HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-09-24 - Orange Coast Pilot,
-
• • • •
\.
etled
• ' . ..
'
Heat Wave Blisters Orange Coast
' -
MarketMag'lae.. urns en ~ohheu-Rape
:r Spr~~ lli!oke'1 . . ~
Two Y~thlul .s·us were ~re, he forced the woman to
wounded m 8'.nta .Ana early to-striR.,and reportedly was!ondling
day w~. pqlice in~~ a her )vb,en a police uni.I. sum-four-~~.robtiery·z:~mayhem monded by a silent alarm, ar-spree U)S1de an. all nigtitmarket. rivec{ at the market.
After wounding two of the four In.the next few minutes, three
suspects as . they ·attempted rto officers .chased and shot at the
flee from the .market, police susii;ects as they ran in a
found ra naked 24·re~r-o l'tt patchwork fashion down
woman. ~e ~parei:it victim of a sideStreets to avoid capture. rapea~tempt,1nastorageroom. Ar(J!sted after being wounded
. Bep1nd a . store counter, of-in thilet and elbow was Manuel f1cer~ founi:l a market clerk Ortiz"' 18, of 2406 N. Pacific b!~g ,from a deep gash near Str~', 88nta Ana.
his· ,ngbt eye, a woubd Of:Cned ·.Also taken into custody was wb_ep: QDe Of the four suspet:ts al-1f-ye·ar-old Pe'dro Carrillo, of
legecjiy •!ruck the clerk with a 2U3 W. 9tb Street, Santa Ana.
homemade billy club. . (See ROBBERY Page AZJ And recov..ered from one of the '
suspect's pockets was the money
police cl.:lim was taken from a
cash drawer in the market.
Neither of the wouilded SUS·
peels, One of them a 14-year-old
juvenile, were seriousty injured
by tbe P.olice gunfire. that
followed as they fled from the
market ·at JVashington and
Bristol Streets.
Accor4ing to Police, the four
suspects entered the market
shortly after 1 a .m.
Aft~r knocking clerk Lawrenae
A. Topper, of Santa Ana, to the
floor with a blow..;:from the billy
club, they allegedly took between
$50and $100from a cash drawer.
As three of the alleged robbers
took two customers to a back
room in the store. the fourth
member of the robbery team
grabbed a woman customer and
took her into another.storeroom.
' ...: . Coast
I
Weather
The blast-.:furna.ce
weather shouia-cool doym
1burida)', with some ear-
ly coastal fog ·cutting the
high mark to the oliddle
70s. along the shorelifte. rn1oru1 it ·u still be .Iio\..i -u;emralJOi.
IN~JDE TO.DA. y ,'·
.AO~ of TetanetM'e bolls
10 to 14. attemptN to u1orl '1'
million. A ,j11oenife affieth
blame• foo much·· crime on .
trletMion. Af. ..... *
MY-ltriiU> __ M = At ....... ., .... UL.... All....... et Cllll•mff c~ ~3 •I= ::
Bob Battin
Su~poenas
Colleagues
By GARY GRANVILLE
0t• Deur ~ie. sc.tt
Indicted Orange County
• 0.lt'!' PllOt Photo br Rlctuonl J(...,.ler
FIRE RAGES OUT OF CONTROL .. O~R 1f,OOO ,ACRES AT CAMP PENDLETON MARINE BASE
Six 'Major Blazes Threaten Over 4o,OOO Acres of Southern Callfornla Land
Supervisor Robert Battin laid
some paper _on his rour fellow Desert Wm' ds supervisors today -subpoenas
for them to appear at his court CIA Opened Mail
·of All Officials
hearin'I Friday. Whj U
That is When Battin's attorney P P
Matt Kurilich will attempt to
against the Santa Ana supervisor quash the indictment brought Maj'or Fi'res
last month by the Orange County -WASHl.NGTON (UPI) _ A lh b Grand Jury. By JACK ClfAPPELL rough.Fe . 15, 1973.
The indictment alleges that °'""'o."'"" .. "'" Senate committee said today the Church said the groups in-
Battiri made improper use of his An· 11,000-acre bt:he at Camp CIA for nearly 20 years opened eluded the Ford Foundation ,
staff in his 1974 ill-fated try for · Pendleton was one of six major and r~d the mail of well-known Harvard Univer sity a nd the
the Democratic Farty's nomina-brush fires, whipped by hot groups and individuals, including Rockefeller Foundation. He said
tionforlieutenantgovemor. winds from the desert, that Richard M . Nixon. Marlin the CIA opened mail going to
The subpoenas or SUpervisors blated through more than 40,000 ·Luther King Jr., Nobel Prize win-such private citizens as Federal
Ralpb Diedrich, Thomas Riley, acres of Southern California nersandoneletterfromlheCom· Reserve Ch airman Arthur
Ralph Clark and Laurence Tuesday and today. mitteechaif'mantohismother. Burns. John D. Rockefeller IV.
Schmit were served in part late With daytime temperatures Sen. Frank Church <D·ldaho), King, Mrs. Martin Luther King
Tuesday aftetnoon. again climbing to 100 to 110 chairn;ian of the Senate Select and "Richard Nixon himself."
Also·sUbpoenaed by Kurilich to degrees and low humidity. fires Committee on Intelligence, said Church said members of
appear at the hearing were Coun-crackled through dry brush in evidence so far showed that Nix· Congress who had their mai l
ty Counsel Adrian Kuyper and four coµnties over a IOO·mile onwasnotawareofthepractice opened includ e d Rep. Bella
__asaistanL.p.e.t.sonnel director front from Los Angeles to San when he was in the White House. Abiug (D·N . Y .), Sens. Hubert H.
RobertSbelton. Diego. ''The President did not know Humphrey (D-Minn.), and
gurilich is expected to ques· One of the biggest fires was at that tbe {flail was being opened,·· Edward M . Kennedy (0 -Mass. ). µ~ tbe svbpoenaed supervisors Camp Pendleton where brush Church said. and Church himself -even his
aboUtffi.eir use of their 0~ staffs was blazing in the J-Jomo-San A committee spakesman later letter to his rpother .
as •ell as a county resolution Onofre area. A total or 54 fire-toldr'eporterl!tha.tjustoneletter Sen. Walter Mondale <D·
coveriri.g .employment condi· fighters. including Marines, of N'ixon.1s. addressed to him Minn.), also said among those on
Uans . were battling the blaze that sent from abroad, was intercepted on the CIA "watch li st ·· were double ..>In his request to have the court a plume of smoke over the city of .June l, 1968, while he was cam· Nobel Prize winner Linus Paul-(quaa~i the indictment, Battin San Clemente. The pall threaded paignil'lg for the presi.dency ing, author John Steinbeck and
malntalned that supervisors' out over the ocean and as far which he won in November of labor leader Victor Reuther .
ttafla .work at. the pleasure of north as Laguna Beach. th4tyear. Church told of the CIA:s mail·
their emptoyer supervisor and The blaze, which was sparked ._,"the Spokesman was unable to opening operation as his commit·
are nOt. reatricted to work hour Monday afternoon by flares used. saywhetherthelettercame(rom tee questioned James Angleton.
Merctiry
Hits 105,
' Going Up
By ALAN DlllKIN
oi .. o.uy"'"""'" The Orange Coast sweltered
again in the grip of a three·day
heat wave today, with tem·
peratures climbing back toward
Tuesday's highs, which were the
hottest of the year.
Inlan~ temperatures ran over
100 degrees Tuesday -104
degrees were recorded at a
Trabuco Canyon fire station and
105 degrees at Garden Grove -
but the mercury also soared
along the coast, particuJatly in
the south of the county.
The Weather Service said tem· ·
peratures would be similar to-
day , but predicted a break
Thursday.
A 98-degree r eading was
spotted on the temperature sign
outside the Laguna Beach
Federal Savings building in
downtown Laguna Tuesday,
while at San Clemente a 92
degree high was recorded.
Lifegua rds at Newport Beach
and Huntington Beach reported
highs of only 80 degrees. but a rt:·
ading taken only a mile from the
ocean in Huntington Beach was
98degrees.
Th e reading was taken by re·
tired ~ Huntington Beach Com·
pany manager J . Sherman Den-
ny, who noted that the humidity
was low , from IO to 20 percent.
and quipped. "It was a great day
for painting.··
It was also a great day lo hit
the beach. and more surfers than
painters turned out. Lifeguards
r eported August·size crowd s
along public sands on the Orange
Coast, with 30,000 on the Hunt·
ington Beach state beach, and
about 8,000 on the city beach.
"Most were kids and youths
playing hookey from school or
college,'· a li£eguard said, adding
that th e surf was a tempting
(See HEAT, Page A2 l
GOOD RESUL1S
FROM BOA.TAD
··There was good response to
the ad. The boat sold thC' rirs t
night it ran in your paper.··
~ ... 'CJ'hat 's the seagoing success
story told by the Costa Mesa man
who placed this ad in the Daily
Pi lot :
11 · 110 SPORTCRAFT
Sportscrui se r . Bow
Rider , Walk th r u
windshield. fold ·g top.
Fish or 1ki. Xlnt shape,
newtrlr &: cov. $1. 700. xx-
x-xxxx regulations affecting other coun· in a training exercise, was re-a Communist bloc country former CIA counter-intelligence
tyemptoyes. , ported 80 percent contained tc> although CIA witnt;sses have chief and National Security If you h ave a boat to
lt waa l4.._coJ1troversial Santa day. said the program be&an as one to · Council member Richard Ober, sell, call 642.5678, It only takes a
~...,.. Cit =~ A ... tl ~Mttk.. A11 C14 ................ ,...... ., ... :-.=-:•• ·:t: r=-:e= :.tt-..... ~-.. ............. ~ ..... ... ...... .,._..... ... ~-_._....._ IJ.N _,_ '
~
•
An. l:w':rvlsor•1 alleged use of Fire-fighters said that the screen comRtunications with who once worked for Angleton.
beb. d h I CUrtal Ch h 'd h few words in th<' right place to at.· his at.a on; campaign work dur· blaze presented no threat to the persons in t e ron n. urc s& t e panel would •--regular working hours that "Llttle SaJgon" cam'p of Viet· The spokesMan aald the covert begin hearings on tbe mail-tract 8 buyer. Alon" the Ocan1~ u.., · 'I l · ~ · eel · 1 · · 1 Coast the right place is the Daily prom edtbeGrandJurytoin· namese stationed on the ma1-openng1 was \ nz in openng 1operat1on 1n a ew Pilot.
eliid ftlMY N'iUhtS~----.!(~!:!;• ee!l!' ~ .. P'!'.!Jlll~EtllSu:y£.!!A£lL_~..!'co:952~, ~be~C!!,•~n-'.!..!!ln!..!:19~54~~~·~ .. ~·tt~nu~ed~-~w:o:ee~k~·~·-------L---~============----+:..1
1 ' • •
' : I . l
-.
,JI DAILY PILOT s
Pa~ty's Affidavit
'Contradictory'
SAN FRANCISCO IAP) -Patricia t-learst in a taped
message received April 3, 1974:
··1 have never been rorced to say anythin& on any tape.
"Nor have I been brainwashed, drugged, tortured, hyp-
notized or in any way contused. M George Jackson wrote.
'lt's me, the way I want it, the way J see it'.''
From an affidavit signed by Patricia t-learst and filed
TUeaday in federal court:
'' ... She was in a constant case of fear and terror, and
expected at any m inute to be murdered by her captors.··
Such contradictions between Patricia's Hearst's state-
ments while she was with her Symbionese Liberation Army
captor& and those the newspaper heiress made in her court
affidavit Tuesday are shaping up as OOnes of contention tn a
developing courtroom
battle.
Was it fear for her
NE IJ1.'i A NA L )"S/S il~ear~ht"'t 0d';;:~ie Mi~!
ramous taped c:ommuni·
ques in which she called
herself the revolu·
tionary "Tania." her father a "corporate liar," repudiated
her family and spurned her fiancc Stephen Weed?
At the time she said it was not.
NOW, SHE SAYS SllE WAS driven insane by her cap-
tors, the cleai-implication being that she was not responsi·
ble for the chain of events that followed her kidnaping on
Feb. 4, 1974.
The affidavit was filed on l\1iss Hearst 's appearance in
court on fed eral bank robbery charges.
"She was given a gun and directed to stand about in the
center of the bank counter," the affidavit said, referring to
the robbery.
"Meanwhile. one pf her captors, armed with a gun
which was kept pointing at her, kept an eye on her and had
told her in advance that if she made one false move or did
anything except anoounce her name, she woul~ be killed im -
mediately.··
BUT IN A TAPED COMMUNIQUE received April 23,
19'1'4 , nine days after the bank robbery, Miss Hearst told the
world :
"" 'ft wlll hMP our d•len••
claim th•t you w~
,.llCwd •rtd rtot c.pturad,
H ,.,., put down th•
· nvli:hln• gun, P.ttyl'
I "On April 1, my comrades
and I expropriated $10,660.02
from the Sunset branch of the
Hibernia bank .. I was positioned
so that I could hold customers
and bank personnel who were on
the floor. My gun was loaded and
at no lime did any of my com-
rades intentionally point their
guns at me ...
''As for the idea of being
brainwashed, the idea is
ridiculous to the point .of being
beyond belief."
Miss Hearst eatJier pro·
claimed that it was · herself
speaking in a taped communique
ol March 9. 1974, the fll'St indica-
tion that Miss Hearst was identi-
fyina: with her captors.
" I HOPE YOU BEUEVE ME AND not think that I've
been bralnw ashed or forced into saying this,'' she said.
"Please listen to me because I'm speaking honestly and
fro.m the heart.'·
Yet, Miss Hearst's affidavit gives this picture of her
first f eWJweeks with the SLA :
.. During the first week, nobody talked to her except the
man who called himself Cinque, who brought a tape record-
ing device into the cl0&et and taped into this device the early
communiques which were broadcast.
"Included in the statements which he was making into
the device were statements that she would be executed un·
leu the demands were complied with.
I "DURING TIUS PERIOD, SHE WAS given liquids to
drink. When the blindfold wu removed, she felt as if she
were on some LSD trip; 'everybody was out or proportion,
big and diatorted. · ·
"She beard constant with threats against her life and
saw that all her captors were armed with revolvers,
lhotguns, and other weapons .•. "
''During all this time, she was in a constant case or rear
and terror, and expected at any minute to be murdered by
her captors.''
But Miss Hearst seems to deny there was any coercion
in the April 3 communique:
··1 have been given the choice of being released in a safe
area, or joining the foices of the Symbionese Liberation
Army and fighting for my freedom and the freedom of all
oppressed people.
''I have chosen to stay and fight.''
Ooze Mopped Up
CARSON (UPI) -County
firemen mopped up more than
1,000 eallons of thick, black
Alaskan crude oil which oozed
out of storage tanks at a refmery
early today. It was not known
what caused the spill at the
McMillan Ring-Free Oil l:o.,
Inc., refinery .
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
F'tobert N. Weed
PrHMMftt l!>d PUllll ......
Jack R. Curley Vic.• ,...,WS.nl 11111 Goln9<"' """,.,.001
Thomas Keevll .....
ThOmas A. Murptilne
INM9"'t l.utw
'
O'lrles H. L009 Richard P. Nall
I
•
Mesa Youth
Ele ctrocuted
In Huntington
An 18 .year·old Costa Mesa
man was electrocuted Tuesday
afternoon as he used an electric
buffer on a boat in the Huntington
Harbour area, police reported.
George Francis Didrlcks. of
177 22nd St .. Costa Mesa, ap·
parenUy was using the buffer
while dangling his feet in the ·
water off a dock at 4211 Warner
Ave ., Huntington Beach polite
said today .
The machine shorted out,
police reported, knocking
Didricks onto his back on the
boat. Two co-workers shut off the
buffer's power and tried without
success to revive him, as did
paramedics who arrived later.
He was pronounced dead at
Huntington Intercommunlty
Hospital shortly after the 2:15
p. m. incident.
Police said th.e youtl\ w•s
employed by M PC Ind11>trles to
work on the private boat at the
dock.
Fuiieral arrangements for
Didricks are pondlnc at Ball>·
Be.rceron f\lneral Home in Cmta.
Meo.
1be Oran1• County Coroner's
office said th!• mornln1 an
'autopey will be performed to
verify the exact cau1e of
Didricks' death but It appean to
have been an accldmital elec·
trocutlon.
•
Sclwlars
Dissect , I
'Throat'
'nte orotecutlon In the Balboa
Puuycat Theater oboc«ilcy trial
was scheduled to real !ti cue to-
day art,.-pr• .. •tlnt POiie• ol· Reen and colle1e piol'easors u
wltnes1e1 who tried to convince
jurors that two w•lklaxlwn sex movl·es are obscene.
The defen1e is expected to call
as its first witness today a UCLA
professor who specializes Insur-veys and re1earcb. ·
Oefen1e lawye1f .. i\obert
McDaniel said late Tuesday that
he planned to call Or. Gene
Levine as his first witness but de·
clined to speculate on the
testimony.
Levine, however, will ap-
parently try to refute data of-
fered by prosecution witness who
· cited surveys related to Public
opinion toward expUclt sex ftlms.
The two films at issue in the
trial In Harbor Munlcioal Court are "Deep Throat" and '"1be
Devil In Miss JOnes .'' As
Tuesday's testitnony drew to a
cl01e McDaniel tried to win con-·
cession from a Cal State Fullerton
professor that the two films had
some literacy.merit.
McDaniel and literature pro·
fessor Michael Holl and spent the
afternoon in an intellectual spar·
ring exercise.
At one point, the theater
lawyer tried to win agreement
from Holland that the stCX')' line
of "Devil in Miss Jones" bore a
strong parallel to a book written
by Jean Paul Sartre. But the pro-
fessor would not draw such a con -
clusion.
McDaniel then asked the pro-
fessor his impressions or two
scenes in " Deep Throat" where
~xplicit sex acts were depicted
and the sound track contained
parodies of popular television
commercials. He asked Holland
about the humor in the scenes.
•·1 guess I must have missed
that," the educator said.
His testimony ended ·on one
note of agreement with his intei'·
rogator. .
Holland conceded that experts
in the field of literature would
dOubtless d.isagree oo the merits
of the two films.
AndyD~
Hospitalized
In Neuport
Andy Devine, well-known actor
who makes his home in Newport
Beach, is reported in satiafactory
condi t ion today at Hoae
Memorial Hospital, where he is
being treated for an undisclosed
illness.
"Just say I'm having an old
saddlesore repaired,'' Devine
j oked today. A hospital
spokesman said Devine, 69, is in
good spirits and says be is "feel-
ing fme."
The spokesman added that the
current illness is not related to
Devine's leukemia condition,
,which is kept under control by
doctors.
The actor, perhaps best known
for his role of "Jingles'' on the
old Wild Bill Hickock"show, was
admitted to Hoag on SUnday but
doctors have not sald yet when he
will be released.
A gala party has been planned
for the heavy set , raspy-voiced
actor in about two weeks, when
he will be honored for bis 50 years
in films and his approaching 10th
birthday. The party is Oct. 7 at
the Disneyland Hotel and is
sponsored by the Orange County
Press Club.
Woman Forced
To Shave Head
II .
•
-, •
Deity .............. •ltN,.. ........
IT WAS 96 DEGREES AND GOING UP AT LAGUNA FED
Mra. Deb Kowalcyk of El Toro and Daughter Shelby, 4
Frot11 r,..,. Al
HEAT P ER SISTS ..•
three to five feet.
h lifeguard predicted "ex-
tre y heavy'" s urf today, from
se o nine feet, with rip cur-
re rQm the breakers making
surfing hazardous.
At Newport Beach it was "ex-
tremely smoggy" Tuesday but
the surf, r:-om three to five feet .
was well formed . and a crowd of
15,000 turned out.
ICBM Launched
VANDENBERG AFB (UPI) -
An Air Force. Minuteman . II
ICBM was successfully launched
Tuesday and plumeted into the
sea on target several hundred
miles. down the Pacific missile
range.
The huge missile blasted off at
9:44p.m.
'The launch was conducted by a
strateeic air command crew
from the 44th strategic missile
wing at Ellsworth AFB, S.D.
Lifeguards at Newport, expect·
ing another dose of sun. surf, and
surfers today, put out the yellow
caution flag. A guard explained
that although th e riptides are
sli ght , there arc not enough men
to man the lifeguard towers. and
the guards want swimmers to
take care.
Only five r escues were made
by the guards in NeWf.iQrt. Tues ·
d3y and the totals were si milar
at San Clemente and Laguna
Beach.
At San Clemente the crowds
"'ere '"moderate" Tuesday until
school got out. The crowds also
were spare in Laguna until later
in the day when school students
tested the three to fi ve.foot
S\.\'ells.
The Weather Service forecast
for Thursday calls for the tern·
perature to drop. A chance of fP.g
or low clouds is seen fol-early
Thursday with the highs ranging
from the mid 70s on the coast to
the mid 90s inland .
CLOSEOUT SALE
I.
"ABCO" Brand Warm-up
Suits -Reg. 24.95
Sole Price Tops 8.95 Pants
6.95
Wilson Tennis Shorts
p,...P ,,.e.tl
FIRES •.•• ·
4
13' ooo-acre base.
Four Mmaeo were lnJ.....i
TllndaY1n •• ep .... !Ire il>cf. I dmt at Camp PeadltWI. A hue
spokeoman sold Iha! Ibey weroe
sent out to put QUI a 1mall flret
started rrom rounds llred durillf
a machine cun tralninC es.erclH.
In stomping Qll Ille bruab, on•,
ol the men 1truck a dud round, whlc~ exploded. The four were
bo1pitalised on th• baH, but 1
their injuries were delcrtbed u
slight. . All told, s,ooo men In Looi
-Antel••• San-Diqo,..JUvonld4i
and San Berni\tdlno counties'
were lightln& llres loday. ·
Another major trouble •pot
wu at a 'l,000.acre fire 11 miles
south ol Lake El11nott.
In other incidents, names
burned into the o~ta.lllN ol a
nudist camp, came wtt.h1n two·
miles of the San Diego Zoo's wild
animal park. forced 200 people to
evacuate their homes, destroyed
two houses, a mobile home, an
avocado grove and exploded a
1,000-gallon tank ol dleoel luel.
The Air National Guard mount-
ed ... Operation Kangaroo" which
involved using big transport
planes to ferry heavy equipment,.
state forest (ire fighters and
prisoner work crews from
throughout California to trouble
spots.
A blaze that destroyed 16,900
acres in the remote ''badlands"
area, 20 miles northeast of
Rive!'lide. became the sec:ond
1,,-gest fire in California this
year. It was contained by a force
of 300 m~n Tuesday ~t. and
was expected to be Wtder control
this morning.
Service Drops
Gay Sergeant
DOVER. Del. (UPI> -S.Sgt.
Rudolph "Skip" Keith has been
given an honorable discharge
from the Air Force because he is
an admitted homosexual. a
spokesman at Dover Air Force
base said today.
The discharge. recommended
by a five-member board, was ap.
proved by Col. Harold H. Hester,
the 436th Air Base commander,
and Keith packed his bags and
immediately returned to his
home in Washington, D.C., the
Air Force said. Hester made no
statement in discharging Keith.
Keith, 25, was quoted as saying
he may seek to join T.Sgt.
Leonard P. Matlovich, another
homosexual, in filing suit in
federal court against the Air-
Force's policy prohibiting
homosexuals from serving. An
Air Force board in Vrrginia last
week recommended that
a.1atlovich be discharged .
' .
TOKYO (UPI) -A court con-.•
victed Sellchiro Kikuchi, 29 of
hacking off part of his wife's hair
with a samurai sword, then forc-
Reg . 15.95 Sale Price 8.95
All Sales Subiect To Stock
On Hand
Soccer Balls 6.95 up
Basketballs 5.95 to 31 .95
Footballs Juniors-
Intermediates-Full Si ze
7.95 to 28.95
Volleyballs 6.95 to 21 .95
Playground Balls 2.25
5.95
to , ..
..
Racquet Balls & Racquets ing her to shave off the rest
because he thought she was hav·
ing an affair with another m.an.
Kikuchi was placed on four
years probation, Tuesday.
He was the second man in
Japan tried for lorcing hla wife to
·shave her he•d· . In the only previous cue, in
1963, a Tol<Yo District court 1ald,
"Hair is not only a social necessi-
ty for a woman. It is a Jarge part
orberllfe.'"'
F-•P-.e.tl
ROBBERY. •
Wdson-Dunlop-Bancroft-Davis
Yonex Tennis Racket s
Tennis Dress
Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts
& Shorts
. ,
Racket Stringing
Bike Parts-Tires-Tubes
Repairing
O,.n 9 to & Closed Sanday
• -.
Penn -Wilson -~nlop
Balls
Tennis
Soccer Shoes 9.95 to 24.50
Football Shoes
Tennis Shoes ladies & Mens
10.95 to "28.95
Basketball Shoes 9.95 to
28.95
Running .,Shoes
531 Center
• '
•
Me
tell
Ol
D
por
jusl
out m.,
•• Spr
2211
Pre
p)H
mo
pur
for1
die.
ca
J:
?,lo
Ont
Dia anc
Du!
scr
Sllr
bro
tha
WOJ
ly,
De
phc
l n
buo
saii
Ille
s
ope
It ii
sta
ml>
Ira
PU
°"' YO<
to) ...
I
•US<
""' Ire C01
no ber
~:,I SU~
Uni obi
aft
SOI
c
Seo
Ca
Ing
Be
(21
tb1
Ca
Int
pa1
del
Jl
I
a~
in)
An
bu· re~
th•
Cal
rel
cal
OCo
mt ...,
ch•
sti
Ia
m1
sh•
I I
tht
he
m1
in!
I
Mt
th<
It ... ... ..
sal
de
ml
Mt
m1
yo
llfl
Y<
m1
Al
0
~
Cc
ye
re
""
"' wl ...
ne eel•m• appears
dally ••<ei>t
Slhlrdlya 1u Hoadlys.
ow P••11••••Jlll
DEAR PAT: I h ave a real old
portable. phonograph. It works
just rme, but the needle ls wom
out and I can't find a replace-
ment. Am I out of luck?
L. E .,SiinClemente
''Need.le la a Haystack," 1169
Sorlalfield M1U, Springfield, VA
z2Jst, /.robably can help you.
P.rovi e tbe firm with your
p)iaono1raph'• ma~ulacturer,
model aum.ber And. year of
pureb11e. and request price ln-
formatlon for • repl1cemen& nee-dle.
c:.u1-rvc
DEAR PAT: While living in
Montclair last October, I hired A·
One Moving Co. to move my
olano from one apartment to another. I insured it for $1,000.
During the move, my piano was
scratched in several places and
S'Ome of the hammers were·
broken. The movers assured me
that an insurance claim form
would be sent to me immediate·
ly, but I didn't receive it until
December. After returning it, I
phoned the office repeatedly, but
1 never received my $86 reim-
bursement. Later, when they
said my claim had been lost, I
filed another wifh no results.
· C. 8 ., San Clemente
Slnee A-One Moving Company
operates only within California,
It ts undor tfle Jurisdiction of the
stile Public Utilities Com-
mission, which licenses in-
trutate moving companies. A
PUC representative contacted A·
One regarding: your claim, and
you report i& now bas been Issued
to you.
8-erdftollqalr
DEAR PAT: I've owned and
.. used 'a Grundig tape recorder for
more than 11 years. I have many
treasur~ lapes that were re-
tX>rdedioo this machine, but I can
no lon~er use it because the rub-
ber ring on the capstan drive as-
semblf has complete.ly de-
teriorated. To date I've been un-
su~cessfu.t. in IQcating a source
tluwgb which this part can be
obtained. I've come taa dead end
~ .contacting every J>OSSible
source in the ''Yellow Pages.''
H .M., Co&ta Mesa
Cost• Me••'• Electro-Tech.
Service pnvlded your auwer.
Conlaet•Aet Eleclronles by wnl·
lng lo 2345 E. Anaheim, Long
Beach, CA 90804, or by phoning
(213) ••5321. A spokeaman for
that firm, tile only Soutbem
Callfomi• dlstrlbul<!r of Gruadlg
lntemational parts, said that the
part yoa reqalre 11 ln stock and
delivery can be bandied by mall.
J20D&plde
DEAR PAT: On Aug. 8 I made
a $20 deposit on a roll of carpet-
ing at Linbrook Carpets in
Anaheim: I later decided not lo
buy it and asked for a refund a
few days later. I was told that
there was no obligation to buy the
carpet and that the· deposit was
refundable. Since that time, I've
called several times and on each
occasion I was connected with so-
meone who either disclaimed
responsibility, or said that the
check woulQ be sent that day. I
still haven't received it and the
las t time I talked t o the
manager's secretary she said
she didn't remember me. How do
I get the deposit back? If I go
there in person, I'll probably just
be told the check's already in the
mail. This was a credit card bill-
ing that has already been paid.
C.L .. Laguna Beach
Llnbrook's manager, Jim
Mooney, lnsis&s that you ~me to
tbf'J store and sign a credJt form.
II appears that Llnbrook ~ dis-
satisfied with the amoun& of time
spent showing you &bis carpet
and further time used by the
salesman at your borne, plus the
delay before yo11 eban•ed your
mind about tbe purchase.
Mooney decHnes to b&Ddle this
matter'bY mail, b•t • 1ays that
your deposit refund will be Issued
after you sign tlte requlttd form .
You may prefer &o bandlfl lbts
matter by 1 small claims court
...it.
Orderf'UW
DEAR PAT: I ordered and
paid for a Minipack hammock
from Great Outdoors Trading
Company of Sausalito early this
year. My letters have brought no
response. and t'd like either the
hammock or a refund.
S.J ., Dana Point
Voor order has been tUled, and
,... ftPOrl tbat you are 111lsfied
wttll Ille morcb1adbe desplu. the
lanld•l•J·
"' ..
DAllY l'tLOf A1 .
!f!t1 l'd" ••pl!!!!b• ... 1'1'5
Screening Set for ssessor
Dlt4tyP'f .............
•
Panel to Pick
By GAaY GllANVllLB
• Of .. ...,., -
. The Oran&• County Board of
SUperviaon asreed Tueaclay lo
form a eltilens' committee lo
screen applicants for the vacant comity useasor'sjob.
T1>e committee wW sift llll pre-
acreened candidates foe the cov-
eted $38,llOO a year poo& down lo
five.
And from those five, the
1upervi1ore tbem1elve1 will
make the final 1elecUon.
Whoever the board lelecll will
serve the 39 months remaining
on· former assessor Jack
Vallerga'1 term and be ellglblelo
seek election to the post as an in·
cumbenl in 1978.
the board will select lta appointee
from that group.
The appointee will be the third
consecuuve Orange County as·
seuorto gain the elected.otfice by
a Board of Supervison appoint·
menl.
Vallerga's predecessor, Rep.
Andrew Hinshaw (R-Newport
Beach) won the board's nod over
a lengthy list of candidates in
late 1964. And when Hmshaw
moved on to Congress in early
1973, the board followed his r~
commendation and appointed
Vallerga. Both Hi11$haw and
Vallerga, running as incum-
bents,· were elected to office
followlnf their appointments.
THE CHANCELLOR'S A TOUGH COMPETITOR, UCI REC DIRIECTOR TOM CASH FINDS OUT
Daniel Aldrich (left) Overcomes His Opponent In Wrist Wrestling Conteat
The task Of appointing an as-
sessor to fill Vallerga'a unex-
pired term fell to the supervisors
last week when the fonner as-
sessor was removed from office
by Ventura County Superior
Court Judge Robert Shaw.
According to the plan unveiled
after a brief executive session
Tuesday, each supervisor will
pPOint one person to the screen~
.tng committee.
Additionally, an unspecified
number of persons, probably six.
representing various segmeuta or
the county, will be appointed by
the full board. Emergency
Medical
Group Set
Top Bassler
Chancellor Twists WriBts .
Judge Shaw ordered
Vallerga's removal when sen-
tencing him after he had been
convicted five weeks earlier of
s ix felony offenses brought
against him in a Grand Jury in-
dictment.
And as the scramble for the
vacated post began , the
supervisors decided that County
Administrative Officer Robert
1bomas and Personnel Direct.or
Berl Scott should pare the grow-
inglist of appllcanta downlo20.
Board or Supervi s ors
Chairman Ralph Diedrich, the
selecUon plan's chief architect,
said tbe board should make its
appointment ''within 45 days, 60
days at the latest.'•
Four county officials were ap·
pointed Tuesday to serve on an
emergency medical committee
the Orange County Medical As-
sociation (O MA ) says will be
needed if family doctors abandon
their practices.
The association's president,
Charles Plow said OCMA is
forming a committee ''to
formulate contingency tilans
should there be an interruption in
the norm a l availabil ity o f
·physical services.··
Plows asked for the county of-
ficials to be appointed to the com-
mittee and predicted a possible
doctor shortage in a letter to
board of supervisors chairman
Ralph Diedrich.
OCMA 's president blamed the hiih cost of m edt"cal .insurance
for what he said is pl acing many
physicians in a poSition where t.4eY . will be unable to continue
their practices.
!.•Some physicians may be
forced into an early retirement,
others will be acceptin~military aDU. other types of praci.ices and
some physicians will leave the
state,'' etows said in his letter.
"There may certainly be areas
of the community which may ex-
perience the loss of their private
family p.hYsician.'' be predicted.
The supervisors responded to
the appeal for committee appoin-
tees by naming <!OUoty Health Of.
fleer' John Philp, Orange County
Medi<!al Center administrator
Rob•rt White, the center's
medical director Edward
Tomsovic and General Services
Agency director Cuba Morris to
fill the fou r positions.
Funding Denied
By DOUG FRITl.SCHE
CM Hie O.llr P'fliM5Ulff
UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel
Aldrich leaned over the table,
ground his elbow into the red
ta blecloth, clenched his fist and
went to work on the problem.
Sweat beaded on hj..s furrowed
brow. His tie hung loose at his
neck. One sleeve was rolled up.
Across the t able crouched the
problem: Tom Cash, UCI recrea-
tion director, 190 pounds, five
feet and five inches tall, 3.1 years
old -25 years Aldrich's junior.
The two men stood almost im·
mobile in the hot sun, each
straining to flatten the oppo-1
nent's .hand to the table in an
arm-wrestling match set to kick
off the UCI orientation week
olympiad-a variety of games
designed for the athletic and the
not so athletic.
Aldrich, six feet and four in-
ches tall, carrying 203 _pounds on
a frame that is well conditioned
through regular training for and
corilpetition In amateur athletic
events, won two m atches.
Aldrich's second opponent, stu-
dent Dave Westrup, stood six
feet, four inches at 195paunds.
Following the match, Westrup
was asked if he let the chancellor
win. "No. I swear I didn 't," be
said.
Aldrich originally was
scheduled to take on Assistant
Vice C h ancellor Rob er t
Lawrence. While awaiting
Lawrence's arrival, cash gave
Aldrich some pointers on the
"Petaluma Wa y."
"It's the speed ," -Cash advised
Aldrich.
••you should see' some of the
heayyweight guys. They go at it
and it snaps wrists and arms."
Cash said of the arm·wrestling
Stat1is of Women
Forum Approved
'
I
Backed by a massive outpour-
ing of support from women's or·
gaoizations, a county Com-
mission on the Status of Women
was established Tuesday by the
Orange County Board o f
Supervisors.
While the board agreed to
establish the com mission on a
unanimous vote, it slapped shor\: ,
of providing it $2,500 ~g re-
commended in an administration
repart. . . .
Before fu11dtng atld staff sup-
port are proftded to the new com-
mi!sion, i\s 15 members must
prepare bylaws and policy state-
ments and s ubmit them to the
supervisors for approval.
lt was agreed that each of tJu;~
five supervisors wlff appoint
two commission m~mberl from
their districts and the entire
board will select five additional
commissioners. 1
And while the women's com-
mission will determine its own
goals and 9bjectives, it was
.established ' to provide a forum
for women to air their problems
to government.··
Before vol1ng to s upport
est a blishment of the com -
mission, Supervisor Ralph Clark
said it should: ·
-Concentrate on specific pro--
bl ems and problems related
specifically to women.
-Interest itself only tn areas
over whlch the Board of
SUpervisors bas some control.
-Avoid duplicating activities
ol uther county agencies such as
the Human Relations Co m ·
mission.
Once the commission's chief
architect Board or Supervisors Chair m ~n Ralph Diedrich.
· agreed to accept Clark's stipula-
tions, opposition that had ap-
peared when Diedrich sponsored
the commission's formation in
July evaporated.
Helping to pave the way for
easy approval of Diedrich"s pro-
posal was support for it by
representatives of county or-
ganizations.
Included a m ong the support or·
ganizations were various chap·
ters of the League or Women
Voters and Am erican Associa-
tion of University Women, Na·
tioh31 Organization of Women
(NOW >. the Democratic Central
Committee and the American
Civil Liberties Union.
More than 20 women
representing as many organiza-
tions , urged the board to
establish the commission during
the hour·long public hearing lhat
preceded the supervisors' UD·
animous vote.
Also supporting formation or
the women's commission was an
admi.nistrVive report prepared
by County Administrative Of-
ficer Robert Thomas' staff.
The CAO 's report said the com·
mlsston's activities wouJd not
duplicate work done by other
county agencies.
.•
'
championships held annually in
Petaluma. #
Either the advice was too good,
or Aldrich and Cash were in dif·
ferent classes. The match ended
in less than a minute with Cash's
arm on the mat.
The next match went much the
same. Less tha n a minute and
Westrup was pinned.
Aldrich stepped back and the
table was opened to all comers.
"Come on! Who's going to be
next,•· Westrup exhorted the knot
of watchers. No t akers.
Finally. to get things rolling,
Bonnie Lauesen, 24, a recep-
tionist in the athletic depart·
ment, pitted her strength again.st
Sally Peterson, 28, associate de-
an of students.
Miss Lauesen, rubbing her
bicep after the match, comment·
ed. "It's sort of hard on the
arm. ..
, The arm-wrestling matches
were the preliminaries, with the
next event frisbee golf. The goU
game, a tug of war-with the
losers winning by being towed
through a sprinkler in the Tues-
day afternoon heat-and other
contests were a mong the morale-
raising events of the day for
UCI's lltb entering class.
Then, the citi•ena' committee
will reduce the field to five and
Thieves Steal
Nixon Poster
SALT LAKE CITY
(UPI) -Per11ons unknown
have resorted to thievery
to protect the privacy of
former President Nixon.
An ei&ht-foot poster of
Nixon was stolen Tuesday
from a display case at a
tl.··ater oromotin.ir a
satirical film titled "The
Faking of the President.
1974."
The thieves left a note in
place of the hand-painted
poster which read: "You
put it up, we take it down .
Leave the poor guy alone,
Let him rest in misery."
Diedrich aillo suggested that
applicants be recruited only
from California as a means or
speeding up the selection process
and to insure their knowledge of
California assessment law and
practiCes.
The board chairman's Interest
in a qaic-_aelection waablftd by'
County Adminlstrlllve Officer
Robert Thomas.
He pointed out that 28 vacan-'
cies in the Assessor's omce must'
be filled and the newcomers'
trained in their pasitiooa to help~
prepare the 1976 assessment role.'
"We could be facing a crisis;
situation if we don't move along,
(on the appointment) rapidly,"'
Thomas.said. ~
He'edlng bis warning, the1 supervisors lifted tHeir freeze on
nine vacant clerical positions in~
the Assessor's Office .
· Amon& possible a:ssessors con-
si<lered as top candidates for the'
job so far are Assistant Riverside
County Assessor Gary Cottrell .-
San Juan Capistrano attorney '
Thomas Cooper, Assistant San
Diego County Assessor Jack
Templeton and another official
from the San Diego office, Ralph
King Jr.
Save an extnt $7.50 by opening · · .
your tax-deferred acccnmt in September
Now -two good rea1on1 10 open your Tax-Deferred Retirement Account early:
1. Open you r account in September and Fldetlty Federal wlll lbsorb your entire $7.50 tru1tH
fee for 1975
2. The sooner you do, the more interest you'll earn tree from 1975 Income Tax.
l.R.A. {Individual Retirement Account) -FOR ANY EMPLOYED PERSON. .
u not covered by a qualified retirement plan. ••f s1/de up to $1,500 ~arned income each year ex.empt
from cu rrent federal Income tax. No ta11: on current lntereet eemed, either. Example: $1,500 deposited
in an I.A.A. wlll reduce your 1915 income lax by a minimum or S330 If you are In a 22% bracket.
Keogh Retirement Accounts for the sell·emp1oyed also available-1975 trustee fee free In September. Doh now!
Gem
Talk
• f
' .
•
IJy .l.C.lfU,\11'/IR/ES , i
.... ""''"'·",_~ .. ,~~t.
OCTOBER'S BIRTHSTONE
Rainbow of Beauty
The opal, October's birthstone,
is one or the most interesting of·
all gems. It has been surrounded '
b y f o lklore , legend and l
superstition ranging from ancient
myths to present "symbol or
hope.''
' Preciou s opa ls give off l
brilliand flashes of many colors. • ·
The black opals of Europe, P ' Queen s land and Mexico are
examples. Since the beauty of the ~t
precious opal lies in its internal
color flashes, it is almost never
cut With facets, like a diamond.
Instead, the opal is cut with a ~
gently rounded convex sun ace.
Large opals or the world
include the Hungarian opal, now
in the Museum of Natural History
~
The d ials of our Lady Biko watches come in
delicious colors-to help make these the
most beau11ful fashion watc hes in the world,
Whal's your favorile? ... olive green, mid-
nig ht blue. wine red , burgundy, burnt umber,
amber. even textured gilt to coordinate
with textured yellow bracelets.
1823 NEWPORT BLVD .• COSTA MESA
in Vi enna. and the Roehling opal, CONVENIENTTERM<i BankAmericard-MasterCharge round in Nevada and now at the 27 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE 5'43-3401 United States National Museum. r:. .. .-... ,.... ___________ .._...__.._ .. ,J'
I
•
• .
...
•.'
'.
44 DAILYPILOT
-
.Just ••
·-. "'' . " . f;:f{t~ I -Ith . . ~· .. ~ .... ···· Tom
arpbiae
·'f:.!1':
Heat_'s Orr
The Coast
SOUT H COAST, WILD
COAST: So there J was,
languishing on the sands of
Laguna's main strand, watching
the beach people and reflecting
upon the changing tide. It was a
time you could do a lot of reflect·
ing.
\
•
' l
'SJ50 MIDfott
Florida Views
Eloise Dam'!lge
• FORT.WALTON BEACH, Fla.
<.AP)' _.J Dfs~ter relief workers ,1 __ tod;;:;;;•Yitbegu.;lbaesslng the havoc
't'1 ed by the fint ma.iQr bur·
ricane in 40 years tol'bike direct-
ly al the Florida panhandle's
cout. s. Hurricane Eloise, now only .;a
beavy thundershower over Tt;n·
· neuee slammed into a 40-mde
stretch· o( coast between F~rt
Walton Be)ach and Panama ~1ty
~efore dawn ,Tues~ay ~tth .
ctrenching rains. howling winds
and spin-off tornadoes.
ONE . PERSON w .. rePoried
dead and hundreds were left
homeless or without electrical
power and water supplies.
Highway 98 along the atretch cir
land hardest hit.
Robert SmJth of Florida's
nJyision .Dt E_mergenf:y
i>repare<tne·ss said tbe-aitaatlOD
was ''bad 'io five c:ountlea:
Okaloosa. Wal\On, J!al• Holmes
and Washinl!!<>n. I(• the worat
one P've bad.,,
Offjcials in the Panama City
area estimat~d damaces there at
S.SO million, while Ma,yor H. Gene
Smith oi Fort Walton Beach
estimated damages at $20
million. Other estimates tricld~
.in as tens oi thous~da of rell·
dents returned to their homes.
"YOU GO DOWN every stnet
and you see bui !dings without
roofs signs down, lrti?S down,"
saidSmith .. ''lt's so widespread,"
To the northwest, the sun was
doing its goodnight act, changing
from gold to ruby red lo lighter
hues of pink as it began to s ink
from sight into a mushy brown
layer of you -know-what. And the
sun alone gave enough reflec-
tions as its rays danced across
the low-tide surf and played col·
orbook games in the rivulets of
water as they streamed between
large clumps of broken kelp.
Ul"tT ........
HUNDREDS OF HOMES AND BUILDINGS DESTRD~ED ALONG FLORIDA PANHANDLE BY ELOISE
Florida Natural Resources
Oirectc:ir Harmon Shields, who new along the coastal area late
Tuesday afternoon, said
dama.es would total at least $150
million from Port St. Joe to Fort
Gov. Reubin Askew, who
called out 400 National
Guardsmen to <protect against
looters wa:a_..ex pected to visit the
area t~ay. Florida Republican
leaders asked President Ford to
inspect the five-count~ region to
see if it qualifies for disaster 8!-
sistance.
THE SAND WAS WARM to the
touch, still retaining beat from a
blistering Indian summer's day.
But now, in the time of the
twilight of magic, it was pro-
bably 70 degrees, maybe a touch
lower, and a slight breeze shifted
the air. '
Thus was ending the day of the
heat wave for most Orange Coun-
tians. But don't tell me how it
was elsewhere.
Don't tell me the mercury
climbed above the 102 mark just
over the brown hills and into the
Saddleback Valley. Don't inform
me that up in the County Seat,
they even admit it got to 106
degrej!s by 1 p.m. You know bow
they take the temperatures in
heat waves at the County Seat?
They put the thermometer on top
of a nag pole. They pack it in ice
first. Half an hour later, they
take the temperature.
IF THEY ADMIT lo 106 under those conditions, what do you
think the temperature was down
, on the sidewalks?
Why , those weather·watchers
· even admitted that at 5 p.m.,
Santa Ana was recording a tern·
f perature of 100 degrees. Way· out -m Trabuco Canyon, it was 102
before the lunch hour.
But don't teU me abQut these
things. Here on the beach, the
temr.rature is balmy. The sun-
set 1s beautiful. There are ~o pre·.
heated workshirts here.
' Now, as you walk; along in the
soupy , edge of the surfline, a
young man with a tin bucket ap-,
proaches. ,
"Hey mister. wanta buy an OC·
topus?"
YOU PEER DOWN in the
boy's bucket and sure enough,
there he is; squishy body all
slack and sbapeleu and arms
flung j n eight different direc·
lions, like a frustrated politician.
"Where'd you get that octopus,
young man?"
"Got him in Balboa while hunt-
ing for lobsters.··
''You ought to toss him back in
the ocean," I advised.
"Why?"
"nDS HAS BEEN too hot a
day for anything to be in a tin
bucket. Even octopuses ought to
havesomecomfortyoukno\¥" ·•
Now I was leaving the beach,
headed back for the real world.
One last backward glance and in
the darkness I could" barely see
the young man along the
shoreline.
He was waist-deep in the surf,
dumping his bucket, letting hi&
octapus go home.
Barbara Pee1;>1e1 Looks Over Wreckage of Neighbor'• Home al Peneme Clly Beach ·
Oil Barons
To Decide
Price Issue
VIENNA, Austria (UPI ) -
Saudi Arabia, the world's leading
oil exporter, wants to freeze
petroleum prices, but influential
Iran is insisting on a substantial
increase.
The internalional oil cartel de-
cides the issue this week at long.
awaited talks on how much to
charge when the petroleum price
freeze expires at the end o( the
month.
'the oil ministers of the
Organization of Petroleum Ex-
porting Countries <OPEC), open-
ing a two-day meeting today, are
faced with calls for price in-
creases of up to 35 percent.
The 13·nation oil cartel. which
has raised prices 500 percent
over the past five years, agreed
in Gabon last June on a new hike
to compensate for inflation and
recession.
Sheikh Ahmed Yamahi. the
Saudi oil minister, said on ar-
rival Tuesday most members of
tp.e cartel seem to favor an in-
crease, but "our J><ilicy is to
freeze."
"If there is a unanimous opi·
nion to consider a· nominal in·
·crease, we would be amenable,''
he said. ''But if those who favor a
big increase do not compromise,
then we will hold out for a
fr.eeze ...
OPEC officials have men-
tioned possible price increases
rangin(from 10to35percent, but
Yamapi said even the lower
figure ''would be too high.••
Oil Min'lster Jamshld
Amouiegar of Itan, which has
been leading the fight for higher
prices, said, "We stick to the
Gabon decision to increase the
price."
• Dally Piiot Deli•ery
Is G•orantffd
Monday-Friday: II you do not have
ycur paper by 5:30 p m .. call before
7 p.m. and your copy will be de-
livered.
Salurdav and Sunday. II you do no1
receive your copy by 9 a.m Satur-
day, or 8 a.m. Sunday. call before 10
a.m. and your copy will be delivered
Clrc .. off• T1l1ph-•
.Most Orang~ Co;unty Areas M2·4J21
Norttiwest Hunhngton Beach.
and Westmins1er . . . . . 540-1220 San Oemente, Capistrano Beach.
san Juan C.pistrano.
Dane Point. South Laguna.
Laguna Niguel . . ....... 4tM6JO
TV Crime Blamed
In Extortion Plot
DYERSBURG. Tenn. CAP> -
A juvenile orficer blames too
much crime on television for an
attempted $1 m illion extortion
plot planned by a group of
Dyersburg boys r anging in age
rrom 10 to 14 .
The youngsters have been
C'harged with threatening to blow
up a Sears Roebuck and Co. store·
in an attempt to extort $1 million
in cash and about $100,000 in
guns, trucks and rarm equip·
ment.
The nine have been released in
the custody or their parents pend·
ing a juvenile court hearing.
Their names were not released.
"lt·s not that we felt they could
have pulled it off."' Juvenile Of-
ficer Joey McDowell said Tues-
day. "It 's that 12-year-olds could
think or it. It's television and
nothing else.''
McDOWELL SAID officers
didn't know they were dealing
with juveniles until the mother of
one or the boys identified her
son '!j handwriting on the extor·
lion note.
McDowell said the plot was
well-planned except for a mis·
calculation in the amount of
postage on the two-pound extor·
lion note and other details that
did not become apparent until
the nine were in custody.
Sherirr·s deputies were called
into the case Monday when Sears
store officials received a parcel
containing a handwritten note
and more than 100 pages torn
Crom the Sears' catalog.
THE NOTE threatened that
the store would be blown up if the
money and merchandise marked
on the catalog page:i were not de-
livered in three Peterbilt trucks.
The note demanded rifles, am-
munition, farm equipment and
citizens band radios.
· McDowell said the type of
truck was specified because one
of the boys was familiar with the
vehicle. He said other members
of the group were chosen by the
12-year-old leader for particular
skills or knowledge.
Investigators took the package
to the postoffice. and postal of·
ficials were able to trace its
origin. Despite the package·s
weight, the boys used only a 10-
cent stamp when it was placed in
the mailbox at the hOmeof one of
plotters for the mailman to pick
up.
''Everybody down at the
postorrice remembered the
package." he said. "It was_ sort
of a joke because the postman
who picked it up got chewed out
ror picking it up with so much
postage due."
DEPUTIES WENT to the
house where the package had
been mailed.
McDowell said the mother or
one of the boys recognized the
handwriting. The other members
of the group were quickly iden·
tified and picked up, he said.
McDowell said the boys ap-
parent 1 y had planned t o
purchase a large farm in
northeast Arkansas and operate
it with the eqllipment they hoped
to extort from Sears.
''It's not that these nine
juveniles were capable of ac·
complishing the crime. It's just
that they thought of it and took it
as far as they did. It's no< entire·
ly impossible that they could
have gotten away with it."
Floods Threaten East Built-in-buttonholer. exclu·
sive drop·in bobbin, many
other conveniences Carrv·
ing case Of cabinete)(tra
...
Heavy Rm:m Aftermath of
T-perat•NS
"''" Lew " .. -15 Sl 1.30 •1 11 .. " " "
Hurri.eane Efuue
•tor"' was ••P•tl•d 10 mav•
northNst Into Poennsr1v1nl• tmay • .id., I ... Miit lt•Sl'I flood Wllt hn ....
rMIMd lfl lffe<t tro"" t.,. to.... Otllo
v.u., •NI Mutttern APHIKl'll-
Mr1;1'1-l'O Into I,_ llllddl• All.-.illt; -· ~ •1'111 ttlundlntorll\S _,.
Walton Beach. •
Shields said he found "heavy
damage to totaJ destruction" of
all buildings seaward of U.S.
24 Kil/,ed
In Jet Crash
JAKARTA, Indonesia
<AP) -An Indonesian
jetliner overshot th e
runway today at Palem-
bang iD south Sumatra, hit
some coconut t~ees-and
burst into flames. killing at
least 24 persons, officials
said. Two others were re·
ported missing, and 36
persons survived.
Com munication s
Minister Emil Salim, who
flew to the crash site, said
there were thre e
foreigners among the dead
but he did not know their
nationalities. He said the
passenger list indicated
there were also two
Britons and one
Frenchman among. the
survivors.
Officials at the National Hur-
ricane Center in .Miami said the
populations or the three most
severely affected Counties -
'Okaloosa Walton andBay-had
increased almost five-fold since
each had suffered a direct hit by
a powerful hurricane.
While Walton County·s J>Opula·
tion has remained at about 16,000
since it was hit by a hurricane in
1936 Okaloosa's population in·
cre;sed from 10.000 in 1936 to
85 000 in 1970 , the last figure
a.;ailable.
BAY COUNTY, which includes
Panama City, had not been
directly hit by a str.ong hurric~e
since 1900. when its population
waS less than 10,000. Now. more
than 75,000 people live in the
county. ,
As the storm moved deeper in·
land, authorities in Alabama,
Georgia and Tennessee r~ported
rains of at least two inches.
Tornadoes h it fort Walton
Beach, Hartford, Ala., and near
Jacksonville, Fla.
Dr. Neil Frank. director or the
National Hurricane Center, con-
ceded that his office was about 50
miles off in predicting where
Eloise's center would touch land.
. .
' 11 51 ...
1J )7
wldiltpl'Hd fl'OM tllt io-r Mlaluip.
Pl V•l'-f Into the Otlio V•li.r Md In tr. AU.ntk CO.SI t\411•1. THISISITI AG~EA"TNEWZIG·ZAG .. " ~ .. ,. .. " .. ''" n " " " .. ¥1114.-111 IJ JS
.... Oif1MiM 1• ,.
-~ ...
..,_y.,. It _,. 1.11
Oltll"t •• Cltf 7' II
.....,. '"'""' 10J .. ........... ., " ,..,.._......, 11 • UI ,....... ,, " ==r0rw. : : IA
... ""' 100 .. -"" ... .,.... 10J 70 •"1..-. 1• • -.... •
CJ..-r(erii1••
.. "'l
--.:::!~~8 ~"
.......... rototldt•
•
I l •
E•Upt fOr_.MNI Flor IN, CIOuct'f 11111s~ ,.,. NllOl'I from U.Mli.
slulppl R1.,.r .. '6rr•rll.
Coll' ~·twft C0 ... '9CI I ......
portlo!I of tftt cOIJfltrr ••rll' klGl11, wltl'I rNdif191 In tftt 40s Incl Shk""'5
.._I DI ttlll _.lhlrn two-tl'llrdl al !Pie M-C...llll.lt'ea•ller
~ tostr 111111 Tllunct.ar. Cott-. tlfluMI r.et todlr but llktll' coollng -· L.ftlttt.. ••rl•bl• wlnct1 11l9flt •fld -N1l110 l'IOur1. 111t1'1• tod•r wlll
....... fl"Ofn IN '"Id to't •loi'ut h
Uiht • ,_, '°9 In lnlanct ''"" C..tt.I '"°""''lllrlt ... U r1f'191 Mltir .. n .... lftct II, lnl•ncl t--
Ml'tltur.t Wiii r ..... llllWMl'I M ....
-. TN_.,..,,_,'1ur.wUllllll.
\
---~·,.._ __ _
His buih4n atitthes lndud·
i~...,.dblsti~.~
button drop.in bobbin,
buift·ln 2-ttep buttonhol•.
SINGER
-.. Con"" ... portlc!ootlnf-0-..
\/
MACHINE AT AN
INTROOUCTORY·PRICEI
'9J85
Has txtr1 wtde dll"ug
C&Plbilitv. txdusi~•
~,....· drop·in bobbin
end moro.(¥ryl~""'
or C.bintt 1Xtr1,
-
,r
I
,.
" ...
,, ~
I
•· _,,,,
'" "' "
,. ,,
-
lj •.
• ' ~
' ~ ' '• • •
:~ • ' • ;.
' '• '· • " • " .. "
.I
t
.,
,,
·'
• I DAILY l'tl.9]' .tf
• ' eaky' t o B e
1 Ql_Vll . Attor ney
No Comer
On Koob
Patty, Soll~h-Lovers?
SAN FRANCISCO (/I.Pl '
-Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr. says lt W.'t fair to call
Nortbenr C.lifornla the
"kook eapital of tbe
world." · After tH aec-
1111 'la! ~~~"' tampt 11117 "-Houae aide .mt •• ...,.,...
with 1U1 and C<ll'dl" blive ovwna ..-ea . .. _,..co In Iha .
world liDdu 11*9 are a lot
al atraas• l ... l•·on.~
-ukl ~ay. ''I . • wouldn'.t want to say they 11!8SHE/l.ll8T'81oveforWolle-wboseSLAnldiumewas ·
At a court hearine TUesday. are all ill ~-on•L&eo-·"CuJo" -baa been known l!!!!Cf_ sbe descril!oll blm lti • Jlllle 11174 M•c"Bri<le said t.be a.year-old grapbi_~al area:-. • ~ mess ace al .. the genUest-most beautlfW mm J'Ye ever v...., cult member ... meq. ~ l::Qown.••
tall1, conipe.teat to defen'd Tile 21-7ear-old.Jlidoe.ant•1 relaUonsblp with Sollall wu
bentif,butappotntedfederalde· Senator Fm· ed --1......w111af.a.ral'oourtroomtm1hear1n1Tu•1 01. fender E. Ricbatd Walker aa co-· ,..,.., ..-w1111111m. J ftl1allY saw blm ID jail. 't)ley kt me ldaa
counsel. "A'ist-:-u.s. AttJ. DaYid Jlancroct quoted Miu Hearst u •&Y·
He a11o warned Jllsa Fromme On D r1111k Rap inlahoutSollall. BenadlbequotetotbeeourtroomiDadrJ,Rat
aboUt ber statements in court. volc~ab. wlla f.Uecl to llaft his $75,000 ball reduced, ut.qole!IT
"As I 'said before Jli11 ·AURURN U.P) -State Sen.· uBancroftquotedtbe-be1ai,dJliuHear1tmadetoan
Fromme, I will not pemtit you to John Stull, a Republican from oldfrltDd, Patriela-..,during a Jail vlsltSalunlay. Eacondido, bas been fined $175 make political sUitements. ,, be alt-pleading no -test to a ' -...... _,,_ 'd • --L/l.TBa, 11/1.NCllOft Nfusel1 to tell reporten ho•f --
PATTY'S LOwft?
Stewen Solah
SBl • drunken drivlng ch•-e. ab' _.._ -e taiDed a copy of the ~·s conversation. Soll 1 ... -... ey.
S. G IN /I. u!et . Stull entered the plea TUesday Steffan Imhoff, said he, WU sure tbe convenau ...... reeorded' M dical u m·t Mee•-PE/l.KIN 'I voice at his arraignment in Auburn e ..,
rather than the high-Pitched tone Justice Court. Judge Wayne .~~ We-.UJ.y., ; th l --Orange Co"".., AmlllarY that earned her the nickname SoUah and Miss Hearst, both bandcuCfed with er '8JTllS ·~ ....., "Squeaky" among followen of Wylie ordered him to pay a $300 behind their backs, did meet for a moment in a federal of the. Myasthenia Gr::avia Faun-
. cultist Charles Manson, Mils fine ptus $75 in court costs. courthouse ballway Frid.N. . . elation will swnsor its-.,.a•I fall
F t d t' t' The highway patrol arrested "They did Illas each C>lher and were promptly separated by medical meet!Jlg 2 p.m. &nday romme star e nego 18 ing Stull Sept. 12 after bis car ran in.-ed t al Canyoll General Hospital 'th · dg on her •Jome manhala.Jt wasb't With our permiasion at all. It happen n a wt aJU e ..-:i · toafreewayconstructionzooeon US. Auditorium, 441 N .. •·•e·•-w,· aecurit1 hallway leaclinl to courtrooms," said Deputy • ...,... •R
Sheaskedforadesk,cbairand Interstate 80 northeast of M.anbalPhllKrell. Anaheim. typewriter in her jail cell and for · .-Sa_cr_a_m_en_t_o_. ______________________________________________ _
Brown Signs
Stiff Gun Bill
extended visltin& hours to in-
terview witnesse$ .
. Later, sheriff's spokesman BUI
Miller said a desk and chair, bUt
no typewriter, would be proYided
Miss Fromme in her cell.
•
For State
Fl'08': Wire Services
SACRAMENTO -Gov. Ed·
mund Bl-Own Jr. signed bills
Tuesday Imposing mandatorY sentences for persons convicted
of uain• guns in committing
serious crimes and requiring gun
purchasers to wait 15 days fol;' de-
liverY. The bill has been en·
cloned by Pr.eslden~Ford.
"Recent events underscore the
appropriateness of swift and sure
punishment for those who use
gurls to commit crlmes,'' the
Democratic governor said.
Ilia announcement follbwed the
uae of pistols twice in 17 days -
both times in California -in at-
tempt.a on the life of President Ford. . ' •
The first woman accusea of at-
tempting to assassinate a presi-
dent, .Miss Fromme obviously ·
followed the lead 9,f mass
murderer Charles Manson, who
sougbUo act as.his.owaaltorney
for tlie olooay 1969 Tale·
LaBiancaslayinga.
WHEN MISS FROMME made
the request to represent herself
during a court appearance-last
Friday, MacBtide questioned the
spindly red-haired woman about
her knowledge of the law.
' "I know nothing whatsoever
about the federal law ... and lit·
Ue about state law," she replied.
"l feel it is my right to retain my
~ voiceinthecourtroom.''
• Even though MacBride al-
The mandatory prison sen-
, ~-Oill wpuld apptx \fl ¢m ~ r"'il!JI' front .i'obberY !o at
"\ tedlpJed.murder.
lowed Miss Fromme to defend
hersetf, be strongly refused to or-
der· the county sheriff lo allow
her "special privileges" such as
additional visiting time to in-
tecview .,vitnesses at the c~
.,jaU "'1>ere ·she ts 'being •held \Ill S350:ooo bail. ..
'
The l:;tlll on the ls.day waiting
• periOd extends It current fjve-day l period. The longer length of time
• is to be. used by authorities to
Following a heated exchange,
Mac~ride said he would be set.-
tin~~ "dang,erous precedent·~ if
he,J,Ssued,such an order, saying an>t federal pri,oner who wished
to aefend himself could demand
thelamep?vileges.
cheek ouJ the backgrounds of gun ·
'· purchasers. . •· .: ,
, l '.6 . Mi~ Acres
:: , • • • ;
• ~l -: ' "r
.. • .. • • ~ ·-
~ • " .. :: .. ..
' ~
' ~ .. .,
"
..
'Offshor~ Oil Lease
Foes W~ Delay
LOS ANGELES (AP) -State and local officials have ap·
parently succeeded in winning another delay in the sale of oil ex-
ploration leases 'OD 1.6 million acres off the coast of Southern
Califomia. ·-.... Los Angeles Mayor 'J'om
(
,.---------"'"]', i!radley said Tuesday U.S.
Sta'le · Department of Interior of-
. ftcials b·ave agreed to meet
with local leaders Sept. JO in
'------------' City Hall to discuss the matter.
. In Washington, D.C:, Tuesday, the man President Ford b8s nominated to head the Interior Department told congressmen
he'll ask for a postponement in the proposed leasing, scheduled to.
start next month .
1'falpraetfft! B UI 8!gae4
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. signed the
year's major medical malpractice bill Tue~day, his office re-
port:pporters claim the bill will reduce doctors' insurance pre-
miums 20'1)ercent. It sets a maDmum limit of $250,000 for pain
and suffering awards. limits contingency fees lawyers may re-
ceive and reduces the statute of limitation to three years in most•
cases.· • •
aarrhtenlloOAde
. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A proposal an~wJiig lawYers to ad·
vertise their services .nd fees Was shouted down Tuesday by de-
legates to the annual state Bar Convention. ,
Inatead, the delegates endorsed a program for ''marketing of
legal services'' disseminated by the state bar which would give
the public general advice on what laywers can do, and the proba-'
blefee.
llfeenllle tltlWde
RIVERSIDE (UP)) -A 22·year-old Riverside City CGlleee
student ahot blm1elf through the head Tuesday following a 2~
hour IUD batUe with police at his apartment.
Investigators said Thomas Joe Abernathy telephoned police
and •aid he was ''the yo-yo that's shooting at the (Police)
bellcopter." Police failed ID rout Abernathy with bullhorn warn· tno and tear gas grenadeadoring the siege'. He was round dead in
tlje bathroom with a bullet wound in his l!e•d.
. .
,Ka•t~11•flf r ....... 1
NORWALK (/I.Pl -Deborah Kantaeng "8S in an "emotional
mrmoll" during tbe period she alle&edly shot and killed the man
abe •&YI raped her, a )llycblatrilt baa teallfie<I.
Dr. Seymour Pollack testified Tu"s.day he had found
evidence o( a variety of pet'SOQal problems and family pressure
pl.ling up Jut year, wt,en she i!t accused of slaying Danny Allen,
21, of Santa Ana , the day after he allegedly raped her.
.Ml11 Kantaaog contends Allen wu killed by her father, who
buaihce·committed suicide.
•
Suit up for
fall the ~· great
~western way.
Hlgh-eontraal top-stitched
wett•m yoked blazer Is
perfect over casual stacks.
Flap pockets, center vent.
Polyesler knit in shades of
blue, ta~ or brown. 39 99 Men's sizes. •
Go wetl, young man, In QllT' 3-plec• vesled'
llUIL Olttinctlvely taltored, impeccably
cut In the western tradition. lean, tapered
jacket, center vent. Slralght leg pants,
sllt'i)ockeled vest. Fine knit polyester In ,70 blue, tan or brown. Men's sizes.
AACAOIA·SANTA ANITA CANOGA PARK CAltBON DOWNEY r:ULLl!ltTON OLENDAl! HUNTINGTON l!ACH LAKEWOOD LOS ALTOS MONfCl.Allt
NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOUYWOOD NORTHRIOGE ORANGE "THE ctTY' PUENTE HILLS JtlVIJtSIDI IAN llltNARDtNO TORRANCE Y9tT0RA
WEST COVINA WHl"WOOO Sport CMI •lso ., AZUSA BUENA PARK IUAIANK El MONTE r:ONTANA GARDEN GftOVE OltANADA 1'.us
HUNTINGTON PARK INcaL.lwooo MONTUIU.O MOHTERIY PARK PA.IA~ MN ,IRIWtOO IAHTA MONICA WEST<lHEBTU. WHfmUI oOwNI
(. . I
' .
•
" ,.ff DAii. Y PILOT
• • • • • .. ..
• • . • • • • •• • • • "'·
. . • .. •
i).' •
3for1.22
Girls' briefs, all
cotton knit. Elastic
waist and legs.
Assorted colors.
,~l
I L. . --· ':. ~--~ i -·
~-:J)Ji . ~~ ;;
'l .
I • -·•"
3 for 2.28
Boys• T-shirt• or
briefs in cool, comfortable
cotton. Rib-knit briefs.
Smooth knit shirts. Sizes
XS-S-M-L. White only.
20°/o
off
girls'
pant
sets
Fall looks she'll love ... at a
price that's easy on the
budget. Choose from a
variety of tops, all with
matching pants. Easy-care
fabrics never need ironing.
Girls' 4-6X. 7-14. Buy nowl
Save 20°/o on each set!
Sale prices effective
through Sunday,
September 28, 1975.
Use your convenient
JC Penney Ch•rge Card •
Girl1' knee-high•
in opaque stretch
nylon. Fall colors.
1.28
Polo shirts tor
boys in colors
he wants !or
school. One chest
pocket, easy-care
cotton in sizes for
school-age boys.
•
Women's easy-care
Penn-Prest·· dusters
599 (f:·~~
Polyester/cotton broad-f ~I.A
cloth, assorted prints. / §\ ,
Shirt placket front • L!
with snap closings.
Special!
2 forS7
Screen-print T-shirts
for Juniors. Easy-care
polyester/cotton or all-
acryllc knit with muscle
sleeves. Choice of
prints. Sizes S·M_·L.
'
Special
s10
I•
The longdrn• done In cool polyester/
cotton transitional prints. Perfect tor
•
•
Total support pantihose .
Sale s3
Reg. S4. Tol1l 1upport pantihose with nude heel
and· reinforced toe. Nylon Lycra" spandex gives
graduated support. S-A-L.
Queen slze, reg. $5, Sele $4.
Sale 150
Reg. $2. Flexxlra · control top
pantihose. Lycra .. spandex power-
net panty, sheer hose.
Special! Nylon k nee high hose.
')~Uniforms. 20°10 off
~-.,.))) s14 and less!
t:}\ 2-pc. pantsuits ~/'\..(;) / _;.,,----. with blazer cut, ) ""~~ f / .t ~ shirt Jae and
f, '"; 13 @-~ ~ e mpire styte tops.
<I • .... ~ J Dress styles
· · ._,.-J Including A-lines,
empires, shifts.
) pleat front styles.
. Plenty of work smocks,
l,, .J /} too. White, colors,
·/i Patterns. Polyester
and polyester blends. ., Misses. juniors
and half sizes.
~;k ..
1---.. y( Save 20°10
·---.. ··.JSale 9.59
.: Reg. 11.99. Two
favorite duty shoes:
ureJhane side lace with
(~ cushion crepe wedge
sole; or moc toe style
..... ; ' -, ·~~ with glove leather ~f . \.(~ upper,cushioncrepe
, -.. , rubtrer sole.
'....• ···--.£...:-~ .. '· Woman's sizes . ... ....__~.::.-~ . ..'.. ---=--=.,
Sale 11 1'
Reg. 13.99. Allractlve
oxford with leather
uppers, oblique
toe, natural look
sole. Women's sizes.
Nude heel, reinforced toe.
White, fashion shades.
~
1199
Reg. $ 15. 'Alfie!
Tapered, layered
wig of Kanekalon •
modacrylic.
Sl;lle 1499
Reg. $19. 'Judy~
Curly short wig.
M6dacrylic eesy
care, fun to wear.
FASHION ISLAND, Newport ~~a~h· (714) 644-2313 .
...--:;---.....,,.,--'-':'.--t-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~•
' • '
'
•
20o/o off
work outfits!
Sale 478
Reg. 5.98. Men's no-iron work shirt
•
with soil release. Of
polyesterlcouon oxhlde in
assorted colors. S-M-L-XL •
Sale 558
Reg. 6.98. Matching work
pants with soil release.
No-Iron polyester/collon
oxhide in assorted colors.
Men's sizes, culfless.
169 .
Men'• work gloves.
Sturdy 18 oz. brown
napoulbandtop
safety cuff. 8 oz.
canvas back .
Sale 58
20°/o off!
Sale s20.
Reg. $25._Men's work
boot. Full grain leather
on crepe rubber sole.
'Sa1es24
!jeg. $30. Insulated
,.men's work boot with
leather upper.
cushioned insole.
Reg. 11 .98. Men's
pile lined work
jackets match our
· work sets. Poly-
ester/cotton
ox hide.
Special
4so
Men's long sleeve dress
shirts. Polyester/cotton
long point collar, one
button cuff. Fashion.
shades, men's sizes.
Sharl sleeve. 3.50.
Reg. $10. Men'• double knll ll1ck1.
Polyester In flare leg western styling.
Fashlon colors. Men's sizes.
Sale 960
Reg. $12. Men'• polynler
doubleknlt al•cka for casual or
dress. Great patterns.
r .
"' I
• I I
-. shop sunetay ~to s P.~:
1
HU N CENJ;E,R, .t:i'!n.tin -<
r .
.
I I
•
. I
•
• •
•
• I .. -
\
119fa
Melching loveoeel, $169
Melching chair, $109
Matching ottoman; $59
End table, $59
Cocklall lable, $59
Ready for easy assembly
with no special tools.
·casual gro.uping for
den or family room
The feeling 11 casual yet contemporary In this
comfortable and inviting group. Loose seat and
back cushions of polyurethane foam are covered
1 in a handsome olefin fiber of natural-tone
·stripes. Tables are'flnlshed In warm wood
tones to match w6od beam accents of uphol!itere~ plF•· .;
useyourconveoi.ntJCPenl\8)'
Time Payment Plan.
• .
Closeout!
'166
Contemporary styled sofas
fit in well with many room
decors. No-sag seat spring
construction, ball casters.
Stain-resistant Herculon.,
olefin in earth-tone plaid or
solid brown vinyl.
Not shown: solid brown vinyl
loveseat, $136
Sorry, not available out1lde norm•t dellv9fJ' ire•. Phone for details.
QuantltlH llmltedOn C:Jotilout mttCttandise.
I
•
I • ' I ,I,
r1 . ' •
•
Sale! Save on
steel belts.
Reliant Steel. Fealures 2•2 bias billed con1lructon ol polye1ter
cords and steel bells. In lhe wide 78 1erle1 profile. Whltnt•llt.
No trade-in required.
Tire al:r:e R9';. price Sale price + ted.111 Tire tli.e Reg. price
878-13 29.00 25.00 1.95 G78-14 35.00
E78-14 35.00 28.75 2.44 G78-15 39.00
F78-14 35.00 28.75 2.58 H78-15 39.00
'(
Sile price +led. la•
28.75 2.74
31 .25 2.81
31 .25 3.02
Save $20! Stop Action®
drum brake overhaul*
46 88
Dress up your car,
pickup or van vyith
custom wheels
Here's what you get:
• lnttliltl·r:iew"JCPenney Stop
AcOon •'Hhlngs on 4 wheels
•Rebuild au 4 wheel cyllnders
• Resurlace four drums
•Repack Iron! wheel bearings
• Lubricate shoe contacts -
• Inspect front grease seats
No points!
Reg. 66.88
'•Inspect brake springs
•Inspect master cylinder
• lnspecl. adjust parking brake
•Inspect rear oil SC!als !or leaks
• Bleed and refill brake system
•Road lest car
"Most American. many
loreign car s
No condenser! 6499
MOBELEC'" electronic
breakerless ignition
Keep s your car in "top tu ne" year alter year .
An electronic sensing unit replaces points and
condenser. Dramatically increases your car·s
performance, extends spark plug life.
3199 1Sx8
31 99
14'6
Polished dish mag.
High gloss
l 1n1sh highlights,
;i!u1ninum alloy
constru ction.
Sale! Save on compact space-savers now!
Personal portable
Salessa
Reg. 99.95. Black and white penonol
portable with 9'" screen (meas. dlag.).
Solid stata·chassls, monopole VHF/UHF
antenna. Whits plasUc cabinet measurea
onrr 10" high, 13'1\'' wide, 10'' deep.
•
Sale 14495
Reg. 189.95. 4.5 cu. fl.
comp1ct refrigerator
has separa1e freezer,
translucent crisper.
9.5 cu. ft. refrigerator,
reg. 219.95. S•le 194.95.
8.2 cu. fl chest freezer, R~. 229.95 Sale 204.95
S•I• pf1c:n enecllve through Sund•y, September 28, 1975
Sorry, nol evall•bie oulalde normal delivery •rH. Phone for dtlalla.
•
•
Save 31 95
Reg . 239.95. Sela $208.
Compact washer Is 21"
wide. 3 wash cycles. water
level selection. No perma-
nent installation; hooks to
kitchen faucet.
-·
. :•:
,. ..
,'---~ •
Save 21 95
Reg. 149.95. Sale $128. Compact
electric dryer is 21" wide.
2-cycle timer for permanent
dress. autom atic cool-down.
No venting needed. .. ·
Operates on 11 sv.
• at the followfftg stores: l .
in ~n Beaehf1-14}-892-mci-1 • ..--------------HHARBGR CEN-TER, GGsta-Mesa (i-l4) 646-6021 .-..__ • . . r ·
•
' 'I
I
•
•
•
c
• I
I
i
I
j
• '
I
•
I
I
r
Aa
AD.y PU..OT EDITORIAL PAGE ..
le on · P.Oo l Bids.
l"niatrated and llldlgnant because the low bid for
the El ni.-o Hltb. School pool w111jl8Z,OOO over their
11udiet, Saddlebaci Valley Unified School District
trusteeshne decided to.take a gamble.
It Involves retii&ling the pool -to be known as
the Ronald W. ~rs Memorial Aquatics Center -
with the !>ope o~~g the $485,000 budget. .,
Board memben.bave expressed the opinion that
-+ the si&-origjnal bidders may have inflated thel~p · ces
• to mak,e up for money lost during the constru lion
slowdown.and because they are aware or the tr en-
dous ~blic 1>ressure to get the pool built.
Tb ere is a d11nger, however. that the next low bid
•might be even higher than the one the board rejected
•last week. In that case the gamble will have failed.
, Whichever way it turns out, the rebidding will de-
lay the construction time table by only six weeks-
>-till within time to open the facility by the summer of
1976.
,1 Complex Ballot Issue
A year's argument and rhetoric on two complex
issues have left Irvine voters with a pair of tough de-
~· cisions in the Nov. 4 special city election. The issues •• .. are whether Irvine should be a charter city and
' whether the zoning for the Village of Northwood
should be upheld.
The two issues are likely to be emotionally in·
i! tertwined in campaigns. One councilman, Robert
, West, contending the council majority abused its
' power in the Northwood matter, has so far withheld
bis support for the ballot argument favoring the
charter.
But the matters should be considered separately.
The NortHwood matter is a city-initiated planning
move for the 1,426 acres in North Irvine. Unlike the
rest of the city. it has many property owners.
.
Northwood zonin& opponents say the. city erred tn
itsplannin&. Tbecouncildlsagrees. ,
The charter is another matter. It may pr'ovide a
framework ror a city government more In tune with the needs of the growing Irvine community.
Both are complex matters, leavln& a heavy
burden on voters to do their homework and not con· •
fuse lhe issues. # • ,
Boost for Upper Bay
Final legislative approval and the governor's
signature have paved the way for a mortgage.
burning part.v; for the new Upper Newport Bay
wildlife preserve .
Legislation carried by State Sen. Dennis
Carpenter <R-NewPort Beach) trreezed past the re·
quired committee and floor approvals over recent
months without a bitch.
It brought forth $3.4 million as the final payment
to the Irvine Company for that estuary which once
figured in one controversy and court battle after
another.
The cash came from a fund containing repara-
tions paid by oil compahies for the Santa Barbara
blowout disaster.
All along, the source of the caalf assuring pre-
servation of the valuable estuary seemed totally ap·
propriate.
• Yet, even though there bas to be a beady feelin&
or success about the commitment or funds for
purchase, all observers and principals in the project
acknowledge the toil which still must be faced.
Heavy dredging and some major pollution abate-
ment projects involving large inland areas of the
bay's 93,000.acre watershed still lie ahead. And they
will cost big money.
New legislation to help the bay probably will be
needed.
•
SB
A H andgun Lung Cancer Connection ? ,
' " '
,: For E very
• .
·American
:~ ( __ A_R_T_H_o_P_P_E __ )
• The President is still Ramely
"' plunging into crowds, although
• he now reportedly wears a bullet-
:• proof vest . Many feel he shouldn't. Plunge, that ls . "'f But crowd plunging is one of
~ the most im-
: port.ant duties
• of a Presi-" ·~ .d e n t •
t particularly a • • President up
:f for reelection.
!t It is the only
I: way he can
~ assess th e
.~ mood of the
: country.
' •• ' ,I • 'I 1.
I~
ii
,(
'
·I
•• • .. .. .. " " ·:
;I
.1
'
J ., .. . • ~ • ..
;j
•
''How are you?'~·l\8YS-"l.be
President, shaking a rulp'"d. .
''Fine," says the owner of the
hand.
The President then knows the
country is feeling fine.
WEARING a bulletproof vest
is certainly a help while. de.
termining that the counto"s feel-
ing fme. But this is no tiiile for
half-way measures.
The Seci'et Service has sug-
gested .that the President, when
crowd plunging, be encased in a
bulletproo! steel box With a small
aperture through Which he could
extend his ·•t:m. 1 White HOuse
aides, however. reluctantly re·
jected the proposal as
''detrimental to bisjmage.''
A moreJ>ractical alternative is
for the President to carry a
crowd of carefully screened,
loyal, trustworthy adherents
with him wherever be goes so
that when the Urge to plunge
overwhelms him, be would have
a safe crowd into which to do so.
Unfortunately, this limited
sampling might tend to destroy
the scientific accuracy of crowd
plunging as a mood assessment
teclmlque .
THE ANSWER, then, lies in
the touchy issue of gwi control ..
Today, fewer than 100 million
Americans own guns ~ This
means that moi:e than half the
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
l'd be willing to wager
that C.G.M. (Gus, Sept.19)
has never been anywhere
near a classroom where
the teacher is trying
desperately to provide
individualized instruction
for 30·plu!J younesters .
Visit any classroom and
you m a y ch ange your
tune!
M.E.C.
o.......r Gvs ctmm•flls •r• 1wllfnlt!M "' ~MddeflotMC•1uri1r..n.cttM
¥1"5 fl .... IMWlflfper. S..0.tl ,...... "I
..... to Gloomy Gn, D•lly Pilot.
nation, including little children,
goes to bed each night un-
defended, unprotected and un-
armed!
tfp. to now. a timid Congress
has taken but one step to ~olve
the problem -and that in the
wrong direction -by banning
cheap ''Saturday night
specials." Thus only well-to-do
. citizens and success(ul hit men
can exercise their inalienable
right to bear arms. (And ask
yourself, would you prefer to be
lined up in the sights of a suc-
cessful or an unsuccessful hit
man?)
If all Americans are to enjoy
their inalienable right to bear
arms, it is up to Congress to pro·
vide them with the arms to bear.
For a modest $5 billion or so,
there is no reason the govern·
ment couldn't provide every
man, woman and child in the
country with an inexpensive bul
efficient handgun under The
Equal Opportunity Act.
IMAGINE the confidence the
Preslde.nt would. fee l as ·he
plunged into a crowd of 10,000
gun-waving admirers, each re·
ady to drill the first person who
made a suspicious move. No
more accurate method of assess·
ing the country's mood could be
devised.
· Thus we see that nei ther the
President nor any American
feels sale and secure witil every
'American is armed to the teeth.
We can confidently ex~ the
support of The National Rifle As·
sociation in passing th.is impor·
tant gun legislation.
• "
·C • •
WASHINGTON --The fallout
from the nuclear testing J4 the lat~ 1950s and early 1S60o may be
causing a belated epidemic of
lunt cancer in the northern
hemisphere. The United States,·
for example, has bad a dramatic in&e~g'cancer cases. ·
In a chilling new study,
respected researcher Dr. John
Gofman
warns that
the lung
cancer
epidemic
could be
severely ag-
gravated by
the growth of
the nuclear
power i.n ·
dustry.
The plutonium fallout from
past nuclear eXplosiohs is having
a deadly impact today, accord·
ing to Dr. Gofman's theory,
because of a 13· to 15--year latent
period before the effects become
evident.
SI NCE MOST or the at-
mospheric testing was done in
the late 1950s and early 1960s, the
latent period is ending now. "For
the .USA alone," declared Dr.
Gofman, "it is estimated that
116,000 persons have been com-
mitted to plutonium-induced twig
cancer. In the entire northern
hemilphere, the total number ts
1,000,000 persons.''
He contends grimly that the
g New Fallout .Theory
(JACK ANDERSON)
Callout "may have already creat·
ed., irreversibly, oneoftbeprime
health problems of our era." The
plutonium from nuclear'"power
plants, he warns, will increase:
the menace to !uture genera·
tions.
Jl1ven if the nuclear power 1n:.
dustry ''contains its plutonium
99.99 percent pe·rtectly," be pre-
dict., "it will still be responsible for 500,000 additional fatal lung
cancers annually. This would
mean increasing the total death
rate in the United States by 2S
percent each year, since2,000,000
persons cu~rently die from a1·1
causes com bined.''
The nuclear Industry', wbich
haa invested billions in. the prO-
li !er a tion of nuclear plants
throughout the coUntry, ha!f '-
sought to downplay the evidence
that plutonium may ~linked to
cancer. '
TIIE INDUSTRY cites tbe fin•
dings, for examrle,· of Dr.
Bernard Cohen o Pittsburgh
University. Cohen pOinta out that
lung cancer has been increasing
since 1945, long before the
plutonium could have bad an ef.
feet.
Most scientists belieyethe lung
cancer epidemic has been caused
by increased . air--·Pollutlon,.11ot
' .. ' ,-,,. '
• ' ..
•
plutonium, Dr. Cohen asserts. He
criticizes Dr. Gofman's basie
data and contendJi that "911 out
ol 100 experts in tbe field would
nbt agree'' with Gofman. "
Dr. Gofman's research ,
however, caMot be lightly dis·
missed. He is Prpfessor emeritus
of rnedt.cal physics at the .
University of California.
turned up evidence, for example,
that $300 million had been paid
out for unnecessary surgeries.
Other P:atients have received in·
ferlor c.,.. fi"om doe1"1'5 .who are
m o re interested in their
medicaid eligibility than their
health. . •. _ ;
Yet th~ new' HEW ,.....etary is
continuing to m ail out medicaid
checks, despite evidence_tl)at the
MEDICAI'D ABUSES states are not keeping a proper
A5 one of his f~t.i acts as the watch on abuse.s and .• therefore,
new Secretarv otHel.ltl!,W,' .... are not ~omply1ng with the law. -~ • · ·• "J From his. own HEW ~files, hefe lion and Welfare, .Davt . . l!l· are a few typical conftdential thews Indulged In a little civil dis· . _,fipdings . '
obedience. ', ~,\; 1"\ ~ ·
. Heisrequlredbylawtoreduce -IN COLORADO HEW in·
,"federal medicatd fl;IDds to;~~et vestigators found that' "nophysi-
which ~o not review liow the-cian or psychiatrist" serves on mon~y ts spent. The revi~ are the mental health team, which is
, cruc~al to insure th't hospita.ls~ supposed to check on the treat-" n~rs1!'g homes , ~nd mental m' ment of rnedicaid patients.
1titut1ons are givmg•proper .cue -'"In Rhode Island, the federal
and are not bilking the patients inspectors were appalled to dis·
orthegovemment. 1 i cover that one hospital had not
Yet Mattbewt has tol'd complied with ·61 of the fl re-
Congress that, despite the laW, quired records. Doctors·wete far
he won't reduce medicaid funds behind on visits to medicaid pa·
at this time. He contends that the tients.
states are unable to ~lice ihe -In Indiana, many nursing med~ca.l rip0ffs and that any homesweren'tevena.Slcedbythe
medicaid tutbacks would have state to conduct the reviews that
the effect of crippling the system. are requited by law.
-tn Ohio, ''no·· medical re-
View$ in 'mental hosjlitals have
been done,•• according 'to a con-
UNSCRUPULOUS doctors and
hospitals, meanwhile, are
squeezing medicaid money 0\.¢ of
the government by bospitaliii,ng
patients, prescribing medicines
and performing operations
wi~tP!edical justificatj,oq ll'6P,. John Moss, D-Ca\it.,
•
fidential report. 1 ,
-And, in WiscoD.sin .. reviews
on nursing homes have been "in·
consistent due to" a 1bort.4&e of
MDs in rural· are'as ~ ti.ck of
cooperation in urb~n areal."'
· Tq,lk l s,_.Revea.ling
Thougbh at Large:
Thew ay one talks about others
reveals more Of one's own
dlaracter than it does of theirs. •
The best and briefest 3.reu-
ment against censorship was
given by Remy ,.de GoUTmont,
when he wrote : "Good books are
irrefutable, and bad books refute
themselves."
--•I
'SYD NEY 'BARRIS
~.. ; .
hum the name o! each of the 10
diTisions of a Roman legion, con-
sisting of 300 to 600 men.)
;
One can always tell a truly
· !amous person by the !act that at
least · 30,000 persons went to
school wltb.Jlim In the •mall town
of 1,'500 where be grew up.
•! :1
1 • Let the Wackos Fight It 91it l
Chronic poverty breeds-lack of
self-reliance, and then the poor
are blamed for (havlngi,no •in·
itiative; which lb rather like
blaming an invalid for ·getting ·
bed-sores: ·
• •• I! the nation's airlines· -
through good times anci. bad -
can pay their employee enough
so that a ''no-tipping''' 'fUle ls
strictly enforced, Mily <111\'t otber
and more-cons1stentb'1affloent service inpustrles manue to do. tbesame?· .:.:t ~ ·~
Good citizens --who believe in
th.e 'death penalty -see eye to eye
with murderers, who believe in it
so much that · they inflict It un-ilaterally .
' ...
..
I
!
To tbe Editor :
· Ah, the cast is complete. Now,
let'• dil a buge pit in Las Vegas and tbrow In l) Patty Hearst 2)
Eldridl• Clea•er 3) Lynette
Fromme 4) a Pi1gie 5) tbe
l-;-"1""-:t-,11 .... --•M!• R..S-A•my 6) lllanhal Ky 7) ·tbe Harrl1e1 8) an
American Nazi 9) a Honkle 10)
Tlmotby Leary 11) a
Waibennad 12) ~-ol the PLO Jal Charin Menson 14l a
faodlt 1nMct lll BW -18)
tbe boule tbat J-blllt. Then we'U Jet them llPt ll Cllll and
Cl'ft1I tbe 1umYOI' Kill "' the
I • •• ,,
·• " :I ' ·-· ···'-°' wwN, tbe tehmon rlCIU
wlllbewortbar-. .,::...w ... . .._.....
•••••e--.er
'l'DU..Bdllor: . ~u~nen wwld like
-.u ... to the -of b11cbel. -
( M AILBOX )
Is it possible to put a
moratorium on 1aid plans in or·
der to request property and dotl
owners to get a permit from the
city (Startiol Wltb Newport) to
take our dogs out f~8Lm. until
8 p.m. ror a fee ol "" a yur? Does tlils sound feulble? SU.b WDlll4 are 1 .. u..i to 1urfen,
, )llla!Jleeaes, parkln1. etc. -not to
mention rnarriaae licenses or
f-hhtng end 1ame and
automobiles.
. SUCH PEI KITS (dopl would
pay a yesr'1 llctDM In ... bane•
.1G<..tb4 papu, pl111 a.UWe.plaU
pail and sbovel (doggi~ butler).
You know )¥e have a fewP,eOPle
like President Ford anci,Mr: Hix·
on who take their dopoe be,.hea
too -.as didiKennedy-..,,don'l
want to be too sterile, or do we?
France . handle~ 118 di>~ 8ncl animal situations in a far more
humane way b-Yi>resenting dog-
giecom!ortstationsonstreets ..
I rath« doubt tbat the dog population would be heavy from
6p.m. to6 a.m. anyway. ButYoU
canbetonit-1'11 be there I
HELEN HUTCJDNSON
, r ree a--.a
To tbe Editor: 1
I tboughl tbe Irvine City CGun· cl.I members were sincere when
they introduced their new tree
prtservatlon ordinance. Now we
ate told about their massive ~ee
removal plan which will destroy
tbouaands of trees to make ,;,ay .11:1 moo bolllll!& tracts._. '
It ·seems to me that there
ahould ~ ao m• way ol at least •••lnr the beautiful; stately
-alyptoa 1rovu wbicb have
stocJd. on Irvine's f111Dlands for
so many.years.
"What has happened to all the
extensive ecoloalcaJ planniJii
rve heard about T Oris it Just a
little easier and -the-\0 cut ~
and grade !hon tbink ecolocx. ~
LORNA PIASKOWSKJ
...
,-I •'
A literai'J ,prize is an IW'anl
customarily _given td a Writer in
America ~!lire he has earned .it.
and in Europe alter he no lona:er
needs it. I
•
.·ijj:·: ....
Attendln1 a funeral recently. J
recalled qae anonymous wit of-
the last century who said. ~After ,
listening to memorial 'oervicff,
one can only cancludei U..t 1the
"boltboperor maaklndlstot"llu<· • ~.~ dead and lr\tfr)~e uv.
.. ... ... ....
'Now that'll whft I <lflR
•view/'
One of the mpst continually
miaused words ls • .. cpbprt'" for
"confederate" or "associate'': a
~ cannot be a cobort,lonly a
arot.tp c•n· <The word comes
----.. ~ --
, · .• OA~NG E COAST .. DAILY PILOT
.-11. WHd.PlllllUhcr
f'homcu KehU1 Eilitor
Barbera tMblth,
'!:dlri>rial PO!lf £dll0<
·}be editorial page or Lhe Daily
P!lot see.ks to inform and ,&l11t1ul1t.e r•adera by P.retenting
on llt~b p1ge divede commentary
on Its ~ interelt by lrndir•t·
edt .. ~mnl t!-and eattomista. by
provai;lmg a ror•m for readers'
views and by 11>re1ent1n1 this ne.~paper's ,Opinions and kleas
on~ -=.urrent topics. The fdltcrta1-
0Ptftlbns of th' D1Jty Plr.;appear .onlytn th! tdftOtial col mn at the to~. or tlie p;i.ge. , Op nlons ex: ~i'ftled by the columnlttl 'and
cart&onli t1 and letter writ.era are ~!!~_own and no ('TI$fOl"lemeritof
u.... .views bYt the Dailf Pl~ should be·inferrN. •
Wednesday. Sept. 24, ms
r
I
• •
•
• AND NOW TllE·-
11 IQ\lipplq • ..., •••• -...n-wltll topleu *"-#J~.
fte latest l!!jUabble, OS
all the world knows, was
pretlplteled w h•n the
• lkipper of the submarine 1\n.,_ was relieved of
duties for ~permitting a
topless dancer · named
Ca! l'\atch to perform oo
deck.
ALTHOUGH THE
Navy permits remale
visitors &board ships,
skippers are supposed to
clear the visits with
higher authority. Which
Stevenson railed to do.
The daoger is that all
th.is bickering over pro-
tocol will obscure the
"THAT'S THE• PART
that is still on the draw-
ing boards," Von Frigate
r'eplied . ''But don't
forget that Rickover's
subs had a few bugs at
first, too.''
B OKs If the Navy is testine rOWD it, I suppose the concept
Opening of
.Meeting~
must be sound. But I
can't help remembering
that this is the sort of
thing that killed
vaudeville and sank
Wilbur Mllls.
SACRAMENTO (UPI) I' l • •~d IF/ -Legislation sought by IJIU~ l!7' ay
newspapers .to open
more government meet-•p • • Set ings to the public has lClllC
tieen signed by Gov. Ed· ·
mund G. Brown Jr. An old-fashioned fami-
The measure (581), ly picnic will begin the
among other things, 1975 Orange Cou~ty
would require city coun-North/South campaign
cils, county boards of to. r!1i5-... more than• $3.6
supervisors and other millio!' for United Way
local agencies to conduct agenc1~. .
open meetings whenever The picnic, 2 to 6 p.m.
they considered appoint-Su n~ay , at Rancho
ments to such posi(ions Cap_sstrar:io, 29251
as planning com-Camino Ca_p1strano, San
missions coastal com-Juan Cap1strano, will
missions 'or vacancies to cost $3.50 per person.
elected offices. Reservations can be
Sou g h t b y t h e made by calling ,SU.2252
Califorlfia Newspaper or834·1461 .
Publishers Association,
the law, authored by Sen.
George Moscone CD-San
Francisco), would for
the first time allow the
payment of attorney fees
·when citiiens go to court
for access to meetings
and win their cases.
Gets Degree
Rodger Sadler Kampf,
son of Richard S .. Kampf
of Costa Mesa, has re·
ceived a doctor of dental
science degree from
Loma Linda University.
Sex Tips
'Save Your Energy'
NEW YORK (UPI) -A psychiatrist
whose practice inclUdes consulting work at a
resort hotel says vrilleyball and tennis are
great honeymoon games but newly marrieCi
couples should save their energy for sex.
"You don't knock yourself out with out-
door actitities. Save your energy for sex,"
said Dr. KY D. Schechter.
SCllECHTEK WAS CALLED UPON to
give "honeymoon instructions" Tuesday at a
promotion staged by a Pennsylvania resort in
a Manhattan restaµrant. Only one couple
showed up. Abbey Goldstein, 28, and Claire
Greenlaw, the 25-year-old woman who will
become Mrs. Goldstein on Nov. 9.
''One of fhe things we were supposed to
talk about was how todresa," Schechter said,
"but I can see you know how:to dress so let's
talk·about sex.
"Dress casually. Make it easier to get in
and oUt of your clothes," be said, "you're go-
in&tobedoing it a lotonyourboneymoon.''
"OF CQUKSE, l'.OU AKE TALIQNG
• about swtnimlng, "Claire said, holding onto
Abbey's hand with a firm grip.
"Obviously I arq talking about swim·
ming,'' the doctor said.
Schechter said couples should avoid lhe
pressures of 'the honeymoon night .. Usually
·tired from driving or a nJ&ht, he said newly
marrie:d couples should relax that fint night
together. "~au want to take a bath together, tp,ke a
bath toe ether, then go to sleep,'' be said. ~ -SCHECHTER, A CONSULTING
psychlitrist for a Lakeville, Pa. honeymoon
reoort, oald honeymOQllinc couples ollen di•·
cuss their common problems with other
couples at honeymoon resorts.
"You mean they have breakfast the day
alter and .talk about t¥ night before with
other couples," a relJ()rt..,-uked.
''Frequently. yei," the doctor said.
I
•
• Wlld11rt·r,l!p1eiMWM, 1WI
'
..
•
By U.S . Govemmerlt i&gUiauons--
we can pay you the highest interest on
insured savings. And, we do-. Right now
you can get World's highest interest:
8 .06<J.•n.75% on $1,000 certificates held
aminimumofliryears-muimumof 10.
This ezceptionally high rate means
your money will double in less than 9
years when interest and principal are
held in your account and compounded
continuously.
What's more, this hiqh rate of
interest iS gua~anteed. So you don't have
to worry about recessions or market
fluctuations. And all accounts are insured
by an agency of the Federal Government.
~~
~~ Besi~e!i getting the highest
interest on insured saYings, you also get
a world of Yaluable FREE services with
qualifying balances. Check the chart
below. see how much money you can
save while you're saving.
Remember; available to all World
Savers+ are free direct deposit of Socili.I
Security checks, free Check·a·Month
plans.Jree postage·paid Save·by-Mail
envelo~pes, extended office hours, free
refreshments and ample free parlciOg.
And ask hoW'you can qualify fOr
car rental discounts, too. •
111™~ !Ifsl llJ.:QlH:!!J
~j~J
World otters you the flexibility of
many high interest, insured savings
plans. Choose the ones that are just
right for yo_u.
® ~@J--Q Guaranteed on
~ Jg 51 .000 minimum balance. Term: ~',G 6·10 years.
~~%(,t
~~~o
Guaranteed on
Sl,000 m1n1mum
b.lance. Term.
4·6 years.
Guaranteed on
Si,000 m1n1mum
balance. Term:
2~·4 years.
Guaranteed on
$1 ,00J m1n1mum
bal<'lnce. Term:
1·2jq ye4rs
Guar;inteed on
$500 m1n1m um
b111ilnce . Term
90 days.
Current annual
rate on passbook
account. $5.()()
minimum ba.lance.
•Ellective annu41 yield when pnncipal and
mterest are left 1n the account and compounded
continuously. NOTE. Federal requlat1ons requue
•substantial 1nferesl penalty for early wit hdrawals
from cer11hcates.
UPIT ........
'DEVOTED TO NIXON'
John W. o.an Ill
~I fj~~ w~~~ 1 ~1./.\11.-3
If yo_u are either not covered under
a re tirement plan or are self-employed,
we can start a retirement plan that will:
(a) Give you a substantial taz shelter now;
(b) Build a substantial retirement fund
that will let you retire in style.
For instance we will show you
how you can deposit up to $1500 a year
in a World Individual Retirement Account
(IRA). Every deposit will be deducted
from your gross income on your Federal
Income Tax re turn so you won't pay a
penny of Federal tax on the principal or
interest earnings until you take distribu·
t1on of the funds (between the ages of
59 Y.? and 70Y<! ).
lf you are 1n the 25% tax bracket,
you could save over $400 in taxes the
first year alcne, while in 1ust 30 years
your retireme nt fund builds to an incred-
ible $171 ,750! ~ased on an earning rate
of 7 ~% compounded continuou~Jy.
If you are self-employed, we'll
help you start a tax-sheltered Keogh
plan 1n which you can deposit up to
$7,500 a year. We'll also fill you 1n on
little known fa cts hke how to make
1975 Keogh deposits as late as April 15
of 1976.
Come in to World Sa•ings today
and see the many ways you can get
more out of this World.
ORLD SAVINGS
Get more out of this World
Yorba Lin<la
18503 Yorba Linda Blvd .
Lakeview Plaza
(714) 993-1440
Fo11ntaln Valley
16123 Harbor Blvd.
South of Zody's
(714) 839-285 1
Huntington Beach
6902 Warner Ave.
(714) 842-9356
Santa Ana
3698 South Bristol
South Coast Plaza
1714) 556-0322
Irvine
18100 Culver Drive
University Shopping Center
(714) 552-0200
La·guna Beach
292 South Coast Hi ghway
South of Vic Hugo's Resta ura t'I
(7\4) 494-9481
Offices In: Antioeh, Arctidla, Arteai .. Los Cerritos Center. Auburn. Brentwood. Citrus Helqhta. (El C./on
-opening soon), Founttln V1lley, Hemet, Huntington Beach, Irvine. Lafayette. Laguna r • .ch. La Mes.1,
Loe Anoei-, Lyilwood, Northrld91, Onttrlo. Pelo Alto, Plac::erville, Rancho CordOYa, R<Wling Huls Eatates. Sac·
ram.,..to: Folsom Blvd .. Point Wnt Plau. Florin Road : Sen Bernardino, San Diego, (San JoH-openlng aoon),
San Mateo, Sen Ramon, Senta Ana-South Cout P!Ua, South San Franclaco, Woodland Hills, Yorba Linda.
)
•
•
World Savings and Loan Assoc1at1on
Serving California since 1927.
32 otfices with assets over $570,CX)(),OCXl.OO.
Offices open Mon. through Thurs., 9 to 4.
Friday, 9 to 6. Saturday, 9 to 1. ~
•
I
•
Wednelday. S.pt•mb« 24, 1975
Lawsuit Filed
..... , Iii Bus Death
SANTA ANA -Damages totaling more than
$500.000 were dewanded Tuesday by the parents of
· • 8-year-old Mission Viejo boy who died June 23
·when the bus in wh.icb he was a passenger collided with a 1ravel truck at an Irvine intersection.
Named as principal defendants in the Orange
C.ounty Superior Court lawsuit filed by W. James
and Sharon D. Ramming, 23851 Calle Hogar, are the
Rou&h Riders Day Camp and organization prin·
cipals Leonard Spivak, Darlene May Spivak and
• Dan Fr as er.
ALSO NAMED ARE bus driver Carolyn A. Con·
non, truck driver James E. Bartley, the Sully-.
Miller Contracting Company, the city of Irvine and
Orange County.
• Negligence is charged against all defenda nts in
terms of the oper ation of the two vehicles involved
and of the allea:ed failure of the city and the county
lo correct assertedly dangerous traffic conditions
at the inte rsection of Jeffrey and Barr anca 1;oads.
•
JOHN llENRY RAMMING, 6, was one of a
number of chil dren thrown from the vehic le operat·
ed by Mrs. Co nnors when it overturned following .
the collision with the gravel truck.
Police noted at the time that it was the fifth
traffic accid ent at the Jeffrey-Barranca intersec-·
tion in the last 12 months. Two oth er children were
hospitali zed wi th inj uri es sustained in the collision .
Stairway Builders
Sued for $20,000
SANTA ANA -Operators of a San Clem ente
condominium complex were sued for $20,000 in
damages Tuesday with the allegation that they un ·
lawfully built a pedestri an stairway a cross the ~tchison , Tope ka and Santa F e Railroad
O>mpany's main line. · · ·
N_ Named as defendants in the Orange County
"'1perior Court lawsuit filed by lawyers for the
'ailroad are the operators of Reef gate West, a con·
4ominium structure at 423 Avenida Granada.
' It is alleged that the defendants have refu sed to
temove the pedestrian s tairway despite the fact
~at it encroaches on railroad land and presents a
bazard to every user of the structure.
~ The company will goto court. this week to seek a
~mporary restraining order prohibiting.futher use QI the bridge. It also demands $50 a month in com-.
ptnsatory dama~es for each month the bridge has ~n used by condominium dwellers heading for a
aearby public beach. ·
Deaths • Elsewhere-
URLOCK (UPI) ~
IW, George M. Lams a, siJ noted worldwide for ·
e translations and
r religious writings,·
at a hospital here
day following a loog
I ...: ess. Lamsa was an
a hoiity on Eastern c~ilization ai1d a lee· t er and author on re·
Ji ODS.
daughter, J anice, and
her i::oommate were
murdered in their New
York apartment in 1963.
. RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)
-Madelyn Dt:1on, 81, a
retired film actress and
widow of the
screenwriter of the silent
film classic "Birth of A
Nation," died Saturday.
She was the widow of
'REDERICKSBURG, · Thomas Dixon, a Baptist V.. ~UPI>.-Max Wylie,' minister and novelist
~ brother of deceased whose "The Klansman"
.. thor Philip Wylie and and· ''The Leopard's
-C.~noted novelist and Spots'' served as the
tefmer radio executive basis of "Birth of a Na-
i.tparently shot himself ti on.''
tideath, the Spotsylania
County sheriff's depart-HYER ES, France •t said Monday. His CUPI) -French poet-
... diplomat St. Johli. Perse, \D-•11 /Woikn · 88, winner of the 1960 r-Nobel Prize for ;..: '""''"••TY literature, died Saturday
IKiouE u.FFEll:TY, r•ilmnt of in his home overlooking
Alft-lm, c.. R111cttn1 °' °"..,.. eo .•• the Mediterranean foll\.P '""· °''' ot dNtti s.pttmtlel' • 1'."'1S,1tttw •of lO. Survl"911by hit
'wljlt Ann• ol Afllfltlm ; par1nt1,
,..,...,&9eH1Uff1rtyofCotYMtu;' D ·
Rod °' wa1n11"1gt°"· •st•r. iPO'l"'ees Out "'-r•ofCOl\IMeM;tl'lt.r& ""e-
·lfl•llW Cf11rl11 & MllC!rH
of Pinn.; ir.....natt.r, Elll!llllM Melisa B th McCr 5-11.• ot New M1•lc:1. or-•IOe e ay ~wlUbtMldM IO;OOAMniun-and Karen M. Lindsley, ..r, September 2s, P1c1t1c v11w of Newpart Beach, have M!lflliorltl Ptn In Newport Bffch, C.. Thft.mn., 111;111b11a111"9 • mtrnor111 received the bachelor of lVlill:tor tM cl'lllCI llf fltoque &-ANW L.lf· arts d f Le · '-"'· S.Ck• K•u111111r1 Mort'*'"· 1611 egree rom WIS
w .,..P1o1m.,An•Mlm,C..dlr'KtDr"L • and Clark College,
G,:fll.t.LD!AM ':~:O~E. ~''· ~ Portland, Ore.
lidllllliltfllCOIUl,_18,C.. .• P811M_., I Stflitmtier u. ,,,s. Surv1YM1 11¥ -PUBLIC NOTICE bnll'Mtr, Rod MlicMUtl•n llf Colt•
~· Gl'•.,..llde •nk itl '#111118 l'llld MOTICI! TD CRIECHTORS ~y, Sltc>litmbltr U •t 1G:OO AM. SU~l!RIOlt COURTOll'TifE ~ s.outchltr C1tmitl1t,.., In Or..... STATEOll'CAl.lt"ORNIAP'Ofll
(.8ioJn llev of f-ncontrlbutlonl nwy TMI: COUflTT 011' ORAHGE
5.!H•rborArHBeseMllTum .... A-llHJ
er Uc lllQ llroth8rt, Fuller1Dn, C... Ett8tt llf EULALIA E MORTON
•Y Mortu•ry dlr9Ctor1 Otceffecl. · ' . :0 IALT%-lllGllOH
• FVHHAL HOMI ~ona del Mar 673·9450
$;osta Mesa 646-2424 . ••
• • llUllOADWAY
~ MOITUART r 110 Broadway. Costa
Mesa .,
... 642·91 50
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo tne
Cl"'ldltors ol fl'lot 8bo'rl Mmitd dec:IKR!it
tMt •11 "'"°"" "8¥tno cl•lrm IQ81MI
tt. Mid diKl'ditftt •r• r11qulrltd kl Ille
them, with ttllt ,.,.Clt$!1.8,.., vouclllt,..,,. in
tr. offic.t Clf tl'lll ci.rk of ll'le ..,.... -
tllledcoul1, Of' to Pf°lt5ent them, w1tl'llhe
IW'C"Mrf ..oucnitrs, IO Ule undotr$10ned
.t tM offlct of EDWARD H. STONE,
Attomey •t u.,.. 61G Nt,.llOf1 c..n1er
Drlwit, Sult• ttO, Ntwport <•Ch,
C.Utornl• '2660, wtfllch Is !hit pl.:11 of
~ llf ... lilRCl9F"Sl9fl'ICI In 811 ,,..., •
torn P9rt.linlng to !hit tst81t llf lo8ld Clit-
cl'dltnt, wllhln tour mont111 8flw the
lint publlc.tlon ot thlt flOUct.
I •
Mc:COIMICK
MOITUAIT
Laguna Beach
P.19d $eptem1Jotr 16, 1975
CROCKER NATIONAL BANK
Trud O.pt.
N8mitd•ISPKl1tl
Admlnl1tr•IOf'
of the ESl•tt of .
Eul•ll• E. Mor1ofl, 0.otned
494·941 5
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
PACIFIC VIEW
..WOllAL "ARK
~metewy Mortuary
Chapel
;JSOO Pacific View Drive
Newpe>rt Be ach,
Cllik>mi•
844-2700
NM•AMtLY
CCKOMAL PUHllAL
NOMI
7801 Bolsa Avf.
We1tmln11er
,93-3525
MTN'I' MOITUAIY
027 Main SI.
Hu!"lnoron llftac:h
&3$-a539
IEDWARO M. STONE
............ L..I,.
611 ... """' C*dtl' °''" ......
....,.. llHc: .. , C.llflirflla ""' Tt11(n4)..._,U.....
........ tlr ... '-1...._.MI.,.._
Pubtlllhtd OrMQe OMst o.ur Piiot,
SotPt.U .8ftd OC1.1.1.1s, 1•1s _..,s
· Neptune Society
CJIEMAT ION 8 UAtAL AT SEA
646-7431
Y .. • ... •wttr-....._... .,...., __ ~_,...
.. Qt! .............. ' ,....... c-..,.....
County· ~ii-port Pace Quickens
SANTA ANA -Air year's pace during -atklnl. but tM tCJt11
travel out of Orange August -12.4 tonS"com· f«tbenntel•htmontlW
County Airport is show· pared to 131 tons the year ol the year ls more tbao
olrcuft, teeplnr the a~rt In th~ ";"Uon
county airport Ill lta pool· behind Chlc110 • O Hare
tionu the second bulldt Internatiooal.
Int •lens of plckln1 up belore. --W,000 -an incre-at-..,. _____ .,.;:;:~
Jut year's pace, accord-The year -to-date five percent over lut NEWDAWN'lOll!UQRISOIOOl ma to the statistics is· figure for air cargo it year.· ~ . PM8dloollkl~...,.,..,,..,,.;Jun~-·
.sued by Airport Director nearly 11 percent lowe1 All but 17.151 of 'hf llNlld--.lndlvtOu.W.SlnltNCUOn-.xt di'/
Robert Bresnahan. ttian 1974 al the same operatlon1 10 tar thbl .... IJOJTUSTIM .. ft.sAMrAAMA Figures for August time. yla.l have been private ,. show 167,600 passengers Despite the dip In 6JJ.Jltl-711"'22
ORANGE COUNTY boarded or got off pass engers. which WlJl8'0oDOr8 ~MUl1M .. ectot
airplanes at the county · ailJK)rt officials attribute
,airport during the mQnth to t h e s 1 u m ping
compared to 156000 the economy, tbe total
same month a ye~r uo. number of airp<>rt tower
Meet Set
By Burke
It was the first time · operations (takeof(I and
thi s year monthly landings> iscli01biagup.
passenger loads topped ward steadily over 1974.
last year's figures.
BUT THE 7.4 percent
increase in Augus t still
left the annual passenger
Assemblyman Robert • figure 40,000 short of l88t
H . Burke ( R-Huntington year.
BeachJ will meet with A c c o rd i 'n g t (I
membe rs or his Costa Bres nahan, 1.04 million
Mesa Citizens Advisory passengers have been re-
Committee in the council corded at the facility this
chambers at Costa Mesa year to date compared to
City Hall at 7:30 p.m. 1.08 million in the first
Thursday. eight months of 1974.
The meeting is open to· Air c.argo tonnage was
the general public. still lagging behind last
IN AUGUST, the re
was a slight decJlne in
•
{loweHouse
The Or. Wilella Howe-
·Waffl e I-louse in Santa
Ana i s o n e of 10
California sites r ecom-
mended by the State His·
tori cal Resources Com-
mission for nomination
to the National Jtegister
of Histori c Places.
T911I Obttacheven ot
Feubtlin Valley, receit· il'-iraduateil from the -u D I v -e r-. I I y 0 f
Wa1bltl1ton, baa been
elected Jo membenblp
in Phi lle!a_ !Cappa, •
liberal arts scbolasUc
honorary.
p;;;;;;;i~ ...... ;;;;;;;;;;=
CLASSIC
GUITAR
INSTRUCTION
John K. Bent
Huntington Beach
960-1245
-cARPETS
STEAM CLEAMfD. .. .
·ANY LIYlll -. ~!!~~::t261 ~~1;~~~ •
.· AlLEN VimON f P~Lsffiy CWNl~I 17141141-4142 ,,,........... . 3.00 l.lllil f!! ........
Energy conservation begins at home.
But it doesti't end there.
• I •
\
House\vives and student s,
factory workers and archi-
tects, engineers and business-
men-everyone is affected by
the natural gas shortage .
And so, when it comes to conserving
\
energy, we need the cooperation of everyone. ( .. -... -..
At home. At work. At play.
We ~t the Gal Company have prog rams to
help everyone save energy. We've go ne to
manufacturing firms and suggested ways for
·them to cut down their use of natural gas
.--
\
' .
while increasing production.
We've encouraged architects .. to
design new buildings to use
less energy. And we've shown
bililding administrators how to
make their present builQings more
energy efficient.
If you'd like to know how you can conserve
more energy in yo\.ir hom~or on your job,
get in touch \Vi.th, us. We have a program for
ever;vone, because conserving energy is every-
ones concern.
Energy is our business.
Conserving en.ergy is everyone's business.
---· I .
•
I
I
i
I •
I
' •
l
' { .
'
1
\
l • I I
l
•
I
•
• • •
'
Killer Gets ·~if e Term
SANTA ANA~ ldller lllcbaol 1-
,__ bu been -to ltale prison fa< llfo fa< Ille,. lie p1a,..i 1a 111e-. ort-m• ·-· .,.. ___ lalt_tromaaravo
cloS In Ille backyordoflda'l'Ultln ..... -.. BrBNUAl IWl•AMl'r Jl•P•~tedly votu.U11&-bl1 1 ••• ., ••••
-f"Ul.JUft NTUUUUftJ~ ~1-·1:::!-'atitif~="j""-= 1;:_"'~~.=
Willlua Gilpin
Sell porlnlt
. J, •
INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN
ARTIST
William C. Gilpi'l
Will Be Appearing At
WARDS
GRAND OPENING
l'BSOHALL Y SIG•IMG l«S PllMTS
WED. THIU SAT., SEPT. 24-27
10 A.M.· 4 r.M.
•
'
aloo drww •late prllon &onm for related CODvletlona cm lddn•"I &Dd •N•dl cbarsel.
roDG& TV&ND •vum that Tbompoon, 23, op serve all th•HDI-~.
Bia two com11~ la tbe kllllnp of former
OW.en Protest
,Gmol~~Priee
Posting Nixed
SANTA ANA -A Jl<OPOOed ordinance thot
would require IU atallon operators to post 1uollne
'price• where they could be aeen by pualnc
motor!oto wu rejected Tlleoday by the Oran1t County Boord of Sllperviacn. •
The p..._e of tbe W·f•ted ordinance proposed
by SUpervil« .Ralpb Diedrlcb WU "to 1Umuiate
eompetition In a market that bu been stripped of
compeUveness. ••
·· Bur A. 8POltBlllAN ro• the service station industry muatered enousb support to defeat
Dledrich'a proposal when he labled It unconstitu.
Uonal and an.infringement on pri vale enterprille.
"Tbe availability~ ,Price information. on retail
&uollne prices to cmsumers exceeds that of any
· other ltem ill comm ...... " said Steve Shelton of the
Southern Callfo!'11la Service Station Auoclation .
' llllELTONALSouldthatanewnoartaboflU •Ism millht convince-. COlllUlllen that tervlce
atatlou have reaumed price wan and, tbua, atve
tbe Impression there la an unlimited supply of
1uollne and aoneedtoconaerve. ·
Shelton's arguments were apparentif enough to
persuade Supervisors Laurence Schmit, Thomas,·
Riley and Ralph Clark to send Diedrich'• proposed
ordinance down to a 3-ldefeat.
Couniy Restaurant
--DiSpute Settled
Mr. Gilpin will be showing his collection of char'
coal drawinss. Gilpin's tr11·to·life renditions of
animals pro1ect his own warmth an.d relaxed
lun·loving humor. Not limited ~to animal
drawings, however. his creations include .fen·
derings of the Old W~tern <;anner't Co. at Npport Beach, several bait bOat sce11es. win·
tefl1nd_ ski SCJi..1.eS and portraits;~ ~ I ., ,. '..:' r •»·'7; ·•"'r·• , , .... P , _ ~" ...
SANTA ANA -Two restaurant chains con-
trolled by the Howard.JohMon group settied their
dispute with the Or11111e Cciunty District Attorney
Tuesday and agreed to refrain from usii:ig mislead-
ing advertising at their outlets.
Dep Dist Atty. C. Brent Swanson said the two
Jolinson·controlled chains -Howard Johnson
Restaurants and Ground Round Restaurants -will
also pay a total or $5,000 in civil penalties to the
county's general fund
Swanson s"ccessfUlly accused the croups of ad-
verjislng several products as choice grade rrou.nd
' ·' nieat "hen, in fact, the meat had not been graded
by the United States Department of Agriculture. '":• ...... ,.,,·1,,·. J" ... . -. '-?. -" ,...~ ~C.. • I 1 , 'W , •. .,. I • I, I ,,,,,,,,, -•"!
• c -The defendants also aareed to refrain from ad·
~ vertislitl products as "ground round" when, in fact ,
they cons11ted of meat ground from cuts other than
the. Ol\~known t~ butchers as ''round.••
•
•
c.. •• 11111 "' J ~. .•
. ·IP: .. ~: .
" t ....... , ......... .
•
OldSmobilel976. . '
AnQJ.d$fbreve~
And.good mneage in everysiz.e-
Take• look 11 the beau1iful new 1976 fro.a. &pOrty Stutire Wpel'IXNJ* lO, f\il.. W. inftll J"* to~• tot.ii com~.
Oldlmobilel in your deal« thowroom. llir.e. ftoal.,..laeel drillf9 Toronleb. there t Good ,. Dlliap. tnditaa1 O&dlllloblle
They're ftnprcaive. JOOd ps milhp i. rlel}' m Oklf.. ~ coMbw:don. dcpendabillly tnd
Then take 1look11tho19'76 EPA Milell!" Th1t'tquiW1 feMCOMidalfls lhe lllT.,. ..Ad~ Y<Ml11 rtne1eecbOlds P"Cled
Ouide test figure1 for Oldamobile. They're of i;iia -.nd modek tUt Okb is offerin,1 lhia with •&lue bce1UM1 it:'s ti.Uh: willl the care i:Ol~ive, too. year. With thb kind ol 11:\ection. then• .00 lilten,tion IO detliil ~·,a 1rldidoft Ill
Ther. ahow thal good gu mileage flli\ll in bound 10 be In Olds IO r.c your lifestyle •nd Oklsmobile. C• -build one for you.?
cur family. R~m~"rbttr these mileage figurQ pock,.etbool. MwS .-.cry Okla, •helher &11'1•11, •c utima1u. Naturally the actual mileap mid1iu or~ iii liuilt IO be rlgllt for
fllll'J'=l wlll vary depending on the type of the times.
dri"lnl you do. your driving habits. your This ytarOkltmobile is offerinJ an av•il·
cu'1 condition. and available equipment. able fivc-speei:I owrdrl" lrlllllmi&llOll Oii
• Stlllfire, OJMa• .oo Cuti-mode II. (You
"
may be used"O'tldnkint of ftve1peed u suic!ly a pertdrm.anc;e feat~. bu! the filth
FIT aiva 10! overdtf¥O efricll:ncy.)
