HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-09-29 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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_.Judge OKs Delay i
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In Vallerga's, ' '
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Hinsha-:w's Trial . '
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-............ ··---.,... ~-M.0.N DAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 29, 1975 ' VOL 61. ~ 112. J SECTIOMS, M l"Ae•S ..
'' ) I
other Boffa?
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•
Fo11nd in Hideout
PiSi O.l, A-ntmo--·.
New Patty Jjnk?
• Ul"I T ......... . !'· ' The pressure is building for James P :Hoffa Jr. (left) to,
take.-up his father's fight for control of t he huge, scan·
dal-ridden Teamsters Union. He's shown with his n·ow·
niissing father in 1971. Story, Page 4.
~imhaw; Val·lerga
:Win Trial :l)elay· ,.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI> -
The FBI said today it found a
9-millimeter pistol and live am·
munition -the same kind used
in the robbery of a suburban
Sacramento bank last ApMI -in
Patricia Hearst's last hideout.
Also among the effects found in
the San Francisco apartment
were a green scarf similar to one
worn in the robbery of the
Crocker Bank branch, papers
from Croeker-Bartk-; and ·a com-
munique from a terrorist group
known as the New World Libera·
tion Front, which has claimed
MENTAL TEST
FOR PATTY, AS
responsibility ror more than a
dozen San Francisco area bomb-
ings the past year. The nature or
the communique was not re-
9y·TOM BARLEY Redding has testified before vealed.
1 ~.:,.,.11yl"t~,_. the Grand Jury. Assistant Dis· Tbe items were included in a
• . tn·ct ··•, tt·~-y Mi··bael .. ~-pi···'. .25-pag~ inventory of effects '· Congressman 'Andrew J .· n. ui.•..: ... ..... ..... I d th art t h also Co1mmented today· "He oun 10 e ap men w ere .. ~w and Convicted forpter , coW.d tiaVe. gOne -.to t,;a1;:been · Miss Heant, 21, and fellow
, ~ Assessor Jack Vallerga fmed $1.000 and convicted of a . fugitive Wendy Yoshimura, 32, .,,er. er anted a \hre.e-ll}0'1th de,. misd lt asn't worth i were arrested Sept. 18. • .,,. o1 t"h.eir Orane• Cou~ty .t ,. emeanor. w "'' The FBI also released a 100.. ~;pe~<>r Court trl~l on multiple 1 ·Six .of the eight· coevicted '8S· .; page inventory or ite~ found in cnm1Q8lch~gestoiday.. ~, ·d~. MJ biad . .f~QI ,. another San FranctSCo apart-
after the robbery.
It had been reported earlier
that currency found in the apart-
ment matched the serial num-
bers of money taken in the rob-
bery. But while listing currency
found in the hideout, no mention
was made in the inventory of
matching serial numbers.
In Sacramento, s heriff's
spokesman Bill Miller declined
to further describe any ev idence
which might tie Miss Hearst and
the J.larrises to the robbery, but
said: "There are some things in
the' labs at the FBI that could
make a s trong case against
them.··
Among other items found in
Mi ss Hearst's apartment, ac-
cording to the FBI inventory.
were registration, identity and
library cards for Sacramento Ci-
ty College, a steno pad with nota-
tions about various San Fran-
cisco banks, a San Francisco
General Hos pital identification
<See PATTY, Page A2:)
86 '86ed'
At Anaheim ,Ba. Pr!~~!_!'l1._!u1d2g1:e_6)\o-b,y• ~ ·~~th~~~Y~JJ:;;i'(~~,du;fii··~ ~ent where Symbi~. Llbera-ny~ ... .,,..,, ~n . , ~·, .l as·tb'e , w·'·' ..._ • a 4 ) lion Army members William and
new trial date alter it was ex· <See HINSH~ •.-.gen.. Emily Harris were arrested the R k I' --*
plained that a trial earlier set to · same day. O C t..AJllCet_~
star:t today would m~t~ertainb'.. Skat ho d" ~e-mv~t~Y1 •e0iitijiolil~ ~ ~r'c' •.·: reSied'iti ~ltfe ... Sti~-be in progress 911 No.y, 10, the e 8r er brief descnpttons of e.ach item C"fU 1 e ar date that Hinshaw f~ "',tAah i > • . , • , . ;, -found and did not directly lie the day.at a rock concert in Anaheim
al r\ b 'be ' h ·'Hi' ' -· • " I ' h · 1St3:l1ium attended by about 44,000 ooeo n rye frges . ..__."' •: ,~. f)r. ~ :__,~I •newspaper e1resst0Uterobbery '-tsonsdrawn to the stadium by ID the-C9Urlroom with'vvw.!" ~e;. .. II.~ 1 a\80'~ of the bank in Carmichael on t ..,... fen, 'dDU w,as former. As8es80i:'11 ... 1 '' ~ .... April 21. A woman and three men rock superslars Linda ~onstadt d irl ho ' ,anti the Eagles. a.de Garlan Redd g,. Vil w~s lJ i '-~~ J .~ 'i' , biJ ;. took $18,0QO at gunpOiut. During , ~ost of the arrests were for al· cleared .of gran'd theft and con-v' ,._..nt..._O ' A the robbery, a customer was hit \ ·~ spiracy charges on a moti9fl _filed • J ~ .l.U .. V'A.ll V. by a shotgun bl~s.t andla.terdied. en<t narcotic v~olati~, accord-rr _t.o ing: to Anaheim police Sgt. VtheDistrictAttorney'ao ice. , A &-year-old San Clemente ·• Nine-millimeter bwiets were Ric:bard Gray whocharacteMzed
. Redc[inf. 56, of Santa ~a, was skateboarCler r dtaa1ed "5l fee\ found on the floor of the bank . 'the c row d , s be ha vi or as
<fl\e of nme emp~oyes ind)ct~ .. , att,er -::be , co}lided wlt.h alJ\ ·'"generally good."
"1er a long probe of allegedl.f il· ,u~\ was. uported iii ".But:· Gray added, "it seems
teg-•llctivitios In (he.Assessor's 'J:' ; --''"-......,>'·• ..,_ FlRSJ' r Jr r PD th 1 ho e om~ dllring Hinshaw's term-• . • ., .. c;,,..,.,...,.-;:..~i.e> ~'!.:..! •• _ .• ~ ~ft ere are a ways some w ar
1-.. ~--.. ,-~'"f"=',~ '~ \ tt!"'~~~' " willing to pay $10 a ticket to get ~· '· i' l' ~. · at rilt~ {~ri..-.ti° F'~all>'E'D thehiselvesintrouble." Conviction~ already ~a'-:t ~ · '\l:edi ni~eDCii 61 -1ln, G<J11 ~ric . n While most of those arrested
recorded acamst Redding s ~_ight the hospital intensive care W1it were charged with narcotic
codefendantl. I~ --:as ~x_pl~~ . or Jr,~ment. T,he child lf· ... Ca~~·~~ s;ld~iO'·~~d,~. viollltio•w. thhe ._,.e~sttdl ...... .8..r-·. tbday that Redding scoopers " §OtteaIYSutferid I broken arm;'' ,....va; rests on drunk in public charges
with the p_rosecution dw:tng_that bead injuries, cuts and scratches whoca~ed .. , . •. and"a rew persons were taken in·
invest.ligation led to thedisnuasal 'lfftlt~DS1SbaT. -~· -· ·---··--~ That a the.advertising success Jo cb.tstody for allegedly c~ing
deeision. · San Clemente Police repOrted story told by l~eCos~'Mesa ~:~n ,Mr6ealed weapons, Gray said. tbe accident occurred ..i.en the who placed tha ad m the n~y --·r
\V e~kends to £nd?.
"SAVANNAH BEACH. Ga.
WP!) -City officials nre debat-bai whether to end ''beach
~kends'' in this resort com-
cnunity where some 30 hlgh
~ students were arrested
17 Sunday aner a nightoCrock ~ _tM>t:Ue throwina.
~kat~•i;d~rcat\lequ\9fapark:.1 .,~i>i!Gt;:, ., ~* • • ...;.;.. ,. ... .'µo4'..r:H --~ ~;
Jng tot dnveway ~ c:Olllded ·ee vw Camper, aliding Ri Qu Ued
wit!\ a car driven by Euatacio E. -· nu motor. brakes. Oling e Canal, 55, of 1804 Loe ~u. San. Xtra clean, $2495, xu-
Clemente. xxu.. \:
According to police, the child Jf you have a recreational
fell down and rolled under tbe vehicle to sell or rent, call
car which carried him '5 feet. 842-5678. We make it easy to put
The eccideot occurred mar 192 a few words to w4>rk for you, in w. El Camino Real. 'Ille driVOl'th ·:::::e.:D.:ai::·1 .. y.:P.:il.:o.::t. _____ _
WU not held. -
SANGER (U PI) -Fresno
County Shertfr~s deputies report·
ed today that all was quiet Sun-
day ni1ht after deputies, Sanger
police and the bighway patrol
quieted a amaJl-scare riot in the·
I . tot Saturday night.
l
U"IT......,_.
The city fathers of
Hazelcrest, Ill ., weren't
satisfied to just put up a
futuristic-looking water tank
at the edge of town. So they
gave it a happy face to greet
motorists along Jlighway 57 .
3 Hold
~Iialiaiis
'
In Eatery
LONDON <U Pl J -Three
gunmen demanded a plane and
safe conduct out or Britain today
as the p,rice for sparing the lives
or seven Italian employes seized
as hostages in a botched robbery
attempt at a London restaurant.
But a high-ranking police official
said ''there will be no deals.''
"I was told by the hostages
they have made this demand,"
Italian Consul General Mario
Manca told newsmen after talk·
ing to the hostages throUgh the
locked door of the s mall
storeroom where they are being
held for a second day.
But assistant Police Com·
missioner Wilfred Gibson said,
"They have been told there wtll
benodeals."
The gunmen, said to include
two West Indians and a Nigeriap.
have held the hostages at lbe
Spaghetti House restaurant in
fashionable Knightsbridge in
West London since 1 :30 a.m. Sun-
day.
They relea sed an eighth
hostage, Alfredo Olivelli. on Sun·
day to show "good faith."
Mrs. Mary Olivelli, his wife,
said her husband dei;cribed the
storeroom prison. measuring on-
ly 9 by 13 fe~t as ''a hell hole.··
"He said the stench is in-
<See HOST AG ES, Page A2)
Woman Rap~d
. '
On Air Base
By Thin Man
A woman was raped at the El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station
and then later slashed with a
knife near her Orange area home
in a weekend incident that is be-
ing investigated today by Orange
County Sherirr·s orricers.
Deputies said the 20-year-old
victim was (irst attacked as she
lert the enlisted men's club at the
El Toro base. They said she was
rmeect -te' 't'91M'o\te ~twt..rclothing
and was raped near a parking
lot.
orricers said her attacker,
described as a tall. thin man in
• tM: f'tltl)'~4w•aties , then--forced
her into his car with the stated in-
tention of driving her home. They
said he stabbed her with a knire
four times before she was pushed
from the car at an Orange area
intersection.
The victim was taken to a local
hospital where two of the wounds
were stitched up, deputies said.
O range Coast
Weath er
Late night and morning
clouds, otherwise fair skies
Tuesday, according to the
weather service. A little
warmer "''ith beach highs
near 70 rising to the low80s
inland.
I NSI DE T O DAY
The ovt'Thead exceed.1 lhe
profit! •/iu~old· llt '$dddttbock
Community Enterpri.Je!, bul
it! work with mentally han·
d:icapped adults bears intangi-
ble dividends See Page Cl.
ladex
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" 511'1'1•""''1•r •••• --., St.!1Merli11• ...
DHtfl ... lkft •• Tei.\t\.r. . .. --.. ... -. .. A-• All
_ ... •• .. tM!tfi~ •• --.U,11 --.,
• ::7'2 DAILVPlLOT s Monday, September 29, 1975
i · Third OC College?
I .
r I 'Communiversity' Concept Eyed
By ALAN DIRK.IN
Ot•O.llrPillelllllfll
A communiversity
described by a task force as "a
true people's college'" -is being
prol)08ed ror the Coast Communi·
ty College District.
It would be a third teaching in-
stitution ror the . distriet, one
1peclalizina in continuin& educ•· tion and one operating in addition
to the Orange Coast and Golden
West colleges. It would take over
evening classes and television
courses.
The plan for the com-
Ready to Topple ... '
• '
.
•
•
The accelerator on this car assertedly stuck as Adeline
Mary Jackson, 74, of Costa Mesa sat behind the wheel.
The racing a uto finally stopped against utility pole on
Orange A venue near Walnut, nearly felling the towering
fixture. Police said Mrs. Jackson, of 1991 Newport
Bouleyard, was not hlll'.l in mishap which also involved
damage to two parked cars.
•
Guards Get .Respite
From Super Waves
Rescue-weary lifeguards from
Seal Beach to San Clemente to-
day welcomed the end of the
super surf that pounded into the
Orange Coast late last week.
The surf, still sizeable Satur-
day, by this morning had re-
turned to normal one to lhree-
foot levels. On Friday, the surf
raged as high as 12 feet.
Lifeguards reported today that
moderate crowds visited beaches
along the Orange Coast over the
weekend, but said there were few
problems.
In San Clemente, an off-duty
Newport Beach Jifeguard suf-
fered a sprained 6ack Sunday af-
ternoon white body swfing in
five-foot Sets at T Street Beach,
one of Southern California's top
body surfing spots.
Douglas Prichard, 17, of 614
Michael Place, Newport Beach,
was rescued by an unidentified
board-surfer who placed
Prichard on his surfboard and
paddled out.side the surf break.
Prichard was transported in
the San Clemente lifeguard
rescue boat to its Dana Point
base and taken by ambulance to
San Clemente General Hospital .
ORANGE COAST
'
DAILY PILOT
He was treated for the sprain and
released.
Lifeguards said no new storms
are lurking off the coast that
could generate a repeat of last
week's surf.
Beach attendance along the
Orange Coast exceeded 100,000
persons both Saturday and Sun-
day. Lifeguards reported 61
rescues Sunday and 75 rescues
Saturday.
Lifegu,.rds over the weekend
were forced to rely on skeleton
staffs to patrol beaches because
seasonal guards were taken off
duty when school started.
f'ro.Page A J
HOSTAGES
describable and the heat over-
powering.··
During the morning, police
passed coffee, cigarettes and
a portable chemical toilet into the
·storeroom. There are no sanitary
facilities in the room and the air
conditioning was switc~ off in
hope the beat would forcelbe ban·
ditsout.
Mrs. Olivelli s31d her husband
also told her the robbers wore
knitted helmets covering most of
their faces and that they told the
hostages they belonged to the
"Black Liberation Front."
Bu t London police and
spokesmen for black community
groups said they knew of no such
organization.
Senior police officers said there
are no political implications.
They said it was just an armed
robbery that went wrong because
police arrived on the scene too
quickly.
: ·' .
Police Commander
Christopher Payne, who beaded
negotiations during a plane hi-
jacking at London's Heathrow
Airport lut January, arrived at
the restaurant today. But he re·
fused to coorirm It was because or
experience with dealing with ter·
rorlsts.
Police marksmen were issued
with au ma1k1 and tear gas, but a
police rpokesman said the lives of
the bolta1es were the fint con·
alderaUon and no attempt would
bemadetoruab the gunmen.
More than 200 police were In or
near tbe restaurant, and wooden
acreeM were erected in front of it to shield the entrance from publtc
vleW.
muniversity was presented to a
meetlni of the district t.rpstea In
Costa Mesa recently: It grew out
of a :study by a task force on dis!
lrict orgaoiz•tion, a study that
was ordered by the board after
faculty membera bad called ror a
review of the evening college.
and sought more say on the TV
courses.
The proposal will be discussed
at a special meeting of the board
with representatives of tpe
academic senates of both Orange
Coast and Golden West Oct. 18.
Th.is special board meeting will
be held on the Golden West cam·
pus, beginning at 9 a .m.
The timetable for any change
in district organization calls for
final approval to be given by the
board before July, 1976 so that
the changes can be incorporated
for the fall 1976 semester.
The communiversity was one
of seven alternatives the task
force. set up by District Chan·
cellor Dr. Norman Watson, con-
sidered. Both trustees and facul·
ty representatives at the meeting
asked for further evaluation,., on
the other options.
The communive.rsity as recom-
mended by the task force, would
be "a true people's colltge''
because it would not be confined
by a campus. "It will become a
community-baaed extension of
the two-college 'mission," the
task force r:eported.
It would offer both credit and
non -credit courses. but would not
grant degrees; degrees still
would be granted by the Golden
West and Orange Coast olleges.
"The communiversity would
operate through a network of
geographically scattered sites
and a variety of delivery
systems, both formal and in-
formal," the report said. "Its
faculty would be largely part.-
time, comprising a consortium of
regular academic faculty, com·
munity representatives, and ex-
perienced professionals."
The communiversity would be
operated on a district-wide level
and would have its own cur-
riculum council. This point and
other elements of the com-
muniversity concept could strike
sore points with the faculty
because the academic senates of
both Orange Coast and Golden
West colleges have long cam·
paigned for the evening college
to be run by the administrations
of the two campuses and not by a
separate administration, which
is presently the case.
So111~...,teacbers also bav,_, criU,Cb-th TV courses 000--
asked for mote faculty cootrol of
the courses. KOCE, which broad·
casts t he telecourses, also is
responsible to t he district ad-
ministration, and not to the ad·
ministrations of the two colleges.
At the meeting, one faculty
representative suggested that
communiversity was simply a
new name for an old structure
but Dr. Watson contended that
the cQJTlmuniversity would be
more expansive than the present
evening college operation, and
added that because it would have
its own curriculum. committee
"it would have the ability to
move in new ways."
Ralph Lewis, an OCC faculty
member, noted that some
television courses have had dif-
ficulty getting the approval of the
curriculum committees of the
two colleges.
"'It seems like this is an ap-
proach to set up a new cur-
riculum committee, weighted
toward t he administration, to
avoid the two curriculum com-
mittees, which are faculty orient-ed,·· he said.
Dr. Watson said that any one of
the three curriculum committees
would be able to approve the
telecourses.
,,...,.. Page AJ
HINSHAW •.•
meanors with each ordered . to
pay a $1,000 fine.
Hinshaw and Vallerga will be
back in court together Jan. 12 to
face identical charges stemming
from allegations that members
of the assessor's staff worked on
Hinshaw's congressional cam·
paign in 1972.
It is also alleged that employes
were paid time and mileage by ·
the Assessor's Office while they
canvassed for Hinshaw and post-
edsians throughout the county.
Valterga's trial in Ventura
County resulted in· the man who
took over from Hinshaw being
fmed $1,000, p~aced. on five years'
probation and permanently
barred from holding public of·
fice. ·
Hinshaw faces briber)' charges
in bis Nov. 10 trial. He and
Vallerga face cbargea ol &rand
thelt, conspiring and embe1zle·
ment In the Jan. 12 proceedin&.
Burn Victim Dies
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Capt.
Arthur Delafre Jr., 38, has died
at County·USC M"'1Jcal Center
fl'Om bums suffered In a sawdust
erploelon at a lllootebdlo fire
h1atWedneaday.
· I
Ul'IT•~ , .. -t · r . ., ' f.
"#( y • • ' ,::r--. . • )I..,.•, • easy as his master does .ii.
·' • '• • I & p ~· •• ""~ . Ii
This Washington dog's mode of tr•v t' iets has it really
a second look from the people in the pa'ss-the pedalilli.
ing car. Maybe it's jealousy'ha ~ J>09Ch , '· ' , {
~ .. " • .f',...P'.;,e AJ ~ . . ~
I • ,..,_ ., Portugal's ·}l~dio,
I ' ; • '.' f I
TV Station'-s Seized
.J ,P A;rTY ••• ·~.
LISBON !UPI) -Prime
Minister Adm. Jose Pinheiro de
Azevedo ordered troop§ to oc-
cupy the nation's Codlmunist-
controlled radio and television
stations today and: said tl}e move
was taken to prevent Portugal's
falling into anarchy.
His move triggered one of the
most exploslye crises in the fOWl·
tr)''s 17-month-oldJevoluUon.
Troopt1 se.nt to qne oi the sta-
tions rebelled a1ainst their or·
ders and joiljed the workers. The
rar left called ror mass protests
.to paralyze the country. ,
The Revolutionary United
Front urged workers to throw up
barricades in the streets and
launch a general strike. ·
The front formed by an al·
liance or leftist groups appealed
for soldiers and sailors to mutiny
against t he government and
"
Crash Hurts
Music Star
NASHVILLE. Tenn .
(AP> -Country music
star Earl Scruggs was in-
, jured early today when the
· single-engine airplane he
was piloting crashed dur-
ing a Janding at Cornelia
Fort a(rfield, police said.
Officials at Memorial
Hospital said Scruggs, 51,
suffered a broken nose. a
broken ankle, facial
lac:erations and head in-
juries. They said he was in
satisfactory condition.
A spokesman for the
Federal Aviation Ad ·
ministration said Scruggs
had flown from Murray,
Ky.
A spokesman for the
private airfield said
Scruggs' Cessna 172 ap·
parenUy overshot the land-
ing strip and flipped over
in a farm field.
mobilize themselves on the side
ofthelefL ,_
"We are now in one of the most
seriou& situations since the start
of the'·revOlution, '1 Information
Minister Antonio Almeida Santos
said.
ue said . ttie priine minister woul4 address t.be nati® tonight.
Mor:e tlJan 1,000 demcinstrators
gathered 1n Rossio Square in
downfowi\,. Lisbon to shout
"Death to 'the Fascists!" and
"Reactlonaties .out or the Bar·
ruts!'' They then marched on
RaA!io Renascenca to demand
that the soldiers give the
facilities back to the workers.
· Radio Renascenca, which is
theoretically owned by the
Roman Catholic Church, has
been the focus of a major con·
troversy since leftist workers
took over the buildina-and turned
it ink> afar left facility.
Another hot spot was Radio
Club where soldiers sent to OC·
cupy t he building rebelled
against their orders and instead
joined the workers. Military
stturity chief Gen. OteloSaraiva
de Carvalho initially ordered the
facilities evacuated, but this was
not carried out.
In the afternoon, a man with a
bullhorn told the crowd outside
Radio Ren.ascenca that the.
soldiers there also were leaning
towards the workers and planned
to take a vote on whether to
maintain the occupation.
Santos briefed the press short·
ly after the prime minister issued
a statement saying that the ac·
lion was necessary lo reverse
Portugal 's s lide toward s
anarchy, which he said was be·
ing promoted by the radio and
teleY.ision stations.
The prime minister made his
move as the country emerged
from a weekend of diverse mob
violence that battered Lisbon
and Porto and struck at the roots
of governmental authority.
card, a blaak wig, birth control pills and radical literature. Also
found was a seven-page
handwrj tten letter on yellow
lined paper addressed "'Dearest
Brother.. and signed '"So mu,ch
JOve , resped. and power. Me.'' ,
Included in the literature foWld
in the apartment weretwo~pies
of "Seize the Time" newspaper,
a ''Liberation School ''
· newspaper, a newsletter entitled
"Political Thesis of the Puerto
Rican Socialist Party," and a
yellow leaflet entiUed 1'NeYf
Dawn" concerning·members in a
Marxist-Leninist New Dawd
party. .. :
Also found were several
newspaper clippings aboµt
Joseph Remiro and Russell Lit."·
tie, two SLA members convicted
of the murder of Oakland, Ca.lif.J
Schools Superintendent Dr ••
Marcus Foster.
. ·-Found in the Harrises' apart-
ment were a variety of weapons.
Also found were several women's
wigs and extensive cosmetic slip..
plies, a parking citation dated
Aug. 22, 1974, and a ski mask.
Also found were pipe bombs
and materials described in ~e
inventory as: ;
-"One two-inch U·brand pipei
cap With black granular s~b-;
stance inside, one U-brand two--'
inch pipe cap with drill bole
through center, one two-inch pipe
cap bearing symbols o and 2 with
drill hole through center with
black granular substance in·
side.''
-''One Gourd brand two-inch
pipe ca·p with drill hole through
center with black granular sub·
stance inside." .
-"~ig!)t two-inch pipes vary-
ing from 310 I.I inches in length.~'
-•'One pipe device capped at
both ends containing bla~k
granular substance with wires
protruding from drill hole."
Also found were three six-vOlt
batteries and one 12-volt batteP.t',
and three books checked out of
University of California libraries
which were titled: ''The Science
of High ExploSives, '' ''Ex·
plosives, '' and ''Fuels, Ex·
plosives and Dyestuffs."
i • ' '
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•
.PJ~e
Crash
•
robed
• I . . ~· It may take "quite a while"
• <ibef'ore the c•u1e of the military ~arto plfJJe Crasll, ip which rout
""r,wme11 W'f" ~lUed 'Ind two Glbfn ..,, .. ,a~rlously il\Jured in
·Mlulo• Vi.e,Jo 'lrfiday, i• de. lennlnf!d1 ae<?ordi03 to a Marine ..Con>a 1pox11man. , ·~. The.Cari lbat thert' are two sur·
V\vora, who will be able to tell
"'bat they aaw )lappen. may help
be inveslifation. explained
J.laeter Gunnery Sgt. Chris
• $vans, a public info.-mation of.
· ficer al the El Toro Marine Corps
AirStaUon.
.,, But he said invest.igaton also ~will sift tfirougb the pieces which
·~were scattered when the plane
hit the ground near Saddleback
College, tn an effort to determine
the reason the plane did riot gain
altitude.
This. he said. is tedious and time-consuming.
The site of the crash is still
sealed otf from spectators, he
said, and investigators are conti-
nuing to comb through the
wreckage.
The ilame of the fourth victim
of the crash has been released.
He was Sgt. Terry L. Dillow, 26,
of Santa Ana. His name had been
withheld until his next or kin, who
live in Omaha, Neb., had been
notified.
Others killed in the crash were
Lt. Col. Julius Lewis Jr. of Mis-
• sion Viejo, Major Harry Collins
. · or Irvine and Master Sgt. Willis
Nichols or Santa Ana.
Survivor Slaff Sgt. Edgar
' Strain, of Santa Ana, is reported
'. i'n stable condition at Mission
' Community Hospital. The second
survivor, Sgt. Bruce Wichlacz, or
I Tustin. is reparted in serious con-
dition at the Orange County
Medical Center burn ward.
The p lane crashed shortly
1. after takeorr on a training mis-
1 sion.' It was scheduled to make
, the flight and return to El Toro t· with no other stops.
r Woman Knifed
'.'Twice Durillg
'. Church Rites
.Just Ducky
Ernest Helling of Santa Ana likes to fish at Laguna
Nigue l Regional Park and the resident ducks seem to
like Ernest Helling. He later distracted them by flinging
marshmallows into the water. "Don't tell anybody there
are fish in here,·· he warned.
'Strike' by Women
Planned Oct. 29
I. -< DAILY PILOT ,ti
'Not Si11ee 1939'
.. Old Coas t Surfe_rs R eminisce •
111 JAClt CHAPPELL
Of .. 0.11, .............
George ••Peanuts'' Larson
Zimmerman squinted out
throuah his dark 11 ...... peered
to sea and grinned as a young
aurfer wiped out on a big chum.
ing wave off Laguna's Brooks
Stretit beach.. ·
"Why, I baven~t seen surf Uke
this since that Sunday in Sep.
tember 1939 when we got hit by a
hurricane.·· Zimmerman said,
ranging his gnarled fingers
throu&h 1 live-days' growth of
beard.
Zimmerman, 59. came to the
Orange County coast in the early
1930s, lifeguarded from San
Clf.mt.nte .19 Sa_nJll...MQDica and
surfed the ll·foot, 98 -pound
redwood and balsa surfboards of
the day up and down thF coast .
The big surf poondin2 the
beaches recently produced a
nood tide or Zimmerman tales
about the "golden days of surf·
ing" and the characters who
peopled them.
Zimmerman recalled surfing
down by San Onofre the day
be.Core the hurricane.
"The waves were breaking in
about 30 feet of water and ap·
proximately a mile from shore,"
he said.
"My first ride was kind ol Cun.
but it didn't last long and I pulled
out. The second ride was fun,
__ ,,_,__ . ... ..... __ .....
••
•
• •
DMtf"' ... IWt .....
OLD SURFERS COMPARE NOTES ON 1939 WAVES
Ted Sizemore, George 'Peanuts' Laraon Zlmmerm1n
about 300 yards. through the isthmus of Panama ("God rest his beautiful &Q\1l")
''Barney Wilkes surfed the and marched right up the Pacific Tom Blake, Peter Peterton.
wave before me and got wiped CaUlornia Coast and spent its Loron Harrison, Dr. John R.
out. J paddled over, picked him fury in the Tehachapi Mountains. Ball, Ron Drummon, Wendy
up and paddled back out. ··Newport Harbor entrance Brown and others including
"On the third wave, he either was closed off by heavy seas Newpart Beach Lifeguard C2s(ef
fellolforratherlpushedhimoff. One ship tried to come in, the Bob Reed, and Bren n'an
The surface was as smooth as the Paragon, and went aground on McClelland, a former Lagijna
skin on a baby's bottom. The the jetty. Eleven people were Beach lifeguard who onCe
third ride was from where the rescued by two surfboard riders rescued Zimmerman. "'l
nuke plant is now to Kunki Ca· whose names are Johnny llugo "Ir there weren't lifeguards,
nyon, about three quarters of a and Ralph Daw son,'' Zim· there wouldn't be enough tax-
mile. and that was the end of my merman reca)led. payers left to pay the city fat.tiers
surfing. I wiped out in the bone Zimmerman was the third wages,"Zimmermansaid. •
yard. I survived, but I didn 't lifeguard to be hired by the city He recalled what the surfing at
s wim ashore, I was washed of San Clemente. He received $50 Corona del Mar used to be like.
ashore," Zimmerman said. a month and had to guard four "In the old days of Corona del
''The day of the hurricane, at 6 miles of beach, he said. Mar before they extended thejet-
a .m . the wind was approaching a Between 1933 and 1941. he ties and ruined the world's best
WASHINGTON (UPI> -Mem· been named "Alice Doesn't . velocity of 50 knots which later knocked about between San place (or riding a surfboard ex-
bersofthe National Organization -is for ''every woman -not built lo 85 with gusts or over 100 Clemente and Santa Monica cept for Steamer Head off
for Women say they have re· just the leminists. We want them knots. li!eguarding and surfing. Diamond Head and North shore
ceived thousands of letters and to show how much they do sup-''That pa rt i cul a r s torm H'1s surfing buddies or the time Hawaii, those were the golden
telephone calls from people port the system -.that women originated in the Spanish Main included Duke Kahanamoka daysofsurfboarding,"hesaid.,
across the country who want to -'p'-ro-'-v-'id.;:e.;:S..cl..:pe_rc_e_n_t_:o_cl_th_e:..s:..u..:p..:po_rt_._··_s_w_•..:P_l _a_<_ros_s_t_h_e~g=-u-ll_o_f_M_e_xi_<_o_, --------------------------
join a one-day women·s strike
Oct. 29.
I
I -
The nationwide strike was an.
nounced two weeks ago by NOW
members who believe it will
show how much the country de·
pends on women.
You're Invited to Mariners Savings
'
MILWAVKE['. CUPIJ -A man walked up to a woman attending
services al the Bethel Baptist
: Church and stabbed her twice in
' the abdomen during the pastor's
"The response in the last week
has been fantast•ic, .. said Cindy
Clark, a strike leader, in a
telephone interview from San
Jose. ''We have heard from
women in the military, women on
Capitol Hill. nurses. busi ness and
professional women, factory
wqrkers ... a nd men, too ."
sermon. ,
Ruby Spinks, 33, was
· hospitalized at County General
Hospital in critical condition. A
· .. 40.year-old man was held in con-
., nection with Sunday's incident.
The Rev. Leonard McDonald,
· the pastor, said he had seen the
suspect walk Crom the back of the
church toward the pew where
Mrs. Spinks was sitting.
Ms. Clark said she has re·
ceived about 2,000 letters and
phone calls the past week, and a
number of other strike or·
ganizers are getting a similar
response.
..
''Then I noticed him pulling the.
knife from her and raising his
hand to stab her again.''.
l\.1cDonald said.
Sunday's
Sermon
Re porte d
By Tom Barley
She said the strike -which has
6 6 G)
Pastor: No Hope
Without Christ
(Editor·a Note : This is.a Monday feature in which Doily Pilot
reporter Tom Barley gives.a per.sona.lited .account of.a sermon
from. a church or synagogue selected at random in the Doily Pilot
circulation area. The church also will be tfu? subjec! of o feature on
Saturday's church -poge.J
There is absolutely no ho~ for our civilization if we fail-
to recognize that alJ our efforts must be built around the re·
cognition of Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior, Pastor
Eugene Stroh told his congregation Sunday at Fountain
Valley Baptist Church.
"Many Christians lirmly believe as they look at the
·chaos surrounding them today that the day or God 's final
judg.ment must be at hand," the speaker said.
"You can't really blame them," he added. "J-fere we
are striving for better economic conditions in the midst or
slums and fighting to end alJ wars while we are confronted
with worldwide starvation.
"Many or us do not realize that all our tremendous ef·
forts are useless unless that are made through the direetion
and purpose of Jesus Christ," Pastor Stroh said.
''Christians must seek God earnestly and constanUy if
we are to surmount our pfesent crises and they must not be
al raid to reveal their sins to Him, '1 the speaker said.
"But we must confess our sins and not simply seek
forgiveness,·· he added. ''All our failures must be confessed
by u.a and carefully spelled out to God if we are to be
absolved from sin as only the Christian who acknowledges
Christ's supreme sacrifice can be cleansed.
"But remember that we were not given license to..tn by
our Lord's ordeal on the cross.·· Pastor Stroh said . ''It costs
God the life or his only and dearly belove4 son to make this
astonishing act or fore\veness avallabletous. :
"When Christ died on the cross he used his precious
blood lo pay the i-ansom for afi Christians," the spe.tter
said. "What a price he paid so that we can set ourselves free
~m Satan's slave market."
I
GRAND OPEN.ING
October 1st thru the 10th
MUNCH A
BAG OF
POPCORN
HELP US
CELEBRATE THE
OPENING OF OUR
NEW BRANCH
Just drive to where Glenneyre
meets Forest iii downtown Laguna.
You won't be able to miss our
beautiful new building.
Come in and participate in our old·
fashioned grand opening festivities
from 9 AM t o 4 PM dally.
FREE CARICATURE
PORTRAIT
Caricature artists from Knott's
Berry Farm will be in our lobby
from noon to 4 PM to sketch your
portrait FREE. It's fun and makes
quite a conversation piece for
friend s and family.
Delicious hot-buttered
popcorn from our
authentic turn-of-the·
century popcorn machine
will add to your enjoy-
ment while visiting our
new facility.
QUAFF A DRAFT
OFOLD-
FASHIONED
ROOT BEER
There's nothing better than JlD <d,i j
that refreshing flavor of cool ,,;~;:;:;:=~-.,,,,;;=fc"::::I
root beer ·· except maybe the
many free ser vices offered to (]
-~[:·
GIVE EAR TO
NICKELODEON
FAVORITES
Marin ers' Savers by the
friendliest crew in town .
Melodies from the past will bring
back memories from the "Good·
Old· Days" on o ur authentic
Nickelodeon. You'll be humming
to old favorites as you open a
new high interest account.
START A NEW ACCOUNT OR
. TRANSFER AN OLD ONE •••
Our friendly savings counselors will be o n hand to help you open a new
savings account or transfer your current one. Just bring in your passbook ··
we'll do the rest! We have traditionally paid the highest interest rat es
available on insured savings accounts.
. I
DAILY FRI s ... r
Q.arn~pm 9.m-Spm 9-m-lpm
,.<
)
•
•
I
OAM..YPILOT •
•
~ .. ~ ... Strikes Paralyze Spanish To
... "\'\ .
wUla
Tom
11rplaiae
SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain
CU Pll -Strlkea in protest
against Saturday's execution of
five urban auerriUas paralyzed
parts of the Basque oountry to-
day and a brought an ex-
tr~rdinary sesslon of the gov·
emment in Mad rid to consider
the violent Spanish and foreign
reaction lo Ille deaths.
Heavily armed police used
clubs to ctueU street demonstra·
tions in some of the Basque towna
and cities. There atsowas aguer-
rillo·st)'le $53~.ooo robbel'Y in
Barcetona and a vast forest fire
that devastated great areas of
the Basque region.
TR& TWO.DAY -al ltriU
wu ealled by undet_..i labor
OO'pnlllatiooa from lbe rour Bu-
quo PfVYlnc" when -seek ind~ence &omsi-;n.11
paraty1ed several towoa tn
Gulpuz.coa Jrovlnce and Idled
thousands workers In lbe In·
dusta1al centM or Bilboo.
by 1,soo yoatb• 1boot1nc\
••Freedom!'' and lD U.bo~ ~ burned lbe SI*
e-J'· I"
'IODAYTBl!:SBweenew-
tJ.Spani1h manll~ wbldi
lurt.ber laolated Sl)'llD P>lllkali¥
and cllplomatlc;!!l'-, Mtxloo orde the -W...,
D~UliSDEPT. -Whal we
did for entertainment here-a.long
the couUine over the weekend
was to close down the roads. This
started in Corona del Mar and
workedupcoast .
40 Pirates Surrender • of all Spanish 10•.....-vL:: • flclalJ-withlD 38-bovl .... ,,
severed aJf commmlc-t--'1 air routes, telephone ~ ~· '
-in a move that~~
Spain's Iberian .\irWQI ~·
completlnC mchts ~,. eq '
route. .Mexican cllp!Omatl -, " ~ailed from .Madrid. •
COrona del Mar and Newport
Center were sites of celebration
saturday for the annual Balboa
Philippine Navy Flotilla Surrouruls Re'be&
Bay Lions Club Lobster Bake. ZAMBOANGA CITY. The
Tl!lils was the 26th such ex· Philippines (UPI) -Moslem
tr.vaganza wherein you got to pirates surrendered today and
sttlff yourself with lobster, jump released a hijacked Japanese oc{~amival whirl -in -the-air rides freighter and 29 hoetages after
arid see if what goes down stays Philippine navy authorities
ddwn, and even watch a parade. threatened to kill them all, a
All of this was for a good cause military official reported. w\th cash thus collected being · Rear Adm. Romulo Espaldon
distributed by the Lions Club •told a news conference in Zam ·
p!ople to Services for the Blind. boanga City, 500 miles south of
ANYWAY. ONE of the stellar M~la, that a Philippine. navy
events of the big bake was the flotill.a of 11 navy vessels fired a
I Saturday parade. The question warn~g shot acr~ss the bow of
You may have is where in th ~he ~Jacked .Sueh1ro Maru whe!l
1 . e 1t tried to lift anchor and sail word do you conduct a parade in through the navy cordon this Corona del Mar? Do you wander .
the backlands up by Fifth morning.
Avenue ? Or maybe you route the
marchers down Ocean
Boulevard and mingle with
beach goers?
The answer is none or the
above. You form up and run the
parade right down East Coast
Highway through the middle of
t~e community to Newport
Center. All this requires is that
yqu shut Coast Highway down to
just two lanes of traffic and rOt1te
I lht parade down the inland two
lanes.
Let me tell you this was one
fine parade. I know because I
wl.s trying to drive through
Cdrona del Mar while it was hap-
''WE TOLD THEM we would
board the ship if they did that and
this meant there would be fight·
ing and we would have killed
them all,'' Espaldon said. "We
fell it was only a show of force
that would force them to give
up."
Dpaldon said the rebels had
wanted the ship to sail through
the navy cordon and proceed to
Zamboanga City to negotiate
with him personally, but the
navy flotilla which had been
~1:anding by about 100 yards from
the SUehiro Maru cl08ed in to a
pening_ The traffic was moving
so slowly I got to view the entire Pressure Valve
paint to where "they were shout·
ing at each other.·' he said.
"Nol one cent was involved,"
Espaldon said. "The rebels were
trapped. Had they resisted, they
would have been killed."
Both' rebels and hostages -26
Japanese crewmembers and
three Filipinos -transferred toa
Philippine navy boat headed into
this Southern Philippine seaport.
sea part.
ESPALOON TOLD newsmen
approximately 40 rebels surren·
dered assorted firearms, includ-
ing two light machineguns, one·
Communist-made 841 rocket
launcher, two U.S.·made M79
grenade launchers and several
rifles. .
The rebels seized the 3,953-ton
lumber freighter in Zamboanga
early Friday morning, ordered it
to sail 40 miles out into
Tungawan Bay and demanded a
ransom of $133,000 for the release
of hostages and ship.
A navy flotilla consisting of 14
vessels immediately surrounded
the ship while negotiations took
place.
The rebels released two
Filipinos as emissaries Sunday,
then progressively softened their
thing. I wouldn't say it backed up
tr8ffic to the south very much but or}e rumor had it that motorists
wrre still waiting in line in La
JOiia.
YOU COULD TELL this whole I change in local events upset
~rona del Mar pedestrians. It's
easy to spot a Corona del Mar
pedestrian because he's so expert
at dodging traffic while trying to
cross Coast Highway. Saturday,
many Corona del Martians were
confused. Instead o( dodging
Cfdillacs and Volkswagen vans,
Witness in Hoffa
Case Held by Mob?
r they were trying to step around
mounted cavalry, baton twirlers
and Shriners riding funny litUe
mbtorcycJes in circles and blow-
ing sirens.
All this proves, I guess, that oUr coastal people love a parade
add will endure all kinds of
h;irdships for one. Every Fourth
o(1July, Huntington Beach closes
down for its big parade. Laguna
shuts o(f its downtown for a
P/iltriots• Day Parade. That
doesn't really bother Lagunans
much because when the Art
Colony gets traffic, the
downtown is shut down anyway.
CORONA DEL MAR, however,
couldn't take the grand prize for
closing down streets this
weekend . U pcoast in Long
Beach, they closed up the roads
(or an event called the Long
Beach Grand Prix. This was an
automobile race they ran right
there on the city streets.
Officials estimated 75,000 peo.
pie showed up to watch the Long
Beach Grand Prix and some of
them even ~ot parked and paid
admission to watch it.
You h8ve to wonder what the
race spectators reaUy got out of
the grand prix. The way people
drive in downtown Long Beach,
when the race started, you are
DETROIT (AP) -A man who
said he helped bury the body of
James R. Hoffa provided in-
formation that led to an unsuc-
cessful weekend search of a
nearby field for the missing ex·
Teamsters boss, a ~te sub-
committee investigator said.
Investigator William B.
Gallinaro, who tipped local
authorities that Hoffa's body
might be found in the field, said
his information came from an
unidentified informant who was
I I
left wondering if anybody could r1,,Jti
tell the difference? STAtt'1"
not involved in the labor leader's
disappearance but who has un ·
derworld contacts.
GALLINARO said his infor-
mant believes the man who said
he helped bury Hoffa is being
held by ''the mob'' until he prt>
vi des exact directions to the loca-
tion of the body.
"Our informant is dealing with
the mob. The mob is talking to ~o
meone who is involved in the dis-
appearance of Jimmy Hoffa,"
said Keith Adkinson, another
subcommittee investigator.
There is no evidence that 1-loffa
has been slain, but some as-
sociates have said they believe
he was murdered because he was
on the verge of being freed from
parole restrictions which pro-
hibited him from taking part in
Teamsters activities.
Some investigators believe
"the mob'' may be providing in-
formation to take pressure off un-
der w or Id figures being
questioned in connection with
Horr a 's disappearance.
A FEDERAL grand jury in
Detroit has. subpoenaed and
taken testimony from several re·
puted mob figures but has pro-
duced no new information in the
case, sources say.
Acting on information from
Gallinaro, Michigan Atty. Gen.
Frank Kelley organized a search
or a 29-acre field in Waterford
Township about 20 miles
northwest of Detroit but fowtd no
trace of Hoffa.
Hu1·ricane Faye Weakens
Plane Spot,s Another Tropical Depression
HI•" L•w
IO M .. " ....
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t01 71
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lrm•"•"~'"ow
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,., .......... (Mil, HI '"" """"" •• ..,,tOt!f\lni.ci .,,, .. .,._ 111 n.
""'""' M tN i'Mw11•1M Mlf .,_the ............ ~lft1"'0.Mr1t.
11.s. s-••,,,
[!BWtOWIH' f~~
c:-t.i
MOmlno 1ow (lcM.ldl w1tt1 "'"' .n.,..
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CM1WI l.mpKlltUrff wlll ,..,...
bittwffn 61 ind 10. lnllrMI l•m-
P9f'lhn1 wilt ,.,.,. bit'-60 91'11
1S. Tll9wet.rltm0tr•lur1t wlll r. ... s-. ......
n4n
MOfllD•Y ~l'llOl'I •:JJp.m . .,,
Slc:onctlow tt1IS1.m. 0.4
TUESD•Y RrltfllOh l:ff•.m. .,,
flnt low 12: 1ap.m. J.J iKeMMtl'I •:O.p.tn. u
S.C-Olow 1t1••·"'· .... 1ufl rlttot l:AI .m., Mt• t : 90-. "'--.i. ri..1 :• p.m., Mtlt:"1p.m.
1
I
l
demands, finally """'"°' lo re-lease the rest of the bootaces,
leave the abip and abandOn the
ransom, provJded they were
granted sate pau&J• out of the
area.
Apporenlly, Espaldon refused
Switzerland bee~ t&e latll ';:
n1UoD to recall Its 1n">as"Ckr' •
from Madrid folloW"lnl a··:
week.end. of violent ~'" rioting there, and European
Common Morket employes bl i to accept the rebels' terms and
demanded their uncoodit.ional -,~
surrender. • ~
f Brussels demonstrated t.odq'·"·
• &1ainst any Spanish paitl~:;;
0 lion in the European COll1DIUl1lty. --1 i The executions stirred prote1Uf .... ·
· In Spain and obroad beCause of i lingering 1>oslility 1o lbe nlllilne'"' • of Generalissimo FrancJac01 .. 1
' Franco, widespread opposition to ·::
THE ADMIRAL boarded the
Suehiro Maru at noon Monda,y,
met with the rebels over lunch
and by4 p.m. accepted t.beir sur·
render.
He then flew lo Zamboango by
helicopter and reported the re·
lease or the ship and its
passengers to Pblllppine Presi·
dent Ferdinand E. .Maroos by
phone.
The rebels, members of the
Moro National Liberation Front,
kidnaped a J apant;se woman in a
beach resort near Zamboanga
last month.
W .. r1ng1ng
Out the Old
BOSTON ·cu Pl) -The
Boston chapter of the Na·
tional Organization for
Women is boycotting Wisk,
the detergent which pro-
mises to end "ring around
the collar.''
About a dozen women
picketed a downtown
supermarket Saturday,
ti.anding out leaflets to
shoppers and carrying
signs reading ''Lever
Bros., wash your own dirty
laundry."'
Spokeswoman Nancy
Sobowal said Wisk was
chosen because "'The ring
around the collar ad has.
been around for so long
add 1t•s one of the ID06t of.
tensive in its presenta·
tion.''
• Former Israeli ·Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan was
to speak tonight at the
University of Kentucky,
despite protests from some
student groups that he should
not be allowed to talk.
the death penalty and beauae Df · •
thewaythe e:xecutedweretrfed. ·~11 . , .
THEY WERE convicted by
military trlbunalo which, except'·"
in one case, rejected all defens!:~ 3
witnesses and evidence. Onetrlil ..
that produced five death Belk"' t
tences -three of them t.ter.
commuted -lasted three bow\s
after civilian defense lawyers;-,,'
had been expelled for lntemo(!l,; . .'
ing proceecllnga wltb ~ •". .,,
Cleanup C·ontinue~::j:
In Wet Northeast
ByTbeAasoclatedPress
Ffoodwaters conUnued lo recede throughout Ille Northeast ,_
today as thousands ol families returned bo~e to clean up in the ·':f-..,
wake or rains dumped by Tropical Storm Eloise. At least 10
persons were dead. # $. •
Pennsylvania, hardest-bit of a dozen states from Virginia to ~
New Englond, reported six persnos deod, 6,000 still homeless, and •
damages totaling more _than $100 million. The : ..
state capital, Harrisburg, was for a time patrolled by National ;:# J
Guardsmen although it had been spared major damage. The ,; .-
Guardsmen were being deactivated today. . .. ,-..
The flooding also left pollution problems that were only : ..
beginning to be felt today. Officials said water supplies may have .
· been contaminated io some Pennsylvania communities~ and .
Delaware officials feared damage to shellfishing in Chesapeake ,.1 ~
Bay could last for years. ,., ,
An ll·mile section of the New York State Thruway was re.. <.
opened Sunday alter having been closed by floodwaten. In Con·
nect!cut, a 14-year-old boy was missing after being swept from a . : ,
raft m the Steele Brooke in Watertown. . ,
"
Every morning, daily interest is added to
every Los Angeles .Federal Savings Account
Passbook Savings -Certificates of Deposit-
Investment Certificates
All at highest rates
.
LOS ANGELES ~
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
Savings insured to
$40,000 -Safe deposit boxes
and the most wanted
savings services
Newport Beach Office
3201 Newport Blvd ... 675-4500 (Across from City Hall)
Head Office Downtown: Los Angeles Federal Savings
and Loan·Assoclati.on One Wilshire, Los Angeles 90017
Other offices through~ut the area
I
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" _,
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• • Nostalgia
l;i Gt>lden
GaiePark •
From Wire Se1 •leeo
SAN FRANCISCO -They
calneloGoldon Gate Parlr by tho
I tOI\' or tbOunnd.s, decked out 1n:
ev1r1thlnc from swaddllnc
clothes to aluminum roll I/: wu a musical reincarnation
of .tho nower·chlldren spirit 0( the'J960s ..
The Jefferson Starship ...a the
Grateful Dead, two of the
gr'atal names 1n San Francisco ' roCk history. presented • r.ree
·t co~~rt Sunday ~fort some 35,!IJO persons.
ANNOUNCEMENTS OF the .
evfnt were nk 1made on local
radio until !\&tu day alnce a well· ~~r.alde.d free concert by the two
groups 1n 1969 drew 150,000.
The Starship, which us«! to-be
the Jefferson Alrp(ane, playOd
Cor. two hours and the Dead for
at>put another hour even though
the. latter group supposedly re-
tired from live performances last year.
l~ was fun in the fog on a Sun·
day afternoon -and a counter-
pomt to a week Cull of news of
Pally Hearst and the attempt on
Pr,kident Fo~d'.s Ufe ..
•" ,,, ... UPI,.....,_. No.Midget
Stand~ Oil Co. 'o! California announced construction
has begun 6n a S50,000.ton concrele oil drillmg platform
(right) in the North Sea. The huge structure, being built
at Loch Kishorn in Northwest ScoUand, will be about 575
feet tall and Is compared to the 39·story Standard omce
building in San Fl'anclsco.
•
Bridge Firebombed
I ' !,.,. t Monc!!y. Sop!•m•., 29, 1975 DAIL. V PIL.OT A§J
Patty's JWrid Analyzed~~. -
• • ••• She's 'Getting Melanelwly,' Lawyer Says
FnaWlreSerrl<el.
SAN FRANCISCO -Patricia
Kearstt1 mental atatecameunder
increa1ln1 scrutiny today as
court-appointed psychiatrists
1tudledtberesultoofteotathatber
lawyer aays are aubJectlng ber to
Meaawbile. the Chicago
Tribune aald lo today's editloos
that more than 30 promlnent
Califomians have been warned
by police to take security precau·
tbls be.eawie their names ap-
peared on a U1t found in the apart·
ment of W~lllam and Emily
Harrta.
The Tribune sald mosl of tlM!.
pel'$0h.B named in wbat it called
the "assassination list" were ex·.,..
ecutives of Pacific Gu & Eleetric t
C.O. and International Telephone ..;
and Telegraph Corp.
.,.it&l anau!sh. U.S. Atty. Jam .. L. Browning
would neither confirm nor deny A«omey Terence Hallinan said
bo will try again Tuesday to ton-
vlnco U.S. Oi>trlet Court Judge
Oliver Carter to move Miss
Hearst from her jail ·cell to a
hospital for the rest of the
poxcboloclcal testing.
tbeexistenceofauchalist. r•
THE HAalUSES, Symbiooese
Liberation Army comrad~ or
Mias Heaut, were arrested on the
same day Miss Hearst wu taken
into custody at another San Fran-
cisco apartment.
The Tribune said.a detailed re-
port on Charle• de Brettville,
c hairman of the Bank ot
California and a director or
PG&E, was also found iii tho Har·
rises' apartment.
I
"Her health ;. deteriorating
here and she i.s getting melancho-
ly," Hallinan told reporters Sun-
day nicht after visiting Miss
Hearst in the San Mateo County
Jail.
HE &\ID A MOTION would be
rl.led for Miss Hearst's transfer
''to a more appropriate setting in
li&ht of her medical problems,••
Ass.assin's Bullet
Missed by 5 Feet· ·l
1
namely, the psychiatric ward or ·syTheABseclatedPress
San Francisco's St. Mary's The bullet allefedly (ired by Sara Jane Moore missed Presi·
H P·t I dent Ford by,about ivereetanddid not hit the pavement until aner 05 I 3 . 1 The facility. Hallinan said. it had passed him, TimemagazinesaidSunday.
could provide better physical and Time also quotes a San Francisco policeman as saying there is
mental care (or Miss Hearst, no doubt that ex-Marine Oliver Sipple's reflex grab at Miss
whom he said did not appear "as Moore's arm defiecledthebullel .
a:pa«d out as when she was ar-Time said the bulletrirect at Ford out.side the St. Francis Hotel
rested.'' last Monday ''whizzed harmlessly between a TV crew and agents.
Hallinan said be would respond striking the wall of the hotel 5~ feet above the sidewalk.••
at a new conference today to
"many questions which have TIME NOTED that Sipple has said he saw an arm holding a dRGANIZERS OF THE con· I eer:f., a coalition of religious,
political and community groups' ad .. f come d · t od ,._ est gun and "lunged with both hands'' at it, but wasn't sure he had Dos PALOS (AP)_ A r es, reerringlothearrestof upan mr uce".onew P tri · member f th d f t .. grabbed Mrs. MoorebeCoreshefired. firebomb badly damaged a a c1a Hearst and her three o e e ense eam -I staging a "Unity Fair,"' estimate
the crowd of 40,000 to 50,000
persons.
They squeezed into Lundley
Meadow a nd spilled onto roads
and hillsides and · climbed trees
and sat picnic-style on the damp grass.
-mrades noted criminal lawyer F. Lee But the magazine quoted police Lt. Frank Jordan as saying wooden auto bridge across-the ......... u ••.•. · .. • • • -that "there'snoquestionhedid deOecttheweapon. Delta-Mendota canal south or .--------------~Ba=i,.,te,..y'-'.------------==-==.:....:.::.:2':.::.::.::.:.::::.=::..:===:..::.::.::!=:::_ _____ _
here, firemen siad.
Pepperdine
Alumni Asked
To Fund Ford
MALIBU (U PI l -Pepperdine
University alumni have been
.. ked to lJay the $41 ,500 bill the
school ran up to host President
Ford on his visit to the campus a
week ago. .
University o(ficjals said the
school mailed letters to
graduates asking them for con· I tributions of "from $500 or $1,000,
1 or wb•tever you can attord. ''
"No one will profit more from
the ~ecognilion which the Presi·
dent's visit will bring to Pep-
p&r dine than the alum -
ni , ''University President
William S. Banowsky said in a
Jetter.
"lord visited the beachside
c;:6npus Sept. 20 to dedicate the
~fmpu s' new Firestone
l'leldhouse. • :
The blaze Sunday benl steel
supports and destroyed much ot
the wooden bridge, forcing ils
closure, M'id· Valley fll"emen re. ported.
Damage was estimated at ,
SJQ.000.
Firemen refused to describe
the type or firebomb used and
they would not confirm reports
that two more incendiary devices
were discovered on . concrete
bridges over the Bureau or
Reclamation Canal in the
western San Joaquin Valley.
Fresno County sheriff's of-
ficers said they had established
no connection with a bombing
two days ago that ruptured a
water tank at a Shell Oil Co.
facility about 40 mires 50Uth of
the site or Sund Ry's firebombing.
A communique from the New
World Lil>eraUon Front, which
sozrie. authorities believe is an
outgrowth of the Symbionese
Liberation Army, claimed
responsibility Saturday for the
water tank bombing.
The communication, received
by a San Francisco radio station,
s aid the w ater·tank bombing
near CoaJinga was "in response
to the capture of our SL.A com.
Fanned IJy Winds
• • t : ~ i
r l Fire Crews Battle
New Brush Fires
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i • By The Associated Press ~ Fire fighters hope they have beaten back the latest thrust or
~California 's annual fall fire season after tough blazes broke out
r erthe weekend near Santa Maria and San Bernardino.
t A forest service spokesman said fire fighters had encircled
.both weekend blazes. Fanned by Santa Ana winds gusting to 40
'miles per hour last week, brush fires in Southern California ~blackened an estimated 63,000 acres. ! The biggest fire of the year in California, in the badlands area
~near Riverside, burned 20,250 acres before it was contained.
! ~non Probed ..
~ REDLANDS CAP> -An arson investigation has been or-
idered after investigators determined black powder and a pro-
i.;pane oil lamp were used to start a fire in the Glenn Wallich
ttheater on the Universit}' of Redlands campus. Fire officials said ! Sunday it took 31 fire fighters
· more than one hour to control
State the blaze in the two-story
building. No injuries were re·
ported and damage was
estimated at $50,000 . •
ISez!I •-ao-
S SAN FRANCISCO (UPI> -The International Museum of
)Erotic Art, created to make· explicit works readily available to
i the man on the· street, will close its doors Tuesday because it is
l broke.
I The sponsorinJ Genesis Church and Ecumenical Center
blamed costs of maintenance, space, insurance and taxes for tbe
decision by the board~ directors to close the u.niqu.e museum. fa.•kr Kiiied .
AZUSA <UPI) -A 24·year-old Arcadia mountain climber
scaling a 200-foot cliff oear Kratka Ridge in Angeles National
Forest fell to his death.Sunday.
Sheriff's deputies said JoM Bystrom aooarentJy lost bis foot-
ing on the sheer face and tumbled to the rocky base of the cliff.
· companion, Barry Cox, also of Arcadia, was uslDs the same
pe but managed to hold onto lhe rocks and save himself. He
lscaled down the cliff and nagged down. passing motorul.
RIVERSIDE CAP) -Morton Lee Gilworth, 30, of Riverside,
u sentenced by a Superior Court Judge to life lmerisooment
er ho pleaded guilty to the hammer slaying or hls neighbor.
The vicUm wal identllled by authorities Sunday as Carol Pat·
tenon. They sa.ld she was stabbed, strangled and "riddled wtth
hammer blows·• by· Gil worth when she came home for lunch and
S\ll'J)rised him a1 be was ramackina her apartment. -.
' • • cns1s
en •
By Harvey A.Proctor, Cbainnan,
Southern California Gas Company.
This report and the one' to follow w ill
~tipply yot1 with fa cts about the shortage o [
n~1tura l gas.
The South ern California Gas Company
,..,:i.nts )'OU to l1avc these f~1cts llcc;iu ~c thi .;;
problem could affect both your home and
your job.
We believe it's a vital tJart of our service
tci keep you infor111cd ;1l:>out th i<-;difficL1 lt
~itua tion.
An enonnous dependency.
Southern Ca Ii forni an" re 1 yon n:it ural
g.1s n1orc than any other sin1ilar form of energy.
Natural gas M\pplies about 55% of o ur
non-transportation energy.
It hca ts 92% of our home>.
Cooks food for 76% of u s.
And it heats water for 95% of us.
But that's only the beg inning. Thousands
of businesses and sl1ops in this area aren't
cguipped to .u se any other fuel.
And many of our industries u~c
natural gas as a rJ\V material for tl1eir 6
•
Demand and supply.
Na tural gas is in short supply, and the
shortage 1s rapidly becoming criticJl .
Althougl1 \"IC continue tc1 urge conscr-
VJt ton . ;i hL1 gc tlcn1and for natural gas remains.
We've alrc:id)r cut back su 1Jply1ng indu-.-
trics that :ire ah!c to t1scorl1cr fuel s.
Rcli:illlL' c.c:;t 1m .1lc.c:; of de1nand an<lof
supplies .shO\'I tl1:it un less \VC find new sourccc;
in the vcr)r 11c:tr future tl1erc \vill be no ~JS
for any of 0L1r in<lL1 strial custon1c rs by 1979,
poc.,sibly CVCJ1 IY7~.
And tll L'n , if "upplics cc111tinuc ttJ
d\v tn dlc, we'll h.1vc ltl !-.tart ctittin~ off~1 firm"
custom er". Tl1:t t inc I udcs 111a 11 v t1f y1 lt1
reading tl1is report.
"F1rn1" ct1.-..ton1crc; :ire c..hnp5, .c:;mall
businesses, office bui!Jing~, ~c lmc l1otels,
and. your homes.
What can be done?
We can so l vi..: t\1i~ prol1 lc111 if .ill 1>f us
\VOrk tog ct lier-c:o11 <.,u niers, ).'.l lVL'rn 111c11 t,
lalJor, and 11ri vate 1n<lustry.
W e ca11 JJrcvc11t tl1c wor ~t consCL}Uences
of the gas sh ortage.
Thi s i'l a11 e 11ergy crisis tl1at 11ccc.1
11ot hnppc11 !
111 ftiturc rcroit", we'll tell yott al1out
tl1 e progressc1f c1t1r 111any cffci rts lo <lc.1l \v1t/1
1 he shortage.
We \Vant you t<J t:o11ti11uc to l13 Vl' tl1 c.:
fac ts about hO\\' a short.1gc could affect you.
A11cl about \vh:it \vc'rc Joing to keep tl1c
worst effects fro111 ever l1a1Jpcni11 g.
The peopk ;H thc Gas Comp;111y hope
yot1'll rcaJ tl1c ... c rcports :ln<l Ui:-.Lu "" thl'n1
vvi t l1 yo ur colleague" a11Ll f,1n1ily.
product'. gas
r~)f more lt1formati1lll IH1 lilt:
natur.11 gas shorta~c, \VJ"itc: l.)ot1tl1cr11
Cali f or11 ia Gas Co11111a11 '" !)<1:.: J .lU9.),
Los Angeles, Cal1fornl.t ~JULI..., I
Southern Califomia Gas Company
Keeping you infonned is also part of our serviu.
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DAILY PILOT EDIT4)RIAL PAGE
• • Letting Ill Soos e
. . With Gov. Brown's signature on Senate Bill I, the
so-called open meeting bill, California has joined a
, 1ong list or states in adopting legislation to let a little
i more sunshine into government cubbyholes. t However, similar legislation at the federal level
is running into plenty or static.
The state measure, authored by Sen. George
Moscone CD-San Francisco), requires city councils,
· l?ounty boards of supervisors and other local agencies
to conduct open meetings when considering appoint-
~ ments to planning conlmissions or vacancies in elect.
·eel offices; opens formerly clo& conference com-
-mittees of the state Legislature; and requires open
• 'meetings of the Public Utilities Commission.
• Meanwhile in Washington Sen. Lawton Chiles of
: FJocida, is getting a Jess-than-warm reception for his
• ''Government in the Sunshine Act," which would re-
' quire 47 federal agencies to make their regulatory de-
~ cisions in public.
1 Said one opponent. ''Freedom from the pressure
1 of public opinion may be desirable .... public scrutiny ~ -of the government's decision-making processes might
I have an adverse effect."
" How's that for a democratic approach?
Its mission will be to draw to the supervisors' at-
tention needs or women in such areas as job op-
portunities, procurement of credit and dilemmas
raced by women who are heads or householda, usually
with less income than their male counterparts.
Supervisor Ralph Clark was right when he Insist-
ed that the new commission should not d11plicate the
services of other county agencies and should not con-
cern itself with problems over which county govern-
ment has no control.
If the new commission follows those instructi(ll)s,
it will have opportunity to be of true service'. to thai
great minority that is ootreally a minority-wi>men.
Up and Away
' After a lengthy slowdown which officials blame
on the economic slump, business is picking up at
Orange County Airport.
In August. for the first time in a year, passenger
arrivals and departures topped last yeat's monthly
figures with 167 ,000 passengers moving through the
airport, compared with 156,000 in August, 1974.
'· In the first eight months of the year, 1.04 million
r1 Support for Women passengers used the airport, compared with 1.os , million last year, but the sharp August increase in-
' No matter how hard they try, Orange County's dicatesthedeclinemaybeover.
' supervisors can't seem to halt the continuing pro-And total take-offs and landings at the airport,
• liferation of county boards and commissions. mostly by private aircraft, are up 5 percent from last
'
'
'Here comes the new blocking back •.. ain't he cute?' I Newest addition to the burgeoning county family year. So Orange County still has the second busiest ~of more than so commiss ions and boards is the Com-airport in the country •. afterChicago'sO'Hare lnteriia-
mission on the Status of Women. tional.
;Judging from the massive support establishmeni It seems apparent that as the economy picks up,
of the commission received from women •s organjza-it's going to get a whole lot busier -and the pressure
• !ions. apparently there is a need for such a com -for a solution to the airport issue will get a whole lot :~
: mission . strong er. ~~·
i/-----------------_L._---------~
flndiana's Bayh Top
I
Freedom
Dies in [Liberal Challenger
. ~ wAsmNGTON-Notbavmg ( ]· Its Sleep i eampaignednaUonally since 1971 EVANS-NOVAK and without even formally an· Michigan~ Sen. Robert Griffm ~ nounctng his candidacy yet this '------------' said it: ''lnthelongcourseofhis-' year, Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana tory freedom has died in .various
: h.as sudde.nly emerged as th~ The second development, out· ways . Freedom has died on tbe
l liberal . with the best chance· wardly even more obscure. .battlefield. Freedorp has died
of win n in g the Demo -particularly impressed party because C"( ign_orance and greed. ~ cr8tic presidential nomin-pros. A statewide poll of New ·But the most ll:nominious death ~ at ion in the primaries and York DemOcrats. conducted by or all is whe,n freedom dies in its
1 thereby avert-the state committee, gave Bayh sleep.""
1 ing a con.Yen-an unexpectedly high 11 percent Tom Jefferson said it 200 years
t tiondeadlock. (surpassed only by 25 percent ago : "As government grows,
Key figures for Sen . Henry M. Jackson, who freedom re·
has been campaigning heavily in cedes:· on the party's N Y k --~ 1• ..-.... t • th R ...... ~ 11 ~ dominant left ew or . auu .. J"""'• ...... n 1or e u.., .,~
f wing have familiar Gov. George Wallace). Baker recent·
come to view In view of Bayh's SCfllt expasure ly reminded
1 Bayb as their in New York , this ·~ggests a himseli or the
; best · h 0 p e significant after-effect from his ext e n t t o
1 because of his aborted 1972 presidential cam· which govern-
1,p o tent i al paign. ment already
:popularappeal,hisdynamismon inhibits hi s Bayh's potential ability to com· r ed the campaign stump and his ac· re om. ceptability across the batcentristJa\.!ksonandrightist He awakened this morning Wallaceiswhatattractstheleft -· h h th Democratic spectrum. Equally wit a woman w om e govern·
I important, Bayh today is or· particularly in organized labor. menthadlicensed himtomarry.
• 1ani1ed labor's favorite can· Militantly progressive leaders of He rolled over on bedding
• didate. uniquely ejoying substan-the politically muscular United certiricated by a federal agency
I tial support among both oldline Auto Workers (UAW>. while and turned on the radio to a sta·
t andleftishunlons. dubious about Bayh's depth, are lion broadcasting only with gov-
t intrigued by his appeal. As a ernment perm'ission.
THE ADVENT ( Bi h Ba h Hoosier good.old-boy delive~ng 1 t U h bo 1 tho Derc t~ flamboyant renditions of John F. The electricity which powered I e s muc a u e mocra ic K ed B h be h that radio -and his shaving mir-l party's course since the enn yprose, ay may t e I' h . 'ced I McGovemdisasterofl972.Hisre· antidote to Wallaceism among ror ig t -is pn at rates
cord during 13 years in the Senate the UAW's rank and file. established by the government ~as been free or either dist· and brought to hiin by a gov-
inguisbed achievement or deeply BESIDES Bayh 's longtime emmeO.l-created monopoly .
I held convictions. A loner with few auto-worker support in Indiana oUrsmE_ is his car-licensed
"close associates, Bayh has never and backing among other UAW by the government, registered
been widely admired for dynamic regional directors, UAW general ·th th t built t I leadership or original insights. counsel Steve Schlossberg en-W1 e · gov~rnmen • · 0
I jiis campaign lhealrlcalily and thusi astically boosts him . ( P'"U"·~-~.I A'y.v· n .') country boy mannerisms bring Considerable staff support n. n
1 grimaces from · sophisticated among the communications
i ,liberals. workers, machinists and govern-
• ment employes makes Bayh the governin;ot~ S-Pe~ifications. And But after 1972, liberals want a earJychoiceonlabor's left. taxed by-tbe government. E~ch winner, not an ideologue, year.:?Ptbat,infact,hedoesnot
moralizer or philosopher-king. But unlike Sen. George own his car, he tents it -from
Bayh, having defeated formida-McGovern in 1972 and Udall this the government.
1 b le Republicans William year, Bayh effectively competes And this ,js true .aJso of his
· Ruckelshaus and Richard Lugar with Jackson for old-line labor. house.
back home in Indiana, benefits He is acceptable to AFL-CJO pre· If you . think you oWn yours,
because no liberal actively cam-sidentGeorgeMeanyandwasone stop paying taxe-s and You'll see
paigning this year (including of four presidential possibilities who owns it. . '-es>· Morris Udall) has become a (along With Jackson, Sen . Lloyd Nor is Mr. Baker tree to drive
crediblecandidate. Bentsen and Sen. Hubert Hum· bis car faster than th.e. govern·
phrey) invited to address next ment allows or to park it near a
month's AFL-CIO convention. fireplug or ~ stop sign or in any,
Bayh is the choice of a top Meany space reserved for government
ally, William DuChessiofthetex· officials.
That Bayh could become credi-
'ble indeed was strongly suggest·
eel by two seemingly minor de-
velopments carefully scrutinized
by party insiders:
nRST, Bayh dominated last
month 's national 1Young
J)emocrats convention in St. louis. winning the straw poll or
~ates after a crowd·pleasing ~ormance. Shucking off his eoat and going on the floor to talk
'lrith delegates,' he ecUpoed his
~opponents.
t
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
r.· cruel contrast to the
~lhaftofthenew
loldl CoMt Pl•n Hotel in
Calta II.-are !IM!.llelds ••piu •lt•r• human hl•I• bead double to
wield tM 1bort-.h~led .... I thoialht that t.lllng
-Olllln'ed? S.H.
tiles union and is highly regarded In an airplane he must submit
by teachers' union leader Al his luggage and himself to search
Shanker. bate object or militant by the government, pay 8 further blacks. tax to the government to fly on an
Thisbroadsupportmeans Bayh aircraft licensed by the gQvern·
escaped the Democratic party's ment along routes authorized by
venomous interneci ne wars the government, in and out of
which have scarred McGovem, government airports along
Jackson and even Humphrey. skyways dictated by the govern·
That he used his time in the Senate ment.
concocting amendments to the
Constitution ls more asset than
liability.
BA'l!H is ahead or the liberal
pack but somewhere sbort of a
legitimate fl'Oftt -runner with his
national campalgning beginning
only next month. He can become
the liberal candidate. confronting
Jackson and Wal lace, by winning
earlyprim~rles.
But Bayh"s popularity may not
survive bis first defeat. While the
yagueness of bi.s liberaljsm
broadens bis appeal, ii deprives
him of steadfast supporters
whcee alle&lance la Ued to his
character, and philosophy .
Anything 1 ~ss than victory,
possibly even in New
Hampehlr 'a Inaugural primary
lnFebrus , could be fatal.
IDS CLOTHES carey govern-
ment labels. His breakfast foods
are certified by government. He
washes his dishes in water
bought from goveroment and
heated by oil, the price or whicll
is decreed by government.
And in this "'land of. the free"
Jet him or you or I try tO keep our
schoolchildren out of schbols
'!Yhicfl ~e required l)y govern·
ment, in a building owned by gov-
ernment. to be taught by persoos
employed by government to
teach •l'atever eovernment
wants them to be taught.
Detore leavU.. 'the house he
places hl• garbage outside to be
picked up by gov,ernme.it. He
places a 1ovet1lment stamp on
an envelope and drops the en-
velope in a government mailbox.
And he hasn't even left for
workyii1 ' Wait f he#etstowork!
Pentagon Expert to the Rescue l
Iran's Military Mix-up j
WASHINGTON -The Pen-
tagon has dispatched its top effi·
c iency expert to Iran to
straighten out a supply snarl,
which is rapidly developing into
the worst military foul -up in
peacetime history.
The trouble shooter, Erich von
Marbod, previously was rushed
to Saigon dur· ·
ing the final
hours of the
Vietnam War.
He managed
to salvage or
.d-est ~ro ~
sensitive-
equipment,
which the
Pentagon
wanted to
keep out or communist hands.
Under the noses of the advanc·
ing communists, he hauled out
uncrated electronic equipment
on barges and flew out South'"
Vietnamese planes. He saved the
United States hundreds of
millions of dollars.
Now von Marbod has been sent tO Iran, as Defense Secretary·
Jam~s Schlesinger"s personal
representative. to work a new
miracle. ' THE PROBLEM has been
created by the Shah, who has
squandered his oil billions on
modem weapons faster than his
armed for ces can assimilate
(JACK ANDERSON)
them. In the past two years, he
has ordered a staggering $6 .4
billion worth o f milit a ry
hardware from the U.S.
As a result. mountains or muni·
lions are piling up on Iranian
docks and fields. Planes, helicop-
ters and other sophisticated
weapons are left in crates for
weeks, waiting to be assembled.
Iranian air crews simply c.ar;t'l
be trained fast ·enough to operate
all the aircraft that the -eager
Shah has thrust upon them. They
were just learning to fly the F..iJs
when the Shah began buying F·
SEs. Before the F·SE crews are
broken in, the still more ad·
vanced F-14s will begin arriving.
It will be months before Ira-
nian crews will be able to operate
some or the complex new planes
and helicopters. It will take even
longer to train technicians to re·
pair the intricate equipment
when it breaks down. The Ira-
nian Navy won't be able to man
some of the new destroyers for
two years.
THE PENTAGON bas already
assigned 2,000 military advisers,
under the command of Maj . Gen.
Hoyt Vandenberg, to help the
Iranians utilize their new equip-
ment. But the U.S. technicians
' can"t teach the Iranians the
necessary skills as fast as thEf
supplies are dumped on them.
The accumulation is mounting/
meanwhile, with t·he biggest
shipments yet to come. "The!
Shah hu liitten off mf)l'e tbaii ~·
can digest,·' said one source ·
Another conceded : "We are p jecting a massive snafu.... 1~
It will be von Marbod~ misiio ,
to save the Shah from his ·
haste.' The 'Iranip.ns are cOm~
tent enough tO operate a tg,&e ·
military machine once UfeY'r
properly instructed.. Bu,t i~ .wil
take "a lot of show-and--t.ell,"1on
source·told us. • . .J-• •• Von.Marbod has astaffofeighd
crack experts, direct acce.M tel
the top Pentagon ~rass and) rei
putation as 'a man "who ge~
things done.'" But this still ma~ not be enough to transform Ifft
into a major military powe'
overnight. ··•
Footnote: One reason for tbd
massive overbuying commer~i~
sources confide. is that most Ir.a~
nian officials are cornipt. Tbei
big U.S. munitions malCerS ke:ep
representatives in Teheran.
They are paid huge com;
missions. which they share wil~
the Iranians who approve thC!S
purcha:;.es. The corrupt lranius
usually get a 10 perce·nt
kickback ; the more purchase Qll~
ders they approve, therefore,·1he
richer they get. .·•,
·stdte Eyes Car Dealers.
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Herman Sillasf the Brown ap·
pointed director or the motor
vehicles department, is an out·
reaching man di' goodwill. He not
only bad the doors of his office de·
corated with a love·bug, but he
bas innovated numerous changes
in concept and
operation of his department. all
designed to make his agency
''more hu -man •• for
both emptoy-
es an,d the
public ..
This spirit or
benevolence
towards ever-
yone hits even
extend_ed to
car dealers, a
business under the direct regula·
tion of the department. Herman
is now proposing regulations to
enhance tbe image of the vehicle
peddlers.
Tb'-re are tbose who think this
time h,e has stretched his "love
everybody" reach too far. They
say his glasses are too rose tinted,
for "Too many have been stung
too often by the auto salesmen for
too long to restore any other im ·
ageofthecar hawkers."
That sentiment is, of course, ex·
actly what Sillas seeks to over·
come with the pd option of new ad-
vertising regura lions.
IDS AIM is to ensure that
"What you see is what you get"
will be the ""buy-word" for the
public in their dealings with auto
dealers.
That is the purpose of a new re-
iulatlon which will require that
any automobile portr•yed on
telev!aion by the dealer must bo
available at tbe sale price ad-vertised[
"This means,•• he said, that if
the vehicle portrayed has white
sid!!'1fJls, mag wheels, a radio
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( EARL WATERS )
and other extras. those must be on
the vehicle offered at the price an ·
nounced.''
''Total price will be the govern-
ing factor in future adv~sing "
he said. "That means'the ret.;.il
price plus tax, license, and op.
tional equipment depicted, as
well as any transpGrtation or de·
aJerpreparation.charges."
The regulations also seek to
close the loopholes which permit
come-ons with such phrases as
"unpaid balance", "balance due
after small down '· and otfier gim·
micks which fail to alert the pro-·
spect tothefuU cost.
• NOR CAN buyers be deceived
by clean appearances of heavily
used cars for the regulations will
require disclosure by the dealer of
an)t.exceptional uses such as-taxis
or police cars or salvaged
vehicles.
Sillas says the regulations were
worked out through _publ ic hear·
ings in which the dealer organiza-
tions and numerou.s individual de-j
al era participated.
"'They have• particularly
cooperative In every in.stance
because they too have the beying
publlc"s best Interests at heart,"
he said.
Implying that the m~ority of
dealers are-.s arutloua to rid the
lndU$!ey or lharp ~·tors as
Sillas, be cited in3tances brouaht
to his atteij\,lon ti)' the dealers to
support~lriftl•D reiul•Uons.
' . ONE WAS the practice of TV
hucksters to picture autos ~
J
. ' nonnally selling for $6,500 at.sale
·prices of $3,0QO. Investigation dis-
closed the autos had beehspeci$J.-
ly constructed for advertiSi~'g
purposes . outfitted with six
f-Ylinder motors and stick stµ#S,
instead or the expected elAAt
cylinders and autom8lttC
transmissions. Tb'e)' were aiJi:o
mUtus the usual accessory eci.\iJp·
ment such as radios and heat~
In other words, they w~i:e
stripped down versions of the c~r
advertised for the sole~~· r
luring prospects. The techni e
is known in the trade as "bait d
switch''.
Whether the regulations ~do muchtoimprovetheimage r
dealers in generar:, the need · r
the regulations seems not e en
debatable by the majority.of de· aJers, <A,
ORANG£ COAST ·~(,·
<J .a. DAILY PILOT
Rob«rt N. Weld. Pu~ ·'1•
Tlwma•Kttvil,E'ditm" '~'
Barbara Krtibich. ~!:·
Editorial Polle t:ditor .~I
The ~itorial page of the n~·,., Pilot seeks to inform ah '
stimulate re#lders by presentin I
oo this paae diverse comment
on toP,Ics Qf ll)terest by $)'1ldlci 1
ed corumnl$U tnd cartoonists b1· provtdlna a foru'" for reackrs• views and by prestntina this new1paper'1 opinions and lde.,srf
.on current topics. The td'tortil
opinlonaoftheOall)o PHOC.~
only tn the ~itoritl cot_1i1qm ~t ~·
top or the P•le. Optnfons • I
Pr6S:td' by the~ col11mftists ~· ttrtoonl&ta and l«ter'"'1trrs t
lheitr ~wn and no «!lldontment. ,.
their ,;...,. by the j>oll)I Plloll
sbou.lct !Je Inferred. n.'
Monday, September 29._l
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f'Jongress Studying
4.erosol Reports
• .,. llOOOnrnlCllE' ...... ..,. ...
Ak -.._·•-,ear ot ••'OOlt _....., tall-al ·var\-~. Amerli:m, lqlaiators are lrl'IDI to~' ~~'&boulil oictc.cb~wbod b7 h•'I> UC ltvlae
sClontills that ae....al set'llYI ma.y be breaklq clowll tbe.,1rt11•1
allield&1alut ca~i:adl-. J,.
