HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-09-22 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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MONDAY A.FT ERNOQ..,, SEPTEMBER 22:-1975
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In ~ea1'y Lafluna Surf
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Ford Indicts Big Gove1-i1ment
so,ooo Volts
Electric Gun
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• MIAMI (AP) The you.ng
blonde in a pink sweater walked
into the gas station and zapped
the atte'ndant, William Lawson,
with a 50,000-volt electric gun.
Then she and a male accomplice
robbed the station and fleet
''I'd rather it had been
so\nebody else," said Lawson,
Z1.
Heavy Surf
Claims l)iver
In Laguna
Battering surf claimed the life
oC a 29-year-old SFuba diver Sun-
d~y at Aliso Beach in South
Laguna.
Police said he was the first
know,n victim of the electroni c
age dart gun, which immobilizes
victims.
Lawson told Police the youh:g
woman· entered the station and
asked to use the phone. The at-
tendant said as he showed her to
the phone, she turned toward him
and, ''calm and smiling," _shot
him.
"It was like sticking ·your
finger in a wall sOcket," he said.
He ts still shaken aiM;t sore from
thetobbery Wednesday.
-V'fTell1'11'tb£fioonm couldn't
move .• ; ... If was the worst, pain· I
ever-1' felt," he taid. "My whole
right side was jumping. I
couJ<ti:'tcontrol my muscles.''
Lawson said the woman was
joined bTa man who leaned over
and pulled t he wires' from the
darts in his belly, then helped the
woman clean out the cash re·
gister of an undet ermined
aniount. One dart was left in.~
flesh.
John Lallr of Brea was found
by San Clem,nte LiCeguard
divers abOut an hour after the de-
ceased and a 'female coinpanion,
Mary Scully of Rolinda had en·
tered the. water. . •.
Ufeguard Lt. Aha,y Rich said
that as tbe couple reached the
surf line, they were battered by
the big waves which knOCked off
Lally'sface mask aodsnorkle~
Police said eight of the
,weapons, Cflled the ''Taser
~ Pilblic. Defender,.,. were stolen
'fromanofficein Miami Shores.
Rl:ch s1tid the divs frantically
hied to find his ait-hose mouth
piece, but ,couJd not. AdqitionaJ-
ly, be was beavlly weighted and
was unsuc,cessful in inOa_Ung ·rus
lifevest.
The body Was swept away
while Miss Scully fought for her
life too, Lt. Rich said.
Divers found the body in eight
to.10 feet of water about 40 yards
from ~the spot where the couple
bad entered the water.
1 U . Rich said the tragic inci-
• dent pointed out the danler of at·
t'el'Qpting to dive When the sUW ·is '
11i&h. ~iao Beach i~ f!atrolleo!. ~r
San Clemente Llfeguards wor.fi-.
i.D.g: under -.a' contract with ~
county. A li~egUard wd sta·
tioned about a quarter mile
away, "'but the drowntftg--was
screened. fr.o'm· his view b)la saAd
berm. ..
,J,SQ~~e .
First Liily
CARMEL (AP) -A.,;,_t ISO •
penoos lined • downtown sln!et ln 11\ls guaint feaside reMr1 f~a &limpse o! Betty Ford who 1i1*it
40 minutes •~opplnc ln • metll
sculp(Ure gallery J •
The Fin1t Lody, dressed In •
brown ud white dreu Md capei ~ wated' at the-crowd u she ~ .....i ~ the small abop ~ ... ~ . . ,. -· -('
~The Taser, which Lawson said
reminded him of a gray
flashlight, launches two small
darts attached to batteries by
18-foot wires. The d arts can
penetrate l lf.i inches of 'clothing
and the 50 ,000-volt charge is
described as incapacitating and
very painful.
The weapon·s makers, Taser
Syste m Inc. of Los Angeles,
describe it as a nonlethal crime
prevention device for stopping
attackers in their trac ks .
l.Jterature that comes with it
states that in early testing, a
blast from the gun using only
30,000 volts nattened a 250·pound
llull.
Lawson. who we ighs 140
Pohnda, was knocked senseless,
his ·hearing and vision blurred.
Doctors at Miami Intematiooal
HoSpital said an inch-long. dart
was removed from Lawson's
iigbt.side ... iust above his waist.
<
FIRST~R .
BOU.~111' "BUG'
' ' ' • I "I sold Q.lY car to the first
person ,)"ho called.··
That s the advertising success
4'Jl)erienced by the Huntington
Beach woman who placed this ad
in the Daily Pilot :
1966 VW ·Bug, very clean
-.SO. xxx-~xxx
If you: lt-'ve a car you want to
convert to .._,h, call 642·!678.
We make it easy for you to put
a few ~ to work for you -in
lhe'Dally Pilol., '
Bullish Chief Hailed
0.11, pttot ~.., ltltMlrll l(Mflle•
PRESIDENT FORD GREETED IN ANAHEIM BY INSURANCE LEADER NORMAN LEVINE
2,400 Chee'red As Ford Promised Economic Health Without 'New Spending Programs·
Wind-packing Eloise
Near Gulf Coast Ports
MIAMI (UPI) -Hurricane
EJoise, packing winds of 85 miles
an hoar, churned today toward
the Gulf Coast parts of Mobile,
Ala ., and Pensa.cola, Fla., and
residents boarded up their homes
and prepared to move inland.
The NationaJ Hurricane Ce nter
issued hurricane warnings from
Grand lste, La., to Apalachicola,
Fla., and urged ama,U craft to re-
main in Port. 'lt also warned
there was a possibility that
tornadoes might oc-cur in ad-
vance of the storm.
"All precautions oxer the Mis-
sis s ippi Delta tegion of
southeastern Louisiana shoo.Id be
rushed lo completion lmmedlate-
ly," the center 1aid. "Elsewhere
jo the warning area, actions
$hould be conpleted this after·
llOOlll"
Eloise was expected.to make a
&wipe at the mouth cf \be lllis·
•isslppi River thl• afternoon.
}
then move eastward and come
ashore tonight in the Mobil e-
Pens acola area, bring S to 10-
inch rains to southern and
eastern Alabama, northwest
Florida and much of Georgia.
At midday, Eloise was cen-
tered near 26.8 degrees north
latitude and 89.6· degrees west
longitude, about 240 miles south
ol New OrJeans. Peak sustained·
winds rem ained at 8S miles an
Supplies Asked
PARIS (AP) -The chie! o! a
rebel tribe in the north central
African nation or-Chad is report-
ed holding out ror supplies in-
stead or $2.5 m illion in cash to
ransom French archeologlst
Francoise Calustre, oaptured
with two other Europeans 17
months ago in a raid-on a desert
village.
hour, but hurricane forecasters
said conditions r emained favora·
ble for further strengthening
before it reached land. Gale
force winds extended north rrom
El oUie·s center for 145 miles.
Eloise claim ed 34 lives last
week when it slashed Puerto
R ico and the Dominican
Republic with 80 mph winds and
torrential rains. The storm los t
much of its strength in the moun-
tains of southeastern Cuba, but
was upgraded to hurricane status
again today as it picked up
strength over the Gulf of Mexico.
Disaster preparations a c·
celerated along the storm -
scarred Gulf C<Jast as Eloise
moved clO!ler to land, and most
civil defense and Red Cross of-
ficiab said they would make de-
cisions shortly on whether to
evacuate residents.
The Coas t Guard in New <See ELOISE, Pa1e AJ)
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Presideni
Talks
In County
By DOUGLAS F Rn7.SCHE
Of#M Dlllff"li.t ....
A bullish Pre~ident Gerald
Ford Sunday told a business au-
1'ience in-Orange County that tbe
nation's economy is well on the
way to recovery. Attempt.a to
speed it, he said, could lead to
disaster.
"Never forget,·· said Ford,.
"that the government that is big
enough to g ive you everything
you want is a government that is
big enough to t ake everything
you have.·•
Ford's talk at the Disneyland.
. ·Hotel in Anaheim to 2,400 mem-
bers of the National Association
of Life Unde rwriters, an in-
s urance industry group, was a
mixture of praise of free eit·
lerprise and indictment of bjg
government .
Targets £or the brunt of Ford·s
assault on big government were
,;new spending programs" in-
tended to relieve the coun.t.ry's
unemployment and bring an end
lo more than two years or re-
cession.
Characterizing suc h moves aS
"irresponsible " and likely to "re-
light the fires of inflation," F-ord
promised to continue to use· hi.s
veto power to quash increased
government s pending. ,
Ford's talk came in the second
day of a three day swing through
California, sprinkled with pre-
campaign efforts to garner sup-
port in the nation 's most
populous state.
According to White House
Press Secretary Ron Nessen,
(See FORD, Page AZ )
Co ast
We athe r
Dense fog along the coast
wi ll increase tonight and
Tuesday morning . Hazy
sunshine today and sli ghtly
cooler Tuesday with hi ghs
in mid-80s, low tonight in
mid-60s.
l ~SIDE TODAY
Pre.ridmt F'OTd today called
/OT creation of llOO·biUion re-
&earch corporation to give ma-
hon enttgy independence in 10
years. A.·5.
Index
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•• .. !12 DAILY PILOT s Monday, S.ptembor 22. 1975
Tape Gap Myst~ry SLA·Bit
In 'Paper. -I Nix~n Denies All 'Responsibility' By Patty WASHINGTON CA PI -
Former President Nixon has de·
nied unde r oath ''personal
responsibility " ror the 18 '>.t -_mjnute gap in a White House tape
recorded three days after the
• Watergate break-in, his lawyers
d isclosed today
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The tape gap remalns one or
the m.vsteriea of the Water11:ate scandals whic h drove Nixon lo
r~ign_. The discl~.!Mltt came ate
a bearing before a special three·
judge court created to consider
Ni xon's attempts to regain con·
trol and possession of the tapes
· :Jluddies Due in Court ...
' .. Bill Scrauch, 59-year-old Ann Arbor, Mich. mental health
technician, goes to court Wednesday in effort to keep his
rooster friend, Rojo, as a pet, despite city laws against
fowl friends. Neighbors complain Rojo crows two and
one-half hours each day -starting at 6:30 a .m. sharp.
. .
:·.Coroners ..
To Study ...
, .. Lung Piece ... Coroner's deputies today
. planned to examine a hunk of
-"lung &sue found on a beach in
: jlalboa late Sunday -a probe to
.. detef'!'line if the organ is human.
· Police ea.id that a Newport.
· Beach resident walking on the
'Jtrand near L· Street first dis·
, covered the piece of tissue lying
~near the water's edge.
., Officers said that the finder
, first buried the organ, then went
. '"homeand pJ"loned for patrolmen.
· Police first took the tissue to
Hoag M emOrial Hospital, and
doctors there identified it as a
-;.~ lung but without special tests, the
. determination of its origin would
· be difficult. Police then contact-
ed coroner's deputies to arrange
· forthetest.
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· Police Crack
•
... Burglary Ring
1 LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Eleven
·persons were arrested and
thousands of dollars in stolen
• property seized Sunday as police
cracked what Officers called one
'.of th.e ~ig$'.est burgl ary ·rings in
' the city s history . .
"The ring was responsible for
-three or four burglaries every
r;;-night and is one of the biggest
~~rations uncovered in Las
ilas,·• said a member of the
Vegas Metropolitan Police
artment task force.
, ,,. e said some members of the
• _ g apparently had been in· r volved in burglaries in the past
~ five years.,..
If ORANGE COAST
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DAILY PILOT
:; Robert N . Wl'ed *"" Pr•ll'""' • .,,, ,.,,.,.,.,.,...
, Jack R. Curley
~ Yi<•"''"*"' ...:I C.ntt•+ --~ Thomas Keevll
I!:. l:<J•tCI• ~ ThOmas A. MurPhl~
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Cla11Ulld AdvertlshMI 642·5'71
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ELOISE .•.
Orleans said helicopters were
lifting. workers off oil rigs up to
130 miles offshore, and Shell Oil
spokesman Brian Toal said
evacuation ot more than 800
persons on its offshore rigs would
be completed before nightfall.
''You can see some evidence of
preparation among the people
but not a lot," said a spokesman
at the Baldwin County, Ala.,
sheriff's office. "We"re nailing
things down here and checking
our emergency generators to
make sure they're okay, but we
haven •t started evacuating yet.··
Huntingt.on
Hilehhiker,
24, Raped
Huntington Beach police today
were looking for tWo men who
raped a 24-year-old hitc.hhiker at
knifePoint Friday night.
Officers said the woman was
hitchhiking at Delaware Street
and Adams A venue about 10
p.m., when the two men, driving
an old dark car, forced her into
their vehicle.
They said one of the men raped
her at knifepoint and cut her on
·the arm during the struggle
before she managed to break
loose and flee.
Officers said the woman was
"hysterical" when she was in·
terviewed late Friday night by
police, and they said additional
details of the incident will await
a follow-up investigation.
The worn an was treated for ner
arm woun<_I at Pacifica Hospital
in Huntington Beach and sent
home, palice said.
Police Seek
Cycle Theft
'Joy Riders'
Police and fire investigators
today were searching for
joyriders. 'who allegedly stole a
motorcycle from a Huntington
Beach man Sunday night, rode it
awhile. then set it aftre.
Firemen. 1ald Oelberl Weber,
2Dllll Lancelot Lane, reported hi s
molercyde mlll•ln1 about 10:30
p.m. .
Then at 11 :48 p.m., firemen
were called to Sowen Schools,
9300 Indlanapol11 Ave .. where the
stolen cycle had J>eenaet ablaze.
.J'.lremen.1aldsom-i..1w1 dill·
connected the motorcycle's
gasoline line then 1et the lulttng
fUelafire. ' ·
Th'7 sald·the cycle, valued at '1.000, wu destroyed but there
wal no damage to scbool or srouncts other Oum • JP8ldl ol•
l<OOChed i•-· . •••
and 42 million documents and
papers accumWaled cluriJlll bia
5"'2-year presidency.
Nixon lawyer Herbert J . Miller
Jr. 1aid the government, in seek-
ina to retain control of the Nixon
materials, has questioned the
62-year-old former president·s
character.
"They say Mr. Nixon is un·
trustworthy, Mr. Nixon will dis·
tort the record, that Mr. Nixon
created the 18 "2-minute gap,"
Miller said. "With respect to the
lS~·minute gap, Mr. Nixon was
interrogated by the office of the
special prosecutor .··
Nixon testified in a special
session before two members of a
Watergate grand jury last June.
Referring to that testimony.
Miller s aid, ''Let them (the
Justice Department) challenge
that his (Nixon 's) responsibility
(for the tape gap) was denied un·
. deroath."
Lawyers for the former presi-
dent.claim Nixoq has a constitu-
tional right of owenership to the
documents and thousands of
hours of t ape reels from his ad·
ministration.
Miller said a nine·month·old
fede ral law providing public ac·
cess to the Nixon records is un-
constitutional under the Fourth
and First Am endments of the
Constitution
He said any former president
has the right to select whi ch
materials from his years in office
will be made public, insuring
preser va tio n of a president's
right to' privacy and the privacy
rights of thos e to whom he
speaks
'This is a wholesale seizure ·•
Miller said of the new law, whiCh
could eventually result in anyone
hearing upon request some of the
:tape recordings made in the
White House oval office
The lawyer complained that
while Congress declared its in-
tention to preserve the historical
record of only the Watergat e
scandals. the materials covered
by the new law include tapes and
notes of Njxon 's role as father
and hus band as V<eU as presi-
dent. ·
"These tapes are interspersed
with conversations between Nix -
on and his trusted aides, a
Cabinet member, his Cabinet
member, his daughter, and
roreign leaders," Miller said.
"By seizing these "papers the
Congress has violated his rights
to privacy and intruded on his
rights under the First Amend·
ment to free speech," he added.
Duke,.Joins Presid~t
Newport Beach actor John Wayne chatted with Presi·
dent Ford Saturday prior to Ford's dedication of a new
field house at Pepperdine University at Malibu. Wayne
"-'as still suffering some coughing. He was recently re-
leased from Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport.
From Page AJ
FORD IN COUNTY. ••
Ford plans to follow up with a
pair of r eturn visits to California
in late October for GOP fund-
raising dinners in San Francisco
and Los Angeles
Former Gov Ronald Reagan,
speculated to be a Ford oppanent
for the Republican nomination
next year, is listed as one of 25 co-
hosts for the dinners, Nessen
said.
Asked whether this meant the
Reagan campaign was waning,
Nessen said, ''What Reagan cam-
paign? Where is it?''
from the enthusiastic audience,
Ford credited the insurance in."
dustry with being a major source
of capital financing that will re·
tum economic healthtothe U.S.
Ford said he was hesjtant to
take steps such as additional tax
cuts to speed economic recovery
for fear of disastrous after-
effects ; "goin g from hallelujah
to heartbreak in one swift move."
At the same time, he said, it is
impossible to underestimate
"the human tragedy of un-
employment.··
"There is a term in economics
that really bothers me -
'acceptable level of uned\ploy·
ment. • There ~ no acceptable
level of unemployment," the
President said.
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SAN ,.aANCISCO CAP~ -Tiie
FBl"h# • oeven·Pa;,'!t-1 In irhl<b Patricia -.
• •crt'"tical comment• 'about IM.c
Sy1Pl!lone1e . .IJber•\iOD Anay ~.ii WU re~.
~-San Jl'ranclico airaalcle
..ia'FBI aeenu round tbe docu·
mall Friday in tbe apartllleot
-Mila Kean! acl ftUow rupllve Wend1~01l!lrnva luid beenarrestedtheday~
Charles Bates, special agent in
charge of the FBI office here, re-
fused to comment, sayingtodoeo
eould prejudice trial evidence.
The newspaper quoted a
''source close to the case" as say-
ing the document is "a missive of
condemnation ·' addressed to
William and Emily Harris, Miss
Hearst's SLA colleagues. The
couple are ··more than strongly
criticized,•· the Chronicle quoted
PATTY TO TESTIFY
AT HEARING?-.\:!
the same unidentified source as
saying.
The complaints involve "~er
tain ·actions· •• that the Harrises
had "either taken part in or were
advocating .. that others in the
''revolutiouary struggle" dis-
agreed with, according to
another source quoted in the
Chronicle story.
The New York Times reported
today that the document indicat-
ed a possible break between Miss
Hearst and other elements of the
SLA.
The Times said the document
showed the Misses Hearst and
Yoshimura were opposed to the
use of bombings and other ter-
rorist activities advocated by the
Harrises and members of the
Soliah family.
Stephen Soliah was arrested
Thursday and charged with
harboring Misses Hearst and
Yoshimura in the apartment
where the two were living.
His sisters, Kathleen and
Josephine Soliah, are being
sought as fugitives on charges in-
volving guns and expfosives.
The Chronicle said its sources
rep>rted that the document was
in the handwriting of Miss
Yoshimura and contained only
initials, not proper SLA names.
But one t,0ur.ce said there were:
specific Cdmments which "the in-"")
itia1s show were the comments of )
"Miss Hearst,'' the newspaper re-
ported.
.• Ford's ilri~al by helicopter to
the Disneyland Hotel was}reet-
ed by a cheering crowd of about
500 as secret service agents and
Anaheim and Oisnevland wlice whisked him from the tightly Mesa WomaQ
RapedinHome.
After Party
secured landing pad in a Short
motor caravan to the rear en-
tranc e of the hotel Grand
Ballroom.
In his speech, wh.ich. was fre-
quently interrupted by applause
"One of the prime goals of this
administration is to sustain the
. economic progress now under
way and to put unemployed
Americans back on the job " be said. '
But the way to do it, he said, is
through the free enterprise
system, not new government
spending programs. ·
·rne document is not dated, but
one source said it presumably
was written after Misses Hearst
and Yoshimura moved into the
apartment -separate from the
Harris residence elsewhere in
the city -where the pair finally
were captured, tbe Chronicle
said, That was about Sept. 9, the
paper said. A Costa Mesa woman who went
to a party in Laguna Hills Satur-
day, the night after her husband
began serving an Orange County
Jail term for manslaughter, was
raped by a mysterious intruder
early Sunday .
"Who are you?.·• the victim re-
portedly asked the diminutive
rapist.
"You don't have to know who I
am or where I 'm from .•. ,"the
stranger replied. . '
She told police the five foot,
120·pound man who surprised her
in the darkened bedroom spoke
in a thick Spanish accent and
raped her'twice.
Investigators were told the
rapist left the woman's central
Costa Mesa area home after get-
ting up for a drink of water.
She had told him her children
were asleep in the next room and
warned they would be .getting up
soon as a method of frightening
him away, police said.
The victim told Officer George
Yezbick she had another couple
as guests following the party in
Laguna Hills and retired about 4
a.m ., following their.departure.
Pepperdine
HeatlCharged
LOS ANGELES CUP!) -
~e district attorney's of-
fice charged Pepperdine
University Chancellor M .
Norvell Young today with.
two counts-of felony
manslallghter and one or
drunken driving in connec-
tion with a fiery auto acci-
dent which resulted in the
deaths of two women.
Deputy District Attorney
Bob Allman said Young,
belng treated at Santa
Monica Hospital for In-
juries he suffered ln the ac-
cident, would be arraigned
oa the charges Oct. 3.
The accident occurred
. Thursday as a car driven
by Alice Fritsche, 55, Claremoat, wa11atopped at
a tra!llc llibl on l'aclnc
Coast Hl1~way at
COUIUJle Drive. Young al·
le1edly rear-ended the
.. vohlcle1 ca111in1 the fUel
tank or-lbe woman'• auto to .. ptode. ·
• • Manners gives you
up to a s1,soo tax
d.eduction this year. ••
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WITH TAX WITHOUT El<TftA SHEL TEFll!D TAX MONEY IAA SHELTEFIEO FAOMTAX AnEFI PLAN PLAN DEFE .. FlAL
S yrs. $ 9,510 $ 6,730 $ 2,780
10 yrs. . -23,540 15,750 7,7ll0
20 yrs. 74,640 .... 080 30,560
30 yr1. . 1tl5,550 95,030 L 90,520 . -
•,1t,b<JW !lgurn .,., based on 25% il'ICOl'f't brldltt. f.a.ral
regulallon• requlra IUbllantlat panalllet lor ~ Wltl'lclfw•
trom ottlllical• accounts.
--... 1
r
Sunday's
Sermon •
-
Reported •
IJTOm Berl•J -~
Priest Makes Plea
-F-0~ ~efogee· Aid_._
. ' fE!dU.,,a Not•: Thia la a Monda!i /-.&a tultlcA paa,,Pllot
r<J1(71'kT tom 1Jartov gftla.o ~.account J/.o ~
frrm'• church or IJl!I_.. Hl«t«!oi -J•J•l)Jollv;Pllol
.'Faith'
Lawsuit
•
Settled
LOS ANGELES. (UPI) -A
$430,500 lawsuit filed acainlt
faith·healini evaocelist K•lllm>
K11hlman by her former...persooal
aclmiolstrator. a Huntington
Beach resident, has been settled.
out ol court but nobod,y Is 1ayini
wbaJ the seluement was.
One term of the ..,..ement ·
provided that l\elther patty dis-
cuss the other terms, an attorney
ror Paul Bartholomew, 38. who
I
· cimrloliollar•o . .Thtc""ll<~ollowillbo°'nbJ..cofo/..,m..on Saturdo11'• clwf<Ch JXll}e.J ,._
Fewer than 10,000 South Vietnam~e 'retus-bud.died
In Camp Pendleton are rmdlng, ln~redlbly, that -lhti>
200 million Americans are prepllf1d to let ~m jda~ thez;e,
, also bandied Miss Kulllman·s
television accounts1 explained.
• Pather Joseph Devliil told the ~e!!~ ljynday ft ~\.
Joachini •s Roman Catboll~ Church;~ Meq. · ·
Father Dev\ln, a Jesuit priest 1"bo wu alrlillecl from
South Vielnam on the day bef~~ ~an oatloo,'a sur-
"""®r las! April 30, ufged Am~ to =.ml>Or.~'that a
loveofAmericabfl>ugbtthe.ewi>iliterllll eto,...:' · 1 . ' ,
"TREY LOOKED on Americ~"5 p;\.~~i,nd. ~ place o( genero&ity and a place ar Jtreatnu,s;'"tibe gueSt
speaker said_ ••Atl they have see'n.sor.r or America ~e the
tents, the heat, the dust. and ~ frustratJon 'of Ce.mp
Pendleton.'' ' • . -· • I i · Many Americans. particularly' lboS~~Worklng w thin
church organizations, are devotedly worltinl' to. pn)vide ._
sponsors for South Vietnamese f amilieS wtlo left evei:ythipg
behind them in the Communist takeover o( ,their country,
Father Devlin said. ·
1'ln the eyes of America and the world th~ l~t a war,''
b~ said-''But in the eyes or God they have gaiiled a tremen;
do~krace.
'"'Those Americans who help these beautijul, trusting
people will share in tha~ grace," tht silvei:-baiTed Jesuit as-
sured the congregation, noting the "inagnificent genei:.osi·
ty" of St. Joachim's in spansoring no less than seven South
Vietnamese families. . .
"IF EVERY CIWRCll parish in the natlo.n bad taken
one family we wQ.uldJ;t't have a tented coriimUnit~·at ~mp
Pendleton," Father Devlin said. "As it·is, despt!ratiJin;bi
setting in down there and the refugees are talking 6t eotnt to ~
Canada, South America and even Africa (or the.hom~
jobs we have not provided." ·
. Many Americans have sei~' on evet"y possible~cuse
to explain their failure to.aid the"Tefugees, Fath~r Devliri
said. '
"Some of them actually believ~·that each Vietnamese
family has a pot of gold in its tent," h~ said. "Others use the
American unemployment problem as their excuse for not
li(ting a finger to aid people who always looked on America
as their ally. ,
"These people who seek our help have the beauiy and I grace o( China dolls,·· Father Devlin said. ''Unfor\unately,
these China dolls came to America arid ... were promptly
' '
I plac~ on tht? shelf." "" ..
'--~-.~~~~~~~~~~_~;~-~-~~~'---'
l-Own Sh./*,·.:· ..
l . Filmmaker Does;Jt Ali ' . • . S. ByJACKCHAPPELL r OftMO.llr ~lolSUff t· In an era of colossal motion
"picture productions with
multimillion budgets, Lagunan
~bin Williams is a member of a
small fraternity o( filmmakers
who are the equivalent o( a one-
man band.
Williams writes, produces.
photographs, selects the music,
narrates and edits hi~own stUf(.
His latest production, a 9:0-
minute 16 mm (ilm entitled
"Greek Island Odyssey," cost
$10,000.
The film has been selected by
the National Geographic to be
screened during, a special show-
ing o( travel pictures to the
society 's members in
Washington D.C. In addition, the
film is being distributed by an or-
ganization called Explor·a-rama
and is being shown up and down
the state.
Making films calls ror. a com-
bination o( patience, creativity,
research and moxie, and a fast
tongue and quick wit, Williams
said.
''It's good because it's one
man's idea, not bastardized like
the films of Hollywood and TV
flims ai:e.
"A man"c·an· create aftlm from
his own r~earcb' and his own
creativity,•' Williams said.
He said be begins with a basic
idea for a film, researches it and
"'by the time I hit the 747, I have
it alJ in my head."
He learned photography at-
tending the Brooks Institute of
Photography. Off and on he rode
with a television station news ·
crew.
"From that I learned how to
hussle and get the shots no mat·
terwhattheobstacles,''besaid.
Williams alone has ftlmed the
interior of the Casino at Monte
Carlo. a coup that has not been,
repeated. The shot was contained
in Williams• first !ilm. Ac-
complishing the feat required
immunity to repeated rejection
l!llCl-a--gub-story-to finally-get-the
necessary approval, Williams
said-
The casino (olks even picked
up the tab for Williams' ~tay at
the' Hotel de Paris in Monte
Carlo.
••
' "' ~·
O.ltyl"llltsc.ff ......
ONE-MAN BAND
lagunan Rob in Williams
story about the land, Provide his-
tory and images of the life there
today ,·~ Williams said.
Guard Finds
Cop's Body
POMONA (AP> -A security
guard early today fowld the body
of an o(f-duty Los Angeles
The filmmaltlng _began as a policeman lying in front or the
·natur•l sideline-to Williams': ehtr~ce io a Pomona Rospitat,
vocation. conducting guided a~tho,rities said. tours or Eur.ope. Ro~ E . Kearns,, 41~ a Central
"The old travelogue, scenes ot Divl11on motor orf1cer was
coJorful ceramics and the •un rushed to the emergency room of .
oetUng over Mt. Alaha. that's de-Pomona Valley Community
adendburied. H9sl'l)al but died about to
-----'">,'!)iii' miniTo<liY'.Creat~laJer,.a.-pokaimaosal~.
•
==r,,,-=:·==-~-" ~
The suit filed last June dalmed
lhlit Miss Kuhlman or her as-
10Ciates took persoaal records
from his orflee in Newport
Beach, interlered with bis busi-
ness and owed 'him $120,000 in
back commi.ss,i.oos.
Bartholomew and his brother-
In-law, Mis~ K\lhlinan's former
pianist Dino lCartsonaki.s. 33, also s~ted in public statements at
the time that the charismatic
evanaelist's personal lire ~ dif-
fered vastly f.rom her pµblic im·
age. t
Dino, who said be broke with
Miss Kuhlman last spring after
she opposed his' marriage plans
and refused to sign a contract
with him, claimed that she had a
"walk-in vault" o{ money under
her home in Pittsburgh and had
collected more than $1.4 million
worth of art and $1 milUon in
jewelry there and in Newport
Beach.
Miss Kuhlman refused at the
time to talk about the statements
because of"security reasons."
The evangeilst reportedly told
a reporter in St. Louis last week
that Bartholomew arid Dino had
both apologized to her (or caus-
ing her trouble. but Bartholomew
denied that in an interview here.
''There have been no
apalogies," he insisted. "Dino
did not apologize, and I, or all
people. did not apologize."
He also said neither he nor
Di.no had retracted any allega-
tions in the suit or their public
statements.
Patty Mo re
In T ouch
-Mother
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Patricia Hearst, described by
her mother as "more in touch
with reality." may take the wit-
ness stand Tuesday to assure a
Ceder al judge she won't skip town
if granted bail.
Derense attorneys (or the 21 -
year-old daughter of millionaire
Newspaper executive Randolph
Hearst said Sunday night there
was ''nothing de(initely de-
cided," but it was possible she
would testify.
If so, it'would be the first public
statement Crom Miss Hears l
since June 7, 1974, wbenhertape-
recorded voice proclaimed love
for Willie Wol(e, one of six Sym·
bionese: Liberation Army ter·
roristS killed in a shootout a few
days earlier with Los Angeles
police.
Miss Hearst, who was want-
ed on 22 felony warrants, includ-
ing bank robbery and flight to
avoid prosecution, must explain
to U.S. District Judge Olive J.
Carter, why, among other things.
she signed "urban guerrilla" as
her occupation when she was
booked into jail.
Carter denied her release on
bail last week, saying he had to
be convinced Miss Hearst was
not a ''flight risk." The FBI
soughi Miss Hearst for 19
months, first as a kidnap victim
and later as a ''soldier'' in the
terrorist group that abducted
her.
Her mother, Catherine, after a
visit with her daughter at the San
Mateo County Jail in Redwood
City Sunday, said there was a
noticeable change in Miss
Hearst's 3P;pearance since her
arr~t Thursday.
"She seems more in touch with
reality,'' said Mrs. Hearst. "The
first time we saw her she was not
hersel(. She seemed to be spaced
out up here (motioning to her
head>.
"Today she wasn't smoking
and she was much better. She's
getting better ev,ery day. But
she's still not the same girl she
was before she was kidnaped."
Mrs. Hearst: said~Patty asked
about a ' black cat she used to
have called "Patty's Cat," and
was told it was still alive.
The visit it\ the jail SUnday was
a group a(fair that lasted 25
minutes. w ith the visitors
separated from Miss Hearst by a
1lass panel.
-BesTdes ber parents, the vis-
itors were her uncle William
Randolph Hearst II and his wife :
her cousin, William 1Randolph
Hearst Ill; and 'Kate Minot, a
Corm.er classmate Of1 Mi~1arst
.ttCeyatal Springs.high. -.
Nixon at Ease
DAILY PILOT 41 t a
Chevette
Mileage j
At Top '!
. ,.
WASHINGTON {UPI) -!be
new Chevrolet Chewtte -.,...213
miles per gallon -..let. the·liut
aVeraU gai mileage of ·llf'Y-
model American car, the &n·
vironinentaJ Protection Atenty
ann<>uncecltoday. ·
The small Chevrolet tJed with
two Japanese imPoifS--==-fhe
Datsun B2t0 and the Subaru -r..-top honors. It was the ·~t
time an American car appeM~
· in the top (ive since EPA ~n
testing ror fuel economy. ~
EPA Administrator Rua~ll
Trains.aid overall '76 model ce-s wil~ average 17.6 miles I"'"
gallon_ compared to an ind\lltTY
average of 15.6 for 1975 ~Is
and 13.9in 1974.
"The 1976 can! Indicate tljat
the auto makers have gone mere
than halfway since 1974 lo
achieving the President's goal or
a 40 percent fuel economy im-
provement by 1980,"'Trainsald..
The 1976 average figure is 12.8
perce'nt above last year.
The 33-mile-per-gallon figure
for the Chevette. Datsun and
Subaru models is an average of
city and highway tes~. The
Chevette wo_n top honors in tbe ci-
ty driving' category at 30 mll_es
Former President Richard Nixon Y{Orks on his memoirs per gallon, comparedto.29forthe
at his home in San Clemente recently. Ollie Atkins, who ·.: Dat.un and the Subaru. 11
served as white House photographer during Nixon's pre-'J In the highway tests. tho
sidency, was recently invited to San Clemente to have ' DatsunB210camecutontopa41
dinner with the Nixons and to take pictures of the. former miles per gallon compare<! to'.40
first family. His pictures, which provide a rare view of ~PG for· a Renault and 39 MPG
the ex-president, are published this week by Time lortheCbevetteandSubaru.
magazine.
Broo ks Blasts GSA
O ver Niguel T rade
WASHINGTON !UPI > -Rep.
Jack Brooks <D -Tex.) accused
the General Services Ad ·
ministration Saturday of making
the Air Force exchange $19.5
million worth of industrial pro-
perty in Cali(ornia for an office
building. that has become a
''White elephant .~·
Brooks, chairmao, o( the
House Government Operations
Committee, said he would call
GSA Administrator Arthur
Sampson and Air Fore~ orficials
to testily a t hearings Oct. 2 into
the property tradeo((.
The swap, made in March 1974,
left the GSA with a huge o(fice
building built by Rockwell In-
ternational, a major defense con-
tractor. at Laguna Niguel, about
12 miles from Richard M. Nix-
on's home at San Clemente.
.While Brooks did not say so in
announcing the hearings, com-
mittee members were expected
to explore the possibility th~t the
o(fice building was acquired
chiefly to store Nixon's presiden·
tial papers. or the 750,000 square (eet or
space available in the building,
Brooks said, only 100,000 square
feet are in use after 18 months
because other government agen-
cies refuse to use it.
"This building has turned out
to be a white elephant," he said.
"We would like to fmd out why
the Air Force declared property
it was still using to be excess so it
could be exchanged. We would
also like to know why the CSA ac·
quired a $20 million office build-
100°/o
PO LYESTER
G AB ERDIN E
s1•• ... .....
.... SJ.ti
DRAPERY
FABRJ C $~ . ~~~99c .. '4-••
Jd.
ing without conJ?ressional ap4
proval." . . Sampson, responding to
Brooks' charges, said it was the
congressman's fault if the build·
ing had become a ''white
eiephant ·' because he had
personally held up the exchange
for a year. The delay, be said.
caused federal agencies
scheduled to go into the building
to renew leases elsewhere. .
"Additionally, there have ~n
indications that the futervention
of Congressman Brooks has
made some agencies reluctant to
occupy space in the building,'~
Sampson said.
Sampson also lashed out at
Brooks (or criticizing the
transaction before the hearings
begin. "Apparently he has made
up his mind already, which is
typical of his conduct in such.
matters in the past ... he said.
Brooks said the exchange was
worked out with. GSA a(ter
.Rockwell found it no lQnger
needed the building and could not
ftnd a buyer for it.
"
Rockwell, Brooks said, was
permitted to draw up a list of Air
Force property it wanted and
GSA then declared it to be sur·
plus. The company received two
industrial plants at El Segundo,
Calif., in trade for the Laguna
Niguel building. Richard Q .
Vawter, director of information
for GSA, said use of the building
(or storing Nixon's papers was
considered, but only after Nixon
resigned.
100°/o
POLYESTER
DOUBLE KNIT
"'~ .... sz.• • $l.tl ··~
KETTLE
CLOTH .
··~ .... ....
•
The worst miles,-per.gaJlon
-figure by anAmericancarwaS're-
corded by a Plymouth Grand
Fury station wagon which
averaged 12 MPG -llinthecity
and 15on the highway.
The absolute worst rankins in
the EPA figures went to three
Rolls-Royce models -the Silver
Shadow. the Comiche and the
Camargue -all of which
averaged 11 miles pergallon.10iR
town and 13on the road.
The Jaguar X-12 also averaged
JI, nine in town and 140ntheroad.
In the overall eity·bi&bwa.11
figure, the winning Chevettq was
a manual transmlssicn witb a
98-cubic inch engine. A secOnd
Cbevette with a llkllblc lncb
encine,.came in second in that
catefory at 32 miles1per gallon as
did a Renault 5 with a 79-cubiC!in-
ch eneine.
Heie are the others in the top
five in the city-highway aver"ge
group:
Peugeot 504 diesel and Peuieot
504 diesel wagon came in third at
30MPG.
In fourth place at 29 M~G were
Audi Fox Manual transmission
97-cubic inch; Audi Fox station
wagon. 97-cubic inch, Ausfin
Morris MG midget 91-cubic inch.
Chevrolet Chevette automatic
transmission, Datsun ~O
automatic transmission, Sa
wagon·, Tri um pb Spit( re.
Volkswagen Dasher ,and
Volkswagen Dasher wagon. 1 " Firth place at 28 mp MPG were
Audi Fox automatic
transmission 97#cubic inch. Aµdi
Fox station wagon, Ford Pinto,
Subaru automatic transmission,
Subaru wagon.automatic, ToyOta
Corolla, Toyota Corolla wagon.
and two additional models of the
Volkswagen Dasher.
100°/o
COTTOM
TERRYCLOTH
...... S)9~ ()orly , .. _.,.
a.,_$JAt
QUI LTED
FABR ICS
ht s1•~ ..~ .
.. $4.tl
\
•
-,.
DAil. Y PILOT
.Jast ••
. '· '\'\ I r-_. :• ,
':'.'>'~ wid1 ';·.:-. ... ·:, Tom .( 11rphine
LATE RALLIES DEPT.
Ev<l')'thing that the kid& have·
feared would happen during the
doldrums or a mushy summer bas
now developed here along our
OrmgeCoast.
F1rst, while they were all out of
school, we didn't get any summer
weather. Now that school has
started, the Indian Summer ever-
ybody ha~ been talking about ac·
tually comes along. With it, over
this past weekend, came some
sizeable surf for the surfboarding
:>et,
Judging from surfers I watched
over this past weekend, you can
bet they were sulf ering more than
just the Monday morning blues to-
day. Total exhaustion would be
more like it. The surfers sef'..med
to be trying to make up for an en-
tire flat summer in just two days.
LET'S FACE IT; we've had ·a
couple of seasons now that ha-
ven't been too hot for those who
like to ride waves. Why, we havt:
kids now who are two years old
and still believe lbe Pacific Ocean
is always fl at .
We bad some weekend visitors
in our region wbo also believed
that the sea was always in a placid
condition. Early news reports in-
dicated, for example, that within
a 30-minute period Sunday mom-
ing, 11 sightseers got swept off the
Dana Point Harbor jetty by a
series of rather largeseasurges.
You suspect that these people
probably saw the surge coming
but they simply didn't believe
their eyes.
Seasoned r e sidents of our
shoreline probably could have
given these people a lot of advice
on what to do when st.anding on a
jetty and faced with a larie body
of waler moving their direction.
~. BELIEVE .your eyes.
SeCiondly, you might try tunning.
U "'"1 coµldn't run, try to find
something nice and solid to bang
onto -like your mother-in-law.
All of that failing, a prayer, brief
and to the point, might be In order.
On the otller hand, there aredif-
feont approacpes when you are
ally if the water' and large
s ibrupUy ,looma up ln·front of
• t~ ~it~tion. th~e are
81 •nri>l•b... The -~ scAnllfie is tb~W",lS sw\111 Ofltl tolhnl'llle nlilll!, 1-DI-:
~ry Is you'll get thniugll It
l>«ol'eit gets through )'Oil,
• 1''91ing.that, 7ou can try diving ~ it -if there ls any water
bOOeath Jt to dive Into, that 1s: I~ing that, you. may Simply =. µie liottom in front of th•
· g water, roll up Into Ii lit·
ti ball. and bold your bands·over
Y\l!& ears. Yo.u do that so you
~ looe YCjll! earplugs when
yqia.are cannOi>ballecl up onto the
sQ6nline)<eJP beda~
J!'YOUCAN'Tremembertodo
-of these thihgs. tlien just do ~all the oilier toutjsts. Tlirn
y4ur baek on UJ,e incoming surge
aDa·wave goodbye to yOI& frien,ds
ub'oa the beach.-
jm'eallty. all this iilvlceisoflit-u ~uence. People de> what !11'\Y want. A few yean back, we
b~ a tidal Wfl,Ve warning off
88Jb0a. Police wei-e si>rea®ai a ~-Bui folks rushecldOwn to
~ P'!-~h in droves. They wanted
~viewoft.hetidalwavewben
it:ilnick.
;they're the same people who
ww.fd climb· a skyscraper sotheY
COUid really feel the earthquake
'tbit.
Parents
T~easure
Letter
ROSEA U, Minn . (AP) -"I
will love you for the rest or my
life," Jon Lynn Ber gland told hls
p(lfents in a letter that was sUJI
unmai!_ed wh en the teen-ager
died in an auto accident. I
lt was found among his belong.
ings last month after he was
killed in the accident near the
family farm at Roseau, Minn.
His parents, Re p . Robert
Bergland, 0 -Minn., and his wife,
Helen, call it "the most prized
possession'" they have.
AI Eisele, the Washington cor-
respondent for the St. Paul
Pioneer Press, r eported the let-
ter in Sunday's dn.tions.
The letter ·was written
sometime the past year. The
parents, who have six other
children, said they released it
because they wanted it to serve
as a testimonial to their son and
to inspire other parents who have
suffered a similar loss.
The single-spaced, typewritten
letter to "Dearest Mom and
Dad" incl udes a reference to a
childhood accident in which Jon.
who was 19 when he was killed,
was severely burned at age 6. He
had extensive surgery.
Excerpts, with the misspell-
ings, include :
··1 know it m ay seem that I was
not always g ratfull for my
mother and father, but, I, after
Jooking at all of the other kyd 's
parents. I relise how lucky 1 was
for having you two as parents.
There were limes when 1 could
not see your logic you used in
raising me. But I now see I must
have been the richest guy on
earth to have you two as parents.
"I hope all .of my brothers see
someday, as I do now, bow lucky
and rich they realy are. I do not
think you goofed once in the r ais-
ing of me. You have given me all
that I have ever needed, you have
given me: Love, money when I
need it, attention when I needed
it, you have given me a good
education, you. have given me
common sense, and a realistic
look at life and the world.
''MoM, I know there were
times when I tried my hardest to
get under your skin, but you have
always ti:eated me right. Dad;
hang on to Mom, I know there are
a lot of people wbo search all of
theirliv.esforsomeooelikeher.
''M'om, I would like to thank
you very, very much, for loving
me enough, and caring for me
~h to work with me When I
was burnt. For straightning .my
legs out so I would not be a crip-ple all of my life.
"Dad, I thank you for being
such a great father. For taking
me camping, for taking: me hunt-
ing and fishing, and teaching me
how to be a real man. I hope that
some day I am hall the man you are.
''H I ever get married and
have kyds. I hope I can raise
them half ~s good as you raised
me.
''Thank you for everything!!! I
am happy. that I realized. bow
lucky J realy am befor I left
home, so now I have this op..
pertunity to thank you, an op-
pertunity not all childm have.
· •'Thank you Mom and Dad for
being so loving.''
''Jon.''
In a P.S. he said 1'I will Jove
you for the res t of my life, no
matter what may come up in the future.'• .
I
Hard Landing
All en Wooten , 22, of Rocky Mount, N.C., manages a
s mile and an "OK" sign from his hospital bed Sunday
after s urviving a 4,500 foot plunge when his main
parachute failed to deploy and his reserve chute became
e ntangled while sky-diving. Wooten landed in1a large
mud puddle, fracturing two vertebrae, but otherwise
emerged with only scratches and bruises.
Kissinger Urges
New Peace Moves
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Secretary o! State Henry A.
Kissinger proposed new Ameri can initiatives today towards
peace in the Middle East and Korea.
In a major speech to the United Nations General Assembly.
Kissinger suggested that one next step in the Middle East could
be an "informal multilateral meeting" to decide where to go
after the fulfillment of the interim accord he has negotiated
between Israel and Egypt.
American officials said Kissinger already had broached the
idea to Soviet For eign Minister Andrei Gromyko and that Russia
-but not the Palestine Liberation Organization -would be in-
cluded in the inlormal talks if all states concerned agree.
Bnnat Batile Rages
. BFiIRUT, Lebanon <UPI) -Street fighting exploded again in Be~t s eastern suburbs today despite efforts of high-level
Synan mediators ~o make a weekend cease-fire effective.,
Moslem leftists and right·win1 Christians fou1bt with , machine guns. mortars and ( J grenades. Snipers J,ired at JN SHORT . pa••ersby rrom roctrtops _ despite a govirnmenl pledge
· tD hunt them <town. Sunday
had been a day of COl'Qparative calm following agreeriJ:ent on a cease-fire Saturday night.
Brezhllf!l' l'le-l"M!t,
· MOSCOW (UPl)-Sovlet Leader Leonid I. Brezhnev said to-
day a new Soviet-American arms treaty would be an event of
world importance lasting dozens of years.
"It would go out and around the earth like r-.adio waves ''
Brezhnev told the five U.S. and Russian spacemen who docked. in
orbit last July.
StrUceHli• Bon-
BOSTON (AP> -Public schoolteacberli seeking more
money defied a court order tOday and struck Boston's 84,000-pupil
school system, which began its.third week under court-orilered
busing.
Members or the Boston Teachers Union, which rejected a
last-minute contract offer from the Boston School Committee
Sunday, set up a picket line this morning at the city's •
Charlestown and South Boston high schools. areas that have de-
monstrated the most opposition to busing. A union spokesman
said nearly 5,000 city teachers were expected on picket lines to-
day around all 262 schools.
2 Die in Crash
KINGSBURG (UPI) -Two
persons were killed t?arly today
when a gasoline tanker truck ex-
ploded and burned after colliding
with a car near here. The
California Highway Patrol said
the collision occurred sborUy
before 6 a.m. at the intersection
of Highway 43 and Conejo Road.
Murder Pro'bed
In Myswrious
Injury Deaths
\'Showers Sprinkle East
I · Pctkhy Cwuds Dot Pacific C008t States
MARION, DI. (UPI) -When
Al Schutzenhofer tool! bis 3-year-
old grandson to a local hospital
for treatment or a small head
gash last October, be thought
there was nothing to worry
about.
But Brian Scbutzerbofer died
shortly afterhewaslnjectedwith
what appeared to be a local anesthetic. · Te•JN!••••rea
f
Mtttl Uw Pt ... .. ., " .. .. " • •t .GI •1 n .i:z " "' ...... .... .. " 9:1 •t " .. .. ., " .. ., •1 .1' ;; : :: ..... u
71 M .tt .. 0 .01 ., .. ..._ ,,.
" " .. ,. : ;: .... • • :; : ,, .. .... .. " ';! :
'
JQOO >0.11
..
.. muttwr?I t1't c:il Flof'lda Ind '"""' on.rt Sout,._1t and Ylll•V• of
CO<lfomlL
Three Illinois law enforcement
agencies now are investigating
the possibility that Brian and
21-year-old James D. Watson,
who 'died under similarly
m.ysterious circumstances. may
have been murdered.
. I'
Fiim• Th••••• Dence
Televl1lon
In the
DAILY PILOT
-----
Although officials at . M/l'!on·
Memorial Hospital in this
southern Illinois town became
suspicious of the two deaths
several weet1 alter they oc4
curred, they eonductal a private
Investigation for several months
before tumine the matter over to
Willlamaon _CDwlcy :;t.ate's At·
torney Robert HoWilorton in February. .
It w•sn't until Friday that
Howerton told the
Scbutienbofera and the Wat.Ions
thedeathsmtgbtbebomiddes.
•'They were not informed
earlier becauH of the -l!>illtr,
of .flllpg a civil law •u1~ •
HowertOn said. "I felt I c<luld
best protect the criminal case,
which i. my flnt duty, by pro-·
<eedlng·asldld."
"fi wu one of the hardest de·
clslona I've ever had to make,"
he saJd, •1but now there are aua·
-pect!'llrllln'nr.
fl
Fee fll!11109'ftl ~
Imported Fuel
Price to Drop 1
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
prlee of• g•llon of IJilportecl fuel
oil wlll drop 1.5 cents as the re-
sult of the Ford adrnlnlltr•tlon's
declJion. to remove.UJe_ ~11-
•·barrel import fee on relined
petroleum proauct.s. offleiala
say.
Federal-EnetlY AdmjnWrator
Frank G. Zar)> allbOUllCed' the
move SUllClaj •nd said President
Ford will decide 1000 whether or
not to remove a $2·per·bahel fee
oncrudeoilimports. , ,
lln!~g the 60-cents !ee came as a r nse to the abrupt lapse
in price cofttrols on most
domestically produced oil, which
could result In bi9ber.priees and
spur inflation:
Removal of the fee on refined
imports, (1nt imposed· in April
I~, fulfUled a pledge made by · F to act if domeStic controls
t ed. The anllinflationary
move was made retroactive to
Sept. 1 when domestic controls
lapsed.
IQ the absence of price con-
trols, refiners and importers are
not legally bound' to pass on the
saving to consumers, but Zarb ·
said he believed they would pass
the benefits along because of cur-
rent market resistance to higher
•prices.
The 00,.cent fee covered refined
fuel oil , gasoline and jet fuel. 'l'he
expected 1.5-cent reduction in
prices will primarily affect the
..
\. I '_,
ATTACK PLA DENIED
Emperor Hirohito
I \ . ;.
earl 11$-bor
~an Denied
By Hirohito
TOKYO (AP) ~Emperor
Hirohito today derill!d·he helped
plan the Japanese ~\tack on
PearlJiarbor. .
Ttie 74.year-old mQDarch said
he received reports on military
operations beforehand but only
after every detail had been de-
cided by the military command.
· The emperor received 31
foreign newsmen. most of them
Americali, in a rare audience a
week before leaving on a visit to
the United States. The newsmen
were r!tQ.uired to submit 12 ques-
tions .. in advance and were
permitted to ask questions
elaborating on them afterward.
·Hirohito,, .who signed. the
Japanese declaration of war
against the United States, de-
fended his actions immediately
prior to ttie war, saying they
were in accord with the Japanese
constitution. .
American author: David
Bergamµrl, wi:ote in a recent
book that the empe_r:or was in·
tricately involved in the planning
and execution . of the Pearl
Harbor attack and was also a
leader of the militarist move-
ment prior to the war.
·Unsmiling aitd sitting on the
ooge of bis chair. Hirohito said he
had beard of the bqol< but did not
know its contents so would not
comment on it. But he added that
he bad always acted according to
the constitution.
Four of tbe wrt,tten questions
concetned the emperor's part in
the military buildup before
World War II. To all of them he
emphasized that he acted con·
stitutioltally. He also said-he was
New England and Middle Allon·
tic states where mOllt rellned Im-
ports are used. ~
· U.S. consurnptio_o. during
midwinter of 111t J~ ~ to'
aboUt %.4 milllon baiiillli dA1 of r
imported refined priiduc(a, the
great bulk of lt for fuel · O\l. 1
Ref med imports made. up about
14 percent or the ~atlonal total af
refmed petroleum products com ...
sumed last year.
If P'ord also decides to drop the
$2-per-barrel fee on impc;rted
crude, the price ol petroleum
products nationwide is expected
to drop by about 3 cents per
gallon. But if oil companies raise the
price of the domestically pro-
duced oil that became free of
price controls Sept. 1, the retail.
price is expected to show a net in-
crease of about 3 cents a gallon.
according to admlni~tration
estimates. OiJ producers thus far
have generally . refr~ned from raising prices tn Vlew of the
move under way in Congress to
reimpose price controls. ·
Zarb warned that removal of
the fees announced that the ad-
ministration will collect all im·
port fees due from oil importers
for the months of July and
August. amounting to some $500
million.
The administration had offered•
to remove the fees retroactively
to July 1 if Congress woWd pass
energy legislation requested by
Ford. But congressional action
has not been taken and importers
have continued to charge con-
sumers for import fees Utrough
J~)'. and August.
'Li/ e' Asked
For Comatose
Injury Victim
MORRISTOWN, N.J. (UPJ) -
A public defender for Karen Ann,
Quinlan said today the woman, in
a coma for five months, should
not be allowed to die because she
has shOwn signs of life through
blinking ·ht¥'. eyes, 'ri>lling her
tongue and moving her mouth. •
Daniel R. Coburn, who was ap-
pointed to represent the woman's
interests after her foster parents
asked permission to remove a
life-sustairling respirator, draft-
ed his arguments for presenta-
tion at a Superior Court bearing
that could lead to a new legal de·
fmition of death.
Coburn, in his court brief, said
he opposes the wishes of Joseph
and Julia Quinlan because there
is "substantial doubt" in his
mind that the woman's brain has
ceased to f~nction, a factor that
could be . used in deciding
whether she is Itg3.lly dead ..
"Without debating the nioral,
theological or practical con ..
siderations in suc·h an applica ..
tion, it is absolutely certain in my
mind that such a request is, in ef ..
feet, asking this court to
authorizE'.: a mercy killing,••
Coburn said.
He said be visited Miss
Quinlan's bedside last week and
saw her eyes blinking, t.onglie
moving and mouth opening and.
closing.
Karen is a ••vegetable,•~ Mrs.
Quinlan said.
Mexican Bus
Crash Kills 18
CIUDAD OBREGON, Mexico
(UPI) -Police said today 18
persons were dead -seven of
them children -in an accident in
which a · bus skidded off a
highway and plunged into a
canal. Five other people were
missing.
The driver, Jose Luis Meza
Arias, wu one of the nine sur ..
vivors but~·s 14-year-old son
Jorge Ahlo o. was killed. -•
A police kesman said the
accident happened Saturday
when the steering on the 1956
model bus .broke, throwing the
vehicle out of control. It PIUDCed
Into the Alto Canal, part d the Ir-
rigation system in the Yaqui
Valley -one of Mexico's most i~portant grain growing re ..
.gions .
'
studying what he would say to the 0....._ ;Roi 0..._ American people about the war _.., ....... ..,
which be called the low point of \ 1' G••-his half-century ret. · Monday.Friday: If "°" do not hlY9 'tOUf' Pflper by &;30 p.m., Cllll before Hirohito said be id not wish to 1 p.m. anct' )'O\lr cogy .u1 t1e dft.. -say anything critical of the
military authorities of the pre-. S.untay·and Sul'ldav: If Yolt do'~
war years. He added that man.y : recelw YoU' cc»v by 9 a.m. ~ ~le were involved, a 'number i»y, or 8 1.m. Sunct:fi· c.wi befcn 10 of whom are still alive. 1.m.andYoUrcOpy nw,Ott~td.
~emperor emphatically .de-C~T•t 1•••• .
nl d th t th J "°"!lrongoC0Unly~'4Mh l ' e a e apaneae were Northweat Hun11ng1on Btlictt.
capable .of beinl led into a .new ,... w"""""'" ........ _,,..
era of militarism. He said be had &.r1ci.men1e. CllPl1trw108Nd! no worrtes on tbls score '9ecawse Sen Juan tepterrano. • •Jl.e.ILll:r..Ule.J~l&lllll,~-\;;::::Da~,,.=· ... :.:·~··:Sou:::•:•:t.....,.,::::::::~'.;) .Ji.J)'Apcoblb __...,,.,.,.. ... _____ .......,,
lion •. • •
J
•
• -. --'
. .. \ . OAILY'1LOT A~ .
Ford Unve~ Energy Plan
r "
SAN FRANCISCO
(UPIJ -Prttldent PW<t
said today he would ask
Congress to create a $100
bi.lliOn govemrnent cor-
poration to acc~lerate
research and devt'lorp.
ment of U.S. natural re-
sources and gi.ve the n•·
tioh enerey indepen·
dence within 10 years.
came about alx weeks
after the Id•• WU first
aubmtt'ted to him by enera advisors and Vice
President Nelson A.
Rockefeller.
Council h•~e acrutinlzed N•~en ta.Id the Prflei· produce or transporl '
the plan core!WJ17. It,_. dent Is not hl!PJ>f. with American energy;
p>rtedly mey involve an lhetltle ''ERFCO. ' -''Technolo&ies t
Fprd said theproDOOed
•·energy independence
authority will have the
power to take any ap-
proPrlate financial ac-
tjon -to borrow and to
lend -in order to get
energy action ·· by
private industry.
BUT HE SAID it would
''serve as a catalyst and ""'T......_. stimulant, working
·DEMONSTRATORS PAoTEST PRESIDENT f()RD'S STANFORQ SPCECH ~b, not in pla~ ol, ~•lkln Wai Dedlciltlon of N• L8w School Headqu1rter1 ~:~~~d$:~ billion
H : . kl. BOO F nl r.~ .. ;;:~~!~ii:l: ec e~ o privat~ efforts because :.&. 0 he estimated that "we
' ' will need over $600
• • billion of energy invest. 'He's. a Puppet, Rocky Pull.s Strtngs' ~:ts ov~r the ~ .. t de-
. · ' Ford outlined his plan
SfANFORD (AP) -The petition said the EA. R LIE It, Tim in a speech to the AFL·
About 300 persons studentsfel'-"compelled Cullinane, a spokesman CIO Buildin g and
THE CREATION o1 an
l"l~ncy to noat loans to
private industry for
energy research has
been under cons1dera-
tlon at the White House
for several weeks. The
ultimate coat la to make
the United States in·
dependent of fore.ign
energy sources.
Ford's energy ad·
visers and lhe Domestic
ouUayofasmuchaa$100 Ford cited three areas support America '
,billion, with the private ln which he want$ the n~leardevelopment;
sector footing the miU<>r proposed authority to -''Electrical powe
coats. concentrate: , from American coaf
FORD DID NOT 11 -·'New technologies nuclear and geotherm
oot all the detaila 0f~e . to :support or directly sources."
plan. which he said
wouJd need con -
gres_sional approval and
create complex legal is--
sues in its financing .
The came for the pro-
posed agency reportedly
is the "Energy Research
Financing Corporation,··
but Press Secretary Ron
~iittlrtnu·.s
BOOKS
OPEN
SOON
_: HAllUllS • PAr!JUl:lS • GlflS, ,..;f~~r.
J6t I. I 711i St. C-Mota • Wntpaft s., ... #5
fAcrc. .._~·Mid.I
PHONE: 64 IOOKS
Save an exba 7.50 by opening
yoar tax-deferred accoat in September
Now -two good reasons lo open your Tax-Del'!rred ReUremenl Account early;
1. Open your account in September and Fidellty Federal wilt ebsorb your entire $7.50 trustee
fee for 1975
2 . The sooner you do, the more interest you'll earn tree from 1975 Income Tex.
I.A.A. (Individual Retirement Account) -FOR ANY EMPLOYED PERSON.
U not covered by a Qualified retirement plan,'"' aside up to $1 ,500 et1rned income each year exempt
lrom current lederat income tax. No tax on current interest earned, either. Example: $1 ,500 deposlled
In an I.A.A. will reduce your 1975 income 1a11: by a minimum of S330 if you are In a 22% bracket.
Kit09h Ret1remenl Accounts lor lhe sell-employed also available -1975 trustee fee free In Seplember. Do II now!
d b It d the dir . for the nrotesting group 1 ID•U Y e an o seen y an ect1on your pre-which ~led itself the Counci as he neared the • COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH: 1855 Harbor Blvd.
19 ottlces to serve you statewide. waved critical placaitls sidency has taken." It ''People, Not Profits, end of a three day vi&ilto JeaM.ateav.-s Sunday as President criticized the President California. • ................ .
marched, booed, chant· lo Convey our distress in Construction Trades ,, F
Fonlspokeattheliedica-for allegedly failing to Coalition,·• said they His "announcement
tioo of a new law school support public service would try to make Ford ,--::.:_:.::_.::_::::.:_:::.:_:~:_:::_:::::._.:=======================================
b 'Id' aware of their presence u1 1ng at Stanford programs and failing to but not disrupt his
Univer&ity. control domestic oil speech. • The Pre;#iident ignored prices.
the demonstration,
though it was clearly in
his view about 75 yards R
in front of the speaker's enn.an platform. T~e noise ~ ·
drowned out bis address ·
Chairs
for those in the rear of 'S l ~~·"."d of 10.000 a ute to Ford'
The protesters waved
signs reading : ''Who SAN DIEGO (APJ -
ElectedYou,''''Fordisa Former California Gov. puppet_and,.Rock~.J>Ul;ls Ronald Reagan has ra: s~n,cs and .. Whip agreed to be co-
pe.nalism Now· chairman of a Salute to
SECRET SERVICF.· President Ford fund -
agents and heavily raising dinner next
armed members of a month for the California
Special Weapons and Republicanparty.
Tactics team from the Reagan's agreement
Santa Clara County to lend his name as co-
sheriff's office viewed chairman of the Oct. 29
the scene atop buildings Ford dinner was seen as
behind Ford. They were a gesture for party unity.
e q u l p p e d w i t h and not as a sign that
close of the three·day
convention of the
Republican State Cen -
t r a I Committee of
California.
The convention also
marked the first head-to--
head showdown between
Ford and Reagan
backers among
California's Republican
leaders.
At one paint Sunday, ,.
few delegates hissed at
Ford"s name.
l ... bi n~cular s, walkie Reagan is backing away
talkies and automatic from his expected cam-Water Ski weapons. paign against Ford for
A Stanford University the Republican presiden·
infotmat.ion officer dis· tial nomination tn 1976.
tributed a critical peti-The announcement
tion signed by more than was made Sunday by
200 of the University's GOP s tate chairman
487 law students. Paul Haerle near the
Only Skeleton Left
Holocaust
•
Destroys Pier
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Mop up operations
continued today al the charred skeleton or a gigan-
tic pier warehouse near Fisherman's Wharf that
was devastated by a roaring, explosive fire.
Champion
Flew Pot
SACRAMENTO (AP J
-Gary M Abben.
several times a national
water ski champion, is
under an eighl·month
sentence for helping fly
marijuana to California
from Mexico. Abben, 26,
was given the jail sen·
tence Saturday. along
with four years proba
til>n
He won the first of his
several national cham-
pionships while living in
Sacramento. Later he
moved to 1-Jawaii.
In less than four hours before dawn Su nday, the V' 'I t blaze turned the huge Pier 37 facility -983 feel 1g1 an e
long, 200 feet wide and about 30 feet high -into
smoldering wooden beams standing naked amid Gets Fm' e blackened debris.
AJso destroyed was an old ferryboat docked next •
to the warehouse and a smaller supply building con -In Death necting Pier 37 to Pier 35. A restaurant and a por-
tion of the Pier JS warehouse were heavily ..
damaged.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The rival United Farm
Workers of Cesar Chavez and the Teamsters Union
wound up almost in a tie SUnday after the first two
weeks of farm labor representation elections.
Meanwhile the issue of
union organizers' ac-.( J cessibility to farm Sta le workers begin rise in im-
'---------~-JX>rtance with a citizen's arrest of seven UFW
/If-, Dog Safe
LONG BEACH (UPI> -Two Santa Barbara fis-
hermen and their dog swam to safety on Santa Cruz
Island after their boat sank Saturday unaware that
the Coast Guard bad launched a massive air and
sea search for them . .
Jim Clark and Dick Reisner and a dog swam to
the island where they tlimbed a cliff and spent tbe
night in the home ol a Dr. Stanton. Stanton flew
them to the Oxnard Airport Sunday where they re-
ported the sinking to the Coast Guard.
THE
EARL'S .... _ ..... "'_.,,...
•II CQfole.
l9"ICI ftoll St.t.ITI ... ,. To.I tlOOll ...................
htUC.....c:.....,_ *°"""',,..., .. """""....., ANO'. l4fHffll
IU:.1....,......,._C....._
!;;~ \1 '4~i111 I
REVEAl.S In Ibo
TORRANCE (UPI! -
Darryl Fannin, one of
several persons accused
in the vigilante killing
or a man who stole a col -
or television set from a
friend, has become the
fir~t of the suspects to be
sentenced.
Fannin, who pleaded
guilty to one count of
false imprisonment. was
given a one.year sus-
pended jail sentence,
t;ned $200 and placed on
two years probation.
The victim, Joseph
Arce, 26. was pushed
over a 200-foot cliff onto
the Pacific Ocean Rocks
last June, two days after
the stolen television set
was found in his apart-
ment.
Police said Arce ap--
parently hoped to selJ the
set lo help support ·his
nar·coucs habit.
CLASSIC
GUITAR
INSTRUCTION
John K. Bent
Hunttngton Beach
960-1245
DA ILY PH.OT ,, ..... -------'!
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I
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
·Protecting Privacy
Government prying, snooping, data collecting
and unwarranted invasions of individual privacy
have become a growing concern for Americans in re-
cent times.
With the advent of increasingly sophisticated
computer syste ms, the average citizen has begun to
feel, with some justification, that somebody,
~omewhere, knows just about everything there is to
know about him. And even if his life has been pure as
the driven snow, the feeling is uncomfortable.
This Saturday, Sept. 27, the trend will begin to re-
verse. That's the day the Privacy Act of Hl74, signed
by President Ford last December, goes into effec\.
Late in October, the Federal Register will
publish a massive digest of all federal filing systems,
the categories or citizens on whom an estimat~ 100
agencies maintain more than a billion individual re-
cords, and procedures tofollowtoobtain personal files.
In December, the government will print for
public sale a booklet telling citizens where to write for
information on their files.
Thus, wilh some restrictions, it will become possi-
ble for individuals to find out just what the govern-
ment has in its records of his life. And, if errors are
found, to petition for correction.
In addition, the new law is aimed at "junking'' as
many governm e nt filing syste ms as possible, halting
the practice of collecting personal information not re-
le vant to a specific agency's job and restricting in·
ter-agency exchange of information. .
While the Privacy Act pertains to federal re-
cords, sta te and local governments will be expected to
follow the lead in controlling the flow of information.
Department of Motor Vehlclos.
Implementation of the law would be costly and it
may run into trouble with the governor, .
But many citizens would agree that stemm~g
this tide of uncontrolled governmental snoopery Ill
worth paying for.
Noise Enforcement
Last week's hearingsin Los Angeles on proposed
federal airport noise abatement regulations have
raised some questions on the part of local officials as
to how effectively they would be enforced.
The Federal Aviation Administration, which
'sponsored the special hearings, would seem the
logical choice since its mandated function is control
and maintenance of orderly aviation.
But some officials, including Newport Beach
Mayor Pro Tern Milan Dostal, allege the FAA's prime
purpose is to encourage expansion of, aviation. Dostal
said the federal Environmental Protection Agency
would be the best unit to enforce airport noise stan·
dards.
The EPA is developing expertise in air and water
pollution matters-much of it by trial and error. But it
probably would not be the best agency to regulate
airport noise, which is a: highly complex pr9blem re-
quiring refined teclmical knowhow .
The FAA, despite the fear of airport-shy local of-
ficials, is the only federal agency truly qualified lo
crack down on increasing airport noise problems.
•
' •
•
.]
r '
l
,.
The California Legislature already has passed a
similar law, covering five specific data-collecting
agencies: the State Universities and Colleges,
Employment Development Department, Department
of Benefit Payments, Franchise Tax Board and
Mounting pressure from all sides to curb the noisy
jets might be enough to convince the FAA to take
: agressive action. In any case, it would seem this
would bet at federal agency's big chance to prove its
stated goo · tentions with decisive action.
'Your puny laws do not apply t.o me!' .,
>l
Towering
Infernos
No Fiction
( PAUL HARVEY)
The book and the movie about
the, ''towering inferno," a
skyscraper fire which trapped
people on upper floors, was a
skillful dramatization but it was
no exaggeration or a clear and
present danger. In my bome-
b'5e city of Chicago the fll'e de-
ath rate is the
highest or ail
large cities.
.Yet, fire -
conscious as
the city
should be, il
continues to
build perpen-
dicular struc ~
tu re s
Michigan
'
Avenue is an alabaster·,
asparagus-piling people on peo-
ple hiaher and hiaher until they
are way out of reach for any fire·
fighting equipment so far de-
vised.
SKYSCRAPER fires are not
all fiction. There have been two
recent fires in Sao Paulo, Brazil ;
hundreds died.
Films of those fires are the
stuff of which nightmares are
tn'\de. And every big-city build·
ing pfficial knows it can happen
here.
. When it does, it will be like the
sinking of the Titanic. Im-
mediately, a hurt, angry and vin-
dictive citizenry will be looking
for somebody to punish.
Skyscraper safety features
will be ·re-examined, some
closed down pel\ding mandalol'y
modification. The resultant
c_haos will deal a monumental
blow to the already overstrained
budgets of the big c1ties.
Los Angeles has made
spfinklers-every fireman's
chbice for effective fire fight·
iniJ-mandatory in all new build·
in~s taller than eight stories.
!!.1f:t will help. Nobody's ever
"1n killed in a building with
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Some prisoners count
cracks in cell waits. Some
count their days. Maybe
Vallerga can while away
the time assessing and re-
assessing the value of his
cubicle. A.R ..
~y Gii$ Cttmn1111t11r1 slrllmltwll "°' ~ 111111 ff Ml M<HHrlly N'tled t'w 'ftlw!. ol Ille lllWI~. '91111 .,_. pot
.......... GleM!yGn, CUiiy Pli.t.
sprinklers working.
HOWEVER the killer in most
·high-rise fires is not.flame, it's
smoke. So Chicago is presently
contemplating a building code
revision requiring compartmen-
talization-with each floor
divided horizontally-9.lld each
five floors separated vertically.
EBch of these compartments
could be sealed off to confine both
fire and smoke.
In fighting a high-rise fire lhe
biggest problem is gaining ac-
cess to the upper floors.
Elevators with heal·sensil\ve
controls stop running. And from
the outside, effeclive ft.re equip-
ment can reach upward only
about 119 re~t.
New elevators installed in
Chicago are equipped with an
over·ride, making them im·
mediately available to fire
fighters.
FIRE Department helicopters
are equipped with "roQftop nets"
which can be lowered to a rooftop
or an upper window to rescue
trappod persons one at a time,
unless the fire has made such.
headway that violent updrans
wreck the chopper.
And fire prevention is less ef·
fective as arson becomes more
frequent. The National Fire
Protection Assn. counts more
·than 100,000 fires "purposely
set·· in the Untled &ates last
year, three times more than 10
years ago.
The mercenary and the lunatic
add a terrifying new dimension to this already worrisome
hazard.
••
"' • o>
Co•plder Sgste-. Misused"! " ,,.
'" •
FBI Still Tabs Noncriminals •j
i•
WASHINGTON -The com·
puter system, .which the FBI is
supposed to use in its war against
crime, has been misused to keep
t3bs on noncriminals. For years.
the FBI has operated a National
Crime In -
formation
Center, which
is equipped
with a multi·
million-dollar
computer .
This is now
crammed with informa-
tion about
'criminals ;
The purpose is to heJp police
throughout the country id .. tify
public enemies, par~cularly
fugitives on the lam. ·
An Arizona highway
patrolman, for example, may
stop a speeder who appears sus-
picious. The officer could query
the FBI computer center and
might discover the driver is
wanted for kidnaping in Maine.
IT WAS never intended,
however, that this all-knowing,
never-forgetting electronic con·
trivance should be used to· store
information about noncriminals.
Such misuse, if it should get out
of hand, could extlnguish forever
the right of privacy. It could lead
to a computerized master file on
all Americans. At the press of a
button, the computer could pro-
duc~ any person's entire life his·.
tory.
In 1971, the FBI began u>ing its
master computer to monitor the
activities of noncriminals. The
names of more than 4,700 non·
criniinals were ''flagged.''
The FBI abruptly ended its mis·
use .of the computer center in
February, 1974, precisely lwo-
days 'before Sen. Sam Ervin, D-
N .C., opened bearings on federal
snooping. .