..
EPAMIUAG•GUIW TllSTDATA
MadlllEnglre/T1•••illillOi•
131 ....,...,..ll•• . I I " 131 Yll'JitularnlllcT1aw14NIOi,. .. _ ....
ZIO t.li~n.ac...,, ..
llllW .......... T1•&1 ...... 1t ..
• W/~T1aw Jset:n" ..
CUTLAM cc.... a s--i
250 L&fllullnllkT,_,...,,,, " 2llO \ll'l'MmrulfT••••ii!BU•' .. _, 11r1,,._.. n.,., ...... ..
3illO W'/~To•••"""*"•· ..
DB.TAU
., W/~Tt-.-..0.1 " NWWWI t:.moHT ........... Tl ......... ..
1'0llOIUOO
455 WIAlllDiNlc'Ylww1 .... 1 " . _ .. _ ...
.. ..
" " ,.
" " .. ..
" .. .. ""-----·--· .
I
O..U Moun V a•dra DoeweJ Nunley JJ, JO, ucl Rue
J:. si.tl•. ilO, of Jl'lillerlm wW be ........ O.t. 31
by .Judie Jam11 H. Walsworth.
Mldaool Selma, ZS, wu fOUDd sullty of flrlt
"dllr-oo-murder, n<ond d-murder and lddn!IP-
1111 a.tho end of the 11 .. -b murder-UiaLID I
JIMIC0Wa!aworth'1COW1nlom. I
.JORN MANUEi.SOUS. 29, waa found suillY of
two c:ow>U of second ~ murder and one ol ldd·
napini.
It wu successfully alleged durinl the trial thot
.tbe murden were methodically planned by the do-
fendanto after Nunley and sieere ran afoUI of the
trio durin1 what w" described u "a hill\ rollilll
drug deal." &th men~ were repeatedly tie-'iJl:"SoU..'
home and tben transported to the T'fiOmpeon home
In tbe trunk of the car.
. .
TH .. RSIJAY ONLY SALE!
20% OFF
ANY BOOK IN Ollt.HOUSE
PAl'Bt llACJtSI BEST SA I RISI llARDCOVERSI --... -.... ..., ......... _
_, I nt.ll!lf .. "°""'Olflllolr ... e
tf • .. 1111 •••• wv' 11 ~ .... ,.. • .._ lllectle9. .. .. .................. Offer
I ut1 e1 Olflw n.n., Sopt. ZSAo
UDO BOOK SllOl'l'E -
1424 YIAOl'OUO #1
UDOVIUAGE --BOOK FAIR
111 S.COASTHIWAT ........... ·u.--
COSTA MBA WAUl'APll llAZAAI
I U2 Ho"" I rt llY4.
Cellll Mo• 1;T '45-ftt2 DISCOU WAt t P APElt;;:
500/o to 80°/o -Olll--· -OM-llOUSOI'.,._,_
Y1Mft.S,, R.OCl:S. ...... ~ flOl.S. ........ nw. •• ... • ••
MOflT..n~-. .. Of91MOll .. V.T.IM
MIWPOU LAMl'StWIE • r.uTS SUl'!'LY In ll1•1llla Drift .
....... ,. ... t .. 631-2111
CANE SWAG LAMPS 1r • .uc.w. -.. . ....,..-•r-,, . ..,........._,, ... .............. --... --2 ... 2995
GREEN TAG
Tire le
Gre•I uvlng1 on all green tqged metch•ndln. TM 111• 11 on.
Check the fan tattle UYlftOI ••• First come, ft rat Mfftd.
Import Car Radial Tires
SAVE
s11 ~ s17
The General Sprint-Jet Radial
The Sprint-Jet combipes a deep five-rib tread
design with hundreds of traction sipes to pr~
vlde road-hugging traction on wet or dry pav&-
ments. Plus you get the long mileage benefits
of radia l ply construction.
$
HURRY!
95
s11 .. 1HlM12 Md
1 •~SA1:1 t11b-eltM
blac:•••lt•. pl ... S1.4e Of Sl.'61
ffllefll f11c:IH Ta•
. .
Off REGUIAR tOW
PRICl PER THIE
DtPfNDING UPoN Sill
Fltl moftt• of: DatlUn, Flat, Hondli and MOR! I
I
Slut 1551Pl13 a llnli 1151Plt3, llm t15SR115
1151Pl14 1USAt46 t551Lllt5 •
T110.le11 lllKllw•ll Tutiell .. blKkwlH, Tubal ... blK!twa\j.
Sire &.50-13 Slz• C78·14 Sin '71-14 Tut>eles• Tu1>el•11 Tubele11 Bl•ckwall e1aekw1111 Bl•ekWalt
$15.95 $20.95 $23.95
Plus S1.77 Plus S2.0I P1u1 U .•o
F.E.T. F.E.T. F.E.T.
Size 1.00.1:1 Slz• E78·14 SlzeG71·14 Tub•lltl Tub.-It ti Tub1l111 lllaekwalt Bl•ckw1U 8l•ckw111
$19.95 $21 .95" $24.95
Plus $2.00 • Plut f2.27. Plus 12.5& F.E.T, F.E.T. 1.E.T,
'f'l/hitewa/la $2 to $4 mo,. per tire.
ALIGNMENT'
. SPECIAL·
$26.95 $27.95 $28.95
• ph11 11.a or 11 ro p1111 S1.~S1 f 4 plut.$2.04 f .E. T •
F.E.T. e><Sl.94 .ET. Fllt ~It of;
Fiii 11\00.elt ol F1t1 moci.11 ot MQ, PorKH, Saab,
Tri11111pti and M0r1l1 Audi, ~I, Trio.imp"· Sunbttam, Atld•,
Toyota Ind lllOr9! Toyota, PoraeM and-•'
Size 175111:14 Sin 115SR15
T11be~11 blac:twa11, Tub.-._., blac:tw1U.
$31.95 $33.95
pl111 S2.0I F.E T. plu1 S2.:M F.E T.
Fii• 11100.I• ol· Fil• 'ft0d1'9 ol.
M••ced11, "-ugoc, Cll•aon. Javu••.
Toyota, and 11\0fl! Triumph, P0<K"'9 and mor1!
The General JET· AIR. m
95
Size 6.50-13
tubeless
blackwall.
plus $1 .77
Federal
Excise Tax
A real valu8 fo r today's econom_y! The
Jet·Air m is built with ru gged four·ply
construction, Duragen"' Tread Rubber.
and twin-tread desig n. Why pay more?
Sin H78-14
Tub<lles1
Bt1ekwa11
$26.95
Ptua S2.71
F.E.T_.
Size 5.80· 15 Tub<ll1&1
81ackw•ll
$19.95
Prus tl.79
F.E.T.
Charge it
al General
Wa •Ito honor
• M11ter Ch11ge
• 81nkAmer11;11•d
Sire Fn-15 Siz• H71·15 T1.1b1Te11 Tubel111 81aekw•U Blackw1l1
$22.95 $26.95
Plu l S2.45 Plu1 S2 83
FE. T, f .E.T.
Size 078-15 Sl11 l78-15•
Tutllll&I Tub1!ea1
e1ackw111 Whll1w1ll
$24.95 $34.95
Plu1 $2.60 Plu1 $3.11 F.E.T. F.E.T.
"Available ln whllewaU only •
s1o's Extra <:naroe ror
larger .or a ir
conditioned
cars , setting
tonion bars . • .
and part a if
. COWACT a STAM»AID
AMHICAMC.t.IS -·
IWN CHl:.CK fi,_ld _ ....,.,ii.o1-wa llf !Wt..,."-MM!g 11!1tfWOlt,-1ill h(WQ Ml\t ...... P'«°Pd -Mwf dr~ .i 1ht>advtfl;,N ,n.~.
. Since .1959
IENEIAL
TllE ...... .-.
.. ~ .... -... -..... -c-... .-t ... ·--"''''"'"'"' .... -~
Don Swedlund Inc.
2855 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa
COAST ·
GENERAL TIRE
l'hoM 540.5 71 0
. . ~ 646-5033 .. -------~ooner or later, you 'll own General•-------•
I
l
l
I
-· .t • I i • j.. ... .... , ..
,4JI DAILY PILOT
Ce mini:
-,£hanges
I ,
Worki11g
• ' bySydney Omarr
n anday,September25
AalES (March 21 -
April 19): Accent on
.security. obtaining back-
ing from one who
encourages your efforts.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.
121: You get rid or fears
regarding costs, leases,
insurance. Decision goes
in your favor and means
-'money picture will be
brigbtet . You will finish
a project or assignment. .. f" SCORPIO (Oct. 23·
Nov.' 21 ): You make
choice between sharing 1Ud selfishness. Decision
could be crucial. Your '1tuture happiness might
be at stake. Know it and
1be grown-up about it .
I
1 1.i._ SAGITl'ARllJS (Nov. ',....nec. 21: Yo\s get into
1are a s that a r e un·
orthodo·x. Teach ing,
eaming processes are
t mphasized. Work, basic
achi~vements also figure
~prp~ently .
" • I CAPRICORN (Dec.
122-Jan,. 19): Curiosity is
satisfied. You glimpse
'truth and can benefit
from Jmowledge. Accent
is on creativity.
I AQUARI US (·J an.
1i o-Feb. 18): Details,
b asic i ssu es, inner
strengths, ability to face
facts a·s they exiSt -
lthese a re spotlighted. If
1 thorOugb., you wi n. If
"·not, you repeat steps.
PISCES (Fe b. 19·
arch 20): Movement,·
!messages, communica-
tion w ith relatives -
these are featured .
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY y ou are
spiritua l, percept ive,
psychic, p a r (i c ul ar.
sensitive, temperamen-
tal and not easy to live
with or to comp1etely
comprehend. ·
fi-•it-ted
David M LeBon of
South LaJuna, win at t 8'.D d e·d San
Cl e '!nente High
Scf\-0 1>1 an d
&jddle!>ac!k College.
b• ~uated rrom llrooks Institute ,
Sclioo L of
Pbo~f h ic Art -.
Wedn_,ay, September 24. 1975
L. 1'1~ Bfiyd
Rolltop D esk
\"\i as a Bargain
• ··········~·········· • I S · •· Vulqanism • •
.Delved.In
OCC Class
' Vu l canil m. a
pheoi>meoa t!J~t bu both
terrified and fascinated rnan for centureis, IS the
topic or a n-four-part
lecture series being of.
rered at Orange Coast
CoUeie .
Tb• series, titled HOuf
,Explosive Earth/' meets
.Frld'&p .beclnnll'lf Oct. -a,·rrom 7:30-9:30 p.m. In
Art Lecture Hall 119.Ad· ·
miMion is free ·and the
-wbllc is· tnvltN to -at-
tend.
' BRUSH -. BLOWER
$C1SSOR STYL~S
HOW TO DQ 1HEM STEP BY SllP
AnYone can care for a Bru$t\ a ~tower hair ety1e. "'
our Other curl cojOh~. !utt-free. full ~nclional •
SCISSOR STYLI$ whicffw• ea NtY. to do as:'J\dl sh.Im:
pool Our tamp cuts, 'finger tUl'l'lblt cuts, curtlng iron
C\,lfS. wash towel dry. brush ·11 fluff cuts or slinple wash
and wear cuts ar• SCIJ~_.. 8'J take-care-of~urse!I .styles. Good for_aoy aoe.-~nalr. No. teasing, no
rolters. no J)ins, no POLLUTING HAIR SPRAY~.
it.&.$0! MO MT f'llMAMINT WAt'tl. fOlf ""'' MIQI WAHf 'fO lllT "°"' NMl ·-OPlt< JOSEPH'S SOSSOR sTYLING
ff7·1 lt3 t
,, .. 3535
17t-Jl6J
NAME BRAND CARPETS
Cl.eLANESE l\,YLON HI-LOW
100% CELANESE NYLON PILE . POPULAR Hl·LOW
PATTERN THAT COMBINES BEAUTY. DURABILITY.
MANY COLORS. II
LOW DISCOUNT PRICESI
··1•1 KITCHEN .iPRINTS
I OW SAU Pll(ED ••.
COMPAIAIU HTAIL ................... $4.H
DUPONT . IYLOI
TRl·COLOR SHAG
100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. DURABLE SHAG
IN 3-COLOR DESIGNS.
IOW SALE PIKED •••
COMPAIAIU HTAll ••••••••••.•••••••• $4.ff
HERCULON® LEVEL LOOP ..
100% HERCULON• OLEFIN PILE. IDEAL FOR •
~fi~l~AtftC ~~~SCciLO~~CfjENS DENS ,
IOW SALE PRICED •••
COMPAIAIU llTAll ................... SS.ff
·HERCULON®
PRINTS
100% HERCULON• IV OLEFIN
PILE WITH RUB3ER BACK.
BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS IN MANY
BRIGHT COLORS THAT WILL
BLEND INTO ANY DECOR.
IOW BB SAU
PllCID , .. , .... SQ. YI.
llTAI. SI." SAVI
so."· SAVI
$2.00
99 (
so., •. . ·SAVI ·
SZ.00
Bl
SO. YD. SAYI
SZ.00
100% ANSO® NYLON WITH RUBBER BACK
5-YEAR GUARANTEE. BEAUTIFUL PATIERN
DES IGNS IN BRIGHT COLORS. G~EAT FOR ·
HIGH TRAFFIC AREA S, '
KITCHENS , DENS,
PATIOS, MANY OTHER
DECORATIVE USES.
IOW SALE PRICED • • • ,
COMPAIAIU llTAll ••• $7.99
"
~!~~~Lt!~=N ~~~~l~!L!'-••
WEAVE FIBER THAT RESISTS STAINS AND WEAR. MANY COLORS AVAILABLE. .
IOW SAU ,_ICED •••
COMPAIAIU IDAIL ................... SJ.ff
'hfllltl'H ,,..,_,,ti llt11tlt1, 1111 . 1,-.,,,, hi.,,.,'" ti.iii''"· ;
' so. n. SAYI
SJ.GO
car·
u .oo
• ""'''"' lrtitNtt rl ~""""· 111 . .......... °" '" '" tit!•• ''"'
WE DON'T WANT YOU TO MAKE A MISTAKE ....
'IREVIRA." S'rAR polyester carpetlnJ.' It's perfecUy beautlfUl .
Practically family proof. •
DUPONT NYLON
DENSE SHAG mn"DVJBA9i1Aat:>-T~UGH, DURABLE AND EASY TO CLEAN • •• 100% DUPONT NYLON PILE.
EXTRA DENSE SHAG IN LAVISH
MULTI-COLOR COMBINATIONS.
BRINGS HIGH FASHION TO
ANY HOME.
SCROLL DESIGN ~. 1 DE.NSE PLUSH ,
100% TREVIRA• STAR POLYESTER PILE. A
HANDCRAFTED LOOK UKE CUSTOM MADE CARPET.
VERY SERV ICEABLE. MANY COLORS
AVAILABLE. IOW
SAU
PllCED IOW SAU PllCID •••
, .......
nTM Jlt."
SQ. YD.
SAVI ss.oo
\ COMPAIAIU llTAIL ......... SU.ff
'llt«kJ f°""1, hk_, lK .. lft If t)t lilt ,......, l'lillfl.-,, .....
'
LUSH GREEN GRASS CARPET
100% POLYPROPYLENE Wl"(H RUBBER BACK. ALSO
AVAILABLE IN CANDY STRIPES. A NATURAL'
FOR MANY INDOOR AND OUTDOOR USES.
NOW SALE PRICED ••••••
COMPARAILE RETAIL •• , ••••••••••• , ••••••• $5.99
·BB SQ."· SAVI
$2.~.
100% TREVI RA• STAfl<POLYESJER PILEc ll:JSTROUS, •
PLUSH SURFACE OF VELVETY ~·-·-
TEXTURE. USUALLY FOUND •
IN RICH. ORIENTAL RUGS. MANY
DECORATOR COLPRS AVAILABLE.
!IOW SALi '-ICED ••• 8_9
so. "· . SAVI • COMPAIAIU llTAIL ......... Sii.ff
S.t.00 -....r FiMr1, t.o: .. li!-tffh i.-ti.ttr~ I"'-".
DUPGNT NYLON 'SCULPTUREti -:::
100% D~POJ'H CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NY~ON PILE., f.ASHIO#~QlE Tl!REE·LEVE~ COBBLESTONE ' • •
0€SIGN 'IN" ~LTITUDE OF EXCITING COLO • •
-'
'" NOW SAL'· PRICED • .', , •
" } \ I •'!.I.., COMPARABLE RlfAIL., ............. ; ••••• , •••• $71~
~ ....., . .., ~
,...._ .. DAT! NO INll•lll • CONVINllNI U IDll PUNS AND U• THMS AVAllAlll • <AU IOI IJlt SW-Al· SOYl<f • Y"'l,Hll CJSTGalUftrt lllPAITMllT
Na.HOllYl!,OOD VENTURA " WHITIIEI 'LONG IEACH MONTCLAll. Fou:r.1N VALLEY 7 "7L•tl yt11 JSOI L .... Strttl l5tll l1 Whillitr llwd. J'ooa ltlfltwtr 11.~. ............... ISt• ........... > II••· -taJ.JJOO (IOSI 6•1·SO" ••l·0161 •Zl·ltl4 (714) 6J6.JSl7 (Jl4) llt-1700
HOLLY)IVOOD TOIRANCE PASADENA CANOGA'A:K , COVIN.A , W. LOS ANGE NO,
I IJJ Villl Slwttl~ 42.36 Art11i9 II••· 2660 I. (ol1t ... 1 llwd. JIOJI Shei111111 1y ¥01.AnW ..... ny 'IOSJS Yltllc,llrL ll • •,,.UUAI MJ~JJ SlJ ... t6 577.1900 Jj7.JJ)4 t66-4471~ . SSMStt...:
l •
,.. "· SAVI
$4.11
..
•
•
•
•
' ' I
t
I
'
j
' .
f-
r
I
! ~
I
f
..
I
Ultra Brite ·
TOOTHPASH
lrtsilal
Fl1t1r!
]OZ.
'AllllY SIZI
J&8 RARE
SCOTCH
Rei . 1·~9~AL 18.45 ~
Smirnoff ~
;, VODKA · · · · ~
Re1. 12.&0 11 40 ,,.,.,,,.,.., l'l GAL. •
Ancient Age ~
iouRBON 5 99 ~ Rec. 6.69 QT. • _ n
I. W. HARPER ~
WHISKEY · · U
Res. 14.st 12 99 n V2 GAL • /!
Schenley ~
Y.Q.DKA sth 3. 89 U ,,,~ ~~1~rice i
::~.::; Burgundy, Chabl;s, 1 69 ~ "':';!} Rose or Pink Chablis
" Reg. 1.99 UI.. • · U
~ ~INE l BEEi ONLY AT CAMAllLLD. FetlNTl1N Y.U..tlY r:
_ l SANTA ANA, l9t1 51. lrist1I SI. _ · ::xc ::xc c ::s:c ::xc ::xc
0 Tweed by LENTHE~IC If\£ 1 The classic lra,crance' \t~I 1/: COLOGNE MIST COLOGNE
. I I\ 1 OZ. 2 OZ. -~.'-··· 4. 75 6.00
~ULTON Old Spice
A Hint oi the SEA'
AFTER SHAVE COLOGNE
4'14 oz."--'SIZES 1. 39 1. 99
Miss Breck
HAIR SPRAY
Choose your favorite
lormula. ' . r sac
ll ll. ...
Hl·DRI
TOWELS
Two-PIJ Pastels!
IJ-111 ..... JUMBO SIZ,E
Paper Plates
9'' ROUND SIZE
Princess Knit
WHITIN; .. Kn;tting sPool
and yarn in a clever, color
ful "tote" package Ages
6· 12. It's fun and it's easy!
Bagatelle GAMES
by WOLVERINE .•.
Astronauts or Auto eec Race. 9V,x51>"
size. . 11.
Spinning Top
OHIO ART -Color-esc ful 51 '4" to p for
ages 2 and older.
Camera
by ESSKAY ...
"Po;nt and shoot'" eec Colar or black and
white pictures.
rnN10R Tool Belt
WITH FLASHLIGHT.
ESSKAY ... Toy
belt f?i the "handy-C tools & ad1ustable BS
man!'
Table Tennis
ESSKAY -Two 88 · paddles and balls C
plus a net.
Boys Assortment
COLDRFORMS ...
Excitement! Dare-
devil Evel Kni evel. 8SC etc. stick-on pieces. ...
"OUCHLESS" Curad
PLASTIC OR
TRANSPARENT BANDAGES
IOX OF 100
ASSORTED
SIZES
------·-·
Cit 'I a••.• ·· .. s,.1 ,,.,,It~·
~-
•
~4 ,TONE · 7·UP
Th M1i11wbl .. SOAP tlte UNCOU Bathroom Tissue
.; . ~"'~··'.','.·
~'-M• ....
. ' ---
DRINK "Elsr Start Rell!"
21 OZ. BOTTU · -' .
2lOL1
PAK
'"' Your Chlee 11
Wood Fi•ishs!
• Dark Cherry
• Waln•t
·. 2.50 f~ ,-----i
Naturalearthcolorbangle ea. !~ : 1.00 ~~t:~IRST :
VAlU6111 (OL!PO,..
bracelets m wood tones 1 77 I "Decor • Print" I
or clay colors. Matching I WITH THIS COUPON I earnngs, too! ti. • ·~/=ioef !lrn>:ii!'1!QP.li'"""..lilm"""'""'"'''''"'"'""""" ! _ - - - - - - - - -_J
~~~~~u!~!s ~
able ... complete BBc ~ with strap for the
neck or carrying.
MITAi.WARE
Assorted Sets
Safe, non·IOXI CBBc toys for tile "litt le
m1ss 1' ea.
Flintstone G
Metal Target ame
ESSKAY -lhree eec darts with rubber
tips far safety.
GOLDEN BOOK
Assortment
WESTERN PUB ·
LISHING -stories BBC of lr1end s and
animals. ea.
DISNEY
Round Puzzles
WESTERN PUBLISHING ... 115 full y ;nter· sec locking 01eces. 20"
complete ea.
Peanuts Assortment
COLORFDRMS ...
The entire group has sec hours of stick-on
fun1 ea.
.. . . -. ,,. . '
: ...... / ~-"'" -~ ' ...,,-.w-:-. . .. .. . -1 •. . .... ~ . ~ ~ ·-...
SLINKY
by JAMES
eec
The world famous stretch ·
n SECRET 10~-o
U ANTl -PERSPIRAMT n Genlle, and sale 'f., 'J3 . U !or fabric s! J..et. I ~ ¥• P~RKl·~tVIS . I ,
1
.-:--::-: Y1~1 C:l 89-,
· .. · .. ·•. ,: · I 00 TABLETS • • • , 500 MG ·~
toy that actually walks ~ ORISTAN down stairsl
----NASAL MIST . :::.'::! n Relief for sinus conges-99c ._-:_ r U 1;on & head colds. 15cc Hitch-Up Toy
Assonm .. l by STROMBECK.
Boat s. buggies,
Hondas . elc. in BBc tough die cas t
metal ea.
rnter .. tio .. r Classics
MODEL PROO . -
ramo us Ii32 sca le 88C models of yester-
year! 11.
Chess Set
HASBRO -Board ·
TRIAMINIC
SYRUP
For stuffed and runny 1 39
noses. 4 oz. •
BODY All
POWDERY SPRAY
and f6 each while sec and black chessmen
plus 1nstruct1ons. ---------~~
Peanuts Puzzles
BRADLEY -150 lnlerlock;ng
pieces. 14•10"88 complete. Ages 10 C
10 adult. ea.
Sew-N-Stuff
Assonment by HlG -Three
d1mens1onal se wing SBC pro 1ects for begin-
ners. Ages 4-8. ea.
Plant Stands
BAMBOO ... Brown
stained in 28" or 33"
heights for 6" or 8"
plant Pols. EA. 5 • 88
aoxEo Stationery
by WHITING fJ • ~
Colorful designs , ~2! ~ Magic Mary :,:.,:~it you'.r 55·c· <L • .. t·.,_1
Ass ortment by BRADLEY -~
Girls can experimerit with ~==~~;;;==;~~=~ co tors and fash1onc; s Be with a concealed
magnet. ea.
"DORSET"
Round Puzzles
BRADLEY -Color.
ful scenes w1lh .. SSc 1nternat1onal llavor,
SOUNDESIGN "Automotic/Monual"
Record Changer
Play 33, 4~ or 78 rpm records .
Diamond st1·
lus. waln ut 34 95 finish #435 • ....
·~ 1lti~ ill ~it1ll Fl
500 pieces. ea .
We Want You to Trust Yoar
S11-01 Pharmacist as You
Trust Your Phy sici an !
• DEPENDABL'E
• :;;:> • RELIABLE
",..-" • DEDICATED
Petuna
CAT FOOD
Assorted Flavors
6 OZ. CANS
------
HEAVY WISK DUTY
Detergent
"Beats Rine
AreU1d the Colin
herytime!"
1 GALLON
-·---------
HIWP'OlT l~f;H-IOJf ~ W..tdff Pl.,. s.t.tn'A AMA-ltl I S..tlrl lri.w SI. a TC>tl:Q-Z437J RockfWlll•
I ·-
"
•
I
l
. I
'
. '
Based on EPA figures, ,
GM 1975 cars showed an ave e . . ,
sales-wei ted fuel-ecenom~
• increase of 28% over '74. ·
• • ••
•
.
' I
'
Using the EPA's own dynamometer test results,
our 1976 Chevrolets, Pontiacs, Oldsmobiles, Buicks and
Cadillacs show an overall sales-weighted fuel economy
'
improvement over the 197 4 models of 38.33.
•
This impressive gain reflects GM's determination ·to offer
the engineering and technology these times demand,
such as our High Energy Ignition System, catalytic converter
. .
and more 4-and 6-cylinder engines.
Before you buy any 1976 car, mak~ sure you consider
' '
•
• ' .
I , ...
•
I . , . .. ,
'·
\ · 1
i 1 I
i· !
I • • . ' •
I,
' l
I .
• • -' •
.
" ..
I
!
I ' " •
·l .
'
' ' . .
\ '
.. ...
,•! ..
l
·~ • ,r . ' • ' •
' • :.
i • ' ,.
l I
t
' '
miles per gallon ••• we think you'll appreciate GM's •
' .
• •
'·
•
.. . .
I
We want you to drive ~hat you like and like what yQu 4rive •
.
1 ) ' )
• . . . .
•
•
•
-.
•
• ' l -
t.
UPI,........ f MICHELLE BIGGAAS IS EQUALLY ADEPT AT THE PIANO AND .ON THE GRIDIRON.
Dream C:Ome True
Defensive Tackle:
8-year-old Girl
HOUSTON (UPI) -The
peewe..e football team in
Mic hie I J e ·Bi I gar s rc:
neigbbo'ttlood~decided it did not need" &If yek.Qld, 78-
pound girl 'pl mg defensive
tackle. And, are •11ioott, folks
~-. llilicbelle we't out JO..l>l•f
her. fint g-e the otflei: day
for ~In~ ·BroncQt,·She
causeCl three fUnibteS .and
made 12 tackles -seven of
them unassisted.
The Broncos won, 27.S.
Jn the first defensive
series in the Broncos' n~
game, she racked the
quarterback so hard that he
never returned to the game. .
That was a 40-0 vic-
1l tory. ··1 can't believe my
dream has come true,••
i Michelle said. ••1 have
always wanted to play foot-
ball."
'
But despite her talents as
the first girl to suit up in the
Inwood Dads' C lub Prep
~. League, which also features
six girl cheerleaders per
team, some players and
parents don't like what she
stands for.
f.
"Most everyone has been
very receptive.'' said
Michelle's mother, Mrs.
Richard Biggars._, ''But
i
thereareafewwhoarebot."'
·The biggest hurdle for
Michelle was obtaining
permi-ssion from her
parents. .
Alw•ys the first player
chosen m front-yard football
gam,ea w ith the guys,
Michelle wanted to play on
an organized team in 1974.
But li'c!!b 11atents said oo.
Wiim klcko!6 time neared
this .;aummer, · Micbelle was
• teody with the big pitch.
.. ··s ee, I can even use
Ricky's uniform," Michelle
said when she bounded down
the stairs decked in her
brother's football garb
"Now can I please play?"
At a special meeting of the
dads' club dir ectors, the
·vote was, unanimous to allow
her to play for one of the
teams. The first one whrch
had a ~Hance to draft her
passed Michelle by.
Broncos coach Forest Day wu, to say the least, not
thrilled at the prospect of
getting a girl.
''I g uess the world has
come to an end,'' were his
exact words.
Then he saw Michelle,
who is two· pounds under the
r wei1ht limit for the Prep
League, practice for the first
time. He promptly headed
for ~e sidelines and Mrs.
Bigflars.
' "l don't mind having a
girl on the team at all," he
said.
~iWilliams Optimistic
Ange& Lose Home Finale . '
The curtain came down on the
California Angels' home season
Ttiesday night in a manner. which
!could have been expected.
I They lost. : .
But it wasn't a total loss .. A
~rowd of 6,078 dropped by to pay
their last respects to the late--
·lamented '75 home· season "and
that boosted total attendance ·at
;Anaheim Stadium to a "healthy
l,058, 163 -an increase of 140,894
over the previous summer.
• Unhappily, the Angels could
not provide the local faithful with
• winner -not even in tbeir;<r.m
J;all park. ' Tuesday night's 54 Joss to the
Chicago Whlte Sox, a loss which
1 ~curred when Ken Henderson
' iipped a seventh inning home run
f to sever a ~-4 tie, left the Angels
;trith a dismal 35-46 record at
• iome compared to a37-40ledger
J On· the road. ~ The Angels finish up their
season with· three games in
' 4lakland beginning Friday \ilgbt. i , "The bright spo\s fat out-
Yeighed the minuses,'' assessed ~ manager Dick Williams. "II It
ladn't been for a lot of Injuries -.
especially to Nolan Ryan, Bill •
Singer and Bruce Bochte -we
inight h?-ve shown even more
progress.
"'I'll tell you one thing -a lot
o1 · inexperienced people picked
up:-t'!xperience in a hurry."
Williams enumerated the
plw:ses of the season as the
emergence of pitcher Frank
... Tanana, the play of rookie
second baseman Jerry Remy
and the hurling of Ed Figueroa
who won 16 games after starting
the year in tile minors.
• OHCAOO • CALIP'CHINIA .... ,,.. ..,,..,
Mllntoll If J , ' 1 ....,,, lb .. 1 1 0
lMIWtJb .i o 1 1 Riwncf s 1 1 o
S11111• . 1000 JKbmllf 5000
ari.211 a o 1 o s..nw.rt l 1 2 2 Mlltlall.. .. 0 2 1 BKNll 1b l 1 2. 0.
............. ci' 5 1 1 1 OIMllJb J 0 2 1
L.,.._..tb J 1 t 0 .M.NntJntf o o o o
SqwitM 1b t •• 0 o.dtcll . .. 0 0 0
Dint• S 1 I 0 etiJ ..... ret1C 4 0 1 t
c.olw;dorf .. 1 1 • Miity• .. 0 0 0
DDMl!l'IQC 3 0 1 I "9mqp II 0 0 0
C.tlenp 0000 LMlttP 0000•
OClonlp 0 0 0 0 M.Scottp 0 0 0 0
HMrlll'°"P 0 0 0 0
l6 s 12 S Tol•ls 35 4 • 4 O«I 000 loo-5
010 U'D llCI0-4
I,. M; • •• U ID Osttln A~ t A 2 1 I
o.t:iom rw,MJ l'b o o o 1 1
Hlimllt!Oft a 1 o o 1 2 ....,.. tM.5 .... 30
......... (t,,.4"6) ~ 1 1 1 2 5
M.5cett • 1 0 • 0 0 • ~ltDn (,). T~:a.A-4,011.
1914Illdy
Ch '. all'f:llOD
Dies at 89
PARIS -Rene thomU, the
Frenchman who wiSn the In-
dianapolis !500 In 1914, is dead at
89, bis family announced today.
Cause of the death was not aza..
nounced.
Th o mas began racint
motorcycles in• 1903 before
switching to cars aod..tbeD work-
ing with the Wright~ as a
pilot. He raced at lndi'anapalls
Cor a number of years aft.er hls
victory, finishing seamd in 1920
and leading the world 's most
famous auto race in 1921 before
dropping out with a leak in his
radiator.
He set a world speed record of
143.5 miles pei' hour im 1924 in •
IO-liter Delage V·l2, a larger
venion of the car he had won IJ\..
dy with a decade earlier. Three
years later. Thomas retired from
racing.
Oltn-t-Glts•t•
SEATTLE - A Seattle group
has offered $15 million for the
San Francisco Giants and their
real estate ho ldiitgs, the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer reported
Tuesday.
The newspaper said Horace
Stoneham, president of the
Giants, placed the Seattle bid
and a similar offer from a Toron-
to group before the team's board
of directors Monday. No im-
mediate action on the offers was
repo~ed..
a-.-Ropped
CLEMSON, S.C. -Athletic
and administrative ·offici~ at
Clemson University decline to
confirm or deny a report that the
NCAA has J>laced the school on
two years ·probation for basket4
ball recruiting violations.
The GreenviU,C!i Piedmont said
Tuesday it bas learned from in-
formed sources that the school
ij'OUld be penalized. The story
said it could not be determined if
basketb'all or all •Ports would tie
plac99 on probation.
T•1111e rl.p.et
SAN FRANCISCO-No. 2
Arthur Ashe was an easy winner,
but No. 3 Roscoe Tanner was up-
set in the first round of a $100,000
tennis tournament at the Cow
Palace.
Nlbe downed Billy Martin 6-3,
6-3 Tuesday, but. Tanner was
shocked by Graham Stilwell 7-6,
6-7, 8-2 In, a match that eoded
after midnight.
In other matches: Raul
Ramirez beat Dick Crealy 6-2-
6-2, 6-3; Charles Pasarell defeat ..
ed Jurgen Fassbender 6-3, 7-6 ;
Cliff Drysdale edged F'Ullerton's
John Andrews 6-4, 7-6; Eric van
Dillen downed Bob Carmich el
7-6.1-6, 6·3. .
· Also, Jorge Andrew eliminated
Carlos Kirmayer 4·6, e-a·. 6-2 ; and
Dennis Ralston edged Sherwood
Stewart 4·6, 7 -6, 6-2: '
,.
DAILY PILOT
I t 4.'f ~·
,CHICAGO (APJ -Alter :IO Patr1ots1J1lcttheywoulddecidel( c~'t a d to lote a se
moo.lb• of m•~•ae.ment·~cm manage.tnent had made a, salary1'
neaoUattons, the ume oonlra~ meanlnf~ offer. It wL• un· ' 1! t;tontract 11 roj
iuu.. bl1hll1btea by the ""'1' c!OrStood that the New ~land sOilie n leaden! believi!
trovental Roaelle Rule, oootinu'e lteani, which had a conttngent or · 'stf'ik~ 1s not a neeeits
toc.loudlhefutunoftbeNational solb~ 1~. here at their own ex-alter!'ative. They believe
Footballl..eague. :S. pense, Was rru11trated to Ute point sa~aetlon can be gained e~
Twodaya of collectlve gain-of exasperation by what they tually In the courb or t
in1 discussions ended in • believed t9 be management 's un -Congress.
1talemate Tuesda3 with bot bend.ins atance In the negoUo -.... After negotiations brok.e-
1lde.t aereeJna: that the same-u_.. :-2-union president Kermit
basic non-economic issues lt1ll Other union leaders, among ander was asked if the.re
plque a possibl,e labor setUe--them Dick Anderson, the Miami be a strike ir the proposal wu
n.>ent. Doi~· player representative jected. "It is up to the ind.ivi
With tbe breakoff in negoti'a. and a member or the exef:lutive members to communicate to
tions, the rank-al)d-Ctle mem-board, didn't th1nj Utere would what their desires are on
benhip of some 950 players will be a strike because ''the players be said. -·
vote be(inning, T-hursday· on • manaa~ment •s lat• contract. of. '
fer, whlcb representatives of the TO Start f;!. --J _y· · 20 NFL qwnera sa:Y will C06ttbem .:::XUllU,l;
about $30 million in new money
Over.&!ive-ye:ar period. B s Sentiment among the NFL un. • till N
ion leaders. who .met here in . aJ•I•IS 0 face·to-face confrontatioos with" e
oWnen and into tpe wee boUrs •
·amOlll themselves, was that th~ · contra~ proP,qaal indicated ,.no R Q·B-Kn · significant Improvement on ' tO 'W"'W111Q 0
ecoeomie benefits D« a major ;u,i..a..m.o
chan1e in the Rozelle compensa·
tionrule.
'lbe. union lea~en. lncfuding LONG BE Ac H (A p)
the. various team playeT ''James Harris is Obf No. l
representatives, also indicated quarterback, there's oq" qllestion
thattheproposalwouldbereject-about that ,'' de'clared Los
ed ,in the vote by the m~E?-Angel~s Rams coach Chusk
bersbip . After that, Jt s KnoxonTu_esdayinanaftennath
.anybQl;ly'sguess. . .. discassion or hi s team's opening
There was specu~ation that ~e • 1065 a\ Dallas. , .
New· En1l~ Patnots, who trig· Barris worked the first three
gered the meetings of Monday • quarters and then Ron Jaworski
and Tuesday Will\ their strike took over and marshalled the
last., v,'eek, would re;ect the con-Rams to their only touchdown in
tract proposal unarumously. But the 18-7 loss to the Cowboys in
no one :'t'"ov.ld venture a predic-their opening National Football
tion SIU\ey would again \\!alk out League game.
and le/use to play Sund,ay . "I didn't think about making
agiinst the Miami Dolphins at the change in that game until we
Foxboro, Maas. m ad e i t . ' ' K no x to I d
Under the memorandum . o( sportswriters and sportscasters
_agreelflent las1 Thursday, which at his weekly breakrast session .
brou.&ht about management's .. A lot or things were happen-
proposal Monday, th~t;•ould be ini: in there that were not James
three days'ot negotiations alter Harris' fault. If you win the
the offer was made and then five quarterback gets more credit
days for the players to vote, the thah be desecves and if you lose
results to be made public by Oct. he gets more criticis m than he
2. . deserves."
At the time, however. the Knox added, "We'll be working
Decisio:q May Affect
Jone8' Award Chances
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Now that
Randy Jones bas won 20 games
for San Dilso and continues to
lead Nation'll League starters in
earned run percentage (2.23), the
question ia, will he pitch again
this season? .
The answer to that may weigh
heayily on whether Jones, 20-11
alter a 6·4 victory over Los
Angeles Tuesday night, is able to
DOdtlf!r S S laff!
AN ..... t .. KA..COWI
SM1t. t• lftA19IH•tS.. Dl9QO
s.pt. 2' HOllStoft .C LOs Af!OR'-5 $111t. 27 •to1"ton •I Los A"91tle1
6:1SP.m.
7;:tSp.m .
1:10p.1ft.
beat out Mets' starter Tom
Seaver and St. Louis reliever Al
Hrabosky for the National
League's coveted Cy Young
Award ..
San Diego's 25-year-Old left.han-
der threw what ror him was the uncommon number of 145 pitches
Tuesday night as he overcame
five Padre errors and two un-
earned runs and weathered
threats in each of the last three
innings.
"This was more pressure than
going for a no-hitter or pitching
in an All-star ea.me," he said
after he became the first Na-
tional Leaguer since 1963 to win
20 after losing 20 the year before.
Jones had an 8·22 record in 1974.
Chicago Cubs left-hander Dick
Ellsworth had a 9-20 record in
1962 but came back the next
-season with a 22·10 figure.
''I've never been this tired
after a game," said Jones after
wlhning bis 20th In his third start
since winning bis 19th. ''I've been
pitching with only three days'
rest lately and I've pitched more
innings this year (Z78) than I
ever have in one s·eason ...
In the process. the 6-(oot, 172-
pounder has gone the route in 18
of bis 35 starts, has six shutouts
and has allowed one run in each of nine other victories this
seaaon .
Jobes is sched.uled to pitch the
next·~last game or the season
here Saturday night against SF.
"We'll wait and see how he
(eels,•· says San Diego manager
John McNamara, "but he threw
so many pitches tonight that it
may be asking too much ror him
to come back with three days· rest.··
LOSANGRl.t:S ._,.
LK'flt
PKlorell 11
"""'" 0¥w'flb
"''" --rl y_, ........ " Dnwnlngp
-~ ... W•llP
Ah••retpfl
~~"
.. 11 r II bl
l 0 I I
2 I 0 0
3 0 0 0
s ' 1 0 • I 2 0 ... , I 1
<I 0 3 I
J OOO
J I 0 0
2000
I 0 0 0
10 00
l 0 0 0
0000
!lA"OIEllO ... , "bl
V•leflllnt If J O O O
~(f 10' I
f"..,.\llS 2b ' 1 • 0
H. Torrn1~ lo Io
MtCowy lb l o o 1
Wlnfleldl""I •<I 1 1 1
Sh¥ontf l 1 o o
0.. Rao.rt1 3b 1 o l 1
Kubl•llJb 0 000
·K•rdlltc J 1 0 O
A.JonHp 1001
Tot•ts JS 4 I 4 "Total1 21 lo I 1
Los"""9ele~ ono :m 001-...
S... Oie90 010 110 U•..._.
E-+t. Torres. R. Jon.H, ICendall 2. Wynn. Cey,
FU!fltes. OP-Los AnQe ll!S 3, San Dleoo? LOB-
Los Al"IQl!le1.9. s. ... 0 1eoo 9. 18-Wlnfle!d, FU!fl•tt.
Ao¥'11•r. lB-H•h,.,. se-w1 ... 1i.1d. s -v•1en11ne.
A.Jones1,H. Torres, Ye•91'•.
tP H A ER 88 SO
00wn1no 1o ~J261
W•ll(L.0.0 ? l l I ? I
A.~IW,20-10 9 I • l 4 8
WP-W•ll. T-1 19.A-ll,561.
hard on the practice field ·
week. I just hope the executi
better this SUnday. It will ha
be if we're.to beat the San Fr
tis co 49ers. • •
The Ram~ and 49ers m
San Francisco and Knox
the roe itly improved over year in offense and det
He sai arris will start t
quarterb · . '
;,,; to , >upset' at Dallas, le
had oci explanal, saying, i-'t was an,ijff d,1 J , ,.! never ljid
thOUlllit · ;t p poorl)l.~l iust!hink utpl well.",
The co'llc sai\\ 'could h.
been a r(fpt exceD , "We di t
Q14t at an' time.•• ~
~He d~'t · -the ope
game 116!1' ~Ill· Harris":
fidence\even though the at
quarterback hit on only one
pa{fSes Cor just five yards.
''1 oan't see where confid
is going to be a problem,••
cq.ach said. "James Harris'
haS great ability and I think
going to bounce back. In any:
versity, certain strength c
gained from it.••
Dallas used the shot.gun fo
tton effectively with Ro·
Staubach at quarterbac::k.~
Knox was asked if the rormaqcm..
basically a short punt with,
quarterback dropping back (
center to take the snap, had
a surprise.
"No." he replied. "Tom
dry had said he was going t
the shotgun even before pra
began and he used it in all si
hibition games. The shovel
is as old as football. There w
surprise, just excellent ex
tion.-1 .
• 1Knox says there is a great
of difference between a bas
manager yanking his pitcher
a football coach substituti
' quarterback .
·•1n the case of a base
pitcher, it's a personal thing.~ e
commented. "If a pitchers
up balls that batters hit
the park in succession, it is
vious he doesn't have it. The
frontation is between him an
batter.
Overall, Knox said that H
did,Jl't do well in some situati
anl hip teammates failed hi
others: He completed only '
pass in 10 atte mpts. '
~Lamonica Raps Sun Co1:1ch, Boss
j Daryle Lamonica, the former •-one thing I will .say now is -
quarterback of the Oakland that mY doctor baa told me my
Raiden, haa quit the Southern left ~ee needs a long rest,"
California Sun of the World FoOt· Lamonica aald. "I've had an
t>aJI League citing p?Oblemll with arthrlttc condition In the knee
his left knee. -acted up after I wrenched it 1 NI he leJt bis Santa Ana apart· In the Charlotte 1ame.
*1ent Tuesday, the M-year-old "I don't like '"king drugs for
i.amonlc11. who had aeen llii\!ted 1 f~ lnjurfes and I'm having
aervicefortheSun,said•'ac:om-to take'"one now, motrin. I told
blnation of factors I'd rather not myself a Jons. Ume ago that ii'
go Into right Dow'' caused hln:a to football ever ceased to become
leave the club. La=ayed fun for me or It became lrliuriou.s
·out hlJ ept\on With. . IA-the to my health. l'd quit." A Sun
NaUonif Fodt~,.u then spakesman slid LalllOlllca bad
jumped to the S:Un·for a "'l>Orted notreportedtodriU.thisweek.
$!00,000 salary. Lamonica suffered a hernia In• l .
the second of two pres~on
pmes be appeared in and liild to
undergo surgery. Foll""'81 Ills
recuperation from the opiration,
he appeared In regular ,....,.
games against San Antonio and
Charlotte. Late In the Charlotte
iame, Feart replaced Lamonica
lna1ametheSuneYellluallylo0t.
Asked abOut being takeo out of
the game, Lamonica said Tuea-
daf, "I didn't object to being
taken out of the game. But wbe:n he (Fem) took meouthetoldme
itwu-becauae'Pat~
how to call the play& better than
you do' "UnW that point, I'd bad - . -I
ooproblems with Fears, he said.
Lamonica said he was dis-
p1e·ued at implications by the
~management that be left the
~elab unexpectedly. ''That's
..,...,ash'," be said. "Fears and
La'rry HaUield both knew I
,.-.,•t going to Shrevepor(. Isa
Jn Latry:s office last Th(lrsc!Jf
'ad told him tb•t,1 also told him
I wanted .my "'lease, which b~
\NOUldD'ttlvelij,e. '' -·
.\lked If _!!le Sun lived '!Ptothe
tefrna ol h~~ntract, ~ca
1ald. •11h.at 1 something t waa't~
talk about -It's In the h8!"1• of mi attome1. ''
I-I • \ .................. 1 •
1
81 o.\ILY PILOT
• . ·MV Secondary.:
Gets Stiff Test .,.
John Murio will di s-
, cover just how strong his
secondary is Friday
night.
That's when his Mis-
a i on Viejo High
Diablos-ranked No.$ in
the CIF 2·A poil-eo!Ude
with the Costa Mesa
Mustangs in an interest.
inc non-league football
game. Kickoff is 8 at
Orange Coast College.
Four players who
!tarted in the secondary As for his secondary ·
last .year are back, but. Murlo says, "they ar9
~uno kno~s they face~ runntn 1 in to our-
b1gtask Friday. _. \ .streng\h. ''
''Costa Mesa looked Murio's 1econdary saw
awe~ome passing," sa.ys little p1s1in1 action lut
SPORTS
Muno, referring to Tim Friday when the Diablos
Rosauer's 15-for·24 mark beat Sad d I e back • 1 Err '
for ,225 yards against La Roadrunners, 27-7. Sad-ors
Quinta which Costa dleback's quarterbacks •
Mesa defeated, 27-14. "I -running a wishboneol·
feel thei~ quarterback fense -only threw 10
and rece1 vers are ex-times, completing 4 for64
cellent athletes.·· yards. Two were in·
tercepted.
Trouble Ahead
Murio say! he is
pleased with his t eam's
Concern
To Oilers
pr<:>gress going into . _
Fr,.day's game . He Eli"!11nat1oi:i of mis-
For Tritons?
San Clemente Jligh's
Tritons could have a bun·
die or trouble on their
hands Friday night at
Western High when they
battle Cypress High's
Centurions in non-league
football if the la tter can
turn its turnover prob-.
I ems around.
The Centurions of
coach Dick Shelko lost
their opener to cross·
town rival Western,
27·14, low -lighted by
seven Cypress
turnovers.
"We lost two fumbled
punts, were intercepted
twice and lost thr4e
fumbles," says Shelko.
Western. aner mOuni-inl a loag scoring drive,
scored its last three TDs
on marches of 19, 24 and
27yards.
backs Dirk Anderson
and Dave Magnuson and
b ackup monster Vic
Beradino.
Cypress has another
asset that did not come
into focu s against
Western-Swedish ex-
c hange student Carl
Fockler.
Fockler was two for
three from so yards out
as a field goal kicker in
practice according to
Shelko, and the Cypress
. coach says he hopes to go
to his 6·2, 175-pound im-
part when opportuniti'es
are present.
As for San Clemente
and its wishbone offense,
Shelko says it won·t be a
matter of replaying
Western's wishbone.
''San Clemente lines
up in a wishbone, but it
runs regular power and
sweepplays.''
seems particularly en· takes is l;be big concern
thused with quarterback at Huntington Beach
Doug Reeves, who has High ~bool this week as
succeeded the outstand· the. Oilers prepare for
j n g p a s s e r , n a v e !heU" second football .out·
Schmidt. ing of the season Friday
Reeves completed 7 of night against Marina's
11 for 123 yards and V~kings at Westminster
Murio says, "he could High. .
have been 10ofJ1. I knew 'J'.he Oilers dropped
he was capable of that th.e1r. opener to Wai:en
type of game, but ~e had Highs Bears, 26-21, m a
no varsity experieitce 00 game that was marked offense ·· by costly fumbles and
Reev~s doesn't throw critic.al penalties against
the bomb like Schmidt the Oilers.
did, but is an accurate "We have a good foot-
medium-range passer. ball team this year and
He also has an excellent we h.ave some ~~cellent
receiver t n E il c running b_acks, coa~h ~chmidt, who caught Roy Brummett · satd
five passes against Sad· ber?re the opener .
dleback despite not be- . ~e w1l_I have to
ing fully recovered from eliminate mistakes that
a separated shoulder. cost us. the ball game last
While Reeves passed wee.k 1f we .are .. to' win
for 123 yards, the ~ga1nst M8;nna,. Hunt·
Diablos' runners picked ington assistant coach
up 163, 94 more than. Jeff Chilcott says this
Costa 'Mesa did in its week.
27-14 win over La Quinta. "We had three or four
JoeBlumwas thelead-fumbles and slx
ing Diablos' rusher, pena!ties that huft ~~
gaining58yards. ag.a1nst Warren, Chilcott says. "We also
had a few breakdowns on
Cypress lost its
quarterback, Steve
Alatorre, in a scrim·
mage injury (crac~ed
ankle bone). a~d taking
his place i' sophorpore
Chris Gragnlino (S·p,
170). .
Big in Cypress· run·
Ding game are tailbacks
Mike Charles (7.2 yards
average) and Bill
Esperanza.Will
hnprove--Y oder
defense.
"We are working on
eliminating the mistakes
this week.''
Ohnemus (7 .o average) . and fullback Mark His Esperanza High
Scbult:i-, a 6-0, 200-Aztecs lost to San
pounder with a 4.5 Clemente 18·0 last Satur-
average. day, but football coach
Pete Yoder says the
Defensive standouts score is not an indication _r.m the Western .1ame of the game's closeness.
were tackle Adam ''We outgained San
Gaertner (5-10, 170), Clemente in total yards,
They are senior Mark
Reinsvold (5·9, 155) and
junior Don. Stodola (5-11,
165). Reinsvold gained
121 yards and Stodola 99
from the Aztecs' com-
bination veer and ·I of~
tense. In all, Esperanza
compiled nine more net
yards than San Clemente
(204-195).
The Oilers dominated
play· most of· the way
against• W•r.ren-with
one exception-on the
:scoreboard. The Oilers
were ahead in first
downs (14·10) and yards
gained (35-2-244) but
were thwarted several
times by penalties th~t
stopped potential scoring
drives.
Bill Holst was the
leader at quarterback,
completing 12 o( 22
passes for 231 yards in-
cluding seven to end
Steve· Samperi for 156
yards and a touchdown.
I and we could have won
I C Are the game if we had done I · oast a a few things better, .. he f-. 1_, S says. "We got down in lbll'e ports their territory a few
" -times and made some
J...t Gl•L.IYOLl.•YIAU. mistakes.
The Aztecs'
quarterbacki, Mark
WhiUey, eo~pleted 6 of
l3 for 42 yards.
Jim Lucas was the
rushlrig leader for the
Oiler&. He carried 15
times for 61 yards includ-
ing a one -yard
touchdown plunge.
YA•llTY ''J dop 't think 18--0 is in-
l'lltyctef Tvttlfl.1w.1s-12. dicativeof the game." -~. JUHIORVA•SITI' "TP"'*'u111-.11r111y, 1i.1s, 1A-1•.1s-•. Yoder looks for his
I ; OlltLST•NNIS Aztecs to improve Fri·
l . """s1TY day night when) they ! ••t1Ma...1,::~1 T'"'1' meet the Dania ·Hills
D e f ._e P.: s i Y e 1 y ,
Esperanza is led by big
tackle Geoff Blumhagel'a,
a 6-2, 220~pounder Who
Yoder says played well
against San Clemente.
-w.ntJflllrrl•fMeyer....... Dolphins at Valencia
)wwll 1•1 *' M1tt1t•, a.4. Hi•' Kickoff i t 8 ..._..IEl•Oorle,M . &U· SS . r McEll'll,..,!El oetZ1U,...,.,•2. ''We"re a young
And Blumhagen could
be a key to Esperanza's
outcome with Dana
Hills.
While Ute Oilers were
losingtoWarren, Marina
lost a be3rt·breaker to
Estancia, 15·14.
f
. :oi·An1111ou11•1L1tt1no..i1,M. team "says Yoder "and ,.,.....,tl:l dlfHowlencl,•L •' ' t • o...... San Clemente is a pretty ~flOl'lem 1e:1 *' F"-t'· good football team. This
.A.~•11•-w1111 1ir.1 d•f R•l•t-week, our main em-Mto.n1e1 ., h . . t . ~T....m-.., rri 6tf v"' HDm-P asis is o score pomts. o~ ... 1. Our defense didn't play
o.i,..0.1..ao. IE.I~' uc.-badly. We're fairly ~h.•1. • k d f •• "••••y-1t111151rom 1E1 d•I qwc on e ense.
°""'*li:-Arf9neu11,1..i.. Yoder also has two
........ r·N•¥tr•• CEI dtf Lllldl5· h . k Ti'ulitoed.•1. runners w o are qwc .
"We are going to have
to put some pressure on
their quarterback," says
Yoder, referring to the
Dolphins' Rob S\amos.
who completed 5 or 9
passes for 83 yards
against Los Amigos.
"Their quarterback also
ran very well ."
Prep Football
JUNIOR YA•StTY
SU,,_ Dy Qlllrt.n
llkllM Gr•ncM 6 O 0 0-O
Edbo,.1 • o o 1•--20 Scorln9: Edl1011 TDs-Mlll•l1,
C.011, All..,, PATl-Tvtll•r IMMfrom
Mll•lsl. ·----TOYOTA!!
OFFICIAL
PACE CAR
Forllle
LOMGllACH
GRAND
PRIX
eon. In -See -Test
Drtve & Reoetve
2 RH TIC:ICITS
For qo,::r"' o.,.
Sept. z & 27•
. 1'10 YALUl!I
-TlteyLast
VOLVO
FACTORY
DEMO
SALE,
4TOCHOOSI
ROM -· ' 2444 DL
Autom1t1c. 1teteo radio,
,.ower antenn1, oower·
.... ing&brlka.12019
SS977.-
IUY
OR
LIASE
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Boston
Baltimore
New York
· Cleveland
Milwaukee
Detroit
W L Pct. GB
93 63 .596
88 66 .sn 4
80 76 .513 13
77 77 .500 15
64 94 .40S 30
57 96 .368 351'>'
West Division
Oakland
Kansas City
Texas
Minnesota
Chicago
Angels
94 63 .599
89 68 .567 5
77 82 .484 18
74 80 .481 181'>
72 84 .462 211'> .
72 86 .456 221'>
Tlff ... , •• .,._
Detroit •t hltlmor1, PO<f, r•!11
Clt,,.lend•,Mll'lf1UllM3
Bos.IOfl•t "'w Yori!, pJld. r•ln
lt•11M1Clty•,T11•10
Mlmffot.•,C>.inll'ld! QllugoS,CAllfoml•4
T"'y'10•m.
O.trolt ICol•m•11 10.11 end 8"~ 1-12) ti
8'111moN (Al111lldlrM111d PlllffW11-11), ! . ,
Mllw•u1111 (C•lborn 10·12) •t Clt.,.l•n<I
(f'wtenotl1 .. 11
aoston 1c1e ... 1..wi 12.t Md n.m ,,_,,, 11.....,
YOl'tl IHVf'tlr22·W•rld Mer 1~111,2
MIMe10t• IHUQftn ,._l!l •t ~Qty (Uhtll
1·11 ~ (Jlffl1'110f1~10) lto.lllMd UUutto-111
~Olfl'llSICMdutecl
TltllfMll'f'I~
·~1tO.lllltfld' OltNtl•IUll_,.. °"""*"''' 9ellOll ~•t!U .... sCllY
OftlY ....... ICl'llduled
~
NATIONALLEAGUE
EaslDivlsioo
• W L Pct. GB
Pittsburgh 91 66 .580
Philadelphia 83 74 .529 8
New York 80 77 .510 11
St. Louis 80 78 .506 11 1'>
Chicago 73 85 .462 181'>
Montreal 72 86 ,456 191h
WestDlvisim.
CinciMati 104 54 .658
Dodgers BS 73 .538 19
San Francisco 77 79 .494 26
SanDiego 70 87 .446 331'>
Atlanta 66 91 .420 371'>
Houston 63 94 .401 40'h
T_.y'1Ge-
PWWYorkl, Cl'llt•OO 6
Sii'! Fr•llCl\CO •I Atl•lltli, Ol)d. "Ill
PllllDu!lll'l:lJ Phltedtlpl'll• 1
Monttt.+1, l-1. Lou"O
Clftcll'IMtl S, Hou110t1 S
Solt\ OitQ06, Los A.1'19'1114
TNey•10.-
Mllw Vorlc tSt•'f'lr 11·tl ~ ~ R. AliGCl'lll
10-171 Sift FrNICllCO fl•tt 1).13-'clC..ldMll1·12) •l
ACIMt• !Morton 11·11end l.Kor1ito-ll, 2 ""11eOllDlll• IOlrtsi-lO-$) at ~
(Ol1Nrt74)
M • ...._.ttc tlt•MtWutn '"-'1 et MontrMI ICM·
rltl'ltr5441
Clnc:lnftell lltlrDy 1.fi) •t Houstm IKOf141uny
'"!.'.:. ,.,.. ... (Wtll N ............. .,.. HI 9t S..
0"'91P'IMten•.!.'1_ . ._.', .. ·--,··o.... ""'FretKIKfl et Sift Dleoo
(lnly9'11N Kl'lldulld
•
Cd.M Stars Ret111-ri X-country
We Know_We're Underdogs-Hollmul. Re&~_ I
eorOoa del Mar JU&h'• in tbat we must •pend linebacker, wide re .. ~~·==-,~~,:
football fortunes have-..dd!Uoaal-time adjlllt--eelver alld ticker. !=:1..*.:i .t;~la.'l'.!'i-~
taken a 1winJ upward 1ne tot.be thln&a they do. He stepped on aome · .. MllMN* cM./ !t:11: ... 11 .::J wltb the rettlrn of '• An4 defentively ctua and ibe wound~ _. •:":-...; ot•, 1~:t1: 11.
at.arte.n Gary Guilness Newport 11 very •I'· .quired 221Utcbea in b1I: JC:~MJn:w:11......,..M1
at quarterback, Brad gresslve. Newport·atu:nta foot. He'll 1lt th1I game :~:•,:-:-s<M•>tttll:M.lldrNll!o
Stauel at Ugbt end and some, but mainly they out.
Spyro Kemble at outside just comericht at you.'' The on!.)' other change IV•=:~:::::...,..
llnebacker. One setback tn the in the Corona del Mar 1 ......... CM> 11":•1 a. bNn ~ The Sea Kings are pre-Corona del Mar camp la aneoal la at comerback 11:tt:J...,..CHIJ1t1D;'-c.a.rt
paring (.or their non· the loss of Brad Greeley, where Holland la ~ ='i:~.'1~ J:~1~.~
leaa:ue clash at Newport the Sea Kings' outaide iJllGaryTumer. tt:tt;-1. ~ UAJ t•:•1 ~ o-.
Harbor Hlg.b, and • -='"~*~W8t!'.l(M)
althouah the Seo Kinp -.-
a re considered un-T Pl ~t'.11'•••...,...
d d • h o urno'"e,....., ague ,. ~ CM),,:.,:,_•'-' IM.I er o.s. coac ave T' :a o tt!•;a.w ..... c.1ttr1t1 .. ,.... ~ Holland says his team <wtl!a:s.c..rrcMe>tt1111t..Niw
bu a iood shot it it can ~ --z-C'4> tti4;_!! o.... 1Ha> u:e: a.
ell . Ran h Al . ... .. IQ IMJ tl!5'J '· cw.. Ot8J mm te misukes and c 0 anutos ";•, ... -,_, .... ,, .... play fundamentally ___ JUM19•COu.Hll sound football. 71 .............. , I Gt>IJtitlll W.1t ~I~ 15. Hl&llr ''If we can do what we Football coach John · Estancia ls comins olf M11ttt1•: ... ....,. •~Di•;
do best we'll have a Callard is sWl relivinc' a 15-Uwinover Mariba'• •Dlfl....._t1:.,;7t.D1•Ma11-W
great shot,'' slays last Saturday's mistake-VUdna:sandCallard1ays :!:~;,~;:;--~~~
Holland. ''But we know it tb · T..-"*""" t. c-,,_ "' 1. . th d Prone I am e w b of the Easies. •• ey ...,_... ,,, '-.,.. .. ,_.,.1,.1 we re e under ogs." Mayfair High. have a well-balanced ot· .. a..... ttt; J. dtN• tM; ... ,,,,.,.
Corona del Mar was His Rancho Alamitos fenae. They have a ..... v .. ..,.n1;1.H-=•11m1a.
past-=.d by Mater Dei, Vaqueros lost, 20-6, in a stroni runnlnt attack OOWilftW.sttu;t.Yentw-•UL
33-0, in the opener, but ga.rn.e in which the va. and a quarterback wbo
Holland says that game q u er o s had six canacramble.''
is behind the Sea Kings. turnovers. S
"Mater Dei was very And that's not all Al for his defense, oceer
physical and just ''Our quarter.back Callardsays,''itisalit-u t W ed WitltlllKc# ........ punched us out. It was threw well,'' says espaty. ene more ...., ... 01._....c..
superior to us,·· says Callard, "but six of his aggressiveness. Mayfair ._.. ....... ._..,
Holland. ··we were miss-passes were dropped. We ran outside on us aruf E~~.=0~.,1.-1
ing three starters, but turned tbe ball over six threw a couple of long &1""1..,_ a. Newcn11e 2
Mater Dei is a very good times, and the first time passes!' =.:,"J~""0
football team.'" we got down to Mayfair's Act U th V QllMI'• ,..,. ... ,..." i, l..M<Mllr ~ewPort didn't fare 10,wefumbled. b ua Yi .e 1aqueros 1 SMHte+dUflit..t2 eur...,1
toowell,·either, falling to "On the second time ave 8 re ativeby hyoungh 'Mll-1W•••D;Attonvui.o
Se 't 24 7 "N • team, one w 1c as OMllMt rvi e, · . ewport we got down to the f!.ve quite 8 few players off 1t11101."°""'-eo1'°"t played an awfully good and had a pass in-1 , d NDtUOWrrt,1,Hunc1tyo team, too ,'' says tercepted ,, a.st years un efeated 0ri..t1,vonoty1
H ii d · sophomoreteam ~n1,CM11N 1 o an . Obviously, the Va-. · . ~1.ew1111e2 •
''Newport has a lot of queros can't afford hall Twootthoseplayen-..-,,_-~'
potential with as many mistakes Fri-quarterback Jeff .,..,,_,,~,,.•'«•O
quarterback Gordon day ·night when they Hutchings and running Glm,.,.._o,Rettwf'tlamo
Ad d '( -Gr1Mlt>yl,H•tlfe111 ams an tat back meet the Estancia back Fa am an u DfwtllNt
Steve Foley. Its offense Eagles at Bolsa Grande Atuatasi-played well ~·.w•tt«G1
.creates problems for us Higb. Kickoffis8. against Mayfair. ==~~•ntioni
.,
C11sfo111 t•t1l}'\fCl'I Radials
"
I . .
On 13'' and 14'!.~SiJM~ for.
Standard and.Small Cars ' .
40,DOO MILE DOUBLE STEEL BEL TED RADIAL TllfES
THE TIRE THAT KEEP$ ITS FEET EVEN IN THE UIN
1'he1e Goodyt!ar 1tffl belted ra-
dial1 {l) 1ave money, (Z)·u1e le11
ruel, (3) provide Iona mileage, and
(4) help con1erve Americ1'1 re·
source1. Now 11 the time to buy
these ,.Cu1tom Polpteel .. radial
tirea that are original equipment
on many1975 new can. Sale pricn
on 1:i-and 14• 1izn Uatp!i •re In
eflect Thursday, Friday 111d Sat·
urday only.
RAIN CHECX-It we aell out of
your 1ize we will in119 you a rain
check, ••surfna rutttn dalivery at
the advertiaed p~
Whlt ... 11
Sin Fib Modela Of
BRll-11
BR7a.14
CR7a.14
bRla.14
ER7"14
FR7a.14
GR7a.14
""'
•$69.45
$69.45
$70.60
$72.25
.$73.SO
Sale Prices On Profes-Simial ~tO Semte Too
SATE
.. Lube&
Oil Change
, S]88· ··
• Up to 5 qts. ol majOI' brand
n;iu1~i-V1de oll
• Oompl•le oh111l1 Jubrlc11jpn
• dl l •c:b•nlJ!I • H'Jl1?9 Mlrure '
lon111r .. 1t1n1p1rt1a1J11ooth.
qutoi. p•rlor1111nc• • Pl1111 •
'ptrc!n11 ror 1ppolnt1111nl • hi· ... ". ,,.., Jncb
' .
SALE
Front-End
Al~gnment .sass
' SAJ,E
Fuel Sal'el' Engine
Tune-Up s299s
Add S4 for 8 t)"I~ $1 fDt llr cond, "111U.S.111• cs-ports 1rt111 II nttded. £.lellldts tfront...+1111 *IJ• ~ • With electronic equipment qur
• Co~lete 1naty1t1ind1l11n· P.rofe11lonal1 Clne.-tune your en-ment ofrecllon-10 lncr<11••e g1ne, lnataUing now polnll plup· ~
llrt inlle1•1•~1hn.prowe1te1..-' • Ina 'f''•tY •. PNCUlon tqulp-conden1et • Helps maintain a
mint, ·~•d, bJ •xp1thu1ced smooth runnlna engine for m&Jd-
prof"1lop.!1, llel1t1 1n111r• • mum aaa nilleage • Includes t)at·
p..c::l.1ion,lllsn.-ent sun, Toyota, VW I: light trucb
IALI DOI Sll'T. 30 1AU 1!NOt RPf. ao
Tin's.It Prim,... lli Elkl.,....,....~~
•
6 Luy fflrJs (0 "'°' ........ -...cr.. ... ...................
·--~ •• 11 ....
·----....... a.-
. GOODYEAR TIRE-EENl'E-.'--Hi-.-fffWPOR1'11R~._rn..
COSTA. Mll$A,.HIWPOllT IEACli ' ' 3000 c u:n I cR
I
lit• ................. , .... , ... -l.C:-Hwy. . ,.... · COION4 DIL MAil • 548-9383 644-8022 . H--. .......... a.7•W.M
, I ,
H ... lt-..MN•M.a.I
··-
•
•
. ,
• .
l
•
• • ~
f
I
i
~
I
' I
t
' (
(
I
I
f
I
"
• ~;
l·
1 .
1
•
'
• ,. I
'Edisoii Defense Praised Area Jc, Road~rs, Gauchos
· Prep Polo ·•
DowNzY -D•n't •aaaillanditarthuou· •ai••tta. "Aad ·c......., • ..,..i qu.n..-"ave .. 1 uch in Co--""n f-11te1mp ... •loot1uit)u ." 14mellow, •• ••••to -.&1c1<Ba1111oco.-R ol•-01 lri.1 ••w•"' Wanen HIJti football 'Edioon bllltl'4 114 ..U ...... ..totbefootball." ecJalllleted I of 1' for W el 110
"'*'b Frank )buolta lo lat l'rl~ that It -M-a oU11 racalla :rard ... al111t Boloa OROVILLE-Bulle The Roodnlll.nen aJoo
down.Cl'adlnl tho P:dilm out hilbJY·touted Boin llllBoan'a.T loutotbo Orlllldt. --..oee and Saddleback CcllMIJe have been minus All· CbatJerw when he a.:rs Gl'llldo, 22-0. Obv•--... , ""•-lutvou. 1 · _,._ football team• have a Golden Vollev Con·
t.be,Yremlndhlmofaotl. lla11otta bope';l'tie ""-::"'o:t-JUwt4emtnat... Aaa nit Hunt~nston =:c:.it , 1, ', '.,_~ sreatdeall.Dcomman. ference runnin"'a back
"Tlle:r're reaU:r frl· Charserw don't hustle u I think we wer. aa de-Bold> mp tut week. °'-~ _,. -·-The two ocbooll, wblcla 1-Woodoon In their
'bteninf,'' be ••Y•· wtll Jbla Friday when fwe tor 40,'' ~· ..,._ :-:--:? PaD11'{.-:-t:=.'r.·~~::"S: meetSat\ll'dayaftemooa flnt two aam11. He'• ''Thelrdefemlveployen the WU"ren Bell'I and "AndtheyareoouUnlly ro • own 1 I t 1 · -.-•-. (I o'ctocll:> at Oroville -outwltb an h\jurod
remind me of anti. They aiarton collide at a It preHurlna you on de-H II" t I a g 10 0 B •a• b •••II•• Hiib, are bolb wllll... foot olnce the fourth day
IOUU)IOU( there. Wben Ilowziey!fiP,. f-" --CIUarltrblCli: _Bill_ Jlolot _ ..__.. I t t ._. aftv-.och potted ....... CJl-practlce; but-will play
they 1et blocked and "We ean t let lheir<Je. lla11otta'1 bl11eit ~u~::.!2:~ "t:' ... ..--~ Z.l .. 'J,'. vlctorlesaaeUOll.,.._ afalnat the Gaucl\o•
knocked down, they get fenoe dictate," 1ay1 . concemlscontaJnlnathe won,26.ii . ::=•·-...,~.;;;.. Butte's Roadrunners Saturday.
rN ...... t'"y"Qit · opened the 1eason with a Woodson. a 5·11 , 190-
\ •
1We didn't rush the "ltOINO"' IJ.13 1os1 to Coaunmee poun.der. cained 700 D bl ,..., k ~ w::J....! Huntln1ton Beach !::.._" : : : :::': RlTer, then tell to yardalu.tseaaon. OU e .a.as 1:or ueon:;r~~~::~~"!·':.!l.'1' ..=:--··w''"' .. _, Gavilen lall week. 3M. 0.ther top olfenslve
. don't know if .a ~~~.~~~t::.:: Saddleback WU upset by Ital's (or Butte Jnclude LONG BEACH-Loni Beach City Collea• for clrclOI WOil Tonuce wecan.,•e .... --. Cypreos,21·10. • quarterback Lance
Beach Wll1on football sevenyean. 21-'1. • -'-Ba.short'that m,ucb time. .,.11111,.,. Butte is going thlOUl'h 'McHenry (5·9, lM), run-
coech Jon Meyer •aJS "Fountain VaUoy'oo(. "Wedidn'tbaveaaond :::!J ~!n:i~!ry~~· ...... -..." a rebuildinJ year, 1ays nillJ back Gree NWer
hil Bnd!1• have a double tense puts tremendous nl&bt offensively," NYI there have onb" been two ~~., .. ,. ~ ~ ~ !:: new coach Bob Martin, and fullback Dino VisiOOi ~kfacmgtt:iem ,as tbey pre s sure on o~r Meyer. "but West .. Tor-touchdown paiies ~v-.o.vie-4,0-y analdeatSanFrancilco (M,205).
gird for Friday• non· linebackers (ChrtJ ranee bad sometbln& to thrownoouslnmythree J.lltriy, ·"llWIM•· Statea7ea.rafo. McHenry earned all· leape clash with FOWl· T~ompaon and Jeff do with that. I would IQ' yearsbere.'' .1u1no•va•1t" . "We're certainly down conference laurel1 in '74 ~ain Valley at Hunt· W~~~t). Weit . Torrance's pre· Mau.otta bas five re-lAl9..._...,..,~a • ..._. from last rear. We've as a defe.n11 ive back,
ingtoo Beach Hl1h . Its been aome Ume •••son r"anklnl• have turnlnt defenilve ~Y•ntY o 1 ', ...... 1ot a lot o you.ng kids while Miller was a tight school . smce we've seen a team beenf&lrl te" tart 1 8-J ~~ .. -51•"•'· ....,._ playing, especially on ~ last season. Visioni
"It lnob like we are throw tbe ball the way Y accura · ~ ~..::.:" t! le::":: · defense and that's hurt lhlured a knee against
going to have to play Fountain Valley does, The Bnzin11 feature a Per 1 e 0 c 8 d but .!,..~=~,. us in our first two ball Gavilan and is doubtful
The Roadrunners run 11
veer offense with varta-~
Uont,says Martin.
Up front, Martin a.:rs
oopbj!more rt1ht llUUd ' Jim Stephen• (8-2, 215>
and fre shman center
Chuck Butterfield (8-0,' L
2CIO) are-his-top playon ..
SopholllJ>re Steve 8-
(6· I , 20~> and Mar k
Heaslip, a 6·2, 215-pound
fresb,m an. anchor 8
green, defensive te"&rn.
''I don't know how we
really stack up agalnllt .
Saddleback , •• says
Martin. ''l know that Sad-
dleback had to throw •
Jot last week and pro-
bablr should .be favored.
because it •s a blgeer~
sehool and it 's in a
stronger conference," ..,
says Martin.
The two school• have
never met before in foot -
ball. awfully good pass de· andnooneintheM.oore bi&llnewlthtacklnJim quarterback'Mark ~'::.,..., ! ~ ! ~l «ames,••aayaMarUn. Saturday. f~ and .at. the same League runs the veer Polsom (!20) and Dan Jurovlcb a 8·2 180· kw"": ~Y-+41c111. r~~~~~~~!!i!!!i!!!i!!!!!!~!!i!!!!!!!!i!!!i!!!!i!!!i!!!!!!i!!!i!!!!!!!!!~i!!!!~ time defense the veer-like that. We saw 'the saliabury .(200) combin-pound aoPttomort' COlll· va1111,,.
which Is a toush thins to Redlands came and It Ina with auardo Paul pleted tlk>f·l4 puieo ror _ .. ,.,,,._,
do," san the new Wilson looked like their pre· Wing (22$) and Vince 145 yards last week. ...,."':.::,.~'::.:=:!:
coach. ference was to throw the Mardesich (225). -. .... wittttewr11e-ntit,..,.
Meyer has taken over ballri~htfromtbebegin· ''We have decent ''Ri&ht now. Jurovlcb DMIHllt:ri?:.=:'o
at'Wllaon after serving ning,' aaya Meyer. size,'' admits Meyer. plays Ilke a senlor,''aaya ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
a1 an auistanl at Wilson The Bruins lost their "But we're thin and are Mui.Otta, ''but he m1abt
for three years, LB Poly opener to he No. s fm"ced to uae most ot our look like a sophomore
far two. years and Lon& ranked team in CIF 4-A playen both ways.•• Friday niaht. ••
Polaroid SX-70
Model 3 camera. 7.988·
Po18rokl'a -SX·70 -3 ·Land camete makes it possible
for you to afford the SX-70
system on a budget. You set the
dlatance to save ... See it
today.
LEASE TODA YI
7SYWIU6
St~ l air condition!
0nty 12,000 mM ...
$95 per.;.... ...
(oeeMUSJ
71D.t.nuH .. 210
Aueon.tlc.. ttereo & lir.
Undet 1,000 mlln..
SI 05 per montn
11135NDZJ
71MMCUIY
MOHAICH &MIA
11 .000 miles
IOll&MIN)
71CHIYSUI
COllDOIA
All power with sunroof
NEW AS$ AILASL~
GOLDENAIRE II~
INTRODUCTORY SALE THRU SEPT. 30.
• Rad ial construction for e11tro gasoline & tire mileage
•Two. rugged steel beh1 t~r s1rength .
WHITIWAllS AVAllAlll IN MOST PO'VlAI llllS
5AlE PlllCE EX lAX 5ALE PRICE EX, TAX SIZE PEii TIRE" PEii TlllE SIZE PER TIRE " PER TlllE
BR78·1 3 $42.85 $2:16 GR70 ·15 $55.94 $3.17
ER78· 14 48.20 2.55 GR7B·15 53.73 2.96
FR78·1 4 50.49 7.67 HR78·15 56.43 3.17
GR78· 14 52.bl 2.89 JR78· l 5 58.86 3.31
HR78· l 4 55 .35 3.09 LR78· l 5 61 .20 J.Ab '
• 'Pnc•• /TIOy vorv ot Chevron 1.olefl.
Standard Stations CHevron Dealers \~rtu ~ ... ,lot~~~,,• ll~R..,.U.~ Poo.Off.AtlotS11ocolyCo.
Three great.
Polaroid cameras! Sponsored by
Orange Coast
Daily Pilot
, .....•••...•.......••••..•.•.••.....•....•..
l ENTRY BLANK l • • : Niln'tt • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • • . . . . . • . . . . . : • • • Address .................................. • • • ·: City .......... ' ............. ZJp.......... :
The SX-70 Deluxe
12699 * Cash Prizes
• • : PftOne ................. .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . : • • • Circle teams you thl'* will win this week's oamts • • • • • • • • • : NY Jets vs Kansas City :
: Minnesota vs Cleveland :'.
Brushed chrome Ind tHther, this electronic
c amera does vi rtually everything for you.
Produces a startling beautiful picture in
daylight before your eyes. By Polaroid, of
course.
Worth • •• : Buffalo vs Pittsburgh ::.
Polaroid's Super
Shooter camera. 19s.8
~·Super Shooter camera adjusts
automatically to the format of six types of
Polaroid tum. Its features include: electric
eye, electronic shutter and flash .
Polaroid Land fllm values!
4.65
Pohrrold Pohl-2 T'ypo
1~ llm. Improved
Cororpack film .
a.39 ~~?L llm.
Colorpack fits all SX-70 c1meru.
·soo
-•Y Pigskin Plclceroo '75 wlnMrs
wlll be awarded a total of $50 In caSft.
First place entries receive $.25, second
~ wins $15 and $10 Is awarded tor
third place. Winnen are notified by
mall.
.._ for the olflclal Pigskin Plckeroo
players form oach week In the Dally
Piiot sports pagos.
arCi. the t••m you think wlll win in
NCI! of the 30 pairings. You may mail
-entry or bring It to the Dally Piiot offke nearest you. Thero aro Dally Piiot
offices fn Newport Be•ch, Laguna
-h. Ml11lon Viejo, Huntington Boach
-Colt.o Mou ..
1st prize $ 25
2nd prize $15
3rd prize $10
PilsklR Plcke,.. Is a N1U1ar futvn of
tllO Dally Pllel sports SKtlon NCh T-y --... -,.
: Rams vs SF 49ers :: • • : St. Louis vs Dallas : l Miami vs New England l:
: Baylor vs Michigan ::
: Purdue vs USC :· • • : UCLA vs Air Force :: • • : Texas Tech vs Texas :· l Maryland vs Kentucky :·
: North Carolina vs Ohio State : ·
: Auburn vs Tennessee : . • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Wisconsin vs Missouri : • TCU vs Nebraska :
Syracuse vs Tulane : • Navy ys Washington :
Golden West VS Mt. SAC : . • LA Harbor vs OCC :
CdM VS Newport :
Edison vs Warren :
Estancia vs Rancho Alamitos : • San Clemente vs Cypress :
Gahr vs El Toro : • LB Wilson vs Fountain Valley : • Huntington vs Marina :
University vs Los Amigos : • Laguna vs Rim of the World :
Dana Hills vs Esperanza
Mission Viejo vs Costa Mesa
TIE •II EAKER -My 9uos1 on tlll total
number of points sc:oncl In all JO games Is
. •· • • • • • • •
. .......... . . .. ...
• • DAILY PILOT
• • • • . : • • • •
• • • ... &
•
• • • '------------------'·•••••••••••••••••·---··•"•••1.•-·•--•••-.-..-. ••.••• r ··
I I ' I
' ~· •
.. 4 DAILY PILOT . ' Wectnesdsy, Stptemblr2'4. i975
Anteaters Add T Mo h s·a 1!~ d Jonio CoUege
JC Playen op narc s I eJJ.11e Grid Schedule '
Four junior college · · · u...,..,.J;J:ON.,
pl1yer11 have bf:e n Mater D.et Hiah .. s away wlth tt,'' says isoutfortheyelrwitha Just nnff u'p and comtit =•='!:.,.'-'~~~" re9rulted to play Monarchs will be going Mater Del ~acb Gary fracturednttk sustained ri&btatyou,''1aysC&rrr ~u ..... 1 bu~ball at UC Irvine, after lbo-ir second Carr. lntlieCdMgame. Tb lif hs .... v'.i ._. ... ~._ .. ..,..,._
coach Tom Spence. ball victory.. Tburlday place will be Mark Taking Ewingtt pJace been ~ork,ng :J! eek-'"'-~~---
, · Faee Lagana
•
Scots Stress
Quickness
: ....
;1n1 LAKE ARROWHEAD
'Io!. -If the Rim of lhe World
:t'..,,"'-. Scots are to improve their
,,.i\' football record to 2-0 Fri· rial day night, then they are
J(:;(t toinC to have to contain
t<.aWrIAg:una .... ~ach's out.side
,, J1:runninttame.
according to Anteaters straight n°""league fOOl-Takin& Wigmore's e o~a.rc &J ~· illUfol".cl'IC.C
They include second nlghl at the Santa Ana Drazba, a J75-pounder !~ 1!f.1ke Su111 (18S). !'fc~na aao;ei!npr~~an ~~~c .. ~•
·•, baseman Brian Hester Bowl against 3·A PQWer ~ho 1aw some ·duty in 'Ibis ia a real blow to m pu 0 ...... ~ .. ~· ~~:u.No. 7 in tbie CIF from Saddleback· Roger La Mirada, but they'll be the vlctOJ')' over Corona our defeue,'' says CUT. that phase ~fter · ~Ololl9ii~::::Ci:, ...
Engle, a ·first b&seman doing it without a couple del Mar. ''lt wu. hi1 liJ'!'t 11t~;c)O letdowns aeamst Corilna C::.~::.1t~:'.tt:::~
Although relatively rrom San Diego Mesa: of their blue chlp · Drazba coil:lpleted one the van~,Y ani:S he did a de.I Mar;. /. ,_,_.,..,.-°"'""~:;~
young-the Scots start right·banded pitcher Bob' starters. oltwo passes for 30 yards gqodjo~"' ••we m1ued two PA'h, .,.., . .,, .. ~ .. ..-.cc
sophomore tailback Dobey and center fielder Quarterback Tim andflve yards oti three CarrlswaryoftheLa had a bad center ~I\ :r"s:':.!:.:'o-:O._.. ..
Greg Ward and junior Br ad weaver f rofn Wigmore ls not expected carries. -· 1.,.. Mir.ada Mata~ors Who and our lasttwo kic ~·' uc..J!!wtttl• ~v u
Quarterback Sean O'Con· Riverside CC. ~ play··at··all··dtte' to a The biggest tetback In enter with sma11' nUm· weren't deep enou ''-."~>v•i1t1atcan~'
''They have a good
h ~ runnine back,·· says
fl-'l~· Scot.5 football coach Ben
tf:>": Stindt, "and we are go-
"'d (' ing to have to sbut off
"'''' their outside pitches.''
nor-Rim of the World r,=="'"""""";=c=:c='1 pinched nerve and a the Monarchs camp, ben' butgOOd size says Carr. "We can·t af .. 1 Min<:otfl .. .t.nt••V•l'*'
has live starters return-DAILY PIL.Or lower back problem. however. is at linebacker ' · ford to do those tbingslri ~'~!VK...-v .. -.
ingfrom aS-4 squad. CLASS~FJED ADS "He'll be held out for the where defensive player "L;t Mirada keeps Its our league and we have eyn-lhttLA,c:itr'"'· ,..__..
They are fullback 8 2 ••• 78 entiregame.ifwecanaet of the w.eek-Kan.t E~J){fem retty stmni ... It toelimlnatethe " '*"' .. '""·--'"et i :-. ~
B
. N ~ -.. .. ---::r-~ .,......,.ca-...., nan orton (5·10, 170), ·
dot That good running FULLERTON COSTA MESA
2!M6 BRISTOL ST. 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD.
SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY . PHONE: 870-0700
PHONE: 5'!1-1!533
SANTAANA
120 E. FIR6T ST. AT CYPRESS
PHONE; 547·74n
WESTMINSTER
15221 BEACH BLVD.
PHONE: 893-854-4 back is Craig French,
• ~ who rushed for 95 yards
1, 1 last week. French gained
·t.u most of his yards on
f~.1 ·sweeps against a re·
•rrr· latively slow Bloom·
.• ,.. ,• ington High de rense, but
ce nter-tackle Russ '
Pickett (S-10, 200), split
end-defensive back Bob
Gradillas (5·11, 155),
tackle-linebacker Todd
Gregson (5-10, 195) and
defensive back Brian
Hendry (5-7, 155J .
SPECIAL VALUES
FOR TODAY
THRU SUNDAY
OUR
'IEWEST
PEP BOYS
,STORE &
SEllVI CE
CENTER OPEN-MON. THRU FRI. 8:30 A.M.·9 P.M./SAT. 8:30 A.M.·6 P.M. SUN. 9 A.M.·5 P.M.
• •,11 will see more speed Fri-
;11 day when his Artists race
the host Scots. Kickoff is
t,.lLt. at 8.
'>.J':' ''Quickness is our
"~'1\11 strongest advantage," 'i..•. says Stindt. "And our
11:•.• goalline defense is
.t, ... , .. tough."
: .... n It was a quick Rim of
"; • · the World team that beat
Big Be ar, 12 ·7, and
looked good enough to be
Pickett and Gregson
key an offensive line that
averages around 180
pounds.
Ri m of the World
employs a slot I offense
and Stindt says it is
primarily a running
team. O'Connor only
threw six times against
Big Bear, completing
three. Ward did most of
the damage, gaining 96
yards.
~emenSpark
University Foe
Lo~ Amigos Higb's
• •1.' Lobos will be trying to
,.., ..:1 get on the winning track
~.~' under coach Al Calonico
·" · (formerly a Corona del
!J·J." Mar High aide) Friday
(150) operate along with
fullback Ken Greve, who
rmhed for 70 yards in 15
carries against Dana
Hills.
"Dana Hills gave us
problems with stacked
600xtJl-~7.::0~0-=x~1~3--+-'"-"c.::..:..
Slackwall 1---=.:....::~-+=::=
735 ){ 1 "4 o•
. night wlien they host
J•.J University at Garden
·'· ·Grove Hig.h in non· ·in .. league action.
linebackers ," says 4 PLY NYLON CORD
Calonico. "At times it
Whitewo 11 l-..:.7.::7::..:: Sx~l-=4-+::.:..:.:=
825 x 1 •
Ln~ Calonico's crew lost to
.~~',"·.Dana Hills in the opener,
· • · 17·3, and 16 of his 22
.f '•'>1 starters were in their
<J li first varsity game.
seemed it was a com· 1 S MONTH
bined thing with a Penn ~~:::Ll~M~l~TE~O~W~A~RR~A~N~T~Y~·~~~~~~:==·
""I b' The Los Amigos coach
~i'''1 feels his team is capable
,M., 'of knocking off Universi·
11..'lr ... ty after seeing good
-r 2 ') ... performances from de-
· rensive linemen John
!'f."i11-'Hern8nd ez (215) a nd
z-.<l'OJoftn Godoy (195) and of. *111" fedsiYe Jiilemen Rick ~ Alva (195) at guard, Dar· :.ar11ryl Beat (175) at center
,l.J'tl'•and Godoy at tackl e. The
·w~1',latter is Los Amigo's'
.~":J•~.,linemanofthe week
rn:J.r Qu arterback Jett'
:!Q(("Le h ma n was han·
tJ no dicapped by a siege of Ou
last week, but should be
in good shape for
University. ~ Tailbacks Jim Lerma
(140) and Chris Bliss
State style · on one side
and a wide tackle six on
the other.
· "University doesn't
appear to create quite
the iame problem with
its 6-1 style, but we've
seen t he middie
linebacker' <Dave Scrog.
gins ) and h e's one
helluva fOOlbaU player.
"'Aad I don 't lhink we
have the individual
speed to contain the
tailback, R.oo Dykes, if
be ,gets past us. He 's
eJus·jve arid I think
University bas better
team speed thSn we."
Los Amigos will try to
counter University with
a pro and s l ot I ·
formation, with sweeps
and blasts similar to the
Corona del Mar offense
o! 1970.
'.\: B .. Top acks Pace ,.
Talented Gahr
•P, •
,..,,. CERRITOS-This
.:)" ... ?'. could be the year of the
l'ilA Gladiators in the
_;1£o ·Suburban League wtth
• '(flu an experienced team un -"'·;.r· der head coach Pete
.b(i-(1.• Nicklas.
~• b · Friday night the Gahr >nil, .. Gladiators tangle with
Zlt.r El Toro's Chargers at
br-q<, Mission Viejo High ln a
-.Jo.ti non-league outing and
wr,~ Nicklas bas only to re-
.r;) ~ mind his charges of the
"!Ob closeness of last year's
tilt to get them fired up.
ffi'"'"' A year ago . the
tW· Gladiators finished
.l.Jr t .. second in league play to
formation and hope to
balance their offensive
attack.
How does Nicklas look
at El Toro?
·"We ha~ a great game
with theQt last year," he
says. "The}' are a well·
disciplined team and
play good defense along
with controlling the ball
on offense.
''I haven't seen them
play b~ from reports I
have, they have good
running backs and have
a good-sized line.·'
d'1h :· CIF Z.A champion Neff B N 2 .•t.,,during lhe league UCS O.
t i ! J season. In the second
.-.2.., • game .of t he campaign, Jn R •
; "' they were fortunale lo atmgs ru 1.., win over El Toro, 21·19.
t.rlO:.· "We have 10 players .Orange ~Coast College,
"J)l.'t;t returning on defense and on the basis of its im-
\!.)£t!,, six on offense," Nicklas pressive victory over
·--says. lie Is referring to riv.al Golden West last
.. starters, not lettermen week has. moved up one
orsquadmen. _,notch to the 'No. 2 posi· 8tJ He could put an 11th lion in the Daily. Pilot's
;:; man on defense in ~ Southern California JC
-s•ame category, if footballratings.
.necessary. oce t Don Heizer starts at · reP.,l a~es East LA tailback this year after College, w.b1ch dro~
"'cam:paicnin.g on defense t~ .rou~b. El .Camino,
• a year ago. A member of w~1ch ~as. scored 127
the school'• sprint relaj Po•.nt• iri i~s two vie·
team in track, be gives tones, remcuns No . 1. 2 the Gladiator' oulside lloth El C~mino and apeed. · DCC's Pliates have slifr
Jl£ke Lueras;-a l90. te1f1 this week . -El
J*Uld fllll back, ia the Camino \angles with
man they count on to Fullerton (No. 5) at
)DOY• llP !he middle. He Anaheim Stjodilim while w•• a ~tarter <"' a DCC li<Jllla LA Harbor· tophomore las! season (Ni>.l2) •.
and a ccordln1 lo his '
WIDE TRACK SUPER
60 0170 SERI ES TIRES
$.
RA ISE D
WHITE LETTE RS
BIG WIDE-TUBELESS
4-PLY NYLO N CORD TREAD
30 MONTH ·
LIMITED WARRANTY*
SIZE IElTfD
WHIT( TUlflfSS P'R:IC E
• 2 FIB!AClASS BflTS OVER
4 PlYS OF POLYCST!A COAD!
•A TOUCH, DURABLE TIRE YOU
CAN COUNT ON FOR •••
TRACTION! MILEAGE! COMFORT !
30 MONTH
LIMITED WARRANTY •
F78.14 $28 .99
G7B-l• $30.99
G78·15 $30.99
H78·14 $32.99
H78 ·15 $32.99
178-15 $33.99
78-15 $34.99
NEW EROM PEP .SOYS
DUN.£0.P
B~l~~ METRIC RADIALS '95 .. $ .1.55A.13
BL.t.Ciic
TUBELESS
S1Z f
SLACK lUSl l(SS
FOR COMPACTS -1ti5R·13
SUB-COMPACTS 16SR·l4
AND IMPORTS l 75R.1 4
_1~.5R·I•
40 M ONTH 16.5R-1 S
PRICE
$S3.95
$34.95
ua~s
$4S:9S
$37.9S
LIMITED WARRANTY* ,~us Sl,6S _IQ..S197 •ET
ftEQUl.I< &i ft ADI~ TYPE INNER TUBES .NO
<Oacti,. """· blO<lka and .,..,=°"'=' .. " ... ~-P*"e' eq~ ~:=c..'L r-:
~· • t.......,..l!.OI n
DYii
CllllJ •OI '.UUHOIA CAIS & TIUCltS
M ITICI 'l:W:.1 !! fl:. ' Tl ADE-IN
REQUIRED llobHolland wlll4~ t""'u.1>4> , .,
tbeteam at qu bter~ck . .._==.1::1 ~
He frat back•p liPAI· • .,_..., " • ean.1Mrear-~ .......... ,.Ml ,.
.. totllnHN»eftotball. ~·~f..., ':
• ne cn..tla1oro wllJ -"· -"''' "\'"' ~?---··Cll""poa-.. t• Olll_Cllf a ftJo ~.--CHtf;ta.LAVett.y lf
'
1
I
---'·-Al PllCD
Pt.ts
n Df!IAL
• DCISl TU
•
FL. OZ.
CANS
1 '12" All SmL
p ~~~.~~'~'' ..... 1 .......... .:1
.... 1 ..... 1 ....... ..
Touoh Vo~
1tHI U ... ...
p<"•Cflonped
1 .... p ... dt ... d ...... ,
.... 1 ......... . 279
FACTORY REPLACEMENTS
FOR MOST° CARS
INCLUDING VOLKSWAGENS,
DATSUNS 6 TOTOTAS 3 98 ..... 4 SMOIS fOI 2 WMlll5
H C>•• o ddod _ .... 1 ....
WITH 2 llYS
69c
Heo•1 ,..;,. b•u1h•1
cieo• boih bano•y
poll aftd coble •••·
MolOGI•.
TRAILER BALL
STWDJ 1 7/1 ""'-139
· TRAILER CONNECTOR
l~ST TO INSTAI
• PQlf •lA.T 88'( CC>fo'NKTOI wnH 11 N.
Wiil llA~S
TloU i.l9h 9•od•tf1brl· <<>"' ;, id•ol fo/'Ho•· iftO•· U·iaf<1,., .ic. l•b. ;, ,.._u ... d --:' ,
i!fa· 59c
& U.Vl
MINI I-TRACK $TlREO . . ..
SUPER .
. COMPACT
•.SMALL~ACT SIZE • Sl111E · camm:s
• Pll1JG1I SEUCTllll BtITTON
, .
SIZE
MODll. •a21 r
FOi CAii 01 lllCf
TIRE
PUMP
''"' "'°' " lS llKM Siii
~...,,-
4••Y •w•p •l!h hl 11'1
fl'•llw•• •w•ll•t h .. • .... ,, .. , ...... 1''
I
• . .
~uddenly He's· Ma1·ried
'Ted &wter' to Tie iM Knot on TV Slp.D
\ .
B1110a..-. Ylewen of• "The 111117 T)>ler •1t .. ~more ar'leos by
IDS ANGSLBS (AP) -l'be MooreSbow." dus,:1 wileeTtdl8do..,.pt~
catwnbla ~ ~ · -daallary.Hoblitfulllla·.
aad' llTll, J:aterprfaeo are ..!': .. ~"=-~-::!I ::'=·l!.":~t:=:-:: pie•ed to•-• .. Ibo_,,. flully ..,.cumbed to ...mt-It.
"')(Ju 0-ptte .... -. --tbe faiDt.•olctd but ftnD. llt. Ted Baxter, at Ibo-. ol wUled Geor•ette pl1.1ed bJ "'lrll ALL VBBY tnrarmal.
Mill llary Blcbardl ID -· 0-~,,111. ' -.. -Iii llbm .. 1 It:.,, ...... ··-.~ 1-!-•ar<IAaoer>dropawf.., • . -·~ -~ a*i*. llurrq (G•vinllcLecld)
Welcome:
Aboard
11J ALMON LOCKASIY
Time WU wb ... yaellt r-WU facellously
-u: "Flfteenor:IO,..U-eocooutforan
~ -race tbelr yaclda -and one 1.0.b. wfol;tt!•.
Tbereb&ve --cbmlc• made ID thelut t:,r.ers· Yacht racln« -at least, the -bore or eap varlet)' -bu beeoale a competitloll 0(
eomprten.
DAii. V PILOT
0888 ' Offe~ •
While tbe merriqJ fl not OIL (to be aired later lblS -•·" ....._ In lborta fnim bil kid's -...leoflJs..DdDldtarB•en ..,. tbe-1-~ ~J;eaC>M came. 9>e Ann
dlle, llwtll rallty-acto,r 'T~ ·~ . (BIUJ Wtiitel arrf..S and Im· ~In-I lbe mif-ol lbat'-ialow-ie:r. -•telY 1i.rt1 wblppinc 'IP
llyou don't bellne it, try tofatbon> the various
and frequent chancea tn._tbe "meu..,..,memnatf , ~
the CQlllPUterlatd numbers ram• wblcb ia supposed
to equalise yacbts of dilrerent Illes and designa for
haDdicappiDC -in IOllll distance oc offshore
racln«
PloW!a n of the 1fJ11o'
Coast GuardAua1U1117•
Dua Point la ofterlnll •
new el••• Jn boattaa
1kills and •eamaublp
-·Oct. 1 "'...,...,. 2CN and 205 at tbe ~
Footer Junior HJ1b
S<J>ool located olI ~
Obispo at.l!5st:L..c.llllilD--i,I
de! Avlon ID San .llllp
Cspiatraoo,
ReststratinD wW be at
7;_30 .P,m. ~\I_ I~
eounew!U eonUnueeadl
Wednesday nl&bt. The
course ia free except fAx'•
a nominal charfe cf t8:
for teat and auppUea.
C" • ban d'oeurvre_s. It's all over
. ............__"' -Trips Set
E'LL BE THERE
Ralph Story
Celebrities
CoJ!Ung
ForTenms
Television and movie
personalities will hold
court at the · Capistrano
Raclquet Club Saturday
and Sonday for a celebri·
titennts tournament.
Comedians Bill Skiles
and Pete Henderson,
sponsors of the two-day
affair, say it's not jUst
another raclfet but a
For Mesa
Retarded·
A recr,atlonal program. for
youngsten sometimes neatect·
eel-blind, deaf, bard-of·beariq
or mentally \retarded-will atart
soon. sponsored by the Costa
Mesa Department of Leisure
Services.
Beeinning Saturday. with a bus
trip to Bluebird Park, in Laguna
Beach the outing., will cmtinue
three Saturdays a month
throughQut the school year.
The bus will leave from the
Community Recreation Center,
on the Orange County Fair·
grounds at·ss Fair Drive, and the
day's program runs from 9:30
a .m. to 3:30 p.m., according to
recreation aide Jerry Kaban.
Children must be 7 years old to
participate.
Mesan Given
ROTC Grant
A bicen~ial gift in the form
of an Army ROTC scholarship
has been given a ~ )4esa
man who is one of the top.
marksmen on the Wheaton
College, Ill., rifle team.
TAKING THE PLUNGE
l\ITM'•Te1n1axter
'Mesa Pizza
Eaters to Vie
In.C·ontest
• A pizza-eaUng contest, featur·
ing fiV"e-man teams, .is being or·
ganized in CO.ta Mesa.
benefit tournament for ·;Michael Chesney, a sophomore
the Artificial Kidney whose parents' live at 2778
F o u n d a t i o n o f Lorenzo Ave., Costa Mesa, also
California. won the Sons of the American
Tbe eatOff, scbecluled foe (let.
11 in Lions Park, from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m., is being arranged by a
local pizza parlor ...vorking in
cooperation with the scboola and
the Costa Mesa Department of
Leisure Services. ,
A pitch was made to Chamber.
of Commerce directorS recenUy,
and the businessmen were asked
to form a five·man ~. About
200 teams are ,expected to enter
the contest, wJ>icb will be in five
divisions: junior high schools,
high schoolj school faculty,
service cldbs: and oped'.
Spme of the stars 'Revolution award for achieve·
scheduled to make ap. ment in ROTC activities in the
peatances are Merv ·springsemester. Griffin, Ralph Story, ·· . . Mario Machado, Comel The honor cames free tmUon
Wilde Marie Windsor al Wheaton College, plus fmanc~
·san!;l'ra Giles AbbY ing ·required textbooks,
D3itOn, iruth Buizi, Dick laborat~ry ~ees •.nil $100 per
Martin, Ed Ames, Ben month fmanc1al assistance.
M'urpby and th e
Seven·lnch cheese pizzas will
be.served to the contestants.
Righteoua Brothers.
Ge:neral admisSion
tickets, priced at $3, are
available by calling the
Capistrano Racquet
Club, 493-7676.
VIP tickets, providing
for reserved seat ad·
mission and a dinner and
dance Saturday night,
are available for $50.
Darwin
ffistory
Related
Charles Darwin, his
life, travels, theories and
discoveries, will be ex-
amined in a five-part lec-
ture series being offered
at Orange Coast College.
The series, titled
·~charles Darwin and the
Voyage of the Beagle,"
meets on Fridays begin-
ning Oct ~ S, -from
7:30-9:30 p.m . in theOCC
$Cience Hall. The series
is free to the public.
Selies lecturer is OCC
biology pr:ofessor Uoyd
Mason Smith, who in
1967 went around the
world on a , sabbatical,.
iet i:acing ':Darwin 's
round-the-world voyage
on Ute Beagle.
Bicycle iiilly
•
·set Saturday
., A bike rally, to benefit
the American Field
5evlce Students, ts beillg
held atl p.m., Saturday,
origln~ting from the
Eitancia High School
Adobe Houae parking lot.
Donations are. $1 for
adults and 50 cents for
students. A cook-out and
-wlm pmy will be held
allenrard.
For Kindergarten~
Upgraded Reading
J ProgramAdvoc~ted
By KATHY CLANCY
Ol .. 0.lty ...... Mllft
Tbe Huntington Beach City (elementary) School Board bas
adopted a set of "reading readiness" guidelines for kindergarten
students. But Trustee Brian Garland, who advocates teaching reading
to advanced S-year-0lds, said the new guidelines don't go far
enough.
AND HE SAID HE WILL CONTINUE pushing for a more
formal reading program for kindergarten youngsters ready and
anxious to learn. ·
So far, however, he has found no support for his idea from
fellow trustees. · Deputy Superintendent Charles Palmer said the guidelines,
adopted for this year at last week's school board meeting, don't
set lortfl any formal reading program. .
BUT, HE ADDED, 'l1IEY DON'T prohibit any teacher who
wishes from teaching an individual student to read.
"However, Garland said be believes the progr.am is
restrictive. He said it doesn't indiviauatlze instruction and it doesn't in·
elude 8.D,)' guidelines for putting a parent volunteer in the
classroom, for example, to work with kindergartners who want to
read. CUrricuJum Director Jim Macon said the guidelines are de·
signecltocetchildrenreadytoreadinthefirstgrl!fle. .-' THEY INCLUDE DEVELOPING THE' child's motivation to
read. learning visual skills, sounding out letters of the alphabet,
recognizing letters and sounds, as well as teaming the sequences
of events ii stories and improving motor skills.
In addition, he said, under the "enrichment" portion of the
guidelines: kindergarten students are pef1Ditted to s~lect books to
take) home andreadortoread to classmates if they~
But Garland said he would prefer guidelines that outline a
fonnal reading program for youngsters who are ready.
"1 am not for jam.ming a book in a five year old's band,'' be
explained. "lfhewantatoplaywlthblocksl,him."
BUT RE SAID SOME YOUNGSTERS "DUE. to a preschool instruction and an enriched home environment" want to read by
S." ' He contends the district policy •1slams the door lo hi& race.''
He continued. ••u we are to really meet the needs of every
t child, we Jriµst take them where they are and teach them accord·
Ing to their' current ltnowll!dge."
.
Fa8hion Show Set at Hilton
' Paper Drive, , ·nckets are now available for
the Saddleback Valley Cbam-'
Du • M bermaids' !bird annual fall
which coot $6, will be aold." '11!ey
ma7 be obtained at Laguna
Federal Savings, the chamber of·
commerce or from the Cham·
bermalcll.
. e m esa .faahlon •how and luncheon,
• A paper drive, beclftnina at 1~!15 a.m .• Satur-·
1ponsored by the Vic-day, OCt. 12, Iii the Laguna· llills
tori• PTA. ls scbedul<!I Hilton IM. •
for ,f :30 a.m. unW noon, 'fbe event wit\ follow a Blcen·.
Saturday, at"the Victoria llelilllal Iheme, fulurinC fashions
S<hoOl parltini lo\, 10i!5"from area ahopl.
Victoria St., Cost.a loleaa .• 1. limited number ol tlckelo,
~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~'-. , ,
Proceeds will be used fO?'
.scholan1hipo and support ol com-
munit)' projects.
F\Jrtber Information may be
obtained by callliis 837'4'1Sll. •
War~ Ted_~ .. whlt bu l\tpper'ed.. ••
He add~ In eomMm! m-llb Ted Baxter than Ted Kllilbt,
"Here ts Georpa, wboia23, mar-171DC a »year-old ,,,.., and it
-convlncln1. I llnd that heartening."
Knllbt bu created aucb an in·
clelible cbaracttt of \lie .......ins.
-OOUS anchor man ol. lbe TwlG
Qty cbannel thafJt ill hard to re-
memllel' that be ia an adjlt"
TBBaB 18 a difference, not the
least beinl the fact that Knlpt ia
atready married and the father
. olthree.
Ted Baxter; by KDicht'a analy1l1, ts ••v11tnerable,
eensiUve, a man· wbo loves dogs
and mother. aelf-centered, yet be
doan't aetout to burl-.·· Ted Knight, on tbe otber hand,
la a show-wise, ambitious, bard·
workln1 profestionat Wblle he
likes Baxter, be admits
"aometlmea I 1et purple in the
veins tryinc to make him work.''
Al'TEB A WEllKEND as himself, be finds il dllllcult to ar-
rive 'If MTM on M(lllday mom·
inp and start the week of re-
hearsali for the Friday night
filming.
For th•t and other fOllSOllll, he
would like to part company with
Baxter after two z;noreRasons.
"I think· the series aboUld stop
while we'i'e still warm.'' be re·
aions. "We're starting the sixth
year., and my contract lasts
throuilb the aeventh~Tbat allould doit .,
Miss Moore berseif has talked
about quitting at the end of thts
season, b\lt business· conaidera·
tions may change her mind.
TED KNIGHT MIGHT well
have conilniled his career as a
well-employed but fairly obscure
television actor except for the
confluence with· •'The Mary
Tyler Moore Show."
'Born in Terryville, Conn., be,
like Baxter, got his start in a
500-watt radio station. It was at
WCCC, Hartford, that be ac·
quired his professional name.
fllANY SOtlTHBBN CAIJPOBNIA yacht owners do not pretend to understand current In·
temaliooal Offshore Rule Marr III -and mllD)'
Wiii cballenge the --of tbe perpetrators of the rule. Tbeae include the 10-Called tecbolcal eom-
mittees made up of. yacht deaignm, aallmakera,
boat blillders and a 1ealtering of mathematically
lncUnded laymen. One thin& i& certaio. 'lbere never has been, nor
probably eYer will be a perfect measurement rule
-bywbateverinlUalatttsknown. Probably the least understood -and certainly
the most controversial -is a new version of IOR
Marie III ,deviled by the Ocean Racing Fleet of
Southern California, advisor}' body for offshore rac·
Ing in tbeae parts •
THE NEW VBBSION IS tentatively known as
the IOR/ORF-75 rule. wblcb wu purportedl)' de·
vlled to brine many ol the older hoats back into of·
fsbore comP.Utlon -especially the ones whose
owners bad defected from the Ocean Racing Fleet
ranks In favor of the more aimpllfied local rule
'l1!e I-hour CllSlll
cover, aafety, boat
handling, legal ""1ia·
lions, aid• to navtcat1on.
charts, compass. marine
engines, m1irlin1pike
seamanship. aailint.
weather and the uae cf
the radio telephone.
Tbe CGA is a non·pald
voluntary or-ganliaUon.
whose activities Include
asststing the tl.S. Cout
Guard in safety. aeatcb
and rescue and provld·
inc courtesy motorboat
examinations for
pleasure boats. •
known u Performance Handicap Racing Fleet Bo ~--
(PHRFJ. Under this system, a yacht's rating can be at UW uer arbitrarily chanced clepelldiog Oil bow well or bow ·
poorly tbe yacbt and Its crew perform over a given •
period. Se101nar • But heed now the screams of anguish of the ·
owners of newer yachts designed to the IOR Mark
111. Tbeyclalm they arebeing-allledlnfavorof Anno----..ll old, obsoleteorollt-designed yachts. '~
To halfway understand wliat is going on in ban·
dicap yacht raclnJ, ooe must bark back a few years
to the lime when most yachts lo the U.S. -includ·
ina·Soutbern California -were raced under a rat·
Ing system known as the Cruising Club of America
(CCA) rule. .
rr MtjST ALSO llE pointed out that the CCA
rule was developed by the private organization
known u the Cruising Club of America, to handicap
yachts in tbe biennial Newport, R.L. to Bermuda
race which was founded and controlled by the CCA.
As the CCA rule was adopted for races in other
parts or the country, yacbtsmen and naval
architects began to find naws and loopholes which
could be and were circumvented. Upshot was that
the CCA said in effect: "To bell with it. It's too dif.
ficult to administer." and tossed il.in the collective
laps of the North American Yacht Racing Union
(NAYRU) -now known as the United States Yacht
Racing Uruon. .
NA YRU was already bending an ear to the in·
temational yacht racing types who maintained that
any measurem ~'lt rule should be uniform intema·
Uonally. .....
Sea Magazine bas
scbeduled an electrooiao
seminar for boat owners
atarting Oct. 21 at the
F.dgewater Hyatt lfDuae
in Long Beach.
The magazine'& elee-
t ron i cs columnlst
Gordo11--Weal wUL em.
pbasize the care and
operation of such elec·
tronic gear as RDF
<radio direction finder),
Loran 'and Omega. He
will also provide
guidance on such equip-
ment as depth sounders.
wind direction and wind
speed indicat'ors,
autopilots and radar.
Although a complete
section of electronic• ,
will be available to work
with, participants are
encouraged to brine
their own portable units.
0 1 was reading the five-minute
late news," he recalls. ''The sta·
-tion· manager said that by the ·
time I said 'Good evening, this is
Tad.ewurz Wladzui Kooopa with
five minutes of late news," the
.five minutes would be over.''
THtJS WAS CONCEIVED THE IOR wblch was
supposed to incorporate the best features of the
CCA and Britain's Royal Offshore Racing Club
CRORC> under which most European races were
handicapped.
This meant that all offshore yachts had to have
a .new "rating certificate'' -which in some in·
stances cost upwards of $300 -including haulout
costs and measurers' fees.
For further informa· uori contact Ken Weiss.
seminar director, 1499
Monrovia St., Newport
Beach, telephone
646-4451.
"IT WAS A TIME when short
names were popular in broad·
casting, so be changed ·his
·nickname of Tad to Ted and
picked Knight out of a telephone
book.''
Knight worked In North
Carolina, Rhode Island and New
York as a radio-television Jack·
of.alJ.trades. Kid shows, news,
.musicals , documentaries,
dramas -he did them all. As an
all-night disc , jockey he de·
veJoped a knack for impressions
-"it was so lonely that I made
up voices and interviewed them
on the air.''
His imitations of Lowell
Thomas, Edward.R. Murrow and
Art.bur Godfrey are mint·perfect.
IN 1957 KNIGHT moved bis
family to Los Angeles, and found
work in over 300 TV segments
from ''Gunsmoke'' to ''Get
Smart." He was also busy as a
voice for· cartoons and
spokesman for a savings and
loail bank when he tried out for
Bal<ter.
"I knew this guy, to some ex·.
tent I was this guy," the::. actor
said.
He took the script home,
marcelled his hair and built the
character from seven broad·
casters be had kooWtl, including·
a famous Los Angele s
newscaster.
The role has won him an Em·
my and instant recognition
wherever be goes. He bas
already played Las Vegas and
plans to cash in with fair dales
and other appearances whenever
be can get time away from the
series.
NewitortMan
Oil AID Board
. Robert M . Mcintyre 0£
Newport Beach, senior \'ice pre-
lldent of the Southern California
Gas Company, has 1-l named to the corporate 'board of direc·
tors ol AID·Uilited Givers.
llclntyre joined the utllil)' In
1952 as an assistant tecbnlclan
and In the following 18 years
served In various aales and
markeUng management poal-tiona. .
· He ts servlnl as commissioner
of the Lqa Ancelea County .fJne:rlY Commtsslon.
• •
Yacht designers Jumped on the new rule as a
means of designing new yachts specificall)' "to the
nlle.'' The re11ult was some extremely fast and
often radical boats could and did sail circles around
the older designs. There was no way. said owners of
the older boata. tliat they could compete witb the
new yachts. They flocked to PHRF in droves, great·
ly decimating the ranks of the Ocean Racing Fleet.
Free Boat
Eqµipment
WithSal,e .
ORF TRIED A NEW gimmick of allowing boats .Jensen Marin~, parent.
with an old CCA rating to race in local offshore f c I d · races m· a class of their own. It didn't take. The company or a an Ranger Yachts, is ex· owners of the older boats were still barred from the tending its offer of free
entry lists of such races as the Transpac and long · t to h
distance races to Mexico which were limited to IOR '~:i::r 23,P;:,c 29~
ratings. 33 models of sailboats.
So now comes IOR /ORF·75which the computer The offer was previously.
experts of ORF have worked on ~gently fo~ near· announced for Cal boats.
ly a year. It hopefully would satisfy all factions. It The offer is good
obviously hasn't, judging from the howls of protests ·through Dec 23 and is
from owners and skippers from all spectrums or the limited to pi.rticipating
ratingladder. dealers and to boats
Not everyone blames the vast changes in h~· which can be shipped
dicap racing on the measurement rule. Official from the Ranger plants
measurers -w~o are also bandy with computers:-in Costa Mesa and New
such as Tom Wilder of Newport Beach and Ernie Jersey accor'ding to
Sporleder of Huntington Beach, are charged with Warren' Bowes director
me?Suring ~ats t~ whatever rule is in force. They of marketing. '
claim to be impartial. Equipment buyers will
••IT'S JUST NOTGOODtJtinking to blame all receive a s ~ollows :
the ills of yacht racing on the rule,•• says Sporleder. Ranger·~· main and 115
"Any rule should reflect the new technology and ad· pe~cent Jlb from North
vances in engineering which are producing faster Sails valued . at $634 ; and faster; sailboats." Ranger-~. main and 115
Sporleder points specifically to growing craze pei;cent Jib from North
oC "level racing'• also known as "ton racing'' in S&.1ls valued . at $779;
which yachts are designed to a specific rating. Ranger-~. m~1n ~nd US
(In ton racing boats of different design and size percent .11b, Ritchie com~
race on a boat·for-boat·basis without benefit of ban· pass, Signet knotmeter dicap.) and Narco emergency
Designers are allowed to play with such -;;.=======:;;::;
parameters as sail area, aspect ratios, beam, draft COME TO THE
and other factors -so long as they come up with a llEWPO T H specific rating, depending on whether they are rat-R ARBOR
eel Two Ton, One Ton, Tbree·QuarterTon, Hall Ton Ill • THE • WATER
and Quarter Ton. 0 Sporleder calls the ton racers the ••grand prix'' B AT
of yacht racing because it attracts dedicated skip·
pen and crews wh06e main concern is getting the SHOW utmost speed out of their craft under all sailing con·
ditioos. They are often referred to as the "pro·
fesaionals" of yachtracing. · ~oat S~
~~ SO WHAT IS A yacht's rating, and how ls it ar·
rived at? To try to explain it technically, with all the
mfthemalical equations which relate to a boat's
potential speed would make Einstein turn over in
his grave.
Generali)' speaking, when all of a boat's
measurements such as sail area, weight. draft. beam1• waterline length aspect ratio (mut height)
and omer parameters are cranked lnto a computer
it comea out with a number wblch ia expressed in
feet -1eneraUy conceded to be the boat's eomput·
ed waterline length .
When applied to a time allowance table, the rat-
ing determines how many seconds per mile a yacht
ts allowed over any given course distance. That'•
why In many tons dlsWlc<>1'aces a yacht can finish
two or tbree daya behind the leaders and 1Ull be
proclaimed tbe winner • .
'
•
I I
•
'
•
••• • • • • •
. fi OAILY f'tLDT
"PUllLIC NO'nCB PUllUC NotlfK PUllLICNcmcz
•.nmouildll•eu • PtCTtnM•u•1•a• .....,.11.ITAftM'-lln' ....,,_, tTAftflo\11.WT
N "" ..... -... b ...... .... TM frol._I., llff"'" .,. ~ Dultoo "IN1 ,... .. : -1tM11CMcwni: euo•f fNTettNATIOMAL ~-;
Datsun
Gets Top ... _ .. ""'""*-• CUlllH•.MW.ttutlt.,C...lfllllM, OAllYl'1 CLaANIHO ••mc1.
..... Mlle• It.,.., ....... Qiil""M•'¥11 . , • llff?T•1*eCtrc.k, ..... t-0,,....._
............. ~ ..... ~ "' .. " 0. ....... .,.,, cw .... )16')1r,U.nt'f .....,.., ec 1t1e ..,.,,,.-., CIMc,... ~,~lfl.c.lifof'flla'*' .. ,._,, hfl"1e> wo1c,._.., 1.u
.. ~: TM...,_., 11(Mllfutlff11oy Mi... ANMltr S*r .... C.0.1& IMW.. CA.•·
.
