (AP) -A $1.1 million suit has been ·filed against Ford Motor Co. by a former e~ecutive who claims job pressures and be_ing fired without cause in 1971 made him DEAR PAT: Wbere can. l an alcoholic. make arrangements to join the It is the second time in less 1976 Bikecentennial trip fr~ thaq_ three months that a former Sa~ Juan Capistran.o .~<f'.......top1evel employe has sued the Williamsburg, Va .. What ts the company over job-related cost, and bow long will the trip · alcobolisrn take? · Michael W. Newell, formerly a C.K., Mission Viejo vi~e=.. president and general Dave Wood. YMCA program manager of Ford's Philco Corp., coordinator, says arrangements flied the latest suit Monday in can be made by contadlng the Wayne County Circuit Court. YMCA, ZOS W. CiYlc Center Newell, ss, said he was suing Drive, Santa An~ CA 92'701, or~ For_d for breach of cont,racl, writing to the nlkecentennial s since he expected to be employed main office: Box 1034. Missoula, by the firm until r.etirement, and MT 59801. The Trans-America for personal problems, job Bike Trail trip from Su Joan troubles and the loss of a career Capistrano Is tentatl•ely causedinbislife. scheduled for a July t, 1t7S de. "The rather bitter battle 1 went padure, Wood said, adding that through at Philco and the time I •be sb:·week, 3,15'·mlle journey spent sitting on the shelf at ti~ord. ., will cost approximately $400, in-were causal factors which iri· 1cldding return by Greyhound creased my drinking habits.'' he bus. said. - Clotlafng c .. ,_ DEAR PAT: I will be living abroad several months and l plan to buy clothing while over~ seas. Will I have to pay customs duty even though I have worn the clothing? A.M .. Newport Beach 1 Yes, .accordin g to U.S. -Customs Service regulations. An article acquired abroad Is not ex- empt from cTuty . because of ase and wear. It mitst be declared at A spokesman ror Henry R. Nolte, Ford's vice president and general counsel, said Ford believes "there is no basis for claim:• Earlier, John R. Brennan claimed in a $1.3 million damage suit against Ford that ·his drink·· ing was a direct result of his job and that it increased as he climbed up the corporate ladder. ''Brennan said, 'Ford made . me an alcoholic',•• saia V. Paul ~nnelly, attorney for both men. the fair retail Yalue in the COUD· t trywbereacqnired.Thecustoms 2 000 v· inSJ>eCtor, how .. er, may make ' Iet._S an appropriate reduction in its .. . \lalue for use and wear. TMse Nose Drop• DEAR PAT: I caught a terri- ble summer cold a week ago. When my daughter saw me searching through the medicine cabinet for some nose drops, she toid'lne not to use them until I checked to see if they were the kind the state recently said were . contamin'ated. She couldn't re· member the brand name, and I wouldn't know where to start checking. Could you look into thia? My cold is better. but I'd still like to· know if the "family" nose drops are dangerous. M.K., Mission Viejo The state Department of Heallb ldenllfled lbe ? microorganism c011ta.mhi8ltU1 prodact •• Daylla btaltd Pllenylepbrine nasal IOlallon (IOC 1111111ber 15581). Tbe Z,OIO-. from tbe al!~cled IOC have been aold through MDX ~. Pfc-N-Save a•d Two G•ys pbarmaelea. Rema-.supplles have been removed from tile 'Shelves. Previously ·parebued suspect bottles should be destroJed or re tamed to the 1&ore wbere they were bought. 'I.iring lt'IU~ DEAR PAT: I wrote lo The Euthanasia Col.fticil in New York City on July 10, enclosing a $5 check for three copies of the "Uving Will." This material bas not been received, and I'd like lo know what's causing the delay. C. W .• Costa Mesa The Euthanasia Coandl bu re- ceived. 4%,000 requests for the ••uvtng Will'' since a recent Item aboul II was pablbbed In lbe "'Dear Abby'' colamn. Tbe coun· cU'1 spokesni•n s•ld tllat hroJet· ter-mailing firms and ZO ot its own office employes are handl• ing requests •• quickly u poss1. Get LA Homes LOS ANGELES CUP!) - About 2,000 Camp Pendleton re· fugees will be resettled here un· der a $1 million federal grant, the. Greater Los Angeles Community Action Agency said Monday. The agency said it will ad- minister the grant together with the Council of Oriental Organizations. The two groups will fmd sponsors for refugees and help in their resetUement. An agency spokeswoman said money for the grant will come rrorn funds appropriated by Congress for resettling Southeast Asian refugees. COASTA C . o.i1y flt lot ...,, "-• L YCLISTSBACK FROM SPENDING SUMMER VACATION RIDING ACROSS COUNTRY --.Sean.Reily, Randy Davia, Mark Ruder (lrol'(l l•ft) Recount Their Experiences Pilot Plwwg's Nixon Picture Best inSlww Daily Pilot Photographer Patrick O'Donnell has taken the top spot news photo award in the 18th annual Forest Lawn press photographers' contest with "'The Last Return," a photo of Richard ""M. ~ixon returnlng home after resigning the pre- sidency. The photo shows Nixon, flanked by his wife and daughter, making a brief statement on ar· rival at El Toro Marine Corps Air Sti:ation. · O'Donnell also took two run· ner-up prizes for feature photo- graphs. Daily Pilot Photographer Richard Koehler took two run· ner-up prizes in the spot news category. The ·Daily Pilot photographers were among 90 from California and Hawaii who submitted 330 photos taken between July 31..1974 and July J<!, 1975. Cyeled Out Coast Youths Tell of U.S. Trek ByffiLARYKAVE at ttt. 0.11., 1'1)91 sun Mark Ruder, Randy Davis and Sean Reily claim the worst truck drivers are in Louisiana, the big- gest raindrops fall in Texas and that water moccasins and al- ligators really do lurk in the Florida Everglades. The three Orange County youths, all 19, say they speak from experience -after pedal- ing cross-country th.is summer on 10.speed bicycles. Ruder of Newport Beach and Davis of Fountain Valley left NewJ>Ort Beach Aug. I, taking the hot, southern route to Amarillo, Tex., where they met up with Reily. Reily of Newport Beach, in- stigator of the marathon trip, declined to cross the desert in the middle of summer and instead began his trip from Eugene, Ore. a week earlier. He then traveled to Texas. Ruder and Davis both fini shed . ' the trip as planned in Miami, but Reily became ill in Louisiana and was forced to abandon the journey. According to the young cyclists, southern hospitality was in true form all the way across the country. ' "'We'd watk up to people, in · troduce ourselves as California college students on bicycles and people would open their doors to us," says Ruder. who is a student at Orange Coast College along with Davis. "We checked in with police in all the small towns and told them our intentions. Then, nobody bothered us,·' say the boys, who half-expected an "'Easy Rider'' type of ex perience. In one small Texas town, they sa~ they created a spectacle just with their appearance. By the time they were at the ot~er end of town, people already heard about them and had run outside to .smile and wave . "Jn another town, people called their friends to come look at us wh~n they brought us home with the"l,_" re_calls Davis. While ln-e-t are mostly en· thusiastic about the people they met along the way, the boys ad- mit that not all their encounters were friendly. "Truck drivers were the worst. They ran us off the rOfid every chance they got.'' says Davis. "'They'd pass us so close that the suction rrorn the trucks would drive us of( the road -right into the bayou along with the ga(ors and moccasins,·· adds Ruder. In one spot in Louisianc.i . a truck with a "wide load" sign passed the youths, but it was empty and did not honk al the cyclists. The boys say they figured il was nothing to worry about, but all of a sudden Ruder looked over his shoulder and saw another truck carrying a mobile home wider than the shoulder on which. they were riding. Ruder says he yelled to Davis and the two quickly dumped their bikes into the bayou before the truck rolled by. Ruder and Oa Vis madeZ1 stops along the way, including visits to Needles, Amarillo, Wichita Falls. Dallas, Shreveport. Balon Rouge, New Orleans. Mobile, Tampa, Miami and Key West. Reily"s route -Oregon, tdahO. · ble. Your copies are being malled Immediately. Tbe E11Utao1sla Co11ncU'1 proiram la directed towar.d penona who wish to make arraniemeats not to have their IJYe1 extended bJ Jll'Olonsed aae of medical eqalp- me•t when it laa1 been de· lermh1ed lbal ail llln•H It . ;;-..~-• Moot.ans, C-olorado, New Mexico and Texas -was more peaceful than his southern-traveling bud-.. ~ 0.11., ............. ., '•trtu:&O.-• FORMER PRESIDENT NIXON cAUQffT I" DRAMATIC POSE ON RETURN TO SAN a.EMENTE _eh9to EMnec1 Am Piiz• lor D•Hy Pl'?''• P~ O'f"""•'j in F"!•at ~~wn C'ohtnt > dies. , Free Five Diplomat Hostages "From Wire Services ALGIERS, Algeria -The four Palestinian guerrillas who seized the Egyptian emb41:ssy in Madrid flew to Alg·iers today in the personal jet of Algerian Presi- dent Houari Boumedienne, re- leased their five diplomat hostage$ and surrendered to Algerian authorities. Algerian officials gave the guerrillas a Polite reception at the airport t>ut did not iin- mediately say whether they would be granted asylum. A representative of t~e Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion also was in the receiving party, although the PLO in Beirut denied that it had anything to do with the seizure Monday of the Egyptian em- bassy in Madrid. The. newly freed ambassador. Mahmoud Abdel Ghaffar, said the PLO was instrumen\al In winning his release. The masked guerrillas held a press conference in the airport's VIP room and said they bad "successfully alerted Arab and international opinion" to thelr- oppcrsttio to Egypt's new jn- terim peace accord with Israel. Ambassador Ghalfar, who was freed .in Algiers with two of his aides, told the Egyptian news agen~y that PLO leader Vasser Arafat was instrumental in win- ning his release. The 55-year-old diplomat said that Arafat sent a message to the guerrillas in Madrid that ~·was quite effective in ending their seizure' of the embassy," accord- ing to a dispatch from the Cairo ne~·s agency. The message was carried to Madrid by a PLO representative, he said. "After hearing it, the five gunmen moved into another room in the embassy where they consulted each other," the am- bassador said. "It became clear later that the message was very effective.•• Earlier, in Cairo. Egyptia1\ Prelllident Anwar Sadat angrily rejected guerrilla demands that he repudiate·his new Sinai agree· ment with Israel . Sadat declared the Palesti· njans ''thought they couJd ter· rorize us or contpel us to a path ~ that is not ours. We say, 'No !'1 l repeat: Never will anything (>{ this sort take place." ~ Press Group Names Pilot Head to Board STATELINE, Nev. (AP) - Norwin Voffie, general manag~r or the San Rafael lndeRenderil~ Journal. has been elected presi- dent of the Associated Press As· sociation of California. Arizona. Hawaii and Neva da IAPACAHNl al its annual meet-ing. Yoffie succeeded Rollan Mellon, president of Speidel Newspapers Inc. of Reno, Nev. Other officers elected MondaY were Mason Walsh, general manager of Phoenix Newspapers Inc .. vice president, and James Geehan, publisher of the San Bernardino Sun-Telegram., sttretary-treasurer. Directors chosen were Robert N. Wee¢ publisher of the Orange Coast Daily Pilot, Robert Uecker, publisher of the StocktOft Record ; John A. Scott, publisher of t:he Honolulu Star-Bulletin; Frank ''Jerry'' O 'Neil\, publisher of the Redwood City Tribune; James W. Gill Jr,. publisher of the Hemet New•, and Mellon. 1 The. newspaper executive mel\lbers of1 the four-state group selected Honolulu as the eite of their 1976 meeliq. "* • • • . • • I : • -. .. • • A4 OAll.YP1LOT Missilesxo · U.$.· to Supply rrns, 6 Eight,ers WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The The " epa United Stat .. may supply larael comment on the report, ap· the lnWrim a1rteibeot "II to the with aophlatlcated Penhlng mis-parenlly due to clll'ft!ll public algnlflcancil or the vlalatlon all sU.S and FIS f!Chters planes as and private bearings with . possible remedial acllon by the part or an aireement en the In' Congress, whjcb mllllt approve U.S. 1ovemment," 1 -terlm-Mlddle. Eaal.Ac<cr4. col-American oblervm In. the Mid· ,,. The airoem~t. cbled Sept. i, SOS DEPT. -Majbe you can remember back in the dark ages of emergency services when the fire truck rolled up to its city limits and stopped while the crew watched a"bouse bum down just over.the line. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ceneral Motors unveiled its new Chevrolet Chevette today, call· ing its 40 mile per gallon import fighter ••a turning point for our industry.'' (Related story on umnl.st Jack .Anderson reNru!I <Ue Eal.Un addl.llQQ to ~ 1975",_!!lcludes nine typewaitlal today. miaesmadetolsrael. · . pases. The -Pc.-at l'epoyted~ - Theground·to-grouodmiasilis, Israeli Defense Minister diplomaUc aources said. it w.- Or when Police, in hot pursuit of a suspect, broke o(f the chasfl 3t the .coynty boundary, allowing') the miscreant-to make good his escape. Those thing_s happened back in another era. Today, aJmost all e~ergency services such as fire J>i>lice or lifegufl,rds have whai are known as mutual aid agree- nl ents. These mean just what. tliey say. U one jurisdiction gets irlto trouble, a ne1ghb0r w111 come acron the line to help. WELL, ALMOST ALLjurisdic· ti.ons have tbe~e agreements.-But you must conSider the downcoast city of Del Mar, and one or its ex- lifeguards named Ronald W. Jensen. Jensen, at 31, was no newcomer to the Del Mar lifeguard service. He'd been rking as a pro on the depart- ent since 1965. He was on duty t the other day when be gOt a ess call from a ranger al San · 'o State Beach. The ranger re· rted two swimmers appeared he drowning off a place called ami's Point. be ranger pleaded with J n that he couldn't raise the c ty lifeguards. Jensen j ped in his vehicle, and raced f miles upcoast to Swami's PageAIO) . The European design car is the smallest ever built by a major Detroit auto maker and is more than five feet shorter.'than Chevy's full sized , Impala. The b~e mode.I will carry a $3,098 pnce tag, JUSt $3 more than th e s ubcompact Vega with a stripped model -the Scooter -tagged al $2,899. Chevy General Manager Robert p. Lund, who a year ago was selling 20-foot Cadillacs; said th~ Chevette was "a turning point for our industry iii this de- cade'' a'Dd he predict~ ftrSt year sales ot as many as 275,000 units. He said the car should de- monstrate that the U.S. industry can build small cars. According to Environmental Protection Agency test results the minicar is ·capable of 4c) m.p.g. on the highway and 28 m.p.g. in a city-suburban driving test with its standard SS-cubic in- ch engine and four speed transmissiOn. With the larger 97-cubic inch engine, the car was rated at 39. m .p.g. and 30 m.p.g. respectively. . Lund said the new hatchback model could capture ll'KJ,OOOsales from foreign manufacturers in the industry's -third attempt since World War II to stem the import tide. The foreign makes have grabbed a record 20 percent of U.S. sales.so far this year. t in an effort to make the sea ue. =---------- our miles isn't so, far. We New "ork's e beaches in our region that I ' whlch have a range cl 460 miles Shimon Pttes I• ~ here slped by Kis1in1er__an4 Israeli and can be armed with nuclear Wednesday to diaCUSll bis eoun· Foreip Minister Y@:Allon. warhead&,wouldputanuplberol try's military neolfs with p...,. conceded on the day·it Arab capitals within range «· American officials. · was signed that the memoran-• Israeli launchers, Anderson re-Secretary of State Henry A. dum ''lost a lltUe streocUt in-its ported. · Kissinger·, whose diplomatic wording in order to get strength But Anderson said in releasing shuttling between Israel and through support in Congress.•• the text of the 16-point. U.S..· Egypt cemented the ..i nterim Israeli memorandum to the •·· agreeme.nt two weeks ago, has Washington Post that the United urged quick congressional ap- Stat~ carefully stipulated "the proval of U.S. pledges to the two nussiles would be conventlOhally countries -commitments which armed-iftbeyl!J"esuppUod. reportedly could coot at least $2 .. The implication, according lo billion over the short term. . o~ sources. is that the Israelis According to the memoran· ffo•pftallzed Mother Dropa Tot 5 St.Dries N·evada Gov . Mike O'C a lla g han was hospitalized Monday night m Las Vegas after suffering · severe stomach pains ap. parently caused by a kidney stone. . will be able to attach their own dum, the United States also pro- nuclear weal>!lns .warheads,'' An· mised to pr~vide Israel with "'o ,;;;;!-~ Ue·r derson wrote lll his column. emergency 011 ov.er a five-year i t ~ ll~ U.S. Ends 'Bushel For Barrel' Talks ... MOSCOW (UPI) -U.S. and Soviet negotiators have ended exploratory talks on a PoSSible long-term agreement that could lead to an exchange of American grain surpluses for Soviet oil. . U.S. and Soviet officials )VOUDd up their-talks Monday even- mJt after 13 hours of neJ(otiations. AU .S. &Pokesman said the talks could be characterized as "satisfactory thus far.'' . The ~viet press has avoided direct mention of the nation's senously in.adequate grain harvest. U.S. intelligence esUmates say µie Soviets will be 40 million-tom.short of their planned 215 million.ton harvest. · Beil'ltt Warfare Stepped (fp BEIRUT, Lebanon !UPI) -Urban warfare Intensified today in suburban Beirut and the powerful right-wing Pbalangist party period and to press for a fmal peace between Arabs and Jews in tt-e turbulent Middle East. Under.the separate agreement with Israel, the meinoranduni said the United States agreed to: -"Maintain Israel's defense strength through. the supply of advanced types of equipment, ~ such as the F16 aircraft.'' The fast, highly maneuverable aircraft is not expected to roll off U.S. production lines until 1979. -Quickly formulate a plan for providing Israel with military supplies "in an emergency situa~ lion''. ~ -"Promptly make oil availa· ble for purchase by Israel." lf It is otherwise unavailable under a five.y-ear arrangement for energy supplies. -Consult with Israel promptly NEW YORK <APJ -Trapped In a burning tenement. a mother saved her 2.year-old daughter to-- day by dropping her five stories Into a blanket held. like a net by neighbors. The mother and a (riend were rescued by .firemen moments later. . As firemen arrived at the blaze in the Bronx, tht3y saw the neighbors holding the blanket In front of the.building. Before they could get their equipment work- ing, they said, Au.drey Barksdale, 29, leaned from the window and dropped her daughter, Tamara. to the im· provised s~ety net below. Firemen then raised a rescue tower bucket and picked MQ. Barksdale and Leroy Steadly, 29, from the fifth·floor window ledge. threatened worse was to come. , ~Ar lea:sr-rour·persorurdied in"t"e11ew04-eTashV-hetween-right-I" ~t·f· ·d -S·tady wing and_ leftist political factions, bringing to mare than aoo the '-'OD 11<.-v e • ate four miles long, or put ttherwa~.1.04oyan1s. Teachers May TROUBLE WAS; Del Mar · eguard Jensen bad made one Approve Pact v ry large mistake. When be ve the 7 ,040 yards, he went out his jlU'isdiction. Outside the Ci· t • H By The Associated Presa number of persons killed or wounded since fighting .'-gan more than two weeks ago. ( J The 5 p.m. Monday de- /. N SHORT adline, set by Phalangist par-ty chief Pierre Gemayel for '------------~· the government to stop the fighting , passed with sparadic shooting still going on in the main trouble spots. Marijuana 'Reduces~ Man's Sex Horino_rw When he got back, bis a1f of the nearly two million So"'n Queries Soldier Fee rvtsor, one Grant Larson, p~pils whose education has been really ticked off. So he SUS· disrupli<LJ!"Y<.cc."'te,.ao;c.llber""i's_' .f-'"'triC!J·k.,e;i;s~ __ ..,;W-;,AS;;:;H.~I:;.;N;;G;.T~O~N:;,(AP) -A U.S. company that contracted to· nded Jensen for one day. across the nation may be .back pi tratn the Saudi Arabian national guard paid $4.5 million fee to a Then Jensen did a really ~at school ~Y Wednesday 11 New Saudi b~sine~sman , l_teg:. Les Aspin (0-Wis.), says. .tbina:. Jn effect. be told biS York .City teachers approve a Asp11;1 said the Vmnell Corp., of Los Angeles, paid the fee. to sµpervisor to take his lifeguard tentative contract settlement re-Gb.asian Sha~.er: listed earlier this year as the president of a j 'band.stick it in his ear. He quit ached today. Beirut bank. Either Mr. Shaker pocketed an exorbitant fee or tthere Both teachers and school of· some of the $4.5 million was illicitly diverted," Aspin said in a 'I didn'i want to yvork with. an fi~iiJ:ls expressed hope. that 1.1 statement. enc)"" that is more concerned million New York J?UJ>il• out of lf.N. Ends Eeonoatdc Se•n-th boundaries and politics than school since last Tlie.5day could th hum.a.a live& •• Jensen said return to classes by Wednesday, er biS abrupt niUremeD.t from ~~kes affecti~g alm?St one e Del Mar city lifeeuard million o~er.pup1!s con~ued.at ce. -school d1str1cts in Cal1forn1a, eironywfl,stbatthedistress Del aware. 111 in o is, to Swami's Point was a falae Ma.ssachusetts. Ne.w Jersey, PUT TRIS ALL in context, h er,youmustknowthatDel ar residents take a very nar· r w view toWard use of their aches. They have them posted, " Mar Residents Only.'' - ch posting that puts visitors limits has no force in law. But sure lets you know how come you are. Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Washington. In Chicago, where 530,000 children were out or school for the 10th day, 27,000 sfriking teachers planned .alternative schools and prepared for a long· range boycott of conventional classrooms. UNITED NA1'10NS, N.Y. (AP) -Weary United Nations de· le~ates unanimously adopted a lengthy declaration designed to bndge the gap between rich and poor nations art.er working long into the night to complete economic negotiations before the start of the regular 1975 General Assembly this afternoon. Red-eyed diplomats returned to tt'e assembly hall to close out the 17·day special economic session late this morning after their third consecutive all·night meeting.· 1'un11ger "'-mi••~· ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -Secretary ol State Henry A. Kbs- inger said today that another increase in foreign oil prices could seriously jeopardize U.S. relations with oil producin« countries and end anger efforts to stabilize global economy. IGssinger told the Southern Governors Conference here that Arab oil producers are moving in the direction of another jump in petroleum prices. Quick action by the United States and its ln· dustrial allies is necessary to bead off the increases, he said. FIMll Fila tor Wlndote Lo•• at doesn't sound too friendly f r a place that a:farently comes thousands visitors e ery year to drop their hard· e eel cash where a bunch of h ybumers circle a track. yway, let this be a wlll'Ding. 't start drowning ,off a Del be-.cb lf you're a visitor. The United Federation of Teachers, which represents New· York City teachers, scheduled a vote by its 1,300-member de· legate assembly on the proposal approved by UFT negotiators. Approval by the assembly at its morning meeting would be followed by an immediate start ··of a rank-and.file vote by the 65,000 striking teachers. CAMlHUDGE, Mass. (AP)-Wlndows fell to the street from· the 00-story Hanco~k To':"er here arid John Hancock Mutual Life lns~ance Co. claims it was because of negligence by the architect._ cont~actor and glass supplier. . :~.e ~1rr:n filed a Superior Court suit on Monday asking un· spec1t1ed damages. All 10,344 of the double thickness of glass - pan~s, e.ac:h about 5by11 feet, had to be replaced in the buildini. The1rongmal cost was about$7.7. ity lifeguard might have you for proof of residence ore you go down for the third • Albert Shanker, UFT presi· dent, said be would recommend acceptance of the tentative pact as "the best that can be done un· derthe Circumstances.'' r Eloise Douses Islands Tropical Swrm Buihb Strength Off Coast , .. STONY BROOK N.Y. (AP) - A controlled.stud)' of 20 men who smoked .!'.five marijuana cige.rettes daily ·for more than five weeks showed signific~t drops in their production of the sex hormone testosterone, a re- searcher has reparted. The study was reported by Dr. Robert Kolodny ·or the Reproduc- tive Biology Research Found•· tion in St. Louis at a weekend meeting at the State University here. Dr. Kolodny reported that after nine weeks on the five-a· day schedule, the 20 men averaged a one•third reduction in .testosterone production. He said that although the average production remained in the normal range, the levela for some of the men fell to below normal, in a range where im· potence or infertility could occur. Dr. Kolodny, who conducted the study jointly with re· searchers of the Unive1:sity of California at Los Angeles, said, however, that he doubted whether ''casual marijuana use has much, if any, effect on a man's,sexual performance, lf-it- is normal to begin with.•• He also reported that the study.· indicated the effects of mari- jqana on hormone productiO!f"" could be reversed within two weeks of stopping marijuana .. e. -. The .study also explained why some prevJous short·term studies of the effect of marijuana. on hormone production have been inconclusive. Dr. Kolodny reported that it- took four weeks of daily smoking before there were significant drops in' the rroduction of a'. sutr stance ca led,;luteinii:ing hormone, which stimulates the testes to produce testosterone. Bill Could_ Hike Costs Of Tobacco WASHINGTON (AP) Congress has sent to President Ford a-bill that would ·boost 'tobacco price Supports and ·even- tually could raise the price of a pack of cigarettes by a penny. Agriculture Department economist Joe Todd said Monday th@t the bill c.ould cost $48 million more a year in taxes to finance the program. Todd said that in two yean, when the current crop qf tobacco is sufficienUy cured to be 't'Olled into cigarettes, the re- tail price of a p"lck of cigarettes could go up a penny . The Senate pirissed the bill Monday; the House already had passed it.· Jf Ford signs it, the increase would raise the support level for flue.cured tobacco from 93 .2 cents a pOwld to 99.9 cents and for burley tobacco from 96:1 cents a pound to $1.06. The increase would raise market prices, and. that portloo of the cost would be passed along tosmokers .. For ftirmers, the increase could mean more income. Farmers of flue.cured tobacco cowd get obout 8 cents more a pound from t~e governme.nt. Farmers of burley tobacco would not get_ rriUcb mpre, if anything from the govemnient, Todd said, because the market price is ex· peeled to he higher than the sup- port price . White House officials said they would have to study the bill's Im· pact on the ,deficit before saying whether Ford would sign It. ' Dolly Piiot D....-, ··-Monday.Fridll'(: If you ,do not t'tlY9 jotlf' PIP9f by 1:30 p.m.. Cllt before 7 pim. and ye>ur copy will be ffo llYefed. • Slturdty and Sunday: If vou do not ret-etv. vour eopy by 8 a.m. S.tut• ' day, or 8 a.m: Sunday, ct'! bekn 10 -.m. and Your ~v will btdMlvtred •. Cfirw 18'111 , ... ._..., ___ • Moll Orano-County Area '4Mlll North111ttt Huntfi\oton ~ • • trwt,w.ttmlntler •••••••• '*'llf' ·Sift a.mtnte. ~,,.,.., llelCh, S,~JuonC..lotrJno. Oitna P'Otftl, South L"°""' Ll!lluna NtgtMt ·•·, i1 •••• 1i .,...,._ ' . .,.: ) ' .. . I .. f • f ' TU!!d!y. September 1e. 197& OAILYPILOT A§ ..M MWlo• Prieetag Fire ·ui)sets Goldwater -H~Everything? Buy City's A.irpo_rt _ . -Y ywanttobuyaus air!lorl? HolJywood-Burbank's 45-year~ld 630-acre facllit)r ls up for sale, Its owner, Lockheed-Aircraft Corp .. said Monday. Recent _estimates put the value al the ~Y at $50 million to $80 "We simply cannot ciln· c _State ,Jinue aa a sponsor or a j>Ublic ~ ) Dllllion. airpor{ service.•• a .COC'theed spokesmao said. addl.ng the fum booes a public ageacy will.Ult~ oyer the pro~y. "U that . doeln't happen, Lockheed will eatertaiD offers from anyone wbo- wants to buy the property and close it down." Hollywood-Burban.t ran.ka 50th out of 521 commercial alr!lorts In number of airline takeoffs and landings in the United States and is the only printely owned airport in the country re- gularly used for scbedulecl commercial filgbts. Airlines which use the facility include Pacific Southwest, ·eonUnental, HUl!hes Ali'weslandSierra P..:iflc. EleeC .... T ... U!i1 .. SACRAl"IENTO CAP> -Cesar Chavez or the United Farm \YOrk~rs says Poor ad.ministration ot Cali!orn.ia's new (arm elec-ti~ law by State officials bas permiUed .. ·a &rower· Teamster con- spiracy to prevail.'' · · 1:he farm union leader also told reporters Monday that all eJectl!'ns held so f at µoder the new Jaw have~ "tainted.•• He promised to ~halfenae elections bis union bas lost to the Teamsters union. Walter Kintz, the state Agricultural Labor Relations .Boa~·s legal counsel, also .was a Chavez target. Chavez sat~ ~1~tz has made "illegal deals'' wilh growers and called for his fITTng . ar ... '11n-ealeaed Herb Alpert and Tijuana Brass were among passengers on plane grounded in Regina, Canada after anonymous phone caller said there was bomb on board. Search produced no explosive. Alpert and group are on eight-city IDur of Canada. Says Carga p14nes · CorJd-Have Belped ~ .\ LOS ANGELES CAP) -Rep. military planes whM privat(' The C130s, workhorse cu• Barry M. Goldwater Jr. says be aircraft in a rec ion are ~eel up or planes ol the the Vietnam Wu~ is ''dl1trau1ht''. that tarp whenafirereaches largepropor·· were Cilled in several tia:les taty Cltld \)lirieS were Mt tioos, 6oldwater3al:dct:--=-'--'-"'"--'1t1Jigtc!ittt-~9mui!lthme1ri101· ~alilluri~'i!"' \IHd for firebom bin& mlsalons in , durlnl August. the .cfanl Sequoia National • ''ON THE SEQUOIA !ire, all Fotest6retarliertblsrnont.h. the military and private planes Goldwater <R·Woodland could have been used," the con : Hills), said iii an li\""tervitw be &reisman said. wU1 work to have U.S. Fores( There was no immediale com· 5ervice fflulatlons •afted to' merit from the Forest Service. insW't greater use ol Air Na-Privale contractors• planes tional Guard Cl30s, which can from as far away as Oregon were carry up to five times as milch brougHt in to nght the Sequoia THEY DKOPP ED nearly million pound• of fire retardan ·which resemble pink. honey. forest and brush blazes. Aside from its large capacitf; 1 3,000 callous per plane. thei Cl¥)'' can be loaded rut. stvin& it ;,'~ · quicker tum around Ume lha4: 1 chemical fire retardant as COD· blaze while Air Force Cl.30s at verted World War n bombers Van Nuys, San J0&e, Sacramento operated by privatecootractors. and San Rafael· sat idle.. The Na· Under present policy, Cl30s tional Guard has 14 C1J05 al Van can be used only after all private Nuys alOne, a spokesman said. older aircraft. 1 The CIJOs were first used in '- fire near Santa Barbara five; ye.ars ago. Equipment a.00 tac-\ · tics have been refined si.Dcethcn .. , contract planes have been called. THE SEQUOIA FIRE, largeat in the state so far this year, raged for more than a week and cov- ered lT,000 acres before it was Dr11nk Charge Hits ··' f1nally controlled. Goldwater aaid he supported the use or private contract· Sixth State Solon • ' .. " aircraf t, but ''we worked in A.UBURN (AP) -The sixth state legislator arrested for Congress for five years to pro--druken driving in the last 11 months .says he won't discuss bis • vide this capability (the use or case until he goes to court. · · · military cargo planes) to the State Sen. John Stull was booked for investigation or drunken ., U.S. Foreft Service, an4, I am 'driving Ftiday night after ~car ran into a construction area on 1 distraught that t hese aircraft Interstate so mortheast or ~ramento and its wheels stuck in li .r. were not used in a fire the si.ie or ditch, the highway patrolsaid. 11~, Bre11>a Vet. SACRAMENT() (UPI) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jt. Mon· ~ay yet~ a b~U req_~g ~at .deVices be placed on new cars sold m. California beginning m.1978 to indicate if the car had been driven more than 100,000 miles. the Sequoia blaze." The incident involving the San Diego County lawmaker took · D 1--Lobby New policies will make it clear place about 11 :10 p.m., two hours after the legislature adjourned .: :11~ reOp~ . . that the Forest Service can use forthe year. ~----....:._....:.....:.:..:......:.....:.:.:.._....:.:..:......:..:...:.:::. ________ .;_ __ ~~-~-----'-:._" ''Req~ri~g auto makers to add a new gadget indicating when 100,000 m~es 1s ex_c~ed may be nice,'' Brown said in b1s veto Loses Name to ·'" message_. _I~ ~~-rta1nly is noy necessary.'' ,.,. Supeets Held RIVERSIDE CUP)) -The ·stepdaUl!bter of horse trainer .i:ack ~haw an~ ~er boyfriend were arrested Monday in connec- li?n with the killing of Shaw, whose body was found in a Fontana vm.eyard, sheriffs deputies said. · Shaw's body was found in the back seat or a car. He had been st~bbed to ~eatb and had rope burns on his neek, investigators said. Deputies arrested Carol Ann Williams 27 and Pedro Domin· quez in Shaw·s Roubidoux home. ' Prof Sentenced SAN FRANCISCO CAPJ -An Oakland college professor con- victed of dealing cocaine has · been sentenced to six months in prison and fi ned $12JOOO. Louis Mueller, 32, chairman-of the department of metal arts at the College or Arts and Crafts, was sentenced Monday by U.S. District Court Judge Spencer Williams. Mueller also was piaced on, three years probation. 1\1ueller pleaded guilty last Ju. ly _to possessing and furni shing a pound or cocaine, an amount which the prosecution said he bought from an-undercover agent. The court allowed Mueller to ~main free until Sept. 29, to get his personal affairs in order then he-is to surrender to the' U.S . Marshal. ' r ·san Jose Drania Ends·in Tragedy SAN JOSE CUPIJ -A single shot !ired by a police sniper ended a four·hour drama Monday that left a would·be skyjacker dead, a hostage wounded by a gunshot and a mother of three stabbed near the heart. · The injured hostages were in serious condition today. The gunman, Fred Salomon, 24, of San Jose, took four persons hostage, telling his captives he wanted to gain admittance to a mental hospital. ''Don't worry, they'll Jet you in now," s aid hostage Dennis Stuart seconds before he bolted from the Continental Airlines 727 at San Jose Municipal Airport. StUART AND fellow hostage Vern Hickman, an airline mechanic, ran from the plane and a bullet from the gunman ·s .JS.caliber revolver zinged past Hickman's ear., That left hostage:; Alden Lindekugle, ·also an airline mechanic, and Dr. Frank Wiefels, 50, of San Jose. Salomon, aCcording to Lindekugle, told" the kneelirlg physician: "'You're.next.' Then be raised up the gun and fired.·· ) Wiefels slumped and tumbled down the stairway of the plal'le, a bullet in his stomach. Cocktail Bar SACRAMENTO (UPI) Peoples' Lobby may just become the name of a cocktail lounge now that it no longer is the· de- signation of the self-styled political reform group. Gilbert Rosales, a Capitol area bartender, purchased the rights to the title "Peoples' Lobby" after PeQptes' Lobby...._Inc .• which spearheaded voter aPproval of the 1974 California Political Reform Initiative, was "sus· pend!<!·' as a corporation by the state. As a result of the state sus. pension, the group's name was made availale to anybody who wanted to buy it.for $6. · Edwin Koupal, founder and executive director of Peoples' Lobby, said the legal loss of the name was ''political harass- ment" and his group would con- tinue to use the name. Police Lt. Gary Leonard saic\,Salomon agreed to Come out of the plane without his weaPQn and with his hands in the air.But, he said, the man used -Lindekugle as a shield. · _' .. . . "ONE OF OUR omrers...;illollt SO leet away, shouted thret_!imes, 'drop yOOFWeapoo,' ''Leonard .said. ''Salomon didn 'l answer. He began to point the gun at the officer. The olficer be I!'. an to run away.'' estwardGJlo ctAlo~l & ~~~ino DAILY PILOT ~M.M SPRIHGI. -· Moll'I• W'ESTWAAO HO HOTELI Go-gioGi,.,.U~=C=LA=S=Sl=F·l=E56D=A=D=S::'._~====================~ 0111 FtH M Abo\oe For Cu'"'"' S.uOll l\IW.. Entertain AF Officen EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE CAP) - X-rated movies and go-- go dancers were on the entertainment bill at the Officers Club here last week, a base spokesman acknowledges. The occasion was a ·•membership night'' last ;rhursday, said LL Col . Frank J . Morris, base rntormation officer. Morris saidi-ie did not know how many X-rated films were shown or whether the go-go girls pertorrrted topless. Only three days earlier the Navy had reported relie'ling a submarine skipper of his command · !or alll>wJng a topless dancer to perform on the ship's deck as it sailed out . ol Po!T Canaveral. J11a ., 1 .. 1July 10. · r 1976 CADILLAC ' On display in 01r shJwroom be3innif18 oeptember 16 ·Nabers Cadillac .. 2600 Ho{bof Blvd .. Costa Meso 540-9100 I . '. Today, ours looks better t n -ever. Our 7.75% yields 8.06% when compound ed daily. While other forms of investment have been having their extreme ups and downs lately, Mutual Savings investors have continued to enjoy high returns with perfect safety. But that's an old story at Mutual. In our 50-year history, no investor has lost so much as a single dime. :> At Mutual, returns are guaranteed a nd your principal is insu red up to $40,000 by a n agency of the federal govern· ment. You can earn up to 8.06% a nnual y ie ld when our 7.75% annual rate certificates are compounded daily. Many of our investors combine two or more savings pla ns so they have money always available and receive high r eturns as well. Look over the different plans, from our 5Y/;0 passbook account to our higher earning term accounts, and decide which plan or combination best meets your fin a ncial goals. Then go have a talk with one of our office managers a nd as k about the free services we offer. They look better than ever, too. High earning Mutual Sa vings Accounts Annual rate 13/~'lo 71/2% &\'•% 61/2'10 51/ .. % Annual yield ~1 i n i mu m ~1 i n 1mum 8 .06% 7 .79<;",, 6.98i;"n 6 .72% 5.39% 6 yea rs? $1.000 4 years 1,000 30 mos. 1,000 t year " 1,000 None 5 MUTUAL SAVINGS 1nd loan ll10C•tt1on Fountain Valley Capistiano-Sllti Cleniente 530Gaminode Estrella/493-565 1 Corona del Mar 17942 Magnolia Street/963-8396 Santa Ana 2867 East Coast Highway/675·5010 • 7th & Nort h Main/547-9741 I'. .. - I• ' ., J .. ' • ' l " ' " I , ' ' rl '. r~ , r ,; r • JI ' • h ' .. ., •. 4 • . . " ' ' ' . " ... .... r; !I. > " . . " •• • .. •· ";,. ' ...... 21()(),, ........ • ·., • ., ., . . ' ----.;-- A6 l J).~ILY PILOT EDITORl.-\L 111 • .\GE -. . A Joh foi-thi]riry Serious questions s urroundingc Oiiirove"rsial ing invested most ol ~r llf~vingsJn_.,a~m;;ozbil~e __ _j__J.l..~i;;~~~~~'..::~ .secre s us unds collected from convicted ottend~ers~--ihoior11n1e;-h.ave-beert tbe~.Victism el arbitrary alKM.lnf · in Orange County's superior and municipal courts re· rul,es and rule changes, necessitating 41 cosUy move main unanswered. . to another location. One reason is that warring factions circling about Under the proposed law, tenants moving into a the controversy can't agree on whose rightful park would be guaranteed a 60·day notice period responsibility it is to audit the funds. before any change could be made in tile rules and For example, in one instance, the Orai\ge County eviction· could be ordered only if a tenant's conduct Police Chic[ and Sheriffs Association has asked for a "substantially annoys" other tenants. State Allorney General's audit. Simultaneously, the While most park·managers are reasonable and board or s upe rvisors has turned to the stale Judicial lair, !here apparenUy ls room for abuse. It could help Counl cil. l. 1 h 11 d on lhe county both managers and tenants lo have the conditions of nlercs 1ng y. no one as ca e r h ·r. II Grand Jury to delve into the establishment and handl· occupancy set ort more speci tea y. ing of the controversial slush fund s. ft could, for example, find oul whal defendants pa id into the runds, what they expected to receive in return and whether or not their money was truly a voluntary contribution as some claim or legalized coercion as others say. Providing il clUl lel lhe chips fal.1 where they may and eventually s ubmit a public report with some teeth in it. the Grand Jury should investigate the secret slus h ftfnds. After all, it is the Grand Jury that is lhe public's watchdog. Mobile Home Rules Loophole Plugged A tax loophole that set off a furor in 1971 when it was revealed that former Gov. Ronald Reagari 'fiad not paid any state tax on his 1970 income is about to be sealed off. Reagan, laking advantage or the so-called ••gentleman farmer'' tax shelter, explained that losses from his cattle investments had offset tax liability on his other income. Now the Legislature has approved a measure. plugging this and other tax loopholes, which Gov. Brown, in his inaugural address called ''a special privilege of the few." [ • • .. •• • ·- 0 " ' • A bill designed lo firm up lhe rights of tenants in mobile home parks is en route to the Governor after approval by the s tate Legislature. The mea s ure would sharply limit the rights of park manag ers to evict tenants for infractions of park rules or to change the rules without sufficient notice. An estimated 6,000 Californians, most with in- comes in excess of $50,000 a year, have taken advan- tage of the tax shelters which finance experts estimate cost the state some $25 million a year. "So far, gentlemen, the only progfam ou,r ce'!so~s found suitable for our new 'family hour policy is Shirley Temple In the 'Good Ship Lollypop'!" Jt followed a s urvey by the Joint Committee on Aging which reported that many senior citizens, hav- In addition to providing the state with some needed dollars, the measure should serve as a morale booster for less-affluent taxpayers who don't qualify ·for tax shelters. . - The Vogli,e For Legal Blackmail ( ,fAUL HARVEY) Bla~ail is legal. You an file a phony lawsuit agai s t anybody for almost any re- 'Dear Gloomy Gus Night anL.mornin&: low clouds and Cog; no surf; three months' worth and back to school! The Grinch stole summer: Bumffier! J.E.T. . ' Gloomy G.n (1mm1t1l111r1111111niHM II<( rNd«S .... oe IMlt MCHHrft, fTfl«t"" ,,;...,., ol tltl 111w-per, S.lld """pit ........ WGlwmr Olli, D•llr PllM. Transcending National Boundaries Eiirope's Economic Miracle LONDON, ENGLAND -The e®DOmic resJirgence of Western Europe since the 'end of World War II, achieved largely with American assistance, must be considered one or the miracles or ourtime. A key que s tion , h o w· ever is whether this a f. fluence is STANLEY KAR NOW at least, in improving the en· vironment. The Thames River here in London, once a cesspool , has been cleaned up to such an extent thaC salmon are reappear. ing !or the first time in a century. \Yaldort prices_...,...~jammed with French vacationers. A phenomenon th3t seems lo have overtaken Europe has been the emergence of a middle class that transcends national boun- daries. But with all this, European leaders are wor-rJe<I that tlie boOm of the past· decade; may taper off, and sorRe are taking precautionary measures. Last week, for instance. • ason. named Pepsi was accused of rape. Accused of assaulting and impregnatin g a neighbor 's female pood.le against her will. solid -or whether it is merely a facade con- cealing deep problems. At the consumer level . meanwhile, shops and restaurants are packed with customers spending money as if it were going out or Cashion tomorrow. People in Stockholm. Paris and Hamburg seem to be Wldaunted by prices that make our own Inflation look mild. Ger-mans , Frenchmen, Italians, Englishmen and Scan· dinavians appear to have become increasingly similar in their tastes and behavior -and very much like Americans. This development has been en- couraged by the European Com· mon Market, which has eraied C'Ommercial frontiers. French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing surfacejl a plan to pump some $10 billion in· to the French economy. partly in the form of bigger government investments and broader social welfare programs. More often than not, he'll pay a relative· l,y.,sm~ll cl~im rather than "def end himself in an ex pen si.ve . court fig?lt. ·'" ~ Calirodlfa is lJ\G ~.rot'people whouse.tbelaw as a WeapOn~ The medical ··malifractice in- surance impasse was felt first in . California because that state's lax laws tend to encourage nuisance lawsuits. , California 's Supreme Court re· cently ruled that when '1lD employe gets drunk at an office p&<.rty and gets hurt on h.is way twme the employer is liable. • A Redwood City, Calif., jury ~warded a million dollars to a woman who blamed her car wreck on th e roadbuilders who Oesigned that curve in the highway. ' i A NAVY dentist rescued a San· la Monica worn an from her burn· tng apartment and then he sued her for $1 .S million, claiming that ti.e hurt his back during that i'esrue. • Gloria Sykes sued the city 0£ l;an Francisco !or $500 ,000, ~iaimin g that a cable car acci- 8ent gave her an insatiable ap-~tite for sex. And she won the se. And in this state o! moun-~i nou s la ws uits ov er legal olehill s Rae Adler, 28, sued a ~ os An geles pet slore !or 100,000, accusing the store or elling her ''a mean snake." • In San Bernardino, a poodle IF CALIFOR NIA ' has more than its share of damage claims it does not have a monopoly. Eleven Chicagoans were in- dicted. for staging accidents. ac- tually breakiilg one another·s arms and legs to ~ollect in- insurancepayments. BYU psychologist, Dr. Victor Cline, says we all tend to be im· itators, for better or worse, and news coverage and much enter· tainment rivets our attention on bad examples. Did you hear about the bus wreck tbe other day in Chicago? Actually, it was a Friday morn- ing accident involving a bus, a truck and a car. A Policeman at the scene later said it must have been a ''scheduled accident.'' It wasn't. THE BUS was westbound on Jackson Blvd., a semitrailer truck was going sout h on Pulaski. The truck ran a red light. and hit the bus broadside. The bus then bumped into· a car in the eastbound lane. - It sounds worse than it was. The damage to the vehicles was minor. There were five passengers in the bus at the time of the wreck. By the time police got there. dozens or persons had scrambled aboard the bus, claiming tO be in· jured passeng~rs . There were five involved in the accident-but 28 were hauled away to the hospital. · The rj?:al s t ate of Europe's health is vital to the United States. for the future o! the Atlan· ·tic alliance depends on European stability. A SERIOUS depression in Europe could spur the rise of communism, particularly in Ila· ly and France, where the Com· munist parties have ~n making headway in the cities. Al the moment, though, the pr'>Spect of trouble is remote despite the warnings of doomsa-yers. Within the past few weeks I have traveled through Germany, France, Italy and Britain, and compared to a generation ago, when I first visited Europe, the changes have been incredible. Factories in countries like France and Germany are as effi· clent 3s any in the United States. This industrial comeback, moreover, has spawned a new breed or European technocrat as , capable as any American man~ger. Indeed, European industry could probably teach us a thing or two. In Sweden, for example. the Volvo plant is experimenting with new working methods de· signed to relieve the tedium or the automobile assembly line. THE EUROPEANS also have ·been successful, in some places • , Last month, my wife and J blindly set o(f for the beach re- sorts or Brittany on the rhistaken theory that the trip couldn 't be more expensive than a similar excursion at home. What we found was Coney Island at 4 ITALIAN housewives use elec- tri caJ appliances made in Germany, and French ki(is play with toys made in Britain. A good deal of m erchandise is · as · sembled from parts manufac- tured in different EUropean countries. The plan is, in essence, bor4 • rowed from Franklin D . Roosevett·s New Deal . It is a mixture· o! capitalism and state_ projects, and it is working suc - ceSsfully. So Europeans may have their fingers crossed, but they are basically confident. And, in my view, Americans ought to be proud that they contributed to lay- ing the groundwork for EuroPe·s prosperity . The Oil Buccaneers From our oil notebook , here are more fascinating facts about those modern buccaneers. the oilmen. whose profits are more !abulOU·S than the pirate treasures of the Blackbeard era: -The World's No. 1 corporate power is Exxon? th e supercorpora- tion, whose $10.9 billion profit·• last year ex· ceeded the an· nual budgets o! most na- tions. Its cor-· porate ruler, J . Kenneth Jamieson, is ·· little known outside of the world 's board rooms. Yet his S677,000 annual salary is more than triple what President Ford is paid. Exxon faces antitrust charges brought by Cpnnecticut, (JACK ANDERSON) Fiorida, Kansas arld the Federal Trade Commission, not to men- tion three air quality violations. 45 environmental violations and 53oil discharge violations. -The multinational, multi· billion.dollar Texaco empire operates iN84 countries, with its own fleet ot 205 tankers and 37 ,000 miles of pipeline. Last year, the company paid a scant 1 .6 ~r,cent federal tax on a $2.8 billion net profit. This means the American taxpayers indirectly helped to keep Texaco's ex- ecutives in Cadilfacs and their women in mink. The company is defending itselJ from more than 50 legal actions involving an- titrust, ecology and paUution. building a large tanker Oeet. In 1§73. the eompany was slapped on the wrist for monopoly prac- tices in American Samoa. --ONLY TWO of the Big Eighl!' pay federal taxes worth mention- ing. Last year, Standard Oil of In - diana paid an 18.2 percent tax on a $1.7 billion net income. Shell paid· .a28.6 percent tax on a $903 million income. Yet even these taxes were far below the 49 percent ·a~e corporate tax. Nor were the two .companies so }lai-dpressed that they had to deprive their executives. Stan- d.a rd of Indiana paid its chairman, John Swearingen, a $476,000 salary last year; Shell"s presi<Jent Harry Bridges collect· ed$410,000, Here are additional oil notes : ;Early Graduation Makes .Sens~ • -MOBIL also paid a 1.6 per· cent federal tax last year on an -even ·greater $3 .6 billion net pro- fit .. Founded in 1866 as Vacuum Oil, Mobil is now deep inti> oil shale, natural gas, coal and solar power. This company, too, is de· Conoco, with $7 billion in oil sales last year, is also the na· lion's biggest seller of bituminous coal ... Phillips, once run by·an American Indian, now operates in 16 countlies and is in- volved in the North Sea explora- tions ... 1 Amerada He·ss, a family firm run by Leon Hess, has boosted its profits a n incredible 676 percent since 1972 ... Getty Oil, owned by · the .aged play.boy and art collec- tor J . Paul Getty, has srored a 245 pei;:cent profit increase•since .1972. • '9 One or th e most encouraging ( ) .. ppenings in publi c oducalion is EARL WATERS e development or the "early . aduation .. program ror high hools. This program will be aced into operation shortly and II permit students 16 or over to lit the hi gh srho ol scene a year two early. That is providing ey s uccessfully pass a ry uivalency examination. ing. More seriously, they ~ill be shorted on some worthwhile ' classroom' learning. .._some suggestion$ had been ad· anced that •nyon e 14 !fears or over 9e permitted lb take the ••t but the OQ'lmission -Reform or ter,mediate nd Secon· ary -Educa-• on balked at . ar-Sffil. what theY dlll •ttee 11 remarkabJp progress. e WW ll those over 18 have able to secure a high Khool '· llicate throuth eqlllvalency nu. Tha\ was due largely to pr-urea brought upon the l'llQ>111$.by th• '!'llitary. -- dua117, unln1 u.,._ 1dlools -•tlil "!or.iy to coll&d ' • ADA money from the taxpayers, one who possesses the equivalent education shouldn't be required to sit through a redundant classroom program. That should apply to all regardless or age. AND, for that, on e can view the new program with mixed emo· tions . • It is well that those in the educational field have finall y come around to the realization that all knowledge doesn't stem IT IS a well established fact from classrooms. Those who that today's children, through · have gained it otherwi se the osmosis of television and a shouldn't be compelled to waste much more worldly way ol liv · their time being spoon fed things ing, are far more knowl~geable they already know . More im- th an their parents or portnntly , the taxpayers gi-andparents were at the same ahouldn't be burdened with such ages~ The-adoption ol the oari, a charade. completion program, made On the other hand there are possible tbrou1h le1i1latlon many who have long contended authored-. by Senator Arlen that the educational process has Greaorio, la merely arecognltlon been unnecessarily prolonged ortlialfact. and drae&ed QUI m.erely lo Undoubtedly there ·will be satisfy an educational hierarchy. some voids in. the educational ex· In their view there is.no reason ptrience of those who opt foc...e."•-•·~~f-o_r_sbort cutting ·the higb school Iy completion. Ther may mils program through the exit ex· the pleasure• o suffering amlnation now .to.be,.WUtut.ed. lbtou&h third and fourth year Rather, they ar(ue, the ba.•lc Latin or some other subjects high scfiool education •llOlll~ be wlilcb prove to be..ol liWe ><allla compacted lnto a two-,year (W- when It comes to !actng up to tho gram. Tlils, they say, rould.,asi- •heer nec-•lllea or earning a llv· ly be done by ellminallng llle v-· 'I .. study periods and compulsory fending itself from multiple en- physical education. Elimination vironmental, water quality and oC !rills would also shorten the antitrustcharges'. ·grade school ye3rs. -Gulf, the oil company qf the I fabulous Mellon family, ran up WHAT MAKES all this impat: its profits a fantastic 440 percent tant is not just the savingS"to the during the 1972·74 period. Last taxpayers which would accrue year, the company paid less than by reducing the number of s~hool a 5 percenl federal tax on a $3.9. years although that alone would billion~ net profit. Some of the seem sufficient. It is the fact that Mellons, with personal fortunes in today's world those wbo seek in the hundreds of milliom, have to earn their way in the pro· mBJ)aged to juggle their furances fessions are r~uired to spend so that. they sometimes pa)' no several ye-ars after colle ge federal income taxes at all. Gulf graduation acquiring the isfighi.ingenv'ironmootalregula- knowledge and skills enabling lions, has been cited for environ- them to meel licensing require· mental viol-.tions and ls Jnvolved ments. As time goes by \,ho8e in illegal political c::ontributions. yQrs have been lengthening as · -Standard O!t ofC.lllornlo by licensing be com es more str· no mea,ns limits Its oPeratiOns to lngent. Calilorqia. rt is active ln ~o less The resu!L .. as been thal-m<l6t~-th~t 35 foreign counUies, IS also entering the professions_are. ne /-0 · lhe mldstage or lile6e!Ore they notelf· are allowed to earn their tirst dollar. Cdmyacting grade and The happiest people are usually high schoo learning would thosewhobave learnedtobecon- permft colle&c graduaUon-at the W>Cedwlll\lcs1 -LSmJlh.._ age most i;1ow a re onl,y enterina. It woul~ tHen make J)l)Sstble enl· barkinl \won a_ career .in tbe ear- ly 20tl Instead or being nearer the aee r30· . Jlhas alw~s seem~tomethat the most diUlcwllparl ot .building a brld&e would be the &larl. - !lob.rt ll<ncltley. I ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrl N. Wel!d_. Pliblisher Thoma s Ktrotl, Editor Barbaro Krnbich. Editorial PagL Edi!or The editorial page of the Daily Pilot seeks to lnrorm and stimulate readers by presenting on this paced\ver!iC commentary on topics of inttteSt by syndlc•t- ed columnllts and cartoonists. by providing a rorum for readers• views and by · prescnllnc_ thi s newspaper"s opinions and ldea.s on current fo)l'iC!5. The editorial .oplnfbns of Ule l)ally Pilot appear only''.n the editoHal tnlumri al the top of thl! pa(le.' Opinions ex· prtUed by the tolumni$lt and cartoonisll rind .letter writea are -lhe.lr own and llO Hdorwrnenf. of thefr vJew1 bj the Dally Pilot •ho!Jld belnrtrTtd. Tuesday,'::>eptembcr 16, 1975 - f ct .. "' ,, di c 7 hi T " , j I 1 ( 1 t : a ' ' ' I ( ( ( • 'I • . , . . . ' -I Polltfeal Notes New Man ers ·Aide -Set ' '1 ... . ..... Transit Employes , EtJ,U;jation Sub-sidized , SA N~T;:;ll;='-ll,N.-.ll--:-"'-po11~-ey -w~u written Wllh must be pertluent to dis-~ Employes ol the Or-an eye toward ,avold!nc trlct operatioo beneficial lly O.C. HVS'nNGS spotesm.an will present a p.m. u part or a campaioi awing Comty Transit Dil!rict any futvre labor rela· in Improving job·rdated 1 °' ....... ,......., ''special lnterest film'" at the tbnlu.c;bthe arta. are DOW enUUed to nim· tlons problems that skllll or required toward • , H---{)>eaaaJl>11-J1Mllallla,......_,.M'.1Lt~--~t fall meetinc al the M a BeolHl\l.Jooeofthelar&•Ddd ~mentforeducatloo ml.th! develop when an accredited de1ree a.gain nest ye~t;;tA.~erdrR:fop!Jililbl!initic~an!K-iwViocnenlliiiil-'1wvi:r..-ooniTiimraiiririi~iii;;.::;;--j~;;:-;;-;;c;;;i,...-...-...,+-¥.~~~~th~eµ!!!•.lln!!..!•~~PP.l1<01.i:J"""''':-'''!•"'•~t~r:i:•~im~--iitbi>;aa1t~c,;,o:.iu:i1;di::a.l:d~d~tico;_:.;a~";__--~- sembb'man Robert 11\Jrte (R-Mtday. nounced their Intent to -the ORANG COUNTY Jol>-l>is~etriat .,e_:1 buraement for school employe'a value or ad· tin"' Be h) at the ..... ,. Dem«raltc pruidenllal--""8· ct =~ ors Al>' work. vancement within the Hun ..... ac ........ Tbe program beglne with ell· tloo In 19'16. proved a l>Olicy Monday He iald the course diltrict. has appointed a new campaign lee at t .:30 a.m. at the Bttnt'M>Od • • • that penn1ta relmburte--;;iiii.ii;;i;ii;;;;ii;~::;;;:iiii;;;iiiiiO;iiii;;;;=====r director. S.vlap and Loan bulldlnJ, HMO ment of 80 percent al tul· -' • Kath_t._Bode, 31, of HuntinJlon Adams "Ave7, Costa lofeaa. 'Ibo A WOULD-BE U.S. oenat«. Uon. -t'egistratlon f-. Beach will direct the Democrat'• film and Navy presedallon wUI Robert Finch, wlll -ar at • rtquired books and SlOP- bid to upaet the Incumbent befollowedbyanoonl-Republican AssoclalelalOr~• Leukemi·a. plies ana 100 peTcent roe Republlcu. • • • Count7 ••Evening Aboant e any necessary travd or Mrs. Bode was a precinct STATE SENATOR Dennis E. Pavilion Queen" Sept.Z3startlnl living expenses related chairman in Mancen' last nee Carpenter (R-NewPort Beach) la llllp.m . D • S toscbOol . when Ii• waa defeated ~ a expected .to dlaeuaa the state of Jl'lncb a former California rlVe et UNDER THE new ar.nn ot-•-one-c·-, '""-c-u'" · lleuten.ut fovernor and pre-rn 11>-· vuv ..-~ u..::: .u.aonua government and his policy. the distri.ct ~ c·•t ' in sidential adviser, wanta to run ,..,.,es -· own tent to run forU.S. Senate general manacer or tn· Mangen' new campaJcn cblff Frlday 'during a dinner meeting aga.inst incumbent Democrat ANAHEI~t -Tbe diviaual department i$ a previous prealdent fl the of the Whittier Republican John Tunney next year. Orange County door-to-heads would be em· tardlow School Pro. Burke's Women Federat~. 1be Newport Beach event will door eampaign of the powered to approve. a striCC-lll"CIO.des.,.Huntl)ij'ton cost 14 for boarding the boat. The Tri-County Chapter of course for reimburse· ach. Fountain Valley, seal The Dtf!elinl will begin at 6:30 5el"Vices of a no-host bar will~ the Leukemia Society oC ment. Any amount ovei- Seacb. Rossmoor and part.of witb.. • social hOur al tbe available. Am-erica continues $200 a year would take Costa Mesa. William Penn Hotel in Whittier * • * through Saturday. special approval. ·The Mangers forces will con! and will be followed bY dinner at THE DEMOCRATIC Party of Mrs. E. 0 . "Al" Bar· "Courses eligible for duct a kickoff ''paUo party" in 7:30 p.m. Reservations can •be Orange County will bost a pre-· rows. residential cam-reimbi.trsement will be Costa Mesa Saturday startin& al obtained by calling (213) view showing of the ftlm "Give paign chairman, said a approved on a cas~by· 7 p.m. at the Micbllel Mound 696-6075. '.em Hell, Harry'' starring James goal of $83,360 bas been c.ase basis,'' ac~rdingto home, 3128 Country aub Drive. • • *' Whitmore as President Harry S set by the voluntary or-Gener a I M~n ager The candidate will be available U.8 .. SENATOR Uoyd Bentsen Truman. ganiiation. The money Edward F . ·ti. He to answer questions. <D-Texas) will attend a private The movie will be shown at the will be used for research noted the-classe can be '* * * reoeption al Laguna Hills City Center Theater in Orange and the society's local seminar s o short· A U.S. NAVAL Reserve LeisureWorldSalurdayat2:30 st.arti.n1at 9 p.m .andwillbepre· patientaidprogramror course~ and not Transit Board OKs Insurance Contract SANTA ANA -The Orange County Transit District has ell· r tered into a risk management : agreement with Trans Rei>ublic Insurance Company that could cost as much as $413,000 a year in premiums. build up its own actuarial statistics, the insurance proposal is a three-year ''retrospective plan'' with optimum and· pessimistic estimates or pre- mium levels. ceded by a cocktail party at victims of leukemia, n e c es 5 a r i l y one Democratic Headquarters in lymphomas. hodgkins semester or a quarter SantaAna. disease and multiple myeloma,sbeexplained. 1°':,gOatTZ said the . ,,_. ORANGE COUNTY Sheriff Bradley Gates will be the featured speaker at the regular meeting o( the Fountain Valley Area Repub,lican Assembly Sept. 24 al 8 p.m . in the Fullerton Sav- ings and Loan building at Brookhurst and Slater Streets. Gales will speak On "Present Day Challenges in Law Enforce- ment." ••• • LOW COST ' f.. '. .. ..... AUTO INSURANCE ~ &_ ' Married persons over lwenly-five ' 1 02* annually Twenty-one year old single males '144 ·~11y Nineteen year old single males 5167* annually (lul ~ ttvdMt• only) •whh ..... dr+.Wtf-4 BOB 'PALEY and Associates Inc. Phone: South o.anp Count)' 642·6500 Nonh o.anp County 5-3205 The pact was endorsed by dis- trict directors Monday on the weight of an audit of district in- surance by the consulting firm of Warren, McVeigh, Griffin and THAT MEANS the district will pay premiums al the end of each year based on the actual mishaps that occurred over the past 12 1 months. ORANGE COUNTY Supervisor Thom as Riley will ad· dttss a meeting of the county·s California Republican Assembly chapter Sept. 25 at 7 :30 p.m. al the home of Dr. Paul_Deloe1 800 La Mirada in Laguna Beach. Gre•t-NYlftOI on .. 1 trMn Uggtd merchandlM. TM .. ie 11 on. HWtttngton:--lJiStft.Ct offiCiifs have been told at best, they can expect to pay about $295,300 fOr a year's full coverage. If things go badly dur- ing the year, that figure could lop $113,000. Republicans interested in join· ing--the county group, which is headed by former Congressman John Schmitz, can sign up al the meeting. THE TRANS Republic bid was deemed the best of 19 proposals offered by brokers and insurance companies. ' T.he complex insurance package includes complete cov· erage of district operations, ranging from vehicle dam~e to personal injury. Coverage fs in a . range of $2 million lo $10 million. Because the district h&sn •t been in existence long enpugh t~ Basset Hounds To Vie Saturday ' ,-._._, anwn•• z~ m1 m.' ,. ••. 'bl Deaths E'lsewhere . SANTA ANA -Any day at Commonwealth A.KC basset two months Motors, 2114 East First of age er older. without St. here. points toward his cham-Entries will be taken pionship, is eligible to from 1 :30 p.m. lo 3:45 enter the annual fall p.m . Judging will begin AKC .sanction ''B'' at 4 p.m. The entrance OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) -Harvey M. Johnson. 80, a federal judge who once ruled against Presi- dent Nixon in a Florida canal construction caseo! died Monday following complications from sur- ge ry . While senior circuit judge in 1974, Johnson ruled Nixon failed to hav e the authority to permanent·· ly stop conslrucl1on of the <'ross-Florida barge canal. IEUllOADWAY MORTUAl'f 110 Broadway. Costa . Mesa 642-9150 Mc:COIMICIC MOITUAIY Laguna Beach 419-4-9415 San Juan C3pistrano 495-1776 PACIFtC YllW MlMOIJIAL PAii( CeJMte,.Y-Mor1uary Chapel 3500 Pacitlc View Drive · Newpart Beach. Califon)_ia 644-2700 HR FAMILY COLONIAL fUMHAL HOMf 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 SMITHS• MOITUAIY 827 Main SI. Huntingtoo Beach 536-6539 SAN DIEGO <AP) _ match for basset hounds feeper .... doJ? is $3. An official of UC Sen sponsored by the Basset There will be a Potluck Diego was killed when Hound Club of Southern dinner following the his car went out of ron-·california. match. . All entrants shol\ld be trol and crashed down an properly inoculated and For more info~tion embankment Sunday off free from illness before regarding the match or Intersta'te 8. Cecil B. h h the dinner, call 633-1423 coming lo t e mate W ha I e • 4 6 • was which will be held Salw--or (213) 286-6069. supervisor of construe--;;;;;:=;;,;:::;==::=========;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiim lion and utilities al the • university. DeathNotkn .. BETTY L. BAER. resident 11'1 Cast. llllitY. c.. °""'el dfflh St~ 14, 1'n. 5'lrYI~ by Ml" ""sl!Md '"""; ._......., DI-S..-"'.'tr of c.or-0.1 Mtr, c...; ~-:S..OitofC-tl Mew Mid E-el HelNI, C....; bn:lllW!t. (M1 Of He<Mt; 2 Qf"M!OC:lllklrm, ,Jay ....i llrMrc... Stf"fk•• w1n bt tiekl n-s-~Y. Seclltmlwl" 1l, ti 11:00AM. PKifie Yie. ~-lnt"°rne<'lt Wiii btprlv .... ~kV...Miortual'y4itt«Of'1,. Mc:eot..(OM GOA OOH,.-, MCCOLL.OM, rnlmntGf cmi. IM'wi '9. O•tt of dffll'I 5$--~ 12. 1t7S. i!M-1•1 Wf'Vlce will 119 flitd 91 •: 00 PM 'NtdnncNY, St. ,.,.._ dttw'll Pl'"estlYRriiln QUf<h. Atv. °""' M•ddo11 oftlcl•fll. lflltr,.,..,,I, F~rMYtfl Me,_.-i.1 P•r1l, S-.U ,.,,,., C.. Ptclflc vi."' MOrt....,.y, j>lewCllN1. Bt•tl. c... dire< tors. 1,, lilu of floMn :~.m1~~~~=·rin1~ MIU Poff, 1S12 E•sl Stwntll scr-t, LonralNdl,C.Ul.tClllJ .... ...... HERBERT C. SAMPSoH. a.teat• il'tll $tslttmbtf tS, 1t7S 11'1 LOl'l!I 8INc.l\- C.. Rtllci.tnl tf Ctst• M•M, C•. ~lftd llr Ofl• son, Hfftltt1 f . ~ et C.Stl Mtse; -Wst«. ~Htttio...._.ot ...... Baf,Cl;I grMlktll~· 4. ....... ~~~ .,.d J "1!••t1r.••'-9'•ilctc:lillirtol. 5'nkft wttl bt i.ti WFiliiil1idlp t:CO PM..,,...~~--Aw ....... Lh14••11 otfl<l•nt. Efll•"'°""""'• Mfl,_ AtioMy. Or .. , C..11'1 MNllf ~ctclMt'-_, .. l'!Mfe .. .,... l•ftrll• cll•flty. 8•11 8foHw•r ___,_ aEAlll:DM.rt Cl)NSTAHCl!: 9EAROSL.EY, mt--*"' llf flS wnt MY Stnttt.. ........-i INdl,,C...0...olMtflS.,..., ... IS, ATHLETIC SHOE REPAIR TREOS & 0THREADS offers offitiol resole and repair service for •ADIDAS • NIKE •TIGER • TRETOl:N •PUMA •HEAD FAST SERVICE Treds & Threads It is not a simple.task for a patient to reach and maintain "leon weight" for life. First the patient must have an honest desire to cure h15 problem ... then accept professional guidance from trained Medical Doctors. Ltndoro's unique 10·week treolment and training program will teach patients tlOw 10 reach and maintain their "lean weight'" for hie. A sale and procllcol pion, with proper nulrillonol diet, and continual emotional support. New audio and sub-liminal visual aids ore used lo motivate the patient. The entire program is under the strict supeMsion of Medical Doctors. special- ists In Boriotrlc Medicine. -lJndQfoQinicsoreowned and octministered bv MeOCa Ooctot1 that restnct lheo1 proctW:::e k> 8onolric.s. HJ. Clinic: Penonntll are llcenMld b¥ lhe Slate ot Col1torn.o. Call for information Monday thN Friday 8 A.M. to 6 P. M. tfrt ... "-l*"fltll$.. ~ .... .,"'"' ~=========-:!,MU, Jt!tfl Mf:l(fl'll .. Y afMI RObtrt MtlC......,;tl•ff'9'1ddM~ ....... ............ -.ElkNrt,.JMl-onS.. ......., '"'"-hll•· .. r911"1lft Cot.ta ,...~ .... ·-f'K'°"· .Undora~ MEDICAL CLINIC ' PUBLIC NOTICE · . NEWPORT BEACH COSTA MESA 645-3740 557~893 Poca ""ProfeSslonol Mt1~0 Vettj!) Bldg, PobfessioOOI Bklg Check the t1ntnUc HYlngt .•. Flrt:I come, ftrt:I Mf'Yed. Import Car Radial Tires SIN l.S0.13 T11t>e1t11 91•ckW•ll $15.95 Ph111].77 f.E.T. Slff 7.00.1S T11btlt11 8l1ckwtll $19.95 Plu1 $2.00 f .E.T. Limited Quantities WHILE THEY LAST! The General Sprint-Jet Radial The Sprint.Jet combines a deep five-rib tread design with hundreds of traction sipes to pro- vide road-hugging traction on wet or dry p:ave-- ments. Plus you get the long mileage benefits of radial ply constructio:n. HURRY! $ 95 Slrt1 15!.SFll! tlld 11~13 IUM!tH b!tckwtll•, plut t1 . ..e or Sl.U ftdertl fl.Cite Tt& Fits moffts of: 0.tSWI, ,._l, Kond9 end MORE.I Sll:H 115SR1S • llzn 1t5SR1S. Sin 1SSSR15 15511R14 1•51R141115SR15 Tubtltlt b!tc~Wlll Tuti.1•1• bo!tctfwt ll. T11to.t1s1 tlltcito..+1. $26.95 $27.95 $28.95 .plut SI 153 or Sl.10 plu1 Sl.'3.SI t4 ptu1-U.OC F E.T. F.E.T. orS1 M-F":CT. f ill model• of· Fill '"Od1!1 ol: f oll modllt OI MG. Por..c .... S.111. Audi, Oc>el. Trl11~. S.,nMtm, Al.xi•. Toumpft tnd MO<tl lOJO'll '"" 1'101111 TOTO!•. Por.~ ... ... and mo•tl Slui 1755R14 • .,. 1151111:15 TUll94fll blaeliw1Jf. $31.95 p1utS1.0IF£.T. Fl!1 ...W.I• oi· l.le•ctdff. P1ugo!, Toro!•, "'" mo••! $33.95 pt111 12.:M F.E.T. ,,,. !'llOd.i• al' c.1 .. on, J-011••. TUu"'Oll, PO<K"9 •nd ....... 1 The General JET-AIR. m Size C71-14 SlM F11·1• Tut>elest T11btte1s •e11cio.w1JI 81tckw111 S20.95 $23.95 Plut U .04 Phl1 S2.40 f .E.T. J".E.T. 95 Size 6.50-13 tubeles.s b1ackwa11, plus $1 .77 Federal · Excise Tax) A real value for today's economy! The Jet·Air m is buill with rU{Jged lour-ply construction, Ouragen"' Tread Rubber, and twin·tread design. Why pay more? Charge it at General 'fl• 1tsol'IOntf" • M1•111r Chl f!Jit • 81,,_Amf!flCll<d Slz• H7S-14 Sin FlJ.15 Slz•H7 ... 15 Tubtlltl Tubel111 l llbl.le•• Bltckwa!I e 11cP111 Blackwall $26.95 $22.95 $26.95 P1u1 1.2.71 P\111 12.•S P1u1 l.2.l3 F.E.T. f .E.T. f .E.r. SlMEfl.14 llnG7 ... t4 llr• S.IO-tl SIN 07 ... 15 Sir• l7 .. 1&"' T11beles1 l11beltff Tvbtltt1 T11btltl1 T11btltt1 Bl•c:t!W•ll Sl1o1;1wttll 8 t.ckw111 Blackwtll wtllWWtll $21.95_ SM.,95 $19.95 $24.95 $34.95 Plue $2.27 P1111 U .56 l"t\!111.n Plut $2,90 Pl.n f3.11 f .!.T. f .E.T, ,.E.T • f .E.l. f.f:.T. wp11ewall1 S2 to $4 mote per tlnJ, I_ " ~Avalltbte In whitewall only • "110fn,.-• _... ... _ • Don Swedlund Inc. _,,_ ....... COAST • GENfRAl TIRE J1 5an llemoodino • I . Long leach • Mission Hiiis .-thorne. 0.0"9'1 • Newpollleoch -~. Longleoch. -..a . l.o Hobo. -nd_Hilts. ShefmonOOl<s 8HllRAL TIRE ---· ·--·--.. ,.,., ......... --2855 Harbor Blotd. Costa Mesa ~ 540-5710 ' West Covina • Fullerton· RIVeRkte • sonta Monico co.to Meta • l'omono • C9nif01 • Hoftywood 646-5031 -------sooner or later, you'll 011¥11 Oeneralt1--lillllll!I __ _ . \ . ~~-~~~~~~~~....:~~~----~-oa-• ___.. ~ ------------·-. • . • • " I ..-..--DAil Y PllOT Huntington Opener ~ ~~ini~hing ~T()nches' 1 Innocent Comedy It may oot be mean as sue , but "Finishing Touches" is a nostalgia trip pr s orts, back to the inqoc.enl ''soi>histicaled'' co medies of the Fifties wher e a good deal of hanky-panky· was discusse d, but none ever materialized. Playwright J ean Kerr has set her latest creation in the here and now. but it's s till not far re- moved ftooi her "Please, Don't Eat the Daisies·· of an earue, vintage with freeze-dried charac- ters and silualions. Neverthe- less. it should entertain a great "t'I NISHI NG TOUCHES" A C-J by J••11 K•r•, dirKled by J••11 .:;ol;wl, leoc..,.lc •I di,..< tor 11u,1v 1.01;1e11, M1 O....•llil\I'• Ale • Kob.o, pr1"11!ed f'<1a•v• •nd S.tvro.ov'"' I 30 11\•0UO" Ocl. 11 by '"'" Hun!lllQIOI\ S.ICPI P!•Jl'IOU\•, JHD M•>" St .. Hunl111111on Be...:11. Rwi.• ~111on1 &-12· S•21 THI! CAST Killy~· ••••. , .••.•• , . , ..• , • , . P11 BurlOft .JeHCooper .... .. ....... .• • . Jorn Flynn 'Frt'CI Wl'lll!.., ..•• , ••••.• , •.•..... Cl1r• Burr.on FtUcl11Anclr11y\On ............... ,EltfftMcGN El\le Kille Plum .•.•. , • , • , •..• , . U.W Slubl)j~l1ld • ~lt,..1C<>Optf' · · •· · · •••. · ........... Rocky Mobero UQlh • QDoopw ................ , ••• C.uy Bilbuwk 1C1vtn c.i.-r..... • •..• , •.. , •.•• JOll lloi;iO!>i\ many patrons at the lluntington Beach Playhouse over the next four weekends. Director Jean Koba has mount- ed an attractive production or this rather lightweight family comedy of a quite normal home over which the cloud of extra- marital shenanigans hovers, but blows over. It's sort or like the weather -everyone talks about it, but nobody does anything. PAT BURSON, an actress of limited experience bu t marvelous intuitive talents; de- livers a first r a te performance in the key role of the wife who finds out in the same day that her pro- fessor husband has the hots ror a coed in his class a nd her eldest son has a female roommate. Miss Burson ia -a -splendid study in .s.tage. ~nimatlon. constantly ac- Intermission Tom Titus live, and tosses off some di!Cicult dialogue with the aplomb of a much more seasoned performer. Less effective is Jim Flynn as her perplexed mate. F1ynn en- cibunters a number of Urning pro- J>lems which combine to render his character erratic when it should be derlsive. Flyn n ex· hibits some moments or strength whirh should become more cohesive with an inc re a sing familiarity with the role. The standout of the supporting cast is Ellen Mc Gee as the woman or ttte world their oldest son brings home with him ; although overactini;:: is required ill her role, it never masks h~r re· al character. Clark Burson is quite satisfactory as a fellow pror who rooms above the garage and has an eye for his friend·s wife. OF THE THREE son.s, Rocky Moberg is solid as the college stu- dent, Guy Babusek has some nice mom en ls as the high school er . and Joe Boggess is engaging as the chess-playing boy genius - all quite believable. Linda Stub· blefield, as the unwitting object of Fly nn 's arrection. comes through _charmingly in a brier se· quence. . "Finishing Touches" is an in· nocuous comedy with enough re· al chortles to round out an even· ing's entertainment. It continues Fridays and Saturdays through Oct. 11 at the playhouse, 2110 Main St .• Huntington Beach. * CALLBOARD -· Saddlcback College will hold a uditions for its two fall productions. "You Ca n't T-ake It With: You" ·and "The Legend or ·Sleepy Hollow," on ENTERTAINMENT Wednesday and Thursday from ts to 8 p . m . at th e college theater ... the first will go on stage Nov. 12-15; the second Oct . 