But Ervin's successor as head
of the Senate Constitutional
Rights subcommittee, sen. John
Tunney, D-Calir., has now wrung
a reluctant confession from the
Justice Department that the FBI
had perverted the criminal track-
ing system to keep an electro~c
,;' • American technicians manning
. the observation equipment. The (JACK ANDERSON J intent,ofco~rse,istodisruptthe
truce. .
. -ACIA report allegesthatSov-eyeonnoncriminals. iet money has been passed under ·
••FLAGS were used to help
locate individuals in matters wherein the FBI had the obliga-
tion to determine their
whereabouts,·· Deputy Attorney
General Harold Tyler conceded in
a private letter to Tunney.
The letter stressed this was
done. as a "pilot program," in
"national secqrity•• cases1 The
ter~ "n'Btional security" bas ~e<Uli the pas~ lli>wevei-, t0
include contr9versi1l lmovie silll"S. football players, politicaJ..
leaders, newspapermen and even
presidential candida~ .•
An FBI spokesman emphasized
that the 4,70(» noncriminals,
whose names were fed into the
computer, were ''under FBI
jurisdiction.·' As he explained it,
for example, a potential draftee
who failed to report to the Selec-
tive Service might have been
"ftaeged."
the table to brtbe one of
Portugal's top rulers. We are
checking out the details.
-Japan's Defense Minister
Michita Sakata bas given ·secret
assurances that the U.S. can use
military bases in Japan to resist a
North Kof'•an attack upon South
Korea. Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger, meanwhile, has made
someanU.·iJ apanese cracks inside
. t@e~ret.-P<>licy councils. "'ti ~Jliellibphoflranhasconfided to visitors that he 'hopes to bring
di,pfomatic-Pressure to exclude
both the u.i;. and Soviet neets,
.. flt'St, from' the Persian Gulf and
then from.the Indian Ocean.
-THE SOVIET KGB, accord-
ing to intelligence reports, is en-
couraging Arab extremists to
step up . their revolutionary ac-
tivities against the oil sheikdoms.
Both Algeria and Libya are
cooperating, at least indirectly,
with the KGB, the reports allege.
--Of all the oil countries, Sall<ii
Arabia stands alone in seeking to
hold off an oil price increase.
Seven of the 13 oil cartel mem· 11
bers led by Algeria and Kuwait, :n
wan£ a stunning $2-per·barrel in·
crease on October 1. The fiv'e ·re-...
maining oil countries are willing
to settle for $1 per barrel more. t',
-Egypt's President Anwar ,;
Sadat is qui~tly seeking from the .;
U.S. $250 million in economic aid
and favorable terms for the
purchase of up to $1 billion in J I
military equipment.
-The Chinese Communists i1
have gained the ear of the rulers
of Indonesia, Malaysia, the 1~
Philippines, Singapore and
Thailand. Signifieantly, the IO
Chinese are whispering anti'-~1
Soviet, not anti-American re·.
marks. ~(.
-The underdeveloped, third·
world nations are trying to get
their hands in Uncle Sam's :ll
pockets. It's all part of their cam· •s
paign to redistribut~ the world's ~1
wealth from the rich nations to
the poor nations. One suggestion, i'
brought up in the back rooms of '"
Washington, is that lhe U.S. put :"'
the third-world nations on the
spot by offering a program to -1
concentrate the aid upon the 30 or
40 most impoverished nations. •-:
Th.is would bypass the nations
raising the loudest holler.
Senator Tunney is suspicious
that the FBI computer bas been
used to keep track of
Congressmen. ·He asked the
Justice Department Pointblank
whether the FBI bad any.
Congressmen in the unag file.''.
Taylor artfully dodged the ques-
tion, but the FBI vigorously de-
nied that any members of
Congress had been monitored.
Films Dim Classics '
The spokesman also pointed out
that the computer center was not
under the FBl's sole jurisdiction
but was govetned by a 26-man
board, including various chiefs of
police.
The skeptical Tunney,
meanwhile, is pressing the
Justice Department for more·
specific answers. He is concerned
that the miSuse of the computer
may be a federal violation. •
INTELLIGENCE DIGEST:
Once th' lsraell·Egyptian
agreement is implemented, an in-
telligence report Warns, Arab ex-
tremists plan to inf ii tr ale into the
neutral zone and kill some of the
I dragged these weary bones to a highly touted "Film Festival"
not long ago, hoping to improve
my appreciation of the cineJ'nato-
. graphic. art -bui leaving, as
before, with the convict.ion that
-rum as an art
medium does
much better
with the
second-rate
than with the
first-rate.
Greatness
in a novel .or
in a play does
not transcribe
itself well oo-
to the screen; perhaps a great
work« irt has to be written for
the screen itsell, as. its primary
mtdium, and, not adapted from
book oi: stage.
•
( SYDNEY BARRIS)
The ''scope'' that gives film its
exciting panoramic effect may
be the very thing that defeats \he
purpose of high art. When a mov-• l
ie does not try to do very much, il
succeeds admirably, in broad, : ••
commanding strokes. When, . .i
however 1 it tries to capture the · .-:
inner feelings of protagonists, ·~
then it falters and fails, tripped :
by its own cumbersome size and · 1
sweep .. . .i
Taxes Driving_, Out Business THE BEST movies I have seen
have bet!n second-rate literJry
works, such as ''Rebecca" 1or
"Gone With the Wind." And
"David Co~perfft!id," which is
not one of Dicken 's superior nov-
els, made an absolutely stunning
movie;. ''Ol1ver Twist," a far
deeper and true work, had to ~
musicalized a9d trivialized out of
EACH. ART form has its own
peculiar limitations, which may : -r
be organic; nor are they easily
interchangeable. The riovels of
Henry Jam es do not make good
plays, for what ls lost Is the "Iii·
terior movement'' within the .
author's mind.
Perhaps, indeed, one of the
measures of the greatness of a
novel or a play is its refractory
resistance to being changed Into
another. medium. It may be like
turning paetry into prose: If l~
could have been said prosaically
it would not have been Mitten a~
Poetry to begin with ..
ls the tax climate considered ( · )
· ba~ in Calllornia by business? EARL WATERS According to some analysts this s~e is ranked last out of the
s en western states and 47lh in tion undertook a study and has ·
th nation as one of being favora-releued an a'nalysis or the in··
bl to business! That rating is itial impact o£ stale and local
b ed upon the state's taxes and laxes. Its findings are that taxa·
th t~ of . legislation being tion in California is shared about
en ct · · equally between Individuals and
aced with the need of creating business. the Jatter paying S0.7 ~J!east 200,000 Jobs each year,. percent~ftbetotal. •'T"h views
dama1ing . COMMENTING ON the re·
t h e · , · search report. tbe MIOClaUon'a
e on o 1J1 l c vice president, Klrk Weal,
engtb or stated:
state. "Obviously busJness regards
R4por.tedlY. tax liability as parl ol ita operat-
n 1metou1 tng tosts. •• Observinc that many
fi 'ml ft•ve taxes are passed on to the con· • u t o o l e d sumer he said: ''Thus all taxes
f m t be can be view d as levies on
a St.1te · penonalincome.''
p-paatureawhUeothers The study meroly attempta to
fi eleeled not to setUe here. determlnewhlchtaxeaarelevied U"4 tax ti ability 11 blamed· on business versus thooe which •= lhe sta~ a place to are paid directly by Individuals
sumers, extremely difficult. To
dafe no commonly accepted
measure of final incidence has
been devJsed. '' .
Even though the consumer .
usually winds up paying most of
the taxes levied on business one •
way or another. the survi .. al of
many businesses depends. upon,
their ability to compete with
rinni baoed outsi~e QC the state
and not liable for Calirornia's
tax ea.
with state funds, local govern·
ment received a greater benefit
from the total tharf the figures ln,
dicate. ll also received subitan·
tial revenues from <ither local
taxes such as business licenses
and utility taxes levied on con·
sumers.
• · r~gnition in order to he made
pa1ata1'1e as a film offering.
'l'he great Shakespearian
plays, s~cb 8! "Hamlet," "lilac-THE LARGEST single source beth,'' tnd "Lear," have never
ol state income ls the sales tax been done well on the screen.
which accounted for $3.3 billion, Laurence Olivier's fdm riraion
a third of which, the study shQws• ol ''Hamlet'' was an unmitJgated
ls absOrbed by business altboucb disaster: and Orson ·Welles'
IN THE 1973·4.tax year theJ,"@l!Clrl tJlll,lcates 111.i l>UJ..q.f--""Mffbeth" was even ...rs.. (In
studied, Californians paid $16.6 th4t ls probably passed on to con-f1ct, Welles' beat effort was his ~billion to support state and Jocal sumers. • ''Citizen K1ne1: •• an oriainaJ
government. This is $6 billion MotorLvehicle 'taxes, including script. which, bean oul 'my more than spent by the rederal :fUel toxu, account fcr more than pOint:)
govetnnlent In 1940. Of course, ·SJ .4 blllion and, •lain. local 1ov-
the 1tate1s budget, exclusive of ernment aha re a in this. "In· THE KORE profound & novel.
local govern-ment expenditures, divlduala paid near $2 blllioo in «' play. the ~ess ~ tt
wu only sll1htly over $250 Income, taxes with hus~pay· -mstolendJtselflofllmtreat-
milllon that year. Inc slighUy more than SI. •billion. ment. PculblY thll Ja becauae
Ac,corMng to 'the study $9,4 -'tax" on....llquo<. cigarettes, prafundl.ty:.c-lala In dilcloalntJ;
billion was r,•id to the state. It horseraclng, lnauranioe and In· the lnn'1 lire of ebara<ten, In
was higher ast year ond, need· herltances raised another btllloa. · plaeln1 a micros._ !Al the
less to say ,.111 be grea~r this The report reachu no collclUJlon secret 1prln11 or lbi!ir -•a·
year, Locat' governm..,t received but one which tan easily be tlofta -where•• lllm, cm tbe-
OAANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robtrt N. Wetd, Psb1Ull1f'"
Thomaa Kenil, Editor
Barbaro Kmbidl_
Editorial Page Editor
..J'be.editotiaLpag~ ol uie Diiiy Pilot seeks to Inform and·
stimulate readers by ,praenUna
On this page dlvene commentary
on topics of interest b7 1yndi~1t· ed coilumnisls and t1rtoonlsta by
providlnc a forum for ~acter.·
view$ and by presenUng lhi• ntMpaper's opinlons and ldeP-on currot topics. The aiitor1al
OpinfON 01 the Dally PiSol a~ar 004' lnU..edltotlal col111111>atlhe'
·top ot tbe pa1e. Opinions ex·
oreatd by tbe columnist.. and
cartooailtt and letter wrtltn are
lhetr own and no t:ndonement ot ·
ui.tr views ~~ tlle Dally Pllol. should"" 1nr ..... ..i.
' I
l
I
fqml1 hu the second for, .. Weal uy1, "This com-
pel' c1plta )lurden of stale pllClled lnter1ctlon makes a de-
liical t1xu In thehatlon ttr'1111naUon of how much of the r-:--~ji0:-9ocerta!d-the reet1,-lht,_. busln•u-tax burden Is actually
• C~ T1.pa1en ~a-ahll\ed. to dlvl.duala u con-
Monday, September"22, ms
$7.4 billiqn from property taxes drawn, as tnnauon continues' to ofher hand, ta an enormoua
alone. Since those f\glll'H partly d rl v e gov er am en t cos ts ....,.,lfylq-'1111, lllfor~
rdloct the adopUon al 8 tmSSlve skyward, ls thal tax<S\"'1tf COD· \lithe craten on._-, 10 Iii
property tax relier program paid tinue to Increase. speak. --·---~----.,..::::========.;..;...--. • 1"' ·-
---
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"Hello -U. dictalff~ Thlo ii' Ille dlctatOR ... " •
•
In Texas To ...
'Shampoo' Yes
' ' Ren0ir-No
CORSICANA. Tex. '<Ul'I> -The difference
between a Renoir nude and the 11175 box otlice bit
"Shampoo'' ii considerable in Corsicana. ''Sham·
pao" is being held over at the local cinema while the
Renoir painting was jerked from a traveling exhibit
at a nearb.Y bank.
... Aa far u l'm coocemecl it (the Renoir paint-
ing of a nude woman u viewed from Uie back) un•t
correct,!' said W. D. Wyatt, president Or the First
Na~onal Bank. ••A few people In a community such
#this might not consider it art. They look at it as a
nude woman.••.
BUT TRE1PAIN'J1NG IS a nude woman, isn't
it?
"It is, -<yes,' it ts," Wyatt said. '.:.But some con··
sider it pornography. I ouly beard an expression.
from one Cr.esident) and that's all it would take for
me.'' . .
Wyatt said he didn't See the Renoir before the
''mutual'' de-:ision to keep it out of the bank display.
Gerry Crawford, manager of the Austin, Te.x.,
Art Gallery offering the exhibit, said the painting
was withheld for a combinatioh of reasons including
a cracked frafne.
'1THHY (THE BANK) DIDN'T WANT to show
it with the damaged frame and 811.' Crawford said.
"It worked out perfect, and we put it back on the truck.
''We dct36 shows a year and never had any com-
plaintl like this before." ·
Crawford Said none or the town's residents,
other thaq bank personnel, viewed the painting
beforeiit wis rejected. . r: ~ r ••. • , ,
••we ~brought it in and then tOok it down;/' be
said. ''The public never .saw it.''
WYATT SAID THE ·PAINTINGS which were
displayed, including num~rous pieces of Western
art, drew a fantastic response including viewings •
!rom high school art students.
But Pat Henderson, art instructor at CQrsicana
High School, said her students have studied nudity
in art and expected to see not only the Renoir but
also other paintings ''we didn't find .' 1
"Nudity as far as art is concerned has not been
taught to our general public," Mrs. Henderson said.
"My students have been taught it and they could
care less. We'll have to come a long way in
Corsicana. If they {adult residents> were to see
"Birth of Venus" it might throw them a bit.
"We are a conservative town. We're coming
slowly around. By slow education, they will un-
derstan!i that none of us were born with clothes on.''
Deaths .
Elsewhere
Deatlt Notlc!es ·
McWllllNY
JAY P. Mc:WEENY, r.5ldentllf Casbi
Miu, GI. O.t• of dHltl s.t>tfinl:ltf' t9.
1'7J In C.bi M.w. Survlwd by hl1wffe'
EllEAi.ttl McW..ny. $ef'¥ic91 will b)t
held Tund.l'I', 5-ptember n, aot t:to LONDON (A p) >M. St. JoM:tilm c.1rio11c Ct1urc11. ,,.. l•r1n9nt, Br•lllwood C.m•l•ty In British film and stage ac· ar--... c.. a~tl·S.reeron Cose•
tress Pamela Brown, 58, MINdlrKtorl. •
·died Thursday . She : LAYM.a•t'
began her career at the WARREN r. LAYM.¥1, rnldlnt o11
Sbak M 'a) U19Un9 HltlMI, C.. 041ti-9f OMltl S.. espeare emon ...,.... t1, ms. SUrtl\lt'd by 1111 ..,,.
Theater in Stratford-on· c-i; ..... -· rooct w. u"'*'_. Avon in 1936 and went on J•"'" L. u.,m•n; on• Nuotit•r. • . • . Lwinda s. a...~ Slntk91 _,,. heM to costar with Sir ..... ~.s.riit•;;lflllr221t2:eo
Laure C.oll i · stag . PM.c.-oe1Mar01""1.1~ n v er in e ... 1 ...... ••ltl-·llr...-on c-o.t versions of Hamlet and ,...,111,.ton.
King Lear.
1.U'n .... CiHOM
M•l.ALHOMI
Corona del Mar 673-9450
Costa Mesa
llU. HOADWA Y
~ITU.UY
110 Broadwav. Costa
Mesa
642·9150
McCOIMICK
MOITVAIY
L90una Beach
494-94\5
San Juan Cap~trano
495-1778
PACIACYllW
.....OllALf'AH
eem.tarv Mortuary
Qi1pel ...__
s&oo Poolflc View Drive . N-Beach,
C.llfomi•
844-2700
MACHADO
MICHAl!:l. GEORGE MACHADO. "1HMt ., Otlno, CA. Dile Dll clMltl
~, 20, tf75. 5...,...1wc1 by ril
Plf'9ftk. LM & lsMlll MKMclO; Sis..,.
B•thr• GOodrlth ; 1••ndmoU1er,
,MitlkU. MatMcto. ROMrY wlll be Tun-
caty, SeD\lmblor U. •t 1:3' PM, St.
Berblll'••s Glthollt 011,wch. Fun91411
mtu W.dlw•y. $ICll:Mnber 24, t'7J,
M t0:1J AM, st. ••rMr1'1 Catllolk
ChW'Ch, dlr.c:ted lty P9111 f"•mllr
Colo11l•I Fun•r•I Home ol
WtttrnlMW, Q.
. .
•
I
'
Shell did a three-part test -of
spme of that mileage advice
you've been getting. The first
two parts showed the value of
good "mileage maintenance "
a.v. a.n,. The third part showed how
much we could stretch a gilllon of gas using
~only driving techniqu!!8 Doing the same
things might save you money. and the country
line gaso .
-Mileage sabotag~ •
To show the benefits of keeping a car in top
mileage shape. I needed 'a car that wasn't in
good shape So I got one of our Shell company
· cars and sabotaged it.
First, I putthecarslighUy out of tune. I set
the ignition timing back five degrees. Then. I
ma& it idle a little too fast and too rich.
'Next. I put on bias-ply tires instead ot
radi.iI. And I lowered the tire pressure riom
the proper 24 pounds to 19 ·
Then I put the -vheels just a hair out of
"·
Here I am v•ith the tet!t rar. Aft.er the sabotage \\'BS done.
I don't think the ear \.\'as in any \\'Clr'Se shape than
thousand& of <'lln on the road.
alignment (14 in. excess toe-in).
Finally, I put in a mileage handicap that
most people don't know about -single grade
30 weight motor oil instead of an all-season
lOW-40 motor oi l.
Phase one: I think there . . , . are a lot of handiCapped cars
Still wondering what it
was all about, our Z!
test drivers took turns
driving the course, a
22-mile path that
included both in-town
:.--.u and highway driving.
The <bivers didn't know Each was instructed to
\\'e had installed this • • h precieion fuel-mea!!wing drive .in his or er
equipment in I.he trunk. usual manner.
After each driver's turn, I sneaked a look at
the special mileage meter hidden in the truiik.
Average for all Z! drivers -13.6 miles per
gallon.
Now here's a bit of a shocker.
According to the best infonnation I could
find, 13.6 mpg is "'If bad miltage '.for a car of
this make and year. . ~
So, while I can't say there's another car
with.exactly the same handicaps, I figure that
a 1ot of cats probably have mileage bandicap6
just as bad as our test car. ~ • ....... ._ ~·
Phase two: What's pod
ilileip llllintenwe WMh?~
After all Z! drivers had finished, I set out to
undo the sabotage.
S"y changing from bias-ply tires to· steel
radials at the right pressure, we expected ~
improve gas mileage. about se~en percent.
•
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·-· S!p4!*22. 1975
DAJLYPILOT
tests incf1eate that a lot save nearly 3 months'
ine annually. COuld you?
By Dave BeITY, Shell .Mileage Expert
.,
Our tM. group \\°&I made uji of ordinary cbiven. Overall
mileage impro,·ement \\"88 23.5 percent
We looked for a five percent boost from
correcting ignition timing.
An improvement of about four percent was
expected from correcting the idle mixture.
And, ~ugh we couldn't say how much,
we expect'ed to save some fuel by getting the
wheels aligned, correcting the idle speed.
and changing from single grnde 30 weight
motor oil to a multigrnde IOW-40.
When the same 23 drivers drove th e course
a second time, without knowing the car had
been changed, they averaged 15.6 mpg. An
improvement of 14.6 percent -~wo miles per
gallon better.
or course savings will be different for
different cars and drivers.
How to figure the real cost
of mileage maintenance
Obviously it pays to make mileage improve-
ments like proper tire pressure. But what
about a tune-up or nidiaI tires? Is the ga8 you
save worth it? ·
Let's take a tune-up as an example.
It could easily reduce gas consumption by
fi ve percent. For the average driver, that
would be 371'. gallons a year, enough to offset
a large part of the price of the tune-up.
The point iB, when you're deciding to have a
particular job done on your car, don't forget .to
cofisider the potential gasoline savings, too.
-Of course the best gas stretcher of all costs
nothing. It's the way you drive.
Phase three: .. Pretend it's
your last gallon"
That's what I told our test drivers when we
started the third phase. We wanted to see
how much farther a gallon would go when
they used good mileage driving skills.
Here's what I told them to do.
One: Accelerate gently. You don't have to
I "''etlt along to ~keeat drive" iJ'I the third phase of the
te8l. My ~ tipe helped the test group .verage an
ldctitional &9 percent improvemenl
Cl'f'£1J away from a lignt. Just take it easy.
'l'wo: Anticipate st.ope. Take your foot off
the gas and let the car coast up to the
intersection.
Three: Don't go toofastottooslow. Mostcars
get their best mileage around 35 mph. We
didn't go over 50 on the heways.
Four: Get into high gear quickly. If you have
an automatic, learn to "feel" the shifting.
With these tricks, our test drivers got an
average of 16.8 mpg. An additional S.9 per-
cent for a whopping fl3 .5 percent over the first
run. That's equivalent to nearly three months'
worth of gasoline per year.
Think of the value of
just one "'°''tb:'s gasoline •
Maybe YOIJ1' car iB '!lreadY-fn good shape. Or
may!>\! yon 'can't afford repairs righl now .
But remember, our drivers saved nearly
enough with the drivi11g techniques alone to
add tlp to a month's supply each year.
And they didn't creep around at a snail's
pace to do it either. They averaged 33 minutes
to cover the coun;e in the first two runs and
only six minutes longer "vith good mileage
driving techniques. That's a small inconve-
nience for the potential saving. ..
Stop by your participating Shell Station for a
r?.ie set of these Mileage Markers. On your
speedometer, they remind you (not t.o men-
tion others who drive your·car) at \vhich
speeds most cars get the best mileage.
Talk to your Shell Dtaler if you have
questions about the condition of your car. He
may be able to help.
l Cheek the Shell lineup for the right gas<>-
.;,. line for your car.
Shell Super Regular linl eaded• has good
driveability to fight staLiout an<l hesitation.
Its excellent detergent properties help keep
your carburetor clean, and lhal°s good for
mileage.
In addition, its octane rating is higher than
th e government·required minimum for
unleaded gasolines, so it can sto1> knock in
many '75 cars.
Super Shell has the same good driveability
and detergent properties as Shell Super
Regular Unleaded. Use it for top-rate per-
formance in pre-1975 cars that require high
octane fuel.
Shell Regular is our lowest priced gasoline.
'If your car runs ,,·ell on regular, use it.
• M011l la te modelC'arseanuse unleaded gasoline. To makr
certain that your car can, check your o"· ner' s manual.
Any questions? Write me.
Just write Dave Ben-y, Shell Oil Company,
P.O. Box 61600, Civic Center Station, Hous-
ton, Texas 71208. I'll try to give_ you answers.
I'll also send along a copy of our booklet,
"Confessions of a Mileage Champion."
•
Peop!e
working
. with energy
.47
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A• DAIL y PILOT Monday, September 22. tW-5
BY the Associated Press ..
The following are Billboard's hot record hits for
the week ending September 27 as they appear in
next week's issue of Billboard magarine:
HOT SINGLES
I. I'M SORRY -John Denver RCA
2. FAME -David Bowie RCA
3. RHINESTONE COWBOY -Glen Campbell
Capitol
·l. F'IGl-ITTllE llQ\VER Pt I -Isley Bros T
'.'leek
5 RU~ JOEY RUN David Geddes Big Tree
Ii. COULD IT BE MAGIC -Barry Manllow
.<\rista
7. AT SEVENTEEN -J anis Ian Columbia
H. WASTED DAY S AND WASTED NIGHTS -
f"r eddy Fender ABC-Dot
9. BALLROOM BUTZ ~SweetCapitol
to. FEEL LIKE MAKIN. LOVE -llad Com·
9. SPINNERS -Pick Of The Litter Atlantic
10. FLEETWOOD MAC Warner Bros.
EASY LISTENING
1. 1 · M SORRY -John D"'1ver RCA
2. I BELI EVE I"M GONNA LOVE YOU
Frank Sinatra Reprise
3. AIN°T NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY
Helen Reddy Capitol
4. I ONLY HAVE EYES FOR YOU -Art
Garfunkel Columbia
5. DAISY JANE -America Warner Bros.
6. DA'.'ICE WITH ME -Orleans Asylum
7. SOLITAIRE -Carpenters A&M
8. BRAZJL -The Ritchie Family 20th Century•
9. THE PROUDONE-OsmOQdsKolob
JO. I DON'T BELIEVE IN IF ANYMORE -
Roger Whittaker RCA
COUNTRY SINGLES
I. DAYDREAMS ABOUT NIGHT TIUNGS -Ronnie Milsap RCA
TOP LP 'S 2. BLUE EYES CRYING IN THE RAIN
I. JEFFERSON STARSlllP -Red Octopus -Willie Nelson Columbia
Grunt 3. I'LL GO TO MY GRAVE LOVING YOU -
2. OHIO PLA )' ERS -lloney Mercury Statler Brothers Mercury
3. THE EAGLES -One OJ These Nights 4. IF I COULD ONLY WIN YOUR LOVE -
Asylum Emmylou Harris Reprise
~. BRUCE SPRINGSTEJo::N -Born To Run 5. Tl-IE FIRST TIME -Freddie Hart Capitol
Col un1bia 6. HOPE YOU'RE FEELIN' ME Like I 'm
5. JANIS IAN -Between The Lines Columbia F'el'lin· You -Charley Pride RCA
7. DON.T CRY JON I-TOUCH THE HAND -
6. ISLEY BROS. -The lleat Is On Featuring Conway Twitty MCA
Fight The PowerT-Neck 8. YOU NEVER EVEN CALLED ME BY MY
7. ELTON JOHN -Cnptain Fantastic & ThC' NAME -David Allen Coe Columbia
Brown Dirt Cowboy l\1 CA 9. SAY FOREVER YOU 'LL BE MINE -
,
. Chaplin '~Iayed' Ra~io
Q: Sellle a bel. A friend laslll1 Cba(Ue CbapUa
«le'f perfor med oa radio.. We u 7 ao. Wbo wlD1? -
Mr, iui.d Mn. lob• E. Downey, Columbaa, Obie>.
A: Your friend does. Back In tile "30s, Now York
radio ataUon WOR lllMI b!c-nam• celebrities to IP·
pear on' a progr am called
"Hollywood" -lint created
'Glad Y.ou Asked that'
and aired a decade earUer. As A: Yes. The former Eliubetll Taylor Hilton Wild·
Ben Gross tells it. even Thomas Ing Todd Fi•her Burt.on became EU.heba Rachel
A. Edison and CbapUn were when she converted to tbe Jewish faith several
penuaded to make their radio months before marry!nl Eddie Fisher.
debuts on that program. Charlie Q. Bow doe1 Btldlllte Mrclot feel aboat WOlll .. 'a··
was the m.ost dllficult to COD· U'! la abe rw or agla' It?.-tflellada Bllrbuk,
vince, saying; ''I've got to have Jackaoa;MUs.
• '
an act lb at will be dlllCl'elll." A: Agin' ii. The sexpot who made Ibo towel,
Whereupon the producers bad famous but ne\!er ou,w It in as she once th.reatened. M
'"""" ... '" one written for him, opening by to do, said; "Wonieo get more unhappy the mor~
the master or pantomime telhn.g h1B listeners: ''You they try· to Ube.rate themselves. Woman is a tender
will probably be surprised to hear tbat-<--1 am a and sweer))erson.-She-wt1Hose1batitshe1:rits-t.6-<·be--t;;-,
pianist," following which they heard a brilliantly like a man.•·
played solo. Then. in quick succession, Charlie ~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=~::-:::;.:~~~=f askedlor a violin, a clarinet, then a cello -on each :-
of which he displayed amazing virtuosity. "And The terrifying motiDn
now," be said "for a finish I shall play them all pitture from the
together." The unseen audience then heard them I :I'.• No.l beataeller.
actually played in unison -not by the comedian of errugurg •
course. but by the studio orchestra. 1 11111 ~,, ""'
Q: Wasn 't EJl1abeth Taylor once known as
Elilbeba Raebel? II io, when! -Mrs. Michael
Erlck5on, Arcadia, Cal.
-WILD
MS:UWD.~
... ----~
CHARLES BRONSON ~•~Wl...,.U ••
• MWS ,.,
SW-
c::I> ,, r•,\o ,,, I"' ' ' '\
8. ALLMAN BROTl-IERS BAND -Win, Lose Porter Wagoner & Dolly Parton. RCA l_,._w., M.,.,. ....
Or Draw Capricorn ~;;;;:;:;i::i'='iiii;i"-,~~~'O~.~H~O~M~E~~I~.o~r~e~tt~a~L~yn~n~M~C~A~~~~~~~__!:::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~"!~=='.:::::::::.'.':'.:'':::~==~============~==·=~=·="='~=:~~
"DEATH WISH"
r7i\'I• ., ...... ., W~$!.~!~.~ ~· CO•Ofol4 DIL MAit
WOODYAUEN
In
"SMILE"
IYl:S AOM 1
COl'IT. SUH. AOM J
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642·5678
"Y!SSONGS"
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"'THE OTHH StDI Of
THI MOUM'TAIM'"
7·1•.HW t.l:IM :tl-9'.11
"SISTERS"
t:MW S. l11M:41-till
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U.1'.A SUM.--Of'9t 11:)1
"'1'HI DOICIST"'
•M1551~ OF IYIL" Ill
'"TH! S.STHS""
-U.IDOZ"" 111
'"I.Oft AND DIA.TH" "SUIPlf" IPGI
Special Limited Engagement 7 DAYS ONLY
<OLOI
O> l!!l WITH RICK WAKEMAN lllY-
~Tm HOWE Guitlr • ---•AIM WllTl-
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MONTY PYTHON&
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RESERVEDSEATPERFORMANCES
SEPT. 2c.zs.ae. 71, 21, 2'1 30th
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GIVE 'DI BELL.
BARRY!
NEWPORT CINEMA
NEWPORT CENTER
"1he FarU>e-.,..,. al .... onlor"
IHI (PG)
IOllllM
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MY,UWEL'I"
ELUN BURSTYN
MAX YON SYDOW
HARIORTWIN
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CYRIL CUSACK
IAN HOLM
MICHAEL JAYSTON
VIVIEN MERCHANT
TERENCE RIGBY
PAU L ROGERS
inHAROLD PINTER'S
"The Homecoming"
Start• F;I,, Sept. 21
BRllTOL
CINEMA IV
MAKUBENfUI
LOOK UKE AN EPtC
rrs BETTER TMAH
"BUZING SADDLES" OR
J...<c-ri.n--..,..,01 "YOUNC FRAHKENSTEN'' --
THE DAllNOE.ST
THING YOU EVER SAW
HUHTIMGTOH ~ CtHIMA
47".ff.iij41.6011
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l90MER
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THE OPl'SA6AINST·
HIS SIJIMVAL
ARE Gf1'1'1N6'
PRET1Y HIGIJ
FUNKY WINKERIEAM
<,>O!.I WANT 10 BE A
MAJOREliE, WICKED
WANDA'?
FIGMENTS
NANCY
•·• I'M VERY
PLEASED THAT
VOL/RE 50 FOND
OF MY
DOG---
l TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE • f · ACROSS , 51 SUmmons
1 Actreu -62 T~lned
Sow Wilk
I TruclQe ' 54 Fi.
10 The llBt 58 Food ~~I Golpe!: Abbr. thlekener
1• UrtJcana ell let house
15 Napoleonic e1 Old 11. pllylna r
Yiclory Sii• card
111 Olwlng1 82 Ftd1.
17 Nllrlcand .J.3 Seed
citric • · append9ge
HI Tu~lsh 64 Ammonia
oenera11 compoul'ld
111 Urge num-65 Vended
ber :YM. 66B~Oltht
20 sawea neck
22 Hurrl111 67 Flrat USSR
2• Cr911'10na preml•
vlollnmaker DOWN
211 Dlstlnc1M 1 Clelnlng •
" ' " 11 £ s s
odors wom1n
'l1 Contended 2-P1rultlc 12 DerideWlth 39 NewBrvns-
30 No. c.olll\I 1n1ects contempt wlcit native
r"9r 3 Ra-Ii-: Rare 13 Lock ol l\alr 42 V1Juable
31 Fruit drinks bird . 21 Consume stone
32 Trll\S4)CISlng 4 81Qoage 23 Eerie 43 Title
31 w ... body hind..... 25 The NITltl in incotreeUJ
38 Thi landeCapl 5 Tlke I« ronn 48 Atr11ne ebb!'.
«I NIQatlwt grantlld ZT PIP8f ~7 Of tl'll mind
COttjunetiOn & Wiit finisher 28 Roman 48 Thf'OWS off
.. , Blrrow1 1 Ship'• .-.cord lheltert 49 Cottonwood
43 "SI~ book 29 Deno!• 50 Bil.-, prodUct Simon -• 8 Htrem tOOrfl 33 Lobby S3 lncnan city
pitman ... " t Shipwreck, for 34 Don Juan.'1 55 DeV1lera'1
,... Ovtcomeof one mottler land
lin.:t:Sullht 10Edgarlee 35'"10lrs" 5611,Nmtfor
45 Listed ·--:U.S. ret1n¥t Rhodes
lndMdualty poet 38 Reunion ~7 Actm• Anna;
48 Pool-sldo 11 comec:H1n 111endfte
11ructure Fred ··-38 Bakery Item 60 Facl1l leature
•
•
•
by Wa F. lroWll and Mel CoslOll
As ATIQAAEY &AM
DRIVER ENTERS IVS
APARTM.fHT OOILOING
AFT!:R A TIRIN(;, DAY.
HE IS CONFROKTED ~A 5TIW<GE
SCENE!·
MISS PEACH
---:-
by Tom K. Rye11
~ IFHf @
Sl«lWS UP, l'M
RUINEP.
by Dale Hale
by Ei Hie Bushmiller
MK ~OUR WHAT DO
MOM IF 5llE'D 'IOU KNOW
Lii« '0 00 A80ilT llOU5E
A HOl/5E SITTIN6?
SlmR
r •
' DOOLEY'S .WOILD ------I GEr I GE1" 1l> cuoosc
Al<Sf' 1Hf NICEST ONE !
CllOICE!
DR. SMOCK
GORDO
MOON MUWMS
•• ;:.
.,
'
Ht
' -COME?
bylail,..-
1
Hl Jl!Clil<.P
by George
•
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... ~ <=;;;....;;.....;:=..__,..--.i .__ ___ _
by Chcw les M. Schulz
!
ENOUGH!
WE\.i. STAY or~v
ABOVE MINI, GROOVY.
KEEP YOUR EYES ON US.
f
by Mel
THE GIRLS
-." 1
"I've worked for his kind-does nothiiw an day and •hen c:allt;...
into his off.ce minutes before qui":illC time 10 take dictation." ·
. ,----------·---
-
...
. . •
• • • l
l
l
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• 1 . for 10_;-\
8mS Stop~i8i7
'""ALLAS (AP) -The Los
elM Rama discoverecl S..n-
y thatp_e_l>uildupo In the
oolhall~ W<lll't llW you a nlck~l's worth of
~ct once the rel\llor season
.tarts.
Rams also learned Iha~
bjJe tlM: Dallas COwhoyir might
rebuil<ling, coach Tom Landry
arned his reputation through 16
earsOfNFtwatsondefense.
Dallas beat Los Angeles 18-7 -
It could have been much e.
llas intercepted Rams
erbaek James Harris three
es and limited the high-octane ~.Angeles offense to 20 yards
c•iDg.Harrlsleft the field in the
fourth quarter with ooe eomple-
lioo on 10 tries fOT' ftve yards. He
iiever moved Los Angeles into
Dallas!em!l!rr . -
'I'be-Gowhoys sc<nd on .field
costs or 25, 39, 19 aod 31 yards by
Toni 1'1-itscb, who also blew trt ..
from 32 and 28 yards. Doug Den·
Dison scored Dallas' only
touchdown on a one-yard plunge.
"A good Dall•• football team
Just whipped our butts," said
Rams coacb-:Cbuck Knoi..
•'Dallas's defense was outstand·
ing and put pressure op us aU day.
We have no excuses. We couldn't
get untracked, and Dallas bad a
lot to do with it. ·2
Landry's offense was also
something to behold with
I~ Sports in Bm/
J].S .. Clobbers
yder Cup Foe
GONIER, Pa .. -The United
sietes 'registered an overwhelm·
ifl)i 21·11 tnumpb SUoday as the
·Jtyder Cup competitlori ended
111\hough \lie British-Irish golfers
vagi!cl a bit of personal and na·
aJ pride with victories in four
the final eight singles
tcbes. '
.But it was much too little and ~;ff too late to stem· the tide of the
nited States• crilsbing victory
l1the biennial matches.
1~So.r1t'ht I\ bETROIT -Denny Doyle hit a
ea-l_oaded double in the ninth
rung Sunday, ·driving in two
and lifting Boston to a com-
ck 6-5 Victi>ry over the Detroit
Tjgers.
'Doyle's game-winner hit just
oYer the first base bag off rookie ~iever Gene Pentz and reduced
Red Sox's magic number for
ching the American League
tiUe to five games. The Red
.... x ·iead Baltimore, 'Wtilch beat
• "aukee 3-0, by 31h games.
's3~ Baek
BALTIMORE -The
altimore Orioles maintained
Krantz and former Long Beach
state teammate Bo Baugh were
dead even at 276 with twin 70s at
the end or regulatio' play Sunday
at the El Dorado Country Club.
Baugh, however, lnissed an
eight-foot birdie putt oo the first
extra hole and failed to save par
on the second with a misguided
five.footer .
Meanwhile, Krantz chipped up
to within three feet of the second
extra hole, sinking the putt to
save his par.
Dennie Meyer finished third
with 72, followed by· Jeff Van
Wagenen, Arne Dokka and Jack
l:wing of San Juan Capistrano
with 74s
Haelcefl Melee
CHICAGO -Referee Andy
Hellemond cleared the ice late in.
the second period Sunday after a
17-minute melee between the
Boston Bruins and the Chicago
Black Hawks in the opening Na-
tional Hoc.key League exhibition
season game _
• quarterback Roa:er stau~acb's
madcap scra'Qlbtes. •l\_ovel
passes, end-arounds •.. and a
fake punt by rooltie.MitdtffooPii.
who ran for a !Int down to a.et up
1'1-itscb's first field goal In the ·
seeondperiod.
"I have to admit Mitch th<J!l(bt
that up-on 1i s oWn.-'-.. s8id ~ry.
"I contratuJated him when he
came off the field. You alwaya do
-when you make 'em."
Staubach scrambled seven
times for 58 yards and completed
10 of 23 passes -moet of them
coming from the spread form•·
tion where Staubaeh is stationed
some seven yards behind the
center:Dallas went to the spread
this year because Staubaeb was
sacked 42 times last year trying to
pass. -
Dallas' young team-thereare
12 rooki~ on it -drew praise
from Cowboys oldtlmer Lee Roy
Jordan, who said: "We played
great football. We played with en·
thusiasm. That's what I like about
this club ; it's young and full of en·
thusiasm. I can't remember the
Cowboys ever playing a better
game." ·
Substitute Rams quarterback
Ron Jaworski saved Los Angeles
the huin.iliationof a shutout with a
disputed four·yard touchdown
run deep in the fourth period.
A dejected llarris said: "I can't
remember the last time I had
three interceptions in a single
game. I don't mind being tanked.
At least Ron got ds a score.''
Regarding the Dall8s spread,
Rams linebacker Isiah Robertson
said disgustedly, "They used that
rinky-dink shotgun offense so
much, it really makes me mad for
that kind or stuff to beat us ...
It was Dallas' 11th consecutive
opening victory and a surprise
since the team was 2-4 in the pre-
season. Los Angeles was 5-1 and
has been picked by many to be
headed for the Super Bowl.
Cornerback Mel Renfro swiped
two passes.
Al o.nn -'9,091 .. ~ .,_.,. ' . ' ' ' ' ' 0.1 -FGFrllld\2.S
0.1 -~MIKllll runllkk 18'1ed
0.1 -FGFrllsch:tt
O.t -FG FrltKh 1•
, 0.1-FG Frltsc.h )I
LA-.s-511.14""' O.mt.pey kkll
INDIYIDUALLIAOERS
1 -1 .
' -11
RUSHING -Lot Angelet, Mt~ 13"67,
e.rtel-10.31. O.lles, HewhOulle U.-. Staubad'I ,.,.
AECE 1\1'1 NG -Los AngelH. ~Ir._, 1·20, Klellll
1-11. o.nu,,...,.no.tse:J.19. Leld1-2.11.
PASSING -Los A1>iteleS, H•rris 1-10.), S 'l"•r~;
_,_.., :J.7..0, 36. D•ll•s, ~ )0-1.3..o, 10.;
NIWl't"llM 140,0.
•
\IPIT .......
DALLAS' ROBERT NEWHOUSE CUTS THROUGH RAMS.
• Chileans Angry
Political Pressure
Blamed for Loss -' SANTIAGO CAP> -Chilean
news media unanimously said
political pressures contributed to
Chile's 4-1 loss tcrSweden in the
Davis Cup semifinals in Baastad,
Sweden.
The best-of-five series was
closely followed here on
television by some three million
Chileans.
This was the first time the
Chilean team bad ever advanced
as fa?; as the semifmal round of
the .international tennis competi-
tion, and every major newspaper
in the country sent a newsman to
Sweden.
Chiles•s chances in the com·
petition decreased· radically
when the star pair of Jaime Fillol
and Patricio' Cornejo was
trounced by Sweden's doubles
team of Bjorn Borg and Ove
Bengtson 7·5, 6-2, 3·6, 6-lon Satur-
day.
The Swedes then wrapped up
the event Sunday with victories
-by Birger Andersson over Corne-
jo and Borg over Fillol.
• -· o ·akland,
Dolphins
·Collide
lllIAMI CAP) -Don Sbula l'W
ftnd out bow &ood his rebuilt
Miami Dolphins are tonlebt ill a
National Football Leaguettuoi>-
openlng test aca.tnst the oa•l-
Raiden, wbosto~pedMlamlZS.28 -
in last year's playoffs.
Oakland is basically the same
team enterio& the contest. Dave
Dalby replaces the retired Jim
Otto at center, Monte Johnson.
moves in at middle linebacker for
Dan Connors, who was cut, and
o.rvr-fs•t
C'llattlld 7 • •
linebacker Ted Hendricks bas
been added. '
But Shula bas watched \be.
World Football League, trades
and injuries drastically alter tbe
unit which was shooting for a
fourth straight S..per Bowl •P-
pear ance when it ran into·
Oakland last December.
Gone IQ, the W FL are fullback
LarryCsonka, wide receiver Paul
Warfield and running back Jli:_n
Kiick. ·· Traded or cut are wide receiver
Marlin Briscoe, tight end Marv ·
Fleming, defensive backs Henry. :
stuckey and Lloyd MumphOrd,
linebackers Bruce Bannon and
Larry Ball. defensive lineman
Maulty Moore and offensive
linemen Doug Crusan, lrV Goode
and Tom Funchess. ·
Out fOT' the season with iltjlDies
are safety Dick Ander1on.
linebacker Nick Buoniconti and
defensive tackle Bob Heinz.
Defensive tackle Manny
Fernandez will be out at least two
more weeks with a sprained.
ankle, and safety Jack Scott -defensive end Bill Stanfill. com.
ing back from injuries. are
doubtful performers tonight.
Despite all that, the Dolphins
managed to compile a S..1 exhibi-
tion record, the same as Oakl.and.
It was Miami's best pre-season
record in its 10-year history.
But tonight's game is the firJl;t
one that counts and will prove
whether the offense can move
with Don Nottingham and Norm
BuJaich sharing Csonka's post
and 'with Nat Moore filliD&
Warfield's shoes.
. It also will test a defense that
must rely on second-year d&-
fensive linemen Randy Crowder
aod Dod Reese, Mike Kolen in the
middle instead of his familiar out-·
side linebacking spot. and rookie
Barry Klll ill ~"""r's safety
PoSition. . ~ _, 4
t eir relenUess pressure on fll'sl-
ace Boston in the American
ague East Sunday, beating the
Uwaukee Brewers 3-0 as Mike
A total of 11 penalties in the
first period and 38 more in the
seeond period were called, in-
cluding eight game misconduct
penalties and several for fight ·
ing
E1'ert ColWts Almost for UCI
••Chile lost under political pre-
ssure.'' read headlines of the
Sunday's edition of the Santiago.
newspaper El Mercurio. It re·
ported that durihg the doubles .
match ''there existed a cl~mate
of hostility which did not allow
the Chileans to perform up to
standard," aud that "during the
three hours the match lasted the
Chilean team was submitted to
psychological pressure which
constituted a real shame.''
-~
'terrez notched his 20th victory
with a two-hitter.
The triumph was the 14th in'the
last 17 games· for the Orioles, who
still have an oufside chance to
overtake Boston ~iUl a week re·
rnaining in the regular season. -.
ptle to K,..,.tz
I LONG. BEACH~hips arid
putts were the difference as two
former· teamm'Btes parted com-
pany after two extra holes, lenv-
ing Mike K_ranti the $4,50;0 win-
ner of the ~een _Mary Open golf
t!>!lrnament.
LA Beaten
By Houston . ,\ '
HOUS"TON {~AP) -J .R.
Richard tossed an eight-hitter
and knocked ln two ·runs with a
bases-loaded single-Stlnday to
carry the Houston Astros past
the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-l1A
Richard, 12·9, pac;lded ·~a 2·1
Houston lead with hls two-run
<tbot _in the fourth that ltnockt!d
Dof!iJer's· Slate
•. .. .... ,..., ... KAICatt) • •
SIC!t.22LosAflllletetSWI~ , 6:SSp.m. s.pt. 2l Los Al'lfltth at S.ft 0419(11 •:SS p.m. ~;"lCU..A ...... t•t'ianOltOD . '6:"p.m,
lout Loa Angeles starter Rick
I Rhoden, .8·3. The liner to center
followed a walk and singles by
Enos Cabell aifd ,Larry
l Milhourndl .•
l The only Los Angeles run was
J wild pitched bome!b! Richard in
t·tl)<! fll'St Inning. . •. . t '3'he Astros tied it 1-1 in the first J .~ Cesar Cedeoo.'s sacrifice fly,
'lben went ,.bead 2-1 in the second I Pll Cabell'• run•~oring alngle.
l 1•LOS.ut0•t.a1 llOUITOW l.' .. ,..... _ .. , ..... ~-• 1 2 0 Ger*Wtt • i 1 0 t.ac:ya . • o o o "· Nllll'WI• ••to ~;O'......,rf '4 0 01 0 (9di1Nd S 0 0 I t......,a 4 0 t • C.Joflnl0fl1b 4 0 I 0 a,.,a • o 1 • J,O'\llff. • 1 1 o
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ATLANTA -Chris Evert bat·
tied back /rom a first-set loss
Sunday to beat Martina
NJ1,vratilova for the singl~s
crown in-the Little Mo tennis
classic, then teamed with the
Czechoslovakian left-hander to
take the doubles championship
The third-seeded Navratilova,
who recently defected to the
United States, rode her serve and
charging net play to the first-set
victory before the top-seeded
Evert recovered to take the
$15,000 first prize 2-6, 6-2, 6-0.
HB Dri1'ft" 7th
SAN JOSE -Huntington
Bea'Ch's Tom Berry finished
seventh in the Pro Series Mile
National motorcycle race at the
Santa Clara County Fairgrounds
Sunday before 9,800 fans.
Anteaters Lose Polo Titl.e
UC Irvine came within 12
seconds of capturing its water
polo tournament crown Sunday
at Newport Harbor High School,
by UCLA rallied to score and
eventually claim a 10-9 overtime
victor.Y
Doug Frantom had given UCI a
7-6 lead with a goal with 35
seconds left in regulation, but
UCLA 's Joe Vargas got the
Bruins even with UCI a man
short 23 seconds later. ·
UCLA dominated the overtime
periods, which saw six UC Irvine
starters fouled out at the end of
the game.
Nick Baba got UCl's Anteaters
close at 10·9 with 50 seconds left
in the overtime but the hosts
were unable to regain
possession.
UC Irvine reached the finals
after dunking Cal (Berkeley),
12·9. The Anteaters were foreed
to compete without All-American
goalie Guy Antley, who is com·
mitted to the national team.
All-tournament selections in·
eluded UCI 's Baba aod aod Tim
Quinn.
. Baby scored seven goals in the
two Sunday games.
UCll'Wle • 1 • 3-12 0Hfon'll• 3 3 2 1-9
UCI S(Oring: Nick 8.C. 3, GMr9f ~ 3,
Boyd PflllPOl 2. Tim QulM I, 8ruu Fre..n:ll, Ol>l.og
Fr;tnloml.
S.COt"e.., Qv.a,.,.,
VClnilfle 1 o 1 S 0 7-•
UCLA 210)12-10
UCI scoring: Nick S•INI 4, Duo.II F~lll'lt0fn2, Tim
Q.llNl2, Boyd Pflllpot 1.
·--,. --~-· -----__.-
·-
"The game was played to the
sound of the Communist lnterna·
tionale, of whistles and tn.impets
and automobile horns, original·
ing with some 4,000 de·
monstrators located less than
one hundred meters away."
The newspaper added that
Chilean refugees threw
firecrackers near the tennis
court and released balloons
which floated over it.
Another Santiago morning
paper, Tercerea· de la Hora, said
that "the Swedes beat us with
petards ..
"The demonstrators in.stalled
powerful loudspeakers pointed at
the stadium, even from the spire
of a nearby church, with which
they broadcast speeches against
Chile, blew horns, rang bells.
shouted and banged pieces of
iron.
"Even mediocre BcngtSon was
brilliant with the help of the noise
created by his countrymen."
Ashe Triumphs
LOS ANGELES (AP)-
Wimbledon champion Arthur
Ashe C'ame back from a slow
start to beat Roscoe Tanner 3-6,
7-5, 6-4 Sunday and win the cham-
pionship of the $100,000 Pacific
Southwest Open tennis tourney.
It ·n be seen on Channel 28 tonight
at 8. '
A crowd of 6,528 watched the
contest.
MARK SCHUBERT
MVCoach
Honored
HOLLYWOOD, Fla .-
Mi ss ion Viejo Nadadores
swim co.ich Mark Schubert.
was named coach of the year
by hi s peers in the American
Swim Coaches Associatl'On
last weekend climaxing his
team ·s annexation of the Na-
tional AAU crown at Kansas
City recently.
The association, with over
&Ki coaches attending, select·
ed Mark after his team had
won five national titles during
the past three seasons-three
by lhe women ·s team and two
by th e overall team.
Angels Host Chisox l
Lee Stanton had four hits, drove M•NNESOTA
in three runs and scored one run •Dr 111tt &\lotk l'.I s I 2 0 to pace the California Angels to a Br.uni! so o l
5-2 victory over the Minnesota c ... 1D ' o 1 1
TwinsSunday. ~rt !:~:
Tonight the Angels hos t &-vwl"I 1 o o o
Chicago al 7:30 with Newport =;S:ss : : ~:
Beach resident Frank Tanana on Roof ( 1 o 1 o
the mound for the Halos. It'll be ~c ~:: g
broadeastonKMPC. L.Go1N1itt 2 1 0 0
St.anl.-On raised his total to 80 in ~=: ~ g g g
support of right-hander Ed Gol•r• o o o o
CAl..IFO•NIA •lt•flltf
i I I 0
"0 1 0 '1 1 I t
3 I J • 1 0 0.
• 1 4 s
300G
4 0 I 0
4 0 I G
3000
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........
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&ol:hte lb
A.0...r9tldh _ ... --0 . 9rtoqstf
0..1•3b
Allletl•C '""'" Fl ....... ... _.
Figµeroa, who posted his fourth auuerp o o o o
str8ight victory and 16th of the T .... , 31 :t 1 1 Totatl 21 s 10 s
year. Ile was removed from lbe ~: : :: =:::
game for Jim Brewer because of E-Go•u . Rl~r' >. 9odlte.Loo-M1-to1• "· a stiff arm after six innings. c:.i1fr0fl'll•" 1&-M<ic•.,., 9o!ltoc.k. sa-.... a...
Stanton scored a nm in the ftr.1t ntt.SIMton.s--0.sr~"' " • 1111 •• •
on Dave Chalk's grounder and 0ottr n .. 1.-.14> • " • s s J • IUUW 2 1000 l e knocked ln two runs ~th _a ~in~le -'~JW. , .. 1u _. J_ l.. -2 2. a
blthetbltdtiil tliethirdonewtth .._ • • • • ! ..... ~ asiiigleiAlhelift.b.---Silt -..1nwuw.w~._.t~--
• ·:::..~::::::::.=:::::::::::::i-__ ~I -.. • -
•
• •
~-·-----------...,
~-/I.JI 0AA. Y PILOT
.P a triots Strike Out
I With. Houston, 7-0
I I
New England found out the ef. The Beiigals staved off two
fects a strike can have on a team goal line bids by the Browns.
SUnday in the r1rst salvo of Na· stopping a pair of fourth-and-one
tional Football League games as :)ituations. f tbe'Patriots were shut Ol1t by low-Anderson hit 17 ot'ZT passes, fn·
ly Houston, 7-0. eluding a 16-yard scprlng toss to
Former Wi scon sin star Neil Isaac Curtis.
Graff replaced Jim Plunkett,
I who is on the injured list, but he
waa unable to mount a scoring
drive. ·
The New Engla nd offense was
I also responsible for the only
score of the gome. In the game's
first series Mack Herron was hit
at his own 48 and Houston's
Willie Germany scooped up the
ball and ran the remaining dis-
tance for the only score.
It wai the first time New
England has been shut out in four
years at the s tadium, except
when it was locked out during the
five daystrike.
EJsewhere in the NFL:
KANSAS CITY AT DENVER -
! The Denver Broncos came from
behind with Bill Van Heusen's
I touchdown catch from Charley
Johnson with 1: 49 to go to topple
' Kansas City, 37 -33.
The Broncos trailed, 33-24 , in
' the third quarter. But Denver
1 came to life with a 33-yard pass from Johnson to Rick Upchurch
and Otis Armstrong's 33-yard
nmtothe2.
He fumbled at that point, but
Jack Dolbin picked up lhe loose
ball and scored to pare the KC
lead to 33·30.
CLEVELAND AT CINCIN·
NAn -Ken Anderson passed
for 287 yards, including 203 in the
first half, and Cincinnati's de-
fense withstood. a Cleveland rally
fora24-17win.
NEW YORK JETS AT BUF-
FALO BILLS -O.J. Simpson
ran for 173 yards in pacing the
Bills to a 42 -14 rout of the New
York Jets and Joe Namath.
Quarterback Joe Ferguson
tossed TD passes to Jim Braxton
and Paul Seymour and scored
one himself on a broken play de-
. signed for Simpson, who scored
two others.
Namath hit only 14 of 36 and
was intercepted four times. He
was sacked twice.
SAN FRANCISCO AT MIN-
NESOTA -Brent McClanahan
and Chuck Foreman scored
fourth-quarter touchdowns to
pace the Minnesota Vikings to a~
27-17 triumph over the San Fran-
cisco 49ers.
McClanahan set up the Vik·
ings' final score with a brilliant
running effort · after taking a
short pass from Fran Tarkenton,
racing 32 yards to the SF 3.
The Vikes drove 89 yards in 15
plays to build a 20-10 lead ea·rly in
the fourth period,
ATLANTA AT ST. WUIS
Jim Bakken's 25 -yard field goal
-with no time left provided the St.
Louis Cardinals with a 23-20
triumph over the Atlanta
Falcons.
Bakken, who kicked three field
goals, was put within range on a
73-yard march in eight plays by
the Cardinals.
•
Chatgers Gave Pitt
What It Needed
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Franco
Harris thinks the Pitts burgh
Steelers can get better. ·
Tommy Prothro only hopes his
San Diego Chargers won't get any.
wo_rse.
The Steelers overwhelmed the
; Chargers 3'1-0 Sund~. putting
, the 1974 Super Bowl champio'"ns
1 in good spirits for"ttll!tr National
., Football League home. opener
1 next Sunday against the Buffa1o
>Bills.
, "We still hav · a long y.ray to
~go," said Harris who helped Pit-
' tsburgh control !he ball by gain·
~ing 78rushing yards in 17 carries.
t "But we should keep improving
t every week.'·
because we did not look good in
the preseason, ··he said. ''The de-
fense played with the intensity
we bad at the end of last season·."
Pittsburgh's "Steel Curtain''
defense limited San Diego to 145
yards in totalAoffense and held
Charger rushing ,.ti tar Don Woods
to3Syardsifi13ci.rries. '
Defensive backs J . T. Thomas,
Glen Edwards and Donnie Shell
·each picked off a San Diego pass
and Steelers rushers dumped the
Chargers quarterbacks, Virgil.
Carter, Jesse Freitas and Dan
Fouts, four times.
The Chargers never advanced
past the Pittsburgh 40 and after
the game, Prothro was blunt:
"They were very impressive. We : Quarterback Terry Bradshaw
: 1 hit 21 of 28 passes for 219 yards Ats.noi-eo -i 1•1,.
· and two touchdowns and Roy
were terrible."
101031•-37
1000 -0 . ! Gerela added field goals of 29, 25 ~~ · -4 and38yards for the winners. Plu -FGGt••l•tt · • · eiu -Lewls«l.,.ssfrom 8r8dshlwGe,.l•kkk
. 11 The Steelers scored in every Pin -M11n1ns ·~overec1 tla'YlbM In tne1 ,_
·,quarter, running up a 20 -0 Gt;;~·k~~Gerel•.Pnt .:...FGGerei.2s
, halftime lead and scoring the Pltt-FGG41ret•ll
I
first four times they handled the P1tt -St1nwortt13loesstrom&81hhawa. .. 11 ••• • football. Pitt-COllllr 1 run c;e,.11 kk.k
4 While Harris may not be 1Mo1v1ouALLl!AoEJts Satisfi.ed With that, i"t Was hi"ghJy RUSMING-PltUburQll,H•rrli.17-78,HMTlton, "45, 8 .. ler 1~ ~ OllQO, Wood$ 13-li, Mii-
' enjoyable to .Steelers' coach tbtW53-:M. .
'
Chuck Noll, especially 1·n light o£ RECEIVING -Plttsburoh, L•wls 4-••· Stlllworttl 3-S6. Sin OleQO, Clll"l'en ~. Sarber
t Pittsburgh ·s 3-4 exhibition <12.1•. I season.·· PASSING -Pltti.buroh, er.ctsNw 21-no, 21• y11lb. Sin Oleoo, C•rter 3·5-1, 24; Fo\11.5 t-lJ.I, 3";
Atlanta's Dave Hamptoo put
Atlanta into the lead at 211).13 In
the third quarter with a one-yard
burst, then St. Louis came back
to lie at 20 with ai:;e left In the
game.
Jim Ray Hart's 29 and 22-yard
passes to Mel Gray set up the
winning field goal.
NEW YORK GIANTS AT
PHILADELPHIA -Ron
Johnson scored twice on
short-yardage situations in the
ri.rst half and went on to defeat
the Philadelphia Eagles, 23·14.
The Giants fell behind, 7-0,
when the Eagles scored on a 13-
yard pass from Mike Boryla to
Charlie Young.
But Johnson capped drives of
&land 49 yards before halftime.
George Hunt provided the win-
ning margin in the fourth period
with a 41-yard field go8J.)...
The Eagles came back with
Roman Gabriel's 2-yard pass to
Harold Carmichael. The G[ants
countered with a 50-yard TD
strike from Craig Morton to Ray
Rhodes.
NEW O R LEANS AT
WASHINGTON -Bill Kilmer
threw four touchdown passes. to
lead the W asbington Redskins to
a41-3routof New Orleans.
Kilmer tossed two TD aerials
to Charley Taylor and one each to
Jerry Smith and rookie Ralph
Nelson before a sellout crowd of
54,414.
For the day, Kilmer cotnpleted
1( of 26 attempts !or 199 yards
and the four TDs. He was sacked
five times.
. BALTIMORE AT CHICAGO -
Quarterback Bert Jones threw
two touchdown passes to Glenn
Doughty and Don McCauley
scored twice to lead the
Baltimore Colts to a 35-7 victory
over the Chicago Bears.
Jones, the son of former pro
Dub Jones, . completed 15 of 24
passes for 177 yards. Baltimore
packed three touchdowns in the
second period and wrapped it up
with a 66-yard scoring drive after
the second half kickoff.
The Bears· TD came after a
fluke play kept a 71-yard march
alive.
DETROIT VS GREEN BAY -
The Detroit Lions took advan· ta" of two b)Oj'ked punts by Levi
Johnson and Ben Davis
and turned them idto three
touchdowns en route to a 30-16
victory at Milwaukee.
The Lions stormed to a 17-0
lead in the second period to stifle
Bart Starr's debut as head coach
of the Packers.
·Joh nson blocked Steve
Broussard's punt near the
Packers' goal and out-raced
Broussard to the ball in the end
zone for a TD and a 10-0 lead in
the first period.
Later he blocked another and
Larry Ball ran 34 yards with the
recovery for a TD. The third
block set Detroit up on the one--
yard line.
·KingsEdg~
UO S ANGELES
Defenseman Tracy Pratt rifled
home a 45-foot shot in the second
.period Sunday night as Van-
couver defeated Los Angeles 2-1
in the first p't-eseason National
Hockey League game.
.. •
1 "We needed a win like that F~1-.13-s-1, u. ,~~~~~~~~---'-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.
Baseball Standings :t
:i :I
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I
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AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Boston
Baltimore
New York
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Detroit
W L Pel. GB
92 63 .594
88 66 .571 3'h
80 75 .516 12 .
75 'i7 .493 15'h
64 92 .410 28'h
57 98 ,968 3S
West Division
Oakland
Kansas City
Texas
Minnesota
Chicago
Angels
94 61 .600
87 68 .561 7
77 80 .490 18
72 80 .474 20'h
71 83 .461 22'h
71 85 .455 23'h SWMl.,·s.sc:-O•vel.tnd 3-j, New York 2-11
Boston l. Mll-UkftO
Teqs8,0llc•it02
lC1115U..Oty 2, 0.kl•ncl 1
c.ll+tnll•S,MlnneKOl•2
T"'Y'•O.IM!I Ml!w.u.llft (AUQIHllN 1-0) I'!. Cle ..... .J'llilllbY
1-1SJ Boston (WIM1 .. t1J •t MtwYn (GuleryQ.4)
Tt••• lhr1•ncow•kl l ·Sl •I lt•nu• City CFltlmon'b1~11)
01kA9e CltNl»IJl It C.I~• CTIMM !Ml
Ml-Kii• Clhrot 1·0 •t Olk:l.nd (HOllJnwlo
ll·lSI °"'' ..... ~ ,...,,.,._
O.lt'llt .. a.ttl~
Mll ........ 9'0.wlafld
lloltOft lit ....., Yori
Teus•t~CIW
Ml-.ot. •• OllllMd ~~lfinil•
I
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pel. GB
Pittsburgh 89 66 .574
Philadelphia 83 72 .535 6
St. Loofs · • 79 76 .510 10
New York 79 77 .li06 IO'h
Chicago 73 84 .465-17
Montreal· · 70 85 .4S2 19
West Division
x-Clncinnali 103 53 .600
Dod«en 85 71 .545 18
San Francisco 77 79 .494 26
San Diego 68 87 .439 34'h
Atlanta 66 91 .420 37'h
Houston 62 93 .400 40~
x-clinched '<fivision title
S..Uy'sSC-pttt:lobuf'atl S, SI. L.Ololll I
Phlll!Otlptll• 4\New York 2
One!MMll;i\ '""'-' Mont.-s. OllC-OO• HolMoft" lAI A ....... ,
Sift Fran<llCO l. Slfl 01'90 I
TeMy'•O.-. st. Lwlt <Mc:O!Othlfl 1$-12 Mil Altd 11-121 at
Mantl"N& CW•ntllnMMd ,..,.-.._121
""a...!llflltl cu ..... wood t•ttl • ~
(l(itllft1\.10 Often.ti llWll~ l).tl llt ""'*°" INi.11 .. ... Loi ....,..... lMtwmnltfl 11-M) at~ a..,.
U*;:lftl1Mf1•1•)
<Mty .............. -·-NtwYorttllt~ 5flfl l'nMllCllll: Mi.ti! ,,..~ .. Pl~ ll:u.lilt~ CIM.WW!tl .........
IMAlliltlH .. S.Oi191
SPORTS
F oothlill
Standings
For Pros
NATIONAL l'OOTU.L\. t-•AVUI!
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San Clemente, Trojaru -'
Slate TV Football Tilt .
South coul Leacue fooiball will be
on display live oo Channel • 1'o•. 1$
when Uoiveralg Hi,h"a TroJA1111 and
San Clemente collide In a noon batUe
at !teiltaUvely) UC Irvine.
The game was originally 11eheduled
for that evenln1 at 'nlllln ma but
University High athletic director
J!!l!!!J!l"!s_MU hu C9ll!pleled necoUa-
U-..wltb KNl!C. II'• only --of two prep~ameo to be-aired live by J;ban·
nel • accordlng to Driscoll.
It marks the first Ume any 0r11111e
l
1-----~~w:..---
ROGER
CARLSON
~ l
C.oast area football team has been
shown on southland television .
University has another aftemoon
game slated for Nov. 1 when the Tro-
jans, meet Dana Hills.
It should be a big day considering
the plans, which include a pancake
breakfast, followed by.a 10 a.m. water
polo clash with visiting Fountain
Valley, a parade through the residen-
tial areas on the way to UC Irvine's
campus, the game with Dana Hills, a
boosters club dinner afterward and a
Homecoming dance in the evening.
,Some notable names on the prep
gridirons include Mater1 Dei
quarterback Tim O'Hara, Huntington
Beach's David Moon and Costa
.; rt:;_'• Dm Duddrldge llDd llike
O'Hara and Mooo are aon1 of ·
form..-Cal Stale (l'\lller1'ln) coaches
Joe O'Hara and Dallu Moon, two ot
the three Srid as~ta that were
lcllled In an ain>land ..-uh two yean
aao. O'Hara wu one of the biak.,s In
II.Iler Del"• tremendolla sue .... In
the eos u asslatant fOOlblU coach llDd
athletl• dlreclor,Tbe bueball o.ld...._
MaterDeiisO'HaraField. ·
Duddrldge is the soo of Fowitaln
Valley High athletic direclo< Ken
Duddrldae.-OOJ> f..tlJ&.~
coaches of the 608.
And Snow ·is a nephew of Los
Angeles Rams receiver Jack Saow.
Naturally Mike's position is the same
as his uncle's.
The CIF Southern Section general council meeting tn Los Angeles is slat-
ed Wednesday and among the Items
on the agenda will be the formal ado1>-
lion of Orange Cc!unty leagues £or' the
1976-77 season.
The latest proposal and expected to
pass includes the South Coast League_
as it now exists (Dana Hills, San
Clemente, Laguna Beach, University,
Mission Vle-fo and El Toro); a six·
team SUnset League (Newport
Harbor, .. Marina, Edison·,
Westminster, Fountain Valley and
Huntington Beach); and a Cel'ltury
League to include Costa Mesa, F.stari'-._
cia and Corona del Mar. '
The on)y possible sWjtcb, In th ..
works is one dreamed up by Corona
del Mar, which woufd place the Se~
Kings and Costa Mf88 In the South
Coast, replaced by Empire League
candidates santa Ana Valley andlim>-
la Ana in lb~ Century.
Bueno En.ten MV Prep ~rid
Sche4olt: Tennis Tourney TMUHOAY'SOAMIS
UMlt•nMllllt' Dll•ISA&owri
Is listed 5Sth in a field of 0r,...tEtMOdltWI Mana Bueno, a four·
time U S. and t!iree-time
British national charn·
pion, will continue her
bid on the comeback
trail in the $50,000 Mis·
sion Viejo women's ten·
nis classic Sept 29
through Oct. 5.
Bueno retired in 1969
after surgery failed to
correct an arm injury,
then tried unsuccessfully
to make a comebp.ck in
1971.
Pending results of two
tournaments before the
Mission Viejo event at
Marguerite Recreation
Center, she could be
faced with a possible
playoff for the sole wild
card berth in ihe tourna-
ment.
At the present time she
.f
LB Mllllken•I W.slltfl 59 players. If she doesn't westmln•t•r vs L•k.ewoo11 •t
improve her standing Vflef .. 1St..:tl10ml1:•1 SMtt AM 'f'S Troy •t u H*'• among wrA players, she 11:•1 could be faced with the l'•IDAY'SOAMll}} prospect of playing off 11=11n0s vs An•Mlm e10 A
with 16-year-old Lea An-Cypress vs S•n c••ment• •t
tonopJis and two other ~t1 .. Tw111
contestants for the wild HunUnotOll e..c11 vs MlrlN ••
card spot That playoff wi:t'.=-:,JMtt.teioA !•"'""' will be held the first day O.rdtft Gro..,.. vs SIM:ld~k .. SA
of the tournament. 8E~-.-w ... ....,
B u e n o w o n t h e Fowrt.in v••i.v vs LB w1"°" 11
~ilQbledon singles titles H~a.,::,"•tHewP'Of)~
m 1969, 'J,960 and 1964 and WHtem n S.v•nn• •t u """"'
was doubles champion in .1.1~._ ,..,,. R.nr;'90 ·~ ~.
1960·63-654Wi. . .. ~Gi' .... >At Forest Hills in the. C..y0nnv111•P•rtt•1E1Modtnll
U.S. 0pen, she captured =~1~,:""P41rk
the :s·ngJeS crown in GMleStll'"' SA v.111, ., c.i Poly =· d d bl Pllmonlo 17:301 l_.--64-66 an OU es SOl'lol'•vsSUMyHllls•ll.AtuDr• in 1960-62-66·68-69 She UQulnt••tEnttslor al'so holds six o·t her LOS.t.m1eosn u .. 1 .... rt1tv•tGwdln
championships in the °'c:9uMewvsM1u1onv1110.iocc
Australian, Italian and =~=~'!:~!:;{'!.,, ... V•lfll. French opens from 1958 cl• through 1965 El Toro vsO.llr •I MlsslonVltJo
Baseball's Top Ten ' Ch . E ·~ N l . l.eQUnl&e.c:n•tRlmofti.'Mlrld f)S ve 'i 0 •• ,111 .•• the Wnrld Ct'ly · an,(j ' SAfU•DA~'50AM•s
l _,, . " • .....~ .. f~-Mart na NaYrati1ova:. ~~,vs$itvfti•iUP•I"""-\
No. 2, are bbth etit'ered iD o.HIY.tt..,..'••twntam ·
the lflisS·oo ViejO tourna.. ~ H*'"' 111 0or.c1o •1 v.1cnc:i. l . U.•I . inent. " · Villeftcl•M'Bol~Gr~
a-i.m.i~tt ..,...w.i~b
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JostwtSF 1241 .,. 13 1S1 .l11 ~c...,esn 114 SM ~ !~ ..... Moo.RP.ARK'. -lfis· Also' :fng fo\r.iMis-R-an 156 MO \01 201 314 -KC 12• .. --•• • • . ~ • ,. •• • • • CraMoi 1so sse 13 175 ·,1• o.-i.011 1,. s21 .. 1•1 .a ston V)eJO Hi D1abl~ SlP,D Viei "ere ark
&ockst1 131 s10 11 1" :,12 ~=:':v ~~ ;!: !! ~~ -:; CQ'-l~C1:1'~ •J:he ediuift -.Eil'Boiite <i0:08) M,artilt
scl'lmldt ~~:;:1 ,,,. 31. • Sch'Ool chadipi·onsbip ~Me.nn · ( 10: 19>, Bob
• • • Hl-fl•ltl s t d l tb c ,, Klngm.n, New York, 35; Luzll'llkl, M1IYberry lt•nl•I CitW 33 • R 3 Ur a Y 8 e OrCoraD \'10 :40) &nd
Phlt.atlphl•, :M; Bench, c1nc:111n111,J•ckson olki•nd 32. G st011· Mooft>ark cross country Matt Mann (11 :00) on the
J7; D. hrkllf', PlltsbUrQtl, 24' Qy • .,, , , ' 3, .,.,,.· •' v·....., ' • •t t" al "th · · I LosA,.11s, 2•. • • ~ w u "· ; s, •• ....... •: mvi a ion w1 Juruor hilly, two-mi e course at
I • .,..., • .._.,. Burrouglls, Teus,lt. M"ke W It h th M k C II LutMkl.Phll.atll)hl•,11,:~.,, _ 1 a .er ouse .Pac-e oorpar o egeo-
on<1nnt11, 101; T. Ptr•r. c inc:"-li,. ,. trh11n httH '" mg the D1ablos with a campus.