Mileage 11111 f"IKtflUt A¥•n-. COtlo di.....,_., 1 .. D.W!, • ..... Clllt. tmJ Hei.n 0. l•Ml.-i Oerrl Jot!fl TflD,_,, 2f'11 CMlf'et
I ~t .. -· ......... tllt -nat1 -~t •M fl ... wltlt t"'4i DorM, Et T..-o, CA. taU>
........... ls 1910tyl1t1 to"" o.,.rt. co-.,ci.n.t1to...,...°"'"'.,._. Tfll1 b111hws1 11 <Dnd11Clecl by• WASIUNGTON (UPI .,._ .. AkOf•llc .. _ ... Olnlnlt tor ...,,.., I!, ltJI. GM*OINtl"""ll\p. ) 11~ •• ,,. ••c11M1k .,,...,... ...,.. o.n-1.i. i'Nm•• -The standard shift I-1-1···· ) ·--P\IOll$1'1MI Or~ -..,, -·1 -.... ™' ll•l•nwnl ... IUlod wUh "" -......... -111oeM.,..,.._ ..._ ..... '.... Da••un B·210, at 33 miles ~--: ~11,24,.i'ldOC .J,l,tt1i · ~10.,S (OlonlyCi.rlo.otOrtngtCOIHllYOtl!ito-WI'
.. "41" OH SAL.I! ...... WINI tlfl'lllfft t•11· • fllO•tS per ptlon, emerged u C8ollf ~.t=~'!"11 Piaw) l"l,lblllhH' or--. c~11 o.11, P11ot, the mott economical car
IUM.Ollflocri11 PUBUC N011CE ~.Mi,t1,2•.aiw:toc1.1,1t1s w1-ti soJ:d ln California Jn•the
.._w.ci 0r~ eo.11 0.11, Pltot. ----------'----------·! Environmental Protec· 9'fi4,'14, 1'7S Jt.S1·7J P"ICTITIOUl9USINtSI N.u.t.£~&NT _fUJIU.C_tiO'l1CE lion A,.:e~cy:ranew rank·
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tl'iifOlloWll!i1 ' roiofhotM°'1>~."'=====~=-'"-J inf'Of1)1i m ell. •
l'WM .!' L I s 0 N M 0 R T GA G E f'ICTITIOUS 9UllN•SS Bet a use the state hu ---.;,,.;:;;,,.====~--1 lillAMl!ITAT•M•NT I 11 PICTITIOUS IUSllillllSJ INVESTMENT TRUST, )091 ,. .. Joo-ni.1o11-1no perwn1 .,. OOll'lllbusl· tou1her a r po ution
NAMllSTATIM•MT Qui" Huu Rood, N••Hn hiKR, MUM~ laws, the EPA tests OI) T~tooowi"'9""1't«IS•r•dolnobusl· COll!otnlo '2W.0 CAl'TAt H'S LOCK flt HUH· ' R .... M AIU$0tl, •• L.lllda 11i., l!NGTON HARBOUR, 11Zl6 Pecllk cars sold in California -~-1 ~kech,COlllonllonMO bou 0 I of all LE.T'S GO ~ISMINO CLUB., um Goor~ L. Arerrot:, tz Undo'*· ~1~!.~.1 ....... y. Hunlln91on 6oKl'I. a t l r:rcen
Le Mill• LoM. Hunlltiglon 6oech, ,... "-'" tJ c•-SOJd . lhe COWl'-COUlomlo.,..I Hewpa11Beocn.co1ttof11Jont60 N••POrl Supply Company IA .... ., . . WJ
0 .... 10,., Sfl•lkNI, 11>02 L• "'-Ml Jom•1 c. •••c•, 190SO Retie:l'lo c.llloml• COrMr•llonl, 11•11 o.Hnlor -take account of the
Lon., H11ntl119t0fl Boocn, COl•lornlo Or1vo,Enci110,C.Ur.,.1110•1a1t su.-.1rw.o.c..111orn1onros ' I '2'fl.il ,,._.un ev•n11om, SJS s.ti Goroonlo, Tl'lls .,,...,i,.,, b conou<t•d b'f' • cor· more stnngent contro
PM Jo"'" ........ ,., !.t, ,,,.J Sot1Di990,C.Ufof'nion100 poro11on. devic es n eeded in • •I ' H II • Roy Doi.mon!, •JIO Stfe.t.Mt.rlNi ,,... ...... , r.__., , __ , Californi a.
C;.;..::;lo .. ~i un n11to11 eoc h, OelRoy,C.Ul0<nlo'111tl l!hll~•;~I -·
Arlltl.ir F . Mo•rll, 1911'1 Collk, O•.-kl B. ~ylilr, Jf., l°'106oW1191'. Thll itll•n•lll wes llltd wlltl !NI
Nor!llr ..... COUIOl"n!•91l74 Ro«!. LolAr>9•19•• C•llfOffllti~ County 0.rll Gt 0••-Counlron SO..-WIBLE TESTS f ••-G•v1n Miiier, SOI North Mc~ Or un;: lh\s llllslnHI II (OllduClecl br I tlm lt• te-•, lt7). oth W ~ ,.0 ~.,...w.lp. P1oce.LMAnve1e1.c ourorn1•t001M ...,.,. er 49 states res teu
'
I , •i S FOfeU E. Ohol"I, t• LlniY 11!•. -··I-0•-oo C•••I 0.)1• ~ .. , • th h " •th •u ..... •••nck• '· ~ NewPO<tBe..:.h,co111or,.1at2..o .-u -· -.. , m ree cars 8 artne e
Tiils 1111emen1 .... , 111.0 ..,,.,. 11w 11111 t>wilneii II conouctM ..,. bus!· SitJJt. IO, 0 ,24.-0C1.1. 1t75 ,...,.75 top spot _the Chevrolet County Cle•~ ot 01an99 counly on 5-c>·
1emill'r •. 1t1s. Mii t•u~C.v Oou'*•n!. Trustee PUBLIC NOTICE Chevette, the Subaru and
"414" Thi• 1t•le1T'ent w•• !!led wllh 11111 the Datsun B-210 -the P\#111.i.ed OrOflQlt Coo~I Oo11y Piiot,
5epc., 10. 11, 24, •no Oct. 1, 191s :M1't-7S County cier~ °' Or•nllf county.,,,~ California tests left only 20, lt1S. NOTICITOCll:IOITOlll h I
------·---·---
. PUBLIC NOTICE
f'4lffl su,••1110111 cou11110'™• t e manual transmiS! on
PubU"'9d Ofonu-Coost Ollly PllOI. STATROl'CAL:lf'OllNIAIOR Datsun at the top. 'Ibe S.p1.10.1r.1,,ono0c1.1.1t1s Jo110-1s nt1couNTro.-011:ANOI f 1 fl
PUBLIC NOTICE
'"· • ....,,. top ue economy gure
EllOtf ol l!L.1lA8ETH MONSER in the 49-state test was
Bll!HL,0.C••Md. 1--===~=====--• NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN lo !N also33 M.P.G.
c:.-.c11mnottM•bovoMmHOICOOIJll In the California tests, ll'lol ... PO•-......... ctoll"M aoo!MI
1t. w1c1 c1ec:..-i1 ••• '"u1roo '° 11i. the Chevette and Suban.i
Uofn\, w1111 tM ,.c",.'' vouc:11H1, In tied for third with an
11Wofil(o.,ltl4'cl0f"llollt.,...,.._ f2SM p G fltMd e-1 • .,. 1opr1Mt1t 1r...m, """' t11t average o . . .
l'IKftWl' ¥0Uc:Mr1, to th• 1111detli0Nd
01 ttwolfk • o1 0Av10 111. aAaOE. At· SECOND SPOT in the
wn.y •I Low, ••a 'ft•"" Corlter
l'>!"lv•. N••PO'' •••<"· C•Ulott110 California tests, with an ~::~1.:.!i"° ..i.co ,,,, 1MaH11M 11 f 30 M p G !NI 1,. 011 moti.r• "°""'~ average o . . .,
lflttottleHU>tollfuldffcedM,wONr, was shared by a Datsun IOI.Ir",,_,,,. .i1,, 111o 11r11 puetlutlotl B·210 wt th automatic of 11'111 tlOtlco.
00W11...,.""'boi" '· 1•1s. J_ransmission. a Peugeot
w 1LL•AMCL.tf'Fo111oe1EHL 504 diesel, a Peugeot 504 1..c:wto<"of ll'le Will
ttrtN.tioY•nomoddoUdoflt. diesel wagon and a
n.vio11:.a.uo1 Volkswagen Beetle. .....,.,...., .. Uw
ttl .......... ~OrlYI ~ltHc: ... CA.ftMI
T.t: C7tfl .... tNt ..,._..,..,. •• ocwt...
P11DHlhed OrO'!IOO COOtl 0011'1' Piiot,
~.,10, U,~,alldOc.I. t, 1'7S M~1S
PUBLIC NOTICE
Arwther
Big Car
Hits Dmt
DETROIT (APJ -
Chrysler Corp. has con-
ftrmed that it j5 dropping
its luxury Imperial this
fall .
A spakesman said that
the Chrysler New Yorker
Brougham has been up-
graded to take the Im·
perial's place in the lUX·
ury car market begin·
ning with the 1978 model
year, which begins Oct.
1.
Chrysler ls phasing out
the Imperial exactly so
years after its 1926 de-
but. Industry sources at-
tribute the car's demise
to dwindling sales.
The nation's No. 3 auto
maker bu sold 3,900 Im-
perials this year, Jess
than half its volume of a
year ago.
Polaroid
Glasses
Retailed
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
(AP> -Polaroid Corp.
will market a line of
Polarizing sunglasses in
California and 'Florida
beginning Nov. l, the
company announced.
Distribution will be ex-
panded to other states
next year, the firm said.
Polaroid said it has
been 35 years since it
sold sunglasses under its
own 'trademark and de--
sign in the United Stales.
A company spokesman
said the sunglasses will
be from Polaroid's in·
ternational collection.
which is currenUy sold in
100 countries outside the
U.S.
Consumer
Credit
"/Jill OK'd
SACRAMENTO (UPI l
-J>ro.eonaumer leetsla·
tion requiring depart·
ment stores to refund
credit balances t o
customers within six
IDOlltba .bas been aljjned
by Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr.
Assemblyman Alan
Sieroty , CD-Los
Angeles) author of the
law, si.Jd ataU.tlca show
that Iarce department
stores hav~ retalnecf as
much ea 93,9 llllWon In
conaubier credit
balances allice l.vea. ·
SlerOly ,said, the new
law al1ned Tueaday
'4'(1Uld requite storos to
lll>llfy cuatomera wll)l
....ilt balances at least
three Umea durln1 the
sl&-mooth penod and b).
form them Of tlielr ~
toacubnfUJid. I
• ·-•
Fn,iit
Price
Drops
J I
• WASHINGTON CAP> -Pe...,
applta ud rice •r• In abulldaDCe
t,nd thould be ·~ In the wholesale and At*11 markell
next month, aayo the AMriculture
Department'• monttily "food
marketinl alert ...
~ii 'IQJIJ>llH 0( appl• and
peara, co1111n1 In al r«OC'd rata,
should be avallab(e for a
alllllllcanlly loafer period this
-hll. the-dep&\'.lmenl aatd. The u.S. rice c"rop Is forecut at. re--
cord Uf.8 mtllton 100.paund
bafo-fuU. 28 percent~ than
the average o{ the lut three
years. 1 Alto ll1ted In plentiful aupply
for ahoppers next month were
beet, cranberries, canned non·
cltrus fruits, raisins, dried
prunes, frozen vegetabl••·
peanut.<1 walnuts, almonds, dry
beans, ary pea• and sweet com.
SMALL COMPllT"ER CAN RUN MODEL RAILROAD
Demonatratlon 11 Part Ol lrvlne Computer Firm'• Show
Porit supplies still are Ughl,
the alert nQ.led. while dairy.
poultry-and egg product.< are
''ad.,uate.''
Co~puter Uses Shown
A model railroad controlled and operated by a
smaJI computer -called a minicqmputer~-will be
demonstrated at the California Computer Show in
Los Angeles Thursday to dramatize the rapidly
growing use of low-cmt computer pawer in every·
day situations.
The demonstration is being staged for potential
users at the International Hotel, 622S Century Blvd.,
by Computer Automation, Inc., Irvine, a major
manufacturer or minicomputers. Demonstrations
will be hehi from 2 to 7 p.m.
THE RAILROAD DEMONSTRATION WAS de-
vised as a means of showing how machines like the
rompany's $295 NAKED MILU computer make it
economically feasible to address a broad ran1e of
problems, "like operating aerv1ce station gasoline
pumps, automatic cash dispensing machines or
street comer traffic signals." according to Len
W'llker, w·estern regional sales manager.
Called A MTR AC (Automatic Train Recognition
and Control System), it is also a training tool for
users, showing how applications programs can be
developed using hardware and soft.ware.
DURING THE DEMONSTRATION, THE train
will tint be operated by a small minicomputer and
then by increastngly larger minicomputers.
•
Over The Counter
HASOUstMgs
' MUTUAL F1UNDS
~----~~---~ I "
•
,
111BSE H LAWS DO PVT ilollE 1-tr!CUoa oa access
to ••pain and sufferinc'' damares so popuJV In many
lawaulta (whllenonetakeaaw.oyyourri1bttoadaylncourt).
MOit of the 18 allow sulta for pain and suffertn1 on!y "lien
medlcal bills reach a certain dollar level (the thtetbolil>:
The Michigan law basnothteabold butUmita suits to cues or
"serious'' injury.
With effectiy~ no-fault in eVery state, tbe auto r,epara.
lions system would be rid ol theWute, delay, injustice and
persooal tra1edJ1 that so Clften pervades the fault system.
With 'f.fective no-,faWt. our aulo iMui'ane.e pre'.mluma could
pay for a substanu.t part of the loaes of those seriouaJy ln·
jured in auto accicleDts (as licainst Ute mere 30 percent of
the looea -they now receive). Wbat'a more. inlurance e~
perta say that baaed on tod.oy's coat ractors, this could t>e
done without any increase inpre_IQiums.
11IE NEXT LOGICAL QUBS'nON must be .. why the
· alowdownT"°Wby bun'tthecon<ePtbeen embra~acroaa
the nation in face ~the fact that vlrtually•every element In
our society -laOOr, business, consumer oraanlz.atlons,
educators, public offici8.J.s, the press -bas hailed no-fault
as indisputably iD. lhe public interOltT ·
\ The equally·discouraging ans..,.Jr to this question is
Opposition rrom one miljor 'source -the personal
liabillty bar.
And sliice the liability bar ls heaVify represented in the
various state legislatures and no-fault strikes at the core of
l!WIY lawyen' livelihoods (""'°'accident lDjury lawsuital,
the lawmaken tbemaelves ba" censiate!llJY attacked the
_concept and repeatedly been. successful either iD block.Ing
entii-ely or substantially waferin~ down no-faUlt billi in
their own leg\,slatureS. " ! ' ~ '
..
. . \
•UNLESS TllOSE DEEPLY {J.i FAVOR of l\O·fault
becqine fu)ly..awue of What ia a~1take11Dd take strong COUD•
termeuurl!s to the personal liability lawyers' tactic,, there
as absolutely noTeason to believe the lawyers will be leas
successfUI in the future than In the P8't. :-
-The concept ·or no-faillt auto insurance was introduced
aslar back as the 1930s -a filll 40-plus years ago. The re-
form bas been a major issue for lhe<Put 10 yean -ever ~ince·Iaw professors~ Keeton and Jeffrey O'Connell,
in a 1965 book, outtlned'tbe inequities In the fault system for
payin.i.,p.uto accident damages and calJed for ·aa ovei'h4ul:
Yet we -4jp.etica's motorists.~ho stand to benefit
so greatly fro.Di"' gOod ho-fault legisl•tion -are~iill walling,
waiting, walUng andp•vhi•; ·• , .. -:;;-•), ~ Wedne~: w_hat, lll'n;olJb\J Congl't"? . . . . •
MAR,KET H 19 ff l I G H'I' S . . .
'1NDE·~· •
Due tc;> lat~ .. tran5mission ioday~s listing'
will not appear In the Dally Pilot ·
AINrrlC'•M s.1 ...
""'"'" ..
..
I ------
W YOltK STOCK EXCHANGE
I
•
•
• • ' . ... ...
'
.. OM. Y PILQT Wodneodoy, S!ptomw 24, 1975
I 11onight's'-
. TV Highlights
NBC ( 4) 9: 00 -Doctors Hospital.
Lesley Warren plays a patient with a his-
. tory of seducing doctors in this episode.
George Peppard heads the cast.
KCET (28) 9:00 -Welfare. A lhree-hour documentary on the confusions and
intracacies of the public welfare system
produced by Frederick Wiseman.
CBS (2) 10:00 -Kate McShane. Kate
·defends an old man (Jack Gilford) whose
homemade booby trao kills a burglar.
I
ABC (7) ll :So--.'The Sex Symbol." ~
Connie Stevens plays the Marilyn Monroe
prototype in this drama about a starlet
climbing to the lop in Hollywood. Also '
featured are Shelley Winters, Jack 1.
Carter and Don Murray. .
~ ---wt ~ '-'"' :W.at ... .-
TV DAILY LOG
IJj (C) .,... Wt SM!: , .. Huf"
(dfl) '69-Hqll M11towe.
l:JD" (C) "'11 St1rd ., "'Pit"
(rllffl) '10 -Julit Ch1islie, MitAMI
S.rraM.
J!ODQj(C) "Tk ~ .. riaM" (d11) '10
-JoM Ftner, llardo Montalbl1.
J:JO ()) ft) "ht • .,., Sid • ., ...
(clrl) '65 -Alili·Mqtd, llllCllM ,,..,.
0 (Q "'Staufs .....,. (drat ·u -Kati., ,.,., 111a111.,..
O'Hlr1, JllM$ lllac.Artllw.
OCE Television (50) . . . . .,
l
~
•
Jessel Likes
Chi/,J, Brides .
Q: Wby did G-J-alw1ya •ury lf·
year-old •Irle! Aad wW. tM V.S. lio 1oa1er bt•olved
ID a ahootln1 war. wbo 19 Ule eomedJu eatertaia·
ln&T-M. McAdams, CGI. (llel.), Pboelll•, Art a.
A: Civilians -and Veter&n& Admlniatratlon
hospital 1hut-ins. headllnin& a USO rene called "A
Heart!ul of Love,'' for which
George has had plenty of re-
hearsing. It isn't true abo\lt hls
marrying only 16-year-old 'l!rla.
"Two of my wives were • year
or two older than I wu." he
says. "Lois (Andrews> was my
only 16-ye8'-0li11>rlde. She was
-the most beautiful girl in New
York when we met and who
could guess then that she was on·
Jass11L ly 14? That mar,rtage "ept my
closest pals in jokes for some time. My favorite was
'Georgie couldn't bring his wife to the party tonight.
She'sliometeething!" ·
Q: Tell me tor sure. llave Dinah Shore and Burl
Reynolds spUt? -M•rme Saave, Seattle; ·,
A: As this is wntten, it must be true··since
neither Dinah nor Burt have bothered to deny it.
Their friends are hoping they both have a change of
heart.
Q: I was shocked bearing about a nude photo of
Jean Harlow showing up in a newsmagaaine. How
much did the photographer get for the plc&ure?"··
Ernst Magus, Minneapolis. ·
A : Not even a credit line. He was identified only
as an MGM studio cameraman who shot the photo
'Glad You Asked That'
by Marllyo ood Hy G••or
of Miss Harlow when she was an extra and only 17.
Apparently, Ken Anger, who gave prints to
Newsweek and Penthouse, was primarily interest·
ed in publicizing a new edition of bis book,
"Hollywood Ba by Ion ," published originally in
Paris some years ago. Anger, a little-known writer
and sometime moviemaker, bas had a run of bad
breaks. Not too loog ago one of his unfinished films,
"Lucifer Rising," was stolen by a member of the
Manson family, Bobby Beausoleil. The convicted
killer held the reels of celluloid for a ransom o(
$2,000. And when Anger couldn't get up the money,
destroyed the film. The Harlow publicity break
could make Anger joyous for a change.
Q: I've heard that Doc Severlnson of the
Tonight. Show Is such a tightwad, be doe1n't even
have pockets iD his suit.! True? ·• Mrs. Marilyn
Gross, Orlando, Fla.
A; Only in some jackets -tailored strictly for
stage use--not to avoid picking up dinner checks.
Q: I think I can win a sucker bet. A friend of
mlne lnslsts there was once a female Dracala. I say
no. Who's right? -RobertodelGadda, Brooklyn.
A: Sorry, but you'll have to pay. Back in 1957
Hollywood produced a lady vampire, played by ac-
tress Sandra Harrison. The title of the film was
"Blood of Dracula." Not lo mention the 1936
"Dracula's Daughter" (starring Otto Kruger,
Gloria Holden and Marguerite Churchill).
~Your question'.! to Hy GardneT, "Glad You Asked
That," care of this new~, P.O. Bo:z ll748, Chicago, Ill.
606ll. MarilJl1l. and Hy Gordner will an.uoer. °' manr ques·
tiorU.'CJI they con in their C<ilumn, bu# the volume of mail
make•per3onal replie.si~~· A.U Rights Rettroed.
.., __ ,_." I UNDA tomliCI fOI JlllSIDINT 11111 ·-· ~ AIOUND WOILD IAt«f HIL111111
·-~ __ .... ...... ------....
"'5 ...
-
-
_ .. """•""' ... ._ ... ,, ..
JAWS,...
1eAI. WAYI •
-~--. LW tOmACt POI ..aotill•••r"" • .... wallld, """' ... 11111
-1
..... llMt -· ....
11,,lD OfF"
JAl!'lS (MN IN
ROLLER BALL.. ... -. -· -•Wftmn
MAIUOll" ....
llPnD Off lit ------· .. .
ltHID Off111
_,,,..._ .. . _,,,_,
MOlfllMN ---..
----""-" ·---..
-
•
. -
••
EHTER11HllENT
•
•
Auditions IJst~
~ The callboard will be
hellVf over the weekend
u lhree Oranse Coast
lheaur IJ'OUps bold audl·
tiool for upcoming at.age
productions.
Intel 11 :isslon.
Torn. ·Tdus
Lead.inc off Saturday
morning will be the
Children 'J Tb eater ple.yhoule, 1110 Main St., danctn wUI besought by
Guild, which wUI be c .. t. Hunllniton Beacll. Open. dlnctor C~uck Roj>erU
inl a larfe company for tn1 ni&bt la Nov. 14 for. for lb• 111elodram•
a toUrtng abow enUUed five WHilei)d1. , which wW open "loY· 13
"Gollywhoppera." Audllloo• for "Tb• f<[alour-weekieodnm.
· Director Gordon Yeaton Drunkard" have been South Cout Repe,to<y 1'.109., E'~,,;J;j w10 ll"Old e&cilnfs ror cilrea-5j~tlle aa trreerwtinc candidates '""""' E•"'e•fl4' teensancladulto -alone Clemente Communit)' toe Ito Youna Peoi\le's with violin aod gWtar 'I'beater for Monday aDdi ~ctl111. Contervatori,.
F "l Set players -at 10 a.m. In Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. ·at Which begins Oct. 4 for I 11IS thegulld.rehearsal hall, tbe·Cabrlllo r1ayllouoe,'youn11ters between J
LOS ANGELES. (AP)
-Veteran scare artist
William Castle· bas
signed a multiple picture
contract with '20th Cen·
tury-Fox, his first ~
ductlon to be ''Noise."
Castle, producer of
"Rosem,ry's Baby" and
producer-director of
''The Tingler,"
''Macabre ,''
"Homicidal" and "4't's
Kill Uncle+'' will make a
series ol films for Fox re-
lease.· ·
1240-H Logan SL. Costa 20: Avenlda Cabrlllo, and l'T S'eeklJiY"pro-
Mesa. San Clemente. A cast d fessiooal thuter-tralrj-
Tbe Huntington Beach 13 men, seven wom~ ir!J. F\artber inrorm.tiao
Playhouse baa scheduled one &i.rl and two female is aYtuatile at &te a252
readings Sunday and l~:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;===;,~=~~~==:--=:r Monday for Reginald
Rose's "Dear Friends," Tlu!ID"rif11in11 lllOlitin
with tryouts set tor 1 • t fi ••-
Sun •· I* ure ,...,. ""' p.m. day and 7 p.m. ,~r. . No. •~ _,,_ on Monday. Austin Peay lrnuJltltg J,_.,._ ..
is directing and will be
looking for four men and
four women in the 30.50
age range, along with a
little girl and a male
walk -on at the
"Noise," based on the ( J novel "The Dark L. M. BOYD
Descends'' by Diana '----------'·
Ramsay, is described as INFORMS In the
a "chilling urb(l.D horror
story" that climaxes in
''a bloody tale of terror."
' DAILY PILOT
l I
fB:~
····PART 2
1H1 , IUNFlOWIEA
W F Al .M. 640.a&N
AAPfU DUMPLa-ICi 6AMG
VSwlu ,_ •-1~1
"t.A.~T -"1'
AT1MI Lt.TM'S~ lal
--.O...•LOft"
MOM. .... Nl.toM-J:ff-11.21
QCIPT-ATI
. IAT.lo~ll:)I
........m..r111
MOMTT PTTHOM &
TNIHQLY•llAIL"
....... YLADY-IPllW
"'OWi. _... PUSSYCAl" INI
.. ""THI tiorruMI""
'"CONFISSIONS OP
A WlteOW CLIAJB" Cal
''TOMMY".
IPGI
en.,
Bargain Matinees $1. 50 Til 2:30
Senior Citizen i. 50 a all ti
SOUTH· COAST PLAZA THEATRES
SAN DIEGO FW't. ATllllSTOL
SO.COAST "YESSONGS" .:.~
LAZA l :l•lt:n P "ToMt:r· .,., ...... 546-2'711 ... .......,..,...,.
FREE PARKIN
SO.COAST.
Pl.AZAD
..........
""VMDR conas ta0• ,., ............ ,,_,., ...
"WHERE'S rQPPA?" (A) llf6 ............ i._.....,.. Mf.UJt
"YESSONGS"• 1:40 a 10:00 sat.i9un.. 3:25-1:45-10:00
. 'lGIMME'SAEL T,ER" -
1:20 S9t.ifSun. 1 :45-5:004:20 ...,...,,;(.
. 'LINDALOVELACE FOR I
' • (R) ., ... 1D:M a.t......_.),&f:00.1D:M
''CANDY''.
:1H: 51
f'AE PARKING
KATHERINE HEPBURN
"THE DELICATE BALANCE"
1:15 P.M. -
ENDS1-flOAY
.,
3150.7115
ll' f 14S-S14M:4S ,AUO---
"MlltlD COMPANY"
i1J0..71SO
FOUN T AIN VALLEY FOUN T AIN VALLEY• ~"'''""'~''""'"'' ~ .. ,. ...... , ~ w&ft~ I ~ ..... -~-· --arvm '&iri'RCl.I .. 11AB1trJ 1,H:i,10.1110
• 71H•fl,M
"" '"'"'~ lj\111 ..... ·~ "~ '
·y ~ f ·f • 1!l:tll!J!I i :tf
'' 2iOO-s11o.'700 •
GfNCR AI Cll\ICW'A C'ORPOR ATIO N
~ ....
!' c; p. • • ·1 ... n ---,
r.
DAILY'LOT R
.' Rell!!I'!!'! ll!•er .. '!'!'f
Concerts ChBllen~g
-.aall-weU...-way ·Beidia•a,.-.J....,l'fo.4Md
ID IOMlllorium• ~oar • lb• Weller •••live, "Der Oraal• CoMt for 1111 lm-i TOii BARUY PhllcbUll" ADJ IDUl!c Jov•
musk -that "-cme factor ...... ... wllo "'~z· tluln -It In comm.., wherever 70U. tllloe a jmlpbdll · •
_....... lcolr:: tbe cba1191C1D1 -to a, :ll w1>on tbe OOCSO proerama ~aid on by 0ur local o.uiwtn•1P1ano~lnP'. wlllriudOwnth&curtaln~ ccncertor1an118t1ona. Tbe combination of the -llillnwlitcbconcertauoiltet
One need look no flarther than brilliant GUes and the ellerv•· Bald111are Ferlauo wlll de-
the plans of the OrlJ!j(e Coast cent Gershwin acors lhould paO servedly take tbe IPOWlht u
College · COmmunlty Symphony them· in for a concert that will IClloist In tbe BrOhma-Violln eon,
Orchestra tor an ex•...a.e ot an a11o oiler TscbaikOWlb'a Sym· eerto. •
enaembio that II ~or tbe ,P.bon1 No. 8, tbe beloved llanlntboltls:tc . 'Patbetlqu ", and Rlm1ky Rl!:'SN01'TllEonlyaoloist..,
)laeatro Joseph arlman--Kor1akoff'1 "Russian Eaater" what will be an ~!l~Y awaltl!d
baJ>Dlly back wltb hit cftheltra cmrrture, -Pncram. Ann Diener Gile1, -atfir his rumored reslsnatlon On to our bicetennlal year and II co-prtnelpal nute with tbe Log
Jut year eave u1 a bad ·1care Is the vlllt of -another collect In-Allaele1 Phllarmonl' ~a.
pl1rmin1 a corker of a COl'leert for ltructor who bu mD a COO· will perform Charles Gritte's
th• oeccso opener Dec. 1. siderable name for bimseJf at the "Poeme" wltb the occcso.
piano keyboard -Blola Qlllece EWf7 aood wlah from !hit col-
mUlic teacher Lulo,LaL umn to a company cl local mual-GOLDEN WEST Collea• in·
structor Allen GllOI will be al the
keyboard in the Costa Mesa
. auditorium f~r a performance of
IAK'S CHOICE II the Saint, clans whose dedication bas
'Saens Plano CP.Dcerlo No. 2 In a became a byword in our mU1IC
proaram tbf't .. •<1ntaln•' commuruty '
Whieh WI.ii Make It?
Video Scri'IJe Offen 'Pearle.a Fol'eCO.at' , . .
ByJAYSHARBlTIT ( ' . ; J TUESDAY -"WelcomeBack, NEW YORK (AP> -Okay ' '' Kotter"•ls picking up script
gang, theme for the biannuil TV REVIEW itrengtb and will araduate to
Fearless Forecast in wbi~ we ' another season. "Joe and Soni''
predict which of tho 28 regularly will last as long as Jerry Stiller II
sebeduled dew aeries on featured in it. "'Switch'' eets
television will prosper or poop Robiaaon•.• will again be maybe a season, but ''Beacon
out. shipwrscked -or lslandwrecked IUll," wbicb started on the top,
As in past years, the Forecast as th'e case may be -by will be at the bottom by JBDUN'Yt
is conducted without reference to Januaq:. ''Family Holvak" will its characters more jumblea
tea leaves, or their equivalent, be aimilarly uprooted. "Brorik:T. than now. ••Joe Forrester,''
the Nielsen ratings. All or it ia, as may' solve crimes, but he'll be meanwhile, will pound the pave-
Quasimodo might say, just a gwlil.ed down by year's end. mentsintoasecondseaaon.
hunch. Here then, the Forecast: 1. !f'lb,ree, for the ROad," on the
btherb811d,willpickupslrength WEDNESDAY -"When
SATURDAY -Howard Ccilell, ·and ~ander about for at le8lll a Things Were Rotten" will get
the Mouth that Roared, got off to yeu. · Sherw1 ood Forest ~~ollatejl, but
a tame start with his live variety ' it'll ake a season. ' stanlCy and
show. Bui ii has promised and MONDAY -"Barbary'Coast'' Hutch" -yecbh. Half.a season.
will do at least a season. Not so will Soon Ie&-ve San F)-anclaco for "Kate McShane'' will lose her
"Matt Helm.'' ''Doc" also will the San Andreas Fault but hnal cue by 'midyear at about
turn his head, cough and expire "Phyllis'' might escape the Big''.'I. the same time. ''Doctor's
sbc>qly. Sh~e for a y.ear. But only a year. "' Hospital'' is closed.
SUNDAY -"Swiss Family
* * *
"The Invisible Man " of course
halo't a gtiost of a chance. '
* * * Cosell Rates Low
NEW YORK CAP) -Despite ''Matt Helm," a private eye
heav"y advance promotion, series, and CBS' ''Brook," anun·
Howard Cosell 's debut as host or dercover poll. ce series, also
a live variety show on ABC opened to smal audiences.
bombed in the ratlng1, according Accordint to Nielsen estimat·
toA.'C. Nielse11.Company,ijgures · ~ "Bo;onk" 't'•• rated as 6lst
·made pubUc Tu'esday. ,. ;m. of '70 shows in audienc:e-
Cosell 's j sh:ow, Which: re· ·letting 'power, while ''Matt
ml~red Saturday night, came out Helm '' was ranked in&ftli place.
third in its time period and was CBS' much -publicized
among the nation's least-watched "-Beacon Hill,'' the nation's top·
prime-time network pro1rams rated show when it premiered
last, week, according to Nielsen fQUJ' weeks ago., then slumped to
audience aamples. t4' 55tb place two weeks ago, did
It was rated 62nd in terms or barely better last week, landing
audience-attracting power and in 54th place.
was seen only in an estimated It· again came in third in time
9.23 million homes, compared to period against ABC and NBC
the estimated 25.S million homes shows, and railed again to cap·
tuned in for the week's top-rated · ture the-estimated-JO percent
sboW,CBS'"AllintheFamily." share of audience which
Two other new series that pre· networks: gener.ally consider the
miered over the weekend, ABC's make-or·break point for a series. . .
THU&SDA Y -"On the
Rocks'' will pound its way to a
1econd term. making big jokes
out of little ones. "The Mon·
tefuscos" Will be out of pasta by
January. while the liberation or
''Fay'' will continue for at least a
year. · Y
"Ellery Queen" also'will last a
year, but "Medical Story" wl1l be
DOA by mid.season, de1plte in·
tensive effort! atl aCript·to-mouth
resuscatatioo: •
fRIDAY -"Mobile One,"
about a TV reporter , probably
will get the Bil Story -about its
cancellati~ -from ~e January.
newspapel-s. "Big Eddie," about
an ex-gambler, may1-sta year it
CBS lets 'Sheldon Leonard as-
sociate mo1e with the spirit of
Damon Runyon. U.not. we make
book this show won't even place
in the mid-season F\rturity..-
We end the Fearless Forecast
with a reminder to stay tuned for
the big show ... life is only the
station break.
..... =~==-.:\,,-~:r,c: .. -
·•1rma•t'ft• S• ''a• ... A 21ratau., .,_. ~ ...._. ,.,., 111
.... tr~ ---..... lnteli.o. lull-----oudl-only. -..,y_...., __ , • ..,.,.ilillllm_ .......
Nar SINCE l.Q/E SICRY. ..
'
'1111' ln.l• (1')' 1f irll Kimn»I.
Thr Arrerl.:a11 O )'ftVlll
ski ,'\lfllmiy ~-lrat<d~I
iookO<l')'thirl): bot ht< li!f
i'.'Kfai" """'I llf"ooul..,.. -:--
lo Ir"" Um.:h lbt "" d ""'
w:rySf'lTbl m.;in.
. -·--.... -... JON VOIGHT · BUllT AEYNOUlS
MOW EXCLUSIVELY
.IM ORANGE COUNTY
l .. IM'l•<llll l'•lllff'> jft><'l'f•
. A llcr.<.inl W Koch Prodoction
~~~Susanm
Once Is Not Enough''
Kirt 11MgW Alexis Sllitll DavW .W.-
Geerge .. u ... llftiu llemlri llrrlU \ittan
IWS "LINDA LOVELACE
FOR PRE I
edwards BRISTOL CINEMA J==i~iionliifY'~I
KATiiARINE HEPBURN
PAUL SCOFIELD
LEE RE1'11CK
' KATI:.. REID
JOSEPH COlTEN
BETSY BLAIR
in EDWARD ALHEE'S
wro, TMvll•. ""· .,,.., TUU 7:1~1:4
9.AT,·tuM. ~7:ti+.41
04 A DtUcale Balance"
Duec1cd by
TONY RICHARDSON
Adaplcd for the screen by
' llrt .... Anll-
-.·s0tr Hu•wwwi
11
, -
EDWARD ALBEE ..,
LAST TWO DAYS
I.NOS TH.Jfl!IOAY
I•
,I ,
'
'.
' ,, lrWl'*-ollsL Y rt 1 DHY HUMOR.
I I .
The ltlge llbactlon of the
decade b1comes Iha greatest
~ evmtinhlltolyl
8ilt~hd
WJllTMORE
-,
as Harry S. Truman in ' "
GIVE 'EM BELL.BADY!
GOOD SEATS AVAILABLE
EVERY PERFORMANCE
TICKETS AT BOX OFFICE
NOW IW Tllf SCREEN ... Cepo.red tar 1111-.. ... -.. .
~ ... unoiled ... 1Xldly .. ~ -,._ ...... .
FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTtR • • ••• • ••
MllTOI.. AT -C~
140-7444
Co--Mlt Al V..,.
''MITCMEU."
CINEMA VIEJO
\
•
Itchy
Scalp
Irking
By DR. STEINCROHN
· ~~r Dr. Steincrohn;
I 'm healthy. except that
I 'm bothe r e d by an
itching scalp. My hair is
dry and 1 have dandruff, too. I shampoo my hair
ever)' daY. I try to keep
my.scalp clean. Yeti am
always scr atching my
' · bead as if thinking of
something important .
My friends c all me the
"'thinker.''
J'll appreciate any
suggestions. Is it serious
enough to make an ap·
pointment w ith my doc·
tor? -Mrs. G.
\
4 PC. SET.
$
~ . ------
RE~EAT OF SELLOUT!
Cbseou1 on high qualify glass 1umblers m IOvely blue & wh11e
Grecian design, rimmed w11h 22K gold. Great tor any beverage
In two convenlenl sizes: 11.5-0z. & 16-0z. Hurry lor yours!
SAVE
. . rd\11
I~
(~~~:i ~ .,_\
. I '
·"· ·s1
2.50 -..
IAuli& ILACI
MEI'S HOSIERY
• -
50°/o
YOUR
CHOICE SJ FOR '
ASSORnD PLASTIC HOUSEWARES
Now ls lhe time to slOCk up on plastic househOICI necessities 81 th!s
low price! Bread baske1, boWls, napkin holder, measuring cups,
col!ee mugs. picmc plate, 16-0z. tumblers or dust pan .•
·--
BEACON 72x90" 11'· 6.99 FIRST QUALITT . RORAL PRlllTED
SOLID COLOR BLANKE 72x90" BLAllllET
Machine wast)able blankets are per-Pink, blue or gold dominan!s
j
rVlTAMlii E '4
JIU~IUllll! JlllHlll
0
••
I
manappedlo resls!sheddino&pijeing. In on white backgrounds.
your choice ol popular cq1ors wfnylon ••Mm"iii';,;;""m"ii"iii';;;",;;';;;'"o;·-.. binding. ScienlllicaMy needlewovenl
' SAVE LMOST 2.00 ••
•
REG. ' 6.99 •
r ~· r r r o ~ ••" --~
J
f
'
BEAANDEllSON,Edllot
CAROL~f'oocl.Edltor.
Mary Ann Anderson,
chief nutritionist
for CARE, samples a. • piece of lettuce
grown in a discarded • kitchen sink planter
on the roof of.her
New York aparfmen{
•
• i
-.
First
G·lass
•
One
'Dish
i
Meals
I
••
•
..
,
' .
• ,
•
•
• •
I
•
Malnourished Children • I
t .. • • ; • '
~
> ' '
l:essons Li'li~g
By IE.\NNE LtS&ll u .. , .........
"Kids are like lealcy buck~.
You keep PoUri•I ll ID. and ll
come. r\1ht out," la)'& nutrl·
tionlsl Nary Ann A.--oube
malnourished chUdnn whom she
la teylnS lo help ID ~
countries.
"Often lhe solution ls u simple
as bullclin1 a new, safe •llter
supply 10 cblldren won't develop
chronic diarrhea Of\ malnutrition
rrom lack off'ood," she said.
Some are malnourished
because their rnot.bers try to
atretch special bigh-prot~in
veget•ble product.I with extra
water to make more than the re· ~mmended number or feedings,
she added. Miss Anaeraon is chief. nutri-
tionist for CARE, the interna-
tional aid and develoPment agen-
cy with programs in 36 countries,
It has saved millions of families,
mainly by helpine lhem to help
themselves, often by raising
their own food.
CARE is a nonprofit, self-help
agency. Its Food-tor-Work pro-
gram provides jobs for parents
on project.s related to food pro-
duction: irrigation, land terrac·
ing and building dlkes to prevent
T
-
'
,,
-
. -
'
•
~. '
-
lloodlns. They •r• paid 1n rood,
not moaey. · , .
They erow about f'Our puunds or
food for each pound they are
paid. -Mlll Anderton. sald because or
inflation. the families wouldn't
come out as well it they bought
food.
Her Job includes teachin1 basic
nutrition to local women. who
work with molhers to lmprove
the diet and health of preschool
children and themselves.
It's a case or ''Do as 1 do, not
jwst as I say.·· She generally eats
local food with typical season-
ings in each country. many of
which rely heavily on vegetable
protein. Miss Anderson, 27, a native o(
Glendale, said she turned to
vegetarianism while an under-
graduate· in nutrition at the
University of Hawaii.
She said her avoidance or meat
ii partly economic, partly at the
tD"ging of vegetarian friends and
partly a f/lSUlt of a job as meat
cutter ari\I packer in the de-
1 i cat es sen secti o n or ;1;
supermarket during college.
She said she soon 'reached jhe
point where she could no more
• • ' .
eat meat than think of Ntlne her ·
jlet cat. -.
She adl<ises agafqil pur.e ·
vegetarianism, uses dairy p"°6 _
durtll and eggs herselt ~ re-..
commena. lhat-~It veae!Ul~ include milk products, ftleaS\".
Miss Anderson said lhe mdlt I
satisfyf.:g thing about her jm
comes 'when you are ab1e to see
children come back to normal,
and the joy in their mothers'
facH when yo!J show tbem how
they can save their children, pro-i
tect them <tgainst disease and re-1 tarda(ion." ~ , 1 1
At a clinic in Guatemala, she· l
"-'BS re minded of the urgent need
for nutrition education. '
·;. Trying on a colorful lot'iiil ·
·blouse, she found s he could not 1\
pull it over her head.
"None or the women there are
taller than five feet, and their •
heads are tinY -one very ob->'
vious sign of malnutrition and're-
tardation early in life,•· she said. ·
~tiss Anderson also spe.aks
rrom experience about garden· .
ing. She grows tomatoes, cucum-
bers and lettuce on the roof or her
fourth floor brownstone apart-j
ment in New York City. Her plan-
ters are discarded kitchen sinks.
I
' I
j
~
Fall Desserts
Reap Prizes
Is your pumpkin pie a perfectly seasoned
custard or an elegant chiffon \\'ith a hint or rum?
Do you garnish with pecans. toasted coconut or
whipped cream?
•
Do you doctor your apple pie with raisins,
orange rind or French crumb topping? Or is your
specialty a natural-food cookie or bread pud·
din • g.
'.
•
' '
. -
•
l
(
I
i . t ~ • ,
1
~
Casser0les Upgraded
For evenings when dinnertime is
minimal, before Back-to.school Nigh.ls and
football games, it's nice lo have theSe main
dishes ready on the back burner ot in the
oven.
CIUCKEN WITH DUTCH POTATO
STUFFING ' ',
iz-ounce package rrozen shredded ha'h
t)rowns, thawed and separated · ..
8s1icesday-old white bread
1h cup butter or margarine
4 halt breasts or chicken, skinned and
boned
11'11 cups chopped celery stalks and
!<.'aves
l cup rrcs h frozen chopped onions
IO·ounce can condensed chicken broth
2 tc~spoons ground or whole celery
seed
:i"' teaspoon s alt
1 _. teaspoon pepper
1--'J cup chop.Ped parsley
2 slices bacon
Toast bread lightly and cut into half·inch
cubes to measures cups.
Melt 2 tablespoo~ butter in a Dutch
oven. Add chicken breasts and t>rown slow
Jy £or about S minutes, turnj"ng once+
Remove chi cken and keep wa11tf. --
Melt remaining butter in the I>l.itCh oven.
Add celery and onion and saute 3 minutes.
Add potlt.tocs. loss lig~ll.y and took 2
minutes longer . Add brOUi (celcry seed, salt
and pepper. Keat t~bc>ili.l)g, '
Re move rrom heat and add toast cubes
and par:sley. Toss well to blend. Turn.mto a
shallow l Y.l·quart baking dlsh. Arrange
,chicken on top, pusblng llghUy into sll!f·
ting. •
Cul bacon slice\; in hall cl'ONwl':" ali<\ 1
place one piece on each chicken breast.
Bake at 375 degreea tor 2S to 30 minutes, un·
tll bacon \:1 crisp and cblcken la tendtt.
Ma.kes4 Servin(.s:_ • ,..----
IT.\LIAN BEEF ON THE ROCKS
16-ounce package frozen bite-s ize
potato nuggets
l pound ground bee£
1 tablespoon oil
1 2 cup £resh rrozen chopped onions
V:r cup sliced celery
t t..si cup diced green pepper
IS-ounce can tomato sauce
V:r cup wate r
2 teaspoons vinegar
~ l 'h teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon salt
I teaspoon marjoram, crumbled
Y3 leasPOOn pepper
Prepare potato nuggets as pac kage
directs. Heat oil in a IO-in ch skillet. Brown
bee( in oil. Add onions, celery and green
pepper and saute until onion is sort.
Combine remaining ingredients. Stir into
meat mixture. Simmer 8 to 10 minutes.
Serve over hot potatoes in four portions.
C.\UFORNIA BEEFSUPl'E R PIE
2 pounds lean stew beef
I tablespoon shortening
2 teaspoons salt
1112 C\WS wa ter
44 cup red table wtnc
4 carrots
12 boiling onio11s
IO-ounce package rrozen peas
2 tablespoons cornstarch
2tablcspoons cold water
Cheese Pastry
" 1 cµp flour, si£ted
~teaspoon salt
Ya cup shotteninl{
Ila cup a:rated American cheese
3 tablespoons cold milk or water
Cook beet slowly in shortening until
'\ichly browned. Add salt, water and wine:
cover end simmer l Vs hours or until tender. Ad<l 'peeled and cul up carrots and peeleil
OPiOas.-Cover ancl:cook 15 mln .. te&r ---
Stir in peas and cornstarch mixed with
cold water. Heat to boiling. Turn into a 2-
qu art baking dish. ,
{\Vhe n making the pie in two stages
and the beer £illing has been refrigerated.
let it warm up in a riot oven while preparing
the crust.
Resift flour with salt. Cut in shorten-
ing; stir in cheese and mix in liquid just un-
til dough holds together into a ball.
Roll out on floured board to fit baking
dish, making cut-outs if desired. Position
over filling. Crimp edges against sides of
. dish and slash top or pastry.
Bake in a 425-degree oven 20 minutes,
or until ni cely browned. Makes 6 servings.
TUN.\ TETRAZZINI
112 pound thin spaghetti, broken into 2-
inch pi eces
'1' cup, butter
1{i cup flour
1h teaspoon salt
11 .. teaspoon cayenne red pepper
~ teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon crushed dehydrated onion
tlakes
2 cups reconstituted low fat insl.8.nt dry
milk
2 cans (91A ounces e~h) tuna, drained
and flaked
1 can (4 ounCes) button mushrooms, un·
drained
I can (4 ounces) pitted ripe olives,
drained
Y2 cup grated P·armesan cheese
Cook spaghetti as directed on package ; .
drain. Mell butter in saucepan over low
heat; blend in rtourl. salt, cayenne pepper'
nutmeg and onion r1akes. Cook while stir·
ring until smooth. ·
Add reconstit'bted. instant milk and con·
tinue to cook while atirring, until sauce
thickens . Combine all ingredients. except
cheese.. Pour into a creased 2 quart
casserole.
Sprinkle t,.ml oh and balte at 350
d•Freea. 35 minut~. Serves 8.
Your dessert recipe, featuring fresh or
canned apple or pumpkin. n1a y be the \\'inner of
the Daily Pilot's flarvest Home cooking contest.
Prizes, to be li sted in future editions, \\'ill be
awarded at the Irvine Is Harvest F estival final e.
Celebrating the seasonal bounty. fruits of
autumn may be used in any of four categories:
pies, cakes, cookies and puddings.
Contes tants must s ubmit their recipes,
clearly printed or typed on 81h x 11 -inch paper,
listing all ingredients and procedures, name, ad·
dress and phone number.
They may be delivered to any Daily Pilot of-
fice or mailed to Harvest Home, c /o Daily Pilot,
P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626. All entri es must
be received by Thursday. Oct. 9.
Cooks or any age are eligible except for
employes of the Daily Pilot and their im-
mediatefamilies.
Recipes will be pre·judged by the food
editor, home economists and a hotel c hef.
Finalists will be notified and asked to bring their
desserts to the Daily Pilot booth at the !estival
site, at the corner of Jeffrey and Barranca
roads, on Sunday, Ocl. 19 for the l aste-orr.
Judging will be based on flavor. appearance.
nutritional value, originality, cost and ease or
preparation. Best recipes in each category will
be publis hed in the food section, Wednesday,
Oct.22.
The (irst place pie-cake-cookie-and pudding.
makers will be honored and one or them "'ill re·
ceive the Best or Harvest award.
Since variety adds to the pleasure of reaping
and cooking, pies may be single or double-
crusted and cakes may be layered, loaf or
molded. Cookies may be of the bar, drop or rolled
types.
Keep in mind that entries selected for judg·
ing at the les tival site should travel well to the
scenic country field. No cooking will be done on
th~ premises. .
, ..
"
"
I
I
,
' t
g DAil Y PILOT
.
·Calendar
OllANGE COUNTY NON-The National
OrianJu.tion for Noa-parents has successfully
completed one' year of operation in the ('(>unty.
" Structure of the group will be changed from
~ial /educational to an education and· com-
munity service format. A speakers' bureau will
be available.
This year the group will participate in a new. l program developed by Children's Home Society
1
for potential adoptive parents.
PANHELLENIC: West Orange County
members will meet al 10 :30 a.m. Wednesday,
Oct. l .. .iJI the Huntingtoo Harbour home of Mrs.
Alan Peterson. ·
Speaker will be Carolyn Lockhart from the
Panhellenic office, California State University al Loni Beach. Her topic will be Fall Rush in the
Southern California area.
FEMINIST SERIES: Under auspices of
California State University at Fullerton, an
eight-week course wiU be offered on Thursdays
in the Hotel Laguna.
Entitled Basic Values and Feminist Con-
cerns, it will begin at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 2. Taught by
Ann Linthorst, the course is designed !or women
who are concerned about feminist issues yet
don't wahl to lose essential values and valid
structures.
The course explores identity, fulfillment,
sex, love, r elationships, emotions and family
life.
••
'
MUSEUM COUNCIL: A benefit fall festival ,
barbecue dinner and dancing to the South Bay
Jazz Band will be presented Saturday, Oct. 4, in
Bommer Canyon.
Funds will· support the Newport Harbor Art
Museum. which may be called for ticket in -
formation.
Suggestion Off-color
LAGUNA BEACH JUNIOR WOMAN'S
CLUB: Prospective members will be enter-
tained at a luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct.
4, in the home of Dee Brislen, Laguna Niguel.
Welfare and phi lanthropic programs
and cultural endeavors will be explained lo
newcomers.
UCI FRIENDS OF mE UBRARY: Philip
Smith, one of the world's premier bookbinders,
wiU be featured in a series of Southland lectures
on0ct.3on theUCI campus.
Smith holds many disti.ogµished awards in
international bookbinding competition and will
be speaking as part of an American tour.
His lecture will be at 7:30 p.m . in UCJ social
science lecture hall.
Pl BETA PHI: South Coast Alumnae will
c>pen their annual book review series at 10 a.m.
f)-iday, O<l. 3.
SIDPMATES SQUARE DANCE CLUB: A
beginners class will begin at 8 p.m. Wednesday,
Oct. l, at the San Juan Capistrano Elementary
School. Caller wiU be George Etzel. Lessons are
open to the public. · ·
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I 'm a well-to-do family. Ella has ever·
Widow 60 years of age, have been · ything money can buy and her
respectable all my life and live parents are very generous with
alone in a small apartment. I her. She is a studious young
own a medium-size black-and-person and has always made fin e
white TV which gets all the chan-grades. So far as I know Ella has
nels. never been in any trouble.
A new neighbor has been very This child enjoys coming to my
pleasant to me. I like his home to visit and I like having
personality. He has invited me lo her. But within the last four
his home so we can watch his col·· months I have proof that she has
or TV which he says is the finest. stolen at least $50 from my purse.
Should I go? I don't want him The losses occurred at three dif-
to lhlnk I'm a loose woman. -ferenl times. The first was a $20
NEED YOUR GUIDANCE bi!!. The second was two $10 bills
DEAR NEED: My, bow times and just yesterday she took $10,
have rbanged! Jt used t.o be, perhaps $15.
••co m e over and see my Dolhavetherighttotrytode·
etcbio1s.'' al with her without telling her
Invite the gentleman to your parents? Can Ella be stealing in
apartment for some homemade # order to save money to buy ex-
apple pie. The two of you can pensive gifts for people she
watch the same shows on your wishes to impress? Please help
black·and·white se!_. ·me do right by this child. I am -
TERRIBLY DISTURBED
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My DEAR T.D.: A 12-year·old who
12·year-old niece comes from a steals is trying to compensat.e for
(Ann Landers OJ
things she feels sbe Is being
cheated of -usually Jove. Re·
cent studies have shown that
more rich kids steaJ than the so-
called "disadvantaged."
Tell Ella you know what she
has done. Leave her parents out
of it. Be sympathetic. Suggest
that she ask her parents to get
her into therapy. No need to tell
them about the stealing. She
could just say she is depressed'
and wants to talk to someone
about her feelings or Inadequacy.
You'd be doing the child a
tremendous favor by handling
the problem in' this manner.
Good luck.
(Ann Landers OJ
ADVISES In tho
DAILY PILOT
HAMS
-.. So Good ... It Will
'Haunt' You 'lil It's Gone"
-( tJVi<E )
---··-----.....,;
• '
'
Exchange It ,
.. ~throw it away-exchance ill'"
Tl\lS I.a the advice of the Exchan~ette
Club of Sadclleback Valley. wblch will
sponsor a second clothlni exchanie
Saturday, Sept. 27. Jroin 10 a.m. to 4
p.111. a\ the People's Federal Savings
building, El Toi-o. Finding bargains !'l the first ex.change are Margie
Arm.Strong and' her c:hildren Lynda
andDavid. ,
\
DONNIE WARD'S
~; 11111/Ufl~ ..
.38Q WESTWILSON;:?i'"'J''"/ :iP.,!;/'
COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 92627 · ·· ..
START PLAYING
OCT. 1st
HARIOR AREAS NEWEST
l'RIVA TE FAClun • MINIMUM MEMIERSHIPS
STILL AVAii.AiLE • Rl!SA• l!ULE
CHARTER Ml!MIERSHll'S
$SOO
NO DUES for 6 MONTHS
I • •
REGULAR MEMIERSHll'
. . $150
lilO DUE$ for 6 MoHTHS
• . " First :.e-First Serf•
CALL NOW
Tf 642•2000
• Spiral Sllrell
ll' llole or H•lf
IEST IUY IMTOWM!
btra Tllldl ••• Hickory 5-ocl
a>UNTRY BACON
• ...., II S...t wltti H...., '1 Spk• Cltne
............. Toptl! .. Hoa ......... _,..., __ .. .,.. ..
FINAL
~ttCLEAN UP•
ON
IRcnaltSCIDU fAbt4cs
LAST 3 DA'.YS
AMY LIVING ROOM
.... __ _ ........ -...--
· 3700 E. Coast fiP<ay. C«ona cNI .Mar -673-9000
1 ......... ,.,_ .......
1u1s.•1sll 11 ..... u......_ 4JS.J441
CAR -PEl\
CLEANED $1995
TMS-OMl.T
any livinc room and hall
(ll•ganUe11 ofl••m Sirel
DINING ROOM (or dl•l•c ., .. )
Now ••• Allvfnctd techn iquts and
chemical dt'felopments make possible
superior results ri,ht in 1our homt ~
1nd at a price you can afford, Now 1ou
c.an h1t1 your, 01rp1fs cleaned profes~
s1onally as ottrn ai110:1 llkt. ·
adHALL $29 .CLEA MED 95
( Rttar.iess ·
t 111 I
SEltVINO
ALLO~
09'AN0E COUNTY
WE"ll CLEAN ANY AOOITIONA L ROO,_. 1195
WITH EITHFR THE AOOYl SPE CI All ........... .
675-9140
NOT DELIGHTED? DON'T PAY!.
UVING•OOM
"!~~2915
Deep Soil EXtraction
A(IOST CARP~TS D•'f
IN l'z TO 1 l'z HI.
LIVING ROOM
HAll $J995 &
DINING
ROOM
• auaRanTee SYST@m
IUllll•TEE Clll,E"{ CLEA•lllB Jr DYE CO. t• 27tll ITllEET, N R'. .,.CH, CA.
. ' • --···-·· .. . .
.!
Thursday thm Saturday, Sept. 25-27
'
50-70% OFF
OPEN MON.-SAT. 10·6
ALL FABRICS, PA TIERNS, NOTIONS
Every(~ing M lfST Go!
a.·~ 5to'U" • :1:303 Nf"\\pOrl n1,-.1.
' Nt•\\ porl llt"R('la <•croli8 from City Ila Ill •
675-2457
Mon.-Sat.
10-5:30 p.m • ,021
29129 PACIFIC,COAST HWY. 9038
S. WESTERN Al CALLE MAYOR ADAMS AVE.
SAN PEDRO TORRANCE
547.3095 378-'2795 .
I ... 11. HCll'IJ
C :.\l.l Fe Ill .\ l A-~
c :o .'\cact:~~ JOIN, THE
BEEFEATER'S
SOCIETY ·
·for a small annual tee, you receive
special prlvllegeo, purchase di•·
counts and newsletters of ideas and
recipes.
We produce II ourselves to aaaure top quallty beef every time.
Our prices are competitive with ordinary beef.
Try Firebrand Beef and If you don't agree It's an outstanding value,
wa wlll return your money. . •
. We also offer other select 'ineats, personallzed service and cookl~g
accessories. ·
• •
Visit our new store at
I 040 ~nt l'aclflc Cont Hwy.~wparf leach
TtltphOlle 631-1272 -0,.. 7 c1t1ys • w ...
Liuklattar's
Ii• eh1a ••ii llEI .
'
.. '
•
•
\
!
•. ' . -f DAILVPILOT A '
Road to ·Recov Who Chooses? ' . ry·: Town
Hall B1AllDnNDSU• -tiodayl....m ...... llOptObiem ·we. have moved patients frOi11 obscure
back wards ... and now have many
well-hidden in community
' . .............. too blab. . .. --• -•.,, "l!lM-...._. ...,,... "Sbould we 1et ___,e meat-..,. adl ....-.,,.._ emplo1meal, paid =~=~;.=.."": =.r .. ~elslrt:; emplo1ment. '" a Lures o u r e u t t u r e • -of 1111 OWD f~ erl't., for reloinlns
Prol 1111 on ah ba .. e lad: Of udel'llaadilll 't!: ....i!=ld !_. Wbal
Laauna Beacb Al· ...... to taut about and aad lowered ••DI• oi !._... willl .....;.-':!.~ care facilities.'
siJW>ceLea1ue1t\U,b8'' --death · .. _m." --. • • -w.
tlcketa available for~ "l llope u.at' -Ille .,. added. "l'm;'DOt poUU<a~'l"*Uf " -;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~
ncltln11978 Town Hall 111118 C<lllllderaUon wW sarinlitbatblCbeXpeeta· WllJ,iibe .. k~, -'t I
Celebrity aeries. be st-lea ~· mentaQy 'tlOao lb all ·-""' Jo. tile tr.ena11¥io ~ P.altiAI The fllndln1 eveat Will dl1abled." , -'Oprlate. Wbal 1 am Plrtld~on In tl\•-belin Jan. :16 wltll a lec. Palrlcla All,n'• op1. 1a1h11 11 ibat sreat inualtYt , • " 1
wre by--l.11'~ Cblef ciltlle , _ -•-· delh~red to1(e '"'"lll~mutt . "Leat we ~~~ate a Waabln~on Blll'eau, HEC.Ell TH~ • ...ioa of tbe annllll plied to the patient. -.v. ~f_pulat~on or )"•II
Htlen'l"bomas. m11tm1ottheCaUromla llcblmtbelar&e•t~· •••bed, behaviot ~
Followlnl wlll be Feb. -laUoa for llmtal tu role in aettiDI tile modlfi.ed robots, let us
23,JuneWeir,vlce-1· Leclurea -will be --llaoJlb. came-from_.lbe..-11f«biaHOO•l!lY·" not take away from lhe-
dent and fubioo editor lellted at 10:30 a.m. --"'11orsldeoftbefence. Illa Allen a!IO ·-· !Ddivldual lb• ri&bl or
cl Womea•a Wear Dally; 2:30 p.m. al lbe Nlauel A f«mer menial Jiii-ti....d tile currenl -free choice, to lbe exteDt
March 22, J01bua Loean. ThPI eater, Monarch Bay Ila. Illa. All.., air ulOll to set "retum to tbe cl.-malll1 that Is Ills.
award wimrin& director· u1. ' U. ...t to iDelw:le tbe JDMnatream of the~~ ''Let every •omaa, ~
producer-playwright; nctets at $30 ror lbe patient in bis own re-mun1t1" as lbe main man and cblld create his
April 28, actor-narrator season. are available by COYerY • ,oaJ. • own model and let it ~eunder Scourby, llM1 WJitlnl·Town H~. P.O. lnlaudlnslbeprocnoss Ulhv ab ed llould · emercefromhllown,in·
Ma.y '17. columnltt· Box 858. J,.aguna Beach toward treatm•nt or ~•ta.ii~~ ~enled dividual self." • ,
authorErmaBombeck'. 92652. ~ • ~en~al lllne11, 1be 'J.H wlde range of •
>' <> 1' aroid prof-ionlJI t0 Uf~Jleo offered to tile I
teep,aneyeonreaJllJ, -~.-'~-'-• ~. · ••we have moved~· ....... ~auc1~"" • •
tlenlsfromobscureback Wbat If they don't .
Change
' wVdl In state boap4aJs choose lo join tbe Tralnln1 sessions for
llM1 now bave mhi! well maln1tream? Aren't proepecllve "death com-
hidden In community there many people livinfl ~ons." previously an·
CELEBRATING ti~D-lasses of 'USC's care lacWties,," she U · alte~native li~estyl~_s Q'Gunced for Monday,
THEIR. i!Oth wedding an· warillne years l944-46 aerted. ;_ I ' co11111dered sane. &pt. 22, will start, Tbw:ll·
.Peering A[Or..!.n'!
niversary were Mr. and will have a 'reunl ' Sbe· bellev"!' tllal tile UFESTYLES · ~ • day, Sept. 25, In Reliable Fred w Loptl Saturday Oct 4 in 3i0 • mental h'e•lth pro-Sbe cited the cases d Manufacturing offices, ~ .. Costa Mesa...:.~: new university Hilto~ rea;io~~ 11 walking a people·~ could live Jn.. 10910Talbert,..ve .. Faun· ts' who now live in Hotel · ra or• edge when It dependently but func -tain'7alley.
met. Thepartywillbeginat comestoexpectations. tiooedbestinasbeltered Pers ons wishing
Among guests at a par.. 1 p.m and will inclUde a ~EcrATIONS work: situaUoo. Others further information re-
ty in their bome was their no-~ social hour din Where once expect• cannot live well, or feel 1arding the 1 p .m.
s on, Donald, frOD\ per and dancing tO tb; tions were aet too low they can't,. lndependeol-cla11e1 may call
"
CORDAY FASHIONS
Fall ~pecial
For Sep_t. Af)cL_O:O l.. f:rH -P•lr of
doubhtknlt pan ti with purch... of. our
regular $50.00 dolJb'eknll p&ntli tult. You
911. two pair of pents 8'w:I one j.::klt •t of
ttne first l:luality doubleknlt. Mede to your
meuurements. especially tor you by
dl-••kert right her• In CM.#' Pllf'lt.
WIS do our own de~nlng. WIS c:ut our own
petttm• -so your Mtection ta unllmiled. Mtr'JY materjals to chOOle from In unllmlt-1 .......
Think how wondtfful It Is to tMaJ ctothM
thlt h.-"'""' been tried on by ..iyone but
you. lndulgll yourself 'lllH.th your own
·'Con:llry Origlnal. ·· ·
' Wit we open by appolntrNnt onty. CaH
tor lntomwtlon or appotntmtnt. 568-4232
BankA.mericard and
Matter Charge d co.nt1.
EVENING ·
APPOINTMENTS
AVAILABLE
!
.Juneau. . • big ~and solll\ds. 11M1 hindered prolf'SS, ly, but find employment Tbreahold, (213) 4774063. ~~liens~ I\
married ID Mora, Minn.,> Wlll{NING in lh•-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-------:--':__-:----------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J
and lived in Sy~amore. junior tllvisloft, Nim-~
Ill .. before coll)IDf tq ble' Finger Crochet
California. Loptlen wu a e v e.n t.,:1 at t b e· Los
Daily Pilot mploye. ' Angeles County Fair'Was
Frau. -Origsb·y, Costa A COMBINED gradua· Mt>Sa~ •
•
'
cm on
SPORTSWEAR
wrafFPl.AlA --54-4121
:BAIBOA ISINll 2161toWA#e.
67S.1904
Values g•lore . terrific · variety
quantities
Save Today thru Tuei., Sept JO.
Polyester
Dout>le Knits
Special LOW price • gre t
value! Designer lengths. 60" yd
wide. If on full bolls • Values to 4.00
Shop
early!
conoNS ' BLINDS
SolldS ~ prints. Oesigoer 6 '6(yd )engttis ·full bolts.
YaMs to J.•9-1.91
r 0'•• IUTTONS . 9¢ hsated ~ and Colors.
• ....... 00
PALL SUITINGS 1 o~d Pol,es1er5, Wool-Nj1on
bleflds, AC1)1ics. 60" wide.
. Yolutl IO 3.91
POLY DOUBLI KNITS
Solids & lancies, lull bdls_.
60" .;de. v ........ .oo
SINOLI KNITS
"91Y·~°" blend.
Jacquauts • Full bolt~
designer lengths. . va11tts 10 3.'°"".oo 1~
SAILCLOtli 1 ·SOl~s. Macli-w8'h POiy· 49yd Rayon blend. •S"'wide.
Vohtt• to 2.SO.
SINQLI KNITS
f.Mtl: & solids. Machine-i<asll Poly-Cotton blend.
IO"'wkle. v-.. .. 3.SO
llA1QllAL CIWllllAY
.....,_ ........ 10 Oz.
100%Cotk>n, 45" .... . ,..,,.a,oo
'
JIRllY PRINTS
Acetale-N't'ion blendL Full bolts, designer lengths.
Yolvt1 to 3.00 119
yd
TRACING PllRIC
Non-woven. Trace or 1fler
pa1tems. Can be stitched. ........ '°''' 10~.
lllTIRLOCK KNITS
Sol~ coto<•. 100% Potyes·
ter. 60" wide.
VoluM to 'J,$0
CHAMIRAY
Beck·IO-lthool favorite.
Machlr'IHl'ash 100% Col-
lon. 45" wide.
Yoktlito \.Ct
CHINOS
Fiii tones, POiy-Rayon
bleocl. •S" Mde.
Ve#ffto3.00
IATIKPR111l1
Exc111ng p111ems. ......,
dllne-Wash Collon. Fl.Ill
bolls.
14~.
88~.
1~
---;
~WIAR .
.. :;..; """· tooi c......149' c:rd bl.nth. 45" ...... "
• ' ....... 2.tl )'d
I
-.
WOMEN'S
sears u 0
Where Thrift Is Alwav.s In ·~tyle located on the lower level
.tsear~l
--..-x•.a.
• l
CUT 27% to 50%!
Easy-We~ring Pants .and Screen Print Tops
WERE.
$5.99
PANTS
Rl\gular •
$5.47
TOPS 3 97 ·
EACH I
Pull-on sryle, proportioned fit nylon pants come in assorted solid colors.
With stitched creases. Coordinate thtJT'I with button·front style, short
sleeved scr'een print pant tops. Fashioned of polyester double knit for
easy-care. Misses' sizes.
SA.VE 16%!
Pant•Liner Girdles
REGULAR 12.97 EACH
Nylon and spandex powernet for flatter·
ing control. Reinforced tummy pbnel,
Wflite. M. L, Xl. 3 37 Also available in XXL sizes. EACH
UM S.On Rew~\>ing Chorg•
•
So~ Coast Plaza Buena.Park
.,.
333) lri1tol . SI.
Phono 540.3333
1150 lo Palma Ave.
PhOMlll4400
This Ad Effective Through
Saturday, Sept. 27
Orange
l'OO N, lustin A.ve.
Phone 637-2100
S. toll MOUH:
M•nd•, thou Joidoy
10 AM I• t ,,.
"'"'"' . ,.JO AM I•' l'M ...... ,
11~;,JPM
Cake
Keeps
Well
MINI POUND CAKE
It's extremely easy to
make
1 i..,. cups flour, fork·
:1tir lo aerate before
measuring
11.. teaspoon baking
soda
14 teaspoon salt
Grated rind of l
lemon
Y:t cup butter or
margarin e. softened
o/• cup sugar
11i cup vanilla
yogurt. from an 8-ounce
container I Large egg
Large egg yolk
Grease a 6-cup bundt·
style cake pan with a no-
stick lining with 1 tables-
poon of solid white
I vegetable shortening;
dust with flour. I In a medlum mixing
bowl stir together the
flour , baking soda and
salt. Add remaining in-
gredients.
1 Al slow speed of elec-
tric mixer beat until dry
ingredients are
. moistened; at me_dium
speed beat for 2 minutes
Turn into prepared pan.
Bake in a preheated
JOO-degree oven until
cake shrinks from sides
of pan and a cake tester
j.nserted in center comes
out clean -1 hour.
Cool cake in pan
-placed on a wire rack for
JS minutes ; turn out on
rack and cool com-
pletely.
Wi'ap in plastic film
and store in a tightly
closed tin box overnight
bd'ore serving for best
1
flavor and lexlure.
Raisin I
~ : Spirits
t· The perfect accom·
1 paniment for poached
eggs at a Sunday brunch, 1 this fruit medley is
!adapted from a
; California restaurant.
1 ARMENIAN COMPOTE
t 'h cup golden raisins
y, cup medium
sherry ' v, cup orange juice
I 2 tablespoons clover
honey
Medium honeydew
" melon ~ Membrane-free sec-
\ lions from 2 oranges
{ Soak raisins in the
sherry until sherry is t absorbed -a bout 24
! hours. Mix with orange
( juice and honey.
~ . Halve and seed melon;
( cut out small balls -
(
there should be about 21h
cups.
-> Add raisin mixture
and orange sections;
chill. Ma kes 6 servings.
Dieter's
Pelight
•
BU'ITERMILK
' DRESSING
1 Calorie-watchers will !l'Precla~t~.
W cu~ bllttumlllt
J teaspoon red wine
vtne1ar
J teaspoon sugar
~ tu.spoon lemon
juice •Inced fresh or
dried basil to tallte s.Jt ~nd pepper to -" Beet tocelher all the
ln1redlent1 ;j 11r tllrn
diem Cn&o a •r, cover
tifbtl7 aad shake
~-!Jr. Jraktt•bout '
~-... :.......
. . ... 4 • • • . . . ' . . ' .
---·· ~-----------. --··-
• 1n FasHion for Slim· Cooks
By llABBARA GIBBONS
It's that what-to-weer, what·to-
eat time of year. The calendar
says "tall" but the thermometer
can still say "summer."
Light clothlng ln dark colors
solves the fashion questioo, and
the food answer js fall 's favorite
ftult, the Apple!
Yoq don't have to wait for
"Baked-Apple Weather" to enjoy
slimmed-down apple dishes.
Here are some early aulumn ap-
ple idea~ for your kitchen:
CURRIED APPLE
CHICKEN MOW
l envelope plain gelatin
80Hf·IH
VEAL
V.. cup cold water
1 cup boUJng water
2 chicken bouillon cubes
1 tableiPoOn lemon juice ·
l teaa-pooo prepared mustard
I teUPoOD curry pGWder
Shake of onion powder
I cup plain yo.-urt
I cup diced cooked white
chick'en meat (or turkey)
I cup diced celery
1 cup unpeeled diced apple
Sprinkle gelatin.on cold water
1n blender:-W alfbbe minute, th·en
add boiling water. Cover and
blend on blcb speed. scraping
often, until gelatin granules
are dissolv..ed.
'
Add bOuiilo~ cubes, lemon
juice m111~ C\LCl'Y and -powd.;;. Cover aD.I bl'!"d. Add
yOIW'l, cov~r aad blend 1~ •
Pour Into • bowl. Chill. In nlrlcentoP 1111W mixture jwit
begins to set. SUr In chicken,
celery and apple. Cbill In a larae
bowl or iadlvlduol molds unUl
firm. Servet four, 113 cllorioa
each. . '
_GllE!W.ARJ.EIWAD _
1 ~ cup1 unpeeled diced
green appleil
2 cups diced celery'
'Al C)IP bolved 1reen ll'"P!'!
IS
VALUE!
'
FREE
ROUND STEAK 1.29LI.
1.79 ~1.
VEAL llllOCHURES
AVAILA9LE AT YOUR
LOCAL ALPHA BETA
MARKET
VEAL
LOIN CHOPS
.1.59LI.
llOHE·IH
VEAL
RIB CHOPS I -
5 tablapoons vanilla )"NU:J"t
2 tablespoon• !IJli)'OO.n.abe,
or diet mayonnaise
Combine and chill. Serve on
le\tuce. liljlktt 6 ·~·· 71 calories each, with re1ular
mayouwe. o Illy 46 calorle1
with die\ mayonnaise.
LEllON APPLE
Gl':LATIN DESSEllT
4·Hrvln1 envelope 1u1ar·
c-dl~ lemon gelatin ml~
I cup "JIPI• juice, bolllilg
1 cup unsweetened ap-
plesauce, cbllled
l;!lt'.Jtl~pii• Jllto ~~
pie Juice U11UI dllsolved. Stir In
cbllled applesauce. CbiU unw
eet. Cut In cubel. Ooly 40 calorleo
each. Top with additional applesauce
II dealred, or try'thia:
.~'p~f/~.·
Whip one envelope topP\l)C mix
in a deep bow 1 accord.mg to
package directions, aublUtutinc . ~r:.~~e roe tile water
SPoon b•er low-calorie,.i-rt
and sprinkle with cl_,,_ .,..
apple-pie spice~ :r.taka 2 C\1111. 9
calo~ ~tablesPo<!'I-•
Ttws. pricfl fll•M'IHCI lo bt
·ff~liH Sfipl. 25 -0cl. 1
I
VEAL SHOULDER 89
ROASTS • LI.
... , ... ·IZ-~:~·" . . .
FRESH
GROUND VEAL • 89ll.
'"""" ·'l::I ""' 0
.
BONELESS 1 39 STEWING VEAL • LI.
WHILE SUPPLY LASTS
H!cdnll!ll 88 BEEF RIBS FOR . · ·
llAtlBECUE • ......
DOLD
SLAB
BACON, 1.38 ...
Grocery Reduced Prices
14·112-0UttCE JAR
RAGUJOE
SAUCE
ALPHA BEJA .. 75-COUNT aox
FOOD STORAGE
BAGS
•• 55
.78
KRAn · THOUSAND ISUNO · •OUNCE IOTTU
LOW-CALORIE 40
DRESSING •
fTAUAN • ,RENCH · l •OL BTL
KRAFT
SALAD DRESSING
ntOUSANO JSU.HO • ,.oz, sn. .n
TitEESWElT • 1/2•GAL IOTTU!
REAL ORANGE OR
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE
.45
.79
AIJ"IT JU,01,..0. 1' 0 / llll
•·AOU."""' . ~ ....... FAMILY:sc&TT
TOILE1"1'JSSUE ·
Grocery Reduced Prices Baker y Reduced Prices
TOMATO VIEG£T.t.M.t:
CHQEM MOOOl.I: 4·"-CK
LIPTON
CUP A SOUP
REGULAR 2·L9. IOI(
AUNT JEMIMA
PANCAKE MIX
•-<DUNT •••. *OUNCES . REOUC!O"" I
49
~~~:WtLLs .39'
• lllRIOfO\Jlll'S · 1-l8. LOAF • REDUQ:O 1~ 5 ti
' oNfON CHEESE 4 '10~'--BREAD •
• AllffA BETA · 24-0L LOAF · REOOCEO 1&c:
Frozen Food Reduced Prices HONEY BEE . 49
BREAD • ·
ALL VARIETIU DCU'T U&
BANQUET . •l·oz. aox
BUFFET SUPPERS
9RIDOPOAD J!lJ. U.G S·MC9'
WHITE
BREAD DOUGH
1-L1t'eoX
VAN DE KAMPS
FISH KABOBS
1.28
.93
1.15
1-LI. LOAF ·REDUCED 115c
ALPHA BETA
APPLE CAKE
8·COUHT • 9-0Z. IOX • REDUCEO 10c
ALPHA BETA
CRUMB DONUTS
.79
.69
FOR CONSUMER WORMA110N-CONTACT •
Esther Cr•nter, Oir9c:UK of Consum• Aft•k1J
777 S. Hart.oY Btvd.. La H•bni,C•llf. 90631
\AllfU5CUODffll•$MOOl"·""l!Y "'(•! lltf<•tOl "'<Ci 0$CAll ,.A"1:11 •1·0Z fl.19(
•
... J_ •
Non-Food Reduced Prices
;ti;POW"eR -
sHAvEcREAM
2.f•OUNCElW• r , ,,-.. J'
CLOSE-UP . ~·
'J'OO'ff P~TE ,...,...,..,.,..
PEPSODENT
JO()lltP~
~2·.1a·-
~&S TIN .
COOKIE SHEET
.73
.49
.69
.99
Cl.AIAOl • STRAW9ERR't OR LIME
a-OUNCE 80TTU -~~;= HARVEST.1.19
t w~ ,_..., IM Tjpl k> N'f•llO! •In co nNll-C•I delkli. Sdn
a.t <...-Cid ,_ ti WI ..... lflllll• $1tit1KI"°" Dt ..-....,..,
..t•llllfd. • (·,,P.•""-"' 1'17.C Air"•• 1t .. u (~t. Al rlt'ln IT!lft'N.
.. -OIJOICl !IOl!l£
SUJMJST UMOM JUICE
•Ot<GGll_.....·•1·0l IOt
MJ8R>C£
.40 PANCAKE SYRl.P 1.15 PU.HUT arrrfR•t•OU..CI 1•11,54 OSCAR MAYER BOLOGNA .73 BRA.UHICffWEGER
,, Ol.WCl .O.{"l)SOl
SCOTCHQ.Mm
•II OIJ"C( IOT!lf
MA.ZOLA COltfil OfL.
OSCAR ... ~lll · n Ol P><G
1.lll VARIETY Pit.It
OSCAR "'••EK· 8 0)-,tlll[
SANDWICH Sf'REAO
OV.:a<! ,..•[II•• Ol PO<G
1.07 LIVEA CHEESE
il.ICEO • f OZ .... G •• ,
1.42 .. LAI· •-t.1 ... G
FA!Urlft JOHN 'MEHIRS
.8f 11.IUIT • l..Ol. PICO ---· .79 CREAM CMH:SE
-------·-----____________________ ,
' ' ' ' •
WITH THIS COUPON I ' WITH THIS COUPON : ~~\~~ft ltc ~~;x raia~~sc ~ FLAKES NAPKINS B.SCUITS eA. l
I LIMIT o~~~~~:rg~~;ouPON '' LIMITO~~curg:~f'O~ ' I PER CUSTOMER ' LIMIT3~~g~~iROUPON. ,,,, !
1 I I I 1 I I ' VAUO IU'T. 25-0CT.' ' ' YAUD Sin. 21-0Cl:.. I I YAU> SEPT. 25-0CT.1 I VAUO SEPT. 25•0CT... I , t I I ~ _ I , 1 ·-------------------------·--·---------------· . ---------------------· ----------------------1>;-· ----------------..... ,. .... ----------___ ._..__ ... i; ·--------. ----·-----------------------· ______ .. . --~ ----------·--------------·----------, -------------...................................... , • ---------~~ ' :--~--------------"!--~ -----------------------------·-1
_ wtTH TH~ COUPON
EARl.YCA.._ I' LARQI!
PITTl!D ~ C
OLIVBS t.NIT ONE CAN I ONE COUPON
PER CUSTOMER
YAU) RPT. 25·0CT. t
WITH THIS COUPON
PAR KAY C , ..... MCkAOE ' ''
MARQARINll
L1Mll ONE PKG. l ONE""COUPON
PER CUSTOMER
YAUD ~ 21·0CT.1
' . ' ' WITH TMIS COUPON : WITH THI$ COUPON : • •
PHABETA IOc ii CONTADINA s~. ! DIET •fl.Avoos . ! l TOMATO . -! BEV~.RIT•A:C,~SE&OSNECOU.PON 71EA.1 ! ! SAUCE . . . l ...,M "'~ '1 : LIMTT 3 CANS & O~E COUPON :
PER CUSTOMER , I PER CUSTOMER :
VALID SEPT. 2S•OCT. t : : YAl.K> SEPT. 25-0CT.1 : I I I I I
·-·-----------------------·--------------··--··--------------------------------------------· ·-------------------------·----------------·-· ·-----·-------------------··------·-----·----· \ --r--
• ---..---'S----
• I
<
• -. I '
• •
• Hobor Cnicl<en
I •
lr:avels Well
•
I
\
' I r •
BEANS
.. ,, '
·•. I ...
~ ~?
llG ~ ' . TdlLn .J •
I 28n.
Bottle I
,
FR,U4luM DIY IOASTID
l'EANUTS I
f •
, Sl'llMGFIB.D CAMMED
'K PO:lATOES ~ .............. ... '" ' (' ..
UA\EMOM
LEMON ,
JUICE
~·-·11 . ';-"~..a:. •
IRISH SPR.IMG 3~s1 LAWiY'S G,ARLIC
SALT ·
AUNT Jll;llMA
FRENCH ·,·
TOAST 4~c
,, .... "".Dl!ilERS 43c
USDA CHOICE MEATS
I
l -120%;
Variety . ..__ .. J .49.. .~ ...
12 oz ..
l . SnlOlcie U~ICs 1.35 .....
I
--• ) \
...... -...--~ ...... ...-.............. ..-..--...~·
MIMT JIMIMA
.,, :~ 3~5.1
5 51
SPRINGFIELD
ORANH '6GL
JUICE o I
. -. . ;; -
.. '"*k• L..clLMeals . . '\ '
8 oz. Chop~Jfam •••••••••••• 1.3~ -
8 OZ. OliYe ~ ••••••• •·· ••• : ••• 86c ...
8 en.· Li•er Clieese •.•• ~ ••••••••• asc ...
·' a oz. Coffo Salmni
,_
•••••••••••ree89c ...
8 oz. Hard Salami •••••••••••••• i·.63 ...
8 oz. Ham 'n Cheese ; ••••••••••• 1.23 ...
I '
8 oz. Mew ~ •••••••.• 1 •••••• 1.29 -
8 ~ Summer "SallsCICJe •••••••••••• 99° ...
• 6 oz. Cooked Ham •••••••••••• 1.69 ...
8-oz. PJckel & Pimento ............. 89" ...
8 oz. Braun~eiger •••••••••••• 69° ...
8 oz. Luncheon Meat ............... 96" ...
8 QL Sandwfdil $Pread •••••••••• 69" ...
8 OZ. Ham 'Spread •••••••••••••• -i • 72c ...
"I ·lb.· Bacon •••••••••••••••••••••• 1.98
I lb. Bol09na .•••••••••••••••.•••• 1.39-
1 lb. Ham Steak •••••••••••••••••• 3.49
8 oz. SIJcedt~hwelger ~ •• ._ •• 9 s· ... . .
( . . •
IXftA FAMCY ' '
GOLDIN DIUCIOUS
APPLES 1
, 1:51
· , u. S.#1 lussm (
NT~TOE~~ 10~19 ('
IX'IV. FANCY YIUOW
-,. MU.TED RHSTOMI ,
PEACHES 1i ~r-4=us.;;._::S 1=-----1~ .
'· FUSM LOCAµ.Y GROWN i
· GREEN IEAllSl
29c I
I LL ! I
SWllT I. JUICY
'· VIJ.IMCIA
ORANGES
·7~ .. 51
MISS IRECK SUPER
(
(
I
i
~u~ IALSAM KIMSE I. 1_,. "
COMDmQMER 1.00 -.
;(,OTHBRUSHES 5:.s 1 a,.w•-
WINES
2/5
GALLON
•VIN ROSE
• CHAILIS ILANC
•IURGUNDY
• PASTOSA
• PINK CHABLIS
5 1.59
Store Hours:
8 to 9 Daily-Sunday 9·8
"'en tH.cflwe
Thursday thru Wednesday
Sept. 25 to Oct. I
Prias~fose.l•"-1
W• Gladly Accept Food St-
COST A MESA I 9th and Placentia
PLACENTIA 7 I 0 W. Chaplniin
f {"
'
' "
I
I rl
I
. . . . -• . . . . .
•
I A DAILYPll.OT
Cucumber's £ost Low Any Way--~¥o ·J,J Sli~e 'It
By CECILY BllOWNBroNE ......... "'"' ........
· 0 For some reason we've never l\ieen able to fatho111. that famous
~British speclally -the
cucumber sandwich -never
1 ;eaught on in the United States to
' the extent It ~id in England.
1 Yet cucumbers from the
,garden. or from th~ market at
times when they're reasonably
}>riced, make th9" thrifliest and
ll1IOOt delicious of sandw!cbei.
naturafla'Di D ""fOod, tfi'e-class(c pot of good strong tea for 4
British way with cucumber o'clock consumption. are the
sandwiches may come into acmeofsopblstication.
vogue. . TO .i-repare a delicious spread
These are tnade shprtly before to ~co~pan,y a seafood salad for
serving: freshly bake4 whit~ a luncheon vie "like to pare a
bread is cut paper-thin with cucu~ber and, erate it into
cru~ts removed anct sptead cream c.b,eese, addinC a little salt
generoµsly wjtb the'best ~tier. and pepper, to use as a filling for
then fllled with thinly sliced, thickly sliced fresh brown bread.
pared garden-fresh cucumbers If the cucu'mber has large
and a sprinkling of pepper seeds lt'!_~t tg cyt it in )!ajf Th~'Ol . ~""en"'°ifftwlse and scoop out the
The sandwiches, each cut into seeds with a teaspoon before
two rectangles and offered with a grat.ine.
A third ·~~'!°" 11 inll'lred by Danllla c • The cucum-
bers fa( llWi Ill'• oftm left UD· P~ all(\ are l)lced P"l"'!·thln.
Tben, io quote a Daal1b cookbook, ''they're sprinkled
with salt, put uqc!er pressure,
drained and mannat<.<1 In slight
ly sweetened -peN!d vinegar. '
The cookbc>ok 1111cests using the cucumben !or topping open
sandwich• of 1llce<Lcold rout ~beef."Wfover brmed eel
brisket, cbJlled and sliced very
thin, makes an exOellent sul).. •
llitute tor tbe mor~ expensive
f'S!l;pon cucum~ sandwiches
are hearty and ema·cood. To
mllke th ... , 01ke 1almoa*bome-coolted or canned) and ' with
mayonnaise/ lemon Jul~ and
fmely grated onion.
Spread the ml~tureon 1ilees of
fresh bread and top with sliced
pared eueumbers. Clote the.
sandwicbes with buttered bread
lllCes -thebuttwViill belpkeep'
the cu.cumber in place.
Another hearty sandwich is
•
made wl rye bread spread with
a npxt~re of 171a~llise and muslard, 11ic:«lllw,. cheese and
sliced pafed Ct.lc.Umber.
Tbe xth tuc1estlon ls a
cucumber sandwich devised by• friend~mipe to serve with cold
cuts an cheese. ffe rye l>ttad andi!preads
it generously with mayonnaise
mi~ed wjtb instant minced onion
and ..;,...,ed pepper. He add$ a
la7er of lettuce and unparec:t
cucumber scored with the tines
ol a f6rk before slicing.
i Now thaJ the best-known chefs I; France are touting the value of
r-~~~~~~~-:--~~~~~~~~~~~~=-~~~~~-=-~~,-=-
'{J akin g?
Munch
Thriftily
For a thrifty supper,
serve this loaf with
baked beans. coie slaw
and fruit.
RAJSINOATWAF
1 cup Oour
1 teaspoon baking
soda
1h teaspoon salt
1 cup quick-cooking
oats
Large egg
Vt cup firmly packed
dark brown sugar
l cup buttermilk
1 cup raisins
11!1 cup coars ely
broken walnuts
On wax or brown
paper stir together the
flour. baking soda and
salt; add oats. In a
medium mix ing bow1
beat egg and brown sug·
ar until blended; beat in
buttermilk. Add flour
mixture and stir until
moistened. Stir in raisins
and walnuts. Turn•into a
!l"eased 8 by 4 by 2~ inch
1oat pan. Bake in a pre-
heated 350-degree oven
until loaf shrinks from
sides of pan and top is
browned -50 to 60
minutes. Turn out on a
wire rack ; turn right
side up; cool complctely:-
When cold may be slicea
about V..-inch thick. For
easiest slicing, when top
will ",1·often, wrap in
Elastic mm and_ stol'! in
a tightly covered tln'box
"for 6 hours or overnight..
Keeps moist, stored this
way, for several days;
after that, store in
refrigerator.
Sauce's
Sweet •
~Ji;~j~ine.
!·pound package
dried baby llma beans
' \VuP peanut oil
· 1,~ ebopped onion
~cupboney
2 teupoons aalt
Soak beans in water
to cover overnjgbt; _add
enqugb mo~ water to
cover and simmer wttil
tender -about 1 hour;
drain,
Inf a small skillet.
heat tbe. oil; add Onion
and ~k gen Uy, stirring
ofteQ, until wilted; stir in
hooey and salt; stir into
llma beanll.
1 Turn into a 2·quart
casserole. Bate, cov·
ere4, in a preheated
J.SO..degree oven until
bearis are glazed -
about 1 houi-. Mali es 12
servings.
I
Chowde
Creamed
It's hearty, nutritious.
8114 tastes good.
TUNA CHOWDEll
l~·ounce can COD·
densec! cream or Potato
llOUP 2cupomilk
V. cup minced celery
~ cup finely gr~
carrot, not packed down
8Y.t-ounce can chunk·
al)lleJlght tuna, drained
$alt -and pepper to
taste
In a medium saucepan cr-..1¥ atir' tbe milk
Into tbe n•p;..add ·~
an4 ... 1Gt; beat. -· . rillil. all-. Gaul' i.... ibc*. Md tmia ::,.. Nit ................... ud ....... 1
Mtt.~
""""'----~ ~-..-.......... .,... ___ .
I
SrlllULATll ,... ..........
' " . •
SPICIAUFOR
SIPT. 2•, 25, 26,
27, 28, 29, 30
mAM sn11 oe WllOU -' ,. oz. fA• ... 29c
total1avlng1 on PRODUCE
-~ ... '
' ... ....
~Ut•UUtf ORA~~~ .• ~~ICE 5 ~ .. ::.1 oo
-KEICHUP-
···~ 25c
--......
PRUNE JUICE
s:a 01. llOTIU
GUIGHAM
l~E CREAM
I W fUVoU--Plat 1/2 UL
Wl'lll TNI --WHEATIES
l:lOLllllG. 41c
WITHOUT CouPoff 61c: llll~ .... --.. -arr. 24 -......
I ' I
Wl'IN ~co••• IMR'I
.SNACK .PAK
fllUITOll .. D•G
•Cl'.llllG. :59c ---.... -·--~ .............
,,._ . '''" ..._. . . . . .· ..
..
•
'
I .
DAILYl'll.01' Cl j
PRODUCE
TENDER BEEF CHUCK l.EAN & TENDER
1 BONE ROUND
ROAST t ST.EAK ·
98! s1·~~
• FRESH GREEN
. BELL·
.PEPP.ERS
-19¢
• •
ASROUNDB0STEA KEiF
I, s1 .38LB.
BEEF ROUND BONELESS FRESH DAILY EX·LEANe •
SIRLOIN TIP. STEAK GROUND BEEF
s1 73LB. s 1 233~b~:.·m0<e • • L81./
TENDER BEEF CHUCK
1 BONE STEAK
S1 .05LB.
CANTALOUPES ..... ~~~-~~~-~:~ ... 4 : S 1
THOMPSON . I I 3 s 1 SEEDLESS GRAPE.S .. R~~-~~-~~!~.~-:
ONIONS .............. ~1.~~'-~-~?~ ......... 1 sc LB.
c ABB AGE ........... ~~.:~ ~~~.:~ .......... 12 c LB.
BEEF CHUCK . s
BONELESS .FAMILY STEAK ... 1.58LB.
LARGE END s 1 78 BEEF 'R.IB STEAK ................... • LB.
BEEF CHUCK s 1 49 BONELESS CLOD ROAST ........ • LB.
ZACKY 73 FRESH HEN TURKEY ................... · c~B.·
DUALITY SLICED · ' s
1/4 PORK LOIN .................... 1.63LB.
QUALITY PORK s 1 59 COUNTRY STYLE RIBS .. ~!?!~... • LB.
PORK LOIN LARGE LOIN s 1 63 PORK CHOPS ..... ::................. • LB. AUNT HA TTIES
BEEF PATllES ..... : .... ~'-~ .. ~~-~; .......... "7 9~B.
\I \I
CORONET · ULTRA IV . KRAFT
MACARONI &
CHEESE
\I
TIDE DUNCAN HINES \I
~ SKIPPY .
• . TOlLET ~
TISS~E ~ o·INNER DETERGENT CAKE',
,MIXES
ASSORTED FLAVORS
PEANUT
BUTER •
¢
;
)
DEllCA lESSEN
OSCAR MAYER
ALL BEEF or All MEAT
WIENERS
99~
1 LB.PKG.
.. .
•
' '
'• 120Z.PKG.
' .
ORANGE , ... trfT OIWI ta. \ AT~ G*Wl" awa. UE-~ .._ SAT.IT'lfl
T 11 TO a
• • RIVEASIDE t ....
' .+-• t •• Tl'Ll.111 """ ATTn.Wl•~
• ~,.._.tA.T, ~!O~· ..............
7%0Z. BOX
¢ 69
(INC. 25c OFF)
If You Buy Each Ona Of These Wise Buys
You Will Save A Total Of S 141
A· 1 STEAK SAUCE ...... ~.?.~;~.'!~~~-4gc
SPRINGFIELD
PRUNE JUICE .............. ~.2.~::~.~~~~. 49c
STRAWBERRY OR BOYSENBERRY
KNOTTS PRESERVES ......... 1.~~~:!.A.~ 99c
ALL VARIETIES
2
3 PURINA CAT . FOOD ....... ~~.??-:.~~~-c
GOLDEN GRIDDLE SYRUP ~.qrt~~s 145
SOF-SPREAD OR DIET 2·8 DZ. TUBS IN 65 IMPERIAL MARGARINE ....... :.~~T!l.~ c
RAGU ALL VARIETIES s 109 SPAGHETTI SAUCE .......... ~~.?.~ .. ~~~-·
BETTY CROCKER ASSORTED 4gc ·PUDDINGS ....... .".~~':'~~~ ....... ~?.?.~ .. ~-~~-
GENERAL MILLS 58( WHEATIES ........................ ~~.~~ .. ~?.~. PLAINORCHOCOLAT~ S·119 OVALTINE ......................... ~~.?.~-.!~.~
5 OZ. REFILL CUPS 92C DIXIE PAPER CUPS ......... ~~?.1.~.~?.~.
DISHDETERGENT_ _ (INC.ZOcOFF) 94c IVORY LIOUlD ............. ~~.?.~:~.<?::':~~
I ~ Wt rtw\'I tht right to llmtt ..... to...., a wttolesaltr•.
7
18 OZ. JAR
• WELCH'S
GRAPE
JUICE WAFFLES
29¢ 53¢
GOZ . CAN
KOLO KIST Morton
BONUS PACK
14.4 OZ. PKG.
Burgundy beef or 28 oz. box Macaroni& Cheese
SIRLOIN TIPS s 99 CASSEROLE 31 c
37 bo Springfield
oz. x chopped 10 oz . bolC
s1 49 BROCCOLI
Schilling Ore Ida
sour dough cheddar 1 oi. box crinkle cut
CHEESE BREAD · 49c POTATOES
·TORRANCE
''"' IU.~AYI:.
AT MAWTHCl'IHl & """'-Y!OA
• STOM M:ll.MI .,,,,, 1"'IU MT, l'.Jlt ~"'° "IUMMY 1e •I
LAKEWOOD mo CAMON IT. _ .. -· ...... ,_.......,
.,.._,,..,MT. t;IO f'O t:ae
~'''·'°'
WOODLAND HILLS m oo
wtCT'OlltY kW.
COfMl• CW VICTORY • CANDO.\,...,..
..oM. TM'IU "' t TO e SAT. a SOM. 110 r
GRANADA HILL$
"'°' CHAf SWORTH AVIE.
AT CHATSWO RTH 8i ZELZIU4 ·--91JM,nfllUP'N.t•lO•
. IAT fo•tt1.1HC».Y1e•t
, l
•
. '
I
[
I • • .
•
I
I
I
!
•
' • •
---·
{', ·-•
• • ' .,.;:...-=:.==.'"'-'::C'--~~~--:::=::::=:::ti=:i::=""""""""c..o ,
• . . .
• .
l
Pheasant p resentation
shows ·meticulousness of
Fred Hossli who has earned
53 national awards.
Well Appreciated
Extr a Effort
For ·Cooks who enjoy
ro,ling and cutting
dough, this is a nice nov·
elty to serve with tomato
soup and fruit salad.
CHEESE TRIANGLES i·"9 cup flour. stir to
aerate, before measur-
ing.
1i4 cup enriched cor-
nmeal
1" teaspoon salt
:Y. teaspoon instant
minced onion v .. cup butter or
mafgarine
'h cup grated ched-
dai' cheese
Stir together flour, cor-
nmeal, salt and onion.
Cut in butter fine; stir in
cheese. Add yolk mix-
ture, mixing well.
If necessary, add a lit-
tle more milk to hold
dough together.
Turn out on a prepared
pastry cloth and knead
genUy a few times. Roll
out to form a 12 b)r 9 inch
rectangle.
Cut into 3 -inch
squares; cut.each square
diagonally in half. Place
on ungreased cookie
sheet; prick well with a
fork . Brush with egg
white.
1 egg yolk beaten
with 3 tablespoons milk
• · ·t egg white, slightly
Bake in a preheated
450-degree. O\!eD until
golden brown -7 to 9
minutes. Makes 2 dozen. beaten ~
'Brilliant Cooked Shrimp
when Yodrethe best
selling coolmd shrilnp in
the nation, II sere must
be a reason.
F't;nstiince:
•
Patrons Pampered SEAFOOD SPECI ALS
............. u .. ..... -.°"' .... , ,,. Lmil
Restaurants usually
t:!elebrate someone else's
birthday.
But The Chez Cary will
celebrate its own J.eotb
anniversaire -a
milestone in Orange
County dining excellence
_. with an invitational,
black tie dlnner on sun.
day and Monday, Sept.
28and29.
''The evenings will be
a tribute to our guests
rather than the
restaurant, an op-
J>Orlunlty to thank 1!Jem
ro-r their patronage,"
said Mary Lou Frazier,
manager.
"The staff is enjoying
the t:!hance to ,do 'our
thin g' -whatever we do
the very best.··
Executive chef Fred
Hoss li, graduate of
Geneva 's Hotel de
Bergues academy, has
prepared the com-
memorative menu in
keeping with the
restaurant's seven Hoµ-
day magazine awards
and S3 other national
honors.
His already famous
poached salnion with dill
sauce and sweetbreads
en croute will precede
the sauteed pheasant
with vea;et11ble garni,
French "cheeses and
raspberrjes Romanoff,
The eig.ht courses will
be accol'DJ)anieQ. by rare
connoisseur wines in· eluding a new Russian
champagne and Chablis,
Grand Cru~ "Les Clos"
Vannier, 1971 1 ·in
jerobaillD. r
"Obtaining pheasant ii
a feat in itself but the
hatdest part is finding
the feathers for the pre-
sentatjon trays,.. Mrs.
Frazier explained.
"We want the party to
epitomize the difference
between spectacular and
classic." ·
Among the guests ex-
pected are Messrs. and
Mmes. Keith .. paede,
Robert Gugg\!!nheim,
Bob Hope, John Wayne,
Clement Hinch, R0&s Mander.
Cortese. John Porter, When creamy and
Ken Cory. Donald Nixon semt-•oft, add fresh
and Ken Wlllll. rupberrle1 (lea vine
Ma.itred' J.B. Ba1es1cy ·enoueh for .rarniab>.
alao wlll lntr9'1uce Adjn. Fold In enoueb whipped
and Mn. Don&ld FrA$81", ci.am to intrease the
Dr. and lfra. Maurice ...iumebynotquitehalf. W~n, C..be ~erbert Spoon into chilled ' Kalmbac~~ Virginia ch1mpa1ne glas1es and
Knott Reafsnyder. .toP with garnish. 1 J ~t ·Hl tlns M ess~s: tMMiilR!~lil!!l!lil!!'~ 'and Mmet. F . E. Qml D1;iS'iWJil Wingate of Copnecticut, "[~
Paul S<hrlmer of New "-'
York City, Carl Vreteau A great
o! Texas and the ~
van HW.ser family fiom
Canada have been bid to
the $7S per celebrat!cn.
A.JS a pre.view taste of
the elegance, H9ssli of.
fers this preparation for
ras pberries Romanoff
for two:
Dis_s olve a small
amount of brown sugar
in the bottom of a chilled
bowl , with one ounce of
Grand Marnier. Add two
scoops of vanil la ice
cream and •mix it with
another ounce Qf Grand
piece tor kid•.
STIMULATES
young minds.
Saturdays
In the
DA ILY PILOT
COMPARE
OUR
PRICIS!
fll5H \
Sturgeon Steaks
flllSH
RED SNAPPER
HOURS: MOll>A.1' THRU fll..11 M
SAT. 11 :3CM:30 Cl.0581 SUM.
The FISH MARKET
Jim mo! sandy C~r
145 E. BROADWAY, COSTA MESA
J US.5223 f,
FIORI
ROY~L~ -m
TOM ----BANQUET
DINNERS -
ll(ln 1111
'
.....
HAWAIIAN
PAPAYAS
• •
.... 22-
11. AVG.
.,..,.,..
11\0W ..
""'""" UMIT J ,.U. ~
u·R-KEYS '
I UF(MU<I SHOUlDEI CLOD IOllEUSS
BEEF ROAST .
39
I
A
.... ·-· .... z.
I LOAf
~ -----------llii' -~------------. ~·::.... . I
T , .... "9"' a:uiaun 3 J,1 l -"'~; .. ~ 1' !c'i)<\ Vt . ~!"!S ,,. T l
!47~ ...,, ... -~ .. --··I • •~Clu•"'• l•OUOt .l••J>C(O ·~• '"'"' I -_.., -COUl'lll' ""-•a•• ,-.Ct .... ,..,. -~ ,, -fYt\ ., • '"l.. I
N . ·---1---RID-IXCOUPON ---J
I
..
'
I • • • . ' L1 ..
. ' j
-
•
•I
I
(
I
..,-!
r
I
• •'
•
'
DAii. V PILOT Q
•
Tu make household
clean-ups easier on yo~ we've added scrub
strength to Northern's ~
new Brawny Tuwels. ·
Brawny's scrub strength ~
will help you scrub up: grime, baked-on foods,
. crayon marks ...
..
you name it. We take
'"·~, _;,. '5<1 r ---rbe~~,a~1d~:n;hem
together. Tighter. .. for scrub strength.
Try new Brawny. New Brawny is one
of the strongest
towels made.~. FIBERS
we guarantee it. ~
See package for ~
details.
.,.
BONDED
~
TOG Elli ER
-. . .. ...-. . . ... ,. ~ ----
•
'
•
I l
I
I
' ' ' '
I
I
I
•
USDA
CHOICE
TOP SIRLOIN FRESH FRYING
I STEAKS . :CHICKENS
• '
U S D A . U.S. Gov't. GrlCle "A"
.~i~:.s239 ~r~:d,53·" Boneless • -3# & Under Y
Cut. lb. lb. '-------"
GRIPES .
I •... lb, ,
HEAD LETtU~E ~ $1ze lllld ................. EI. 29c
fOMATOES ~-Slze ........................ :u.'25c
AVOCADOS ~r.tr0Any11ea1 ••• -........ 1a.33~
• Cllllll ..................... .,""".. ' '1lf ilMe or,11!1 ~ Plictjl Tool ' ' •
Mouse Plants ii gg· o BoslOn Fems .. $399
AaortaAI .......... Pal AIWIJIAFnortlt ........... "" -
-·
I I ~
USDA
CHOICE
(
•
•••
--
•
,. ,,. . ' ·~
I
' I
f'
•
•
•
•
'.
'l t ~ ,,
'
' ' "
'
' , ..
\
--
----
' •
I
•
I
. .. . . ... ... ' ' .• •
--... _ --.,
• WednMdlir.S!ptember24, 1975 , • I
. , _ ..,.._....:.; .... :;..:...· . . ~International Favorites Surprisingly Simil1r
Cran~.~rry Juice Cop.ies Old Coantry
.,
.ta ste
,
By CECILY BB.OWNSroNE
AUK..W ~ ...
One or the niost fascinating
aspects of cookery is tli&'{ay the
same dish pops UP. in the Cllltljpes
of different nation~ties and in
it is interpreted by each.
A favorite exampile or this is
Italian ravioli, Chlilese won lens
and kreplacb from JewisD
cuisine.
Another example, les!S re·
marked on, is the similarity _of
Champagne
Sole's
I l~~~~:i~inthe
kitchen is as essential as
salt; to give navor to dis·
hes and sometimes to
tenderize meat.
The t"OSt o( true Cham·
pagne prevents one from
using it too freely in the
stew pot, but it does so
much for game, fowl ,
fish sauces and cheese
dilbes, that you may find
it worthwhile to try it.
Uke this formula for
mtetofsole:
I SOU ELl:GANTE
12 thick fillets or sole
' l(a bottle brut cham-pagne ...
1 small oni o n
chopped fine
1 ounce5 butter
8 tablespoons fresh
<"ream
••BB yolks Sall and fresh
grqwict pepper
Lay ,fillets fiat in pan
and cover with cbam-.
pagne. Add salt, pe.,_,
onion and I tabl.,pooo
butter.
l!ring slowly to boil,
redu~ l,leat and simmer
gently 7 minute..
•
•
When cooked. -remove
fillets \#Ith perforated
• I fisbM.rver,pl•ceooeerv·
ing dlsb and put ID ~
oven.
Put remaining butter
i n pr:ebeated thick
saucepan and allow to
melt off the fire. Add
'cream and egg yolks. · •
Beat mixture 7
minutes with wire whisk.
Add enough or the sim·
meting liquid to obtain a
fairly liql:lid ere.am
saUC8'
Heat sauce b~t don't
boil. Pour over fish and
serve with champagne.
S«vesS:,
.T~rrific
.
Tureen
..
Gtrman Rote Grube, Danlab
Rodgrod and Russian Kissel.
All are ·puddings made of
sweetened fruit thickened with
cornstarch and all are favorites
in their respective COWl~---
One of the best veJ11ono of Rote
Gh¢;e we'"°e come upon wu de.. Kochmann. who
spent ing-up yean in
y l!;ronce.J>ut has
lived in the U.S. SIPU 1946.
When Rene was aliUle-girl her
HINDQUARTER
U.S.D.A.. MADI "A' WITH l'OllTIOHS
Of Hlat. WINOS AND GIUJTS
47!
mot!'F made RoU GrutJe fl'om
lresb rupberrin and wawbtt-
ries. Now . Rene makes the
dessert with the fro1en
1weete1:1ed berries aad1 adds
cranbel:rYJUlucocktalL ·
"Addlac a 1"118 aftheO.VOr of the tart eraaf>erry:• she says,
''11111keo lbadwert taste the way
my-··~"~ Ullac •Jl!!llJ! ice cream as a
•auce lor tDe Rote Grutze is
all(lfbn Change of Rene's -a
quid! Md clelicious swil<:h fro~_
the tradltlcoal vanilla custard
sauce or crealSl.
B.ENB IWCIUIANN's
SOTl:GB.Vl'D
2 (W--.l P""~ fl'olen sweetened~tba-' lO·ounc• paetq:e froa:en
sweetened llr••W.1leo.(balved or11lud), tbwed ·
3tables--li ~ cup traaberrY juice
cocktail "' 1 cup vanilla ite ere
m•lled In an electric blender whirl the
undrained berrfea unlll liquelled.
f>our throur~ a fine-mesh
~rtoreal~ve seeds.
'
• ANOTHER All ·NEW STATER BROS. MA.RklT AT 12U llOllDD A'\'I., CORONA, CAUF.
Ou. MD .. · CHUCK '·~··· ROAST .OAST
--·~-·. ,18.$1A9 IEAK •..-09~ c · s1·~~ IE~F L •• ' 18• '
BONE-rN POUSH BEEF 19 rSAU~GE Ll~R
gs~.· 69~ Lii.
.
~eatdt& Z'~~ ~
SCHICK BU.DIS
I •
Old·fasbioned flavor
from the-new ,..and de·
lightful "American Food
-?he Gastronomic
StOI')'" by Evan Jooes
<Dutton).
•
..
j
• •
serve to guests with
French bread and a fruit
compote. .
JUDITH JONES's'
CREAM
OFBARLEYSOUP .
· 2 tablesPoon's butter
1 carrd't, finely
chopped
l medium·size onion,
ripely chopped
1 leek , finely
chopped
2 stalk.I celery, fine-
, ly chopped
5 cups veal, lamb or
chicken stock
'h cup uncooked
pearl barley
~ teaspoon dried
lh.Yme r 1 teaspoon salt
Fl'eshly ground pep.
,.. I cup tbinly sliced
milbrooms · ;,-Lemon juice
~ cup heavy cream
2 tabl es poon s
~chives
Jlllt I tablespoon of
b•tkr, re1ervln1 re-
m• I ad er. Sau te
v..-.bles in It !0< 6 mr .. tes. stlrrln1 oc-
cill1 ••Jy.
A611toek, barley one!
••• afnp and simmer,
··~ ••~ ove-: low beat. rorlhollr•
...... )lie melt re·
,,......,llodterin1~llet.
•12dlllloqma apd<a
I lit•Jl•I Of lelftOD ' 1.-, ..... Ute until ,, ,., ..... &ender' .
........ ytooene,
.. avy cream into
mushrooms , h eat
without boiling, then mix
mushroom-cream into
barley soup.
Sprinkle with minced
chive1. M ak'e 6 aerv·
ingl ••
MOUARELU
MOOUS MANO • C.-• 1Mn.
$149
VISIT WfTH
GIAMHT OOOSI
II"' 2-S, 2•, 17 NOM 10.00 A.M.
te S1JO '""'
SNOOPY
WIUll
THiii TOOi -··'-: t.:.. .. , '::" ... , ..
MITWtNKM
~,. .... ,.
•Mn..lT Mil, ....... 11.., ..... ,,,., ..... -.... _, ..... _, ...
'
WI llSIRVI
'"' ··-•o PRICES £me. UM':..C::.~'o"'" 7-FULl DAYS
CO-•CIAL SEPT 25111 DIALHIOI ..._ '
WHOUU.UH ""''' hL . -. ~
I ••
'·
'
"
•
•
I r
Richness Garnished
II~~.~ :orb • le.......,,,.....,_ .................... acay ••D PLU•
ch alt a • l• -yOIU with tbe ,. loclnremb<t..,.. 11.UlCE e•ee e reUa Oil Uw mainlac i,t cup a.Car Tara llllo ft"lllDlt-.,.. "'eup boney ~~l.i:.'n1y bllavor al and remalllln1 Ii eup •PriDI form ra•; 2tal>leopocmswat..
Gently ';:.~°.:;i,.f1\"""· water. Cook over low refrl1arate unll Mt. 2 CllPI •llced "-"
lilht sue n a beat. •llrrinl constantly Slnad aour <0ream .,... California plums
lhat bria:f·•rup kd-llDlil lhlcltonod. about J.O to p • r e t u r n to 2 teaspoons cor·
ly
00 or an lov-miouteo. Stir In softened retr11erator, anol cblll -b e roundneas, yet roll-1elatin until dlsaolved. apln. Just .,.,.,... ....,_ \lo eup port ~=~=~~\~• JUlcy and Beat cream clieeae In&. re-• aide of IP"' Combine bc/n•l'· wMer y ·b with mixer at medium lDc form pan &Del .,..._ 'ud ...,..larch. Add 1 ou can 1IY fresh or •peed; l"•duuq l!eat In cliH1eealte OD Mnlal eup plums &Del almmer -,.fr,.ozen cheesecake, or e&&J..t:elatin m ixlU!!'t ~· CoYtt tour ,,... •ts minutes .-or untll
ooe ':i"h:clpe.ft"dlnak.• theii"'iilil lemon juice, wltli Ruby Red Plum ...,..tblckens. RemoYO
'tb R ::'"· R den 1<P ii vanilla and lemon rind Sauce and Jamlob with from beat and aUr In wi u Y e PIWD Beat •II whites until .....,loeal plwa U-. If wlna. u .. remalnlq cup
:.,."'/," :!Jilll'lllllb with ltitf, but not dry. Bl""1 -. Pw addllioell of aliced plume for
1aESR i~lll-llgbtly.,.bipped cream plum 1CIP!lln1. S. •••· _.........,-bottom .....
CHEESECAKE r pac1<a1e ll ...... )
%Wiebaclt. rmely crushed
Ii cup soft butter
The only real way to reduce your food budget
~ cupsug:ar
~ teupooo nutmec 1 envelope ~l lab\esi
poon) unflavored gelatin
~cup cold water
3 eggs, separated
2 packages (8 ounces
EaCll> cream cheese._
softened ·
1, teaspoon lemon juice· ~
2 teaapoona 'Vanilla
Grated "rind of one
lemon
l -cup whipping
cream, lighUywhipped
111 cup dairy sour
cream
Ruby Red PJum
Sauce (recipe follows)
In mixing bowl, com-
bine zwieback crumbs,
butter, i,,. cup of the sug.
ar and nutmeg. Line bot·
tom and sides of 9·inch
spring form pan with
crumb mixtUre; bake in
400 degree oven, 10
minutes; cool.
Sprinkle gelatin over
1/c cup of the cold water
to soften. Set aside.
Romanoff
Switch
Plums
Instead or using the
traditional strawberries,
try some of these
Romanoff variations
with slices of fresh
plums.
-Mix 2 ounces each of
maraschino liqueur and
brandy; add a dash of
Cointreau to taste. Fold
the liqueurs into one pint
of softened vanilla ice
cream and spoon over
enough sliced ,
sweetened plums to
serve four.
-Whip one cup of
heavy cream and fold in-
to one pint softened
vanilla. ice cream.
Flavor with rum and
Cointreau, as desired,
and spoon over 1 quart of
sliced1 sweetened plums.
Makes6to8servings.
-Mix one 6-ounce can
of frozen, undiluted,
orange juice concentrate
with 11.1 cup tawny port.
Pour over 1 quart of
s liced plums and
marinate for several
hours.
Spoon into eight
dessert dishes and pass a
bowl of sweetened.
whipped cream.
Healthy
Revival
Interesting and de-
licious combination.
BRUSSELS SPROtrr
SALAD
2 cups fresh or
frozen Brussels sprouts,
cooked and cooled
2 cups thinly sliced
zucchini (2 medium)
¥• cup slJced
scallions
2 tablespoons diced
pimiento
11' cup peanut oil
2 tablespoon.s lemon
juice
2 tablespoons cider
vinegar
Clove garlic,
crushed
'
Grapefruit '
~.!,i~~!<••~.39°
• •
•
It's r.:Olly simple arithmetic. Because w~ don't offer
b.low-cott 1pecial1 on a few selected Items, we can
offer you lower prices overoll on the items you wont to
buy. That odds up to real' aovings --and leaves you
with a lower food bill.
{) t •· T~KE ADVANTAGE
• . OF THOSE. "KEY BUYS" ••• · Harvest Day Graen . <; THEY ' MEAN GREATER SAVINGS!
B 22c . eans Jt-T•'JI flfMI hYM ..... • of "K•'f ·~•" (.f° -~ tS... .,... lhop .. Ludiyt
CUT, OUCll>, ,.OZ CAN ,,, ........ ..
Del Monte Biscuit. Mix,
~~,!~OZCAN ~.19° !~~'q'~'~.~~ 11,5
•
.Del Monte ·
Fruit Cocktail ~ 35c
17 OZ CAN• •••.•...•..•.......•••.• ,,
. Kounty Kist 25·C
Peas ~
1101CAN •••••••••••••••••••••••••.
Harvest Day
Diet 'Beverages 12C
120ZCAN ...... ,..... • ......... .
•
Del Monte !~!!'~!~!5.. .~.31 c
Beechnut Strained C ~~! .. 1~5°+~120ZJAR ,. 13
'
Birds Eye ...:·
COol Whip ~ 59c
TOPP'ING,tOZCTN .•• , ...•••••.•.••
~ .. ~~~~~ii' ....... <C.61° ;s~~~,Pu~ ....... .c.111 ifd .. ,,~I!'!'·~ . .11111:11 ........ .c.65°
,. .. ~.'~.~-Bflj~~~ .... ~5~0 G~ BllCk Pepper _..ia:'JO
SdMlLL\NG.•OZCAN .......................... ~ Dil!tv Moore Beef Stew .,.. eno
240JCAN ................................... , .,~
Suahlttti-CJ's F~Nrc;AMERicAN, 15ozcAN ••..•••..... ~.26C
. ' ......... _,... ___ .,.. .......
... -.......-.1 .... ,....,.__ •. 1111'',
~0 1tn1yi..1ry ............ ..,......,. ....... .. -................ ....-......... .. -·-Bonded Meots .
Blade Cut Chuck Large End Rib
~~~.~~ ... "88° ~.~~!!LBl ...... l8 138
·. Boneless Round Rib '"~~~.~·~ . . ' 148 §!~.~~ ..... "148
Cross Rib
~,!.!!! ROLCEO LO 13 8
Top Sirloin
~!~~~ .... "22a
TDDRamdStBlk 1'' 9c)pf£L1ESS, IEEF •••••• ~ ..................... LI ~~}!~~~ACHED ......... , .... LI 1°' ~o~~ .................. :.u 139 !;!~l'OATE9'HOUSE STIAfC 2.21 LI),, •. Ltl 211
~L=I'.~ ........... LB 79c
ANY SOE~~.~~.~ ....... LO 111
?;!~K~ ...................... LB98C
~S~·~1~~ ...... .Le89°
~!~~~ .............. La1 31
~ ~~S & DEVl!NEO ••••••••••• ••. La68° ~-&rt;;OEA ..... .LB 57:
USDA, ORAOIE A , ••• ., •••• , • , ••· ...... , , , , •• LB 48
~!~!~ ........................ LB 1 48
~~~~~~ .. ... LB 128
~~.llf ~.1.~..... . .. ............ ,B 158
~ ... ~!~~ .............. ,.,,l·LBPKG 178
~A~~.!~ ................. 12·0ZPKG 141
ITEMS BELOW ARE AVAILABL'I: AT LUCKY DISCOUNT CENTERS ONLY~ ••
' TENNIS BALL CAN
WASTE BASKET
Health & Beaut~ Aids
~~~.·irt.~~~ ~~~ ..... ~.121
~~ ~~Jlh's ~~i".°. .......... <C.27c
~~~~~.~~lllllOCI .......... ~.1°9
o.a Amino Shampoo .,..159 ~~·-······································· ~~,~~°. ........................ ~.139 ~~ .8.~·~111.~~·.111~~ ......... ~ 139
Produce.
Russet 1 QC Potatoes '""
BEST fOfl BAKING •••• lB
Fresh 12c';1 ~f.!~a~ .... '""'" 7'
Banana
Squash
DELICATE FLAVOR •.•• LB
Bartlett 19C
Pears /
LUSCIOUS, SWEET ••• LB
~J;~~~AY ...... LB 29c ~
PHOTO DEVELOPING
Ii teaspoon salt
\t: teaspoon sugar
\4 teaspoon dry
mustard
Thit 1tnlqu. -te botkef will
be o 1mort oc:ce11ory for any
room In yovr hot.I••·
COLOR PRINT FILMS
KODAK • GAF • FOTOMAT • FUJI
Oewwlopong. PrintlnQ $'>11
12 up. roll... ,--
--==---~ 20 1111-ro11.. • sp Halve 1malJ. sprolita
and quarter large ones.
Turn into a bowl with the
zucchini, scalllon and pi·
miento. r Beat together tbe re-
maining ingredients and
pour over srrout mix-
ture; toss wet .