Lut week a Sena!e Plllel ecncluded bearings "" the.....,.., to the eartb'• OIOll.8 lbi.eld aa•tnst extreme ultra-violet radiatlan
hom th• aun that '11"1' can propellan ancf Duofoearbon
rdrlgeranta may cause. • '
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THE U:Gl8LAT08S AltE IN TUE p00itic. of a cl>ll ault
jury, lr1i91 to determine wbich-~dll~ llaa the -,--~-_., _.,.r'-'""'-... e olllleevldenee, . , SbOllJdspraycwtbatuse NEWS 1V.4LvSIS .nuoroearboo propellants be ~ i • binned?, t
-......;;;:..;,;;,...:,;.. _ _;,' _..,,..:.' ....J .According to testimony
. . " . ~. UCI cbemlat F.S.
ROwland~eslJ!erela1M1queotioil~Y&bould .
. RowlaM.l liDd follow UC1 researcller Mario Molina unveiled·
their theotlea of die dangers of continued use or aerooola One!·
.nuorocarbon refrigerants in June 1974. Last week, theJ testified
. be!ore the Senate ~mmittee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences. •
I I· THE ISSUE IS <LEAJl CUT: IS Rowland's theory and its
t • new su_p~rting evidence ~tf reason for an immediate bi.non
i a multi-billion dollar enterprise? "'
1 The aerosol Industry, which bas mounted a public relations
and lobbyfng campaign to get the word out on its side or the 1tory,
refers to Rowland as ''Chicken LitUe."
Fluorocarbons 11 and 12 are the culprits in Rowland's
sc_enario of radiation danger and possible shifts in the earth's
climate.
The industry.suppc>rted Western Aerosol Information Bureau
indicates that $9 bi.Ilion of the U.S. gross national product in job&,
goods and services is tied in with the fluorocarbon industry. They
say $3 billion is related to aerosols. ·
. ABOUT 40, ... PERSONS AllE employed in .the industry,
which accounts lor a payroll of $365 million says Albert Daven·
port, president of Pactra Industries. ' ·
Don Rowson, head ol. the industry organization, contend:> the
proble~ is not so severe that the world cannoi wait a few years to
determine whether more def mite proof develops.
. Dr; Jam~s C. Fletcher, head of the federal space agency
which 1s leading the effort too.btain more information, testified in
· Washington that he does not expect enough data until nild-1977.
The heads of both the National Science Foundation and the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration agreed that
more information is needed before a decision is made.
SCIF;NTISTS AT THE HEARINGS, ON .!he other hand,
agreed Uiat none of the information collected over the past year
tends to disprove Rowland's theory.
They could not agree on how immediate and how serious the
problem may be
But Sen.' Robert Packwood CR-Oregon), who authored a
Senate bill to ban fluorocarbons 11 and 12, said he would rat.her
err~on the side of caution than take 'YlJlecessary risks.
• Tests ol the upper atmosphere were conducted the past year
by the National Science Foundation and the Na ti on al Oceanic and
AtlDO!!ipheric Administration. The results fit in with the predic·
lions Rowland and Molina made in,lt14, the scientists contend. ,
•• 'ROW4ND'S THEORY IS ~T ~ nuorocarbon gases .
· · rile to th~ 1trat-here -the laye<e>(,qtmoophere between 50,000 ~ reet arid 200,000 feet 81>ove sea level ~ 'f'here they begin a chain
· ~IMilion that breaks down osone molecules.
()lone, a molecule made up of three oxygen atoms, acts as a
._ shfetd aeainst extreme ultraviolet radiation from the sun. A one
percent' reduction in ozone, postulates Rowland, would result in a
two percept increase in the number o~ eases of skin cancer.
But sliin cancer is not the only probl·ep:1. scientists believe a
cut in the..""otone coUld cause. · ,.
, In oppostng the develOpmept of supersonic tr .ins port aircraft
I 'Which scientists believed also wQuld deplete the ozone, the Na·
, 1 tional Academy of Sciences said, ... as far as climatic change and
J agricultural effects are concerned, no clear·cut statement can be
r made con~erning expected changes in temperature or rainfall.
Nevertheless, a global change in syrface temperature of a few .
1teQths of a degree and an associated change in rainfall are not !
, ruledout. I • . f' 1 "LOCAL CHANGES MAY BE LARGER, AND the economic,
. social and political effects of such changes could be substantial."
'. ~, Rowland cited the National Academy of Sciences report in
;, his testimony this week.
(· Additionally, be told the committee, the fluorocarbons are
-1 more effective absorbers of infrared heat radiation than carbon
dioxide, which could result in an increase in the "greenhouse ef·
feet" of the earth's atmosphere. .
The greenhouse effect essentially trJps the sun's heat in the
atmosphere, rather than letting it reflect back into space.
Rowlarld predicts the increased greenhouse effect could
further chaqge (be earth's climate. •
"THE THEORY WE ARE DEAUNG WITH, if it js proved, is
., devastatqtg in its implications," said committee-member
Se.natorDale'Bumpers (D·Ark .). -..
Meanwhile, in a recent discussion(){ the matter, Molina sug·
, , gested that the economic effects of a ban on fluorocarbons 11 and
{ 12 could be eliminated by a switch to other chemicals .
.. 1 Less stable fluorocarbons -like OuofOC8rbon 22 -would
,, break down before getting to the ozone layer, he said, and would
., be less objectionable than fluorocarbons 11 and 12 refrigerants.
A variety of other pressurizing gases also are avallabie to
, , . take.the place of the fiuorocarbons in aerosols, be sa1<1: · ,. ' .. '
" .
~,,Breafh T.est Nixed
:For Testing· Drunks
" " TURi:.oCK (UPIJ -Policesay
they will no longer use the breath
test to check suspected drunk ·
Police said city attorneys ad·
vised them to drop the test
because of the ruling .
• -drivers.
' Officials said the omicron in·
' toxilizer test was no longer to be
.I used because of a recent decision ! by Stanislaus County Superior.
1 Court Judge Francis Halley.
He ruled that the tesi. and re-
Attorneys said the ruling ex·
tended to include the breath test
evidence which must be pre·
served and available to thf! de·
fend.ant's own expert.
l suits could not be admitted into They said heretofore, only
I evidence unless the machine was blood and urine samples were · = to 1 of. preserved because the omicron I r•UlP J:>reserve 8 UJJ'lP e •machine uaes up the samples in ,
1
~ ~·a breath for the de· tallincthe~L •
\ 4 .. ,.,~ •
.t 4 .t' l ~Lunches Ton Long I . SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
I lll&te medical consultant fired for
1 taking too much time on his
I llDl<b breaks must be given a
Sacramento County physician
dismissed IT<>m hi• job with the
Department of Heallh Care
Services In July 1972.
I 11ew person11el hearing, the
California Supreme Court hu· Ho was fired ro~ allegedly pro.
ruled. · longlllg lunch breaks despite I The court ordered the Stale waminp and fo1'twice leaving
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'Love' £oui•se Canceled
OOLUJllBIA, S.C. (UPI) ·-r.aclrotlnt-t bu "Many people are morel'reetotalt 1bout1a
b'N<l oucellatloll of 1 counecm loffmald.q 1t the to have sex In a rela~p." bell&id.
tllllnnity of South CeroilDL · But he doesn't think the lack ot interest In
Dr. W.11. Bryan, who bu taught tlle C<>Une fOI' course meanl 1 lack of intereot In lovema1t1J11. J,
flye yean, aaid when the course began ••students Hesaidtheeounewullstedas''Lovemaldng
llartedcomtnsindroves." because "I thought the tille would be oato.hy ~
VE · rather than sex hygiene." .:. 1
the ampblthe1ter In the Life Science Building with "E llY MONDAY NIGlft' ATTT8Ell' Oiled "Nobodywouldshowupforsexhyglent." ,:t
300!0400-le"
ButnowthainumtMrbudWlndledtoabandrut. Pair From Coast Cited
"I just thou.ht that showed a·lack or Interest so ·· ' lfllllsaldthereisnousetokeeppvlngit, .. besaid. • Oran1e Coast resl-oompetlUon at tbe Los
Bryon a1ld the course grew out or lectures he dents Ann Fain or Coota Angeles County Fail'. <
pvetoebureb,soc:lallllddvlcgroups. Mesa and Mi chelle Jim Petersonoflrvloe , .. Goodrow of Newport, won first place for 1a
1111 SAID RE TllOVGRI' THE CHANGE in Beach received first feature pbolo entered~·
oodety's 1ttltudes toword sex had a lot to do with place ribbons for their· the._Hpboto11r&Ph¥«jl.·
the lack of interest. entries tn the Home Arts testattbefail'. ,
The Natural,.from Manhattan •••
it gives you the best of both worlds
At last, a shirt that gives you the superb comfort, the lightweight
feeling, the coolness of cotton •, .. wi th permanent press case.
Manhattan calls it the Natural, and that's just how you'll feel when
you wear this fabulous shirt, The new blend of 60 % cotton, 40%
polyester has cotton's unique qualities, yet it washes in a bree2e,,
. actually resists spots, won't pill. Best of all, it looks terrific!
A. Fleur de !is print in air force blue, rust, khaki, priced at, Sl4.
B. Floral in midnight blue/ grey, forest green/khaki on natural, 814.
Not shown: Solid white, light blue, maize, grey, rust and naturil, Sl2
' Men's Furnishings
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South Coast Plaza
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Bullock's South Coast. Plaza, San Diego Freeway ac Br.istol, Costa Mesa, 556-~61 l
• Per...,nel Board to reconsid.er V ltis office for several hours
UIO of Dr. Join Skelly, a • witbolltpermisslon. ' '--------:--lF--.. --------'"'----:-:-------t-----------Jl"""---4S:-J
. 48 DAIL V PILOT
Pre-planning Advised
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Movie Dae •
· Cutting Funeral Costs • Jackie's Aunt
By the AssOC":iated Press
Consumers who plan
ahead can save hundreds
o( dollars on funeral
<'Osta by learning about
different types or
services available and by
avoiding decisions made
under stress.
The Federal Trade
Commission recently ac·
cused the $2-billion·a·
year funeral home in·
·dustry of practices rang-
ing from body s natching
to de~civing the
;bereaved.
THE COM~llSSION
proposed a series of
rufe:; which would re·
qtUre funeral directors to
give cu stomers a price
list or services and
merchandise available.
At the time funeral ar·
rangements are made.
customers would be en·
THE FAMILY CIRCUS
LM.Boyd
( CONSUIUER J
titled to a memorandum
recording the items
selected and the price.
'fhe National Funeral.
Dirertors Association
estimated tha t the
average adult funeral in
1974 C'ost $1,207. That
does not count things like
the cemetery or
crematorium expenses,
flowers, a monument or
marker or transporta·
tion charges. The FTC
staff, in it.s report, said
the average cost ror a
runeral and burial is
about $2,000.
AMONG THE ITEMS
on the bill ror a tradi·
tional runeral are rees in·
volving the services o(
the funeral director, his
By Bil Keane
staff and his facilities
and charges !or the
'casket.
Cutting these expenses
is possible through a
variety of methods and
individual savings de·
pend on personal view.
points. One alternative is
a memorial or funeral
society, a nonprofit or-
ganization of people who
have banded together to
seek simplicity and
economy in funeral ar-
rangements through ad-
vance planning.
THE CONTINENTAL
Association of Funeral
and Memorial Societies,
Inc .. with more than 100
chapters in almost all
the 50 states, estimates
that half a million
persons are members of
such organizations.
,
i UPI 1'eltf'M"6 Retul'tl ng
Promoter Glenn
Turner says he 's go-
ing back into the
motivation business,
only a week after he
was fined and freed
following a federal
fraud. conspiracy
trial in Tampa, Fla.
Lives ·in FiltA -
NEW YORK (API -An aged molller and ber
58-year-<>ld unmarried daughter,· heirs to soc1U
position and long-gone wealth, live by lbe sea in a
decoying house tilled with eatJ, faded piolUNS, filth
and the clutter of their past.
Edith Bouvier Beale, atmoot 80 but as bri&ht·
eyed as a bird, and daughter Edie. a lull-bodied
beauty. are the subjects d "Grey Gardena:• 1a
documentary film by Albert and Davis Mayales..
MRS. BEALE IS THE AUNT OF Jackie
Bouvier Kennedy On..,ta and Lee Radziwill but tbe
coruioction is downplayed in the ftlm. • ·
"Tht>re was no need to go beyond the Beales for
the film." said Al Maysles, wbo6e fl.Im auceeuee
include "The Salesman'' and the Rolling Stooes
documentary, "GimmeSbelter." , ,
Filmed in 1973 at the cluttered .. Grey Gardens••
mansion in East Hampton, the movie is a New York
Film Festival selection.
Depending on state ~~local regulations, in· TelopL--e d1v1dual chapters may 11.ite
MRS. BEALE, CRIPPLED WITH arthritis, a
straw hat crunched on her head, lies in bed most of
the day eating ice cream or pate from the room's
refrigerator or corn boiled at bedside. She sings bits
of the ·40s to scratchy records while dozens. or cats
meander over her. enter into arrangements
with undertakers to pro-
vide information about
members at s pecified
costs. Chapters also pro-
vide iniormation about
different types of
services available -in·
eluding cremation and
bequeathal of the body to
research -and lists of
charges.
"THE WHOLE em·
phasis is on preplan-
ning," said the Rev.
Harry E. Smith, presi-
dent of the Greater New
Haven <Conn.)
Memorial Society, Inc.
"You begin by learning
what the options are.
Otherwise, at the time of
death, you 're pretty
much at the mercy or the
undertaker you go to.··
Rebecca Cohen, ex·
ec:utive secretary of the
Continental Association,
said consumers "can cut
costs enormously" by
doing a little investiga·
lion.
IF YOU ARE laced
with funeral arrange:
ments for the first time
immediately after the
death of a friend or re·
lalive, take someone
with you who is removed
lrom tbesituatjon.
Must Pay
In Libel
SAN DIEGO (UPIJ -
A Superior Court jury·
has awarded more than
$40,000 to a former
Telopha se So<'iety
employe in a libel suit
filed against the society
and a funeral publica-
tion.
William Joseph sued
the society ; its presi-
dent, Dr. Thomas
Byrnes Weber; Weber's
wire. Marian; a trade
publication <'a iled .. The
Death Report." and its
editor. Jos t>ph John
Trento.
Edie spends her day answering her mother's
commands, occasionally escaping to the beach or to
strut like a majorette to marching music, dressed in
a tltrban made from a sweater, fish net Ugh.ta and a
skirt improvised (roma blouse.
Such is their life since July 29, 1952, when Edie
left her dreams of a stage career and her many
suitors to care for her mother.
"I MISSED OUT ON EVERYTIUNG," said
Edie at one tearful point in theftJm.
··1 didn't want my child to betaken away. I'd be
entirely alone,'' Mrs. Beale said sonly_
The Maysles met the Beales while they were
beginning a film about Jackie and Lee, and
although there is scant reference to the sisters, the
Bouvier aura is there. It was Jackie's money and in-
nuence, it is said, that saved the Beales from evic·
lion in 1973 by the local Board of Health.
MANY OF EDDIE'S COWRFUL; IF mis·
matched, clothes are apparently Jackie's hand-mt·
downs, said the Maysles.
''And there is that Bouvier aristocratic
arrogance and vanity in the women,•· said AJ.
At one point, Edie complains about a terrible
smell in the room.
•·1 love that smell. I thrive on it. It makes me
feel good,·· said Mrs. Beale from her bed.
A portrait of her young and beautiful self teans
against the wall where cats often have relieved
themselves.
BF.SIDES
AWARDING Joseph '
$10,800 in general
damages against four
defendants, the jury de·
cided the society should
pay $12,000 in punitive
damages.
In addition, Weber, "l'M NOT ASHAMED OF ANYTmNG. Where
also a partner in "The my body is is a very precious place."
Death Report,·· was as--• The Maysles said the women were pleased with
sessed $10,SOO in punitive .. tbe !Um, deciding everyone should have a movie
damages; his wife was made of their life -and shrewdly negotiating for a
assessed $1,500 in shareofthe£ilm'sprofits.
punitive damages and
Rudy Brought
Tango toU.'S. "Be aware of legal re-
quirements, ··she said.
Tr~.nto was assessed
$6,000 in punitive
damages. Navy Group Forming
METEORITES are never round or Oat.
Claim is made that vodka was popular in
that area now known as Ohio long before it got
to Russia. No, I can't prove
it. But some liquor experts
contend vodka was first
made by the J>eruvian In·
dians ab<>Ut A.O. 8. SUP·
posedly, it was called chac-
ta. Somehow, the Hopwell ·
Indians of the Ohio area
got hold of the technique
for making it and passed it
aJong to the Iroquois. The
Vikings picked it up from
them, returned it to Scandinavia, and that's
where the Russians fmally found it. Fascinat-
.tng, i(factual.
Q. ''WHO introduced the tango into thii
country?''
A. None other than Rudolph Valentino,
that romantic movie star of yesteryear. With
a partner named Bonnie Glasse. In 1914.
WHEN CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS
first landed on this hemisphere, he wrote a
short report about it to the king and queen of
Spain, put it in a sealed cedar box, and set it
afloat. Exactly 359 years later. the message
was found on a shore of Morocco and handed
over to officers of the American Big t:hief-
tain. Just 124 years ago. LitUe late in report-
ing that. Sorry.
IF YOU LIKE to yell, whistle or sing in
the streets after 11 p.m .. you might do well to
stay out of Memphis, Tenn. Lawmen there
don't tolerate such. In fact, Memphis for more
than a dozen years bas been named the na-
tion's quietest cit)'.
YOU'VE HEARD tbat widely quoted
idiom ''to bring home the bacon.•• But do you
know who popularized it? Jack · Johnson.
be.fore he became the first black heavyweight
cllampion of the world. In 1910, he told his
mother, "Don't Worry, I 'll bring home the
bacon.'' Newsmen picked it up. And just about
everybody in the country repeated it.
LOSE WEIGHT 1
OR MONEY BACK
Ht111 dlnic.al lt•ts compltfl'd 11 1
ip;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ m1)of unlYtfJlty h<Jspilat ptove I hat lh1 OOAINEX Plln will help rou los•
•~11s wtltlit quK:kly. CLASSIC
GUITAR
INSTRUCTION
Jol)n K. Bent
Hontington Beach
960·1245
ODRINEX cont1l11t 1n 1muin1
hUl\191 ltmll lhll IUf)l)lfSSH lht
tpptllte. Ciiia, lhiee ROOd meals a <Jay
ts Ille tinr ODRINEX ltbltt lltlps
you nt !NJ without btlna huriary.
Wllh '""' ulorla, your wci&hl 1oes down, Stle talen H dktcltd ·Ifill not
""'' you lltl\'Oul Look btttsr, ltet berter 1s you 11111
' alm111in&4owltlfld1Y wit II OORINEX
StlhllctiMltyHtlltffd cw mOftt)' blck.
i 11m111--,:
Learn whether em-
balming or a casket is re·
quired in the case of
cremation because the
price of a funeral often
depends on the price or
the casket.
JOSEPH SAID in his
suit that he was libeled in
an article on Dial·a·
mation, a cremation
service in competition
with Telopha.se .
Orange CoaSt men who Anyone who may have
served on any destroyer served on such a vessel
escorts while in Naval
service have been
welcomed to join a new
association forming in El
CajOn.
can contact Frank R.
Crawford. P .O. Box 12m.
El Cajon, 92022, for
!urther fn(orination.
OPEN HOUSE CELEBRATION
Door Prizes
Miyato MX-E I 0 Speed Bicytle Wcasa "Toll Tulips" (Pattern)
Dinnerware Set for 8
Polaroid SX70 Model 31.and ConM a
Toshiba RP 1600F AM/FMTransistorRodio
Dried Rorol Arrungem1111
Open an account and add some beauti~
ful color to your home scenef The
Coleus, peacock of the plant world,
features a profusion of multi-
colored leaves and spikes of
light blue flowers. Grows in-
doors or out. Easycare in-
structions for the Coleus
will be included when you
come into our office to
pick up YoUr plant
Come as you are and help us celebrate during September 29th through
October 31st. Free refreshments during the first week.
lOKAIBANK '~. OF ~~!~~~IA
3333 W11t Coast Hwy:
Newport Beach 92660
(714) 648·7121
BRANCH'OFFlci:S
Inglewood, Huntington Beach, Plays del Rey. SoUth Bay
..... Office. Lot ..... "
'I I
•
•
.• .,
-TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY!
SOME QUANTITIES ARE lJMITED!
SPECIAL!
Women's pull-on
Acrilan® pants.
EACH
Here's a pull-on pant to make you
dance with joy! They are made of
Acrilan knit that gives you a new
shapely silhouette so in tune with
today's look. You may choose from
eleven muted tones, and at this low
price why not buy several? Machine
washable. In siws 8-18. Hurry!
"CHARGE IT!"
IMOf' M<*™YTMllOUOM IATIJllOAY 113' AM TO ti• PM MnQ).,\y •• A TO .... ,,.., • .ltJrT ... ,. "CMA•oa: rr'
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DAILY PILOT ,t.
ly Phll 1ri1ertonc11 lnt~rgoverilment. Council Weighed
11J GAJIYGllAHYJUE-ot•MtJ Pu11...,
.SANTA ANA -Mom· bera or the ID ·
~vernmental · •Un• eou...,u oe Onnc• Cowlty will ¥Ote Nov. 28 to decide If the
council abould be dli-
banded.
di Mid o mOJwliy of the--
councll favors dlsband-lni ICC and DO council member ha.a time to a
tend ICC mut1n1s.
cludlftl th• mMUDI
wu thell underway.
Tiii-\' AaGVBD tUt
the council 1bould be
1}¥ftl a chant'e to prove
lt•elf, is a 1afe1uard
acain1t encroachment
Ol'I local control by re-
gion.al aovemmentl and
Is suffering only because
of a rack of member
participation.
ot •Ore llahlillll-llbr..,,,
.,.. lndl•atlon1· "that it
can do a bll Job !or all of us."
'Hammet orcued that
the existence of ICC
servt• as a deterrent to
encroachment· on local
('()Ulrol by reaionat acen·
cl.,. lite the Southern
California Association ot the,Nov. 26 election. it IL
Governments. likely that a less formal
orcalllsatlon sl1111lar to
AND SCOTT; ICC's the defunct Supervison
chairman, vowed to con. and Mayors Conference
tlnue to attempt to wlll be formed to bring ~rsuade the council's city cquncilmen and
members and non · county supervisors
members to keep the together for diacussio.:i of
organiiati~nalive . isa~ea of countyw1de
Should at collapse in i;ignificance. Judging from reaction
lo the disband p-al
at an ICC meeUn1 In
Fount•in Valley tbla
week, there'll be little
suspense about the elec·
tion'aoutcome.
-County Super
llalph Diedrich nd
'lbomu Riiey indl ated
they believe the a ~e
of ei'ht county cities
from CC'• membership
and the threat of other
cities to withdraw de·
cides the issue in favor of
d!Jbandlng.
Their arguments came
in the tace of two county
cities that never Joined -jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:-· ICC, the sub1eq_uent
That's because sup.
pprt for the voluntary as·
sociation of Orange
Cowlty cities and county
government continued to
dwindle when:
-s·pokesmen for at least seven member
citiu said they would
support a leas formal as-
sociation ol cities and
county government. ·
withdrawal of cities and
Dledrlch'1 contention
that ''unless they're all
in,-noonels in."
"I '.*ilh I~ deYelop a nice patina, ratbtr than just wnnkat ... ~ -A SPOKESMAN for Ille Anaheim City Coun· . -A ~POKESMAN for
Those citlea that are
out include populous
Huntington Beach and
Santa Ana . Should
Anaheim bolt from the
organization as was in-
dicated, those agencies
that remain would
represent only about 65
percent of the county's
Population.
. Supervisor Robert Bat-
Death& Elaewhere UC Irvine tin quoted Battin as say· inl ICC ''is not worth lhe
time or money ."
M support ror the two-
REIDSVILLE, N.C.
!U PI) -Charlie
Monroe, 72, whose Blue-
grass and country musie
career spanned. almost
half a century, died
Saturday after a lengthy
bout with cancer.
Monroe, who remained
active until only days
before his death, re-
turned to his home here
Thursday following a
series o( concerts in his
native Kentucky.
FUNT, Mich. (AP> -
WIUlam M. Gollogber,
52, who won the 1953
Pulitzer prize in news
photography ror a pic-
ture or Adlai E .
Stevenson with a hole in
his shoe, died Sunday or
m~ingitis.
DeatltNotkes
sued Over year-old voluntary or·
ganization continued to
Insurance
evaporate, ICC was not
without its defenders.
Mo st outspoken or
those who favor con· s AN TA. A N A -.• tinuati~n of ICC were
Damages totaling more Fountam Valley Mayor
than $108.000 have been George Scott, Costa
demanded by the widow Mesa Mayor Jack H~
of a UC Irvine lecturer melt, New~rt Beac~ C1·
whocl•ims in her Orange ty Councilman M~lan
County Superior Court Dostal and Supervisor
action that be was un· Ralph Clark.
lawfully denied group
TO RILEY, Diedrich
and other form er
staunch supPorters and
ICC participants, the
failure of all 26 cities and
the five supervisorial
districts to participate is
the council"s fatal Oaw.
But Dostal insisted
that projects already un -
dertaken by ICC , such as
a uniform classification
or public service job
codes and establishment
RICHMOND , Va.
<UPI) -A 46-year-old
heart transplant patient
died Sunday when his
body rejected the new
heart he received just
over one month ago at
the Medical College of
Virginia Hospital,
hospital officials said.
The patient, Dean Goins
of Springfield, Va .,
began experiencing
symptoms of heart rejec-
tion last week, a
spokesman said. and dlsabUlty insurance
during his employment
atUCI. MI AM I ( U PI ) Deanna Morris Swagel
Funeral services are names the Regents of the
scheduled today for L. G. University of California
Crews, a former Miami as defendants in a
policeman credited with lawsuit that also lists her
saving Franklin D. three children as co·
Couple Prevent,
Seizure of Home
Roosevelt from an as= plaintiffs : Matthew Scott SANTA ANA -A Corona del Mar couple ac ·
sassin's bullet and with Swagel, ll, Phillip Lee cused oC failing to make payments on their swim·
singl e·handedly arrest. Swagel, 9, and Steven ming pool have gone to court in a successful bid to
ing underworld figure Al Jonathan SwageJ, 7, all prevent the sale oC their home at public auction.
Capane six times. Crews, of 3162 Kittrick Drive, Robert R. and Nancy W. Steach, 2 Twin Lake
JOHN E. :;:~:g:. ,n10tnt °' 74, died Friday in a Los Alamitos. Circle, also demanded $500,000 in damages from
Al"udN, c... • 11. 0.1•of OMtris.p. hospital at ·Marathon, She states that her late South Pacific Pools, operated by Lawrence E. and
t.rnb9f" "-191s. SIWvl-9 b' l'll1' wue where he lived since h b d M' h I W Beverly Johnson o( Garden Grove, for taking the "'-9l'f .-en 8't'ltton; 1N1rent5, ""'· t. us an , IC a e ayne
• Mrs.. 11«1.1111. B't'ltron. Sr.of Fostwa· 1963. Sw a gel, le cl u red in legal action that could have cost them their home.
tJ.C...;'-Drott.r1..11en11 v.e'l"trvn.. I UCI f Named as co-defendant in the Orange County
Jr.ot0uen •• c. .• ndar1•n11.a"'ron ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI> neuroogy at rom Su . C rt I •t . •• S 0 · Fed I o1 FoSm-c1tv, c.. s.rv1ces .,.. P!'ld-Sept. 1, 1972, to Aug. 3I , penor ou awsw 1s u1e an 1ego era inv. P•clflc 111ew M•mod•1 P••--Walter Dunbar, 57, 1973, but was nox al· Savings and Loan Association, the agency involved ~v.N-•"""••M"'•K•n,c... New York's director or in the filing of a lien on the Steach home and the set· lowed lo take out group 1 a1LL~.1CR.t.ME,.,,..$1aentoleom probation and former li(e or disability in· tingofanauctiondate.
Mew,c.a.o.teof-.t11s.ptembtr1', dir~ fth C l'f · Th Ste ch Ii t 18 . f I'· ·1h th I i.1s.Sur>1IYHbytwo$0tli.,Jeny& ..... ~oro e a .1omia surance during that e a .es s senous au...,w1 epoo :._.~~-~·bat~ of H~u ; ,.,. Department of Correc· period. installed by the Johnsons and contend that they
Like To Hear More About the
TRAllSCEllDEllTAL
MEDITATIOll '" PROIRAM?
\
As
Taught By
MAHARISHI
.MAHESH
YOGI
Free
Introductory
Lecture
NEWPORT BEACH
Wed., Oct. ht-8 p.m.
M-1 Sc-AiolllOll-M-er & l"lne St.
SANTAANA
. Wed., Oct. ht-at Hoon
H--~.3rd Floor, 1020 N. a..-way
•!W..-iii~;:!'r-1~1~;:.of 11:::,:,: lions, died Sunday while Sw a gel, a N INDS failed to make payments becau~e of that condition.
'"-"" W•1de11cn t•mllv. M1mor1•1 mowing the lawn at his fellow, died Sept. 22, Judge H. Walter Steiner has set Oct. 7 for a hearing
"r-.1ces Tu•,d•,. 11:Jo ... M. ee11 ho me in suburban 1974, of leukemia. and issued a restraining order. For Information Call 83S-37n
&rOltO'fMv CNoe• with Aew. JolvlKnO• Gw'lderland. :::.:.::..:::..:.:::::::_:::_ ____________ _:: ____________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"'!!!~"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!~'._.:_ _GffklMI. c.ontrlbutlons .,...., btm.Ge to
Newport C.nl•r Unll•• Mlttlodlst -
Cllut"c:"' l•IJ 8reedw•., MOrtUMy dh-eclOn.. '
•lllADl.•Y
MELEN LUCILLE lltADLEY, '"1· °"" 01 Statitor., ca. D•le o! -..~Sep.
ttmb.r 16, 197J. SurwlY1d by lwo
,.l•(n, Loi• Macnelt and lltrblnt
Whit•: •lld lrlend( Ell• E. Sttr
Ml!morl•I wrvlc:•1 w n bt hl!lll onWed .
...sOIY." OC:lof)et 1, 19/S el Pt>'• f'•mily
c:.otanl•I Funer•I Ho,..., WeS\mlllSter.
Co.
CLOUD
ALWYN L. CLOV O, resl*l'lt" of
..........., 8~-.:1'1, C.. Oete OI ONtll 5ilip-
IM!btf lt> 191~ SurvlYl!d by hb ,....,.
f<-1~ CIOUCI, OM brotr..r, ~d
ClolHI Ol C•rt1b•d, C•. Mlmorl•t
MrYICH .. 111 De Mid el 10:00 AM Tun..
da,, HC»t;l Men'IOrl•I HOstilt•t Olee>el.
'"'"'"'''" Wiil be prlval•, P•clflc Yltw Ml!ITQ'i.t P•rk, N•wporl S.ach, C..
wlUI P~lllc: vi. .. MOrtu••Y dtr-<ten.
NUGH•S LU.LIAN F. HUGHES. reslOlent ol
CosW Mew, C•. Dal• of dNltl s.p.
~ 27. 1'75. Surf'lvedby '"""'-· Joh'n W. Hu11h•1 ol Coil• Mew,
FtkMl'd E. HUghet. of T111,ln, ca .. and
J-P, MU9fln. ot MIO.r•, C...; 1(
oran«hl~. 23 11reat·or•nde:hl10ren,
•nd 2 or••l·1r••I gtahd,hlldreri. 59nlcts .,111 be Mid Tu.t4ay 2:00 PM,
e.n eto.dw•y CUoel with Rev. c.Kll
E•n-s offkl•nl. l11l1rm9nl, Martor "-s1 Mln.'i.I P•rk. Bell Bt'OiodlNV
lrilonu«vdl~tor-s.
LUNDIO"O
AHNE LUN080,.G, aoa ti, t'eSld!nl
Ill s.r. ci.m.nte, c... Dal• ot DNtll !ieP-
l~ll'tr 26, tt1J. SurYl¥ed t1¥ rt.r
dauQtlltl', Mlory SllYelr• of l'Ulltl'lon,
C..1 t1s•rs. EYa l'IKI of Ug-HIM5,. c... Md"""' ... °'°" of ll'!Vleweod,C..; J tr•llCkhl+cl.....,, S.rvl(eS T~v.
s.,ttmMr 30. 1:00 PM, SI. P9ul's
Utthlr .. Church, F1tli.t'lon, D . RtY.
~ £. Martzrt.lm offlcl-. N ·
r.,......ms by M<:C.ul•Y f. W...l«t
~'I'. Flllltl'lon, c.&.
HAV•I
W.t.All:EN II:. H.t.VES, reslcltl'lt of Nnnirw\ ka<tl, C•. SUr\llved by his
ln.nl:il, Mr. C.R. l(•nnen. Services win
lllt 1'91dcrypttlclt Ol'I Tund•Y ll:OOAM.
lleH•vue M.auso1•um, On1arlo, C..
Mti:·~O-"'" Cent• Ml~ Mortu.y
dl,.;lors.
1· IALTZ-lllGllOH
I FUHllAL MOMt
Corona del Mar 673-9450
~ta Mesa 646-2424
ltullOADWAY
MOITUA•Y
t 110 Broadway. Costa
Mesa
642-9150
McCOIMICK
MOITUAIY
Laguna Beach
49 .. ·9415
San Juan Capls1rano
495-1776
PACIFIC 't'llW
MIMOll.t.L PAii
metery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Dtive
t Newport BeacM.
1, Celiforni•
I . .644-2700
1r -----!: PlRPAMILY
l COU>l«4L ""'IUL
ll HOMI
• 7801 Bolsa Ave. l Westminster
.. 8as.3626 f
I
l~
l·
SMITHS' MOIWAIY
827 Main St.
Hunlinglon Beach
,f 1536-e$39
SANTA ROSA CUPll
-The mother of presid·
inc J udge Ro bert J .
Drewes of San Francisco
Superior Court died here
early today from injuries
s uffered in an
automobile accident
which also ;njured her
son and his wife. Oare
Ringland ·was in the rear
self{ of the Drewes' car,
which was hit broadside
Sunday night on the old
Redwood Highway , near
Petaluma.
Dfssolldfon•
01/ffarrfage
1:111-11 A ... 11.1 ,,
W•llon, l(ennelh Bernard •nd ear ..... nloulw
Mor•IH.~ R. and Dolof'esS.
"-ICMlt, M.lxi"" Fern and Flonela
Durw•rd
llohrl, Ectvrin Al•n and Heidi 6 .
Pet'•!, M.arprll• S.....11vn and Flal .. 1
S.1\llidof'
lkisb'I'. 1...tOM GeM\ll•Ye ancl E,..,,.sl w.
IClklH, 5t1aron IC. •nd Jolin I'.
Russ.U, !(•win lr¥11'111 •ncl Jennifer .....
51_,.,..,, R.ctltl ... ,.,.. •rid Wllll«n
u-enceJr.
l(ekhum. Myrri• F. Mid Danie! J,
Progtt°, Su..,. L. •nd P•uf Fl.
s.ndtl'I. L°"'ttll S. •ncl Thoma!i Fl,
Stlftl'I, Col9Ue l . and Rk ... rcl F.
Htrwn, Loris Noreen and Loren Rtflll Mlll•s. ~''I' Ann al'ICI Jofln Ch•rlt!i
0. t.mp, Zena1 F1"n Jr. •nd lier• Y.
T.ol•. Gayle Yvanne ..wi P"llUpN.
Gn:lllM, Llf1d.ll Gall al'ICI 0.n Churi.1
Stuti.rt, MlrpNI A. •nd Carl A.
Gu11.i-. AMC. and w1111amc .
Shtl'lff. ~ R•ri•ln •rHI Aotltl'I -Pelt, $I.ital'! G. and Henry
Fralwl, Lloydancl Shlr .. y
Htlnl,...Jlleoband H• .. n M.
1!11'9fH A1ttutl H
Rkn.nbOn, LOrna S. •ltd Tlmottrv
""' Coe*. 0.\111111:. and ,,,. ... 1(.
Tr•Y'fl...luti.ancwllll•m
Ertdr.tM.SonM E. •nd J•mes e.
E.51ep,J-R., IU •ncl c ......... M.
M.il, OWlllOClhtf' 8 . at1d ShlrltyM.
.IOl'IM, flllU'l•nf Gwinn and ~l'I'" ......
,..,.,, 0.Ylct P. •nd TolnetM' P.
T~ll. Mlldt'td M . and James E.
~.~rUyri.t..•ndLar.-.,L. I ~. J•lc•IOl'ld OOUll••• Morton I Nlt.,.r, Mary May 0 , •nd Al .. n
"""" Du &olt, Jotin•l'ICI Estl'lfl'
Btncllert, Otl'ltrlM Vktorl• ~ -·-...... Writl Ellfffl 1Mw1 &e..-d
"""' RHcltf', NINlnO UM Md P~•
Smith. M1r911rtt .t.nn •ncl ll:•vmoncl .,..
Taykll",Atlt"ll~•ndSt•phttl P.ut
W hoMf, ~~t T. •lld Jan.s
... trkll
l'ltlftWll, JeAllft •nd ltlllbef10.lt
Sftfffl, "kN"' Arlfll •nd Rt--LOOI! -.,.. ,.., .. _ ........ , ...... .... -.
flOUH1'AIM YAWY
CHAMIB
OfCOMMIRCE
We're celebrating
our new star
located at
7080 Hollywood Boulevard
A new star is coming lo Hollywood ... to
shape ii up. And we're celebrating wilh a ... I Special Enrollment Offer-at!!.!_ clubs I
* If you join any Holiday Spa Health Ctub
between September 29 and October 5. you'll get
2 years of membership tor the price or the
flral year alone, plus * a free $pa Bag and * Nutritional Gulde and Diet Booklet. * And if you join then. and it's your flr•t visit
to any of our clubs, we'll waive your first year's
enrollment fee -NO ENROLLMENT FEE! Offer
limited to adults only.
Special Club. Our new Holiday Spa Health
Club has separate men's and women's exercise
rooms with the latest "variable-resistance"
exercise equipment. Sauna, hot hydro-massage
whirlpool. steam and suntan rooms.
You can even lake a jog on us-with our
outdoor roof-top running track. Tan in our sun
deck area. Do group exercises in our slimnastic
salon or join our unique "jazznastics" sessions.
We have everything you need to get you
in shape.
Special Guests and Activities
* Or. Anne Marie Bennstrom-'high priesless'
of physical culture. * Dr. Hans Kugler-gerontologist. nutritionist.
aulhor of .. Stowing Down The Aging
Process." talk show personality. * Dr. Paul E. Ward, P.E.D.-Oirectorof
Program Development and Research for !he
Health & Tennis Corporation of America. * Bilt Emmerton-World premier marathon
runner. * Major George Otott-Founder of U.S.M.C.
Physical Fitness Institute. former Olympic
coach and advisor to Presidenrs Council on
Physical Fitness.
Join us for dally •port•, •un and swimwear
fa•hion ahows hosted by Nann Miiier, ieading
fashion authority. Enjoy champagne. punch,
hors d'oeuvres and door f)flze1. * our new Hollywood •tar *
7080 Hollywood Blvd .
213-469-6308
(corner of La Brea Avenue in
the Muir Medfcal Center)
•
I
Holiday Spa Health Clubs
For Men And Wot1len ..............
510South Beach Boulevard
South of Lincoln Avenue
(714)826·038,1 c..e. .....
2300 HarOor Boulevard
Harbor C.ntlf
17141549-3368
·-· 17031 Venlura Boulewud
West of Balboa
(213)986·6330
HuntJneten a.Htl 18585 Main S1raBI
Main SI. •1 Beach Btlld.
(714)842-1-451
Longhach
4101 Atlantic Boulevard
Corner ol Carson
(213) 426-8874
°"'"'" 622 East Katella Avenue
Watt of Tu11in Ave.
(714)539·2441
-
W.atmlnatet'
6757 Westmlnst•r -'.venue
Weitm1n1ter Center
(714).894"3387
GRAND QPENING
' C!LEBRATION , I* · * MondaJ through
&unday
S~rntMr 29 through
OctobelS * At.!!J locltlono -* Spectal Qrond
Opening Monlberehlp
Olft•-Anlleblo at all
IOclltfona 4 · * 8"cltl weeltend 1ufft11 at new
' Hollywooct location * ,Jetry Dunphy
•
'
• · * Hu~h O'Brlan • 'l Wiiiiam Shatner · I '* Brenda Venus
..
•
i
' ' • I
)
,4J9 DAILY PILOT Monday, September 29, 1975
:s&l•~St,.?lllHlt~ Tonight's
TV Highlights
KHJ (9) 7:30 -"All My Sons."
Arthur Miller's indictment of wartime
profiteering in this 1948 movie drama
with Edward G. Robinson, Burt Lan·
caster, Howard Duff and Arlene Francis.
~Tops in Pops ~ '11SS•" , ........ .....,.. ... , .. '11.,.,. -.
........ ~J!<M'_
KTLA (5) 8:00 -"Any Wednesday."
Jane Fonda in her sex kilten days as the
mistress of Jason Robards Jr. who
catches the eye of Dean Jones in this 1966
movie comedy.
By the Alloelated Press
The following are Billboard's hot record hits for
the week ending Oct. 4 as they appear in next
.i week's issue of Billboard magazine:
HOT SINGLES
I . FAME -DavidBowieAlomar
2. I 'M SORRY -John Denver RCA I NBC (4) 9:00-"Cops and Robbers."
Cliff Gorman and Joseph Bologna star in
this TV premiere of the 1973 comedy mov-
·" ie about a pair of New York policemen
r 3. RHINESTONE COWBOY -Glen Campbell
Capitol
~ who pull a multi-milliondollar Wa ll Street
. caper. 14 ABC (7) 9:00-KABC Special. Pitts·.
burgh. Pirates' s lugger Willie Stargell is 1
profiled in this documentary with Hank ~
Aaron and Mickey Mantle a mong many
sports personalities appearing.
'
TV DAILY LOG
Monday
Eve ning
SEPTEMBER 29
':00 1J (i) ®) tJl m Nm 0 01\~QJ IJ) Non
O (l)1tu11B o c!Bl oo> oo m rcrL .... ,.,
Nl111t fMlbfll G1ren B1y Pltl1n
vs. Dl!nver Brotlt:OS. O lnMllSt m P1rtrlclp F1rnfly
(i)Ml•IZ
£DlllN Ttma
a~ Stir Trek ED Y1111 A1e111
'1) Little RIKllS Ho~r
I 6:l0 R Mtrv Crilfln $alow ........
~ I]) Kop11'1 Hutu m nie Nat1r1lilb €C Traftl fll11 ,
I '''" D @OO!!lNon lwli111 for Oo!lan ........
Tt Ttll tlle Trutll , .. , ....... I._""' "'"" (I)C1111t:111olt .. "" ~ ll'tt Amtricl11 5tfle m Clauk Thtf111 Prmrw '11H1
Hum1nl1ies in Dr1m1"
i,11 P•111 m Adda .. fallllr
1:30 I) SZS.000 Pyra111kl
D SEE MARLIN PERKINS
*"Mutual of Omaha's
(1) Mt'lit: (C) (Zhr) "Htm Too
Lttt~ (com) '65-Maureen O'Sulli·
van, P1ul rorcl, Coftnie SIM!ns. O@ OOlfOl iDN•c M111d•r
Mtwit: (C) (2iir) "Cops 1 Robben."
(com) '13-Clill Coon1n, Jonepll Bo·
togn1, Oit.k Wud, Shtppard Strud-
wotk, Ellen Holly, John Ryan. Nino
Rurgl!11. Gorman and Bolo1n1 1t1r
IS lwo /rltw York City policemen
wllo pull 1 multl·milhon doll1r Wall
Slreet ee(H!r, hopina: their jobs 15
(l)j)t will proltct the m.
(i) Tht U1!oudialllts 0 llA8C Sped..91' "Willie St11a:ell:
Wh&t If I Oidn'I Play 81S1iball?"
lon1-b1ll sl~a:ier Stua:ell of the
Pitlsburth Pirates ii s.een on !ht
Held and al llome. Hank A.Iron,
Mickf)' M1nt!e, Muhammild Ali and
m1ny others make a:uest appear·
ancn. ID Tht 8tld Ones
l)Q MO\'lt; {C) (211r) "ltr1r Rtme"
O!N) '67 -fr1n' Sin1111, Jill SL
John. ED Cit1nd Pril THtni1: S.11fltft Ttur
()hr) "The $100,000 San francisco
firtm1n's fuJICI" Men's lln1ls
matcl!es from San fr111ei!CO's Cow
Paltce. 1ia CIJ> m a.rbl,, eoar1
9;30 IJ (III CI!(]) Maude Maude dt·
cides her m1rri11e is over-Walter
has fallen otf !ht WlfOll ind w1s
sten by her in 1 seemin1ly tom·
promisina: situation. Wilen Wtlter
learns ol Maude's decision and why
lhe m.1d1 it, ht comes home with
llopes ol 111tch!n1 lhin1s up only
lo fi11d M1ude htnelf in 1 com-
promilinf UllllliOll. o -i,llPobn Cbr1
10:00 IJ@(}) Cil Medial Ctllttt 01.
l @eWllll --• Gannon is flCed llritr. ttie dittmma
WILD KINGDOM"
La. AMerb• SlJ4t of blindly trvs1in1 1 nluable col· t.....,. tt.i: lhtvt « 1all;ln1 tllt WOfd ot 1
UlllR S MMe: (2111) •All MY dyinf illln lh1I a dodor on his
s.." {ch) ·--~ G. lloblt-tllff 'liia liwtlwld lit I Slllll'llllll son, Burt tancasttr, How1rd Duff. /nekfe11i In Vltlntm. Pet1r H1$ktll I K1t11 Rtkn rutsts.
I=";'.,,.""'"'" ; e, m.:: int 9' ChllldM ltfbuy Coast "The 81ll1d ol
Alllfl Redwln1 Jaif' A setre! tip to
llfy uttlt lltrek tash lh•I $20,000 is hidden in 1
1:001) lfil Cl) Cf) Rllodl Rhod1 tnd tfflk·lown jail, promots C.ble to ret
f
t Jot art llllYinl 1 difficult time try· himHll 1rrnted as 1 w1nled out·
in1 to ctldlr1te lhtit lirsl 1nnivl•" i..... to retrieve tht money, bul the
s:ifJ to,.ther. The co~ple's tem11111 pl1n hcklires whtn a 11111 sprinp
ketp 11t1in1 the blsl of them tnd his ctllm1t1 ind they take C.bte
p1n1111 the ocusion from btlnt 1loo1.
i pleas1nt. Brtndt's fife is not a · ~5"tt• hllll• Rtpe1rt
actly 1o1111 smoothly ellller. sh• is Cit SNrt
lac:lld with Mine evicted fn:im her ([l) "" Haw
f
1putment. aJ MlniM: l111pessibl1 o u@amr•· 11w111•t• 10'.l0 1 Co11•11111tf fted)td ilia "[yts Only" A top·ln1I to.· News I ernmurt worw with 1 pboloerapltic Acffiflu11t r mtl!IOIY b Sll'l*!td ti I tcllll'CAI of
classilied lftfonNlloll that tw bttn 11:00 IJ (}) 0 i.11 mm News
f1Hln1 lnto wbwfSivt hands .rid 0 ())(Ii@@ News
Westi11 Is 1ssi1ned to tit needtd led. ti CrOllC.ht PfOOf. S.rb1r1 AndenOn tnd 8obtlJ i) Set. lllU
Van 111tsl · TIMI l.llCJ Show 0 Mtrrie: (C) (%Sir) "Aly Wtdnn-fit Al~llllR FHt
dwr (com) '66-hnt rondl, Juan Med Sqllld
Robards. Dl!an kines. (}) ht« Ciu1111
i Wild Wild Wtst & Ce111illt .
Dultfs Qlolte ( (I)) Lift Alnericl1 Style.
Jtfll lalitllrSbow 11·15i,llC111111"
5'c:ctJ '"" Mtxkt ' Ila ;,.,...u ll:JO I) !fJl @Cl) CIS Liit llt¥it: (C) fD OOIJT O.r StlrJ "Tht hd "Uadi" {d11} '73-Slella SleYens,
Gan(' first 111 1 series of dramati· Ed Plef~, Jofln Mcintire, Jess Wtl·
11tiofts of incidtnts ffOlll early ton, John Saxon.
Amulwi history, lhis pn11r1m 11) Clltff PJ!e
illuUr1tes Ille Qlllnict bttwetn &. 0 0 (I) ®I m Joftll"f C.rso11
(lish alld lndltn notions of j11stn. Dom Dl!Lulst ls a:uest host.
The slory concer1s Atth11r Pudl, 0 The "°""'"''"'" an inden!ufed servant tried in 1638 (6) Mtrit: "Ttflllde" (1dv) '43 -
in P!rmoulh for the kiHina ct 1 Marit McOollald, Chester Morris.
Nm111nstll lndl1n. 0 MysttrY TIM.atre "Any Second al M" Al;rldedde Now" Slrwart Gr1n1tr stars.
'1) lapt-LllPltl Pn1r1ms 0 Mlwle: "The Flt Mtn" {mJ1)
1:301)(i11{])Ptryllis Jonalhan Do· '51 -J. Scott Smart, Julie londorl,
ler's 81·yetf-old, ftisty mother f11J$ Rock Hudson.
I visit alld l'bft1is is lorced to tum m Mls$iln: lmpon!ble
O'ler her room. Decidl111 on !Me· (~(I)) Tm.ti or Ctnequencu
peMtnct fnllll tht Dl!tlen. Pllytlis 12:00 0 Twililfil ltM
lllO'lt1 into • "" tprtmenl 1nd m MM!I; "Deported" (dra) '51 -
ldlieves inst"! squlof. Jeff Chtndler, M1rt1 Toren.
(I) 0.11 Ulllli klff9 Tat 12,30 a mt
BMtty & Yid.ti SlllO'Mt SMw M11 'Ml UNCU I Mert Critlll Slltw ·
l.ts ~ l :OO O d.imToflltrtOW
"'°II @OOIJJ U • .. ,..., 0 "" ""'
Arthit's quil:-th.lnkinf uva Ille 1;451) llttle: "Tiie Rtt11111 ol OdoMr"
me of 1 wom111-bvt the ,'lfOrlll~ he (tom) '4!-Glfnn ford, Teriy Moore,
JM1! ls no lady. Arcfllt ~ armous l.tmts Gleason.
lot the w«1d lo know ol his he'*'.
but initallllr dlan1ts M mind 1;30 1J Mme: "Mt' {ad'I) '38 -
wi.en ht discoven t~t lrulll abou1 Tyrone PuMr, lo1tU1 Younr. Anna·
the woman be rescued. btUa.
'
Tuesday
DAmME MOVIES
,:10 0 "Cparl" (dra) '3l -RIMld
r.ot1111n, KfJ Jrlflds. ..........,.
(dlt) '4Z-t•1 L1911t.Cbl* blos.
lll:DO@ "VNI 1"""' (llfl) 'SZ-....
lcM 8undo, Allllloftf Qilitll.
IZ:OO . "Tiit MMtatmdr" t1•) ''7-
C'«flfl Wildt, Mlurte9 O'K111.
1:1»0 "1llrM le(' (mys) '37 -BoriS
Kfrloff, W1td Bond.
@"If• OnlM'" (dra) '59 -Brin·
4ofl DI! Wilde, C.rol lyn111.
l:JO D (C) .. ,,,,....,.. (WU) '53 -
Cll1rltM ttn!on, Jack P1l1nct.
1:00 \Xj (C) "Tk 11111 Mtndletl" (dl1)
'6.J-Pat Boont, /rllfte'I' K•an.
J:JD (lJ"Wmer. Uftift" (Mlv) '41 -
Rotiert Y011n1, Dean hpt1,
0 (t) "Otrl11'1 11" Part I {C:Otll)
'Ml -rr1nl Sinat11, Ot•n M1rtin.
4. RUN JOEY RUN-DavidGeddesBigTree
5. MR . JAWS -OickieGoodman Cash
6. BAD BLOOD -Neil Sedaka Rocket
7. BALLROOM BLITZ-Sw~etCapitol
8. DANCE WITH ME -Orleans Asylum
9. AIN'T NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY
Helen Reddy Capitol
tO. ROCKY -Austin Roberts Private Stock
TOPLPs
I. PINK FLOYD -Wish YoU Were HrerColum·
bia
2. JOHN DENVER-Windsong RCA
3. TJ-IE EAGLES -One of These Nights
Asylum
4. BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -Born To Run
Columbia
5. JANIS IAN -Between The Lines Columbia
6. ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND -Win, Lose
Or Draw Warner Bros.
7. JEFFERSON STARSHIP -Red Octopus
Grunt
8. SPINNERS -Pick Of The Llller Atlantic
9. FLEETWOOD MAC Warner Bros.
10. OHIO PLAYERS -Honey Mercury
COUNTRY SI NGLES
1. BLUE EYES CRYING IN THE RAIN
Willie Nelson Columbia _
2. DAYFREAMS ABOUT NIGHT THI NGS -
Ronnie Milsap RCA
3. HOPE YOU 'RE FEELIN' ME Like I'm
Feelin' You -Charley Pride RCA
4. IF I COULD ONLY Wiii' YOUR LOVE
Emmylou Harris Reprise
. 5. DON'T CRY JONl·TOUCH THE HAND
Conway Twitty MCA
6. SAN ANTONIO STROLL -Tanya Tucker
MCA
7 SAY FOREVER YOU'LL BE MINE -
Porter Wagoner and Dolly Parton RCA
"'HASHYIW'" 111
MONTY PYTHON &
THI HOLT •RAIL ..
'"FUNNY LADY"' (PGf
-OWL AND PUSSYCAT" l,.J
''TOMMY"
IPGI
'"APPU DUMPUM5 GoAN& ..
SWISS Fl.MIL Y IOllNSOH" IGI
-.Y llTMOLDS
"MAN..fATER" _ .........
•JA.ws· ---f.t.C....TAWAOS
ltl SIMSUUOUHD
l•ll*B9STUISOAY
"MANSON"
... hll-Oltn.Sc ..... -:... ............ .................
•
"RIPPED.QFF"
LC> PllCI MATS
wm.SAT..sutl.
..... "91.YllMottr
AY THl&antt•W
~ .. '° .....
MDM.'nlW -~»Na-Sl.J•
UCWTHOUtAYS
.... , .• ~ll:Jt
-...11 UNI F1Y1r lMI
,IWFOID WIYIS'" IP&f
~~~~ 8. YOU NEVER EVEN CALLED ME BY MY m'?-I --.. , ....
NAME -David Allen Coe Columbia I-le~..:..----.;_,
9.l'MSORRY-'JohnnyDenverRCA --
IO. HOME -Loretta Lynn MCA "MOON RUNNERS"
EASYUSTENING l'llla
!. AIN'T NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY EJllolOquld
Helen Reddy Capitol oon .. d Suthert•nd
2. l 'M SORRY -John Denver RCA "5.P.I "'.$."
3. I ONLY HAVE EYES FOR YOU -Art .,.
Garfunkel Columbia ._""-1-.S... ,,._z
4. I BELIEVE I'M GONNA LOVE YOU -1;;~~~~~~~~
Frank Sinatra Reprise -( ) 5. BRAZIL -TheRitchieFamily20thCentury THE BOOKMAN
6. GAMES PEOPLE PLAY -Spinners All"'!· . .
tic
7. ICE CREAM SODAS, LOLLIPOPS AND A
RED HOT SPINNING TOP -Paul Delicalo Artists
of America
8. OA!SY·JANE -America Warner Bros.
9. CAROLINA IN THE PINES -Michael
Murphey Eplc
JO. SOLITAIRE-Carpenters
Heiress TV Flick
Pushing for Airing
LOS ANGELES (AP) -ABC Television has
stepped up the release of the movie, "Katherine,••
the story of a young heiress who "rejects her
parents and pampered life to join a group of ter4
rorists "
Originally scheduled for showing later in the
season, the TV movie will be seen on ABC Oct. 5,
replacing the movie "The Laughing Policeman.''
While the network didn't say so, recent events ap·
pear lo make the show timely.
•A 'BUZING
SAOOUS' OF
PORNOGRAPHY."
FOUNTAIN VAL LEV .. . . . . . . . UMM _.UI?..,
WmTW :JYJ -~--· GrvE"l:ll JIEl.I· BA8RT? '1M-l1»J!le 1.-&-
f"OVNTAINV.O.LLEY • .. . ~ . ' .
'~(ef.tl :llJ!i:liif ., ,_,,......,m
GENERAl CllllEMA CORPOAATIOl\r
·1
REVIEWS In the
DAILY PILOT
-,..,_ ....... ~~
1 lllrMl• ..... I.» ........ .,!mMS • ....... ...................... ... •••SManr ........ "'~
CIN EMALAND
CIHEMALAND
1•1•s..ttJM a.. .. m .1&01
ltll r&Hlll
MU~ ""'91"1
'1ltf HOMECOMING" , ........ ,....
s.i ..,_.~,.... ..... -
The 1£rrilying motion
pkture from the
terrifying No.I best sdkr. aws
Ill II ....... ,.
SQIEm le'IAIS5 lMISI -
il!iiG1111J111 1!1ll~
1 ii.lo 1M ~Jll111 li11iai1m ntll
lll'US il~·ioo ·Mill1.IS·iififllllfti
iiil.lJ'i lJlill.:IM!llm :.W .. 'l'.i I • ..... ,............. (
•.,._AL WA.YI"" .I --·-~---~
Of'fNl1:JO_e .. tNQN&Y 9/14
'"A fine, ftrotious film."
-ri-Mat•:•~•
CYRIL CUSACK
JAN HOLM
MICHAEL JAYSTON
VIVIEN MERCHANT
TERENCE RIGBY
PAUL ROGERS
in HAROLD PINTER'S
"Tbe Homocoming
ST.IJl'tl ntl.
Sf,.,., :It
MAl(lSIEHHl#I
LOOll. Lll(fAHl!l'tC
IT'S l!TTPt TIWt
!.~~,....,..,.-, ''8U.llHG U.DOLES" °" "'l'OUtfll fl'IAHl(fHSmtr' --
1111-. -•u1111 ---~~~ ...
!BITE 111£ BlWTf
811
lo •nto ...........
"4·U•
Loi,, ... ........ _ ,,..., ....
Ull..U ........... .... ,.
~--UR MOHTY mH0H I HOlY GUllf'lt
MINNIE & MOSKOWITZ ,.
Ofilltl-*'•IM'*llS Mll' _,._Ult
MAN$0N • .... urs SCAU jQSICA ... -·· --......... ....,..,
UIT ""9'fa.SI = ~t I tlNDA LOYllACI fOI PUSIDENT "'
~-AROUND WOIUl JANNl' Nlll11t
-~. -~UMJTI
.......... ...... -·-·-~ ..
!_. ........
'""''""· 111o--.
lll·llN
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'"lt~~0011~•11 ...,. ....... , .... ,.
JAWS -
TIML WAYI !fl;• ---LINDA lOVILACI JOI PmmlNT "! AIOUND WOILD, fANNT Ml. 1111 1
MANSON 111 ...
llP•lD Off 11t
JA.MfS WN lfrf
ROLLER BALL... .._,
WDDl •
Ion 111 ""' ...,
MANSON • ...
llP•lD Off1111
-•lftlll.ll9ft -.. ~· 11,PlD Off11> --· COONSKIN 110 --11DAL WAYI ,_
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l MAVEN'T GOT A
EWSPAPER! · ..
'
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J CAI I 641·4321
FORHO I V
' '
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'
•
A12 DAILY PILOT Monday. September 29, 1975
Dou ble Winner
Argosy Swept
By H urricane
Morrie Kirk 's 40-fout two-tonner, Hurricane
Deck, Balboa Yacht Club emt'rgl'd as a double win -
ner in the International Offshore Rule division of
Newport Ocean S<tiling AssOf.'tation 's Alamitos Bay
Argo~y .
Sixty-one boats in rive di visions turned out for
the annual "party" ra('t> frvm Balboa to Alamitos
Bay on Saturday, and rrom Alam~tus Bay to Newport
on Sunday.
THEONLV 0lherdoublew1nnedwas Rivet, skip-
Jlt:'fl'd 'tiY Keith' Cleland,
RYC, which won both
races 1n the
Pt:"rformance Handicap
l{;;1cing F1eetClass R.
Brisk winds made a
short race for the fleet on
Saturday, but on Sunday
the winds were so light
that lht-fleet did not
finish until about6 p.m .
Balboa Pier to Alamitos
Bay
BOATING IOR (9)-J, Hur-
ricane Deck; 2. Raider,
Jim Linderman, BYC; 3,
Drumbeat, Ayres
Brothers, NHYC.
PHRF·A (18l -1, l-lidalgo, Rod Lippold,
NHYC ; 2, Tomahawk II . John Arens, BYC ; 3,
Virginia. O e nni s Rurnett,SSYC.
. I"
11 2 H aroor
Yachts Win •
SF Regatta .. • • • Two Newport Harbbr .Yacht
Club skippers sailed off with top
tion'ors in St. Franch>-Yacht
Club'!I annual Big Boat Series, a
Week~ong regatta sailed on
breezy San Francisco Bay.
The winner of the St. Francis
Perpetual ror Class A yachts was·
Dave Cuckler's 48·foot sloop
Hawkeye from NH YC ~ith four
straight firsts. Runner-up was
Lightning, Theo St~phens' 57-
foot sloop Crom the hos( club.
Bill Pascoe's 47-foot German
designed and built sloop Saudade
from NHYC missed a clean
sweep of the Class B series by on-
ly two se('onds. After winning the
first three races. SauUade was
edged on ('Orrected time in the
final ra('e. Runner-up was Whis -
tle Wing , a 46-foot sloop Owned by
Hastings Harcourt, Santa
' Barbara Yacht Club. Third was
SCaramouche, sailed by Robert
Alexander, Seattle Yacht Club.
...
.
Club 'Dirty'
(;up's Hom.e inVwlat it;tn
Nf;.W YORK <UPI> -The pr .. tlgious
New York Yacht Club, home of the America's
Cup and symbol or Yankee aristocracy, was ·
I round in violation or the city's hnllb code t<>-
day. 1
In a statement, the city's department of
health 8aid the club had "fresh and old mouse
excreta In the kitchen" and "dead roaches on
the Ooors of the kitchen and glass storage
-rooms.··
Under city regulations, if the violations
are not correcte-d. the club is subject to clos·
ing.
Felis Pelitmuire, manager of the 1,6()()..
member club, said "We're correcting them."
The club houses the America's Cup, sym~ 1 bol or international yachting supremacy.
Two Yachts Fight
For Challenge Cup . .
Two six· meter yachts are fighting it out on San
· Francisco Bay to determine which will represent
the United State~ in the Australian-American
Challenge Cup Seri~s.
The contenders are St. Francis Vt, entered by-a
St. Francis Ya('ht Club syndicate. and Razile
Dazzle. Seattle Yacht Club. Racing is being con·
du('ted over an Olympic type course off Berkeley.
PHRF·B (ll l -I. Rivct ;2,BlueRorkel,Bill 0111rll'ti.tsi.tt"'°°
Th~ winner of the Rheems
Trophy for Class C yachts was
another well-known· Southland
yacht, V.,endetta. 'D 40-foot two-
tonner ('O ·skippered by Tom
Tobin and Art DeFever, San
Diego Yacht Club.
Runner-up in the bid for the
Rheems Trophy was Shillelagh .
sailed by Commodore Bob Keefe,
St. FYC, and third .Y' • Mirage,
LeS Harlander. St, ~VG,
St. Francis VI was dismasted in heavy winds
Saturday but was expected to be back in action to-
day. A six·man selection committee named St.
_ Fran('is VI and Razzle Dazzle as finalists after
..Pacemaker of San Francisco and Poisson SoluDte,
Seattle, were eliminted last week.
" ..
Blurock, BYC : 3, Debra, DickRauff,SSYC. CLEAN S WEEP-Dave Cuckler's new King-designed 48·
PHRF-C (12> -I, Sunda, Graham Gibbons, fool sloop Hawkeye easily found its way around breezy
BYC ; 2, Charisma, SC'ott Mason, BCYC : J, War San Francisco Bay to win four straight victories in St.
Eagle, Ken Batzer, SSYC. Francis Yacht Club's popular Big Boat Series. T h e vic-
ORCA t ill -I. Polync5ian Concept, Buddy tory earned 1-lawkeye the St. Francis Perpetual Trophy.
E~en,BYC :2.Imil~a .VicS~rn ,BYC ;3,Wash ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~n%·-.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,
Tub.Oliver Was hburn, WhiteBearLakeYC. '<:. 1•'t/ :
AlamitosBaytoNewportPier '' '
IOR -1, l-lurricane Deck ; 2, tie between Raider f...
and Drumbeat.
PHRF'-A -1. Sunraker. 1-lobart Denny, BCYC;
2, Tomahawk II : 3, Ransom, Dave Delo, BYC .
PHRF-B -l , Rivet. 2, Debra ; 3, Bebo JIJ :Bob
Darnell, VYC.
PHRF·C -Little Oly , Jack Badorak. SSYC; 2,
War Eagle; 3, Charisma.
ORACA -I, Erin, Howie 1-loughton, Lahaina
YC ; 2. Thesis, Jim Turner, LBYC ; 3, Mirage, For-
restStewart, VYC .
Zetn§ IOR Wilmer
In E nduro Ev-ent
Bill Gilbert's Zeus. Pacific Mariners Yacht
Club. was the IOR Class A winner in Californi~
Yacht Club's Enduro Race. the second feature of
the Fred Harris Series.
Class A winner in the Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet was Paradox, sailed by Tom
~ Armstrong, CYC, and the Midget Ocean Ra('ing
fleet Class A winner was La Diana, skippered by
Fred Huffman. Blue Water Cruising Club.
More than 115 boats turned out fOr t he race
which was sailed around the buoys on Santa Monica
Bay.
IOR-A -l, Zeus; 2, Jano, Bob Kahn, CYC; 3.
Arcadia, Del Amo. LAYC .
IOR-B -1, Bananas, Milt Baehr, CYC; 2, Str-
ing, Jon Byk, CYC; 3, Merlin. Jack Ibach, SMYC.
PHRF-A -1, Paradox; 2, Genesis, Dick
Williams, PVYC ; 3, Resolution, Jerry Hunter,
KHYC.
PHRF-C -1. Windfall, Lew Newfield, CYC; 2,
Daria, Dave Ross, WYC ; 3, Sea Fever. Earle
Kneifel, eve. .
PHRF-C -I, Veracity, Howard Williams,
SBYRC; 2, Sturmvogel, George Klose, SCCYC; 3,
·Cra('kerjack, Jack Cunningham, SMYC.
l\tORF·A -1, La Diana, Fred Huffman,
BWCC; 2, Walrus, Jim Worthington, SMYC; 3, Su-
Dy III . Andy Lockton, CYC.
MORF-B 11 , Hardtack, Mark Wilson. KHYC ; 2,
Lollipop, Tom Leweck, CYC ; 3, Solitaire Al
Diamond, SMYC. '
,Bandit Captu re s
Ahmanson Series
Bandit, skippered by
Steve Morton of the
Chicago Yacht Club was
overal l winner of
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's six -race
Ahmanson Series.
The series is scored on
the best five of the six
races. Bandit's low score
for the series was 15:11,i.
points, beating Jim J,jn.
derman·s Raider ,
Balboa Yacht Club, by lf.t
of a point.
ings are unofficial.
Class standings :
CLASS A -J . Raider;
2. Bandit; 3. Drumbeat.
CLASS B -l. Nuan('e,
George Austin, South
Shore Yacht Club.
CLASS C -l . Tie
between 1\>lerrydown,
Bill Lapworth. St . FYC.
and Canadian Robin,
Jim Warmington .
NHYC.
CLASS D -I.
Chinook ; 2. Quadriga,
Ed Meserve. NJ-IYC. Both Bandit and
Raider were Class en-
tries, but Ra ider edged-;::::::::::::::::::::=::::::,-!
Bandit by 2•~ points in COME TO THE
the class standings. NEWPORT HARBOR Third in Class A was
Drumbeat. skippered by IN • THE • WATER
Don Ayres Jr., but in the BOAT O\lerall standings Drum· .
beat tied on points with
Tom Schock's Class D SHOW entry, Chinook, NHYC.
Tom Wilder, race com-
mittee chairman ror the
Ahmanson Series. em-
phasized that the stand-
Misty Sea
Pabst Winner
•
The West C°'st's
lar1est floatin1 B"t Show
Sat. Sept. 21
~~
Sun. Oct. 5
"
, •.
JUstgoodga~rnilea an~ a lo ,, price ·are'1 enoug anymore. ...
l
I' ,.
'tbu want a car
that lasts, too.
Sure Corollas are low priced and get
good gas mileage. They average 30 mpg
on the highway and 20 in the city in
EPA simulated tests.•
But what good is all that if the rest
of the car quickly goes to pot?
That's why every single Corolla goes
through water tests, brake tests, even
glove box tests. That's why every single
engine is tested for 30 minutes before it
ever spends a minute in your Tuyota.
MARK D 4-DOOR SEDAN
CORONA 4-DOOR SEDAN
'tbu want extras at
no extra cost.
Even our lowest priced model comes
with fully reclining bucket seats, rear
window defoggtr and power front
disc brakes.
So you can imagine what our racy
SR-5's include. Sample: AM/FM radio
for sweet music. Wide radial tires for
sweet handling. And a 5-speed overdrive
transmission for sweet savings on gas
and engine wear.
All at no extra cost.
COROLLA WAGON
'tbu want the right
car at the right price.
Which is why we make so many
different Tuyotas for you to choose from.
The low, low priced Corollas, plus sporty
Celicas, solid Coronas, roomy Mark II's,
tough pickup trucks and Land Cruisers.
In alJ, 22 d ifTerent well-built Tuyotas
with lots-built in for the money.
Good ~aS mileage and a low price?
Sure. But tn a Tuyota, We want you to
enjoy those savings for a long time
to come. Get-yo~ hiinds on a 'lbyota.
CELICACT
.. COROLLA SR-5
Misty Sea, skippered
b,Y Tom Collins,
Kollywood Yacht Club I waa the winner of the
Pabst Trophy predicted
I Jog race hosted Sunday
byCaUfomia Yacht Club.
NEWPO RT BEACH'S
LIDO VILLAGE
...... .i ... ,.... ....... "•IMI TOYOTA
Get, your hands on a 'lbyota.You'll never let go. Collln•' percent of error
over the 2~·miJe course
I WOI0.7~.
HOURS
S.t11f111 10 am to ID pm
S1nf•1s 10 am to 6 pm
WeekdaJs 2 pm to 10 pm "ThHe nJ\lm•rt NMdon 1975 EPA 1lmul•Urd tfllt. The sttueffuel f!OOnomy Ofthlt car will v1ry dl!ptndinc 1,1pon the typeofdri•ini you do,)'Ourdrivina b.bita.
how well you m11intain yourc1r, optlon11I equipment inllUllled, ind roed ind we1thtrc:ondition1.
I
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l'ogo81
How are boys and girls
pictured in textbooks?
E,xperts say sex roles
are still stereotyped.
-~--'"'.:.. --------·-·--·-
Dick and Jane: Discrimination Victims? ' .
By ALLISON DEER
Dick and Jane have been
replaced by Mark and Janet, but
for the most part stereotypic sex
1 roles remain the same.
lncteasmg · awareness among
educators aod parents that such
stereptyping exists in schools
and other institutions is an objec-
1. tive ot a course taught by Jeanne
Kohl Jenkins and Audrey Fuss at
: ' California State University, Long
Beach.
Or. Jenkins and Dr. Fuss are
partners in Sex Role Coosultants,
an educational service specializ-
ing in in-service training pro..
grams for school slaffs in order
1 to help bring schools into com-
pliance with recently passed
lp.ws.
The catalyst for the Sex Role
1 and So'tialization in Schools
• I
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course, a series of three weekend
seminars beginriing Friday, OcL
3, was Dr. Jenkins' experience
when her son was beginning first
grade.
"I got a letter from the school
administration about an eµ.ibit
of the state textbooks to be adopt.
eel for fall. Parents were invited
to view the books to help teachers
select those to be used at my
son's school.
CHANGES UNMADE
"When l picked up a random
sample of several subjects for
grades kindergartei:;i through
eight I was horrified. I had ex-
pected the new books to have
eliminated the sex role
sterotypes. Instead, if anything,
they were worse.··
Upset by her discovery, she
went directly to the district office
and soon was the center of a
meeting ol the superintendent,
schoOI principals and
psychologi~ts . .
Dr. Fuss bad been teaching the
sociology of women at CSULB for·
several years, and had sent her
students into schools and
libraries to analyze programs
and materials for sex role dis-
crimi.Dation.
The pair decided there was a
real need for a program to not on-
ly increase awareness of existing
conditions but also provide op-
tions for change. In the one-unit sections,
participants will deal with
evatU.ation of sex roles in self and
institutions; textbooks and sexist
practices in the schools, and
toward personhood, what can we
do now?
The pair listed some examples
d prevalent practices in school
materials and texts'?
"In a spelling book there were
only . four pK:tures or females.
And, the illus~tion for the word
'gossip' was a woman. The de-
finition read , 'a woman who
spreads rumors.•
IMAGES PERVASIVE
''In basic school readers,
stereotyping was pervasive.
Boys were cast in active roles,
girls in passive ones."
Through a slide-tape presenta·
· tion .. Dick and Jane as Victims,''
which reports the results of a Na-
tional Organization for Women
study, they reveaJ more ex-
amples to their students.
The study included 134 books
rrom the country's 16 largest tex-.
tbook publishers.
Males outnumbered females S
to 1. Occupations listed gave 147
options for males and only 26 for
females, most in a "serving"
capacity.
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Jeanne Jenkins
and Audrey
Fuss, left to
right, hope to
make parents
and teachers
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aware of
role'S portrayed
in school
books and
materials
through course
at Long Beach.
School Materi<;Jls Censored
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
UPl,-.nllyE._
Does it rot your child's morals to expose him to what
you or some other person considers "dirty" books full of
raw sex and four-letter words?
ls your daughter's future as a lady ruined whe~ she
fmds Ms. Magazine in the school library and reads it re·
guJarly? ·u be Such questions and many·more about books v.:1
asked and quickly ans~ere.:ct by book censors operating at
the local public school level m the new school year.
The censors will either remove the books from the
schools or get the school ,board tO-ban the allegedly ~xious
reading matter. They also may insist on censonng the
English teacher's reading list.
The censorship movement has reached into ~I parts oC
the nation. Public Officials and private cititens alike ar.e de·
bating the merits of long lists of controversial educational
materials.. ~.,.
~ . .jlf(ISTPUBLICIZED ..
The most publicized battle of the books was wa~ed m· ~Kanawha County, W.Va. 'lbere '\'JS a boycott of the disput·
ed boC)U. When ui"e dust settled. liaid re11:ulatlon• were set.
\Ith The effect-Of tbli, educators say, is that all bu\ tbe least
rootroverslal books Will beellmlnated.
"The battle of the books ID Kanawha County is only tbe
tip of the iceberg,•• Says the National Education Association
in a spe-ctat report on book censorship. .
The association predicts the book censorship problem
wUlJleat up more during this school year and "produce ~
troversies of national significance ln yet·le>-be-determined
·school districts." . . . ·In an 87-page report of the West V1rgin1a controversy -
"A Textbook Study in Cultural Conflict" -the association
said extreme right wing organizations provided "legal, or-
ganizatiorial and financial assistance to the protesters.''
BACK·TO·BASICS
The book censors tend to line up philosophically with the
Back-to-Basics Movement in Education.
These parents want a return to fundamentals in the·
classroom using tried and true methods of getting informa·
tim across. Bedrock information needed to function in life
and society -the way the parents do, taught much the way
the parents were taught.
Insisting on books that don't offend or upset the family's ·
moral blueprint for a child is a parent's right.
Parents are well-intentioned and on firm legal ground
when wanting to review the kinds of books their children
will be required to read.
•'The Godfather" might be okay reading for an 11 or
12th grader but is it suitable for a seventh grader -who is
less mature? Some parents may not want their 12th grader
·1oread tbat book.
The sex scenes, the violence, the inside story of or~
ganized crime, the four-letter words, just aren't decent fare
for a youngster at any age, argue some parents. Such books
have no Rlace in their scheme for child raising. Objections
toQbscenity rank high on the list.
FEMINIST MOVEMENT
Even the objections to information glorifying the
feminist's movement -Ms. Magazine, for one -can be un-
derstood when you remember. that there are two sides to
every movement. .
· · Around the nation during the last school year these
were some developments in the battle of the books:
-The school board in Randolph, N.Y .• removed 150
'books from the school library. The National Education As·
I
Only four women were pic-
tured driving a car. Only one wa s
pictured working-in the school .
cafeteria.
"An important point," said Dr.
Fuss, "is that racism and sexism
are much the same. The changes
made to accommodate racial dif·
ferences were mostly cosmetic.
"They added some black and
brown facesJn the illustrations .··
The problem is not that non-
sexist materials do not exist .
They do, Dr. Jenkins noted, but
they are not in wide circulation.
Math and science books are
among the worst offenders, they
•Said. "Any word problems that
mention a girl or woman, and
they are rare, have to do with
baking or sewing or shopping.
BOYS ARE STARS
··rf it relates to astronauts,
anything other than domesti c,
boys are the stars.''
Dr. Fuss gave the example of
"Farmer Brown·s Farm.'' All of
the animals on the farm were
female. All wore aprons. Mrs.
Brown was indentified only as
"Farmer Brown ·s wife."
Although the home is still the
strongest influence on a child.
the school has a great opportuni-
ty to correct sterotyped images,
they asserted .
"By the age of four. boys and
girls have a pretty good idea
about how they will grow up .
Children are not unaware. They
see who has the power. who
makes the dec isions. If Mom
says one thing, and Dad says
another, the kids soon know who's boss .·· Dr. F'usssaid.
What can parents do about
classroom m aterials?
"Vis it schools. Ask to see
materials. Talk to the teachers
about stereotypes you find in
materi als.··
Jn books, count the number of
boys and girls represented. Look
at what they ·re doing. Are they
active or passive"? How are
adults portrayed as role models?
INACCURATE PICTURE
"Ask a small child what his
mother does and his answer most often will be housework. But the
Department of Labor has pre-
dicted that nine out of 10 women
w:ill work someti me in their lives.
'"The period they will spend as
homemakers is relatively short.
Yet what is the role model pro.·
jected?'0 '
Another criticism is that books.-
do not really reflect today's
lifestyles. What about children of
divorce or separation? Fathers
who work at home? "Children
are not getting an accurate pic-
ture of what adults do.''
Yet another problem is that the
mother is most often depicted as
disciplining the c hild, making
him do his chores, punishing
him, while father gets the good
friend, buddy. happy roles.
"Mothers are often shown as
stupid, forgetful, clumsy, help-
less and always making fun of
themselves. An example is the
mother who had to wait till Dad
got home to get the cat out of a
tree. She couldn 't figure out how
to get the ladder and climb the
tree.''
· Sex role stereotyping is no in-
dividual's fault, they added. It's
· institutionalized.
Dr. Jenkins cited the example
of her child entering kin-
dergarten. "There was a boys'
closet and a girls' closet. A line.
for the boys and another for the
girls. Games for boys and games
for girls.
WHY NOT?
"I asked why and the teacher
asked why not? It ·s always been
this way. lt 's natural."
Part of the course is getting in
touch with the difference
between female and feminine.
male and masculine, traits which
are genetic and those which are
not.
They emphasized that institu·
tionalized divisions, artificial as
they are, are as harmful to boys
as they are to ~iris .
"Boys have not been allowed to
be tender and gentle. Girls have
not been permitted aggression
and strength.''
Dr. Jenkins received her PhD
in sociology and education from
UCLA and teaches in the
sociology departmef\t at CSULB
and the school of social sciences
at UC Irvine.
Dr. Fuss. who earned her doc-
torate in sociology at UCLA, con-
siders herself a theorist with her-
main interest the position of
women iD the United States.
They have taught courses
ranging from the sociology of
education to ethnic minorities
and consciousness-raising
groups.
Sex scenes, violence,
organized crime, 'obscene'
words-polluting schools?
sociation reports the controversial books included all books
by or about blac ks or about the women·s rights movement.
The books included John Steinbeck's "'In Dubious Battle''
and books by Isaic Asimov, Kurt Vonnegut, Richard
Wright. and.James Baldwin.
-School officials in Baton Rouge, La., dropped a lex~
tlxx.\k called "Mass Media and the Popular Arts." It con·
tainecl news stories alx>ut the 1968 Democratic convention-
including f Our-letter epithets used by protesters.
-In Dallas ... Jaws," "Go Ask Ali ce'' and "Norttt
Dallas Forty" were rejected by a school board screening
committee. •
-In Syracuse, Ind., parents forced their high school to
remove from reading list John Steinbeck's "Of Mice and
Men" and "Grapes of Wrath" because the books contain
cuss words.
-Two legislators in New Hampshire introduced a bill
calling for a $1 ,000 fme or a year's impriso_nment for a
public schoolteacher who assigns books containing wocds
defined by the state as obscene.