10$·StauD NewVork IO!•Monl•MI. yl:oen'y, K•nM5 Clly, 103; t.ynn, 9·49
s.ft FrMC:iKo, •1. ' ' Boslofo, 102; Rlct, 8os1on, 1112; Ml#!Kln, -c:·=·====::::::==============:-Plk:lff"l ,I DKlskMI• ....._Vortl,91; R.J~klOfl,-0.ki.icl,tl. r
Hr•bosky, St. Louis, 12-3, .900; Rare taste. · Gulltlt, Clnclnn•ll, 14·4, .771; l'lk:lll"11SD9CbtMll
Norm•n Clnclnn•tl 11·• l33· Moret, 8oston, 1"3, .111; M. TOf'l'l!1,I s..wr, M-Vo~ 21-9; .700; ·oen:y·, 81ltlmort, 20-1, .71•; Eckersl•r.'.
Onc:lnntU, 11·5, .611; cnrllten9oil, O.WllWld,IW, .... ;T•n.n.,C..llfonP.1 Eill1er.you have it. Ptlllidllphl._ 10s, ... 1; liootor1, Las IM, .661,~tenon.CtevetMld,1•7,.W;I
AnlllttH.11·t,.U4;Murr•y,MonlrMI, P91mer, s..ltlnw>rt, 11-11, :.56; I. Lit, ---":·"' Oryou don't.
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Turn on Students .. • •
87 Al.USON DEEQ. ··~ Jm11ortuU1 -Ibo .,.,.,..,,.,,...,. idledulebefflectedcmthe-
lnstructional televislqn Is of what teach.eta · and students
'' p:ow!ng up. wut to see. Each P<'Otll'ODI ii
11 ''Aller Sesame Strett. the shown (our limes durini the
-'traditional teacher·ln-front~f· week so that teachers can work the-camera approach ·simply them into curriculum,•• llf .
didn't interest students. Children Sa.User s-.id.
expected more sophisticated pro-Utilization information la ift.
gramming. eluded in pack.ages to member
· ••without· adequate-funding scbool1. Actlvltie1 before and
and professional production after viewlog a program and the
1 techrliqueJ, instructional in.formationa.l goals are Cfwn u
television was becomina: a worth· well. · ·
lessmedium." ·•used eftecttvery televialon
More and more, it became dif. can complement the teacher's
. ficult to interest> children' in the Jesson plan or she can me it u
old·style televised lesson, said the core of a lesson."'
sandra Sauser, coordinator of in-. In addition to . the traditional
o structional television for KOC£, approach to teach.in&" math or
'J Channel $0. language skills, for example,
,, ' new series deal with effective
.,
• •·
TV COORDINATOR
Sandra Sauser
learning.
Inside/Out Is geared totbell-to-
10-year~ld and deals with pro-
blemS of everyday living from
sibling rivalry to divorce in the
lamily. the battered child and the
joker in theclaasl"OOm .
.. Each program is open-ended.
'The purpose is not to tell children
bow situatiorta abovld &e ·
handled, but to give an op.-
portunity to deal with a problem
when not actually tbrutened by
it. " NON-THREATENING
.. Children.get to bear a variety
of opinions from other kids and
their rationale for-choosing acer-
tain behavior.'' There are 30 pro-
grams in the series.
"Parents might find the series
valuable to watch with their
children to instill their own
v·aJues," Ms. Sausersa1d: '
Inside/Out is being used in mar-
riage and family classes on the
high school level. Th~ Ripples series deals with
knowledge, ar-t , values and
change.
"lt didn't turn the kids on, 50 In Feeling Spaces, for exam·
•
•
•
G,,.. -. }~-~-·.
-. -
• the teachers didn't twn the set pie, a group or five.year-olds vis·
00:· it a cathedral. T.he children's reactions range frOm ex· In the past few years. however. u'berance in the wide aisles to KOCE CATALOGUE COVER BY TOM SHANNON SHOWS TOPICS FROM SPELLING TO SPELUNKING.
imaginative programming and • inclusion of parents and fear inside the,tiny,cubicles and
educators in the planning and on dark cellar steps.
utili ·1· h brougb In another segment, a small za ion proce~s as "-ta boy visits the zoo witJi bis sister, ~!*;.~11, KQCE &i ·ITV pro-.. ~Ja,tandtheaUdiencefoU~ws ~ gra_ms will be beamed to 150 bis steps ~o find her·.
·schools in eight q_istricts. Others One ei;>1sode deta11:5 ~ 55 ~
are considering membership, . pie reqwred to get &Jet plane u:1to she said. the sky. Bread and Butterflies focuses on career awareness.
QUALITY PROGRAMMING Ourstory deals with the lives of
From 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on little known Americans and
school days, high quality leased Vegetable Soup tells about .
programs are aired. minorities. ••
,
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Monday. September 22, 1975 P.ge 81
Ms. Sauser js leading a series
of workshops and seminars this
fall, through Cal State un-
iversities at Fullerton and Long
Beach and UC J,vine, to help
teachers learn to use television
as an effective teaching aid.
••i.t the past we have offered
on:site workshops for teachers,
but we found that after a school
da)t-, a two-hour inte-nse
workshop wasn't as effective. · "This ye'ar; courses are being
offered evenings and weekends
for unit credit.··
The wealth of printed
materials accompanying the pro·
grams makes-the teacher's job
easier. "She can use the suggest·
ed activities or they may trigger
ideas of her own.·•
Ms . Sauser , who taught
elementary school in Nevada and
Nebr'aska. before working three
years as a utilization specialist,
is adamant that television not be
used as a baby.sitter or pacifier
.in the classroom.
"When a program is on the
Illustrations such as these encourage
viewers to w~tch Vegetable Soup, a
series on minorities, and Western
Civilization shows on Channel 50.
•
' •
\
teacher shouldn 't be correcting
papers or talking with another
teacher. She should be watching,
too. It is importal'\t that she know
what she wants the children to
gain from th e experience."
As an· executive director or
Telecommunications or Orange
County, a network of represen-
tatives from participati ng ·
schools, Ms. Sauser stresses.that
the two-year-old organization
was formed so that local ·
educators could have a say in
programming.
Through TOC, school s can
participate (or SO cents per stu·
dent per year, hall of which is re·
imbursed by the State Depart-
ment of Education.
Along with quality program·
ming, fl exibl e scheduling.
related print materi als and
teacher motivation seminars,
TOC has regular needs assess-
ment surveys .
Schedules are available at
KOCE-TV , Golden West College.
•
Viewing's
Variable
In the average American household . the
television is turned on for six hours a day.
By the time a child graduates from high
school, he or she will have spent 15,000 hours in
front of the television and 12.000 hours in the
classroom.
Parents shocked by these figures have a few
options.
One is unplugging the '·boob tube.··
Another is joining other families in Prime
Time School TV.
PTST is a n ot-for -profit organization formed
about five years ago lo encourage teachers lo re-
commend a nd use evening television programs
as part of their classroom resources.
Recently, PTSf expanded its efforts to in -
clude par ents. Family viewing is encouraged
through Prime Time Parents.
Funded by g rants from the Harris Founda·
tion, Chicago, and the Bush Foundation, St.
Paul, the o rganization prepares and distributes
guides to selective programming on both public
and comme rcial stations.
A qua rterly handbook details uses o(
mate rials in home and school.
A key objective is to transform a normal ly
passive group of viewers into critical observers
with a ''pote ntia l for creating a de ma nd for better
quality pr<Jllramming."
Use of the guide may lead to innovation .
Parents have begun lo duplicate materials
and send the m via their children to encou rage
teachers to s pread the word to other families.
Last spring, Prime Time launched a cam-
paign to •·put the family back in family hour."
And. an interesting system of feedback has
developed with reactions shared by both pa rents
and children who are happy for a chance to voice
their opinions on what the ' 'tube'' has lo off er.
Parents who had given up on television are
turning back to viewing the "special events''
that can be educational for the whole fa mily .
Examples of last season's suggested pro-
grams were ''In This House of Brede'' dealing
with life in a convent and "I Will Fight No More
Forever" which dealt with the American In-
dian 's fight to preser ve his culture .
Those wishing to becom e Prime Time
P.arents can join for a tax dedt.ctible donation of
$5 by writing lo PTST, Dept. FA, 100 North La
Salle St., Chicago, Ill., 60602, for sample in-
form ation.
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j
·Life's -His Classroom
By ALLISON DEEllJl ... ~ ,. ... ....,.
Mike Reeves be.lleves
in the Mark Twain IA)'·
ing, "Don't let school get
in the way of your educe·
tion."
He's postponed begin-
ning his studies at Cal
Poly San Luis Obispo for
a year, but the lea.ming
process ham 't stopped.
The Orana:e Coast
College graduate spent
some 1.000 hours this
summer putting in 14-to
16-hour days during 10
weeks as a counselor at
Camp Bloomfield, the
Foundation for the
Junior Blind facility at
Malibu.
He was selected from
more than 1,.500 appli-
cants as one of 80
counselors for' the camp.
All were volunteers.
They came from
thorugh~ut the United
States. The blind, deaf
and multiply ban·
dicapped youngsters at-
tending were from the
Western States.
Reeves, who expected
to find himself feeling
sorry for the young cam-
pen;, discovered that to
the kids themselves,
. blindness and deafness
were ''obstacles, not han-
dicaps ."
Young people from
Fairview State Hospital,
were among those at-
tending the first session.
VOLUNTEER WORK
Not new to volunteer
work, the 21-year-old
Huntington beach resi-
dent bas volunteered his
time in convalescent
hospitals, with YMCA
and special education
classes.
This fall Jill "educa-
Uoo '' lncludn •orking
with the VlKCA'1 New
Horizons proaram tak·
ing retarded adults oo
evening excunfons aud
spending weekends with
dtsadvantaaed
youngsters.
'I know now 'that I want a career
' in therapeutic recreation. But
He spends 1eve111
hours each week with the ~lderly and forgotten in
area nursing homes.
••The kids and the
older people are the ones
that need you most and
appreciate yqu ma14•~
he said.
• first, I 'think you need to
know the people and what
their needs are. , I
The days at Camp
Bloomfield were long.
"We got up with the
bugle at 7 a.m. and were
with the kids constantly_
until 10:30 or 11 every
nigbL I think I had all Of
five 'days off all 1um· mer."
Bu.t camp director and
founder, Norman
Kaplan, "put in 24-hour
days. If the kids needed
him he was there. How
could we not give when
he demanded so touch of himself?"
be educated Into accept-
ing them. They can do so
much more than so-
called normal people
believe they can.
''All of us have so
many rnilconceptlom."
Although safety first
was UM camp motto, the
campers were exposed
to every normal camp
experience.
''You can't imagine
what it's like to help a
BEACH SPECIALIST blind kid catch bis first
After his first week, fish in the trout pond."
because of h.is life-saving On the beach, the blind
training, Reeves was children built sand
made beach specialist. castles they bad ''seen"
"For some of the kids witbtbeirfingers.
it was their finot trip to 'Ibey played baseball
the beach. One of the with the use of
kids jumped into the noisemakers to guide
·water and asked who'd direction. ''Now when
salted the ocean., No one they liaten to a baseball
bad ever told him the game they know what's
ocean was salty. After ...:«oing on. they can see it
that, I took nothing for ~ause they have ex.-
granted."
pertenced it." ,!><Cause the In-field .,..
By the end of eacb periences he is gaining
c1mping experience, as a volunteer are valua-
Reeves said campers hie.
and counselors were ''I know now that I
morelikefriencts., want a eareer in
VNDEllSTANDING therapeutic . recreatlon.
"I lhtnk I've learned to .But first, I think )'OU
love · people more. I un-need to know the -1e
derstand more and ·have and ,,what their needs
learned so much pa-are. ,
Uence. They grew and He s also postponing a
·we grew. So much of planned bicycle trip
what we did was to build through New Zealand for
confidence.•• awhile, but may make a
He W88 touched by the Bicentennial trek to 1be
communication between · East Coast later in the
the deaf and blind year •
younpten. . Mesnwhlle he'll be in-
'.'One deaf girl and a volved with Uie isolated
blmd bo)'. devel!'ped a elements of the com-great fr1endsb1p . He munity
learned to sign and she ' ·
learned some Braille. ''1be etderl7 and the
There was total commun.-handicapped , enjoy
ciation between them." • things as much as J do. I
Reeves delayed com-cloo't like to aee them sit·
pletint .h is degree ting!'
The 1 youngsters told -------------------------'------him that their only han-
dicap was the limitation
placed on them by
others. "People have to
t. MIKE REEVES: UNUSUAL STUDENT
•
"f Teen Trouble? Trust Them .t
A creative
career for
en &women
ENROUNOW
r !
• !)EAR ANN
'!',;'LANDERS: I am just an
'~ average 16-year -old &irl.
.• , bUt my parents bug me.
·•111tey keep saying, "It's
;;;~ hard to be parents
these days:• Why don't
::·:they realize it's h~ to ~be a teenager, too?
1; This is a crazy,·mJxed •.. :up world. There lre
•" 1imes when J don't know
::. the difference bet•een
· aormal horsing around ~1 ~nd what ia actually
... wrong to do. I can't tell
1 some truths from lies.
~ I'm coot-about belllf
"' ""square or bip. ' -I want to make my
"· ~ents proud of me but
.. ·u·s imposaible to agree
·. "'with them· all the time ~~ . .,. and never express an
'' idea of my own. I find
IJlyself trying to be 1be
. -· t>"rfect child. The -I
';.• o;;in do is try to be decent
aDd hope I don't let lbem
; .down. ..
• i-
> ..
So, Mom and Dad, if I
wear the wrong clothes.
or say the wrone thing,
or bring home a guy who
looks a little freaky,
please remember you·
raised me and basically
I 'm a pretty good kid.
I'm a part of you both so
I can't be all bad.
I realize you worked
and sweated a Jot to br-
ing me up right and one
day I 'll be doing the
same for my children. I
just want you to know 1
think you are really
great parents and 1 love
you very much. Please
trult me a little and ·have
faith .. -YOUR
srlJMBLING CHILD
DEAR CHILD: Yoor
let&er, straight from the
beart of a H -yeor-old, cml<I bave been written "7 any of a mllllon kids • 11aanb for expressing so
honestly your fears,
bopes, dreams -and
.. -·..-~~~~~-.~~~~~~., ·.,",r1dd' ~ -~~ ,~e 1ngs ~ ~ ·
~: and Engagements
" ' :'
•
-~ ~ '. ..... ~' • •
To avoid disappointment: prosPedive
·brides are reminaed to have their wedding
stories with black and white glossy
photographs to the Daily Pilot People
Department one "·eek before the wedding •
Pictures received after that time will
not be used .
For engagement announcements it is " . ,, . imperative that the story. also accom-
~ .... panied by a black and white glossy pie~
·•• ~ lure. be submitted six weeks or more
~ berore the wedding date: otherwise it will o~· ~· not be published. . ... ,. To help fill requirements on both Wed-
~ ... ding and engagement stories, form:; are ! .. available In all Daily Pilot offices. Fur-.,.j • ther question• will be answered b)' People ·:t"-c: ~partment staff members at 642·4321 .
~ ... ' ' '
LOSE WEIGHT
Ol IOllEY r1c1 ........... ~ ... ____ .... l>t'
-11a .... ..,..,.,....,
~-. ~ ........... .
.... -t"8I ........ Ille ........ -11 ....... -....
• t>t ··-"° -.... ,... ... -........ . ... --... -.... ... WI ...... llr«lld • "51 lllClt .. "' ...... . lOol ""*· fe.I Mtlltl' "Tiii SIMI tlhl111111t-._,lll'klliODftlNO: . ...................... ..., ....
~H~lll! ..•.
Ann Landers
your deep appreciation
of your parents' love.
quaintances. I wouidn't
know their kids if 1
passed them on the
street.
wishes to yoa all."
Tbe •lamp wUI coll ten
cents. You •ill bave
acknowledged the lnvlla-
FALL SEMESTER
I'll bet your mom and
dad are very proud of
you, in spite of your
doubts, and it's my
bunch that you'll do just
Ible.
To receive this mailing
is such a shameless_pitcb
for a gift that it ma«e me
furious. Am I over-
reacting, as my husband
says? What would you do
lf you were in my shoes?
-BOILING IN
LAGRANGE
tlon In a lady-like man-;,.
ner and you can stop , -
bolling already. ~ ,.
DE AR ANN.
LANDERS; This morn-
ing we received in the
mall a fancy engraved
\\redding invitation (out-
of-state) from former
neighbors we have not
seen in three years. We
have had no contact with
these people by Jetter or
phone since they left
town. They are not and
never were business ac·
DEAR BOILING: rd
drop a line and say,
'"'lbank yoa for Jew.a, 1111
know your ion (or
daughter) la being mar·
rled. So sorry we are•·
able to attend Ute wed-
ding but we send our best
CONFIDENTIAL TO
THERE'S NO FOOL
LIKE AN OLD FOOL:
Sorry, I don't agree.
'Ibere are more young
fools thsn old fools -snd
they are tbe worst.
Nature bas a way of get-
ting rid of old fools.
Young fools just hang
around becoming more
foolish, •
~~~~~.:__~~~~~---'~~~~~
PICKWICK FASHIONS
REMOVAL SALE
CLOSING OUR FASHION ISLAND SHOP-WE CLOSE SEPT. 29th
ENTIRE FALL STOCK
403
TO 603 OFF
llllCICJine BeilKJ Able to
Buy OUR MEW Fall Sportswecr
MOW, at the BeciinnilKJ of Fall, at
These Tremendous Reduc:Hons!
JEANS SWEATERS·
JACKETS BLOUSES PA~TS
TOPS T SHIRTS --
ALL SALES FINAL
. .
CAsH, MASTER QtARGE, BANKAMERICARD ON1.I
NO OWIGES OR LAY-AWAYS
MO AIAIMDS, IXCMAMRI, OI UTUaMS OP ANY 11!"1>
INTE:RIOR DE:~JGN · ••
200 NIWPDll OliiW Dr. COLLE:GE: ~-.Ca m _._
DESIGn PLAZA DESIGn PLAZA • DESIGJ1 PLAZA DESIGn P
STONEWARE PLANTERS
glazed with water proof, lead free glaze, one of a kind pots.
HANDMADE ON OUR P01TllS WHEEL
SAVE UP TO 60%·
AT OUR FAOORY
Buy direct lrom Ille potter
High quality hi-fired pots, hllndmade, and
glazed, one ol a kind stoneware pots.
Dealers welcome
HEAVY DUTY MACRAME 4 n. LONG
•9,00 VALUE ON SALE FOR '3.50
1" 11l'.'fll1¢ SUI. 5• Pol Rer, $1.•
~~ •3so · -~ •2so
•
•
'" Pot Rtf. $5.•
OUR $200 PRICE
•
'
•
"
• •
'
Taurus'
New
J •
' TVUDAY
UPrDl8DD
.,~1'.0llUll
.tatSI (March 21· Afril It): Your attitudoo
IOWanl MCUrity, m-•
.,.., ... Iona aro ··-out .. a.ad )'OU ••ialNrtt"
rreah •lewpolnt .
CruUYe .d•h• 11 eri· ~
V • TAuaus <April 20-
1 ews:•J' '°}: Tlaoae wlao normally are con-. ......u.., surprlla willl
Yliln actlonl. Yourown '~"ii ID pc-~ e ' ' swblc ud )OU IMnelll ulYSn!I:.:..u nortbodor ~~-
=
Asthma
GIUUNJ (llhy 21.June
20):. Undercurrent of
iViiiti, 1ituaUoMCausa yau to take a stand. no
matter how relucta.nt. Your horit:ona_ ex_pand .
•
·Attacked
NEW YORK (UPl)-
Sister Mary Romauld.
who beaan her career as
a teacher wltb the Feli-
cian Slaters, has asthma
attacks so severe that
she wu told in 1966 she
no longer could teach.
Her massive doctor
"bunt•• ended when she
read about the N atiooal
Jewish Hospital and
Research Center in
Denver in a Catholic
newspaper. •
· She was admitted,
given an intensiv~
diagnostic workup and
medication to control the
disease-allergy shots
plus steroids. She spent.
tWo years at the hospital,
was on one of the
medications for five
years, on another for 10,
but went back to school,
this time as a student.
t She earned her
~ master's degree in social
work and now is a
medical social worker at
St. Joseph's Hospital,
Bangor, Maine.
For two years now, she
has been off medication
entirely ''de-
1 sensitized," she s8id, and
-\ft~thlng fr~Y. (' -,_
SISTER MARY ROMAULD
FALL FABRI ' '
unbleached muslin •
Great for anything from western
shirts and ethnic blouses to curta,ins
and pattern making. A hundred and
one uses. 100% cotton, 38" wide.
" Machine Washable
COMPARE AT .69 A YARD
~rsev prints
Beautiful "Swinger" prints in the
dusty 'fall colors. Many fun designs
to choose from.
Acetate/nylon blend • 48"" wide.
Machine wash -Tumble dry
VALUES TO $2.98 YARD
2yos.$3
start-to-sew ~i·ts
Wet'' Miii ......... : .....
Wcal ' I "8>)171
•
......_. .. , ................ _..., ,,.., ... ,
·,, n C: Cc.tar-...,.. ........... ....
ltJ ... ll
.....,.,._,., .,. ........
---104111
--. ... c..... "'" __ .._
_,...._. .... llJ
• •
•
,
-•
JEWELRY TALKS .,
MARY ELLSWORTH·
In the Seotember issue o(
Town and Country
Magaiine, and other slick
fashion magazines, we are
seeing pearls being worn
again. Had you forgotten
haw lovely they .tould look
against your skin?
At this time, we are selling
the fresh water "BIWA"
pearls, strung along a 14k
chain. These are feminine,
and nattering in 16" to 18"
lengths. Pierced earrings too
in the interesting "baroque"
shape.
The BIWA pearl (from a
fresh water lake in Japan>
takes several shapes. You
are probably most familiar
with the very white egg
s.bapeor rioe shape BIWA.
I love the n atter baroque
shape. It is extremely high
lustre and slightly "shrimp"
or golden in color. l am
especially partial to the
baroque pearl, the huge
South Sea being my favorite.
We are Showing a few S.S.
pearl rings in tailored high
polish, almost geometric mountings .
Some hints for pearl care:
• . .
n.1m
PUllUC NOTICll PUBLIC NOl'ICB
I
•
,
• '
I
I·
8f DAILY PILOT
:_.;.ainpalgll Tlekl.g
Tiffie Marches
-For Wallace
From Wire Sonic ..
You ma.y smile when aomeooe ,shows up wear-
ing a genuine George Wallace wrist watch, but the
lastlalJlb goes to the Alabama governor.
The timepieces are helping pay for his pre·
sideotial campaign with8 profit of $1 each for him.
Wallace. a still unannounced candidate for the
1978 Democratic presidential nomination, 11ot the
g~abead from the Federal Election Commission
for the sale of wrist watches and other mementoes
bearing his picture and signature to raise funds for
both his campaign and his personal bank account.
• •
American rock music star Alice Cooper
pledged to ' 'exile '' himseli from Europe, Britain ex-
cluded, after claiming his entt!W'age was accused of
stealing from a Munich, W~tGermany, hotel.
Cooper told reporters as he arrived in London
that the hotet tried to charge his party of about 40
persons for two nights when it only stayed one.
He said that when the bill was rerused, the hotel
management ·•accused us or stealing towels.
television sets and other items from the hotel
rooms. This was absolute rubbish." • Joseph Kalllnger, a Philadelphia cobbler who
allegedly took his young son on a three-state crime
tour, has been round guilty of a Dec. 3 robbery near
Harrisburg, Pa. ·
The verdict in Dauphin County <Pa.) Court puts
Kallinger in line for pl'06ecution New Jersey, where
be is charged with killing a young nurse, rePortedly
because she rerused to perform a sex act.
His extradition to New Jersey was ordered in
April but could not be implemented until after the
robbery trial.
Kallinger, 38, was convicted on rour counts or
robbery, one count or burglary and rour lesser
counts of false imprisonment. • Sharif Sirhan, eldest brother of Robert F. Keo·
nedy's assassin, has been placed on two years pro·
bation and fined $140 (or drunken driving.
Court records showed Sirhan, 42, Pasadena,
pleaded guilty to ·one count or drunken driving. He
was arrested Sept. 2 after his C'8r collided with a
parked vehicle. ,
Sirhan's 31 ·year-0ld brother, Sirhan B. Sirhan,
was convicted of the 1968 assassination or Kennedy. •
The world premiere or the film ''Give Em Hell
Harry,!'' based on the lire of the
late former President llarry S
Tnlman, attracted a capacity
audience at $25 a ticket in In-
dependence, Mo.
The movie is actually a
filmed performance of the one-
m~ stage play featuring James
Whitmore, who was on hand ror
the apeoing.
"I've seen this film once," )
he said. "l usually dpn't view ,WM1TM01111
pictures oecause, quite rraokly, l don 't like
watching myself. I'm not pleased with 'my looks .
But I did like it. I may see it again.··
•
R.fe•ard Keeling, a 31-year-old UCLA &raduate
student, bas been ordered to stand trial ror murder
in the heroin overdose death of singer-composer
Tim llacldey.
Keeling, who holds a doctor's degree in music,
was ordered to appear Cor arraignment Oct. 2.
. Buckley, 28, died June 29 as he was climbing
the stairs to his apartment here. A coroner's report
sai~ he died or an overdose of heroin, •
The Nevada Supreme Court halted civil pro·
ceedings in Las Vegas District Court in whicb
Howard Hughes is seeking to buy the Silver Slipper
Casino.
' Distrt ct Judge
J-b Pavlikowski ruled ,.....--------,
Hughes' Summa Corp. ( ) lacks authority to buy the PEOPLE
SilVF Slipper. The cor-'---------~poralloo appealed to the
higlier court.
SUmma, which began leasing the club in 1968 at
$32,000 per month, tried Jut year to exercise an op-tioa,'° buy the casino but was turned down. The clut
owners said Hughe! illegally withheld rent to rreeze
thein out of business.
" The state Court of Appeal said an environmen·
tat impact report won't be necessary ror artist
Chd1to Javacheff to erect bis 24-mile "RuMing
Fence" between the Petaluma area and the Pacific
Ocean.
• 6"There is no substantial evideOce that the pro·
ject will have other than a negligible and temPorar)
effect on the ·environment."' the appellate cour1
ruled.
The court overturned a June 19 ruling by
Scmoma County Superior Court which said county
supervison could not issue a use permit tor the art
project until an envin:mmental impact report i~
completed.
* Cindy Birdsong, a member of the soul singing
group Tbe SUpremes, and her husband, Charles D.
Hewlett, have agreed to .terms ror a divorce, Ms.
Birdlong's attorney said. · Ms. Birdsong, who prerers that designation,
and Hewlett were married on May 24, 1970. It was
her first marriage and his second. _
Ms. Birdsong's attorney, James Lerman, said
the divorce action was filed Jut March on grounds
of irreconcilable dilferences. He did not disclose de·
tails of the settlement, but Lerman said Ms.
lllrdaong would have cus!Aldy of the couple's son.
J>arid,2. .
• . .
A11mell nodule removed from the right lung of
Sm. -. A. Bart (D-Mlch.) wu not canoerous In
tests conducted ot Bethesda
Nnal Holpltal, his office an-
weed. '
!J'be 11ochlle was removed
"'1Jept: 11 alld llart :la recover<nC-Irom tbo chest surlPf)'. -1!* ama11, Isolated nodule
wao dlleovettd durinl teota to
dotinnlne the primary-~ of
a 11111.,U cancerou~ &J'VWlh found Cll~'•atm..
• • •
• . ~ .· ... ,~,:! •• .. ~
A Canadian funeral dlnclor, I. oa.atas MMH ~u 11•m.ed ,IO\lei:ellP> lfalld muter of the
lndl! t OrdffofOdd Jrellowa a! Ille order'• an· ,...._,eo11911111Pllrfumd. ·
11 .... ae, 1111eeeeda Fruk L. Bllrl•u of
l'WtlllMl. • .--or the' IOI', wblcb e1a1ma 1.a ... _ ..... lall-. i . .. -.
i
I ..
' .
Fall Regatta Dra~s 126 ~~r~:P
SkinnPn. E11J·nv Summer Saili;,a ·Slate~
-r'r"" --~ -..., "Get It To1eu.er fer
' The summer 1autn1 weather
that yachting bulls ha•• waited
for flnaJly arrived Soturday and
Sunday. giving the 12111 boats in 12
cluses some spirited competi·
lion in the Fall Regatta.
Balboa Yacht Club handled the
outside classes con1i.sting or 4.9
boats in five classes, and lhe
Newport Ha_rbor Y11cht Club race
committee supervised the inside
classes with 77 boats in seven
classes.
May Be, Hank Tbaya-1NHYC; 5, LID0-1'8 (10) -I, Bob
Toma.hawk ll, John Attm, BYC. Mlndte, LIYC; 2, Pl'od Toepel,
ETCHELLS·22 (1%) -1, Dark 8YC ;~llernLeflon,WCYC.
Star IV, Skip Elliott, NHYC; 2, ' LASEil A UO) -1, .llm llucJ<.
Splrtt, Phil Ramser, NHYC; 3, ln1bam, NlfYC; 2, Scott
Bon Bon, Ro&er Md1h11er, Bernard, NHYC; 3, Ty Beacb,
NHYC. BYC.
Kidl" la the title ot • dllld care wor)lsbop be-
ing presented Satwd.,.,
OcL 4 at Oran1• Coast
Ccllese.
The workabop, i!o · .-td l>Y tl>e Orlllle County Dey Care Aa-
eoclation and tl>e OCC
Earlj Cblld-C1Ub, .. ~~to stimulate a ~~etClndq
care. rt runs from I a.m.. to 2:30 p.m . In the OCC
Science Hell ond Home
Eecoomlcs BUilding.
Appoiated
SHIELDS (8) -1, Jean, LASER B (12) ~ 1, Dave
Gordon Marlow, UC!SA: 2, Cileri<,NHYCj2, MaritAndie:Wi,
Crwlcber, Lee P•illt«~UCJM. BYCii· 3, Ned JOllH, NHYC. SOLING (8) -I, crA, Bill-SA OT' A (lJ) .:;. 1, JI) e
Fields, NHYC. Pinckney, BCYC ; 2, Bill Buck·
FINN (9) -1. Heni)'Sprque ln&b•m. NHYC~ 3, Realna
Ill. NHYC. Parker, NHYC. .
, SABOT B (5) -1. Bill Bents, OUtside Cluses Melvin J . Bridge of ·
Newport Be ach has
been appointed to the
Position of vice presi·
dent in charge of
markelin2 by the
Barient Co ., San
Carlos, manufac ·
turers of winches for
sailing yachts.
PHRF (14 ) -I, Ghost II. John
Reynolds, NHYC ; 2, Solneska.
Keith Dinsmoor. BYC; 3. Blue
Rocket. Bill Blurock, BYC: •:
In1kle C Cl-NHYC.
LIDO·l4A (15) -1. Bob Uc· SABOT c (12) -1. Matt cifero, BYC: 2, Rick Criafiel, Tin&Jer. LJYC; 2. Tom Doylem
VYC : 3. Al Perez, BYC. LJYC; 3, Jim Lawaon, NlfYC.
Tb• workshop is open
to the public and ad-
mission is SS per in-
dividual and SS per cou-
ple. Check• should be
made payable to the
Orange County Day Car-e
Aasociation, and mailed.
to Marsha Hall, 1106 W.
Carleton Pl., Santa Ana
Sundance
Dances Off
With Title
BOATING
King Beats ~ield
Of 80 i~ Hobie 14
Jerry King of Newport Beach
topped a field or 80 to. win the
Hobie C""at-14 national cbam-
piopship at Glen Arbor, Mich.
"" Saturday. The winner is a former
Hobie-16 sailor sailing a 14 for the
Cirst time in major competition.
Weather on Lake Michigan
dropped Crom a comfortable 70
degrees on the Cirst two days ol
the regatta to a blustery lS knots
with rain on Saturday as a cold
rront moved into the area.
The top 10 Cinishers in the na-
tiooals quaJlflecl far th8 world
champion1hJp1 scheduled at
Palma del Mar, Puerto Rico.
Dec. 11-14. They are: 1. Jerry
King, Newport Beach; 2, Phil
Berman, Newport Beach; 3.
Randy Hatfield, Long Beach; 4.
J. Allyn st.evens, Orlando. F1a.;
5. Dean Froome, Kailua, Hawaii ;
6. Jim Mccann, Orlando; 7. Mike
Staudt, Fontana; 8 . J.erry
Jenkins. Elk Lake, Micbf\ 9. • Brad Carpenter,, Sayville, a.;
10. Jan Gugen, Boy City, Mich.
92107. .
Fourte.en workshop
sessions are on the
schedule. Topics include.
''Homemade Outdoor
Equipment,''
'"Homemade Tovs. ·•
''Art Activities,'' Music,
Storles and Song's,''
''Help for Day Care
Motber-s, '• •' N utritlon
and Feeding Young
Children," "Rainy Day
Ideas.·· ''How to
Parent," ••1nrant
Stimulatioa, '' ''Cooking
with Kids," ''Safety in
the Home,·· ''Motor Ac-
tivities,''· ''Guide to Dis·
cipline," and "Stoeytell-
ing."
Sundance, a Cal-27
skippered by Jack '
Mayer, Capistrano Bay
Yacht Club was the over-
all and Cl8"' B winner
Sunday of Dana Point
Yacht Club's 67-mile Tri·
Port race, the sixth
reatare or the
Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet Series.
The race started
Saturday at Dana Point
and took the fleet to a
mark orf Newport
Beach, then to Oceanside
and back to Dana Point
ror the finish. Light ai/S
encountered along the
coast Saturday night re-
sulted in a slow race that
did not Cinish until midaf-
temoon Sunday.
Golden Hinde
Reaches L.4
Willard Appoints
Area Rep for Vega.
PUBLIC NO'DCE
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAMllSTATIEMIENT
Thi folio.inti S19n. •• -.111111 blal· .-. .. :
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A
replica or Sir Francis Drake's
Golden Hinde, which arrived in
San Francisco on its maiden
' voyage from England earlier this
. '
Willard Boats or Costa Mesa ·
has announced the appointment
or ..the Crow';. Nest, Newport
Beach, as the area represen-
tative for the Vega 30 and 40-foot
diesel trawlers and the new Vega
world cruising sailboats in eight
and 16-ton sizes.
dent of Willard.
The Crow's Nest, with Richard
Connella as president ii a large
yacht salea, service and dock
complex located on Newport Bay
at the site of the old South Coast
PIERCE (IF,,l(:E EQUIPMENT,
MJW, JtltlSl.,C01l10MtM. CA.nt.u
At.,. PMn:~. 1n 22nd st., eosu.
~.(A. 92126 ™• tlullMSS Is (Onduc:tl'd by Ml In·
cllvldl,lal,
Alon Pltt(e
Thl5 Jtal•,.,.nt wos llltd wit!'! lhP
C-ly Clefll GI Orlnot·Co..nty 1111 ~
tirmbel' 3, 1975.
CLASS A -I,
Twilight, (Morgan-35)
Bill Wiedeman, OYC ; 2,
Music Maker (lrwin·30 )
Savin and Doose, OYC ;
3, Audacious,
(Yankee-30) Mike Ken·
nedv, DPYC.
year. has arrived in Los Angeles
ror transformation into a floating
movie set. ""'' Putllltnod Or~ C:0.11 o.lly Piiot,
s.pt...l,IS.22.29,1•75 Jll,).7~
The Golden Hinde 11, a four·
!'l~ted, 102-foot replica of the
~~ century galleon Drake used
in his voyage around the world,
200 year~ ago, arrived Sunday
Crom San Francisco.
The move is part of a program
to appoint a limited number bC
additional full ·service fac6.ory
representatives in major yacht·
ing centers, according tO ·Jack
Hochadel, presidentofWil.lard.
Co. . Hochadel said Jolm Granath,
Willard's Vega1 retail sales
manager, bas associated with the
Cr0w'S Nest . William A.
McNamee, formerly in Vega re-
_ tail sales, bas been named
marketiD.g,JDanager of custom
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUSINUS
NAMESTATEMIEMT
The follow1119 J19'SOft II clol119 buW·
MSSOS:
WESTCLIFF CONSUl..TING, 150I
RINI 1,.1,., Newport Beacll, CA. 92660
Wlllllm Jofln IE.ftl~ Jr., lD
Ro.Ith t..lne', Hewp0t1 BtKll, Coll!. 92'60
Tiiis er,,s1,.u 11 tondu<ltd IJf' M ln-
OIY~I.
CLASS B -I . Sun·
dance; 2, Vulgar Boat·
man, (Columbia Sabre)
Hugh Curran, DPYC; 3,
Endless Summer
(Cal-28) Dave McMillin,
DPYC .
It will be refitted as an 18th
century buccaneer vessel and is
scheduled to leave ror Mexico
Oct t for a pirate Cilm,
··swashbuckler.''
The Crow's Nest, with Richard
Connella as president, is a large cording to Jack ttocbaa~ pres1·
boats. /
Willard builds fiberglass
yachts and commercial vessels
WUlllfc\.Jofln EdtltlevW Jr. •
Thi• .Ultmefll ... , flied ""'"' the C»urlt'r ci..11 o1 or.,.e Coufltv .. s.o-
~ l. tt1s.
CLASS C -1, Beluga
(Coronado-2S) Hilding
Johnson, D PVC, 2,
Pe.gy Lynne (Kittiwake-23) Chuck
Pierce. DPYC, 3, Sans
Souci (Ericson-27)
George Bodica, DPYC
Lumaran Wins
Lumaran, sailed by
Bill Rohrs was the win-
ner or Voyagers Yacht
Club's annual Catalina
lsland race Saturday
and Sunday
LM.Boyd
Sll.nuner' s
Kids Smarter
A BRITISR SCIENTIST tnSlsts his
statistics prove that youngsters born between
May and Oetober develop higher IQs than those
born during the rest or the year
The shoulder blades or a turtle are 111s1de
not outside its ribs
IT'S KNOWN that 33 out of every 100
viewers who watch NFL football on TV are
women ... THE HEIGlfl' or a baby girl in·
creases by 50 percent during her Cirst year. Her
weight quadruples ... IN RUSSIA, the salad is
always the first course, never aside dish.
NOTHING WORKSquitesowellinthepro-
fessiooal polishing ol silver as a disk or bull
walnls hide impregnated with jeweler's rouge.
Blame that, please, ror the shortage of
walruses.
RADIO
Q. ''Can you name radio's fU"St hour-long
variety show?'"
A. Research reveals it was ''The
Fielschmann Hour" With Rudy Vallee and his
Connecticut Yankees.
PRICE of a new bride in Jamestown when
the English Cir st settled there was 120 pounds or
tobacco.
NIFTY, this advertis·
ing trick that a German ad
agency ~ame up wt th. Or so
the agency execs thought.
Pretty young girls, models,
starlets, that sort, they
were schooled to drop fancy
P8W handkerchiefs near
unescorted fellowa. On said
handkerchiefs were ad-.
· vertiH.menta for cigarettes, radios, sporting
events. lt ls my undentanding, however1 that
the agency bad difficulty keeping the lllrl• on
the job. They kept nmnin& off. with the Un•
escorted fellow~. ' MAllllYUNQ.E
Youn& lady, you can legally marry your
uncle In Pennsylvania. If you both tbi/lk that a
good notion, but not in any other state.
TB& SJLK on an ear or corn Is not Just de·
· coratlon. Each strand is a sort of path along
which the pollen can travel to fertilize Ille In -
dividual ketnels.
~me11teL.M.lo¥f,,.,o.an1•. Cof\I ..... .,.,.
Qlfrll"t ""'' L..M. ...,. . .
from 30to120 feet. '
The Solo Sailors "'P' Publlllled Or•ntie eo.st o.ur Piiot,
SOpt.t , lS, tt, l't, 1•7S J?t1S
PUBLIC.NOTICE
8 Race A.cross Pacific
FICTITlpuS•UJINISS
NAMESTAT•MllNT
TN followl"'I ,.,.llN'll •r• doing Ml-
MSl H :
SHOPPER'S VILLAGE
O.EANEllS Md LAUNDRY, tn• N.
Mlotn $1.,_., SOnLI AM, C.11'°"""
JllmM T. Mool't, 111l RhodtS Or.,
Cmto Mltw, ClolllOt'nlom»
SAN FRANCISCO CUPll -Amid
cheers from wellw1sherson land and in
sailboats, eight daring yachtsmen
Sunday embarked on a smgle-handed
trans-PaciCiC ocean race, a 6,500
nautical -mile marathontoJapan. 1
The seven men ancf one woman,
representing Japan, the United States,
France and Germany·, left San Fran-
cisco manna at 2 p m Among them
was Keo1ch1 Hone. tbeman who sailed
a tmy sloop smglehanded Crom Japan
to San Francisco in 1962.
Sponsored by Japan Association ror
the International Ocean Exposition
and organized by Nippon Ocean Rac-
ing Club, the race is bid as a top event
or the six-month-long Okinawa Fair
now a third or thew aythrough.
FOR THE RACERS, the lone course
mark will be passage between the
Hawaiian islands or Oahu and
Molokai, before their fmal destination
at the Expo site on Motobu Peninsula
of Okinawa Island.
The award giving ceremony is set
CorNov . IO in Okinawa, and all were ex·
peeled to complete the voyage in about
SO days.
Horie, 34, who scored the feat of
around·the -world non-stop solosaili».g
in 275 days last year, appeared relaxed
as he conducted the final round of
check of his 3S·foot "Mermaid IV"
before the start or the race ..
"I have to win back all I lost in
Reno,'' joked Horie. No prize money is
involved in the race, "but l had saved
on the transportatio~ree,'' said Horie,
who had sailed hiS boat over the
PaciCic for this race.
He said Ibis time he rmisbed the trip
in just 40 days, compared with 94 days
it took him 13 years ago in his first
"Mermaid,'' which bow is in a San
Franclscomuseum.
THE DARKRORSE in this race ap-
pears to be Yukoh Tada, a tS-year-old
Tokyotaxidriver.
"To me. this event b a sort of.
carnival, not a race. I don't really
think or winning,·· said Tada, who non-
etheless had brought his self-designed
JO-root ''Okera Ill'' inarecord48days
across the PaciCic.
9tttle L Moof<e, 1113 RhodtS Or .• a... ~ Colrtoflll• mu
lNs ~"'" 11 ~led !JV ori ln-
d'tldYll.· •ttle L. Moort .
Tl'lll 5tltt-1'11 ... 1 llled With It.
County Clert ol 0r""9" C-o\Hllyon Sitp..
1IHi'Df 11, 1'7S.
Tada. who tfaou5l:ht "I Was sailing leisurely t '' said he spent much time on
the ocean practicing Zen meditation
and playing jazz on his beat-up tenor Nlllftd 0r.,. c~" ~ltr ":.'=.
sax. • 'Okera,'' he explaioed, means s.. n.1t.•• Ott. ,.11, 1t1s is.1.1s
"flat broke" and saidheoowpossesses
only the boat and his cabin Tokyo after PUBLIC NOTICE
·selling off his house to fmance this '1et1Ti6Usaus1N1:ss MAMl:ST~TllMaMT race. n. 1o11ow1ne .,..._ 11 c1o1119 busl· For David While of San Francisco _,,,,
this is the first yacht race ever, with SEA NOTT YACHT SERVICE,"' AYOC.00, CellllMew, Cloll~nltt2'27 Orie and 8 half years O( experience in Gr•t1ory CllJrles Noll, 2tl sailing itself. But, bavingjustcomplet·' Awt.to~eo.taMeu, C•llllH'nl•nw
ed a 5,000·mile solo trip in his 32·foot c11!:'!.~r.u is c:oncMIH er Ml ,,..
"~atapha'' from Tahiti to San Fran-Greoor'l'C.Non
f Ttll' •'-1•"""" w•• llttd wit!'! the ci.sco·in 41 days, he was all set or the c-rtv O•rll o10t•"9t cou111r~ s.p. new challenge. tembtt'11.1t15.
••you NEVER really stop moving,'' Pl*btlocf °'""""" (o.11 oa11,":..~ said White, 30, a University of S1P1.n.1t.•JldOc.t.•.1i ,1•1s ms-1s
Colorado dropout. "There's always
onemorethlngtodo." PUBLIC NOTICE
In his cabin were, among other F1a1nousaus1111•ss •~<-•s, l11nauaae instruction books (or NAMllSTATllMllNT LA.... --ao 0 Tiie folio.Ing ~ ii cloiftg tlvs'· Japanese, French and Spanish, plus a "'"":
kltt I Co hi th UNIQUE NEEDLECRAFTS, 2ll A en 0 aC mpany m On e Eost 1,111 Strttl, ·cosla Me10. journey. c.lffonll• nu1
Noriko· Kobayaabi, 29, the only w.-,=-"~~~i.fc!::=5
female entrant, ls a petite woman with Thb Ws,lntp 11UlldKttderr .. 1 ...
saillq experience ''ever since 1 was a 111.--."_ .,.,, •··--'little girl." . 'nlll ....-1 wo1""'jjj;;; 'fl4lh tr.
''l just like sailing. It doesn't matter c.ity a.not°'"..,.. county1111 s.p.
whether it's a race or pleasure,•• said ..... 11• '''s. ~
Miss Kobayashi, whose ()Illy time in· Put111shtd °'"..,.. co.11 ~u, Piiot. cenUve on this race seemed to be the Srfll.n.29,ofld0tt.•.1J, 1t1s ,.,_,5
PUBLIC NOTICE limit at two months, because afl'er that
she would have to retum to her job as a
sports reporter in Tqkyo. She said she sraTUMw:,0:,'.a;:oorw..HT
planned to enjoy a tea ceremony op the . ~~'i'!!i°'::=!::!.'!!:,.,
ocean. ~ t11eU10otU1ot1c111iou.111Us111ts1-: This race is the second such event, MERMAID aeA.uTv SALON, fin
tbefirstonein1969withfouroutorfive ~~~!1~7tr••1• Co~t• Masa,.
starters fl.ni.shing the race from San ,,_ f'k11tltM llhlnns N•nw ,...
Francisco to Tokyo. 'lbe winner was """ to ~ .. w•• 111ed tn 0r-. ClufltyOl'IJutrn. ttn. Erick Tabarly or France, who com-l!Mry E.. Mii. Driver UCt1'1H
Pleted the distance in39days. ...._ Nnm1, ,,.,_ 5"t• O.ra sn.t. ~V....,,Gellfronll•"* 11tltllllllMM-1CeMuetocl:llW'Mk't-
Weisfie/,d's ·Cup Race -. MlrrE.Wlll
1Ws ......... , ." tllotd With tN
CllWlti CMt1t .. °'~ OM!lly ... 1411'*"11.ms. ,_,
"*lllllM or.,.. CMM o.lfr ,....._
Won by H~nley in Ptz!c ~~~~=·~ ..
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Gtorae . Scbwnacheratthewbeel leclthePQ _ ......... ..
Henley f 1lled to lead fot a whole lap in , S'.241 point. In natloul .i...a1np co-, _::.~111 "'*'1 tr.-.. ....
any beat but still managed three nar~ brto the seUOQ'I fta&l nee. ~t LUflNINO .ti1os, tM....,...
row victories Sonday as he took.the Ul!'acller'a llotlt Wd id make the -~~'.';':'.:':...
Pride ot Pay 'N Pak to victory ID tbe llnals at It flnls~ed .-1n 118 flnlt ...... ..__<>•--
Weisfield'• Cu,p race oo Ni.ssioq..Bay heat and failed to complete "t.be ~~!'.:::'., orw.
and the nat,onaJ point champiooalll,p. second. TM• ..... ,.. 11 col'IChlet9d ., •
Jtenley grabbed the lead in each ot. ••Georae ls fantutJc, Unbelleva~ ...-~~MMiUM
his three beats coibing cit~ final ble.,.'·' said Pat oytner Dave TMt •••"*"' -• flltf ...... .,.. tum Of the last lap. His mareins of fleerODSperaer. "Jlciw-'tahudfor ....... °""""'-C:-0YM-
victcry ranaecl from one-ba1f to. two • alngle .lap all day, •cept at Ille -~..,,. -boatlenitht. • llnllh. and bewu runninscollleout· ....,_.,._.,..,.,....,....._
The . Welafleld'1, with Biiiy aldealldaylODJJ." .. ..,.,..,_ .• _,,
I
\
'
'
' ,
I .,.,,~
" •f ' Top Song Leaders
Saddleback College song leaders started
the_ schoo_l year by winning trophies for
thell" roullne and for being superior in all
aspects as well as capturing several in·
dividual blue ribbons during the national
All America Specialty Camp in Saota
Barbara. The songlea'ders, shown
clockwise from the top, are Katy Davis,
Mission Viejo-; Tina . Pugliese, San
. Clemente; Janice O'Hagan: El Toro ;
Marlene Butler, Irvine; Carrie Conger,
Tus_tin; Kathy Kessey, San. Clemente, and ,.-
in th~ center, Evelyn Homs, El Toro.
I
1 State Attorney Questioning
· Unificatio~ Election R11ling
f By K,\THY ClANCY the proposed' district.a and the ex· m~nt of Education.
or .. o.~1............ isling school systems in their Mason said tbe judge's "strict
.(o attorn&y for the state area. . interpretation" of the law could
Department of Education says Ap~al,s or the ruling are ex· spell defeat to future Wlification
he doesn't "see the logic" in the peel~. . . efforts. court ruling against two West qriffin ex_pla1ned .that in hts
Oran•e County unifi ti 1 ruling, the Judge swd the state . e 1ca on e ec-could make exceptions in school ti~~ attorney' Tom Griffin, pre-reor'a~zation in the areaB . of
dieted that if Judge Claude M ~tbn1~ 1mbalailce, community
Owen&I ruling is upheld on a~ 1den~t~,. numbers of studen~
peal, either the state Education and diVlS1on of asset.a -but not 1n
Code will need revision or ''there tax base.
probably won't be any more un-••t DON'T SEE the logic, to tell
• ifications: the truth, in the Judie·~ con-
' THE J U D GE RUL E D last
week that unification votes in
Fountain Valley and south Hunt-
ington Beach were improperly
called because the state Board or
Education allowed too great a
disparity in tax wealth between
clusions," Griffin said, "in that
one area of the code has to be
construed literally while others
do not."
Griffin also backed up com-
ments made earlier by Hal
Mason, director of fisca:I services
for the Orange County Depart-
'
HIT IT Hits It
On Tax lmpoumh
The HoneS ty, Integrity and
Truth Insistence Teatn or tbe
Saddleback Valley (lllT /IT) has
launched a campaign for school
district support against regula-
tions governing homeowner tax
impound accounts.
John Simons aild F..d McKean.
co-chairmen of the citiiens lobby
group, want schOol districts to be
able to tap the impound accounts
when they are short of cash.
CASH FLOW PROBLEMS fre·
quently arise among school-dis-
tricts when taxes ooll~ed by the
tax collector's office are not
turned over until long after the
start of the fisca~y ar.
That means y have to bor·
row money to m t fLScal obliga.
tioas and then pay interest on the
borrowing, adding to the burden.
of taxpayers, claim-Simons.and
McKean.
Trustees of the Saddleback
Valley Unified School District
have already acted in support of
mT IT's request to Gov. Ed·
.mund Brown for corrective
legislation.
Now Simons and McKean are
asking for similar resolutions
from trustees of the Brea.Olinda,
Laguna ~ach, Newport-Mesa.
and Orange Unified School Dis-
tricts.
-Homeowners pay monthly
amounts to their mortgage
holders which are held in trust by
the lending institution· until tax
bills are issued, usuaJ1y late iii
November.
The impound accounts fre-
quently are required by the
mortgage firms as a condition to
issuance of homeowner loans.
In addition to allowing school
districts to obtain access to funds
held in impound accounts IDT is
lobbying for the eventual aboli-
tion of most impound accounts.
.
Qu~e Test Rule
Eyed for Newport
Developefs in several areas of
Newport Beach, including all of
West Newport, may be reqtiired
to cooduct special geoloCic and
enaineerinl stadies tot their pro-
pooed proJecta if the state in·
eludes the local areas in "special
study zones."
The zonet, tO be detennlned by
the state. geolo1Y· and Mining
Board are'being drawn tn an at-
tempt 'to help minimize dama«e
in futl11'9 earthquakeo. Tl!e -
limin&rY sites chosen in Newport
all are localed on tile Newport·
Jn&l""'ood Faull.
Maps may be viewed in the
city's Community Development
Department, 3300 Newport Blvd .•
between 8 a.m . and S p.m. on
weekdaya. The maps detail exact
locations of the proposed areas.
PERSO NS. CONCERNED
about property in these areas
may send comments to lbe state·
boanl by Sept. 00. Aller that dale,
state ofliclala wUI begin prepar-
·ingfinahnapo showing the mnes.
Comment.JI should be ·mailed
to: .CaHfornla Mining and
G«>logy· Board, ~oom 1341, 1416
Mnth Si' .. Sacramento.
· The new regulations, the rt!"lult
of tile Alqul1t-Prlolo Act of 1972,
would mean that proposed real
estate development in tile zones
would be 1ul>Jecl to ..tensive
geoloclc apd en1lneerlng
studies. Also, real estate agenta
th the areas w~uld be required to
tell prd$pecll11e buyers that t
.11111ls1ltuated In a •.Pttlal 1tudy
GRIFFIN SAID IT would not
be impossible to b.reak up large
high school districts into smaller
tm.ified districts and still comply
with Owens' ruling.
Formation of financially equal
districts, he predicted. would re-
quire gerrymandering of boun-
daries and even divisions in
school attendance areas.
In addition, Griffin agreed with
Mason that the judge did not con ·
sider Senate Bill 90, recent state
school finance laws, which make
local assessed value less impor-
tant than it once was.
UNDER SB 90, districts are al·
lowed a set amount of dollars per
student per year What can't be
raised through local taxes, is
contributed by the state.
Griffin said when the state
looked at the south Huntington
Beach and Fountain Valley un-
ification plans, officials ruled
there "was more than adequate"
revenue per child
"It wou_td result in higher tax-
es," he said of FopnWn Valley 's
case, but added voters would
have to decide if they were will·
i.ag to pay more.
GRIFFI N SAIDTHE sU.le still
has a public Policy in favor of un·
ificatlon," primarily for reasons
of community identity and con ·
tinuity of elen;ientarY and high
school curriculum. 1 He added that recent trends in
education . which make the
school area -not the district -
the focus of attention make un·
ification less vital.
He said the greater emphasis
now is on parent involvemP.rlt at
·1ocalschools.
But he said unification still is
important and state laws should
be "nexible enough so that peo-
ple can have the organization
that best suits their n~ as they
see it.''
Vin Jorgensen
. Tribute Set ,
In Neu:port
The marine industry and the
City of Hope will join in tribute
Oct. 4 for long-time Harbor area
businessman Vin Jorgensen al a
dinner at the Newport Bea.ch
Marriott HOtel.
City of Hope spokesman Joe
Brody said that Joraensen, the
founder of Balboa Marine
Hardware, will be hooored by the
establishment or a research
fellowship in 1tis name at the in·
stitulfon m Duarte. ·
Joraensen has served on the
board of directors for Hoag
Memorial Hospital and ·was:
named Newport Beach's Mah of
the Year in 1969.
The dinner will begin al 7 p.m .
with a no-bost cocktail hour,·
followed by dining at8p.m.
Spokesmen for the tribute said'
that all friends of ~orgensen are
welcome. Reaervations are
available through the City or
Hope, (213) 62M6U. Extension
• • .. --·-..
• DAA.YPILOT .,
The Nemesis of .Cults
' Ted Pa.trick 'Deprograms' Religi.ous :leal.ots
BY GEORGE COIUIJ!U. .......................... , · NAME NEW YOllK -He'a both
denounced anclpralsed.8"'scon-In tlie
demnod bf rellalous culuats u a N. EWS lddn-r and •b\11<1' d rl&blf; but balled by otben U • a kind, .., . I
sympathetic man w.llo ha• p-ammlng'' activities acroa the
reocued hundred• ol you111 pea-countl')' have become tile bane of
pletronl mlnd-lw.la""'"eaptildl udOulL.llm..!!!unal rell1lous
'lbal la tbe sharply coolrasttna -·but who is a hero to many
lmaie painted" of Ted Palriek, 4C7' . .,. • .....,..,.rs and ll!!f<llla.
of San Dleao. whose "depro-"Wll CAN N!:VElt tbank this
Old Patient ,
Left $700 •
To C·ounty
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
• CM .. Deity f1Ulllll9ft
Trevelyn Trench. who died laraely unmoumed three weeks
a10 and was bought a $700
funeral that includes no grave
marker, has bequeathed his la.st
$700 to the people of Orange
County.
Thal is all Mr. trench. 75J had
left from his accrued SOcial
Security payments kept in an ac·
rount administered by the con·
valescent hospital where be died,
alter bis rour years there.
HE HAD NOTHING al all
before he was adtnl~ in 1971
when he was 71, senile and no lone er able.to care for him.self.
miracle man eoouab," uyw lln.
• Riobard Carroll of cu,yohoca
Falls, Ohio, whose dauab~r.
Mattia, came out otthe Mahuaj
Jl srouP throuah Patrlclt'1 in-
fluence. "OUr nation owes him a
ll'••t debt,"
Says M•rcia : ''He hu an
am~ ability to get you to .,
thliik.···
-·'An unders.tancllna. dedl .. tod! ·:
..
Christian, who truly knows the ,,
Bible," 18YI Mrs. Albert TW-ner •:
of Warwick. R.I., wbo1¥daughler
was drawn .out of Sula M)'W11 ,:<
Moon 's Unification Church
through Patrick's efforts. -:
ON THE OTHER hand, leaders
of the groups say Patrick and ex·
members of the groups who work
with him are lawless r~ders rid· ··
ing rwgh!lhod over riibls cf re-"
llgious choice.
A ban'1 "of mercenaries who ' ':
kidnap for c11sh" and whose use •
of "pseudo-Pavlovian method& • ·
deconvince individuals o( thelr
faith," says Neil Salonen, U.S.
president of Moon's movement.
Patrick, a black, bespectacled 1 •
Methodist who previously was a
community-relations adviser for .,
the California state govemnient, ,•
says the recently spreading ar- .:
ray of cults are ••group
mesmerism ·· to induct and hold
members. ··
"IT 'S A FORM OF
psychological imprisonment,''
he said in a telephone interview~
"Their techniques are all the
same. to control the mind and ... · Hit Social Security checks
piled up because bis needs were rew. , ·
destroy free will.·'
Since 1971 when Pabick had
':•_
The mone~ that came in moo ·
thly had.to be spent for him, or,it
would have'been cut off.
''We bought him a lot of
clothln1," says Bayview Con · ·
valescent Home Administrator
Don Beld.
TREVELYN TRENCH'S
modest fortune -all the fWlds he.
had left in a lite no 0f¥ has been.
able to learn anything about
sine~ his incarceration as an in·
digent citizen -could not be aJ .
lowed to grow .
California law does not allow-a
Medi·Cal recipient to have more
than $1,500 to bis name, or his
health benefits will be cut off and
he must exisf as a priVate
hospital patient.
So tbe regular flow of clothing'
and personal gifts were
purchased to keep his bank ac-
count under $1,500.
HE SAID THAT if Mr .
Trench's funds exceeded $1,500
and the state cut of his Medi·Cal
benefits, making him a private
patient, alone in the world with
$1,500 in the bank, one month's
charges alone would have taken
a third of it
He added that convalescent
homes and hospitals literally
adopt such patients, administer·
ing their affairs when they are in-
capable and have no one else to
do it. J
.. l don 't think Trevelyn was
neglected," says Seid, who said
while Mr. Trench left: DO known
relatives, he didn't want •for
clothing or personal effects such
as toiletries .
THE OLD MAN who moved
through life in such a way that be
literally won no tears of loved.
ones or lengthy eulogy when he
left life and left bis last $700 on
deposit with the county still lacks
one final note ot dignity in death.
Jim Nicol. of Comprehensive
Care Corporation, owner of the
UfllT ......
Eseaped S hark
Henry Peterson. 2Q, of Beloit.
Wis., leaves the hospital
after b"aving his leg amputat-
ed following a shark attack in
Daytona Beach, Fla. He
credits reading the novel
••Jaws'' for saving his life.
Storm Drain
Aid Approved
For San Juan
The County Board of
Supervisors has approved an
agreement with the city of San
Juan Capistrano to help finan·
cially in the construction of a por ·
lion of the Alipaz storm drain.
The improvemen~s will be
made along Alipaz Street. from
Del A vi on to an existing storm
drain outlet about 1,800 reet north
of the road, a"<:.,cording t o
Supervisor Thomas F. Riley .
He said the storm drail\ im -
provements will eliminate an ex·
isling hazardous roadside ditch
and provide an butletfor an exist-
ing upstream s torm drain
~ystem . The agreement provides that
the Flood Control District's
financial ,participation shall not
exceed $200,000 and de&ignates
the city as the contracting agen-
cy for the project.
I .ak e port Arson?
hospital, notes the $700 left in LAKEPORT (AP ) -Arson is
Trevelyn Trench's b~k account su~pected in at least 11 Lake
and now given to t e county .....__, County fires which have burned
would have covered it. more than 550 acres and cost ap-
.' "They al least could have proximately $84,000 to ext·
given the poor old dude a grave inguish, the State Div ision of
marker,·· he sighed. Forestry reports.
Career Field
his fint tussle with one or the ....
cults in getting his own son out of
it, he has been working with
other parents across the country
in extricating youngsters from
the groups.
. "Knowledge about how they
work is the best protection
against them," he said. , '.
So far. Patrick said he and his • :
associates successtully havei '·
.. deprogrammed'' about l ,OOOJ :
young people from variolis cults: ''"
a procedure in which relatives .
usually arrange to meet mem-
bers in private. take them>to a '.
neutral spot, and then Patrick ··
shows up to work at persuading
them to quit the groups.
"IT'S A MATTER of gettln4
them to thinking for themselves
again," he said. "It takes ·pa-·,
tience, common sense and trust.-
You've got to know the Bible.
You show them that what the .
group taught just will not stand ·.
up to what the Bible really tells .;
us."
He siiid deprogrammina: .•·
usually takes from an. hour to a
day or two, the average case re-·:·
quiring about four hours. After·
ward, assistants who are former
cult members stay with the new-
ly emerged person two or three
weeks to give reassurance.
Patrick spends most of hiS'"·•,
time on the road, traveling •bout ·
10,000 miles a week, handling .
various cases. His charges vary,'"
according to costs. ·
FOUR TIMES, HE has been
hailed intQ court on charges o(
holding cult members unlawful-·'
ly, and twice convicted, twice ac.
quitted, with the convictions on _ ..
appeal. But the legal issue-
smoulders unsettled, with the laW '• ·I clear against forcibly detaining
adults. but almost nonexistent
about mind.manipulating tec hni ·
ques.
··people don't realize how big
this thing is.·· Patrick said.
estimating there now are 5,000
cults in the country. large and
small. totalling about two milliOn
people, mostly involving insular,
regimenting pa tterns.
Genealogy Not Well Paying
Dear Joyce: I read an article about genealogy
and it seems to.me that I might do this as a business
from my home. What do you think?
-C.S.,Alexandria, La.
Genealogy -the study of individual or family
descent witti particular emphasis on names, places,
dates, and·relationships -is a financially chancy
proposition.
·A few well-established genealogists are nicely
compensated for expertise, but most ancestor hun·
ters should consider genealogical research as an
activity for supplemental income or as a hobby.·
EVEN IF YOU EVENTUALLY qualify as a
certified geneaio·gist, you'll have the problem of
getting customers who
can pay for the long, ( ' ).
ey .. reddenin&. hours )'Ou Career Corner
spend searching family _ _ .
trees. 1
(Inquiries for the
Board of the Certification of Genealogists can be
sent to 1301 New Hampshire Ave. NW, Washington.
D.C. 20036.) Though much inquiry can be done by mail,
you'll fin1t personal visits to scch places as
courthouses and cemeteries will expedite your
searc.h . A homebound individual ran do
genealogical research but would have to rely on
others to do essential legwork .
SELF· TRAINING IS A COMMON practice. In a
oew compact &uide, "'Tracing, Charting and Writ·
ing Your Family History," author Lois Martin
Sk alka :-;uggests that besides using a tape recOrder
when you interview chatty relatives. you consult
various kind s of records . These include city direc-
tori es, birth and death r~ords. ce metery and
fun eral home records. marri age certifi ca tes, re;
li gious records, probate court. census returns. Im·
mi gration and naturali zation petitio ns, and fore ign
records.
Your librarian can help you loc ale other how.to
books. such as "Searching for Your Ancestors," by
Gilbert fl. Doane, available in Bantam paperback :
and "Genealogical Researc h : Methods and
Sources,'' two volumes by the Am eri can Society of
Genealogists.
LOCAL COLLEGES /\ND BOARDS OF educa-
tion may ofter courses in gt"neal ogical research.
County historical and genealogical soc ieties, publi c
libraries and ··v·s·· periodicall y offer workshops.
Job opportunities are chiefl y in private re-
search for individuals an d fa milies. The going rat e
in tbe Washington, D.C. area is $5 an hour; it is dif·
ricult to work an eight-hour da y poring over dusty
records and microrilm.
Clientele may be acquired by advertising tn
local genealogical publications and newspapers,
llnd tn such national specialiied magazines as the
Ame ric an G e nea logis t and the National
.. .. ..
..
..
Genealorical Society Quarterly. .
Send career questions to Joyce Lain Kennedy al '·
this newspaper. Sorry. the volume or mail ,JDake•
personal replies impossible. . (
ABll4'8 TENT-"TIVELY tn-
ducled are all of West Newport,
the Balboa Peninsula as fat west
aa 18th Street, one small parcel
di 19th Street near Coeta Meoa
(Newport Terrace Con·
domlnlulllll ) and another an!all
aru weot..o~ llODle Vlata School .a !nine Avenue. ...... ' 2%7. "
-. I ,, .. •• • • •
-
.. DAILY PILOT Monda~. S.ptemtMr 22 Ul75
PUBLIC N011CE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
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PUBLIC NQ11CE
t•CTIOff)l sev•••••1.1TY
II any provl~ tit thl1 .... It ....... ,""' .. "-'~"'-.. tr~-or ICIP!lt•tlOll to.,,.
__, or(lrt\lmtleft<•t, tUCft ~lldl·
ly Of' --tltloll~llty .,.._II !'IOI af't«I
tht CIC.., ~°"kJ.Ofl• or ••k.i~ ~ wtikh t an M OI~ ... 1c1 f!f:'°
ltoe:L" '
JeCTtOH 4; Tiii~ or.._. i.Nl.I
~ l'ffKI MIG bf Ill f\1U IGr<f _.,of·
feel l'hlr1Y (XI ) 0.fl ltom Mid.,_ Ill •""'9'· •1'111 Detore tM •llplrllltlon llfflf•
..... llSI 0.Yti 19fMr I~,..,..,., ...... I • .... ltMd~ hi tMOr~ CO.WO.. ly Piiot, •~per ol' eener•I cln:ul•
tloool Ill' lrit..O MICI puOU~ In !fie Qty of
C.bl Meu, t09tlfler wlltl IM'*"" ol
tM ,,..~of ... (It" of Cost.I M1t ...
klOtl~wltht,.,..,.,ttotti.~
of tht city eounc.u votlno tor llfld~t , ... ....,,.,
PAMEO ANO AOOPTfO tlllt IWI
(lllyols.pt .... bt•, 1•11.
A.L.Plnkl•r
M•,.,,.. ol 11'11 City of CMt. .. ~
ATTEST:
V•ltr'9M.Wltt
Deputy
Clly Cl<lrkottheCllYOI
COSltMeu
STA TE Of CA\.I FOlllNJA I
COUNTVOFORANGE ) ''· CITYOFCOSTAMESA )
I, EILEEN P. PHlNNt!V, OtvOerll
-1•-offldo Clerk of the Cily C.ouncJI ot IM Clly ot Cost11 "'-1•. her1t>y
teftl!Y tMt I ... •lllOW and , .....
Ordlri.MI No.,,_.,_, lr>trocluc.ld -
c-ldlnd wctkwl 11y ~tklrl ~ 1 ,...
9Ui ... """'""'Of WIG Coty Coi.n::H l'lllcl
Ofl u. 2nll NY ol Setilembe•, 1t 7J, •nG
_........., .,..,..., •l'tll ~ ., •
wl'IOle •l • ~·•• meeUr19 OI !o9ld City
C-11 l'lllcl Oii ttw 16t" 4'Y of ~ ~ 'f15 l)y IM lollowlnQ •Oii Cilll -AYES COUNCIL. MEMBERS·
Plnkley "4•mm111 Wiison q11<1n ... _.
NOES: C0Uf\ICILMEM8ERS: NoM
ABSENT COUNCIL ._EMBERS: -IN WITNESS WHEREOF I Ptilvt
......OV •lmy tlanG ~•fll1.ldtl'llSNI
of 11W Otyof eo.l• MllM tftl' 1""'.,..,.of
~rl97J
(Mill' EllNflP P"lnney •• ,
Clly Ct.erk •"" 11.-officloCJerll of !I'll City CouncU of thl Cih·
ol CO$t1Mls•
81; V•lerl1M. Witt
O.outy City Cltork ol
tl'lilCl1'1'of CO$!• Mlw
PublllohH 0r•"91 CH1t O.Uy Piiot,
!otcllemtllr 22, 197J -... JllC+IS
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUSINl!SS
HANll STATEMl!NT
Tile following perM>n 11 Oo6nQ bin!·
MUH: EXTRA SENSORY PROOUC·
TIONS, E.S. PRODUCTION!>, E.5.P .•
•JO Btnl Streit, L•11un• Bt•c". c..ntom1•n•s1
NICHOL.AS JOHN ESPOSTO, I~
91-..t S1r111, L.egun• h•c,,, C.llloml•
"'" Tl'll$ MiMS5 1$ conaucted Dy •n !fl.
dlvlcai.I.
Nlcllol•sJ. EqNKIO
Tl>is ,1.11ment w•s 111.0 wu" 1111
County CMIP'll of Ofil~ Cour1ty an S.0-
Wmbllr4, 1171.
1'41411
PublllNd Or•noe CMS! O•llY Piiot, s.p1.1,1s,n,tt,1•1J :ws;r.;s
N •11
Pulblltl!H 0r•"91 CH5t o.i1y Piiot.
Slot. tS,t2,.2t,•nd0tt. '· 1175 UolJ.-15
PUBLIC NOTICE
PIC'TlTIOUS 8UllN•JS
NAM•ITATIMINT>
Thi follOwing Pff10fl l$6olng lliWf'llH
"' ACTION BROKERS, 21621 ~t
Hlt h••w. Hun lnoton •••tl'I,
C...lfwnl•n..
ltlly Guy, IOal C:Olltn•, H....tlnvt0r>
8Hctl, C.lltoml• '2Mt
This busl""s Is conducted by .., ln-OlvlCIUoill.
Rily Guy
TMs ll•lerr.nt Wit IUedfwltl'I ti.
C01.it111 CIJH1t.of 0ri1"91 CountyO!'I Slp-
11.._.r II. 111S.
"'"" PuDl!Shld 0••119' CHst O.Uy Piiot, Se91. IJ, n, n ,•ndOcl. '· ,,,, 1S11-IS
PUBLIC NOTICE
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The Bluest~ on the Or-.. Coat
DAILY PILOI CL• .. SSIFIED ADS
~~~~:·=~ (842-5878)
•::::J••at• ........ tOOl).2999 • • .......... 3000 4699 -··--· "'-lal .. -...... 5000-5049
Nill...,.•Mollc« lloolwiFGrs.te • -...tors.le
Alt-real ettateadverti5fd •••••••••••••••••••••" •••••••••4••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
inl.bisnewtpaperlstwb-G..,... IOOZG........, 1002e1a1,... 1002
je(t. to the Federal Fair ••••••••••.!19•••••••-•• ••••••••••••••••••,!•••• -••••••••'1••1••••••••
Hou1in1 Act of UH MEWPO=• C11£ST ~STATE · wblch mal<Of tt ureaa1111 c • ) Uel•only ,.,
advertl e ••any pre· *** *** SAC~ ~laUf'lllA feren~e lflllit•~llQI> ot Plu1h 2·Br. de~, ~be. $5,000 D0WH edn>o 2,.
dl.krfm •Uoo on WllhO-IJCtr.:;"'Z"CU: 1•·1 :OW.I " :· ' L em!ll· L•
race, ~olorj ~. 00. sex. =:efLe~~~:; ~ Pre1tt1e •re•. Trle ne!r' H\u~ rm:::.~ ~ na ona ongtn, or an with 1 d ~med studded 1treet. Huce llv· Hurry on Lhis spcc-11.1 1! intention lo make a,ny ow own, · Ing ar,a Mammoth c.115'0--lllt such prefe:rence. limi~ oc c up a nc y . CALL FIESTA .ROOM with
l. d ' ~ '-·""I 10 831 fM\1 ion, or 1smmhu1uon~ sONO REALTY INC. C A T H E D R. A L
CEILINGS. Warm coun·
t.r )' k I lcbe.n wllb This newapaptT will not I·---------· I ~ ....... HERITAGE
. . ftEALTORS
knowlnflY a~cept any
111idvert slng for rea;I
estate whlch Is in viol-.·
lion ot lhe law.