Cover .and cbUI tor .
several houn (or over--
night) to allow navon tO
blend. (The z11cchlnl will
benefit from the
marinade and wW not
taste "raw''). Makes 6
oervirll•·
•
.:~"! .. ~RE JOlll CllOICl 1~ cov.r..i eotMtOf• ,..,..,,.,._................. 121 Dhrkl.d . ......,dlii. dlth •
Sctvor•c•• dih ·
DNp loof dl1h~ I IA. 1.112..,.... 11t1.r r d11h
-·· ..... Or91&~-.. -raw.ll..UUA,_ . • "'ti. tfl11 ceu111 ••1. .. , ..... --··· ·--"'' U NIU a.---·11·-·-·~-
· Pll l'IAB
10" AOYot Scwot .... _... 88"' ........ ' ...
Riii PLAnB
S.l«t <I.or 141 or white ·-........ .
•
--
STORAGE CHESTS
S.l.c:t the tit• thot Mllh you Mt' for all your 1fora99 needt.
IUNll UMOMHO -!It.AA ... -... ,, •• 1•• 121 .
......... u
am UllY .... "' "' PAI ... _
\A..atl ....... CMll ··-•• L CMftlAI A'IMI ........ mt ....,. 1111n
211
GOID PAlllnO WAil !.KEY
~!::i BUYS ~~.:.~,., •• ,....i-.... 121 AT All LUCK'(
OE VB.OPING
CENTERS ~~LA!.~~ ...... :t~ .. 111 Off•r Good Th.N $99t.,m,.r 301h. .......
JtM umu AYL
• ~fl•
11!Jt ..-'°" AWl\ll . """'"'"' .,..m-m•ni•
1•11...-0MllWR
• .. ma IMS$ t •IUllllT 01.
(
fuJut
~SUl'llMAIUIS
110UIGl COllllTJ
AllA to SUVI YOU ....
'
Ml9tOI '" •. ~• smn .. ,.. Ill.at .... -w•nmt·
' I
i
'
" '
I
•
I
I
I
,
'
I
'
I
' I
_CJ41 UAILV PILOT
Shell '
Out
Trea't
Sweet, small shrimp
with sauteed mushroom
in a delicate sour cream
sauce are a great "muf-
fin stuffer'' .
. For a perfect brunch,
serve with asparagus
spears on a bed of lettuce
and tall chilled glasses of
iced-coffee or tea.
Some tips in using
frozen, cooked shrimp -
look for shrimp which
are frozen separately
and not clumped. A
• • .. '
, ... .i1 • .., ..... ~1.-r• .. •LI--• ,...., .-•.1
OUR l'OllCY GUAAANTEfS
THESE lOW ,_ICfS 10 8E
ffffCT1vt• •T lfA.51 7 o.-.~s.
WED ., SEPT. 24th
thru
TUES., SEPT. 30, 1975
r ·, Jt.· •• ",!':t'" ~ . . .. . . ... • . ... . . '"
TIME for PANTRY STOCKIN' SHOPPI'
CHUCK RO
-BEEF BLADE CUT TUI KEY
HIND ... QTRS.
smooth ice glaze is the !.~------------most protective of the
delicately flavored
shrimp whatever the
size.
GOLD BOND
QUALITY
STEER
BEEF WITH
GIBLETS,
NECK' &
PORTIONS
OF WING
INCLUDED
YOUNG, TENDER
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
4 to 6-lBS.
Thawed shrimp are
sa fe at room tem-
perature for up to 4 hours
-ideal for cold buffet
serving.
SHRIMP SU RPRISE
IN A MUFFIN SHELL
a4 pound fre s h
mushrooms
3 tablespoons butter
Juice of 'h lemon
BEEF CHUCK
7·BDNE ROAST
98~
SHOULDER CLOD ROAST
toNElfSS $15J. '"' CHUCIC •••
1,2 pint (1 cup) sour
cream
4 English muffins
12 ounces (2
packages) all purpose
frozen cooked shrimp
BEEF RIB STEAK • ~°'~'~":0~":" ••
FRESH GROUND BEEF •••••
siivERSALMON :~~7 ~ s1 1!
DOVER SOLE •• ::.~ •• sl 5!
BEEF CHUCK ARM ROAST • • • s10J.
BEEF BRISKET lE-'H BONELESS $16~
e e \e e e e • • • e
1 2 teaspoons grated
Parmesan cheese
Use a fork to hollow
out the inside of the
EngliSh muffin leaving
the sides intact. Toast
EVERFRISH '0l2gz
FROZEN
•CUT GREEN BEANS
•CORN
•MIXED VEGETABLES
•PEAS
IRIS SUGAR :1
. .
' for a few minutes. Crum-
b I e and keep the
hollowed out portions for
later use. , , VEGETABLES •
.. , •. $ II '
ri Wash the mushrooms
and slice thinly. Melt the
3 tablespoons or butter. j
Brush the inside of the
English muffin shells
lightly with melted but·
ter. 1
Add mushrooms to re·
maining butter in large
frying pan, squeeze
lemon juice over them 1
from wedge and saute
ror a rew minutes. Stir in
sour cream and cooked,
frozen shrimp.
Heat only until hot
through. Spoon into m~
fin shells. Sprinkle tops
with crumbled muffin
from center.
• Sprinkle half a teas-
poo n of g rated
Parmesan cheese over
the top and toast under a
broiler for a few minutes 1
until mutrin crumb and
cheese top are toasty.
Serve with a sprig of
green parsley on the top
or the mound . Or
watercress. Serves four.
Salad's
Supreme
Tuna salads -usually
made with celery,
mayonnaise and season-
ings ~ are everyday
rare.
If you're interested in
something new and dif.
ferent, you' might want to
try the following com·
bination of tuna ,
vegetables and fruit ac-
co mpanied by an
avocado dressing.
NEW TUNA SALAD
4 cups shredded let·
tuce
1 cup thimly sliced
celery
I/, cup minced
parsley
2 cups cubed fresh
pineapple or one 20·
ounce can unsweetened
Banquet Dinners
FROZEN
All VARIETI ES
,
(EXCEPT BEEF or HAM)
REGULAR SIZE
D DESSEirCAKES~;;7~~:.1?~.u .... 99~ D SAUERKRAUT ........•. ~i~~·~ ... 89e
0 BIRDSEYE COOL ~~l!N ~~~~0~.~~';;. 59e D BOLOGNA .••..••• '.1?1 ••• ':!:~: .. :~'11:~ .. 98 c
D CRINKLE CUTS •• ~~~ :~·~ ".'.". ~~ .. 39' o CORN TORTILLAS ......... "'.~-: .. 19'
P IDGIOl'O 3 '99c 11100 !.+lttOOlD o• 49 D BREAD DOUGH •• :~1!~ . ~;1~ "•! ~1• ' ; ' D ~HEDDAR .••.•••... ~~z~·~;~ ·. •.0! . . :
!\/NII,.! 69' 1 ~ O FllUIT DRINKS ..... !'\ '!':'?'~ •. 0.'! .. D ILLSBURY BUSCUITS ...... : : ~'.. • a' ~-, • l:. .. ,,_. • __.,.
C.C. VINEYARD •
. I WINES VIN ROSE',
BURGUNDY,
CHABLIS or
PINK CHABLIS
IA.
fiAt.
' LUCKY LAGER
BEE,R
11 -0Z. 12 :p 'l'' NON-RETURN
6TtS.
Fresh Flowers
REC lEAF U~GHT WITM $498
PHILODENDUM • ·:~·~· .•: ':>! •
FRESH age FLOWER BOUQUETS •••••
GOOD SElECTION $149 INDOOR FERNS ••. !".':".' ..
CARE FREE 6" POTS WITH s39a
COLEUS Pl:ANTS .. "~':'~ ••
O••~S~ COl,INn ... QT s4•9 D BOURBON """'" '" __ ,, • ...............
l'IQ\lj,(M ... 1()1 s411 D VODKA ...... :0.·:x: ~· ..... .
D CANADIAN DEW .. ·:~•:'·'.::i':''?· ... 5499 f
D TEQUILA ...?"~ ~ii.:~\ID'g'T s499 ................ -"'AIR .. ~ .-W"'
10c OFF LA.BEL
CREST ·~~"7 51' Toothpaste ~;?~·
' D BABY SHAMPOO •. -~~·:0: .. s1n
D CHEESE CUTIER •••• ~·~0
•••• 54'
D PARING KNIFE ••.••• '.'~' .•.• 74'
D KITCHEN TONGS ••••. "'.'. . . . 54 • •
J
BAG I.
·--·-TREESWEET, PINK
.....
~: Grap~fruit
•
II
• • ' .
" r( •
~'Ju~c~, 4~~~-.. ,_.,..
·~f
,!
r
If JANE ANDERSON
FRESH
BREAD ..
.
·~ OL' VIRGINIA
,:,FRANKS
WHITE or
WHE#>T
1-Lli.
LdAF
)1
I' .,
l
., ,.
-,
ROSARITA, JO.OZ. 59c R.E.D., ·OZ. S'l 19
REFRIED BEANS • • • • • • • .. ' RED LMON ••••••••••• T I
liils MAYONNAISE •••••••• age . stliA~'·Eff BABY FOOD ••••• 13c
BEll BRANO, 0~ to 9-0Z. REG. OR DIP 1W1N 59c ·· 8<-0Z. ( <OFF LABEl) $192
POTATO CHIPS ••••••• :·;~ BOLD ETERGENT ••••••••
IO·OZ. ggc 16-0Z. ERA 59c TRIX CEREAL • • • • • • • • • • • UQUIP DETERGENT ••••• · ••
pine a pp 1 e chunks, ''1w __________ -l'fi
drained 1 '~·--·•: ., .. ,,--·~ ~ • ,. fl Moisf CAT1EF00'0°z: ....... 49c J32
0.
0vz'i1ou1D .. . ........... s 11 s
r-----== ...... .,,. .......... ···~·········1 : Discount Tickets 1 Two 7-ounce cans
solid white tun a. drained
1 cup mem·
brane·free orange sec·
lions
Tomato wedges
Avocado Dressing,
see below
Scatter the lettuce,
celery and parsley over
a serving dish.
Add the pineapple and
arrange ~hunks of tUQa
over it. Top with the
orange 1ecttons. Sur-
round with the tomato
wed1n.
Service ;.vUh Avocado
Dreaalng. 6 servings.
AVOCADO DRESSING
It cup mashed t\pe
avocado .
It c up unflavo~ed
y<IJllll'l
. .1. Y.)~letpoon oranie
jllice 2 tal>Jnpoona finely
chos>Pe<I onion
l'J teupoon ult
Make thla dreUlnl m
· more than 2 boura before ..,...,,, I
1 .Siie tocethf'r well 811
the ~Medientl; cover 1 ..
Fresh Cut Lettu.c·e
LARGE HEAD
I AV.\ll.A!l! Al I Russet . : ·1hri~1.izar1 :
P : INTERNATIONAL:
Olaf ' 1 HORSE SHOW 1 oes ~···········•
U.S.
NO. I
BAKING
SIZE
'
TOKAY GRAPES •• s:e~.F~AV~R~L •• 28! r.l.riftlm·a·l't
•Mesa Verde Center, Harbor at Adams, Costa Me~a •13922 Brookhurst, Garden Grave 2[; I El Toro, El Toro
• 1308 W .. Edln9er, Sonta Ana •5858 Warner, HuntlllC)ton Beach • •
1 c
I
I '
• •
'
Cheese and wi'Je sauce help
a few st.rlmp_go a long way
for tt?is elegant entree
that w/H e party guests.
Buffet Stmr · ---
Stretches . -
The best part of this iUab Is tbe na;....
The next -thins Is its stretcbablllty.
Ilene It u a fam!IJ f!etree or multiply and UH It for buffet ~ lince It ~ tenderly warm •• ewero&e• on a
warmingtrayor lnacbleqdlsbaener.
Accompany It ~l~ green oalad with
a sPl'inkliu of Ill~ oran1e se~ts and follow It wltb me! chunks sprintled witbklncb. . .
SlpWIP IN CRBl!:SE "1NESAUCE
cub!t slices day.. old bread. trimmed-and ,
2 aix ounce pack.,ba all purpose
rrozen , cooked: shrimp
\0 pound Cheddar cheese, sliced •
~ stick butter. melted
3eggs
1~ cups milk
Pinch dry mustard i;:
Salt and pepper ID taste
Cayenne pepper to taste
Cooking sherry totaste
Beat eggs, milk~ mustard, cayenne pep-
per, salt a nd pepper and sherry in a bowl.
Make layers or the bread cubes, cheese and
shrimp in a casserole and pour beaten mix·
lure over it.
Pop into a 350 degree oven~ 40 'minutes.
Jt can also be made the day b'efore and held
in the refrigerator for final cooking over-
night.
A major advantage or sing frozen
cooked shrimp is the smalltt' izes availa-
ble .-try a' large salad size. They're fre-
quently muc h more econo call)' .priced
and give your casserole a shrimp-laden ef-
fect. Serves four easily. ··
' . •
'
AL'S CHOPPING BLOCK
· 1500 Adams Bl•cl., Costa Mesa IHext to Edwards Cinema) '
Mon. ihn. Sat. Store Hours: 9.7 ................ 0c••• 546-8196
USDA CHOICE
ROUND STEAK lone'" ............................ s1~
USDA CHOICE
SIPE
of
BEEF
98~
-OPEN -SUMDAY TllN ' .... ., ..
WEACCEP1'
FOOD STAMPS
USDA l'lllME USDA CHOICE USDA l'lllME SIDE ~D HIND of QU TER QUARTER BEEF .
51.09LL 51.0SLL 51.15 LIL
'
PRODUCE SAVINGS
J 854 NEWPORT BLVD . ico:=:~~=~~:.".:' .. T
OPEN 7 DAYS 9 to 6 Phone 642-6025
ITALIAN EXTRA FANCY
S•ASH ,. s~
59~
BART El I 5 s· PEARS ... 1·
'cais ~4. ~1 ..,_
•
-.
•
• •
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
. 642-5878
H>SIMPAIM
FRYERS -...,
RSH S .. IMP-SCAUOP
KABOB
SWORDFISH
• CO<:ICTAIL
SHRIMP
amSNAl'PIR
FILET ·
SMOKED
ASH $125 -..sz.ot._ . ._
THOMPSOM
BLACK ROSE
MUSCAT
GRAPES
19~
. .
•
" " ·' 11
" ,,
63 C.. IQ
EGGS J I . ,,
99 ~ 63c "I ,. .,
2s: ,., .. ..
l•T•DOL o._ !o ••• s 1 s.! . ' ~ --s12! .......... _..,..21
',
...u5SO"$• ....... ' I .... .. ....
SOUR· 69C DOUG+t 1¥.1 •
BREAD -
iii.icious"APPlls'A15c
ORANGES 10~
fllMCIJSP 5! CUCUMBERS
FANCY 10! tsfll PEPPERS
''"
' 1
(
• ••
i
oil
tl 1I
"
' " It·'
" .' I t
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I . " • l
.,
" '
•
I r
l
I
.. · ....... -... -~ • . . .. . " ·~-~· .. ~----·---. ' .. ~ .-.
I ... . • -,
J:Jf DAILY PILOT Wodnooday, ~-bor :M, 197~
N o velties o n·: Stic k: A Grill ••
'"
• • I .
i·ng Experience
'' ByCECILYJllOWNSTO~ :.. ............,.... ............
The · word 1 'kebab'' is, of
course, an abbrevLatioo ol ahlab
kebab, a Middle Eastern term.
1Accocding to Webster, "shisb"
J
means skewer and ''kebab''
means roast meat.
California food writer Philip
Brown says, ··All manner ot
foods that are skewer-cooked
1.bave come to be known as
kebabs. Just why we have adopt-
ed the Middle Eastern term is
-:-anyone's guess, since there is a
word for the process in almost every language.··
'Vinegar
Pl enty
~Of Uses
.-. In addition to being
ideal for freshly pre-
pared salad dressings,
vinegar can be used in
other ways around the
kitchen:
•
' ' • • "Skewer pooklni Around the
World" by Georgia Cheopelas
(Simon and Schuster> bu llmoot
S50 recipes coverina the meat.I,
poyltry, shellfish, fish ,
vegetables and fruits that ican be
skewered and cooked. f
TJtere are also chapters on
sauces, accompaniments, menus
and entert.aintng. M s .
Ch~pelas'a emphasis is on coolc:-
lng kebabs indoor
Now that the high cost of meat
bas hit us, what Ci\D be substitut-
ed in skewer cookery for the fine cuts-of lamb and beef that were
often used?
-. One a:ood idea come,. from ·
•Pblllp Brown's article. He sug.
aesta cubing raw .t urkey breast
and marinating it in a combina-
tion ol olive oil, while wine, !IJ'Y
vermouth, a:arllc, salt and pep-
per. • The turkey cubes are then
alternated with squares of green
pepper and celery on skewers
and brushed with the marinade
whll011iey are c6arcoal·1rllled.
Some years ago, at a party,
Jim Beard treated chicken
hearts to a Japanese-atlY~
marinade and cooked them to
.U
'
perfection on tbl grill lo the Lamb keuba cm be mode
backyard. rrom 1houlcler rather than le&
Bacon·wrapJI«! chlckeo livers meat. Ollt or Ille -ways to are delicious when skewered aod treat the -tbtat ~u given to me
broiled, especially when-served by o Fren~b artist !rlml after I
with a dip. , eoJoyed th kebabs at her house.
For a luxurious one, use Major Sbe eut . onion and garlic
Grey chutney, cbopp~lbelarge tbrausli a (eod srinder and
pieces of mango fine aDd rt'tum· mixed the combtnati!)n wJth
ing them to the saucy part"-the cube,s 0£ lamb and eoanety
relish. srow¥I pepper. Then the meat
"We don!t have to reiiiltid•·-·~-and...ae•MOIDI went into ~au
th at frankfurters, cut ln thirds, 1ar and the cover was screweil on
can be inserted on skewers with ti&htly ·
vegetables of your choice. You After the lamb had marinated
may wanL t _o_ baste wlth a overni&ht in the refri~ator, it
barbecue sauce. wll skewered with green-Pi'Pper·
•
squares and tomato wedces
before being broiled. It wu •Ill·
eel aft r crilli•i·
If you f!Bh, or t!Mn ore fls.
berfolk in your family or UMJlC
your friends, you can make Uili.f-
tykebablof aomeoltbecalcb. ,
F1>1: t11ese a bqte al melted but·
ter ilnd lemon l>r lime Juice Is
tine. ll you want to e~!";
I.his bute, you can add wnu.e
wineor-minc,ed.lnooll®Jb~~+-
A good marinade for fish
kebabs can be concocted l\J'm
peanµt oil, soy sauce, garllC ind
fre&1i ginger root.
'
•
" \
I
I
•
,
(
i
Greens such as
spinach, leaf lettuce and
Swiss chard will be crisp
and clean when soaked a
few min.utes in water to
which some vinegar has
been added.
We're creatia1g a Svper.marlmt ancl a haH for JCMf:• .·
Ther~'s a ' market-and-a-half opening in your · Unused canned pi-
mientos will keep for
weeks in Ute refrigerator.
if placed in a jar and cov-
ered with vinegar.
Fried potatoes will
absorb less fat if vinegar
is added to the shorten-
ing or cooking oil.
Hard-cooked eggs will
peel easier if so me
vinegar is added to the
c:P<>king water.
l( sour milk is needed,
add 1 tables poon of
. Vinegar to 1 cup of milk
or cream.
Peeled potatoes will
n6t darken if vinegar is
added \o the cooking
water. •
Remove the odor· of
onions or fish from your
hands by rubbing them
with a little vinegar.
When poaching eggs,
afid vinegar to the water
to kiep~the whites from
spreadjng. ,
Add 1 teaspoon of
vinegBij; to the water in
1.wbich rice is cooked tp
k<JOp,J IHL riCJt iIJllM_
whole.
WI LTED CUCUMBER
~LAD
2 large cucurribers
(about 1 pound e&ch),
pared
,.. 2teaspoons salt
ll"z cup salad vinegar
3 tablespoons sugar
I % cup onion rings
Pimiento strips
Score cucumbers with
fork ; thinly slice. Ar-
range cucumbers in ! layers in bowl, sprinkl-
ing each layer with salt.
Weigh cucumbers down
with smaller bowl ;
refrigerate several
bours.
Drain cucumbers well,
squeezing out any excess
tj,quid. Stj.r sugar into
vinegar until dissolv&t;
p0Ur over cucumbers
and onion rings.
cover; refrigerate ~t
least 1 hOUr, turning oc-.
Casionally.<Serve as a
salad or meat accom-
paniment; garnish with
pimiento. Makes 4-6
serVings (about 3 cups)
Carrots
~
Appeal
Bound to be popular!
, HONEY CARROTS
6 to 8 medium car·
rotl, pared and sliced
"' 4 tablespoons butter -
ar margarine ·
¥• teaspoon dry
mUlllard
J4 teaspoon nutmeg
¥. cup honey
" Cook carrots, covered, In a small amount of boil· Ins salted.1 water until
fender; drain. ·
Meanwhile beat butter Plat until ii melts! stir in
'1UStard and nutmeg,
lbellboney.
-,. Pour over carrots; re-
~••J l•n tly, folding
sa~ce over carrots.
"1akes 6 servings.
I
ftsliano -
Poach peeled fresb
Bartlett pear holveo 'in
port wine (or olbar ""9tt
dnHrt wine) wltb •
iilec•of onnp rlDd ..ell g::.i:• •re tender but
CliiU_ln 1'1ne. tl'd:: <iollrcns roUecl
•
neighborho~ with super low prices ... up to 15,000
items ... hundreds of Super Buys ... a super ,ne~ stor.e
with hot b'akery and International ,Appeti~ -~
Shoppe .. ·.Meat Master quality meats ... sup:er coup.on7 -•
sa-vQigs .. ;and friendly people, too. ' "'°·,
' " I ~ •.
Bis your clay to save.
I '
•
If you're lo,oking for a bigger than average
supermarket, with better than average savings, . ,
()ciuber 8,. j"s-y9ur day. The official Ralphs Grcind ·
Openin·g starts at 9 .a.1111., corner of Harbor at ·
Wilson. Join in ~h~ f-Qn and savings. -• I . -
•
l" •
). i, , .,
)o' • . ,
' • .
/ 1
: I • r '
' ~
"
.,
' ,
I
• •
•
WllrlONST.
• Wlth...,.low
~ ......
l
•
I I
I f
, I
••
j
I I
I
l
I
I I I ' l
I
l
' ,.
' ' • • •I . ~ • •
... .. . • ' _i
.,
I
I .. .
I' l
~
.. . • t '
-
,, '
' '
' • ---------... -·-·--·-----...... ~ -· ..... .. .. .J. --
'ftla Ill a 11Ulclt cott-all:e aoodldutot..ttlle<tlller111lha 1pplea alleed 14 Inch thick •
.... wD _.i.e -.r. U wooden pick before Mrvliia. U Sprlnltlo with 1u1ar and eln·
I I "A . <I a i-la)>ered pu· then la DO "-b tllnllnc lo lhe -llellle 1 lo 2 """"'"1111111, cm...,. • 11111,111 of fl'olb apple. p1c1t, 111e cw 1a done. ai>Ploo Jmt loo• lllelr al-
111-ud aa111aee. bUt ere IUll firm. Set ..... but .0
Sene ll directly from lb• APPLB/SAUMGB notOO'f•. •
ollllle\ cul Into ple·1haped · COPJPEBCAKE Place lhe butter In a well =with apple butter or fresh a link aauaa1ea at sausap IOUG>ed t-lneb lion llldll,et and •ce u an a<eompani· pollieo hut OYll burner. <Test wlllt a -. • a larp tart applee, peeled, dJop of wat... When Ille walw
=-nol be peeled for cored and 1llced · "dances" before evapentlA(
aauce tr the sauce la ltableapoonsbrownSUfar pulare~.l CIDEJt~PPLESAUCB ~
at put Into the blender 1 taupc>oo1 cinnamon P"'1r In enoulh ~atuir to eo\rer a tart apples ' •
aft# eGCJldD(. And If you like ap. 1 ~ eupe p1ncalte batter the bottom of lhe pan -14 In· ~ cup apple.,cld•
1.i.11.-.,fiibalotoffiavor,llle ltablespaonbuu.r eh. Cook 3·4 mJnplet over ~lo~cupauaar
i:ldoratapplejuleei,orthe''"uld. moderate heat unW battw -i.reu~utt .., PlaeebrollerrackSor81ncbos a•-1 d-'• (Do...,.\Wn) ~ Thia ~ed coffeecake can belowheat.Tumbrollerlo...... ..,. 1 ''' ..-· \4teupocm11n(er • ..__ Arran1e \he aauaatea on lbe p --~ aU am:; alto i. balted.llLthe oven bul It Saute 1auu1 .. In a tarce pucake and cover them with ap. ere, core ~ ce
-will tall:e loD(er. -Ille lem· aklllet, abolll 5 minutes, until pl dlatrlbu"• -•~ place In aaue..p1111 -c 1*'lllaN foe 600 de(reea .F. and u bro es, ~1 ev....,. ~ 1111W apploo ore i...-. lbe-for101ol5111iDulel. we Wiied. Drain and keep Pourlheremalnlngbat1«ov• (20lo3!1minutes).Stlrin1U1ar, warm. , the apples and -olace undet the salt and ctnaer. Cook l minute
----;'if::::.._;.:.!..;=:.::,-_;.;::;~...i;:::;==:~S;;:'"~-Wbelber.'.'.:=:~b:ro~U:'.'.ed:'...:or'..'.ba~at~ed~lt:_:'•~•'.__~Pour~'...of'.".:f ~fa~l_.'.fto~m~skl~l~let~,~ed~d-~bro~ll~er~u~nt~ll nicety bro~wn_ed_. __ 100_1_er.,_. Makes 6 servings.
Jardiniere
• Super quolity, super low prices-that's what you
always. receM! with Ralphs own brands. Ralphs
guar a11tees thaf ciry Ralphs brani:f product either
meets or exceeds the same high quality standards
as name brand$. Yet, they cost less. You can save
·wherever' you see the Ralphs label like Ralphs
· 19·c ••• •::;
•
Frozen Orange Juice, o delicious concentrate mode
from pure Florido oranges.
Money saving Ralphs brands fi-om i<:e cream to .
I Conned and frozen fruits and vilgetables tO fresh
baked breOds -something to switch for.
-Super Bakery ' ' . . . . .
... All Star
White or Whe•I
Super Produce Meat Master Meats ....,-... ~
New Crop-Flortd• lndl1n RIYM
Roost's
Accented . .
Braise .. a rump rout
slowly In red l'ine,
•• topiolo pule and s1>1ca;
Mid freeh vecetables and
you have a hearty one
pot meal perfect for fa,ll,
menus. Long slow cook· Int tanderi1e1 the roast
and anows lhe w!De and.
aeuonlnp to permeate tbebeef. • f
Serve with crusty
frencb bread. A tray o(,
asilorled fruits and cb'eeses is a 1imple.,
classic ruu.h .
llUlllP llOAST
• IAllDINERE
4 to 5 pound bone! ...
beef rump rout
2 tablespoons butter
% cur, buraundy 2 tab espoons tom.to
paste
2teaspoonssalt
6 whole peppercorns
4 finely chopped'
cloves garlic
2·1ncb strip orange'
peel ' ·t·inch stick cin..r
nainon
[ ~ aks 74 ~Beef ~.59 D~ip,;'e~·· .. ·~•Top 48 RadorWNte 19 t -· .............. c.. "· • .... c..... . •• ~ •••p••-""'°"p'""""'c .... c.k":;: •48 ~Grapefruit .. , .•
4 whole cloves
I pound boiling
onions
Bsmall canots
Brown roast in butter. Bini fl'8lb Shullldlr _ ~~Kuchens pkg.• ~ NowC<op·C•lltOml•-••'""'°M ~ f Roast .. 1.09 ~Lamb Roast •.• 88 ~;;;;.~Cakes .. , •• 79 0 ~.. ::.:
°'""'"'""-11 ~rown· s .... Onions Ralld Cll{•••• GreWll · °"'"''" ''" · LLB
f o •• !!' Roast.~1.2188Q_ ~:~~J.!=!,~P!fo lb.91098 ~ 1:.;1s .. , .... 47 B ~~::·:~.
I Cube Steaks lb. • ~ frYer Bn!as,IS . lb. • Q .... ........... 87 D ........ .. i 99 Q """''""" ........ .,... 29 ~ Bouquets '""'" • · Green Cabbage
. lb.. l,l!,J Necks and Backs lb.. ['JI· ..... ,.,, 2 87 ['JI ...... c • .,
I. ~ .. New•ILoln,;;!"~'Steaks" 2 48 o ·tolllOml•G-89 ~ Roral pkg. • ~Romaine
!. lll.J """ "· • ~ Fryer Wings "· • ~ ,.......... .<,' . 139 ['Jl~Coctflllels ~ Boneless StiiW Beef ... . • ~......... lb .• 99 0 G=~chi'lk:' . · .. 1:15 n Whffj'"119·'....... ·~ .59
["]II 8"f "9vnd-BoM1n• ~ ~ Beet lip Staal~ r.! 1.78 , n -Rex SOie •. 2.09
D 1~ROOoci-St8eks -41.88 ~ ~&~~bslb.~~= /-;;r;•;' -,9 r;•KoM•I Super Deli
...... 15
.,ch .10
....... 25
...... • 10
..... ,19·
..... 29 Cln. , oet~ .... ~c.tc;:.t·• ~Wieners .. ~.69 ·~~~ice ·,~~ • o o .. !!~
~. ~" --r-LJj15'ic9d-1mok.d -DMlhs Bal""° ~M~ . ... 78 ~BuddlgMeats ..... 45 uu•11 . 29 11110 ' 79 ~~~Brisket ... i.48 ~;:,,~~ ..... ~.19 ~TinY Peas ·~:::. olce Cream::~.
~SI~-lb. .89 Swiss Cheese ,, ... 1.59 Health a Beauty , Pantry Fillers QW•~' t 0CacMV11tey-(Ack-12.oz.tt7)
O;== 01<;;;;.·Di\i"P~kles .,.95 ~i;j;h;0;i;m :.;~.59 ~i=~lt~ii'' ,",~~.35
IUlnlllliifJ' w•n"'8' lb. ,58 . ~ AtlerStl•veLotlon 4 89 ["]II Gofden-Crt1mStyt1orWhol1Ktmtl . 33 "" ~ ;;tte,.e;ed;...i._,., lb .75 0 Beet frriS ,, ... 1.39 ~ Mennen Skin Bracer .. ;~ • ~ Ralphs Canned Com '',~~ • ~ ''"\'~ ......., ........ ,.. 48 0 ... ,... ''" 105 ~ U°ibi0Ba~0Roll On ·~~ .88 ~ l:;j;'h;'l<etchup :,:;,~ .35 ~~..;!.~ 1'58 0=;::1cs g•:: 1:25 ~~Nasa!Spray ~~.92 ~s;.;;·Wnip ~~.39 RalPhs Bacon.... . . ~ ..... rudorotet-2Tl.lb ~ NonAlfOAl-Stiek 3\o\Ol. 99 ~ Ton1-Batt!Si.r:• .CY.oz. 35
0 '""' ............... 89 ,, 85 ~ Manpower Deodorant P••· • ~ Bar ~p ,., , ~Sliced Calf Uver ... • Imperial Margarine , . • ['JI Johooon;•-FO< • ., .... 1 n ~ '""'''••FOllPKk•g• 17 ~ .... -1· 59 O Flootd• '"" ''" 85 ~ Baby Lotion .:.~.~ • ~ Brown Gravy Makins ";,:;: ~ ~ ~ Sausage Tb. • Ralphs Orange Juice 11Uon • LA For Se9'0nlng and Cooking 48 . Frozen Food ~ A-1 Sauce .!,~.~ .
I ~ RMolpl"Xh•ed-C~~=abJes 10 29 [A Scre1mlngYellowlonker1-Sot,pkg,or 49 I DI ble-Fot••lllsket~Coflstuken I StlnlM1c1Jr1-Stv1AO • ~ y~..,. P::: • ~ FKktle faddle ~=: •
· -l;effle / g Wh Boril8IUX 1 59 ~ ~-~~ '~:;: .89 ~ t;;;;on Juice :,::; .39 ~Ritari . , no• ~Wine ~ • ~ Cirt'G;:.;~eoons '~:~ .49 ~ K~·A\d''"'M'"• ::! .49
~ SOltllle-Aaofttll-bctplbotKnok°"'lft ~ IWptts-•ProDf tun 519 L:J Banqvel-FrttdChlekenor 1 48 [A Kr1ft -l~uldtOOOlll1nd ' • ~Dixie Cups · ""'···~ • ~ Kentucky Boutbon .... • ~Turkey Dinners ~:~. ~Salad Dressing ·:.~~ .88 D ---A~1~-1r1Wlfl• 88 D Ulftbd1'1Mt-lff•1.20 "'" n 40 LA A1'°"tdV1rlell11-flceptSllctdBe•f21b.129 [A E••Y!••h 129£ 89 "IWly T°"'-"' !· • .... • Smh ncJ!T Vodka g••· • ~ Banquet Suppers pkg. • ~ Stain Remover ......
Q--Plottbo-#_,,. 197 D .......,,,__s;-~.. ... 10.99 !:JI"'"'.................. 170• 39 ~ ....... Mlf!• 12•• 59 ~ Thei1110S E11l411s ~... • Seagram a 7 , -~Pancake Batter ...... • ~ Whealles Cereal ,k, .•
Prittl EllecllYI 8 ~11m1Mr2Stlmlilgh October1, 1975 J,. • " r··++···.,r··•·•~-tr•·~-;;·---
1 ..... o+.1tru•C.,. nn 11 .... .11..... eo... 1112 11 .... .Jit .. C...... 1111 I GIM-...... -...... _... Llfft_,..... .'
• s.IM:h •1 111•• · · aa 1·1 ..... l·•e 1 I Ball .· ~':i .1 II a.. :.:. II-·~·" I
I -11'<-"""°"-... ~ 11 _ ... _ ...... _... . 11 ...... _ ... """'"" ..... _ I --·--"-°"'' ---·-D<t.• --""'.,.._""', L •""" coullON · •L au"" cou-· • L au11•A cou110N .I The 19-er incaket with .l!l!r • -prices ________ .. ------· .. ----------~ llAlM srotlis ARf UlCATED AT: * ... 17th ST., cdsTA MBA 9901 ADAMS BLVD., H\JllTINGTON BUOi • 1~71 s. BROOICHURST, WESTMINsmt r 2'167 PASEO DE VAlBtCIA, lAGUllA llUS 11'l6117.tlt{ST., TUST1ll ' 401 N. lO~ A~IM '69:2 WARNER, HUKTINGTON BEAOf STORE HOURS: 9-10 Dally, 9.9 Sunday
• -
Add in cup wine eom·
bined with tomato paste,
salt. peppercoros1 garlic. orange peel, cin4
namoa and cloves. Cover
and rout In 275 detree
oven2boun.
. Add peeled onions, 1 scraped carrots and re-
mainiag wine to beef.1
Cover and continue cook·
ing 1 hour longer untit
tender .
Slice meat and serve
wlthvegetables. Thicken
pan juices for gravy ii
desired. Makes 8 to JO
servings.
English
Version
The English boil many
<A their beef, lamb and
mutton dishes and one of
their greatest achieve·
ments i~ boiled beef
served with carrots and
egg dumplings.
Here is a rectpe for
that venerable dish.
BEEF 'N DUMPLINGS
6 pounds beef brisket
15 carrots peeled
1 marrow bone
1 teaspoon·
crumbled, dried thyme
1 parsley sprig
1 medium onion
peeled 1 teaspoon salt
Egg dumplings (see
below> Place beef, 1 carrot
and rest of ingredients.
except dumplings. in
kettle and cover with
with water.
Bring to boil. reduce
heat and simmer about
three hours. One hour
before meat is done, add
rest of carrots.
Ten minutes before
end of cooking time.drop
egg dumplings on top of
liquid, spoon by spoon. l
Cover and steam 10
minutes. Serve with (
mustard and fresJi
horseradish. Serves 8
penona.
To make egg dump!·
i.np: mix 2 egg· yolJal, 1
tablespoon milk and 'h
teaspoon salt. Beat in 3
tablespoons unsifted
Dour, and beat till UlhL
Fold In 2 egg whites and •
beatUJ11llff.
Tantalize
Alternate thl n
crosswise slices of freah
Bartlett pear with aucea·
o(orange and onion.
Drlule with clear
French dressing and
sprinkle with cbop1>04 parsley .
'
• •1 •
r ·
CJf OAILY PllOl
I
W!dn!!day. s.e-2<, 1075
~OOMER
11ts.1r's ~imi.£.IVE
• MAD '-
• eefAKFAef
IVIT~
• AIZNoLD
£1/orz:(
DAY
\ 1~/S
: Wffl(.
n
Jol!'f~AT
SCtJl'iJIS
Slrto~S!
by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
liar 11!ALL(.
IT'S JUST
f~AT /j)~I~
Eve(l.'{JOO'/
Elst 15
OUT Of tll<J~
TRIVIA MARKER
Upon this spot in 1820, jeb J1nkt1,
e lost prospector, ~1gh1ed a Sea
Gull in the ~ky. Q\•er1oyed, ha
named_ the soaring bird "Lucky"
and set orr in the direction from
y.·luch it had come. The Saa Gull.
liov.·ever, turntd out to be a pre-
maturely gray vulture na med
"Certild", whom eventuully ale
Jinls.
fo0/0LO 5UPPLJE5
AIY AllNl.+1U M
DAI/,.'( AOU!-T
2eou12fM£HTs
by Tom K. Ryan
; FUNKY WIHKERBEAH by Tom Batiuk
•
WHATWA5
THAT~
1HAT WA&
WICKED
WANDA I
PRACTICING
HER MAJORE,,.E
ROUnNES/
WHEW I l'OR A SECOND
THERE :i: THOUC,HT I OJl\5
. IN 1HE TWIL/6KT ZONE I
,
l ' .
.. ~
FIGMENTS by Dale Hale
. " .
·' ..
' ;
;
• NANCY j
'
' '
' i
j IVT,·.1•
WE OUGHT TO DO
SOMETHING
ABOUT THAT
HQL.l..OW TREE
ON OUR'·llAWN
I
~ TODAY'S CROSSWORD nizLE
l
I ACROSS
1 LINtNn
5 In addition
9 Actr11s Gla
• 14 Zodiac 1lgn
15 Rodenll
1 II Rich IOU"*! l 17 EnQ.Ope<a
• compow
: 11 Non-
• protes1!on11
; 20 Fraati-w1ter
• Usri ! 21 Occupied a
• chair
, 22 LOfd --·
• WW•I adm'i'al
: 23 R()d( ledg1
" 25 OYersaw : ! Sling
! ~ ~r~7~1!p1ke
: JO 50%
• 34 for1h WOflh
: untw.
• 36 Plgmenl
: 38 One making•
• gill
: 39 ()agree hold-
• er:3wotdl
: ... 2 Proc:lamation
• A3 o.prnslng
: A4 Minl"9Ultar
• o'5 Aa1.1·1 master ! --Ctlarles
• ~ Chou En -·-
47 G1e11:
• Pretix
'" •Q Reslr1lns I •
51 Mercl'l1ildls·
\ngeven1s
54 Ot the 1tars
58 Be!Ofe lhet1
eo Vlolen1 blow
111 R1.1le olsome
1pa11men1s: 2
word•
63 Deteal
Sol Color
65 Orlice worller:
Abbr.
66· Hungarian
c+ty
1!17 CUY in Ohio
68 Ancient
Pnoen1ci11t
c ity
'
Yes1~r11~y s Puule Sol'l'l!d
69 Wllt\efed: Vir i 1 Entr1nce 40 Exe.lama lion
DOWN 12 Thal ... nol •1 Enghsh
1 Mild oaths 13 Pallld river
2'femlntne 19 SonofMlled .t6 Cause to
name 24 Aspect sleep
3 Lombardo"s 26 BrNkupa '8 Oeepc.u1s
lorte: 2 words senteoc:e 49 Kind of land-
4 AdclilOn"s 28 Not either mark
partner JO Gardener's 50 YOtJng ox
5 H!11onc. Umes tool 52 Clfe pa1rori
s Tlbel•n 31 t.at>Or union 53 Miitric unit
monks pl: 2 WOfdS 5' P.I. b1.1111lo
7 New Yorll 32 Ringlet 55 Footwear item
landmarlc : 33 Costing 56 PTAmemt>er.
3 wOJ(Js no1n1no Abbi.
8 Timetable 34 Feds. 57 Flow o!
abbr . 35 MuslimJUOO& current:
9 Turned to the 37 RounOend Prel1x
side pr(ijeetl~ 59~---otGreen
"10 Persi an J8 Riverbank Gables~
gazelle a1ruc111res, 62 Time abbr,
I
• •
•
s;;-
c~
by &nie BushmiHer
OUR
NEIGHBORHOOD
DENTIST CAN'T
STAND TO~
-If" -. . ,. :::::=:=.:=! . -----
PEANUTS -r,A-SK-''/Ol'/1-t!IO~
IFME ~SMl
i) l1AKE 1llE LEA~
IN '«ll!1 'IARO
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
I
I •
YOW t<NliN W>N YOIA'R'o
lll?ffY; MAR'ClA ?
ffGAIAS/!t ~ -E AN INNU
L.AGK Of' CONFIDENCE !
DICK TRACY
•
CIRCLE THE Bl.00<
ONCE, FIRST.
'
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR. SMOCK
GORD0 1
S'T'eAPY AS SHe Goes ... POI'>'!' -'1'0-POl't'T' WHf?N
PASSING .'
MOON MUWHS
-FOi! T!IE iMl'OltlANT
) ® -rouc~ .. D·O·O·P·c·o ..
. THEF<E!
ANIM;d. CRACKERS~ .
'TTTTll•r'.:::"'.'-=:=::::=--;,.;:;::;;::::::::;-i
ll)Am''lO Ito.I
A h'QJIE TOtJ!eHT f'
~.WHAT1 S.
PLi\RIN9?
•
,/
by Charles M. Schulz ..----------,
HE II/ANTS 1tl KNOW MOllJ
Hf CAN TEl.L. IF '/Oll'LL
DO A 6000 JOO,.
~~LY, ~ ""'' IN 'MY PIANCH.
by Mell
by Chester Gould
SEND 2 MORE N\EH AND A
/KNIE CAMERA. MEET US AT
1.eMIDE'S PARKING LOT.
)
• l . • '
I
!
• '
_J
'' .
bi Rodge Bollen
UE
I,
. •
.
I
' '
,
' ,.
... /
t .
~· i "
. /
. ._
"
•
•
I
-
• ' fl .. -~· •
• -
'
I
•
' .
-
25 ~au.-a dderSTwin-P._k bags are
we>rtJi 1200 Blue Chit> Sta1Dps (1 Book)
rni 1ijhr·1 ··,,. .•.
I i I -I '
. ""., ! 1 I ' t . I ; f 1 \ -I ti i . I ·' . ' t . ~ ' • • " , '
I\ p ·
JJ'
•
STAMPS
If you're t.rying to raise money, Laura
Scudder's and Blue Chip Stamps can
help.
work. Just about eyerybody eats po-
tato chips, and more people eat' Laura
Scudder's Potat.o Chips than any other
kind. Don't wait._This pot.ential source
of revenue is just waiting to be tapped.·
Get your group going and start saving
empty outer bags of Laura Scudder's
. Twin-Pak Potat.o Chips today.
~fake your T11.tn-Pah bags to the Blue Chip Redemption Store nearest you!
/ Have friends and n eighbors save
their empty bags of Laura Scudder's
Twin-Pak P otato Chips, and for each
lot of 25 you collect you'll get 1200
Blue Chip Stamps -1 full Book! Re-
deem these stamj)s -and you can add
in other Blue Chip Stamps people
might like to donate -for some great
·things, such as TV sets, home appli -
ances,.cameras, sports equipment. You
can even get cash! Let the bulging Blue
Chip cjltafg be yoiir shopping ".'"de.
This is a super way to get cash or items
for auctions and prizes for contests.
Here's a t.errific opportunit to put a
lot of helping hands and mouths to
The Twin· Pak outer bags m1U1t be
delivered to a Blue Chip Redemption
Store. For each lot of 25 bags you bring
in , you will receive 1200 Blue Chip
Stamps -right on the spot! Sorry, no
redemption can be made for lots of less
than 25 bags, and only oliter bags that
say Laura Scudder's Twin·Pak qualify
for redemption. OF.FER eNDS AT
5 P.M. ON SATURDAY. NOYEM-
_BER 8, 1975. • • ,
California
,,l..HAMf!ll/\
11 1 South Sl-0110·111.on
ANAll EIM
11r,1 "' .. ~t Lonmin"'""·
Ill\ I\ t:MSFI f:Llt
1~0 011 k S1 ,,.,.,
B":Ll.~·LO\Vf:lt
IOU4 Rotoec•·""" 1111·•1
COSTA M F.SA no w..c. 11tth s11 .... ·l
COVINA
14tl Hl'lllen!Mck
DAl.Y CITY
Ill~ Pll'rot St..-' £1. Ct; NT RO
747 Mnln RI~
t;I, MONTE 4i<HI North Pftk lt<1111•I
t;UR!kA
424 Comnl•rclal
YRl".SNO ltt i.a 8hlfttl• A••
OLP-NDALE uaa San "'"'""'"' 11""''
HAWTHORN£ tl11t c ...... h111•• fJl•··I
HAYWARD n •H Jflul<ln lltw•l.
l!OLLY\\001) l'/\f'OlMA
fiJ",4 ll<>IJY"'''°'t l~I•··! 110<11 •l<l.01·,,,.
I ND/ll l'ASAOJo:NA
!11-fi•;ll lfiJ!.w1ov 1 I I 1 i7o ~:..lit t;r .... n :-;1 ,, ··1
1·1<0 n1v1-;UA
l.i\ llAHltA ~~o·. \1,'n•l'lin,.1nn Uh·I.
:!'•1 lmp\'dKI lti"h'""'' 1'11,\fONA
I.A M&•;.\ 1~11:, Y> .. •l Mi•~'""
7•1.1 t:I C"><jon Hlvol. R":OLf\Nll~
l f,M2 No1·1h Or""'''' LO:O.:(; llEAC ll
11~() H"'""'"" IU\'ERSll!J·:
•Hiil ln.JhonA LOS ANGELE.<; S•\CRAMl;NTO An•:A :itto s11 ... .,,. ""··· I North llhrhl10n1!, 1
LO!' AMCt:LE:S. 4flll> V.'an ,,, . ..,,
l fl~~ ~th , .... s ..... SI\ LIN AS
21 Sltn Mi!l'Wl o,.,,...,
LOS /\NG}:LES
141<1 \\'. :-.410t1ch-.!o·• n1 v1t. SAN 8ER.NAR1)1Nn
1~41 ''H"'' St.-t
.\lnfl}:ST(J .~AN JOS.E 11n1 MtH•t11y A•• Ill•~ Hu1nh1un l..11n•I
NORTHRIDGt-: .'\AN f,UIS 081Sl'O
1 ... 30 R-111 lil•·L ~3'• llhru.•11
OA~LAND SAN RAl"AP.:L i:no Tdfll:'.'""nh " .... Z3 Bcllan\ 01 .... 1.
OCEA.NSJDt: ~ANT A /\NA
121 North Hon•~ l4t 1 l5Mt .. ,, ..
ONTARIO SANTA l\ARBAR/\
11...SO..th M11o11nta•n till~ i.a. P09JIU Ht .. ,1
• ', .
I
Oller good o~ Laura Scudder'• Twin·P~k Potato Chi po : Regulor, Chillo lo~ Dipo, and B~r-B·Q Aavor.
-
• .
. -
SANTA MONICA
101& Unroln Htvn.
l'iA..NTA ROSA ~u~ ci..~,i...,m A«.
~OUTH Gl\Tt-:
Sfilfi IAnir B"IH:h Blv•I.
:iTOCKTON
1~3 J 11mmown
TORltANC•:
2lll44 HAwthor"e Blvol.
VALLE.10
'8 SD rinalll.own Shor>. Ctr,
VAN NUYS
•111 Sepulvt!da BIYd.
VENTURA
111110 Eut M .. h•
VtSALiA
1141 W"""' Walnut A'f'f.
WA I.NUT CREER
l!fl~'I North Malit
\\'E:STMINSTER
14~t Buoch Blvd.
YUDA crrv
11418rkb:e61rttl
Nevada
I.A.fl VJ!:(;AS
41l0t W. S.hnra
SPARKS
11115 Od41• Bt..t.
• •
I .
•
. .. ....
i I
•
No way do yau tit "1kunktd" WMn you angk for yO<JT fouoritt• at El Rancho-. I For variety, for quality. for value, you can be sure that you reeled in the finest
catch! So aet your course for El Rancho, to be sure!
--..... _..____ .. . .
-h
~
..__. ·----
• •
,
• s111 · Corvtlll • • • • • • •
S.lt ... tor_, Fnah -
MontereJ Squid 59t
Dare tO be dil!emli!
I
River _Smelts... 69t
From the rushing Columbia!
' Fillet of Turbot 79t
M h• Mah" s111 a I I..... •
The real thing from Hawaii!
Jumbo Shrimp • s31t
Extra fancy Miiican white -ahell on ....... -~~~-~----7~~_.._~,_,.,, Sea Scalloos •• -. s~
I
-. ..,,.....
Crab Meal ALASKAN •••• SJ 2?
~ . . ,.
]Jl."liciously mild and sweet •• ;;r. frqm big Al11skan_king,crabs! IS ll. IOl. • .15.00)
f;' I " • ; ' ,,,. . '
. . . .. ·-
'---"" ...._ __
Halibut · $249
STEAK ."'
I Center cut to offer the best!
Crab Legs • • • • • s 12!
Meaty -from Alaskan crabs!
. Fresh s 1 s9
. Catfish •
1 l.iouiaiana fish -skinless, headless •
;,. ... -1 • l
v , Shopoer StoJJpers! Y '. • ·• '9-~'Ti-;;)~j,.·.
M. ayonria:is. e QUART ••• 39c ........ Ch ........ op...._pe_d_2_5__,c
Frozen Foods!
, . Broccoli
You'll be delighted witll, the quality -and (h~ 11avinp -when you buy Springfield
-Peaches DRMONTE ••••••••• 49c
Golden goodness in firm t
1
ast.y yellow clings -5liced or halv~! No. 21/i can
I ~.~.~~~!~!~~ .. !~~:.~:,;,39c
flour~-.... ~ ... ~ .... 79c
f The brand that gives you a "wjlite thunlb" !ot 1ure multe in all your baking! 5 lb, bag.
' .
Salad Oil : ••.•• :s11' Toilet Tissue • ~ &9c
Large 48 ounce siZe -Sprinef.Jeli:ll ' Coronet Ultra -4 roll pack
Light Tuna ••••• 49c
Chicken of the-Sea -chunk! 6~ oi:~!. + breSsfng1sus •••• 49~ I. Jtalian, French, Goddeu! 8 oi 1 ,
lemon Juice • . • 39c
Sunklst -the experts! 16 oz.
Hunt's · Catsup •• _35c
Saucy Oawr in 14 oz. bottle • ·Natural Cereal • 75c
Heartland -all varietiest 16 oz. } 't'!!.y-~~ l~!~:peo~
I Electrasol • • • • • • &9c· " Cat Chow • • • • • • 3•c ,,-'i!or dishwasher3 -33 oz (15c tff) ·\ !1 iPutir.a -beef or t;ith! 22 oi
=wild B"d Seed 59c.:. . lvpr.y Liquid.. • • 99c :~-51&;;. 49~~. 1
:: ~°"~S";;2 i~isc
Springfield ....i .paclc:ap of 150 [ ·t. Yfylbt -.mak• diJll, too! l IA oz
r-' t '
Tom~o · 1-2c r, Sauce
' R;.tll flnor! ilpringfiel -'-8 os
Peanut
Butter
Skippy'• 1mobtb or crunchy! 18 os.
'
Birdseye's garden goodn~! -~O ot
Macaroni·.,., CIUS[ ••• 29c
Mo,rton's • , • 8 ounce package
Spinach llllDSl:YE , ••• 19C
Ch~leaf or chopped! JO oz
Avocado Dip • • • 59c
Calavo, to be sure! 7 3/4 ounce
Eggo Waffles • • 49c
Regular or Blueberry! 11 cz
Hash Browns .• 39c
Splingfield potatoes in 2 lb. lJkg.
Grapefruit 2 7c JUICE ·
Minute Maid Reg. or Pink, 6 oz.
, Price• fa.effect Thru, S<Pt.·25
through Wed. Oct, l
Ope" da ily 9 to 9. Sunday IO lo 7
• No sales to dealert
'--Ship Ahoy-Crom Deep Alubn .... !
_FRESH s 14,. I
PERCH •
Fresh. fillets of ocean perc·h!
S. · 1 n· Fa 1 -s 1 a' a mo SILVER • ;.·.... ••• •• • 111
Delightful treat to serve baked! Whole or hair. Get aome for the freezer! • ·f
Salmon : Steak ,s2s~ ..
Center cuts fresh tilver salmon! Firm flesh, fiavor(ul! Great barbecued of broiled!
·~ I
Fresh · Cla~$ ~=~ 7 ·9~
Have a clant bake , , • make tome cMwder1 ~,,. 99C t.) New England! .~
. '
' . ~!~~el!!t~:.~~·' J s 1 s•
Choice! Whole or half. · lb 1 , , , &9c Split -rofflrs . ; . . . . . . . . . . •• . • • ,.
Large ineaty fteeh ftying chickens!
Garden fmh •••
tender! All green!
Haas 39c· • Avocados .· ...
~ali(ornia'• finest ••• an~ largo •fie!
El Rancho Gin •• s499
Baking
Russets
U,~. No,-, l J>temium quality!
'
ARC' OIA P~ \AOfNA SOUTH PASA DENA HUNTINGTON BEACH NfWPORT BEACH EASTRLUFF IRVINE
' '' '. · '"' <'\lqo••qu ..,., ,..,.,,, 1<1 " ' t , ,.,,,1 '·'• 1,,,",
. . ' ' • ' ' , ... '" -""f"' "" "' ' ' ' ' ' ' . . • • ' ' • " ... , ' ' '
left l1rpriw ............. 7k
Ji}ei1eh11M1nn'1 qualieyt J lb. Pi:s
Al .................... $3.30 r .. automalic ... 11en1 o .. r. a11>o 1111 1111
... FtM .•.• . ••..••...•... lie ~~7rWrlll. f« yrAJr J*~ 16 \t ounc. can
' . I
T • 11111 llrs.... .. . .. .. .. . 2tc
M°'*turi1a1 a It cleanses! 811 btir ,
.... G1l1tin •• ;. ~ .•.....•..• 43c ·
The bit e ounce pq -all navor1l
Dr.."""' ................ $1.19
0..rt topping mi.1! 6 os. PKk•P
Spray St.ch ,.. . . . .. . . . . . . . • 7k
FaultleM -ea. to UN! 22 ounce eiM
leef Stew .................... 3fC
J<.otd Kitt frozen . Ht.1t •" ~! 8 °'•
'SlrloiA Ti \ "············c··"· 590 Kold KiA froM1\ convtnlenctit l °'' ' -~___.._. • I I ' .
•
•
'
• •
'
'
\
t
\ -
"
t
\ t.
\
\
~ I \.
\,
\
.. ....... , .. ,"" \M9I llDI c·g .. -2 '*". °"'* ..... -.......
,., fOallft. ,.,.,,,, .a. ... ..... ·Jll& U4,NO. c.n
e.1111. •
•
\ . . el; ftlf."..gr 1 :!z 'S'•5 '
, IEAc:tt IClfl SCI COSTA UUA HUM I ie&TOH IEACH . AIM A -CORetu DB. .... R IRVM ·~li\\\\\~~\~\\i\ii\~~\~\\iili\~-~%ll1\\\,~\\~\\i\li1~\\\\~\\\~\~\'\~~i•\\\\\\\\\~\\~\~li\~~~
I •
•
. .
• •
•
\
• •
•
•
• •
.
l
. •
i
•
\.
' ·,
A Big Dude
John Hayes, at II feet, 2% inches tall, almost has to
reach down to twirl his lasso around this lass, who is little
Donna Mc Hale, 7, of Mission Viejo, who stands only three
feet , eight inches tall. Hayes, of course, is on stilts inside his
woolly cowboy chaps and boots. He dropped by Saddleback
Valley Plaza over the weekend to pick up some grub and
other supplies bcforeheadingforthehills again.
Harrises' Link
To Bonihing Eyed
EMERYVILLE (AP) -Police Chief John Lacoste says the
firebombing of a police car in this Oakland suburb last month
may have been masterminded by Symbionese Liberation Army
members William and.Emily Hanis.
Lacoste said he believes evidence removed from the Harris'
apartnient after their capture Thursday links them to the Aug. 13
bombing that destroyed an unoccupied patrol car.
"THERE'S NO QUESTION A110CIT the connection,';
l..acoste said. • ·
The police chief said a bomb removed from the Harri.1' •rart·
_ ment was identical to the one taped to the gas tank o the
Emeryville police vehicle. He said the two devices also were
· 'identical to a bomb found under a San Francisco police car Aui. 6
and added that he conferred with the FBI and San Francisoco
Police on the cise.
The Harrises were arrested shortly before fuglUve heiress
Patricia Hearst and her radical comrade Wendy Yoshimura
were apprehended at an apartment about 2Mi: miles away.
LACOSTE SAID FBI AGENTS found New World LiberaUon
• Front literature in the Harris' apartment.
l' The NWLF has claimed respansibility for the firebombing
;here, as well as a series or bombings in the Bay Area the past 20
months.
Lacoste said Emeryville police received a NWLF communi·
que after the bombing saying that the action was iJ\ retribution
for the 1973 fatal shooting by police of a 14-year-oJd black BP·
, prebended in a stolen car. Police said the youth fired uPon them,
but his gun never was fotmd.
LA.COSTE SAID 11IE HARRIS apartment also contained the
names and home addresses ot four Emeryville police officers.
The officers were not involved in the shooting incident.
which he said indicated the NWLF may.have been considering
:-. further random violence against police. ,.
•
;
l
l
' • ,
·'
,
Lebanon
Cease-fire
·Fragile
BEIRUT, LeballClll (VP!) -
Premier lllullld Kanml oald to-
day wun111 PoliUcal and re-li~oua 1roup1 a1r,e•d to. wJ draw from the streets of
ll'<!lrul, bul a major rlS)lU11
P'OUP rejected the accord and a$
p.m. truce ·deadline puoed with
llUJlmen-from a!HacUon1 IUU at
their posts.
The agreement was desiened
to end aix days of urban warfare
.(
.
) IN SHORT
between Moalem leftists and
rllht·wlng Christians that
caused 225 deaths with at least
3SOpenons injured.
Perre Gema~el, leader of the rlghl·wlng Pha angist party Iha!
controls a powerful ~litia
~ said his men would not
wt aw until the eovemment
asserted ils a!llhorlty in troubled
areu.
Onoald'Note
WASHINGTON (AP) -A new
probe has been launched into the
circumstances surrounding the
destruction of a threatening note
sent to the Federal Bureau ol In·
vestigation by Lee Harvey
Oswald in early November, 1963.
A lmoWJed1eable source in !he
Justice Department aaid Tues·
day !hat the matter has been
turned over to the department's
criminal dlvlalon.
The FBI acknowledged recent.
ly that the letter, delivered to the
Dallas FBI office . by Oswald
shortly before the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy,
was destroyed aoOn alter the
Kennedy aasaa1inaUon. . ..,..,, . ...,._,
PORT~D. Maine <UPI) -
The three Epl1copal liUbopo who
onlalned II women priests in
Philadelphia last year were
censured by an overwhelming
majority of the Episcopal House
olBishopo.
The same resolution Tuesdf1¥
"decried" !he action ol a bishop
who ordained four other women
priests In W ashlnglon, D.C.
The roll call vote was 115-17 to
censure the Philadelphia priests
-Bishop Robert L: Dewitt,
former bishop of Pennsylvania;
Bishop Daniel Corrigan, reUred
bishop of Colorado, and Bishop
Edward R . Welles, retired bishop
· ot.Westam Ml11ourl. . .
Kleppe,llaer.ed
WASHINGTON (APl
Thomas S. Kleppe appears
bead.eel for confirmatlon as Jn.
terior secretary, with senaton of ·
both parUes predlctinl he'll win
final Senate approval.
Kleppe, 56, described himself u "a decision ·maker, not a pro-
crasUnator" at a Senate hearing
Tllelday. .
He also defended bis. four.year
tenure as bead of the Small Busl·
neas. AdmlnlstraUon by de1111ng
allegations of mi1manaa:ement
and lnfluence·peddJini.
P.UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUllLI(: NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
J 'I '
•
•vauc NO'ltCB
PCJllUC NOTICE
PCIBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PCIBLIC NOTICE PClllLIC NOTICE
·~-HERITAGE • • R EALTORS
1EE3~fil COLLEGEPARK . fi'i Superior in decor, lovely
,., •• , .. 6.Ci:-5671-t
a friendy dot~
•wltor wll help rou ueate
an ineqllM!w,
but irff~ .... -. ...
DAILY PILOT
cov. patio, brick plan-
ters. & outstanding
ga rdens! Plus 20x20
paneled bonus & game
room. Just listed. Should
go fast. 646·7111 or -.
D,E1.IGH1fUl
3 BEDROOM-+ den, on
waterfront with 3 full
baths. Vacant and ready
to move into. $79,000.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
642·5200 .. 675·4060 ~
G..,..al 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~llo!~.!w~!l
4 Br, 4 Ba &.Gallery
2 fireplaces, wetbar
Deluxe kitchen
Pier for yacht to60'
You may select the
finishing touches.
675-8120
OCEAN VIEW
New custom 2,400 square
foot hom e with
pJanOJ'a:Mic ocean view.
' Builder. will customize to meet your individual re-
quirements. $11 7,000.
10% down. 962·~.
.Q. KEY
Housts for Seil• 'iil!J2 Rf; Al TORS iii ••••••••••••••••••••••• GeMral I 002 General 1002
·············~········· •..•.••.•••••..........
\\ LSl.1 '1 N
TAYLOR CO.
!\EAi.TORS s1nl'e 19 46
FANTASTIC SUPER IUY!
Ofle of the nicest ·.4 BR homes in
Baycrest area for only $89,500. Formal
PR & unusual kitchen o'looking lge re·
ar yd. Spac. rms. Rm for pool.
21 I I San Joaquin Hills Road
NEWPORT CENTER, N.8. 644·49 I 0
--------
1002G..l.r.i 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
CUSTOM BUILT .l.... CdM
... twin duplexes; 3 bdrms. & family
rm. each unit; quality workmanship
thruout. Both units nearly new. Avail.
single or together . Corner $124,900
inside $122 ,500. Xlnt rental area.
An&mON, SAUSl'EOPLi,1>
We have openin~ for 2or 3 people,)Vith
R.E. sales expenence or ~ year or
l)lllfe. , .an active office ih a TOP
00\:ATION! ,
PCJllUC NOTICE
'
. PUBLIC NOTICE
SUHIUO• cou•TOP0THIE
STATIE OP CALlf'O•HIA FO• * ntECDUN'tYOPOWANC•
•
F
d
I • $ a
..
[
I
(
I
i
l
c •
I
-
~Jo/an
REAl hlATf ... ( . '
PARAGON
' ... . .. ....._For s. Hw1ForS. H11MHfor5* t"a1n...-S. H1 1sfa '-\S. Hwtn Fer S. • .... ..... ·-······---_,.. ........ -.. .,. ... -·········~ .. -·······-···-.. ...-..,······-· .. ····j·-··········-····--ii-!!!!!·!!· ~-~-m·a; ... :·;·;..,i-~j .. ;·~·1111~--j*ii;;;;~DAll.~~y~"°~1T:_.11-!!!I ....... ... ...... 1002 ...... I I I .. -M~I_........... ''°' ........... IW t' ,,,,.,.s.. . ............. • .......... ,., ................... ..,.. ~-················-·· ····~................... ................ ....................... ........................ ........................ . ............................................ .
SKIM .... -cAUllO!l«A COMOOJa c .... ..., tol4 .,..... 1 L11 ...... 1 .. "' ...,.. ~ IA y CRIST llAt4dm. IA N...-post ...,... do9e ········••••111!9••······ ••••••••. ............. .. .................... .
COcnpl ... ,r.t••<J' IA PoOI -...... --2000 SqU1'0 , .. , Bil· lo ....... _; -.......... Ml..... l.AsnlDI • Br, 2~ .... ,.,. k!Ub, ::";,!! ~~i.!'!-~ Cbr, tloa, --IUid\y ... the loome all In -• •••It de•on{ecf. IALIOA 1c.1 .A HD S.loa, people! Do yoa fr9~llo ..,., -.., bay ._ oc:ean.. ,siiOCl rm a.ad romw diDiA(. floor. 'l'b.U Jovely , UDUftal Yalae.-.'ISO • ~ won t.bil uut Over \ti ti$, 0'9'nerlSJ..._
f'<eowaenlllp • .. •• ,. maoy qualllt bedn>oOI. 1 l>alh -c F C1l1S1•11111. NIW LIStAll -OUI UCW$1YI :'::" :::lrr"t1.nr~j;i;;iiiiiiiiiii~oiiii;;I • '(}, ' reatura edauptoma&e b•1 m•rv110_,1 floor · · CHICITHIPllCll .• .,;'),~ ~ one Uio best buy 1n phn, 101.., •. 1 dl•L•t ..... '"°'°" Deluxe Townhouse Type Duplex. ~.:' •P t. c.n JoaJ 11., oall' "'7.IOO 1.,.. Jhb :.;:,!~~ ne.w,orl Be•ek •t room, larc• ram a1 'Spacious 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba each, beaut. SOUTHLAHDll.S 1paclou, well~
C::,SELECT · Olllblt<t to l!I. VA loao. brick paUos, laundry rms. Blk to Bay , __ _!:!!•!::-!:~~:._-! T• .. ~•a of...J1'Ublne ---!"'1----I TPR'oPERTIES 545-9'lt. on the quiet end or the Island. This is yet'°"mU.l•"-l ..
• -$13,000. CA.tL ..... llllO. roocn . Can lot pqn:bue<I iJ shag crplC, Walk·IR closets, encl. car, ••• •s•I S lodrm ., J\', beth home.
NI WUmNG pride otownersblpllylng. 8T4!'!' 10JZ ~·Dd llri.~0.\'I__•icel.Y. c .... tr, Clllb e.tt. ••••• ···-··· ... •••••·•• .,..... "• -maU1 Bu•t.) ~ ... do9 FM.AAl'l'WSID Agent 549-08µ LAlttl'OlllSr ... ..st;o-oflhe
A.rcbitttt dclflc-t ... vu,
fenced )'d, rm. io ltX•
pilftd. Ore.at la.mUy homo w/IO molot, I Br, brick
paUo.t09,.IO(t :-: ..
W/W<lbM; •••"loleonUo .... t '42.$00. l.iOO ""' lL 1' OPIMDAILY * Co • r·.. beat~• ••allal>l•. C:\I. & ou.n\r)' club r:I homo. 4 bodroc.>m. !\oil --------'--1 ff n."kl n-un IMHAU>IAY
'We olrtr lhll. aldor
• • •
NEWPORT
I00,$001 . boths, larg•l•rnllY"'°"' I!' I W&RE YOU-I'd IOOZ Co,_de!Mw 10~. -e ---.-••ver 552 750 •675-7060• wli.h blla bar,~ livJna QUln ILICl.AMCI aee It todQ! Corcoa c,lel ·---•••••--•--•• .,._•••••••~"-.•J-..t..•••••• .oc~~ecl~'!!!~&l. • 0 .albo.,,__ room , dlnln• Eattni l.AHCH-lhr•harmwltbbMmed llAa Dca11" Nory:;-:.~,~·~· cl hlll -, •• ..,.. •••• in kitchen . Thb lo•eJy-• ...,. cellloJ, .,.Heel floor, OUl•OMR·Z 4111DUPLEC ••• ,, .. ~ • .Ji( rl . ~~~~11~•;•;;11;1~~~1 H d home in exchlilv• af.e11 pa led wtill rtrepta Sin I t mUy bome ..._.
"
•r ~~.1~~ FUUy o< Mesa Verde. Showa Fr ne h c1oon· :; I• • SO. OFIAYSIDI l---.-..,.----·I re••ev
I t~ Qp'J tfk-e~a model . 3 ~nc open . • o.v1r1.1Je4, kit: w1lk t .wttba:SBR,2.8Arent.al. llmdta1'•...,_. 1040
Jut11thia:price! bedroom•. a baths, hb1e ..... ecluded bdeted -UiRi iliOJi: c;reat a~ Only l '-' yeara old. ••••••r•••••••••••• .. •• ~
I .1 d patio• yard sbaded b1 • for year U'OU8d Uv!n1 Featurinr beam-:11-.,. * IY o-* ~ UPERB am1 r. room, oub e lit at tree : tbr•• $5.5,000 .. ~_. .... ,.... . flrep ace .. Seeing i1 bedroom•. two batb ns-aa m.IOBSEv natural wood and brick Beautiful Deane eroa:.~~~~~~~~~I
00 OCUQ s1do of
Hwy., on park·l
crounda' this i• estate-type home. A
va.nc.e •»P"L n!q~'· 0[[ered at $179,JD
Ftna.acln1 &o be neaoUli N . Exclualvety by • • .. INCOME
FOUR·PLEX. pride o1
ownership, DelWte units·
Fireplace. ~lm., 2 baths
eactl. On.ly 8 yrs. old.
$134 ,SOO. 1-"ee land. Prime
area.
Q MES believiagotreredwltbGI homeonTWOLO'l'Sptus teJ:tures and perfect bome.•br,Zba.Zstory, -c...,.. l<O S4l·HSO llnanclna. call-I. a S.car 11r ... l<paaeled io<allon. Call644-1211. very printealmOlphe,.. UNIVERSITY CCM'ttln tW: llR • ~
11-..n 644-7Uf
-
. bobby •hop. JllSt ••• wi•h .1.1ani _,.,., PARK
blocll to lbeoca.a beach. f:tiol, &: entry. Fe.atW'etl ••••JUW•••• · 301' MA.RJGOLD AVE., rae master 1ulte, PritedMid~'
at U:le cbaoee. to'bllf one . $119,500. Roman bath &: &Lri"°1.. COme see this 3 bdrm.
Soon to be completed. :s
Bd, den. 3 ba. Ocean am
Canyon Views. By
Owner. 494.srz9. PRESTIGE HOMS of the few remaining;,--~-~=="--·By owner, Prtn. Only, wfth tormaJ dln1o.g rm.,
comQletely relurbbhed .., _________ A REAL WINNER-see ''NEWPORT'' BY OWNER 11. 3 Br. 2 Baj ;~l8~1~,000;;;;.;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j 'P•Clous nutr. bdrm., Reaffort 645-6646 bedroom, 2' bath sioglf!I lhis beat in clasa; foui: + den. North ~ HWy . 2"i b aths. &. family
storyTownhouseslnSan-ASSUMA.RE bedroomhomeorthreeA JUST LISTED! A!ost m.7~144·287'7. kitchen. AU tb.ll In a MOHAICHIAY
lBR CONDO
ta Ana . Still only $21 ,950. 7o/o VA LOAN convertible ckn. Mr. 4 popular model-walk "° WALICTOllACH single fa mil)'home,nflar 'Mte flavor of <>kl Medco
Ask for Frank, 839-8321 FRANCISCAN E'OUN· Mrs. f;Jean Jive tiere-West-c:tift s hop pin(. Charmin& 2 Bl-t'OtUtgeon VACANT' commun1t)'Po0l.pltt1 &: permeates t.hruoul this
Acent TA INS·best one atory newly paintedt draped & a -UI 11 "--eel lovely St. wtrm. for ell:· -M:USTSELL!! tennla.. Bea~toaeethis colorful 4 bdtm. home
h I ca-led. Spa~-·--uo ~au u Y ~""at 3 tra unit. Open dail"'. Owner w1·11 make low In-one belore deddln• '" with Lhe fami.1" rm. over-plan wit large sparkl ng ·..... ............, .... bed.room home on large ~ ..,.. Y $24,500
Locate d on Jo'air\'ie w
Road is this upgraded
condominium with pool
privileges. All adult and
on beautiful green belt
area. Existing flnancing
at 8% % Submit down.
mp ~ pool. 4 Bedrooms, family I: Y•r'd with a pple, corner lot. Plush carpet-i-0.Slcc•c;·soo=.-'-A"'&tc.·.c,,.._.=24co25:=....--1 terest loan.2Bedroom on buy! Jootbk:Jna tbe poojl are1a F ............ ......._ _,, room dining room apricot,allriond&pltim I 1 kl h large lotwltbfruittrees. LER. AISOR 'wl il1 1eparate acuu. r ~ ' ' treee. Private beach too. ng, spac ous le en! DUPLEX 2-2 br units. Easy tercns-. fountain & flrepit. Tho
We $poclaliu In
On The'Water
Near the Water
View or Water
massive tirel?lace, patio, dining , &r: rnanicureo Choi~ loc. So. ot Hwy . n-'-are tllel<'"·"--kitcb.en, lo_w maln· 4714 CORTLAND D.$ .• yard -$79.~. Call Mr. .500.Qwner.~ sconlDALTY REALTY 00•• o( "'de7. tenaoce .yard and a 7% CAl1AM1 E!!,. HJ000GHLANDS. Black MS-M:M , Associal· • . 53~7SJJ\' , a1 reMwor~s 0art donct·
loan anyone can assume. or-· · ec:tSouth Cout Broken;. Cotona Hia:hlands, s·Br, 2 ~~~~~~~~~ 4523 ca m~ Dr Irvine ng ex1tan IUl'el e Ofl.,..d at -1so ""'" COLE-•..._.,_.;.. l ;;;iii~!!ii~jiiO~iiim B VI pt B h c al ., Ctr by a welt known artlat. 540-U.Sl~~ · ""W · ~.i!r'.@!'.!_ t' a, ew, v · c ' ampus leySbop • Alltblsinaprivatearea.
Rt-1 OPEHHOUSE m.soo. Owner/ Bro!<er. CALLIJU600 ~ _,._. Bluc lrom beuh I< ·~~in
.ANYTIME
... ~ HERITAGE
• .• REALTORS
25!5 E. Coast ffwY THURSDAY m -2!123. I b $ llS 000
•
61s.ss11 I "J •lie_. 1oa •" · 1..n... ••soc WATERAIONT i-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J Thi~ lovely view ho~ in Costa M.so I 024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TUR"KR ~ • HOMES I• lrvme1 Terracebl·d~ll be ••••••••••••••••••••••• WWteWalwrYiew ll05N.C1tHwy,La1un• ..uwc--1 ;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~ u.1.-ia...a...-&-open or Y9Ut ms,._.,-• • A.. ft...-• Est .. ~ Xlnt I ,. -·-494-1177 ~Bach ..... _.., .-.... · tion Thurs. attemooa'.l:S Easts1de Br Owner. l •n r ftlC4I --ac OC!a aon e,u..,,nces
l7\416.ll l400 FIXH UPPER p .M. If your offer ls & Fa m I y Ro o ~ , by~ lhls handsome 4 bdrm., TWO TltlPLD:ES
I 002 G_,...I I 002 ············t·········· ..........•..........••
NICE HOME AND A llG ROOM
Brand new listing on a 4 bedroom that
has a 20x2Q room that is just that : a big
room! The home is neat and clean,
right next to the park and school and
there's a double fir eplace facing the
living a nd family rooms. At $63.500,
this is the original "lotta house for the
money.'' Call us!
'Uf'liijl()Uf: ti(),..f:§
REALTORS•. 545.5990
1525 Mesa Verde Drive, East, Costa Mesa
' GHffal 1002 G..,eral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
~II. macneb / Irvine ~ realt y '
CU$TO~Cj)UALITY VIEW HOME
in Corona del Mar w /unlimited
J)ossibil llies (or lg. family or
separa te suite for in -laws or
teenagers. Cus\om-built w ;no ex·
pense spared. Heated & filtered pool ,
-180° View. 5 bedrooms, family
room. bonus room, 3 fireplaces & 311:?
baths. Sl60,000 incl. land. Belle
Chase Lee 644·6200. (W71 )
EXCITING VALUE IH IRVIHE!!!
4 bedroom home on quiet cul-de-sac.
Walk t o pool , te nnis courts. &
school!! $59,500 Laszlo Sharkany
644·6200 . (W12)
KIHG SIZE!
Love ly traditional Westcliff 6
bedroom w /formal dining, family
room & breakfast area. Spacious
rooms & secluded spacious yard.
Best area for lg. family . Close to
schools and shoppin g. Fee simple al
Sl45.000. Martha Macnab 642·8235.
(W73)
EASTSIDE TRIPLEX -562,500!
Newly decorated ineome units
W}view of Santa-An;;a golf course.
100 '1j> occupancy. Very flexible
fi nancing. Paula Bailey 642-8235.
(W74l .<
., !'
WHAT MORE7 ON SANTIAGO!!
9ne look & you will hope you brought
your check book -Light, airy,
yellowy colors, indoor-0utdoor living
......... like a brand new home - e very
extra in this 3 bedroom, 3 bath home + room for pool -$139,500 -Lois
Miller 642-8235. (W75)
~JOIN THE BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE!!! '
ou will love this s pectacular single·
leve l custom home -4 bedrooms.
family roo m & billi a rd rOom
w/w alk·in wet bar + many built·ins
_0 Lovely rn aster suite. Bob Owen~
1>42-8235. (W76)
' Hf.All EVERYTHING !
Close to beaches, tennis clubs,
harbor, golf,Fa&hionlsland,schoo ·+ tomm. pool! 4 years young
bedroom & family room home in lop
-condition. Beau.tiful l11 ·1ll'lint.
la nd~caping. $88,500 • 1felen Hartley~. (W'n) ,, •
•4ZAJll ,, .... 100
ltt ..... om. 1144 ,..,,,...
............ Cll •• btQ
• --
Open HOllM Daily Larae a bedroom, 2 ~ satisfactory to t,hc con-Separate Bachelor urut, 2111 · ba., Z..stoty home;
258QSantaAnaSl.c\l bath, quiet cul·de-sac servator, it will be SM,900.NoA&ll.646-6238. HEATWAVE detlls. beams & open ~a~~~e~~v= near schools & market. lorwarded to the -·rt ~ict d y stairway five iL a very
•• H•rry on this special!\ 1 1 ILUEJ••~s.. ·h· s pac ous, ou~• · 73~ Fl'nanc·~ ....... p._. e . ou can own I ·••--lee! luxe owner'• ••It, ., C or approva lno pro· _. t IS refres hing pool Ing. See it todav at whitewater views.100' to Buy now and sel de-alJ5"0-ll5l bate). The homl! ha• 4 COUNTl.YWATS home. Has decking &. ' beaeb. One baa S·Br
cor. 2 & 3 Bedroom, BR, 3 Ba+ pool. Thia Is a A perfect country retreat firepit. Was redone in· $l09,000 home, TbeothetW Pool
single and 2 story. Gas rare opportunilf, come to call home. 3-Rancb side and out. Priced in T'"" &: jacuzzi. $1~.000 Ir:
assisted SOLAR seeit. sis:ed bedrms, 2 -mid 50's. Easy terms. ft.~naoo · $215,000. ZAGROD
HEATING !lSlinarea). 1915SabrinaTerr. Comforta ble baths, 968-«:>6 ~"i?' Realtor.C94..a&11 400£.17',~FORAll CoronaclolW. rusuc lireplc, trg. added PURRSOHALITY 1 !:~~~'...·~·~·~·2~0'.':00::_11 --------+-
c.M. : '_ •. uw MESA DB. MAR famlly rm w/open be&m Purrfect home for yout"I· CU$tom home by owner. ~~~~·!-1·1-~~I ceil, modern bltns, Coun· •r owing' r mil L .& Lag.Sch. 3 Bd, a ba. ,,l'=i:, ·. • _ ,..._ Big, big 5 ,bedroom, 3 i& a Y · ow WOllLD"' Otean view. QuaUfiestor • • im bath, two-s\.Ol'y, on quiet ~atmosphere. Chance-main t enance ya rds, S2000. I tax credit. street. E-Z walk to o •·lifetime. Best buy in' t'OV'd patio. lovely in· APART Owner!Builder anxlOus.
You don't need a l'W! to
"draw fast" when "you
place an ad In the Daily
Pilot Want Ads! Call now
-64?-5678 .•
shop'g. and all schools £!sta M ~sa. Onl y te r io1r , in good I S TH1S SPEC · Makeoffer!Opeohouae thru College. FUii price COM,.ANY ~.900. Veterans &: F1lA neighborhood; cl01e Lo Sa , 0 •• HEALTORS ar& welcome. CALL shopping.968-4456 TACULAR 3 BDRM., 3 t .• ._n. I2 :3H:309t6
$58,900. CALLSM-2660 SINC E 1944 540-3666 1-~~~-----I 8 AT H, CON>TEM · Tiajuana.498-1383.
•
. SELECT 673 4 0 $40 -o p 0 R ... R v H 0 M E . • -4 0 .~ Detailed, qualitt L-N'9os1 1052
.PROPERTIES ~ ~ O•AMelo-Ylew architecture, w/ea~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
G-..al 1002 G-.'..:J)i h/IA Walli ... loach lonJllve uaeofwood,1tqo. •WEKMOW• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••··~··••••~~~~ JUST USTED;M :t'l!JI# Perched on a private oo, vaulted cedarlhin&le LA.GUMA.HIGUB.
$31 950 ..... ,. _ •• 1 -·-mesa overlooking Hunt· rooflinea. Located qn '*" llST *
LIDO 1$1.E
Waterfront, l.ldo Nord. 6 BR. or 4 BR.
& apt. $285,000
Like pew! 4 BR., 4 ba. l ·Owner.
Custom bayfront. Lawn, patio, pier &
float $325,000
Allr. 4 BR., 3 ba., Lido Soud. 77
waterfront, sandy beach. $275,000
Ft.'
BILLGRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Ba yside D1 1vt.-N 8 t-.75 6161
1002 1
G1•1ral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
SPYGLASS BEAUTY
Beautiful 4 bedroom, 2\'z bath home
located high on a fully landscaped
view Jot. 2 Fireplaces, family room,
& sunny breakfast nook. Custom de·
corated t hruout. Shown by appt.
640-6161
GRACIOUS LIVING
Elegant Big Canyon home. 4
Bedroom, family room, formal din·
ing, 3 bath. Low maintenance yard
with 9 hol e AstroTurf putting green.
Many extras. You own the land!
$169,500. 640·6161
SPARKLE PLENTY
h e r e: New rust color ed carpel
thruout. No wax in kitchen. VERY
PRIVATE yard with boat gale.
Located in Edison Hi district, n ear
beach. $42,500. Call now 962-4454 .
OCEAHWOOD $62,,00
This dramatic 2 story home is truly
different. 2 Master suites, o n e up,
one down. Formal dinin g and
separate fami l y room with
fireplace. SEE THIS ONE! Call
962.4454
(
WHERE ELSE?
Can you find a big 2 story home with
4-bedrooms, 2 l'z baths and a big open
wood deck porch ~ the ~pper level.
Lovely carpets & drapes, in this
stately 3 year old beauty. Easy FHA
or VA terms. ~.900. lilkes it!
546-4141
E·Z IJVIN'
E·Z·walk to elem, jr high & college
E·Z·bike to private family recrea· · tlon cen!er ---
E·Z·access to freeway
E-Z.time to So. Coast Plaza
E-Z.terms -VA assumable
E·Z·Size big 3 bedroom+ family rm
E-Z.to see! ! Call S46-u41 '
I "
-
, W•"re ....... To Help inglon Beach. Single· le•el grounds, with AN N O R T ff V f E W ~ •
Sharp and spacious 2 story ranch , line OUTSTANDING 180' EJ:ceptlonal buy in this
bdrm. l bath condo in ••POOL. 3 br, din rm,+ Western styling. 4 VIEW OF 'nlEOCEAN,
bestpartolCostaMesa. recreation rm.2frplcs.3 bedrooms, Ben Franklin CATALINA & THE +.Br.ora&de1J.famrm, , , 'Qaiall ·~ covered patios, xtra lge stove in the living room, QUA I NT VILLAGE din r"!1 • Mt. view homf'.
I>• p . lot. Many! Many! More wood t:abinet.s in the sllft· BELOW . SPACIOUS Prof ly decorated &: lace Extras !!! Owner can ny kitchen. Lda of fruit ENTRY FOYER, WITH ldscpd. Many extras ln· ~·· · •upply financing. Only trees. party veranda. GI FLOORS OF FRAN· eluded. $69,950. •
752-1920 -•"'9,""0. A.a . 642·22"1, & all ter ms available, CISCAN TILES. Leads to Loguna Miglri • ..,
l.OOQU.\llSl,NlWftOITSIA(H -"" 5~ c. II ···-·· 830~ .~~-(msg&46-9666) ca OOW,oou.-O<>oP'I. SUNKEN L IV. RM . .,,.,.,,, ...............
WITH M ASSJVE RED . . LINDA ISLE REPO. • br + pool. BR ICK FIREPLACE & Mon1on Viejo 1067 $59,000. 9% int. $4000. extensi ve use of glass. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut iful 38r home dowo. Agent, 546·7739,· '"PICKYOUR w/hlgh vaulted ceilings. ELEVATED DIN ING
s unken living room . ,_968_·7_94_•------J,~"""'"""'~"!!"°""""""'"""'~J RM .• 2-STORIES ffiGH. OWM COLORs•• Designed roc entertain·' Wt VAULTED BEAM Owner has agreed to
ing. Plus room foc J large Costa Mesa I 024 CEILING. Mstr. suite have any COior carpeting bot NOW$189500 $42,500 w /dress . r m ., HAS in this .c BR .• family j~·COIS REALTY coi.·~~·a~·r:~iK~··;; Sprawling one level with BRICK FIREPLACE & room home. Large )ot on sparkling custom pool!I EXPANSIVE OCEAN a cul de sac street, with 675-6670 owner• r e duced to 18' Master quarters. 2 VIEW. Unique kitchen room for trailer acceas.
red 147 ,900. 4 BR. 2 Ba, Din· vanity baths, children's has all bill-in RANGE &: Beautiful view of Sad~
RilnbNngW ... _. f:~ut~l1l:~;i:~pedh .~~ s uites. gourmet s tep SELF-CLEAN. OV£N, dleback Mts. Wife e!l -Courtyard entry Ulf"U sw-saver kitchen, lge multi-M lCROWAVE OVEN, tre~ly anxiou.s to join
inging gate, s waying to shopping & schools . purpose area. Ankle de· TRASH COMPACT .• her husband in Chicago.
palms, brick BBQ 1_..._. __ 926 _______ 1 epcarpet.oi:anddecorator N'UTONE CENTER. Just reduced to $55,500.
fireplace. T1"ee shaded, VACANT drapes. All fastidiously ETC . This ultra deluxe VA &: FHA b uyt1rs
V.. acre estate. R-2 lot. clean, just lh mile t ho m e cannot be welcome.
Room for extra houses. IN MESA VERDE Westm . Mall I! Bk described with words. MISSION VIEJO
Owner abandoned. Sharp 3 bedroom. Very 962·SS11 you must see to ap-a•••TY Hurry!! 645-0.'n'J clean. Giant living room. ---------1 pr-eel ate. For those who .._
FOREST OLSON IMC Only $44 ,SOO. LowestJ--------•J can afford the finest, it's 581·1000
lalboa Island 1006 price in all Mesa Verde. our buy of the year. Of.
Won 't last! World Real fered at BY OWNER Spac. 3 Br, 3
Estale,"'6·77T1 · $36,500 SIOS,OOOr..BPrlce Ba, "El Dorado", AJC,
LGE Mod Dplx, 3 BR. 21 --'-'--'Ea""s-~-'---, ..... ----1 SEE TODAY!!! $47 ,900.830-8298.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Ba e a . SlS7,SOO. 130 nKIS' GONETOMORROW!! Pearl. Owner640-4307 3Br, Fam rm. walk to schools. Priced to sell Buy s a 3 bedroom, 2 bath MISSION R£ALTY• Try a o a i I y pi l«i t
lalboa ,eninsulo I 007 $49,500_ Agnt. S48-30IJ . hdome . C1omdpledtely br1e· 985 S. Csl Hwy, Laguna Class1£1ed Ad to buy, sell
••••••••••••••••••••••• ecora e , ou e Phone 494-0731 or rent something
Bay£ront Condominium 2 8y0wner,lge4BR.2Ba, garage with boat door&. -
Br 2 Ba, DR, pool, dk, Mesa Verde. Asking rear yard access. EJ:· Mewportleoch 1069 He~portleach 1069
security 213-394-4293 $47,900. S.S7-S176 cellent area, close lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• o --~------1 ~~-------o everything.
~~:'! .......... ~~-~~ ~~! .......... !!'!~ lfi
511 TARBEL~. rn
.· ' 1926-1976
ASSUME GOVERNMENT LOAN:
Rent·like payments. Entry hall, con·
vertible den, wood cabinets, built.ins,
party veranda, boat access, $39,500!
ABANDONED BY OWNER : Move
right in. Entry hall. family room, brick
fireplace, sunny dream kitchen, GI ,
FHAok, $41 ,000, hurry!
540-1720
2955 Hcrilor ll•d. .......... ,......,. __ ~
1002G.......i 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
~tu.S.ui~m
RtJALTORH
' 644·7270
•
·• JUST USlBI
. Ideal first home or fixer upper;
3 Bedrooms, brick BBQ in rear
patio. Priced to sell. $36,500. Submit. \ . . .
2821 &. Coar.I If hwoy, C0<ona de! Mor
0
"" fll ""' '" '" 1111 ..... .. ...... ,,."" .... ...
illage Real Estate
962-44n er.::> 546-8103
OPEN HOUSE Lg. cust.
Pool w /spa &: patio.
Beaut. 4 br.1% ba, frpl c.
nxt. to park&: schl. Nr.
Shop'g Ctr. By Owner.
$49,SOO. 963-316S, 9052
Pioneer Dr.
$25,000
2 Be drm , 1\.IJ bath ,
Townhouse with bltn
R /O , dishwasher,
refrlg., ready to move In -
to. Veter-ans no down!!
Won 't last. Call to see.
Red Carpe t, Rea ltors
536·8836
lnine 1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~ CALLNOW
(7/. 752·7315
DONALD M.llRD
A1.-cM1 ... , ... I ten
,-
******* 7 SHINING UDO STARS
•4 BDRMS. + dining rm. $99,500
•3 BDR MS. + family rm. $124 ,500
*5 BR., din. rm. + fam rm. $197,500
•5 BR., pier &slip, lshold. $225,000
•4 BR. + fam. rm., pier /slip $325,000
•4 BDRMS. + fam. rm., pier /slip
Prime location. $400,000
•6 BR., rec. rm, pi er /slip.$810,000
UDO PENINSULA COHDOS
Pier & slip facillHn
3 BDRMS .. 2 baths, $99,500
2 BDRMS., 2 Baths, $115,000
Salesman R eady To Serve You
LIDO REALTY
3377 \'la Udo, H.I .
*******
673-7300
I
• •
I •
.. DAILYPILOT * W!dn!!dly:S!ftember2",1115 ................ MMlnU.Mllrt'•• H11snu...... ... ..
ti 0 ................... -·············-······ "-'-I. • . ...... ,. ... _ ..... :~!~'~·;·;·~1r:;;;;·-;-;~·~·;1~·; ......... It d ........... s.: lac•••"~.·~ JOOO ••••••• ,............. ---•• -1-• • ..,.. .... -• •II!--••••
I • • ~ ••o ~,-1.-1. ......... ....__ w• -........ _ ....... . ·······••·············· •.•...................• •...•....•....••.•...•.• .. ,.. ... ....... ...... ...... ........... ...... ................................ . DUPLBX~ 19 W. Stu· •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••....-•••••• •••••••••••-••·--.... JJM c..tll MeM .............. • .. ~ Y5eflt 1067 S-.... IOIO ford, Santa Aaa. All PR!!I: n S.atidlODndo ~toed J aa. 2 a.A ••• ••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• -••••••----•"• ••••••••P•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• term•, VA, FHA , CL, •Proteuiona.IStrvieeto NewlBR,Zba.dtn,wel. -.. •. Ntl la '15t.-. wttWa&iafrm&JBR,2 Pl.W.A• MO WX UP lM .... 6
1 AS-LOW •••D.,Wolt••• OU .. $45,-°"""'YZI. •L.AMD&.Ol.DS• bar, pool. A~oll. -on -Aali fw aa. •loo Ba, -.-.!llpavall. ~loA ~·-· lodl. C:O. TV, --,, IWTm8•rrLO.a.1o.1 ForprtcHandlnt.eresl\o Ml-ll• leue at $475 Mo. Adult.I __.,_.-.11W Hn'FbllQ!i..511·1010 •. •llaldl ~A--'l teT. poet. 'IS MDA. , ~·~ ~ d 8o w Home1a t ct* onl "'"' ..., w-a. 118 • No •uauryiq, .. -~~bl o:•· .... ~. w Loll for.. 2200 642-9900 ~ORBIN Rea1IO<O RJPloalu.._...Oolr MOco•Yll'w ·-Bon;Hldpool 415 ~ ........ .
'°8'aeo1t1.-youtak1 .,....._. Y ••~up..•••••••••••••••••••••••• Californ&.'•IA.rfett 83).2* ; ~12'11 en.. 2Br, dea, ·~ ~ tbr, 2~ be, •aau.trl•Sldlotl ltl..i ·· overlhll1~"-VAl">A4 .b.oot.downi,z&ednD, Whltewatervlewlotfor •R •-1ro.--.1 1 ~ ..... ~.-yr· di 11 ram I dedl.1 ••OFF.,..'ll"lt'll
of $25,000. ~~ a BR. a • 1 a I • 1 t 0 r >' 11le in San Clemente. en .... ~T1~·· Fa ... Y~ 3234 fr,171'4111. • •· ' · w/'IAJ. Ot111lrool utl avail, boma with central air Town)'iQUJes ttlll at only '924311. _, Pool/tea•.~· Lie SITS. mtM...-t.Blvd.Cll f $1.Uto Siii. UWill ~•uoo•-a la •••n-1-121,950. New cupeta, ~ ~ ~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• flEAU"f • .New llSDCho Saa m.sm. --... ~ •"""• --· - -,; '-"UINI u,i -d -lAr1e % br. hqe rumpcq Joei;utn Twilboilue. i Br, .,_,.._. 11·1 !!.~1'", ••~ -
Vie.Jo'• Ba.rceAooa nef«h· . ne.w rapes, etc. Alk i ola. o..rt. -Z ba 2 car ,.....,. '·· Ao-•-'"-JOO lSLE, LUzurlou ._, borbood.Jual .... 800. Frw.-IA&eal. lltMft 2400 .. ~ . · . • ll'o a, 11.,, ~~-20Jll'l• •l•CM
MISSION YllJO ~ Townhouse cUldo, 2 stor)', ••••••••••••-••••••••• · .,. • '"• • ) :or.:,n:-e:.~~: JoU coune • lake. "15. ~:-~home. '13JO~m l BR Funs., 211'& cklleU lbr. 2202 'ff, ()tltanb ..... llAl.TY 2br,1~ba,POOl,recrea· A.voc .. GroYe Nll5aVICI Aat-.8'2·4421 • • S41JJCM4fU141iS queen1\1.e beCl, prtv: Winter renttl. '175
Sii 1000 lion room. lle1t ftpanc· '~ Yn old.13ae. w/S200 TO LAMDLOIDS • BR, Den. ,Nt Beach, dreutnc "'9 extra 1'1C DIOl'lt.b.'7J.ml.
• Jna. Call "2·<6000, Mr. Has1 •110Jlm.t. $10,000. Member or 8oerdi or S}Jacp $ BR, !Pit ba. First Ca61n 1'50. mo. Year•y . room a, enC'l. aar. WINTER Oftly. 1 br (Um.
&..,.... • ......... hitz. ac. ~ dn. Jnterat onl)' R4•1tort, Better Bual· ~wnhouse. OIS Month. Super clean •Rr, 2ba, 17~3172 W/ltol'•I•· Aduhl only. Steol to beach. #IS. mo.
Custom S BR. San Z yrs. Income thil yr. nenBureau,~berof t'75-1080or613-9187,Art eompleteb' ~lled. AcK...8AY,prtv-1cy +.2 nopet.a. Incl-ulll~rllin1.
---Verlarde-an 8 ma-...1n. MolNleHowwt llDD over'!°0•000
1 E.SloutG .S.Aad · Commerce. ..._.lilarlDR._. 3240 Warm camel C''1t 6. Br 1 Ba, ~i., drpa, SUSCASlfAS •.:; ... .::.;1:o•o;;...°';;;..;...:...~i--
I I ..... .... f.ofo Sol• IOC. ~ . ran . ' 5]A •sos ... d h I ood ... ,r.•r I• lenced ,. cen "'ew-. manicured Escondido. n•·T4'7·5550 V"'W ••••••••••••••r••••••• ra,.a ' ·ruou · r ..... e, • · i..rae nlceb furn. bech. BAYl'RONT 2 br. z ba, la..nd1;;,rtn1, Jarge ••••••••••••••••••••••• ffUJ'lt, Hbf"l"wnMle. Never paneli•1, accent• Jn yard. 0 •Ingles. tz7S 6: 1 bn. Adull1 Oftly, ao patio, pas mo. Yrl1. =~~h ~~~ ;cu:ie!!~:~~d~ ~~!.::??~:: ... ~?.~! ~.,j~fi(!![ifl;J1ll r::ai~~~ ?a:S::-!1.~·~ ~B:___R;.:1:1: :::· ~·12~~=~1~~~~'.'..= ulll.
ditlonlnc. Oneota kind! many other added extras OC.IANA ~~uifrt~;!!!M!.~! ~ orl75-MU:. hwuber. LO malDl rear Liv 4' 'Fam..' Rm' ati adlU/no pets, UUI pd. Houae for 2 adulta Gib,
S89:900. 110,500. ''SOUTH"' Sl.25 Santa Ana, 1 br cot yud w/JAarr:zI.. 2 ear Port Stlrltn•, Comm 18" Mon.rovia,MB.o338 winter reAt.aL. ~ ~..,
MISSIOHVIEJO RoyMcc:.rc19 ADULTCOMMUNITY taee,yard. 3~f0:f:i.h~:,=.er.,: r:.:::i:::tt.:~t· Pool $US. r7H17l A'llll WWWEEKLYRATD' Otean.l?W877 I
llAl.TY Rec-Ml II D ~wporl7729 2 ~Et-:, o;::-:_sJD~nd $130 Hunt. Beach, quiet o". Barbara. 91U'!• o< eowta, pool •du-... 11/1 boc-W.. Wio1er lteolal. Spoc. :Jlr.
511 .. 1000 <Mila esa...,,... unii: ch'oice lo~~'ion brw/&arage. 613·~7«. All. Ooty '''5 mo. iat:l HEWPORTHEIGHTS 2010 t4a.,..,.lt'td Stes-to-"beacb. ens. lat
Acreogefor .. 1200 overlooktna a:olf course $ll5 Anaheim 1 b 1ardenerA:PoGtaenioo. aBr,Crpl,fencedyd,new Coda...... 6.lut.f75-'1818.
Hewportleoch 1069 WI ... 1l1"mpoe or ocean, W/llrage 41•2300or6'f.J.m. ~alnl ·-I-· -· .. , ,.4 .. , , ••••••••••••••••••••••• $16S Garden Grove. Viii Real l'atale au • -. -. • .,..,. WINTER by pllrlr, DQJ' •••··~··••••••••••••••• AVOCADO LAND . $2,<llO Short. walk to clubhouse, now 1 br, klds&petsolr:. N~a:1ent1 Fe. NEED a home for a Year l Modena&O-$Ml SWlot I I ... , new 2 br, 2 ha, dSbWbr. BA YFRONT per/AC . Rancho Cal. r.°~'in~a~I~ ~.::pi:~ $175 Anaheim, neat 2 b •Edinger/MianoUa or 10? BeauUfµlly de· BEAUT. Bluffs Condo. 4 •PEE Linens 128$.mo.5M4083
2 Custom Homes 80% Seller Fin. 8\-;% Int. t &: bus r 30 w 11araee. 4 BR z BA. $335 t.llUed 2000 IQ ft.• Bt, 2"' BR., 21h ba. Jmmed OC· •FREE UtlliUes ON TB.£ BEACH 2 br z
BALBOAPENlNSULA Tight$ forces sale. :'~:{eafroms..:in;ego. $185 Costa Mesa. 2 br •Sla'ter/~·ach Ba. •ffamlly rm, cp'y."'50.Aat.&M-1133 •FullKitcbeo • Excellent location on the Owner 714-676-5734 w/yard, family welcome separate dln1n& a.tea. An •Heated Pool ba. bltni, gar 6: l.ndry Bay &.only lilt block to the Illness rorcea quick sale! ~ We1tminst.er, 3 br. 4 BR. 2 BA ... $345 Jrvloe pl1nned com· BLUFFS BEAtrrY •Laundry FacWtiet rac'•· 1350 Mo. YrlJ.
Ocean. Eachhomehas4 AP~ROX . 3 M! acres. :J.~ner s34•495 . nlcelocationrorfamily. •Garfield/SUS:hard mun),ty w/park, pool• Upgraded!BR.2\oiJ;ba. •TV&Maidserv.incl . 6'7S.TTT'7&5»"2Zl
bdrms 4 baths & vlc1nit.y69th,fLAlamedo SZ15YorbaUnda,spac.3 2EBd.R,1B/AEd ... ~. ie1 nnlacourts.WillaceeCaptll $450Mo.Agent&M·ll.33 · •PhoneServitt 3 BR, 2 Ba, Frplc .
Gallery,' 2 fireplaces , in H~ntingtotiPark. ~ly IHI Estott' br. kida&petsok. • 1nger "!!::--ean up ~.ll'e4lfl. S..8-Sh-..1 in-. _ __. Ta.stefully (bin. 2 Dr. to
wetbar, ultra modern 10 miles from L. ~· City Exchange 2100 $265 Cypress. 4 br, fncd 4 BR. 2 BA ... -Agent, ss1._,., C_.1.._ 3271 * -Y ~UU9* beach. Winter $350. mo .
. kitchen & private pier. 1-lall. Pvt party wdl sell••••••••••••••••••••••• yd.kids&:pelsok. •Bolsa/Edwardll ltoclt 324 ..,.. 1&2 Br Sl75. Up. Adlllts, 67S-3l12 Fee land. See at 1 nt 90< per sq ft or trade WA.NT yacant R-4 or c .2 SZ8$Stanton,4br,yard& 4BR.2BA ... $3M Lii .. • I••••••••••••••••••••••• no pets. 171 E. 22nd St..1-".:.:..=~-----
East Balboa Blvd .. or for Or a nae _Count Y Prop. Costa Mesa area. garage. See now 963·4567 or963-1786 ••••••••••••••••••••••• &LEG ANT Upgraded 645·3732; fU2..36'5 . N'R OCEAN new l>plx. 2
cau 67s.st20 ror more de· Property. Prm. only HAVE Ocean Front In· Member of Board of EMERALD Ba~, pbt. Condo. A/C, 2br. l~, Br. 1 B•, Garb. disp. tails. please.646·26S2 come, Marina del Rey Realtors, Better Busi· bch,tennla,pooll C.2 r. D/W,atv,.cpt,drpe,....,.,. •TrO~Pool• D/W. •ar. Yrly, $310.
Coel'Wlltrcicll peninsula. Priv. only. ness Bureau, Chamber of Nice 3 BR. t" BA. good ( r p I, deck . Yd . •ar. Adulta,nopet.a. ~-l Br, cpt.I, drp&, bu..is, Child OK.
DOMTLIF1' p ,600 Write P .O. Box 845 . Commerce. area . $325 mo. Call Whitewater vu. 558-3030 493-3429 patio. UUUties pa.id. $180 615-0M2./11M92 •
A HAND!! •••• ~~~•••••••••••• Venice, CA. 0029\ 530:8505 962·4471 Aeent &644·181S s.111 L..... Jzt6 mo. ~·1168 Wiater· ,rental. 5te5' to
It's 1potles1 and easy to BA YFROMT 3 BR & family rm + OceanfrontNo(tbLaeuna ••t•••••••••••••••••••• i BR, 2 ba. No piKI gr beach. lbr bachelor.
keep that way. ATecent· '}'~ ~ay~ro: ~~n lolbo• lllmd 3206 frplc 2 car garage Cove. 4. Bd, 3 ba,.frplc, 8d.. 2 ba. bpme. Ocean children. Pref. matu:re $150. 615·2445.
ly redecorated 3 BR end Office building, spec· W ll l dm .;_ 000 • . · ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach " Adams. $37S'. deck. patio, steps to vttw, rrplc, carpor.t . li•~d~u~lls~.JSl~SS~.~642~·-!!![.:._~~l~~a~c~h~. l·t-"m·~r:;;;-;" unit townhome near pool tacular view, executive 1. ra e -· · eqw· 3 Br av all for yrly. l block 968 Beach, newly painted. Adult.I, no pets. Lease. u uui. • and clubhouse with over· offices. ty in yacht and.cash. to bay. Bar & patio. mo. ·9331 $850. Winter, $1,000. 49'7·1812 aft. 7Pm week l BR rurn. garage Apt. bay. Balcony. I eaae
sized master suite and Reduced. $600,000. WANT T.D.'s oreqully in 673-1200 16-4pm 2Br, 2ba Condo. Bltns. Yearly. No pets.49MWS2. days, Sat. &$.in. all day. Walk to Eutslded a1bo1p-$190 . 218~ 21at St.
oi&bt Jieht view. $169,500. llLL tiRUNDY New cpl. No kids or peU. pine center. J ea or 675-9195. Cal1&44.7211. home, in trade forLGE Mod . 3 Br, Frplc , $225.Ph:67,_5801. \Bd.houserorrentyearWnfwlill1f'lr J298 elderlyperson.$140mo.i-"-'-=-'="------
Reoltor 67S.6161 $110,000. equity in ST ' gar, $4SO. yrly. Vacant! around, frplc, walk to••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-8759 eed Tempor•ry Hoos· Cris Connie Cruiser. 130 Pearl, M(M30'1 beach. $300. per mo. 505 Looking for a family Lo ing't?! Ba.ch apt. Phone.
/Jn NIGLL
UAIL[Y 1'
ASSUUAT ES
ASkFOIRON Corona chi Mer JJJJ $100.MOVEIN Lombardy Lane. rent our home. 4 BR, 2 H.+ingtot11eac.h 3740 Wkly maid serv. S'l7S.
Coado111inlum1jTow,.. 67J .. 760 I A9. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALLOWANCE 494-4092. BA, crpt• & drp&. R/0 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mo. No pets. Udo SKores
housetfor..r. 1700 • 1319 Bonnie Doone, Deluxe 3 bedrm, 2 bath. A Frame 2Bd loft., deck Nl~ fenced back yard. WEEKLY RATH HoteJ ,873-8800
••••••••••••••••••••••• Rentol1 Irvine Terrace, 3-Br, fplc, bltns. forced air OceaD,; <:a.nfoo views: $335. mo. 963 -4569 E-•cYll•• ... .aa....., EANFRON1' furn. e.x -EASTILUFF HORTH LACIUMA ••••••••••••••••••••••• hea~. near beaclles, Adult•. ~-No pets. 963·1786 -~ tra 11e 1 br. Jmmac. 4' Br,· 4l:en, 3ba, frml din HcMltn Fu""•d ~~':·mroa.m . rm, nice fd· Schools. parka & cool 830-522$. 3 Br l'L Ba kids 1 . pel8 727 Yorktowlllt¥d' Cpls -~ 67 .......
rm, Storage Galore! CONDOS . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""....., b ·--pr • "" • 0< • BeachBlvdatYorktown1_;:=::·.;;~=-'-·'-"-"-"-~~ •604Marigold·Coey3-Br ocean ree~. _..... e La••••H~ 3250 OK.$315.lae.rris&atove 53' A411 •-e•-~ 3776 Poolsi:r.eyard.$BS,SOOby WhitewaterVitws·2&3 Cftweraf 1102 & den, 2-ba, pvt. patio mo -:1•• ... U w.eeae -..._ .....__. Owner644-7596. bdrm. unlta from $54,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Springfield Ell.ates ••••••••••••••••••••••• ava · · STUDIOS & I Ms •••••••••••••••••••••••
OC
. ·E·~FRONT
2
Bd 420 Cypress, North Bachelor mobile $75., $400mXit.6'4·6397 Kent Rogers Realty 3 BR, 1\.1: Ba home,.blt.u, C~d1111hll-•Full Kitchen lMMAC, 1 br. next to
l't..I.. + 2 Laauna Costa Mesa. $150. 1 br. 848-8300960-3858 $290. mo. · U ...... ist.:I 3425 •Heated Pool beach, lovely ocean g:,. gar~~ $1ZS,OOO. Call 6 7~7225 CdM. $175 Lo '16C> winter, 3 Br. 2 Ba, all bltns, crpts, 202 Spring(iekl, HB . (213)330-9752 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Laundry PadllUea ·view, $197. Incl util
ner, · bachelors lo 4 brs, drps, frplc. $350 mo. lse. w. of Beach.6blkson LamtBD .... ..._. 3252 Brand New, Condo, 3 Br,2 •Free Utilities 1_.:•=98-3253:..::=------
•
-..111.1-n.-1.ax Balboa. Unrurn N.B. 636·1908.eves. Alba ~ .. ...,... Ba 2 g dkbalcony •FreeLinens ,._ ......... ~ _ hild Adams, N. at a ma ••••••••••••••••••••••• • car ar, lbr w/car. ·walk to bch. l t'J Bllr: from ocean. ~-··2 brc ,pet.Un-VllWHOME' Beaut. 2 br, 2.,..· ba &e:pool.$350mo.9G2-876'1; •TV&Maidserv.avail $160. Carpet.a and
Quality con•tructlon. rurn H.B. 12516· 4 br. pool. h Frpl r ed. eve 96B-088l •Bar·B·Que dr Sto &e: refri Sll?
000 0
.
11
t Ir: kids. pet. Fee A.gt . i.n Corona Hichlands. 3 Super clean 3 BR, 2 BA \own ome. . c. D · · •Phone Service apes. ve 1-, · wner WI a HOMIFIMDY:S BR, 2 Ba. small yard, home. Fine resldentiaJ yd, pool racil, 2 car gar. 3 BR. 2 .Ba . .El Toro, alr •l Mile le ocean 827-J.833.
10% down and carry *64z..ttOO• formal dlnintt:. much area. Compl cr:ptd & $375. Sandy, 498·0%40 cond, attach. dbl aar, ......, T.D. This offer will I m 0 re . submit on drpd, bltns, iease. 1325. 8-5pm. 49.S-4100, 6-lOpm & pool, xtra n1ce. $285. mo.' BEAUTIFUL 1 br rum ~;;;M.
fut. Loe. at111l ·30th St. SSSSSTEALSSSS OCEANFRON'I't br $185., children. 644-7211Agt. mo. Red Carpet893-1351 weekends. 837·10'13 apts SISS & 1175. Spanlab ••••••••••••••••••••••
2 be b I ~ 500 Gd 1 1 rt &in pets ok L e. Beacb. Al5o -style bldg, pvt. encl gar, • a.c un ts • · t egal! P . ces terest B 1 2• b a PKl'I kid COZY 2 br cot.I.age. frplc, 4 BR. 2 ba, 2 story, rry;lc. 2 Br, 2 Ba & Den. owMolM pool, sauoa, lndry, ad.Its . Gewerol 3102 t.tome. R-2 cor loL Gln keep going up, up, up ! a · r, _.,.. 1• rent or lease option s:ns. cpts. Walk tobeo.ch. $400. Coastslde, pool, tennis, U..._..lllled JSZS 17301 Keelaoo. Ln, 1 bllt •••••••••••••••••••••••
ny Fortunt!, rltr . WeatllJbavearewsln&le pe.ts.1ln41e1.C.M.1br, 497.2930 ut&lut+d...V..it beach, grdgate $400.1 •••••••••••••••••••••• w. o!BeacboffSla•-·.ANABEJM , . 61S.1520. story, 2 bed.rm, 2 batb ut1I pd, smateaor couple mo. ..._... · 4gg..3735, .._ .. ~1 ...:..::...:.='------!Townhouse• et only & CdM l br, ulii pd, Call962·4218 Custom 2 BR, 2 Ba. ~n· 842·7M8 , VllWSl..-~·,.·.
MIWPOITSHORIS SZl,950. Atk for Frank, singles ok. Agt. Fee.!:~!!~~~~ ••••••• ?~~~ 'var, i,".!"s·mo'rpl~~!~!: steB;-2tos.•, ~~..:.!J'~e3 ~: •• ·~.='c: Viejo Lagm1oleta 37•41 ~::b~i.:~~~,.: 3 BR . A·frame + lge. 839-8321Agent. 9'19·84i30 acan . -· . .,_-~ • _.w · ••••••••••;~••••• ••• -11 lh lib d tlY! fam.rm.t62.500 I• 1-•-..1 J Newport Bcb environ. 3 aftnooo/eves. Frplc, grea~plan. Rec. •2Br 2 ba ·trplc gar EFFICIENCYAPTS a eseC ubolaln,.y . 3 BR, 2·aty. Huge garden 1'ownhousecondo, 2sLory,• O• .._ 106 lee Br, z Ba Fam. Rm. facil, teon11 & pool. pool i.dult pe1' OK' $290, I "d Country lu Y~C·
paUo.'63,750 2br,l~ba,pool,.recrea· ••••••••••••••••••••••• rrplc's. lge'patio w/gas ••BEAUTIFUL l & 2 Grdgate. $425 mo. Tustin 962:5880 · · ":m $\90· Pool,vii81 • Golf. 11 tennta e.t1 :
4 BR., ramlly room ; Jge. lion room. Best financ· UKE new 3 br, 2 ba, all BBQ, spac. back yd. Well Story homes, a & 4 644 -5403/875·0430 or · · fo:'e&.. :.~· 1 ace Horteback rfdi.nl. 1, ~
paUo $7S900 in1. Call 642...fOOO, Mr. elec. kitchen w/dahwhr, cared for cond. Steps_to bdrms, 2~ baths, fam 847-8583. · Duplexes'UNfurn 3600 .4 · brm + den. For Into.,
CA YwOOD REALTY Fritz. frplc, patio, bbq. 9 l'DO Westcllrf Plata, on qwet rn:i . rrplcs, wet bar1, __ ... c v-·"2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BACH. util pd. $UIS. mo. ,_67_3_-4_300_..,..---,..,--.. S4l·IZ90 * lae, $385. mo.539.a&'Jl culdesac. $480 mo. ut11ity rms, Irg yard. .,..,. _... _,.. 3 BR 2 Ba in CdM no up/$60. wk Crescent Ba)' ... lloa \sa.d 3106
Oc rUIA , STEPSTOBAY-OPEN s.&·0950 From $425. up. No fee. Spacious new 2 Br, 2'rii • bildml ia20 l'35N c tll 494-2508 . SACllACI tM 3Br,2Ba,FMRm.Patio . CALL846·1311 Ba Twnhmt wJall tbe peta or t · · · 8 wy •••••••••••••••••••••••
OWNER ANXIOUS ''SOUTH'' 328Sappblre.644-0954 2 Br, 1 ba, adults, no pets. pri~acr ot ~· Wood. mo.844..UOO Oceanfront -Attractive 2 3 BR avail for yrly. 1
Btg Canyon. Priced re-Small yard. Gas stove, bu.mini rrptc 1n llv. rm, BALBOA Penln . Year-bd, 2 ba, apt. Fabulous block lo bay. Bar&paUo.
heed $lO,OOO. 2 story ADULTCOMMUNITY 2 Br, convert. den/br, 2 $250.mo.55&-'1280 form.din.rm.cusLsbac rowid 3 br, 2 bi, frplc , view. Winlerrental. No 673-120010...CpQJ.
&ane Home. l'br w/3 NEAl\OCEANSIDE Ba,bltm,frplc,d.ntloc. crpt&d.rpicleanlngdbl car•ce. $350, mo. pets. Days, 494.1oss.1 .. oeiP•....,• 3107 caraalaie~~·ooo 2br,2ba,ooestory,end Winte.r.815-76'73. *** FRESHLY aven,dsbwsbr.A.ttacbed 581--0725 N•1hta , 494 ·5602 or•••••••••••••••••••••••
· -· · unit. Choice location So Ba ~ 1 'B 2.,ba 2car1•r. w/autoopener 4.913834 .• overlooking goU' course . Y•1un ... r, .,.,, . PAJNTED 3-Br home. REALTY INC. & tow malnt. rear yd. 1.c:::::::=::.:_;_ ____ I IAYFROMTCOHDO
with glimpse or ocean. Winter, $MO. mo. Lora Two-c:ar garage, paUo & . 71•/146-1371 COmm\lnilJ pool, Only Apatu1 ........ 1ti1d Lux. 2 BR., den. 3 Ba., 2 Br, 2 Ba, Pool, Sun· P~Ul W. BRUMFl£LO
& ASSOC
549· 8505
Short walk to clubhouse, Vance Rltr. m-4082 low maintenance yard. PIS mo .• Jae option ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt.. beach, terinis, pool. deck. Adult, Security
pool •. jacuzzi. Near .El lolto•P•allll'lll• JIOJ Private home for one Irvine 3244 avail. CbUdreD • peta l•••ltlmd 3706 Winter lease $450. guarded bldg. Open. 1-5 . ~;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Camino Plaza 1.hopp101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• year lea•e. No pets. $350. ••••••• •• •••••••••••••• OK too. t98-2'00 yt for ••••••••••••••••••••••• ( '11 ' ) '" 9. 2 9 2 6 or Sat & Sun. 310 Fernando. • center & bus Im~. 3Cl b mo. DONALD M. BIRD RIMTALS HoUY. • ELEGANT, completely (213)790-4601. apt 312. $550. Sale price
m.inute1 rrom San Diego, a:M~LED .:, ~· ;;'; &: ASSOC~ATES. 2192 2 BR, z Ba ...... $350/!ll!IO M•-1 __ Vl..L. 3267 re-done 2 br apt. Perfect d $88,000. C5J Coldwell Bonker
1•lne1a forces QUICK a. mo. n · Martin Suite 1S5 lrvine 3 BR 2 Ba $400/-425 =-•-,,..... ror couple or single. Oceanfront year-roun Olive Wlggenhom, Rltr
SALE! By owner $34,'95. Montero. 1-879-5991 Ca. (114> '752-73l!i , 3 BR' 2 B .. , ... $385/'50 ••••••••••••,•• .. ••••••• Great B1lboa Island bachelor. $185. mo. UW. 615-6180
THI Fl .. ST 541.303&, Duplex lrg upper 1 br, dis· 4 BR' 2~ a&''... ~ Ground noor 2 BR Condo, location. 114~ Coral.j_!!pd~."!136-l:lf'.:~032~1-----1~::;-;--;;;:;;;;;;-~;:::::;:-
3 BR 2 B El Toro al
hwshr, crpt. thermo ht. 2 & Den wate?froftt: ·. teC>O crpll, drs-, bltns, •ar, $3ZS. yrly. S'J'3.3lll8 Oceanfront, Immaculate, BAL. PENIN. Condo. LIDO HOME , a, , r Yrly 673.2039 3 Br, 2 ba, garage, patio, pool privUeps. Sl50. mo. . t, dulll . ter 1 3·Br, 2·ba, well decorat·
Unbelievable quality in cond, attach. dbl gar, · · stove, refrig, dshwhr, L[ RAISOR U>-5191 • BeauUlul3br,2ba,leue qBwe $,"25 1"jmUill ed, frnt. cor. Joe.
construction and decor. pool, xtra nice. nnt of. Coron•delMm' 3122 $395. Incl. water & to July l, "16. $350. per r. • nc · · Panoramic ·ocean vu.
