HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-10-03 - Orange Coast Pilot7 .
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FRIDAY i>.FTeRNooN;ocroi E.ft'3,,.,i s •
VOL ... NO. V• •• SeCTtqlitl, "~·s. •'. . . ' . •
Johlestf."·:
Rate Up
:J -ury In,dictlrtents
I I . ; '· • tnd i cted 0 r a n,ge .. Count_y 511pUVisor said 1,'hur.sdayhe 'tdu
Supervisor· Rober~ ilottln ·hh ·''1i"! a·1l!<'lmd·~,-Mlh the •Op--
an appeal with the Second ·~toUrl.. · ' , o;t.Court ol Appeal uklllg l1 ., UO • adlni there •is II We !I .. b the Grand Jury indict· clwillce !!I~ court ...,ill act on bla
inentagainstbirn. • ~tial·_ii>,e•11 ancSd•q"""1 loc a
1 An~ '1.0.ha titlifuli: 1ii'e' &iJrt" '~•~h,;;.,~f{: !~~~'ail ';;.y
fall to quash the tnil.lctmen\, Bat-riihta.'' th.• supervi..C oald. · '
tin has,..~ked.it,to order 1ijj trill!, " •When lndlctelf71li "inkl·AiJilliit )'11\ic~ 19 sc~eduie<I to begin .Mon-.on ch4fg•• related to isljtg c<111n·
day, delayed. . • • 1y· emptoyeo in hi• ill·faled 1974
'i ., catf,paign for lieutenant eov-
Furtbermore. t ran1ec.iunty .tin.or /Ballin Hid hel\'ould insl1t /
Superiqr Court J\tdlc ,Jerrold on tdS rfet\t to i. speedy trial. 1
~;:::li":~"l:":.~ ::;;1~ ,.:Wi;.en~: ._h/~i:;:1 w1'l:l: ~ th_.,ind-l'C'tm•nt..-asi~:• '\e-_ :...:.~J~~~.aee .u J.,
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KJ"S SPf)USE ,,
U~ .~UBY'-
DES MOl!llf;S, .l<>Wa. (AP) -.
•1.be United Stltes ls a 1'patadise
rOr women,!' aa_ys 'tuy~MaJ Ky,
wite ol~Cor.mer.south Vietnamese
Prem'ier Nluyen' Cao Ky.
. Mrs. Ky, a fashiOnablY dressed
mot~ ,oi~six~ said in an in-
terview 'thursaay she ls happy
that American women are gain·
ing an lnCreasiogly progresslVe
role.·~
But bier husband. who i~ on a
peakine tour, disagreed, ••Yinc.
''I'm ~ady 101D.1Kil'\9alr•ad>' 'I • -_,.._ J.'ti'=,
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Jobless Rate
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Up • ID State,
Do"'n • ID Nation
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~ounc en
Ali1nony Oat? ·-Bribery
Soliciting·
Probed
Cohabitation Quizzed
MADISON, Wis. (UPI ) -A divorced woman li v·
~ ing with another man may have to forfeit her alimony
payments from her former husband depending on the
"manner and extent of the cohabitation, .. according
to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Justice Bruce Beilfuss. in an opinion Thursday,
said a woman·s cohabitation with another man could
be seen as a change of circumstances that might af-
fect the a limony payments from her former hus band.
The 5-2 decision came in a case involving Dr. E .
Robert and Barbara A. Taake, formerly of Beaver
Dam, who were divorced in 1966. Dodge County Judge
Joseph E . Schultz had stopped Taake's a limony to his
ex-wife because Mrs. Taake was li ving with another
man.
Mrs. Taake admitted to occasional sexual rela-
tions with the man and said she did not correct
persons whe n they referred to her as the man's wife.
Beilfuss s aid. He said her cohabitation with the m an
was "not an occasion al indiscretion but continuous
cohabitation \vi th arrangements for joint support.''
Beilfuss, however. said the high court majority
felt Schultz went too far when he ruled out any future
alimony.
Calls a Hoax
OC Phone Phantom
Now Using Threats
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.. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
04 llM' o.;1, l"llOISUlff
The Telephone Phantom, a
breathless m a n who spends 10
cents to dem a nd $10,000 ransom
for a little girl he som etimes
calls Ginger , threate ning· to
mutilate her, still was sought to-
day in a s tepped-up Costa Mesa
police manhunt.
He a ppare ntly went on a
malicious dialing spree Thurs-
day, calling at least (ive mothers
in northeast Co!'ta Mesa with his
perverted prank.
Now, according to police. he
haS obtained information about
eectaln younger c hildre n at
Sonora Efementary School in
oorthea~t Costa Mesa and is no
longer apparently dialing num·
be rs at random.
A woman whose slxt.h-grade
daughter attends Lindbergh
Etementant School ·waA also vic-
.timized Thursday, as police
logged at least sev.en s uch
telephone call s to fa mily hpmes.
Investigators 1aid in more tha n on e case, he claimed to have in
captivity . a little girl named
Ginger and -once -he did re·
ach a Woman with a child named
Oinaer.
She was spared the terror thpt
has atruck othc.r m;ers in the
..
• past, called periodically for two
years, because Sonora Elemen-
tary School administrators sent
home a note with pupils warning
of the new wave of annoying
calls .
The telephoned threats which
began Wednesday are being
handled as a m atler of ext portion
a f ederal o rfense sin ce
(See CALLS, ~age A2)
Outhouses
Burn ed Up
ROYAL.TON, Wis. <UPI J -
What's high s chool homecoming
without a fl a m ing outhouse or
two?
For the third time ~.days,
an outhouse was reported stolen
Thursday in Wisconsin. And, as
in the othe r two incidents, the
theft a pparently was a prank in
connection with hom ecoming
festivities.
Wa upaca County authorities
said the structur e was laken in
Royalton and found two hours
later on top of a woodpile to be
used for the Weyerhauest:r High
School hom ecomi g bon!ire. ~ \ . .
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By GA RV GRANVILLE
Of llM 0.11, P'li.11 SUtt
All fiv e m e mbers or the
Fullerton City Council and coun•
ty Super visor Ralph Diedrich are
among witnesses subpoenaed to
appear before the Orange County
Grand Jury next week to teU
what they know about an alleged
bribery solicitation.
Neither Diedrich nor council
members F'rances Wood, Robert
Ward, Duane Winters or Robert
Root were subjects of the in-
vestigation leading to next Wed·
nesday·s s ecret Grand Jury
hearing.
Central figures in the in-
ves tigation of the a ll eged
solicitation centering on a recent
F\Illerton City Council land use
decision are :
-Dr. William Brashears of
FUiierton, who won and then lost
city council approval of a rezon·
ing application to allow him to
build a high density con ·
dominium project on land pre·
viously zoned for single family
residenti al use .
-City rouncilman Charlelf
Phil~ps . the swing vote on a con·
(See BRIBERY. Page A2 )
Co ast
We ather
Variable high cloudiness
with hazy sunshine Satur-
day. Pa tchy night a nd mid-
morning low · clouds and
fog. Slightly coole r with
beach highs near 70 rising
to 80 inland.
I NSIDE TODA'°'
F'rom bucking bronc1 to . a
bluegrcu1 competition, there'1
a lot 8Cheduled to hoppn1. at
the Orange County ~air·.
ground3 lhi1 month: See~
CJ of loday's Weekender.
lll4lex
AtY-St>nkt ., ,.._,Trw .. ~ .. •1tlt1 ... •• ,.,.,,. ....... •• ""'""'"' Dl ·lt fMllMalNt-•• ...... <• Or""'f9c.-t' •• 0.1Mll"'4ket\ •• "'"" ., ..
·11 .......... .. -· .... --"" Slkll M1111t-...... "-· .. ; 'f•lt'ri ... <• ""'""• .. ,,._ <!·• ·--« _ ... •• , .. _ ...... " •• -N-cf~ ,., ... .. --
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or-VPllOT $ P:tld1y, October!, 19'15
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FORMER GOV. EDMUND G. 'PAT' BROWN (LEFT) CHECKS SCORECARD WITH WILL JORDAN
Mrs. Brown Looks on After Round of Golf on Costa Me•• Country Club Courae
Pat Brown
Tries Mesa
·-Golf Course
... Former California governor
Edmund G. ''Pat'' Brown and his
. wife visited Costa Mesa Thurs·
,• day to play golf and inspect the
.. ,results of a project started 10
years ago during his administra-
tion.
Brown, playing with Coun·
cilman Bob Wilson, turned in a
.score of 106 to Wilson's 90 at ·the
Costa Mesa Country Club while
Mrs. Brown, tearried with Coun-
.. .,cilman Will Jordan, shot a 95 to
.r ~ordan's91 .·
~· It was during Brown's ad-
l' ministration that the city of
· Costa Mesa, With the assistance
"t of Assemblyman Robert
• .Badham, acquired 256 acres for
· , the 36 hole pu_blie golf coUrse. i'he
city le-._es the property from1he
state for $10 per acre per year
and at the same time maintains
the property. The clubhouse ilJ
.,,..,.ttbytbe .cityof~'Mesa,
As a member of· the state
ecological committee, Brown
praiJed.the use of open space and
noted that the course '1is ·in
damned good_shape."
"Without this course here, this
land would be all houses and sub-
divisions," said Brown. "Costa
Mesa should be proud to have
plenty of open green space like this. .
Quake Rocks
Afghanistan
HONG KONG (AP)-Asevere
e.art.bquake was recorded from
thf: bor.der region between
Afghanistan and Pakistan today,
the Royal Hong Kong
Oboenatory reported.
A spokesman said the quake
measured 6.$ on the Richter
scale.
Tbe Riebter scale is a measure
~ CJ'Dlllld motioa as recorded on
seismographs. Every increase
~one aum.ber for ex.am_ele from
magnifude53" to magnitude 6.5,
means the ground motion Is 10
times ~eater.
. ORANGE COAST
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DAILY PILOT
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Chil,d Beater Gets
90-day Jail Term
Convicted child beater Sheila
Louise Lessley, formerly of San
ClemeDtJ!, has been sentenced to ·oo days in Orange County Jail for
failing to serve the 60-day term
she. drew on sentencing in Sep·
tember, 1974 .
Superior Court Judge.Kenneth
BRIBERY • •
troversial 3 to 2 council ballot
June 4 approving the rezoning
thatLwas rM.c.iaded-Sept. 2 on a
5-0 vote. 1 -Leroy Rose, a prominent
Anaheim architect and Fullerton
planning commissioner.
-Paul Wallich, a public rela-
tions consultant and atone time a
meinber of the Brashears' team
seeking the rezoning.
Along with the council mem-
bers, Diedrich', Fullerton City At-
torney Kerry Fox and the city's
planning and public works direc·
ton,· have been su.,poenaed to
testily at next week's hearing. ·
A Fullerton police sergeant
and district attorney investigator
John Gier have formed the two-
man investigation team that has
probed the alleged
bribery solicitation.
According to Diedrich, the in·
vestigators came to his office
several weeks ago to ask him
about a recent conversation· he
had with Brashears.
"I told them Br8shears had
come to me and said someone
was trying to put the arm on him
for a favorable rezoning,··
Diedrich said.