~ grandma's pantry.
U Separate sewin,g room Ir 1-;::;~;;;;:;;;;;;;;;; 12 to 18 nits! Buyer uliUtu rOom ·Ill' verlflda 11 want s immedi 'at e ~
Purcha1e with pride of overviews ·~macuJate LOW DOWN m a nieurea grounds . ownership in the beach ONCE JN A UFF. Tl~tE SGOOO. Down mO't'ts you arta ... wants Maoaieroa 8 N F p I prem ises and tax ARGAI ... ony fn! 1900 Sq . fl . J
••••••••••••••••••••••• shelter. call Ginny, $49,950 ! Hurry.Call now. bedrooms, !amUy room.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... 1002
T u1s ·-oHE Broke r54Ml-41 ~·Z313 . 2 baltt.1, 2 brick EMn ""'"' 1 '"'~~~~~~~~"'! OPfHflt.,·••s ,UN 10tJ1N<i"1
• nreplacu. M .. Verde. W£~J:1::;~~:~fi '· HOUSEv?::uss lllHl•ll ".'"'15~~~.c,.1 (!b grarious entry·lavish Uv· Country atmosphere or
i n g a r e a l o BI G rlelds and farm houses.
bedrooms. Thi~ beautirul cathedral ceilings and l•---
tri·level home is TOP WAJ..LS Of-' GLASS & DUPLEX
SEATED at $75,500. overlooks the coastal 3 Bdrms ., 2 baths each
Don't be acc'd out. Call vall ey ! Enter tile entry . unit ; rrplcs .. bit-ins.
646-7171 sink in to t>ill ow like Ideal lo<:atlon for sum·
CORMERLOT
MEARllUCH
carpeting! Lavish dining m e r /winter r entals .
r oom . cozy living in $85,000.
Scandin avian family ti73·3663
room' Sweeping master associated bdrm suite with separate
bre.akrast patio ' 3
Childr e n 's retreats!
S5600 total down' f-lurry .
call 8-47-6010
BROKfllS -llfAL·o11s
101~ "" B~lb• ,, ~' • J6~ •
COATS &WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
SEALllEACH
ESTATE
RAMIUIG3BR
$59,SDO
Wa ll$ to s url. Artistic
e leganc e is C"ar efully
ble nded with carefree'
beach community life
style. Spacious livinjl;
room with massive stone
firepl<1ce and adjoining
One block from BIG
CO RONA BEACH In
charming OLD CORONA
DEL MAR A prime
building sit~ Offered at
$69,500 Call for more de-
Artl.st's MaDSl.OO tenace .. Banquet ,;,ed dining room is conve-
B~The Sea niently served from mod e rn go urm e t
Just yards to sand kitchen . Interior galley.
D Th be<1c~ .. J,OOOSq.ft .oClux-Separate wing f o r n e B! ury hv1ng. -4 l'? 7 Bdrn_ts. hideaway master suite &
W11rm, ch~ng family large childtens·quarters.
Beautilulnew2s roo.m _Oriental pl,ank Owner bought another.'
4 Br, 4 Ba &Gallery patio oyerl~s m1n1 or-Doesn 't wunl 2: Mu st
2 fireplaces, wetbar chard 1n pnva_le ya~. sacrifice. Call 963·7881. Oehpc:e kitcheo $89,000. full pnce. 10 /r oPrn 1110 ·11s1vNl08t N>(11
FHA APPRAISED Pier fOr )'<icht tooo· down. for appt. CALL
tails Ca1167J.8S50 l•--------•I QPfN Iii 0 • '1SIUN 10 8{ N/Cf '
[~li~l·liil
<1t $42.500 J,000 sq ft You may select th e 962-7788
of home 4 bedroom, 2112 finishing tooches. ~ KEY
baths. large family room 675-8120 .l~~=l 8~e~~~!91'.~·~*!..i~=~===~ with bltn bar. liv ing l ~llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'I -..:: ~-r oom . dining Eating!'.
a r e a i n k it eh en BIG BEDROOMS MINI RANCH TRl·PLEX
Hardwood floors Fully IN NEWPORT ABA.MDOHED 3 BR
air conditioned Won 't H-~~ SACRIRCE $49,500
lasl llh. · 1 s;•vn•~ Gr eal renlalo1 loc<1t1on. · a is pnce L · b h $33,900 arge · spacious · 2 at . Close to everything. A..~·
Up•··RB Doublegarage ·separate Completely redeeorated s um e YA loan. Call
0 M E
r. S rec. room Alley access like a model . Prime re-545.949r_
3141 C•fnPUS NB 541 •8655 646-7171 . prestigious community.
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for boat, ete. $.54,950. Cit.JI sidential neighborhood in ail
OPfN 111o ·,,-s1u,., ro111 "'"' Large family sized living ( '· ' I room. Country styled . l ,~ kitchen . Rambling~;;~~~;;;;~;;;;; ~
SHORlCREST ·
TWO STORY · ~i g rounds with fruit or·
..-.<w.,.-:,. chard. Secluded master
c
L
' A s s
I
FAMIL~ROOM
Unique entry to spacious
formal li l.'ing and ban-
qu e t r ooms . Sunn y
gourmet kitchen. llaml>I·
ing game room with
c rack ling fireplac~.
Gracious g_u<'Sl bath and
large laundry room .
Sweeping stairs to king
site master and separate
childrens s uites. Lush
la n d scapi ng . Very
private grounds. Call for
appt. today ! $58.500. Call
96:i'6767.
F OtlOffOftQI S.1ter1 of IN lour .....,~ wordt bf.
low lo for,,. +ow li"""'le wordt.
I I OI EM U B
. I I' I I' I
I GRABE 1:,
E I
1
s
1
o
1
,E .
1
E Br. , .• 1 . The way th•! candld1tes ire
I I II I anr.ounting their candidKY
D fa '"""°"'· v~·• '";"" they -• giving -on band-. I SENTE L " lw-oons. 9-ff ,_ -1.l ....1.l_.I_' ...Jl_IL.·~ o f:-:::l'.: :-.... "'::.!:..-:::: -yoo,i ....... ,,_ ftp No. 3 t..i.....
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I) ~l":~\tmm TO I J I J I I I J.
SCRA l)LETS Allsw~ in Classification 4600
SEEK & FINO' Most Populou1
~ H 4
N K 'fl
N G II A. F. S K R 0 Y 'o' F. N M 0 R
f. K I ~1 r. F. K s A T n f) M N A r ·~·i.!Yo~s!i]E)C' I. R 0 y I y K 0 T 0 •: y D
"0P I AOOUUOTSCCKSLTJ
YYUlNC/\J ll TA AXYY~MA
IWLOSllANAPAI C YOIOOK
A E KJ S E 0 U H £ H R C 0 0 C'S ~ S A
HNUMO .C KOWDRTOCIMCR
CWSSITICOJK R COOrtOT
NYO~HNCH~1A I W~MBXNE
AXACGTOR~IXYOLTOTER
HROBINASAE R tUOC I XBM
8C AIMRO J MPAOLUAPUA8
AAUPTOOHCA£•PEk l CO ' ' DMRAM08AYSMOSWODNO~
•
retreat and generous
siz:e~ childrens suites.
Hurry. Priced to sell
fast! Call963-788t.
J3A %
AVAILABLE
BIA)' now iind select de·
cor. 2 & 3 Bedroom.
single and 2 story. Gas
11ss i sted SOJ,.AR
I-I EATING {Isl in area).
OPEN HOUSE DAILY
1-5 including S<t l and
Sun. 2580 Santa Ana St.
CJ\1.
1oo:i c;_,.a1 1002 ·······-··············' ...................... .
macnab/ Irvine realty ·
I ST TIME °"8111
Custom built 3 bedroom & 4th for
pool tabl e or 4 bedroom, fa mily
room , 2'h bath home w /heated pool
in t ropical garde ns. 2 stone
fireplaces -All new kitchen. $83 000
-Dona Chichester 642-8235. (WsJ)
DESIUIU MESA VIUE
Exceptiona1 ··value -4 bedroom, 2
bath home. Best buy in town t
$47 ,900. Gail Foor 644-6200. (\\'64)
',. WHIT£ .WATa VISTA
Every room of this custom 3,600 sq .
ft. home views coastal panorama
from Laguna to La J oll a. 2 years
new, 3 levels of custom luxury in-
cludes entertainment level w /Wet
bar, jacuzzi, fire pit, ek. See & Buy
-F or a ppt . call Helen Wood
644.QOO. (W65)
RESHMESS OF AUlUMH
Ca ptured in ~is custom decorated 4
bedroom, 2900 sq uare feet, i year old
home. Tiled entry and 20' celling
blends beautifully· w /curved white
'wrought iron stairway. Ex. lg . fami-
ly room w /fireplace leads to an
18 'lt~4' pool. Isla e n w /Sweeping view of Up r Bay &
fores{ of t rees. Vic Jashinskl
642-8235. (W66)
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_ ... _. ~For~ H1•1n-5* ~--11 .. --· _,,_s:.:., 22.lf>f DAILYPll.Of
••••••••••-•• .. ••-:--••••••••• •••-•••••••• •-•••••••••• ... ••••••• ]~-·•••••• ................. •••••••••-•••••• ••••••• ••• ••••••••••••• H -'* H . ~ ·~ Ga 1r.. IOQ 1002 •11 .. 1111 e .. 1w e1 91 IM2 o•.a llltt 1Mf.HFeii--S. ~-••••••••••••••••••••••• ·--········ ... ••••••• •••• -· ................... c .... MeM · 1 ................. _. ..................................................... -9 ••••••llililii••••••mmlliii ••••••••••••••._. ....... ••-•••••••..-.•--• -;· .... ~•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltL.awt•..._.. 1040 ltedt 1069 t .. •pertleacll 106t
LIDO ISi.i M tb• chance to buy one WttlM A&ef1'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. •••••• •••••••••••••••-•••••• t;
or th' !•w rem.U.1~• OOH .... /.Alt M•a .... eej1 1 ******* I '"
Watedroot, Lido Nctrd. 6 BR. 01t 4 BR.
le apt. $285,000
eomplotall' ,__ z v o 1J • v E G O T P'ool b~• Wfl Br. l1e 7 SHftf-UIO STAIS ' bedroom. J bah llqle SON£THJNO ~ we paneled Pam. Rm. ., at«YT-•-,.1ns.... do!Anewlbtlnllnec.ta w/frplc. ~Din. 2.,., *48DRMS. +diningrm.M,500
taA!la.SUUonlySU,llO. II•••• S•~Or Ba. By Orier .•• 950. •38DRMS. + familyrrn.$124,500
Like new! 4 BR., 4 ba. 1-0wner. "* lor ""-· ll:IM:l2I worrmouulllD. ul· 911S.u44. •SBR.,dln.rm. +famrm.$197,500
Custom bayfroot. Lawn, paUo, pier I: •-"'~•-•-•-----·• l!.:!::':i..i..;;_:::r $40,900 *581l, pier lcslip,tsbold. $225,000
Doat. $325,000 , ••••P• ' 1h 1007 •·Br, 2l>ba, perfectly O•AMftit.Ylew •4BR. + fam.rm.,pier/slip$'125,000 •••••'°••••••-••••••••• ch•rmln1 uvraa room w•toleea '*" BDRMS. + fam. rm., pier/slip
PAMOUMIC --Attr. 4 BR., 3 ba., Lido Solid. T1 rt. Baytront C<lad<>mlnlwnclk2 aocl &eparmrannaldin· Percbed .., a prl••t• Prime locaUon. $400,000 .,... wa•-~ront,sandy~-cb ..... •,ooo °' 2 8•· DR. pool. • Ina room. Lavoouallty? m .. • ver1~"·--11 nt ~ea rec rm p1'er/slip$8lOOOO Price reduced SS.0001 Forever view of l.Cll uc.-.,..,.,,. aecurttym..-..... Love bulltln11 Love , 0 uu...i... u -•v ., · • • jnctoo Beach. Sinai•· Catallnaandthejlay.incredibledecor l•oaa....J.-a 1eparate family room tr.ory r•n<!h, fine
nd land•ca~ tbi bd , ..,...... wllh aetood nreplace!, w • 1 11 • a l1 ng on 8 4 rm .. New on market, Ciolli! drtve-•u•appealU.•twUJ ea ... ern I Y ng .... Tiburon in Har rVlewHills.VanLw·· B b ·--Ith·-' ~ i><dl'Oj)(ft•. Be• Funklln " J. r.J. a,_....w -w· ma.le.• you smite? Move 1r.oveinthe llviJllroom, wallpapers, exquillt.e fixture8-4Dd a ...1-b<.-l·ba.1ueot11wH.m -qlll•l<!Yonthltme. n~ln<!>in·t11.,•n ·
history Of caretul atlebtioo to oroug qlllet lll' .... "'l!Olll "°"'' CALL 540'3666 ny kitchen. Lots o1 !ruh
maintenance. Now at $118.SOO. A list.mg-11G•111._,.,,. 1001 ••••.. 1001 ~::;:~~ b~tf~~b?:, treea. party veranda. GI
o{FranScoU. •••••••••••••-•••••••• ·••••••••••••••"•••• ... ~-cl'l •. p-.t,t ina, = & all terms available,
dr,periea •ltd more. ~J call now, 842~.
UllljlfJUt t1()MH ~.;~ .. ~i.:;s~o GLJtYI \\ I c-I I ·, ""
LIDO PIHIMSUU. CONDOS
l'llr•llpfocl!Mft
3 BDRMS., 2 baths, $99,500
2BDRMS.;2-Baths,'$US,OOO
Salesman Ready To Serve You
LIDO REALTY
JJ77 '"'Udo, M.a. 673-7300
******* REAL 'TORS-, 675-6000 c-e del -I OZZ ~443 E1st Coasi Highway, Corona del Mat ••••••••••••••••••••••• El T-o 1 Ol.Z L_,..a le.di I 041 Hew,pori, ,,1eec,,,,,h,,,,I,~!~ --....................... .... . TnRREll__
1926·1976 TAYLOR CO. llAll ••••••• •••••••••••••••• Irvine I 044 ~
4 •• DUPUX LAKl FOREST ••••••••••••••• ;....... EMERALD ... y . BA YFRO" I , -·-c I Ide 2 Custom Homes
l\},.\ll<tl.:--. ,,1•·l'11 t.
GeM11.. IOOZ G-,1 IOOZ
.................. t•••• -:···················,···
•
• •
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"
. .._A ISU-MIW-M.leiW!CIHT SO. 0 IA·-~ _,,,, 1 HOME UFJI We offer Lhls older home BALBOA PENINSULA • with as BR, 2 BA rental. Builders new~ BR. never • on ocean aide of Coa.at Ex<!ellent location on lhe Perfect design! Elegant carpeting, Only 1\.ii ye1ra old . OC:<!upie<t,·trplc,disposal. Tbi3 new free &landing Hwy .. on l)lrk ·llke Bay&only llt blocktothe -drapes & Wallpapers, Italian marbl~ Fe1r.urln& beam ceilings, Drtv1•Nby,2216251 NolAan St. home in Unlv. Park ha! grounds; thll Is an Ocean. Ench home hu 4 ~ ~-~
Waterfront3brw/boat .4'J
dock. Submllext:hanges
or Jea1e opt.Jon .•
$139,500
• OPEMDAILY •
pool &Jacuzzi. 5 B~ FR,Iorm. DR; natural wood and bri<!k Cal orm em, gent. approx.2500sq.f\.otllv· estate-type home. Ad· bdrm s, 4 bitba &•i
billiard S'h b • /SU $3!l5 000 textures and perfect MS-3766 ing !pace. It ln<!llldes 3 vance app't. required. Gallery, 2 fireplll<!e•.• rm. a, pier p. D ' . · · location.Call6"·1211. FouuttalaY•ey 1034 lrg BR ~s, finished bonwr Offered at $179,500. wetb•r. ultra modern'.
76LINDAISLEDJl • Open ailyl·S ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm, 3 ~ Baths, formal Flnancingtobenegotiat-k.itc-hen & private pier. , 21115-Ja' lllal... 3b 2b diningrm&famllyrm. ed.Exclusi\•elyby Fee land . See at 1200 " JF I WERE YOU-I'd MEWPOU CBffll. TM.&. 644-4910 Rent w /option. r, a. The price is $64 ,SOC Corb•Mcriin Ea&t Balboa Blvd .. or ~
WA:ltJtFROM1' see it today! Corona del ·=~u/~~t:,'~.as . leasehold & the builder Is Realtors 64~7662 call 675·8C2o for more de·~:.
HONES '9tar charm with beamed .. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~(-----~-::--::-=:--I a nxious to sell! tails. ::!!!'i;:.-cernng. pegge_d floor. Ge•rel 1002••••" IOOZ BVOWNERlg.3B•.2Ba FAMILY FARE PARKllHOMIE5 -==------
in4!6llM<X> paneled walls,f1replace; ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••--••••••••• +den. North of llwy. 552·1800 MO~'RCHl'Y DOH"TUFr "" ---~==~-1 Fre~ch doors open lo, u"'VE YOUR CAKE.'· . · ' 38edroom, 1V.bathwilh0 ___ ~----• nA A A HAMiii! NEAR THE BEACH coor. secluded bricked nA • • ~$7=9·c.'50=644=-'-21m=c.· ---I big bonus room over TURTLEROCK The flavor d Old Mexico
OHL y $38,000 p~tio & yard shaded by a . -.and eat it too ... aD OCEAN VIE\V Charminl 2 Br cottage on garage. Tennis <!ourts. TOWNHOUSE permeate!! Lhruout this It's spotless and easy to
giant tree ; thre e ho . t• ioc ti C lovelySt.w1rm.forex-awlmming pool. Nice 2br. & den. Form e r colorful 4 bdrm. home keeptbalway.Arecent·
Only 1 mile. ride your bedrooms two bath me lD pres 1ge a OD -ameo tra un•'t . Ope" dally. area of townhouses. Gel model. Air condiLioned, with the family rm. over· ly rede<!orated 3 BR end ~
bike to the bea<!h. This home on TWO LOTS plus Shores~ 3 Bdrms., 3 baths, formal din· " i.n for under s:;ooo, Call to automatic sprinklers and looking the pool area ~~~ ~f:b~':e;1~~ = ~:d~~mhs.a~n! ~T1~G: a 3-<!ar garage& paneled ing rm. A huge Jiving rm. with 9 ft. ceil. -"'-'·~500-·-"~111'-·..._ __ Z4_25 __ I see! ! Red Carpe t· lighting. A MUST SEE. with its separate jacuzzi, sized master suite and
hobby shop. Just one Price ONL y $l39 500 OUTSTANDING O<!ean & Realtors 536-8836 1$64,...900~r:· r:iuli.U'\\ilil fountain & firepil. The ~irr: ~~~fee ·e~tr~a ~~~S block tor.he ocean beach. ' <!hannel view. Lease or Hulltift9toe 8ndt 1040 CALL NOW noors ar c tile & the doors Ci~~~!!7~~ ~lew. Sllf.SOO._
room for your boat and 307 MARlGOLD AVE.. sell. $64S /mo. The park ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ are works of art depict·
D $119,500. ATT&nlOM. ~ atlst&Carnationisyour 752·7315 ing Mexican figures done ..
trailec-. on't miss this We have openings for 2 oorr 3 oeo peooplle with rront yard. Ql.laint old • IY OWMER * by a well known artist. charmer.MS-9f.91 . B 'f l De B A REAL WI NNER-5ee R.E. sales experience of a year or house . Hdwd firs & eaul1 u ane ros. OONALDM.Bla:O 1 Allthis inaprivatearea. /.Jn NILfl
~All f Y !.,
ASSUCIAHS this best in class; four plaster wails like you home.• br, 2 ba, 2 story, 1\11 Blks. from beach &
bedroom home or three & more ... a n active office in a TOP never see anymore. 3.ar, very pr.iv ate atmosphere1 --~··~-="'~'"~'~· '~"="•=•-ell.lb. SlSS.000
convertible den. Mr. & LOCATION! 2-ba. Master Br /ba pvt. with elegant landscape, ASSUME 7o/oLOAH TURNER ASSOC. EASTIWFF
: Mrs. Clean li\·e here-upstairs. BAM lo 5PP.1 ratios, & entry. Feat1;1res SZ.Z9 MO. llOS N. Cst Hwy, Laguna -;~~~~~~~~lnewlyedpainSted .. draped& ~ d aki lyd, 9AM to962PM Rargen mbathst~~a'tn"·'u'me . •DULTHOuJC 494-1177 4rmB,r,Sdteonr,a3hgea,Gfr:i~:!~' • carpel . pa<!1ous patio ~ w e n s . 67S-54 o r oma a 0< • A .._
Th. C --ator & yard with apple, 642-8584 426 BegonJu Ave. By owner, Prin. Only. Spotless adult occupied M•TCHI~ p••R Pool site yard. ~.500 by ~~
............ • apricot, almond & plum Prln<!ipalsonly. $81,900. 962-8668 home ~ Plan 7 California T A BR .~h ~ Owner644·7~. '
Invites your bid oo this trees. Pri\·atebeachtoo. home. Cul·dc-i;ac loca· wo4 .. vd1ewOomf:1 OCEANFRONT2 Bd 2 -lovely view ho me in 4714 CORTLAND DR., DUPLEX 1-2 br units. OPEN HOUSE Lg. cu.st. tion. Fireplace. Comfy Mornings1 e r . a + ,
Irvine Terrace. It has 4 CAMEO HIGHLANDS. Choi<!e toe, So. d Hwy. Pool w /spa & patio. kitch e n . Queen slzt> your choice for $127,500. 8d garage apt. $125,000.,,
BR., 3 ba. & an outsland· All for $85,000. $79,500. Owner.548-5306 Beaut. 4 br, 1:11. ba, frpl, bed r 0 0 m s . Lawn or $133,000. Owner,645-3655
1ng pool. Herc is how to GeMt"Gll 1002 • r----------• nxt. to park & .schl. Nr. s prinklers. Anxious SELLER MOVING ..
bid : firs t. inspec.·t the COLEofM~ GeMr.. 100.Z ATTEf\Pl'ION: Shop'g. Ctr. By owner. ow ner wants fasl sale. Laguna charm with
home; if you like it, · Realtors ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• BUILDERS S!il,000 All terms . A.-;sumc 71".f VA loan great view from this
lr....iMew.,,..n
1"' Blk from ocean.
Quality construction. ~
$.117,000. Owner will takc '
10% down und carry 2nd
T .D. This olfer will go
fast. Loe. at 2IJ'I ·30th St.
make anoffer. lf yourof. 2515E.Coast.Hwy TROPICAL lbr plus den on R·2 lot. 963·3165,90.S:ZPiooccrDr. $23 ,0 CO r e mainin g BR , newly redecorated
fer is satisfactory to the 67'S-551 I p •n•"'SE 2 BR CONDO So. or hiway. Xlnt in-balance-with payments home reasonably pric conservator. it will be ---------[ "'IUIUn come. from cx1sting unit. By Owner" Glet1 Mer at S229 m o. No qualify. at $18,500.
sent lo thl;? court for ap· ---------1 MESA VERDE $24,500 WI room to build 4br re-Jbr, l 3"ba nr shop'g, bch, ing! Owner may help BUILD YOUR DUPLEX
proval {n o probate). ASSUMABU POOL ar unit. Ownr will Con· scbls.S48.450.s.ifi·SJ2.I finance or try 14250 + ff .2 tot walking distanc
That's all there is to it. 70,0 V • LO..,... Located on Fairview sider trades. Principals costs lo new loan. See to to lhe Beach. -",000. T I . ,, .... An Tropical setting located I .. .,2 000 552 5020 IY THE s•o. -ru Ya ra re opportunity. FRANCfSCAN FOUN-. 1 d Road is this upgraded on Y· ..., . · · · ~ believe-call 752·1700. C -1, on qui e t <!u · e·sac. Aft< A d eek--"·
2 beach units $52,500. Gd
income. R·2 cor lot. Gin-
n)' Fortune, rltr .
675·7520. ome see1 . !1~~~~l~f~g:~::~8~~ h~~25RcACTAE:BD~ ~ ~~n\~il;;~~i.u~l:l~ti:: ~. n w L~iu.~. Lo!l~~~~h=up· ~~·u~··'~"~''~N•:' MA·YOCK ~;,,·.B~~~· :~~~ ~~~o;lmd,~Riu~:J',; :[~~e~~~~:l~=~~ ~~~~~;;~·~;~~~?;~ ~:~d~. ·~;~~\.\~~~'. [ ~IHftlflJ 1 coRrouTioM MEWPORTSHORES ·
3 BR. A·frame + lge.
ram. rm. $62.500 massive fireplace. patio, ROOP.1 . Lots d paneling ~ . ha•·e we had • 3-Br + prof. landscaped rear & 494-2146. COMPANY kit<!hen , low main· & shutters. POOL s ur· . 22~1 • IL front yard. 5'W .950. full REALTORS -· tenance yard and_ a :1% rounded by extensively 2·ba + 2·car gar. home price. Owner1Agenl, YOUR OWN LagunoNiCJIMI 1052
Sl;"l;t..:f: 1 ~4 1 loan anyone can assume. covered l anai. 3 CAR as nice as this one with 952.2457 SPA •••••••••••••••••••••••
67 ].4400 Offered at 566.750. Call GARAGE. Steps to park. s uch TERRIFIC terms.
.... ~~~~~~~~I 540-1151 First to call gets to see! ANYTIME Only $36,500. Fam• rm $15,000·YACAHT Is r1 gh t ouiside the Like N•w View! _ Betlerhurrytosce.call w1rockfrplc.Xlntbuyin Gl·fHAOK bdrm door of this 3 3Br, 2ba, upgrd 'd cpl._,
DOYERSHORES 546·2313. 1 ~~~~~~~~ ...... primeC.M.nbrhood. Quality·ye6 r Shingle bdrm +den home drapes, patio, lnds<!pd .
WATERFRONT Ol'l:N 1119• 11 ~ •uyo;y1i'~ ABANDONED Call toclcry 540..3666 roor. hwd. noors. Block Bright & ch1..-ery. this $49,500. 4954995. ~~~ ::~,i~;.~~~fyn~~1.~l~~~~~~~~~~11~1a.·,_._. -~-'IHtdi\~I ··~~~~ • ~~ 1 ~~I l;f ~~~ti~n~::~~:~i!}: ~~~~~1: c~~,~~~£01l~~r--L-~-'i:-~-M-K_!;°_11U_w_c_•_H_._,
d ABANDONED ---·-"=-··~ neighborhood. 134 ' Deep WEATIIER! $i0,950 * IEST * formal ining rm .; CALIFORNIA +POOL ~{Jt :Ji)ti lot. Exis ling6"k GI loan BEAUTifo~ULocean vicw
.,ivate patio e n"v-LINDA ISU 2 t 4 bed 'I;~-~·~-~-~-~-~,-~ .. ~-~ payuble $142 mo. oil -LE RAISOR from <O•Y home locoled 1\1 any extras. $315,000. CLASSIC s ory. room. '
Shownbi·app't. , Spacious thr~ bedroom lavis h baths. Dining anyone can buy subject REALTY in. ghu a rded ~ate area Beautirul 3Br home room . Sunken living to Hurry 1 897-0321 w1l 4 tennis <!ou rts.
• • 0 esWOr z from lush country <!lub. sunken living room. ~~gmg~ F~~e:mac:eiri~ge:. DELlGHT . c452JCa m:':i~~;.~v~ !:u1n': a~~~riva~ec::ezaZ:h.
R ~1 640-00 0 Unique li ving and dining D . ed r l rt . MESAVERDE 2st-,4 ampus a cy....,,.. . e..-or5 • . h kl . es1gn or ene a1n -Oak bannisterstaittase. .,..r c•LLS]11 •600 parking.$S8,500.
3 BR, 2·sly. ltuge garden.
patio. $63, 750 ..i
4 BR., family room ; lgc.
patio. $73,000
CAYWOOD REALTY
• 548-1290 •
5ACRIRCE
OWNER ANXIOUS
Big ·canyon. Priced re·,..
duced SI0,000. 2 story
Deane Home. 3 br w /3
car garage. $120,000.
PAUL W. BRUM Fl HD
& ASSOC .
549-8 505 "
C F C I th beach home· jusl acrn" w/high vaulted ceiLin gs, 1 d PARTYGIYERS ·•· · 1 j ·
areas wit crac in g ing. Plus roomfor31a...,.e R b I N bedroom. 3 bath home. A -<!ountry fir e pl ace. .., omeo acony. ear ENORMOUS SU~ boats. NOWS\89,500. the beach. ARE YOU With 20x26 family room Turtlerock. 4 br, 2'f.i ba, BEA UTIFUL 4·Br, 2-ba, 1---------• JACOBS REALTY READY FORTIUS!On· for those special parties!----------• fam rm, din rm, 2story, Broadmoor home with BIG CANYON ce:a Coldwell Ban~ ~~~~~~NKJ~'i,H ~~ 675-6670 ly$42.500,actNOW!Cail entertaining at your 8' 2 frplc's. pool. Cul-de· oceanview,Approx.2200'
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;.,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-842~ blln bar und e r a WALKTOIE.4.CH Sac. immac cond sq.ft.Familyrm,dining GLASS. Separate master ~ . · cathedral open beam VACANT 569.950. 752.0SJfi rm& brkfstrm. $95,500. THE AME,ST
and childrens wings. DOYERSHORES ceiling. Covered patio M.USTSELL!' ---------• L-. nawu....aR~ LIDOHOME Manicured rear grounds. d 1 L r 1 r TELL US ~-• ....,.... ·-·• Walk to Sl'hool. Hurry!~ For the execulive·who an. 0 5 ako 1•hi;esho or Owner will make low in· -··· 830·5050 496-4040 Unbelievable quality 1n
I J reels c ramped.move into pnvacy m · e is me terestloan.2Bedroomon .. what you want .. the construction and decor.
Highly cU!ltomlzed 4
bedroom BROADMOOR
home. 3000 Sq.ft . of living
spa<!e in<!ludes expanded
family toom. Living
room and m as t er
hedroom. Professionall y
landsc aped. Air <!ondi·
tioned . See to appreciate.
$171,!XIO
This can 't ast. usl th is s pa<!ous home, adreamcometrue.Call largelotwithfruittrees. home of your drcams MissionYieio 1067 $46,900. Call !JGl.6767. 546 S880 Agenl E l b d r • • • New 4 Bdrm., formal D&.~ oPfN 11,11 .,,s1uri rOl!11-11ct• elegant 5 bedroom, 4"2 E•STSIDE -· · asy erms. may c rea Y or OC· •••••••••••••• • •• ••• a nd den home. Terrific
.... , baths, immaculate con· "" 1~~~~~~~~~~1 SCOTIREALTY cupancy. Don 't be a vie· ASSUME LOW open slrada location +
•
. dition , best location. )VITH POOL $27 900 536·7533 tim of risin,i:l cosls .. nng IHTERESTLOAH extra parking. Priced lu., i ~ PETE BARRETT Your ramily should real-3·BR. addedfamiiy room l""~~~~~~~~~I our number No qualifying, no new sell at $198,000
:: .. ..,,.· .. ~ ... tt: -REA''JY-ly enjoy this brand new 1· loan costs when )'Ou take 644·1766 .. rr · Bdr 2 b w /open beam ceiling, 652·7000 over this 7 1t1 7. VA loan I ... ~~~~~~~~·
640-6161
NEWPORT
INCOME COATS&WALLACE
FOUR-PLEX, pride or
ownership. Deluxe units·
--F~H~•~R~IEP==_-000-----1 Fireplace, bltns., 2 baths
"" each. Only 8 yrs. old .
REAL ESTATE. INC.
$34, 900 $134,500 . Fee land. Prime
Rare opportun ity in area.
prime beach city! Pri<!ed PRESTIGE HOMES
thousands be! ow RHltors 645-6646
market ! Walk to beach
o er1ng. 3 ms. a., rormaldinrm,back yard J· 642·5200 675·4060 rrml. d ine. rm, huge FR w/ country atm05phcre of $25,000. Lovely 3 BR. ~ with rrplc besides Jge & fruit trees. Veterans -home with central ai r Wanf Qualitv?
RambHngWreck pool. Owner will pay :welcom e . Call Rltr ., conditioning in Mission Sodoesthcowner;/°this
Courtyard entry lhru sw-point s so )' ou can 540·3666 -Viejo's Rar<!elona neigh· lovely 3 bedrm. 2 bath &
Purchase withFHAorGI r---------borhood .Just$43,9JO. POO inging gate. swaying L home in a garden palm s. bri ck BBQ financing. This should BYOWNER ReaJEst:ate MISSIONVIEJO setting. Don 't miss it!
fireplace. 'tree shaded, move fast . 64&7711 or Unique 4br Mesa Verde by/r&!VAY l;~~~~~~=~~l1 __ _!~R~E~AL~TY~l_ __
1
Callnow !645-722l •h acre estate. R-2 lot. 540-8944. hom e, many x tras. 581·1000
Room tor extra houses. -S>:!,?oo.><•·"'72· HEATWAVE REDECORATED 0 . '1
Hurry!!Sf.S.0.103 this rerreshin& pool ca rp eti ng adds an C usto m 5 BR . San _&ii .,,
FOREST OLSON IMC · OVmllY home. Has decking & ele.gant touch to the in-Verlardc on a magnifi-
• I ... ' cant view lot, manicured
Own e r aband oned. ~ predicted. You can own Lovely plus h cocoa Lar9e&bpeMive ~"'111U"'21
-• • firepit. W.11s redone in-terior or this custom MEWUSTIHG CE !lide and out. Priced in cutie.2Bdrms .. s pacious landsc aping, large WestctiffRealty
from this spacious 3f·--------bdrm h o m e! Needs
minor fixing and paint
but WHAT A BUY! Make
S $ $ with minpr r epair!
Offered for limlted Lime ·
don't wait · call for quick
appt. 847·6010.
Cuti COSTAMESA PRI ••YAREPO•• mid SO 's. Easy terms . livin g room. air-addcdpoolroom.customr-------~-
Country Ckb e $38.500 SLASi'ED •·Br, 2·ba. Call 968·4456 conditioning and lots of carpets & drapes thru· The Blu£fs, De<!orator'i;;
Beaut. 2 bdrm. + den Buill by Dyke & Col-ed 000 F 64•5045 PURRS""'•' 'TY s torage. $44.000 out with central air con· Artistic Condo. Plan W. w /wet bar; next lo tennis Jusl reduc SS. · or .,. VnllUd ditioning. One d a kind! Converled toJbr, 21'> ba. grove. 3 bcdrms, 2 baths. · k I Deli hlt I 3 <!ls. & country club. lge family room & dining qwc sa e.f ·1yg u 3 b r 1 b 3 h 0 me w / Purrfect home for your $89.900. Uy owner. $64 .500. Sell or
$59,500! .... a . Bllns. fireplace. bedroom, am• .room hardwood noors 1400 growing family. Low 552 "7500 MISSIOMVIEJO Jeaseoption.640-4617.
OPfN 111Q: ;11 S II.ft/ IQ~/ I/(!'
THE REAil
ESTATERS I
•675~7060• home in the private com· · · maintenance y..1rd s, d h'll '9 "11.v
Prop good crps & drps.. COY· munily of Bayshores. !ls~7 ~~o L'i fenced lyrd. cov'd patio, lovely in-re I ·.:~!11•-i REA.LTV Brand New 4 Br, 3 Ha ,
Balboalay · e r ed pa'tio, double Twofireplaces,patioen· b 1· · ,137ssu000m•1 °9~n Le rior . i n goo di·~~~~~~~~~l;;;;-;;~;;5;;8-;;l ~-1~0:;0::0-:;-;:: Fam . Rm .View.Agent. Redton garage. tert aining. Vacant and a ance 0 • . a "· · hb hood I t -1921 K ' Rd NB 1..,~~~~~~~~~1 646-~928, evesS45-3483 ready fo r occupancy. E . Broadway 1n C.M. ~:~~pi~;. 00.S.~~ ose 0 BY OWNF.R Spac. 3 br. 2 979_5099 •nits · · F 177,500 .Call 67J.8550 Days: 83.1·2161. Ask for 1 _________ LagunaBeach 1048 ba ''EIOorado'',A/Cun----·-------
-O>fN rril:I · 11 s ,uNTOM'N11..l' · Bonnie. Eves & wknds, ••••••••••••••••••••••• der S50's. 8J0.8298 The Bluffs; early area
-----' Lachenmyer
REALTORS
644-7270
•• COIOMA Da MAI llUl'Llll -U · new paint & carpets in the front
3 bedroom, 3 bath. fireplace wtit.
Rear unit upgraded 2 bedrms, 2'.
blltbs, fireplace, wi!k to beach le
shopping. -Owner will consider trade
for more units . $99,500.
· 2821 E. Coast Higlhwo 1 Cofona c:fel Mor.
ttOMa fOlt t1v1MO, .. nwou
.. u11•''"'" MW.NJUN
,.rivu 11 1• ''"""
\
Realtor
CLASSIFIED will sell it. . 'DJ THE REAL
ES
GHerel IOOZ GeMral IOOZ
··············!········ ·······················
·,11 TARREL~. rn
1926-1 9 76
ASSUME GOVERNMENT LOAN:
548·9877 . 1-Story 3 BR. 2 Ba. J + Assummle LOGlls $57 ,ooo Agt. 640-5560 $1900.DOWH
Ran<!h House-Large 3-Br + 2-ba & 2-Car gar. Will
not last . Call fordelails
540.3666
Mo9oalifying only S37.500 O.c• so low -., loan< in HARBOR VIEW
for a beautifully lilP · Mission Viejo, El Toro & New 0 n mark e t,
graded 3 bedroom. 2'h SanJuanCapistrano.2lo b 1·r 1 h ' hi Oath, lovely Townhouse, NEST ca u 1 u ig Y up-s BR homes.Call itraded Carmt·I on
kin g s ize 'master 811..0821 Greenbclt.W/patlo,yard bedrOdm, fireplace. huge For the perfect family . k •
den or ? Near pool & Formal liv. & din. rms.. AZTEC RE.ALTY ~ee~~nt;e~in eb ~f~r~~
c lubhouse. Excellent kids rms. above, wet bar,1----------I 646·6710 or549'0812
location. Convenient '1.o self·<!lng oven, 4 bdrms. L~~~!!!l!liiliiil@!~,;;l"':__I everythin . Call Losee. $75,000 .. PICI( YOUR By owner, duplex l/l blk
If, , : • • ·, , • 1~~~~~~~~~1 OWN COLORS" to ocean. m.ooo. Mer Eastside By Owner, t Br I Owner h as agreed to 6pm , 752·0644
F 11 R 962·4471(r.I.: 546·8103 Soon to be rompleted. 3 have any color carpetinsi
le am Y oom,1~~~~~~~~~~1 Bd, den, 3 ba. Ocean & in this 4 BR.,· fa m ily SanClem...te 1076 Separate Bachelor unit, c v 1 B an yo n e ws . Y room home. Large lot on •••••••••••••••••••••••
$35,900.NoAgts.fHG.6238. HOME & INCOME Owner.494·5'729. a cul d~ Sa<! street. with 4 adjace nt lots. Over
REPO. 4 br + pool . AT THE HACH! llG OCEAN VIEW room for trailer access. 42.000 sq . rt. R-1. Owner
$59,000. 9% int. $4000. Cozy 3 bedrm w/1500 sqn Beautiful view of Sad· will subordinate. Oct!&µ ~~wn . Agent. 546-7739; ror you ! Has a sunny 2 Bdrm., own your own dlebatk ML". Wire ex· views. $65,000.
Rent·lil<e payments. Entry; ball, con·
vertible den, wood cabinets. built-ins,
party veranda, boat.access, $39,500 !
ABANDONED BY OWNER : Move
right ln. Entry hail. family room, brick
flreplace, sunny dream kitchen, GI,
FHA ok, $41,000, hurry! !;..;8-7944 co untry kite ben & apl.Close lo shopping& tremely anxlOW1 tojoi n
11 ----------1 breakfast rm, 2 vanity beach. Large healed pool her hul band in Chicago~
COLLEGE PARK. by baths & thick <!arJ)el.S. & P•llo area. Many ex· JI.lat reduced to $55,SOO.
owner, reduced r.o Then a bonu.srentaJ unit tras.Asklng$42.SOO VA & f'llA buyers
AHCHOllAGI
IMVISTM&nS
!.P t71414t~77" 540-1720
ltl51-lttd.
·-·~....,. ..... ~c.m, ..
• "
$41,SIOO. 4 DR, 2 Ba, Din· to help you make the welcome
rm, Bltna, wash mom. p1yments ! Short on '<1r.Ti""''ftttftca~-MISS.ION VIEJO ~
be•ut. landscaped, <!l<>1e cuh?Submit a2ndTD!! ~17 IEALTY
to shwplng & s<!hool1. As1uma,ble 1% VA loan! 4n .2eoO SI 00 545-4926 Bkr962·Soll l·I 0
j
Have something to 8eQ'!'
Cl•11ifit!d adsdoll welt
~-...!...----------,~---
'· 1 • ·-
'.U DAILYPILOT Monda)!. S!ptombtr 22, 1115
· 1 • ~
Heunt.lltfwM:•d ._....,....,.,.., .. ,. tf lwat1r.1J•1d .. alw ... U:lhaA. Afclz1•~•••• .·······-············· ....................... ·············-······ ···········-··-·· ············ ••••••••••••••••••••••• "°""" ,._ $Clflt l•om• 'ropertr JOOO Howtn U...._.lhed tt.tf-'OR 1Hc1t 3240 L J •Ml... 3112 •••,• ~ ••• ·..??~ ... .,., .... ._. 17" Cerw 1111 Mi.-... , ... :.~" ······················· ....................... ....................... ...,.. ......... ,............. ..... . ··-·············--· ···················--····-········ . .. •••••••••••••••••••••• Ar 1'oliaae+1111'1. ... • • • •
-... -3202 Hunt. llbr Twnhff. Ntw°' HICiUl~ SHOftS wator pd. -)'1'11.trn 111&._00EAH-Pllllt-> 2 Br. l4'ba. -latn. HEW 14. J Ir, ......... J ;;ti;'g'!'''''''''PjtE'£ occupl~. 4.Br. 3ba, 30' Oce•n view. 2 BR, 2 a.. wiotv . S15-am br, l ba. Garb. dlJp, r r p I c. W /W t pt-, enc. 1ar. 1 ba 1111' mo~ 51111• ••• ID .16 UNITS ••••••••••••••••••••••
•• •Don"tWalt1'<*•
For arlcc& aod inleretl
come down. Bolh wll
probably ket:1tg<llng up.
t'(IJ adult luxury 2 br. liH
ba unit•. lnl"Ofllc $41 .340.
Pricod t&l $325.000.
•ProfaslonalServlce• boJil •h.J>, t~nd, pool, cardeo home. ft'p~. alt 3701 D/W, I~'· Yrly. SJJ.O. draperies. new pain&. Mew II· 2 bl', patio. 11 .... J LAMDLOIDS• j11cu;1.:rJ . $6:i0lse.M7·'97 con•. 1love Ir ref'ria ...... ,,....... QLlldOK. Leue, SZ1S mo. UCB. dosetl. eM. 1ar. G25 ·• 1'I: or673·9'1S elec. dbl. i•r. 1u•rd ••••••••••••-•• .. •••.. 17$-0MZ~ (lUll14·D67.w1cdyt. mo. Gd. loc. 9'1·ZM1 or ~ H°:'4t:::. ~~~~ :.~...:xt·i.='e 8:.Yi~.R8~ uv;;.Yp,.l ~: OCEANFRONT, 1'• d Olarrn l br. ll'IN1 deck ld·ttn .. 7i , not duwn ! 2 Ot.-drm,
b;,i sl n~le a lory
Townhouses atlll ut onl
$21.950. New caf'pct1
new drapes, etc. Ask r
Frank. B:J9..8321 Agent.
Prlnclpuls only plcilie.
PAUL W. BRUM FIEL D
& ASSOC
642 ·8550
Califnrnla'lli Lill"fleal 1475 n;ao 496--'6111 1tore1 $300 mo. "71.fTSIO cor•ted, dean 3 br, 2 bJ to reflned mature llldy. UADT TO llMT '
•Rcntlll M.'fvlce!• Viti are Reill fl!late • · • 6 )It 1 br. ,...-Ref. 873.Q74Jl1S.S'126. Sbaa crJ)U, d:rpa, paint· 1
No Accn~ f'ee M:1Moa Ylefl.> 3267 LC;. J bf', 2 ba. 8a.)'f.roat 1• ,. 3 • 4 be' ed .iu •t.we Ir 11raae. _.~
-•Edin1cr/MqrwUa ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'II /View, rrp1. Yt'~J: Beaut. ... ... frpk. z BR., 2 b1., frplc., dee. &oft.ynopee.crchl.ldren. I HUNT. Bch ~-a br.
frplc, kid1 Ir pet 48R,28A ... $33$ 38r. 2Ua. Fwn Room. facil.Wntr.$3SO.u~laA • ~.1e._•n1f':leir'1111• 200f bll·ins, dlalshkwrto .. ~...;_. stts.mo.mA12lhSl.
•Slater/Beach Pool. $4.SO m o . day1 Alao2br,2b•UJ>w.· C· '"-'• • • • oee1n; w --· OR DA $345 m -ltG2&5"5-4'DIOt'\'et:. c~•• to p¥&.·bcb, W ... OcunlraatSeeJlalb', read70et.11t,$1:i0Pu.u;..28R,1ba,enc.pall.o ·rownhousecondo, 2story, ~r~~:"" 2550
2 br, 1 i.; ba. pooltle ,· r,t..-crea • •• •• • ••. ••••••••• •••. • t1on roon\. !I i(lanc
1nJt Cu ll &42-•000. Mr OCIA.MA
HUNT. Bch. '1 br. den, Z
b6l, kids, pc t. rncd ,
garage.
NWPT Och 2 Ur. child,
pct, fncd . M:>lrai:e. A&t .
Fee.
:Spr~n~dai~·/llell w /w1111h'g, fad.I. Wnlr. ""''ll' mo. A&l 613-6510 .$115 mo. lit.~ losl + $75
3 BR. 2 BA. ... $345 G;;.~~~ ~=-.2 t!f/!s~~~'. ~.~~-Call alt Oceanfront apta avail, BRAND new a bed/Z ba. aec. IU.o381. .,
•Edina er /8olo;u Oiira pool pr! vil~ges. s,1;50 mo. from S1'5 to ia.•. UUI in· (rplc, 1undetll. S&'11$ •• mo. W AU TO IEACH , -=
t'r1ti "SOUTH" 3 Dlt. 2 UA.,.Sl25 830·S89l Alt.radlve.2Br, mlltobtb. cl B75-48'11 : f7J.5205 • ~sat; 115-1070 l&J br, cpts. ctrps, bllftl,
ADUL'r <.:OMMVNrrv
Nl-:A H. OC t:ANSllJt.: Mobll•Homn
For Sole 2 br. 2 ba. one story. l'lld
1100 unit Choit•c [0(:1111111
•••••••• .. •••••••••••••• O\"erlook1ng i.:vlf l"ouri.t·
HOMERHDERS
•642-9900•
• BrookhW'$l/GarfleJd Sundeck. ~or YtlJ'· 17l•M11 11, .. 11• 205A:Z1215th St.
:tBR • ..lBA. .. S?tl) 4 BR EldonKlo. ~rplt , 1Y~A1Mmllft5. tbt. 2202 W.Ocean&mtCotfeM.fto ·:S&J4· UPZSlor.Jn'.-1 .. .S
963·4567 or963-1789 drps, blln.5, ~lio. ft•d yd. WJ t t t S11! ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"
'-----............ 1 CJ05etos.:hoollr:s t.>oP 'a. B;;iyvtew 3 "'Bf' 2. Ba. n er ren • • -• WALKtoBeachl&r:2br, " .r.::;:. 1· SJSO.•mo s:K>-5891 duplex. rrplc. dlhw•hr month. 67S·8231-Offa. ..... Plth pool adults. No pet1. ·•· il ;:y~,·i !(il-.1;rf~'1 Nice J nn .. 4.\o BA. tvod ---, p3tio, '450.YtlY tse. Call OCEANFRONT' 2 br" 1. 2 Ir "S Br. Adults no 1175 &up.Z!O.l2lhSl •• 219
--
Vllll"9 De6uxt-with ijll r111~e (i/ 11t·ean
Fully insuluted. addt'ff Short walk to clubhouse.
~<·l"t en roo111 8xl7 +-
man) other .illdl'(I extras
SIO.!>tJO
vuul. Jal·u1.11 Near t;I
C.1m1nu Plata ~hopp1ni.:
l'Cnlcr & lJu~ lLnl'S. 3(,
minute~ frnrn San D1egu.
Illness forl'l.-S qui cks.ale'.
Hy ownt•r $311,495
MK<lOJG
__ --·-1 ..... :*1' urea. $325 mo. CaJI Mewporta..Ji l.2 9 13.S-3100 /t~ wduplea SMO LOuoed pt.ta,dshwhrs.lhaJcptl, 15th-St IM&-3927 , ;·=• j t' 1' 002-4471 A~cnt ••••••••••••-••••••••• _. • 548 4331 closed •ar»ge, frplc , · .ii: ' =-' -----TOWNll OUSF.: 2B r . IA.LIO.Al ... -occupincy. . BOQ. Gu 6: water p:t, ATTHEBEACH
Roy McCardle
Realfol' 1810 Newport
Cost a !\1 cs::i s.18 77~
HH , \"acunt. adult purk -
Costu ~I t'S11 On hos hne, Rt-al Estate
near !!lort•s. $•1500 Exchan9e 2800
541'1-1915 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---WAN·r \'utanl R-4 or C-2
S125Santa An:1, \ hrl·Ot · t:omry 3 br. Z ~· n.kl' 2'.<i8a . pool . bll n !I , Winter 1180sl235 Mo. 21J.6$fi,.7808 Pool NEW JLGE3BORSS1 5
l<1ge. yard. yard S3SS · 62!ll "alhn~ wash /dry. gar No pc1.1i. Incl. uUI , equip. kitchen, Newport Crest lovely 2hr. LA MANCHA ArTS Hunt. •larbow" Area
S130llunl.Ucuch,quicll \"luterOr S.12-27 17 G'TS·Y188 pool.Nearbua,mkt.ete. 2~ ba , dbl 1•no1e 178ScottPIKe,CM Adult.I 846-4150
brw /garn.:c ua1 51 ....,.,.. 1 _ _:.:.::J~~~c:=--~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ $135 1\naht·1n1 1 hr 3Br. l '~bu , cpls, drps. lOS.i. 0 ' w/openier, 3 detU, pet1_ M2-60'1'S
w ~11rage d~hwsr. Firl'plal"f'. $?7 LIDO ISLE Atlr. 3 BR .. 2 ba. step& t.u bit', pool, tmnls. Walk to MIDITEIUHIAN NEW 2 Bed.rm. 2 balh •
5165 G urden t.;ro\·c. Set· 1110 C•1ll H97 -4!:1tll Lovely 4. bl', 2 bo;i home.' bay &t oc.ean. Winter ren· beach. No pets. '485· apartment.. near beach.
no'A' 1 br kids & JM!L-> ok. . · -f'rpl, patio. aJJ rf«. kll.. ta!. Muture adults. No 675-11.8' or4'15-l070 VILLA.GE , parks & schools. $265. per
$175 1\n~he1m. nl•at 2 br 3 en & family rm, 2 ca dbl. ear . ~ 911 · 6 /1 or pets.-"' Mo173-3S91 z BR, ,. blk to be-h. 1 Br. 1 Br&: Oen. 2 Br, 2 month . • arage close tu bC"ach. -"P2" -. Br TownhOU>e ea-·-w/gar:tJ.:l' · $550 Yrly ti7:t-l334 ; -C d~"-3722 Winter or pm.sible yrl,y. · ·~.... SprintfieldEstales 51~ l'osta ~lcsa . 2 br 5375. mfl. OOS.0031 GT.1-4798 1 Of'•• .,. _.. 17~9225 "'lJ.9'4.00 dt'apes. fireplace, 3 ""'cld KB
d r ·1 1, 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '" pool.!1, 4 tenftia courts . 202Sjftine;.i1 • w 1y~r · amL y~·c '1'" c AT'l'N Boaters~ f"lunl . M • 8488300$3858 A.cf'•OCJ• for sale 1200 Prop l'nsla !\l~u arc;i.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 11,\VE Ocl'an Froflt In·
AVOCA J)O i .J\NI). 82 .080 rome. Manna de\ Hey
per 1AC . Han~·hll l'ul jl('n1nsula. Priv. ooly.
M'i: Soller Fin >1'1'. Int. Write P .O. Box R•l5.
Tig:ht S f(1rc1.·~ -.alt• Vt•111ce. CA . !r>291
S225 Weslnunstcr. 3 hr, llrbr . \\'alcrfronl 3 br ~AYCREST home. OVl' l-tt.1~e 1-RR. apt•., full WINTER orily. 1 br furn. arm ·Spuna s. •
nice location fur family . ho>n•: ,. pvt cl0<·k fo tn tod;iy 4 br. 3 ha . frplr. ht.rn. Waat 4uiet. mature Steps to beach. ~-mo. 2400' Harbor Blvd W. of Beach,6 blkson ......
S275XorbaLuxl:1,spa<·.:1 lea s; 5600 1~ rn u. Pvt $112.$. mu. Call i':..lWOO pt-::·son. Olk. l.O ocean; ioc!l . util & parking. Costa Mesa(114)SS7-8020 Adpms,N.atAJB.bama
hr, kids & pt•ls ok pty 714 .IJ41J.!52-I Co., 642-tlJIZ wai'k to stoces. S22S P 5"-6899or 675-75418 NEW BREEDAPTS 1M.
$2ti5 t:yprcss. ·I br. lnl·d --------·-UDO ISLE Beaut >lk 1'1o. Agent613"fi510 OWN YOUROWN3S'xl0" Bach /loft $21S. Util, pd, NEW 2&3 Br apt1. • ()Wlll'r 7\ \.ti7(i-57:,I --\\'ANT Ha yfronl or 1.11.:can
front ho1nc, to S.100.000
\\'ill tr:.1Uc $125,UOO. l:fjUI
\yin y11eh~ and C'ash.
Commercial
Prope-rty
yd,kids&pets ok S295~1 0 3br,F'4hu,cpt. 4 b near~lub $'91io mo' C h M 3724 AtobUe Home,localednr. o ppln s. ga r , poo l , dshwhr, fr'pl c:eoclgar . .,.•-.: S!85 Stuntun, •I br. )<•rll & drps. bltns. fnt·d yd . kids ,·U<ta·67 ... 1..., · · · OI ' •ta jacu•z·o. 393 Hamilton, See M1r.1413Huntingt.On «·,,ra"··. s·, ... ,,,,w OK 842-82U..1/213-8116·000H -'-•-··_.,,...,,""" ••••••·•••••••••••••••• Lido Island, by water. "' ,.,... .. ..-&UP Onl -~1~a1"""' 645-4411 St,aplB,orcalJS36-4095 ,., 1\.lc mb('r of Board of. . . -~--:--2Brcondonr •lool.g.Quic1, $15. "~ Y -.--.. "' · rinan·t-----------1 or536·7S28
Healtors, Bl•ltcr Hu ~• 2Br. 2b<1. Con~o: Bit~~ p\'t, frplc tlrikl/pet ok. •Studi o& l BRApls clble. Call: 873-5359 or 3 Br, z ba, crpl.. patio, nrl-=::.::::..;::c:::._ ____ _
l600
•••••••••••••••••••••••
BA YFROMT W1\NT 1·.u:~ or l'<1u1ty in lll'SS Burcuu, L11amlil'r of N~w cfl. ~uk1ds or pets. Encl p ;.i,t . poul Low •TV .. M.UdServ A\'ail 673·0598 OCC. $225. 1009 A Mis·
Uffict• bulldin~. ~pee hon1t'. 111 tradt• for Commcrl·c. S2Z5.I h .6 iJ-~J. ___ ('rime.SJ()a.979-7888 •PhoncServ,Htdpool BAYFRONT 2 br, 2 ba, sion,552-4576aft6 lr'finlf 3844 ,.
Si lo 000 t 57. 530-8505 •ChiktrenSection pa11·0, S325 mo. Yrly. -~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.icular 1 Lt''A', cxct·ut11e . . cqu1 Y in B M Vc:i'U offiCl'S Cris Connie Crwser --SIOO "-10\IE JN 5200.000 Yiew Estate •S.S OFf!' week's rent 544·2013 aft 6PM *2 c upper. esa e. NEW Rancho S;.in Joa·
Rt'duccd S600.ooo. ASKFORROM lllKEtubeach 21.Jr ,Sl8.S , ALLOWi\NCI-': underSlOOO.mo.till-0797 w/ad Ad~lls. $185. Garage quin deluxe tovmhome,
BILL GRUMDY 673-760 I A~. sinRles ult . C ,\1 Or 11 .H. Deluxe :J b<.'Clrm. 2 bath, or64~1102 2376 Ne\liport Rl\·d. C~1 1 Br, Apt. $180 + util. avail., no pets. 833-8914 2-Bf', 2·b a, den, San Joa. ~· 2 br. 2 ba. kios, pets. Lag. f ed · ---S48·97~5or~3967 House ror 2 adults only, CASA VICl'ORIA quin Garden Plan. View. Realtor 6 75·6161 ----------Beach, 2 br, $240ool .. uthil pd, fhpeka.l . "1,.',~sa"r ob~cache.a!r. NEWPORT l{F.JGfrT'S wintel' rental. Steps Avail. now. $500. 5S2--4-0lO . ftlfol• singles ok & p ou!le • .. ~ 3 8r, rrpl, renced yard 2035 ,...._CM Ocean.673-2617 1,2&3br.DeluxeUnfur.
Condominium• Town·••••••••••••••••••••••• CdM. l br, kids,J pets Schools. parks & cool New paint. S«25 month. 1 BR Furn, 2 lrg closets. or Furn. gas/wlrpd."'-or640-8287eves. •I
hou1e• for Ide 1700 OUllfl Fumlihed Also 2 br, $215., smRil •. -s, ocean brcezl'!i S360 Per 521 El 1'.toden.a 5C8·~1 q ueensi :ie bed, pri v. Winter Rental. Spac. 2Br. Adults:-No pets Sec. gate L-a leach 3848 ·'
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• family. N.8 . AJ(t f''ee mo dressing rro. extra lrg Steps io beach. ~-15 Pool, rec rm, elevalol's .;:;;;••••••••••••••••• t-nffal 3102 979-8430 Spr1ngrieldl-.:stale.'s The Illufrs. 3 BR & fam. r oo m s, encl . gar . •tut.675-781 6. 525Victoria,6'2-8910 HORTH LAGUNA
CONDOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Kent Hogers Really "Greenbelt" Avail now w/slor age A dulls oo]y, Df'op a pebble into the
Whitewater Views-2 & 3
bdrm. units from SM .000.
420 Cy press. Nort h
La~una
.alb I I~ 3206 848 .• .,N,960.-...c.u Partly furn., ~mo no pct>. Oceanview deluxe S BR LRG 1 Br, pool, nr. shops, Ocean from your Apt. CE,\N1''RONT I br 5160., oa ' -°""" ~ \.rent&IO ~ "-'-'--------! Ba. SteptJ t.o beach, ....in.. adlt.1 /no pets. Util pd. Lease. L.uxury, security. util pd., Ralbou. ,\lso ••••••••••••••••••••••• 202Springfield , HB '"' --yrly.613.!i&J8 -1884Monrovia.548-0336 MatUce adults.3175.5Csl. r
N.B. l br. $185., util pd, 3Bravailfor yrly lblock W of Ueuch.Gblkson BEAUT Hluffs Condo. 4 SUSCASITAS Hwy.499·283S.
Call 675-7225
.. ~· ···~" ., ............ .
\ \I .Lt·:'\·
HE \l '.I'\
A fH RGI Nl(RPRtSl5 CO
\.:ids . pet. L;;g. Ut!al·h 2 to bay Har & put1u 1\dams. N at Alabama BR , 2•n ba Jmmed oc-Larfc nicely fu.rn . bach. WINTER by park, ne •Shody Elms-Pool*
br. $240 .. util pd .. si ngles ff73 -1200 10·4 pm 1 ~"'.""'.""'.""'.""'.""'.""'.""'."~ cp·y. $450. Agt . 6M·lllJ & 1 tirs Adults ooly, n new 2 br, 2 ba, dahwhr. 1&2 Bf' $175. Up. Adults, Recently built2story2br,
ok. llus ull l br. utll pd. 1 2b -W 1 5,75 o.. 1 3 BR 2 BA ,pe:.:•.::•:.:·..:•.::ll"'O'-'N-'-<:WIJ<W\°"'="'"B".,-1.-l $285.mo.548-4063 no pet.a. 117 E. 22nd St. 2 ba luxury eon -. C.M. Or 1 br. SIJ0.11.R . J~r. a 111 t'I" • • .,..per t cun · BLU Ffl~S 3br, Zba tri· -LOWWEEKLYRATES ~~--------1 S4S-37l2;642·3645 dominiums. XJnt views, A'-lt F• 9.rc._8430 l'arpets &: dr apes hom e 1''1ne rcs1dcnt1al level. xtra cleun. n1ecly ON THE BEACH 2 br, ~-----------! rrom$325.yrly.494·1795 ··· · ~e. 4. Firepla<"l'. 675·7016 area Compl crp1d & dee Walk Lo Cd~I 111 & Exec..tiY1ts.itet ba, bllns, gar &. Ind
Balboa Island 3106 C df'IM 3222 drpd, bltns. lease S325. t~ast b l uff Elem Sehl J080Nnrporfll•d fac·s. $3SO Mo. Yrly. HaciendaDeMlfla NewDuplex.Oceanview.
••••••••••••••••••••••• orona ,.. mo Red l'urpet Rro·l351 644 -4986 . Co.to.._..,__ 615·7777 &. 559-4221 160 W Wi" C M frplc, beams, 2 Bd, 2.Ba, l
I I ••••••••• •••••••••••••• ----- ---• •SOii. • • block to Bch. &; Boal Ca-LIKE new 3 br, 2 )a. al B 2 tl · CO NDO 3 b 1' b· BY 64'2611 S Cl -3776 Cl -~G el c kitchen w/dsh,.·hr 3 r, a, nt.'W sp;ic1ous r_. 2 a , Rent or Lease Option ...,. • em 01..... •ages nyon Shopping Center. rr~I~. patio, bbq. 9 m~ tri -le ~el $50? 404 ~shwhr , r:fr1~. dryer . OWN l.'.:R 4Br. :1 1,, be&. Shldioa&, ... s .. ••••••••••••••••••••• BEAUT.GROUNDS $450. 491·15Z3 or
SSSSS'tEALSSSS lsc.s:IBS.mo .. ~8831 Fernlear. 675·667~ ror 265 N.upet.s Ch1ldrenuk. Baycrest Ivan Wells •FHEELinens JMMAC. 1 br. next t ADULTS.NOPETS (213)941·745.\.
· 1 1, p · &" appt. 848-K:l<!O Home Pool. frml Dr • •fl~REEUtilities beacb . lovely ocean LOmioule»toocean.Lge • . it ega ·. rices lntcres~ J BR. 2 ll/\. bltns, frpl, ---324 4 1'T rm SOOO mo. incl poGI •F'ull Kitcben view, $197. incl util 2 Br $215., lge 2 Br ~br, 2ba vie~.apl. Fplce,
keep _going up, up._ up. Winter . Gd. loc. 675-7673. * 1319 Bonnie Doone. ~~~i!'.~••••••••••••••••• & ~arden mainten;ince. •i-lealt.-d Pool. 498-3253 w /patio $220. Gas & beamed ceilings, lndry West1llhavearcws1ngle I20T fr\•lne Terrace, 3 Rr , 6423099 c.cc.c='-------1 w ater i ncl. Draperies, rm, dbl gar. $350, story, 2 bedrm. 2 baLh opar, 2·h". f•m rm. nire i•d R-'ccorat··• 3 BR, 2 BA _ · · 21!---•Laundry Facilities h " •~ = TV& M ·d · I lbr w /gar. Walk to be . carpe•-. gas heat, 1as 675-4M8. Townhouses at o nl y 5'150mo. home. Nu landsp• $350 BAYSllORES. r & fam • ai sen'. inc· ..., t----------
$2 ••• k 1 ~ k 'M n •PhoneSel"Vice $160. Carpets a i:i-d stove, air coOditioning, H port .. -• 3869 1, ........ As or '"'an. STEPSTOBAY-OPt:N •604 arigold-Cozy3-r mo Ask IOI" Be\' or Joe rm. P\·t bcb, SoW0 mo. drapes. Stove &. refng. s wimming pool rec. ttW .....,
· 839-8321 Agent. 3 Br. z Ba. FM Rm. Patio & .:Jen, 2-ba, pvt patio 963·4567 or 963·178fl 979-8685 &:: 673-2&&3. Shod ~ •oa1* -1833 h &d' ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Y~' -·· · room.was en ryers. p• ~RT
T . h ond 328 Sapphire. 644-0954 S4 mo. . r t&2 B $175 Up Ad··'•.. .._,ftK ...,...,....,,._ own ouscc o.2slOl"Y, Agt .644-6397 Rip:h l onS.anJoaquinGol NWPT Shores 2 sty. r · · ........ SmdaA•a 3780 BR -1 pd.•-pts 2 br, l 'h: ba, pool, recrca· VERY no'ce 3 br +den or Crsc 2B r . den, single h-·se, 3 br, 2 ba. frpl, no pets. ln E. 22nd St. 1 • uli . ........,, c ' APAltTMEHTS
,
-, -645.3732., .... -... ••••••••••••••••-••••• stv, refr1g. $170. mo. Bachet-i-z ~ion room. Beil rlnanc· din rm. 2 ba, patio. Wn tr. • 1 Bf', util pd. New cpts level. central ;Ur. !S50 yr. tennis. pools, walk lo ""'" -"" ....
1n1 . Call 642-4000, ,Mr. only . S3 50. 675·4365 / drps. frplc. $230. Adult, Jy.675·4059. bch $425 645·1531 / •T......Jc .. Poal• AMIASSADOllMHS 831·9216 Bedroomaand ".
-F_'r_ic..t>_ .. _______ 833-2820 nopets.833·8974 631 ·1400 • -r· OF "MERIC.a OAKRIDGEVILLA Townhouses 1-""-'='-------t -~-----~cc:-c tBEAUT New Rancho Sant ;ijii;;i;;iii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil l Br. cpts:, drps, blt.rus, A .._, 3 br, 2 ba, bltns, children Fr. $229.SOOpen s.G
OCEAN. A lcilboaPenintula 3107 CostaMe•a 3224 Jouquin Twnhome 2 Br.I' patio. Utilities paid. Sltll TWO LOCATIONS 1 ~•< •<• w Daily 1 b 0 I k ·1 h LYR TES we come, -· o.oo ' S Pool T . I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 212 a, 2 sty veroo s GREAT Fam1 y omc mo.548-1168 WEEK A Center,645-ll97 pa· S· enn1s 'l "SOUTH'' Spa·c. 2 Slry 3br. 2ba. ¥z Acre. I br. util pd, golf course & lake $575 . for lease. 4 Bt.-drms, 3 ~=='-"~-----! FULLSERVJCE l---~------;Acro111 from Fashion i
Bayview House. S325 or appls. $180. 547 ·7044 /552-0055 baths, family room. din· Lge hr'lll 2 Ir 2277 Harbor, C.M. GARDEN Apt. 2 br, 1 ba, Island at Jamboree on
. APULTC0M~1UNITY deluxe 2br apt. $250 , 4 BR, 2 hu, frplc. kids. ing room. Low main-Dltns,w /w,drps,pool, 2909Bristol,S.A. e nc . gq r . Adults. SanJoaquintfillsRoad.
• NEAR OCEANSIDE t arport s. Wint er . pet.fncd ,g:1r1t~c. tl:EMTALS tenance yard Must see SZOO. Adlls. no pets 645-4840•54().2300 846·7129,631-1249 1714)644-1900
2 br 2 ba one stOI')' end sn-9467. Family, :1 br. kid!!, pel. 2 BR. 2 Bu ...... $3501360 to apprec iate. Pete Bar· ;""~· ;2;·95~2o;;;;;;;;;'i;;;;;;;;~:~:;~;;;;i;"'."~~ .. ~1~~:.~~~~-::~8 l' Ch' I I ' · fncd. garage. J BR, 2 Bu ...... !4001425 ret.t.Realty 642-5200 $215. NEW 2 br. patio, $330 .• Yrly 2 br. 2 ba, 2 .. :!'e:iookin~ c;ol fo~~~~~ REMODELED 3 br, 21'~ Pool. 2 br. bbq, kids. pel. J BR. 2 Ha ..... 538.5/4501~~~~~~~~~~'1 BR F SIS5 AP.'!.!~e:!'~__... garden. Adults:, no pets. story. 2 car encl gar.,
with lfllmpse ol ocean. ba. $.120 mo. Wntr. 305 ~aruge.S26S. FeeAJ..'\. 4 BR. 21.oz Ba ........ S450r l urn ... U""'""-· 527 w. Wilson,642-1603 balcony. 642-1603
Short walk to clubhOU1e. Mont ero. 1·879-5991 HOMERMDERS 2 & Den wiatcrfront .. 5600 HAllOR VIEW LOts or bltns. 'pool, walk •••••••••••••••••••••••liJE;::iJi{i:Jb,-;p<;:~;;;;~;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J-8r, 2-ba, $496. mo. Nr . to s h o ppin(I.. 1n mi.. G .. eraf 38021DELUXE 3.br apts. 2 full
pool, Jacuzz.i. NeMr El Corona dtl M• 3122 •642·9900• LE RAISOR pool & park.6?l·760I AJ..'t . beach. 931 W. l9Lb Sl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• baths, s w1mm1ng pool, OCEANFRONT
Camino Plaza shopping ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-049Z ANAHEIM CrplE_, $290. mo. 540-9172, 3 BR, 2 ea. $350 Winter
centef' & b\LS 1inet, 30 Close lo beach· 3 BR Z Newporl Och environ. 3 REALTY $37S. YRLY 2 br ocean·t ~"'.""'.""'.""'.""'.""'.""'.""'."~ VIEWS! c-.RTS! ext112 STEPS TOIEACH miiiut~ from San otego. Ba .. frpl , comP furn. P~e-lge 1¥··2 Bu. Fa~. Rm. 2 front. frplc. bllns, reftig,I · _..., 1-==='--------I
lllncs$ forces QUlCK fer adults. Winter. frplc s. lge paUo w 1i:i;1u1 4523 Campus Dr .. Irvine gar. 645_~ IM~t/\C. 1 br. $140. utils New Canyon Rim Apt.a in NICE 2 br, 1 ba, pool, shag 3 BR,2 Ba4 $325 Wint.er
SALE! By owner $3-1 ,495. AgentS73-22:22 BllQ, s,pac. bondackSlyd. Well Campus Valley Shop Ctr. =--------1 pd, crpls, drp8, patio, Anaheim Hills give you cpt, drps, els to ever· IAYFRONT
548·3036. cared or c · eps lO CALL 813-8600 Del uxe Waterfl"Oflt 3 BR, 2 quiet adults. 613-2056 all lhese abundantly! ything. $190. 548-7986 aft 3 Br, 2ba, unf, $l75yr.
LCll)llfta leach l 148 Westcliff Pla7.a, Ofl quiet Ba $5()0. yrly. Slip avail.I -'"--------.; Countf'Y Club living. 5
D91exet ••••••••••••••••••••••• c ulde sac . $480 mo . For lease. University a.ao7 Finleyst.55'1·7010 HuntinC)tOftleoch 3740 Golf, 11 tennis cls.1-----------1
Onitt sale 18001 LEASE $160 ooo Beach 548·0950. l';ir\.:. Oxford model. Jbr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Horseback riding. 1. 2&2 ~a:e 2 br, 2 ha. pool, associated
••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo. ror sOOs mo. un-3ba. fa m rm. Major LOVELY 3 BR. 2 Ba . WEEKLY RATES brm + den. For-info., view, frplc, adults, $250.