New4Bdrm.,forma1DR rerover$37,000 .. 88'1·1073 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cardener, 548·1995: REALTY 'BR Eldorado, crpts, mo.Nochildrenorpe\I. 49'1-1082. M25,mo.Agt.6'4-63W1
and den home. Terrific~ I Close to beach· 3 BR 2 675-18S4 drps,b.ltns,paUo,fcdyd. 6'13·3108 L.ARGElB WoodsCo
Open .lr.da •--aUon _._ DI ' ·• •"'""Campus Dr •-·ine Cl.ose to school &abop'g. . · r, ve BL.K. Ocean/Bay, beaut. . """ • ~-1100 Ba .• rrpl compfum pre-• BR 1 ' ~ rd .._ ·•"" IDlbo p -~ ·• 3707 area $265/mo ARCH · b 1 , .. ••-2 extra parking. Priced to ·-r d 1' Wint ' ~ • ge en ... --.. ya . Campus Valley Shop Ctr $350. mo. ~l a ....... BAY RE zrn view+ a cony. s uuw sell at $19&,000 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• er 8 : ts. er. quiet street, Eastside. CALL 13w600 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · 499-BR, I'io) Ba's, Frplc, 6 44-1766 OPIH HOUSI 1·5 geatm-zm S350 mo. ls~ last & SlOO 3 Br, 2 Ba, Fam. Rm., LG. 2 br, 2 ba. Bayrroat Hewport•• .. -J769 Leate. $325.841>1789 .========~I 32116tlLSt.,H.L L_,...leedt 3141 dep. The Real Estaters, For lease. University f:a~*:~ days w/vlew, frpJ & wash'g. ••••••••••••••••••••••• B mod Lara:e Four.Plex near ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646"7171· Park. Ox.ford model. 3br, eves. factl. Wntr. $3SO. uUlt pd. OCEANFRONT i br $325. s~:· ~.a Br:;'.' Ann~':i
The Blufft, Decorator's
Artistic Condo. Plan W. Converted to3 br, 2'At ba.
By owner . .$M,.500. Sell or
Jea;i:e option. 64(M617.
the beach. (1) 3-Br, (2) LEASE $160,000 Beach 3 Br 2Y.a Ba on Golf 3ba. fam rm. Major Newport._. 3Z6t Alao2br,2baupper.Ac· FrpJ Win,er rental leue $350 64().$719
z..Br, (l) l·Br,Submiton Condo. for 11195 mo. un-eoufae. $450. 'ean eves. Greenbelt.$175.552-8374. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ce1s t,o pvt . bch , w/ga;,642-4590 . . · • offen.AskingSl.48,000 .. fur . or $950 fur. 540-7086 121MastersCir-TOWNHOUSE 2Br, w/washa:. racil. Wntr. Quiet, clean, airy, 28r.
Oceanrnt.3br.2ba,2000 cle. · u:;1~Pbr:~r=-b2 2'ri!Ba, pool, bltns. S300, utns pd. Cl.11 aft Beaut. lge 2, 3 as 4 br. frplc. Part rum or un-
sq. rt., wetbar, rrpJ,.Sec. 10•11 552•1389 evesy wasb/dry, gar. No pets. 6PMe1$-4465 Oceaofronl/Vlew, [rplc, furn. Bltns .. 2 blks to
pani. Adult.a. 544--7618 . 'io) Acre \ br, util pd, ap-213-722-6810 days Mr' '15-9188 Bayview 3 Br 2 Ba bale, 1ar. $325. up. ~ ocean & bay. $325 mo. )'r·
Brand New 4 Br 3 Ba pins, $180. 4 Br, 2 ba, . . d 1 r ds I W.OceanfronlSeedaily, ly.OpenSUn.675-U.O&
F R V. t ...... • 1 BR ~OUJe • pa.Uo for frplc, kids. pet, rncd, Shipp LIDO ISLE up ex, rple, hwshr IW6·3114 673-6688 eves. Brkr. am. m. tew. ,,_.ent. REALTY INC I d ul I paUo ••IM -·· lae C.JI
1 .. 21 Kini Rd NB . aa arJe q e person. garage 3 br ram rm Rl~"'s ' .,...., ~~.., · · 9'19-5()99 5 · · 714/146-1371 494-8170.$185 w/lrplc.kidsi.pe1.$235 1' ,.,_ * Lovely4br,aba-. 835-3100/-CellllMeM 3724CoshM... 3724 -Tb~~;:-;;;t~~-1i;;;.;;;;p;:;;;;f;;;i0ciii Bd 2 br child sin-•-pel. UNIV. PARK Frpl, patio, all elec. ltl~. l'LIO'I~ Tb lufl I Ille ' "' 2000 I Peolhouse Condo , • "";°' , 3 BR, 2 Ba .......... $39.1 dbl·. 1ar. $450 9/1·8/1 or ~ A ~ eB i;ear yarea Giiie IOPl1 VteWin1 Main Beach. rncd. Feeagt. THE TERRACE •sso· Yrly. ••1.133•·, Winter $160·1235 MO. l-Story3BR.2Ba. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ·~IM. mo. Call r-m 12·•' HOMEANDERS • VI ~ • · •• 7 000 A• ~ ·~ ~ •• 3 Bil, 2 Ba ........... $425 673-4798 Ind. uUI, equip. . ·' -' ~·.,....-ASSUME 494-0088. •642·9900• GREENTREEHOMES' pool. Near bOa, , ele.
11HARIORVIEW 7o/e VA LOAN HOwport..... 3169 LOVELY cul-de -sac 3BR,2Ba ........... ¢s BAYCl\EJ!T bome. Move 105MainS!,675-8140
K'e w on mark el , Spacious 4-pler., good ••••••••••••••••••••••• street. 3 br, l'h: ba. stv & 3BR, 3 Ba.········· .$425 ln today.,, l:ir, 1';• r~ 1 BR lge liv rm kit
beautiful bl1hly up· area. Close to kchools, LJDOJSLE refrig., Ige encl. yard. DEERFIELD HOMES 912$. mo. can· at down'town Balboa ' $21.S' ~ d d C I b ~ l Own h 3BR,2Y.Ba ......... $42S Co.,842·80U I'-I -·• · · ··t;a e arme on s ot"p ng. er may Watch the ~ta go by! $340. NAar sc oolS: R.aJlchoSanJoaquin uU auC MG42~
Greeo"lt.W/patio,yard carry second. Agent, Wntr.3br,2baS.)'front. 548·4471 . 2BR,2Ba ........•.. SS75 2BrcondoN'HoaC.Q\9et. Beaut. furn 2 yr old
It• plants like you've 549-0812or846-6'710~ 61M646/213 .,_4t66 EASfSIDE, nr new lux. 3B~. 2 Ba ....... , ... ~ pvt, (frplo •. QUJc;l /pet ok. duple-,_,_ m -aa.
never seen be lore. STARTER E' ONT , d 1 3 B 2,.. Ba DI Encl pal, pool. Low U ,•· ,·:::!"'2 ~ ~-
-lOor-U. oi:;,m~~:,1!..J,dl~,:v.:if. Rri:."~vl . ;d. 2 car ga~: 552•7500 cdm.e.$305.979-111111 ~er.~3i;;2b;_'.
By OWMr, duples 1/2 blk INVESTMENT 3l08mo. sm,175-1349 Quiel residenlial area. • $200,00DYlew ·-$375 Win\er, $425 Yearl1, ~:;tJ!2'ooo. ~er 2aepar1lehouse5ona.lotyRLY3BR,2Ba,Mlbe $425.643·7888 red hlll bnderSIOOO.mo.'31-G'Mr~67:.:.3c.:1139=7-'-·---....,.,.-I
in desirable Ea1U1de ocean. 620l w. Ocean· Br duplu, fmh paint, ~6U-7102 2 Br, Ba1Cront, bea.Ut.
S.C .. ••• 1076 Oolta Mesa. 3 Bdrm, l front ava.ll ocl l. "450 trpts, fenced yd, gar. re•lty Rent or~ BY view, uUJ pd. pvt. bdl,
..... •••••••••••••••••• bt.tbplus2bdrm,lbalh. 646-Ml · · ehUdorpetOK.942--1509. ~ •• •OWrtER :···Br~.-a 3-~~ ba,'&ar,t;m,winter.m.&1'75.
' AIM.me a'Kt PHA loan on Oonaldtr exch1nie, boat. ..:.:"'-':.:.:'------~amlc OC'lu '{lew, 3 taah, T0111down. LIDO SANDS N.8 . Ehvironment. lbr. 8a1creit: 1 ... an Wel•a BAY VlEW, beach, 2 br
-homo. Low On. Furn winier. Atln.C 3 Iba condo. Pool, Opce, Home. l'ool. lnnl Dr • "25· UW pd. Plerll*&.
Pplt.$12,1119-l!l:t;. :··~ BR, 2 BA._ w /dllo 1375 . No children . RIHTALS r~::o.::-.. i:i.::. 1odltl...,l·l= E. F.d~-. • : . . 11r. Club faell. $4150. S4·f$1J. · TUR.TLEROCX "2·3099.
AMC:HOIA .. p I I ~.-' : Afenl848 -• AVAlL.3 br. 2 lia, "}! ... SBR.·J:.-V:·pw' MSG' ear.Mehl-1722 ~ 1 • P I .,._ • Verde home $3SO Al\ •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• •~•ca 712·-oc~ANFRONT I BR 2 540-720 ' ' · 3BR,2Ba ........... $OIO GREAT. Fam~hoDle Husa l ·BR. apl., fully 1714 49~7711 1.--"-UAC• BA, new paint, crpla, 1 · 3BR,PR,2Ba .. ,, .. S37& for leaae. a 3 turn.Wantqule\,malun
12 UlilT~ J:.&lda C M.. drpo, etc. $4S() wlai... on· I Br. 2 ba home Costa 2 BR. 2 Ba ........... $9 '4!11ba, r..ur -· .,. ...... Biii. to ocean: 5'-1 = '27K , ..... 914" koan ly or IUO/mo yrly. Kesa on PrincelOD. DflEltnELD l•I room. 1-11,1&1•· wall< .,.lo -· IDS Per .~:::!.!'! ...... !!!. avall.A.l~loK.May t7M$M 1¥;1SM JWE~~'t;Eiii.ii.L=' tenance yint. Mutt eee Mo.Ai•~ .... ~ ~~=-riD. only\ !Dillll 320J ~~HIVeltlfd·~·-3b~·· llJ.7000 :::=.::.=-· c:.m~ 17 ~..-Mi ..,. 91a . ••••••••••••••••••••• U&D., rs UH:lll. _...o. , •·•••1••••• ... •••••••• _..., fito 'y Gr I BSAUTIFUL Income ,II. J br, SU&., ....... • 142·23.le. . +---·rm ..U., 11ri,.......Ul5. pel8.AlaoN.B.2br-.. t ltar. fonaaJ din 1111 Bak'r St c .. ta kld1 6: pet.. WaJk \o Covely rim home. Avail
' ' .
1·\:11l i\'I'',
[~ , I \ · l\l. ,.;. ---
~:i,_· ••••· Slat,ooO. Open ••let ~.B. 2 br, ICMM, now:. 4br, 2ba. fam rm. -n -l·•--•U.Cen-...... •••ilea. Or ...... nl•• yrd. 1380 mo.
0 a:.r:-""YD. !111clo,2br,-.1fllp4, 67J.11111or~-8Qlll. A[( ........ 11 " 1ta11 .. ot. Ast. r... r:; II••• 1onl-'° 11117 .....-. -Wanladr•ull& 6'2·111178 ClualllaclodacfollwaD.
Who's the new kid
on the block?
' AMBASSADOR INN
BRAND NEW
No Cleeninc Dtciosit S 5 O
No Luse Required Sin&)e Stidio Apt.
• W..kl• "'•W ~ • J+ciml p..t
• llltdte111 IMilit ........ il, • G.tl llQ;•
•lmlMMJ ._,,_..... .a.c, .. 1--
• '~ ..... 1i.tiii. •(JI vtllhief ,,.,
• S.itdli..nl _....,. •Wlltt ... ~
•W.~WMlltyllf-1. • ........ ~
• D+Net ibel ~ ... u.
WATEllFAW •STIIEAMS• LAGOONS
2909 IRISTOL AVE.
SANTA ANA
«Ai -" "Coul Nu) 54 -'2300
•
.. , I
• G
t
----... ,. #-·---·~ ..
.._ ...!..':. .. ~!~:. Qll ..... 4411 WJ• 11 f&M ,!FE"°".._'!'i1111 ' CAIL:, Y, P!LOI IC •4&' lzU taU:. l.L ,, la-· iii.:_~ ..... ., ......... ,,,,,._.,., ~ 1 • ·-·-"""'" --• ---••••\lo wntod •• -·~-~ _, .. a.-ltJS •~•·--~ 1300 ..... W_ I•
C .................. ................... -.WV~ ,,_,....., ...., ~ ~.....,. ~ •, • .. Milr . ..... • .... -·· ••••••·-· ............ ....,...OW? .. 1&1c.,.., • ......,.. .. ~ Allo .__ ............... ·•··••••••••••••••••••• ........................ .....,.. I
........... J4 ......, ...... CH·~Y caum.-..a.,,.._ •l•I •• ,.~ ......... MOH.SYAnilableror2111 ·tri-'·=-ASSJ.9TAJlfT •··
N
• ·w • ...................... • ... -................. _,. "' ~*-_..,..__ ~ ... 1 .=::•·.:.:: --~,_ , ~1NIPll•M'tt'm T . T . .__.. UIOO. to fh'' '111,., t ' dl_a. 1• AMIMALMOSPITAL;QI;'"' 3:~ .,... ... TOIM.CH Dollllle, Vlf)'q .Nu WANT.ID: -....... araaa. ti IO --NO~•· -••·•-•--• •-1 I • • -· Ubl~'-f,.._ tr-'·~ -•·---•· _,...,. -l<k. Sltooftlll.oa Mdlcin --~ •-'""" • • ·•• DIJI~ ~ :.:.hli= DO ••• INOfrl• ~· ... u ..... : :-. ;:t;~;.;;.·, ;"" c: = l>'l_t>:'~ to P,•Y••r" .,. ••• i~. OT 1hlkau• ID"wW --ban·-tJI' elL o_raaco. liYj I' I~
SPA.C.dlll lllll.1• !~ <IOHd 1ara1e. l r'r.:· ~~~=-~· '1Mllis. do ..... uLfum.1-: poe~Nt·t• Ulll' m=er::::--1.~112.fo'! dontd.)i_IQ_. ~v/1i.~'f.,'!J.!...ltl,_"-·
bit ... _ -Ol BBQ. Gaa ........ pd. • 2 ear -...... -· .. , ....... aia. -lllUIUI at Nalloft•lde Reply /\d. 503• Dilly N 8 II :,;.-lb,; rl y ' ••r.MS..IM..Daw8. Poai POI "l C"l-lat AM Jiii N7.mt Mo. ldMI Newport FtJ11D~lal Corp . Piiot, P .O. Boa 15'0 a.io.' oo. ti.I
-..12u.A-.. LAMANCHAAPTS ...,;.,, oaa ••, ••••••••••·1-••••••••• ....,•v•ll~lhemaUat «7U)Tn-Jll50 ColtaM••.c..nea Dl.. "f'
n. .. m l br.•---~· m&eou"'-CM 28Dll·ATTll BEAQI Br,.-.. ..,u, """'•····--4lM Tiie Fattoey ror: c-. T: •m Black <l•r-AHl•ISoalOfc. ;1:'.: ~ -•-"""'"• ~ sup• atovt'~ U hwbt. ~ ••••••••••• .. ••••••• .. • try •&ore. book •ton, de-tt•rtl••a. Trwt ment &1w/bm1, •• .:: ...... All journo•• p~ to Nfined mal11n lad)-. -..,,. llwl .••·Nl:W·LAROE dilp. l"'IWS..-. liGL.Oan lorllaU>. U.et•.-·-Dtidi SOJS lrtm. Vic. Newport'; -. ~· llef.ns.mt.~ tz11. ?4gw 2 br pelJo,. ADU~oafla'bor~ s..A...~C.tCb.lldO-.JC llllrb,~ltO•IDor Scaf\C2Aoretrcat •••••••••••--••••••••• Co1ta Mea•. Reward. =-~:~~: a,:~~ .~~~bi:--~~.;'"-JJZi\~~'rJ>is wU.lw ~,J1~ =·~ id!:i ~.:~:;,•,;Ji;.. b::t LOANS ml ti 80% $41-47<0,'7 .. UOO !'.:.:;:;~· Ht·Jll~ •~·
oeeui Walk to ttorw· H t H .-..___ ••••••••••••-•"••••• ...-4400 IH'Vice. MSW. dlh Sl. I st TO £a...,-,r. .,........ 1350 ready OeL lat. pso p.,; Larp 2 br, 2 "--pool. Mu1'1' · a ~-THB ~O •• ,.,..,.,. ••• -..... , Cll. Dap Ml>mO. .... J ... TD~ •u •u•u•••••••••uu • ASST. llana1er. Gard<n·
mo. All ITMISIO •low. frpl<. ado1ta, "50. ta ...._I.SO P • • ~ •-. I SO I Wi1lclff Dr. -l Loweslral• Ofa••tC4. Drinking prnblemT IQll. lll•lntenaoco & .,,. ~maorTSlllll LI .___., J141 ........ 1/11//TI~ ... CallAl~obol•lelpUne keepoCSSWlib:ioCotla
BllAlfD -•~A • -i •-"""",...ES'tONPT N.,.._.Plnwta!Clr $U'•••••-httMr..._ Co. >1•rsa•-y•~ -Meoa lo excbanre f~ frplc .... ~=·-t..ovELYZllr JP6C-nDI. ••••••••••••••-••••••• -... ~ ... fBQi. L.w,..O,..S,.C. 'JIU"" -. tcz.Zl7l . -....sc.s-otu .. 'U-11 _,._ rent. ••2·507a or • s.o.siA;m:itni'"" cpl, nlce kitcb, brick DropOe a pebble lntoAt.brt Bacb.WBR. C..Uoa~Mauaer S........... Se."1118 Harbor area 24 SP1RITUA.LR£Al>ER ltlllllWB.51 ~
1nackbar, p.Uo. Xlnt. tan from YoW' pt. lromlilT&.50 (tlt>MNlllatJll 146.SSo. 6>ql Hwy. La&. rears Open lOAMtolOPll 2 BR. ada; p:rqe. lot"aUon Reu. ftlllL 351 Lease. Lux\117, HeUril)o. AdultJ..No.hls Beb. Xlat. apace now Advice on 1111 matters. A'M'EfrrfDANTS, llve•ln.
avall.aowonteue Vletoria. Apt. 357, Malu:read ultl.31756Clt. WlMeaaDr. avail for Ulnimtr1. le-WTDL.-W..ted 312N.EICamlnoReal male II' female for d}a,:,
""13».A •• -..1111 •1m ---,......... (SB1ta&utotNewport NDt.96$JQ,ft..W/GCelbo WEHAVEC-AStl l SlnClemeot.e.Yor•ppt. •bled adultJ.. Wotlc '"~
BEAUT. LS. Ocunv'"' NEWLY Of'JCORAT STEPS to bcb 2 Br Blvd.) View. UUl.s. 6 c:ommcm -----au-7JndT.1>.'1 192-9034 492-V136 =•n_comm,11a.lt1~ • br
2
b d•-i....
2 8
ED duplex apt. .,.50 ~ ~ •C'llll!ll area matnt_ incl. Ample Loanon2MT.0 .'a ted with Clllvuy wdber/~~c~. pd r;J,..J.1~1~,SJ..S:.~Vf!..\~ wtOod• Cove -area . ~C-,...r. Cree~rkWJ.Jl~.,.nN New J;ous.ZDdT.D.'a Abnan t1•••,. Cb1prd. Pay varin erom ..... S4 -• ...; ··-t·s"'-r~~. UNOO R.E.497-31SO i".-· · ~-EQult~vsmL Div. Photo Ma• .19 U00 .··500. mtbl1. 2S. Adults no pets, _._ .;tM....,.....,;-J465SO--COUllhrJ'oLI&: MllN ·14't'G CO l1''3F1tlil!rton,CM ..§71 ·0610, 995·7843 or ~or '1Z24llZ col· LG. 2 BR. l~ ba Studio, Coa.y atudM>. W.lk to ~._......,. lkh.,491·3098 6'5-21M . . lOAM-12Pll,63l·ll84 826-7003 ~-
-""--------1 quiet .. pin, new paiol, Be~eb/loWD. ~lied I•· ,.---~~1r1o1•~ S Mol / "TI""'.....,. SlN'GLE, oceio v\ew, =.d-, 1o.1._ walk 4iYidua1. no _cbildreo or -....,.. 4 00 p~--~-/ I Foxy Girl'• Out Ca.II A """"'5•
1
k d •r--. peu UUl -~ $175 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Massace. U Call. We W &...-... · ~ oc e 1arage. So. oJ a Aachll . .lar.Jitl.•I• l'i · ......... ,@. NEWM•lNewport.~.osta Lott&Fai.d Come . Spec i.111 ize Jlll-"tar-Hwy. No pell:. '215. dlikl OK. oo ...... saoo. ,..!!'°'L. last. deposit. 2112 Meta, lOOO, l200, l440aq. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Parapleglcs.M2·31W Reputable Copyri&hl Al-
-...... "'""' __ ---
S,,7..UU after' pm. 540-&UI -, 4lr.t::6Ar..f~ ~;: 55' PK sq F1' CL 54r.Ul'5 or9*2912:8 A•t•C•••llllh 5 I 00 torney lO hand1• my caie · W ltd U-17 WES'TCLlFF-NB ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• PREGNANT!? acatn1l Air Callfornia
1 CMfeMl'M 3124 ee ays . .lOa.m·!IJRl . AGT.54t-5032 1209 Sq Ft M-1 apace, C•ring confldeotlal M11•d ne. COO&act Dh:k
\
•••••••••••"• .. •••••• yard, 1ar. bl' new, Sat. • Oak wood orrerl tbe frontolfice,drive-J.urear WANTED counselinC &: referral. Shawn creal.Or of P'Jy MIDST.......,. pett.SU.UIGS Me~._. 316t flnestinC'Ot.11b7ehab Uv· $140 up atore-dfkel cptt; door, 1115. mo. 628 Abortion, adoption & Palt:r Insert. Boa &U,.
,\
VILLAGI 1-Br R EASONABLE-••••,••••••••••••••-•• in.&alaprice)'OUcanaf· d r ps air bath. 17301 Terminal Way, CM . CONTESTANTS keepAl;rC.ARE"'-.-.ca·• Bl boa,Ca.113MZ
t Br, 1 Br 4c Dea 2 B A'duJls over ,3$.Stove. No PAIJC MIWl'ORT lord. There's' SI ml:Wob Beacb Bl. H.8.IC-2834 Days 540·5'710, eves '"',..,,.... Auto Sen.Ccnhler
Br Townhouse. C.~ls. peta, mo E&den Ave. ~· Aln.4TS ln rttreatlonaJ raciliUes. PROFESS'LCLASS A l46-068l For TV's MOST FREE IA TH Exper'd only. lln 9-iipm,
drapes, rlr~pl ace. 2 BR. 2 ba.i No pell or ~ .Bfid\eklrlor2 ~~~JJ,W,ffuuTtiEN· Bld g , 3 atory. 2790 1250 SQ P'T M-1 space. EXCITINGSJ-IOW Given with pun:.hue of Mon thru Fri. Cull Mr~.
pools, t t~ courts children. Pref. mature "Bedrooms and artlvlties dittict.or wm Harbor Blvd, C.M. Air front office, tse rear m11.Ssace wJtb ad. Cameron, Bauu Buick&.
om 2':~0:.:,0.. Blvd adults. S11~. &C-5&9 . Townhouses Pl.ans parties. B8Q'I, ~..:;.:l~~:.:~l :i!'!'· ~!.r.. s",ao;._m,.o ... 1 ..... • "GIVE uy•ll['' Abroxcn ...... Im porta, 2925 liarbor
C..taMesaCn•i••1-EASTSIDE. ••new I""· Ft.$229D.~~nu lnps "more• FreeSU.n· '='" •. n1~!':. ~, .. ,;.· .....,. '.....,. '" . "ft"' M Photo Mad.ting Dlvd,CM9'19-2SOO . .-__, .... _ ~ daybruncl'I. ·• muslc, J• '""'•par._..... Day$ 510·5'110 . eve• 1733 Fullerton,C&f
Ad!J.t 2 b"•e ......... __ duplex,JBr.2~Ba.Din. Spa-Pools-Tennis Pl be rr l . I M .R . Stever, Mar. 646·0681 Everyday -~ Rm. Pvt yd. 2 car gar. Across rrom Fashion us au i u a1n1 es, M7--0l.36or646-8398 8 Ola I lOAM -12 PM,63l·l18C
$170nopela.lnquireapt QWet re1ide0Ual area. Island al Jamboree on 1&2 bedroom apts. 000 SQ FT, i ores, 2 wJ.i~Mu;e z :G7"'68::,.:W'.:.:·c:W:.:llson=~---l-Sl25~~·!M5~·?~80S.~----I San JoaqulnHllls Road. furni5bed &. unfurnished. EX.ECUTIVE suites ori baths, immed. acn:.s st HAS HEID A Oakwood Oaroeo Ai>U Ne,.port Harbo•-. 400 lo fromOCAirport .... 78'18 $25,000 MU$1CALC.ROUP J&c~~·scrpt.. l...!'"/\tiou~. REDIC:OIA.TID . f714t644-1900 offers an eadusive "N 2200 sq rt . 642·4641 · Jna:lamorousprlics ror any occasion? We
V\11111' -3b 2b r il t y I br Re~t Raise Guarantee''. 6'5"4405 'Stvrop 4950 Call.etle bookonlyehebesl.
sion, ~U76 att.6 r, a, am Y uni · $330. r Y 2 • 2 ba, 2 We fllara ntee lbat 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12llJ145-1707 Call PadroneAasociates -"~:;;~~;;;;;;;:--1~12=30~. N~o.!'pe~ls!:_·'.!'5~1:!·5~1"2~--1 •tory, Z car encl gar., rentwlll not be raised fo Prime Hunt. BC!h. loc. age LOt ror RV's, etc. ~7262 CASA VICTORIA "---p ~ 3126 bal'4>ny. 642-1603 1 FULL YEAR ._ still from $1~ mo. inckl. util. 18.50 ~r mo. Neill SllD ., or (213)8'.'.HIOOO J,2&3br,DeluxeUnfur -Own 5075 w A -ext.3181 or.Furn.o<>«/wlrpd · ••••••••••••••••••••••• •DELUXE-have the flexibility arner ve . Co.forinfo531-33'14. ara pierced In your
d
--VERYI 2b 2ba /t monlhlomonthoccupan-146-4249 home. For Appt. call A ults-NopetaSec. gate ge r, w er· Eastbluff 3 br. 2 ba, cy. Models open daily 1~1 -=...;;;."-----.---Rewtals w..-4600 ta J.o.a 5300 536-1803. 8·12pm
Pool,recrm,.elevators race. upgtaln, no pets. townhouse, lie .. Incl. to 1. Sorry, no pets or Ground Ooor wslh or w/o ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l----==---
525 Vilfloria,642-$10 $225. 611·$2'05 ' spac 'm aster suite, din children. Month to ,noa 1tora1e-. panel, sbwr, Wanted to rent. Partially LOS1' /FOUND al needs Sl0,000 now!
•S.._.. _. -oo1• Htool•••••i•ngt• •°"··-·••••h••3•8••4•p• rm & dbl garage. Auto occupancy &r: rootrnnate frig, •Ink, air, CM handicapped man wants A PET? Dress shop 40'x6S'. PLnr -1 am-r-door opener avail. Pool & servite available. 548·9766 modest rtntaJ. to share 960-2900AdopUon. Low or loan sec. 213-331·5'33
·AYON
WANfTO
MAtllMONly,
lot Hol 9 to 57
Be an AVON
REPRESENTATIVIS·i
Be your own boM:, aet
your own boun. No ~ •
per. nece1s. Tralnl
provlcled. Call 54G-7<Ml
Zenith 1·1359.
1&2 Br tJ,T!l Up. Ad ults, .. recreaUon area. Adults OFFICE or store ava.ll. w/penon who can ai.ve CostSpay/Narterlnfo. ~=;fil,~~ St. NEW 2 'Bedrib, 2 ball\ only,nopet.s. 0 k 1000 sq fl. Newport care & compan.lonsh1p. .....,,.....,& Babysitter my home.
----'-'--'-""'---I apartmeht, near beach. •$332• a wood Pellin. Choice location. Write classified ad . no. Found: ,,Male Alredal~: Pnporaffea days. Gtri age z. $20 .~ parka&schools.-"' ...... r 865AmlgosWay,NB Garden 639-6700 w, cfo Dally Pilot. PO name Red Dockery · ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• week.645-2413 H fndoh -,... Managed by A Box l:i60,ColtaMeu,CI Nr. N.8 . Harbor Jii&b, Sc•ools& i 160';,.,Wflooo.~ m";:.':i.1neld&lales William WaltersCo. partments FOR SUBLET 921126. 1t5tb st.5'8·3tltl7-1Minlct1oe 7005 Bc~:;J::~:..'2~~·
~ CloHclG•Clgltl 202Sprinafield. HD 1 Br ($1UO), D/W. No pets. ..._,_..... Exec. ofc"s. al Fashion lmMt1fbtvet+/ FOUND: Girls Bike. 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• girls age 6 & 9. 1:4.5 tQ1
BEAUT. GROt.1'iDS 848-~960-3858 Nr. Hoag, ~an, FP. lr111ne al t6ih Island. NB. Wells Fargo flftoM• spd. Vic. HVHomes, NB, 5:45 weekdays In m,:;
ADUL Ts.NO PETS W. of Beach. 6 blkson bltns, pool , 646·51 ll 645·0550 Bank Bid~. 1 to 2 yn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• March '15 IE A home. 494-2181.
1om,·n l lo L Adams,N.atAJabama WESTCL -. F\lrnorunfum Approx esi 64().65111 ' u es ocean. ge IFF • br. t h ba Rooou 4000 ..., sq. fl. 2 .,,<. olc's. & OpportllJily 5005 TRAVEL AGEHT BABYSITTER; live In.
2 Br $21S., lge 2 B townhouse, Adults only, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Secretary /reception ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found: 2 Australian young fem a I C. :~fearti,~ncS2120rO.a~n~' NE W 2&3 Br .apts , :>,.~ts .l!~,!e!'ordLn. ROOMSS25.weekupwith area.tnternaUonalDala HURSHYSCHOOL ~hMepahletb""e .. ·.~-~~rM~~. CL/\SSESST/\RT Tran1v/rer1. req .:_ · ..... e dshwhr, frplc, encl iar. *°"' mo ...... ,....., od -~. • vwiK ..,. Student/pt Umejob O ~ carpels .. gas h~at, .a:as .SeeMa:r. l 4l3Huntington · · kitchen . 548-975.S or Pr ucta, 660 Newport P~hool. nr. downtn. Masino Call873-057S MON'nD.Y · · · stoye. air conditionini : ,aptB.orcall~ ONTHEBAY 6'5·3961 Ctr. Or., Ste. 2.85, NB. Colla Mesa.Carefor2' · · Earn commission 1_833_·0896-------~
swim m ing pool, rec. 'r5a6·7~ Duplex , frly. rental. C714J$48·080l aftSPM at SlOO mo. Room to ex. FOUND: Sm Black dog. whileyouleam Bakers helper. LijUe ex·
room washen&d rs r~-'-'-'-'"-''------1Out.standing3 br, 2 ba, LOVELY Room & Bath, pand. lncl.lgc.lot,nrly. Vic or Gil l man• ' rye . frpl, 1800 sq. ft., upper. San, Clemente, $100 mo. NE.WPORT Pfd:en office new bldg., comp. equip. Michelson. lrvine. Call PACIAC r:~.'Bc~~4~-~. Mao:
OAKRIDGEVJILA W ALIC TO RACH Boat dock evail. Newly Ref•· 492·4881 a wt.es from o incl. u~. SSS.000. s.52·1921. TIAYEL SCHOOL
3 br, 2 ba , bltns, children .1&2 br, cpts, dfps, bltns, decor'd. Suadttk. $165 .. Cheerlul room. lite kit . ~1~~~arehouse av ad. Graham Rily 640-2414 l-'-"-="'--------1
welc:o!,l]e, $225. 858 W. garage. 20S &21.215th St. 615·'200 privgs. Laundry facil. FOUND: Vic Ol 20th & 810 E 11thSt,S. Ana BANKING " C~nter,645-11111' S36-4259or841·:tl51 • W alk in -take over Irvine. S m reddish bm 54J..66SS IA ... CORP " Spacious 3 Br. 2 ba, frplc. Ref. req 'd. 548-1372 •I MO FREE RENT• Hairstyling Shop. Must fem . Ch I h u ah u a? Actreditedby NATTS "
A OONVCNlf:NT SHOPPING AHO
SlWINO CUIOC FO.. THE
CAL OH THE GO.
I
I blk t be h. Y J .._,.. 1·2·3 Rm. offices from , o t ' , 1 Haa Been Retained .., o ac ry~·Lg.Pvt.•oom&ba••,·n sac . p ion. open . 63-3962. Establishedl963
C 1164 7 u1 $13.5 per mo. Nea1 p -I ll 5 Tofntft"vfew a S· 054 • I I Oc · 1 11 rime oca on. an Financial Aid o....,,rams
2 BR. near new. bltos,
$22.S . mo. 642·3693 or
642-2231
Spacious 3 br, z ba units,
Iii! hlock to bay & ocean.
$350. mo. yrly. Bkr
615-4911
ove Y eanV1ew am Y AJrport. Noleasereq. Clemente. 129 Avenida FOUND; Pacer girls~~~~~~ .. ~-~~ •TillfllS
home. Cable 1V & linens 833·32239Til noon Del Mar. 498-1520. bike. Schwinn boys bike. I: •PROOFOP•S
furnished. Kitch. & laund o priv. Employed woman MINI-SUITES <1 ·2-3 + wner identify & claim TENMIS LESSONS •MEW ACCOUHTSu
or female student only. rooms}. Xerox & secy ~p~~~ch. Police Pvt/Group/NB.675-<643 ExperlenceNecesaaJ't '
s110 mo . Ph: 193-5945. service av al I . On IJeaf The Sour ll you are goiJ>M 10 study t,oran OrangeCounty-·•
. Newport Harbor in Cen· ECO ... OMY FOUND; Slamese Cat, dance, why not study Indepeodeof.BaDk '
In.large fa~l.y home .w/ tinella Bank Bldg. J"lll ferq;ale. Vic. 17th & with tbe beat. Diana · Callorwrite
k1trllen pnv. Exclusi~e 642·4644 Monrovia,C.M.SM-S311 Lehan has classes in forint.erview CDM area. $150. 640-8701. --"C.C'--"------1 A rew stores are still f-"::'.:O:.:::.:::c=.:.::::c::::.:::::. DOUGLAS PLAZA
" Great Pwt11ers Bands-of.COior Bayfront 2 Bd. 2 Ba, Pvt
Bch & pier. $SSO. yrly.
979-1935 &644·4.SIO
100 SQ. FT. Ofc. space. availa ble at Shoppert FOUND SAT., H.B., by Ja:tJ:, taf,· ballroom and Irvine.Cali(. Pvt. Room & Bath for $200 mo. hie. Lag. Niguel VIII hi h t h 1 l 1 h dancerc ze ror adults & ...... _...._
l C M N OC ,......~ ace, a K volume e P er, wr stwa c · teenaonly.Call75l-J-•. --ren , osta esa r. area.83l·:r.G.i).'.t.493-2718 shoppers mall. If you Call&idenUty.968-0670 .,....,. I~~~~~~~~~
~·
r. r, • ~,;.
j .
I ,. _.--. '~
9 325 .
8·18 :,
CHECK llf?O Wlffftl wl111
• .cvm-sullltd jJcht thft t~ contrt1t1n1 or t111tctll111
pllltl. ls.w bOlllJI Gteat lion• " .... , .... Pflldtd httem 932:5: MiUts'
Sinia I , JO, 12, 14, 16. II.
SiN tt: !WM 34) top 2~ rdL 4~ fabric; pants 214. ~I.DO for uch ·ptlt1m.
Add -for udl pttt1m for fl flllil and lullclln"
~ ... '--_ ... -....... St.. ....
T.18. MY 1111,1. rTW ...._ .. 111u11r.-
•1rtU•1 ...............
fattlfl ,,.., .... -flt •• ,...,~htw•
c.tllil-c., ~hill«"'
fn• ~......,. ,.. \"""· I:: ~' 1.1! ~---· _,_ .......
""'!'" - -..
7011
Gy~B...t.
l
Add ch.lrm to sofa or bed wf~ -blltds~l<Gfor argl'lan..
Croc:Nt with 4 c:olor5 lo
mllle U'lis lntriruina: 1f1~ JIFf'I' -just slnRlr, cloubi.
erocl'let phn cllaln ioop:i.. Use llTl!ttina wo-sted. Pat11m 10111
directions.
S1.IO for 11th Plttf:m. Adi 25t ncll i-tltm for firTI<tass
ntll Ind lllndlln&. Setil ti: --,. a .,...,._,,, --....... owa.a...-. ... ,. ............. ..... __ ..,,_ -· MORt 'thin Mr btfortl 200
•alp ph11 s ''" pri11ttd ,.. side NEW 1971 NCEDlCCRAfT
CATAl.001 Hn tnf)'thi.Qf. 75':•·
CtMlrltt wta 14MU -11 'Cttdltl a ...... I,
llttty ""' .... , • m,,Jt CllClltt SIM ,,. + latt.... 1.2'
-"'-1·• ,....,. C:rtctlf '"' -...
!""!IO ·---, ... lut* Cr.cttt IMt: _ I.If ---.. , ___ 1.:
~::.: E·r ':. ....... ''l'-'"' -of H,t~ltt I __.Ill< ..... t.,tt ... fr-...11• 11-ftrl .... ,,_ .. . ~" 11 liflJ ........... .
38r, 2ba, bllns, gar,
Deluxe. Pvt patio. Yrly .
$325 mo. 61.S-~.
College. S6S mo. S56-6S29. have the mettband~. F d bl k Learn the rine Art of i:
Slp•g rm. no cook'g fo• p NO,W LOf~INSG we'll pul the foot traffic oun • •c male Toy Upholstering Day & eve IAHK TB.LER older emplo.,'d non res ige .ice pace in front of you. If YOU Poodle w /expired. Hunt. classes being. held c.a1i Fee Paid ,
s mok'g , non"drink 'g CuslomRetaiJStores don'thavelhemertban· Beach lie.; vic. of forEnrollm t673-0
9422 Generous co. hit u n•
man . S•. o mo. 1543 HUNTINGTON di.se, we'll help you ob-Ea•tbluff.N.B.644·0906 en . iforms for thei• ":i
2. 3 & 4 BR from $315. " MARINA Job w~ 7 yearly . Near beach. ,_o_ra_•ccHe.•:..C.c.·_M_. _____ 1 EXECUTIVE CENTER lain it. Join 100 other LOST! Prescription 1 ~ 075 staff. Lovely Joe. Property House,6'l2·3850 ··-am merc~ants, who are glasses at Indian Trails •••••••t••••••••••••••• Marion Mann, 83J. ~ For mature lady, pvt. 11•> , 151 beating the Sou r Park or Riverside or .. Attr.ma\uresgllady,ofc. AlaoFeeJobs.IleMis &
OCEANFRONT new 1 br bath, den, TV, klt. priv. Economy at Shoppers Newpo r t H eights exp, It. typg. recept. De nnis Peraoone+-
upper. Cpts, drps, gar. no smoking or drinking Viilage,2724N. MainSt., 642·89l2,968-4293 • Hostess. Rel.193-5390 Service or Irvine,
, __:Yc_:r_ol>c.:.:'•-;:•:.:· $31::::_5::·.::642=·""==--}-'o_a_n;.•ccP:..l:..-.,;493'-'---8302"-''--'---f Santa Ana,. 834-1551 Michelson Dr. ,. Lost : Silver Medallion C~ean~ng Gal has open . .
GORGEOUS 3 Br duplex. ROOt.1 & BATH. rurn., 1714114"'4493 1----------1 w/2 keys. One of them time tn Balboa rrtoam to Barmaid. Dependable.
Newport Heights. nearly priv. home. Close to O.C. Beer Bar: Harbor Blvd., v e r y i mp 0 rt an l . 3pm wkdays call eves. f(eferences prererred.
new . Fireplace, selr. College. & beach . NO. ~osta Mes~ Denta.1/ C.M . S•0,000 Gross Dillman·a Restaurant 536·3106. LotU5 Room.~9602oc
clean oven patio & Female.545-2600 Med1cal /Olcawlesavatl. $20.000net.F.sllJyrs. 6731726 ' 897·9.S15. s· j OK Qu From S345 /mo. Mr. BAY&BEACH . · B.S. Degree/teachingl---------
garage. A ing es · Laguna Beach. Lile cook· O'Keefe, 549-8138 REALTY 675-3000 Lost: Eastbluffs area. Blk exp. wa'!t Pff recept. or Barten~er, Expcrien~. &73·8556 gent. in11. $95 monthly. Call ----'---'-'--'----1..:::.::::.::::.:._:c__c_:.::""'"°I male poodle w/Wht spot relatedrield.848-0204. Partt1me,daya.Apptyaa
NEWCondo J.Br 2~.ba 494-6176. BUSINESSOrMed.orc·s. Let me show you how to on chest & front paws. . person, 1464 So. Cit..
r .1.11· Hui " 468 & 472 sq. ft. at 40" IQ. earn Income in upper5% Reward 546 _4390 or HSou•e.kheeperfbab)'11tter Hw". Laguna Beach. ~91:;1 1 es . ......,.... mo. YacatJon ltfttalh 4250 n. 1525 Superior Ave.. or the U.S.-$100 invest. ' pan1s speaklng/some1 -~'-~-----
••••••••••••••••••••••• NB.642·11&0 Mr. Riley644·S391 5JO.Z440. EngUsh •. 4 toS hr.I, Mon Bartenders/Wait.res.'le'li &
3 Br, 2YI: Ba. Twnhse. on Dix. Palm Desert condo. Lost: Blk. Standard Fem thru Fri .. Your home, Host. Call ror appoint-
the Bay w /boat Slip. Pool , Ja cuzzi. Goll . Exec. ofc space, new, LJ~rLJcense Poodle. Blk lip on H.B./F .V. area. Own me nt. Ask ror Mis!'""
Avail. 10/12. $550. lse. Avail. Ott. Nov . Dec. ~.B.MFuMlly carpeted, Orange County On-Sale ton~ue . Silver choke 1.r~ns. Call betwn 1 & Glenn,548-0132.
646·21QO. 546·3501 rps. r. ayerl5a-lS6l General. "OLD ISSUE-chain. Vi c : Betw Vic· J0 .30A.M.980-2068 .
YEARLY 3 br, 2 ba, 906 Cabin, Big Bear. slpa 12, 2 N.8 . SOOsq ft, ocean view, COCKTAlLSONLY" torta & Wilson. Reward. Help Wanted 7100 Bluepnnl operator. Ex~
W. Balboa Blvd. Frple, fplcs, 3br, sep playrm. upper, $150. mo. Ol8 W. EMERCilENCYSALE 6'2·1963. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~,MCop~94~~ Corona
blt.ns, garage. 1 blk to col TV. pooltbl . 494-8611 CstHwyS42·:m50 Call Mr. WinstooCollert Lost: Blk framed pre· APARTM&n'MGR ar, ·
bay or beach. $375. LagBch. ATTRACTIVE small 0r. C2l3)2'72·42A9 seription s un glasses. Ex:perienced (or 22 Unit
615-5487 entols to shwe 4300 flte on Mariner's Mile. NEW Beauty Shop, small Sat. Balboa. Otean Blvd, Ad ult Complex. No pets. Boys & Girls ' ·
3Br, bl tins, (rplc. 2 baths. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail. Oct. :Ut '75, facing clientele. Larges rooms, n r G St. Reward . 545·3621 aft. 3PM for 10 to 14 yearsol age. Dai·
d h h r 0 . Eld 1 I d -·~•1 h h w Y • Ca 11 Larson must. sac. due to illness. 528·2468. appt. Jv Pilot deliverv routes s ws . cean view. er y a y wu s are Shipyard, 5 .... _3641 or " .... l ;;;W;;i;•;l•;r;·;S3;1;;Q;;6T.l-~;24;93;;;-;;;;I two bdrm home with 646_7833 -Fantastic potential. Xlnt LOST: Calirotat,rem.Nr ARTG~Y may be available in your same. Capistrano Beach terms. 642-9030 o r Dana Point High . MA IAGIY. area.Earnprofitforde·
Oc
••MfRO.._. <Palisades)493·.1793. SINGLE to 6 rm suites 548·9447 Rewa r d . 831·2370am. MAG liveries & cash. trips or ~ "' 496-60s9 For newly opened merthandise for selling
3'BR,2 Ba . $350Wmler To Share 3 Br. 2 Ba , home :id ail. i&~ush ;f~I~ ~areer or Po/1-time opp . ..:::::::c::::C!'.P::m:_:· _____ , hranch In Laguna Bea('b. new subscriptions. t,or
STIPSTOllACH Costa 1'1esa, Big back gi;i-r .. rpo · or person interested in LOST · Golden Retri ever Exper'dlnartsales.Xlnt information please l"•ll
yard. $90 mo inc. uliL s.er~1ce incl: Recep· Needlecraft!. No Invest. male.Lie. 06132. "Sand': career oppor. Ca ll 642.4321 . From Sa n
3 BR, ~~,~~ter 642-7615 an 9PJ\f. tion1st, conference rm. reqd. 646-2259Af\. Jpm Vic. Cd!\t Sun. Reward . 2 13 I 881 ·32 1 8 or Cle mente -San Jua n ~erox , automated lyp· U T 615-5247 or673·9'795 213 /341·4146eve:i1 . Capistra no arcu. call
,Br,2ba,unl,$t15yr ale or Female. tn 1ng,etc.Call&1..1·3640 A 0 DE TA l L ~~~~~';~~&1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 mid·20"s. 2Br apt. in CM . . BUSINESS. Anaheim. FOUND: Cute black & 49a-0630 and ML"-Sion Vic-o
$125 mo. Mus t be F\lmJshed office apace-Neta over $2,000 mo. IO· while Jon1oi haired male Assemblers jo-EI Toro area, call associated employeed w/refs . Ground 000f", _easy ac· ness rorcesqulcksaleat klllen. Bushard & Nan-581·6310. 6U-.5983Tom cess, 460 sq.f\. 1nci bath, y, value, $12,500 Casb. tucket H 8 988-9le8 l::qual Oppor. Employer
l-'-'--"'-'-"--·---1 cpls, d•p•. desks & 673-4980.Eve. -=·=·=-·=='--!PRODUCTION
I~~~~~~~~~ WALK to occ. Fema1e in thairs . Only $265/mo. Wrt eeds . FOUND : Dalmatian&toy ASSEMBLERS Selling anything with a 1: 40's seeks same or stu· Mesa Verde area. Phone .. ter 0 helptofinub min. toy poodle. Vic. Daily Pilot Classified Ad
• ~. 2 Ba. •"Jlll to sand. denlloiharelge2br. l \A.i Jim Wood 675-6000 or The ,,Gre~t ~merican Coast Hwy & Promon· · · 1 11 a.-""' 675-6061 Novel Will give % El I . b IS a s1mp c ma er •• •
Hl'I ~l<.(il<, ll fAt f' l'I',
I , V. ti It ~ ~ '' ''
Frplc bltns pQtio $295 ba. Sl2S. incl. util . eves. ,.64 • or toryI'oint.675-9366 cc ron1c assem Je r juslcallG42_5618. .,· . • · · ...,...,.,....,. -. 5-0337.lOam~pm. -~•allea•l6mon'"·ex rrly. 642·9696 "'-""""' •FASHION 1•• "ND• .,.,ui · u"' -------· ~ •~t-~-FOUND: blue/wht Cal, perierw:e in cable har· ·
BEACHYRLY.Jbr,Jba Straight Bus. man wants Executive offices ~•W~ 5010 w/Jamehip,Oearollar& ncssing, soldering and Ne•I •port•
t ' I I w/recepl,, secy & phone ••••••••••••••••••••••• I O v· O C Coll dplx. oceanw rrom enc. o r e n w. aame, ux · · 1c. · · ege, reworl\ of Printed circuit ••ulpment r aunporch. $400 +utlli. home,Npt.area.152·7lp0 service. 3.59San Mi J(uel, FOOD MANAGE C.M.545-4522 boards. Jf you qualiry
04S-1SS6 NcDaniels N.8 .640-19tOor644·1860 (Previous owner/ and are 3 good reliablt" operator) Available to be Found; blk. Shepherd, k I I
Deluxe bayfront lower tJOO mo. LaYely Bdrm., Newport Beach deluxe worki.nl partner or for male, vie. VJctorla Park, wor er· P ease •PP Y in
. duplex, yrly, 2 br, z ba. pvt ba ., pref elderly ~lr•,ea0r1~.:-' ~r sq .. n.. perc:ent in dlninC. coffee Costa Mesa. sCS-1708 An person.
$375227Ult11St67s.o238 wom•n, noosmokero• ·~~ uol pa>d. or fast food operaUon.,.c•-------1 ST ..... D .. RD -· · drink!!'r. 963-1133. 8roker615.moo (or salary+ ?).615·9688 1• A,... A
LIDO tale l br util-rum. PLUSH rfl LOST: Mon. 9fl2 approx . $200'Call61SZ....aller• Newporl Bch "'blk to o cc s pece, l11YH-• P.M. Black Cockapoo. MEMORIES, pm · oceao. 3 Br, 2 Ba, 2 Bt'• tbort or Iona: term lease· o,poa t•-'tr' SOI 5 nds h•lrcut. Male. Vic. l-"-~--------1 •vail IO/I. Fem<:'apre· low rent. Call John ••••••••••••••••••••••• l7tb & Irvine, C.M . INC
2 Br $210 yrty nrocean !erred Days 17•·9210 Del"rancnco. C"VmJ91.. 648-0490 or 549·6538 A subsldia:..,of
Nopettchild;Zba.shag Eves.s75-6n6. lnd1.Utria1Brokers ..,.. 'llill"'llllV':'E Reward APruf.6 320611' Balboa Blvd 833-85:51 • Moblle home subd1viAlonl -''-'--=-=-------I
644--'340 OEPENDA8LE Per1on being reo.dled for s•les. MAGNETICSCORr.
DELUXE 2 BR, 2 Ba,
prl•. paUo, garage. $3:Z$.
mo. yrly. 2.04 21at. Sl.
67J.U'8
to share cute bay1ide ..,..11R...W 4450 Rnort 1rea. Key lot•· You don't need a aun to 2221So.AnneSt
furn. apt. wtn yr. old ••••••••••••••••••••••• lion. ApproxSlllO,OOOpro-"dr•w fast" whC!l'I you Santa Aoa,Ca92'104
woman. Priv. rm & bath.. Sharp Newport. •lore or jeeted net n<r<¥. ~% inL place an ad ln the Daily $150.U-Ul,~•p.ark· ofc.,feroundfloor;37x15. for $40 ,000. Owner-Pilot.WantAds!Call oow
Ing Inc Id. 615-M $200 Mo. Broker675-6'100 developer. 644"'670. -642·56'78.
'
•
An Equal Opportunity
Employer M /F
Fot CIMIVW Ad
ACTtOll
Coll
A 0-'l.l rt.at Ao.moo ..._..,.
' . .. .. • ·~ .... j •• . .
M 0AA. Y PILOT
. l • I :'\I .. , 8 "',," . r
= -·-. ' ' . .
~ Add 11 ... Build It... Diaper it...Hammer It... Carpet
11 ... Cemenl il ... Wlre 11 ... Hoe 11 ... Clean it...Move
11 .. ,P ress 11 ... Paint it ... Nail lt ... Plaster it ... Flx ii ... SERVICE Dl·RECTORY Plumb 11 ... .-atcn n .,.1'1pe ...... n e'l'oae1 n ... ~oof 1r. .. Landsc11pe lt. .. Tlte it .. iTrlm lt ... Sew lt ...
Ha ul it ... Add it ... Plant It ... Alter l t ... Leam It. ..
. c.,.. ... , c1o11c1e.... Ci-.Ohlg Hoo!Mcle•lng .._...,... · Pil llnf/P.,.,1tot ""lwr/1111111 ... ""9
•• ,.. •••••••••••• •• • • •• • •• • • • • • • ••• •• •• • ••• • • • • • • • • • •• • • •• • •• ••• • • • • •••••• ~· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• \.. ..... • • • • • • • • • • • •• • ••••• • 111 • •• • • • • • •• • •••••••• ... •• • .•••••• ~~-···-········· ••••••••• ··:;1:· •••••.•
ntlnt, newly ret'd,C.i&rpenlry -Cuatom . Nur.:se &,.1dQtber~f.Ots.Jo Cleanup.,_• \ree~ortct1JOUSECL.EANIN0llou.r Ex·pel'leneed J"apaatii Prolpilnlet'.liii!it:wli'k. VEX-v---NEAlf' PATCH R.E PA LU-1 11TVP0 £5.
Ut---wrJ-te "U'P boots, 1temod, re.,att, 111dd-0n, Babysit in her home . .rototillina, rniOOr kbcp, BttS.l.oea1. ~ll Janice's Gard.eninl & Jandlc-a_p. n!aa. l a.t/ext. free eat, JOBS Is RESTUCCO. llt'!:,.':!nfl! .. :.,1c. ~yroll ta& n:'lums, fin. Insulate. ~Jgns. l'"ri!e Aa:es 1·4. Moo. to f'r1 . lOyrt)narea&l&-28>3. Ra•aedyAiua.67UM3 ina.l'reeeat.&15-3*. Ref1.$48·2'7S9/6G--31t3 Freeml.8111-lat, 1Walt.....,.__,-w.me
i ~ti, et(!. All or part, est. 64S·3439 1 642·8648 .,.__ ftu q'hn s,.wt--/Attt. ltlrnl • iononoli...S serv. Reu c~oct John Bak«, ....... lawn Call for r .. id<ntial clean· ·-' Pnt "'I Tni:s .... .... : amo Custom Carpt!ntry vnTT or & 1arden care. Cut, eel.le in&. V&.P c!e&ners. Aft 3. ••••••••••••M••••••••• •11tt ••••••••••••••"••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Framing or finish ,••••"'•••••••••••••••••• &cullivale.9Ee3408 '9S·6828.1..0wrates. WILLIAMSftSonl Fr.Eat.Jim 35.W Pia lllg Wanted/ Sewjitl."•11 ~tttlltg Remodel /a ddition Prlvate &Com~rti111I. MUOOJ}'. Brick/mock& Profeialonal Eu.('Ope&n ~.. klndl.$8ll_y,A""l,a02S. •••••••••••••••••••••• 549-41S9. Custom paU.C., room ad · Rieb'• Landscapine It Exper, dep.., reaa. Lady Stone.Call581·1829 Wallpaper '-·•·"er.»-, Spsw Ifs Ca lle s,vllle, S•n Child care ln my home.1----------1 d l tlon s. Remodel Garden malnten•nce. will clean your house. .u•~ -Water beaters, dlt· Clemeore
Close to Gisler school. MINORHOMEREPAJR S49-4-066. Sprt~~leris, c:onttet~ L Calleves,636.(874 MASONRY 4' CON · dworlc:.$48.a.95days. poub, drainl, fauret,a.1·--=.===-----
Callanytime.962-8367 Plumblng·Carpentry h aultng. S8l·G574 . "' CRETE WORK. A5lt for SSAV.ESJ.lk-ll -'ees. ex· copper repipeis Same ,.., -;::::::-'.:;:;:jr,';:::;:::;;-:::j __ C~e!"'~a'.'m".i'."'~l~ile!';·~-~=5560~-IEledrical 830·1893, 82'1·7882. E"per. housekeeper by Jake. S4f..188S l/lntr. Anv rf~:it JObs. prices day • mibt.. We ••••••••••••••••••••••• 15 year old •1 babysit 01 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• day, N.B. ·C.M. area. $20 ' take Mct.r '""'•-e. L-4c CERAMIC TU.E. New & houseclean in Laguna Addlt~ons, Remodeling, ELECTRICIAN . Sml G~ ~lc:n a day. Refs. 67$-1761 Concrete BI o c ~, Many Reta. 8<415·0SS8 300948 "''-• Remodol. Ffb,: e11t. Sml .Beacharea.494~ Pa~1os, Paneling , jobs maiut/repajn. 22 ~··••••••••••••••••••••Good h le Slu m pa tone, Relne. Jack. JUST~MG jobswdcOJne.p&-3426 -"=====.::.::=--l Cab1nets,ek.492·9739or · "THINGS'' by Mooie. ouse eeper _wanta walls, Gradi n s, T Q lit Pn'.11 pa.[o.t.
IMIMl1Servlce 832·8026Ja.ckor J(thn . ynii~x~3IOfl.S48·5203. Gen 'Voodwork, rCpali's, dto d'!•k•I Y~ ~~,!O Du mptru<'kl.5C8-S287 i:,. l:l~E%t. Reas rates· •CALL&Q..Ull• Top Soil •••••••••••••••••••••••c IS le plumbing ek642·5613 •Y.~ Y ·1"''5·...,~·· 1 . 1 G ' u•RV'C!O'l l ruatNr.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• arpe en e Garc:h i • · Pamth.-9 tpopMlwcj ree es -•· eo.ri.e -_...~ ...... ,.,._..,.,.Ull tt.com Instant Color ••••••••••••••••••••••• "ng I DOIT ..... , We Will Do Any Type of ••••••••••••••••••••••• 538·8675. •84&>980'1• •Top So ~pos,.-
••••••••••••••••••••••• l'UoW hoWiecleanin& l Furn NO JOBTOOSMALL •Muleh•Rod * Prints&Enlargements CA~PETXPRTS-ttiyrs JAPANESEGARDENER Electrical, Plumbing, own equip. Sa.tis(act.ion EXTERIOf.lS 5.\VE S$f Cstm Paint/Wa llpapel'-CALL.
Xerox Color Copy Cnlr Get ll Really Clean 10 yrs exper, all phases etc. Reas rates. &l.2·495'7 _.a r S48·J<>t>l R .. L . St nor St• t e Jna.. Paint .int_._l20ml. ezt. Any plumbin&-WAttt.; MSW l.9thSt CM WILLIAMSMS-8115 I . ua · ' -Licensed Insured Call $24S 3b 968-t-t.52 I ks maroliie ··~~-Sen1ce
631·3S35 For lnfo~ma~ion Sales·Repair·ln."itall ReasC~~lb7;{~~atcs HcwJJng Japanese Housecleaning. 979.3335 avg r • e ~~Io• 'u res. re aa. •••••••••••••··~··•••••
Have6SOOColor Cop1er Cement/Concret. .••••••••••••••••••••••• Own tran1porU&tion . PETERS PAINTING P'lashr/Repmr 832·2468.10%of!w/ad Removal•, Umb~. top.
WILL Tl ME SHARE •••••••••••••••••••••••Qu~li~ Maint/Landscpg Hay_Ling Anylbing. 546-052'1 lnt/Ext.·Reas.tat.es •~•..!..!.!.•••·~····-·•••••• ~ _P.:1ng ..._____prun1n' + "'abiMIM~t--Bl ot•k ~& SlumPsiont' Sod. sprklrs, soil tond , Garage clea.nup. flelia· J "f ri I CallGeneat .5.52·0&58 ValleyPl~mbing5ervice Fl'fewood. rlc/1nsr
'--.. Walls·. Plan'·"· Dri,es , cleanup 64.2-3331·646·4908 bl e fa st service. 963-64S2 am a a · PATClj Jl!LASTERING L!c 302258, 642-2624 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..., ' •••••••••••~••••••••••• A'·LTYPES R -·•·t f.:.:::.:=.:....-----Sidewalks. &&5--8720 HOUSEPAINTJN G *•*-'-" •• • epatrs.~~. Cstm cabinets, boats. ---------Exp . Japanese Gardener. Landlords Vacant Apart· .· . · Free Est 540-6825 repipe.837·5270. Don 't d rop the ball1 Get u paUocvr,k.ilchrmdl.Jal-Cla:.sifit'd ud s sell !Jig Com pl e te yd maint . •HAULING• meots need clea.ning? Jruude /out. Hi Qual/low Job with a low-cost Dally
tice work 646 ·52 19 , 1tc1n:.," smal.I itcrru; or any Shrub .. trees, Free est. YARD CLEANUP Ca ll for estimates. rates. Bruce645-S37S. Find wha.t y~ want in Have something to sell? Pilot Classi fied Ad.
548·9669 ilcm. Just call 642-5678. S46-05Z7 • • 556-o.147 • * •94-6983. Want Ads Call 64Z-s6'78 Daily .. ot Clasl§ifie$. Cla1si,ied ads~o it well. Pllone 642·5678.
~
HftpWanled 7100HolpWanled 7100 HolpWOt1ted 7100HolpWanlod 7100 HolpWanlod 7 100HllpWGll!ed ilOO HtlpWGll!ed 7100 HolpW011l•d 7100 Help Wanted 7100
••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••
Accounting
VIDEO DISPLAY
TERMINAL
OPERATOR
GIRLS AND BOYS
12to 16Y...-s0f4ge
To work a few hours evenings after
school. Earn $15 to $30 each week as
well as exciting trips & prizes.
l'hon• 714 542·1354
betw••n I OAM & 41'M
Equal Oppor tunity Employer
MATURE ADULTS
Ftall· Tim• & l'.+-Tlme To work with boys & girls 12 to16 years
of age. We will train you in newspaper
sales promotion. Must hav<! dependa-
ble transportation. Earn $100 to $250
per week
. Phone 542-1354
between lOAM & 4PM for interview
Equal Opportunity Employer
~· 11 OUR STAFF MAKES
THE BIG DIFFERENCE!
COME SH FOR YOURSELF. WE DO A IETTEtt JOI.
TOOMAHYJOI
O~ITIES TO LIST.
CAU. US!
PERSONNO. RESOURCES 833-9145
Perm. Placements &/or Tempora ry
Agency: 1151 Dove #112, Newport
RESTAURANT HELP
For new re6lauranl
opening soon.
WA ITRESSES
BUSBOYS
COOK
Apply in person, Harvey'
J 's, 16903 Algonquin;
Board walk Shopp~0·: g Cen te r , Huntingt n
Harbour. ~
needed for Basic /Four computer in ·
stallation. Som e experience helpful but
will t rain ot herwise qualified person.
Pleasant working conditions, good pay
and company benefits. For interview
please call the Personnel Office at the
Restaurant Cashier for
oceanfront holtl in
Laguna Bch. Must be ex·
per'd. Apply to l\1rs .
Baltazar, 494·1151. Help Wan~ 7100 Help Wanted 7100 .,.... ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Help Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 ... .,..Wonted 7101 SA L ES . Earnes t .
DENTt\L ASSISTANT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·;:;g•;;:;:;••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• knowledgeable, person
Chairside. Ortho exp. 61'rlS "Uys Janitor. part·lime, light PEOPLE PERSON MA.HAGER TRHE NURSING w /elxlpe ~I in ~hi nl a ' req . Newport Beach. "U d . 1 '• ~-. crys a . s1 ver, 1ewe ry,
642_2626 _ ut1es. Appy m.r. =:ane Exec. looking for part Fast Food Service. *AIDE$ desiring perm. modified, DAILY PILOT
Dental Assisfmd
Enthusiastic, energetic
person w /expet . pref'd.
Salary open. Newport
Ctr. 644·2455.
Travel or Mr . Wi l liam s, time business associate Burgers, Orange Julius h I ·1· NB " Silverwoods, 4.5 Fashion & Mexican Food. We will Join a team who cares r Y pos1 ion, · · s in wholesale supplies. about pat'••ls & about oldest estab. jewelry pro· 330 W. lay St. Costa Mosa
642-4321,nt 276
Shirley i:l now interview-Island, NB B · I 11 train 893 9842 ""'' ·---------·I u s 1 n es s u Y · · you. Learn ._ .. you •an prietorship. 673-9334 ing ror 20 sharp girls &•-·t I' d 1 t · ,...,.. "
An Ecfua1 op,..-1y '"'""°'" guys, over 18 lo travel LIQUOR CLERK, perm. ~f~~ize · n erview Man exper 'd main· be paidex.tra fors'u.ying SALES· for selling car
w /fun group to Hawaii, pos. full time, eves. Must tenance &: painting for well. We ha.ve our own · ho
New York & USA. No ex· be 21. 673·7530 morns. MAMAGIEM&fTTRME apt complex. C.all 9am· coffee shop &. otb,er stereos & me compo-
per. necess. w/2 wk ex· only . Young man to work in 6pm,540·1300. benefits. Exi>e'r'd-all nen:~d E~r~~~~· g~!. Help Wanted 7100 HolpWanlod 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DOCTORS ASSIST.
Young lady (18-2.8) to as· 1 pense paid training pro-. · 1 1 b · shins. Apply Mon thru pre . · hool C 11 •ram. Above av" earn-LIVE·IN . mid.die a
1
ge growing too renta USI· MAN ICU RIST needed for Fri 9am.4pm, Royale flexible w/sc · a
lo I .. ..&..•-· sist in f-lealth Spa. No • woma n full time or ness. Must be neat in ap· J 1· ti & d" 642 1020 ings thereafter. A_l_I _. _ ·• _ u 1e e pe 1cures. Conv. Hospital, 1030 W_ --·--------care of:! boys-&-It hs pg pearance &-have-very Lido nail shop:6'75·99ll. -w s l A a .... ssenmwers Cler>c Typist w/acctng. exp. rcq. we trai n. Apply Must have own s mall backgrou nd. "J:kt dcliv. noon· s pm. 2112 J-larbor
hand tools. Apply, 1919 Harbor Travel, 675-1311. Bl vd, Costa Mesu.
transp. furnished. Appli -· . ' neat handwriting. 6 Day arner, · a n a na . SALESGIRL. Fabric ex·
cants must be neat , 623"4715 btwn lO am·IO wk . Prefer married man 546·6450. •: per. nee. PaM. time. Call
E. Occidental, SA. ::,--::-=-c:--:=cc~-::-::--c~l-':'.'..'.:'.:-'C'.:'.~""""-------~----I C LE R K TYPI ST Nd
single & able to leave im· pm. for perm . respoosible MASSAGE Mary, 646·4040.
med., if not ~ooner. For LVN needed for conv. position. Exper. n"'".re· o · f
IOAT IUILDERS
Westsail Corporation has
immed. vacancies for :
sharp exp full time
person for detailed &
varied job·$2 .75 hr.
557-0116.
ELECTRONIC
TECHNICIAN
I . . -pen1ngs or exP,.,or un f?C~sona 1ntcrv1ew, call hbsp. 3·11 shift. Xlnt pay qui red. Apply 9-nOon. Call for info. 12am on Parli-ally Handicapped
man needs Jive -in
housekeeper or" helpful
companion. Reply to
classified ed. no. 553, c /Q
Daily Pilot, P .0 . Box
1560, Costa Mesa, Calif.
92626 .
Shirley, 63.J-.5937 ext 308. ,&. benefits. Apply in I930NewportBlvd,CM 645·0864or67S-0258. Mon thru J'.TI, 10am·5pm . person. Beverly Manor , 1 ---~----,.--1 --.:..::c.:c:c.c..:o..=-==-1
I 0 Salosladios
needed to work 3 hrs a
day. 5 Days a wk, earn
approx. $75 a wk. Call
962·4385 bef. noon Mo n,
Tues &. Wed. for intervw
appt. Thurs 9(l5.
Dock Hardw,... /
Genoralloat
To serv. copy machines
in Org. County area.
Holiday Inn 340 Victor;ia, C.M. CLASSI FIEDwill sell it. Medical Secretary for ac· 3737W .Chapman -"'-'-"-'-"-="-''-'---·1----------1 tive Harbor area gen'I
Cocktail Wai tress ex· Musthaveelectro/mech. With 1 year marine ex· per'd. Apply, Pippins, exp. Salary range from Orange Hl'lp Wantfll 7100 Help Wanted 7100 pre.c . Exper. &qualifica·
(at Santa Ana Freeway) ~•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lions in handwritten r e· &Jerience. 34235 Doheny Park Rd, ssoo to_ $690 per mo +
&elcoatTouc... Capo. Beach. some comm. Higher GRAPHICS SPRAY
PAIMTER With 1 year marine ex· salary if exp'd. in copier
perience. j ... .-.... -... -.-.... --t field . Call ror interview: Call 557·3311. ApplytoGateGuard Cl.'~OL Org. County. 833·8181or 1----------1
tfs McCormick Ave , CM vn 1" San Diego, 565·6261 H' k f
BOATS Empl;~-• f;_;;;_;;;_;;_;;;~-io;-;;;-;;;;;_;;;_;;_;;;;;;..., ... 1 If J~u Ori] a 3~~~ure
StoclcroomCferk r ~ .. -, EngrLabTech to$750 person & would like
Sailboat knowledge pre· Med Frnt ore $600+ p /ti me s e I ling in
f'd. Good oppor. Apply in HEEDS YOU HOW! IRVINE PER,SON~'EL pleasant su<roundings,
person. 1919 E. Occiden-1-.: daytlrpe. Co ntact Mr .
tal,Sanla Ana. *PUBLICATIONS* SERVICESll'-AGENCY Thompson. So. Coa~t
BOOKKEEPER
Exper'd, f/time. Prerer
contracting exper. Reply
to Classifi ed ad no. 554,
Clo Daily Pilot, P. o. Box
1560, Cos ta Mesa, Ca
92626.
BOOKKEEPER
l"YChg. Able to go thru
T.B. Large wholesale/
r et ail mdse business.
6J).l Debra 645-0093 for
ibtervw a rrangement.
,looklceeDef"oP'TirM
Newport &ach Firm,
needs qualiried book·
keeper. Min. 3 days per
wk. Call Mr . Daniels
btwn lO-llAM.642·1626
$600 488 E. 17th Street -Plaza, Joiver" level for in·
Variety. Fast paced (al lrvine.)Costa Mesa terview . ·
ore. Bk prbackground. Suite224 642-1470 1~-~------1
Lots of room for ------ - Home makers: earn $5 to
ADVANCEMENT ~~ .. $6 per h r. teaching
•UPFROHl'• EXEC.SEC'Y, facinating new hobby .
Good sh & typing skills Hours a rranged. Call $650 979-3488/963·2300. Meet&greetclients req'd. £ubmil resume & 1----------1
all day Phones. Lots of salary requirements to HOSTESS /CASlilER
M P I · led classfied ad no. 556 c/o Day/night, see Mgr Sun· oxy. eopeoncn · Da1·1y Pilot. P. 0 . Bo• •TOP~•$• Mon, (9·11 am) Harry 's ••~ 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca New York Bar & Grill.
$850 92626. '248 Martingale Way , ~~rns;~=~~~ FEMALE. 25 to40 yrs old. ,_N_.B_._<_n_r_o_.c_._Ai_._'l'O_rt_l __ ,
in investment field. Sit down light assembly Houseboy. Live in plus
3400 Irvine
Suite"1098"
Newport Beach
556-8505
wo rk. Full or Part time. small salary. Bea ch apt.
645-6920 from 7 A.M. to 2 492·0571 .
P.M. ---------Housekeeper Wanted Pvt
Fie ld RepTme room . ba, color tv. Non
Major m ulti -branch smoker.897--0864. -:-::aiJ!i£iiiViERS-~~...:~":"~~...:~~1 operation seeks an effi. 1----------1 'IUS DRIVERS cient indlv. to aot as HOUSEKEEPING
l!f a le or Female, will Cook needed p/lime Tues liason between corporate SUPERVISOR
train. Gd. driving record & Th urs for conv. hosp. h e a d q u a rte r s &. A M s h i f t . &
a muAl. Capistrano area. Apply in person, Beverly branches. Xlnt growth Housekeepers. Ex per.
E.O.E.492·3873 Ma nor, 340 Victori a, oppor. Call Dave Stout· prcf'd.
Costa Mesa. fer, 833-2700. Dennis. & Sa n Cle mente
. CARLOTMAM De nn is Personnel GeneraJHospitai
With exper. todetuil new Service of Irvi"ne, 2082 714 /496-1122
cars. Steady job, good COUMTER HB.P Michelson Dr. 1~--------1
hrs. Pleasant working P /time. Sal thru Tues HOUSE MA.HAGER
eonds. Co. benefits. App· (days). Over 18. The Finish Ca~nter lo :e· Xlnl housekeeping posi-
l y in person only . Donut Factory , modeln_-.obile~fc.lnside tion availtopro(essiona l
J19sitively no phone calls. Sunflower al Fairview, & out including deck. person w /good refs. Xlnl
$ee Mr . Nielsen, Terry C.M. Also, need helper. Call salary. Nice family in
Buick, 5th and Walnut. aft Spm , 645·7780 in Costa Hunt. Harbour. Call Mr. H B Mesa. · · CounhrW-ReynolW.,846-00U.
CARPET CL!AMER Mature, aggressiVe, at· Faod Production Install er: At least 1 yr ex·
Experienced 673--7t62 -tractive, expr'd woman Helpto(c:ec»d per. in <'ar stereos &
needed . Wages & LangloisFrozenFoods speaker in stallation.
CAR WASH HB.P benefits open . Apply 2975LagunaCanyon Rd . Also, must know how "to
All P ositions. 5 Loca· Wed -Thursblw2&4PM. LagunaBch.497·1141 handle air tools. 'Call
tlons. Sii;der Steak House, CM . l --~F-R_Y_C_OO_K ___ ,l -'64_2c.· l;c0cc2c.O ______ ,
ft MetroC•Wnh 2196 Harbor Blvd. Costa COOKSAssistant R EAL EST AT E
-~2950 Harl>or,C.M . Mesa.548-1.822. KITC HEN Help INVESTMENT ilind --:.-:C;;:H;-;A:;U:;:F;;FE~U;;;R;---~~~~~~ .... ~~1 Full /part lime. apply in RES I DENT I AL
Leading N.B. hot.el. Call <;OUPLEfor250urutco~· person btwn2·6 PM. The salespersons wanted.
Chuck, betwn 8a m-4pm. pl ~x . Mu n expe~ d Log l n n , 1792 5 Additiona.I staff 'needed
.u.y.1oo.exl 56S.EOE. painter & some ma1nt . MacArthur Bl.lrvine for expanding pro--=-'--~------f Woman to c I ea n ..:.:.=:.:.:.=cc:.o.c:.c..=;c.._I grcssive, prestigious or· '
Chfld car e, mature resp clubhouse, laundry rms GAR.DEMER ganitation. Video sales wOp1an to ca~ for 7 &. ~ & vacant apts, Good sal. Assistant for apt com· training in offiee. I f ~( 1 , in H.B. Refs Call 9·8pm,5'6-1300. plex, N.B. 40 Hrs per wk. you 're ready for superior $3il.-<4260aftS :~P.M. 1 ---~------1 Steady work for reliable commission and' eduea·
Dental recept., exper, persori. Phone644-0606. tion&I bpportwlltik and ctAIMs desk only. some Sat. Gd want to earn 525.000. per •{ l.L benefils. salary open.1---------•I year and up call 0on
lfeflpllaMAdjnlor HB. 846·3540. GE>(ERAL Berillan. QUAIL PLACE
We areeurrentb'teektng Dental assist. chrside. 6 •Secratd1 PROPERTIES. (714)
aalndJ-V . wf3-$ynexper. mo. exper. nee. Ptr on· •Typists 752·1920 · •
la BODILY INJURY ly. every evening, some •K•ypMCl!Opn ~\i::~t~:\,_5_a1._H_B_._846-3:l4CI. ____ , •I'll Opn JAHITORS-
b~n et l t i . Sal com DENTAL Asst. pt. time NEEDtDNOW! Matf!treindividua"capa·
m1n1 u rate with ex· back ofc. 11si:.t. ror Tempo TemporaryHetp ble of general office
»ftftnce. chtldren'1 dental ofc. t7802SkyParklrvlne cleaning. Supplement
·aBNBRALACCTDENT Exp.pref'd.581.seoG · 1 CallSf0.4.465 your ineome·wltb 3~
• GROUP 1--0;;;h;A;;;;;;;;;--11~~~~~~~~*"'1 hour"S work ln f\&llerton Call 714i$12-:26IO I enlal AulstGll! area, 6·9PM, Montfay rorappoitlmmt Energetic, enthus\Astic GEMERALOfflCE through Friday. fl.SO per '
JqualOPP.&rnployu indiv: for Laguna Bch Work p /time. Corlee, ~our. Call S42·cm3 •nd Pt_aet1ce , Ex.lier. ne-;:::eSI. 642·1877. leave name. add.re$$ k \'aU dort't need .a 1un lo -4fiay-w'k.4M--3596. phone number.
.. tit-aw rat" whtm you 24 GIRL-S for Jewelry '~~~"""~"""~"""~!I pJ1ee an ad in the Daily Dent.al Aul tanl. mature piece work Adler Ml1. I-
.Piiot W,.nt Adaf C.tlnow ex per. cbai.r side, en· Co. 3645 W. McFadden, find what · you' want in
-Mz.NTI. tli"'lulic, -· S. A. 963"753 Dally Pll°'Clasallieds.
' I
MEN WOMEN
ATTENTION,
EMPLOYERS
Do you need skilled, reliable
people in these job categories?
Credit
Order
Cl...U:1
File
Record
& Shipping
General
Service
Controller Credit Analyst
Computer Opr Cr edit Manager
Customer Service Clerk
Data Pr ocessing Control Cler k
Data Processing Manager
Data Proc Acctng Coordinator
Ge ne ra l Ma int. Man Ink Lab Opr.
Inv. Conlrl Clk Keypunch Opr
Ludlow Opr Mach Maint & adjust
Machine Operator Machinist
Manager Production Services
Mill Roll Slitter Office Manager
Offset Press Opr Packer
Parcel Post & UPS Clerk
Payroll Bookkeeper Plate Maker
Press Operator Prod. Control Clrk
Programmer-Cobol 360 DOS
Slitter Typist
On ·9/5/75 WO consalldaled -U.S.
......tact•ring aperotfons in Dayton,
Ohio and converted our G.-.. GroY•
Pl... Into a dlalri-..n IWid Mr<lco
-for fast ....ic. to -w .. 1 Coast CllSfomen..
At a res•lt. a _..,. of c~o
c11:pl.,..s co.Id nat relocgte cmd ....
.. -In Ille -.. clastlfica!IOM.
Wo wGllld like ta ... -. placod with
Mi )'+w""J COMpGniK.
w .......... ooc1y helped ......... of
-..... ..,... -!obi. .... If JGll .... . a -far ..,, of tho people In tho
...,.., calOCjOriH, -tn.ito JGll to call
us for fwlher dotan ..
l'hon• Mrs. i..o-T albol
MONARCH MARKING
SYSTEMS, INC.
~272 Lampson••-
Garden Gra••· Calif.
l114J 893-0511
An equa l opportunity employer
sume to 351 Hospital Rd,
S ui t e 1 18, Newpo r t
Beach, Ca 92S>a.
Part time tellers. Exper.
Hd'brs to &uit. Call Mary SALESUDY
B;ltes. 494-0711 . Security Part-time to assis t MEDICAL Ba k L "·h manager. Exper'd. Q\•e r RECEPTIONIST __ n_._a~g_. ---·---·I 21.
l ~EDIATELY for PART Time eves & Sat PogeloyMatemity buS~urgical office. Exp AM, pert. for students, south Coast Plaza
onry .' Mu st type well. inside work, guaranteed Call 557-5734.
Insurance exp valuable. wage. Call Al. ~·0013 ---------
Send typewritten resume . . SALESLADY, exper. part
toSuite801.1401Avocado Part Time ~ne Waitress time, ready to wear.
Ave. NB 92660. Please do C o c k t a t I e x P e r Newport Bch. 673-6250
not phone. , necessary. Apply at Sad· -~~------
1-~--------1 dleback Lanes. Mission SALESMAN
Mgmt trne. Route sis co. _V_i_e~io_._586_·5300 __ . ____ 1 For Iea.diqg lighting fix.
Future. Age 23-39. Car, ture store in Orange Co.
phone. $160 wk. 848·1004 . Perfed Prefer one w /lighting ex -
MTST OPERATOR
Exper 'd . 5-9PM daily.
Send res u me t o
classified ad no. 5S5 c /o
Daily Pilot: P. 0 . Box
1560, Costa Mesa, Ca
92626.
W,_,,'--9Cr. Good pay. Paid v&cs
--.-, & hosp. Send name, ad · Hours dress, age & qualific;.1 -
9-2PM or4--9PM lions to P.O. Bo x 1251,
Earn $4 hr putting your Costa Mesa, Ca 92626.
personality to work. All SALES work done from our new •
Irvine off:!. You m ust PharmcKeVticctl
possess a Pleasant clear to $13K + car-!'-Comm
voice & a confident man· Fee Paid
Noon Duly .AldH ner. Perfect for students Above ;_ivg career op~r.
Regula r substitute posi· & housewives. No actual w /fortune 500 co. SC(!k •n A"
l ions availa ble im· selling fnvolv~. For self star~er w/bus1ness
medialely.$3.00/hr.2hrs more in fo. 833 -8098 or a sc ience degree!.
daily . Supervise noon betwn9am-sPm. Tremendous potential '.
timeactivitiesonscbool l-----'-----1 Call Ba r ba ra Ma c.
playground. P/t male, fem. service 833-2700. Also Fee Jobs.
APPLY IN PERSON estab accts. Eves/Sats Dennis· & Dennis Pcrson-
Fou ntain Valley School $7 5 wk+. Mr . Levi ne1 Service o( Irvine. 2082'
District Office, comer or 848·1004 Michelson Dr.
Newland &. Talbert St., ' · Fountain Valley. QU ALITY CONTROL SALES.RETAIL
WEAREANEQUAL Excellent opportunity in Aggressive cxper 'd
OPPO.RTUNITY gro\fing dlagnoSill c re· salesperson wanted for
EMPWYER. agent Orm for qualified retail sales position in
1----------1 individual. A degree in new leatherwear store.
science w /3 xears work· Earning11 up to $1000 per
NURSES AIDES ing experienCe & fun -mo. Apply in person at
OR ORDERLIES da.mentaJ knowledge or The Tannery West, So.
Salary dependsonexper. immunology & GMP re. Coast Plaza, Tues tOam-
Be recog nized. Ca ll qui red. Salary $11.K to Spm thru Fri. lmmed. Port Mesa Conv. $14K on level of ex ·l ~~--'------
Hosp, 642-0400. perienc:e. Call 546·9581 Sales Secrflcry
Fountain Valley. Need sharp gal friday.
NURSES!! " l--.• -,-.. -Es-tate-~Salos---I Sh & typing a must. 1\s·
Pract.·RN·LVN. Choose , . . sist sales manager Mon·,
your s.hi't & xlnt pay. Establ1.s hed multiple Fri8Am·5PM,lrvineofc.
M o r g a n · s N u rs es sales offu?e. If you have a $650 mo to start + fringe
Registry, I ,license & wa.nt lo have benefits. Call 979-8952 for
548·93611833·2365 one of the best locations appt.
'=· in the harbor area, call 1-'-'-'--------
HURSES AIDES Paul Martin, 644-7662 ror
F!time 7·3 &. 11·7 shifts. app't.
exp pref'd . Perk
Supe r ior Realthcare,
1445 Superior.NB
S•curity Guard
Over Worked Security
Guard needs a relief!'
Varied hrs. On Call.
[n••iN-Mfl•TIN l•i Ideal job '°' retire d u11u 11 " person in good health. HURSESAIDlS" ~ Apply in person to Lynn
Ex p er'd . BayvieW -REALTORS--"" Baird,
• Manor Conv. Hosp, 2065 ReliaLte person Needed W•stsall Corp.
T h urln Ave, C .M. for 'Photo d r ive.up 27SMcOormJckAve
642·3SOS. service F1es. Hrs. Clll Costa Mesa
NURSING • 6'6·2364. $ecyLeasing to$9200
*LYN'S "R.E. SALES* IVORY TOWER!
3.11 Shlfl. Joln our pro-We now have openings Fee Paid
ressional team who care ~for new salespeople. Ex· U you are accustomed to
about ou r patient$ & cellent ·commission spUt the finer things:, you'll
about you. Apply Mon and.toads of·leads. G,real fove t his plush ofc or
thru F r i 9.4 Royale atmosphere. famous co. CqJI J an
Conv. Hospitai, -t030 w. ~orintervfewappt. J qnes, 833·2700. Also Fee
TNERONT•YLOR "Jobs. De nnis & Dennis Werner , Santa Ana. •\• · "' Personnel Service or
546-MSO. GROW Irvine, 2082 Mlcbelscm
NURSING " 673-7601 Dr.
MURSESAIDES RESIDENTMANAGER SECY IR""IPT. ,
Exper'd GerJaLtl~·· R e&idenllal Mgrs. Ex p er-ld ..... -va.ried
Openln1s 111 s~f\.s, . needed. 25· 100 Units, re s p °' n 9 J b 11 i t I ea .
LYN 7-3!30 .. &Int. working conditJont Conatruclion ex-per. de·
Exper'd Geriatrics 4c & benefiJ.s. Call Sper-Unc airable. Jmmed. openl.ng.
medlcatlo·ni . X l nt Manaatmenl833·93l2 Ne-w·port Center. Aepl}'
bene,lts . Equal Opp. to Classified ad no. 517.
Employer. Park Lido SELL Idle Items with a c/O Olily Pilot, PO. Box
Conv. Hosp, 461> Flagship Dally Pilot CJasslfied Ad. 1$80, Cott.a Mesa, Ca
Rd,N.8 ,MUOU. 64.2-5678. 92626
/
• I
• •
)
)
• r --.. '---• .... ~...a.. D . ~ ·-' ----_,___•_. _,...' I . • .,...._ 1055 "°"'""" lot011o> .... s,...IA ~.f!pl .-M.1!11& DAILYP!LOT 7
... W-.cl 7tH]~ W..e.4 . . ···············-····-....................... al tOIO I ·-•••••••••• .. ~•·••••'•• , 7t00Cata IOlS CRlJ'ICSESTAT&-. ROANWwtilw~ ••••••••••-•••••••••• 4WllitelDrf._ tJIO ............... ....1_,wtect . · · a ••••••• ................................. -!-\II~ wect.~ .....,.._ e1iee •• 11es.. Plrf'ed Coa4. n. ot~. 1s ... ·~··········· .. •••••••• ................... , ••• ····················!!
HIMAl.AYANIQTrrcNS ~l .. rt.!..aUouo.Olll ~ loli-o.Jl.'ht>cood. Wl'YIMO'flDI hi-97 SALES PERSONN rt c..r~ rerl•l•r•d. s Clua, tlUaa...... • Trad:• for campe.r or OUltNEW.LOCATION lt7ll.01\tS ..................... .
U, &UcratloA pedlar-. Pic:l""lf, JOll W, Cliria 'r~.:t•:.i~.::.-· -bo-• 5 I HOI 1. totk IU-A
11U18'. ~5r""' Au. Tell I ._ ... --' s.M.... Y•llow, la mlnl <OlllH·
,._,,. woo·t •ome.on• r• •••rt••• com-'S t1oo.c11!'!.---1~'Sllt> . Lake tU 2 brotben, we IOM Sew ... M1 t' IOtJ •••••••••••••••••••••• ir:_ _ _ V'f'""~
doo'l want IO dl6 le tHt •••••••••.;; ..... ._ •• •••""••••••···••--••••-• ~/ JE 6'...V lHP Ct1T
mobll: park ••>" we G•U., 11' Mt nmala.a Btot. 1ewlnc mac.blne., .., tllt '-'I I SS ... IOOO
have IO. an ~HY qJtr" bone .,..... M.J Cabiftel. E&ettrte. t:50. •••••••••-•M•.••••••• [::::;::-!5!5~M!:!!IM!l-!0~::-=l~;;;;;f:.::::.::::::,rnilJ handsome blk lritlenJ. b..a,cbeetN ,-~ 14$-J.d'T io·a~-vte live oullide, but. Uke 1---~ -b 9560 •-·eel 1 ....... c.. ...1 .......... offer. ··~ AA to.' 8.RANDNEWmvet-..1, Malteofr s..;ias ·-•••••••••••••••••••••••
lrplri•ted •
~
Major ~pplGKe Dept.
~offye-
l0ff'9 • .u..-.~ bl1&a•, . 1175 Necdli, doll • .,.,... • ••••••••••••••••••••• '•• t ed MASERATI
call our lweet ...,, wbo • •70 JU!iln.a. Paid ..... will Mi' w9!~ Cl.•I*'· • Courier, •••• than GH18Ll, Borr•ni wi~ . I ~~ft~ /,,_at va°!" w'!°:i'io~ ••••••••••••••'•"•••• take $115. ll'UltaeD! Pri. ~::ca.,.-ltlt1 fll· l)~QOO 1111. Cu1t> lnt. wheelt, lMMAC. Xlnt.
P.Gi111ts & Cameras
Fu • P.,....ti.. Opuii.gs
Apply Today b••• a very a;by tlatet, pt1.S5T.a&Mbf.W'D5-Tpm ""411$,..._.No-8"1. coad. 18,000 mi .. AJC. '7S P ickup. fill. 8 tractr.
all &ro. We llke her WANIB> S ..... ~ w 4 Chevy .. Toll.p/a,p~ 'iJFordP.U.~..,,13.000 f15.0CI0 ... 4f& ~u•ovnwltires.!f.
~~!&!.mJ.'l!a.!!!.. even thou&h.ahe~ 1a1irl. TOP CASH DOL~AR ;!.1.''•::.;.:!s; ••• :-.~~ a Jc, dual bltl. 1addli 'mt Oft reblt ens. shell. Alfe RO... " 9705 ml. $2800. 87'"11825· ·-
ntnk you• t*ue call, P ,\ l D F'O R 'VO U a Imm ·aemlnston Hilh tanks, etc. ''°'' caboves' saddle tanks. SJ.%50 or -.;; •••••••••••••••••••
5318"'374 af\6otlml·4000 JEWELRY. WATCH:f& Power. Rine w /s.copt. Campt,$2500.531-an'. be.ltofr.96M145 '7I Spktlr.. WILL BUY YOUR
Peno.e!Dlf•llliiNll '
ual Opportunity Employe
l ilM:JO. :rlv~8.fra8a~J-g· SUS.:152·SS58 Ha,11111 fl40 ~Font Pickup, rebllm -lClnl<OO~ .. ~ ~~8i'k~X~Th
-SML-foOlNTSlAMESE mr~~ Kutle-Skh-Market'bind· ••••-'"•••••• .. ~···~••• ~enc· 1addle-lanlts, '600...... 9707 PAIDl-"'OR ·"'
l Femalo, 115. Six wf!:tb ~ int• <ladies) used OM Ride • S.,. 'Xlnt Mfl-84.9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OR NOT. O&a~ 1ea-1on :--Super ti . -cond. Call ITl«MS-or ,74'M__._Pldt T \ ,11 _._..... TOP DOLL.Alt
"--dies ri.n1. 9 Di.a'tnood. 13$.00. d4-41TO. 4*3-m7. Newport Beath. R .....-1 " W k ~ CAW.. I .....,.. 17,. value. Sl<rlflce for oto.l'Y •• ne, •P<> • I 00 LS 4 ...__ SAL BERNADENt:
Lia!.. •led 7100........._W....__ 7100 •••••••••!'!Qi~i•••• S300 Cuh.'-~11619 TV ledle 'tdft/ wbel.11 A oa1Y 11 ooo lllUUI"" 5..o.&H2 :::"?" ····i;········"··· ;~ .... J •••• ;;:...... ....., w • Jpm. . aft_. Hi17st:..... koohn ti SO mues.SHA'RP! (115.\). Auto. tran.t:;, all" condl· .
S A W I ..Cot:kers. Chihbahua, •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• COPILAHD'S 'lioning , radio. Gas Fiat 9725 sep~li~~ ~~per'!dend•o,l, .r::e.,o.p .. /t ~~-=~b ... ra Poodles, Sblb·llU, G. be••··-IOIO 2S"RCAColorhBl•uL SUZUKl.1$0CC, red. JllPCrn ... l•\lerl4S3DTE. • ••••••••••••••••••••••
· on '1 · " ...... u.,.,. Shorthair J.it Bills ••••••••••••••••-••••• l J..ooU ..UUUk 5$0Dtnl, lnckkl.ooolac-$257] ~OEQ A,••11 ...... wknd&. .. up w·t1y , ..... mliif.Scbnauur, Pom~ W"" .... 1ED -mapo. • • ~ -·-··~· -S5WOOO... . . •
handwriting. Apply AM, qual ified. Call for mb.ed Puppies. StUc! svs TOP CASH DOLLAR Over SISOO Ste~ all l»ZOZ'7. '70 Dat.suQ pickup irucks ,.,... UDtj ua.a.ftftl•Arnas J
2590Newport81vd,CM. personal intervw, moalbrttds.2525W.t'lth PAID FOR YOUR Pioneer must HU~ tHonda~XL.3200mi, (2)o.SQ:50 eadl. tW' .--....... TV"~ .......... (
Neal a PP ear . • w a rd robe when Pekes Westles 100 A•'lll! new. ll.50. IM5-0337. C'ftl. --·Fu: _..__.or eJ l •
963·7470afl3pm · · SA Ope JEWELRY, WATCHES. ' ..... , . I t d S?00 MJ..0001. 6 ~'" "".,.. Service Station Allen· · -at Fairview. · n ART OBJECl'S, GOLD 645·~. n-. or Jerry x n con · V LVO Factory A lhon&ed
dunt, exper'd, Day It Writer needs he:lptofmiJh eves. s.31·5029. St L VER SER VICE. LIKE NU 25" RCA Color 96l.at72 70 Ford Camper Special, Sales• Service:
Eves. f)lll & ~/lime. Ap-"The ,.Gre!'t American POODLES darlinc .AKC F I E FURN & AN· w 1 tnu t cona w Jd re, 2 5SO Su11lki, very good '4 Ton, manY xtras. Sl800 l'~M H(1'hor C ,,, b4t\ 9J<!l •Put.I• Leasing ....
ply_ Shell Station, 17th & Novel . Will give % or loys, apricot. male. TIQUES. MS-2200 service poll cy. $95. cond. S550 best ofr, or best.offer. 642-~18 -
Jrv1ne, NB -~ 645-0337. lOam-epm. Ml·~ Kn'g Si. n.• ~-. com· S48--736'l 615-7572, 552-8481 1 Ton 1950 ca.-~ .. 9 speed. . Austht .. Ht'cMv 9709 QICU. .,~.. 0....-3 •••••••••• ~~-, ••••••••••
Service Sta_ Atten~ant Mwrcll.di1:11t • DocOBEDIENCEClass plete, Still ptgd. Xtra 4 Channel 1lereo, lite ONDA 305, $225. Good S.crifice/bestolr. '67 3,000MK. Lo mi. Mint
wanted. Full & p /lime . ••••••••••••••••••••••• toatartWed.Ocl29 l'irm Sl90 (worth 1425). $110 646·'7249 lransporta.Uon. &75-a489. cond. Musll'lell. 8stofr.
Dick M iller Mo tor\
FIAT
CBr-0wn,1·s ShNc911, 990 E. Allticpte1 ,. ! , 1005 t 1T:JO P .M. Newport Qn Si $170, usually home:, :!;time ' 492..f!!Ot '73 CHEVY Cheyenne zo 4 67$·8617 1644·8722.
oast wy, •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• . Irvine area. 546-492JI. in~I del. 835-2263. hid . lon bed ( II 1-'-'-'-'-"--',;,c'--=---1ZO W. Warner 1-....::.:..:;::.:.:===-==--1---------ISTEREO. AM /FM radio 73 SUZUKI 5$0 6,800 w . nve, ~ • u y MW 9712' at So. Main
Shlf,Difta/lec IRISH SE~R PUPS. 6 Smalla.ircondilioner$2.S. w/t1pedeclt&sp.;aken. miles. Like new. $8$0. ~~64a,.~ camper.••••••••••••••••••••••• ;.ntaAAa 5S7·2132
Person 8miGar w/ship-wks, paper1, pick or lit-13 'xJS' blue. green & Gdcond.S100.49S-1195 962·9703 ORAMGECOUMTY'S
ping. receiving & record tier, $125. 581-5843 white low pile carpet. '72 FORQ Ran XLT ~ keeping. Must be ••· 1 --"-~-------1 Gd. Cond. $:50. Twin bed lollh& M.._ am ah a 80. t 97 2 Ton'campersgpecerlal. Air, OLD£ST • AKC Old English Sheep-rramc,•<.Call-3157 &-..1--a Grasshopper. 6,SOO mi. & '1 per'd . Male or-rem. Pla nt d . -......,. •..-r-n'" Gd d ,..0 C 11 p /S, s1ereo, m¥g .. , in C.M. Salary open. THEWORLDS og Puppies. 8 wks . , . ••••••••••••••••••••••• con · -~ . a Send resume w1exper & GREATEST Reasonable.640-6637 S x7 Metal Storage Shecl. Cilllff'OI 9010 894·8041 . ca mper~ s hell. $2950,.
age to Classified ad no SWAP MEET• Afghan PUJ:>. AKC. Black $50. 642·1149 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ONDA CL350, runs v7:.1844 9570
558, t:/o Daily Pilot, P . 0 . • masked silver, male. 8 BOY SCOUTS great, t:ustom paint, Box 1560 Costa Mesa I · Cn r-··•~ ne·• ~... II Oii •••••••••••·•••••••••••• ' · SUN Sept 28th lam •pm wk5 Ii: adorable. Nds g~ no me ast ..,.,.,..._.~Club ~ uu•h•, must se ! er! 673-926S Cal.9262ti. · 1 'd The' .. home.960-1470. members hip. Call and airplanes. Tax i O FORD Van. must sell ----------1 os1 e $48·&4S8 or6J3.1SlO. advantages.S46-4990 '72 YAMAHA60 this wk., very cleao.
Shop Instructor. Semi re· Oftfario fp11clway AKC Golden Retriever Fairly Trick Ready Race $2 ,000. Bill : 9G2·9117 &
tired or l'Ollege student Ontario, Calif dark fem pup, xlnt hntr & 11·12000 BnJ Air Cond. 6 To8 Ft. glassdinghys 12$0 492·1438 983-3644
Sales·Service-Leasine
Roy CilMrer, Inc.
Rolls 'koyl'e BMW
234 E. 11th St.
Costa Mesa 546 4444
w 11nddu s1·1 arts back -ATTENrtONSEILERS wtrdog. 49S.tl861 $129. RCA Color"TV, $96. ,,_.,,, ,._F_;rom $14.St.o$2SOE 71 HONDA ··~L d•'rt i..:c::'1c::::O c:F'-o--•-~---,l,ne-.--groun . nstructing boys FOR INFORMATION 10 Gal. RV Wtr Htr. $39 • ....., • .,.91 ~ vn ~ ru &:A.-"" ~:=~ 9-~:~.&!2~:.W2~a ll Phone213/990-7927 HG~~~~ond. e_J~a: i ;r~ ~~i;s:~~~·e:ms4.s.~~~ ~Ml •ts: •~•/20 ~lt:t!~~-~'$:>.~e: ~:rm~lee f!f;l's~f~: &'st • ••o.:t.DWAl"~
----'--'--'.'-"-"--lcarved, Antique Mantel l 2" high, 536-3249 a ft. S46·3642 __,--.,. ce fO Honda 180. nds work. contained. Slanduphtad SAMIA ........
STATIONERY STORE IN from CasUe. $395. P h: 6:30 ••••••••••••••••••••••• street legal, '75reg. SlOO. room . New lltts & drps. ,.
COM, needs Saleslady 536·1823 Drafting ~quip., drafting ScorwloMmrl•I 3149 Bray Ln. C.M. Many other unlqlic ex· 835·3171
CREVIER
F /t , 5 day~. Xlnt working Siberian Huskys. AKC. mach .. birch Tbl CX.80, Engine·lliclioa-Elec. W -0477 tra1. $3750. 642-8808. nt1.1,11.riw.n0tU't'IMOJIACttiR
conditions. Especially Toellourfriends Blk /wht. r(dJwht. $100 sloped o r flat. Lamp, FlreSyslm·Plmb'tJ-l--...0.--------1----------
fine clientele. Francis· inOrangeCounty up.498-1704. Elec. Eraser. Vellum Refrg.freeest548-9704 HOMH. '70 FORD Van Club
Orr,675-lOlOforappt. JOMA'IHAMS Rolls, Etc. 847·9917 (3-9 'Sole/R..t 9160 Wagon, .Chateau, air, •NTl.....,'ES' Keeshond puppies. 2 pm) loats,Power 9040 •••••••••••••••••••••• t:lean, S238S. Aft. G'.
STERLING & "' 111A1 fe male. AKCSSO ••••••••••••••••••••••• e the U.S.A. the RV 552.3074 .
CHIMA SALES is havinglheirannual 642-4875. Moving . Mus t Sell . 16. Starcrah '°HP 08 way. B&D Motor Home End of Summer Cnldspot frost free. $7S. X " cond Re tals. 646-9611 69 For~ ~ T, Campr Van. Salesladies for fine ta ble Clearance Purebred Germ. Shep. 8 c6tch, $20.1 Stetto, $60. motor. lnl . Beal 302 V·8, Arr. Bubble'Top.
top depts. Exper. Only. SaleonEntireStock wks,ndgoodhomes.$15. Kitchen table. chairs, off67S-75S7S32·t637 EN.T THE BEST! •73 Hi\ch, M·CYclenck, Ice r~~ sr~·?fi.·i ~~ .W~ up lo lh OFF! ! ea. 546-01166M /1F $20. Double box spring&: 20' Starlire '74. Best built Exet:. ZS ', all luxury ex· boK, water, sl~ 5, Kint.
547·8332. Mrs. Strong. for 422 31st St.. N. B. Small IO\'ing intelligent f rame, SIS. Elet:lri c hull, 225 OMC, Deep v. tras . Free miles. Pvt. 12200. PJl . S4Q.7532. ~p~a~rl~"~i~m~e~"------i ----::"'.":6~1"""°:=-:::-:1:=-___ 1 m ale Cocker -Terri e r H~aler. aU~lnt ~nd. bail tank, a ll ac«Ss. trlr. Pty. 979·90S6 Dodge, '7 1. 1-T . 109".
-3 ANTIQUE mix, 2 years old. needs !\lis~ 275 ar ay, PRICED TO SELL. PP 18" Winnebago 1973, 13,0@ Sportsman. T·glass. Air, TELE PH ONI-.: WORK
rrom ho me. representing
Nationa l Firm. Good
telephof!e personality
needed. No selling.
Guaranteed salary. Will
t rain . Call collect,
714·822·4046 {8am-6pm>
ORIENTAL RUNNERS loving home. 536-1929. Lag. Bch. · lo.Gpm. S86-4S8S mi., SJps $Or 6, self con· r adials. Xtra whl/lire1.
Reasonable 494-6764 2 Shep/Husky females, Me mbers hip Cor sa~ezo·cust Lapslrake.'135 l 'd, a te. generator, &:1 .:•~73~·~5631=~·------
, spayed 1 yr old Loves Newport Beach Athletic H.P . John501"1. Mint t:Ond. more. rl.900. 498--0295. '62 CORVA IR Van, Kint
.AMTl9UES.AL.l t:hildre~ Gdwal~hdogs Cl ub. Sl2S. incl. transfer Bstofr.640-1168/549-8875. Sertlcelr mech. cond. Must sell,
H
40 D1E.4~ ss7.1984 · ' fee .SS2·S402 18'wil Blain Boa\ w 6 cyl Parh 9400 Make olfer,512-0115
.... ftY ..... _ J free to y 09 8045 Stereo Faze Linear 400 engine O /D ti-ade for •••••••••••••••••••••• Wos Wmtted 9590
bqulsffelRaftllnls Amp, Ci tation 11 motor home' +cash or RARE NEW 'SJ T·BlRD ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOUCl«JP Tre1Mnc1iia•Vm'iety PURE·BRED German Prea mp .. S3SO . bot~. makeoffer.549-1885. Eng. $8SO or best. offer.
FOREMAN MALL OF.ORANGE Shepherd PufS free lo Scuba Eqwp. Water Gill , . 646-5194
WEPAYTOPOOLLAR
FOR TQPUSEDCARS
FOREIGN. DOMESTIC SEPT zs...28. ood h 494 7115 Twn 60 Tanks. Scuba 21 Day Cruiser, i4 Kona .
Sailboat manuf. is look· Free Drawi~g for A ti· f94.5187°!11e. · or Pro. BCP Sl.50. both. Staie II. Beautiful , Renault body cut into or CLASSICS
SADDLEB A CK
BMW
EXCLUSIVELY
·& -Moo· ......... .......... .,, ...... ,-..... , .. ..... ...,, ....... ...
'*a,.• t ,.
BMW, '70. 2002. Uke nu.
59M mf. Air. Art1 1FP..1 .
$2.800. OriR P.P. 494-2076.
Capri 9715 ,., ......•.•.•.........
'72 FJat 128. 4 Dr. Xlnt
Cond. 3S·37 MPG. $1,500
838·9671 Eves.
9735 ..........••.••• , ..... .
'S9 Ka rmann Ghia reblt 40
HP eng, new battery, Rd
tires. SSSO. ~·6182
Mmda 9738 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Mu.st sell. '72 Muzda JtX2.
Xlnt met:hanlcal cond.
SlSOO. l';d', 49:t·Tt66.
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
L-
New·Uted
, O'f.,i IOJI
MER(:EDES
OM DISl'l.A Y ·~
House of,•1sJDrf~,
A U-THORJZ.kD • i
.11\ERCEDESDEALEI'
6862 MS"nchcstcr, :•
Buena Park , ;
523-7250 <
On the Santa Ana Fwy. ·
73 Mercedes "',
SLC .
Coupe " .-, I
Pully equi pped in ;lc:OI\
gold with fuU mahogj ny· I'
leathl-1; Interior, &: 1!$S
th a n 14,000 mile.s''l
l•PM8397 ' '1
SLEMONS MERCEDES ing for a hard working . n ·' JW6·6504 ManyXtras.586-9!122 parts. In good shape.
s upervisor for its ques •• u 1 9 11 h 1 Reasonable.646·3078 ' , .. a e, mos. a s 0 5 • 7• POOL TABLE Sl t Fiberglass Mold for 20' lO!:J-Chu~ crew. Must ~Appliances 8010 part Colden Retriever. Gd cond s:!5C> ·we~ e~ boal Jlull deck hatch GRILL & front chrome
If your c:ar is extra cle.an
see us first. '72 c..,; 1970 1-l arhor, (' ,\1 .
4Speed,radio.Sparkling 631·1276
skilled 1n touchup repair••••••••••••••••••••••• Likes kids.SfG.7945.. r · 979.0037 · e stooO 0 ' 540.2842• strips ror ·60 Corvette.
& a~le 10 .s~~k good C .E . Washer w /mini . iver. · Eves 9.;s.;~ ' All in xlnl cond. $?00. or
English ~ Sp.anish. Xlnt basket . $100. Frigidaire Adorable Pups. loo~ing 1974 ·0 PENNIF.S. Jlo1(NT ' best ofrer. Call between 9
co. ben~fits & top wages wash e r $65, GE dis-for good home. mixed SEWN BAGS. $80. EA. 16' Bluewaler Marlin, & 5 days, Richard,
to .the right person. App· h wa s h e r $85. West -breed. 586-0436 OR OFFER. 67a.9688 Mere. 1/0 , trailer, full 646-1935
ly in person, ~oCasey, ing hou se refrig $40. 2 Yr. old while German t:o ver . $2500. Days, I-'---------· I
Westsad Corp. Guar /Del S4&-8672 Shepherd. female. Xlnt Young fe male raccoon. 540·2842 Eves 968-7465 Monz.a Mag Type Wheels, 275 McCormick1\ve,Cl\I $50. ' ' New, Fit any Vega ,
Wh irlpoot"Electric pet. 839·7129an. 5 644·1656 lO FT. Diesel trawle r, $17.95 ea. 546-8948
dryer.1974«M>del.S60. FR E E German n earin g completion.1-====...c----c.,..--·I
499-1716. Shepherd / Lab females. Lrg wooden sec. desk, $60. Gr and Banks t y pe. YW EnCJ. 1500 CC
E I . R 646-1172 Wheelodex £il e, $60. $35,000 SJ0-8940/~aft..6
e c tr 1 c an g e , ----------1 Mini-bike, $65. 546·18.15. so IT. Diesel Trawlers, 1----------· 1
Will train dependable Sig nature. 2 o v ens, Furniture 8050 $50,000 complete Autos for Sale
women to become plastic Clean. $.SO. 548-8807. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Usable investment. 6, 4-Atlantic Pacifi c ••••••••••:••••••••••••
injectio n m oldi n g K e nmor e W,a s her & •MATTRESS* piece place settings, MaritimeCo. ~I/ 9520 operators. Jl,f!-lst be. abl_e Dryer, Sl2S, both. sterling silver. Oneida 646·5491 67s.894S Eves CIOssict
to stand entire shift 1r MAD..,ESS Belle Rose pattern. ••••••••••••••••••••••• necessary. Openings'on 1---~C~a_l_l""""4 ___ 9 ___ * " * Make reasonable ofr.14 ' Glaspir w/trailer. '64LincolnConvertible
Ist shlfl. $2.15 per hr lo Will buy some ~f. Ap_· *ALL SIZES• 846·4576. Xtras & skiis. Sl.000/ b5l Runs well, looks good
start: 2nd Shift $2.29 per pliances. Running or not. Prict'd to Mo•e! Air Cond Wards 80001.:ol~r~-~54~2~·~6656=~aft=S~----S600 646-9000
TRAINEES
IAUERIUICK
2925 Harbor Blvd.
C<Mita Mesa . 979.2500
,
TOPDOUAR
PAID
IMMEDIATELY
FOR ALL
FOREIGN CARS
CALL OR COME IM
TO SEE US
NEWPClHT
ll"lPnH TS
3100 W.C..st Hwy. NJ.
642·9405
red finis h. Super sharp! 1----
M I ELT. '69 280SL, leather, al"r1
'
$2177
DM le.wib
.TOYOTA
1966 Horbor ( r,, ..,d,., Y}r'l1
'73 2000, deluxe, A1C. xlnl
cond , new radial s .
S2150torr er. 631·2731S
n e w tires. a perr, ·
specimen. Call owner~
days ; 644-3762, eves .'"
640-1575 ---------· '72 Merl'edcs 280 SI-: 4,5
Est ate Sulc. Air, Xlnl
cond. 50.000 m1. f7!IOO.
494 -3432 .
-----~---~ '56 1\-1t>rct'drs Class1<" Su~
roor. radials, nu 1nler. nu
s ilver paint. lotalll'
restored. $4.,500 /bst ofr~
i3 CAPR I 4 1·yl .. 4 speed. ,_ss_1._34_7_1_. -----
gas sa \'er. R295. !!35·8378
or Sjl·.1666. MG 974,2 ., .................... .
hr to start.Jrr1ShiftS2.46 Also 'scrap m e tal . 833•9625 g 646-8686 BTU 's, Sl2S. 2. IO Spd laspar Runabout. 13·.
·73 Cupr1 V6 Dix . Radio,
Heater, Low mi. r:xcel
Cone! S2.800.&l2·4lG.1 1---------
·71 ~t G 1\-1dgt. ~hnt corvJ .
30mpj:!. Xtr:i:-.. $1885,
5-18·!>821 aft S"pm ----per hr start. Raisein60 675-5258. Bikes,$l2S Both.498-339!1 Elec s ta r t er. 35 hp '59CADIUAC days 1----------· Best offer • 642·0502 Orancie c-ty's Datsun 9720 i2 !\1G Jlolid~ct, l\M /i'"'l\1 ; · Ko'tchenRange,clockcon· KINGSIZE BED. mat-E vinrude Nds repair. Hl<Jh !$Ivy po'n sl,o'po'n• 52395 • MOBILE C Tcleph •s •r •1 ••••••••••••••••••••• • --~ 'PPLY t•ol. gas. Blk/whl TY, tress. b oKs_prln .i;c & ar one, S350.646·0077.968W.17th 1957Chev.Classic,4·doo,, f 61'M 6~3 .. ""'" " " ' f t f VI 5 channe l Vilt-"' duplex. St t CM onl-...h. '74 260Z. Auto , air, At. ·" -'"""" ~.:.
O'a n•eCoast Plastics both beaut. cond. Best of-rame, x ra irm. a ue o""-1541 Day> '==r..:ee:::.:·:.:...:· ::.:..· -----good tires. new shocks & "T-... • $525 sell $2 15 Al so OJJ 1-b k 52 000 ri•' I llllMoaoyTot:• AM /f'M radio' lo m i. MGB 9744 . 850 W. 18th Street rer 536-3062 ·· · I ~---~-----FOR RENT·••. P/HR. ra es. . o e-ina · Queens •'•• bed >•a lue ~ -1 11 ·1 E Call Roger o' 0·11 Xlnl cond $5900 /bs t . ••••••••••••••••••••••• C6sta !\1csa · Leaving Country. Mu st Lobster Fishing Boat, m1 es. -arm Y car. x· ~""""""""""""""""""""""""~I FOR SALE mode rn SUS. sen $.195. Delivery II lh' ' !838 cellent body cond. & gd. l. __ _'84~7=-"'55~~·---1:-"'=5·..:3~298=·------1 · 11 h se e very 1ng · fully equip. Sportsrisher r efrig. brown. $75. (714) included. Usua Y ome. Pl 1· ,102 CM m o tor. Needs n e w acen 1a . or Sea Cruiser. &45·2898 up h o l s t ere r. Ex . 645-921S after& PM . S41·S593 Transmission. $500. Call FREE APPRAISAL
perienccd. Apply in Dryer , elec. La«i;ly Ken-Sora & l oveseat . Miscelloneous KONA Bubble Dec k, 830·3157 We buy used cars &
'72G'r
·72 1200 , xlnt ; new Xlnt c on~. A~(FM.
tires /clutch ; radio. Sfil(lO 523·0300 ext 221 & J92 24 UJ
or best. 640·4960 eve~·-·--------
person. 657 W. 19th. CM. more, hvy duly, SlOO. Beautiful. very gd quali-Wanted 8081 $4000. BOSTON Whaler, 'R-'~'-'-,".-"0-11-0-... -----trucks. Call GROTll 548 3567 ed . •••••••••••••••1 •1 ••••• 40 Evinrude w /trlr. CHEVROLET for a free * '72'IO", • · · 846-4576. ty, never us . moving. •hicles 95)0 · I " "
Opel 9746 .......... ,, ......... ,.
962.2562. SS CASH SS FOR $1000. 642·35m appraisa · S3800 or ~toffcr. NEW Sears Elec. Dryer.I -'===~-----Coodusedfum/refrigs ••••••••••••••••••••••• GROTllCllEVROLET 4fl!S·28-19 '68 Opel Kadrtl. 22.111.11! nii
UTOTEM C 'b 18' Glasspa r 160HP Mere VW powered dune b110 gy. t82tt Beach Blvd. 1------'-----1 on en,'!, tlenl('<J f{'nd•·1. * * ,still under warranty, Used Porta· n Frz.rs /slOves.546-0768. . ·· ._ $125. Eves. 675-3'48 in goodTcondilion. 1/0 . Trailer. $1800. Call See & makeofCer. Huntington Beach ·;2 510 4-dr. l\!\1 lf':'.I ta(X' $850 fii:1 6414 ___ _
EMPLOYMENT Phone6Jl·lS94 EDGER wanted. power .. l .:'.646::'.:·0098="-------l ----'548:.:::·~3=120::... __ 847-6087 549·3331 A C. ma,i.:s. :r>~tPG. mint Porsche 97SO OPPORTU~ITIES AIR CONDITIONER, I---------running good or not. •---S 'I 9060 Cbe d' & cond S2 100 49-1-J.132 " -·• 72%Ton vy.ra 10 SELLluGYOURC&R? · ' · · •••••••••••:•••••••••••
Ful\orPartT'ime 8000 BTU"s. ~i"rlpooJ., Color T. V. Spanish Cab. 547-3182 • GI ... "'
NOExruor N....-sary like new.S150.&d·S872 new. $250. Woodburning • I ••••••••••••••••••••••• heater . a /c, util bed. TOPPRICESPAID "' --~ s 35 Ch · Mus1ca '72 Hobo'e 16 w /t,ailer. lO 'h' Da na Cabover AR:e21 --6SEligible · love, $ . amp1 on . Forlmports
·73 240Z Xlnt. rond Maj!~.
AM /FM rad, air, Coco
Brwn . 830·6882 GotoThcNearesl KENMOREEtec.i>ryer. Juicer,$1Z0.5Spd.Bi cy· Instruments 8083 XlntCond.$1S87. Ca mpr. $4,800 / o rr. PaidfororNot
TIC TOC MARKET 3 yrs old. XJnt cond. S'15• cle $ZS. Console Stereo, •••••••••••••••••••••••:i----~8J3.~~=~~---1 -~55~7~":::::'85::.:0~'~6T.l-=~92ll=I~. --1 Deon Lewis ~s '7 0 510 Radials,
For Appli cations & Info ,_556_·_047_7 ________ 11 _:cSI..:5~.~49~7~·~1898='-----Tenor sax, 1254 Selmer · For Sale 1973 tt' self con· H bo --~ i\1ags, , Bundy. Like new. Hantl..ID~ 14 No. 3552. with 1966 ar r, ,,.,, AM /F!'of , x lnt c:o ntl .
OR CALL (714J642·n02 .Auctioa '80~5 Maple bedrm suite, box case incl. $175_ 646-IS09 tra 1l~r, Xlnt t:ond. all tained camper, & 00'% T 1 ____ ..:64~6-:.:.'°'='---.:::11=300::::.·..:548:.:::~·3'17::.;:5:_ ____ 1 ~~T~i~c~T~o~c~S~ys~le~m~s~·~l~n~c~. ~;••••••••••••••••••••••• springs & matt, $Z2S. Call ----------1 e q u 1 pm en t . $1600. Chevy Pk up. $3500 or
I Bu;v l art 6pn1 586-4779 WHITE pearl electric ac-, ~963'--53"--l-t ______ , best o rrer. 897 ·4613 or WE PAY 1971 DATSUN 510, 2 rlr, ~ ~ * * ii"""'* ... . 7 cordion. ru11 key. New•-846·5851 CA $H xlnt cond. Sl<100. P\'t par
W AREHOUSEMEH Good used fUmitlire & BED. King sz. Bureaus. s1000. Sac rifice $700. Call SAILS FOR SALE l-'-"-'-"-------1 ty fl75 0437
Food Distribution appliances, or t wttl Sell lam p tables . hanging between 8 & 5,_j62·0603, Fully batten main w/jib SP!"rtl, Race, 9540 FOR USED CARS
'72PoncM
914
5 Speed, rad1.1I tin ·~. A;t-
pearance ~rouµ. :aM·~
FSL. Sec it. y11u "ll 1Juy ll '
D esire ve rsatility . forYo.&. wall unit, xlnt cond. after5:30,962·1549 for 20·25' Cat or Tri. Roets PHILLIPS The ras1cst dra"· in thf'
I . I l ue.:. B . 64 4047 R 60 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"csl I) I I' I ' cus om er invo vemen ' M.AStERSA 110M arga1n. 4-or Office Fu-~-& '~~·~·=•~Oll:;:.::•~b~l•~-~-.:.:..5~1-"-.--I C us tom ,. ied F•' ,-•1rd .. . -.il ;u \' i "
i n v e n . c 0 n l r 0 I. c a 11 6 ·6·8 68 6 & a 3 '9625 979·0150 nwnw'C" I . ~ BIB CK. PONT I Ac ·Op F.L l rc~'~"::SS;' ';'';e~dA~d=·:":"~·:·~=·':':· ::Jc:~·"":::=":'~'"::':'-~·=·=·' ;'-'_'~'~'J' J weekdays83.1-2642. ., .r . . Equipmirnl 8085 12'Kilew/trailcr. Camaro. For s treet or 24888Allcia P ark way II I IOJO Gd.p1eces.&old1es.Spool ••••••••••••••••••••••• $450 s trip , Low pri ced . Laguna Hills 8.Tl·2400 C:: ,,. ~
Wl-10 WANTS TO WORK? CJC es ' • table. pr twin beds. com· xt svl chr.; $1S /J.S. scyl ____ 5~36-11292~~---I c•~7~5-~24~8!!':..· -----1--'----::-=-::----'-I A,.)~. s TAR G A'Z ER ft~ .. , DR IVE A CAB! ••••••••••••••••••••• , pl etc67S-4SM I· 1"2"-'!.!....:=...:::.:s,.cLAY 1'. POLL~N'---~---<
CHOOSE your ·hours. ' 'i J " c hrs" $B /•p. s~y dks. '74 Hobie Cal. Many 4WMflDriYes 9550 JQP J::i. 1ov.o...1, ... fY<,.c....i. ~ ,..,'~'1';,1 ,
work for yourself, be AZUKI Brand new Wht Gas w"•,c91hlhneC<Mvr.;,·A~7•4n:lle-8&7 xtras. Xlnl cond. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... ~·"··~•o•~•t• .. ·•· o.:• ,, .... u..