-In Wi sconsin, school boards and libraries have
banned "The Godfather," "The Exorr.ist," "Catcher in the
Rye.'· "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" and •'Tbe Last
Whole Earth Cata logue."
"It is the job of dedicated teachers and resPonsibte
parents to keep indiscriminate censorship from depriving
our children of the education they need." . • (
The book censors, meanwhile, (eel it is their job, as
responsible parents, to keep allegedly sick books from
polluting the minds and spirits of their children.
No one can force them to make their offspring watch
television shows or movies that pollute their cb.ildrea.'a
minds and spirits.
And, they •ay, the same right over control utendll to
school and library books.
..... ... .
.\ '" ..
I
·ft D~IL Y PILOT Monday, 8!Pt•mW 29. 1975
~diusting
In S.tyle
By ALLISON DE ERR
Ot•O.Ur Pl+.t ll•n
Want to right nine-
month inflation in s tyle?
Your mat e rnity
wardrobe could mean
the diJference bet ween
looking comfortable and
neat and feeling heavier
than you are, according
to Orange Coast College
lectur er Ro zan ne
Holbrook.
Mrs . Holbrook will
teach a workshop on the
subject beginning Satur-
day, Oct . II, \\'ilh a lec-
tu re during OCC's
Fabric Fair.
On the following three
Saturdays , three-hour
workshops will deal with
.• expanding patterns in
size, design variations,
lingerie made to fit and
the I ayette.
·· 1 s tarted s ho pping
during my second pre-
gnancy and could find no
styling that I liked.
Everything was too
cutesy, all Peter Pan col -
lars, big bows and ruf-
fles ." she said.
Manufacturers of re-
ady-to-wear don't seem
to take into considera-
tion the working woman
who needs more tailored
t1 clothing, she said.
So, s he began to ex-
periment with adapting
patterns she k!\ew fit her
normally to ad1 ust to the
weight gain with pre-
gnancy.
"Also. I wanted lo de-
sign clothing tbat could
be re·cut later for my re-
gular wardrobe."
Rather than insert a
stretch panel in slacks,
she utilized an elastic
waistband and stretch
material. "The elastic is
notched so that the
elastic can be extended
as you expa nd.'' Af-
terwards , the pants can
be re-cut, removing the
excess fabric.
Mrs. Holbrook, who
also teaches color and
line at OCC, will offer
ideas on de-emphasizing
the roundness of pre-
gnancy.
"What you don 'l need
is a patch pocket in the
middle of your tummy to ~,
attract attention."
She noted that a little Another difficulty, she by mixing and matching
shaping and contouring said, was planning a tops and bottoms.
in the back and s ides can wardrobe for all terrf-With some tops, she'd
have a thinning effect , as per atu res. ''A I though sew both shorts and Jong
opposedtotheall-around youarenotthatlargefor pants to cross the
fullness most patterns the first few months, you seasons.
feature. do go through several · M a ny or the new
Wh seasons." stretch-and-sew fabrics en looking at ready-So. s he offers options allow a lot or leeway and
to-wear or altering your such as a slimming dress she will give suggestions own clothing, she ad-vised tookin f aJ that doubles as a jumper on their use. Expectant
lowin wi g or or -with a b 1 o u s e or mothers are fortunate
an ar:ple hdeem~eam s and . turtleneck underneath, today, she said, because
"Although we are ad-
vised to buy maternity
wear in our normal dress
size, many do not leave
room for expansion and
are not that attractive or
comfortable towards the
end of the nine months.·•
or a bas ic tailored top the "large look " of tent
that can be varied with dresses and big tops is
an assortment of dickeys in.
and cuffs or used with a "I can look for ideas
blouse in colder weather. not only in maternity de-
She found that pants partments but in regular
and tops w er e most clothing as well."
versatile, al lo wing a During the "hands on"
wider range of costumes w o r k s h o p s M rs .
j'.Habit Only a Symptom
/
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Rozanne
Holbrook will
teach a
workshop
on making
attractive,
comfortable
matern lty wear.
Holbrook will lecture turer plans to include
and the n wor k in· swimwear that can :be
dividua11y with partici-used after the baby ar·
pants on problems of rives:
drafting, construction ''The ready-to-wear
and design. prices are high and the
BABYLAYETTE selection is minimal.
"By the t ime you re-Often the construction ol
ach the seventh mooth, these garments is poor.
you may not feel you'll With a little lime and im-
get enough wear out of agination, you can
anying made at that create clothes that suit
point, so I 'll give one your own style and save
session on layette it.ems money," she said.
such as gowns, blankets The workshops are
and toys," she said. free and the public is in-
The course, she hopes, vited to attend any or all
won't attract only expec·' of the sessions on1 the
tan t mothers. OCCcampus. TheOct.11
''Grandmothers and lecture is scheduled for
friends could get some 11 a.m. in the Applied
ideas for gifts, especially Sciences Building.
if the mother-to-be ls a The remainder of the
busy, workingwoman.' series is planned for 9
Si mple, easy to make, a.m . to noon, Oct. 18
inexpensive lingerie will through Nov 1, in the
be the topic of another Home Economics Bui.Id·
session. And, the lee· ing, Room 3. ,
\
· LINDA VAGASY BETH LAMPE
Betrothals
Vagasy-Garcie
Mr. and Mn. Francis P. Vagasy of Costa
.Mesa bAve announced that their daughter,
Linda A. Vagasy and Robert L . Garcie plan
to be married next summer.
The bride-to-be attend! ~omia state
University Fullerton. She graduated from
Nortbview High School and Mount San An·
tonloCollege. .
Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Garcie of Bullhead City, Ariz., studied at
Bell High School and Cerritos Junior
College.
•••
Lam pe-Elllott
Mr. and Mrs. Roland P. Lampe of Costa
Mesa have announced the engagement of
their daughter, Beth Lampe to steveo El·
liott.
The affianced couple plan to marry Dec.
20 in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church,
Newport Beach.
Mias Lampe, a business administration.
major at California state University at
F\lllerton, is a graduate of Costa Mesa High
School and attended UC Irvine and Csl P<>-
ly, San Luis Obispo.
Her fiance, son of Dr. and Mrs. Steven Y.
Elliott of Huntington Beach, is working on
his PhD in molecular biology and
biochemistry at UCI where he graduated
with a degree in biology. He also is a
graduate of Marina High School.
l DEAR ANN
I LANDERS: Please don't
' think I am too crazy to
~bother with. I need your
"help. It's this terrible
habit and it's driving me
nuts. First I s hould tell
you I am 18, a girl, lonely
find out why you have an
uncontrollable urge to
bu rt yourself. A byp.
notist will not provide
lheanswer.
I suggest a talk with
your scbool counselor.
Confide la ber or him.
Verbalize your feelings
at loneliness and inade-
quacy. U you aren'tcom-
fort able with the
counselor, ask your
family doctor to suggest·
a therapist wbo can help
you talk about your-anx-
ieties and problems. And
do hurry, please. The
soooer you start the bet-
ter.
(Ann Landers~
agree. Already they
have asked us to take 25
people off our list of 110.
Can you imagine the
nerve?
put on the wedding and
they do whatever they
can afford? Or are we
crazy? Please tell it like
it is. -REFUSE TO BE
GOUGED
A Setv S SMe
very unhappy with
yself.
About a year ago I
an to bite the inside
:.• of my mouth and iny
r lips . lt 's l ike biting
fingernails -once you
start you can't stop. I
: have bitten myself so
I hard that my mouth
I bleeds, scabs form and
!"still I can't stop biting
[,myself. I'm scared to de-
We are not rich people,
Ann. What's more, we
have two daughters or
our own to marry off
within the next few
years. Believe me, we
have no intention of ask·
ing anybody to help us
out with the expenses.
Isn 't it understood that
the parents of the bride
DEAR R .G.: Hold
your ground. You're
absolutely right. Trim
your Hat if you must but
teU the bride's parents
that any kind of wedding
they can mana1ie Is
perfectly all right with
you. Let them know lt'I
THEIR party.
v.ts ralff Pl.ALA --54-4121
'BAlBOA ISlNCl
216iYaineA¥e.
67S.19(M
ath I'll get cancer ii I · 1 don't get over this stupid
habit.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: Our son's wedding is getting to be a.----,--------------------------
Can you suggest a hyp-
notist? I need someone to
take control of my mind
and make me stop doing
this terrible thing. Sign
me -ASHAMED AND
SCARED
real pain in the neck_
Every day it gets worse.
Here's the problem :
DEAR FRIEND: Bit·
lag JOUr moa:tll and Upa
la not tile problem. It's
.., &lie SJmptGm of aaotber
frollle~. 'Y oa need to
His future in-laws have
some ritzy ideas about
bow a wedding should be
and it is sure running in-. to a lot of money. They , ______________________ ..:;;.., ___ ,
seem to think it would be
nice if we offered to help
out with the expenses.
My husband and I don't
Cancer
Money Due
TUESDAY,SEPfEMBER30
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19): You may feel.
"cut off at the pass." Key is to garner forces,
gain allies, get best possible buys, know when to
draw line.
TAURUS (April 2D-May 20): Conclusions are
reached, deals closed, thoughts completed,
finishing touches put on manuscript, format.
Build on solid base.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Be more in-
dependent in dealings with neighbors, relatives.
New contacts now prove fruitful. Your creative
abilities can be successfully utilized.
r.. CANCER. (June 21-July 22): Money comes
, your way. This time, practice "conservation."
I Yes, you eet proverbial second chance. Will you
1 repeat mistakes?
I LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Highlight ability to
) make material al hand ''work for you." Means
i be flexible, versatile, willing to laugh at your
ownfolbles.
· VlllGO (Aue.23-Sept.23): Be specific. Read
between the lines. Jl you ''do your homework," • I I I I .
:i
N· u
bez)eflt.8 can be enormous.
UBRA. (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Perspective im-
proves. You not only are aware that "something
happened,'' but you learn wby it occurred.
Member of opposite sex is involved.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2J): Home, security,
basic eoeta are featured. Be diplomatic, not
weak. Get point acf'06S without bein,e overly ag-
IP't!salve.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): See
beyond the immediate. Avoid self-deception.
Streamline procedures, methocb. Land deal -
and what It coots -could be high on agenda.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Organize.
' Accept added responsibility. Adjust cost factors . • r-Dob't 1eD youneH short. Taxes, leases, protec-Uve policies are feotured.
l AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Finish what :rot\ lion -avoid hanging on to outmoded con-
. cepts. Accent iS on eoOperalive efforts. ~ PilK:ES <Feb. Ii-March ~J : Be dlrect. in·
j~ dq>tndent Ind aet to heart of matters. Eschew
.. " !"'9, ~pe procedures. Your work, ef!orts can-
have far·reaelllng efle<t1.
•
"" . ,
JCPenney
Pixy
portraits , •4
are enough to ·make
anyone smile.
• No appolnlment necessary.
• Age !imil: children to 12 years old.
• Choice ol Several Poses.
• Two chlldren together •• , onty 2.98.
• No hidden charges.
Only1.69
for a 5 x 7 or 4 wellet alz"
of same pase in rwtur1I color.
If you have a second or third favorite
pose. take them, too. At these special
prices. in either size.
Your second selection -.. :. 1.11
Yoor lhird selection _. ·-·----·---1.15
Your toutlh selection ---·-···--·-1.55
Your l1rth sele.:Uon __ ,_1.40
-.Oln' IEACH ed COSTA MESA l'lxy H_.a' hplo lo!
30 tt.wyll Oc._. +. 10 AM lo I PM ...t 2 PM lo 6 PM
T-day tt. ...,. Tlw idly: 10 AM lo I PM. 2 PM lo I PM, 6
PM lo I PM Ft-lday; 10 AM lo I PM ...t 2 PM 'lo 5 rM s• ..,. .
r
..
'
knits
" GRAND DUTCHESS''
"PRINCESS" WARP KNITS
Look good, feel great in these comfort·
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100% polyester & acetate/nylon blends
Machine wash· tumble dry
VALUES TO $2.69 YARD
SOFT 'N SLINKY
•
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• Beautiful screen printed "Key West'' je""y
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Triacetate/polyester blend· 44"/45" wide
Machine wash ;·tumble dry
REGULAR $3.69 YD.• SAVE $1.72 VD.
SIMPLICITY # 7177 l~l
plaid suitings
Get set for the cool weather with
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FIGMENTS
NANCY
NANCY.
SURE, -JOE ---WHAT
15 IT?
WILL YOU
DO ME A
FAVOR'<'
WILL YOU
GIVE ME A
HAIRCUT'?
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TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Enl&roed
Prefi-
5 Foodlish
9Patt~
garment
1• 01nlsn
"""'" 15 Klnd ot
sandwich
18 "VIYe--1'·
11 Derisive
sound:
Sting
111 "0n\yGodc1n make·-..
20 A1euy --'
21 Every·olher·
ye1r IYeflts
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25 Scolf
2fl ln!amous
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Island
32 Vamlsh lngrt-
dierits
37 Mfrom - -
al'li11lrw;i sea~ .
38 A1rhne IOI"
Erle, Pa.
"' Moon '"""'' '' 8111dle~
·-Brown
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Cowl\and ..
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2 words
2
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" ""'"" 51 Garment plfls
54 Low plafltl
58 Honl!IQ de¥1ce
62 Inscribed
stone 11ao
63 Helpers
6A Clock-punch·
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6fl Paris" water·
front
67 111 up!fat 11
Tehran
68 Al au Umes
69 Harass
70 Be disposed
71 Meeting;
Abbi'.
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1 Righteous
2 Rub out 22 Bird"s beak ~ Garment1
J Quebec 2• Tou<jjh oucer ~ 8i11d
penlnsula coved~ •1 Pounding
' Aimed 27 Hawaiian tooll
5 That girl partands '9 Have lunch
6 P1antu~ln 29 Lofty 52 Thalllloily·
medicine JO Great Barrier 2 ...on:ls
1 Coric COiumn iSlilnd !13 Trappi11g
ridge 31 !Alrlous: Ortlce a Senlof 111IOOT1i1I ~ Holst
member ~ Ltadei Sf.I Imaginary
9 MM:hllle tool• J3 ~ JudithH beings
10 Pt11si011er composer 57 PT"opnet1
11 Babylonian 34 Ebfo alld 58 Stinging
war god T1gus. e.g. l11HC1
12 AclOf -· 35 Hurr.th 59 Oneon lhervn
HirrlsOll 36 Wl11ter ground 00 A11 Adams
tJ Unllea CO'l'ef 61 Acl04' Richard
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by Dale Hale
(
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DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR. SMOCI
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GORDO
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
OAllYPILOT IP
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by Ferd Jot.llOll ,,.,, ___ _ ---
by Rodger Bolen
OKAY--· !'LL
GET A
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JUDGE PARKER
I IMA61~E Hf 60T
HQl\E All 1116HT. ~
NEEIX.ES 1
-:iH ~
by Harold Le Doux
,.J~Il=:;/.;:l(:;i~~:E_Ai'i.NEiL;\DY'j ~-~~Hlt,llLE[J/.i~rriiiL()CXi:v;J WHAT IT COUUl HAVE BEEN STOON
THlS TRUCK ms DO"" AND NOi'< ABANDONED OR
THE DESCRIPTION THINK> THE OWNER CAN 6E IN ONE
OH THAT A/'6! OF THESEAPARTMENT5!
MISS PEACH by MeR
Cl
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1"1--1~ A.R'CN'I A? 9L.f~I( AS THEY ?EEM,
ll(A, A FOll:M£'1: Pli'.E';IOENT ONCE SAID : '---:xs~-, "WE HAVE" NOTMIN6 i O FEA£
!JI.AT FEAI? IT-SELF."
WELL, THAT~ WHAT f ffAl(-f'fAlf..
AND I FEA<I: MV FEAlt or FEAlt,
ANO r '"-SO FEA!i: MY FEAlt OF
MY FEAI(. OF FE.All: . AND I
AL~ F'E.Alt MY ...
DICK TRACY by Chesler Gould
HIS SAWEO-ofF REAU.Y
DEWED UP ANOTHER
GOOD HAT, TRACY,
I .
AS HE PULLED THE
SHOTGUN FROM INSIDE THE ~HORSE~ HIS ELBOW
STRUO< '™E AAIMAL'.s SIDE,
CAUSING PREMATURE
FIRING-NllTELY.
t •(..1/1 . ~\_ '\) i\,
"I'm .sorry lo haYe lo rclum it-inslead of a conversation piece,
my husband Yiewcd it as a ~hooting piece."
DENNIS THE MENACE
~ ~ /-
• raroo coos l'o
11\lN AWAY!'
_\ ••
' •
'
\
•
"' DAILY PILOT Mond!y,$•ptember29, 1975 I I
Blocked 1•11nt Gave LA Mo~en I
MVTennis
Tourney l SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The
San Fra.ncisco 49ers' 10th
straight loss to the Los Angeles
Rams hurt just a little bit more
than the first nine.
"I thought our defense play~d
better than theirs did," said
llnebacker Frank Nunley after
Sunda~·s 23·14 defeat on the
second weekend or the National
Football League season.
~ ",We penalized 1 ourselves right
out of the game," said coach
Dick No lan. painfully looking
back at the holding call which
' .· \ .
,,,. • "M W7f'itlir~a ••..• J
took a 30·yard gain away from
fullback Larry Schreiber, who
had cauitht n Norm Snead pass.
mid way in the third period.
Ttft""~rs led 14·6 at that point
ahd had thoroughly dominated
the game, yielding onJy 118 yards
to Los Angeles' struggling of·
fense. The officials carried the
ball rrom the Rams ' JS.yard line
to the •19ers' 25, and three plays
later l..os Angeles scored on a
blocked punt.
"The blocked punt gave us the
momentum," said coach Chuck
... i"' .. --
•
Knox. "The special ttams played
a tremendous game."
BUI Simpson blocked Tom Wil-
tum ·s punt attempt and Monte
Jack!iOll scooped up the loose ball
and went isix Y•rds for the
touchdown which cut San Fran-
cisco's lead to 14·13.
Tom Dempsey kicked his third
field goal, a 51-yarder which tied
the Rams' distance record, to
give Lem Angeles lhe lead early
in the final quarter and James
JJarris clinched the victory with
his first touchdown pass of the
U"'I Tti..ttoto THE RAMS' TOM DEMPSEY KICKS ONE OF THREE FIELD GOALS AGAINST 49ERS.
P~y Bills,
Then Talk
Of Future
Monday's Wash:
Regarding the World Football
League, which I believe is dying
on the vine: If you want to talk
.about your future, why don't you
payoff last year's debts?
Parents of 13 high school foot-
ball players may sue the city of
Rochester, N.Y., after their sons
suffered burns on a rootball field
marked wilh hydrated lime. a
substance that can burn the skin ir
activated by dampnt.>ss.
i Why don't soccer orricials put
·more scoring into a game which
produces so many 1-0, 2·1 type re-
sults (boring to many would-be
_,-~
~ -._..,. -
aLENN WHITE
WHITE
WASH
fans) by widening goal p<>sts by ·
three or four feet? And why don't
American football officials put
more worth to the field goal and
almost automatic conversion
kicks by narrowing goal posts 8-10
feet?
Those who like long distance
running s:ompe<lon will get a
chance t• soak up their thing in
December, what with the CuJver
City marathon one week and a
similar ruD in San Bernardino a
week later. That's 2S mfles, 385
yards per race. Gasp!
The weekend trip to Northern
California for the Butte College-
Saddleback football game pro-
duced two experiences: (1) The
best officiating I've seen in years
C2> The most foul -mouthed
person I've heard in my life, in-
cluding Marine Corps drill in -
s(ructors.
The garbage-mouth concerned
was on the Butte sidelines, wear-
ing a No. 66 jersey and civilian
pants, acting like a coach or
coach's helper and sounding like
lhescum of the.earth.
Al fin! I thought It was a Joice,
but I have been invited to the an·
eual Orange County OfficlaJs
Aun. banquet and daace. For
new readers, that Is tantamount
to a Jew being Invited to
Aafebwf11 by Adolph Eichmann.
Rams quarterback James
Har:ris has to me demonstrated
far more often than not that he is
not a quarterback of top ability
sucb 11,51ou micht expect in a pro
Jootballleacue.
~oweyer, in that wretched
division of Los Angeles, Atlanta, '
New Orleans and San.Francisco,
Ibo Rams could prol>abl1 win the
tilie 11'1tll !Urb Livsey ~QB~r
evenl$coach. ·
/I.Iler two weeks or re1ular ·
se .. on · play, LA is the only
dh•mon team with a win Cl·l} and \bllt'• 011ly becallSe the Rama
...,., able to luck out against
1\~ division .member Cthe
Drop Finale
LA Emls Season
Of Disappointment
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The
Los Angeles Dodgers· SC<JSOn or
disappointm£>nt ('Oded Sunday
on precisely that note -disap-
pointment -as the Houston
. .\stros struck in the eighth in -
ning for (our runs· and a comc-
(rom-behind 4-2 victory in the
season finale (or both clubs.
It \Vas Cli ff Johnson·s three·
run homer in tht.> eighth that
highlighted a four·run inning
after rookie Riek Rhoden h;1d
kept the Aslros scoreless for
seven innings on three hits.
The Dodgers finished in
second place in the National
League West, 20 games behind
the Cincinnati Reds who over·
came a 3 1h-game lead the
Dodgers held in May to make
the race a runaway.
"Naturally." manager Walt
Alston said in his postmortem,
"I'm disappointed. But you can
look at the other side of it. We
did win 88 games and ,, .. hile it
was far from enough to beat the
Reds at least it's a lot better
than a lot of other teams."
Actually, it ·s better than 17
other clubs.
Alston pointed to three prime
reasons why the Dodgers won
14 fewer games this y~ar than
last year when they won the
National League pennant.
"The injuries. cert:iinly, •·
Alston said. "as well as the fact
several players didn•t have the
Golf Tourney
Won by Hill
LAS VEGAS IAP) -Veteran
Dave Hill, \\:ho had toshakeo(fthe
potential disaster of a double
bogey to gain a tie, won a sudden
death playofr ror the Sahara In-
vitational Golf Tournament Sun-
day when Rik J\.t assengale hit his
second shot in the '~.'atcr on the
first extra hole.
Hill SC'ored the 121.h victory of
his controversial, often-fined,
sometimes-suspe nded 17 -year
career with an eight-foot birdie
putt on the first playoff hole. The
bitterly·disappcinted Massengale
made bogey.
•·0.veMlll,U,,000
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W.lly "'""''"°"'· ''·''' llCenSllll.tl,OI•
year this )'C'ar that they had
last year. And, fin ally, the
Reds."
''Any club that wins 108
gam<'s, like the Reds did. well,
1·ct have to say it has a pretty
~ood chant·e of \Vinning the pen-
nant."
'fhe Dod gers scored exactly
IS(l runs (ewer in 1975 than they
did in 19711 and of that shortage,
the manager said, "Give me
those 150 runs and we'll win 15
or 20 more gam<'s.
''We"ll give a lot or them back
just by having a healthy Russell
and Buckner and Ferguson. But
that's not all of it. We need
another hitter in the lineup."
HOUSTON
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season, 22 yards to Lawrenee
MCCUtcheon-wllh'?:l'tleft.
The victory moved the Rams
iqto first place in ~e NaUonal
Conference: West wtth a 1·1 re·
cord, with San Francisco, AUan·
ta and New Orleans all0.2.
·'We were down and had to
come back after last wee.k, 1' said
Harris, who completed just one
of JO pa&ses in the opening-game
loss to Dallas but rinished with 15
completions for 193 yards Sun·
day.
..,..., ONrtln
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Launches
Chris Evert and Martina
Navratilova. the top seeded
players, will open play in second
round competition of the $50,000
Mi.s.slon Viejo women'sproteMis
tournament Wednesday at
Marguerite Recreation Center.
Angel.s Culf ed
The two top seeded stars drew
first round byes in singles com.
petition of the tournament that began today with a !6-player
field . Champions will be crowned
Sunday in the week-long event.
Valerie Ziegenfuss will meet
Judi Connor of New Zealand
tonight at 8:30 in one of three
matches at that hour. The evening
session begins at 6 with Bettyann
Stuart of the John Wayne Tennis
Club in Newport Beach playing
Mary McLean of Ft. Worth. Tex.
in one of three matches at that
hour.
lnj11ry Dims
4-way No-hitter Stuart v.·as added to the field
late when the prel1 minary round ,
for a wild card berth was aban·
doned after the (ield was reduced
to 56 by the players themselves. OAKLAND <AP) -"Nothing
was going to change our plans."
explained Oakland A's manager
AJvin Dark, who wasn't plan·
ning on a no-hitter.
The A's made a. little bit or
baseball history Sunday as Vida
Blue. Glenn Abbott, Paul
Lindblad and Rollie Fingers
combined to no-hit the
California Angels in a 5-0 vic-
tory on the final day or the re·
gular seasion.
The four-man effort sends the
A's, seeking their fourth con-
secutive world championship,
into the American Lea~ue
playoffs against Boston with a
98-64 record.
Fingers, the A's relief star,
nailed down the major league's
first four.man no-hitter Y:ith
two innings or work which sent
his earned run average under
3.00. Blue y,·orked the (irst five
innings to gain hi s 2Znd victory
and Abbott and Lindblad
worked one inning each.
Blue was scheduled to go just
five innings in his final tuneup
(or a st<\rt in the second playo(f
game. And the no-hit bid wasn 't
going to change Dark 's mind.
The le(t-handed starter said
later. "I ju st wanted to eome
into the Clubhouse and watch
the football games."
* * * CAll~lllHIA OAKLAND
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PACKERS, DENVER
ON TV TONIGHT
DENVER -Green Bay's
Packers and the Denver Bron·
cos, who have met only once
before in National Football
League regular-s~ason play,
clash here tonight in a televised
game seen on Channel 7 at 6 o·clock.
In their only previous meeting
in 1971. the Packers scored a
34·13 win, but tonight. they'll be
10-paint underdogs.
~I
The hot finish by the pitching
staff and Reggie Jackson's 35th
and 36th homers, tying him
with Milwaukee's George Scott
for the AL title, brightened up
the clubhouse after the game.
But there was concern over an
injury Joe Rudi suffered in the
third inning.
"The doctors tell me it's not
as bad as last time," said Dark.
··so I 'm not going to say
anything else until we find out
exactly what's wrong.··
First baseman Rudi le(t the
game after hurting his left
thumb swinging the bat. He
tore li gaments in the same
thumb in August and missed
five weeks or play.
Jackson said early last week ,
after clubbing his 33rd and 3'1th
homers in the pennant-('linching
game against Chicago, that he·d
like to tie rather than beat hi s
old friend Scott in the home run
race.
"To be reali stic. I didn 't have
a very good chance to catch
'The Boomer,' but I was swing-
ing ror the fence every time.
i ·m happy that's the way it
turned out,·· Jackson said.
The re~ul ar season turned out
very well for A's owner Charles
0 . Finley, loo. A Fan Apprecia·
lion Day cro~·d of 22.000 made
total attendance 1,077,000 , by
.far an Oakland record and an
increase of 240 .000 over last
season.
Redn1on Wins
She won the Wimbledon Plate in
1969 and is a past U.S. national
public parks: junior champion in
the firls 14·and-underdivision,
She is the wife of the current
('(Ub manager and tennis pro-
fessional at the John Wayne Ten-
nis Club.
Playing in a major tournament
(or the first time in Southern
Cali(ornia are BrigilteCuypers of
South Africa. Fiorella Bonicelli of
Uruguay, Dianne Fromholtz of
Australia and Ingrid Bentier or
Sweden.
Jn addition to Evert and
Navratilova, other seeded
players in the tournament include
Marcie Louie. Wendy Overt-0n.
Linky Bc>shoff. Sue Bal-ker , Sue
Stapp and Janet Newberry. None
or the top eight seeded players
drew first round matches.
Marguerite Recreation Center
is located at 27341 'fr<1buco Place
in i\fission Viejo. Call 337-4084 :or
further information.
TOHlaHT"S SCHEDULE
Fin• fl•u11d Sl1191ft
6 p.m.-Bettr•nn Stu••I IN-ll0'1 aea.:~1 •s
M;,ry M<Lt.i.n (Fl. WOrlPI, Te•.I ~Le• An\oncpa1"
fGl.,noo r11 l vs . Wfn<ly P11 ;\cn fAu\tr41ia ),
8'l<;11Ue Cuvriers iSo. A!d(.lo) vi.. Sheri E•<rn.tn
l9eve•IV l"llfl't
7 JOp.m.-M&rl• 8u•no <B•atitt V!o. f1vlr• We•· ~nber9ft !Argen!inal "' l<rlsli.,. sriaw !Ne w Vor~) v~. Glyn•s Col"\ IEn!ll-), AN> B•urnfl(I
1L• Jolla) v~ 5n•ronWaf5h (S.$n R•l..,I)
B·JO p.m. -11111".i" Zll'<;ien•ui.~ lMi!o-\lon Vi.,101
vs JOOy Connor (Ne w 1 .... 1anO!, Uana 1(1~~ \So
Alrocal v\. J1n"t Ne .. ,,.,,,, (La .Joilil l, Cec•
MilrTl~1 !San F••nt•SCol vs. ll:a!e La!n<tm I Palo Allo).
TU ESOA Y'S SCHEDULE
Crowd Enthusiasm
Overshadows Race
LONG BEACH (API -The
sounds of big league auto racing
have echoed through city streets
in the United States for the first
time in 23 years, creating a hap-
pening that seemingly over·
shadowed the race.
There were people clinging to
steep high-rise rooftops by their
fingertips Sunday watching Brian
Redman, of England win the in -
au_gural Long Beach Grand Prix,
a $100,000 race for powerful
Formula5000cars.
Others packed apartment
balconies. sat on the front porches
or old folks · retirement hotels and
watched from the ledges of (ire
escapes and theater marquees.
• "I couldn't believe the crowd
and the enthusiasm," said Red-
man, who won his second con -
secutive Formula 5000 series
championship with the victory.
"If the crowds were like this in
other street races, welt 1 ·d like to
see all the other races slrcct
races.··
Redman inherited the lead on
the 35th lap of the 50-lap dash on
the 2-mile course 11o•hen Mario . \n·
d.retti and aggress ive Tony Brise.
a newcomer fr o m En gland .
broke down after leading the
race and a spectacular duel.
Newport Beach 's Jon
Woodner-despitc being forced
out on the 27th lap because of an
accident-still (inished 16th.
Two other non -finishers -
• Costa Mesa·s Graham McRae
and Huntington Beach's George
Follmer-were listed 27th and
28th. McRae was through after
five laps due to an accident and
Follmer·s car broke a wheel
after one lap.
Redman, a 16 -year racing
veteran, admitted he was driving
conservatively after mechanical
troubles in practice and eased his
way home by a hair-minute to win
the$30.000 first prize. VemSchup-
pan q( Australia was second and
won $16.000.
The crowd was estimated at
65.000 for the (irst major street
race in this country since the
Watkins Glen Grand Prix in New
York in 1952.
Promoter Chris Pook said.
"We ·ve got a lot of edges to Polish
but J really expected more pro·
blemsthanwehad.··
One problem was a delay,
caused partly by the crowd mov·
ing around that forced the end of ,
the race into dusk and put the set·
ting sun into drivers· eyes on the
swiftest part of the course.
Another problem, Pook con · -f
ceded, was attendance . He said a -.
paid crowd of 52,000 was needed to 1
break even for the event but the 11
' paid gate was announced at 1 46,500. 1
If attendance was less than ex· ' peeled, the total effect was more
than hoped for, Pook said of the
race that organizers hoped wOuld •
,. brighten the conservative image ,.
of this city of 380,000.
The race was safe -no injuries
during the race itself after one "'
crackup during practice that of . ..i
ficials blamed on excessive speed
·on an access road.
---· ---
• • ,.,
•
O.J. ~ie8 R~cord,
•'
Bills ·Stop Steelers
0-'. Sim111oaliedJlm Brown 's
Natlonal Football 1-,_..
Sunday while leading lhe Buffalo
Blll.t Id a :io-21 ups~ over \be
..world tba,mplon Pitt1bur1b
Steelers In Pittsburgh.
There wu more IUlpense in
Dlilu, wherequarterbacltJtoger
Staubach threw a three-yard
touchdown pass to tight end Billy
Joe Dupree In overtime, giving
the Cowboys a 37-31 win over the
St. Louis Cardinals.
Siinpeon ru.sbed lor 727 ymls,
Including an 118-y ard TD romp In
the third quarter that 1ave the
Bills a23-0 lead. It was the fourth
20()..yard game o( Simpson's
career-which ties Brown's re-
cord-and it was the most yards
anyone bas ever rushed a_gainst
the Steelers. The Cowboys led. 21· JO and 28-17
in the titird quarter, before
quarterback Jim Hart-whocom·
pleted four TD passes in regul~:
tion play-rallied the Cardinals.
: Hart threw a 37-yard scoring pass
to Mel Gray with 46 seconds to
play. sending the game into over-
time.
Elsewhere in the N·FL:
CINCINNATI AT NEW
ORLEANS -Ken Anderson
tossed three touchdown passes as
his Cincinnati Bengals defeated
theNewOrleansSaints,21-0.
zqne, rumbling i\be ball. Ron,
McDole recovered for
Washibgton,andtheroutwason.
In all. Washington defenders
saclted Morton eight times.
NEWYORKJETSATKANSAS OTY -· Joei'Namalh hit Rich
Caster with a nine·yard TD pass
in lhelourth quarter, sporkin1 lhe
Jell to a 30-24 win over Kansas
Cily"sCblels.
The Cblefs bad pulled to within
two poinU late in t.bethlrd quarter
before the Jets-and Namalh-
added the clinching TD.
The ChiW did draw lo within
six in the fourth quarter on Jan
Stenerud's 3S-yard field goal and
drove to the New YOl"k five·Yard
linewith 47 seconds left..
PHILADELPHIA AT
CIUCAGO-Bob Thomas booted
a 26-yard field goal with eight
seconds l eft. giving the
Philadelphia Eagles a 15-13 win
over Chicago's Bean in a game
featuring two of the NFL's worst
teams.
Roman Gabriel's l4·yard TD ·
pass to 6·8 Harold Carmichael
with 4:09 lert sent the Eagles
ahead, 13·12.
Key to Chicago·s attack was
sl111aloaller Gary Hui!, wboeom-
pleted •. 19 of rr passes lcr 171
yards, .lncluclinC a 9-yard ICOrirur
pass to Cid Eclwiorcls In t.beoeconil
quarter.
MINNESOTA AT
CLEVELAND -Versatile
Quarterback Fran Tarkenton l"""ed lor two toucbdowns and
ran ror oae, sp._,.kin,g the Min·
nesota Viltincs to an eaay a.10
winoverCleveland.
Minnesota •tarted off fast. tak-
ing lhe opening ldckotl and driv-
ing 60 yards in seven plays.
Tarkenton threw a 29-yard TD
strike to John Gilliam int.be drive,
and the Vikings were never
threatened.
OAKLANDATBAL1tlllORE-
Tbe surprising Baltimore Col~
opened a 10-0 lead, but the
Oakland Raiders-one of foot·
ball's best teams-l'allied lo win,,
31-20.
Neal Colzie's puntreturnsof26.
43 and 23 yards sparked the
Raiders who scored TDs in each
of the last three quarters.
Oakland £inally went ahead
early in the thir period, taking a
17 .13 lead on a £our.yard TD strike
£rom Ken Stabler to Dave Casper.
Anderson mixed short flares
with bombs, throwing a 52·yard
TD pass tolsacc Curtis in the first
quarter, a 14·yard scoring strike
to Charley Joiner in the second,
and a 5·yard TD aerial to Curtis in
the third period. .
TD Run by Culp
Defeats Chargers
DETROIT AT ATLANTA-The
much·improved Atlanta Falcons
lost their second close game in a
row to another s urprising team.
the Detroit Lions .
Lions running back Allie Taylor
scored on a one-yard nm with 1 :20
lert to play, sparking Detroit to a
17-14win.
Atlanta-thanks to a 17-yard
run TD run by llas kel Stanback
and a 26-yard scoring pass by
Steve Bartkowski-had a 14·12
·lead until the Lions rallied. On
Detroit's last drive, quarterback
Greg Landry fi red a 14·yard pass
to Ray Jarvin on a £ourth.down
play.
MIAMI AT NEW El\IGLAND--
1 The Miami Dolphins overcame a rl4-0 halftime deficit t-0 defeat the
New England Patriots,22·14.
I
Don Nottingham and Norm
Bulaich sparked the Dolphins
comeback. Nottingham-who
rushed for 120 yards-scored on a ·
seven-yard run in the lhird
quarter, and Bulaich dove one·
yard for the go·ahead score in the
fourth quarter. Garo Yepremian
had three field gi;>als for the win-
ners.
: NEW YORK GIANTS AT
WASIDNGTON -Tack.Je Diron
T a lb e rt sac k e d Gia nt s
quarterback Crajg Morton three
times and Billy Kilmer threw two
TD passes to Roy Jefferson, lead·
ing the Washington Red.skins to a
49·13win.
The Redskins -trailing 7.0
after the first quarter---erupted
for 28 points in the second period.
Larry Brown ran £our yards for
I the first score and Kilmer threw
I 31 yards to J efferson for the
second. Three minutes later.
Morton was sacked in the end
HO USTON !AP) -Houston
defensive end Elvin Bethea felt
onJy sympathy £or teammate
Curly Culp Sunday as h e
watched the massive middle
guard return a fumble 38 yards
for a touchdown during the
Oilers' 33·17 vi ctory over San
Diego.
"I kept shouting. 'You're going
the wrong way. you're going the
wrong w ay'!'' Bethea said.
already having visions or his
friend being tagged rorthe rest or
his career as "Wrong Way··
Cul p.
"I really thoug ht he was going
the wrong way;· Bethea $aid. "I
just wa$n't close enoUgh lo do
anything about it.••
Luckily for the Oilers, Bethea
wasn't close enough to stop Culp
from scoring because Culp was
going the rigfit way. And his £irst
professional touc hdown iced the
game for Houston.
"I knew I was going the right
way. I just hoped J would make
it," said Culp, an eight·year
veteran. "It feels great to gel
that £irb-t touchdown."
The Oilers unleashed a potent
rushing attack o r Ronnie
Coleman and rookie Don "J aws"
Hardeman on the Chargers and
each runne r gained over 100
yards and scored a touchdown
each as the Oilers took a 23·10
third-quarter lead.
But it took Cul p's touchdown on
the £irst play of the fourth
quarter to put the Oil ers in solid
command or the game and set up
an early American Conference
Central Division s howdown with
equally unbeaten Cincinnati next
Sunday.
··1 was jus t following the now
of the backfield ," said Culp,
given credit for solidifying
Houston's de£ense last season.
Coleman rushed £or U2 yards
on 16 carries in his ft.rSt start of
the season and Hardeman picked
up 107. lt was the £irst time since
1967 that two Oiler runners had
gained more than 100 yards in the
same game.
··we complement each other:·
Hardeman said. "All r had to do
was carry the ball because the
holes were there. J really gained
confidence in myself."
Coleman, who ·was impressive
in Houston's 1974 preseason and
then played sparingly during the
regular season , also fell a
boost." "I'm going to go from
here and try to do better." he
$aid. "I know l will.··
Hardeman scored on a one·
yard run and Coleman raced 46
yards in the third quarter for his
touchdown. ........ .......... KOltf: 9YQUAltTEllS . ' ' ) 1) 1
Hou -FG 811tler 1'
SD-'Mloch '""" IWerKPl.i"Ok•Utl Hou -H•rde!IWI" 1 ,...., !kk k lailO!<ll
10 -11
10 -31
Ho.I -S.•yer 4 N~f lrom P•"or•ni IBlltltr
k k kl
50 -FGW.rKNno:tt
Hou -Coi.m.ri 1146 runs <Bulle< kic k!
Hou -Culp J8 lumbl" reco"'"' rel11rn !Butler
kk k l
SD -McOon•lll 30 p•s1 t rorn Freil•)
(wro.r)Chi114 kl<k •
Hou -FG Buller lll
A -J1,Wl
STATISTICS
SO H
Fl•" dowm 11 2•
R~-y1rds 2S.:!IN W.2U
P9Wnoy.,d' 1.&I • ISi
Ash.ir11 ••refs 96 111
Pi'5>H IJ.16--1 1J.1S.I
Punts S-J7 S-l"
F~-~1 J.1 0..0
~1Wltifl -Y••d1 S-~S IJ.1JO
INDIVIDUAL LEADE11tS
RUSMING -S.n D1eoo, Woocll, 1...0. ~ton.
c.oiem.n 1'-112, H•rdem1n 11.101.
RECEIVING -S..rt OieQcl,Mc.oo-ld4-J7, ~·
rl\Qn i..1. HOUl!orl, 811rrouoh S-11, .,_,_, •. SJ.
PASSI 114G -S.n 0'4'90, Fouh 10.1&.0, 11'YM<k;
°FrelUot J-a.1, s•. Houslotl, P•"orinl. U·:U.O. IJ.I;
Okkrrt l·J-1, II.
TOYOTA
FINAL
Baseball Standings
'75
CLOSE
OUT
Prices
Start at
$2856
Wiiie TNy L.,.t
VOLVO
FACTORY
DEMO
SALE
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FIOM
flwnple:
244 4 DR.
Autom•t ic, atereo radio.
power antenna, power
steering & bflk••· 12019
$5977.
BUY
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\,·EASE
AMERICAN LEAGUE
(Final)
East Division
Boston
Baltimore
New York
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Detroit
W L Pct. GB·
95 6S .594
90 69 .566 41f.z
83 77 .519 12
79 8) .4'i/1 15lf.t
68 94 .420 28
57 102 .358 37Ya'
West Division
Oakland 98 64 .605
Kansas City 91 7J .562 7
Texas 79 83 .488 19
Minnesota 76 83 .478 20'h:
Chicago 75 86 .466 221fz
Angels 72 89 .447 25YJ:
Sunday's Scores t-
Baltimore3·2, New York0·3
Cleveland 1 I . Boston 4
Chicago 6, M innesola 4, 10 in-
nings
Milwaukee 7. Detroit o
Texas 3, Kansas City 1
Oakland S, California 0
Replar Season Ends
NATIONAL LEAGUE
(Final)
East Division
W L Pct. GB .
Pittsburgh 92 69 .571
Philadelphia 86 76 .531 6!h
New York 82 8J .506 101/:z
St. Louis 82 8J .506 lO lh:
Chicago 75 87 .463 171h:
Montreal 7S 87 .463 17'h
West Division
Cincinnati 108 54 .fi67
Dodgers 88 74 .543 20
San Francisco 80 81 .497 27 1h
San Diego 71 91 .438 '31
Atl anta 67 94 .416 40112
Houston 64 'ill .398 431h
Sunday's Scores
New York 5, Philadelphia 4
Chicago 9. Montreal 6
Cincinnati 7. Atlanta 6
St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 2
San F'rancisco5, San Diego3
Houston 4, Los Angeles 2
Regular Season Ends
I Monc!!y. Septembef 29, 1f1S OAH. Y ptl.O'T
Sports in ~rief J
Czechs Top A11ssi~
J h
Football
Standings
For Pros
•1'GIU.L""°"MULEMW
......... c ·-· --• I.. T Pict. l"1' ,_
10•1.000••·
l00 t.111191oS1'
ttO .MIO,_.Sl
110 .•au
•10 .000 21 •
0.-MIH'#hiM
......... J 0 0 1,000
o.trWt 2 • 0 t.IDO
~ 110 .MO ar-.., • ' 0 .-
....... Dl¥6 ...
.. " " .. ". " " lM,.,,... 1 I 0 .JDI » JI
Al.... 0 1 0 .OIO ,.. .., s......... 0 1 0 .000 31 '°
HrlwOrN. 0 1 • ,000 J U
PRAGUE -Jan Ashe, 3z.year-old The paper said Joe·
Kode1 propelled Wimbledon Champion. Burke. vice president
Cle<lloolovakla Into the wUl pl->" the 23-year-old and general ma•-•
ttn.aJ round ol the 19'1S Argentinian for the met with Kellebrew
Davia Cup· against $16,000 fir s t prize before tbe club's ~-1 lolllf
Sweden when he beat tonight.. to Texas at Arl1r\lf.01.1.,
Australian veteran Tony • ·Tes .• SUnday and told
RA>cbe, w, &-1, M Sun· l\'ae-fH1.,. lt'hu lhe39-year<>ld Killetnw
clay. DENVER -Top-he w.ould be free lo
That vietor1 fl\'e seeded M a rt i 0 a negotiate with anot.hel-
Cz«hoe:lovakJa an Insur-Navratilova, struggling club.
mountable 3-t lead in the to rmd her game in the Ca.ala Set. M rk. best-ol·flve tennls series. lint two sets, forced Wl-a
in the last singles seeded Carrie Meyer in· PHILADELPlllA -
match. John Alexander to errors in the final set Second baseman D.a
of Australia wu leading en route to a. 4-6, M, 6-3 cash of tbe Pbiladelpllla
Jiri Hrebec M. 6-3, 1-6 victory Sunday in the Phillies set a major'
and the lourth &et was finals ol the $50,000 league record of 1199 ot
lied 6-6 when play was Denver women's pro· bats in a aeasoo when t.
halted by darkness. fessional tennis touma· batted four tim ett Sundm)'
··11 bas alw1ys been ment. again•! the New Yor~
my great wish to get to /ff Fl__. Mells . _ _ _ , lhe Davis Cup finals."' aaa.9f!I • ~ Cash broke the ,......,
said Kodes. ''Now my Major league baseball or 698 s~t by Matty AJou.
wishhascometrue." managers m ay have for the P l tt s bur1lr '
Czechoslovakia's yic· more job security than Pirates in 1969. Cash af9.
tory sets up the first South American politi· has the longest coft.,ifi
Davis Cup final ever cians, but not much sec-utive playing streak
between two nations more. in the National League.
from the European cooli· The ax fell on two 341 straight -all 1
nent. The closest geo-necks Sunday with the games last year, 16'1
graphically was in 1933 promise or more to come season and the f.inal
when Great Britain beat as the 1975 regular gamt$Of 1973. ~==l* FranceJ-2. season came to a close.
-• t. T "t. _.. l"A Sweden earned a berth F\l.JlertOn"s Del Crandall =~• ! ~ :1
:: ~: inthefinal,tobeplayed wa s fir ed by th e
MNrN ' 1 o .JOO u <ij later this year. by beat-~filwaukee Brewers and
N.V.Ms ' ' 0 .!IOO .... ing Chile 4·1 one week Frank Quilici was dis---~ 0 2 0 .000 w " c:.-Mo1vni-ago. missed by the Minnesota
CJl'llCifwwotl z o • 1.-45 ',', Twins, That brought the HoustGlll , • • ,.-• Adle A d"8JlttS ... "'~ 1 t o .-• •· number of managers
CIWll.,.. ......!C:...~-17 "' SAN FRANCISCO -fared during the season
o.t~ 1 o o 1.000 u 41 Top.seeded Guillermo toeiJ?hl. ~ I 0 0 1.000 ::D ll .c-.atv o i • ...,.. 'S1 ., Vllas struggled to a 5-7,
s...OMF o 1 o .ooo 11 10 64, 6-4 victory over un-o.htti~~· seeded Jerr Borowiak,
~.a.ci.wlaftd10 and Arthur Ashe over·
M1.,..1n • ......,E1M1lend 14 ed G fl M t WHhlRQtot1n.-vor11G1-11 power eo a$ ers
a.i..ait,BM11more10 or Australia 6·2, 6-2 in the
ObootS.PMi.otipn1•1> semifinals of a $100,000 o.ii..:u, St. Llllthlt,O T ~lfll'n,;s.r.01ego11 tennis tournament at the
..... Y«ll.Jlot1•,K...w1CltvU Co p 1 Su d o nclftM!121.Ne .. 0r1e."'o w a ace on n ay.
Buff•loJO.PlthtK1•oh 11 The second ·seeded
YaAnge .. 1tl. S.... f•Ml<IKe '' T...._..'10.-
.
KlllefH"ft., Out
KANSAS CITY
Harmon Killebrew has
been informed by the
Kansas City Royals that
he does not fit into their
plans £or next season,
the Kansas City Star re-
ported in today 's edition.
°"""'" S..y •I O.nwr I• o'dOC:ll
OW-171
S-..y'l0.M"
NirWOri.-•tAllMl•
[llol<iwr •t 8111f•IO
For Colleges
l"lt1Mlur'9fl•I Cle .. IMMI NllwEft91_ .. ._.,yonJet'
Mlnwml •t °""" B•"t Clftl: 1,...11 .. HouMon
S... Fr-tluM K•rtM' Q ty
Ook..too •I Ml...,.SOI•
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'a.ltl""ll,. .. LHA ... le'
WasN"Vf-1 "1'111 .. lphl•
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WO•LD FOOTUl.l. LEAOU£
Eq~ Dlvlt'-
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S..Antonto l J 0 .100 210 IS7
S.OUfornl.11 S 4 O ,SS4"4llJ
'Sllre .. POrt l S 0 ..... 1'1 XW
H9••1i 1 S 0 .llS 113211
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8•rm~m •• H•-•I S..ftUy'1 O.Wmet 0..•latt••' Sl'l••woort s.outr.er" C:.htorno•t Mempr.is
Baseball's
Top 10
NATIONAL LEAGUE
,.....,.,0. G Aa It H 1"1:1.
M9dloc:kCM 1JO J14 77 112 .;is.
T,Sl.,..1!.tl. 151 Sii llO ltl .lJ2
Snollnf>Vh 1n .,, '° 1se .ne
MrgnC!ol I .. 499 101 lU .l:l1
-M.nHt" 132 ... 5 ., \SJ .124
Ger-yLA 16.0 •st IJ 710 .l1t
AowOl'I 1t1 *42 11 1 110 .JU
"-'-SF 11t SOI JJ H.O .J1t
°*1'0ol tJJ )7. I J 1G: .l1J
8"KllS4L. 1:16 J21 ,, 16.l .lDt
Grid Schedule
COLLEGE ·-· ,._ Mtsko •I BrfO'\Mn Vo..'IQ. ......
s.1 .... ,
IE•tl
VIII-• •I Bo\tOfl Colleoe' nlQf'lf
C.r•ll -1 Buc: ..... H
~Ince""-' C.Ollllftltl•
Hol"t Cross WI O.rtmoutr.
&oaot1 UJMWl'rsllY •I H•rv•rd
Air Fcwc:• "'· N.lvr ti W•t.N"(ltgo. D.C.
~ .........
ltefllwtll't .. "-"" St••• Dull• .. Pin ••fll•ll•t Rutge~
Oncln,...l •I lempl•
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M1141UiDPI "'· Al•M!IWI •I Blrm--T•-1-TKh •I App.alKhi.,.,
S&Me.n!Oht
Vlr{linl• Tech .. A11b<lr"
WllllMn & M.I..., .1t TM O t.clel, -· ~ll~d•tD•vlchofo
Rk~ •t E•sl C•rotl,.., nr~flt
VMI M Furn>MI, n•Qtlt
c....,_.1tGeo<"o1.1
FlorkNSt.le •I GeorQI• le<h
Florlcj.a•I LSV, "iofll
Mc.Hoene StMe •l ....._,,,...11, niqNI
S.,ra<-•t Mioryl-..d
~h Te••' Sl•le •I Memphll;
Shi•, """'11
Soul:-n Mlt"\s.lppl •I MIW»1IJP -· N orl h et1 C Lowi,i•n• v s -Louls.l-•1 Sflrt .. port, nlQhl
S.Vlot •I Soulh c:..rollM , n19'11
V~ll•ITul-,n•V"I
NOrtt1 C..rol:IM •I Vorglnt• --1.w:lli ... 51 .. e •I B•n Sl•le
Wett••n M lch lO•A •I eo ... 11nQ c;,...,
W•V.lnqtonSt•te•l ltllnol' c.ntr.i Mldll9"" •I lllinou Slti.. -~ c.tlh>ml• 11 low•
Teu,A&.M•t K•"Y' !>I•'"
Mlssourl•IMIC:lll.,...
So11lh••,ter n Lo111 •••n• •I .... ~ 5.1••· "'"'"' LOUSj ...... TIKh •I Um.Ir, n1Qt11
We'I VirQ1n l• •I So11!ne•n
Mttt•odi\I
UI ... 5.t•t••I Te••'· no11h1
T•••\·Arllnoton •• We\I lP ••~
s.t.ie.nlQM
llKlllel
Nl:trt'-t.lern •I Ar,,.,.,.., n•Qllol
ld4rt>o•t NlntlY Sftl•, "!On!
•-st.le•! Ul•h,n'4l1ht
Color.cto 51.11• •• WYDmlnv ,,.. .. ....,..ko•I B•l9"•m Youno
lulW .It Ne• Me•l<O SI•~. n19M .....
'Stil'IJOW SIM• .11 C..llforn111
Fr.-Sl•le ti C•I Poly is.ti Lui'
Dei'IOOL n10n1
W"1\11'1Qlon •I Or~
Gr•mDllroq w,, Ore90n Sl•le 41
Plw11Md, nl9"t
Ttu\ !E1 P•w) •I P•t!llt. nlqht
C..I 51•1• !F11llerlonl •I San OieQo
Si.le, nlQf\1
Army •I St•nlord
(»lio Sl•I• •I UCLA, nl11hl
JUNtORCOLLEG£
Frld.ly'I Gllfttt
LO"ll IM•cl'I CC •I Or•n~ C.0.•1
L.A~-\lllUCL A JV (•prn I
s.t""'-"t't G•mt1
F.,Ue•lotl "'·Golden We" d!OCC
CVDl'~~••I C.rr•1o•
Pot•te 111 S••ll• An• Op rn I
C1tn.1i•! RloHondc.
"'"'~II p., ...... ,
8¥\1.,..•I Ol•lle1 """· s-Anlll'l•O•I LA H1rbor
!>Mo OleQQ Mew•' LA v111e,
W.\I LA •I El•I LA
Comrrton 11 s.rrt• Monie•
-PMll•t lrnpln•I V1li-y
!.6'111 8a<M<I11 l dll
C...\IOll'\•I AnltlolleV•ll•r
~ley1tEIC..m•no
P•..-n• •t LOS ~O•no\
F•ett'll•t B••..-slle111
Cl.II ti• II Drwn
8l'et S.cklleb.Kk, Rt~~''""'· LO\
Angel•• CC. !.011lhw.,~tern, S1"
S.r,....du ....
A!I ~,..,.s bt-Qln di 1 lO, ""'"~' Gll>t'l" .. h• lndl<•l...i,
MARTINSVILLE.
-Dave Marcis passed
Benny Par.
sons with less than 40
laps left Sunday aod held~
him of£ the rest or the •
way to win the 20th an ·
nual Old Dominion soo.
his ftrst Grand National
stock car victory of the
season.
Marci s o utraced
Parso ns at a r ecord
speed or 75.819 mph for
the 262.5·mile race over
t h e .525-m i l e
Martinsville Speedway
be£ore a crowd or 32.000.
Ali Fight
On Giant
' l
TV Screen
The long.awaited re
match between Muhanrf
mad Ali and Joe f'razier
y,•ill be telecast Ii Ve on a
giant screen in the 9,100
seat Anaheim Conven-
tion Center Arena Tues~
day night.
Reserved seats ~a_r_f
available through ~._,,
agencies and the Cen:,).
ler·s Box Of£ice, 800 YI,~~
Katella Ave. Tickets are
S20 and $15 . Doors wir(."
open al 5 :30 for tbe 6:~
ful l color telecast.
The world
h eavy w e ight .cham ,
pionship. direct rrom
nngs1de in Manila. will
be the £1r st rematch
bt>tY.'t>('n the two conlen·
ders since J an. 24 , 1974,
y,•hen Ali regained his
American Title in a 12·
round decision. lie won
lhe world ti tl e £rom
Georj:?e Foteman in an
eig ht·round knockout on
Oct . JO last year.
Frazier was responsi ·
ble for one of the two Ah
losses on his record. tak·
1ng the IS-round victory
ror the undispulcd World
Heavyweight Title in a
New York m ntch on
March 8, 1971.
N-ll•n
St l'lm l dt , Phil•detphi•, JI;
K l~n. '""" Yori<, 3', LullMILi,
f'tlll.ldelpfll•, :M; BeMfl. Ont1nrw11. a . o. P•''"'· Pltts«N•Qtl, 15; 0'1',
l.Jl>SAl!oele\, ll.
Ohio Uftl-r\lty 11 Nlirw>el>OI•
Ml...,t,Fl•.t1Nebr9'k•
Kenl St•le .. NortMrn IHlnoh
Mi<hi!lrMI Sl41t •I f+olrt O..me
ColOl'Mlo •I Olli•,_.... Rare taste.
•-0 ..... 1• Lw:IMkl, Phil.oelphl•. 111 , &Mtl\.
Ol'llClnnMI, no; T. Ptr••r. Ci1K1rwwo,
IOI; St.uwb, New York, IOS; C... l.D5
..,. ...... 102.
1"1"111 .. ltt*<.~)
Hr•Dotly, St. Lou!1, tJ..3, I ll.
Gullett, Cln<1nn•ll, IJ·•, .719;
Norm•n, Clnc:lnn•ll, 11·4, .ISO; SrN""''· New York, 11·9. 710; 0t¥<Y.
O "<i.....tl, 11·5, .'81; Hootm, ~
~.1 .. 9 •. M l ;Murr•y.MonlrNI.
151 • .rur; Chtl\tH11r011, Phll.tdt!Pt.i•.
, ....... 1.
AME lllCAN LIEAGUE
1"1.,.,.0.... G Aa fl! H "'i.
c.-MI" l(l SlS n lt'J .3'1
Lym Bsn \() J N !OJ llS .lJI
~NV ISi 591 ll 1'10 .111
Rkt81n 1.u ~ '1 174 ..JOit
WVonvtllOtk 1q ~"" ""' 111? .:...
G.9relt KC 159 Ul M 1-S .:a
,Mr.RMKC 11'6 drO SI U1 .JI».
o()r110ol !ID "'2 M • l.S .llM
l()lmbhNV ISO 562 U 111 .Jl:M
Hro,...T•" 1•) stt tt 151 .31XJ
HomelltwM
C Stoll , Miiwa ukee. l t ; R,
Jack,on, D•kl•nd, 36, M•rbe•P1'.
Kl<>W\ CllY. J.-6. Bon<I\. Ne• V-.
XI; TMKt, 0.klMd, 1'; Su,,,,..., ,,.,.l.1t.
11-..... I•
G . Stoll , M H w •111Lee , 10•;
"'-rDtrry, K•"Y\ Cilf , 10t, Ly .....
&Mtor1. !OS, A Jt<kson, 0.kl..-.:1,
t<M ; A1(e, 8o1lot1, 102, Mu-, Ne•
York, IO'I
1"1~4MOKkienl
Mom, llintDl'I. U·I,, "14; Ill. T~ ..
••1Umor•. 10·• •. 490; i.-ra,
K•"W' en .... 1S·1 •... 1; P•lr!'lef,
.. "lmore, 7J..ll, .•It ; 81toe,0...'-"!1.
tf•ll, -'61; 8 . LH. fkt1.IOl'I. 11 .. , . .S.;
l clltr\l•f. Clev•l•nd. 11·1, .•SO;
...,,....,,Ollo;I.,..., 11 .. , .Ml.
Ti__,. T..ch•IOkl•llom• YMI
Ml.,..i. 0 , •• Purdue
<Al~. ILDno 8eKhl •I Southern
tUlnDI'
0.'f1G'I 11 Toi-. "tQl'>I
Louis>'flle •I Wl<hlt• Slt1e. "'Vhl
"--•IWl\tontin
Sovthwttl
1CU "'· Ark•n'•' •I Lollie Roel ,
"'""
Water Polo
Results
OOL.SAG•ANDE
•llD$H·IOl"H TDUllllNIE'f
kor• bw O....rlrt!.,
Unl\lllr\ltv 1 3 I J-•
~ A"'"1rn 1 l ' 1 10
uni ... ,,,,., Korinq 1.:1\~•~ll l, ~.t
nllJ, Me<ln•t k 1. Alley. Slt'V~n•
sc ..... by ou1ntr' s.to Clemtn!e • J 2 ' 11
Cypreu 00011 s.n OP ..... nle KD•iroq· Nl"'llf\Y l ,
u.n.Mck l , H.Hk in\ 1. Werne<, Hum-•irys. l)uQln. 8or•, 0.V•t.
M-•wg...rten
MiuiOl'IVlljD 1 0 0 I 7
s.r.c1emem1 o o 1 ' .. SI" Ot,.,..ntf \<.Dl lf>Q Llflebeoc' J, -· 'Mt. SAlll ANTONIO 1'()U llNEV
~~A 0 2 J 1 1
\M:seJV 0 1 I I 4
GoldlM '#t~I worln,-1. Cr-t .
ll'IU!. ftoc:", J . Clook .
HOW A. Y A.IU.K.E FOR LEA.SE
1975 AUDI 100 LS 4 DR.
Auto trMS., .PQWer 'leering, air cond .• radial
tires&mno. (8151049281)
'150~~u•TU
....... 0,-.. '-'
DON BURNS Prestige Porsche Audi
1J611 Harbor Blvd., C;r.n1en Grove
(110~Wl
Either you have it.
Or you don't.
•
..
' -'
•• ; • •
,. . '"' . -J:· . . 11'.~i" •' ,, ., )ii ~··.i,.,;·
~ '• "l ' ." j r• -,· . : I '·i',t . .• ·~ ,., ... , ·.
t 1, •:, u,. ' . ~ ... I . --.. -.
:
1hGAL~ $1845 SAVE .. ~150 NOW.. \:\"
)
\ ' ..
•
,A • .._.<-::°"='L'-'Y-'Pl.!L::O._T,_ _____ :M°"ond~o"'y,.,Sep=l"""'=bo::r..:29"'"1"9,_,,,73
1ie Rule .
Okayed
yCIF
e CIF Southern Sec·
t has formally ap·
PJl'ved a football lie-
. 8.ker system for the
. 5 playoffs Ul)der the
1 -yard Jie-breaker
( mat.
l's also an option to
rrues a1 their ootion. tnone of the circuits in
e 0range Coast area
gone along with it at
point.
oting against the op.
was the Sunset, Ce n-
t)lry, and South Coast
~gues . M ate r Dei
ach Gary Carr says
item has not been dis-
~sed in the Angelus
$ague, but he opines
t~ doubtful that body
Will employ it either. The
Jmpire LJ!:ague also has ~voted.
The playoffs, however,
,ape: another matter and
·~re's how pl ayoff
Omes will be decided if
V ' • ,, •• · ent111-i to ~y ·J8it
"'f ' I • • ~
Mesa '. Verde ·€€
'( ! : " ,. , .
Mesa Verde Countrl" BAm..u• (761 and a tie BIU Helm.aDd.~
Clubo!Costa llleoa.w!IJ between 'Georce Cllellus tied wiU.' BTU
celebrate clearance Of laeman and Dick"Tllton llaMo'alld Bill Bu:rlcelcr
eocrow Friday li1temoon ,i 71. • top ~. eacb wltb "&
with a special pr_.ia· • Elliot Llftoit won .D acore of 46. •
Uoo at a dinner meetinc nieht witb '16, followic1 Ill third place .,;_
in the clu))b-·wben , by ,Frank. lllorrow alld Leck Herrltt •d u towing pro Ken V.entur! aian..,Zlebell at llO and -~' lib 48. will present the club With Wilbert Lowry and Alex ~-pn w •
a set of spedal coif .lllilluatM. In at-loW balls flt
ch1bl. . • ,,, __ .,• ,.,.. .,_. folirtome competition,
·The .special cluk will ,......,, ~.,.. ldr. and ldn. Jolm Pllfr
be a set used bf '.fony Entries are. still oPell tealil.ed with 'Mr. add
Lema •. a man wjlo won for ,Lbe. fu1t day 111011 Mn: RoJer·HuJbee to
·his first tournament <at !DW'!l•m!Ollt at i;asta del posi a w1Dnlri1 "1core of
Mesa Verde and u a re-Sol.(lpIL Club lit 1(1SSlon 120.
suit. poured champllg!le Viejcron Fri~ay, Oct. IO. ~a-_place w~ to tor the press and !M:Calpe ~field wlll be limit· Ille Jim Peeks and Don
known as Champagne ed to 1'4 10Ifers with a Gallants atJ.it•with \be •
Tony. • ,.hot gun start at 1 Leo Schaumen teaming
· Lema was later killed o'clock. Each·contestant With. Dr. "aild Mrs. Jam :·
in an airplane accident ~be presented with a Hoyos fortblrd atl27.
in·themidwest. . .... dozen aolf. ball!! at the .•.
The evenio'g ·dinner· first tee wl!l!.JJ0,000 in MUe S•llPN ,
presentation will bellltt· prlzesbelagoffered. Dave Sb<if(, llD·•aals·
ceded by a round '!f JOlf ···Th• winn0t1 will be de· iant "pro at" FQ.Ullt•ln
for c.Iub members~ In· .terinined on the least Valley Mile ::uare Golt vited'guests. , · · number of putts rather
Club members have .than on overall score, Coura.e, P<>I! .rounds of recently completed ma~g.it u.iWJ.ue in.tb&:t 14·'12;--146 to tie for first
•
I •
f: game ends in a de-
1 o c k after four SEACLIFF CHAMPIONS Kay Moser
(center) was the winner of the women's
golf championship at Huntington Seacliff
o.1trP11.t5lMt..,... purchase of the ,golt womep as 'l"ell as men place ii) tbe\Sovtbem Country Club recently. F1ight winners in-d 1 bh t -ua1 California a .. slant pro. course an cu ouse .cancompe eonan..--s .cham~'i'ons~lp,a at eluded Lorraine O'Neill ''1eftJ in the first facilities from Japan "basis. ' · · . 0 arters: •
After a coin flip decides
the first team on offense,
that team shall have four
downs from the oppo-
nent's 10-yard line to
sco re by either
touchdown or (ield goal.
flight and June Doyle in the second flight. Golf J;>romotioms. Ille. ·, .Eiitry fee ".is $25 with Westla e Village t!Ua
8 n d Frid a y . wi 11· f9111JS avaiJ.,tile at Casta week.
A score or loss of
p<>ssession te rm in ates
the series and then the·
other team has the op·
portuoity ~o counter with
a.· four-down series at the
JI).
Moser Capt11res
HB Seacliff Title
The defense is able to
score with an intercep-
·tion or recovered fum -
~le.
Kay Moser defeated
defending champion
Joan Weaver by two
strokes to capture the
I Jf the score remains women's club cham-
Josie Tipping (80) and
Barbara Malick (83).
Ann Gazda and Claire
Collins tied for low gross
with 102. Jan Dowers
was the net winner with
7i> ~nd Virginia Kidder
was second at 77.
tied, the same sequence pionship at Huntington
will be enacted until Seaclif(Country Club.
there is a Winner. A win· Moser fired a 261 fOr
ning touchdown would three rounds to 263 for
notnecessitateaPAT. Weaver . Geri Hege Mlle.Sq .. re
• Ea~h team ~ill be fmishedthirdat264.
permitted one t1n,:ie o~t In low net action, Nan· In a member-guest
for ~ch extra period, m cy Ray was the winner tournament at Fountain
. add1tton to any other ac-. with a 229. followed by Valley Mile Square Golf
dUmulated during the re-Cuba Cur'l (234 ) and Course, Ronnie Olsen ~·t r g and guest Sara Milledge ... a ame. Margaret Kum agai o( Riverview were the f\A team's series shall (235). b t t d f d winners. e re:s ar e or . e-In first flight action, Others in order of . fens l v e Pass tn -Lorraine O'Neill was the
t r · I finish included: Rose er ere.nee, regain ng gross victor with a 279. pos.sess1o!1 aft_er momen-Rosemary Erickson and Fergus wixh Ruth Ann
tarily losing i~. or a.re-Alice Hubbard tied for Taylor (Old Ranch);
aovery of a missed field 5..,.,,ond with 281 _ r Lorraine Ackerman with al tt t if h ball --~ Bia.r b a r a S we 11 · 10 a emp t .e Beverly Emerson won <Riverview); Shirley as been touched first by net with a 227, followed Pobe with Pat Wilson
the defense beyond the by Vivian Troutman (Costa Mesa).
neutralzone. (237) and Violette Fifth place went to
,. O'G8ra (241). Joan Hill with Jean '.l _ p June Doyle was the Browning (Riverview); ~ea rep third flight gross victor Carol Lott with Barbara
with 289 with Virginia Perry <Los Alamitos)
F b II Stevens second at 299. were sixth, followed by ~ OOt a Roberta Andrews took Helen Doyle and Jean
third with 307. Ann Anderson <Recrea· .,
Results Net winners were tion Park); Ceil Jaeger
Kaye Temming (226), with Ruth Schonert (Im· ~tty Peterson (240) and perial).
' JUNIOR VARSITY' lrene Pare (246). • : Jn ninth place were sc-.., au.,,.,..
"""" 0 0 • 0-• llfesa Verde Bert Holt with Emmie
ai1., ' • • 1~ . .L o u C a r r o I I ; EdillOft TOs: SlmOlOfl 3. Sllefrenl. I · t u.m.t. PATs : Tul11er J 1~u.s1, n a cnss·cross ourna· (Riverview); Carolyn
Jo1111S<W11run1 . ment at Mesa Verde West with Dorothy ~~ sc-1tr~~"0 0 2_2 Country Club, Mary Wrigley (Los Coyotes);
vinahrt o o ' 0o-1 Wanama~r was the A Peg Francom with Mary estMKi:CS:::Z~~;:t,:. flight wi er with 33 Fothergill (Mesa Ml""' •'•~along wi h Marge. Verde);RoseMillerwith "';:!~~~c~, •• , 2~ L~v!. :AT~ Williams. Meri Nakashima (Jm-~ 1nm1. Ha s.,.tv: t11rougn e1'ld' Phyllis Leasure was peripl); Leonore Tan-
-· .next with 35 with berg with Sarah Wood ~T-sc-"7Gu•n:"0 0 o-o Eleanor Altman at 36. (Riverview): and Rhea
?-,,,. o o o 6--6 In B flight, Phyllis Bowden witti Mary
SOPHOMORE ·Liken was the winner Boyer (Riverview). eor-•1z•bfOY•"':'', 0 o-6 with 31, followed by Jan ~H•rbor 1 'o 1-10 Dowers (331h), Betty <'oda Baa
second with 70 with
Frankie Durst, Kay May
and Millie Hayes tied at
71.
Betty Brown was the B
flight winner with 67,
followed by Carolyn
Kilmer (69) and Sybil
Foster (70).
In C flight , Donna
DeMar was the victor
with 66, followed by Rae
Mitchell (68) and a tie at
71 between Nina
Danielson and
Rosemary Skillion.
Mary Grose took D
flight honors with 60,
followed by Eleanor
Greer (67) and a tie
between Elise Stipes and
Florence Weichman
(70),
EINlpel
Mimi Wishney was the
low net winner with a 73
in A flight at El Niguel .
Country Club with Ann
Teel second at 77 re -
cently.
In B flight, Adrienne
Warren was the winner
with 76, followed by Bet·
ty Williamson (78) and a
tie between Beth Lil-
j estrom and Trudy
Tarczynski (79).
Lois Jackson was theC
flight winner with 80,
followed by Merle Ferry
and Beverly Henderson
(82) and Peg Herten ·
{83).
Maudie Weidman cap.
lured the D flight with 78,
followed by Maxine
Jolley (80), a tie between
Betty Halladay, Kay
Mcchesney and Jane
Mahaffey (81) and
.MargaretSibbert (Ii:!).
In an all irons touma-.
ment on the Mesa Linda Blff Ca•tfOll
CdM To: 11ac:11e1or. N•wpott TO.: Gonya (341h) and Fran \.,.,._, Brown. Burr. PATS~ 8'rloM •
hikkl, .,...., (kick>. Grotenbws (351.h).
sc_.,.ca.1,.,., Virginia Kidder and Mtrl~ 3 0 ll-46 •
,......,111191on B41ac:h 1 o o 0-1 Pat Gill tied for top
MarifWI TOS· Polllll!Qllomt 5PI.,,. h" . C fli ht 'th34 PAT: O.wNrSt (klclr.). Field GNi; OnOrS tn g Wl • •
oew111r,1 ns v•rd!IJ. He TO: "''" followed by M ar1on
PAT : Moon !kick>. Schulte (341h) and Jay
sc:..-•1tr0utrta" Du ) £ ...... ,.. o , o 1•-i'O quette (36 .
09ftt :-uns o o o o-o In a stroke play event,
' k-"7""•rt•rt Lu ill p dd k th -.ncMA111m11°' o o o o-o. C e a oc was e
~.. • • • l>--40 A flight gross victor with ~I• TOS: 001t11n,ue1, 1Cr.is"' 85 Net winnerS in·
carnci.PAT :Oo""f'lllMl(r\11\). ,·d . ,-K' d sc-1tro-n.n cu ed Shir ey 1n er ~,::::.Id g : : ::1: (78), Joanie Cham-
~ s.ac:11 Tos: Moon, Ph1m. berlain (80) and Ceil
"""·PAT.: H•uoJ'M frunl, Brown (82) SC-"70ital'tffs . c¥PNU o o o ~ Leasure was the B
SanOtwwnt• , • o o. o-o gross winner with 96.
SC....ltyQllaftlrs Mish" U t lured tAMlr-9• 1 o 1 o-1• i ema su cap
Mt1eroe1 • 814 1 ....... net at 78 followed by MllerOtlTDI: Mlttl(lll'IS,ft'•Dlr, '
course at Costa Mesa In 3 thrOw out tourTia. ~If and Country Club, ment, Helen Tegeler was ~ce ~erby ~as the A ·theAfiigbtwith49.Betty flig~t w1nnerwtth a69. Jane Smith, Pat Burl·
Ginny Stasko took ingham and Martha Im·
brecht tied for second at
S so, followed by -Edna · Girls ports · McHugh (51) and a tie
o••LsTt:NN•s between-Jan Greene and
Coron• •1 Mmr"' ugun1 Btac:ll Arla Brown (52).
1w. ' Mary Kay Moore was
v.11eJMtt • the winner in B flight v•11SITY un1...-ityotfS.n1•At1a1s.11,1~. with 44, followed by
,,_.._, o.i dtf Foilnt.in V•lll:Y 1s-11, Marge Smith { 46), Jean
is-s. Ju111o•v•11S1Tv i'ield and Doris Rousey
un1 .... ~11.,<ltfs.nt•""" 1s-•. 1s-11. (51 ), Jere McCormick 1..'::,w;'~~~~ "•11•• d•f ,.,...., 091 andHopeOvale (52).
Tripp, Carter
Race Friday
celebrate the clearanee def SoL Golf .Club and Sheff then defea1"d
of escrow on the pro-. Mission V-jejo Country 'O,:tuck" Mont.abaff. ~the · Cl b · second hole In a suclclen-perty. ' . u . . d th ·1 ff . "th . . , .. ea p ayo , ·w1 a Lag-• 8-la "!ff C••fi• ~1~:tr will be tryhic,tor
The Laguna "each 'It was :rpartner·~ bet· hi'! players ~ard this-fall Ron "Sleepy~· Tripp or men's · golf• assoqiation ter bati evenf at Big Ca~ and will receive biS PGA
Costa Mesa and Dana staged itS mdnthly .nyoo ColDltry Club re-membership card ._about
Carter of Huntington tournament at Pala 'cently. . '., thea&meiime. ·
Beach , the top two Mesa Country Club re· L
drivers on the USAC cently 1 with Al BotelhO ·-
midget circuit this (82-11-'11). emerg~g as
..-;eason, are among the the winner.
entr?-nts in a SO-lap DB· Secopd place in A
tional championshio flight was a tie between TllY.SM'i"sMME
Prep Football Slate
..... 11'¢
race Friday at the Frank Rossi (82-10-72) c=.::';"LlllitWOlliifatSAlowl
OrapgeShowSta~iumiil and Bob Nieminen PlittDAT'SUMU i
San Bernardi(\0. 1 ( 8 6 • } 4 -7 .2 ) With F•Mnl•ln':'19¥i...:-W~ ... n at
The race will mark the Clarence.Owston third at w..tm1nsw . re~um of the nation's top &:J..10-73 . , , ~·~·t:._": u ,......_
dnvers (o the West Coast Four players tied tor P.Wtit •
and. it will be the se~d first in ~ ~ght ln.;luding ::::.:~::=:~,.
outing at the Orange Red Hast1ns, Lou Un; 0r._•MuntlflOIMllMdbl
Show s peedw.ay this derwood,RafLovitta!Kl Vll'-,...:!115C:::::-..111 a
year. Charles Schroer, all at ........
The race is under the 75. Bob Borchers posted .:=-i.wc.u~•...,...
direction of J.C. Agaja· a 77 while Gordon ~.....-
nian and will combine Rayburn and Harry 'Fit1*'-'at11wn11fl'9111
USAC drivers with those Green each had 78. t:!~V:S::::=.:Wa:-' from the CRA sprint B.ill Bailey was the S11nnyMU1svsT,.yt11F4il1«1on
circuit and the USRC winner in C flight with ""~=~
mir:lget group. 70. followed by John 1tantt1eAl•mll••'**"arow
••• a
} . •
Sponsored by
Orange Coast
Daily Pilot
* Cash Prizes
Worth
·soo
.,
Weekly Pigskin Plckeroo '75 winners
will be awanled a total of $50 In casll.
First place entries nM:ei .. $25, second
place. wins $15 and $10 Is awal'Wd for
thin! place. Wi/lners are notified lly
mail.
...-tor the o111c1a1 Plgslcln Pkkeroo
players form each Week In ti. bally
Pilot -*s pages.
' .
•.•........ , ............................ ~·····
: l;N-TRY BLANK : • • : Mante ··~·······.......................... : • • • Addl-.s ••.•••• ••• .......... •• •• • •• • • . • . • •••• • • • ·•rH..' ZI • • -·· ........... ............. p.......... • • • : ........ ...... ..... .. .... ................ ... :.
: Cfrde tums•yOu Wnk w11I win this Mti(s llrMI : • • • • . .• : Jlaltimore vs Rams i
. : ,. Denver vs BUffalo i
: ~JtJsburgJi vs CleY'eland : i USCvs lo)!Ya • ;
• Ohio State VS U~l.A • 'i .~issouri vs Michigan i
: Miami, Ohio vs PJlnlue 1•
.. i Duke vs Pittsburgh
• Colora~-vs Oklahoma •
: Boston u. vs Harva·rd i -! Ai'l'l).Y1Y$ Stanford :
: F.latida vs LSU . f · i Mich!gar, .Siate vs"Notre;Dame • ·
. : washingtpn vs o,-.gon i
: · . Fullerion w GOlden~W'5t, -;
: Long Beach CC vs Orange Coast t
, ! · Wes'''" vs. Fountaift:Valley :
~ ICeUy. PATI: JoflS.Z (JllSll.-;;============================o; Mtrrl .. n, N•r•ll•r•, S••aot l•I• I
Orcle the team you think· will win in
each of the 30 Pairings. You l'llJY mall
your entry or bring It to'tlle Dally Pilot·
office nearest you. There are Dally Pilot
offices In Newport Beacll, Laguna
Beach, Mission Viejo, Huntington Beach
-QostaMesa.
! CdM·vs V~lla Park • • · .i University vs Valen~la. . ! . 'f"''· SCW.•YCMtW'J
"""'"" 0 • 0 0-• lidlton 1 1 ' a-n EcN1• lOs: F•lt'llO 2, Clark,
...... PATt: Bolllm I (kk.U). s.tfe. ty:..,..._.i..,
, ken'10.Nn ~\'•Illy 0 0 '4 1---U
UWllllft O 0 O 6-6
'" TOS: Gittens 2.. ~.,.._. PAT1:
Sm!Wla Olkllisl. Fiii 0ot1: Scnlth m -·· tc .... ., .........
.... """'-0 0 0 0-0 UIW¥9nHy O 0 0 M -.....,a.,..,,
c.t.liMHI O 0 0 ~O ..... vtl.. 614 ......
...... VM'JtTOs: ,._,.,'*'*' • .....,.PAf: lr...itoylpMSI.
See Exciting. •••
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
FOOTBALL
THIS FRIDAY NIGHT· OCT. 3rd
occ vs .
LONG I .EACH' CITY CO,Ll,EGE
at Le Bar.cl Staciuln on The OCC Ce1111p111 .
GAME-TIME 7:30 P.M. -
TIClll' PllCIS:
ADULTS $1.50
CHILDlllH $1.00
STWllf CTS $1.00 I
•
IOXClfRCI
OflMIAT
6:JO P.M.
FE PARKING
GOOD PRICES
GREAT FOOTBAii
' .
1st prize S25
2nd prize S15
3rd prize
. : .. Canyon vs Laguna Beath 1 ...
·: . Brea vs Dana Hiiis.