OPEMHOUSEl·S rur ., o r S950 rur . * * * FRESHLY Greenbelt.$475.5.52·8314 . Fam-rm, 3 car ga r , 6'13-4300 549·32620r751·1891
BR'J " E~S "1f A.'(•'':.
l!V..6~c,< ''
321 16th. St H.I. Oceanfnl. 3 br. 2 ba, 2000 PAINTED 3-Br home. UNIV Prk TerrT~·nhse. 2 ~~~~~~f:.:;f~t:39 $500. 72Ex7tcTi:!ild·~:-.. ~d li1~1A~o;,o;i;l.tJ.....i;;;il-3i1i;oii:6~1 ---•• -.BttRl.,ppoo1;;;;1.:---1~~~~~~~~ ''
Lar"e Four·P~x near sq. It .. wetbar, rrpl, Sec. T " & b b .. 1 l b -~· Back Bay $100 DELUXE e wo-car gar1tge, puuo r. 2 a. n1us rcn Y BeachBlvda.tY<rktuwn ••••••••••••••••••••••• • · • • the beach. Ill 3·81", 12 ) guard.Adults.M4 ·757S low m·alntenance yard. 10 /l . 552-6810 eves. F'11llOcta1V1f'W ?Br,2 ba,gar,ldl")';ytly 751·189lor549-3262 Eas lbluff 3 br, 2 ba,
Z·Bf'. (l) l·Dr.Submiton S 2BR 2B Pr>·"ate home !or one 213 ·722 ·68!0 d"ys Mr. Townhouse 4br. 2'" l>a. Sl6-04 ll · t f ' J h l I I offers . Asking$143.000. $350. uper , a. nr • " ~ STUDIOS& I IR• or ~In er, some urn Liarge 2 br, 2 ba. pool, own ouse. se. nc . Town & Beach. Adults, year le11sc . No peui. $350. Shipp din. lg fum. 3 decks avail. 673·513teves view, ff'plc, adults, S'lSQ. s pac master suite. din
REAL TV INC .
714/846-1371
no pets. 499-230201" (2 13) mo. ·ooNAl.D !\I. UIHJ) Pool /tennis . Lse $.575 . •Full Kitchen S49-l2&2 1511891 rm & dbl garage. Auto
769.7975 & ASSOCIAl'f;S, 2192 *RENTALS* 675-3122. •HeutedPool 3 BR livail for yr\y. I or -dooropeneravail.Pool&. 11
Martin Suilc 1~ Irvine. 1·111-: TEHHACE ·--•L11undry Facilities block to bay. Bar & patio. LOVELY 2 br. spac. rms, recreation area. Adults.
I BR House & pa lio ror . ' "!llR 2Bo 0 •"'5 San.Juan •PreeUtilities 6731200"0•pm · kl h b · k t -s 11laricd quiet 1icri;on. Ca. (7l41 752-7315 '(;REFNTR'Eii ff()~1ES C-istf'ano 3278 •F'rce Linens -"' ... cpt, nice t<: • ric on y, nopa.s. J~~i£~~~==~1 ~~~=~:;::;;::z~1 .., ~-,,.,,·1 lolboa p-·-0 3807 sn ackbar, patio. Xlnt. •$332• 494·8170. $18.5 3 Bit, 2 Ba ........... $375 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •TV & Maid St.'f'V. I · R t 351 , . ••••••••••••••••••••••• oc11t1on. eas. ren . ass Amigos Way, NB 2 Br House, children & 3BH,3lla ........... $425 SJC 3 Br 1 1~~ Ba. new •Bar·ll-Que Vt'ct o ri·a •pt 357 M edb ( Bd Penthouse Condo sp•c. 3 b,, 2 ba. (rplc, IL • "' • • anag y . · . . · pell welcome. $2M mo. Ut::ERFIELDl-tO~tES garden home . l\l in •PhoncServiee "' "' 646-4252 lnc:om•Pr__... 2000 V1cwjng ~lain Beach .. 9tlZ·200tl.207BPomono. JBR 2' B o-'• M · p 1· r I 1u·1 o. blktobayorbch,views. WilliamWaltersCo . ..,....., 1 . , \o2 a ..... ---·'"""' a1nt . a 10, rp c. • "'1 e~oocean ••••••••••••••••••••••" SASO . mo. call rom 12-ti -·-~cc.=""-='--"'--1 I' h s J · pool N bch So of Bal Pier No ....ta z BR D I c~ d el --..anc o an oc.qwn comm . , r .. no BEAUTIFUL bf · • · ...,....... px . .,._,rps, ec.1Br(Sl90),D/W.Nopcls. 4UNITS-trii4ESA 494-0066. I Br. I Ba, i\vull. Now . 2BR,2Ba ........... $575 pets . 5335 mo.leas". apts$IG5 &.Sl7~-~an~~ $4SO.yrly.49t-1795 bltns •. ene. gar. 1017 A Nr. Hoag, Ocean, FP,
$64 950 Mew port l1toch 3169 ~ili~si11~'-:s1.~S'1";~1~"a~: J BR. 2 :;2 ~7500 . -.. $525 493·6636 style bldg, pvt encl gar, IA YFRONT CONDO :S~~~(~P~ SS&-0670 or bltns; pool. 646-Slll
Four bread'" huller un· ~·~;;~·~·;;;~·~;:•;••;• ing fee. No pets. 376 Vic -red h'ill '"ealtv ELEGANT Upgrad ed pool, s1u.na,lnclry, Mllts. 2 Br, 2 Ba, Pool, &In· WESTCLIFF2 br, l Y.t ba
its! Fine C1M1ta Mes;i r tori a, 673-462'7. ·.::.M&W,• Condo. A./C, 2 br. 1~ be, 17301 Keelson ].At:1 blk deck. Adult. Securily NEWLY DECORATED townhouse. Mulls only,
localion . Two-2 BR al hou se. Wntr .. rental. D/W,stv,cpt.drps,pool, W.ofBeacbGftSater. guardedbldg.Open1-S 2Brw/gar .. $175.Watef' nopels.1728BedtordLn
$18.5 mo. & tw1>-1 BR at Wash /Df'y. utils. pd. Mea a Verde.\3 BR. 2 Ba, GCJUnaleach 3Z41 gar.Adults,nopeb.$250. 842-7848 Sat&SUn,31.0Fernando, pd. 2176 ''E" Placentia. $285.m o.548-7533 ' ,
Sl45 mo. GrOM t620 per S475. 751 ·07M fam. rm .. fpl, guraae ••••••••••••••••••••••• 493.3429 apt 312. $5:iQ. Sale price 636--41201·5
mo . total. Over S600 LIDOISLE rec.r oom.:>49-2057 OCEAN VIEW DECKS 3286 Logunahach 3748 $88,000. 1---------1 ONTHEBAY
d 5 -.~ L--••••••••••••••••••••••• Oli W -•-RI 2 BR I Ba crpts drps D I i t I ' •~ndable on 15'"~ noun! Neat • clean 2 llR wtw VYTn -:ii ·ve i•g~-u. lr • • • • up ex, yr y. ren a • ,...... .,_ Watch lhe boats go by!· 3 Br, 2 ba, gara~e. patio, .,.I bit k't h., I I ••••••••••••••••••••••• EFFICIENCY APl'S 5"7• .,.,.... stv,. refrig, lndry tac, Outstanding 3 br, z ba, Can add g mnre unit•! Wntr.3br.2baBayfront. sto\'e, rcfri~. dsh\\·hr, carpc 9• n. 1 c" rp · f Pool 'd ~ ~ H bo & M"usl !lee-cut\ now & dbl. i;:ar . Large yard. 2 Rd , 2 ba. home. Ocean roro $.190. , mai • carport, nChir at' r frpl, 1800 sq. n., upper.
752.1700. 675-4646 1213-449-4466 S395. 1n r l water FamilyO.K.S375 ~10 \'iew. frp lc, ca .. port. phone. laundry. Village BAL. PENIN. Cond o. Wiison. l "ldok. $170. Boat doek avail. Newly Of'INIUQ"'~"i""'~1,,,, OCEAN FRONT. J hr gardener 54 R l !l!l~i . fl;ll SSfONllEALTY Adults, no pets. Lease. lnn.494-9400 3-Br. 2·ba. well decorat. 642-3697 decor'd. Sundeck. $465 .
home• 1 yr old dl x ., •. 3,·1 ~~5-7&">4 ______ • ,,,. .. !\-1.0731 • • 491-1612 uft. 7pm week 8 CH .1 ~ 11 e d . r .. nt . c or. l oc. LG . 2 BR, I'" ba Sludo·o. 675-4200 ~ ' · ' '· • · "' days, Sat. &&in. all d ay. A · uti · 85. mo. Panor•mic ocean vu. ,.. 1----------. l J tn ti mo. $475. 675-1849 J '~ RR h ousr on P\'l .. --up/$60. wk escmt ~ay. $42S mo. Agt. 644.6397 qu.iet 4-plex, ~ew paint, 3 BR, 2 BA. bltns, DW, ~'::~·=:::':::':"'""'!!:""!:"""""'~ ON 8 E •c H. 4 Ur. vo· ew. f e need Int . Ji[ u r u ~ e. F:-E ~I E HI A L D lbctahy' t W nt. r. W eshnl" •ter l 2981 !'.I 4~35~N'.:. ~C~st_t H~wy"'.!~49'"!:!·2508~~J;;;:::;--';;::::;':;::::;;-";'-;;:-:; I c~ts' drps' bltns, walk lo CI os ed gar. • n r Hoag · ""t' '~ Si d e . 228 Ct'cll s:.!05. rent11 , P\'l. . enn1s. I ~ Sl15(J mo. lease. F\Jrn or 548-6680 PoOl s lg . 2 br. frpl. d('("k. ••••••••••••••.•••••••t• Oceanfront 4 S r apt West Ocea.nlront. 1 & 2 s ~ps &. scbls. l schl age Hosp. Adu!U. $2.85. mo. ASSUME un furni shed. --yd . \Vlli ll·~·atcr \"U S.t75 . LookinlZ for a famil y to Winter lease. NO pel."I: BR, uplp e!~...1.r.•:rwa1goe child OK, no pets. $200. 642"·0596
W<1 terlront fl omf!!' 31.>r , Iba. a,:ar, Ir~ fenct.-d SMl-3030 & IW<l · 1815 renl our home. 4 Bil., 2 148 5 4 94 _7011• 0 r space1""1 v , .-ang, · 540·6338 1----------
70/o VA J.OAN Gall 6Jl·l4oo. yrd newly decorated.. No -------RA . rrptjt: & d!ll5. RIO. 213 •• ;.... • 613-14.u . . BAYFRONT-Touch the
Spacious 4•pl rx, good pe&i $260 S48-it?l6 Oce.anfront North La)!unt1 Nite renced back yard . ._.. -· S31S. 3 Br, 2 ba. patio-boats! Panoramic view:
aNa. Clo&e to achwls. YRLY 3 BR. 2 Ra, on the · · · Co\·c. 4 Bd! 3 rn.. frple , $335 . en o . 963-4569 Oteanlronl -Alb'ad.i\'e 2 BR. 1 ha, di.nine rm, yard, gar, nr new, no Brand new lge2 br 2b1
1h()pping. Owner may oceari. 620 1 w. Ocean· •2Br, twnhse/poot &tesa deck, p11t10. step:; to 96J...1T86 bd, 2 ba, apl. Fabu.I~ newJ.y d ecorated. $300. pett.642·)603 apt.. Pool, Pauo.. swiroof.
carry 1econt1. Aaent. rront, yvall. Ort. 1. S4SO. Verde $275. ctukl or pet Be:1ch, newly painted. view Winter ren\.lll No mo.613-9S9l D Pol . · I 6 Sec. bldg. Adu.lta . $650.
!Wff.6'12or646-67to 646-3971 OK.SU-8974. 1850. W,i nter. s1.ooo. Tow,._w 3525 peli~ .Days , 494 .10ss . •• ftf 3 2 mo. Call owner da1• ..::.:.:...:=:..::c::.:;:.::.:.:::_ __ l-"C.CC.C.'-------l-''-""'-CC.=c.c.---
3
-
2
-
3
-
4
·1 Yearly. No pets. 4M-64S2. Unfw wis••• N 1.,. b l a, 4n4 ... 602 or l~blt lo b~/be~ 2br, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ( 213) 845-2341. eve a .. STARTER •OCEANi'~ONT• Fountain Valley ••••••••••••••••••••••• • "' ., 'n •• carage. -·yr-$165 MOMTH t213U591"954
C h• rm I n g 1 8 r •••••••••••••••••••••••Vacant, View.38d .~b•.2 custom a. 8ll, 2 Ba, cen· 494·3834· ~~;~ Refs, 1-Bdrm. apt., 1 blockl----------INVESTMENT w 1,an1e. Winter S!15 Lll'C• 2 br, huge rumpus aundccks, renced yon!. tral •ir. llCission Viejo Lux. 2 BR .. dell. '3 Ba., above Coast Hwy.; walk IEACH • YfAIU. Y
inparatehoufflon a tot mo. 613-2493 rm , 2 Ila. 2 car J1:1Ar11c:. t«O Del l\l ar. 49'·71811· are .... S:Z95.54'·1041 Pvt. beac:tt. tfl'llftb, pool, ACENT to-beach on lo beach A wharf. W/W Deluxe. very 1rl Jbr. Nu
·1a 1 d esirable Eaitside bltn~. comm swi m pool. 1 8d houie ror l"t'llt year Wlnle-r leue $t50. Sa•1bore. 2 br. dplx, c arp, bit-In range &: cpU, all bit-Ins, f"plte,, or C.tti Met•. 3 Bdrm. 1 HOIKH U.......,....., Kida ok. noree. $l8S. mo. ar~nd frplc walk to •2Br, 2 tt., ~· 1ar, ( 7 14 > 4 9 9 • %"92 6 or stvJref. L1 paUo. Vrl1. oven, refrig. water. $395.-SM-9218 or
b.th plut 2 bdrm, l l»ilh. ••••t•••••••••••••••••• 1_A~l~l_._M_2_·44_%~ beach. $:Joo. pft. mo. 505 ='t:~~=· -szoo. 1213)790-4801. O'.IO,.o.631.(Nl.S MISSION REALTY 675--0555.
Contiderexeh"'"'"•.boat.li-. .. 3202 Shart 3 RR, 2•· ba . Lomhardy L1a t". ~ •••M-0111•*" ... ,... ~. cea nfronl. Sp cjous. Bayfronl Newport Is tuh1 T01 udown. ••••••••••••••••••••••• town OU.!le. S375 month 494-4092. ......™ Uxk: a 3600 w lad C..e def.... JI --' • 175 7080 or 613 9187 Art • ••••••• ••• •• •••••••••• inter $32S.·$U5. • •••••••••••••*'•••••••• VERY lge 2 br-, Z·ba-w tter-duplex, 2 lge patiol. . -• . Log.• Hlll1 3250 BALBOA Peeio . Ye1r-utll. or Yearly.417·1082-NltW I bdrm 2 b race,· Utslaln, no pet.•. 2 Br, Den, $385
tt..tf1'910ft ltach 1140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rOIMd J bf', 2 ba. frptc, ce•nfront year·rou.nd Bttna ·~· G25.675-5205 • 1 Br Deluxe.ms
•••••••••••••••••-••••I BR. 1 \.~ Ba home, blltl-s, ••r • ,..,, SISO. mo. bachelor. $18S. mo. Util. ~:~eM . .5C9-eis7Dayt ..... .tl.,tOll .._ 3140 .,..Pier Avail. 873-9315
4 BR Hunt. Conttnenl1d S2(K), mo. Sll..n5 pd. S:.·0321 • •••••••••••••••••••••••YEARLY 3 br, 2 b1, M
Condo, pool. c lbh&fl.. 12l3)Ul-9752 Nr. beaclt2br,Jba,dec:k, 11w1To-•CH W Bala..--Blvd -1c ktds /p•t OK. $29S'. 2 BR. 2 Ba. C<lll, no Mowportllt«li 3769 f11>l, llltiis; gae. No pets ~ -' -'••• • ' . 9'19-TMI , ........ M...... 3152 c.fliLdreo ~ pets. $288. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $350. mo. 675-0ll9 HUI. stioPPIMG> bllna, 1•r111e. 1 blk to
Member .of loud dt ••••••••••••••••••••••• reo.644..-(Swde) $40 WK UP 1&2 Bdr 6 1,2&:38r•C;blll'IS,dil· bay or· beach. $l75• =l~C):r't;.~&:m::~ ~f~;r~', h~i::er ~i L~/~$::. ~ ~ i!t~t':..i IMl. 2 8a+ I• CdJ, no :,~h. ~~~n£'x= ~ ~~~ 8:i ~~ ~'*;'~::'iarat~~o: :a~~~ns, lfl>k:. Zb<llhl\
Commerce. OK. B•rbar•.18S-1738ot +t50 cle1n'1. fe•. pets or cllildreri. 133D. <115 N. Nawpor:t. 91, NI! water. $485. lie. Da•eS. $200. t..iona Est1le•, d1bwshr. Oeean view.
5JMll05 8'11•5744 • .,.... • 400.0:Wor4tlf.Ul61 ""'""'-' ~·-.... 121JAft. 53WS7t Wlnter.$310.ll»ltll.
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.,..1-.. 1U.faw. ocall°"R-4z500fflceR*d 44001eal1llW ..... 4600~t!tn.Trwt . ,__.., 5350 WClll!ed 7100 .W,W..ted 7 1 HolpW-7100
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deida 5035 •••••••••••-••••••:••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
twwporfltedl 3169 CAllM : •tMOFREERJ!:NT• LocalbUJlnasman,mov· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drinkln,~~· O..t .. ,.,...Ofc
•••••••••••••••••••••• •••llfillAI••• '1·2·3 Rm . olflc• from ~na J;:i7U: :~ LOANS Ill tD 11% ~al~~·~s::=e AVON MQ~a:!=•=-:mall Exper 'd Insura nce &
Bayfront 2 Bel, 2 Ba, Pvt s larae bedrooms. Sleeps $135 per mo. Near ~m home oi-aPt f« 30 · latTD-Co.i..fO!o hand tools. Apply, 1»19 pegboard. EBtab"I prae-
Bch
935
& pl~· :'°w · yrly. 12. Sepata~ game room AirJ!C!~· No lease req. • to4S dayi while bis heme ZllMI TD &.o.I; SPIRITUAL READER E. Ottident.al, SA. tice. Xlnt N. B. )()('. Non
979-1 &: with color TV and pool a.w-322391\lnom 11 belnl completed. Lowa,rat•OranceCo. ~nlOA.lftolOf'M. WAMT'TO .:=c::=~==c=:::_ __ I s moker. Sal open. Reply ~EWPOITMAllMA tabl~. Hu.geaundeck. By Pr"Uae bid& Newport Prefer Ocean.froot 0t Satffer ..... Co. :l2N~~lc~;.U.::i MAUMO•EY. w!~!~~~has ~~0Cl,~:!f~ot1P~'.=~
Spac. G ... ;.!r.: ~S::u o~ wee~end . Beach. Luxury pvt office view for1elf, wife&: t9yr 54.2·2171 ~11 S.nClemenW, Fol'appt. lwt Not9to 57.. lmmed. vacociesf«; 1$60, Cost a MHa, Ca
P . Li Ian . ......_ • run:a ach in suite. 645-3700 old dau1hter in college. Servin& Harbor area 24 492.9034 492-9136 p-• H--w.626 r1.pa o, a.a -:...... Willingtomakelarsede. 1...:=="--------1 B e a n A VO N -• _.., 1-==::·:_ _____ _
beach, lovely 1araens. .. to .... 4300 NOy.'LEAStNG posit for dama ge for years Atwcmt1tt1rMp REPR ESENTATIVE. GeMf'Cllloat ENTAL Asst. pt. time olfering~dbrapt$4'1S. •••••!•••••••••••••••• Preiticeotfice Space rl1bt 1ituaUon. Call JMITO~Wmhd ,.ot Ml d I Be your own bosa, set With 1 year marine ex-bac k ore. asslst-. for 919Bays1 eDr' 6'7S-ltl4 Cu.stomRebllStores Bryson Hickman at WEHAVECASH! 0 ~ 1 Ag your own hmra. No ex· perience., c hildren'• dental ofr. AN 35 to 60 shr. 2 br, 2 HUNTINGTON 6'15-5"4 1733 Fullerton. CM ~ Dix 3br, waterfrcot con-ba apt. $115 mo . MARINA · 8uy2ndT.D.'s lOAM -l2PM,6Sl·ll8' per. neeesa. Tralninc Gekoat Toc~ Exp.pref'd.581-SiOO
do. plus boati aU2Py_ Z.beaz: Oat wood .So., NB . EXECUTIVE CENTER RETIRED Cpl will w!;:;!,C:=~b~·a ~--& crt:~i::-1540-'JOtlor With 1 year marine ex-DENTALASSISl'ANT
gar ., pat o. · a . 14$-3761 :-\..!/ alt or rent apt« rnobil ';;, .. uil 1 mt DI -, I~~~~~~~~~~ perience. Cbairs ide. Ortbo exp. Refrig,trasbcompactor, l.'l. home mo.of0ct.M1-'1134 ~ Y ova . v. .I Applyto GateGuard Be h dishwas b e'?", 1'100. FEM ALE roommate BARNETTMTG.CO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAIY-SITTER 275McCormicll:Ave,CM r eq . Newport ac 4
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645-161191"5. needed. Furn yrly on SCRAU Int' 645-213t Sclooala • 612·2626· .::.C.'---,--~-----1 Balboa Is. $UO util inc. ~hl ........ 11... 7005 Saa Cl•meale area, 5 BO/ITS DRIVE•••-s
,Deler ••• •.b_•p'vtbpallntlo•·. e~ .. 675-UA.•. 1714114' •493 ANSIMrM' AwlRCIMUll ••••••••••••••••••••••• daysawk.fortwoyr.old StockrooMClerll __ ,..... •~"'7 -nUWi Penowal1 nMMJSWSOHS boy, our home. $15 a wk. Sailboat knowledge pre-F/time. Apply in Penon,
$3Z5mo.6'1$-458&. Room m ate Wanted for W'·h 1 blet b Imbued-Barge-Lost I:,_.. 492·87&5 f'd.Goodoppor.Applyin 1900HarborBl,CM
... l1e, 2 Br, house w/yard .. 0 su or .1 are Obese-Nestle ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt/GroupJNB.67S-0843 penoo 1919 E. Occlden·'I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
•LA PARISIEMME• lnHnt& Bcb.846-8237 large one room office nr REBATES Aw'unc1-l1 5100 JoboW~ 7075 BABYSITl'ER: live in, tal Sa~taAna. ·11
I•·• Br unlurn $110 •. Grange County airport. lh andid t -~ y o u n g f e m a I e • ..=:.:•==="'-------' DRIVERS WAMl'm
ll'V • ' "' R t t d t Sec t rt I services The way at c a es ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• f . l & d li $215. All electric. oomma e wane 0 !:,8 a pro. are announcing .their Sept. Only! Permanents HOUSEKEEPER. Capa-~~e'!i~/Pp:.U~eaj.obr~.~: Bookc keecp~~,ex333t><rl3mcrd e1151• k~ro;~ed5ge of•p;.~;.
Fireplace. Heated pool. aharetownbse,SJCarea. vld 833-8'147· candidacy for President, $10. Free Haireut ble., 3 yn e:xpr. Excel &33-0896 opy aB~b.. _7133 '
Adults,nopets. Call83l·9874 aft 7pm. BVSINESSOrMed.Ofe's. 'you'd think they were w /shampoo & set for refs dealres full time L8guna c 49f. • helpfuL M.,t have van 97~1268 WANTED: Roomm ate, 468 & f'12 sq. ft. at fOr sq. g iving REBATES on New Customer• Only. position In NB area. Babysitter, eves. Mature IOOIOCEEPER o;k~Ca~~m~ =
Across (romgolfcourse straight, mature male to ft. 1525 Superior Ave., bandwagons. 548-6073. . 673·9521 Gayle. woman. NB are a. 2·3 20432SantaAnaAve abare luxurious 3 br Cot\• NB. 6'2·1760 •-1--I ... ru-u wk 6313:598 Exper'd, r /time. Prefer 548-0197. -="-'-----'-~ do be 1 I J ...... __., 11¥ RWD. for info. Re retmn H..._ W_._.. 7100 a" . -' contracting ex.per. Reply1:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
D I b fr t 1 • au · urn. ac"""'• E f ~ ol F .. c h "-..,. -to Classified ad no. 554, e use ll1 on . ower pool in Irvine. $1?5 mo xee. o c space, new, .,..mce .1111. •• mot. me. Ir.DI. •••••••••••••••••••••• BABYSITTER Mature
duplex, yearly, 2br, 2ba. M?.679t · · N .B. Fully carpeted, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 813 /15. No bass.le. P. O. person to supervise 2 c fo Daily Pilot. P. 0 . Box ELECTROllCS $375. 675--0236 ~.Mr. Mayer752-7561 llllill••• Bos U\$-Univ. City, Aecnt/Cost older childre n while 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca
3 & 4 BR t r11c MOBILE home ln nice be . Opporlwitt SOOS 92608. (213) HOl.-;5000. Fmt Ofc Med parents are out ~ town. ~"'""'=:::·:__ _____ -J We are 8 rast ---ang
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z. rom __.., sandy N B park. Lot*-Offices for rent. auuful ••••••••••••••••••••••• San Clem. 4sz.t649 an g•-· year ly . Near beach. ing for .:Oitle lB-Zl $96 newly dee. bldg. Open .... URSERY SCHOOL IR\llNE PER.50NNEL 7PM Bookkeeper, 1 day p/Wk, Electronics Divlaioa of
Property-House,642-3850 mo GU--23?7 • • Mon thru Fri 12-4. '171 W. "' WANI'ED SED\llrCC .. Art'tt.. V""V Lyceum Production loc. N. Y • S • E . I i I t c d · tllth St C M Pre-School, nr. downt:n. ANTS "-v1',,.L..,J t"'lt...ICJ'lf\.. t P .O.Box 1018, Laguna diversified corp. located
OCEANFRONT new 1 br Reep ial wishes to share • · · Costa Mesa. Care for 211 CONTEST f88 E.17thSlreet BANKING Beach, 92652cr4944747 in the Irvine Industrial
upper. Cpts; drps, gar. cb~ing Bal IsJd bome N.B.500sqft,oceanview, at $100 mo. Room to ex-(at Irvine). Coil.a Mesa IA~ complex. We•eloatin&
Ytly lse. S3'1S.IQ.3M3 w /sam e. 675-8139 or upper, $150. mo. G>8 W. pand. Incl. tge. lot. ~y . For TV's MOST Wh224 '4Z.147 Has Been Retained IOOKICEEPER for; ~ OCEANVIEWnew.t BR.2 613-2383. catHwyMZ-3850 new bldg., comp. eqwp. EXCITINGSHOW Tolntsview F /Cbg. Able to 10 thru Sr.A111 61..s
Ba li.... · ..:At\ 1.. lTRACTIVE mall ol $85,000. 91t.1 a EmS . T.B. Lar ge wholesale/ .e. ... .,.. • ..e new._..,, yeary Yng working woman A. . s , • Graham Rlty 646·2414 AdfYl!y Director *' -retuil mdse business. "'11
II~ seeks fem roommate & f1ce on Manner s Mlle. ''GIVE-ff.TAKE'' •PROOFOPRS Call Debra 645--0093 for wa. ......
GORGEOUS3BrduPlex. a pt cai~NB area .. Avail.Oct.lSt.'75,facing Walk in ·take over :~b8c!:e~~°"":g: •NEW ACCOUNT'S intervwarr8D8emenl. 'it In.......,.
Newport H:fb". nearly 642-l4 '1l h wy. Call Larson Hairstyling Shop, Must team interested ln pa ExperienceNecessu,...., • T.C.Wl.s 1..:=="---:--::--:-,,::-=:i Shipyard, 548-364.1 or s ac! Options open. E veryday -~ Boys & Girls a.gs 11-13 o,Y new. Firep ace, self-•-••f•R .. 4 350 646--7833 Prime loeation. San ga.m.Owmel.2 tient care first. Must ForaoOrangeCounty need ed for delivering Tnt~'•
-c lean o ven. patio, & -ai Cl t 129 A ·d WINASMUCHAS have certificate. }?'ort JndependentBanlt n ft bool H t •-· garage. Singles OK. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• SINGLE t'o 6 rm suites emen e. veru a Mes a Conv . Hosp • Call or write yers 8 er sc · un · -ng Of' S73-8556 Agent. SGL.Garages,t u-both. Avail. in plush office DelMar.498-1520. $25,000 7141M2-060Q. forintenriew in.gt.on Beach, Fountain Weofferattractiveistart•
...::c:..:==='----1 621 Iris, CdM. 640-4860 « bldg nr. OC Airport. Full in glamorous prizes DOUGLAS PLAZA Valley area. 536-0883 ing rates t.oiether wltb NEWCon~o.3-Br,2Y.t-ba., 528-MSS service incl: Rece p· Th S C•Leslie Aftlmalec.tsol Irvine.Calif. xlnt frin1e benefits .
;:9:::1uues. '350. mo.OfffuR..tal 440G tionist, conference rm, Beat e our 12131845-1707 Offic• l~~~~-~-~~~~1 M a~eu ?r0:::swill ~~~~~~::r~.person t.o
••••••••••••••••••••••• xerox, automated typ-ECONOMY or (213)80-6000 Apply in person at 20612\: train. Gd. driving record S.&.S.C.
1 3 Br, 2\ii Ba,·Twnhse. on 150 I Waah:lff Dr. ing, etc. Call8J3.3640 ext.3l8l Laguna Canyon Rd, BAR MAID. full fpart a must. Capistrano area. Div. ofT.R.W. Corp. I
the Bay w /boat Slip. Newport Financial Ctr luslnns R...tGI 4450 A few stores are still Laguna Beach. time, Sir Harvey's, 17'1 E.O.E . 492·38'73 3030 So. Redhill
Avail. 10 /12. $550. lse. Offle Spac ava1·tabl e at Shoppers Lost&Fomd 5300 E.17th St.C.M.548-!IMO . al t · (northofO.C.Airporl) ,.
L ... 1-e e ••••••••••••••••••••••• APT ~ g Coupl ~-empo•ary -·· S An Calif 927-646·2700. ··7 Village, a high volume ••••••••••••••••-••••• -a.na er; . e . , ... ' ...--anta a · .... Call on Site Manager DELUXE office, comm'! shoppers mall. If you LOST /FOUND wanted for oew 20 uruls, Ba rmald. for Mon thru tk>n in congenial office. Equal Opportunity
3176 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Be ac h, com. center.
1,100'. 2br, l'hbL •·plex.
Mature adulta:. Lease,
$195. 492-37119.
JllO
(714 )642:3lllext346 &industrialspaees. Alsc have the metthaodise. APET! Cotta Mesa. Lavel~ rent Thurs n1tes. 436 E . 17th Good telephone manner. E mployer M/F
mini warehous es i11 we'll put the foot traffic 960·2900Adoptioo, Low tree 1 Br. apt. No kids or Sl. CM. 548-9949. '~~-~ill".··~'-c_· ------!~~~~~~~~~
WESTCLIFF BLDG
NEY'Jf O fll BEAC H
I> ' A,•
Laguna Niguel & Missioo in front ol you. U you Cost Spay/Narterlnfo. pets. 9'19-3375 Bartenders/Waitresses &. -Viejo areas. Handy tc don't have lhe m-han· f · CLERK TYPIST ELECTRO . ..,IC
S D. g ~-200 t ...... Host. Call er appo1nt· s · 1 Ag y eed s ,... an le 0 "'"''" c dise, we'll help you ob· LOsr· Greyfem.cat.y~c. m e nt Ask for Miss oc ia enc 0
2000 sq ft. As low as» lain it J oin 100 other Canyon St. & Pac1f1c, Asst:Mbl• I Plllgn Clerk Typist. Type 50-00 TECHNICIAN.
persqft.S3l·l400 mer•hants . who are CM.645-0914 G"erall.abann Gleno,5'8-01.12. WPM wJaccurac:y, work To serv. c-y m-bines ...:.-cc •11 '• ... TEMPO in Hunt. Bch. are a. ..... -~~.-.W $80. Mo. Ideal Newport beating tb e Sour Lost. Blk male Poodle, IEAUTICIAH 547..(I003 in Org. County area. V"'.=. shop avail in the mall at E~onomy at Shoppers med ·s z Blk collar 17~~yP~H~inc Costa Mesa·Nwpt Bch1 .:::..:::::_ _____ -I Must ha ve electro/mech.
2 ,Br, shag c!rpta.. drps, .t"N .,......,... The Factory tor: Coon· Vulage, 2724 N. Ma.an St.. w /rabies tag. Vic. Irvine -... area salon. No follow. COOK FOR HOSP. exp. Salary range from
stove, dah..,W, garbage I.I.:..,__.... try store, book store, d& Santa Ari a, 834--1551 Terr. Reward! 673-2221 Cal~ nee. $90 wk guarn & Ap ply at 1501 E. 16th St, $500 to $600 per mo +
•••••••••••••••••••••••
disp. l nq 415So. Orange, ~=----------Li, etc. 673-91l16or673-ll193 comm. 548-9986. Newport Beach betwn s ome comm. Jli ghcr
S.A. .• AptC,tchlklO.K. · Found : Male Airedale, ASSISTANT 8 30 &: 3 3)p all salary ir exp'd. in copier 3200$q FtC-Zstorefronl WEAVINGSHOPforSale name "Red Dockery" IEAUTtCIAMS : am : mer e field. Call for interview :
Ap ..... nb ..... shed with 6 drive-in bays. by Owner Very reasona· Nr N B Harbor High At:"'IMA.L tfOS:PITAL HAIR CUTTERS G4S-S707 · Org. County, S33-818l or
or URfw alslltd 3900'1----------1 ldea1 for auto or boal ble. 640·SBlOorS48-4206. l5lb st · 5'8.J087 ' Assistant, cleamng. full Top Joe at ion in busy So. C OOKS WANTED San Di ego, 565-6261
••••••••••••••••••••••• 55'PERS"FT serviee.58SW.t9th St, f , orp/t Orange, Irv, or C l Pl II THE EXCITING .,.. CM. Days 540-5710, eves Mak e Money -Ha.ve un. FOUND Male. medium N B A P pl Y 13 3 3 o a s aza m a . Apply Jn Person ESCROWOFflCU 1617 WESTCI:JFF-NB 646-0681 Own your ~ k.n1t sli~· sized dog. Beige, black Avocado, Newport Ctr, Guarantee wage, 40 hr Colony Kitchen Manufacturers Bunk is PALMMESA~S. AGT.541·5032 goodlocalion,rucec en· earsfi4S·300l. N .B. Mon thru Fri wk , vacation benefits, 32111-larborBl.CM M INUTB~TONPI' $140 up store-offices cpls SURF&SAHD tele.Call581·7408aft5 . 8-lOam . ~~B eauty Salo n,1--'c"o""u"MTER"'-="HB.P-'-''---1 ~~~~~~gOf~~;x,':;.ri~~
d · b th 1'1301 S~Vll-Be Bar· u -..i..-Blvd FOUND Appr 3 mo .1 ;;;;;:;-;;_:==:-;:::::::;::::-l ~~~~-----I N.B. ofc. Successful can-Baeb,1&2BR. rps air a • t•«So tHw ~y ,· • ._ CeMr s•' 0~00~0 Gros·,· Resembles Shepherd. ASST. Manager. Garden-* 8 E /\ U T y Pttime. Sat lhru Tues didate will have min. 5 from$l72.50 BeachBl,H.B.842·2834 ...., . .~ . . , Pleasecall847-536&. ing, maintenance & up· (days). Over 18. T he Adulta,NoPet.1 Bch. Xlnt. l'lpace now $20,000net.Est.13yrs. keep ot s.s units in Costa 0 P E RAT 0 R S · D on ut F ae to r y , yrs escr ow expcr. i n
1511MeaaDr. PROFESS'LCLASSA avail fOf' eommer'I. le-BAY&BEACH FOUND: Young female Mesa in exchange for Manicuri st fu11 time. 2· Su nflower at F ai rview, Orange County a r ea.
(SBlkaEastofNewport HBldborg, 3Blvd.storCyM. 27Ai90r nant.S385permo
00
.965sq. REALTY 675-3000 Shep? Tan. Vi c o f r e nt . 642·5073 or A.ss1ista1nts & 2-shal.ampoo200,,_,c::..M=--------I Mu1st .be effectibve ~n de·
BJvd.) . ar · · rt. w/oceanview. Ls. & Magnolia & Hamilton. (213 )885·3851 g1r s, or new s on. 11· ve op111g new us1nes~. 516-!8IO eood .• elev., panel walls, common area maint. in· Let n;ae show you how 962•2565. Newport Center Dr., COUPLE, man to main· Xlnt co mpe n sation,
---....:.~=---1 di-apes, carpet, elee., cl. Amplefreeprkg. Inq: earn income in up~ ATIORfrriEY N.B. 644·6671 ta1n , wife manage lge benefits, & work environ~
ROOMS 4000 musie, janitor, parking. K. w. JOHNSON 50% of the U.S.-$100 m· FOUND: Sml, Dog, black park apts .. Westchester ment.
•••••••••••••-•••••••• M.R . Stever, Mg r. 1465 So. Coast Hwy, Lag. Ve!t. Mr. Rlley644--S39l fema le w /brn points . WAMl'ED IEAUTY STYUST area. No vacanci~, ade-Please send resume in· Rq<>MS $25. weet up with 5S7.0l3Gor6'6--8398 Deb., 49'1·3088 llaiHsl W..ted 50 IO Vic. Tustin & 11th CM. Reputable Copyright At· Exper'd in c uttinfol: & quate help, top s alari es, eludi ng salary history i11
kitch en. 548-9755 or l!:XECUTIVE suites on l~trlalR .. d 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 546-62M. tcxneyto handle my case quick service styling. apt util. vac, bonuses, complete confidence to: 645-396'1 ~ against Air California Must be prc#icient in all perm. 675·8067. Tim Peralta, Regional
Newport Harbor. 400 to ••••••••••••••••••••••• FO 0 D MAN AGER FOUND: Keys. 8 in ease. Maga%ine. Contact o;ck other beauty work a lso. Vice P res., Manufae·
Room oi-room w/kitCben 2200 s q ft. 642-4644 ; NEW M·l Newport. Costa (Pr e vi o u s own e r I Vic. Shaws Cove, Laguna Shawn er eator <'t Fly Manicurist wanted also, COUl>LE, asst . manager, tu rers Ba nk , 1201 Onvl~
· privll. Mature person ' 645-4405 Mesa, 1000, 1200, 1440 sq. operator) Avail. to be Bch. 545-2636 Paper insert.. Box 642, p /tim e. 837 -4743 o r ocean ar ea ~arden apts. Sl. Newport. Beach, Ca
over50.$25wk.548-6073. Prime Hunt Bch roe ft.543·3145or646-2928 working P~d'?".ror FOUND. Kitten . ....._ & Balboa,Ca .92662 837·8779. Xlnt oppty. 96'l-6653, Ed 92660 · · . · pe rcentage 1n 1n1ng, ~· -.. Thom pson E I<> E l LOVELY lloom & Bath, from $125. mo.lncld. util. 1200 Sq Ft M·l space. cof(ee or fast focxl opera· white, 4 mos., very *AUTO Blueprint operator. l'.:x-qua ppnr .. mp~l)'~
San Clemente, $100 mo. 507 5 War~e r Ave . front office, drive-in rear lion. (or salary + ?). fr iend ly. Vic Mesa per, Copy Cats, Corona CREDIT MGR ne<.-'Cl.s As· EXEC.SEC'Y
'Ref's.4-•-1 846..f249 door, $185. mo. 629 675-9688. Verde. 556·8475 LOT Del Mar.494·7133. sistant, l o work with in· --.oa Good sh & typing skills
d n "lh or / T e rmin a l Wa y , CM . p d 53 50 voices. deposits, & ac-· Cheerful room, lite klt.Groun oorwi wo D 540-5710 e ves l.we1tw.tttf enOft 1 MA.._• co un t s r eceiva ble. req'd . Stihmitre-sumc &
privga. Laundry facil. s tc;>rage~ panel, shwr, ~l ' Opportunity 5015 •••••••·~··,•••••••••••• " B &G'rl Rel·clvable expcr. salary requi rements tn
Ref req'd Sfl-tm fri g, s ink', air. CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Foxy G i rl s Out Call Chevrolet dea1ership of-OYS I S helpful, but not nee. In· class(ied ad no . .s5li r /~•
. . 548-9'166 1250 SQ Fr M·l space, CO yRU'l'ltlE Massage. U C~ll, .We rers permanent position 10 to 14 years o( age. Dai · t e r e 5 tin g work r o r Daily Piiot . l'. 0. Box
ROOM 6: BAm w/sep-ail front ofC ice, lge rear • ~'" Co m e, .Sp ec 1al1 ~e to youni man to assist .IY Pilot delivery routes ene r get i c pe r son 1560, Costa Mcs;,i , Ca
arate entrance. SJ$mo. OFFICE or11 st«eN av rt. door $l90 mo 1240 Mobile home subdivision Paraplegics. 542·3169 new & used sales depart-may be available in your · 92626.
1000 ·~ ewpo • · · bel di~ f al o1 ' -~1 r d 979·2880 l---------640-1141ev-. p-•·'. · locaUon. Logan St, emu. Mesa. 8~!_rearaea.~K"'ey 'loeesa.. PREGNANI'?? ments in maintenance area. Earn.,. .... t or e· ~ D s•o 5710 eves -.. inve ntory. See s ales liveries & cash. trips or DELIV ERY MAN nt.>eded FOODSl'.:RVICE ROOM W/pvt. ba • Ute !3t1100 ~ • • • Uon. Approx$111J0,000pr~ Caring confide ntial manager at HOWARD merchandise for selling for Ofrice Supplies. FUii Looking for somebody?
cootinc fadl'a. M. sno. clfi ject.ed net now. 25% inl. couns eling & referral. Che~olet, Dove &c: Quail new subscriptions. For ti me. Must be energetic Top m1o1 1\agement for 25
Lag, Bcb.0.-8176 NEWPORT g~1 utll1ce 2000 SQ FT 3 of cs 2 for $40.000. Owner· Abortion, a doption & s•-portft·-·b. . formation please •all •-t . Be h yrs. Nowlemployed. wish --=---------1 suites fn>m 0 ~. · b .-. 1 _.:., ' at d el ........ ~ keeping 1 ..::.:~.:.·.:.• =•-'w-'-'-=~=='---1 in ... ""' nea appeanng. ar to relocate in Oran,11.e Co.' La. Pvt. room & bath lo Some warehouse avail. aua, mlUU-L .crou ev oper,_._..... APd ARE5C7·2563 642·432 1. From San Stationer s, 4000 Campus Familiar with personnel lov·•·~ ... ~ewra-"" ~.-1 fromOCAirl)Ol't1163-m8 ..... ,_.. , . . . . Auto. Cle m ente-San Juan Dr.N.B.
b -SV'll.": ,... ,........, -··-' 4 0 S l lAd Ad M h • .Ca pistrano area, ca11•l----------I acquisition &packagini;:. ome.CableTVlclinem ., I land. View of St ... e 550 W.t..t 5 20 p1nua VllOf. vi~e K CllllCS -49S-0630and MlssimVie-Dentel rC<'ept .. exper. xlnt rood formulation o€
furnlahed.Kltch.tt.laund fashion s' · 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• in all m atlerl. New in leshle11 11 -.&! W e Jo-El Toro area, call desk onl y, some Sat. Gd prcmixcs,j<tms.jcllie:-k ~v E pl-ed -an 8 • y . ecre ary · V' proll area. 10 AM to 10 PM. .,~, · L' • ... & .. ~. · m ._., ......... t nis bed Plenty orStora9eLotforR a, etc. Wlllinvest$10,000 ta· N M . S A ne.ct: 581-6310. benefits, salary open. spices. on~"S 1n1po.~
.._$1 femalebat:!,~:"11· pu;rkln&. For info S8.!50 per mo. Neill Sign ble business as working ~~ · •an.. · •U ll• Equal Oppoc.Employer 118 .846-3540. e :ii: Po r l of r a w
lOmo. P :~. .. .... _.753• Ask for M.ary Co. for lnfo531·3374. assot. 714-272-6861 · .material!!,also planting J -PROTECT YoUR HOME •HeCl\'J ftulu Dental assist. chrsidf"'. 6 & growing ror rr1...'Sh tood nlargefamllybomeY(/ a..e. RlfttaftW .... 4•00 Ma.eytoLoe 5025 . ed -·r mo. expcr. nee. P/fon· m a r ket!. llas grower
'kitchen prtv. Exclu1lVe MINl·SUJTES ,1•2•3 + •••••••••••••••••••.•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~Ud~=~~ •JHp Jy, every evening, .some contac t :s: Hestauranl
CON area.$l.50.l40-l'107. roomi ). xerox Ii. secy Wanted to rall. Partaally MONEY Available for 2nd 0 ' •4 W'lleet Drfye-OPPORTUMITY Sat. llR. 8"16·3540. s upply contact !!. Cfl v • ..._ ..... -210 s ervice avail. On handicapped manwanlJI T. T. Loans., $5000. to FIHIA1H A~loo"-Japenon knock1 often when you 213-592·5171 aft. 3PM.
•• N1Wport Harbor il'I Ct'!n· rnodest rental to share ·$50,000. NO points. pr• Given with purchaae ~ use resull·geWng Dally IF YOU wkdys or wknds . . ••t•• ••••••••••••••• tlnet1a Bant Bldg. wtperson who can &Ive payment pe na1ty,.or m 8.$1&gewlthad. Pilot Classined Ad~ to EnJ~ Sun.111 Palm'Spr-&iZ"644 c&N ac companlmshlp. eacrowfet"J,uptol2yn ... -._ .... reachlhe Orange Coaat havease:rvice t.o oCfer or Gene:r a l handym an &
lnc1. 2 Br~ 2 ba Condo. Write clualfi.S al no. llnaneio.tc. Call Don ---•r<•ICllJl9 market. Coodl'I to sell. rlace an ad maintenance man : Tho
POOi( iac•ul, lennil. sQ. FT. Ofc. 1pac,e. m., cto Dail)' Pilot, PO Blulu1, at Nationwlde PIMlfoMad I i . P hone642-S6'1R I n th o Dlil ly Pilot lno, at Laguna. 211 N. A~al lor Ot& • .NO'f. llQOmo,lteot.ae.Nfl-* BoalMO,CCll.aM.ma.Ca Financial Corp •. 1'1UFull.-.,CM Classified Section ••• CoastHwy.AstforMrs. !I"-· No cllll4 « plla. -.Dl-111155.4'UIU -: ('IU)m-3950 !OAM·12Pll,1131·111< Phone 612-"'71. Gnbiel ,,, .an.
•KKENDON ~ AN'C'l.JEEP
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HelpW-. 7100HolpW...... 7100 HolpW.... 71M W.... jj... WM11111B C COCIUal 'lpJ-•••oo-I
·············---···-··-······-··· .... •• ···········--····-·... .............. IALUJITOCK ¥.:PS'cLVU&fcrpJt. ..... * M r1le AW.. PaB-CRP 'y.J w-c.waa '2r.9"4,,' HEY LOOK GoilollonJ--11&......,. -..... GM C'•Yll· V·•· Hmto
. • GIRLS AND BOYS
., . " 12tol6Y ... OfAp
To work a few hOW'S evenl.ngs afler
school-E'arn $1~ to $30 each week as
well a.s exciting tripe & prizes.
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l'llolle 714 54:Z.ll54
lletw-I OAM lr-4PM
Equal Opportunity Employer
MATURE~TS ..... .,... .. n..
To work with boys I< la 12to16 years
or age. We will train you ID newspaperi ·
. sales promotion. Mlllt have dependa-
ble transportation. Earn $100 to ~ perweek. . · ·
~9n•.542·1354
between lOAM & 4PM ror Interview
Equal Opportunity Employer
Us OVER! a.era ' ' LU ..,I' 1 Alli! ---uee.u.r.r ·--.._.. • . -rr•m....._ '""° .... ~-_,.... or ""· .tr. P¥t pt)<. WE'LL BJ: OPENING ~ _..,....' -,~ ... -"1f/9TMTJI. AllllWSl'OREl!l -W.COollllwY,llB Ml-T-IUilt< d5f -J.::.!:!!:!:!!::~"-----
IL TOllO llfaltre11et. boete11.., -le Y• IMI _,_ Lille --ta' 9laruaft • HP c>'
cookt. Full &ad part •••••••••••---caM.llle:L 1115 .... lD mator. xi. coad. But Umc.Toppald~. ~HldUeu.1-llaind <llft75-7"7-IA7 ' , ..... """"°""' 9:»1:30 ... iJ.{
AS:IO-t:30SIDPTS.
C'#n Ffffl., .. .Alltlod.
Apply betw-2 ud $ I wkl. II-bave -a• &tarfite "H. -t>ul)l pm. J)ean1'•• szt iovtnibome.MI IHI ,_A 1&Mll a.ull 225 OMC. Deep V. ·Aveeild&. Pico. Sea ....... • bak0tuk aUaccw.tr~
Clemente. t.crvel.J 'kiU-Deed &cNiid ••••-••••-..--·••• J>ltlCED0 TO SEU... PP bomea... kc avJ clln tLS,., teJ • ,.., "' rrntea aper:-ft GIWI .....,._ cltn--tat11Pt11er-d1ra. · .,
Boat Builder. Some ,_all ... ._blaeCYrW.Pl•c•• Cad IAPltr~e. US su\7r'~'7 ex-per. r;-.... ';'.~.--.,._. W.lttla,Ollll .... 14U. H..P.J ...... lllllltOJlllL
WllAT'SOUR!JNE? ~ .. ~ •• ;,, ":.f.fln~.: •"-""''I ilESS• SO!JDOAKDJ:SK Be&Qll'.-~
HelpW..ted 7100Help.W9hd 1100 Hal · U-pay~ "'A Wdf" .,_llOIJl!!BlaJnBoatwf<7•
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Help W..ted. __ 7100 W-'itel 710 Jo_...Blll tM,~· ..... ..._D""*S* __, culo• OJD. trade
1
tor • HunlingtonBeach's linesl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••• tt•swomensapp • inC' "/acb""t1, 3700 B ,.,l'IA ~ ator bOIDe ii'ealll'llllll'-
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, G1rls-'uys . spa & ~ym need attrac· MANICURtsr Exper. \n • PART TIME-Alllamouobrand mdle Hilltop Rd. Soquel. Calll. '*ALL SIDS* t CLr&ll'l' air.., 1 _.,,. ,DUllteoffor,,...19. . tive gtrla. FullJP.T. Juli ette & pedicures. FULLTIME atsubltanUall7 95073 -PrfcedtoMonf Polturecbr•ltill-bect ~ 1
Travel av<1.il. Days/Eves. Call Some rotlowlng nee. E1ecutive secretary reclucedortces. · llJ..t•ZS&6461616 de&t dlr. All matcb'&, ~l'DayCruba-.'74.ICmai;• . . betw lOAM·lOPM. 675·9911 sieoded..·Jr you have had WHOWANTSTOWOJlK.? · fabrJc ln molded all staae 11, Beautlfl\-1-· ~urley 1s now 1nle~v1cw-Town &Country Sp t.b.ls type d experience, DRIVE A CAB. KINGS,ZE BED! mal• steeL815---5CllD . ~ M1n;1Ctr11.:ilf.~ , '
1ng for 20 shllll> girls & 963-77'l3 a MAIDS now a housewife, could WHAT'S OUR CHOOSE your hours, treas , boaspr ns 6 Ev'-~e,·••t•••,J/O
Jiluys, over 18 to travel Colonial Motel, 1967 usetheemployment9AM FORMAT! work for yourself, be frame • .xtra Orm. Value ,l .. A . •·.u"".:::'.Gd• ~
"11 /fun group to llawaii. tNSTR UCTORS·Health NewporlBl.C.M. to 1 P .M d a i l"y • your own bo6!1. Men or ssz l -Al ..., w ... """"-. New York &USA. No ex· Club. Great opportunity . dependable. conscien· Women. Can be slightly s., 18 1
.,..;!$. ao MiFi, St.eo IOfl $45MmlS. per. n~cess. w/2 wk ex· for young man & young &1atds wanted, 5d8:)' week tous. accurate in typing, Unique self service hand le apped. Neat· Queensiie bed. value ••••••••••••-••• .. ••••
pense paid training pro-ga l . Knowl84ge in forretirementreindence. good phone personality, operaUonlhat'scenter Clean Appearance. ~iad::~ 8":"a11.1DeJ!tt!ner:_ '~;~~~~t:.:;ut~ '::~1.fu5u.i::t.';;t~:
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Phys-494·94~. • and woul~oblike ~ .. ~~dl~· · °'w'ohmopep'w"' a<tlk onf!"'!" 70veuSu., ret1irmented. Age 25 ,';!' 5tl·$SS3 ..,.. ~~. -··-. 11000• Days, ~0.2842, 1n e r ~a er . . is e p u. Call Management 7earoulJ atun:no::: IU· • nwho now. . ppe your m· --..._.._, Evet,9'&-'1465' ,.
transp. furnished. Apph · 879-2350 wkdays betwn PEOPLE PERSON ly houn, Call 493-0711 or understand value.. come. Drive a cab 6 hrs For 1ale: I ' IQfa bed. l'ants must be neat . 9-5Pa.t. E 491-7658 fM an interview or mMe a day. Appl7 ln Brown tweed,podcond. · · ti' Bluewater lluJln.
:single & abletoleavuim· 11.m•ece ·bu10051.nk~~ !~.J'laatrte appointment. (Dana person. Yellow Caib Co., $75. 131'f1 MacnoHa St., ~I: M.._ )lac. 1/0, trlilel', t1U
med .• if not sooner. For Insurance Sales Person, ~ ..._....., PolntArea) ·WHAT'SINJT 186 E 16lh St Costa o--G .....-. 5 _.... SS D
personal l
·n1-·1·ew. 'Uil full or part u·me, Casual-in wholesale supplies. FOR YOU1 • ·• .. uen rove, --.ween ,,_.-cover. 2 00. aJ_ ' "''" ._ B l I 11 Mesa. 69pm •••••••••••-•••••••••• ~21'2 E.a 168-'1485
Shirley, 633-593'1 ext 308. ty Lic .• 631·1175 u 1 n es s u Y Perfect . ...1rtl 9010 , • • · Mon lhru Fri.10am-5pm . capltall1ed. Interview Women p /Ume 2·3 brt Sota • lov •••• t . ••-••-·-·~·-•••-40 rr. Dietel trawler. Holiday Inn INVESTMENT and 873·2223 Working Ground nooroppor. In attn or eves. Earo$30-$80 BeautUul, very gd quail-• nearln& completion.
, , :n:n w. Chapman R E S J D E N T 1 A L Hoars ":. rapidly expand.in& chain. & up wk I y. Free ty, never uted, movlnJ. BOY SCOtll'S Gr and Banta typ~.
Orange salespersons wanted. MANAGEMEMTTRNE 9' tP war .d robe when 962.Z562. $35,000
'.ls.nlaAnaFreewa)
Additional staf.f needed ·ZPMcr .. M qual1fled Call for netdboett >OFT m--•-I Y f or expa nding pro-Young mantoworkln Earn$4hrputtingyour '. andalrpltiM9:
0
Tax • ima.ai-awen. ...c.::==c:..:.=.:.:._=='-1 . tool talb 1 rallJl-Glbton per so n41I 1ntervw, UtedPorta.Qib ad 1 ".h-,..., • .,...,,.. $:i(),000complete • ' GRAPHICS SPRAY gressive, prestigious or· growing ren us · personality lO work. All .,.. 963·7470aft3pm. in good condition. van lg_ • .,,.........., AUantlcP.acilie · A ganization. Video sales ness. Must be neat In ap-work done from our new 7'14 58~5000 xl09 Phoo~631·1.91H 'I I' 0 •• ..:...:w MariUmeCo. '
PAINrE:R Lraining in office. If pearance & have very Irvine ofc. You must LagunaHllls1lllton MerchmtdlM Wlf'O yg. Call 557·3311. you're ready for superior neal handwriting. 6 Day possess a pleasant clear We 'll be interviewing •••••••••••••••••••••• Large plants. patio rum., All glass, '62... Newty re-6'6-:'&f
91
6'1S..91MSE
commission and educ a· wk . Prerermaniedman voice&aconfidentman· Tuesday&Wed.Only Antiqlle• 8005 Frigidaire, bar stools, built tOObp £vlnrude loafs.Rent . GUARDS lion al opportunities and for perm · responsible ncr. Perfect for students •••••••••••••••••••••• end & coffeetb.ls. custom eni. elec. at.art. Boat in Cll..tw 9050
Im mediate opening in want to eam sz.s.ooo. per position. Exper. not re-& housewives. t"o actual OLD Round Oak Pedestal I am P s, Paint I h I•, excellentcoad. All equip-•••••••••••---••-""•
Costa r.1esa. J\bovp year and up call Don quired. Apply 9-noon. selling involved. For • A".ll Table, $225 646--9391 or sofabed, twin beds. etc. nient,includine$200bait C d 21 t 0 .
iolverage startin1 rates. Berman, QUAIL PLACE l930NewportBlvd,CM more i nfo .. 833-8098 PIC· 111 J S57-6021aft.6 673--4169 tank w /tWO pumps . ~on~ 0
$iD-a 3na
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PROPERTIES. 17l') belwn9am-5pm. Tandem trailer $2175. ot or $25
8
ay. per odic inc easeii, 7••.1920 ' 35 YR old•-·-. d--•, Decorator .. furniture 482-878Saft..6:30' ' Calldaysat114~
benefit account. Worlr. -. Medical.Assl1tant Pit male fem. service -..~.,. ~ St I d ng HI •-~ -close to home. Car & Primarily back office. est'G ac'cts. Eves/SalS xlnt cood. $1.65 875-an ey im rm 14' Wh I FUU ~Sail 7¥60 phone rcq. For interview JANITORS 1 S~AMSTRESSES after6 pm w /china cabinet. Spanish a er. covers. •••••••••••-·-•-•
E
'd n1 ••h Hunt B c h physic an $7 wk+. Mr. Levi Needed Must bee• style bedrm set. Mlac. Stee.-iag alatlon. No '1Z Hob! 10 n-u
appt.inCostaMesacall xper o Y~ rs per Writ Cl u·ed Ad N • C ed e w, __ -·ght
5 0
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1
. e ass 1 o. 8'8·1004 per d 0 n P 0 w e r arv . Antique Mantel 545-9209 en•~· S6QO, 16" Nona ..,_1r-• M-·,' •
ABMI Seeurit·yServices ni · ays w · rv1ne 465 D ·1 Pilat PO Bo I C U C ii · Alli__.. -· j (213) 659-2070 Brea. Call Mon thru Fri., ...,;.. Cai Y A1 . ea· 1·r" Real Estate machines & in garment rom as e ~ Pb· Color T V •--·'•• Cab. anoe. L e nu, $200. m.zsoO ~ 1752·7292. 1.-... osta esa, ' . construction. Apply, Car-536-lS'lJ ~ Naples Sabot. $200.1----· -=::.:='----
Hot el Night Audi.tor'---------1 92626 Sd~e ,. 684 W 17th C M new $2.50. Woodbulnlng &1$-.lllttto.5.· .. ZZ'fi"'-"'---
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W h r . nd o, · To all oar friends Stove, •0 5 Champion . l!'all ~··i:.i:---.. !. ...
Airporter Inn Hotel aundrom al Assistant. Medical Secretary for ac· 1 e 1 a1v,e Pals • ofiine -64~ in Orangeeourity Juicer, .~20• 5 Spd. Bley. •Toan.. a:J.au'dinab.les yequi ·Xhltstum
lrvine, Contact M.r. Han'. Mature woman ·Pltime. live· Harbor area gen'l PY 5 a · 1. eedasant ice c.--1 rt JOU ........... c cle .,c .... Console Stereo, FJ'oai.S145to--.Z,0 Best of er .648-
9000
nan833-2770 N.8 .673·1690,fi75-0334. Prac. Exper.&qualifica· ersona 1z m anage-•.;x:o;re a es "~'~,. -~ 6Ts.llM5Eves lions In handwritten re· ment if needed and pay a I 000/0 FEE PAID ANnQUES $15 . .t9'f-1898 _ LIDO" 14 No. 3552~ witb
Housekeeper aundry person, 3·11.
Live in preferred . wknd s i n cl ud ed .
Newport Sch. 1 sch age Bayview Conv. Hos p,
child. Pvt room. 5 days.1-64_2·_350_5_· _____ _
Refs preferrett 642-7713.
Housekeeper Wanted Pvt
room, ba, color tv. Non
smoker. 89'1-0864.
IVE -IN, middle age
woman full time. for
care of 2 boys &It. hskpg,
623-4715 btwn 10 am-10
pm .
LYN'S •Housekeeper /Sitler,
live-in for motherles home. Boy 9, girl 5, mus Da)' shift, f /time. Every
speak English. Refs req. other wknd off. Good sal
548-2718 Ofc.(213) &bene.Applyinperson.
823·79M or eves. 546-2718 Park Superior Health·
care. 1445 Sllperior Ave,
Wanl ads Call642-$7 NB. E .O.E.
HelpW-.t 1100HelpWantec1. 710 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••
MB4WQMEM . ...
_:~:;.111~EN~l~N; '::'~':
EMPLOYERS .... , '' !>\ . . :lll.
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DD you need skilled, reHable
people iq thes• i® categories?
Credit
Order
., ; J ...
. '
Clerks:
File
Record
& Shipping
General
Service
Controller . " · . CJ:ec,lit An.alyst
Computer Opr' · Credit Manager
Customer Service Clerk
Data Processing Control Clerk
Data Processing Manager
Data Proc Acctng Coordinator
General Mairit. Man Ink Lab Opr.
Inv. Conirl Clk · Keypunch Opr
Ludlow Opr Mach Maint & adjust
Machine Operator Machinist
Manager Production Services
Mill Roll Slitter 0£fice Manager
Offset Press Opr Packer
Parcel Post & UPS Clerk ·
Payroll Bookkeeper Plate Maker
Press Operator Prod. Control Clrk
.Programmer-Cobol 360 DOS
Slitter Typist
0. 9/5{75 we .-aldoled -U.S.
-..:t..-109 openill•• a. Dayfoll,
1 j 0Wo 'l"'I c•Hrled -G• c1oo Gnve
I ·-a.to a dl•tri"""'"' mod -"••
-for fast ......ic. to -Wnt j eo.t c:ntolllers.
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Wewotlclllketosee-plecoclwllll
•IJ' arilNj compmla
w ...... .._....,... ••• ..,.ot -.::'°''"filed ..... llllt If JOll -• ..... ...,.., ............... ...
.... •• uhgcwles. we inle jw to C.-....... -......
"
f .
MONARCH MARKING
· SYSTEMS, IN~.
7272 L P•• 4••111 •••••l'Off,C ...
1714). 893-0511
sume to 351 Hospital Rd, higher com!111ssion than Liz Reinders Agency is having their annual Maple bedrm slilte box loah. Mallllw• trailer, Xlnt cond, .ti
Suite 118, Newport m os t offices Call 4020BirchSt StelM Endof&lmmer springs&matt,$'l2S.Call Sen"Jct 9020 equipment. $l&OO.
Beach, Cu 92663. 548·7711 a nd ask for Dan. Newport Beach 833-8190 Clearance aft. 6pm 588-4'n9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963-5311 ..
[@ CallfcrADPt. Saluepo1n0~!'°0·rper.~1 oc1 k G--es~e 8055 Sc:rloMmfne n3Venture Cat w/trailef..
MEDICALSECRETARY Established'i96S ~ r -~ 1119 E ~ adi El Self furUngjib.Gd---". Gd typist, m edical ' 4223lstSt.N B ••••••••••••••••••••••• n ne· OS· ec. "''"~ terminolo~y. Insurance, SECRETARY· 673«Mll ESTATE Garage Sale Sat ireSys~·Plmb'g ~7c£~ys 4
92-
7
'40 eves
bookkeeping. accounts RECE"80.,.ST thru Tuesday 307 N. Re£r1.freeest.548--9'1M
·receivable, for growing ReClllhtateScffl Professional office. Im· AppliancH 801"0 Bayfront, Balboa Island. SAILS FOR SA1E
Fully batteu mtlo w /jib
for Z0-25' Cat or Tri.
Reuonable.640-SUlt. ~ I
chiropractic office. Exp Hilli e McCormack , mediate position availa· ··~··•••••••••••••••••• EVER\'TWNG GOES· loats.Poww 904.Q
preferred. Salary com· Realtor. has an opening .bl e ror s harp e n · Will buy som~ Ref. Ap· Furniture, appl~ancea, ••••••••••••••••••••••
m e n s u rate lo ex.· for a n ··-e X per· d . thusiastic hard working pUaaces Ru~g or i:_»Ct. canoed goods, antiques. BEAUT. Bay Boat & Ski
perlence. 646-0516. salesperson. Successful· person. Experienced 00. A Is o scrap met al Honn 8060 1 8 ' C b r i s Craft
Mgmt trne. Route sis co. ly serving Lagwta since ly.552·8339. 675-5258. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUper1port. Mint concl salts• Sabot, goodU ..m,.2 ~.1 A ••
39
Car 1963. 494·7S.S1 K M Lo eng hn Reas. Ur s • oar. nes. $225. .... ure. ge ~ . , SECY RECEPT EN ORE Washer & 5 Yr. old Reg.. Quart.er '6l5-aoei)i 2Pir i..t.-S&.>7526 l
phone. $160wk.848-1004. RECEPT TYPIST Exp er, d Va r.i ed dryer. Sel. $100. Hurry! Mare. lo foal. $1600. ~~~~·~~w~-~~··:_.(~=~7.:------
Monogrammer. piece Development/ Construe· respoosi,billties. f>!S.5666 or 673-9599 aft Shows Eng. & Western . '31 Cbri• Craft. $l0,00C loats.Slfps
work personalizing tioo firm near O.C. Construction exper. de-6.30&Suns. 5'8--'J038aft.5:~. value. Make offer. Doc~ t. 9070
sweaters. Days 644-079'1. Airport. Active desk. Re-sirable. lmmed. opening. G.E. Washer w /mini 8 yr old Quarter Horse 546-066!. •••••••••••_. .......
Eves552·3046 q 's judgment &r: in· Newport. Center. Reply basket. $100. Frigidaire mare, very gentle. SSOO Must SeU-ZO'"POwerboat. Sil WANTED \ C itiative. Growt.bposition. to Claas1fi~ ad no. 517, w_a her $65, GE dis-or best offer. catt after Bestofrer.S4M618or (1) p or side tie. 49' pwr ••
Motel Night clerk. 21 and TypJn& SS wpm & ac-c/o Dally Pil~ PO. Box hwasher $85. Weal-6pm, 5'6-1087. ....-.. Pvl. OK. 6'2•6654. Of
bondable. Call 493-5661. curate on IBM exec. 1560 c t M c r~~~~~~i~~1~=~-~~·~~~~~~~-~~~1~=~~~·!1~· Best WesternCapi'at.rano Salary commensurate • os • esa, 8 inghouae refrlg $40 92626 Guar /Del 546-8872 • GenUe 4 yr ~ nmnint
Inn'. w/exper. & potential. qrtr horse gekling. 14.3
P hone Mrs. Kraus, Sell-sandwichesmornings ffet11 8015 hands chestJl\.lt,$600/bSt MTST Ol'EIATOR ~-during business Mon thru Fri. Salary + •••••••••••-•••••••,•• otrer. '4M·l952. Ask for
Exper'd. 5-9PM daily. ·~: · comm . Must have·car. bigSam. Send res um e to CallLlndaSSIJ.-0670 **I BUY*1'1 1-====-----·I
classified ad no. 555 cto UCEPTIOMST· Good used furniture & Jewelry
Daily Pilot, P. 0. Box SECRETARY Service Sla. Attendant, appliances, or I will Sell ••••••••••••••-••••••
1560, Costa Mesa. Ca 1Profeaslonal 'office. Im -p/time. 18 or over. App· for You. t w' A ........ D
92626. mediate .._,.,on availa-ly, Pico Mobile, GOO MASTERS .. -noH "'"' ble , to;-;b.arp e n · Avenlda Pico, San Clem """'"' TOP CASH DOLLAR NCR 4200. Front desk & .... bard .,_ 646-8616&833-9625 PAID FOR v·oua relief audit. Ambassador USlasUc-. . wor ...... g .iervice ..Sta. Al.tendaot, lnn2277 Harbor. CM. See person. Expenenced on· p/lime. Exper'd only. icycln 8020 JEWELRY, WATCHES,
Mr. While. ly. 5S2·S339. Avail eves • wknds. •••••••••••••••-••••• ART OBJECl'S. GOLD,
•lt.E..SALES• Neat . appear . & ~11~~E:u~~R~·I~~: --------1 We now have opening handwnting. Apply AM. AZUKJ TIQUES.~ for new salespeople. Ex 2590 Newport Blvd. CM .
· -2itn Martin. Irvine
CalltFor Appdntment
MURSESAIDES
ORORDERUES
Salary depends on ex per.
Be recognized. Call
lmmed. PortMesaConv.
HOiSp, 642·0400.
HURSESAIOES
Exper'd. Bayview
Manor Conv. H05p, ~
,T~urin Ave, C.M .
ell t · · lit I 0 Spd lic:ydes Mlscel•1 '9l1 · 8080
candeln dco~lDlSSlleadsonGsp Shtto Recep. $500 $10 • ...,.,.,,.__.. •••••••••••••••-•••••• oa s~ · rea Greetclients&:ans. -atmos~here. phones .. 60 wpm ·type. CYCLE WORKSLTD Kng Sz. Bed. New, com· For interview appt. Good of'flce skills 1822 Newpcrt. Blvd. plete, still pkgd. Xt.ra
THEIOHTAYLOR CONTROLCAREER CostaMesa.548-Slll3 firm $190 (worth $425).
GIOUP E I •• QnS.$170,usuatlybome, mp oyment .,.ency " frame Man's-SCbwinn Incl del. 83&Z!63.
673-7601 34001rvine,Ste109B Coat. w/b<d rack, ZJ" i-======-----1
REUBEN'S
L-HIA•
Has Openings For:
HIGHT COOK
·NwptBch 714~ al um . wh eels $15. WANTED
STERUHG & :.~ 646=·3680='-------TOP CASH DOLLAR
CHIHASALIS ~ats 8035 PAID FOR YOUR
Salesladies for fine table I'•••••••••••••••••••••• JEWEiiRY.-WAt(l~
top depta. Exper. Only.-HIMALAYANKITI'ENS ART OBJECI'S. GOLD
Ph : 897-0327, Mr. Woods CFA registered. 5 SILVER .SERV.JCE.
for full ·time. P h : generation pedigrees. FINE FURN le: AN·
547·8332, Mrs. Sltong, tor;::67c:5:...0:.:1c::68:;.. _____ !:'Tl:::'Q::UE-=:'S:'. -===23lll'=~=J
part-Mm e. Dogs 8040 1974-D PENNIES.' Ml
ApplylnPerson •SwimmingPool• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEWN BAGS. $W EA.
Mon lhru Fri 3-SPM Salesman. Must be ex-PET OR OFFER. 6'1S-9688 24001 AvedeLaCarlota f • WORLD• Lacuna Hills l-"P<fl=:.::en::<::ed::::.·.:-::.:::::1::· __ 1 Cockers, Chihuahua -2 large w.a.goo wheels,
Equal OpporEmployer Telephone Answer Sen. Poodles. Sbih-t10., G: $49.50 ea. Slim gym, $15.
NURSING Exper or will train. Shorthatt, Pit Bulls, Miscitems.$48410U.
*AIDES Sales ·Custooi ring1 ~~:.::.""-1i.m:.:mc:.:.~_·_F_I•_•_· _b_r_•_·1 ;'!~i~~hnW:!ti·e:.0~0 Small air conditiooer$25 .
6'2·3505.