23 and 24 . Broadway Duo Take LA, SF Light Opera LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Broadway producing team of Cy Feuer and Ernest Martin have been named managing directors or the Los Angeles and San Fran- cisco Civic Opera, one of the most successful theatrical opera- tions in the United States. Feuer and Martln, who pro- dured ''Where's Charley?'' "Guys and Dolls," "Can-Can'" and "How-to Succeed in Busin es Without Really Trying,·· will take over from Edwin Lester, who rounded the Civic Light Opera in 1938 Lesteltarted by presenting four ope ltas for a week apiece; now the e are roµr or five large- scale usicals playing half a year in Los Angeles and San Francisco. Besides playing Broadway com p anies, the Civic Light Opera h as originated many musicals. "HOil WIYE" SAOOLEBACK PLAZA Selling anything with a 1: Daily Pilot Clas!l\fied Ad is a simple matler ... ·. just can 642-5678. •, .... inpl_ dlulln(I. , ,e~!r~y funny . -ol IM Wl!l\fte •t>d n'(lo.I 9fimuletj119 p1911 o• ..,.1111 cHcilM er.,--ltte N.v-~ "JUMPERS" by T-St_.t A deliciously madcap English-farce that's a must-see for theatre-goers who relish truly civilized wit. intellec· tual agility and clever lunacy. Mature audiences only. S,..WPoetiewP-.:fa t .. s.f.IJftn(l-$3.00 . ·~ '~'fl Jou th Coast Repertor.1.: • .. ,,,, ..... MMT LADT'" IPGI -OWL MID PUSSTCAr tPGI ""THE FOITUMI"" "MONTI PnHON & HOlY GIAILM IPGI "TOMMY" ...,,....,... Of nt1 MOUMT.....,. "DOWN MIU. lACr IPGl ........... "HATH WISH" llJ "APPL.I DUMPLIH&-....- SWISS PAMIL Y IOllNSON" 1•1. "'WHrTI u• Hnr IPGI "'SIWfOIO WfYIS•f,..I "SEXY.EYED ANETTE HAVEN IN A STEAMY SEXPIONAGE 'N' SINTRIGUE SAGA ·" ' Jolln HQ!me~ . IN b=at adilll . .l(i llr In , . "JOHNNY GU~' iff cmbodim<nt of forlliddcn plasurc. -..... ~ o\T l:•S·S:Oi n 00<0""'0"••><""'0 ;<I \H O • Ill( ""., M. MtQllOCllS. "'"" . ""' ,,... lllSIT •• L1••M1 ....... , ... ~·- I• • .,14, fl''"""' l'N·Ult lo .,fff, .1 ........ . .... , ... lo l llMI ........... .... , ... I . -"""·*'-THI IQITUNI ,.. '"" •. FOi Pm'S SAKI"' -~· ..... --lOYI I Ol8nt,.. -· llRHI"' DffN 1 J:Je NOOH IOl1 .......... 'UT II WALKING TAla.. WILD McCUUOCWI "' °"" ll:)O NOON -----TOUNG fUNKINSTllN WClltf'J"4lfT'I ll'tl TAKI MONEY & IUN !I'll _,.._._ 1••~1U•I •Oi i[[' tMllD•!I UMl!I II fll(' CPlllll,... 1-11 SOc • U-2 F,_1 -~· ·-"" oc II•" I! -·· ~·-· ...... _,, .. , 1111•1 , ............ ·-· _ .. ---· --.. , ... , .. ...... ·= .. ::: I ~-........... WILD Mt:CUUO(H'5 !"I M-. .. MACON COUNTY LINI _., .......... -~ ..... _, .. _,_ll>JI JAWS .. CA,TAIN HfMO .. ·---UNDO COYIU Hll0fl'll GOING A''"' __.._llflUTWU WHm llNI fMl ,_. --UWl:OUT P"i -tto..r• COONSKIN 111 --IUUllLLA.-i "9CJO ....... CAnO ~ ...._. lA IOt.t. ...... ..C. ws....-nos ~-llTOHO YMI DOOi (ti -· INTll THI 01Vll tt1 ---·-.... W~McCllUOCHS ;.o --. TIDAL WA¥1N " ' ~ Big Hand for l:'lake o.ew ... ·,, _ .. J.O Dkwz 'es "'IMICUA'MU! MOM- ILACIC 't"'°.Otr "Tl' CAMI NOW OUTa SPA.Cl• DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642·5678 [ARlHQUAK[ ...... .....,_ ~CIHEMA CIHTlll t CIHlMA VIEJO CINEMA WEST ••1000•'•"~' \""MWl'"' '0 ~•••·1 (•Ot~tlt&r-•"f ... ,. '"" _..... ..,_ •• '° •111-'"''" 979-4141 l l0.6990 192-449) fltul PIUI PIUI ''TM "lltotMf Can You "Bite The lulet'' Wild Meeullochl" Spare • Dime?" MAKES BEN tuJ LOOK·UKE AN EPtC JT'S IEnlER THAN "BLAZING SADDLES" OR ''YOUNC FRANKENSTtlN" NOT ,.., 'THE OTHER SIDE . SIN::E OF THE LOJE MOUNTA IN' STCRY- A TillUIE STORY or: LOVE AND COURAGE ,PLUS "WHITE LINE FEVER'" -- .. _., .... , .. ~-Ctlllll t 7"414 I You'll~ It as well as see it.. " • 'Glad You Asked-that~ . '1f Marilyo ...S Mr G• dilor THE-CITY SHOPPING CENTRE ORANGE •532-1721 ""-'CITY CENTRE CINEMAS -S.A. f'RWY IMANCMEITER EX.I c .a. '"WV ICITY DR. £XJ -wMMcC•1t .... "'W .... ,., .. i- . . '. FRAMED I ' )tltlrftttlSI ~nit uuu•• ""TOMMY" -.... -..a4<1Mllt 'UlllEll COVfR HBO" J.IUIW.~1 .. 1 ... S . COAST PLAZA "DON'T lOOlt NOW" UIW.-hl.........,. "BfYOND THE DOOR" ..... 1 ........ -. ............... CINEMALAND 1414$1 """' ..... us.lill fllll'UIM "AMERICAN GRAflTTI" ................. ...,,,._ ........... ,. , ...... ....,, ... ,,, ... 1'11 SI. lllUtUllllS .,,..,,,.._(» __ ..... , ...... w. ....,,, .. , ...... "THE FRONT PAGE" ... ML-hi ....... • TOGETHER '"The Fortune-............ - t. HAllOR TWIH l<Uiof.oTWl.UJM 4f>.057l 646°3266 8 WISTIROOK whtwilllt .. , MOOtOfllll\t ---530.4401 P91er .Sellafa Aa Ille Hllortoua Inspector ClouH•• . 4. .. . I I I f I I I I I t f • - . I I r I I I QUEENIE Tonight's ,, TI: BighHgbt8 -. --IH t -ABC (7) 8:00 -HaQpy Days Someb9dy . ~as mess" up Fonzie's ~ycl'if-and he's Giit to get tlie lllil· ~-Boo~~· !Ion Howard ' NBC <•> 8:00 -Police Story. Chuck Coanen--atars as a cop with both personal a!"f Prof"!'siODal IWOblems as· he tracks· · dOwn a PW' o( armed robbers. _ CBS (2) n :so -"BanaCek : Fi)> Me- lf-You can. Find Me." G~e Peppard stars as the lllllurance inv gator who tackles the big cases In this episOde lrom the now-defunct series, with Sterling ' Hayden. TV DAILY LOG ·ruesdoy Evening sun-.11 Wednesday ,. .. KOCE: Tele~j,oii (50) ' ''He can't be bOthered right now -he'a n.tddal a 11\de presentation ... " • I .1 1'IJpd!1.,......... ... '"" DM.VPLOT ilf ..,. FDA Wams . Je:wa Oarlstlaas ·1 · Of Ear Drop 'WQrker-s .Refu,Bing i Hazards To Print Pentlwuse . , " 1 PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE " . . / ' t Alf DAILY PILOT l"*4!f. S!ptembef' 18, 1'175 ,Sales ltenu • FTC Assails S·afeway Ads WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Federa l Trade Commission has accused Sareway Stores Inc., the na tion 's l a r~e s t super market cha in, or cheating consumers by 01dvertising food al sale prices but selling it at re- gular prices. T he Joss to shoppers. one F TC la wyer said ).londay, has been "sub- stantial'' over lhe years. although no com p lC't e ctoll ar es timate has been made. THF. COM PLAINT against Sareway co m· pleted a s-.1.·eep by the agency against the coun· try's "Big "{hree'' food store ·c hains. A&P. the No. 2 Chain, and Kroger , No. 3. have been hit with similar litigation. Th e FT C s a id Safeway. whicb operates J,950 stores in 27 states a nd th e Di s tri c t ,o r Columbia a nd whi ch did $6. 77 billion w o rth or business in 1973, engaged in false. m isleading and deceptive advertising. The chain advertised items as bein g on saJ e, the compl ai nt said . but in a ''s ig n i ri ca nt number" or stores the items were Jert 'on the shelf, and sold to shop- pers, at hilher pre-saJe pric-cs. 'Pass the Soy Satree' I . ·~· Sales Up for GM 3 Other AulD Makers Show Drop • ll"ETROIT <AP> ll174"model cars. -PBZ;ns-car! are-rorr· S r 8 od I ning at a 13--year low, olf ales o 197 m es THAT P~TTERN 16 percent from helped pusb domestic apparently did not re-depreased deliveries of t car deliveries in .early peat ltselt this year, 5 437979in1'74 Seet~nit:ier to within 7.:5 af~lh prices are--p -·~ --· . perc!;nt of slroog year-inl up again in the fall . SALES OF imports, t !!go levels. the U.S. autc_> In 11 tea d, Ind u it r y which' have taken a re-, 1 .ind~'?c; repo~'f· analysts credited the cord 20 percent ol the • t . our m...,or com·· stron~er than expected American market so far ~ panies sat~ they sold sales 10 the latest period this year. are reported c 150,241 cars ~n eight sell· to early sales or 1976 only at the end of each lng S(a_ys ~unnc the Sept. model1 which carry month 1·10 penod. compared rlc 1 in' averag· · · · with Ii2 172 in seven P e creases AMC said it sold 1,529 days•in the comparable mgaboutl250acar. . cars in the lates t J .. 1Jl74 pertbd.. For the year-to-date, period-54 percent of , domeistic s°'les of them 1976 models. ·1 PERCENTAGE in· 1 creas es or de.creases in sales are computed from the daily selling rate -18,780 this year, compared with 20,310 in. 1974. u"1 '•1.-.i J n d u s t r y g i a n t Presley's Shares Dip THE COMPLAINT seeks to require Sareway to post a copy or its ad· vert.ising in each store along with a notice ask· ing shoppers to compare the m arked price against the prices in the ad - and to report a ny dis· agreement s to the manager . Lee's Chinese Cui sin e, Inc., a converted hot dog wagon in midtown New York City, features a pagoda-Like top replacing the traditional umbre lla. P. Y. Lee's menu includes· sweet and sour Pork, vegetables and fried rice, egg roll and chicken and vegetable Jo mein. J .. cc is shown on left. General Motors Corp., the only company to re· port a sales gain, said de- IiVeries were up two- tenths of 1 percent from last year. However, Chrysler Regional Concept Irvine's Credit Union Bid OK'd The Greater Irvine Industrial League has r& ceived a state charter to create what may be.the na· tion's first regional credit union, serving .thous.ands of employes from possibly hundreds of firms in an area of about five square miles. Th e Pre s le y Com- pa n ies o r N e wpo rt Beac-h ha ve reported re· venu es a nd aft er-tax earnings of $23,79-1,708 and $561,619, respecti ve· ly. for th e second quarter endedJuly31. Tourism on Wftne? Corp. sales were off ·2 'Percent, American Motors Corp. sales were down 14 .5 percent, and Ford Motor Co . de· liveries dropped 21 per- cent from comparable 1974 averages. LEAGUE PRESl'DENT Tim Strader said re- ceipt of the charter from the California Department of .Corporations means that operations of the Greater Irvine Credit Union can begin almost Im· mediately at GIJL headquarters, 17880 Sky Park Circle in Irvine, with an expected initial mem· bership of about 3,000persons. The acti on was based in part on a 1973 FTC sur· vey of retail food l'itore prices. Unlik e the com· plaint against Kroger , which is pehding. and the one against A&P, whi ch has been settle d, the Safe-.1.·ay action does not allege that the items on sale were not available. It simply says that con· sumers suffered over· pricing because the food continiled to be sold at prices higher than ad- vertised, LOS ANGELES <AP) -Vi sitors to Southe rn Ca lifornia a re spend ing more, but th e a rea's tourist industry orficials ar e enjoying it less. compared wit h $1 .03 billion for the same period last year, the council said. GM, Fon:! and AMC are allowing dealers to sell 1976 models severaJ weeks before their rormal introduction because of shortages of some 1975 cars. Membership in the credit union fills a need for employe loans at favorable interest rates, accord· ing to Strader'. The credit union is open to employes of GllL-member firms throughout the Greater Irvine lndus\rial Area For the s imilar period of last year. revenues a nd earnin gs we r e $23,445,JOS and $836,477, respectively. Earnings per share for the quarter were $.21, based on 2,620,998 shares out· standing, compared to $.32, based on 2,599,569 shares outstanding, for •the year·earlier period. Tourists spent a record amount in the 13-c-ounty region in the first six months of 1975, but the rise may be al · tribuled in large part to inflation , the Southern California Visitors Council reported. Aul the number of visitors was re- ported to have declined to 3.801,500 from 3.872,800 a year ago. Because the number of tourists dropped off. the higher dollar fi gure was mainly a reflection of inflation, offi cials s aid. Ear I y September sales last year were un · expectedly high as pend- ing price increases averaging about $450 e car triggered a buying s urge of remaining STRADER SAID THE league now has 290 members, with a total of about 24,000 employes. He noted that there are about 1,250 business firms with an estimated 35,000 employes in the area served by the credit union, which includes Irvine and parts or Newport Beach, Costa Mes3, Santa Ana, Tustin, Orange and El Toro. AND TJIAT MEANS the outlook for the area's third largest industry isn't bright, council ofricials said. Tourists a ccounted ror $1 .07 billion in bu siness in the six.month period, "MORE PEOPLE WERE lravell· ing. but fe we r ca me to Southern California ,'' s aid William -P . Brotherton, the coUncil ·s managing director. Coast Firm's Burglar .Alarm System Viewed Dickens Finished Mystery? Special to the DaUy Piiot Conference has made Vle burglar alarm syste m in • DENVER -Burglars response five times conjunction with Basic !· Note it s tated that Abeware : While you're faster for burglar alarm Four Corporation of "The Mystery of Edwin 1 1 iifting up the window or calls at the Newton, Irvine. Drood '' by Charles jimmying open the door, Mass. Police Depart· \ Dickens has no ending. a new computerized ment. ''BEFORE WE used On the contrary, it now • al h "We estimate that only the computer, the alarm h~s numer«?US en?ings. 1. arm srstem can ave · d I would go off, the d1's· Dickens died without police dispatched to the six secon s e apse i 6 cene eveB-before you between the moment the patcher would have to ( ) :stepfootinthebuilding. alarm goes orf and the check through a lengthy L. M. BOYD I time a patrol car is dis· card file, correlate the i 1 IN FACT, an Irvine patched to the scene," n~mber of the alarm finishing it, true. But minicomputer system says Timothy C. Coogan, with lh,e owner . go more than 100 other pro- 1being displayed here staff attorney for the through another book lo fessional authors· have during the 82nd Annual Newton Police Depart-find the naf!ie. add~~s, written final chapters to 4lnternational Associa-ment. Coog8n developed and other 1n~ormat1~n, polish off the thing. Plus :tion of Chiefs of Police the computerized and then. dec1~e which one spiritualist who fi'"""""""""""""""""""""""":=::=!!::!!!!!!!!!!:==;f Patrol unit .~o dispatch to claimed to get the win· Thllortnovncwroernlsnelthero"ofl~1owU the.scene, Coogan ex· dup directly from norlhc Dtdtotfofl o/ on ofl~' IO buy llllJI of thnit Wamties. plained. Di.ck ens' Spirit. The oftttlf'l9 11 made or1/v1>y I.he Offering Cin:ulor. ''Now, with our Basic I· Four system, the instant A FRIEND recently 160,000 Shares the alarm is activated, returned from Egypt lrvtne Savings &: Loan Auoclatlon (In Organlullool Guarantee Stock ($10Po• Volue) Price $12.50 per Share NOTICE The Offering Period will expire at 5:00 P.M., Friday, Septembcer 19, 1975, unless ntended or renhted prior to that time. Coples of Offering Circular may be: obtained from tlw·A8foctaHon at 17092 PuDman SU-eet, Irvine, Calllomla 92705, (114) 649-8434 its number is shown by a s a ys it's numerical display con· not just the trol and at the same pe c uliar time, that information is ro c king automaticall~ fed into gait of the the computer. The com· camel that puter uses that number makes the to determine the name i n e x · and address or the sub-perienced scriber, the type or rider sick, alarm, whether it's a bu .t the home, bank, or other s mell oflhEi building, and the ap-beast. He me'ant sick, propriate police· car and literally, he said. fastest route to lake. ALL TlDS information instantaneous ly flashes up on the television.like screen in front of the dis· patcher," Coogan said. ''I BELIEVE, honesUy believe," said Charlton Heston, "that all actors are meant to die broke, friendless and drunk in a desef!edditch. '' Approximately 600 IT'S NOT UNUSUAL alarms are plugged into for an ocean going ship the Newton police com· to take up 30 tons of 11.P~U~t~e~r_s~y~•~t~e_m_. ____ ~barnaci~s In one year SELL Idle items with a ... CONTRARY to Daily Pilot Cl assified Ad. popular belief, some :~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~642~-~567~8~. ;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ blind persons do indeed ~ •become seasick, it's now - .. Susan. Susan is the paperwork expert in the Newpor.;t Equity Funds Loan Depart""nt. After you 've talked to Cal Wolfe or Linda Blue about your real estate loan, you 'll probably hear from Susan when your loan is funded . She's an important member 9f tile staff that has processed over $1,CX>0,000 in new second trust deed loans so far this year. Sw•" Cannot If you're in the market for a real estate loan, why not give Cal or Linda a call7 The number is 644.a824. And after your loan is funded, ~ello to Susan I AVCO FINANCIAL TOWER 620 NEWPORT CENTER OR •. • Sl:llTE 211 NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA 92660 known ••• THE IUGH BID for a fighting rooster is oftentimes $1.000, I'm told. YOU'VE HEARD THAT 311 the people who acted in stage plays dur· ing Shakespeare's day. even those who played the roles of girls, were men. But did you ever wonder why? Here's a theorist who contends the theaters of those times were not much good as far as acoustics ge.. And the speaking voices of most women were not resounding enough to cut through the dead air. • QUERIES Q . ''Rem e mbe r Jo«nny Roventini, that ramou5 Philip Morris bellboy? How tall wa.s be?" A. Exactly four fe<lt. Q. "WHAT do you call the home of a bare?" A.A form. 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Y•.a•'• Rltlb·lA>wa Appear Every Satarclay .. tw,_ VO•« fC,l~n--W.. _.. .5drtt ~ ---~ ~ -. ~ •.f ~ U. 0. P.t ,..I 0.. °'9 O~ Se. lwo'l ~,-•"11;,__-F-"'"-" ~!'.'!Y.-!!'t ll :I ... ,.._,:,_j 11 -i: ------,....., ,. • ::::,· .... ca. ·~-c-'° ,. , ..... 7 ~~. , m= \It .....:........ a-! , 51·•·· -'' ,,._,. ='' ~:: Ji ~~ BySYLVIAPOllTEa '<i.a..tiilaScriu) Altbousb ••altered collogea bav• beiw> lo elve out "en· u.cement•' Or ••no-need" acholll'Ships to atlrect top a.tu· dents, few national Pl'l•ate Protrams award money for achievement alone. Moot iedt a comblaatloo a( excellence and need. • -An Wuatraticl:tlsthe Preliminary Schalastlc Aptitude Test/National M•rlt S<:bolarship Quahfyinf Test (PSAT/NMSQT) ~ bytheColl•s•BoardandNa- tlooaJ Merit Scbalarsblp Corporation and 1lven to Junlon la about 18.ooo hich · schools each ,October. Scbolarsblps can ranae Crom $100 to $1,SOO a year for four years. See your counselor about participating. -Blackstudentswtio ' Money's Worth t!lke the te_st also can compete for scholarships of the Na· t1onal Achievement Scholarship Program for outstanding :Negro Student.a, in a~ti.on to the regular competiUoo.. WREN YOU TAD THE PSAT /NMSQT and complete a short questionnaire, YoU get a bonus : on your registration f6rm. you can ask the College Board to include your name ln the Student Search Service files. This service is used by col- leges to send facts about new or special programs (includ- ing aid) to students with certain characteristics. -The National Association of Secondary School Prin- cipals and the National Honor Society award $1 000 scholarships ~ qualified high school seniors who beloni: to th~ Honor Society. Check at your school for eligibility re· qwrements. . Make a list pf your Qualifications. interests, objectives and talents. Theb check directories and reference guides for achievement scholarships that fit your needs. FOR PRECISE INFORMATION about special and career-related scholarships, get "The Official College En- trance· Examination Board Guide to Financial Aid for Stu· dents and.Parents''"(Simon & Schuster, $4.95). Your school library or financial aid officer may have a copy. Do not overlook these other private sources of aid : -'National Organizations of which you already are a member. Many groups-4.ffClubs, Boys' Clubs, Jaycees, Junior Achie-Vement-h.vesmall, specialized pf9grams. -Professional career organizations - such aa those re- lated to health and nursing, law enforcement. engineering, special educat ion-:-offer aid to stimulate young students to enter U)eir fields. Some even sponsor scholarsl).ip "con- tests" in which you can demonstra_te Y.our need-Get a c,opy or urnuperl>"'NEeaAL.ift?'' from the American Legion. Box 1055, Indianapolis, Ind. 46206 (SQ<). -Athletic scholarships are a well-knOwn source of rinancial aid and so are grants to winners of beauty or talent contests sponsor~ by local, state or national organizations. Beware, though, of private promoters who, for a fee, ,,ro- mise you a "scholarship." : • -LABOR UNIONS AWARD large numbers of, scholarships to members or their children and many cor· porations offer scholarships to children of employes as well as to students with no corporation connection. Check with your union and corporation. -Civic and fraternal organizations that sponsor scholarships range from the American Legion posts or aux- iliary units to the Elles. !Jons, Masons, Parent-Teacher As· sociations and Dauji?hlers of the American Revolution. While i!!.,_g:iQ§t ~ases_._ the m9Q.eyjs for children o{memb:ers or lh05e liVUlg in.the community, check each source. -. Minorities often get help from national organiz3tions that offer scholarship$ and /Or special counseling and refer· ral services. A few: ASPIRA Educational Opportunity Center, 216 W.,14th St .• New York, N.Y. 10011 (Puerto Rican); Bureau of Indian Affairs, Higher Education Program, Box 8327. Albuquerque, N.M. 87108; League of United Latin American Citizens, ~ational Education Service Centers, 400 First St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20001; National Assn. for Advance· ment of Colored People, 1790 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10019 · Natioqal Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro stu. dents', 1776 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10019; National Urban League, SSEa~tSZndSt., New York, N.Y_.10022. -FAMILY ANCESTRY can be your key. Check ethnic organizations that would be apuropriate to you. 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I ,. . -------~--·--..... -.... ---·------··----·- _,...._ x.toll Qi I t7 Ml s.3141 + ~ Xlr• 111< 10I 6 l7 l 'h+ V. y~ ll'ldus • Jlt 1 •.• YngStDt .tiQ 4 11 t~ ••• Z.lee.otp ·'° • 2 11"-•.. ,..,, .JO • •2 1]f't-"" Z.Vr• COr'p • • 2l s -"" Z....itflR.a I ~ 161 19--V. lo.wn 11111.2210 .tll • .,. .. ~ Business Sales • WASHINGTON (AP) -Merchants and manufacturers took advantage or 'a July sales surge to further trim the :huge inventories which were a key in· .grcdient in the recession, the Com· merce Department said today. The department reparted total busi· ness sales rose $3.69 billion, or 2.2 per· cent, in July to $169.4 billion. It was the strongest monthly advance since April for sales and marked the fourth sales increase in a row. Gas Price Dip NEW YORK (AP) -Continental Oil Co. said over the weekend that it is reducing the price of its gasoline by a penny a gallon because of "com- petitive conditions in the marketplace." Conoco thus becomes the first ma- jor to adjust retail prices since the end of federal price controls Sept. I. . SPORTS ' ENTERTAINMENT • ------------ I I t\ JJ DAILY PILOT Ban g Sixteen U~IT ........ Name Tags Required On Baggage W ASIUNGTON (AP) -Hop- ing to cut down the amount of lost luggage.. airlines will refuse to carry your baggage alter Sept. 21 unless it bas your name on the outside. .T~e new rule, approved by the C1v1I Aeronautics Board two months ago, will not apply to lug- gage carried on board, but onJy to checked_ba&gage. PASSENGER S WHO do not already have their name on their luggage will be furnished with Cree identification labels by the airlines when they check in I It's 'hang sixteen ~ for Ratsy, a surfing dachshund pup as before departure. s he rides the crest of a wave in the Atlantic Ocean off St. The airlines long have been A4gustine, F.la . At the end of her ride, the pup swims for urging passengers to put their the waiting arms of her master. .... name on the outside of their bag- --------------------------gage so that Uie carriers can quickly locate baggage that is Julie Eisenhowe r 'Having Some ·Fun' WASHINGTON (AP) -Julie Nixon Eisenhower is putting her life together again. Thirteen months after her fa ti.er, Richard M . Nixon, re· signed the presidency, Mrs. Eisenhower, her father's staunchest public supporter, is having some fun. SHE SAYS HER MARRJAGE IS closer now and that the pressure to perform publicly has lessened. She has written a cookbook and designed embroidery kits to be mass produced. She is considering a television career. · And she i s beginning to feel free. "It's been a different year because, for one thing, I'm not guarded,'' Mrs . Eisenhower s aid in an interview in her Washington apartment. "I don't think anyone can know what it's like to have 24-hour protection for six years. I don't think David and I ever had a normal situation. "In the last year, we've kind of discovered having fun again· and being free, being able to pick up and do things and go places. I think that's the major happy thing in our lives. ''IT'S NICE NOT TO BE UNDER pressure to try and answer questions on every topic of the day, especially if you don't think people care what your view 1s on whether we should send more aid to South Korea . J just re- ally value being able to be m)'own person.·· The Eisenhowers' two-story apartment. which overlooks a bu~iltersection not far from the Kennedy Center, is furnished simply with small sofas and ri.igh arm chairs. A beaded flower arrangement, a wedding gift from sister TriCia, sits on a table. A small picture of her father, taken recently in California, sits on a J ULll: shelf in the foyer. MrS. Eisenhower requested that no questions about Watergate or her parents be asked, explaining, "I'm really tired oftalktng about it." What she enjoys most these days, she said, is spending more time withhel-husband. "WE WE R E BOTH SO,CAUGHT UP I N political events that we really didit't haJe a life of our own. Now we have more time with each other, time to talk about our future and what we want out of life ... J've come to the conclusion that in marriage you really have to concentrate and give a lot. And I've found thai when both partners are involved with som.ething they enjoy, that's when there's happy sailing.'' At 27, after years of shaking hands and giving speeches in the name of the Nixon Administration, Mrs. Eisenhower is trying to establish her own identity. "1 enjoy working, I really do. If I hadn't had any interest or work goals when my father left office, my life would have been ver:r empt)'.. Having th~e. things going has been very impartant dunngthe f1rst year he has been out of orfice. ·· She has written "Julie Eisenhower's Cookbook for Children," a volume or recipes collected from friends. Included are such items as "Pink Panther Soup," and "Daddy's Favorite Steak Sauce.•· THE R ECIPES RANGE .F ROM INEDIBLE but decorative play-dough cookies to a more difficult, somewhat spicy Kima, curry. Mrs . Eisenhower said she now rei rets not calling it a cookbook for children and theirp·arents. A series of anthologies she has edited for the Saturday Even- ing Post comes out next r_ear. Her needlework kits, which she de- signed and which are being marketed by a large needlecraft com· pany, will be on sale in major department stores in January. Does she feel her famous name is an advantage or a trap? "It ·works both ways," Mrs. Eisenhower said. "There's no l easy answer to that. You have to go on living. If your name is \ known, you might as well make the best of it. I don't think you can ~ retreat if you think you're doing things. legitimately and produc- ~ ing things of quali.J.y . It's not a worry to me.'' " ' SHE BR USHED HER LONG CHESTNUT hair behind her. shoulder, letting the features in her round face soften. "I'd like to give a painting to the White House in my mother's honor someday, .. she said. "I think it would mean a good deal to her." She said that Warner Communications Inc., a major enter- +-~ainment and commUnicationS firm IOC~tediifN"ew York, is try· 1ng to promote a television program for her -an idea she finds • both appealing and threatening. "I don't want to be a TV personality," she said, her dark eyes ,1 narrowing. ''I don 't want to be a TV star. Yet I'm known now . I'm • J. torn."' • misplaced. The CAB order was requested by the airlines. IN 1971, T HE airlines began re· quiring all standby passengers to have their names on their bags and began providing free iden· tifiCation sf1Ck-er~Regul3r passengers were given the iden- tification stickers upon request but were not required to have their luggage identifijd. Lost and misplaced baggage has been one of the biggest com- plaints against the airlines. Neither the Civil Aeronautics Board nor the Air Transpart As- sociation, the trade association or the airlines, has rigures on total bags lost or misplaced each year. F l .\ f • ·'1 l .. y J II .; I .. • Tuna Embargo .. Vowed . Other ·Nations .Pressured t.o Qbey Treaty W ASlllNGTON "<AP> -The Commerce Department has an- nounced it intends to impose an embargo on some imparted tuna flSh, a move which copld cut orr most of the tuna sold in the Unit· edStales. The embargo is aimed at· pressuring other nations to abide' l!f a 1966fishin4 treaty. T H E l!JOV E FQLLOWE D complaint~ b.t U.S. tuna fish- ermen that the United States is the only nation which forces its rishinf fleet ta,abide by interna· tional y set quotas for a five. million square mile area of the Pacific Ocean off North and South America. Commerce Department spakesmen declined to say in an- Wlr k l< 'Good morning, Senator!' noWIC!ng the propoaed IIDpon ban which nations ml&bt. be taraets of the embarlfO. 'J'be.Unlt· eel States imports 65 percenl al its tuna fish, the vast bulk ol lt from Japan. The proposed ban would apply · only to yellowfin t\Ul.a fish, the . variety which goes into the canned li ght tuna ·wlilcb con· stitutes the mainstay of U:S. tuna · ftSh consumption. 1 sllned -tbetre•tJ i!villl"llre .... soclaUon PGtl•r to deter111lne hoW much tODa coul.d be !aken from the Pacific coaservaUon """'· , ' BUT SOME }J.ll, flahr£~n contend Ute dom~ .II.et oo the verce of ba•k,...ptcy and ave threatened t.o .,.lllster lbe!r •hl.IJll under a forelp nae if the ~ei:n· mentcloesn 'tacl. I SRV'ITiNG OFF a sianificant 1 porliOll or imports could be ••· peeled to drive up prices at / supermarkets, but offtclals .J.ng; said the U.S. l~el'J\l1)etlt warned other nations that the~ esti.ma1µ that 8,000 toils beyond U.S. might couple the ban with •. the quota already have been euier limits on catches by u .S. taken f.rom the area aod tbe fuial tuna boats in the controlled area. ~e above and beyond tbe quota The treaty restrlc:U the !al<• h'om the conservatioa1 ~-to 115,000 tona for !hi• yea. SChon- Robert w. Schoning, director aught total as much as Z0,000 . of the Commerce Department'S tons by year-end. National Fisheries Service, &aid · the agency will take fmal action on the proposed ban ·in mid-· October after soliciting addi- tional evidence. An international meeting on the issue is scheduled to coincide with the date the ban would become effective. . T H E CO MM E R CE deoartment held hearin.:s in San Diego on Aug. 29. U.S. fishermen claimed their, share of the worldwide yellow!in tuna catch had declined to 60 percent this year from '90 percent in 1966, largely due to restrict.ions im- posed by the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Association. The United Stat~. Canada, Mexico , Japan, France, Panama, Nicaragua and Costa Rica arE' the nations which have DOG D.4l'S LoNDON (UPI) -.If 'your dog is having one of those dog days, don't go to your ·medicine chest to find him a.n upper . The advice came in a re- .port issued by the British Small Animals Veterinary Association. ''Well-meaning pet owners can turn their dogs into ragiDg wolves by giv- ing them human drugs," it said. "The animal loses all its domesticity# It changes from a house pet to a Wild animal. l/Jaja Homeowners LOOK WHERE THE MAGIC COOKIE BROUGHT US Protest 'Takeover' SAN DIEGO (AP) -Mexican peasants say they have taken over 764 acres of Pacific beachfront land from U.S . homeowners 40 miles south of the "We are claiming only that which is legally and constitu- tionally ours." 1 international border in Mexico's Baja California. The land on which expensive Salcedo siad the communal • farmers will allow the Americans to live in their own homes. 1 Th~se Orange County girls are enj oying Camp Scherman in the San Bernardino-Mountains. be· ca us e Orange County familie s bought Girl Scout cookies last year. But there is more to Girl Scouting today than cookies and camping. Nearly , 35.00Q Orange County girls are involved today in projects that are very relevant to today -ecology, aid to the handicapped, senior citizens, and, of course. activities designed to help in home and business. They'll be better women tomorrow because they're having fun being Girl Scouts today. And fully 31 'percent of the funds needed for Girl Scouting come from the annual cookie sale. Aren't you glad they're selling cookies instead of d ope? Wouldn't you like to.help supply part of the other 69 percent, or become a needed adult leader? Call ... homes have been t>uilt by .. ~Americ&n1 11 part ot ~• 35,000- ~.acre expropriation order,ed in 1 1"9 by lhen President Adolfo Lopez Mateo for use as an ,..aa:riculturat community, a · i:•Pl'keamaa ial4. i THE IZ PEA.8,4.NT families, he ,, toid reporters, 11only wish to live 1 ·s1de by old• wllh lhe Americana 'iu nelthboci aod In Justice and ace. 1 ''We do not Intend to move clf.'Luld Jor,. s~v.i-.u. pretid-of t!MoLauroar.Dai Communatbeeutlve commltlee. • BUT A FOR MAL protest was being prepared by Howard Koenig, a retired industrial sales manager from Detroit, Mich. The goyernment wU1 be eked Wednesday in Medco Clly t.o al· 1ow the Americana to continue un- res\rlcled use of \he iaad. said Koenl1. 1ddln1 \ho\ "If com- munal 'farmerJ can cmrl'1: in and just take whatever lhey feel Is convenient, then no private prO:. perty luafeln.Mexlco.''" . A few of Ille houses were buiU north of Ille La, Fonda h<MI and restaun.nt at.~ C!Olta exceedln& $40,00f:. I GmL scour COUNOL OF ORANGE COUNTY Judg.,.CaMn Schmidt. Pr..ident - 1620 Adams Costa Moso, 0.lilomla 92626 (714) 979.7900 ' One in.a-serh~s~f public service.adv.ru;tisemeots..SDOOSJ:>.ted b!.J._Avco Financial Services, NeWport Beach, California I I ' • • When I was younger, I would give myseff theme papers tO write during the summer. That's the kin<;/ of -discipHne I set ror ·myseff.' Now training officer at Faiiview, Bobbie Reed is writing her sixth book arid a manual 'to bum excess energy.' ' • ' TEACHING 'S H.ER MISSION _ llJ ALLISON DE~EIUl • Ol .. 0.lly .......... At the aae when most children are in elementary scbool, Bobbie Butler Reed was working as a cook and interpreter in the Brazilian jungle. ''Tbey; ottered my father a gov a 1 'The flrst three years of high • emorshf P. house and bulldozer it school I had to work very hard to he'd become a Brazilian citizen... . catch up, studying seven hours Unstable politics caused him to each night. but I made-it to the tum down the offer. "He knew top of my class. There were a lot that if there was a revolution, of things I didn't know about.:• which was frequent, he would have lo remain af\d we would DIFFERING VALUES most likely be deported," Ms, Retumlng to"the United States, • d aD training of personnel at the : facility . • Before Ms. Reed and her two : sons n:ioved to Stanton, she served On the Sacramento staff or- ; the State Department of Heiilth's ·Licensing and Certification I. iop e Her missionary parents began their work in South America when she was nine and stayed for sixyeus. "My ·father's eventual goal was to live among the Indians," she said. But the Brazilian gov· emment first required that they learn Portuguese, so they lived initially in a small village. Reed, new training officer at she found that she didn't lit in. Fairview Stale Hospital, ex· "My values were nol their plained. 'values. And, while they had been So, the family began to contact playing, I had been working. I 'm the country's some 750 Indian still not very good at playing. tribes under less friendly, though 1' Attitudes toward the opposite : Department, supervised the de· partment's facilities information unit and worked in persorinel .. 1.management for the State _Department of Transportation. ' • • She believes that participatory education is the most effective ·method, and hopes to bring much qt this Into Fairview's training program.. t I I BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tuesday, September 16, 1975 ( ' She 'Mines' peaceful, circumstances. sex were different as well. After ''Every week there would be a all, I had lived and worked with a new edict from the government. tribe of Indians lhal wore little or We couldn't live on Indian land, no clothing and made 00 bones so we'd move; or we couldn't aboutsex.'' grow our own food; or no She found the experience d~ washinf our clothes on the Indian 'veloped in her a great sense of in· side of he river; or no meetings dependence. for the Indians.·• __ "c;W~e had no radio, television or movies. bUf\iie tiaa a lot.or::ats- cussions about beliefs and valu~. JUNGLE LIFE On the other hand, the Butler home drew young professionals. doctors. lawyers, newsmen, '"for the experience.·• By the time she was 10, Ms. Reed found herself camp cook for the Indian workers and official interpreter for the tribe. "I was in an unusual position. I was a child and female. Women of the tribe were not-beld·in very high esteem. But the older men would come to me, make me pro- mise not to tell the _youn~r men they had broken tradition and ask me to write down therr customs and rituals. "Then the yollnger men would co me ai:id do the same, and I'd get out m y pencil and write it all down .·· She had no formal schooling between third grade and high sc hool. "But J was always an avid reader, curious about everything. "'Values I held were my own. I owned them because I had worked them through myself." · · She feels she has always been people-oriented and has been teaching "since I was eight years . old." 1. Ms. Reed also brings to the work several years of teaching and training experience, and ex· tensive background as a writer. "When I was younger, I would give myself theme papers to write during the summer. "'That's the kind or discipline I set for myself.·· BOOKS PUBLISHED She still has a shelf of UR• . published work, but also has five published books and seven train- ing courses to her credit. Her role at Fairview makes • her responsible for coordination Within three years, she hopes to help set up an on-grounds col- lege offering the courses and~ grams that staff and trainees must range far and wide to com- plete currently. She also hopes to est861lsfi a . firm · bridge between all agencies . and hospitals in the county, to · shar~ training and resour.;es rather than duplicate efforts. "'There always are workable alternatives.•• • She is impressed with the . positive attitude, that things can get done, she has felt in her two months at Fairview. Having hopscotched all over the country in her teens (~'I went to eight different high schools'.') slii finds ·she now feels very at home in.Southern California. ''For the past three years, I've been on the road three or four days each week, and whenever 1 arrived in Southern Califoi-nia, I felt I was right at home." ·- Meanwhile she is at work' on yet another manual for participatory education and a &beth book -"ll 's always been a -great way to use my excess. enecgy." · ' , Own Business By CHARLES J. CANNON could Watch the face or the mine HESPERUS, Colo. (UPI) -and make sure no one went in," Violet Smith is a God-fearing she said. "Well, that was about it woman who resorts to violence 85 far as I was concerned. I went only when she's provoked. up on the road, choked hell out of What provokes her most, she him, whomped him alongside says, are the "damn federal the head a couple of times and bureaucrats" who ~ant to close :got him on the ground and the coal mine she and her knockedhelloutofhim." husband have worked for 43 'fhe mine inspector left bur· years. She chased three federal riedly, she said, and went to marshals and four mine in.spec· Durango to demand that sheriff's to(s from-her-:K:ing-€oa!-Min~e"u~1 ~officers arTest-M-n:-Smith for as~ early August. sault. "I whipped all seven at them "The local officers told him it out of here and told tliem not to was a federal problem and they come back," she said "I've got would let federal officials handle guns, but J dido 't use them. I it," she said. "They told him, won"t , either, unless they use 'that woman;s not bothering theirs first. There're going to anyone, so why don't you leave have to fire the first shot.•• her alone"?'' Mrs. Smith's cause has been espoused by numerous groups. including students at Ft. Lewis College in Durango. Bumper stickers proclaiming "KiDg Coal Forever -Total Government Never" and "puran,go ls ·Proud of Its American Vio)et." are seen on local cars. P ROBLEMS. Mrs. Smith, 69, has two p~. blems with the federal govern- ment going back a number of years. One stems from her re- fusal to allow federal mine in- spections and the other is the re- sult of a new·Jormula for com-puting royalty payments on a 40-acre section of government coal land lhe Smiths have leased. In 1970, she says1 an inspector visited her mine and told her eritployes that everythin'g was fine. Later, however, the inspec- tor discovered Mrs. Smith had not ordered equip~ent . to monitor methane gas in the mine and ordered it closed. "He dro!e up on.. a hill so be· ALLEGED VIOLATIONS Mrs. Smith said alleged mining vioJations led to a $3,000 fine against her, which she hasn't paid, ·and the forced purchase of $30,000 worth of mining equip- ment she doesn't need. "They told me I bad to have all this stuff for use on my mobile equipment," she said. "The only trouble is that I don't have any mobile equipment. I suppose I can use about $2 worth of this junk and the rest is ju.st sittini around getting rusty.•• Mrs. Smith said in 1973 when she leased the 40·acre federal coal tract she assumed it wouJd be added to her existing "granddad" lease. which called for royalty payments of 15 per- cent per ton of coal. "Then they told me I'd have to pay 4_ percent of the coal's value," she said. "Sinee I'd been. selling my other coal for $12 per ton, they estimated tbe new lease at the same figure and ·said I owed them 48 centa per ton. · • Violet Smith, 69, with work ers of the King Coal M ine which she h as operated for 43 years, 'resorts to violence only when she's provoked.' 'BUG DUST' coal prices to make up for the ad· "Hell, that stuff in the new d.itional royalties. But she said lease is 'bug dust.' Bad coal, and she had stopped mining on the it costs me over $9 a ton just to new lease and "the coal there get rid of it. I told them so, but can stay there as far as i·m con- they wouldn't know good coal cemed. from. bad if it flew up and hit '"I told those damn· federal themlntheface.Soltoldthemto bureaucrats I wouldn 't take take their 48 cents per ton and another dollar from the poor peo· cram it." 1 pie who buy my coal just so the Mrs. Smith said officials of the government could get richer. I U.S. Geological Survey in might have to raise my price to Denver auggested she raise her · $15 per ton to pay for .0:4:V.: equip- 1 ' ment, but I'm damned if the gov- ernment"s going to get it.'' So far, s he said, the govern- ment claims she owes $5,380 in extra royalties based on the 4 percent figure. If her own books were U!ed to determine the royalty, she said, "the govern· ment probably would owe me money for taking the coal out. "The federal govern{Ilenl is afraid to take me to court because they know they"ll lose. • --~·--------- They think they can come in here with force and take my rights away. but they've got another think coming. "Things are pretty quiet now and we·re digging coaJ like hell because ·evr.l'ybody needs it. I hope it stays that way. But the only way they're going to close me down is over my dead body. If they come back, they'd better br- _111g their gum and they'd better shoot.'' • • . • ---·----~· J I ! ' •• . ,§_~OAll.~~Y::.Pl!!L~O~T'-~----'T"'uffd::."'•t:·=tol:::em:::-=-"'"":c:•::.97,,,~ I -. : Why Weight? New Clas~ E>ue I f ' T ' ' " • ' •• Married 50 Years °pioneer Oranee County residents Mr. and Mrs . Harold T . Segerstrom Sr. celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Sunday with a family gathering in the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Segerstrom, the only surviving son of Charles John Segerstrom, a Swedish immi- grant, married the former Veronica Phyllis Merrick in Santa Ana. They made their first home at 1501 N. Broadway irt Santa Ana and began their a'.griculture and dairy farming business in tins. winning accolades for their lima ~ .... 1 The Segerstroms ai:quired the warehouse .Vea of the old Santa Ana Army Air Base in U»D.and ventured into the commercial area Qy developing an industrial district on 25 J;.res of land. Tin the years following, they constructed the first high-rise building in Santa Ana, the United California Bank on Main Street, and started the first phase of South Coast. f!aza. tiheir 17-story South Coast Plaza Hotel mpleted their project this year. The Segerstroms are the parents of one • Hal Jr., and have four grandchildren. By BEA ANDERSON Of ... 0.Uy~i.t~ .:.To succesafully lose weight and keep it orf is more complicated than most people..ualize. It is more than counting calories and using will power. According to Norma Norton, wh6 with Isabelle Goldsmith will teach a course at Cal State Long Beach, by becoming aware of eat- ing habits and accompanying fe elings , s tude nts c an do somethin~ about changing their diet. Ms. Norton says their ap- proach is successful "because we deal with e ach person as an in- di vi du al . Our methods are aJ y,·ays positi ve and supportive .·· Their groups are small, "never more th8n 15," and the eight- w.,rek session emphasizes self-awareness along with facts about nutMtlon gathered from academic sources and the federal goVernment. KEEP DIARY Awareness begins with stu- dents keeping an "eating diary," in which they log the time, the w\tb the door elated WU more chart and IOI chua• In their satllfytng than eatlna. lifeocyle wbicb are benellclal. EV.Eal'.BODY CHANGES -1 ''TIMI calendar ,ivea them an ~~~l:!!!l!!!.&!..!:!!!!ll~~~===~~.~~orll>~i>~1><1;:,1n~ted~ out that ea g, "notevervbodylosesweitrhldur· oriltlmemtnathem." "We encourage them lo keep .,, ~ """--'elJ'll that,.,_, can't bate ID. g the sessions • . . but ever· "~1 • -1 the diary for at least two weeks,'' t.belr bebavloc on iomeone else's Ms . Norton said. "By that time ybody changes. ....,_.. Tb mutt •-"e their "Some realize they Just aren't •~U\,l&Yo. e'/ -... they •hoUld be getting Insights own. · about themselves and their eat-ready to deal with weight loss but ing habits... feel they will deal with It in time. Pf;BBONAL P ltOBLEM Then , students are assisted i(I: "One student discovered she 111. Nortontai41hestaitedde- pursuing other ways of fulfilling put on weight because it was her alping the coUrte after her 600 themselves by building a re-only way of getting away from married sis years aio. pertoire of "personal treats." home. "At the time J wu 40 pound.t "Some don 't eve n know what ''Under strict doctor 's care, overwetabt. I tried eYf!fY kind of they like anymore; what is she would be ordered to reduce, diet, "oqld Joae w~ and I~ equally or more saUsfylnJ than so-sne wOWd go to a 'fat-farm .' it back. What made it worsewo ood She did this on the average of the mother of the bride wu a ai&e f "Thllt 's when we start digging thtee times a year." e,bt. · in again." In ihe awareness and ego-• "I bad a year to lose, but J wu These discove ries are "ter-building exerc ises, many the same weii:ht for the wed- ribly individual. What works for " pyschological dis ciplines are ding ... one doesn't always work for used. "It's as eclectic as we can She said she felt miserable and others." get to attain the necf¥Sary re-decided, "I h~ beiter take a look Fof instance, Ms. Norton sai~. sults." at myself. · one student discovered she ate a However, Mrs. Norton said, it "I couldn't figure out why J lot when she got home from doesn't do the students mucn couldn't tune into my own work. The pressures of work and good.to know allofthe ''whys''of behavior pattern when I had the children's demands came overeating if they don 't do workedwithothers'forsolong.'' together. something about it . Ms. Norton is a mental health Later, she round that relaxing "So, we introduce an 'action counselor, bum an relations ror about 20 minutes in her room calendar.' Dieters are asked to specialist, Parent Effectiveness ·training leeder and community service director} Los Angeles Weddings ~ and Engagements To avoid disappointment . prospecti\·e · brides are reminded to have their "''edding stories -v.·ith black and y,·hite glos sy ph otQgraphs lo the Daily eilot People Departm.ent one \\'eek berore the y,•edding. Pictures received after thut time will not be used . For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story , also accom - panied by a black and white glossy pic - ture. be submitted six ~·eeks or more tte.furOM.__w_e_d.diog d$te; otherwise it will not be published. To help-fiTI reQuirements on both wed · ding and engagement stortes;-forms are available in all Duily Pilot pfrltts. Fur· ther questions y,·ill be answered by People Depart~ent staff members at 8424321 . County-Psychological Associa· tion. As she started packaging a course "I ran into Isabelle ol')e day . : . wh~re else but the market buying food?" ?t1s . Goldsmith, a nutritionist, was interested in joining forces. The non-credit class will begin Tuesday, Sept. 23, and Thursday, Sept. ZS. Students may register at the class, and further informa·- tion is available by callini:· CSULB Extension office at (213) 498·5561. Landers D u e t o circumstances beyond our control Ann Landers' col- umn will not ap- pear today. f-' I MR. A.ND MRS. SEGERSTRDM ·Meter Just the Ticket t By ERMA BOMB ECK pressed to know where to 1-1 suppose a lot of you put it, but decided since tGt parking meters for the TV set attracted the Christmaslastyear. greatest number or A friend of mine vagrents, it was a place watches when the city to statrt. puts the old ones on sale "Okay, gang,•• I an- and was kind enough to DOllnced, "From here on put one under my tree. in, it's going to cost you It may just have been to park in front of the 'IV the most inspired addi-set. You got your meter lion to our house since here that explains it we put a basketball hoop all ... each nickel buys over the clothes hamper. . you 30 minutes, one dime At first. we were hard-60 minutes. Nickels and dimes only." n "What a rip-oft,•· they snarled. ?Y · At the end of the week, ,,. ..... , the house had raked in - $43.20. Then business fell ' · AT WIT'S END off. '-~--' "What's the matter?" I asked one of the boys . "Aren't you watching TV today?" "And pay a nickel for a half hour of Yoga? Are you crazy?'' The next stop for the parking meter was another problem area, the bathroom. FOr years, we have had an over- The real test tor the parking meter came when we finally attached it to the refrigerator door. Every time the door opened they had to put in a nickel for the first 30 minutes they stood there. i.e..s _________ p_a.rJLI n g prob I em · Then one night we did ~.omet..h_i_n.g rather drastic. We towed our son away. "You don'tun- derstand," he said, "I was just waiting for you to come along so I could get change for a · quarter!·· \/Aid Due , 1111\f;DNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 By SYDNEY OMARR "-Jll ES (March 2l·April_l9): Friend who con· suits you actually aids you. Means by lending helping band now you will be helpirig y~urseli. TAUkVS (April 20-May 20): Accent is on goal. career how you relate to those in authority. Chang~ due and a message -in form of call or writing -trig1ers a,ction. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Look beyond the immediate. Be aware of potential. Travel, ~ ... publishing are in picture. Domestic adjustment · figures prominently, too. CANCf:R (June 2l·July 22): Aura of mystery intrigues and could also be frustrating. Partner, f -mate bas key. Know it and ask -don't permit pride to block progress . . I , LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Accent on partnership, 1 ·1eaat doc\lment, settlement whicli brings yo~ I 1 greater re!!ponslbility-and rt!cognltion. . VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22): Employment PIC· ture changes -you could leave one phase of ac- l tivity in preparation for "something big." UBRA <Sept. 23·0cl. 22): Ability to love Is enhanced; you feel more vital , vulnerable -and alive. Imprint your own style -lead rather than I , follow, even though some becom·e envious. I SCORP IO <Oct . 23-Nov . 21): Accent on abode, r place where you feel stture. One who aided in r past may expect favor to be repaid. Maintain I f grown-up attitude. ' SAG11TAIUU8 (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): You get • chance to try different areas, methods. Flexible r, ~eh I• necessary. Be versatile; expand hart-.. •I! CAPIUCOllN (.Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Spotlllbt on I lalnlnl 1peciflc nff<la. Slick to principals. YO\l colleet, •dd to auets. Don 'tsell youraelf-rt. I AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Trust Judi-· I merit, iDtulUOD. You are on_largel -kn<lw It and I •clJlkit J:Oll are •war• ol ii. Be confident. I ParaorW!ty 1blne1. I PUCll!I (Feb. lt-Marcll 211): Get behind the 1 1 . II«'*· InformliUOll II available If you reject CO¥er 1torle1. Tbe valid 18 •pl to be hidden betwHlfU. llatt. ., II .... , It,..,.......,,, )'OU~• an or••nbe., a natural exeevt1ve, ••P•ble of bandllna --.... ~bilit>'..wo«klna~W'<l._YouJIOW 8nmakl.,valuable-.:i;.-..u. 1 • - which didn 't seem to im- prove. The parking meter did it. "Go check your son," I said to my husband. "I think his meter is ex- pired.'' ''His meter 's all right," he reported, "but our son has expired. There is no sound in there at all." "He's there all right He was towed away three months ago and ·can you believe it, no one has claimed him yet. with headphone and a Cor·'ecti·on magazine. Tell him he's ' · about to be ticketed." , As the traffic retl off in Debra Lynn Lund and the bathroom, we moved Guy Clark Fowler will the meter to another marry Saturday, Sept. limitless parking zone -. 20, in ceremonies to be thetelephone. conducted in St. The kids became Catherine of Siena absolutely parail.oid Catholic Church, Laguna about their time. One Beach. evening as I walked by Their parents are the on my rounds and John B. Lunds and chalked a warninJ;? on a George C. Fowlers, all of forehead , J heard ihy son Laguna Beach. say, "Okay, so you 're a The Sunday edition of wrong numbe r . Keep the Daily Pilot erred in talking. 1·ve still got 30 publishing the wedding minutes left on my story a week ahead of dime:· ,. time. .RUFFELL" UPHOLSTERY .._T•W..t ....... 1911 -111<.I. c.... ......... ..OJlt Th• hometown ,119Wap1per for 1n the Orenge CCllat lt·!he DAILY PllO! ~t:M::.. ','. •• " .· Locotloftslo _......, ...... PRESCRIPTIONS • '"""' Mctllillttl • °"""""" Ltf 111 r•fl" ywi-,...._, .............. • Shop Tues., Wed. & Thur>. 1().6:30 I " 2 Fashion Island 6!14 ·2800 .,i ) ... _ ... , .. , ... _ ...... , ...... ____ ...... --------~ ·--. --.. __ • • Ell . I • TUMBLEWEEDS .. by Tom K. Ryan DR. SMOCK I ll<JNDEfl ""'ERE SHE GHS >'£11 INfoRM,t,-? " WllV lllf: llL.AD< ARM MNP ANP 'WARs, LIMPIP.U?ARP? I WISH'f('°") I CDULPA 'SAVE» HIM .. • R8Pr!fAT 'f'HAT, Pi..e:AS8 ... veRY ... ve~Y Sl,.OWL,..Y ~ I , .... .. ) ,j~ FUNKY WINKERIEAN t 5TAF:F MEETING& '!HIS YEAR Wll.,1. BE· HELD ON 1HE FIRSi AiolO '!HIRD 1UE&DA<.>5 OF EACH MONThl I RGMEHTS ,. 11.Y MD'S A AIECHANIC ! NANCY AW, THEY CAN'T HURT YOU--- THEV'RE ONLY ABOUT-AN INCH LONG t ... f .. TDIAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ~ I ACROSS 50 English rl\'el Vtsttrdifs F'uzz!e Solftd . 1 Levan11ne 51 Uttered under ketch e»th 5 E~h•bil'iOns 52 Lile l)ftlCISt 10 B P Q..l: necassity mt~flbell 56 Ha'roe 14 l .&meopen 60 Incline ~~IJit~~!lHillJ~ 1!1 Daughter's 61 loansecur11y SPO\Jle 6A lmpro~ed . ==+;;+'+' 16 Maked1rty •prosition 11 Great f&Zl 65 Serve pi1nist :. 2 66 Brows words 67 Be clothedtn == 19 An1m11 sheller 68 Heat gener- 20 Airport aUnO devices bul!dlng 69 Recording 21 Engaged !!'I medium ~gument DOWN 23 Continue to 1 Ot 1hal kind JIYe · 2 Cetebes ow 26 PlumDing 3 GOddess 01 item spring: Va1. 27 Timothy 4 Curdle Eaton or~. C. 5 Small lllament 27 Angefed .ta Ooc1rlN1 01 Penoev e Sel or 28 Ml!dieal coodoct 30 etiooses memorabilia swelling 49 Spoiled chltd 34 Golden Calf T They: French 29 Venerated 52 lnletjeclion of 35 Of Norway 8 Forcible emblem relief 37 Gold: Sp. police 31 Pul'ICtuation S3 carnival .38 Grant permit· Invasion m#ll device s1on Q Mogl 1~ 32 Rubbish: 54 F.mkllne 39 Slow1tately 10 Sllpaway • Informal n.ne dar1C411 11 Rob 33 StlOe part& 55 Bossa ~: C1 -Abnet 12 Ship"& llght :16 S.Wmlll Latin-Amer. <42 Ul'ICle: Scot. sall · machine music 43 Steepiugged 13 Snow't9111Cle 39 Fibber-57 Oiva·sso10 1ocll1 18 Put>llc and Molly S8 Large 44 vestment conYe)'tnee '° Promoting umtlfelta 45 lmpalrmenl 22 large bundles peace 59 II not 47 Soupstocll 2• Catrwllcdrug 44 Cl\angelnlo 62 Et1e1pe: 8ource1: 2 25 Long shallow &llO!her lorm Slang words 1eceptacres •6 Deer's hofn 63 Goll hole rim ( .. " 17 " " " " .. " • • ---..... . ______ ......____, ____ . ______ _ • - fi I .ii1/ by Tom latiuk by Dale Hale by Ei 1ie luhmiler ••a.o .... "' ~--- ._ .. ___ _ _ y,.,.,_ tf ... H ... «<C... NOT THAT ONE PEANUTS H/TTIN6 SAu.5 AAIJN5T THE 6AAAh< AEAIN, l see_ " . GI ("~ . - M.ISS PEACH ! FIND IT INTERESTING THAT ~OU SllOUlD HAVE THE fAAAf,f, fClt A pAt!Nf.( l4llEN ~Oil PlA~ ,\\IXEO·OO\ISLfS GORDO . ; ,I ' I ., COUJ..DN.' I :l tX»l'r l(}l()W M~J..F,.I'.M P/lACTIC/Na "1 cur AL"'M! MOON MUWNS Bl.IT F'OR<:;ETTING A WIFE1S BIRTHDAY IS A HUSBAND'S OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE, HoN; by Chartes M. Scllilz -~~~~~~-; l WAS ALSV WONOE~IN6 HE NE1~~ FOOT-FAULTS! WHAT THE BEST PART OF HIS &.\AIE 15 ... by Herold Le Doux by Mell :tltA, Yo..! THINK YOJ,111' PAJ<EN~ ltf~ENT T><E EXPE~F: ' OF ~IAPPOltT/Nj; Yot!, e...iT YOJ.I CAN ll'E~T ~J<EO THev'LL_TAKE CAJ<E OF YCJIA f c ' ! " I " DICK TRACY ., ~~1 DO I HEAR A CAR ON THE GRAVEL? YE~, MY FATHEJ< KEEP7 MIATTE/!"ING 50MET'HING TO THAT EFFECT. ... - by Chester Gould -----~..., by Gus Arriolet I • '" by Ferd .loto.'llOtt~ .Jr. HETlf? BUT I YE~! t-1N1r Yoo •, W/>NT SOMETHIN' ~VER NOTICED n t;t.MiL ,AND SP.ARJaY 1H' BUBB~fS II(, ~MY BIRTHDAY! A 90Tne OF M BE:ER?, I THE GIRLS •• " "Oh dear, the ra!.hiondcsigncrs want me to plunge to the-waist lhi~ f~I." DENNIS THE MENACE I l J ' ' • • ii I' ,_ ... -...---____ ,.. ---------~ "----.. --~-.......... _ _.._ __ _ ,......_ __ . ·-----·-------:- I • ' . I !t:::5~:!:!~~==========::!:!!!!~i!!e!!!!!!!!!!:~'"!!:!!'816!!! -~~~~~~~ NFL Strike MUshro~ms:· It's Jets' Twn ' R e t urns To Team SANTIAGO , Chile -Chil e's Davis Cup squad was returned to full strength Monday when Jaime Fillo! agreed to play for his country in lla astad, Sweden, this weekend d espite death threats. Hem an Bastago1ti a. president of the Chi lean Tennis 1-~ederation, said he talk£'d with Fillo! by telephone i\londay afl<'rnoon and the 29-year-ofd player agreed to join teammates Patricio Cornejo and Belus Prajoux under heavy security in Baastad ror the best- . of·tive semifinal tennis series against Sweden beginning Fri- day. Fl11o1 . a native of Santiago, 'A'aS reported to be in Los Angeles on Monday, where he and hi s AmeriC'a n wife, Mindy, and their son have a hom e. l-lowever, he 'A·as un available for <:omment. Last week, all three players bowed out of the Davis Cup serie:.; a.(.ter Fillo! recci ved anonymous thre ats against his li fe and rumors circulated that there would be mass demonstrati"on.s against Chile's ruling military junta during the matches. ' . L p -. ffJee SMtae :QOSTON -Dwight Evans col- lerjed four hits and four rbis wbVe rookies Fred Lynn and Jim Ric,e each drove in his lOOlh run Monday night to lead the Boston Red Sox to a 9-7 victory over the l\1ilwaukee Brewers. Roge r Moret won his 14th game against three losses as the Red Sox extended their lead over sec_ond·pl ace Baltimore. to , 4112 games and reduced their magic number to nine in the AL East. Rice and Lynn are the first two rookies to drive in JOO runs for the saqie team since Ken Keltner ant Jeff Heath did it for the Cleveland Indians in 1938. Vet• Rdefued ' 'l"Wo lop veterans in the Na- tional Football League wer e traded Monday. All-pro center Forrest Blue of the San Fran- NEW YORK <API -The New York J els voted to strike today, joini.ng the New England Patriota~in their derriand -for ·an immediate contract settlement with National Football Leaauc owners. Tbe J.ets ' surprise...action c.ame. only five hours aft er manage- ment and union negotiators had emerged from an all-night meet- ing in . Washinlflon with federal mediators. The league made a six-point proposal which said the Patriots could r e turn to -· _ ............... ... practice wlthout reprisal and which promised a new labor con- tract orrer by S.,pt, 25. MeanwliJre;NFL owners began a meeting in New York. The Jets voted at their Hemps tead. N ,Y,, trainin& <!amp,· a.-nd riiiity-of tlitt:.players- immediately left camp. The vote. announced by J.he Jets' manage- ment, was by two-thirds ma- jority .. ··we have been informed by player representative Richard Neal that the players have gone on 5trike," a Jets' s~esman sald. The action follows by tq days th• Patriots' strik~ one wftl ch ror,ced cane.ell , 1ast sunday ·s •,ra . lion between t'3;e lWP . The SJX>:kes mu. Ne. 8' sayioc, "We haVe . l9'8i: to strike to try to ~ ~lt ment arld the union~, 1JPi! as a runoff to show j!Jppqn /.w New England. "We voted to stri~e, but we are also awaiting the ~come of votes around the league. This is College Foe~ Mix It Up ~ u,,., ......... NEBRASKA'S TONY DAVIS (25) IS .SNOWED UNDER BY LSU DEFENDERS ... nota1trike9Plnstttie!l.,iYcirt would defuse. the lat~ NFL Jet1)lutaotrill,etoJel•-al loboc.J>roblellll, which ii Mult 90 t'-table." the lfl'L M.......,ment ""mdl's . .,. -~~--,"""-...... -lllll'WQ'll1Ullded1<J; • · . .,;tte Jet player1 were &ettinc ..... 1.9«e~er in small ;Jr<>Ul"I lo tste Tl!e offer ll•d promised no ll<I i-.e game plM ror Sunday'• reprisal& roe ...,. -taken ,iich"!luled NFL .opener In Bur-before today. . lflp. IJ'be players. however, said The Patriot. players sped! the • #MY l"Quld ref~se lo participale morning conalclering the otter ·••••beduled 2:30 ~ ' and trylJtg tiicleeide if the woold ' The unexpected action by the. end theii one-team 1ir4e. By Jets could seriously damace th . '"*'·they~ Q!adenodeeiJlon, chancel that the all-night but by that lllDe llley ........ - negotiations in Washington aware of the Jets• action. 11th Straight Hooton Equals ~-LA Win .Mark LOS ANGELES <AP)-Apar· ty guy, the Los Angeles Dodgers Burt Hooton iso 't. He had just won his !11th straight garue ~ lyi.o& Dodger great Sandy Ko.ut.ax and Don Dry sCl.a le among starting pitchers -but.he scoffed at the mention of a celebration. "It's not over with yet ,"~ ex- plained after beating the San Dodgers S late All~-1 .. KAKOWI 5'rpf. 14o5enDleOO•tl.nilf19eln So!p(. U,1111 Di.go•lL.MA"911 .. , 5">(. !ti.OS Ang.e .. ,._ Houston J:H•.m. J:H-"""" s:-..,,... Diego Padres, 5-4, Monday ni&bt on Willie Crawford's dramatic three-run homer in the eighth in· ning. "But if it gets to be 13 or 14 or whatever, well, I just might celebrate a littJe." The victory was a most im- probabJe one. Willie McCovey had just hit a 3-run homer in the Padres' hair or the eighth for a 4-1 lead and Hooton's 10-game win streak ap· peared to be at an end. But in the bottom or the eighth the Dodgers came flying oer the mat for four runs, the last three on Crawford·:!i homer, and today Koufax, Drysdale and Hooton stand alone as the only starting pitchers in Los Angeles Dodgers' history to put together 11 suc· cessive victories. It's the longest win streak in baseball since the Phillies' Steve Carlton won 15 in a row in 1972. "Thal 's an indication of what kind or d\b lbis really is," Hoot.on nid after lmproW.g his record to 17..f. 01-7 since coming to the Dodger& from Chialgo in May). "I figured It'd be tough after they went ahead but, beck, we did hne six outs to go 11.n.er McCovey hit that homer. No, I hBdn't&iven up." "' Hooton hasn't lost since July 10. He's the hottest pitcher in bate ball right now and he at - tributes it all to his new-found c«tfidence and his fast ball.. ''111.ey wouldn't let me throw it at Chicago,'' be said. Hooton fanned 12, • Season hl&h and the most ~ts since he whiffed lS in bis rookie year. . The Dodeers went ahead 1-0 .i.n lhe fourth when Steve Yeager'& infield &rounder produced a run. But the Padres, restricted to two hits, got everi in the seventh when Ted Kubiak's wrong.field double scored ttfe tying run. In the second game of the series tonight Brent Strom, 8-5, will start against Los Angeles rookie Rick Rhoden, 2-2. s.utOll!GO ... , .... Gr~cf .. 0 0 0 T.,_"5 S 1 1 0 ~· 4 It 0 Mc:Q>ftylb C!2J Wlnli.ldrt l 0 0 0 ~ph 1000 Rol:ltrU :lb .. 0 l 0 l(·Ntt• 4021 O.Wlst 1000 F~llh fOOO Folk..-tP 1(1 00 Loe.k .. ..-1* I 0 0 e c;r.ffp • 0 0. M:lntoJhp 0 0 0 0 Tllmtf'ph l too LOSAMGf.LE' ._. .. Uc;ytl ._ .. ..... d G«w.,tb .. , .. ,_, __ .,......,_ -·· -· ... , " ... .. 0 1 0 .. 0 1 0 .J 2 ! 0 0 00 0 .. 1 3 0 J 1 1 0 • II o 2 210• 2 , 1 J .. 0 0 0 .. 0 1 • Tot•ls 31 • 1 • Ttlt•ts )I s 10 ' S.. 0'-90 000 ODD ,._,. --~isco· -t9ers was traded to the Baltimore Colts for an . un- disclosed draft choice. And former All-pro guard John Niland of Dallas was sent to the Philadelphia Eagles for a draft choice. . Leag ue to Fold? l.cJil A19tf'S -100 OU:--5 DP-Lot. A"981H 1, LOB....S. Oieoo I, U& .t."9'1•1 7. 29-Kullll•ti;, HR-MtCovey C101, Cr--d (9). $8-«1,1biP:. 5-Folk-. El~ewhere the Washington Redskins cut former Green Bay great Dave Robinson, a 13-year veteran. · S tre akatZ3 NEWYORK -MikeVailofthe New York Mets drilled a sixth- inning sin gle Monday night against i\.1ontr eal to extend his hitting s treak to 23 games, equalling the National League's streak-hitting r ecord by a rookie. The hit, a clean run-scoring single up the middle off Steve Rogers of the Expos, gave Vail the longest hilting streak of the major league season, surpassing the 22.game string by Boston's Denny Doyle during July 12-Aug. 4. . And it matched the NL rookie record or · 23 straight games set by Philadelphia's Joe Rapp in 1921 and equalled by Richie Ashburn_. also of the Phillies, in 1948. The major league rookie re- cord of 26 straight games is held by Guy Curtright or the 1943 C~ago White Sox . e had another sin gle in the M s· 3-2 win. ... lte t e A.:ter• OOS' ANGELES -Dick wliite, p~licity director or the Forum lb '.Past six years, was named M day as direcLor of operations f the Los Angeles Aztecs of tbe ~ American Soccer League. lte, 3S, will assist John fetz, the ma naging general pa ner of the Aztecs. ~ tane Erert Out LANT A -BeL<sy Nagelsen, ~ lying constant pressu re al the ne in th~ deciding set, trimmed Je Me Evert, 6-3; 1-6. 6-3 in the ·ng round or the $75,CXX> Lit- Ue Mo Women 's Tennis Classic M day. other_ matcM:s M oriday.~ rie Zieaenfuss downed Sue medbasicb, 6-1, 6-3, and Sb ron Walsh stopped Kate -... Lailuim, 11-4, 7·5. P1ep•N ' OXVlLL&, Tenn. -Ten· n e went throua:h a light out MoodaLJ!! ~l>at&.tion hls week'• J&me aaainst ~,....__.,.,,.,_·vo~ uieraecs lrom last Sa rday a 21·8 victory over ii lud with no lllJurles. Gary JI c~ ind JlandT Wallace rnalad af· quarterbect ·mid. r1J1aqan,wbo...,...._ -&<>IF:bdowu -I.a lbe-llaryland , and Jfl G"11!11 -..ttol!beek,._,..~~~~~ " • .. . WFL . Obituary Long Overdue • • • Soon, somewhere among the obituaries perha ps, r eaders should be reading about the pass- ing of the Wor ld Football League, which in my esteem was dead and buried before it ever ,p layed its first game, railed to meet its first payroll, folded its fin.1. franchise or told its Cirst lie about game attendance counts. l w the first home game the C mia Sun played. I'd rather ha been riding a burro across Dea_th Valley at high l)OOD during a summer heat wav.e. The caliber cf football and circus-like broadcasting slob· bered out in. WFL spectacles I WHITE WASH OLl!MN WH ITE witnessed, listened to or saw via television made me wonder how anyone could be so bard up ror something to do that.he'd di sh out hard-earned money to attend the po.md, 8-ounce halibut working the waters near t he Channel Islands (Santa Barbara area). License plates issued for the coming year in the Quebec Province will bear the 1976"0lym- pic Games logo. It would be nice if all the states. in the USA had some sort of Bicentermial slogan on their 1976 plates,. Former Daily Pilot sports staf· fer Hank Wesch will be married the end of this month, tying the knot with a for m er high school sweetheart. Wesch is now •' the San Diego Un~n and previously was with the San Clemente Sun.' Po>t. Playing on Whittier ·College's l975football team is Mark Oeven, a product of Est ancia High in Costa M esa. The 170-pound freshman is out for defensive back . Tanner Rallies For ~'ictory games. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Apparently not many people Roscoe Ranner overcame a first are attending games these day~ s\:!t case or jitters to'1.urn back and for that re1ison, the tenure or l\tike Cahill, 4-6, 6-1, 6·4, in a the World Football League featured first round match of the seems anything but lengthy. $100,000 Pacific Southwest tennis Crowds last weekend we re c h a mpionships Monday at pathetic. The Sun sa.vs it drew UCLA's_.Pauley Pavilion. 11 .123 for its bi g Goodbye lo Pat India's Sashi Me non , a Haden promotion. There were graduate or USC. registered the 18,003 at Memphis to watch the onl y upset Monday when he oust- NFL exiles Csonka. Kiick and ed 16th seeded Charles Pasarell ·Wadidd.p,edorm. o! Puerto.Rico, 7·6,.7.J!. • Some 12,500 were said to be at Onny Parun of New Zealand the duel in Birmingham, one of and Cliff Richey won their first ... AND MICHIGAN'.S GORDON BELL (5) TUMBLES. I,. M REiii: e•so l"ollwn .,,,,, Gr9ff '312 10 Mc:lnliolh IL.•1Ct 1 2 2 I 0 I HocllOll (W, 11-91 • 1 .. 4 3 12 Greif plki.ct lo 1 batters In ltlh. WP-Folkws. T-2: 13. A-12,m. Angels Fall In 12 Innings To .Twins, 7 -6 BLOOMINGTON, Minn .. (UPI ) -Glenn Borgmann hit a 12th in - ning double to score Steve Braun who led off with a single and give tlle.MiMesota Twins a 7-6 victory over the California Angels Mon- day night. T hey play again tonight at6 (KMPC, 710). Minnesota tied the score in the botton!' of the 10th when Johnny Briggs singled in Braun, who singled and moved to second on Lyman Bostock 's base hit. CAU..OltfUA MINNESOTA •llr•M '-••r•lll Cotllm If 6 O 0 O Tti"rtlnt> c o o o Mloll 111 s 0 l 0 l(usltk pl! 0 0 0 0 Rl¥ent l 6 2 0 J . Br+Qos 11> 1 I 1 I Gwrtttdh 3 0 0 0 BryeH S 1 I 0 NeftltSdl'I 0 1 0 0 Sorvm-t 2 O I 1 8Ddllelb S 2: SI c.r-111 ! 1 2 I .JldlS011P1'1 0... Fordt l •• 2 1 O.Bri09S•• ooo• HIWdh 3021 sa.il<!l'lrf JIOI 011 ... dtl 1000 Chllklb 4 0 I 1 Mtl<.lylb SO t O E~,...t S 0 I I ,....,,,.._SS 6 I 2 O Mllffn SOIO ~rt COJO ~" 0100 Br-rf 2220 er.-;rp 0 0 0 0 Rooft 2 0 1 0 ~,.,.,.,,.p 0000 ...... " 2110 sc:ott.p 0 •• 0 lllyltYellp • 0 0 0 ~,.,. 0. 0 0 Clmpbtljp 0 0 0 0 Tot•s .ct 6 12 6 TDW$ 4 1 11 6 ON out wtlffl wif'W'lfftg run KDl'W catlf«N• 000 ., 010 100--4 MMffot.a 2:10 om 002 101-1 E~ye. 81tsf'ftf', DP-C.lW-1, I, Mh•· flB't• 1. l.09-0llloml• '· MlnMlll\.l 15.. 26-Ah•tl'S, P1Plfltl, 6trom.nn. IB-Alnr1. Botht.. Sfl . Brtgip. s---4kMll', Nttl'"-,F_ ---=Stmtan;CNI . • I,_ H AllAl8SO Ploctw• 7 1 332 1 er-r · 1~ • 2 2 2 • IClrkwood \'lo 7 I 1 O 1 Stlltt '"'2 00 0 0 Hoc:k""'"""' fl.., O·S) 1~ 7. I 1 l o 81ylfwn 10 II • S l 12 ~l(W, ... J 2 0 I 0 0 2 WP~tw.. 9,.._,., T-3:11, A-a.on. Bevine--Behut-a-Snceess tbe Mfpposed hotbeds crowd-wise round battles. Richey breezed In the WFL'• !il'9t year of opera-past Larry Nagler, 6-0, 6·3. But FOXBORO, Mass.· <UPI) -seconds Into the fmal period on a. , 47 llf Notre -Dame's 212 rushing ticm. .Parunne..i.dthreeset!totopple Freshman J m' Browner rl 21·Yard.J'!!Cho~t -f•rdl "l,bad to try ancl-.a m,y Another 18,479 SliOwed up ror IIarOORRahim of PaJait:ili, 6'3, -ilfyitils-up -e liilllille sl~e The two teams were tied S-3 confidence baek playing In froot SUnday'I game In Hawaii and no 6-3, H. third period after hi1 older at Ume on !leld goals bf 30 ol'...,..,.,le again and 00 national crowd report-wH-made lor·the In other f1nt round-matches, brother Rois-bad ,,_..red a y by Notre Datn<l's Dave teteVtSlOR'! ~ duel at PbO,delphia. Jef! Borowiak defeated Lito . rumble Mond•J night lo lead Ree and 45 yards by Boston -.. OYOV- There seems-.to be a growing Alvara&, 7 ·6, 44· 6-:11-; Cliff NotH Dame"tO-IQ;'t'"..S•itt~t o•er allele•• Fred St.e.in13rL ,.·. ""'90.1111 n 1 1 ,_,., legion that believes the World DrysdaJe defeated Peter F1em-Bostol\. College ln a natlOnally · --_.~ hatd to put' lnto wof'l:'S •..:~:.,..11 . • J • o-:t Football League 11 on Its death Ing, 8·3, ~-4; Phil Dent beat televised football same. what I 111ean1 to be back," said '""""-" -bed. GrahamSUlwetJfs.-2,~M ; apd The tr.umpb waa Not..r..e end-011 Browner who-was ~~J."'""',..,::? And !rankly, the onlysadtblng KJm Wrilck beat Rdf Thung, Dame's first 1111der new coach nam the 1ame'1 ~-· ,. .... t,Jo, _ ab611t tha( Is th~ perplexing H, H. Dan' DeVlno and Jta 12t111traighl defe~lv player ror makl~& '"''1" .. U>ouillt: Row many more WrL Alao, Barry Pbllllpo·Moore de· openlng-pnie victory. seven unuslsted tacklei and --- eDlploy .. and other creditors featecl She~ood Stewart, H .-·Sophomore AJ. Hunter, wbo covul,Dc a.,fumble. • -·- wlll-belefl-boldlng the bee? &O;_Erlc Vlllil>lllencleleateclJ-mined lM .....,., along with • "I 'cbUld ~eel the nist _.. o1f ::=:.;.::---S-.. *"· a.1; ~ RoN ar-w bee-of-a'ills<--that"nm," aatd Humor, Who ' __ F1eerman Kenry Keleman of deleated· JI.Ill Del....,,, U, M," <1p11Dar7 :'&'-Ion, aealed the enl«'od tlle 1ame in ,....._ ............ Oxnard recet1tly boil"" a ••.-•L ;-L · I t -•d •• """ """' "'""• ..... ,--v l•Jll• w a ow~. own~ period aad-carried-fift"tima-fbr -,..,..,, __ _ I ·------~~~--.-----------------. . ---- I On Prep Front Girl,s Athletic Programs Chal}g,~ Girls sports on tbe hi&b scl>ool level have ltken anotbor giant slep forward for the coming year and lndlcaUona are that lhe1 will be on a par with the boys as tu as lealUlng and playol!