"My advice to Brashears was
for him, if he really believed so-
meone was ·putting the bite on
him, to go either to I.he district at·
tomey or Fullerton Police Chief
W~yne Bornhoft,'' the supervisor
added.
He said that earlier in the year
wh~n Brashears· zoning applica-
tion was bouncing back and forth
between the city council •and
planning commission Brashears
had asked him to intercede with
Phillips .
"J called Chuck and told him
that in my opinion it wasn't a bad
proposal but I am not a cily coun-
ciJman and the judgment was
Chuck's lo make," Diedrich said.
Diedrich and others involved in
the investigation who were in·
terviewed were at a loss to ex-
plain Ro:se's involvement in the
investigation.
On two city planning com·
mission votes on the rezoning,
one of which failed to carry, Rose
voted in favor of :the proposal
both times.
WaJlich apparenUy had a (aJl-
ing out with Brashears during
the city's five-mnonth delibera-
tioo of the rezoning application
and midway through the tussle
was dropped from the
Braaheara team.
The proposed rezoning ap·
proved in e.arly June by the city
~ncil touched off e referendum
drive 6y a group calling lt.elr
Tax.payer• Against Public
Giveaways,• referencetotbere·
development aspect or
Bnohean' proPQSal. •
'lbe or1anlzation succeeded in
obt:ainlng enough signatures on a
petition to place the council's de-
,cl1lon before the elet'torate,
Shortly · afterwards, I.he councif
reconsidered itl action and voted
5 too to r .. clnd lhe rezcnlna.
f
Williams imposed the jail time on
Mrs. Lessley, 20 , who was recent·
ly returned here from Arkansas.
She will serve three years proba~ .
tion on release from jail.
Mrs . Less ley was recently
cleared in Arkansas of murder
and arson charges filed when her
two children died in a fire that
destroyed the family 's mobile
home.
Arkausas officers said there
was reason to believe that Mrs.
Lessley sparked the fire that
killed her two sons, Jesse, 2, and
Audy. 2 months.
I',._ Page Al
CAL~ ...
telephone lines ar~ used -rather
than merely annoying calls. ,
The latter are governed by the
Calilorl"ia Penal Code and treat-
.eel only as misdemeanor of.
lenses.
Courts tradi(ionally force the
individual involved to obtain
psychiatric help and place them
on probation when they are
caught and convicted.
A Pacific Telephone Company
security spokesman said Thurs-
day that a whole group of men
who chronically make lewd or
threatening telephone calls are
known to Orange County law en-
forcement agencies.
lnv.estieators say they believe
the man harassing Costa Mesa
families is the same one who
went on such a spree in the south
county two years ago, with more
than 200 calls reported.
They say far more than 200
calls were undoubtedly placed
and never reported by victims at
the time.
Previously, the caller only
warned the individual telephoned
-generally a woman wilh
children, home alone during
daytime work and school hours
-that he had kidnaped her
daughter.
He would then describe vii('
acts he intended to perlorm on
the helpless child,'...but in the re·
cent outbreak of such calls, the
individual demands $10,000 for
her release.
The information flyer sent out
by the school following the first
incidents, and a report of a
strange man trying to obtain
family lnformaLion from
children there, has apparently
helped offset the panic and fear
he tries lo inspire.
He was abruptly rebuffed by
two women Thursday when he
called with his message and de-·
manded $10,000 to free their
daughters. ,
"Oh fine, I'll have it in just a
second," one replied:
''I only have 10 cents ."
snapped another mother.
''That ·s noL enough," the
sinister caller &aid, hanging up.
Descriptions of the caller's
voice and manner were uniform
in rePorU filed by annoyed and
angered women Thursday, ac-
cording to police.
He is quieJ, soft·spoken and ap·
parently comP.letely calm lb out-
lining his demAnda, but bis voice
aOWJds breathless, as though he
is sexually excited or had been
runftin1. the women sald.
Detective Sgt. Sam Cordeiro
said Thursday it is believed the
caller is middle·aged or older,
but some victims said It sounds
like he ii trying to disfl\llle his
volce.
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'State of Ml•d' ,.,... r.., At I
P . . CaseE ed TRIAL '... : a 'ttv ;v Prior "to atac'lng -be ..i-·w_w: J ~ IJ • ·~!~~~.,!-~e(~,.=~~:~:~
• -rt McDaniel i""'1nearly Ill
B P ·t · day Tbunday and·\lllfd w.,s.
Y . rosec. u o. , rs ::::cc::-Wtu:~·:::~.i;.~~ · Dr. llllchaefGoldlteili.
· ' GoldateiD, whoMrVedU,ICOD•
SAN FRANCISCO (APJ -M. On Tuelday, U.S. Dllt. COiltt aultlftt to t,he U.S. Qxnm!U!m
Patty Hearat'a payebologlcsl Judge Oliver J . Cari.r 111-1· on Oblcenlly and bu apent eilbt toou neared comp~)<!day, a eel to rule wheti.r Miu Hearst Is yeon conductlns. studies m the
delegation of federaI libd state mentally cbmpetent to be Cl'OIS"' effects of erotic ma~al on
prosecutors began plarminl their examined in t'O.art. Her attorneys adults and tbeJ-r-aeX ~ llYe1.
second "!lummit'' meetioc-onthe say she may be.on the.verie.of a testified that t.be:tttm1 are
increuingly complex c~ nervous breakdown and &bou1d ''educational andilMDeftcial'' for
The conclave, set tor WedDa·. be hospitalized. adults'sexllves.-----·-·
day, appears certain to concern Two. of three court-appointed The t•o sexy fUm• •-'"cive
legal ramifications of Mias prycbJatrists vJaited tbe J&Ued adults a chance to see aex a¢5
Heant'smentalstatua-heiress Thuriday. The )>a.b.el's they've beard about.'' accardJ.ng
written report.I on Mias Hearst's to the psychiat..rQ;t.
FrO. Page Al
BATTIN •••
the normal 60 days &~ally
conceded to be the safeguard
period on a defendant's constitu-
tional right to a speedy trial.
Now, however, Battin says he
wants more .. tim.e to prepare. bi$.
defense and to appeal to higher
courts to have the indictment
against him set aside.
Basis for his aJ)peal is a recent
state supreme co.Mrt decisioo that
· quashed an indictment because
the prosecutor had not told a
Grand Jury about evidence
which tended to point to the de-
fendant's innocence.
Battin said that decision.
which does not yet have the effect
of being law, has a·bearingon his
case.
His attorney", Matt Kurilich,
will argue in Judge Oliver's
courtroom today that Battin was
denied constitutional safeguards
by the G.ran·cf Jury''a • action'S'
against him.
Specifically, Kurilit!h will con-
tend that his client was denied
bis right to confront his accusers.
tocros11 examine witnesses and to
present evidence "paint to his in·
nocence. ,
· Last week, when Judge Oliver
denied the earlier Battin appeal
for him to quash the indictment,
the judge said Kurilich would be
given 15 minutes today to st'ate
his case.
OespileJ.he last minute flurry
of lt"gal maneuvers aiming at 3
trial delay, Battin said Kurilich
will be prepared lo begin hls de·
fense Monday when ·the trial is
still scheduled tO bea;in .
As yet, the Santa Ana
s upervisor has not asked the
Orange County Superior Court to
set his trial date back.
"1 don't t,hink the court will
give me the time. of day let alone
a continuance on the trial.'' Bat~
tin said to explain the reason for
his failure to petition the ·court
for a delay in his trial.
mental state Were beina pre-"Seeing the ffil1111 ia • de·
pared and cOuld ·be i\l.bmitted to sensitization process by Which
the judge today or Monday. peoples' anxieties .,.... redllced
through repeat~d erposure,"
Carter bas saJd he will seal the
reports until after he has studied
~empriYataly-• · . .
It was uncertain whether a
decluation of mental incom·
0
MRS. HEARST
COlilDEMNS'MEDIA-AS
petency in federal court would
prevent state prosecutors from
procee'dlng with their cases
against Miss Hearst.
Goldstein said. •
He Said viewing the sexually
explic·it film• ·may be an
alternative way to 1olvln}l
people's _sex problems. Rat.bi.iltr
than ba1'i·ni to ident1£~
themselves as people with Mir.
problems and coming to a sU
clinic for treatment by a doctor.
they can be helped through fill""
oCthis nature, he said. .
And, for persons without sex
problems, tbe two films in ques-
tion are definitely ''en.tertaiD·
Chare:es against !tfjss Hean:t ing,' •in the doctor's opinion.
and SLA members William and "Sexual slimulatiori is ent•4
Emily Harris are multiplying. A ta.ining for a"dults,'' he explained..
Los Angeles grand jury Thurs· Goldstein ·cited numerous
day indicted the trio on armed studies by himself and his col·
robbery, assault and kid.nap leagues that show there are
charges. "minimal effects on actual sex.-
In another development Thurs-ual behavior'' from watchilsg erotic movies. day, an official co'nfmned that a Studies s how that married
"memoir" written by William couples experience. a slight in· Harris was among evidence i • eathered whea be wu an;ated. cre;us~ i.n se~ act!y ty W.it.tlW 24
The more "than 13-page hoursotvl'e~i!lgrucb.mms,but _
. manuscript reportedly indica~ that the act1v1ty returns to. the
that Harris was one of the men normal level. after that .time I ~ 'tidaiped M'ISS '!~"',on ., r,t.'.r•r.::i=~w:-~ir Feb .. 197(. . . y I !f • "1 • • a1' . -., ,. DOl ; ' ·, ' ·"\ ••nont .-e~ ~ ·
.. .., • ·:-'.,~~. ~ 1 ..... ~ ~ n~e'lf.fri'\Y'1@ie f-e.~,a~ y.ey 'Di.... · , · · viewqalh••ci;een,~•"ld. . .µuOze 'Banned.-Will>·•iJ11le;peop1estuilied.,~e
•• ·-:t · · l • , "r q:lly 11Cniflc~ cbana:e wu mat
On P I ~>; -~ I, .,,the)I 'talked more ,abou~ 1ex
• , Jl'tl V.8 ; , ,.;thin 11/~24·bouf~nod,,
• ; . ~ti '·~ '('.: {, '{~1 \. ,•:·~•.•u nlt mcrease ,ln,sex " ,, • .; •).. ·t, • · aCUViU': ''™"" t,here WJ'4 .a re·
PORT MORESBY. P~~"' gy!ar, iU..Uoned:se•:parthet, be Gum. (UPIJ -" N.Wly.~· · said. · . ; " •; \. .
ctent Papua -.Ne.W Guinea W 1 · • .l.:.' .i.,. •
nOtmcect today~tiit the!'SaJe .~ · '1 "-•"':'"'· • •
alcoholic beverages will be Teen Girl Cut forbidden on paydays .
Parliament passed by a 42·14·
vote a measure providing an un-
iform poy day throughout the na-
tiona and prohibiting alcohol on
such days.
Deputy Dennis Y ~· ""bo in·
troduced the measuie, satd too
many tarililies suffered because
husbands and fathers drank
away all their money on payday.