.loin a team who cares makers is seeking ex1 mixed puppies. Stud svs 13'a1$'" blue, creen •
about patients & about per'd sales person. Xln Tefeph Ans. StrY most breeds. 2525 w. l7th wblte low pUe carpet.
you. Leam how you can oppor.forresp.indiv.So. Needed a mature ea· at Fairview. SA. Open Gd. Cond. $:i0. Twin bed
be paid extra for staying Coast Plaza, CalJ fo per'd opr. to work a I :;:ev~ea:!:.. :':53~1c;:·5027~~·----1;:'1r~•:mc.•:;·~$S~. C:':aU:"83'>3:.::C.O.::U7:=--~I
well. We have our own appt., 549-1431. variety or h s D 1-I · c 1~-r · ar., G Sbephenl AKC rvme oas .._.._. ... .,. Club
coffee s hop & other SALES . Earnest, wknds, eves & rel el 3erMan · · memberabtp. Call benefits. Exper'd-all knowledgeable, pen graveyard. Call 644·!M21 os. femal~, x.lnt ,5'8-64&8or633-l.5lO
shills. Apply Mon lhru w /ex per. in china, betwn 9 & 4 Moo thru pedigree & tempera· •
Fri 9am-4pm, Royale crystal, silver, jewelry, Fri: ' ~ ment.642-2203. MOVING. MUST SELL:
Conv. Hospital. 1030 W. desiring perm, medi·ri·ed, · w . Mal 0 Dou I to n Chio a Warner , Santa Ana. hrly position. N.B.'s •,d•mAailanheotsr ..!1 moodos (Arcad ia), 42'' round
546 .... TRAINEES 0 . s . -tog marble top -J•-table.
°'7'I • oldest estab. jeweJry pro-home. 642·1375 " .. , .... NURSING prlelorship.B!Q34 Living room c hairs, Pul-ebred Ger. Sheps., 8 lamps, &lassware, misc. * L VN'S SALESGlRL, Fabric ex· Will train dependable wks. Fems. SOS. Males l-'-586-48:.:...=76".------'-I
3.11 Shill. Join our pro-per. nee. Part time. Call women lo become plastic 1.SSO=:.:· 54:.::6-0_::1:;16:_ ____ 1Dr.A•-E . d afU lessionalteamwhocare Mary,646-40t0. inj,ection moldtngr .. ~h•llblqiahpTbl., r ng
ope tor M t be bl KC Ch ampioo. Sired mac . re 42x80. about our patients & ra s. us a e slope.' or Oat, Lamp,
pp!
to stand entire shift. if Danes, 12 wks •• tan a
about you. A Y Mon 10 Sdtlt.Ses netessary. Openings on wft)lkmuk.-1M, 1F, Call Elec. Eraser, Vellum
thru Fri 9·4, Royale needtd to wcrk 3 hrs' a lst shift, $2.1.5 per hf lo 548-0069. Rolls, Etc. 841-9911 (3-9
Conv. Hospital, 1030 W. dly. 5 D•~ aw• earn start 2 d Shi!\ -29 pm) Warner, Santa Ana. ...,... !'t ; n -· ·per S4&-G450 approx. fl-' a wk. Call hrtoittar\-3rdShll'tS2.46 DOgOBEDIENCEClaas _...R .... ' 982"4385 beC. noon Moo. pet hr atart. Raise in 60 toalart Wed.OCtzt rv ~
Office, general clerical. 'l\les & Wed. fOf" intervw days. _ 7:30 P.M. ~port S01 lJD(~el~~lhl Minimum 3 yrs "'I ln· · appl. Tbun9/l5. lrvlnearea.548-4928. Pano ., 8CID-n,..ens), --•k APPQY W/bencb,m&.CODd.Oak ~~~~ ll::;:" S:.:.S~: SALESLADY Orange Cout Plutlcs IIUSH SET'I ER PUPS. 6 deok, Dair of bulled lwua
noon. Mr. Stl.aw. 4dQ' P1rt·tlme to assist a50W.18thStreet wlu, papen, pick of lit· table lams-, S2S pr, ma.
Tl re s &ores, 11622 manqer. Exper'd. Overl;;;;;;C~oo~ta~M~eo~•;;;;;l;t~er~, $1~25~.~581~-SM:l~~~~i pie chest ol drawan, 21 w /tot kt, m9Ple cotfee t.
Armstronc Ave. rrvtne. · AKC Old Eqllah Sheep. bl~. 40 yr.. okl trunt. milk 549-2117. P•loyM .. •wllt dog Puppies. 8 wk1. can lamp (ceramic)
Partially llandleapl>ed SouthCoastPlua * UTOTEM* 1\easonable.-6'5-78117aJUPK.
man n.eed1 ll•t·in Call55'1"'5134. bou1ek••P« or helpful s •LE•u • ~ IMPLOYMIKI' Af&ban Piii'· /\KC. 11\adt ' Ml"I STOLi
I R I A ~ orro-~·s muked ailver; mile. I •1400 •gpr1\1al. Two c91nptn on. ep 'I to Prel. one w'*--• elec· R,.....,,.. wk1 •adorable..,,_ Id •
c.IU1lfled ad. "°1 &\'I, cto ·trteal expcir.'~ pay. l'ullorPartTime b 860 1470 '~ 1ear• o1 • l300 er olfs-•
Dally Pilot. P.O. Box Paid vaci, hotp. send No Exper Neces.tutY ome. · · , 131·1971.
JS60. Coota Mes•, ~Ill. nam~ •dd,...., I&• f< Age21--<I&"EUglhl• Sellln1 •""'"•• with a ~--• t2628. quaU caUonttoPOBOlc Goto'I'heNeatetL DaltyPJi~a..tnedAdw=-....
PART Tlme eY•. Sat 1251• Co. Mesa, Ca .. :f=:~o l~c~=~· .. '···;~,·c··:·SH···::-l'O··.·-·
All. pert. !err •udt111a l ,::=•::;•c:·....,...-~~--I ORCALL(TI~llll·TIOi !-"====~--' .'"< A -in11d1 work. iuar;ni;;I "8d what TicTot~let,.' rtDcl wb•t you"* in Gdodu1edftlmll"dri&•
W•S•· Coll Al, SG.9011 l>allT .l'llot . .llllly Pilot a-.ll'nr'l/alov-. 54Ua. . . . ..
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·--:RMNG GUICE ~THE
CM. OH THE GO.
• For &rls, Boys!
t
r l <#
' 9310
SIZES 8-20
,,,, 1Tf...,;_ 1Tf ... -r-
8111.tm iftt"o Uris flst.,.ced
........... ,., -It .. _., or-1111 Olll,..
;,;~ ............ -111\W .... at 1twttl ~ "'"""-"'°'"'--~ ..... 10. 12. 14~~ ... 2CI. SU. 12 ... )I 2" ·--·-. ... ll.90 "' .... -MO Hf lw _. -tor tlnt.0.•H_......,_ =---441 ..,_ .
mw.e 1•1t...._
Y-. MT 11111. PfW ..... .......... -.. ..,... I , .. ,.. .......... . ......... , .... .... __ r......._,.....
C1 .. 11•_ .......
, ... ~ .. --......
... + -~· ---·· ===~:
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0 -' 4 •• r
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1 ~49 Harley David&on cust
chopper. S3000 firm. 395
·Victoria, CM7S2"°826
' :MolorH-
' Sale ROftl
1
~ . ..
NLVJP[]l\T
1r~PlJH rs
•
MAYlllCllS
IARGAIH l'lllC8I
5 To choose, R11 In ex-
cellent condlllon!
Theodan Robins"'
FORD
2060 Harbor Bl\ld.
l'INJOS
25 To choose frem :
W u1ons. 2 Doors,
Runabouts I f'rma $179S,
(1168DSY).
l1Mad1nla•I
FOID
20IOHarborBlvd.
Co&la M ea.a 642-<IOlO ..,._... "'° .......................
ATLAS
. Chrysl .. "l I lit Open Dally & n. 'til 10
PM
2929 Harbor 81Yd.,
Costa Me:ta
546-1934
C..La Meoa 642-0010 l'onlloc ,,65
Chnrolet '920 Mll"Cwy 9950 •••••• • •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Cadlnoc 9915 •••••••••••••••••••••••
NLWf'llf\T
1r~FlH\ rs
i1 ' CH:~::::~:LO
U.Mge '74. Immaculate eond. ~· Well equipped. Mercedes
trade -in . Exte nded
Cadillac t e rm s available .
(41 4403), Di r .
213 /921·8588; Selection l-7:::••.:;1=523::.·:::7250::::.... ---1
ova 1 oo con11-a1 •••••••••••••••••••••• .. _ ..... .._
c ' ••• "4ali ._._ ... '74 MARK IV
$7,750. 552-1416
'71 MARK ID Classic, I
ml . Full pwr'. Pvt . -
, .. , ...... _.. ... ._
DON BURNS Pre~ Pwscbe Audi
1Jla1HarMr•tvd •• --1714l-DU '
I
'73 Cousar XR-7. Full For Sal11 : 1960 ~on4ac
pwr, air, new tires, brks, Stn.Wgn. VB. P{8, i:'JS,
AM /Fii stereo. ~395. Auto lrans., needs minor
M,2 • .537$. , eng. work. $L50. 494·94l5
ask for Gary .
COMPARE
Be FIRST to see. drive, compare and
own a new 1976 AMC Matador. H0<net.
Gremlin or Pace~ They are HERE
N<JN at KENDONI And, we make them
easy to ownl Or to lease! Hurry, our
FIRST 1976111\ipment is limitedl
CALL 14t.a023 QI MS.mo
JIJ4 HARIOll IUD .. COSTA MESA
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011nty Sifts
-~ ......
oise Element
SANTA ANA -While certain the county"s land
it would be locally poui-planning effort la reftned
, ble to mute the Orange enough to take into ac-
eountr, Planninc Com-count the complexities ol
I lea on's proposed noise contours and !i"iHra1 plan noise ele-monitoring. ~t. the county Board But Osborne said ln bis tot SUpervfaora bas been report that while some
-.,rd It wouldn't be a good changes could be made,
r-8 adoption of a ••scaled :0.&repOrttolh~~ down'' noise element
o be aired Wednesday, wouldn't clarify many
eounty Environmental outstanding general plan
Management A1ency issues.
blrector , H . G . ed th t und. 'Geor1e'' Osborne has . He not a er
1 advised against 'maJring s t a t e. I a w , a n y
any substantive.changes alternative plan, no_ m.at-
in the commission's pro-ter bow ~treamlined, posaI: would reqwre contours.
•
The EMA was ordered . . toC0111ider amendin1the OSB:OJ:lNE ALSO said suggested element 00 the existing land use ele-
i r ou D d s it is too mentoftbe g~n~ral plan
sophisticated and goes ~lready contains s~r
too far beyond the ingent .l~~d us~ .noise
minimum requirements compatibility pol1c1es.
of state environmental I n a d d i t i o b ,
laws. supervisors were told by
S E V E R A L Osborne that it would
SUPERVISORS voiced take many more months
particular concerns that of preparation to come up
the plan offered by the with alternatives that
c.ommission called tor meet both state require-
precise noise contours ments and board desU:es. · around all potential
sources of noise that
would be damaging to
community health.
Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich said he is not
The county has already
had several continuances
of the legal deadline for
completion of a noise ele-
ment.
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ORANGE COUNTY
Court Aide
Fined $315
SANTA ANA -Orange Coun-
ty Superior Court administrator
Leslie Loy McCartney bu been
fmed $315.50 and placed on two
years probation after pleading
guilty to. drunken driving
charges in Santa Ana Municipal
Court.
Judge John Teal imposed the
sentence on McCartney, 53, who
was arrested by ·California
Highway Patrolmen. in Santa
Ana Aug. 1, 1974.
Officers said they pulled the
court official's car over near tbe
intersection of First Street and
Grand Avenue after they spotted
him driving erratically
-'
r. -.
:_.: J • ../ State· lnyesttga~es
Se~ret Drug Fund
l17GUYGKANVIU.E
• Of .. 0..,0,., .......
SANTA ANA -At the req-of" the fund's trusie., the At-TBEKll:POKE, tbrw audlta
toroey General ~• otnce ha1 ¥vebeeaorclered, lnclul:liQltwo
agreed to investlcate a~ clmunlcipal~-$:!0,000 fund obtained lllr'oqb to four cfty police depetmeota,.
Mn1e County SuJIOriC!l'--OllFt-_._them i.a,--lleaoll-
fromdnll offenders. . 5-n Cl~ente.
Anicned tlie task ot ""'1ilrur CowitY Supervlscr Laurence
the coot.roveraial -held ·by Sclunit h~ cha.r'led the -the Orange Cowlty Drue ana--llave·been-ltle«all1 obtol-' u .a
Narcotics Task Force wu A. rann ol extortion from otrmdera
Wells Petersen, De)>l!ty Attorney and ha•~ been imptoperly
General stationed in so Diego. handl!"1 without a full public ac-
Petersen was 8ssigned the ~i:''fecent written oPlnlon,
chore after Orange l'Ollce Chief n-.~ County Council CJ•vt~ Merrill Duncan on beball ol the ~,....y-. -y-:
task force asked that the fund be Parker said the money obtained
audited by the attorney general. from the offeoden and .used In
THE TASK FORCE'S request
came in rebuttal to the board ot
supervisors demand for a county
audit. , .
Actlrig on lnstructlOlll fro111 the
fund 's trustees Dlatrlct Attorney
cecil Hicks reportedly has re-
fused to give Auditor-Controller
Vic Heim the records he needs to
carry out supervisors' order.
The. board bas also requested'
an in"9estigation into the fund by
the states Judicial Council.
In tum, the council signed the
auditing task to it's commission
on judicial qualifications and
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narcotic and other investigatlOlll
is rightfully fine money and
-should be deposited In the COWllY
treasury.
Alternatives Aided
SACRAME.NTO (AP) -
Unorthodox Public schools will
get a boost from the state next
year under a bill signed by Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. The measure
by Sen. John Dunlap ()).Napa)
allows school districts to enroll
up to 10 percent of tbeir Students
in so-called alternative schools.
and sets state guidelines for the
schools.
l
Ousted
Referees
Sue Cory
SACRAMENTO (APJ
-Seven state in·
heritance tax referees
have filed suit against
state Controller Kenneth
Cory ·on the contentioo
that .bis firing of them
was unconstitutional.
The suit was filed Wed-
nesday in Sacramento
County Superior Court
by Jack Dozier, a .
Stockton attorney wbo
also has sued Cory on
behalf of himself In San
Joaquin County.
Tbe suit alleges that
Cory attempted to fire
the seven to create jobs
for relatives of persons
who contributed mm:;.ey
to bis campaign.
But Dozier, in an in-.
terview, said ''the main
prong of the case is the
constitutional issue -
that the statute under
which Cory acted is l!ft·
coostltutional."
In the San Joaquin
County case, a ·judge bas
ruled that Cory's action .
firing Dozier was un·
constitutional because it
discriminated against
referees in counties
where there are only ·a
few referees.
"I did it on what I call my
'Doral Diet? And I'm really
pleased. I'm losing 'tar' but I'm
not losing out on the pleasure of
smoking. , .
For the
Record
"Doral really taste~ood, so
this is.one·diet that's easy to stick
to. And compared .to my old
brand, each Doral is 5 milli-
grams lower itJ. 'tar;' That's 100
milligrams less 'tar' a pack
and since I smoke
.almost
a·pack
a day,
my Doral
Dier sure
adds up?'
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Menthol or Regular •
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Wlmina: The St1111011 General Has Determined • 1het Cipieu1 Sm6g ls llqerous 10 Yqur Health.
' ' •• Mftmt0lil3 ... ¥.0. ... ~
Rlllfl, 15111g. "Ill", LO ~nicoiili. ir,porcignnt. Flt Rtpon ~ '15.
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Tonight's
TV Highlights
' NJIC <•> 9:00 -''There'•. Girl In My'
Soup." Peter Sellen plays a SoW'Jl!8l eo[.
nmni•t wbo rtoda bis life dW1qited wbm
a koolde. girl (Golilde Hawn) moww In
wltb blm ID tbU, 1970 comedY movie. .
ABC (7) 9:00 -Lou "Brock -the
1blef. A aJ1(111s special focualng oa the St.
Louis Cardloala' outfielder wbo brote
llaury--Wllls'-staleo base-::reeonl last season with ns tb!!fta. New Yorti:"'nmes.
sports writer Dave Anderson la the
moderator, • --
CBS (2) 10:00-Medical Ceiiter. Dr.
Gannon (Chad Everett) is tbe patient ID lllls episode a5 he develO!l" poycbogenie
symptoms which prevent him from fuoc-
t!onlog as a pbyaiciao. Florence Hen.
1leraon guests,
TV DAILY LOG
Tuesday ..... _ <-> ... -...
Coleillo. Slldrl ti& l!j-·--(onj'!O----
DATTIMJ: MOVIES ·aa·,.... .... -ua.,.,"'""""' c-1 ,,._ ....,. <-> .. --
-..... ~ ·-(Q l*ir.Q'..t'. ~ ... "':..(JI--._ ..... (MW) '2. -.......... Cw ...
•
-. "'(!)_ .. __
11:11(1) ..... ,.... ("-J 't7 -lllt •• -J.e,eaa.,,....... ... 1-. ....... • ... _l-ioMI __
12:t1•-··-~· ___ ..,_,_ .. _ .... _ ..., __
•
r
• , .. •
I . ' VOL. 68, NO. 265, 2 SECTIONS, 2.c PAGES ~ltGI COUNTY, CALI FOR'!lltr MQNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1975 TEN CENTS ~-lJ,tlon'.~--~n~y Geiiibg~ell--Ford . ·
., DOllGLAll IDIJ8C ac . ..,......,....... _ ...
A 1>11Ui•h President Gerald ~Sunday told a -au. dlenco In Oranse Couldy that the
nation'• ecoa0my ls well on the
way to recover1. Attempts to
~'It he tald, cauldJeod "' dis-. . ••Nev ... for1et, ' said Ford,
"that the govel')lm~ that lo bi1
-h to give ,you everything
10U walia a 10v....-lhat ls
bi6 -h to take eveqlhln&
1ouhave.'-'
FOl'jl'a talk o.t the ,DlaleyllDd
Hate! ·1n '.Anaheim to ~400 mem-
bers of the NatlODalAllO<lalloo
of Ute Under•rlters, an in-· ·surance Industry araup., wu a
mlxtwa of iaraiae of ft'M en·
lft1.>rlH -IDdi-ol bi& 10Y<mment1
• Targets for the bnn ol ~'• •
__ E-! ___ _
''new • I sanicr-·· ill~ t.,.i.d NIJjvo lllo < • ilr>"• -ploy--....... -to more llwl two yoon ol re--· . Charaeter111n1 -b -as "lrret-lble" ond tillelylo "re-
light the flrea ol lnflallon," Toni
pn>mlaed to <ODtinoe to uae bit
veto -er to quuh Increased aovernmeot 1pendiDC .
' < . "ord'I tolk came in the .......i ax! Lao Angeles.
llayorathree doysw!Jlathroulh • Former Gov . Ronald Re .. an,
Collfonlia, sprinkled with pre-t IJ*lllaled to be a Ford op(>OClenl
~alllpai8D efforts, to gamer aup. for the' Republican nomiqation
port in the nation's most nextyeat,isllstedasoneof25co-
popu&ous state. boets for the dinnen, NenfP
According to White Bouie aid.
.Prest Secretar:Y Ron Nessen, Aaked ~hetber this meant tbe
~ plans to follow up with a JleaCan ·campaign wls •aning,
pair ol retum vi1lts to California Neuen said, ''What Rea&an ~m·
In ble October for GOP fund· pa!Jn?Whereiolt?" .•
raiaing ~ers In San Francio<0 Jl'Ord'1 arrival by hell~ to
the Disneyland Hotel was snet•
ed by a cheerin& crowd or about
SOO as secret service agenta anti
Anaheim and Disneyland Police
whisked him fi:om the tlaJstly
secured landing pad in a short
motor caravan lo tbe rear en4
trance of the hotel G.ra1td
Ballroom. -In hl5 speech. which was fre-
quenll>' interrupted by applause
(See FORD, Page AZ) "
Brea Diver ·Drowns· ,
•
ID .. Heavy ·so WaVes .
'Police' ' .r--.---,~r===;-;--~-;,-~---.,:~,--. .......
.
Raid,2
Houses
Two armed men impenonat-
ing poliee officers "'aided" the
residences Of two san qemente
men -Sunday handcuffinll their
victims, spraying them with the
chemical mace .and kicking one
man in the face.
•VllACIUI
0 I
The case is under investigation
today . b y San Clemente detec-
tives In statements to officers
folloW,ing the incident. no report
was made as to what the in-
trlldero were demondlng. A .22
caliber rifle '!as stolen fropi due
oltliem.en. ~ :-
~ Ul!Jt ... ,__.
TROPICAL STORM ELOISE GETS SECOND WIND
Move1 Towerd Hurriceno Stro~gth Over Gull
~ "*~-BICYCLE TRAILER REASSEMBLED AFTER RETURN
· Mro. Gl ende Wiiheim, Erik, 2, 1nd Klrote n, 9
'lbe victims were identified as
David llLA~en, Apt. E, and
Gerard :S. Sclin'lzer, Apt. A.', 245
Del Poniente-San Clemente. ·Eloise Takes Aim
' •
·Cheap Holiday
Polite L , Ray Hartman said
the bandits entered Abelsen's
apartment through a sliding
glass door and later forced entry
into Scbnizer's residence.
On Gulf Coast
Fuel Cost Cycli$ts ]Jc -----
By LAURIE KA.SPER
Of .. O.Hr'~li.t a.ff
Gasoline for a 66-day trip
across the country this summer
cost the Wilhelm family ot San
Juan Capistrano just 11 ceritf.
The fuel was needed only for a
camp stove because Tim and
Glenda W.ilbelm and their
daughter Kirsten, 9, bicycled the
2,938 miles to Wastµngton D.C.
The youngest member of the
family, Erik, 2th, also made the
trip put he rode in a two-wheeled
trailer pulled by his father.
They believe they are the first
family and Kirsten is probably
the youngest person to pedal
across the country.
There were· several reasons
why they decided to take this
trip, Mis. Wilhelm said.
They like to travel--and bicycl-
ing js an inexpensive way of do-
ing 1t. Also, this is the bicentenial
year.
''Our daughter, being9, n~ed
to find out what'America was all
about," she said.
They wanted to see the country
as the pioneers had seen it.
Horses;-the: histbric way of
traveling, can only travel 2:; to 30
miles a day, Wilhelm said.
Bicyclists, .however, can travel
50 to 60 mil~'S a d8y ind still see
O~ange Coas t
We atller
~e same things.
· It's better than traveling by
car, he said. "You get a feeling
for the country.'' •
Automobile travelers, be ex-
.plained, take the major roads
which allow them to rapidly pass
<by the· towns, stores and people
along the way. Tbej stay in the
same kind of ?otels and ~t at the
same ldqd of restaurants at ma·
jor intersections along the route.
"It's incredible, really, how
Cbanneled everybody is to
travel," said Wjlhelm, a police
officer at UCI Irvine.
''You just pass through the
country and yoµ never really see
anybody. You never really meet
anybody."
But they stopped at the tiny
general stores, ''places a tourist
in a car would never dream of
stopping. But to us, on bieycles, it
•as an Oasis,'' Mrs. Wilhelm
said.
~For their son, She sWd, the-trip
was "like ·a living story book ...
He saw the far ms, anilnaJs, and
mountains and even met real
cowboys,. -· But the Wilhelms .too saw
things they 1hought didn 't exist
4'nymore. 1.. • • •
• Among the small these "'ere
stores where rope is still sold by
the pound rather than foOtage and
local produce is sold in cardobard
boxes rather th an ready.wrapped
in.cellophane '
In front of a garage w&ere they
stoPped was a pot-bellied stove
•circled by chairs. Mamy homes
they saw had dirt driveways and
thepeopl~didn 't seem to care and
tbe.y stopped at a restaurant
which stilL bad, and 'used, out·
i.;u. ...
The men were handcuffed and
their mouths were taped shut.
Abelstm....w.as. ticked in the lace
and his ·nose br'oken during the
fracas
·The men left the apartments
just prior ·~o the arrival of San
Clemente Police, summoned by a
tele-·phone call from an
an·onymous and hyste rical
female
U Hartman said the bandils,
one of whom was al-med with a
4S caliber pistol, represented
themselves as peace officers
No local, state or federal of.
ficers were known to be working
in the area, Hartman said.
MIAMI (UPI ) -Hurricane
Eloise~packing win.ds of 85 miles
an hour, churned fuday toward
the Gulf Coast ports of Mobile,
Ala., and Pensacola, Fla., and
residents boarded up their homes
and prepar,ed to move inland.
The National Hurricane Center
lSSUed hurricane warnings from
Grartd Isle, La., to Apalachicola,
Fla., and urged small craft to re-
main 1n port. It also warned
thert> was a possibility that
tornadoes might occur in ad·
van<'e of the storm .
0 'All precautions over the Mis·
sissippi Delta region of
southeastern Louisiana should be
Improvements Set
For Niguel .Beach
By. WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Ot .. O.llyll'ti.t$18tf
Avco Com m unity Developers,
Inc. bas agreed to complete long.
promised major improvements
at Orange County•s Niguel Beach
Park following fODclusion of a
new pact between the company
and county governm~t-
'l"J;le remaining improvements
at the beach park south of
Monarch Bay and north of Dana
Point will cost an estimated
$400,000, of which $280.000 will be
paid for by the county as part of
the original agreement signed
two years ago.
Under terms of that deal, Avco
transferred title to the beach and
aome uplands to ttie munty for a
Consideration of $880,000. The
company agreed to!"'perform
numerous improvements at the
park"in addition to conveying the land. ' •
originally called Salt Creek
Beach -was stymied by the
State Coastal Commission.
That opposition carried over to
the deal between the company
and the county and Avco delayed
mllking many or the improve-
ments due to snags in approval of
surrounding residential projects.
When the promised improve-
ments were not completed, the
county withheld the remaining
$280,000 it hadn"t paid to the com·
pany for the land. Under terms of
the new arrangem~nt, that
(See AVCO, Page A2l
rushed to completion immediate·
ly:· the center said. "Elsewhere
in the warning a.rea, actions
should be conpleted this after· noon ."
Eloise was expected to make a
swipe at the mouth of the Mis-
sissippi River fhis afternoon,
then move eastward and come
ashore tonight in the Mobile-
Pen.sacola area, bring 5 to 10-
inch rain s to southern and eastern Alabama, northwest
Florida and much or Georgia.
At midday. Eloise was cen-
tered near 26 .8 degrees north
latitude and 89.6 degrees west
longitude. about 240 miles south
of New Orleans. Peak sustained
winds re mained at 8.5 mil es an
hour, but hurricane forecasters
said conditions remained favora-
ble ror further strengt hening
before it reached land. Gale
force winds extended north from
Eloise's center for 145 miles.
Eloise claimed 34 lives last
week when it slashed Puerto
Rico a nd the Dominican
Republic with 80 mph winds and
torrential rains. The· storm lost
much of its strength in the moun-
tains of southeastern Cuba, but
was upgraded to hurricane status
again tod ay as it picked up
strength over the Gulf of Mexico.
Disaster pre parations a<'-
celerated along the storm-
scarred Gui£ Coast as Eloise
moved closer to land, and most
civil defense and Red Cross of-
ficials said they would make de-
cisions s hortly on whether to
evacuate residents. .
The Coast Guard in New
Orleans said helicopters were
lifting workers off oil ri gs up to
130 miles offshore, and Shell Oil
s pokesm an Brian Toal said
evacuation of more than 800
persons on its offshore rigs would
be completed be fore ni ght~ll .
Dense fo& along the coast
will increase tonight ,and
Tuesday morning. Ha:ty •
111D1hine today 111<1 sllaJslly cooler Tuesday with lilp
in mid-8!)s, low tonlabt in 'd-. -l. •
·• i'the peopl<'they met enjoyed
~nuelves and seemed satlsfiect
,1 \' ~th tbeJr liyes._ "J;hey were ~50
(SeeTRIP, PogeAZ) .
The oceanfront property was
orl'.ginally ~art of A vco's 4evelop.
ment plsn.i]for (he 10Uth «>~t
Lag11nan, 66,
Injur ed in
Purse S~tch ~
~I DE· TODAY
-~ J'ord t&iawcOlled ' for creation 0/ $!00.bi/Jion r~ I
-.h corporotton to Qioo,.,.
~ ..... llr~inlD _.1.A.S.
llldex , ...... ......... ,, :::.=: :2 --••
Mr' •• 'tt I:::. ~~ = ... ., ... ... Alf ...._. .... I .... ...... "" .. ,,,,, ._,...._.. M. ......... At
Al '*'' 3 ; •• ... ,...,. Al ........ ,. ---...
• ••M ---M
.... -. -·..,,.-~
' I : area but the specific projecl. A 66·year-old Laguna Beach I d f woman was knocked down and ·Cl 'l T' l )> anne or the properly dra1ged for 10 feel along asphalt e m en e 0 ,.. ' ' ,. pavin( by a high, school-a1e
. Glori2' '.Dei ~t , , :"~ :.r.t~~~~!~l\':1 ':!t~: Moles•~. .By'W~ . . UgunaBeachsa1un1ay. 1-q.a I Thief , Aside ftom 10°"' abr11Sions,
A ~year-okl San Clemente girt · , t 1he woman Wu ,iot' &eriously in-
was lured into an alley Blcove /\ Dan•, POlllt ch@rcft''Wi ~"R-lo .. was-placed a~
and forced to participate in a sex buralarlriit ti $f2 durtn1 the .lJt which only s:r was in cash.
act 9olndayln San Clel!lftlte. wee~e!ld ~thieves w)IObrokeln· Aner ac<Otli~g th1'w6man, the n., child 'was unharmed by. to a 'loc~k dri...t in U.. youn« 811allant ran to a car
her A11alant Who gave her a $1 church Oranp County parked around a comer. The in-
lllllfollc.wtna lbeact. • 1 Sheriff's repart.,dloday. :· cl'aeat occurred at about' 3:45
Tho lncldeDI took pla ... at Deputiea Hid tbore WU DO p.m. <Urd&y albng Holly Street a~ 1i p.m.-l>elWlcl-il ~-m.~. eridenca of forced ..uy IDl.o the nur'Monterey Street. _
aernce st•tlon near Aftllldu ,Gloria Del Lutheran Church, Police. deehned to release the
l!:aplanado~d.Bar~ e. 33501Stonehl11Dr1Ye. nameorthevlctim. • ' 1,. '··•
• ----~----
' ,
FIRST CALLER
BOUGHI 'BUG'
"J sold my car to the first
person who called."
That ·s the advertising Success experi~ced by the Huntington
&:ach woman who placed this ad
in the Daily Pilot:
' 1966 VW·Bug, very clean
$650. X~X·XXXX
• ~you have a car you want to
co vett to ce.sh. call 642-$678 .
e make it easy for you to put
a few wOrds to work for you -in
the Daily'l'ilot. -
Friend
Made It
To Shore
,.
•
Batterin1 surf claimed the.lit,
of. a 29-year-old Scuba diver~
day at Aliso Beach in Soulb
LaRuna. . .•
John Lally of Brea was ·tounc1
by San Clemente Lifeguard
divers about an hour after the d~
e:eased and a female ~mpanioO..
Mary Scully of Rolinda bad en-
tered the water. ·
lifeguard Lt. Andy Rich said
that as the couple reached the swf line, they were battered IQ'
the big waves which knocked ciU
j..all)''a.face mask and anorkJe.. ••
Rieb said the diver frantically.
tried to find his air-hose mouth
piece, but could not. Additional-
ly, tie wag heavily weighted and
was unsuccessful in inflating his
liJevest.
The body was swept away
while Miss Scully fought for her
life too, Lt. Rich said.
Divers found the body in eight
to 10 feet of water about 40 yards
Crmn. the spot where the couple
had entered the water.
Lt . Rich said the tragic inci-
dent pointed out the danger or at-
tempting to dive when the surf is
high. Aliso Beach is patrolled by
San Clemente Lifeguards work·
ing under a contract with 1the
county. A lifeguard was sta·
lioned about a quarter mile
away, but the drowning was
screened from his view by a sand
berm.
* * * Storm Surf
Batters C oast
With Injuries
Storm surf crashing ashore
along the South Orange Coast
produced a heavy loll or injuries
and rescues for San Clemente
and Laguna Beach lifeguards
over the weekend.
Laguna guards rescued 42
persons. San Clemente guards
rescued 60 persons. Ten persons
were swept from the breakwater
at Dana Point HarborSuQday.
Three person s w~re
hospitalized following the inci·
dent Sunday morning al the
hartx>r, Lt. Harry Gage said. fie
said the injured were released
after treatment at San Clemerate
General Hos pital.
In Laguna Beach, .Craig Pfyf-
fer, 12, was hospitalized Satur-
day after his surfboard struck
him in the back and broke his
shoulder blade.
Lifeguards treated the youth'
tor shock and back injuries. ~e
was taken to South Coast Com·
munity Hos pital by La,JUna
Be ac h Fire Department am·
bulance. ,
Jamie Ga lino, 21, residenceun'..
known, was rescued Sunday from
surf at St. Ann's Street beach. l:le
was pulled from the water in a
s tat., of nea.r exha ustio n~
lifeguards said.
Pfyff er wa s r·eported in
s atisfactory condition tod•y ..
Gelino was released after t:Hat-
ment.
Weekend surf of four to six feet.
was reported kicked up by a
tropical storm off B•ja
California. Surf was running ..
two to four feet along beacb<s'td,. day. • ... "' .
I
A2 DAILY PILOT L/SC
-SLAHit-
In Paper
'.By Patty
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The
t'Bl has a seven-paae document in which Patricia Hearat made
critical commenls about her
Symbionese Liberation Army
companions, it was reported to-
day.
The San Francisco Chronicle
said FBI agents found the docu-
ment Friday in the apartment
where ?.1iss Hearst and fellow
fu gitive Wendy Yoshimura had
been arrested the d ay berore.
Charles Ba tes. special agent in
charge of the F'BI offi ce here, re-
fused to comment, s aying to do so
could prejudice trial evidence.
The news pap e r quoted a
"source close to the case" as say-
.\ng the document is "a missive of
· '('Onde mnation ·' addr(•ssed to
William and Emily 1-larris, Miss
; Hearst 's S LA colleagues. The
couple are "more than strongly
, criticized," the Chronicle quoted
PATTY TO TESTIFY
AT HEARING?-3
the same unidentifit..>d source as
saying .
The complaints involve "cer-
• tain ·actions ' "that the Harrises
had "either taken part in or were
advocating" that others in the
"revolutiouary struggle" dis -
agre ed with , according to
another source quoted in the
Chronicle story.
The New York Times reparted
.today that the document indicat-
, ,ed a possible break between Miss
'. Hearst and other elements of the 0SLA.
The Tiines said the document
, .showed the Misses Hearst and
.Yoshimura were opposed to the
~ ..u:se of bombings and other ter-
. rorist activities advocated by the
-Harrises and members of the
Soliah family.
Stephen Soliah was arrested
Thursday and charged with
harboring Misses Hearst and
Yoshimura in the apartment
·where the two were living. -
·· · His sisters, Kathleen and
. Josephine Soliah, are being
sought as fugi,tves on charges in·
\'Olving guns and explosives. ~ The Chronicle said its sources
'reported that the document was
in the handwriting of Miss
'cy'osbimura and contained only
• 'ittitials, not proper SLA names. ~·But oae source N.id tAere were: ~iapecific comm'enta which "the in-
'ltlals show wi;re tho 1:c>1n!ll1'n!a of
'llllss Hea.r.~t.' tho "."':"'PJl.~r re--:r1>0rted. ' .. , '. ! t ....
_, '!'he document is not dated~ but
ooe source said it p~umably
was written after MisSes Hearst
''."aJld Yoshimura moved into the
("apartment -separate from the
Harris residence elsewhere in
· the city -where the pair finally
t-were captured, the Chronicle
&aid. That was about Sept. 9, the
paper said.
' .
':'Crash Kills ...
· '!fustm Rider
-• BALDWIN PARK (UPI) -A
' 20-year-old Tustin woman was
killed and her companion
.,. seriously injured Sunday when ·, ;m automobile swerved into their
motorcycle on the crowded San
Bernardino Freeway then sped
~.
"Eileen Marie Nunez. a
pa·ssenger on the motorcycle, was dead on arrival at Baldwin 'fitrk Community Hospital.
James Walter Barowy, 29,
Hollywood, was reported in
·ous condition at the same ~~ital.
e California Highway patrol
the hit-run driver made an
e lane change and crashed
the motorcycle, throwing
victims off the bike onto the
¥1-ftment.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
•
. I
O.Uy ki.t..,,..., ay ll:lcNl'f l( ... Jer
•
5 0 ,000 Volt• . '
Electric Gun
'
Used • m Heist
MIA~! CAP) -The young darts in his belly, then helped the
blonde iD a pink 1¥(eater waJked woman clean out the cub re-
-the-sWftetion-.nd •• ...,,., elm• on u•detumln•d the attendalll'. WUU-Law ., ~ount. One dart waa lef!. In bla
with a ~.000.volt efectric ""1· · ,nesb. ,
Theo she and a male accomplice Police sajd eicbt of the
robbed thestatiQn and fled. weapons. called the ''Taser
''l"d rather it had been f\\bllc .Defender."' were stolen
tomebody else,'' said Lawson, fromanofficein MtamiShores.·
· Z7. The Taser, which Lawson said
Police said he was the lint reminded him of a cray
known victim of the telectroo.lc-nasblight, launches two 1mall
age dart gun, which immobilizes darts attached •to batteries by victims. 18-foot wires. The darts can
Lawson told police the young penetrate l lh inches ~ clothing
woman entered ,the station and and the 50,000-volt charge is
'ask,ed to use the phone. The at-desCribed as incapacitating and
tendant said as he.1howecfherto very painful.
the phone, she turned toward him
and, "calm and smiling," shot
him .
'"It was like stickin1 your
flhger in a wall socket," he said.
He is still shaken and sorerrom
the robbery Wednesday.
"I fell on the floor and couldn't
move .. It was the wont pain I
ever felt," he said. "My whole
right side was jumping. I
couldn'tcontrol my muscles.''
Lawson said the woman was
joined by a man who leaned over
and pulled the wires from the
Enrollment
hlcreases
lnCUSD
PRESIDENT FORD GREETED IN ANAHEIM BY INSURANCE LEADER NORMAN LEVINE
2,400 Cheered As Ford Promised Economic Health Without 'New Spending Programs' Gas Chamber
Ordered for
Slayer of 5
Back to school a.enrollment in
the Capistrano Unified School
District bas surp,.s1ed
estimates, while enrollment is
below projections in the Laguna
Ifeacb Unified School District.
As~ first week.of .. bool drew
to a close, the Capistrano district
posted a total enrollment of
13,600 -100 stu4ents more than
estimates. Nixon Denies Role
In Tape Erasure
WASHINGTON CAP) -
Former President Nixon has de·
nied under oath ''personal
responsibility'' for the 18 1h·
minute ~ap in a White House Lape
recorded three days after the
Watergate break-in , bis lawyers
disclosed today. . "'
The tape gap remains one of
the mysteries of the Water~ate scaridals which drove Nixon to
resign. The disclosure came at;
a heaOng before a special three·
judge court created to con.sider
Nixon's attempts to regain con-
trol and possession of the tapes
Taxi Driver
-I Recovering
From Knifing
A Santa Ana taxi driver was re·
ported doing well today in a local
hospital after being stabbed in
the neck Sunday by a young as-
sailant in what Orange County
Sheriff's officers described as a
motiveless attack.
Deputies said Yellow Cab
driver Donald Carles Raymond,
32, was attacked in the Tustin
area after he picked up a young
man near the intersection of 4th
street and Grand Avenue in San·
ta Ana.
Deputies said the attacker
made no attempt to rob his vie ·
tim. They said he ran from the
cab after wounding the driver
and disappeared near the in·
tersection of Holt and Warren
streets.
and 42 million documents and
papers accumulated during his
51h ·year presidency
Nixon lawyer Herbert J Mill er
Jr. said the go vernment, in seek -
ing to retain ('Ontrol of the Nixon
matE'ri als, has questioned the
62-year-old fo rmer president"s
charac tE'r
"They say Mr. Nixon is un·
trustworthy, 1'1r. Nixon will dis-
tort the record, that Mr. Nixon
created the 181h·minute gap ,"
Miller said. "With respect to the
181f.t·minute gap, Mr. Nixon was
interrogated by the office of the
special prosecutor."
Nixon testified in a special
session before two members of a
· WatergategrandjurylastJune. 1
Referring to that testimony,
Miller s~id , ''Let them (the
Justice Department) challenge
that bis (Nixon's) responsibility
(for the tape gap) was denied un-
der oath.''
TRIP .•.
friendly . Several times, the fami -
ly was invited into Strangers'
homes for the night.
"It's really a different world
out there," Mrs. Wilhelm said.
''Youtend to forget it."
I But Wilhelm·said, "There are a
ot of dead towns in the country
that don't know they're dead
yet." And they saw pollution in
the midwest which they found
depressing.
Seldom, however, did they gel
depressed enough to wish they
were home . Instead, they
.dreamed of other trips they might
talce.
S J P k At one point in Indiana, when an lJBD ar Wilhelm got sick and they won-
dered il they would be able to con-N me Ch d ~ue.Kirstensaid shewouldcon-a ange tin~:,_ al~~t'i;er still believes she
Long Park in San Juan wouJdhavedoneit.
Capistrano is now El Camino Although everyone conditioned
Real Park. themselves for the trip, Wilhelm
Thepark,onthewestsideof said the task is more
Camino Capistrano near Oso psychological than physical.
Road and La Zanja, was named Affer the first week, the body
bytheCityCouncilrecently. adjusts to the situation. he said.
They chose the name after a Then, a person has to set his
plea by Pam' Hallan, writer and mindonagoalandpedjilasfaras
historian. possible.
The accepted name com-The experience has convinced
memorates the road which con-the Wilhelms that any family can
nected the missions in early doit. ·
California. The present-day El They are writing a book , which
Camino Real passes through San they hope will be published in the
Juan. spring, and intend to write
In c:hoosing this name, coun-magaz.ine articles encouraging
cilmen rejected the Parks and other families to hop on their
Recreation Commission's re-bikes and take off.
commendation for El Camino Park. '
' Build /Jelly,
Bogey, Body
Tlu1dib belly danclni, Indian
ba_lba• 101a and pl'ah• old ~erlcan golf will be amca1 ac-
tlvlU. ottered this .fall by the
L11una Beach recreation
division:
E'ro. Page AJ
AVCO •••
'mOnOywill n~W be paid.
But because of the delay, infia·
tion has added an estimated
$120,000 to the cost of the remain-
ing improvements, bringing to
$400,000 the cpst of completing them.
FORD .•.
from the enthusiastic audience,
Ford <'redited the insurance in-
dustry with being a major source
or capital financing that will re·
turn economic healthtoth&u S
Ford s aid he was hesitant to
take steps such as additional tax
cuts to speed economic recovery
for fear of disastrous after
effects; ''going from hallelujah
to heartbreak in 9ne swift move ··
At th e same time, he said, it is
impossibl e to underestimate
"lhe human tragedy of un -
employment ··
"There is a term in economics
that really bothers me -
'acceptable level of unemploy-
ment.· There is no acceptable
level of unemployment,'' the
President said.
Talks Grounded
MIAMI CAP> -Contract talks
between National Airlines and
striking flight attendants re-
mained grounded today after
fede.cJ_l-mediators suspended
negotiations for the second time
in two weeks. WilliamJ . Useryof
the Federal Mediation and Con-
ciliation Service suspended
negotiations Sunday night.
REDDING CAP\ -Robert
t>aul Sander was sentenced to-
day to die in the gas chamber for
the sniper slayings df five
persons in a >Smlth .River ·motel
last March
The bearded, 23-year-old'
Sander refused to stand when ~ntence was"' prpnounced by
Superior Court Judge Frank
Petersen
The for.DJer Ci.neipnati depart·
ment store employe, convicted
by a jur,y Sept 4,irefused to stand
when the ..bailiff ordered all to
rise f.S the judge entered the
courtrooll!
The juclee also ·!!!'keel him to •
stand before he Imposed sen-
tence. 1 •
"No, I will not," Sander said
The judge then asked if there
was any legal tea'son why sen-
tence should not be pronOWlced.
''Carry on,'' Sander said.
''The sentence carries an
automatic appeal to the
California Supreme Court.
Petersen said that il a higher
court finds th' death penalty~
constitutional, Sander must
serve life in prison.
Sander is one of the first to be
sentenced to die unde r a
California law allowing the death
penalty for multiple murders.
In Laguna Beach, 3,137 stu-
dents showed up -63 less than
expected. J
Officials in ljoth ~chool dis-
tricts said they expect their
respective student populations to
continue to increase in the com-
ing weeks.
ln the Capistrano district, the
sharpest enrollment gains. were
posted at Dana Hills High School
in Dana Point and Del Obispo
Elementary School and Marco
Forster Junioc, High School, both
in San Juan Capistrano. 4
Joseph Wimer, director of ad-
ministrative services, said three
new teachers have been added to
handle the unexpected enroll-
ment. A portable classroom also
was added at Dana Hills, he said.
In Laguna Beach, enrollment
gains wr,re:.. posted at three
schools ..1... Thurston Intermediate
and El~Morro Elementary In
Laguna .tseach and Aliso Elemen--
tary in South Laguna.
There were declines below
estimates at Laguna Beach.Jligh
School, and Top of the World
Elementary School. · '
Clyde Lovelady, business
manager, said this year's enroll-
ment pattern may parallel last
year's in which enrollment start-
ed out below estimates, tben
gradually increased and ex·
ceeded them.
• • • Manners gwes you
up to a s1,soo tax
deduction this year.~.
. -.AND EVERY .YEAR UNTIL YOU RETI RE! NOW YOU
CAN BU ILD A TAX SH ELTERED RETI REM ENT FUND
AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -TH E IN DIVIDUAL RE-
T IRE M ENT ACCOUNT.
Mariners Individual Retirement
Account is a personal tax-sheltered
retirement plan. ''IRA'' was devel-
oped by Congress to give you an
effective way lo build your own retire-
ment fund.
You can save as much as $1500 or
15% of your wages, whichever is less,
and your savings will be a tax deduc-
tion during your worl<lng years. If
your spouse works, your combined
tax-sheltered !savings can be as much
as $3000 per year. -
Come In to Mariners and start your
own lndlvldual Retirement Account .
You'ltfbe saving tax dollars now and
bulldlrtg a much brighter future. For
ni.ore inlqp11allon, come In or caU any
one o,f our convenient locations.
-
HER'E'S HOW FASt YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS
,;IRA " ACCOUNT. lndi.,idial Retirement Accou11tt ent Pffl!ently
Hmi!f, 7~ % Pflr Y'N' """"" placftd In e ti·rffr O.rtiflC.lfl. Your .,,,, Y••ld ,, increttKI to. blQ. B.Ofi% When ,,.,.,..., Is edded to
tll• aocounl inllnot 1nrl compounded daily. Will! 1 m1•lm11m
1r1a1 ... 1t11111 conlrlbution or 11500 NC/I yNr, h•re't ho• your
llotoM)' will Qrow·
WITH TAX WrTHOUT EXTIIA
SHELTERED TAX MONEY
IRA SHELTERED fPIOMTAX An ER Pl.AN , Pl.AN OEFEAML -'
5 yrs. • $ 9,510 $ 8,730. $ 2,780
10 yrs. 23.~ 15,750 7,790 . . ,
20 y,., 74,IMO «,080 30,~ .
30 yr1. 11!6,550 95,000 90,520 •
'AbOlttl uour• •r• bas.ct on 25% inc.om. br.oitt. Federal r.gu'9i1lon1 rtqulrt IYbllanUal penalllet fOf ewty wllhdr>w•ll
from oerttlical• actoU"tl; ..... .
.
Registration for clM&es lti un-
derway at the dlvl1Ion'1olfice, ~711
GlenneyroSt.
Other activities Include
blockprlntinJ,, brld~c!Ullcal guitar, boneback rl , outdoor
1 i::::une, tennl1, ~f~•1ball,
Supervltor Thomas Riley said
the company wiU landectaDeJ im·
prove-parklng roti: fDs'fall •
sprinklers 'and replace van-: _~..,.-S ... a.eg Q""',..,t.nnQ
dallied light fixtures and :.1. ........ -•• ...,.;:, ~· .... "!V;:i,
ba=':dded lhat=he ct also ' ~ i1114 Loan ~li)dijn
contains a clause fO(' .... ,.,. .._.. ..._;.... .._. .... .._ .. · \ ......,. Hin• w. Allt•I••
etbal! and 1wlm .
l'GI" fu~lnformatloa, call 4N,-ll2t, E , .
the county to perform the k (a.,..ldoc..to.) OIOG~Sl (lol•-W0<1d) 3IOSo.a..01lx_O• ~. Ml.S"'!'Jil'el!•!l -bill-Avco·If-l~lfdet-"'ed', tW..CdlllO< '°'"""*"" (Zl<) ... '1D ,1_1oo1_11M1. Cl"l~'-.. -the company ltn't prooeedlns · (714) 4000 (71•)""2-(OPD'1 SOON(' !21>l"'·""'· · 121>)6J1"''' 1allsfa~. -•• .c,;~~-~.-;._..;.._~;...,L,;.;,;,;o.;.,.;;.;,,;..;..;,;,;. __ ...... ..;.. __ ..;;.;;.;;...;..;...._~
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Wailing to Buy
A Home? Don't
Q. l• thiaa good Hml ts llou" "°""7
A. Ya, It la. It coold, ID !act, be the belt ~Od In which
to M a house that )'OU1ll MICOUDtel' In many a year.
J'..e11dln1 ln1Utuuo111 are loaded with caab !or
~ aJDGOtcni<lal---. ll~lbe<e ta a bliili ovenupplJ o!houoca, """'and old -"with one._. ~ ..umaua1 400,000 llMOld unils oo the market.
equivalent to IJ'I •lfl>l-
montb-ply.
Money's ,
Worth
Xorts11e rates are not likely to decllne oub-
stanti.tJJy, It at au -and
l1Je7 are QOW mod•\y
NIDI asaln. Housln( l I
h!I' I b. e D In • ~·------c4laltrophlc slump am it ls not yet boomin1by1ftY ineans.
I On top or all this, thlo Is the on\y year in wblcb you are
llbl•lot' • bouiin& laxcredlto! up to $2,000.
Q. W~oboe4-cx011fll/lallootlledQ<? •
A. It bu --tor to DMJOt lnvfStm._.,tr. SUbUrl>an munlt;y houlea bave rilen about 10 pere<!ot in value i year during the past to years. Except in ouch
tnMare yean 81 IBl4, this beats the pace or 1nnat1on. It
beats the record or many Other mediums. And this is one advantage, olcourse. .
I ' J Q. Willanoldn-lloldiUoalw?
A. ''There's a demand ror houses 40-50-60 years old ''
e phaslzed Mrs. c.arol W. Greene, pre$ident or the
Northwest Bercen Board ol Realtors, headquartered In
Jllilgewood, N.J ., during a paMI on homeowotng recently.
"More houses are torn down than fall down .
; ''U•a house la 1t.n,1cturall)' 90U1Jd, it"s there for 100, even 00'1 yean and when they get that old, they take on a pre·
mJum value as weU as attract bu.yen who seek an older ~·--··-·--.. 1-..uiH: ~Ul. \(
• Q. B-"'°"JI"°""' '11ould.a ""*""look.al bot-bu¢ng? II! A..Tbe •-•I• Is seven tO nine hoUks, and says Mrs. Gltlene. "People wbO fall within that raofe are usually the f!eet'buyers." The unhappiest are the ones who ~o to ex-
es, looking at one house and buying fast or looking at so
that they become indecisive and final\y buy out of
f.,trltlco.
I Q. W1>ol.oboutt~trendo/int<T<.trales?
to A. You'll probably gain nothing -and more likely lose
-'if you bold back from buying in anticipation that
ri>rtgage rates might drop substantially from today's telt'ets. Even if rates do decline modestly (and don't count on ~I the decline .almost surely will be ofrset by increases in Uf prices or house a you want to buy. .
! Also, the point was underlined a1 the Northwest Bergen ·
altors Board panel that the average IJl.Ortgage is held for
less than the 30·year period usually cited, and thus, the
t is far less than homebuyers realize. The national
a age is 12 years, and around the New York metropolitan
a it's only seven years.
Q. What about tazo.ue.ument~ondmse88ed ooluatiort?
( ~-A. Assessed value is merely the value placed on a pro-J>!Tty by the local tax assessor, and it is either as cl06e to
irlle=value aa Possible or reflects a standard fraction of true
vilue. The relationship and the taxes needed to fund local
CIJremment determine the tu rate. That rate is generally
~eased as so manydoUars and cents per hundred doUars
of.assessed valuation. · ~ 1 If:. :; t-
~-Q. If you run into flnandnl trouble, wlxlt'lholtld you do. about
·~Pt.omemortgoge? ·
A. Tell the lender as soOn as you see trouble coming and
't wait until it has arTived. Virtually every problem has
lution and lenders often can and will do whatever is
ible to resolve your problems. Banks and other lending
· "tutions cannot make money out of /oreclosures -but at
ert.ain point in a delinquency~ unpleasant developments
start to happen automatically unless your lender is kept
iq!'ormed. .t-'J'hen it will cost you, the homeowner, much more than it
~rwi.se would to stop the machinery. Even worse, your
problem may h·ave advanced too far for the lenaer to be able
tQfmd a solution.
\ Q. But back to the key point: is tll'.il.o good time to borrm.uand
wi;uyolwuu?
. A. It is.
' Figure OUt Costs
fBuying a Freezer . . ,
~r.an Be Expensive
'lly Ualted Pras
lntenaatlonaf
!J'he American consumer is
on a freezer buying binge,
possibly fueled by bumper
ciqps from home gardens and
a nationwide shortage oC can-
ning jar lids.
What ever the reasoqs, re·
ceht studies at Cornell
U~versity ehQw food frozen
. at home costs almost 19 cents
more per pound than food
bought and eaten fresh.·
COmell's New York State
College of Human Ecology
sa!d,home freezer sales last ~artotaled over three milliori
Ulll1s.
:t\'ITH BARTLEri pears·
arttT tomatoes going ror 19
cfOl,ts a pound in Los Anaeles,
Mi.ches 29 cents a pound in
Mjnneapolis and broccoli 59
ceots a bunch in Boston, the
teinptation to buy for the
fr~ezer is obvious. These
fitures from the United Fresh
Ftuit and Vegetable Associa·
.Uoifts weekly market report
1~ .. UPI are lower in some c.-than home garden pro-
d9te.
, ·Freezer operating costs are
only part or the picture. Hid·
den costs include freezer con-
tainers or frftzer paper, the
value or.your own time and, in
tbe case of most fruit, sugar
or a sugar substitute.
So before you buy fresh
fruit and v~getables to freeze
at home, add up the inciden-
tals. ·
IN OTHER FOOD
categories, some good buys
are available. UPI's regular
survey of supermarket. food
pijces found whole broiler-
frYer chickens only 49 cents a
pound in Milwaukee and 52
cents tn San Diego, compared
with an-average 58 cents a
pound during the base week_
last March 19. In four other
cities, they Were 59 cents a
pound . New York and
Portland, Ore., reported Qle
high, 8S cents.
At the lower levels, it pays
lo broU, barbecue, fry or roast
chicken for family meals.
Higber·priced birds can be
stretched by using them cut-
up in casserole dishes~ es
paella, chicken with rice or
•• chicken in ltalian·style
·' tomato 1auce with spaghetti BusineBBmen r.;:m• other macaroni --
'.,keet Oct. : 1 BE'JTEK STILL, lool< ror
• yearllnr !owl, ~ small
:The Orange Cou.Tity Lauer hens .wbiCh ~omet.imes are
ti&y Saints Business and calle stew1n' '!r soup
J!>Uesslonal Men's Assocla· chicken&. They re both as 'tllfn will haye thei~ monthly much u 20 cents a pound .,,~,. 9ctober l at noon at cheaper than ·l/foiler-rryers.
tpa ~ddteback Inn in Santa ·and are more nuortul for
~· 1low.cooked dishes. suoh eo I .,-ii. s peaker wtll 'be stew ond SOUP-They clin be
Hithard T. Hanna, director tw...ln-one bar1al11J: tbeart;y,
*-4 c.b.a1.rman of the ex· 1oup with hom•made or
etuli.., oom111lttee, Webliter • alore-I>oqbt noodles for oae
..lnl.unaUonal_Corpor&Ubn. .courie "!'d chicken salll! ot J>I-tall Havey I.1nn at CIUcien m • ffir!ul sauce
*'\)UO for r .. ervatlons. ror U.V main dish .
' '
1
NEW YORK . STOCK EXCH~GE Monday's.
Closing Prices
..._.. VOA.It CU~l -liiilllf t111 .. !Wt = ... ... '"' =·~~~ ~--0. 0. N..aO-Qt. M. 0. O. M~O.. ~
o... ~ .. r;J.._--~ ·~ i -~ ~~.: :I~·: 1;~1: :: Pf~ =~~~ ~:::_·~
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111.i -;;.·.; M ""'•"' "'.:!!.J1:~1
-
141
. ;=.::I:":: 21 g.,.: r: =~,·.:it 21.!::!tt PS1a.ir 1:10 :: !:X :i -i ·' worldwiderevivaJfortheU.S.curren-11ur --.21!'-..,._-. E.S'l'll.lffl~llt IJZ 21 + _, Hwll.1-t,M I IS IMll • Mo Mtrc'k I.IOU• 61~ PS EG;lf•.•1 ·· l90 .. ~tl YI
c.t>I.. M ,.._" bf!Pf,04o; 16 :MV.-\lo "'*"'O.t1• 1o:a .w . ..,_.., Mt~tti .19 • m • -Yt PSE .,.11.1 •• r100101 ••• cy. The price of gold alw improved
Cp .'2 'i 0 20"'-i,lio bkoee .SO 19 ,,.,.._" "°""'niJ ·24 ti 1'7 12 + Mo ~.to 6 1'1'--" PYS::i·=·,· ... • 9 • ..!!, N"'+ *' al•er 3 Sharp fall '"SI week. tiif 2 m+ \la &$1ltn'IAlr ,, ts "' ... ~ ... ' ,, 11"' ... Me at• 1 ~"' ··-""'-"" I.' us
•wa ·• n •v.-" b~°'' -• ' tot 11 -" .-. • ,_. ' ~ ,,"' .,, '· ·1 u ""'° ... "'"' • .ao 7 ,I 1'" ·.. The dollar Jumped to 4.5467 rrancs -. ·,· ... ,',r!_·;.: ;:~r1'.;:211 ~ ~i-~-=:t J .:::~; MrNM~IS 1
': ~= Pul:ll~r'i:,: ~' 11'~~~ it.» ..--.. ~1• , .. tNo-• """""""'"'' 11 .... " MOM 11 ,.1......._1 ll'll>ltllol.2!1\ •• ,, ""•... in Paris . a b.lgh ror the year, from i u 6' ''"•" Ect111nMAtt• 1) ••" ---•• ''" ••• 1 ·•-* ,,._._" "'°""!._.., 1 '"' ... Fr1'day's clo•e or 4 "137 lrancs 11 "'r ~-.~ Et>lld jil .al7 ft 21 --Huttllrli:.-! 4 t• -'It MO ln ,1•., t» ti~-Pwl.SP -~ J t0J 2S41o .f WI .~ ' "'-•• ,.,,-... EcMNt;,•tt,, 14"'-., ~JI 11 a,.-~ 1.10 11r-.~ ""'11M11•!'1Ct 121 .--lit Today's opening quote was 4.5255 ' ' ,, "m-~ f.Otnar 1.• , 1 ~" * .s 11 ~" _ ';ii s ,, t<M-"' ,......<»~~ • ., 11 -YI rrancs . •MS• .. -• ... E0&0 .12um11 •• __...,_ ""°" .. •11"!'f ••• ,..,....~. II llC!•\41 .~1·1 ·= u"· ... ., ........... , ,__ ... ICRS .. ·;•WI+ --I • tlfll+ ........... 111 II..-.... r
.:M1 12t ,.__·~ ~-='~ 1'1t 'ftt!: lSt 4 '··. '4m!'" · :~•, tt :~;r: e:""Sct;-,. • " ~-· '' ,..., ··· .1sc · ,.. "10i ·· ...._~ M!lllMlf :. ' 1• ••• .nt1 ., ''"-" <A-_IO • 4S '1'>11 • \Ill ltlft N41Uia !t ll..._VI rw-1t2.a·; 1 a -GI Miiii.. $ a lM• 'A a •• 9 • .... )'
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TUMILEWEEDS
.
THI' OWS A6AINST
HIS SURVIVAL.
All!' GETTING-
PRt:T1Y HIG!l
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
l,lOIJ WANT 1l> BE A
MAJ'ORETrE, WICKED
WANDA~
FIGMEMTS
' ~NANCY
•
•
··-I'M VERY ···BUT 1 WISH
PLEASED THAT YQU WOULDN~T
YOllRE SO FOND , _P_E~T_H_IM_·_,,...
OF MY ,_
DOG··-
DAY'S .CRDSSWDID PUZZLE
ACROSS 51 Summons S.tur~'fs Puzz!e5ol¥ed :
1 ~reu -52 Tre.linld
Bow woJ1<
t 8 Trudge 54 FllQt
10" Theflrat M Food
~: Abbr. thlellener
,, Uftlc8rlli 50 k:lf'IOl.IH
15 ,._tonic 81 Old ft. pllylng f
vfctory site Clfd
18 OfWl/\QI 82 ftdl. I
17 Nltrlcend &l Stell
citric appendage
l8 lurklth M At11monia
Qe!*lll ~Pol.Ind
19 Llirgl num-65 V1n0ecl
ber:Var. 66S.Ckollhe ,...... -' 22 Hltl'ries 87 Fl'11 USSR
24 Cfll'JIOfl• premlw
rioUnmakw DONN
25 DltttnctiYe 1 Cleaning --""""" l1 Contendld 2 ,_..hie 1 ~ OeriOt with 39 New Bruna·
30 No. c.ollna lt1MCl1 contempt wick natl'te
fW9' 3 A#I-: Rare 13 Lodtofhalr .a V1llJlble
31 Fruit drlnkl bird ti CoMume stone
32 TCMIPOlll'IQ _. 8egg1g9 23 Eerie '3 Tltlt
$ W* body Mndln 25 The NIM ln lnc«f!C:Uy
31 n...-. 5 TIM !of lorm -48 Airline ilbbr.
• ...... grWll9d 27 Papermonej47 ot.ttiemlnd
CClfttuncilon I Wall llnlaher 21 Roman 48 Thfonoff •. iff 8lrftlwa 7 9tl'P'1 record It.In 49 Cottonwood .o -._.. bodt 29 Denote 50 BsMry product
Slfl'ICN'I-~ a Hatnft'.IOd\ 33 Lobby M tnctiandty
by Tom IC. Rye11
! ..t ~-,, .. -
. by T Olll Batlulc
by Dale Hale
by Ea aie Buhnliler
MISS PEACH • · plemln. •• " t Sttipwreck. tor 34 Doti Juan'• '5 oev11eni·1
o'4 Outco!Mcf OM mother land
mn.:t:luttlx 10Eag..IM 35•IOIJ'1• !51tt.ntmefor
• . •' " :: . ' .·
4$ U11ed -: U.S. relathoa Rhodes lndMd~ poet :ii ReunlOn 57 Actress Anna
~ F'Od-1ld9 11 Comedian attendee •1Nc:11n ,Aid_ 38 Bakl!fY ilern 60 F1eif\ fetlur•
•
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DR. SMOCK
GORDO
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•
IT'LL CATCll oN·-
M,..YBE .•
Oii >-c~~ P>-Y.-
' t / / ., '
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•
DEMMIS 'l'HE MatACE
•
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ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFO RN IA . ; MONDAY, SEPTEMB ER 22, 1975 TEN CENTS:
' ' . . r .._ \ Dlllty,.......,.,.....
, .) ,. ~'!AS l'Ul.L, l'ULL, PULi. AT SUNDAY'~·MISSION VIEJO DAY~ CELEBRATION '
,BuT IN ANY TUG '0 WAR, SOMEBODY WINS .AND OF cqi.illSE 'SOMEBODY LOSES ' + L" ' •(J ' .
:Viejo, D1:1ys Wiild .Down -
;_~O!KJ~i4ent.-1"m1i , ~D#,Funfest
l ........ ( .,, ... -.. I • , ' I ' . '
' .... -.... j. ... '. ... • ''"... -• , ...... ' An ••tlmated 4,000 people A 1S2·foot throw of,lhe l\'bbee compelltj_ons while ~yntb.ia
, patticiPated in fin'1 festivilie9of .~won Scott: ~bone fll'St place in Godinez, An~iell.ourer and Tony
. UHfllission Viejo Days Sunday... . theFrisbfftoss. . .. , ' Beebe 'woa log sawing competi· _
··Winner.a .in the'. softball, · Grandi ebad.pton in the tionsfbr~eiragecategorjes.
ctivbioq A, cqmpetltlon were Df.! ·:rest.st J!"OI." competit/ons was ' Pat Rohinson,'~, .~eam, the
Be;moll'a team . DITision B Jack Burke and Danny Brennen udtuckers, wontnetug--of-war.
aortball winners were Steve was declared the grand cham· GM'7 Martin and Da\iid 'Linnell ',Gileother's~•\11· ' , pioo 1J1 the lo~g jumJ> competl-were.deelllffd hole-in~ grarld In' the vone,lt>alf cooipetttlom, Ilona champion& of the day.
RichBradwaytook'Orsti>tacein David Martin's bullfrog, Tom Heller wore the be,t
1 Divlslon A and Kevin Severson ••Joe,'' won the bullfrog jump beard to the1estivities while Sal woa Division 8 . while ''St.lcky,'' owned by Carl Becerril bad the best mustache
Table tennis tO..maments were Nellon, won the small !rot; Jump. and Paul Jlerlgstad had· the best
won by Gary Austlh, siailes· Bryan 'fy100, Alex App, Mil<e, hairy gam•.
Gary Austin and Bru<e Corblli, 11.odcnna and Pat 81"'1" loot IJ~a· Reeves took the grand
tuen'• doubles, and Gary and ,rim place bonon ill their age )lrizemthebakedaoodscompetl-
JudJ> ,,_..tl.n,P,!i<eddoubles. 1 <•l!'t•ries or the watormelon \ ~~. G lol . ~Ii Prank ana Grave Ni~ were eOntest. t--• , . ..,.,,,.vuay u ~u rat""' ant
<declared the d1~mplonsble , -'llaut 8Jld Joe ~ti ..,.for'iama oncl Jellin....iille Rosie
llridc• team. ' 4A took tint pl1ce In tile bars..... <Seo VIEJO, Pa1eA111
-.
Recovery Coming, He Says i
By DOUGLAS Fllll'l5CllE ... o...., .......
A bulllsh Pr-e1lclent Gerald
FO<d Sunday told a buslnesa au-
dience in Orance County that the
nation'• economy ls well ca tbe
way ·to recovery. Attempta to
speed it. he said, could lead 'to
ctiaaster. -• ••
''Nevet foraet:• s&ld Ford,
"that the J ovemment that is big
enouch to tlve you. ""erything
you want 11 a government that is
bif enouah to take everything you have.'' • .• ,,..1
Ford's talk at the Disneyland
Hotel in Anaheim to 2.40G mem-
ben of the National Aasociation
"
Fire Hits
Restaurant
Third Day
Orange County fu-efigbters to-
day are investigating the came
of a fll'e which resulted in about
SS,000 damage to the kitchen at
Casta deJ Sol Country Club
Restaurai{t Sunday evening.
'Mte restaurant was just O()elled
lo the public Friday.
Capt. Tim SapROk said firemen
spent a little more than an hour
and a half controlling the fll'e.
'n)ey were prevented from ob·
tailling rapid access to the fU"e,
he said, because it was confined
between walls, portions of which
were covered with stainless steel
sheeting.
Firemen. who were also ham-
pered by the smoke which spread
throughout the restaurant, had to
tear open the wall to put the fire
out.
A spokesman for the Mission
Viejo Company said the
restaurant. -for which a. grand
opening is scheduled Sept. 28.
will continue in operation.
Firemen also responded lo a
false alarm at the casta del Sol
Recreation Center at 9:45 p.m .
Firemen, who had been work-
ing, at the restaurant fire, dis-
covered a short in an electrical
box m the attic of the recreation
~nter. This, apparently, caused
a smell of smoke in the building.
County firemen are also in·
vesligating the cause or a fire
which erupted at 7:51 p.m. in the
Mission Viejo home of Neill
Casey al 25515 Adriana.
This fire, which caused an
estimated $400 damage was con-
fined to a bedroom closet on the
first floor. Firemen controlled
the fire within three minutes
after their arrival.
Mrs. Casey was treated by
paramedics at the scene for
smoke inhalation.
Nois e Debate
of Life Underwriten, an ~·
surance industry CJ'OUiP, was a
mixture of praise ol free en·
terprlse and lndlctmmt ot ble
govemment.
Taraets for the bnmt of Ford's
assault on big government were
••new. •pending -proarams" in·
·tended to relieve the country's
unemployment and brin& an end
'to more than two years of r&-
ceseion.. Cbara~eri1ing such moves u
''irttspOnSlble'' and likely to ''re·
light th&:fires of infiation, ~ Ford pfomised tO· continue to use his
veto Power to quuh increased
govemment spending. _ ·
Ford'• talk came ill the second J
day of a three day swine throulb ~
California,. sprinkled witb pre-;
. campaign efforts to (am.er sup. r
port io the nation's moll~
populous state. ;
According 'to · Whit& House;
Press Secretary Roo Nessen.~ Ford plans to follow up with a ..
pair of return visits to California ~
1n late Oetober for GOP fund4 •
raisins dinners in San Francbeo;
and Los Angeles. ' ~
Former Gov. Ronald Reagart, ;
speculated lo be a Ford oppooelil
for the Republican nominaUoa :.
· next year, is 1Ufted asoneof2$ c6-"
(See FORD, Page .U) -:
r--'"T--r----.====;-----;:.----=7---i' ·. " \
u .
•
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0
u ....... .-..
TROPICAL STORM ELOISE GETS SECOND WIND
Moves Town Hunlcane Strength Over Gutt
Eloise Takes Aim
On Gulf Coast ..
MIAMI (UPI) -Hurricane
Eloise, packing winds ol 85 miles
an hour, churned today toward
the Gulf Coast ports of Mobile,
Ala., and Pensacola, f1a., and
residents boarded up their homes
and prepared to mo...e inland.
The National Hurricane Center
issued hurricane warnings from
Grand Isle, La., to Apalachicola,
Fla., and urged small craft to re·
main in port. It also warned
there was a possibility that
tornadoes might occur in ad-
vance of the storm.
"All precautions over the Mis·
sissippi Delta region of
southeastern Louisiana should be
rushed lo completion immediate·
ly.'' the center said. "Elsewhere
in the warning area, actions
should be conpleted this after•
noon.''
Eloise was expected to make a
swipe at the mouth of the Mis·
sissippi River this afternoqn,
then move eastward and come
ashore tonight in the Mobile-.
Pensacola area, bring S to 10-
inch rains to southern and eastern Alabama, northwest
Florida and much of G~gia.
At mitlday, Eloise was cen•
tered nea~ 26 .8 degrees north
latitude and 89.6 degrees west
longitude, about 240 miles soutti
of New Orleans. Peak sustained
winds remained at 85 miles ad
hour, but hurricane forecasters
said conditions remained favora.
hie for further strengthening
before it reached land. Gal·•
rorce winds extended north frOnt
Eloise's center for 145 miles.
Irvine Sclwol Panel
Eloise claimed 34 lives last
week when it slashed Piterto
Rico and the Dominican
Republic with 80 mph winds and ,
torrential rains. The storm lost.
much or its strength in the moun·
tains of southeastetn CUba, but
was upgraded to hurricane status
again today as it picked up
strength over the Gulf of Mexico. To Stzuly Jet Issue
Irvine school trustees, who won
a bat~e to close the old Irvine
School due to aircraft noise from
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station,
plan to look tonight at what they
believe might be a renewed threat
to district facilities -com·
mercial planes at El Toro.
Trustees will consider a resolu·
tion opposing "joint use" of the
Marine field at tonight's •7:30
o'clock meeting at University
HighSchool 4Til Campus Drive. .
Last month, Orange County
supervisors voted to seek u.s.""
Department of Defense approval
lo add commercial flights to the
Marine base. This ls the first op-
portunity the Irvine trustees have
bad to respond officially to the
supervisors' application.
FIRST C4UER
BOUGlll' 'BUG' ' ,"I sold ~ car to the first
person wh(/called."
That's the advertising success
experienced by the Huntington
Beach woman who placed this ad
in the Daily Pilot:
lll66VW ·Bu1, very lean
~· XXX•O:XX
If you bave. • C'.!ar you want to
convert to oeah, •all &cl-~.