: · f-'•gnolla vs Costa Mesa i · Orange vs H~i~ Beach i
: ~n Ct9mente vs R--'Beach ;.t
: . .El Dorado VS MisM~ Viejo i
: . Newport v~ Los AJ.1imitQS ~
: Westminster vs Marina . <:
: El Toro Vf> l;Sl!ffanza ;! : , Edlsan vs L.Oara , :
-·· ; Tustin vs E.stancia :
•. . ,, ..
, , I ·• t • ._t~.., ., -C . ·•· , ', .. ~ . ,'' 1 Tl•··~,.'-My _,. • llle •I ,~I .• • __:a,~ • 1 ninll1re1••.C...11t•·•11tw:ls ~Pl ~· .. a. .. 01; •. f1 9 a :-r-• :'I' ...,, ........ . . ~ , ' .... .
..,.... ....... 11z!sa· ... cf I flj ......... •. .. . • ••• , ....... ..
Wcf11 ., ., i
• : ~ . " . •• ~ # •
I .... ~i;:,;::.:.,;.,..;·~·.,;;~~..;,_;;,.j,~"' .... 41 .. . . ': . ··············~···························" 1 h .\ I,
' ••
I
•
~·
r
:
;8TIMULATl!S
:,0.,ng ml11ds.
• ••
•
•.
' -..---
DAllYPllOT
'Profits' Not Tangible
Sadd/,eback Community Unit Helpt1 Retardsl.
'7 LAUalE KASPEll ........ ,.. ........
· AllllaUll> the overhe..S for Sad·
clleback Commun!~ Enterpr\leo ;. .-D•• times ila pnillta, It ta
stl1I • lniltf\11 venture, accordlnr
toAttl.l>nen, m101&1n1.dln<tor.
Tbe nonprofit corporatloo Is a
al>dtend 'l'Otklbop for ment&Uy
..-tcapped adulla.
IT IS NOT a new concept
(there ote three oth<~ In the
county) but it is new In Mlssion
Viejo. TbU month, it wu moved
from facilities in the Good
ShOpberd Lutheran Home In El
Toro to on Industrial building at
2510I Taladro Circle. .
~ck of space was the primary
reason for the move although
J.bnen said such a business,
which prepares people to wort in
normal business operations. also
needs ''a more normal situ a·
tion.''
• Ihnen describes his worlc~ os
"people who have the problem of
meotal retardation.
''ln other words."' be plained, .. they're people
they have a problem."
••• but
DltfTPlMtwtPWiti
NEW FACILITY CAN PROVIDE SPACE FOR UP TO 100
Don Dwyer• la Knolllng ptent Heng•ra In Mlaalon Yl•jo
Kiwanis Club donated $300 to the
group tp develop crafts which
would sell. <The Kiwanis Club
also painted and installed plumb·
inf utilities in the new building.>
Tile ~ult are Christmas cards
and ornaments and note paper.
which are sold through the
Lutheran home, and macrame
plant bangers, which are sold to
stores by a sales representative.
They are "kind or·· handmade,
Ihnen .11id. Jigs and other little
tools have been devised by
teachers at the workshoptogul~
the workers while they twist and
knot the yam for the hangers.
•l
MOST OF THESE are being
sold in other states, especial!~
Colorado and New York.
"We've tried to market thtr'
products on their own merilH
rather than (the fact thatt
they're made by handicapped
people.·· said the director.
Crafts are a bit unique r~ a
work.shop of this kind to develop..
·Ihnen said. Generally, he eXY
plained, workshops take in piece
work from private business on a
· rontract basis. .,
He does this also. While some
workers are knotting, painting
and silk screening the cra(L
items' others might be stuffing
coupons in bags, filling an
emergency medical aid kit Ol'I
counting and packaging plumbJ
ingparts.
WORKERS ARE PAID on a
piece basis. The average weekly.
pay, he estimated, is$5to$JO. ,
Some produce at a rate o~
about 20 percent of the norm, he
said. Others approach the norm. ,
But Ihnen, who worked in a
similar workshop in Downey
before coming here, said all the
workers get JOO percent of the
satisfaction of working.
"lt beats sitting at home doinf
nothing,'' he explained. "Bein
partially productive is better
than not being productive at all.••
AND THE WORKSHOP, which
is· supported by donations and
training funds from the Regional
Center for the Developmentally
Disabled, is less costly than the
past method of institutionalizing
the mentally handicapped, be
said.
While the purpose is openly
more of a social nature than pro ... ductivity, he said, the people re·
ally impressed are "these hard-
shelled business people.••
They like the esprit de corps
and earnestness displayed by the
people working there, he said.
SHELTERED WORKSHOP TRAINS HANDICAPPED ADULTS
Joanne Hutcheson Paints Christmas Ornament.
Area residents are being invil·
ed to see the workshop and the
products made there during an
open house' Sunday, Oct. 19,
from 12:30toSp.m.
IRS, Procter Case Studied
WASHJNGTON (AP) -The Justice Depart·
ment says federal prosecutors will not prosecute In -
ternal Revenue Service Commissioner Donald C.
Alexander in a Seattle case involving alleged non-
payments of i mportduties.
A spokesman said Sunday that the U.S. at-
torney's office in Seattle decided it lacked evidence
that Alexander violated any laws in advice he re-
portedly gave as a private attorney to the Procter&:
Gamble Co.
The Chicago Sun-Times reported in its Sunday
editions that a U.S. Customs Service investiga~ion
implicated Alexander in an alleged coverup to
defraud the government of duties owed by Procter &
Gamble. The investigation reportedly involved a
time when Alexander was a private attorney
representing the detergent firm, prior to bis 1913 ap-
pointment as IRS chief.
AIP for lt'aUaeoe
RENO, Nev. (AP) -Still confident that George
Wallace will be its presidential candidate in 1976, the
American Independent
Party says it is in better(~---------)
shapetbanever. IN SHORT National Chairman
William Shearer said Sun----..,----'----'
day at the . AIP annual
meeting the party Is well prepared as it heads into its
third presidential campaign and is ahead of previous
efforts.
a-t De•ln Pr.t
NEW YORK (AP) -Time magazine says
Watergate figure E. Howard Hunt maintains he was
never ordered to assassinate columnist Jack An-
derson -only to drug him.
Time said its correspondent.. David Beckwith,
interviewed Hunt at the federal prison at Eglin Air
Force Base in Florida about reports th al the Richard
M. Nixon administration had put out a murder con·
tract.on Anderson.
T••Barp/WerCla
POINT BARROW, Alaaka lAP) -TheOeetoflS
supply barges struggtlng to reach Alaska's North
Slope oil fields through the ice-jammed Arctic Ocean was reported early ~ay waiting for d'-Ybreak.
about 30 miles west of Point Barrow, a coast Guard
spokesman said .
·~ • '
• 1 •. " .., . ,
88 DAILY PILOT Monday. September 29, 1975
n. llge11 Mwbt:P'lt• Otl tht °"'""' Coltt \
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
Yoo Can Seu tt . Find II , [ 642 • 5678 ) One Call Service Trade It With a Want Ad . . Fast Credit Apprcwat
ttoil l•IDf• , 1000.lttf \::: •"'•n ...... I. ~ ., -MlrcfiMJndoM · · · · ---~ ttMoh l000-'69' "' · ~'' '_.:>WY IMt• & MsW ~~-. "'' ....-i 600().j()ff ~nt 9000-"°"' ll.IW.11, ln~ttl,..nl I I.,_,,. & Aut.....W.t & tthft
"'-"1111.. 5000-!ICM9 ,.,.,..,,.., ..... 7000.7199 lf'Ol'I otion • tl00-"9f
_________ .. ~-~~!!! !.~~ .~~: ........ J ~::: .F;'.~ ~~ •••••••
ERRORS: Adverl;
1"'"'9d check lhelr ads -.--------------dally and ropori er
ron lmmed~y.
DAILY rlLOT .,,.....
llablllty 10< Ille fint ;
corrf'ct inMrlion only.
PuOli1her'1 Notice:
All rca I es late a1h l'l"11Sl'd
10 this newspajlt'r 1,,. "ub
jecl to lhl' fo't'tlcraJ f.i1r
llou s1 n ~ Art ul 19iiM
which make:-. 11 1Jh·i.:.1l l
;1dverll~l' ··an) p11•
ferenee. lim1l.it1on. or
d1ser1rn1nul1Cln b.1,,.t-<I 1111
race, color, rl'lig1011 , '>t''C.
or notional oni.:111 or 1111
1ntt:ntion to r11;ikt· un~·
such prefert'lll'l', l1rn1t:;
t 1on. or d1srn nuna\11111
BUY A PIECE OF THE HILL
17 ,000sq . ft of Spyglass Ifill! 'l'h e view
fron1 1t and tht· home 011 it' 1'he view is
s1X!t'li.it'Ul;.ir. lht• home is 4 hecl rooms,
nearly llt.'\V ;_inti the lot 1s 17.000 sq ft
The wholt• 1·n1·h1\;.,i(la 1 ~ yours for
Sl 79,950 ~ l ~Ul'tl()'
Ul'lll()U~ t1()M~~
RE AL TORS', 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Carano de! Mar This newspaper will uoti
know1n ~ly HCt't'pl uuy
1J cl v c r t 1 s 1 11 ~ I o r r 1 • : t1 I ""1!11!'!11!'!11!'!11!'!11!'!11!1!11!'!11!'!11!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!'!!!!!11!'!!!!!!!!!!"! t·state wbu:li 1., in \ 1ul:i """
_ 11on of lht• Ii•"· I Gen•ral 1002 Getteral I 002
General I 002 •••••• ••••••••·•••••••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••
ABANDONED
COLONIAL
5 BDR-2 STORY
MEARBEACH
\\1 1nd1ni.: trcl' l111ccl
strccl H;11:-l·1I hl'<lrlh
Enormou.., FUH:'ll AI.
DINI'.'/(: Rt>'J:lol Bru~ht
counlry k1t1·ht'11 •l tl'
covr:REU IJANl'~:
W f<:S Ll·:Y N
TAYLOR · CO.
RE ALT ORS since HJ46
BAYCREST SPECIAL-$89,500
Yt>u 'll lovc this comfortablt'4 BR fami -
ly home. Love1y cptng . & dr<.1pcs .
choice wallpapers. rm for pool. Fam
rn1 & form OR , 3 baths . ~1bundant stor
2 I I I San J...,.;n Hills Road
NEWPORT CENTER, M.I . 644-4910
• ~~!!.°!..~~ ........ ~-~-~ ......• 1~::.~~ ....... .
G.-ol 1001 -ol 1002 Gooiotl IOOJ •••••••••••••••••••••••
Remblltog w...i.
Courty•rd entry thru sw·
ing1n-.: ~Utt', a 1.1.·1y1n~
pulmll, b r ick BliQ
fireplace. ·rrec shaded,
111 11.cre estate. R-2 lot
Room for t-11lra hOusc:.,
Owner abandoned
llurry!~ 64~
FOREST OLSON IMC
JUST
REDUCED TO
5122,000 ; gorgeou~
PAt.ERMO MODEi, 14
bdrms .. 2~ baths. family
rm ) : on highest sttf'et 1n
Spyi:luss . llarbor View
ll omcs S~ctaeular un
obs I rUl'lt:d vu:w of v.allcy
below . Owner ha:s lx.iuMht
.111other & is r·cady to
COO\(.'
LE RAISOR
REALTY
4523 Campus Or., lrvint-
('ampu!i Valley Shop Ctr.
CALL 833-&600
SHORECREST
TWO STORY
FAMILY ROOM
U1H4ue ~nlry lo spuc1ous
forn1:il llv1nl{ <.i nd ban-
q ul' l roo 1n ~ Sunny
KllUr ml'I k1tchl.'n . llambl-
111~ g:J rnl' room "'il h
l'rat•kl1ui: f1repla<·f'.
(;r,1t·1ou:-; Auest hath and
lJl'l-:l' launrlry roorn
Sweeping ~lair;, to k in~
size masll'r anll scpurate
thlldrt:ns su1t!'S. Lush
lanll sta p111g . Very
private IJ l'llUOds. Call ror
o.ppt. today• $.Sl!l.::.00. Call
963·6767 . .. ir.ur 1.u •r ,,·c.i • .. u•
[~ THE REAL
ESTATE RS
OCEAHFROHT
()CIUXt" duplPX + guest
rm & bath. parking for •\
lur~c cars. $159,500'.
....................... ············-· .. ···-····
YEAfl OLD DUPLEX
Distinctive d~BIJPI. with 3 bdrms .. 2
baths & frplc . in each unit. 4 Car
spaces (2enclosed); $119,000
DOLLARS & "SENSE"!
Livable 2 bdrm. home on standard R ·2
lot -I<><: a led South of Hwy ... ready
for occupancy -'-''C have the key.
Priced a l virtua lly Jot value -$561500
A TT!MTIOH, SALE5PEOl'U
\Ve have openings for 2 or 3 people with
R. E . s ales experience of a year or
more ... an active office in .a TOP
LOCATION! A congenial group !
• vr As:;t
BAY AND BEACH
675 -3000
~401 l C. OA!i T HWV t:O~ONJ'l Ol l. MAs:;t -----------
GenKal 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Being remodeled ; custom 5 BR, 5 Ba.
6500 sq. f l. home on point, pool. dock.
South View.3 BR,31f.i ba,largerooms.
Boat s lip. $224,500. -
Custom 5 HR, 4 ba . View.
lagoon. Boat s lip . $295,000
80 ft. on
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3-tl Buy~1d1· Or•v•· NB 67~ 6161 --
1002 G_.. 1002
•••••••••••••••••••••••
;,A,
J!j)
•••••••••••••••••••••••
MIMIRAHCH
AIAHDOMBI 3 IR
SACRJRCE
PAVILION O\'l'r\'ll'WS
s unken lL'rraet• -;eparatt•
''hot huust'·· EnJOY
ocean ~·1c"s from rnulll·
level µrouncl'>. 5 .Juinbo,
bedroon1s. ma:->tt·r :-.uitc
with bath&: dorn\cr C•.111
546-2313
* 675-7060 *
Balboa Bay Prop.
I
Reallors * OPEH DAILY * ~~~~~:! .......... ~?.~~ ~~~~:!••••••••••~?~~ 1----------1 IF I Wt~RF. VCJU-l'd
PRESTIGE src 1t today! Corona dcl
S33,900
Completely redecorated
hke a model. Pnme re·
sidential neighborhood in
prestigious t;_ommunity.
Large family sized li ving
room . Country s t yled
kit,;he n . Rambling
grounds with fruit or-
chard. Secluded master
re treat and generous
sized childrens suites.
llurry. Priced to sell
fast~ Call 963-7881. ~~.I~n~w ~!l
4 Br, 4 Ha & Gallerv
2 fire places, wctb:,;r
Uelulte ki(chcn
Pier for Yittht tnt;()'
Yo·u ma y !iiClel·t the
finishing touche~
675-8120
MODOWM 2 BR CONDO EASTSIDE
$24,500 C~~~:R
Lo<"at€'d on Fa1rv1cw 1\tature area. ·rree·lincd
Road is this upgraded quiet s treet . JJr1ck
<"Ondom1n1um with pool walkway leads lo a v.·orld
pri vileges . AH adult and of charm situated in
On beautiful green belt much soui.:ht ~f l e r
area. Ex1st1ng financing "East ~1de ;\rea .. NO
:11 8J~ '; Submit down OOWN to vet buyers. /\
6
"a--c -'°si-1~1-rarl'.' beach art-a bar,.:a10 -eltcellent terms availa-
b 1 e lo rill CAN 'T
DUPL ICATE ·ru1 s ANYTIME ONE. Call no"· to sci· 1t
SUPER V ~LUE j~;;;;;;:::~;;;;;;;;j "'6
·zitJ E<e~!:!n~I~~.!~ •• , . Mh ETlllCUhLOUS [6 .. ; .. 1s arl y t e word for ~~ ly blufrs on one of the this la >'ishly refurbished
AREA Mar charm W1th beamt.'tl
llcautiru l hiddl•n 2 story ceihn1ot . pegged floor,
nn pri vall' l'Ul·de-s-tr paneled walls, fircplarc;
Tht!'t charm1n,li! home has Freneb doors open tl'I a
4 l<irgc bdrm:-.. 3 baths. tool. seeluded bricked
formal din rm. ram rm patio & yard shaded by <1
Everyth1n~ a fami ly gian t tree : three
could ~·uni. In choice bedrooms, lwu bath
1\1esa Verde 545-M91 home on TY..'O LOTS pl us
o J-car ~a rage & paneled
hobby shop Jus t one
block to the ocean Llcath
307 l\1ARIGOIJU AVE, Walker & lee
Reel !state $119,500
A REAL WINNl'.:11 -&•e
MEWPORT SHORES this best in class: four
\'au lted ceilin g living bedroom homeorthree&
room, skylight in family convertible den ~tr. &
room . 2 Bedrooms. 2 P.1r.s. Clean live here-
balhs, 2 patios. new newly painted, draped &
carpets. etc. s.57.950. carpeted. Spat·iuus pallo
rin es l g r ee nb e lt s . home in lla rbor View
Beautiful polio with ex· Hills . De si~ned & dc-PETE BARRETT & yard with apple,
*•**JUMP••** apricot, almond & plum
ception1JI privacy-three coratcd hy Dorothy b e dr o om -2'-'~ b a ths . Wilke. ·rhe lot is 210 Price reduced lo S75.000. Call S'IJ-s5so. fl.wide, offering an un-obstructed \'\CV.' Of ba\' & ()1>~'4 fOIQ • /<IU,ilO~rr,.(f• oce<in . This mint cnndi-
[:·e... \ ______ j lion l"l'S lflt'OCl' Offl'rS gorJ:couo; g;.irt.Jcns v.·1th
gret'nhousc. 4 RR . 2 Ba .
& powder rtn .. 2 frples .
at the chance to buy one -REALTY-trees. Private beach too.
of t he few remaining b ' 4714 CO RTLAND DH ..
comple te ly rcfurlllsbCd 2 r.:61;1;·5;1;0;;;~~=6~15~·~40~6:0~ CAMEO lllGHLA N US. bedroom. 2 bath sin~le ---All ror 585.900.
story To"·nhouscs in San-COLE of Newport
"Ana. SUll only $21.950 GRACIOUS LIVING Roallors Ask for t~rank , 1139-8.121 Agent Elegant Big canyon 2515 f.:. Coast li"'Y
home. 4 Bedroom, family 1 ____ 6_7_5·5511
room, formal dining, 3
'""""''l •ll\1 ,.,. '~'" .,,
Whale of a Deal
SPANISH STYLE
CONDOMINIUMS
7·V.."J. Annual financing.
EASTSIDE. CM. (Close
to Back Bay ). 2 Bedrm,
2 bath, $43.500. 3 Bedrm,
2 bath, $46,950. 3 Bedrm.
f a mil y -kit c hen
Tov.·nh o u se. $48,950.
Open Daily 1-5. 2580 San·
ta Ana .
~EWPORT
INCOME
library with spt.•c1al Df
fice closet & exquisite
rloyer. Call ror app't to
Set:. $1B3.400
NEWPORT
BEACH
FIXER-UPPER
bath. Low maintenance MEED 9UICK SALE!
yard with 9 hole Astro All your dreams come I ~~~~~~~~~~
Turf putting green. true. Two bl'd room 1:
li1any extras. You own seaside t•o ttag(' "'ith FOUR-PLEX, pride of
ownership. Deluxe units·
Fireplace, bltru; .. 2 baths
each. Only 8 yrs. old.
$134,500. Feeland. Prime
area.
PRESTIGE HOMES
R•attort 645·6646
Want aJ results fM2-567
COMPANY
1i E.\ L1'1 >HS
SI :-0 l ' I·: 1 ~l·l ·I
673-4400
General · I 002 Grtteral 1002
3·8edroom home needs
creutive buyer with lols
of ambition. &!per loca·
tion. private yard, pC)O\
needs work. Transferred
owner will help finance.
Hurry, take advantage,
$55,900. Call 962-7788
~ KEY
_f\EALTOl\SilC
the land. $100,500 room lo grow. Located in
640.6161 BAY SHORF::'i. A great community Wllb pn,·atc
beaches. The pril'l' bas
been reduced to SGJ.900.
Call 673 -8550.
SPECTACULAR
VIEW
Large luxury adult oondo
with boat sl ip available.
Full security bldg. Pri.
swimming pool. 646-7711.
Ope.n E\•es.
-
Hoaffs l'Of" w. 1:Howse1 For We ~-~~••••••• , ··············-·-········ . ··············-······ . ~ . -G-rll 1001--' 1002 CotN ...... • IOJ " ······················· ···~··················-............. ·-·-..
..... Offor t' JJ40olMlr •
(Unlvenit>' Dr.) • • INTERVIEWlfC NOW OpenJ4n.lly y,
dt a.r;.:::: bd ·-~ cvstoUI Jllualve Seasoned Agellis
frple. hl&b beam C!lilD'(. lnvesti9ate Our ''Salesmen"
Oriented Proc;JrG111
Z\"t ba, m1D¥ trees on
76'xl24' lot. B1oc:t' wall
fenced. Auum&ble 1i:.
lsl. TD. Own/All..
"2·1212.
r~TYGIYB!>
DELIGHT
cooper a. cox corp
1525 mesa verde dr. reJ
c95ta mesa 540-9922
MESA VEJIDE21to.y,C
bedroom. ' Nth bomt:. With ZOlt2.6 ram.Uy room
for those special parties
entertaining at your 8'
bltn b•r under a
eat.bedral ope.n beam
ttilins. Covered patio
and lots or trees for
ptjvacy make this home a dream come~-OIJl
546-S8IO, AgenL
1002 Go-I002E~~~~~-•••••••••••••••••••••••
S32,500-Sl77
PER MO.
1nl·lude1 t ax•g ~ ln
s urance on 7'ft. GI exist-
ing loan. Anyone can buy
s ubject to. Jlwd noors.
frplc. cpts. d:r~.-Wood
shlngle roof. Obi ~aral(e.
Big lot . Cul l' homl'.
Hur •.
EMPTY NESTER
Children grown and left
home'? Try South Coast
• •••••••••••••••••••••• CO.LLEGE PARK
COIOHA DB. MAR 3 Br. 2 ba. lrg Uv rm & con AGE ram rm. Proles&deooral·
Lowest pnc.-ed home in ed . N•w erpL/ drp1/
Corona 4jel Mar on a wallpaper etc. Cov'd pat
duplex Jot. This charmer &: lrg pool s& yard.
is a spotless 2 bedroom MS-5741 aft6pm. home with open beam 1..:::-..:.:.::::::::!:=---
ceilings. brick fi.rt:placc mta Point 1026
and private yard. Double •••••••••••••••••••••••
car gal'age str~sed for A•ail.W. "'-d.
expansion. A short we.lk Jn Dana Knolls 3Bt·2ha
t o s hopping c enter. Lg yard w/pavedboalor
$6 1 ,000 . Cal l now . trlr pkg s p ace .
673·8550. -496-0685 /493-2161.
('.)11(1 1•1 9 • •! ' IU'~ tf"l pr Nl{'l•
[~:lfi*IHI Price ireatly ,.educed ..
Unobstructable view lot
above Quiel. Canoo
Restaurant. ss.s.rn>-•
iocluding lhe models are a a I -........ '?r --sold out, but we have ••••••••••••••••••••••• IHYESTME.tfJS
"'
Shores-Allthenew ones I Ibo 11 ~ 1006 J; •..,.H0••~1
highl y upgraded 3 & 4 ~N THE Bt:ACH, ch•rm-_ JJ-C714t 496-7711 bedTm homes with prices 1ng hom e w /rental on · •
1 s tarting olt $50.900. Norlh Bayfront, Balboa -, • -~I.
Amenities or this out· Island. 675-1679 Huntington IMCKll I 040
s tanding development 1n--. -0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 1
elude private lakl' con· Balboa Pnimula ,1 07 -J
II · . ••••••••••••••••••••••• M---~lthGw•• tro ed secunty entry, ~ pool. j:.icuzzi, clu bhse Bayfront Condominium 2 Large home. formal en·
and top quality construe· Br 2 Ba , DR. pool, dk. try, dining rm., family
tion. CALL now s.s6-261i0 security 213-:194-4293 rm. with frplc. Squeaky
•
SELECT Coronod~Mcr 1022 clean! Xlnl financing
••••••••••••••••••••••• available. Priced to aell PROPERTIES DllPLEX i -2 br units. atS7S,SOO
Choict: loe, So. of I-lwy. CORllNASSOC. MOVEIMFAST
Owner anxious on this
very sharp 4 br. New
paint, erpts, d rps &
many n1ore improve
ments . Priced to sell
quickly at $46,500.
~-OVERY ~Reoll1tot•
CALL 64$-5045
ABAMDOMED
CALIFORNIA
CLASSIC
Spaeious three bedroom
beach home · just across
from lush country clu b.
Unique living and dining
areas with cracklin~
co untry firepla ce.
ENORMOU S SUN
SOAKF.D KITCl·I EN
SUR R OUNDED BY
GLASS. Sep,arate master
and c hildrcns w1n~s .
1\1anicured rear grounds .
Walk to school. llurry! !
This can 't la.st. Just
$46,900. Ca\1003-6767 .
<Jill• 1•1 '' • r• ~ •u·• innr .,,q •
[®lij~Hil
Univenity Parit
FIXER UPPER
Lar ge 3 bedroom. 21".i
balh. quiet cul-de-sac
near schools & ma rket.
Hurry on this s pecial!!
Call540·1151
S79.500. Owner 548·53tl6 REALTORS 833-290.6
.. TWO houses straddle
t2) R-2 lots. Ocean &: ·
channel view. The park
at 1st & Carnation is your
rront y.ard. Quaint old
house at 426 BegQnia .
3-Br. 2·ba, hdwd firs.
Mstr bdrm/ba p'vt up-
s tairs.
.. Great renla1 property
at 2410 lst Ave 2-Br. 1-ba
v.·/g.a r. Already lsd. See
8AM lo 6 PM daily .
675-5•192 or 642-8584
Pr1n's. only.
3 Ir 2 Ba o..>i••
OML Y $89,500.
in an excellent South-of
Jlighway location on a
generous 451\. lot.
C<i ll usqwck.
644 -7211 . . '
,
$25,000
2 B e drm, l 'h bath.
Townhouse with blln
R J O, di s hwas her ,
refrig., ready to move in-
to. Veterans no down!!
won·t last. Call to see.,-.
Red Carpel, Realtors 1 536.8836 '
-1
·:I
FIX ITUP! ·j
Hard to find a fixer· in
H.B. Nice lol in ~ood...
location needs tender
loving care. 3-Bedrooms. -
under $50,000! 968-4456
PROMISE HER
ANYTHING-
but buy her this almost'
new hom e with coin·
ple tely upgraded in-
terior. Decorator carpels
&: drapes. Customized
ho me s he de serv es,
968·4456
Ready to ............................................... FHA APPRAISED
Fasl Di•-arilKJ
It 's hare! to (ii'id this Ii.ind
or luxury in Newport
· .at $42 ,500. 1,900 sq. rt. Beach for this nominal
of home. 4 bedroom, 21h kind of price. Newly de·
baths, large f;.im1ly room cor. 3 bdrm. condo. over-
with bltn bar. li\'in~ looking green Ja"·n &
room, d 1n1ni,: l~at1ng trees. with th;.irming
a r t'a 1n kitthf'n . i;ia rdcn patio Asking
Hardwood noon;. f\111y
JUST LISTED
$31,950
-HERITAGE ' • REALTORS S<l.250 DOWN CHI NA covE beaut. Move Into!!
4 Bedrooms. 2 baths. I ~~~~~~~~~~:! view, lfi blk to2 beaches. 2 ~room, 1 bath. Elec: ....
elB
macnab / Irvine
realty
THAT BICEMTENMIAL FEELING
Gra ce ful r e minder of early
American living. 2-story. 4 bedroom.
3 balh home. 31 root li ving room
w /used brick fireplace & hearth.
Charming bannistered stair\vay &
o~d fas~ion sash windO\\'S. Family
s ize patio & yard . $115.000. Lois Egan
644 ·6200 . < X70 J
ELITEEXECUTIYE
ADULTMOBILEHOME•••••
!"l• ratinj.f 2 bedrooms. familv
room. Every e xtra -more s torag'e
than y ou would beli eve_ Putting
course pool pool bowling
green. ['arty room pool roon1 .
Elegance galor e!!! And you must
see s uper location S32,50.0
"UNBELIEVABLE" ~ Lois Miller
642-8235. (X71 )
HARIOR VIEW -SUPERB
Front row Irvine Terrace w /Spec-
tacular View or f-l arbor. Catalina &
Sunsets' Sparkling pool in seclud ed
front courtyard ! 4 bedrooms, 3
baths1 mode rnized kitchen. F1 exible
financing. $225.000. Larry Oyer
642·8235. CX7 2>
A RARE RMD
.!>•ceptionally comfort.able Cameo
ffighlands 4 bi?droom' home s ur·
rounding lovely private yard. Priced
realistically at $87,Aoo. Martha Mac-
nab 642-8235. (X73)
'42412JS 644-6200 "' °"'""' Dtlwt .... Mtd11fll.ll
,.,....,. ~ Cttif#MI 0113
.iir cond1t1oncfl \\'on't S49.75o
1"'1 "' ""' ""c' · C. F. Colesworthv ..-...S U l'Ellll _R•allors 640-0010
f--1 OMES Lowest Price On
J8411 Cempus NB 549-11655
LINDA ISLE I •---------•!Bea utiful 3Br home
BARGAIN
hunter's ~ial
Near St. John s Church.
school & shopp111,.:. J
bedroom, ",th l.ari:c ex·
tra bonus rnnm Room
for trailrr. camper. liont
w /h1gh vaulted ceilings,
s unk en l1\·1n g room .
Designed for entertain·
1ng . Plus room for J large
boats NOW$189.500.
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670
or bikes (~111et t•ul-<le-sac 1---------=I street As kin,.: $12,500
Call ~0-1151
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
G~ne-rol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I
Kt~ . .\LTftKS
644-7270
JUST LISTED
.,.., Ideal r1rst home or fixer upper. U 3 Bedrooms, brick BBQ in rear
patio. Priced to sell. $36,500. Submit.
2328 E. Coast Highway, Corona d el Mot
1•11
-11·~ 1m•' ••«•ti
HOMCS fOft LNIMC lilfl"°OltK
•
T
Gracious dining plus eat-1
1
3 BR, l Ba , 979-3180days . tnc bltns. Completely re·
in g area in kitchen. done. Oversized garage ,
plumbing 2 yrs old -SOUND Of SURF OWN E R Harbor View with boat door and real'.' :
carpeting t yrold -2car llills 3 Br 2 Ba, Fam. ya rd access. Only r::ta~~:~~~lo~~all ~~e~e~ ~i~~~.0~1'1 :.~i1~~~\i~'.~·.::i000 =·500·
COUHTRY LIVING
5 +FAMILY
Huge 2 ~tory famil y
home. Close to i;olf
course &. coon.try cl ub, 5
Jrg bdrms. 3 belhs, f•m •
r0om & form•I dlnint.
Lrg lot It room for pool.
All term1. $f5.9'91 . -Walker Cloe
Roa l !•tel•
,
646_7171 brass fireplace for those Ch 8 lfi 11
'"l"f•,n•fJ -t1\fLJl'jlOiqN.lf' cool nights. Huge sun-arm1ng2 rcottagcon 962 ( ) · dec k. Assumable loan lovely St. w/rm. for ex· ·4471 :::: 54t5-8103. ·
illage Real Estate
also. Only $65.000. Call tra unit. Open daily 12-5. /
54Ml41 603 Orchid . $74,500. CouwtryDufch ·" c A"&,,•:::"c:.1 c:.64=5:.:·24=25=----1 c H A R M : d e l a i I e" I w1. Costo Meso I 024 :trchitecture, pictures-, •1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• que window treatments ••
Newport Beach
Great ror enlert.aining VACANT
around pool and patio. 3 l~~~~~~~~~~·I Huge bedrooms. 2 baths. F
Heavy open beam ceil·
ings. Li vi n~. fa mily,
formal dine +detached 3
room studio.
IH MESA VERDE
Sharp 3 bedroom . Very
clean. Giant h\'ing room.
On ly $44 ,500. Lowest
price in all Mesa Verde.
custom designed Fam 1 rm w /wi rm panelling.
floorLoceilingbrickfplC, I
wet bar. beamed ceiJ.
i ngs; book s helvest;
Formal dine, ma.ster
+children's suites, til~
foyer. Assume $35,000 V l\
loan or terms. B~r
Payments only $167. As-Won't last! World Real
sume FHA loan on this 1 _E_s~t-•_t•_.~..._-·_1_1_1 _1 ____ 1 6-39 es:646-4543 , large 4·Bdrm plus family
room home. CALL Rllr.
M0-3666
I ROENAC
I I
I HENWI Ill' ' I I I I' .
I VUCE R I.I • • OV'fl:rhe.,rd. 'We re•lly dcufl
I 14 I le"'" ebovl hi51Clty. I have 11
- - -'""f9•r wno thinki. the blv <14$h in ·29 1, • fo!k.ong
l~~~L;.,;.Ac.::C~A;..;J;..:;K;...~1 •bout • treln -." ,.,.,
-'--~'-~'-L''--'''-~j_,G ~~:-..._do;:!!~ ":::,,-j -rov .....,, h-lie!> NII J below.
!~""' """'"" """' '" I' f I' I' I' I _ 'H!-1' mv~•ts _ _ . . _ _
ti ~~~,:s~~' lllrl•s I I I I I I
SCRAM-Lm .....,.,..,; I• Clanlflc-5300
••POOL. 3 br. din rm. + 962·551 1 .
~~~~~~~a;;~~ !~!cig! "in@ I 0 ...
lot. Many! Many ! More •••••••••••••••••••••...,y
Extras!!! Owne r can UMIVERSfTYPARK 1
suppl y rinancing. On ly Edinbur~ 3 Br + lge •;
$59,900. A~. 642·2221, s tudy off master Br, 21fi l•
tmsg&4G·9666) B.a. central aJc, w/elet'.'•1"
Eostslde
3Br . i.~am rm, walk to
schools. Priced to sell
$49,500. AgnL 548-Xlll.
tro (ilter . Full'~J
wallpapered w/CU.!l.. dbl"
drps, lolly crpt 'cl'.'"
Kitche nAid d shwsl}r
ne,w waler bealcr.-frplc:7
a uto gar. opener, Beaui..,.-
By Owner, lge 4 BR, 2 Ba. Bk yd Ir: patio. Looks ll~
Mesa Verde. Aski n g ModelJ1ome.BestBuy n
_S4_7_,900 __ . S5_7_·5_1_7_6 ____ 1 all Irvine Area .
MUSTSELL!
Owner. $55.450.
Ea.o;t Costa Mesa. 3BR. I
RA . c harming older 18741 VIA SIENA
home. Lge fenced yard. Lovely Turtlerock
$46,5-00. Assume l~n bal Bdrm, 2·bath, fam
of $37.000 at 9"k. S48·9877 room, enclQS(ld grounp.,,
or 833·2161, ask for Bon· Atrium. Jdeal Ooor pla'\
, .;c•o.l•::·--------I t r leisure Uvtng. 1
,. BOND REALTY ' •
...... , ....
·~ YAlEl'O .••
4-Bdroom. 2-bath
CALL 64~S045
,.
GALLERY DPllOMES' • 831-aut • ,,,.
t11oon
TURTLEROCK, C'ampus
view, Plan 1v-tBt 2~Ba ·J
Upgraded & xl;u 1ne·
land . $TS,OOO. Ph !
83.1·944,/Eve,&18-13811 -
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104 ....................
TUBTLBRDCK
TOWNllOUSB ~-• dell. Former
1114dtl. Alr --.ldfocn 1Ue aprialklen and ua11uu. A lllJSr saa. 114,toO.
CALL NOW
752·7315
' H1uan'-S. jll1u1et..,,._ Htr1H,_S. lwc1a1 Pl'''''' 2000 H111nUafM 't d .............................................. , ............................................... ··········•············
•••••••• ~. f"9MIC:,..rtle_. toii •••••" .... 1 ... aUlttl'S-N.-CIUtlldelteu" JJOJM 1111U.fw '''rd ltrui"U• ·+rd Afel...,.,. '',.
•"•-• ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• •••••••\·,-...... ••••• ........ (It ) tall • (J) •-••••••·---••••• •-••••••••••••--4 •• •••••-•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• .... •-•• ******* lllR. Gd. ,._i., •I fl ;; ....... "40 Harport .... l.Uf l•1•P1 I h Jff7
1 S1••11 &»o STAaS ;:,.~~-OAb. -·-•••••••-··--·-••••••••••••--.. ··~ .. ••••••••••• ............
•4 BDIUIS. + dlntn1 rm.-~ _ .. u11<-. """': LIDO ISLE . . ' BR, a ..._ <M ..
*'BDRMs. + ramll,vrm.S124 ,soo ... CANYON •UNITS t •'• =P~.;. ':!.;..~. LDY<11 •.,. abo-\;'.'·~:~:::. :•5BR.,dio. rm.+ ram rm. surr~ .... ·-~ SIZ0.000 Ooota ...... ar. 1'\ Ba, J-t<uul -IN. Ul-lm ffpl. Pollo iu-. kiL tal. ll•la"' -... •5 BR., pier l<ellp, lllbold. 9225,000 Hard-llooniDU ~ ......, tri-In ~· family wokome 01'17S.MU. dbl. au . .0.0111 -Ill oi ..., _ .... _ *•8fD + fam. rm .• pier/allp$325,000 t~:b'!n.:nt~~t.n.:,e0, floe COila Mtn ••· c.ia ..... 2 Br. vacul Sbr'. a,., huae 11\Uler br. SSSO Yrl1. 111·lllt; BACHELOR. l Mk'° ._1
•• RMS. + ram. rm., pier /Slip ,,..,, o.w .... ..,. .;,,. ::·::"' ... wi::.,~ -. mo. stnal••· eblldroa, pe1a l7M711 or ...... utU. Ind. au.
Primeloc.aUon.$400,0IO of lOtb faJrwar from excba.111• Nall. Low C:C.ta Mes.alletBr.2 OK.Barbua.~oraercoodonrHoq.Quiet. mo.'YrlJ.175-"llN..,._
DAA.YPllOT ..
•8BR.,l'ilc.rm,pler/Sllp$810,000 private loulioa. 2 .... nc1. Hard"' but ba,kldo•p«aok.SOOO. 173·57 ... AI\. pvt, lrplc. Wld/pet olt. ROOMY&•,...•llt-0..-
Bedtoom•. a b1tb1. •aluts·calloowtor.,,. Kuo\. Beach z Br,** BEAU11PUL t 6 2 Encl pat. pool. Low p1 .. anttkiol'Y.lew lll0-1 HOME LEFT! LIDO.~~ .. ~~£.~ IUS.000 view .1sz.noo. Gf:••• rard. ,.. _, Slor1 homH, I • • crime. PCJO. ,,..,_ mo. Incl. uW.l!Mliia
Thi. ••w 1,. ---••-a _-&1 644-1766 INVES1XEHI' OIVWON Newport llucb 1 br bd.rm•. 2"' balho, lam SZOO 000 Ylow •-P~~~ PO·-•· 1 ~ -~ 3 BDR bU4 bo k rm frplc•, •et bara, ' ~ .... ,... u"• .. e -•
home in Un1v. Park hu
2
BDR MS., 2baths, -9.600 Cll• .. •
1076
Cche S200 me. par nr. utility rma, Ira yard. ••d•r SI 000 ••· yrly. n.o pell. ~Ul pct ::r.pxi~:1;!\:~~v~ MS.,2 Baths,$11S,000 •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• Newr.'rt Be.eh 3 Br 2 Fl-om SUS. up. No ree. 6lI .. 07t1 or 121~. 17J·JIJI. 1St4
1,; BR"•, flnllbod'b:..; SalesmanReadyToServeYou "SAHCLaeCTI Ba, amlly hotno, trflc, CALL .. 8-Ull 645-7102 Muomar.
rm. II\ Balhl, lormal LIDO REALTY Buchll.ae .. Toplo<alloo lh•1hli,-. yard,aar•se.sns.)'l'lr $315. YRLY zo..oce00.$lli5· YRLYlllrd~
dlninl rm I< lamllY an. JJnYlti•u.. u • 67'7' overlookln& beach I< ...... 2400 Gant .. Grove z br, 1"' ,_t.ftplc bll.Ga rein& UUI paid. 4IO Hardla&-Tbe price ta '84.$00 -.-... -aOO pier. 2"-Br, lilK ba, j\Jll ••••••••••••••••••••••• ba ,amaUpttok.S:UIO. ear .u . .» ' ' Nokkllorpeb5CT•ll»
leasehold •ll>ebulldtt ~ * * * **** ... J l.ARGE lot lnSon Moriu Sant• An• 1&•2 Br,2car · •nxious lOHlll ~ ,,. .. lo Ille-·· Great C 1ara1e,kldl<*.$1ll5. H•11011-w CosteM... 1724 , . inveatment. 149,SOO . < reatlloe are.a). All Member of Board or .,. -.-•••••••••·----•••••
PAUllHOMIS -portllffcli 1069Newporl-106; 492-4121 uUUUOlln •pald,walk· Realtor" Beller Busl. REALTYINC .. S-Br.Z·ba.$4911.mo.Nr. $35.W.&•
552·1100 ··--•••••••••-••-••--.•••••••••••••••••••••• BJ!R'tlli\J1E2ritBY ins dl•la~e to Lake nMI Bureau,Olambttot' 714/&46--1i11 poolli.park.873-l&OlACl. 1----'----'-'"---I REALTORS ~e .. ~!!Y..-· .. !!? ... No1'as"t1 Commerce. *•SITV\Hl ... '°,..•a11dl!,R~A•·'I Turtlerock. 4..BR. Z\\ Ba __..... .....,._. Laree S BR, t:W BA, good LIDO ISLE, Lux1.1rtous • • ._..,. ..
ram rm, dln rm, 2 atory INJERYIEWJNG NOW New 2 BR. 2 BA, Ooado.1;~for~Du::•~ne=·;;:;f;;l ~~~5~3~M~5~0~5~~~1 area . S32S mo. cAtl SsBr bome. $1200mo. •PhoneServ, Hld pool z frplc's, comm. pool Dbl. far. $0.500. Pn!t. 962·'471A&ent Al\. 17$-0J.23 •ChildrenSeeUon
Cul ,de·sac. $69,950 Hlli.11447~. p l•a1 l.a.d lZ06 •~OFFweek'lrenl
Se S ed A nts AlM 5'11tt&S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Village Real Qt.ale 3 BR, Den. Nr Beacb, w /ad
7'2·0036 3 80 ge J-Condo ; White Waler LGE Mod. 3 Br, Frplc, NoA&entsFee S4SO . mo . Yearly. ZS?•NewportBlvd,CM
RIDTILEIOOF Cophtr.o 1011 Country Club; beauUtul· 1ar. ~. yr\y. Vacant! •Beach/Main 67S.Sl12 SG·97S5orl45-*1 D ~ •a-NE Investigate Our "Salesmen'' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ty decorated 2 bdrm .• 2 uo Pearl, 6t0-43a7 3 BR, 2 BA ... $31l CK v '"~ "' GROWJNGFAMTU'"! baths. Goll, ltnnla 6 •Bol1a/F.dwards BA BA ,privacy +,z 20J5fzl12l•CM
$52,150 Oriented PnMram s bdrm .• den, family rm., pool. Move, lo COd d . ',er ·.v•ll ror )'l"ly. l block 4 BR. 2 BA ... $1SS ~:n .. 1e e.·~r c~, r!~ 1 BR P'urn, 2 tra c:iolela, E~cellent. Irvine loca· "'-T rorm. dininl rm. Ocean $49,SOO o ay. Bar & palio, •Slater l~ach " ' ' 16 coslae beil, prlv. tion! Fabulous red ti! view ntoCl\ft *9 E 67J.120010-4pm 4BR,2BA. .. -yard.~~N7°8 •ina81es. '27 nr rm.-~-•-
I
' 2 S · ................ dden n'!:':"'hard mo. -• 113. y appt. GAU• ....
Gorgeoua Spanish re AMCHO&Atil 3BR.2BA. .. sns on y. w/1tora1e. AduJta onl.)',
roo. tory entry. ~ Ccwowocle4Mw llJZ •McFa 1-1 room1 . e ncl . 11r.
bric~ fireplace. Forma INYUTMBCTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• •GarfRield/Bushard HBR VU, 4 Br, 2 ea, om,,•.i ..::"°c..:"="~·-------
dini u.c area. All til • t'.'IC 3 Br, 2 Ba, all bltns, crpts, 2 B ,lBA ... $285 Liv, & Fam. Rm. J81
kilcben. Gala ta mil F 714~ 496-771 I drps, frplc, $350 mo. lse. 963-456"1 Ol'963-1788 Port Stirling. Comm SUS CASITA.S
room . 3 Queen aiz: 636-l908.eves. Pool $52S. 675-0171 Avail Laree nicely furn. bach.
bdrms.,or 2BR +love s.t.A.no 1080 lealhtate l"Nw 3244 ll fl le 1 brs. Adulta only, no den , a1 you wish! Im ••• ••••••• ••••••••••••• ir.w ..__ "'tOO VIEW tfOME ••••••••• •••••••••••••• I c:.:.:.:....--------1 peu.. 2110 Newport Bl.
I l he ***D ,W~* ... c.._..... • in Corona High.lands. 3 Redecorated 3 BR, 2 DA NEWPORTHEIG~ macua e everyw re · M lllll'l' ** ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR 2 8 II rd n•Q includes air condltionin For prices and interest.to WANT Vacant R-4 or C·Z • a, sma ya • home. Nu landspt.. 13:iQ. 3 Br, frpl,fenced yd, MW LOW WEEKLY RATES & gara"e door ope ' d Both 11 formal dining, .much mo. Ask tor BeY or Joe paint In&: ouL ...-.. szt becllfl'Ns.ln
'I" ner. come own. . wt Prop. Costa Mesa area. more . Sub mt t on 963·4567 or""'"' 17116 ~ Park like yard. Fu\ probably k~gorng up .. · KAVE Ocean Front In· children. &M·ntlAgt. ,,,_. El Modena548-5041 2010 ... ..,.... lh'd
price $.52,SSO Call fast .. not down. 2 Bedrm. 2 come. Marina del Rey Right on San Joaquin Golf BEAUT. Bhifa Condo. 4 Costa Melo
752·1700. f 540-9922 b a Ii n CI e, Ito r Y peninsula. Priv. only. COZY Z br collage, frplc. C 2B d I a:I BR 2\.4J b lmmed 642-2'1 I
QPfN Ii! Q•" s ,(.N 10 ltN'C f ' cos a mesa Townhouses still at only Write p .o. Box 845, rent or lease option $175. le~se~: cen~;aJ ~~:~yr~ cp·f'. $450. :o.. 644.1uf' Shtdlos & I .. ~. [~. ··,1t~1·11 ~1 ,,.121w,9d50 .pesNewetcc~~k ,ts, Venice.CA. 90291 497.2930 ly .675-40$9. •FREE ••--, ; · ra , . ""' or -""-'---'-'"'-"-----1 BEACH. 3+Maids. Chan· UUK:ID .. ··' ''l : 1 ~~~.~~•••••~~.48Hewportleoch 1069 Frank,839-&121Agcnt. Rltltals ~~~~D~f!<;.~=~s~ BEAUT.NewRanchoSan nel view. Decorato :~1f:,~:ities . -,·»--·-•••' • •••••••••••••••••••••••Mobile HOtnel ••••••••••••••••••••••• Joaquin Twnhome. 2 Br, sharp. Furn or unturn. ~..a
1 O $645 /mo.Tbeparkat lSt. 2'h ba. 2 sly. Overlooks $850 •HeatC'.IPool
BA YFROHT •• ~~~·~·••••••••!~. ~:!:'!~.~-~•••••• Y& aCraJ~a~odn :dYDt/i' ;,roa .. t golf course & lake. s,575. W~~~rfront llomes :~u:~!i~~~~. 4IR.+11&1 EMERAU> IA Y
I We orrer this older home
on ocean side or Coast
Hw y ., on park-like
grounds : this is a n
estate·type home. Ad -
vanC'e app't. required.
Offered al $17 9.500.
Financing to be negotiat·
ed. Exclusively by
Corbift.McctM
Realtor1 644-7662
2CustomHome JI S47·7044 f55Z·oos.5 Call631·1400 ....... • BAL.BOA PENINSULA ViklftCJ Dtliae Gftwral 02 plaster walls, like you •Pbooe Service
Excellent location on the Fully insulated. added ••••••••••••••••••••••• neYer see anywhere RENTALS HVH Palermo 4 br, D.R .. -----=----
Bay &:only Vt block to the screen room 8x27 +Bachelor mobile $75 ., anymore. 3·Br . 2-ba, 2 BR.2 Ba ...... $350/360 F .R. 2'w'I ba, $500. Owne •Shodya...f'ool•
Ocean. Each home has 4 man)' other added extras Costa Mesa. $150. 1 br, mstr bdrmlba. 'pvt. up. 3 BR. 2 Ba ...... 5400/425 _ .. _<>_0008~~------l 1&2 Br $115. Up. Adulla,
bdrms , 4 baths & $10,500 CdM .$175lOP&Owinler. stairs See8AMto6PM 3BR,2Ba ...... $3tl5 /450 SBr 2 Ba ,Fam.Rm .. Oin. nopets.177E.22odSl.
Gallery. 2 fireplaces, Roy McCcrdle bachelor:tt lo 4 brs. daily. 615·5492 /642·8584 4 BR. 21/t Ba ........ $450;1 _~;·J~J~'~~~·~~~·~r~~~j;645:;:~-3~!3~2:: .. ~ .. ;-~;;· ;;:::~ b I R It 1810....___. Balboa . Unfurn N.B. 2&0 t rf t S600 ~et ar, u tra modern ea or ...._.. ... t"""" • $295., 2 br child, pet. Un· .~OR rent 3 br, l ba, 1100 en wa e ron ·· Mod. $475.644s4844.
kitchen & private pier. Costa MesaS48-7129 furn H.B. r')QC. 4 br. pool, sq. (t., frplc. uni.um. ex· l[ RAISOR l BR Furn 1185 Fee land. See at 1200 _..... t to; " t 2 BACK Bay area. Beaut. 1 -•-r bit .........t -'k East Balboa Blvd., or AcreocJe for Ide I 200 kids, pet. Fee Ag\. cep s ve re ng, car .....,... o ns, .....,., W1U
call 615·8120 ror more de· ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOMEAMDERS garage, fully crptd. $360. Rr 11fY ~f ~ v~e;s~~pei~t~~~s. to shoppin g . i,;, m i.
tails. AVOCADO LAND. $2,080 *.1.42-9900• monlhly ,phone498-2647 UU. beach.931W.19thSl. • 4S23Campus Dr .. Irvine cpl!!. drps. $375. mo. lSt 548-0t92 DR •~•nc per/AC . Rancho Cal. Small 1 Br. crpt. drps, c v II Sho c last+ clng832-6443 ~~~~~~~~~ ,.,_ OCEANFRONT2 8d + 2 sork Sellerf\n.81o!i"';;.lnl. OCEANFRONTlbr$185 .. rncdyard.S2SO. ampus a ey P tr.-"-'--'-=""""'--=
Cr escent Bay Point: a Bd garage apt. $125,000. Tight S forces sale. pets ok, Lag. Beach. Alsol ---~ .. ~·'.:-~'.:·---I ::::::C::--=A:-L;-L-=-8_3_3-8::-6_0:-0-~I 2 STORY 3 IDRM 2 BR. 2 ba. No pets or
QPfr,111<1 ·HSfuNroB1t•<f• nearly new home; un· Owner,645-J65S Owner714·67&.S734 Bal. 2 br, $250 .• kids. UNIVPrkTerrTwn~.2 28a,ClubhouM!w/poo1, childre n. Pref. mature [~' .
. _..i ~ db~~hf~n~ :t~~s.i.n ;~ --.-.-.. -'-d-'Mc..ce_w-'0..,..~--.--1 -A-'P--'P-'R~. ~o~x..:..:~,~.~o:..:.:a_c_r_e_s_,I ~i~~'."s,~C:1e;:1~:re 2~~ ~~-~~!>' !seP= ~~·, ~-b:52~1~~9re;!c~Y. =i;73.;1a1:1S:~.an. adults. SlBS.&a-5848
IRVIMIE-$61,900
Quiet cul·de·sac. Curved
c_ement drive. 2·Slory
l1led entry. Massive
brick fireplace. Formal
dining room. Gourmet
kitc b en w ith bar .
Secluded master suite.
Lar ge den or office!
Separate laundry room.
Front & rear patio!!~
Prime Univ. Park loca-
tion. Anxiously asking
just $61,900! 1-lurry ·Call
752·1700 to. pre,•iew.
. · at s. +detached guest l ~ Olk from ocean Yic1n1ty 69th & Alameda & CdM 1 br, util pd , ll/1,NO PETS.6il-9179. C quarters. $475.000 Quality construction in lluntington Park. Only singles ok. Agt . t-~ee. 2l3· 722·68IO days ltofr · Need posh qual'tenl? Lge QSG de Oro '========O'.I TURNER ASSOC. s111 .ooo. Own(<r will take 10 mile!! from L. A. City 979.5430 Costa Mesa 1224 1 -'Sh'-'ip~p'---3 br. fam. 21/t ba condo. ALL UTILITIES PAID
TURTLEROCk llOSN. Cs!Hwy,Laguna 10% down end carry 2nd 11all. Pvt party will sell ••••••••••••••••••••••• * REMTALS • frplc , tenni!I . pool . Compare before you
TOWHHOME 494-1177 T.D. 'fhis oiler will go at 9Cr per sq rt or trade lalboctlslaftd 1106 Newport Heh environ. 3 UN IV . PARK jacutii . view , $550. rent. Custom desianed
fast.l..oc.at207 -3()t.hSt. for Orang e County ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jge8r,28a,Fam.Rm.2 642·0042 featuring; ~cellent location nr. • • HUGE BEAMS P roperty . Prin. only 2 Br, convert. den/br, 2 rrplc's, lge pallo w /gas 3 BR. 2 Ba · · · · · ·· · S395 -"-:=..."-'=-------' •Spacious kitchen with ~,'"nheswch3oobdl ~mUC, 1
2
· Nbae.ar&· high ceilin~. sunk~~!'-~~ 2 beach units $52,500. Gd please. 646·2652 Ba, bltns. frplc. xlnt loc. BBQ. s pac. back yd. Well TlfE TERRACE San Cle........ 3276 indirect lighting • and oversi,ed living income. R·2 cor lot. Gin· Winter. 67.>-7613. <'Bred for cond. Steps to 3 BR. 2 Ba .· · · · · · · · · · $425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Separate din'g area
luxu-leat .... cs ·incl. wel r . F I .... I-P -~, 140 GREENTREE HOMES •J ..... oom have panoramic n Y or tun e. r l r . • .... sa I ~r We5tc11rr Plat.a, on quiet Pres.lits. Condo 2Br, 28a, •Home-Like &Lora0 e
bar atrium &trash com· . · 675-7520 . •••••••••••••••••••••• So. Bayfrnnt 4-Br. 2V1ba. 3 BR 2 Ba S3'15 r •
P
aci.or.Pricedat _,..OOO. views o<, city and .coast. culdesac . $480 mo. • ··········· Pool, Ylew, ease . •Privatepatl~ _.,, Something special ----------I PRIMEBA.MK Winter. $.550. mo. Lora,54=8~·09='°~·------3 BR,3 Ba .......... $42.S $215 /mo 714..s?S-3.Wi •Closedgarw/slorage
C b .1 SI OOO BUIU>I..--. VanccRltr.67J.4062 1-DEERFIELDHOMES . . ' •MarblePullman
WEltAVERENTALS ustom wt. ?5. · lll GCANYON ~ '"Acre 1 br. ul1·1 pd. ap· 38R 21).z B "'25 <-J M a y t r a d c ooo '~ • a.········~ ~ 11°" •Kingaize Bdrms
552·7000 ZAGRODZKY Reallo•. Outstanding Value S Sl .050,y · 1 Lux~ry Cottage yrlyh, $36S. ~Ins. $180. 4 Br, 2 ba. Rancho San Joaquin Capistrano 3278 • Poo 1. Bar be q u e !I · • Popular Monaco Mod I 172,000. ear Y antiques. sunken eated rplc , ki'ds, pel, fncd. 2 BR 2 Ba ""75 494'8611 e · ·' · · · · · · · · -••••••••••••••••••••••• surrounded with pl ush reduced $10.000. Lovely 2 Grdeat Newport location. watcrbed. 613-7008 garage. 3 br, fam rm 3 BR. 2 Ba ........... 5.25 ELEGANT Upgraded land!lcaping
By Owner, Great ocean,
coastline view. 2 Bd .
f a m .rm .. l i.,; ba ..
$59,000. 497·3164.
story 3 b De Ho Te •luberl & Assoc. w /frplc. kids & pet . $23.4>. c d , r ane me Real! 67"aU>n LIKEnew4br 3baorJ 552·7500 on o./\tC.2br.11hba, Adults.Nopel& w /3 car garage. Don't · ors. """""" · 2 br , child, singles. pet. DtW, stv, cpt, drps, pool, t BDRM $220.
wail! Act now! $120,000 Commercial brid~ ~a, ;t1 71j · kitc~~n rn<'d . Fee agt. red h ,111 R49a3r.~~29dults . no pets. $250. 365 W. Wilson 642-1971
Property 1600 ~bq.1~ ;;0 fSe. ~~~: 10
' HOMEFIMDEIS .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •642-9900• 2 Br, partly fum. Cpl.I,
BA
STEPS TO BAY-OPEN 3 realty Spacious 3 BR. 2 Ba . drps. $190. mo. Adults. no
AllGOHE!! LG9U11aMiC)Uel 1052 YfRONT Br, 2 Ba. FM Rm, Patio LOVELY cul-de -s ac Avail Oct. J. Lease. pets.642·1154
They wasted no space in••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT SHORES Office building, spec· 328Sapphire. 644-0954. street. 3 br, l ~ ba. stv & ~ Adlls. $400 lncl. water,1-'-"''--"-'-':..:.----
making this versatile L'k ., ..,_ 1 An area with piziaz, lhat tacular view, executiv~ Belbo p •-·•-3107 refrig .. lge encl. yard. l --=~====----·I trash . putting green, Hwdin4Jfon leach 3740
Pt1ul W Bru111ficld
& A'>~ot 549-8505
noor plan. use it as as I e "ew ..-.. w. has : z lge. pools. tennis offices. a en-S340 . Near schools . pool. •••••••••••••••••••••••
bd rm., 2YI bath or 4 3Br, 2Ba. upgrd'd cpts, cts., clubhouse + walk to Reduced. $300.00J. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548·4411 . ~!'!:':~~~~ ...... ??~~ A.t1ent 493-1137 WEEICL Y RATES
bdrms. and bonus room. drapes. palio, lndscpd. beach!~ llLL GRUNDY Duplex lrg upper l br. difi· E utl •··~-••• soo 495 .. 995 W h · 1· ed · h h the h EASTSIDE n I EMERALD IJay . pvt . Condon1iniuna XK •e.aii~ It's attractively decorat· -, . . e a\le spec1a 17. in R alt 675-6161 ws r. crpt, rmo l. • nr ew ux. I ed and landscaped for s a I es & r e nt a Is in e or-Yrly. 673-2039. duplex. 3 Br. 2i.-..i Ba, Din. bch, tennis. poolA lg. Z br. Unfunl Jhed 3425 727 Yorldowft lfyd
low maintenance. $57,SOO *WE KMOW * Newport Shores since * SAN CLEMENTE Rm. P\ll. yd. 2 car gar. r r PI . deck . Yd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach Blvd al Yorklown LAGUMAMIGUEL 1963: . , . l.ogunahoch 1141 Quiel residential a rea Whitewater vu 558-3030 BrandNew,Condo.38r,2 53t.-G411
•IEST• WEKNOWTIIEAREA 4,000Sq .,ft.build1ng1deal ••••••••••••••••••••••• $425.645--7888 . &644 ·1815 Ba.2cargar.dkbalcony STUOIOS&llls
552-7500
red hill
realt:y
THE BEST-TRY US! fo~ furniture or other re· LEASE $160 0()0 Beach & pool. S3SO mo. 962·8767 : F II K'l h NO R TH VIEW -1 tail. o~ Del Mar: heart.or Condo. £or ,OOs mo. un· N.B. Environment. 3br. Ocea nfront North La~una eve. 968-0SRI • u l c en
Exceptional buy in this :r~~esS.S~~~nl~ if,i~e. shop~1ng. Loading doc.k, fur : 0 r S 9 5 0 ( u r . 2ba condo. Pool. npce, Cove. 4 Bd. J ba, frplc. -•Healed Pool
4·8r,or3&den,famrm, allsizcs&designs par~1ng . $99,500. Will Oceanrnt.3 br.2 ba.2000 $375 . No children . deck, patio. steps to SAN Juan 2 Dr, 1113 Ba •LaundryFacilities
din rm, Mt. view home. Askaboutour consider lease or lease sq ft wctbar frpl Sec 543.3512 . Beach, newly painted. condo. Oshwhr,disposal, •Free Utilities Prof'l y decorated & option .492·-4121 · d' · ' ·· $850. Winter. St.000. 2 car encl. gar., pool •FreeLinens ldscpd. Many·extras in· GuaranteeSaleProgram BERT•IAHENRY guar .Adults.544·7678 AVAIL.. 3 br. 2 ba. J'-1esa Yearly.Nopets.49<1 ·6'152. privgs $225.75S·9'165.ext •TV &Maidserv.avad ~ eluded. $69.950. CAYWOODRE.41.TY REALTORS l Bd. Penthouse Condo. Verde home. $350. Agt. 227 •Dar-B-Quc ~ LogunaHHJuetRealty * 548·1290 • CondorniniumsfTown· Viewing Main Beach. 540·1720 Ocean view. 2 Bd , 2 Ba . •PhoneServicc .~~~~~~~~~~~~]~:.:::'.::.;;~;;,;o~ $450 c n ( 1 6 Den. $385. 499.;,n()CJ or 2 BR nr Pool, gar, H.B. •l Miletoocean 830·5050 496·404 ~ housesfCM",saie 1700 ·mo. a rom Z· Mesa Verde. 3br, 2ba. 546-4681 . 1Talbert & Newland )
LaCjuna leoch I 048 BY OWNER-48r, 2400 sq · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4S4·0066. --din .. lrg kitchen. $350mo. $330. mo. 847·2872 BEAUTIFUL 1 br furn
••••••••••••••••••••••• ft , beaut lndscp, glorious r ......... ~ .,,. HORTH LAGUNA Newport leach l 169 642-2356. IRAMD MEW apts $165 & $175. Spanish
Custom home by owner. view. Must leave state CONDOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAMVIEW Townhouse style bldg, pvt encl gar, ~.Be~. 3Qu8di·r2 ~a , immed. $87 ,900. 831·0218 layfront Whitewater Views· 2 & W t h L:t?o ~1t; b ,
3 g~;~g!. ~~·u\~_15N0 b~~!: 4 DR. 3 Ba. Executive •• ~~~':'!i,1!'::! ..... ~~~~ ~i s~~~r~nda'.];: ~d~tk
an view. a I ies o Mi1·•--lflejo I 067 Sharp 2 Bedrm. bdrm uno·1s rrom •~ 000 a c e a ~o Y. szso. mo. 1933 Anabeim llome. with all plush 28 2 b f I W. or Beach oil Staler. $2"000 tax credit MVn VIEW Bo tSI' · ....... · Wntr.3br.2baBayrront. A · 6463100 amenities . Year lease. • r. a, rpc. ~ar.
Owneri Builder anxious:••p•••••••••••••••••••• s8?~ •P 420 Cypress, Nort 673·3096 /21:J..57J.2484 \e, -$425.645-6392 pool.adult,pctOK.$290. 842·7848 ~lake offer! Open hous BY OWNER Spac;,3 Br. 2 · Laguna Deluxe Townhouse, 38r, Tustin 962·5680. ----------
Sat. &Sun. 12:30-4 :30 Ba, "El Dorado . AfC, Call 675-7225 OCEAN FRON! 3 BR 2 11;, ba, rpts. drpi;. bltns. Laquna MIC)Utl 3252 1 Br Adult Garden Apt Tiai·uana.498-l383. $47,900 .830-8298. WATElfllONf . BA, new paint,. crpts, Pvt palio, dbl gar. Nr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• DuplexesU..._.,. 3600 w /pool . Across from HOMES drps,etc.$4SOw1nteron· so. Cst Plaza. $295. Beaut . 2 br . 21,'l ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• LakePark,S152.pcrmo.
BY OWN_ER . Swecpin~Mewporfleac.h 1069 zulwc:a..i~ Jy or $650/m o yrly . 545·4163 . townhome. F'rplc. rncd BALBOA Penin. Year· _536 __ -7_4_4_7 ______ _
ocean view, cathedral ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~e..r+> 675·4534 yd, pool fa cil. 2 car gar. round 3 br. 2 ba . frplc. Like new 1 br nr bch be&'!' ceilings. 4 BR +OPEN daily 1921 Kings 111416..llltCI' ----------l3 Br house. Z ba. frplc. S360 . Sandy, 4!HI0240 ~~~~e . $350 . mo Cpt. drps. bltns: frpl:
family rm. 2200 sq. rt. h . HousesUnfunlisMd bltns, crpts & drps. No 8·5pm.495-470'J.6·10pm& jacuzz:i&pool.592-5813
l.'lefully decorated. Road . Breal tak.1ng pels 55 16693afl S k d • h b •-ThcBluffs;earlyarea $$$$S~••5555 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · -_1 wee en 5· 2 BR, 2 Ba. CdM, no $95 000 645-3374 or ar or w ocean view. igu, L-a leoch 3748
497
.i
564
· New deluxe 4 br &. (am l ·Story38R.2 B.a. it legal ~ Prices&interest Gneral 3202 Dana Point 3226 GotfCouneVu-#2 children or pets. $268. -~·
-'-'='-------I rm home w /custom __ S5~'~·000c.cc_A~gt,_.640-__ ssoo_c~-I keep going up, up, up !•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Spacious new 2 Hr , 21,-<:i _mo.544·6800<Susie) ~';~~····.~·;;;·•••••••••
Ocean View 2Bd, 2 Ba. features thruout. Agt. Want ad result.; 642_5678 Westill haveafewsinglc FREE FREE SeasideCondo Blf:. Twnhme w/all the 3 BR, 2 Ba. in CdM, no up/$6().u!,1k~~e~i8!:~:
Afch Beach Heights .1-;:'¥1=9~.S=ll99=======J..:========:::;~I story, 2 bed.rm. 2 bath •ProfessionalServi<"e• New 2 BR , 2 ba.den, wet pnv~cy or home. Wood pets or children $320. 1435 N. Csl Hwy494·2508
$60k By owner. 400-21091 Townhouses at o nl y •LAHDLP.RDS• bar, pool. Avail. now on burn1n~ frplc 1n hv. rm . mo.644·6HOO
or.546·4681. $EEK & FINlf MllitarySl•nl' $2 1,950. Ask for Frank, Hamefii*n * lease at $475 Mo. Adults form. din rm. cusl. shag l ~=-'-"-='------IOceanfront year-round
White Walwr lflew
x rnt location enhances
thia hand.tome 4 bdrm ..
2~ ba., 2-story home;
decks, beams & open
stairway give il a v~r)'
spacious. outdoor reel·
iqa:. See it today at
$\qfl.000
.A-Gian.
REAL ESTATE
'J()l' (,I•""' Y" )I
1. l • l • ' l , ( I It.
, Perfection
ltome exudel pride of
arlis t le architect
owners . Stained glass.
an studio, 1azebo, hdwd.
noor. 3 bdrms. $74,500
WtJlaia Charmer. l Bd,
lr~lc, privacy. Ocean
Ylg, 1611,SOO. 494-338.I
IJNWARHASBOOTHl'"SOWI.
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AWOL. CHOW HITCH
ROOT CAMP C'IVIES Kl' RRA11!il IJOCPAC'F. !ilHAVF.TAJI,
CMOPPF-R FllLDSTRlr !ilW/\8
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Enjoy much l•rJfr ·•S.tk .t fu1d .. DU11lt' •~th ,,.,., ,ti()
dillCfl....,~fl per plontl 1'1 •n •ll·rw• M-ri~ 61 'l~·,,.rt ~ltt'
Tomdt"r ,·oiurn" I. 0 1'hd CTI. M.nd SI ror tM'h. m•lt•n11 rhfl:•1
peYl~t' 10 "Stfk It fimt .. in tAf'f ()f Thi~ l\f'W'lop.tf'l"r
839·8321 Agent. 642 9900 only . crpt & dr~s thruoul. Avail. Oct . 1. One year bachelor. Sls:i. mo. Util.
• CORBIN, IleaJton> Super kit w 1sclfclean1n1t I ease. 3 B ll . 2 Ba, pd. 53~J.0321
Duplexe•/ Callfornla·sLar~est flJJ.2906 644·12'71 dbl oven. dshwshr At · charmer in Olde Corona
Onih sOle 1800 •Rental Service!• tached 2 car J;ar. w/auto de! Mar. Atrium. patio, LARGE l ·Br. WoodACove
••••••••••••••••••••••• ,--,. Fountain Vmley 1234 opener & low maint rc1:1r frplc. Upper Wlit. $400 area. $265/mo. ARCJ-1
•• FOUR·PLEXES ••: ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mo. l·l arbor Investment BA y R.E . 499.2277 l'if~h~~·~J'~:'; lj\; :.~1iH.'r~J 1-,8.:;ge,2.~'.""~~~ ~~~~ ~:~me~~;,~~·~ _c~o~m-"p~•~n~y-.67=:>4400-'-=---loccb~:~~~.on,t.BD2. ',"r•n• ..
new. _; ...... ,_ , .. =:r-bltns. comm. swim pool. OK 98ZJOO k f Kidsok,nofee.S28S.mo. too. 4 · as or ApartmenhFurNahed luxu ry apt '.'I . New FREESEltVl~E Agt.842·4421 Holly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• carpets. new drapes.
TO LANDLORDS MissiOft Viejo 3267 lolboa PeNns~a )707 balcony over the beach.
Member of Board or Sharp 3 BR. 2Y.i ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $385.-$410. 494·1055 or
Realtors. Beller Busi-townhouse. S37S Month. 3 Br, 2 Ba. Fam Rm .. LG . 2 br. 2 ba. Bayfront,_4_94_·_3834 __ . _____ _
nessBureau.Chamberof 575-70&0or 673·9l8'7,Art pool. $400 mo. days w f~iew , rrpl .,_ wash'g. EFFICIENCYAPTS
Commerce. 11...1....-IJ:--t •--h 3240 833·8162 & 645-0260eves. facil. Wntr. $3:50. utlls pd. rrom $190. Poot m:ud, 53()..8505 nwrn~.on--. Also 2 br, 2 ba upper. Ac · I _,,,_, I Income ,roperty 2000 •'' •••• • ••••••••••• • ••• Ground floor 2 BR Condo. c e s s t o p v l . b c h . phone· au ...... ,. Vi I age Inn. 494 ·9436 •••••••••••••••••••-•• C.M. 2 br, $195., singles & 2 Story, 4 BR. 3 BA. 3000 crpts. ~r.ps, bllns. Rar. w /wash·g. facil. Wntr. l ~-~-------
R EALTY INC.
714/146-1371
16 UNfTS pets.Al.soN.B.2br$250., .sq .rt. of living area . pool priv1lefcs. $250mo $300, util.!1 pd. Call an $165 Furn. Charming
All adult.I huury unil.S. kids & pets. Walk lo Super sharp. Prestige No Pets. 830-S891 6PM 675-4465 Bach., nr Bch. Ulil. pd.
Prln . only please. water H.B. Z br. ktds. neighborhood. $500. per 4 BR Eld d t Resp . empl. Adult. $325,000. pets, singles. Or Lag. mo. Ga rdener included. ora o. crp s , IALSOA IMH 494,4200, 1
4 UMITS
Excellent Costa Mesa
Units. Large corner lot.
S'lll.900.
Be.sch 2 br, $240., util pd, Call 962·4471or960-2501 drps, bltns, patio. red Y~· Winter $160·$235 Mo.1---------L.
single!! ok. Agt . t~ee . Close lo :;chool & shop g Incl. util. equip. kilchcn, Newport leodli 3769
"79·8430 48r-Condo.Continentals, 5350 mo . No pels . pool .Nearbus.mkt,etc. •••••••••••••••••••••••
pool. cJub hse, Kids OK 830·5891 . 105 Main St, 615-8140 Oceanfront apl5 avail.
IF YOU ~7~~5 Vermont Ln, Newport lhoeh 3269 Beau I. furn 2 yr old from Sl4S to. $190. Util In·
have a 1ervlceloofferor ••••••••••••••••••••••• duplex. sleflll to ocean. cl. 675--4873 • 67~ or
ieoods toaell, place an ad CLEAN 3 hr. 1% ba, ram TOWN II OUSE 2 Br . Upper 4 br, 2 ba. $4.50'1 -'"'"-"1 ... c..;.1.c1 _____ _
1n the Dally Pilot rm, patio, 2 ear garage 2\ltBa , pool , bltn.s , Winter. Lowtr3br.2ba. OCEANFRONT 3 br
Classirled Sect.ion ... yard. quiet. $340. mo. wash/dry, gar. No pets S375Winter.$425Yearly. bome,tyrokJ,dJ~.avall.
Phone 642-5178.. 64$-3702 675-9188 573,3397 3 \o 8 mo. $47$. 115'1849
I .
I --
J
•
BJODAILYPILOT
Add 11 ..• Bulld IL.Diaper 11...Hammer it ... Carpet
it ... Cement 11 ... Wire it. .. Hoe it ... Clean lt...Move
it ... Press it ... Paint it ... Nail it ... Plaster it ... Fix It ... SERVICE DIRECTORY
I ~~~~!!'!! ............ :~!'!~~ ............. :~!.~~~ ........ ~.ard. ••lrKJ HoulittcJ Houwca. I ] • ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mo•leg reWlo<)/I'-"'9 rlo:oil>log , ...................................... ~······· ..............•.....••
Chffk Writina Additions, Remodclinit. CARPF.'f XPRTs.t6yrs JAf'ANESEGARDENER EXPERIENCE
Home-Offtrl!. Bi11s, Put1os, Paneling , Get it RcallyClean IOyrsexper,allphalSCi> •llAUIJ.NC• REFERENCES
Mbvln•tff1Wiae-Student Profn1lonaJ £uroc>tan MARV'S PLUMBlfllG
puyroll, mo. thk 1>41.litnc· Cab1ntt:s, ~tc. 492·97J9or Wll~LIAMSS49-81IS Rcasonable/i=Atltnattl YARD CLEANUP ~·7440,Q.'1032
1ng. 549-1 w .832=·="°="'::.:.:J~·~·=•=0=•~'=•=hn=--1 -,-5=•=1•=•=· R='=""c:cc'='=1="'='=•=11'-, ___ c_a_11_!_•_1-_1m __ ---·l---•-•....:......,.:.:..=:c='-•-•--'· I
w /lar1e true II:. Rei at. Wallpaper lnltal&er. Xlnt •646-9807•
Ba:ny 541·1'7ZSl&»ST7'9 work s.11-MSSda.YJ NO JOB TOO SMALL
--C C r L..dtcaplltg Mo YI a 1. h I u 11 n & , Painllng/RtP&Lr. 3:5~rs .......... ptumbi"" waterserv.
llobytittinq Carp~nl.ry -l•uncling, emettt/ ~ Exp.Jop:aneseGardener.Haullng Anything.••••••••••••••••••••••• cleanui:-. Exp-reas-(rM workguar,ta.lteadvan-I"" k=s ~arboliie
••••••••••••••••••••••• shelving, sml remodel.••••••••••••••••••••••• Complete yd mai.nt. Garage cleanup. ReUa-Experlenced Japanese est. reliable sludeot. taeeo(myexp.531-7006 c~~lo;ure.!I, real. Avail:tbleforh~by s ittuig Nojobtoosmall960~9. Block ~ Sl umps t.one Shrub .• lrees. Free est. ble. faat r.ervlce . Gardening & landscap-M7·2la. Prolpalnter.hooestwork, &32·Z46S-l0%offw/ad.
JI arbor View Sc·hool CARJ>ENTRY C ·t Wall.!1 : I lantt.'rs, Dnv~. S46-~ 963-6452. ina. Freee:st.~. G40-09W • • us om S1dcw1tlks.64J·8720. 1 --"----------r -=-'-'=------r-~~-------lp•t'-/P---ilwl reas. Int/ext, rree t:Sl, RoofilW'I _l!_r~ patio covers & ri.:palrs, -----Cleanups, trecwork . Ford's La-•-cape ..., -·,-Reis 548·21~1642-3913 •• ,. C''. Rc·asonable. Norm Contrac tor H alth Cl·-L-i.uo ••••••••••••••••••••••• · • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• · rototilling. minor ldst.'J), e -Sod J11wnsJSprinklers
L.OVING Ch1ltl C:1re -.rter 5pm. 64&-!£74 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10 yrs in area 646-2693. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Design Svs . 962--7817 EXRTLER lOSRSI SAV5E m rtoJhrfR--...:.. Rt~t•AtRS-f. ALL TYIPES
M h •. h p ' t &'"· I ---~-------1 . . n or t a l e ...,_. Reas. rceests. 1c. Y amt'. a:.XP n1ot er. C t S · riva t vvr"luncrt·ia Dental C--M-•nry Ljcensed lnau.red Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• Walt8J0..5000anytime \Ykdys, L>an:1 1'1..4W<MIO •• ~ ••• ~':'~~~•••••••• Custom pall<~. room :id Rich 's Landscaping & -._-.. _
I---d 1t1 on s. H l' mod c I Garden maintenance Low Cost Plant •••••••••••••••••••••••,_.,_ .. _3335 ________ , PATCll PLASTERING Ti.le
Cabine t M_.l-"'A• 4""'' Sprinklers, concrete & MASON RY • CON ._....., John 's Carpet & ..... ..,.,.,, lndv/Family JmmedCvr QI; • PETERSPAINTING ••Al,.LTYPFS•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uhlt D h ----------hauling. 581 -6574 , CRETgWORK.Askfor I C5lm cu b1nl·t~. boats, I P o Is e~,· , nds am, pool Cstm re modi, udd, patios, 830-1893, S37-7882. Call B. Scott 546-3614 Jake. 549·1885 Cnt/JEG"xt.-lteu. rates Free Est 540-6825 CERA~11C TILE. New le
:soi re ar e n s . kith U , I ! 1.=:::.::=:'-0::::..::0:::.. ___ l----------,_c..c='-'-''-'=-,---,-J-~a::;l~·'.::e:.!""::..!a!:lM2::=·~04.l8:::::~1yERY NEAT PATCll Reinodel. Free est. Sru.l patiocvr.k1lchrmJl,lat-Degreasers & all t·dlOr I l' en.-;. l'S,1,.;n, r cs' J6h.n D ' t1cc work 646·5219. brightners + 10 m1n~nsr645 ·3139 aker.Experienced Housecleonlng Concrclo Block,HOUSEPAINTJNG. J OBS & RESTUCCO. jobswelcome.53&2426
«• ''~"'' lawn & garden care. Cut. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SI umps tone Retn" •--·d /O t Ill I/JO "'r •••1·~ S II .roo·JV<.N bleach . for whiteflectn·c al · • .,,. ul:)l e u · qua w r eee!lt ........ -. .Top a • _t.~ge_&_,_·ultivate .962-J.4fllj llOUS"F"."l,•·,,•N!NG 'os 'our w a 11 s. Gr-ad in JI., t B ••• .~6
I C
I t•arpets. Sa\·t• n1oncy by••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... ,. '' ra es. ruce-..... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• a rpen or B · Call J Ice'• l~U~u~m~:!?~tr~u~c~k&~ ..... ~~=~!_-l-;;;;;;:;;~;;:::;-'.:::;=:-::::-1 saving m t t us1ness. an :tt •• -.a..I""' .·ropSoil•Com•v.:<l• ••••••••••••••••••••••• · c x ra rips. ELt-:CT R 1<.:IAN . ~111! Ragi.1etJy /\nn:s.6"1S-6SSJ SSAVE$$·Besl prices, ex---.. ,. M I h 1,,..,4 ';;J
Carpentry c us ton1 Clean living rm, d1n1ng 1obs. ma1nt1re11u1rs. 22 G MeralServic es •. t/intr. Any fix.ft jobt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • uc * "'""'"'' •
Rcmoi:I. rcp •. ur, ..1tJd on, rm & hall $15. Any rm yrs exµ. ••••••••••••••••••••••• we Will Do Any Type of 1'1_reptaces·Plantery Many Refs. 645·0836 Phatilbil'I CAL.L586·0030
insulalt'. l)co::.1~n~ 1-'ree $7.50, co1.1c h $10. t·hair $5. ltc 2331UK. s.iis 5:...'0J , "l'lllNG S " by /\.l oose houseclean1nG. I l''u rn Bnck-Concrele Pallo Jack S 1~ 191s TrH Ser•1ce
! •15 :Wl!' IS Yrs exµ 1s wh;11 counts. ~ -:-Gl'n woodwork. repair::., own eQuip. Satisfitction Block Walls BBQ Pits r-----------1 pee-• ~·~ ·"' · J not method. I Jo work G arde ning plurnbin". etc 642·!1613 llefs. Ests. 646·0464. Cstm Paint/Wallpaper-•••••••••••••••••••••••
If "d I <" O ft J!u1::1r548·106_1_. _____ 1 . p . W al~r hea_ ters, dis_. Removals, 1-,mb·ong. lop· Custom Carpenlry rnysc , ._, r~ ~":.l·U~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---1ng . a1nt int·S20rm , ext 1 d f
'
• f h Q 1· 'I -L d I DO ITALI.' Want u REALCJ.1-:AN WILLIAMS&SONS $249 g 3b 968-7"c.. posa s, rai~. au:ets, p 1 n i:, pruning + ra1n1ng ur 1111s , ua1ty " . .11nl / an s1·1>i.: • Masonry.Brick/Block r ---"-'~-'-------rco.pper re p1pc~. Same Firewood. lic/insr !f. c· m~1:J e I /:1d1l 1l1011 Use the Jiaily Pilot "Fast sod, s1,rkl.~~.scu.I .cond . Electri<"al, Plumbing. llOUSE?CallGingham &Stone.Call.58l-7829 Top Qual' Prof painting pnces day & night. we 642 2624 J49 ti l;i 9 I! c ._. u I 1 .. S' c r v , , c clca_nup 64~ 3331 fi46·4~ ete Reas rtlte::;. 642·4957 Girl. f-'rec 1..-sl~ 645·5123 take lifslr Charge. I.it -·='-'--------" ext/inl·reas rt.s . fr esl. -i\11NOltJIO~tt:Ht..:l'AIH l>i rectory Your i'ervic-eJapant·se Gardl·ning llANDY!\1AN -l-lomcs &: !\!ATU nl'-:&RELIABl.F. SELL idle items with a Reside n tial & Com· 300M8. ford's TreeServicc
l'lutn hing C•tri>cntry 1.~ our sp('!'tillf y Call Scrvicl'. Hegular l\.: Clean A pts c onsc ie ntious woman w /refs. &own Daily Pilot Classified Ad . mercial Lie/ins. George JUST PLUMBING Ex pr Crew, lie, bonded
l"c·rarnic: tilt•. 5'10·5560 00-5678. t'xt 322 Up. 1-.. rcc E::.t. &12 J Hli! Cr;_ift s man. 645-0558. transp. 998-4048 642·!1678. S38·8675. •CALL642-'llU • & in.-;ured. 962·7817
Apartments r..mished Apartments Unfwn. Apartments Unfum. Aparlm•nts Unfwn. Apartments r..mitMd Office Rental 4400 a..sineu Retllal 4450 Money Wanted 5030 e nanal1 5350
••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Unfurniahed 3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• N~wport Be ach 3769 Corona del Mar 3822 Costa Mr sa 3824 Newport Beoch 3869 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 150 I Wntcliff Dr Sharp Newport store or 2ND TD money wanted. Drinking problem?