Your Ow n ~--. •ten or 1 Range $175/mt. Qn s( · · ·"""" · 592-1590 or 846.3680, Best $ Tn cM--~lorl ,,....,<JOO"''" T"-u•«lav, ~ " 1ospc1m--...... &f '72 Ford Pickup. 4 whl r-1...,,d\(o-·.-w-o<'<l·"')•o~·· ;:i};~;s-.~. Women. Can be slightly _, ...... ~ ~x ~prgs, matt rame. 2 CL lENT Chrs., l sec'y. ofr. drive . F 250. J.'4 Ton. _AT•u·u11 Qf..,.,,zodoot b••''•''"""
handi cappe d. Neat · 'SIO.o,..,-Co.f sUll1n pkg. $170/bsl. D1bl Posture chr& I till -back 3.3' D 'SJ C\a!iiSIC $3400 /bslofr.548-4500. P""d r.~ •" 11 ~~. ;;~ :;:; oc~~:.:: Clean Appearance . CYCLEWORKSL'f.D bedrm se\. apt sa eec deSk chr. All match'g. unnegan · :· GI ,w .,.,,. Jo. .. -i 11-6.1....-.oo• ~o· 1•
Vets .. reti~. AR:e 25 to lWNewportBlvd. stove.673·7079. ratf'ric in molded all Wood. ~!oop. cru1s1n p: 1975CHEVY FOR ~1._1 .. n ;:;:! .... ~~=-:;:.::..... • 9 •1 •1.
70. Supplement your ih-Costa Mesa.548·5783 steel. 675·5060 capabilities. i;~~ 515·500 ·•.o.1U1 eD>--• ,,.,.. e.""--• •>'"° ' come. Drive a Cllb 6 hrs Dinette set $20, coffee &-2 Bogardus 548·J.NV l/1 TOH PICKUP Used YW'S r_,,,"!1 .. ~;:" :~"':" ~~~ ~~ ~roon~oiut
or more a day. Apply In Camtral Ir end this $30 for all. 2 bed Pets 8017 22' F IG Cruising Sloop V8. a utomatic, pwr. lS',. ,.111•111 i~i'::"° :&' ~:,,_ ·o• "I :i peo~n. Yellow Cab Co.. Ecpli,.....,.t 1030 ~':~~~~~·Je:~s.;~:: ••••••••••••:•••••••••• ltead,galley,slpiZ steering &t ractory air PoldforarHot US-JU g~=' :le:'.. ~,t.__. ~~~
11251 Slater Ave, Foun· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 751_4_,. Young remale raccoon. Sl&9S. 646-9000 cond. Big t.ltts w/spoke '2.u.M nro •11 .. ··-111-. 1•1'-1912 i:
talnValley. Penlax ES2 , Auto -$SO. wheels.(POJ8). (~:·,11 :~~.::...,. :;~ ~=
Bellows. Sllde Copier, Ciwoge StM 1055 644·16S6 lea.ta. Slips/ SALE PRICED AT ~ '~'"'"' ""~ ,,~
Wclo,mh an 11 ond~•""van 3;1MM.~ideangle.SOMM ••••-••••••••••••••••• SCRAM LETS Docks 9070 • SS6H 11.n. Och. 142-4435 1./;~~, l:~ ~:-... ~~=-uo_ ousc. au .,,. . · h1aJ;I speed. can art &PM'. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• COPB.AND-S· ;:~ ;,;~ :~·_....,..,,,,L-''4 ca nt apt it . Large apt 5'8·57SS. H....thtdottHrbr ANSWERS Slip needed ror 29' S•ll. IEPctn Have$3,000t:uh. Want to 11,.... ''r.::.::.i ,,,_ ...
oomplex. C.Jl 9'im·6pm. ·SAT /SU.N Sep\ 27·28 Grouc h -Slung -Nwpt Bch. 821-0161 aak J buy late model Cad or n;:7 ~~~ ~Z:,""'
540-1300. Com-pie r• black &. wht Furniture 6 misc items. Manly -Corpse -forCtumpton. 551-1000 equiv rrom pvt prly . 1•C1o ~c.. .. ......
darkroom. $100 or best t6281TisburyCitt"le. SURGEON 631·3215. ~;:;':,"'""' ~~ ~~'"' Don't j(ive up the ship! o£r.Ah5pm,S48-6'744. lf youstillhaveyourap· EAClfRACK Sell in< anything with •'"'"-'--'-""--------1 1tV! ill'::! ,,_
"LIAt" It In clatslrh .. -d. New ~ph o l . Sofa s & pendix ut middle age, .. STsrf.! GE DaUy Pilot Cla.Mified Ad NS.ED cheap transporl11-~..;:.;: ,..:;r," ::~:"' ....
Shl,p to ~hore r '"llll&I Sell things fast wit.h.Dally Cbair1; all klnds, rrom yoU r ' re probably a Sml boat· $1.4 mo. 303 Is a 1lmple'tnaltcr . lion car fot ~fe. Call 10ci...""' "°-'"' 90 "'-'
642•5678 Pilot Want Ad1. $25. to $9.5. M7•5JT6 SURGEON. E. Ed1e lAtr 1-8'71·2866 just call 642·s"8. t1fter 8 pm.891J.J623 11 ~GooJ ®"""",. ()w!~~t
• •
t
• ' • ---·-~----· ----.... -·-----. .. ' i 1· . .e~ lw..l . .'1i-.~V1 ~'9'oOiNO!/,$!f)lttmu.t24,1•75 01, Mporitd ,,..noa.l•po1i9d ...... 'apert"4 -~ '_.. ':~ .. ' ''°"U •," -• • ' •••••••••••••••••'•••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• A t U ...
....... IMpomd • Awtoto ,.,,,..... EXCLUSIVE oyot• 9765 Trf_,. 9767 Y.•• ,71~ .A.tea. Uaed , ~-~~•••-•••••• ,.1 •• ~~ ........... ,,.,,. ..••..•.....••....•.... ......••.•.•...•..•.... ....................... .••............••.•.••. ....................... ....................... ..... . ""
PoncM ~750 Rolls R91ce t756 OOI TR·3. Claulc •· reblt. 0~ ... ICOUMTY 9915 hrfrolet H20 ·-•••••• ••••••••••••···~··•••' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orartge Co11t1ty '75Y2 mut •••· A Beauty. VOLVO •• ., •••••• .,, •• ,., .... •••••••••••• .. -·-•••• ••••••••t
•7SC/l.lllBA # DEAURINU.S.A. 0m 1 $1200.-EXa.tJSIVELYVOLVO / "\ ~0i:t".l~ull.[.="3LTl>4 ·~;ii::
e ne • CARvlR . Here -·•••••••••••• .. ••••• aOr1apOountyl · Beat pit dtt~ "*· ... U k * 64$00IS ~ROY· 'f1 TOJQtas •-·-1 .tnt ~ae1tVolvollealer oc-SllMNoaat lll"lm.. .. • •
S.•oo. Wor• r ••• ~. • MOTOI "'-DIRECT rodlal llna. "nil ...... -~ 'li2 Suporeo,&!pla ~. ROUS ROYCE W/I.~ • Bl/YorL!!ASE Huge m 5 llonta %+%. Sleel ·-· '.
av:u. 84.S-mT • ., c'o".',.· '!!h,J~· CAI NMM vud· '70 vw ·11 or older. m· ~ In& Tint &Jap Wod. ......... ,.
U4-... u-AllTHOll'UD c~un C1U631·2271dealer. ~iK~f"' ~ s .oOo m i. $3,3~. Ph ............ -······ •.
·•.51 »l·A Porsche, ClOSlo SUNOMs S.. & Ser•k• onw lrt ii VW Bua, reblt en·c. .,..!_. e Cad•lllac IM-0137 ~/~~o•Y P::.1,~1. ;; .:=., Clamfl·~Ads 642 .•• ,8 DAVE.ROSS Test Drive ~!~to-b. becl..;.,~cond. ·1 2 Ch e v Capri ce. Gd. <0nO. ll•k• orr: :::-:---'-'=---1===-=::::...-.::::::~:::.'..".j l'OMTIAC.ITlln y;...u.:., -· or...,._ 2026 S. •-1e t• '• AM/FM. A/C, P/S. P/B en-.
Flat 9725 Flat . 9725 2480 HorMr lhod. ...._, 'IS VW llUS. 11 .. m. Anaheim 7S0-2011• ac~IOfl nu tire1 11• bet. vnl ;?. OWi••''' H55
• • ••••• •• •• •••••••••••• • \; •. •• • • •• •••••••••••• I Buy 1l~rter hrates • bat· 0 .. 1 AA .....,1 I 9PID · ' :-r. ...;• •••••••••••• ........ . •••••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••;:") • to • $1100. Ph: '9:M4kn • VOLVO .. _..._.._ '13 Monte Carlo LMnda\L
ND 1975ggng 1112DOORWITH L or Ti-an••pe.n.frntltrt•r c... ........ J\lllpwr.itratobuclc:ell,
N[w • ease whee••· pana ooi,. c.u SALE '-'"-.... iape: c•••n saaso.
: • . IRONT·WHEH ORIY! : • ·--· 1\ l 6'0·3018. All tiar1 in our •\DI'~ Naber' s """'~.:..:.;•.::••cu-~-~1
: ..... i ••• ,,,..,,_,. ... ,d ... , ••• ~, • ; (fe.GJ\ e.wi.a '65 BUG. Xint. cond prlctd'atbelowincreue 'l'eteover~ '15
I
• ............... ~···"'""" '• $ • ~ . lhrpout.$87•. olAll)1j1l2!th. .......... 111ac-Jlann.7own:Cao~!l/.L : ,!"·.:::i:;.:~i.:~.:'"~'::''·~-:.~ !--: ~ TOYOTA Ph:67S.5196 ; 48 ~ P /S,P /B,alr..-1135.
• ,,,. ~·~-·• • ' M8·9002days . ._ ~H•rHralW., I '6$ '4 t.on pldrilp, reW&..l.!:~~==--=it==:=
: HUllllY! : 1966 Harbor f M.. c.t0.9303 Ja1uar Sedan. Wir.e.•bls. TO CHOOSE '-.. "Mis.A MM100 ./ en.a. new tir-. '61.1' C,W '~ 57
• MOST COLORS AVAILABLE • Mlchelins. AM /FM. etc. FROM over c~J~C ••••••••••-•••-·• •• : -r : TOYOTA'.'· Offer or trade lor vw JUST • ""IVED .,. CAD CdD. lull pwr. As kin& $1,$00 ..... M30 .,. Ruoabout Dix Int/ •
• J I , _j • c'"-P•r. or s m•ll 1UUUT p.s, p.b., p.w .. P·•·· :'lr att.5pm · "'··---/vm· ........ 4-s
• · '--' .l .---.... _ • "-· f' --y cond, Land•u. Crwae ~uv• 1• """Y• • OFFICIAi-s ailJtoat.119;1.&175. • ~,__J_Vft Control, AM /FM stereo. SS Chevy . Nomad W1n, -Eve. 840-4644 :•'I\_ ~ ~ : PACECAl ·1973VW Bus,w/camper. DEMOS tapedeck,rearwind.de· body 1.n ·xlnL cond ... Foe-est. Gr. Runabout. 4-• \J... ·~ • Comeinand '•test drive·· Xtras,including Z.bed. Example fogger, trunk release. S1crl f1 c e bes t otr. ·spd. ZOOOcc 53.000 mi.
• ' • a 'JS Toyota and receive 83J..2l44 •75 244 5ec1m radial tires. 24,000 mi. 675-2489. $1150/80 5ti.256S
• LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND • 2 "'~ee"'tickets M FM $6350. 675•7629 p • • • ,..,.. WANTED ; '70 ·'72 VW Automatic, A I '71 Monte Carlo. IS.
• To the Long Beach Van. full camping, gd s tereo ·radio, power '72 Ca•loc P /B, A/C. AM /FM. Must t7tRUNABOUT, gd. i
• • : • • • • • • •
• GrandPrix cond. Like sun roof. steerine.powerantenna, EIDmoclo sell.645·2317. cond.Sl200. i
• Qualifying days Sept. 26 645·4680 low miles. #2019. 548-1644
• &27 _ $5S99 Convertlble '74 Monte. Carlo., ~Lo~0m~f.iliiii;;;;;;;;~=='-n6o A BEAUTIFUL NEW : IS I 0 Value) '59 Karmann Ghia, good v.a, auto. trans., ructory Xtr,:!.,1L361kt;..~.~; ~ ,,,._,.. 9960 Xl I 9 • cond $575 l air condlticmlng, power or •w· · m.wM.llee. ••••••••••••••••••••••• QB/,Jfl .• While they la!il ! Ca.II ""•:Zl74d·-or l>e.GJl e.wi.a• . (di ) l "' .. ,,.. steenng, power sc CCMtti...tal 9930 . 1 • D ~11,..; 1 675 -86:11 eves. Cl brakes power ··•-•-ws ATLAS .-<:OMP'LEfE WITH MAGS e • ..... WllO ~ • wu-.. • •••••••••••••••••••••••
AllDAM;FMRADIOI • ~ UU\ 1968 Squa r eback, xlnt -~· power se~l s, radio, '72MARKlVMintcond., '""~""'"""'""""' 0 •' • I ;j;:: TOYOTA eond. $1200 Hrm. Afl ., .• VOLVO h~aler, whil~wall tires, very lo miles. $5,200. Chrt ..... ,!PIJwi.,oc,..•llhlh
"" !~ ~v•t~ o~•n •"• '-~·· • i:-....... 5PM 646-1570 vinyl roof, Unted glass, Blll: 962·9117 lc963-366& Open OaUy le Sun. 'tit 10
'-"P C0 •• ~~100 r .... a .. 1 • · · 19b6 Hn1 bor c M. 646 9303 wheel covers. Ve ry · pu ~Jo1) 11.oo ... 1No 001~1~11 • I ~'KYQ -• l 1900 Hcnbo•: c r,, b46 9303 c ean! .-.,, · ··ss. Full power, leather. "'2929JtarborBlvd .• 69 VolYO W-$3777 4-dr. Llkenew.$111•. Costa Mesa
'71 Corollit 1200 Cuupe, For Classified Ad 4 Speed, radio. A nice . 673-3206. 546-1934 DICK MILLER MOTORS -FIAT
•0 1-·1.11· 1-~lt."'l 'tJJt )'.II ·1·11tJ/ll/.f,'/J • 645·77~ . . lllll A11'11&· Corvette 9932 • Call a $1977 ~\ UUILO •••••••••••••••••••••,. '62 Valiant. ,6-eylinder.
51250.0iii<:.uwncr. AC'fJ ON one!'306I cd l •
L• 120 -~:··~y;;~~~~-"~;i":o:\; ~:·~~~";;~~;;·'AN':_)• T\~'~s~~s~·~~ d~~~y 111r1\~~ ~~i·I~:~ 1\11111 l"•,,;& TOYOTA For C*o~~!~ASa: other :r~~:Por~a~i~!.11~~~
e 557•2132 • <!l.>H s~1f1ed !\d. Phone 642·5678 (ft¥1" UUW used cars & truc ks! 848-8340,DLR.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -~--ati78. ~ 1966 HOfbor. c M 646 9303 HOWARD ~hevrolet, 70 Plymouth, s:KMJ firm,
Autos, Mew 9800 /l.uto1. Mew . 98001/1.utos. Hew 9800 11.·~-. Mow 9800 Autos. Mew 9800 ~ VOLVO c...... 9917 Dove & Quall Sb. Near rully loaded. new tires. ••va Jamboree, Bristol, &: gd cond 556-6529
' •• •
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••-••••••••• .. ·MacArthur, Newport ' · 19b6 Hn1hor CM 64b 9303 7f1Camart>4 spd V8, 1 Beach. 833-0MS 12 Duster, xlntcond.. • ·
SA&ES &. SEif.ViCE ·· .. . . ... ·'' ...
' .. •· , ,. I I ,,..
' .
No. 1· ·1n ·n1e . -lation-
...
' WE ARE PROUD Of OUR OUTSTANDING RECORD WITH THIS OUTSTANDING CAR!
Before YOU buy I
COMPARE OUR SAVINGS AND INSPECT OUR COMPLETE HONDA SERVICE FACILITIES
NEW 1975
:HONDA. Civic
cvcc
• MILES PER
GALLON
ownr. XJntCond. $1800.Newtires. '
see ! 2187 Pacific. C.M. 533-034lor645-6763PM. COUCJOr 9933 960-3&52
Apt. C btwn 3 pm & 10 •••••••••••-•••••••••• pm. Che•rolet 9920 •72 XR7. ~harp! Auto 1967FURYillSta.Wgn.9
'75 VolYOS
luyorl.eCIM
.
'71Volvo144, super clean,
new radials, cll.dch. $2500
aftG,497-2301
•••••••··~··.••••••••••• trans, full pwr, air, pass., 73 ,000 nti., paint&: CONNELL · AM /FM tape. Rally tire1Jikcnew,xlntcond.
whls. Must. sell. $2150 S1200.644-4600
CHEVROLET bs l/ofr. PP 838-34'3. Ponffoc 9965
days, 645·3141 eves.••••••••••••••••••••••• Gary. SALES&SERVJCE
2828 H..-llvd.
COSTA MESA
546-1200
1968 Cougar RX7 Power '69 Le Mans Sta. Wgn.
steering and brakes , Immac.$950.Callaft.
s te reo call evenings. SPM 631-2754
495-0148 '70 Firebird Esprit. Auto.
'74 Impala 4 Dr. Sedan. Dodge 9935 air. Xlnt cond. Must sell.
Auto, fac air, PS, Vinyl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64().5"7"-34'-a'-1_17_. ___ _
roof, lo mi. Xlnt. cleaq '73 Charger Brougham, '69 Ventura 2dr h.t., auto.
cond. $3100. lilBS-3966. aft& loaded, ·divorced must ajr. p .b., p.s., good cood,
Pfll· sell!,$400. cash&: Ute Jowmi.$8.50or$150&a.s·
72 C a.--~ over paymenu, $2,900. sume pymts. 536·4436 .... vy nap 642·9030br548-!M4'1 6pm-9pmorwknds
9 PasHHlllf' . '68 vs Dodge Dart, A/C. '61 GTO. Good Condition. ~ Auto. trans., fad.ory air R /H, 1 ownr. Gd. cond. 2 .-vi I ........................ d ' t ..........
9905 con it1oning-. power dr.'950/0N0.5'5-1497 64&-1645
steering. radio, heater, 1---------·
••••••••••••••••••••••• whitewall lites, "tinted Foret 9940 '73 Le Mans, PIS, P /B,
'72 Sporlabout. A/C, P /f>, glass, wheel C!OVer!I. Nice •••••••••••-•.,.••••••• Air, new radial Ures, Jo
rad,i.ats, noor shift, xlnt ear! 416 EAA. '68 Ford Ranchero, mi, top cood. 646-4032.
rond. 968·2373art. 5,30 .. $'> 177 tamper. P.S .• P.B.. A.C., 1_E_v_es_. _____ _
Buick 9910 ~ . .WJdewhls.SI000.673·7381 T'-dertilnl 9970
•••••••••,•••••••••••••• 1\"1111 luviA '73 Ford Pinto Sta. Wag. 4 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'74 ES!AT£ Wgn .. FUiiy eeitWL Spd, n ew tires. Xlnt 1968 LANDAU. 35.100 80•
equip d . 14000 m1. Im· :~· TOYOTA cond .f2200.675-;4950 \ual ~lies, lull power. mac. 644-4592 . 64 F d F q h . new tires, immac. $1195. or a 1con, 1 675-3735 '64 Buick Special. ~gn . 1960 Horbor. c M. 646 9303 perlorman~ 289_, 3 spd. , Bright nu color·nU tires. auto, w /shll\ kit. Mag Vega ·' 9974
Ownr. ~90. 846-0255. 74 Monte Cerlo Landau whls. taped • Makeol· •••••••••••••••• .. •••••
9915 Black, fully equip'l. 17M, fer . 646-5806. '71 GT. A/C, 'P/S, radial :
•••••••••••••••••'•••••• S4500or bstofr. 5J&.463S •64 Galx. Au • tUr, RIH. tires. Gd cood. Pvte par~
'72 CDV Leather. CR. '74 Impala, Xlnl cond. PS. PB, bod1 & interior ty. 581·8164,581·2700.
Cont., V. top Jo mi New Low mi, Assume loan . g reat. Runs but needs '72 VEGA, xJnt cond.
tire s /brakes $3 .600 S3250/bstofr.561·9089aft motorwork.$200/bstofr. $1650. Call 673·092S oc
751·5613 5:30. 549-1249 Pvt .. pt.y. 675-8654 ask for Rob
· 9910 loaick 9910 a..lck 9910 ltoick 9910 '· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~J ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
YOU ARE CORDIALI.. Y INVl1ED TO
SEE & TEST DRIVE THE
SPARKLING NEW
'76 BUICKS
ON DISPLAY SEPT. 251h AT
TERRY BUICK
FANTASTIC --
DISCOUNTS·
i
ON ALL REMAINING NEW
-'75 BUICKS
AND DIMO'S.
' • • TERRY BUICK
'
5th & WALNUT -536-6588
"Downtown HunfincJlon Beach''
• •
• YEA-R-EllD .MODEi . C-LOSE· 011 SA YllllSI
•
•
·, ' . , . . . , , • . . •• • • . . • • . .
.
• • • •
I 1i-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_;_~__;;;._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---t1 ·· ,,.-. ' . .
NEW '75 PINTO . MPC
I
NEW '75 . LTD SIZED
Make Us An ,.
SEDAN. 2300 4 cyl. engine, fforlt & reer bumper
guardt'pluamore. (Ser. K111382)
52777
$65'.!....
NEW '75 MA YERICK
QJSTOM 000 4 DOOR BIRD HT. 351 OD V8 ono ..
clx. while waU radial tl1'91r, d1x. bumper group, wheel
COYWSand more. {H1&4482f
53999
BRAND NEW COURIER
Oller
We Can't ··
• Refuse IL ·;
4 DOOR. 250 CI D e cyl. engine. Tinted glua. front &
rear bumper guards, color keyed, outside mirTOrl and more. (l 196308)
53077
1800cc englfM. 4 speed, Vlnyt bench l8lt and rmre.
(Ser.-85)
52899 WE'RE No.1 :f::
••• . ::
~.·
And ... ... '~ . ' . .. We Don't Want
To Lose ~NEW 1975 GRANADA
I ! ~~~!~~'engine. S
California Emission Equip-
ment. Deluxe Bumper Group.
#5W82L 143152
• a>
6 •
L a>
.D E :s
• c .. m
iii ,..
.1
E
,.
0 L I ....
>
': ~ . .
HI .
s1301 MONTH
t1:1r • -· x.... doWfl ca ... -ine1. i. • 11o1o-.11 ...ia-'° °"9r'Nll ,,,,..prioll II «en.Mo. N'f', • ll~ 0n.-,-cno11
DUNTON FORD WANTS YOUR BUSINESS
'71 PINTO '72 DATSUN '72 RANCHERO '73 DATSUN '72 MAVERICK
WAM>M ncaur fHAUH
AulO "'"', •MloO. 1'91191. "*9c1r'll:1'20CJ5) • "'*9d .... -honing. •ldlo. "'-'-'· _ _.. ...... ""'° ,,,_. -11-.~. •IOIO. -,,. e C'l'I . -...o , • .,. ... rlldiO. ,,.,,., A -~ -~°'-•~v.ctnELOI ~t .. N!ll!.) ._, •• -._. ........ ~ (481r.JXJ ( .. 1,.,,,.) •
s1977 s2277 s2777 s2577 s1977
'72 T·BIRD '73MAZDA '74 TOYOTA '72DODGE LA .. AU Show Us A CJood COIOUA WAGON YAM M. -........ lllCIGl'JI -oondilloof"of'G. -~ -dllC .,,.... ••• --. • ~. AM /f'M 11 .. .0 •adl0.1-•. litlf«tVl--Credit Statement ""Jfo lrl nl , r.OIO. 1>e11 ... who1.-i '"" 1lnt..i flC'l'I .. WIO lrW19., od4olflor P .. ri!-.{20.tl.) --.. 11di0 ....... _.....,. , .......... (9112HOJ! E>cc .. i...1 buy 11 gi.&. !~•Kl 4 cr11m Piii' lllli..ll'\JI l<:x>l.llnled._ . .,...._ .. ._ •. rou"l tout • AND ,,,,.,., s3077 ·S1477 $2677 s3177 We'll Deliver
On The Spot!
'71 CHEVROLET '72 CHEVROLET '73 FORD '72 FORD
c.uwio MONTI c;.uLO MUST.MACHI LTD
v ... ""'° "-· '-='«v -~ -....... ""°· ·--· IKtotr. OJiditiu•io. -,,.... -"'-. -•-"'9· ~-""'W v.e. altC) "--· llC1Gf'JI ..,. coridi!IOIWIQ. -.._.rig. -One tit..,,,, •adoo ~•I'll--!'lg. -""""°""" rldlQ. '--°· llll ........ _ ,,,.,.., ~.-.-.......... ,,...._(RM2) "''" !1191111)
.s2477 s2777 s3377 s2477
'74F02. • '74 PINTO '72 PINTO '74 CHEVROLET
LDT•HM.C WAOOt'SO ... YNAHATCHIACK " ...... ""°· --.. '-dory .... C>Ol'idl!IOf'll!'IQ. -
• ~ -Iii..: ......... rldlo, ~-....... /lwJilo "-'· AMIFM <Miio. l>e1!9'. ~ ''°' • -..!. t.cilo ...... 1 .. l~I Al/tO.~...ilo.hNI• {Pe101 ! --.. ...... --. ~ •. (Plli5el
_, .
s3977 s3277 REHT·A·CAR s1977 s2477
SALi '72 CHEVROLET "'#WIHDB SPICIAL' '72 PLYMOUTH '74 PINTO
IMDS ltiiM'ALAIDL PIM'l'O •••••••••••• $20 ..... J DOOi. aUMA80Uf MAVHICK •••••••• $22 ............. "--· ,.,..,,, .... -di1'oo••'9. -
Auto nr... iletorY" * eoiditloi • • .....,_• ,,...,, SUHDAY ................... lll:torY • ,..,idlllO ••. -"-'"'· -OIK II••••• radio. ,,._.,, ~.l"fdio.-.("'"'' MUST ANG •••••••• $25 _.....,...._(,..,.} ,_, ' .
MIGHT • s2477 CH.+.HAD.+. •••••••• $25 s2177 s2977 ·) • I SO FREE MILES
l I
i '74 F.ORD '73 MAVERICK '73 FORD '74 MAVERICK r .... TOl:IMO COUPI ·-_ ..
• C'jjl .• "*'· ...... ,..s;o. hMNr. ~ ... ............ IN0 ....... 09S &lltc ..... ~ ».DOO ...._ la'!._ nicl C8I! Ctfl9-IMICI o11r,11o lrW, ltctoryw oooodilloo orio._._... ................. ~--~----.......... ,2'MSA> ..,_w....._lldlQ. ....... !'9011 ........ ._ ..... ,.... ........
Al c.. ...... lo ""'-' 54277 52477 s2977 s2977 -,,. ....._~'•a .-
• VISITE HUESTo· DEPARTMEMTE LATINO '
• • • '
•
•
• •
2240 S. MAIN at WARNER, SANTA ANA, 546-707 0
'1 •
•
'
• -.-;:
• • • •
• l
' '•
I
I
I ,.
I
I.
..
•
Atlas
WINDOW STICKER
PRICE 56304'5
• •
•
21, 1971
DISCOUNT $140018
BRAND MEW 1975
NOW .... s4904•1
A FACTORY $300 ~ CASH REBATE
BRAND HEW _
FURY ROADRUNNER
2 Door. V-8. automatic transmission, vinyl roof, aircondltio~
ing, AM/FM stereo. steel belted radial tires, power windows,
bucket seats w I console. power steering , power disc brakes,
tinted glass, sound insulation package, inside hood latch,
etc.
For YoW Further
Con"f!llienc:e •••
~ay Service n-.. ~ to 5:oo , .M. M:Z:... H......, •=oo ..._., 7:30 .4 ··-:---r.,.,. r.i.r....
welconie v .M. lo 5:30 p_,,j • i:'
W • ,o•r Worr · "• ,,:;h • Regardless Of a':!!:.._ Service
•75 TRAIL DUSTER DISCOUNT $1633IO
V-8, auto. trans., • wheel drive, air, cruise
control. AM/FM, tinled glass, 5 passenger
c~ llHclY"r~~~~ r" for an Al'l'O or ~ 546-1934. INTMEHf: 17141
ae1ting package, rem:>vable hardtoo.
fllec:tric dod(. special 1T9g1 & tires. & much """" .
USED CAR SALE
'74 VEGA
HATCHIACI
Eoonomlcal • cylinder. 3 speed,
redK>, Mater. (884KHK)
'72 MONTE
CARLO
V-8, auto. trans., air conditioning,
power steering, Power brakes.
POWer windows, AM /FM radio,
whitewall tires, vinyl roof. till
-.(587EJV)
'73 PLYMOUTH
SATB.UTICUSTOM
V-8, auto. trans .. air conditioning.
power steering, power brakes.
radio, heater. whitewall !ires. vinyl
roof. (359GXJ)
'72 FORD .
1COMOLM CUSTOM ZOO
V-8, auto. trans., power steerj.ng.
power brakes. rldio. heater &
many more to c hoose from!
(85365M)
s1795 s2495 s21ts s2995
'72 OLDSMOBILE cun.ussun ..
V-8, auto trans . air conditioning,
power steering , power brakes.
IM/fM stereo. heater. wtlitewan
tires. vinyl root. mag wheels.
(528EOOJ
'74 PLYMOUTH
SATB.UTI CUSTOM
<4 Door· Sedan . V-8, air
conditioning. power slaering,
power brakes, rad io, heater,
whit9well llrn. vlnyt root. factory
extended warranty. (042KZX)
'75 PLYMOUTH -Eoonornkaf 8 cyt.. auto. trw..
power steering, radk>. heater.
whitewall tires. vinyt roof. ~low
ni'8s. t.c:tory extended warranty.
(137581)
'73 BUICK
-Al. v..a. auto. tnna., air conditioning,
power steering, PQW9' brlkll.
power sots. stMeo radio. helter.
whitew1ll Urea, vlnyt roof. tilt
wheel, crul18 control. (444HGC) •
s2ots $2895 s32so ~3095 ·
. ,
BRAND HEW 1975
IMTERMA TIOHAL 1/2 TOH
PICK UP TRUCK
V-304 engine. 12 v .. 70 amp. inc. cap battery, 11
in. 65PG clutch, optional gear ratios, exhaust
emission label.
•
"' , Front axle locking hub. heavy duty RR . step
bumper, power steering, Increased cooling,. 2
·speed transfer case, delt~xe exterior 4r1m
pact<age.
4
WHEEL
DRlft,
COMPLETE
"HEAVY DUTY"
SERVICE AVAl'LABLE
far ya.-l.V. O.; of lie flMst
ser-•lce f•cllltfes ,. cpr••9e
Ca.tyl Opn' Sciloi"•ys 1:00
A.M. .. 5:00 , .M. Mallclay tin
Frl•IJl.7:30 A.M. loS:JO P.M. , ,
•
•
Laguna/
-EDITION
'
J
Today's CJ .....
N.-Y.S.1ea • • •
•
-.
VOL61, N0.2167,4SE.CTION\S1 PAGES TEN C!ENt$ ORANGE COUNTY,CALtFORNIA
I C I
WEPNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24. 1975 ·
I l • 0 -..:..;;.COast Swelt~rS
-'
• JD ~
11' ALAN Jll&DN ...... .., ........
...,. .. Tbei:':.""0r-e cout swe1tem1.
.. ala in the 1rlp "' • lllree-da)-heat waye today, with tem-
P«atura cUmbln,-baclt towaril
"'-d07'1 biibo. wblch Wfft the
-..iotlbeyear.
lalaad temperatuns ran over
100 degrees Tuesday -104
de1ree1 were reeorded at ...
Trabuco Canyon fli'e It.lion and'
• •
• '
.~d~gre~-1lleat ·.~·
105 del,_ at G""""' Grove ...:. downtown Lacuna Tu11day, ny, wllo noted that the bumldltif
but tlle.•Jr~IUY soared wb.iU lU...S.a.o Clement• a 92 •. was..low, fromJO 16.20 _.,1, ~ 1!IOaa tale coast. partl<ldarl,y in deiiree bieh was recorded. and quipped. "It wu a sreat dt,y lbeaOutli oflbe county. lJ!eauards at Newport BeKh forpainllng." .
1'be ll'e~tr Service said.tem-and Jrwitington Beacb reported It wu al10 a peat day to bit ._.tures would be Sjmllarto-blgliil of iiilly"IO de1r .... but· a r.,. thebeacti, ona more surfera lllin,
day. bu.t predlc:ted a break acling taken oaly a mile from the painters turned out. Llleguanb
'ntunday.. • • · ocean in Huntington Beach was reported Au1ust·1i1e crowds
A ll·deire .. reading was 98dearees. alone public sandsootbeOranse
apotted on the temperature slrn The readin1 was taken by re-Coast, with 30,000 on the Hunt.-
outside thet" Laguna Beach• t'°ed Huntincton Beaeh Com· ington ... Beach state beach, and
Fed ral Savings building in pony manager J, Shormsn Den-(SeeREAT, P...,.U) . \ •
' Opened .Iletters:
' I
Of Nixon · 8.nel ·Others . -.
JJ ,, ...; .,t ' • r
•
' t o.lly ,. ........ .., lll&a.1'11 ~-
IT WAS~ !JEGREE!! AND GOING UP AT ~GUNA FED
Mra. Deb ttow*Yt<ol El Toro.encl Daughter Shelby, 4
• -t '
Ho ~ Wi. Spark
il6 "'• J: I 4. _11ri il1or · ~
ByJA~CHAPICU. Ot .. DllltyPlllltllll{
An 11,000-acre blaze at Camp
Pendleton was One of six D\a,Wr ~~ush fjres, w~ipped by h'Ot ~
~1nds from the desert, that
mazed through more_ than 40,000
acr~s of Southern dalifomia
Tuesday Md !belay.
' . . . iiorth aaI.aguna Beach.
The blaze, wbich .was sparked
Monday .afternoon by flares used Jn a training exercise, 'Was re·
parted 80 percent contained to-
<lay.
Fire-fighters said that the
blaze presented no threat to tbe
"Little ·Saigon" camp of Vfet-
nam es e stationed on the
.UC,OOQ-acre base.
~ Four Marines were injured
Tuesday in a separate fire inci-
dent at Camp PendJeton. A base
With daytime temperatures
a1ain climbing to 100 to 110
degrees and low tiumidity. rares
crackled through dry brush iq
four eounties over a '100-mili
front from Los Angeles to San
Diego.
One-'of the biggest fires was at
Camp· Pendleton where brush
was blazing in the HomoSan
Onofre area. A total of. 54 fire.
fighter.s , including .MarJites1 were battling the blaze that sent
a plume of smoke over the city of:
... .spokesman said that. they were
sent out to put out a small fire
started from round1 tiled during
a machine gun training exer'ciae.
San Clemente. The paJl threaded:
· out over the ocean and as fai '
'
In stomping on the bnts:h, me
of the ruen struck a dud 1'°'l"'1
wtq.cb expioded. The four were
hospitalized on the base, but
their injuries were described as
slight.
(See BLAZES, Page A!) '
Ambulance Issue
Stirs Disagreement
A festering disagreement
between the city of Laguna
Beach and South Coast Com·
munity Hospital over ambtdance
service surfaced Tuesday al
Cobncilwoman Phyllis SweeneY
and Administrator Bernard Carr
squared off at a Chamtier of
Commerce directors IW1cbeoo.
The 'tiffrl>egan when-cau anl
nounced that a strictly emergen-
cy ambu,\a.nce private9', owned:.t
btit •ubsidized heayil)r b)'i \the
nonprofit' community hosp1ta1
and Orange County would be
eliminated Oct. 7 when agree-
ments.expire.
Sweeney, we were in negotiation
for quite a time before we knew
other arrangements had been
made by the city of Laguna
Beach."
"By ambulance service, I'm .
not talkl ng about some am·
bulance parked back in some
,garage aome place, not man..,ed,
and whenl they need it, somebody
IQeS Out and tries to find .
some~ to diive it,'' Carr said.
t The clty's back\Jp ambulance
now is stationed.al the downt9.wn
(See DISPUTE, Pue A2 J
' Two Held
In Rape,
Robbery·
Two y0uthful suspects were
wounded in Santa Ana early to-
day when police internwted a
four·man robbery-rape-mayhem
spree inside an all night market.
After wounding two of the four
suspects as they attempted to
nee from the market, police
found a naked 24·year·old
woman, the apparent victim of a
rape attempt. in a storage rooin •.
,Behind a store. ~tpr. rlf.· ficers • foun_d i m_.-ket clerk
bleedjng from a de<j> ga"' Mar
his right ey~. a ·1v"'!l"i i/>ened
wh"!' one o~the four~~ al-
legedly struck t~e c!l'j'k With a
hom·emade billy club.
And recovered from one o( the
SUSP;ect's pockets Was the money 'poli~e claim. was takerl from a
cash drawer in the market.
; Neither of the woUnded sus·
pects, one of theni a 14+year-0ld
juvenile, were serious!)t irijured
by the police gunfire t h at
followed as they fled from the
market at Washington and
Bristol Streets.
According to police, the four
suspects entered the market
shot;1.ly after 1 a .m . .
' After knocking clerk Lawrence
A. Topper, of Santa Ana~ lo the
floor with a blow froni the billy
club1 they allegedly took be!Ween
$50 and SlOO'froD) a cash drawer.
.As three of the alleged robben
took two customers to a back
roof\1: in the store, the fourth
member-of the robbery team
grabbed a woman customer and
took her into another storeroom.
There, he forced the woman to
strip and reportedly was foodllng
her when a police unit, sum·
monded by a silent alarm , a r-
riveOat the market.
In lhe next few minutes, three
officers chased and shot at the
s us pec ts as they ran in a
patchwork1 fashion down
sidestreets to avoid capture.
Arrested after being wounded
in the leg and elbow was Manuel
Ortiz, 18, ot 2406 N. Pacific
Street, Santa Ana.
<See SPREE, Page A!)
RFK T~ Begins
LOS ANGELES <UPI ) -The
"second a:un jury," seven of the
mos't distinguis hed criminal
science investigators in the na-
tion, today began reexamining
evidence ffom the assasslnation
of Sen. R"obert Kennedy.
The ·ambulance was provided
under a three. month pilot projedt
to ~mpr.ove em1r1ency
transportation to the area run·
ning from Laguna Beach to
Capistrano Beacb. , ~
"When thi1 is discontinueil,
don't )>e, sull'rlsed lo see ~e "°""°"'" limes Jump lip lllere !!1 2S to 30 mlJfutes, •• Carr warned. r;
·shark Water
Big Fuh·Chase Diven OUt
Mn. Sweeney spokeupq,uickb: ,.
then de<larfn"t Iha~ the city ot 1 Laguna Beach was notpartofllle
Bgreementfor the emergency OO•
SAN PEDRO (UPI) -Divers searching for a
missing fisherman were-chased out of the water by
sharks following the sinking of a 60-foot commercial
f18hing boat one mile off' Point Fermin, the Coast
Guard reported. '
The Coast Guard said Tuesday a passing vessel
-resc.'ued seven of-the eigh{ crewmeh-<1board the St.
Joseph almost Immediately. The missillg lnan, Vito
Sapienza, was feared drowned when he became en-
tangled In fishing nets under the capsized craft.
. -
o.11, ... .._SUtl'PMte
ANNO UN CED CANDIDACY FOR CONGRESS IN 40TH
fPi'Dlessor Harry Jeffrey, 38, Pledges Honesty, Integrity ._
Laguna's J effrey
See.ks. Congress Sea t
By FREDE}lICK SCHOEMEHL
Of .. Dally .. l ... 5Uff
Harry P . Je!Crey of Laguna
Beach announced bis candidacy
today for the Re publican
nomination in the 40th
Congressional Dis trj ct how
represented by Rep. Andrew
Hinshaw CR-Newport Beach).
Jefrrey, said his candidacy will
allow the voters in the heavily
Republican district to send a
''new message to Congress.''
He said the message· would be
twofold: honesty and integrity m
government and progre!sive
JtePublican leadership. •
Jeffrey indirectly attacked
Hinshaw, who now faces indict·
ments on charges of grand theft,
bribery and embezzlement in
Grease Burns
In L aguna;
Loss $3,800
A skillet containing hot grease
erupted into flames Tuesday
evening starting a fire tbat
caused an estimated $3,800
darnace· to a Laguna Beach
a_partmept. .,
The blue at 354 Cliff Drive was
eid.i.ogul•bed by firemen from
. the do'IDIOwn lire .talion after
th\i¥. .received th, alorm at S:06
p.m . ' .._ •
''l'be o(cupanl .,,, the apart.-
men!, ifi's. E,L. µndt, was Wat.chin~ the eveoU:ag news on
televislOii w~en the lla>brake oul
in the lteben. She. was 1\o{ In-
connection with his former posi.
tion as county assessor.
"My new m essage will em·
phasize honesty and integrity in
government . I beli eve that a
public office is a public trust.
And I join with the many
thousands of voters in th.is dis-
trict who deplore and condemn
the actions of those who do not
share this belief." Jeffrey said in
a prepared stateme nt.
Jeffrey also broadsided As-
semblyman Robert Badham CR-
Newport Beach). the only other
declar ~d candidate for the
Republican nomination.
"We simply cannot afford to
have representa tives like Robert
Badbam who constantly vote
against progressive, sensible
legislation ,'' J effrey said .
Jeffrey, 38 , is a history pro-
fessor at C alifornia State
<See JEFFREY, PageA2 )
GOOD RESUL1S
FROMBOATAD
"There was good response to
the ad. The boat sold the fi rst
night it ran in your paper .. ,
That's the seagoing success
story told by the Costa Mesa man
who placed this ad in the Daily
Pi I ot :
1_r ,110 SPORTCRAFr
Sportscruiser, Bow
Rid er, Walk thru
wind.obield , rold'g top.
FiJh Of ski. Xlnt shape,
newtrlr& cov. $1,700. xx·
lMlXXX
l,y ambulance statjoned al die
boopitab Sile._ 1a1.i:,.t11e c11¥--was
well protected with a -rate
contract and by virtue ol • ctt,. '
leased ambulance operated by
police end fire :personnel ·~
backup.
Mrs. Swee.n.ay ' remarlt, rank.I~ .Garr. 1
· Harklq back lo the •Ill\ of
summer and.,to a time wbeo am.
bulsnce resPoM• limes......, fli,
The Coast Guard cutter Point-.l:varis and two
hell~ers combed the waters off Point F rmin.J1ntil
dari but no fr ace of the man was lound.
lAls Angeles city lifeguard vessels aniftbe Coast , \;uUd ferried divers to the scene but they were called
back llecause of large numbers of sharks in the area.
•"1•• said tjl •fire cawoed .. ~
1 $3',0ooaamagetolbestruc-
ture of lb• apartmeqt \~nd
another $800 dam age lo cOn!~ts
cl.the kitchen.
If you hav e a boat to
sell, call 642-S6'18. It only lakes a
few words in the right plal?e to at-
tract a1 buyer. Alonl( the Orange
Coast the right place Is the Daily
ee11iv .. Catr 11ld. ''Jlt1 • ._:~·.,,,....,:::::'.:;:::;-----------.,---------' Pilot. .
~ ,,,____
. :]... • (\ !1 ' -
' t> •• • . . • '
20 Ye ars ·
Of Mail . . .
Snooping ,,
WASHlNGTON (UPI) -A
Senate committee s,.>.d today tho
CtA for nearly. 20 years apened
and read the mail ot well·known.
groups and individuals, including
Richard M . Nixon, Mirtin
Luther King Jr., Nobel Priie win-
ners and one letter from the eorri·
mittee chairman to his mother.
Sen. Frank Church CD-Idaho),
chairman of the Senate Select
~D1i\tee on Intel~~. said eVidentt so far ahowed that Nix·
on Was not aware or the practic::e.
wbeil hew as In the While House ..
"The President did not know
that the mail was being Opened,·•
Church said.
A committee s pokesman later
told reporters that just one letter
of Nixon's, addressed to him
from abroad, was intercepted on
June 1, 1968, while he was cam·
paigning for-the presidency
· which he won in November or
that year.
The spokesman was unable to
say whether the letter came from
a Communis t bloc country
although CI A witnesses have
said the program began as one.to
screen communications with
persons behind the Iron Curtain.
The spokesman said the covert
mail-opening was authorized in
1952, began in 19S4 and continued
through Feb. 15, 1973.
Church said the groups in·
eluded the Ford Foundation.
Harvard University and the
Rockefeller Foundation. 1-Je said
the CIA opened mail going to
such private citizens as Federal
Reserve Chairman Arthur
Burns, John D. Rockefeller IV.
King, Mrs. Martin Luther King
and ''Richai-d Nixon himself."
Church said me mbers or
Congress who had their mail
opened in c luded Rep. Be lla
Abzug <D·N.Y. ), Sens. Hubert H.
Humphrey <D·Minn.). and
Edward M. Kennedy CD-Mass.),
and Church himself -even his
letter to his mother .
Sen. Walter Mondale <D -
Minn .). also said a mong those on
the CIA ··wa tch list" wer-e double
Nobel Prize winner Linus Paul·
ing. author John Steinbeck and
(See CIA, Page A!)
Coast
Weather
The bla s t £urn ace
weather s hould cool down
Thursday. with some ear·
ly coastal fog cutting the
high mark to the middle
70s along thE> s horeline.
Inland it'll still be hot, in
the mid 90s.
INSIDETO DA.Y
A group ·ot Ttnnesue bofl.t
10 to J(otfempted to utor1 Sl
million. A Jt1venil1 officrr
blamti too much crime on · •
televi.Tion . A4 .
• • ' .... •
'
-
I
A% DAILY PILOT L/SC
•
Jet Use
·Denial
forecast
I By GARY GRANVILLE I Dt1MDflll• l'I ... ..,
iJlacked by recent letters from
military o f(ici a ls, county
Supervisor Thomas Riley pre·
dieted today that OrBJlge Coun-
ty',s application for commercial
airline use at El Toro Marine
.o\irbase will be rejected.
In Riley's mind was u letter re-
ceived this week from marine Lt .
Gen. L. E. Brown.
"If and when the formal ap-
plication to the Department of
Defense for Joint use of El Toro is
received in Wash ington, we are
prepared to j ustify its disap-
proval. .. said Brown
The boa rd of s uper visors
agreed in late August to apply for
joint civilian-military use of El
Toro and the Naval Air Station at
Los Alamitos .
The purpose of thC' appLication
was, in Riley 's word'>, "to lay to
rest once and for all notions that
Orange County's airport problem
ran be solved by joint use of the
military bases.··
"There was never any inlen-
tion to imply Lhal thi s office or
the Board of Supervisors favor
civilian use of El 'foro, ·· the
Newport Beach supervisor said.
Tuesday, the application to the
Department or Defense was an
issue again when supe rviso r
Laurence Schmit attempted to
withdraw Los Alamitos from the
request.
Riley said he would support
Schmit's move if El Toro was
also withdrawn.
But when Schmit's motion ·
couldn't muster a second with
both military bases omitted,
the effort to withdraw Lo s
Alamitos from the application
was quashed on a three-two vote.
After the board meeting, Riley
chastised those who suggest
civilian use of El Toro.
''This issue has been used for
years to lure Newport Beach re·
sidenls into believing their pro-
blems with airport noise can be
ended by permitting commercial
jet operation at El Toro," said
Riley
l The supervisor said considera-
tion of El Toro can be eliminated
inoneoftwoways :
-A firm commitment from the
board of supervisors that the
county bas abandoned the idea of
using El Toro.
-A firm denial from the
""Department of Defense of the ap-
plication asking for jo~t use of
the militaty air base. ·
And based on the reactiOQ from :~~~~c~~~u1!\1;~s~P~~~~~
tion wlll be reject"!I and the El
Toro issue will be laid to rest.
. l Fro.Page Al
rCIA .•.
labor leader Victor Reuther.
Church told of the CIA's mail-
~g operation as his commit-tff questioned. James Angleton,
former CIA counter-intelligence
chtef and National Security
Coimcil member Richard Ober, who once worked for Angleton.
Church said the panel wculd
begin hearings on the mail-
opening operation in a few
weeks.
'
Thief Gets Trees
1 Burglars who climbed the
chain link fence at a Laguna Hills
nursery carried off bonsai trees
valued at nearly $1,000. Orange
County Sheriff's officers repart-
ed. today. Deputies said the raid
at the Laguna Hills Nursel')',
23002 El Toro 'Road, was carried
out while owner George
Matsuoka, 55, was in Japan on
vacation.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
·~--~--·
o.11r 1"1'91 ~Ill' •1:1cJwo..-ICMtlkr
-•
' . . . ' •• ' -Cella Contract · . I
Probe Ordered
Continued •Crvtiny ti. a E' troversial couDtY. ~ont •et
awarded to a health testilll
linked to Dr. Louis Cella w11 or·
dared by the Oranie Co'l"tY
Board of SUpervlson Tueoda.r. •
Tbe.contr11ct collering physical
examinations o_f county
employes and prospectlv·e
·employes was given to the"
Orange County Health .Testing
rnstitute <OCHTI) by a un-animous board vote. ·
Later, it was revealed that
Cella. a political confidant to four
supervisors, was an OCHTI
founder in 1973.
It was also noted that \,be in-
stitute operates from facilities
partially owned by the multi~
millionaire Santa Ana physician.
Cella and his attorney said the doctor bad divested himself of
any rmancial interest in the non-
profit corporation six months
before the contract was awarded.
-' Diedrich told .l'b\Jp U,.... WIS ·
• little to be cained b7 odclltlooal ,
debate of the !Hoes raised by the
health officer's department.
But, be addfd as a wamln1.
Philp and othet1 should raise ls· .
tu&at!helimetbe~mat ••
In( a dHisl!IJUl)d ll!t_lfter..111
:ieciaion bas been made.
BiversiQe
Will Meet
On Airport
FIRE RAGES OUT OF CONTROL OVER 11,000 ACRES AT CAMP PENDLETON MARINE BASE
Six Major Blazes Threaten Over 40,000 Acres of Southern California Land
None the less, it was known
that the contract's background
was being investigated by Dis-
trict Attorney investigators and
was later scrutinized. by the
Grand Jury.
After balking three weeks ago
at a proposecl meeting, Riverside '
County supervisors agreed Tues-
day to meet· with Orange County
officials to discuss Rancho
California as a possible jet
airport·site.
JEFFREY ...
Uni versity, Fullerton. 1-te has
be en active in Laguna Beach af-
fairs £or several years and is a
rnemb e r of several pro -
E'nvironment groups .
He has had past experience on
Capitol Hill, as an aide in both
the Senate. House of Represen·
tatives and the Cost of Living
Council.
Jeffrey said he would support
Gerald Ford "100 per;Cent" in the
President's bid for election in
1976. Jeffrey said Ford is a ''pro-
ven, effective and competent
leader.··
Addressing other issues, Jef-
frey said there is a need to have
offshore oil, but only if there are
adequate environmental
safeguards over drilling opera-
tions.
He called for legislation that
would halt the availability of
··Saturday night special" type
handguns and urged stifler sen-
·tences for persons who use the
guns in the commission of
crimes.
Jeffrey made his ·annoUnce-
ment in the banquet room a:t the
Boardwalk Restaurant which
srmed as ,the p~ess center during
f, er President Richard Nix-
oia's San Clemente visits. The
walls of the room are lined with
color photographs of historic mo-
ments of the Nixon presidency_
The primary election is June 8 .
The 40th District stretches from
Huntington Beach to Oceanside
and inland to the Riverside Coun-
ty tine.
Fro.Page Al
HEAT •••
about 8,000 on the city beach.
''Most were kids and youths
playing hookey from school or
college,•· a lifeguard said, adding
that the surf was a tempting
three to five feet.
The lifeguard predicted ··ex -
tremely heavy" surf today, from
seven to nine feet, with rip cur-
rents from the breakers making
sllrfing hazardous.
At Newport Beach it wa s ··ex-
tremely smoggy·· Tuesday but
the surf, from three to five feet.
was well formed, and fJ. crowd of
15,000 turned out.
Lifeguards at Newport, expect-
ing another dose of sun, surf, and
surfers today. put out the yellow
caution flag. A guard explained
that although the riptides are
slight, there are not enough men
to man the lifeguard towers, and
the guards want swimmers to
take care.
Only five rescues were made
by the guards in Newport Tues-
day and the totals were similar
at San Clemente and Laguna
Beach.
At San Clemente the crowds·
were "moderate•• Tuesday until
school got out. The crowds also
were spare in Laguna until later
in the day when school students
tested the three to five-root
swells .
The Weather Service forecast
for Thursday calls for the tem-
oe.rature to drop.
SPREE ••.
Also taken into custody was
,18-year-old Pedro Carrillo, o{-
2113 W. 9th Street. Santa Ana .
The other wounded suspect
was a 17-year-old Santa Ana
youth who poli~ did not identify.
They also declined to identify
the 14·,Year-old juvenile who was
taken into custody with his three
robbery mates.
Three suspects were charged
with robbery. kidnap and ... ault
with a deadly weapon. 'lbe 17·
year.old suspect was charged
with the same crimes ~ wen u
attempted rape.
•
Bob Battin
Subpoenas
Colleagues
Indicted Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin laid
some paper on his four fellow
supervisors today -subpoenas
for them to appear at his court
hearing Friday.
That is when Battin's atl.orney
Matt Kurilicb will attempt to
quash the indictment brought
against the Santa Ana silpervisor
last month by the Orange County
Grand Jury.
The indictment alleges that
Battin made imprope.t,.USe of his
staff in his 1974 ill-rated try for
the Democratic Party's nomina-
tion for lieutenant governor.
The &ubpaenas of Supervi:;ors
Ralph Diedrich, Th9mas Riley.
Ralph Clark and Laurence
Schmit were served in part late
Tue5day afternoon: '
Also subpaenaed by Kurilich to
appear at the hearing·were Coun-
ty Counsel Adrian Kuy"r and
·assi"s~8nt Personnel director
Robert Shelton. ·
·· Kuriqcb is expecte4,to ques·
tion tbe sUb~naed s~rvisors ·
about their use"of their own.staffs
as well as a county resolutjpn.
covering emplOyment condi-
tions.
In his request to hav_p the court
quash the indictment, Battin
maintained that supervisors'
staffs work at the pleasure or
their employer supervisor and
are not restricted to Work hour
regulations affecting other coun-
ty employes.
It was the controversial Santa
Ana supervisor's alleged use of
his staff on campaign work dur-
ing regular working hours that
prompted the Grand Jury to jn~
diet him on seven felony counts.
Fro.Page Al
DISPUTE •••
fire department headquarters. It
has been in service for about five
weeks and has respanded twice
at times when the contract
ambulance has been delayed or
has malfunctioned. It will
respand only to Laguna Beach
emergencies, however.
"There's a lot of emotionalism
in this," Mrs. Sweeney said.
''You bet there is," Carr
answered. "I just went to make
su.re that when this is discon-
tinued, I don't want the hospital
blamed for long response times
of 27 to30 minutes,•• Carr said.
.. -.. a difference oe~a couple
minutes can mean a difference
between Jife and death," he
added.
Driver Hit
Wrong~
A hit and run driVer hil lhe
WTong car during a mishap Tues·
day in San Clemente. The
crunched vehicle belongs to San
Clemente Police Del. Leonard
Goodwin .
Goodwin, who was acroas the
slreet when tbe accidenl oc·
aurred Iii the 100 block of Canada,
cave ebase and a friend called
the police slation ·and two patrol
units were dispatched.
Several blocks· away, Det.
Goodwin ,topped a car driven by
Randy Lile Danlel, 19. ti. 331 En·
CinoL'.ane, San Clementi.
Daniel was cited under a vehi·
cle code se<ition ~ov_ering hit and
nm accldenls. Det. Goodwin ~aid
the dam11e to his trvck w11 not
exteoaive. '
BLAZES •..
All told, 3,000 men in Los
Angeles, San Diego, Riverside
and San Bernardino counties
were fighting fires today.
Another major trouble spot
was at a 7 ,000-acre fire 11 miles
south of Lake Elsinore.
In other incidents, flames
burned into the outskirts of a
nudist camp, came within two
miles of the San Diego Zoo's wild
animal park, forced 200 people to
evacuate their homes, destroyed
two houses, a mobile home. an
avocado grove and exploded a
1,000-gallon tank of diesel fuel.
The" Air National Guard mount·
ed "Operation Kangaroo" wblch
involved using big transpOrt
planes to ferry heavy equipment,
state forest fire fighters and
prisoner work crews from
throughout California to trouble
spats.
A blaze that destroyed 16,900
acres in the remote "badlands"
area, 20 miles northeast of
Riverside, became the second
largest fire in California this
year. It was contained by a force
of 300 men Tuesday night, and
waS expected to be under control
this morning.
And from county Health
Department officials came com-
plaints that their recommenda-
tions to keep physical exams
within the department bad been
ignored by the decision makers.
When given a chance to have
his say publicly on the con-
troversial contract Tuesday,
county Health Officer John Philp
avoided its most controversial
aspects.
In a written report requested
by the supervisors. Philp merely
reviewed outside contractors
who had bid on the proposal and
suggested that his department
monitor OCHTl 's medical
performance.
The board endorsed Philp's
suggestion and took it one step
further.
In addition to ordering medical
scrutiny of OCHTJ's
P.erformance. County Ad-
ministrative Officer Robert
'fhomaS was asked to audit the
contract's cost effectiveness.
Two weeks ago, Thomas and
his staff praised the board's
awarding of the contract to
OCHTI and scolded health de-
partment officials for their
behind the scene statements.
Tuesday, board of supervisOrs
chairman Ralph Diedrich said
the aftermath of the cont:r11ct award had been an embarrass-
ment to himself and other board
members.
CLOSEOUT SALE
The meeting was proposed by
supervisor Thomas Riley._ ~er
be and fellow supervisor 0.«a.J.ph
Diedrich were appointed by the
·board of supervisors as a two-
man committee to discuss the
Rancho California proposal.
But early this tDonth the
Riverside bOard of supervisors
voted unanimously to oppose
the airport proposal.
Tuesday, the Riverside board
changed its mind and appointed
Supervisor William -E. Jones to
meet with Riley. Diedrich and
San Diego County supervisors to
discuss the proposal. Jones
represents the area of Riverside
County that includes Rancho
California.
-rRiler today conceded that the
proposal to build a major jet
airport on a 10,000-acre parcel in
Riy~rside County adjacent ta
both the Ora~e County and San
Diego County boundaries is "not
without its problems."
"I do feel, however, that .the
Rancho California proposal of-
fers a real chance for us to come
to grips with the growing air
transportation needs or Orange
County as well as its . twd
neighbori'ng counties," Riley
said.
•'There is constant preSsure ror
us-to expand operations at
Or8.nge County Airport, Which is
simply impossible,•• the Newport
Beach supervisor added.
~~
"ABCO" Brand Warm-up
Suits -Reg. 24.95
Soccer Balls 6.95 up
Basketballs 5.95 to 31.95
footballs .Juniors-
., Sale Price Tops 8.95 Pants
6.95
Wilson Tennis Shorts
Reg. 15.95 Sale Price 8.95
All Sales Subiect To Stock
On Hand
Wilson-Dunlop-Bancroft-Davis
Yonex Tennis Rackets
•
Tennis Dress
Mens & Boys Tennis Sliirts
&Shorts
Racket Stringing
• ' , Bike Parts-;Tires-Tubes
I Repairing
J
•
Intermediates-Full Size
· 7.95 to 28.95
Volleyballs 6.95 to 21.95 I
Playground Balls 2.25 to i
5.95 ~· -~ ,,
Racquet Balls & Racquets E
Tennis I: Penn-Wilson-Dunlop
Balls
Soccer Shoes 9.95 to 24.50 .
\
Football Shoes
Tennis Shoes ladles & Mens
10:95 to 28.95
Basketball Shoes 9.95 to
·28.95
Running Shoes
538 Center
I
'
'
"646-1919
•
j
DAil y l'l.OI' •
Matchlng loY ... at, $189
Matching chair, $109
Matching pttoman; $59
End table, $59
Cocklall llble, $59
Ready for easy assembly
with no special lools.
Casual grouping for
den or family room
The feeling 11 casual yet contemporary In this
comfortable and Inviting group. Loose seat and
back cushions of potyurethane-foem are covered
in a handsome olefin fiber of natural-tone
·stripes. Tables are finished In warm wood
to~es to rilatctr wq~ beam accents of
upholstered P'""f"·
Use your convenleqt JC Penney
Time Payment Plan.
!
i Closeout!
S166
Contemporary styled sofas
fit in well with many room
decors. No-sag seat spring
construction, ball casters.
Stain-resistant Herculon~
olefin in earth-tone plaid or
solid brown vinyl.
Not 1ho•n: solid brown vinyl
loveseat, $138
Sony, not available outeide normal delivery area. Phone for details.
Quentltlff llmlted on cloHout merchandise.
; '
i -
I '
Sale! Save on
steel belts.
(
Reliant Steel. features 2+2 bias belted constructon of polyester
cords and steel belts. In the wide 78 series protlle. WhUewall1.
No trade-In required. 'f
~~r,~,.-• ..,,,-._,....;Rl-oeg-.• -ri~ce-.-•""•'"'••,..•"n..="+"t"'ed'.°"ta:::i• Tire size Reg. price Sele price +fed. 181
878-13 29.00 25.00 1.95
E78-14 35.00 28.75 2.44
F78-14 35.00 28.75 2.58
Save $20! Stop Action®
drum brake overhaul*
4688
Here'• what you get:
• lnsl811 ri"ew JCPenney Slop
Action· linings on 4 wheels
• Rebu ild all 4 wheel cyllnders
• Resurface lour drums
•Repack front wheel bearings
• Lubricate shoe contacts
• Inspect front grease seals
No points!
Reg. 66.88
-•·Inspect brake springs
"Inspect master cylinder
•'Inspect, ad1ust parking brake
• Inspect rear olt seals for leaks
• Bleed and retill brake system
• Road test car
"Most American. many
foreign cars.
No condenser! 6499
MOBELEC'" ~lectronic
breakerless ignition
Keeps your caf in "top tun e" year after year.
·An el~ctronic sensing unit replaces points and
condenser. Dramatically increases your car's
performance, extends spark plug life.
G78·14 35.00 28.75 2.74
G78-15 39.00 31.25 2.81
H78-15 39.00 31.25 3.02
Dress up your car,
pickup or van with
custom wheels
3·199 151:8
31 99 14x6
Polished dish mag.
High gloss
finish highlights,
;11urnlnum ;illoy
c onstruc1ion.
Sale! Save on compact space-savers .now!
Personal portable
:A: ,·~-
!\ I .
•
Salesss
Rog. II.IS. Black and white peraqn•t
port•ble with 9' .. screen (meas. dlag.).
Solid slate chassis, 11'onopole '(HF/UHF
antenna. White plastic cabinet measures
onry 10" high, 13\i'' wide, 10" deep,
the folowll19 shires:
• r· 'Dton Beach (7141892-7711. ..... . I
•
Sale 14495
Rog. 18 9.95. 4.5 cu. II.
comp•ct refrigerator
has separate freezer,
translucent crisper.
9.5 cu. ft . refrigerator,
reg. 219.95. Sale 194.95.
8.2 cu. ft. cliest freezer, Reg. 229.95 Sal• 204.95
Sale prlcn effective through Sunday, September 28, 1975
Sorry, notaV1ll1ble oulllde normal dellvory or••· Phone for det1ll1.
•
...~
Save 31 95
Reg. 239.95. Sele $208.
Compact washer is 21''
wide. 3 wash oycles. water
level selection. No perma-
nent Installation; hooks to
kitchen faucet.
• HARBOR CENTER, Costa Mesa Ci14) 64&-5021 •
• . T'
•
,
·' ' ;
I
'
•
Save\21 95
Reg.149.95. Sale $128. Compact
electric dryer is 21" wide.
2·cycle timer for permanent
press. automatic cool·down.
No venting needed. " · ·
Operateson 115V.
!
•
•
r
j ,.
j
' I
•
. • •
,
i:
I
i
• • • I
I .
-
I
/
•
• I
I -.... ., ..
AILY PU.OT EDITORIAL PAGE . -
Beach ·~ Park Facilities
~ -' • •
The lat.est La,uria Beach diversion seems t6 be
thinking up knickla111cks to be plunked on the citts
Main Beach p ark. '1'!ie city council should resist ou! of
hand such projects with one exception, a proposed
lifeguard headquart"ers.
, The proposed. facility would be tremendously
i;-scaled down-from-one originally -planned two years
ago. The cost is estimated to be about $40,000, less than
•half thalolthe first.
The school board, however, hasn't budged much.
It first offered a 1.5 percent Increase, then 3.5 pett4!Dt.
In essence, the board has sald 3.5 percent is Its Jut of,
!er.
The board must be aware the 3.5 percent olfer "'
doesn't appear realistic now, In view or the Increases •
other districts in the C91111tY have managed to come
up with. Another hard review of the budget Is ill orcle • .. .
• And', rather than being located at the south end of
t e beach where some views could have been dis·
turbed, the newest proposal calls for ll)e building to be
ilocated at the north just below a cljf! where no Views
would be blocked.
Certainly, the suggestions for placing inarkers,
statues, plaques, etc, in the park are made by sincere
well meaning persons. But they deal With esthetics or
favorite remembrances of the Art Colony. An ex·.
panded lifeguard headquarters, is a functional re-
quirement.
Affront to Citizens •
The San Clemente City Councll has tendency to
dart into secret eJ<ecutive .session whenever there is
the slightest chance their d.iScussioos conceivably
could be allowed under the state anti·secrecy law, the
Brown Act. '
The latest example occurred in the midst or a
public hearing whep a rift appeared between coun. cilmen on th'e question of lnereasin& city residents'
·sewer and water rat.S. • '
Offer Unre~tic • When -Councilman Pat Lane tersely questioned
whether Ute increased rates .Weren't partly
necessitated by city<l'Qnstruction 'of a new sewer line
aiding a land developer, Mayor Tony DiGlovanni
'abruptly rapped his gavel and called for the secret
The potential for a teachers'-strike in the ,
Capistrano Unified School District ·heightens as each
day passes. -. ,
Teachers and the board of education ~till remaln
far apart on an acceptable salary.Increase. ~d it is
questionable whether a probe of the situation by a
three-member fact finding committee will do as much
session because Of 11possible'' litigatioh: '
At the end of the ts-minute dosed door talk, the
council emerged and agreed to defer the rate hikes
for30days.
to bring the sides closer together. •
The teachers originally wanted an unrealistic 20
percent increase. They since have pared their de.~
mand to seven percent, a figure approximating
salary increases that have been made in smne<rther
districts.
Secrecy conceals from the public that which Is its
right to know, the opinions and justifications of elect-
ed officials. Secrecy is a deVIce abused . by public
officials who bold their electorate in contempt.
Secrecy is an affront to the citizens. The council
should recognize this.
A Handgun
For Every
American
' [ ..... _A_R_T_u_o_P_P_E _ _,)
The President is sWl gamely
plunging into crowds, although
he now reportedly wears a bWJet-
p r:oof vest. Man1 feel be
shouldn't. Plupge, that is.
But crowd-plunging lfl one of
the most im· ·
port.ant duties
of a Presi·
.dent ,
particularly a'
President up
ror reelection.
It is the only
way he can
assess the
mood or th~
country.
''How are you?'0 says the
President, shaking a band.
'"Fine," sa)rs the o~er of the
hand. ' ~
The President. then imows the
country is feeling firie.
WEARING a b~lletJ)roof vest•
is certainly a help while de·
termining that the country's feel-
ing fine. But this is no time for
half-way. measures.
--'l'he. Secret Servtee )bas sug.·
gested that the Pi'eslden4 when
crowd P\lll_!Cing be eocaaed ii\ .a' bulletproorste~'bOX With 1a sma11
aperture through · which be could
extend his arm. While House
aides, however, reluctanUy re--
j eC t e d the proposal as
"detrimental to his image."
A more_practical alternative is
for the President to carry a
crowd ~f carefully screened,
loyal, trustworthy adherents
with him wherever he goes so
that when the urge to plunge
overwhelms him, he would have
a safe crowd into Which to do so.
Unfortunately, this limited
sampling might tend to destroy
the scientific accuracy oC crowd
plunging as a mood assessment
technique.
mE ANSWER, then, lies in
the touchy issue of gun control.
To.day, fewer than 100 million
Americans own guns. This
means that more than half the
,
' . De~
Gl~~y
Gus . ,
i·4 ,be willing,.t,o waeer
thatC.G.M. (Gµs';sept. 19)
bas never ~en ·an·ywhere
neu: ·a class.room wher;e
the teacher is trying
desperately to provide
indi'Victualized instruction
for 30-plus youngsters.
·visit i.ny classroom and
you may chana:e your
1.une! .
M.E.C.
Glelmy Gft c.-1111s 1rt 111bmlttMI by r~...-do """"c1swrlly reiled u. ....... .t IM MWIPtper. s.tl• ....... pll
IMt'fllll0'-1yGllJ, Dill1Y Piiot.
,
nation, including litUe children,
goe'IJ to bed· each night un·
defended, unprotected and un-
~ed! ·-
Up tO now, •a tit;nid Congress
has taken but ope slep to solve
the problem ~ aDd that in the
wrong ·directio.rt -' by banning
cheap ''Saturday night
'Sa>ecials." Thus only. well-to-do
'clt.iiens and succesUW bl\ men ~
cd <exerciie their inalienable
right to bear arms. (Arid ask
yourself, would you prefer to be
lined up in the sights of a suc-
cessful or an unsuccessful hit
man?>
If all Americans are to enjoy
their inalienable right to bear
arms, it is up to Congress to pro-
vide them with the arms to bear.
For a modest $5 billion or so,
there is no reason the govern·
ment couldnrt provide every
man, woman and child in the
country with an inexpensive but
efficient handgun under The Equal Opportunity Act.
IMAGINE the confidence the
President would feel as he
plunged into a crowd or 10,000
gun-waving admirers, each re·
ady to drill the first person who
made a suspicious move. No
more accurate method of assess·
ing the country's mood could be
devised.
Thus we see that neither the
President nor ~ny American
feels safe and secure until every
American is armed to the teeth.
We can conf'idenUy expect the
support of The National Rifle As·
sociation in passing this impor·
tant gun legislation.
c • •
'WASHINGTON _:_The fallout
froqi the nuc_lear testing in the
late 1950s and early 1960s may be
cadsing a belated epidemic of
lung cancer in the northern
hemisphere. The United States~
for example, has had a dramatic 1
increase in lung cancer cases. ..
_ln a chilling new study,
respected researcher Dr. John
Gofman
warns that
the lung
cancer
epidemic
could be
severely ag·
gravated by
the growth or
the nuclear
pow er in ·
.dustry.
The plutonilim fallout · from
past nucl~ar explosions is having
a dea,ly impact today, accord·
ing to Dr. ~ofman's theory,
because of a 13· to 15-year latent
period before the effects become
evident.
SINCE MOST of tbe at·
mospheric testing was done in
the late 1950s and early 19&>_5, the
latent period ;s ending now. ''For
the USA alone," declared Dr.
Gofman, ''it is estimated that
116,000 persons11lave bien com· mitted~to plutonium-induced lung
cancer. In the entire northern
hemisphere, the total number is
1,000,000 persons.'.'
He contends grimly that the
s "MA~, IF' :THIS L06 >HAl>N'T (O~E ALON6 l't>·&E. A 60NEF.~
•
Lung cari'cer con11eetio0?·
g New Fallo~t · :rheory
. ... .
[JACK ANDERSON)
plutonium, Dr. Cohen asserts. He turned up evidence, for example,
critit!izeo Dr .• Gorman•.-basi.c that $3QIH!lillion hoc;l ~ paid
data anil onttndii1.b.iltJ "!ill out out"fe winedd!lal'J' 'slligeries.
of 100 experts in"the. field would Other patients have received in·
not agree" 1fith Gofman. ferior care from doctors wbo are
fallout "may have alreaily creat· -Dr. Go(n,1('a!i''i' reSeareh l mo~e .inl.N:tesled ·ib"' tbeir
ed, irreversibly, one bf the prime however, Cfnilot IMf~y diS· medicaid "iligibility than their
health problems of our era." The missed. He )S ProfeSMr emeritus health. · 1
plutonium from nuclear pow~r. of medical ph)'sics at the Yet the-new-HEW Secretary is
plants, be wa~s. will incr~e -1 University of California. continuing to mail oUt medicaid
. ~' menace to future genera~. '~· r., • checks, despite evidence that the
lions. ·. MEDICAJAA!!US -'• )•' l 1.1 t states are,i;\ot keeping a proper
Even if the nuclear power in-f . 1. watch on at>u,ses and, therefore, dustry "contains its plutonium· ' As one..o his irst !I:~ as the are not complying with the law
99 99 t rf ct, 1 .. ._ --new Setretary of.li•alth.'Ell~-• -,,,._ b" HEW ii'! • . . ~.rcep pe. e y, o~re--..tioD and Welfarr.:'fDavi<t 'Vat"..J S """vDl i~ own . -··~1· b~e diets, 1t w111 st.ill be ~pons1b_l~., . thews indulged in aljltl ¢.vlM;,_ are . ll.·1few .IYP!<al, conuaentlal for 500,000 adsJ1tlonat fat:at lung obedience . . r" 1 ~it 1 ;,;,7'. {;"":, rmdings . ,_· . . ~
cancers annually. This woul'd. -. · . · 1 1 r, .. , ·
mean increasing the total de8th ,He 15 reqw_re~ by law tq r~uce -"IN COLORADO, HEW in·
rate in the United States by 25 fed.~ral medic aid f1:1"46 W '~J.,a.tes. v~stigators round that "[Jo physi· I
percent each year since2 000 000 which ·do Dot revl~ bOw-lhe ctan or pt;~chiatrist" serves on
persons currently itte r.:Om' all --.'°'on~y is •\)Ont, The rq~~ -aiit the men ta) health leJDI which is
causes combined. v , 't,, •cruc~al to msure tbat hospit~. supPQSecl to c·beck, otl tbe treat:
The ftuclear industry, which "n~~g homef. !nd. ~ental JD· meotofpiedic•idpatients.
has invested billions.iii tbe~ --Btitutions are·.g1~1n1i1>l"QQer ~e1 .--In .Rhode Island, the federal
lifer,ation of nuclear-plant&' and, are n~ hilting the patients inspectQrs were appalled to dis·
throughout the coun.tl'YJ bas or the government ... '1. l1t • ,t cover. that one hospital bad not
soughttodownplaytheevldence -, ·vet Miitt'ltews ><hos ·told complied with 61 of the 67 re-
that plutonium, may l"l linked tp Congress that, despit..,the law, quired>l'ecordl . Doctors were far
cancer. c he won't reduce medicaid fUnds behind on-visits to medicaid pa-" &t this time. He oorlt.end! that the tierits"
THE INDUSTRY cites the rm; states are 'unable to police' tHe -In Indiana, many nursing
din&$, for exam'fle; 1 of Dr. "medical ' ripoffs and that any homes weren't even asked by.tbe
Berfiard Cohen .'o Plttsbufgh medicaid cutba•ks -1<1 fla.•1 , state to conduet the reviews !hilt
University. Cohen points1out tut•· the effect of cripplinttKe S~em. are r!equired by lp.w~ .
twig cancer h~s been incre"8inf t ·· . · : -, In Ob.io, ••no medici.l re--
sifl ce 1945, long .beCclre the . UNSCRUPULOUSdocton and views in mental hospitals have
plutonium could have hail alf!ef· hospitals~· meanwhile, are been donti_.'' according to a con·
feet. '_.,,., ·-· AA~g medicaldmon'ey but of fidentlal report. -
. Most scientists believe-ttie 1iµii 1:·tbe gOvernment by hospitalizing -Andt·in Wisconsin, reviews
cancer epidemic ha~ beiD CQ,~ Patients, prescribing medicines on nursing, homes have been "in·
by increaSed air · poll~ 110t .. i;4..an&nP.:erforming operations consistent due to a shortage of
~ ~ ...... 1 ')·, · witboutmedicaljustification. . MDs in rural are~s and lack of
-.,------:-------------'"'---""---Rep. John Moss, D·Calif., cooperation in urban areas.'' ~ .~ ' . .... "
.. " _,.:Talk : t~ .. ~~~~li,ng
Thoughts at Large:
-Thewayonetal~saboutothers
rev"eals more of one ts tfown
'•-character than it does oft.heirs. .,
I ..t 11
·,The best and briefest argu;
ment agalqst cetisotship' was
given by Remy de Gourmont,
when be wl"'te: "Goodboo~s are
irrefutable\ and bail"bdoks refute
themselves." · r' J '·'
( ~YD~EY HARRIS) . --from the name of each of the 10
divisions of a Roman legion, con·
sisting of 300 to 600 men.)
. , .,. .
~~~~~~!!!!~~~==:=~.:..:..:::2_ , Cbronici>ove~J;b~l••k'bf
One can always tell a truly f~njqus ~r~9n QY the fact that at
leas~ 30,000" persq:ns went to
school wltbhlnitn the small town
of 1,SOo where he crewl'I'·
:.. • t sell·reli~nce, ar;rbthen the&
Let. the W acko~-Fight I~ o.tit ' .. · .. · 5~1€[.~h\~:-wiJ:
If the ation•a airlll!~'~ -
I Good citizens wbo believe in
the death penalty see eye to eye
with J;'hurderers, who believe in it
so' much that they inflict it un-
uiterallY.. ~
'
To the Editor:
· Ab, the cast is complete. Now,
1~1·1 dll a huge pit in.Las Vegas
81111 throw In 1) Patty Hearst 2)
Eldridge Cleaver 3) L)'Jlette
Fromme 4) a PiUie 5) the
1••e•e Red Army 6) Marshal
KJ 71 tbe Harrlaea 8) an
Ammtcan Nu! t) a lloalde 10)
Tlaotlly. Loary ·i:~) a
Wullmmaa 12) ,Arar~ iJt the
PLO 1!1) Charles ll-l•) a
fMdlt IDMct l5) BW Walton 1e)
tbe -tbat Jack bullL n... -·n let -n,bt 11 out aao1
avwD tM lurTIVOI'. Killll of Ille "~· Of coune, th~ 141vi.im rlPla
wlll be worth •f-..... .!. • ~ M. RElllLllli' ...... .,._
To IM lldltor:
Aftll--.... ·--!IM illlt om .. oa ilNi .-..1or nve
,......., .f .... d ~.
.. through gt<>d -11pies abt:l °"' -
[ J
believe iL tbe !'ll~tie . Theatre In South ' can pay tl>eir empro~ enOWlh
...
___ MAI ___ L_B_<O_x_· __ ·,. 1 Lquila. so that a ''no-tippina:'' fulti ls • -WE HAVE astamjlmacl\inelii "Webave Jl!!it ..-...d bome stricUye orce!l_~"I''~~
. t~e,store but it has beeri empty from what we h9dli0ped would and more coll$1 ~~
ORANGa COAST
DAltY PILOT
........, ..... ,.....,.. ..... """"' 1'11,... .. t.-
·-......... fl'I ........................ ... ....... u.w. ... _... ............ .... ...... , ..... ~ ................... .. ---lltllMINll_Y .......... ,.. ---·==-.... -......... .....,,. .. . ..... ----
f": ·--
time has come to write and -what action I can ceL • As I am st.ire you are aware, all
the mail bous hav. -r• 'J!!IC"'od from downlown Lquda ,Jleaob. I work at the e.--
About Book Store ai 387 Cout
ffllbway and all the. merchants ln our-block are very \IPlel u we
all do quite a bit of m~~ l.t ii yery inconvenient. '\he
' public are furious anti il!ri led by
t11i1 actiou . Touriatl "°""' Into
tbe abop every da1 Mltlac _..
to-mail C I, etc., a'id CID~ -•
for two days anc,t I can't e./en. let be an entertaining evening at our service industries· ..-anaae to c19 throoghonthephoneto"'"'lO<tlt. local theater. lnalead, we u:e ••-same• _,.. .• ...,,,.._ • ... .,....... , un:: · .. ,, .. t ~ • T.w.a.Klftlil,Mor
Last week I bad to mail a sbocUd Ill the lncndlille -, -I<,_ package and walked up to the tasteof-who_...._ A llteriry prize I,s an •ll'""1 Edu.riolP .. i!;..U,, post o!fice, only to find a line a movie like 'Slaten' -not W. customarily giv.O to a ,n~ Iii.
•-20feet long, with only two mention charpfotlu ~ America before-he baa ""11iitl it, ~N;.~ ~~~;' f:4rb"fo':':. 0:1.~
clerks working. I had to wait 50 and in Europe alter be-Jio.t.._., .. _'•• r--• ~ ~· minutes •to mail my1'ttk..ie. I "J'LEASEha•e-cti~ needs it. ~ • .,,...,. ·-;;.Ullll) ... 'dh,~~;;.~
1hudder to think what will hap. for your communlt7 to "F•eut · · t!, 1 on topics ot lnte_ rest by 11vndicat-
IJOll &l Christmas. hilher calibef ruaia -'Sis-~ttendlng a fllneralf~,'J · ~colliinriC.Uon4ea~~ts,by
l hope this letter wW briitg ten' and .. ':" •Lfllda ~-·'• recalled tlie -anonymous,Wf~ of provldlns • torum for readen'
_ aome chant•• in our local mall comlq etlta. -1-" the1Qft c .. tutY w)\O'llid,."41\er • •lf'!'5 ~4 l!Y_,Pf<•••tl•r thl• altuatlon ; If not I _am ..... 1 tft "SbOw some 1oot1 tll!m, ad-lilten\lli: memtlrial ~ n~~ r •v1n ona and ideas
-•--i vert!M llOd YW will ~)liiir , oiul •·· cl·....: •••• .. ' till Curr.., loj>te•.' The editoriol i a group or the dawntOwri "-al t•• ,_ ol can ., con "''!"r"'I "''. ·<iP1111ons•or-1Ho<Doil~PttotaP1J<ar ••sm-,th•~-w~db•n • ..,. ..,,w,.. pa",.,.. bnl"--l<>rmanklnd1swr'""" -~·nthe~·t ~ 1 o1 pens.~ -"" -· ~ the few unlucky P'Wlt !'~O rect ih:" dead and tater the 11.. t',,P:d ,~;-~:"~ -=t ~-
BARBARA :MAUNEY vlewedtonlahl'sperfc:lrmdce, int'' · 1J 1. 1 " l prHsl'd,by the columnlsll and ---1 ••Weare1)'0WllcoupleanctCQQr 1 ,.c~1&~dletterwr1Ler11re
1lder ounelvea open mindedt btlt One or the molt conUn'8lly thf,I~ own and no end~ Of
the comblnatloa ot tonlbM act• mi.med words 19 • "<!obort fQr thelt views by th• 1>olly Piiot
in& and blatant 1.-e wu too ''confeder'ate" or ''alllOdate"~ 8 shouldbelnrerrtd.
muoll.", SHAROPIWOHL penon cannot be a cohort, onlY a W,edn~, ~pt;lM, 11175
--Gll,ICG ~RL !lfPiiP can. <Tha won! comes · ) '---'-------..1.v
•
• •
•
••
•
'
~·ountry~s
OnNo-faU.lt
Money's
'WOrth ...
llAlllCALLY, GOODNO-F&OLTWj.lallon: ·.
'"
,,...w.,,.. accident .ietlml" ro reeovar medlool and
~II.,._ and kilt i,,...l)'Glll thelro"ll liia..,......
COlllllUY. mmtl011ohrbow .. iilfl\illtln thea<eldoft\; ~. l'ri>tldea f ... tiroodet, more readily avall~ble
,
"
...
••
;• : • • : • • ...
' ' .
' . ' ' '
"
" •
'
•
•
' ' .; ..
,
• <' ,.
beneft.t•; t ~ -h>'I forth~ Coltotlhae-erbene!ltl bY a llml!a·
liol>OD "Dllil',...." lauulil (lllboucb the victim'• ... .,, to c:aurt1D-.,eri9'11 c-ilfully ~).
'vmTU-...Y ,zvny llBG•ENT OP th• publl•. -
·labor, bu&lnna. conaume;r :=tiom, edueat.Ors, publfc
oflldlll, tlle preu -bas tho concept of no-fault .
. 'Ille Datable oxceDtlon ii the ~ Uablllty bar -&lid ._ lawyera 8J'O llea'rib' r• •eiited In 1tate lesttlalors, it Ja~tllaJlltety tbat ,the_.t liability bar will make
, ..,... that ~ ID the -• leCil'latureS CODtinuet dis· beailonlrui1J 11e>W. •
Tbua,billll have beeD lntrodllced into Conerets -S.354
lD the S...ate,.H.R. 1900 lD'lhe liooae -that would push !he
slatel 1nto actlnl within a apectfled time. falliDg voluntary
stateactfon, a federal us.tom woald be impouct
<l>llTAllTBFtJL AS AHOTBEB. PEDEB.&L "layer"· ,,..,--m to Y'!ll. U·il obvious that J10ofalilt wlll be a Iona.
IODltime arrivln1 wlthoot lbilaortof p"*'1118.
ln the Senate. the no-fault bill bas been sent by the Com.
merce Cc>m)Dittee to the fUll chamber. In the House, it fs
awaWna a public oQlcry from us,, America's motorists and
key beneficiaries. Cbaoces for passage are reported louy,h· and·•·· . ' . Tl)' threat ol climbinc coot baa tieeo raised by opponen·
ts to tlie federal gulclellnet -but thiJ aeems to be fading.
Initlllly/opponi!nts claimed our auto lnlurance COiia, could
eoup as DJ.UCb as ,17 percent; this wM revised downward to
a me off percent; revised downward again to actual cost.-
savings of u , much as 10 percent, a calculation colilpan,bte
to that of proponents ol lhe federal leglslation.,An lndepen •
dent, third-party actuarial· study said modest decreases
eould be expected. (Tbae projections are based on ,toda(s •COlldJtlon,.) •
'
ACCO.RDINGTO'hlEN&TION'SlargestcariMurer, a cus~me? who pays $180 ~ year for. a full coveraae auto
policy pays about $100of t)jat total for property damage COY·
eraaes and about $60 for personal injury covefages. Using
that figure, auto insurance costs could either go down $6 a ye~ or up about $10 a year Under the federal guidelines no-
fault law ___, depending on wboee cost estimates yoU. believe.
Tbatcostof less than$1 a month is inconsequential.
Wbat!s more, iilfonnM estimates are that from 60 to 75
perceqt.Qlore people will be paid for their losses under no-
fault than are presently paid under ti>• pure fault system. ' . .
· AJllY DECRJ!ABES OR INCREAsES IN 'premiums
'WOl1ld !lPPIY to llie personal injury portion of tile total pre-
mium Only, ~cause ijlat's what no-fault affects. . .
No-fault does not .affect the larger part of the prem1un,
the property damage coverages, such as collision and theft,
fire, vand.allam_. etc. -·. "'
In essence, all thilt Congress would be legislating would
'be,federal standards or guidelines which the states then
would meet.In their individual no-fapltlaws.
Recitation of the insurance business would remain with
the states. There would be. no need' at all for creation o{
another federal bure:aucracy to administer a guidelines·
• type law;" ' ·
CO&;r, TO STRESS IT AGAIN is hot afactor. ' Amenca·~ workers bad to w.llt 3'J yean.for full protec-
tion under work.er'• compensalloillegislatlon. Will you; the
, American motorist, wait and pay: d~g a ~imilar 11:pan of proctastlnalion? 'W't!f yOU )et the fiiwyers so dominate your
Uves that they can· bottle up ~tely iegislallon you
.know is in your own )ntei:est? WHO among you speaks for YOU?
CSUF Gives Class
Cal state Fullertoo.,will ter managers . It em·
Jauncb an eight-week .phasizes today's opera:
management seminar for tional problem,s in the -ownen and manaeera·of manufacturing and
smalltidliness-.onOct.16. marketing areas.
The seminar consists of
ei1ht Thursday ey-g
meetinga from 7 to 10 p.m.
in JiloQm 512 of the Sci-.
Building .
SUB1ECT .CONTENT
will lDelude: ·Role ol Tas Planning and· Tax
ConsideraUona; Account-
' lDI Needa for Small Busi-
THE COURSE IS co-neas;. Jlarketinf, Sal_.,
1pon1oted by the U.S. Promotion, and Ad~
Smau· Business Ad• Ing; Crime & Fraud
mlniltntl•: <Store/Shqp/Plant securt-
lta JlllJ'Pfl•e\is to help ty); Fundamentals of
-dOta •an.I manffets of Purcbaalnl and· lnven~
1millbuailiea1estobebet-' Control; So111;.cea of
, PlnanC* and .P1anning,
Forecllstlnt, and Jludict·
~ With emphasis on C6h Jtow. 'r ~a
Hills Gets
' ewS&L
Fw additional write er
phone lhe Se~ or Buai-
.. ., Admini•tratioa and
Economic•, Cal $tatc U'lll....ib. IOO Nqrtb State
Colleae· Blvd., Fullerton.
_.; pbolle8'10:2251. •
' • PqmODa 'Pirlt Federal ;·~~~~
bnncll -· lD ~ Hiiia OD Sept. JI, all·
4' noune•d \"llllam F.
.. ~iru:'=ci..
~ tlon• .. 11th br•·neb 111
Seutbet'll Callfornl~ • .Jla fOllrtb Ill OraJll•
....... '"Lapoa Jlllla
t -
AN BAB.LY
B.ll:Gll!:W:B.&~JOJf' waa ...,.... iDrollniiet ~ be
Umljad to' the •lse <it. !lie
daaroom .
I'd for 111e course la 151>
wbicll indudet admlalcm
tO all ei,bt lelaiOlll, --· Ins material•, p'ubll••·
t.ion1, free patkin1 1nd
nfnobmeota.
~ . A two-week open boule
will cellbrate the Ol*d1>1. 1'\..:,-. Cited Vlolt.9 'lrill reoelft • free ~· 1
DOtt.d plant -a ebolee <l Bel .. Dairy or Hunt· Mrd of J>aradl1e, 1aso ln1ton Beaeb • ._a
Delm ... •"'8111la, -a Fl;iindlt Quallt:y Diiiy
lland Mdlalty ''lload olWestmlDrter are Slold
AUaa . 1 Jn addlUon, lbere =.=mn•ra at the Loo ,na be • -ebell • County Fair's ·-DJll u~ ill Ille .,._telal mlllt ._. ...... ' • ]lllitlan. ' . '
'Wedneeday'•
Cloling Prieea
-----
""
'N:EW YORK. STOCK, EXCHANGE
•
·-
I
I
.. . . "' " . . ~ . . • •
DAILY PILOT 2', 11171
Tonight's'_
TV Highlights
NBC (4) 9:00 -Doctors Hospital.
Lesley Wa rren plays a patient with a his-
. tory of seducing doctors in this episode.
George Peppard heads the cast.
KCET ~(28) 9:00 -Welfar e. A1 hree-
hour documentary on the confusions and
intracacies of the public welfare system
produced by F rederick Wiseman.
CBS (2) 10:00 -Kate McSbane. Kate I
·defends a n old man (J ack Gilford) whose .
homemade boob.v trao kills a burglar.
Jessel Likes
Child Brides ~
Q: Wiiy did G-fe J....i llwaya mury 11-
year-old 1lrlJ~ Alld wllJI tM U.S. l!O Joiiier i.•olved
In a ohootlnl wor, wbo lo Ille eemedlan eatertai.-
ln&f -M. McAdam1,Cal. (Jld.l, -.s,Arl1.
A: _Ci\tillans -arvl ~eterans Admlnlstu,U
boapitll •but·lns, h•adlinlna a USO rene called "A
• HeartfiilOlL<>ve;'~ror which
George has bod plenty of re·
beaning. It Isn't true about his
marrying only 16-year-old girls.
'"Two of. my wives were a-year
or two older than I was," he
sa,s. "Lois (Andrews) was my
onJy 16-year-old bride. She was
the m06t beautiful giil ln New
York when we met and who
could guess then that she was on·
ABC (7) 11 :30 -"'The Sex Symbol." t
Connie St evens plays the Marilyn Monroe
prototype in thi s drama about a starlet
climbing to the top in Hollywood. Also
feature d ar~S h ell ey Winters, Jac k
Carter and Don Murray.
..... J•1s11L ly 14-? That marriage kept my
•
TV DAILY LOG
Wednesday
Evening
SEPTEMBER 24
' closest pals in jokes for some time. My favorite was
• 'Georgie couldn 'l bring his wife to the party tonight. She's hometeething ! ''
Q: Tell me for sure. HaveDin•h Shore and Burt
Reynolds spilt? -MafmeSauve, Seattle.
A: As this is wntten, it must be true--since
neither Dinah nor Burt have bothered to deny it.
Their friends are hoping they both have a change of
heart.
Q: I was shocked bearing about a nude photo of
Jean Harlow showing up in a aewamaga11ne. How
much did the photographer get for the picture?''·· ·
Ernst Magus, Minneapolis.
A: Not even a credit line. He was identified only
as an MGM studio cameraman who shot lhe photo
'Glad You Asked That'
by Marilyn. ClftCI Hy Gai diMr
of Miss Harlow when she was an extra and only 17.
Apparently, Ken Anger, who gave prints to
Newsweek and Penthouse, was primarily interest-
ed in publicizing a new edition of his book,
"Hollywood Babylon," published originally in
Paris some years ago. Anger, a litile·known writer
and :sometime moviemaker, bas had a run of bad
breaks. Not too long ago one of his unfinished films,
··Lucifer Rising,'' was stolen by a member of the
Manson family, Bobby Beausoleil. The convicted
killer held the reels of celluloid for a ransom of
$2,000. AI)d when Anger couldn't get up the money,
destroyed the film. The HarlOw publicity break
could make Anger joyous for a change.
Q: I've heard that Doc Severinson Of the
·Tonight. Show is sucb a Ugbtwad, be doesn't even
have pockets in his suits? True? -Mrs. Marilyn
Gro111, Orlando, Fla.
A: Only in some jackets -tailored strictly for
stage use--not to avoid picking up dinner checks.
Q: I think I can win a sucker bet. A friend of
mine insists there wu once a female Dracula. I say
no. Who's right? -Roberto delGadda, Brooklyn.
A: Sorry, but you'll have to pay. Back-in 1957
Hollywood produced a lady vampire, played by ac-
tress Sandra Harrison. The title of the film was
"Blood or Dracula." Not to mention the 1936
''Dracula's Daughtet" (starring Otto Kruger,
Gloria Holden and Marguerite Churchill).
send i/Otlr queationl to Hy Gordner, •'Glad You Aaked
That," core of thi& new.spaper, P.O. Box 11148, Chicogo, lU.
60611 . Marilyn.and Hy Gardnerwillon.twer:os many que•· nom: °' they con in their colutfin, but tM volume of mail
rntJkeaperaonal r~lie1~~1i~. All Right• Reaervtd.
•
........
~--...
tll'S SWI JUSl(A ,.
OMMll..0..••_,MM.1'
_ ............. Jil, ............ ~ ....
""'°""" "°""' --" -.. --1 LW LOW1U1C1 fOI raitllfllllll"W "
----11-___ ,_1, ..
JAWS-
TllM. WAW '"" _,__ ----· ___ ... ,.
__ .... _
-~ . -· -°"" -·-mit . ---· ... -°""
. ·-·•1•1•""' -_.
'
I
-•
•I • •
• •
Ajjditions I .. lst~
'I1le •allboard will be .,.ayy qver the weekend
as three Oran1e Coast
theater crou~· bold audi-
-ror upeom~ stage proclucUoua.
Leadin1 orr SatW'!lllY
morning will be the
lri18111 i11ion
Toen Titus
.w.uud,..wldchwillbe.cast-cmjleaeb.~ dir-Chuck ~~ ENTEmlNMENT Children•• Theater s·· :µ10 ,MalnSt., dancenwlllbellOUlbtby •
ing a larp company ror la Nq_v i• r.r ror the meloarania.
a tourinc show eolllled r. .. w11k...a.. which will -Nov. 13 [
New Fright.
Films Set
"Gollywboppers." Audltlon1 for "Ttie lorarour-l!_eek~nan.
Director Gori!On Yeaton Drunkard" laave betn South <:Oiat Ri&>e}"IGO'
will hold readln11•' ror ojl!Jed br Ul .. San la remnftq ea~
let:DS and '!dulls --11Cllli Clemente C.mmually f0< Ito Young' POople'a
with violin aad guitar: ~-ror MOllday -~ctlot Coqaervatory. players -at 10 a.m. in 'r:lleilday at 7:111 p.m. ~ Wbleh ~ns Oct. 4 for
the guild rehearsal hall, the Cabrillo Play-. youocs!ers belll'••ll' 8
JW.M Loi"" St., Costa 202 Avenlda. Cabrillo, and 17 •••kine pro-
Mesa, saD Clemente. A cast o1 !essionll llleat<n" traln-LOS ANGELES CAP)
-Veteran scare artist
William Castle bas
sjgned a multiple-picture
contract with 20th Cen-
tury-Fox, hia first pn>-
duction to be "Noise."
Tbe Huntincton Beach. 13 men, seven women. ing. F\lrther inforniatl'.on
Playhouse hllf scheduled one l(rl and iwo temale Is avalloble •\ 6'6-3252. teadlngs Sunday anJ1_ -· -~
Castle, produce r of
"Rosemary's Baby" and
producer-director of
''The T i ngler,••
''Macabre ,••
"Homicidal" and ••Let's
Kill Uncle,'' will make a
series of films for Fox re-
lease;· ·
Monday (or Reginald
Rose's "Dear Friends,''
with tryouts set for 1
p.m. Sunday and 7 p.m.
on Monday. Austin Pear
Is directing and will be
looking for four men and
four women !q. the 30-50
age ran'ge, along with a,
little girl and a male ·
walk ·on at the
"Noise,'' based on the ( ) nov e l •'The Dark L. M. BOYD
Descends'' by Diana '---------J Ramsay, is described as
a "<!hilling urban hOn"Or
story" that climaxes in
"a bloody tale of terror.''
INFORMS In Iha
DAILY PILOT
"IA~, .......
AT"IMIU.TMS"'• .......LO\T"
.... .,.. ....... , ....... .a.
UC9'fHOU9A'n
.. IAT.&~IJ!M
._YLADT"INI
"OWi.AMi P\ISSTCl(r'.INI
, . "THI FO.,,_..
. "COORSSIONS OF
• wueow cu•••= w
''TOMMY".
IPGI
.
""MOOMat.1las•t,.,
~TUASUll"INI
. -nsso••s•,
•.wc:rsUSTMMANr'tNI
··,utU .................
5'111SS..-Y,&O_.I_,
........ ' "MooN liUllNRS" .... .......
WAVF' ,,__.
. . .. .
TM lm'ilgfng lllOlion.
pk.lure irooi tit•
terrif11in11 No. I bat M'lhr.
----------= .. _.
~-·-""·-· -· .... ·•11•10
.'Qn.
Bargain Matinees $1. 50 TH 2:30
Senior Citize ns l .'50 at all ti
SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEAlRES
5'rH ClEGO Alf.• AT UISTOL
SO.COAST "YESSONGS" .!i':!':. 7,, .. , ... PLAZA "TOM,;r 1 .. 1 .,.,.. $t6-2711 w.--....•1~
f RE PARlllN
KA.THERINE HEPBURN
"THE DELICATE BALANCE"
S:1iP.M.
ENOS-Y '
FOUNlAIN VALLEV •
• ' ' ' "• I • '
I
.,
' lly ALAN 6111DN __ a.My .......
Tbe OrR1• Coast swdttted again IA the a-rip of a three-<lay
beat wave today, with tem.-
peratW'ft climbing back !&fan!
'llladay's hlgho ,.-wbiob weno the
hottest ol. the year.
Inland temperawres ran over
100 deareea Tuesday -104
de1ree1~ were recor~ed at a
Trabuco Canyon fire staUon and
TEN CENTS.
lOO~egree Be~
105 dearen at Garden Grove -downtown Laauna Tuesday,
but U.e inereury alto soared whll• at S'ao Clemente • 12
ai.aa Ille cout, paril<ular!>: In decree hl&h wu recorded. tbeaciutbolthecounty. ~'-"--' Llfesuardl al'Newport Beach
'ftie Weather s.rvlce uld tem-and Huntln«ton Beacll reported
perat-would be "inllar to-bichs of only 80 de1rem, but a re-
daY, but predicted • break-" adin& taken only-a mile from the
'lbunda1. o0ean In Huli,tlngton Bea<:b was
A H·desree readln& was 98d~-
apotted on the tempeniurt! si&n The readina was taken by re-
out1lde tbe La1uda Beaeb tired Huntinston Beach Com·
Federal Savings bulldlng In pany manaae~ 1-Shenmm Den-
Ill', who noted that tbe hwnklltT w*' tow, fr:om 10 to »·paccat.
and quipped, "It WU a llOat.day
f orpalnili>tr.
II was ai.o a areat clay to bit
the beacbl and more 1urfen llian paint~ urned out. ur.,..-
reported Au1ust-si1e crowd1
1loog public sands an the Oran.ae
Cout, with 30,000 OD the Hunt·
ington Beach state beach, and
<SeeHEAT, PageAZJ
Riley ,P,redicts Denial
·of Toro Jet • ans1on
•
•
' l.ity ............. ~ ...............
IT WAS 9' DEGREES AND OC>ING UP AT LAGUNA FED
Mrs. Deb:i<owelcyk of El'Toro and D-liter Shelby, 4 . .
Hot Winds Spark
~
"Majolj ·Eifres ~
By iACK CHAPPELL !'.. ' 'hMia!' In a 91!Parale Ore inci-
ot, ... o.try 1"4•-.t ' ·e~•mp tendleton. A bue
L ,, 1'i,OIJO:aor~ )>I"""~ Canlp Ill 'llalo Iha( 1"'1.Were
Penweton was one ot 5tt lnlijor .., ~v to 1ut. out a small fire ·b~uoh . lite§, -whip~ bT. hot • roQnda fired during w~nds lrom. the dele~t that .alll8 e'(Ubtrai~exerclse.
;blazed throUJh mpre .thlin :W,000 r Jn stomping i00 the. br:ush, one
.•cres of ,Southern' Callforni'a Ol"tbe. m._,. struck a dud round
-Tuesday and today. -'-'.bich exiRoded. The four were
With daytime temperaturn Dpitallled on the base, but
again · climbing to 100 to 110 "'-r injuries wer.e described as
degrees and JOW humidity, rireS alight: I
.crackled through. <In ~rush in All to~d,. 3,000 men in Los
four counties over a lOQ.-mile Angeles, Sad Diego, Riverside
'front frofn Los Angeles to Sad. an4 1Saoj Bernardino counties
Diego. ---wereflellllng fires today.
· One of the bit:gest rires was et Another i;n'ajor , tcou.ble Spot
Camp Pendleton \¥here , bMish Waa at a 7 ,000-acre fire 11 miles
'f8S blazing in tbe Homo-San aoiltb ol LeJ<e:Elshiore.
Onofre area. ~A total of 54 fir,e-J~.ptbdr ·.i,aeldent1, flames
fighters. jncludinc M8rJaea, burned hlto the outsklrj.s of a
were battling~the blaze that &ent ud1st ·camp, came within two
a plume of smoke over the cily of miles of the S'n Di,go Zoo's wild
San Clemente. The pall threaded ~..,animal park, forced 200 people to
out over the ocean and as far-.. eval!uate their hoqies, destroyed
north as Laguna Beach. . two houses, a mobile home, an
The ~laze, which ~as sparked avoeadc:J grove ~nd exploded a
Monday afternoon by flarei. us~ 1 1.000-galion tank of diesel fuel .
jn a training ex-ercise, ':w!1s re· " .. The Air National Guard mount-
ported 80 percent C<¥ltained to-ed ··~ratioq Kat:\g&roo~' which
day. 1 • , inv,ol~ed u~ing~ big tr~nsport
Fir e-fighters said that the "Planes to ferry heavy eq.wpment,
blaze .pre1ented no threat to,the ,· slat.e forest 1fir'e lighters anlt
"Little Saigon'' can)p of·VJet·. pri;iioner wO~k o~ews from
namese stationed on t.he throughout Califorma to trouble
124 ,000-acre base. , ·) spots.
Four Marines were injured .. _(SeeBLA.ZES, PageA2)
Two Held
In Rape,
Robbery
Two youthful suspects were
wounded U. Santa Ana early to-
day when police interrupted a
four-man robbery-rape-mayhem
1pree inside an ail night market.
•After woundii1g_two of the four
suspects as they atfempted to
flee from the market, Police
found a naked 24-yeir·old
woman,-the apparent victim of a
rape attempt, in a storne room.
Behind a store $:OU.Oler, of.
ficvrs found a market clerk
bleeding from a deep gash near
bis .tilljt eye, a. wound opened
--o('lloe'r.r ~ oJ. legedly struck the clerk l!(ith a
homemade billy cl.&.
And recovered from One of the
suspect 's pockets was the money
police claim ,was tilken from a
('Uh drawee in the market.
Neither •of the--wounded aus·
]>eels, one of them a 14-year-old
juvenile, were seriously injured"'
by the police gunfire that ·
followed as they Oed from the
market at Washington and
Bristol Streets. ,
According to police, the four
suspects entered the market
shortly after 1 a .m .
After knocking clerk Lawrence
A. Topper, of Santa Ana, to the
floor with a blow from the billy
club, they allegedly took between
$50 and $100 from a cash drawer.
As three ol the alleged robbers
took two customers to a back
room in the store, the fourth
member of the robbery team
grabbed a worn an customer and
took her into another store_room.
There, he forced the woman to
strip and reportedly was fondling
her when a police unit, sum·
monded by a silent alarm, ar-
rived at the market.
In the next few minutes, three
officers chased and shot at the
suspects as they ran in a
patchwork fa s hio n down
sidestreets to avoid capture.
<See SPREE, PageA2)
~ l .. ~ ' ~ °""' 'li.t,,.." ldcMte tt•• GU~ OF "'COM._"'INO.,.,L OYIR 11,-ACMS AT CAMP PENDLETON MARINE 8ASE
• . Six ll'•Jlf-•! nu, .. •'\ o.., 40,000 ~· Of Southern C•llfornla Land . • ·: .... .. .
" • ••
'
' • . ' •
Shark Water
Big Fish Chase Diven Out
SAN PEDRO (UPI) -Divero searching for a
missing fisherman '\'ere chased out of the water by
sharks following the sinking of a 60-foot commercial
fishing boat one mile off Point Fermin, the Coast
Guard reported.
The Coast Guard said Tuesday a passing vessel
rescued seven of the eight crewmen aboard the St.
Joseph almost immediately. The missing man, Vito
Sapienza, was feared drowned when he became en-
tangled in fishing nets under the capsized craft. '
The Coast Guard cutter Point Evans and two
helicopters combed the waters off Point Fermin until·
datk but no trace of the man was found .
Los Angeles city lifeguard vessels and the Coast
Guard ferried divers to the scene but they were called
back because of large numbers of sharks in the area.
Bat\iu SUbpoenas
~ .
Fellow Supervisors
Indicted Orange County
Supervisor Robert Battin laid
some paper on his four fellow
supervisors today -subpoenas
for them to appear at his court
hearing Friday.
. That is when Battin's attorney
Matt Kurilich will attempt lo
quash the indictm.ent brought
against the Santa Ana supervisor
last month by the Orange County
Grand Jury.
The indictment alleges that
Battin made improper use or his
staff in his 1974 ill·fated try for
the Dem.ocratic Party's nomina·
lion ror lieutenant governor.
The subpoenas or Supervisors
Ralph Diedrich. Thomas Riley,
Ralph Cla rk and Laurence
Schmit were served in part late
Tuesday afternoon .
Also subpoenaed by Kurilich to
appear at the hearing were Coun-
ty Counsel Adrian Kuyper and
assistant personnel director
Robert Shelton.
Kurilich is expected to ques·
tion the subpoenaed supervisors
ii bout their use o'f their own staffs
as well as a coUnty resolution
covering e mployment condi·
lions.
ln his request to have the court
quash the indictment, Battin
maintained that supervisors'
staffs work at the pleasure or
their employer supervisor and
are not restricted to work hour
regulations affecting other coun-
ty employes.
It was the controversial Santa
An a s upervisor's alleged use or
his staff on campaign work dur·
ing regular working hours that
prompted the Grand Jury to in -
dict him on seven felony counts.
Mail Snoopers
CIA Opened Nixon's Letters .
WASHINGTON <UPI) -A
Senate committee said today the
CIA for nearly 20 years opened
and read the m ail or well-known
groups and individuals, including
Ri ch a rd M. Nixon, Martin
Luther King Jr., Nobel Prizewin-
ners and one letter from the com-
mittee chairman to his mother.
Sen. Frank Church (D·Idaho),
chairman of the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence, said
evidence so far showed that Nix-
on was not awa,re of the P,ractice
when He was-~rt the White House.
"The President did not know
tha( the mail was being opened,··
Church said.
A committee spokesman later told reporters that just one letter
of Nixon 's, addressed to him
from abroad, was intercepted on
June 1, 1968, while he was cam·
paigning for the presidency
which he won in November or
that year.
The spokesman was unable to
say whether the letter came from
a Co mmunis t bloc country
Thief Gets Trees
Bur1l1rs1 wbo climbed the
chainJinJI:: tent-eat a Laguna Hills
nuroery carried off bonsai trees
valued at near1y $1,000, Orange
County She.rirr•s officers rePorl· e4 today.· :Qeputtes said the raid
at the L•1una Hiiis Nursery, 2:fOO'l El Toro Road, was carried
out w~ile owner George
Matsuoka, $5, was in Japan on ~atlon.1 ' '
although CIA witnesses have
said the program began as one to
sc reen communications with
persons behind the Iron Curtain.
The spokesman said the covert
mail-opening was authorized in
(5ee CIA, Page A2 l
Valley Picture
The long and s hort ol 'it come
together at th e Saddleback
Valley Plaza. See picture. D2.
GOOD RESUL1S
FROMBOATAD
"There was good response to
the ad. The boat sold the first
uight it ran in )'.Our paper.··
That·s the seagoing success
story told by the Costa Mesa man
who placed this ad in the Daily
Pilot :
17' 110 SPORTCRAIT
Sportscruiser , Bow
Rid e r . Walk thru
windshield, (old'g top.
Fish or ski. Xlnt shape,
newtrlr&cov. $1 .700. xx·
X·XXXX
If Yo u have A boat t o
sell. call 642·5678. It only takes a
few words in the r ight place to at-
tract a buyer. Along the Orange
Coast the right place is the Daily
Pilot. '
Letters
Oppose
Proposal
By GARY GRANVILLE
' Of .. Dlll'""'Mlfl
Backed by recent let.ten from
military official.a., County
Supervisor Thomas Riley pre·
dieted today that Orange Coun·
ty's application for commercial
airline use at El Toro Marine
Airbase will be rejected.
ln Riley's mind was a Jetter re·
eeived this week from marine Lt.
Gen. L. E . Bro~·n.
"If and when the formal ap-
plication to the Department of
Defense for joint use ol EI Toro ia
received in Washin~. we are ..
prepared tb' justify its disap-
proval," said Brown.
Tt\e board ot supervisors
agreed in late August t.o apply for
joint civilian·military use of El
Toro and the Naval Air Station at
Los Alamitos.
The purpose of the application
was. in Riley's words, "to lay to
rest once and for all notions that
Orange County 's airport problem
can be solved by joint use of the
military bases ...
"There was never any intcn·
tion to imply that this office or
the Board of Supervisors favor
civili an use or El Toro," the
Newport Beach supervisor said.
Tuesday, the application to the
Department or Defense was an
issue again whe n supervisor
Laurence Schmit attempted to
withdraw Los Al amitos from the
request .
Riley said he would support
Schmit's move ir El Toro was
also withdrawn.
But when Schmit 's motion
couldn't muster a second with
both military bases omitted,
the effort to withdraw Los
Alamitos from the application
was quashed on a three-two vote.
After the board meeting, Riley
chastised those who s uggest
civilian use or El Toro.
"This issue has been used for
years to lure Newport Beach re·
sidcnts into believing their pro-
blems with airport noise can be
ended by permitting commercial
jet operation at El Toro," said
Riley
The supervisor said considera-
CSee J ET, PageA2)
Coast
Weather
The bla st furn ace
weather should cool down
Thursday, with some ear-
ly coastal fog cutting the
high mark to the middle
70s along the shoreline.
Inland it'll still b(' hot. in
the mid 90s.
INSIDE TODAY ·
A group of Tenne.ssee boy.s
JO to 14.attnnpttd to extort. Sl
million. A juvenile officer
blamea loo much criml' on
television. Aif.
\
Index
aJ ........ .u
•1 """"' .... Att Minic... •• Al MYtllll l'lllMt M
Cll Mlti-1..... M
C II Or ..... C.Vlllt, A t .. 11
"'' ...... (l.J Al ~f •t-4
.. , DI". ""'flt"""" •tt ... , ... ~r11M' ••·1 (4-Jt T.-..u..i U .. TMetffl .. , A t t ....,_... r _.
.. 'llllN'M ....... .. ..... C>
,
•
r
•
•
l
..
.II DAILY PILOT SB
Air Base
Annex
Stu die d
Irvine coupcilmen told Mayor
Art Anthony Tuesday to draft a
formal letter to the Department
o( the Navy a~king if it will aup-.
port a city errort to annex El Toro
Marine Corp6 Air Station.
The council has viewed the
move as a way to prevent pro•
posed commercial aircraft use of
the facility.
The council has declared all-
out war with the Orange County
Board of Supervisors over a re·
cent supervisor:s propoeaJ that
the Marine base be opened to
commercial as well as military
craft.
The council is trying to cover
a,11 the bases, as Councilman
John Burton put it, "because I
have a terrible feeling that if we
leave any stone unturned they
will sneak one past us on this.··
Mean'4•hile, the city has run
a1round on possibilities of annex-
ine the land around lhe hR ... P . rt i!I.
ln agricultural preserve.
The Local Agency Formation
Commission, which has jurisdic-
tion over annexutions, has told
the city it will approve no annex·
ations of ugricullural pre~erve
land unless it ha11 been notified
the owner plans to take it out of
the preserve.
Irvine Company President
Raymond Watson has told the ci-
ty the company has no im·
~mediate plans to take the land
out or the preserve.
However, Mayor Art Anthony
said he does not interpret
Watson's comments as "a flat
no.
Meanwhile, the council also or·
dered the city be put on mailing
lists or agencies which might be
approached for information or
approvals on the Marine base ex-
pansion.
The agencies include: Federal
Aviation Administration, En·
vironmental Protection Agency,
state Department of
Aeronautics, and the state
Department of Transportation.
By fi ling requests with the
aa:encies. the city will be notified
of any bureaucratic forays by the
supervisors, Anthony Pointed
out: .
Viejo Slates
_Meeting on
Parking Ban
R epresentatives of the
California Highway Patrol and
Supervisor Thomas Riley's office
will be invited lo the Oct. 13
meeting of the Mission Viejo
Municipal Advisory Council to
discuss an on-street parking ban
proposal.
After this meeting, during
which the council hopes to de-
termine if such a program would
even be feasible, two public bear-
ings on. the issue will be
scheduled.
Followin1 this, according to re·
commendations of the traffic
committee, questionnaires will
be distributed to residents.
During their meeting Monday,
MAC members questioned who
would pay for the enforcement of
such an ordinance, how it would
be enforced and whether signs
would have to be posted i.r. all re·
sldenlial areas.
Cities Need Help
WASHINGTON !AP) -Mayor
Moon Landrieu of New Orleans.
chairman of the executive com-
mittee of the U.S. Conference of
Mayors, told Congress today that
many cities cannot support
themselves.
Without additional federal and
state help, he said, "We won't be
able to survive ...
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N . Weed P••.+d9nl ...:I P\>1111-
J•ck R, Curlev
\'kl'"'" .... ' '""co."" .. ""'-
ThOmas Keevll
l.tlllol
ThOm•s A. Murphlne
._NtlntEOI•
"
QMirlesH.Loos AkhardP.Nall
Altl11M1Me .... 1 .. ~
• " 4 -I
• •
' .,
Cella Contract
Probe Ordered
CIA •••
ua, .,.,.,. 1n 1954 and caat1nueo1
lhroulb Feb.15, 1973.
CbW"cb said the froupo In-
cluded the Ford Foundalloo,
Harvard Unlyoralty and tho
119cl<afol'4r ................ 1111 -the CIA opent<t mall llOlng \o
aucb private ~ltllent u Fedel'&.,\.'
...., Reserve Chalrm•n Arthui":i
Continued scrutiny ol 1 con-In • written report req.-ed Burns, 'obn D. Rocl<efall• IV.'
trover•i•l county contract by the au:rrvlsor1, Phl~p m~ Kin~: Mrs. Ma~n Lutber ~Pl
awarded to a health testing flan reviewe outelde' c:on\ractor1 and RichardN1xoohlml9lf.
linked to Dr. Louis Cella was or-who had bid on the propooal and · . Church said members RI
_]loardofSu rvlsorsTuesd~a~y"-. __ rn.gnil~ OC.JLTI.:.• .med.lcal opened Jncluded Rop. Bell ,
d~red by the Orange County suigested that hla deportmOJ1t Oongre .. who bad U..ir m~
perfornt.ance. Alnuc (D-N.Y.). Seno..llilbert
0.11,Pl ... St.tt...._.•
ANNOU NCED CANDIDACY FOR CONG RESS IN 40TH
Prqfe~sor Harry Jeffrey, 38, Pledges Honesty, Integrity
Laguna's J effrey
Seeks Co ngress Seat
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEIIL
OftlMt D.-11' Pit.I SUH
Harry P . Jeffrey of Laguna
Beach announced·his candidacy
today (or the Republican
nomination in th e 40th
Congressional District now
represented by Rep. Andrew
Hinshaw (R·NewportBeach).
Jeffrey said his candidacy will
allow the voters in the heavily
Republican district to send a
··new message to Congress."
He said the message would be
twofold : honesty and integrity in
government and progressive
Republican leadership.
Jeffrey indirectly attacked
Hinshaw, who now faces indict-
ments on charges of grand theft.
bribery and embezzleme nt in
connection with hi s former posi·
lion as county assessor.
"'My new message will em-
phasize honesty and integrity in
government. I believe that a
public office is a public trust.
And I join with the many
t,bousands of voters in thls dis·
tricl who deplore and condemn
the actions of those who do not
share this belief," J effrey said in
a prepared statement.
HEAT •••
about 8,000 on the city beach.
· "Most were kids and youths
playing hookey from ·school or
college,'' a lifeguard said, adding
that the surf was a tempting
three to five feet.
The lifeguard predicted "ex·
tremely heavy" surf today, from
seven to nine feet, with rip cur·
rents from the breakers making
surfing hai:ardous.
At Newport Beach it was "ex·
tremely smoggy" Tuesday but
the surf, from three to five feet,
was well formed, and a crowd of
15,000 turned out.
Lifeguards at Newport, expect·
ing another dose of sun, surf, and
surfers today, put out the yellow
caution flag. A guard explained
that although the riptides are
slight, there are not enough men
to man the lifeguard towers, 3.nd
the guards want swimmers to
take care.
Only five rescues were made
by the guards in Newport Tues-
day and the totals were similar
at San Clemente and Laguna
Beach.
At San Clemente the crowds
were "moderate" Tuesday until
school got out. The crowds also
were spare in Laguna until later
in the day when school students
tested the three to Jive-root
swells.
The Weather Service forecast
for Thursday calls for the te m·
perature to drop.
f'.--Page A J
SPREE •. :
Arrested after being wounded
in the leg and elbow was Manuel
Ortiz, 18. of 2406 N . Pacific
Street, Santa Ana.
Also taken into custcxly was
18-year-old Pedro Carrillo, or
2113 W. 9th Street, Santa Ana.
The other wounded suspect
was a 17·year-old Santa Ana
youth who police dld not Identify.
. They also declined to identify
the 14-year·old jutenUe who was
taken Into custody with his three
robbery mates.