Lamp~al_~
SOUTHLAKE.TAHOE CAPJ -
A teen-aeed girl Was in stable
condition Thursday following
surgery to repair a cut suffered
when she was· hit by a boat pro--.
pellerin Lake Tahoe. · .
Authorities said ~eraldine
Peters, 15, of South Lake Tahoe.
sustained a large slash on the
side of her chest.
-'!"'\'I'"!' •ri-,,. ••
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All )amps specially reduced for you.
Choose from such well known lines as -
Stiffe) Fredric Cooper
Marbro Knob Creek
Design Gild Chapman
• and many more
DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-KARASTAN-6AKER
WlllDA TS I SA TUIDA Ts't:vo .. S:JO •
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NEWPORT BEACH'"'"• 1727 Wt:S<CU>' .. DR., MZ•3110
LAGUNA BEACH•
3U NUHT\1 ~'IW>T llW y .• <tl·a.it
.. TORRANCE• 23119 HAWTl!ORNE BLVD.
C{)ptn f'ri . til 9, Sun. U·J:JO) , 31~1119
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• '1119~· SS ID .. _, .. ..,.
ls .... , ..... ,!JL
c p\"'Gbll'"fi '! Thn write Pot •
'!·Par .,ur cur-,,d ktpr. ott rM
ana:wer• arid ac-
tlo1t '°" ntf'( ta aol~ l~tk.1 in
govtr11menl arid •
bt1:•ine11 . Mdll
JIOur qwatiou lo · •
Par 01111n 'Al
Your Serol~e .
or:angt Coott
Dollu PUot. l>.O.
Hai' Js6o. Costa
r.t .. a. CA ?7f74, j.ncl•d.<-uaur
elepho~ number. . ... ___ , ...
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• The Subject b l..ahr
-• ,t) DAILYPILDT •
t
Hurd Sentenced
To Life Term
llyTOM BARLEY '" ....... " .......
COnvicted kUler Steven Cralc
Hurd was sentenced lo ·Ille in •
state prison ThuMKlay for the
l<illlngs of Mission Viejo teacher
--.Florence N_ancy Brown and
service station attendant Jerry
_ Wayne Carlin.
" Manacled band and foot, the
bushy-haired transient diaOlayed
-oo-etmot.lon u Orenae CcUnty
Superior Court Judge Fraak:
Domenic.hini ruled that he could
serve both life terms concur-
rently.
"'_Judge Domenicbini also as-
aured defense attomey William
Gamble that he will recommend
to the Department of Corrections
that Hurd, 25, be allowed to serve
his sentence in the state's facility
for~-the criminally insane at
Vacaville. ·
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DEAR PAT: Have you ii.ad any
c0mplata11 or lnquln.. about the
Unioa Jl'idelity Life Insurance
Co. of •Pblladelphia?-l've re-
Cei1'ed '•dverti1ln1 brochures
from this company in the mail
and I'm curious because they are
telling a policy just for cancer in-
surance. No phYsJcal examlna·
_ tfon la requlr'4 and every\hlaC is
handled bf m.ail. Benefits, -er. will nol be paid until at
lfflt four months aft.er a client's
application. • 11 this company
Getting together al the opening session of
the AFL-CIO's six-day convention in San
Francisco a.re (from left), Gov. Edmunc(
G. Brown Jr., AFL-CIO president George
Meany and San Francisco Ma,yor Jo..,ph
Alioto. Top items on the convention agen-
da are this year's economy and next
yea,r's politics.
H1:1-rd has already served two
long terms •S a mentally incom-
petent defendant since he was ar-
rested In late 1970 and chsrged
with the murders of Mrs. Brown,
31, of El Toro, and Carlin, 21, of
Santa Ana.··
. • a.lty,... ..........
LIFE IN-PRISON
Devll Kiiier tt<ml
drove to a PTA meet.inc. leli.Umate? ~
T•e Calllor•la :~~:::: .Counti.,· ans Pick ·Up Tab?
PGllcy Service llarea• ftpGrtl
Oal U•lo~ Fidelity Life
But a jury in Judge_
Domenichini's courtroom ruled
Oct. 2 that Jlurd was sane when
he co~mitt.ed both murders and
that both were first deeree.
Gamble _said after the brief
sentencing .. session that he has
not yet decided it he will app4?al
the conviction. He also indicated
thal the appellate chore, if such a
decision is made, could fall to
another attorney.
It was testified that her body
was l•ter buried off the Ortega
Highway after the gang wrapPed
.her in a blanket and propped her
between them for a freeway ride
interrupted when a CalifonUa
Highway Patrolman halted the
vehicle. · llllanBce c. ... •k • td .,y the R . Co 1w c $7.'<"IA ooo·
•• ""'"' i. , .... •awr·c. No epairs tO urt use to ost ,-'iv, . GUier A YS 11a,aJ.ries or com· The wagon was allowed to re·
sume its journey aft.er a brief
questioning or the other occu-· pllllf!ll •a•e liei!ii i'i!<elffd alloul 11 -GARY GRANVILLE
· 1111• firm.I Ualoa Fidelity's 1 ••n.11.,,. ........ eW•tOmer 1er1'lce division County taxpayers probably
IP*n•a• aid tlriat tills po1tey•s will have. to foot the esUmated
appUc•tlon ·form •~ '•Have $720,000 bill to repair the
JW~lta caac~r-!"lfadairn damaged West Orange Couq.ty · ._..be mede, prewiola ldltory · Municipal Courthouse, accord-
of eaaeer !,or ••Y otlle'r mb~ mg to county l:ounse1 Aanan '
1ephae•latlon •oldl beDOllll. All Kuyper. ~ dalm1 an·aoroqlilJliJft!llllat:;---in-a-report sent to the Board of
ec1·uctcantermastbedtac-ed Supervisors Thursday, Kuyper
· IJI days .after the eft'ec:tlve date said the county bad three years
. of tile piellCy before aAf bellte8ta from when the building damage
areiNlled.• was first noticeable to a "re· .. L ' ason.able·man" to file a lawsuit to
r-o. 1 recOver repair costs. P-...P. ..... And the Jllowa]lle three-year
. , · period went by the boards in
_DEAR 1PAT: I would like to March or Apr.ii of this year,
have some prints made from the Kuyper reported.
passparl1:.photo my deceased · "The county"s action, if any,
husband nad taken in 1953. I could have bee~ against the
believe tbe photo was taken at architect for negligent design,
the Hope Studio in San soils engineer for negligent in-
Bemardido. I know this was a vestigation or the contractor for
loo&'Ume-ago, but a friend said negligent construction," accord-
. that passport photo negatives are ing to Kuyper's report.
tept for Years. I want the extra "There are some indications of
prints m~de to give tQ IDY son and . negli,ence by all three Coontrac-
daughter. Will 'you see how I tor, So'ils engineer and
s hould •o about bavlne this architect)," he added.
done? Wl)oev~r is at fault, the $1 .1
J .R.,NewportBeach million courthouse built in 1968
has been severely damaged, ap-
parently as a result of a settling
action fint noticed in April , 1972.
· Bapel!&adlo,laao~lablul·
-. bai Cal' a Cam-Inc., 1770 ~ . ~ewpo~, Costa Mesi, can make
coplea <If t!>e or11taal puspert
photo wlUM>at • negative. The reprblts~may not have tbe same
darlly 's l~e original, bul Ibey
· will be lid.table to &Ive to your son
anddauiltter.
DEAi,\ PAT: My roother gave
me a set of cookware that she'd
purchased . years ago from a
door-to-:tioor '·salesman. I need replac~ent liandles,and;l don't
know how to con_t-a'ct the
manufacturer. ·
·Engineers have suggested that
the slippage can be halted by pre-
ssure pumping concrete un-
derfOot1ng beneath 61 pilings
that suJ)port the building.
They believe the unusual settl-
ing is caused by peat bogs com-
mon to the Westminster civic
center area.
Kuyper's report to the
supervisors didn •t clear the coun·
ty of all blame for the costly
damage \o the 7-year-old $1 .1
million courthouse.
''The county approved the
plans and specifications. If t~e
contractor built according to the
plans, there is no liability on the
cop tractor,'' be reported.
Kuyper also noted that for as
yet unknow.n res.sons the
courthouse was'built 220 feet easl
or the construction site originally
selected.
"The relocation had to ·be
made either at the. request of or
with the concurrence and consent
of the county,·· according to
Kuyper.
"Soils tests were not made for
the relocation site. ~The soils
engineer advised that the condi-
tions would be the same and that
nq_ test.S were required. Evident·
ly, the architect agreed and the
county did not require additional
soils exploration.··
''This omission, probably
justified at the time, could be
legally damaging to any lawsuit
rued by the county I •• Kuyper COD•
tinued.
-"In our opinion, the reasonable
profitability of a recovery of
damages in this matter is too
small to justify the costs or pre-
paring and . bringing an action:•
he concluded.
Defense Spending
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Defense spending limits con-
tinued their upward spiral as the
House Thursday passed a $112-
billion defense budget bill.
Though the appropriation is $9
billion less than recommended
by President Ford, it provides
about $6 billion more foi-the year
ending June 30 than for the pre-
. vious 12 months.
· L.R., Costa Mesa
You neglected lo mmtlon lbe
••e of·tlae muUfadarer, bat
'yov qae1Uatt la w freq11entJy
Mked. by 1otlaer nMen, eften
wltlloet e• .. lh, •roiuct tden-
tlflcatloa fer traitl•I· tr the
coc*ware ••• p•relliued from a
·door·&o.door 1alesm-, ...npla~
me11t soaree1 m97 be reqaeRed
from the Dlred 8dlillc Auod•
lloa, 1731M8$. N.W., Wu•lapae
DC-. If lbe original pattbae wu m·ade at a ret.U store,-belp
may be ollhlHd frem .--al
Cookware •••.,•d•ren A1-10Clatloa. llos D, l'-...a, WI
51125.
'Dial Booker'
Radio Vice Ring Cracked
DOWNEY CUP() -A "dial-a·
booker'' ring dispatched pro-
stitiites by radio, like taxis, to'
customers' homes and hotels
throughout Southern California,
Police said Thursday.
The operation took in $14,000 a
week on its ~ut of $25 per
customer Police said Richard. C. Camp, 29, was ar-
rested on suspicion of pan-
~Vasectomy: Answer . ' .
;, Or :-More Prqhlem?
• • • For weekend ~ead•rsof the Dal-
: ly Pilot, these features will be
.. : amdn1-''SUnday'sBest": ~ •
(suN~.A Y'S BEST)
: MALE SURGERY -Vasec-.l tomy,theoperationthatsterillzes HELPINGTHEMSELVES -A ,~ a man, can be a 1oluticm or just groyp of Vietnamese refugees Z: • IDOther problem in tbe complex froin Camp Pendleton have pro-i/. . collection of issues invol1'illg posed that a ''Vietnamese ~' birtbantrol.Wlwedaexandotber Hamlet'' be built to facilitate the
subjeeta. Daily Pilot Staff Writer integration of refugees into
l Tom Barley takea oo the aubj~ American SOfi~ty. ·E.cerpts ol a
;. In leadolf articles for the YOU letter from Area No. 08, Tent 52D ., ..... wilJ appear on the Editorial
• Pages.