• are coo· cemed in the very near r~. · The Southern Section of the CIF, under tbe capable ll\lldance of Mar&aret Davia, has added 35 scbools to the &iris program for the coming year to increase the number or participanlS to 314 for 1975. Several changes have been HOWARD :~ I made· in the format foe lbe girls ' for the coming year. First, and perhaps foremost, is the fact that the girls will be divided into 4-A, J..A and 2·A divisions for playoffs in • volleyball,. t ennis. basketball, softball and track and field. Also, team competition has been added in tennis and badmin· ton. In the past. these sports have been contested only on an in- dividual basis.in playoff competi- tion. · How will this aftect Orange Coast area schools? ··we· won't know where the leagues will be placed as far as divisions are concerned until the CJF council meets Sept. 25.'' Davis says. "It is quite possible that the South Coast League could be in 4-A competition in volleyball because of the showing of La guna Beach last year and then be placed in 3·A or 2·A in some other sports. "The same thing would be true of other leagues but 1 can"t go in· to that until we get the council's approval. .. The South Coast circuit js in· tact wilh Lacuna Beach, Dana ltill.,-San ClemenU.. El. Toro. Vlgion Viejo and University in tbefold, • . No change hu boen Jll3dc in the Beach Cill .. cln:ult for tbe eomlnc year wlt.h HunUngton Beach. Marina, Newport narbor, Costa M.esa . Eatancia, WestmLnster. Fountain Val)ey and Edison lntacr. · '"This is tbe last year for that league.," Davis says. '"We hope to get all or the 9irls leagues coordinated with thu boys leacues and this is one that will have to be changed,·'~ says. 111ls means that Corona del Mar is the lone area school in the Century League, joining Foothill, Saddleback, Santa Ana, Santa Ana Valley, TUstin and Orange. Mater Dei is likewise a lone representative from the area in the Angell.is No. 1 circuit. Others are Connelly, Rosary, Marywood and St. Joseph. Playotr dates have been an- nounced for the nine approved sports along with individual tournaments. Volleyball . will be contested Nov. 15, 18, 20, 22 and 25. 'l'enn1s . the other fall sport, will hold in - dividual pla)'of£s on .Nov. 22 and Dec. 6. Team play takes place Nov. 24 , 26, Dec. 2 and4. Next in line will be the field hockey team playoffs on Jan. 17, 20, 22 an"d 24. Basketball con· eludes March 31, April 2, 6, 8 and 10. Individual pla)'offs in gym· nasties take place ~fay 15 and 22 with team competition May 6, 8, 11, l;J, 18. In badminton. in· dividual and team competition will be held simultaneously on May 22. 27 and 29. Track and field will be held May 14 or 15 and 21 or 22 with the . masters meet May 28 and the state, meet June 4 ands. Swimming dates are May 21 and 28 and diving May 25 and 28. Softball completes the year with . playorrs on May 25, Zl, 29, June 1 andJ. SerVite I Rebuilds ,. For'75 se"nlte lil&llsetiiiii•1 FM.an are coming off a elwnplcnshlp I ason iD..loothall.blll ..-11 Ken ·Visser is bulldloJ I.tom the crolind up after losln$ moil of his · stalw~ to araduatian. • The Friars tanele with Newport Harbl>r High Tburaday night at La Pa.Ima Park in · Anaheim In the lid-lifter r .. both schools and it may be a long .>evening for the defending . ~elus Learuecbamps. ''Basically we are a very young team." Visser says. "We lost 10 starters on olfense and nine on defense and we're relying on this year's junior class for replacements. "Jn the four years I've been here, this will be the smallest team I 've had, physically.'' The lone returning offensive starter from last season is center Perry Morita, a 6-0, 175-pound senior. Defensively. the Friars have starters Rock McCormish at middle linebacker and Brian Baggott at corner back returning. ~like Kenlon, a linebacker, saw a lot or action, but not as a starter. This will be the first meeting between the two schools and Vi s· Mr is wary of the Tan and early reports of their power and size. "I hear that Bill Piziica says he has the best blocking back he's ever had in that kid playing fullback <Dan Christy>." Visser says. '"I've also beard he feels Steve Foley is the · best nmn.ing back around. "I would say, we had better strap it on and get ready £or them" On his small Servile team, he has senior D ea n Hess at quarterback Hess is 6-3 and 195 to200 pounds. The team's fullback is J ay Bennett {6·1, 175) while the tailbacks are Phil Fuentes (5·8, 160) and Leonard Altavilla (5·7. 150l Visser says the tailbacks are quick but not neessarily fast . Visser describes the Servile passing game as balanced. Inexperience Hurts MD I • Opener With Corona del Mar Key to SeWJon .. ' • The A""4ld Palmer Method .. Al"lL'ltW DIKDM'a.DI"" ~ . HOLD O~ "'LIGHT'• ~ WITH. YOUR alGHf , ,!!'° ~t • --· ~ ..···~· ";?11.~ · ....... , ,,~0 ~ fJ ·, I 1 often we-1m1lf'Vf' aotr«<-r•i• ~;:!. ~~ their 1w1np by suddenly lnnn.s;. "'\,.~. 1n11he pressure orthC'irri&hl·band ~ ,.,: i'•P· Thi~ u$ually occurs •t l1'tJ ., /J \ wan or the down1win1. tliouah J .: 1 \Orne hold on too UIJhlly wilh 1hl1 -t.. tl h11~d from the itart of the bac~ ~ J ,. •W'"I· '~ . cJrabbina or clutching 'With the "' ,,. ... -,.. rishc hind fu1n 1 the rhythm or ·.I" pace or your swina. II ~ows down your dubhc•d ~td •~ throww. your dub off the 1r.1clr. You '1'1ould hold the clubhahl• ly in yout r1&ht hand as you ad• dress che ball, and then try to maintain this. 11mc prcsiurc 1hrou1hou1 your swln1o lm•ainc 1ha1 you arr holdin1 a liatu ob]C'ct vrry gently in your fin!fts and tossin& it underhand. Thi• will SJVC )'OU tht1 (C'C!in& of proper grip prrssurc and frttdom movc~ mcnt. Moves to 4-A ··~ 0 .. . ..."-_.,... ... South Coast Polo Review South Coast League water polo bas improved steadily the past few years-to the point where the 1-2 finishers in the circuit finished 1·2 in the CIF 3·A finals in 1974. with University and Laguna Beach doing the honors roles in the Diablos• quest for the league title. Up from t.he junior varsjty ~~ ~obn DoWd. Dave Bartlett and Rob t:barles. Steve Braun. a varsity swimmi.ng let- terman. also is a possible fattor in Mission's season. D•••Bllls • COaeh Don Webster has 13 ret1.1rnlnS let· termen but only three starters back os the La Quinta Hl!lb Aatecs pre- pare for tbelr eeasoa opener with Elosta Mesa Hllh Thursday nl&ht (7 :30) at Bolsa Grande lllSh'•/leld. . "I was pleased with the way the team perl0"11ed In the Garden Grove High School carnival last weekend despite having lo go with • new quarterback,·· Webster says. •'Witll a new player at 1 that position. we are a 1 liWe behind on defense because of the time we I have spent working on offense.'' The quarterback ls Clll'l . of three starters back from Ja1t season when the Aztecs posted a 4-S record. But be played at split end a year ago and is also a starter on de- fen 1 e at middle linebacker. The.Anenoperateout cl a spread formation with a multiple set. "We did a lot of pass· ing in the carnival, pro. bably throwing 17 or 18 passes in two quarters," the coach says. How about the receiv· Ing corps? Mark Stephens is a sophomore at one wide receiver spot and Frank Stouff is on the other side. Stouff is also the team's backup quarterback and is a senior. Webster has been coaching at La Quinta for the past 12or13 years And when teams are that tough they are usually upgraded to the next step That's the case for the South Coast League this year where it moves into 44 A circles with the top level of prep water polo in Southern California. The Dolphins or coach and has won three cbam- Jack Dickmann have a pionabips in that time solid corps of returning -lll68, 1!1'11 and 1973. U starters with only Dave the odd year rotation Milosch and Tony holds true in tbe'70s, the Schlarb missing Crom Aztecs are due again this the 1914 unit as they gird season but the coach for the 1975 South Coast Isn't predicting any titles season. i~ yet, . The season gets under way this week and here's a capsule look at the South Coast's six outfits: v"t"enttw Brian Card.aHo (6-0 Pacifica moved .the sr.) is in the goal and ball. pretty well. against seniors Tim Meza Andy lW ui tbe canuval and Milosch,. Jim eooPer and we'll have to improve a Casey Sorenson are great deal on d.efen.~ lo The 1974 CIF 3-A joined .by Rieb Renz, make a showmg, he champion University Steve Knudson and Doug says. Mater Dei High SchoolJii!I the competition under these con-cording to Carr. He isS-10 and 175 Trojans have better McCartin. Th'ursday·s game wilt open the 1975 football season dilfons and it also rneans that we pounds. talent this year than last. Knudson is a Buena mark the first meeting of Thursday night against Corona will have ca)iable replacements Steve Williams (6-2, 200) will accord ing to coach High transfer and Reaz the two schools on the del Mar on the Newport Harbor in case of injuries.'' ·open at f u 11 back for the Chuck Morris-which is out.after: standing out football.field. field. On offense he will start Mark Monarchs. f spells problems for the in swimming. The Monarchs of the Angelus Drazba, a.junior, at quarterback. Mater Dei will operate out o a rest of the league. McCartin, 8 junior. is • TONY ACCOMANDO OCC Otfenoe DAVE BIENEK OCC Defenae ERIK <£SCHER GWC Otfenae • MIKE MORADO GWC Defense League entry will be fi elding a Drazbais5·9and16Spounds. slot·I formation and utilize an , Returning senior out of action, however. young, inexperienced team, ac· George McGowan, a defensive okie defense. starter Jeff Hassett keys He is didelined after fall· I cording to their coach, Gary player last season, gets the nod With exception of flanker and the attack, which also ing through 3 window in Carr. at tailbaCk. He didn't play or-split end, the Monarchs will have features juniors Larry an accident. ··we're about as green as you fense a year ago and doesn't have good siz:eon the offensive line. Baba, Kirk Sampson. Two juniors who could can get,'' Carr says. "Most of our the speed or graduated Pat Bill Kelly gets the start at tight Pat Collentine and Geoff help the Dana . Hills returning people have had very McKeon but has quickness, ac· end and weighs in at 3l0. Tackles Madson. c au s e a re Reese little game experience and our are Mike Monnig (6....f, 205-) and Sophomores Jack Thompson ·and Scott Capistrano Goller Among Favorites entire season will depet ~d on WoJ·Cik Re(eoaod JoSthnaSrtt1enmgmgeurar(6ds·4. ?!lc1'uc1· e John Graham (goalie) and Benson. LONG BfEASCH -JJack whatkindofastartwege . "'°""' . .... Peter Campbell are also Son cie.e..te Ewing o an uan Carr isn't exactly singing the Knott (6·3, 205> and Monty Nyder counted on for heavy Capistrano, a rising star blues. In £act, he says depth may ST. LOUIS -Greg Woj cik. (5·10, 200). At center is Eric duty. San Clemente High.· on the PGA golf tow:. is be a factor for the 1t1onarchs this former Huntington Beach 1-ligh Winter (6·2, 190). . Other seniors who coach Bill Hartman bas one of the early favontes season. and Orange Coast College root-Smallest men on the starting could help aie Mark fourreturningstartersin in the 150-man field for "I can't name a defensive ball star, was released by the St. squad are nanker Jamie Dickson overs tre e t, Jay the Tritons' pool where the $22,500 Long Beach starting team yet because we Louis Cardinals today. (~8. 150) and split end Pat Pritz! camp be 11. Mark San Clemente bas seven Queen Mary Open golf havea littlemoredepththisyear The Cardinals acquired \Va-(5-8,150). Leonard and Jeff games scheduled-tournament that begins and there is competition £or some jcik, a tackle, from the Chicago Carr says Corona del Mar will Borsuk. which is seven more than Thursday at El Dorado of the starting positions," he Bears in July. Wojcik had also utilize quickness Bnd will pro-!'Overall we're better everbefore. MunicipalCourse here. says. played for the Los Angeles bably have a balanced offense in talent than ever," ''We fielded a team Ewing and Barry ··we are really pleased with Rams. against his team Thursday night. says Morris. "It's a mat· ta st ye a r, • • says Jaeckel or Los Angeles, _ _:_:,:.._:__:_ __ :.....:..... _____ _:_:__ _______________________ -:---, ter of maturity. Game in-Hartman, "but this year are listed as the men to B b ll S d • experience could be our we are with facilities and beat for the $4,500 first , TOYOTA!! ase a tan lngs biggesthandicap. we hope .to be com·· prize in a field that in· m9---L petitive on an average eludes 20 other Orange LagMaa .DeU4C'ai• basis. With teams like Coast area players. AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pt:l. GB NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division \Y I ... Pct GB The Artists will com-University, Laguna RickDivelo£EINiguel Toro : Steve Cook or Meadowlark. Ken Cody or Hunt· ington Beach : Jack Conrad or Mesa Verde CC; Jimmy Clark of Huntington Beach; Tony Campregher or Meadowlark ; Roy Eversole of Huntington Beach; Jim Lynch or Meadowlark: Doug McDonald of Shorecli££s. John Mahoney or Laguna Niguel; David Ray of Mesa Verde; Bil· ly Schwenneker or Mis· sion Viejo ; Roland Thurman or Shoreflif£~. and John Welker or Meadowlark. .. . . ,. It ' "" f ,. t ... .. OFFICIAL PACE CAR Boston Baltimore >Jew York Cleveland Milwaukee Detroit 89 61 .593 84 65 .564 41•z Pittsburgh 85 64 .570 Philadelphia 79 70 .530 6 pete under new coach Beach and Mission Viejo Country C lub, Dave Je£fMayandtbeLaguna in the South Coast She(( of Fountain Valley Beach water polo team League it ·1 1 make il Mile Square and Dave jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ could be as.:;troniz as last tough, however.·· McKeating or llunl· · Come in and ''Test DI-I••.-a '75 Toyota cnd lecei•e 2 "FREE" TICKETS TO THE LONG BEACH GRAND PRIX Cj)llallfylftCJ Days Sept. 26 & 27 ($10. VALUE) WllU. They Last VOLVO FACTORY DEMO SALE 4TOCHOOSE FllOM Elta"°"'a: 244 4 DR. Automatic. stereo radio. power antenna. power steering &bt1kes. #2019 55977. BUY OR LEASE 77 72 .517 ll11z 71 74 .490 151".t 63 88 .417 26 ~ 55 94 .369 33112 West Division 90 58 .608 84 65 .564 6~z 74 76 .493 17 69 77 .473 20 69 79 .466 21 67 83 .447 24 Oakland Kansas City Te~as l\1innesota Chicago Angels llrMllCllY'I ~- 8o$tQl'lt,MHWllUktt 1 K • ......,, Cfly J, (Fli<:1g<11 Minne~•• 1, C•llforn!1 6, 11 inrMf>Q~ O.klatld at T•1<•\.J>lllll·· •.tlro 0n1wo-me,.ctwl'Elu).-d To4'y'• GI"'" Oakland (Blue 111-11 1n11 e .. hm.lln ~111 .ii ft(I\ (Perry 16--16 100 Jenll!nt 16·11) 81!!1""""' (P•lmfr t i-IOI II Bo'ton m..,11 .. 131 QlwlMd (E <:lltrtltY 12-U 111 Dotlrool (Arro't'O ,., Oll<..,O l""'lferw<1••l •I Kl~(lly (1..-..rd "" """" Yorll !Gu•• ft.6 1 11 M•lw1uU•t (""'*"'"°"' ... C..\ifomll !Monv-0°01 11 AAl'"'\Oll (Huor..\ ,.,,, Wl'nflll•r'• ~ 8111!imott 11 Boston CltWllfW:L II Dttron Ntw Yark •I Mu .... ul!H O.lllMd •t Ollc•QO KlnYlClty 11 M1nnewi1• QIMWTlll It Tt .. l St. Louis 78 71 .S23 7 New York 76 74 .507 91h Chicago 72 79 .477 14 1\1<1ntreal 65 84 .436 20 . West Division Cincinnati 98 52 .653 Dodgers 82 69 .543 161h San Francisco 72 79 .477 26Y.z San Diego 68 82 .453 30 .<\tlanta 66 &5 .437 32112 Houston 59 91 .393 39 M611d1r'• G•r'nft O!k •9'1 •·1, Plll\bUrOl'I ~-'I f'lelflj Yo•• J, Mont•e11 J SI Louis I, Pl'lll1Mlphl16 Los A~I•• ~.Sin Diego' At11nt1 U, S.n Fr1ncisco O Tod1J'1G1mH P•!Utlu•O" ((•ndel ... ••• /.$) •• CtUCIQO IR. Reu\cf'let i0-1 Sl HOus10ll !Dierker 1J·1$) 1t C•nc•nn,11• <8•11 •..q'\amt~.e1 M0<>Tre"t ((..o•tot~r1 l ·Jl "' ""'"" Yort IMji!11r~ 1 .. 111 Pf\Uilldelpto•I (Slmp\On 1G!11 SI LOU!l lF0<1.<:" H-10) S..,. O;.qo (Strom J.~1 11! LOS A19le• !A,_n '" All.,.11 IDevoM 1-41 11 !.In FrM•dS<O U .. lk ~• .. \JI Wtd'"'"'•r'1 GI""" All .... 11.tl S.n F• ncl\CO PIU5b<>rof'I I !pl'!i1 ~'""''' 011.::191111 N • ll "'"'ntre1I ••!iii OU•\ *' Oie9o 11 Lo\AftO<l!les DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO I 1966 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA MESA 646·9303 SPr•itP•Pt:rt ... 6ody Shop Opl:'n S Oay\ a •t''"'- Part' D"ptrfmll'nt Opf'n So+urdoy\ 9 o m.·2 p.m , ";• · l' ,•/v\o .1 .'.i\•1.-·1 ·' !,· .. , .. •,: r.,'\/,·I, '; WE MAKI OVERSEAS O!LIVERIE~ • year's CIF 3-A finalists, Back are seniors Steve ington Seaclirr CC, are according to May. Cade and Brian Haskins amopg tbe leading club Among the Artists and juniors Shawn pros. squad are Mo Amsden, O'Gorman and Eric Sandy Galbraith of Robert Brunswick, Doug Groos. Huntington Beach who Bunting, Wade Grendel, Others in the ·raid are finished third in the Mike Linkletter, Al goalie John Chrum, California State Open, is Me ndez and Bruce senior Bill Bedrogi, also entered as is Bill Morton. junior Don Hill and Feilo£EINiguelCCwho Also Mike Newton, sopho more s 0 an has been playing the Brian O 'Hara. Robert Lineback, Don Murphy. mini-tour. Shaw. Mark Speciale, Kevin Ha skin s and Other golfers from the BlaKe Summers, Ke n Bruce Mealy. area include: Ray Car· Wandell, Scott Whitlock. El Toro rasco, a touring pro from Steve Chri stensen and ·Huntington Beach ; Dan Sam Taylor. Cliff Hooper moves Barrile or San Clemente; SIVPI ADVANTAGES OUR ~AGIR OFfHS Rounding out the from a title contending Charles Bothwell or El s quad i s foreig n ex -school to El Toro High · 1 1 change sutdent Renato this season to coach the 1976 CARS ·that yours may llO't! COMl'lCTE OlANGf COUNTY CO•IU.GI l"cl~di"'I ' "-'J•-~II. Mendoza of Brazil m:1. Chargers in their third 190). season or water polo ac· Morton figures to man lion. the hole and M ark "The big problem is Speciale (5·11. 170 jr.) lack of a pool to hold moves to the nets as workouts. But tbal is be. goalie. 1ing solved this year," he u.r-J -.!I-& say.s . ,, ..... oa • -10 El Toro lost only one Mission Viejo High"s player by graduation but Oiablos have three re-will still field a young turning starters in the t eam with only two fold with senior Brian seniors. They are Bob M (' D o u g I e • J e fr Howle y and Bob l.A>C5ch. Scoleman and junior There are also two and remaining '75s · LOW LEASE RATES! Bri11n Goodell . juniors on the varsity ' Goodell. however, will roster. including Dave not be available for polo Schudel and Jeff Wilson. All makes new cars & trucks! foraboulamonth. ::,ophomores are Dave 833 OS Returning letterman Lindahl, goalie Wayne • 5 5 Craig Fransen. goalie Prior. Josh Rubinstein Jerry Locke (5·10), Ron . and Charlie Waltman. ~~,tt;ST. l-lenderson, Scott Lang, Freshman Bob Tuttle W• ..._ .. .., Dan Eby and Tom Ray completes the varsity ... -~···· --· all figure to play key roster . .__....;. ______ _ I 5•• C,._..,., Mtul .. WJ.jo, O..o PolM', • -n,.., W... .._ ..... _..fLA. ... 2 MONTH TO MONTN l[NTAl IASll l NO DEPOSrr llQU:trD ON A,,lO'tlD ClfDn' 4 ONlf J1 7 10 PU. MONTH TOTAL COSf IMllMIPH ,...., 5 NEW COMPACT UNrT Silt 11 "• 1 4~' 6 vOtcr Ml$SA PAGlU AUO A•I Af U.lll 7 FULL Fill M INTlNANCI ORANG!COUNTY RAOIOT!LEPHONE I SERVICE I~(' 17141835-3305 ... tO, SANTA f'R, IAlftA MA '-l.,_ loMcfll. MIH""' ..,,..., ri:MI """''· ""' c.._-. •• ,... ( .... tr-. lfl ,,_ , ......... .. ,,.JllJ • ' I , 8 DAIL V PILOT ' T1'*1d1 •- Astronaut Peddles Beer Duke Geu Coors' Contract Cuveted by~ FrOm Wire Sf-rvlCH Charles M. Duke Jr., the JOlh man to walk on the moon and another businessman were named by the Adolp1h Coors Co., to eslublish one or four new Coors beerdistributorships in San Antonio, Tex. Duke, who set fool on tbe moon on Ap.ril 20, 1972, was named along with Richard J. Boushka, prcsi. dent of Vickers Energy Corp., of Wic hita, Kan., to handle the northc.:ist San Antonio area. Duke announced his retirement from th~ Air Force Friday, errectivc Jan. l . Ile needed only another year and a half in the Air Force to reach the 20-year level, which would have e:irned him ~ re- tirement of hair his milil~lry pay as a colonel. Former Vice President Agnew also had soug ht the distr1 butor~h1p • The governm('nt rt•unbursed Northrop Corp. for parties thrown hy \\l:u;h1ngton hostess Anna Chen- nault for the purpose or selling the aerospace firm ·~ FS jet fi ght oc tu As1;.1n governments, the Capitol I l1JI News Servtcc said. ·rhe r eport said the f>Eof>f~E lop Pentagon brass, and Bogart, a University of Hartford student who Uveii with his wife and 6-year-old son in Torrington, Conn., has some money frotn a trust fund set up by 1 hi~ father and devotes much of his free tlme to sport$. , "1 never' felt comfortable on the stage," Bogart. t'Xplained. ~ I * Liberty, the First Family's dog, produced nine puppies in little less than eight hours on the third floor or the White House. The process was observed by First Lady Betty. Ford and daughter Susan. Liberty. a golden retriever sent to Oregon in Ju· ly for mating, had five males and fdUr females. Mrs. Ford's press secretary, Shella Welden- reld, said all the puppies were "very cute" and the mother was "doing rinc." ' . Kentucky Gov. JuUan Carroll had a pinhead-si:te nodull" removed from his vocal cord at St. Joseph's ho:;pital in Lexington. Carroll "s press secretary said the governor was in ex- celJent condition following the IO-minute surgery. • E.,.I VPt .,_._.. ,,.n.,sena•~ Rep. Bella Abzug (0-New York) says there is good chance she may run for the U .S . Senate against Conservative Republican Sen. James L. Buckley. ( J pa rti es were attended by '-~~~~~~~~ that the Defense Dep~rt men t routin ely rc1 n1- bursed Northrop thousands of dollars. The nodule apparently was ,. caused by voice st.rain brought on Producer Wtll Buy 'Bigfootage' The story sa id Mrs. Chennault, widow of Gen. Claire Chennault of F1ying 1'iger fame. is li sted as a ''consultant·· in two internal Northrop documents. • Jerry A. Cooper can relax again. The FBI said it's convinced the heavy equipment operator is not D.8 . ·Cooper, the legendary hijacker who parachuted out of a jetliner in 1971 and escaped with $200 ,000. "We've checked it out and are certain he's not the same guy," said Robert G. Kunkel, special agent in charge of the FBI "s Alexandria, Va. office. Acting on an anonymous tip, the FBI began its in- vestigation of the JO-year-old construction worker this summer. Hijacker Cooper was the subject of national headlines. song s, bumper stickers and buttons after his spectacular $200,000 leap near Northwest Washington state. • "Come back, Mick Jagger," the plea rang out from a top British politician. . . r ' Sir Geoffrey Jtowe, opposition ..,_ Conservative party spokesman ~ on the treasury. made the pica in _.....-- a speech at Nott"ingham University in which he called ror a drastic cut in the income tax. He la mented what he termed the · :'fame drain" in which pop stars and other celebrities are driven ·out of Britain because of "punitive" tax laws that can take up to 98 percent of a star's earn- ings, JAGGER "There is little doubt that most of the stars con- cerned -the Rolling Stones, the Slade, Ringo Starr and Rod Stewart, for example -would prefer to make the UK (United Kingdom) their financial ~ base," said Geoffrey. · • Stephen Humphrey Bogart dodges his father's fans. The ·26-year-old son of the late llumphrey · Bogan. and actress Lauren Bacall says he wants to make a name for himself, pteferably as a television spartscaster. CARROLL by a virus Carroll caught about five weeks ago while on vacation. • Thirteen University of Virginia faculty members ex- pressed o"pposition lo the s c h e d u I e d a p - pearance Wednesday niiht of Nguyen Cao Ky , former premier and vice president of South Viet-. nam. The faculty members -12 professors and an asSO<'iate professor ~voiced their criticism in · let- ter to the University Union. which is sponsoring Ky's speech -the first on a projected national tour. The letter s aid Ky is "among those least likely to give u.s an honest and accurate account of the tragedy" of South Vietnam • Alex Joseph -polygamist, religious leader and would-be homesteader -was ordered to appear in federal court at Salt Lake City to explain why he shouldn't be held in contempt for refusing to vacate federal lands _ U.S . Di s trict Judge Aldon J. Anderson scheduled a Friday hearing at which Joseph and his followers must show cause why they should not be jailed for refusing to obey an eviction order. Joeseph has vowed to defy lhe government and stay on the desolate southern Utah land. "Wounded Knee will look like a picnic .. if federal agents try to move the band from their de- sert homesteads. Joseph said earlier. • A special court summoned Iranian millionaire Habib Sabet to defend himself on charges or un - authorized hiking of prices on spare auto parts. Sabet ls vacationing in Paris. The court s um· mons was delivered to his ageftt. • Rep. B.F. Sisk (D-Calif.} entered Bethesda, (Md.) Naval Hospital to prepare for surgery this week to replace an enlarged section of the aorta, the main blood vessel from the heart. Sisk, 65, was scheduled to undergo the surgery \Vednesday to correct the abdominal aortic aneurys m. Teen,.ager Hangs Self Dow to. Succeed TOKYO <UPI) -A 17- year-old boy committed suicide on the first day or his senior year of high school because he did not have $19 in interest money to pay a lnan shark. Grades·Vp, Knowledge Down By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) -All that recent muttering about the younger generation goi ng to the bow-wows apparently was wasted breath. ~\GHT£Jt SIDE • of the National Education As· sociation and asked how it came Ry VERNON SCOT!' HOLLYWOOD (U PI) -I( you 've taken home movies of Bigfoot, the monster who roams the Northwest. it c'ould be Worth more than $10,000 to you. Producer David Wolper will pay at least that much for usable footage in his new dramatized documentary, ''Bigfoot, the Mysterious Monster." WOLPER'S IN SOMETIDNG of a bind. He's making a film with a star he can't see. He is almost convinced Bigfoot does indeed exist. But he needs proof. The producer will, in.fact, pay ju:iwell for footage or the re-cent pied Noxie monster, that fo elling, seven-foot denizen of Noxie, Okla. And if you have Smm or 16mm film on Florida's Monkey l\1onster, the Arkansas Falk Monster or the celebrated Skunk Ape of the Everglades, you will not leave Mr. Wolper's embrace empty-handed. WOLPER WO ULD agreeably accept movie footage on the Abomipable Snowman or the.' Yeti, as that cuddly but evasive ·monster is called in th~~ Himalayas. "We have some· amateur film or Bigfoot," Wolper said, '.'but we need more. We are negotiating for the famous Patterson footage of Bigfoot taken· in Bluff Creek (CaJif.) in 1967. "I'll accept still-photographs, too, but obviously we won't pay as much for them. f\.1asabiro Miyao hanged himself in the bathroom of his family 's borne in Osaka, 300 miles west of Tokyo. Statistics now at hand credit . today's high school students with an academic attainment that scholars for centuries have striven for in vain. to pass. . \ "Example is still important in the learning process, and today's high school kids are consumers as well as students," the official e:<plained. "People laugh about the ex- istence of monsters. But as I ate as i910 everyone scoffed at re- ports or giant hairy things living in the African jungle, they turned out to be gorillas.'' TODAY'S STUDENTS have managed to improve their grades while al the same time absorbing less knowledge. According to the College En· trance Examination Board, last spring's high school graduates who took college entrance exams scored 10 points lower in verbal \s"lttll~nd 8 points lower in math than the cl~s of '74. ''They see profits increase while the quality of the merchan~ clisedeteriorates. They see prices being raised as the size of the package shrin ks. They see r wervice decline as service costs escalate. WOLPER'S EXPERTS will scrutinize alt film offered. ' Overdressed gorillas, football linebackers and excessively hairy brothers-in-law will be winnowe<t out, you may be sur'e. ''Scientists say reports of monsters ar e nonsense," Wolper went on. "But no one believes them. J think there is a credibili· ty gap between the scientific community and the American public. ·, Police said the' boy bor- rowed $21~ last spring from a neighborhood money. lender. He used the money as a down payment to a sales syndicate for car wax, and auto parts and accessories, which he planned to sell door-to-door during the s ummer. His business wa s not s uc- cessful, and he could not · raise enough money to pay the 35.6 percent interest. 'it was the 12tb straight annual de~~ne and thC'-~iggcst single drop on record. ) "IN THE CIRCUMSTANCES, it was inevitable that they would figure out a way to get higher grades with less education.'' "People like to believe in the unknown. It has something to do with childhood. We have a desire to make the world more interest- . ing and colorful than it is. A good example is the Loch Ness monster. Everyone likes to hear about him." Viejo Library ; To Sell Books At Golf Links • Fril;nds or the Mi ssion Viejo Llbrary are sponsoring a book sale Sunday, at th·e Mission Viejo Golf Course. 1be noon to s p .m. sale will be held in conjunction with Mission Viejo Days, an annual communi- ty celebration. • Among the books offered for sale are novels, mysteries science fiction works, textbooks' how·to books, h istory volumci .travel, art l'nd music books, and bioerap~.ies. Pall!J"back books will be sold forlOcenUeach. F\Jnd1 earned from the sale will be used to benefit the Mis- a!on Viejo IJbrary and Its oc- 6.JU... Resldonts who would Uke to or- f« lhelr books to the sale may br- "I D& tbom to tbe Ilbtary on Chl1s1nt1 Drive next to ihe Mls- alaa Vj~JoCompanyolllcea .. I T THE UNTRAINED eye, thjs:I report might seem to cor- ro6orate suspicions that the modern adolescent mind is not· the sharply honed mental instru· ment it was when you and l were- young, Maggie. But sit tight for another statistical jolt. According to other rigures, those self-same seniors who did so poorly on their ''Col lege Boards'" graduated with higher high school grade averages than the 1974 graduates. Like the tower college entrance test scores. the higher grade averages followed a recent trend. Thus. high school educa- tion· appears to have established a definite pattern of better grades with less learning. IF THAT SUGGESl'S that in· structional standards are slip· ping ift public schools, perish the \ thought. Any or the teachers now Ol"l_-.trtk_e___wlll tell you what a ip-and Job they are doing. It means, rather, if we old grads but admit It. that today"• students are more intelligent tban we-were. J'U be frank to say J was never smart enough to Improve my grades while lowerina: my in· fonnational input. To the con- •t.rary, tbe less I learned in class the more likely my report card to drop. HOPING TO FIND out more abaO:t Olis heartening new de") velopment, J called up an official I Although it is not yet clear what this will lead to, it is apparent that reversal of the traditional grade· learning correlation is a genuine scholastic breakthrough, com- parable in its way to the invention oftbeduncecap. I salute all the brilliant young blockheads who helped pull it off. What About Diamonds? PARIS (UPI) _:_,French women treasur e chauffeur-driven cars as prestige symbols over such luxuries as jewels, cruises and fur coats, according lo a poll. The news magazine Le Point said findings ol lbe poll lndicalA!d 51 percent o! French women are impressed by chauffeur-driven cars .. Jewels rated 48 percent and an ocean cruise got 41 per«Dt. Wolper, incidentally, wou1dn't object to footage on Nessie, either. "THERE RAVE BEEN many Bigfoot expeditions," he said . "There were 40 registered sight- ings in 1973. They dropped off in 1974 . Ttlis year there's an in· crease in sightings. "People who have seen Bigfoot have passed lie detector tests. J have tapes of their descriptions under hypnosis. Fascinating."'' Wolper is C(lnvinced there may be several amateur films of Bigfoot and many photographs. "People are afraid to admit they have such film for fear t~ey "ll be ridiculed. We will pro- tect their anonymity if they wish. "IT'S POSSIJILE IN mymind Bigfoot does eldst. lllo, he would have to be an intelligent creature to have remained in biding so lont. Who'd'have dreamed Stone M; Men would be dJsco.vered · decade In the Pbillpplnes?" Wolper's comp-any, has ~ worklnl on the Bigfoot mm ror a year. It will be rele....O this sum- mer. other items, in order of preference. were: a fur coat, an evening dress, an alligator bag, apartment& wlt.Jnnore than five rooms, a pedip<ed Odog, • color teJevia1on. a bridge table and a wardrobe of 10 pairs-ol-. Wolper requests that photo. -11"1!~1 w!_th monstec root,ge wn.teli m : _ David Wol.Jr Productions, 843 W. i!nl St., Loll An1eles90048 • • • • ... • ,San C emen e ·I Foreign Progr~m • Recruits Interest . -----~ By LAUlllE KASPEll Of .. OlltY......... ,. YES Is a wo!'d Hector d.i Ri~d LeonitrdO Jl'lores Jr. woufcl like to hea.r more often these days. They would like more families to say, ••Yes, we'dllketohaYe a loreign student livewit.b us for awhile." They would Uke to hear more American studef\ta. say. "Yet. I'd like to vtsll and study In Central or South America.'" ' · AND, THEY'D UXE MORE PEOJ'LE to know thal YES rewesents Youth Exchange Service, tho progiam they operate out of a home in the Shore Cliffs area of San Clemente. Now in its second year, YES evolved when. tbe two beeanle disenchanted with a similar exchange program they were both working in. "We decided we could do it better on a smaller scale," ex· plained del Rio, the program dired.oc. · And rpore exjhange programs ar~ needed, he said, because the larger, better· known programs have reached . a saturat~ point. Additional programs would get more people involved, Jijo said. MANY STUDENTS WOULD UKE TO vblt this coun\ry but give~ the idea with the belief that they would just never get into a program, added F1ores, a lawyer and Mexico City native who was once an ex.change student. This is especially so in the und~developed countries. he said . YES works only on exchanges between Central and South America and the Western states. They chose San Clemente as their international headquarters ' because it is in the middle of the coastal area and has access to the freeway. Five people work full-time out oC the Orange County office • Others work part-time 1n Washington, Oregon, Northern California and the Central and South American countries. IT IS A PROGRAM POIJCY TO operate offices out of homes. del Rio said, cutting down on operating costs. It also provides a comfortable, informal atmosphere for visitors and serves as a place for students to stay temporarily when the need arises. The men say they are pleased with their smaller siie and setup but also admit they'd like the larger recognition of the American Field Service. This, they explained, would bring volunteers who would belp with the administrative tasks, like mailing pubtlcily releases, but also, and more importantly. host students in their homes. A total of 76 South American students had applied to come lo this country this fall. So Car, however, only SO have been placed. JN OCTOBER, A GROUP OF Central American youths are scheduled to come for nine months and another group from ~uth America is due for lOweeks in December and January. But they won't come if familfes aren't found.for them to stay with, del Rio said. Other programs w!I! bring st~ents here without having a family ready and wa1t1ng, he said, but YES won't. They are looking for middle class families because these are what make Arrierica, he s·aid. They would have to provide only ''a loving home, room and board." f Families wpuld receive in return knowledge about another culture and, he hopes, a tile-long friend . There are no requirements on the size of familieS. A family of 18 in Redwood City is hosting a student. But another host fami· ly is a couple, in their mid·SO's, with two married children._ ..., THE FA MfL \' HOWEVER, IS CHECKED before a student is placed with them-. · The students, ·JI.el ruo said, are not to be considered as maids or household help but can be expect¢ to help around the house. This. he explained, is because "when they are here, they have to live as Americans." If they don't adjust to the fatnily or the "American way;• foreign students are st!nt home. · 1 "We're a tittle tougher than tbe other programs;•• said del Rio, a native or Bue.nos Aires. TO HELP THEM DETERMINE IF a foreign student will measure up. del Rio said, their !application inCludes an essay written by the student about his or her life and their reason's for wanting to come to•America. Their recommendations and grades {they must have good grades but not necessarily be "A'' students) are also checked. The student pays fees and transportation expenses to the pro- gram. The average paid by a Central American student is $700. Of this, del Rio said about $450 is for transportation. The remainder covers the program's idministrative expenses and the cost of in· surance for the students. Students also bring their own spending money. • WIULE FOREIGN.Sl'UDENTS COMING to this country are generally from wealthier, upper class faniilies, American stu- dents attr acted to such a program are of the middle class. So, the men said, the;; "Undercharge" Americans in atter'npl to get more of them into the program and .to promote a more equitable exchange betwe~n countries. . student! will benefit"1he rest.of their lives from this ex· perience, del Rio said. But there is more purpose to it than personal experience, F1ores added. "WE BELIEVE THESE KIDS COMING to the United States today wil l be businessmen and government people tomorrow," be explained. They are people who will build a relationship between countries in the future. "These youngsters are more the ambassadors," he said~ "l think this ambassadorship is aeeded.'' * * * * * *• * * * E.dison Welcomes New AFS Student T h e E dison High School chapter 1or the American Field Service will sponsor a Sept. 24 potluck dinner to welcome its new exc han ge st ud e n t. Branislava ''Branka" Cuk from Yugoslavia. Those interested in attending shoutd contact Mrs. John DeMisten, AFS president. at· 962-5008. Interior Decorator Course Offered Braoka will live with the Thomas H. Moore family in Hun4 tingt.on Beach during her stay. The Moores have a 16-year-old daughter, Erin. The chapter also has spansored an Edison student, Barbara ~· for. a stay In Concepci~ Paraguay. · During tile summer, anolh Edison stud e nt, Gretche Wooden; vis11A!d Turkey under the ,AFS procram, "lihlle the local chapter entertained-Eva Joltansson. a student from Sw\!den. A course in do-it-yourself in· 'Bell ' c·•-• Se• terior decoration opens ror re!-y -.. glstration Sept. 25. It la sponsored Coeta M<!sa women may~ · l>ythe Costa Mesa Department or g1.ster Sept. 25 at.tile city's LeilureServtces. munity ttecreation Center+ S!ptupswll! be 6to8p.m. at the 'Fair Drive, from e 14 8 p.m. !or Community ReC?eatlon Center, • classes in belly dancing. CluM$ wbeN! the course will be taught wlll becin Wednesd11Y. Oct. 11$ Tlleodays Crom 9:30 a.m. 14 l!=}Oo College Park Elementary ScliOol a:m7 by decoratoi'llillara • from1to8p.m:rorlitg!nnersaiid Kirby_ A $17 fee11 roqulredCortbe 8 14 9 p.m. ror Intermediate and class. -_ .,iv __ ecl stlldents. , • , I \ ~ ·I • ·• ' .. ' he y. Id ed ra va m .. ·1 ~ . . . ,. . ,. • ,~, ., • • . • . I • l • LT. GOV. •ERVYN M. DYMALLY earlierthls year took a •trooeerapproacb, telling a United Na· Ch • J ..JJ ;_ _ tions energy coofereoce that the major oil com· l,~S panies are to blame. Implicit in that statement is the feeling that as long as oil companies can make. more money by $ellini ru.;i o11 to eiectrtc utilities, Jl.f'OtL ~r lbey won't produce enerty from the geothermal lJ.J.1 I~ leases.they hold. But DymaUy has since-softened his stance somewhat, concedihg that the delays may not be en· ~T US tirely the responsibility ol the oll companies. l , ervo Nevertheless, he says be wants to fmd out wbo is r-====o--.. holding up development SOUTHERN ol a resource that some By DR. STE INCROHN CALIFORNIA energy experts say could Dear Dr. Stelncrolm: FOCUS eventually produce .20 '---....:.....:..;;,,.;;;,,,. _ _,,, percent of the electricity CabTbmta needs. So he's called two statewide.conferences for this month, sessiom where most of the major geothermal lease·holders (almost all are oil com~ panies) and all the governmental agencies involved with them will participate. Why do I fill myseli with tranquiliz-:rs? because of the open and ·veiled taunts of my friends. CONFERENCES ALONE, OF COURSE, ARE not enough to produce new activity. . These meetings come at a fortuilOU$ mo~ent. Just last month the San Diego Gas &: Electric Co. and the federal government announced joint de- velopment of a 10-megawatt geothermal power plan.t near NUand. At almost the same µme, Imperial County of. ficials approved plans by the city of Burbank and Republic Geothermal ·Inc. to drill as many as 18 wells on federally-owned land southeast of Hoitville. And another agreement. this one between Union Oil Co. and several landowners near Brawley, was also reVealed this month. Jt allows Union just five y~ars to begin produc- ing power on a 2,000-acre site, or else Jose its lease. The reason? My hUAband and I have de· cided not to have children. We are called selfish to our Jaces. We are happily married and the only fly in the oint· ment is our friends' reac· DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE tioo to what we consider our hOnest ev a.luation of whether we want to have children. THIS HAS MADE me nervous. My hu sband is not as affected by their reactions. I would ap-. THESE THREE DEVELOPMENTS BY preciate knowing how themselves might have been sufficient t~ pu~ pre· your reade r s feel. Do ssure on other oil companies to get moving in the they conside r childless geothermal area. · couples selfish in an "Many people in the drilling industry have told overpopulated world? - us that the state of current technology makes M Q " n .. · geothermal development im~ssible," says Mara. Dirrim, research coordinator for Oymally. ''If these recent developments work out, they will be shown it is not impossible." The technical problems the industry complains of involve the high mineral content of the steaming hot underground water in the Imperial Valley. There are far fewer brines in the water a.t tbe cur- rent geothermal developmentll;I soaoma-CcJu.nty in Northern California. But if the corl'osion and odor probte~ eaUSed by the minerals were so severe, why would a fisc~I · ly conservative firm like San Diego qas & Electnc be investing so much in its project? DIRRIM, WHO IS COORDINATING THE Dymally conferences, says tha~ is one of the prime questions other lease-holders wtll be asked. "Our conferences are designed to put the pre· ssure on whoever is to blame for the delay," he s'aid. ''Everybody has been pointing the fing_er at 'the other guys.' But as soon as,it can be showi\ that the technology is effective; it will put on a lot of pre· ssure for more development.'' For the consumer. there will be titUe im· mediate impact from all this. Even if the current experiments are effective, it would be several years before the underground pools could become regular suppliers of electricity. . . But the eventual impact -if the entlJ'e poten· tial said to exist beneath the Imperial Valley were used -would be a lowering of utility bills and a decreased dependelfce on. unreliable foreign :;ources for fuel oil to run the state's power plants. Orphan Bats Vampires Need Home FORT COLLINS; Colo. (UPI) -Dr. Michael Petit wants to find a new home for 22 vampire bats that like to be scratched behind th ~ ear s a n d d o,n' t particularly e njoy. human blood. Petit, an assistant pro- fessor of microbiology at "Colorado State Universi· ty, said he collected the animals in New Mexico for a research project anct would like to find a suitable home where they would be used for science, not kept as pets .. Although the new owner would have to pay shipping ch¥~es for the sharp fanged bats, Petit said he would be willing to give the bats a~ay. He said the three·inch, brownish gray bats are clean and disease.free and rate human blood low on the ir list of foods . They prefer beef blood dispensed in a hum· mingbird feeder so Petit thinks the prospective Dew o..tner should live near a slaughter house. The bats enjoy being J;"cratched behind the ~ars. he said, and if well fed will never s woop down on their new owner for a quick snack as movie bats do. - COMMENT : I would be squashed if I took a stand in such an argu· ment. There is much to be said pro and con. However, John Simon. well-known art critic, has written an interest· ing, provocative article on why he prefers to be childless which ap· pe·ared in the May 197;> is s u e of Harper 's magazine, titled, "Why · l'mChil,dless.·· HE QUOTES Aldous Huxley: "Population is rus hing up and soil fertility is rushin g down, so that in a couple of generations most of the planet will be a du st bowl 1nhabited by the starving anci ruled (since de· mocracy is incompatible with hunger ) by tyrants." And then Simon goes on : "That was in 1948, and we are now closer by one generation to that in- tolerable state or affairs. That the birth rate has fallen off here and there in the world is not nearly enough as long as in ad· joining areas procrea- tion ch~rges ahead at a suicidally full blast. "That, too, contributes t o my rem aining child· less, and even ha ving become associated wilh the National Organiza- tion for Non·parents. Alon g with-NON, I believe that the child· free state must be made socially respectable in a society that through countless means -from religion to advertising, from school books to soa p operas -en- courages multiplying. THE PICK OF Punch "LET THOSE whose chief talents lie in the direction or par enthood reproduce , albeit with moderation ; let others, otherwise inclined, re· main unpressured and Wl.discriminated against -feel free to be child· free:· ., f ••you can get o se<on<I opfoion j/ you like, lwf I dtOflltOsi' ci cvr••·'' I, • I Feel better, Mrs. Q.? Perhaps now you will oot need so many tran· quilizer1. On the other hand, I wonder bow a friend of mine with 10 children will react. And others who are raising an-cl have rai se d t hildl'en? ••• Learn to m ake de· C'lsions and act on the«rt, as indecis ion is killing says Dr. Steincrohn in his booklet, ''How To U ve With Less Tension At Home." For a eopy write him al this paper enclosin& 50 cents and a stamped. sell-addressed envelope_. 6 ~ ' 2 . • :5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 ·a -- . " , DAILY PILOT •7 --. ......... ... _ . ...__ •••••• 119-ntlf . 'llllllgoll .... ._. ... .,._On19e~ DAILY P•LOT . CLUSl~ED ADS You Con 5411 It, Find It, [ 642•--j °"' t:al ~ ......... .-... ,........ .............. -.-t =.~.:..... --..... --·-.............. -.... Trude It W-1111 a Want Ad iJlllV•U Fast Cnclt Approval 1 ...... """'~-..... ,... ...... -.w. ........ ...... _.... -·-Tl 0 1-............. .. ..... ~ .-.0For-Hw11For--Fors.N -For-._.. ················· .............................................. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••·••·•• •••••• 1002 1002 G Mr.i l00.2 l ~-... ------·l~G~l~M~r::!.. 1002 Gt•r• • Gt•rol 1 ~ JI ..................................................... ; ...................................... . T SHORECUST ~~acs~_";,"'_""'..,.ec1s DUPUll • TWO STOltY --. S B<lrm•.~ z baths each dolly ...i .._. .,.. unit: rrp1<1 .. bll·lns. FAMILYROOM ron Irma•~ ... The Ideal location fOf' sum· Unique C!''!Y to spacious SUPER VALUE IMBLU EJceellent location 1 me r /winter renta l s. formal bV)ng and b.iln· DAILY PILOT ~it• 1115.000. quet ro.oma. Sunn)' OPEHDAILY ly bJuffs on Ol1t' the fin~tl gree11bel lkaullful pat>u wit h c•pUOnat priVOlC)'·lb.ree b edr oom .zv, bafhs. Price reduiced to PS.000. Call $73.SSSO. " l..,.lyfarttoe ......... m-3063 ~E'!..., gounnetkll<hcn.Rambl- c-..et....._..,. l_p..J a:1me ro0m with 307 MARIGOLD AVE., Corona deJ titar just one block to the oce:an beach. lti'ench duors open lo huac Ch.ioese etrns shad· ln1t the brick patio and lawn. Wood paneling, beam ccilinR, ~Jtiteil naors &.111cturc window. -.t• --· er1e\lln1 fireplace.. Graclous ruett bath and lar1e la undry room. Sweeping stain to kine slle master and separate children~ sui(e5. Lush l andscapi n g. Very pn\'lle grounds. Call for appl. today! ssa.soo. call associat ed ...... -··Holler. . All real estate #iverll.aed la lb.la a ewapaper Is aub-Jttt lo the Federal Fair HouslDg Acl of 1988 which m akm It lllet:aJ to advert ise "any pre· ference , Hmltation, or dlstrlmlnatlon bued on race. color, reli~ •ex. or national arilfPQ, Olf" an intention to make any such pre(en!IK'e, ll mita- llDl'll, or dilcrimlnation.'' This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertisi ng for real estate which is in \'iolll· lion of the law. fl•' " l lo-, ~ I l'I., ~ ' '1 '• • ,., ! • • •• MIHIRAHCH MAXI VALUE Private drive lo secluded ranch. hOUJl» Rambllng. main house. Jne ludt'S three big bedrooms, parlor, and farm k.itche n . Bnck lerrace leads to sprawling grounds covered v.·jth fruit trees. Price in- cl udes: separate maids quarters, wood shop, c h icken house, bird aviary, storage sheds a nd much. much more. Get back to the basics. 963·8767. (11~1•11i'l •llSll/fl l •lll Nl'f' [®IHAillil Off.N Ill 0 •ti l fUN IOllt loll(f' THE REiil , ~--' EST_ll_T~~: add charm lo this three I~~~~~:::::;:;;;; bedroom, two bath home ; thri.-e car i;:araJ(e pl\IS paneled hobby room . T\\'O Lt:GA I~ LOTS make th.is a be:sl bu.y al $119.SCO. GOVERMMEMT OWNED $34,900, $1750. Uown. Nice sect ion or llunl· 1ntton Jkuch. 3 Uc1trm, 2 baths. Gov·1 n11c. 6'&.3928. evt?S 646--0G50 Lachenmyer Reallo• lr---~---;;;;11 Only $5 1.000, Call 96.1·6767. Don't wait .. Oi'fN Ill.,. II s fl.I .. rol!f lj>(f I [~;lfi&ll1I 642-5678 DAILY PILOT cLAssiflED HOVIS Advertisers may pl ace their ads by telf'phone 8:00a.m. to5:30 p.m. Monday tl>ru Friday &t.onoonSaturd ay · COOT A MESA OFFICE JJOW. Ray 642·5678 NEWPORT BEACH ~Newport Blvd. 642·5678 HUNTINGTON BEACll 17875 Beach Blvd . >«>!220 LAGUNA Bf:ACll 1115 Glenneyre Laguna Beach 494·9466 SAODLEBACK 25201 La Paz Rood Laguna HilLs 581-6310 NORnt COUNTY dial free S40·1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadline for ropy &: kills is 5:30 p.m. the day bcfOf"e pubhcation , ex· rep(. ror Sunday & Mon · day Editions when deadline Is Saturday, I<'. • CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS: Advertisers shoukl check their ads daily &: report errors immedi;itely. THE DAILY PILOT assumes llabdily for the first in· roJTed i~rtion only. CANCELLATIONS : When k11linjl! an ad be sure to make a record nr the KILL NU MR ER given you by your ad taker as rere1pt or your cancellation. This kill riumber must be presen· led bv the advertiser in case Or a dispute. CANCELLATION O R CO RRfo:CTION Of' NEW Al> BEFORE RUNNTNG : Every effort is made to kill or correcl a new ad that has been ordered. but we cannot 1!'.U11ran· lf'e to do so until the ad has appeared 1n the .. ..,. DIME·A·LlNEAOS: "' 11'e5e ads are strictly cash in advance by mail or at any one l'lf our of· rtee11. NO phone orders. Deadline : 3 p .m . Jlriday. Costa Mesa of· 1nce • 12 ~ at a11 ,tranchofficel. TltE DAILY PILOT «Servel lhe ri.iht to cla&1ifY. edit, een$0r or- ·r efuae a n y 11dver; llam-en1, and to c)l,anae ii.A ra:.ei. • rcau)atlons wilhoul prior notice. CLASSIFIED MAIUHG ADDllSS P.O. Box 1560. Costa.Mesa ...,. I COMPANY HJ::,\LTOHS S l:'\L:E 1:.111 6 73·4400 U><~l~~~ ~ ~t, .,,\:;;;;~~~~~ this older 2 bedroom FHA. APPRAISED home & garage. Lot is ... at !42,500. 1.000 sq. n. 48x140 deep. C-all of home.4bedroom,2\.'i now ... it's a real rind. baths, large family room Gr•at few Kids! Quiel culdesac street w1lhoul. traffic. Large bedrms with separate master bedroom. Family r oom w /2 fireplaces. Near Westctiff shopping center. Priced right at $68.500. Pt"TE BARRETT -REALTY-$39 950 with bltn bar, livinA • room. dininJJ:. Eating 642·5200 &lS·40$0 IJ~l 11 · a r ea in Jcite h en.I ~~~~~~~~~ ~ Hardwood 000f'S. fUlly "" ~Hll air conditioned. Won't ----------·I ANYTIME last at this price·! HORSE · A<5 PROl'ERTY .... """""""""""""""""""""~ LI p F.R n Be a ut if u I 3 bedroom with MES haidwood floors & brick 5 BIG BEDROOMS fireplace. A neat. clean VIEW LOT ™1 Campus NB 5•9·•555 family home. Extras in- MEWPORT HEIGHTS elude 4 stall covered sta· ****Ju•-•*** ble. Don't miss th.is great 3,000 sq. ft.· 2 story Cape ,.... • • b value a t ~i:9,000. Call Cod . magnificicnt street at tuc cuancc to uy one - t o.s tre e t R -2 lot. of the fe w remaining 54().1151 Outstanding continental completely rcfurb1s~ed 2 m aster s uite . v·alk in bedroom, 2 bath. .s1ni::le c loset. Quiet Hide· A-Way story To-...·ryhouscs 1n San· feeling . ln\·est $8,500.1 ta Ana. Still only $21.950.1 ,;;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;~1 Call to see. 646-7171. Ask for f'rank. 839·83211 · Ol'f•irr1'1 •1t s1 ·i i111 ••1··r• Agent -HERITAGE • • REALTORS Artist's Mansion ,.,~l,. T~!, 5,:~ •• d beach. 3,0QO Sq. fl. of lux· uey li\•ini::. 4 to 7 Bdrn1:-.. Warm charming family room.' Oriental plank· patio overlook!! mini or- chard in private yard. S89,900. fulf 'prlc.'c. 10' :. down. F"or i1ppl. C,\LI. 962·7788 ti K€Y 1 I P.€AlTOP.SiC , NEWPORT HTS ONE YEAR OLD Can you believe w. l year new home in Newport Beach beautiful hcighl" area. 3 Lge bdrms, open beam ceilin~. beautiful frec·standing fireplace. Only $69,900. 545-9491. -1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ SUPER [~ ~I • ILUFFSLOCATIOH ~~ ~ .Up~a~?d~b~~!:!c. ~~dg~~~~· 0~~%ts .n~~ · Built-ins. 2·car garage quiet cul de sac. Wide w / enclos ed back yard. greenbelt plus partial One mile from beach. bay view. 3 Bdrms., 2'h Low upkeep yard. Walk baths; great storage to downtOY.'n park. space; 2patios,onegat· S-15,000. Our best value. et!, one covered. No bet· Call to see. tcr Bluffs value at $79, 750 MILLIONS SS VIEW!! WE'RE LOOKIH' •. for a trade. or trades on a 4 month old completely c usto mi zed Spyglass home. $95,000. Equity. JACOBS REALTY 675·6610 536-8836 MEW LISl:IMG HARBOR VIEW Spacious four bedroom home. Quality carpeting· cathedral ccilin~s with C. f. Colesworthv . Realtors 640.oofo 20HAlOT You mus t scetobcl1cvc! Spa<:ious 4 bdrm, •I bath i n p r es t igious Dover ShoroEi. A "must sell "' situation. Lowest pnc•· for area. Owner mu:-.l v<£calc. Take advantaJ;t· • Call now. 54&2'313. ""fj 'II'>• II~ 11,·1 t JI f l •. ·1· THE REiil ESTATE RS ! EASTS!Dr-: Elderly owner an:..:ious! 1---------!\lus t sell fa s t ! Ro th JUST REDUCED!• houses 10 tip top condi· Supcr filmify home-!". lion. Fantastic in\'CSt· bedrooms, 3 car ~oira~"· me nt. Low, low down 3 full baths, formal d in paymenl.64:>-0303 in ~ r o om, upJ!radl·il FORESTOLSOJ"41MC. c arpets , drap es & HOW IS THE TIME exposed beams· parquet floors in dining room and E TCLIFF for job seekers to check family room· impt.-ccablc * W S * wallpaper. Room fnr pool table in famll ~ fl)Or(l . Sec this now'! Call :>-!O·ll51 the Daily Pilot Jlelp landscapu"I!· ocean and Ucautifully kcpt3 Bdrm. \\'anted classification . If · cd + family room hn1nc \'alley vie .... ·. l'r1c at the joh you want is not $l l9.500.Ciillfi7J.fl.'">50. with country kitchen, there you mi~ht eonsider Dl'IN r•i Q • .i, ,, ii rn~i ri·ri , dhl. frp\c. $71,950! -..HERITAGE offerin{:: your __ '_'_'_"'_.'_'_' [~· BalbooBoyProp. · wllh an ad in the .Joh Recitors wanted category. Phone • 675·7060 * 642-5678 ===;~~~~~;=~~~;~;~ Want a"tl rc-:-.ul t... r,.12 51;0K ••• REALTORS \'ou don 't need a ~un to . .r'draw fast "' whe,,.....you The fastest draw 10 .. th<' C.~ £\.,,.A. f) 'C ~C.fll place an ad in the Daily West. . .. 1' Daily 1'1101 • ~\!::> \\.atJ ~).. -(.!:) J.j q~ ~ PilolWantAds!Call now Class ifi ed Ad . Phone dG h C' II That fnfriguing,Wor ame wit a nuc e -642·5678. 642·5678. _ _:,::_:::=:__----l-'C.C:.."-''--------1 , ...... lty (Lllf •. •OUAN G.,....01 I 002 G....rai I 002 •······••···•·········• ·······:.··············· ·~t i TARBEL nlTORS, rn .,.· 1926-1976 MESA VERDE : Fruitlrees. garden, dance veranda. 3 bed.rooms +den or 4 bedrooms. Wood cabinets, buill· ins, just $47 ,500 ! THE BLUFFS : Reduced $6900. 2- s tory villa, parquet floors. conversa· lion pit, banquet dining, 3 bdrms, 3 baths, must sacri£i ce! 540-1720 2955 HarbcrllYd. --· '°'9Clt-...... ~ I RA "l" I 0 I I I' I I ~-rR-iO:rl"TG-rY ..,, i . I I' I I . 1 I HAG U L 1~ I I' I I I . H ypOtfosy P1r 1u d 1c 1" Wrtppe:d vp in · -, <)IS I TACSEK I r-y• T...,..I ....,.1--,1~ o c.~ .... •• ·'·"· • ., ... • • • • • • by r,11,~~ ·~ ·~~ ,...,.,~., -·cl• --------'°" ~ 1•9"' "'~No. J M!ow. 19 Pl•NI NUM'f~{O \l Tll'S IN THI S! SOUAllfS ., UN~•AMlil{ Afl()V( l(tllRS • I I TO Cfl ANSWft , , • • ICIAM-lm AHIWW ' l \ •• DAILY PILOT TuMday. September II. 111~· . • ' HonftfOi'C'Gl,.-~-ta;;;ro,.-.;~....-~--1 ............ """--~ ······················· ....................... ·············-···-··· ··•······· ••••••••••••••••••••••• -·For s.i. . . J--.. For Seit -For Seit ---Seit .................................................................................................. Gewff'Clll 1~10 •• ,... • 1002 ..._.... · 1002 G..erai 1001 •• _, •••••••• ., •••••••• Co.toMHa .10l4Hulll1f1•-l04 wporlleodi 1069tWwporth .... 106f . ............. .,, ................................................ _ ...... ·············--···-· IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••'•••••••••••••••••••••-••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ~~;~.;.-.;.••••••••••••••• HOUSE OF GLAS.S Wes t side-3 Hd ,l Ba,•• F £ft H H l LL O"er si r.ed 2 car aar. Town.houte. Exclwlwe l.ZX15 patio II carport. eommunll)' 01r:t·lo C a rp & dr.ap . Lot Meadowlark.GolfCounc 8:1 'Xl20'. Frult treu. " beaebe•. ~cJou ii .B::;K:.:K::S48=c·::W7=·----I Z.8•, 2-ba. Incl pool. -tennl' .J~ .. ourta •od llG IN llG CAHYON CAMEO SHc;>RES A prestige location ... with a panoramic ocean view. Spacious 3· bdrm., 3 bath home ; lovely pool with ample decking Cor easy entertaining. Xlnt loan avail. at less than current in· tercst rate. Top value. $157 ,500 V~ Afl Yltw In :. tountry atmoepher~ of sw:tyina field• and farmh ou?it:1>. lhl11 cot· mopulltBn e5latt o( c11th.:dral ce1hngs and $27,900. cJubh.le. ~800. SOARING WAI.LS OF 3-BR. added family room GLASS & ov~lc.de• th" w Jo pt.•n beam celHn11 coastal valley' to-:nter rormuldinrm,bltCkfat'O thru rare tJlc cnt.r)' sink w I country Mlmolpbere 11110 pdlow-ilkc carpet· & fruit trees. Veterans 111~! Luvilindhun~rUOlll w elcome. Call Rltr., RSALTYINO. entc rlulnmt:nt! Com· 540.361)6 714/1•6-1371' * * PRESTIGE** Unique contemporary cla.ssic. Finest use or Oak wood. A warm. adaptable" ramUy home • .S Banns. + family rm., large sundeck with jacuzrl. Star or the Udo Island Home Tour. $197 ,500 .LIDO REAL TY ll77Y141U.-.H.L 67].7]00 --· . .... ' .. : ... ~-. .. .; r:. One of the bigger homes at one or the lesser prices. 5 bedroom, custbm, ex· tremely workable Ooor plan, quality appliances. carpets, flooring and ap- pointments used throughout. Exciting opportunity for you to do the finishing decorator touches. See this fairway custom at $259,500. BAY ANO BEACH 675-3000 forlable & coi.r, living in 1 .:::::..::=·-------11;;;;;;~;;~;;;;;;~~;;;;1 Sc:1nd1navlun an1 room! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Swce1>in.1t mW1ter bdrm Dana Point 1026 0 I «•650. do ·.~ 11uil e With scpur•te sun· ·······················' n J H wn L .. -~ I" ... o.Jdw rtlHch ID'' shine br1takruat patio! 3 1 -••-'· d~ ~ •.• , 1 00,.1 .. .1~~ led 3 a;sa• .... -,... ~ ... . Ul'iijl()UE t1ClMES RE A L T0RS1'. 675-6000 2443 East Coa~t i.1tghway, Corona del Mar 1002 General 1002 <'·~()7 L t..OA~T H WY CORONA or I.. MAJt Ch i ' i , "d A•al-••-.,...,. ~~'"""ii •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 c rt ns rctrt·aIB ,.11 In Dana Knotls-JBr-28•· bedroom, 2 bMth home In ml •<,'l•"•moo"',""'°1rc.~or on; l.rg yurd w/p11ved boat eJulc:cllent locMUon. Call NOkl·L-. &~t • BA YFROMT r: Y nl11 ... own t I storage 49&-0685 q ck~ r coic own . 2CustomHomes GNiff'Ot •002.Gt'Mf'Gll 1002· Won't last lht· wknd! or rr . ' mlfl·~u~ Trlpl e Jt -3 -2Br. 2 ULA •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• llurrv .call847.fi010. DELUX E DUPLEX For ,,_eyI:)fl1Jd', w/rrplc. 3 cw gar. by i!,~~~e~~l~:i~the Q1iN1<1'•·•l\•i.r.•1·~1 •.•t• sule bj' owner, ocean--4471lr.t: owJfer. 352, 35& & 362 [ ® lfi!iH\fl · ~~~;1r.~i'·~~;::it. 1 .. ;.. 1044 li'I~~· .. ·~~s~.~~·~ fi~;~·r:f :ffi.:f.£ ... LIDO ISlE ' Waterfront 4 BR .. :> ba., rumpus Pier & noat, sandy beach. $295.000 rm .' ••••••••••••••••••••••• wclbar. ultra modern kitchen & private pltt. v/61an This n ew free standing 1 HOME LEFT! PARTY GIYERS HwntirHJfon Bi-och I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• REAL ESTATE '100 (,1,.,,,,,.l",, St ~·-~·•••, ~·'-rJ•O Fee. land. See at 1200 Eaal Balboa Blvd., or call 67.5-8120 fOI' rooce de· tails. ~······················ ······················· Like new! 4 BR., 4 ba. 1-0wner. Custom bayfront. Lawn, patio. pier & noat. $325,000 DELIGHT!! ~1 F.SAV l::ltDE2story.4 bcdrofl m. 3 Lath home \V1th 20x26 fa mily roorn for t huse spc<·u1I parties t•nlt•rtaininl-! al your 8 ' h ltn b a r under a 1·:1thcd r;il open be um eed1ni:. C.:o\•crctl patio a nd lots of t rl·e:-. ror privu1·y rnake th is ho1n1• :1 drl•a rn co1nc true. C<.ill •BY OWNER• Beautiful Deane Bros. home in Univ. Park has approx.2500sq.O.o(hv-s· Remal ' ' v.: t·:SI.t·:Y N TAYLOR CO. H.t-:A l.TOHS S llH't' UMH ''ILUFFS"-HEAYENLT HACIENDA Spacious 2 story customized ''E'' model end unit. 3 Bdrms , huge fam rm w /wet bar, 2 frpl. 2v, baths. 2 Patios - even a dog run. $98,500 ~Salud ! 2987 QUEDADA OPEN WED 1·5 211 I 5.., J ......... Hill• Road NEWPORT CENTER. N.I. 644-4910 Getter al 1002G .... rol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BIG CANYON IYO'WNER Gorgeous ston~ & stucco 4 Br. home. llighly up· ..:r:idcd. Divorced & muv- 1 ng . Situation worth thouSandS to buye r . Worth $195,000-wi ll take $169,500. Want quick sale or trade. Cull 644-2466. . MINI RANCH AIANDONED 3 BR SACRIRCE $33,900 Completely redecorated like a model. Prime re· sidcntial nc11-:hborhood in prestigious comm.unity. Large family sized li\'ing room.· Country s tyled kitchen. Rambling grounds with rruit or- chard. Secluded master retreat and Jtencrous sized c hi ldrens suites. I-lorry. Priced lo s ell fast! C<i\1963-7881. CLIFFHAYEN OC EAN VIEW-und pool too! Country t·ollagf•· used brick. open beams, C'ozy r 1r c pla cc, 3 b e droo m s. lusc iou s private patiO, pool & j acu7.zi. $122,500. rec Of'tN 111Q •rl§fUf/10~1 NI('/' [ ~li~&lli!I la nd. • PETE BARRETT -REALTY- LOW 'DOWN! $6000. Down moves you in ! 1900 Sq . ft . 3 bedrooms. ramily room, 2 bath s , 2 brick fireplaces. Mesa.Werde- a steal at $59,!500. Call 546-4141 General . ' macnab/ Irvine realty YACANT LOT-llG CANYON outstanding Fairway lot -at the end of a secluded drive -#25 Hermitage Lane -$78,500. Barbara Aune 642-8235. (V71) , "IDEAL ·FOR ENTBITAINIHG" High beams in living and family rooms -open out to gracious patios. 3 bedrooms, each with private bath. Room for Pool + 3 car g:mlge -on beautiful Somerset Lane. $117,500 Mary Lou Marion 642-8235. (V72) A DUPLEX ON THE IALIOA SAHDS FOR $115,000 The sand is your front yard! 2 bedrooms up & one down. Great summer /\Vinter Rental area. Tom Queen 644-6200. (V73) OLD LAGUNA CHARM Triplex near -beach and town . 3·2 bedroom cozy apart me nts -2 w /fireplaces. 55 foot frontage, 3 car garage. Excel lent rentals - $123,500. Mary Lou Marion 642·8235. (V74) llG CAHYON IUILDING SITE Marvelous views of golf course lakes and the hills beyond, Located at end of quiet cul-de-sac. Well priced at $102,500. Tom Queen 644·6200. (V751 IMPIUSIVE HOME- EXCITING VIEW of ocean.. Harbor and crimson s unsets from high atop one or Corona del Mar's most desirable streets. Complete pri.vacy in pool and lanai areas. 4 bedrooms, formal dining room, family room & 2 brick fireplaces. $129,500. Bell'i Chas~ Lee 644.QOO. (V76) ••z.eiJI •• ._.Jot .. , O.-Offft ... ~ ......,.., ........ ~ .. , homt' 41Jr.2 00,2litory, ing s pace. It includes 3 IX ft DOMTUFT vt;rY pr1 \'ale alm06phere trg BR ·s, finished bonua Laat chance for tax re· A HANOI! A~tr. 4 BR., 3 ba., Lido Sowl . 77 waterfront, sandy beach. $275.000 n : w1tb ~le)tanl landscape,· rm. 3 ~ Baths, formal bate: custom 3 bdrm. v patlos .. & cnlJY. Feat1:1res dining rm & rarnily rm. homes:, priced to sell, It's spotlns and easy to~_ large master su.1te, The price is s64•500 w /many extras. Ope keepthatway.Arecent-• Ruman b1:1t.h & atrium. le1:1sehold & the builder i~ house all days but Tues. ly redecorated 3 BR end ' By owner , Prin. Only_. anxious to sell! From $88,SOO unit townbomc near pool....,; $81900 9628668 ~~~~~~"'."'~~~ andclubhousewilhover· · · · PAIK II HOMES ::. sized master suite and .• BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341Boy!.1df'011vc NB 675·6161 LIYE IN ONE 552-1800 FAMIL y DB.IGHT night light view. $00,500. & REMTOME!! For the ramily wh Call644·7211 . _ TUR'fLEROCK ~ !W6-5SMO. ' G....,.al ECON OJ\1JZF.~' Cozy J TOWNHOUSE .wants everything! This ~ .. , bedrmowners bomewith 2 br. & den. f'orme r 2-st.ory J bdrm .. 3 b<ith, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 .:~~~~~~~~~~I country kitchen & dine. model. Air conditioned. family room home has S • : 1002 I 002 Getteral ~HERITAGE ••• REALTORS ~ ..........•.......•... ABANDONED $33,000 Fantas ti c 2 s tor }. J bdrm. 2 bath, budt-1n dream kitchen. lar~e hv- inR roo m . J\ j.!reat op- portunity to gf'l slurl(.'iJ in home ownership 111 de · mand Huntinj!lon Ueuch area. Short walk to shop· ping. J\ steal al $.13,000 . 963·5671or 556-7035. -' ' SP AMISH AXER 3-BR·Z STY POOL BEACH $28,500 . SUHSHIME 1. warn1 wood floors & automatic sprinklers and be amed ceil's .. rrplc .• ~ · COTTAGE carpet. 2 vanit y baths. lighting. A r.lUST SEE. central alr·tond. & elec ~-p $39•900 ! Sty, 4 I.ill. 3 Ba. Frplc, PLUS a 1Bil.1 BJ\ rental $64.950. htron,i cd a&ic ,r.i11te•00. Largt1 EASTIWFF ,,,. Cl ub-Pool, ·rcnn1s, l blk brings in $200. per mo. ea e 1 ter poo Nnl a condo' Not a ocean , 574.500. Pnnc. on· Beach area.962-SSU Bkr CALL NOW with spa. Lots of private 4 Br, den, 3ba, Grnn11 din t. townhousL'. but a C'horm ? 3• 2 ~ deck & patio area. rm. Storage a ore!·. ing 3 bdrm home on a l_Y_·64_-_. ~4 ------BY OWNER. Adult 2· ~"-.. 752-7315 BeautiCully lndscpd., Poolsiteyard.$85,SOOby ·~ large lot, n£.>Slled a mong story condo. 3br, l 1h.ba, with sprinkling system & Owner 644-7596. tnwcrinJ! trt."l·s and gen-Balboa Island I 006 wushcr /dryer. reCrig. ·DONALD M.llRO 1 £~need yard. _One or the OCEANFRONT 2 Bd + 2 tic roll ing J111ls' Cotta~c •••••••••••••••••••••••1 -;=$2~8;·~900;.:;·~"6;;;-·~S4~7~2~.-::--:.=·J __ ~•~·~"~'~;·~·~·~··~·~-~·~·~'.'.'..'...o._J finest homes m the area walkw:1y to exquis ite XL~T INVfSI'l\tENT !OPEN HOUSI-: Lg. cust. & only minutes from Bd garage .apt. $125,000. s tone entrance! Deep Res1d en t1 a l & C?m · P oo l w /spa & patio. PRICEREDUCED Niguel Beach. A real Owner. 645 · 3655 s ha ~ c a r1lt!l thru·out ! mcrc1<1l I ncomc. Good B<>aut . 4 br, l'\-4 ba, frpl, Owner wants fast at;,lion jewel at $92,50) 6 Br+den. pool size lot 1''01ll\1AL l>JNI NC.i C'n· a ss umab~c . loan . By nxl. to p~rk & sch!. Nr. on tQis 3 bdrm .. fami.ly overlooking new gol£ tertalnmenl t:nhanct.'Clb y owne r . I ~in c. only . Shop·g. Ctr. By owner. rm ., 2 112 bath home. mIJ.l@&Il11W~~°W·-course.$84,995.646-6395 a GALL 0 I' I NG $52.000.673-ffi.16 $5 1.000 . All t e rm s . loc<ited in the new _ .u GOU Rl\IET KITClll·;N! 9'i3JIGS .~52 p· eerD Dee.field Park y,·11a<>e. NEWPORT SHORES Balboa Pe-ninsula I 007 · •"" 100 r. .. •99·2800 Sweeping master bdrm Asking only $53,950 i====~---~-I 3 BR, A-Crame + lge. + 2 l'hild's r c tre<1t ! ••••••••••••••••••••••• BY O.....,"R fam . rm. 'fop cond. W hd · h' LAHGE41lDHM * """' * •o ali Bri..._ as ;i y service por<' . I . l C l WEIIAVERENTAl.S "' ram C -:r"" $62,500 Woo'l last wknd ! For $120 ,000 a ppraisal. a sk-~uxuriou s ,a ues a .. s pans the attractive 3 BR. 2 ·sly. Huge1Y.. . k r ·llS 7 60 ingSl16.000.673-4224 wiilk lo be<ich, 2800 sq. It II . qu1 c appl. ..... a 1 · IU. ____ ,It .. 5 BR +den. on cul· 5-52-7000 corner o t.o a ga ena garden ·t ype patio!-· 0·111 1r1 , -o1'•1un • , ,.11"" e ntry or this beaut. ocean $63,750 \o [~ Ba yfront Cnndorn inium 2 de-sac. 3 H1\, 3 car gar, vi e ,w h o m e. 3 Lge . CAYWOOD REALTY Br 2 Uu, \)fl . pool, dk, beaut cond. Prine. only. bdrms. + a priv. mstr. 548 129 securit y 21:l -39-1·'12HJ 576.500 963-1216 suite. 21h ba .. massive1---*-=:..:.:~·..:..::.:..;D;_* __ family rm .. frp lc . & B --~·· n.-J rormal dining. Insist that runu ... ew~ex 11 Large entertaining siled living room. Kitchen large eooui::h lo prepare banqu e t and l a r J!;e • BA y v 1r:Wt:ONOO• enough d ining room to 1----------i ,,. •2 Bedroom, 2 11alh • 1-==;========c1 your Age nt show you l\l!t Blk from ocean, .., multiple listing 57S6. or Quality construttion.' • call u s. S89.SOO. Open $117,000. Owner will take Sun. l -5. 2888 Bernard lOo/o down a~ carry 2nd - ASSUME7%LOAN $229MO. serve it. Sweeping sta i r~ to bedroom suites, !luge hideaway master. TakC' over 7%'"/o 1',llJ\. NO NEW LOAN COSTS. $196 /mo . pays all. llURRY 1-,IRST TO CALL GETS TlllS BARGAIN. Cnll 963-7881. $32,501).1.0 MO includes taxes & io· surance on 7".4i GI cxisL· ing loan. Anyone can buy subject to. 1-lardwood floor s. fireplac e. carpets, drape~. W'ood shingle roof. Double garage. Big lot . Cule home. llurry~ 897·0321. -. . ATIENTION 8UICD£RS! Live in this nice 2 bedroom home while you build your units on the R-4 lot. Room ror pool ta- ble in larp;e convected family room. Walk·in closets. paneling, ji!as bltns & t:overcd patio enhance this property. Don't delay on this ... only $40,500. Call 546-5880 ~HERITAGE REALTORS So. COAST SHORES BACK ON IHE •l>ool.Sundcck• •Slop A•mlablc • HARKET • 2 Cad '"'''""• ~TI •Adult BldJ.!-588.000• Here's your opportunity Olive Wi ggenhorn, IUtr lo buy a home at last 675-6160 yea rs price. Super sharp [ .. ~~~~~~~~~·\ Exlra nice. 2 BR , 2 BA. on O\'Cr "'·ide lol. $80,500. 540·1571, eves /wknds 673-63 1 I 4 bedroom SANDPIP1':1l ] · MUD1':L 1n i larbor View lli \ls. 3 R;1th . 3 C"a r ga"rage, gre<1t putio y,•ith v1ewin,::: d eck. Custo m decorated 11nd pr o- fessionull:,.· lundscapcd. YOU OWN TllE LAND~ $119,900 . Open Daily 1·5 PM. '3860 ()('ean Rirt'h. Corona dcl Mar. 640-6161 ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE, INC. COLLEGE PARK Superior in decor, lovely covered pa tio, brick planter$. & outstanding gurden s ! Plus 20x20 paneled bonus & game room. Just listed. Should i.:o rest 646-7711 Open Eves ~ Imm ESTATE SACRIRCE $5,000DOWN OWNER RNANCED Pres t1 i.:c ~i r t•a T ree studded street. llu,l;!e 11\' Corona del Mer 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RARE 4 BR DUPLEX SO. OF BAYSIDE with a J Bil, 2 BA rental. ()nl y 1 1,~ years o ld . FcaturinJ.! bcam ccil1n,l!S, natural wood and brick t ex tures and pe rfec t loc ation. Call 644 -7211 Costa Mesa 1024 ·····'················· $.50.000 2 RR house & 1 Br ilpl. r.41i 8K.'l8 ur 548-9441 10-12 & l'\'l.'S 1nf.l a r e a . l\1am moth•·---------•I FIESTA ROOl\1 with l' C A T II E D R A I. CEILINGS. Warm eoun· try kit c h e n with grandm<i 's pantr y. Separate sewinl! room & ut1hty room · HI' veranda overvie ws immaculale {Tlan ic ure d grOunds . Once 1n a life Wm c bargain . F .P . only $49,950 ~ flurry. Call now, 546-2313. REDUCED!!! COLLEGE PARK Cus tomit ed 4 bdrm .• 2 baths; wrought iron gate entry: 2 patios. Walk to all schools. S49,000. Call for app·t Corbh~Mcrtin Roollon 644-7662 By Owner . lgc 4 BR, 2 Ba. Mes a Ve rde . As kin.': $48.900. 557-5176 GeMral I 002 G...eral 1002 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' , Rt~ALTC•K!ii 644-7270 l!.ti.i COIOHA DEL MAR DUl'l.EX -1tJ11 new paint & carpets in the rront 3 bedroom. 3 bath, fireplace unit. Rear unit upgraded, 2 bedrms, 2 baths, fireplace, walk to beach & shopping . Owner will consider trade for more units. $99,SQO. 2828 E Coo•I Highway, Corona del Mof , I "" -•M !•~·....... " MOMCS fOR llVl"G MfTWOM ... 1•• .i1' •H ·~· \IU Of ro•., '""'u •• •• • .,, .. ' Mesa Verde by Owner 4 Hr, 2 8•. new <'i:J>U & drps,,nr .sehool11. A."fumc II \'~';. loan. 3280 Dakot.1 549·32S& •. I ' mRBElc 1926-1976 Spanis~ La Palma "By Ayres", massive clay tile roof, Fiesta rm w /floor to cathedral ceil- ing fireplace. custom window scat. 4 s pacious ADULT HOME Spotless adult occupied Court. T .D. Thi5 offer will gG : * .,,. 494 75.'lt ·., + fast. Loe. at207 -30th St. home ! Plan 7 California, 2 beach units $52,500. Gd • rl\' (or...,l><" home. Cul-de-sac loca• income. R-2 coc lot. Gin-h.ll o< J ,, .I tion. Fire place. <.:omry ny Fo rlun e, rltr. t.a.t.<cr k i t ch en. Que en s ize '"'"""""""""'""""""""'I 675-7520. ...,. bedrooms . Lawn'' ---'------- sprink lers. Anxious .,- O'A-'ner wants fast sa le. EMEIALDTERR. Assume 7'# VA Joan · Cha rming & spacious, S23 ,000 rema i ning panoramicviewhome;2 b<ilance-wilh payments bdrms. +den+ privacy <it $229 mo. No qualify. & in pristine condition! · , 0 h I Sl35,000 1ng . wner may e p TUR~ER •ssoc·. finance or try $4250 -ti " ~ costs to new loan. Sec to 1105N. Cst Hwy,Laguna believe-call 752-1700. 494-1177 LE RAISOR REALTY SPECTACULAR VIEW Bring your trades £or this lo\.·ely VIEW proper- SACRIRCE · OWNERANXlOUS Big Canyon. Price re~ 1 duced $10,000. 2 stor~y, Deane Home. 3 br w car garage. $12),000. .-,; PAUL W. BRUM Fl ELD & ASSOC. 549-8505 C:J Col~well Bon~~' ... YOU'LL LIKE ir • Outstanding channel and." bay views rrom one '?Ir. Newport's finest ~ dresses. There are twa.. bedrooms , two baths . large living room and area dining room. You can relax in the jacuz1.~ along witn enjoying tho pool. Won't la s t a l $105.000 644-1766 The Bluffs; early llJ'Ca 1-Story 3 BR. 2 Ba . $57 .000 Aft. &a0-5560 BR's (or 3 +extra den). 4523 Campus Dr., Irvine Glass & tile patio kitcheri Campus Valley Shop Ctr. w /bar serves gas BBQ, CALL B33-8600 ty in Newport Beac h,•----------- complete with boat slip. D 0 VER S 110 RES .. Transferred seller will Galaxy Dr. Reduced; take most anything. Call Sl.5,000 to $189.~. Beaut.· ror more details . 3200sq.ft.Viewhome.4! 646·77U. Open Eves. br, den, ram. rm, pool. - . By Owner/Agt. For infor l,lo'!e play rm w/detorator·i-----------1 floori n g. Assum able Loquna Beach I 048 Fl.-KA loan or terms. Bkr ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9tl2-.5Sll ·Across the Sfrfft from each other TWO TRIPLEXl-:S, N. Laguna. I Has a 3-Br home & (2) 2·1Jr apt$. The other has· a 2· Ar lux. ury home & (21 l·Br l'lcgant apts .. pool und jacuzz i. 100 Fl to OC'ean. $165,000., $213.000.· Your thoice. ZACllODZKY . Realtor. 49''8611 or appt. call : 64.2-2589 · Classified ads sell bi~ · items, small ~tems or~ item. Just call 642-56"78. SEEK & FIND• Hil[hland Cl•n! H~A C RHSCMO~XM H MnRns II U F F t) t-: I If A II I .J A (" !\t 7. 11 ll f t: t ' II HT/\ t: /\ (' ~ 7. II t: /\I\ 4! Sc· N RSlf'TNN\IHMNf.f ;T~'IH lll ~ I) 1' C:. 0 H S I. A A S F. I H 11 ll !'Ii I) /\ L. I)~ It S I A f " t • T ~Kt-; I\ I) U \" (; :'\ /\ T<'l.AN~f;~~T C ~1;~FHKAH KMACORll l .FFAflSSF C ffM~ ,1\HNF.t;r.1 s 11 NMltRSYAGt'R W~UG~OC S O T All C tO~C llG ~tt()U~HATRIALCNURAUO TRGNF.NA~nc'AMACRPNOS ST~TAHTHc :s1rNAONNUS C ltllA ~Hl/\1 .