Three suspects were charged
with robber):'., kidnap and assault
with a deadly weapon. The 17·
year-old suspect wo.s charfed
with the 11m.e crimes u we.I as
at\empt.,i rape.
'
Jeffrey also broadsided As -
SE'mblyman Robert Badham (R·
Newport Beach), the only other
de clared candidate for the
Republican nomination.
"We simply cannot afford to
have representatives like Robert
Badham who constantly vote
against progressive, sensible
legislation," Jeffrey said. ·
Jeffrey, 38, is a history pro-
fessor at California State
University, Fullerton. He has
been active in Laguna Beach af-
fairs !Or several years and is a
member of several pro-
environment groups.
He has had past experience on
Capitol Hill, as an aide in both
the Senate, House of Represen-
tatives and the Cost of Living
Council .
Jeffrey said he would io.upport
Gerald Ford "100 percent" in the
President's bid for election in
1976. Jeffrey said Ford is a "pro-
ven, e ffective and competent
leader ...
Addressing other issues, Jef-
frey said there is-a need to have
offshore oil, but only if there are
adequate environmental
safeguards over drilling opera· ,
tions. .
He called for legislation that··
would halt the availability of
"Saturday night special" type
handguns and urged stiffer sen-1 tences for persons who uBe the
guns in the commission of
crimes.
Jeffrey made his announce-
ment in the banquet room at the
Boardwalk Restaurant which
served as the press center during
former President Richard Nix-
on's San Clemente visits. The
walls of the room are lined with
color photographs of historic mo-
ments of the Nixon presidency.
The primary election is June 8.
The 40th District stretches from
Huntington Beach lo Oce:anside
and inland to the Riverside Coun-
ty line.
BLAZES •••
A blaze that destroyed 16,900
acres in the remote "bad.lands"
area, 20 miles northeast of
Riverside, became Ute second
largest fire in Caljfornia t his
year. lt was contained by a force
of 300 men Tuesday night, and
was expected to be Wlder control
this morning.
Mot el Visitor
Loses (:ash, Checks
Orange County Sheriff's or-
ficers are investigating the theft
of checks and cash from a San
Diego woman who was robbed
while she swam in the pool at a
Laguna Hills motel.
Deputies said intruders en-
tered the room rented by
Margaret Elnora Hale, 57, of San
Diego, al the Hyatt Lodge, 23932'
Paseo de Valencia and removed
SS40 in cash and a check for $186
from her purse. There was~ no
evidence off orci ble entry.
Burglar Killed
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI> -A·
policeman earlY---today •hot and
killed a burglary suspect who
had wounded tbe officer and hl1
partner-:--t
Th'e SUu>tCt, identified only ..
a black male in hiT20ll. wu abot
In the arm and shoulder by ol-
ficer Joe Curtin , at, a police
spokeoman said. •
••
Thecontr4ct covering physical Humphrey (D-Klnn:), an
examinations of county The board endorted Phtlp's Edwarfl M. Kenntd)' (0..MU..),
employet and prospecti ve . su11e1Uon and took it one step and Church b.lmaelt --even hl8
employea was aiven to the further. lett*"to!Usmolhe.r.
Oran1e County Health Testina Sen. Walter llond:ale, (D·
i.Jnstitute <OCHTJ) by a un-Minn:.-), alto •aid amonc those on
animous board vote. ftj "d the CIA ''watch U.-t•• weredou~
Later. It was revealed that versJ e Nobel Prl3wlnner Unua l'auf1 tne. author John Steinbeck and Cella, a political confidant to four labor !tad.er VlctOr n-.. "'tt. .
supervi1or1. was an. OCHTI Wi"ll Meet .,_w, founder in 1973.
lt was also noted that the in·
stitute operates fn;>m facilities On Airpo
partially owned by the multi-· . rt
millionaire S'nta Ana physician.
Cella and his attome)' said the
doctor had divested himself of
any financial interest in the non·
profit corporation six months
before the contract was awarded.
None the less, it was known
that the contract ·s background
was being investigated by Dis·
lrict Attorney investigators and
was later scrutinized by the
Grand Jury.
And from county Health
Department officials came com·
plaints that their recommenda·
lions to keep physical exams
within the department: had been
ignored by the decision makers.
When given a chance to have
his say publicly on the con·
troversial contract Tuesday,
county Health Officer John Philp
avoided its most controversial
aspects.
German Class
Signup Set
Registration for a conversa·
tional German class, which is for
both bea:inniog and intermediate
students, will still be taken at 7
p.m. Thursday in Room H-4 at
Los Alisoa lnlermediate School.
The approach to the language
will be individualized lo allow
progress at all levels: according
to Hank Adams, the instructor.
The claas will meet regularly
from 7 to 10 p.m . Thursdays.
F\arther informatlo~ may be ob·
tained from the Adult Education
Office at 837-6270 between 1 and
IOp:m.
After balkinl three weelca ago
at a proPosed meeting, Rivenide
County supervisors agreed 'l'\les-
day to meet wllh Orange County
officials to dlscu11 Rancho
California as a possible jet
airport site.
The meeting was propo11ed by
Supervisor Thomas Riley after
he and fellow supervisor Ralph
Diedrich were appointed by the·
board of supervison as a two-
man committee to discuss the
Rancho California propo8al.
But early this month the
Riverside board of supervisors
voted unanimously to oppose
the airport proposal.
Tuesday, the Riverside board
changed its mind and appointed
Supervisor William E. Jones to
meet with Riley, Diedrich and
San Diego County supervisors to
discuss the proposal. Jones
represents the area of Riverside
County that includes Rancho
California.
Riley today conceded that the
proposal to build a major jet
airport on a 10,000-acre parcel in
Riverside County adjacent to
both the Oranae County and San
Diego County boundaries is ... not
without its problems."
"I do feel, however. that the
Rancho California proposal of-
fers a real chance for us lo come
to grips with the growing air
transportation needs of Orange
County a s well ·as its two
neighboring counties," Riley
said. 1
"There is constant pr~.urc_lor
us to expand operations at
Orange Count~ Airport, which is
sirrlply impossible," the~ewport
Beach supervisor addaj,, ,~
r .... P.,,eAJ
JET •••
tion of El Toro can be eliminated
in one of ,two ways:
-A firm commitment from tile
board of supervisors that ti\'
county has aijandoned the Idea o
using El Toro. '
~A firm denial from th '
Department of Oef ense ol the ap
plication asking for joint use o
the military air base. ·
And based on the reaction fro
military officials, Riley said he ·
confident the county's appllca
tioo will be rejected and the E
Toro issue will be laid to rest.
' Cohductor •
To Perform
At Benefit ,,. .
Alvin Bright bill, new choral
conductor at Satfdleback College
will perform in a solo benefit r
cital Friday at 7 :30 p.m . l
Leisure World..'s Clubhous
Three.
The public is invited lo atteh
the benefit which is bein
. sponsored by the Laguna Hil
chapter of the Kansas Club.
Proceeds from the concert ar
earmarked for the Cbambe
Singers scholarship fund at th
college.
Brightbill, a frequent ten
soloist with the Roger WaRne
Chorale and Los An"eles Guil
Opera, includes ln his repertoir
a selection of German art songs.
Further information may
obtained through the college'
community relations office.
CLOSEOUT SALE
"ABCO" Brand Warm-up
Suits -Reg. 24.95
Soccer Balls 6.95 up
Basketballs 5.95 to 31.95 .>
Sale Price Tops 8.95 Pants
6.95 1
Wilson Tennis Shorts
I
Reg. 15.95 Sale Pric;e 8.95
All Sales Subiect To Stock
)
On Hand
Wilson-Dunlop-Bancroft-Davis
Yonex Tennis Rackets
Tennis Dress
Mens & Boy~ Tennis Shirts
& Shorts
Racket Stringing
Bile Parts-TnhT.ubes
-Repairing
.,.. 9 ti & Closed Sunday
.( J
. I
Footballs Juniors-
Intermediates-Full Size
7.95 to 28.95
Volleyballs 6.95 to 21.95
Playground Balls
5.95
2.25 to
Racquet Balls & Racquets
Penn-Wilson-0.,,nlop
Balls
Soccer Shoes 9.95 to 24.50
Football Shoes
Tennis Sh,,es ladies & Mens
10.95 to 28.95.
9.95 Basketball Sh'oes
28.95
Running Shoes
to
538 Center I • 646-1919
I
.rt •
I ' l
\ •
•
• ' --
'M'lehlng love-I, $189
Mlllehlng c:Nlr, -$109
M1tchlng ottonlan; $59
Encl t1ble, $59
Cockllll 18ble, $5
Ready for l!l'SY'!'."r.'.!"blY
With no apeqtal "')'ls,
~ 1 ..
. .
•
•
' . • '
Q'a9-~al grouping for
den.or·tamil.y room
;
I
. ' "Thi feeling lo casual yet contemporary In this
comfortable and Inviting gfoup. Loose.seat and
baCk cushions of polyuretha'ne foem~are covered
In a handsome olefin fiber of natural-tone ·
·stripes. Table~are flhlshed In wa1m wood
'~ 'ones to malCti ~ beam accents of u~holsterild pieces:
Uoeyourc0n,,..nlt!ntJCPenney
Time PayftMinl l'fiil. · • '
•
•
•• Closeout!
'166
Contemporary 1tyled sofas
fit in well with many room
decors. No-sag seat spring
construction, ball casters.
Stain-resistant Herculon•
olefin in earth-tone plaid or
solid brown vinyl.
Not shown: solid brown vinyl
loveseat, $136
Sorry, not available out1kle normal delf'IWr area. Phone fordetail1.
Ouantltfea limlt9d.o.l:l closeout merchandise.
r
-•
•
I
• •lt • I
• I •
;
I ' " .4 lf"'
•
.. . • r ' t . . • r •.
·Sale! Save on
steel belts ..
•
Refl1nt Steel. Features 2+2 bl11 belted con1tructon of pqlye1ter
cords and steel belts. In the wide 78 aeries profile. Whlt8w1111.
No tr1de-ln required.
T1r•·•lze R91. price S•I• price +led. tax Tire 111•
878-13 29.00 25.00 1.95 078·14 35.00
E78-14 35.00 28.75 2.44 078·15 39.00
-"78·14 35.00 28.75 2.58 H78·15 39.00
•
••
Sii• price +fed. lli•
28.75 2.74
31.25 2.81
31 .25 3.02
-Save $20! Stop .Acti9n®
drum brake overhaul*
,.4688 .
Dress up your car,
pickup or van with
custom wheels
Reg. 66.88
Here'• what you o-t: • Inspect brake springs
•Install new JCPen,,.y Stop •Inspect masler cylinder
Action• linlnge0rf4 Wtieets • rnspec.1. adjust parking brake
• Rebuil411 a/14 wti9e1 cylinders · • 1nspec.1 rear oil seals lor leaks
• Resurt8ce four drums • Bleed and rel1ll brake system
•Repack front wheel bearings . • Road 1es1 car
•Lubricate shoecontacta "Most Am e11can, many
• Inspect Iron! grease seals foreign cars.
No points!
No condenser! 6499
MOBELEC'" electronic
breakerless ignition
Keeps your car In "top tune" year after year.
An electronic sensing unit replaces points and
condenser. Dramatically increases your car·s
performance, extends spark plug life.
'31 99
15x8
''Mojock .. m off-road
wheel in popular
all·wh1:e &POke
design. ~xtra strong
construction.
3999
15x8
"Mojock"n1 olf·rond
and AV wheel in
sh 1n1ng chrome.
Ruqgedly built to
lilsl for years.
31 99
14x6
Steel Spoke1r.1 all·
steer wheel with
heavy chrome finish.
Easy lo mount.
Sal·e! Save on compact space-savers now!
•
\
Personal portable
1
Sale saa
Reg. ff.15. Bleck•nd white peloon11
--with 9"' acreen (meas. dleg.).
Solid stale chassis, monopole V\!FIUHF
.,--antenna:-Whlt&plesljo cabinet measures
only 10"'hlgh, 13\i" wide, 10" d8ep •.
I ' ' ,
Sale 14495
Reg. 1119.95. 4.5 cu. II.
compact refrigerator
has separate freezer,
translucent crisper •
9.5 cu. tt . refrigerator,
reg. 219.95. Sale 194.95.
8.2 cu. IL chest freezer, A09. 229.95 Safe 204.95
S~le prlcH effective through Sunday, September :!a, 1975
Sorry, not avallable outside normal delivery area. Phone for datello.
Save 31 95
Reg. 239.95. Sale •208.
Compact washer Is 21"
wide. 3 wash cycles, water
level selection. No perma-
nent installation; hooks to
kitchen faucet.
---.. ---\f: .. __ __.:.. -
•
I
•
Save 21 95
~eg.149.95. Sale $129. Compact
el«:trlc dryer is 21 " wide.
2·cycle timer for permanent
press. automatic cool-dowrt.
No venting needed. · ·
Operates on 115V.
I ·., ~ 1o1ow111g lhres: ·~·~ii ~each (714j~~7771.
I
•
•
•
HARBOR CENTER, cbsta Mesa (i14J 646-5021 . . . , ..
' ---• -'
'
1
•
•
'.) • • ·' ~ • .
• •
' l
l • • • • • ·: ., • • . •
' •
J
1
I
l
I
" • (
•
\
I
'
'r
~
AILY PU.OT EDl'IVBUL PAGE
le on ' Po 1-t m~·
-· / " r • r ., ' • . I . . . •
Frustrated incUodignant bee~ the low bkl'b N~._... ( ij say ~city~ In.
I.he El Toro High ~I pool was'$182,000 over their Its planninf. The eUic~e(e•. , .
budget, Saddleback Valley 1,J!lified S,ChooJ Dlsb;ct ~ piarter Is another matter. It may p~ a
trustees have decided to take a gamb)e. Jro~e'flllr.k for a city govemmQDt more In tune with
It involves rebidding the pool -to be known as theneedsofthegrowfnglrvinecommunlty.
the Ronald w.. Caspers Memorial Aquatics Center -Both are conipl!!X matters, leavtng a heavy
with the hope of meetlngthe$48S,000budget. · bunlen on voters to do theit hrun~\vork 'aod not con.
ed th ini th !usethei5aues. 1
• • ..... ~ members have express e op on at
Ga
' the six original biddets may haveinflated theirl>riCes . -~to maU-Up formoney-lost during the construction ~Boo l f 'T -T, •· -i:o .,; •·1•
slowdown and because they are aware of the tremen-' . 8 or-'.I pper.-na J' •
'dous public pressure to get the pool built. " .1
• There Is a danger, however, that the next low bid ]i'ioill legislative approval and the governor's
mlght'be even higher than ~one the-board rejected •lil!ll~e !)ave J>&ved_Jh"-'f_B)'. for • mortgage-
last week. In that case the gamblewlll have failed. • bunllnl part¥ foc the·new Upper Newport Bay wlldlil• preserve. ' Whichever way it tums oot, the rebidding will de-t.elllslatlon earned by' State S.e.n. Dennis
Jay the construction time table by only six week&-~ter (R-Newport-llead>J breezed past the re·
still within time to open the facility by the summer ot quired committee and fioC>r ·approvals over recent
1976. mootba without a bitch.
, ·-. ,. ·-v l~btfortb p.4'1Jlillill't'~ the final payment
C I Ball t I . to tile IMline ComJ>llllY (or t tuary which once
Omp eX . 0 88Ue =·in .j!D~ cqiitrc)Yef"y ~ court batUe after
A year's argument and rhe_toric on: two complex The ~•sh c~me h-oJn .a Allid CCllltkJ,.g repara-
•
issues have left Irvine voters '!"'th a p811' of IDU!lh do-, 1, ;• DMkl by ~ compani<!s l!or. t~ Santa Barbara
: · cisions in the Nov. 4 special city election. '.l'he JSsues blowai1fcilsaster. -
; ; are whether Irvine sbould be a charter ~ity and --~ alo,ng, the source of the cash assuring pre·
, . whether the zoning for tlVillage of Northwood '8"!1Uon. of the v.iuable estuary seemed totally ap-
should be upheld. . ' . 1 • • llfO!Jtlate. • ) " t : The two issues are likel to be emotiol!allY Ill· • Yet; even though there has to be a heady feeling i : tertwined in campaigns. One councilman, Robert ot success about the commltmen' 'of funds for
.. _ r -, . •
• · West, contending the council majority abused its purcllase, all observers 31111~iincipals in the project
power in the Northwood matter, has so far '!ithhekl ~ie the toil Wlifch · mit51 be faced.
his support for the ballot argument favoring the Hean dredging and some m8jor·p0Ilution abate·
charter. meal .Jlt'!>Jel:ts involving large inland areas of the
But the matters should be considered separately. bay's ·~aore waUtShed still lie ahead. Aod they
The Northwood matter is a city·initiated planning Will coefbig·money. , .
move for the 1,426 acres in North Irvine. Unlike the-New legi,slation to help·the bay probably will be
rest of the city, it has many property owners. needed. . ..,. SB
A Handgun
For Every
• .
i· American
• ,
( ART HOPPE )
. ' • ' • • • Lung Cancer Connec!tfon?. • •
) . ... Dear , ~· ,-l .. ti .;
Gloomy . :.-:C -.:·.~ · ... :g New F _allout Theory
Gus ·'· l! !.' 1 ... ' ~
"'. 'ti ' ~·.a:::~...,. .... _._ .• -------.. • ,1 ~ASHi~~TO~~i_~,lm... · · ·. pl~t!'f!ium, Dr. Cohen asserts. lie tYmed up evidence, for example,
I'd be willing to»waier • ··fl'>'I' ~.n Cle -,!~in ·· ' ;rACK '.l\.'NDERSON cnbc~es Dr., Gofman'~, basic that $3«!0.million had been paid that C.ll.M. <Gus, Sept. It) ,laleiJtliCljl.an4'e Y Ce .~. ~·· , · data and contends tl!at ' 99 Olf~ out ror '1lrulecessary surgeries.
bas'11everbeen<1Dywbeuj ""'c:iyling "'. ~•. '· lbjc:::)ll. • · or JOO expert!; in the field would ~er Uents •~v, receit8d in· near a classroom where , · 1un(· cancer w· · or.Ur~·. s • · · .. , .,p -not agree'' with Gofman. feriOr care from doctOrs who are
the teacher is ~trying > helll.iiptaere. TJle'U -.~!-~ .fap~t·~marhave alreadycreat-Dr. Gof'1ap.'s research. more intere;i:ted in tfleir
desperately to provide .. !-'example; has bad a cliii~ ·~· ed, lrrevers1bly, one d the prime however, cannol ~ li&hUy dis-~ riledlc:aid .el.igibi!iJY ~an. their
' , •
'11le President is still gamely
plunging into cro_wds, although
he now reportedly wears a bullet-
proof vest. Many reel he
individualized instruction mc~m l~nf: cancer cases. health.problems or our era." The missed. He is professor emeritus health. •" , '
--tor·30-plus youngsters. -Jq_ a.•ch1.ll1ng new studY,, ,Plutonium from D\4Clear power of medical phy'sics a(. tbe .YettbenewHEWSecreta,ryis
YI.Sit ..any classroom and respected researcher Dr. Johit plants, he warns, will incr~ase -UniversityofCalifonµa. continµing t~ mail~ med:icaid I i shouldn't. Plunge, that is.
t I But crowd plunging is one ol
~ the most im-
1 portant duties
i of a Presi-l ~dent,
' particularly a
I! : President up for reelection.
It is the only
way he can
assess the
•
I mood of the
' country . .
.l't::. "H ... h ow are you t says t e
President.. shaking a band.
"Fine," says the owner of the
I • band.
' !. ' !
' ' I ' I,
i !
" ' I:
j
l
l I
' I
i
I , ' 'I
The President then knows the
cowitry is feeling fine.
WEARING a bulletproof vest
is certainly a help while de-
termining that the country's feel-
ing fine. But this' is no time for
half-way measures.
The Secret Service has sug-
gested that the President, when
crowd plunging, 'be eocased-in a
bulletproof steel bo'l'wilti,a small
aperture through which he could
extend his arm. White House
aides, however, reluctantly re-
j e ct e d the proposal as
"detrimental to his image."
A more,practical alternative is
for the President to carry a
crowd of carefully screened,
loyal , trustworthy adherents
with him wherever be goes so
that when the urge to plunge
overwhelms him, he would have
a safe crowd into which to do so.
Unfortunately, this limited
sampling might tend to destroy
the scientific accuracy or crowd
plunging aa a mood assessment
technique.
THE ANSWER, then, lies in
the touchy issue of gun control.
Today, fewer than 100 million
Americans own guns. This
means that more than half the
you may change your 1 .G-o f m a ..,n the mel\ace to futUre genera-( ,r • ~ checks, despite evidence that the
• tune l . war.ns that lions. ' • MEDICAIDABUS£!! s(ates are hot keepll)g a proper
M.E.C. t ~ e 1 u n g ,Even if the !lllcl~ar powe~ in-A~ one of hi 11rSt_ actl th6 '° waf.Ch on abus~ and, therefore, • c ,.a n c e r dq.stry ••contains its plutomum 5 • are not complying With the law. :=:::.-::=-,.::~~~~~:! e:p idem i c ·-'99'.99 ~rCent perfectly," he pre--~ew Secretary of Heil~ Fpuca-FroDi h~ own HEW ftles here =:::.:,~ii~..r-"' c dil 1-d be ''diets. '"it will stiU'berespdosible tion a~d Welfarei Da~ Mat-are ,a feW' typical, confidential
nati~. incl.uding little children,
goes to bed each · night un-
defended, unprotected and un-
armed!
Up to now, a timid C.Ongress
has taken but one step ta solve·
the problem -and tltat-in 'the
wrong direction 7 by banning
cheap ''Saturday night
specials.'' Thus only well-to.do
citizens and successful hit men
can exercise their inalienable
right to bear arms. (And ask
yourself, would you prefer to be
lined up in the sights of a suc-
cessful or an unsuccessful hit
man?)
If all Americans are to enjoy
their inalienable right to bear
arms, it is up to Congress to pro-
-vide them with the arms to bear.
For a modest $5 billion or so~
there is no reason the govern-
ment couljl.n't provide every
man, woman and child in the
country wi.th an inexpensive but
efficient ltandgun under The
Equal Opportunity Act.
IMAGINE the 'confidence the ·
President would'· feel as he
plunged into a crowd or 10,000
gun-wa'ving admirers, each re-
ady to ~rill the first person who
made a suspicious move. No
more accurate method of assess-
ing the ~try's mood could be
devised.
Thus we see that neither the
President nor any American
feels safe and secure until every
American is armed to the teeth.
We can confideriUy expect the
sup part of The Na ti on al Rifle As-
• sociation in passing this impor-
tant gun legislation.
severely ag-for 500,000 additional fata1 ·1ung thew~mdulgedinallttlecinla.Mt·• find· gs :'
gravated by carkerS. annyally. This would' obedi~nce •. · ~ijl) ,. ~· .. · 1
the growth ol m<lan Increasing the total death He IS reqwre by la'!! ryilu"!".;, -11'! COLORADO, HEW' In·
the nuclear rate in the United States by 25 fed_eral medica~d fW\dS , fi~t~ vesti4a~rs found thllt "ho physi-:~
power in -percent each year.. sinceZ..000,000 which ~o not revie\v f!oW th~ cian ~r psyc.tiiatrist'' Serves on
dustry. persons .curreptly1 die from all mon~y I~ s~ot. The revie~ art, the m~n~al health team; "1hich is
The plutonium fallout from causes combined/' ' ~1 ~ crucial to insure that 1*5Ptta?S, supposeji to check on tbe,\reat-'
PAil nuclear eXpln~s is having ·The nueJelJf ·:ind»fb'Y.,.'>which n~rs~g homes. ~nd mental 1rl-. men~ df medic aid patients. l<
a deadly inipact tbd&Y... accord· :hltS invested billior:i.s in the _.Pr~ stitut1oos are g1v1ng proper care -IrVRbode Island the federal
ing to Dr. <lo-rman•s -theory, liferation of nuclear r.>fan!S and ar.e noi bilking the patients in.s~il>d' were appiuel( to dis·
because or a ~3-1o 15-yeJlr latent throughouC ~lie count:r)if'°has· --ort~e government. eover_~hat one ~~spital bad not
period before the effects become sought to dow!!pla~ the ~v;deiice ·--' . Xet M attbews. has told. C<l!"Pl.i.i\d with 61 '.ol the 67 re-
evident. that plutonium m.ay be liDkeCI, to .. congress tliat, despite the_law, qm.reC:llecords. Doctors were far
cancer. L-' • .-....... .... -· ..... ~..be .won't reduce medicaid funds behind Op 'sits to m~caid pa.
SINCE M'OST of the 'al· '· '· ·· attblstime.Hecontendsthatthe tients. •
mospheric testing was done in THE JNDlJSTltY cites the·flll· stat~ are unable to police the -In Indiana, 1 many nunlng
the latel9SOs and.early 1960s,1he di'ngs, for example; of De. medical ripoffs and that any homes wt;ren't ev~ask:ed b)'tbe
latent period is ending now. ''For Bernard Cohen of Pitts.burgh' medicaid.'.cutbacks would have state to cond'uct the revi8VM that
the USA. alone," declared pr. University. Cohen points out that the e~ect of crippling )be sys(ern, , are req\rlred ~y la>y.
Gofman, "it is estimated that ltmg cancer bas .been inCfeasing : >' • ~ -lo Ohio, "nit medical re--
116,000 penoos b~vebeen com· since 1945, lon..g before the UNSCR PULQUSdoctors and vieW.S in mental 1iospitals have
mittedtoplutonium-induced lung plutonium ~ld bavl:~ an ef-hospitals:; ;'imeanwhile a;re -been done,'' acCQl'.d..bla to a con·
cancer. In the entire northern feet. ' l , 1i • squeezingmedicaidmoneyouiot fidentialreport.. , hemllp)ler~. the !?tal number ·ill .. JllostsCJent)!ils believe'tbe\Osig ...the:go_v-!trnJ!l~t .br hoopit,alizlni. . _:::-An<!.Jt!. \\fisci!!f!in~ews
1,000,000 persons. . ! "" ciJJ.c;F epldem,c has been; pa~ Patients, prescnb1ng medicm94;-on nursing homes ave "'in-
He contends grimly tha(.fte ,.by increiSed 1air f.C?llutf"dn, ·not and (''erforming oper&tlons consistent due to a shortage of
..... 1-,., • • • • .)i WithOUtmedical juStificatiOl'I. MDs in rural.areas and lack of :------------,,-.,,.----'·:.i.•.:;;..~ __ ..t;;...._ Rep. John Moss, D-Calif.. cooperation irturban.4reas!' ~' •<-.;er.-_t ... ~J{
»··Talk Is ReiJea:cirlg ,.
j.
•
Thoughts at Large:
The way pne talks about others;
reveals i:fiore o( one's own
character than it d~!l(theira .
J, ~ I •
The best and briefest argy.
ment against censorship was
given by Remy de Gourmont,
wh~n he wrote: "Good books are
irrMutablq,. and bad books refute
themselves:" ,
' . -
SYDNEY"~ARRIS •
from tlje nllmd' of each 'ot the 10
divisions of a Romari legion, con-
, sis ting of 300 to 600 men.)
One can afways tell a truly
· famous person 'by the fact that at
least 30,<tOO l~ersons went to
school with him in the small town
of J,SOO where he grew up.
• ' t -Chronic poverty breeds )ack'of
self-reliance, and then the paQr
are blamed for havtng .no in-
· L ·et 1 the Wackos Fig.ht It_ ·, 0.u-.;·' · -·:.~L~~.:..hii~~~1~r~~~e\~:
· If the natioli 's airlines .._
GOod citizens will> believe in
the death penalty see eye to eye
with murderers. who believe in it so much that tlley Inflict It un·
ilaterally. 1
• . '
•
TotbeEdltor:
· Ah, the cast is complete. Now,
Jet'• dig a huge pit In Las Vegas
and throw in 1) Palt7.lleanl. 21
Eldridge Cleaver 3) Lynelle
Fromme O a Plcgie 5) the
Japanese Red Army 8) Manha!
Ky 7) ·the Harrlaea I) an
Aiaerlcan Nui 9) a Hankie 10)
Timothy Leary 111 a
Wealherman 12) Arafat of the
PLO 13) auitlel Ma.-14)--a IMCilt Insect 15) BW Waltoo 11)
tbe bouae llW Jack built. 'lbeD
we'll iet--tllem Jlcbt It out '!!"1.
orown the ftr;ylvor Kina ol tbe
,--.... --..;•,,__., __ _,, ' ·' • ' di · through gpod ti,mes and bad -
{
' \' _t 1 pail fRd s!lli'veJ'o doggi"' Uerl . .It 1ee111-ll: to 111• tbat thtre cao pay \heir emploY"S ~h MAILBQA . Jl'ou ko"r we biore a C ~ iiliould ~some-way <I. at least so that ·a "no·tipplna" rule is
_ . .. . 'Jike Presla,nt,~~ and • Nb:· saving tbe oeau!Ulll. stately strictly enforced, why cm'! other • • ' on. wlio tske'theit_ti-, · -'!)ntli• groves wii.cb bave aod more con1.terit(y affluent ~.,_,..._.,.. ....... ,..,....._ too-as did Kenn -we "t stocKt on Irvine's farmlands for ffrvice industries manage to do ::..-=::=:z.:,t:.1.-:;.: want.tobetoolterl 1f"ilo~t!':: Somanyyears. theaame?·
•••• ce.A .. ....,._.._._........,..... hance handles its.dog and_ "What has hapPeJled to all .Ute --
=-:=::..•,:::.=-.~:. animal situations in a far more extensive ecological planning A literary prl'ze ts an awant-
.... humane way by presenting dog-I've heard atiout? Or ls tt just a customarily given to a writer ln
giecomforisfationsons:treets. little easier and ~cbeaper to~·. A'merica before he h~eft"'lt
1 rather doubt that the dog andiradethantblnkeoolOtJ. ~ •and in Europe afterhenoloq.,:
• _.tatloli>would be heavy from · LORNA PL\Sf!:Ow:>J!l needsil. • _ ,
Ip.JD. to 8 a.m . anyway. Bdt you
canbetonit-1'11 be there!
HELEN HUI'CHINSON
.;tt ~ r .. .,
Wl<'k• ., Attendlai a funeral r~, J recalled 0'8 anony~ ot
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
-~N,.iv...i.-1/'"°""'•/C...U,B-
Botl>o«i «MiJOcll.
£dlt9rial POl/t Ed;lor
The editorial pace. ol lhe Daily
PilQt. seeks to inrorm and
sUn_"lulale tftaders bf JlftS«llinl
Of\-thi1 ~e divene eocamenl-lry on topics or 1nterest by syndical·
td cQlumnllU~d ~1rtoonist.1, by JJ!\viding a /or readers'
\llP11 a'ftd Preffntlna thl1
I Wockoe. • .J •• , Of .......... tile ie....... riClda
will be worth. fort"'1e. ... lrf.~
II It poujble to put a
moratorium on ftld pl-In or-
der to request pf:i llld doc ownen to get a ltfi1' the
city CltartlDJ w tb ~Wpatl) to take our clop outh...pla.m. unw
' p.m. ror • f .. ., •• year!
t!o;lf this 10\ind '"""'-' Such permits are ioaaed to IUl'fO)i>,
bui!n .. a .. , parklllf, etc. -not to
menUon marria1e licenses or
fishing and game an~
automo!tll•.
~·-..,,... . -~ . Tothe Editor: ·
I thOught the Irvine City Coun·
ell mem~rs were &inGer"ei when
they lniroduce,i their MW tree
praervatiop or.till.-. Now we
are told about theil' maAlve tr-..
mnoval l>lall which will destroy
~and.I ot trees to. m•ke,.wq ... torD>on_mn,iiect:..
' tbeJaat c~ury who .aid, •Aller •
lilten1n1 to m•mortal illlfV)c~.
-can on\jr conctlille Ill~ ~ bdlJloJle for'mankl'1418 tp resur-red"the doa4_.uut lnler th! llv·
newsptper's opinions aDd Ideas
"'!. cwtept toplc>JtTloe ldllatlll CJllU1i• of lhe Da,Uy Piiot appear
onl)' Jn lbe.edJtorlal column at the
tot of, Ibo p~e. Opinions e•: prnaea b~ tho. <o\am"1¥a ·and cartoonists tl'ld letter writers ere I .... _._._
Totbo Sdllar: • ' We~ ownen would like
.. after an lllUnl•UI"' totbe pro-
llftllklD al dop ....... -.
SUCH PERM.ts CcloP> would
1>11 •year'• n .... oe 1n a.cban&o
few the paper, ph11.a UUle pluUc
•
·-' -w(\."\
'NO'fll thlit .. 'what / c.I/
1 e 'vMw/•
' -
,
Inf," ~
Qne or the moaf continually
misused words is • 0 c0hort" for
".eon.federate'' or •'UAOClate••: a
penon cannot l>e a ccbort, only a
aroup can. (The word comea
;~~ .. ~t:!"~:
.OOUld be inrerrect . •
w~. &pi:~ms • t
•
T ... y's Cll ... 111
N.-¥. Stoek9
•
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, ~EPTEMBER 24, 1975 TEN CENTS
' • ID 109-degree Heftt
·~~~~~
Tiie Or .... o Coaat awe!~ acala la the grip ol • tbree<lay
beet wave today, wllti Lem-
~ elimbiar bael< li>ward
y'• hlabl, which were the
botlest ol the year.
lnlucl tempel:'alures ran over
· tto dearees Tue•!•J: -104 dearee1 were rec ed at a
'.l'i'abuco -Caayon fire .iauon and
1°' d-al Gardoo Grove ':-
bur lbe-mercury also soarea-
alollS the cout, ~atlll In
the-olthe counQ<.
'"'9 Wutber Service saia tem-
perat\ara would be al.milar to.-
day, but predicted a break
Thunday.
A 8l·de1ree reading wa1
spatted on the temperature sip
outfide the Lacuna Beacb
.Feder~ s-vln11 building in
downtown Laauna Tuesday,
while al San Clemente a 92
degree hilh wu recorded.
Llfegua~ al Newport Beach
and Huntington Beach reported bi&hs of only 80 degrees, but a re·
adjng taken only a mile !Nm the
ocean in Huntlncton Beach was
98dearees.
The readin1 was taken by re-
tired Huntington Beech COJ'll·
pany manaser J . Sherman Den-
ny, who noted lb at tllo ~umidily
wu low. from 10 to ~ perc9at.
and q\ll~_,, .. 11 was a ere• day
(orpain .
It was also a creat day to bit
the beach, and more surfers than
painters turned out. Lifeguards
reported Aµguat-11.ze crowd's
along public kands on the Oranae
Coast, with 00,000 oo the Hunt-
ington Be8ch state beach, and
(See HEAT, Page~)
Riley· ~redicts Denial
Of Toro
Two Held
In Rape,
Robbery
Tw_o youthful suspects were
wounded in Santa Ana early to-
day when police interrupted a
four-man robbery-rape-JD8)11eril
spree inside an all night markitt.
et • ans1on
Letters
Oppose
p ·roposal
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of .. 0.11, ..........
. !nJine lf'{ts -.N~
~p~~llll f!: ·~or,
After wounding two ol the four
suspects as they attempted to
flee from the market, police
found a naked 24·year-old
woman, the apparent victim of a
rape attempt, in a storage room.
Behind a store counter, of-
ficers found a ruarket clerk
bleeding from. a -deep_ gash near
bis right eye, a w......S opened
when one of the four suspects al-
legedly struck the clerk with a
homemade billy club.
Backed by recent letten from
military officials, County
Supervisor Thomas Riley pre·
dieted today that Orange Coun-
ty's application for commercial
airline use al EL Toro Mar1ne
Airbase Will be rejected.
In Riley's mind was a letter re-
ceived this week from marine Lt.
Gen. L. E. Brown.
"If and when the formal ap-
plication to the Department of
Defense for joint use ol El Toro is
received in Washington, we are ..
prepared to justify its disap·
proval, ·•said Brown. mine c!ou llmen ~~-i. i11Sept...,betl972 .. ~Y hired Walnut Creel< ~ -Fro 19116 to 11112, habody .
.Director Eddie Pea~ Jr. as was wttb the Ph0eni)[, Arlz. Jhrin~'s neW director ol p~mnihg . i>It!D'nl'l department. 'Fro~
p.uesday. . JaftUal:>\ 1985 Ii> Janµary 1966 be
1 Peabody, Irvine's \bird plAn· wu .with t-e San · Bemardino
/Ung director In 1... iue. four , CG!mfy pllUlllJng department. ·
)'tan u a city, will start :wOrk 1P,,eabody bolds a master of arts
<Nov., 17in th.e $28,QOO.a,..)'e#post. in mb81t'leograpby from Indiana
· ll'he six Coot, one ibd>1 2~0-• llldyen(ty and a bachelor of arts
pound planner bu boenf>t.,,,;nc ;it-grapby from the Unlversi·
1direetor of the •. San Fr~. fyolA'ri-il. · '
:.ubdrl\ of Wal~I Cr-the.. Irvine'• former (!lannlng dlrec-
:P'!l'HL t.tiree years. i • tori, Wllli.am 'Livingstone, re-
1 e has .been with the:' watnut 1igned. Jut February citing ir-
Creek-platiniilg depart~ recoecilable • differences with iJanu~ 1972, and was pro · . City JI"'~'"' Willia"I ~oollett" :1 · -r .
~ounciLDebQtes ..,.
f • Hoos~ ·ts·~·ue~ •, . . .. .... . ~ _ _,_.i... .. .
By'D01JGl:AS'.Fm1·,.,.;ru. an lrviite·Compaliy requeat to de-
Ol .. o.ur•n.elWf termine hoW to keep the sale
Irvine cqµncjfmen sawed...,..ay
at tl\e city's kno!t}' h<lusint ilstle
Tuesday, dropping tlie mailer
befor~ :(eachlng ~ ai:reement' oo
wb'elber houses ' lntencled ~or
nioderate income families sboWd
be iept from appredalinl <Ni of th~ moderate price rlJIPi •
Highlights of the lengthy <lfs-CU$Bfon~were: 1 .. •
--Irvine CempaQy Viee" ~i
dent William Watt said areri\ift·
ment for 10 percent qf-ttte homes
in' a new Villace ........ WOodbrida<-
to be in the : moderate-tnc:O.ne
range will be met With IS for-sale
liomes. Tht real of lbeestlma\ed
800 mod,rate'ln~ome wilts '-(rill
be f!l!D:tm~. , ~ .. ·
-,boUses fi'om ~ rapidly appreciat-
ing out..of'Ui& reach of moderate.
income families by the time of
reeal~. ~ t:-W:att·said the company"'tans
to .apply, within .the next ~eek for 1 a low-interest loan from the new
State Housing Fin.-ce Agency to
build a SO to .... 90 unit apartment
"'lmplex for elderly persons.
-Mayor Art .Anthony was as-
signed 'the ·t45l: Of organizing a
committee to make sure the
,lriiJae .• C<il!IP&nY "lneeta ita re·
ql&rement lo build 10 per<ent of
the homes in \food.bridge for sale
to ynoc$erate~uicQme families.
The,. committee ~ill determin'e
, , &ee~U81NG,PageA2l
'
And recov-ered from one of. the
suspect's pockets was the money
police claim was taken from a
cash drawer in the market.
Neither of the Wounded sus-
pects, one of lh'elll a 14-year-old
juvenile, were seriously injured by the police gunfire that
followed u ' they fled from the
market at Washington and
Bristol Streets.
According to police. the 1four
suspects entered the market
shortly after 1 a .m.
(See SPREE, Page!l2l
Irvine School
Chiefs Voted
, Salary Hikes
Three top Irvine school ad·
ministrators were given pay in ·
creases ranging from five to six
percent by the school board this
week.
Superintendent A. Stanley
Corey was given a raise from
$38,000 to $40,000 a year.
Associate Superintendent John
Rajcic was given a raise from
$32,000 to $34,000 a year.
Administrator of Educational
Support Services Marilyn Harris
was promoted to assistant
superintendent and given a raise
from $28,300to $30,000a year.
•At the same time, the board de·
cided not to hire a personnel
director, instead leaving those
duties to administrators already
employed. The unfilled post was
budgeted at $28,000 a year.
.::.:.The Council reflgured he
meaplng ~( moderat~ lncollle, ael\lilll llie . ~an1~ at ta:tGO-to
$14,500 a year f amity incoriie. • f)p~· Letters ,
'
• Ull'IT .......
RESCUED FISHING BOAT CAPTAIN WELCOMED HOME
Seven ol Eight Aboard Capsized Boat Were Saved
• Shark Water
Big Fuh Chase Diven Out
SAN l>EDRO (UPI) -Divers searching for a
missing fi sherman were chased out of the water by
sharks following the sinking of a 60-foot commercial
fishing boat one mile off Point Fermin, the Coast
Guard reported.
The Coast Guard said Tuesday a passing vessel
rescued seven of the eight crewmen aboard the St.
Joseph almost immediately. The missing man, Vito
Sapienza, was feared drowned wb-en he became en-
tangled in fis hing nets under the capsized craft.
The Coast Guard cutter Point Evans and two
helicopters combed the waters off Point Fermin until
dark but no trace of the man was found .
Los Angeles city lifeg uard vessels a nd the Coast
Guard ferried divers to the scene but they were called
bac~ because of large numbers of sharks in the area. ··"'
Battin Subpoenas
Fellow Supervisors
Indi cted Orange Coun·t y
Supervisor Robert Battin laid
some paper on his four fellow ·
supervtsors today -subpoenas
for them to ar)pcar at his court
hearing Friday.
That is when Batlin"s attorney
Matt Kurilich wi ll attempt to
qbash the indictment brought
against the Santa Ana supervisor
last month by the Orange Cou nty
Grand Jury . \
The indictment alleges that
Battin made improper use of hi s
staff in his 1974 ill-fated try for
the Democratic Party's nomina-
tioi:i for lieuten a nt govemor.
-The council took 09 action
'
COOll RESIJL1S
FROM B04T ,ID
.--:-CIA 'Mail Snoopers'
The subpoenas of Supervisors
Ralph Diedrich, Thomas Riley,
Ralph Clark and Lau r ence
Schmit were served in part late
Tuesday afternoo n.
Also subpoenaed by Kurilich to
appear at the hearing were Coun-
ty Counsel Adri an Kuyper and
assistant personnel director
Robert Shelton. ' 11There was IOOd:i resp6me to
the ad. Tire boat oold u.o .r.nt
nigblitraninyourpeper.'' ,
::,. That's the seaa:oiag SUtCCeflll
story told bt the c.ota ..... -
who jilaced this ad If\ the Dall)r
Pllot : • •
WA$Hl!WTON (UPI) -A
Senate'.COnii:6itt.e..said today the
CIA f~ neatly 20 yean opened
and rud 11\e mail al well-known
~ on4 lildivklualJ, includhig R:lcli,r_d ,II . Nixon, Martin
tul .... ~l'Jr-.;Nobel Prize win·
nen,@Dd on_ Jetter. from the com-
Jnllteechalrmanti>bilmother.
17' 1/0 SPOR RAPT
Sportscrui1er. Bow ~~d..!!• Walk ibru ..U-l~ld, -· top •• Fish or ski. X.lnt sh•pe,
newtrlr&co\l'.$1,-700..u· ~
X·XXXX
If you · b••• a•J>oa( t11
ull, call 6'2"-5871. lt only takel
feivwords In tho rlShlptacetoat-~ a bUyer. Alon( the <>ranee
C-l the <11ht place ia the Daily
~ -
Sen. Fran~ Church (J>.ldahql,
chairman of the Senate Select • Com:mlt~' on Intelligence, 1a1d
endlnee to far showed that Nix ..
on WU D0t AWare of.the s»rlliClice
wbeo.lle wU in the White Hou.se.
"The President did not know
that the ma!l wu belng·opened,"
, Church uld. ,_,A coillmltiee tPOkesman later
wod ~ that just me letter
Of NIXoi"1, ltddre11ed to blm
from a-d. was lntettepted on
J-1, 1 ... wMle Jte .waa Cl.m·
paigning fOr the presidency
which he won in November of
that year.
The spokesman was unable to
say whether the letter came from
a Co1nmunist bloc country
although CIA witnesses have
said the program began as one to
screen communications with
persons behind the-lrooCwtaln.
The sPokeaitlan said the covert
mail-opening was authorized in
1952, began in 1954 and continued
through Ffi;I>. 15 1973. •
.Church taid the groups in·
eluded the Ford Fpundatlon,
Harvard University and the
Rockefeller Foundation. He said
• the CIA open~ mail going to
such private clUze111 as F<;deral
Res erve Chairman Arthur
Bums, John D. Rockefeller }V,
n1. Mn. Martin Luther King
} •
and "Ric:hard Nixon himself ."
Church said m ember s of
Congress who had their mail
opened included Rep. Bella
Abzug (D·N.Y. I. Sens. Hubert H.
Humph~.ey <D -Minn.), and
EdYianl M. Kennedy CD-Mass.I.
and Church himself -even his
letter to his mother.
Sen. Wa,lter Mondale <D -
Minn.), also said among those on ..
the CIA ''watch list'' were double
Nobel Prize winner Li.qus Paul-
ing, euthor John Steinbeck and
labor \eader Victor Reuther.
Church told of the CIA's mail-
opening operation as his commit·
144-quealloned Jam es .Angleton,
former· CIA counter-intelligence
chief and National Security
Council member Richard Ober,
(See CIA, Pa1eA2l
Kurilich ls expeeted to ques-
tion the subpoenaed supervisors
about their use or their own staffs
as well as a county resolution
covering employment condi-
tions.
In hi s request to have the court
quash the indictment, Battin
maintained that supervisors'
staffs work at the pleasure of
their employer supervisor and are fiot restricted to work hour
regulations affecting other coun-
ty employes.
It was th" controversial Santa
Ana supervisor'• alleged use of
his staff on cainpalgn work dur-
ing regular working houn that
prompted the Grand Jury to In·
diet him on seven felony count.I.
The board of upervisors
agreed in late August lo apply for
joint civilian-military use of El
Toro and'the Naval A,;r Station at
Los Alamitos.
The purpose of the application
was, in Riley's words, "to lay to
rest once and for all notions that
Orange County's airport problem
can be sOlved by joint use of the
military bases.··
"There was never any inten-
tion to im~ly that this office or
the BQard of Supervisors favor
civilian use of El Toro," the
Newport Beach supervisor said.
Tuesday. the application to the
Department of Defense was an
issue again when supervisor
Laurence Schmit attempted to
withdraw Los Al amitos from the
request.
Riley said he would support
Schmit·s move if El Toro was
also withdrawn.
But when Schmit's motion
couldn't muster a second with
both military bases o mitted,
the effort to withdraw J.os
Alamitos from the application
was quashed on a three·two vote.
After the board meeting. Ril ey
chastised those 'A'ho suggest
civilian use or El Toro.
"'This issue has been used for
years to lure Newport Beach re-
sidents into believin g their pro-
blems with airport noise can bP.
ended by permitting commercial
jet operation al El Toro,'" said
1ti1ey
The supervisor said consider:.:1-
<Se.e JET, PageA2 J
Coast
Weather
The blast furna ce
weather should cool down
Thursday. with some ear-
ly coastal fog cutting the
hi gh mark to the middl{•
70s along th e s horelin e.
Inland it "ll still be hot. in
the mid 90s .
I NSI DIE TODA 1 ·
A group of Tenneistt boy$
10 to 14 attempted to e:rtort SI
million. A juVenile officer
blame& too much cnme on
televi.tion. A4.
AtY-lenk.• -.. ~~ -·· --Dt«lllM-'k .. a • ._. ........ --"---MrtJeor•..-=· MlllA~•
•
--
Al OAILYPILOT ' .
Riverside Eyes . --"' ---""-.
Airport Site
After balking three weeks ago
at a propo1~ meeting, Riverside
County supervisors agreed Tues-
day to meet with Orange County
ofticials to dis cl4ss Rancho
California as a possible jet
airport site.
The meeting was proposed by
Supervisor Thomas Riley after
he and fellow s upervisor Ralph
Diedrich were appointed by the
board or supervisors as a two-
man committee to discuss the
Rancho California proposal.
But e arly this m onth the
Riverside board or supervisors
voted unanimous ly to oppose
the airport proposal .
Tuesday, the Riverside board
changed its mind and appointed
Supervisor William E. Jones to
meet with Riley, Diedrich and
San Diego County supervisors to
discuss the proposal. Jones represenlll the area or Riverside
CountY that includes Raiicho
California.
Rilef toda.Y conceded that the
proposal to build a major jet
airport on a 10,000-acre parcel in
Riverside County adjacent to
both the Orange County and San
Diego County boundaries is "not
without it.a problems.•·
"I do feel, however, that the
Rancho California proposal or.
fers a real chance for us to come
to grips with the growing air
* * *
transportation needs ot Oranae
County as well as its two
neighboring counties," Riley
said.
''There is constant pressure for
us to expand operations at
Orange County Airport, which Is
simply impossible," the Newport
Beach s upervisor a dded.
President
'Passed Up'
Sara Crowd
By HELEN THOMAS
WASHINGTON (UPI!
. President Ford heeded a spur-of-
the·moment request from the
Secret Service not to plunge into
a crowd outside a hotel in San
Francisco seconds before a
woman fired a pistol shot at him.
a White House spokesman said
today.
Press Secretary Ron Nessen
told reporters that Ford skipped
shaking hands with the throng
BROWN SIGNS
NEW GUN LAW-5
r Fro. Page AJ
outside the St. Francis Hotel
Monday because the Secret
Service at the last minute ex-
pressed concern for the Presi-
dent's safety.
• l
JET •..
tion of El Toro can be eliminated
in one of two ways :
-A firm commitment from the
board of supervisors that the
county has abandoned the idea of
using El Toro.
-A firm denial from the
Department of Defense of the ap·
plication asking for joint use of
the military .air base. ·
And based on the reaction from
military officials, Riley said he is
confident the county's applica·
lion '!fill be rejected and the El
Toro issue will be laid to rest.
·SPREE •••
After knocking clerk Lawrence
A. Topper, of Santa Ana, to the
floor with a blow from the billy
~lub, they allegedly took between
$50and$100from a cash drawer.
As three of the alleged robbers
took two customers to a back
room in the store, the fourth
member of the robbery team
crabbed a woman customer and
took her into another storeroom.
There, he forced the woman to
strip and reportedly was fondling
her when a police wtlt, sum-
monded by a silent alarm, ar-
rived at the market.
In the next few minutes, three
officers chased and snot at the
suspects as they ran in a
patchwork fashion down
sidestreets to avoid capture.
Arrested after being woundf"!
in the leg and elbow was Manuel
Ortiz, 18, of 2406 N. Pacific
Street, Santa Ana.
Also taken into custod;Y: was
18-year-old Pedro Carrillo, of
2113 W. 9th Street, Santa Ana.
FOrd ''always'' listens when the
Secret Service makes an on-the-
spot security suggestion, Nessen
said. That might have saved his
life. on-the-spot ··security suggestion,
'Nessen said. That might have
saved his life.
. Nessen said the crowd across.
the street from the hotel entrance
-where Sara Jane Moore stood
with her pistol -was ''one of the
crowds the Secret Service sug-
-gested the President might well
pass up. The President passed it
up.'"
Instead of his usual style of
pressing close and shaking
hand,!, Ford waited for the Secret
Service to open the door of his
bulletproof limousine and waved
to the crowd ..
The shota rang out, missing
Ford and ricocheting off to
wound a taxi dfi ver nearby.
Nessen said Ford is satisfied
with his Secret Service protec-
tion and will shake hands with ·the public when he travels to·
Chicago next ~eek, even though
some congressmen have urged
him to limit public appearances
in the wake of assassination at-
tempts in Sacramento and San
Francisco.
''The President does intend to
go to Chicago," Nessen said of
the trip scheduled for Tuesday.
''The President is more than
satisfied by the protection he re-
ceives from the Secret Service.
· "I think we will see the Presi-
dent shaking hands in public
again.''
Cities Need Help
WASHINGTON (APl -Mayor
·Moon Landrieu of New Orleans,
chairman of tbe executi\'.e com-·
mittee of the U.S. Conrer'ence of
Mayors, told Congress today that
many cities cannot support
themselves.
Without additional federal and
state help, he said, "We won't be
able to survive.''
' --
0.11, ..... ,wt~
ANNOUNCED CANDIDACY FOR CONGRESS IN 40TH
Professor Harry Jeffrey, 38, P!edgea Honeaty, Integrity
Laguna's Jeffrey
Seeks Congress Seat
By FREDERICK SCllOEMEllL ot .... O.lly tll'ltM SI.ff!
Harry P. Jeffrey ~of Laguna
Beach announced his candidacy
today for the Republican
nomination in the 40i.h
Congressional District now
represented by Rep. Andrew
Hinshaw (R·NewportBeach).
Jeffrey said his candidacy will
allow the voters in the heavily
Republican district to send a
''new message to Congress."
He said the message would be
twofold : honesty and integrity in
government and progressive
Republican leadership.
Jeffrey indirectly attacked
Hinshaw, who now faces indict·
ments on charges of grand theft,
bribery and embezzlement in
connection with his former pasi·
tion as county assessor.
\'My new message will em-
phasize honesty and integrity in
government. I believe. that a
public ofrice is a public trust.
And I join with the many
thousands of' voters in this dis·
trict who ·deplore and condemn
the actions of those who do not
sbue this belief," Jeffrey said in
a prepared statement.
Jeffrey also broadsided As·
semblyman Robert Badham (ft.
Newport Beach), the only other
declared candidate for the
Republican nomination.
"We simply cannot afford to
have representatives like Robert
Badham wh.o constantly vote
against progressive, sensible
legislation,'' Jeffrey said.
ven, effective and competent
leader.!.;
Addressing .. other issues, Jef.
frey said there is a need to have
offshore oil, but only if there are
adequate environmental
safeguards over drilling opera-
tions.
He called for legislation that
would bait the availability of
"Saturday night special" type
handguns and urged stiffer sen·
tences ror persons who use the
guns in the commission of
crimes.
Jeffrey made his announce-
ment in the banquet room at the
Boardwalk Restaurant which
served as the press center during
former President Richard Nix-
on's San Clemente visits. The
walls of the room are lined with
color photographs of historic mo-
ments of the Nixon presidency.
The primary election is June 8.
The 40th District stretches from
Huntington Beach to Oceanside
and inland to the Riverside Coun-
ty line.
' .
Hot Wimls Spark
Major Bi-ash Fires
' 81 JACK CH.\PPJILL ............ -An 11,000.acre bl-at Oamii
Pendleton .,,,. ODO ol 11!' maJor:
brush flre1, whipped by bot
winds from the due.rt, that
bJaz:ed throu1.h more than .0,000
acres of Southerp Callfon:Ue
T,llesday and today.
With daytima temperatures
atiln"llmbta i,""too-io 110 deR..._ and low humld.lty. n,...
crackled throu1h dry bnl5b in
four counties over a 100-m.lle
front from Loo Anllel!l!I to San
Dle10.
One of the biagest fires wu at
Camp Pendleton where brush
was blazing lD tbe llorno-San
Onofre area. A total of 54 fll'e-
fighters, includinl Marines.
were battlln1 the blue th.at 1ent
a plume of smoke over the city' of
San Clemente. The pall threaded
out over the ocean and as far
north as Laguna Pea~h.
The blaze, which was sparked
Monday afternoon by flares used
in a training exercise. wu re.·
S:,~ IO pette.Ql _ .. _, IA>-;
Flre-fl1bteu tald that Illa :
blue -ted no tbre.t to tll~·
• "LIUle Sat,on" camp ol Viel;
"Bam.e1e stationed loo the ~
Uf,000.ac-re baae. · •
. Four Marines were lnlured; ~•Y ID a ••l>arote fire !Mc·~ .,....,. at eamp Pabdldan. A !ia15. ifok-• nld tjlat Ibey were•
-out IO put out a amiatl ~· started from round• fired clurlne
a machine run traiJiinc exercise.
Ia ft~0t1 Ibo ..............
o1 tbe mm •truck a dud ~
which tKploded. The four were
bolpltallled on the but, but
their illlwi., were deaeribed ~ •light. •
All told, 3,000 men lo I.Os
Angeles, S.n DleJO, Rlverwlde
and San ..BernardillO counties.
werefllbtlnr fires today. ..
Another major trouble spot'
was at a 1,000·acre fire u miles
soutll of Lake Elsinore.
In ot~er incidents, nam~s~
burned into the outskjtta or ·,·
nudist camp, came within two'
miles ottbe San Dle10Zoo'•w\I~'
animal park', forced 200 people to: * * * ,.,,_ P-ee .4J
HEAT •••
,.. evacuate tbeir homes, destroy~:
two )>ouses, a mobile home, a
... avocado-grove and exploded a"
1,000.gallon tank or diesel tqel. ' . about 8,000 on tbe city beach.
· "'Most were kidS and Y,OUth.s
playing hookey from scbOol or
college," a lifeguard said, adding
that the surf was .a tempting
three to five feet.
The lifesuard predicted "ex·_
tremely heavy'' surf-today, from·
seven to nine feet, with rip cur-
rents from the breakers making
surf mg hazardous ..
At Newport Beach it was "ex-
tremely smoggy" Tuesday but
the surf, from three to five feet,
was well formed, and a crowd of
15,000 turned out.
Lifeguards at Newport, expect·
ing another dose of sun, surf, and
surfers today, put out the yellow
caution flag. A guard explained
that although the riptides are
slight, there are not eooua:h· men
to man the lifeguard towers, and
the guards want swimmers to
take care.
Only five rescues were made
by the guards in Newport Tues-
day and the totals were similar
at San Clemente and Laguna
Beach.
At San Clemente the crowds
were "moderate" Tuesday until
school got out. The crowds also
were spare in Laguna until later
in the day when school students
tested the three to five-foot
swells.
The Weather Service 'forecast
for Thursday calls for the tem-
perature to drop.
Thi! Air National Guard mow11-·
ed "Operation Kanaaroo'' which
nvotve;d u1ing big transpart;
planes to ferry heavy equipment..•
st~te .forest fire fighters end•
prtlO¥r work crews from•
throughout California to trouble opots •.
A blaze that destroyed 16,llOO-
acres in the remote "badlands Pl'.
1 area~ 20 inl~es northeast or
Rivenide., became the second
largest-fire In Californii thi~
year. It was cOntained by a force
of 300 me~ Tuesday rught, and•
was expected to be-under-rontroJ
lhil morninl. '> ,
f',,_PageAJ
·cxA ...
who once worked for Angleton.
Church said the panel wouJ<t
begin hearings on the mail~·
opening operation in a feW
weeks. ·
<;hurch told Angleton the CIA
had failed in its responsibility I<>
the President by not informing
him of the mail surveillance pro-
gram. -.. -
. Angleton replied that Nixon
would have been told if he had
ever asked for a review Of the in-·
telligelice -system and pro-
cedures. •.
Jeffrey, 38, is a history pro-
fessor at California State
University, Fullerton. He has
been active in Laguna Beach af.
fairs for several years and is a
member of several pro -
environment groups. .
·He has had past experience on
Capitol Hill, as an aide in both
the Senate, House of Represen-
tatives and the Cost of Living
CLOSEOUT SALE Soccer Balls 6. 95 up
BaSketballs 5.95 to 31..95
Footballs Juniors-
Intermediates-Full Size
Council. . ·
Jeffrey said he would support
Gerald Ford "100 percent" in the
President's bid for election in
1976. Je~frey said Ford is a "pro-
•
"ABCO" Brand Wann-up
Suits -Reg. 24.95
f
\ ' ' •• l
The other wounded suspect
was a 17-year-old Santa Ana
youth who police did not Identify.
· They also declined to identify
the 14-year-c>ld juvenile who was
taken into custody with his three
robbery mates.
Three sUJpects were charged
with robbery. kidnap and assault
with a deadly weapon. The 17.
year-old suspect was charged
with the same crimes as well as
attempted rape.
f'ro.PageAJ
Sale Price Tops 8.95 · Pants
6.95 7.95 to 28.95
•
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Thom•s l(ff"lil 111; ...
HOUSING DEBATED. • • •
who qualifies to buy the homes.
The homes will sell for about
$36,000 or Jess.
-The · discussion-was con-
tinued to Oct. 28.
In approving the zoning for
Woodbridge, the city council in-
cluded a requirement that 10 per· ·
cent of the homes be affordable
by fa mill es of moderate incon\e.
Major problems in moderate-
income housing . discussions has
been bow to keep the homes from
being snapped up by speculators
and how to keel? them from BP·
preciating out of the reach of
moderate-income families upon
resale.
A number of Jaeas were booted
around by councilmen Tuesday
on bow resale prices might be
controlled. Each had Ieial or
philosophical obstacles.
Flnallf • Councilwoman
Gabrie le Pryor, ·who
spearheaded the 10 percent
moderate-income housi.Dg move,
·said, "Something tells me that
there are not three-votes for a re-
nle mec:banlsm even If Bob West waataere.•• •
Coancl!Dfan Robert Wert wu
on vacation.
Criticizing tbe Idea ol a brake
"" price rl1et, CouDCUman John ~ uld 1ifch a move would
mue tbe O<CUJ>anta.. "eoonom!C
prl1oner1.'' He 1ald lf the
moderat_t income f...W• could
Mtnalha-epprec:leticol lllr tbolr
~J
• '
homes, they coµld never afford lo
move elsewhere.
The Irvine Company, which
Watt said "'did ..not volunteer for
this''. sent an opinion urging
some way be devised to keep the
moderate-price homes in the
moderatf·income range.
The oi>@ion said, "Although
the company-has no obligation or
ability under the (requirements)
to see that these uhits remain in
the moderate~income housina
stock on resale, it would be in the
best interest of the city if some
mechanism were available to do
this.''
"Uthe initiat·buyer wen able
to sell to anyone and co terms of
his own chqosing. one ol the prin·
clpal objectives of such a pro-
eram would be quickly defeat·
ed." it said.
H'owever, the council showed
no interest in setting Up such a
method.
Wilson Tennis Shorts
Reg. 15.95 Sale Price 8.95
All Sales Subiect To Stock
On Hand '
Wilson-Dunlop-Bancroft-Davis
Yonex Tennis Rackets
Tennis Dress
Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts
& Shorts
,
'
•
• •• Volleyballs 6.95 to 21.95
Playground Balls 2.25
5.95
to '
Racquet Balls & Ra_cquets
Penn-Wilson-P.,.nlop · Tenl'!IS
Balls
Soccer Shoes 9.?5 to 24.50 :
Football Shoes
Tennis Shoes ladies & Mens. . .
10.95 .to 28.95
Basketball 9.95
---
to·
-·
I
I
•
I '
• .. . .
.VOL. 61, NO. 267, • Sl!CTIONS, 5'I P~ES ORANGE COUN\Yc CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2A, 1975 TEN CENTS.; • •
llJ IUT11Y aANCY ... ..., ... -
Catlinglhree-~ Orance
c-.ty unilica~ J1ms "non-
-lcal, •• the Huntuiaton Beach
Union Hilb Scbool 8Dard .owed
Tuaday•pigbl to wlJri< a1ainst
tbooe plans and two qlben now
belna battled io court.
Board Pr .. ldent Ralph Bauer
~ed tbe plaoa !or Ocean
View, W-estmin1tec and Seal
* * *
'
Calls U ·1· • nl ·1ca t1on
Beach, llelnf pr•ealed tonllht
to !be Or-· CoualY C-m!\leo cm Sc-Diatrlct OrpnlzaUon
are 111•••1 becauM of their
varianee ln asHIHd value.
Ancl Tnlotee Bob Knox aald "it
it ~kin1•' tla•t the boards in-
volved would P"'h thooe plaos a(
Ibis time.
.. On any common sense base
those _plans are nonsensical,"
Bauer continued~
'Ibo lnlll ... tald Uley didn't
--wby the-dlwe<o cootlnulftl to push lbelr uollica-
tion plans now while a court rul-lne oo Fowllain Valley and IOUtb
Huntln{llOJI Beach ualllcat.lou 11 belnc debated in appellale court.
Oran&'°" County S._.ior Court Juda• Claude Owen1 ruled tbooe
two unlllcaUoo plaos ...,.. Wea al
Jul week bttauae or Ille vartance
in assessed value between tht
pr<>pooed districts .
Aulslanl SUperintendent Glen
I>yolncer said tbere also II too
great a variance in the proposed
Ocean View, W01tmlnatef and
Seal Beach dl1tricls tolall wltbin
state law.
Truatees also voted 4to1, with
Truatee Don MacAllistu abs·
taining, to continue Ill appellate
court boltle a1aloal tbe Fountain
Valle.y and south .Huntington
\ .
'Nonsense' ' . • • -r-
' .
Beub unlflcatJons.
Jdae:Alllater abstained because
be Is ruonlng lot the propooed
Huntingloo Beach llllilled fcbool
board.
Knox 1aid Ibo board hu spent
about $10,000 on its-court battle so
far and m1y ape.nd .. nother
$10,000.
Trustee Roi> Shenkman •UI·
&Ollted Tuesday ni&bl tbe board
1•unemotlonally and factually"
make ite Position k:noYm to t.be
county committee toolgbL • The committee will meet at.
7:80 at McGau1b Sc._. iu Sul :
Beach. tr any plans are tentallri·;
ly approved. tonl1ht, It would';
then set public heart.ngaon them. · ..
Bauer said t.be new plans ~'t
provide adequate housin1 for ..
hilh school students and contain _
overlappln1.
!See PLANS, Pqe .U>
Reading Emergency · Only
Program
Attacked
County to _Handle
• The Huntington Beach Union ·
High School Board lash<d qui an·
grlly at West Orq~ County
eleD\entary scbool districts T14"·
day night !or doina w~ trustees
called ••a very poor job of
teaching reading.''
Aninial Control
. •
•
-Trustees-lear-ned during their
board session that 25 percent of
this year's freshman class -
1,170 students -are reading two
grQde levels or lower than ex-
pected, according to hi&:h school·
administered: tests.
''These elementary schools
ought lo be doing their jobS,"
stormed Board President Ralph
Bauer.
"Never has an elementary
school reported to taxpayers that
they are gradualin-g eighth
traders who cannot rea(l up to
irade level,'' he charged.
'But his co~menls were
challenged this mon)ing by ad-
millistrators in the Ocean View,
Fountain Valley ~nd Huntington
Beach elementary school dis-
tricts.
'Oee•p View Su.pi..:-. Dale
Coogao said today tbat icconling
fo Ocean \{iew-achninia .. ered
t~sts, -eighth gr•dera , Jbere
-stored an average ol five inonths
ahead i:i•iion-wide in reading and
language arjs and 13 months
ahead in mathematics. ·
, He'said the scores 31so showed
70 percent of the studenta were
readlrig a t an above-average
level ..
"You can't take the bottom
quartile (ooe !.Urlb) ·an.<I make
the.norm out of that," he said,
noting that any \oalid test scores
nationwide should reveal SO per-
.cent a b ove average and 50
percent below.
"Somebody is always going to
be in the bottom 25'~t,'' be
conlinued. "In a school ol gifted
lddo oomebody ii gl)lng,ip'be;~
dumbesl 'gifted' kid/' 1>e•said. ·
High school trustees were dis-
cuuing a new remedial reading
prorram being lntroducect tbi&
fall·that includes diagnostic help,\
parent involvement and special
classes.
Superintendent Jake Abbott
s aid the board will spend about
$100,000 to $US,OOO on I.hat pro-
gram this year. ,.
Coogan· also said high school
officials will not publicly release
!See READING, Page A2)
LuauPlannM
In Huntington
The Kuntington Beach
Chamber of Comm~ ~ the
women's divis ion of the t!hamber
are holding a city.wide luau Fri·
day beginning at 6;30 p .m. at the.
Sheraton Beach Inn.
A polynesian bu(fet is.
scheduled at 7:30 p.m. lo be
followed· by a show featuring
dances of the islands.
... _
RESCUED FISHING BOAT CAPTAIN WELCOMED HOME
Sevion of Elght,Abow d C1119lzecl Boat Were_ Saved
.Shark Water •
·Big Fi.ah Clra1e Diven Oqt
SAN PEDRO (UPI) -Divers searching for a
'missing fisherman were chased out of the water bx
sharks following the sinking of a (!().foot commercia
bing ooat on~1 pme off Point Fermin, the Coast
Guard repollted. · ·
• Tile Coast Guard said Tuesday a passing vessel
rescued· seven of the eight crewmen aboard the St.•
Joseph almost immediat~ly. Th~ m issing man, Vito
~pienza, was (eared dt'dwned when be became en-
tilrigled in fishing nets under the capsized craft.
The Coast Guard cutter Point Evans and two
helicopters com bed the waters off Point Fermin .until.
dar)c but no trace of the man was found. ·
Los Angeles city lifeguard vessels and the Coast
, Guard ferried divers to the scene but they were called
bacl< becauseoTiarge numoors cifs harRSl.rtlfe area.
: Tip Ai~d . F <>rd
}
In Missing Sara
'W A'H~'t.f'oT:Orit:1 >
Pri!s1ident Fold heeded a spur-of-
. the-moment re9uest from the
'Secret Service not to plunge into
a crowd outsi.de a hotel in San
Fralicisco se conds be fore a
woman fired a pistol shot at him,
a White House spokesman said
today.
Press Secretary Ron Nessen
told reporters tbat Ford skipped
shaking hands with the throng
outside the St. Francis Hotel
Mopday because the Secret
Service· at the last minute ex-
pressed concern for the Presi-
dent's safety.
· FOrd ''alWays'' listenswhenlhe
Secret Service makes an on·the-.
spot.security suggestion, Nessen.
said. That might h ave saved his
life.
on-the-spat security suggestion.
Nessen said. Thal might have
saved his lire. ·
Nessen said the crowd across
'the street from the hotel entrance
-where Sara Jane Moore stood
with h'er pistol -was "one of the
crowds the Secret Service sug-
·gesled the President might well
pass up. The President passed it
up."
instead of his usual style or
pres sing close a nd shaking
hands, Ford waited ror the Secret
Service to open the door of his
bulletproof limousine and waved
to the crowd.
The shots r ang out, missing
Ford and ricocheting off to
wound a,taxi'd.river nearby.
Nessen s aid Ford is salis£ied
with his Secret Service protec-
tion . ot
Without a show of enthusiasm,
Orange County supervisors
agreed today to provide
em-eti-en cy -a ni m a·t Cl>n trol
service to Huntington Beach.
The city was, in effect, left
without · animal control service
Monday night when its city coun-
cil voted t6"c!iscontinue its con-
tract wrth California Animal
Control (CAC J.
't.ate Tuesday morning, a city
resolution wa s handed lo
Supervisor Laurence Schmit. It
asked fOr the county to provide
* * * Help Asked;
City Won't
Go k> Dogs
lrunilngton -Beach_ officials re·
quested Orange CoWlly to come
to tb,ir rescue to ease a potential
animal control crisis £oday after
Cali fornia Animal Control
abruptly hailed all services in
the city Tuesday night.
Stray dogs and cats had the run
of the city and only s u c h
emergency situations as a threat
posed by any vicious dogs or ac·
tual dog bite incidents would be
handled by county personnel.
. Residents with major pro-
blems were told to call City _IJaJI
and' they would be referred lo
orange County officers.
''We don't have the capabilities
at present to pick up strays," Ad-
ministrative Analys t Darrel
Cohoon said this morning.
.. But you can't say the city is
going l o the dogs," Cohoon
quipped. "An e ffective ·jOb ha~
been carried out over the last it:.!
years in reducing strays, and we
haven't recei ved very ma ny
calls.··
"But we w on 't be able to
respond to routine calls for a
number of days,,. he added.
Polic e a l so r eceived
several calls concerning stray
dogs, but said there were no
more than us ual.
M e an w h i l e , Ci ty Ad ·
minislralor Dave Rowl ands went
before t he county Board of
Supervis\ors this morning to seek
a commitm ent fo r emergency as-
sistance in the interim before
fulltime s ervices could be im·
plemented with the cOWtty.
ll is understood that normal
operations will require 60 to 00
days to become fully fun ctional
in that il would lake that muc h
time l o re crui t a nd tra in
employes .
Volunteer s from the cit y's
Animal Assistance League were
(See HELP , Page A21
•
emergency services, pre-
sumably on a scale to deal with
rabid and injured artimals.
Bunhe board balked-at-taking
action without understa.D(llng the
conditions of the arranaemenl
even lhoUgh the county health de-
partment 11 obligated to control
animals that might pose a health
problem within any city.
Before today's board meeting,
City Manager David Rowlands
met with Schmit to discuss ar-
rangements for.-emergency coun-
ty service,
The board then aareecl to pro.
vide the service in retum fot the
recovery of man hours and
mileage expended.
County Health Officer John
Philp reminded the supervisors
they had frozen three animal
control officers' po1\tions that
have been vacant four moo.tbs .
Philp asked the supervisors to
lltltheir hitlng fr~ze 8',a me~
ol providing his department tbe
capability of handlin& the un~
scheduled Hunlinat,on Beach
work load.
Coast Swelters
100.degree Heat Retums
' llJ ALAN Di llKIN Ol .. Otilty,. ........
The Orange Coast sweltered
aa:ain in the eriP of a three-day
heat wave today. with tem-
peratures climbinc back toward
Tuesday's highs, which were the
Mesa Youth
Electrocuted
In· Huntington
An lB·y ear -old Costa Mesa
man was electrocuted Tuesday
afternoon as he used an electric
buffer on a boat in the Huntington
Harbour area, Police reported.
George Fra ncis Didrlcks, or
177 22nd St ., Costa Mesa, ap-
parently was using the buffer
while dangling his feet in the
water orr a dock at 4211 Warner
Ave., Huntington Beach police
said today.
The m achine shorted out,
poli ce r e p orte d , knoc king
Didricks onto his back on the
boat. Two co-workers shut off the
buffer 's power and tried without
success lo revive him, as did
paramedics wh o arrived later.
He was pronounced dead al
Huntin gton lnter communily
Hospital shortly after the 2:15
p.m . incident.
Police said t he youth was
employed by M PC Industries lo
work on the pri vale boat at the
dock.
Funeral arra ngements for
Didricks are pending al Ballz-
Bergeron Funeral Home in Cos ta .
-M esa.
The Ora nge County Coroner's
offic e s a id t his morning an
autopsy will be perlormed to
ve rify the exact c ause or
Didricks' death but it appears to
have been an accidental elec-
trocution.
hotlesloltheyear.
Inland temperat.une ran over
100 <1e1ree1 tue1day -104
de1rees were recorded at a .
Trabuco Canyon fire station and
lOS degrees at Garden Grove -
but tb,e mercury alsb soared
along the~coast, particularly in
the south of the county.
The Weather Serviceisaid.tem-
peratures would be 1 milar to-
day, but predicted a break
Thursday.
A 98-degree reading was
spotted on the temperature sign
outside the Laguna Beach
Federal Savings building in
downtown Laguna Tuesday,
while-a-r S-an Clemente a 92
degree-high was recorded.
Ufeguards at Newport Beach
and Huntington· Beach reported
highs of only 80 degrees, but a re-
ading taken Only a mile from the
ocean in Huntington Beach was
98degrees .
The reading was taken by re-
tired Huntingt on Beach Com.
pany manager J . Sherman Den-
ny, who noted that the b'umidity
was low , from JO to 20 percent,
and quipped, ''It was a gteat day
forpainting. ··
It was also a great day to hit
the beach. and more surfers than
painters turned out. Lifeguards
reported Au gust -size crowds
along public s ands on the Orange
Coast, with 30,000 on the Hunt·
ington Beach state beach, and
about 8,000 on the city beach.
· "Most were kids and youths
playing hookey from school or
college,'' a lifeguard said, adding
that the surf was a tempting
three to five feet .
. The lifeg uard predicted "ex-
tre mely heavy" surf today, from
(See HEAT, Pag:eA2)
Coast
Persons interested. in attending
can obtain informatioo concern-
ing tickets •by calling tlie
chamber offi.ce al 962-6(181.
GOOD RESUL7S CIA. Said 'Mail Snoopers' Weath er
Th e b l as t fu r n ace
weather should cool down
Thursday, wit h some ear·
ly coastal fog cutting the
high mark lo lhe middle
70s along the s horeline .
Inland it"ll still be hot. in
the mid OOs.
FROM BOA'l'AD WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
. Seo.ate comll'littee said today the
"There was goocl,,.response lo CIA for nea11ly 20 years opened
the a~. The boal~eOI~ ~ first • and react the mall or well·.known
night 1t rJln m yourvC!per·' groups and individuals, including
Ttial'• the seatoing success Rlch1rd M. NlX'ob.-Martln
story told by the COila Mela man-J;;utber Klag Jr .. Nobel Pl'l•e'Nln-
who placed th.ls ad in" the Da.ily ners and one letter from the com-,
·p I Io t : mitteechalrmantobismother.
Sen. Frank Church (0.ldabo),
Committee "!' Intelligence. said '~IO far showed lbat Nix-
on wullot aware of the practice
when he wa1 lo U.. Wtilte.Jloilu.
"Thf President did t\Ot know
paigoing for the pres idency and "Richard Nixon hi mS'eU."
which he won in November of Church s aid m e mbe r s of
thatyear. Congress who had their mail
TI•e spokesman was unable lo opened i ncluded Rep. Bella
say wbll:ther the letter came from Abzug (D·N. Y. J, Sens. Hubert H.
a Communi st bloc country Humphrey (D -Ml nn.), a nd
althou -itnesses ha ve Edward M. Kennedy <D·Mas.s .)~
aaid the program began as one to and Church himself -even his
screen comm11ni cations with letter to his mother.
persons behind the boo Curt_ ,,;;ain;.. . ..--Nll!S.i•,.nh-,. W a I te.r Mond ale ( D· ::: , also48J4~on
the CIA ••wal ch list " were double
Nobel h tze wlpber Unus P aul·
ing, author Jof\n Steinbeck and
begin hearings on the mail-
ope nin g op e ration in a fe w
weeks.
Church told Angleton the CIA
had failed in its responsibility to
the President by net informing
him of the mail surveill ance pro-
rram.
AnJleton replied that NiX.on
w.ould_ baye b.een told.JLhe had
ever asked for a review of the in-
tel Ii 1e n ce s yste m and pro -
cedures .
•
I NSIDE TODAY
A group of Tennessee boys
10 to J.( attempted to t %torl. SI
million. A j uvenile officer
blame• too much crime on
televi.rion. A.4.
lnde¥
•
(
A! DAILY PILOT H /F W9dneldar, $ep11ma124. 1975
NWLFLetter
Patty Urged
'Use Silence'
SA N FRA NC ISCO <APJ -
Patricia Hearst was u rged t Q
''adopt the tactics of silence'' and
refuse to cooperate with her al·
torneys in a communique from a
group claimlnC to be part ~f the
mysterious New World Llberu-
tion Front.
A communique addressed to
Supervisors
Subpoenaed
By Battin
l l"ldi cted O r a n ge Co unty
Supervisor Ro bert Battin laid
some paper on his four fellow
supervisors today -subpoenas
for them to appea r at his court
hearing Frid ay .
That is when Buttin's attorney
Matt Kurilich will attempt to
quash the indictment brought
against th e Santa Ana s upervisor
last mont h by the Orange County
Gra nd Jury.
The indictme nt alle~es that
Batt in made improper use of his
staff in hi:s 1974 ill-fated try for
tht" Democr atic Party's nomina·
tion for lieutenant governor.
The subpoenas o( Supervisors
RaJ ph Diedric h, Thomas Riley,
Ra lph Cla rk and Laurence
Schmit were served in part late
Tuesday afternoon.
Also subpoenaed by Kurilich to
appear at the hearing were Coun-
ty Counsel Adrian Kuyper and
assistant person nel dir ector
Robert. Shelton.
Kurilich is expected to ques-
tion the subpoenaed supervisors
about their use of their own staffs as well as a county resolution
covering employment condi-
tions.
ln his request to have the court
quash the indictment, Battin
maintained that supervisors'
staffs work at the pleuure of
their employer supervisor and
are not restricted to work hour
regulations affecting other coun-
ty employes.
It was the controvenial Santa
Ana supervisor 's alleged use of
his staff on ca mpaign work dur-
ing regular working hours1 that
prompted the Grand JlllY to In-
dict him on seven felony counts.
HELP •..
'maintaining the dog paund.
Dennis Smith, owner-Operator.
of CAC, the private firm that had
been under contract to perform
animal control service, halted
operations after he· and his at·
tomey and city officials failed to
reach setUement terms Tuesday
afternoon.
CAC had been given a 00-day
notice of termination at Monday
night'scouncil meeting and it
was expected that the rirmwould
provide some kind of services
during that period.
the jailed newspaper heiress was
received Tuesday by television
station KOO .
The communique from the
··People's Force& New World
Liberation Front Robert Emmitt
Burns Contin gent'' said thr
group had deli vered the message
to Mi ss Hearst's attorneys Mon·
day. That was the day before she
swore in an alfidavit that she had
been forced to cooperate with the
t errorists who ki dnaped her
more than 19 m onths ago.
The group, which clai med 12
members, accused Miss Hearst's
attorneys of wi thholding t he
message from her.
The FBI agent on duty here
said today he had not heard of the
group before .
But investig ators have ~~~
looking into the possibility th at
the New World Liberation Front,
which -11\s taken responsibility
for a number of t errorist bomb·
ings, was s pawned by th e Sym·
bionese Liber ation Ar my.
F,,_P~A J
READING. •
statistics Showing whi ch school
districts are doing better or
poorer jobs .
Instead, he said. the informa·
lion will be pa ssed to the di s-
tricts, and they may release it if
they wish.
Trustee Don MacAllister urged
pass ing the inform ati on t o
elementary distri·ct s Tuesda y
night, noting : "Her e we are
spending money in an area to br-
ing students up to a level to teach
them high school work."
And, Bauer stormed again :
"For crying out loud, we are
s p en d ing thou sa nd s and
thousands of dollars to do what
the elementary districts should
have been doing years ago.''
He also suggested they are now
trying to unify to ''bury their pro-
blems in 12 years rather than
eight years."
Coogan said today he believes
the board's ''offhand remarks"
were "a very unfair indictment.··
Charles Palmer, de puty
superintendent of the Jluntington
Beach City (elementary) School
District, said tests administered
there don't agree witlt the high
school scores.
And he believes the program
should have been based on "a
series of tests'' not just one.
Fountain Valley Schools
Superintendent Bob Read said to·
day the hfgh school material has
been given to the board and to
schools to help them make any
needed improvements.
And Coogan continued: ''It is
unfair of someone who is not an
educator to indict a whole dis·
trict on the basis of one test
score.-'-' -
But Bauer s aid Tuesday he
believes the test score is signifi -
cant.
"We have been nice and sweet
and loving, and now it is ti me to
say: Damn it, start doing your
job," he concluded.
HEAT •.•
Dayli:s_ht
..,~ j ....
Prowler
Rapist?
We s t m in s ter polic e a r e
·searching for a would-be rapi1l
be li e ve d o per a ting during
daylight hours in an expensive
neia:hborhood near Golden West
Street and Mc Fadden Avenue,
north of Golden West College.
Poli ce at first confirmed -
following a telephone call to the
Daily Pilot f r om a worried
howewife -that a rape had in·
deed occurred in the area on Fri·
dayat2:05p.m.
Detective Linda Fl ana1an
modified this r ei>ort Monday af.
ternoon and said the incident in·
volved only an attempted r ape
and that the man had sped away
before police arrived.
He appar ently changed his
mind and didn't go through wi th
the attack. according to Det.
F1 anagan.
Offic('rs h a v e confirm ed
several reports of a prowl er in
the area and are investigating
link s with the Friday afternoon
sexua l attack.
A woman in the area feels cer·
lain the daylight prowler is the
same ma n as th e wou ld-be
rapist.
She said her hus band saw the
man crouching outside her
bedroom. window after9 a.m. last
Tuesday.
"My husba n_d ran out after
him, but he was gone in a fiash,"
she said. "He just vanished ."
The wom an, wh o said she also
was told by police that a rape
had occurred in the area, said the
prowler appe ars during daylight
hours while the men of the famil y
are working.
"He lurks in the backyard and
enters homes through unlocked
back doors, ''shesays.
She said the suspect wore a
black and gold ski cap and ap-
peared to be in his early 20s. She
added that he had a normal
build, was a Caucasian and wore
light colored shirt and dark pants.
"We moved away from New
J ersey two years to get away
from t ha t kind of stuff," the
woman said . "Where do you go
from here?·'
F ro• Page A l
PLANS ••.
And trustee Helen Ditte added,
"What is the hurry'?" in getting
unifi cation for the entire district.
But today Roger Belgen, presi-
dent or the Fountain Valle y
School Board, said the high school
district's sta nd stiows trustees
"are acting purely in the in·
terests of self -preservation."
Belgen, who has been pushing
the board to take a stand on the
three new plans, added, "The
high school board has repeatedly
said that they want to provide
leadership to the feeder d.iatricts
in unification; and -yet they COD·
tinue to stand in opposition to
every feeder district they serve.·•
And he said their current op-
pasition is "weakly based" on a
court case he believes will be
overturned on appeal.
Bauer also did not rule out the
passibility tbe high school dis·
trict would go to court on the
three new plans if they eventual·
ly pass the State Board of Educa·
tion.
•
SUPERBOYS GARY GUYOT, (LEFT) AND K
Down In The Valley, Superteacher Col
o.lly "1111. It.ft~ SCHNEIDER IN 'SUPERSCHOOL'
Thomes Triea New Appro•ch
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+-~~ ,
lfealtla Firm
Board Sets Probe
Of Cella 'Link'
Continued scrutiny of a con-
troversial county contract
awarded to a health testing firm
linked to Or. Louis Cella was or-
dered by t he Orange County
Board of SU per visors Tuesday.
The contract covering physical
e xa m inations of county
employes a nd prospecti ve
employes was given to the ·
Orange County Healtlt Testing
Institute COCH T I) by a un-animous board vote.
Later, it was revealed that
Cella, a political confidant to four
supervisors, was an OCHTl
founder in 1973.
It was also noted Utat the in-
stitute operates from faciliU4:s
partially owned by the ~~lti ·
millionaire Santa Ana physician.
Cella and his attornef said the
doctor had divested himself of
any fi nancial interest in the non-
profit corporation six months
before the contract was awarded.
None the fess, it was knovm
that the contract 's background
we being investigated by Dis-
trict Attorney investigators and
was later scrutinized by the
Grand J ury.
And fro m county Health
Department officials came com·
plaints that their recommends·
tions to keep phyelcal exams
within the department had been
ignored by the decision makers.
When given a chance to have
his say p\i.bllcly on the con·
troversial contract Tuesday,
county Health Orrtcer JOho Philp
avoided its moat controvel'Sial
aspects.
In a written report requested
by \he sqpervisors. Philp merely
reviewed outside contractors
who had bid on the propooal and
suggeated t hat his department
monitor OCHTI 's medic al
performance.
The board endorsed Ph1lp's
suggestion and took it one step
further.
In addition to ordering medical
scr u tiny of OCHTI 's
performance , County Ad·
rninis trati ve Officer Robert
Thomas was asked to audit the
contract's cost effectiveness.
Two weeks ago, Tho~ q.nd
his staff praised the ' boarll's
awar ding of the corttf act to
OCHTI and scolded health d e-
partment officials for i heir
behind the Scene statements.
CLOSEOUT SALE
Super Sclwol
Registmtwn
Set Oct. 3
•
Registration will be open until
Oct. 3 for the Fountain Valley
School District's new "SUpe r
School,'' an after-school pro·
gram of special mathematics, re·
ading,lnus ic and arts and crafts
classes. ·
The 2 to 6.p.m . proaram will ~
Mondays through Fridays at
Fountain· Valley School , Bushard1
Street and Talbert Avenue.
The new pr ogram was de·
signed to m eet t he needs of
families with working parents,
district officia ls noted, as well as
youngsters who want or need ad·
ditlonal schoolwork.
Cl asses include story time,
cooking and nutrition, math and
reading, cr eative arts and crafts,,
and Uair.e: is a $12 monthly charge:.
for each class. ,
In addition, a walking tour
class will be held each Thursday
from 1to2 p.m . at a charge~ $2.
monthly.
P a r ents may enroll t heir
children, age six to 10, in all or
just ooe or two courses, officials
noted.
The new program i• being_
guided by Colleen Thomas, an
elementary school teacher in re-
ading, m alh, physical education.
mime, dance and crafts, Officials
said. •
Cohoon aaid CAC pulled out
when the city re(U&ed to return
Ma,000 that the firm had posted
agai n st a performance
guarantee, that it failed to come
up with. 'nie firm wu alaotold to
stop the collection of license fees.
Smith was not available for
comment today.
seven to nine feel, with rip cur-
rents from the breakers making
surfing hazardous .
At Newport Beach it was "ex-
tremely smoggy" Tuesday but
the surf, from three to five feet,
was well formed , and a crowd of ·
15,000 turned out.
IC BM Launched I
VANDENBERG AFB CUP)) -
An Air Force Minuteman II
ICBM was successfully launched
Tuesday and plumeted into the
sea on target .
"ABCO" Brand Warm-up
Suits -Reg. 24.95
Soccer Balls 6.95 up
Basketballs 5.95 to 31 .95
Footballs Juniors-lt was learned that the city bas
been negotiating with Robert
Sharkey who performed animal
control services in the city before
the CAC contract .
"He's agreed to help out in an
emergency situation," Cohoon
said. "It's another step we could
take should the health and safety
of the city be threatened," he
said.
ORANGE CO AST "" DAILY PILOT
2 Youtm Wounded
In Market 'Spree'
Two youthful suspects were
wounded in Santa Ana early to-
day when police interrupted a
four-man robbery-rape-inayhem
spree inside an all night market. ·
After wounding two of the four
suspects as they atfempted to
flee from the market, poli ce
found a n a ked 24 -year -o ld
woman, the apparent vi ctim of a
rape attempt, in a atorageroom.
Behind a store counter, of·
fi cers round a market clerk
bleeding from a deep gash near
bis right e)'e, a wound opened
when one of the four suspects al-
legedly struck the clerk with a
homemade billy club.
And recovered from one or the
suspect's pockets wu the money
police claim w a• iaken from a
cash drawer in the market.
Neither of the watmded sus-
pect1, one of them a 14-year-old
Juvealle, we,....1rloualy lnlured
by tb1 police 1un11re that
foll.owe<! u lh•1 n.ci rrom the
mar ket at Washln1ton and
BrisUll llreets.
Aeeotdllt1 to poll.,, the (our
1111poet. entered Iba market
lbcrtl)lallm',lo.m . ~ •
After bloekiDa clerk Lowreoce
A. ~r. of S1nt1 Ano, to the
floor Wltb a blow !rom the billy
elull,-tllay all11edly took belwetn
1111 and ti ll'om •<uh fir•-.
· As three of the alleged robbers
took two customers to a back
room in the store, the fourth
member of the robbery team
grabbed a woman customer and
took her into another storeroom.
Also taken ilfto custody was 18-year-old Pedro Carrillo, of
2113 W. 9th Street, Santa Ana.
There, he forced the woman to
strip and reportedly was foodllng
her when a police unit, aum--
monded by a silent alarm, ar-
rived at the market. In the next rew minutes, three
officen chased and sbot at the
suspects as t hey ran tn a
patchwork fas h ion down
sldeatreeta to avoid capture.
Artosted after beini wounded
In the leg and elbow wu Manuel
Ortiz, 18, of 2406 N. Pacific
Street, Santa Apo.
The other wounded suspect
waa a 17·year·old Santa Ana
youth who police did not Idenllfy.
They alao declined to ldenllfy
the 14-year-old Juvenile who was taken into cu1locly with hla three
robberymates. ,1 Three 1u1pect1 were choraed
with robberi:1 kidnap and uuult
with a deoQly weapon. The 17·
year-old •••P•CI WU charred
wilh the-111De crim .. a '"11 u
attempted rope.
•
I
Sale Price Tops 8.95 Pant_s
6.95
Wilson Tennis Shorts
Reg. 15.95 Sale Price 8.95
All Sales ·SlJbiect To Stock
On Hand
Wllson-Dunlop-Bancroft-Dqvis
Yonex Tennis Rackets
Tennis Dress
Mens & Boys. Tennis Shirts
• &Shorts
R~cket Stringing
a.e Pads.Tires-Tubes
Repalltng
9'11 111 & Ci.I
Intermediates-Full Size
7.95 to 28.95
Volleyballs 6.95 to 21 .95
Playground Balls 2.25 to
5.95
Racquet Balls & Racquets
Penn-Wilson-Dunlop Tennis
Balls
Soccer Shoes 9.95 to 24.50
FootballShOes
I
Tennis Shoe& Ladies & Mens
10.95 to 28.95
Basketball ·Shoes 9.95 to -28.95
Runnl'MI shots
531 Cnter -'&,46-191 S
•
'
.,
•
•
•
' .. ~\ ~ .~alailna hlwe111t; S16
M8lcll!nll cha .. , $109
. M.tc:h!nil ottOftUln; $59
Encl i.ble, SS9
Cack11ilttliblf.SS9 , .
•Ready for e&Sy assembly
with no ~iaHoola.
,
. .
•
I
) '
•' • •
Casu·al· "· ·rouping for
I
Sale! Save on
steel belts.
R,eJl~nt StHI. F••\ures 2+2 bf•I belted constructon of pol)'Hter
eotdt ··•nd·ateel betts. In the wide 78 1ertea profile. Whltewellt.
No trade-In required,
Tire 111.e Reg. price le prtce + f.ct. U x TiN Ille Reg. price
878-13 29.00 25.00 1.95 G78·14 35.00
E78-14 35~00 28.75 2.44 G78-15 39.0B
Sale prlce +fed.tax
28.75 2.74
31 .25 2.81
31 .25 3.02 den ·c,1-tamlly 'roo'11 F78-14 35.00 28.75 2.58 H78-15 39.00 -~~::;::;:;;:::::::::::::::::::.~~:::::::~~;......( Dress up your car,
•
' .
.•
wll"":' ..; ....
The taellng Is casual yet contemporary in this
comfortable and inviting group. Loose seat and
back cushions of polyurethanefoam &re covered
in' a handsome olefin fiber ot natural-tone ·
'·stripes. Tablesare;flnlJhed in warm wood.
Jooeslto match.~ ~eam accents of
. upholstered pl-.• e> ~
Use your c0\l!9ftlent .ic:PP>eenni.-"',..Y
• Ti"!"' Paymen\ Plan; · · "
'"
Closeout!
s166
Contemporary styled 1ofaa
fit in well with many room
decors. No·sag seat spring
Construction, ball casters.
-St&in·rE!"slstantHercolone
olefin in earth·tone plaid or
solid brown vinyl.
Not shown: solid brown vinyl
loveseat. $136
Sorry. not availabJe outside normal delivery' area. Phone for details.
Quantities llmtted on j;IOMOUt merchandise.
Personal portable
,,
Sale 14495
Reg. 169.95. 4.5 cu. ft .
compact refrigerator
has separate freezer,
translucent Crisper.
9.5 cu. ft. refrigerator.
reg. 219.95, Sele 194.95 •
Save $20! Stop Action®
drum brake overhaul*
46 88
Here11 what you get:
• Install neW JCPenney Stop
Action .. lln1ngs on 4 wheels
• Rebuild all 4 wheel cyllnders
• Resurface four drums
• Repack front wheel bearings
• lubricate shoe contacts
• Inspect front grease seals
No points!
Reg.66.88
• Inspect brake springs
•Inspect master cylinder
•Inspect, adjust parking bral<e
• 4nspeet rear 011 seals for leaks
• Bleed and refill brake system
• Road test car
'Most American. many
foreign cars.
No condenser! 6499
MOBELEC'" electronic
breakerless ignition
Keeps your car in "top tune" year after year.
An efect ronic sensing unit replaces points and
condenser. Dramatically increases your car's
performance, extends spark plug life.
Save 31 95
"9g. ff.tf. BblCk and whit• .,..._,.r
pottabl• withe:·• screen (meas. d!ag.). •
~Id &tale Cb-••· monopole VHF/UHF
anttnna. White PIUllO cabinet me-_sures
8.2 cu. IL chest freezer, Reg. 229.95 Sele 204.95
Reg. 239.95. Sale $208.
Compact washer is 21 ''
wide. 3 wash cycles, weter
level selection. No perma-
nent Installation; hooks to
kitchen faucet. l onry 10'' high, 131'" Wide, 10'"deep,
• I
Sale prlcH eff9ct1Ya through Sunday, September 28, 1975
S.ony, not •••liable outaida normal dellvery aru. Phone lord.tall•.
•
. • I '\ .. HARBOR CENTER,' Costa Mesa (714) 646-5021 •
pickup or v~n with
custom wheels
31 99
1Sx8
"Mojock"'Tt.• off-road
wlieel in popular
all-whi'.e spoke
design. Extra strong
construction.
3999
15•8
"Mojock .. r1.1 off-road
:ind AV wheel in
shining chrome.
Ru ggedly built to
last lor years.
31 99 14x6
Polished dish mag.
Hiqh gloss
finish hlgh!ighls,
alu1ninum alloy
constru ction.
Save 21 95
R'eg.149.95. Sale $128. Compact
electric dryer is 21 '' wide.
2-cycle timer for permanent
Press. automatic cool-down,
No venting needed. .. · ·
Operates on.115V.
•
•
'
•
.•
• . r, -, ,,
1
I ti •• 11
~;
I
' ·' '•
~W>ii~·fn4) .. 111~ •.
~
...
I \ . . ~.. r f
•
1·
j
I
A8
9AU.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
~An Elllotional Issue
N~ that ~alifomia Animal Control <CACl has
ltieen given 60 days-to cease operations In Huntington
Beach it behooves city leaders to take a long, hard
look before they take the next step in animal control.
The city has several courses, including a con-
tract with Orange Count~. forming a consortium with
nearby cities, or even taltlng over the operation itself.
But the decision must be taken only after all the
pros and cons are weighed, for perhaps no issue in
Huntington Beach is as volatile as dogs and cats.
CAC was clouded with controversy during its
tenure and undoubtedly had its s hortcomings, but
many people feel much of the criticism was un-
. justified.
The company apparently did an efficient job get-
ting stray dogs off the streets and in licensing of
animals.
The pound was another matter; conditions were
admittedly poor, but it is owned by the city and some
of its inadequacies can be laid at the doorstep of city
hall.
Whatever the decision, the new operation will be
in the hot seat from the start. You can'tplease most of
the people much of the time when you're doing
s omething with their dogs and cats.
· t City and Schools
Two 1J1em be rs of the Fountain Valley City Council
lashed out angrily last week at the Garden Grove
Unified and Huntington Beach Union High School
Boards for their court attempt to halt a unification
election in their city.
been criticized bYJ!PJ.ll>lleMJ of Jlllili~alion for taking·
a school matter upJ1t council meetings.
But they deserve commendation for trying to
serve the concerns of their citizens -in this case tQ -..
hold a school reorganization election. They also iw.ve
set aside space in the city newsletter for both sldee to
report their unification views.
It should be noted that the council in the past has
publicly endorsed school tax override measures. ,
Then its involvement in schools was welcomed, and
no one even suggested that school problems were out:
side its realm of interest. ...
Early Rea~ing
Brian Garland, a trustee in the Huntington Beach
City (elementary) School District, plans to keep
pushing for a reading program for advanced kin·
dergarten students.
So far, his position hasn't won any support from
fellow school board members, but bis 1deas seem to
make sense.
.Garla11d contends that recently adopted
guidelines for kindergarten "slam the door in the
face" of the advanced five· year-old who wantsto read.
The guidelines inclu_de activities to prepare
youngsters to read in the first grade bu~do not include
any formal kindergarten r eading program.
Garland, himself a teachert believes some
youngsters already have learned the material con·
tained in the guidelines.
• It would be sad for youngsters to wast.e part of
tbeir y.ear in kindergarten and perhaps become
turned off to school because they wetf ~mxious to re~d
and could nor.
• •
Both Roger Stanton and George Scott said they
will continue trying to get a unification vote for Foun·
tain Valley residents, noting they aren't urging a
''yes'' or ··no'' vote, only the right to an election.
Their stands are well taken. They at times have
Whiie the guidelii!es don't prohibit an individual
teacher from helping a youngster read, Garland's
suggestion to provide for some .type of formal pro-
gram deserves attention. H "MAN) IF IHIS LOCi HADN'T COME ALONG 111> JE A 60NEI'.~
A Handgun
For Every
American
( ART HOPPE )
I The President is still gamely
I plunging into crowds, although
, he now reporte~ly wears a bullet-
proof vest. MaDY, feel he
shouldn't . Plunge, thafis.
But crowd plunging is one of
the most im· "
portant duties
of a Presi-
.d en t.
particularly a
President up
for reelection.
It is the only
way he can
assess the
mood of the
country.
''How are you?'' says the l President, shaking a band.
I "Fine," says the owner· of the
hand.
The President then knows the
I country is feeling fine.
WEARING a bulletproof vest
is certainly a help while de-
1
tennining that the country's feel-
ing fine . But this is no lime for
half-way measures. ' I The Secret Service has sug-t gested that the President, when
1 crowd plunging, be encased in a
•
bulletproof 'steel boi!with a small
aperture through which he could
extend his arm. White House
aides, however, reluctantly re-
jected the pToposal as
''detrimental to his image.''
A more practical alternative is
for the President to carry a
crowd of carefully screened,
loyal. trustworthy adherents
with him wherever he goes so
th&t when the urge tq plunge
overwhelms him. he would have
a safe crowd into which to do so.
Unfortunately, this limited
sampling might tend to destroy
the scientific accuracy of crowd
plunging as a mood assessment
technique.
THE ANSWER, then, lies in
the touchy issue of gun control.
Today, fewer than 100 million
Americans own guns. This
means that more than half the
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
I'd be willing to wager
that C.G.M. (Gus, Sept.19)
has never been anywhere
near a classroom where
the teacher is trying
desperately to provide
individualized instruction
for 30-plus youngsters.
Visit any classroom and
you may change your
t~e!
M.E.C.
Gteomv ~s comm•nts ilre 1ubmlttad by ,......,,. Mid IMnolM<•surlly relltict tM YI~ ot tM-IWWap.iiper. Send yow pet
"""" '11 Gloomy'"°'' D;ally Pilot.
nation, including little children.
goes to bed each night un-
defended, unprotected and un-
armed!
Up to now, a timid Congress
has taken but one step to solve
the problem -and that in· the
wrong direction -by banning
cheap ''Saturday night
specials.'' Thus only well-to-do
citizens and successful hit men
can exercise their inalienable ·,
right to bear arms. (And ask
yourself, would you prefer to be
lined up in the sights of a suc-
cessful or an unsuccessful hit
man?>
If all Americans are to enjoy
their inalienable right to bear
arms, it is up to Congress to pro-
vide them with the arms to bear.
For a modest $5 billion or so,
there is no reason the govern·
ment couldn't provide every
man, woman and child in the
country with an inexpensive but
efficient handgun under The
Equal Opportunity Act.
IMAGINE the confidence the
President would feel as he
plunged into a crowd of 10,000
gun-waving admirers, each re·
ady to drill the first person who
made a suspicious move. No
more accurate method of assess-
ing the country's mood could be
devised~
Thus we see that neither the
President nor any American
feels safe and secure until every
American is armed to the teeth.
We can confidently expect the
suppart of The National Rifle As-
sociation in passing this impor-
tant gun legislation.
.,
Lung Cancer C99nection?
r ·, T . .L
.Cliilliµg New Fallout· Theory -I
WASHJNGTOI'! -The !allpu\
from· the nuclear teBtin~ in the
lale 1950s and early 1960S may be
causing a belated epidemiC of
lung cancer in .th~ northern
hemisphere. The United States,
for example, has had &·dramatic
increase in lung cancer cases.
In a chilling new study,
respected researcher Dr. John
Gofman
warns th'at
the lung
cancer
epidemic
could be
:severely ag.
gravated by
the growth of
the nuclear
power in ·
dustry.
The plutonium fallout from
past nuclear explosions is having
a de~dly impact today, accord·
ing to Dr. Got.man's theory.
because of a 13-to 15-year latent
period before the effects become
evident.
SINCE MOST of the al·
mospheric testing was done in
the late 1950s and early-19605, the
latent period is ending now. "For
the USA alone," declared Dr.
Gofman, ''it is estimated that
116,000 persons hav.e been com·
mitted to plutonium-induced lung
cancer. In the entire northern
hemisphere, the total nurriber is
1,000,000persons.'' ·
He contends grimly that th!?
( · ] plutonium, Dr. Cohen asserts. He
JACK ANDERSON .. criticizes Dr. Gofm~s basic ' d,iita and coptends that "99 out
of 100 eiperts in the field would
· not·agree'' with Gofman.
fallout ''may have alreadycreat-Dr. Gofman 's research,
ed,)rreversibly, one of the prime-however, cannot-be lightly-dis-
health problems of our era." 'l1te missed. He ls professor emeritus
plutonium from nuclear power ·Of medical physics at the
plants, he warns, will increase UniversityofCalifomia.
the menace to future genera·
tioDS.
Even it the nuclear power in-
dustry "contains its plutonium
99.99 percent perfectly," he pre-
dicts, ''it will still be responsible
for 500,000 additional fatal lung
cancers annually. This would
mean increasing the total death
rate in the United States by 25
percent each year, since2,000,000
persons currently die from all
causes combined.••
The nuclear industry, which
has invested billions in the pro:-
lif eration of nuclear plants
throughout i~~ C9UJ\try" JJ,as
sought to downP.lay the eVidence-
that plutonium iuay be linked to
cancer. ·-. .; ~ -.
TIIE INDUSTR y cites the rm-
Oin-gs, for examPii; pf-Dr.
Bernard Cohen of Pittsburgh
University. Cohen points out that
Jung cancer has been increasing
since 1945, long before tbe
plutonium could have bad an ef-
fect.
Most scientists believe the lung
cancer epidemic bas~ caused
by increased air polluUon, not '
MEDICAID ABUSES
As one of his first acts ~ the
new Secretary of Health. Educa-
tion and Welfare, David Mat-
thews indulged in a little c~vil dis-.
obedience. '
He is required by lawtoi:educe
federal medicaid funds to &tales
which do not review how· the
money is spent. The reviews ar£
crucial to insure that hospitals.
nursing homes and mental in-
stitutions are giving proper care
and are not bilking the patients
or the government.
Yet Mattbews bas told
Coogress•that, despite the law,
he won't reduce medicaid funds
at this time. He contends that the
states are unable to ~lice the
lneOical-ripoUS-and that aiiY
medicaid cutbacks would have
the effect of crippling the system.
UNSCRUPULOUS doctors and
hospitals, meanwhile. are
squeezing medic aid money out of
the government by hospitalizing
patients, prescribing medicines
and performing operations
without medical justification.
Rep. John Moss. D·Calit.,
turned up evidence,.for example.
that $300 iµillion bad been pajd
ou~ for unnecessary surgeries.
Other patients b'ave received in-
ferior caie from doctors w.bO·are
more interested in their
medi~aid' eligibility than their
healtfl. r . ' ~
Yet the new HEW Secretary la
continuing to mail out medicaid
checks, despite evidence tbat the
states are Dot keeping a proper
watch on abuses and, therefore.
are not complying with the law.
From bis own HEW files, bere :ire a few typical, confid'1nllal
findings,; •
-IN COLORADO, HE;W in-
vestigators found that "DC> physi-
cian or psychiatri.st'' serveJ; on
fhe mental health team, whlcb ls
supposed to check on the treat:
ment'of medicaid patients.
-In !{bode Island, tbe federal
inspecto<s were appalled to dla-
cover t1i.at one bospital bad not
complied 'with 61 of the 87 re-
quired records. Doctors.-werefar
behind on visits to medicaid pa-
tients, , .
-:: In Indiana, m8111 nursing ·
homes weren't even iSkiilliYtlie
state·to conduct the reriewa that
are required by law. . :
._ In. Ohio, ''no medical. re-
views in mental hospitals bave
·been done.'' according to'a con-
fidential report. J '
-A-nd, in Wisconsin. nwlews
on nursing homes.have been,''in·
consistent due to a abort.ale d
MDs in rural areas add lSCk ofr
cOoperation in urban areas.''
·Talk Is Revealinlr
Thoughts at Large:
The way one.talks about others
reveals more of one's own
character t~an it does of tbeiq.
The best and briefest argu.
ment against censorship was
given by Remy de GQ\lrmont,
.when he wrote: ''Good books are
irrefutable, and bad books refute
themselves.••
' Chronic poverty breeds lack o!
' , .
'
SYDN:EY KARRIS
• frdm the name of ea"cb Or the 10
divisions Ota Roman legion, con-
sisting .QC 300 to 600 men.)
Ona can always tell a truly
famous t>i!:rson by the fact that at
le.Pt 3Q,OQO pe~soos went to
scbool ~it,l!'hinl hi the~ town of.l~~erehegr,~up, . ~ \~
I I
,,!
Let the Wackos Fight. It··~Out
•
self.reliance, and threq the'P<>Qr""
are blamed for .haVUfg no .id.~
itiative; which is r&thej like"
blaming an invalid ·ror getting
bed-sores.
If the nation's' airlines
through good times and bad -
can pay their employes enough
so that a ''no-tippin.g'' rule la
strictly enfdrced, wfiy can't other
and more consistenUy affluent
service industries~agct to do
the same? '
.. Good citizW who believe in
the death· penalty see,eye .to eye
with murderers, who ""11"11 ln it so m~~h· that they inflict It un-
ilaterijly.
To the Editor; l · Ah, the cast is complete. Now,
let'& dig a huge pit in Las Vegas
and throw In 1) Patfy Hearst 2)
El4Jidge Cleaver "3) Lynette
Fromme 4) a Piggie 5) the
JaJ)anese Red Army 6> Marshal
Ky 7) tbe Harrlses 8) an
Anierican Nazi 9) a Honkie 10)
Tlmotby Leary 11) a I "Wea!lienDan 12) Arafat of th e
I PLO lJ) Obarles M"'-1 14> a , .. cat Insect 15) BW Walton 16)
the house that Jack bui\t,1Tben
I we11 let them fight It out and
crown the sumror ltlac of the
Wad<Os.
Of course, the te)vlslcm rights
wlllbeworthaforlUM.... ~ · M. REMtlA:.-
.... -•e.elles
To the Edftor l I ·IN• propertY ownen would like to.aw an !llternallvetothepro-• -WUon of doc• on beadles.
' ---
( .MAILBOX J
Letter• from Teader• op ~lcome.
The right to con4efl8< leftm tq fit
6JIOCI or t'liminate libel U: reserved.
LetUT• •I 300 WOTds "' iu. wlU be
Qivtn pre/ermcc. AU Jetter• mu.st in· cl""" lfo;ooture 011<1 mGiling odilrtu
but nam11 mau be 1UUMel4 on re·
quelll If aufflci ... t ......... "-'""'· l'ottllJ tolU not be publlllled.
'
Is ii possible to put a
moratorium on said plans in gr..
der to requnt property and c1og
Owners to 'et a permit from the
city (starting with Newport) to
,takeourd.ogsout t'rom6a.m. unUl
6 p.m. for a fee o! $20 a year?
DoM this sound feasible? SUch
penntta are issued ~ aurfen, buliaeases, parking, etc. -not to
~ention mrrlace Ucensei. or
-
fislring and game and ~ the Niguel Theatre D South
automobiles, • \ Laguna:• · ._
-... ,., -. • ,_.. ' ",We have Just ~~ home ·-·Su~ll P':'l,IMITS ~dogs) Wl>Uta' trom wbat ~had 11ft>ec1 would
-pay •'year s1 license m exchqe be afi entertainihg evening at our
fo!' the paper. plus a ~tlie ~laslic ~ local theater. Instead, we are
plill and flhovel idog!lle bitter). shocked at th~ Incredl~e bad
. YoultnoW we haveafewpeople taste of anyoutiwhowouldacrem.
like President Ford and Mr. Nix-a movie like 'Sisterl' -not to
on who take their dogs on beaches mention cbarae for itl ~ -s ,did leennedy -we don 't •
waDtto be too sterile, ordowe? "PLEASE havteooughreepect
iFrance handles its dog and . for your community to ~t
a.dlmal situations in a far more higher caliber films than 'Sis--.
lilmane way by presenting dog-ters' and your 1.Linda Lovelace'
glecomfort stations on streets. coming atlractlon.
l nther doubt that the dog "Show, some &Ood rums, ad-
popU!atlon would be beavy rrvm, vertise and rou wW ~ 19'11'
6:P·I!'-to 6 a.m .. anyw!lJ. B~t~ ·theater with 'patrons:~ ol
<1111betonlt.._Mlbetliere! ' the few unlucky _1 .. who
HELEN HUTCHINSON viewed IDnlgbt's performance. "Weare ayounc couple and con· .,._ . ..,,_,. G _ sldl!r ourselves open minded, but
•• ~ the ~ll!b)nation. of terrible act-
To the Editor: ing /Biid blatant gore was too
;rh~ following, is a copy ol a loll· muqh." SHARON WOHL lerllllll~tothemaugOl'Of1-, I • GR.EGWOHL
' -I I
'
A literary prize is an a.ward.
customarity given to a writer in
America before he has Gamed lt,
and ln Europe after he,oo ~qlller
needs it.
Attendinl a tuneral i:,cently, I
recalled tlie anOQymoua wit of
the,as1 century who said, "Atle\'
listening to memoriil services,
one, c.an otily conclllde that tlW!
best.hope/or mankind istoresur·
~ t.be dead Jlllcl lalei: the llv•
ing.''
ORAN~E COAST
DAILY PILOT
I -N. WMl;Pu-''7:.!:tK_,,B_ ,Borl>an>I!...-,, tdUonot Pog• Editor .
Th< editorial page of Ille Dally fJ")101'••ee~1 to iarorm and
lllmulale fe~ders ~Y pl'eoentJnc GO thb pe1Jtdivenecommentary
on topics of1nteres,br l)'Ddicat·
ed columnltt.1 and ~.,.._.ts, by
~!<1101 a lohuJJ for reaclen' views and by ,pte1aitlllf this
hewapaptt•a Opfril<M'lt and kteu
OQ t'Ufrtiit toplca. Ttie edltortal 01lililoh~of'.l~• 11loily 'Pilat ·-only ln thriCllfoi'i1l c61umn attbe
,..,. of the \>al•· OplaiGnl •· ~ by the oolumnials ancl
cary,oot'btl and lelter tJdLtn,._...
One of the most contlilually !heir"'!"' and no•..-..eat ot misused worcls ls ' "cohort" for lh~i• v1ew1 by the Dalb' Pllat.
"C004tde.rate'' or ''associate''; a should be lnr~rr~.
person cannot be a _,only a I Wedllesday,1fept;2C,1175-8\U~ can. CTbe "tont com_es : ~ • .
• ,
\
' Today's Closlag ·
N.V. Stoek s
.u-.
VOL.168, No. 11>7, 5 SECTIONS, 70 PA9£$ . ORANGE COUNTY, CAL IFORN IA WEDNE.SDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1975 N TEN CENTS
• l Rile · . ___ y Sees. ~orO,~ Ai1~port Reject~o~
ByG-'ltYGllANTILLE pllca&n to th• Depmment ol OrcceCounty'salrportproblOfll withdraw Los Alamitos from the dvilionuseolEIToro. . °' .. ~~ ··-~t>etense for ·Joint used El Toroi& can• sol.ved~by joint-use ol lhe!.._.reque1t. --•·Tft1is isSue: has beefl. used for !!~eked by r~e!'lletten from reffiyed in Was~~ we are ~bases.'' Riley said he would support m_1l1t.a.ry of!•cJals, county -pared to •usu•·· 1•• d'-~ Sch ·1· ·r El T years to lure NewPort Beach re-..., -..,....... ' o.z .,. ..... ...,,.._ ........ _ was •ever . I , m1. s move • oro was .d •· . l bel' . lb .• SUperv1sor Thotrias Riley pre--prova.l;PsaidBro·wn.• ,..,1.11 •v ... any 1n en also withdrawn si enl.il an o 1ev1ng eta pro-
d1cted today that Orange Coun -The board of superVisora tii:n to Imply that th.!s ottlce or But when Scbmit's motion blems with airport noise can be t~·s. appUcafion for commercial aireed inlate4\ugU1J1.toappJyfor , U\l Board of Supervisors .!avor couldn't muster 8 second with ended by permitting commercial
airline u:se ill ~ Toro arine joint civUian-milila.cy uae o( El clvlUan use of El 1:oro •. the both military bases omitted. jet operation at El Toro," said
Airbase will be.reJ~~ ...... . Toroiand the Naval Air St.t.ion at Newport Beach supernsoral.ld, the-effort to withdraw LOs Riley ~n Rile~"s mind~waS:i let~ re-lA>I Alamltoe._ ~ 'l'uesday, th• application to the Alamitos Jrom the application The supervisor said coru;idera-ceived·th~ week from tnarinaLt. .:rhe ~of the •W!!~cation Department ol Defense was an ,wuquasbed on a three-two vote. lion of El Toro can be eliminated
Gen. L. E . .Brown.· -.. W~ in Riley'I word! 1to l•y to i1sue again when supervisor After the board meeting, Riley in one or two ways:
"U and when the -r~_mal-ap· ~·~anc1·ror all ftotlons that Laurence Schmit attempted to chastised those who suggest -A firm commitment from the
• •
boo.rd of liupervisors that the
oounty has abandoned the idea ot "'inl! El Toro.
-A firm denial rrom the
Department of Defense or the 3}>-
pllcation asking ror joint use or
the military air base.
Aod based on the react.ion from
military officials, Riley said he is
confident the county's applica·
lion will be rejected and lhe El
Toro issue will be laid to rest .
, 'attin Charges Again
P o lly.Gf.ot?
Birds of a feather allegedly flock together. You can't
tell in black-and-white, however, b ut the green
character at the top' is not a pigeon. He's a parrot. He
now hangs out with the pigeons roosting below, after
escaping from his cage. That's what happens in swing-
ing old Balboa. You fly the coop and fall in with lower
company.
•
Porno Prosecution .
To. Resi Its .C·ase . . . ' . -. The prosecution in the BaJboa close McDaniel lried to \rin con-
Pussycat Theater obscenit.Y trial . cession from aCaJ State Fullerton
was scheduled to rest its case to-Pl'\)fessor t hat-the two films .had
day after presenting politt of.:.-·• so,rnellter·ary merit. •
ricers and college p,rofessors as ~ McDaniel and literature ·pro--
witblosses wbo tried ~·conV1nc1 • (See PORNO, Page A%) jurors that two well·klloWli sex: J
movies are obscene. ....,),
The defen~e is. ·•~.1<>ca11 , ·Car ·Salesman as its first witness today a UCLA
professqi: who specializes ih sur-
veys anile~ear--e:h.:.. ~-'+"~Soi !-.JI_ v•ci• Defense lawyer Robert CJ.Ue 1 Im
McDaniel said late Tuesday that 1 ~;.
he planned to; eall Dr. 'G••• ;..A 52-year·old r<ewport Beach.
Levine as his first witness bUt de-J car sal~man was found dead in
clined to speculate on the.• hii back yard early today of: an.
testimony. • ~ • • •PPllj'elltb'. 1elt-,innlcted guMliot
Levine. however, wllL .ilp--WOundfnb11head.
parently try to refute data of. Robert Chari~~ Wallace, of
fered by prosecution Vt'ilnefl8 ,Who 113$ . Port SJi.eC!teld, was dis·
cited surveys related to public covered by tiis wile, Delore_s, and
opinion toward explicit sex films. stepdaulhte.r, Emily Aust1~. 18,
The two films at issue la the Bfter they first heard the .single
\ria1"1n Harbor Municipal .court . i\lllSl><>L i>Oliee ~aid~ are "Deep Throat'' and "The 'Wallace repor"te="y'~shot
Devil in Miu Jones." As tiijnseU wllll,a .45·callber pistol.
'Tuesday11 testlmony drew to• wblchwasfoundbyhisside. -
Says Police Dip Into Drug Fund
By GARY GR ANVILLE ot•O.•., ...... _ ~
lnctt'cted Orang_e County
Supervisor Robert Battin said to-
·day that the reluctance or law en·
forcement officials to allow secret
rourt funds to be audited is due to
their "fear illegal skimming ac-
tivities will be uncovered.··
Battin charged trustees of the
lund.S collected· Crom defendants
and used in investigations "don't
want to be accouq_table to the tax-
payers and be forced lo account
(or the money they are using for
their own personal use and pro-
Heat Wave
Fries Coast
At 100-plus
By AL-'N DIRKIN
Of tilt' Olll.IW PU ......