-: .,; MROHITO'SJOB-Whllethe p ._.....,Japan la keeping his H 0 R s E B A c K 1N-79ar-old promise lo visit the 'CINDERELLA'-Areally"got-. '& ;Uult.s SI.ates, some atbome are· it-together•• Orange Coast
• calllnc for him to reslp his Job" teenaier la making the most or
ond hbt return t.o lbe.~wbeD nearly seven years of showing
'be -back lo J-'. Back· . horses aod, al age 14, ls about to
•: pwndatort .. IM-his lackletheblc-timecompetilionat
• -118 and bl1 polltla to i'Old in the Forum International Horye
• · -lal United p,..,.. lnlarna• 1 Show. Jt'1 thlll week's "horsl\I,\
tionaldlapatch. 1
.. • Around" feature. \
•
deting. "Whatever els~ he m·ight
be, this guy Camp is a first rate
buiinessman.~ · a detective said.
The operation employed about
20 prostitutes and nine telephone
operators to run two "com-
munications centers ·· in
Lakewood and Hawaiian
Gardens and had a fl eet of
limousines throughout Los
Angeles and Orange Counties,
said detective John Abbey.
The ring's -services were ad-
vertised in underground
newspapers as "massage in your
home." Prospective clients were
subjected to a thorough credit
and background check, Abbey
said, and Camp had a file or 4,000
names, addresses, telephone and
SoCial Security numbers, credit
ratings ftQm legitimate ci-edit
bureaus and sexual "desires and .
peculiarities.''
Customers would c"1) the com-
mlll\ications centers and, after
they were chec!ked, the operators
• would consult the file to match
the client's desires to a girl with
the proper ''specialty'' available
inhis area, Abbey said.
Orders went out by "beeper"
signal systems and radio
telephones to women waitinc in
litnousines throughout the area
"from Malibu to Irvine,•; Abbey
said, and they would responc;l to
the call. 1•
While they were at work, the
chauffeur. who received $10 a
trip, kept track or incoming calls
for other assignments.
The women kept their "tips" or
frorn $50 to $150, the detective
said.
Two similar -but larger -
rings were belie¥ed to be or>erat·
ing ~the area, palice said.
•
Many of Kuyper's findings
were based on a study un -
dertaken bY Converse, l)avis,
Dixson Associatt.ls.
The main purpose of the con-
sultant's study was to determine
when the courthouse damage
''would have become sufficiently
appreciable to a reasonable man
for him to realize that a founda-
tion problem e:xisted."
"By April, 1972, there hod been
six work requests for maHunc-
tions of the same door in Division
Six (courtroom)." the consul-
tants noted.
·Apart trom passible appellate
action, the sentencing .closes a
file that was first opened on June
2, 1970, when attendant Carlin
was practically decapitated by
an ax wielded by Arthur Craig
'"Moose" Hulse, then 16.
Hulse, the 300-pound strong
man of the gang of (I.rug using
drifters led by Hurd. killed and
robbed Carlin while Hurd looked
on and. it WQS testified, urged
Hulse to greater efforts. ·
Hulse was later sentenced to
life in state prison £or the killing
Of Carlin.
pants. .
It was further alleged during
Hunt's trial that be cut out por-
tion::; of Mrs. Brown's body and
devoured them in what was
described as a ritualistic tribute
to Satan.
Hurd repeatedly testified dur-
ing the five years before he was
brought to trial that Satan was
his father and that his actions in
June, 1970, as on many other'OC-
casions, were dictated by the
devil.
Indians Rioting
1.
ln Januarv. 1972. a repair or· der issued at the court.house said,
"Many, many cracks in walls.
Framing around window is
cracked away from the building
allowing cold air in ......... "
It was in 1971 that a $1 million
wing was added to the ill-fated
courthouse, bringing the coun-
ty's totaJ investment in the build-
ing to about $2 .2 million.
R~ently it w.as reported that
signs of damage have begun to
appear in the.addition. ,
Three other members or the
gang drew prison terms for their
role in the "devil cult" slaying 24
hours later of Mrs. Brown. All
three, free on parole five years
after the killing , testified against
Hurd and described his Man.son·
like control of the gang.
Mrs. Brown, a teacher, was
knifed to death by Hurd after her
station wagon was halted on San
Canyon Road in Irvine ~ she
_MADRAS, India (AP> -Police
fired bullets and teargas today at
a stone -throwing mob of
mourners attending the crema·
tion or political boss· Kumaraswami Kamaraj. More
than·70 persons were reported in-
jured. The caus~ of ·the riot was
not immediately known . . , .
1hls Week Specials
• IMP.TIENS
•ASPARAGUS FERN
• DOUBLE Plti'K BEGONIA
• VINCA • FELICIA
• MARGUERITES
• RICHMONDENSIS
•MUMS
PETUNIAS
Re<J.
69' 29c
SHADE & 1L o 99~ FRUIT TREES 72: A1LGALSIZE
HG. $Z.2' ............. MOW
~~~~~~-'--~~~~
2V2" POTTED
PLANTS 5 FOi s1oo
--HOUSE l'LAHT DU'T.
, !!~!~~ ............ MOW 59c
I CITRUS TREES
EMERALD
RIPPLE
1 .......
...
7.tl
ALL SCOTTS
PRODUCTS .._, ..... _....., .......
s3"
20%
off
HG. $10.•S ............ MOW $695
. ~9.hllt' .. 1
.Y!.MOW s3~T
PANSIES ':.-:.~c 49c
PLANTER s129
HOUIS:
DAIJ 7:J0.6:00
5-loyM S:JD
•E
2123 NEWPORT Bl.VD.
COSTA MESA • 646-3925
-. . -
MIX ... I.ti
J. _ -
I
.\
•
J
I
J
•
-
44 DA11,VPILOT
I
•
' Frl91Y.OctOOW!, 1975
"'.:'
T11rkey Applauds E ~go IJ(t i
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -Turkey today
... welcomed the easlne of the U.S. arms em·
batgo but indicated It would not lead t&an
immediate reactivation. ot U.S. mWtary
bases on Turkish soil.
There was no immediate comment from Greece.
ol M •• IW ~ .... ~I.be em bar to TllrUl''• air force a(. HouH 91 ttepre1entatlveo wu "a step In Tbe.b,W allowln&llhlpment .,_m on ~-cOllSlderably -lack of 1paro , the. positive dlrection but It does not "'wth Ot America.a we:apooa to Turkey, In·
alto(ethereUmlnate the previous unjU!l de-tludlnc"24 Pbut.om )eta, WAI approved Z3T ~a Ylctory fQ;r. the fl>rd aclmto'ratr.uo.,
clslon." to 178. • wlllch bod soufht ror montbl to""' Ille --' Forelan Minister Ihsan Saprl Tbeembar1owulmJ)Oledby~• bar-t.beHouucave237\017'.._al ;
Coglayan1ll laid reactlvoUon or the rune· la.st February becaUIO ol Turlcey'• -or nulilday nlgbt lo. bUl allowlnl Tllrt07 to •
Uone of Ille U.S . baa .. wu "out ofthe que•· American.1upplled anm In ltll lnvaalon of '"••the arms. tion " and that the Hou.se vote was only the Cyprua 14 mObthJ ·aco. • ~
b\lg{Mln1 "for ,elimlnatln& the shadow ~When Concress retused to ease'the em-The approval marked the ninth time the
which has fallen on TurldJb·Amerlcan rel a-barco last July Turkey retaliated by 1U1· Houle bad voted on I.be Issue since the •m-
tlons." pendlna all operallonll on U.S. military In· bar10wulmPo•edlnFet;ruily ••
'
Nice G_uys
Finish First
1!11 NICOSIA. capital of CypJ1!S, riot·
police manned barbed wire-barricades
erected across alt approach r.oads to tile
U.S. Embassy to guard against any de·
monstrations over the easing of the em·
bargo.
Turkey's deputy premier. Turban
Feyziogly. said the vote Thursday by the
INFORMED SOURCES said any change otallfttlone, 10verelv curtallin• America's 'lbo'Serlaie bod· aJreacly paued a llmUu
In tlle1>ases' presMn!llUii would have to Intel 4enceca.therin(ontheSovletUnlon. bill, and today accepted tbe ~""17.t ..
11 be taken up in nea:oUationa between the two ments and sent the measure to "'\-
countries f'br a new joint defense agree· MORE TUAN 'IO percent of Turkey's· Ford. Theactiontookoae.minute. '.. •
ment. _______ m!!!!!il'!!ll!!•'!:lYLleQ~ul!J~~m!!!en!!:l:_i~s~of~Am~~·r1~ca~n~o!!r1~Cl!!il!.: • ..::c:.:.:.... · · ·
1
: i
SWEETNESS & LIGHT:
Laguna Beach is now searching
for a new police chief. The City
Council this week apparently de-
cided they want ta go for a really
nice guy for the job.
Laguna needs a new chief
because the in cum bent, Frank A.
Schopen, will retire Jan. 4. You
have to hope that Chief Schopen
doesn't take offense to the new
job descrir>tion for his spot.
Hoffa Crunched
In Compactor?
I'm certain the Laguna coun-
cil, in its infinite wisdom, did not
intend to imply that the present
chief isn't a nice guy.
Anyway, it was Councilman
Charley Boyd who said Laguna
s hould se'arch for a new principal
peace officer, who "has a benign
and not a harsh image." Council
merribers Phyllis Sweeney and
Jon Brand seemed to agree. And
that's a majority on the Art
Colony council.
NOW YOU ARE LEFT to
wonder precisely what the coun·
cil wants in a new chie£? Do they
want a guy with a penchant £or
pasteJ.colored shirts? Should he
go for suede shoes rather than
black boots? 1\.1 aybe his pistol
should have pale ivory handle
grips and a barrel scrolled with
cupids and hearts.
Before you get giggling too
hard over a ll this, you should
know there is historic precedent
for benign police c hi efs in
Laguna. I can personall)"' re·
member several.
There was one chief who you
might not have considered kindly
by his looks. He wore an am-
munition belt with a Smith &
Wesson revolver hanging off of it
that looked like a cannon. He was
attired in high black boots. He
always wore the same kind of
shirts-oli ve drab military twill .
BUT HE WAS KINDLY. He de-
monstrated it one Halloween
when a Laguna football star -
who C!Onsidered himself rather
fleet of foot -was happily eg-
' ging some houses fl-om the mid·
die of the street.
· The chief snuck upon him. "All
right, Robert,'' he roared,
"you're under arrest."
DETROIT CAP) -Sources
have confirmed that FBI agents
are investigating whether the
body of ex·Teamstcr::i president
James R. Hoffa was stuffed in a
trash compactor and hauled away by a Mafia.organized
sanitation com pan)'.
The trash co-mpactor is al the
RaJeigh M.owe restaurant, less
than five miles rrom the parking
lot of another restaurant where
Hoffa was last seen July 30.