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'11£ 1'~XCl'flNG Newport Financial Ctr• o(c., ground noor; 3'1Xl5. $10,000. Pay l~ int. Due Call Alcohol llelpline
WJNTF.ft hy p;1rk . nl'a
nl·W 2 br, 2 ba, d:.hwhr
~!iS mo. 5'~·40ti:I
N t:\V 3 bdrm . 2 h :1,
garage. Bllns. Poinset·
tia. CtJM . 549-886'7 Days.
Hacitonda De Mesa
160W. Wil-.C.M.
Closed GC11"'C19ts
;1 Bil . 2 Ba . Fr1)Jc .SPAC.dlx3BR,3lla,1 1,~ Df-..:AU1'.GROUNTJS
1'..1 i.tcf1.1 lly furn i l>r tn blk to ocean. 1~cek at the AUULTS.NO Pl:."'l'S
t,.•at·h Winter S350 mo ~·ater . $485. lse. Dave S. 10 minutes lo ocean. Lgt.'
t>75·Ji72 G44 72 111!.gt_. _____ 1 2 Hr S215 .. lge 2 Br
-----r--~--w /p at1c1 $Z20. Gas &
NI{ UCt:;,\N new l>plx 2 2Rll.&den:garage. water inl'I. Draperies.
Br. I B:.i. Garb. d1$1>. tlv:.i1i _ nowonleasc h earpet~. gas oot. ~as ll W. i!tlr . Yrly, SJlO. SJSO.~~:_nt644 ·7~-slO\'l'. ;_ur t•ontJ1tion1ng, t:lultl ()K I fi7S·tli;42 1673·l~~12 B~AUT Lg. Ocectnview J swimming J>OO . rec . 1 br, 2 h..1 duplex. Hltns, ~oo m , washers &dr)_'.er~
t:utc b;1rh I lilk pier & w;1shc r 1tJrycr. 2 t'ar g:lr.
$
'
N1c1-:2 br,Jba.pool ,l>hag b;1y U;il t·ony Leas e ·125 . Ac ull.-. no pets. s ~ 22 1 cpl, drp~. l·I.<. to c't'f'· $190 . 2 1H '~ 2 1:.1 St 7.-4002 Of' 7' 8955 CO · ythuig $\W . .'.:>-ili·7!.18i.; :..ft
li75·!J l!.15 lcet. ------1>
fJJ--:.LUX t: 2 llH . ;;!' Ha , Like NC"-' 2 Hr. l llii. crpts 2 I~H nc:1r nl·W. hltn:-.,
pr1v. patio. izar:1i.:e. SJ~ & drps, I 1·ar gar. $235 $?2•' li•l'"31'\J'l 111, mo_ yrly Z(~I i!l:.t. St. mo. Af,:C!nt. l"i75·0562 1.;2_•2;,31rno. w 1 •
673·1l •l!S -----"' "" Bach 11-:i blks from ocean
Need 1'emµ(lrary lluus· SIOO mo No pets. 673-4!.IJl
ing')·>') "H.1l·h ;.i pl. Phone. or675·4l74
Wkly maid ~c rv. £275. J\1o No pl'ts Lido Shore: 2br. Iha . r ngc. ref, gar No
Jlotel. 673-HMO'.I pcts 1ch1ld : Sh4g & fp 43:1 Iris: S250 L.sc. G44 ·434U
OCEAN fo'RO!VI' furn . ex-C osta Mesa
tra lge I br lmn1ae
Cpts. $2.50 67.>-4ti8K
3824
····················~··
Off Beaten Path
I BR LOFT ONLY
/\\'all. (lt·t !:"1th
~\~~l~tl~~
Pvt p:1L10, frpl, I vr I"<'
HAYLOFT APTS
283 A•ocado, C M
645-014:?
~I 0 11· f',f'I ;, pm !H 7 pin
Sat Sun IUtl ill lu I pm 1 or 2 Dr. adults. no 1"'-'ts
$170/$190 2"121 1-:. 16th !;t
N i-lts 646· ll:!OI
l'ark Ne'A"l>Ort ·Subleahe.
Br. $325 mo. 833·8203. o
t!ves 673·5332.
1. 2 & 3 llr Adults no
pets. dshwhrs. shag epts,
closed garage, frplt', 2 BH I Ba. t•nl·l gar rt.
OUQ Gas & 'A'alcr pd patio 1\1tu11 .. no 1x·t ~
Pool . Sl95 8·lti·71i!'J
LA MANCHA APTS
---1 778 Scott l'lace, <.:M
CX::E,\NFllON'l' 2 br UP· 642 -SITT3
2 Br. $200, P\I p.1110 No
kids /pets, nu t•pts. drps.
731 1\ W 18th St 673·71117 1.ocr duple."<. :S:l-10 imml'd ~---
0 r c r . 5 ·I ti 4 3 3 1 / MEDITERRANEAN 2 Br, pooL over 21. $165.
213·fi54 ·7698 VILLAGE 1no. SlOtl. cleaning fee.
ON TllE 01'-:ACll 2 Br, 2
Ua . bltns, gar & lndry
fac"s . $350 mo. \'rly.
675-7777
1 Br. 1 Br & Den, 2 Br, 2 325J 17th !'I.aft I lam
Br Townho~l'. 0...rpets, Dana Point 3826
d rapes, fireplace. 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pools. 4 tennis courts
gym · s auna's.
OCEANF'RllN1·. ncal 2 24UOl~tlrhorBl vd
V J-::R Y lg£' 2 hr. 2 ba w /\t>r·
race. upstairs, no P\'tS.
S225 675·5205
S l65MOHTH
Br, upper, adults. g;1r, Costa Mesa (7 14.!_557·8020
winter. $275. 673-Joru. Adult 2 hug<' bedroom:.
·•11:1 Blk to bch Delux.e. S170 no pets. Inquire apt l -Bdrm . apt .. I hlork
frplc . balcnny, 3 br. 2 ba, G 568 W Wilson ctbove Coa~I ll'ft'Y . ~·a\k I ---------1 l9 beach & ""hurf . W1W
yr Y S375. 673·5606 3 Ur. 2 ba. ('rpt, patio. nr carp, blt ·1n ranJ,!c &
2 1·, Br . 2 Ba . gar. OCC . S225. 1009 A !\tis-O\'Cn ,refrig
\\.'asher tdr)'C'r, 3 hous~ s1on, 552·4576 art 6 l\.1 ISSION Rf.ALTY
... 40.l ·Cr1:.11 ••
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
PALM MESA AP'TS. Leasing Office Space $200 Mo. Brokcr675-6700 I yrs. Xlnt. security. Agt. 24 hrs a day835-3830
rtllNUTt:s·roNrT CallonSiteManaJter NEWPORTILVD 545""289 .... oxy Girl's Out Call
Huehelort or2 UCll t'114)642·3ll lcxt246 AHTIQUEROW M~es,Trwt Massage. U Call. We
Hedrooms and Bach,1&2 BR 1000 tb 4SOOSQ n. AIC. Dffds 5035 Co m e. Specialize
1·ownhouses A[i':i~.~~2~ts paneled. erpt. Offices & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Paraplegics. !>42-3169
Fr. S229.SOC)peo0.. wa.ehou'c. Mc Nash LOANS u~o 80% fJail.v l561 Mesa Dr. R It 642 1334 tS Olks EastofNewport ea Y. • or Spo-PooL<>-Tennis Rl,·d. 1 V,» c_._,.. _642 __ -65_711_______ I st TD 90/o Across from Fashion ., ,..
Island al Jamboree on 54ti 9A60 ,/=-~ Industrial Rental 4500 2nd TD Loans
San Joaquin l-L1ll!> Road. R-oo-,.-.--4000 ~:::;-z. __ .
(7 14J644-1900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,/--""'· ./' Secy _ ....... ~.
./' ............ , ....
•••••••••••••••••••••••
NEW M·l Newport, Costa
Mesa. 1000. 1200. 1440 sq.
rt. 543-3145 or 646·2928
Lowest rates Orange Co .
PREGNANT??
Car ing confidential
counseling & referral.
Abortion, adoption &.
keeping.
APCARE547-2S63
HEB>A •DELUXE• l-'vt . J{oom & Hath for
., .. tbl fl 3 b 2 b· 1., rent, Co:.ta ~1e!->a Nr. C)C .as ll r, a . s~ CollcAt" M>S mo. 556.f~ Incl. s pac-ma~ler suite. _ . ---
din rrn & dbl ~arage . Lai..:unct Bcal'h. L•tc l'OOk·
Call Mr Howard
645 ·6101
Sattt ... Mtg. Co.
642-2171 545-0611
Serving l'larbor area 24
years MUSICAL.GROUP
1200 Sq l'~t A1 ·1 spacc.0----------·1 ror any oct·asion? We
front office. drive-in rear 2nd TD Loans Wanted book only the OOst.
Auto door npcncr avail. lng. $95 monthly, Call --. -door , Sl85. mo . 629 WE HAVE CASH! Ca11 PadroncAssocialcs
Termina l Way. C~1 . e 2 d 'r u · 636-7262 Pool & rl'l'rl•allnn tlrca. 494 ·617fA. 55' PER SQ FT
1\1lults only, no pct.<.. Ifill WESTCLIFF-NR
•FROM $322• HOOr>.1S 525 "1t't.'k up v,:ith AGT. 541·5002
kitc h en . 548·9755 or . RVS A1nigos \V:1y , NII
J\f :.ina.(:ed by
\V1!11tlm W<illt·rsCo.
645·3007 SJ40 up store·off1C'es cpl!i
drps air bath. 17301
8('arh Bl. H.B. 842-2834 Bark Bay_ Room wlp\l
bath in lovely C'Xe('U\J\ll' --,,-R-0-F Es--s-·1~ Cl.ASS/\ home with pool. $1 2.'I mn 546·b740bcf9 /\J\t Prt>fcr Rldi;:. 3 :.tory . 27!10
uy n .. s
Days 540·5710. eves Loanon2nd1'.D.'s
646·0681 New Loans·2nd T.D. 's
1250 SQ ..-r M·l space. Equity lnvsmt. Div.
front office. Jgc rear BARNEITM1'G.CO.
door. $190. mo. 12401 _____ &1_5_-_2_!34 ____ 1 l..o~an St. Costa Mesa. AnnouncelMfth/
Days 540-5710, eves Personals/
B4G·068l Lost & FoUnd
Spat'lOUS 3 Hr. 2 ba, frph·.
I hlk to beach. Yrly $35()_
C.111 G·l:l 705"1 l lar~>0r BJ\·d, C.~I ,\ir nun ~moking work1n~ 2000 S(~ f> .. T. 3 ofc5, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BE.A C H .. YEARLY won1~111 '>Ver Z.5 cond. · elev .. pant'I walls. baths. 1mmed. al·ros~ st Announcemeints 5 100 D~·lu.-.;e, very h): :lh r '\;u Room & Bacrd 405 0 ~~ii:.s ja~~t~\;a~·~f~g · rrom OC Airport 963 __ -7_87_8_ 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
epts. all hlt 1n-.. lplrl', nrl ••••• •••. •••••••••••••• ~I . It . S t c \"er. !\1 gr. St 4550 AURA E. l\.1cCONNELL
w;,it('r SJ95 blti!l211i or P\t rnom with hoard 557 ·0136or646·8396 •• ~~••••••••••••••• Or. Of Veterinary 117
!) ~5.:l -Costa ~lc l>a S225 mo. EXECUTIVE s uites on Storage lot for RV's. etc 1\nnou~~~~~1;~pen1ng
llayfront 2 Bd . 2 B.1, f'\'l 549-io79 Newport llarbor. 400 to $8.50 r>er mo. Neill Sign of
ilt•h & pier . Sf>.'">O yrl}. Vacatio n Rentals 4250 2200 s q ft . 642·4644 , Co. for info.531 -3374 Peninsula PctClinie
97!:1 l!JJS & l).W •• c;Jo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645·4405 a., . I 1 2915-17 Newport Blvd . . . . . , _ -S!ness/ n•es / , Be ea •L..._ P..._RISl~'HE• Cabin. Big Bear.sips l2 ,2 Prime Jlunt. RC'h . loc. Finance Newport a('h, 92663
""' ""' g,. fpl 3b 1 Clinicllrs ·J\1on,'fucs. 1&2 Hr unfum s110 & l'S, r, sep P ayrm. from Sl25. mo. inclJ. ut1\. •••••••••••••••••••••••
,2 ,. ·,11 1· •t , <'OI TV, poollbl . 49-t8611 5075 Warner r\vc . Business 1'hurs.1''ri.9:JO-.l2am '' C' e< ril L·1gBch Andl ::))-S :J(}pm F1rc11ltll'l'. lltatl."d pool. ' ----846·4249 Opportunity 5005 Wed&Sat9·l2tlm
Adults. no pcL'i. Rentals to share 4300 Ql'·fo~ICE t , ·1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Doclo~ hrs by appt
979·1268 ••••••••••••••••••••••• orr 'oNre a\al · Phone: 714-675·7010 Across fromgolfC'oursc-• , 100~ s q t . ewp_or t
20.lJZSanta An:i Av, WAN.1 ED : Hoommatc. Pen1n. Cho1ee location Beat The Sour
l straight. m<1turc male to 639·6700
Yl-:ARLY a br, 2 ba, ~16 share luxunou~Jbrcon· . > ---.-· ECONOMY
W. Balboa Blvd. f-'rplc, do. beaut. furn Jacuz~.i. NE.WI (lRT gard.en offi~e
Lost & Found 5300 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LOST /FOlIND
1\ PE'l"!
Gal needs SI0,000 now!
Dress s bop 40 'x6.'>'. Ptnr
or loan sec. 213·33 1·5"33
"H EW "
1' .. E1\TllER
r.-1/\SS/\GESIU.
Abraxas Massoge-
Photo ModrlirHJ
1733 Fullt•rton. Ci\!
I 01\ !\I -121'!\1 63 1·118-1
Employment &
Pre paration •••••••••••••••••••••••
Sc hools &
lnstrvction 700S . ...................... -
TENNIS LESSONS
Pvt /Group/NH. 675-<&tl
Learn the fine /\rt ol
Upholstering. Day & ('\le.
t•lasses being held. Call
for Enroll ment 673·9422
Jobs Wanted. 7075 •••••••••••••••••••••••
bllns. g<1ra,1:e. I blk to pool. in lrvtnt•. $175. mn suites from 4:t-in<'L uttl. A few stores a1·(' still
b<t y or beach. SJ7;; 547 ·67111 Some warehouse avail. available at Shoppers
Cleaning Gal has open
960·2900 /\dnption. l.ow time in Halbou fr JOan1 to
Cost Spay /Neuter Info. 3pm 'ft'kda)'S call eves. li75-!>487 5Sl·006l v ·11 h. h I .Slra1)'.!ht Bus man wants -----1 1 age, a 1g \'o ume
HF.ACIJ YltLY.3 br.2 ba to rent 'A'/S;1me, lux •IP.10F'REERENT• shoppers mall. If you
clplx. Oceat1\IU from enc home. ~pt . area. 752 7300 1·2·31 Hm. offices from have the merchandise,
s unporch. s-ioo +utils i\-1cDan1els $135 per m o. Near we'll put the foot traffic
!HS l596 ,\1 rport. No lease req. in front of you. If you
· · ________ SIOO mo l.o,·cly Bdrm.. 833·32239Til noon don "l ha"e the merchan·
Deluxe bayfront IO'A'Cr pvt ba .. pref elde rly --dise. we'll help you ob-
LOST 1 f'r<'sc riplion 536·3106
J::lasses at ~nd1a~ Trails Help Wanted 7 1 DO
Park or R1vers1de Or., ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport H eights .~
642-8912. !:168-4293 Act•t /Mfg/Cost toS\21\
Lost : Blk . Standard Fem Engr Lab 1'et·h to S750
Poodle . Blk tip on Ftofc !\ledical S600+ fr bch. I.ease. 1\dult ·
$345 mo 613·tD60.
I Bd . Ul1l .. ga r age,
wasbt.'r . $160 per mo. 'J'o
June 15th 1717 12 Ralboa
Bl\'d fi7J .. 1001
C1\S1\ VICTORlr\
1.2&3 br. Delaxe Unfur.
or 1-'urn. gas/wtr pd.
Ad1.1lls·NO pets Sec. gate
Pool, rec rm. elevators
525 Victoria, 642·8970
duplcx. yrJy, 2 br. 2 ba woman. non s moker or rt11Nl·SUITES ~1 ·2·3 + tain it. Join 100 other
SJ75.227 19th St.675-0236. drinker.9G3·77l3 roums_J Xerox .& secy merchants, who arc
Huntington lt'ach 38 40 I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1 -----s e r \' 1 c e a v a 1 I _ 0 n b e a t i n g t h e So u r
••••••••••••••••••••••• 11 Male /Female s hare 3 Newport !!arbor 1n Ccn-Economy at Shoppers
hr+den on Peninsula tin e lla Bank Bldg. Viilage,2724N.!\1ainSt.,
tongue Sil\'cr choket GenOfc /Constr to$65-0
cha<n. Vi" Bctw Vo c IRVINE f'ERSONNEL ~·~.::,_w'1"'0 -Reward. SERVICESll"ACENCY OCEANFRONT
:l BR. 2 Ba. $150Wintcr
STEPS TO BEA.CH
near 10th. Sl.'"'1.1 642-4644 Santa Ana,. 834-1551
67J-71IB8 C \"C!' 5·19·8251 --400 SQ. FT. Ofc. space.
4H8 E. 17th Street __________ 1LOST. Small. v.·hile male (at lrvine)Costa Mesa
$40 WK U I' 1&2 UtJr & •Shady Bms-Pool•
Bach. Color ·rv . maid 1&2 Br $175. Up. Adults.
serv, pool ·r11Jo:: MESA. no pets. 177 E. 22nd St.
415 N Newport Bl. N 645·3732 ; 642·3645
BIKE TO BEACH
HEAR SHOPPING
1,2 &3 Br apt..s. bltns. dis·
hwashers. sorn e w 1(rp)C's
& 2 car garaJ!eS. f'~rnm
S2QO . L ions t:statl'S.
536-2579
3 BR. 2 Ba. $325 Winter
3 UR, 2 ba s.lXJWntr.
SEA WIND
Condo, 2 BR., 2 b:i .. den.
Unf Yrly. $175.
J,ady w /share NB. home $200 mo. lse. Lag. Niguel
w/n1aturc \liOrk1nJ: lady. area. 831 ·9255,493·Z118 LiquorUcense Terrier w /blk ear. red Suite224 642-1470 col ., vi e 1-larbor & ____ ..._
Sl50 + 1 :-all I 645·2GGO. Orange County On-Sale Geisler . C ,M. 675-7611 _..~.-.-
NOW LEJ.\SING General. "OLD ISSUB· day s/ Eve: 557·2149.
G46-9681 ------1 ---NE b . NEW 2&;1 Br apt ~.
Roommate \\'<lilted fem
<1gc 22·30. Ra \ Pcnin, nC'A'
2 br. 2 ba apl. $150.
ltobin , 842·1iti4-l ll'avt.•
Presti~e()(ficeSpace COCKTAILSONLY'' Reward. A re Yau Too YC>UnCJ
Custom Retail Stores EMERGENCY SALE For Airtine-s?
Santa Ano 3780 S2lS. 1 W 2 r. p;.itio. dshwhr, frple, encl gar.
••••••••••••••••••••••• garden .. Adults, no l)t'ts. Sec J\1 gr. 14 13 I luntinJ!i.on associated ll UNTINGTON Call Mr. Winston Collect LOST . Siamese cat. Large concern has o~n -
AMIASSADOR INNS
OF AMERICA
TWO LOCATIONS
WEEKLY RATES
FULLsr;RVICt:
2277 llarhor,C.!\1
2909 Bnslol, S,/\
645-4840 &540.ZJOO
527 W. Wilson.642·1603 St. apt R. or rail 536 .. JO'J5 message
M/\RINA (213)272-4249 answe rs to "Mi s hka " ings forlO~als&guys,ltl
EXECUTIVE CENTER Ne1.1tered male. flea col, lo 23 yrs. r>1usl be single
NE\VLY DECORATED ~/"\~ Career or part t1n1c opp. \'i<'. Fair Or. & Nassau, & free to travel entire
W Strai.:ht r oom n1ate 111.,J Ii I for person interested in C.M. Reward. 751 ·9200/ U.S . at a random ~~r277t~·rE .. $~~~t·e:t\~~ 2 BDft·/\'1'1'111·: BJ<:ACll 1 .............................................. ~ needed · spacious 3 Rr · Needlecrafts. No Invest. 541 ·4194 itinerary. Guarantee re-
or 536-7528 BR OK ERS-R EAl TORS
lOl\ W Balboa 1>7 1-Jbbl
636_41201.5 SUPER NEW·l.1\HGE 1 ap;1rt Share w fl other 1 reqd.646·2259Aft .3pm . , turn . 2 week expense ------~ 1 l-lunt1n ~ton llarbor /\re a Bayfront, Newport Is. guy~ SIJJ mo. fi.10·8109 1 Lost:. Brc:>wn Bncf Case & paid training program.
SJIS. 3 Br, 2 ba. patio-_i~D_U_L_1'S . x.·11•·4150 duplex, 2 lge patios Cd!\! 17141846""4 493 Writer needs help lo finish Denim 1acket (sz 3) So. Abo,·e-average caminJ,!s.
d
"
De "The Great Ameri can Orange County Reward yar · ~ar. nr new. no LG 2 llH. I ha. cne patio 2 r. n, S385 G1\L needs roomm·1tes · · ··trans P 0 rt at i 0 n
J:Cls .64.:--1600 SIS5 mo .tst .•~1.1st +$75 1Br~eluxc,$32S {females). 3 hr. 2'ba'.SINGLE to 6 r m suites N<;v~~'O:,ill .-:1vc 'h< or Lost Sat Sept 20thl furnished. f-'or intervicw
2 BR. 2 ba. No pets or se<'.842-0J89 P1erAva1l. 673·933.'i lowl'r duplex. 2 hlk~ to Avail in plush office -. · .10am·8pm. 540·5505. Call836·8887. ............................................. ~I children. Pref. mature ON T llE SAND· Beautiful beach. 6-12-3188 bldg r:ir. O~ Airport. F\Jll Beauty Shop in lop loca-LOST: In Do\'er Shores
Apartments adults. $175. 642·5S1R WALK TO BEACH 1 BH C d v · f b s_e r~1 ce incl : Recep-tion. Unlimited parking. NB. Black ~1ale L ab. ART GALLERY
Unfuntis hed 1&2 br, cpt.s, d11r,;;. bllns. on o_ iew o ay Garages for Rent 4350 t1on1 st, conference rm, Your clientcle will love it Ans. to "Eric". 1 yr old. MANAGER
••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE, nr new tux. garage. 205 15th & 217 & kmts . 1 ''11 t x.tr~5 Pvt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~erox. automated typ-and so will you. 646·32SS Tan collar. whte nea col· For newly opened
General 3802 duplex. 3 Br. 2112 Ba. Din. 16thSt.536-42.S9 : 847 3957 pr g., e eva or. · m Double GaraJ,!c. Costa ing.etc. CallS.13--3640 Agent. lar. REWARD. 548-3396 branch in Laguna Beach.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Rm. Pvl yd. 2 ear .llar. 8 B • 1 d ~17 ~l~~~it. 991 '3610 £,·es ~1e:-a. Slora)!:e only. $45 •FASl·ITONISLAND• or642·8235 (Reverlyl Exper'd in art sales. Xlnl 'N'llEl'I Quiet res idential area. 2 r 2 a. 17381 Koc o "' -' permonlh.646-57!)4 career oppor. C<tll "" " $165 mo Cr11ts tJrps ---Executive offices •PETSHOP• Found ·. Money. Call & 213 /881 -3218 or
VIEWS'· •~RTS '. $425. 645·7888. · · • OCEANFRONT new I Br S I 1 & h ~..., stove. 960·19!11 wkdays ' · torage ontv lgc s1nJ:lc w recep .. secy Pone Great opportunity , Identify. 21J /347 4146evc-s. New Canyon Rim Ar)ts in RED ECO" •TB> aft 6 :30 pm . upper · Cpts. di:ps. ~ar. ~a rage. SJO: ~nth. scr\•ice. 359 San Mi~uel, S 673 _6376, S-9pm -Yrly lse. SJ75 64.!·3443. 548_.~., N.R. 640.19100r 644_1860 owner /operator. upcr Anaheim llills Jtive you 3br, 2ba. family unit. '' location ! Sll.000 l---'-'--"--"-'-'"'----1•---------• al l these .abundantly! ATTl lJ-:BEACll ,..,,,,., y 1 2 1 2 b FOUND . Brown leather "-ssemb'-""'-$230. NopeL"I. 751 ·5162. NEW /I ,.1.,111lll$3!S ;p..i>Jv. r Y lr, a. Offi O Newport Beach deluxe "' ~,. "-:11'·-Counlry Club livin~. '' '-· story. 2 car encl gar.. ce Rental 44 0 case on Avocado Sl, CM . Gtontorall.abcMet s
Golf. JI tennis els.Good location. near lluntington llarbor Arca balcony f.·12·1603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~uilcsfromJ&"persq .ft. Owner call. identify. TEMPO
Ad"lts ••• 41510 Air. <"arpe'-', utit pbid. llorsebnekriding.1.2&2 tran l'i port ntioo & ~--~·· ---ExeC'. ofl' s pace. new. 546·2855 brm + den. Jo'or 1nro .. tn ark et s . 2 BR 3 Btl, 2 BA, bltns, DW, N _u . 1-'ully C"rpetcd,•-"-'_0_k_e_r_6_75_·_67_oo _____ 1 r----------r l'emporary llelp 3 OR MORE '' ,. ' FOUND money call & 17802 Sky Park, Irvine
673-4300 w /covered patio. New eloscd ..: ar ·• nr lloai;: drps. l\I r. Mayer 752-7561 Share my office in Irvine. '"""""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'""""""'"""'~I ' Call S40-44SS
I Ibo I land 3806 ~·pts. drpl'i & paint. No !luge :l hr, 2 b1:1 beach llosp. Adults. $285 mo. ---$75 mo. Telex, IBMI · l.~;d~e~n~t~;f~Y:_.·6~~~~---1 '"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""' a a s pets . 5190. s 48 .772o opt. C:11I for additional r..i2.osoo Phologr:tphy ofC' w/dark SclectriC', air cond. Pl an t shop, indoor ·
••••••••••••••••••••••• (eves.645-4532) info. (114 )847-4387 rm . A IC. ~ h n we r . 752·8181 tropic a Is, greenhouse. Assembly & equipment
I 8 R a" a i I for yrly. 1 1------~---1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; •Ocean \' 1 ew h~e. II kc pa nelcd 'A' alls. 548 ·97661-;:::;=-:-:· ;;::::;-~-::;::! ~67~32·094"':'_9!·~·~!~3-~llllJ-4~~987'!!~-1 op c r a ti on s . Man 0 r
block to bay. Bar& putio. Eastside 2 Br garden apt. I• He w 3 •-~2 Ba · y"'r·lwy .• $52 2f~p. 61,.,7.3 .. ~r. 2 ba. C.1\1. IBuslHss Rental 4450 SCRAM-LETS woman needed. Exper'd 673·1200 l0.4pm Priv. fenced yd .. cov 'd . ~ J ..,,,.,,.,, Bicycle Dealerships S46 4135 f p · Bil with fireptact. bltn~. F'A ~~~----~---l wis~ to s hare or sublet ••••••••••••••••••••••• Choice areas. trg. & In· · ·
Jotboa PMiftsula 3807 ~:n1:~ &ri;~fJ~· Adui:~ heat . CLOSE T 0 2 Br, 2 Ra, stCft; to sand. my office near OC DELUXE office. comm'I venlory. Top bikes & ANSWERS Assist S.... Ofc. .,
••••••••••••••••••••••• only.$225646-1509 ()CJ>..:AN . SC HOOLS, Frplc, bltns, patio, $315 . i\irport. &~n~ustriaJspaces.Also spor ting goods . l\1r . Cornea -Whine All journals. Drt.1V ron-
p,\ H KS & Sl!OPPING. yrly. 642·9666 833·8747 m In l warehouses in Baker, 213451·5443. Curve-Jackal
l.AYFROMT C()trilDO BACfl Apt, bftns, laundry SJ2S & S.160. per month. Laguna Niguel & Mission1 ----------1 WRECK l r act !t • Re Y no Id s
faciL Nr. OC College. KENT G • RS Newport Terrace Condo. 3 Luxury offiC't' in prestige Viejo areas Handy to Be B llarbor rn d Reynolds EA. Exper. on-•2br,2ba,laeSS50. n 0 I:. br 2'-'i ba ,...,u.. Up~r bid N 8 GI sed all s o· · er ar ; v ·• Overheard: "We really ly apply Ma I SISS mo. 751-5561 art. G HEALT\' · · ~· ,,._ g, · · as w an 1ego Fwy. 200 to C.M . $40,000 Gross . don'tlearnRboutho'story, · • rqu 11
•Lae0porsellS88.000 19thSt.968-9Ul6 view.645-3700 2000 sq rt As lo as» 120000 N. -. M.otors. 83 1·2R83 or •()pen J-5SalCr.Sun pm 960·3858848·8.'l'.lO • · w • e ... .i:.ot. 13 yn. I have a teenager who 495·1213 .
Be h Ill d W t <-J per&ql'l.831-1400 Ask.•-.ooo·."•.oooDn •3101''ern•ndo.Balboa ac v · es on .-n uan Single & double room of. BAv&BE'ACll thinkathehlgcrnshin ·29 ----------
OllveWiggenhom,Rltr J IEDROOMS J\dama.4blbto Capistrano 3878 fices loc. in niodern 3200Sq FtC·2storefront REALTY 675-3000 is a folksong about a ASST. ~lanager. G:ardefl.
675-6160 3 lge bdrms w /patio. l\labnin11.ri1tblone ••••••••••••••••••••••• center. util'!' rum'd. Hy with 6 drive·in bays. train WRECK." ing, maintenance & up.. """"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'i 'rplc, pool acrt'J8S rrom bloc-k to 2Q2 Rochester 2 RR Co d • •· d lh $75 ~ 0-•206 Id I I bo keep of SS un1L~ in r~ ... -lge quiet park. $250. n °· .. p..,, rps, emo to ....,.5'4 · ea or auto or al NURSERY SCHOOL FOUND. FemaleGerrnan ~-' 2 b ud b Ad Its ly $45-8628 wash/dry, enc. l(ar $225. 0 ,;ervice. 585 w. 19th St. Pre School nr downln Shorlh . p . 1 M P..!esa In ex.chan1e for ew rst 10,1~ a,1 __ u __ •_•~-------N£AR 2 b 2 b mo .. adulll'IOnly. /\ft. ffice & warehouse CM .Days540-.s710,eves ... ~· M •ea' · air 01ner. esa r ent 642 -5073 or frpl,oceanview.$360yr. new r, a, 6PM,551 •1537 s pace, new from $50. 646•0681 .......,ta esa. ra for 24 drlMar.979-2251. (213)86S·38Sl ly. Wiil coMlder winter. •VILLA MINOS• closed A:ara,11:e, fromS27S 1 --~-------l lt.O. by Morina High.1---------1 at $100 mo. Room to ex·l-""'-"''-"'-'C--'-"=---1---------
211•284•9384 Also 3 br, 2~ ba, $37~. All Santa Ana 3880 846·1177 SMALL retail store local· pand. Incl. la:e. lot, nrly Personals 5350 ATTENDANTS, live-in; i 1
2 Ir, l lo .a..a. ulil pd. 414 22nd St. Open ••••••••• •••••••••••••• ed In Cannery Village. new bldg .. comp. equip. ••••••••••••••••••••••• male & female ror di!I· •
l BDRM, J blk to bay or C r -r• Sal/Sun 1-5. /\Nt . No fee. 2 B h rptil d l If YOU . $80_ m o . 613.9606 : SBS,000 FEMALEGAMULERS? abled adults. Work In
oceaa,1 t.1!!,l ... 7lfllnc61. $215 . :'U:~ u~:~7i:!!,~ 848-1311or846-4938 co~J. a:t~ve , 'd !l:'~~r: have 3 serviC6 to orrer or ,6~7~3~.9~39~3~------I: ;-:G:'-•:h~a_m:;--R:lt:r:. :-~646;-:--·~24~1:-:•i' Yhoung, po11ishedd. clean chris tian community. 1 1 mo. 1r 1· v, e\·es. E 1 ~ • r aarb. disp. !nq 415 So. -Le s a\/en . c 11ss reiu1er. Associated with Calvary · nc O!I"'"" GaraJ(~ J Bd, patio Apt.. 1 blk rom 0 goods to St'll , place an ad DEL I & COUNT R Y 1 m e show YoU how to meet lady 19-32, not over Chapel. Pny varies from 1 ·
JBr,2Ua.new.modern, GaslcWaterPald.Molo IJcach, $175. mo. SPe range. S.A. Apl. C· in the D11lly Pilot STOREavallot'TheFtc· eamlnco'!'ainupperSi:\ t40lbi1 , no children. $200.·SSOO. mthly .
513 W . Bay. Annual Morent1ls.S22StoS23S. )qanT'1er2fll"B"l4thSt. Adults only Ch1ss1Jied Section ... tory, N.B . $350. mo. or the U.S.--ttoo invest. photo·phone exch. P. o. 671-06.to, 995.7843 0 ,..
lease. SSSO. 640-5719 2324 Elden Ave. 833-2480 or cal • ·3840. CLASS I Fl EO Wlll 5ell It. Phone 64215b"78. 673-9606 or 673-a3 Mr. Rlley&M-&91 lJox 2393. C.M. 826-7093
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VIDEO DISPLAY
• Eoertet.lt', llltb•wfMtJ~ =u:t'&~~~· E•t•bliabed moltlpl• f:!:f,a~1.1&t.'t~ •m WOii De ''i' N•• v.pbol. sor11 • DIL ci•ter Stu4 E.r-locUd.i ror~ Alesof'Jkoe.'Il10Ublwa M :JIQpm « 1027 CDuc Cocltera, CJaibuabu•, ~-'"w"=' ~ rinp. SOpt.a. Eleb. $1.IO roa.r:t. . ~~ :=.:.= lfw)',no.GLll,pm.I. Poodlea Shlh·tiu, G. ' ... WT
nowrvwt'-la the b&rbclr are• call T......_.AaS.. Sbortba\r, "t Bulls, G•111 Sld1w.. Alum.Jnum Patio Room .
TERMINAL
OPERATOR
Dental A......,., mawni '~"'~' Pat.&J. llart.ID.W.11izcor .. .......,... mJAl ·Sdm•...-. Pom1 . SALi uxao,SllQ.
ope.r, C'bair aide. u~ ~met app'l. ::i~-;.~O:.~o..":: Pelr:ea, Wt1tiea, 100 SaL,Or:t.it StlsttS.
ou111•a1e... .... ,,__ , ••• L .,-..... _ou.-m.lud PYPP6a Stud '"' i :oo ·-145 .. 00'1"' <VWV'Y • _...._, moll breedl.. 25ZS W J7\h _, China. Lennox "Ol ym-w,,...~ ·' · ' · be<wnl•C. · CORHERO I " Pl lJ •·-' 9 De .. lf 'a' 'rl' -.,.... . ' at Pak'vkw. SA.. Open lmt 6: ORANGE pa a nwo ~, ... ,
l!'oll>•laatle, .,:;.. •• •. -· . "''." -· • n•anN I TOllC-••ea.531·-· COSTA MESA dinner, Hlad, butter,. ..... --11111 ~ ·~ COfilllN-,., I! uueer. a """'·· aloo a c= w/ftfl«. llftl'd. .ow •~u.u.,V'f"lllllS ~ J:>rrocOBEDlENCJ!Qau 1.-.r•M• Cltl.,. t'ryatal Iona itemed needed for Basi~/Four computer 10·• ._., o,.., Newport Pwtll•.Mp t.111• -RaALToRe__. Sailboat mamt. lalook· toatartWed.Ottzt F\l."'fture,Qothlna, w•ter1lasaa.laherbut
Ctr ...... >&& Locat Otanae 0.. tirm las for 1 hard wortin& 'f:JtP.ILNIWJIOlt Appliance&, Boob. wllb pla ti num baQd. stallation.Someexperiencebelpfulbut DENTAL ASSISTANT iootbt1 Coe P\a.ttbulq •LI.SA'''* •upervl•or for It• Jrrinearea.Ml•D Toys,SportinMGoods Repl•~emcsnl value, will train otherwise qualifi~ person. I! 'd b l Id • Mana1er w/5 ,...,.. of we aow ha'f'e opentn&a touchup crew . ..)l.ut be YOU NAME IT!! $380. WW loell for $200. Pleasant working eondiUons, good pay ~e'; NcB.-.::.u;, various purebasin1 for oew •IJ«oeoote. £).. akUled la.lOuchfip repair Slffrian Huslc11. A.KC. ProC'eedstotfarborArea ,,_.7282,
d b 0 c. · • •cat exper. Mat.trial cellenl com.nillUoa spilt " able to apealc &ood 81k/wbt, red/Wbl. llf> Voutb aQdO::lnlmunity 1-"C.:...="------an company enefits. Please apply at Di.sbwasher & lr:ltcben lndu1trlal, iaventory and loada ol leadt. Gre:al Bn1U1b It ~nish. JCJnt up. "91·1704. Activity Projed.s Mltctl••om
lbe Personnel Offlceo(the bel..,.. Sid'• -:a.. COl>trol et<. All1o lo baa atmooph•re. ""· benenta "..,, wa,.. Spoasor<dbythe Wooled 1011 DAILY PILOT 107 Z1lt Pl. NB~ dlt dept in di.-.ctor: For lntti~•Plll-lo the 1'1&bt penoa. App. Pree to Yw 1045 COSTA~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
al'\L -absence. IDtervlewi THI IOMTAYl.OI lY ln penoo. toCUey, •••••••••••••••••••••1 • IOTAIY CWI SS CASH SS FOR JJOW •-St..~~-i-=='------1 mua\beae_..ieciby A·~-w _,._ "--• -r --reaum•·Please submit ti ..-Kvvr ff -,... Male kitten. 3 _,, •tnUe .... ___ 1060 Good u1ed l'Um/rtJrip 642-41Zl,al%76 DOCT~ASSl.ST. •----• ••-all I-•7•7•AI 275MtCormiekAve.CM Indoor r.'· Will adopt~ Fnr1/stov ... $4&-076t. •-~ Y '·d 1•-.. canme~co,«c 1
"' • --lovln1a ult~--.•~·-.••••••••••••••••••••••• -0p-11lweilr IC =• .. ,-.. Ollnl .. 1 -U· •-Do ~ot ~-y P . Th I ~•ro ~ ,..---.. ~·-a1st in Health Spl. No _... 1~ ua.. . R .E. SALES. ATTEN·11.1p1st. ursday on y. 898·11«. 17 hand Pinto Gelding EDG~R wanted, powu,
l.i!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l•l up. Net. .. train. Applr Paid B7 ~. TI 0 N L l C ENS E D Boa Ung lknowled&e de· Spirited & sound. 5 gall· runruna &ood or not. = DOOi0-1 pm. 2112 Harbor UNLICENSED-GET sired. $3 .00 per hr. Watchdo'/. Norweilan ed. $630orotr.6tS+4US. 5"17·3182
HelpW•lod 7100......,W..ted 7100 Blvd,CoatalCwa. MUISu •-THE a•·o CARPET 645-6600or .... 19!1l. Elkhoun . Happy 8 mo. '-·r ' =:.:.:::.:::c====---~ --"" male. Trained. 675-ell En&ll•h band made Riding MaJcol
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11
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1-OIOl»ll.LJIS TREATM.ENT!WtU'alnUphol sler~r . Ex · S.ddle+t.ack,$17S.Xlnt hKtrufn.lllt1 IOIJ A~moff .. S.. Rus no11 Wanted, Must DIAINM&iilWAMTm Salary depeadaoneaper. you toaell homm with an perience d. Apply in Mature twins, black & Cood . .ssB-0298 •••••••••••••••••••••••
3 expenenced Chevrolet be ab I e t 0 wo r le IOCaJ!a ·~·Will lralA. Be recocniaed. Call accelerated roune lhat penon. 657 W. 19th. CM. white Ptnian. Must stay WJfJ1"E pearl eltttric .ac·
:;alesmen. Combo-work weekends, as weU aal-'°""-''-11'11<""'-_'_ .... _.,.-'"-1• __ lmmed. PortM.es.aConv. starts imm«l If you're 5'8·3537. togetber.~UM J•welry • 1070 coi-dlon, fllll key. New
both new & uaed · weekdays, Apply ta ILICTllOtilC H09p,64Z·O.OO, int.e:restedinearningbig · ••••••••••••••••••••••• S1000.Sacrifil-e$700.Call ~xcellent. pay plan & ex· person Mon.·1bu:n. ~5. money from lbe atart, Wa.1tress, ex-per. f/time. ,.,..,.,.. 1050 WA,.....ED bet 8 & 5 962-0603. II t d I G ASS&• •s NUllSIS!! eel indlvidua.liied free Sld.'s Blue Beet, 107 21st ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.. 1 ween · cc en emo pan. ulllvers Restaurant P/Ume.M2-43CZ. Pract.-RN·LVN. Choose traininalnonltw:}obaa· Pl,NBart4pm. TOP CASll 001.LAR after5:30,962·U49 MacDonald l8A82MacArt.hu.r8lvd. your shift 1c. xJnt pay. ai.stancetnatopolc.loc.W ·l k·t h h 1 *MATTRESS• PAlD FOR YOUR Gibson ·Ripper Bus, blk
Ch• rof-.& CARWASHHELP Foocl"~lkM Morgan'• Nurae 1 withb• frJ._~1n1 d1 1y ~: e::.Gec!!i~a~t'::ste~t •MADNESS• JEWELRY. WATCHES. ebony, "''/case. scoo. ,...y CT All PositiOO$. 5 Loca· HetpHeadad Reclstry. fl'!GtP ere . .....,. mm~. worker. Neat appear. ART OBJECTS, GOLD, Univoa Amp, .5iOW·U'" 492-8500 tions.Alao,cashJer. LanalollFtozenFoodl 548-8311118J3.2365 Linda"58·?5.M Oriainal Pizza, 2l2J •ALLSIDS• SILVER SERVICE, $125. Lero Baas, f75.
• M•troC .. wastt 29'1SLa1unacaQYOnRd. RESJDENTMANAGER Balboil Bl, NB betwn PricedtoMDQ! FINE; FURN & AN· 6'6·5137 . A~SffT.Cosh1er 2950ltarbor,C.M. La1uaa8ch.49T·l7tt NUISESAIDES Re si dential Mgra. 3-tpm. 811-9625•646-1686 TIQUES.&45-2200 Learn to play 5 s tring Ex per d only. Hrs 9·6pm, F /time 1·3 &: 11·7 shift.s, d d 2!5 oo u · Lad' I 9 Di nd 'lonthruFr•·.ea11Mr•.CLAIMS FOODSIRVICI. exp pref 'd . Park nee e · ·I .n1t5.wANTEDm1turewomaos r •. 1 1 ies rng. umo ·Banjo ! Blue&rass & " n-xlnt. worlcingcond1tiotu"' i . d 1 ° •."' ovesea · S1!i0value.Sacr1fict:for c hor·m a tic slyte. Ca meron, Bauer Bu.ick & I.I. A ANT Superior Healthcare, &: benefits. Call Sparling to ass al. wtlb el er Y Beautiful, very gd quali· ~ Caab. 5.5'1·lGL9 aft. Rea.sonable. Call Gree
Imports. 2925 1-larbor Tl'le~•.t:..-ter Newport Beach. S Day 1'45Superior.NB Manaaemenl8J3..9:1l2 per:soQ. Ambulatory ln !!.:..~~"..e.r used, moving. lpm. 548_4987 aft5pm. Blvd,CM,97S.2SOO. ,.. • ....---~ week. Equat Oppor. --~------1 re11dentlaJ home. $3. hr . ._._ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j We are currently seeking Emplo:yer. For appl. NURSING Reaponalble woman to No hoUJework, cooking MitcallCIMCMIS 1010 Selmer Radial Trumpet
AVON
WAKTTO
MAKEMOMEY,
lut Mot 9 to 57
~: iid6vD7L~fr:j~lj\y (213) 8t8-3t08 or (714) E HU~dS£GS Al1DIS1 . babysU. lnfa.ot &: prepare or bathing. 64&«M8 8pEc01 R>:_~~~RN.
1
••••••••••••••••••••••• w/case. 5 tnOl!J okl. New
CLAIMS Hand•; ..... Xlntl.:'::'":..°"::::':.'·c:•::"'::..::_::: ___ , xper er a rlcs . dinner 4 or 5 days a WHOWANTSTOWORK? cus . w.u..., -•·CUI . WA,.....ED $660 . Sac at $250.
una <>perun,_aJl&bifta. week north San velvet c.balr . "' 1·498·0188 working eonds &liberal FRVCOOK 'LVM7,J:l0 ' · DRIVEACAB! Thoma svi lle Ka . TOP CASH DOLLAR -'--------
b e n e fit s . Sal com . COOKSAui1tant Exper'd Geriatrics a Clemente.'93-ZJM CHOOSE )'Our hours, Hdboard. Beaut. <=able PAID FOR YOUR OfficeFurnffurw&
mensurate w ith ex. KITCHENHelp medications. Xln RESTAURAN'l'HELP work for yoursell, M Spinet piano & bench. JEWELRY. WA'ICHES. Equipment 1085
perience. Full/part Ume, apply in benefits. Equal Opp. Fornewrest.aurant your own tnss. Men ot S.SS.4758af\.6. ART OBJECTS, GOLD••••••••••••••••••••••• GENERALACCIDENT personbtwnUPJ.f.Tbe E I p k L·d· openinaJOOn. Women. Can be slightly SILVER SE"RVL CE GROUP Log Inn . l 7 9 2 !5 mp oyer. ar t... WAITR'EssES handicapped. Neal· MUST sac:rific:e, near new · Exe svl chrs $15~. SC)'
B e a n • V O N Call714/832·2640 MacArthurBl.lrvine Conv. Hosp,t66Flag.shil BUSBOv..-Clean Appearance. Spanish Spiece bdrm FINE J:o~U RN & AN · c:hrs $8 /up, acy dks.
REP RES EN'TAT IV E . For appointment Rd, N.B. 6G80U. COOK•o.'.J Vels., retired. Age 2S to group. BeauUJul. only 2 TIQUES. &IS-2200 Machine cvnri. Pierce-867
Be your own bos:;, set1 __ EQ~•-•_l_O~p~p_E_m~p~l_•>~•-'-I GAIDBB NURSING Apply in person, Harvey 70. SUpplement your in. yrs new. Call96J..:1>1Z. Kng Sz. Bed. New, com· ~. l9th, Cft.f. 64.S-7411·
your own hours. No ex· CLERICAL Aasiataot fOI' apt com· •LG. SJtF. J s , 16903 Al1onquln, come. Drive a cab 6 hn Walnut desk, No-Mar lop, plete, still pkgd. Xtra IBM Com poser, sland-
per. necess. Training plex,N.8 .40Hrsperwll:. Has open•·ng !or RN Boardwalk Shopping or more a day. Apply in firm S190 (worth $425). alone model, fully mahl· PART TIME Ty . St d rk • ~1 bl pers y II Cab Co 27x36", 2' high. $40. , provided .Call 540·704tor · · pmg ta ywo 1or .. Qa e Relief Supervisors, 3·11 Center . HuQtington on. e ow · .. 644.1412. QnSz$170.usuallyhomc, tained by IBM : xlnt
Zenith 7·135'9. 55 wpm, general ofc. person. Pbone&M-0606. & 11·7 shilts. Apply Mon Harbour. 11251 Slater Ave, Foun· incl del. 835-22163. <'Ond , As k Ing $3200.
thru Fri 9-2, Roy ale . ll lain Valley. 9' couch . s· lo~eseal . Small air condit'one -. 675·73608am·S:30pm FULL· TIME. Mailing
Banking dept pos. Lile typi.ng.
TELLERS & I nte rvie wing Tues & HEALTH SPA
INSTRUCTOR
Conv Hospital 1000 W RN , p /t1me, 11·1 re ef. Floral w /down pillows. 2 . , bl ' r -& .
Warfter SA 54i64so · Mesa Verde Conv . Womet1Waftted blue velvet chairs. Xlnl 13 ~IS uc! green S1ng~r Model ~· elec·
BOOklCHPERS Wed. Apply National ' · · Hospital 661 Center SI, For cleaning. $3+ per hr. d Re 673-3'14:1 white low pile carpet. tron1c cash rcg111ter. As ·
NURSING CM Newport Bench area. con · as. · Gd. Cond. $50. Twin bed sume lease al $1.lS. per
p /time. 20·25 hrs wk. Systems Corp, 4361 Birch
Cont act Bob Creighton,1 _S_t.~N_B'-------I
Irvine National Bank. Clerk, a pplications taken
833 ·3700. Equal Oppor. 7.11 F ood Store, 21-5.D
Par1·1\me *AIDES Own transportation. Chinese Oriental Rug. frame,$S.Call830·31S7 mo.71t·644 ·&18S
SALES/£STIMATOR 644·2266betw9&12noon. Wool 9xl2 Brick nL1l
Join a team who cattS TRAINEE 12 oOo C~ll after 6 · 1974·0 PENNIES. MINT 4Wooddesks,f1ling cab.;
Need experienced Jn . about patients & about NeededforOrangeCoun·Women wanted to ~ork 494 3549 • SEWN BAGS. $80. EA. black viny l chairs,
Employer. Plaeelitia, C.M. structortoorganiz.e&in-you. Learn how yoo can ty Sub·c:o ntractor . for . h o u secl ea nin g · · OROFFER.675-9688 copier ; lik enew.642-7008
struf:!t pb:rsical fitness be paid extra for slaying College or Jr. College service. Call 67~. ~ing·Sz . bed w/boa s pr· Roy a l Copenhagen & Tues. 9.3:30
Barmaid. Dependable. Clerk Rejected nems
References preferred. Credit Checker
Lotus Room. 556·9502 01
897·95'75 .
BARMAID 'A'ant~d full
time 4 nites. 1 day,
wee k e nds off. Cal l
546.9949
Will train if necessary.
Apply in person. Ask for
Ken Jameson at
program in exclusive all well. We have our own degree preferred but not Writer needs help to finish ings, frame. matt. Xlnt Bingham fi gurines, new, Architect 's complete of.
adult apt complex. Must coffee shop &: other mandatory. Apply in "The Gr~al American ~~nS~~llS~~~~~betwn pri ced below retail. fice rurnishi~, equip.
have knowledge of & be benefits. Exper'd-all person btwn 9am & lpm. Novel". Will give 'k or 646·5194 ment , 1uppl1ts, etc.
able to maintain gym shi!'U. Apply Mon thru Mon · Fri. 1214 E . Ed· -? 645-0337. toam.spm. Wrought Iron .. dining.glas!I 2000 Seu One·•da. pc ••t 979-4373 equip. f'r1 9am-tpm, Royllle inger, Santa Ana . bl 4 ha J .... 1---------
Plea.seCall Conv. Hospital , 1030 W. . ~handls.r top ta e554i.im:Jc in . tings Silver plated din-Sewi119 Machilw-s 1093 lank of America
500 Howport Cir Dr. 644-3319 Warner, Santa Ana . .SALES : for selling car ••••••••••••••••••••••• · nerw.are. $8 per set, •••••••••••••••••••••••
From9AM-Noon !it6-6t!50. stereos & home cornpo· Antiques 8005 Quality Uaed f\imiture, m i nimum 10 set s . BRANDNEWoeverused,
BEAUTICIANS
Hewpatt a.ach
Equal Opportunity
Employer
THllRYJHECO. NURSING nen;~ E~j'not~.~ut ••••••••••••••••••••••: de corator s urpl.u ~. 5S7·347S &61J.719lafl6. 197S Necchi, does ever
550 Hawport Cir Dr * LV ... 'S f1~exibie w /s~hoo'i c:i~ To all our friends La~u~a Beach Artis t. s Selling anything with a yth ing. Paid $500. will
STYLISTS '
For (2) N. B. salons. w /or
w /out following. 644·0661
or 540·8582.
" 642.1020 · 1n Orange County Pa1nt1ngs -Sale now . lD Daily Pilot Classified Ad take $19S. MU5l sell ! Pri.
Mewport.._. ~11 Shift. Join our pro.---------JONATHAN$ p~gress. 1635 Supenor, is a simple matter •.. ply.S.S7·2484~wnS-7pm
CLERK TYPIST Equal Opp Employer fessional team who care SALESLADY. ex per. part Un1t t , Cosla Mesa. just ca \~5678. Sporting Goods 1094
Accts payable elerit (orl ........... ~ ....... ~ ....... ~~ ....... .,,.I about our patients & time, ready to wear. AHTl91JES
Newport Beach Jn · Homemakers:earnSSlo about you. Apply Mon NewportBch.673·6250 ishavingtheirannual :;u r ~n ce co. Ex · $G per hr. teaching thru Fri 9.4, Royalc EndofSummer pe~1enced, gf?od facinating new hobby. Conv . Hospital, 1000 W. SALESMAM Clearance
Costa 111 esa ·N ~'PI Bl'h w /f1"ures & t yping. H_9-ll[S arranged, Call Warner, Santa Ana. f'or leading lighting fix· Sale on EntireStock
arQ a salon. No fo ll ow. Sa lary to $475. &:~ _..-g'/g.J.i88Jw;?'1.230Q 546·6450. tu re stort: in Orange C.'o. up to ~ OFF•! nee. $90 wk guarn & bener·,1s .8"" "-""" · ~ ___ · ~ ll h 42231st Sl N B ,,.,.~ -.... Prefer one w / H ling ex· · · · · comm. 548·9'J86. C L ECK TYPIST Nd Housekeeper =In . Part time tellers. Exper. per. Good pay. Paid vac:s 673-6001
R H k & I Hours to suit Call Mary & h Se-' d BEAUTY OPERATOR s harp ex p full time ousew~~J.~un · Bat.es, 494-0Til. Security osp. "" nam~.,.a ·Appliances 8010
Needed immediate ly person for detailed & · Bank, Lag. Bch. dress, age & quall 1ca· ,,,, •• ,,., •••••••••••••
6'14·57SOor644·0398 va ried job·$2 .75 hr . HOUSEK_.MG 1 ---~~-----1 lions to P.O. Box 12Sl, Whirlpool Electric
s.57·0116. SUPERVISOR Pan Time Lane Waitres:; Coslill Mesa,Ca92626. drye r.1974 model.$60 Blueprint operator, Ex·l -""-=-"--------1 Co c Ir: la i I exp er s•LE• n-AIL 499-1706. per, Copy Cats, Corona Coc ktail Waitres s ex · A M S h i C l . & neceuary. Apply at Sad· Jilt. -..o•
De1Mar,4M·7133. per 'd. Apply, Pippins, Housekeepers. Exper. dleback Lanes. Mission Ag gressive exper 'd Will buy some Ref. Ap.
31235 Doheny Park Rd , pref 'd. Viejo, 586-5300. sale~1perso1 n wan.l~ f~r pliances. Running or not.
Capo. Beach. San Clemente 1 -~~-------1 reta1 sa es pos1t1on 1n Also sc rap metal
Boys & Girls 800/o COMMISSION Ge~:':t.\..."':"~'•' Pm.ct E~~n.'~;!h:;:-;,.;:;,:; .::"cc':..:·5258=:...· -----1
lOto 14 years of age. Dai· /C Wortdnig mo. Apply in person at G.E . Refrig, F /f'. 17 cf
ly Pilot delivery routes .. as a member of our of· Installer: Al least 1 yr ex· HOW"I The Tannery West, So. Sl20. G .E . Washer 1 \A:
may be availa ble in your fi ce. Individual trainin11 per. in c:~r stereo:i & Coast J'laza, Tues l08m· yrs old SJOO. Kenmore
area. Earn profit for de· in a most desirable area, speaker 1n slallat1on. 9-21'M or 4-91'M Spm lhru Fri. Washer $100, Guar & Del.
li\•eries & cash, trips or C 0 s t a l'lf es a . Ca 11 Also, mus~ know how to Earn $4 hr putting your 546·8672.
merchandise for selling 645.5045. Ask for Ker handle air tools. Call personality to work. All SALESWOMEN
new 9ubscript1ons. For McFarland. 642·1020 work done from our new We need 2 more people Auction 8015
inform:rtion please call *DISCOVERY* _:.:::...:='-------! Irvine ofc. You must for the best sales job in •••••••1 •••••••••••••••
642-4321. From San Janitor. part-time. light possess a pleasant clear o g co F1exible hrs I BUY
Clement e -San J uan REAL ESTAn duties. Apply Mr. Scane voice & a confident man· c;;nn:ces~. PersonalitY * * * *
BEAUTICIAN
~------
•••••••••••••••••••••••
6mm Remington High
Power, Rifle w/scope.
$125. 552-33.56
~ TY.Radio,
HIFl,St.-. 8098 ...... , ... ,,,, ... , .....
Over $1 500 Stereo all
Pioneer, must sell Rl25.
645·0358. Ask for Jem
loots I.Marine
Equlpm...t •••..•..•........•. , ...
G~rat ,010 ., ... , ......•..••••.•..
International Designer Pattern BOYSCOlITS
need boats,
~-•• .~ •
and airplanes. Tax
advantages. 54f>..4990
loots, MalnfetMltlU I
Ser•lce f020 .................. , .. ,.
Scol'lllO Marine
Engine-t't;jdios· Elec. Capistrano area, call . or Mr . Williams, ner.Perfectfor students &enthusiasmmore im· Good used furniture & , 495.0030 and Mission Vie. Companion for older lady, Silverwoods, 45 Fash.ion & housewives. No actual po rt a nl than ex pe r . apphances, or I will Sell
jo-El Toro area, call ge n~ra l housework & Island, NB selling involved. For $600+ draw after short for You.
Fire Systm·Plmh'~
RefrJ:: freeest548·9704
581·6310. · cooking.S48.s.56a more info .. 833·8098 qualifying p e ri od . MASTIERSAUCTIOH
Equal Oppor. Employer Cook needed p/lime Tues F / l i !~H~~. Fri _ 1_be_tw_n_9a_m_·5~p_m_. ____ 63:.::..:.1 _:·04.c54:..c.·.•_•_m_·5~p-m_. __
1
646·8686 & 833-9625
& Thurs for conv. hosp. Bayvie w Conv. Hosp, P /t male. fem. service •Secretaries
0 T LDER Apply in person, Beverly Th · c M t b t E e /Sals I A IUI S Manor. 340 Victoria. 20S5 urto, .. esa aces. vs . IOOo/0 FEEPAID AHTICj)tlES
SHOW&SB.L Westsail Corpot'ation ha Costa Mesa. 642·3505 S7 S wk+. Mr. Lev 1 Liz Reinders A~ency
1mmed.vacanciesfor : 1----------1 L~-~....._ 848-1004 402QBirchSt,Sle l04 Ana hei m ConvenlioR
D •H-~--/ COOKFORHOSP. ~ '•--------: N tBe h 8338190 Center . 800 w. Katella. K• an;rware Work rom -.. home..,,, e wpor ac · r ~-1 d G eral Boat Apply at 1501 E. 16th St, J--Coll for~ Across rom .._,..,ney an .
W. h en . Newpo•t Beach betwn the telephone. Good RECEPTIONIST E t bl . 1965. 80 Exhibitors. Ocl 2,3.4, It 1 year manne ex • comm. We hire ban-s a lS s. Thurs/ .. T 1/Sat l·lOpm,
perience. 8:30am & 3:30pmor call dicapped & Sr. citizens. h. Sun J2 6pm
G •-T hup 6455701 I ed. •• · lo SECRETARY·Fas ion · · tKOat OUC: t--·--·------I Call collect, 7lt/823-M38. mm 1a..., opemng r I I d G' I Fr'd R SECKULICH With 1 year marine ex· United Handicapped individual with good s _an · ir · 1 ay. e· PRODUCTIONS perience. COOK Sales. clerical skills. Typing 6C 9wres enthusiasm, l~p· -.--'-:.::::.::..:=::.:.::::.:::c...._I
ApplytoGatcGuard Six nites, immediate ..::::::::__ ______ ·fwpm. Sb or dicta.phone. in.g & S.11 . 359 San l1cycle1 8020
Z15McCormickAve,Cl'l1 opening . Apply inuve·inoroutWomanlo Must be ta c tful . Miguel.N.B.64().J 9toor •••••••••••••••••••• , ••
p e r so n · Spaghetti care (or elderly couple. 1 pleasant. al:He to handle 644 ·1860:._ ____ _
BOATINGJNDUSI'RY Bender. 621M W. Coasl an in\'alid. Refs. Ph. busy phones. SECRETARY,f/time. !ll
MasterCcapt"ntet"/ Hwy.NB. 64.5·5898 PleaseCall ins . agent. 11> sec'y
Installation . COOi( •LYM• 644-ll89 Secure flllurc. Willing to
Req 's a min. of 2 yrs ex Six niles , immediate Bayview Conv. Jloap, From9AM·Noon grow. Work 548·9391. Ted
per. in carpentry & boat o pening . Apply in ZOSS Thuri.a Ave, CM THEllYIHECO. 998-4975. Bob544·79'72.
installation . lmm ed . s h 11 · 55ou wportClrDr p e r s o n.. Pa g e 1 8'2·350!5. "a Security t>_..t
AZUKI
I 0 Spd 8icydH
$1 0. over Cosl
CYCLE WORKS LTD
1822 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa. 548·5783 openin g . Apply al , Bender. 6204 W. Coast Hew~a.oc:h 0 ked s ·1 Is lander Yachts. 1922 8 LVN needed for conv. ver wor ecur1 Y llwy. N · Equal pp Employer G d c d rel•·er• D-IBll:a~r~r~a'.'nc~a~R~d;.:.1'.'':'!.•i".n~e'-. -!;;;;:::;'-;::-;~;;--=:-;;::;::! hosp. 3·11 shift. Xlnt pay uar n e s a · -~-8040
-Chef to $1100. mo. Sid's & benefits. Apply in Varied hrs. On Call. 1 •••••••••••••••••••••1
locrt Repairmen Blue Beel, 101 21st Pl, person. Beverly Manor, Receptionist. Front office Ideal job for reti red 'Purebred Germ. Shep, R
I\
'··'
71785
Spod110
Bouf!q..,e
Must have waterfront NB. 675'·3333 aft4pm. 340 Victoria. C.M. appearance & poise CS· person in good health. wks, nd good homes. $15. boatyard exper, Need _c_c.__c..c_c_c.cc.c.._~--1 Appl y in person to Lynn ea.S46·01166M/1F Day or night -long or short -this front WTap .k'.lled worker w/clear COUNTER HELP MAID sen l i a 1 · p 1.e 8 s 8 n t Baird. dress is a joy to wear. 1lie set in waistband buttons . . t ele phone \IOICe. ac· A K c G 0 L D E N to the .d So ... f brl h ·1k ·1• . record. Blackie's Bo at Day!'! & nights, p/Ume, 18 Colonial Motel c u rate trr,•ng, some WeshalJ C'.:f. . si e. · ·~ a cs sue as s1 . s1 Jersey, Yard.673·6834. & A I betwn2& Pb·•n9137 2'<M cCorm>·~ ve RETRIEVER PUP· challis, crepe, sheer wool. TI78S is eut in Misse!'! -:..::.:::_:.:.:..;:=:._---I over. PP Y ·....,.. general o flee duties J .,,.. PIES. 644 ·1481. "' s· < kd Del T c t M .;Nzes 10-18. •~e t2 requires 4 3/8 yds. or 45" fabric "'' .,pm w ys. aco, MAID w•~o Commensurate salary & ---~os~a~,.,es~•'._ __ l ;;:~;:;--;;-;:-;:;::-;;-:-:-1 r th I d d l 18 "' r Bookkeeper SIS, 1155 B k CM ,,... •.,.. or e ong ress an 5 y . or the short dress.
Fee Reimb. Construe. a t r, Part Time* Call e mploY•e ~its. ~Service Station Allen. CHOW ·CHOW Pups· To order: a~nd pattern number, size. name,
exp nee. F /chg lhru Deliverymen ovr 21 perm Mesa Motel" 646-9681 Persa:nnel direc:tor. 3Zl.a11 dant. exper'd . Da y & AKC, Red, 4 ni alc 1 address and zip. Price $3.00 plus zs~ postage.
••·-F pl\ early morn LA TimeS M . t Cam I no Capistrano, E F II & p/time AP· Fem., !5 wka-old . 5464676 lnctease your sewing know-how. Follow l.he rave fin. slmla. l'-"'U ee. aemeo Suite 205, San Juan ves. u . · L...->-• d · 1 CONTROLCAREER deliv lo NB homes. $2:SO an;EOPLEPERSON . Capistrano. ply.Shell Slat.ion, 17th & PUREBRED German ~review a vice rom the Detriot F'tee Press.
Employment Agency per mo. 642-4800 Exec. looltina for ..... Irvine. NB Shephe rd. Female pup· "If sewing is an activity you lake seriously.
J.400 trvlne, Ste 1098 -.. _... R -~1 py 6 wks $25/bst ofr Spadea's "Sew Tips" by World Famous Desitners Nwpl Bch 71415.56.ll<',l\O De liveryman, pe rm .• time business U50Clate •CwptWWW Ser vice Sta Attenda nt · • · sbouJd be as much a aprt ot your home sewing
p /time. Early morn deliv in wholeJlale supplles. Cltrii:Typbt wanted. Fuil & p/ltme. 847·5900. center as a good sewing machine.'' Paperback 1 _
1
1 IOOU&Pst of LA Times to CM, NB 8 U I I n es a I u 11 Y Appl y Jn Person. Mrs. Brown 's Shell , 990 E. GERMAN !!hort haired ~ 1st each -or set of 5 al sz .75 postpaid. Send
E'aper"d , (/lime. Prefer areas. No coiled.. Must capitalized. Interview Mus co. Gemini In· Coast Hwy, NB Pointer pups, AKC reg. ~en 1.o this newspaper, c/oSpadea, 2 Bridge St., eonlr'act.ln&~-Re.~I~ bave depend. car . m.2223 dustMes, Inc. Z31J So. All shob, 3 f, 1 m. $75. Milford,N.J .08848.Dcpl.CX·lS. I to Chtssifled ad no. ~ 5'48+4?~. MAMA.a TIMI Pullman, SA. S Mw;t sell. M2·9373 after 6
t c/o Dally Pilot, P. 0 . BoJl DENTAL ASSISTANT Fa at Food SerYice. RKapffoRid Grc!T:~: firm l.!'.p:Om'-------.j
1560, Costa Mua, Ca Chairside. Ort.ho exc. Burcen, 0rnce Juliu. Needed for front o(e. baa openings in Its Santa POODLES. Darling AKC
l._"'626_c...._· _______ 1 req. Newport Beac • 4t Me&lcan Fbod. We will MWJt be neat. pleNant &: Ana office for sharp in· TOYS. Apricot male.
642-2JBH. trala..893-98CZ enjoy dealing w/tbe divlduals w/p:ood sh &: .54.1 ·3092.
IF YOU public. Must be exper'd typing !lkil\Ji . Good op. l-"-'-'"'-"------1
have a 1er'/lct to off or or You don't need • 1un to MASSAH in hand ling a bus y por. to start caret"r. Call
1oods to aell,•ptac~ ;in ad "draw fast" when )"OU Openings roresp. phone. s Day wk. 9am-personnel al 54.9·0902 for The fastest draw in the
In lh e Dally 1·1 il ot place an ad in the Oaib' orlnexp. 5pm. Apply in person, furt.herinfonnatlon. West ... a Daily Pilot
f
Olau lfied Section ... PllotWantAds!Calloow Callforlnro.12'Nnoa Tues tbru Fri. 15t5 F.qua10ppor.Employer Classified Ad . Pbonc 1 ~
Pbone&t2·56'11-642-.567&. . _ &&5-0IM.cr~ NewportBlvd,C.M.. 642·567&. I~
I
I •
loats, Power 9040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
181/2 Blain Roal w 6 cyl
e n~ine 0 /0, trade fo1
motor home +cash 01
make offer. 54!)..1885.
Gla s par Runabout .
w /trl r . 13'. Elec starter
35hp Evinrude Nds re
pau-. $3SO 64fMXJ'T7. 91~
W. 17th Street. C.M.
18 ' Glasspar 160HP ftfcf'f'
l/O. Trailer. $1800. Cal
646·0098
24' Campbell Cruiser. "'01
photos, info, & marin~
survey, call 213: f.&i.{J89(
or 799<J829.
33' Ch r is·O ·Vit ct
SporUisher. Mint rond
Call673·1933. =----20'1/0 . ID EAL t-TSll/SK
BOAT. Very clean, m :in1
ext ra s. $6800 Ph
494-4849 before 12 wknd~
afl6 wkdys. ----
SKIP JACK 20'
F .B. Xlnl cond r.tan'
xtras. Slip avail Bes
ofr. 346·Z249.
1973 32' Luh l"l't, TS, FB
Pilot VllF, Eltt Rcfri~
etc. $28,900, 1634·0844 01
538·867.5.
23' Inboard. l2 Wetdt.'t'k
OS, nu tanks. ruddC!r
e t c. Must Sell $7SO
SJS. 7020
20 ' Cusl T..apslrakc. JJ:
11.P . Johnsoo. Mmlconcl
Bst ofr. 640.l 168/S49-887S
loots. Soll 906( ..................... ,.
SAILS FOR SALE
Fully batlen main w fJil
for 20·2S' Cal or Tri
Reasonable. 64Q.SIOO
12' Kitt w/lraller.
$450 ,...,,,,.,
·,
I
DAILY PILOT M Aatoi, i•ported .Mltot1 t.,1rW ....._ 1_,1C"W Wit, U..:. ....._ UNd ~-~=•••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••• ············--·-··· ................................ ........__ ... _ ············--····..... . ftl7 ...... s.11 9060 4 Wllffl Drl-tlSO ""'°' Wmhd 9590 IMW 971 _...... 97 T.,.i. 9761 C 311 9'11 9'JI ,,,.,,.,,, __ .. ,,.,
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••··--•••••••• •••,•••••••--... •••• ••••••••••••-"•-•• --·••• -·•••••••--·-••• "'12 au.oeboul. Bfta/Blk
"H 11,oble Cat. Mao WE'VE MOYl!DI TOP DOLL Al L..•t '14 Toyeta Collea or. CHEVY llO!fl'B CARLO im, 4 •ti, "'1ek. Rill.
xuaa. Xlot oond. Col OURN•wLOC•-ON puD ..._01,_.....a apd, ""'""'· radhla, r ' '14. J"'moeulote cood, dlrom• he .......... ooo .m.UIO or...a>. Bes c. n.~• ,..,. ........,. .._.. .Koni tboc)& Xllt..... W.U.ecauipped.~•dn mi. tlSSO/bet offer aft. .. 2001 L ltt51. IMMEDIATB.Y ova 100 PIOORrm .-ltad•·ID. B&teoded __ ... $&,.,.,...
22' P /G CnUin& Sloop
Head, 1alle.r. &Jpa2 --....
S-AM ... HC-term• •••ll•ble . FORAU. &•ST•-· ... _ '14C.UeaS?,ll,ootml, (414401). J>Jr. 71 ..... 74's COPELAND'S FORllCOHCARS ..... ••• OHDISPU.Y ;::~ss.•?S. a1-. ..••gr , , , , , 11 -• s ••: rlMTOS JEEPCITY CALLORCOMllH 8:fl'3171 tt.Hofll .. rtt Ill'!! ,.. 1tc,...._mo. z1>oo..-;Runo11outs.Sta·
2•• Venture & trailer. TO SEIUS Tit1 uu1MAn:D1PWOWDtlNI AUTHORJ.ZkD • Corolll, 2 *·· 4 fPMd. ,...,.,..., 72 CblwYNoY•_..., Uonwaaoas. from SLM
Xtraa. 111111 aell. &l ol 55MOOO lll'!RCEDESDEtJ..!!R · Eic•ll••• •r-porUI· ~~ .. -oa .... c.11 ('IOllBSW)
-'"'"'"·-'-"-'367=·'--·----'72 •·ord Pickup .• whl 1971 IMW200 •68Gltloncheoter. Uoo • .,.IMIDIODll'. 's I ti -· '1111odarw• M
Mootg9mery 12 wanted. ~l~~bst~~:.o$4s~.on . 4spde~, alroooditto!ina:. tz•r7~= '72 C~rona llark 11. , e ilC -on .... CtaY ~=Blvd.
Will pay up to $MIO. if i ~----------1 1tereo & c:naa wheels. OntheSantaiA.NFwy. atmpa:, hllh' .mllel, but OflR IN STATIOMWMK>M Maiieaa &Q.001
Xlnt cond. 846·•633. 1975 CHEVY One owner. Will ~rade! ad. XlDt Buy! 11'50. ........... Automatic. lador')' air. 996~
Eva. &weekends. 1/1 TOM PICKUP 3100 W.Colstu-.ft.B. 831·~0dfr. MBZ '61 250 &E. Qaulc 538·1991. •' • -12 · montht/12,000 mlle ,.,.a.... .., ..
....... ~1 / V8 l t ' "'"J modelandreallyrdcel,,A '72 C II 1... t C 0 _,.,._ w·-•DIY~-<·~) ••••••••••••••--••••• _._.,.pl , au oma ic. pwr. 642 .. 9405 c---1 oneownercarand•ho""' oro a .,.,,.,, au o, ...,'-"'... -· -..-....-Docks 9070 steeri.ng & ractory air ....... 9715 1't. Prlee• \O .. ,, ... b SJJOO or 1belt olter. cau • -('" 1'eoclctintFORD•••· JJLAS Cond Bl'g '~ W/Spok •••••••••••·•••••••••••• :u -8'" ~ " =···--••••••••••••••••••••••• · ""'~ e OrangeCounty't week. t0q0072). Dlr. .,....,._. -~
WANTED slip for 34' wheels. (rt98). I luy 9 3 / 9 2 1 • 5 a 8 ,,_____ ZOSOHatborBlvd. Chris Cruiser. Pvt home SALE PRICED AT H gh•1t S er I 73 CAPll 2 1 • ; t9Toyota..--o ., llac ~-ta Mesa 642-0010 C~sler /ftjt 1a,tM:t
SS''' on 11-1• V8. 8 tra<t< sten:o, air 714 1523·1250. Xint cood.11'1~... -~· .iiv "~---. UltO OK. Quiet, courteous -r-· · '--·toll ,,....., ......,.,,, ~ o'.JUU owaent548-3096 COPb ·~ llHMaxeyToyota ronditionabg. XI.NT in & MBZ '73 4M> SE. Clean. ~ er.-,.. . Mw..rl:liir .. ......, 1 '•Cbe:v. lcnpalaCus\om, P ' __..o•s Call Roger or !Jill out, 831·2040dlr. One owner car. Can be 74 TovohiCce Ill '-.. c:...-..MM1• /, full power, air, Xlnt. 2929HatborBlv(I.. ~.B.28'boat1lipforrent. JEEPCITY 847-8555 , leased or purchllaed Automatic, [adory alr,, · cond. Lo mi. $895. rll'm. ·coataM~a. ~~~-Pb ' 546-6299 SSIMOOO FREEAPl'RAISAL D-9720 ntendedtenns. !003835> 12 "'oolb/l2,000 mile CADILLAC ELDORADO Ul·:IS75. 546-1934
1972SCOUT We buy used c ... rs & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dir. 21S /821·8S88 ; warranty. 12954 '73. Very low mUea1e. Corvette 9932 firm
loah. Speed & llARDTOP. Roof' rack, trucks. Call GROTll WI~ BUY YOUR 7
JC /5ZJ·
7250· (M'JLKK) Oneownercarandahowt ···············-······ 70 J1Yj1~=-ssoo tires. Ski 9080 automatic, air cond., CHEVROLET for a Cree DOARVOUNLKSW,TOYGOTA. MBZ '13 45o SEL. Fully n..o-. .. ·J it. Fully equipped. BU.Y •TOPCASH! fd ynd.oa,....,.;,.,~w ._,
••••••••••••••••••••••• pwr. steering. XLNT in· appraisal. A EN equipped w/suo roof. A fOllD on ex\ended terma or For Corvettes and other g co ~· 4
lt' Glaspar w /trailer. side & out. Will trade. GROTHCHEVROL}o:T PAIDFOR well maintained luxury 2060Harbor81vd. lease. <•5P64S). '?Ir. used cars & trucks! 12Duster,x.lnlcood •.
Xtras & skiis. list ofr. 83l·2040dlr. 18211 Beach Blvd . TOiR.C:,fuR sedan for the dis· Coeta 1111a 642·0010 2_1 3 I 9 ~ l • 8 Ii 8 8 ; HOWARD Chevrolet. $1800. New tires,
542·6656aft5. lluntingtonBcach CALL crimlnating buyer. v~-9770 11415Z342SO. Dove & Qu~ Sts. Near 960-3452
T port-'74 Toyota Land Cruiser. 847·6087 549·3331 Lease or buy, (000821> -.w...-Jamboree, Bristol, &
rtml Like new, 16,000 mi. SELLl~GYOURC•R? SAL BERNADENE Dir . 213/921·8588; ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1974CADIU.A0 M.ac:Arthur, Newport '67PLTMc:5utH
••••••••••••••••••••••• $4800 Ph · 642·1995 " ~ 540-04-42 714 /523·7250. 197JVW SEDAN D.E VJLLE. Beac:h.833-0555 Bel.-edea:e hardtop.
c-.en, S./ . . . 9560 TOP PRICES PAID sup ER 8 EET LE 18.000 original miles. automalie",excellentcon,
Reid 9120 Trucks For Imports ·7 4 260Z. Auto, air . MBZ'631904cyl.Sed.Car Special mais custooi Silverw/blac:k leather& CCMllJClr 9933 ditioo, l2 month/ l.2,000
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••,.7•4 •• M••••da•··,~::.~.::.·•• Paid for or Not AM /1'~M radio' lo mi. looks and runs like new. lnl j b 4r t.e w·u Landau. Pri~ to sell at ••••••••••••••••••••••• mile wa'rranty '$109
IO' El DorodoC a1. a..,._.,. D•an LewlsimPortt Xlnt cond $5900 /bst. Priced for quick sale. &~de ~1~d::°· J $8395. Will take trade. '12 XR7. Sharp! Auto <TVCUSl
Make ofr 54~885 Rohlar1y &engin1e.