("~I S tKC C A~ O~RSl~C ll S OHAGEH~C /\~ I I .. ,• . ~ • - •. -. • .. ., • • • ~!!!?t'!u;,~·~"'!!l a' • H1•n ~ ..._.. f ·+111 *""'·;.~ ............................... ~..... ... . . .. ... . .. -... .. ll•n• ':f:'.!.!f'!1'IW.a1Jud TI ,.,. o.<ILYPILOT ;;"?~~;;";~~ ,,;i~,!~"•"=wi.: ......... ,_ .. ~ ~~.~ .. ~~~ .. --··-··~·-~~--·"'"''??;!•~!!~~ ... no• ~:~ •• '~~!.~! ........... '!':!! .. ": .... '· VI.~• c.:..-. CTJ.IOO. ·;..:.•~by".!!!.".': lllJ!f'I'. 'lkti .. 3 Ill', ·.~411t40.U.3 0.'lr~B01JSI: tllr, SJt.fl-·· .............. J76f -3124 leedl ll4I '·, No.OW_. ... i•t&. -. ... S.--Dl ~.-l<pol .;.!t:-tMoll"•· pool, •1tu, •-AlBRAjotlt _,, ....... "!" ................ , .. -..... ., ................... ,, ·NlwPoft..-r !IT SQ.• llr.don. 1 OK.aor ... -.c.u ::O:i:"'· •· •-. •!J:'~~~~ It VP J!!,Pdr • Offloalat,.. ~ • pebl>le 1 .... the • • ..,...... . C 1 ~·· k14•, pet. focd, 0 , •Joe 111 45a• 0 ••<" t..-0-sen • .--.a.cb. COior -,~L~mald 1.: .~.,Br. Adr4l1 no ~aa etom )'Olll' &'*-. ~ '*** CQtetO *** -·I· .araae.. · -~ • • *Oli'dra~ -wrt _ J001.. THE •DA: peq, dsbwhn.lhac c-pta. Leue. Lu11.ury, aecwil)', Pltulo 2'Br~tka. ~Ila. l'I •P'tlf 2SOO NWPt' Bell 2 llr, dlld, -1111· ~ ~ . LIDO ISLE .._OPl',....'treal CU if. fiespool m, NB elose<I 1•n1•, lrpl&, Jlat"!"e e<luiU. Sl'l'»Clt.'" ij' ,Walktobcb.,Zcarpr., _ ........ .....,. __ • pet.lllC'd;~ o.. HuaLHbrTwulll& Loveb'4br,ta.bael.. "'w/ad ....-1 _ B.BQ.Gu• ... terpd. H•1,4tt-2&'tS.. • ... 1 • -d . Wiii oillMn 1al, ,...._,. ·l'!!_~l1h<I wpl Be' oeeoplod, ca., 3bo, JO hpl, patio, a11-.-lt., ts'llN••f"dM.,.,(31 ~-_ WI _ ~ -Jiff · ' ...,..~ .... ._.,..., Cl>» m-•.•1-•.cltlld, -••"•··~·.·-dbl.car.~~111 -111--'7li>•f4S.alf-__ ...... --·· u.w·~ .. ··-s ; w;&A1ow~11n.m:t 115-rnt Pit-Jaewt&l.u.$1$0~SCf. ssso vA,:11J.1Jst; mo.A.dlllt.a.noptU.1ar, ---~· ••••••••••••••••••••·-~ oecU'lt••c 7 • CA ~edB&ftloe:lbr.t .Gl'•11·N15. 8TS-4T• JOJSP• l4aCM ZBr,lba.f1S-1DBI. mSc:.;~·°' PA,llMEWPOIT 1 ·?. llll'·tul __ ......... f'eo 1 BR PUm, 2 ir. -Af'Aan.an'S , " BONDICEALTYlNC ..-i1t.W. ,.,.._ -OC£ANPRON1'2tlr,)"l'ty, quee111ite tt.ea priw 1 BR •IM· 1~ blodls &o MID~ Bachdorlor! t' ,:I ' llld•1r 2MO HOMIRMNaS RI.UL---1>1w, aar•a•. ssro. No dr-tq rm. ..in 111 -~·rmt~•tdl VILLAGE B<d,_..and • •••••••••• ........ ••••• •64Z..tt00• D£.WX£ pell.MS.~ rooms, enel . 1ar. ror1 e . "...i re:n •. Townhouses ;1· s..c1..... 1076 WANTV•cuta.4dl'C. a Bedroom, l* bath-. Bluff 38R Lf W/1Lora1e. Adull5 ool'~· ~:1·1"'0.,TA;.o,0c1aLll.l.or ~~rT.lB .. r•~~-~·2 }'t'.$2:29.50()pc119-6 •• •·•••••·••••-••••••••••• Proop ~--· -·-· fireplac.e, l>?tns, s;m. ",'.'" t, , · • tm. no pell u.1-ow ome. ......,.,..Ls, Dal'" f Lonty P• ...,. llAVS~ ~i; .......... 329' tSIO. per month. Grettnbelt' .M.U.uow. · ... (ZU)J31 . collect. drapes. fireplace, J "' •low bome.·3 .-., Xu!Da de1 R., •••• .. ·-·-•"•••• .. • Badsw<n, HI bath.-. '1'~~-:::~o. . , Sll!CA511'~-~ BllACllPl!,llHl'2«,2ba. ~:.!~ cowts . Acr~~:·~c::;i:v:!~1 ... fldlyredeeonted. lbal ~uul•~ Pifv. CIDly. I Br •Y&ll (Of'""1y.1 block Cklde lo tetmols A: partl:. • 1A'I* •Cllf fum.. u.Ka. bllu, IN' la Andry fac~. -.....1 bland at J•mbotee on llaller•.,..... -w. rile P.O. Bolt •·•, to bQ'. Bar A pat!o. B ic7cle t b b It 1 bn. Adu&tloab'. ._u..mo ~~ -1711-•. MOOllarborBl\>u SanJoaqulolDti. 0 ··• -~· Yonlee,C"A.I02!ll ... m-....-wpm Chi-OK. 0 ••e · e::.'.1!.;.. 8~~1~odo;,.~ pe1a.rn-.,.nBL ;.;;...,."''.'""'~ '." C..U Mes• 1714>'57-8020 17141644olWO ... ..!.: .M,.MCMCCl:tNlllO:l411U.U.tM 3 Br, PeUo. --W:t:i:~"':tl:oo cp'y.$150. All ..... UJ3 ~?.!t~~!'b! :US-" II<.·'""' ....... 1 blk IO ":~tn! =· ~ ea:;.tront. lid,. Ba, P.i. ltffEsTt••ns llhltt mo.. See atac.own.or Adama.N.atAJaNma 3 BR. i BA open beam sobt1" •ewer'° Zlt beach. Comp redecOf. G568W. Wibon Bch It pier. SS5D yr:IJ. 1714149 .... ntl W..... 2900 calJZU-332-MIS Sprin10ekl&llatel ceiliaca. pools, t~nls Harbor BIYd (.\crou Yrly. S2'TO Call Oolkd. 919-11.lS&&K-4.510 ••••--··--••••• I K ... l.,...lettty crts. Close to 8dL Yrl)'. tromK·Martl · zu..m-ste11 NEWLY DECORATED Sc.to.AM IOIO DM fiXU·IAYeltment! Cor'OelldllMw 3122 t•0..31Slor $450. 6U-153lorfSl1•1400 NR.. OCKAN new Dplx.. 2 2 Br, w/gar. cl'JK, $185. $33Q_. Yrly Z br, 2 ba. Z ···-·•····--··•••• Ync •a.rrledt 1eelr:: ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ••• 300 BAYCREST ~-.Move LOWWEEKLYRATES br, 1 ••· G••b. diap, Water pd. 211& ··c·· ston.-.:z ear encl Jl:&r •• l rt •r be! •~ ooo BEA'"" t .. Oceanvlew l --'""'"' I --.....u <..a-... Pl•cenUa.636-41201·5. balcony.~1603 '***Do., W8if*** s a s ow ....,, ... ,.. ..... In today. 4 br, 3 ~. frplc, X-.n'le _... D /W. gar. Yrly. $3l0.1..:..:.:.==::.:::::..;=:..:..:::....-1--'----'--'--=--- For prieft .mlintenat to '17s..3329 . .. ~ .. :.~ck!~:~~· sszs. mo. C.11 PaW.00 2 0l0Ha'wpott••cl CbUdOK. Nf:WBREEDAPTS LIDO, GREAT VU, com• down. Both wW....... , $4.25 Adults · No-pets. 4 BR Hunt. Cmtinenlal Co.,&U-8012 Cotto,... t75-0M2/IOG59S Bat;hlloft s:us. Ulil. pd, Tnhse, 2 BR, 2 Ba. WU · })robabl.Y-keet:tgoin;lap .. • •••••••••-.... ••-•••• 8'75-40a· · ' Condo, pool. clbhse, 64z..161 t applas, gar. pool, que featues. $500. O)Or. .. not down! 2 Bedrm. 2 Hones ,_.,.±tel ~~et OK. $295. BLUFFS Z pt • 4 BR SWdiot&: I Ir's Fadq Ocean, apedOW1 Jacuz1i. 393 Hamilton, 61s..&159 ~a h l n e 1 e al or y ••••••••••• .. -••••••• 3 Br, 2 Ba, new spacious bon\I• room~'immJ" •FR.EE L10em ~~~:~! :;.;o0·A:11~~:!JMM4~~1i•~:.:..::::::::fiiii~~~=~--iiii .,"';"' OUIClltlllatonly ia.....i 3102 tri-l evet. uoo. •••siJPERSbarp3bew/lr1>1, occ.$59$Mo.Aat .... w3 •FREEUtilitia $48-1 ••RLOFT~w OCUIAOMf .950. New carpets,••••••••••• .... •-••••• Fernlear. 17$-6675 for bli. wall. bllnl.. l'OGn. •Fu.UKilcbeia --• 3BR,281.$350Wintn-~=o'!r~~ fort' BR hot1se $85. 1 BR appt. llWll2or847·181ilD."t'"~ New OCEAN VI ~W •He.aledPool WINTE.B. on 1he sud at Pvt patio, frpl, 1.yrlsc STEPS TOIEACH • ~ · mobUeCott.Mesatso 2 Townhouse. t.Br. 2Yiba, La .ndryF.elllties 1628 Oceanfront. 1 br AvaU..Scpt.lSlb ·3BR,2 ea.$S25Wlnler MoblleHamK ·B L Be ch$240 CostaM... 3114 BEACH ·3 & 4 Bra. din. lie ram, J decks •TVullM ld ind. $210, Studi.o 1150 mo. HA.YLOF1'APT'S I YFIOMT ForSale llOO utit ;a~:acWor wrli; ••••••••••••••••••••••• Childrfln/peta; OK. Mdl pool. tennis. Leue $S7S. :Phone~':°'· · Utilspd.963-411188 JIJ:A.•oc*"CM aBr 2 .,! unf -••••••••-••••••••••• Hu.at Beacb $100. Balboa EASTSIDE, 2 br, crpta, llke homes. $350--$37.S mo. 67.5·3122.. . · 645-0143 N Be drps stove yd.melgar Call Ann or Carol ,._.,gt -3740 IMM AC. off ocean1---;_;_;_:.;...c;;._ __ VlllhMJDllMitt Sl40. ewport ach N 1r:;'·d :-• ._... · 963-188I 2Brcondonr.ffoal.Quiet... w/view Beaut. wood B b · F ll . u1 ·~ dded $1.~. Agt. Fee.~ o 1 s or .... -. _,mo. pvt frpt Ch, lid/pet -1. ••••·•••••••••••••••••• -t' ... -· 1 3 ~-.!L 2 a, crpt.. patio. nr u Y ins &"'°", a Agl646·1456 • c. · .,,.. ' ec • au nc. Ul."\;. $225. "1009 A Mis- scre.en room 8x21 + cAoalll... 3106 $350permo.1SI'&Last3 E~cl pat, pool. Low WHICLYIATIS cbtlwshr. a br upper, aioo,~·4516aft.6 maoy other added extras •••••••••••*••••••••••• SHARP 4 br, all blLns. AV1 br, 1% ba. cpts, drps, cnme. $30$. ~'18118 • healffft s.lh-I LOWER 3 br, 2 ba, $2751..::==:::..;==;..;.. __ Slo.500. KE ftew 3 br 2 ba, all 10 /1. Quiet CUl·de-sac. b I t n • . ........, 727 Tcwkfvq•wcl ea. All bltns. Pvt. court •2 Br upper. Mesa Verde.I-========= : Roy McC_. elec kitchen ~Jdsb.whr Fam. only. $350. 551·7648 114·842·8263/Zll-886-0008 "'00.000 Yiew&tah Beach BlvdatY«ttown yd, car. 112 34th St., Adults., SJ&$. Garage DELf'E ~ • ~ ~~:· Redtor 1810 M.w-rt frpl~. patio, bbq. 9 mO 4 B 2 8 dbl <!•-rtille 3244 •nder SI 000. •O. SJ' A•t t ~Sat. •Sin. 645-3109 avail .• nopds..s:J3.39'14 poo_ • pat o.loco'!'.. c C ·~ $38 ...,...._ r, a, gar ........ ve 6 3 1 0 191 0 -eves MZ-44111•kdys set.Un&, 11: nt. . ,,.,.ults, ostaMesa541-7729 lse, s.mo._._1 & refrig. Avail 10/l.S, ••••••••••••••••••••••• • r STUDIOSl:lllls ' Lg.lll2Bedroom.28a nQpets.548-lm~ Acreopfor .. 1100 4 BR, 3 B~. all blt.m. $600. $350.SS&-1096 Redecorated 3 BR. 2 BA 64§..7102 •Full Kitchen OCEANFRONT. lge de· ~alttoSboppirlg& Bus •••••••••••••••••••••••!Winter only. LUXURIOUS Eastside z home. Nu laodspg. $300. NEWPORTHEIGHTS •Heated'Pool corat.ed,clea'n3br,2ba opeU.M&r.631-3847 •DEUIXE- AVOCADO LAND. $2,<llO (313)332-8401 sty. Duplex, 3 br, 2 ba, ~~k0:;,,.~~ or Joe 3 Br, frpl, fentm yard. =~~~'Ju~dlities &lee lbr.61S-4688 CASA VJCTORIA ~08.;~~l:!~e~ ~:~. 210~: :f%':Cfitt~n~.,:~~~il6o•'•:i :•a 3107 ~~ iin,.rm •• ~~.; gar, V p ~~~1P~!::~.=th. •FrfteLinens B:.?!,nulmo.2BrYt,~uaa.··.'!~-i i.::3Fu~°!"'-~o!pd.ur .. spac mast.er Nte. din . n. · ••••••••••••-••••••••• v • a 10. --mo. l . rk TOT. Twnhse. •TY & MaidMS'Y. aTaiJ -"'I __._ _, .. w rm & dbl garage. Aul() Tight $ forces sale.:Spac 2 s•-3br 2b 645--7888 2 br, 2 ba. Beaut. .n~r.n Que afttPK. AdWtl·Nopeta.Sec.gate dooropeneravalLPool·&o Owner114·676-5734 · ·. ....~ • a, G bit Com f · u-u-Pool recnn.d.erators · Ad ---'--'---"-"'--'---1 Bayview House. $325 or E·SIDE. Charming 3 Br, reen · m. acs. S-..._ •PhoneSenioe oc::::EANl'JlOM'l'2br$32S. • · · recreatioo area. ullil 13 + GROSS I deluxe 2br apt. $250 , l'h Ba bm wlhuge yan:I. ~~~~i22~::i~3~9ay~ve & c•s"'-' 3278 •1 M.ilet.ooceao FrpJ .. Winter rental ~ Victcxu,M2-89'10 onl.Y, no pets. •c:RES , . carports.;._ Winter. Country atmosphere. Shipp Mr.••••••••••••••••••••••• BEAUTI w/car.M2"'511D CLOSEtoShopping.1&:2 •$33%• A $71-9467. ... Avail. now. Fam. only. Elegant upgraded C.ondo _ . FUL l br f\rra BR, pool. Acllts, 00 pets. 86'5AmigoaWay,NB R-3 Zoned property, San $350/mo. l&t + last. + REMTALS Air cond 2 BR 1~ Ba. apt:S-11GS"&-it1S:'"Span1sb 1 Br, 1 Blk to Ol!ean $115 Cpt., drps, .tv, ref. $165 Managed by Juan Capistrano Owner REMODELED 3 bf", 2\4 dep. 962.8118. D/W Ra·· _..:.. d • style bldg. pvt. encl gar, + u t t l . Park l n1 . & up . 1887 Monrovia William Walters Co. may carry paper. ha. $320 mo. Wntr. 305 2BR.2Ba ........... $360 • nge .... _.. f1JI• pool.sawia,lndry,adlts. ~ M8-i1 /tf4.9'19 Broker 213423·6418 ~1ontero. 1·879-5991 CHARMlNG 3 br, 1 ba on 3 BR, 2 Ba ....... $400/425 pool, dbl gar. patio. 17301 Keelsoo Ln. 1 blk . '3 1 Br ($190), D/W. Nopebr. . Hunti_... leach 3140 tree·lined Cul-de·sac St. 4BR,2Ba ........... Sit50 tgi°d.!;g no pets. $250. W. or Beach olI Slater. s.taA.M 3780 STUNNINGl.g.2br,2ba Nr. Hoag, Ocean, FP. Buli111e11Prap11ty 1400 ,_,.on Oceanvlew. $325. 2009 4BR,2'hba.wntr ·· $800 • 842-7848 •••••••••••••••-•••••• dwnstrs. Garden apt. bltns,pool.646-Slll ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Republic 645-f646 L[ RAISOR P I t.c $US. 710 Ulth SUNSE:T Beach Oc · . C--~-1-1.~ STUDIO a"', like new, oo' e • SEP. lbr, frpl, enc gar. PRIME IA.MK ILDG. . ean'. __.. -,...~ AMIASSADOl IHHS SL · stv tref. blk to bch, sgi. ' • Great Newport loc».Uon . front. 2 br. 213-0X 8-7858 3 Br cond_o, 3 ba, cpts. REALTY Utrfvnlished 3425 frplc, jacuzzi, pool. I blk 5170 000 yrly St 050 000 or 592-$822 drps, patio. gar., bltns, ••••••••••••••••••••••• to beach. 968-5700 OF A.t-alCA z BR. util pd. childre only. $255. Yrly. 67J..S160 c • · • , • $295. Water pd. 548-1995; TWO LOCATIONS welcome No pets Cpts . Ted Hubert & Assoc. Lag.ta leacll 3148 6lS·l8M 4523 Campus Dr .• Irvine Beautiful. like new, 2 br, 2 SMALL BEACH HOTEL · . · • 2 BR upper, garqe, block: Realton ....., aEN\ • Campus Valley Shop Ctr. ba. D.R .. f""I, pool, 2 . "-ooma ~~-eek WFEUELLKLS:VERRAVJTESC Wdrallps, paAtio. M&r.1 1. to beach. Adults, no~· • . u................ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... n. ............ -· E ace, pl&,642· 364 ~.mo.MZ·-~- LEASE · ~ Acre, 1 br, util pd, CALL 833-1600 patios. Westcliff area, Apts SlOOmo 536-'1056 H-~ C I ;-:;;';::;';;':''::':::;'::=~=i-~~'!:.!~c"!~~--- Condominl.n1 Town.. $150,000 Beach 1 $ 1214 Rutland Rd . · 2277 .......... M. 11 pool hou1es forscM l 700 Condo. for $Ol5 mo. un-app s, 180. f * RENTALS* Newport Beach, 6'2·9178 l Br Adult Gardea Apt. ~Bristol, S.A. LRG 1 Br, 'nr. ~· WESTCLlFF 2 br, l~ ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rur. or $950 fur . 4 BRf, 2 ba, rplc, kids, THETERRACE afler6 w /pool . Acr_oss from Ms-48406540-ZJOO adllS.!,DO pe.ts. Util pd. town)louse. Adults oaly, .. ...-.-.. pceanfnt. 3 be, 2 ba, 2000 pet. ncd, garage. Lair. p k $152 l884 mi1onrOYJ.a.54B-OS36 no pets. 11281kdford.Ln. m.,1TH LAGUMA sq. ft ., wetbar, frp1. Sec, ra:uy, 3 br, kids, pet. 3 BR. i~~v ·pARK.''$425 To ...... 11' ~ft~ Sar,; we"eh:d 0s ..... =:i~ 2 Br.t=pls, drps.gar. taun-$285. RIO. 548-"ISSJ COteOS guard. Adults.SM-1678 PD 1' a,·.··1 ... • k"ds pet 2 BR. 1 ba. · ........ -u .......... IMd 3525 536-1447. .,., . d dry, Bay St. $1tK>mo Oceanfront new l Br up Wh·t t v· 2 & 3 00 • r, ' 1 · ' ' -" ••••••••••••••••••••••• 831.s2'16. • • bdr ,mewa .~f 1ews~ 000 Whit~ water view Copdo. garage.$26S. Fee A.gt. 3 BR .• 2 Ba ......... $400 Custom z BR 2 "· •e L-lemda 3748 •••••••••••-••"• ... •• per. Crpts, drps, gar. Yr· .uruwo rom~. · scoom.o:furn.2BR.,.2BA HOMEFl~S TURTLEROC"K ' D<I, .. n· m.lboal"-:t 3806 · I l $315642-3443 420 Cy preaa North ---4BR 2•• 8 ~... lral air. Mission Viejo ••••••••••••••••••••••• LG. 2 BB, 1'1.1 ba Stud10,~Y_50_· ______ _ ~giina '~ Agent644-"270 . * 642-9900• ' "' a ......... .,..?:; area. $295. 544-HMI EFFICIENCY API'S •••••••••••••~••••••••• qu.iet 4-plex, new paint,,-ON THE BAY Call67~7""5 tbr h?use & patio forsMALL 2 br unfurn . •:~i~;;REEHOM.s:l.5 from·$190. Pool, maid, Year1y.Chanrung2Br,l cpts , drps, bltns . Dupli:1., yrly. rental. ~ •• t d ld 3 ~xH u..tw. 3600 phone, laundry. Village ba. Terrace. Cptd. No Carport-l.ndry. Walk to • sa ar1e o er person. Dshwhr. refrig & stove. BR ., 2 Ba ......... $375 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Inn. 494.943& gar. $215. fiTS..2'133 Aft 5. ~ & schls. l child OK, Outstanding :S hr, 2 ba, ' 49£.8110. $185"" $250. Avail 10/14. E. 19th 3 BR .. 3 Ba ..... , ... $425 BALBOA p . y pet ...,,.,... ..,..,,. ,,....... frpl. 1800 sq. ft., upper, • LOVEL. y oceanside 3 St. Ca ll Liz E~an, COLLEGE PARK enin. ear· BACH ·1 pd l•oaP1ch11._. 3107 no s._.....~ Boat doo~ avail Newly . " . -· . ~. ' . .. . \ \LLI·:) ' HI ·: \LI' A 6Erl(; I t<IE llPRl<;f S ( (1 646-3922 3 BR, 2 Ba.+ D ..•.. $4ZS ro:nd 3 br. 2 ba, frplc, up /$6(, ~ Cr~l~-•••••••••••••-•••••••• $190 Freshlydec<r"d. lg. 2 decor'd; Suodeel. $465. bdrm. den, Emerald Includes gardener · ~1.~25ge, s3so. mo. 1435N:CalHwy494·25fll ·Adults 2 br. 2ba, newer, hr. quie t. pool. no,67=._....:::200.:.:.. _____ _ Bay.$525.673-4169 2Br,tba,adults,nopets. DEERFIELDHOMES bit I N t hild S .-ns, yr y. o 'pc:! s. c .. ren /pet s. en. 3 BR, 2 BA. bltas, DW, Hewporthach 3169 Small yard. Gas &love. 3BR,21h Ba ......... $42S r..--t Lux. 2Br, den, 3Ba, Pvt. 6'f3·3986· (213)257-9792: C 1t1 %eos Welcome . closed "ar., nr Hoag ••••••••••••••••••••••• $250. mo. 556-7280 Rancho San Joaquin "'--'-ents ~shed Reh, tennis, pool. Winter ' .... ~ • 2 BR, 2 Ba ......••... $515 ::-::::·;···•••••••••••••• lease $450. (714) 499-2926 WALK to bay/beach 2br,1 ..:..::..:c••=~------l llosp. Aiautts. $!.SS. mo. SSSSSTUl.SSSS . OCEANFRONT 5 br Newport Bch environ 3 _. ·· 642-0596 itlegaJ!, Price!t&.intcrest house., Wntr. rental. lge Br, 2 Da, Fam. R~. 2 lalJoa 1 .. cmd 3706 or (213)790.fiGOl. l'h ba, 1arage, laundry, •St.ocly SlnH»~* 1...:=.c==------- k -p go•ng up up up! We W h /D til d ••••••••••••••••••••••• · patio. $250 to $275 yrly. 1&2 Br $175. Up. Ad··u .. , Compl. ,~-led. -. ~" • , . as ry, u s. P . frplc's, Jge patio w/gas Oceanrront Spactoas R fs S&&-1"'-· YL .... "" ~· ~ ... st1U have a rew smgle $475, 751-0104 BBQ, spac. bac" yd. Weil 3 "BR avail for yrly. l w· · . · e · ......;;r: 3007 no pets. lTl E. 22nd Sl. lrg patio.. J blk to bdl. No ~~-lh • VISl•N bl k lob Ba ' t" •nter $325.-$425. mcl. ""' 3732 042-« story. 2 ~m. 2 ba caredforcond.Slepsto oc ay. r.pa10. utilorYearl)'4lf7·l08Z.-C--det ..... 3122 .,_.. : ...:o<7t.1 single& $22$ yrly . Townhouses a l only LIOplSLE Westcliff Plaza.on quiet al.ALTY 213 ·195--64009-Spm . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 00-3912. $21,950 . Ask (or Frank. Watch the boats go by! culdesa•, $<BO mo. 552 50 Rooms $36 weet "-2S EW bd DcmaPoint .. 31161..::::..:==------839832 A Wntr.3br,2ba8ayfront. .. -7 0 Bayfront l bryrly. Patio. th · ' · 3 rm, 2_ ba, •••••••••••••••-••••• BAYFRONT-Toucb the · 1 gent. 67~6/213-449-4466 548.0050. J\RedHiUCompany parking. Inquire 400 So. ~=k ·:~~e:'hts&$50. ~arage. Bltns. P01nsd.· VERYlge2br.2ba wlter--boafs! PaoorapUc 'riew. lncCMRePrape:tf 2000 Ri ht S J . Golf Bayfront.AptS Heaied Pool & ne~; tia,CdM.st9-886'7Da,.s. race, upstatrs, oo petg. Brand new,lgeZbr,Zba .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -&.-!-L~..a ~---1.-ift Y-3234 g on an oaqwn B h L t BR -ALSO tr -Poot .. .,.,.. -·---1 Hottse>s U...---nNIR• -r Crse. 2Br. den, single Bach. A pt . $175 mo. eac · aguna Motor + sep. guest rm. & --. 3 • 2 ba, .. .,... •--.MUI.I-.-. 16 UNITS ••••••••••••••••••••••• .••••••••••••••••••••••• level,centralair.$550yr· Furnished, ut il pd. Inn, 1575 N. Cst. H•Y· bath. $275. Avl ; 9/U, very lgc wtsm.all yard. Sec. bldg . .Adults• $6.50. AU adult IU'"',.., 2 br 1~ Geweral • 3101 6 BR, 3 Ba, new crpts, cul· Jy. 675-4059_ 544-4925 /673-8700 ask. for 494·3S3'7 . 6.fi0.1141 eves. $275. 615·5205 mo. Call owner days b ni 1 --.1 ... ,· ••••••••••••••••••••••• d e-sac. $400. mo. Judy 121 3)945-2347, eves a _u ts. ncome~,.340. FREE FREE (2Ll)333·lt07;3J6..4063 BEAUT. NewRancboSan · Oceanrront 4 Br. apt. BT, 1"4ba. upstairs. Sl65MOHTH (2131997-6954 Pr1ceda.t$32S,OOO. p 'f ··ona1 . JoaquinTwnhome 2 Br Balboafte ' da 3707 Winter lease. No pets. frplc, W /W cpt, l·Bdrm . apt .• l block . • ro ess1 Service• Large 2 br, huge rumpus 21h ba 2 sty Ove~look~ •••••••••;••••••••••••• $4 8 S. 494.7o11. 0 r draperies, new paint. above Coast Hwy.; walk Spar1ous 3 Br, 2 ba. frpk-, Principalsonly'please. •LAMDLORDS* rm, 2 ba, 2 car _garage. golr c~urse & lake. $5lS. IALIOAIHH 21l-35S-9434. Lease, $275 mo. UCB. to be<ich & -.·harf. W/W l blk to beach. Yrly$351). Ho·••fillders * bltns,comm.awtmpool. 541704415520055 U . . tal (21J)6tfi.J267.wltdys . carp, bll·ia range & CaU64>7054 P~Ul W. BRUMFIELD & ASSOC. 642-8550 Kids olr::, no fee. $285. mo. · · n1_que w1nterren .105 Oceanfront Attractive 2 ove n. rcfrig. 642-9900 Agt.842-4421 University Park. TheTer· Main St. 675-8740 ~· 2 ba_. apt. F"abu1ous r . beach 2 br,2ba, deck, MISSION REALTY IEACH •YE.ARLY California's Largest r ace. Jbr. 2ba, din. rm. 2 BR 1 door to beach view. Winter rental. No frpl, bltns, gar. No pets. * * 494-0731 * • Deluxe, very trg 3br. Nu •RentalService!• Sharp 3 BR, 2Y.s ba. Pool, cstm cpts/drps . shorltermrental Week: pets. Days, 494·1055. $3.50.mo.6754129 cpLS.allblt-ms,fpltt.nr t:;iji~jjijj~jijijii~I townhouse. $395 month 14-zsmo 833-8203 lyormonthly 6'7i6640 Nights. 494·5602 or Huntiatgfonleoclt 3840 waler. ~ 6fi6-S21B _. . 4 UNITS hlESA ~ ~ 675·7060or 61J..9187,Art. · · · 494·3834. siif r~rc~c!!~~x. ••••••••••••••••••••••• &7~. · $64 950 1·1~; I l'l·ej[ll!:ill 1-hKI leach 3240 L_.a loach 3248 s.PAcrous 1 Br$Zts. Ulil N.wport loach 3769 Cali ·u ~';que Ho~~; 2 8~·;.~~'~u •.. lisi;; .. ~c~1ew1;;;;.;;,;tde-;-:3ii1il1r;;I. !"Pur bread & butter un.AA[1\"11J f""t;f . ••••••••~•••••••••••• •••t••••••••••••••••••• ~:1 . t~-~~-~r~th1og. ••••••••••••••••••••••• RJtrs.615-6000 quc ·adult apls. ;:;;i~. ••••••••••r---···-·· t.\S ! Fine Cos~a Mesa · BRAND New 2 sty 4 br, OCEAN VIEW DECKS pe OCEANFRONT2 br, 2 ba, Sorry, no children or BR. walk 'to beach • N'' toe a lion. Twe>2 BR at FREE SERVICE . 21r.i: ba, 3 car gar. Up-Neat & clean 2 BR., w /W BEAUT. Bayfront 2 br. wsh/dry. gar. $350 mo til Cotta Mna 3824 pets pets. $195. yrly. 492,576.') $165 mo. &. twe>l BR at TO LANDLORDS graded. $450mo. 96&5612 carpets, blln. kitch., frpl, pvt. beach & dock, gar. June or $4SO mo. yrly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · APPLE AP1'S o_.:"r:.77:..:.:6 .. ·4-055:::::....--io-~ $14.S mo. Gross S620 per Member of Board of. dbl. gar. Large yard. Util pd., $325. Wntr. 3113 Seashore Dr. Wanted Coupiewfbaby 6700WarnerAve,ll.B. r.,___.___..1 r.. • .,.tL::d 'ft\o. total. Over $600 Realtors. Better Busi· y Family O.K. $375 Mo 67~6475 673-6518 rent our clean E . Side 2 · <714 1&f7..rot7 -.-.,. U ~~~~~~-... -3900 spendableon1S%down! nessBureau.Cbamberof OURLAST_STOPwhen XLNTOCEANVIEW Br. Apart. $175 mo .f---:.:..:.=o:..:::;.:.__ __ I ~ Can add 8 more units! Commerce. you see this sharp 3 '>...BR, 21h. ba. cust. bit. LG .~ br, 2 b"a . Bayf~t lbT: 2202 W. Oceanfront. 494...CSJ.4 . BIKE TO BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must see-ca ll now Slo.ISOS bdrm,almostnewhome. home.Lge.liv.rm .. rrpl, w1v_1cw, frpt & w~hg . Winter renlaL ~11.S . . :1S2·llOO. yery close to ocean. sep. din. rm., blln. kitch. fac1L Wntr. $3..'50. utds pd. month. 6'15-8231. Sparkling dlx 2 Br, 1n HEAR SHOPPING n· OfllN'11"·''·s 1UHtOYN1CE• HEYLOOKUSOVER! Grea~ n oorplanforen· 2 car gar. lmmac . Also2br.2baupper.Ac· Be ut 1 & br duplex.E .Side.lnd!icp'd t .2 &lBrapts,bltns.di$-t~e ~-I w e have fumilhed or UD· terta1nmeot. 968 4456 (IC lhruout! $475Mo c es s to pv l. be b, a · ge 2, _3 4 · pvt. yd. gardnr,encl K.a.r. hwasbers, somcw/f'rpks ·. , ...• JllJ i!fill furnisbedl. 2 6: 3 bdrms. 963-5191 MISSlONR.EA.LTY w /wash:g. facil. Wntr. Oceanfront/View, frpl<:, S:ZS0.675·1849 & Z car garages. l<"'rom ~ ~ Qf;\ ~·J: AUareas·Allprices. * •494-0731•• $300, ut1ls pd. Call a!t ~16 g~s:: $200 . Lions Estates . . -~~ ._ , 1 Seeyaeoon! GORGEOUSLaCUe!tl3 6PM875·4465 . 646-J ce f, 536- 2519 BIG!. . bdrm; 2 bath, includ~s EMERALD Bay, Wn~. Attractive28f,BUctobch. 114 HaciNdaO.Mna WAllTOl£ACH "AIA.RERMD! ~ ~ washer, dryer, elect.nc rental, pvt. bch. tenm:s1 Sud kw· ter Oceanfront apts a•ail 160W.~C.M. . Two 4-Plnes 1 · l ~·ll! ~:[I jl 11 garage door opener &: pools lg. 2 br, frpl. decx, n ec · ID or yeaJ"· from $lt5 to $190 Ubl in: CloMd 6acCIC)CS 1&2 br. cpts, drps. bltiis. All 3 BR, 2 Ba,:1\~'W!i!lf/ w\J;." gardener! Available· yd. WMtewal£t'vu.$475. ly.6l3·0Zl6aft>. cl 675-4873· m'.'205 or BEAUT.<;ROUNDS .,,,_..205&212I>th St. ~/spri nklll:ts &: bltns. . r:· Call96S-4456or962·5987 ~J030&:644-l8l5 Co1t0Me-1a 3724 87i-847l • ADULTS·NOPl:.IS S36· 3058 or 536 · 4259 oc Near Frwys. Good in· 53M505FeeA.t# REAL ESTATE by Xlnt Ocean VieW & c;ity ••••.,.•••••••••••••••••• lOminutestoocean. Lite 847 · 3957 Oakwood orCers tho co~e. Xlnt potential. McVAY Lights. Sharp ,:v-2Br. •Shody ems..Poal ~ D~~~~-ZG~:. ~ ~~:t '& 2 Br $215 .• lge 2 Bs-NEW LR. 3 br. dsbwshr .. finest in countrydubli.v· 586,000. Agent. 549·0812 2 BR Costa Mesa $175. 2 l Y.i ba. J~e _d~k. elec gar l&:.2 Br $llS. Up. Adults, crpts. $2l5 & $265 Winter. w /pa ti? $220. Ga~ & enc. l!ar, 2 ba $275 pio. 1nJ? al a price you can af. o.r646·6710 Br $20!5. NeWpaft Beach, Village Real Estate door, ref.ng, Mr. trash. no pets. 177 E. 22nd St. 673.9404 aft. 6_ water incl. Drapeneis. New lg. 2 tr, palio, lg . ford . ;J'here'g Sl million singles ok. 2 Br, 2 ba NoAgenLSFee grdner incl. $385·$400. 645.3732 . &t2-J64S . carpets, ~as heAt. ~n.'I Closetl'O. enc. ~ar $2~ in r~reational raciliLM!s. 21 HEWUMITS Huntington Beach, kids, •Edinger/Magnolia 640-4576. ' OCEANFRONT 2 br up· stove, air cond1lioninA. mo. Gd . 101:·. fS.ol7 25-11 or NIGllT LJGIITEDTW· lben 5 ctlos 3 erel 8 n ,'.'"n .H8unXtG. rosBch.s, P< 0 klS . $H 2 o 0 r 0 se rAancgth, cFattle 4 BR. 2 BA ... $335 •Tropical Pool• per duplex. S.140. immcd ~:~ ~!~~,!~0J~,~~~ · 842:1172 ~~~~?i~5RTSd~orull t1,,·mh~ • • • ee. •Edinger/BOisaCh•"•a l Br cpL'I ..a__, bltns occup ancy 548 -4337 ' · · '" '" p . . 919-8430 .. L-na N'--' 3252 . • . .· .... ~~ ' . Zbr , lbtt {'OfKIU. Washer/ plans part.in. B8Q·l>. r"1c1pals onl,y. Agent.1...::.:.c::==-------I <1BR.2BA ... $335 .~ •••• :?:::••••••••• patio. Utll~e&paid.$18() ZIJ -654·1698 1 BR, util pd, drps. cpls, dryer. Jterri l?;. Pool . trips&. m~! Free Sun~ ~f~~n~o~9:·9332 or~ ~· •• ? •Sl1ter/Beach OV_ELY 4 br .home mo.548·11 NewporlCrestlovely2br. stv. re.frfo/ St70. mo. Po.itiu. 968·5097 wknds &r d•ybr11nch . ...::.=='-=::..::::::..... ___ ! 4BR,2BA ... $345 w /Yie:w.$42Smo.1stJlast L9",_..2.. 2Vi! ba, dbl garage 831·9276 aft6. Plus beautiful singles . 30 UtrlTS •Springdale/Heil + 150 clean'g . fee. Bltns,w/"',drps,pool. w/opener, 3 ~eeks, wet OAKRIDGEVl~ ATTllF:RF.ACll 1&2 bedroom apts , Tustin Area, jriD of 3 BR, 2 BA .•. $345 495~or49&-1951 1200 . Adlts, no pets bar, pool, tenms. Walk lO 3 br, 2 ba, '=' cffildrcn NEW /L(;r:J BDJiS315 furni shed• umurnisbed. · hi Sa-nta .":. 8 ° ... '><., l br ..-•Edinger/BoliaChica &4Z.9520 beach . No pets. $485. 1 858 Oakwood Garden Apt~ owners p, 2 +Acres ol n£O ......... ..."' 38R.2 Bt\. . .$325 67S-7.184 or6'7~U710 ~ com:~c. · W. Buntinglon Harbour of'fen an ettlusi.e "Nft grou nd. All adults. tqe · 11;warner/Edwards MlsllollYfeio 3267 Gar.Apt.inahopplngrntr · . oter,.._..llt7 area. RentRaiscGuarut.ee". ~~· ~~~:'!.· ~':r.:::U ~~;.s;~1 br 3 BR, z BA ... $350 -••••••••••••••••••••• for elderly person. No Sl'EPS bto beach, VJCW, 2 Bil. 2 ea: pool. bltns, Adults 846...fil!ll We guarantee that J'Olll" ~··oo-o...:,--u b .. ~ .._ •Brookhunl/Garfield Br, 2Ba, Fam. Room, smokers or drinkers spac.2 1 r,)$265.U!f'\ forced air.$1.95.Nopcts. t BR cprt d~ frpic rentwillnotberabedfol" -..... .... ...., _._ ,...unt. Beac .....-1 ..... P 1 114 52;9......,l -,,,..,. • • .... ~. · 1 FULL ~•n • Ill w/rarage. 2BR,JBA .. .$285 . oo. '450 mo. dayt 548-8759 714.........,1 £ncd yd. garage.. Slnglc ir...-.n. • 11 5 HOtJSES TusUn $150. l be, stove, 963-4'61or953-1'186 83Ul621<MS<mlcves. IZJO. NEWLYdecorated"'Z VERY.I«• & modem·2 br 2 Br, crpts, ljie ci.,.eL<. only.842-6007 ~;n~h'i':.em~~~ refrlc. ~pts,dtps . Ground floor 2 BR Condo, br, balcony~ pool, garden upstairs, steps 10 ocean. stove.· $185. &Q.54fi6 or REA.DY TO REM? cy. Models open daily JO 6 u..arrs Wbr .. w~amrdster $155. Neill SHARP 3 BR, 2 Ba, close . c.-nU, du:PS, bi'-•, gar, .. wng .. U Utlil ~ Adults Wa.ter, trash & TV cable 645-Mll t 1 5 H '""~ •. , 1 .... u..,. Sorry ......, patd Free wash & ShSig crpts. dri)'(. paint· n · Sony, no peb or deaf:~8repi1!'s~~~h'!!: CostaarclMeSa. $200. 2 br ~~utr~~ :::1~hj 8~~n,~il~ =~invilel•· $250. mo. ~~ 1 1 ~ ~· ~ drye~. Sept. to j~ne. Lee 2 Br, l\I& Ba. qew ed, gas stove & j{arage. ~~1::~~~:1~~~ Mesa w~ll lake cJlt: w/y .tamU,ywelcome parklike atmo11pbere corner W. 18th St'. $260. mo. 4808 Seashore crpts, locked 1arage, 5 0 : r r Y service available. chuaa ror tba J.ovestor Hunt. Beach 2 be, 2 bl!, $37S. mo. FREE REN: 4 BR E ldorad?· crpts, 645.0805 Dr. 615-8345 laundry hookup, adult$, no pets or ch1ldrt-n. flSS. movinl up. ·Try l1nd, $20ral0. Ch~~.~ ----TAL LIST drJd, bltns. pat.iq. fed >;d. 2 BR, ~ blk to beach. no!GthpePtls.64$2525·35'~ 28IA E . Imo_. us A 12th St. b akwOod. Iota. ,bousl!sorunLts. n1t1-· w-,-.. .... ,. CURTIS C10&e to schooi llshgp g. ..., ~.44 1tmos9here. nice tor S350 mo 830-5891 l BR F ~1as Winter or possible yrly. · " .- 1 ' • REAL ESTATE · · • 1 BR uu.i;.~-.. ,.... 6'1S·922512U.9'4-t890 GKR.DEN AN 2 br. 1 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garden Apartments · ·11·. · ' !amllY · llCl:llS8 . '~" $ -~ NEW R I & .4 .. a . G"fdcn Groft s:us. a be~ ... .,.rt...... 3269 Lots of bltrut, pool, walk LG 2,br. r ba ocean apt. • .. "6~71·29frll, 63T,.~ ... "".d u l l 1 . quin de.•u"xl'~Ot•~homJo .. •· . =~= w/lard.See!"'!!_I_ a-•ba,b~~,;;;--· ....................... t h I •• I N ~ -__ ,, J ~-4br: ...,,. .. ...,... • ....-~..... 0 • s opp n1. TW m · wtpaUo. o pets .. $27 2-Br, 2·ba. den. S:in Joa· ...,.,_...._.. ·~ J. · • . stab.ton~ • •,.,.. Slncles, , pet.I UDO Jst.E Beaut. S.Br beach. 931 W.19tbst. mo. inc. wt.t & cable TV. 3 BR, t"' BA. lg.rms. new qWa Gardt n Plan. View. 880 trvtne • JS> · , DI~ an• OK. Barba.ra.183-«139 or •-ba nea.r club. $9:50 mo' 54l-Oll2 W•lt'. Daj's: &.42·8206,. paint, cpt, drpa. Children AwalL aow. $500. 552.fiOIO At 16th :~,...~, .. ~~~ .. ~,..~~~~~b·~l~3~1~1~S~O~:~·~it~~::l:~l1Jo6'/~~.._~,.....~======:=l~,....~~.'~g"""~121~;;;;;;:~·,;;;;;·~~~~~l~~~:::J~E~v~ea~.~-13~1-0394~~::;~;;!;go~K~.~"'5-Q'l~~>~::;;;~:;;L~or~6'0-~828~1~ev~es~.~::;~====~84~5-06~50~=:::: ' • • ---------'-· I ' ... .. B Jf DAILY Pll.OT Add It... Build lt. .• Diaper it... Hammer It. .. carpet it .•. Cement it. .. Wire it...Hoe it ... Clean it...Move IL.Press lt...Paint it ... Nail it ... Plaster it. .. Fix it ... ., SERVICE j • DI • • • --- ECTORY . ~:::!!!~~ ........... ,, ~~~~~ ....... !~~~ ......... !~ .. !!!'.~ ..... ~~-~~~~ ........... 1!'!!! •••••••••••• _ ,.,. ................ _ ••••• ELECTRICIAN. sP,1 "TlllNGS" by Moose. Jap .. eseLad1Wouldli .. EXTERIORS SAVE "1 Pnf A.HT Pk M119 BRAMlO TILc; N.,.." labplttlog ....,.., ... , ............................................ . Jobs, moi1nt lrepaJr1. 22 Gen woodwork. repain, tohou.seclean.. R.L. Sinor Stllte • YDeS -'•A-~--Stnl J..oviat: care, lg_..yd . arpentry-Cu&:tom Hr/day /wk. Qileltwlnds Remod, rep~l r, add on , OK. Refs tile. S~·O:WT insulate. Ocs1gn:; t'roo Je.annie. esl. 645·3439 )'rs. exp, plu.mbing,etc.6'2-5613 CallM.S-UST. Llcen(ed lnsured Call Fr. £at. JJmMS\W 5~ lq, jobl'Welcome.531-IUt lic233108.Mll-S200. ~ ...u Water tiealec•, d is• • 1 DO IT AW Expert housecl~anl!!.( _.,os po1als. draim. faucets. VIcroRYnt.ECO 1 Dabysiltlng (my home), A1AST r~ R Cruft!)m<in:. Ganl•nln9 £! t . J Pl b' done on wkly bas\1, 3 yrs l>rof. painUng. clean wrk ••••••••••••••••••••••• coppe-r tt"pipe~. Same Italian. Me3tlcu Ttn'9-*. N.B . Call afl 6pm, Specialty. Jtemodchng, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ttcecR~~~~~tes ~/· he>tipilal exp. Gd refs. & reaa. Jnt. & Ext. free CU~"TOMWOODP~TIOS prices d3)' & rughL ~e Cota &allll,.Ule.Buy Raebel, 631-1732'. r1ni ~h work, ref ii;. f'rec J/\PANESt dAJl0£NER · • , 537 ·78'S9 est. 1$1--0684 &962-5425 Design/Build all th•pes take &,t str Charge. Uc the tile, rentlbetoolt, or luiJneii ServJce est.Guarwork4t'J9Jl05 lOyrsex~r.allphases The ijandlt Man llOUSEPAINTING . 581-5369Wc'd900-6645 300948. ~~\i;;,.sat';,st:~ /~t!'iii •••••••••••••••••• c t k'l h lleasonuble/Eistimat.es Can Landsc'apinq Inside/out. I'll quaJ/low Plastff le....&. JUSTPl..UMllMG lions. Newor~modeleif. Cslm Payroll Ser:~;:~ ~e~od~li~lt~nal~r~~~~s C<Jll 7Sl·l!m llomeRepa~·r . • ••··~···~··•••••••••••• rates. Pruce00-5376. •••••••••t r.':••••••••• •CALL&l.Mlll• Showroom 05'C!ft 10<. Jlunt. Bt'h, Westin ;irca & repair. Un.iqut! & un-fil OST I. AWNS lmprovemenU: . ford :s Lands~ape Custom painting/ MARV'SPLtJMBlNG Mon-Sat.aeo52Gellyl)r~ Dcpcndable89tl-60Zl. u sual work wt'leome. MOWEO/EDGKO, SS Dennis Sodh1wns/Spnnltlens wallpapering, Paint int, PATCllPLA51'ERING •646-9il17• La&unaNlguel.&1tl-234(L ff • M hi MbrBBBureau962-l'.Jl'1 wk , Cfl.1 /Nli ONLY. st.Clit.ir OeslgnSvs -962·71U7 $20 ••ALLTVPfli** NOJ08TOOSHALL ii 0 re• CIC M' S•s <;1.'flrgc 549-2015 Ph 6'6 63 rm, ext $249. avg 3br Free Est ~ T09' So 1'ypewrilcrs, 0tdding .Cu stom Carpentry - _ --------: ·4 I Experienced Japanese 968-74$2. Anyplumbingwat.erserv. •••••••••:• ... •••••••W m11l·hines, culculoilors, Framing or fini s h , Quality Maint /Larw.lscpg Gardening & landscap-PETERSPAJNTING VERY NEAT PATC•l leaks. marolilc •TopSod.compost• eleclron1 t· c:alC"u\ators. Hcmodcl 1add1t1 u n ~od. s prklrs, soil cond, H. 11 ing.f'reeest.64S-3Jg8. Jnt/Ext.-Reas.rates JOBS & RESTUCCO. enclo;iures.1 reas. •J\tulch•Redwood•., J. o a n n1 11 c h i n c s 5'19-41 59 r leanup 642-3331·64&4008 •• ~.~?•••••••••••••••• Bluegrass Sod f~r Sale. J< CalJ Geneal5S2-1>4:>8 F-..eeert. SJ:S.l.439.: 832-2468. ){)%ofr w/ad CALL$81fMilUJO furni!Shl·d ' .t(avcSl•r\ll'Cl'rulJlcms·! t-:xp Japancse Gurdener. Aaullng Anything . per S Q . fl. 53(1 -5033. p r . t hones k Roofing Tt'ftStrflce •CALL US • C~tServicit Co mpl e te yd ma1nt . Gara_gc cleanup. Reha-Heiachwalk 19888 ro pa~n'f, f twor • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••..A Ofhl'l" 1'~qw pin(·nt Cu ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shrub . lrt·cs, t-ree est. ble, (as t service. 963-6452 Golden west St. JIB . ~:e~!~ ~~21~;13~t. REPAIRS-ALL TYPES Removida:, llmbln.g, toP.--1~255 i\1 l HJ ld ,C1r{'ll· CA llPF.TXl'HTS-lf.yrs 546 0517 " Rei;s,freeests,lic. P!ne. prunln' ¥-·-t·n~~al h·y ~16261i5.5 c:t·l1tlt•·<illyClt·<ul CleanupsS48•6142 ilr'l-!AUJ..JNG• MolOflry WALL1co,valEJedR11NGS Walt830·5020anytime !.,~r!!ood. Jtc/1nir WILL!Ai\1S.>19·Hll :> YAHDCLEANUP ••••••••••••••••••••••• ns . .,_._... Cabinet Malcing S;ilcs Hcpiur ln~l;,cJ! Co rn pl m.i1nt Gt..'OrAC Wll~Ll/\MS&Sons lte1noved Sewing Alterations 1-------"--- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••556-0347•• J .E. SWENSON 008-t900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ford'sTr-eeService -I Cstm cabine t~. boat s. (,"arpet ln.l>tallat 1o n . Cleanups. lrt•cwork , Masonry. llnck/lllock & Learn to sew robe. pants ExprCrew,lic,bondedl Patio cor. k1t rh rmdl, l••t Rt!pa1rs,.t-'rl'ct·stim:.itl·~ rolul1ll1nfl:, in1nor Jdscv, H cleani1111t l ~S~t=o~ne=·~C-,•=1~1=58=1~-7~829=---IProressional European In 4 lessons ,,..,... Slurt, __ &_;_o_sur_ed. __ 962_·7_8_1_7_ IU yrs 111 11re·1 t;46 2&IJ ouse ·-:r W I I all E ~-• t1 c .-work&<lfi 521 ~ Guar.labrtr &15 3274 · • · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll.1 asonry&Conrret~ it lpaper nst er, X· Sep.22.540-4479 j ---J11hn !laker. c:t1>cr. lawn IJOUSEL'LEAN1NG is our Work. Ask ror Jake. cl work . !>48·3"Ul5. } .. or Classified Ad Carpentt'r Ci!-mrnt Concrete ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Car I><' n tr y -Pa Ill! I 1 n g, !;helving, sml remodel. No job too .small 900-39"19. URICK & BLOCK WORK Patios, Walls, Planll:rs Local refs. ti45·K.">l2 & J;<Jrdl·n care. Cut, edge Business. Call Janice's1 ____ "4_9-_l,.. _____ 1$SAVt:s. Best pric·--E•-I n ACTION j & I 96, ... ~ R d A 67" """" ~ " UM!: lhe Daily Pi ol fast eu tlvate' · . .,..""' aia:c Y nns . .............., tcr & Inter. Any fix -it Calla t"ireplacei-Plenterli Re s u It'' Ser Vi c l' l::itp t.:ardencr wanL'i part Wunt a REAL CLEAN Brick-Concrete Patio jobs. ~tany rcl'li. 645-0836, Directocy~ Your liervice Daily Pilot Umt• work. aftt•rnoons, llOUSE? Call Gingham ljlock Walls-IJ»QPits 1-'-•_c_k_-________ 11 ~n.o.11yP1tGttM1yh111 ls our s pecialty. Call AD-VISOR wknds, reas 'IU:)-li268 Girl. fr~ csts. 64S-5123 Rers, Est.s. 646-0464 Want ads Call 642·5618 '°" .,..1""""''°"rioc.I 64.2·5678, ext. 322. 642-5678 comnH1"!t1 ••• ......, .,. Aporime•h Furnished Office Rental 4400 Office Rental 4400 l"""'trlol Rental 4500 Buslnou Lost & Fotmd 5300 P ... sonols 5350 Help Wnted 71 O Help ~alllecl c 1100 or Unfurni~ 3900 ••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••••• ••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Opportunity 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• .. • Rooms •••••••• ••••••••••• • 150 I WHtcliff Dr. NUW 1.~:ASING 2000 SQ FT. 3 of cs, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOS'f /t'OUNO Drinking problem' TllF: r:XCITINC: NcwpOrt 1-'inancial Ctr l'rl'st1g1~ <>fficc Space baths , immed. across st Candy & CICJCreHes A l'L"T! Call Alcohol HelpliOe PALM MESA APTS. L • Cu'> tom Hcta1I Stores from OC Airport 963·7878 S _, Rout ~-2900 AdQptioo , I.ow 24 hrs a da)' s:J5.383J • J\1 JNUT1':S ·roNP'T t'dSUHJ Office Space I U.iN'l'ING'fON -. upr·Y r Cosl Spay /Neuter Info. HCll. CallonSitel\lanagcr ;\lAitlNA NEW J\f ·I Newport, Costa IN0Se)hn,11lnvolvt-dJ SPIRITUAL READER Ha 1 • h . 1 &2 HR . fro in (714 )642-3111ext246 t:x 1-.:CU'flVE <..:ENTER Mesa, 1000, 12(1(), 1440 sq Men & Women can rill & LOST : Light orange male Open 10 AM to lO PM S172. 50 1 ,,,~\ ~ ., ft.543-3145or64&2928 collect money frum coin tabby cat. Looks like Adviceonallmauers . . 1 ; "' operated di~penllen> 1n !'llorris. Vic or Golden 312N EiC · R I Adults. No Pct::. I > I ul 1200 s Ft M · anuno ca l""l'l-a'~. . .,, q ·1 space, and around lhe Orange West&Warner.842-3064. San Clemente,Forappt. ,,., " ... ~ ur front offire. drive-in rear Co. area. $l5(X) ca3h re-1 ----------~ (5 Blks East of Newport door. $185. mo. 629 quired. Many details c;ill LOST : Shcpherd /llusky 492·9034 492·9136 Ulvd .) Terminal Way, CM. colle1..1. mix on 9/13, vie .t.br Mas 54t>-98ti0 ./AH c-~ 17141846-4493 Days 54 0·5710, eves FEDERAL SERVICE I•aularino & Bri!1tol. ""'Ph:::~ Newport Bcac.'h duplexes ~~ ,_.,;i ... ial W1 is~ lo ~ublet oo1'r·share 646·068l (2131772-7947 ~~!: red.5 s~~-1~~ 3 ~~ 1733 Fullerton, C~ for rent. Ju.sl slept> to thl· ./ ,.,.. .,_ ~· argc on~ room .1ce nr NEW Frec-sta!Xiing bldg. b/5·0970, ask for Bill. • lOAM -12 PM. 631-1184 bcuch. Upper delx 4 Hit. ..1 • .,.0.--.. Orunge County 1urport. Fresh sea ;itr location WEAVING SHOP for Sale ~~::'.:~'..".:C:::'..-"'.'.'.c __ jl::----::-c-'c'-'-"'--'-:-.,-,; 2 RA. furn. St50. winter ./~ -·1<• ... ~. ~crelaria\ services pro-7200sq.fl. 12x14 O/drs 77 by Owner. Very reaso~a-l-"' 0 u n d : f c m a 1 e foxy Girl's Out Call rates . unrurn. lower ,.,.._..IY'~'"' · vidcd.833-8747. W.lSth,CM.615-5300 ble.640-59J0or 548·4206. Shepherd. Mesa lhi;::h Massage. U Call, We dclx , 2 11n apt. $Jl5. School . Tan. No JD . Come . Speciet li zc winter rates. ti40·Gl61. 1250 SQ F'T M·l space, NURSERY SCHOOL 979-1471 J>araplegics.542-3169 ask for Ocin Glenn, or 5146 up stort··officc.s cpts front office, Jgc rear Pre-School. nr. downLn-. E dcps air hath . 17301 -' $190 12'0 F d Rik & h'l Sh PREGNANT?? Wray Andrew A,llcnt SS' P RS"' FT uoor · · mo. ·• Costa Mesa. 0.1rc for 24 oun : w 1 e • ep. --~---''-''---I "" Beuch Bl, H.B. !S42-28J4 Logan St Costa Mesa mix puppy. Approx a Caring confidentia l 1617 WES'l'CLlfl-'-NB • · · · at $100 mo. Room to ex· v · counseling & referral. 4000 ,\G'r. 541.5032 PROfo"ESS'L,.... .. c-5 /\ Days 540 -5710, eves pand. -Incl. l•c. lot, nrl)'. wks·3 mos. 1c: 15th & ~w~ 646 =01 Mon"o ·I" NB No ID Abortion. <idopl ion & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bldg, 3 st ory . 2790 ·vuo ___ new bldg . comr t.'QlliP J ' \ "·"' • • • • keep•'"•· ROD Is k EXECUTIVE ., •o< 000 !162-1628 aft 4 pm. !\' $25. w~ up "'ith • ~ su1 es on !!arbor Blvd, C.~1. Air Storoqe 4550 -.... · APCAREM1·2563 kilrhen . 548-9755 or Newport ll arbof". ·WO to cond .. clev.,panelwalls, ••••••••••••••••••••••• GrahamHlty li46~l'I FOUND Jn sh Setter in 645-3967 ~5~~40~q ft . 642-4644 : drai:_ic s" c:1rpet , elec .. vehicle o r Tr:.iiler Costa~!esa Calltoiden-Employment& Room for renl. Kitchen --------music, Janitor, parking. Stora~e. $18 per Quarter. Investment llf)' 545-3738 PrirparatiOft pri vileges.·priv. e n· Prime llunt. Bch. Joe. ~7 ~136St~~l\.lgr . W.17thC1t1.548-0358 Wonted 5020 F d S u h't 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tranc~. $140. first & last. from $125. mo. incld. util. · nr · ••••••••,•••••••••••••• oun : ma ~ 1 . e on~ Schools & Call499-1457aft.6. 5075 Warner Ave . JNVEST.TAXCREOIT houreddoi;t.l2 highl7 ln1tnrc:ti0fl 7005 846-4249 Business Rental 4450 Rentofs Wanted 4600 Need $25.000+ ITC ~~~· llunt. Bch. 536-3811 •••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ADVERTISING We are'l'eeking a person to augmen~ our Classified AdvertiSmg department for inside telephone sales.· Classified experience necessary·.Excellent com·, pany benefits. Salary commensurate. with experience. 11£9UIREMEHTS IWCUIDE: •Must type 45 WPM (electric) •Dependable -Good speaking voice •Pleasant personality . If you are ambitious & want to be paicf for your efforts & have opportunity for' advancement please apply in person to: ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 330W.lay5t.~Mosa An Equal Opportunity Employer Sepr br & ba. Year lease. Great location. Ocean Blvd, CdM . A\•ail Oct lSt. 675-8706 aft 6pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plus DOB Depreciation . TENNIS LESSONS IROOKHURST Stor2e00·•300hopSqC-2Ft/M-I Frank Metro 714 /546-8:KL.1 FOUND : 1i1 ale black Lab. Pvt tGroup/NB. 675-0843 Help Wanted 71 OO Hflp Wanted 7 IOCJ FIMA.MCIAL. THE -· · -----Vic of l\.fagnolia & PLAZA 642-0tsl. Talbert . F.V. 963·1147, Jobs Wanted. 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l J I Room or room w /kilhcn · privil. r..Jature person over 50. $25 wk . 548·6073. N I COLO..,Y GE w . Monry Wanted 5030 c'"'-7604 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A.SSEMILIRTRME ow easing ·NEW . " GARA ANTED ~ · · custom ext.'t'utivc orricl' JORETAIL SFIOPS near JSth St N 8 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUSEKEEPER, C.a pa-Local alternator re-suites. Large and small _ . 673_1195 · · 40 Year rnident. Newport FOUND_: Blac~ femal~ w I ble. 5 yrs expr. Excel m.11nufa cturer. Duties in- BANCORP Has been retained , lo interview CLERICAL . PERSONNEi::. - . ..J users accommodated. Prn~'lc reasonable space exec. looking ror S20.000 brn points. Vic Tustin & r efs desires full time elude soldering, check- Lea sc i n cludes all availablelargc&sm'!"ll. Quiet. middle aged, secured by 2nd T.0 . on 17th CM S46-625S. position in Nll area. ingofparts.assemblyol amenities. Lea s in g ~d hor~ dcha:m. b Jth employed man w /2 my home & duplex . F_O_U_N_U M 1 M S 673-9521Gayle. alternators. Must speak .1.1gent, Donna, on pre· & ~~~cs~ 11/\~j;~e~at ~ mellow blk Lab. dogs 673'2223· P;irl S:hce;frcr~-Vi~: Construction Bkkpr-Girl A'0,mkefo"EFn!alisnk. h .. 64522:9'1°65h.c. En1'oy Sunny Palm Sp"-m·s ~· B kh t (mothe" & son) l O" 2 BR • • • 1 cs. """"'" roo urs . F' est i v iJ I n r Arts ' . • M~ es Trust Santiago & Galaity NB . Friday, mature, desires lngs. 2 Br, 2 ba Condo. l-luntinglon Beach, nr Grounds. house with fenced rrd, Deed: ' SOlS 646-3008 F.T . position in construe, ASST. Manager. Garden- Pool. jacuzzi, tennis. Atlanta. 963-8961. 580 BROADWAY '?M. Prefer E~sts1de. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tion ore. Refs. 968-5931 ing. maintenance & up-Avail for Oct & Nov. l .. AGUNA BEACH 645-7094 before4pm FOUND : Watch.Ladies, keep or 55 uiiits in Costa Reas. No chiJd or pets. SJNGLE lo 6 rm suites LOANS t 80% 10 A •t to l2 Noon Ch uff · · (I) 327-8171. Avail. in plush office ., Business ln•esf UP, O. 0 , a ering, companion, Mes;t in exchange foe bldgnr.OCAimnrt.F\Jll ·494 7915 Finance &10-6900 bachapt,ma,int,bonded. renl. 642·5073 o r ·.-• ••••••• .. ••••••••••••••• lstTD OGIS-9°/o f'o"nd ·. Male A•."edale Helen 548-7197. (2131865-3851 Vacatian Renfcils 4250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For an Orange County l ndependent Bank Call or write for an ~ interview. Douglas Plaza, Jrvipe, Ca. "833-2334 service incl; Recep:I'~~~~~~~~~.... 2ndTOL.ocmts '" ' Retdalslo-•-4300 lionist, conference rm, 8u1&ne11 Tcrricr.upprox8mostol Ho u secl ean;ng Done, ATTENTION GARDENB•"m 1'd ro · Mn t•-· ••••••••••=.:•••••••• xerox, automated typ-DELUXE orfire, comm'! Opporl)lnity SOOS Lowest rates Orange Co. yr old.548 -0179 , want on regular basis. CTR PROFESSlONALS. Thur: nites~ 430 ° E. iilb TIDY M or F over 30 to ing, etc. Call 833·3640 & industrial spaces. Also ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sattler Mtg. Co. Own trans. 979-71119. $. Catirornia's largest St, CM. 548-9949. s hr lg. cozy CdM home. Ground floor with or w / mini warehouses in 642-217 1 545-0611 LOST Bl k Cock . Nursery chain has op No Kooks. or drug tyl)e3. slo"age, panel. "hW". Laguna Niguel & Mission W a I k i n -lake over Serving ltarbor area 24 L ·0 h"' Saalpoo hin Hrfp Wanted 7100 port un i lies f or ex : BA~ MA I.D. 'Cxper 'd, • $1 • " • v1·e1'0 e H d l H · t 1· g Sho M t years aj!. c · area · nig t ••••••••••••••••••••••• F /l1me nights M z 75+utals.644-11.M8 rrig. si nk , 3 ;,, C•I ar as. an Yo a1rsy1n p. us M. h" t periencednurserymenin · r. s. 548 _ 9766 . • San Djego Fwy. 200 to ..sac! Options open . wearing ic igan ag, APT Manager : Couple the Orange, Los Angeles, 3023HarborBl,CM. MAN 35 to 60 shr. 2 br, 21 cc:::.=c:::. _______ I 2000 sq ft . As low as JO: Prime location. San 2nd TD Loans Wanted Reward. 492·3074 · wanted for new 20 units , Riverside Co. areas or · b a a p.t . $165 mo. OFFICE or store a\•ail. per sq rt . 831-1400 Cle mente. 129 Avenida WE HAVECASlt! LOST : Grey rem. c-at. Vic. Costa ll.1esa. Lovely rent those with retail sales ex-BEAUTICIANS Oakwood So., NB . 1000 sq rt . Newpor DelMar.498-1520. Buy 2ndT.O.'s Cani·on St. & Pacific. rreetDr.apt.Nokidsor per. who want the STYUSTS .. < -s1 $80. f\.1o. Ideal Newpoctl-----------1 Lounon2ndT.o .·s pet" -•~6 ... ~, Penin. Choice location. CM . 645-0914 "'· "", . ..,,, c h-allen ge -of growing For (2) N.B. salons. wtor shop avail in I.he mall at New Loans·2nd T.D.':s Beaut. Bayrront 2 br. 2 ba1_639_-_•7_oo ______ _, The factOry ror: Coun-Beat The Sour Equity Jnvsmt. Div. ... -e YooT y..__ with a leading Company w/out foll. Call 644-0661 furn. home wldl'kk. Male Lost: Blk male Poodle. "'"" 00 --:11 in this fi eld. We offer top or 540-8582 will share W/fcmale. NEWPORT garden orfi c :r.re:~~~;3:=c!-'~~-·~:J ECO O BARNETT MTG .CO. med s z . Blk collar ForAirtiftes? ind u stry ·wages &1----------· $225 _ l st , la~t +sec. suites from 4J< incl. util. N MY 645-2134 I w /rabies tag. Vic. Irvine Large concern has open-benefits. Plus potential BEAUTICIAN 752.6283 Some warehouse a\·ail. 3200 Sq 'Ft C·2 store front Announcements Terr. Reward! 673·2221 ings for 15 gals & guys 18 management positions. Costa Mesa-Nwpt B~h =~~----,.,---·1 ~55~7~·~006~1-------J with 6 drive ·ln bays . A few stores are still Pttsonals LOST: H.eward for lost and over. Free travel to Apply in person Tues. or area salon. No folloJ!:. Womanw/7yroldsonwill SINGLE & Double Of. ideal for auto or boat .available at Shoppers Losl&FGUld J\.t ale Dobie, ans. to Hawaii, Alaska.Chicago .We d . 9AM lo 6PM. nee. $90 wlt.guarn I& share nice N.B. home fices located in mOdern service. 585 W. 19th St, Village, .a high volume ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Cer", red collar. 212 & New York: guarantee Nurseryland Garden comm.548-9986. W/resp. _'!"Oman, 1-son center. Util. rumished. CM. Days 540-5710, eves shoppers mall. If you A.nnouncernrnfs 5100 Santu Isabella, CU . return at random Center . 15851 Gothard:l-------'---"---- OK. Mariners schl area. By the month, zy sq. rt.i c"'c::.'·~068=t:..... ______ 1 have the merchandise,••••••••••••••••••••••• 645.0358 1v infor. itinerary. No exper. Ave. (at Edinger Ave.) ABs~~~!'i1~or,pb/lia'rmb'ver Reas. Call Nancy, 540_5:?06 ~c'll put the foot traf£ic Sept. Only ! Permanents 1-----'----------I necessary. Two wks ex· Hntg Bch, CaJif.898-4455. 5'i8·2SJ77lo8am.oraft SEP.bldgwti::ar.IOOO sq 1n ~ront of you. tr you S lO . F'rcl' llair cut penscpaidtrainingpro-Conlact Ml'. Bax.. s tylisl & receptionist. 6:30pm wkdays, anytime fashion Island. View or ft. 213 W. Wilson, CM. d~n t ha~·e the merchan-w /shampoo & set for LOST : Si lky Terrier, gram. Above average _:s~l~ce~s~s~e=r=. :::;;;;:.~:--ll~64;;;;6~·848;;;;~0~o~r~64&~;ll;;A5;. ;;;;;;;;: wkends · · nay . sec r et 3 r y 645-2020 &612-6560. di~e •. ~e JI .help you ob· New Customers Only 1\.1 ale. Blk /Tan. ·Ans. earning~. Transportation furn1 ~hed . Plentr of l5x60STOREB!dg. Shop-lain 1t. Join 100 other S48-60iJ · "George", Baycre;t & furnished. For interview AutomotiYeWtt BEAUTYSALOH parking . For info pi ni:: Ctr. 17849 Beach merchants, who arc _ . Dover Shores NB.Wear-call Mrs . Franks at Need young. aggressiv , 644-4753. /\s k for !'11ary Blvd . JIB 213_454.8971 beating the SourRWD. fofinfo. Herctum ini; Collar, tags & ID . 557-3007 blwn 10 -6PM mentosellfastroovin Needs experienced Rose. · Economy at Shopper s o(f.M.C.mot.hme.stln. 548-1269 .Aft.4 Tue.&Wcd.Only. \'ehicles. T op com Managing -S t ylists. J''emale or male 21-30, single. mature, ncaL employed , no drugs, no pets . Share quiet lg, S br VIII ••N · · be Beauty Operator s . In Cannery Village shop age, 27 .... ·Main St" 8/3/1~-No hassle. P. 0 . LOST : Sm. Blk. fem . m.Jssions & nefits. Ap Guaranteed Sal.aty- for lse, 700sq. ft. 428JI.sl SantaAna .. 834-1.SSI Box 8413 Univ. City, py, vie. Nwpt. Hgts·.~~-SELL idle items with a plieations now bein Comm. Paid vacations,, St. NB, 557A!276 92608. (213) 1-101-5000. Call: 548·61'3 Daily Pilot Classified Ad. taken .at; Free l ife insurance .. Cqpelan~.Jnc. sdtools & Schools & Schools & Schools & Schools & School1 & 2001 E. lstSL-S.A. Store dis c o uu1.s • h~e. llunt. lkh .. $115. Find what ynu want in no. lst & lasl. Ut1I pd. Daily Pilot Classifieds Mary Jo or John 968-5233 · · Female to share 2 Br, MV Condo. $90 mo. Ph. 586-0141bef.2PM. Roommate Wanted £or lge, 2 Br, house w /y.ard in Hntg Bch. &16-8Zl7 ·Gw"'l., f0< Rent 4350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garage Av:iil $25 mo. V e r y .!'ce.ure . 2-10 Avocado D CM R33-K294 rear behind hse Office Rental 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MlNl·SUITf:S (1-2 J + rooms). Xerox & sc<.'y service nv:a i\. On Newporl lfarbnr 1n Cen tlnetla Bank R ld g , 642-4644 •1 P..10 FREE Rio:NT+ 1,z.a Rm. offices from $135 per-mo. Near Airport. Noleasereq. 833·3223 9Til f'IOOl'I l111trvction 7005 Instruction 7005 lmtructiOft 7005 Instruction 7005 ln1fruction 700 lnstrvction 7005 558-IOGp J~~~l;a~!=~~Ce • • •• • • • • • • • • •••••••• •• • • •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••• •• ••• • •••••• ••••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • •••••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• •• • •••• ___ ...:::.::.:_...:::.:..:::io.._-J YMCA SCUBA DIVING CLASSES · Discov~r An Exciting New World Triple Certified Instructions Emphasis ~n Safe & Sane Diving 45 Hour Course Diving Is A Healthy Family Activity_ A Basic Course That Stresses The Proper Methods Of Safety As Well As Teaching The Techniques Needed To Enjoy The Underwater World Next Course Starts Wednesday, Sept. 24th-6:30 pm • Automotive MonhJOfnll'J Wm"d· -Wanted 3088 lrishll st Costa Mole l111port Spe<lal ...,.ideratlon 51tn'lce Wrfftr For U.O..e w /following . AlsaMeed l111port Line Mechanic See Mr. Severson ~eMlemiA .TO'(OTA 1966 Horbor, ( M. 646:9303 • *BEAUTY 0 P E R A T 0 R -S • Manicurest full time. 2-Assistants & 2· shampoo girls. for new salon , 200 Ne wport. Center Dr., N.B. 644-6671 . B.Uinan Day Shift AirporlerlnnHoteJ Conta~ Mr. Hannan 833-2TIO. Blueprint oPerator, Ea• per, Copy Olis. Carou'O Del Mar, 49'-7133. \ ' ' l .. ' I • r d • - y ... •• .,, rt I •• .. ... "" ... all ... ... ail .. all • • ' , _ . ~ !. • ., .. 1 11t 1'7S OAILYPtLOT 11twpw.ea11 11111t11J W•••• 7tM '''" w •• ,,. l ., • .. ·-···········-··-··· -• eo· so ...... -... ,_ , ... -•••••-••• .. •-••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-••••••••••••--··-••••••••••••••-•-... ••••••••.-t••••••-•• • i Cl!ll"• I: .,.... Man1•ement . s;a,..1111 ...... ;;;p;;,. MJO ·~-!!••••••••,,. •• ,,.,. •••••••••••••••••!••••• GIRLS AND BOYS PEoPLBPKRIJOM U&'JURE ·.aNll'""' 111111e,-.LrWie ""f"""' ............ •MAJT1U!5S* MOVING Sal•! ,Bdrm • . Baeo. , ....... !.~ . ""' . ~· ~ Sll:..V!:llBJIJTHll«l • CAMERAS . M •o"'"'SS* .... couc'h . llr1' bllle .+ 12 .. '' y..,.·Of.... Um•""'"':'~ .... n...firt.n.. . TralaM. ---nee. Jouniali•l ..iillftc Rallol * ... ~~. mot•.tfT-441•11ll · · l:.~-r~·~1"."?'u1~ Tbwortnrlt.bbays~glrb't2to18years at.mi s.s Planar,'811:-. •ALL~* Royal Elec, TY-rlw •• To work • .few hours evenjn(s after capll1tlaod. laler•le• al All•· We will trllD you iD newspaper Super D w. II mm tu, Prtcodlo Maftl t100; 120 BllS Elec. Ac· ;:.Mhooi~n $.ll!.to ~-~e~1~dl~.1l:':ee:k~· :•·:_i· ~"171-~'~'i"~~-~~;i-•alel promotiOat---:=)rmt have d.ejlebe!a. _ P/llmlp••,. ,•,:!,..41 ~!.. be mo: Z5tnm 'nJpc<>t I U. IJ3.t625 & 64M616 <Miian. tuo. 982-8141 -...it as ez:c1t-1 .... trina L prires ~ bl tr u ,.. __ .. 00 to *'Kl\ ---M:-JOOmm-~' s... . 'b ..• h """ ..._ ,...,.. · ,,! on. """u·,.. ~ lL Weelltadl. • 115: 2x -·-· SIS: Pritidaln, bar stools. Slm111ona BabyCri •" ..-Applylnpenan ttltera •nd rocu•tn1 cu.1tom l•mps. patio nna ma1tre11. ~·Call .,.,,, 714 S4J..IJ54 ASST~~ . Phone542.1354 -••••hvCWt 1ereon1, PS: Vl•llor r...,,, 1 .. potted plonu.1..::54S=...-r=•·----- lletwMli IOAM .. 4PM w•T<ftAH!IS "w-10All 1:4Pllforlnt«vlew 1221 W.Coaotltw,,NB ••tl>·naab, ~: Onllilca pal0Una1,etc.m .. 1ao . 2 i•r&• ... , .. wheel1,• UV. _.. M.S;$)00 C'Ue, $$. C006ider Lr.st a.tt ~ Sii &•ID .,. EqaaJ Opportanity Employer . ·,~. !JI Eq_ual Opportuolt,y Employer roe Ltica(lex ..-lal'1(• lol••inc 1<> Apt. Must adl -·~ ... m 'IL-· ~~~~~~~~~====~==:·~~ -n •Swlmmin&Pool• format eqmpment ~· ~bousehold furniture. M~llemi.$4i&41> ~ Ii l:. Siles man. MUat 'be a · 4!11-35410t 581.0ZZZ. lncld. Refric: .. Washer• ..:...w_ 7100 ..... W.........., 7100 Opt ••IL•~ ....,W.........., 11•• ...._W_ 7100 perieneed.-L c... I035 Dryer.CoiorT.V .• Destlk."1ltcolH•-• ...,. • ...,. -•-...,.. -•• • ...,. --u-~• Chain . Picturea. An · w~od 8081 ........................ ••••••••••• ..... •••••••• •·•••••••••••••-••• .. •· ••••••••••··~-··•••• ·--~ -~ ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• Di hes •-Kolek - lo .. A.l1a: tl1rs We have JI atc:ne oil IP A R T • T t M E • SAILIOAT Eara tatrl iDc:iiMy for Sl1mese Kittens, Blue' ~~~ck•~ Silv~r . Sail•••;;·~·~;·;;;;·~;••• Apply in penoa. Must ..... Accra C11rt& are on the rDOYL A wii· T E L E p H 0 .N E ASSlt• M '11!.~d•o" ...... ""'21. ~ Sea.lpolnt .... s:t5 -Flsh. S•trlfi~ salS-3322 Good uaed f~/refries ,Nave own tooll. 1911 E. l"or Boat M(g. Firm. qut Ulf-tervice tonnat SOLICITORS. WORK RM ..,._ .._... 111- 0cddent.alSt.SA.. P1.7able:, Payroll, COit that reature:1 famous FROM YOUR HOME. Minlmu.mofZ\.iynexp. 9am·2 :30pm or 3pm• 9 FT. SOFA. XLNT Fruatatoves .546-0768. r BOATS -· SS'1·1'133 -.. ran • , S 2 . I$ I b r • p 1ailboalli. Mu.It pouaa J.;!en. CTI4J m-2210. :::!:•••••••••••••••••• AFTERS P!i1 67s,.&258 W•nled : 4x4 l!Of~. 6 l() M AM'l .Z-IYnAc...t•ex· b da ~at ualil"' LUS hiuse:mblyoffiberalUI 8:3-m. AJk for Mr1. "--1040 CONO . SLOO . CALL , , ol• .,..,... womeit'• 1 Jl sub-BONUSilS. NoRlllnt ln· or acquire nece.1sary ' 16' c-h•in link fence &. . seeJ~:i:s;IJlt Duyer. 1ta_ntJa Y.. re uced volved. CAIJL 81Lb j,_i band tools. DepefldabiU· E.O.E. •PET WORLD• G ..... s• 1055 post•. Must~ r~a&Ona· ,.Xoowledae ol. pure.bu-GENERAL pncea. 556-1424 orD&1U. ty prerequisite: for THIA.TIE Cock era. ~hihuahu.a, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ble. Also, chicken wire~ • i.n& lot aailbolll parts re-•Secret8'1H Look tor • socceiarul PART Ume counttt sales, employment cootidera· DOC>aMAM :'f:1-'e:, ~~h~~u'm°f~'[: MOVlNC : Single bed. okl steel fence posts. 751.1163 '.q'd.HdpuslslfJAhead. •Typi•h c~Hrwlthasuccenful buay office, heavy ~$u1PK~u:i:: Ovt>r 18. A.pply,709£. St'hnauaer, Poms . secretary desk, m"!"'Large aluminum tra!i h .;l'op wacea to rlgbl -.; company. Sal~ com· oboael. Re:alestateeap. 174.220-e.rianAve lrvine Ba.lboa81,Ba.lboa. Pekes, westles, 100 sell, makeoffet.~3643 cans. ne-w or used. person . M -F. Call •KeypmchOprs mensurate wlt.h ex-helpful but no · · mixedpuppies.Studsv1 eve.a 6'5·608litf\er5:1SPM .-8J$.1107betwn9-3. •PIX Opn. pM.enceorwewWtr&io. neceHary. &cz.9900 ult SallOl'ISalesman w/expr. Tire Servlte Spetiallst most.breeC&.2525W.11th Monet 8060 W ted · · NEEDkDNOW! forDorolh)'. Strt COmm tood traffic. Brake & Wbeel Align. ·at Fairview. SA. Open••••••••••••••••••••••• an u,·ed Dyn a·Gym looldl..,... $725 _, CALL .,. __ 1 Pl ;1 ...... c ll4' menl Tral~. Newport 531 -Auditiqknow1. Work TempoTemponryHcip MR. f'AR.l.ANDER PART Time 4Wet ti Sat av. ace .....--· Tire CenteT. ptease app. eves. """''· 8 Yr. Old Sorrd Mare, 640.1132: • wJoperatiommaua«. 1'1802Sk:yPartlrrine (114)586-SOOD,extlOll AM, perf. for students, SAJLSEAMSJ'RESS Jy 3000 E. C.out Hwy, Doi Obedience CJasif to Xfnt cond, family pet, -~ ~ .st.ockbrokeragefirn:t. CaUStCMUS inside work, guaranteed Experience perterred. CdM . st.artThurs.Septl8,1:1IO but. requires good rider. Me1 1 alclnoal-BOil CONTROLCAREER ·wa&e.CallAl,509013 Good Workinc condl· pm. NewporL·lrvine Reason for sa l e.. n1 ! ~~11oYrv-l ... ~~1<nc008Y General ha-ndyma'?-.."• ~ed 'ocal Astlstant for PARTn.. tiona.CaUIC-&Ml. * UTOTEM* area.546·•928. heartbroken daughter •••••••••••••••••J•••••• "'""" _., maintenance man; .1.u -1.,. Pi . going t.o school 551-5630 PRE-CRS Fendtt aguar NwptBcb n4/556-8505 1 t L ~, •• 2U N Ot.olaryogolot. .... -aslic Personabl e men SALESGIRL.funsbop. EMPLOY"--AKC Old English Sheep aft6pm. wtth t'ase. GoodCondi--"=-'-'-'-----'-----1 nn, a Re--• · Surgeon. OrangeCount.y. &women to take energy SERENDlPlTY ,....., Dog pups. Parent& OFA tion $2.50 . 644-1140 Ask for Bookkeeper, experienced. go:i 1Hwy. Ask for Mrs. Secretarial experience crisis survey in local 1, $.51·2702 OPPOITU..-rll.S certified. 640-6637 . Reg. TB Mare. Arab look· John ..copy Cats, 333 3rd St. 0 te required, back office ex· area. Hoon 5:30 to 8:30 ,.,, f\IU or-Part Time Ing-spirited, showy. Sor l ..:'.~:'...------- ,.J.aguna Bcb. 49+-7133. GENERAL OFC perieoce belplul. cood weekday eve1. Earnings SALESMAN No Ex per NeceYary · LHASA APSO trade for gd Western or Camelot trumpet w/case. r l pay & benefil9. Send of SlSO to $225 possible Age 21-65 Eliaible Puppies. ma.le, reas. Quarter hone. 673-1933. Used 3 yrs·Gd for lilU· .,., 1001~ Need {time ac:cura e. typed let•-r •-o-wne. a· fter traln1'ng ~r;od. Qualified Rtlail Paint&. G l Th N t 963-5815 dent. S60. 545-8791 l ~-b r· mature person to t.ype, du.: .. :"' ..... ~D ·1 r-Wallpa.per experience. TICo ToOCeMAeRK.,..ET 5 Yr. old Reg. Quarterl~~~=:.:::c::.::::.. __ _ .. Newpor u.;;ac 1rm r.ole. an•wer phone. We Write a w.-v, a1 Y Call btwn 1:3063:30Fri. ,... •-ni • ~ Al 1 d , ··ge ('~lb) M 1 1 I $t600 Off! ~.~-1. d alilled book " Pii t PO Bo •c..n ,........,.la 9/ 9 E c nl ol .. or new s ......... ·ope n. w ...,.or Ap£1,·-u·-· '·Info s u -&.rill" ""' • ;are. n oa . · ce "'~ •" 5 qu . orrer paid group, health, o • x -_,.. 1 · ner1y o r Costa Mesa. M9-<1812 °' .. ... """':~~ 7702 German Shepberti. Ex· Show• Eng. & West••rn. Equipml!flt 8085 I ~~itr ~x~ ?::~:din~ paid vacli, profit shiiring. Mesa, Ca. 92628· Systems. 631·2770· 645-4203, Mr. Miller. o.riccf'oc lg;~!!:,inc. cellent bloodlines Ir tem· s.Ml·7038 an. 5:30. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• salary history to P. O. $&25 per mo. start. 'l')'p· MEDICAL ASSIST.. perfect perament. Ph. ~·1238 Howeholcl Goods 8045 Ext" 5vl chn $15135. St')' 1 i I Box 111", Newport ing t.est will be given. Beaul·irul prevenl'•v• SALES Aft,9pm.$100orpickoJ. chrs SS /up sry dkti • Call B d · P l Con Wot'""b1g Sharp•-"•• 11·uer ••••••••••••••••••••••• h' · p· ... , Beach. Ca 92663. (Part· ar ens es · health clinic in Garden rwm•-_.,.... ... _ Waitresses. hostesses, Mac 1ne cvrs. 1erce ti.me applicant to work t.rolforappt.546-5.5?2.691: Grove is seeking a H_.. Gcft . cooks. Full and p~rt AKC Go)den Retriever SHAG CARPET W.19th.tM.645·14lL min 3 daysperweek.will Randolph St.CM warm, oul.loini person f·JPM•4-9PM We have operungs for limo. Top paid benefits. pups. EnglishfAmerican MEW..cteAP Pets 8087 beeonsidered). IRL FRIDAY, Medi· wboif,,qualifiecfforback Earn 14 hr putting your Managers & As.slit.. Apply between 2 ar;s2: champline S3l·10EIS 3rolls, •ntiqUe'"old,.140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Care, Medi·Ca1, or Sick olc wbrk. Xlnt benefits. . to k All ·Mars . Must have pm . Denny's. · · ' sq yds ea. 1 roll htne Clerical: temporary posi· room supplies & rental Cqmpet.iUve starting ~r-::.•lity rroc:OI' · knowledge of women's Ave n id a Plco. s ·an Dacbahund Pup. blk/tan, green. uo sq yds. $3 'per Purebred Ger. Sheps:., 8 l5on in congenial office. bil l ing experience. salary.& interesting~ rr°:ine o~1c Yo:-Um": hi&b fa.ahion clothing &r. Clemente. male . Statidal'd AKC, sq yd.' U·haul ex cndarpet ~!s:w!'~~~· $35, Malet Good telephme.manner. MO·!M06 Mary Ann workers. If .qualified, possess a pieasant clear ·m~agementexper. Call Waitress Ex·per. only. shots. $75./ofr.842-0882 layer will deliver ad lay ~-::::·c:::::::'..::C....---- 545-1131 please call, Mrs. Ellis, voice & a-confident man· tortAteTrvHIEe'!' .!.'!C; Noon to Evening shift.. PURE· BR ED German for $.1.10 per sq yd addl· Pl..01 & O"JClft 8090 CLERK TYPlsr for F'l:re Help Wanted F!lll & 539·8"8 betwn 9am·12 ner. Perfect. for students -.vva Blue Dolphin, 3355 Sh e p h e rd Pup a . .tionaJ. Call (714)493-7799. ~·••••••••••••••••••••• & Casualty Dept . p/ltme, Days, eves & noon&2·5pm. &·housewives. No actual &W-6500 ViaLldo,~ewportBch. Beautiful . Sacrirlce Jewelry , 8070 THOMAS Insurance Age.ncy . C!unn~:r ~~fp .c~;~1t, Medical Secretary for a~· sellini!r In=. For Saleswoman, f /time Wanted Mate 18 or over, sso . 0 81 0 494 -771$ or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ELECT~~GAN. Newport Beach. Ex-.2.4 pm, wkdays, Del live Harbor area _gen I more o., · perm. DahnkenofCo&t.a full or p /time. Apply 4M·51 . WANTED perient'ed. 645-900'7 Taco, 1155 Baker St, prac. ~xper. &qualifica· Phone soliciting &.:,Utetyp-Mesa• 1819 Ne,wport Kentuclcy.f_'rled Chicken, GOLDEN La~rador pups, TOP ~CASIJ' DOL'LIAR TY, Rodlo. .. •COOi(• Costa Mesa. (At tions tn resume to Box ing.ContadRoyWUson. Blvd. 34122Pa~if1cCoastHwy, champ. s1red . $50 .. PAID F .OR YOUR Hlfi,Stt>r-eo 8098 F.'·rv1·ewl :!!!;,., Balboa Island, Ca >49·9129. D Point I 6 •-•-•-•••••••••• Dinner house ex· ~ SALESWOMEN ana · 894·7704a ter •wiu..... JEWELRY. WATCHES,••!"•••••••••• ~~necf~~S~Wa~~ ~~~ Liv:-~~red . Ml'dlcalAslistant Pj:ta'ba!~'ct~~miv!:~~~ }!~ t~~edbe~t.~! -=~we:!~ :~rn·e;.8 s°c!~! G3erM~~ s~:~(!· A:i~t ~rlv~~E~it~J'~: ~au:~s~~r: ~:t~~gn~:: Restaurant. Serid re· Newport Bch. 1 sch age Primarily back o_rfice. s75 wk_+. M.r.. J,.evi Orange co. F1~bl~_!'rs . sunervision exper. re· pedigree & te~pera · FIQUN~URN & AN· corder · ~eiver saO sume to N.L. Burk. 33025 child. P\'t r. 5 days. Refs Hunt Bch physician 848·1004 ---carnece~. Pi!l'IOna~lt)' qu u . -send name, . ad· ment. 642·2203. -.Tl b ... en rr a•t-.ZP::M' Christina. D.P., Ca. f d 6427713 Write Classified Ad -No. & enthusiasm more 1m· dress, age, quelilica-or s. or. "'' 92629. pre erre · · · 465, Ditily Pilot P.O. Box QUALITY CONTROL HI· port ant. tha!" ex per. lions. pay requirements Weimaraner Male to mos hnp~rters Sco ... s l~S5:::7::·~16~1C'.9 _____ _ Cook forl.-...:6al Housekeep_er, t day per 1560. Costa Mesa. Calif. FI SPEAKERS. Ex~r & $600+ df.~W atte; short to Bill Lee, Custom Rae· old. All shots. $Z to good Ge.nwne Bur.ma Jade loati & MmiM ..... .,..... wk. Owo t.ransp. ln· 92626 xlnthearingessential+ qualify101 perlo~. ing Yachts, 3700 B home.642-1375 _ La-.:ender1tf1negrcen. E--'pMent , Apply at. 1501 E. 16th St; terview & refs req"d. some troubleshooting 631-04$' ~9a ~:.~~m. Hilltop Rd. Soquel, Calif. AKC Ch . Dane 3 ~ohshWedllCaba~~ns127. 5 AJI •••:t:'•••·•••••••••••••• Newport Beach, betwn 615-3547 METALMAH knowledge. Salary lo 960-2803eves&:wirJllg. 96013 ampton • s1.ze1 . 1 sac . .,._ G al 90TD 8:30am &3:30PM. Exper'd. 2076 eiacenU3 $UOO. Resume to B.E.S., · ' months. tan w!blk mask. --hi 8071 elttt' -.-.-, •'.o Housekeeper/Babysitter Ave, Costa Mesa or Inc .. 345 Fischer, Cost~ SEAMSTRESSES WHOWANTiiTOWORK? lM,lF.Ci:dl.548-~. tiiitiC nery •••••••••••••••••••••• COOK..F/l'IME Over 18, non-smoker, 642·0632. Mesa. 92626 Needed. Must be ex-DRIVE A CAB! . ••••••••••••••••••••••• r.. AU Around Experience. Mon-Fri. 9·6PM, car re· per • d , 0 n p 0 we r CHOOSE your hours, AKC COCKER. Spaniel USED WOOD & ~ETAL BOY SCOUTS • Sam'sSeafoodlJ quired.494·1000 Mgmt.tme. Route sis co. Real&tateSalM machines & in garment work for yourself, be pups. 106 Manne Ave, WO~KlNG.-Eq~pment need boats. ~ 3901E.Cst.Hwy,CdM Future. Age 23-39. Car, Hilli e McCormack, construction. Apply, Car-your own bo6s . ?tfen or Bal.675-5m for 1mmed1ate disposal. andairpl~.Tax . INSTRUCTORS·Hea~th phone. $160wk. 848-1004. Realtor, has an opening, jo 684 w. l7th c .M. Women. can be slighUy e..-... toy 8045 May be inspected at our advantages. 546-4990 CCHNa&Driwn Club. Great oPJ>Ortwuty 'th floor t.ime Sue ·~·,.,a ..... · • h d ' pp d Neat·""-°" shops. 8 AM·4:30 PM, •Earnext.ra$,p/time:,.ror youngman&young MODEL&·MASSEUSES -~ ··· · . V'15·-u an ica e ·ranee ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mon-Fri . LIDOSH.IP16'CustomDory,wooden. over21.MenEd.sPiua. gal. Knowledge in Figure ?tfodels, estorts, ~e;s:~i:;s:::~L:=~~ SECRETARY ~!:S~.nre~:~~:.,ezst.OB~AUT. Dober-~bpup-YARD,900UdoPar~pr. w~ite tblue, cover, xlnt. ' ~410 E.17CthOS<.OllCSM . ~s1ed9123trs:;o' n~w~nk;•.~oar"yusl~bpceht~ini 63~·,o'• .. ':,~~eN~:C:~d~~ R494.11ssE1t •-I estment ~~~isse~~~fir'! ~:d~ ~~m~PC~~~tc~~; ~;~ p1e:s,6w~S~ MNt.'KB~ICIMOlll 8080 ;~~~~~-a~:·c rart " · · · ea s a'""' nv resp. •ec'y w/good ·'-'"-. or more a day. Apply in POO-POM 4 ~. rem . Fo'berglas. 40 KP, Out- 1 2nd & 3rd 5 Day week 9-5PM Firm developing hi-yield aa.ui:t y ii Cab Co .1••• ••••••••••••••••••,•••• d ' Phone•N-9'5s. · · Motel Maid Wanted. resort area subdivisions. B a c k g r o u n d i n per1on, e ow ·• spayed, gd. w/children. board fully equippe • Full-Time 673-4520 Must expand financial securities, insurance: or 186 E. 16lh St., Costa &41·4475 aft6 WANTED Ex c e 11 e n t tr a i I er. COOICSWANJED IR.VINEPERSQNNEL KirkwoodMotel resources. EXCEP· real est.ate desirable. Mesa . TOP CASH DOLLAR 493-1960$1095. A I lo ~-TIONALO port ·t r Xlnt telephone techni· k . DeU 3 Mo. old female tabby PAID FOR y·ouR pp y ~IC"•ovu SER.VJQS&<AGENCY Nurse p uru y or ues & ability-to assume Woman to wor in kitten needs nice tw>me. ES Kayak·Seat.s, paddles, COlonyKltchen 488 E .lllhSlreet Direcfor person experienced in ~esponsibilit.y. Resumes from !0:30·2:30. Wrk Call (2l3lS9&-7901eves i_~;Ef;:JEJ'it.~~Lri rack . preservers • .. ~. _.:32:::.:1.:1.::"::•::.rbor=..:8::1:..• C::M:::.._1 (al lrvine). Costa Mesa syndication , venture or background details in days. 549"1422 s l L v ER SER V JC E . 642·2112, aft. 6, Doug Ot' .i. COUPLE TOMANAGE31 Suite 224. 642-1470 of Mlr-.es capital, etc. 644·4bl0. full confidence; w /salary Beautiful Jong-hair kit· FINE FURN & AN· Dave . .(Vbnit motel. N.B. area. ! 1~~~~esnk,li:.~t!ii~~ 1£ Receptionist fO!' law . of· r equirements to TMl Merchandise ~:.fs.J~~· l·M, t ·F. TIQUES. 64S.Z!OO -'8~o~al'.:l::,_M_o_l_u_let-.---IC--t-- Must be resp. w /no~:;;:::;;~;;;:;;::;;~ rehab facility in the fice ; someclencal sk11ls. Corp., PO Box 2500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sttvicit 9020 ---childrenorpets.Replyinl• 0 S ta An e NewportCenter!Wl).8510. Newport. Beach, Ca Black male Labrador. Kng Sz. Bed. New, com· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.handwl'it.ing. state R range. an a ar a. 92663 A.ti 8005 Needs large yard & gd ~Jete, still pkgd. Xtra • Qualifications, attat'h re· JAMITQ S Must .b_e motivated RECPT /TYPIST F/l' · · ••••~•~••••••••••••• family . Well trained, Jov· r1rm $190 (worth $425). Scoro10 Merine sume, refs, & photo. Mature individuals capa· tRo.w0•. r,d b'eh~~orn::-~n:~ Nwpt.' Sch. Architec· Sec.retar.y · Shorthand & es kids & pets 646.5355 Qn Sz $170, usually home, Englne-fladios-Elec. ·-Write classified ad no. ble of general office °' tural firm is seek'g. a genoffit'eexpreq.Apply •JOMATHAMS · incldel.83.5·2263. FireSystm<Plmb "J! 551 , c/o Daily Pilot. P.O. cleaning. Supplement well as medic:are pro· conscientious, ~i.sed, in person: Salary open AHTIQUES * F-urniture 8050 . Refrg. rreeest 548·97().1 BoxlSGO,CostaMesa,Ca· your income with 31h cedures. Excel salary, bright & amb1t1ous d e pending on ex · ofrers 8 fine selection.••••••••••••••••••••••• PJANO,ap!Jghtwlbenc~, "'!492626. hours work in Laguna benefits & incentive pro-person. Must wr~. well per i e n c e . Ra 1 o n We buy & sell. 422'31.lil St walnu~ wOod, cof. lb • loal1, Power . 9040 Beach area, S.9PM, Mon· gram. Call 532·.6848. under pressure &: be an Products .. 11462 Von N.B. 673.6001 Sale''of fvrnitwe. Map~e, old tnink, old.oak ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 1X>UPLE, asst. manager; day through Friday. Nurses Aides, exper. Top xlnt. typist.. Contact: Karmen,Irvtne. ACCESSORIES ~us1c desk. 2 ant.1que 16. Allen Boat&. Trailer, ...,.. ·ocean area garden apts. $2 .50 per hour, Call wages. Port Mesa Conv. Geraldine bt.wn. the hrs SECRETARY / OLD R 0 UN D 0 AK T1f~any la.mpg, S.50. old 25H p Evinru.de, com· Xlot oppty. 962-6653, Ed 542·0313 and leave your H 642.0400 of 9-liAM & 2-4PM PART TIME Pedestal Table. $22.5 . ANTIQUES ·White sewing mat h.$?!>. plete, 7. wide. Bait tank. ri·~Thompson name, address & phone osp, · 640·0710 Typing&filing 646·9391,aft . 65.57·602'1 From Mac:W Home Call after 6 PM . 645--7857. $600. or offer. 213431 .7572 •. tustom, Cabinet Malterto1~n~u~m~be~r~. ~~~~~~ NURSES AIDES R.£.SALES 557-4114 30 OAK TABLES. 200 Buil~er of bea11:tiful ex· 1928 Ford Roadster ISVz• Blain Boat. w /G cy l ·-.,.'.work with a Creative!'. Exper'd . Bayview . Pressed Chairs, sets & ·~cutive homes in Hunt· pickup. Concourse cond. . . .. 7 ..J)isplay Design Firm. Janitor, part time, light Manor Conv. Hosp, 20SS Mew Office Secretary. Re~1ona15a:1es s ingles, Hall Trees. 1~gton J:farbour~has s~ld 1913 Studebaker louring. Ena1ne O/D, trad~. ~4:r , "~7780 duties Apply Mr. Scane Thur in Ave, C. M . We've just remodeled & Service Office. Typing China Cabinets, Etc. and final unit t~ now offcnn1o: Clean, unusual, rare car. Motor home + cas 1. ,.,._. Si 642·3.SOS. ouroffice &weoowhave & Shorthand .. Near more. JERRY O'CON · tothepubhc_thef1nede· Akai, video tape w f 549·1885 _ ,, .. DENTAL·ASSJSfANT or Mr. Williams. ·i~er openings for 3 new Orange Co. Airport. NOR ANTIQUES. 1760 c'orat?r rur.ruture at sub· camera & accessories. BEAUT. Ba y Boat & Sk i. ~··Front desk &t chairside,, jf0 ~5NB 45 Fashion Nurses Aides, all shifts. salespeople. Xlnt com· 545·1171. l\lonrov ia C.M. 64 5·9446 st"tm1al disc'?l 1 nkfro7c: 642·9574 . Days,644·2494 . 1 8 ' ch r i s craft. ,_ .. ;r::k~~.iJ.;.cS:..~!YJ1~on s~:e:inHousekeeper ~~~v~r~i:;p~:: ri:~~~ ::!d5~:n split and lots of SECY RECEPT. f 35 YR old ~ecretury desk. ~~st~ 1~~~f ~~me, r~~sl 26 gal fi sh lank & all ac· ~uperspo~t.s ~~;scl~~r~. ~ for one person. St, Costa Mesa. Forinterviewappt. Newport Center · xlnt cond. $165. 675-1 1&1 served basis, for cash. cessories & 2 oscars. $75 . 6~.~· 1 .2~M wkdfs. · Dental Assistant, mature 494·23.'ll. TJ:IE ROM TAYLOR Con!§truction & Real after6pm Everythi019MUltGa! &16·7104. . :: ~~~~Sti~~~-~~· en· 1---L-'l-'-V-E-'--I-...,---Nursing L.Y.M. 6G7~-076UOPI ~~~~ ;::=fits~~~rP~~I~~ Applioncts 80 I 0 P. ~;2e i';t::~delL~~~~n~~· Mceomunbter'y'hc'1•ubrr. '•''1.n3~_£e,aosrt 2 Loa .P s ~ r ~. ~e ~ s1; s '1t1 ~ l'I 3·11 :30&7·3:30fftime. ., Cia·s·11·oed ad no 517, c/o ••••••••••••••••••••••. • H bou Loe ted -f h c l • · AL A.sit l ti 1 .,. 1---::..:..::....:..::.:..;.. ___ I "" 1ngton 3r r. a 553-0424 . o nson. us .. min., ·DENT · P • me Pre pare t.wo mea s . NURSESAIDES R E SAL~S A TT EN Daily Pilot, P. O. Box Whirlpool 14 cf FF rerng near the intersection of cond . S:l,000 or best orr. ' .. : bcha1c1kdreonl~9• d"e'n'l,1311. o'r~~ Light housework. Other All s hifts, exper"d in T. I 0· N L JC.EN s ED· 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca $125, GE bltn dshwshr Paciric Coast Hw y & TREES .,E 640.11680r S.l9·8875 , job or school OK, as not Geriatrics. Park Lido ,. • .;. 92626. $85. GE washer. 11h yrs B d y (ne,t to C"p ---· • ..._..Exp. pref'd 581.·saJO needed during day. $125. Con v . Center, 466 UNLICENSED-GE 1 old. $135. Guar tdel roa wa · 15 Gal. $15 · 24"' Box S75. SkipJ·ack 20', 1''B, many Balboa Penins ula . Flagshi p Rd, N .B. THE RED CARPE.T Service Sta. Attendant . .546·8672. tain Jacks 'Restaurant) 556·8338eves. xtras. Xlnt Cond . Sl1 ri .,Drapery workr oom nds 673·0149. 642·8045. TREATMENT! We.train p/time. 18 or over. App· Tues. Wed. & Thurs. 10 avail Bstofr.8'16-2249 . .. exp be1p. 3Ul5Dl\irport ...:c~=---:-:-::----1 ..::::.::::::.:.------l youtosellbomesw1than ly, Pico .Mobile, 600 Electrolux. Reccntl,Y AM·6PM. 15' Palm tree in box for . --· l ·LOOpDr.CM.545-5346. LIVE-IN, middle age NURSING • accele~aled course t~al AvenidaP1co ,SanClem overhauled. Extra air KINGSIZE BED, mat-sale. You ffiO\'l'. $1~ or 30 O~ENS T/S, FD, r ~· woman full time, for *LV...,'S starta 1m~ed. lf .you'.e . powerbrush,$30.orbesl lress, boxspring & besto{fer.546·310SEve., cord g. fath. Tff'. VI-IF, DRIVEMAITS care of 2 boys & It. hskplJ, " interested tn earning big Service Sta. Atten~ant offer. 536·4830. frame, xtra firm. Value Weekends. etc. Self-cont, L1 \'e abd. ,.iF'/lime. Apply in Person, 623-4715 btwn 10 am-10 3-11 Shift. Join our pro-money from t.he start. wanted. Full & p/tlme. $525 e ll 5215. Also . SI l .000 Oars: 831·9000, ·•.ts90==:...::"::•.;.rbo=r-'Bl=,C.;.M"'---.l..!'.p!!m'.,:. ________ 1 .ressional team~hocare get individualized free Brown'• Shell, 990 E. Wi~I buy some.Re£, Ap· Q ···~7.e bed value IRVIN.E Coast CC ~1 cm · P'.\t &W/E998-0065Gr1f • ..,,,_,,. about our patients &. training in on the job as· Coast Hwy, NB pliances. Running or not, S4~~en s;1· Sl9S. Delivery bersh1p. 2 wooden ofc. hn , ··-ELECTllCIAH LYN'S about. you. Apply Moo sistanceinatopofc.Joc. Also scrap metal .. · se U all h desks.644·7406 · ~~ Good Marineexper. nee. Day shift, (/time. Every thru Fri 9·4, Royale wilh a friendly at-Serv_ice St.a. A~tenda~t. 875·5258. included. su Y omc '66 Sportcrafl. 16 ft , i5HJ• • .... Ca.US45·6916 other wknd orr. Good sal Conv ' Hospital, 1000 w. mosphere. Gall immed : F /time .. Exper ~· Smit· . 541·5593 *LUSK HD MES* w1lh nice trail('r s1:100 or ·" & bene. Apply in person, Warner, Sant.a Ana· Linda 5$81555 ly's Union Service, 2348 Refngerator. 3 yrs old . Original Oil Paintings As· best offf'r. 751·.'ll-1 3 ... , ELECTRONlCS Tech. or Park Superior Health l .!54~6-~64~50~. :_:.::_:_: ___ 1,;;;:;;;;;·~;;;;;;;;;;~ Harbor, Costa Mesa.. $'75. Call 645-9410 art er sorted size's, l\1ennox MCE . ---~..,,Eng·r . TTL Logic, ...... A 6·30pm R . 8 O Ll~ME ~Chris Craft . Chri~<l · .) , Design, Breadboard, care. 1445 .;:xipenor ve, NURSING Service Station Atlen· · · Glasses. ri c-a· rac IM A n;;1 1 Vitrh Sport fi sher. l\l inL 7" tes t , de bug, serv . NB. E .O.E. REUBEN'S dant. exper 'd. Day & Frigidaire side by side from 1()<: to $50. 536-2335. SALE contl. 67:1· 1933. ....:,_'960-3855 Maid. p /t. Refs req'd. •AIDES Eves . Full&p/time.Ap· refrig. Xlnl cond. ?tJust For sale : 6. sofa bed .... ol model and apart· • ~ ---- 96 So r-1 Jo'on a team who cares LOIJIMOtill ply5hell Station, 17th & se ll . $150. See all ed ood d m ent furniture. Sl':I': 28' TROJAN Sips "· J.SCIOW~ER Village lnn, t · ._ about patients & about. Irvine, NB 4P?t1 .644·105S. • Brown twe '~ r co~ · OUR DI SPLAY AD Wed· gollcy. head. Mint •ond. ' pporti.ullty in una Hwy,Lag.Bc bow HasOpeningsFor: S75. 13171 Maitnoia .t., nesday.Septembert7th. Best offer, &10·1168 u1· you. Learn you can Service station attendant. Auction 8015 Garden Grove, between 5 c .9_ .. 15 Be a ch . H be Maids. Small exclusive be paid extra for staying .,.. oo 1qualifled t'o'"'bead dept... Motel needs maids. well . We have our own HICiHTIUSIOYS over.S.O. Apply in person.