THE FIRM THAT picks up the
trash every Friday at the
Raleigh House in Sou!Jlfield just
north or Detroit is Central Sanila·
tion Services Inc. of Hamtramck,
incorporated last year by Raf·
faele •'Jimmy Q'' Quasarano and
Dominic Corrado, reputed Detroit Mafia figures.
Guerrilla.s
Arrested
In Bel/a.st
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
CAP> -Police rountled up sus-
pected Protestant guerrillas in
Belfast early today after 12
persons, most of them Roman
Catholics, were kille d in Northern Ireland's bloodiest
day in nearly four years.
THE TOLL WAS the heaviest
of any day since "Bloody Sun·
day," Jan. 30, 1972, when British
paratroops killed 13 Roman
Catholics after a civil rights
march in Londonderry.
The incorJ>Qration 'papers fall
to make clear which o(two reput·
ed Detroit Mafia figures, each
named Dominic Corrado, is in·
valved in the company. The
latest annual report dropped the
names of Corrado and
Quasar a no .
FBI agents last month inspect.
ed the 40·cubic ·yard compactor
in.stalled by Central SanitationE
the Raleigh House. said Jam s ·
Joseph, general manager pf t
banquet hall. Joseph told re·'-----">
porters the FBI said their in ·
quiries wt:re in connection with
the Hoffa case.
"JNFORMATJON concerning
the Raleigh House has come to
us in a good usable fashion ,"
8aid Robert Ozer. head of the
U.S. Organized Crime Strike
Force, which is probing llo££a's
disappearance. "We're prepared
to go forward with it to wherever
it might next take us.··
Joseph said the compactor is
red from inside the restaurant
through a hole in the wall and ··a
machine grabs it, pulls it in and
compacts it." The trash is taken
to a nearby landfill, a Central
Sanitation spokesman said.
The Detroit Free Press report.
ed the FBI is investigating
whether Hoffa might have been
killed at the Raleigh House.
which .iJ 4 1h miles south of the
M·achus Red Fox Restaurant
where the ex·Teamsters boss
was last seen more than two
months ago.
Empress Meets Star
Mrs . Betty Ford introduces movie star Ginger Rogers to
Empress Nagako of Japan at Was hington reception.
Emperor Hirohito and President Ford are in back·
ground talking to other guests at White House fete.
Spaghetti Hostag~
Freed After 5 Days
LONDON (U PIJ -Six
hostages held captive by three
j:unmen in the basement
storeroom of an Italian
restuarant (or five days were re·
leased today , but the trio's
rioJJeader shot himself in the
st6mach rather than surrender to
police.
were coming out, .. he said. The
captives then trooped out one by
one, wrapped in red blankets and
unshaven.
They were followed by the two
gunmen.
Robert took one look at the
chief with a ll that heavy artillery
hanging from hi s body and
figured he wasn't under auest
yet. Our gridiron hero took off
sprinting. The chief, aJas, took
off sprinting after him. Down the
middle of the street they went. It was a sight.
The police refused to say i:u>w
many persons were brought)tn,
but all were believed to be mem.-
bers of the Ulster Volunteer
Force CUVF), one of the biggest
of the private Protestant armies.
Officials believed the UVF.c:ar·
ried out most of t~e att&eka
Tbur.sday in retaliation for 30
bomb attacks last week by the
Catholic guerrillas of the Irish
Republican Army's provisional
wing.
THJS IS THE second time
Quasarano's name has come up
in connection with the Hoffa in-
vestigation. Earlie-r, the FBI
made inquiries as lo wbeth!!r
Quasarano and another reputed
mob figure, Peter Vitale, had
met with ..,cqrrent Teamsters
'President Frank E. Fltasimmons • iO Detrcit four or five days.before Holr~ dropped· from· sight. No
such meeting bas been pin-
poii:tted.
The six Italian captives filed
out of the Spaghetti House
Restaurant shortly aft.er 4 a.m.,
looking tired and drawn but ap·
parently in good condition. Two
of the gunmen followed aboul 20
minutes later and surrendered to
police.
Police then entered the base-
ment and found Davis lyine on
the floor of the :-:tore room with a
stomach wound. He was re·
mOved on a stretcher and taken
by ambulance to St. George's
Hospital, a few hundred yards
from the restaurant.
A spo~esman at St. George's
Hospital aaid the bullet was re-
moved from Davis'sstomach. THE CHIEF RAN ·HJM
DOWN. Caught him, despite the
handicap·of ammo beJt and can-
non. He humiliated that boy in
front of his peers. But the chief
proved right there how kindly he
was.
He did not tackle the lad on the
pavement. He just grabbed him
by the scruff of the neck and
haided him off to jail.
The lesson was that rione of the
young lads of Laguna ever ran
from that police chief again.
Even if he was kindly.
NOW, APPARENTLY,
Laguna will get another nice guy
for police chief. You are re·
minded, however, what the great
baseball manager Leo Durocher
said about nice guys. 'Ibey finish last.-
That might not be too great if
you 're chasin1 a bank robber.
The Catholics struC!k back
Thursday night. The bullet-
riddled body or a man believed to
have been a Protestant was
found in 3 Belfast street.
Gunmen in South Belfast shot a
39-year..old Protestant man in
the leg. Three stores owned by
Protestants were bombed in
Armagh, 35 miles southwest of
Belfast, and three poliC!emen
·were WQWlded . Four fU'med men
bombed a Protestant garage in
Coleraine, 60 miles northwest of the: capital.
THURSDAY'S loll raised the
number of confirmed dead in
Northern Ireland's Protestant·
Catholic civil war to 1,331 since
August 1969.
SiampCost
Up Dec. 28
WASffiNGTON CUP!) -
The priC!e for mailing a
one-ounce first <:!lass letter
will io up from 10 cents to
13 cents Dec. 28, the Postal
Service says.
The rate for post cards
will rise from 7 to 9 cents.
Parcel post rates wiU go up
'about 10 percent.
. The air mail rate will
hse from 13 to 17 cents for
the first ounce, but it is on
the way out. The Postal
Service expects by Oct. 11
to be sending all intercity
tint class ruail by air at
the regular rate if distance
warrants it.
A SHOT THEN rang out from
the cellar prison. Police rushed
in and found Franklyn Davis, the
gang's leade r, with a self·
inflicted stomach wound.
Scotland Yard described
Dayis·s condition as "serious but
not critical."
"I spoke to the hostages very
briefly," said police commander
Cristopher Payne. ''They
managed to raise a smile. I
thought they seemed in re·
markably good shape.''
After a quick checkup at
nearby St. George's Hospital the
hostages were a llowed to go
home. Hospital authorities said they all appeared little worse for
their ordeal.
PAYNE SAID the end of the
siege began with a banging on
the storeroom well -a signal
that the gunmen wanted lo say
something.
"Then a little while later we
heard Davis say the ~ostages
POLICE SAID the two other
gunmen were being allowed to
sleep in separate cells at Cannon
Row Police Station and will JlOt
be questioned until they are fully rested.
Nader Seeking
GM 'Precall'
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Ralph Nader's Center for Auto
Safety said today it wants to
know how crashworthy is the
new General Motors Chevette,
and until it can tirid out there should be a "precall. '•
The center said in a statement
that because General Motors has
had more than 25.5 million cars
recalled for safety related de·
fet'ts in the pa.st eight years, the Ch~vette bears studyi.ng.
Mideast j ~
Observer
BidOK'd
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Howe International Relations
Committee unanlr110¥5ly voted
today to send 200 Ao:ierican ob-'.
.. rvers to the Sinai Desert lo.
watch over the recent Arab--
Israeli agreement. The relQl,u. '
tioo will go to the full .llouse for a
vote next week.
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissingei-, working to break the
administration deadlock with
Congress over secret agreements
( JN SHORT J
for U.S. aid to Israel and Eopt.
was scheduled to testify before
the Sen»tte Foreign Relations
Committee later.
The House C!ommittee voted
24-0 for a resolution to send the
U.S. civilian teC!hnicians into the
Mideast to monitor the intklm
Sinai accord betwun Egypt and
Israel.
Fra11eo l'oac
MADRID (UPI)
Generalissimo Francisco Fran·
ro·s government tOday reaf-
firmed its intention to execute
any persons convicted of police
sJayings despite worldwide pro-
tests against the firing squad de-
aths last Saturday al five men
convicted of killing policemen.
Legal soqrces estimate that as
many as 40 suspects now being
held in jail' could race military.
eourt-martials under the ter-
rorist law. No new trial da.tea
have been announced.
Kls9'11ger DeadU11e
WASHINGTON !AP)
Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss-
inger has until Oct. 15 to turn
over a secret memorandum sub·
poenaed by the House in·
telligence committee or face a
new.confrontation with the pan.el ..
Chairman Otis G. Pike CD· N.Y.), said the committee voted
9 to ·2' Thursday to subpoena a
State Department memorandum
alleging that the department
mismanaged the Cyprus crisis last year.
Kissinger has refused to pro·
vide the memo and bas barred
lower-level officials from testify-
ing on recommendations they
make on U.S. policy decisions.
Poat Edltf-Old
WASHINGTON. (AP) -The
Washington Post printed an ab-
breviated morning edition today
at six area plants folJOWfng a one~
day shutdown due to a sabotage.
marted Strike by pressmen.
Although the Post missed its premidnigbt early edition press
nm, a 24-page edition -one-
forth the norm al site -was de-
livered downtown early today.
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'Inexcusable'
Sub Skipper Given Bad Mark
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WASHINGTON CAP) -Others
may think it was funny for•a go.
go dancer to perform on the deck
or a submarine, but not the
. Navy's top a~m,ral .
., ADM . JAMES L. Holloway III ·~ ~ announced solemnlY Thursday
that Cmdr. Connelly Stevenson's
conduct was ''inexcusable" in al·
lowing dancer Cat Thtch to do
UPIT .......
· her topless act on the deck or the
submarine Finback.
Holloway, chief of naval opera·
lions, found the veteran-skipper
guilty of 'falling to exercise pro-
per judgment, violating regula·
lions and "permitting an action
whJch could have distracted the
attention of those retpoll!ible tor
the sate navigation of the
nuclear-powered submarine.••
Holloway softened the
penalties recomlJlended by
Stevenson's auperlora, but or·
dered a ''punitive letter or ad-
moni,Uon" entered aaainst the
41-year·old com mender . \
lilA VY OFFIC.J!RS .. Id they
\Wo\4.ldn't bet. •much on
\
r •
Stevenson•a chances for ,eromO..
lion or tor another majOr ship
command Jn the future because
of this blot on tis record.
But Joae h K . Tau·1s11, stevenson's Jawyer, looked for
the sliver lining .
Taussig, a retired Navy cap-
tain who won the Navy cross in
the Pearl Harbor attaclc, told a
reporter the letter or &dmoniUon
"mi&ht slow him dowri. a bit, but
Stevenson bas a Jot going for him."
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OnS&ra
Finished
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• Jury Believed Kidnap, Rape ..