1
s
7
po
00
ke0 1966 Harbor, C.M. 645-3298. < O 3 9 7 9 9 D ) . DI r . · · ('21LJD). 831·2040dlt. trans, full pwr, air. Theoclon RoblM
-'-'-'-'------I w ee s on y • 646 !003 2 1 3 I 9 2 I· 8 5 8 8; W.AM11D , AM /FM tape. Rally
69 Chevy ~ Too, p/s, p /b, miles. Sl-IARP! (615A). · 714 /523·7250. used ,70 VW's or older. ~ ri4 CADILLAC whls, Must sell. $2150 FOID
a /c, dual batt. saddle COPEL.A.HO'S WE PAY Call831·22'7Jdealer. I • bst /o(r. PP 838·3443. 2060ffarl>or81vd.
tanks, etc. s~· Cabover JEEPCrTY CA$H MBZ '71 280SE Cpe. 3·5 SEOAU de VILLE de!,•,•.· 645·3141 eves. Costa Mesa 642-00l ~ Campr,$2500.536·3507. 558-80..w.. engine. Fully ':'C'.luipped WANTED; '70-'72 VW M "I' ~ vv w / s,un roof. Mint cond; Van, full camping, gd Vinyl '!'oof, leather in· '71 PLYMOUTH ·~ Chevy Carry-all, fu.11 '73 CHEVY Cheyenne 20 4 FOR USED CA RS Available for lease o cond. Like sun roof. tertor, full power, fac-'68 XR?, auto trans, fu\I Barracuda, 6 cylinder,
aJI cond, ,PIS. p /B. Air whl drive, long bed, fully PHILLIPS purchase. ( 142CFU). 64$-4680 tor)' air conditioning, tilt pwr, air, xlnt oond. $1500. automatic, vinyl roor.1
.shock.s, 6 foam bed & equip., w 19. camper. BUJCK·PONTIAC·OPEL 2 1 3 I 9 2 l • 8 5 8 8 ; steering wheel, AM/FM Best offer. Pvt party. $2595 (#21(1)
curtains, 40 gal. spare $4!)()() 642.3569 24888 Alicia Parkway 714 1523-7250. 173 YW CAMPER stereo with 8 lrack tape, &&4-6317 . Theodore Robifts
gas tank, full hitch &w1r-· Laguna Hills 831 ·2400 MBZ '73 450 SLC. Low One owner. Ski racks. powFr door locks, cruise Doclgt-9935 FOID
ing,644-7651 '72 FORD RangerXLT ¥. mileage! Completely lmmaculat.einside&out. control, etc. Includes 12 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2060Harbor81vd.
Mobile Homn 9 140 ~~ns~ar:r:;:~i~~~i:: TOP equipped., A silver beau· 831·2040dlr. mo!llh 12,000 mile '72 Coronet, 4 dr. Small Costa Mesa 64.2-0010
••••••••••••••••••••••• camper shell. $2950 . ty w /bl~ck interior. '69 BUG, body, int., eng., fi~l~f V.P. warranty. V-8.R/H.auto,76,000mi. Pontiac 9965 ~
Dual RI.de on bay. Xlnl 752_1••• $ Flawless · COOl~) Ex· in xlnt cond. Asking blue-20 m1le11 /gallon Xlnt .,.... tended lease avail. Ask · •••••••••••••••••••••••
cond. Call 673·8385 or for lea se mgr. Dir. book.644·552f Only $6395 ~~7n~.;-Sl895. or offer. '73 Pont. L:eMans 4 dr.
493·5837. Newport Beach. 1 J~1~~h;ev! ~;: ~t ~ Paid LEASE OR IUY! 2 l 3 I 9 2 1 . 8 s 8 8 ; '6' VW nu clutch tram ~ .....,_ p /s. p /b, air, only 31,000
Moto...:ycles/ box ... 642-1357 FOR '75 280 z 2+2 714 /523·1250. tires, brakes. Xlnt cone!'. ~ n I J Ford . 9940 mi 's. Orig. owner. Needs
Scooters 9150 4.s~ed. mags, air condi-.64 MBZ 2205 4 door. air, $795. 673-2325af\.6 1-b!I C Ii I C ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires. $27~deline
••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 CHEVY J/4 Used VW'S uon1n~; Loadedw/~lllbe AM /FM stereo w / tape, '74 VW Super Beetle, ~-.... ~ '873 LTD 4 door. h~niijP,. 552-0438or .
'72SUZUKl.750CC.red. Pickup w / Alaskan Pidf Wot extras.Verylowm1l.age-sunroor. xlntin&out! 28000 i I '--rgm.,power.,air, n .69FirebirdConvert.62M ,
5500 mi, inclds $400of ac-camper, excellent ! $2495 a or or""' less than 4000 miles. 962.1932 xint c':n"d~e~lch:fi~ Best offer over $2700. nu tires, a /c, xlnt cond.
cess. $995. Ph: 559-5440or (888778) (090M PF). tires, $2 ,6$. 5Sl-4l'2 LEA.SE Ol IUY! 492·89$4. $1850. 644 ·0228 af'l.6
839·2027 . TheodoreRobins $196.90 MBZ'75,280Deluxesedan C •72 Ranchero. 51400.
FORD Plut:T Exec. Full power. '68 VW BUS w/radials, "72CADILLA p ·~il:s~ZL~:el n5e5!. 6~~ 2060 Harbor Blvd. 36 OE~OAC Qualified 5 yr. financing tape deck, lo mi'g. $1250. COUPE DE VIW rJ.~58&ini~!:flhu~: Costa Mesa 642.()()JO mo. · available. 1156?.6. DLR Ph : 640-5390 Ar.itorltatic. lilt steering --'--"-''-'--'--"-'--'-'----'-I 962·9703 llunt. Bch. 842·4435 Ca P c OS l : $ 8 7 O O {714) 523.7250 wheel, stereo. pwr. win· Ford Torino Wagon. '72, '75 Suzuki TM 125 '69 FORD Autos, Imported Residual : $5lOO Ask for . Yol•o 9772 dows, air conditioning. p /s, p/b, $1800. Aste.I ~~. U.tility bed pickup. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Larry Chesney Lease MG 9742 ••••••••••••••••••••••• One owner & CLEAN! 541·3078 -Department o••HGEC-~ --~='-"-"----I 492·0894. au tom a tic . $23 54 General 9701 IARWICKDATSUM ••••••••••••••••••••••• """' -• 1 (794FWA).
(16910Dl ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 MG Midget XJntcond VOLVO $130 29 Suzuki '72 380CC, just San Juan Capistrano · · · • tuned pistons. plugs &. Theodore Robins 831 -1375 493.3375 Nu tires. 3 1.oJ:ti. Sl ,850. EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO PlusTm: . FORD 197 3 LOTUS . 646·6817 after5PM. Largest Volvo Dealer 36 md. OEL : OAC
nngs.S495.84&300l. 2060Harbor8l\'d. EUROPA 1971 Z40Z. air .. mags MGB •9744 inOrangeCounty! Cap cost : $4400
H I D 'd · 1 Cost •• ••• 0010 . . d. am/fm . new radials. xlnt BUY or.LEASE R 'd al SIOOO Ask 1 ar ey av1 son. JUS a esa "'"". Yellow, 1n mint con t· cond $3800 548•5007 aft ••••••••••••••••••••••• est u : or rebll. $900. Yms 9570 tion. fl1ustsee ! IP102). 4.30 · · · · .71 MGBGT DIRECI' Larry Chesney Lease
•72 Ho~a~~-:-5~17~eeds ;;;;~::·:;; .. ;·; .. ;;:: c~:e~~·s ·go:~. 'fa~as;,,_n:r~~ Xlntc~;.dJ'..;ooomL Pp~~· "i~R ... WIC~DATSUH
'64FALCOH
Automatic, low miles,
excellent ! 12
month /12.000 mile war·
ranty. $1095 (CTJV369)
TJoeoclore Robins
FORD
2060 Harbor. Blvd.
Costa Meaa . 642·0010
'72 PONTIAC
CATALINA
BROUGHAM
4 Door Hcrclop
Vinyl roof, tapestry in·
terior, run power, fac·
tory air conditioning,
power brakes, radio,
sport wheels, etc. Low
miles on this Cadiliac
trade-in! (®E'I'X)
Only $2295 work. $425, or offer. Bet-Sportsman. T-glass. Air. 558-1000 oim /fm stereo. $315-0. of· Ponche 9750 l.~_, ~-~-! ~ 83~a)37nJ5uanCapis4'!~"°3375 ter hurry! 960-3546 cust. int, paint. mags, 9705 fer. 496·7231 art . 5· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2025 S Manchester .==~=:.:..-~-"~:.:..=01 '70 Maverick. stjck shirt.,
radials. Xtra whillires. Affa Romeo 1973 o•TSUH '75 C •R•~• Ana"-:m 750-2011 Clle¥rolet 9920 $800. or oll«. '68 9 pass MllllPI (:OJlll•t .'74 550 HONDA Chopper ....... 850.673.5631. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' "'~ •'Cl Country Sedan.air.auto, ~M,.c'-..._. ' Xlnt cond. Sl600. 546-0975 .., '63 Alfa Sprint. AM /FM , Z40 Z. 4 speed, air condi -Likenl!'w. 645-0045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• full pwr, $500. or offer. -......,
Sun/Monfl'hurs '69 VW Van. Reblt eng., All nu mech. $750. Ph: tioning, mags & metallic VOLVO CONNELL .54~5-.!:1202~------i'."'C.=a,.=-===-==-=,,-; brakes, Xlnt cond. Ex· 64.2-8301. paint . Low miles . '62Super90,Sepia8rown. -
R 'd741.HONDA1CRl25 tras. $l950. 4gg.2350. 09 S3l-2040dlr. $4200. Work records SALE 9952 '72 POHTIAC e tne sw ng arm, A.usti•Healrt 97 avail.645·$717 Mustan9
moved up boges. 30 '66Ford. VaporinJ·ector ••••••••••••••••••••••i For Sale 197.5 Datsun All I k CHEVROLET ••••••••••••••••••••••• CE MA.MS Hardtop
M'k ,~ l rt 8210 2500 AM /FM '59356 A Po-c"-cars n ourr sloe . v1·nyl roof. automalo'c. 1 una, •u sage po · 20 MPG. $945. '67 3,000MK . Lo mo·. M•'nl .• ""· · · '" 11... ' M l C 390 G I k I Rd & d I ~350 $l950 priced at below increase SALES&SERVICE 67 us a ng Pg· power . s~e ri'ng , 12 ing. D& Pi~. n c e 492·CW394 . cond. Must sell. Bsl ofr. a_ 10 ra 13 s. -. · · E I ' h 6 64"8366 or August 2Sth. 282a H~ ll•cl. n g n e • ea er s • monlb /12,· mJle w•r-frame + more. Xlnt 675.8617 1644_8722_ S4 -0010 v-gr-._-l ,. & ·
Ond Must See lo .p '70 Ford Econoline Radio, 48 _ au oma IC, power air. ranty. $2595 <233.JRE) c · · '71 Dat. Wgn . Runs.needs PORSCHE '72 914 Cpe. COSTA MESA $899.848·8340Dlr. TheodorelobiM preciate. 644·2677. htr. mags. air lifts. lrlr '60 Austin Healey Work , best offer, over Fully equi'pped. A clean 546 1200 bitch. $2000. 548-4463 aft "B g "S 'le TO CHOOSE • ~~--"·11e 9955 ~FORD
C · · o T I h u ·eye pn $400. 548·8179. and very well main· -~ -' lassie 7 rump 4. Xlnt.cond,gdrunncr,gd · d bll , FROM ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2060HarborBlvd. Daytona 500. All orig. body, Int. A classic & Ffat 9725 ta l n e a utomo e . 1915 Monza 2+2. Steel S I d Se . ,,.5000 I' IMO 4994006 '72 Chevy Van. I Ton. Lease or buy . (91(858) JUST ·-·vED radial tires. Tilt steer-o" eL•DaSnMOlrYILEtce Costa Mesa 642·0010 ma. . .. shortbed. VS Auto. PS. hard to find. Gd MPG .••••••••••••••••••••••'"' Dir . 213 /921 -8588 ; IUUU
"74 750 Hond8. X1nt cond. Xlnt shape, xtras. $HOO Remova~le hdtop • momru 714/523·7250. FACTOIY ing. Tint glass. 4·spd. GMC TRUCKS Thunderbird 9 •70
$1500. E•lra a-sorles. raglop. Stde curtains. 6,000 mi . $3,350. Ph. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. .......... bst ofr. 846·7632 art 6. D~ • ..-5560t37 HOHD•c••s 646·8130 aft6. 531.3912 . $1200 cash. Call before H clqucrten '67 Porsche 9112.4.Senl. 5 El'IV'~ · "' Aft '74 T·Bird. 2<1.000 mi 's.
1971 Harley Davidson
Sportster. Xlnt cond.
848-0181
G:JOpm ,892-2970. eo Spd, a/cond. New candy Example • 7 2 ch e v caprice, UniYersity a. Loaded. $6500. Pvt party.
'73 Dodge Van. Shortbed, BMW 9712 In Santa Ana apple red laL"Quer. Mint 175 244 Secf• AM /FM, A/C, P/S, P /8, 2850 Harbor Blvd. 1_67_3_-686 __ '-____ _
V8 , c:ptd , pan e led. FACTORY cond. $5200. 751·5&51. Aft t ' & bat I rf C t M 540-9640 $3200 /bst arr. 963-726 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUTHORIZED 5.~·0265. Automatic'. AM /FM nu ires • vn . OS a esa YecJa 9974
wkdysa(t5. SALE •SERVICE ster~o radio, power 644·S881aft6pm Piftto 9957 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'72 HONDA CVIOO. lo mi , --~------PARTS•LEASlNG Rolls Royce 9756 steeni:ie. power antenna. Take over payments. '75 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·12 VEGA, xlnt cond.
100 mpg, xlnt cond. '71 FORD FI AT ••••••••••••••••••••••• low miles. J2019. Mon:ia Town Coupe. V-8. '14 Runabout Dix Int/ext. $1650. Call 673-0925 or
$350/qlrer. 99'1-46811. SURFER VAH #l DEALER IN U.S.A. $5999 P fl;,~ /8, air. 498-1835. Sunroor /vinyl top. 4-spd. 67&-8654 ask'°' Rob
•ry2 Kawasaki 500, Custom V-8, automatic, factory EXCLUSIVEL y ROY IJ l .,4 Monte Carlo. Lo mi. Eve. M0-4644 1972 GT Hatchback.
Seat, Crash bar, Far· air. $3095 (16965Hl 120W. Warner at Main ~ CARVER ~II.II Al~A Xlras. Like nu. 492-9034 PINTO '73, auto, R&H , 4 spd, R !•I, $1375. ""~vne~'. $800. firm . 551 ·4116 Th~Jobins & Santa Ana 557·2132 ROLLS-ROYCE to\U\. UllW or492·9136. Must see. low mileage, xlnt cond. Pvt. Pty. 640-&t57
2000Harbor81vd. 2>4f.l7thSt. VOLVO 1973 Chevy Malibu, auto, $2,lS0.573-02m '71 GT. A/C, PIS, 4-spd,
1 ~~/HR~· 9160 Costa Mesa 642-0010 '68 8.')() Fiat Sport Coupe, ~===.!~~:!~:~,M~•!['.:_'_, p /s, p /b, air, vin top, 73 SilverBlk lnt. 4 spd, radials. Gd. cond. Pvt
-nn 40 MPG, Looks terrific,· 1966 Hvrboi c M. 646 9303 radials, xlnt concl. Best mags, .air, 18,000 mi . pty. 581·8164 / 581-ZIOO or ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE OR IUYI • t 'l"'\ ~··· $1350. 586-1214. Cl0$lDSUNDAYS o(r. 645·0490eves/wknds $2,100. 675·1308 837-3993
'See the U.S.A. the RV ,7 SDODGEY.A.M• 1' _,_.._jli~Phty. M-edes•--9740 '.61 Rol ls Ro)'ce Silver '69 Volvo, $1500. Come & ·~H • 9100 .•. ~--H 9800 •·~--,How 9800 way. B&D Mot.or Home • .....,. ..,.... ~ Cloud 11, sunroof, beaut. see! 2187 Pacific, C.M . -~ ew A9nn, ew AVnn Re.ntals.646-9611 TRAD ES MAN lOO . Pl..at40 • 4•Mt4f ••••••••••••••••••••••• $11000 ortrade 837-4180 Apt. C blwn 3 pm & JO••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -==='--'"---"'---I Automatic, pwr. steer·. U.A...,r.ti-.-.,ldt '75 MBZ 450 SEL Exec. ' · ·
·Rent '13 Overland 29'. ing, carpeting, portholes. ; 0,.. Sit•• s luxury Sedan. Metallic Stvh .. 976 I pm.
Loaded. Free miles, lo <1A04555). • finish, electric roor. Old ••••••••••••••••••••••• VOLVO '74 4 dr. Sed.
rate!;. Pri. pty.538-0547 S 138 99 price. Save over $2 ,000. EXCLUSIVE . Ec,ooomy wilb s tyle. • "701MW 030739 . DLR . !114> TbisonebositalLLease Allto Senlu & PrepoklTax 2800 CSA. Silver with ,_523_·7_250_. ______ , . FOi available. (6t6364). Dir.
Parts 9400 $336.00 blue leather. Low miles. '75 MBZ 450 SE Exec. lux· Oranne County 2 1 3 I 9 2 1 . 8 s 8 8 ; ·••••••••••••••••••••••• 36 mo. OEL: OAC 831 2040dl ":JI 114/523-7250. VWEn t500CC Cap cost : $560011------'-·----urysedan. Factory war· com _.:.::.:.::=..:.::::: ___ _
53Q..6940t5J0.4799aft.& Residual : $2400 Ask for ranty. Lease or 5 year ~ 1972YOLYO\ Larry Chesney Lease 19731MW financing available. 142E.4speed,..aircoodi·
NEW Goodyear H78xl5 Department BAVARIA 3.0. Gold with 030802 . DLR . (714) Uoning & AM/FM. One
Poly glass Tires on IARWICKDATSUM black leather. Powerl-'523"-.7-'250"-''-' -------< MOC ... TOI owoer.831 -20Mldlr.
Ford/Dodge rims. $149. SanJuanCapistrano window s & sunroof .. 12 MBZ 250Cpe. Runs &
CallGreg,548-lOlSbtwn 831 ·1375 493-3375 Mags & low miles . lookslikenew.Leaseor AUTHOllUD ·Alltos,UHCI ' o·JO am 5 30pm 831 2040 dlr -. & -••••••••••••••••••••••• · . : · · . . buy. 007833. DLR. (714) e
. .i A.-tMforW. ~':'!~!.~ .... !?!.~ ORAMGECOUMTY'S 1_523_-_7250 __ . ______ DAVE ROSS ~•~••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• WEPAYTOPDOLLAR OLDEST '.66 MBZ 250 SE Cpe. POMTIAC·STVn '12Sportabout,A/C,P/S, ~s/ FOR TOP USED CARS o· ... Horizon blue. A beautiful 2~0 H.-bor ll•cl. radials, floor shift, xlnt
1 Clin,.C• 9520 FOREIGN.DOMESTIC , ramlly car. Extended., ____ ' ___ ,__ eond.968-2313aft.$:30
••••••••••••••••••••••• or CLASSICS t 08524 3 DLR .. • '64 Lincoln Convertible 1r your car is extra clean Sales-Service-Leasing (;[4) ~ia-7250. · · Toyota 9765 '67 Rambler. New tires,
l _:.JnsweU,loobJ:°"9000 seeui~U~IUICK Ro Carver, Inc. '73 MBZ 280 SEL. Low ••••••••:7"5•;;.2••••••••• Good~~~s:r=--·
Rolls Ttoyce BMW mileage, fully equipped. 74 l·hl-ck--'---"'-'-='---
U5'1 Cbev. Classlc14-door· Cost2925MHarborBlvd. 234E.17thSt. Averynicecar.Lea5eor , ttlO JOOd tires, new•nocks 6: a esa 979-2500 Costa Mesa 546-4444 buy. 016086. DLR. (714). TO~. •••••••••••••••••••••••
brakes, $2,oW origlna11~3;;i~~::~:=:::~;:;;;::~;;:;~~~ 523-7250. JVUN 183 Buick. EJtcellent
mu ... l ·f•milY car. Ex.I I ST AR G A'ZEK•...,, Here troo1port111on. See 111.
eoiletJt body ""111. & gd. F==.:""--'13 MBZ 280s'E Sedan4.5. -· M8-8340Dlr. l " d flJCLA\' l POU.AN One owner car & im·
Trmo ori_.1 ee~ ~-'*11 H ,_o.;1,~c.w. M maculate. Extended NOW 1 "•st-IUYI anam .... on. -· ..... Y' ,.,u.,.,1., .. ,.,. Uttn. Y' ~ """ S.IU7 To ck: .. lop mes.~ fOt Twsdev. terms avai1!!>le.._ 015615. CCli:llt a.. '73 Wdllltlltu r-i,..,..m~"'9to~ DLR. (714)~1250. • U -•·~"'-lee:ra ... 1111 of)'Olll"Zodiocbir1hW'-llli~~l.-j 1-~~~t;;;;~~;--1 T t ft.-1 n.utoma c ..... -~ ·-""'-"' I 74 M----s ' . e1 unve Ing, lull_ ... ,_ ,....... '2 ....... ~ ',t;" R';"', .t.l:=,.,.. f~'f · Cruise Control. One ln a ............ .-.......... i.;. ... 240D VUU1 mllli 1 <-..'FJ> u .. Toa a,ev,, radk> • i~· ~~ ES':-. ,. °' ~ . '~4!b::~ro:~~ r.~o"::r :L a= E~Mof Diesel . 8!'f • ·~~~ •• 800 t A re•' economy 0 .,_ OA ampr. ...... / 0 r. ~~= ::= .. ~::..::... auto,uobllewltb1\Ulroof, Leasl' 3Smo. -:r: c 511...iUorm9l281. 1ic-i .,.. no-C•P coil : 14395
,1 • .,_. •JSt-t 11~ auto"'atic transmission. Residual: .. --AM for WJ..N~EBAGO ~ DelWEe :;~ :;~.:;.:. :;=:-.. power lteering, fadory l _ .. -~-•-22• '11-/olr itr-.i .. 1..., '•Ot air conditioning. radio,&: fi•• 1t1tt:a. ~rry ChesDlf Lease "-"&UI . -· ,,~ .1v ... ·~ 110..·1 rtJPV ""' WIW ._part.meat .• ,....,~~~xlru.11,000 110.. ..,..,..,. 11c.u...., heater. (871J > · t•RWICJID•-~
1111. N. IV'. o--tradetorJll~~q ''*"'""' .. """" "'a..-p I eel t ~ ~·---~111-4..,__ r,::,._ r.:=:-~~-........ r c o TOYOTA_ s.nJuanc.p1s1nno -~ -· H"""' 5, • .,. .,w.... ,,,,.," Sell! SSJ.·m1 .-mo ~5JGM 4l*-'f.'.11
.,..,..,.RV.9frfR"Van u=.;'nr,:.i ~~ +>10.:M .,,1f66.Hcwbor.CM646-l03 C•••c ttll ~!r.• ::a :~:::s~ ae-et: n= i.a.t• Mn•l 1elt, '15 Toyola •••••••••••••••••••••••
11•11, W -al le wall 1'T• "°"~ C"-H bar CM HilWt. Long bed, amllm '72CoupedeVllle,browlt, .... ml,Mllio1 ,._ .,_ "';,. 1176031•:12'76' . atorto, olr. like oow, •lol, 28,000 pll,
c:.JtO..• ., ~~ .. ®~-~~®~,,.~-~~~~~~~l_L=~~~g~=JJsc~.zao~·~·~12~-$378~.~~~b"~11~,.,..,~rr~· ... ~84~•~1g•~·~
I
'
•
• •
l
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
STUTZ
.FIREBIRD LEADER!
19 In Stock
'70 to Brand New 197 6's
'70. FllllllD
..,... ....,, tnM.. OOWtl' 11.-lllQ. "°"""' ' 111'.W.._ radio, Mehf, .Ai.YI root. ,......,.
......_1"'8ESI .,,,,.
'
•
I .
•
Laguna/SO .. Coast
EDITION
•
Today's Closl•lf
N.Y. Steekll
• '
VOL. 68, NO. V2, 2 SECTIONS, :U PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1975 TEN CENTS.
• .
Ja~k Scott Drove Patty to East Co·ast?
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Patricia Hearst fOCle cross·
counll'y with sports aC\lvl5l Ja<k
Scott four months after she wu
kidnaped and at one point
declined Scott'• orfer to drive her
aoywb_ere •he wanted, includlac
· home, RoUlng Slone rol&•x!ne
says init.s new issue.
"I Want to 10 where my friendis are going,.. Miss Hearst wU
~ as tellin1 Seott u Ibey
drove toward lbe s.,t Coat lo
f meet SLA members. ~~ltor "°"onl Kolm
-Darid Weir said
their a«otllt WU -.. In· formation from WlideaUfled
....,.... wbo "t:alke<I to Pally
Heant; Ibey were~ Ibo)'
bolped ..... .' •
$Cott WU introdueed lo lbe
HarriM8 after word WM eirnd
that be wanted to write a -on
the orpillutlon. The ~
r invited Scott to. Berkeley-·
-. ...,. .... met ~lleant
(W u.. ant Ume and •-' to
dl4ft her to the' East Co-., the
ll'llcte •old.
-· wbo oace t<>IAI ~ · •·1.-met anyoae who~ me abeJraa Pa,ty Heattt~''could not
berucbedlromedlatelyfwcoro· -·· lllA He~t announced aller
her kldnapln1 1be hod tateo the
name "Ta.uia." · .
Misl Hearst WH C<lnf'med, ap.
parenUy ln a closet, for four
weeks immediately aft.er.she was
kldnaped from her Berkeley
ti>utment on Feb. 4, 1974, by the
SI.A, said the Rollin& -re-porters, who were interviewed
tl!la morning on NBC's ''Todoy
Show.''
In an amdovit filed last week
Trial Delay Granted
For ishftw, V.
Meeting Tonight
.. College Eyes
•
Fnt11re Sh~pe
The future physical shape or
the S-addleback Community
College District will be discussed
by trustee., during a special
meeting tonight at 7:30 in Room
212 or the library.
Administrators and -architects
are expected to present~ board
·with several alternatives for de--
·:-· velop°'ent qf the district. under a
1ve-ye-ar master plan.
Currently, the district's only
racility, Sadd.Jeback College, is
~divided into the lower campus of
temporary buildings and the up.
per campus or permanent build-
ings.
A college spokesman said dis·
3Attack,
Beat Man
On Beach
A Redondo Beach man was
brutally beaten and kicked by
three young men who attacked
him early Saturday on Mountain
Road Beach in Lagwia Beach,
Police reported.
Police said the man was told,
"If you're a faggot, you're in
trouble,'' by one of the as-
sailants.
Without waiting for a reply, the
trio shoved the 51 -year-old victim
to the ground, beat him and
kicked rum in the back, police
said.
The victim told orficers that at
one point a person tried to come
to his aid but w-as chased off by
one of the attackers. •
Poijce said the victim suffered
• bruises to the lower rib_cage~and
back. He declined medical treat-
ment locally . .,...
The area where the attack took
place bas been the scene of
several strong artQ,, robberies
and arrests of men allegedly
engaged in sexual acts in public.
Coast
Weather
cussion will c~ter around bow
the college '.OOuld be developed
and if it should be . dooe before
consideration of a second. or satellite. college aite.
When the ·district was con-
ceived, he.said, the tboltgbt was
that .there would be at least two
campuses to aerve their area
which IAcludes Tusiin, IrVine,
M-V'M}o 'D.-'l'On>. La-a N\""'°I, Lag n'8. Beach,,.S.n
a.-ie, SllJI Juon, Ctj>istrano
tndCapiotraiio Beach.
'lb~ dlatrict 'a enrollment Ibis
year increased. 81 percent over
last year's figure~· he said. If the
increase continues, be exPl'&ed,
some provisions will ha\ie to be
made to house the students.
'lbe district budlet does In·
elude $!50,000 tor stUdylng pro-
tential sites for a satellite campus
in tbeTustin-li'vine area.
Although the meeting is .,..
peeled to be a study session,
board membj!rs will be tsked lo
provide administrators with
(See cou:.EG E, Page·AZ)
Skateboarder
Hit, DraggecJ
> ~ •
By Automobile
' ' A 6-year-old San Clttmente
skatebol\rder, dragged .t5 feet
after he collided witta an
automobil&e. was .reported in
satisfactory condition today al
San Clemente General Hospital.
Aaron L . Peverieri ·or 134
Avenida 'Florencia remaiqed in
the hospital intensive care unit
for treatment1• ~he' child re-
portedly suffered a broken arm,
head injuri~. cuts a1'i1 accatcbes
in the mishap. ,
San Clemente police reported
the accident occuired when the
skateboarder cam~ "oot1al'a park-
ing lol drivew•Y ana collided
with a car driv'en by ,Eustacio E.
Canal, ss, of lllOf Loo QoJu, Sall
Clemente;.
According to· Police, the child
fell down and rolled under the
car VihiCb carried tµm 45 feel.
'lbe accident oceurrid near 1502 'w. El CaminO ReaJ.. The driver
wunot~eld.
'
" Gunmen Hit
Deserter
Drowns
PERRIS CUP!) -A
marine deserter from
Camp Pendleton drowned
in Lake Perris Sunday
after he tried to save his
girlfriend who was floun-
dering about 75 feet of-
fshore.
Allen Scott Conner, 22, of
Los Angeles, dove into the
lake to rescue the stru,ggl.
ing woman but when he re-
ached her, she-apparenUy
pulled him down , in-
vestigators said.
She managed to get back
to shore safely.
New Crisis
Sparked
In Portugal
LISBON CUPI> -Prime
Minister Adm. Jose Pinheiro de
Azevedo ordered troops to OC·
cupy the nation's C.Ommunist-
controlled radio and television
stations today and :.aid the move
was taken to prevent Portugal's
falling into anarchy.
His move triggered one of the
most explosive crises in the coun-
try's 17-mooth-old r evolution.
TiOops sent to one of the sta-
tions rebelled against ·their or·
ders and joined the workers. The
far left called for mass protests
to paralyze the country.
The Revolutionary United
Front urged workers to throw up
barricades in the streets and
launch a general strike.
The front formed by an al·
liance of leftist groups appealed
for soldiers and sailors to mutiny
against the government a nd
mobilize themselveti on the side
of the left.
"We are now in one of the most
serious situations since the start
of the revolution," Information
Minister Antonio Almeida Santos
said ..
He 'Said the prime minister
WO\t.ld address the n:alioo tonight.
More than 1,000 demonstrators
gathered in Ross io Square in
do't\tntown Lisbon to s hout
"Death to the Fascists!" and
"Reactionaries out of the Bar·
racks!" They then marched on
Radio Renascenca to demand
that the soldiers give the
facililiH back to the workers.
Radio Renascenca, whi ch is
thioretically owned by the
Roman Catholic Church, has
been. the focus or a major con-
(See PORTUGAL, Page AZ>
January
Hearing
Date Set
By TOM BARLEY
Of .. Dally pt .......
Congressman Andrew J .
Hinshaw and convicted former
County Assessor Jack Vallerga
were granted a three-month de·
lay or their Orange County
Superior Court trial oo multiple
criminal charges today.
Presiding Judge Robert
Banyard set Jan. 12, 1976, as the
new trial date after it wu ex-
plained that a trial earlier aet to
alart today would tnOOt certainly
be in proaress on Nov. 10, the
date that Hinshaw faces trial
alone on b.ribery charges.
In the courtroom with both de-
fendants was former Assessor's
aide Garland Redding, who was
cleared of grand theft and con·
spiracy charges on a motion filed
by the District Attorney's office.
Redding, 56, of Santa Ana, was
one of nine employes indicted
after a long probe of allegedly il-
legal activities in the Assessor's
office during Hinshaw's term as
Assessor.
Convictions already have been
recorded against Redding's eight
codefendants. It was explained
today that Redding·s cooperation
with the prosecution during that
investigation led to the dismissal
decision.
Redding has testified before
the Grand Jury. Assistant Dis·
trict Attorney Michael Capizzi
also commented today : ''He
could have gone to trial, been
fined $1,000 and convicted of a
misdemeanor. It wasn't worth
it... .
Six of the eight convicted as-
!See HINSHAW, PageAZI
Knife-wielding
Rapist Sought
San C lemente police are
searching today for a knife wield-
ing rapist who attacked a 20-
year-old woman in her apart~
ment.
The rapist reportedly entered
the beach area a partment of the
victim Friday afternoon and
forced her to submit to him by
holch'ng a knife al her throat. The
rapist left immediately after the
attack.
The woman was not physically
injured.
Police are searching for a man
in his 20s and of average height
and weight.
in federal court here: Miss
Hearst ••id she w u held in a
closet for nine weeks.
The reporters said Miss Hearst
asked to be permitted to join the
SLA but most members ol the
l1"0Qp were opposed. It wu Sl..A
leader Donald DeFreeie, wbo
called himself "Cinque," who
convinced others to accept her.
Wben she w aa re.teaed from
confinement. the article aald,
Mils Hearst Was allowed to move
freely tmon1 SLA memberl and .sat In on the group's ''dally.
political study sessions."
When 1tx members of tbe SIA
died In • shootout with Lu..
Anselea Police, Miss Heam and
SLA members Bill and Emily
H•ma were a few blockl away
Ustenlnl to radio accounll ol U..
confrontation, Rollin& Stone
. <See SLA, Pap AZ)
United Way Laune!laing ....... ,°"" .....
The Crazy Toad Players, a Costa Mesa mime troupe,
cavorted around the Crean Rancho in Rancho
Capistrano as the balloon went up on United Way's $3.65
million fund-raising campaign in Orange County Sun-
day. The ba lloon was donated by Ballooning Unlimited
of La Jolla . According to United Way campaign
chairman Cal Mortensen, $1,093,610 already has been
pledged. The funds will go to support of 72 human
service agencies.
Restaurant Permit
For Dana Weighed
Orange County planning com·
missioners will consider a re-
quest Tuesday for a permit al·
lowi ng construction of a
restaurant just south of the exist·
ing Quiet Cannon restaurant in
Dana Point.
FIRST C4UER
GOT C4MPER
''I 'm very pleased . The
camper sold to the rU'St person
who called."
That's the advertising success
story told by the Costa Mesa man
who placed this ad in the Daily
Pilot: .
'69 VW Camper, sliding
roof, nu motor, brakes.
Xtra clean, $2495, xx.x·
XXJll:Jl.
If you have a rec r~ational
vehicle to sell or rent, call
642-5678. We make it eas y to put
a few words to work ror you, in
the Daily Pilot.
Although stafr planners are re-
commending that the environ-
mental impact report be ap-
proved. they are recommending
that the permit be denied as sub--
milted or continued ror a revised
plot plan. The commission will ·
convene at 1:30 p .m.
As proposed, explained a staff
planner, the plan includes less
than the required parking.
Commissioners also are
scheduled lo give final consid er a-
. lion to rezoning a portion of the
Bear Brand R anch which
borders Laguna Niguel.
Commissioners have approved
<See PERMIT, PageA21
Smugglers Aided
RAWALPINDI . Pakis tan
CUPI> -Smugglers with help
from a crowd of 500 villagers
fought a customs squad Sunday
in a 30-minute gun battle and re-
('aptured a seized truckload of
marijuana and other con~ra1>and
gQO(\s. Late night and morning
clouds, otherwise fair skies
Tuesday, accordiQg to tl,)t
weather service. A little·
warmer with beach highs
near 70 rising to the tow 80s
inltnd.
Niguel Stere
Two gunmen, look liquor and lUl
unknown adloUilt o,I; ~uh from a
Lapna Nifllel marltet Sunday
aller beating the store clett< with
a length of ehaln,:or..,e Cobnty
Sherilf"s officers reported today.
• Surt's Down--Finally Second Try
Successful,
INSIDE TODA 't'
r~ ovnheod ~zcddl u..
proJiU /iue/old.al Soddl<bock
Cornmunft11 Entnpritt1, but
U• IDt>fk with memolly hon· dicoJ>P<d adulll b<al'• inlar!vi•
l>Udioidmlf.S••~ogeC7.
Deputies 1aid-the1 two men
warned the cler• al the U-Totem
market. 300o• Crown VaJley
Parkway, tbtt they had a sun
without tt any time 4)iopla}'ins a
weapon.
Offlcen 'said the pair E-ied ,.,..,.....a .u ..,,."'...., •i' the drawer and tb-e cash er
...,.... 11o11 ~ AM and took bottle• dt Tequila fom ~ ~ = .,.·:: \be aheJf •fter. attacki.nc .. the o ,... ... ,a. ,.... at.a employe with the chain. " -., __ ... ' !i o•-• aa ,..,..,.... Att . ~ Deputlea •ald. the vlc m .
1 .._,.... "' ,,..,..... ..... .,. D•vle\ ltorn..rar•. '21, ot Dana
I l ••:M• AM ~ ,. "r-..,_..,a~:;;;' ...... ..,, ...., ... Point, ... "°'--· ""'-~· ,..,....... "' .......... ~., 1'n>e:1are1Jillt.ryinat.o • \::'"'=:-:__~"''.'....-----~ · the actual cash toss.
~ J ~
Lifeguards Wei.come End of ,_rounding Waves
Rescue-weary lifeguards from
Seal Beach to San· Clemente to-
doy welcomed the end or the
super surf that pounded into the
Orange Coa•l late last week. "
'lbe s.;rl, still' ~lseable Satur·
day, by Ws mQtnini bad rt·
turned to normal ,one \o three·
loot levels. On ·Friday, the surl
raged as high aJ 12 feet •
UfegQards reportl!t! t<>!W' thtt
moderate croWds vis,ted'tie'aches
alont the Orange Cout over the
weekend, but said there were few
problems. • 1
In San Clemente, an oft-duty
Newport Beach lifeguard suf-
fered a sprained back Stlnday af-
ternoon while body surfing in
five-foot sets at T Street Beach,
ooe of Southern California 's top
body surfing spots.
Douglas Prichard. 17, of 614
Michael Place, Newport Beach,
was rescued by an unidentified
board-surfer who plac ed
Prichard on bia surfboard and
paddled outside the surf break.
Prichard was transported in
, the San Clemente lifeguard
rescue boat to its Dana Point
bast: and taken by ambulance to
San 'Clemente General Hospital.
•
He was treated ror the sprain and
releued.
Lifeguards said no new storms
are lurking off the coast that
could generate a repeat of last
week's surf.
Beach attendance along the
Orange Coast exceeded 100,000
persons both Saturday and Sun·
day. Lireguards reported 61
rescues Sunday and 75 rescues
Saturday.
Lifeguards over the weekend
were forced to rely on 1keleton
staffs to patrol beaches because
seasonal guarda wer~ taken off
duty when school started.
SAN DIEGO <UPl l -A
22-year-old man jumped
off the San Diego.Coronado
Bay Bridge into th e water
below -and lived -so
went up for another try •.
this time leaping onto the
rocky bridge foundation.
The body of Thomas
Lloyd of San Diego wu
found s mash e d on the
rocks beneath the bridge
Sunday.
Witnes ses said Lloyd
made the fatal plunce
minutes alter his first dive
into San Diego harbor. ~:
l
..
~-At DAILY PILOT L/SC Mond!y. S.ptembef 29, 1975
Constmeer Card Crcu1h Hurts
Music Star
NASHVILLE, Tonn .
(AP) -Country music
star Earl ScrUJgs was in·
jured early today when the
single-engine airplane he
was piloting crashed dur-
ing a 'anding at Cornelia
Fort airfield, Police said.
A Better Idea
For Post Office
Ofricials at Memorial
Hospital said Scruggs, Sl,
suffered n broken nose, a
broken ankle, facial
lacerations and head in-
juries. They said he was iD
:satisfactory condition.
A spokesm an for the
Federal Aviation Ad·'
ministration said Scruggs
had flown from MWTay.
Ky .
A spokesman for the
private airfi e ld said
Scruggs' Cessna 172 ap-
parently overshot the land-
ing strip and flipped over
in a farm field.
Had a problem with the maU
lately?
The U.S. Postal Service has a
remedy.
It's a consumer service card
which will be available from all
letter carriers in Orange County
as or Wednesday.
The card, actually a sandwich
of two postal cards with a piece or
carbon paper in between, coo·
tains four blocks.
On these, customers can re·
gister complaints. request in ·
formation, make compliments,
offer suggestions or make
general comments about the
mail service.
Ed Murphy, Orange County
coordinator for the nationwide
I Holdup Thwarted
Gwunen Hold Seven
Hostages in London
LONDON (UPll -Three
gunmen demanded a plane and
safe conduct out or Britain today
as the price for sparing the lives
of seven Italian employes seized
as hostages in a botched robbery
attempt at a London restaurant.
But a high-ranking police official
said ''there will be no deals.''
"I was told by the hostages
they have made this demand,"
Jtalian Consul General Mario
Manca told newsmen after talk·
ing lo the hostages through the
lo.eked door or the s mall
storeroom where they are being
held ror a second day.
But assistant Police Com-
missioner Wilfred Gibson said,
"They have been told there will
benodeals.''
The gunmen, said to include
two West Indians and a Nigerian,
have held the hostages at the
Spaghetti House restaurant in
rashionable Knightsbridge in
West London since l ::JJ a.m. Sun·
day ~
They released an eighth
i_Grass Fire
Exti.,,gui,shed
A grass fire burned five acres
i.n a vacant field Sunday in San
Clemente before 28 regular and
volunteer San Clemente firemen
extinguished it.
No structures were involved or
threatened in the blaze, Nick
Maule, fire engineer, said. The
cause of the fire is unknown.
There were no injuries.
The fire occurred in a field
south of Via Socorro near the site
or the proposed Shoreclif(s
Junior High School. •
hostage, Alfredo Olivelli, on Sun-
day to show ''good faith.''
Mrs. Mary Olivelli, his wife,
said her husband described the
storeroom prison, measurini
nine by 13 reel as ''a hell hole.··
"He said the stench is in·
describable and the heat over·
powering."
During the morning, police
passed corree, cigarettes and
a portable chemical toilet into the
Storeroom. There are no sanitary
facilities in the room and the air
conditioning was switched off in
hope the heat would rorce the ban·
ditsout.
Mrs. Olivelli said her husband
also told her the robbers wore
knitted helmets covering most of
their faces and that they told the
hostages they belonged to the
"Black Liberation Froot."
But London police and
spokesmen for black community
groups said they knew or no such
organization.
Senior police of ricers said there
are no political implications.
They said it was just an armed
robbery that went wrong because
police arrived on the scene too
quickly.
Police· Commander
Christopher Payne, who headed
negotiations during a plane hi·
jacking at London's Heathrow
Airport last January, arrived at
the restaurant today. But be re-
fused to confirm it was because or
experience with dealing with ter-
rorists.
Police marksmen were issued
with gas masks and tear gas, but a
police spokesman said the lives of
the hostages were the r1rst con-
sideration and no attempt would
be made to rush the gunmen.
More than 200 police Were in or
near the restaurant, and wooden
screens were erected in rront or it
to shield the entrance rrom public
view.
Thieves Grab 86 '86ed'
Loaded Trailer At Anaheim
A trailer packed with china,
silver, glassware. cameras and
other valuables was· stolen in the
Mission Viejo area during the
weekend while its owner was
away seeking a tow for the dis··
abled vehicle. Orange County
Sheri(f"s officers reported today.
Deputies valued the loss suf ·
rered by marketing consultant
Jeff E. Chintz, 35, of 23681 San
Esteban, Mission Viejo at $4,4fl>.
They said unknown thieves re-
moved the trJiler rrom the point
where the victim left it, near the
intersection of Crown Valley
Parkway and Paseo Del Niguel.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N . Wl!ed
l'r•,IOrnl ...... P\llllt,,.....
.._/ Jack R. Curley \llcil PT't,lcMfol•Nll c.. ...... ,,,,.....,,.
Thomas Keevil
l!dllo•
ThOM8S A. Murphlnt
IMl'lqtf\9 EOi\Cor
"'c
Rock Concert
Police arrested 86 people Sun-
day at a rock concert in Anaheim
Stadium attended by about 44,000
persons drawn lo the stadium by
rock superstars Linda Ronstadt
and the Eagles.
Most or the arrests were ror aJ.
Ieged narcotic violations, accord-
ing to Anaheim police Sgt.
Richard Gray who characterized
the crowd's behavior a s
''generally good.''
"But," Gray add.ed, "it seems
there are always some who are
willing to pay $10 a ticket to get
themselves in trouble."
While most or those arrested
were charged with narcotic
violations, there were some ar-
rests on drunk in public charges
and a few persons were taken in-
to custody ror allegedly carrying
concealed weapQns, Gray said.
Pair Injured
As Jeep Flips
A 18·year-old South Gate
youth, one or two people injured
when a jeep in which they were
riding rolled over, was reported
in satisractory condition today at
San Clomente General Hospital .
Thomas E. Huff repartedly re-
ceived internal injuries as well
as cut.I and scratches in the mis·
hap Friday on an off-road area
near the 600 block or A venida
Pico.
Also injured was Armando
Mendoza, 18, of Downey, who
was released after treatment for
a fi'actured shoulder bone.
Both youths were transported
to the hospital by Fire Depart·
ment ambulance. Furtherdetalls ot how th• accident OCCU1Ted
were not available.
•
Consumer Service Program,
said that one copy goes to the
local P<>Stmaster ror immediate
correction an~ the other to Postal
Service Headquarte rs in
Washington, D.C.
The complaints will be
catalogued and analyzed by com·
puter to help spot problem areas
and nationwide trends.
Murphy said the Co'nsumer
Service Program was tested
earlier this year in Illinois,
Massachusetts, Arizona and
Rhode Island. Postal customers
participating in the test found the
cards easy to complete and said
most complaints were resolved
to the customer's satisfaction.
''Ninety-two percept o( the peo-
ple we surveyed said it was a
very, very good program,"
Murphy noted .
He said the card should be
especiaJly helpful in tracing mail
which has been late in arriving.
"IC a customer hasn't received a
letter that was sent two weeks
ago, ror example, there is a place
on the card where he can fill in
the sender"s address," Murphy
pointed out.
Postal aut horities say the
cards should take no more than
two minutes to fill out. If the pre>
blem is not resolved lo the
custotl)er's satisfaction, h e
should see the postmaster
personally.
HINSHAW •.•
sessl:!r·~ aides have had felony
conv1ct1ons reduced to misde-
meanors with each ordered to
pay a $1,000 fin e.
tlinshaw and Vallerga will be
back in court together Jan. 12 to
race identical charges stemming
from allegations that members
of the assessor"s staff worked on
Hinshaw's congressional cam·
paign in 1972.
It is also alleged that employes
were paid time and mileage by
the Assessor·s Office while they
canvassed for Hinshaw and post-
ed signs throughout the county.
Vallerga's trial in Ventura
County resulted in the man who
took over from Hinshaw being
(med $1,000, placed on five years'
probation and permanently
barred from bolding public of.
fice.
Hinshaw races bribery charges
in his Nov. 10 trial. He and
Vallerga face charges of grand
theft, conspiring and embezzle·
ment in the Jan. 12 proceeding.
E'roat Page Al
PORTUGAL
troversy since leCtist workers
took over the buildin2" and turned
it into a far left racility.
Another hot spot was Radio
Club where soldiers sent to OC·
cupy the building rebelled
against their orders and instead
joined the workers. Military
security chief Gen. Ot.elo Saraiva
de Carvalho initially ordered the
facilities evacuated, but this was
not carried out.
In the afternoon, a man with a
bullhorn told the crowd outside
Radio Renascenca that the
soldiers there also were leaning
towards the workers and planned
to take a vote on whether to
maintain the occupation.
Santos briefed the press short-
ly after the prime minister issued
a statement saying thal the ac-
tion was necessary to reverse
Portugal's slide towards
anarchy, which he said was be·
ing promoted by the radio and
television stations.
The prime minister made his
move as the country emerged
from a weekend of diverse mob
violence that battered Lisbon
and Porto and struck at the roots
of governmental authority.
Woman Raped
On Air Base
By Thin Man
A woman was raped at the El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station
and then later s lashed with a
knlfe near her Orange area home
in a weekend incident that is be-
ing investigated today by Orange
County Sheriffs orriet!!'S.
Deputies said the 20-year-old
victim was first attacked as she
left the enlisted men's club at the
El Toro base. They said she was
rorced to remove her clothing
and was raped near a parking
lot.
Officers said her attacker,
described as a tall, thin man In
his early twenties, then forced
her into his car with the stated in·
tention of driving her home. They
so.id h• ~tabbed her with a knife
four tlmes before she wM pushed
from tie car al an Orange area
lntenectlon.
j I
'
,
Another Hoffa?
The pressure is building for James P , Hoffa Jr. (left) to
take up his father's fight for control of the huge, scan-
dal-ridden Teamsters Union. He's shown with his now-
missing father in 1971. Related story, Page4.
Thieves Loot Scene
Of Fatal Viejo Fire
Burglars have looted the scene
or a Mission Viejo tragedy, steal-
·ing. the valuables locked in a
garage arter a July 27 fire that
took the life of Barbara Maycock
and her two daughters.
Sheriff's depUties valued the
sporting goods and hand tools
belonging to Michael R .
Bond Interest
Raise Asked
WASHINGTON CUP!) -The
Administration asked Congress
today ror authority toseU savings
bonds paying more than 6 per·
cent interest.
A spokesman said bonds yield-
ing more than 6 percent interest
would'"not necessarily be offered
ir the ceiling is lifted but the
treasury wag.ts tile llexibility to
offer the high-yield bonds "in
view or the wide fluctuation in in· lerest rates in the last half dozen
years.··
A Steal
For$15
A shopper got a bargain
from the May Company de·
partment store at South
Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa,
Sunday but though he paid
cash, it was still a case or
grand theft.
Police were told that just
five minutes after the store
was opened a man, aged 35
to 40 paid $45 ror an Orien-
tal antique. But he did so
after he had switched the
price on the vase, remov-
ing a $599 tag and replac-
ing it with a $45 sticker.
Police were informed
that an employe rrom
another department in the
store, not knowing better,
sold the vase for the
switched price.
Maycock. ex-husband of the dead
woman, at $1,108.
The valuables were locked in
the garage or the burned house at
26445 Fresno Drive, Missipn Vie-
jo, roUowing the blaze that was
believed started by a faulty laun·
dry dryer.
Deputies believe the thieves
struck over the past weekend,
probably using a truck to haul
away the loot.
At the lime or the fire,
Maycock, 33, was vacationing in
Portland, Ore. He was not locat-'
ed until three days after the rtre.
Sheriff's deputies described
the looting as the mo5l callous
burglary they have investigated
in receot months.
E'ro. Page Al
COLLEGE • •
some direction as lo how they
hope to proceed toward develop-
ment.
Board members are alSo ex-
pected to consider a preliminary
plan for a swimming pool. ·
Allhougb the state bas ap-
proved matching fwids ror con-
struction o( a pool on campus,
trustees indicated during their
budget hearings that they would
rather the district's money be
used ror track facilities.
Ji'roat Page A I
PERMIT ...
the zone change, from
agricultural to mixed residen-
laial uses; however they request-
ed' some changes in the accompa-
nying text so the hearing on the
request was continued to 2 p.m.·
Tuesday.
Commissioners are aJso
scheduled to consider Presley
Development's appeal of lhe r e-
quirement for an environmental
impact repart on development in
the Pacific Island Village
Planned Community.
Consideration or rural street
standards is also on the com·
mission's agenda.
ALL FABRICS
llbuplslio"-1
With This Coupon
Good Mon.·~ Wed. Only
'"
SLA ••• -. said. The articl• said the H'er-
rises quickly bought • 1"'ecl car
and left Lo• Angeles, with Miu
'-"ant hidin& In the back seal un-
der,. blanket, for San Fr-UCO.
The }{arrisea ••found other
means" or leavhig Berkeley for
the Scotts* New York City apart.
meat. Scott and Miss Heanrt,
''poe.lnl as ma.n and wtCe," drove
eastward, Rolling Stone s aid. ·
Miss Hearst was "very up-
ti1ht '' and ''fell extremely
wtnerable to being recosnized
along the way," Weir said,. but
there was no problem. The group
met fugitive Wendy Yoshimura
in New York and then went to a
Pennsylvania farmhouse renttd
by Scott's wife, Micki, the article
said.
Rolling Stone said during: the
summer at the Pennsylvania
farmhouse, Miss Hearst had a
long discussion with Scott about
her conversion to the SLA., whieh
Kohn and Weir said "was as
much emotional as political. She
had relt isolated emotionally and
she was disappointed in her
parents and in Steven Weed, her
fiance, and their response to the
SLAdemands.''
At the end o( the summer when
the farmhouse lease expired, ar·
rangements for returning Miss
Hearst and the Harrises to hiding
in California were made by a
··new team '' that included
Kathleen Soliah, now herself a
fugitive, and her brother Steve.
Scott again drove Miss Hearst,
this time westward, Rolling
Stone said.
On that second trip, the rtrSt
time Miss Hearst appeared in
public since her cross-country
trip to the East, their worst rears
were realized in Iowa -they
were stopped by a s tate
poll.ceman ror speeding, the
magazine said. ·
Scott leaped out or the car and
ran back to the police cruiser
before the officer had a chance to
approach the van in which Miss
Hearst was sitting, disguised ;;i s
Scott "s pregnant wife, the article
said.
It quoted Scott as saying.
"'Sorry, officer, I guess I got a lit-
tle excited about Iowa winning
today. That was some game.''
"You're an Iowa fan?" the
trooper asked, noting the out-0{·
slate plates on the van.
. "Hey, I'm just a football fan.
No matter where I go I love to
listen to football. You wouldn"t
give a li.cket to a rootba.11 flln.
would you? Thal would be kind or
anti-American," Scott said.
, The magazine said the trool*r
smiled and replied. "I'll let you
off easy this time but be carefur
when you cross the border into
Nebraska. They got upset by
Wis'!onsin, you know."
The trooper then put his ticket
book away and left without in~
specting the van or seeing Miss
Hearst, Kohn and Weir said.
* * * SLA Pistol
May Be New ·
Patty I.ink
SAN FRANCISCO (UPIJ
The FBI said today it found a
9-millimeter pistol and live am-
munition -the same kind used
in the robbery of a suburban
Sacramento bank last April -in
Patricia Hearst's last hideout.
Also among the errect.s found in
the San Francisco apartmenl
were a green scarf similar to one
worn in the robbery of tH e
Crocker Bank branch, papers
from Crocker Bank, and a com-
munique from a terrorist groi.u>
known as the New World Libera-
tion Front, which has claimed
responsibility ror more than ·~
dozen San Francisco area bomb-
ings the past ~ear. ·
•
-------
Good Buy-
• Cheap To11rs
• I •'
I ll18YLVIA fOllTEll
(Flnt o/ lwo coj.,.,..J
Aa al Oct. 15, Ida wilbtart 1ppearfng ID lnvd aect1-of M'#1p1pon aod ___ tbecowrteyconta~
tltreeinltials -OTC -wbldl can lluh tbev1utlcm OOllta
milllool of you by U-Ul!O-t.
The inlllaJs stand for "onwtop tour charter •• a method.
of lo~-~·roup plonetravol wblcb bu beet\ unavailalile to'·
the m.,,.,..ty or us until aow because or neodl-cowm-P.'!"1 reslrictlllns and allourd red tape. With the new OCT's wvu41>, many of tbeoe
restrictions wUI be lilt• ~· sbai'pcy cuttlnc both air·traveJ and -hotel
~ . Money's
Worth
JUST WHAT JS AN 1
OTC charter? In brief, it -----"'
\s_ ~ group tour. to one city that you may take u .an in·
diVldual: You musts~ up at lea.at 15 or 30 days in advance
of ~e ~ght, depending upan a dome$tic or tntemationaJ destin~tion , ·pay for air transportation and hotel accom.
modations and aaree to slay either a minimum of four or !even days. That's it.
M ~t s~g!lif~~ant : you are not required to be part of a~
called. affinity .grouptouseacharterfiight.
, With es_calating f~ ~ sending scheduled air fares
up and airlines w~ of ev.en 1reater increases ln 1976, ~he ~s are com1nf]ust in time. The baqain port.Jon lies
m the air fare -about half that or scheduled airline fares
And lo .sug~est what's ahead, the number or OTC charterS
now being flied by tour operators with the Cl vii AerooauticS ~ard Ca legal requiremftlt) is reaching bliz.iard propor-tions. 1
THE ESTIMATED f,500,000 .u!EIUCANS who .,"ow Dy
on charters ''could . double with OTCs, •• predicts Glenn A.
1<;ramer •. 1>?ard cha.irman of Oakland-based Trans Jnteroa·
• llonal A1rhneis, largest charter ai.rline in the world and a
•Transamerica Corp. subsidiary.
··For the first time, travelers can really take advantage r low-cost charter tours. OTCs will rejuvenate the soft "!domestic and international tourist markets ••
• Even the CAB -which held out for so long against this
·break for the ~oosumer -now admits that if OTCs are sue·
~essful, they will "mean profits to the scheduled (airline) tndu~try, not losses .. because OTC will provide an expandlng
traffic base for the mdustry at a time when it is faced with
too many empty seats.•• .
TO HELP YOU SHOP for an OTC vacation : ! -Visit more than one travel agent. OTCs are so new
and so many types will be offered that many agents may DOt
be up to date.
. -:Shop ~round for an OTC charter departing on a1date
co1nc1dlng with your travel plans OTCs are being arranged
to popular tourist s Pots everywhere
. -Check if an OTC is leaving from your local airport
directly to your choice of deslination For an OTC will save
time a!1d money if it can leave from an inland city
(~ashville, say, or Peoria) flies non.stop to its destination
-eliminating the so-called ''gateway'' city
-FIND OUT WJL.\T TllE package price includes. All
OTC tours must include a round·trip charter flight, hotel ac-
commodations, airport transfers, baggage handling. But
one flight might feature deluxe hotels at the same price that
another offers first.class hotels Some might include
pightseeing tours <Jl no extra cost.
-Check if meals are included Competition between
the many OTCs to be offered will be very keen and some
meals (costly overseas) may be thrown in. If a Modified
.>\merican Plan (two meals a day) is offered and costs the
same or onl y a little mote than a European Plan (no meals),
the MAP may be a much better buy . ·
-Ask the travel agent aOOut financial penalties, if you
change your trip plans
-ASK ABOUT WNG WEEKEND OTCs, under which
you can stay for as little as three nights or four days at any
1 vacation spot in North America or the Caribbem For other
• parts of the world, the OTC minimum stay is one week
• When OTCs were allowed in Europe about a decade ago,
the European travel market exploded, TJA 's Cramer re-
... calls . Europeans began traveling all over the continent as
well as to Africa and the Middle East at very low cost.
At the same time, this upsurge in charter travel did not
adversely affect scheduled service -and in fact, scheduled
service in Europe went into a boom.
Investment Class Oct . 6
' One more in the four.week
(?range Coast College lecture
~eries. thi s o ne titled
ncustomizing Your Invest-
ment Program ·· is scheduled
to begin Oct 6 at Newport
Harbor High School.
Sessions will be Mondays
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in the
I
campus auditorium, featur·
ing Randall Mccardle, presi·
dent of The Real Estaters,
college instructor, author and,
Daily Pilot realty columnist.
His secOad lecture the
following week is titled ''Real.
Estate, a Working Tool in,
Planning Your Estate."
;
Model Shirt UPIT• ........
Terrylynn Bockay models a "Hands Across
America" T -shirt depiclting the Bicentennial
project or 5 million Americans bolding hands
from coast-to-coast ne;irt July 4. A Chicago al·
tomey Is organiaing Ule event.
I
DAILY f!LOT A J l
Monday's
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Dollar Stronger
BRUSSEl.S (U PIJ -0('~p1t1• .1 10
percent hike in intcrnat1nnal oil prier-;
the dollar opened hi gher on maior
European money mark ets Monday
Money experts said there "'as gl'llt'rul
belief that a stronger U.S. economy
could absorb the increase easil y.
' Gold prices rose shghU y and the
British pound fell to a new <ill timr low
against the dollar The pounrl op1·nN.I
at $2-.0310 but quic kly r:tlhl'd to
$2.0325, down Cron1 1-'riday·s closing
12.0450.
Fiat Prices
TURIN (Af,) -Fi~t SPA raised
prices of its 127 a nd 31 models 1 per·
cent effective Monday.
Last week the company had in -
creased prices of 126, 128, 124 and 840 ·
models by an averageof 7 percent.
' The Fiat hikes were the fourth
declared by the company this year.
•
--
. AJ.2 DAIL V PILOT Monday. September29. 1975
Double Winner
, ( Argosy Swept
B y Hurricane
Morrie Kirk's 40-foot two.tonner, Hurricane
Deck, Balboa Yacht Club emerged as a double win-
ner in the International Offshore Rule djvision of
Newport Ocean Sailing Association's Alamitos Bay
Argosy.
Sixty-0ne boats in five divisions turned out for
the annual "pa rty" race from Balboa to Ala mitos
Bay on Saturday, andfromAJa mitos Bay to Newport
on.Sunday. ~
THEONLY otherdoubl e winner was Rivet , skip-
pered by Keith~ Cleland,
BYC, which won both
r aces in th e
Performance Hand icap
Racin g Fleet Class B.
Bris k winds made a
short race for the fl eet on
Saturday, but on Sunday
the winds wer e so light
that the fl eet did not
fini sh until about 6 p.m.
Balboa Pier to Alamitos
Bay
BOATING !OR (9l -1, Hur·
ricane Deck ; 2, Ra;der,
Jim Linderman, BYC; 3,
Drumbeat , Ayres
Brothers, NHYC. f' PHRF-A (18) -I , l-lidalgo, Rod Lippold,
"' NHYC ; 2, Tom ahawk II, John Arens, BYC; 3,
Virgin i a , D e n n is Burnett, SSYC.
2 Harbor
Yachts. Wm . • 1
SF Rega\t,a
~ . '-,
Two Newport Harbclf Y~cht ·
Club skippers sailed off with top;•
honors In St. F'ra11ci1 Y•~~t
Club's annual Big Boat Series, a
week-long_ regalta s_!lled on .
breezy San Fr a.ncisco""Siy. f
The winner of the St. Francis
Perpetual for Class Ayachts w3s
Dave Cuckler's 48-foot sloop
Hawkeye from NHYC with four
straight firsts. Runner·UP was
Lightning, Theo Stephens' 57·
foot sloop from the host club.
Bill Pascoe's 47-foot German
designed and built sloop Saudade
from NHYC missed a clean
sweep of the Class B series by on·
ly two seconds. Afier winning the
ftrSt three races, Saudade was
edged on corrected time in the
fmal race. Runner-up was Whis-
tle Wing, a 46-foot sloop owned by
Hastings Harcourt, Santa
Barbara Yacht Club. Third was
Scaramouche, sailed by Robert
Alexander, Seattle Yacht Club.
.. ,
Cluh 'Dirty'·
Cup'a Home inViolation
NEW YORK •(UPI) -The pnslleiOWI
Now York Yacb.t Club. fiom• ot the America••
CUp and aymbol of Yankee aristocracy. wu ·
found In vlolalloa of the cit)t'• bealt.b code to-
day.
In a statement, the city'• department of
11'0alth said tbe club bad "fresh and old mOW1e
excreta in the kltchenr' Md ••dead roaches on
the noors of tbe kltcberl and glus stotac_•
rooms.''
. Under city re1ulal,lons. if the violations
are not corrected, the clllb is subject to clos·
ing. t '
Felis Petitmaire. manager of the 1,600-
member club, said "W,'re correcting them .•·
The club hous~s the America's Cup, sym·
bol of international yachting tupremacy.
Two Yachts Fig ht
F~r Challenge Cup
Two six-meter yachts are fighting it out on San
· Francisco Bay to determine whi~h will represent
the United States in the Australian-American
Challenge Cup Series. The contenders are St. Francis VI, entered by a
St. Francis Yacht Club syndicate, and Mzale
Dazzle, Seattle Yacht Club. Racini is being ;con-
ducted over an Olympic tyi>:e course of( Berkeley.
PHRF-B (ll l -I. Rivet ; 2, Blue Rocket, Bill ~11,,.1eo1:SUH..,...
Blurock, BYC ; 3, Debra. rnckRauff,SSYC. a.EAN SWEEP -Dave Cuckler's new King-designed 48-·
The winner of the Rheems
Trophy for Class C yachts was
another well-known Southland
yacht, Vendetta, a 40-foot two-
tonner co-skippered py Tom
Tobin and Art DeFeyer, San
Diego Yacht Club. )
Runner-up in the bid for the
Rheems Trophy was Shillelagh
sailed by Commodore Bob Keefe,
St. FYC, and third was Mirage,
LeS Har lander, St. FYC.
$t. Francis VI was diSmasted in heavy winds
Saturday but was expected to be f>ack in a~ion to-
day. A six-man selection committee n?med St.
Francis VI and Raz:de Dazzle as fmalists after
. Pacemaker of San Francisco and Poisson Soluble,
Seattle, were elimintedlast week.
PHRF-C < 12 ) -1. Sunda, Graham Gibbons, foot sloop Hawkeye easily found its way around breezy
,.. BYC; 2, Charisma. Scott Mason, BCYC ; 3, War San Francisco Bay to win four straight victories in St.
Eagle, Ken Batzer, SSYC. Francis Yacht Club's popular Big Boat Series. The vic-
ORCA (II ) -I, Polynesian Concept, Buddy tory earned Hawkeye the St. Francis Perpetual Trophy. Ebsen, BYC ; 2, ImiLoa, VicStern,BYC;3, Wash,___::_:_:::::_:.:.:::::_:::_::_::::::.:_:::::..:::::._:.:.:::::.:::_.:_:::..!:::..:::=_::~:::::.:.._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,
Tub, Oliver Wash bum, White Bear Lake YC .
Alamitos Bay to Newport Pier
IOR -1, Hurricane Deck ; 2, tie between Raider
and Drumbeat.
PHRF-A -1, Sunraker, Hobart Denny, BCYC ;
,,. 2, Tomahawk II ; 3, Ransom, Dave Delo, BYC.
PHRF-B -I, Rivet, 2, Debra; 3, Bebo Ill, Bob
,1 Darnell, VYC .
•1 PHRF·C -Little Oly , Jack Badorak, SSYC ; 2,
"' War Eagle; 3, Charisma. ORACA -1, Erin, Bowie HoUghton, Lahaina
YC; 2, Thesis, Jim Turner, LBYC; 3, l\1ir age, For -
.. rest Stewart, VYC .
·'-''
~ ...
•••
"'
,, ' ...
l• .. ;: -, .
·'
C-.
Zeus IOR Winner
In Enduro Event
Bill Gilbert's Zeus, Pacific Mariners Yacht
Club, was the IOR Class A winner in California
Yacht Club's Enduro Race, the second feature of
the Fred Harris Series.
Class A winner in the PerformBnce Handicap
Racing Fleet was Paradox, sailed by Tom
Armstrong, CYC, and the Midget Ocean Racing
F1eet Class A winner was La Diana, skippered by
Fred Huffman, Blue Water Cruising Club.
Mqi:e than 115 boats turned out for the race
which was sailed ar0W1d the buoys on Santa Monica
Bay.
IOR-A -1, Zeus ; 2, Jano, Bob Kahn, CYC; 3,
Arcadia, Del Amo, LA YC.
IOR-B -1, Bananas, Milt Baehr, CYC ; 2, Str-
ing, Jon By,k, CYC; 3, Merlin, Jack Ibach, SMYC.
PHRF-A -1, Paradox ; 2, Genesis, Dick
Williams, PVYC; 3, Resolution, Jerry Hunter,
KHYC .
PHRF-C -I, Windfall , Lew Newfield, CYC ; 2,
Daria, Dave Ross, WYC ; 3, Sea Fever, Earle
Kneifel , CYC . ,
PHRF-C -1, Veracity, Howard Williams,
SBYRC ; 2, Sturmvogel, George Klose, SCCYC ; 3,
Crackerjack, Jack Cunningham. SMYC.
MORF-A -1, La Diana, Fred Huffman,
~WCC; 2, Walrus, Jim Worthington, SMYC ; 3, Su-
Dy Ill, Andy Lockton, CYC. u., , ,. MORF-B 11, Hardtack, Mark Wilson , KHYC ; 2,
,., .. , Lollipop, Tom Leweck,. CYC ; 3, Solitaire, Al
,,, Qiamond,SMYC. .
" .. . :: B andit Captures
E.Ahmanson Series
•
Bandit, skipper~by lngs are unofficial.
Steve Morton of the Class standings:
Chicago Yacht Club was CLASS A -1. Raider ;
overall winner of 2.Bandit;J .Drumbeat.
l'f.ewport Harbor Yacht CLASS B -1. Nuance,
Club's s ix -race George .Austin, South
Ahmanson Series. Shore Yacht Club.
The series is scored on CLASS C -1. Tie
the beSt five of the six between Merrydown,
races. Bandit's low score Bill Lapworth, St. FYC,
for the series was JSo/.I and Canadian Robin,
paints, beating Jim Un-Jim Warmington .
derman 's R a ider , NHYC .
Balboa Yacht Club, by 'l4 CLASS D -I.
Ofapoint. Chinook ; 2. Quadriga,
Both Bandit a nd EdMeserve,NHYC.
Raider were Class en--::========~I tri~s, but Raider edged •
Baooit by 2 '-' po;nts in COME TO THE
the class standings. NEWPORT HARBOR
Third in Class A was
Drumbeat, skippered by IN • THE • WATER
Don Ayres Jr., but in the BOAT overall standings Drum· ..
beat tied on points with
Tom Schock's Class D SHOW eritry, Chinook, NHYC.
Tom Wilder, race com-oat
mittee chairman lor the ~ s~
Ahman'son Series , em-0.#...
phasized that the stand-:z. •
Misty Sea Ille West C.ast's
Larrest Fiuti•J Stat Slllw Pabst Wmner sat. s.,1. 21
Justgoodgaslnilea
and a lo price are11 enoug :anymore.
t
You want a car
that lasts, too.
I
Sure Corollas a~ low priced and get
good gas mileage. They average 30 mpg
on the highway and 20 in t\\e city in
EPA simulated tests.•
But what good is all that if the rest
of the car quickly goes to pot?
That's why every silll!le Corolla goes
through water tests, brake tests, even
glove box tests. That's why every single
engine is tested for 30 minutes before it
ever spends a minute in your 'lbyota. ,
MARK D 4-DOOR SEDAN
You want extras at
no extra cost.
Even our lowest priced model comes
with fully reclini'ng bucket seats, rear
window defogger and power front '
disc brakes. -
So you can imagine what our racy
SR-S's include. Sample: AM/FM radio
for sweet music. Wide radial tires for
~weet handling. And a 5-speed overdrive
transmission for swef)t savings on gas
and engine wear.
All at ho extra cost.
COROLLA WAQON
bl want the right
car at the rigid price.
Which is why we make so many
-diO:erent 1byotas for you to choose from.
The 'low, low priced Corol\jls. plus sporty
Celicas, solid Coronas, rOomy Mark ll's,
tough pickup trucks and Land Cruisers.
In all. 22 different well-built 1byotas
with lots built in for the money.
Good 'as mileage and a low price?
Sure. But 1n a 'lbyota, we want rou to
eajoy those !Javings for a long time
to come. Get'1)'our,hailds on a 1byota.
1 • ...
Misty Sea, skippered · S...Ocl 5 llOMOrt'A ' by Tom Collins NEWPOR" • -1 •·• .· Hollywood y acbt Cluti T BEACH'S
wu tM winner of the LIDO VIWOE
Pablt Tropbutedlcted ............ ~."'u.. !11J..!i':y.~= Sltlrl•JS 'fa": 111e ~ Get your ha_., on a~. You'll never 1-1 go.
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. '
Tod•y's Closhig
N.Y. Stoeks
. :VOL 68. NO. 2n, 2 SECT10f1S, :U PAGES ORANG;li COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2'1, 1975 TEN CENTs
I ; 7
;_Jack Scott Drove Patty to East Coast?
• -'SAN FRANCISCO (API -
'J"atrlcia Rearst rode cr~s
country with 1porta actiVist Jade: 1 Scott f®r months after the was
ktdnaped and at one point
~lloed S<Olt's ofler to drive ber
I ODywhere she '¥&Pted, including .home, Rolling Stone magazine
1ays in it1 new issue.
"I Want to go wbett my friends
are golnc." f\tiss •Hearst w.u
quoted a.s ..telllng Scott as Ibey
drove towatd tH EMt Coast to
nleet St.A memben.' •
Asaoeiote edilOr Howard Kohn
-1 ~er Dula Wlir uJd their ICJ;OIU!l w_, ...., cm in·
rormat1¥ fro"-.c•lJ!llenUlled ~ wbo "to ..... to Patty
Heam: they ••111 u.n: they
belpedber." ·
Scot • ~ to lbe
Han:isea allei:'Word'Wu spread
lbat be wasuecUo wrlto 1 -oo
•
\he 0<Canl~!loo. Tbe lionises
iavit<d Scott lo I 8e.rteley -..art-
ment, where be met P~ Hearst °' the lint time aQd air-I to drive her to the East Coast. Ute
lrlldesald. · Scott. who once told reporten
''I never met anyonewbotold me
1he was Patty Heant" coU.ld not
be reached Jm mediately for com· ment.
Miss Hearst announced after
her llidllaPll>I she had talteo lbe
DI.me "Tania.''
Miu Hearst wa1 confined, ap-
parently tn a eloaet, ror four
w~ immediately aller she was
kfdn,pe(l--kom her Berkeley
1partnient on Feb. 4, 19'14, by the
SLA. aald the Rollihg Stone re-
porttts, wbo were interviewed
this mornin• on NBC's '"Today
Show.''
ln an affldavit filed last week
.
ln federal court here, Miss
Heant said she was held ln a
closet tor nine weeks.
The reporters said Miss Heant
uked to be permitted to join Jhe
SL.A but m0&t members ol the
ll'OUP were opposed. It wu St.A
leader Donald OeFreeie. who
called himself "Cinque," who
convinced others to accept her. ,
When she was released from
confinement, the article said,
Min Heant was allowed to move
freely amoni SLA members and
sat in on the croup's "daily
political study sesaiom."
When six members of the SLA
died in • 's hootout with IA&
~eles Police, Miss Hearst and
St.A member• Bill OPd-Emily
Harris were a few blocks away
Ustenln1 to radio aceounta ol the
confrontation, Rollinc Stone
<See SIA, Poge A21
Trials Delayed
Hinshaw, Vallerga to Wait
Diabl.os' ~arlin's
Bl,1'0111 BllRLEY .... .,....Pt .......
Congressman Andrew J .
Hinshaw and convicted former
County Assessor J84;k VaDerga
were granted a three-npith de·
lay of their Orange Coupty
Superior Court trial oo multiple
criminal charges today.
Pre1idto1 Judge Robert
Banyard set Jan. 12, 1976, as the
new trial date after it was ex-
plained that a trial earlier set to
start today would most certainly
be in progress on Nov. JO, the
date that Hinshaw faces trial
alone on bribery charges.
In the courtroom with both de-
fendants was former Assessor's .
aide Garland Redding, who was
cleared of grand theft and con-
spiracy charges on a motion r11ed
by the DUtrict Attorney·s office.
Mission Viejo High School standard
bearers display the school logo at the past
weekend 's Balboa Bay Lion's Club
Lobster Bake in Corona del Mar. The
parade Saturday plus the carnival and
lobster bake attracted throngs to the Fri-
day through Sunday event. New Crisis
Sparked •
_. College Shape Studied.
. I In Portugal
Saddl.eback T.,.,,.tees Mull Ph11ical Future . . -LISBON (UPIJ -Prime
Minister Adm. Jose Pinheiro de
Azevedo ordered troops lo OC·
cupy the nation's Contrnunjst-
controlled radio and television
stations today and said the move
was taken to prevent PortugaJ"s
falling into anarchy.
The future physical shape of
the Saddleback Communit y
College D'istrfcl will bedisctiSsed
by trustees during a special
meeting tonight at 7: XJ in Room
212 of the library.·
fA.dministi'ators and architects
are expected to present the board
•with several alt~.p1ativ~ for de·
velopment of the tlistri.ct under a
five-year master plan ....
tentiaJ sites for a .satellite campus
in the TWltin -lrvine area.
Although the meeting is ex-
pected to be a study session,
board iilembers wiU be asked to
provide administrators with
some direction as to bow they hoPe to proceed toward develop-
ment.
Board members are also ex-
pected to consider a preliminary
plan for a swimming pool.
Although the state has -ap·
proved matching funds for con·
struction of a pool on campus,
trustees indicated during their
budget hearings that they would
rather the district's money be
used for track facilities.
His move triggered one of the
most explosive crises in the coun -
try's 17·month-old revolution.
Currently, the district's onl y
facility, Saddleback COllege, js
divided into, the lower campus or
temporary buildings and the up·
per campus or permanent build·
in gs.
A college spokesman said dis-
. cussion will center around how
the college s hould be developed
and if it should be done before
lroinePrepares Plan
For Jet Use Protest
Troops sent to one of the sta-
tions rebelled against their or-
ders and joined the workers. The
rar left called for mass protests
to paralyze the country.
The Revolutionary United
Front urged workers to throw up
barricades in the streets and
launch a general strike.
The front formed by an al-
liance or leftist groups appealed
for soldiers and sailors lo mutiny
against the government and
mobilize themselves on the side
of the left.
consideration of a second, or By DOlfG FRITZSCHE satellite, college site. Pt .. .,..,,.,,.~ ... <A
When the district was con· Irvine Gity Attorner James
ceived, he said, the thoug:ht was Erickson ha& outlined a broad
that there would be.at least two campaigh.for the ei"ty injts errort to prevent proposed commercial campuses to serve their area · aft I El ~ M · which includes Tustin, Irvine, airer . use3~ •Ol'O anne
Mission Viejo, El Toro, Laguna Corps AJf St tJon.
Niguel, Laguna Beach, San ln some area~. such as the s~g-
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano gested ~~nexat!~" of the ,Mi;m~e
andCapistranoBeach. ~ EiicYCJn.~.pot~ti~.
The district's enrollment this l~Qthe~,. be swd;_ · f!QWre \addi-
_year increased 81 perceilt over ' '~..1...~af an•t,ai1berorttheycanbe
last year's figure, he said. If.the Pl~bed against an~~e ~-
increase continues. he explained, tp-BoaJ'.d1of Supe~son applica-
some provisions will have to be :Uon to he ,P.epanm~t W: the
made to house the students. ..; .. Navy to. d~ commercial flights
The district budget does in· to·EI TorQ. • .
elude $250 ooo for studv>ng p . In late August, the supervisors
• 3 ' ro votei.1 to request that El Toro
become a "joint use'' airport-
oo.e-used by both commercial and
Orange Coast
Weather
Late night and morning
military craft.
If the. request goes through,
Erickson. said, county figures
estimate an averiP\ce of 140 com-
merQal arrivals and departures
daily.
clouds, otherwise rair skies
' , ·Tuesday, according to the
weather service. A litUe
warmer with beach highs ; .
near 70 rising to the low Ms ••
. .
Some of the ideas Erickson has
propased to the city council
alri!"ady have been put into action.
othen include:
Thieves Grab
Loaded Trailer
inland.
INSIDE TODA 't'
TM overhead excttdl the t>rofil• li!!<!/old.at S<Jddleback
COmmunit)I Entsrpnus:, b&d
i11 WOTk ll)'ith metft0llt1 han-
dicapped.adu/l>-boorl "1tanoi· bl<dillidondl.SHP.~BI.
'
A ti:ailer packed with china.
silver. glassware, cameras and
other valuables wu stolen in the
1tfission Viejo area during the
weekend while tt& owner was
away aeeking a tow for the dis~
abled vehicle, Orance County
Sbttllf'aomcers reported today.