The Orange Coast sweltered
, again in the grip of a \}:!ree-day
heat wave" today, with tem-
peratures climbing back toward
Tuesday's' highs, which were. the
hottest of the year.
lnland temperatures ran over
100 degtees Tuesday -104
degrees were recorded at a
· Trabuco Canyon-fire station and
IOS degrees at Garden Grove -
but the mercury also soared
along the coast, particularly in
the south of the county.
The Weather ~rvice said tem-
perature9 would be similar to-
day, but predicted a break
Thursday.
A 98 -degree reading_ >kas
--spott~OiilheTemperatureSlgn
outside the Laguna Beach
Fed eral Savings building in
downtown Laguna Tuesday,
while at San Clemente a 92
degree high was recorded.
Lifeguards at Newport Beach
and 'Huntington Beach reported
highs or only 80 degrees, but a re-
ading taken only a mile from the
oc'ean in Huntington Beach was
98degrees.
The reading was taken by re-
tired Huntington Beach Com-
pany manager J . Sherman Den-
ny, who noted that the humidity
was lbw, from 10 to 20 percent,
and quipped. "It was a great day
for painting.··
It was also a great day to hit
the beach, and more surfers than
(See HEAT, PageA2)
Andy Devine
Hospital,ized
lnNeuport
Andy Devine, well-known actor
who maltes his home in Newport
Beach, is reported in satisfactory
condition today at Hoag
Meqiorial Hospital, where he is
being treated for an undisclosed
illness.
"Just say 1·m having an old
saddleio,re repaired,·· De".ine
joked today . A hospital
spakesman said Devine, 69, is in
gQOd spirits and says he is "reel-
fng fine."
'the spokesman added that the
current illness is not related to ~bevine's leukemia condilion,
which is kept under control by
doetors.
The actor, perhaps best known tor bis role of "Jingles" on the
old \'\lid Bill Hickoek show, was ~~mliti!d to Hoa.g on Sunday but
C!octors have not-said yet when he
will be released. ...
A gala party has been planned
for ·the heavy set, raspy-voiced
actor in about two weeks, when
he wlll beltonored for his 50 years
Iii films aifd bis approaching 70lh
birthday. The party is Oct. 1 at
the. Disneyland Hotel all(l is
sponsored by the Orange CoUnty ·!'r .. sClub.
bably pocketing.··
The controversial Santa Ana
supervisor's blast followed a
milder attack on the Orange
County Narcotics Of£icers As·
sociation by Supervisor
Laurence Schmit.
While Schmit's attack on the
a5SOCiation was tame when com·
pared to Battin's the Garden
Grove supervisor said he
believes the association's reluc-
tant'e indicates to him "they pro--
test too loudly."
··I have learned that one of the
people who constructed the as-
S()('iation's attack against me in
the press is the same person who
handled the disbusement or
funds and the bookeeping (or
one of the accounts we planned to
audit," said Schmit.
The attack he mention$1 was
the Narcotics Officers Associa-.
tion·s allegation that he is en-
dangeringthe Ii ves or undercover
narcotic agents by discussing the
controversial court funds and in-
sisting t hat they be audited.
Schmit's concern, raised in
Superior Court, is over a $20,000
investigative slush fund.
UPI T.....,_.• <"
RESCUED FISHING BOAT CAPTAIN WELCOMEO HOME
Seven of Eight Aboard Capsized Boat.Were Saved
Shark Water
Big Fish Chase Divers Out
"
SAN PEDRO (UPI) -Divers searching for a
missing fisherman were chased out of the water by
sharks following the sinking of a 60-foot commercial
fishing boat one mile off Point Fermin, the Coast
Guard r eported.
( The Coast Guard s aid Tuesday a passing vessel
rescued seven of lhc eight crewmen aboard the St.
Joseph almost immediately. The mi ssing man. Vito
Sapienza, was feared drowned when he became en·
tangled in fi shing nets under the capsize~ craft.
The Coast Guard cutter Point Evans and two
helicopters combed the waters off Point Fermin until
dark but no trace of the man was found.
•
Los Angeles city lifeguard vessels and the Coast
Guard ferried divers to the scene but they were called
back because of large numbers of sharks in the area .
"''' ,,,
Tip Assisted Ford
In Eluding Sara
By HELEN THOMAS
WASHINGTON <UPI)
President Ford heeded a spur-o(-the-moment request from the
Secret Service not to plunge into
a crowd outside a hotel in San
Francisco seconds before a
BROWN SIGNS
NEW GUN LAW..,.,\5
woman (ired a pistol shot at him,
a White House s pokesman said
today.
Presa Secretary Ron Nessen
told re~rters that Ford skipped
shaking bands with the throng
outside the St. Francis Hotel
Monday because the Secret
Service at the last minute ex-
pressed concern for the Presi·
dent's safety.
Ford'' always'' listens when the
Secret Service makes an on -the-
apot secu'rity susiiestion, Nessen
said. That might have Saved his
life . N~sen said the crowd across
the :-treet from the hotel entrance
-where Sara Jane Moore stood
with her pistol -was "one or the
crowds the Secret 5ervi.ce sug-
gested the President might well
pass up. The President passed it
up ."
lnstt>ad or his usual style of
pressing close aud shaking
hands, Ford Wailed (or the Secret
Service to open the door or his
bulletpl-oof limousiile and waved
to the crowd.
The shots rang out, missing
Ford and ricocheting orr to
wound a taxi driver nearby.
Nessen said Ford is satisfied
with his Secret Service protec-
tion and wlll shake hands with the public when he travels lo
Chicago next week.
He has also expresse4 disap--
proval of special municipal court
funds that are channeled into at
least £our city police depart·
ments, including Laguna Beach
and San Clemente.
Schmit has insisted the pay·
ment into the funds by ®fe!\:_
dants is legalized extortion and
that they rightfully belong in the
county treasury.
In response to the supervisor 's
allegations, the Narcotics As·
sociation charged h·e ·was un·
dermining all investigations and
<See FUNDS, Page A2l
* * * SuperVi.sors
Subpoenaed
By Battin .
'Jndicted Orange County
SUperviaor Robert Battin laid
some paper on his rour fellow
supervisors today -subpoena$
for them to appear al his court •
hearing Friday.
That is when Battln's attorney
Matt Kurilich will attempt to
quash the indictment brought
against the Santa Ana supervisor
last month by the Orange County
Grand Jury.
The indictment alleges that
Battin made improper use or his
staff in his 1974 ill -fated try for
the Democratic Party's nomina-
tion for lieutenant governor.
The subpoenas or Supervisors
Ralph Diedrich, Thomas Riley,
Ralph Clark and Laurence
Schmit were.served in part late
Tuesday afternoon.
Also subpoenaed by Kurilich to
appear at the hearing were Coun·
ty Counsel Adrian Kuyper and
assistant personnel director
Robert Shelton. ·
OIL REPOKTS
BOOST DOW
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
stock market, spurred by "hopes
OPEC members would approve
only a moderate oil price in·
crease. closed broadly higher to·
day in moderate trading on the
New York Stock Exchangt•.
The Dow .Jon es industrial
average, up more than 12 poinL'i
earlier, gained aheaQ.6.34 points
to 826.19. I.ate profit taking cut
into gains. Advances led declines
by about a IO·tO·threc margin.
<Tables, 87 J.
Price s · were hi g her in
moderat e trading on the
American Stock Exchange.
Co ast
Weathe r
The bla s t furnace
weather should cool doWn
Thursday. with some ear·
Jy C'Oasta\ rog cutting the
high mark to the middle
70s along the shoreline.
Inland it 'll still be hot . in
the mid 90s .
I NSIDE TOD!\ 't'
A group of Tennessee boys
JO to 14 attempted to extort SJ
million. A juvtnile Officer
blames too much crime on ·
televi.rion. A.f.
M't-IW¥1c:• _,.,
L't~.r ... .
""""'' --~--kn E~P ...
Ellt.n.1-"' .. _. -··--..........
1 ............. -.. -..
Index
Al ,._.itw1 41 ., ... i., ... ,
A12 ~9o• .,
Al Mwtulil l'IMlll ..
Cll Nlllt!MI Not-. At
Cit 0r-.. c.Mw A,._11 A11 ,.... C:l..J .. ~ .,.. ... , ,,, ..... ....,. ., .... , o............ , •
C:...10 ---~'"" ~··· •IT~ I I Alt~ • .... ,bl, Cl .......... _
•
. •
• I
,,
1
.. 1
~--....
.. -·' • •
"' DAJLVPILOT N
' ClubJ • Bay
Prepares
Ca""val ·.i
Cella Contract
.. Probe Ordered l
Continued scrutiny of a con·
troversial county contract
awarded to a health tesUng nrm
linked to Dr. Louis Cella was or·
dered by the Orange County
Board of Supervisors Tuesday.
The contract covering physical
examinations of county
employes and prospective
employes was given to the
Orange County Health Testing
Institute (QCHTI> by a un-
animous board vote.
Later, it was revealed that
Cella, a political confidant to four
supervis ors, was an OCHTI
founder in 1973.
It was also noted that the in-
stitute operates from facilities
partially owned by the multi-
millionaire Santa Ana physician.
Cella and his attorney said the
doctor had divested himself of
any financial interest in the non-
profit corporation six months
before the contract was awarded.
HEAT •..
painters turned out. Ufeguards
reported August.size crowds
along public sands on the Orange
Q>ast, with 30,000 on the Hunt·
ington Beach state beach. and
about 8,000 C?n th~ city beach.
· "Most were kids and youths
playing hookey from school or
college,·· a lifeguard said, add.in~
that the surf was a temptmg
three to five feel.
The lifeguard predicted "ex·
tremely. heavy'' surf today, from
seven to nine feet, with rip cur·
rents from the breakers making
surfing hazardous.
Al Newport Beach it was "ex·
tremely smoggy" Tuesday but
the surf, from three to five feet,
was well formed, and a crowd of
1.1,000tumed out.
Lifeguards at Newport, expect·
ing another dose of swi, surf, and
surfers today, put out the yellow
caution nag. A guard explained
that although the riptides are
slight, there are not enough men
to man the lifeguard towers, and
• the guards want s'lrimmers to
1.akecare.
Two WoDJen
Assaulted
In Newport
Newport Beach Police are
searching today for two men sus-
pected of committing two
separate rapes in Newport Beach
Tuesday. e.rirstincident-occWTed-ear~
ly Tuesday morning in an apart-
ment on 16th Street iD Newport
Heights. The victim, a 25-year-
old teacher, told police the man,
believed to be about 20, entered
her bedroom through an open
window.
She told police he threatened
her with a knife -li11:hUy cut-
ting her finger and chin -before
raping her. He then left through
the window in which he entered.
Police said.
Thesecondrapeoccurredabout.
10:30 a.m. when a 21-year-old
student was attacked in her
apartment on Bay Avenue on the
Balboa Peni.bsula. She told police
the man, thought to be between
00 and~ years old, came through
the open front door and said he
wu ''hiding from !JOmebody. ''
When she asked him to leave,
be struck her With his fist. pushed
her into the bedroom and raped
her, she told police.
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weld ~~ ..... """'.,... Jock R. Curley ..,~~-o.-·~
ThOmes IC9t'Vll .....
ThOmas A. Murpt'llrw -·-
•
Qllirin H. l.oOt Rkhlrd P. ~II ~ ~-.......... ~
None the less, it was known
that the contract's backgi;eund
was being investigated by Dis·
trict Attorney Investigators and
was lot~r scrutlnited by the
Grand Jury. -
And from county Health
Department ofri cials came com·
plaints that their recommends·
tions to keep physical exams
within the department had been
ignored by the decision makers.
When given a chance lo have
his say publicly on the con·
troversial contract Tuesday.
county Health Orficer Jotm Philp
avoided ils most controversial
aspects.
t.omter dinnere, a parade, a :
carnival •ad the pri"" awwof •' m~ Cadillac ..re hlahUibto of the :
• 2'IJI aaauil Balboe Bay Lioo)s •
...... Lol>lter Ban be~ l"rldoy : alibi lb Newport . , ~: • Loblt,t dlaaers, at ~ Hch •:
will be Sold throughout the thrM-: d~ event, whi_ch la a LICl111' fWld · : l°lle :.t.;J'.rol~ for Services foe ;
' Per1on1 purchasing din.oers : ue elllibl<ffor the prize Codlllo
IDddozeoOI other pri ....
In a written report requested
by the supervisors, Philp merely
reviewed outside contractors
who had bid on the proposal and
suggested that his department
monitor OC HTl 's medical
performance.
A Really Wide Seleetfoa
1'bia year'• lobate-bake ls also
the kicllolf e,l'ent for the bleenten, ·
nial celebraUon In Corona det '
Mar. A parade with a blceaten."
nial theme wlll wind tta way'
throuch the center of town Satur-
d11 morning, beginning at9 •·"!· . at Poli!settla A venue and con·
cludiQa at the lot>ater bake site.
MacA'rthur BOulevard and
Pacific Coast l!ighway, abOut'
two hours l~er. · The ·board endorsed Ph1lp's
suggestion and took it one step 1
further.
In addition to ordering medical
sc rutiny of OCHTI's
performance. County Ad ·
ministrative Officer Robert
Thomas was asked to audit the
contract's cost effectiveness.
The only thing missing from this ph~ of
Auto Row is Dodge dealer Cal
Worthington and his tru•ty dog Spot. Or
an elephant or two. Actually, the rows of
cars are backed up on Coast lllgbway
through Newport Beach due to repair
work on Coast Highway bridge just south
cl Dover Drive ne'ar Reuben E! Lee float-
ing steamboat restaurant.' Traffic 11fcked
up at times Monday to the A1che• '
Overj>ass. •BQttleneck may be cleared 1
eventually by. 'new J!ridge currently µnde'r
study. + •
-·· • The pafade wm lnelude 130 •'.
noata, bands and dignitaries:
·Newport Beach Mayor Donald
Mcinnis is the grand manhal-.
and the Newport Harbor High Schocil Band will serve as the
hootbai>d.
Two weeks ago, Tilomas and
his staff praised the board's
awarding of the contract to
OCHTI and scolded health de·
partment officials for their
behind the scene statements.
City ErrorNot .
Durin& the weekend, " carnival, with rides and booths,
set up by various Uons Clubs.~
will be held at the s1lf'. Houn ot•.
the lobster bake and c8rnlval are'
5p.m.to11 p.m'. Ft<day, Dl/Ofl to
about 10 p.m. Saturday and noon
to9p.m. Su~d9y .
DA Cl.ears Plannen on Delaney's Project
Tuesday, board of supervisors
chairman Ralph Died.rich said
the aftermath of the contract
award bad been an embarrass·
ment to himseU and other board
members.
Diedrich told l>tuip there was
little to be gained by additional
debate of the issues raised by the
health officer's department.
But, he added as a warning,
Philp and others should raise is·
sues at the time the board ts mak·
ing a decision and not after the
1ecision bas been made.
Fro.Page Al
PORNO ...
fessor Michael Holland spent the
afternoon in an intellectual spar-
ring exercise.
At one point, the theater
lawyer tried to win asreement
from Holland that the story line
-of "Devil in Miss Jones" bore a
strong parallel to a book written
by Je¥ Paul Sartrei But the pro·
fessor would not draw such a con·
clmion.
McDaniel then asked the pro·
lessor his impressions of two
scenes in " Deep Throat'' where
explicit sex acts were depicted
and the sound track contained
parodies of popular television
commucials. He asked Holland
about the humor in the scenes.
"I guess I must have missed
that," the educator said.
His testimony ended on one
note of agreement with his inter·
rogator:
Holland conceded that experts
ln the field of literature would
doubtless disagree on the merits
of the two films.
Fro.Page Al
FUNDS •.•
endangering the lives of agents.
After making the allegations in
a letter to Schmit officers of the
association refused to elaborate
on them or to explain how the
supervisor's activities were en-
dangering officers· lives.
Today, Battin jumped on
Schmit's bandwagon and took his
!1tlack one step further by alleg.
tng the fund s are being spent by
persons he failed to identify .
SLA Spinoff?
BylULARY KAYE
Dftr1e0anrl"li.tsun
An investigation by the Orange
County District Attorney's office
has turned up no evidence of
criminal conduct on the part of
Newport Beach city staff stem-
ming from an error on Delaney's
Cannery Village project.
Deputy District Attorney Bill
Evans said today that the in-
vestigation, prompted by
persons opposing Fran Delaney's
$1.8 million project, is over 'Ptd
that no criminal charges will be
filed . .
"Of course, the door is always
open for citizens to file civil suits.
but we've determined that no
criminal intent was involved in
CIA Snooped
In Letters
For20Years
. WASHINGTON CUP!) -A
Senate committee said today the
CIA for nearly 20 years illegally
opened -and IS!otograpbed -
the mail of well·known groups
and individuals, including
Richard M. Nix<>n, Martin
Luther King Jr., Nobel Prizewin-
ners and one letter from the com·
mittee chairman to his ..
Sen . Frank Church (D·ldaho)
chairman of the Senate Seleci
Committee on Intelligence said·
evidence so far showed thai Nix·
on was not aware of the practice
when he w8-s in the White House.
"The President did not know
that the mail was being opened ••
Church said. '
A committee spokesman later
told reporters that just one le~ter
of Nixon's, addressed to him
from abroad, was intercepted on
June l, 1968, while he was cam·
paigning for the presidency
which he won in November of
that year.
The spokesman was unable to
say whether the letter came from
a Communist bloc country
although CIA witnesses have
said the program began as one to
screen communications with
persons behind the Iron Curtain.
Group Urges Patty
To Adopt 'Silence'
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The group. which claimed 12.
Patricia Hearst was urged to ·members, accused Miss Hearst's
''adoptthetacticsofsUence'' and attorneys of withholding the
refuse lo cooperate with her at· message from her. ·
torneys in a communlque from a The FBI agent on duty here
group claiming to be part or the said today be had notheanloltbe mywtmous New World Libera-aroup before.
lion Front. (Related lltories. A.s, llut lnvesti1ators have been
D2> • tooldnl" Into the posalbillt)' that
the mistake,'' Evanssaid.
The investigation involved the
error that was revealed at the
Aug. 25 city council meeting. Op-
ponents to the project, led by
Jolm Klllgsley, pointed out that
the vote taken in January ap·
proving the project included only
three aye votes, while. four aye
votes are needed on a project of
that type. I .
Delaney's Cannei')' village is a
proJ>Osed project consisting of a
restaurant.commercial complex
on the Lido Peninsula.
Opponents to the· plans are
primarily mobile home residents
who would be displaced . if
Delaney builds the complex.
Attorneys for the opponents
discovered the flaw in the voting
record and filed the complaint
with .the District Attorney'' of.
fice.
Evans explained that based oq
the complaint flied, investig~tors
were probing the possibility 'of a
"conflict of int~resi, or even
more serious, criniinal motive"
on the part of ci~y officials W?d/or
council merribers.
He said. however, that the er-
ror appeared to. be inadvertent
and that a letter stating the find-
ings bad been sent to the com-plainants. ·
As far as the future of
Delaney's project, tl1e entire
round of hearings will begin all
over again on Oct. 2, when the
planning commission will rehear
project plans.
From there, the project Will be
beard at the city council level
and then the Regional Coastal
Commission as the last stop.
However, the delays have been
costly both for developer
F)'ances Delaney and al.so resi-
dents of the mobile home park in
the direct line of the proposed
construction.
This week, dozens cl resident$
of the mobile home park reeeived
notification that their ~ti w~re
being raised from $85 per month
to $180 per month, effective Oct.
I .
Delaney blamed the rent bike
entirely on the cost of the delays. .' .
c
Meeting Set
On Transit
Questions regarding the future
of transportation in and through·
the Harbor Area will be dis ..
cussed Thursday in • Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce.
Town Meeting session at the.
Balboa Bay ClllJI.
Chief speaker at the 7:30 a.m:
event will ·be W.F. Pond acting_·
district director of CalTrW, the
agency formerly known as ~
California Division of Highways ...
Their plans for the Upper
Ne"'JK)rl Bay Bridge, the Corona-
deltMar Freeway, Pacific Cout .,..
Hifhwa.)' and Bonita Canyon ·
Road will be discussed and open
for questioning. Juice, coffee and"
rolls will be served at $2.25 per·· 1 person. .
CLOSEOUT SALE Soccer Balls 6.95 up
"ABCO" Brand Warm-up
Suits -Reg. 24.95
Sale Price Tops 8~95 Pants
6.95
·Wilson Tennis Shorts .
Reg. 15.95 Sale Price 8.95
All Sales Subiect To Stock
011 HalJd
wilaon-Dunlop-BGnci'oft-Davls
Yonex T kli'lis Rackets
Tennis Dress
l
Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts ..
& Shorts
Bbsketballs 5.95 to 31.95
Footballs Juniors-
Intermediates-Full Size
7.95 to 28.95
Volleyballs 6.95 to 21.95
Playground Balls
5.95
2.25 to
Racquet Balls & Racquets
.Penn-Wilson-Dunlop
Balls
Tennis
Soccer Shoes ?.95 to 24.50
Football Shoes
' '
•
, .
A communique addressed to the New World LlberaUan Front,
lhelailednewspaperheireuwu which bu taken responaiblllty
Heelved Tuesday by televllllon for a number of terrorilt boDll>-'
llaUonKGO. ings, was spawned by the SYDI· Racket Sfri.nning •
Tennis Shoes ladies & Mens
10.95 to 28.95 • •
· Tbe communique From the bloneseLlbereUonArmy. i •r Ba k b II hoe ."Pooplo'1 l"orce1 New Wodd. Min Hearst waa lddnaped by · • I et a S S 9. 95
Lil>erallon Front Robert Emmitt the Sym~ton .. e Liberation Ariny Bice Parts-11fe5. T· .L-S Burns Cont1n1ent" oald the • on Feb. 4, 197•, but later pro-'•-
'""'1>-bld dellv,ertd the ,,,.,..aage claimed her aile1lan~ to the ter-28.95
to Mias Heant 1 a1tome7s Mon-rorla~up • R•p -Lrf daJ. That wu the d11 before she The 21.year-old dauCbter J>f >ur.. Runni -Shoel
owweln an ,tlidavltthat1hebad llaqdolph and Catlwrlne Hurst -7'"-~----..... --------1--------~-..-------1 bemf<ftedtocooperatawltb · -wu~tedTllundayllldlabe-n... '
terron1to who ~ldn•Ptd be lni lnnearb7RedwoodClty ..,_ 9 ti & Clalll SllUy 538 Cfttar 641-1919
-.tllanltmontha.,... ~ SM Mateo County Jail. ?:.l••••••••••••••••'-ml.im•----~•.;,.•mmml.S
to • "
---•• .. -
I
•
•
•
•
-,
·~99 sofa
Mellallllng.lo•11••t; $199
Melching cllelr, $109
M9tclling ott-n; $59
End table, $59
CocldeU table, $51
Read~ for easy .assembly
, With AC>~ tools. -• •
•
• #
•
Casµal gr~uping for
den or family room
(
The fftllng la caaual 19! contemporary In this
comfortable and Inviting group. Loose seat and
back cushions of polyurethane foam are covered
in a handsome olefin.fiber of natural-tone ·
'stripes. Ta~l~fl9lshed In warm wood
tOnes to matc.,.h ~~beam accents of
upholstered•PI"'° " use rourl:omren~q~y ·
Time Payment Plan.· .
..
'
Closeout!
s1a&
Contemporary •tried sofH
fit in well with many room
decors. No-sag seat spring
construction, ball casters.
Stain-resistant Hercul.on•
olefin in earth-tone plaid or
solld brown vinyl.
Not shown: solid brown vinyl
loveseat, $136
Sorry, not available outside normal deliyery area. PhoM for details.
Qu.ntlties limJt:ed on clo_1eout ~erchandlae.
I
•
.
'
..
•
• " r ..
Sale! Save on
steel belts. ·
ReU11)t Stffl. Featurn 2+2 bla1 belted con1tructon of polynt•r ~rd• 1nd ateel bell1. In the wide 71 1erte1 proflfe. Whltew1ll1 •
No tra~e-ln required.
11nl alzo R .... -S.le price +tec1 .... Ti,. •lz• Reg. price
9711-13 29.00 25.00 1.95 G78·14 35.00
E711-14 35.00 28.75 2.44 G78·15 39.00
F711-14 35.00 28.75 2.58 H78·15 39.00
•
Sale price +fH. x
28.75 2.74
31.25 2.81
31 :25 3.02
'
• •
•
Save. $201 Stop Action ®
drum brake overhaul*
4688
Dress up your car,
pickup or van with
custom wheels
Reg. 66.88
Here'• whit you get: •Inspect brake springs
• ln~I new JCPe!'loeyStop • Inspect master cyllnder
Action• linings on 4 wheels • Inspect, adjust parking brake
•Rebuild all 4 wheel cylinders •Inspect rear oil seals ror leaks
• Resurface four drums • Bleed end refill brake system
• Repack Iron! wheel bearings • Road tesl car
•Lubricate shoe contacts · 'Most American, many
•Inspect front grease seals foreign cars.
No points!
No conctenser! 6499
Moee~EC'" electronic
breakerless. ignition
Keeps your car in "top tune" year after year.
An electronic sensing unit replaces points and
condenser. Dramatically Increases your car's
performance, extends spark plug life.
~
31 99
15•8
"Mojock .. ,M off-road
whee l in popular
· al1-whi:e spoke
design. Extra strong
construction.
3999
15•8
Sale! Save on compact space-savers now!
"
Perspnal portable
Sale~&&
Reg. 11.lis.111ectc and whit• peraonel' poila .... with 9•• screen (meas. dlag.).
Solid state chassis, monopole VHF/UHF
11ntenna. White plastic cabinet measures
only 10" high, 13%" Wide, 10" deep. •
., Sale 14495
Reg. 189.95. 4.5 cu. It .
compact refrigerator
has.separate freezer,
translucent crisper.
9.5 cu. ft . refrigerator,
reg. 219.95. Sale 194.95.
8.2 cu. It, chest freezer, AOjl. 229.95 Sale 204.95
Sele pric• effective through Sundoy, September 28, 1975
: I '
Sol'f1, not evallable outside normal dell••rr •r••· Phone for detslla.
Save 31 95
Reg. 239.95. Sale $208.
Compact washer Is 21"
wide. 3 wash cycles, weter
level selection. No perma-
nent Installation; hooks to
kitchen fauceL
-~···
Save 21 95
Reg . 149.95. Salo $128. Compact
electric dryer is 21 " wide.
2-cycle timer for permanent
press, automatic cool·down.
No venting needed. · ·
Operates on 115V •
•
•
•
• •
. I •
•
•
• • • ~ ...
I.
l
~ "
"
' {
' • '
•
• .
. • • I
!
l
i~ii Beleb(714)'892-m1. .HARB.o~ CEtj.TER. Costa Mesa ,Ci14) 64~1. ., .
~ . . • • ... ' ,
l • • '
. . •
• •
A8
' I AILY PIJ,OT EDITORIAL PAGE
· Boosi foro...Upper Bay
Final legislative approval and the governor's
signature have paved the way for a mortgage .
burning party for the new Upper Newport Bay
wildlife preserve.
L e gislation carried by State Sen. Dennis
Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) breezed past the r e-
: quired committee and floor a pprovals over recent
· months without a bitch.
It brought forth $3.4 million as the final payment
to tbe Irvine Company for that estuary which once
figul"<ld in one controver sy and court .battle after
,.another.·
The cas h came from a fund containing repara-
tions paid by oil companies for tbe Santa Barbara
blowout disaster -an appropriate source of cash to
assist in tbe preservation of the 'valuable estuary.
Yet, even though there bas to be a beady feeling
of success about tbe commitment of funds for
p urchase, all observers and principals in-the project
acknowledge tbe toil which still must be faced.
So far, the raw components have yet to be as-
sembled among diverse agencies for a government
mechanism that can function smoothly to effect
seriously needed restoration of tbe estUary.
Dredging of a large area silted up by floods and•
t he cleaning up of waters draining into the bay from a
. huge watershed are two matters which must be ad· i dressed as quickly as possible.
The projects will take time,and IDQ\l8Y as well 8\1
I an unprecedented coordinated approach by agencies ! representing all levels of government. •
! So far a cooperative spirit and sense of purpose
! already have developed.
. The Department of Fish and Game Is tbe official
' landlord for the preserve and its planners already are
al work developing a pilot dredging project.
·' It is obvious that with the department's exteulve
plans and limited budget, more special legislation
likely will be needed to fund the critical restoration
job. ' ' -
The next need appears to be the creation of an or-,
ganlzation out of tbe many governmental jurlaillc-
tions involved to proceed on a coordinated, construc-
tive planning and funding program.
Jet Safety
Appeals by s!JOlce!!meo for more than 1,800 resi-
dents worried about safety problems posed by Jet
flights over their homes came before Newport Beach
city official~ 'this week·-'l(_itb .demands for prompt
!IUPport from the city. ·
But tbe three councilmen present decided to hold
olt action until Oct. 14, citing their diminished ranks
from alis'ences and tbe'ne:M for addil.ional'testimooy
to give the!D a soil\! basls1or any city action.
Certalnly tbe residents who consider their grave
concerns as valid --.Id have liked an instant decision
by tlie councillor tOtal endorsement of the campaign
'tobave tbe •afety issue examlned by the federal gov-
ernment.
The allegations are serious. They cite asserted flilwi in 'equipment· and manpower allocation at
Orange County Airport, and tbe data uses strong
terms with ominous predictions of serious crashes
and possible loss of life.
But tbe city h&11 lj!arned from bitter experience
that it 'ba~_.to marshal its 'facts and prepare its cas e
tborougbl)! il it hopes to win any points with the
various government entities -in t.ltis case, the FAA
-in\>olved in the Orange County Airport.
N
I AHandgwi Lung Caneer Conn,ection? . I . .
I I For Every
' I A .
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
g New Fallout Theory
1 rnenc~-
~ [ ..... _A_R_T_u_o_P_P_E _ _,)
The President is still gamely
plunging into crowds, although
he now reportedly"Wears a bullet·
proof vest. •an.y feel he
shouldn't. Plunge, that is.
But crowd plunging is one. of
the most im-
portant duties " of a Presi-
.. d e n t · ,
particularly a
President up
for reelection.
I'd be w.fUing to wager
that C.G.M. (Gus, Sept.19)
bas Dever been anY'!itiere
near a classroom where
the teacher is trying
desperately to provide
individualized instruction
for 30·PlllS youngsters.
Vi&t any classroom and
you -may chance your
tune!
M.E.C.
GIWny Gu<emt11•11l1•r•1ubmlltltd IW
......... Mii .. "' M C•a.urily "'!!Kl .. wt-ol , ... JWWIJNI,.•. S..... .,.... Pll -w•oi-v Gut, O•lly Piiot.
•
WASHINGTON -The fallout
fr9'1' the nucle~1 testing iii the
" l•ll• 1950s and ear y 1960s may be
c8uli.Jig a belated ei>idemic of
lung cancer in the northern
hemisphere. The United States,
for-example, has had a dramatic
increase.in lung cancer cases.
J~. a chilling ne w study.
respected researcher Dr. John
Gofman Warns t,hat
tbe lun g
ca ~nce r
eP i 1d em i c
c ould b e
se verely ag-
gravated by
the growth of
the nucle ar It is the only
way be c an
asses s the
mood of the
country.
nation, including litUe children,
goes to bed each night un -
defended, unprotected and un-Pow er i n · armed! dustry. · .
Up to now, a timid Congress The pluton~um !all~ut frc;>m
has taken but one s~ to sotve·· ~st nuclear explos1ons is having
the problem -and that IJ>,the., !<•d~dly Impact tod8;Y, accord·
wrong direction -by banning . ing, fo pr. 1 Gofman ,s theory, ''How are you?'' s.ays the
President, shaking.a band.
''Fine," says the owner of the
hand.
cheap • • S atu rd ay· night because of a 13· to JS-year latent
"l"!"ials ... Thus only well-to-do perloil before the effects becom e
c1t.iiens and successlul hlt men evident. The President then knows the
country is feeling fine. can exercile their inalienable
right to bear arms. (And ask
_JV~G a l!_ulletll.~ vest_~ • .Y.QWJelf, wou]!:l you_prefer to be
is certaiilly a help while de-lined up in the slghtsO ra sUc-
termining that the country's feel-cessful or an unsuccessful hit
ing fine. But this is no time for man?)
half-way measures. If all Americans are to enjoy
The Secret Service has sug:-their inalien3ble right to bear
gested that the Presideni. when arms, it is up to Congress to pro--
crowd plunging, be encased in a vide them with the arms to bear.
bulletproof steeL bOx with a small For a modest $5 billion or so,
aperture thro~gh which be could there is no reason the govem-
extend his arm. White House ment couldn't provide every
aides, however. reluctanUy re· man, woman and child in the
j ected the proposal as country with an inexpensive but
"detrimental to his image.•• efficient handgun under The
A more ,practical alternative is Equal Opportunity Act.
for the President to carry a J
crowd of carefully screened, IMAGINE the confidence the
loyal, trustwor thy adherents President would feel as he
with him wherever he goes so plunged into a crowd of 10,000
that when the urge to plunge gun~waving admirers. each re-
overwhelrns him, he would have ady to drill the first person who
a safe crowd into which to do so. made a suspicious move. No
Unfortunately. this limited more accurate method of assess-
sampllng might tend to destroy ing the country's mood could be
the scientific accuracy of crowd devised.
plunging as a mood assessment Thus we see that neither the
technique. President nor any American
THE ANSWER, then, lies in
the touchy issue of gun control.
Tcxlay, fewe r tbao JOO million
~meric an s own g uns. This
means thal more than half the
feels safe and secure until every
American is armed to the teeth.
We can confidently expect the
support Of The N ationa1~rune As·
soci ation in passing this i.mpor·
tant gun legislation.
SIN,CE• MOST of the at-
mospheric testing was done in
the late I950s-and ear-ly 1960s, the
latent-.period is endi~ now. "For
the USA alone," aeciared Dr.
Gorman, "it js 't:stimated that
116,000 persons have been com-
mitted to plutonium-induced lung
cancer. In the entire northern
hemisPbere. the total number is
1,000,000persons.''
He contends grimly that the
.
(JACK ANDERSON)
"'fallout "may have already creat.
ed, irreversibly, one d.tbe prime
health problems of our era.•• The
plutonium from nuclear pawer
plants, he w ams, will increase
the menace to future genera·
tions.
Even if the nuclear power in·
dustry •·contains its plutonium
99:99 percent perfectly,'' he pre-
dicts. "jt will still be responsible
for 500,000 additional fatal lung
cancer s annually. This would
mean increasing the total death
rate in the United States by 25
percent each year, since2,000 ,000
persons currently die from all
causes combined.''
The nuclear lndmtry, whiCh
has invested billions in the pn:r
!iteration of nucl~r plants
throughout the eollnt.ry..,-baa.-
sought to downplay the evidence
that plutonium· may be linked lO
cancer.
THE INDUSTRY cites the tu" ~ding s, for example, of Dr.
Bernard Cohen of Pittsburgh
University. Cohen points out that
lung cancer has been increasing
s ince 1945, long before the
plutonium could have had a:n ef4
feet.
,Most.scientists believe the lung
c·tU:tcer epidemic bas been caused
by increased air pollirtion, not
Let· the Wackos Fight It Out I
'
Tot.be Editor:
· Ah, the cast is complete. Now,
let's dig a bu&e pit in Las Vegas
and throw in I) Patty Beant 2)
Eldridce Cleaver 3) Lynette
Fromme 4) a Piggie S) ttie
Japonese Red Army 6) Marshal
K7 7) the Harrlaes 8) an •
American Nul 9) a Honkie 10)
Tlmotby Leary 11) a w.-...... 12) Arlfat ., the
PLO U) ChJ1ff JI-14) a
!aocilt inMct H) Bill Walton IC)
tbe llouae \bat Jack llullL Then
W9'll let them n.JJt it out and
.,_,, tbe aurvlvor Kille of the
Waclot.
Of eoune, the telvlaion tiehla
..Wbewortbaf-,_,,
Y.REMLAP
•
( MA~B9X .}
Is it poa&lble lo put a
moratorium on aald pl11111 in or-
der to reque.ot propeijy' add doc own.., to Jet a permit fl.Qlll the ,
~ <itartin1 with Newport) to
,ta1ceourdo11outfromea.m. until
8 p.m, for a lee of S2ll a yean
·Dael Ws sound feaolble? Such .
Pll'1Dila are luued to IW'fen,
buiine8ies, parldn1, --not to
.....Uan m1rrl11e U-oc
Babine 'and came .,,nd
aotomobile,. I . ' 'taken'1iwal/lrom Nj!Wplltt Beach
< , • clUzens! The eify ~ISlmcll plans to ~91 PERMITS <!'<>Pl '"°'!Id -a uw (another~ IAl'ban clop ~ a year's license m exdlange ltolO be;lches at all1!Jnes. This Is
ltir. the paper, plus-.a1UtUe plastic a Poor excuse for the council's
pail and phovel (dolllie baller). inability to cope with beach pro-
You know we have •few people blems.
like President Ford and Nr. Nix-Write or call your council'llan
on who take their dopon beaches now-don't let this pass.
too -as clld ~ennedy -we don't DIANE EI.DEil wanttobetooslerlle,ordowe? • •
~once bandies its dog and ;:,:::--:---------..,,
linimal aituaUons in a far more Wirks
humane way by p.....,ting dog·
g;e ~mlort stations en streets.
I rather doubt that I.be doc
i\clll(llatlon wouJd be heavy from
8 p.m. to 6 a.m. anywo.y. But Yolt
eanbetonit-l'llbetberel -
-'' 'HELEN HUTCHI!SSoN
Belld!B-
Tot.be EdltOr<·
Do you enJoy wa.IIdnc )'OUr dog
en I.be beacb T
Tblt J>lriture wlll -.i' be
.,._ ,,
•
·-
.-.:i· . !Wl"
'Now that'• wh« / c.
•tn.wt•
plutonium, Dr. Cohen asserts. ~e turned up evidence, for example,
criticizes Dr. Gofman's basic ·that $300' million had been paid
data and Contends that ''99 out out for unnecessary sur.geries.
of 100 experts In the field would Other peUents have re'cei\'ed in·
not agree'' with Gof,man. feri6r "care froin doctors WhO are
Dr. Gofman•s research. more interested in their
lloWever, cannot lie JigbUy dis· · medicald eligibility tlwt lbeir
missed. He is professor emeri{us health. · ' 11 •
of medical physics at the Yet the new HEW Secretary is
University of California. continuing to mail out p>edicaid ._checks, despit:e.evidence that the
states are Dot keePing a proper
Wftcb on abuses and, therefore,
are not complying with the law.
From his own HEW files, here
lll"e a .few typicaJ, cobfideoUal
tilidings : •
MEDICAID ABUSES
As one of bis !irst'acts as the new Secretary of Health, Educ&4
tion and Welfare, David }!lat .. thew~ indulged in'a1iul~ ciyif m obedience. l ~ ' ' He is required bylawtoreduce -JN COLORADO. HEW in-
federal medic aid funds to :if.ales vestigators found that ·~no physi-
which do not re view hoW the ciao or psychiatrist'" serves on
money is spent. The reviews arE llie mental health team. which is
cruc!al to insure that hospitals, supposed to check oll'tbe treat .. •
nursing homes arid mental ~· ment of medicaid paUentA.
stitutions are gi~ J>roPtt .care·• · · -In Rhode Island, the federal
and are not bllldilg the palients iru;ll"ctors were appalled to dia·
ortbegovernment. ' >'" cover that one hospital had not
Yet Matthews )las told complied with 61 of tlie ffl ,....
Congress that, despite lh<!"law, quired records. Docton WI"" far
he won't reduce medics.id funds behind on visits to medicai.il pa·
at this time. He contends that the tients. ~ u,
stat.S are unable to P!!Jice the -In Indiana,__ml!W'...,Dl!O.i!!g
nledi~al'"ripoffs-8114'"1lfat11nr liomes weren 't even lis~"li by the
medicaid cutbacks woWd have state to conduct the reviews that
the effect or crippling the system. are required by law. '" .
, · -Jn '"'Ohio, ••no meaical re-
UNSCRUPULOtJS do<tors and views in mental hoopif/l}s have
hospitals. meanwhile, are been done,'' accord!ncJO a con·
squeezing medicaid money out of fidential report. ' . '
the government by, hospitalizing -And, in Wisconsin, teviews
patients, prescribing m~cines on nursing horries have been ''in·
and performibg operations consistent due to a shortage ol
wit.bOut:rDedicaljustificatidn. . MDs in rural area·s and laCk of
Rep. John Moss, D-Calif., cooperation in urban areas."
,Talk Is Revealing
Thoughts at Large:
The way onet'alks about.others
reveals more of one's own
character than it does oflheits.
The best and briefest argu.
me nt a gainst censorship was
given by Remy de Gourmont,
when he wrote: "Good books are
iITefutable, and bad books rerute
themselves.••
Chronic povei;ty breeds laclt of
self-reliance. and then the poof.
are blamed for bavlne no In·
itiative; which is rather lite blaming an invalid for getting
bed-sores. __ ,
If the nation·'• airlines L
through good times and bad -
can pay their emptoyes enou&h
so that a "no-Upping'" rule ls
strictly eillorced, wby ean'tother
and more consiatently amuent
service industries manage to ·do
tbei;,ame? · -.
A literap prize is an award.
customarily given to a writer in
America before he bas.eaftled II,
and in.Europe after bo no 1"'*"' needs IL 1
Attending a funeral ......Uy, I
recalled the anon)'l'O!llll wit ol
th4l last century who tilid. '' ~
listening to memorial aenrl..,.,
one' can Otlly concl~ thoit. the ~t bope foe mankfnd Is to resur: '
tect ttie dead and -!hi II•·~ Inc."
One of the most cootinually
misused words ls ' "cohort" tor
"confederate'' or ''uaoclate''; a
pencm cannot be a cohort, only a
fl'OU.P can. (The word comes '
\
( SYDNE~ HARRIS)
f ' from the name o( each or the 10
divisions of a Roman legion, COO""
sisting of 300 to 600 men.)
One ean always tell a tnaly
famous person by the fact that at
least 30,0QO persons went to
school with him in the small town ofl,~wberebegrewup,
-
Good citizens who believe in
the death penalty -eye to eye
, with murder<!rs, "'bo believe in It
so much_ that they inflict j\ un-
ilaterally.
' ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
' I
I
r • •
1
•
•
--~~.-~~~~~ .
C·o1intry~
On N o-faalt ..
:.,n11na~ . ,_.,_ -
It tOolt from Jtn to 1 .. -li8ltlbic n ,.... -•• lw
_,--In lblo U.8. to -~ ..... e I ar. Joh __ .. ,,..Mld.-.n--...... -.....
No-1.ataato-ln a-. U•11tb1•u. ....,.., ...... -10 .,..'""'!~!""'------of public-. ~ -'•IMJ!rucelawa IN ID Offeet ill f-~ ••tlllti of' -... Aod Ille 11-
&Ut Un l'°vi"• .D!>-tmaltlawaon-..lloob
do -..-•la•ti-... -lotl!IJ' .... qutet1'1 mr'ta« eoet~.
'~
~
Worth ·
BMJCALLY,GOODNO-FAtJ!;ii'=~-? -Allow• ..,.-'lidlma to" . ...slell ~
bmpitaJ •-• llDd loltlneomo--own inlur-complJIY, regudleu olwllowaa at f!_l!Uatlae aeelclelJt:
-Provides for broader. "''f"' l'eadlly avajlalal~
belu!ftta; ~ ~
-Pl!11·forthe ecetotlheee =-nts bY•ilmlta-ll<ll Oii "~UCe" lawsuits (11tulevict1111•a 4c-to
ClOUltillmoreHrl-•-laflllly-==ledJ. .
, ''YJaTUAQ.Y SvDY IBG= OF tlae piibtic:"-
labor, buaines1, cons~cwpi ... edueatari. pablfc
offleilll, the preu -bis tDdar the COllCop( ti oo-flUlt •
. The notoble exception la Ille ~ llablllb 'bar -and
eloee llW)'ers are beavllY •0111"•1'1l._.ill 1tlie lesill•lorl. IL
IJ more th111 llkely that the-,.J U1blllty bll'.11111 make
sure that pro1re11 In the ltlie lectalatures C011tilluea dla-beartenlntiY slow. .., "" Tbus, bills have beeo.,in&od.-.l illto Coagrtoa -fl.3M
In the Sonata, H.R. llOO ill lbe Jfoaff -•t would push the
stateo lnlo actllli within• apec:lftef time. F.W..g 'fOiuntary
state ac:tloa, a federal system would be lmJ10l!<I.
· DISTASTEFUi, AS ANOl'llEa FEDEllAL "layer",
11111 -m to you, It la obvl..,. thll oe>flult will be a 1001.
10llg time arriving wttbout thla aort ofl'rocldlnJ. •
In the Senate, the oo-fault but has been sent by the Com· moree Committee to the full chamber. In the House, It ts
awaiting a public: outcry from ... America's.motorists and
key beneficiaries. Chances for passage 'are reported touch· and-co. r .. ,:'\
The threat of c:limhi'ft1 ecol haa beonrllled by oppooen·
ts to tho federal &uidellnea -biit 11111 seems to be fading.
lnitlall,y, opponents claimed our auto basur111c:e costs c:ould.
goupasmucb as 17percent; thiawaareviaeddownward to
a rlJe of 4 percent; revlsed.downward-aglln to actual coll
savings of as muCh as 10 pereent, a caleulatk>G comparable
to that of prop0nents of the federal leglJlaUon. An illdepen·
dent, third·party actlllrill etudy said modest dec:reaaee
could be expected. (These projections are based on today's
·COlldltlona.J ' .
ACCORDING TO THE NATION'S largest car Insurer, a
~tber who pays f160 a.ryear for a full cov~rage auto ~llc:y pays about $1Ckiofthat total for-property damage c:ov·
erages ahd about $80 for person._i injury coverages. Using
that figure, auto insurance cost.I could either go dowil $6 a
year or up about $10 a year under the fed._eral guidelines no-
fault law .:-. depending on'1rhose cost estimates you believe.
That cost of less than $1 a mopth'is inconsequential.
What's more, inform~ estimates are that from 60~0 75
per:cent more people will be paid for their losses under oo--
fauJt fllan are presently paid~der the inate I eult system.'
ANY DECREASES OR INCll.EASES IN premiums
-wbuld apply to the penonll injury portion of the total pre-
mium only, l!ec:ause that's whatao-fault affects. • •
· No-fault does not affect the larger Plll1 oOhe premiun,
·the property damage coverages, such as colli1ionlllld theft,
ftte, vandalism, etc. · ~ '~ , •
In essence, all that Congress would be leJjSlltlng would
be federal standards or guidelines which the states tb.~n
wmld meet in their liidividual no-fault laws.
Regulation of the insurance business Would.l'emain wi~
·the states,, There would be no need at all for creation of
another federal bureaucracy to administer a gUidelines·
type law. . .\ ,
COST TO STRESS IT AGAIN, IJ not a factor.
Amertca'S WOtkers had to W81t '37 years for full protec•
tlon under worker's compensation legislatiop . ..Wlll.J"®~the
Aniericiilmot:orist,Wilt• anOpay dunDca·slmilar span of
.procrastination? Will you let the lawyirs so dominate yovr
lives that they ean bottle' up lndeflnlteljr legislation you
know is in your own interest? Who among you speaks for
YOU? ~
MARKET HIGHLIGHTS
INDEXES
Due to late transmission today's listing.
will not appear in the Dally Pilot . -
, •• Nt'Q.· l 'ork 15
Most Arti., ..
· NIW YOlltl( CU-ll'IJ -:TN 1S ,.._ -. 1tw 11DC11t tf'Mtcl • ,,.. Ntw YOftit 9'clf
bcMftgt WHnnda~... 0... o.. ,.._. .. ;\ ..... w• 3SIJ\ • ~
#Mcll'llli.1 Ille' lld • ~·1·• 5'4 -~' Mel ~ •••••• fflji. ..._ .. 1\o\ Glltf • WMrl'I • • •• • • I -'11* • 4'o °"' ,.,..... ....... 12', '°""' + Vt Tt•K9 lllC .. , .... lg,)Ot 2'4 + v. Oii ••••••.•••• t»• :i... + ...
& .ce .. . . . . . "• ""'-+ "'· Mr ~. •. tf;AOO .,,-.;:. ~ ~-• c.:. •• "" .. • ...... """ ... "' 'TtlllU fnstrv ... .. . •.• ~\4· + ht ·~-~ • . • • 9'JOO JN! + ""· McOoft .... • • '1.000 1"" + "' Mid Slit . ... . • •l,«IO ,, + ...
11M c.,, ......... tt,7'1t m +"" ..
. . •
•
~-~~--...................... .....
,.._ .......... ~ ..... ~ .................... ~ .. ~--.!~~~~~~11!1;;.iiiiiiiNio.i;;;;;;iDM.iiiiiii;Y~
NEW YORK. ·STOCK EXCHANGE Wedpetday'•
CleehagP~ Yeu'a ~ Appeu l!lJ'erJ Satwrday
" . . .
'
I
(
•
DAILY PILOT 1976
••
• Tonight's·
; TV Highli hts . -g
Jessel Likes
Chih!Brides
NBC (4) 9:00 -Doctors Hosp.ital. Q: Wiiy did o• kueJ al••:rw liiany 11-,..,..,d girls! A•d wllla Ille V.S. • lmlaor tovohed
ID • Aoollng war, wi. v Ille eomedlu eotertalll·
inl'-M. McAdami, C.ol. (ltet.), Pba•IZ.Art1.
Lesley Warren plays a patient with a his-
. tory of seducing doctors in this episode.
George Peppard heads the cast. A:. Civilians -and :VeterlJIS Admlnlltretion KCET (28) 9:00 -Welfare. A three·
hour documentary on the confusions and
intracacies of the public welfare system
produced by Frederick W1Seman.
i»opital shut-ins, headliolnJ a USO rene called." A
Hearttul ol Love,,. for Whfcb
George baa bad plenty of re-
beaniric. II isn't true about his
marrying only l&-yeor-old &lrla.
''Two of my wives were a year
or two older than 1 wu." he
says. "Lola (Andrews) was my
only 16-year-old bride. Sbe was
the moot beautlfiil girl in New
York when we met and who
CBS (2) 10:00 -Kate McShane. Kate
· defends an old man (Jack Gilford) whose
homemade booby trap kills a burglar.
ABC (7) 11 : :io --"The Sex Symbol."
Connie Stevens plays the Marilyn Monroe
prototype in this drama about a starlet
climbing to the top in Hollywood. Also
featured are Shelley Winters, J ack "
_ could guess then that she was on-
J•ss11. ly 14? 'lbat marriac:e kept my
closest pals in Jokes for some time. My favorite w~..t.
'Georgie couldn't bring his wife to the party tonlght. · \ Carter and Don Murray.
~ 'Sli'im\t!i&..u:r-~ Sbe'sbome teething!" ·
Q: Tell me for sure. Have DlnahSbon aadB1111
Reynolds split? -M•f.l:DtSauve. SeatUe.
TV DAILY LOG
A: As this is wntten, it must be true0 -since
neither Dinah nor Burt have bothered to deny it.
Their friends are hoping they both have a change of
heart.
Q: I was shocked bearing about a node photo of
Jean Harlow showing up in a new11maga11.De. How
much did the pbotocrapber get for the picture?"··
Wednesday
Evening
rnticl111 cladon. Sybil il tmpitaliad
lot tlle .MO)lld time 1llr1 bt1111
blUeitd by lovers, bu! Dntfi lit·
COnltS s.dtlft witll /llf drspll! h1J co.-un ldvU.
Ci) Tiie U111Ud11Wa
Ernst Magus. Minneapolis. ·
A: Not even a credit line. He was identified only
as an MGM studio cameraman who shot the photo
'Glad You Asked That'
by Marilya ...i Hy GcrdMr
of Miss ~arlow when she was an extra and only 17.
0 liifl (i)J (}) Q) larrlla "On
tlle Rold'' Aller a 1aut111t "'nl ol
f nllUIWIY 11rl (CllHt Mote:Kc~llfl
l'll~!ipsl, Blrltt1 is tr1ppr1! by lW!!
dtsperate men wtlo !Of«' him lo
hr1p 111em tstl9f. SlrotMr M1rl111 Apparently, Ken Anger, who gave prints to
and Giiy Bwscy •Isa 1utu.. • • Newsweek and Penthouse, was primarily interest· IJ91 Mnir.l~(Ztlt).,.11t =1 ~in publicizing a new edition of his book, :!'.~dt:>R~ StM ollywood Babylon," published originally in
liJTlltlolllOln Paris some years ago. Anger, a litUe-known writer
~MM: IC) (1't) "Cltl" (m11~J and sometime moviemaker bas had a run of bad ·~:Maiiritl Clllnlitr, Uslil C.ron, breaks. Not too long ago one Ot bia unfinished films, ~CJai ..... (llv) rrec1. "Lucifer Rising," was stolen by a member of the
eridl Wilnuf's ptoMq ~ Manson family, Bobby Beausoleil. The convicted 'i:!I ~ : ,: ~:~~ killer held the reels of celluloid for a ransom of snln:_u pu $2,000. And when Anger couldn't get up the money • . ..,1.... destroyed the film. The Harlow publicity break
a. '*' a.. cou1d make Anger joyous for a change.
NiN:a.. Q: I've beard tbat Doc severtason Of the
JO:OOllJ!,l \P@ llt• 11,s.111111 A -Tonigh&. Show ls such a tJghtW•d, be doesn't even ~w.;,, J:'!: <!!"'.':' 6~ have pockets in bJs suits! Tnle! · Mrs. Marilyn
kwfJ, ..._ iftSlllJ 1M is inl!OWIC ol Grou, Orlando, Fla.
wron1dolll( llld.lfD kite MeS111ne A: Only in someJ·ackets -tailored strictly for ~ lr#Jolr. *-Ms his dlf IA stageuse--nottoavoi picking up dinner checks.
Q li)(j)mP•lf•c•lll "f111 Q: I think I can win a sucker bet. A friend of
Yards of Trwllk" Clllrln R°"" • r-~· •~ lb I al D I I flUISt Gitt! CorMa) fll'ICis .11· ii mme aua1S1.> ere wu once a em e racu a. say
((uest BWi• LUI) posi~ • i: no. Who's right? -RobertodelGadda, BrookJyn.
ptio~ i11 1 billn1 011ttit at A: Sorry, but you'll have to pay. Back in 1957
ni. ..,.. DI Alf1M Woodward. ln· Hollywood produced a lady vampire played by ac-::_111.,;!:!,.~ ::' :::',.!': tress Sandra Harrison. The title oi the film was
1o1e zz.oao ,.!.,. .111 UfMllt "Blood of Dracula." Not to mention the 1936
illo 1111car.M111~111 en~ ''Dracula's Daughter'' (starring otto Kruger. •ad"""' W_..lfd • lollnd Win, Gloria Holden and Marguerite Churchill) Ro,w b 1111 priMI -..ct. Robliit •
RiSt Ml ~•II Clfl"M also auest. Si'nd i/our questions to Hy Gardner, ''Glad You A1ked ! ~fl: That," core of th ta new6J)ClptT", P.O. Box 11148, Chicogo, lU.
O .. STARSKY & HUTCH'' 60611. MorilY'fland Hy Go:nfnerwUI on.!1Dtt OJ mo"JI que1-* ON A DEATH RIDE lionl. °' they can in theiT column, but the volume of mail
O<llll(IJl(})m-• -mak<1p<no114I r~ie1impo.nb1<. AU rughl1 R<urved.
''Ouli" Ridt" O!i¥illl from S.•
frtllCia • ttie dluilll• of •
crilMI WI wflO "5 llreld to ltll
.. ..... lift ..... .ms. ....,. .. "*' Me pl!ISUld b)'
Min • .. dlt It llOtt!irtt to ........... lkl llld kt" ~ "°"' .mi. Ole jGumff. Jttt C..,, Paul Htdt ud lllthtetn MW· .,._
1ln .. ...,., """ ...... IC-1-- --.. ,,...,. ..... trllllllo-' llt s.rt ...... ww .... ....._-lMllllMa..f"MrillllpaCs. lt'.lll .... T .. ....._. w. ._.-ICI.._ _ _... --......,. <• ?4.. iliCiiili ..-i:rw. t~~= ~·"· ~•of,,-
....... -Ml Mlfl'I'.. ... flt, ..
...... I 1 ....... fir* ' nt.\sflllw .. ......_ ..... ._,..... n. ..... ne ... _ ... ...
I="-=-~-D ,....._.... (llJ lM ,._.... ~
' -~.... 11:15., C11191 l4
"9-.J 1).... ll:Jlw(J)CISLNMM: {t) ..,.. ~ ,,.._ n. LllMI IAl" (dr•)
'U-llchatd Wld1111k.
lo mam-""" iii iillis•••11 ... ""* tlriltc ,. .... Mel" !ff [JJI (})-..,. -"TM 1ea s,.W" (d11) 7 4 -
r..mlt ~s. SM!lty Winl11t1,
.llClt Clattr, DDll MumJ. 0 .... : (C) "Wt •I kNlra'"
(a!N) '!U -.ll!fl Clialldlel, M1nl111
Mu;.rell. m MisNM: 1a,ouillle
C·E Television (50)
' ' { .
-·""'--· ... urs SCAU IUSICA"
_ ................. M. ................. ... _.., ___ ti_
--~. -· ·-•... ,.
' . ·--...... .....
---I LMA uwwa IOl l'llSllllN!"
AIOUHD WOILD FANtn' Mill•
I
IOllWW-••"' _.,.,_.,,...,.
JAWS,oo·
TIJAL WAVI ,,.., ---IJNDA LD'llUCttol Ol--llllW • __ ,AllllT ......
WMSUAH IN
ROLLER BAU. .. --WIOl• ----lmtl MA-• ... '"'ID Off• ............
MAll$Oll• .. . '''"'Off• ---COONSl(IH " --TMWAYI ... _,,,... __ _ ,,,,_,
llOIT-• -1111-... ·-MODI•••• .. ....
Mlftlll\L•
----.... -. iMIT-•·'
• •
• •
·ENTEJTllNIEIT
New Fright
Films .Set
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Veteran scare artist
William .c1~1tle bas
algned a·l!1uluple picture
contract with 20th Cen-
tury-fox. his flrlt pro-
duction to be "No~J""
Castle, producer of
•'Rosemary's Baby~· and pro~ucer-director of
"The Tingler ,"
''Macabre,"
"Homicidal" and "Let's
Kill Uncle," will make a
series of films for Fox re-lease:· · ·
•
Auditions Listed
The callboard wlU be
heavy over the weekmd
II three Or•nee Cout
theater croup11.hold ...u.
l!Olll for upcomln1 •tole
(ll'Gducllon1.
Leadlnc ort Saturday
mornln1 w i ll be the
... i\\ioeian
Tom Titus
Chlldre11'1 Theater Playboulo,211011alnSt., doncenwillbel'"•l!llby
Guild, which wUI be cut· Rwillnclon Beach. Open-dlnct« Chutlc ~ Inc a Iarie compaey for inf nllht II No•. IC ror for tbe melodram•, a tourlnc show entitled fivaweekendl. wbleb wlll open Nov. 13
"Gollywhoppers." Audition• for •>The forafour·wHkilo<\run.
Dlre<tor Gordon Yeaton Drunk•rd" ba .. been South~ Repertory
wlU hold readiDIS for ca n.e ii b 1 t be San la reendtiDC •an<lld-
Uft>I and adults -along Cletliente Commualty for ii& Youn1 ,People'1
with violin and guitar Theater for llonday and Actln1 Conservat"1'J,
players -at 10 Lm. ID 'l\l<!eday at 7:30 p.m. a~ whlcb bec!D& Oct. 4 for
tbe.cuild rehearsal ball, the Cabrlllo Playbouae, youn11tan botween-ll
124().)1 Locan St., Costa 202 Avenlda CAl>kllo, and H 1eekln1 pro-
r.1 .. a. San Clemente. A cut ol. feaslonal theater tnirf.
The Huntiniton Beach. 13 men, seven women, ing. Further inlormatioa
Playhouse has scheduled one girl an<t, two female 1a,va1Iableatf!48·3252.
readings Sunday and l~~~~~·~;,;;;,;;~~=;;;.:;::;;.;:=::"~~l Monday for Regin&ld
ROie's "Dear Friends," TMttrril11btg'nUJiion
with tryouts ·sel· for I p/dUtt fl'llltl IM p.m. &lnday and 7 p.m.
on !o\onday. Austin Peay krrifJIUt(I f'h.I befl lltlkr. ...... ,..~ is directing and wiU be ~· ·· " -.. ,,.
looking for four men and
four women in the :.>-50
age ranJe, along with a
little girl and a male
walk·on at the
"Noise,•• based on the [
novel ''The Dark
Descends'' by Diana
Ramsay, is described. as
L. M. BOYD )
INFORMS In Iha a "chilling urban horror
story" that climaxes in DAILY PILOT ''a bloody tale of terror.''
mf~
····PART 2
"Ur.tw.t.\1' _.,,.
41' M U.TMS• Ill ~91LO'fr
.,.._.,....,._..._,......_Sl.J:I
DC9'1' HOIJ9ATI
&Af.&~l:l:JI
THE c11v SHon'INO CENTRE
OA~NOE •532-1721
~Ill
MOMJT f"mlOOI &
'IMIMOLT-·
._., LADT" 1N1
_ ... PVSITCA1" 1 ... 1
.'"IHI~ '"COtRssloMs~
A \fteow CLIA ... w
"TOMMY".
ll'GI
"MOOM a-s·1 .. 1
"'SHAM'~ ftliSU ..... ,
··Ami'"'"""---•AM&YaollMSOlf'I•• . . ' ·v .... .-...... lNI ,,aron Wlftl""...,,
l•••tMll11tm
"MOON llUllllEltS" .... ' ...... ... ,,,
··------~ -·= ' ... ·.
1..-A-W,., ... U
_, .... •U1.c:i'9
INAFIMED CllCERT "YESSONGS"
n Bargain Matinees I. 50 Til 2:30
Senio r itizen I. 50 at all time
SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES
SAN DIEGO FW't, AT BRISTOL
FOUNTAIN VA LLEY -
~-.... ·•'''"'" ,.,
' ~WAVl" __ ,,,_,~,
GfNfOAI \.INr Ml\ r.ORP ,)Sll\TION
• • -
,\
t
•
VOL. 6', NO. 2167, S SECTIONS, 70 PAG,ES ORANGE COUNTY, CA,Ll ,ORNIA
•
Tothay'• ca .. aq
N. ~. 8&eelul
WEDNESDAY,SEPTEM8ER24, 1975 C TENO:f!!S
' .
:Official8 Con ·der Se • g ~Fairgrounds 1
•t~~
The quuUon of _, Ille Oruce County Fal ........ ID !Mia llna and red....ioptna Ille
state taclllly oe a 15~-slte In the south of county is beinl exploM by onmn. ...,.
•ultmtt. • •
Soch • move wo.ad be sound
economically, Ill ...,.•lttnts
pOintout In am.--to tile
Or-County Fair lloanl., Tba r,•llin ol fflllna Ille 1113-ocre
altcround1 aad movlna:
elMWMre was oee ~ aeven de-
velcpment altarnallv• IUQeol·
ed .in the repert by C.udlll,
~lett IDd Scott of Leo Anlleles.
Tba soal ol Ille study Is to come
·up with a :IO-year p._am foe de-
ttlopmeot of Ille fairpwnda.
Tba -pbase ol the n.ty,
wbicb will belin next -and I .
U~T ......
' RESCUED FISHl,Ha BOAT CAPTAIN WELCOMED HOME
Seven of l!lgbl Aboard Ca119lz~ Boat Were S.w.ed
,Shark Water . . -.
-Bij F.Uh fJIRe Djtien 0«t
SAN PflD.RQ (UPJ) -Dl"era searching for a
lhlssing fisnerman-.we...._chaa.!d<old'Of the water by
sharks toll"?"ing :lhe g~g of a 80,lbot commercial
fll!hing bo~t 'one mile 'iiff Point .htmin; the Coast ,
Guard reported. ' . , . · The Coast Guard said Tuesday '(passing vessel
rescued se en of the eis}it cre~e aboard the St. '>
Joseph. alD1.0S~ iil\ined,iately. The' sing man, Vito ,
, Sapienza, was feared'tlrbwned wJt .he became en-: 1
r ·tang ltd in fishing ne;ls under the ca1J6ized craft. '
. The. Coast Guard cutter Point Evans and two
11\elicopters combed the waters off Point Fermin until
<lark but no\~ace of the~ wasfound . ~
.. Los An~les city lifeguard Vesael6 and. the coast
, Guard rerried divers tO the scene t they were called ~ 6ack because or Iargenumb<:rs Ofl ks in the area.
• " _______!_ -
• I ' r ..
\ . ... . Tip A'ssi~ted F;ord -.
t ~ • •
In Elru#~Sara
. By HELENTHOMAS
WASHINGTON <UPI)·~
President Fqrd heeded a spur-of-the-mom.eni requeat from the
Secret Service not to plunge into
a crowd .outside a hotel in San
Franci-sco seconds before a
' '
'BROWN.SIGNS .
NEWGUN~W~
the street from the hotelentrance '~Where Sar'a Jane Moore stood
with her pistol -was "one of the
crowds the Secret Service sug.
gested the President might well
pass up. The President passed it
up.''
woman fired ; pistol shot at hint, t
a White House spokesman said
Instead of his usual style of
pressing close and s h aking
hands, Ford waited for the Secret
Service tq oPen the door of his
bulletproof limousine and waved
to.the cro.wd. today. 1 Press Secl"etary ~ Nessen
told reporters tbat ford skipped
shakins hands wltll the tbrong ,
outside the St. Francis Hotel
Monday because 1"the Secret·
Sel'Vice at the lasti minute ex-
pressed concern fo( the Presi-
dent's safety. -'
FOrd''always" listenswhenthe
Secret Service makes an on -the·
spot se~urity suggestion, Nessen-
said. That might have saved his
life.
Nessen said the crow,d across
COOD BESulTS
FROM BOAT AD
'
·"There was good response to
the ad. The boat sold the first
~9;!lit ran in your ,PBPft'."
That's the se•1oinl succes
story told by the Costa 'Mesa maa
who placed thia ed in the Daily
Pilot: -.-
17' l /O SPORTCRAfl'
Sportacrulser., Bow
Rider. W.alk tl'lru
windshield, fold'g lop.
Fish or ski. Xlnt shape.
newtrlr& cov. $1,700. ax-
ll:·xnx .. . ' rr you have a boat to
seU, call 842-!la'll. It only ttkes a
fn l"Orcls In the right place to ol·
tract a buyer. Along Ille Orange
~the riihl place I~ tM _Df'Y
-
The shots rang out, missing
Ford and ricocheting off to
wound a taxi dri ver..nearby,
,Nessen ·s~d Ford Is satisfi~
with his Secret Sen'ice protec·
tion and will shake Hands with
the Public ,when be travels to
Chic•go next week, even though
sorne congressmen have urged
him to limit pUbl. c appearances ·
'.in th"tt :arake of 8-'lsassination at·
tempts in Sacramen~ and San
Francisco. '
"Tbe President does intend to
go to Chicago,·~ Nessen said of.
the trip ..,heduled for Tuesday. ··n.• Preslaent is more than
satiafied b)I' the protection.he re·
ceives from the Secret.Service.
"I think we will see the Presi·
dent shaking ha_nds in public
again.''-~
f!icks to ·speak
At Mesa Chamber
, •n1:1 Attorney Cecil Mcb
wilt be Die featu..,.S.1Peol<ef'at
the 2Sth annual membership
luncheon of the Costa Mesa
Chamber of 'Commerce at the
Mesa Verde Country Club Oct. 9.
.ms talk Is ubeci. "An EJtem·
poi:1neous-Commentarx on CUrreat Toplu of ln!erat. • TM
luncheon, which also will mark
IM lnstallaUon of officers and
diredon', will costtll apcnon.
\
•
be completed In February, wDI
~entrate man cloetly cm the
deyelapm• alternativeo, which
""'" from Mlllal the lite and · ID!>Vinl elsewbere to rtdevdop. Ins 1M lite re&udl<S$ al exlstinl:
fadJIUH.
Tiiis Is bow Ille Consuilm!ts lee
In Ille !Int-phase report Ille
eeonomWa of movlna tbe
1rounda: aelU.aa the land at
betw-'40,000 lo po,ooo an 1<re
roe '8 million to f!.5milU..,,...i
blo'inl an 80-acre site flarlher
IOUtb, 11 about $20,000 an "l're,
ror $1 .1 million, leavipWp:t4.3
million to S5.8 mllllon fO<' de-
velopment.
Tbe plannera point out tl\ol a
P"".IUl'PoOilion on selling Ille.site
18 !bat tbe olty ()( ca.ta .Mesa
would approve IOftin& for a com·
l>lnalloo ol residential and Com·
mercial u1M.
l'he repart lhen adds. ''In diJ·
cussions with the city ol Colla
MMa lt appears that consider•·
ble opposition would be levi.ed
against another type or land ... ..
'ihe. consultant• also
acknowledied that finding
another site in the south of the
county also would be a critical
factor.
·Falra:rounds manaeer Jim
Porterlleld.uld lllal movlna Ille
faircroond• has bem diseusse<I,
but aband·on•d in the past.
V1rious companies hive sue·
1ested land deals, he said, ad-
dini IJ!at approacb"'I have 'been
made by the Irvine Company. the
Grubb and Elli• Company, and
Coldwell Banker. .
Previous studies by the f1lr
board'.s buildinl and vounds ~
CSee FAIR, Pa10AZ) !
Bftitin Charges Again ~
Says Police Dip Into Dr"(lg Fund
ByGARYGRANVILLE
• Ot .. o...y,. • ...,
Indicted Orange County
SUpervisor Robert Battin said to-
·day Uiat the reluctancf;_ of law en·
-rorcementofficialstoallowMcret
court fundJI to be audited Is due to
their "fear illegal skimming ac·
livitits will be uocov~. 1•
Battin charged trustees of the
funds collected from defendants
and used in investigations ':~·t
want to be ac®ilf\labletothetax·
payers and be forced to account
for the money they, are wslng'for
their own person)Ll use and pro-
Ac~ident
Kills Mesa . .
Youth, 18
An 18.year·old Costa Mesa ~ waa elec«PcariAod Tues4aY.
-u lljllla<id an ele<fric buffer on a bo'at1n.thelluntington
Jla1'bour area, polic~~ed.
George Francis Didricfia, 1 o(
171 2ancl St., Costa Mesa, ap-
parenUy was 'uoin& ,l/M' buffer
while dangling his feet In Ille
water ofJ a dock at 4211 Warner
A.ve., Huntinc,ton .Beach Police
"' slld toda.y. "". r
The machine shorted 0'1t·
poli,:e repdrtea, kno9.king
Didrtcks on.to Ills back 116h the
bo.at. Two'co-workers ~ut '!ff Ille
buffer's pow.er an~ trjed without
success to revive bjm, as did
paraniedics who arrived later,
He was pronounced dead at
.Huntington lnterco-mmunity
'"Hospital Tho y after lie~S
--p.m.jncident.
Polic.' said t)lie' youth.. was
employed by MPC lncfilsu'les lo
woi:J[' on the privlite boat at Ille
.~ock. .
·Tuoral ~tran,ements for
Didricks are pendmg at BaJlz-
Bttgerdn Funeral Home in Costa
Mesa.
The Orange County Coroner's
orfice s-aid this mprning an
autopsy will be Performed to
veriry the exact cause of
Didricks' death but it appears lo
have been an accidental elec·
tf()('ution.
I11ill Team ·
SigmtpsSet
Costa Mes3 1irls Who'd like to
strut their stuff for Uncle Sam in
America's 200tb Bicentennial
Year may sign up Thursday
night 'at the Community Recrea-
tion Center on the Orange County
Fairgrounds.
Reelstration is scheduled from
6 to 8 p.m . for the community
girls' drill team, which is for
girls nine to 14 years old.
Fee·for the JO w.eeks of classes
Mondays and Wednesdays, 4 to 5
p.m .• is $1 .50 an~lirls must pro-
vide their O'fD red·white-and-
blue \lJ\iforms, which q>St under
·SlO, according to city recreation
aide Deanna Read.
OIL REPOKIS
BiJOs7' DOW ,
, N'EW YORK <UPI ) -The
stock mark el, spurred by hopes
OPEC members would ap.Pruve
only --a moderate oil pric~ 1n·
crease, closed broadly hltljft,r to-
day in moderate trad:i.ni on the
New York Stock Exchanft'.
Th.e.. J>ow Jones lndi:'lstrial
avei:;age, up more than 12 polnU
earlier, eained ahead 6.34 points
to. 828.19. Lale profit takiJlll cul
lnto1aios. Advances ledideclines
by abolit -a JO•to-three margin.
(Tablea, 87>.
P'r Ice 1 w e_re. higher in
mode1;ate trading on the
American Stock Exchqe.
bably pocketin1. '·
The contToversiaJ Santa Ana
supervisor's blast followed a
milder attack on the Oran1e
County Narcotics .Officers As·
sociation by Supervisor
Laurence Schmit.
While Scbmit's attac~ on the
association was tame wtien com·
pared to Battin's the Garden
Grove supervisor said he
believes the association's ~Jue·
tance indicates to him "they pro-
test too loudly.''
"l have learned that one of the
people who constructed the as·
sociation's attack against me in
the press is the same person who
handled the disbusement of
funds and· the bookeeping ror
one or the accounts we planned to
audit,'' saJd Schmit.
The attack he mentioned was
the Narcotics otricers Associa·.
tion's allegation that he is en-
dangering: the Ii ves o( undercover
narcotic aeents by discussing the ·
controversial court runds and in·
sisting that they be audited.
Schmit's concern, raised in
Superior Court. is over a $20,000
investigative slus h rund. .
Coast Swelters
• 100-degre~ Heat Returns ·
The Orange Coast sweltered
again in the grip or a three-day
heat wave today, with tem·
pei;aturn climbing back toward
Tuesday's highs, which were the
lilitt.i&af"9year. --inJanct temperatures ran over oe· degrees TQesday -104
degrees were recoided at a
Tra.buco Canyon fire station and
106 degrees at Garden Grove -
but the mercury also soared
along the coast , particularly in
the soUth or the county.
· The Weather Service said tem·
peratures would be similar to-
day, but predicted a break
Thursday.
A 98 ·degree reading was
:!:potted on the temperature sign
outside the Laguna Beach
Federal Savings building in
downtown Laguna Tu.esday,
while at San Clemente a 92
jlegree high was recorded.
LlfeguardS al Newpor'£1Jeacll
and Huntington Beach reported
highs of only 80 degrees, but a re·
ading taken only a mile from the
SLA Spinoff?
ocean in Huntington Beach Was
98degrees.
The reading was taken by re-
tired Huntington Beach Com·
pany manager J . Sherman Den·
ny, wbo noted that Ille humidity
was loW, from 10 to 20 percent,
and quipped, ''It was a great day
forpaint1ng. ••
It was also a great day to hit
the beach, and more surfers than
painters turned out. Lireguards
re ported August.size crowds
along public sands on the Orange
Coast, with 30,000 on the Hunt·
iagton Beach state beach, and
about 8,000;::>n the city beach.
"Most were kids and youths
playing hookey from school or
college, .. a lifeguard said, adding
that the surr was a tempting
three to five feet.
The lifeguard predicted "ex-
tfe11rely-hl!-avyOJ surf today, from
seven to nine feel, with rip cur-
rents from the breakers making
surfing hazardous .
Group Urges Patty
To Adopt 'Silence'
SAN FRANCISCO IAP I -
Patricia Hearst was urged to
"adopt the tactics or silence" and
refuse to cooperate with her at·
torneys in a communique from a
group claiming to be part of the
mysterious New World Libera-
tion Front. (Related stories, AS,
02).
A communique addressed to
the jailed newspaper heiress was
received Tuesday by television
station KGO . ·
The communique from the
"People's Forces New World
Liberation Front Robert Emmitt
Burns Contingent'' said the
group had delivered the rriessage
to Miss Hearst's attorneys Mon-
day. That was the day before she
swore in an arfidavit t~at she had
been forced to cooperate with the
terrorists who kidnaped her
more than 19 months ago.
The group, which claimed 12
members, accused Miss Hearst's
a ttorneys or withholding the
message from her.
The FBI agent on duty here
said today he had not heard or the
group before.
But investigators have been
looking into· the possibility that
the New World Liberation Front.
which has taken reitponsibility
for a number of terrorist bomb·
t'n.s, was spawned by the Sym-.
bioneseLiberation Anny. '
Ml•~ H'earst was kidnaped by
the S,)rmbjonese Liberation Anny
on )i'eb. 4, 1974, but later pro·
.claimed hel"allegjanceto lhe ter-
roMgtoup.
, Tbe 11-year-old daughter ol
R1ftd tPh and Catherine Hearst
wu arrested Thbrsday 'and is be·
lng held in nearby Redwood City
at the San Mateo County Jail
1
f
'
while awaiting court action on
federal bank robbery charges.
Her SLA companions, William
and Emily Harris. also were ar-
rested last Thursday.
Andy Devine
Hospitalized
In Newport
Andy Devine, well ·known actor
who makes hi s hom e in Newport
Beach, is reported in satisfactory
condition tod a y at Ho ag
Memorial Hospital. where he is
being treated for an undisclos ed
illness.
"Just say I 'm having an old
saddlesore r epaired," Devine
joked tod a y . A ho s pital
spokesman said Devine, 69, is in
good spirits and s ays he is "feel· ing fine.··
The spokesman added that the
current illness is not· related to
Devine·s leukemia condition,
which is kept under control by
doctors.
The actor, perhaps best known
(or his role of .. Jingles" on the
old Wild •Bill Hickock sllow, was
admitted to Hoag on Sunday but
doctors have not said yet when he
will be released.
A1gaJa party has been planned
for the heavy set, raspy.voiced
actor in about two weeks, when
he will be honored for his SO years
In films and his approaching 70th
birthday. The party ts Oct . 7 at
the Disneyland Hotel and hi
spc>nsored by the orange County
Press Club.
>
He has .also expressed dlaap.
proval of special municipal cowt
funds tbat are channeled Into al
least four city police depart·
men.ts, including Laguna Beach
and San Clemente.
Schmit bas insisted the pay·
ment into the funds by defen·
dants is legalized extortion and
that they rightfully belong In th1
county treasury.
J:n response to the supervisor's
allegations, tbe Narcotie& As-
sociation charged ,he was un·
dermining all invesUeations and
(See FUNDS, Page AZ)
Two .Held
In Rape,
Robbery
Two youthful suspects were
wounded fn Santa Ana early ~
day when police interrupted a
f0t4r-man robbery-rape.mayhem
spree inside an all night market.
After wounding ~wo or the four •
su.specta as they attempted to
fJee from the market, police
found a naked 24 -year·old
woman, the apparent victim of a
rape attempt, in a storage room.
Behind a store counter, or.
ficers found a market clerk
bleeding from a deey gash near
his right eye, a wound opened
when one of the four suspects al·
legedly struck the clerk with a
homem-ade billy club.
And recovered from one of the
suspect's pockeU was lbe money
police claim was taken from a
cash drawer in the market.
-(S<e SPlll!E; Page JU)
Meeting Set
On Transit ..
Questions regarding the tutUre
or transportation in and through
the Harbor Area will be dis·
cussed Thursday in a Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce
Town Meeting session at the
Balboa Bay Club.
Chief speaker at the 7:30 a.m.
event will be W.F . Pond, acting
district director of CalTrans, the
agency formerly known as the
California Division of Highways.
Their plans for the Upper
Newport Bay Bridge, the Corona
del Mar Freeway, Pacific Coast.
Highway and Bonita Canyon
Road wi II be discussed and open
for questioning. Juice, correc and
rolls will be served at $2.25 pe r
person.
Coast
Weather
The b l a s t rurn :Jl'e
weather should cool do"'"
Thursday, with some ear-
ly coastal fog cutting thc-
high mark to the middle
70s alpng the s horeline.
Inland it"ll still be hot , in
the mid 90s. •
INSIDIE TOD/\ 'l'
A group of Trnne1see boil-"
IO ro 14.attempted lo extor1 SJ
miUiOn. A Juvenile offictr
biamt's too much crime on
frlevi.rion. A4.
Index
I
I •
•
A.2 DAILY PILOT c WednMC11y, S!pttmbtr 24, 1975.
.~
TONIGlrf
COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BOARD -Regular
meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. .
"'ENLARGING YOUR BOUN·
DARIES" -Dr. Arthur L. Bietz
lecturer, OCC Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.
'"AVIATION SAFETY FOR
PIWTS'" -OCC Art Lecture
Hall. 7:300.m .
THURSDA \',SEPT. ZS
LIBRARY PROGRAM
Story hour, 10 :30 a .m. Evening
rilms, 7:30p.m .
COSTA MESA CITIZENS AD·
VISORY CO MMITTEE -
General meeting, Assemblyman
Robert 1-1. Burke speaker, City
Council Chambers , 7:30 p.m .
FALL RECREATION
REGISTRATION -Dept. of
Leisure Services fall program,
Community Recreation Center.
6-Sp.m .
COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE
-First meeting of year, Clyde
Zulc h gues t , M esa Verde
Elementary School. 6:30 p.m .
-social hour, 7: JO p . m . meeting.
UCl LECTURES -"Women
and Business,'· Room 248 Social
Sciences Lab. "America in the
Post-Vietnam World," Room 178
Humanities Hall. Both 7 p.m .
"JU1'1PERS'' -South Coast
Repertory Theater, thru Sun. 8
p.m .
UC! LECTURES -"Women
and Business;· Room 248 Social
Sciences Lab ... America in the
Post· Vietnam World." Room 178
Hum anities Hall. Both7p.m.
Rites Slated
For Staffer
At Fairview
Graveside funeral services are
scheduled Tuesday for Geral-
dean M . Pope, an original staff
member at Fairview State
Hospital in Costa Mesa, who died
Tuesday following a sudden ill·
ness.
Rites for Mrs. Pope, 61, a
widow who lived at 007 Plumer
St., Costa Mesa, will be at 10 a.m.
in Holy Sepulcher Cemetery.
Orange , with Father Rod
Stevens, of St. Joachim 's
Catholic Church officiating.
-She was a 42-year resident of
Orange County and joined the
staff of Fairview State HospitaJ
wh"1 it opened in 1959, becoming
supervisor of its switchboard de-
partment seven years ago.
Mrs. Pope is survived by her
brother, Newport-Mesa Unified
School District Trustee, Harbor
Area Boys' Club official and
Harbor Area Baseball League
Director Rod Mc Millian.
Memorial contributions from
friends are suggested to benefit
the Harbor Area Baseball
League, P .O. Box 222, Costa
Mesa, 92626. or the Catholic Big
Brothers of Orange County,
headquartered-in Fullerton.
Funeral services are under
direction or Bell Broadway
Mortuary .
Gold Watches
Stolen in Mesa
A variety of jewelry including
two gold pocket watches valued
at $900, has been burglarized
from a Cosla Mesa man's home.
•
Richard t . Baldwin, 31, of 150
E. 21st St., told palice Tuesday
his loss also included two rings
and $120 cash stolen from his east
side apartment.
Investigators were told the
valuables were taken both from a
bureau drawer a nd from Mrs.
Baldwin's purse and included her
engagement ring.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Rober1 N. Weed
Ptt•idWll • .... PuOll~
Jack R. Curlev
Vk• ~tl!Mnl t,,. Gt..., .. M......,,
Thoma$ Keevll
E•i'9<
Thomas A. Murphine
Mt,..tlno Eo;111r
'
•
Chlrtn H. Loos RkMrd P. Nall At.1111.Mt ..... ~ .......
j
CIA Mail
Snooping
Disclosed
WASHINGTON <UPI> -A
Senate committee said today the
CIA for nearly 20 years Ill egally
<>s>ened -and photographed -
the mail of well ·known groups
a nd individuals, including
Richard M . Nixon, Ma rtin
Luther.King Jr., No~I Prizewin-
ners and one lett~r from lhe com·
mittee chairman to his mother.
Sen. Frank Church (D·ldaho),
chairman or lhe Senate Select
Co mmittee on Intelligence, said
evidence so far showed that Nix·
on was not aware of the practice
when he was in the White House.
"The President did not know
that the mail was being opened,"
Church said.
A committee spokesman later told reparters that just one letter
of Nixon ·s. addressed to him
from abroad, was intercepted on
June 1, 1968, while he was cam·
paigning for the presidency
which he won in November of
that year.
The spokesman was unable to
say whether the letter came from
a Communist bloc country
although CIA witnesses have
said the program began as one to
screen communications with
persons behind the Iron Curtain.
Meet, wnfer
Policy Heard
By Trustees
Newport·Mesa school trustees
listened Tuesday to several
citizens who urged that they
make the distri ct's "meet and
confer'' bargaining process
··wide open.··
Trustees were considering a
new policy that would create a
more open atmosphere regard-
ing the bargaining process. .
The policy is prompted by As·
semblyman John Vasconsellos·
bill passed last year, that made it
mandatory for the bargaining
negotiations to be more accessbi·
ble for citizens.
Exact guidelines were not in·
eluded in the new state law, but
the law specifies that citizens
must be able to stay informed re·
garding negotiations and be able
to offer comments, if desired.
District officials explained
they incorporated the intent of
the new Jaw into their meet and
confer sessions this year.
However, they lack a formal
policy and the one propased
Tuesday was an effort to make it
more officiat.
However, citizens who ad-dresse'd the board told trustees
that the proposed policy still does
notgofarenough.
Reg Anderson of Newport
Beach, a member of the district's
citizens' Budget Commlttee, 1ug.
1 gested that the meet and confer
sessions be open to "respons ible
.citizens ... "
Trustee Marion Bergeson said
it might be considered and asked
staff members to examine the
implications of suc h a new policy. ·
Trustees declined to accept the
proposed pOlicy on first reading,
and asked it be "overhauled''
prior to the next meeting in two
weeks.
Basically, the new policy sug-
gests posting all communications
between trustees and employe
delegates within 24 hours of the
bargaining session, sending such
communications to the press and
other interested citizens or wail·
ing at least seven days after the
employes' initial pay proposal
before responding. to give the
public a chance to react.
9or SVJ, Try
Swim Class
Swimming classes for ever:·
yone from tiny tots to senior
citizens are being . offered in
Costa Mesa.
Registr ation for the city ·
Department of Leisure Services
program will be conducted
Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m., at the
Community Recreation Center
on the Orange County Fair-
grounds.
Interested persons may also
sign up Saturday, from 1 to 5
p.m. at the Harbor Area Boys
Club pool . 594 Center St., where
the courses will be taught. A
nominal fee will be charged for
the two-week and eight-week
classes.
f'r-PapAJ
FUNDS •••
endanaennc the lives of acenta.
After maklna the alle11Uons In
a letter to Schmit omcers of the
auociatlon refuud to elabqrate
on them or to explain how the
1uperyl1or'1 a~\lvlUes were en·
dari&erlng ofllcera' lives.
Today, Battin Jumped on
Sc:bmll'a bandwaaon and-Illa
atteck ooe 1\ep further bl' allea· Inc 1111 fund• a~e belnll apent by
~belalledtoldentlly .. ,,
---------------'
•
-
-'Link'
Prol>ed
l i
I
l
Con~ued acrutllly ol a COD· •
\l'Oyeralal Cl)UD\, COnlU~\
awahle4_ to ._ bealUl •M!IQl l)rlil
linked to Dr. Louis Cella w• 0<-dered by the Oraqe Couotl(
!!.!>ml~ Su~Jaoro Tueaday~,e.tl·l 2'bi> CODl\'li'\ COV.n..,'"" eX,amiaatlona of count ~ employes and prospectlve ,.,
employea was glven to the ~
Orange County H•allh Telling l
lnslJtute (OCBTll by a Ill>· anlmowiboard vote. l
Later. it was revealed that
CeUa, a politjcal confidant to four ,
•upervi1or1, was an OCHTr "·
rounder in 19'13.
It wu also noted that the !n-
atitute operates from facilities
partially owned by the mwti-
millioaalre Santa Ana pbyoiclao.
CeUa and b!a attorney said the
docto< b~d divested hlmseU of
any financial interest in the oon-•
profit corporatlon aix months ..
.befOl'e the contract wu awarded.~·,
Be Got Out and Ordered An!lfl'Ofl
Nooe the leas, It wu knowu • .
that the eontr-ct'a baekground ,,
waa being lnll'estlgai.I by Di•·.
trict Attomeic In•eatlgaton and . ·
w~s later scrutinized by the ·~ The imperturbabl e Joe Gray er Santa Ana
must have been awfully hungry. While
turning into Taco Bell on Fainiiew Road
at Baker Street in Costa Mesa, Gray's van
collided with a camper. This was the re-
sult. Gray, however , crawled out, made
his way to the window and ordered His
lunch despite the unsettling event. •
Grand Jury. · ~
, And from county Health -
Department officials came com-•
plaints that their recommend•·
lions to keep physical examsM·
within the department had been · ·
ignored by the decision makers.
FAIR~ .•
committee had indicated that the
present site continued to be the
best one, and nothing had come
of these overtures in the past.
While the planning consul·
tants· repGrt indicated that the
city of Costa Mesa might block a
move, Mayor A 1 vin L. Pinkley
has expressed less opposition.
He said that the city would be
against hi gh density, "however a
good high rise or condominium
or something of that type pro-
bably could be worked out, .. he
said.
But the mayor stressed that the
city's preference would be to see
the fair r emain. but upgraded.
He suggested part of the grounds
could be sold with the money re-
invested in development.
The planning consultants ar·
rived at a ftgure of 86 acres for a
future fairgrounds site by con·
tending that 51 acres would be re-
quired for parking and 35 acres
for facilities.
Many other factors are con-
sidered in the report on the ques-
tion of site suitability -such as
the possibility of building a
cultural center joinUy with the
city of Costa Mesa -but no re-
commendation is made.
The report describes a wide
range of possible uses for the
fairgrounds, including exposi·
lions, SPo rting events -swim·
ming, tennis, auto, motorcycle,
dog and horse racing -cultural
events. a town ·center area with
specialty shops and restaurants,
a recreational vehicle park, and
an equestrian center.
The report em phasizes the
need for an equestrian center,
citing statistics on the number of
horses in the county, and calls for
a major horse show facility, and
ultimately up to 800 stalls to be
built.
The report also suggests that
the equestrian center should be
operated separately from the
rest or the fairgrounds, under the
supervision or a special manager
or concessionaire, and should be
self-supported with its own self-
liquidating bond program phased
over a seven.year period.
Doctors Save
Woman's Leg
After Crash
A Costa Mesa woman whose
leg police at fir~t said was.
literally tom off when her bicycle
collided with an Orange County
Rapid Transit District. bus Tues-
day underwent s urgery and
will prOb&bly make a full re-
covery.
Miriam Harlitch, 32, of 622
Hamilton St., was listed in fair
cond.iton today at Costa Mesa
Memorial ·Hospital, according to
nursing supe.r visors.
She sustained extremely
severe lacerations and loss of
blood shortly before noon Tues-
day in the accident in eastbound
lanes of 19th Street at Harbor
Boulevard in the downtown Costa
Mesa area.
Police at first said Mrs .
Riverside
Board Eyes
Airport Site
After balking three weeks ago
at a propased meeting, Riverside
County supervisors agreed Tues-
day to meet with Orange County
officials to dis cuss Rancho
California as a possible jet
airport site.
The meeting was proposed by
Supervisor Thomas Riley after
he and fellow supervisor Ralph
Diedrich ·were appointed by the
board of supervisors as a two-
man committee to discuss the
Rancho California proposal.
But e arly this month the
Riverside board of Supervisors
votea unanimously to oppose
theairportproposal. ....
Tuesday, the Riverside board
changed its mind and appointed
Supervisor William E. Jones to
meet with Riley, Diedrich· and
San Diego County supervisors to
discuss the proposal. Jones
repres,~ts UJe area or RiytJrsifi.e
County that includes Rancho
California.
.,
,.,... Page AJ
SPREE •••
Neither or the wounded sus·
pects, one of them a 14·year-0ld
juvenile, were seriousl)' injured
by the police gunfire that
followed as they fled from the
market at Washington and
Bristol Streets.
Accdrd.ing to police, the four
suspects entered the market
shd~y after 1 a .m . ·
After knocking clerk Lawrence
A. Topper, of Santa Ana, to the
floor with a blow from the billy
club. they allegedly took between
S50 and $100 frpm a cash drawer.
As three of the alleged robbers
took two customers to a back
room in the store, the fourth
member of the robbery team
grabbed a woman customer 8nd
took her into another storeroom.
Also taken into custod1 was
18-year-old Pedro Carrillo, of
2U3 W. 9th Street, ~anta Ana .
There, he forced the woman to
strip and reportedly w.is fondling
her wh~n a polic,e ..unit, 1 sum-monded by a sllent./alarm, ar·
riv~ at the ~arket. f
When given a chance to have
his say publicly on the con-·
troversialf· contract Tuesday,
county Health Officer John Philp
avoided its most cootroversiaJ
aspects.
In a written report requested
by the supervisors, Philp merely ·
reviewed outside contractors·
who had bid ·on the propooal and ...
suggested that his department
monitor OCHTl's medical
performance.
The board endorsed Phtlp's
suggestion and took it one step
further.
· In addition to ordering medical ··
scrutiny of OCHTI 's ··
performan·ce, County Ad · '
ministrative Officer Robert
Thomas was asked to audit the
contract"s cost effectiveness.
Coast Board Meets
Trustees of the Coast Com·.
munity College District will meet.·
at a· o"'clock tonight in the district
office at 1370 Adams Ave., near .
Orange Coa1t College. Among.·
the items to~ considered is a re· .
port by a t&l'k force set up to .
stu4Y 'Uiti organization of the dis-.
trict.
CLOSEOUT SALE
"ABCO" Brand Warm-up
Suits -Reg. 24.95
. 1 Soccer· Balls 6.95 up
Basketballs 5.95. to 31 .95
Sale Price Tops 8.95 Pants
6.95
Wilson Tennis Shorts
Reg. 15.95 Sale Price 8.95
All Sales Subiect To Stock
On Hand
·• ---------------...;..··
Wilson-Dunlop-Bancroft-Davis
Yonex Tennis Rackets .
' Tennis Dress
I ' I
Mens & Boy~ Tennis Shirts
•
"
Footballs Juniors-
Intermediates-Full Size
7.95 to 28.95
Volleyballs 6.95 to 21 '.95
Playground Balls
5.95
2.25 to
Rqcquet Balls & Racquets
•'
"' '
Penn-Wilson-Dunlop
Balls
Tennis I
' .Soccer Shoes 9.95 to 24.50 . .
Harlitch's leg was nearly tom off
in the collision --ith the bus tl. Shorts
drh•n by Harry G. Harbin, 23, or "Ill
Football Shoes
Tennis Shoes Ladies & Mens
10.95 to 28.95 ·$751 Meinhardt Road ,
WfStmlnst•r. R--Let Strinni_. "That's wbat they told us "'°"' •or•~
berorewe1otherlntheemerfen-Qasketball . Shoe5 9.95 ~k~~~:· said. a hoap tal Bice Parts-fns-Tubis .
Someti()\\', the 'fictlm aufler«I • 28 95
only 1eriou.1 lacerations and R •
• abrulonl and esca1':e4 the accl· · epc:ilring Running ShOes
dent with ~one of leg and hip '11 ----------------....;::...."'-...:.....,,,_ _ _:_:_ __ :..:..;..:.:,..;_ _____ • fractures police at nnt beUoved ""C!:!-.:t'~e accident 1s atUJ un· llfl• 9 ti I 1 Clls .. Sil. D Clllter
to
-.
646-1919 '
tier lnvnUaatloD.
I I • ·-I
~--
•
•
i
•
• . . • • • •
• . '
'sota
' Mldchlnlllo 1.s1e11
M9tchlng chelr, $109
Matclllng oll-; $511
End 18ble, $511 • Cockhlllteble,~
Ready for easy mbly
with no 1peclal Is.
< ' • >
,
~ '
e~s~al g~ . uping for
den or family room
..
•
'
,.,,;, feeling la CUWll yel cont11111por•ry In this
comfortable and lnvmng group. Loose seat and
back cushions of Polyurethane foam are covered
in a handsome olefin flbe{ of natural·tone
·stripes. Tables are finished In warm wood·
tones to matcn '""°" t>eam accents of
upholstered pljlCes.
u .. y~rcony;~ c~~nney
Time ParmentP!iliJ 1 "• . '
.
' '
Closeout!
S166
Contemporery atyled sofas
fit in well with many room
decors. No-sag seat spring
construction, ball casters.
Stain-resistant Herculon•
olefin In earth-tone plaid or
solid brown vinyl.
Not shown: solid brown vinyl
loveseat $136
Sorry, not avaPabte outakfe normal dellYerj area. Phone for details.
Ouantlt'-limited on closeout merchandise.
'
' .
• ·sale 14495
. safe S.s& fle9. 189.95. 4.5 cu. fl •
compact refrigerator -
has sef?arate freezer,
translucent crfsper. ,
llag. Ill.II. 81* and while IMinOn•I 9.5 cu. fl. refrigerator,
reg. 219.95.'Sole 194.95. • '
•
•
I
11.tm
•
Sale! Save on
steel belts.
•
R•ll•nl SIMI. F11tur11 2+2 blu belted con1trvcton of polye1ter ·
coi'da and 1te1I btllt. In the wide 78 1erle1 profllt ... Whltew1111.
No trade-In required.
•
Tftalu Reg.price S.le prfce + '"· lli• "'"·-Silt price +fed. ta•
871-13 29.00 25.00 1.95
E71-14 35.00 26.75 2.44
F7S.14 35.00 28.75 2.58
Save $20! Stop Act~on ®
drum brake overhaul* " _. 4-aaa-
Hert'• wf\et you get:
• lna~IJ new JCPenney Stop
Acnon~ Hnings on .t wheels
• Rebuild all 4' wheel cylinders
• Resurface lour drums
• Repack front wheel bearings
• Lubricate shoe contacts
• Inspect front gfeaae Seals
Reg. 66.68
• Inspect brake spril"lgs
• Inspect master cylinder
• lnsqect. ad]ust parking brake
•Inspect rear oll seals !or leaks
.. Bleed and relill brake.system
• Road test car
'Most American, many
foreign cars.
No points! ,
No condenser! 6499
MOBELEC'" electronic
breakerless ignition
Keeps your c"ar In "top tune" year after year.
An electronic sensing unit replaces points and
condenser. Oram·~ucally Increases your car's
performance, extends spark plug life.
G78·14 35 .00 28.75 2.74
G78°15 39.00 31 .25 2.81
H78·15 39.00 31.25 3.02
Dress up your car,
pickup or van wifh
custom wheels
31 99
15•8
"Mojock"'' .. ofl-road
wheel in popular ,
all-whi:e spoke
design. Extra strong
construction.
3999
15•8
·:Mojock''Tu olf·ioad
and RV wheel in
sh1n1ng chrome.
Ruqqcdly built 10
1,1st for yeJrs.
31 99
14'6
·~1
' ., .i.p"' •• ..
Save 31 95 Save 21 95
-pol1.iiie with 9' • .. reen (med. dlag.).
Solid llate Chuels, monopole VliF/UHF. •antenna. White plastic cabinet l'Oeesures :
only 10'' high, 13111" '!Ide; 10'' deep~ . ~
8.2 cu. fl. chest freezer, R811. 229.95 S•I• 204.85
Reg. 239.95. S•le $208.
Compact washer ls 21 ''
wide. 3 wash cycles, weter
levef selection. No perma-
nent Installation; hoOks to
kitchen faucet.
Rl!g.149.95. Sale $128. Compact
electric dryer is 21'' wide.
2.cycle timer for permanent
press, automatic cool·down •. Sale prloff eflectlv• lhrough Sunday, September 28, 1975
Soriy, not av•ll•ble outside nonn1l delivery aru. Phone for detallL
No venting needed. ·· ·
Operates on 115V.
· lilt Ille hlowl1 9 llares: I 1 • . I 1r. !>ii Beech (714) an-n11.
• . .
t
.. ~----"-.; •
• I • HARBOR CENTER, Costa Mesa (it4) 646-5021. ~· ' . . . ,
'
'
•
•
•
•
·1 •
' • ' •
t
'
I
!
'
' ------· ------------
ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE.
Freeway Pri9ritieS .
Sanbl Anlllk miking moves to push' the state into
pmpletln1 ,the O(ange Freeway, from its present
~Ull at the Santa Ana Freeway, to the San Diego
,.,...,.,way.· ·
That city Js.calling on Costa Mesa and Anaheim.
officials to put up a united front to support exte)ISion
tbefreeway'down the Santa Ana River corridor. '
._,.,,_"'"CostacMesa--0Wcials see the benefits . of such a
"nk, but reckon it must tfll<e its place behind a greater
riority -getting the state to complete the Newport
eewayat least up to Bay Street.
;. . The Newport Fr~way extension is ·pressing
·cause of tlie giant excavation in the Newport
Jlgulevard median, a hole created to get dirt for the
-Newwrt-and-Corona de! Mar freeway Interchange.
'.lblll li91e will remain as a scar through the middle of
t"Costa Mesa until the Newport Freeway is extended in-
to lt. The city must be cautious of diverting any atten-
tion !tom this goal.
:' With state construction funds so short, it's thus
1 hard to see bow Costa Mesa officials can give·fust
( prioritY to extending the Orange Freeway. · 1 rj' . f . " ...... Out of Order
~ ; ·Costa Mesa Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, abstained I lrom voting last week in a ceuncil decision on whether
r. a developer should be required to upgrade an off-site
~ fire hydf.ant as a condition for an apartment project: f The mayor is a member of the Costa M,esa County
, Water District, which owns all the hydrants in the : I city.Hedecidednottovoteliecausethe.situationmight -1 I beconstruedasaconflictofinterest.
• •
table, and thus explilned how be would have voted
and why before the vote was tak,o. · · ·
GOOd intentions led him asti:~Y there. lf votJni
abstention is In order, pai'IJcipation in the debate,
which .might influo:nce l!DOtber councjlinember'• vole
isoutoforder. . , -. -~--·;
Boost-f,Qr .;uppeT, Bay
' ~ .
Final legislative approval and the governor's
signature have paved· the way for a mortiage-
burning. party for the 'new upper Newport ]la.y .
wildlife 11reserve. · · . . ' 1
Legislation c~r1e:a by State Sen. Dennis
Carpenter CR -Newport Be;iCb) l:lreeaed past the re·
quired committee and floor approvals over recent .
months without a hitclf. •
It brought forth $3.4 million as the final payment
----io the Jrvin.,.eotnpany~or'411at es\u41'Y which once
figured in bnl! colil(Oversy /l\ld \court· battle after
anotJuli'. • • • • Thi! cash came,(ro a fund containing rep31'a-
tions .pai~L)ly oil C\Jl!IPaliies for the Sant• Barbara
blowo11t di1111,5ter. " , . 1 -All al orig;-tblf sourCe of the :tas assuring pre-
sei:va!lon of the valuable.estuacy seemed totall),' ap-.
propnate . ., · ~ .
Yet, even though thel'l?"hu to tie a heady feeling
of success-about the commitment of funds for
purchase, all observ~ and principl\lB'IP the project
acknowledge ti\e toil Which still must.be faced.
Heavy dredging and some major pollution abate-
ment projects invqfving large inland areas of the
bay's 93,000·acre "(afersbed still lie ahead. And they
will cost big money:· 'I•,
•
•
i i It's questionable whether the abstention was
~ : necessary, and the mayor probably was erring on the f i side of caution. But he also was anxious to be accoun-
New legislation to help the bay probably will be
needed. · c "MAN, IF 1HIS LOu HAl>N'T COME AtONu .111> '~A 60NE~~. '
.' ' . . ' '. ! AHarulgwi
~ Ii For Every
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
..
Lung Cancer Connec(ion1 ,
,
>I . • J ..,.. 1,• . ., ""
.. -~~·"l • g New f allotJt _ Theot-y.
. A ' .-,_ . ..._ _ _... _______ ..,
j 1 Anrerican .
-fj.( ART HOPPE )
. ff The President is still gamely.
I 'd be willing to wager
that C.G.M. (Gus, Sept.19)
has never been anywhere
near a cJassroom where
the teacher is trying
desperately to provide
individualized instruction
for . 30.-pJus youngsters.
Visit any classroom and
you may change your
WASHJNGTON<1*--fallout ( J plutonium, Dr. Cohen asserts.~ turned up evidence,forexami>le,
from, the nuc1e1fti!ith!g;1i1 the· JACK ANDERSON criticizes D<. Gofman'• baslc .that $300 millio had !>Oen paid.1 late 1950s and eatlf 1980s,blay be . data and contends that ••99 out out' for unnecessp.ry: surgeries. c•~!'lg . a bel~led ~e.IJ\lc ol . , ol 100 experts in the field wou!dl 0th.., P'!~!B .gave receivecj in-
. ,lunf.· cancer ·An ·1 t.h.e·~rthern tr not agree" with Gofman. feriof care fr.om doctors wbd·are
hemisphere. The UDJ,teii Stales, 'fallout''mayhavealreadycr,eat· Dr. Gofman 's research, more inter'ested in tli'eir
I plunging into crowdS, although
he now reportedly wears a bullet·
: proof vest. Many 'feel he
: l shouldn't. Plunge, that is.
• But crowd plunging is one of tune! · • M.E.C .
for example, harhad a dr4matic ed., irreversibly, one of the prime boweve;r, cannot be ligbUy dis· medicaid eligi)>ility than:'their
increase in I Ung cancer cases. , ""'health problems of our era." The missed. He is professor emeritus health. ' l;r 1 • ~ ... In a chilling new study. plutonium from nuclear power of medical pflysics at the Yet the new HEW Secretary is
respected researcher Dr. John plants, he warns. will increase UniversityofCaliforni~ CQP.tinuing to mail out medieaid
G o f m a n the menace lo future genera-cDecks, despitefeVidence tbat the
warns that tions. MEDICAID ABUSES states are hot keeping a proper
t h e J u n g_ Even if the nU·clear power in· wat.cb on abuses and.-tberefore, '! the most im._•. ~-portant duties
t of a Presi·
1 .. dent,
c a n -c e i:-dustry ''contains its plutonium As one of his first actsr~e are-not complying with the law.
· ·' e pi d e m i c ' 99:99 percent perfectly.•• he pre-new Secretary of.Health, Ed.uca· From his own H·E'(/ file.a, .here
c o u I d b e • d.ictst "it will still be responsible lion and WeUare, J>avid Mat-·are a · few typic41, confidential
I particularly a
President up ~ J for reelection.
1 It Is the only
, way he can
: assess the
' mood of the ·
• country. • ••How are you?'' says' the I President, shaking a hand.
J ' ••Fine."' says the owner-Of the I hand. •
The President theo ko<1ws the
1 country is feeling fine. • ·
i ' WEARING a bulletpi;oof V<!St
Is eertail)lt a help while · de,-
termlning!i.-anhe eountrf'sfeel-
t ing fine. But tbi!;t 'is .no time for:-l hall-way me&,,ures. .
!' ,'• The Secret _:ierviCe has s.ug~ geated that the<P'resident, >fhen
1 I :, crowd plunging, be eftcased' in a
bulletproof steel bo~ with a small
1
1 aperture through which he ~Id i extend his arm. White House
1
1, aides, however, reluctantly re-jected the proposal as
"'detrimental to bis image.••
,,,. A more;Practical alternative is l for the President to carry a r crowd of carefully screened,
! loyal. trustworthy adherents
1 with him wherever be goes so
! ~ that when the urge to plunge
( overwhelms him. he would have : I• a safe crowd into which to do so.
Unfortunately. this I imited
sampling might tend to destroy I! the scientific accuracy of crowd
plunging as a mood assessment
1 technique.
1 THE ANSWER, then, lies in
the touchy issue of gun control.
Today, fewer than 100 million
.Atlat;:ricans ,own gµns . This
m~ that more than half the
nation, including little children,
goes to bed each night un-
defende<J , unprotected and un-
armed• ·' Up to now, a timid Congress
has taken but one step to ·solve
the problem -and tha\.in_.the ~
wrong direction -by banning
cbe'a'p ''Saturday night
specials.'' Thus only well·fu.do
citizens and successful bit men
can exercise their inalienable
right to bear arms. (And ask
:yourself. would you prefer to be
D.ned up in the sights of a sue~
cessful or an-unsuccessful hit
man?)
Jf all Americans are to enjoy
their inalienable right to bear
arms, it is up to Congress to pro-
vide them with the arms to bear.
For a modest $5 billion or ·so,
there is no reason the govern·
.ment couldn •t provide every
man, woman and child in the
country with· an inexpensive but
efficient handgun under The
Equal Opportunity Act.
IMAGINE tlie confidence the
President would feel as he
plunged into a crowd of 10,000
gun.waving admirers, each re-
ady to drill the first person who
made a suspicious move. No
more accurate method of assess-
ing the country's mood could be '
devised.
Thus we see that neither the
President nor any American
·feels safe and secure Wltil 'every
American is armed to the teeth,
We can confidently expect the
support of The National Rifle As·
sociation in passing this impor-
tantgunleg~lation.
severely ag-for !fO(),poct additional fatal lung thews indulged in a li.tY,e Ci\( . :-.. , findings : •4 . .. I'
gravated by cao~ers annually. 'fllis would obedience. · "" · , r-:-1 • • 1,
the growth of mean irjcreaslng the total death He is r~uired'by law~reduc~ '1 -JN COLQRAOO. HEW in·
the nuc lear rate iri the United Stares by 25 federal medicaid funds to states vestigatorsfouad .tbat••oopb)'si ..
power in· percenteachyear,since2,000,000 which do not review hoW· the clan or psychiatrist•• serves on-
dustry. persons currently die from all mon~y is s.pent. The revie~ <µ>E the mental health team, whieh is
The plutonium fallout Crom causes combined.•• !It. crucial to insure that 'hospitals, supposed to check 00 the treat:
past nuclear eX.plo.si~isbaving The' nucleat· iDduspt · ~ftich ,nursing homes and mental in·· mentofmedicaid patients. ·
3. deadly impact today, accord· has irivested billions in ihe•'pro.._ " stitutions are ~iv.ing proper .care -In Rhode lslaud, tbe;federal
ing to Dr .. C·artnan''k ... -\heory, liferation of nuclear plant!t' pd are not bilking the patien~ inspectors were apJi81.led to~ ..
because of a 13-td tS.teariatent throughout -the-cou.ntry, hasr -.,Pft.pegovernment. · · cover that one hospital had Dot
periodbeforetheeffeMsbecome soughttodown.,laytheeviClence-Yet Matthews bas told complied. with161 of the tn re-
evident. that plutoniiim may be linked to Coniress thait, despite the law,. ~ recordsl Doctors were far
' • .1! cancer. . )te w.on'.t reduce medic&id funds, 'liehlnd on visits.to medicaid pa•
SINCE MOST of· (be at-·-atthistime.Heconten&tbljtthe fientS. 1 1
mospheric testing was aone in THE INDUSTRY cites the fin· stat~s are unable to pOli~e tl:ie --In Indiana. man)' nu:rSing
the late 1950s and early 1960s, the dings, for e_xampl~. of Dra zpedical ripoffs and \that' any hQ!D_es weren•t.ev._eo asked bytbe-
latent"period1~S ending now. ''For Bernard CoQen of Pittsburgh medlcaid cutbacks wotJJ.a "baVe sta~e to cond,uct the reviews that
the USA alooe,".dec!Ol'ed Dr. Uruversity. Cohen points out that tbeeHectof crip~liDgthesysJem, are.required bylaw. ~ ;
Gofman, ''it is \stimated that lung cancer has been increasing 1 ~ In Ohio;• ••no medical ~
ll6,000 persons have been com · since 1945, long before the UNSCRUPUJ.0USdi>c'to~·ana ~ews iii ~ental hQSJ>italS have
mitted toplutenium-lltduced lung plutonium could have bad an ef-hospitals. meanwhile·. -are been done.'' accordinlf.-M a con-
cancer. In , th\ .entire northern fe¢. · squeezing medic aid mOneyo1.(t"of' fidential rep6rt. ---.,ir.; -
hemisphere, the total number is Most scientists believe the lung the government by hospitalizing ·~ :And, i11Wisconsin, reviews
1,000,000 PerSOns. ':' cancer epidemic has been caused patients, prescribing m~cines ~ oni)rursi,og bobiCs have been ''in·
He contends grimly that the by1 increased air pollution, not and performing operation; -'CQDSi~tent due !-0 a ~e of
., ·WitbOirttnl!dicaJ.justificaUon. MDs in rural areas 8bd lack of
-------------'------------Rep • .John Moss. D·Calif., cooperati.onin\U'bauarea.s~·· ~
I•
.
Talk I~ lllni~ll.li;,,g
Thoughts at Large: ,
The way one talks about others
reveals more of one's own
character than it does of theirs. •
. ,-'
SYD,NEY HARRIS . .... ....; ..... .,..., ................... _~ 1 fi'<lm tlie'nlm~ oi eacb or the 10
The best and brfefest argu. ~vi.si.onso~aRom8.nJegion.con·
ment against censorship was ststingof300to600 men.)
given by R:emy de Gourmont, ~hen he wrote : ''Good books are one cant .iways ten a truly
irrefutable, and bad books refute famous pet.son by the fact that at
themselveftr'' 'lea~~Jo;~-_persons went t ..
. . SCJiOOI Wi!Jl'~ tn lbe11111ailtown Cbrome wverty breeds lack of ' ol l 500 where he lll:eW:!IR. .
I
I
self·relia'ace, an ',then the·poor: "" ' • ,_'If . · \ ~ --~
L t th W k F . . ht. It 0· ~ t -fu:ti~i::n:ihi.~1.'.1~a=..~:; ~~J;i*°e:riyw~~ J: e e ac Os ·Jg · u ' blan!ing ah mvalid for !letting withml!l'i!erers, who in it bed·sores. '., 1 !K' .. mucb tll•~ llley illllid It UD•
. . · .~ 1laterally. \ • .
I
If the natioqra airlines ...... · , .. ---------~ f th · i · llttl ..,. u ., .. through good tidleo anti bad !.. • •
(
:
'} ~ epape~,pusa . e..,as o. stampt.etc. Now.lt~Jias csn pay their emPioyes-h · MAILBOX: . pail ahd shovel (do~e ~et). out0lorder.sl1oah••lllD100Jlalf so that .a "Do·tippinl'' rule IS ·~ORI.NOE COAST "
To lbe Editor :
• Ab, the cast is complete. Now,
ii• die a huge pit in Las Vegas
-In l) Pally Hearst 2) El dee Cleaver '3)<Lynette Fl'-•• 4) a Piggie 5) the
JJf?ES?e lted Army6) Marshal
X1 7) the H arrises 8) an
-"-'-Nul 9) a 1""'11:ie 10)
T motlll1 Leary 11) a
• ' • _
1
... _,..1 .Youkoow.[wehaveafew~ lhema~hlJ\es~dmoot.!lfther~~ strictlyeoforced,wbyan'tC)ll\er
_ .. , mte President Ford and r.tr. l'lilt· ~· b\iJllUDC out 41(. ltalllp& • I and more •consistently affluent 1 ._._..;..._.,:C::t:-·-<JO·whotak.etheU'dogs;011beadieo lights: ·When you tey J)lle of the .service industri.S m-to do ·~~!'!!'!!..,. ............ , ..... .,. .,.. .. ,... too ~asdidtKen'n~-r-,vedon"t machines that aren't marked, thesame" 1 • ~Jr">~~· ,.._.,........,,..,.,....,,.,._...,.. .... _ .Wanttobetobstedle ordOwet. r it'slikepl•yin"aLasVeaas~ · • · .. Diiiill.....,
,,,....,... .. AHWttenl'llntl• ... ......,__., Fr band! '.,_ d ·•• -• b .. .1...: ~ -. ... 11--r:; I 'lmrfJatttKn!l::t,,.' ,. .... ..,... ...... !'Ml_, .. .,......,... · ance es i.. og ~ arm~ __._t, except ..-t ,,. you A liter&ry prize is ait ~~ant. ~ tditorlolPo"". E
::.":':..-:""'""''•,......_,._,,.., animal situations in a~ more hittbejackpotyougeta~or "' eustorriarlly given to a writer in •. ~
W ID 12) Arafat Of the .
~ -= •-14) a 'i )1 It-poselbte to put a ) .Bill '#,llfm lS) liloratorlum OD Sa,ld i>J-.ha OI> '
..... that .J•cl< hlillL Then der to request proper9' lllld doJ
Jiit tlleiD ftlfit It out and owners to get a pei:mlt trqm the
-die n"bor KlnC of the city (startinJ with Newport) to
WttllK. ' . .. · takeourdogsoutfrom6a.m.t,1btll Of-... tlle<tel>illon rl~ht:a ~ p.m. for a lee of $20 a year?
•1iewmt11afor1-.... Does this sound leMlbleT 41ueh
JI. R.ICMI.\f . pormlta are !11ued to lutftn
businesses, parking, etc. -not~ •111 -8e•t• meoUoo marriage licenses or
----·----~-·--'~1.1!.''!.• .J!.!!d ,_ ...... ~'~ . . -·"' ... •·~~o.Ues. •-" owneni--• . •ellli-.aallmlaUv.tott.pro-SUCBPll:JllllTS(dop)wwld
• ,_.,.wlldQpoabe10M. p11ayear'•llcensehlescbqe
--• . ' ·--. '
humsne ,..ay by presenting dog-a book of stamps th<tl·11"1 paid' America before he baseaned"' 'Theetl!lorlil PU• .rllieDally g!ecdhlfort1taUons.011s~!4'. tar. ~ 1 and tn Europe after beilo ,_ Pilot ••fl<• \\0 •Worin ••II I rather doubt that the dog . ' Jleeds1t ·-.,,-&timll&le 1'~ 111' ~
pcjpdaUori would. be heavy from THE MACID1'(E atOrantellld · · • ..,~~=~
6 p.ln. to 6 a.in. anyway. But you 17th Street is a!Jo a bad pmble., Atlelidlna a funeral ~UY. l ' . :;l ·:.,,;:;;;a _,by
c:anbetonit-l'llbelhere! It would be Bil. lf..-0-t to recalled the anony-II"!'; ct: •1 pi'o'1d!B• a fqrum lat'i'o-.· H~LEN HUTCIDNS01i ::...~'in~~~! • .!:~~ g~ t!'e Jut dentury who~. I Mle<' ' ...... ~M,'br '--""' w. •··-listening Ill menrorlii s'!l"\>l~-iPfl' • .....,...,.__. Ide• G_.a.9 G-. · When ii went up to 10 cenb., Oil'! can oliJy conclllde o.w ~ ""r!i::J~ :::f:•· ~ edilcrial ~ • '1 • llOwem',lnevernot!cedanlm-beathope)brmanklnrl1'_toreour-' :1ylnthe~ort!\1...,::::
To the Editor: I • ~·111,•nt m ••rvice. n jua~ r*1 the d d and. inter the !iv-tap of'lh• P•&•· Opbd ........
I hope that when lhe·pcot office seema to get worMLIIDll worse. 1ng." • • -by Ille "°'11~ -gets !ta 13-cent •tamp, they call When stamps were .three centa nrtoonists aod let!« ~ttra""'
olfor<lto!lxthatp!teotJunltover lorfifalclas1and011eeentfora One or the mO.t continuaUY .-..-·--ao--aJ tlftM'HM:borSlloppifilrC<iiter.Tr-postcard, we got good Htvice. misused words Is "eohort"4or .. lllolr ,;..,,.It tlle Qlily l'lll1t
111ed to be a ·o ~e~ little s~,cethen,lthaaltoneuptnprice "eoofeclerafe" or "&lllKICiate"; a Sliooldllelftlerr.d.
automated 1>0al oll~~bat aoo d""1! tn service. person cannot>be a ~c>llllrt. aolY a \V,eclnetldayAlept-:ac,_ Jm
mide eh_. ~ :roa · buY • JIM BOLDING · 1ro•:"P~•:an'.:.' ~C~~:h:•_w:111~~d~to:'.m:ea~=::::'.:t:::::t:'.i:'.:::~7:_-'
l
•
' r I