&\H j)IJ:GO (AP) -NORWALK (U PI) -by Mn. Kantatlll Iliad A ....,.dlnJ ol Illa cm·
l'IH r.1•hlatriatl and On Oct. 2, 11174 , Debonh herfolher. ( lmwu~
P!'eJll'lo1l1t1 have ~ aaid, abe wu Mn.Kanta.,..1ald•
!"---two dayo ot-lddna and raped by wu abdu<ted from a •••· SANTAIDfG . Hrn!nary tuta oa s.ra Danny Allen , On Oct. 2, parkllll lot In Looi Oer· 111c1 Ille waa ~ ta
,_ MOMe, tbe all...,t 11m, • IW"Y found her in· rlto1 by Allen ,and periodic amanla, -
would·b• e11111in of -or murderlnJr Al· anotber .man wllo drove tbltbwfltller-Allen,.
-Ford. lentbenextdaybyalioot-bertoaparklnS..taAna i:::;.ed the IUD lD lier
W.,._J,D. WllllalM inlhlmpointblarikinthe IDd raped her" at !Dllfe --•bleedller ct Ille, MetroDoUtaa OOr-r ... w1thaahot1un. P!llnt. They foreed berto lbedld II. Sbe illd DGt...,.
rectloaal Con\er an· · "" •-A llll"Y of 10 men and ii•• them ber addraa <all tbe trulb liDW abe nounced completlce ot Ae••ttell two women 'l'hurlday ac-and telepbone number wu bypnotbed by a
Iba tO.ta Tbundq. Mn. quitted Mn. Kantaq, beforetheyfreedber,abe p17ebolo1llt, abo
Moore, 45, baa been beld .A Joyful 19-year-old 1~. of Loni Beach, ofter said. tl'lllled.
inlaolatlonattbefederal divorcee, D ebra fourdaysdellberatioo. Allen,, of saiita ~. Timothy Trl!1'0
J1lhincela1t weekend. Kantaeng, come~ out Tllepetltedivot<eeand called U10 nest clay and-frl-otAllm'•,lM...U-aea-
Tllere wa1 no word on of the courtroom former mOclel burst into aaldbewucomlnst.ober tbat lie and Allee -
reoultaotthet .. tl. after 8 jury 80• tears. "I'm happy and home. A• be walked boraoback rldlns with
MRI. •ooaB 1s quitted her of .a I 'mllad."shesald. lbrousbtbedoOr, bewu Jln;Jtanta-wbeeabe
cbar1ed with flrln1 a murder· charge In bl&1tedinthefacewltb• 1819 abe wu kl__. · . u+ . -• •• .JI.caliber pill~ at~ killing Danny Allen, ~~~ 8V :f.!:O' ~ .tlOcallber!~tsun. =:•::::pod~~";· .f::j
SI.A Hl-o S b" Libe in San Francgco ,,.;,... 21. of Santa Ana. -•us1n1 tn"al that in-~ p•-g~-ON --A •oa .A Allen, he ""· -.:rm 1onese raUon A•my members William 22 u s ~.,,·atrate ho h aid ped ·~ ·-...,., ~w.. -• ~ d E ii H "'" · · · -.w . s e s ra cl"ded two "con· play-A a -ordl.,, of -~A A stable-~-an m Y arns reportedly used this house In downtoW1l Ow Woodrul ordered --... -~
sacramento as a hideout from Januacy until June t.bla year. tbe°':nt1 to d~termlne her. . r ... ioaa"totbeslaybig-=·tt~po•nl~~:;t,;~ :::in~ ft:'eandy ::,,,""",..:
. • -· wbetber 1he ta compe-uu..::s · • teet t.oatand trlalfor lrY· · that she held the Cl!D that Mn. Kanta ens riding
P ' ' d th Prell F D • d killed him, sayin1 "It wltbAllen. Al . ;i F : d :r.:,t1." mur •r • • ro11U1te eme wontott.ldldn'tmeanfcr ress rea..,y ~u:n WUllam••aldtbeleltl . . ltt.ogoof!." Aid Offered .
were run Wednesday and SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Lynette "Squeaky" A f'int trial ended in a • ·
P Tburado7 by Du. W. ~ h be .. -~do mistrial when Mrs. Kan-Appllcatloo forms for
t-t G ilt M . Walterllehnln&eroltbe .riumme as enlua~ wninarequest forre-taeng's father, Robert state acbolanhJps, col· a y U Y-. : om Topek1SU.teH01pitalin ductlon ol he~ bail on 8 charge of trying to as. Boyd, 45, committed Iese _.tWllty sranta
Kansu, Robert Eardley · •uainate President Font. suicide, takinJ an over-and oeeupaUonal educa·
. . . of the medical facility Miss Fromme, a 26-year-0ld follower of con-dose of dru11 in a Leng tioa and trainln1 1r111ts
RED WOO 0 CITY companied the Hearsb.. Of.St. Joeepb in Tomales, for federal priaonen at victed mass murderer Charles Manson, is accused Beach hotel. At th·e are now available at
(UPIJ -The mother or He said Dr. 8eymour told UPI he did send Sprin1fleld Mo. and Sid ol pointing a loaded cun at Ford as he walked second trial, her at-state Senator Dennla E .
Patricia Hearst Thurs· Pollack of use. qne of 'Miss Hearst a medal via Smith '• Paychologist throu1h a crowd in Sacramento Sept. 5. Ker bail torneys produced COO•. CUpeater'I diatrict of.
day night angrily react-the court -appointed jail officials. It was · from 'the Menninger was originally set at $1 million but was reduced to .• feulons in which Boyd lice, 2032 Quall St .•
ed to the 11 new indict· psychiatrists, examined blessed by the Pope. Foundation in Top,ka. $350,000 later. admitted shootinl Allen.. Newport Beach.
ments lodged against her Miss Hearst ThursdaY · · · · · ·
daughter by comment-. night. •
ing "the media has tried Bailey said his clfent ~------------------------------------------------------. Patty aud found her guil-would probably· be ar-
ty. So why not everyone raigned in Los Angeles
else?" after proceedings are "'"""*F.o.1.c..
Rando Ip h and finished in San Fran-~t•~ineureduD•oMO.OOODeracc~oit .•
Catherine Hearst vis~ clsco. ;
their daughter for 30 "We'll worry about
minDtes ar thi~ San this case and ·then the
Mateo County Jail and others," he said.
then commented briefly Neither the Hearata
on the Indictments of nor Bailey had any, cofn-
robbery, kidnaping and ment on in what 4!ondi-
assault with a deadly lion or spirits they found
weapon tetumed earlier Miss Hearst. ·
in the day . But near her cell a
• Roman Catholic priest is
R E ~ a S T , trying to communicate
PRESIDENT of the San with Patricia Hearst in
Francisco Examiner, case she wants or· needs
comtnentecfonly.thatthe any ''s piritual as-
indi~tments ''were not st.stance.,. totally unexpected. We
kiiew· they \~ere having
Grand Jury.bearings.•·
Mrs. Hearst told as-
sembled news men: "I
suppose you people think
_ all the problems of the
terrorist& can be solved
by pinning them on Patty
Hearst.
"It's strange how she
is caught betwe·en the
radicals and the govern-
ment. The radicals want
to get out from under and
the government wants to
pin everything on her in
order to .get rid of ever·
ything in one lump. But
it's not realistic." .
CIUEF DEFENSE At-
torney F. Lee Bailey ac-
"EVERYONE ELSE
is trying to get to her
mind," said Father
Sylvio Ma sante, 65,
"What about herioul?"
The Priest patiently
'waited in a corridor for
three and a half ~houn
near Miss Hearst's San
Mateo County J ail 'cell
block Wednesday night
only to learn he could not
see the alleged Sym·
bionese Liberation Army
member because she
was ''tired and emo-
tionally distraight" rrom
extensive psychiatric
tests.
Father Mas ante, a
member of the Catholic
Order of Oblate Fathers
Resignation Demanded
Clii.ef Davis . '
Angers Gays
LOS.ANGELES Cl:1Pl) -Homosexual activists
Thursday called for the resignation of PoJice Chief
Ed Davis because of his outspoken oppoSition to a
CIVil Service Commission ruling µtat he must allow
bomoeexuals to become police officers.
Davis called hdmosexuality a sickn ess, and
. said homosexual police would spread venereal dis-
ease, destroy the morale of the department and br-
inl the uniform infq .CODtempt .. Parents would be
· · · ' frightened if they thought
.
. ( ')'·"i lost children were being ·Stale j hunted by homosexual llf· . ficers, he said.
'-------~. .. The Rev. Troy Perry,
a well known homosexual
activist, caJled Davis "a rabid homopbobe Who bas
real problems, I feel, with his own sexuality.
''I'm not calling the chief a homosexual," he
added. "I hope he's not."
P•ddle B•lllM!d
LOS ANGEIJES (UPI) -The city school board
aboJi1hed •spanking as a means of punishment
Thursday, but called on school officials to discover
new anclmore effective means of student discipUne.
''Violence is not the best way to teach
adherence to law and order," Dr. Julian Nava said
as be introduced the measure on a 4·3 vote. ''Vie
should fllld Other WBys that rules can be obeyftd,. ''
STANFORD (AP) -Fifty community doCtora
have been auspended from using Stanford Universi-
ty because they do not carry adequate malpractice
inlurance. the hospital announced.
The 1u1pended physicians include 30
pe1chi•triat1. and most are occ~ional users of the
hospital, the medical center said Tllursday: ,_
l SACRAMENTO CUP)) -The BroWD Ad, mlnlttratlon baa dropped plans t.o 1ive California
driven-a 10 percent rebate next Y~ar in vehicle re-
llstraUcin r-. which would have amounted t.o •
about p .eoper car owner. .
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of banks
will give you a · few
services when you hit 62.
•
We give you nine.
UCB is now offering plenly more
lhan the usual free checking
accounl for people 62 or over.
We"re offering a complele package
of banking services-everything
Iha! comes with our United
A=unl, The package includes:
1. Unlimiled checl< writing wilh
no minimum balance required.
2. Free personalized checks.
3. 5% regular savings accounl.
4. Free safe deposil box ($6 size) .
· 5. Free lravelers checks. 6. Free
money orders. 7. Free cashier
checks. 8. Complete slalemen l.
9. Free bank by mail.
We"ll also be glad lo dep:isil your
Social Securily check automali·
cally. so you won"! have to come
1n for lhal. And if you qualify. you"lf
get !he MaslerCha rge Card that"s
accepted al over a million places
around !he world. Also Balance
Plus overdralt proleclion. And
Check Guaranlee Card.
Normally with a Uni led Account,
•
lo get all this , you"d pay at least
$24 a year. So you"re way ahead.
At our bank. ~ really pays lo be
62or aver. Just open your account
al Iha nearesl Uniled California
Bank before you're a day older.
rnfi1 UNITED ~~k°R~IA
-llnltecl California Bank. The best banking ideas in town. Or your money back.
•
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· BuslaeH and Tra111(JOl'tatlon Se~lag Doaald Burns Tbursd•J" said the rebate p al \Was can-celJed Ill favor of usinJ the money t obl•in tus • '--:--:;-------------_;,• ______________________ ...:._ _________ __)
mWlmlat.bteatenedlecleralhlshway ,\ • · ,
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DAILY PILOT E D ITORIAL PAGE
R~hts of the Accused
A state Supreme Court ruling last week and a con-
currin& opinion by Justice Stanley Mosk raised
significant issues about the grand jury system as It
,relates to criminal indictments.