Deputies valued lbe loss au!·
lered by marketing consultont Je« E'. Cllinll, 35, or 23881 son
Elteban/M,asion VI~ at M,4*1.
11te)' s~ unknown lbln• re-
lnOled the ltaUer from the point
where the victim left It, neor lbe
lntu1ectlon of Crown Valley
Parkway and P ueo Del Niguel.
,
-Amending the city general
plan for the area around El Toro
to prevent the development of
facilities needed by a com·
mercial field and to include land
uses inconsistent with a nearby
commercial field
-Pre-annexation zoning
around the field aimed at the
same weak spots as general plan
amendments. Alth-ougb the pre·
zoning has no weight as law, it
declares the city's intent for how
the property is to be used.
-COOperating with other cities
in the area to be affected by pro-
J>OSed "joint use'' to qualify an
initiative folit a county.wide
ballot. The initiative would re-
quire a vote of the people in the
affected cities before any airport
could be built or expanded.
-Working with the public
utilities serving the base to limit
services to prevept expansion of
the field.
On the last point, Erickson not-
ed, "The likelihood o( arriving at
.such an arrangement with the
utilities would depend upon the
leverage that the city might have
with respect tp the coonections
(See JETPORT, PageA2l
FIRST C.4LLER
Gm' C4MPER
"We are now in one of the most
serious situations since the start
of the revolution," Information
Minister Antonio Almeida Santos
said.
He said the prime minister
would address the nation tonight.
More than 1,000 demonstrators
gathered in Rossio Square in
downtown Lisbon to s hout
"Death to the Fascists!" and
"Reactionaries out of the Bar-
racks!" They then marched on
Radio Renascenca to demand
that the soldi ers give the
facilities back to the workers.
Radio Renascenca, which is
theoretically owned by the
Roman Catholic Church, has
been the focus of a major con·
troversy since lefti.sS workers
took over the building and tumed
it into a far left facility.
Another hot spot was Radio
Club where soldiers sent to oc-
CllPY the buildi ng rebe lled
against their orders and instead
joined the workers. Military
security chief Gen. Otelo Saraiva
de Carvalho initially ordered the
facilities evacuated, but this was
not carried out.
In the afternoon, a man with a
bullhorn told the crowd outside
Radio Renascenca that the
soldiers there also were leaning
''I'm very pleased . The towardstheworkersandplanned
camper sold to the fU'St person to lake a vote on whether to
who called.·· maintain the occupation.
That's the advertising success Santos briifed the press short-
story told by the Costa Mesa man ly after the prime minister iS!lued
who placed this ad ln the Daily a statement saying that the ac-
Pilot: lion was necessary to reverse
Portugal 's slide .towards '89 VW Camper, sUdin& anarchy, Which he &aid was be·
rool. nu motor, brakes, tng promo(ed by the radio and
Xtre. clean, '2-•5• ua-television alations. .... _
If you baVe a ree:reational The prime minister made his ..,
II move u the country emerged vehicle to sell or l'"e.t\t. ca from a weekend of diverse mob
642·5678. We make it tUJ to put violence that battered Lisbon
a few words to work for JOU. in and Porto and struck at the roots the Dally Pilot. or -~-----------,-governmental authority.
Redding, 56. or Santa Ana, was
one of nine employes indicted
after a long probe of allegedly il-
legal activities in the Assessor's
office during Hinshaw's term as
Assessor.
Convictions already have been
recorded against Redding's eight
codefendants. It was explained
today that Redding's cooperation
with the prosecution during that
investigation led to the dismissal
decision.
Redding has testified before
the Grand Jury . Assistant Dis·
lrict Attorney Michael Capiii.i
also commented today : ''He
could have gone lo trial, been
ftned $1,000 and convicted of a
misdemeanor. It wasn't worth it ..•
Six or the eight convicted BS·
sessor's aides have had felony
convictions reduced to ml&de·
meanors with each ordered to
pay a Sl,000 fine.
Jlinsh&w and Vatlerga will be
back in court together Jan. 12 to
face identical charges stemming
from allegation! that members
<See IUNSH/l W, P•1e A21
Dome Looted
Scene of Fatal Viejo Fire
Buri.Jars have looted the scene
of a Mission Viejo tragedy, steal-
ing. the valuables locked in a
garage arter a July Z7 rare that
took the life of Barbara Maycock
and her two daughters .
Sheriff's deputies valued the
sporting goods and hand tools
belonging to Michael R .
Maycock, ex-husband of the dead
, woiban, at $1 ,108.
The valuables were locked In
the garage of the burned house al
26445 Fresno Drive, Mission Vie-
Merit Scholars
jo, following the blaze that wu
believed started by a faul ty laun·
dry dryer.
Deputies believe the thieves
struck over the past weekend.
probably using a truck to ·haul
away the loot. '
. At the time of the fire,
Maycock, 33, was vacattonloa' in
Portland, Ore. He was not locat-•
ed until three days after the rmtJ
Sheriff's deputies descl"ibed
the looting as lhe most callous •
~urglary they have investigated
1n recent months.
Three Saddleback
Students
Three Saddleback area big}\
school students have been named
semirinalists in the 1976 National
Merit Scholarship Program.
Ramon 0 . Oropesa{ a senior at
El Toro Hi gh Schoo. and Gary
Olson a nd Michael Wilson,
seniors al Mission Veijo High
School. are among 15,000 stu-
dents who will continue in the
competition ror about 3,800
scholarships lo be awarded next
spring.
Woman Raped
On Air Base
By Thin Man
A woman was raped at the El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station
and then later slashed with a
knife near her Orange area home
in a weekend incident that is be-
ing investigated today by Orange
Couoty Sheriff's officers .•
Deputies said the 2()..year-old
victim was first attacked as she
left the enlisted men's club at the
El Toro base. They said she was
forced to remove her clothing
and was raped near a parking
lot.
Offi<'ers sa id her attacker,
described as a tall, thin man in
his early twenties. then forced
her into his car with the stated in-
tention or driving he r home. They
said he stabbed her with a knife
four times before she was pushed
rrom the car at an Orange area
intersection.
The victim was taken to a local
hospital where two of the wounds
were stitched up, deputies said.
Water Emergency
NEWARK, Ohio <U P!l -Res;-
deoU ol this central Ohio city,
living in a slate of emergency,
have been cautioned to limit
their use or water or face possible
crimlnal charges . Mayor
Richard Baker declared the
elt\ergency Sunday rol1owtng a
water main break.
• Ill Semis
Oropesa. son of Mr. anti Mrs.
John Oropesa of El Toro, has ap-
plied for the Naval Academy.
Always on the Principal"s Honor
Roll, he is active in the school's
Key Club and cross country
team.
Olson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Olson of Mission Viejo plays the
viola and has been in the school
orchestra for three years. His in-
terests lean toward mathematics
and science.
Wilson, son or Mr. and Mrs.
~is H. WilMQn of Mission Viejo,
ts a member of the school's math
club but is also interested in
science and creative writing.
Over a million students took
the qualifying examination for
the program . Semifil'lalisis
represent the lop half of one per-
cent o r the nation 's most
academically t alented young
people.
Scholars hip winners will be an·
nounced in April.
Crash Hurts
Music Star
NASHVILLE . Tenn .
(AP) -Country music
star Earl Scruggs was in-
jured early today when Lhe
single·engine airplane he
was piloting crashed dur·
ing a landing at Cornelia
Fort airfield. police said.
Officials at Memorial
Hospit al said Scruggs, 51 ,
suffered a broken nose, a
brok e n ankle , fac ia l
lacerations and head in·
juries. They said he wis 1n
satisraclory condition.
A spo kesman tor t 1.i•
Fed~ral Avia t i on Ad
ministration said Scru,izr..s
had flown from :'v1 1.,·,1Y,
Ky. .
A spokes man ', .
privat e' airf i~l I 1'
Scruggs' Cr.>.sna 1, .•
parently overshol the lan1
ing strip and nipped o\.cr
in a farm field.
I
~ondey. September 29, 117$
-
I
Consumer Card
A Better Idea
For Post Office
~lad a problem with the mail
lately ?
'fhe U.S. Postal Service has a
remedy.
It's a consumer service card
which will be available from all
lett er carriers in Orange County
as of Wednesday.
The card, actually a sandwich
of two postal cards with a piece of
carbon paper in between, con ·
tains four blocks.
On these, customers can re-
gister complaints, request in-
formation , make compliments,
off er Sl.lig es tions or make
general com me n ts about the
mail service.
Ed ~1urph y , Orange County
l'OOrd inator for the nationwide
Consumer Service Proaram,
said that one copy goes to the
local postmaster for immediate
correct ion and the other to Postal
Service Headquarters in
Washington, O.C.
The complaints will be
catalogued and analyzed by com·
puter lo help spot problem areas
and nationwide trends.
Murphy said the Consumer
Service Program was tested
earlier this year in Illinois,
~'fa1111ac hu setts . Arizona and
Rhode Island. Postal customers
participating in the lest found the
cards easy to complete and said
most complaints were resolved
to the customer's satisfaction.
..
Deaerter
DrounJJ
PERRIS !UPI! -A
marine de1ar~er from
CUip Pendleton drowned
in Lake Perris Sunday
alter he tried to save tus
girlfriend who was Ooun·
deriog about 75 feet of-
fshore.
Allen Scott Conoer. 22. of
Los An&eles, dove Into the
lake to rescue the stroasl·
Ing woman but when be re·
ached her, 1he appU"enUy
pulled him down, 1•·
vestigator1 s.ald.
She manaeed to get baf:k
tosboresalely.
••
SLA •••
talc!. The artkle said the Bar-
risn quickly bought a used car
and left Loe Angeles, with Miu !leant bidln1 in the ._. _ un·
cler a blanket, for San ...._lt<o.
The Harr~1e1 ''found othtr means" or leavln1 Berkeley for
the Scotts' New York City apart·
ment. Scott and Miu Hearst.
"poelna u man aod wife," drove
eastward, RollingStone1aid.
Miss Hearst was "very up-
tight'' and ''felt extremely
vulnerable to beln1 reoognlzed
alon& the way," Weir nld, but
there was no problem. 111e STOUP
met fugitiv~ Wendy YOl!Sh.imura
in New York and lhen 'ltlenl to a
Pennsylvania farmhouse rented
by Scott's wife, Ml<ld, the article
said.
•
I 3 Attack,
''Ninety.two percent of the peo-
ple we 11urveyed said It was a
very, very good program,''
Murphy noted.
He said •the card should be
especially helpful in tracing mail
which ha11 been late in arrivtna:.
"If a cu1Jtomer hasn't received a
letter that was sent two weeks
ago, for example, there is a place
on the card where he can fill in
the sender's address," Murphy
pointed out.
Y Classes
To Begin
Wednesday
The Saddleba<k Valley YMCA
bas scheduled the following
special interest tlasses fot" the
six-week tall 1e11lon to begin
Wednesday. 1
Rolling Stone said durlhg the
summer at the Pennsylvania
farmhouse. Miss Hunt had a
long discussion with Scott a~t
her ronversion to the SL.A. which
Kohn and Weir said "was as
much emotional as political. She
had felt isolated emotionally and
she was disappointed In her
parents and in Steven Weed, her
fiance. and their response to the
SLA demands.··
At the end of the summer when
the farmhouse lease ex-pired. ar-
rangements for returning Miss
Hearst and the Harrlses to hiding
in California were rftade by a
•·new team•· that included
Kathleen Soliatl, no>v herself a
fugitive, and her brother Stev~
SCott again drove Miss Hearl>"t ,
this time westward, Rollifljg
Stoneaaid. Vnited Way Launching Pllolo •r Olwc:l e1ec:u
The Crazy Toad Players. a Costa Mesa mime troupe,
cavorted around the Crean Rancho in Rancho
Capistrano as the balloon went up on United \Vay 's SJ .65
million fund-raising campaign in Orange County Sun-
day. The balloon was donated by . Ballooning Unlimited
of La Jolla . According to United Wa y campaign
chairman Cal Mortensen, $1,093,610 already has been
pledged. The funds will go to support of 72 human
service agencies.
Restaurant Permit
For Dana Weighed
Orange County planning com-
missioners will consider a re-
quest Tuesday for a permit al -
lowl n g construction or a
rataurant just south of the exist-
ing Quiet Cannon restaurant in
Dana Point.
Although starr plannen are re-
commending that the environ-
mental impact rep<.>rt be ap,.
One Everest
Climber Dead
KATMANDU, Nepal (APJ -A
British .expedition conquered Mt.
Everest tor the second time in
three days last Friday, but one of
the members or the &SJault team
was killed before reaching the
29,028-foot·hlgh summit, the
world's highest. the Nepal
Foreign Ministry said today.
A brief message receivett from
the' expedition said that Peter
Boardman, 23, and a Sherpa
guide &et foot atop Everest on
1')-iday.
proved. they arl" re<'ommending
that the permit be denied as sub-
mitted or continued for a revised
plot plan. The commission will
convene at 1 :30 p.m.
As proposed, explained a staff
planner, the plan includes less
than the required parking.
Commissioners also are
scheduled to give rinal considera-
tion to rezoning a portion or the
Bear Brand Ranch which
borders Laguna Niguel.
Commissioners have approved
the zone change, from
agrl<"ultural tu mixed residen-
taial uses ; however they request·
ed. some changes in the accompa-
nying text so the hearing on the
request was continued to 2 p.m.
Tuesday.
Commissioners are al so
scheduled to consider Presley
Development's appeal or the re-
quirement for an environmental
impact report on development in
the Pacific Island Villag e
Planned Community.
Consideration of rural street
standards is also on the com-
mission's agenda.
Gas Station Robbed Sexes Battle
In Laguna Hills v TV
A Laguna Hills gas station was .. or al
robbed of. $185 over the weekend
by two men who held the lone at-
tendant at gunpoint in the station
office, Orange County Sheriff's
officers reported today.
· Deputies said one of the two
men covered the attendant with a
weapon from behind a nearby
wall while the employe was
forced to take the cash from the
office ot the Fountain Gas Sta-
tion, 23991 El Toro Road , Laguna
Hills. The loot represented the
day's receipts.
• • •
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. We@d
~••kM"l ...e Pllbll\Nr
Jeck R. Curler.
Viet ~n .... t .... Go!.,.••I -
ThOmes Keevll ••ltw
Thomas A. Murphlnt _ ...... '"'*
Otier ... H. Looi Rlctwlrd P. Nall _..._._,_.,..lftl £•ton
Mission Viejo
A IO -week series or sports
specials billed as "The Battle of
the Sexes .. will be £ilmed in Mis-
sion Viejo this year for airing
over the CBS TV network.
The half hour programs will
feature men and women athletes
in sports challenges ranging
from golf to tennis and skydiv ·
ing, according to Charles A.
Pomerantz. a spokesman for
MGM in Sherman Oaks.
He said the competition will
feature "some of the top athJetes
in the country,·· several of whom
were scheduled to appear at n
press conference today at the
Marguerite Recreation Center.
Pomerantz noted that Mission
Viejo was chosen for the filming
because of the community·~
athletic facilities.
HINSHAW •••
or the assessor's staff worked on
Hinshaw's congressional cam-
paign in 1912.
It ls also alleged that employes
were paid time and mileage by
the Assessor's Office while they
canvassed for Hinshaw and post-
ed alps throughout the county.
Vallerra's trial In Ventura
County resulted in the man who
took over from Hinshaw being
t\ned Sl.000. pl1ced on five years'
probation and permanently
barred from boldln1 publk ol-
nce.
Hin.shaw races bribery charae~
in his Nov. 10 trial. He and
Valler1a face charges of erand
theft, conspirln& and embeaale-
ment in the Jao.12 proceedlnl.
Beat Man
On Beach
A Redondo Beach man was
brutally beaten and ki cked by
three young men who attacked
him early Saturday on Mountain
Road Beach in Laguna Beach.
Police reported. ··
Police said the man wu told,
"If you 're a faggot, you're in
trouble," by one of the as-sailants.
Without waiting for a reply, the
trio shoved the SI -year-old victim
lo the ground, beat him and
kicked him in the back . police
said.
The victim told officers that at
one point a person tried to come
to his aid but was chased off by
one of the attackers.
Police said the victim suffered
bruises to the lower rib cage and
back . He declined medical treat-
m~nl locaUy.
The area where the attack took
place has been the scene of
sevC'ra l strong arm robberies
and arrC'sts of men allegedly
engaged 1n sexual acts in public.
Gunmen Hit
Niguel Store
Two gunmen took liquor and an
unknown amount or cash from a
I~aguna Niguel market Sunday
after beating the store clerk with
a length of chain, Orange Counly
Sheriff's officers reported today.
Deputies said the two men
warned the clerk at the u. Totem
market, 30009 Crown Valley
Parkway, that they had a gun
without at any time displaying a
weapon.
Officers said the pair emptied
the drawer and the cash register
and took bottles or Tequila from
the shelf after attacking the
employe with the chain.
Deputies said the victim,
David Romania, 21, of Dana
Point. was not seriously injured.
They are still trying to determine
the actual cash loss.
JETPORT ••.
that the utilities would have to
develop between existing
facilities and the base."
Jn the month since county
supervisors decided to try for
"joint use" at El Toro, ttre Irvine
coun<"il has taken a variety of
steps, including a formal request
to the Department of the Navy to
annex El Toro.
However. Erickson points out
in his advisory io the council , the
federal government -under the
terms of its acquisition of the
field -has sole jurisdiction over
the property.
Erickson believes it unlikely
that the military will voluntarily
surrender a portion of its
jurisdiction to ~the city through
support in an annexation pro·
ceeding.
Regarding the general plan
amendments and the pre-zone
changes, Erickson cautioned,
"The difficulty here, of course,
will be planning in such a man·
ner that will not create adverse
Impacts resulting from con-
tinued military operations from
lhe base.·•
Tight Watch
For Hirohito
WASHINGTON !UPI) -Some
of the tightest security measures
in history will be in effect during
Japanese Emperor llirohlto's
.two-week state vi!iit to this coun·
try starting Tuesday.
The emperor and Empress
Nillako. the first Japanese
monBrchs to come to the United
States, oren the visit TUosday In
colonia Williamsburg, Va.
President Ford wUI welcome
them to Washlnaton ThW'1day
with Ml mlUtary honon .
I
-Pat<hwork quUUng : Begin·
ners on• Thurs4aya, advanced
student.I on Fricbys, both classes
fromlOa.m. tonOoo; $2fee
-Exercise and volleyball:
Wednesdays from 7 to 9 p. m.; $12
fee
-Women from the Bible:
Tuesdays from 10 to 11 :30 a.m.;
lee$2
Postal authorities say the
<"ards should take no more than
two minutes to fill out. It lhe pro-
blem is not resolved to the
t'ustomer's satisfaction. he
should see the postmaster
personally.
86 '86ed'
-Automobile maintenance for
f women: Thursdays from 8 to 9
p.m .; SlO fee
At Anaheim
Rock Concert
Police arrested 86 people Sun·
day at a rock concert in Anaheim
Stadium attended by about 44,000
persons drawn to the stadium by
rock superstars Linda Ronstadt
and the Eagles.
Most of the arrests y,•ere for al-
leged narcotic violations, accord·
ing to Anaheim police Sgt.
Richard Gray who characteriied
the crowd's behavior as .. generally good ...
'"But," Gray added, "it seems
there are always some who are
willing to pay $10 a ticket to get
themselves in trouble."
While most of those &Tested
were charged with narcotic
violations, there were some ar-
rests on drunk in pUblic charges
and a few persons were taken in-
to custody for allegedly carrying
t'once'aled weapons, Gray said.
Cano/Tuna
Was 'Fishy'
CHARLOTTE, N .C. CAP)
Tamara Campbell thought the
stuff in her can or "Breast ·o
Chicken" tuna smelled funny and
didn·t look right. It turned out to
be cat food .
Ted Law, president of the Pied·
mont Better Business Bureau,
said the can had been correctly
stamped as pet food on its metal
lid. But the label, which most
consumers read, indicated the
contents were for humans, he
added.
''We went into half panic," said
Raul Garcia, quality control
supervisor for the packer, Sun
Harbor Industries of San Diego.
Garcia said an investigation in-
dicated the can Mrs. Ca mpbell
purchased was probably an
isolated case.
-Hatha yoga : Thursdays from
2::.>to4p.m.; $12permonth
-Modern dance and jaiz;
Fridays from 3:30 to 5 p.'m.; $10
fee
-Ma1ic (for children):
Tuesdays from 5 to 6 p.m.; $12
lee
-Fascinating Womanhood
(two nine·week sessions):
Thursdays from 7 to 9 p.m. and
Fridays from 10 a.m. to noon; $35
fee, includes study materials
-Using color and line: Wed-
nesdays from 9 :30 a.m. to noon;
$35 fee
Additional information is
available from the Y. 23131
Orange Ave. in El Toro; 830·
YMCA .
Knife-wielding
Rapist Sought
San Clemente police are
searc;hing today for a knife wield·
ing rapist who attacked a 20-
year-old woman in her apart-ment.
The rapist reportedly entered
the beach area apartment of the
victim Friday afternoon and
forced her to submit to him by
holdin1 a knife at her throat. The
rapist left immediately art.er the
attack.
The woman was not physically injured.
Police are searching for a man
in his 20s and of average height
and weight.
Douglas in Court
WASHINGTON (UP!I
Justice William 0 . Douglas re·
turned lo the Supreme Court to·
day for the flrst lime since last
March to participat' in the first
formal business of the new term.
A spokesman said a full nine-
man court was present for the
first day of a week·long private
conference.
On that second trip, the nrst
time Miss Hearst appeared in
public since her Cf'06S~country
trip to the East, their worst fears
were realized in Iowa -they
were stopped by a state
policeman for speeding, the
ma1azine said.
Scott leaped out of the car and
ran back to the police cruiser
before the officer had a chance to
approach the van in whic:h Mi~s
Hearst was sitting, disgwsed 'fS
Scott's pregnant wife, the artic'e
said. .
It quoted ~c,ott as saYtn'°.
"Sorry, officer, I guess I g~t a .1~·
Ue excited about Iowa w1nn1ng
today. That was some game.'' :
"You're an Iowa fan?" the
trooper asked, noting the out-Cl'(-
state plates on the van. :
"Hey. I'm just a football far.-
No matter where I go I love o
listen to football. You wouldn't
give a ticket to a football fan .
would you ? That would be kind Of
anti-American.'· Scott said. ,
The magazine said the trooper
smiled and replied ... I 'II let Y<?U
off easy this time but be careful
when you cross the border into
Nebraska. They got upset by
Wis~onsin , you know ...
The trooper then put his ticket
book awily and left without. iri ·
speeting the van or seeing M1 $s
Hearst, Kohn and Weir said. :
* * * SLA Pistol
May Be New
Patty IAnk
SAN FRANCISCO CUP[) -
The FBI said today it f0W1d a
9-millimeter pistol and live am-
munition -the same kind used
in the robbery of a suburban
Sacramento bank last April -in
Patricia Hearst's last hideout.
Also among the effects f0W1d in
the San Francisco apartment
were a green scarf similar to qne
worn in the robbery of the
Crocker Bank branch, papers
from Crocker Bank, and a com-
munique from a terrorist group
known as'the New World Libera·
tlon Front, which has claimed
responsibility for more than. a
dozen San Francisco area bomb-~gs the past ):'ear.
f
All FABRICS
!be ... -~
With This Coupon
Good Mon. fhl:u Wed. Oni}'
I •
• •
t
. TocJay's Clotdag ·
N.Y. Stoek•
t r
~
.VOL. 68, NO. 272, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1975 TEN CEN'!f
:Jack Seott Drove Patty to East Coast?~.
SAN FRANCISCO <APJ -
'P•trJcia H•arst rode cro11-
C'OUnlry with sports activist J•ck
Soott four months aft.et-she waa
kidaaped and at one point
declined Scott's offer to drive her
anywhere she wanted, including
home, Rolling Stone magazine
'.says in Its new issue.
"l want to go where my friends
are going." Miss Hearst was
quoted as telline Scott as tbey
El Toro
Jet Plan
Outlined
By DOUG F RITZSCllE
Ol•Dlllly,..Mlt~ Irvine City Attorney James
Erickson has outlined a broad
campaign for the city in its effort
to prevent proposed commerciaJ
aircraft use of El Toro Marine
<:orps Air Station. ·
In some area5, such as tbe sug-
.eested annexation ol the Marine
base, Erickson is not optimisti~.
others, he said, require addi-
tional analysis before they can be
pitched against an Orange Coun-
ty Board of Supervison' applica-
tion to the Department or the
Navy to add commercial flights
to El Toro.
In late August, the supervisors
voted to request that FJ Toro
become a "joint use" airport-
one used by both commercial and
milit&ry crart.
Ir the request goes through,
Erickson said, county rigures
~imate an average of 140 com-
111ercial arrivals and departures
daily.
Some or_!be ideas Erickson bas
pt"oposedlo the city council
8:.lready have'been putintoactioo.
: Others include:
: -Amending the city general
-plan ror the area aroupd El Toro
to prevent the development or
racilities needed by a com-
mercial field and to include land
uses inconsistent with a nearby
commercial rield.
-Pre-annexa t ion zoning
around the rie1d almed at the
same weak spots as general plan
amendments. Although the pre-
wning has no weight as law, it
declareti the city's intent ror how
the property is to be used.
-Cooperating with other cities
in the area to be arrected by pro-
posed "joint use" to qualify an
initiative for a county-wide
ballot. The initiative would re-
quire a vote of the people in the
affected cities before any airport
could be built or expanded.
-Working with the pu blic
utilitie6 serving the base to limit
services to prevent expansion of
the field.
On the last point, Erickson not-
ed, "The likelihood or arriving at
such an arrangement with the
utilities would depend upon the
leverage that the city might have
with respect to the connections
that the utilities would have to
develop between existing
facilities and the base.··
In the month since county
supervisors decided lo try for
"joint use•· at El 'roro, the Irvine
i;;ouncil has taken a variety of
steps, including a formal request to the Department of the Navy to
annex El Toro.
. However, Erickson points Out ilt his advisory lo t he council, the
(ederal government -under the
<See JETPORT, PageA2l
Coas t
Weather
Late night and morning
clouds. otherwise fair skies
'Tuesday, according to the
weather service. A litUe
warmer with beach highs
near 70 rising to the low 80s
inland.
INSIDE TODA 't'
The overhead ezcttds the
profit• fiuo/old at Soddl<bock
CommpU~ Enl..,,,._, but
it1 work with mntoU11 ban·
dicapped adults bears tni'anaf.
blt:dividmdl. See P.a,ge 81.
.. y.,, tow.ta e:· .. ·5= e·.::o. :::. ...... .., __
.... ...
!,
.. . .. •• .. •n .. .. •• ... ... •• ••
..
drove toward the Eut Coast to
meet SLA members.
~iete editor Howard Kohn
and reporter David Weir said
their account was based on in-
(orniation from unidentified
SOW'ce5 who ''talked to Patty
Heuat; they were there: they
helped her."
Scott was introduced to the
Harris~ aftu word was spread
tbat be wanted to write a book on
•
-
the organization. 11le Hani.ses
invited Scott to a Berkeley apart-
ment, where he met Patty Hearst
for the first time and agreed to
drive her to the East Coast. tbe
article said.
Scott, who once told reporters
''I never met anyone who told me
she was Patty Hearst".could not
be reached immediately ror com·
ment.
Miss Hearst announced aft.er
Read!i"io Topple
The accelerator on this car assertedly stuck as Adeline
Mary Jackson, 74, of Costa Mesa sat behind the wheel.
The racing auto finally stopped against utility pole on
Orange Avenue near Walnut, nearly felling the towering
fixture. Police said Mrs. Jackson . of 1991 Newport
Boulevard, was not hurt in mishap which also involved
damage to two parked cars.
her ltidnaping she had taken the
name "Tanla."
Mias Hearst was l'Ollfined, ap-
pa.reaUy in a closet. for £our
'fte~ immediately after she was
kklnaped rrom her Berkeley
apartment on Feb. 4, 19'14, by the
SLA. said tbe Rolling Stone re-
porters, who were interviewed
this rooming on NBC's "Today
Show.··
In an affidavit riled last week
in rederal court here, Mis s
Hearst said she was held in a
closet ror nine weeks.
The reporters said Miss Hearst
asked to be permitted to join the
SLA but most members ot the
groUp were opposed. It was SLA
leader Donald DeFreeze, wbo
called himself •'Cinque," who
convinced others to accept ber.
When she was released from
con£inement, the article uld,
Miss Hearst was allowed to move
freely among SLA members al1(d
!•t in on the croup's ''dair~
political study session.s." '
When six members of the SLA1
died in a ahootout with Ldr
Anaeles P9Uce, M\ss Hearst and ·
SLA memben Bill and Emily
ffania were a few blex:ks away
lhstenine to radio aceounta or the
coqfrontatioq., Rolling Stone
• (See SLA, Pa1e A2l
'
Trials Delayed
Hinshaw, Vallerga to Wait
By TOM BARLEY
Ot .. 0.11,,. .......
Congressman Andrew J .
Hinshaw and convicted former
County Assessor Jack Vallerga
were granted a three-month de-
lay of their Orange County
Superior Court trial on multiple
criminal charges today.
Presiding Judge Robe rt
Banyard set Jan. 12. 19'76: as the
new trial dale after \t was ex-
plained that a trial ea.Nier set to
start today would most certainly
be in progress on Nov. 10, the
date that Hinshaw f•ces trial
alone ori bribery charges.
In the courtroom with both de·
fendants was rormer Assessor's
aide Garland Redding, who was
Troop Occupation
Portugal's Radio,
TV Stations Seized
LISBON (UPl 1 -Prime
Minister Adm. Jose Pinheiro de
Azevedo ordered troops to OC'·
cupy the nation's Communist·
controlled radio and television
stations today and s aid the move
was taken to prevent Portugal ·s
(ailing into anarchy.
His move triggered one of the
fl'lOlt explosi-ve crises il'l the roun·
tn'• 11-mont.h-old revolution.
Troops suat to one or the sta-
tions rebelled against their or-
ders and joined the workers. The
(ar left called for m ass protests
to paralyze the country.
T he Revolutionary United
Front urged workers lo throw up
barricades in the streets a nd
launch a general strike.
The rront formed by an al·
liance or leftist groups appealed
for soldiers and s ailors to ml1liny
.tea.inst the government and
mobilize themselves on the side
of the left.
··we are now in one of the most
serious situations since the start
or the revolution," Information
Minister Antonio Almeida Santos
said.
He sajd the prime minister
would address the nation tonight,
More thaq 1,.()()0 demonstrators
gathered in Rossio Square ln
downtown Lisbon to shout
.. Death to the Fascists!" and
.. Reactionarieli out o( the Bar-
racks~'' They then marched on
Radio Renascenca to demand
that the soldiers give the
Cacilities back to the workers.
cleared of grand then and con-'
spiracy char1es on a motion filed
by the District Attorney's of(ice. ·
Redding, 56. of Santa Ana, was
one of nine employes indicted
alter a long probe or allegedly il-
legal activititli in the Assessor's
office during Hinshaw's term as
AsletiSOf.
Convictions already bave been
recorded against Redding's eight
codefendant.s. It was explained
lOday that Reddina·s cooperation
with the prosecution during that
investigation led to the disnllssal
decision.
Redding has testified berote
the Grand Jury. Assistant Dis-
trict Attorney Michael CepiW
also commented tQday: •"He
could have gone to trial. been
fined $1,op() and convicted of a
misdemeanor. It wasn't worth
it.°'
Six of the eight convicted as-
sessor's aides have had felony
convictions reduced to misde·
meanors with each ordered lo
pay a $1 ,000 fine.
Hinshaw and Vallerga will be
back in court together Jan. 12 to
race identical cbarg•'"llemminc
from allegations that members
(See HINSHAW, Pole A2l
"' London Police
Say 'No Deal'
To3 Gunmen
College Shape Studied
Radio Renascenca, which is
theoretic ally owned by the
Roman Catholic Church, has
been the focus of a major con-
troversy since leftist workers
took over the building and turned
it into a rar left fac ility.
Another hot s pot was Radio
Club where soldier s sent to OC·
c opy the building rebelled
against their orde rs and iru;tead
joined the workers. Military
security chief Gen. Otelo Saraiva
de Carvalho initially ordered the
facil ities evacuated , but this was
not carried out.
LONDON (UPI J -Three
gunmen demanded a plane and
safe conduct out of Britain tcxlay
as the price for s paring the Jives
o( seven Italian employes seized
as hostages in a botched robbery
attempt at a London restaurant.
But a hi gh.ranking police official
said "there will be no deals."
Saddleback Trustees Mull Physical Future
The future physical shape of
the Saddleback Community
College District will be discussed
by ~ustees during a special
meeting tonight at 7:=-i in Room
212 of.the library.
Administrators and architects
are expected to present the board
with several alternatives for de-
velopment of the district under a
five-year master plan.
Currently , the district ·s only
racilily, Saddleback College. is
divided into the lower campus of
temporary buiJdings and the up-
per caJtipus of permanent build·
ings.
A college spokesman said dis-
CU6Sion t.>111 center around how
the college should be developed
and ii it shoU ld be done before
consideration of a second. or
satellite. college site.
Whe n the district was con-
ceived , he s aid, the thought was
that there would be al least two
campuses to serve their area
which includes Tustin, Irvine.
Mission Viejo, El Toro, Laguna
Niguel . Laguna Beach, San
Clemente. San Juan Capistrano
and Capistrano Beach.
The dislrict·s enrollment this
year increased 81 percent over
last ye ar·s figure. he said. If the
increase continues, he explained,
some provisions will have lo be
made to house the students.
The district budget does in-
clude $250,000 for studyLng pro-
tential sites for a satellite campus
in theTustin·lrvine area
Although the meeting 1s ex·
peeled to be a study session,
Irvine Plans 1976
City Census/Quiz
Irvine government wants to
know bow many people are in the
city so it can be sure it is getting
all t.he money it is entitled to
from other levels or government
that allocate cash on the ba.5is of
population. .
The city plans a special census
in 1976. And, while the city is
counting, it plans lo ask these
other questions :
-How much do you earn?
-How mtlcb are your house
payments?
-How much is your rent?
6.day Strike Ends
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Nearly
800 police officers and
fireftghters have ended a ai•-day
strift, reporting back to work
with 1 pa7 raise. But Mayor
Le)ris Murphy called the setUe-
ment "Tuca6n's darkest hour"
~ sold It w .. achieved by the
Uleof scare tactics.
-How many rooms in your
house, not counting bathrooms.
porches, balconies, fo}'ers , halls
or half rooms?
-What is the ethnic origin or
the head or household?
-How many motor vehicles do
you keep al home, not countin1
motorcyclei;?
-In what geographical area
does the head or the household
work?
-Do you use anything other
than the private car for
transportation?
-How many preschoolers do
you have and how old?
On all or the muJUple-cboice
questions. one or the allowed
respons es is "no response."
According to Administrative
Services Director James "Har-
rington and Assistant Planning
Director Claudette Dooatella, the
questiona were selected lo avoid
sensitive areas and to satisfy t:il)'
planning needs.
board members will be asked ~o
provide administrators wilh
some direction as to how they
hope to proceed toward develop-
ment.
Board members are also ex-
pected to cons ider a preliminary
plan for a swimming pool.
Although the state has ap-
proved matching funds for con·
struction of a pool on campus,
trustees indicated during their
budget hearings that they would
rather the district ·s money be
used ror track facil ities
Bos ton Teachers
BOSTON (UPI> -The striking
Boston Teachers Union a nd
school officials today concluded
a 23-hour bargaining session with
a tentative contract agreement
to end a week-long s trike .
CrashHwts
Music Star
NASHVILLE , T e nn .
(AP ) -Country music
star EarJ Scruggs was in -
jured early today when the
single-engine airplane he
was piloting cras hed dur-
ing a landing at Cornelia
Fort airfield, police said.
Of(icials at Memorial
Hospital said Scruggs, SJ,
suffered a broken no!ie a
broken ank'Je . rac i1a l •
lacerations and head in-
juries. They 1aid he was in
satisfactory condition.
A s pokesman for the
Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration sald Scruggs
had flown £r9m Murray,
Ky.
A spokes man for the
privat e a i r(ieJd sa id
Scruags' Cessna 172 ap.
parently overshot the land-
ing strip and f1ipped over
in a rarm field. -
}
In the afternoon, a man with a
bullhorn told the crowd outside
R a dio Re n asce nc a that the
sold ie rs there also were leaning
towards the workers and planned
to lake a vote on whether to
maintain the occupation.
Santos briefed the press short·
ly afte r the pri m e minister issued
a statement sa ying that the ac-
tion was necess ary to reverse
Po rtu gal 's s lid e t o wards
anarchy, which he said was be-
ing promoted by the radio and
television s tations.
The prime minister made his
move as the country e merged
from a weekend of diverse mob
violence that b a ttered Lisbon
a nd Porto and s truck at the roots
of governmental authority.
Woman Raped
On Air Base
By Thin Man
A woman was raped at the El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station
a nd then late r s lashed with a
knife near her Orange area home
in a weekend in cid ent that is be-
ing investiRated today by Orange
County Sherirr·s officer!5.
Deputies said the 20-year-0ld
victim was firs t attacked as she
len the e nlisted men's club at the
El Toro base. They said she was
for ced to r e move her clothing
and was raped near a parking
lot.
orricers s a id her attacker,
described as a tall, thin man in
hi s early twenties, then forced
her into his car with the staled in-
tention o( driving her home. They
said he sta bbed her with a knife
four times before she was pushed
from the Ca r at an Oranae area
intersection.
The victim was taken to a local
hospit al.,. where two or the wound~
we re :st itched up , dl!pUties said.
.t
··1 was told by the hostages
they have made this demand."'·
Italian Consul General Mario
Manca told newsmen after talk-
ing to the hos tages through the
loc ked doo r or th e s mall
store room where they are being
held for a second day.
But a ssistant Poli c t! Com-
missioner Wilrred Gibson said,
"Th ey have been told there will
be no deals.·'
The gunmen . s a id to include
two West Indians and a Nigerian,
ha ve held the hostages at the
Spaghetti House restaura nt in
fash1on<1ble Kn1 g htsbridge in
West London s ince I .30 a.m. Sun-
day .
Th ey r e l e a sed an e ighlb
~!age, Alfredo Olivelli. on Sun·
day to show "good faith."
Mrs. Mar y Olivelh, his wife,
said he r husband described the
storeroom prison. m eas uring
nine by 13 feet as· 'a hell hole.··
"He said the stench is in-
describable and the heal over -
powering.
During the m o rning, police
pa'sised coffee , c igarettes and
a portable chemical toilet into the
storeroom. Ther e are no sanitary
facilities in the room and the air
conditioning was s witc.·hed off in
hope the heat would force the ban-
dits out.
(Stt HOSTAGES, Page AZ)
FI RST C4LLER
GOT C4MPER
··J 'm very ple a s ed. The
camper sold to the first person
who called.·'
That ·s the adfertising success
story told by the Costa Mesa man
"''ho placed this ad in the Daily
Pilot :
·m VW Camper. slidlng
roof, nu motor. brakes .
Xtra clean, S2495, xn-
xxxx .
tf you h a ve a recreational
vehic le to sell or rent, c•ll
642·5678. We make it easy to pul
a few words lo work for you, b\
the Daily Pilot .
'
•
..... I DAILY PILOT Mon<11y. September 29, 1975
Fo1111d I" Hideout
PiStol,
New Patty •
0
'
•
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
The FBI said today it found a
9-millimeter pistol and live am-
munition -the same kind used
ln the robbery of a suburban
Sacramento bank last April -in
Patricia Hearst ·s Jast hideout.
Also among the errects found in
the San Francisco apartment
~·ere a green scarf similar to one
worn in the robbery of the
Crocker Bank branch, papers
from Crocker Bank, and a com-
munique from a terrorist group
known as the New World Libera-
tion Front, whic h has claimed
MENTAL TEST
FOR PATTY, AS
responsibility for more than a
dozen San Francisco area bomb-
ings the past year. The nature of
the communique was not re·
vealed.
The items were included in a
25-page inventory or effects
found in the apartment where
?r1iss Hears t ." 21, and fellow
fugitive Wendy Yoshimura, 32,
\l.'ere arrested Sept. 18.
The FBI also released a 100·
* * * Fro•P~Al
SLA ...
said. The article said the Har·
rises quickly bought a used car
and left Los Angeles, with Miss
Hearst hiding in the back seat un -
der a blanket, for San Francisco.
The Harrises ''found other
means" of leaving Berkeley for
the Scotts' New York City apart·
ment. Scott and Miss Hearst.
··posing as man and wife," drove
eastward. Rolling Stone said.
Miss Hearst was "very up·
tight'' and ''felt extremely
vulnerable to being recognized
along the way," Weir said, but
there was no problem. The group
met fugitive Wendy Yoshimura
in New York and then went to a
Pennsylvania farmhouse rented
by Scott'8 wife, Micki, the article
said.
·page inventory of items round in
another San Francisco apart-
ment where Symbionese Libera-
tion Army members William •nd
Emily Harri.I were arrested the
SarQeday.
The inventory contained onJy
brief descriptions of each item
found and did not directly tie the
newapaper heiress to the robbery
of the bank in Carmichael on
April 21 . A woman and three men
took $18,000 at gunpaint. During
the robbery, a customer was hit
by a shotgun blast and later died.
Nine-millimeter bullets were
found on the floor of the bank
after the robbery.
It had been reparted earlier
that currency found in the apart·
ment matched the serial num-
bers of money taker in the rob·
bery. But while listing currency
found in the hideout, no mention
was made in the inventory of
matching serial numbers.
In Sacramento, sheriff's
spokesman Bill Miller declined
to further describe any evidence
which might tie Miss Hearst and
the Harrises to the robbery, but
said: "There are some things in
the labs at the FBI that could
make a strong case against
them."
Among other items found in
Miss Hearst's apartment, ac·
cording lo the FBI inventory ,
were registration, identity and
library cards (or Sacramento Ci·
ty College, a st~no pad with nola·
lions about va'rious San Fran-
cisco banks, a San Francisco
General Hospital identification
card, a black wig, birth control
pills and radical literature. Also
found was a seven -page
handwritten letter on yellow
lined paper addressed "Dearest
Brother" and signed "So much love, respect and power. Me ."
Included in the literature found
in the apartment were two copies
of "Seize the Time" newspaper,
a ''Liberatioo School ''
newspaper. a newsletter entitled
"Political Thesis o( the Puerto
Rican Socialist Party, .. and a
yellow leaflet entitled ''New
Dawn''
_Guards Get Respite
'
From Super Waves
Rescue-weary lifeguards from
Sel.l Beach to Sa~ Clementf to-
daf wel~med the end of the
super surf that pounded into the
Orange Coast late last week.
The· surf; still Sizeable Satur·
day, by this morning had re-
turned lo normal one lo three·
fool levels. On Friday, the surf
raged as high as 12 feet.
Lifeguards reported today that
moderate crowds visited beaches
along the Orange Coast over the
F,,_P~AI
JETPORT ••.
terms of its acquisition of the
field -has sole jurisdiction over
the property.
Erickson believes it unlikely
that the military wiU voluntarily
surrender a portion or its
jurisdiction to the city through
support in an annexation pro·
ceeding.
Regarding the general plan
amendments and the pre-zone
changes, Erickson cautioned,
"The difficulty here, of ·course,
will be planning in such a man-
ner that· will not create adverse
impacts resulting from con·
tinued military operations from
t.he base."
•
ORANOIE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Jack R. Curley Vlt•""•~IMnl •noll ~""'el~•
ThOmas Kee-.til
•
•
weekend, but said there were few .
problems.
In San Clemente, an off-duty
Newport Beach lifeguard suf-
fered a sprained ha.ck SUnday af·
ternoon while body surfing in
five-foot sets at T Street Beach,
one of Southern California's lop
body surfing spots.
t>Ougtas Prichard, 1.7, of 614
Michael Place, Newport Beach,
was rescued by an unidentified
board -surfer who placed
Prichard on his surfboard and
paddled outside the surf break.
Prichard was transported in
the Sao Clemente lifeguard
rescue boat to its Dana Point
base and taken by ambulance to
San Clemente General Hospital.
He was treated for the sprain and
released.
Llfeguards said no new storms
are lurking off the coast that
could generate a repeal or last
week"s surf.
Beach atteridance along the
Orange Coast exceeded 100,000
persons both Saturday and Sun·
day. Lifeguards reported 61
rescues Sunday and 15 rescues
Saturday.
Lifeguards over the weekend
were forced lo rely on skeleton
staffs to patrol beaches because
seasonal guards were taken orf
duty ~hen school started.
Driver Killed
As Car Rams
Van in Mesa
A 63-year-old driver was killed
in Costa Mesa Sunday night when
his car apparently ran into the
back of a van that was halted at a
traffic tight on Harbor Boulevard
at MacArthur Boulevard.
Oliver Webster of 1700 Green·
ville St .• Santa Ana, wu pro-
nounced dead al Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital aboul 15.
minutes aft.er the S:3> p.m. acci·
dent.
Wilnes1e1 told police. th1l
Webater'a cu traveling north on
Harbor at about 50 mileo an hour
rammed into the back ol a halted
van driven by William Nelson
Emery. 20, of 24142 Anker\On, El
Toro. The Impact reportedly
knoclted the fan 100 leet thNuab
the intersection. '
Emery wu not in!urtd thouah
a pa11enger Henry Philip
Schmidt ol 1501 Sylvia Lane,
NewJ>Ort Beach comolained of
leg and shoulder inJurle1.
Scbmiclt refuaed mldlcal treat-
ment., ~evei:.
1
United Way Launching
The Crazy Toad Players, a Costa Mesa mime troupe,
cavorted around Rancho Capistrano as the balloon went
up on United Way's $3.65 million fund-raising campaign
in Orange County Sunday. The balloon was donated by
Ballooning Unlimited of La Jolla. According to United
Way campaign chairman Cal Morte nsen . $1 ,093,610
already has been pledged. The funds wiil go to support of
72 human service agencies.
, Home Looted
Scene .of Fatal Viejo Fire
Burglars have looted the scene
of a Mission Viejo tragedy, steaJ·
ing. the valuables locked in a
garage after a July Z1 Ci.re that
took the life of Barbara Maycock
and her two daughters.
Fro..P~Al
HOSTAGES
Mrs. Ollvelli said her husband
also told her the robbers wore
knitted helmets covering most of
their faces and that they told the
hostages· they belonged to the
''Black Liberation Front.''
But London police and
spokesmen for black community
groups said they knew of no such
organization.
Senior police officers said there
are no political •implications.
They said it was just an armed
robbery that went wrong because
police arrived on the scene loo
quickly.
Police Commander
Christopher Payne, who headed
negotiations during a plane hi-
jacking at London's Heathrow
Airport last January, arrived at
the restaurant today. But he 're-
fused to confirm it was because of
experience with dealing with ter-
rorists.
Police marksmen were issued
with gas masks and tear gas, but a
police spokesman said the Ii ves or
the hostages were the first con-
sideration and no attempt would
be made to rush the gunmen.
More than 200 police were in or
near the restaurant, and wooden
8creens were erected in front of it
to shield the entrance from public
view.
HINSHAW •..
SheriCf"s deputies valued the
sporting goods and hand tools
belobging to Michael R .
Maycock, ex-husband of the dead
woman, at $1,108.
The valuables were locked in
the garage of lhe burned house at
2644!i Fresno Drive, Mission Vie-
jo, following tbe blue that was
believed started by a faulty laun·
dry dryer.
Deputies believe the thieves
struck over the 'J>&st weekend,
probably using a truck to haul
away the loot.
Al the time of the fire,
Maycock, 33, was vacationing in
Portland, Ore. He was not local-
ed until three days after the lire.
Sheriff's deputies described
the looting as the most callous
burglary they have investigated
in recent months.
Woman Killed
In Collision
A two-car collision al 5th St.
and Fairview Ave. in Santa Ave.
in Santa Ana late Saturday night
cost J8.year·old Amelia Meza of
Santa Ana her life.
Police said Mrs. Meza was the
driver or an eastbound car that
· collided with a south bound auto
as they both passed through the
intersection.
... The woman was dead on ar-
rival at Orange County Medical
Center shortly after the accident,
accordini to ~lice . Cause or the
accident 1s still under investiga-
tion.
•
Cw•1ner Cant
A Better ·idea
j
For Post Office
Had a problem with Ule m.u
lately!
The U.S. Poota.l Service ha.s a
remedy.
It's a eonsumer aervice card
wbich will be available tro111 all
3 Attack,
Beat Man
On Beach
A Redondo Beach man . was
brutally beaten and kicked by
three young men who attacked
him early Saturday on Mountain
Road Beach in Laguna Beach.
police reported.
Police :1aid the man wu told,
''If you're a faggot, you're in
trouble, •• by one or the as·
:1ailants.
Without wailing for a reply, the
trio shoved the SI-year-old victim
to the ground, beat him and
kicked him in the back, police
.said.
The victim told officers that at
one point a person tried to come
to his aid but was chased off by
one of the attackers.
Police said the victim s·utrered
bruises to the lower rib cage and
back. He declined medical treat-
ment locally.
The area where the attack took
place has been the scene or
several 8trong arm robberies
and arrests or men allegedly
engaged in sexual acts in public.
Knife-wielding
Rapist Sought
San Clemente police are
searching today for a knife wield·
ing rapist who attacked a 20·
year-old woman in her apart·
ment.
The raplst reportedly entered
the beach area apartment of the
victim Friday aflemoon and
forced her to submit to him by
holdil)g a knife at her throat. The
rapist ten immediately after the
attack.
The woman was not physically
injured.
Police are searching for a mflll
in his 20s and of average beight
and weight.
A Stea/,
For$45
A shopper got a bargain
from the May Company de-
partment store at South
Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa,
SUnday but though he paid
cash, it was stiil a case' of
grand theft.
Police were told that just
five minutes after the store
was opened a man, aged 35
to 40 paid $45 for an Orlen·
tal antique. But he did so
after be had switched the
price on the vase, remov·
. ing a $599 tag and replac·
ing it with a $45 slicker.
Police were informed
that an employe from
another department in lhe
store, not knowing better.
sold the vase for the
switched price.
i.tter earrlen In 0r..,.e County
uolWednesday.
The eard. acfually nandwleh
ol two pootal cards with a piece of
ea.rbon pape~ in bet-. eon-
l&ino four blocu.
On tbne. cuslomens can re-
gister complaint.I, request in-
lormaUoo. make compliments.
offer 1ucce1tton1 or m•ke
ceneral comments about the
mall .. rvlce. .
Ed Murphy, Orang~ County
«*'dinator for the nationwide
Consumer Service Program.
said that one copy eoes to the
local postmaster for immediate
correction and the other lo Postal
Service Headquarters in
Washington. D.C.
The complaints will be
catalogued and analyzed by com·
puter to help spot problem areas
and nationwide lre'nds.
Murphy said the Consumer
Service Program was tested
earlier this year in Illinois,
Maasaehuaetle, Arizona and
Rhode Island. Postal customers
participating in the test found the
cards easy to complete and aaid
moil com.plaints were resolveld
tolhecuslomer•asatisfaclion. 1
"Ninety-two percent of the peo-
ple we surveyed said il was a
very. very good program,••
Murphy noted.
He said the card sbould be
especially helpful in tracing mail
which has been late in arriving.
''If a customer hasn't received a
letter that was sent two wee IQ;
111g6, for example, there is a place
on the card where he can fill in
the sender's address." MurPhy
pointed out.
Postal authorities say the
cards should lake no more than
two minutes to fill out. If the pro-
blem is not resolved to the
customer's satisfaction, h~
should see the postmaster
personally. i
I
86 '86ed'
At Anaheim . .
'
·Rock wncert. i • Police arrested 86 people Suri-_
day at a rock concert in Anaheim
Stadium attended by about 44,000
persons drawn to the stadium by
rock superstars Linda Ronstadt
and the Eagles.
· Most of the arrests were for al-
leged narcotic violations, accord-
ing to Anaheim police Sgt:.
Richard Gray who characterizeH
t.he crowd's behavior Cj);
"generally good.'' :
"But," Gray ailded, "il seem};
there are always some who arl!
willing to pay $10 a ticket to g~
themselves in trouble." ,
While most of those arrested
were charged with narcotic
violations, there were some a~
rests on drunk in public charges
and a few persons were taken in-
to custody for allegedly carrying
concealed weapans, Gray said~
.fleirut 'Normal'
BEIRUT. Lebanon <UPI)
Crowds sureed into the streets of
Beirut today, making a brave
start toward shaking off 11 days
of bloody urban watfare and r e-
turn to normal . The clashes
between leftist Moslems and
right-wing Christi;lns left at least
330 persons dead and more than
600wounded.
of the assessor's staff worked on
Hinshaw's ·congressional cam·
paign in 1972.
~e>upe>n
It is also alleged that employes
were paid time and mileage by
the Assessor's Office while they
canvassed for Hinshaw and post·
ed. signs throughout the county.
Vallerga's trial in Ventura
County resulted in the man who
took over from Hinshaw being
ftned $1,000, placed on five years'
probation and permanently
barred from holding public of·
fice.
Hin.shaw faces bribery charges
in his Nov. 10 trial. He and
Vallerga face charees of grand
theft, conspiring and embezzle-
ment in the Jan. 12 proceeding.
Douglas in Court
WASHINGTON C0PI>
Justice William 0 . Douglas re-
tumed to the Supreme Court to-
day for the first time since last
March to parti~ipate in the first
formal business of the new term.
A spokeeman oald a full nine-
man CO\trt was present for the
flnt da1 ol a week-Jcq pdva.te
conference. .
ALL FABRICS
...... s.-
'
Huntington Beaeh
·Fountain. Valley
EDITION
•
Tod ay'8 C::losl•g
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 68, NO. 272, 2 SECTIONS, 2A P AGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPT EMBER 29, 1975 TEN CEN1°i
·Jack Scott Drove Patty to E~st ~COast?~
SAN FRANCISCO (APl -
_patricia Hearst rdde cross·
('OW)lry with SPorla activist Jact
soott four months alter she was
kldn1ped and at one Point
declined Scott's offer to drive bet
llQywtiere she wanted, includin&
ho9'1e. Rolling Stone magazine
says In lts new issue. · ..
"I want to go where my triends
are 10Jng,'' Miss Hearst was
qUOltd as tellillg Sc:ott as they
UPI T~
The city fathers of
Hazelcrest, Ill ., weren't
satisfied to just put up a
futuristic-looking waler lank
at the edge of town. So they.
gave it a happy face~ greet
motorists along Highway 57.
Handicapped
Panel Gets
Oct. 6 Push
Huntington Beach City Coun-
cilmen will receive a request for
formation of a Mayor's Advisory
Committee on the Handicapped
at their n~xt City Council meeting
Oct.6.
Mayor Norma Gibbs said she
will be introduced to some of the
problems faced by the han·
dicapped on Oct. 5 when she will
drive a car equipped with hand
controls for handicapped persons
and then ride a wheelchair to
lunch at a restaurant.
Joan Carlson and Brenda
Premo, both handicapped, said
they will show· the mayorthat few
persons realize the problems in·
volved in moving about in a
wheelchair.
The purpose of the Handicap
Committee would be to advise the
council, various city committees
and commissions, the building de-
partment and various school dis·
tricts on probleros C<JOCerning the
handioapped.
•'Too often we find programs
and facilities designed for the
handicapped without consulting
them,'' said M .N. ''Mitk''
Spencer, a consultant with the
State Department of Rehabilita·
lion. That agency is recommend·
ing the formation of the commit-
tee.
Objectives of the committee in·
elude working with the city
planning committee in plannirfg
, barrier-free buildings a nd
'facilities ; through the, Parks and
Recreation· Department. to ae-
>Welop recreational programs that
..re usable by the handicapped,
but not separate from programs
and facilities used by the com-
\munity asa whole.
FIRST CALLER
COT CAMPER
•·1·m very pleased. The
camper sold to the fU"St person
who i!aUed . ''
That's the advertising success
story told by the Costa Mesa mac
who placed lhls ad in the Dally
Pilot:
•
'98 VW Camper, slldll\C
roof', n111 motor, bra!d. Xtr• clean. $2495, · . ..,..
U you have a recrtaUonal'
vehicle to sell or rent. call
"2·!16711. Wt make it .-to put
a f<:W words to work foryou, in
the Daily Pilot. ,
drove toward the East Coul to meet SLA-memben.
AUO<'late editor Howanl Kolm
and reporter David Weir aald
their account was !med cm in·
formation from unldenUfied
....,._ wbo "talked to Patty
Heant: they were there; they
helped her."
Scott WU lntroduc..i to the
HarriH:a aft.er word wM spread
that be wanted to write a book on
the organization. The Harrbes
Invited S<ott to a Berliele)t apart-
ment. where he met Patty Hearst
for the rmot time and ...-lo
drive her to the East eo..t, the
article said.
SCo«, who onoe told reporten
''I never met anyone who told me
lhe was Patty Heant" could nol
be reached immediately for com-ment.
Mi.as Hearst announced after
her kidnapine sbe bad takeo the name '"Tania."
Misa Hearst was conlined. a~
parenUy in a closet, ror four
weeks lrnmedi•tely after she was
kidnaped from Her Berkeley
aputment on Feb. 4, 1974, by the
SLA, 14id the Rolling Stone re.
porten, who were lntervlewed
this mominc on NBC'• ''Today
Show."
In an affid•vit filed last week
Trials Delayed
• Hinshaw, Vallerga to Wait
lly TOlll llAJILEY
Of .. o.w,. .........
Congressman Andrew J .
Hinshaw and convicted former
County Assessor Jack Vallerga
were granted a three-month de-
lay or their Or•nge County
Superior Court trial on multiple
criminal charges today.
Presid ing Jud ge Robert
Banyard set Jan. 12, 1976, as the
new trial date after it was ex-
plained that a trial earlier set to
start today would most certainly
be in progress on Nov. 10, the
date that Hinshaw faces trial
alone on bribery charges.
In the courtroom with both de·
fendants was for mer Assessor's
aide Garland Redding, who was
cleared of grand theft and con-
spiracy charges on a motion filed
by the Diatrict Attorney's office.
Redding, 56, of Santa Ana, was
one of nine employes indicted
after a long probe of allegedly ii·
legal activities in the Assessor's
office. during Hinshaw's term as
Assessor.
Convictions already have been
recot:ded against Redding's eight
eodefendants. It was explained
today that Redding's cooperation
with the proseoatioo during lhal
ill..ti&etlonJed to U-di .....
deoislib. .
Redaing has testified before
the Grand Jury. Aasistant Dis·
trict Attorney Michael C.piui
also, commented today: "'He
coula have gone to trial, been
fmed SJ~OOO a nd convicted of a
misdemeanor. It wasn't worth it." .
Six of the eight coovicted as-
sessor's aides have had felony
convictions reduced to misde-
mt?ariors with each ordered to
pay a $1,000 fine.
Hinshaw and VaUerga will be
bact· in court together Jan. 12 to
face identical charges stemming
from allegations that members
of the assessor's staff worked on
Hinshaw·s congressional cam-
paign in 1972.
86 r.86ed'
At Anaheim
Rock Concert
Police arrested 86 people Sun·
day at a rock concert in Anaheim
Stadium attended by about 44,000
persons drawn to the stadium by
rock superstars Linda Ronstadt
and the Eagles.
Most of the arrests were for al·
leged narcotic violations, accord·
ing to _Anaheim police ~gt.
Richard, Gray who charactenzed
the crowd's b ehavior as
"generally good.·•
"But.'' Gray added, "il seems
there are always some who are
~willing to pay $10 a ticket to gel
themselves in trouble."
It is also alleged that employes
were paid lime and mileage by
the Assessor's Office while they
canvassed for Hinshaw and post·
ed signs throughout the county.
Vallerga's trial in Ventura
County resulted in the man -who
took over from Hinshaw being
[med Sl,000, placed on five years'
probation and permanently
barred from holding public or .•
fice.
Hinshaw races bfibery charges
in his Nov. 10 trial. He and
Vallerga race charges or grand
theft., conspiring and embezzle-
ment in the Jan. 12 proceedfug.
Holdup Thwarted
Gunmen Hold Six
Hostages
LONDON <U PI> -Three
gunmen demanded a plane and
safe conduct out of Britain today
as the price for sparing the lives
of six Italian knployes seized
as hostages in a botched robbery
attempt at a London restaurant.
But a high-ranking iloHce official
said ''there will be no deals.''
· "I was told by the hostages
they have made this demand,"
Italian Consul General Mad._o
Jlane• t.dllll'11eWiJa-ft allel' ~ing lo the host.ages through ti\e
locked door of the small
storeroom where they are being
held for a second day.
·But assistant Police Com·
missioner Wilfred Gibson said,
"They have been told there will
be no deals.''
The gunmen, said to include
two West Indians and a Nigerian,
have held the hostages at .the
Spaghetti House restaurant in
rashionable Knightsbridge in
West London since 1 :30a.m. Sun·
day.
They released an eighth
hostage, Alfredo Olivelli, on Sun·
day to show "good faith." A
seventh was freed today.
Mrs. Mary Olivelli, h.is wire,
said her husband described the
storeroom prison, measuring
nine by 13 reet as ''a hell hole.··
"He said the stench is in·
describable and the heat over·
powering.
During the morning. police
passed coffee, cigarettes and
a portable chemical toilet into the
storeroom. There are no sanitary
facilities in the room and the air
conditioning was switched orr in
hope the heat would force the ban·
ditsout.
Flu lmnuinization
Clinics Scheduled
Flu immunization clinics for
Huntington Beach Senior Citizens
will be held at the Seniors Recrea·
tion Center, 1706 Orange Ave.
Dates and hours will be Oct. 6,
9:30 a .m. to 12noon; Oct. 15. 12:30
p.m. to 2:30 p.m ., Oct. 20, 9:30
a.m. to12noon.
'
.~ London in
Mrs.·Olivelli ·said her husband
also told her the robbers wore
knitted helmets covering most or
their races and that they told the
hostages they bftl.ongOO to the
''Black Liberation Front.''
But London police · and
sPQkesmen ror black community
·groups said they knew of no such
organization.
Senior police officers said there
are no political implications.
'Ibey 1atd li was -just an ar:med
robbery tliat went wrong because
police arrived on the scene too
quickly.
Police Commander
Christopher Payne, who headed
negotiations during a plane hi·
jacking at London·s Heathrow
Airport last January, arrived at
the restaurant today. But he re-
fused toconrirm it was because of
experience with dealing with ter·
rorists.
Police marksmen were issued
with gas masks and tear gas, but a
police spokesman said the lives of
the hostages were the first con-
sideration and no attempt would
be made lo r1.1sh the gunmen.
More than 200 police were in or
near the restaurant, and wooden
screens were erected in rront of it
to~hield the entrance rrom public
view .
Grove Driver
H e ld in Crash
A 20-year-old Garden Grove
man was in city jail on a charge
of relony drunken driving today
after his car struck a 1.5-year-old
bicyclist Sunday afternoon.
Police allege David Lynn
Peek, 28, or Garden Grove,
swerved as he drove down
Hamilton Avenue at Brookhurst
Street, striking IS-year-old Scott
Bradley Dunn of Santa Ana.
Dunn, who fell off his bicycle
and down arl embankment, was
treated ror injuries at Paci.!ica
Hospital in Huntington Beach
and released.
Bail for Peek has been set at
Sl,500 , police said.
attn Hearst was allowed to move
frffl1 amonc SLA members and.
sat in ori the &roup's "dal
Political study sessions.•• • ,
When 111 m~mbers of the SL*
died in a s hootoul with Les
An&el .. Polloe, Mi .. Heant •"* SIA members BlU and Emll7 BarrW •ere. a few blockl aw111r lillel!inC lo .,.dlo aoc:ounta ol U.
cool oiilatl1>n, Rollin& Stoljlll
' (!lff SllA, Pase AZl ---
•
Valley Unification
Leader Hits Panel
lly KATHY CLANCY
pt .... Ollt•" ... ,....
Carl "Bud'' Jones, the leader
of the Fountain Valley unifica-
tion drive, said today lhe Hunt·
ington Beach Union ~High School
Board has ''consistently
vacillated back and forth" on
ways to carve the district into
smaller K· 12 systems.
And he said despite high school
officials· contention that they
never adopted any new unifica·
tion plan last November, they did
vote 5-0 to study unification along
city borders.
But Ralph Bauer, president or
the high school board, said today
that 5-0 decision has since been
outdated by a recent Orange
County Superior Court ruling de·
aling with ~c hool finance.
And Bauer said that tonight at
the board's 7:30 meeting in dis·
trict offices he will ask if there is
any way to develop unification
plans using a court judge to de·
termine it they follow state laws.
Bauer was rererring to a rulillg
made two weeks ago by Superior
Court Judge Claude Owens who
NO MEEnNG
Huntington Beach City Council
members will have a rare Mon -
day night ofr tonight with no
council meeting scheduled. The
next counci1 meeting will be held
Monday, Oct. 6 at 1 p.m.
ruled that unirication ciections in
Fouiltain Valley and south Hunt·
ington Beach were improperly
called because of too great a
variance in assessed value in the
proposed districts.
Bauer said he is wondering if
the courts could be asked to draw
up unification plans for the 52·
square-mile high school di strict
(See UNIFY, Page A2)
$9,000 Stolen
In Huntington
A Huntington Beach man re·
turned from an out-of.town trip
Saturday afternoon to rind about
S9,000 worth or belong·ings mi ss·
ing from his home. along with
$7,000 in damage by vandals,
police said today.
W. J . Canatsey . of 20301
Mansard Lane. reported the theft
at 6:44 p.m . Saturday. saying it
had occurred within the past
three days.
Police said the entire home had
been ransacked and damaged. Among miss1n1 items were a
television set, rifles, coins and
jewelry, orficers reported. They
said the thieves may have en·
lered through a rront door.
Co ast While most of those arrested
w,re charged with narcotic
viol~lioas, there were some ar·
rests on drunk in public charges
and a rew persons were taken in·
to 1cµa:tody for allegedly CaM'Ying
concealed weapons, Gray said. 'Third' Coast College? 7
Weath er
Late night and morning
clouds, otherwis(' fai r skies
·Tue5day. according to the
weather service A little
warmer with beach highs
near 70 ri sing to the low ~s
inJand.
Drive -in Dair,y
Robbed of 875
A gunman pulled a pistol on a
cashier of a Fountain Valley
drive-in dairy Sunday night and
escaped with $75 in cash stuffed
in a paper bag.
The holdup . occwTed at the
Rockview Dairy at 9>11> Talbert
Ave. at I p.m . Police are •endinJ
teletypes to other ogencleo In ef.
lorts to lra~lt dQwn the gunman.
Pipe Bomb Found
' COLUMllUS, Ohio (AP> -
Plllloe and fire ofllolall late S..n·
day fonnd a pipe boin~ planttd In
ao UDCler,...,...,., 1asollne ot«age
tank at a Texaco •~ on that
clt1'1 north tide.
Communi:versity Caters to Night Crou:4
By ALAN DIRKJN
oi .... 0.11• ~u.-....
A communiver"sity
described by a task (orce as "a
true peopJe·s college" -is being
proposed for the Coast Communi·
ty College District.
It would be a third teaching in·
stitution for the district, one
specializing in continUing educa-
tion and one operating in addition
to the Orange Coast and Golden
West colleges. It would take over
evening classes and television
courses.
The p l an for the cofn ·
muniversity was p,resenJ.ed to a
meeting: of the dlstrlcttnlStees in
Costa Mesa rl!tenUy._lt ~I
ol • study by a luk ,,....,.. on <lb·
triot organlzallon, a study that
was ordertd by the --.! after
faoully momben had oalled for a
review or the evening college,
and sought more say on the TV
courses.
The proposal will be discussed
at a special meeting of the board
with representatives of the
academic senates of both Orange
Coast and Golden West Oct. 18.
This special board meeting will
be held on the Golden West cam·
pus, beginning al 9 a.m.
The timetable for any change
in district or1aniaation calls for
final approval to be given. by the
board before July; 1976 so that
the changes can be incorporated
rorthefall 1976 semester.
The communiversjty was one
of 1even alternatives the task
for"~. set up by District Chan·
ce.Uor Or. Norman Wat.son, con.
sldered. Both lrusteeo and laoul·
ty repruentat.ives at the sneetlna
asked ror further evaluations on
the other options.
The communiversity as recom·
mended by the task rorce, ·would
be "a true people'• college"
because it wO\lld not be confined
by a campus. "It will become a
community-based elrlension of
the two·college million, 'I the
task force reported. · '
It would offer both credit and
non·credit course1, but wpuld not
grant degrees ; degrees still
would be 1ranted by the Golden
West and Oranee Coutollege1~
"The communivenit1 would
operate through • net~rtr of
geographically seattu.d siWs
and a variety of delivery
systems, both form*1 and in·
formal,·· the report sUd. "Ill
laoully would be larlti1 part·
<See DISTRICT, ..... All I
INSIDE T ODAY
TM overhead e:rceed3 the
profit• fivrfold at Soddleback
Communiflt' Enterprises. bt.ll
'iC.t WO'rk with mentalllt' hon·
dicoppedocfulfs bears intonm·
ble diWkMs. See Page R7.
. Index
•• ... •• ..
• .. It •• •• •• ... . .. •• ..
AMW•ri ,,..;.,
IUIMIMl ... w.
Of .... cevM, -· " ..... ...,., S.C.11 IMriith ·------
•• ...
M ,eJ •• .... .... ... ., . ... .. ..... -
• . ,,
•
•
•
• ••
'\ )· •' ... .41 OAILYPILOT = H/F Mondey, S-etembt, 2l. 1976
• • •
'
Ready to Topple
The accelerator on this car assertedly Stuck as Adeline
Mary Jackson. 74, of Costa Mesa sat behind the wheel.
The racing auto finally stopped against utility pole on
Orange Avenue near Walnut, nearly felling the towering
fixture . Police said Mrs. Jackson, of 1991 Newport
Boulevard, was not hurt in mishap which also involved
damage to two parked cars.
f'ro91 Page AJ
DISTRICT PROPOSAL.
time. comprising a consortium or
regular academic facuJty , com-
munity representatives. and ex-
perienced professionals.··
••
The communlversity would be
operated on a district-wide level
... and would have its own cur-
riculum council. This point and
other elements of the com·
muniversity concept could strike
sore points with the faculty
because the academic senates of
both Orange Coast and Golden
~West colleges have long cam·
paigned for the evening college
to be run by the administrlitions
of the two campuses and not by a
separ$te administration, which
is presently the case.
F,,_. Page AJ
UNIFY •••
that would meet legal require·
menls.
In the meantime, however.
Owens· ruling is being apPealed
and plans for the Nov. 4 elections
in the two areas are continuing.
Bauer said today he believes
the city boundar1 plan which his
board explored last ~ovember
also would be ruled invalid in
court if Owens· ruling is upheld.
And he said the 5-0 vote sip.ifi·
ed. the board's intention "lo look
into'' unifying along city borders,
··not to do it.··
"..\s new facts evolVe, positions
have to change, obviously," he
said today. "I think it is un·
realistic to say, 'last November
you said this .· It has to be taken
in context.··
But Jones said the 5-0 motion
was made ··and not a damn thing
was done about it.''
Bauer argued, however, that in
the past 10 years the high school
board has taken many unitica.
lion stands. And he said one re·
ason the city border plan wasn't
pushed last November was
because it found no supix>rt from
elementary districts.
But 'Jones said that early in
Fountain Valley's unification ef·
fort, high school officials said
they hoped to "dovetail'" their
own plan with his so everyone in
the district could vote on unifica-
tion at once.
"You can't dovetail a plan if all .
you do is sit, .. Jones charged. "If
there are any neeative ramifica-
tions to this unification, it is
because of the high school dl s-
trict'sobstincy. · ·
ORANGE COAST ""
DAILY PILOT
•
Some teachers also have
criticized the TV courses and
asked for more faculty control of
the courses. KOCE, which broad·
casts the telecourses, also is
respQnsible to the district. ad·
miniStration. and not to tt\e ad·
ministrations of the two colleges.
Fire Station
Tours Slated
For Oct.11
Fire Prevention ·week will be
observed next week and all Hunt-
ington Beach fire stations will
hold open house (or the public
from 10 a.m . to4 o.m. Oct 11.
Fire Chief Ray.mood C. Picard
invites every citizen lo visit the
neighborhood fire station. Chief
Picard said this will provide an
opportunity for all citizens to
meet the firefighters "who are
serving the community and who
are providin1 emergency
services for the protection and
preservation of life and property
24 hours each day."
Firefighters will be available
to answer questions concerning
the safety or citizens wherever
they might be in high rise build·
ings, in their own homes, camp·
ing, or in the neighborhood
theater or shopping center.
"Now is the time lQ find out
what you should do to prevent
fires from starting and what you
should do to preserve your life
and property, .. Chief Picard
said.
Fire station locations are:
Lake Station, 104 Lake St.;
Bushard Station, 21441 Magnolia
St.; Gothard Station, 18311
Gothard St.; Murdy Station,
16221 Gothard St.; and Heil Sta·
lion. S891 Heil Ave.
Pistol
Tied to
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
The FBI said today It found a
9-milJimeter pistol and Uve am·
munition -the s•me kind wsed
in the robbery of a suburban
Sacramento bank last April -in
Patricia He ant• s I a.st hideout.
Also amona the •"ects found In
thr San Francisco apartment
were a green scarf similar to one
worn in the robbery of the
Crocker Bank branch. papers
from Crocker Bank, and a com-
munique from a terrorist group
~wn as the New World Libera-
tion Front. which has claimed
MENTAL TEST
FOR PA TTY, A5
responsibility tor mor-e than a
dozen San Francisco area bomb·
ings the past year. The nature of
the communique was not re·
vealed.
The items were included in a
25·page inventory of effects
found in the apartment where
Miss Hearst, 21, and fellow
fugitive Wendy Yoshimura, 32,
were arrested Sept. 18.
The FBI also released a 100·
page inventory of items found in
another San Francisco apart·
ment 't4'here Symbionese Libera-
tion Army member-s William and
Emily Harris were arrested the
same day.
The inventory contained only
brief descriptions of each item
found and did not directly tie the
newspaper heiress to the robbery
of the bank in Carmichael on
April 21 . A woman and three men
took $18.000 at gunpoint. During
the robbery. a customer was hit
by a shotgun blast and later died.
Nine-millimeter bullets were
found on the floor of the bank
after the robbery.
It had been reported earlier
that currency found in the apart·
ment matched the serial num-
bers of money taken in the rob·
bery. But while listing currency
round in the hideout, no mention
was made in the inventory of
matchinlii: serial numbers.
In Sacramento, sheriff's
spokesman Bill Miller declined
to further describe any evidence
which might tie Miss Hearst and
the Harrises to the robbery, but
said: "There are some things in
the labs at the FBI that cou.Jd
make a strong case against
them." '
Among other items found in
Miss · Hearst's apartrnent, •C·
cording to the FBI inventory
were registration, identity and
library cards for Sacramento Ci-
ty College, a steno pad with nota.
tions about various San Fl'an·
cisco. banks, a San Francisco
'General Hospital identification
card, a black wig, birth control
pills and radical literature. Also
found was a seven ·page
handwritten letter on yellow
lined paper addressed ''Dearest
Brother" and signed "So much
love. respect and power. Me."
Included in the literature round
in the apartment were tVtO copies
of ''Seize the Time'' newspaper,
a ''Liberation School ''
newspaper, a newsletter entitled
"Political Thesis of the Puerto
Rican Socialist Party,'' and a
yellow leaflet entitled "New
Dawn" concerning members in a
Marxist.Leninist New Dawn
party.
Also round were several
newspaper clippings about
Joseph Remiro and Russell Lit-·
tie, two SLA membf.rs convicted
of the murder of Oakland, Calif.,
Schools Superintendent Dr.
Marcus Foster.
Found in the Hanises' apart·
ment were a variety of weapons.
AJso found were several women 's
wigs and extensive cosmetic sup.
plies, a parking citation dated
Aug . 22, 1974, and a ski mask.
•
Rioting Quelled
SANGER CUPll -Fresno
County Sheriff's deputies report·
ed. today that all was quiet Sun-
day night after deputies, Sanger
police and the highway patrol
quieted a small-scale riot. in the:
town Saturday night.
'TM Or .... CHll 0111• ~!GI, wltll Olflkll '' c.....-llW NI .. \ Prt", I\ 1>Ubll,,..,, D• lltt
0.-Coe~\ l'llDl!llllnt Coff<J>O<>Y S.0-p.ar•lt
eoni...-s ••• put.11.,..11 MG""•¥ !~•""91' "'ltNt' 1w Co\11 Moo ... N•wi>Orl 61'.c~. H"""'""'"" 8t1C:ll/Founlfl" Viii••• lrwlnt. S-f,(1(110>t(•
V1ll1• ... UtUNI lkMlll'Soulll '°"' A ••nqlt rtt-1 tOlllon 15 PllDlli.11..:1 SMUl'OfYI .,d !tu"· IW¥\. T ... prlMip.1 pubHNll"' P'.,.,I 11 ~I lJCI
"Ne\\ a.,'"'-'· C..\11 '°""· C.hlor,,;1 'l'l•i.
Robert N. Weed ,.,... Pflfle AJ
• ' " • • ..
' . • •• •
• • . ' i
Pfftldtnl Incl "vbol91w
Jack A. Curlev
V k • P1'11-"I -(,lrlf'•ll "'-ine9f•
Thomas KHVll
l!Cl•\Of
Thomas A. Murphlnt """"~•"9 £Oltor
Charles H. Loos Richard P. N•ll
SLA DETAI~ •••
said. The article said the Har·
rises quickly bouaht a used car
and left Los Anaeles, with Miss
Hearst bidin& in tbe back aeat un·
der a blanket, for San Francisco.
The Harri1es ••found other
mean.a" of leavlus Berkeley for
the Scotti' New York City apart-
menL Scott 111d 11111 Heont,
"posins u man and wile," drove
e11tward, Rollin I Si-a aid.
Mll1 Hearst wu "very up·
tl1ht" and "felt extremely
vulnerable to be1Ji1 racoan;&ed atone Ibo way," Weir aald, but
there wa1 no probl1m. The group
met l\lfltlve Wendy Yoohlmura
ID New York and the w.,t to a
Pennaytvania farmboull rented
by Scott's wile, Micki, tht article
said. \ Rolllna Stone 1al4· clurtq !h
summer at the Pennsylvania
farmhouse, Miss Heant had a
long discussion with Scotl about
her conver1ion to the SLA, which
Kohn and Weir said "wa.s as
much emotional a1 political. She
bad felt ilol1ted emotloMlly and
she w11 disappointed in her
parent.I and In Sloven Weed, her
fiance, and their l'flponM to the
SL.A demands.••
At the end of the •UDU?« ~hen
the farmbOU1e lease expired, Ir·
ransemenll fqr retumlnc Miss
Hearst and tbe HarriHI to bldlng
In Callfornl1 were made by a
''new team·~ that included
K1Ulleen Sollah, naw henelf a
fualUve, and her brolher Slave.
Scott •lain drove llllas Heant. thla time w11tward, Rollin&
~aald.
J
UPIT ......
Another Hoffa?
The pressure is building for James P . Jioffa Jr. (left) to
take up his father's fight for control of the huge, scan-
dal-ridden Teamsters Union. He's shown with his now-
missing father in 1971. Related story, Page A4.
Guards Get Respite
From Super Waves
Rescue.weary lifeguards from
Seal Beach to San Clemente to·
day welcomed the end of the
super surf that pounded into the
Orange Coast late last week .
The surf, still sizeable Satur-
Huntington
Signups 'On'
For Courses
Registration is continuing for
Huntington Beach Recreation
and Parks Department classes
that begin next week.
Registration hours are Monday
through Friday from 9 a.m. to 6
p.m. at both Murdy and Edison
Community Centers.
Classes include folk dancing,
·gourmet budget cooking,
Hawaiian and Tahitian Dance,
inte"\ational cooking, coed fit· nesa. youth drawing and paint· ·~ 1'18. Mexican eookin&, Christmas
Crafts, beginnlng knitting, bas ic
hiking and camping, belly danc·
ing, fashion accessory crafts,
children's drama, needlepoint
and pre.teen ballet.
More information can be ob·
tained by telephoning Murdy
Center at 842·4431 or Edison
Center at $36-5486.
I.ibrary Post
To Sclunidt
Jacqueline Schmidt has been
elected Huntington Beach
Library Board chairman for the
coming year and George
Williams elected vice chairman.
Mrs. Schmidt replaces David
Wickersham who has chaired the
board during the period of
Ubrary construction. He will re-
main a member of the board.
Mrs. Schmidt has a bachelor of
science de gree from
Northwestern University, major-
ing in Journalism and history.
George Williams Is the principal
at Oak View School.
day, by this morning had re-
turned to normal one to thr.ee·
foot levels. On Friday, the surf
raged as high as 12 feet.
Lifeguards reported today that
moderate crowds visited beaches
along the Orange Coast over lhe
weekend, but said there were few
problems.