We make.it easy ror YO:U lo put
a re:w wordl to wort for YoU -in ~Dally Pilot.
• ' .
Already, the City of Irvine has
launched an anti·aircraft cam·
paign composed of lea£lets
circulated throughout the area
that would be affected by com-
mercial planes at El Toro.·
The city council also has given
the go-ahead for some heavier
measures: thre~lened lawsuits
against county government at-
tempting to annex the Marine
base; spearheading an intensive
lobbying campaign; and having
the-city transportation com·
mission look into more ways to
oppose "joint use," as combined
commercial and military Rights
at El Toro have been called.
Tl* trustees' resolution points
out the deteriment to the health
and welfare of students in noise·
bombarded schools. It also cites
the fmancial crunch such a move
could put on'tbe di.strict 's building
program .
C.onvicts Sought
FOLSOM (UPI l -Authorities
today searched for two escaped
convicts, one a convicted
murderer with a scheduled
parole date of Nov. 15, who
,walked away from Fol.som
'°rlaon•s minimum security
ranch. Prison offlclala Identified at o lomatH as convicted
er Thomas C. Pawlicki,
• Charles H. Waddlnitoo,
32, servini a prison sentence foe
assault with a dead!(..., II!"'·
Disaster preparations ac·
celerated along the stormr
scarred Gulf Coast as Eloise
moved closer to land, and most
civil defense and Red Cross of·
ficials said they would make de-
cisions shortly on whether to
evacuate residents.
Co ast
Weath er
Dense fog along the coast
~ill increase tonight and
Tuesday morning. Hazy
sunshine today and slighUy
cooler Tuesday with highs
in mid·80s. low tonight in
mid-605 .
I NSIDE T ODAY
PresV!enl Fo.d today called
/or creation of IIOO·biUion re-
aearch eorporotion to give no-
tion eMTflJI independence in 10 vears. A·S.
-· .. :;::: --"'--.. a..-• -----.............. ·-.......... .,_.
Index
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AM JlfN'I,__ At
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A.Z OAILYPlLOT SB
-SLAHit
In Paper
}Jy Patty
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
1',81 has a seven-pai;te document
in which Patricia Hearst made
critical comments about her
Symblonese Li beratioc Army
companions, it was reported to-
day.
The San Francisco Chronicle
. said FBI agents found the docu-
ment Friday in the a partment
where Miss 1-l ear st and fellow
fugitive Wendy Yoshimura bad
been arrested the day before .
Charles Bates, special agent in
charge of the FBI office here, re-
fused to comment, ~aying to do so
L"'OUld prejudice trial evidence.
The newspaper quoted a
••source close lo the case" as say-
ing the document is ''a missive of
condemnation '' addressed to
William and Emily Harris, Miss
}learst's SLA coll eagues·. The
couple are "more than strongly
criticized,·· the Chronicle quoted
PATTY TO TESTIFY
AT HEARING?-A3
I the same unidentified source as
saying.
The complaints involve "cer·
lain 'actions'" that the Harrises
had ''either taken part in or were
advocating" that others in the
••revolutiouary struggle'' dis·
agreed with, according to
another source quoted in the
Chronicle story.
The New York Times reported
today that the document indicat-
,ed a possible break between Miss
Hearst and other elements of the
SLA.
The Times said the document
I showed the Misses Hearst and
. Yoshimura were opposed to the
1 use of bombings and other ter-
" rorist activities advocated by the
Harrises and members of the
· Soliah family.
Stephen Soliah was arrested
Thursday and charged with
harboring Misses Hearst and
Yoshimura in the apartment
where the two were living.
His sisters, Kathleen and
Josephine Soliah, are being
sought as fugitives on charges in·
\'Olving guns and explosives.
, The Chronicle said its sources
'reported that the document was
in the handwriting of Miss
Yoshimura and contained only
initials, not proper SLA names.
f But one source said there wer~
specific comments which "the in·
itials show were the comments of
Miss Hearst,'' the newspaper~
ported.
· '.l'he document is not dated, but
one source said it presumably
was written after Misses Hearst
and Yoshimura moved into the
apartment .-separate from the
Harris residence elsewhere in
the city -where the pair finally
were captured, the Chronicle
said. That was about Sept. 9, the
paper said.
"Clemente Tot
i Molested
· A 5-year-old San Clemente girl
" was lured into an alley alcove
·and fOf'ced to participate in ·a sex
act &lnday in San Clemente.
The child was unharmed by
her assailant Who gave her a $1
bill following the act.
The incident took place at
about 1 p.m . behind a gasoline
service station near Avenidas
Esplanade and Barcelona.
Bombing Claimed
USBON, Portugal (UPI) -A
clandestine right·wing terrorist
group today claimed
responsibility for the weekend
bombing of Prime :Minister Jose
Pinbiero de Azevedo's holiday
residence.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed'
t'nllcletllaftdhOll-
JKk R. Curley
•• ~ ... 0.flM'll ..........
Thomas Keevll .....
"JMmas A. Murphine
Mot~•dl•
..
Q\arles H. Loos Richard P. Nan
Mll.a.M ........... ~
Soddlobo<k V•lllY Olt1co _a.. ............. ~ --· c... ..... ; ........ ..., ...... ....,.,. ... M"ttsll........,..........,, ...,................,,,.11 ..... ._.._d.
~h.cfl:t1•0~'--
T•lt .... OM C714) I04D1 ~· ............... MJ.5611
SMdlMlol<I. v11+., Nt'eOH~
111 .. 110 ,.,..., Uoll CM"**
4t$1Ut
ca.rrW!t. d O!'.,... C'"1 NltlMi 0-. .-,, M ..... Mtl1ff. lthMr~ ~ NfMf ., .. ,"U"11'1•'11l ._,.M fl'l9'" .. ~ -'""-' ... ,," ,.,,,...,.,... .. --· .... '""' .... , ... ,.., It c.-----~~ ::'"'-:;;= W'1' •
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o.ltr,. ........... ~~
'
50,000 1'olt• '-
Electric Gun ' , -
I
Used in Heist •
MIAMI (API -The YOUDf peaetr.te lit Inell• ol dothl•1
blonde In a pink aweater walked and the 60,000·volt cbu&e ii
Into the cu staUon and sappodc ~bee M ~J19!•cll"llll .... the attendant, WUltam i.waoa, very pala6d.. -• •
with a $,000-volt electric aun. The .,••JIOll'• ...-.., T~
Then she and a male accomplice Sy•l<!m lac. or J,.oe Aas•lu; robbedtbest&Uonandfled. descl'lbe It u 1 ""'"'""-1 erllllf
"I'd r catber It bid beea lftVOllilOO-device for ........
somebody else." said LAWl<Xl, attacker• In tbelr tracts .
Z7. Ute:rature tbat com. with ff i
Police said he was the !Int ototeo that In early ""1!ns. a '
known ~ctlm or the j!lectrooic· blast from the '"" ~"=1 age dart IUD, whlcb Immobilhes 30,000 volts llltleed a 250-
vicUma. bull. --
LawlOll told police the young Lawson, wbo wel1lui UO
woman entered the station and pounds. was knocked --.eletS,
asked to use the phone. The at--his bearing and vlr.::"~ tendant said as he showed her to Docton at Miami
the phone, she turned toward hlnl' Hoopital said an lncb.lcllfl
and, •*calm and smiling:• shot was removed from Lawsoo'a
him. rl(lbtslde,justaboveblawa!IL '
''It Was like sticking your " \
finger in a wall socket," he said.
He is still shaken and sore from
the robbery Wednesday. ;•1 fell oD the floor and couldn't
move. It was the worst pain I
ever felt.'' he said ... My whole
right s ide was Jumpina:. I
couldn't control my IDWJclea. ••
Heavy.Surf J
Claims Diver !
In Laguna i
PRESIDENT FORD GREETED IN ANAHEIM BY INSURANCE LEADER NORMAN LEVINE
2,400 Cheered As Ford Promised Economic Health Wtthout 'New Spending Programs'
Lawson said the woman was
joined by a man who leaned over
and pulled the wires from the
darta In his belly, then helped the
woman clean out the cash re-
gister of an undetermined amount. One dart was left in bis
fiesb.
Battering surf claimed the Ilf.
ol a 29--year-old Scuba diver SUni
day at Aliso Beacb in Soutlj
Laguna. ;
• 1,
FORD •••
hosts for the dinners, Nessen
said. .
Asked whether this meant the
Reagan campaign was waning,
Nessen said, ''What Reagan cam·
paign? Where is it?'" __ .
Improvements Set
For Niguel Beach
Police said eight of tbe
weapons. called the ''Taaer
Public Defender,'' were stolen
from an office in Miami Shores.
The Taser, which-Lawson said
reminded him of a gray
flashlight, launches two small
darta aUached to biitteries by
18-foot wires. The darts can
John Lally of Brea was found
by San c;temente Lifeguard
divers abo\it an hour after the de
ceased and a female companio~
Mary Scully of Rolinda bad .,.,
ter~thewater. • I
Lifeguard Lt. Andy Rieb sai4
that as the couple reached tM
surf line, Ule~ were battered bJ
the big waves which knOcked otl
Lally's face mask and snorlde. ~
Ford's arrival by helicopter to
the Disney land Hotel was greet·
ed. by a cheering crowd of about
500 as secret service agents and
Anaheim and Disneyland police
whisked him from the tightly
secured landing pad in a short
motor caravan to the rear en-
trance of the hotel Grand
Ballroom.
Mesa Woman
.Assaulted
Mter Party
A Costa Mesa woman who went
to a party in Laguna Hills Satur·
day, the night after her husband
began serving an Orange County
Jail term for manslaughter, was
raped by a mysterious intruder
early Sunday.
••Who are you?,'' the victim re-
portedly asked the diminutive
rapist.
··vou don't have to know who I
am or where I'm from .•. ,''the
stranger replied. ,
She told police the five foot,
120-pound man who surprised her
in the darkened bedroom spoke
in a thick Spanish accent and
raped her twice.
Investigators were told the
rapist left the woman's central
c.osta Mesa area home aft.er get-
ting up for a drink of water.
She had told him her children
were asleep in the next room and
warned they would be getting up
soon as a method of frightening
him away, police said.
The victim told Officer George
Yezbick she had another couple
as guests following the party in
Laguna Hills and retired about 4
a.m .• following their departure.
,
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
OttlM D.llly '11MIWff
Avco Community Developers,
Inc. has agreed to complete long·
promised major improvements
at Orange County's Niguel Beach
Park following conclusion of a
new pact between the company
and county government.
The remaining improvements
at the be ach park south of
Monarch Bay and north of Dana
Point will cost an estimated
$400,000, or whi ch $280,000 will be
paid for by the county as part or
the original agreement signed
two years ago.
Under terms of that deal, Avco
transferred title to the beach and
some uplands to the county for a
consideration of $880,000. The
company agreed to perform
numerous improvements at the
park in addition to conveying the
land.
The oceanfront property was
originally part of Avco's develop·
ment plans for the south coast
area but the specific project
planned for the property -
originally called Salt Creek
Beach --:-was stymied by the
State Coastal Commission.
That opposition carried oVer to
the deal between the company
and the county and Avco delayed
Fro.Page Al
VIEJO •••
Beck took the same honor for
preserves. Jan Spear's pastries
were declared the best in the
category and Carol Hansen took
first in the cakes and other baked
goods division.
The events at the golf course
culminated the five-day com-
munity celebration.
Nixon Denies Role
In Tape Erasure
WASHINGTON (API -
Former President Nixon has de-
nied under oath '"personal
responsibility•• for the 18~
minute gap in a White House tape
recorded three days alter the'
Watergate break-in, his lawyers .
disclosed today_
The tiape gap remains one or
.. the mysteries of the Wateriate
scandals which drove Nixon to
resign. The -disclosure came at.
a bearing before a special three-
judge court created to consider
N'ixon's attempts to regain con-
trol and possession ol tbe tapes
and 42 million documents and
papen aceumulated durtna his
5~·year presidency.
Nixon lawyer Herbert J . MWer
r. aald the government, in aeek-
ins to retain control ol lhe Nixon
materll.ls, has quesUoned the
O.year"'°Jd former president's
·character.
"They say Mr. Nixon Is un-
trustworthy, Mr.•Nlxon will dis-tort the ™ord, that Mt. Nixon
erttted lhe 18\t·mlnute C•P "
lillllet Uid. "With I ~lo il.e
Ult-minute taP, lllr. wu
illlerroC•ted by the cilll"" of the
apeclal prwecutor:. ''
Nixon_ tpt111ed In • :.t':laI IWlon ~two -of a
WatergategrandjurylastJ~e.
· Referring to that testimony.
Miller said, ''Let them (the
Justice Department) challenge
that his (Nixon's) responsibility
(for the tape gap) was denied un-
der oath."
Garden Club
Slates Meet
M.i11ion Viejo Botanicos
Garden Club members will share
hobbies and crafts at Wed-
nesdoy'11:30 p.m. meeting at the
Mission Viejo Swim and Racquet
Club1 Tierra Circle and Mos-
quero Lane.
Club plans for the comlna year
includill 1'0rk1bop1, cuest
speakers and field trips, accord·
Ing to LeUy Skeen, publlclty
chail'l!I••· The orConbaUon la •lso lnvolvecl In plant aales, -to<l.,'l Ule :st.t'otnclt't l>aJ '*'"" an annulll cammunl·
13' ~II Inform ...... club -~111v1ua1111_,,_a.... clyAJWa.~
malting many Ot the improve·
ments due to snags in approval of
surrounding residential projects.
When the promised improve-
ments were not completed, the
county withheld the remaining
$280,000 it hadn't paid to the com·
pany for the land. Under terms of
the new arrangement, that
money will now be paid.
But because of the delay, infla-
tion has added an estimated $120,000 to the cost of the remain-
ing improvemehts, bringing to
$400,000 the cost of completing
them.
Taxi Driver.
Recovering
From Knifing
A Santa Ana taxi driver was re-
ported doing well today in a local
hospital after being stabbed in
the neck Sunday by a young as4
sailant in what Orange County
Sherifrs officers described as a
motiveless attack.
Rich said the diver frantlcaIJ:f
tried to find bis air-bole moutli
piece, bUL could not. Additional'·
ly, be was heavily weig)Jted an4
was unsuccessful in inflating bii
lifevest.
The body was swept awa~·
while Miss Scully fought for beJ
life too, Lt. Rieb said. ' ,
•
Supervisor Thomas Riley said
1 the company will landscape, im-
. prove parking lots, install
sprinklers and replace van-
dalized light fixtures and
bathrooms.
Deputies said Yello.w Cab
driver Donald Carles Ra}rmond.
32, was attacked in the Tustin
area after he picked up a young
man near the intersection of 4th
Street and' Grand Avenue in San·
ta Ana.
Deputies said the attacker
made no attempt to rob his vic-
tim. They said he ran from the
cab after wounding the driver
and disap~ared near the in· tersection of Holt and Warren
streets.
Divers found the body in eigJ
to 10 feet or water a~ y~
from the spot where the ooupl'
had entered the water. . i Lt. Rich said the tragic inc
dent pointed out the danger of a
tempting to dive when the surf i
high. Aliso Beacb is patrolled b~ San Clemente Life1Uards wor
ing under a contract with th
county. A lifeguard was sta,
tioned about a quarter mil(
away, but the drowning wa!
screened from his view by aaanC
berm.
•
Riley added that the pact also contains a clause providing for
the county to perform the wo"rk
and bill Avco if it is determined
the company isn't proceeding
satisfa~torily. •· ..
•
•
•
• • • Manners gwes you
up-to a s1,soo tax
deduction th~s yea& ••
' ••. AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU
CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND
AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE-
TIREMENT ACCOUNT. .
Mariners Individual Retirement
Account Is a personal tax-sheltered
retirement plan. "IRA" ·was devel-
oped by Congress to give you an
effective way to buil~ your own retire-
ment fund.
You can save as much as $1500 or
15% of your wages, whichever is less,
and your saving_s will be a tax dedu<>-
tlon during your working, year3. If
your spouse works, your combined
tax-sheltered savings can be aa much
as $3000 per year. •
Come In to Mariners and start your
own Individual Retirement Account.
You'll be saving tax dollars now and
bulldlno a much brighter future. For
111o~e lnformat!on, come in or call any
one oJ our convenlenl l_ocatlons.
•
HERE"S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS "IAA ''ACCOUNT. lrtd/vldu•I Retlr&ment Acoounrt .,. ,,,..,.,,,,,
.-mint/ 1~ ._, f)9r r-ar wh.,, pi.<:fld in • 6--yeer ~Ifie.,.. Your
•"""'' yleHJ ;, llttifHs«I to• big. 8.06% wh!M lntwnt Is •ddfld to ,,,. acco11n1 NlaflCft •nd compounded d•lly. With • maximum
1naivkhMI contribution ol $1500 lNICll ye.r, 11_,,·s how "°"' moner _,,,, rlfOW:
WITH TAX wm«>UT EXTRA
SHELTERED TAX MONEY
IRA SHEL TEAED FROM TAX
AFTEll PLAN PVJI DEFER ML .
5yrs, s 9,510 "i's e,m s 2,780
10yrs,,. 23,540 15,7lill • 7,790
20 ytl. 7~.640 .c.1,080 30,seG
30yro. 1115,560 95,030 90,520
·~bow9 Hour• .,.. bued on 25% Income btacktt. F.a.r.\
rwQ\ll•tlonl teq\llM tubSlantl•I peNltin I.Of MrlY Wllhcltttalt
trom oerUllcat• aa!O\ln11. r
vine
EDJ TI 0 N
TodaY'sCl .. 111«
N.Y.Steeka
••
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1975 TENCENT~
Ford OptHnistic ~
----ReCOJ)ery Com_ing, He Says
Carl"flillfl a Torcla
'fuga-togged Bud zerboni carried a torch
past UC Irvinks 11th group of new stu-
~ts to touch off the "0" Week Olym-
piad. The athletic antics include a frisbee
i .
golf tournament, arm-wrestling matches
and others aimed at generating school
spirit. Orientation Week began today for
about 2,500 new -UC! students.
·2 Fight Over Runaway
M~n Jmled in Fight With llnlotuled Guns
Two Irvine men Were jailed
early today after they allegedly
brandished unloaded guns at
each other in a dispute touched
off J>y a teenace runaway girl.
apartment cry, ''He's &ot a gun,''
said Nash.
and resisting arrest.
Carlisle was cited for disturb-
ing: the peace.
lly DOUGLAS FarnscRE
Of .. CMHyPl•llllff
A bulli1b Prealdenl Gerald
Ford SUnday told a business au·
dlence in Oran•• County that the
Dat1on's economy la well oo the
way to recovery. Attempts to
speed It, he said, coWd lead to dluster.
"Never foraet, •• said Ford,
"
1lh•t the government that ls big
enough to 11lve you everything
Y9J want is a aovernment that is
big enough to lake ever)'lhlng
you have."
· F0<d'1 Lalk al lhe Disneyland
Hotel in Anaheim lo 2,400 mem-
bers of lhe Naliona) Asaociatloo
Trustees ·
To Study
Jet Issue
Irvine school trustees, wbowon
a battle lo close the old Irvine
School due to aircraft noise from
El 'fyro Marine Corpe Air Slation,
plan to look lonigbt al what lhey
believe might be a renewed threat
to district facilities -com-mercial planes at El Toro.
Trustees will comider a i'esolu·
tiori opposing ''joint use" of the
Marine field at tonlghl's 7:30
o·clock meeting at University
High School 4771 Campus Drive.
The girl, 17, bad.teft home last
weelrfollo'Mi g: an arl\Jment with
her parenta, aecordi.Dg to Irvine ·~Police Detective Steve Nash. '
When she went down to in-
vestigate, she found herseli star-
ing into the barrel of Mac-
carone.'s rifie, Nash said. She
called police.,
Maccar.one l'a' aqested on
cbarc•• of l!r'8ndhhlng a firearm,_ disturbini lhe peace
The teenage girl was cited for
lack of parental control and re-
leased to her parenls' custody.
Both Stonecipher and Mac-
~arone were held pending $1,500
Last month, Orange County
supervisors voted to seek U.S.
Department of Defense approval
to add commercial fights lo the
Marine base. This is the first op.
portunity the Irvine trustees have
, had to respond ·officially lo the
aupervisors' appllcaUon.
Already, lhe Clty of Irvine baa
launched an antJ-aireraft cam-
pai1n composed of leaflets
.clr=Jated lhroughout the area
that would be affected by com-mercialpl~oes at El'roro .
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She found refuge al the home of
a friend al Park West apart-
ments, N uh said.
. Nash claimed the girl was an:
no"yed by the frierid's father,
Davjd Edward Stonecipher, 47, Ot 3801 Park.view Lane ..
Stoneeiplier was charged with
ctiild apnoyance, brandishing a
fin;ann.and assault with a dead-
lyw~a'wn. ·
The girl, said Nash, had passed
on word of the allegation. to other
friends. One friend, Michael
Mario Maccarone, 21, of
University Park. drove to the
StonMipher· home Sunday night
to take her away, Nash said.
According to Nash, an argu-
ment erupted and Stonecipher
brought out a .38 caliber Smith
and Wessen revolver; threatened
Maccarone and ultimately pistol-
whif>Jfed him. The gun later pro-
ved to be unloaded.
Maccarone left, returning
around midnight with a friend,
Terry McQue Carlisle, 18, of
Irvine, Nash said. The pair car-
ried an unloaded i"ifle, ~2dded.
A neighbor, Patricia Elaine
Marshall, 22, beard someone in
the Stonecciphe·r,s downstairs
Man Shot to Death
' -HACIENDA HEIGIITS (UPI)
-Daniel Holland, 20, was shot to
·death early today while standing
in front of.his'bQme. Sberifrs de-
puties said they knew of no
motive and had no, sus~ i~e
shooting. .
•
-Pepperdine
Head Held
bail. .. ,.
St~..,. Surf
Brea Diver DroWlls
In l.aguna Waves
Battering surf claimed the life
ol a 29-year-old Scuba diver Sun·
day at ~Aliso Beach in South
Lacuna.
John Lally or Brea was found
by San-Clemente Lifeguard
divers about an hbur after the de-
ceased and a female companion,
Mary Scully of Rblinda bad en-
tered the water. ·
Lifeguard Lt. Andy Rich said'
that as the couple reached the
surf line, they were battered by
the big waveS which knocked off
LaJly's face mask and snorkle.
Rich &aid the diver*r · cally
tried to find his air-outh
piece, but could not. ional-
ly, be was heavily weighted and
was unsuccessful in inflating his
lifevesl.
The body was swept away
while Miss Scully fought for her
life loo, Lt. Rich said.
Divers found the body in eight
to 10 feet of water about 40 yards
from the spot where'the couple
had entered the waler
Lt. Rich said the tragic inci·
dent pointed out the danger of al·
tempting to dive when the surf is
high. Aliso Beach is patrolled by
San Clemente Lifeguards work·
ing under a contract with the
county. A lifeguard was sta·
tioned about a quarter mile
away, but the drowning was
screened from his view by a sand
berm.
Nixon Denies Role
--~~ Tape Erasure
WASHINGTON .CAP> Miller said. ''Let them <the
Former President Nixon has de-Justice Department) challenge
n_ied under oath ''personal that bi3 <Nixon·s ) responsibility
responsibility'' for the 18¥.a· (for the tape gap) was denied un-
minute gap in a White HouSe tape-der oath ...
recorded three days after the Lawyers for the former presi-
Wateriate break-in, his lawyers dent claim Nixon has a constitu-
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-discl~edtoday. . tional ri&ht of owenership to the
lne.district attorney's of. The t·Ape gap remains one of documents and thousands of
fice char.•ed Pepperdine the myateries of the Watergate hours of tape reels from his ad-• 3candals which drove Nixon to ministration. _
Univeralty Cha,ncellor M. retign. The disclosure camt a1' Miller said a nine-month-old
1Noryell Youngi tod1,y with a trearing before a special three-federal law providing public ac-
twO coun.ts of felO'ny judge court ·created to consider cess to the Nixon records is un·
{manslaughter-and One of Nixon's attempts to regain con-constitutional under the Fourth drUnlte~,driyiftg ih connec-A d r th with' a fi-'·a\Jto....,ci-IJ;9I lin\i ~session of lbe lapes and Firsl men ments o e ~iz aDd 42 million aocummts and Constitution. . ~hich res;f!ted in the pape'n . a¢Umulated. during his · He said any former president
;dea of two w men:
1
S'h·year presidency. . . . , . bas . the right to select which
The, city council al99 has given
the go-ahead for some heavier
measures: threatened lawsuits
against county govemment at-
tempting to annex the Marine
base; spearheading an intensive
lobbying campaign; and having
the city transportation com-
mission look into more ways to
oppose "joint use," as combined
commercial and military flights
at El Toro have been calJed.
The trustees' resolution points
out the deteriment to the health
and welfare or students in noise-
bombarded schools It also cites
the financial crunch such a move
could put on the district·s building
program
Taxi Driver
Recovering
From Knifing
A Santa Ana taxi driver was re·
ported doing well today in a)ocal
hospital after being stabbed in
the neck Sunday by a young as·
sailant in what Orange County
Sherirf·s officers described as a
motiveless attack.
Deputies said Yellow Cab
driver Donald Carles Raymond,
32, Was attacked in the Tustin
area after he picked up a young
man near the intersktion of 4th
Street and Grand Avenue in San·
ta Ana.
Deputies said the attacker
made no attempt to rob his vic-
tim. They said he ran from the
cab after wounding the driver
and disappeared near the in -
tel'ISection of Holl and Warren
streets.
FwrUlaKlan
Seeks Members
· Deputy D~~ A!Wnoy., · hi !Bob hltrrian 1.sSid •Young, · Niion Ja'Wjer Herbert J. Miller materia~~Cll s years in office WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
being trea•·ed,-at Santa. ( .{r.saidthe,&overnmen~,lnseek· will be 'ma·cre public, insuring (UPI) -The diners and
Monica Hospital ror in-. Ing to retain'Control of'lhe'Nixon preiervation of a president's waitresses laughed when about
es b~ suifer"ed inithe ac· · materials. bas questioned tbe right to privacy and the privacy 20 hooded Ku Klux KJansmen en-ddent. would ff arraigned 62,-year-olcf former ·president's ri1hts of those to whom be tered a Lake Worth restaurant.
cm the charges Oct. 3. _ cbaracte.r. speaks. Led by Grand Dragon John the accident occurred .. They s•y Mr. Nixon is un-"This is a wholesal~ seizure,·· Paul Rogers, the KJansmen. un-
Tuesday aa·a car dr1ven ~tworthy, Mr. Nixon will dis-Millersaidotthenew1aw.which masked but wearing dark
by ·Ali ere, Frltsctt,e. 55! tort the record, that Mr. Nixon could eventlplally result in anyooe glaues1 announced t,hey, were on
Claremont, was stopped a ,created the ,18M:-minute gap,'' hearing u.Pon reque&tSOpteofthe a .. rect'uitrnent and awareness
a lraffic 1i'1tt .., l'aclllc :Miller anld:-''Wllh r Pt<t11i till!" la]>e recordinga made n the> drive .. 11round Polm Beach Coun-
C o 8 1 t ff 11 h way ~ t 18JA-l'hlnute gap, "Mr. Nixon was White Houseovi:til ornce. ty. The drive, cooduct.ed &mday
Coastline Drive. YOlllll al-lnterrocaled by" lhe otrice of the The lawyer complained lhat , from a camper uucl<, hil aboul ·~dly re~r-ended the special proftCUtor ,. while Congress. declared it.a in·. nve restaurants iA. the county
, ole, causU!g the fllel Nl>.on teatified 0 ii' •. s,~al lentlon lo P,l'elerv6 the historical and quicklx picked up considera-t>nt of fhe woman's auto Hsslon be(Ore tw~ mem~oi a record of only lb Watercate hie police sbrvell)a.<lce.
to p!Ode. Wai.ercoLelrandJurylutJWie. ~' ecandaltr, tbe•matorlllls.-.No dlsju~banl:ea were re-lli':;:...J..;;. _______ ~.JU11errlnl lo tbal...toaUmonY, lsM NIXON, Pap.uJ'--'C.... · Port..t:.. ·...:..:.._ -
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of Life Underwriters, an tn-
surance industry group. was a
mixture of pr•ise ot fre8 en-
terprise and indictment of big
covernment.
Targets for the bnuit ol Ford's
assault on bie government were
••new spending 1>r~ams'' in·
·tended to relieve the country's
unemployment and bring an end
to more than two yean ol re-
cession.
Characterizing such moves as
j'lrresponsible'' and likely to ''re·
U1ht the fires of in nation," Ford
promised to continue lo use his
veto power to quash increased
government spending.
Ford's talk c.ame in the aecoocl·
day or a three day •wins t.hrou&b:
California, aprinkled with pre...
campaign efforts to gam~ •LIP...
port in the nation's mo1t
~~:~:;it:~e. to White Hou1e:
Press Secretary Ron' Nessen.
Ford plans to follow up ~lb a
pair of return visits lo California
in late October for GOP funil·'
raising dinner5 in San Francisc:O
and Los Angeles.
Former Gov. Ronald Re11an.
speculated lo be a Ford Qpponen.t
for the Republican nomfnatklo
next year, is listed asoneof,2Sc»--.
(See FORD, Page AZ>
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0
UPt•::&~
HURRICANE ELOISE GETS SECOND WIND
~torm Moves Toward Guff Co a at
Eloise Takes Aim :-
On Gulf -Coast
MIAMI (UPI) -Hurricane
Eloise, packing winds of 85 miles
an hour, churned t<Xiay toward
the Gulf Coast ports of Mobile,
Ala., and Pensacola, Fla., and
residents boarded up their homes
and prepared to move inland.
The National Hurricane Center
issued hurricane warnings from
Grand Isle, La., to Apalachicola.
Fla., and urged s mall craft to re·
main in port. It also warned
there was a possibility that
tornadoes might occur in ad-
vance of the storm.
"All precautions over the Mis-
s issippi Delta region of
southeastern Louisiana should be
B-uck Rogers
Bandit,s llse
Electric Gun
MIAMI (AP> -The young
blonde in a pink sweater walked
into the gas station and zapped
the attendant, William Lawson,
with a 50,000-volt electric gun .
Then she and a male accomplice
robbed the station and fled .
''l 0 d rather it had been
somebody else:· said Lawson,
27.
Police said he was the first
known victim of the electronic·
age dart gun, which immobilizes
victims.
Lawson told police the young
woman entered the station and
asked to use the Phone . The at-
tendant said as he showed her to
the phone, she turned toward him·
and, "calm and smiling,'' shot
him.
"It was like sticking your
flllger in a wall socket," he said.
He is still shaken and sore from
the robbery Wednesday.
.. 1 fell on the floor and couldrl,'t
move. It was the worst pain l
ever felt .. , he· said. "My whole
ISeeZAP, P1geA2)
FIRSI' DULER
BOUGllT 'BUG'
"I sold my car to the first
person who called.··
That's the advertising success
experienced by the Huntington
Beach woman who placed this ad
in.the Daily Pilot:
1966 VW ·Bug, very clean
$650. XXX·XXXX
If you have a car you want to
convert to cesh, call 642-5678.
We make It e .. r far you to put
a few words to work.for you -in
lhe Daily Pilot.
'
rushed lo completion immed!tte-
11!;.'' the center said. "Elsewher9
id the warning area, actlo1111
should be conpleted this after·
noon.''
Eloise was expected to make a
swipe al the mouth of the Mis,.
sissippi River this afternOQtr,
then move eastward and come
ashore tonight in the Mobile·
Pensacola area, bring 5 to 10-
inch rains to southern and
eastern Alabama, northwest
Florida and much of Georgia. :
At midday. Eloise was cen-
tered near 27 .2 degrees north
latitude and 89.6 degrees west
longitude, about 210 miles south
of New Orleans. Peak sustained
winds remained at 85 miles an
hour, but hurricane forecasters
said conditions remained favor•
bl e for further strengthening
before it reached land. Gal~
force winds extended north frOm
Eloise·s center for 125 miles.
Eloise claimed 34 lives last
week when it slashed Puerto
Rico '8.rld the Dominican
Republic with 80 mph winds and
torrential rains. The storm lost.
much of its strength in the-moun-
tains of southeastern Cubll, but
was upgraded to hurricane Status
again today as it picked"' up
strength over the Gulf of Mexicd.'
Disaster preparations ac-
celerated along the storm-
scarred Gulf Coast as Eloire
moved closer to land, and most
civil defense and Red Cross of-
fi cials said they would make de·
cisions shortly on whether to
evacuate residents.
Coast
Weather
Dense fog along the coast
will in crease tonight and
Tuesday morning. I-lazy
sunshine toda y and slightly
cooler Tuesday with highs
in mid-80s, low tonJghl in
mid-605.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Prelidenl Ford today called
for crea.Jion of SlOO-billicm re·
seorch corporation to givt' no·
lion em>r!IJI independt'l'lCE' in JO
yecus. A-S.
Index -•• --~.::i: •• -...i u.,.e,, .. ......... "*-C>no• •• M14lor'l.llH '"
•• .. .,_ . ' ......... .. ,, 0r-.. °""'l' • ....... . .. -· • OW.w\I ... ..,,.,, .......... --" •• -"' .~ ...... .. ---' ::; .. ·-··: •• .... -. " ... -• My~, •• --•• I
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DAILY PILOT
SLAHit
In Paper
:By Patty
.
1
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) ·-The
FBI has a ·seven-pa2e docum ent
in which Patricia Hearst made
t critical comments about her
--Symbion.e se Liberation Army
. companions, it was rePorted ~
day. · The San Francisco Chronicle
I said FBI agents found the docu-
ment Friday in the apartment
~·here Miss Hear st and fellow
fugitive Wendy Y<oshimura had
been arrested the day before.
Charles Bat~s. 'fpeci al agent in
c harge of the FBI office here, re-l fused to comment, saying to do so
t.'OUld prejudice tri a~vidence.
The n e ws p ape r quoted a
••source close to the case" as say-
ing the document is ''a missive of
conde mnat ion·' addressed to
William and Emily Harris, Miss
Hearst's SLA colleagues. The
couple are "more than strongly
, criticized,'' the Chronicle quoted
'
------PATTY TO TESTIFY
AT HEARING?-AJ
the samC unidentified source as
saying. The complainls involvE' "cer-
tain 'actions' .. that the Harrises
had "eithe r taken part in or were
advocating" that others in the
••revolutiouary struggle'' dis-
agreed with. a ccording to
·another source quoted in the
Chronicle story.
The FBI said today it had no in-
formation that Miss Hearst was
,ever in the Phoenix area. as re-
port.ed by Newsday.
"We have no location at all in
Phoenix or elsewhere at this
time," said Roger Young, assi~
tant special agent in charge of the
.Phoenix FBI office.
The New York Times reported
l ,today that the dOcument indicat-
,ed a possible break between Mi ss
·Hearst and other elements of the
SLA.
The Times said the document
showed the Misses Hearst and
Yoshimura were opposed to the
use of bombings and other ter-
rorist activities advocated by the
rHarrises and members of the
Soliah family.
Police Lose
Pot Plants
CODY, Wyo. (UPI) -
Police chief Al Vanderpool'
sa)'s he.hasn't caought the
thieves who swiped two
three-foot marijuana
plants from the Park CouJ>.
ty sberifrs office window
still but he has plenty of sus-
pects.
••we suspect everyone
who walked into the office
grinning from ear to ear
asking · what happened to
our Pot plants,'' he said.
The crooks pried open a
window to get at the plants,
which were used for drug
workshop demonstrations.
Officers reporting for duty
the next morning found the
plants clipped off at the
base.
• .
·:NIXON ••• ,
f
'by the new laW include tapes and
notes of Nixon's role as father
t and husband as well as presi-
dent.
1 "These tapes are interspersed
Lwitb conversations between Nix·
[on and his trusted aides a
Ca.et. member. his Cabi'net
; DJ.Imber, his daughter, and
dreign leaders,'' Miller said.
'"By seizing these papen; the
Congress bas violated his rights
:!~ privacy and intruded on bis
~gilts under the First Amend-~t to free speech,•• be added.
.. • •
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed
Pr~afld~
Jack R. Curley vu~-co.-•-.....
Thomas Keevll lld1lor
I
~ Thomas A. MIJr'l)Nne
> • ,,,_"991,,. Ediklr
• OlarlesH.1-1 RlcllonlP.Nall ~* .............
• l
:t;Jig Surf
Batters·
Coast
Storm 1urf cru•lnc ""°"' · alq the South Oranse Coan
produced a heavy toll al IQjuri .. and ......,.... ,.,. San Cl-
atid 1.a,..... Beach Jlf .......
overlheweekend ••
Lalv•a •••rd• reoev.14 a ~-Sall Cl-...-rescued eo penoao. Tm.,.._
were owept from the -..Wit«
itt Dana Point Harbor S.mdl,I':
Three per1on1 were
bolpitallsed roUowlnll the Incl'·
dent Su.nday mornlDt at the
harbor, U. Harry G .. e said. He
aald the IQjured Wen! releued
after treatment at San Clemente General Hospital. .
In Laauna Beach, Craig pryr.
fer, 12, WU bospitlllted Satur-my after his aurfboord atruct
him In the bact and -e bis
shoulder blade. .
, Life1111arc1& treated' the youth'
for abocl< and back h1juries. He
was taken to South Coast Com·
munity Hospital by Laguna
Beach Fire Department am ..
bulance. ,
Seller Willa
ThURaflle
1'11erunawo,..-o1a . ...... ~ ......
tbe 0r...,. CoalltJ' roir-
1roud1 •••])! meet l.n COila Mesa Sawtq wu
apparently the 1"7 Millnc
the Ucketa -UAUI Joe
, co11lda't produce Ille
prise.
• A pTOtpectlYe tfe,bt.
bu1er ..... ·-lo -wbal lie wu maybe llOillll
to wlA ealled police 1o • J"alr.Drin after pmllt*W
--lo ......... Ille pill! bike failed. ''Tllroulh mutual . .,._
meat between hlmMff end
the ra1r,.-, the -
-olor decided It -
Ume to -dowa," ._ CooUi M-Pollee ~ tivel'bl1-McConnld:.
Tbe IOtt..,--ator-not arnmted but pollee 1114
bil departm'e WU luill1•
1
.
Gas Cba11me.;
Ordered for·
Slayer of 5
PR
' O.Uy P'ti.I ,..... IW IUcMr'll K ......
ESIDENT FORD GREETED IN ANAHEIM BY INSURANCE LEADER NORMAN LEVINE
2,400 Cheered As Ford Promised Economic Healtb Without 'New Spending Programs"
.Jamie Gallno, 21, resldeoceun-
known, was re5cued Sunday from
surf at St. Ann's street beach. He
was pulled from the water in a
state of near exhaustion
life1111ards said. "
Pfyffer was reported in
satisfactory condition today.
Galino was released. after treat-
ment.
REDDING CAP) -Robert
Paul Sander wu amtenced to-
day to die in the gaa dlamber for
the sniper slayings of five
peroons in a Smith River motel
last March.
From Page Al
FORD •••
hosts for the dinners, Nessen
said.
Asked whether this' meant the
Reagan c:1mpaign was waning,
Nessen said, ''What Reagan cam·
paign? Where is it?'' __ _
Ford's arrival by helicopter to
the Disneyland Hotel was greet·
ed by a cheering crowd of about
500 as secret service agents and
Anaheim and Disneyland police
whisked him from the tightly
secured landing pad in a short
motor caravan to the rear en·
trance of the hotel Grand
Ballroom. In his speech, which was fre-
quently interrupted by applause
from the enthusiastic audienCe
Ford credited the insurance in:
dustry with being a major source
of capital financing that will re-
tumeconomic health to the U.S.
Ford said he was hesitant to
take steps such as additional tax
cuts to speed economic recovery
for fear of disastrous after-
effects; "going from ballelujah
to heartbreak in one swift move.••
: At the same time, he said it is
impossible to underesti~ate
'.,'the human tragedy of Un·
.employment.'' ·
"Ther~ is a term in economics
that really bothers me -
'acceptable level of unemploy-
ment.• There is no acceptable
level of unemployment '' the
President said. '
"One of the prime goals of this
administration is to sustain the
economic progress now under
way !lnd to put. unemployed
A~encans back on the job," he
said. •
But the way to do it, he said is
through the free enterprise •
system, not new government
spending programs.
Coroners
To Study
Lung Piece
Coroner·s deputies today
planned to examine a hunk of
lung tissue found on a beach in
Balboa late Sunday -a probe to
determine if the organ is human. Police said that a Newport.
Beach resident walking on the
strand near L Street fll'St dis-
covered the piece of tissue lying
near the water's edge.
Officers said that the rmder
first buried the organ, then went
home and phoned for patrolmen.
Police first took the tissue to
Hoag Memorial Hospital, and
doctors there identified it as a
lung but without special tests, the
determination of its origin would
be difficult. Police then contact·
ed coroner's deputies to arrange
forthetesL
Wife Guilty
In Mutilation
MERCED (AP) -A 28-year·
old V1Salla bouaewif, bu been
convicted of nrst-dep-ee murder
In the Sept. 22, 1974 aa mutila·
tlon alayinC of William "'Corley"'
Stubun, 21, of VJaalla.
• JCrs. Karen Jentry was con·
vtcted in Merced County
_Superior Court by a nine-woman,
tb..-mao jury wbicb dellberat·
ed5~houn. '.l'h• woman and ber husband,
Elmer Von Jentry, 28,of Vilalla,
/ are accused of strlldnl Stuhaan
on the bead with • bamn;ier,
· alaahlnJ hla throat and salllll1 mlllll•Uncbim.
Improvements Set
For Niguel Beac.,,,
Weekend surf of four to six feet
was reparted kicked up by a
tropical storm off Baja
California. Surf was nmning at
two to four feet along beaches to-
day.
F.--PageAJ
The bearded, 23-year-old
Sander refused to stand wben
sentence was pronounced by
SUperior CoW't Judie Fr•• .. Petersen. _.., -r
The former Cincinnati depart.
ment store employe. convicted
by ajurj Sept. 4, refused to stand
when the bailiff ordered ·all to
rise aS the judge entered tbe
courtroom. By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
OftlwO•llf Pl._,.S&Mf
Avco Community Developers,
Inc. has agteed to complete long-
promised major improvements
at Orange County's Niguel Beach._
Park following conclusion of a
new pact between the company
and county government.
The remaining improvements
at the beach park south of
Monarch Bay and north of Dana
Point wUl cost a9 estimated
$400,000, of wbicb ~.ooo will be
paid for by the coulity as part of the; original agreement signed
two years ago.
Under terms of tbat deal, Avch
transferred title to the beach and
some uplai:tds to the county for a
consideration of $880,000. The comp~ny agreed to perform
numerous improvements at the
park in addition to conveying the
land.
The oceanfront property was
originally part of A vco's develop-
Mesa Woman ·
Assaulted
Mter Party
A Costa Mesa woman who went
to a party in Laguna Hills Satur-
day, the night after her husband
began serving an Orange County
Jail term for manslaughter, was
raped by a mysterious intruder
early Sunday.
"Who are you?,'' the victim r~
partedly asked the diminutive
rapist. ·
"You don't have to know who I
am or where I 'm from .•. "the
stranger replied. . '
She told police the five foot,
12Q-pound man who surprised her
in the darkened bedroom spoke
in a thick Spanish. accent and
raped her twice.
Investigators were told the
rapist left the woman's central
Costa Mesa area home after get-
ting up for a drink of water.
She bad told him her children
were asleep in the next room and
warned they would be getting up
soon as a method of frightening
him away, police said
The victim told Officer George
Yezbick she bad another couple
as guests rollowing the party in
Laguna Hills and retired about 4
a .m .• rollowing their departure.
Crash Kills .
Tustin Rider
BALDWIN PARK (UPI) -A
20-year·old Tustin woman was
killed and her companion
seriously injured Sunday when
an automobile swerved into their
motorcycle on the crowded San
Bernardino Freeway then sped off. •
. Eileen Marie Nunez, a
pas~nser .the motorcycle
was dead o"-orflval at Baldwlri
Park Communit1, Hospital.
James Walter Barowy, 29,
Hotlywood1 was reported in ----wuon at-the ....,.,.
hospital.
The California Highway patrol
said the hft·hln drlve<..made an
unaafe lane cban1e and crllhed Into the motorl:ycle, ~
both v1c111u off tile bike aa1o tbil
....pst ........ ·~-~-
ment plans for the south coast
area but the specific project
planned for the property -
originally called Salt Creek
Beach -was stymied by the
State Coastal Commission.
That opposition carried over to
the deal between the company
and the county and Avco delayed
making many of the improve-
ments due to snags in approval of
surrounding residential projects.
When the promised improve-
ments were not completed, the
county withheld the remaining
$280,000 it hadn't paid to the com-
pany for the land. Under terms of
the pew arrangement. that
mone)t.will now be paid.
But because of the delay, infla-
tion has added_ an estimated
$120,000 to the cost of the remain-
ing improvements, bringing to
$100,000 the cost of completing
them.
Super"(isor Thomas Riley said
the company will landscape, im-
prove parking lots, install
sprinklers and replace van··
dalized light fixtures and
bathrooms.
ZAP •••
right side was jumping. I
couldn't control my muscles.''
Lawson said the woman .. was
joined by a man who leaned over
and pulled the wires from the
darts in bis belly, then helped the
woman clean out the Cl\Sh re-
gister. of an undeterfnined
amount. One dart was left in his
flesh.
Police said eight of the
weapons, called the ''Taser
Public Defender,'' were stolen
. fromanofficeinMiamiSbores.
The Taser, which Lawson said
reminded him of a gray
flashlight, launches two small
darts attached to batteries by
18-foot wires. f.he darts can
penetrate J'h inches of clothing
and tbe 50,000-volt charge Is
described as incapacitating and
very painful.
The weapon's makers; Taser
Syste.m Inc. of Los Angeles,
descnbe it-as a nonlethal crime·
prevention device ror stopping
attackers in their tracks.
The judge also asked him to
stand before he imposed sen·
tence.
''No, I will not,'' Sander said.
The judge then asked if there
was any legal reason why sen-
tence should not be pronounced..
''Carry on,'' Sander said. \.
•'The sentence carries an
automatic appeal to the
California Supreme Court.
·ctemente Tot
•
Moleste'a I
f • •
A 5-year-old San Clemente girl
was lµred into an alley alcot
and forced to participate in a ~
act Sunday fu San Clemente.
The child was unharmed b.Y
her assailant Who gave her a '1.
bill following the act. ;
The incident look place dt
about 1 p.m . behind a gisoline
service station near Avenidas
.Esplanade and Barcelona
•
• • Mariners gives you
up ·t~ a "Sl,SOO tax
deduction this ye~ ...
.•. AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU ~
CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND
AT MARINERS , WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE-
TIREMENT ACCOUNT. . · ·
Mariners Individual Retirement
Account is a personal tax·sheltered
retlremenl plan. '"IRA" was devel·.
oped by Congress to give. you an
effective way to build your own retlre-
menl fund.
You can save as much as $1500 or
15% of your wages, whichever Is less,
and your savings will be a tax deduo-
tion during your working years. If
your spouse . worl<S, your combined·
tax-sheltered savings can be as much
as $3000 per year. •
Come In.to Mariners and start your
own Individual Retirement Account.
You"ll be saving lax dollars now and
bulldlng a much brighter future. For
more Information, c;ome In or call any
one o.f our tonvenlent locaUons .
"
HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROW$ IN A MARINERS
"IR~" ACCOU~T. lmJfvldua/ RalfremMI AC'CIOClllll are Pf9ffttl"1
•rn111fi 7°"'Mt per ~r Wl)fHI pl1c9d In e 6•)'Hr c.rlllicate. Your
•nnw yleld f1/ncreat9d10 • bfg. 8.06% whfHI ;nterest Is etld«J to
'"-aa:ount h•lence ind compounded deity, With • me11lmum
lnol!lldual co11ttlbu11011 01. ''"'° Heh yHT, M,...., bow your
money will grow: '
WITH TAX WITHOUT EXTRA
SHELTERED TAX ~ MONEY
IRA SHELTERE FAOMTAX ...... PLAN PLAN OEFEftllAI.
-5yra. $ 9,510 $ 8,730 . $ 2,780
• 10yra.. 23,540 15,7!i0 7,790
:20yra. 74,840 44,080 30,560
30yia, 165,560 • 9!!.030 90,520
"ADCW Hour• .,. b9Md on 25• lncomt bt"llCMt. Fedtt•I
t911ulallont .-.quh'e 1ubt1emlal Ptn<l• for wty •\~
lrom •Uflc:ai .. eocoun1•. '".:
•
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T•••Y" Cleel"IC N.". 8•• ... •
•
I VOL ... N0.165, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1975 TEN CENTS
EJecirJe. Gun Za~ .JlolJIJerj ¥iet,tn.
I IOAJll (APJ -Tho -
.... ID a plall --•allied
........... t.U.Mdllf~
1loa aaedant, wuu.m ~
-• 11,009-wlt -· .... ~ a11a and a aulle ...,...,. ...
·-· atatloa ..,S llod. "I'd rather It had l>ean •••llodt etae,·· ukl Lawlcm..
:11.
Nee .......... Ille 111.t
......... n.u. ol Ille ...... """'" :.dart ..................... .. -. La-llllld DOllee Ille -
--_... I.be ·-lllld -to -lllol ph«W Tho •· -•uldaalle•oadbwto
tllle .......... ----''calm and an•Hnc '"' lbat. lljm. •
"It ... Ilk• •tletias your . llnlerln • wNB oocUI," lleaeld.
"TteU • u;e nooc: .na cou1c1n·r
move. It was the wont p'1n I
ever felt.'" be ssld. ".117 whole
ri&ht .aide • a1 ~=in~. I coW.dn'tcoatrotmr es.' >
La-non 1aid the woman was
jolDod ~a man wboleanecl over
lllld eel the wino from the
dNrU iD bio belly, then helped the
;..,.,,.., clean o~t lhe eub ,...
Cil'ter of an undetermined amount. One dart wu:left in.hll Oeab.
Police said elaht nl tbe
weapons, c•lled the "'T••• Public Defen4er ," were 1tolm
from an office in MiamlSbonil.
' Tiie Taser, which Lawson saifl
reminded him of a 1ra7
Oashlipl, launchea two small
' .i.iu aU.CMcl to. batlAri• by • ;11.foot wlraa. The dU\I cu
_.irate I ii la-ol dot"'ns and the ·IO,OOO·volt cliarae I• doocrlbeil aa lacapaclUUac Md
very painful.
The weaPon'1 . makers. T ....
S:rwtem Inc. of Loa An&elo1,
-rtbe It u a llOllietbal erlme ~tlon devfce far ~DI
•ttackera In their track•.
Uteiati.re ·that · .. me. with ~
afatea that In early i.tln&, •
blut from. the gun usl~ oalY 30,000 volts nattened a 2:11>-Pounil
bull.
Lawson, ·who-w"eighs lfO
POUndl, was knocked senael-bla hearing and vision blllfl'9d.
Doctoni at Miami IntematloD-1
Holpital said an lach·lonc dart was removeCI from ,LaWIOll'C.
rtsht 1ide, juat abo,ve bis wallt.,
; . .
May:or Gibbs Charges Witc 1111
• , ..... 1 . \
•
0
.,.,. ..... _..
HURRICANE ELOISE GETS SECOND WIND
Storm Moires Toward GuH Coast ·
Eloise Takes Aim . . ' .
On Gulf Coast ,.
' -MIAMI .(UPI) -Hurricane
El~. packing windl or 811 mllea an bour; churned today towatd
the Gull Coast POrll or Mobile,
Ala., and Pensacola, Fla., and
residents boarded up their homes
and prepared to move inland .
The National Hurricane Center
issued hurricane warnings from
Gi'and Isle, La., to Apalachicola,
Fla., and urged small craft to re-
main in port. It also warned
there was a possibility that
tornadoes might occur in ad-
vanceof the storm. .
"'All precautions over the Mis-
a is s i'ppi Del'ta region ot
southeastern Louisiana should be
rushed to completion immedillte-
ly," the center said. "Elsewhere
in the warning area, actions
should be conpleted this after-
noon.''
Eloise was expected to make a
swipe at the mouth of the Mis·.
sissippi River this afternoon,
then move eastward and come
ashore tonight in the Mobile-
Pensacola area, bring 5 to 10..
inch rains to southern and
eastern Alabama, northwest
Florida and much of Georgia.
At midday, Eloise was cen-
tered near 27 .2 degrees north
latitude and 89.6 degrees west
longitude, about 210 miles south
of New Orleans. Peak sustained
winds remained at 85 miles an
hour, but hurricane. forecasters
said conditfons remained faVora-
ble for further strengthening
before it reached land. Gale
force winds extended north fri>m
Eloise's center for 12Smiles ..
Eloise elaimed1 34 lives last
week when lt'. slashed Puerto
Rico and the Dominican
Coast
.
Weather
~. . ~
llepub!M 1!ilh ., """' .... ~ .....-.& r-.iot. The -.. loilt.
nt.ucb of Its strength in the moon·
talns of southeastern CUba, but
was upgraded to burricme status
agaln.:ltoday as it picli:ed up
, strength over the Gulf or Mexico.
Disaster prepatations ac-
celerated along the Storm-
scarred Gull Coast as Eloise
moved closer to land, and most
civil defeme and Red Cross of.
ficials said they would make de-
cisions shortly on whether to
evacuate residents.
The Coast GUard---in New
Orleans said belicopten were liftla& .workers off oil rigs up to
130 oailea offshore, lllld Shell Oil
spokesman Brian Toal said
ev aCuation .of more than 800
persons on its offshore rigs would
be completed before nightfall.
One-I~ed . .
Skateooarder
Tries Harder . ' .,
Mike Johnson, a one-legged
skateboarder from Huntington
Beach was turned back Satunlay
in the world chamPionsbips in
Los Angeles, but 1116 q,. there~
will be many more big events,
"and I'm going to enter every
one of them.'• • .J
He, mi51ed qualifyiog f"I' the
' chan\pioliship round b)']uSt two
points.
"I made one mistake,'~ he said.
"On my Jump. I came dOwn on
the nose of the board instead of tltf': center. It sure ~dn't t~k
gi:llceful and il cost me &0me
points."
M.l ke, who. works for a
skateboard manufacturer in
Westminster, lost hia ri&ht leg
two years ago in a motorcycle
raciq accident in Virginia.
Matney's
Attack
Disputed
lly llOllEllT llAIIKEll ... Dtl...,,. .......
Huntina:ton .Beach Mayor
Norma Gibbs uid today that Ci·
ty Councilman Jerry Matney is
·engaged in a witcbhunt in bis
charges against City Ad -·
ministrator Dave Row)llnds and
alleged secrecy in government.
She said there is no foundation
to Matney's charges.
"I hate to see things brought
out in the personality arena. .. she
said. "It really leaves a strong
~as:te.''
uwe need to be 88 objective
and as calm as possible in the
operation of the city. I think ever-
yone is harmed by this type of
witcbhunt, ·• she said.
"The City Council is ab6olutely
not covering up anything,'' she
said. "H thine• do come out,
we'll-can \he'li:ounty Grand Jury imnledlatOly. •
"Al Ulli !IDie cO!i>Ptefelr back the-city administrator,'' she
s_aid. ''We're lookint into these
thing.-factuaJlY:1• not for
beaclllnes.
"Everyone is entitled to bis
opinion, but we should override
personal feelings,•• she added.
The Matney-Rowlands con-
troversy broke out Aug. 25 when
Matney charged Rowlllnds with
(SeeGIBBS, Pa&eAZ)
·west County
Bathers Get
7-foot Surf
Top surfing conditions were re-
ported today on the beaches Of
West Orange County with
breakers peaking at seven feet.
Lifeguai"ds &aid there were
many eight-footers Sunday. but
the surf generally1 ranged from
four to six feet both then and to-
day.
Heaxy fog shrouded the
strands this morning and cut the
visibility to 100 yards at times,
according to lifeguard.5.
Huge crowds took advantage of
i deal conditions over the
weekend. however 1 to pack the
Huntington Beach city beach
with turnouts of 30,000 on Satur-
day and ~.ooo on Sunday.
The surf , w lis · expected to
dimiriisb Tuesday, according to a ·
spokesman from t'1e U.S.
Weather Service.
He said the activity was
spawned by tropical storm Lilly
which bas now dissipated to 25-
.knot winds. tt is reported sta-
tionary about 1200 m iles
sou~west of Southern CaJifornia
and weakening.
\ .
Sclaoob Issue
• Detty,. ........ .., lltcMN -~
PRESIDENT FORD GRE£TED IN ANAHEIM BY INSURANCE LEADER NORMAN.LEVINE :
2,400 Cheered Aa Ford Promised Economic Health Without ·N-Spending Program•' !
Ford Bullish on EcOnomy
Also Takes .Stand Against Big· Government
ByDOUGLASFRITZSCHE
ot-.n.111"'9CSUff
A bullish President Gerald
Ford Sunday told a business au-
dience in Orange County that the
nation ·s economy is well on the
way to recovery. Attempts to
speed it, he said, could lead to
disaster.
"Never forget,'' said Ford,
"that the government that is big
enough to give you everything
you want is a government that is
big enough to take everything
you have.··
Ford"s talk at the Disneyland
Hotel in Anaheim to 2,400 tnem·
bers of the National Association
of Life Underwriters, an in-
surance industry group, was a
mixture of praise of Cree en·
terprise and indictment of big
government.
Targets for the brunt or Ford's
assault on big government were
··new spending prol(ratr1$" in·
tended to relieve t he country"s
WJemploymeot and bring an end
to more than two years of re-
cession. -:
Characterizing such moves as
.. irresponsible·• and lik'ely to ''re-
light the fires of infiatioo, •• Ford
promised to continue to use his
veto Power to quash i{lcreased
government spending.
Ford's talk came in the second
day of a three day swing through
California, s prinkled with pre-
campaign efforts to garner sup-
port in the nation's most '
populous state.
According to White House
Press Secretary Ron Nessen,
Ford plans 'to follow up with a
pair of return visits to California
in late October for GOP fund -
raising dinners in San Francisco
and Los Angeles.
Former Gov. Rona1d Reagan,
speculated to be a Ford opponent
for · the Republican nomination
next year, ii listed as one of 25 co-
hos ts for the dinners, Nessen
said. .
Asked whether this meant.the
Reagan campaign was waning,
Nessen said, "What Reagan cam•
paign? Where is it?''
Ford's arrival by helicopter to
the Disneyla nd Hotel was gre9-
ed by a cheering crowd or about
500 as secret service agents and
Anaheim and Disneyland Police
whisked him from the tilhtlY
secured landing pad in a short
motor caravan to the rear en-
trance of the hotel Granf
Ballroom. ·
In his speech, which was fre.·
quentl y interrupted by applaust!
from the enthusiastic audience
Ford credited the insurance ifl!.
dustry with being a major sourc'°'
of capital fin ancing that will rtl-turneconomic healthtotheU.S.:
Focd said he was hesitant · to
take steps such as additional tax
cuts to speed economic recovery
for fear' of disastrous after-
effects; "going from hallelujah
to heartbreak in one swift move.••
· At the sam e tim e, he said, it Is
impossi bl e to underestimatt-
''the human tragedy of u.D.
.employment.·•
Denae fog al•~• the coast will increase tonight and
Tuesday morning. Huy
sunalline today and slightly
cooler Tuesday with blCbs
hi niia:a>s, low toniglit ID • ·
~d..(l)s .•. \. t
He said a motorcycle ran over
his leg and doctors bad to· am-
putate it after 1 gangrene tie·
vel~. · . 11• sal.!l baving ooi11 'ope lefir ,
pOses "DO' great problems ,iil
-skateboarding. He 'feels. Uiat
Copd natut al balance com-
pens•l'!I f..; eny handicap ltlo ·
.Oection Battle Rages
"There is a term in economics
that r eal l y bothers me -
'acceptable level ol unemploy-
ment.· There is no acceptable
level or unemployment," the
President said.
!See FOllD, Page A.2)
r •
'INSIJHi:'TODAY ,
. Prtli<knl F'ord ioda!I caUerl ' for crNtlon o/ $1(10.bilfion re-_.h COl]>OrOtforlto flfv< ,...
/tioll...,,1111 ~in lO
-1.A..!.
.misht have. '
'
BY.,.TOllf BAllLEY · ur .. O.llr~•...,
A .O..rtroom batUe sparked
when the state Boatd of. F.duca-
tion called for scHobl ·dlstiict UD·
-• ilication el,ction1 In Fountain Snipers C&p~urecl Valley a•d l{untingtott Beach
went into its secop.d week tod-1,y 1 PEARBLOSSOM (lJPI) -A .)e_.~r. ange County Sil~erior t llMlex bullet from a high-powered rifie· ~· 1
-.. ., shattered the rear wlnClot! "Ora Jilli«• Ctaude M. Owens has
.... -.. --., awe~.., =-~ sUll not signed the writ that he c nrln Al --,. _..-_1 ..,_"'"" ., .....,.._ ., 11iaht the .....-Ute -~-•w.l"f' he'#Ould sign op
:::Ua , :: """"' •t: the tbree teen-•cert \micle.. tieeome • aeven-day bearing into
way for the Nov. 4 election in the
absence of the writ but that pro-
cess has been baited with the fil·
ing of a new lawsuit l;>y a group of
Fountain Valley residents.
ldenUfylng themselves Jn the
Superior !;ourt ac1lon as 11ME
(T:axpaJ-ets J ntere.ated \n
M!"'lclpal l!lconom}'> the Foun· ram Valley group -mns the
p1 ~eel el..,iion as illegal.
lawy.r..'tbat unlflcaUon would
create su'bstanUal and unlawful
differences in tax bases in the af·
· fected cliitrtcts.
One unification propoaal would
convert school di&tricta in Foun-
tala V~leyl'IDto-orie unified dis·
trict-kindergarten through high
school-:w(th the same boun-
'vdart... as the city ol Fountain
alley • -..... -'-
FIRSI' C41.LER
. BOVGHI 'BUG'
"I sold my car to the fll'lt
person who called.''
That's the adv,ertisi.ng success
experienced ~Y the Huntington.
Beach woman who placed this ad
in the Dally Pilot:
1966 VVl·Bua:.--very.clean
$650. -XXX·JtXXX ~ · u-n ~__,, .,, auspect•a veblcle and CJ~ the second d*Y of what has now
--:! ......,. •11·" Booked on syopicion or -pt· tbr:ee lawsuits filed 1oY the Xun· l =:.'~ · M .~,, r t .~ eel mun:lell ,.-ere Hucti Coonot. tlnaton Beach Unl'on .Hill\
-•• -M !9, .a-.. KcDonald. 18, and Sc-D.latrtct end 1111 Gardat
-They seek a coart itJar!nc into -
their addlUonal allesatlon that
the state acted unlawfully when
It ruled that voters COUid decide
on Iha~ er-ot tr: -•<:ho!>! dlttri ts ..
n.e· other proposal would take
territoa from the Jluntlnglon
Bead! City $cb0ol Dislrict <el•·
~) end add to it the por-
1iell.oUhe FOWltain Vall07 sc:hool
clWtrict ~t 11 .. inside the clly ol
Huntlaston Be!_cb.
· If you have a car )'OU want to
convert to c-esh, call 642·5678. "'
We make it easy for you. to~
·• few words to work for yoiu -18
'the Daily Pilot. · • ·~ ........... , ....... -..I......' M G () edSc I~ ... _ .. --\.. JamN Ilo1, '.19, all from U.O,All• I • nm hool'Diatrict. ~!>....-....:..---,-~....:..-'-Ul!!RU(1elln-_ _.;.._:_;l'i:iDlillll of IM1lola wu llllCler
1\
Judge° Owens bas al~ea y
1• urMJl w1t a b!!l!I dlW'.jct
•
• 'I
•
/.
At DAILVPILDT H /F Monday. S!ptember22, 1975
Beach Council
Control
•
'Tops Agenda
The Saddleback College Board
of Trustees will be asked to con-
sider a change in cllstrict office
bours tonight.
employes take an hour lunch.
Trustees are bein1 a•ked to
change these hours to 8 a.m. ~
4:30 p.m. with employes taking a
SellerW"uu
~!laffle TM nma••Y .._.,a
10-•peed bicycle raffle at
the Orans• CowllY ... ...,
1round1 1wap meet la
C01ta Meea llundaf -apparently the suy selling
the ticket• -unlil· be
couldn 't produce tbe
prize.
: r
Currently, the offices are open
from 8 a .m . to S p.m. and
half-hour lunch. ;
The change Ls being requested
to conserve energy, accordinJ to
a report prepared for board
members.
A prospective ticket-
buyer who wanted to see
what be was maybe going
~ win called police to 811
Fair Drive after persistent
demand.a to examine the
pr!U bike failed.
Weekend
Accidents
Hurt Two
A 17-year-old lruntingt,on Beach
driver and a 27·year-old Costa
Mesa motorcycle rider were in
Orange County Medical Center
today after s uffering serious in·
juries~n separate accidents
Saturday in Westminster.
Lt. Joe Wood s said the llunt-
ington Beach youth, Michael
Miller of 14951 Sunny Cr est Lane,
· lost control of his automobile in
Westmnster Mall 2: :l> a. m.
He was southbound in the park-
ing lot, Woods said , whenberoUed
over twice while making a left
-turn and slammed into several
·small t~es. He suffered head in-
juries and ~as treated by
Jtaramedics.
•1 His two passengers, a brother
Bradley. 15, and Ricky Lee
_Erickson, 17, weretreatedandre-
\leased by Westminster Memorial
,Jlcopital.
Michael was transferred to
Orange County Medical Center
where be is in the Intensive Care
\Unit.
In the other accident, palice
said Marcus Crissman of Costa
. Mesa slammed broadside into an
"automobile at Bushard Street and
Hazard Avenue at 10:40p.m.
He was reported in satisractory
condition today with head in-
juries. Persons in the auto
·escaped iajury, 99licesald.
Huntington
Hitchhiker,
V•
'24, Roped
"' •'· Huntington Beach police today
1 were looking for two men who
raped a 24-year-old hitchhiker at
«nifepoint Friday nighL
Officers said the woman was
hitchhiking at Delaware street
·and Adams A venue about 10
, -p.m .• when the tw.o men. driving
an old dark car, forced her into
their vehicle.
They said one of the men raped
her at knifepoint and cut her on
the arm during the struggle
-before she managed to break
loose and Oee.
· Officers said the woman was
••hysterical" when she was in-
terviewed late Friday night by
police, and they said additional
details of the incident will await
a follow-up investigation. .
The woman was treated for her
' arm wound at Pacifica Hospital
in Huntington Beach and sent
home, police said.
600 Flee Blaze
MONTREAL (U PI) -Flames
broke out in the midtown
Sheraton-Laurentian Hotel to-
day, forcing the evacuation of
more than 600 persons from the
20-story building.
~"' A fire department spokesman
):said the rll'e appeared to have
;.;.originated in the ceiling of a ~restaurant off the lobby of the
~900-room hotel, built shortly after
FWorld War U.
DAILY PILOT
•
According to this report, sur-
veys of employes taken over the
past two years have Indicated
that employes prefer a half.hour
lWlch.
If approved , a college
spokesman said, the hours would
not affect extended day students .
Trustees will a lso be asked to .
approve a waiver of liability with
the Mission Viejo Company so
that archeology classes may
enter the company's property to
dig in certain selected sites.
The trustees meeting begins at
7:JOp.m. in the library on the up-
per campus.
Police_ Seek
Cycle Theft
'Joy Riders'
Police and fire investigators
today were searching ror
joyriders, who allegedly s.tole a
motorcycle from a Huntington
Beach man Sunday night, rode it
awhile, then set it afire.
Firemen said Oelbert Weber,
20811 Lancelot Lane, reported his
motorcycle missing about 10:30
p.m.
Then at 11 :48 p.m., firemen
were called to Sowers Schools,
9300 Indianapolis Ave., where the
stolen cycle had been set ablaze.
Firemen said someone had dis-
connected the motorcycle's
gasoline line then set the leaking
fuelaftre. They said the cycle, valued at
$1,000, was destroyed but there
was no damage to school or
grounds other than a pat<h of
scorched grass.
Ji',._PageAl
FORD •••
"One of the prime goals or this
administration is to sustain the
economic progress now under
way and to put unemployed
Americans back on the job," he
said. .
But the way lo do it, he said, is
through the free e nterprise
system, not new government
spending programs.
Crash Kills
Tustin Rider
BALDWIN PARK' <UPll -A
20-year-01d Tustin woman was
killed and her companion
seriously injured Sunday when
an automobile swerved into their
motorcycle on the crowded San
Bernardino Freeway then sped
off. .
Eileen Marie Nunez, a
passenger on the motorcycle,
was dead on arrival at Baldwin
Park Community Hospital.
James Walter Barowy, 29,
Hollywood , was reported in
serious condition at the same
hospital.
The California Highway patrol
said the hit-run driver made an
unsafe lane change and crashed
into the motorcycle, throwing
both victims off the bike onto the
pavement..
Ki,d Prograin-
Under Way
The Fun Shop, an activities pro-
gram for children whose parents
serve as volunteers in Huntington
Beach's Ocean View Sc hool Dis·
trict, has now opened its fall
session.
Children from 18 months to
schQol age are eligible t.o attend
while their parents are volunteer..
ing at district offices.
District officials •aid volun·
• leers are needed in the dlatrlct'•
library, art lab and media ceilter
Tuesdays tbrou1b ntdan from 9
a.m. to noon. Tbooe wlabing to
participate may C<Dtad Kathy
Hulme, Yolunteer aide proaram.
dlrector,at8'7·~1.
City Geta BenChes
The Fountain Valley IJoni
Club bu donated !In redwood
bua bellcbee to the cl17. They
woe lut&Ued by the cltY Public
Worts Department at four in-
tenectlolUI alon1 Brooltburst
Sb'Mt -at Bl&lbai'd'1net and l'llll\"rlA•-I
"Through mutual agree.
ment between himself and
the fa'irgrounds, the raffle
operator decided it Wu
time to close down," says
Costa Mesa Police Detec-
tive Phil McCormick.
The lottery operator was
not arrested but police said
his departure was hasty.
GJBBS •••
· trying to keep the public and city •
council from knowing of city
operations and expenditures.
He we nt on to say that
Rowlands was aided and abetted
by the naivete and ignorance or
the mayor.
Mayor Gibbs said that M&tney
must believe he is the only one
. who knows what be is doing, "'He
• thinks everyone else's answer is
false," she said. "He seemed
compelled to continue digging to
prove that be 's right," she said.
Mrs. Gibbs cited an example of
a rumor she said she heard this
· past week that could easily be BC·
cepted. without substantiation.
She said she got word of a story
going around that members 9(
the Public Works Department
bad painted her house last week.
''This is totally falae,'' she
said. "Anyone seeing the house
could tell it hadn't beem painted
recently, but it is an example of
something people can believe
without any proof.
''There are seven individuals
on the council," she said, "and
we are not there to satisfy egos.
We are elected to do a job."
Mrs. Gibbs said further that
proble ms are not with Rowlands.
"It's more of a staff problem
with certain staff members not
leveling with complete informa-
tion. There are one or two of them
tormenting many ot: the pfo-
blems," she maintains.
Mrs. Gibbs said a personnel
commltte bas been formed to de·
al with Matney's charges. It in-
cludes council members Al Coen,.
Harriett Wieder and Ted.
Bartlett; Personnel Commission
Chairman Wandelyn Hiltunen
and Economic Advisory Commit·
tee Chairman Philip Oster.
Youth Jailed
After Shots
Fired in Row
A 19·year-old man was in Hunt·
ington Beach jail today on
charges of assault with a deadly
weapon after he allegedly fired
two gunshots during an argu-
ment Saturday night.
Police said Jeffrey Allen Vese-
ly, 19, or Poway, was visiting an
apartment complex at 17132.
Emerald Lane in Huntington
Beach Saturday night when the
incident occurred.
•
His bail was set at $10,000,
police said.
Officers said two residents of
the complex went to the apart-
ment were Vesely was visiting to
complain about loud noise.
When they arrived, officers al-
leged, Vesely pulled out a pistol
and in a struggle with the two
the shots were fired. '
Police said neither of the com-
plaining neighbors, James
Pitner and Steven Barnes, were
injured, and the shots did not hit
anyone.
Pepperdine .
HemlHeld
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
The district attorney's of·
fice charged Peppei-dine
University Chancellor M.
Norvell Young today with:
two counts of felony
manslaughter and one of
drunken driving in connec--
tion with a fiery auto acci-
dent which resulted in the
deaths of two women.
Deputy District Attorney.
Bob Altman said YOUllg,
being treated at Santa
Monica Hospital for ln·
Jurlea be suffereg in the ac-
cident, would be arral1111ed
on the charges Oct. 3. · .