••••••••••••••••••••••• &9pm Norilake china serv. !°). witb desire to be in· Hours t'an be arranged coffee shop & other Harbor&WilsonTexaco. **I BUY** Lazy Bo y Recliner w/360 $15. New Arvin ba/rm 1954 is· Lyman Bay Boat, ~-dependent 6 a1sume Weekda-.494.'3521. benefit•. E•per'd-all ApplylnPerson heater, $10 . Mahoa. 60HPMakeoffcr. ( _, .......i..... ,.. u-nthru~•·""PM SHARPWEEKEND Good used furniture &c deg. swivel. Brown leather top step tables 615·6110&613·2662 ' reaponsibility "" U"<'....._ shifts. Apply Mon thru """" rl· ~., GIRL ·u Seil 1 th L'k M st ..... one'aownbos:s .. Pan$800 MAID WANTED 3f.001AvedeLaCarlota appliances, or l wt ea er. 1 e new. u. $10 eac h . Carpets & . •• 111 15, • el Fri 9am·4pm •. Royale torYacht.Sales~c. forYou. beseentoapprec. Reas. ads· 10,4, .• 11.6 ,,. Zodiac Mar... '.l in· _ per month+ ~olpro-Don! QWxote~ot M Conv. Kospi~, 1030 W. Laguna Hills Lido Village Manna MASTEISAUCTIOH for sale, must purchase :'xll'·, $2S each. Good flatable. 25hp Joh'.1son. -.>..~l!!~.~~:f~t.$~;~0b::~ 2 OO~aeU'l:r~C ~~·Santa_ Ana. Equa10pporEmployer 875-8111 646•8686 &lll-t625 orthopedic chair. Cost door mirror $3, Daven· 20hrs.$11.50.64-1·52R6 •monthforpa.5t8months. KM 1 d WPM I lo IOZO .~~~ill sell for $120. bed(% size), yellow-'31 Chris Craft.. $10,000 .j.-C&DCa.rolatNolanReal MAID WOR. ote · OFCCAStlR hortban ,80 •gen I eye I -·_..,:.z. brown rose. pat., SSO. value. ~take o ffer.' Eatat.e Jae "$49-()316 or Neat, energetic. Laguna Full-Umeonly.Age20+. ' office exp. Apply in ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sol• & toveseat . Clothe&, size 8-10 IJ ~·086l . ~ '"-Gt-9f13 ., . Bch. Re&Ort. 6 d~ wk. Seriousapplic.ts. •RN p e r aoa.. 17462 Von &d of S.1wmr Beautiful very gd qua11· jewelry. 646-Zl93 c:::::::::::::_ ____ _ . .: 494·1196 Good pay 51..0cations Dt-......t. _.. Karmen.lrvioe. CL1•••~1 1 r'used movina loah, Rtnt .,.. GmA"mil_, 1 ..;::.:.=.:....-----~1 · w.troC.Wmh ...uGl'crr H 51111~""-n ~2-~v2e • · Wat.er Softner, Bruner, Chart•r 9050 D ·ay mi.ssi paid MAHAGIMEHTTRME Mwwl*JSerYlH u se av1n~5 o · fully automatic. Ex-••••••••••••••••••••••• :1" Al co~20aon , Young man to wcrk lnt _ _;2950:=:::.:;K::•::rbor=-'8'.:l,_,C.:;::M::·--i Exper'd in Geriatrics. B\~ycles &. /\cces&Orib.k es. adroom Set, Mahogany. cellent. Asking $1SO. 0£. Coronado 23 at Dan<i. , arowia.g tool rent.al bust·'· OFFICEHELiP re h ab 11 i l • t. ion & Will t.a kt any di e or •ood cond 1M ctle.'\t. of fer. 493-6747. . Point for $20-$25 a day n .. ' .Muatbenettlnan. Medicare In a 11kl lled Toptaceyourmeua.ge a~thlnllnontra e. "' · 13·, C 11 d 1833 ,_. r Dependable, m•ture 1 Ill y before the VCL WORKS L'l'O. d r B 14' er s, , • w·ill sell •-uba G~ar or Call aya al 714 -.uua •• ~ ~. ,,, MOTICE r • bow Dall1 POot Class· i.. itiecl' ad1 display lhl\ir -· mcuttet wlt.b letfbWty L.. a.nd Un pact? Our adl. we ar<proud to A)', really T.O 1tt rt1u.lta. Phone -IMU8J8· - I• naarance &c have v•-N --• d nutt:tn.g ac ty. e.tY 613 0620 lt6PM ~ ~;81 handwriting. 6 D.Y woman. on•sn-er. g good benellll. Medical, reading public. J822NewportBlvd, E · a · trade for motorcycle lellh.,. Sail 9060 wk. Prefer married man typing skillt. Part time. life' &r. income disability phone Cost.a Mesa. 548·.5783 d h b 11' G l tra.iler. 536-9633 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·bl 5'8·"61. ' 1 p k Lid Daily Pilot Don't rop t e a . e a • for perm. reaponsi e nsurance. ar 0 Schwinn-Brce:ie 3·Spd job with a low-cost Dai ly 1974-0 PENNIES. M'1NT Col . 26. M Ii} I · Fu I I po11tlon. Exper. not re-Pa.lnter'n"alnte conv . Center. ••• Claoified,6°'$818 &irl '1 bike. $40. Call Pilot Cla astried Ad . SEWN BAGS. $90 EA. rat'e/cru1.!le. p,500. Pvto quired. Apply 9•noon. for SigziStudlo. '1agsblp Rd. NB. Phone 5'5-8191 Phone 6'2·5678. OR OFFER. 67S.988R , part.)'. 646-6706. ll30Newport Blvd, CM 645-1'nlD tor appt., 642-5881. I ' , " • - •11 DAILY ,ILOT Tuesday, S•p1•1nbet 1e. 197! ........ Wanted 95"0 ........ t.porW ......... h tecf ....... ~.~~ ••••••••••••••••••• ~~ .............. ~-~~·····-···· t......_ s.u · '°'o ~·· s• tro11.,. •• ' Trcrve1 9110 ···:;;--·;;:~~ i:c;~;· ;..:..::-··-·--;no ~rC:'''"'' 1sijlircir----.-.n,rtj41:_1o!!1~~==::!!?.•'IM'"•Y------t!~h.-- ····-·················· ...... 9120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~R ~OP USED CARS ..... '!::' ••••• .-................ ~·········; •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ::;·c·······,--, d···:· Co111ar XJl.1. PUii • FUPPER 902. Gd. Cohd, • .-••••••••• -.-·-•••••••-• 31' Mt>BIL! Scout. runy FORElON, OOMESl'J.C WJLL BUY YOUR "1 DEALER IN U.S.A. ·10 'BUICK RJVlE'RA . -1•rN••0 i:_._.: r. "'"" .-io, air new.~ brb1 ll.$115 or b1"l offer. 67$-3284 10' F.I Dorado Cllmpt'r. se.lf~ont'd . Many e:rttaa. orCLASSlCS DATSUN, TOYOTA. IAV Low miles. 1oUl wllh palnl p' .• l!-r 1 m 0 • AiitJ''ii f*W-P,315. alt.I. any orrer over St21~ Se_, to • pprecl ate. If your ear llmra~ OR VOL.KSWAQ.BN Im cARvll blade vinyl top. mac .. ~.-.T•tz. IK2'""7S, •• 1 ~9-1885 S48·?198orMS·3'75 seeU¥fir1"l. PAJDFOR. leall\er Interior, powe-r , ~ vertJbae.. 72 Hobie 18 wttraUer, Mot°!!lclH 1973 ideal tr<&\'cl traUer, IAUERIUICK OR NOT. IOUS-IOYCE wln6ows •extra dean! 'M Otevy M.al.ibu.. 4-dr. dl:tfertaJYcon XJ.ntCon~ Sc _ 'llSO sclrcont•lned,likencw. 292SllarborBtvd.. TOPDOU..AR ~.':J!i:. $2115 . (10tAQE>.1C~N~da~w~·°'*~·~lill~IO!-~All~er~~.:U;io~"';;IUld;::-'::=llb:=~ .. ,~--~; ---....:=='---! ..... .,,........ ....... <l<Mlto Mtt f19;2500 CALL----~~·-.-.-...-.. .--· JobntOa. le~ Iincoln· amlwkndr.tc.-SS.-.Jll!'lllCll-••••••••••-•••·•·•• .. ••·1~-=-=:=-:::::::..-----ll-"-"'-'---''---~--I SAL BERNADENE ' lA'·-f'or~S'\le 311' S.llbo•I & BULTACO '73 p ' -QOllOMMDATJ lhrcun, 262' Harbor c.-....... 9930 '191% mooring, 5.5 meter Nwpt ~ 1 .• ursang TrCtilen, UHlity 9180 TOP DOLL.Al Blvd.,C,M.M0-50). ••••••••• ....... ,,, •• ., Harbor. S.00.-B.b 3J0, x nt con .... xtras ••••••••••••••••••••••• e.1..&-"' 9761 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $700 fl 508-1343 PAID '74 260Z. Auto, air,·-· c~··-'1915 '74 J.1eyer. 714·644·2442 o(c. • rm. MOTORCYCLt;/Util AM /FM r<1dio' lo ml.••••••••••-"••••••-• --1971 lfark JV, xlnt cand. 7U·546·3170<homc) '41 Harley· Da vidson Trlr llom\:mllde llatbed IMMIDIATB.Y Xlnt cond $5900/bat. ~YCLUSJVE ' ~73,.•C•P•:•d•e•V••lU•e••.•.•;:/f•: OTT~i!;lOOorw,!.er.;_S519$, MU~_!~ll Knucklehead Good f"ord truck trlr. 5x6'. FOIALL &U-3298 ~ ~ -_,_,., ..,...,.. CATALINA Z1 less lhun 2 cond. $2000.6'6-7'uu. Heudy for the ro0&d. New FOREI~~ .< •• 5 1..:=-==·-------I _1 radio. ,pis. air, lo mi. .... CON Vinyl roof viD.11lnterior, yrs. old, Uk.e new cond . -t 1 res & paint. Vtiry w"\Jt.K •73 24oz. mai-, AM /FM, A.:...-ge~Counfy Xl n t cond, $5.000. ·~~NLJ:~f t," .. , doo; .buck~ st;its. factory air 1/B Atomic 4. •r all nj.t '73Su1.uki 400. Not brok en sturdily blt.$275 rirm. CALL OR COME IN air, 4 apd. Gd.' cond. vrun S&l·l.351. ted•n. Elegai.nt yellow conditio~n.c. aulclnaUe mast, Genou & S1.11n · u1 yet. 2.000 m1. lk11t Of. 75 1·9:>-tU TO SEE US 673·3659 ~ ,88 Cad Coav. $!50. Runs · Uld with dlirll: brown transm1ssioo, Dower naker rigging. VI-IF-ft:r . Call Bob,494·98!fl. Aut S . & · ~ good. . vinyl top & saddle steering, _radl•1 ttrn • .t'M , etc. F\11\y loaded ---~ o er•1ce '73 240Z. Red. 27M, Tape111. . _... , ....... of Xlnl Cadillac trade·hl. w /cxtra.!L S;.\C RIFI C f<~ '71 llONDA 175C't" great Par1J 9400 stick, mass, x.lntcoDd.. 9 75141'3 leather 10t11a·1or . ......,.... · $13 800. Call: &&5-4222 or ga.lt saver. dcix:ndlolblc ••••••••••••••••••••••• $ 54900 499-4095 . extras included: AM-FM. t4!t6.INX). 6'l6:78ti6 transportation. dirt bike, Al-I 3000 Part.Ii cn" trans. ac. · · ~otl • '68 CADILLAC SEDAN stereo, cruise control, Onl $1195 ---------·I runs xlnt. S225 firm . Hear end ull µurt.s . Pvt '1 1 240Z, am/fm, mags, De VILLE. Powder bl~, etc. Only $3175. (888039).lr--~--::--::=-\ 1·36. 4 sails, Vllf<' rathu 751 -~.>19 pty .Cutls47.5~. radials. xlnt co nd. AllTHORtllD avt!:rywe1lkeptcarw1lh Johnton &: Son Uncoln· ... ~ f:e- RDF auto pilot. St:;.i -JJQOlllCust"'--lll $36:i0./offer.556-7072 ~•s..-.a all tbe extras such u ·Mercury. 2628 Harbor i Y«'I Wind.642-6607 J075»137. llONUA XH75 . M""" .'x-,.. ·~1-· DAVE ROSS power ,wlndowl. crul>e Bl•d,,C.M.540-5630. -llwltll --'-'="-'-"'-==---tras S350 Su?uk1W Grt ~utoJforSale • 642·~.P~. 1 '74 2:60Z. A/C, AM/FM, PONllAc..snrTZ control, etc. A c:.-i-... 111• Sailor/Salet1 m1tn w/cxpr. trail l11kl'. Make offer. •••••••••••••••••••••••i----------1 mags, lomi. _. SACRIFICE AT ONLY C ett. 9932 Strt Comm. good traffJ(• 1':ves_s.i_o_'-_SS_1_s_. ____ , •~q•e• 67S·2145eve. 2410 H.ttorlff-. $995. <RSK.876). Joh.nsoa on BoatPluc~7 1~·&1:'>·ll4~_ -"""' Ora1t9•Cot.Mty'5 1----------·r &: Son Lincoln-Mercury, •••••••••••-"'"••••• 72 ,\J a1co400. cornp. Clallics 9520 Highest $Buyer '66 Datsun Niswn, 4x4,1----------I 2626 1-farbor Blvd., C.&iL •TOP CASH? . 22. r1·be •I .. •• loo 12 1 bl 1 .. ..,ti\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• I ~ h d 7 5 For Co -tes --• oth-r,.. u.:..;::. P re t.xra!>,....,.,., on111pon1 Xlnt mac. con ·Toyota ·96 540.5630, rv ... ~ 01uu .... 1'"\Jlly equippe<lXlnt sail:. _ .. P~rfcrt . 5:,i6 I~~-'64 Lincoln Convt:rt1ble B'U M T ot Sacrifice Sl:JXJ. firm. 930 ••••••••••••••••••••••• u1ed cars &:: tru.cks ! . Best offer. 64t»OOOO Huns well, luok.lt ~ood 1 oxey oy4 0 Bluebird Canyon Rd. '66,Coupe de Ville. Fully HOWARD Cbevrol~t. mobll•' 9955 -----------1400 Tl\1 Suzuki 1.hrt hike sooo 64ti-89CKI Ca.II Roger or hill 497.1478. 'J51'-z equipt. Xlntcond. Priced Dove & Quail Sts. Near •••••••••••••-.. -•••• loot.. Slip• Docks ·rwot1mcs 1nd1rt S650or 1 ___ _'.84~7-<ISSS~~'.....--j-'C.:..:.:.;..:;______ "/~ tosell.644·4644. J b B · tol & ~__., offer. Call &12·4514 Recre otional I· a m oree, ris ' Sales andoXTY•m • '070 -------Vehicle1 '530 FREE APPIAISAL Rat 9725 JOyOtas '72 Sedan De Ville, MacArthur, Newport OLDSMOllLE " YA;"it ,\llr\JOO{o.LX ••••••••••••••••••••••• We I.Ju)' used cars & ••••••••••••••••••••••• e legant blk feather B~ch.8J3·05SS GMCTRUCKS -:.·············:··~····· Hl-~1\LLYNICl!: truck s . Call GROTH ~u"iW..-a Here w/vinyltop,whltebody, PROF.BUILTALL'72 HOMDACAIS 2SJ-,1:4s5~A~A~~·1S~l1-~'R Asking $<11!5_. __ S.16·46.S:I * * Rent** CllEVROLET for a f ~~. full power, air, FM Custom Vette, one of a U I _ .... ~ 29' Overland l\.1tr I-Im appraisal. NO.W stereo-cassette. $3.~. tlrfd styling, f\111 pwr inc n 'f'ST••r v.u. YACHTS 675· 1393 'ti9 I lud<ika w /'74 Comb:.il Loadt>d, Jo rale!S. 538·0.>17 GltO'fli CllEVROLET ...-.AftAl:l,4ITlllS PP. 673·7635 AIC+windoWs, new red 2850 Harbor Blvd. ·d L' \Vomb:.il t:ng. Good cond .. Pvt. Pty . 18211 Beach Blvd. ~ ... AWA Come fn exllblk in• 350 cu in/4 Costa Mesa 540-964(), ~ntsleep ors1 ct1e ... or 32mm l'umµcr l'arh. ~---------1 }luntingtonBeach '"~'"'"'~ • '72 Fleetwood Broughm, ... €al 25 sail bout. ·l9'J·4200· \V /rcl'd val\'e. Vcry SACR!f<~ICE 847·6067 /549-3331 Factor)' Aulbofiz.ed Test Drive Top-of -the-line. Split $r'OOo.~~!;~ app. •73 :64;-'-2_·8064_:-·-::--~~::::;---::;;::-l--''~'""-k:'k'.:_'· S.150. 4!1J.27!'15. WINN EBA GO '72 Chief· ~es• SerVJce T~..u front lea th. ae11U. Xlnt 1..::=~=:o:==='-----f OLDSMOllLI Newport Beach. 28' s!ip .. 73 K i\\Vt\ !OOCC. Lo mi , t:11n 22 ',$11 ,500. lik e new, SELLING YOUR CAR? •Parts• Leasint '-AftlJ cond., for R.E.1 Co. car, '6S CLASSIC stingray 4 98 Sll>AH w /dock .. S75 pe.r mo. Lall 5360. Call alt 5 pin. r ust. int. :.ill xtras, :.i./c, TOP PRICES PAID Buy new radial 40,000 mi spd, 2 Lops, new tires & Sierra tan with wood fordetatls546·6299. 645.4813. 11,000 m i. l'vt . Ply. Forlmports Goodyea.rtlrcs.Priced.t.o Mags.XlnLcond.Justa grain vinyl top Ii: 53 1·3374orti45-1554 PaidforocNot FIAT or sell .546·T325 beauty! MustselL$2,300 matching interior, full loah, Speed& Ski 9080 ·10 l\loto Gu z1.1. 7000 mi's. Wlndslueld. saddle bags, ••••••••••••••••••••••• hat box. l'riccd.to sell. 14' fish or ski . 45 hp J\1crc :J46.73za. D L • I~ orofr.S.1·913C Dunebuggy w/trailcr. 110 e on ew1s s. lease Comaro 9917 power-,factoryaircondi· Corva1r. Steerin~ 1966Jl:irbor, .1\1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '63 Stingray. Absolutely l ioning. tilt wheel. brakes. Hydrauli'c 646·9:Xl3 UOW.Wamer f\ l 111,,;1 1ocamar,04spdV8,l perf.2Tops.26,000mi's AM /FMstereo,etc.Ex., c lut ch. Very clcan.1----------j atSo. llain .mft, ULIW ownr. Gd. cond. $2,150 on new eng. New tires. ceptionally clean! 1969Bult..ico·SherpaSJ25 645-3069 WEPAY 1,SantaAllll 55'T·Z132 533-0341or645-6763PM. SJOOOor ·bestofr.960·3969 (197GRPJ. & trailer, skis. v<:!>lS. cxt· 1----------1 Jngu1sher, anehor & equip. 968·9J.11 67~1 4Whe•IDrive• 9550 SH 9730 TOYOTA '70Z28,4spd.35Qengine. afl6. OnlyS1095 ------i•••••••••••••••••••"'' CA Jaguar New conditioo. 497-2228 D...L.• 9935 ~·~-rs· ~1 ....................... _.,...-..._..., Tronlportotion . '72 SUZUKI. 750CC, red. 'i2 BL1\ZElt 350. 4 sp. FOR USED CARS ,72 XJS. Dark Brn. Xlnt 1_966 ffo'fbor . CM ~-9303 or days 494·5333. ••••~••••••••••••••~•••2"° ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5500 m1 inclds 5400 of :tc · P B, P.S., air. whls, roll · PHILLIPS cond. Orig own. Lo mi. . . '6S Dodge. Automatic 6 .._ .... Aircraft 91 I 0 cess. si.is. l.>Ji : 559-54'10 or bar. cust. trim. 2 Lops , $6,950. 546.07911642.2003. '69 Corona Cpe. Auto. Air· iO Camaro SS 396. 4 spd,, cyl excellent transpora·c.t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• !!J9.2027 immac. 54,.5·3766. BUICK-PONT IAC -OPEL new tires, bat~ery. $1395. A/C. P /S. P /B, clean. Lio~: $299. 848-8340 Olr. · Hot air balloon seminar. ---24888 Alicia Parkway CLASSIC COUPE 642·087 1 $1950. 645·5089<home) or 1974 Olds. CUtlass 4 dr., 9 introduce to the sport: ·7 1 YA~1;\Jf A360 Enduro. Lag..ina llills 837·2400 XKEVl2 ,67 Toyota Cordna. Gd 644·1860 <Office) '74 Dart. 2 dr Swinger passenger Vista Cruizcr Sept24 .25.2700.61zo ~tint cond. Sl.65-0 mi. Truclc1 9560 673.1933 d F al tr d C Z28 4 pd Hdtp. Only 8000 mi, sml wagon. Auto. trans., ait' -=="-'-'--'------I !\1usl see to appreciate ••••••••••••••••••••••• Au To s w A NT ED con ' or 5 e or a e. 1974 a!llaro, s ' VS mlr, PS. PB, radio, cond. stereo Cruizecon • . · . , 7 3 E L . · M d 9738 842·9009. mag tires, $1700 dwn, h f -· I I • • . Campers, Sale/ ·963 44,12 evenings. C A M I N 0 , anything runrung or not' m o . TOP, 631.3862art. :>l'M. lr, ac. air, viny op. trot. 12,000 mi. $4200. Rl'nt 9120 Back to college. Must sac. automatic, ructory uir, S25. sso. $100. Fast serv. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Volk1wogen 9770 Pvt. pty must sell. $3500. '99·3472. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cherry J-Ionda 'CRl 25 vinyl roof. power steer· & green Cash! 892·5017 & '73 MAZDA ••••••••••••••••••••••• 73 Cam arq, lo mi, very 645-0817. Pinto 9957 Amerigo Jl'. Self con· El s inore. All tri ck ing & brakes, low miles, 892-7047 RX·2C~ '73YW clean. $3,7951 Call aft. Ford 9940 •••••P••••••••••••••••a. tained. Jacks. bounce goodies. SuperTast. Best $3l54 <03621 R) Origirial fini sh s11ver, Low miles, fully factory 6PM.675·4944 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 R un abo ut. Ne w aways, tie downs. $2.200. ofr. 979·8603 aft6Pr-.1. Theodore Robins Autos, Imported stereo, air conditioning, equi p ped. $2 1 5 4 Ch ole+ 9920 '71 FORD Galaxie 2 door, brakes, radials, below 675·53.59. FORD ••••••••••••••••••••••• &SHARP! (615.JPX) (#NT2659A) e•r AutQ., air, power steer· book. 833-4870 d ays, Motor Homes, r=-~ l-ldrbor B 642 h1d:.v., 10 • __ ,., _ 30 DAY 1000/o Theo~ Robim ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ing & brakes, low miles. 673-1690 eves. -Overhead camper for Sale Rent --9·1·60 L.o: lil iu a ·vv ""'"' 970-7 SY M -• t k ·1h boot os a es . •••••••••••••.•••••••••• MechanfcalWsr..tv FORD CONNELL $1954 (452 0 ) a ...... a rue w1 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Theod Robi '74 Run-about Elnt cond. ice box. 962·0084 •74 Toyota PU '73 AUDI 4 dr. sunroof, 2060Harbol"Blvd. ore M __________ ,see the u :'S.1\. the RV osta Mesa 642.0010 FORD Dix int /ext . Sunroor Camper Perris Valley, wa y. B&D Motor Home Short tied, ma"gs & wide stick, gd. cond. $2.450. CHEVROLET d Vinyl top, 4·spd. Eves. R l I 64"9Sll lires.radio,4sp,J6Mmi. Wknd : 557-5441, wkdy : '?•Superllcctle, 2060HarborB6421v _.0010 640_4",. fits mosl compact pick-. en as. .,. !\.lint ! 752.1591 213-926·5541 Costa Mesa ---~-------- ups, gd cond. $250 firm . Executive 1910 25' Xlnt Xlnt5~~j~· SALES &SERVICE '72 Runabout 2000, 4 spd, ~ 846·1961 cond 64 , m 2 a1n 50 y extras. P\·t 73 DATSUM P.U. ~~~~L0~·tto:: XJnt cnnd, ,.~~~64.115•7d.00 2828 Hmi»or ll•d. 6 '7RS ... ~~A air."Tadio, $1675. Pri ply. '11 van camper equipt ply.· 2· · 4Spced,$2454l9325) Call5J0.4l04. ----61VW,xlntrunning,reblt COSTAMESA ""~ 846·7235 td1wht curtns, ~pare Sale-Exec .. 73.~'. Only Theodore Robins. Mercedes 1rra 9740 eng., tape. 4 spkrs. SSOO. 546• I 200 Loaded! Only 12, 786l-'-'--'------- blnt. 640·6538558·8860 12.000 mi. Xlnt cond. Pvt FORD ••••••••••••••••••••••• 536·6889 art. 5 miles. like new. $4954 '72 PIMT0--1--2060 Ha'bo' Blvd. Au.tin·H••ey 9709 C NOVA vi 1 (•P2098Al COUHTRYSQUIRE 1974 6' Camper Shell for pty.963-7367 6420010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Le.. WANTS> '73 HEVY • ny TheodoreRobins STATIONWAGOH • .,&ourierJ Datsun, etc Costar.1esa . '67 3,000MK . Lo mi. Mint uew·Used Used '70 VW 's or older. top, automatic, power FORD peed . &be ff I' .'S250. 673 -6.581 Want ad results 642-5678 '74 · Cu r 1 er: 11,500 m1 . cond. r.1 ust sell. Bst ofr. " Call 631·2Z11 dealer. steering & brakes. air· .....,.,. Har•--Blvd.-4 s ' air, au 1 u • OVER I 00 t?_'i."4 <P2008A) ,....,.,. UU1 Don't miss this one ... ! ·sn -~ --~ ----Ill Radio. htr, 40spd. short 675·8617 /644·8722. ,-Theodore Robins Costa Mesa 642-0010 (614FYE> .,... LWZAU - -SWZWK b ed . Im mac. $2900. MERCEDES '71 VW Sqbck. Rblt eng, su- 83 7 '60 Austin Healey "Bug. ou DI"~ •y FORD F d c try Sq -r~ 1 -· :'":"" 492· 1 , ed" .1 XI 1 d " ~-Auto, AC, radio. $1795. d 73 or oun wre .,,.. . ey sprt e. n ~con ., H of. rt Pvt t 5521938 2060Harbor Blv . Wagon, loaded, 26,500 gd runne r, gd. body, in· ou1e 1llPOI I ·P y. · · Costa Mesa 642-0010 u II terior . A classic & hard AUTHOIUZtD miles , 1 owner, wi sc ..... ·~ .. mira cle m a zda A CONVtNlfHT SHOPf>INC ANO SEWIHC CUIOl fOll: THE CAL ON THE CO. ': Great Ensembllng! ;' I ' . ': •• . ' " ' '· • Coty up 011 told <bys or niRtits with this afgllln. Ma~t the f1mity happy! Com· b1nt 3 bri111tt colors lor \!tis fringed btautyl Dog-bon1 molll Is all easy nb double crochet ot knittin11 worsted. P1ttern J_ • .df" ~ • 7123; directimis. :j, ...., 111-....i-111'-""T..... $1.00 for e&eh p1ttem. Add ,. 25t •Ith p11tern for lirst<lass d · mall ind llandlin11. Send t•: Marftlout 'fOUl'ld IOWfl Of ......... ; • 1tl\lll bound-tum tunic with t' • ,...,..111 , .. .., pr1nb OI' wur sftirti:oat~r111 ..,,.. 1 • om Plllb. tool Plffect for cot· a. 10. ON car.. .., • ton clted1, knit1. -,.., -IMl I ~ rttnttd htt1111 9178: Miut1' ... • ....._. • Sia. •• 19l,12, 14, 16, 11. Silt. =... ....... Zip.,.._ ~ lZ Mil""" Jlllllwil 3'1' Jell. • ' IC>«* flbflc. MOM thin "" before! 200 1 s.d $1.00 tor ucti P11t1111, dtslPI• phn 3 frtt Pffll1td ht· ""*' 254 fof etcfl pttlwn IOI' s(dt f'flW 1976.NEttllE'CRAfT : ff fl~.~ mill Ind Mndllns. CATALOG! Ku Ml')'thil'i(. 75c . ... I ... Cf9ditt wtli s.-ts _$ 1.00 t ........... CIMMt •• .,...... __$1.00 d< ':Oil:!*'... =-~~· 1::: ' ...... 1t.. .... Siw + .... '"' 1.2S t Y_... MT 11111. Prt.t t=:-r=....-: ::: If ........ .-1. •. -"9i1JI• Cncht htl • 1.00 J ... ....._ __ .... ill_.. l' ll.1M ~ .... tit pt• 11.-t-....... I.tie ~ ..... '"'' ..., ... "" 111.U.t llo"'7 ..... 1.IO E ,......,. '"*' """"" Ifft.._ to _.., .... Inf .. "' ~" .. , ........... 1'.111 y ~_!I,_"'"'·. 12"111A1"'1otlll -.IO< ~ r1.11,w 1.21 """ " .... 11 _.,, .-· .., , .......... Wtt ... 12 -•• • ..... r.-. =-1M , 11 Nita fir T_, ft -IG1 - -I.It lloli.JI llJl!fl.l!n I ' .. 2150 Hari>or ll•d. Costa Mna 645-5700 Yon• 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '69 Dodge, long bod)', cpt'd, paneled, new cng, $1,100. 675-4059 . '6.'i FORD Window van, new paint, 6 cyl, auto. Gd. cond . $910. 675-5810 to find . Gd MPG . MERCEDES DEALER '7:MSu1&~ ~~e~n~e!1.,,:. '72 CHEVELLE or trade equity for older Removable hardtop and "'""2 Manchester, t.J fi xer upper VW Bug. oou tires, lo mi. Xlnt cond. STATIONWAGOn 675-6200or67S.3Cll8. ragtop. Side curtains. Buena Park Moving must sell. $3500. Power steering, air, xlntl...:;.;..=:.:.:::..::c:.==--·I Sl ,200 CASH. Call before 523·7250 548-4197 PP. condition. 52454 (•P2125) '62 Falcon Ranchero, new 2150 ..... lh'cl. 6:30 PM, 892·2970. On the Santa Ana Fwy. Theodore Robins. motor, radiator &: fuel Con Mesa 645-5700 BMW 9712 73 M eel ·~.= m~.us~~1ar co~ FORD ~~t':~~a:s~"~ te~~~d Plymouth 9960 ere es of£er. 642·4118 2060 Harbor Blvd. tires. 19 mpg. Asking ••••••••••••••••••••••• SLC Costa Mesa 642·0010 $825. 968·<1971aft6pm. ' 12 B u g , x l n t c on d , l::'.'-::-:---::--:--:---;---1-=:::.::=..:.::;.:::;.:==-,.,.1 c e AM /FM I 8 track, 4 nu 74 Monte Carlo Lru:id~u Imperial 9942 ~ . . tires,$2150.892·1236 Blac k, fully equip t . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ch'Zlller PIY-"' Fully eqwpped 1n 1kon 17.000 mi. $4500 or best •61 Ch 1 Cro l , &in. 'W gold with full mahogany-VW E ngine IJepair, serv-offer. 536·4635aft. 6 . 1ry~ e!'g.nal W:wn~· POpeM n aily & n. Y.. JO leather interior. & less ing CDM Area. Honest & pena · r:i 1 • • • than 14,000 miles ! Reasonable.644.Ql66. '74 Impala 4 Dr. Sedan. 42,000 ~1. Like new. 2929HarborBlvd., (•PM8397) Auto, fac air, PS, Vinyl Cond . immacula t e. CoslaMesa Yol•o 9772 roof. lo mi. Xlnl, clean 11300. 832-02l9-546· 1934 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. $3100. 963-3966. an 61;M~o~•~en~· c~k~=-'---.9~9~4~7~---~~~~~!._ __ ORAMGE COUMTY pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Cricket. Nu trans, wll" ATLAS SADDLEBACK BMW 1970 Harbor, C.M. EXCLUSIVELY & SLEMONS MERCEOES : VOLVO · '73 CHEVROLET IM· '73 MAVERICK w/ Lux:· pump &. batter y. EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO PALA WAGON. Power ury Decor! Au\omatic, 2SMPG .$9S0.545-l287 . 631-1276 . . ~~-,. .. '71 DODGE Van, many %l4l2 ........... fboY. extras. xlnt. running • ...._....,.._ , _,o_n_d_. ~S2_.soo_._64_2_-•_1_SJ __ 1 u1~1... ,. • 4tMttt ,. U..A..y,,..waybl O,..Str • ..,. '72 DODGE MAXl·YAH 1972 300SEL 4.5 litre. grey, 1 owner. Please call Mr. Selby837-4911 or after6 581·8916 Largest Volvo Dealer steering, factory air con· factory air, power steer· Pontiac. 9965' inOrangeCounty~ ditioning, an excellent ln.g, vinyl r oof, low••••••••••••••••••••••"! BUY or LEASE wagon for a~I your r.~mily miles! $2854 (Pl995.A) '73 Grand Prix, air, pwr, 12 Pauenger Royal V -8, a u tomatic transmission, factorY air co nditioning, power steering. power brakes. heavy dut)' tires, radio, etc. Less than 28.000 miles.on this hard to find C ad illac trade -in . (643EIE >. SALE PRfCED 72 Ford Super Van . $3700. Ca II art 6, 6'\2·2712 J\sk ror Dou~. 1--- '7 1 Ford Van. ~~ Ton. t\uto fPS. Xlnt cond. S2600 fofr 848·8483. ORAMGE COUMTY'S OLDEST & Sales·Service-Leasing Roy Carver, Inc.. Rolls ltoyce Bro.tW 234 E. 17lh SL Costa l\.1esa 546-4444 CREVIER DIRECT needs! Carnes our Gold Theodore Robins new rad. tires. Topcond., ~-""~'11\1 Crest Warranty''. $2875. FORD Stereo. $3,550.673·4618. Su~~~$S~ :,~-~1 l'i•i ~ ej t·~~~;~:r!i~ :2~~ Cos~~s~rbor B~:O<llO Grand Prix 72, triple blk, ----'-------; 2025 S. Manchest M0-5630 . •71 MAVERICK deluxe cloth int. Load~. '72 220 SEDAM 73 Mercedes Benz Sedan, er all power, AM/ FM, lilt, Perf. co nd. New Anaheim 750-2011 '68 Sta. Wgn, Aff, air, GI as sayer. st~n$dla9r5d4 crui se. ne w tires &: Mich elins, A/C, Etc. · P /S, P /B, xlnt mech ransmission. brakes $2725.581·7156. $7500. 830-32A6(NB) · cond. Must sell. $575. (•Pl9ll) •----------- ·53 MB 220S Sedan. orr. white, red int., auto., air. . $1,400. 494.3947. VOLVO 541·9134 · TheodoreRobins For Sale: 1960 Pontiac FORD Stn.Wgn. VB,eedsP/8, PIS, SAL£ •74 MONTE CARLO 2060Harbot'Blvd. Auto trans .. n mu>or" All cars in our stock Maroon with white vinyl Costa Mesa 642-0010 eng. work. $150. 49t-~ roor, beautiful! Only ask for Gary. priced at below increast •71 of August 25th. 21,300 miles, tilt steering ,73 FIREBJRD F.sprit, Gd wheel, etc. 4469.ISAl MAVERICK looking, gd running co00. 0 66 COUPE AIC., vinyllop. Rallye U I Sf •••OADWAV MG 9742 TO cHOOrl!!. Only 31,000milesonthis whls, P /S. PricedtoselL SANTA ANA ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ economical 6 cylinder. 3 · Pvtownr. 645--9997. 835·3171 '69 MGMidget.Complele-FROM •peed sta nd.a rd y 9974 tHl:ULTIMATl:DfllVINOMACH•NE 1 ly restored. Must see t.o JUST ARRIVED transmission. Cadillac eqa '64 Mercedes Benz 1 4·dr. Nds work. $750. 5&: wknd. 642-0035. -appreciate. 968-0215. 21 SO Hsbor ll•d. trade·in. Radio, heater, •••••••••••••••••••••.•• Capri 9715 ~G~,-----9-7-44-i FACTORY ~ -645-5700 whitewall ti= & spot-'71 GT. A/C, P/S, rad•al ••••••••••••••••••••••• M DEMOS less. (983DLO). tires. Gd cond. Pvte par- '73 2000. deluxe, A/C, xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• '69 Chevy Malibu 4 Dr. Onl $I S9S ty. 581·8164, 581-2700. cond .. new radia ls, •67 MGB-GT Example Great cond $1500 or bst S295Q. /offer. 645-74"9 o' '75 244 Sedan I ;or~r.~1~01=W~M~arq~w:·1;;a~S~.c~. ift~~;:C~-~~·11 Wagon. new clutch & 631 .2738 Tape deck. radials, runs Automatic, AM /FM!~ tl .... I CCldlliic eng. $1500 or best offer. l-----------i~•~d~-~$~1300-'--_.~SS_7_-1_1_84_. ___ 1 stereo radio, power '65 Chevy Convertible. 16Mtlu• llM 646·1012afl.5pn> Autos Wanted 9590 '73 2600 Capri. A IC. R(H. t 'ng -er antenna Gd. cond, gd tires. $350. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Very c lean. $2,750 . '72GT seen ........ · Call536·1860. ,_._ 540t.o Class1·r1·ed Ads •··- TOP $ Paid FOR Used VW's PaldfororMol 552.7207_ Xlnt co.od. AM /FM . lowmiles.#2019. l -''-"-'-'--'~=-'-----1~2....-~~~~~':';~a;~~§§;;;;:-;:~-~·· 523.0300 exl.221& 992-MlO ('999 Cadill 9915 f '73 Capri V6. :l>,000 mi, eves. . .,.., ••••••~t•••••••••••••• STAR. GAZE~'fl .. air, radio, new radials. Opel 9746 "W\ tWJ1A• Cl.AT L POU.AN---.-,=-! Xlnt cond. $3:KlO best ofr. s j.lj1t uwA Pvt. pty. Ot'fice 833-8800, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~ 11 J/t. !::.~ ~1;:! = ~ "''" n Q homeM.2·0196. 71 OPS.GT 1.1f.:7" 1"odrftlopw-.torW.o.day, ~;_; SPORTCOUPE VOLVO " z..-z::.:;·;:;:~ .. -ats. 9720 Mlnt!S22:5C I.I. ,d(TAv•1i11 ,. Ji.-.Hola ••••••••••••••••••••••• (•8'98) 1966 Hofbof. C.M. 6'6 9303 · ~age f"~=~: ~~ fi t: 'l~t~m8a'J:.nrc!(•J:c~: Th•oc;~ ~-~~~••••••••••• Cad"illac 7• i~ ~r"' $~9$. 848·8340Dlr. 2060llarbor Blvd. Gl'Mrol .. 9901 :to ~~ . TC 260ZrSilYft"-8lueo air, Cotta Biles• 642·0010 •••• ••• ••••••••• ••• •••• r-a....t"IOln l~~ ~ = ljmJ• 1 ,i!l' 8 1!"'f,¥8 magi, am /fm stereo, Port.eh• 9750 '64 MERCEDES Ben1 ~-,._ :ie:;_... a~ l'ft lie ~ P/P. 714·S5t10lfi. Eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 190C, 4 dr, auto. nd! 0 _ IN u...,, ... w.., flunt. Reh. 34z .. 44as work. $750. '64 Chevy, ~ .. -·--1s"' ~io..-. ===---'.==~111 , 1200 Coupe. am/Cm, '67 912 Porsche In xlnl dr ~ auto. nc1a1 work l'~ :J::1~ ·Witnled VW Bui. fixer up-mags. radjals, $1700 or cond . Like new, Rebll $ISO. 842.6935 aft. s & C 4 ••• ~" 11 vo..ir ·•~""'11* P'f!'r; ~i ll-ttede equity 11'1: bstdfr. 91\8-Mll -eng. $4,000.493-3973-wkndl. LW"-a.. ;;~ ;;=. 73 Ford C(lwltry Squire . 21 ~..,, !I c-..+r Wagon. Loaded 26.SOO ·72 240Z. Auto..i,_a /c. mags. 67912exceptionallyclean. Mell 9'JIO Nabers fi~ H~.,. miles. J owner. 675-6200 Xlnt cond. nst olr over 1750CC, near perf. Beal •••••·~··•,•••••••••••• ~~· ~=--or675-3008 -~,000.6"4·ll2S offer.673·S97Jaft.10PM. ·-ll W e ,,Oedleoled S6,., '" stat• •ion. new !ltio....l.lllac J:t:: !n':·" Sell Me Your Car or :il&OZ t2plu4) Aft, stereo, '68 9U Jtlnt. cond. Just a radi&l.1, Joaded.. lOP@')d, '°""' 2'6'4 ~-- Truck. top cash mooey. m ags, 18 ,000 miles. Be1ut1l Mu1L sel l. SS200.Ube1.t . h:i. pt.y , 2t00MarHr11w.. >DlotH -·~ C1ll493-l299al\Ytime $6,SOOor b11tolr. IH4-WS.. $4,.8$0. orotr. $41--913' 175-1311 /&TS-2001 C..t.. MMe MMIOO w~Goo4 ®'Al-- I • r I , ------------------- • 7 .. • ' , . • • Laguna/South Coast. ~ . - T oday's Clesl•« N.Y. Steeks • EDITION . ., • VOL. 68, NO. 259, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES -ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1975 TEN CENTS 0; ' CIA Cliie.f Admits . De~dly Dart Guns WAsHINGTON <UPI) -CIA Director Willlam E . Colby, dis· pl~ a deadly electric dart tun ttiat he 1aid could kill sileqtl)l at 100 yarda, today admitted lo Congress the agency for fivt> years illegally maintained a stockpile of lethal poison and weapons. ' Colby said bis predecessor, JUchard Helms, was aware of the • 1970 requirement· that such I I u Gunman Kil bl • Officer By ARTHUR R. VINSEL CM""' Dallr l"llM sc.tr A veteran Long Beach policeman stalking a kidnap· robbery suspect in a back yard of a Signal Hill area residence was shot to death early today. A task force of police, includ· ing some 100 officers and Z7 cars plW1 two police. helicopters, cor cloned off and covered the area in ·which the suspect was later cap· tured.wilbout incident. Barefoot and bleeding from foot cuts, he was taken into custody without attempting to fll'e a .38 caliber weapon believed to be the death gun used on Patrolman RobertR. -all. . Officer ·Birdsall, 40, was pro- -nounced dead at 1: 12 a.m . in St. Mary Med ical Center in the downtown area of Long Beach. He was shot in the chest at close ranee after he and his partner, Officer Wilbfu-Poston, split up in the darkened region on the Long Beach-Signal Hill city. border hunting their suspect. Investigators identified Officer Bin:lsall's alleged slayer as Fred Harvey, 24, Long Beach, a transient. He was booked for in- vestigation of murder and as* sault with a deadly weapon on a p:>lice officer. (See OFFICEll, Page A2) ,-olice Grab , NuJ.e Bath.er A nude sunbather who tried lo evade the arms of the law by swimming away was booked into Laguna Beach City Jail Monday afternoon on suspicion of resist· ing arrest and appearing nude on a public beach. . Police said the 18-year-old South Laguna resident took to the water off Moss .street Beach when he saw officers approach. Lifeguards were summoned to capture the suspect, but were not needed. The man swam into Wood 's Cove. He was given a pair of swim trunks and trotted off to the police stalioo. The man Teportedly claimed lo investigators that his own trunks had fallen apart. Coast Weather Mostly sunny through Wednesday, according to the weather service, with ronlihued warm inland but cool at the beaches. HighS near 70 at the strand rising to the mid-80s in north county areas. " INS IDE T ODAY Julie Nixon Ei•enhower is putting Mr Ill• tog<th .... - . and beginning to luaw: aomt fun . She 1au• pre1iure to perform publicly has telttflftl. and thi ii beginning to "fttl free ,'' Stor11 P.age ~12. l •tlex . I .--------·- . . . material ~ da1poted of. But ColbJ did not say whether Hel1111 &ad knowled1e of the llle&al stockpiling. . Under questlonln& by Sen. Howard Baker <R·Tenn.), Colby said records showing who authorized the development and stockpUing of the deadly biological weapon were destroyed three years ago with Helms' knowledge. ets Tlie First Dag tn the glare of tetevl1;oa <!amtta lilhll. Colby showed the Senate Sel~t Committee "" In· telllgence a telesc<iptc-sllbt<d, black dart 1un which he described &a ''a very deadly weapon.·• Sen. Frank Church (!).Jdtbo). Chairman of the committee. gingerly inspected the weapon slighUy larger tha~ a .45 ~ and handed it. alOft/I to o4her members of the panel~ Colby said the dart gun, Powered by electric batteries, wis one of various methods of in- }ee~ln1 'lethal doses of such poi--i as ahellf'l•b•Joxin and cobra ~ venom in ''offensive taraets.•· . Defenai vely, he said, the Pollonl weredesllned for suicide pllla for captured agents. Church opened the panel's rust Sam Williams and Skip Freeman won- del-ed what was in store for them as they stared into their kindergarten window waiting for the door to open on the first day of school. The youngsters at El Morro Elementary School were part of about 3,200 in Laguna Beach Unified School. Superintendent Robert Sanchis reported a smooth opener with no major problems. Drug Fund Fate on Lfue Laguna Council to Delve lfl,lO Police Stmh The future of a private narcotics investigation fund maintained by the Laguna Beach Police Department will be on th~ line when the Laguna Beach City Council meets at 4:30 p.m. Wed· nesday al City Hall. The Laguna Beach fund and similar accounts held by the San Clemente Police Department and Orange County Superior Court were brought lo public at· tention recently by county Supervisor Laurence Schmidt. $21,000 has been paid out, leaving a current balance of $3,000. The money has been used to pay drug informants, rent un· marked cars, make narcotics ''buys '' and purchase sur· veillance equipment. The fund is kept at a local bank . Police Chief Frank Schopen and three senior officers in the department control its use. Schopen has outlined three alternatives on the fund's future tothecouncil : -Continue the current pro- gram. -Close the account, return the $3 ,000 balance to the court system, and set aside between $3,000 and $5.000 from the city budget to pay for future narcotics investigations. , -Close the accounJ and place <See FUND, Page J\2) CVSD School Trustees public hearings with a statement saying tbe investigation "in· volves the illegal possession of deadly biological poisons Which were retained withln the ClA for five years after their deSl.ruclion was ordered by the President (Richard M . Nixon)'' in 19'10. Colby said "middle lnel" CIA officers were apparently responsible for mainlaininJ the stockpile '!f poisons and delivery Newport Incident . Hurts 2 By JOHN VALTERZA 0. .. 0. .. , ...... IUff An argument over a 25-cent pool game at Smokey Stover's discotheque in Newport Beach ended in a blaze of gWlfire·early today, seriously wounding a Costa Mesa woman and inflicting lesser injuries on the manager. The closing time shooting in the tavern at 3295 Newport Boulevard at l : 50 a.m. triggered a manhunt which ended wi!b more gunplay in Hunlingto-0. Beach a short time later. Police arrested two suspected gunm.•n. •fter what they described aa a struule that even involved a police do1. Officers jdenUfled4the most seriously jojured victim as Becky Bengstom. 21, of 994 Valencia Ave., ~ta Mesa. She suffered gunsho wounds in the back and side 'a . d i;nderwent surg'ery early .to ~Y at Hoag Memorial Hospital .. \ Her condition today was not immediately known. The club's manager} Fred Cisneros, 31, of 600 E. Ocean Front, Newport Beach, suffered a minor wound in the wrist. He was treated and released at Hoag. Ten rDinutes after witness re· ports of a license number and car description were dispatched by police, a patrolman in Hunt· ington Beach spotted the suspect car at Beach Boulevard and Ellis Avenue. Patrolman Bob J effrey, driv· ing a unit occupied by a police dog, stopped the car driven by James Joseph H aas, 24, of Hollywood. Also in the car was Timothy Gari Elliott, 22, of Cov· ina. As Jeffrey and a backup officer (See GUNFIRE, Page i\2) ' The funds are from· funds paid by convicted small time drug .users, on the theory that they should bear some of the cost of narcotics enfor cement. Under normal circumstances, fines are paid to the court. Schmidt said the practice amounted to a fo.rm of legalized Salary Inquiry Ordered blackmail. A. The president of the Orange County Narcotics Officers As- sociation charged in the wake of Schmidt's criticism that the supervisor has subverted narcoUcs investigation and may have endangered the lives of narcotics investigators. In excess of $24,000 has been paid into the Lacuna Beach fund sin'ce it was created in 1971, and Fisher man Beaten, R obbed Near Pier A 21.year.old San Clemente mail reported Monday he' was knocked unconscious and robbed of $138 in cash and $13) worth of fishing'tackle near the city pier. Officers said Daniel L. Hub· bert, 430 N. El Camino Real, was struck from behind. When he re· gained consciousness, his wallet and fishing gear were missing. The inc:dent occurrttl at about 10 :30p.m . Sunday. Clemency Deadline By FREDERICK SOIOEMEHL Of* D.lllY !"Ii.ta.ff Capistrano Unified School Dis· trict trustees ordered formation of a fact-finding committee Wed· nesday as a step in settling de· 4ldlocked salary negotiations with teachers. The three-member committee will be composed of a person selected by the board. one select· ed by teachers and a third person mutually agreed upon by the two sides. The committee·s job will be to investigate salary negotiations and deliver a "statement of facts " to the board and the teachers. The statement would serve as a foundation for future bargaining. About 120 persons -most of them teachers -packed the San Juan Elementary School cafeteria' where the meeting was held. Oµtslde the cafeteria, about 20 tealliers picketed. They carried signs lambasting the school board's latest' salU")t offer of 3.S percent and cuta in the educa· tional program that were made to pay for it. ' A'bout 375 teachers, represent· ed by the Capistrano Uniffed Educators Ass~iation CCU EA), Are seek_ing a 7 percent salary in- crease..-- (CUFT), a union group, are hold · ing out for their originaJ demand for a 25percent increase. Tony Leon, CUEA president, urged the board to enter a "bind- ing arbitration" agreement with the teacher representatives as a means of settling the salary dis· pule. Under this process, both sides would a g r ee to accept an arbitrator·s recommendation on w11al salary increase should be given. Supt. Jerom~ Thornsley said , <See FACTS, Pagei\2) s~tem s. . .... Helms, now ambassador to Iran, was sitting in the back of the packed Senate c.aucus roo.111 .. scene of the W aler1ate hearinp .. Helms, CIA director for almost seven years until 1973, is seheduled to testify before the committee Wednesday. Colby said there ls in existence a memo between Helms and (See CIA, Poge ,U) Ford Speaks In County OnSrmday President Ford is scheduled to speak in Orange County Sunday _as part of a long weekend of politics and golf. He is due to be in Anaheim Sunday to ad- dress a dinner of the Na- tional Association Of Life Underwriters at the Dis· neyland Hotel. A White House spokesman said that the weekend will begin with Ford attending· lhe Oklahoma Slate Fair in Oklahoma City Friday. He will fly to Los Ang~les Fri: day evenins and on Satur-· day be will dedicate• field house at Pepperdine University, Malibu, after which he will fiy , lo Mon· terey. • ay 11 row.I of ile :Beach and aj)eftd .e hi&hl in Mon· terey, the spokesman said. The President will fly to Anaheim Sunday, and re· t urn to Monterey for another overnight slop. Beach Ruled Unsafe After Sewage Spill · A mile-long stretch of the_ San Clemente beach has been declared unsafe for swimming following a sewage spill which polluted the waters from the pier to north beach. City Engineer Phil Peter said today the s pill was caused by a vandal who broke into the Unda Lane sewage pump !:ilatioh and kiCked loose a plastic pipe. Raw sewage was then pumped out on- to the ground rather than into a sewage treatment system. • It is unknown how muc h sewage was spewed into the sea. City c rews chlorinated th'e beach areas affected by ttie sewage and have reinforced lhe pump house door with a steel sheet in an e ffort to preYent further vandalism . Another mishap ·near Avenida Estancion sent treated sewage effluent gushing across the beach and into the sea. A pump direct- ing the effluent to the city's ocean outfall or to the golf course failed. T~e highly treated reclaimed watf:r involved is not hazardous to health, Peter said. 0.11,,. ............. w ASHlNGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Ford's Clemency .Board has ended its work after processing ctatms for 1$,4~ -a·pplicants our of an estimated ..\~.ooo eli~ible men. The board's tenure expired af mldnlgbl~oiiiliy. An<fthet 100 teachefl,, 1 repr~nted by the Capistr-'11" Unlfiiiil 'riamtToli"6t'Te•clfln , ~TEA.CHEAS WERE OllT IN FORCE WEDNESDAY TD EMPHASIZE SALARY DEMANDS F•ct-Flrdng CommlttH Wiii Be Formed to Break Negotl•llo n Deadlock -.t I, --·--------~~ DAILY PILOT l /SC Tueldl , S. tember 18, 1975 g Cl.entente ,Counefl .~illside Grading - Law Con8idered ' A controversial law affecting hillside grading a nd construction will be considered by the San Clemente City Council meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at City Hall. The measure has provoked a storm o( opposition by area de- velopers some of whom have charged that strict interpretation and enforcement of the law could halt new home construction in the city's hillv undeveloped ''backCountry.•i' The law requires contoured grading and prohibits the ter- raced pad type grading which has marked much of the develop. ment of the city's hilly territory. gulating skat boarding in the city. -A letter citing the dangers of erosion of the blld'fs along Pacific Coast Highway between Avenida Pico and Camino San Clement~ -A claim for bicycle dam.a ges of $37 .22 filed by Richard D. Pellerin alleged to have occurred when he struck a pothole at the intersection of A venida Presidio and La Esperanza. OFFICER ••• The charges could bring the de· atb penalty if he is convicted. When the Bough Breaks , ,,...,.,,...41 CI~ .. - Sidney GotUleb, former chief ol the •1eoey'1 tecbnlcol -.1- divilicin. l.ndlc•U.., tbe ncaidt were dntroyed by GcWleb, IA November 1972, before ho ' re- tlttd. ' Colby conceded G«Web bod -•t CJA headquarters within the wt f~w days r<Mewlllf ..... taln rues, but aald no one bad In- terviewed blm to find cut wbJ be d~yed tbOle vltal........it. '"Then we run up a&almt • stone wall," said Baker. Church's committee bas pro. bed intelligence activities at leQllh In clooed 1easions. Durln& t1lCl6e sessioo1, the leftover toxins at the tt,rmy •s bioloaical laborotory at Ft. Detrick, Md. came to light. Instructions to des(roy chemical and biological warfare material at Ft. Detrick were-is- •ued In 1970. But May 20, JI grams or shellfish toxin and eight milligram.a of cobra venom were found in the small vault. • The grading law originally pre- sented for council consideration at its' meeting Sept. 3, was con- siderably less restrictive. lt had been loosened up during a series <>f Planning Commission hear- ings and meetings with de· velopers. -- By a 3-2 vote, then the council ~andoned the ordinance worked "out by the com mission and an- nounced its intent to adopt the original drart as proposed by the tjty pl anning staff and modeled after one adopted by the city or San Juan Capistrano. Police said Officer Birdsall, a JS-year veteran of the force, and his partner e ntered the area about midnight. arter a woman- contacted them from a liquor store, reporting she had been kid - naped and robbed. Bob Marsh of 540 Mountain Road, Laguna Beach, inspects his Lincoln convertible beneath a stout 25-foot long limb of an old Pine which fell during the night. The branch pierced the car's cloth top, but an assessment of further damage bad to wait until the heavy branch was removed. Marsh said he had been after the city to trim the tree prior to the accident. Colby also told CoQaress that during the past 25 years his agen- cy secretly developed "devices'' for use in counter-intelligence ac- tivities, Including a fountoln pen dartlauncher.1. Colby also said foreign in- telligence agents are continuing to use drugs on "target subjects" overseas and administered a drug to a CIA operative within the past year. The council's switch prompted criticismJrom the planning com- . ,mission which voted unanimous- ' ly to express its "disappoint- ment" that the City Council de- cided to enact the ordinance in a form other than the one approved by the commission. Noting that the commission had spent more than five months . :studying the matter, com- .missioners pointedly suggested the COWlcil had overlooked that study in its action. Other items on the council agenda include: -A proposed 75 percent in- .crease in the city sewer service . charges and a 10 percent in- : crease irl'tbe city water rate. -A request that the city con- sider the proposed access to the Sborecliffs Junior High School. The city and the school district · have in the past appeared to be at odds over the school access which would increase traffic on "fleighborhood streets. -A proposed ordinanc~ re- A description or the suspect vehicle and li cense number led th e m to the Signal Hill neighborhood where it was dis~ covered and Officer Birdsall was then slain 'when he apparently found the suspect . He was shot in the chest, ap- parently without warning, although it was not immediately determined how many times be was hit. First reports of the killing of the 15-yea r Long Beach Policeman said it sowided like an automatic weapon, indicating multiple shots were fired . Niguel Home Hit by Burglars Burglars who twisted orr the front door knob to gain entry to a Laguna ~iguel home took jewelry ahd coins valued at $1,800 from a closet in the master bedroom, Orp_n_ge Co~nty Sheriff's officers reported today. Deputies said the thert oc- curred at the home of construe-, ti on worker Mario Visintin, 32, of 23761 Mariner Drive, while the family was_absent. Shattering Experience · Farm Land Preserve Sought for San Juan By LAURIE KASPER lease it to farm operators. CM-.o.11yP1M11s..tt Their recommended develop- The San Juan Capistrano City ment fees are $500 for each re- Council will be asked Wednesd&y-·-sJdentia~ unit..-!Xhey . .su&&!1St that rught to set the scope f?C a pro-a comparable fee be developed · gram to preserve agncultural for industrial and commercial land in the city. properties. The council also is being asked to authorize the final phase of the Agricultural Study which will provide a detailed action pro- gram. The Planning Commission has recommended that the study con- tinue and that an action pro- gram, which includes placing a surcharge on new development and putting a bond issue before voters to raise funds· for city purchase of at least 100 acres of farmland, be formulated. Their recorilmended approach to agricultural preservation is to have the city own the land and The proposed third and rmal phase of the study would address administrative means and pro- cedures and costs associated with it . If the study is authorized, the council will also be asked to con- sider initiating a General Plan amendment which could 6e ap- proved before the end of the year. The cutrent plan states that the agricultural overlay shall be ef. fective only until Jan. 1, 1976. If an amendment is not approved before then, the overlay becomes Void, I , The council ts also being asked to adopt the Land use Manage- ment Code by urgency or- dinance. This code combines and re- vises the existing zoning code and subdivision regulations into one docu ment. If approved, it will be ona of the m·ajor tools used to implement the city's General Plan. The code was given a first re· ading. by the council al its last meeting FUND ••• the money in the city budget in an account earmarked for narcotics investigations. The narcotics fund discussion is one of 62 items on the council's agenda. ' Other matters include abate- ment of the Heisler Park squirrel population; preliminary plans for a lifeguard facility at the north end or Main Beach Park; award of a contract for city hall additions, and a n increase in parking meter fines to $S from $3. . Hayden: Put Refugees on Nixon Estate LOS ANGELES. (UPI) - Senate candidate Tom Hayden quipped Monday that Vietnamese' refugees who cannot be sent back to tbeirnative country sb®l.!I_ be housed on Richard Nix· on's estate at the former president's expense. Hayden. former "Chicago Seven'' defen· dant and husband o( BC· tress Jane Fonda, is <>PIJ05· ing Sen. John Tunney for the Democratic nomina- tion. Hayden said Monday .-that if elected be would do all he could to encourage Vietitamese refugees to a:o_ back to Vietnam. The United States has no choice but to help those who do not wish to return, be ~aid. "But l think the b)lrden should be 111aybe carried by PresidentNixon and they should live in san Clemente.'' F..-PalJeAI FACTS ••• however. that there is no pro- vision in state law for binding arbitration between school board and employe groups. ·'Even if the school board was predisposed to binding arbitra- tion, it would be an illegal act," he said. Tbornsley recommended the board appaint the fact-finding committee. He said it would be in keeping with board policy in situations where •·persistent dis- agreement" has arisen in salary negotiations. Trustees unanimously agreed to formation of the ~mmittee and Thornsley's recommenda- tion that Dr, Donald Woodington, a rormer Laguna Beach Unified School District superintendent, be named as the board 's representative. In his testimony, Colby d.ld not mention a report aaying American agents tried to UJe l ethal toxins to assassinate African leader Patrice Lumumba. The cache of toxins and poisons, Colby said, were found May 20 in a small ~by-10 foot vault which had a stock of ''various materials and delivery systems accumulated. over the years." They included ''other lethal materials, incapacitants. narcotics. hallucinogenic drugs. irritants and riot control agents, herbicides , animal control materials and many common chemicals.•• Colby said. * * * CIA Reveals U2 Spy Pilot 'Had Poison' . WASHINGTON (UPI) -CIA Director WUliam E. Colby said. today Gary Powers, pilbt of the U2 spy plane shot down over the Soviet Union in 1960, was pro- vided with a tiny poison needle concealed in a silver dollar in case be wanted to commit suicide. But, Colby told the Senate Select Committee on In - telligence, Powers "obviously did not use it, and was not in· strueted tO"dO so. It was otrered to him to provide him with an op- tion." Colby said an earlier "J,.pill" designed for agents to commit suicide during World War JI "took some time to :work and was . agonizing." He said agents who might have the need to use such a pill would want ''instantaneous" results and that was why the poisons, such as was supplied to Powers, _were developed. The needle vlould hav""91'1abled Powers to in- ject himself with deadly shellfish toxin. ''The Powers F1ight was the only time we were aware that the toxin was used for operational use, although the L-pill was made available for earlier fllghts," Colby said. , . Volunteer workmen sweep sharp shards of glass from Big Bend region of Laguna Ca· nyon Road in Laguna Beach, after mishap caused about 25 five-gallon bottles to tum- ble from Bastanchury Springs bottled water delivery truck at commuter rush hour this morning. Damage to tires was reported by two motorists as traffic bac ke d up 1.5 miles. Brooms were furnished by nearby Langlois Fancy Frozen Foods firm. Let Us Put You On The Map • " ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed IJITnldeM .-Id P11t1H- , Jkk R. CurteY. ' Vic.,..,...,,._~-,,.,........ Thomas Keevll ·~TIM>mas A. Murphhw ••••1,,,E...., • ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Faulty Vent • Prompts Suit , GUNFIRE ••• approached the car, Haas as- sertedly plunged both bands A San Clemente resident who between the front seats, causing claims bis 17·year-old daughter the officers to suspect that he almost suffocated Dec. 12 was reaching for a weapon. bee ~ bl ked •-One shot was fired at that point ausev. a oc 1tcatervent sued two local fumigation com-by an officer but the slug ·panies Monday for unspecified traveled over the car and into • damages. · vacant fiela . ' Donald Stenersen, 7111 Avenida Officers said a struggle ensued Victoria, names Barden's Ex- wb.en the pair refused to leave terminating and Ron's .F\lmiga- the car. and at one point Haas lion in bis Orange County ' -·free from an officer only to superior Court action charging be aubdueCI ond cbewecl by the nelllll!ence during the fumigation do.!;,_ t -ed of,&it-homoNov. 27.' ·~ women were ''!" Steneraenstatestbattbebloek· char~ Q1811lt With • clelldly ·in1 ol lyheater vent dW'ing that Weapon. operation almost caused Uie de- B•elr •I the nlcbt1pot in •th 15 days later or his daughter, NewportBe8Ch,poUce1'ttestill Jobanna, 17. He ••k• tbat plecln1 toa~r the stoey ol the c1om.,es be awarded by a bial •b<lotlnl· ........, • DetediYe S•m.AmburseJ 1ald ·--.,· tbe two •Ue1ed 1UDmen had , llajled late at the club, Pllll'lne F.. / Pull h.'. poo1 and c1r1n1r1n1. Then an arsu-ll'emen vul -~red-over Wbme tum. It_ BERKl!:LEY (UPI) -Strlldng •tiane::i a11~rtedly asked ·firemen have called off their ~oral .l!oallcerL to i:tlJ>OVe tile blOflulde,or major roads Into the Polr and •tier 8 nolly irsument cltt bee•u" It was -=-their · blllb men were out in the street.. cause more h.arm lban S ,_ tJ . I ' ' *•••••• [carpe .. • • 11663 PLACENTIA AVENUE Near the ebnce. inside our store. is a giant new map, We are in the process of identifying all of the homes we have carpeted since 1965 on this map with colored pins, [A different color for each year.) aose scnl)iny will detect some interesting facts: firstly, we have carpeted homes on virtually &Very street in the area. Secondly, the pins are in bunches, indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH advertising. Thirdly, the number of homes we have carpeted is staggering. If you desire honesty, expetlence, and recommendations from neighbors we have worked for, then Alden's is THE PLACE! ••••••••••••••••• ·installation· custom draperies I UC. NO. 230412 • COSTA MESA, CAUF;-9262? ~ • , • --~--. I • • Pi•ff Pi•ffery Tueaday'•· Clo11ing f"rices NEW YORK. STOCK EXCHANGE Cigarett.e Ada 'Moody' ..W ."'°"" ·cu,.,· --.... "' ... °"' -°' By IUlil'ON •Ollll:OWlii& 111e diaretle ~ are -1a1o-t11e-...,. !C!'!i::!8 ~:-:-~ trieo lo stake out an uu fOIC llMltlntbeam-·a-. You cu. __ Ille P""tlon a -Is teyllllt lo -"" by readlDa tbe copy -......... at Ille lliuavatloaa In tbe Ills. A btaad on the u~~ l'lth !ta "m-" m-.. A btaad that'• lllPJ>lal lr.- cl>onldn1 them ... -. I TRli LONGEST· I JlllNNING ~ampalcn in tbe ·cl&•r•tte bu1lne11 is Marlboro's weatern motif, llDd It will continue es lOGI u the brand ronUnuea t.o mcwe up On the aale1 chart. Marlboro Is OU the verge of overtak:inl Winaton aa the tap.sellina brand In the eoun- lly. 1be Marlbor'O message Is .clear: ··eome to where Ute flavor is.•• Wbat it's reall1 ~g, beyond that, ls: '"Ibis is not one of those may low· tar and low·nlcollue brands. Tbis ls oae you can taste.•• · Winstm> 11' also In this ''!Ull· flavor" category. It has a heavy .slug of tar and nicotine, even more than Marlboro. Since it bes belW! to lose ground to Marlboro, Winston has changed tbe models who appear in its ads. I 'Ibey now tend to be YoWl& people dressed in blue jeans, and they're saying things like: / ''U it wasn't for Wi.Dston, I wouldn't 1moke1'; or "Taste isn'I everytblug, It's the only thing"; oj I "ATASTETBAT'Srul.Ua I cigarette un't real; It iau't auytbiue. Winstonuforreal." The No. 3 selllug cigarette brand is Kool and its message for many years bas been the simple one. ••come up to Kool.''• What it is stating ttiere, and what menthol smokers apparently re- cognize, is that it contains more menthol than other brands. And It does. Lately we have been seeing the emerg~nce of a new categ.,..Ylliat might -lle called the ''cancer Money Tree I:.~~".: -~-.i:: !l!!:.ll!l;:ll!, :?: : --=~ ~ '1!...t.! ~:·=:a-mJ 21 ·~f:_-~ :m:.•J:'l::l~..!t .::!1,Jlol"-l: 11;;;:. "J..-~ I"'"'·.. ..,·; • l: .tit.a. .. I 1 F"' ~tall ... ....._... ., ... 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I ,.~+"-MtOtlrtJ.n S '11t.<t .... prom.-;; the Oavor ol a full. AkM 1.M 11 161 ...,...._ -.... .,..,. .. .• 1 WI-.... ,_ MMltl 1 ,. JI """ •• I Tl.rsK. .• .. ,. -.. MllDl•U 1.1'0 s 14.._ \lo flavor .11.r.tte ...... ·-··t =.._em--,._i '• " .. __ ...... 0.-11 Creft •• TH J--.. fdNUMf .. ' MO !!::="' t" 'N tV. •• Jl ~--""" Mt,.w •cn l • 11'H ... . . i.uvu 1.l ~' t» Olr.orc;: .. 1 1-.-. "-,..... Paci I .... S 11 -14 I Tl. plO I ,. I .. . .. Mii Gyp '·" I • . .._ \t •~•--o.--••the tar aad ~.Ml lt 11 .. -YI OVl.O-.. S 11 1'"4=1,JO ., 11 .... ~ 1.206 6 lO""• ._. ... 11 .--1 .• •1 ~..,.._.,~ ...,._,..Jl6 11•~•i.Ow'-.S 31 11 .AIJ • ........ l ........ Orl4 l l•'llo-ll.M9'llldll.Jllll D• .,.. nfcoliQe '' Mlttll~ • 11 ~ .. ~-l .• 2 II ... 1.241, m .,.._I. l.mt ... to • I 1Jllllo .. , NatltldptAO •• I • • ~ .. 2' ....... ... Co ...... 18""'-YI Fttt.c:."P.1 6 t 1111*• \6 ll'ltlll,._ 1 ... t 16 1tV.-.... NI,,..., c;.e..111 141 l\fo , A to 10 ...-.-v. wt .. ,. 114 + "" r1~ ,Jllfl 'I ..., ~" IMI ~_,J• • • """' ... ,...,.._i 1.ao. 5 1 :r1 VANTAGE AND Doral, In· _ ... .,.., .... .,.,. .. "',, ,.• -. ,."" c ...,_ .. • t l4-,.... '""~'·,_ • lll't--"" .__ ,,. , " 11"'-11o "", 5oitm1uw11• • ~ .,.. Cl llW .. IYlft .• 17 J\li ••• 1'M1Uk1AI • I 29\lo-"' ~E11.JO ttJ 20 111111-NalS.~v .1• 1 I ,.,.._.,. Ck:lentally come to vnu from Mi-MIO t ... 1 W »¥1-.i, g11 .. 111.60 1 11 1~ ••• ~kkrMI 11M IS IN ... io-.110 l.S. lo. ,. l~'lio ... N1 S&e...O .to 5 11 I,.,..• """ th. • ,_ .f.mlr( •. ID t tt• ,,.___ .. ft0.,1,_. I 6S 1•"'-11i Fl11'9K#AO • 1• tit+ .. '-P't.t ... • 11 H \>ti i-.... Nll.t.UAOll ut _ ....... .. e aame folks who make .... [:: ....... ,.,• ,.> ~.·,.·· o..o .. t.» .. .so •v.· ... F1""1 s1 .20 5 4 1\lo-"" •-11'1•.n s a '6"" ... Na11oi\lta Wlnsl d 5 1 d 11:: ....... OnGr.•·•·;dOD" ... "'""''""511 • .., ~-•C1UHMp11111 t , • ,,. ..a.t1'1' .. c. .. 1 ~"'-"" on an aem an A ..,1-. .. ti-. ... Oftllrlll•'·"° nit ... 1=1rw.1.101 ,.,._~ 1rE1..,...n 1311"'-""""'°""':lo •us ,,.,._ .. Camel ~MIO • . 5lf I~-~ OT Fifi J.10 1 11 ~ '4 1'110..'1 :1111 6 111 ...._ '16 •• ~ .. b 1._.-NCI!: C. .n 1 ta U 'h-Vi • AOllt1!.lO 6 1 I+"+ \6 0~ .K10t1foe !I ... l'tt (Mt ... 1 '°"" -4 ITEL C,.,p S St ...... "-NltSM.-·'° 1 1 I~-""" Then of _,,_. -Jet to AnlCYolll ,,,.. t 2:» zi-.• 1111o 01 litN J.C t ~ ~+ ... Fslllic$ llltO 11 14 ,,..._ *° tU Intl .IS ' •t 10~-..... Ht•,._ I.SO 6 ll ..,.__"" • ....U'U .. '..... AM0.11 .u,. .. I Pll• .... at...Mtt . II 'J r '6 fstMISl .'6 1 11011.,._ ... IUl,,U..,llAi .. I """' ••. NY ..... J .JO .. JU0021 -\lo the brands which don't know A01'1T•1 .s. • • tt\1'1-Yo Ot.iSo All .. •1 11t+ "" "'"'a.s 1 ... s .iv 22\ii + .,.. --J ,_ Nltwppi 1.1• .• oi 1•11o-w. wb t lo ADwl...... I I~+ 1' Ol't l!W ,6'JS 121 1"!-Mi FUNS ant 2 6 IS I0'.6 ,,, _._ ,. ... I JI 10-.• ... f>l f.noEI t .11 t H I P~"" a say to arrat sales Amil(,.. 2 'i .,, .--. "' o,, '""-'~. P 1,.16 ••. F1P•C11 1.21 • .. 1Jt1i ••• Jent.n .10 • ' ''"" f\llGie 1.21 1 u 11....., • declines Viceroy 'or exam Al'atl'lllr .J• • •1 • Qty'"" Pf I '' Jl 1•11t-"' '""~Mo . . ;1 iv. .. ' JaOl'NI .tab .. " 1'4 •• i,-i, NE1T T 2.M 10 ,. ,,.,,,,._ \lo • • •I ' • Aim~.IOfl1J J• "'-·~ 0en.El.t0 6~1 i.'4+ Y., F11u.-1t:.tilO t ttlt+"" Jlttf~Ool .1111 1J 26'6• \lo .......,,.II Mt 6 11111 • '°" pie ,.uo"'comln'.t ·--·.... JSfl dOO • +I O..kCMl .$0 •. t """'-" F11\llh .4Jb. 11 .... ,,, JCPpf ll.so ,, JIXl 109 -1 Nwmrlt 1.6011 IOS 2• • v. I' ~UWt. ""°" 10 .. tt n •"" ~AM .J.6 • • 4,..-i.. l'1W11C1.76 1 10 11141-"" .-..1 c 1.:1111 n 11""-"" Nwmfll'l4'-'1 ,, 2 1s t1V. w th the llne : ''Why 1.n •• ,, 11-,...-. WCHfJ • .0.10 s .. ~-I FitttlMl.10 1. ll'll•"' J ..... lctr ..... JO J'6-\(o NYS EGl.l'O' n JI _ .. Vi • n. I'd A Oft '"' to s uo 11• + "" El JAi I !II 16V.-1111 l'li.r.t F .40 • » ll'lolo-1111 JllftWltttr 1 t 60 zt\4 -1 NI .. ~ l.J.t 6 )a llV.-\lo iceroy, occause never AOnfllla .. 11 '"'•"" o.wEJpf1J d00101 ... ,.., FllllefSC.lO 1 11 11~14 Jltl'!Ws1w1 ,,. 10 •. Hl•Mplj,.o •• .a ~v. Smoke a borlu ! .... -... •• ~ .. 70 J 21 1Jt111 \4i °""EOll.AO •• tJO 11 + 11o Fl.etEnt .2'1t \61 ~--JlmWpfl.60 :10 Jl'li• "Nl.,...,i AO .... J::tlll-llllo . g C ~--·-· """'"°'"~"tt 161 u~= • 0ero.c..s:.z 10 ru t v.. "" l=l•!ftiflo _., 1 » 1~" JHft '" 1.1a t• 1JY>-111 NlaMpt .n .. ao 11-,,.., Boring must )Dean those """"'"1 .. ,,., -4 own P.• 'l ~-111 l'h1v.,..1,., s .. ..._. JHt11v1.Aa .• ,. 1.-.-v. HIMplto.IO •• ,.. n •...., · • "'""'-.JO 21 1•S Jrilllo-"" o..tt~ 111111 I 10 -\lo R lllt•ol l.16 P a. 1~ _, ~I.a t tilt It,_..-'II 1'!14111 S 1,130 ., 11 11Yt• \lo c1g~ brands which are """'1,,...tm .. 11 J111 -1o1i C.M1 '"" c,p J76 1 -..., Rlnlk p1 • .,.. r to0 JOYt-1 ...,,,,..J ·'°' 11 1s. '°""-v. NL:'"'°""' 1 s 11> n~+ "" Pninvingg-sales. ·.~.' ..... , .. _-~OIARMCI 5' WI .. Rlfttkof1W. •• 2 15 .... -1 ... Jr!MOl.IO• to11:i.. MLTCtp .60 J M\J -•.lo _..,.,., -· ---.. .... CHA pf 1.10 ., It •-"' "'' I! C-14 ' 1 llloli• "" Jhr.c:.ri pl , . 1 JI NorlolkW), I JI 61V-. "' Poor Liggett & uyers """ MDton • 1ss s" .. CHA 1n.l5b ,, 1011t-l4i l'I• Get .'«! 6 1s u .. .ltWILOll'\ • ..a i• .o '"'-v; Horlntl 1v. " in.-"" sq. ' All'INO !.Soto 6 63 30'4-•• CHA Uiwllt I 1 ., l'laPwr t.tt I .. tl-.... ¥) Jor"'°" IV. • ' 2'tV1 + y, Horrll 1.20 6 M , ....... "° whose branda are au in a "'" SNt1,.. , 1 ,.,. •• 1/;i1 1 I' .......... R•PwL 1 ... , "' ~ •. JollwM.111< 1 1 , ,, NA c;oe1 ,•11 2 ......_ ~ -- .. • ... .. 1 hi.-"' F~1,,... 6 12...,_ ... JOY#l•l ... 11 52 n•-•.:. NAMt•··"*' zr ~ ... state of retreat, ia really • ..., .. s ,. 11v.=1 1.19 a 11W1 •• .....,.l _.. 1• 111 ....,_,w. N1tic. •• .• • 11111 .. NAm~ 1.• ' 19 " -.ii =ate. It'• now ...... to Amttmt,.. .• s .. y,_.., 1..a .!.l 11 1~-"' FMC .tz , " 1S11t ... ......... •-HCMlr ·"* 5 ,. M tloD ...,..,..... ~M .. ll • "'° .. U011t 1U 10111o .•• FMC !,. .• Ml 27 + tn ~lwAI , .. J 1$1 21 -"' NoO\AWtwt •• 1S 1:>-'6 •• ·-~ 81 ·~~third Anti -..s •JN-"' Al<fi W.. 6 -'4 ...... 1#.lO .. • *'6 •• ltA1 '1PfoAI.,. I ff -1 Nlll>llU1 1.0J6 ltt t +\>'lo ......... w.:: •T&Tl.Ali•'!lt.S\41-... .»12 II~ .. FoelaCl.I06 1 M+'4 "9~.1111 11 s:v.-.... .-c:MGtMJ 1 t ·· cl.&arette''foramotenwbose MITl.Trr. .• ,.... .. "'!i'"""·· 11 2.._ .... F«d#ltl.•JO 2" 1"11-~ KOpnft-. .• I I~ NOlllG4os'J 6 JI ti---... -.... ATTPIA 1 .Q M tJ •16 ,..._ -F« MUI ,ft S t 1~ 111 Kaf9.Mlt .I' • $ 121111o• \.; NllGtlllf' 1.to •• 2 t1.,.,_ 1Ai u..u~ta Jet rupy after •molt· ~~"~ '' . · '° .catn-• 1P "a~.. 110 ., + ... ,.,M pr 1.to. 1 ""' , . ~a.• r 3"I 2svi.-* No1n" '·" • .., 1w.-"" Ing those full·flavorod • ..,,,., ... •.·.; ,,~· "".. &Al•A• aP .-• .,. FtD1Jrt1 ,tJC1 .......... "' JC "'"""cioo .,,,,..iv, NDMtGt3.•o s 11 u 11o .• 1~ ~• FOOCl:d 2t 4~-'4 FortHwd.•11 a2S\'r.~ ··1 16 l~lll• \lo NoSIPw1,M I $10 I' ........ cigarettes all day and who M!e"'9 lt1'1 5 .,...._.. ...,...._.,, 11r »~-1 l'ostrWI 1.10 6 ., ~ K9t101!1... IS ,,"""_ \lo NoSPpl "" •• 0) '° -t A--·1 lik th ··-h fil ""-t$f 10b • fl ,.._"' Cotol!St t.2S r '' ~ ••• ,..._..IO ' JS ~I ' ic. ..... 1.aro 1 • ,.,._"" NOSPDI 4.11 •• 11<11 0 +1V. w.111 e e .....,. -tratlon. ~ '"' 1 1 n ''"" . . Colt ltldln 1 i so ,,.__ ti. ,,.,.., M ,JO 11 112 , • .,.. v. "'-'PL.11.s2 • • ,...., • ,... Nr;'irii\ .tSb 1n 76 N<-~ br·•A• because they "•-~•y .,._."",!.", •,• ",,' •,,• -" .. c:.HllfA 1AO •• , ''"' ••• ,,.-.-'·'° s "11 12,....,,.., ic.cy ,~ , ,.. >'-"-~ Mort 1.eo s ii v .,., ... IUAl9 U&lu.I ,_ Col G.5 ?.06 1 .. tt•-'A· ''""""' 1,to t " 16"" ic.ty "'IA , 3 11V. • w, N_,IA ti ,•I 1 '»I 1"6-V. •---]ike _ ... t ... •• AMJOIN::Nlf TJa 1'QIGpflA •• JSl.__ ... Rlque,1""'611 SS •:v. ~&llr .. 1to •llll-YI HW6-l.10tlll ~ •.• ._~ ao,,."""""'· ~ ... ' ' ,..; "" Oii """'" • 117 Stlt-"" -0 0--Ka"""• A01A J l \li NErt cl.AOb • IS »l4-~ : ........ QI! .. 61 ~-"" E()tllo t 1 .. 20"-• .... G-.. ll!Ctlt s ' ,.... ~R ... . • 10 12 Nwtt '" I.JS .l 116 ~ ... 0 ITS _.ut. ..,,.,...Qirp. O 1 -\6 /Mlf ,. t 2 -\lo GAC Coorp ., a I ~.!OJ l! ·-N-11,..wl .• 112111>-'6 N TWOoa1erbrancb, ...,....,140, ·• .-. "" com s "' l\lii+"" GA, ep .Ja s n 10 .:: ic.1•1 ... 201 1 ,.,.,_·v.; N""'''"p1s •• 1 • ••• • ··~ -·A Chesterfield, Ug· ""'-''"',·,. .. ,· '• .!~-. ~ 01m11£1.'9011 1tt ..,.,.,_,.,.,. GAi' D11.20 .• , ~·"' ic.11ogg .70 16 .,. 11 _.,. NwR1pf•.20 .• 10" -1 &Ail.ID CUN .......... l ....,.. .. OmrlEclt.30 I tO J5'1t-Yr Gotrn k 1 . .0 S t 11...,._ \lo Kitr-.. .IO .. S lO't+ ..... Nwttlt1SlfC5 " 1 f1Vt ··• lett •. ~ to b Amit! lt1 .JZ • n ~. "" ~dpft.D. • 'JI•• YI ~of 1111< •• 1 '°""'• ~ K.lt'l'lmll 1.C 6 I •>.r.-\lo Nw Mt( .160 , '11 ....._ .... • PJ.yers seems ave Alwalda M 1 •31 17~ • .., dJlf tA .• ,, 11w.-v. o..n.t' ·" ,, • :n + ,... bftCI 1.-11 1•1 12'h-""' N~t 2 . .0. 10 • l'l._ • j ust about thrown in th~ ..,.,t1Hc:,,ao .. 11.io •. ...1.to . 1 1•"--" Geto0tn .1612 "111214-• JC.,U1111.1•1132 11"-. NrlnC.01.106 •n ... we! Alldo'1CI I.JO 6 t6 at't\-11o IEdwl .. J R -.... ~'n&I .M 1 t llV.-'6 Kerr McG I 16 101 t 114-~ NN1or!SI .50 t t2S ,,._. 11>11 to . L&M. a brand Oil the ....... 1ui·.12 7 J ,_ -~ QmEO ... •• 1 l\lii-"" Gl#loc:• ... 7 111 tt ..... ""' bnlOM I• s ' ,, . NrtSI pl I;".. 13 ~, .... decline tor· mau•v years, 15• """":::11i""'"•-'• ,." •,~. -,." c.orM,OH ..... tJ t ... a.. s..c 1.10 s 6 n -v. Kidde w . ., • 1~ 1•v.-~ Nuc.orCp .n • 15 11 -"" ~ ,._ CW01•1.n.1 I lt\>\>-"". Gollse.'t lft •• tz H •.• IO"*"'_l,to 6 to 26l'o -lli NVF Gomp 1 lO ,-....t,t, DOW 6eing-pos1'tioued as 04L-llCiCO ~ • .. 2:21'11 CMMi SM. 1 T «22 J:Jv.--GATX I.Ill ' .. 2SYt• " J(l,.OS .40 ' s 6"-14 _;,....o 0--un: ~°"9 11 fll6 ~· 7 21 It .. -• c;cA Corp t 1 ffo-\lo =C.'I0 11 11 12"11o-llo 0..ltePr ,M 7 1 '°"" ... proud smoke,•• whatever that ~,. _.. 4 " ,._ ~ sc.i ts • s + "" c;.rn1n1 c..., . . .s ..,., •. . " ·'"' 1J >s 1"""'-""' °""'""'" ' a • ~ ~ 1.• • 11¥1-.... I Ill I ll I~ ,,, Gsmlriltt1 I•,. SJ 12 -Yr Ill Co J 11 t \ti-""' Oc;clOPI r 4 •• J s.tV.+ \lo atean1. Mel.. t J -\41 a. i 1 ll .... -"" OnAMI .1Ab , • o1:S WI , , • KoOPltf 2 . ., t 101 71\(o -\I', Oc;c Ptpl ,to ·• lll "Vo-~ S.IAlt D ~ •. .Sib •• 1•S t--.'16 ~1.IOGlO 25 JS ••• Kor~!" t ) S , OuPl,t1;1.SG .. J.I _... ••• 1 cigarettes." These are the "'Golden West Cites ~" • j s ....... QwlftMI ,... • 21 IJ -.. Gftt&Ms .IO ' I N ••• ICr.tk,t I.ft 10 1n ,,.,.._ (i; Oc;td I WI •• ,,, ,.._ 141 Ndw'O .iJe 1S tot JOl>'t-l"I C'.orltkC .70 1 14 j6 .... • V. GtflC.tbl .n S 21 W.-,,.. K,.._ .a.i It 10C3 17'11-'111 Qedltn Op. I 1 22 11 -1111 iWC!k IMP • .-36 t\fo-'4 Owl lr:d .toti t 116 ltll-V. Gii C.-1.20 P 'W ,,,,.._Vo K"'llt' 1.:16 6 » 19\4-v, '000!! Ill' t .17 .. 1 ~ ••• ArilW ll'IC: • 16 11'-\.Iii QlnsEO pf 6., I S2 • . • Git~ 0111 .u 1 •S u-.--J(.,._ In .JO It 1S JV,. Ofilo Ed 1.U t lol !SV.-14 Ml PS 1.» 1 Ul ,,...__ -~ pl s .• 2 •2""-V. Gii Dlt.,.100 • V 4 -\4 ---1.. L -. '. Oh E. pf 4.40 •• 1100 O h ••• An< ..... .Vt •• ' ••-"" pf 4.6.S • , r100 ,.,._, Gni Dy Mm 6 "" o \o'J-Mo lac:Gn 1.60 6 2J 1'"" . . . Oh E pf •.u .. 110 .o:v. ••. Arti;UGt.1'7 Sol Jflll-tn 1.lS t 171 t•--• Go'!Elttl.to14~4 ..... Uim&llSlllO I 3 IJ\4 • \4 Ol'>Epll0.16 ,. JIO IOI ..• ' Load ·Factor Hike James M. Harmon, presi- dent of Golden West Airlines reported for the month of August, 1975, the airline car- ried 29,195 passengers. The Newport Beach car4 rier's available seat miles for the month were 2, 774,991, which accounted for a moo· thJy load factor of 55.38 per- cent compared to S0.89. per- cent for the same period last year. Total passengers car- ried year-to-date total 210,092. The schedule completioa fac: tor was 97 .34 percent for the 111onth .and 98.05 percent year. to-date. The carrien on time departure record for the month was 95.02 percent. Golden West bas recently acquired new joint fares with the major carriers operating In llDd out of Los Angeles In· lerJ>atioual Airport. The joint fares are available from all Golden West origin cities to most major U .s. destluations. • Make Certain Your Spark Plug's Right C.pliol Ne ... Senice Many aiecbanics, both or tbe professional and SUnday variety would be offended at the thought that they could in- stall the wrong spark plugs in a car. According to the ~µ.r rent issue of Motor Magazine this happens-much too often, particularly w'hen changing brands. One should always refer to the car manufacturer's recom- mendation not the brllDCI interchange charts. Tbea:e charts are not an ~NHIGHG~ accurate guide. . Tbe wrong spark plup can play havoc. with your gas mileage and mate for a rough running engine. As the plugs get tougher and tougher-to get to, many more people are re- lying on professional mech·anics to chancethem .. Make sure YoU are getting the properooes. · . Some stations are 'pushing platinum tip plugs wllb the advice that with lead-free gas they'll lut the life of the car. Experts say that there is no guarantee the expensive platinum plugs won't foul at the same mileage a1 the con- ventional pJug. The biggest difference may well be in the high price of the platinum. It sure doesn't show under the hood. • The newest car for 1976 will be a mini job from Chevrolet that is reported to give about 40 mil~ to the gaUoo. It is a forerunner of a new generation of cars corning to us for the remainder of this decade and 'well into the 1980'1. This newest addition to the General Motors faiully will be the smallest, lightest, moot miles to the talion car they have ever produced in this country. It will weigh about 2,000 pound&. with a 95-incb wheelbase and an overall length near 180 inches. The. powerp~ant will be a four-cylinder. 85-cu.-luch enclue de· livering that extraordinary 40 miles to the precious ealloo. _ The new Chevy will be 18 incbes shorter and 500 PoW>dS lighter than tbe 1'75 Vega, GM's shortest car on the market. M the fint long mileage, mass production car from an American ma nufacturer it will become the ya.rdlttck for all the others that will surely follow. It's going to be an Interest· ingraceto watch. · . . • I!<! careful on those back count?y bridges. It has been reported that 80,000 of America's 564,000 bridges pooe real ... dangers to motoris ts. They are either too weal! to handle the heavy loeda or too narrow t.o safely accommodate traffic. About 150 fall eacb year. One reason ls that three-quarten of thl!ile bridges were built before 11135 when motor,vehicles were smaller, lighter and fewer in number. > . . ..,..llftO\f,, 10 1'1111 ••• l'Jlplf•\\ .• J" -Ioli Grll"OOCll.«111 1CI U...-"' ~.Jt S 4J ·--II< OllPwptl•A •• 11JOOIOfYt--\o'J Am1C01.60lt $ 'J2I 'JMlo-lo'J ·ot.1010 t 1•'61 ,,, GltftGo-1.2'a16 I'"'° ••• "-"lll!llo .• 2 2•1-'.-:i.. OtiPw ofl ...... IDO lU _,_, "'""pl l.10 •• 15 n Oft6NGJ.11 t .... n 11o-"' Gn!HHI .!oO 2 "IOVt+"" ~.-10 • 1 .....•.. DnpptD 7.1• •• JIO MM ... Al"'5C'.ll .'JI -"41-.... ou;11110 ...... ,., _, Gtftlftsto'111. " tvo-w. l.Hds.&.N .~ 1 p 10\lo +,.. OICCC:O .to. J , .. _ .... 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It's 'hang sixteen' for Ratsy, a surfing dachshund pup as ~she rides the crest of a wave in the Atlantic Ocean off St. A11gustine, Fla. At the end of her ride, the pup swims for r1 the waiting arms of her master . ,, .. . :Julie Eisenhower " "'.'Having Some Fun' . , ("· WASHINGTON (AP ) -Julie Nixon Eisenhower is putting • 1ber life together a.sain. Thirteen months after her fattier. Richard M. Nixo n. re- · Signed the presidency, Mrs. Eisenhower, her father's staunchest public s.upporter, is having some fun . " SHE SAYS HER MARRIAGE IS closer now and that the ,1 pressure to perform publicly has lessened. She has written a cookbook and designed embroidery kits to be mass produced. She . is considering a television career. · --:· And she is begiOning to feel free. "It's been a different year because, for one thing, I'm not •. guarded," Mrs. Eisenhower said in an interview in her ' Washington apartment. "I don 't think anyone can know what it's , like to have 24-hour protection for six years. I don 't think David · · and I ever had a normal situation.· "In the last year, we've kind of discovered having fun again' and being free, being able to pick up and do things and go places. I think that's the major happy thing in our lives. "IT'S NICE NOT TO BE UNDER pressure to try and answer questions on every topic of the day, especially if you don't think people care what your view 1s on whether we should send more aid to South Korea . I just re- ally value being abletobemyown person." ., The Eisenhowers' two -story apartment, which overlooks a busy intersection not far from the Kennedy Center, is furnished simply with small sofas and high arm chairs. A beaded flower arrangement, a wedding gift from sister Tricia, sits on a table. A small picture of her father, taken recently in California, sits on a ; JuL.t• · shelf in the foyer. MrS . Eisenhower~ requested that no questions about Watergate or her parents be asked, explaining, "I'm really tired oftalking ,aboutit.'' , "• What she enjoys most these days, she said, is spending more timewitb her husband.' "WE WERE BOTH SO CAUGHT UP JN political events that we re31Jy did.O'-t have a life of our own. Now we have more time with each other, time to talk about our future and what we waht out of life ... l've come to the conclusion that in marriage, you reallY have to con'centrate and give a lot. And I've found that when both partners are involved with som.ething they enjoy, that's wheothere1s happy sailing." At 27, after years of shaking hands and giving speeches in the name of the Nixon Administration, Mrs. Eisenhower is trying to establish her own identity. . "I enjoy working, I really do. If I hadn't had any interest or work goals when mY father left office, my life would have been very empty. Having these; things going has been very important during the first year he has been out of office.'' She has written ''Julie Eisenhower's Cookbool( for Children,'' a volume of recipes collected. from friends . Included are such ite~ as "Pink Panther Soup," and "Daddy's Favorite Steak Sauce." THE RECIPES RANGE .FROM INEDIBLE but decorative play-dough cookies to a more difficult, somewhat spicy Kima. curey. Mrs. Eisenhower said she now regrets not calling it a cookbook for children and their parents. A series of anthologies she has edited for the Saturday Even- ing Post comes out next year. Her needlework kits, which she de- .signed and which are being marketed. by a large needlecraft com- pany, will be on sale in major department stores in January. Does she feel her famous name is an advantage or a trap? "lt·works both ways ," Mrs. Eisenhower said. "There's no easy i.nswer to that. You have to go on living. If your name is knoym, you might as well makethe best of it. I don 't think you can retreat if you think you're doing things legitimately and produc- . ing things of quality. It's not a worry to dJ.e. ·• SHE BRUSHED HER LONG CHESTNUT hair behind her. shoulder, Jetting the features in her round face soften. "I'd like to give a painting to the White House in my mother's honor someday,'' she said. ''1 think it would mean a good deal to her." She said that Warner Communications Inc., a major enter- tainment and communications firm located in New York, is try- ing to promote a television program for her -an idea she finds both appealing and threatening. · ''I don 't want to be a 1V personality,'' she said, her dark eyes narrowil\g. "I don't want to be a TV star. Yet I 'm known now . I'm tom.:· -:Baja-Homeowners Protest 'Takeover' • • SAN DIEGO IAP ) -Mexican I' J*&S&Dt.s -say they have taken O'Yer 764 acres of Pacific I beachfront land from U.S . , ewner1 40 miles south of the "We are claiming only that which is legally and constitu- tionally ours." I aUoo.al border in Mexico's California. '1'be land on which expensive boniea have 'been built by CllDI II part ol a 35,000. expropriation ordered In , by then· President Adolfo Lope1 Mateo for use as an ~ a1rlcultural r:ommunity, a ljlOkeomanaaid. - ' '1'1111. PEASANT families, he -~en, "only wish to live -llJ aide with the Americans • ~borw and ID justice and , .