In San Clemente, an off-duty
Newport Beach lifeguard suf · 1
fered a sprained back Sun~ay ~f·
ternoon while body surfing 1n
five.foot sets at T Street Beach,
one of Southern California's top
body surfing spots .
Douglas Prichard, 17. of 614
~1ichael Place. Newport Beach.
was rescued by an unidentified
board·surfer who placed
Pric hard on his surfboard and
paddled outside the surf break ..
Prichard was transported 1n
the San Clemente lifeguard
rescue boat to its Dana Point
base and taken by ambulance to
San Clemente General H05pital.
He was treated for the sprain and
released.
Lifeguards said no new storms
are lurking off the coast that
could gener-ate a repeat of last
week's surf.
Beach attendance along the
Orange Coast exceeded 100,000
persons both Saturday and Sun·
day. Lifeguards reported 61
rescues Sunday and 75 rescues
Saturday.
WonumLeaps
To Her Death
Apparently despondent over
the death of her husband a year
ago, a Seal Beach woman leaped
to her death Sunday night from a
high rise apartment building in
Long Beach.
Killed was Marie Elizabeth
Heil, 620 Coastline Drive, who
made the fatal plunge while she
and her daughter visited friends
at 666 Ocean Blvd.
Reports indicate that Mrs. Heil
jumped from the window of the
16th-t1oor. The fatal leap was re·
ported at8:45 p.m .
Funeral arrangements are not
known at this time.
Portugal
Stations :
Occupied
LISBON (U Pl) -Prime
-Adm. JON Plnbelro de Azevedo ordered i..._ to oc -
cupy t ... n•tlon'1 Com.ll>unllit -
controlled radio and i.lev!llon
1t1tl<a1a loclay and 1111d tbe move
wu Wtm to prneat l'llotulal'•
lallllll lllto anarehy.
Ilia move tri11ered one of the
mo1t exploalve cr11u 1n lbecoun-
try01 l7-monlh-old ......i-.
Troops sent to one of the 1ta-
Uons rebelled a1alml tbetr"\ir-
den llld joined the woden. The
far left called for maa P"Usts
to paralyze the country.
The Revolutionary United
Front urged worken to throw up
barricades . ln the atreeta and
launch a general strike.
The front fOrmed by an 'al·
lianc, of leftist groups appealed
for soldiers and sailors to mutiny
against the government and
mobilize themselves on the side
of the left.
··we are now in oneoflhe mosl
serious situations since the start
of the rfvolution," Information
Minister Antonio Almeida Santos
said.
He Said the prime minister
would address the nation tonighl.
More than 1,000 demonstrators
gathered in Rosato Square "1
downtown Lisbon to ahoUt
"Death to the Fascists!" anti
"Reactionaries out or the Bar·
racks!·· They then marched an
Radio Renascenca to demaqd
that the soldiers give t!"(e
facilities back to the workers.
Unit Protests
Commission
Nomination
The Huntington Beach Union
lligh School Board has appolnteil
Dave Baron. whose children a~·
tend Westminster High School, to
the district ·s personnel corq-
mission for a 60·day emergeJlcr
period. !
But the appointment, made
Tuesday night, was done over the
protests of the district's nori-
teaching employe organization. ,
Baron will take the seat of the
commissioner normallt
nominated by the California
School Employes Association. ;
He was appointed after
trustees refused to seat two
CSEA nominees who were
husbands of classified employes.
The state CSEA organizatiori
said it will go to court in a te1t
case over the matter, and the~
urged trustees not to appaif!l
anyone to a 60·day interim term:
Cyclist Bre~
Leg in Crash
Covina motorcyclist Joseph B.
Dillingham was reported "doing
fine'' today at a Huntington Beach
hospital after suffering a frac·
lured leg in a Sunday cycle acci·
dent. ,
Police said Dillingham, 20, was
riding down Pacific Coast
Highway near Newland Street at
2: 10 p.m., when the front end of
the cycle started to wobble. It hit
the curb, police said, and threw
Dillingham to the ground.
Officials at Pacifica Hospital.
where Dillingham underwentsµr-
gery to repair the fracture, re·
ported him in stable condition tflis
morning.
• •
ALL FABRICS
lm.tU.-
With This Coupon
Good Mon. thru Wed. Only
I
•
7
•
• •
Orange Cttast
EDITION
•
VOL. 68,'NO. 2n, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
•
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
..
Today's Closl•I
N.Y.St~
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1975 N TEN CENTS c•
:Jack. Scott Drove PB.tty to East Coast?'
drove toward the Eut Coast to
meetSLA members.
Anoclate editor Howard Kohn
md rePQl:ter David Weir &aid lhitir •ctOunt was based on iD-
f orm1tion from unidentified
_.._ who "talked to Patty
Hearst: they were there; they
the «&onlzatlon. The llurlses
Invited Scott to a Berlr.eley •part·
• ment. where be met Patty Hearst r .. \be fint time and ..,....i to
dri-.ber to the Eut 00111, Ibo
article 'aid.
hor lddnapln1 sbe had token ~
llUtte "Tania."
in fede.ral l'OUrt here, lli11
Hearst 11.id she wu held ln 1
closet for nine weeks ... ;; , · ·
Min Heant w11 allowed to move
freelx among SLA i;nemben and
sat In on tbe aroup'1 ''daily
Political 'study a•ssiom. ''
, SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -
!Patricia Hear.st rode crosa·
-.Oley with •Port• actlvbt Jock
&ott four months aft.er she wu
~ido.aped and at one poi.at
declined Scott's o!ferto dri•e her
.onywhere she w4nled, lnchxllq
home, RoUJn1 Stone ma.aazine
.aya in ita new 1a1ue. . belpedber.''
Scott wu Introduced to \be
1lorrlaes alter wont wu spread
that be wanted to write a book on
Scott. who once told 11$CK1er"I
''I never met anyone wbo tald me
she wos Patty Heant" could not
be reached lmmedi1tely for com· men\.
Ilia Hearst was conf"med, ap.
parently ln a closet. for four
weeka lmmedi1tely alter she-was
kldn1ped from her Berkeley
apartment on Feb. 4, 1"74, by the
SLA, said the Rollin& Stone ~
port.ss, wbo were interviewed
U... mornlnl on NBC's "Todoy
The reporter• 1aid lllllU He-ant
uked to be permitted toioio the
SLA but m01t members-ot U'9
group were oppoeed. It wa St.A
leoder Donald n.rr.ze. ,wtlo
called himself "Cl.nqUe:"' Who
conTin<ed olhon to oecept bor,
When six memben of the SL.A
died in • shootout with Los
An1eles Police, Mi .. Heant Md
SLA mem..bers BUI and Emily
H~1 ~ere a few blocks away
lis<enin,-to radio accoun~ of th<I
confrontation, llomns !itOl\f
"I want to Jowheremyfrl-
are 1oln1, •• Mb1 Hearst waa
quoted u teUi111 Scott u tbe)I
BeUe, l'llette ""'1 T.._...
The city fathers of
Hazelcrest, Ill., weren't
satisfied to just put up a
futuristic-looking water tank
.at the edge of town. So they
gave it a h appy face to rP""'[
motorist& along Highwa1'5'7-
Irvine Plans
Anti-El Toro
Jet Use Fight
By DOUG FRIT1.5CllE °' .. ~ .. .,,. ....... Irvine City Attorney James
Erickson bas outlined a broad
campaign for the city in its effort
to prevent proposed corhmercial
aircraft use of El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station.
Jn some areas, such as the sug·
gested annexation or the Marine
base, Erickson is not optimistic.
Others, be said, require addi-
tional analysis before they can be
pitched against an Orange Coun·
ty Board of SuperviSOl"S' applica-
tion to the Department of the
Navy lo add commercial fiights
to El Toro.
In late August, the supervisors
voted to request that El Toro
become a "joint use" airport-
ooe used by both commercial and
military craft.
If the request goes through,
Erickson said, county figures
O&tlmate an average ol 140 com-
-~rcial arrivals and departures !lai!Y-.
, Some "of the icleas_J.:ricbon. bas
-Proposed to the city council
already have been putintoaction.
,. Others include:
. ---Amending the city general
plan for the area around El Toro
to prevent the . development ol
facilities needed by a com-
mercial field and to include land
uses lncon.sistent with i. nearby
commercial field.
1 -Pre-annexation zon ing
,around the field aimed ait tbe
,.,~ame weak spots as general plan
•:amendments. Although lhe pre-t zoning has no weight as law, it
declares the £ity's intent for" how
the property Is to be used.
<5ee IETPORT, Pa1e.U>
~ FIRST G4ILER
'I WI' C4MPER
''I'm very pleased. The
camper eold to the first person
who called." ,
That'a the advettisin& success
story told by-the Coot. Mesa man
who placed lhla ad In Ill& Dally
Pilot: •
"' 'It VW Camper, •lldlng root, nu mot.or. brakm,
"'' Xtft cleao, S:ZGS. xu-. . """'· ' It you have • reere1Uonal1
veblcle to aell or rent, •call --·We m•• It euytoput
• few wonk to work r..-'°"' ID
Ibo DaliJ' ~-'
• ~ ,• .~
Miss Heant announced after ~.·· In • affldovlt filed last week . . .
Trials Delayed
Hinshaw'-Vallerga to Wait
By TOM BARLEY
Of•0.11'1~ .......
Concressm an Andrew J .
Hinshaw and convicted former
County Assessor Jack Vallerga
were.granted a tbree-montb de-
lay of their Orange County
Superior Court trial on multiple
criminal charges today.
Preaiding Judge Robert
Banyard set Jan. 12, 1976, as the
new trial date after it wu ex·
plained that a trial earlier set to
start today would most certainly
be in progress on Nov. 10, the
date that Hinshaw faces trial
alone on bribery charges.
In the courtroom with both de-
fendants was former Assessor's
aide Garland Redding, who was
cleared of grand theft and con-
spiracy charges on a motion filed
by the District Attorney's office.
Redding, 56, of Santa Ana, was
one ot nine employes indicted
after a long probe or allegedly ii·
legal activities in tbe Assessor's
office during Hinsbaw·s term as
Assessor.
Convictions already have been
recorded against Redding's eight
codefendants. It was explained
today that Redding's cooperation
with the prosecution during that
inv U,alioo led .lo dismissal -·' Redding ~as testified bofore
the Grand Jury. ,\!18\st.ant Dis-
trict Attorney Michael Capizi.i
also commented today: "He
could have gone to trial, been
fined 11 ,000 and convicted of a
misdemeanor. It wasn't worth
it ...
Six of the eight convicted as-
sessor's aides have had felony
convictions reduced to · misde-
meanors with each ordered to
pay a Sl,000 Cine.
Hinshaw and VaUerga will be
back in court together Jan. 12 to
face identical charges stemming
from allegations that members
of the assessor's statr worked on
Hinsbaw·s congressional cam·
pajgn in 1972 .
86 '86ed'
At Anaheim
Rock C.Oncert
Police arrested 86 people Sun -
day at a rock concert in Anaheim
Stadium attended by about 44,000
persons drawn to the stadium by
rock superstars Linda Ronstadt
and the Eagles.
Most of the arrests were tor al-
leged narcotic violations, accord-
ing to Anaheim police Sgt.
Richard Gray who characterii.ed
the crowd's behavior as
''generally good.··
"But,•• ,Gray added, "it seems
there are always some who are
willing to pay $10 a ticket to get
themselves in trouble."
It is also alleged that employes
were paid time and mileage by
the Assessor's Office while ,.they
canvassed for Hinshaw and Poll·
ed signs throughout tbecount.y.
Vallerga's trial ilf Ventura
County resulted in the man who
look o~ from Hinshaw being
rmed SJ.,000, placed on five years'
probation and permanently
barred from holding public of.
flee.
Hinshaw faces bribery charges
in his Nov. 10 trial. He and
Vallerga face cllarges of grand
theft, conspiring and embezzle-
. mentintbeJan.12proceeding.
Holdup Thwarted
Gunmen Hold Six
Hostages in London
LONDON (UPI> -Three
gunmen demanded a plane and
safe conduct out of Britain today
as the price ror sparing the lives
of six Italian employes seized
as hostages in a botched robbery
attempt at a London restaurant.
But a high-ranking pol.ice official
said "there will be oodeals.''
"I was told by the hostages
they have made this demand.••
Italian Consul General Mario
Jlanu W.W. DeW••• . Ing to the hos.tares throlllh u.o
locked door , of the small
storeroom wbefe they are being
held for a second day.
But assistant Police Com-
missioner Wilfred Gibsoo said,
"They have been told there will
be no deals:'
The gunmen, said to include
two West Indians and a Nigerian,
have held the hostages at the
Spaghetti House restaurant in
,.fashionable Knightsbridge in
West London since 1 :30 a.m . Sun·
day.
They released an eighth
hostage, Alfredo Olivelli, on Sun-
day to show "good faith." A
seventh was freed today.
Mrs. Mary Olivelli, his wife,
said her husband described the stor~room prison, measuring
nineby13feetas ''ahellhole." ·
"He said the stench is in-
BUDGET GAP
DAMPENS DOW
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market fell sharply today under
the weight of uneasiness over the
federal budget deficit and the er·
feels it might have on interest
rates. · i .
Trading Was light, ~ver.
(Tables, Al 1 > ~ _
Late last week..:. Arthur •F .
Burns, chairman or the federal
Reserve Board, had wamed that
the government'$ borrowing
needs to finance the deficit could
put new upward presstire on in-
terest rates.
The Dow Jones average of 30
stocks lost 13.37 pointstoBOS.23.
describable and the heat over-
powering.··
During the morning, police
passed coffee, cigarettes and
a portable chemical toilet into the
storeroom. There are no sanitary
facilities in the room and the air
conditioning was switched off in
hope the heat would force the ban-
dits out.
Mn. Olivelli said her husband
also told ber tbe robbers wore
t 222 ,:... -~--m.fl cl -,_and thattbof lold'lbe holtages they beRmged to the
"Black Liberation Front.··
Delay Sought
For Cannery
Village Project
The Newport Beach city plan-
ning staff will recommend a
lengthy delay in planning com-
mission reconfideratioo or the
plans "ffor the controversial
Delaney's Cannery Village on
Lido Peninsula Thursday.
Community Development
Department Director Richard
Hogan said today that because or
the already packed agenda for
Thursday's session and the need
for more staff time on new stan-
dards for the project, he"ll re·
commend a postponement until
Nov . 10.
The proposal once wa s
believed approved by both the
commission and the city council,
later was deemed dead when the
city staff erred in interpreting
the margin of one vote. Four ayes
were needed, instead of the pre-
vaUin1 three-aye simple ma·
jority.
That thrust the Sl.8 million
commercial and office complex
back to the drawing boards.
Strong opposition has come all
along from the MoanaCommuni-
ty Association and other interests
in the area where a trailer park is
scheduled for demolition.
When lbe Wll,)"el~~
confinement. tbe article sold\ (SeeSLA, Page.U) •
• ' U .. IT._..... Revealing or Concealing!
Congressman Otis G. Pike (0-NY>. in complaining
atx>ut President Ford's policy in forwarding secret in·
formation to the House Intelligence Committee, com-
pared the action to a bikini: "What it reveals is signifi-
cant but what it conceals is vital ... ''
G &et, Respite·
From Super Waves
Rescue-weary lifeguards from
Seal Beach to San Clemente to-
day welcomed the end of the
super surf that pounded into the
Orange Coast late last week.
The surf, still sizeable Satur-
day. by this morning had re-
turned to normal one to thne-
Coot levels. On Friday, the surf .
raged as high as 12 feet .
Lifeguards reported today that
moderate crowds visited beaches
along the OrM.Dge Coast over the
weekend, but said there were few
problems.
In San Clemente, an off-duty
Newport Beach lifeguard suf-
fered a sprained back Sunday af-
ternoon while body surfing in
five-foot sets at T Street Beach,
one of Southern California's top
body surfing spots.
Douglas Prichard, 17, of 614
Michael Place, Newport Beach,
was rescued by an unidentified
board -s urrer who placed
Prichard on his s urfboard and
paddled outside the surf break.
Prichard was transported in
the San Clemente lifeguard
rescue boat to its Dana Point
base and taken by ambulance to
San Clemente General Hospital.
He was treated for the sprain and
released.
Lifeguards said no new storms
are lurkjng off the coast that
could generate a repeat of last
week's surf.
Beach attendance along the
Orange Coast exceeded 100,000
persons both Sa.turday <Ind Sun-
day. Lireguards reported 81
rescues Sunday and 75 rescues
Saturday.
Lifeguards over the weekend
were forced to rely on skeleton
staffs to patrol beaches because
seasonal guards were taken orf
duty when school started.
' '
' Char ge Nixed
In Pot Plants
JUNEAU. Alas ka <AP I -
Federal authorities, faced with a
promise by local police, have de-
cided not to prosecute a Juneau
woman who grew seven mari-
juana plants on the windowsill of
her home.
U.S. Atty. G. Kent Edwards
said it would be "in approprialc"'
to prosecute the grower because
Juneau police assured her there
would be no charges ri led after
they seized the pl a nts .
The seizure Au g. 2'I was the
first of its kind s in ce lhc Alaska
Supreme Court ruled in Ma y that
possess ion of mariju a na for
personal use in the homes is pro-
tected by cons titutional rights to
privacy.
Coast
While most of those arrested
were charged with narcotic
violations, there were some ar-
rests on drunk in public charges
and a few persons were taken in·
to custody for allegedly carrying
concealed weapons, Gray said.
'Third' Coa·st College? Weather
Late night and morning
clouds, othe rwise fair skies
·Tuesday, according lo the
weather service. A little
warmer with beach highs
near 70 rising to the low 80s
inJand.
Cano/Tuna
Was 'Fuhy'
C!V.RLOTl'E, N.C. (AP)
Tamara Campbell thought the
stuff in her can of "Briast '0
Chicken" tuna smelled funny and
dldli'( look right. It turned out to
becatfood.
Ted Law1presldentoftbe Pied·
mon.t Setter Business Bure.au.
said the can had been correctly
stamped u pet food on Its ir.etal
lid. But the 18be.I, which most·
COlllUmen read, lndiCated the
contents were for humans. he
odded.
"'We went into haU panl(!.. ••said
Raul Garcia, quality control
supe"1sor for tbe. packer, S}ln
Harbor Industries of5an Dl•llO·
r
Communivenity Caters to Nighl Crowd
By ALAN DIRKIN
Ol' ... DtiJ'"'"' ....
A communiversity
described by a task force as "a
true people's college" -is being
proposed for the Coast Communi-
ty College District.
It would be a third teaching ift,
stitution for the district, one
specializing in continuing educ•·
tiori and one operating in addition
to the Orange Coast and Golden
Wesl colleges. It would tf)<e over\
evening classes aqd televis\CJ!l
""'11'11U.
The pJari for the eom ...
muniversity was preseated to a
meeting of the district~~
Carta Mell recenUy. ~pew out
ol a stud)' by a task force ,. dis-
trict organl&allqa. a llWb'.lluit
wu ordered by 'tile baorfl ""-
faculty members bod for a . ,
review of the evening college,
and sought more say on the TV
courses.
The proposal will be discussed
at 1 special meeting of the board
with representatives of the
academic senates of both Orange
Coast 111d Golden West Oct. 18.
This special board meeting will
be held on the Golden West cam-
pus, beginning at 9 •.m.
The timetable for: any change
In ~!strict organization calls for final opproval to be given by the
ooard before July, 11176 .. that
the changes can bf: incorporated
!or the fall 1'76 semester.
The communiverlil)' was one
ol seven altemative1 the task
force, set up by Dlslrict Chan-
cellOI' Dr. Norman Watson, con·
sldered. Both trustees and facul·
ty reprO..ntatlves aj the meedni!
asked for rurther evaluations on
the other options.
The communiversity as recom·
mended by the task force, would
be "a true people's college"
because it would not be confined
by a campus. "It will become a
community-baaed extension of
the two-college mission," the
task force reported.
It would offer both credit and
non-~redit courses, but would not
grant dea:ree1 ; degrees still
would be granted by the Golden
West and Orange CoastoUe1ea.
"The ~ommuniversity would
operate through a network of
geographically scattered sites
and a variety of delivery
systems, both formal and In·
formal,"' the report 'said. "Its
r1c:ulty would be latgely part-
<See DISTRICT, P ... .U)
INSIDE TODAY'
The overhead. erceed.s the
profits fiVt!/old at SaddJ.eback
Communit&1 Enlerpri:u?J, but
ifs work with mentally han-
dicapped adults bears intan<ri-
bltdividends. See Page 87
ladex
Allll L..I ...... " -·· ............... °' ... °"'", -· '1'1¥1• ...
'""" M9rt1Mt T•lftt.,_ -....... --
.. ... .....
.ti ... :u ... .. ..... ,
' .
~ di DAILY PILOT N
I Pistol
' : Tied to
Pat.ty?
SAN FRANCISCO CUP!) -
The FBI said today it found a
9-millimeter pistol and live am-
munition -the same kind us~
· ln the robbery of a suburban
Sacramento bank tut April -in
Patricia Hearst's last hideout.
Also among the effects foWld in
the San Jo'rancisco apartment
were a green scarf similar to one
worn in the robbery or the
Crocker Bank branch, papers
from Crocker Bank. and a com-
munique from a terrorist group
known as the New World Libera-
tion Front, which has claimed
0 MENTAL TEST
FOR PATTY, A5
responsibility for more than a
dozen San Francisco area bomb-
ings the pa st year. The nature of
the communique was not re·
vealed. The items were included in a
25-page inventory of effects
found in the apartment where
Miss Hearst , 21 , and fellow
fugitive Wend y Yoshimura, 32,
were arrested Sept. 18.
The FBI also released a 100-
page inventory of ite~ found in
another San Francisco apart-
ment where Symbionese Libera-
tion Army members William and
Emily Harris were arrested the
same day.
The inventory contained only
brief descriptions of each item
found and did not directly tie the
newspaper heiress to the robbery
of the bank in Carmichael on
April 21 .
Driver Killed
As Car Rams
Van in Mesa
A 63-year·old driver was killed
in Costa Mesa Sunday night when
his car apparently ran into the
back of a van that was halted at a
tr:ifric light on Harbor Boulevard
al ~tacArthur Boulevard.
Oliver Webster of 1700 Green·
ville St., Santa Ana, was pro-
nounced dead at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital about 75
minutes after the 5:30 p.m. acci-
dent.
-Witnesses told police that
Webster's car traveling north on
Harbor at about 50 miles an hour
rammed into the back or a halted
van driven by William Nelson
Emery, 20, of 24142 Ankerton, El
Toro. The impact reportedly
knocked the van 100 feet through
the intersection.
• •
•• t
Emery was not iltjured though
a passenger Henry Philip
Schmidt of lSOl Sylvia Lane,
Newport Beach. comolained of
leg and shoulder injuries.
Schmidt refused medical treat-
ment, however.
Debut Slated
By Paramedics
Newport Beach"s new
paramedics and their van am-
bulance will be formally in-
troduced to the community Fri-
day morning at a town meeting
sponsored by the N ewportHarbor
Chamber or Commerce.
The event will begin at 7 :30 a.m .
in the Newporter Inn's Carousel
Room and will offer a continental
breakfast at $2.50 per person.
Reservations for the session
can be obtained through chamber
offices at 444 -8211 .
The paramedic program is
scheduled to begin operations
next month and will involve a
squad of specially trained
firemen operating through a base
station set up at Hoag Memorial
Hospital.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed ..,.~Mill~
Jack A. Cur In *' "'H*°"I .... G-9 ..... ;..........,
Tr.omas KHVll ll•il••
ThOmM A. Murptdne ,,,._ .... !_
•
O.rtn H. LOM Ak:Nrd p_ Nall ...... ~_.......t....,,
) ,_
-
•
•
Readg to Topple
The acceierator on this car assertedly stuck as Adeline
Mary Jackson, 74. of Costa Mesa sat behind the wheel.
The racing auto finally stopped against utility pole on
Orange Avenue near Walnut. nearly fellink the towering
fixture. Police said Mrs . Jackson, of 1991 Newport
Boulevard, was not hurt in mishap which also involved
damage to two parked cars.
Thieves Loot Scene
Of Fatal Viejo Fire
Burglars have looted the scene
or a Mission Viejo tragedy, steal ·
ing. the valuables locked in a
garage after a July Z7 fire that
Two Arrested
As Newport
Theft Suspecl8
Newport Beach police arrested
two men under similar
circumstances over the weekend : as each was surprised in the act
' of burglary, investigators said
today.
In one case, a resident in the
1600 block of Irvine Avenue sur-
prised a man during a burglary.
and soon afterwards. Thomas
Hilary Albritton, 47, of 1961
F\lllerton Ave., Costa Mesa, was
arrested. That incident occurred
li!ite Friday.
On Sunday, a similar incident
brought police to a home in the
1900 block of 16th Street in
Newport Beach . and police
booked Thomas Edward Hughes
IV, 22. of 2110 E . 16th Street.
In each case, investigators said
they are investigating asserted
connections with other recent
breakins.
Bail on Albritton was initially
set at $10,000. The amount for
Hughes was higher at$25,000.
Ransom Found
COLUMBUS, Ohio (U PIJ
About $200,000, believed to be
part of a ransom paid for the re-
lease of Dayton businessman
Lester Emoff was found near
Hoover Reservoir here Sunday
by FBI agents, it was reported to·
day.
took the lire or Barbara Maycock
and her two daughters.
Sherifr's deputies valued the
sporting goods and hand tools
belonging to Michael R .
Maycock, ex-husband or the dead
woman, at $1 ,108 .
The valuables were locked in
the garage of the burned house at
26445 Fresno Drive, Mission Vie·
jo, followin.1 the blue-Ulat wu
bellt!;ved started by a faulty la\ln·
dry dryer.
Deputies believe the thieves
struck over the past weekend,
probably using a truck to haul
away the loot.
At the time of the fire,
Maycock, 33, was vacationing in
Portland, Ore. He was not locat-
ed until three days after the fire.
Sheriff's deputies described
the looting as the most callous
burglary they have investigated
in recent months.
'Hidden' Key
Used in Theft
A burglar who apparently
made use of a hidden key to the
front door stole stereo gear, a col·
or television and' golf clothing
from a Corona del Mar residence
over the weekend. The lost goods
were worth $2 ,450.
Police said the theft occurred
some time late Saturday night or
early Sunday morning at the
home of Michael James Leech, 26,
at 720 Iris Avenue.
Officers said that the key was
found moved from its regular spot
after Leech returned home and
discovered th'e theft.
Cons11mer Card Set
For Mail Maladies
Had a problem with the mail
lately?
The U.S. Postal Service has a
remedy.
It's a consumer service card
which will be available from all
letleT carriers in Orange County
as of Wednesday.
The card, aciually a sandWich
of two postal cards with a piece of
carbon paper in between. con-
tains four block•.
On these, customers can re·
gister complaints, request in·
form1Uon, make compliments,
offer 1ug1e1tion1 or mike
1ener1l comments about the
iDail lttVice.
Ed M urpby, Oran1e County
coordinator for the nationwide
Consumer Service Pt-ocram,
said that one copy eoes. lo the
local postmaster ror immediate
correction and the other lo Postal
Service Headquarters In
· Wuhinaton, D.C.
and nationwide trend$.
Murphy said .the Consumer
Service Program was tes ted
earlier. this year in Illinois,
Massachusetts, Arizona and
Rhode Island. Postal customers
participating in the test found the
cards easy to complete and said
most complaints were l'e30lved
tothe customer's satisfaction.
"Ninety-two percent ol the peo-
ple we surveyed said it was a
very, very good proaram, ''
Murphy noted.
He said the card sboold be
.. peclally helpful In tracing mall
which bas been laie In arrivt111.
"lf a custoqier hasn't received a
letter that was sent two weeks
ago, for exa·mple, there is a place
on the card wber• he can fill in
the sender's address," Murphy
pointed out .
PMtal authorities say the
cards should take no more than
two minutes lo fill out. If the pro-
blem ia not resolved to the
customer's aatiafaction, be
should see the po1tm11ter
Portugal
Stations
Occupied
LISBON (UPll -Prime
Minister Adm. Jose Pinheiro de
Auvedo ordered t.roop8 to .oc·
cupy the nation's Comm~t
controlled radio and television
ataitionJ today •nd said the mov;e
wu taken to prevent Portugal s
falling into anarchy.
His move trtagered one o1 the
moet explosive crises in the coun·
try'a 17-month-old revolution.
Troops sent to one ol the sta·
tions rebelled •eainst their or·
ders and joined the wcrkers. The
far left called for mus protests
to paralyze the country.
The Revolution•ry United
Front urged workers to throW up
barricades in the streets and
launch a general strike.
The front formed by an al ·
Uance of leftist groups appealed
for soldiers and sailors to mutiny
against the government and
mobilize themselves on the side or the left.
"We are now in one of the most
serious s ituations since the start
of the revolution,'' Information
Minister Antonio Almeida Santos
said.
He said the prime minister
would address the nation tonight.
More than 1,000 demonstrators
gathered in Rossio Square in
downtown Lisbon to shout
"Death to the Fascists!" and
"Reactionaries out of the Bar-
racks!" They then marched on
Radio Renascenca to demand
that the soldiers give the
facilities back to the workers.
Radio Renascenca. which is
theoretically owned by the
Roman Catholi c Church, has
been the focus of a major con-
troversy since leftist workers
took over the building and turned
it into afar left facility.
Another hot spot was Radio
Club where soldiers sent to oc-
c upy the building rebelled
against their orders and instead
joined the workers. Military
security chief Gen. Ot.eloSaraiva
de Carvalho initially ordered the
racilities evacuated, but this was
not carried out.
In the af\ernoon, a man with a
bullhorn told the crowd outside
Radio Renascenca that the
soldiers there also were leaning
towards the workers and planned
to take a vote on whether to
malntsln the oecuttalion..
DISTRICT. •
time, comprising a consortium of
regular academic faculty, com-
munity representatives, and ex-
perienced professionals.'·
The communiversity would be
operated on a district-wide level
and would have its own cur-
riculum council. This point and
other elements of the com-
muniversity concept eou.ld strike
sore points with the faculty
because the academic senates or
both Orange Coast and Golden
West colleges have long cam-
paigned for the evening college
to be run by the adminiStrations
of the two campuses and not by a
separate administration, which
is presently the case.
Some teachers also have
criticized the TV courses and
asked for more faculty control of
the courses. KOCE, which broad-
casts the telecourses. also is
responsible to the district ad-
ministration, and not to the ad·
ministrations of the two colleges.
United Way Launching
The Crazy Toad Players, a Costa Mesa mime troupe,
cavorted around Rancho Capistrano as the. balloon went
up on United Way's $3.65 million fund-ra1Smg campaign
in Orange County Sunda)'. The balloon w~s donated. by
Ballooning Unlimited of La Jolla. Accordmg to Uruled
Way campaign chairman Cal Mort.ensen, $1,093,610
already has been pledged. The funds will go to support 0£
72 human service agencies.
F,....PageAJ
SLA DETAILS •••
said. The article said the Har-
rises quickly bought a used car
and left Los Angeles, with Miss
Hearst hiding in the back seat un·
der a blanket, for San Francisco.
The Harrises ''found other
means" of leaving Berkeley for
the Scotts' New York City apart-
ment. Scott and Miss Hearst,
"posing as man and wife,·• drove
eastward. Rolling Stone said.
F ..... PageAJ
JETPORT •••
---COOperating with other cities
in the area to be affected by pro-
posed "joint use'" to qualify an
initiative for a county-wide
ballot. The initiative would re·
quire a vote of the people in the
affected cities before any airport
could be built or expanded.
-Working with the public
utilities serving the base-to limit
services to l>revent expansion or
the field.
On the last point, Erickson not·
ed, "The likelihood of arriving at
such an arrangement with the
utilities would depend upon the
leverage that the city might have
with respect to the connections
that the utilities would have to
develop between existing
facilities and tbe base."
In the month since county
supervisors decided to try for
"joint use'' at El Toro, the Irvine
·council has taken a variety of
steps, including a formal request
to the Department of the Navy to
annex El Toro.
Miss Hearst was "very UP·
tight'' and ··relt extremely
vulnerable to being recognized
along the way," Weir said, buf.
there was no problem. The group
met fugitive Wendy Yoshimur2'
in New York and then went t~ a
Pennsylvania farmhouse rentet:i
by Scott•s wife, Micki, the articl~
said
Rolling Stone said during the
summer at the Pennsylvani3
farmhouse, Miss Hearst had a
long discussion with Scott about
her conversion to the SLA, which
Kohn and Weir said "was as
much emotional as polilicaJ .
A Steal,
For$45
A shopper got a bargain
from the May Company de-
partment store at South
Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa,
Sunday but though he paid
cash, it was still a case of
grand theft.
Police were told that just
five minutes after the store
was opened a man, aged 3S
to 40 paid $45 for an Orien-
tal antique. But he did so
after he had switched the
price on the vase, remov-
ing a $599 tag and replac-
ing it with a $45 sticker.
Police were informed
that an employe from
another department in the
store, not knowing better,
sold the vase for the
switched price.
ALL FABRICS
lllaptWtllwl
With This Coupon
Good Mon. thru Wed. Only
The complaints will be
catalo111ed and anal)'Ud by com·
puttr to help 1pot prclblem ....,u personally. I . I ·
' r ,
'I •
..
-•
I .
Good Buy-
Cheap To11rs
B18YJ.YIAPO .. Tn
(Flntofttoo-.1
Aa of Ocl.15, ads wlU IWt •Pl>Oar!nc la Ira.,.,, oectiona d news~•P<!l'S •nd m"'&lloes ..,..,.. thecoomlQ' coctalnln
three in1llal1 -0TC -which 0011 slub the tlon •C million.aolyoubya.sm\1Chu$0 v1ca c.ttof
The lnltiala •land for "one-.l;"t!::~ cltyt« "
d. IOW·('OIS~ &roup plane travel wbJch IJ.u been USl~v:U"!= Ille majonty or wi unW l)OW beu111e ot D-ileu
menl restrfctlons and absurd red tape. Wltb the ne.!~; lboueh, many or ll1ese ,.,,1rlcllon• will be 1111-
ed. sharply cutlln1 botl!
ttlr·travel and holel
eosts.
JUST WllA T IS AN
OTC charter? Jn brief, it
Money's
Worth
ii; ~ group tour to ~ city th•t you may t.ate u an in·
div1dual. You must sign up 1t leut 15 or 30 days in adYance.
al the flight, depen~ upon a clom.,.llc or lnteniallortal
dest10aUon. pay ror atr transporta.Uon and hotel· ac~
modatlons and agree to stay either a minimum of four or seven days. That's it. .
M~t s~ei:ti~~ant : you are not required to bepartol a•
called. aff 1n1ty .a:roup to~ a charter fil&ht.
With escalating ruel costs sending scheduled air faru
up and airlines w~""-!'g O! e":en greater increases in 19'16,
the O~s are coming Just m time. The bargain Portion lies
in the a1.r fare -about hJ.lf lhat of scheduled airline.fares
And to _sug~est what's ahead, the nllmber of OTC chart~
now being filed by tour operators witb the Civil Aeronautics ~ard I a legal requirement) is reaching blluard proP9f· j1ons .
THE ESTIMATED •.soo.ooe AMERICANS who now Dy
on charters "could_double with OTCs," predicts Glenn A. ~ramer., ~ard chamnan of Oakland.based Trana lnlema·
t1onal A1rl1nes, largest charter airline in the world and a
'l'ransamerica Corp. subsidiary.
~ ''For the first lime, travelers can really lake advant.a&e. Of low-cost charter tours. OTCs will rejuvenate the soft
domestic and international tourist markets.·•
' Even the CAB -which held out for so long against this
bre)k for the consumer -now admits that if OTCs are sue·
cessliil, they will "mean profits to the scheduled <airline)
industry, not losses, because OTC will provide an expandiac
traffic base for the industry at a time when lt is faced with
too many empty seals.''
TO HELP YOVSllOPfocanOTCvacatioo:
-Visit more than one travel agent. OTCs are so new
and so many types wilJ be offered that many agents may not
be up to date.
. -:-~op ~round for an OTC charter departing on a date
ro1nc1d1ng w1th your travel plans. OTCs are being ananged
to popular tourist spots every where.
-Check if an OTC is leaving rrom your local airport
directly to your choice of destination. For an OTC will save
time a~ money iJ it . can _leave from an inland city
1Nashv1lle, say, or Peona) rues non-slop to its destination
-eliminating the so-called ''gateway'' city.
-FIND OUT WHAT THE package price includes. All
OTC lours must include a round·lriP charter flight, hotel IC·
Commod.ations, airport transfers, baggage handling. But
one night might feature deluxe hotels at the same price that
another orrers first·class hotels. Some might include
sightseeing tours at no extra cost.
-Check if meals are included. Competition between
the many OTCs to be offered will be very keen and some
meals (costly overseas) may be thro'Wn in. Jf a Modified
American Plan (two meals a day) is offered and costs the
same or only a litUemorethanaE~Ptan (Qomffll),
lhe MAP may be a much belterbUy. ·
-Ask the travel agent about financial penalties, iJ you
change your trip plans. '
-ASK ABOUT LONG WEEKEND OTCs, under which
~u can stay for as little as three nights or four days at any
•rtaeation spot in North America or the Caribbean. For other
..Parts of the world, the OTC minimum stay is one week.
When OTCs were allowed in Europe about a decade ago,
1he European travel market exploded, TIA's Cramer re-
~calls. Europeans began traveling all over the continent as
(-,veil as to Africa and the Middle East at very low cost.
••
At the same time, this upsurge in charter travel did not
'adversely affect scheduled service -and in fact. scheduled
•ervice in Europe went into a boom.
Investment Class Oct. 6
I One more in the four·week
Orange Coast College lecture
~eries, th is one tjtled
·,customizing Your tnvest-
IJlent Program'' is scheduled
t;o begin Oct. 6 at Newport
Harbor High School.
~Sessions wit I be Mondays
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in lhe
' ' . • f'.911i 11111•rs 1111d L11srrs
&, ,,.._ York (U Pt I -T~ toOowl ... tis! ._ tM tlOC:k1 IMI Pl•..._ (Ill,_ most eno lost tl'te rnoxt !Ml~ on percem of '""'* °" llW N•w Yllfk Stoc:k --· "'"1 end PtKent-oe cri.ttQIH •rw thl ~~ tier-" Thi prevlcM. ctot.1119 fll"k• Mod ttie c"'rrt~ <IOWIO prtet:.
1 OAINll!:ll!
1 FdP9"" Mo 1\.'t .. W. Up II.I
, .,,.,., lf'MNs[ J'll.. " Up t'l.t ~ U'*1Y L pt S\.'t .. \.'t Up 10.G • ln$1lllWll l"v t\.'t+ ..-Up •.t
SC-on 8r t•+ "' Up 1.ll
'
Mal!Not" I" 5 + 'Ill Up I .I
Cordl.w• Cp 1•+ "" Up 1.1 • Dot!LlJ" wd t~+ YI Up 1.1
9 Qwysll'I' ..C IJ..t•+ "" Up 7.1 •utdPl<C Mrt IV.+ .. IJo J.1
U
L..ndt'Wfl .«JO ltfll+ ~ Vp .. ,
LFE Cor1l'I • + \Ii Up l.7 ·~ .l1 l\ji.. v. v. •.S W 8'ftal8 . 17tl 'Ill>" \It Up •.I
campus auditorium, featur·
ing Randall Mccardle, presi-
dent or The Real Elltaters.
college instructor, author and
Daily Pilot realty columnist.
His second lecture the
following week is tiUed ''Real
Estate, a Working Tool in
Planning Your Estate."
N-·York 15
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MEW YORK <UPO -I..... 15
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I
Dollar Stronger
BRUSSELS <UPll -Despite a 10
percent hike in international oil prices
the dollar opened higher on major
European money markets P.1onday .
Money experts said there was general
belief that a stronger U.S. economy
could absorb the increase easily .
Gold prices rose slig~ and the·
British pound fell to a new all lime low
against the dollar. The pound opened
at $2 .0310 but quickly rallied to
$2.0325, down rrom 1-Yiday 's closing
$2.0450.
Fiat Prices
TURIN (AP) -Fiat SPA raised
prices of its 127 and 31 models 1 per-
cente!frective Monday.
Last week the company had in.
creased prices of 126, 128, 124 and 840 ·
1 xnodels by an average or 7 percent.
The Fiat hike5 were the fourth
declared by the company this year . ,
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AJ2 DAILY PILOT Monday, S!p1ember 29, 1975
(
Doahle Winner 2 Harbor
Yachts Wm
SF Regatta ...
..
Club 'Dirty'
Cup' a Home inYiolation
' "
Argosy Swept
"/Jy Hurricane
. Two Newp0rt Harbor Yacht
Club skippers oa!lecl'olf with top
honors in St. Franci1 Yacht
Club's annual Big Boat Serles, a
week-long regatt.a ••iled on
breezy San Francisco Bay.
NEW YORlt (1JPt) -Tbe preotlsloua New Ycrk Yacht Club, -oltbe-America•1 Cot> and 1ymbo! ol Yankee ariotocney, wu·
found In vlolaUoa ol tbe oily'• lleallh code to-
cla¥. . Morrie Kirk's 40-foot two-tonner, Hurricane
Deck. Balboa Yacht Club emerged as a double win·
ner in the International Offshore Rule di~isipn or
Newport Ocean Sailing Association's AlamitoS Bay
Argoey. ..
Sixty-one boats in five divisions turned out ror
the annual "party'' race from Balboa to Alamitos
Bayon Saturday, and from Alamitos BaytoNewPort
onSunday.
TREON LY otherdoublewinnerwas Rivet , skip·
pered by Keith' Cleland,
BYC, which woo both
races in the
Performance Handicap
Racing F1eetClass B.
Brisk winds made a
short race for the fleet on
Saturday, but on Sunday
the winds were so light
that the neet did not
finish until about 6 p .m.
Balboa Pier to Alamitos
Bay
BOAJING !OR (9)-1, Hur·
ricane Deck; 2, Raider,
Jim Linderman, BYC ; 3,
Drumbeat. Ayres
Brothers, NHYC.
PHRF·A 118 ) -I, Hidalgo, Rod Lippold,
NHYC : 2. Tomahawk II , John Arens, BYC ; 3,
Virginia , D e nni s Bumett,SSYC.
The wjnner of the st. Francis
Perpetual for Class A yachts was
Dave euckler's 48·foot sloop
Hawkeye from NHVC with four
straight firsts. Runner.up was
Lightning, Theo Stephens' 57·
foot sloop from the bolt ctub.
Bill Pascoe's 47·foot German
designed and built sloop Saudade
from NHYC missed a clean
sweep of the Class B series by on·
ly two seconds. Arter winning the
ru-st three races, Saudade was
edged on corrected time in the
rmal race. Runner-up was Whis·
Ue Wing, a 46·foot sloop owned by
Hastings Harcourt, Santa
Barbara Yacht Club. Third was
Scaramouche, sailed by Robert
Alexander, Seattle Yacht Club.
In • statement.. the city's ~ ol
health 1ald the club bad "fi'elb and aid ,,,_
excreta In the kitchen" and "dead roaebel OD
tbe noon of tbe ldtdlen and cJua •tot.,.,
l'OOJna •• ,
Under city reJulationi. If the vlolaUone
are not corrected, the club is 1ubject to cJos.
Ing. .
Felli Pet!tmalre, manager of the 1,eoo.
member club. 1aid ''We're correcting them.••
The club houses the America's Cllp, 1ym-
bol of international yachting supremacy.
Two Yachts Fight
For Chalknge Cup
Two six-meter yachts are fighting it oui on San '
· Francisco Bay to determine which will represent·
the United States in the Australian-American
Challenge Cup Series. J
The contenders &reSt. Francis VI, entered by a
St. Francis Yacht Oub syndicate, and Razzle
Dazzle, Seattle Yacht Club. RacU,.g is !>eing con-
ducted over an Olympic type course off Berkeley.
PHRF-B (llJ -1. Rivet ;2,BlueRocket.Bill o.lty,netAatt,....
Blurock, BYC; J, Debra, Dick Rauff, SSYC. a.EAN SWEEP-Dave Cuckler's new King-designed 48·
The winner of ,the Rheems
Trophy for Class C' yachts was .
another well·known Southland
yacht, Vendetta, a 40-foot two-
tonner co-skippered by Tom
Tobin and Art De Fever, San
Diego Yacht Club.
Runner-up in the bid. for the
Rheems Trophy was Shillelagh
sailed by Com mod ore Bob Keefe.
St. FYC, and third was Mirage.
LeS Harlander, St. FYC.
St. Francis VI was dismasted in heavy winds
Saturday but was expected to be back in tiction to-
day. A six-man selection committee·named St.
Francis VI and Razzle Dau.le as finalists after
. Pacemaker of San Francisco and Poisson Soluble,
SeatUe,"Were eliminted last week.
PHRF-C (12) -1, Sunda, Graham Gibbons, foot sloop Hawkeye easily found its way around breezy
BYC; 2, Charisma, Scott Mason, BCYC; 3, War San Francisco Bay to win four straight victories in St.
Eagle,KenBatzer,SSYC. Francis Yacht Club's popular Big Boat Series. The vic-
ORCA (II > -I, Polynesian Concept , Buddy tory earned Hawkeye the St. Francis Perpetual Trophy. E~~DC ;2,Imi~a.Yk~rn.B~;~W~h ~~~~==~==~~~=~~=~~~==~~2~-----------~---------------------~
Tub, Uliver Washburn, Whlte Bear Lake YC . '\:'
Alamitos Bay to Newport Pier
JOR -1, Hurricane Deck ; 2, lie between Raider
and Drumbeat.
PHRP'-A -1. Sunraker, Hobart Denny, BCYC;
2, Tomahawk II : 3, Ransom, Dave Delo, BYC.
PHRF-B -I, Rivet, 2, Debra; 3, Bebo III, Bob
Darnell, YYC.
PHRF-C -Little Oly, Jack Badorak, SSYC; 2,
War Eagle ; 3, Charisma.
ORACA -1, Erin, Bowie Hotighton, Lahaina
YC ; 2, Thesis, Jim Turner, LBYC ; 3, Mirage, For-
restStewart, VYC.
Zeus IOR Winner
In Enduro Event
Bill Gilbert's Zeus , Pacific Mariners Yacht
Club, was the IOR Class A winner in California
Yacht Club's Enduro Race, the second feature of
the Fred Harris Series.
Class A winner in the Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet was Paradox, sailed by Tom
\.-Armstrong, eve, and the Midget Ocean Racing
Fleet Class A winner was La Diana, a\tippered by
Fred Huffman, Blue Water Cruising Cl ub.
"ore than 115 boats turned out for the race
which was sailed arOWld lhe buoys on Santa Monica
Bay.
IOR·A -l, Zeus; 2, Jano, Bob Kahn, CYC; 3,
Arcadia, Del Amo, LAYC.
IOR-B -1. Bananas, Mill Baehr, CYC ; 2, Str-
ing, Jon Byk, CYC ; 3, Merlin, Jack Ibach, SMYC.
PHRF·A -1, Paradox; 2, Genesis, Dick
Williams, PVYe; 3, Resolution, Jerry Hunter,
KHYC.
PHRF·C -1, Windfall, Lew Newfield , CYC ; 2,
Daria, Dave Ross, WYC ; 3, Sea Fever, Earle
·· Kneifel, CYC. .
PHRF·C -l , Veracity, Howard Williams,
SBYRC; 2, Sturmvogel, George Klose, ScCYC; 3,
Crackerjack, Jack CUnningham, SMYC .
MORF ·A -l, La Diana, Fred Huffman,
BWCC; 2, Walrus, Jim Worthil)gton, SMYC ; 3, Su·
Dy Ill, Andy Lockton, CYC.
~ MORF-8 11 , Hardtack, Mark Wilson, KHYC ; 2,
Lollipop, Tom Leweck,. CYC ; 3, Solitaire, Al
1 Diamond, SM Ye.
•
Bandit Captures . '
Ahmanson Series
Bandit, skippered by
Steve Morton of the
Chicago Yacht Club was
overall winner of
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's six -race
Ahmanson Series.
The series is scored on
the best five of the six
races. Bandit's low score
for the series was 15¥1
points, beating Jim Lin·
derman's Raider ,
Balboa Yacht Club, by o/•.
of a point.
Both Bandit a.nd
ings are unofficial.
Class st3ndings :
CLASS A -1. Raider ;
2. Bandit ; 3. Drum beat.
CLASS B -1. Nuance,
George Austin, South
Shore Yacht Club.
CLASS C -I. Tie
between Merrydown,
Bill Lapwortb, St. FYC,
and Canadian Robin,
Jim Warmington,
NHYC.
CLASS D -1.
Chinook; 2. Quadriga,
Ed Meserve, NHYC.
Raider were Class en--==:;::;:;::;;=:;::::;=;;;-I tries, &ut Raider edged 1
Bandit by 2y, points in COME TO THE
tlleclusstandtngs. NEWPORT HARBOR Third in Class A was
Drumbeat, skippered by IN • THE • WATER
0on Arr•• Jr .. but 1n the BOAT overal standings Drum-· .
beat tied on points with SHOW Tom Schock's Class D
entry, Chinook, NHYC.
Tom Wilder, race com· .. oat si. mittee chairman foe the v. ~
Ahmanson Series, em· 0..1.
pbuized that tho stand· ~
lbu want a car
that lasts, too.
Sure Corollas are low priced and get
good gaa mileage. They average 30 mpg
on the highway and 20 in the city in
EPA simulated tests.•
But what good is all that if the rest
of the car quickly goes to pot?
That's why evel')"single Corolla goea
through water tests, brake tests, even
glove box tests. That's why every single
engine is tested for 30 minutes before it
ever spends a minute in your Tuyota.
MARK D 4-DOOR SEDAN
r
lbu want eidlas at
no extra cost.
Even our lowest priced model comes
with fully reclining bucket seat.a, rear
window defogger and power front
disc brakes.
So you can imagine what our racy
SR-5's include. Sample: AM/FM radio
for sweet music. Wide radial tires for
sweet handling. And a 5-speed overdrive
transmission for ·sweet savings on gas
and engine wear.
All at no extra cosi.
lbu wa1I the rigid
car at the rigid price.
Which is why we make so,;nany
different 'lbyotaa fo..-you to cbOOse from.
The' low, low priced Corollas, plus eporty
Celicas, solid Coronas, roomy Mark ll'a.
tough pickup trucks and Land Cruisers.
In all, 22 different well-built 'lbyotaa
with lots built in for the money.
Good 'as mileage and a low price?
Sure. But 1n a 'lbyota, we want you to
ertjoy those saving& for a long time
to come. Get-youii hands on a 'lbyota.
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• ;; Orange Coast
EDITION
• 't·
VOL. 61, NO. 272,2 SECTIONS, 2A PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today's Closlag
N.Y. Steek•
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1975 c 'l'E;N CENTS
!Jack Scott DrOve .Pauy· to East Coast?
' SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -
=!.t::e.:~ ~~'J::k
I Scott four moat.ha oiler she wu 1 'ldn•ped and at one point
I decliMCI Scott'sotrertodriveher
aDywMre she wanted, inclUding
home, Rolling Stone magazine
says in its new isaue.
"l want to ao where 1"Y friends
are 10Lng," Mlss Hearst was
quoted .. t~lllng Scott .. they
* * * Pistol
•
Tied to •
Patty?
SAN FRANCISCO CUP[) -
The FBI said today it found a
9-m.illimeter pistol and live am-
munition -the same kind used
in the robbery of a suburban
Sacramento bank last April -in
P.atricia Hearst's last hideout
• Also among the effects found in
the San Francisco apartment
were a green scarf similar to one
.worn in the robbery of the
~ocker Bank branch, papers
from CrocJc:er Bank, and a com Dluniqu~ from a terrorist group
ltnown as the New World Libera
Uon Front, which has claimed
MENTAL TEST
FOR PATTY, AS
fesponsibility for more than a
dozen San Francisco area bom~·
in,gs the past year The nature of
the communique was not re
tealed.
The items were included in a
~S·page inventory of effects
found in the apartment where
"ias Hearst. 21, and fellow
fugitive Wendy Yoshimura. 32,
Were arrested Sept. 18.
; Tbe FBI al<o releued,a lOQ,
: page inventory of items found in
another San Francisco apart-
ment where Symbionese Ubera-
tion Army members William and
Emily Harris were arrested the
aameday.
The inventory contained only
brief descriptions of each item
found and did not directly tie the
newspaper heiress to the robbery
of the bank in Carmichael on
April 21 . A woman and three.men
took $18,000 at gunpoint. During
the robbery, a customer was hit
by a shotgun blast and later died.
Also found were pipe bombs
and materials described in the
inventory as:
-''One two-inch U-brand pipe
cap With black granulaF... sub·
stance inside, one U·brand two-
'inch pipe cap with drill hole
through center, one two-inch pipe
cap bearing symbolsOand 2 with
drill hole through center with
~lack granular substance in·
side.·•
, -"One Gourd brand two·inch
pipe cap with drill hole through
center with black granular sub·
stance inside.''
-"Eight two-inch pipes vary.
ing from 3 to l 4 inches in length."
-"One pipe device capped at
both ends containing black
granular substance with wires
protruding from drill hole.''
Also found were three six-volt
batteries and one 12-volt battery,
.· (SeeP&TTY, PageA.%1
)
.Ransom Found • · COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPIJ
About $200,000. believed to be
part of a ransom paid for the re·
lease of Dayton businessman
Lester Emocr was found near.
Hoover Reservoir here Sunday
by FBI agents, it was reported to-
day.
AStetd
For$45
A shopper got a bargain
from the May Co~panyde
partment store at South
Coast Pla~a in Costa Mesa,
SUnday but though he paid
cub, it was still a case of
grand theft.
Poli~e were~Jiold that just
fiye m.mute1 after lbe store
was opened a man, •led 35
to 40 paid Sf~ fdr an Orien·
, t.a1 anUque7 But he did &0
~ after he bad switched the
price on the vaff, remov-
, 1nJ a S5e9 tag and replac· F
inC it with a. $45 aticlter.
Police were .informed
that an emplQye from
onolher department in Ille
store, 'nO\ k"'l"'lnl better,
sold t~e Yase for the
• llWltdoed prl"'.,
• •
drove toward the East Coast to
meet SLA members.
Auoeiate editor Howanl Kolm
and rePorter David Weir said
their account was based cm in·
formation from unidentified
sources who •;talked to Palty
Hearst; they were there; tbey
helped her."
Scott was introduced to the
Hairlses after word was spread
that be wanted lO write a book on
the orpnlutlon. The Harru ..
.invited Scott to a Berkeley •Part·
ment, where be met Patty Hearst
for the lint Ume and ogrft(1 to
drive her lo the East Coast, the
article said.
Scat\. who once told reporttts
••1 never met anyone who told me
she'Wu Patty Heont" could not
be rearbed immediately for tom·
ment.
Miss Meant announced after
her lrldnapinl sbe had taken lhe
a•me"Tanla.··
Miu Hearst was confmed, ap·
parenUy ln a closet, for four
~ lmmedlately after she was
lddnaped from ber Berkeley
apartment on Feb. '4, 1974, by the
SLA, said Ille Rollinl Stone re.
Porten, who were interviewed
this mornln1 on NBC's "Today
Show.''
J~ an effidavit filed last week
in federal court here, Mias
Hearst said she w u held in a
cloaet for nine week1.
The reporters said Miss Heant
asked to be permitted to join the
SL.A but most members of the
group were opposed. Jt· was SLA.
leader Donald DeFreea who
called himself "Cinque, •1 who
convinced others to accept her.
When she w•s released from
conlinement, the article said,
Ml.as Hearst was allowed to move
freely among SLA members and
ut in on the group'a "'dalb"
political study sesslON."
When six members of the SLA
died in a shootout with Loa
. .Angeles Police, Mlsa. Hearst and
SLA members Bill and Emily
Hurls were a tew blocks away
U.tenlnc to radio accounts of,lhe
confrontation, Rolling Stone
(See SLA, P110..U)
Trials Delayed
Hinshaw, Vallerga to Wait
llnited Way Launelaing
The Crazy Toad Players, a Costa Mesa mime troupe,
cavorted around Rancho Capistrano as the balloon went
up on United Way's $3.65 million fund-raising campaign
in Orange County Sunday The balloon was donated by
Ballooning Unlimited of La Jolla. According to · United
Way campaign chairman Cal Mortensen, $1,093,610
already bas been pledged. The funds will go to support of
72 human service agencies.
Portugal's Radio,
TV Stations Seized
LISBON (UPIJ -Prime
Minister Adm. Jose Pinheiro de
Azeyedo ordered troops to OC·
cupy the. nation's Communist-
controlled radio and television
stati011=5 today and said the move
BUDGET GAP
DAMPENS DOW
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
· market fell sharply today under
the weight of uneasiness over the
federal budget deficit and the ef.
fects it might h.ave on interest
rat~.
Trading Wafi light, however.
(Tables, AllJ
Late la1t week, Arthur F.
Bums, chairman of the Federal
Reserve Board, had warned that
the government's borrowing
needs to finance the deficit could
put new upward pressure on in-teteat rates.
'Jlte Dow Jones average of .30
stocp loet 13.37 points totll5.23.
was taken to prevent Portugal's
falling into anarchy.
His move triggered one of the
most explo~ive crises in the coun-
try's 17-month-old revolution.
Troops sent to one of the sta·
lions rebelled against their or·
ders and joined the workers. The
far left called for mass protests
to paralyze the country.
The Revolutionary United
Front urged workers to throw up
barricades in the streets and
launch a general strike.
The front formed by an aJ .
liance of l'eftist groups appealed
ror soldiers and sailors to mutiny
against the government and
mobilize themselves on the side
of the left.
''We are now in one or the most
serious situations since the start
of the revolution," Information
Minister Antonio Almeida Santos
said.
He said the prime minister
would address the nation tonight.
More than 1,000 demonstrators
(See PORTUGAL, Page A2)
By TOM BARLEY
Of .. o. .. ,~ .......
Congressman Andrew J
Hinshaw and convicted former
County Assessor Jack Vallerga
were granted a three-month de-
lay or their Orange County
Superior Court trial on multiple
criminal charges today
Presiding Judge Robert
Banyard set Jan. 12, 1976, as the
new trial date after it was ex·
plained that a trial earlier set to
start today would most certainly
be in progress on Nov. 10. the
date that Hinshaw races trial
Mesa Man
Shot, Killed
By Police
By ALAN DIRKJN . ttt .. DMIJ l"IMIMAlft
A Costa Mesa man who
threatened a plainclothes
poU-ceman wlth a knife wae shot
and killed Saturday nifht by
another officer, Santa Ana police
reported today.
Guillermo Sandoval Ruiz, 'n,
ol 660 Surf St., was slain by a shot
fired by Investigator. Giles
Hadrycb as Ruiz closed in on In·
vestigator Paul Gregiore with a ·
knife. a police spokesman said.
The police statement said that
Ruiz and and a friend, Raphael
Rodriguez, who would not give
his address, tried to ram a car
driven by a woman off the street
on Fairview Road. Ruiz' car hit a
block wall. and the two men ran
olf on foot with area residents
chasing them.
Police units responded and in·
vestigators Hadrych and
Gregiore arrived in an unmarked
car. The police spokesman said
that Ruiz, carrying a knife, ran
up to the car and flung the door
open, apparently hoping to com-
mandeer it, not r ealizing it was a
Police vehicle.
Gregiore leaned back, pulled
his gun and told Ruiz he was a
police officer. Ruiz then ran
about 20 feet from the car and
the'officers gave chase. But the
spokesman said that Ruiz
stopped and advanced on
Gregiore with the knife. Gregiore
backed up, but when his back
was almost against the car In-
vestigator Hadrych fired, killing
Ruiz with a single shot.
Rodriguez was being held in
Orange County Jail today on a
charge of assault with a deadly
weapon. The police report did not
say how he had threatened the
police.
Boston Teachers
BOSTON CUPI) -The striking
Boston Teacher s Union and
school officials today concluded
a 23-hour bargaining session with
a tentative contract agreement
to end a week-long strike.
'Third' Coast College?
Communivenity Caters to Night Crowd -
By ALAN DIRKIN ot .. Crr.ltr ,.. .......
A communiversity -
described by • task force as "a
true people's college'' -is being
propooed for the Coast CommunJ.
tjr Coltoee District. •
It would be • third ~chine in-
titutlOlt for the cllstrlct, one
specla.llii.ng in continuing educa-
tion and one operating ln addition
to the Ora03e Coast and Golden
West <olll!f••· It would lake qyer
evMin& c .uses and televlilon
<OUJ'HS,
The plan for the com-
-venit¥ w .. ~ to 1•
m19*la1 olthediltric.ttn&stw la
Costa Mesa recently. It grew out·
of a study by a task force on.dis-
trict organization, a study that
was ordered by the board after
faculty members had called for a
review of the evening college,
and ~ht more say on the TV cou.nes. ,
Th~ eroposal Wiii be dlsc115$ed
at a special meeting o( the board
with representativef of lhe
~cademic sen.ates of both Oran1e
Coot and Golden Wnt Oct. 18.
This special board ~ will
be held on the Gold<tt Vitti. cam -
pus, beginning at 9 a.m.
The timetable for -"""-' ) I
in district organization calls for
fmal approval to be given by the
board before July, 1976 so that
the changes can be incorporated
for the fall 1976 semester.
The communiversity was one
of seven alternatives the task
force, iset up by District Chan-
cellor Dr. N'orman Wat.son, ron·
1ideted. Bolh trustees and racul ·
ty r~resentatives at the meetin~
asked for •further evaluations on
the other options .
Tbecom!Jluniversily as recom·
mended bf•the task force, would
be ''a true people's college"
<he Dll!TaJCT, P• ..UI
alone on bribery charges.
In the courtroom with both de·
fendant.s was tormer Assessor's
aide Garland Redding, who was
cleared or grand then and con·
spiracy charges on a motion filed
by the District Attorney's office.
Redding. 56, of Santa Ana, was
one or nine employes indicted
after a long probe or allegedly il -
legal activities in the Assessor's
office during Hinshaw's term as
Assessor.
Convictions already have been
recorded against Redding's eight
codefendants. It was explained
l
Bello, 'l'lw:,..,
The city f a ther s or
H azelc r est, Ill ., weren't
satis f ied to just put up a
futuristic·looking water tank
at the edge of town . So they
gave it a happy race to greet
motoris ts along Highway 57.
Driver Killed
As Car Rams
Van in Mesa
A 63·ye ar-old driver was killed
in Costa Mes a Sunday ni ght when
hJs car apparently ran into lhe
back or a van that was halted al a
lra rfic light on Harbor Boulevard
at MacArthur Boulevard.
Oliver Webs ter of 1700 Green·
vi lle St., Santa Ana, was pro-
nounced dead at Costa Mesa
Me mo rial Hos pital about 75
minutes after the S:JO p.m. acc i·
dent .
Witnes ses told police that
Webster's car traveling north on
i-larbor a t about 50 miles an hour
rammed into the back of a halted
van driven by William Nelson
Emery, 20, of 24142 Ank erton, El
Toro. The impact reportedly
knocked the van 100 feet through
the intersection.
Emery was not injured though
a passenger Henry Philip
Sc hmidt or 1501 Sylvia Lane.
Newoort Beach. comolained of
leg and should e r inj uries .
Schmidt re(used medical lreal-
ment, however.
Castro .Statement
MIAMI (AP) -Cuban Prime
Minis t e r F id e l Ca s tro has
declared that hi s government is
prepared t o r e main
"economica lly blockaded" by
the United States for as long as
necessary rather than give up its
campaign for Puerto Rican ln·
dependence.
today that Redding'a cooperation
with the prosecution during that
investigation led to the dismissal
decision,
Redding has testified before
the Grand Jury. Assistant Dis·
trict Attorney Michael Capizzi
also commented today: "He
could have gone to trial, been
(med $1,000 and convicted of a
misdemeanor. It wasn't worth it ....
Six of the eight convicted as·
sessor·s aides have had felony
convictions reduced to misde-
(See IUNSHAW, PageA%l
Six Held:
Police Say
'No Deals'
LONDON (UPU -Three
gunmen demanded a plane and s~e conduct out of Bri.,taln today
as the price for sparing \he lives
of six Italian employes seized
as hostages In a botc'hed robbery
atteq1pl at a ~ndon restaurant.
But a bigh-ran~ing police official
said ''there will be no deals.··
"I was told by the hostages
they have made this demand,"
Italian CO'ns ul General Mario
Manca told newsmen alter talk·
ing to the hostages through the
locked door of the s mall
storeroom where they are being
held for a s econd day.
But assistant Police Com·
missioner Wilfred Gibson said.
"They have been told there will
be no deals."
The gunmen. said to include
two West Indians and a Nigerian,
have held the hostages at the
Spaghetti House restaurant in
fashionable Knightsbridge in
!See HOSTAGES, PageA2l
FIRST CALLER
GOT CAMPER
''I 'm v e r y pl eased . The
camper sold to the fi rst person
who called ...
·That's the advertising success
story told by the Costa Mesa man
who placed th is ad in the Daily·
Pilot :
'69 VW Cam per, slil:'ling
roof, nu molor, brakes. Xtra clean, $2495, xxx -
xxxx .
If you have a recreational
vehic le to sell or rent, call
642-5678. We make it ea!ly to put
a few words to work ror you, in
the Daily Pilot.
Coast
Weather
Late night and morning
C'louds. otherwise fair skies
Tuesday, according to the
weather service. A little
warmer with beach highs
near 70 rising to the low 80s
inland .
INSIDE TODA'\'
The owrhead ercee<Js thR
J'rO/it:t fivefold at Saddlebock
Community Enterpnse:t. but
Us work with mentally /Jan.
~adults Mars intanqi.
bledividend:t. See Page 87.
ladell
Al,._ 5itf'Yk• " AMLtlder1 .. -· ... .., Mll!Ylel . .. L.'::i!:r .. ,.. ...... 1,.. ... .... , co • •• o....,.eev .. 1, •• a. ... 111• ••·ll -· •1-1 -· .. ~l•Pwt9f' ••• ...,._ .. • Marll .. 1 ...
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& . )';
•
•
DAILY PILOT C ,
~~
tae••
' ca\e1\daf -
.
~MONDAY EVENTS
...U:soAY,SEPT.30
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -
Commdnlty Recreation Center,
Tues., W..ed., Thurs.12-3p.in.
"JUMPERS" -South Coast
Repertoey Theater, through Sun.
8p.m .
UCI LECTURES -"Wines of
the World,~ University Club, 7:30
p .m. ''UP.locking Realities
Within lf»fl'·'~ Room 100 Science
Lecture {Rall . ·'Professional
I Public R'&ations, '' Room 220
Social Sciences Tower. "Food for
Thought,'' Room 100 Social
SciencesHt}Jt. 7p.m.
OCC LECTURES -"Behind
the Headlines," Dr. Giles T.
Brown 14cturer. Forum, 7 :30
p .m . ''Gardening in Small
Spaces,''. Fairgrounds Photo
Bldg. 1·3p.m.
Spending
Prlorities
IOn Agenda
The Costa Mesa City Council I will discuss a call for priorities to
be determined in the spending of
city funds on social programs
tonight.
Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley had the
item placed on the agenda after
I making comments at several
council meetings that such a
priority list should be established.
The mayor has said that federal
revenue.sharing money for social -
progr~s should be disbursed in
an esta"blished procedure, with groups; making the requests an-
nually, with the council evaluat·
ing t~~m and then making the aJ.
JocatJons . The mayor has
criticized the allocation of fund s
based on presentations made by
groups at council meetings and
with nooverall evaluation.
Oth'er items on the agenda for
tonight's study session, which will
be' field in the first-noor con-
1
, fereqCeroom at 7:30p.m.,include
consideration of the lease for
Mar:dan School on city property
i on 19th Street, a discussion on the
develGpment of TeWinkle Park,
Monday. September 29. 1975
Ready to Topple
The accelerator on this car assertedly stuck as Adeline
Mary Jackson, 74. of Costa Mesa sat behind the wheel.
The racing auto finally stopped against utility pole on
Orange Avenue near Walnut, nearly felling the towering
fixture. Police said Mrs. Jackson, of 1991 Newport
Boulevard, was not hurt in mishap which also involved
damage to two parked cars. .
F"°"' Page Al
SLA DETAILS ...
said. The a rticle said the Har-
rises quickly bought a used car
and left Los Angeles, with Miss
Hearst hiding in the back seat un ·
der a ~lanket, for San Francisco
The Harrises "found other
means"" of leaving Berkeley for
the Scotts· New York City apart-
ment. Scott and Miss Hearst,
86 '86ed'
"pasing as man and wife ," drove
eastward. Rolling Stone said.
?.oliss Hearst was "very up·
tight" and ''felt extremely
vulnerable to being recognized
aJong the way, .. Weir said, but
there was no problem. The group
met fugitive Wendy Yoshimura
in New York and then went to a
Pennsylvania farmhouse rented
by Scott's wife, Micki, the article
said. and an appeal from Santa Ana for
Costa Mesa to support extension
of the Orange Freeway to the San
Diego Freeway. At Anaheim
IJIJian _Hqghes Rock C.Oncert
Rolling Stone said during the
summer at the Pennsylvania
farmhouse, Miss Hearst had a
Jong discussion with Scott about
her conversion to the SLA, which
Kohn and Weir said "was as
much emotional as political. She
had felt isolated emotionally and
she was disappointed in her
parents and in Steven Weed, her
fiance, and their response to the
SLA demands."
Qf~Costa Mesa
' De,ad at 89
1 Funeral services will be held at
2 p.m. Tuesday for Lillian F.
Hughes, a 25-year resident of
Costa Mesa, who died Saturday
at the age of 89.
A native of Pennsylvania, she
and her husband, the late J . 0 .
Huehes had moved to Costa
Mesa in 1950. The couple
·celebrated their 70th wedding an·
niversary in 1972.
Mrs. Hughes was a member of
St. Andrew "s Presbyterian
Church. She is survived by three
sons, John W. Hughes of Costa
Mesa, Richard E . Hughes of
Tustin. and James P. Hughes of
Madera; 14 grandchildren,-23
great-grandchildren and two
~at-creat-grandchlldren. t Services will be held at 2 p.m. ,t. Tuesday at Bell Br.oadway ~ Mortllary with burial In Harbor t"'" Rest Memorial Park.
l
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I
l
I
t -·
BW'D Victim Dies
LOS ANGELES !AP> -Capt.
Arthur Delaire Jr., 38, has died
at County-USC Medical Center
from burns suffered in a sawdust
explosion at a Montebello fire
last Wednesday.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed
"""'""' .... f'\111111-. Jack R. Cur~y
YIU .-reslOltftt •"° GtMr .. M.NOI'
Th0ma$ Keevll
Editor
Thomas A. MurpNne INM!IMlt!ll...,
c
Qartes H. Loos Rkhlrd P. Niii .... ......,.. .... ~ c.ta--UIWHI .. , MfMt Mlllllfll ....... ;,..0. ... 1·-·
Ot-Olf-~ llfftJU ~ Nf...,. iewle-.t ... tlll'lll .. Kfll 1116 GI_.,... $1..-4
Hvnllnq!Oll ... (fl: 17111.llffil:ll &oule....,, ... ..._. V•ll•Yt 71101._. 1'.11111-
.i SM D .... "'-"
T, ......... C7t4) '41-GJ.1 Cini-AdWrtlslot"2.WI
Police arrested 86 people Sun ·
day at a rock concert in Anaheim
Stadium attended by about 44,000
persons drawn to the stadium by
rock superstars Linda Ronstadt
~d the Eagles.
Most of the arrests were for al·
leged narcotic violations, accord·
ing to Anaheim police Sgt.
Richard Gray who'characterized
the crowd's behavior a s
"generally good."
"But," Gray added, "it seems
there are always some who are
willing to pay $10 a ticket to get
themselves in trouble."
While most of those arrested
were charged with narcotic
violations, there were some ar·
rests on drunk in public charges
and a few persons were taken in·
to custody for allegedly carrying
concealed weapons, Gray said.
F,.._PageAJ
PORTUGA'L
gathered in Rossio Squai:e in
downtown Lisbon to shout
"Death to the Fascists!" and
"Reactionaries out of the Bar·
racks! " They then marched on
Radio Renascenca to demand.
that the soldiers give the
facilities back to the workers.
Radio Renascenca, which is
theoretically owned by the
Roman Catholic Church, has
been the focus of a major con-
troversy since lefiist workers
took over the building and turned
it into afar ten facility.
Another hot spot was Radio
Club where soldiers sent to oc·
cupy the building rebelled
against their orders and instead
joined the workers. Military
security chief Gen . Otelo Saraiva
de Carvalho initially ordered the
facilities evacuated, but this was
not carried out.
Jn the afternoon, a man with a
bullhorn told the crowd outside.
Radio Renascenca that the
soldiers there also were leaning
towards the workers and planned
tb take a vote on whether to
maintain the occupation.
Santoo briefed the press shori·
ly atlerthe prime mhilaterluued
a statement saying that the ac·
lion was necessary to reverse
Portugal '1 1ltde towards
anarchy, which be said w.,.._-ine promflled by the-radio and
television stations.
The prime mlnlater made his
move u the country emerged
from • weekend or diverse mob
violence tbat battered Lisbon
and Porto and atruck at the roots
ol govem~ental authcrlly.
At the end of the summer when
the farmhouse lease expired, ar-
rangements for returning Miss
Hearst and the Harrises to hiding
in California were made by a
''new team ·· that included
Kathleen Soliah. now herself a
fugitive, and her brother Steve.
Scott again drove Miss Hearst,
this time westward, Rolling
Stone said.
On that second trip, the first
time Miss Hearst appeared in
public since her cross-country
trip to the East, their worst fears
were realized in Iowa -they
were stopped by a state
policeman for speeding, the
magazine said.
Scott leaped out of the car and
ran back to the police cruiser
before the officer had a chance to
approach the van in which Miss
Hearst was sitting, disguised as·
Scott's pregnant wife, the article
said.
It quoted Scott as saying,
"Sorry, officer, I guess I got a lit·
Ue excited about Iowa winning
today. That was some game.••
"You're an Iowa fan?" the
trooper asked, noting the out-of.
state plates on the van.
"Hey, I'm just a football fan.
No matter where I go I love to
listen to football. You .wouldn't
give 1 ticket to a football fan,
would you? That would be kindo£
anti-American,'' Scott said.
The magazine said the trooper
smiled and replied, "I'll let you
off easy this time but be careful
when you cross the border into
Nebraska. They got upset by
Wisconsin, you l_cnow."
The trooper then put his ticket
book away and left without in-
spectihg the van or seeing Miss
Hearst, Kohn and Weir said.
* * * F,....P.,,eAJ
PA'ITY •••
and three books checked out of
Unlve.-.lty of California Ubrarlea
which were tilled: ''The Scleoce
of High Exploslvu," "Ex-
plosives," and ''Fuels, Ex·
plaolvH and Dyestults."
The apartment also contained
numeroua books on OU-and
llunlan communla.m. tbe In""°·
I«)' laid.
' •
I
Super
Waves
Subside
Rescue-weary lifeguards from
Seal Beach to San Clemente to-
day welcomed the end of the
super surf that pounded into the
Orange Coast late 1-ast week .
The surf, still sizeable Satur·
day, by• thla morning bad re-
turned to normal one to tbre&--
foot levels. On Friday, the surf.
raged as high as 12 feet.
Lifeguards reported today that
moderate crowds vi.sited beaches
along the Orange Coast over the
weekend. but said there were few
problems.
In San Clemente, an off-duty
Newport Beach lifeguard suf·
fered a sprained back Sunday af ..
temoon while body surfint in ,
five-foot sets at T St(eet Beach,
one of Southern California'• top
body surfing spots.
Douglas Prichard, 17. of 614
Michael Place, Newport Beach.
wu rescued by an unidenWied
board-surfet' who placed
Prichard on his surfboard and
paddled outside the surf break.
Prichard was transported In
the San Clemente lifeguard
rescue boat to its Dana Point
base and taken by ambulance to
San Clemente General Hospital.
He was treated for the sprain and
released.
Lifeguards said no new storms
are lurking off the coast that
could generate a repeat of last
week's surf.
Beach attendance along the
Orange Coast exceeded 100,000
persons both Saturday and Sun· ,
day. Lifeguards reported 61
rescues Sonday and 75 rescues
Saturday.
Lifeguards owcr the weekend
were forced to rely on skeleton
staffs to patrol beaches because
seasonal guards were taken off
duty when school started.
DISTRICT. •
because it would not be confined
by a campus. "It will become a
community-based extension of
the two-college mission," the
task force reported.
It would offer both credit and
non-credit courses, but would not
grant degrees; degrees still
would be granted by the Golden
West and Orange Coast alleges.
"The communiversity would
operate thJ'o'ugh a network of
geographically scattered sites
and a Variety of delivery
systems, both formal and in·
formal,'' the report said. "Its
faculty would be largely par!·
time, comprising a consortium of
regular academic faculty, com-
munity representatives, and ex·
perienced Professionals.''
The communiversity would be
operated on a district-wide level
and would have its own cur-
riculum council. This point and
other elements of the com·
muniversity concept could strike
sore points with the faculty
because the academic senates of
both Orange Coast and Golden
West colleges have long cam-
paigned for the evening college
to be run by the administrations
of lhe two campuses and not by a
separate administration, which
is presently the case.
Some teachers also have
criticized the TV courses and
asked for more faculty control of
the courses. KOCE, which broad-
casts the telecourses, also is
responsible to the district ad·
ministration. and not to the ad·
ministrations of the two colleges.
...
Reve.,,ing or Concealing? U~I T•..,_,.•
Congressman Otis G. Pike <D·NY>. in complaining
about President Ford's policy in forwarding secret in-
formation to the House Intelligence Committee, com·
pared the action to a bikini: "What it reveals is signifi·
cant but what It cooceals is vital - -." '
Cons111ner Card Set
For Mail Maladies
Had a problem with the mail
lately?
The U.S., Postal Service bas a
remedy.
It's a consumer service card
which will be available from all
letter carriers in Orange County
aa of Wednesda#v.
The card, actually a sandwich
of two postal cards with a piece of
carbon paper in between, con·
tains four blocks.
On these, customers can re·
gfster compl~ints, req~est in-
formation, make compliments,
offer suggestions or make
general comments about the
mail service. .
Ed Murphy, Orange County
coordinator for the nationwide
.f',.... Pllfle AJ
HINSHAW •••
meanors with each ordered to
pay a $1,000 fine.
Hinshaw and Vallerga will be
back in court together Jan. 12 to ·
face identical charges stemming
from allegations that members ot the assessor's staff worked on
Hinshaw's congressional cam·
paign in 1972.
It is also alleged that employes
were paid time and mileage by ·
the Assessor's Office while they
canvassed for Hinshaw and past-
edsigns throughout the COU11tY.
Vallerga's trial in Ventura.
County resulted. in the man who
took over from Hinshaw being
fined $1,000, placed on five years'
probation and permanently
barred from holding public of·
fice.
Hinshaw races bribery charges
in his Nov. 10 trial. He and
Vallerga face charges of .grand
theft, conspiring and embezzle-
ment in the Jan.12 proceeding.
Water Emergency
NEWARK, Ohio (UPl)-Resi-
dents or this central Ohio city,
living in a state of emergency,
have been cautioned to limit
their use of water or face possible
criminal charges.
Consumer Service Program,
said that one copy goes to the
local postmaster fol' immediate
correction and the other to Post.al
Service Headquarters in
Washington, D.C. I
· The complaints will be\
eatalpgued and analyzed by com· '
J>Ut:er to help spot problem areas
and nationwide trends.
Murphy said the Consumer
Service Program was tested
earlier this year in Illinois,
Massachusetts, Arizona and
Rhode Island. Postal customers
participating in the test found the
cards easy to complete and said
·most complaints were resolved
to the customer's satisfaction.
''Ninety-two percent of the peD4' \
pie we surveyed said it was. a \
very, very good program,"
Murphy noted.
He said the card should be
especially helpful in tracing mail
which bas been late in arriving.
"If a customer hasn't received a·
letter that was sent two weeks
ago, for example, there is a place
on the card where he can ftll in
the sender's address," Murphy
pointed out.
Postal authorities say the
cards should take no more than
two minutes to fill out. If the pro-
blem is not resolved to the
customer's satisfaction, he
should see the postmaster
personally.
F,.._PageAJ
HOSTAGES
West London since 1 :30 a.m. Sun·
day.
They released an eighth
hostage, Alfredo Olivelli. on SUn·
day to show ''good faith.'': A
seventh was freed today.
Mrs. Mary Olivelli, his wife,
said her husband described the'
storeroom prison, measurihg
nine by 13 feet as ''a bell hole.''
"He said the stench is in-
describable 3nd the heat over ..
powering.''
During the morning, police
passed coffee, cigarettes and
a portable chemical toilet into the
storeroom.
•
ALL FABRICS
..... w. ......
With This Coupon
Good Mon. tin Wed. Only
7