The accldefit occurred
Tuesday. aa · a car driven
by Alice Fritsche, 55,
Claremoni, was stoPped at
a trt!flc U1bt 011 l!aclflc
Coa'at Hlchway at
Coastline Drive, YOUlll al··
lecedly rear-ended the
vehicle, caw1iDC th&. lull.
tank .. tbe ·--·· ...., to ll<Plode. I •
~·
•
J
Trustees
Discuss
Batde ·
Tiie HunUqtoa Beocb Union
High School Board ii expected to
dilcua• !ti court battle aimed at haitlna two ynlflcalloll elections
at !ti 1:30 o'clock rneetiDI TUeeo
c1ayn1aht.
Unlllcatloo electlona for Foun·
taln Valley and IOUth Huntingtm
Beach .were ruled Ule1al lo
Oranae County Superlcr Court
last week, but the tlocti.., pro-
cess Is conUnuinl pending the
outcome of court appeals.
Trustees will meet at dlatrlct
offices, 5201 Bol•a Avenue.
Trustees a!Jo are ezpected to
discuss the Impact of the court
ruling on unlficatitm attempta by
the Ocean View, Westminster
and Seal Beach elementary dis·
tricts.
* * * Ocean View
May C~ange
Unify Stand
'The Ocean View School Board
will bold a special meeting at 1
o'clock tonight to review its un·
ification position.
The board will be considering
whether or not to proceed with
plans to unify along district boun·
daries or wait for the outcome of
court appeals concerning the
FOllntain Valley and sooth Hunt·
iogton Beach plans.
The meeting will be in district
offices at Warner Avenue and
Beach Bouleavard.
The district has received a let-
ter from Ralph Bauer, prt$ident
of the Huntington Beach Union
High School Board, urling Ocean
View trustees to delay their
plans.
But Ocean View Superinten·
dent Dale Coogan said today the
district board may want to con·
tinue its unification efforts until
the outcome of the coort case and
or the Nov. 4 unification votes.
The Ocean View plan is to be
considered Wednesday night by
the Orange County Committee on
School District Organization,
along with plans for Seal Beach
and Westminster.
ScJ,"eaming Girls
Mob Rock Singer
LONDON (AP) -Les
McKeown, the lead singer with
the Bay City R.ollers band, has
encountered some girl problems.
The 19·year·old singer was
knocked out by screaming teen-
age girl fans eai:Jy Sunday who
mobbed the stagti at a television
studio during a show, a studio
spoksesman said.
Duke .Joins President u ... ,........
Newport Beach actor John Wayne chatted with Presi-
dent Ford Saturday prior to Ford's dedication of a new
field house at Peppenline University at Malibu. Wayne ,
was still suffering some coughing. He was recenUy re-
leased from Hoag Memorial Hos pital in Newport. •
Patty Criticizes
SLA Pals in Paper
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
FBI has a seven·oaize document
in which Patricia Hearst made
critical comments about her
Symbio.nese Liberation Army
companions , it was reported to-·
day.
The San Ft ancisco Chronicle
said FBI agents found the docu-
ment Friday. in the apartment
PATTY TO TESTIFY
AT t!EARING?~
where Miss Hearst and fellow
fugitive Wendy Yoshimura had
been arrested the day before.
Charles Bates, special agent in
charge l)f the FBI office here, re·
fused to comment, saying to do so
could prejudice trial evidence.
The news paper quoted a
-.. source close to the case" as say.
ingtbe document is ''a missive of
condemnation'' addressed to
William and Emily Harris, Miss
Hearst's SLA colleagues. The
couple are "more than strongly
criticized," the Chronicle quoted
the same unidentified source as
saying.
The· complaints involve "cer-
tain 'actions' •• that the Harrises
had "either taken part in or were
advocating" that others ·m t.h'.e
''revoluliouary struggle'' dis;.
agreed with, according tq
another source quoted in the
Chronicle story.
The FBI said today it bad no iri-
formation that Miss Hearst waS.
ever in the Phoenix area, as re..
portedbyNewsday.
••we have no location at all ip
Phoenix or elsewhere at thls
time," said Roger Young, assiS-
taol special agent in charge of th0
Phoenix FBI office. ,' ' The New York Times reporte(I
today that the document indicat.
ed a possible break between MisS
Hearst and other elements of th~
SU.
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deduction this year ...
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You can save as much as $1500 or
15% of your wages, whichever Is less,
and your savings will be a tax dedu<>-
tlon during your working years. If
your spouse works, your combined
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Come In to Mariners and atal1 your
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•
J
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"IRA •• ACCOUNT. lndividvat Relirftm~nl Aceou1111 are pr•nntly
Mrnlng 7.\li% PM fft' wh•" plSCfld In a 6·y• certltic.te. Your
•mtWll 'fl•ld 11 lf'lt:t'H!ed to ab~. 8.06% wlltfl lrt,.,.11,s •dded ro
lhe .ccount bat.nee and '°mpocu1d&0 dally. Wllh a mar/mum
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money wlll grow;
WITH TAX wrntour EXTRA
SHELTERED TAX MONEY
IOA SHELTERED FftOMTAX
Anf:,1 PlAll PLAN DEFERllAL
15 yra. $ 9,510 $ 6,730 $ 2,780
10yra. 23,540 15,750 • * 1,190
2D yrs, 74,&40 44,080 30.~
30 yrs. 1ds,560 95,03Q ll0,520
• •~ r1.,.._ .,. ti.Md on 15% Income brw::Mt. Federal
rti0u•aHont 1"9qUiN IUbltMtl .. pen11ti.. tor tllffy wlthdrawMI
from cettlllc.1• .:ic:oun11.
•
•
•
.,
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Orange Coast
EDITIO,N
~
\
T ... y' a-....
.N.Y. St.ea
• • •
•
VOL. A, NO. 265, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA •. N TEN CENTS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1975 s . .
Electric .fiun ZaJ!s Kohberg Victina ~·
'lllAlll (AP) -The YQWll
Nm4e la a pink 1we8ler' waited
Ullo the cos station llnd upped
Ille au.adant. wnuam La-
witb • so.ooo..volt electric sun.
Tbm abe and a male accomplice
,_ tbe station aqd Oed.
••J'd rather it bad been
somebody else," said LllWIOft,
27.
Police said Ile ., .. the lint
ltnown vletlm of the eleelJollie-
ace dart ,...., wblcb immobilUea
'victims.•
Lawacx> told poUee UW -woman entered the statioo and
asked to use the phone. The •t·
-tendant 111d •• be-1bowedher to
the phone, she turned toward him
and, ''calm and smiling.'' shot
him.
"It wu like 1tlcking your . 6-bl a wall socket," he said.
He ialtill shaken and IMlnfrom
the robbery Wednesday.
"I fell on the Door and couldn't
move. It was the wont Poln I
ever felt," he aaid.-."My whole
rl&ht aide was jumplna. I
couldn't eontrol mymuacles."
Lawson said the woman was
joined by a man who leaned over
and pulled the wireo rrom the
darts bl bis belly, then helped the
woman clean out the, eae,b re.
lister of an undete.rmin.e.d amounL One dart WU leftjo bis
Oesb.
Police said •lght or the
wea~ns. called the ''Taser
PUblic Defender,'' were stolen
fro.manofficeln MiamiSbores.
111e Taser, which Lawson said
reminded hlm of a gray
fiasbllght, launches two small
darts attached to batteries by
ll·foot wires. The darts can
penetrate 1 in inches ol clothlna
-and tbe ~.OOO·volt char&e ia
described as incapacitallng and
very painful.
The· weapon's makers, Tuer
System Inc. or Los Angeles,
describe it as a nonJethal crime
prevention device foe atopping
attackers in their tracks.
~ -
Uterature thal comes with. it ~tatE'S that in early tettin&; a'
blast from the gun uslna: on.I~
30,000 volts flattened a 250-pou.na
bull. ..
Lawson, who weighs ltl>
pounds, was knocked senseless.
his hearing and vlslon blurred.
Doctors al Miami International
Hospital said an incb·lona: dart
was rero.oved from Lawson·a·
right side, just above hls waisl.
I
Nixon Denies Tape Gap Blame~
. . -
\
+ ,.
(' e\tllll.Cl"'I
0 \
UPI ... .._.
HURRICANE ELOISE GETS SECOND WIND
StQfm Moves Toward Guff Coast
Eloise Takes Aim
On Gulf Coast
.. MIAMI (UPI) -Hurricane
Eloise, packjng winds of 8S miles
an hour, churned today toward
the Gulf Coast ports of Mobile,
Ala., and Pensacola, Fla., and
residents boarded up their homes
and prepared to move inland. .
•
The National Hurricane Center
issued hurricane warnings from
Grand Isle, La., to Apalachicola,
Fla., and urged smaJl craft to re-
main in port. It also warned
there was a possibility that
tornadoes might occur in ad·
vance of the storm. ·
"All precautions over the Mis·
s i.s.si p_..pj I! e 1 t A r ~12 n of
southeaSlern Louisiana shouldlie
rushed to completion immediate-
ly," the· center said. "Elsewhere
in the warning area, actions
should be conpleted this after-
noon.·•
RALLY ENDS;
DOW OFF 9
NEW YORK (UPI> -!Prices
closed sharply lower today in
moderate trading on the New
York Stock Exchange as in-
vestors consolidated gains made
the latter part of last week.
The Dow Jones industrial.
average, ahead around two·
points at the outset, lost 9.39
points to 820.40. It had gained
34.66 points the previous three
sessions. ·
Declines led advances by about
a seven-to-five margin. (Tables,
A9).
Prices were lower in moderate
trading on the American Stock
Exchange. ·
Coast
Weather
Dense fog along the coast
will increase tonight aod
Tuesday morning. Huy
sunshine today and alightly ·
cooler Tuesday with highs
in mid·80s, low tonight in
mid6.
INSIDE TOD-"' Y
President l"ord today coU«l
for CTt<JliOfl of ''OO·bi!Aon r .. aearch corporation lo give UCJ..
tJon -rw ~--in 10
_..A..S.
-·· ~"'r. .......... ·--Q 1 • ----........... Rt' -· ..... _ .,_
•
Eloise was expected to make a
swipe at the mouth of the Mis-
sissippi River this afternoon,
then move eastward and come
ashore tonight in the Mobile-
Pensacola area, bring 5 to 10-
inch rains to southern and
eastern Alabama, northwest
Florida and much of Georgia.
At midday, Eloise was cen·
tered near 27 .2 degrees north
latitude and 89.6 degrees west
longitude, about 210 miles south
of New Orleans. Peak sustained
winds remained at 85, miles an
hour, but hurricane forecasters
said conditions remained favora-
ite Tor f'Urtb·er -strengthening
before it reached land. Gale
force winds extenCjl.ed QOl1h frOm
Eloise's center for12S miles.
Eloise claimed 34 lives last
week when it slashed Puerto ·
Rico arid the Dominican
Republic with 80 mph winds and
torrential rains. The storm lost
much of its st'fength in the moun-
tains of sout)leastern Cuba, but
was upgraded to hurricane status
again today as it picked up
strength over the Gulf of Mex~ ..
Disaster preparations 'ac·
celerated along the storm-
scarred Gulf Coast as Eloise
moved closer to land, and mosl
civil defense and Red Cross of-
ficials said they would make de-
cisions s hortly on whether to
evacuate residents.
Mesan Charged
In Batf:ering .
Of Contractor
Newport Beach police arrested
a Costa-Me!:a man and booked
him on charges of felony
mayhem over the weekend in a
case which stems from the bat·
tering of a harbor area cement
contractor.
The incident took place late
Friday night in front of a West
Newport market and left Blair
David Randolph, 37, of Newport
Beach, with facial fractures and
severe cuts which required
doiens of sUtches.
Officers on patrol the following
morning anested John Steven
Harp, 22, of 2017 CaP!'lla-<:ourt,
Costa Mesa. They allege that
Harp confronted Randolph bl an
unprovoked incident and then re.
peatedly punched and kicked the
victim in the face.
Officers said witnesses iden-
tified Harp as the assailant.
Randolph was taken to Hoag
-Memorial HospilaJ after the
boating and doctors wired his.
jaw and sewed' up the wounds in
hil face. He WIS then ~lted in
satisfactory condition.
Harp, whose clothing bore
dried blood, was booked Into city Jall and held tn Ii of $25,000 .bail. .
Erasure
Remains
Mystery
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Former President Nixon has de-
nied under oath ''personal
responsibility'' for the 18Y.a-
minute gap in a White House tape
recorded three days after the
Watergate break-in. his lawyers
disclosed today. f
The tape gap remains one of
the mvsteries of the Water1ate scandals which drove Nixon to
resign. The disclosure came a~
a heaiing before a special three-
judge court created lo consider
Nixon's attempts to regain con-
trol and possession of the tapes
and 42 million documents and
papers accumulated during his
5'Al-year presidency.
Nixon lawyer HerbertJ. Miller
Jr. said the government, in seek-
ing to retain control of the Nixon
materials, has questioned the
62-year-old former president's
character.
''They say --fl.-r . Nixon ia _1,1,n-,.
trustworthy, Mr. Nixon will dis-
tort the record, that Mr. Nixon
created the 181Al-minute gap,"
Miller said. "With respect to the
181,ti-minute gap, Mr. Nixon was
interrogated by the office of the
special prosecutor.''
Nixon testified in a special
session before two members of a
Watergate grand jury1ast June.
Referring to that testimony,
Miller said, ''Let them (the
Justice Department) challenge
that his (Nixon's) responsibility
(for the tape gap) was denied UD·
deroath. ••
<SeeNIXON, PageAZ)
Porno Trial
'Attitudes'
Examined
The prosecutio"'-in the Balboa
Pussycat Theater obscenity
trial resumed its case in Harbor
Municipal Court today with
evidence related to police sur-
veys of public attitudes toward
sex films. .court recessed late last week
at the conclusion of more than a
day's testimony from a Los
Angeles sheriff's vice in-
vestigator who outlined a survey
of 5,000 households during which
homeowners filled out question-
naires related to their accep..
tance -or lack or it -of sex
films.
A jury or six men and six
women is hearing the evidence in
lbe trial related lo twoseirures or
the films "Deep Throat" and
"Devil in Miss Jones" last June
al the adult theater on the
peninsula.
Theater owner Vince Miranda
and two other principals in the
ope.ration are on trial on charges
of misdemeanor exhibition or ob-
scene films.
Swells Greet
Beacbgoers
Moderate swells yielding
waves or up to four feet greeted
about 120,000 beachgoers on the
strands of Newport Beach over
the wff.kend in a two-day exam-
ple of Indian summer.
Llfeguards said that of those
who ventured into the water
Saturday and Sunday, •2 re-
quired racW.ng.
Water temperatures were in
tho mid 80S and the air was in the
hi&h 708. I'((> serious incidents
were reported In the surf clurlnc
the period, ... ~ Hid .
' '
' D911y "9t.t "'9lt .-, ltldMnll K_. ...
PRESIDENT FORD GREETED IN ANAHEIM BY INSURANCE LEADER NORMAN LEVINE
2,400 Cheered As Ford Promised Economic Health Without 'New Spending Programs'
Ford B11llish on Economy
Also Takes Stand Against Big Government
By DOUGLAS FRITZSCHE
Ol Ole Dallr "91M S49fl
A bullish President Gerald
Ford Sunday told a business au-
dience in Orange County that the
nation's economy is well on the
way to recovery. Attempts to
* * *
speed it. he said, could lead lo
disaster.
··Never forget,'' said Ford.
•·that the government that is big
enough to give you everything
you want is a government that is
big enough to t ake everythin g
* * *
Ma"' 24, Arrested
In Threat to Ford
SAN FRANCISCO (APJ-A
young man was arrested today
outside a hotel where President
Ford was scheduled lo speak and
booked on s uspicion or threaten-
ing the President, police said.
Police id entified the man as
Ronald Carlo, 24, of Mobile, Ala.
Officers said he was turned over
to the Secret Service after being
taken into custody in front of the
St. Francis Hotel.
At the time of the arrest, Ford
was inside the hotel attending a
luncheon of the World Affairs
Council. He was to address the
gathering after the luncheon.
The man taken into custody
was never in proximity to the
President, officers said.
Two weeks ago, Lynette
Fromme. a follower of convicted
murderer Charles Manson, was
wrestled to the ground by Secret
service agents as she pointed a
loaded automatic pistol al Ford
in sacramento.
F\J.rther details were not im·
mediately available on today's
incident.
Security precautions were
tight around the two hotels where
Ford appeared todljly. '
• The President had addressed a
meetin• or the A FL·CIO Building
Trades CounclJ at the Hyatt
Union Square Hotel.
Even tbou.gh lhe two hotels are
only a bl~k apart, the President
made the short joi~ in an auto
circled by Secret' Service men.
Earlier, police took two men
into custody after Ford arrived
after an apparent scuffle over a
Viet Cong flag and a man shout-
ing ''Free P atty Hearst, jail
Gerald R . F ord .··
One or the men wore a placard
reading .. Free Patty Hearst ..
and the other had demonstrated
with about 25 others calling ror
an end to the Egyptian-Israeli ac-
cord. Both were handcuffed and
taken away by police.
The preside ntial motorcade
followed a heavily guarded route
from San Francisco Interna-
tional Airport to a downtown
hotel whe r e he addressed the
AFL·CIO Building Trades Coun-
cil.
The brief one-block ride to the
St. Francis Hotel was in contrast
to Sept. 5 in Sacramento when
,, Ford walked a similar distance
from his hote l to the state
Capitol.
At lea st 30 uniformed
policemen guarded a cordoned
street leading to the hotel, wh.ile
dozens .or other Secrel Service
m en and plain-clothes offi cers
closely watched several hundred
spectators. ~ About 25 demonstrators pro-
testing tbe Egyptian-Israeli
peace pact chanted "Palestine
yes, Kissinger no, recognize lhe
PW" as the Pi-esident was sped
to his first engagement.
The President immediately en·
tered the hotel rather than shake
bands with people in the crowd.
•
you have.··
Ford's talk at the Disneyland
Hotel in Anaheim lo 2,400 mem·
hers of the National Association
or Life Underwriters, an in-
surance industry group, was i
mixture of praise or free en··
terprise and indictment of bi&
government.
Targets for the brunl of Ford 's
assault on big government wee~
.. new s pending pro~rams" in-
tended to relieve the country's
unemployment a nd bring an end
to m ore than two years of re-
cession.
Characte rizing such moves as
"irresponsible" and likely lo "rli'r
· li ght the fires of innation," F'orif
promised to continue to use hil'
veto power to quash increased
government spending.
Ford·s talk came in the second
day or a three day swing through
California, s prinkled with pre·
campaign efforts to garner sup.
po rt in th e nation 's most
populous state . ·
Accord in g to Wh it(' House
Press Secretary Ron Nessen,
Ford plans to follow up with a
pair of return visits to California
in late October for GOP fund·
raising dinners in San Francisco
and Los Angeles.
Former Gov. Ronald Reagan,
speculated to be a Ford opponent
(See FORD, Page AZ)
FIRST CALLER
BOUGHI' 'BUG'
"I sold my car to the fi rst
person who called ...
That·s the advertising success
C'Xperienced by the Huntington
Ik>ach woman who placed this ad
in the Daily Piiot :
1966 VW Bug, very cl ean
$650. XXX·XXXX•
If you have a car you want ~O
convert to ca.sh, call 642-~78. ,
We make it easy ror you to pul
a few words to work for ou -ira
the Daily Pilot.
• •
On Three •
Ncv.rp<)rt Geach p;.itrolman and bystander
struggle lo right compact car late Sunday
after dri\Cr William Herrera. 34 , of
Anaheim. lost control and auto clipped
tre<· in Corona <.lei l\1~r. Police said l-ler-
rera was uninjured in mishap, but his top-
pled car -and thl~ tree -each suffered.
Accident occurred sh611ly before midnight
at Coast Highway near Poinsettia Avenue.
·District
Boundaries
1
.0n Agenda
. I Newport Beach councilmen
tonight are expected to cast their
final votes on a proposal to
redraw their individual district
boundaries to reach a more equal
number or constituents.
The measure, drafted by a
special committee, affects can-
didates in council elections but
not voters. Candidates must re-
side within their respective dis-
tricts but are e lected by the ·
voters at large.
In the latest change, the goal
was a difference of constituen-
cies of no more than 1,500 voters.
The changes as envisioned in
the measure include these shifts:
-MA YOH DONAL McfN.
~S gives to Councilman Howard
Rogers· district all of Lida
Peninsula and areas west of city'
hall .. To the district of Councilman
Pete Barrett, Mcinnis gives asec-
1 ' lion north of Hoag Memorial
•f.-Hospital.
. -AYOR PRO·TEM MILAN
DOSTAL loses to Barrett's dis··
trict the Westcliff area. Linda
Isle and Harbor Island. He aJsd'
relinquishes Promontory Point
and Promontory Bay to the dis-
trict of Councilman Paul
Ryckoff.
-RYCKOFF. in tum, sheds
The Bluffs to Dostal.
-COUNC ILWOMAN
J,UCILLE KUEHN gives up the
portion of Balboa Island
downcoast from Marine Avenue
which then would fall in
Ryckoff's district.
r -The final shift of territory
from Councilman john Store to
~1rs . Kuehn which involves
Harbor View Hills and sections of
Poinsettia and Poppy avenues
plus Hazel Drive, all in Corona
dei Mar.
Screaming Girls
Mob Rock Singer
LONDON (AP) -Le s
McKeown , the lead singer with
the Bay City Rollers band. has
encountered som e girl problems.
The 19-year-old singer wa s
knocked out by screaming teen-
age girl fans early Sunday who
mobbed the stage at a television
~studio during a sh.ow, a studio
""spoksesman said.
S McKeown was hit on the bead
i n the frenzied sta mpede by
~"SCoi-es of girls and was out cold
:,:for several minutes.
:;;
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Jack R. Curley Vkce ..... ~. •nO Ge .... .i ,,.._,.
Thomas Keevll
Cd•IOI
Thomas A. M urphine
""-!W9"'9 E<lltrw
N
:)> Charlff H. Loos Richard P. Na11 ~ A•tl1'llfll ,,..!>QlflQ [d•lon
"""""' .. •<•Offk• S)J) ~,;,._, lloutlP¥1<d
#IMIHN Mfr9u: II' ,0 . -.: WIS, 1t26U
Pepperdine
Head Held
LOS ANGELES CUP!) -
The district attorney's or~
fice charged P epperdine
University Cha ncell or M .
Norvell Young today with
t wo counts of felony
manslaughter a nd one of
drunken driving in connec·
tion with a fiery auto acci·
dent which resulted in the
deaths or two women.
Deputy District Attorney.
Bob Altman said Young,
being treated at Santa
Monica Hospital for in-
juries he suffered in the ac·
cident, would be arraigned
on the charges Oct. 3.
The accident occurred
Tuesday as a car driven
by Alice Fritsche, 55,
Claremont. was stopped at
a traffic light ·on Pacific
Coast Highway at
Coastline Drive. Young al-
legedly rear-ended the
vehicle, causing t he fuel
tank of the woman's auto
to explode.
One-legged . .
Skateooarder
Tries Harder
Mike Johnson, a one-legged
skateboarder from 1-luntington
~ach wa~ turned back Saturday
m the world championships in
Los Angeles, but he says there
will be many more big events,
"and J"m going to enter every
one of them.··
He missed qualifying for the
championship round by just two
points.
··~made one mistake," he said.
"On my jump, I came down on
the nose of the board instead of
the center. It sure didn't look
graceful and it cost me some
points.··
Mike, who works for a
skateboard manufacturer in
Westminster, lost his right leg
two years ago in a motorcycle
racing accident in Virginia.
H~ said a motorcycle ran over
his leg and doctors had to am·
putate it after gangrene de· .
veloped.
He said having only one 11eg
poses no great problems in
skateboarding. He reels lhal
good natural balance c~om·
pensates for any handicap he
might have.
Navy Captain
Welcome Back
A retired Corona de! Mar Navy
Captain who had been barred
from vi siting West Coast Naval
bases after he criticized the
service is back in the Navy's
good graces today.
Capt. Paul Hummel, di strict
president of the Na val Reserve
Association. had been restricted
from the bases by Rear Adm.
Fillmore Gilkeson. former di s·
trict commandant, after Hum-
mel publicly accused the Navy of
neglecting its reserves.
Rear Adm. Samuel Gravely
restored full visiting privileqes in
a letter and invited Hummel to
meet with him to discuss Naval
Reserve problems. Gravely also
praised him for his dedication to
the ri;;erve force.
Hummel contacted in Long
Beach, said he was "very, very
happy.u
NIXON •••
Lawyers for the former presi-
dent claim Nixon has a constitu-
tional right of owenership to the
doc.uments and thousands of
hours of tape reels from his ad-
ministration.
Miller said a nine-month-old
federal law pioviding public ac-
cess to the Nixon records is un·
constitutional under the Fourth
~and First Amendments 0£ the
Constitution.
He said any -former president
has the right to select which
materials rrom his years in office
will be made public, insuring
preservation of a president's
right to privacy and the privacy
rights or those to whom he
speaks.
"This is a wholesale seizure,"
Miller ~aid of the new law, which
could eventually result in anyone
J:learing upon request some or the
tape recordings made in the
White House oval office.
The lawyer complained that
while Congress declared its in-
tention to preserve the historical
record of only the Watergate
scandals, the materials covered
by the new la w include tapes and
notes of" Nixon's role as rather
and husba nd as well as presi-
dent.
"These tapes are interspersed
with conversations between Nix -
on· and his trusted aides, a
Cabinet member , his Cabinet
member, his daughter, and
foreign leaders,·· Miller said.
"Ry seizing these papers the
Congress has violated his rights
to privacy and intruded on his
rights under the First Amend·
menl to free .speech,·· he added.
FORD ...
for the Republican nomination
next year, is listed as one of 25 co-
hosts for the dinners. Nessen
:>aid. CRelatedstory,AS}.
Asked whether this meant the
Reagan campaign was waning,
Nessen said, ''What ~eagan cam·
paign? Where is it?··
Ford's arrival by helicopter to
the Dis neyland Hotel was greet-
ed by a cheering crowd or about
500 as secret service agents and
Anaheim and Dis neyland police
whisked him from the tightly
secured landing pad in a short
motor caravan lo the rear en-
trance of the hotel Grand
Ballroom.
In his speech, which was fre-
quently interrupted by applause
from the enthusiastic audience.
Ford credited the insurance in-
dustry with being a major source
of capital financing that will re-
turn economic health to the U.S.
Seller Wins
This Raffle
The runaway winner of a
10-speed bicycle raffle at
the Orange County Fair-
grounds sWap meet in
Costa Mesa Sunday was
a pparently the guy selling
the tickets -until he
couldn 't produce the
prize.
A prospective ticket-
buyer who wanted to see
what he was maybe going
to win called police to 88
Fair Ori ve after persistent
demands to examine the
prize bike failed .
"Through,mutual ·-· ment between bimsoll and
Tettpftio.... 111•> Ml-4321 the fairgrounds, the 'raffle
Cl-leOA_ .... ..,.,.,. _.60_D_F}ee maze operator decided It was
•
°""''=' "" °'....,. com ~ c-... t1me to close. down. .. says :r,tf .;"':: .. :r.:~~::= =~ . MONTREAL (UPI) -F1ames Cost• Mes• Police Detec· ;:;,o;t:-wi::.•HV• •tt(laf ..,.ll'i,"1"' •• btoke out ln the midtown UvePhllMcCormtct.
1 t ~.~·· • f!f•••i: o.1c1 • cowe. .... Shenton~"'llll'l!liUiilHOlefTc>. - --.,,.1otterroPerator was ~,,Jrt.~~.,~?~ day, tavlng the evacuation o1. notarre1teclbulPolJce1ald ~,..._,,.,. ~ -more--tbllr900 ~ friiii !he ;rbladeporturewaahuty.
»story bllllding .
l I -.
I •
Swimmer
··Vanishes •
In.Surf
A despondent hitchhiker wbo
was last seen late Saturday
swimming intq the darkness near
Newp(K't Pier was the subject ol
a weekend search but pcUce a.ad
lire1uards could only line! a s00e
and windbreaker.
The events surroundina the
disappearance of Pritz Ford, 23,
of Oklahoma City, were first
related by Keith Scott ,Price or
3155 Canadian Driv.e, Costa
Mesa. He gave Ford a ride in El
Monte and during the drive to the
Harbor Area, the motorist noted
that the hitchhiker was extreme-·
ly despondent.
Price told Newi>ort Beach
police that the rider seemed to
have no particular destination,
but finally settled on being let out
at the Newport Pier.
Price said that Ford left ,the
car, leaving his wallet and some
spare clothing behind. The man
dashed for the water, Price said,
and after swimming for SO yards,
vanished rrom view.
Price related that during the
drive, the Oklahoma resident
mentioned suicide but said that
ht:' ··didn't haye t he courage" to
carry it out. ·
Lifeguards who searched the
area after Price's report found
one shoe a nd a windbreaker
belonging to the missing man. _
They found no other traces,
however.
* * * Coroners
To Study
Lung Piece
•
•
Duke .Joins President
Newport Beach actor Jolm Wayne chatted witlt Presi·
dent Ford Saturday prior to Ford's dedication of a new
field house at Pepperdine University at Malibu. Wayne
was still suffering some coughing. He was recently re-
leased from Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport.
Patty Criticizes
•
SLA Pals in Paper
I
l
Coroner's deputies today
planned lo examine a hunk of
lung tissue found on a beach in
Balboa late Sunday -a probe lo
determine if the organ is human. SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The couple are "more than strongly
Police said that a Newport. FBI has a seven-paJ!:e document criticized," the Chronicle quoted
in which Patricia Hearst made -~ the same unidentified source as Beach resident walking on the
strand near L Street first dis·
covered the piece of tissue lying
near the water·s edge.
Officers said that the finder
first buried the organ, then went
home and phoned for patrolmen.
Police first took the tissue to
Hoag Memorial Hospital, and
doctors there identified it as a
lung but without special tests, the
determination of its origin would
be difficult. Police tqen contact-
ed coroner's deputies to arrange
ror the test.
Body Discovered
CASTAIC (U PI > -Thedecom·
posed body of an unidentified
young woman was found Suntlay
in bushes alongside the Golden
State Freeway near h er e .
critical comments about her
Sy mbionese Liberation Army
companions, it was reported to-
day.
The San Francisco Chronicle
said FBI agents found the docu-
ment Friday in the apartment
PATTY TO TESTIFY
AT HEARING?-A3
where Miss Hearst and fellow
fugitive Wendy Yoshimura had
been arrested the day before.
Charles.Bgtes, 'special agent in
charge or the FBI office here, re·
fused to comment, saying to dO so
could prejudice trial evidence.
The newspaper quoted a
"source close to lhe case" as say-
ing the document is "a missive of
condemnation '' addressed to
William and Emily Harris, Miss
Hearst's SLA colleagues. The
saying.
The-complaints involve "cer•
lain 'actions' "that the Harrises
had "'either taken part in or were
advocating" that others in the
''revolutiouary s truggle'' dis-
agreed with, according to
another source quoted in the
Chronicle story.
The FBI said today it had no in·
formation that Miss Hearst was
ever in the Phoenix area. as re·
portedbyNe wsday.
"We ha-ye no location at all in
Phoenix or elsewhere al this
time,'' said Roger Young, assi$-
tant special agent in charge of the
Phoenix FBI office.
The New York Times reported
today that the document indicat-
ed a possible.break between Miss
Hearst and other elements 0£ the
SLA.
• • Manners gives you
up to a s1,soo tax •
deduction thi~ year. ••
... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU
CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND
AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" THE INDIVIDUAL RE-
TIREMENT ACCOUNT.
Mariners Individual Retirement
Account Is a personal ta x-sheltered
retirement plan. ''IRA'' was devel-
oped by Congress to give you an
effective way to build your own retir~
ment fund.
You can save as .much as $1500 or
15°/o of your wages, whichever is less.
and your savings will be a tax deduc-
tion during your working years. If
your spouse works, your combined
tax·sheltered savings can be as much
as $3000 per year. ·
Come In to Mariners and start your
own Individual Retirement Account.
You'll be saving tax dollars now and
building a much brighter future. For
more Information, come In or call any
one of our convenient locatioN.
.
HERE"S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS
'"IRA '' ACCOUNT. Individual Refiremen/ ACO!Ml'71.! •re pre!Mlly
e11rnlng 7~% pflf" ,..., when placed in a 6-)"Ht" cerUlicafe. Your
1nnu.I yield 1s 1~,..3ed to• big. 8.05% when Inter.it is 1dd&d to
Ille eec:ounl b11/111C8 aflrl oompounrl«J d•lll'. With 11 ma•imum
ina(trlrlual C011frlbul/on ol Sf~ each ye11r, h-·s how your
monel' will grow:
WITH TAX WITHOUT EXT AA
SHIEL TEAED TAX MONEY
IOA SHELTERED FROM TAX
AnER PLAN PLAN DEFERRAL
5yr1. s 9,510 $ 8,730 $ 2,780
10yrs. 23,5'0 15,750 7,790
' 20 yrs. 74,&IQ 4.4,oeo 30,560
30 Y'I· 165,560 ' 96,030 90,520
'A.bow f!Gur• iwe baed on 25"' Income bf**tt. Federal
rtQUlatlon• reQUlr• eubllanUal peruilttes lot ..,1y wllhdra•I• ''°"' w11101e..:oun11.
4\ Mariners Savi .,,.
• andLoanAssoc~ ~~ .
"-••Jart.... H4iw ... a..th l ....... ~ s..llMch "'"""""'' LbtMl•l•r (M4Mn Ottka} I (lortkte C.-ntei°) 310 GS.nney.-. $L (lelsvr• WOfld) l3IO So • ....,.,fy Dr. (Opp.Mt. Slnol HMpUol)
ISIJW.,tcJiffDi:. 10241o11ideDro (11'4)4'4·7506 13'20S..lhckhll¥d, 2Jl)W-3000 ~ 1747kv«t_.a~
(71'4) .. 2·"'°'t° (71~ '411·.tOOO (OPININGSOOH) (21,) 5"·7626 I ~ (213) 657 ... 1'41
•
• •
' •
I
I
I
I
Wailing to Boy
... A Home? Don;t
I • 1,Q.l1lhiaa~tinwtoboiloliouo?
A.. Yn, it i.. lt oouJd. in ract, t.o the bat period In which
to}ocy a house thot )'Oll'U-in muy a year.
Leodio& lnaUtuUona are loadett with caab for
,,_, ..... • mmt cniclal .....lderatlon. U ID)'llllns, there
ii• ....,..._..llJlplyol-. new and old -with ooe..,
"' eotl.m1U111 400,00ll unaold unit& on the market,
eqil!ntont to an eil!ht-
.-itll supp!Jr.
M~a1.e ~•tea are niil Uk y to de<'line aub-
11:.lntlal y. If at all -and
they are now modntlJI '1sin& •&•In. Housing I
Money's
Worth
'!••been io a :...------' ~trophic Slump and it ii not yet boomina by any mell\I.
°"'lllllOnlll• top or all Ibis, thl$ is the only year In which you are ,. eforaho\15ingtaxc~tofupto$2,000. I
Q. 1Vlocit aboolto ,.,...., .. ;,,114tion halge?
A. It hu been Slll)eri~r to moot Investments. Suburhan
mu:ility ho\l.ses have: risen about 10 perceat in \"alue
ch -year during 'the "J>ast ).0 years. .Except in at.1th
tmare y~ as 1974, tb1s •at.s the pace of Inflation. It
beats the recoi;!( or many qth.r modhun:i. And thlJ is I IYooeadvanta1e.orcourse. · . ' j !I, Will an o!Mr ;...,. hold Us v0i1111
A. •0Th.ere's a demand fOC" bouses.40-50·60 years old,'' I emphasized Mra. Catol \V . Greene, president of the
Northwest Bergen BoJTd of R .. lltlrs, headquartered in
(Ridgewood, N.J., during a panel on bomeowning recently.
I .. orebou.sesaretorndownthanfalldown.
"If a house is structurally sound itfs there for 100, even
I 200 years and whe.n they get that ofd. they take on a pre·
roium value as well as attract buyers who seek an older houu:'a charm.··
Q, HOtD "'""M hoaan ahould. a buf/<I' look.at !><~ buy!ng' A. The averace-b seven to nine bousei:, and 1ays Mrs.
dteene.. ••people whO fall within that range are Usually the lfpp1esf: buyer1: ''The unhappiest are the ones who go to ex·
1 ~es.. looklng at one house and buying fast or looking at so
I 1 that they become indecisive and finally buy out or
1 f tration.
l Q. What about the trend of interetf rctea?
! A. You'U probably gain noth.ing -and more likely lose
if you hold back from buylng in anticipation that
-d.ortgage rates might drop substantially from today's l~els. Even if rates do decline modestly (and don't count on il,l the decline almost surely will be offset by increases in tpe prices of houses you want to buy.
Also, the point was underlined at the Northwest Bergen ~altors Board panel that the average mortgage,is held for
less than the 30·year period usually cited. ana-thus, the
I t is far less than homebuycn; realize. The national
I erage is 12 years, and around the New York metropolitan
,-ea it's' only seven years.
t t Q. What about ta% ruset!mmt& and a.ssetsed ooluotion? I f A. Assessed value is merely the value placed on a pro· ~rty by the 10<'.'al tax assessor, and it is either as close to
t.tue value as possible or reflect• a standard fraction or true
V';llue. The relationship and the taxes needed to fund local
tl)Vemment,determine the tax rate. That rate is generally
I ~pressed as so many dollars and cents per hundred dollars <f assessed valuation. .
.., f Q. If you TUn° into financial trouble, wbat should you do.about
1 lhurhomemortgage? t ' ~ j *. A. Tell the lender as soon as you see trouble coming and
't wait until it has arrived, Virtually every problem has
solution and lenders often can ahd will do whatever is
p>Ssible to resolve your problems. Banks and other lending
iAstitutions cannot make money out of foreC~osures ~but at if certain point in a delinquency, unpleasant developments
\till start lo happen automatically unleSs your lender is kept
itrormed. • •
. Then it will cost you, the homeowner, much more than it
~erwise would ~to stop the machinery. Even worse, your
iroblem may have advanced too far for the lender to be able
to find a solution.
I
l Q. But bock to the key point: is this.a good time to borrow and
t9buy: a house?
' A. ltis.
MARKET HIGHLIGHTS
INDEXES
NYSE.Index
ASE Index
Dow-Jones Ind
S&P 500 Stocks
~f"dti11rr~ 011rf 1,,,,s .. r•
=-: ...... YOrt; IUPll -The fDlloM"Q .lbt
45.14 off 0 .39
84.60 up 0.04
820.40 off 9.39
85.07 ofr 0 .81
.' NPU." l'orl< I .;
Mo111 A t-11 ,,,. the .-.1 IPMt l'l•"t fNlltllCI lftD$I dwr/alottl. tf'll rftOl.I INIMd Oft .-n:; .... of
etttW OJI 1"' ,.... van; S!Odl Nl!:W YOlllC IUPIJ -Tlw IS !NSI
t Nlot"""r,.; llilf'Clnt"211 <,.._. .,., the •II .. ltocks trMld on the ,....., YOfll ti!lft•~ "9;~ TM ..._.,,.,. <iotil'lll Slock E•<Mn91 *S:U'.: c-. Oii. ,
Ji'ke eitd 1"9 C'llfntlt Clollng 111'1«'. X.n111 Cp •...•••.. lS1,IOO SJ-.. -:A.
•11r11tltuPll '"" OAIN•r.:+ "' Up 222 """Ml Alrw •••.• 1'3,IOO ..... -,,.. ~. -, Btu 2"°+ ,.., Up iio Ell lll•y .....••..• 1u.JOO. s.. -7v. 14 c 8 .,.,., 1 21 + • Up tu Natl ~rfllcon ..•... 12',DOO .,.._ -t\11
SNtr•ln Llfl 3 • ~ Up h..J ~ ......... 121,500 JJW. -'""' s ~ •14+ •• ·~ ••.•. SOlftllitnl c.o ••••.• 11•,100 ttllo •••..• .~ .... .,.. APO'.J Oii ••••••.•• 115,.00 M -'"'° 1.ot 17\.'I+ 2 Up 11.• ,._ ..,,,., ....... """ ~ (7 Cle OU .so 1~+ 1 Up 10.7 ....,. ....... -r. Mtfl9 Tl' Arn 24+ "' Up to.O SMrle GO .••.••.. 112,100 1+"'°
llttJnl Df 1.:Jl Sot"+ "'° Up l.O Olntl Oil .......... IOI.JOO ~ + j v. P11rn •11 .u s + .., Up ._, Sony cP ••••••••••• 103,000 lilt -"' CC 1 COrJ1 11-+ '°" Up ].] ITa.T ........... , tol.100 1'"--~
I.Iv Fd c. , + •• ·~ '·' Wintngl'ls9 El .•.•• •1,.m 14'11 -.... SlmPrcfl .It 1:"• ;;.; u; 7,.. JOM$Of'I & John · .. •l.«IO 12\'J -t:ii.
AwtoCp wtt 1S.10-t1•M Up ].I P'•lrtlllld C."'-•••• t'l,300 ......., -1ti'I
l>+UfM .1t s ..... -Vo 71
"""'-k °' "'• \Ii VI) ,..1 t---~---------O lrl'llv wt1 1 + l·M Up 6)
c.oa..T1... ... 1 • v. 1.1o 111 A111f"ric-011 o.tte<: llltfll 4 .,_ "' Vo l1
F•lrmlFpi' 1 121,\ .. ""'IP 11:4 lf11Jff)Sf Arfilaf>
LOSIElltS ~=~g:n:g
1"41-l\li OH 14.5
--,,_ Off 1f.3 S4 -1\o'I Off 12.2 .. -nt Off 11.1 J = tt g:; ll·l
1 -"'-Off H.1
1 -" on 11.1 4 .... -V. OH IOA 2~-..... Ott t .S
•14-""' Oi't t .1 114-.... Off t .1
NEW YORK IUPI I -TI'le 10 ~I
9(11¥9 510U.S trMld IHI IM Amtrk ....
Stoo:k &c:~ Monel•Y•
HwltmnOU •.•... WtlUlel ,.., .•••.•
""4Nlt'S So!K •.••• -•CO ·-•·-•··· F"•tc:ofl SH& ......
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K.-Oii ··•••• ~ 11111 ........ P-" Ot-OU •..• .... ~·~···
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DAILYP'ILOT .(f
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHA'NGE ..
•• Monday's
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Dollar G alns
LONDON <AP) -The dollar
strengthened on some European
foreign exchanges today amid a
worldwide revival for the U.S. curren-
cy . The price of gold also improved
after a sharp fall Jast week.
The dollar jumped t.o 4.5467 franC!J
in Pari.s, a high for the year. from
Friday·s close of .4.5137 francs.
Today's opening quote was .-.5255
francs .
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,) ":,t~J~f~OAll.::7'':':Y:'.PIL':'Oo:,:T~---..!Mond!r~~· 6!p!!!i!!-!!!!!!!!.!!22'-.!, '!.'!!17!
.: ~MER ' .;. by Wa F. lroWll .-Mel C••
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TUMBLEWEEDS
THE: OPl'S A&AINST
HIS SL.IRVIVAL
AAf Glm'IN&
PRE'11)' HIG!j
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
<,>oU WANT TO BE A
MA:roRETrE, WICKED
WANDA"
FIGMEKTS
NANCY
-·-BUT 1 WISH
YOU WOULDN'T
PET HIM· OH,.MISTER ·
SMITH···-
---I'M VERY
PLEASED THAT
YOlJRE SO FOND OF MY !:--~--_.."
DOG·--
l TODAY'S CIDSSIDRD PUZZLE
t ACROSS ~f Summons
1 '-cima--52 TrN-lll'led •
8ow walk
I Tf\ldge 54 Flags
10Thtfirst 59Food
Gotpef : Abbr. tllk:kener
1 • urtlearll 59 ic. Muse
1S N8$>C>lt0nlc 61 Old II. playing F
victory site card 1il~fli 111 OfWlngs 62 Feds. H;
17 Nitric ind 63 Seed
cltt1c 1ppendage
11 Turkish &4 Ammonia
generals compound
19 Largenum-6S Vended
bit: Va1. 66 Baell ol lhe "'..... """ 22 Hurries 87 First USSR
24 Crtm01'11 premlef
1110tln1n11ker DOWN
2S Dlat1nctM 1 Cleaning ..... .......
27 Contended 2 Pwnltit 12 DeriOewith 39 NswBruns-
30 No. C.OHrwi insec11 contempt wick oati're
mer 3 Rarli -: Rn 13 Lodtoll'lllr 42 V1tvable
31 FNlt drinkl bird 21 c.onsume alone
32 Ttanapoein; 4 819D1Q9 23 Eerie 43 Title
37 W.. bOdy l\lncl*-2S The ume in liMrlCOl~'"""""Y
38TllelMdlolpe 6TIDfOf lorm 48 'Alrllneabbr.
Cl Nlrgllhoe ;rtnted 27 Piper moneY 47 Of the mind
~ 8 W.it trnlalW 21 Rom11'1 48 Throws oll
'1 &..ow. 1 Ship'• rtOOl'tl thllllera • 49 Cottonwood
4$ "Slmpl9 boOk 29 Denote 50 Bakery prod\ICt
Sknon -• 11 Hartn'l l'OOl'I\ 33 lobby 53 lndlen city
plefnan ... " 9 ~.tor 3' OonJuan'• S& Devain·a
44 OulCOMI of one mottler land
an.ct: Suflhr 10 Edg«Lee 35 MIOU·1~ 56 II.name I«
45 UINd -: U.S. • rflttlve ROOdes
MISS PEACH
indiY!dually poet 36 Reunkln S7 Actress Anna
~ ~side 11 Comedian attendee
Mn.clure Fred-~ 38 8ake1J lltlTI 80 Faclal feature
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IFHE:
SIOWS UP, l'M
RLJINEll.
by Dale Hale
by Ea 111ie Bushniller
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DOOLETS .WOILD"
,....,.~--......, I GET 'lb CUOOS£
.:111£.NICCST ONE.!
RJLL. ' &/.A5T,
WITH
1111! Fll!CNT .='r LUCK/
ANIMAL ~CKERS
• ... by Mel
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THE GIRLS
. ' .
DENNIS THE MENACE
-,,
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N.V. S'&eeb
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VOL .... NO. 265,.1 SEcTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1975 c TENCENn
known vldlm of tile eleelronlc· = ,...., •blcb•-llm
i....,.. told police tile -ftmU -tbe ototlon and
lllhtto -Ille ~.:n-•t· • ....,,... Mid .. be .-.. to
tbe.Jlll<me. ~ b1rned toward llhn
and, ··~aim and amWns." ahol
blm.
"It ... Ute 1Uctins )'OU~.
6-lnawall10Ckel."be6aid.
He Is .up shaken and-. irom U.r-.;. Wodn~. .
•·t (ell on Ute Door uif couJ.ln•t
mo¥e. It was the worst pain l
ever felt,," be said. "My wbole
llhl -.id.-.raV'j'::f.ln~. I
toWdn'teontrolmym •··
LaWIOll: said lhtf' woman was
joined by a man wlloleanocl °""' and pulled the wlnil from the
darta ill his belly. Ulen helped the
• L
M8nBeldinT -. • • •
5;000
Attend
Fiesta \,
Daredevil bicycle racing,..Mex-
ican di,nner1t, niusic. c'!fllval
rides, the cr<rwning d a hooey-
blonde·Miss Costit Mesa and the
chance to win a new 1975 car
drew an estimated 5,000 people
to ibe .Fiftli A.•nual Fiesta de
Costa Me.a oven.he weekend.
TU.rnout for the Chamber of
Commerce-sponaored event re-{
ached record proportions, with
ideal September· weather as a
'primedrawingcard ..
''The weather, o{ course, was
jll$t perfect," Chamber ol Com ·
, ,merce Executive Manager Nick
• 'Zienet said today, not long after
M~ay dawned wet and gray
.(ollowini-a glorious weekend.
The rest o( the successs, he
declared, .. can be ·attributed to
General .. Cllairman Les Miller
~~such stal:wart co-workers as
Cliff Wesdorl.
One highlight of th weekend-
-lopg•festiv~ h,rald~ anfval o(
autumn was ~wntnrof' Cindy
Bamberger, 18; as the new Miss
COS:ta Mesa whQ will reign for the
roming year.
Miss Bamberger, works ahd
attends · Oraoge1 Coast College
full-time. C\S ~oes her runner-up
for the title .. PaD1!ela Johnson, 19.
also a Costa Mesa resident. -
Daredevil ~icycle rider BeMy
Carpini, 15, of t,..akewOQd', de·
lighted specators both on and off-
track' as winner of the motocross
b~e race _staged in a race.nt lot
on West 19th Street near Pomona1
Avenue. '--~
He. was awarded a ,new
Schwinn bicycle and showed it
off~by Performing wheel-stands
on the winner's plat!orm.
Grand prize of the festival , a
1975 Ford Pinto wai won by
Estancia f{igh School student
Dale"Richard,' ot 2123 Pomona
Ave., who purchased his winning
ticket from a fellow student.·
, She is Ann Miller. a member of
the Estancia High School ba~.
which raised more than $4.000
toward a · trip to perform in the
U.S. Bicentennial celebration
next year through fiesta ticket
sales.
Other prize winners included...
Tom Powell, of 151 E. 21st St .•
Costa Mesa, who took h~me a
<See FIESTA, Page AZ)
..
DNlr ..._. ... ....,..
' MESA 'MISS A HIT
• Cindy Bamberger
Gas Chamber
Ordered for
-Slayer of S . .
REDDING (.AP) -Robert
' Paul San(ler w ~ S:dhteneed to-
day to die in the 'tas chamber for
·the sniper slaJings of five
persons in a ~rnith River m~
last March.
The bearded, 23-year·old
Sander refused to· stand when
senterice was pronounced by
Superior Court Judge Frank
Peteriren.
The former Cincinn8u· depart-
ment store employe. convicted
by a jury Sept. 4, refused to stand
when the baili!f ordered ·all to
Pae as the judge entered the
OOurttoom. •
The judge also ask~ him to
stand bmore b'e impoeed sen-
tence. "
•'No, I will not.•• Sanders d.
i
SecUrity
'Tight' '
At Hotel ·
SAN FRANCISCO (APl"-A
young man was arrested. tod~
ootside a hqtel where President
Ford was scheduled to speak and ·
book~ on suapicion of threaten-
inglhe Presi<lent. palice said.
Police identified the man as
Ronald Carlo;.24, of San Fran·
cisco. Officers said he was turned·
over to the Secret Service after:
being ta.ken into custody out.side
the Hyatt Union Square Hotel.
At the time or the arrest, Foril
was insijie the hotel attend.in~ a
luncheon of the World ... Affat.rs
Council. He was to address the
gathering after the luncheon.
The man taken into custody
was never in ·proximity to the
President, officers said: '
Two weeks ago, Lynette
Fromme, a follower of convicted
murderer Charlr Manion, was
wrestled to the ground by Secre\
Sttvice agents as sbe pointed a
loaded ••lomaUc pistol at Ford
in Sacramento. ,
F\lrtber details were not im·
mediately available on today's
. incident.
Security precautions were
tight around tbe two hotels where
Ford appeared today.
The President had addressed a
meeting of the AFL·CIO Building
Trades Council at the Hyatt
Union Square Hotel. •
(See THREAT, PajeAZl .
RALLY ENDS;
DOW OFF 9
NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices
closed s harply lower today in
moderate trading on the New
York Stock Exchange as in·
vestors consolidated gains made
the latter part of last week.
The Dow Jones industrial
average, ahead around two
points at the outset, lost 9.39
points to 820 .40 . lt had gained
34.66 points the previous three
sessions.
Declines led.advances by about.
a··seven-tci-five margin. (Tables,
M l. ·
Prices were lower in moderate
. trading on the American Stock
· Exchand:e.
Vieti~. -~ . ., . woman clean out lbe cash re-dartl attaclled to bau.r!es by Ulerature that comea wltb It
ai•t•r of aq undet,rmilted · 11-root wJroa. Tbe darll cal\ ... tee that In early tesUntt a
amow>t. 0..-dart was )ell la bis· ....., ... 1 ~ Inc bee ol ~hlq blaot from !be sun llllnll .,.:1J 0~. 1 ~ and ~~ S0,000-volt . charie ta 801000 vol~Ueoecl a IS).
Polin 111.ld etlbt of the -=,: ln~'JtacttaUns and • "'f~wao ~, who wel•b1 :.o weaPoas, called tbe -Taler very · • Public Defender;• were stolen ' pounds, wu kn~ked senseless, The weapon •a maken, T~ hit bearl111 and vlslM blurred.
lromanofficeln MlamiSbcwes. Sy1\e11> Inc. -or Los Anseles, Doctors at Miami lntematlonal
The Tuer. wbl"' LaWIOll said . describe It as a nonleUutl cdmo lloopital said an incb·IOlll dart
rem ioded b lm ,of a gray prevent.ion deviCe for atoppiftc wu removed from. Lawadft't
Oubllgbt, laun.chea two amall at.,.cters In their tracks. rlgbt&ide,juataboveblswalst.
•• I •
eat ~to . ~resitlen
• • ' '. '
• OIUy l'tlllt "'*' lllf lliCMnl K ..... ~ PRESIDENT FORD GREETED IN ANAHl!IM BY INSURANCE LEADER NORMAN LEVINE :
2;400 Cheered As Ford Promised Er=onomlc Health Without 'New Spending Program•' .
~Fo;rd Bullish on Economy
> • •
Also 'fakes' Stand Agains't Big ·Government •. . ~ -.
By'1>0UGLAS FRl'!Y.SCHE
r Of .. 0.ffYl'tliltsc.tf
A flullish Pre~ident Gerald
Ford Sunday told a business au·
dience in Orange County that the
nation·s economy is well on the
way to· recovery: Alt.empts to
speed il.t he sai¢, could lead to
disaster.! · · '
"Never for1ei " skid Ford,
''that theieovernri-1.nt.that is big
enough to give y~ everything ~'Want is a goverilrhent that is bigf· enpugb ... •to tali:e everything yoU have." ..,. ·
Ford's talk at tb:'Disneyland
Mot'el in Anaheinf'to'2,4oo mem-
bers of the: National Association
of Life Underwriters, an in-
.suran~~·'8Jfu:i.try_ groqp, was a
mixtdte --of praise ~o(~/re«!f·en-
-terprise and indictnient ot big
goverttment. rd ·~:~fte~ r~gth~o~~~!n':nf ~e;:
"new spending programs'.' in· . .
tended to reneve the country's
· dJlemploYment an·d bring an end
to more than 'wo "years of re-
cteSsioo. · · Cbaracteri~iDg such moves as
"irresponsible" and likely to "re-
light the fires of inOation," Ford
. promised. to continue' to use his
veto power to quash increased
government spending.
Ford's talk came in the second
day of a three day swing throug'h
California, sj>rinkled with pre-
campaign effort.!J to gamer sup-
port in. the nation's most
populous state.
According to White House
Press Slcretary .Ron Nessen,
Ford pl8ns to, follow up with a
.pair of return visits to California
in late October for GOP fund-
raising dinners in San Francisco
and Los Angeles.
Former Gov. Ronald Reagan,
speculated to be a Ford opponeril
for · the Republican nominati09:
next yeat', is listed as one of 25 ~
hosts for the dinners. Nesseri said. <Related story, AS}.
Asked whether this meaiit the
Reagan campaign was waning,
Nessen said, ''What Reagan cam·
paign?· Where is it?··
Ford's arrival by helicopter lQ
the Disneyland Hotel was greet-
ed by a cheering crowd of about
500 as secret service agents and
Anaheim and Disneyland police
whisked him from the tighUy
secured landing pad . in a shott
motor caravan to the rear en ..
trance o f the hotel Grand.
Ballroom. Jn his speech, which was fr&'
quently interrupted by appJaus.t,
from the enthusiastic audience;
Ford credited the insurance in~
dustry with being a tnajor source •
CSee FORD, Page A2)
Coast
Elo,ise Takes Aim . ~· . '
· On Gull Coast Weattier
Dense fog along the coast
will increase tonight and
Tuesday morning. Hazy
sunshine today and slightly
cooler Tuesday with highs
in mid..ftOs, low tonight in
mid.ro..
.__ -..
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Eloise was expected to make a
swipe' at the mo!'lth of the Mis·
sissippi River this aft.ernoon,
tben move eaStward and come
ashore tonight in the Moblle-
Pensacola area, br&ig !i to 10-
incb rains to southern and
eastern All.bama, nort~west
Florida and much~ Georgia,
INSIDE TODAY
At midday, Elo1se Was cen·
tei:ed near 27 .2 de....,.. north
latitude and 89.8 deer-west
Prt:fldenl Ford today called
for crtotion of· IJOO-bill1on rt:·
3«freh corpofa.Hon to give na-
tMm entt0j 1ndepend~e in to
JIN.TS. A·S.
looJltude, •"-ut 210 .. mile;s south
of New Oriea'lilfl Peat •listained = winds remah:)ed at 85 miles an
fiour, but huMCane foieeuters %:"...::'""'
ntd,<01:u11tloo• re111alned favora. -:,..
bl tor further slreftl\benlng $:::""'
berore •it reached"' land. Gale • , .. , :;:: f~ 'Wlrtlll8 e•l8>ded -lrOmt-:ii:.:.;.._. El ' c.~t0<.125mlles.-..'. .. -
(Bee El.OISE. AZ) .
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-j.;er -,
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DAILY PILOT c
"Seller Wins . .
Thh R,a/fle
:'fll• runaway winner of a
lO·si>ffd bicycle raffle at
the Orange County 1'"'alr-
grounds s wa p m eet in
Costa Mesa Sunday was
apparently the guy selling
the tickets -until he ·
couldn't produce th e
prize.
A prospective llcket-
buyer who wanted to see
. -wHat he was maybe going
to win called police to 88
Fair Drive after persistent
demands to examine the
prize bike failed.
"Through mutual agree··
ment between himself and
-che fairgrounds. -the rafne
operator decided .jt was
time to close down ," Says
Costa Mesa Police Delet:-
tive Phil McCormick .
The lottery operator was
not arrested but police said
his departure was hasty.
FORD ..•
I Of capital financing that will re-
turn econom ic health to the U.S. I Ford said he was hesitant to
take steps such as additional tax
' cuts to speed economic recovery
for fear of disastrous after-
effects ; "going from hallelujah
to heartbreak in one swift move."
At the same time, be said, i~ is
)mpossible to underestimate
l•;'the human tragedy. of un-
employment.''
"There is a term in economics
that really bothers me -
!acceptaQle level of unemploy-
l'llent.'· There is no acceptable
level of uneml{ioymelit.'' the
Presiclentsaid. ' .t
I .. One of the prime goals of this
administration is to sustain the
economic progress now under
'YBY an<I to put unemployed
Americans back on the job," he
said.
) But the way to do it. he said, is
through the free enterprise
system, not new government
spending programs.
.
' f'r-PogeAJ
ITHREAT •••.
Even though the two hotels are
mly a block apart, the President
made the short journey in an.;. auto
circled by Secret ServiCe men...
• Earlier, police took two men
into oustody after Ford arrived
.after an apparent scuffl~ over a
Viet Cong flag and a man sbout-
jng ''Free Patty Hearst. jail
Gerald R. Ford.•• · I .
1 Olle of the men wore a placard
reading "Free Patty Hearst••
and the other had demonstrated
with about 25 others calling for
an end to the Egyptian-Israeli ac-
cord. Both were handcuffed and
taken away by police.
The presidential motorcade
f ollowed a ti,eavily guarded route
i'rom San Francisco Interna-
tional Airport to a downtown
botel where he addressed the
AFL-CIO Building Trades Coun-
cil. ~
· The brief one-block ride lo the
St. Francis Hotel was in contrast
to Sept. 5 in Sacramento when
Ford walked a similar distance
from his hotel to the state
Capitol.
I Ji'r-P~AJ
FIESTA •••
j'SlOO set of tires from the Grand !'fix tire shop; Mar Reddy, 2700
,Peterson Place, who won a stereo l'°uild system from Theo's TV,
'and Judith Fenton. of2916Andros &. .. who received Air caJifomia
,'.round trip tickets for two to San
~ancisco.· • :,,..~~--~~----=-~~...;
t ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed
Pfttl0rtll "111l P\lllllJ!lw
Jock R. Cu<lev 'lk• Prnldlnl Mid o.nti,:i ~
ThOmlS KHV11
EOllOt
c
Thomas A. Murph1ne Moll~lnl,€.... 1
Charles H. t..ooS Rkhlrd P. Nall Aub\~l MA~ll'll E""°""
'
. I
Monday, September 22. 1975 -
ii
UPI Nllwtnv'°
HURRICANE ELOISE GETS SECOND WIND
Storm Moves Toward Gull Coaat
Mesan Charged ,..,,_r~AJ
Jn Bat~ring ·. ~1~~~~~~ 1~ve: last
week when it slashed Puerto Of Co._._.,..,,.,.nr · Rico an d , the Dominican
'"'' ......_f"' · Republic wiUi 80 tnph winds and
Newpart Beach police arrested torrential rain~. Ttie storm losl
a Costa Mesa man and booked much of its strength in the moun-
him on charges -0f felony lains of southeastern Cuba, but
mayhem over the weekend in a was upgraded to hurricane status
case which stems from the bat· again today as it picked up
tering of a harbor area cement strength over the Gulf of Mexico.
contractor. Disaster prep-arations ac-
The incident took place late
Friday night in front of a West
Newport market and left Blair
David Ran~olph, 37, of Newport
Beach, with facial fractures and
severe cuts which required
dozens of stitches.
Officers on patrol the following
morning arrested John Steven ·t
Harp, 22, of 2017 Capella Court,.
Costa Mesa. They ·allege that ~
Harp confronted Randoll!I> in im .
unprovoked incident and then re-.\.
peatedly punched 'and kicked the
•• victim in the face.
' Officers said witnesses iden·
lilied Harp as the assailant. • •
Randolph was taken 'to Hoag:•
Memorial Hospital after the
beating and doctors Wired his
ja'w and sewed up the wo~ds ~
•his fp.ce. He was then admitted lD
sati.tfactory condition. •
Harp, whose clothing bore
dried blood, was bQoked Into city • iaJI and held ia If~ of $25,000
bail. . ~-· ·..,·.
.... ·"' . :,·
' ·,
,
•·-TONIGHT COSTA MESA PLANNING
COMMISSION -Regular meet-
_ing, City Hall, 6:30 p.m.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 23
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -
Community Recreation Center,
Tues., Wed ., Thurs. IZ-3p.m.
"GARDENING IN SMALL
SPACES'' -Alida Brown lec-
turer, Photo Bldg. Orange Coun-
ty Fairgrounds, 1·3p.m. ·
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL
BOARD -Regular meeting,
Costa Mesa City Council cbiµn~
bers, 7:30p.m .'
"JUMPERS" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, thru Sun: 8
p .m.
.. BEHIND .THE HEAD<
LINES" -Dr. Giles To. Brown lecturer, OCC Forum,
7:30p.m.
UCJ LECTURES -"Food for
Thought,'' Room 100 Social
Sciences Hall. '·Professional
Public Relations," Room 220
Social Sciences Tower. 7p.m.
.
Dorm Thief .
Takes Watch
A burglar slipped into a. Bible
college student's dormitory room
over the weekend and packeted
his pocket watch, as well as get-
ting away with his guitar police
said today.
John l. Gannon, 23, a student at
Southern California College, an.
Assembly of God Cburch-
affiliated liberal arts college,
told police his loss was 1294, in-
cluding the timepiece, iutta? and
bis wallet ..
lnvestigatqrs found no clues to
the break-in.at 55 Fair Drive.
celerat,d along tbe storm·
-Scarred Guff ,Coast as Eloise
mOyed closer to l~. and most
civil defense ahd Red Ctoss of-ficials~aid they. would make de-
cisiollf sflo'rtly on whether to
evac}late residents.
The Coast Guard in New
Orle&JJS said helicopters were
litli)lg wprkers off oij rigs up to
130'mifes offshore, and Shell Oil
spokeiman Bria'n Toal said
evacuation of more ihan 800
persons on its offshore rlgs would
be CO!l!PletOd before nightfall.
"You can see some evidence of pr~Pilration amOng the. Pf!OPle
but not a lot.'·' said' a spokesman
at the Baldwin. Cot.inly, Al1a.,
sheriff'~ of{ice. "We're nailing
things· aow~ here'~ and chedcing
oliJi, emer'(enc,y generators to
mak'e-sure they're"'\okay, but we
haven't started. evacuating Yet.;'
! ,
M~Woman .• ••• £ ' •...I •fl": • ;. AsssUJted ' ' i ' ~ ~
Mter P'any··
A Costa Mesa woman woo.went
to a party In Llguna Hills Satur·
day, the night after ber'husband
began sorvin~ an Qrange County
Jail term for manslaughter, was
raped by a mYsterious intruder
early SUnda~.
''Who are you?,'' the victim re-
portedly asked the diminutive
rapist.
''You don't have to know who I
am or where I'm from .•. :•the
strange:r replied.
She told police the five foot.
120-pound man who surprised her
in the darkened bed.room spoke
in a -thiclf Spani§b accent and
raped her twice ..
Investigators were told the
rapist left the woman's .central
Costa Mesa area home after get-.
ting up for a drink of Willer.
She bad told him her children
were asleep in the next room and
warned they would be getting up
soon as a method of frightening
him away. Police said.
The victim told Officer George
Vezbick she had another-couple
as guests following the party in
Laguria Hills and retired about 4
a.m., follo'f"ini their departure.
' Mesa Woman
Hurt Avoiding
Football
FOotball ~easo'!-is here apd
Babbett Baumer ls in Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital.
She wa's seriously injured Fri-
day evening when sbe swerved
her car to avoid a foottiall .bounC"
ing into' the street, ·she told
police, causing it to crash into a street Ught pale. ·
... The Southern Californi-a
Edison Com:pany light1 pole at·
Collece Avenue and' Shannon FJRSF CtlILEJR Lane then toppled over, crushing
the roof of her vehicle, police
BOUCBf 'BlJC' ""tursing super~sors at Costa
"I IO!d my car tO the fll'!lt M .. a Memorial Hoepltal lilted
person who called.'' . Mrs. Baumer. 31, of ·l978 Maple
That'• the advmillnf success Ave., In fair condition suffering a
experienced by the Huntlniton lractUfed nose and inlernal in·
Beach woman w~o placed Ibis ad j~:tce ,sald1"be~ ~U~ at •
inUieDaily Pilot: '• lhe sc~, ·Mis. Baumer only,..,.
1 t96&VWBi.J. vety-i .. ..-. O!lembered• sdelng' o:~tiall
• ....... .... ""-·-~ $6$0. Xllf•XUX bOundJIC ini, !)>e street\ Mid -·,,. _ ...,,. ,,..._ u you ~·ve • ear -· want to 4lbe v--.S \O>iVbid 11 llld the ! ~t•r fr ....... 11 .. "llflt• Mf'!flR 11'1111.,.. 0• ~ #"-pol• ; f'" f , ,,,'911W.., •1t•111 ,.,,.,.,........ -v-toM•b call"2 5878 · ""; • " • •
_..,_ -~· '""' • • Police •.•1:~··~•Jg1;;· • ' · · • We make It ea11 lot' YGU to Pllt ..,., .... s ' ~st:-r.=tf'..:C ·•f--1to-W«kWjo!o-1Jt. -=-~~ '1 ~ ~ l r~~\.::iiili!:!!~':,..:=•::::w-::~;..:;===,,,_-=u.=-1>::alb':=;Pll~ot:;;·..!m=··-· ;;;:!;;;:;-~and-.:.~~ .
.• t ' --
. •
Weekend
Crash Kills
Tustin Rider
-.. . .. ·-· ...
Duke .Join• President
•
'
UPIT...,_.o
Newport Beach ac!Oi' John Wayne chatted with Presi-
de.nt Ford Saturday prior to Ford's dedication of a new
field house at Pepperdine University at Malibu. Wayne
was still suffering some coughing. He was recently re-
leased from Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newp0rt.
Patty Criticizes •
. '
SLA Pals in Paper
•
! ;>
BALDWIN PARK (UPI) -A
20-year-old Tustiit woman was
killed and her companion
seriously injured Sonday when
an automobile swerved into their
motorcycle on the crowded San
Bernardino Freeway then sped
off.
Eileen Marie Nunez, a
passenger on the motorcycle,
was dead on arrival at Baldwin
Park Community Hospital.
SAN FRANCISCO CAPJ -The
FBI has~a seven-PaJle document in which Patricia Hearst made
critical comments abollt her
Symbione~e Liberation Army
companions, it was reported to-
day.
couple ate .rmore than strooiiy
criticized," the Chronicle quoted
the sam~ unidentified source -as
sayinJ(.
James Walter Barowy, 29,
Hollywood, was reported in
serious condition at the same
hospital.
The San Francisco Chronicle
said FBI agents found the docu-
ment Friday in the apartment
The complaints involve ••cer-
tain 'actions· • • that the Harrises
had ''either taken partinorwei'e
advocating'' that others ·-in the
.,/. PATTY TO TESTIFY
AT HEARING?-.U
· ''revolutiouary struggle'' dis-
agreed with. according to
another source quoted in thei
Chronicle story.
Burglar Grabs .
Jewelry, Meat where Miss Hearst and fellow
fugitive W~n<jy v;osbumv:a.had
been arrested the aay before:
The FBI sajd today it had no in j
formation that Miss Hearst was
ever in the Phoenix area, as re·
portedbyNewsday.
"We have no locatiOn at all in1
Phoenix or elsewhere at thil
time," said Roger Young, assi~I
tant special agent in charge of th'\
Phoenix FBI office. ,
Charles Bates, jpecial agent in
charge of the FBI office here, re-
fused to comment, saying tO do so
could prejudice trial evidence.
A burglar crept through the
window of a £'osta Mesa woman's
home as she slept Friday night,
stealing jewelry, purses and
frozen meats worth $1,174, Police
said today.
They identified the victim as
Harriett A. Gainy, of 155 Merrill
Lane, a resident of the east·
central ~ection of the city_
The newspaper quoted a
"source close to the ease" as say-
ing the document.is "a missive of
condemnation'' addressed to
William and Emily Harris, Miss
Hearst's. SLA colleagues. The
The New York Times reported
_today that the docum~t indicat-
ed a possible break between Miss
Hearst and other elements of the
SLA.
• • • .Mariners gives you
up to a s1,soo tax
4eduction , this year..~
••• AND EVERY YEAR UNT.ILYOU RETIRE! NOW Y,OU
CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND
AT ~~RINERS, WITH, ':IRA''.. -THE INDIV-IDUAL RE-
TIREMENT ACCOUNT;. 1 A ~ ' . .. ' Marin~rs lndlvlduar'Retirempnt
Account Is a . personal lax-sheltered
retirement plan. "IRA" was devel-
oped by Congress to . give you an
effective way to build your own retire-
ment fund. · .
You can save as much as $1500 or
15% of your wages.'whlchever Is less,
and your savings will be a lax deduo-
tlon during your. working years. If
your spouse works, your combined tax-shelter~ savings can be as much
as $3000 per'Year. • ·
Come in to Marlner9 and atarf yo\lr
own Individual Rellrement Account.1~
You'll be saving lax dollars now and
bulldlng a much brighter-future. For
more lnform~llon, i:or;ne In 'or call any
one o.t our convenient locations. •
::_n_;:t_ --•
'
HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IHA MARINERS
"IRA ',;/tCCOUNT. lnd/11/®111 R11tlr11ment Ap:oun/l 1Jt'9 prtJHntly
urnl ~·% PtJr yur whftn plac«l ln • 6-yHI' t»rtlffCIJt•. YOtJI'
11nnu111 yi•ld i1 iranNd ro • Olg. 8.0$% when lntere1t 11 edd«I to
lh• ""°"'u O./IJl'ICf and compoundlld d11ily, Wllh • m11XJmu,,.,
lndivldu•I conlrltiutlon ol $1500 nc/l yHr, ."-'•'show your
mOMy wlll grow;
WITH TAX WITHOUT EXTRA
SHELTERED TAX MON&Y
IRA IHEl.TEAED FROMT1t,_ AFTER PLAN ,. PLAN OEFEfUU&; .
5yra. $ 9,510 $ 6,730 l 2,780
10yJS, 23,540 15,750 • 7,790
20yra. 74,S40 «,080 30,500
·~yrs. 185.seo 95,030 90,520
• AboYe tlouree are bUed on 25% Income brr:':.' Ftlderlll
rt0uNi11on1 requite 1ubtttnll•I peneJtlel for.., 'i wlOOJrawala
tt0moerttfk»t1111COoun11, •
t • -
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•
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