" Under the present system, grand juries meet in
secret sessions, to examine evidence and hear
testimony presented by prosecutors who hope to con·
vince the jurors a suspect should be indicted.
The court ruled last week that prosecutors must
tell grand jµrors of evidence that tends to point to a
suspected offender's innocence as well as that which
ten'1s lo incriminate him. .
Justice Mosk took the court's decision a step
further by proposing that those charged in an indict·
ment be given a post indictment bearing.
At the hearjng, the accused pers?n would have
the right for the first time to face his accusers. to
cross-examine witnesses and to examine whatever
evidence was used against him.
Mosk's suggestion, which carries no offici~l
weight, has merit. Persons accilsed of crimes 1n
secret grand jury sessions have those rights guaran-
teed them in the Constitution.
P reside n t Still N ews
A Federai Communications Commission ruling
that inadvertently barred television coverage of
Presidential news conferences has been reversed.
The 1964 r egulation held that a television network
or other broadcaster covering a Presidential news
conference must give equal time to other candidates
for the office.
. Because of this. President Ford's news con-
ferences have not been covered since he announced his
candidacy for the Republican nomination in 1976.
Now. fortunately, the FCC has ruled that the
President's meetings with the press are bona tide
news events and thus exempt from the equal time re-
quirement. The ruling also will be extended to Include
debates between candidates both for the Presldency
and lower offices as news events. ·
This is a sensible decision. The President's news
conferences and candidate debates are of great
public interest-and of great lmportance, especially
during an election year. The networks sboµld have
the right to cover them without being hamstrung by
the equal time rule.
Who's to Blame?
Som~thing went wrong when the West Co!-'nty
Municipal Cou rt building in Westminster was bwlt 1n
1968. And whatever we nt wrong then was apparently
repeated in 1971 when a wing . was added to the
courthouse.
As a result, both the original structure and the
1971 addition are sinking into what was onre a subter-
ranean peat bog, an unusual site to select for any kina
of a major structure. So far, the Orange.County Board of Superyisors
has agreed to spend $13,000 to find out what. •.>Is the
crippled building and what can be done to repa1F 1\.
The $13,000 research job begun in June has .re·
vealed only that it will cost about $720,000 . to
permanently right the ·original courthouse bwldmg
which, incident ally, cost $1 .l million to cons~ruct in
1968.
Left unanswered so far is what went wrong and
ho is responsible for the forced ex pe nditure of ~.;..;.ooo to heal a seven-year-old building that cost
1 million to build. ·
The blame belongs somew here and the public
houlg be told where.
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A Ford-Rurnsfield Ticket?
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A Lesson
For Public
Speakers
Dear
Gloomy The Vice Presidential Ga·me
SYDN EY H HI S
e neatest 1tt e news story
I've seen in a long time came out
of Fulton, Missouri, where
James A. Van Sant, president of
General Steel Industries. was
given an award as the "Man of
the Year."
And indeed he is, in my book -
not for the reason he was given it,
whatever it
-may be, but
(or an even
better and
rare reason:
he declined to
make the
customary
"thank you'' ·~ speech, and
lt instead hired
1 concert
pianist Eugene List to fill the
period set aside for hie; s~h.
... didn ·~ want. tol'.bore lbe au!
dience ... Vad"1sa.t said, whicn
pretty nearly nominates him for
Man or the Century. When one
reflects upon the number of in-
finitely boring acceptance
speeches one has sat through on
similar occasions, Van Sant's
handsome gesture approaches
the fringes of divinity.
ACTUALLY. and probably
without knowing it, he is follow-
ing an ancient and honored Sa-
moan custom, which should be
, far better known (and practiced)
I in our highly verbal and equally
I inarticulate society.
More than 30 yeafs ago, I re-
l call Dr. Victor Heiser,. the mis·
sionary doctor to the East, relat-
ed how he w as given a similar
honor by the native king on that
fsland. The king's spokesman I arose and m ade a gracioUs pre·
I
seqtation; just as Dr. Heiser
arose to accept, he was Jerked
t Gus
I like you because I don'L
think happy people know
what's going on.
D.A.
Gloomy Gui c11mm1111•1•r•1uDmlU11tl tlJ
ttMl•,1 •11d dO nM 1111c•1-.rlly ,..ll.CI IM
vlew1 ol lftt .,.,.IPIPOr. Senti vour fN1 -ff le Gloomy Gu1, D•lty PllM.
back into his seat by the nalive
doctor al his left.
"We have arranged a speaker
for you," the man whispered.
"Here in Samoa we do not
believe that a man who is a good
physician is necessarily a good
speaker. We have our own pro·
fessional speakers who do this on
ceremonial occasions -you can
be sure he will say exactly what
you were intending to, and do il
· even better.''
THE MAN was right, Dr.
Heiser recalled, and his sur-
rogate speakec drew e normous
applause fos:: hi s acceptance
performanc'h .. Samoans, ap~
parently, are inore sophisticated
than we, who naively assume
that because a man is good at
• treating wounds or selling steel
he will be ~ually competent at
1 public spf!'.,king, whic h is a
special art or its own .
How lovely it would be, for in·
stance, if the l\1otion Picture
Academy Award.s were given to
actors and actresses who had
brought along their own '' accep.
lQrs." What charm and wit and
tact they might express, instead
of the sad mumbles and silly gig-
gles and sentimental slobbering
we have so long been subjected to
at these a nnual charades.
And can anyone conceive of a
banquet that would not be
enormously improved by the pre·
sence of Eugene List at the
piano, instead of some florid
eminence whose command of
rhetoric is roughly equivalent lo
that of·a cocker spaniel in a spell-
ing bee? t 'm told Dr. Heiser
never made a speech after that
day --. but then his surrogate
never performed a lobotomy,
either.
WASHINGTON -The fact
that a 34-year-old presidential
aide named Dick Cheney is in-
creasingly taking charge of day·
to-day White House business is a
fascinating manifestation of
backstage intrigue with far·
reaching implications.
The reason Cheney is handling
so much o ( the White House
routine to -
da y .. say
knowledge -
able insiders,
is that his
boss and men-
tor, presiden-
~i a l c hief· of
staff Donald
Rumsfeld-, is
quietly
deepening his
involvement in the management
of President Ford's election cam-
paign. And that is widely viewed
in uppe r . reaches or the ad-
-ministration as a means to one.
end: putting Rumsfeld on Lhe
1976 ticket as Vice President.
THAT A Ford-Rums£e1d ticket
is talked about stripusly in high
places is a clear stgn that Vice
President Nelson Rockefeller's
problems have by no means been
solved. While l\tr. Ford·s praise
for his Vice President grows ever
warmer and less conditional,
Rockef.eller·s stock among party
leaders perceptibly declines.
All this creates a table8u
worthy of the Byzantine palace.
?t1r . Ford. typically open and
straighl·forward, clearly wants
to reward .Rocke£eller·s loyal
service the past year with a full
term as Vice President. But con·
stantly at the President's side ad-
vising hi m is Rums feld -
secretive. clever and no friend of
Nelson Rockefeller.
Strengthening Rums fe ld 's
hand in surreptitiously pushing
to dump Rockefeller are two out·
side events : the Vice President's
ill·advised Southern tour. which
It's Still a Slush Fund
WASHINGTON -It used to be
C!alled. the "slush fund .... Then it
bttame the "newsletter (und."'
Now it's the ''constituent ser vices
fund."
But by any nam e, the game is
the same: members of Congress
use private donations to run their
offices in a style Congress refuses
to rtnance, and they consider this
money outside t he bounds of
political contributions which
must by law be limited and ac-
counted for. .
Last week, Congress forced'the
reform-minded federal election
commission to back off its at-
~empt to rewrite the rules govern.
ing "constituent services funds.·'
Under heavy pressure. the
commission voted unanimous ly
to chanae its earlier ruling that
con1res1men must charge all
money from '1 constitutent
~ces funds'' against the new
' rampai1n •Ptnding limits set by
law for mem bet1 of Congreu.
IDlltead,.-!i decided the private
funds will cqunt u political
~pendlnt only lb the last year of a
~.member'• two.year ter~
And the la1t two years of a
... tor:111X·year term.
roNGa£88 created Ille · eom-
mlHIOG to reform camrJ•n
:"' <lln•.t>r•ctlcet and C<m8Noa vel01'J decl.tiont. lh UU.-.e,
( GUEST RE PORT )
itdidso.
Traditionally', congressmen
have a rgued the private office
funds are donated and used to im-
prove their service to constituents
and should not be subtracted from
the amounts they may legally ac-
cept and spend £or reelection
pul'poses.
The successive changes of label
show how the private funds have
grown to respectability a mong
public office holders . .
Richard Nixon's use of pMvate
contributions to help run his
senat'orlal office alm06t ran him
out of politics. It was acl05e thing
in 1952 whether Dwight
Eisenhower would drop Nixon
from the Republi can t icket
because of-relvelations about his "slusb "fund.
Nf11'.on denied impropriety and
satisfied Republican eld_en with
an ~mOtional, televised speech
known to thi s day as the
"Checkers '' speech because of his
mention of his daughters• dog.
But the slush fund remained un-
'der acloud. •
THE "NEWSLETl'ER" •loge
came next, when congressmen
found the COfl&resslonal newslet·
' I
ter to be a good way of keeping in
touc h with constituents. But
newsletters ate into stationery
and free mailing allowances, so
m e mbers appealed for private
contributions to help pay the
costs.
This also provided a way to
sidestep political reporting re-
quirements and get contributions
from corporations and unions,
which were prohibited from
spending money directly on
politics.
The respanse .. was often more
than ample. Money was left over
to pay other office expenses, hire
additional staffers. pay for extra
trips home tor selr and spouse
and even to pay ror vacations.
The fWtd eveotuaJJy. acquired
the ''constituent services'' title.
At first. the electi9n com-
mission ruled that Congress pro-
vides quite e nough money for ol·
ficial duties. Private donatioM,
it said, are political and must be
counted wittiln the spending
limits fixed in the new law.
Although It finally modined lta
view, the comm issfon did retain
a complete ban against contribu-
tions by labor unions and cor·
poratlons. It also limited In ·
div1duaJ contributions to $1,000
by Individuals and &mmlttce
donations to $$_,000. '\ · , 1 George I. llbrti, UPI .. I
( EVANS-N OVAK )
did not win over conservatives
and sickened liberals, and the
Harris poll showing him hurting
the Ford ticket.
The result is agitation against
the Vice President in Republican
ranks which goes beyond the
usu al phalanx or right-wing
Rockefeller -hate rs. State
chairman Paul Haerle of
California. who defied his state·s
Ronald Reagan zealots to an-
nounce hi s early support £or Mr.
Ford, is now publicly calling for
a new running-mate.
ONE P ROMINENT con -
servative leader who is counted
on by Reagan forces has come to
feel so strongly that Rockefeller
1must go that he is thinking about
1 making this olrer to the White
J House: dump Rocky and 1·11 back
: Ford.