•.. , "W• do not Intend to .move "'1," aal4 Jorie SalCedo Varfas, . E~!!:!tlhoJ..aiaroearc1eo .. • --·-. uecuU-v•committee. •• Salcedo siad the communal Jarmers will allow the Americans to Ii ve in their own homes. BUT A FORMAL protest was being prepared by Howard Koenie. a retired industrial sales manager from Detroit, Mich. The government wtU be asked Wednffday in Mexico City to aJ. low the Americans to continue un-· · restricted use of the land, said Koenig, adding that "If com- munal farmers can come in and Just take whatever they feel is convenient, then no private pro-l>ertY issaleln Mexico," A few of the houses were built north 'of the La Fonda hotel and .f'e1taw:.aJlt.-a&.-eo1ta exceed.Ina $'(1,009 .. I ' Name TagS'~ ~ Required On Baggage WASHINGTON (AP) -Hop- inl to cut down the amount of lo.rt luggage, airline• WW refuse to carry yoar bagga1e plier Sept. 21 unless it has your name on the outside.• .. The ·new rule, api>")ved by the Civil AerQllautics Board two months ago, will notltpply to lu,a:- gage carried on board, but only to checked.baggage. PASSE!~GERS WHO. do not already have their name on their luggt.ge will be furnished with fr-:4e identification labels by the airlines when they check in before departure. . The airlines long have been urging passengers to put their name on the outside.of their bag- gage so that the carriers can quickly locate baggage that Is misplaced. The CAB Order was requested. by the airlines . IN 1971, THE airlines began re- quiring all standby passengers to have their names on their bags and began providing free iden-· tification stickers. Regular passengers were given the iden· tification stickers UP.Oil request but were not required to have their luggage identified. Lost and misplaced baggage has been one of the biggest com- plaints against the aitlines. Neither the Civi l Aeronautics Board nor the Air Transport As- sociation, the trade association of the airlines, has figures on total bags lost or misplaced each year. I .. ·- a-'una Eiilbar ' ---·- , . ,. <Jther ·N~ Pressured to 01iey ~y WASHINGTON (Al') -Tbe, DOWIC!q. the propooed Import Commerce Department bu an-ban wblcbf.allona might be 110W1ced It Intends to iJJIPo86 an · tarcetaorlli '111b111'l1>.1b.Unil· embargo on aome l,mported, tuna ed Slata imports 8$ percent ollta lllh, a move whklL*d cut olf tuoa fiaJJ, the vut blllkollttrom most of the luoa sol4 ID thfl Unit. Jopan, •• ed Slates. · , The proposed bon -.Id a'1PlY The embargo Ii aiined at· · Cl9IY to yfllownn tuno lllb,. the preS1wiat other nations tO abide' ... · ·var_letr. which"" 1oe1 Into the byal966fiahinftreaty. 'c:ann~' Ugbt: tuna which con-. stltut.S the m11n1tay d U.tr.tuoa THE MOVE FOLLOWED · flsbcon'aumptloo. complaints by U.S. tuna fish· \ SlltlTl'ING OFF a sllDifloant ermen that the UnllAld Slates ls I portion of imports collld be ·~· the only nation which forces its pected to drive up prices at f~shing fleet to abide by intei:na· /supermarkets, but official1 li~~Y set quot~a for a five -warned other natloas that the rnil~o~ square mile area of the /U.S. might couple ..the ban 'irith Pac1f1c Oc~an off North and easier limits on catches by U.S. South America. 1tuna boats in the' controlled atta. Commerce. Depart~ent Robert w. Scboning, director spokesme~ declined to say m an-cl. the Commerce Department's . National Fisheries Service, said the agency will take-tln'1 action Wfrk• on the proposed ban in mid-· · October after soliciting iddi· tional evidence. An international meeting on the issue is scheduled· to coincide with the date the ban would become effective. THE COMMERCE deoartment held hearin~· in San Diego on Aug . 29-U.S. (ts her men claimed their share of the worldwide yellowfin tuna catch had declined to 60 percent this year from~ 90-percent in 1966, largely due to restrictions im- posed by the lnter·American Tropical Tuna Association. -• The Un.ited States, canada, Me1:ico, Japan, France , 'Good morning, Senator!' Panama, Nicaragua and Costa Rica are lJ)e nations which have " IWT SO•B ll.& IWMI- -the dom-llC'k.., lbo.verpo1-......,.-ljift tbtealmed to ...-lloilr IMP!< uncle• a rorei.n ll~lf tbl 111>1ani- ment doesn't aet. ' I 1119 trellY ....-Ille l.te t.:oln the cOmeriillklii -a to 175,000 lonl lor tllll ,_, ~ Ing sa1a the, u.s.·5 estimates lbat 1,000 - the quota alteacty · "-" o taken from·the•areil Ud.lllio~ take above and beyond'-qilita mi1ht total as m\leb as ll0,000, tons by year-end. IJOGDAIS ··LONDON (UPI) -U ·y~ dog is having one o£ those dog i;tiiya, don't go to your medicine Chest to fmd him an upper. The advice came in a re- port issued by the British Small Animals Vete,rinary Association. · ''Wel l-meaning pet owners can turn their dog~ into raging wolves by giv- ing them human drugs," it said. "The animal lO&eS all ita: domesticitt, It changes from a hoUse pet to a wild animal. ·- LOOK WHERE THE MAGIC COOKIE ~ROUGHT VS .. .. • These Orange County girls are· enjoyin!! Camp Scherman in the San Bernardino Mo untains. be· cause Orange County families bought Girl Scout cookies last year. ~ut there is more t_o Girl Scouting today than cookies and camping. Nearly 35.000 Orange County girls are involved today in proj ects that are very relevant to today-ecology, aid to the handicapped, senior citizens, and, of.course,-aetivities designed to help in home and business. They'll be better womep tomorrow because they're .having fun being Girl Scouts today. And fully 31 percent of the funds needed for Girl Scouting come from the annual • cookie sale. Aren't yGu glad they'te selling cookie' instead of dope? Wouldn't you like to help supply ' I ' -' part of the other 69 percent, or become a needed adult leadeff.Call~- GIRL scour COVNat. Of ORANGE COUNTY Judge c.1v1n Schmld~.Pr .. 1dent 1620 Adams • • A lkliled way Membef' Ager't:y Costa Mesa, Califaml• 92626 ' (714) 979-7900 ... .... ---·----------- dne In a 'sanes of public ser,vice a~vertlsements sponsored by Avco Flna(lcial Services, Newport Beach, CallfdV'la ' I ' ' • • -------• •'· ·~ >cL ' , -------·- I ' ---..:;::·---"-------------------------" --• 1 ~ • l l I - 1/ ! • • v -·- Saddlehaek_ • I VOL. 68 NO. 259 2 SECTIONS 2• PAGES ORAl\IGE C:OUNTh', CAi.IF,ORNIA I TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1975 TEN CENTS • Headly Dart Guns .. members elf, Ille p•nel. system1. Helms, now ambas to· WASHJNGTON <IJPI) -CIA Jllrector Willia111 E . Colby. diJI. pl~ a deadly electric dar1 8Wl that he said couldlill 1Uenlly at 100 yards, today adntltted to Congress the ag•ncY for fiv~ years illegally maintained a stockpile ot lttbaJ poison and weapon.a. material be di1po1ed ot. Bu.t Colby did. not •ar wbolher Helms bad knowledJ• or the lllesaJ SIA>Ckpillng. . Under que1tionin1 by Sen. Howard Baur IR.11'-.). Colby said records sbowin1 who authorized the develop.glent and stockpllln& of the deadly biological weapon were destroyed three years ago with Helms· knowleda:e. In t he+ 1Jar.e of televtalon •• ....,,. liahto. Colby lhowed \he Ses,ale Select Committee oo ln· te1111ence a teleaCCJ!llc-sight.ed, black dart cun which he descrlbed as *'a very deadly weapon." .. Sen. Frank Church (l).[dllho), cbalrmao of tbe committee, glogerly tnapeded the weapon, _ slightly 1ar1er than a .45 pistol and banded it-along lo other Colby sata the dart 1un, pow.red ti>' eteetrlc. 'batten.S, was one ol v•rious ")et.hods ol in· Jecli'OI lethal doses of such polson.s as shellllsh toxin and cobra venom in ''offensi~e largels." Defensively, he said, tbe pol.sons were designed for suicide public hearine:s with a statement ••1ine: the investigation ••in· volves the UJea·a1 p)SSeSSion . of deadly biological poilons which were retained within the CIA for five years after their destruction wu Ol'dered by the President Cluchard IL NiXC\11)" in 1970. Colby said "middle level" CIA officers were apparently responsible for maintaining. the stockpile of poisons and delivery Iran, wa1 aittin1 lo the of" the parked Sen8te caucus room. scene· of the W ater&ale hearlnO. Helms, CIA director 10< ~moot· sevelJ yeara until 1973, is scheduled lo testify before u,e cOmmiUee Wednesday. Colby said his predecessor, Richard Helms, was aware of the • 19.70 requirement that such I I u ets Saddleback Trustees Board Opposing Joint Base Use By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Ol ~IHlly~Nea.tf , The SaddJeback Valley Unified School District's governing OOard voted ~onday night to join the opposition to a county pro- posal calling for commercial use of th'e El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Trustees adopted a resolution by unanimous vote requesting neighboring school districts and governmental repr esentatives to block lhe county's application to the ·Departmebt of Defense for joint civilian-military use of the baSe. Their action was based on the belief that airline traffic would subject Saddleback Valley school children to excessive noise and expose them to unnecessary danger. pllla for captured agenUI. · Cburch opened the panel's first at Long .Beach _Cop Killed In Shootout The Saddleback Valley Scihools resolution follows similar actions taken recently by ·the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Coun- cil, the Saddleback Republican Assembly and the Irvine City , --_ ... -~ -I a.et..,-,.._..,......,. CUSD TEACHERS )1¥ERE !>UT IN FORCE WEDNESDAY TO EMPH,UIZE SALARY DEMANQS F~ct-fl!'.l.!nv Comm111!1e·Q .. ~pr~ to.,,_. lttapt~,)lq11,Pf.IM!)~~. , · Council. 1 • ' . ClJSD ·~I '.f....,t~ By ARTHU R R. VINSEL Of th9 Dilllly ~I .. Shfl A veteran Long Beach policeman stalking a kidnap· robbery suspect in a back yard of a Signal Hill area residence was shot to death early today. The .reaolution wes pushed' through l>y Trustee Loa Young who said that although it appears the county ha1 litt~ chance of winning approval for the pro- posal, trustees, as elected or- ficials, would be remiss in their duties if they did not state their dissatisfaction. Sa-lal-y -Inquiry Ordered . , . "Commercial planes would be absolutely devastating," sald CSeeSTATl pN, PageA2) By F REDERICK SCHOEMEHL Otftlll 0.11, "1Nta.ft Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict trustees ordered formation . of a fact-finding committee Wed- hesday 8s a step in settling de· adlocked salary negotiations with teaehers. Tony Leon, CUEA president, urged the board to enter a "bind- ing arbitration" agreement with ttie teacher representatives as a means of settling the salary dis- pute . U"der t his process, both sides would agr ee to accept an arbitrator's recommendation on what salary increase should be given. Supt. Jerome T homsley said, however, that there is no pro- (See FACTS, PageA2J A task force of police, includ· ing some 100 officers and 27 cars plus tWo Police helicopters, cor· doned off and covered the area in which the suspect was later cap· lured without incident.. 1 Barefoot an.d bleeding from foot cuts, he was taken into custody without attempting to fire a .38 caliber weapon believed to be the death gun used on Patrolman Robert R. Birdsall. Taxing Rate Given For Saddleback Property owners in the unin- corporated com munities of the Saddleback Valley Will be taxed this year at a total rate of $11 .77 per $100of assessed value. The three, member committee will be composed of a person selected by th~ board, one select· ed by teachers and a third person mutually agreed-upon by the two sides. The com mittee's job will be to investigate salary negotiatiOOs · and deliver a ''statement of facts " lo the board and the teachers. The statement would serve as a foundation ror future bargaining . Irvine, Viejo Vie For Car Dealers Officer Birdsall, 40, was pro- nounced dead at 1; 12 a.m. in St. Mary Medical Center in the downtown area of Long Beach. He was shot in the chest at close r8Dli!e a£ter he and his partner, Officer Wilbur Poston. split up in the darkened region en the Long ,Beach-Signal Hill city border hunting their suspect. Investigators identified Officer Birdsall's alleged slayer as Fred Harvey. 24, Long Beach, a (See OFFICER, Page A2) Ford Speaks In CoWlly OnSuiula .Y PreSide11t Ford is scheduled to speak in Orange County Sunday as part Of a long weekend of politics and golf. He is due to be in Anaheim Sunday to ad· dress a dinnf'r of the -Na- tional Association of Life Underwriters at the Dis· The total rate includes $7.42 (or schools, $1 .63 toward the county general rund and $2.72 for specia1 districts, illcluding parks, waler, sewer, libraries, fire protection and street lighting (Related story, page Al). To roughly compute their ul- timate tax bill, homeowners can determine the assessed value of their pr operty (one fourth or the market value less t he basic $1,750 homeowners exemption) divide by 100 and multiply that result by the tax rate. - Heim 's office stressed the ~aa d.Jeback rate he is using as an ex- ample applies only to people liv- ing within the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. Heim this year is using $40,000 as the average market value or a county h~me. Using tpat base, the avetage Saddleback Valley tax. bill would stand at about $970.20. About 120 persons -most of them teachers -packed the San Juan Elementary School cafeteria where the meeting was held. · Outside the cafeteria, about 20 teachers picketed. They carried signs lambasting the school board's latest salary o(fer or 3.5 pei-cent aOd 'cuts in the educa· tional 'program that were made to pay for it. About 375 teachers. represent- ed by the Capistrano Uniried Educators Association <CUEA), are seeking a 7 percent salary in- crease. Another 100 teachers. represented by the Capistrano Unified Federation of Teachers !CUFT>, a union group, are hold- ing out ror their original demand tor a25 percent increase-: An Irvine erfort to prevent a potentially lucrative tax source- 3.uto dealers seeking sites in lrvine -rrom moving down the road to Mission Viejo advanced a step Monday. Plan· ning commissioners unanimous· ly approved 'zoning for an auto saJes center. An ordinance approving \he zone change will be considered by the city council Oct. 14. A second and final vote on the or· dinance could take place Oct. 28. The center, which could bring an ei1timated $300,000 in taxes to the city and more to the school district annually, ls being split away from t he rest or the Irvine Industrial COmplex-East to avoid the constraints or a development· stopping suit that has Deen filed by low-cost housing advocates. The Irvine City Council Aug. 19 gave the project top priority and told city planners to push it through the work~ in 60 days. The actual time will be 68 days, ac- School Design Okayed neyland Hotel. Hub Co •po~e.!.h0 i !.~d ~h~," ~h: N,ew . Saddl.eback Facility Gets ncept weekend will begin with The preliminary design con-rooms around a "(amily room" the Ctistrict·s fourth, next tO the F o r d a t le n d i n g the --cept for the Saddleback Valley -which ia-&o-be---used for leacher __,presenUy_existiJlg Sil.vuado,---EI Oklahoma State Fair in Unified District's newe&t high plB.nninc~seling, individual Toro and Mission Viejo high Oklahoma City Friday. He school was approved Monday instruction and special projects. school campuses. will fly to Los Angeles Fri-night by unanimous trustee ac-Th~ cl8¥roo~ (:l~tersT in tum _ At the sa-me time trustees -~+---<>~:; :::lU~:d~~a~: !8Je1.,.~. __ u_·°"..,.·, are arouPic[8touna ~ 'hUDor authorized a major expansion ...... y_,_ Still-unnamed, the schooLwill t he school con1lat1ng or UI~ · ~lt~.!m& _project a_!. !tfis- hous e at Pepperdine be located in the Aliso Hills libt"ary; ~rce--~ and'-ad-.tSiOfl .. '1i4fc:tlUgh SCfiOol , porti~ns University, M·atibu, after Planned Community near Alicia mlniatrativecom l!:lex . d wtilch ve scheduled for com- which he will ny to Mon-Partway an~ Paseo de' Valenda lNoteworfhy design features in· lin by rall 1976. • terey. and house an estimated 2,3>0 stu-elude a little theat er and a gyin- e._w.jJJ ~lay_a round o( .-Jla5iUJl!.,tWhkb...~~conve~ '$1 rt.illion rem~ling job golf at Pe ble Beach and -•-•em a·• .......... --•....ab•~~. {nto a 2,000 se11t performJng att.s ncllides -k ..,experience and -spenct--the--mgbt-tn-Morr-~· w....--.. -.iuu:u.. , iVI." cen ~ ar r g nee center in the ad· terey, the spok·esman said. J . J«:"sen ·~nd P.artners, district .. . . ':mi tra building, a media The President will Oy to arch1tect1, show thet the cam.pus Schoql autbonl1es hope to put anded teaching space Anaheim Sunday, and re-~ c;onsist of one large bt.dlding the l!_rO}ect out to bid by May'•-_and auto shops. ---w-rn-tu · Mont eTey for W'llh mter.spened.coud.)'ards. ----1178::..::a.nd ~ construCllafi:11i lley features will be anolh.r overn"sbtston The S7 million raclllty will May~. 1 "' feature ·c.lusters of four teachirlg Th,e li:igh aChool will become <See DESIGN, Pa1e Al) ,,.-~-:::~:::-;; .. ::;::;::::-:=====-:::'.. -I • ' cording to Richard Goecher of the city planning department. The haste was caused by four auto dealerships which have told Irvine Company officials t hey are interested in the indu5trial complex site. According to Irvine Councilman Henry Quigley, the dealers will seek sites in Miss ion Viejo unless they gel fast action on the Irvine site. The 62-acre auto sales center site is al Irvine's city limit al lhe San Diego Freeway and Canada Road. The Irvine Company has declined to develQP any land in ttre plan11ed Irvine Industrial Complex·East due to a pair or <See AUTO, P;iigeA2) Recreation Council Sifts Alternatives A propoas\l for recreational programs in the Saddleback Valley will be discussed by the Citizens Recreation Advisory Committee tonight at 7 o'clock. in Los Alisos Intermediate School, Muirlands Boulevard and Moor Avenue. , The plan has been proposed by Dive Evers, recreation supervisor ror the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. Members or the committee, which was rormed by the dis- trict~s board or trustees, are ex- pected to object to the proposal, according to Rick Bohay, service area 4 representative. They will object. he said, lo having all recreationaJ funds! which come both from the scfM>o . and the county, placed into Qne recreational program for the en- tire area, which covers Mission Viejo. El Toro and Laguna Hills, rather than the specific service areas. ---f Colby said there is in existence a ri'le~o between Helma and <See CIA, P a1e AZ> Newpprt Incident Hurts 2 ... • .. ByJOHNVALTERZA ,, Ol .. IMllty ,. ........ ' .... ~ An ar gument over a 25-cent pool game at Smokey Stovert• disCotl)eque in Newport Beaeb ended in a blaie of gunfire early t oday, seriously WQunding a Costa Mesa wom an and infiictinc lesser injuriff on the manager. ·The closing time shooting ia t he tavern at 3295 Newport Boulevard at 1: 50 a.m. triggered a manhun"l wh ich ended with more gunplay in Huntlngton. Beach-a.short.tim e later. . Police arrest ed two suspected gunmen affer wbat t h ey described as a struggle that evea inv.Plved a poli~e dog. Offi cers identified the m ost seriotiily in j ured-Victi m as Becky Bt n~atom 1.,21. or 994 Valelial• Av e, Co•ta•Mesa. She .s:ulterea l\IDlltot wounds. in the back and side and underwent surgery early today at Hoag Memorial Hosp ital. . Her condition. today was not immediately known. The club's manager, Fred Cisneros, 31, or 600 E. Ocean Front, Newport Beach, suffered a minor wound in the wrist. He was· treated and released . at Hoag. Tep minutes a fter witness re-. ports of a license number and car description were dispatched by police, a patroJman in · Hunt· ington Beach spotted the suspect car at Beach Bo ulevard and Ellis Avenue. Patrollnan Bob Jerrrey, driv· ing a unit occupied by a police dog, stopped the car driven by Jamee .Josep h Haas, 24, of Hollywood. Also in the car Was Timothy Carl Elliott, 22, of Cdv· ina. As Jetrrey and a backup officer approached the car, Haas as· sertedly plunged both hanil's between the rront seats, causing the officers to suspect that ne was reaching for a weapon. ... One shot was rired al that point by an officer but 'the slug traveled over the car and into a vacant field. orricers said a struggle ensued when the pair rerused lo leave the car, and at one point Haas broke free from ·an orficer only to tSee GUNFIR E, PageA2) C o as~ We athe r Mostly sunny through Wednesday, according to the weather service. with continued warm inland but cool at the beaches. Highs near 70 at the s trand rising to the mid -80s in north county, areas. INSIDE TODAY Julie ivtxon E isrenhower is pta tmQJier lit e.J oger het..ll{IJJin and be-ginning lo have some fun . She soys pressure to perform publicly hru l~S!tefl«I and .the is beginning to "/ttl /rte.'' Stqry P.oge A.12, llldex 1 • • '/ • r > • . .. ' Ro•nd '.l'tDo j BidS-Out Again For Toro Pool Faced by a low bid which ia ' '$182.000 above the SaddJeback I Valley Unified School Di•lrict's budget for the El Toro High School pool, the school dlitrlct '• governin& board called Monday night for a new round <A bidding on the project. The action was based on the board's consensus that the Olym- pic• pool could be built f0< the $485,000 budgeted f0< the con- struction portion. Several trustees were of the apinion that the six flnns who bid on the project were trying to taJce advantage of the school district because they know there is a great deal of Public pressure to get the pool built. Trustee Bill Kohler said the construction industry is "out to make money" after a b~iness slump and that he believes the bids may have been inflated. fl'ro. P11ge AJ "OFFICER ••• transient. He was booked for in- vestigation of murder and as- sau.11 with a deadly weapon Cll1 a pal.ice officer. The charges could bring the de- ath penalty if he is convicted. Police said Offie!er Birdsall a 15-year veteran ol the force a'nd his partner entered the 'area about midnight, after a wom-an - contaeted them from a liquor store. reporting: she bad beenkid- naped and robbe<l A description of the suspect vehicle a.od licenae number led 1 them to the Signal Hill neighborhood. where it wu dis· covered and Officer Birdsall was then •lain when he appareutly found lbe 1mpect. · lie WU sbot In the cbesl,, •P- parentJ~ without warning, aJthot.,-h it. WU not immedi.teJy del.ermmed bow maar u.ae. be wuQit. Mt reports of the llilliq of tbe JS-year Lone Beach. J'(J!U&eman said it .,.med like an automaUe weapoa,, indicating multipleobotawerefired. Some abot.1 may haft been fired by tile rietim. . The immediu aru al SIOlal Bill, • lln7 oil ud 1-..i city _c~IF mc1 .. ..i by tbe dty of ton& Beocb, w,u lm-otely sealed off. · • Teum ol oltleen ~ from a eommand pc.twereaent into the reclon "' tract -the popular officer_.• 1b1er and . finolly -ce-wtthia three hours of m. 1taytnc. Harvey WU ••nctil between t,..a hou1es by two officers .imu1t-•r, aceanliaC to u . · Tony Maleticb, --W have been cut down In a -If be resisted. · The olalu patrolm., ls no rela- tion lo 111..,.port 8"dl P<Jllce SCt-Donald' Burdsall, wbo•e namelsapelleddllf~. Jazz Histoty Clan Offered History of J az~. a coune trac- inc the development of the mmical style from its inception In Afrtca tbmll~b ""'4em day a .. nt«arde m!>deo, bo&IM Wed- neoday II Saddleback College. · The class will meet Wed- nesdaye from t . to 10 a.m and •1•1'rida,a from 8 to 10 e.m. in ' Room Q-3 on the college cam pas. 'I Registration continues through Wednesday for all fall Sad~ cllel>ack cluaes. .,, . ,, .. j , I' , .. lo f ' ., Saddleback Community Collea• Di1trtct r .. idellls who are I.I ye..-. of •I• and/or high school aroduateo are ellelble to attend Classes. ORANGE COAST .. DAILY PILOT TMOr. C.-. ~" """.tlkfi 1s t~ ll!Md.:t:.=·f'f•n. ,=:"' llw Or-C:-1 P119fllllt~t"::· ...... t .... llon$M• ~ ~ ....., ,..,Id.I,~ c .... ~ .U,H .._,,fl'.,.,... ~,'!r:, s=:= Y1ff1~ .fnd ~=-CN"-•::r.:-'"'· $MW .. ,. r,,_ ~ ~-It .. llCI WH4 llar c.w•... .,,.. ..... ROlbertN .WMd ,,,..-..a ......... i.. Jock R. Curl=t._ w.,.....,.,.1*"111Ge...,." ThOm•s Ken-II E•lto1 ~ ... _,.._ --if."-RicllOrd P. Noll ..................... 11•~,ucll V•'':t!''""' ....... ......,_ ""'""" -~:m-=---~ ..... : 1,,.,..9ft(.lil...._. ............ 1 1•~54f..t 1" ,.,.,.,, •• tn4> 6G.mt 011 ····~-60-1611 •• I Pl I tV....,,._Of9ct ..,.., .. _ ... _ ........ ~ ... =-=-:.= ~~ ":::"=!.,"a. .. ..... ,.. . .. -· . £.....7aS..~=== J . • • . L ll wu 11u1gested earlier by Robert H. Ferguson, the dis· tricl'• ~ir~ctor of pl"""1ng and . development, that the $182 000 deficiency could be made' Up by dialrict bond money and •fate aid. That proposal clearly was not in favor with a majority of board members who said that this would amount to transferring district funds rrom one budget in- to another. "We all were elected on the basis or fiscal austerity,'' said Kohler. "We riave a commitment not to spend their (the people's) money foolishly . And I think this would be spending money foolisbly ." Bill Monoson, president or the El Toro Hom eo wners Associa- tion, told board members be thought the bids were exce.ssi ve in view or prices charged for con- struction of reSidential pooJs. Aocording to Monoson 's calculations a backyard pool builder could well ~tay within the district·s budget . The readvertising of bids for the joint school-community use pool will delay the construction timetable by approximately six week.I, school authorities said. However. members or the gov- erning board said the short delay wou.tCI not be s1gna11cant. ·l"tte pool would still be ready by summer of 1976. "Let them have it. Lay· down the Jaw to them," Trustee U>a Young told administrators. "We wt.II still be swimming by JW1e." The SO meter pool, which will be open for community use after school houn and oo weekends, will be known as the Rooald W. Caspers Memorial Aquatics Center ill honor of the late filth district Orange County Supervisor. ,.,... P11ge Al GUNFIRE ••• . be subdued and chewed by the dog. 'Ibe two men were booked on charges of .. aault with a deadly weapon. Back at the nightspot in Newport Beach, palice were still piecing together the story of the shootinf. Detective Sam Amburgey said the two alleged gunmen bad stayed late at the club, playing PQOI and drinking. Theo an arcu- ment erupted over wbose turn it was to play. Cisneros assertedly asked several bouncers to remove the pair and after a noisy argument both men were out ln the street. · They assertedly milled around outside and argued In vain to be readmitted and aoon afterwards it was closing time. As 45 or SO patrons were leav- ing, the men were &een to run across Newport Boulevard and witnesses said Ha~ wltbdre., a gun from bis ar. painted toward the crowd, bracing his bands on the roof. Amburgey said the crowd scat- tered as five shots rang out rrom the city hall parkina: lot across the street. · The two victims were struck from behind as they headed toward the doorway. Ambur1ey said it was a miracle that no one elae w .. struck IJl the flurry of gunfire. • FACTS ••• vision in 11tate law for binding arbitraijon between achool board ~ employe groupa. ''Even if the school board was predisposed to binding arbitra- tion, it would be an illega1 act," he said. Thornsley recommended the board appoint the fact-finding committee. He uld It woold be in keeping with board policy in situations where ''persistent dis- agreement" ba1 arisen in 1alarY negotiations .. Truateeo unanimOU1ly R1reed to formation of the committee and Thornsley'1 recommenda~ tioo th•t Dr. Donald Woodinflon, a former Laguna Beach Unified School District 1uperlntendent, be named as the board's repreMDtative . 'Ille board aloo tabled apprvval of lta previous 3.5 percent 1alary Increase offer pendlni the ttate· -ol lacta from the commit· lee. • p,...·P ... AI DESIGN ••• 'II ...,. 840-Hal auditorium and bllld room, tbe out.Ide of which· will ba d...,..ated by a ttyllzcd mural d~lotlDI "'-Soddleback mountabu. a Spaillab. ~on, and a padre. ' /. Hayden: Put Refugee.on Nixon&tate ,LOS ANGE LU {Upz) .:.. Senate candidate Tom Hayden quipped M~ that Vietnamete refua:ea who cannot be sent back to their native country shoWd be housed on Richard Nix. em's estate at the former president'1expense. Hayden .~ former "Chicago Seven" defen· dant and husband of ac- tress Jane Fonda, is oppot.- ing Sen. John Tunn~y for the Democratic nom.i.na· tioo. Hayden said · Monday that if elected be would do all he could to encourage Vietnamese refugees to go back to Vietnam. The United States bas no choice but to help those who do not wish to return, he said. "But I think the burden should be maybe carried by President Nixon and they should live in San Clemente.'• CIA ••. Sidney Gottlieb. former chief or the agency's technical services division, indicating the records w-ere destroyed by Gottlieb, in November 1972, ·before be re· tired. . Colby conceded Gottneb had been at CIA )>eadquarten within the last few days reviewing cer- tain files, but said no one had in- terviewed him to fUld out why he d .. troyed those vital records. "Then we run up aaeinst a stone wall.'' said Bater. Church'• committee· has pro- bed lntelUgence octlviu .. at length In closed sessions. Dw1l>ll those sessions, the leftover toxins at the Army's blolo1lcal laboratocy at Ft. Detriclt, Md., cametoligbt. *** CIA· Reveals U2 Spy Pilot 'Had Poison' WASIUNGTON (UPI) -CIA Director William E. Colby said today Gary Powers, pilot or the U2 spy plane shot down over the Soviet Union in 1'1111JO. was pro- vided with a tiny palloo nMdle concealed in a silver dollar in case he wanted to commit suicide. · But, Colby told the Senate Select Committee on Ina telligetice, Powers ''obviously· did not uae it. and waa not in- structed to do so. It was offered to him to provide him with ao op- tion.'' Colby 1aid an earlier ''{,.pill" designed for agents to commit suicide during World War 11 "took some time to work· and was agonizing.•• He said agents who might have the need· to use such a pill would want ''instantaneous•• results and that was why the poisons, such as was 1upplied to Powers, were developed. The needle would have enabled Powers to in- ject himself with deadly shellfish toxin. - ''.The Powen Flight wu the· only time we were aware that the toxin was used for operallonal uae, although the L-pill was made available for earlier night.," Colby said. STATION ••• Mrs. Young, nolntlng out that some schools rn the vicinity of Los Angeles International Airport had to close beca...., of the noise factor. Her comment.I were echoed by Trustee Carole Neuatadt who 1aid, "I too feel very lllrollCIY about thil. We cannot alt back and &Hume this will be denied." Although the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council CSACC) baa not yet taken official action oo the renewed airport -1 a representative "of the council m: dicated to trustees Monday night that such action is imminent. Radcliffe A•b of the SACC aviation committee tol4 board members that there ill no other airport in the nation which is joi.ntty used by military and civilian aircraft. He described the l"-4 fighter jeta fiyln1 Into the El Tero base u "bot rodo" with twice the 1peed potential of commercial crart and said that bit cmv .. a- Uons with civilian captains in· dlcate they would refuse to lly peuencen illto El Tero because olthe added'dan1er. Alb noted that a pttitloo with t•thousands of 1t1nature1" now ls being circulated at Lacuna Hiii• Lolaure World In ~ to comlllt1'olal tralfic otlboboH. • Shooting Out of Bounds~ Of 2Dog_s_.~<;uard....... Qui.ta . Over RePriniand P . . DEL MAR (.\P) -Ronald w. ,_bu quit,.. ro'. tested a city Ule1uard because.be tried to amwer • rescue call too far away. The call that two men appeared to be drowning A HWIUOston Harbout' woman cbarfed today that her two pet do&• were ahot lo death in cold blood by a ucurlty guard at a Seal Bead> Naval Weopcwia Sta· tiOll. I Mn. Bhett7 Pilarski, ltltlZ ' Warren Lane, said the dogs. Gretel, a female German· 1hepherd ond Harrin,ioo, a male Labrodor·lheoberd were sunned down Sept. a; dn the _.w of the ttatl4n hut oho clido't know about lt until a week later. "We're just lookinl fer help,·· she said, her voice brealrln& with IObl. "We don't want anything like this to happen again." Mra. Pilarski said she had given the do&1 a bath Sa,turday and they slipped out ol the cate' that night and into the Navy sta· lion across the street without license tags or identiftcatJcm. She said that in accounts she had learned, a security guard saw the dogs out around the bunker:15, one aleeping and one sniffing around. "They growled, but didn't at- tack," she says, "and the man shot and wounded both. He tracked them down and fired nine shots in all before they were dead," •be sobbed. "They were petrified ol guns," she says. ••AU the men had to do was shoot once in the air and they would have run away.·· Commander Hany Madera, executive officer or the station, confirmed the Incident.. He said wild dogs roamed tlle base ror years and it could be as· 1wned that '4ra. Pllanld'1 dogs were wild. "At the same time," he said, 'we bad been w a.med that a rabid do& wu on the loose. We hall gotten the word that one bad bitten a boy (Colin Rdain) and to be oo the lookout for It. "The 1uard had )bla In mind when be made bis rounds," Madera said. "'When be saw the twodop, he eot out or his car and they rrowled. He felt threatened by them md didn't think be could get back In . the vehicle before they attacked," the commander said. Mrs. Pttanki said she has con· tacted Rep. Mark Hannaford about the incident. Ford Rapa U.S. Courta WASIUNGTON CUP!) - President Ford today ac- cused rPOme federal courts d not following .a new law which specifically outlines altemaUves to rorced bus- ing to bring about quality education. The President broacbecl tllie question when asked at ~news conference whether be wu p~epared to ap- prove more money for education In view al the problems which aueb cities u Bolloa and LoullYllle, J(y. had been confronted with in busing enforce- ment. ''The thing that botbenl me about actions of sqme of the courta • ., la -they apparenUy have not taken into consideration the law •illlled by me oo AllC. 12, 1974," Ford said, three da)'I alter be took of· flee. came from a park ranier who said later of Jensen1 "I'm glad he did respond, even though It was a false alarm. It could have been a disastrous situation." ' Grant Larson, Jemen's •l!Pl!rvlsor, said the spot of ll1e apparent drownlng was outside Del Mar's jurisdiction. · By the Uine the ranger was able to reach county lifeguards by telephone Jensen was there. 1 Llµ'son gave Jensen a <?lie-day suspension when be got back Sunday. · . "I said I didn't want to work with an agency that L5 more concerned with boundaries and politics than· with human lives," Jensen said afle quitting. Timberline Project · Approved Oran1e County planning com- missioners approved. a new con- dition al use permit Monday which will allow South Coast Development Company to con- tinue its "Timberline" develop- men t east of Muirl&nds Boulevard and north of Alicia Parkway. The Permit, which allows phl\Sed development of theli~ acre area near Aegean Hills, ad been previously approved. A county administrative error, however. required another ap- proval. Ray Ziccardy, president of the development company, Did they plan to build 162 single-family homes in the planned unit de· velopment which includes com- mon areas to be owned and main- tained by a homeowners associa· ti on. The concept is sirjillar to that used in condominium develop- ment.a. The development is in an exist· ing eucalyptus grove but, he said, tbt! streets have been de- siped lo minimize IJ'adina and retain u many trees as po&&ible. There are 2800 existing trees, he said. About850 of these will be left in and an additional 2000 trees will be planted. Work on the projed la expected to •tart within the next four weeks, be said. It ii eJtpected to be completed In abouhwo years. Course Set In Harmony Commercia.J Harmony, a course which will present a study of harmonic progression. in the commercial rield, begins tonight at Saddleback Community College. The three-unit course is being offered from 1 to lO ~p .m. Tueada)'I In Room Q-3 on the campus.~ Traditional and popular use of interval•. modes, rhythms meten, notation of scales, atruc: ture, notation and use of coo.tem- porarY ebOrda and progressions will be empbaeized. Students interested in enrolling 1bould have completed a course in harmony. Student. may enroll in the course at the college ad- mlAiona office through Wednes- day, fl',...P.,,eAJ AUTO ••• lawsuits til~d by the Orange County Fair Housing Council and environmentalist Wesley Marx and six other Irvine residents. The suits attack the environ- mental impact repart and roning for the industrial area. contend- ing that the city is not meeting its responsibility to have housing available to industrial-area workers. The auto center spilt-off is justified by planners beeau.se re- latively few employN will work in the car dealerships. About 54,000 employes are ul- timately anticipated ln the eastern complex. Although the Irvine Company has not sougl;it separate zoning on the auto center because of the suits, it made no objection to the zoning move initiated b1 the Irvine Planning Department. Planning commi1sloners stipulated that the proposed ex- clusive auto-sales use of. the site be expanded to Include equip- ment rental and auto wrecking. They also added a requirement f~r educational facilities for· auto-related skills. Encephal,itis Still Raging By The Asso<lated Press State health investigators were checking today 56 new eases of encephalitis reported in Indiana. The new cases brought to 264 the number of reparted en· _ cephalltis cales. Laboratory work continued in connection with 10 suspected encephalitis deaths, the •tate health boarli' said. Investigators warned that the type of mosquito carrying the disease could survive cold weather by taking refuge in crawl spaces in homes. They added, however, that moequito breeding stopped in cold weather. Mothers of Twins . . --- Meet Wednesday Saddlebact Mothers of Twins Clu~ will meet Wednesday at 7:30 ~.m. at 24342 Apbena Way in Mission Viejo for pizza and dis- cussion of twin care. The club meeta the third Wed· nesday of every month to ex· change information, twin equip· ment and clothing, ace0<cling to Joan Haroldson, publicity officer for the club. Mothers of triplets also participate, abe said. Addi - tional information is avatlah· · ~v calling Rosemary Draga 551-4~. Let Us Put· You On The Map Near the entrance, lnaide our store, is a giant new map. We are In the process of identifying all of the t.oilres we have cspeted since 1965 on this map with COiored pins. (A different c:olor for each year.) aose scrutiny will detect some' interesting facts: firstly, . we have carpeted homes on virtually every street '!" the area. Secondly, the pins are in bunches. 1ndrcatrng WORD-OF·MOUTH advertising. Thirdly, the number ol homes we have carpeted 11 ~rtng. lf you desire honesty. experi1lnce and t9COl!lmendations from neighbors we have Worked 1or, then Alden's Is THE PLACE! l!l&-o'D EN'S :rtista11itiiin:·custom draperies Jn a reference to the c:om.ntlon tllat El Toro'• exp-loo -.Id ...,ueve noise probltm1 at Onnt!e County Airport Ath 1ald, UC.N0.2l0421 "You're not OOl•l•J anythln1 by tat1n1 the nolH from -place 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COST, A MESA, CALIF. ~2627 • PHONE 646-4831-:46-2355 and putting it another." - 1 ._ ____________ .:..-;,;:..;.....:.,;,:..:,:.;,;_:;::::.,_.::,::::;=::::::.:.:::::::.._.1 • • • • • • T•day• .. C::leslalJ N.Y. Swelk8 -.. ·-l • VOL 68, NO. 259, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1975 TEN CENTS ' CIA . Chief Admits Deadly Dart Guns~ ' 1 · U~IT• ....... .SEN. FRANK CHURCH HOLDS.DART GUN ALLEGEDLY EMPLOYED BY CIA OPERATIVES Order• to Destroy Lethal Toxins 'Directly Dt tobeyed,' Panel Charge• ;AutQ Zoning Approved Irvine Planners Okay Sales Center Project An ~rvirle efro~t to prevent a ly approved zoning for an auto The center, which ~Id bring potentially lucral1ve'taxsource-sales center. an estimated $300.000 in taxes to aw~dealer-8:-ffff!·ing-sites in An-or--dinance approving. the t.b.e_ci.ty B.nd more to the schoo1 lr-v-lne-f.,.r-om m-oving ::one change will .be considered district annually, is being split down the road to Mission Viejo by the city council Oct. 14. A away rrom the rest of the Irvine a~v .. ;nced a. st.ep Monday._ Plan. s~cond and final vote on the or-Iodustrial Complex-East to avoid run.,-comm1ss1oners unerumous-dinance cbuld take place Oct. 28. the constraints of a development- stoppiog suit that i)a1 been filed . ' • WASHINGTON (UPn -c~ Dirt<t<>< William E. Colby, clll· pllytnc a deadly electric dort gun Illa! he 1ald could kill lllentb • at 100 yards. today adlilllted to Congreu the aaeney, for five years llleaally maintained a . stockpUe or lethal poison and weapons. Colby aaid bis predecessor, Richard Helms, was awareolthe 1910 requirement that such material be disposed of. But Colby dld not say whether H~ms had knowledge of the illegal stockpilln1. Under questioning by Sen. Howard.Buer <R-TOM.). Colby said records showing who authoriied the development and stockpJling of the deadly biological weapon were destroyed three ,years ago with Helms' knowledge. In the g I are 'of televtsioil: camera light!:, Colby showed lb¥'. Senate Select Committee on Iii:· teJligence a telescopiC·ISighled~ black dart gun which ti9'• des('ribed as "a very deadly ' weapon." .' l Sen. Frank Church ([).Idaho); chairman of the committee, gingerly inspected the we•pon, slightly larger than a .45 pistol <SH CIA, Page A!) .... Tavern GunplaY •nl ~lwotillf! Enm Bar Fight By J OHN VALTEllZA a manhunt which ended with back and side and underweHf ' °' .. 0.11,"" ... ..., · I · H · more gunp ay 1n unt1ngton surgery early today at Hoa&. An argument over a 2S·cent Beach a short lime later. Memorial Hospital. · ~I game a~ Smokey Stover's Police arrested two suspected Her condition today was ~ri dis~eque tn Newport Beach gunmen after what they immediately known. .. i ended 1n a~laze of gunfire early deScribed as a struggle that even The club's manager, Fre~ today , seriously wounding a involved a police dog. Cisneros 31 or 600 E. Ocean' Costa ~~sa. woman and inflicting Officers identified the most Front, N'ew~rt Beach, suffered lesserin,Jur1esonthemanager. sei;iously injured victim as a minor wound in tbe wrist. He The closing time shooting in Becky Bengstom, 21, or 994 was treated and released at the tavern at 3295 Newport Valencia Ave., Costa Mesa. She Hoag. Boulevard at 1 :SO a .m. triggered suffered gunshot wowlds in the (See GUNFIR E, Page AZ) Suspeet Na'fJbed Long Beach Cop Slain in Search By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. O.llyP'I ....... parently w·itho·ut war n l-ng, although it was not immediately determined how many times be was hit. Dogs·Mu1•.dere.r. by lo,.l";:~•Uiquaio1.l!!Yocates. The mtil>• Gil* Cooocil AUit. l.L .... .0 gave the project tOp priority and told city pJai nners to push it thrOui:h the works in 60 days. The A veteran Long Beach policeman stalking a kidnap. robbery suspect in a back yard of a Sioiel lli.U area residence was shot to death early today. A task fore~ of pblice, ioclud· inl' some joo offjcers and Z1 cars plus two police helicopters, cOr· doned off and covered the area in which the suspect was later cap. lured without incident. First reports or lhe killing of the 15 -year Long Beach policeman said it sounded like an automatic weapon, indicating multiple shots were fired. Some shots may have been fired by the victim, L Woman Says Guard Slwt Pets actual time will be 68 days, ac- cording to Richard Goecher of the city planning department. A Huntington Harbour woman charged today that her two pet dogs wete shot to death in cold blood by a security gu,ard at a Seal Beach Naval Weapons Sta tion. Mrs. Sherry Pilarski, 16912 Warren Lane, said the dogs, Gretel , a female German shepherd and Harrington, a male Labrador-shepherd were gunned down Sept. 6, on the grounds of the station but she didn't know a_bo\lt it WJ:lil a wee.le later. _ "We're Just looking for help," she said, her voice breaking with· sobs. "We don't want anything like t}J.is lo happ~n ag~. ·· COPS COWDE ON 'CODE 3' ST. LOUIS (U PI > -Two policemen, responding lo the s'ame prowler call rrom ~irrerent directions, crashed into each other in their patrol can. Both were injured. Patrolman Charles 1-legel suf- fered a fractured left thigh and possible head injuries Monday. PatroJmaq John Rice was treat- ed for a fractured left wrist and head cutl!I . Each said he could not dist- inguish the flashing lights or hi s car from those of the other car. Mrs Pilarski said she had The haste was caused by four gi ven the dogs a bath Saturday auto dealerships which have told and they slipped out of the gate Irvi ne Company officials they that night and into the Navy sta· are interested in the industrial tion across the street without complex site. According to Irvine licensetagsor·identification. Councilman Henry Quigley, the She said that in accounts she dealers will seek sites in Mi ssion had learned, a security guard Viejo unless they get fast action saw the dogs out around the on the Irvine site. bunkers, one sleeping and one 'fhe 62-acre auto sales center snifiing around. site is at Irvine's city limit at the "'They growled, but didn't at-San Diego Freeway and Canada ta('k," she says, "and the man Road . shot and wounded both. I-le The Irvin e Company has tracked them down and ~ fired declined to develop any land in nine shots in all before they were the planned lrv inE" Industrial dead." s he sobbed. Complex-Eas t due to a pair of "'They were petrified of guns.·· lawsuits filed b )' lhE" Orangr s he saYs. "All the man had to do County Fair Housing Council.and was shoot once in the air and they environmentalisl Wesle)' Mar)!. would have run away." a nd six other Irvine residents . Commander Harry Madera. The s.uits att ack the env1I"?n executi~ officer of the station,\ mental !mpact _r eport and zoning confirmed the incident. ~or lhe 1ndus_lr1~J area, c~te~d He said wild dogs roamed the \ing that _th_e_c1l~ 1s not meet1ng.1ts base for years and it could be as-i res~ns1b1hty l_o have . housing s umed that Mrs. Pilarski's dogs ava1lable to ~ndu s tr1al -area were wild. workers. "Al the sam e time,'" he said, . T~~ auto center split·ofr is "we had been warned that a JUS_t1f1ed by planners bec~use re- rabid dog was on the loose. We lat1vely few e mployes will work had gotten the word that one,hed (See AUTO, PageA2) bitten a boy (Colin Raisin ) and to be on the lookout for it. ·'The guard had this in mind when he made his rounds.·· Madera said . "When he saw the two dogs, he got o ut of hi s car and they CSee DOGS, Page A2) .,...., fltMI...., ..... SHE'S A. JUDGE. Betty Lou Lamoreaux Brown Names Coast Woman Court Judge GO\ Edmund Brown Jr. has appointed Betty Lou Lamoreaux of Newport Beach as a municipal court judge. She will fill a new position in the Harbor Judi cial District, raising the number oC judges on that bench to Ci ve. Since Oe('ember, -Judge Lamor.eau:1t, Sl, has been the traffic trial com- missioner in the district. The an· nouncement Crom Sacramento did not indicate who wouJd fill the traffic commissioner's position. Judge Lamoreaux. who used to live in Huntington Beach and re · cently moved to Newport Beach, formerly was in private practice in Santa Ana, specializing in civil work. A Democrat, she is a graduate of San F'rancisco Law School. Her annual salary as a municipal court jUdge will be $11,677. Bar efoot and bleeding from. foot cuts, he was taken into custody without attempting to fire a ,38 caliber weapon believed to be the de allt gun used on Patrolman Robert R. Bird.sail . Officer Birdsall, 40, was pro- nounced dead at 1: 12 a.m. in St. Mary Medical Center in the downtown area or Long Beach. He was shot in the chest at close rani?e after he and hi s partner. OCficer Wilbur Poston, split up in the darkened region on the Long Beach-Signal Hill city border hunting their suspect. Investigators identified Officer Birdsall's alleged slayer as Fred Harvey, '24 . Long Beach, a transient. He was booked for in- vestigation of murder and as· sault with a deadly weapon on a police officer. The charges could bring the de· ath penalty it he is convicted. Police said Officer Birdsall, a IS·year veteran of the force. and his partner entered the area about midnight, after a woman- contacted them from a liquor store, reporting she had been kid- naped and robbed . A description of the suspect vehicle and li cense number led them to the Signal Hill neighborhood where it was dis- covered. and Officer Birdsall was then slain when he apparently found the suspect. He was s hot in the c hest. ap- Saddleliack -schools Oppose Toro Jetport Ford Speaks In Co wuy On S wulay Preside nt Ford is scheduled to s p eak in Orange County Sunday as part of a long weekend of politics and golC. He is due to be in Anaheim Sunday to ad- Judge Says Squeaky C_an .Speak Publicly By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI °'""' 0.11, "4i.tSUtt The Saddleback Valley Unified School D is trict's governing board voted Monday night to join the opposition to a county pro- pos.al calling for commercial use of the El Toro ~1 arine Cocps Air Station. Trustees adopted · a resolution by unanimous vote requesting neichboring school districts and governmental representatives to block t.he county's application to the Department of Defense for joint .civilian.military use or the base: Their action was based on the belier that airline traffic would subject Saddleback Valley school children to e.JtcHsive noise! and expGse theiti. to unnecessary ~anger. The Saddleback Velley&hools resoluUon follows similar actions taUA:~ec:tnll)' b1 .lbL.Mlasioo · -.. . u Viejo Municipal Advisocy Coun- cil. the Saddleback Republican Assembly and the Irvine City Council. dress a dinner of the Na-SACRAMENTO (UPI) -U.S. tional Association of Life District Court Judge Thomas Underwriters at the Dis-MacBride agreed today to allow neyland Hotel. Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, ac- A whit e Hous e cuseCI or attemptin g to as· The resolution was pushed spokesman said that the sassinale President Ford, to throU&h by Trustee Loa Young weekend will begin with speak out publicly but not about whosaidthalallhoughit•appears Ford attending tb e hercase. the county has little chance oC Oklahoma State Fair in He also agreed to consider at winning approval for the pro-Oklahoma City Friday. He another hearing on Friday her posal, trust ees, as elected of· will ny to Los Angeles Fri· motion to act as her own at- fi('ials , would be remiss in their day evening and on Satur· torney. duties if they did not state their day he ~ill dedicate 8 field Wearing her famili.ar l\owing dissatisfaction. hOU.$e. J! .Pe_P,perdine red gown and hood, the devoted "Commercial planes would be-UnJversity,-MiJfbu, after apostle or mass m u rderer absql.utely devastating," said whJdl be WJ.11 f1y to Mon· •. Charle.a Manson insisted the Mrs. Young, pofntlne out ~l terey. publii;ity given to the MIDBOO some schools in the vicinity o( H~ wifi..pla·y 8 .round of ca.le five yeaA a'o and the at- Lo11 Angeles tnterl\ational golf at Pebble Beach~and temjtonthe Pres1Clent...-UCepre-Aif1JO~ hlfd to close becanse -of spend the ·ntgh( in Mon-1' judiced ht!r rieht to a fair trial, the noise factor. · terer. lb-•poke.sman said. She ulted to be released from Her comments were ~hoed b.l..J' _ ___ne PreRdent wil,I ny to Mac8ri.de'1 gaa order. Trustee Carole Neustadt wflO Analleim SundaY and re-He modified the ordef to al&ow said , "I too feel very strongly, tarn to "Monte'rey fort , t ~ to talk wltb news ~porters about this. We cannot. &it back another overnight atop. • i.~·.att~a except the case and usume.thl.l wJILbo.denled. '' ...._ _____ .,... ____ _,,, · it.elf and sald she ll)lY tallc wlll> . , I - .. . .. potential witnesses about the case. She argued that the attention given to the threat on Ford's life nationwide prejudi('ed her right to a fair trial and cited a national magazine story which she said discussed her sex fantasies. ··If she wants to talk aOOut the Manson family or th' sex ran· tasies she made rererence to that's up to her,·· Mac Bride &aid . "You can 't find a juror in the whole country who hasn't read something 11bout it,·.· th e diminutive 26·year-old redhead told MacBride in a forceful but Wlemotiooal voice. Mias Frotnme pointed a .45· caliber automatic pistol at the President on his vi sit to Sacramento Sept. S. The weapon wu loaded but did not have a bullet In lbe firing chamber. She •PPl!1tred in court wlth UIMFR~ME, ... l•AZ> .The immediate area or Signal Hill, a tiny oil and industrial city completely enclosed by the city of Long Beach, was immediately sealed orr. Teams of officers dispatched from a command post were se:nt- into the region to track down the popular officer's slayer and finally succeeded within three (See OFFICE R, Page A.2) Pool Cue We apon For Fatal Beating BURBANK (U PI ) -Roger ·A. Starkey, 21 .-has been charged with beating a 270-pound, siXl- foot-two·inch man to death with a pool cue. Poli ce sa id Monday that Starkey got into a n argument with Guy Hartman, 38. in a pool room bar ·1ast wee:k. Hattm"a~.,.-- was apparently dragged from the bar and beaten in an alley. Oil S tations Hit NEWARK, N.J . (AP) -Ten Gulf Oil Co. service stations in the North J e rsey area were hit by vanctals today, and a man who identified himself as "a J ewi sh militanl'" claimed responsibility for the incidents in a telephono c311 to The Associated Pre!-ls . Co ast W eathe r Mosl ly s unn y"" through Wednesday. according to the weather ser vice, with continued warm inland Hut cool at the beac hes. Highs near 70 at the strand, rising to the mid -80s in north rounty areas. I NSIDE T ODA 't' Julie 1Vixon Eisenhower ii putting htr 11/e togelhtt again and beginning -to have some fun . She says pre:isure to perform publiolu hcu leMenf!d and :ilu> is beginning to '"/eel free .·· Story Page A.12. •. l I ' I ' • ' I t I -I I I t • , ' I I I • ' ••A2 DAIL'( PILOT ~ Fairview Budget Slashed Budget miscalt'ulat1ons 1n Sacramt'nto have resulted in a crash program to cut $4 .6 million from anticipated costs or running California's 10 state hospitals. in - cluding Fairview State Hospikll in Costa Me sa. Fairview orril'IU IS art: scheduled to meet 1'hursday lo draw up plans to cut more than $1 million from their $26,620,444 operating budget for tht:! current year. • State ofril'ials s ay the budget originally was based oo past his- tory of job turnover :.imong psychiatric technician~. Rut 1n today-·s tight economy , the turnover has been nowht.•rc near the anticipalE'd rate, thcv said. .'\ hi rtng freeze on tho employ- ment of new psychiatric techni- cians has al so been imposed as a result or the miscai<·ul ation re- vealed in a special memor<.1ndum l'irc ulated within the state Department of 1-l ealth. Generally, the job vacancy rate in the IO state hospitals for the PT classificatioo runs five percent, but it is now only two percent. • Delly """ SUllt ,._. Fairview Slate Hospital, with its budgeted 1,598 perSonnel posi- tions is one of the largest single employers on t he Orange Coast. Maintenance work -unless deemed rritical -also is being postponed to help make up the budgeting difference, according to Don W. Mill er, manager of the state dcpartment·s hospi tal £1.ivision. OFFICER RON ROOGERS DELIVERS COPY OF "THROAr' At Balboa's Pussycat Theater, a Jury In the Balcony Hospital staffs will be reduced slightly, but state officials pre· di eted too small a decline to re- duce quality or patient care. Jury Views 'Throat' In Pussycat Trial Fairview chief Or. Anthony Toto said, as of last week, his hospital was down 69 positions from its budgeted work force. He said budget cuts wilt be dis- cussed Thursday al the regular monthly manage ment personnel meeting. Jazz Huwry , Class Offered History of Jur, a cours'e trac· -ing the development of the musical style from its inception in Africa tbroui:b modem day avantgarde modes, begins Wed- nesday at Saddleback College. l The class will meet Wed- nesdays from 9. lo 10 a.m and Fridays from 8 to 10 a.m. in Room Q-3 on the college campus. Registration continues through Wednesday for all fall Sad- dleback classes. Saddleback Community C.ol.lege District residents who are 18 years of age and/or high school graduates are eligible to attend classes. F.--P.,.eAJ DOGS ••• growled. He felt threatened by them and didn't think he could get back i.n the vehicle before they attacked," the commander said. Mrs. Pilarski saUI she has con- tacted Rep. MarK Hannaford about the incident. 1 Indian Complaint I· WASHINGTON (UPI) -The U.S. Commission on CiVil Rights today accused the federal gov · ernment of a ''neoco!bnial '' policy toward the Navajo Indian reservation in the southwest by encouraging private exploitation of mineral resources. i '. I ' ORANGE COAST • DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed Pr•1Hl'llt-~!--- Jactc R . Curk!y 'lfktPr ... ldUll-<fto~• .. ,..,. ...... Thomes A. Murphine .......... .,d- By JOHN VAL TERZA Ot llMI D•llr PUfltSUff The j ury~ in the Balboa Pussycat Theater obscenity trial went to the movies Monday to see the two sex films al issue, and as the day wore on a damaged print of "Deep Throat" sparked some wearying delays. The jury of six men and six women and two alternates rode by bus for the special sc reening of that film and its companion feature, "Devi l in Miss Jones". And as the jury sat secluded in the balcony of the peningula theater, about a doz en Courtroom spectators watcJ:aed from the bottom·floor. All went smoothly througA the GUNFIRE ••. Ten minutes after witness re- ports of a license numb6 and car description were dispatched by police, a patrolman in Hunt- ington Beach spotted the suspect car at Beach Boulevard and Ellis Avenue. Patrolman Bob Jeffrey, driv- ing a unit occupied by a police dog, stopped the car driven by James Joseph Haas, 24, of Hollywood. Al so in the car was Timothy Carl Elliott, 22, of Cov- ina. As Jeffrey and a backup officer approached the car, Haas as· · sertedly plunged both hands between the front seats, causing the officers to suspect that he was reaching for a weapon . One shot was fired at that point by an officer but the s lu g traveled over the car and into a vacant field. Officers said a struggle ensued when the pair refused to leave the car, and at one point Haas broke freeJrom an officer only to be subdued and chewed by the dog. The two men were booked on charges of assault with a deadly weapon. Back at the nights pot in Newport Beach, police were still piecing together the story or the shooting. Detective Sam Amburgey said the two alleged gunmen had stayed late at the club, playing pool and dri nking. Then an argu- ment erupted over whose turn it was to play. Cisneros assertedly asked several bouncers to remove the pair and alter a noisy argument both men were out in the street. AU'{O ••• ,. • 0\artnH.loos Rid\ard P. Nall in the car dealerships . Au1t1•1MtNt111•.,... About.54 ,000 ~mployes ue ul - Offlcft timately anticipated in the \ a...MtM1,_ .... ..,"""' eastemcomplex. ....,.,.e..ctll2m"""'°"............. Al tb Co ~-~"'": 1-.0.._51~ though . e Irvine mpany s;....-.~~/:::"~11,e-~" has not sou.ht separete t.Oftine on ••IM "'-tr the auto center became or the T•ll••••• CJ14>toat'I auita, it made oo object.ion to the OMURell~~·"11 ionin.1 move initiated by the -u10 lrvine PlaMinc Department. ,.,_.,'jt.,W Planning commi11ioners •-stipulated that the propooed ex--~:r.·;: '!;w.*":. <:-..:...':"..!.."':.::= dusive auto·'ules use of the site -:,-:~.:.:!t';:.~·,-..,..;:.:i ':.: be. expanded to include equip- ~" -· ment rerttaJ and auto wrecking. ___ ........... _ ..... dd prenoon showing of "'Devil''. After a lunch break, the jury re- assembled and it was time for the second film alleged by the prosecution to be obscene. But the print Was damaged and lS minutes into the film, the lights went back on. Newport Beach police,. wh o carted several prints of the films away from the theater last June, suddenly were told to bring some back . · And after a hasty run in a patrol car, officers returned with a fresh copy of the Linda Lov- elace sex film and the show was oo afain, 1 I The j .. r.y. !Wh'ich has a mem· bership ranging in age from mid 205. housewi,ves to an elderly r e· tiree, appe·ared in good spirits throughout the day. As jurors filed doWn the balcony stairway for the last time, some members joked and laughed. Others re· mained somber. ~ "It sort of catches you off guard,'' said one to another as the group left at the end of the day. The screening of the two films and opening statements by the prosecution and defense took up the first day of a trial which is ex- pected to take six weeks. Misdemea nor obscenity charges were filed soon after the seizur.es in June against the owner of the theater chain, Vin · cent Miranda, plus two other principals in the operation. In Monday_'s opening state- ments, the prosecution asserted that the films later to be seen by the jury were patently obscene and were basically movies with flimsy plots used only to lace together repeated and graphic de- pict ions of sex acts. The "defe nse argued that, although the sex is graphic in the movies, the issue goes far beyond the si mple sexual depictions. "Deep Throat" was charac- terized by the defense as a spoof which treats ''what could be a very heavy subject " with humor. ~efense attorneys charac· ter1zed the other film as a "morality play'' of sorts which has a definite message. FROMME .•• fede r a l public defender E . Richard Walker to seek lo have her name removed from the judge's gag order and to appeal for a reduction in her $1 million bail. "With thf: amount of pas t publicity of the Manson case in 1969 and 19'10 and the amount of heavily prejudicial publicity, if I talked all day and night it would !!9~ affect the bu.lance,'' she said. · Miss Fromme's two room· mates, Sandra Good, 31 , and Susan "Heather.'' Murphy, at- tended the court hearing carbed in red -outfits resembling habits of nuns. They said red eym· bolizea the "btood of sa<rilice." In documents filed wltb federal District Court Monaay, U.S. At· tarneyDwa111e Keyeo asked tllat· she be kept under tbe·c•I order. He taid concern for a fair trial must take precedence when con- stitutional rilhts.oc.laab. Final Coastal PI~n Weighed · CIA ••• and banded 1rolO!IC' to Olbar members ot the pand. Colby aald tbe dart •Qn --by ele<lrlc -.n.: wu ooe of variOut metbodl ol ln- Jectina lethal do1ea of 1uch !)Olsoao as ahellfllh !ollln and cobra venom lo ''offu1lve Urttbl." California Coastal Co m · missioners meeting tlUs week io Los Angeles will attempt to •dopt a finaJ 1tatecoa1tal plan-adotu· ment de1igned to protect the Free Food Offered To Students The Irvine school district is of. fering subsidized lunch and milk programs for students who qualify. Free meals and milk are available to students wbo are members of a family of four with a monthly income of $522 or less.· The scale varies depending on family size from $269 fot a family of one to $816 for a family or eight. Reduced -price meals are available to students who are members of families of four earning between $523 and $731-a month. The 20-cent meals are available on a smilar scale. A family of eight could earn $817 to $1,142 a month and qualify. Other families whOse "adjilst· ed'' income fits the requirements also qualify. Special circumstances include housing costs in excess of 30 per· cent of income. high medical ex- penses or others. Last year, about 100 Irvine youngsters qualified, according to Food Services Director Sue Decious. Figures are not yet available on the number who applied this year, she said. Applications m ay be obtained from 1Jvine schools or from the dist1 . office : 2941 Alton Ave ... In·ine, 92664 . Parents dissatisfied with rul· ings on their qualifications may appeal the ruling to Associate Superintendent John Rajcic at the school district office. Stolen Auto Parts Found; Suspect Held Irvine investigators recovered $1 ,900 in allegedly stolen auto parts and tools Monday and ar· rested a former Mazda Motors employe in connection with the Sept. 2 theft. Daniel H. Chapman of 337 21st St., Costa Mesa , was arrested on grand theft charges Monday evening when he returned to the Mazda plant, 1424 McGaw Ave. Irvine, to pick up his last check. ' 1!fazd,a dealers in Phoenix, Ariz., had telephoned the Irvine facility for references on Chap-- man, who had been fired from his job at the Irvine plant Sept. 12, Mazda officials told police. The queries aroused the suspi- cions of Mazda officials when they were told "Chapman had his own tools, according to Irvine In- vestigator John Stoneback. Stoneback said he talked to Chapman Monday and searched his car, locating $1,900 in alleged- ly s tol e n a uto parts and mechanic's tools. coastline from unchecked de~ velopment. "We hope to wrap up the plan this week and cet It to tile prtn. tert." lf1Jl d Joe Bodovit1, the commission·s exttutivedirect«. Commissioners will becin dis· cu:ssion and adoption ol the plan at 9 a.m.. Wednesday at the Airport·Marlna Hotel . If neceaaary, th-ey will reconvene at 9a.m. Thursday. The deadline for submitting the plen to the California legislature is Dec. 3 -the date specified in Proposition 20, which was ap- proved by voters in.),972. That proposlti..V created the regional and state coastal com· misaions and also included the mandate that a coastal plan be prepared and put into eUect by 11176. Several parts of the plan have been tentatively adopted at pre· vious meetings; however, the crucial issue of how the succeed- ing coastal agencies will be structured has not yet been de- termined. Representatives from many coastal cities throuJhout California have spoken at public hearings, telling commla&ionen they want local aeencles'to re- tain local control. One of the most vocal oppo. ne nts has been the clty or Newport Beach. Councilman Pete Barrett spoke at last week's hearing in San Francisco and argued that while a state com- mission should handle overall control,· local governments can, and should, handle local planning issues. , However. environmental groups and a minority ol cities believe that strong commission controls are needed to guard against violations by developers. that regional Laguna Beach's Mayor Roy Holm has maintained that re- gional coastal commissions are theonly logical method or protect· ing the coastline. Another impartant part or the plan inclµdes maps showing coastal areas recommended for state acquisition for use as open space areas. Seventy-five sites, including a number in Orange County, have been identified on a preliminary list but state commissiooex:s have not yet decided which gites they'll include on the list they send to the state legislature. OFFICER ••• hours of his slaying. Harvey was caught between two houses by two officers simultaneously~ according to Lt~ Tony Maletich, and would have been cut down in a crossrll'e if he resisted. The slain patrolman is no rela· lion to Newport Beach Police Sgt. Donald Burdsall, whose name is spelled diff ereoUy. Meet Readied VIENNA, Austria (AP) -The economic commission of the Organization of Petroleum Ex· porting Countries -OPEC - opened a series of meetings to· day to prepare for a ministerial conference Sept. 24 that could freeze or raise oil prices. Defensively, he said, the polson.s were dealaned fot 1utc1de pills for captured a1m11. Chutth -eel t.Qe pmel'• llnrt PQbUc hearilli• with a ll&telbent 1aylng the lnvestlaatioa ''in· volvea tbe llleaal poosesalon ot deadly biolocical poiaons which ~ retained within tile CIA foe live yean after tbelr delUuctlon wu ordered b1 tile President (Richard M . Nixon)" 1nmo. Colby aald "middle level" CIA officers were apparently respomible for maintainlna the stockpile of pabooo and delfvery ay1tems. Helms, now ambauador to Iran, wu sitting in tile back or the packed Senate caucus room, scene of the Wal!J:l•te heari.n1s. Helms, CIA director lo.-almost seven years until 1973, is scheduled to testify before tile ""'1'mi"'-' Wednesday. Colby silid there ill in exlatence a memo between Helms and Sidney GotUleb, former chief of the agency's technlCal services · divilllon, Indicating tile records were destroyed by GoWleb, in November 1972, before be re- tired. Colby conceded Gottlieb had been at CIA headquarters within the last few days reviewint cer· taln mes, but said no one bad In· tervlewed him to find oot why he destroyed tbose vital records. ''Then we run up against u stone wall," said Baker. Church'• committee has pro. bed intellieeoce activities at length in cl()Sed sessions. During those sessions, the Jen.over toxins at the Army's biological laboratory at Ft .. Detrick, Md . cametolight. • Instructions to destroy chemical and biological warfare material af Ft. Detrick were is· sued in 11170. * * * CIA Reveals U2 Spy Pilot 'Had Poison' WASIDNGTON (UPI) -CIA Director William E. Colby said today Gary Powers, pUot of the U2 spy plane shot down over the Soviet Union in 1960, was pro- vided with a tiny poison needle concealed in a silver dollar in case be wanted to commit suicide. But, Colby told the Senate Select Committee on In- telligence, Powers "obviously did not use it, and was not in- structed to do so. It was offered to him to provide him with an ·op- ti " on . Colby Said an earlier "1.rpill'' designed for agents to commit suicide during World War II "took some time to work and was agonizing.•• He said agents who might have the need to use such a pill would want ••instantaneous" results and that was why the poisons, :such as was supplied to Powers, were developed. The needle would have enabled Powers to in- ject himself with deadly sbelllisb toxin. "The Powers F1ight was the only time we were 3warethat the toxin was used for operational use, although the L-pill was made avail able for earlier Oights," Colby oaid. - Let U~ Put You On The Map * ....... . carpe Near the entrance. inskle our store. is a giant new map. We are in the process of identifying all of the homes we have carpeted since 1965 on this map with colored pins. (A different color for each year.) aose scrutiny will detect some interesting facts: firstly, we have carpeted homes on virtually every street in the area. Secondly, the pins are in bunches, indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH advertising. Thirdly, the number of homes we have carpeted is staggering. If you · desire honesty, experience. and recommendations from neighbors we have worl<ed for. then Alden's is THE PLACE! DEN'S • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • ·installation· custom draperies lJ(, "°· 2!0'12 ~ S..••"41911 ...., c.tntt ..i.• -:-r-Y also a ed a requirement &="""'......,,.,......,, • • ror edbcation-al factlltiet for ~...;~.,',,,'..,=",,,' =~· ~""'=--=-:~--~-~auto-releted skills. ~ Mac Bride Issued tile gag order lut week...It preventa penons in·· volved In the case -lncludinl at· tom-.ys J:-Miu-Promme -1663 Pl~CENTIA AVfllUE • COSTA MESA. CAUF.!92627 • PHONE 646-038-646·2355 from~ ctonewsmen. .... ~~~~~~~~...;..~~~ .... ~~~~~..:..~~~~~~~~~~~~~...I -. ~ ( .I. lJ i> • • . 7 ) Huntington ~aeh .Fountain Valley· --EDIT! 0 N · • VOL 68, NO. 2S9, 2 SECTION S, 14 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • • Today's Clo•l•g N.V. Steeks I TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1975 TEN CENTS CIA Chief · Admits Deadly Dart Gun$ ' . ... _ .SEN. BARRY GOLDWATEA .SIGH'l'.S THROUGH DART GUN Weapon Capati'• of .Siient KllNng 81 100 Yards Bearing Taaiglat Citizens Get Choice On Animal Co.ntrol By ROBE RT BARKER Ol' ... o.u,,.. ... ~ Huntington Beach residents will be given a choice tonight when they testify at what could be an exp1osi ve hearing of the city's Animal Control Com- missio,n in lo the _perlonnance of .California Animal 'Control (CAC). They can testify under oath if th·ey desire or they can appear as witness~s do at ne~ly all q_f·tbe city hearings without legal con- !lrainls. · The decision to permit the testimony to be optional was taken by Huntington Beach Council members Monday night, sitting in joint se6sion with the Animal Control Commission. Councilmen Jerry Matney and Henry Duke both cited the threat of intimidati6n to witnesses in their successful drive to remove the stipulation of . oaths as ad· vacated by the city attorney's of- fice. Matney declared. 'the swearing ·in ia an affront to Hwttington Beach ci~zens. ·"When I wa.S mayor. I chaired 1e,yeral 1tQlot.ive• iuua," he s;ud, ''andneveroncedidJswear in1fifileUea." •·1·m really going to raise hell,·· Duke said while glancing at City Attorney Don Bon/a, "if something turns up two months from now that hasri 't been brought up because someone was intimidated and afraid to speak out.'' May,or Norm a Gibbs, who went along in the unanimous 5-0 ~ote for optional testimony, said the swearing in was an attempt to eliminate the emotions surround- (Stt ANIMAL, P "'e 1\2) Slaying Admitted . Beach Woman's 2 Dogs Murdered A Huntington Harbour woman charged today thl;)t her two pet dogs were shot to death in cold blood by a sec11rity guard at a 5eal Beach Naval Weapons Sta- tion. Mrs. Sherry Pilarski, 16912 Warren Lane.. said the dogs. Gretel, a female German shepherd and Harrington, a male Labrador-shepherd were gunned down Sept. 6, on the grounds of the station b:ut she didn't know about it until a week later. "We"re just looking for help," she said, her voice breaking with sobs. "We dori"t want anything like this to happen again." Mrs". Pilarski said she b.ad given the dogs a bath .Saturday and they sJipped out of the gate that night and into the Navy sta· lion across the street without license tags or identification. She said that in accounts she had Jearned, a security guard saw the dogs out around the bunkers, one sleeping and one sniffing around. . '\ I Burke Pl.am Rap Session Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R -Huntington Beach) has scheduled public r11p sessions for 7:30 p.m . tonight at the Hunt. inaton Beach City HaU and Wednesday night at Foun· · lain Valley City Hli:ll. Burke said he wants to Pr'9ride his Constituent.a with an opportunjty to "a.sk questions,. offer sug- gestions, or. just express their view1 a bout state js. Rael.'' "They growled, but dictn•t at- tack, .. she says, "and the 'm<Jn shot and wounded both. He tracked them down and fired nine shots in all before they were dead," she sobbed. "They were petrified of guns," she-says. "All the man had to do was shoot once in the air and they would have run away." Commander Harry Madera, executive officer "of the station, confirmed the incident. He said wild dogs roamed the base for years and it could be as- sumed that Mrs. Pilarski's dogs were-wild. ''At the same time," he said, "we had been warned that a rabid-dog was on the J005e. We had gotten tbe·word that one had bitten.a. boy (Colin Rolsin) and to be on the •ookout for it. <Stt DOGS, Page 1\2) Coed Slain . At Berkeley BERKELEY {AP) -A 20- year-old Laney College student was strangled over the weekend -the third murder of a young woman in five days in the Oaklpnd·Berkeley area, police say. The body of Nancy Huber was found Sunday under a boxcar on the Southern P~cifte railroad tracks he~: Sht; was wearing oft. ly a swe,l.teruulled up to her neck. Another youni woman was killed !!alurday, and the bocly of a college student waa found Fri· day. Oakland Homicide Sgt. Fred Farkus taid there was no evidence liukina the three aJay. ..... ' i WASHINGTON ~U PI) -CIA Director William . E . Colby, dis· playing a deadly electric dart cun that be said could kUl silenUy at 100 yards, today admitted to Coo(ress Che agency for five yean illegally maintai ned a stockpile of lethal poison and WtlPolll. Colby a aid his predecessor, Richard Helms, was aware of the 1970 requirement thal suc h material be disposed of. But Colby did not say whethe.-Helms had knowledge or the ille&al st«kpiling. Under questioning by Sen. Howard Baker (R-Tenn.). Colby sald r.ecords s howine who authorized the development and stockpiling of the deadly biological weapon were destroyed three years ago with Hel.Jns' knowledge.· ~ Jn the a:lare of television ca ra li&ht1, Colby showed the ~a le t Committee on ln· telll&enc a telescopic-sight.ed, black dart eun which be de1cribed aa ''a very deadly weapon".'' · Seo. Frank Church (D·ldaho>. chairman of the committee, linaerly inspected the weapon, sllgbUy larger than a . .S pistol and handed it along to other • members of the pan~. - Colby said the dart aun) powered by ele.ctric batteri~ was one of various methoda ol Qi. jecting lethal doS'es or SQCtl polsoo.:1 as shellfish toxin aDd cobra venom in ''offensive • targets.·· , Defensively , he said, the poisons were designed for sulcidi pills for captured a1enta. <See ClA, Pa1eAZ> Judge Halts Electiori Sclwol Redistricting Effort Stalled .. By TO!ll BARLEY ~ .. o.uyPOMS&aff Judge Claude M . Owens signed a writ today that puts an end - barring appeal -to plans for un· ification elections Nov. 4 in Hunt· ington Beac.b and Fountain • VaUey. The Orange County Superior CA>urt judge made ftis decision Monday night after nearly two days of keenly fought arguments between five lawyers in his courtroom. And be stuck to his ruling today despite a determined last ditch attempt by Deputy Attorney General Patrick Hooper 1.9 deJay the decision. The slate' lawyer said he will immediately file an appeal with the Fourth District Court of Appeals. Hooper added today that he believes the controversial elec- tion can be JJalvaged if he can ob- fain the relief be predicls he .will get from the San Bernardino court. Officials of the Orange County Registrar of Voters office are placing more faith in Judge Owens' d~isiop. They ha,ve abaq~oned previous plans that caUed"for the printing today of sample ballots which were to be mailed to voters in HWltington Beach and Fountain Valley. J udge Owens made it clear im· mediately before ruling Monday night that he was satisfied that ~eavy Banded' the slate decision to call the elec- tion was ''arbitrary and capricious.·· He agr eed with attorneys James Obrien and David Larsen that unifiCation elections were called for both cities without state officials being fully aware of the impact the proposed division would have on the tax bases of the school districts. Officials of Jhe Huntihgton Beach Union High School Dis· Skins, Jet On Strike· • WASHINGTON (AP> - The Washington Redskins and New York ·Jets went on strike today, je>iniilg the New England Patriots in a growing player demand upon National Football League owners to agree to a new labor contract. (El\J'ller•tory, 84). · The surprise a~i~ by the Jets and Beds"'kJns came only seven hours after management and un·' ion negotiators emerged from an all-night meeting in Washington with federal mediators . Unification Leader Blasts Court R11ling By KATHY CLANCY Ol llM o.ur Pllilot M.Mf Carl '·Bud" Jones, the leader of the Fountain Valley unification effort, today criticized Monday's Superior Court ruling which halts the Nov. 4 school reorganization election in hi s city. Saying the ruling by Judge Claude Owens wa~ made by "some pious benc h master .·· Jones placed the blame on what he called "heavy-handed tactics .. by school leaders in the Garden Grove Unified a nd HWllington Beach Union High School Dis- tricts. But other West Orange County community leaders welcomed Crisis O a8s Sla t ed The Huntington Beach Free Clinic will offer a class in Crisis Intervention beginning this Wed - nesday from 9:30 to 11 :30 a .m . at the clinic. The class wilJ run for s ix weeks and trainees will become volunteers for the Hunt- ington Beac h He lp-Line. In- formation can be obtained from Jimi Sanchez. 536-8894. Judge Owens· ruling, saying the elections he ha lted in Fountain Valley and south Huntington Beach would have been unfair to some taxpayers and children. Stephen Holden, president of the current Huntington Beach Ci - ty (elementary) school board, said he was disappointed in the ruling. "We have worked hard on un · irication for several years." he noted. ··we felt that this plan is the plan that could be presented to voters in a favorable light.·· But Ralph Bauer, president or the Huntington...Beach Union High Sc hool board. said he believed the judge's ruling sustained the hi gh school board's feeling that the plans were inequitable for dis- tribution oft ax wealth. "We are pl eased,·· he con- tinued. ·'but not from a vindictive point of view.·' Fountain Valley's Jones and Frank Bryant, co-chairmen of the unification committee, today al So questioned the timing or the la"•suits. TCME (Taxpayers Interested in Munici pat"Economy), a Fountain (See JONES, P age A2) Dog Located Not Rabi4 So Shou Stoppe'd A Huntington Harbour boy bit-California Animal Control (CAC) ten by ' stray dog had a strange and they came out and got him thing happen to him on the way to after a while,·· Colin said. get biS second injection against U . Richard Lyons Of the CAC rabies. said tbe dog has been imJ)oUnded He found the 4og that bit tum. in the Huntington Beach shelter Colin Rolson of 26931 Round since Saturday and that 'it has ·Hill Drive said he and his mot.her cleared · its quarantine period were On the way to the doctor's since bitina Colih about lhree Saturday ... afternoon when they weeks ago and it's free,olrabies. saw two d.Ois running loose near Lyons said the doc appea,J;'S to Wamer Avenue. be a mlo11:ed dalmatian nearly all ''A third.. one came out from white but with some black on its behind them , and I saw it was the face. . dog that l»t m e . Boy wast sur-Colin says he's happy he prised. ... doesn't need any more shot.I and ''Mom pulled off to the side of that one was enough. · th• road .. and we called r "ltsurehurt,"bei aid. I. trict and the Garden Grove Unified School 'District also suc- cessfu 11 y alleged in three lawsuits filed against the state that they did not receive suffi· clent notice from the state on the unification propasal. U the election had been ap- proved, residents of Fountain Valley and a portion of Hunt· ington Beach would have bad the opportunity to vote on the crea- tion of new, K-12 school systems. The suing school district• would have lost a number of schools to the new Founlain Valley Unified School Distric4.,it the state's plans had been al~ lowed to go forward. It was protested during the bearing that the existing. Hunl• ington Beach high schoiol dist· trict would hav.e become a "rem· nant district" and that its three remaining high sC"hools would <See UNI FY, Page A%) Figlating Secreev Matney Has Faith In Ills 'lnvictus' Huntington Beach City Coun- cilman Jerry Matney declared Monday t.bal he plans to continue his fight of city ball secrecr he leveled against Administrator Pav.e RowlaJtdo. Matney made hia announce- ·me.nt after delivering a reading of William Henley's poem "In· -¥ictus·• which he quoted, ''"It matter& not bow strait the gate, how charged with punishment the scroll ; I am the ;aster of my fate; 1 am the ca wt.i11 of my soul... . Matney, then annolUlced he has retained a lawyer in the con- troversy spawned by a series of allegations he made against Rowlands Aug. 25. He said he Will ask the public lo heJp pay legal expenses. "I am now released from any comm i tm en ts to s uppress evidence," he said. ''J feel very confident with legal help,"' Matney said. "I can question who I want to and look into records that I want and I don't have to put up with (council restraints) anymore." .. I've begged for city attorney help in my case, .. Matney said. .. but I couldn't get an inch. 1·11 never beg again.·: Matney says he plans to take his charges to the residents of Huntington Beach in a public forum or in some other manner . "That·s one of the things my attorney, Jim Jackmap, and I will decide,·' he said. Matney said the public should Valley Weighs Maste r Plan Okay Tonight The Fountain Valley City Council will consider final adop- tion of a $4 .2 miJlion master plan for the city·s recreation and culturai complex in Mile Square Park at an 8 o"c1ock meeting tonight. Recent additions, made after a public hea ring last month, in - clude a larger gymnastics room and an ad~itional soccer field. The plans also include con- struction or a cultural center, senior ci tizens facility. swim complex and additional sports areas. In order to build the new facilities, the.council would have to ask citizens to pass a bond is- sue, which city officials estimate would add 44 cents to" the taX rate. But the council isn•t expected to consider the bond issue at tonight's meeting. Oil S tatioD8 Hit ' . NEWARK, N .J . (AP) -Ten 4'Gulf Oil Co. servlc~ stations in the North Jersey area were hil by .Yandals today, and a man who identlfied himself as "a Jewish militant'' claimed respansibility fOf' the incidents in a telephone call to The Ass~iated Press . I • be aware of what is happening and what will develop ln the future. ·'There are new con .. cems," he says, '"and one hat legal implications." "Dfflsions have beep made to launch serious consequencd in 1978 and thereafter," he said. "Jam stating there have been giveaways and that b&d judg- ment has been used," he a s- serted. Matney said his r endition or "Invictus·· was intended to de- . pict his !eel in gs. Police Seek . Finance Firm Holdup Men Huntington Beach police today searched for two gunmen who herded customers and employes of a finance firm into a back room, then fled with $50 in cash Monday. Police said the pair ente red Beneficial Finance Company. 16121 Beach Blvd .. about IJ :45 a.m. Monday, pulled handguns, then ordered the two employes to turn over the <'as h. They then he rded the employes and three customers into a back room. ordered them to wait fiv e minutes there and rled. Police searched the area near-by after the holdup but were unable lo find the suspect!i. Police described them as in theil' 2()'s, one tall with black hair and the second with a short build and mustache. Officers said there were no in· juries in the incident. Coast Weath er Mostly sunny lhrough Wednesday. according to the weather service. with continued warm inland hul cool at the beaches . liighs near 70 at the slranci nsing to the mid-80s in north county areas . INSIDE TODAY · Juliti Nuon F:1senhQWer is putting her life logether ago.in and beginning lo lwve some Jun. She so.111 pre.1.rure lo pnjorm pubhcly hos lessened and she is beginning to ·•teel free.··storyA12. l•dex At T.W """I<• Al llll"'""'U.... Al I!,_ hntWcll 11 MM!tr T'" All LM. ...,.. A 1t Mtwtn Al C..l"-"'!a AJ MllWI ~-· All 0-lfl" •1•11 .ut-.1 ,.._. A4 Clooftkt ., 0r-..c.-, Al '""_. •• ...... •i·t ~ .... ICM Al~ ... $ 1!•""111P..,. A6 Dr.lt.IMrWft ., ~-1•11t Al S..Cll•l'll .. 1 A1 .. 11 ~-· ., .. " ,..,..,.... "' l'lwtM-.Colrll Al n.Nltf'\ Al tfyOWfMoo Al ......., A4 I ... I C..-•1 ..,...,...... A4 J I l",;A:if DAILYPILOT H/r lueaioat. Septemoer 16. 1975 Suspects NafJfJed , • ' . . ; ,. • 2 Persons Shot In·NewportBar By JOHN VAL TERZA °' '" o.u, ...... """ An argument over a 2:5-cent pool game at Smokey Stover's discotheque in Newport Beach ended in a blaie of gunfire early today. seriously 'olo1ounding a Costa Mesa woman and inflicting lesser injuries on the manager. The closing time shooting in the tavern at 3295 Newport Boulevard at 1: 50 a.m. triggered a manhunt which ended with more guapl ay in lluntington From Page Al JONES ... Valley taxpayer group opposed to unification, issued a statement to- day blami n~ the "·hole matter on the Fountain Valley (elemen+ t ary) School Board. "It is unfortunate that this mat· · ter had to go to court:· said Zita • Wessa. Tir-t E chairman.··,\ good "" elementary school board that is responsive to the people and COO· cerned about their community and the quali ty of education would · neverhavelettbisgetthisfar." She also said the reasoo the matter got this far was that the state Board or Education ''has been so sick and tired cl Fountain Valley coming year alter year· with their unification plans, that if they wanted to unify with Newport·Mesa they would have allowed them to vote to get them off their back ..... Fountain Valley (elementary) 1 Board President Roger Belgen ! said today he, too, is disair pointed. ''l don't want to look at it as be- ing a defeat yet but as a loss of a skirmish,'' he continued, saying he hopes the decision caa be re- versedonappeal. ·Funeral Set ·For Stuntman ' 'Killed in Reno • t Memorial services fer Gordon rlllcCollom, 25, will be held at 4 ... p.m. Wednesday at Saint An· drew's Presbyterian Church in Newport Heacb. McCollom, a teacher at Edison High School in Huntingt<>n Beach . , and a resident of Costa Mesa, .. was killed last Friday while . performing a wing-walking stunt 1 at the Reno, Nev., air races. The family has suggested memorial donations to the McCollom Scholarship Fund in care of Mike Poff, 1532 East Seventh Street, Long Beach. Poff, a classmate of McCollom at Long Beach State College, said the scholarship will be given to high school gymnasts. Mccollom was a gymnast as a student and was coach of the gymnastic team at Edison. Interment will be at the Fairhaven Memorial Park Santa Ana. ,\Cash, liquor Taken · ! From Country Club ·' l • : • Thieves made' off with $1,202 in cash and an undetermined amount of liquor early Monday morning from Meadowlark Country Club in Huntington Beach. Officers said the burglars en- tered between 2 :30 and 6:XI a.m. through art\,Of(ice window. The fClub is located at 16782 Graham St. Tbe facility is owned by the ci· ty, but lease d to a con· cessiOllaire. ORANGE COAST "" DAILY PILOT -. Beach a short time later. Police arrested two suspected gunmen after what they described as a strui&le that evep. involved a police dog. Officers identified the most se.ciously Injured victim as BeC"ky Bengs tom . 21, or 994 Valencia Ave .• Cost.a Mesa. She suffered gunshot wounds in the back and side and underwent J surgery early today at Hoag Memorial Hospital. . · Her condition today was not immediately known. The club's manager. Fred Cisneros, 31 , of 600 E. Ocean Front, Newport Beach; suffered a minor wound in the wrist. He was treated and released at Hoag . Ten minutes aft er witness re· ports of a license number aQd car description "'ere dispatched by police, a pa~r Iman in Hunt· ington Beach s tted the suspect car at Beach ule\•ard and Ellis • -\\'t"OUe. Patrolman Bob Jeffrey, driv- ing a unit oecupied by a police dog, stopped lbe car driven by James Joseph Haas, 2..C , of Hollywood . Also in the car was Timolhy Carl Elliott, 22.. of Cov· ina. • As Jeffrey and a backup officer approached the car. Haas as· sertedly plunged both hands bet'IA·een the front seats, causing the officers to suspect that he "·as reaching for a "'eapoo. One shot was fired at lbat point by an officer but the slug traveled over the car and into a . vacant field. Officers said a struggle ensued when the pair refused to leave the car, and at one point Haas broke free from an officer only to be subdued and chewed by the dog. The two men were booked on charges of assault with a deadly weapo11 . Back at the nightspot in Newport Beach, police were still piecing together the story of the shooting. Detective Sam Amburgey said the two alleged gunmen bad stayed late at the club, playing pool and drinking. Then an argu- ment erupted over whose tum it was to play. Cisneros assertedly asked several bouncers to remove the pair and after a noisy argument both men were out. in the street. They assertedly milled around outside and argued in vain to be readmitted and soon afterwards it was closing time . AB 45 or SO patroJUJ were leav~ ing, the men were seen to run across Newport Boulevard and witnesses said Haas withdrew a gun from his car, pointed toward the crowd, bracing his hands on the roof. 2 +'fen Jailed In Huntington Store Burglary Two men remained iit jail to+ day in lieu of $5,000 bail following their arrest Sunday night inside a Huntington Beach health food store, where, palice said, they had stolen about $200incash. Thomas Clyde Landay, 20, of 17392 Queens Lane, Apartment 2, Huntington Beach, and Willie Ray Wisely, 22, of 16331 Underhill Lane, Huntington Beac~ both were arrested on suspicion or burglary, police said. Police reported Officer Keith Nale was checking stores in a shopping center at ro82 Warner Ave. about 11 p.m. SUnday, when he noticed the door at Jan's Nutrition Center had been pried. He radioed for another patrol unit, then officers searched the building. They allegedly fOIDld Landay and Wisely hiding in an attic. Coast Cyclist Hurt in Crash With Motorist A 26-year-old Huntington Beach motorcyclist was in guarded condition in a hospital intensive care unit today follow- ing a collision early Sunday morning. Police said Glen Austin Dulaney, 28, of 17442 Jacquelyn Lane, Apt. ·2, was ln!Ured at 2:28 a.m .. :;unday when his motorcy· cle colllded with a cor driven by Roy Edward Donovan, 19, or 17159 Santa Madrlna St., Foun- tain Valley. Donovan also..,.wu lnjured, police aaid, and was reported in stable condition todoY. Bolll men are being treated at Hunlln«too Jntercommunlty Hocpital. Officers 11ld the cruh oc- curred at Newland -ond Sllrln1hunt Avenue. Police said · both men were cited far dnmkea dd ....... • • I Eord~~ ·-Gunman In ·~oUIJty Kil& OnSuntlay President Ford 1s· ~01".1!:;.er scheduled to opeat In ~~ ~1 Orange County Sunday as part of a long weekend of politics and golf. He is due to be .in Anaheim Sunday to ad· dress a dinner of the Na· tional Association d. Life Underwriters at the ~ neyland Hotel. ·A Whit e House spokesman said that the weekend will begin with Ford attending the Oklahoma State Fair in Oltlahoma City Friday. He will fiy to Lo• Angele5 Fri· day evening and on 5atur- day he will dedicate a field house at Pepperdine University, Malibu, after which be will fly to Mon- terey. He will play a round of golf at Pebble Beach and s~tbe night. in Mon-tere . the spakesman said. The esident will fly · to Anaheim Sunday, and re- turn to Monterey for anOther overnight stop. Coast Plan Heading For Printer California Coastal Com· missioners meeting this week in Los Angeles will attempt to adopt afmal state coastal plan -a docu- ment designed to protect the coastline from unchecked de· velopment. "We hope to wrap up the plan this week and get it to the prin- ters '' said Joe Bodovitz, the com Mission's executive director. Commissioners will begin dis- cussion and adoption of the plan at 9 a .m. Wednesday at the Airport-Marina Hotel. If necessary, they will reconvene at 9.a.m. Thursday. The deadline for submitting the plan to the California legislature is Dec. 3 -the d&te specified in Proposition 20, · which was ap- _proved by voters in 1972: That proposition created the regional and state coast.al com- missions and also included the mandate that a coastal plan be prepared and put into effect by 19'16. Several parts of the plan have been tentatively adopted at pre- vious meetings; however, the crucial issue of how the succeed· ing coastal agencies will be structured has not yet been de- termined. Representatives from many coastal cities 'throughout California have spaken at public hearings, telling commissioners they want local agencilii' to re- tain local control. . One of the most vocal oppo- nents has been the city of Newport Beach. Councilman. Pete Barrett spoke at last week's hearing in San Francisco and argued that while a state com- mission should handle overall control, local governments can, and should, handle local planning issues. However, environmental groups and a minority of cities believe that strong commission controls are needed to guard against violations by developers. that regional Jl,...PageAI ANIMAL •.•• By AllTHVR R-VINSEL Of .. o.t.,,. ...... A veteran Long Beach policeman stalking a kldnap- robbery tu•pect in a back yard of a Signal Hill area residence was shot to death early today. A task force of police. includ· ing some 100 officers and 27 cars plus two police helicopters, cor· doned off and covered the area in which the suspect was later cap- tured without mcidenl Barefoot and bleeding from foot cuts, be was taken into custody without attempting to fire a .38 caliber weapon believed to be the death gun used on Patrolman Robert R. Birdsall. Officer Birdsall, 40, was pro· noun.ced dead at 1:12 a.m. in St. Mary Medical Center in the downtown area of Long Beach. He was shot in the chest at close ranee after he and his partner, Officer Wilbur Poston, split up in the darkened region en the Long Beach-Signal Hill city border bunting their suspect. · ~vestigators identified Officer Birdsall's alleged slayer as Fred Harvey, 24, Long Beach, a transient. He was booked for in+ vestigation of murder and as- sault with a deadly weapon on a police officer. · · The charges could bring the de- ath penalty if he is convicted. Police said Officer Birdsall, a J.5-.year veteran of the fOrce, and his partner entered 'the area about midnight, after a woman- contacted them from a liquor store, reporting she bad been kid· naped and robbed. A description of the suspect vehicle and license number led them to the Signal Hill neighborhood where it was dis- covered and Officer Birdsall was then slain when be apparently found the suspect. He was shot in the chest, aP- parently without warning, although it was not·immediately determined bow many um.es he was hit. First reports of the killing of the 15-year Long Beach policeman said it sounded like an automatic weapon, indicating multiple shots were fired. Some shots may have been fired by the victim. The Immediate area or Signal Hill, a tiny oil and industrial city completely enclosed by the city of Long Beach, was immediately sealedorf. Teams of officers dispatched. from a command post were sent into the region to track down the popular officer's slayer and fmally succeeded within three hours or his slaying. Harvey was caught between two houses by two officers simultaneously. according to Lt~ Tony Maletich," and would have been cut down in a crossftre if he resisted. . The stain patrolman is no rela- tion to Newport Beach Police Sgt. Donald Burdsall, whose name is spelled differenUy. Family Swims Set Huntington Beach Recreation and Parks Department swim pool at 16th and Palm Avenue is open for family swimming Mon· day and Wednesday evenings from 6:30 to 9. p .m. every weekend. Recreation swimming · also is offered from 1 p.m. 'to 4 p.m. Admission is 25 cents for children and 50 cents for adults. r • o.n.,,. ... ...,....,... SHE'S A JUDGE Betty Lou Lamoreaux Brown Names . Coast Woman Court Judge Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has appointed Betty Lou Lamoreaux of Newport Beach as a municipal court judge. She will fill a new J>OSition in the Harbor Judicial District, raising the number of judges on that bench to five . Since December, Judge Lamoreaux, S1, bas been the traffic trial cool+ missioner in the district. The an- nouncement from Sacramento did not indicate who would fill the traffic commissioner's position. Judge Lamoreaux, who used to live in Huntington Beach and re- cently moved to Newport Beach. formerly was in private practice in Santa Ana, specializing in civil work. A Democrat, she is a graduate of San Francisco Law School. Her annual sal ary as a municipal court judge will be ~1,677. Police Seek Baby Grabber LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Police were looking for a man who tried to take a sleeping baby from an apartment near the downtown area early today. Police said Doris Anell, 26days old, was taken from beside her mother, Zola Garcia. The sus- pect had forced open a window screen on the first floor apart-ment. · The woman said the suspect, a male latin, was wrapping the child in a bedspread when she awoke. She said she wrestled her baby away from him and the man ran out the front door of the apartment. Jlr-PageAl ' UNIFY ••• become overcrowded in the near future. Judge OweriS commented near the end of the hearing that state codes call for tax bases in new school districts to be comparable to those districts broken up by wtification action. .-· C·IA ••• -Cburch.opeftd.\he.panei'• llm public hearings with .a statement aaY1n1 the lnvealiaatioa ''in- volvea the Wqll poe-ol de..ily bloloclcal po1soos. Which were retained wiUilii the CIA for five ye.ara after their destrucUon wu orde.red by . the Pl:eoident (Richard M. Nixon)" ln19'10. Colby said "midcile level" CIA officers were apparently respon1ible for malof•it.f, the stockplle 0( pol$ou -VOi")' systems. ,_ Helms. now ambassador to Iran, was alttinf in the baclt or the packed Senate caucus room, scene of the Watera:ate be.arin&s. Helms, CIA director for.almost seven years until 19'13, is scheduled to testify before tha oommittee Wednesday. Colby said there is In existmce a memo between Helms and Sidney GotUieb, formec chief of the agency's technical services division, in<\icatlng the records were destroyed by Gattlleb, in November 1972, before· ·he re- tired . Colby conceded Golllieb had been at CIA headquarters within the last few days-reviewing cer- tain files, but said no one had in- terviewed him to fu>d out why he destroyed those vital~. "Then we run up against a stonewall,'' said Baker . Church's committee bas pro- bed intelligence activities at length in closed sessiont. During those seSJ!ions, the leftover toxins at the Army 's biological laboratory at Ft. Detrick, Md., cametollght. Instructions to destroy chemical and biological warfare material at Ft. Detrick were is- sued in 1970. 1r * * CIA Reveals U2 Spy Pilot 'Had Poison' . WASHINGTON (UPI) -CIA Director William E. Colby said today Gary Powers, pilot of the U2 spy plane shot down over the Soviet Union in 1960, was pro-- vided with a tiny poison nee<t.le concealed in a silver dollar in case be wanted to commit suicide. - But, Colby told the Senate Select Committee on Jn .. telligence. Powers ''obviously did not use it, and was not in· structed to do so. It was offered to him to provide him with an op. tioo. •• Colby said an earlier 11L-pill'! · designed for agents to commit suicide during World War II "~k some time to work and was agonizing.'' . He said agents who might have the need to use such a pill would want ''instantaneous'' results and that was why the paisons, such as was supplied to Powers, were developed. The needle would have enabled Powers to in- ject himself with deadly shellfish toxin. "The Powers flight was the only time we were· aware that the toxin was used for operational use, although the L-pill was ·made available for earlier flights.'' Colby said. Course Planned He said he was satisfied that this was not the case in the un· ification proposals be has now nullified. A four-evening art course en~ titled From Collage to Applique Stitchery is scheduled to start at Fountain Va!Yey Hlgli SCbooi this week from 4:30 to 8:30 p.m. 'l"he course is especially designed for elementary school teachers. More information can be ob- tained by calling 832-0170. ing the testimony. Deputy City Administrator William Amsbury said the re- ason for seeking the sworn testimony is that, "We wanted evidence we could rely on.•• Let Us Put You On The Map The thrust of tonight's hearing .at 7 o 'clock at the council chamber conference room ia to judge the performance of California Animal Control services in the city and to de- termine it there are reasons to ·break the contract. Animal Control Coinmission chairman Robert Baker said he is aware of contract violations. He also complained of lack of communication with the city council. "We've been appointed to an advisory role,'' be told the coun· cit, "bill the communications aren't good. You don't know our measaie," he said. 1!,._P.,.eAl 'DOGS ••• "The guard had thla In mind when be made his rounds,'' Modera1ald. • "When be saw the two clop, he cot out of hi• ear and they growled. He felt tllreaUned by them ond dldn 't tblnk be could get back In the vehicle before they attacked," the "°mmandor said. 1 • Ji!n. Pltarald sold Ille bu can- tacted Rep. lllark Bannaford -abodt the Incident. I Near the entrance. inside our store. is a giant new map. we are in the process of identifying all of the homeS we have carpeted since 1965 on this map with colored pins. (A different color for each year.) aose scrutiny will detect some interesting facts: firstly, we have C81J)eted homes on virtually fNer/ street in the area. Secondly, the pins are in bunches. Indicating WOAD-OF·MOUTH advertising. Thirdly, the number of homes we have carpeted is staggering. -.• . If you desire honesty, experience, and recommendations from neighbors we have worked for, then Alden's is THE PLACE! DEN'S ' ••••••••••••••••• • -installation. custom draperies UC. NO. 21)122 1663· Pi..!CEN'TIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CAllF-92627 •, PHONE" 646·4838 -~6-2355 I .. • ' • ra•ge Coast • EDITION Today's Closa.• ' N. ¥. Stoek84 ; ' VOL. 68, NO. 259, 2 SECTIONS, 2A PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1975 N TEN CENTS ~· . ..... f · Adniits-Deadly Dart ·Guns . • ,WASHINGTON (UPI) -CIA Director William E. Colby. dis· playing • deadly electric dart CUD that be said could kill silenlb at 100 yards. today admitted to Con&retl the a1eney for five ye_ar• . UlecaJly maintained 1 stoclrpale of lethal )IOisoo and weapons. Colby said bis predecessor, Richard Helms, was aware ol. the 1 1910 requirement that such .. mat~rl•I be disposed "Of.~ But Colby dla oot aay wbetber Helml hid knowledge of tbe illecal stocqllln&. Under que1tlonlnc by Sea. Howard Baker <R·T..,,,.), Colby said re~orda 1howin1& who autborlaecl the development and atoekplilnf of tbe deadlJ' bioloaica weapon were destroyed tl)ree yean -with Helms' knowledge. In the glare of television camera lights, Colby showed the Senate Select Committee on ln- te1U1ence a telescopic-sighted, black dart gun which he desert bed as ·'a very deadly .... _... . Sen. Frank Church ()).Idaho), chairman of the committee, stncerly lnapected the weapoo. lllllbUy larger lhah a .'5 pistol and banded it along to other Gunfire at ·Ne • members or the panel. ,~h Colby said the dart 1un;·• powered by electric batteries, • was one of various methods ol in- jecting lethal doses of 1uCh· poiloo.i as .s hellfish toxin and' cobra venom in ''offensive targets.·• Defe nsively, he said, tbe poisons were desicned for suiclde pills for captured aeents. (See CIA, Page AZ) ort .. Tave1·11 Wounds TwO Ul"IT ....... SEN. B'ARRY GOLDWATER SIGHTS THROUGH DART GUN' Weepon C-ble of.Siient Kllllng •I 100 Y81'da Ne.,..·Jurist J/uJge ·Lamoreaux . Tapped by Brown Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has appointed Betty Lou Lamoreaux of Newport Beach as a municipal court judge. • She will fill a new position in the Harbor .Judicial District, _raising the number of judges on that bench to five. Since December, Judge Lamoreaux, 51, bu been the traffic trial com- missioner in the district. The an. nouncement from Sacramento did not indicate who would fill the traffic commissioner's position. Judge Lamoreaux, who used to live in Huntington Beach and re- cently moved to Newport Beach, formerly was in private practice in Santa Ana, specializing in civil ,work . A Democrat, she is a graduate of San Francisco Law School. Her annual municipal fil.617 . court salary as a judge will be llnstable Air ~ O.lty ~-51.n ....... SHE•s A JUDGE ~~! 4Ju Lamoreaux Flash Flood Threat Seen for LA Area e' By United Press International A brief thunderstorm spawned by moist unstable air from Mex- ico dumped heavy rains on parts of the Los AngeleS Basin today, and flasb flood w arninis were is- sued for most of {he mountains and d ese rts of Southern California. The National Weather Service warned desert _and mountain re- sidents to "check preparedness reqilirements and be ready for quick action if n8sh nooding is observed." 'heavy amounts in Santa Moni ca. Studio City and other areas of the Los Angeles Basin. No damage was reported. The weather bureau said the greatest threat for heavy thun- derstorms ·was expected this af- ternoon and evening. It blamed the storm threat on "very moist and unslable" air reaching Southern California from Mexico. Despite the storm system, the weather service predicted con- tinued warm temperatures for Southern California with the high al Los Angeles Civic Center expected lo reach 90. Hassle . . Over 25e Billards By JOHN VALTERZA or a. 0.11, l"INll:MaH An argument over a 25-cent pool game at Smokey Stover's discotheque in Newport Beach ended in a blaze of gunfire early today. seriously wounding a Costa Mesa woman and inflicting lesser injuries on the manager. The closing lime shooting in the tav.ern at 3295 Newport Boulevard at l: 50 a .m. triggered a manhunt which ended with more gunplay in Huntinflon Beach a abort ttm·e-later. Police anested two suspected gunmen after ·Wbat they described as a struggle that even involved a police dog. Officers identified the most seriously injured victim as Becky Bengstom, 21 , of 994 Valen~ia Ave., Costa Mesa. She suffered gunshot woWlds in the back and side and underwent surgery early today at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Her condition today was not immediately known. The club's manager, Fred Cisneros, 31, of 600 E. Ocean Front, Newport Beach, suffered a minor wound in the wrist. He was treated and released al Hoag. Ten minutes alter witness re- ports of a license number and car description were dispatched by police , a patrolman in Hunt- ington BeacH spotted the suspect car at Beach Boulevard and Ellis Avenue. Patrolman Bob Jeffrey, driv- ing a unit occupied by a police dog, stopped the car driven by James Joseph Haas, 24, of Hollywood. Also in the car was Timothy Carl Elliott, 22, of Cov - ina. As Jeffrey and a backup officer approached the car, Haas as- sertedly plunged both hands between the front seats, causing the officers to suspect that he was reaching for a weapc>n. One shot was 'fired al that point by an officer but the s lug traveled over the car and)nto a . vacant field. Officers said a struggle ensued when the pair refused to leave the car, and at one point Haas broke free from an officer only lo be s ubdued and chewed by the dog. The two men were booked on charges of ass ault with a deadly weapon. (See GUNFIRE, PageA2) a.My PfMt ... "-- OFFICER RON RODGERS DELIVERS COPY OF "THROAT" At Balboa's Pussycat Theater, a jury l,.n the Balcony Jury Views 'Throat' In Pussycat Trial The jury in the Balboa Pussycat Theater obscenity trial went to the movies Monday to see the two sex films at issue. and as the day wore on a damaged print of "Deep Throat .. sparked some wearying delays. The jury of six men and six women and two alternates rode by bus for the special screening of that film and its companion feature. "De vil in Miss Jones". And as the jury sa,t secluded in the balcony Qf the peninsula theat er. about ,a dozen Courtroom spectators watched rrom the bottom noor. All went smoothiy through the prenoon s howing of "Devil ". After a Jurich break, the jury re· assembled and it was time for the second film alleged by the. prosecution to be obscene. But the print was damaged and 15 minutes into the film , the Lights went back on. Newport Beach police, who carted several prints of the films :\way from the theater last June, suddenly were told to bring some back. And after a hasty run in a patrol car. officers returned with a fresh copy of the Linda Lov - elace sex film and the show was on again. The flash flood warnings were issued for all of San Diego, lm- peri al, Riverside and San Bernardino counties and for Los Angeles. County from the south slopes of the San Gabriel Moun· tains northward into Kern Coun- ty east of the Sierras and 'the southern Portion of Inyo County. Rams Joining Strike? The jury. whi ch has a mem· bership ranging in age from mid 20s housewives to an elderly re- tiree. appeared in good spirits throughout the day. As jurors filed down the balcony stairway for the last time, some members joked and laughed. Others re· mained sombe r . Rain, accbmpanied by thund~r and lightning, fell briefly but in DOW DECUNES F08 611l TIME NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock me.rket, plagued by rising interest rates, closed lower for the sixth consecutive session to- day in moderate trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow .Jones industrial average, ahead more than two Points at the outset, lost 8.06 Points to '19.1.13. Deellnes led ad· vances by about a 10-to-three mu~n . CTables, All). Prices were lower in moderate trading on the Ameiican Stock Exchange. • Jets, Redskins Follnw Patriots in NFL Walkout By Tile Associated Press The player representative of the striking New England Pat.riots said he received word that the Los Angeles Rams were expected to join the strike later today. There was no immediate com- ment from the Rams on the state- ment by the. p1ayer represen· tative, Randy Vataha. former Golden 1We11t College and Stan- ford University end. · Earlier, both the New York Jets and the Washington Redskins voted to join the Patriots in the strike. The Patriots were locked out by ln·an-a.1em-ent tMay After the players voted to conUnue their J 5trike amid &rowing support , ' from other NFL teams. "We've taken a course of ac· lion." Randy Vataha, player representative, said irt Foxboro, Mass., after three team meetings dutjng the day. "Now, it's up to the other teams to suppc>rt us. "That's four games," Vataha said, referring to Sunday's scheduled opening of the regular NFL season involving the Rams, Jets, Redskins and his team. In addition, tbe Chicago Bears said they wOu!d,,g_o put in rorce if the •NEL Players Association called for a league-wide strike. The Patriotsiwalked out Satur- day in the hope of speedin1 negotiations for a league con- tract. ,. Vat•ha said lbe Pairioi. asked .....l-l - • • management to reinstate the col- lective bargaining agreement between the NFL owners council and the .. NFLPA which expired 19'h months ago. Vataha s aid the players also asked owners to return the squad to the 46-man limit as a show of good faith while negotiating a new pact. The tefm roster was reduced lo 43 from 47 players this year over the objection of the players' association. ' R eCerring to the.-1ix1>Qint pro- posal matte early this morning by owners. Va ti.ha •'-'d, "We still wt.nt to play, stilt _want t(ff)rac· lice but we cannot do it: under this Piopos'a1." • "It sort of catches you off guard." said one lo another as the group left al the end of the day. The screening of the two rWnS and opening statements by the pr0$eculion and defense took up the flrst day of a trial which is ex- pected lo take six weeks. Mi s dem ea n o r obsc"e nity charges were fil ed soon after the seizures in June against the owner of the th eater chain, Vin- cent Miranda. plus two other principals in the operation. In Monday's opening state- ments. the prosecution asserted that the films later to be seen by the jury were patently obscene (See THROAT. Page AZ) 1 Trustees Oppose -Jet Use BY. RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Ot .. IHllyll'I'-..... The Saddleback Valley Unified. School District ·s governin( board voted Monday night to join the opposition lo a county pro- posal calling for commercial use o{ the .El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Trustees adopted a resolution bY unanimous vote requesting neighboring school districts and governmental representatives to block the county's application LO the Department of Delenae for joint civilian-military use or the base. 1 Their action wa1 based on the belie( that airline traffic would subject Saddleback Valley school children to excessive noise and expose them to unnecessary danger. The Saddleback Valley Schools resolution follows similar actions taken recently by the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Coun- cil, the Saddleback ·Republican Assembly and the Irvine City Council. The resolution was pushed. through by Trustee Loa Youn& who said that although it appeani the county has little chance qf winning approval for the pro- pc>sal. trustees. as elected or. ficials , would be remiss in their duties if they did not state their dissatisfaction. "Commercial planes would be absolutely devastating,·· sai'd Mrs. Young , pointing out that' some schools in the vi cinity or Los Angeles International Airport had to close because of the noise factor. Her comments were echoed by Trustee Carole Neust adt who said. "I too feel very strongl.y about this. We cannot sit back and assume this will be denied.·· Although th e Saddleback Area Coordinating Counci l fS ACC) has not yet taken official action on the renewed airport proposal, a representative or the council in· di cated to trustees Monday night that such action is imminent. (See STATION, PageA2) Coast Weather Mostly s unny through Wednesday. according to the weather scrviC'e , with continued warm in land but cool at the beaches. lli ghs near 70 at the strand ris ing to the mid·80s in north county areas . INSIDE TODAY Julie. 1Vi.ron £1.tenhoweT i3 putting her liff.' together again and beginning to haue 10me Jun. She says pre.t.rure lo perform publicly has leMe.Tled and she is boeginning lo "feel Jree.."Story Al2. . ..• ,. At y_. """"kl Al IMwll'lh&IM Al I,_ """""'II •1 --WT'" Al I 1..M. .. ,,,. All MIYln Al Caoltfwrll• AJ ~ l"llfMll A 10 a..in.-ar.12 ,.. ...... , .,..., '\ A• (»fftkl aJ C...,.. Cw!tty A 1 a-.. .. N aJ ,....., 1•·1 DNftl ""'lkn AJ ~ 4-1 ............. A• Or.SllN.C...... ar ~ .. -Ill Al S*iliMlfll441 Al .. 11 "-· Al~U T ... ..,..._ A• ..... tlMlll•c_,. AP ~ Al My0....... Al ......... A4 ........... Jiii at ""'"1.il ,.._ A4 QAILYPILOT N f'reaP..,AJ l ~!! :pe~.: the panel's first 1 public hearings with a statement sa1in1 the invesUcation "in· •. wives the Illegal _.100 of • ·deadly biological pois<>ns which 1 were retained within the CIA for five years after their destruction ~a& ordered by the President (Richard M. Nixon)'' inl970. Colby said "middle level" CIA officers were a pparently responsible for maintainin~ the stockpile or poisons and deli very . . systems. Helms. now a mbassador to Iran, was sitting in the back or the packed Senate caucus room, scene of the Watergate hearings. Helms, CI A director for almost seven year s until 1973, i:. scheduled to testify before the committee Wed nesday. Col by said there is in existence a memo bet ween Helms and Sidney Gottlieb, former chief of the agency's technical services division, indicating the records "·ere destroyed by Gottlieb, in November 1972 , before he re- tired. Colby conceded Gottlieb had been at CIA headquarters within , the last few days reviewing cer- tain fil es, but said no one had in· terviewed him to find out wh y he destroyed those vital records. "Then we run up against a -stone wall," said Baker. Church's committee has pro- bed in telligence activities at length in closed sessions. During ·those sessions, th e lefto ver toxins at th e Arm y's biol og i ca l. la boratory at Ft. Detrick, Md ., came to li ght. In s tructions to d estroy chemical and biological warfare material at Ft. Detrick were is- sued in 1970. But May 20, 11 grams of shellfish toxin and eight milli grams of cobra venom were found in the small vault. Colby also told Congress that during the past 25 years his agen- cy secretly developed "devices" for use in counter-intelligence ac- tivities, including a fountain pen dart launcher . Colby also said foreign in- telligence agents are continuing , .to use drugs on "tru:get subjects" 1, overseas a nd a dministered a drug to a CIA operative within the past year. In his testimony. Colby did not mention a report saying American agents tried to use lethal toxins to assassinate African leader Patrice Lumumba. ... * * * CIA Reveals U2 Spy Pilot 'Had Poison' . WASHINGTON (UPI) -CIA Direetor William E. Colby said tn.today Gary POwers, pilot of the ·11iU2 spy plane shot down over the .. Soviet Union in 1960. was pro- ., vided with a tiny Poison needle 1, concealed in a silver dollar in . 'case be wanted to commit suicide. · But, Colby told the Senate Select Committee on .Jn- telligence, Powers •'obviously · did not use it, and was not in- . structed to do so. It was offered· to him to provide him with an op- .. tion." · Colby said an earlier ••J....pill'' , designed for agents tQ commit suicide during World War II "took some time to work and was · agonizing.•• He said agents who might have the need· to use such a pill would want "inst antaneous" results and that was why the poisons, such as was supplied to Powers. were developed. The needle would have enabled Powers to in - ject himself wilh deadly shellfish toxin. · "The Powers flight was the only time we were· aware that the toxin was used for operational use, although the L-pill was made available for earlier flights," Colby said. - ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wee<r Pr111dit11I .... P11t1t1....- Jack R. Curley """'""'"""'.,..Ge_ .. Ml ....... Thom~eevU n.omes A. MurphJne MIM!liftl; E4Mlr N Qarte'IH. Loos AkNnf P.Nall Mtlt .. ftt .... ~ ' • --.---- • Pa .. ellsts Meet . . ~Fina Coastal_ ·Plan Weighed Over the Falls · California Coastal Com· . miuionera meellnre= week in Loe Angeleo will at to adopt aflnalstatecoastalplon-acloeu- ment deaiped to pr.uet the coastline from 'Wlcbeded de- velopment. "We hope to wrap up the plan Pet Dogs Murdered By Guard she's trying to get back over the top of the wave as her inner-tube companion eyes the coming fall. Just sit back, Debbie, and enjoy the s lide to the bottom. Sunny ' skies and warm temperatures brought out the beach crowd this week, in- cluding these "Three·persons-in-a-tub" a t Newport peninsula's M Street. Young · Debbie Ruiz, of Newport Beac::h::.·.:.'oo=k:.:s...:l:::ik:::e:_ ________________ _ A Huntlqton Hatbout w0man charced tod&7 ·that her two pet clop were sbcit to death ID eold blood by. a security auard ~ a .Seal Beacb Naval WeaJIOQll Sta·. Uon. Mrs. Sherry Pilarski, 16912 Warren Lane, said the dogs, Gretel, a female German shepherd and Harrington. a male Ford Speaks -In County OnSwrilay President Ford Is scheduled to speak in Orange County Sunday as part of a long weekend of politics and golf. • He :Is due to be In Anaheim Sunday to ad· dress a dinner of the Na- ·tionil Association of Life · Underwriters at the .Dis- neyland Hotel. A White House spokesman said that the weekend will begin with Ford attending the Oklahoma State Fair-In Oklahoma City Friday. He will fly to Los Angeles P\1- day evening and on Satur- day be will dedicate a field . house at Pepperdine University, Malibu. after wblcb be will fly to Moll- terey. Supect Nabbed Labrador-shepherd were gunned clown Sept. 8, on the irounds of tbe station but sbe didn't know about it until a week later. .. We're just looking fiif help," she said, her voice breaking with sobs. "We don't want aDything like th1a to hippen agaiQ,;'' ·Long Beach Cop Slain in Search Mrs. ·puarskl said abe had. give~ the dogs a bath Saturday and Ibey slipped out of the gate a Signal Hill area residence was that night and into the Navy sta- shot to death early today.· tion across the street without -By ARTHUR· R. VINSEi, CM ... Dlllrl"ti.t .... A veteran Long Beach paliceman stiJlking a kidnap- robbery suspect in a back yard of State Cuts Grant Money At Fairview Budget miscalcutations in Sacramento h&ve resulted in a · crash program to cut $4.6 million from antiCipated costs ol running California's 10 state hospitals, in- cluding Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa. A task force of police, includ-tlcensetags oridentification. ing some 100 officers and 27 cars She said ttiat in accounts she plus two police helicopters, cor-had learned, a security guard doned off and covered the area in saw the dogs out around the which the suspect was later cap--bunkers, one sleeping and one tured without incident. sniffing around. Barefoot and bleeding from '"Ibey growled: but 'didn't at- foot cuts, he was taken into tack," she says, "and the man custody without attempting to shot and wounded both. He ftre a .38 caliber weapon believed tracked them down and fired to be the death gun used on h · II :'J.f th Patrolman Robert R. Birdsall. nines ots m a ore ey were dead," she sobbe . Officer· Birdsall, 40, was pro-''They were petrified of guns,•• nounced dead at 1: 12 a.m. in St. she says. 1• All the man had to do Mary Medical t:.enter in the was shoot once in the air and they downtown area of Long Beach. would have run away." He was shot in the chest at Commander Harry Madera, close ranl!e after be and his executive offiCer of the station. partner, Officer Wilbur Poston, confirmed tbe'incident. split up in the darkened region on He said wild dogs roamed the .. tbls week and get It to the )lrin· ten," 1ald Joe Bodovltz. tbe commiasion '•executive direct.or. , C.o01mtssloner1 wUl'belill d.i.s- CUNlon and -ptlao Cil the plan .at 9 a.m. Wedn!19da1 at the Alrport·Mari na llotel. If necessary, they wW reconvene at 9.a.m. Thursday. The deadline for submlWna the plan IO the California legislature la Dee. 3 -the date specified in Propcioltion 20, wblcb waa •P- proved by voters in UJ'J2. That proposition created the regional and •t• coastal com· missions and also lncluded the mandate that a coastal plan be prepared and put into etfed by 1916. Several parts of the plan have been tentatively adopted at pre- vious meetln,g1; however, the • crucial iuue of bow 1l>e ~uc.ceed ing Coaital agencies will be structured bu not yet been de- termined. R~presentatives from many coastal cities throughout California have spoken at public hearings, telling commissioners theY, want local agencies to re- tainJocal control. One. of tbe m°'t voclll oppo. nents bas been the city of Newport Beach. Councilman ~ete Barrett spoke at last week 's hearing in San Francisco and argued that while-a state com- mission should handle overall control, local governments can~ and should, bandle local planning issues. However, environmental groups and a minority of cities believe that strong commission· controls are needed to guard against violations by developers. that regional Lascuna Beach's Mayor Roy Holm bas maintained that re- gional coastal commissions are the only logical method of protect· ingthecoastline. Another important part of the · plan includes maps showing coastal areas recommended for state acQuisition for use as open space areas. Seventy-five sites, including a number in Or.ange County. have been identified on a preliminary list but state commissioners have not yet decided which sites they'll include on the list the)' send to the state legislature. He will play a round of golf at Pebble Beach and spend the night In Jim. terey. the spokesman 1aid. Tbe President will fly to Anaheim Sunday, and re-' turn to Monterey for Fairview officials are scbeduled to meet Thursday to drjlw l!P p.Jans to cut mo.re than $1 milJ!on from their $26,620,444 operating budget for the current year. the Long 8!'acb-Signal Hill city base for years and It could be as- border bunt10g thetr ~uspect. • . swned that Mrs. Pilarski'a dogs - · lUlother overnlgb~ stop. F..-PflfleAJ GUNFIRE ••• Back at the nigbtspot in , Newport Beach, police were still piecing together the story of tbe shooting. Detective Sam Amburgey said the two alleged cunmen bad stayed late at the club, playing pool and drinking. Tben an argu- ment erupted over whose turn it was to play. Cisneros assertediy asked several bouncers to remove the · pair and after a noisy argument both men were out in the street. They assertedly milled around outside and argued in vain to be readmitted and soon afterwards it was closing time. - As 45 or 50 patrons were leav· ing, the men were seen to run across Newpart Boulevard and witnesses said Haas withdrew a gun from his car, pointed toward the crowd, bracing his hands on the roof. Amburgey said tbecrowd scat- tered as five shots rang out from the city ball parking lot acroos the street. The two victims were struck from behind as they beaded toward tbe doorway. Amburgey said it was a miracle that no one else was struck in the flurry of gunfire. THROAT .•• State officials say the budget originally was based on past his- tory of job turnover among psychiatric technicians. ·.But in today's t ight economy, the turnover has been nowhere near the anticipated rate, they said. A hiring freeze on the employ- ment of new psychiatric tecbni- cians bas also been imposed as a result of the miscalculation re- vealed in a special memorandum circulated within the state Department of Health. Generally. the job vacancy rate in the 10 state hospitals for the Pl' classification nms five percent. but it is now only two percent. Fairview State Hospita1, with its budgeted 1,598 personnel posi- tions is one of the largest single employers on the Orange Coast. Maintenance work -Wlless deemed critical -also is "being postpaned to help make up the budgeting difference, according to Don W. Miller. manager of the state department's hospital division. Hospital staffs will be reduced slightly. but state officials pre- dicted too small a decline to re- duce quality of patient care. · Fairview chief Dr, Anthony Toto said, as of last week, his hospital was down m positions from its budgeted work force. He said budget cuts will be dis- cussed Thursday at the regular monthly management personnel meeting. Funeral Set For Stuntman Killed in Reno ind were basically movies with Memorial services f« Gordon flimsy plots used only to lace McCollom, 25, will be held at 4 togetberrepeptedandgrapblcde-.p.m . We<lneaday at Saint An· pictionsofsexacts. b ri Ch The defense argued tbat, drew'•. Pres yte an urcb In Newport Beach. although the oex ls gr~phlc In tbe McCollom, a teacher at Edison movies, the issue goes far beyond Hlgl\ Scbool ID Huntington Beach the simple sexual depicUON. and a resident of C4sta Mesa, "Deep Throat•• wu cbarac· teri....S by the defense aa 8 spoof , was killed la~~ Fr~~~~-wbile · wblcb treats "what Could be a performipC 8 w~g·w-stunt v-heavysubJect"wltbbumor. , at the Reno, Nev., airra~es. -• The family bas suggested Defense attorne79 ebarac-memorial donations to the terized tbe other film u a McCollom Scbolaroblp Fund in "IJ!Orality play" of sorts wblch haaadeflnitemeat•do. care of Mike Poff, ~ East -. Se\lerotb Street, Long Beach. 1 Poll, ,o_ claumate of McCollom 'tt1Alll"('lkaeb·State-cotlegl!(Baid~ HigJlway-flid Off tbe.acholar•IPP will be given to · .Invest!-gators identified Officer : were wild. • 11 :- Birdsall s alleged slayer as Fred '"At the same time,'' he said. Harvey. 24, Long Beach, a ''we bad been warned that' a transient. He was booked for in· rabid dog was on the loose. We vestiga~ion . of murder and as-had gotten the word that one bad sa~t wit~ a deadly weapon on a bitten a boy (Colin Rolsin) and to · F..-PapAI STATIQN ••• police officer. . be on·tbe lookout for it. The charges could bnng the de-Radcliffe Ash of the SACC aviation committee told board members that there is no other airport . in the nation which is jointly used by military and civilian aircraft. ath penalty if he is convicted. Police said Officer Birdsall, a 15·year veteran of the force, and his partner entered the area about midnight, after a woman- contacted them from a liquor store, reparting she bad been kid~ naped and robbed. A description of the suspect vehicle and license nUmber led them to the Signal Hill Jieigbborhood where it was di&o covered and Officer Birdsall was then slain when be apparenUy found the suspect. · He was shot in the chest: aP.. parently without warning. although it was not immediately determined bow many times be was hit. First reports of the killing of the 15-ye ar Long Beach policeman said it sounded like an automatic weapon, indicating multiple shots were fired. • Thieves Get $8,5401...oot A burglar pried open a sliding glass door to a West Newport home of two young women Mon- day and looted the place of ex~ pensive jewelry and appliances. The total loss in the theft on 39tb Street was $8,540, and police said large quantities of personal jewelry made up most of the booty. One woman report¢ the theft after returning home late M.on- ftay night. Police said that someone wear- ing ripple·soled s hoes which left distinct tr ack s used a screwdriver to pry open the door of the residence. He described the F 4 fighter jets flying into the El Toro base as ''bot rods'' with twice thP. speed patential of commercial craft and said that bis conversa-•· tions with civilian captains in- dicate. they would refuse to fly passengers into El Toro because of the added danger. Ash noted that a petition with "'thousands of signatures" now is being circulated at Laguna Hills Leisure World in opposition to commercial traffic at the base. In a reference to the contention that EI Toro's expa&ion would relieve noise problems at Orange co·unty Airport A sh said. .. You·re not solving anything by taking the noise from one place and puttin·g it another.•· Let Us Put You On The Map *•••···· carpe • .• Near the entrance, inside our store, is a giant new map.· We are in the process of identifying all of the homes we have carpeted since 1965 on this map · with colored pins. (A different color for each year.) . aose scrutiny will detect some fnteresling facts: firstly, we have carpeted homes on virtually every street in the area. Secondly, the pins are in bunches .. indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH advertising. Thirdly, the number· of homes we have carpeted is stQggerlng. If you desire honesty, experience. and recommendations from neighbors we have worked for, then Alden's is THE Pl.ACE! • ···~···········'· ·installiition. custom draperies iQCRAMENTO roPtl -The ~=::~'::!'~as a . Stats lnpart~ot Ill Trwporta-at..Ses~aa-eoacb..d-lhe Uon, which 11 b1111dln& .. new Q'mnuUC team at Ediaoll. freew11,1, Ii•• ca!lefl«ld,lts.tradl-~,-111term~ll~wl ll tie at the llooal proindllon Gl •1Nat!Otnal Fall'bavon ~ orial l'arlt Santa llljhwa,y Week.'' Ana 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, <;Allf. 92627 • I iC; NO. no.; PHONE 646·4838 -646·2355 ' . t - . I ' I ---~---------,)... .. ~) .•. -· • • ~·- I ,. --··-. • • Tueeday'1.' Cloamg Prices Cigt;ireftA Ada 'Moody' . . -. -...... ·~~-~~·= ll7 llU.'ION •OllrOWiti C:: ;::fm,r::; : " - ,,. cllaret:U p•t-w .. . ... er aw::. ........ 1· .!!!.•· ll -1111o wbat Ille acl"'1111n1 Mon ri::.:: t .-+ii' =:=.:?1= ey-i'ii1!t:!j1;1 ni..6;f itMlflntbe•moll•"•mlDd. Tree ;; ..: • :: 'fllJ J" -11 v ....... -the pOlillon • • >if ~I: .. l!" 1 '1:; ii' bnDd II llYIDI to~ •.. g c;.;: ~\".4 .~ ~it= i .:~:a"l:1tbe-. tow-tar •11,d 1ow-n1co11ne 1 .. S~: ?I"~· ·.1 .1, _: 1 1: .. A brand tb · ...... Uutt -preylnc on ' " "' --• F-..... 1•· ~mood" \\P!m"""-alaJIA people's fun of <oncer. ~~ l Jtt 1l:-.,. '· .S lt -~ ~ ... .._••b••-· • -~•• I " !!: ..... ,.. l" ........... ·. lrllDd that'• 1lipplaf ~ ~-.._..uno~c --1. • ~ ::: .. ,... cha .. lb -th•tth-~ =='-·; 'tt" -·· .. ':II :· 1 I"'=" n.,na e meuase. are ''aafer" tha.a. ciaaret:lel ......, ........ ' ' w ••••• ! :4= ~ TK"E LONG'IS·T · with be.a'fier contelb-.uona ~ ... :~:*!: .. ijf ... ll •UNHING campalo iD the of~ and nicottoe. it b a £.g:£. ft :t •• ·" • ~·i ..o -• • i 1a ti b I I belief that Is wld""-hold 5:1 .... 1 " • ·u • J "' .,, K.arlboro'a western motif, So ba _ .. _ 1 --·-t..t.1: • w.e ..--.. 1. • • ..._-. .... re e ua D911 s ·eveobyPraide.nt~ I ~·j n ~=: .. ~.~ 21'4::: --•It wlll -tlnue • '-• u we ve au. •Cir 1..-u.-E..-11 1 •t11-~ . *"'• ~ .....,. ... vu ·-,.. abcJurin• • smoker • ...-......... M •• , itt ..__., ti i:f ..., the brand contlnuee to move ... ...., i-... .., _.. ... l • ..,... , t·l!. • " -\:' Up On the l&lea Chart. ~thaUtbe.tal..klboutlmok-m~ I JI~ ll: ::: 1li; t Ii!!=~ Marlboro ls on the -e o1 in.I 1 decided I'd eltherqultor ,,. ., ...... "'"' ... ~ 1_. ai •• ;;;_ .. -'-·-• smoke True. J 1moke True." o..J 'i "• I._. " ~J:;o 2 'I f .!. ~ overt ... lnJ' Wlaston .. the OrtheadaforVant•-wblcti r ....... 1 1 .~ ~ CNMllwt! .• 'I •. ~ i.lellins brad in the eomi-_, __ ....... 0 -..... "--~ ..-• • d... . . . a. ""'*-' 1 " try. prow.we ........, ••or m • full-..... 1.lt II "'' V.-"' Olot'llF"'. •• I t\111-"' The l(ar)boro messare ls flavor Ciaarette ''without =''~ ~ JI ..;:+t-Oreh Cr.,:: I){ ~ t •---"Co . .........__ .... _ .... ~ -·· tke tar -~ ...,.. ':M s Ml 11"'-"" :'t'J .. , ,, c~: · me to WUR:" ll.llll:J ~ .... .._ ... -'tM .....,. ~ .-• 11 ""• \o'I t :;fi s " 11 ••• flav<r 11." What It'• realty nicotine." • ~t.f.! .~ ill !!."'; l: ~"C: :: ..: l:..-·" sl.)'ing, beyond that la: •'This ;.·.a" • ~ " .. .. ,. 1w. + • .. v·-AGB ·No~-· In Mt •• b+ 1 -\lo Mlllt •• " l llo -" isnotooeofth---'·-·•-ftl'la " uuraa. • .... ,...,.ta 10 ... .._ ttllleettvln •• 11 ''*' ••• .,..,.. __ , llV~ ...tA ••• t ... 11 .. 0 " to fl'o All'tlldlM P U U\o'I--C1o1Botll1 • .0 1 11 lt\o'I •11 tar and low-nicotine brands. ~ • .,.ome )'OU m M19rc:.•.111 •ta•,,__., a..0...1.u 1 61 ""'--• Thi.sisoneyoucantaste.•• the aame folka who make .timalOI .~ • i .,,. .1,. OnGot•.• .. $ .. ~ ••• Winston and Salem and !:i."' ' ll ~ ~ ~.r•.a .. aoo • ·:1 Winston is alao in this ''full-• "'''*' .• t ••• t.1 . .0 , 21 tt • .,. Camel ._,.. 1 "" t 1<•1.20 1 · n .,..._ .. flavor'' category. It has a . A01an1.ia • , +" ~korJ :•10 1,.. "1~.·u heavy slug of tar and Theo, of course. we set to~~~~ Dt 'f:! := 8t=~"!.~ r. ... _:: nicotine, even more tban tbe brands which don't know :gr;:~.~ , :;:; t! ~1:..~n 1~ m=, tz Marlboro. Since· it bas bem•n what to say to arrest 1ales M1t:k~2 1 ,,, 1.--llo otr1"""""·· , 1,.16 ••• •-d-linea Vic-,,. ",,..,,,.,, .2~ , ,, 1 • • • CHr '"""' 2 . . u 1"'-"" to lose ground. to Marlboro, """' · ... ~vy, ior exam· ~·'°" 1J '' N-"" a.. El.tit 10J1 2•"i + \o'I Wi t b h •• tb ple,isnowcomlngatsmoken"" .1~ .. aseo ' ... , '*-1l011.w •• • ~-~ ns on as c an&cu e 'tb lb 1. . ,, ·AGll 1.•111 .. n n ... .,.. a.cAm .2• • • , -w. modelswboappearinitsads w1 e tne: Why 1..32 •• 11 1•""•-.. 0v0112.•10 2 .. .,.._, Th · d be · f Viceroy? Because I'd never :,:;.·.: .~ '1: =: t; g::1~1~·3 .~ ~ ,n~=,~ ey now ten to young smoke a boring cig .. --" • ·" s i1 t24-.,.. OW£pl 1.• .. i50 n + ,. -ple dress·• m' blue je•.... . -~"'· """Ham .'2n >U n ""-._ 00no.ca .n 10 m '"' + \o'I --icu ....... , Bor1nf must mean those AHM1tlf2 .. .s1u -2 OlllltP.» •• a ~-" and they're saying things . arette b d . ~.J021 14s 2~-"" o....nPp11 •• 1 10 -'llo like: cig ran 1 which are Mt1-1m .. ,, .s1,1i-" a.. 11w Cit •• »• 1 -"' -...1.uringfoodsales Al!llMIC.1 .11' :rt ·~ .... CNA Fll'KI .• SI M •.• ''U it wasn't for Wmston. 1 "'"'V""'"~ • • A MNlc:~ • ... s -"" OIAlll' 1.10 •• 41 11"'-" --·'dn' Poor ~· ett •-.. yers Nn •••·· 115 !" ... CNAln.aRio •• tJ 10.,._,. WVUI t smoke'': or ''Taste. _. __ br oi: JZI, I AnlNGl.Sitg. w JOV.-"' CHA Uwtn .• I 1 ... isn't ev·-••-i. It'• tbe-''U .,..~ are all in a ,,,,. SNt.1"' • 1 1... ••• Lio •• 21 •\to•"" ~,~ ....., state of tr t Is all Mtttil11'17i .. s N -"' Get a ,,. "'-"' thing"; or re ea • re y -. 5tnlll M s "' 1i1A-1 1." •• 2 111,1i : •• desperate. rt'• now ...c ..... to .,...,._.. s .•~-\o'I 1.os •• 11 11~-·" ... T·-s-·rs--• If JJOOI~ -1..... Nrdllnl.a.o • ... ••. a..•,., nv. ... _.. _.. w.:s ""'""' AMT& a.• t JOI "'°"-"° ..Mlt 11 --V. n naa ann. '~· I w-T .. .a.. al , ........ 6l..l....I ...,., rn S <4 U4-\6 At4 1"' 6 -'°" cigarette isn't real, it isn't ci&arette', for smokers whole AntT& "'"·· " '°"'• " 1nitu •• 11 ,._.,. an"'"'"" W'-·tonls'--aJ " ••-·ts get ·•-mok ATTflfA.S......; 2 .t2 ••• M11 ft' 2 • .._ .. J...-ue• lllB 1.._.lc • ~.,.. rupy-...u::i-1 . =t.""·· 'l·a""--. t,r.J~ .. ,10 •1 .. "' TbeNo.3aelllnacta:arette ing those full-flavored A'Mr ... 1t .~,,.. 1f.!•.~ ~cat11,..~i I: S:.:~ brandisKoolandltamessaae cigarettes all day and who ...,.""'1"1 s • 11"-"' "'""A11 11, ».,.,_,. for many years has been the don't like die higb.ftltration =·1~~: ~ ,::.:-.~ 1..t!s'I ~ I: r.._·;; simple one, ''Come up to brandl because they "hardly :=r.;i.!;;2t1! 'll l~ -.~ ~0:.~:·1 .J 3~-·~ Kool.'' What it, is staUnt ta.stelikeanything." =~11e ::2: n1 ~~=~~ti!:·• 1,f sm:=~ there, and what menthol Nl'lpex c.1' • •lilt-"" {.ol5o0h1o2, ., 10fll• w. smokers• apparently re-ON ITS TWO other brands, Z:-.:.'t'.r ·; ;~ ~:-~ ='~ ·s .: l"":-= cognize, is that it contains L&M and Chesterfield, Ug· Z::~a.·=·; ? S:~; ~ =J~:~ 1: ~=1:;:: more menthol than other gett & Myers seems to have An11:t11ft .1t • n •~·""' CWEdDf:t.11 •• • • .,. .. .,. bran••, •-di•t•·-·. · t b ~Al I IJI 17"'+ -CwE-1.G •• 11 11\lo-'4 ~ nu ~ JUS a OUt thrown iD the AncNic 1..20 I 11 20 •.. C-.. Pl' 1,M .. 1 , • .,._ "'° Lat 1.. b beeo ....... 1 ""-'"° 1.20 6 16 :rt\'>-"' °'"""'Elf wt .. 2 ---"" e.,,. we ave ~~ towe . IAM, a brand m the M9fllc:• .11 1 2 s-. ... Ctme:a BlWl .. 2 --"" the emergence of • new decline tor many yeimi, is ::t..::t.t: ;: llY.::: ~1~:: 'i ,:~-·" eategory that might best be now being pusitioned as "the ,,._ ou " • 64 nYt ... camm""' 1 1 m · ~-~ c i.11 e d the • ' cancer proud smoke," whatever that ~~t.~ ·4 := ~·v; ~so 1~ ~ 11-+: Cl·gare"··." These ·-the m....... " 1-°'·· • 1slo'J-"' c;;l::;.~,n 1 111 .._ ••• 'K;,lt ....... -· = r2 , . 9 I -Mo COMM 1.209 S 1 Ulo'll-'°" .Golden West Cites I..oad Factor Hike James M. Harmon. Presi- dent of Golden West Airlines reported for the month of August, 1915, the airline car· ried 29,195 passengers. The schedule completion fac: tor was 97.$4 percent for the month and 98.0S percent year· to.date. The carriers on time departure record for the month was 95.02 percent. The Newport Beach car- rier's available seat miles for the month were 2, 774,991, which accounted for a moo- thly load. factor of 55.38 per- cent compared to 50.89. per- cent for the same period last year. Total passengers car· ried year-to-date total 210,0S'l. Golden West has recently acquired new joint fares with the major carriers operating in and out of Los Angeles In· tematlooal Airport. The Joint fares are available from · all Golden West origin cities to mosfmajor U.S. destinali'!"". MARKET HIGHLIGHTS NYSE Index ASE Index Dow-Jones Ind S&P 500 Stocks I Hllllr pt 4.07 2CIM'91 J T•!\f'ltC Awt 4 NtMN t.r• S CMI l'IV Cp • c.otw.11 Mtg , Plckwtt .M ·~~i:-1 ' Inv 10 ltM" In<. 11 ""'""' ... "' 1 11 Sltfr pr l.IO IJ 5""ett' Ano 1-4 l.lhlntt ..JD n Allwn lnco • 105 lttt .11~ 17 WIUs F . Miii .. ._~~ ........ .. ""°"" INDEXES 43.59. 82.21 795.13 off off off off 0.42 0.66' 8 .06 0.79. ,,, ,.., .... ... I~ '" 7.1 •• .. •• .. ... ... .. .. .. ., l:l ,,, It,, 11.S II.A II, I II, I 10.4 ... ... '" .. ... '" .. l:l ., l.:l .., 82.09 ACTIV• nuot5 Y RIC IUPU -Ti. IS rflOtt 1.$ lrlOlod' °" U. ,.._ Yortr. T~, a.. ·~···· --31\o'I -....... -.. Olkofll ••• ,... l:rt;AOI • ••••••. .,.... ........ 11~ ~ ••.•••. s-st .... ,.... •• ,.,. 10 •••••• k.l"Mllt ••• • ... • 1...-%1Yt -"' .....,... •••••• 10J;p 1t -._ Qlrtl £.-• • . .•• ~100 "" + ¥1 WHltfM It ••..• 100,0 ""' -¥1 od .... ,.. ..,_ -1¥1 .. • • • • • • • •;AGO .. -l\lo lcolld •• • .... """ ... ¥1 ~ n,100 3IM -1111 "'"'°"' ~ • . . .. .. 5'16. -1¥. Spery'y Rind ... • n,kiiii • -~ A•erka11 IOM•••f AC'fi~'f> Nl!W Y0"tc U,.IPI) ~ TNI 10 ecth•• MOCIU tr«lllod on µw ArMrkan SIOdl 211· dMonlit T,,.Mty. s. ... a-a.. Houston OU ..... 1tS,G :M.'111 + ~ JC.Icon S..b tl,000 ll .. + 9l'e Pttntk • H•ll '3, 100 lf:v. ,,., SrrQJI C. S!,IQI 2M -¥1 ~nPlt ........... W.-\'I Rr D&arn OU , .• .• 64,000 1Slo'll -'4 ..... Pet Dev •••• )l,j(IO 11'111 -I ~ Ind ••• ., •• !1,600 21 + 1\l'J ~1111,... • • •• g::: 4't + 1 Vo Market Trend ,. Wnll ••1tlrT ±nz , ......... ~. Nek 't'ork Sain VolH111e -. ·······-··~""'tl ....... -..o.loL~o .... 'ICIO'I m -············ ... ,.. -................ 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Hang Sixteen It's 'hang sixteen ' for Ratsy, a surfing dachshund pup as she rides the crest of a wave in the Atlantic Ocean off St. Aqgustine, Fla. At the end of her ride, the pup swims for the waiting arms of her master. Julie Eisenhower 'Having Some Fun' WASl-llNGTON (AP) -Julie Nixon Ei~hower is putting her lire together again. Thirteen months after her rattier, Richard M. Nixon, re- signed the presidenc y. Mrs. Eisenhower , her father 's staun chest public supporter, is having some fun . SHE SAYS HER MARRIAGE IS closer now and th at the pressure to perform publicly has lessened. She has written a cooklx>ok a nd designed embroidery kits to be mass produced. She is considering a television career. And she is beginning to feel free. ··rt ·s been a different year because, for one thing, I'm not guarded," Mrs. Eisenhower said in an interview in her Washington apartment. "I don '.t think anyone can know what it's like to have 24-hour protection for six years. I don't think D.~vid and I ever had a normal situation. · "In the last year, we've kind of discovered having fun again· and being free, being able to pick up and do things and go places. I think that ·s the major happy thing in our lives. "' . "IT'S NICE NOT ro BE UNDER pressure to try and answer questions on every topi~ of the day, especially if you don 't think people care what yOur view is on whether .we should send more aid to South Korea. I just re- ally value being able to be my own person.'' The Eisenhowers' two-story apartment, wh.lch overlooks a busy intersection not far from the Kennedy Center, is furni shed simply with small sofas and high arm chairs. A beaded flower arrangement, a wedding gift from sister Tricia, sits on a table. A small picture of her father, taken recently in California, sits on a Ju1.1E shelf in the foyer. MrS . Eisenhower requested that no questions. about Watergate or her parents be asked, explaining, "I'm really tired o{talking aPout it." · -What she enjoys most these days, she said, is spending more time with her husband. · ''WE WEJtt BOTH SO CAVG~T UP JN political events that we really didil'l bave a life of our own. Now vie have more time with each other, time to talk about our future and what· we want out of life ... I've come to the conclusion that in marriage, you really have to concentrate and give a lot. And I've found that ..• when both partners.are involved with som.ething they enjoy, that's when there's happy sailing." . At 27, after years of shaking hands and giving speeches in the name of the Nixon Administration, Mrs. Eisenhower is trying to establish her oWn identity. _ "I enjoy working, I really do. If I hadn't bad any interest or work goals when my father left office, my life would have been very empty. Having these. things going bas been very important during the first year he has been out of office." She has written "Julie Eisenhower's Cookbook for Children," a volume of recipes collected from friends. Included are such items as "Pink Panther Soup," and "Daddy's Favorite Steak Sauce.·· . - THE RECIPES RANGE .FROM INEDIBLE but decorative play-dough cookies to a more. difficult. somewhat spicy Kima. curry . Mrs. Eisenhower said she now regrets not calling it a cookbook for children and their parents. A series of anthologies she bas edited for the Saturday Even- ing Post comes out next year. Her needlework kits, which she de- signed and which are being marketed by a large needlecraft com- pany, will be on sale in major department stores in January. Does she feel her famous name is an advantage or a trap? "It ·works both ways," Mrs. Eisenhower said. "There's no easy answer to that. You have to go on living. If your name is known, you might as well make the best of it. I don't think you can retreat if you think you're doing things legitimately and produc - ing things of quality. It's not a worry to me.''' SHE BRUSHED HER LONG CHESTNUT hair behind her. shoulder, letting the features in her round face soften. ''I'd like to give a painting to the White House in my mother's honor someday,'' she said. ''I think it would mean a good deal to her." · She said that Warner Communications .Inc., a major enter- µllnment and communications firm located in New York, is try- inl to promote a television progra_m for her -an idea she finds both appealing aml threatening. ''ldou't want to be a TV pe rsonality,'' she said, her dark eyes narrowing. "I don't want to be a TV star. Yet I'm known now . I'm tom:.~· !Jaja Homeowners Prote st 'Take ove r' ., SAN DIEGO (AP> -Mexican pe;uanta say they have taken over 784 acres of Pacific beachfront land from U.S. homeowners 40 miles south of the )n!ematlonal border in Mexico's JJAja California. 1'be land on which expensive bome1 "have been built by Americana Is part of a 35,000. acre expropriation ordered in -4918. by then Prnident Adolfo Lopes' Mateo for use as an l-'--'-~-..pfeuitunt-1'<>mmunity;-a 1pokamati said. . • "We are claiming-only that which ..is legally and constitu- tionally ours." Salcedo siad the communal farmers will allow the Americans to live in their own homes. BUT A FORMAL protest was being prepared by Howard Koenig, a retired industrial sales manager from Detroit, Mich. The government will be asked -wednellday ln~t!Xl<o City tl! al- low the Americana to cootinue un- restricted use or the land, said Koenig, adding that "if com· --muoal farmer• cail come ln~and Just take wha~ver they feel . ls convenient, theft nb private pro- perty II safe In Mexico." A rew of the hou1es were built north of the La Fonda hotel and restaurant at costl .. exeeedin1 ,000. ;:----- N~e'fags R~red Ori Baggitge W ASIUNGTON (AP) -Hoi>- inl to cut down the amount of loot luccace, alrlfnes will ftfllle to carry your baggage~ Sept. 21 unless it· baa ·your name on the outside. The new rule, approved by the Civil Aeronautics Board two mootbs ago, will not apply to IUC- aage carried on board, but only to checked.baggage. ' . PASSENGERS WHO do not already have theii name on their luggage will be furnished with free identification labels by the airli11es when they check in before departure. The airlines long have been urging passengers to put their name on the outside of their bag- gage so that the carriers can quickly locate baggage that is misplaced. The CAB order was . requested by the airlines. JN 1971, THE airlines began re- quiring all standby passengers to have their names on their bags and began providing free tden-· tification stickers. Regular passengers were given the iden- tification stickers upon request but were not required to have their luggage identified. Lost and misplaced baggage has been one of the biggest com- plaints against the airlines. Neither the Civil Aeronautics Board nor the Air Transport As- sociation, the trade association of the airlines , has figures on total bags lost or misplaced each year. • • -. Tuna ~mbargo ¥owed --.,L_ - Other N~ Press~ 1.o -~~~~~- WASIUNGTON <AP> -The, IJOUJlcinl the propoled 1-1. Commer°" Deaartmem bas an· .;,,_ban wblch nation• ml&llt be -"'Ced It intends to Im-an tarpta of tbe emb-. The Unll- embarllO on some Imported tuna edStateslmporta85pereenlol1ta fish, a move which could eut off tunaflsb, the vast built of It from JllOlt of the tuna sold In tbe Unit-Japan. . • ed States. The prol'.'!"ed ban would apply The embar10 Ii aiined at-· only -to yellowfln tuna rlllb, U1e pressuring other nations to abide--varlet)' whtcb 1oe1 lnto the" by a 1966fishln' treaty. canned . light tuna . which con .. · •tltuta the mainstay of U.S. tuna "THIE MOVE FOLLOWED · llllbCOlllumptlon. ', complaints by U ·~-tuna fllb-\ SllUTl'ING OFF a s!Cniflcant • . ermon that the Uruted States_ll I portion of Imports could be ex· the only nation w~ch forces its pected to drive up prices at f!.shinl fleet to ablde by intei:na-/supermarkets, but official1 ti~ally set quot~s for a five-warned other nations that the milllo~ square m1le area of the / U.S. might couple the ban with ~acif1c Ocean olf North and easier limits on catchel by U.S. Sbutb America. tuna boats in the controlled area. Commerce Depart~ent Robert w. Schoning, director spokesmen declined to say 1D an· of the Commerce Department's National Fi1heriea Service. 1aid · '""-ks tbe agency will take fln'1 action .. •~ on the propo1ed ban la mid• October after soliciting addi- tional evidence. An mi-mationol meeting on the ts1ue iS scheduled to coincide with th~ date the ban would_ become effective. . THE COMMERCE deoartment held hearinJ(s in San Diego on Aug. 29. U.S. fishermen claimed the ir share. of the worldwide yellowfin tuna cat.Ch had declin"ed to 60 percent this year from 90 percent in 1966, largely due to restrictions · im- posed by the Inter-American Tropical Tuna AssociatU>n. The United States. Canada, Mexico, Japan, France. 'Good f'[lornlng, Senator!' Panama, Nicaragua and Costa· Rica are the nations which have • lfloled Ille ln"*1 II t11o as-soc!,....._ to da. -bowmuch-..-.-.... ., from ·U. Pacific en r 11 •llliioa zone. ' • ' -' BVT ·llOtilll: 'V.a. ~Cllllllec_>d Iha dom•lic 11..t II .. thevergeolba=..,.-~lo .......... updera,.,..elp lf\llo.....,. ment-'tad. .._ The treaty rellrlcta tllo' t¥e from the •-atlca -a to 175,000 tomlor thla J~-inl said tbe U.S. nt atimatet tbat a.Goe . the quota already baye taken kom the -...S tllellnol take above' and bey-~4'IO!a mil!>t totai u much u 20,ooo, tons by yeaMnd. DOGDAlS "-LONDON <UPI) -U "yoUi dog Is having one of those dog days, don't go to your medicine chest to find him an upper. The advice caipe in a re- port issued by ·the Brltish Small Animal!> Veter!Ji11...ry Association. ''Well-meaning pet owners can turn their dogs into raging wolves by giv- ing them bunlan dr}lga," it. said. "The.animalJQ60$ all its domesticity. It changes fr~m ~ouse pet to a wild a"-mal. ·, . LOOK WHERE THE MAGIC COOKIE BROUGHT US • designed to help in home and business. They'H be better women tomorrow because they're having fun being Girl Scouts today. And fully 31 percent of the funds needed for Girl Scouting come from the annual ' > •. ' • , These Orange County girls are·enjoying Camp Scherman in the San Bernardino Mountains, be- cause Orange ·County families bought Girl Scout cookies last year. But there is more to Girl Scouting today than cookies and camping. Nea.rly 35,000 Orange County girls are involved today in projects tl)at are very relevant to today-ecology, aid to the handicapped, senior citizens, and, of course, activities • cookie sale. Aren't you glad they're selling cookies , - instead of dope? Wouldn't you like to help supply . part of the other 69 percent, or become a needed ' adult leader? Call ... 1 GJRCSCOUf"COUNUL OF'ORANGE""COllNTY - Judge Calvin S<hmidt, Pr~idenl , 1620 Adams ---.~Cosla.Mesa...Ca · 626 ~uMedWly-.Agei1cy (7141979-7900 \ .. " ~ ol. 01 '"' I . . . ~ One m a series of public service advertisements sponsored by Avco Financial Services, Newport neach, C alifornl~n • > " \ . \ ·- • I • ' .-• I State •••ewe~ • Events Could LT. GOV. MB&VYN II. DYlllALLY earUerthla year toot a 1tron1er approach, tel1ins a Unlted1'ia· Ch:; 1 .Jl -,"'"' lionl en«1y confereoce that the D>.io< oil com· .,uu,e.,., pan!" are to blaD>e. l.mpllcU In that statement ls · the feellnr that u long u oil companiea can ma.te : men D>oaey by 1e111ng fllel q11 to eleetric utlliiles, IF.!Oman they woo't produce enercir from the geothermal W ~ . te-theybold. . . · But J)yD>aily bu since IOftened his· 1taoce somewhat, conceding that the delays "'&Y oot be en· 1'. Tervous tlrely the re1pon1lbllity ol the oil companl01. 1 ~ 1 .Nevertbeleu, be 1ayo be winta to find out who 11 bolcllnl up development lly D&.STBINCROllN SOIJl'llERN ol a reaouree that """"' CALIFORNIA ......,. eaperta uy could Focus eventually produce 20 '-.,.-..:;....:;..==--' percent of th' electricity Call!ornia needs. So he's called two' statewide conferences for this month, sessions where most of the m-.jor geothermal leaae·holden (almost all are oil c.om- pa.DI•) and all the governmental agencies involved with them will participate. CONFERENCES ALONE, OF COUJlSE, ARE not enough to produce new activity. These meetings come at a fortuitous moment. Joist lut month the San Diego Gas & Electric Co. and the federal government announced joint de- velopment of a 10.megawatt geothermal power plant near Niland. At almost the"same time, Imperial County of- ficials appi-oved plans by the city of Burbank and Republic Geothermal Inc. to drill as many as 18 wells on federalJy.-owned land southeast of Holtville. And another agreement, this one between Union Oil Co. and several landowners near Brawley. waa also revealed this month. It allows Union just five years to begin produc- ing power on a 2,000· acre site, or else lose its lease. THESE THREE DEVELOPMENTS BY themselves might have been sufficient to put pre. ssure on other oil comparues to get moving in the geothermal area. .. Many people in the drilling industry have told us that the state of current technology makes geothermal development impossible,'' says Mark Dfrrim, research coordinator for Dymally. ''If these recent developments work out, they will be shown it is not impossible." The technical problems the industry complains of involve the high mineraJ content of the steaming hot underground water in the Imperial Y alley. There are far fewer brines in the water at the cur- rent geothermal development in Sonoma County in 1 Northei:n Califorpi~. 1 _ ... _ _, ..... :· , • BUt if the corrosion an4 odor problems caused by the minerals were so severe. why would a fisc31-'Y conservative firm like San Diego Gas & Electric be investing so much in its project? DIRRIM, WHO IS COORDINATING THE Dymally conferences, says that is one of the prime , queslions.otller l~ldors will ho asked. "Ouf conferences· are designed to put the pre· s:sure on whoever is to blame for the delay," he said. "Everybody has been pointing the finger at 'the other guys .' B..ut as soon as it can be shown that the technology is effective, it will put on a lot of pre- ssure for more development." t I For the consumer, there will be little im- mediate impact from all this. Even if tbe current experiments are effective, it would be several years before the underground pools could become regular SlJPpliers of electricity. . -But the eventual impact -if the entire poten- tial said to exist beneath the Imperial Valley were used -r would be a lowering of utility bills and a decreased dependence on unreliable foreign sources for fuel oil to nm the state's power plants. Orphan Bats Vampires Need Home FORT COLLINS; Colo. sharp fanged bats, Petit '(UPI) -Dr. Michael said he would be willing Petit wants to find a new to give the bats away. home for 22 vampire He said the three-inch, bats that like to be brownish gray bats are scratched behind the clean . and disease-free e a r s a n d ·d o n • t and rate human blood particularly enjoy. Jowontbeirlistoffoods. hum~ blood. They prefer beef blood Petit, an assistant pro-dispensed in a hum- fessor of microbiol~gy ~t mingbird feeder so Petit Colorado State Un1vers1-thinks the prospective ty, said he collected the new owner should live '~als in New M~co near a slaughter house. for a research proJect and would like to find a The bats enjoy being suitable home where scratched behind the they would be used for ears, he said, and if well .Science. not kept as pets .. fed wiJl never swoop ~lthough the new downontheirnewowner c:;.n.er would have to pay for .a quick snack as s~pping cha~rges for the movte bats do. 'FHE PICK OF Punch •• -"' • Dear Dr. Stelllcrolm: Wily do I fill myself with tranqµi,li1er1? Because of "the open and veiled taunts of my friends. The reason ? My buaband,..and I have de- cl d ed not to have childre~.1 We are called selfilb to our faces. We are happily married and the only fly in the oint· ment is our friends' reac- ' DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE lion to what we consider our honest evaluation of whether we want to have cbUdrdh. nos HAS MADE qie nervous. My husband is not as affected by their reactions. I would ap- preciate knowing how your readers feel. Do they consider childless couples selfish in an overpopulated world? - Mn.Q. COMMENT: I would be squashed if I took a stand in such an argu. ment. There is much to be said pro and con . However, John Simon, well-known art critic, has written an interest- ing, provocative article on wby he prefers to be childless which ap - peared in the May 1975 issue of flarper 's magazin~,· titled, "Why I'm Chilruess." -HE-QUOTES Aldous ~ Huxley : "Population is rushing up and soil fertility <is rushing down, so that in a couple of generations most of the planet will be a dust bowl inhabited by the starVing an(! ruled (since de- mocracy is incompatible with hunger ) b y tyrants." And then Simon goes on : "That was in 1948, and we are now closer by one generation to that in· tolerable state of affairs. That the birth rate has fallen off here and there in the world is not nearly enough as long as in ad· joining areas procrea· lion charges ahead at a suicidally full blast. "'That, too, contributes to my remaining child· iess, and even having become associated with the National Organiza- tion for Non-parents. Along with NON, I believe that the child- free state must be made socially respectable in a society that through countless means -from religion to advertising, from school books to soap operas -en· courages multiplying. ''.I.ET THOSE whooe chief talents lie in the direction of parent.hood reproduce, albeit with moderation; let others. otherwise inclined, re· main unpress ured and undiscriminated. against -feel free to be child· free." Feel better, Mrs. Q.? Perhaps now yuu will not need so many tran- quiliiers. On the other hand. I wonder bow a friend of mine with 10 children will react. And others who are raising and have raised children? • • 2 • 5 6 7 8 • p I L 0 T ' c-~ L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 ·6 7 8 ' --' H••H,...S. H1•Hfor5* ..._...PorS. · tt111H,_S. ······················· .............................................. ••••·•·•••············· ••••••••••••••••••••••• • .. 1002. .. 1002 l .. 100• .... ,.. 1002 t 1-;;,;,;,;,;;,;,;,;,;;,;,;,111111111~~-!':'1 .. :::r:!! Mt&U 81 .. r ' ' ·············••*4•••••• .................................................................... . SHOUCUST JJ TWO STORY -" FAMILY ROOM llRORS: Ad\'tlH..,.. DUl'LIX 1tl1lld clledl lllllr edl 3 Bd'rl"QI., z bllhs taeb CW, ed ,.,.. .... unit ; frplca., ,bit-ins. ,.... I & ..... , ..... Ideal location ror SWD· DAILY PILOT• 21 m•r /winter rent all. lolllltylfirlllo-· = cornCt -·-Giiiy- Un.1que entry to ap•clous formal l,lvlng and bin· quet rooms. Sunn)' $ta.22!53 Eves 1ourm'et kitchm. Rambl- associated lt ~ ·•~. '1fr,,• ~. SUPER VALUE " IHBLUFFS I Excellent location In ear· ly blu/rJ on one ol tho,, lineal 1reenb1lt1 Beautiful patio with ex ceptlona priv1c1·t.hree' b•droom -2\.i: b•tb•. Price r~uced to $751000.i Call 873·8550. ln1 11me room with cC"ackltn1 fireplace . Gr•cioua 1uest bath and large laundry room. 1'111111-·1 -.: . 1 ~~~~~~~~I sw .. plna 11a1r.s w ting AU real tstate ldvertJ1ed I· si&e masltr .net ~parate 1n U\11 newspaper ls 1ub-MINI RA.NCH chlldrens suites. Lush . " . . . . . Ol.f.H Ill t •fl S llJH 10# H(l 1 ~ . THE REAL ESTAT E RS • Ject to the Federal Fair landscaping . Ver)' llou1io1 Act or 1988 MAXI VALUE prtYOte """"""·Cail'"' which makes tt.Wrgal to Prlv1te drive to secluded 1ppt. today! $S8,.500 Call advertlte "any pre· ranch house. Rambling 983.fl767. ference, llmlt1tion, or main house. lncludea °"""' ru 0 • '' 1 ·~·· ',,, '; , . ~~:~~,~~~ e!l~~~::ri~::!:Z~ [ ~ l!illlil Intention to make any leads to sprawling -- 1uch preference, UmJta· 1rounds covered with Uon, ordi~rnln.Uon." fruit trees. Price in· eludes: separate maids This news paper will nol quarters, wo<>d shop, knowingly accept any chicken house. bird advertising fOr real aviary, slorage sheds ealale which b in viola· and much, much more. _,tl~•;•;;o;l;th;;•~l;•,;w;;. ;;;~;;;II Get b11ck to the basics. • OnJy $51,000. Call 963·8767. Don't wait. _ Ol'fN ltt 0 •If S I UN 10 81 N<(t' , 642-5678 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED HOUIS Advttli!W!l'I may place their .ch by telephone B:OOa.m. lo5:30p.m .' Monday tbrv fl'rlday II to noon Saturday ·• C<liTA MESA Ofo'FICE 3.JOW . Bay 642·56'78 NEWPORT BEACll JJ3J Newport Blvd. 642·56'78 HUJ'n1NGTON BEACH 17875Beacti Blvd. .... 1220 LAGUNA BEACH It• Glenneyre Lagun• Beach 494·9466 SADDLEBACK 25201 La Paz Road La1una llilh .SIU ·63JO NORTH COUNTY dial free540-122Q CLASSIFIED DU.DUMES Deadline ror copy & kills 1s 5:30 p.m the d ay before publication, c•- cept for Sunday & P.lon· day Editions wh en deadline is Saturday, 12 """' CLASSIFIED ltEGULA TIONS ERRORS: Advertisers should chttk their ads daily ii: report errors Immediately . THE DAILY PILOT assumes liabtlity for the first in- oorrect insertion only. CANCELLATIONS : When killin,ii: an ad be Mn to make a record of the KILL NUMBER given you b:v your 11d, taker as receipt of your cancellation. This kill number must he prcsen· led by the advertiser 1n case of a dispute. • IW:l!~<tl COMPANY Groat for Kids! H.EALTOHS Quiet culdes,ac street HOME ON C·l Sl~ct: "" without , .. m •. Large Art1'st's Mansi'on 673-4400 bedrms with separate I:;;;;;;~~~~~;;;~ master bedroom. Family B The Sea room w /2 fireplaces. Y Located on 191..h Street is Near Westcijff shopping Just ~ yards lo sand this older 2 bedroom , FHA APPRAISED center. Prlctd right at beach. 3,000Sq. ft. of lux·· ho.me "o gdarage. Loct ,''1 ... al $42,500~!:.~ sq. n. $68.500. uw"ar'm'·.i~gh·a'rm'°, .• '.Bdra'm1n,.,'.:., 4 x 14 eep. a of home. 4 uo."'oom, 2Y.r PE:TE BARRETT .. .?<• now ... it 'a a real find. baths, large famJJy room r oom. Oriental plank.I $39,950 with bltn b.ar, living -REALTY-patio overlooks mini or· . . room , ~ining. Eat1n& '4l·S200 675·4060 chard in private yard ~1 It. are a 1 n kitchen . $89,900. full price. 1or; . 1 Hardwood Doors. F\llly down. For appt. CALI. • air conditioned. Won'tl·--------•l 962·7788 ·, ANYTIME last at Lhis pnce! HORSE -Q. KE:Y l ~~~~~~~~~PEERSB PROPERTY %"1 R€ALTORSA , Beautiful.a bedroom with hardwood floors & brick NEWPORT HTS 5 BIG IEDROOMS 3141 c NB 549 •1655 fireplace. A neat. clean ONE YEAR OLD VIEWLOT l~~~·~-~·"""""""""""""""i family home. Ex:tras in · H"WPORT HEIGl:fTS 1: elude 4 stall covered sta· Can you believe a l year m;; UMP ble. Don"tmissth.isgreat new home in Newport 3.000sq. ft .-2storyC8pe ****J **** value at •••,ooo. Call Beach beautiful heights Cod ·r. ,·ent street at the chaoce to buy one _., 3 L bdr · magni.1c "~" 1151 area . ge ms, open to street R ·2 lot . of the few remaining ......,. beam ceilings, beautiful Out.standing continentaJ completely refurbished 2 free·standin~ fireplace. ~ master suite -walk in bedroom. 2 bath single Only $69,900. S4S-949l . ' closet.QuietHide·A·Way StoryTownhouses inSan· 1111 ) feeling. Invest $8,500. ta Ana. Still only S2l.9S0.1 .;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~I l Calllosee.646-7171 . Ask for Frank, 839-83211: mN""'"''""'o•"«" Agent SUPat , l [ ~ I] FRESH & MEW! G~~~::u~.L~!~~~w MILLION S 5 S _ ~ ~ Upgraded3br,2bahoml'. end unit Dolores, on ,I I~========~ Built-ins, 2-car garage quiet cul de sac. Wide VIEW!! w / enclosed back yar~. J:reenbelt plus partial You must see to belil'\.'C' j One mile from beat•h. bay view. 3 Bdrms., 2'h Spacious 4 bdrm, 4 bath Low upkeep yard. W<ilk baths ; great storage in pres tigious Dover i to downtown park . space; 2 patios,oncgat· Shores. A "must sell" S45.000. Our best \.'a\ue. ed. one covered. No bet-situation. Lowest price WE'RE LOOKIM' .. for a trade, or trades on · a 4 month old completely cus tom1zed Sp;rglass home. $95.00l. Equity.' JACOBS REAlTY l75-6670 Call to s1e. Ler Bluffs value at $79,750 for area. Owner must 536-88306____ c. F. Colesworth1v ,·aeate. Take ad,anLaoe. ~ ij Call now. 546·2313 &D R•m•::MA::~o o [®' 3 PLUSPOOl $3,600DOWM in Costa l'o1esa . Not just sharp -it's PREITY. Very pri"·ate patio. Com · munity pool. No yard work. Call64&717l. ~11 llt O· 11 ~•UN TO~f t, rf• HOW IS THE TIME for job seekers to check the Daily Pilot He lp Wanted classification. Jr the job you want is not there you m1ghl consider MEW LISTING HARBOR VIEW Spacious four bedroom home . Quality carpeting· cathedral ceilings with exposed beams-parquet noors in dining room and family room· impeccable landscaping-ocean and valley "'iew. Priced al SI 19.500. Call 673-8550. offering your services ,-"~~ · wtth an ad in the Job ~~ Wanted category. Phone ~; 642-5678 ~ GoMrol 1002 GOMrGI 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~1i TARREL~. rn .. 192 6 -1976 MESA VERDE: Fruit trees, garden, dance veranda. 3 bedrooms + den or 4 bedrwms. Wood. cabinets, built· ins, just $17 ,500 ! _ EASTSIDE Elderly owner anxious~ 1---------Mu st sell rast ? Both JUST REDUCED! houses in tip top condi-Super family home-S tion . Fantastic invest· bedrooms, 3 t•ar ~arage. me nt. Low, low down 3 run baths. formal din· payment.645-0000 ing room, upgraded FORESTOLSOHIHC. carpets, drapes & RAHMIO I I' I I R 0 l G Y I I' I I wallpaper . Hoo m for pool tabl e in family room. See this now!! Call S40·1151 -HERITAGE ..• REALTORS I HAGUL I I' I I I Hypocri•Yi Prtrjudic• I ~· =-::::::· =·::::::· :::'..-, wr•pped up in • -,• ... THE BLUFFS: Reduced $6900. 2- story villa, parquet floors, conversa- . lion pit, banquet dining, 3 bdrms, 3 baths, must sacrifice! I TACSEK I 111>-,.;l ,~I _,,_,l;c...:;.-I ~I ~ .. eo...p._ ""' tflwtii. CWG'M I --L....-1-1.--L--L....J .. "' '"'"! .... -_ ... '°" ...... _,..No., ........ 540-1720 2955 H.toaril[h'd Atwkn)*tcJt HCNM ~c.,...,. 6 "'''"-· ...,. unm I • I I I I 10 ctr ANSwtt , '-'".,. -'· -'·-'· ICU.MLlll ANIW'tlS ' • ' , • "\ I I • " • ~:.':':"..5:1!:. ....••••.•••• : ................ ~ •••. ~ ••••••. 1~~~ ............ . CotloMHa ·.t02411sllolit•-1040 ............. 1069Mewport .... 1069 ....................................... , ........ ··············-···· ... ··-··--····-.. ·· Bl OAILYPILOT T....toy.S!ptomboftl,1975' I . -Fo<Sdo H For Saito I Hou••• For SGM-.._... For SaM Hoes.es For Sale ••• •••• •••• •• •••••••••• •• 4!1~ ••••..••.•..••• ~ ••••••......••••••.•••.••••••..•••.•••••••.•••••••••..•••.• , ••••••.• c....... 1002 GftMf'GI I 002 GtMral I OOZ ~el . I 002 G1Ma ol 'I I OOZ •••••••• • • • ••••••••• ••• . . . . ....... ·-·· . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••·•••••••• ••••••••••••••• •••••• HOUSE OFGt.ASS Weatgl d e 3 Bd,l Ba, • • FERN fr ILL O\•erii1ed 2 c•r aar. Townhoute. Exclmive lZXl.5 patio. & cwport. com rn Uolty nts:l·lo Curp It drap . Lot M'udowlartGcUOJu.r'H ~·x1w . Fruit. tren~ • be•el\u. Spacious BKR 541-1$57, 2-Br, 2.-ba, indudel pool, I ... ... .-. llG IN llG CANYON One oC the bigger homes at one of the lesser prices. 5 bed.I100m. custom, ex- tremely workable floor plan. quality np1>LLances, carpets, flooring and ap· JX>rnlments u se<I throughout . Exciting opportunity for you lo do the finishing <lecorator touches. Sec this fairwa)· custom at $259,500. U!llll()Uf: t1()MI:~ REAL TORS'. 675-6000 2443 Eas1 Coast H1qhway , Corona de! Mar GeMrol 1002 G~rot 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WES l.l·:Y N TAYLOR CO. REALTORS >1 11cc UJ46 "ILUFfS" -HEAYENL Y HACIENDA Spctcious 2 s tory customized ··E '' model end unit. 3 Bdrms, huge fam rm w /wet bar, 2 frpl . 21h baths. 2 Patios even a dog: run. $98,500 -Salud ! 2987 QUl'.:DADA OPEN WED t-5 2111 s.., Joaquin Hill• Road HEWl'ORT CENTER, H.B. 644°4910 ~~~!~~! .......... !?.~~,~~~! .......... !?~~ BIG CANYON I . MINI RA.NCH BY OWNER ' ABANDONED l BR <_;orgeous stone & slUt'Co SACRIFICE 4 Br. home. llighly up· SJJ,900 J:radt•d 01\·on.·ed & mov-Completely r('(iet'oralcd 1n~. Situation worth like a model. Prime re· rhouSandS to bu)cr s1denl ialnl'i~hborhood1n \\'orth SI95.00>-w11\ t:ikC' prc:,t1~111us cl11nmun1ty . 5169,500. Want quick sale Large f~un1Jy .'.ilt'<l h\·1ng or trade. t:alllM-2-166. room . t:ounlr ~ styled ---------kitl'h Cn . Rambling CAMEO SHORES A prestige location ... with a panoramic ocean view. Spacious J' bdrm .. 3 bath home: lovely pool with ample decking for easy entertaining. Xlnt loan avail. al less than current in · tercst.rute. To5> valliC. $157 ,500 VE AR VIEW fn a country atmogphere ol swsyln• (telds and farmhou»t:.lii, tbi~ co.· mopo litan e'tatc of. cathearat ct>ihna:• and •~7 900 SOARING WALLS 01" 3-DR. :ddedra.m.\iyroom GI.ASS & overlooks the w/open be<im ceillna, coasta l valley! Enter ldl b k-~ thrul'.<i1retile(!,ltry -sink rorma nnn, ac ,, ... _ into pillo--llke car ..... l· w / country atmollpbcrc t.enol1 courta and clubbse. $18,900. .. _. & rr-wt lrcelf. Ve&eran& 111K! L11vi1hdln.ingroom wclt'Ome. Call Rltr., REALTY INC. entertai nment ! Com· 540.3666 714/&46-1371• fort<i1ble & (.w,y livinR I.ii 1:0:.:::.::::::... ______ ll,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 **PRES1IGE** I' Unique contemporary-cla .. ic. Finest use or Oak wood. A warm, adaptable· l'amily home. S Bdrms. + family rm.. large sundect with Jacuztl. Star or the Lido Island Home TOW'. $197,500 LIDO REALTY 3377 YleUde. N.L 673-7300 BAY AND BEACH 675-3000 Sc11.ndinMv1an fam room! Swccp!n)e master bdrm 11ultc with scpnrate !!'.Un· ~hinl' breakfast patio! 3 Chlldrens retreats! An(t rour h. much more for on· ~.'!':~!.~~~ ........ !~!;~ Only $3650. down .._.......... 10 ... ·M.w...ris.acto 106• A•ailable"""-d ~~~-ew21Ydtttb""bo~ated1 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---- ;>..,07 E COAST MVllY CORONA OLI-MAR In Oana ·Knolls·3Br-2Ba· uvu.vum, : ha me n Lrg yard W/paved boat 'excellent lc><aUcn. can OldL-ci--BA YFROKT orlrlrstoraJte.496·0685. quick! Nr . Beach & t own; 2CustomKomeS , ~ G~ral I002G~ral 100°2 ~o~~t6~?1 s!0:::,~ ~~~d i Dt:I UXE OUJlJ.EX For 1JJ116N~·mm~ ~~f~:1~~~2;2,".:·b: BALBOAP~SULA ~ I , ...... _ .. ____ , 352 3~ &. 362 ExceUentlocabononthe 11;de by owner. ocean· 962•4471 r::: 810 ow lfe~. • Bay&ooly ~blocttolbtr \•iew.OpenHOl.lSeSal.& Thalia . (.55 t lot). Oc Echhome:b 4 •••••••••••. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• llurrv, t•ull 847·0010, LIDO ISLE Sun . 24651 LaCresla, $119,500. ti7,5 .622t & bdean., 8 4 b th .. ., •~ 1269 • 642·3099 r m • a I .. ,,..- Waterfront i1 l\R ., 5 ba ., run1pus Pier & rl octt. sa ndy ht•ath ~95 ,000 ~---·lnin• 1044 · Gallery, 2 fireplace1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wetbar, ultra modern Like new! 4 Hit .. 4 h;.i 1-0wner. Custom bayfront. 1.awn, patio, pier & float. $325,000 Attr. 4. BH .. :J ba . Lido Sou;J . 77 waterfront. s<.1ncly bectrh. $275.000 Ft. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy!.1df• Drive . N 8 67S ·6161 Gfttffal I 002 G~nerol 1002 PARTY GIVERS DELIGHT!! l\I ~SM1EHOJ-: 2 story. 4 bedro6m. 3 b:ith horn~ \\'1th 20x26. family room for lhOSC Spt.'C1 al parlie!i entertaining at your 8' llltn bar under a rat hcd ral op«n bC'am 1·cilln~ Covered patio a nd Jots of trees for pr1\•a1·y makl' this home a Orcan1 romc true. t:all S.16·5880. ~HERITAGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• •BY OWNER" Bt.-:iut1fu\ Deane Bros. homl'. 4 br, 2 ba, 2 story, very pri\ <itc atmoophere with eJ('gant Janel.scape, patios, & entry. f<'eatures \ar~c mas tc-r s uite, Roman bath & atrium. By owner , J>rin . Only. $81.~0. 962·8668 LIVE IN ONE & REHTOHE!! f:CO NOM JZF:!! Cozy 3 bed rm owoers home with ••••••••••"' •••••••••••· i ~::::::::::::::=~~~~~~I country kitchen & dine, SUNSHINE __ \\'arm wood floors & COTI"AGE carpet, 2 vanity baths, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ABANDONED REALTORS Sll,000 ~ Sty. 4 UR . :1 Ila , E-"'rplc , PLUS a 1 DR, 1 BA rental 1 HOME UFJ! This new free standinl! home in Uni\'. Park hu approx. 2500 sq. n. or liv· ing space. Il includes 3 1rg DR·s, finished bonus rm.-3lh -Oaths, formal dining rm & family rm. The-price is $64.500 leasehold & the builder is anxioustoseU! PARK II HOMES 552-1800 TURTLEROCK TOWNHOUSE 2br . & den. Former model. Air conditioned, aulom~t!c sprinklers and lighting. A l\fUST SEE. $64,950. , F ;1nla ~t•\: 2 s tor), :1 bdrn1, 2 b:1th. hutll 1n dr~am ktll·hcn. lar~e II\ 1ng ""Toom . /I. great uµ. portun1ty to ~cl startt.-<l in home ownen;hip in de- mand llunlington Beach $39,900 Club-Pool. Tenn1s. l blk brin,i::s in S200. per mo. Ni•t a condu~ Nut a ocean. $74.500. Pnnc. on· Beach area.962·5511 Bkr CALL NOW \uwnhoust·. Liu! a l'harm ly . 642·3242 ~ · :.irt::.a. Short walk lo s hop- ping. A steal al $.1:1,000 963-5671or556·7035. SPANISH FIXER 3 BR-2 STY POOL BEACH [~~~: 1~~.r~:>s~11~~~1~~n~ - 8s7or~ ~o~io~ .31~~ ~~b!:, 111~~ /..o!!lll,.!7.,!5~2~·:.!7~3~1~5!.J towering tret-s and ACn· Balboa Island 1006 washer /dryer, refrig. ·OONALDM.BIRD ll (' rol I 1 n .il hi I ls ! Cot l age • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ,~12::;•~· ""°::--~· "'::;6~·54;:;;72_·;""::------~ 1 _ _::A:•-:::_;~":'"~'::· ':"~h~M~·~ w a I kW a'.'/ lu exqu1 s1lc XL~T INV~'TMENT OPEN HOUSE L.:. cusl. slon c cntruncc! Uccp lles1 denl1al & Com· Pool w /s pa & patio. sha~ carpet thru-o ut ! m('rc1al Income. Good Beaut. 4 br, 1~4 ba, frpl, F'ORM ,\L l>I NIN<.; e n-ass um<.1bl e. loan. By nxt. to park &schl. Nr. tcr1a1n ment<.·nhancedby owner . Prine. only . Shop ·g. Ctr. By owner. 11 GALLOPING $52.000.673.f.6.l6 $5 1.000 . All terms. liOURl\11-::T KJ1'CllEN! ---• -----Sweeping ma~ll'r b<.lrm Balboa Peninsula I 007 963·3165, 9052 Pioneer Dr. + 2 t.-hlld 's retreat ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• \V ;1shday scr\'l<'e porrh ~ Wnn 'l las t wknd! For quick appl. Call !i-i7 ·0010. !"l'I' 'I • H \ ... "• ''/> '• •BYOWHER• LA RG E4 BOH.:0-1 Sl20.000 appraisal. ask· Luxurious La Cuesta ing Sllt:i,000. 673-42'l4 w:ilk to beach. 2800 sq. PRICE REDUCED Owner wants fast action on this 3 bdrm., family rm ., 2 1'2 bath home, located in the new Deerfield Park Village. A~king only $53,950 WEH,\VERENTALS 552-7000 .AO/an REAL ESTATE voo (.,•, ...... ,..' .,, IJ-i 'I I' 1 ~ l? l'Jll'> Six Remain kitcben & private pier. Fee land. See· al 1200 East Balboa Blvd., or call 67~8120 for more de- tails. DOHTi.tFT AHAHD!! Last chance ror tax re bate ; custom 3 bdrm." homes. prited to sell w /m8"ny extras. Ope house all days but Tues. From $88,500 11 ·s spotleu and easy to •· keep thac. way. A recent- FAMIL V DB.IGHT For the family wh ly redecorated 3 BR end unit townhome near pool .11nd clubhouse with over· sized master suite and night light view. $69,500. Call 64.4 ·7211. wants e\•erything! This . family room home ha s , • 2-!llory 3 bdrm.," 3 bath, eBI ~!:t~a~dai~~!:!t: Lr~l~: ~ .. ,I\ Ironic air filter. LargC E •STIWFF -heated & filtered pool ,... • with spa. Lots or private 4 Br, den , 3ba, frml din • .. • .. deck & patio area . rm, Storage Galore ! ·.· Beautifully lndscpd., Pool size yard. $85,500 by with sprinkling system & Owner 64.4·7596. f~need yard .. one of the OCEANFRONT 2 8d 2 r1nest bomes m the area + & only minutes from Bd garage apt. $125,000. Niguel Beach. A real Owner, 645·3655 jewel at $92,500 . 6 Br+ den, pool size Jot overlooking new golf course. $34.995. 646-6395 •' ·. NEWPORT SHORES 3 BR, A·rrame + lge. ram . rm. Top cond. A Dramatic Bridge $62,SOO ,·~,r .. spans the attr active 3 BR, 2-sty. lluge ·-· corner lot to a galleria garden-type p.alio! ·-• entry of this beaut. ocean $63,750 view home. 3 Lge . CAYWOODREALTY L I CLIFF HAVEN f>CEAN VIEW· :.uid pool too' Country t·o tlt1J,1c- used brick. open bcarns, l'OZY fir e pla ce. J hedroonis. lusc inus 1>rl\'.alc patio, puul & Jacuzzi. $122.500, fee land. ~rounds wilh fruit nr chard. Secluded master retreat .and generous si1.ed childrcns suites. flurry. Priced lo sell fast ! Call963·7881, CJl~N i•I ,, • ,, ~ 1u•1 rOfll ~JI(!' [ '1 lijldlllJ Large !~!;~~i~g s ized [ li\•ing room . Kilchen ® large enough to prepare ~~== barlquct and large - enouRh dining room tol•---------~ serve il. s~·ccping stairs to bedroom suites. Jlu~l' hideaway mastt.-r. 'l'akc ove11" 7=%''~ l-~11 1\. NO NEW LOAN cos·rs. S196 1mo. pays all . l l URH.Y FIRST TO CALL GETS Til l S BARGAIN. Call 963-7881. BACK ON THE MARKET ft., 5 BR + den, on cul· Buyfront Condomin1urri 2 de·sat', 3 B1\, 3 t'ar g.ar, Br 2 lia , l)lt, poul. dk. beaut. cond. Prine. only. security 2 13_-3!>1_·4~---£6.500. 963·12='~'----I bdrms. + .a pri\-·. mslr. 8 •BA''VIEWCONDO• • 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath• • l'oul. Sundcck • •SJ ip 1\vailable • •2CarParkin,i!• - suite. 21/2 ba., massive ___ •_5_4_·1_2_9_0_•__ } faml ly rm . frplc. & lrandNl'WDuple:r . •··. formaldining.lnsistthat llh Blk from ocean :~ - 1-----'--"----1 your Agent show you multiple listing 5756, or Quality construction. : call us. $89.500. Open $117,000. Owner will take· • · ASSUME 7% LOAN $229MO. Sun. 1-5. 2888 Bernard ~~i}. d~~i! a:::a~l~:· ~{ PETE BARRETT -REALTY-· HELPWAMTED 642-5200 675·4060 VALLEY ll.1-:AL TY is ex- two salespeople. Lot~ of ()PfN Ill q • II~ IUN 10 ilf NI(./• •,\dull Bld~·S88.000 • llere·s your opportunity Ohve Wiggcnhorn, H.ltr to buy a home at last 67.>6160 years price. Super sharp l"'"""""""""""""""""""""""""""'I 4 bedroom S/\.NDI::.11,r:R I~ Rea!Estate byl&NAY Court. 1 fa.st. Loe. at207 -30th St. 2 beach un its $52,500. Gd income. R -2 cor lot. Gin· ny Fo r tune, rltr. 675-7520. ::;:;;;;:::::;;::;~ panding. aDd we need beneffts·CALL Vody ~····· · ,. ~ LOW DOWN! $6000. Down moves you in~ 1900 Sq . ft . 3 bedrooms, family room, 2 baths. 2 brick fi replaces. A1e;a Verde- a steal at $59.500. Call Nelson, 6 75"·7225 ~ anytime. ~~ HARBOR YIEW ~·=~\ ~~~~ THE REAL ESTATERS l\fODEI~ in Harbor View l·li~1 :> .. 3 Bath, 3 ear .:<•rage, ~rc;1I patio with viewing deck. Custo m decorated and pro· fcssionally landscaped. YOU O\VN 1'111--: l~AND '. SI 19.900. Open Daily 1·5" PM . 3860 0t'lo;.1n Birch_, Corona dcl ti.tar. Extra nice, 2 BR, 2 BA, on o\·cr wide lot. $80,500. 540·1571, cves /wknds ti73-6JI 1 --- WHArSAH A-FRAME? Only the most unique aJry open f(."Cli ng inside; with the most private Corona d~ Mar I 022 secluded surroundings ADULT HOME Spotless adult occupied home! Plan 1 California home. Cul-de-sac loca- tion. Fireplace. Comfy kitchen . Queen si1.e bedrooms. Law n sprinklers. Anxious owner wants fast sale. EME.RALD TER~ Assume 7<v,, VA Joa n Charm1n.g ~spacious, $23,000 remainin g ,panoram1cv1ewhoi_ne:2 balance-with payments bd~ms . :t-~en~ p~v_ac~ at $229~o. No q u.alify. & in pnstLne cond1t1on . ing ! Owner may help $135,000 SACRIFICE OWNER ANXIOUS . ..,., Big Canyon. Price re .. :a dueed SI0,000. 2 stor.Y.•.~. Deane Home. 3 br w 13~.or car garage. $120,000. ~::... HILLS 546-4141 RENTAL: Great Lus k home with pool . Furnished. $650. per . mo. CAI.L 675--7225 ~ COATS&WALLACE \ \I .I .I·:) . ' "". ' ............ , .... . REAL EsTATE .1Nc. ' Bi-:, 1 :r' A BERt; lNl(RPfHSlS CO GeMral 1002G.....t 1002 ............ '!··········· ...................... . mac nab / lrvlne realty VACANT LOT-llG CANYON Outstanding Fairway lot -at the end of a secluded drive -#25 Hermitage Lane -$78,500. Barbara Aune642-8235. (V7l l • "IDEAL FOR EMTBITAIHIHG" High beams in hving and family roonis -open out to gracious patios. 3 bedrooms, each with private bath. Room for Pool + 3 car garage -on beautiful Somerset Lane. $117,500 Mary Lou Marion 642-8235. (V72) A DUPLEX ON THE 1"'-'0A SANDS FOii SI 15,000 The sand is your front yard! 2 bedrooms up & one down . Great Summer /\Vi nter Rental area. Tom Queen 644-6200. (V73) OLD LAGUNA CHARM Triplex n ear beach and t0\\'11 . 3·2 bedroom cozy apartments -2 w /fireplaces. 55 root frontage. 3 car garage . Excetlent rentals - $123.500. Mary Lou Manon 642-8235 . (V74) llG CANYON IUIUllHG sm Marvelou s views of golf course lakes and the hills beyond. Located at end of quiet cul-de-sac. Well priced at $102,500. Tom Queen &14-6200. (V75) IMPRUSIVE HOME- EJICmHG VIEW or ocean, Harbor and crim$On sunsets · from high 11top one of Corona del Mar's' most desirable str~ts. Complete privacy in pool and lanai areas. 4 bedrooms, romiat dining...coom. family .room & 2 brick fireplaces. $129,500. Belle Chase ):.ea 644-6200. (V'16) '4W2H 644-4200 ~ .. ,~.,.,,.. .............. _.,.__SH!'- SJ2,50Q.LO MO includes taxes & in· surance on 7'Yr GI C'xtst- ing loan. Anyone c.an buy s ubject to. l-lardy,•oud floor s, firep l al'C, carpets, drapes. Wood shingl~ roof. Double g.aragc. Bi~ lot. Cute home. !·furry! 897·0321. 1111 ATTENTION BUILDERS! Li~e in thi s nice 2 bedroom home while you build your units on the R·4 lot. lloom for pool la· ble in l:.irj!c t'O nvcrted family room. \Valk -in clos ets . panelinJ!, gas hllns & t•ovcred p;1t1n cnhuncc this property. Don·l dc-1:.iy on this nnl.v $40.500. Call 5-16-5ol380 ~HERITAGE REALTORS So. COAST SHORES All the new homes in- cludinJ! the models are sold out, but we have highly upgraded lwo and three bedroo1n models wilh prices starting at $50.900. Amenities of this outstandin~ projel't ure private lake. controlled security entry. pool, jacu:.tzi. clubhouse and top Quality con~lr1~t.Jon . CALI. S:>6·2ti00 «;:; SEL.ECT . -. 1 _1~.:...P.:._R.O_P_E_RTIES 640·6161 ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. COLLEGE PARK Superior in decor, lov ely covered patio, bri c k planters. & outstanding gardens! Plus 20x20 paneled bonu.s & game room. Just listed. Should go fast 646-7111 Open r.:ves -. . ----· ESTATE SACRIFICE S5,000DOWN OWNER FINANCED • Prestige area . Tree studd1..~d s treet, I luge 11 v- i ng area . l\famn1olh Fl EST /I. ROOJ\·1 with C A T H E D R A L CEILINGS. Warm coun- try kitehc'n with g r andma's pantry . separate .sewing room & utility room -18' \"Cranda o\'erviews 1mn1at'ulutc mani c ured i.:rounds. Once in a life t i me bargain . FI'. only $49,950! flurry. Call no\\'. 546·2313. 'll'!ll ·01 •I • < I• •. ,, . ,. [~ THE REAL ESTATERS GeMral I 002 GeMral I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Rt~ALTttKS 644-7270 "411 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX -!t1JI new paint & carpets .in the front 3 bedroom, 3 bath. fireplace · unit. Rear unit upgraded. 2 bedrms, 2 baths, fireplace. walk to beach & ohopping. Ow ner will consider trade for more units. $99.500. 0 2828 f . COO$f Mighwoy, Cqrono del Mor --r~·~·~~~~~~~~T~""'"'lilll .,;~',,. IOOMts 100 u~•C IOCTWOll• W--"t Ut .. !, •M '"-lnl, .. UIN ·~"'" .,,,,.(! .. ! .... ,." ••••••••••••••••••••••• outsid e . Th ere's a RARE 4 BRDUPlEX SO. OF BAYSIDE garden patio off every room. LR has high A· shaped cei ling for a cabin-like effect Call 968-4456 finance or try $4250 + TURNER ASSOC. costs to new loan. See to 1105 N . Cst Hwy, Laguna believe-call752·1700. 49 ... 1177 natural wood and bnck " SSWEPTEETEMBH"'~R'ST " '~-·-_: 1 o521 -==, =,=lk=+=l=Hou=•.:..e_ ~ . . ..........•........... texllfres an~ perfel't~1nnocencc & tender lov· .. \., 11 •. __ ,_.::_i, L"k ., y· 1 FROMTHEOCEAM location. Call&W ·7211 ing care show 1n this 1~~;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 1 e "ew iew. 2 BR & 1 BR Duplex on PAUL W. BRUMFIELD & ASSOC. 549·8505 LllCJuna Niguel with a 3 BR. 2 BA r'ent;1l Onl y I ~, ye<i rs old . Fcatur1ni.: beam ceilinJ:S. e.as1ly .affordable cot'" I• 3Br. 2ba, upgrd 'd cpts, l /•f.l lots. Tremendous • ' tage, close to beuch! 3 LOOKYifERE! drapes, patio, lndscpd. poteritial. Lot size will ~- bdr1n 2 bath. r~orever l~S4::::•·~500=-~·=•=S~4=995=·----1 accommodat e large e r n1 ..,.... We've found a sleeper . ~~~~~~· ~~~·~~liy~o~u'~'~-~0~'_::0::::'.:.~=·=500:'.I F 1 *WE KNOW* duplex w /4 car gar. ... 96Q.4456 ew peop e know this 3 V 1 . 1 00 bdrm .• 21/:i bath home ... LAGUNA NIGUEL a ue in ot. $61,5 . BY OWNER lg 3 Br, 2 Ba b ·1t th Agent549·0812 Walk To Beach wa. u1 on e g'een *BEST* I-;~;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;; ~ den North of Hwy. and has a view of the I• S79,750644-2877 -4+Fam:r;'I +Dini11n h~·us. It's upgraded, im· CLOSE TO OCEAN-4-Br -'--'-----''-----• .. , I de lu xe Broadmoor Owner ne quick ac· m cu ate and wailing for . h «g Coldwell Banker BY OWNER lion Walk pastyanls of yo o er.$54,000 home,2dfrpRlcs,hlg ~yup-1 Duplex 2-2 br units. paradise, forest of trees, .... g rade · ecreationa YOU'LL LIKE"' , Choice Joe. So of llwy. decorative exterior. En· facilities, security area. II S19500 •••5300 t•y lo parlour wo"lh $95,500. Outstandingchannel an~I ' · ......,. ' L na Hi-'"' R~~ty bay views from one orA f crackling fireplace . v1s1e -.,..., -Charm1nj!. 2 Br cottage on J>ool-table sized family H 830-5050 496-4040 Newport's finest ad· - lo\·ely St w/rm for ex-o · · a1.a.•-dresses. There arc twu tra unit Open daily. room. unng roomseats ""~•• MissionVi~jo 1067 bedroom s. two baths . 10 for dinner. \Youd 552 ... 7500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 1· I 1 S74 ,500.A~t .fi45-2425 c b " l d m b -1, 1\RedHHlt:ompan>· arge iv ng room an< Costa Mesa 1024 3 ine s, rca ui · 1"'"""""""""""""""""".,;,,..,,;,"""'IBY OWNER Spac. 3 br. 2 area dining room. You ins. 'fopped by a heavy[" ba "El Dorado·'. A1C un· can relax in the jacuz1.i shake roor. StS.500. bkr. L d sso· .~8298 1 ·1h · · th ••••••••••••••••••••••• $50,000 2 BR house & 1 Br <11>l. 646·88.58 or 548·9441 10·12&eves wun 't last. (.'all! ar?.e 4 BR er s . .,...,. ----1 a ong WI en)oy1ng C: p ool . Won •t last al Family ome .. Just 1 1/~ M~wport Beach I 069 $105,000 mRBEll:::;;; blks.rromtenn1s&park . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644·1766 Highly upgraded and re· ady for your family"s oc-'------ 1926-1976 REDUCED!!! 1-==========-1 e u p a n c y . Fast COLLEGE PARK Customized 4 bdrm., 2 baths ; wrought iion gate entry; 2 patios. Walk to all schools. $49,!X>O. Call for app't. Corbin-Mcrtin Realtors 644-7662 Spanish La Palma "By Aytes", massive clay tile roof. Fiesta rm w /floor to cathedral ceil- ing fireplace. eustOm window seat. 4 spacious possession. Priced at $69,500 LE RAISOR REALTY BR's (or 3 +extra den). 4523Campus0r., lrvine Glass&. tile patio kitcheri Ca~us Valley Shop Ctr .. w /bar scr\'es gas BBQ, CALL 83].8600 lge play rm w /decoratorl-------'-'--'--'-C.:..- r1 oorlng . Assumable Loguno Beoch 1048 FlfA loan or terms. Bkr ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPECTACULAR VIEW The Bluffs; early area Bring-your trades £or .1-StoryJBR.2Ba. lhis lOvely VIEW proper· $57 ,000 Aft. 640--5560 ty in Newport Beaeh,1 --~~------ com plete wiUt boat slip. D 0 V .E R S H 0 RE S~ Trans!erred seller wiU Gal axy Dr. Reduce« take most anything. Call $15,000 to $100,500. Beaut: for m ore d e tails .. 3200&q. ft. View home. o\ 646·7711. Open Eves. br, den, ram. rm, pool. or appt. call : 642-2589 Classified a_ds sell big Items, small ttmm or any By Q\\•ner, lge 4 BR. 2 Ba, loles a \1erdl'. Asking 962·5511 Wl,900. 557·5176 Ac.rass tht Sirttt BY OWNER By Owner. Lovely 3 BR. from eachother - . 8y0wner/Agt.For W Or- l ;::=;=::O=:=:::=~::;::::=;~::;::L~it~e~m~.~J~us~t~<~al~l~642{;618:::;:::;:~-,-, SEEK & ffND" mchland Ciano '' Unique ·lbr Mesa Verde walk to beach. Li:. mstr. TWO TRIPLEXES. N. homl', inan v xtras. Bil., 2 Ba, family rm., Laguna. I llas a 3·Br $5.1.S00.546-.547i kilrh w /blt-ins; frpl. home & (2t 2-Br apL1 :.::_::_::.::_ ___ I Carp. drapes. As!l.ume The other has a 2·Br lux· COLLEGE PARK exist VA loan. $41,900 ury home & (2 ) 1-Br RE1\U'fY ... immaculale 960-2643 960·3743eves elegant apts .• pool Clnd 3 lledrm home, sparkling j.acuzzi. 100 Fl. to ocean. ~;r?~k1c~ 1i.!itc~ ~:a'r: FHA REPO ~~O:i·~··z~A5R~ZvKY~ New carpels thruoul. 1..:R.:;e~a~lto=r.::·.::'"'c:..'"6=1~1---·ll ll igh l y up~raded . Jl<autifully lnndscaped. Only $34 900 4 Sal• ly 0-All t e rms. Call World . • • • 2 Houses on l Lot. 2 Rea.I Estatc556-T177 Best buy in Hunt. Bch. 4 Oversized garaies, sun-BR, 2 Ba. New carpels deck ovrlk'I ocean . MF.SA VE ROE ... Pool. will bo installed. Call 1_,165=.000=~· •.::94:..:..:-8=1.::'IO:_ __ 3br.2ba Ownermus\.sell now. qui c kly . A steal at 'CURTIS S.,6,000. Make reasonable orror. Vacant. Move in •t REAL ESTATE once. Pay rent until clooe 9''2-Z458 For sale by owner. Sweep· Ing 'ocean vi e ws , cathedral beam ceilings, 4 br + family rm, 22008<1 ft. tastefully decorated. RM~C RRMCMOEXMHSORBS OI J F,O~IH~lllJ~GMZ RUI -4; U II 8 1' AC ,\ <.: :.; 7. UC A A U S C N ' ... of escrow Ca ll anytlme'l----------- for details. 543.n11; art 6.644·0072 RNI CT~N MRMNl .GTC IRll C ONCOllSLAAN~I Rfl D~OAL ONH~IACCTNK£A0lJUGN h Tfc t AN s l GA. f:TCNG V.'FflEAk R~A C DRULFFAOSSFCRME ARNEEMS l I NM Hft SYAGCR W~.QGNOGMOTAll C I OECll G E R OU~~ATR I ALCNURAUO T KGNENA~O C AMACRPNOS ~TKT ARTRGNI CNAONNU~ C llflANRIAl.~N l ~EHCCA~ O~R~I S C ll~ORAGER GCA~ $95,000. &45 -3374 or ~ -r~ Mesa Verde by Ownu 4 Br, 2 Ba, new ctpta It drps , nr tchoolll, a.uume 8 Vil % loan. ~ Dakota .. ...... I By Ownt~• • .::•"1:.:.·.;1"'=--'----ll o..,.,..,.....,,..===--,,.,..,,-.-=..,...,--,-J .... :tPr__.1W/i56s~~· bch.,,_•·-1 ...... "" -tTM•Ml.._ ....... 11Meo1 .._,,,..,,_.,,.. "J -..... ....,-... ,.._, • •lqoulb ill UM ~uelll sch ls . , . -ldofM.-........ ..i bn• 11 h• •••M•.-: OCE.AH YIEW IJUCHANAN MA('MF.Ar-1 MUNRO SUPER SllARP 2 s d • ch a r m er ' <'llATTA:"i MACnu rr R081 Pool home w /4 BR. Northend. s59,500. f:tiN~ MACCkt:C.oK 81NCLAl!t ~ Separate (am rm. w/bar, Norins Reah.1494-8057. MAf'A1.UtTERTOM0~~~~~~~~1 81:n~'rwAtrr -! ~ :; lg II vina rm w /dinlntJ::':==..:..:.::='"-'=..:.=.:c..-11.,,.. _____ :.::::::::::::::;:,:::::::=:::_ __ _,~Mi area, 2 bath.~ & room (Of' New 3 hr.den. 3 ba, ocean-F.nlf"v m!K°h •••••• ··~"~It Iii f'1n1f' 11u1&lf'• w11h "v•r~~ R .. V . .,.$56,950 princ:ipaJt fcanyo~;~ ny C'J'INnr l"l••t'nVf'ri ... rwr Jltntl In •n •ll·l\t"' ~""'" of:l~·Pll•• On<•kl~ ... ly. 868 8606 ---W.000 _ _ _ Tnrfli'rt W>t11mr"ll"l . II lllld Ill. Jlftld11 nir .. ttr. n11tlll1chtel• f"''l'R • '" ·-ii I 'F 1M"inliii!in IR nt...,,!lR r. I ' I :.orange ·coast EDITION Today's Clo lag· N.Y. St4"'ks ' . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16;1975 VOL. 68, NO. 259, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES c TEN CENTS Ii •• CJA Chief .. Ad,iµits Dea&,y Dart Guns --· -r9 ~~'M~!: ~':'1'l!i~. fil: playlnJ a c\e•dly flectric dan IUD that he sllid could kill all""1b at JOO yards, today admitted to Cone:reas the acency for five years ilJesally m..aiotained • stockpile oJ lethal poll<Ml and weapon.a. Colby said bia predettssor, Richard Helms. was aware ol the .. 1970 requirement that such matoool be dlsl*M of. But COiby did. oot ·~ wbeUMr HehDa had lulowled1e or tbe illepl atorkpllinC. Under que1Uonlbl bt Sen. . Howard Boker (R-Tenn.), COlb): aald record• ahowlos wbo • autborUed the developlDOllt and 1tockplllnf or the deadly bioloslca we·apon were deltroyed three yearo aco with Helms' knowled1e. 'In tbe 1Jare of television camera llahta, Colby showed the Senate Select Committee on In· telllaence a telescopic·aighted. black dart gun which he described as "a very deastty we&P90.'' Sen: Fl'ank Church CD-Idaho), chairman of the committee, iPnceriY inspected tho weapon. aligbUy tar1er than a .45 pistol and banded 'it along to other Gi111fire .at Ne ' . membea:s of lhe panel. Colby said the dart aun. powered by electric balteries. was one of various rnethodi .of in- jecting lethal doses of such poisoo.> as shellfish toxin and cobra venom in ''offensive targets." Defensively, he said, the poisons were designed for suicide pills for captured agents. (See CIA, Poge AZ> ort Tavern ·wo1111ds TwO t' ~t· • ' U PI .,....... .SEN:' BARRY GOLDWATER SIGHl'S THROUGH DART GUN Weapon c..,.. of .Silent Kiiiing 01100 Yards .. ]udgf! Lamoreaux Tapped by Brown Gov. Edmun.d Brown Jr has appointed Betty Lou Lamoreaux of Newport Beach as a municipal courtjudge. • She Will fill a new position in tbe Harbor J udicial District raising the number ot judges ob t h at b..ench to five. Since December , J\ldge Lamore,ux, 51, has been (he traffic trial Com· missioner in the district. The an nouncement from Sacramento did not indica,te who would fill the traffic com missioner's position. . Judge Lamoreaux, who used to . lfve ilfHWilingtoD Be-acir-a:r.-d l'e· ~-. cently moved to Newport Beach. formerly was in private practice in Santa Ana, specializing in civil work. A Democrat, she is a graduate or San Francisco Law School. Her annual municipal court '41,677. salary as a judge will ·be Delly ...... Miff,..... SHE'.S A JUDGE Betty Lou Lamoreaux Hassle Over 25e Billiards By JOHNVALTERZA Ofa.O.lly~,.... An argument over a 25-cent pool game at Smokey St.over's discotheque· in Newport Beach ended ln a blaze o( gwtlire early today, seriously wounding a Costa Mesa woman and inllict.ing lesser injuries on the manager. The closing time shooting in the tavern at 3295 Newport Boulevard at 1:50 a .m. triggered a manhunt which ended with ll)Ore gunplay in ff·untington Beach asbort time later. Police arrested two suspected _gunmen after Wliat""they described as a struggle that even involved a police dog. Officers identified the most seriously injured victim as Becky Bengstom, 21, of 994 Valencia Ave., Costa Mesa. She suffered gunshot wounds in the back ancl side and under.went sur"gery early today .at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Her condition today was not immediately known. The club's manager, Fred Cisneros, 31, of 600 E. Ocean Front, Newport Beach, suffered a' minor wound in the wrist. He Was treated and released at Hi.lag. Ten minutes after witness re· ports of a license number and car description were dispatched by police, a patrolman in Hunt· S ddl h k S h · 1 ington Beach spotted the suspect . a . e ac c 00 s 1~.~~~achBoulevardand ·Ellis . Patrolman Bob Jeffrey, driv- . ·ing a unit OccuPied by a police 0 . T J t t dog, stopped the car driven by Ppose .I. oro . e por James Joseph .Haas, 24, or Hollywood. Also in the car was . · Timothy Carl Elliott, 22, of Cov · Bf RUDI NIEDPELSKI The resolution was pushed ina. . OflMDally PUMSUn • through' by Trustee l..oa Young As Jeffrey and a backup officer The Sad~leb~~k ,Valley U~ed who said that although it appears approached the car, Haas as· Sc·hool D1str1ct s 1;overn~'!I the county has little chance of sertedly plunged both hands board vot-:<1. Monday rught to JOm winning approval for the pro· between the front seats, causing the oppo~1lion lo a count! pro-posal, trustees, as elected ·Of· the officers to suspect that he posal calling for co~merc1al use ficials, would be remiss in their was reaching for a weapon. of tbe El Toro Manne Corps A1r duties if they d•d not state their One shot was fired at that point Station. . dissatisfaction.·> by an officer but the slug Trust .. s.a~opted .a r,esolut;1on ''Commercial planes would be traveled over the car and into a by. anan1mous vote . r~uesting absolutely devastating," ~aid . vacant field. ae1ghbonng school dislri~ and Mrs. Young, pointing out that Officers said a struggle ensued governmental represen~at1~es to some schools in the vicinity of when the pair refused to leave block the countr s application to Los Angeles International the car, and· at one point Haas the D~pa~men~ of Defense for Airport had to close because of broke free from an officer only to joint c1vll1an·m1lltary use of the the noise factor. be subdued and chewed by the base.. ". Her comOients we-re ecbOed by dog. ~1r·.act10!1 ~QS based~ the Trustee Carole. NeusJ,adt who The two men were booked on belt~( that ,a1rl1ne "traffic would said, "1 too reel very strongly charges of assault with a deadly -su~JectSaddlebackVall~scbool about ibis. We cannot sit back weapon . children to excessive noise and · expose them to unnecessary (See STATION, Page i\2) (See GUNFIR E, Page A2) danrer. .I' CNlty ..... SUff ...... OFFICER RO.N RODGERS DELIVERS COPY OF ''THROAT" At Balboa's Puuycat Theater, a Jury In the Balcony Jury Views 'Throat' In Pussycat Trial The jury in the Balboa Pussycat Theater obscenity trial . went to the movies Monday to see the two !!lex films at issue, and as the day wore on a damaged print of "Deep Throat'' sparked some wearying delays. n The jury of six men and six women and two alternates rode by bus for the special screening of that film and its companioq feature. "Devil in Miss Jones ."' And as the jury sat secluded in the balcony of the peninsula theater. about a dozen Courtroom spectators watched from the bottom floor. All went smoothly throug h the prenoon showing of ··Devil ··. After a lunch break, the jury re· assembled and it was time for the second film alleged by the prosecution to be obscene. But the print was damaged and 15 minutes into the film , the lights went back on . Newport Beach police, who carted several prints of the films :\Way from the theater last June, suddenly were told to bring some back. And after a hasty run in a patrol car, officers returned with a fresh copy of the Linda Lov . elace sex film and the show was on again. TheSaddlebackValleySchools R J e • St ek ._, resolutlonronow••imllar•ction• BIDS 01n1ng rI e-.,, taken recently by the Mission-___ _ The jury, which has a mem- bership ranging in age from mid 20s housewives to an elderly re· tiree, appeared in good spirits • throughout the day. As jurors filed down the balcony stairway ror the last lime. some members joked and _laugbed. Others re· mained somber. Viejo Municipal Advisory Coun· ~~e1!t1~·~~!fb.::.•ek•~~bliJi!~ Jets, Redskim Follow Patriots in NFL Walkout Council. JIJ',T~}.,•soel•tfld Presa, • from olher NFL teams. management to reinstate the col· DOW D'""CUNES The player representative or "We've taken a course of ac· lective bargaining agreement "It sort of catches you orr rr' ti.on." Randy Vataha, player between the NFL owners council guard," said one lo another as the slriking New England th a I rt t th d r th Patriots said he received word representative. said in Foxboro, and the NFLPA which expired e 9 roup e a e en ° e FOR 6111 'TIME that the Los Angeles Rams were Mus., afier three team meetings 19Y.I months ago. day. expected to join the strike later during the day. "Now, it's up to Vataha said lhe players also The screening of the two films NEW YORK (UPI) -The tod theot.herteamstosuppartus. askedownerstoreturnlhesquad and opening statements by the stock market, plagued by rising ~~a was no immediate com· "Tbat's..'.four games." Vataha to the 46-man limit as a show of prosecution and defense took up interest rates; clo~ lower for ment from the Rams on the state· said, refer:Ting -ro Sunday's good faith while negotiating a the first day of a triaJ which is ex- the sixth consecutive session to-1 scttiedul~ o~njn<r k'.-the reauJar new pact. peeled to take six weeks. d•y-tn-modeTatlt'trading on the ment by the P a.yer represen--NFL _-.e~ .. theRa Misdemeanor obsc'enity New York Stbck Excha{tge. tative, Randy Vataha, former se 800 VutV~!A •PUJ, Tht!l te•m roster was reduced charge• were flied soon after the ~.he Dow Jones 1·n'duslr1·a1 Golden We•• Colle-' and-starr· Jeto,Red•kinJ·and "•'team. to 43-.I.. •7 £lay-•"-year se1·zures in Jn ag I st th ..,, '11"' 5~ .. • In· ad•ition, tbe-'C"'icago Bean •a.e"••.• " TO•<> Uu.:> u e a n e 1.veh1e. a head more than two J~~~~rst!,~be~~e Ne~ York ,..1ihl'tti"ey WoUld go out in rorce tf over~~ object op 9ftM jtla.)¥.rs' owner of the theater~ Vin· f-.-.paintLa.t-the utset.-losLJL06 11-tl;t..,t-~r-tm?i ·orlrh the--N·Pb-Playen Association ~soc11: on. -----.....,......._ • ceg,t __ MirancJa.. plus two ot~r point& to 'lV:i.13. Declines led ad• Redskin• voled 10 16Id' the calledioro1leigU~l"iclestrike . Retcrloc toOlhe •ix-point pro-prlqeipal• in the operation. vancee. by about a 10.fo-lhree Patriots in the strike. • The Patriots walked out Sa~-posa! ..-triade early thls morning Jn Monday's opening state- m&reh\. (Tables, All). The Patriots were locked out day in. .. the hope of speed,i g byo~ersl Vata,ha1aid, "We Still m!'!fttl, the pro9ec"tion &Merted Prices were lower: in moderate oU 'ti f 1 con ~ant tq p Illy, atlll want to prac· th1l the rums later to be seen by ' ,Council Studies Pureha$e· The Costa Mesa City Council is being urged to take two signifi· cant steps tonight in the purchase of property from privaleowners. -The council is urged lo con· demn two parcels o( land for park purposes ; if authorized these would be the first condem· nation proceedings launched by the city. -The council also is asked to approve the first property buy for tbe downtown redevelopment program. Leisure Services Director Keith Van Holt has recom· mended the condemnation proceedings for the Brentwood and Charle Street park sites because negotiations "have re- ached an impasse.'' He reported t hat $48,000, 100 percenl of the appraised value for the 37,000 square feet, was of- fel-ed for the Brentwood Street sile. The final offer for this land was $52,800, but this was refused. Based on the appraised value, $.57,300 was offered for the Charle Street sile, involving 32,700 square feet . "Thi s offer was re· fused and the property owners are not willing lo negotiate al any price," Van Holt reported. Both sites are intended to be neighborhood parks. with the Brentwood Street site being 1.5 acres and the Charle Street site 1.2 acre!!!. The holdup is ove r the purchase of the second parcels for each park. Purehases or the first parcels for each site already have been approved. The purchases are part or the $3 .9 million park acquisition and development progt'em authorized by votCrs nearly two years ago. The other significant property slep is r ecommended by the .Redevelopment Agency. ·Assis· tant City Manager William Dunn explained tha{ the agency wants the council to approve negotia- tions to buy the Andial Corpora· tion properly. ;,in auto repair shop, at 1876 Park Ave. (See PURCHASE:, Page A2) Coast Weath er Mostly s unny through Wednesday, according to the weather service, with continued warm inland but cool at the beaches. Hig hs near 70 at the strand rising to the mid ·80s in north county areas. I NSIDE T ODAY Julie Nixon E1.!enhouJCT 1! putttng her liff' toge/he?" ago.in and beginning to have $O'l'11e fun She says pres.wre to perform publicly ha! le!!sened and !!he i3 beginning to 'feel free." Story AI2. l•tlex .. '" .. "' .. " •. ,., . .. , .. ... , .. ,, .. •• .. .. tradln1 on the American Stock ~fay°!~·::1:;nt~ t~8fm~e~~ ~ea'ct. a ons •or a ugue 1 , • ticebukw~cannotdo.t.t,~erthis the Jury were patently obscene =-~=Ex:c:han::•=e:'::::::::=::::::~'.5'.::..':•l:~:::lt.;_.:•m::d~c~r~:w:dl!~l~U~!P'l>O~~~~~Y~•:tah::•~·:•:id~t:h:e~P:·~::.::-:::..:Ml<:::td:_~.:~:..:=:"'.::.L ....:= 1_'~~~~~-(See~_T_a_•_o_~~T_._Pai~•-AZ) • l j ; . I • • • • ·. • ' I • DAILY PK.OT c t Fr-P-.eAJ CIA ••• Ch.urch open,e:d the panel's first . public heacl.ngs with a statement , sa,yina the inveatJ1aUoo "in· 1 ' volve• the illegal• posaessim of 1 deadly biological poisons which , were retained within the CJA for fi»e years after their destruction ,vas ordered by the President (Richard M . Nixon)" inl970. Colby said "middle level" CIA officers were a pparently · responsible for maintaininJ th~ ,._st.ockpile of poisons and deliterjl 1 systems. , Helms, now ambassador to .lran, was sitting in the bac:k of .,,the packed Senate caucus room. scene of the Watergate heiltings. Helmis, CIA director for almost seven years until 1973 , is scheduled to testify before the commi_~tee Wednesday. · Colby said there is in existence a m emo between Helms and + Sidney Gottlieb, former chief of J the agency's technical ser vices i division, indicating the records t we'te destroyed by Gottlieb, in ~ November 1972, before he re- l tired. Colby conceded Gottlieb h<:\d been at CIA headquarters within rthe Jast few days reviewing cer- tain files, but said no one had in- I terviewed him to find out why be d estroyed those vital records. ' "Then we run up against a 1 stone wall,'. said Baker. . Ch~rch's committee has pro- 1 bed in_telligence activities at ·length in closed sessions. During thoSe sessions, the leftover toxins a t th e Arm y's biological , laboratory at Fl. Detrick Md cametoligbt. ' ., · Ins tru ction s to d estroy ,1 chemical and biological warfare I material at Ft. Detrick were is- sued in 1970. But May 20, 11 gr_a~s of shellfish toxin and eight mllligrams of cobra venom were 'found in the small vault. r Colby also told Congress that during the past 25 years his agen- cy secretly developed "devices" r for use in counter-intelligence ac- 1 tiviUes, including a fountain pen , dart launc her. Colby also said foreign in- telligence agents are continuing , to use drugs on "target subjects" 1 overseas and ad m·inistered a ! drug to a CIA operative within the past year. · In his testimony, Colby did not mention a report saying .i American agents tried to usev lethal toxins to assassinate African leader Patr'ice Lumumba. * * * '.;~CIA Reveals U2 Spy Pilot ·'Had Poison' - WASIUNGTON (UPI) -CIA ·1 Director William E. Colby said '. 'today Gary Powers, pilot of tbe ' 11u2 spy plane shot down over the I' Soviet Union in 1960, was pr.; J'vided with a tiny p)ison needle ' coacealed. in a silver dollar in case he wanted to co.JDmit suicide. · But, Colby told the Senate Select Committee on ln- telliaence, Powers "obviously did not use it, and was not in- structed to do so. lt was offered to him t.o provide him with an op- , lion:• Colby said an earlier ''L-pill'~ ·· designed for ,agents to commit , suicide dur!ng World War II ••took some time to work and was ' agonizing . ., · He said agents who might have ''the nee<f io use such a pill would want ''instantaneous'' results 'and that was why the poisons, ·such as was supplied to Powers, rl·were developed. The needle J would have enabled Powers to in· ject himseU with deadly she!Uish tmdn. "the Powers flight was the 1 only time we were aware that the toxin was used for operational use, although the L-pill was made available for earlier flights,'' Colby said. ., -. -" T _,f . .I; ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed Pr••tdlfll ... "'*'- Jack R. <:urk!Y V"• Pre.io.~t •1111 c;e,.,... .. MIMO"' ThOmas Keevll ·-. ThoMM A. Murphlne •neglnl Edl• c Chlr1n H. \.OOS Rktwlnl P. Nall ~ Mlin9tlfll Ecllll!B • 1 • I Over the Falb Sunny skies and warm temperatures brought out the beach crowd this week, in- cluding these "Three-persons-in-a-tub" at Newport peninsula's M Street. Young · Debbie Ruiz. of Newport Beach, looks like she's trying to get back over the top of the wave as her inner-tube companion eyes · the coming fall. Just sit back, Debbie, an(! enjoy the slide to the bottom. · STATION •.. and assume this will be denied.•• Allhougb tbe Saddleback Area Coordinating Council ($ACC) Long Beach Cop Slain in Search has not yet taken official action By ARTHUR R. ~EL on the renewed airport proposal. oe ... 0.11,,. .. ...., arepresentativeofthecouncllin-A veteran Long Beach dicated to trustees Mooday night policeman stalking a kidnap- that such action is imminent. robbery suspect in a back yard or Radcliffe Ash of the SACC a Signal Hill are.a residence was aviation committee told board sbottodeathearlytoday. members that there ls no other A task force of police, includ- airport in the nation which is in& some 100 officers and 27 cars jointly used by military and plus two police belicopterS, cot'- civilian aircraft. doned oft and covered the area in He described the F-4 fighter which the .suspect was later cap- lets fiying into the EI Toro base tpred without incident. as "hot rods'' with twice the • Bar.efoot and bleeding from speed potential of commercial loot cuts, be was taken into craft and said that bis conversa~ custody without attempting to tions with. civilian capt{lins in-fire a .SS caliber weapon believed dicate Ibey. would refuse to 11y to be ~he death gun used on in EI T bee Patrolman Robert R. Birdsa!L passengers to ....,. ause Officer lllrdsall, 40, was pro· oftbe added danger. A!h noted !bat a Petition witb DOUDced dead at 1: 12 a.m. In St. '"thousands of iignafuri!s" now is Mary Medical Center in the being circulated at Laguna Hills downtown area of Long Beach. Leisure World In opposition to He wu shot in tbe chest at commercialtrafficatthefJase. close ran•e after be and his In a reference-to the contention partner, Officer Wilbur Poston, that El Toro's expansion would splitupintliedarkenedregionon. • relieve noise problems at OraJtge the Long Beach-Signal Hill city County · Airport Ash said, border hunting their suspect. ''You're not solving 8l)ything by Investigators identified Officer takinl the noise from one place Blrdaall's alleged slayer as Fred and putting it another." Harvey, 24, Long Beach, a transient. lfe was booked for in- veeU1ation of murder and as- sault with 8 deadly weapon OD a police officer. • p,...P.,,.AI GUNFJRE ••• Batk at the ni1htspot in NeWJ>Ort Beach, pollce were still piecuig toietber"the stOry or tbe shooting. · · Detective Sam Amburgey said the two alleged gunmen had stayed late at the club. playing .,001 and drinking. Then an argu- ment erupted over whose turn it was to play. Cisneros assertedly asked several bouncers to remove the pair and after a noisy argument both men were out in the streeL They assertedly milled around outside and argued in vain to be readmitted and soon afterwards it was closing time. As 45 or 50 patrons were leav~ ing, the men were seen to run across Newport Boulevafd and witnesses said Haas withdrew a. gun from bis car. pointed toward the crowd, bracing his hands on the roof. The charges could bring thede- alb penalty if he is convicted. Police said Officer BirdsifiJ, a 15-fear veteran of the torce, and h1' partner entered the area about midnight, after a woman- contaCted tbem from a liquor ·'--.,, repo~g' she had been kid· naped and robbed. A description of the suspect vehicle and license number led them to the Signal Hill neighborhood where it was dis- covered and Officer Birdsall was then slain when he apparently found the suspect. He was shot in the chest ap- parently without warning. allbough·it was not immediately determined how many times he was hit. First reports of the killing of the 15-year Long Beach Policeman said it soundOO. like an automatic weapon, indicating multiple shots were tired. Some shots may have been fired by the victim . The immediate area of Signal Hill, a tiny oil and industrial city completely enclosed by the city or Long Beach, was immediately sealed off. Teams of officers dispatched from a command post were sent into the region to track down the popular officer·s slayer and finally succeeded within three hours of his slaying. Harvey was caught betweeu two houses by .two officers simultaneousl,y, according to U . Tony Maletich, and would have been cut down in a crossfire ii be resisted. The slain patrolman is no rela- tion to Newport Beach Police Sgt. Donald Burdsall, whose name is spelled differently.' Funeral Set For Stuntman Killed in Reno Memorial services for Gordon Mc:Collom, 2S, will be held at 4 p.m. Wednesday at Saint An- drew's Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach. McCollo"1 , a teacher at Edi59n High Sch~. in Huntington Beach and a resident of Costa Mesa, was killed last Friday while performing a wing-walking st\Dlt at the Reno, Nev., air races. The·· tami~y has suggested memorial donations to the Mc:Collom Scholarship Fund in care of Mike Poff, 1532 East Seventb Street, Long Beach. Poff, a classmate of McCollom at Long Jleach State College, said the scholarship will be given to high school gymnasts. McCollom was a gymnast as a student and was coach of the gymnastic team at Edi$00. Interment will be at the Fairhaven Memorial Park Santa Ana . .Pane&stsfteet -. . Fiiial Coastal . Plan Weighed California Coastal Com· missioners. meetini tbil week ln Loo Angel• will at\empt to adqJt a final state .,,.1tal'Pl1111 -•~· ment designed to proteet the coutline from unCbecUd .de. velopment. I "We hope to wrap up the pion Ibis weel< and cet it to tbe prin- ters,.'' ••Id Joe Bodovitz, the commlaslon 'a executive 4irectar. ' Commlostdllen will lJetiD' dla- eusslon and adoption ol !be plan •t 9. a •. m. Wedn...Say 8' the Alrport·ll11rlna Hotel. If -... ary. !MywWNUJD ... at ta.m. Thunday. ' The.deadline for sutitntttfn1 the plan to tbe Callfomla Ieglalature ,. Dec. 3 -the date opecified ill ~tloa 20, wbidi wu ap- proved b; TOien ID 1112. That p.--ltiOD . ...._ tbe regional and state coulal eom-pet D'O,gS misaions &nd a1ao Included tbe O' mandate !bat a cout.i plan be -ared and put Into ettect by M Jed 1'16. Uli Jillf'll Several partl of tbe plan bavo .::;;; heed tentatively adoptiJil at pre. ~ -. vioua meeUp11; however, the B Guard . crucial lsaue of bow the succeed-y ' . ing coa1tal a•.-ncies will be ' -_ , lllnlctu<edbu~yetbeedde· . terlniaed. A HUnJ!!igton Harbour woman .. Representati•e• from many cbar,.Otoday that hlr two pet coa1tal cltle1 tbroug'hout clop were shot to deaih ID cold Califomla bave spol<ea at public blood by a secer!IJ IU8ld at a bearin,.: telling commlssiaoers Seal Beach Naval Weapons Sta· " tbe1 w.m local agencies to re-tlon. lain local control. ' Mrs. Sherry Pilarski, 18912 Warren Lane, . said the dogs, Gi-etel . a female German sb<Pherd and HartlJfgtoo. a mllle Labrador-shepherd were gunned down Sept. 6, OD the grounds or the station but she didn't know about it until a week l&ter. "We're just looking fer help," she said, her voice bre.aking with sobs. "We don't want anything like this to happen again." Mrs. ·Pilarski said she had given the dogs a bath Saturday and they slipped out of the gate· that ni ght and into the Navy sta- tion across the street without license tags or identification. She said that in account:& she h~d learned, a security guard sitw the dogs out around the bunkers, one sleeping and one sniffing around. "They growled, but didn't at- tack,•• she says, ••and the man ' shot and wounded both. He tracked them down and fll'ed nine shots in all beforethey·were dead," she sobbed. "They were petrified of guns.•· she 1a11. "All the man had to do -was shoot once ID the air 8nd they wouldbav,run'iaway.11 •• Commander ff·arry Madera, exeeutive officer of the station, oonflrmed tbe incld.,._ • TONIGHT COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL -Regular meeting, City Hall, 6:30p.m. ''BEHIND THE .HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T. Brown,OCCForum, 7:30p.m. UC! LECTURES -"Food for Thought.•• Room 100 Social Sciences Hall ''The Nervous System,'' Freshman Lecture Hall, 7p.m. WEDNESPAY, SEPr.17 OCC LECTURE -"Enlarging Your Boundaries,'' Dr. Arthur Bie tz lecturer, 1 :30 OCC Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. UC! LECT URE -"The Nervous System, ++Freshman LectureHall, 1p.m. One Of the most voc8l oppo- nents bas been tbe city of Newport Beacbr Councilman Pete B.art.eti.JllQkio .t llllt Wttk's hearing ID San Pranojsco" ,and argued.-tbat while1 a state com- mission should ,h~e overall control, local governinents can. and should, handle Iocait>l•nning issues. .. i !. However. environmental groups and a \Din9ril1'1ol cities believe that strong commission controls are "'needed to guard against violations by developers. that regional La~una Beach's Mayor Roy Holm has maintained that -re· gional coastal COIDmlftiOfts are the only logical method of protect- ing the coastline. Another important put of the plan includes maps showing coastal areas recommended for state acquisition ·for use as open space areas. -• Seventy-five s1tes, incjuding a number in Orange Co\mty, have been identified on a preliminary list but state commissioners have ootyetdeclded whichsltestbey'll include 01.1 tbe list Ibey send to tbe state legislature. • F,...PogeAI PURCHASE. It would be the first public ac- quisition of private wopertJ in the downtown redevelopment program. The parcel haS been appraised at $98,000. Dunn explained that the owners want to make several changes to the property that woula increase its value. Dunn said'that the redevelopment agen· cy therefore recommended that the city buy the site now before the improvements are made. . _ He said that the city would then lease back the property to t.l)e owners until the. redevelopment program gets under way. Dunn explained that the Andial property is important because the ultimate goal for that area - caused. by the planned widening of 19th Street -is to buy·the-now closed market facing llllil Street and provide parking behind it. The Andial property -on the corner of Park and Plumer Street -may some dly bave to be torn down to make way for ac- cess to that parking. The c~ciLID~@..1$ at 6:30 p.m. \ in the council chambers. Ambur.gey said the cr.owd scat- tered as five shots rang out from the city hall parking lot across the street. 'lnflati,on' . Still Threat ~et Us Put You On The 'Map The two victims were struck from behind as they headed toward the doorway. Amburgey said it was a miracle tha:t no one else was struck in the flurry of gunfire. Judge Orrhn Hunts' Trial LUBBOCK, Tex. <UPI) -A U.S. District judge refused today t o dismiss wiretap charges against W. Herbert and Nelson Bunker Hunt, sons d the· late billionaire oilman H.L Himt. and ordered i ury selectl.on to bellin- U.S. District Judge Halbert 0 . Woodward agreed all testimony from tbe Grand Jury w,blch in· dic:ted the Hunts had not been provided to defense attorneya but said he had read the testimony and did not belleve tbe omiUed parts contained ID!ormatlon rele- vant to the cas~-- F'remen Pull OUt . BERKELE-Y·(UPU -SlrlkiDl! fjremen have called off tbelr blockade or llWor roads into tbe clt.J because It was ~ thel.r .cauae.ln.or:e batm than \ WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Congressional Budget Office pre- dicted today tbe economy would rebourid swiftly from the re- cession this year, but inflating food and fuel prices threaten to • abort the recovery in 1976. By the end of the year, prices will be riaing in the range of 6 to 8 percent, compared to the 9.9.per· cent rate in the second-quarter of this yea r , the report said. Unemployment, which averaged 8.9 percent in the second quarter of this yeir, should fall oft to between 8.1 and 8.6 percent by the end of tbe year, CBO said. ' P,._P.,.eAI 'fllROAT ••• and were bulcally movies witb filDJIJ plota used only to lace together repeated and1<apbicde· pictlonsobexacts. - Ttie defense araued thal altboulh the lex is lfaphlc In the movies, tbe lilaue •-for be;yond JlieailQP!esexual.4eplCtlona. "Deep Throat'' waa. ebarac· Wlud bJ tbe defense aa a lpoof . which ~ats "what coO!d be 'I!, nry heavy •ubjecl~ with humor. · Defen1e attorneys c.barac- terized the. other ftlm H a "morollt1 play" OI sorta Whkh Jw.a.de1ln1te.meu,..._ . ....,...~ ·~ I ·--- *•••••• carp~ -1643 PlACENllA AVfNUf Near the e~tranc;e, inside our store, is a· giant .-· ITI!IP· We are in the process of Identifying all of the homes we have carpeted since 1965 on this map with colored pins. (A different color for each year:) aose scrutiny will det9!'f so,,.. interesting facts: firstly. we have c8tpeted homes on virtually every street in the area. Seci>ndly. the pins are in bunches, indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH advertising. Thirdly. the number of homes we have carpeted is staggering. · l II ·YOU desire honesty, experience, and recommendations from neighbors we have worked · for, the!\ Aldan's Is THE PLACE! "DEN'S · :]iiiiiilitiiin: "custom draperies . . • C_C?;STA MESA, CALIF; 926r • PHONE 646-4838 -646-2355 , . •