If Rockefeller , 67, is dumped, it
is highly unlikely that Reagan,
64, will replace him. High-level
speculation about a younger suc-
cessor boils down to the three B's
-Sens. William Brock, 44, and
Howard Baker, 49, both of Ten-
nessee. and Ambassador George
Bw;h, 51 -plus Rumsfeld, 43 .
Baker is the best known but is
widely distrusted both in the
If the public is having difficulty
reconcilirig the contradictory
philosophy behind the home
financing regulations proposed
by the BrOwn administration, so,
too, are the lending institutions.
The new rules advanced by
Donald E . Burns, secretary of the
Business ani:i
Trans porta -
tion Agency,
are aimed at
what has been
termed dis ··
criminatory '
practices in
home lending.
The charges
stem from the
deni a l of
ho~e mor~gages in rundown
neighborhoods. The practice is
called redlining. It is alleged this
discriminates •S"ainst blacks and
other minorities. The truth is the
loans are refused f'CltElJ'dless of
race and color.
The direct targets ot Burns are
thesav,lngs and loan associations.
He would compel them to grant
loans without regard to area and
t~er~tore without regard to the
_ continuing security tor the loans.
He has indicated similar action
against the banks is under con-
sideration.
ms INITIAL attention to the
savings associations rather than
the banks has an obvi~ reason.
Mos t b a nks are te~erall y
chartered and not subject to state
reaulatlon while two-thirds of the
savings firm.s are licensed by the
state. ·
lt ii Bums' contention that the
redlining ot certain geographical
areas without regard to the credit
worthlnes1 of loan 9pplicants ''ls
l'HPonSi ble for the cootlJlulng de·
te:rioraUon of our lnner·clties, a
~Unuing cllm bin tbecrlmerate
dCI lorthetconUoulng slippage of
• • ,
White House and party circles.
With Brock up for reelection next
year, his selection might tum
another Senate seat over to the
Democrats -or, if a Ford-Brock
ticket lost, remove him from
political life. As for Bush, he was
one of Mr. Foftl's final three
choices for Vice President (along
with Rockefeller and Rums teld).
But now out of sight in Peking as
envoy toChina, he is also out of
the political mind.
Enter Rums feld . While the
Ford campaign is t~hnicaJly re-
ihoved from the White House,
Rumsfeld actually rva:s it. He
talks lo party leaders far more
than is generally known (includ-
ing wily old-pro F . Clifton White
of New York, architect. or Q.arry
Goldwater's 1964 presidential
nomination).
. WllAT 'S MO R E, anti ·
Rockefeller conservatives get
this pri vale message from
Rumsfeld : I can't do anything
about it right now, but I agree
tbat Rocky should go. "Taking
the overall drift of the way Rum-
my operates;' one presidential
aide told us, ''I can only conclude
that he is running £or Vice Presi-dent.··
But the cheering would be
restrained if Rumsfeld succeeds.
.. He reminds me too much of
Nixon," says one conservative
HANDLING the funds or in-
vestors and depdsitors, lhe banks
and .savings associations are in·
stilutions or public trust. As such
they are closely regulated by gov-
ernment. The\r loans are
scrutinized by examinen. If the
loans are thought not. to be secure
an institution can be seized b y the
government and placed under
·caretaker manage ment.
That was exactly what hap-
pened to Pacific States Savings
and Loan some » years ago. It
had loaned on property which de-
v al u at ed by reason or the
economic depression. The pro-
perties were solid and not in tun·
down nelghbofhooda with oo
chance to comeback. , They in·
eluded the Clift Holcl lnSan Fran-
cisco and the Sa.nta Barbara
Biltmore. Ndnetheleu, the firm
was tak~n over beeause the
depressed book value ol the pro-
perties didn't balance out the re.
serve requirements. "
IF THE money entN.t.d to the
lendlng, lnslltutions by lndlvld"t1'r
Congressman. "You never know
which way he's going.'' Similar-
ly, Rumsfeid is not without'
ferocious ene mies in the .ad-
ministration and ' the White.
Howe itself.
Some or those e,nemies think
that if Rockefeller goes, he
should be replaced by a ilon-
Washingtoo figure -preferably
a . young, moderate governor
·such as Gov. Daniel Evans, 49, of
Washington or GoV. Robert Ray.
47 or Iowa. Conservatives would
much prefer Gov. James
Holshouser. 40, of North .
Carolina.
THE R E IS, however, a built-in
liability £or Rumsfel4 or any
other seeker of the 1976 Vlce-
presidential nomination young
enough to become Mr. Ford's
heir-apparent in 198:>: all other
Republicans ambitious for the
1980 nomination wouJd try to stop
him to keep the poSt..Ford option
wide open.
Whatever_ the choice, many
Rej>ublicans feel the President
ought to hurry it up. One
politically astute cabinet officer
told us that Mr. Ford should do
t he unconventional and speak
now, either redesignating
Rockefeller or picking his suc-
cessor . To do' othe·rwise will en-
courage more Byzantine inttjgue
in the heart of Jerry Ford·s open Whi!' House.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Ro~rl N. 'wud, Ptlbll&~
Tho'mos K1111uil, Edilor
80i:tiora Krribtclt.
' Edi!'Orlot Pogt Editor
:nie editorial page of the Oalfy
Pilot s~e ka to tnform anCI sllm~late readers by P"ftmUnk:
on this page dlver1e commentary "" •
on toPits ot lni.ereat•by IY11dlcal-
ed CX!lu mnlsl$ and cartoolits1.1, b.r
providing a forum fOt' readers'
vie"'' and by preAentlne Chia news paper's opinioit1 and Id~
on current topic,1. Tht l'ditorfit
opinions or tbe.. Da,ily Pilot 4Pr>e•r
only in tht edltori•I column at t~
top ot tht P•1e. Opinions e~
presled by the coJUmnistt •ni'.t ta~oonltlt and letler wrlt~I":$ are
their ~n and no endoratmtnt 41
thelr v,ew• by the Daily Pil.v should be Inferred. ,.~
f11da>'• ~ber a. '!ftS ::
j
' .,
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·I
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• • •
•••w-F...i
Gull Law Foes
~)·m for. Fight . . -· • WAS!'!IN.,GT0.1'1 (APJ -The
N1Uonal alfte ~tion has
raised •U ·m~lllon to fight ' Uodiun-control legislaUon in
Oonereu 1111d ii likely to collect
mueh moi:e; u NRA .o!llclal
... )'I. •
The a s sociation also said
I lbrou&h ill lobloYlnC arm, the
Imtitute !or LeC\slaUve Action I that it contilluel to -e a1i
·-·control lellslltion. ,. •
ffarluB. <:.-. u.-·· executive diree&or, to.tbe -
Judiciary s ubcommittee oo
crime: carter was quesu.ect on NRA
lobbyin&, ~-~ivitiff by subcom·
mltlee C!Wrmaa ~aim Ooayera
Jr. lI>-lllch.), who, rad part o! aa NRA fund-raisin& letter that
warned .of a fight against
weapons that would take iuns
away from policemen.
Carter told Conyers that tbe in-
dividual wbo originally con-
ceived that soliciation bad been
put into another job and tbet he
hoped in Ifie !uture that NRA
'fund·l'aiail\J activities would
''become more sophisticated.''
ANOO'HER WITNESS, Ronald
• I
L. Gainer of the Justice Depart-
ment, bore the brunt of criticism
from advocates on both sides of
the gun-control issue when he •P·
peared on behalf of an Ad-
ministration bill.
Prices Effective Oct. 4th arid Oct. 5th, 197 5
I
J I Ul"IT• ......
TlllrdOtUd . " . Margaret Truc"au, "'.26, wife
.of Canada's prime minister,
whore the couple's third child
· .. Thursday. The . baby was a
~ seven-pound, 14-ounce boy.
1
~:Loyal Dog ...
;.Selected
11
u' Hero of Ye~~
<. ·I TOWSON , Md. <UPI) -Fawn.
a 4-year-old German shepherd
from St. Petersburg, F1a., who
n ,flung herself in the path of a rat-
-t. r'1:e.soa~e to save a 3-)'.~~-old
.,chil~ has been namedKen-L Ra-
~1 lion's dQg hero of th,e year.
~ The dog was honored at_the-
1 1.22nd annual dog hero ceremonies
. sponsoredi by Quaker Oats
<1· through its Ken-L Ration dog
"'food division. Her owners, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Schlesinger, received a $1 ,000
•. savings bond, a year's supply of
Jr·dog food and a gold-plated leash
<.: and c:ollar for their pet.
,. Fawn was credited with saving
<Ji young Russ Schlesinger from a
~1 diamondback r a ttler last
·· February in the back yard of the
. Schle:i inger home. The dog
·.came charging out or the house,
·.pushed the child out of the way
.-v and took1the strike of the ratUer
with her· head.
Russ 's grandfather shot the
snake and r ushed Fawn to a dog
hospital, where she eventually
reeovered.
Rep. John M. Ashbrook (R·
OhioJ, a longtime opponent of
gun controls, complained that
the legislation was too restric-
tive.
When Gainer said the. ad-
ministration decided not to seek
registration of harid~ because
. of emotional fears or many peo-
ple that It could lead to handgun
conflScation by some future ad-
ministration, Ashbrook said gun
owners should be afraid of this
administration.
llEP. WILLIAM J. Hughes CD·
N.J.) contended, however, that
the "Administration's legillation
was weak because it did not re-
quire record -keeping on
transfers o( guns from an
original. owner to second and
third owners.
The Administration's bill seeks
to cut down on the number or
licensed gun dealers, to ban the
manufactur e, sale and
posSession of so-called Saturday-
nigbt specials -cheaply made
and easily ·concealable weapons
-and lo require a 14-day waiting
period before an individual could
buy a handgun.
THE WAITING PERIOD is in-
tended to allow law-enforcement
authorities time to check.
whether a 'prospective g un
purchaser meets federal require -
ments•to buy a handgun. But it
would not fequire that the back·
ground checks take place.
CHURCH PUNS
GVN PICKUP
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP> -St.
Philip the Apostle Roman
Catholic Church will be asking
for something a litUe extra on
Oct . 11 and 12 . It wants
parishioners to give the church
their handguns .
The Rev. Richard Engle said
cartons will be set out at Mass
both days for the guns and he will
tum them over to police to melt
down.
Father Engle said he was dis-
turbed about handit:WlS ~ed in
violent crimes .
Yule ·Like ·lt
Dirwsaur Safari for Holiday
DAILAS lUPI) -Last yea r
., the Neiman Marcus Christmas
t•;catalog offered bis and her hov·
.;-erbugs for the djsceming Texas
1-millionaire s hopping for just the
'.right five.figure giCt. This year's ·:•~tociing stuffer su_ggesUon is a
'£.Utah dinosaur safari -at a
t '"tbargain rate of 129,995.
ti · In previous years, the store has t:; dangled before the wealthy shop-
_., per1~uch trinkets as his and her
, -2,000-year old mummy cases.
"'' matcttj.ng camels, matching sub-
" marines and in 1974 the $.1,640
..,;:economy-size hovercraft. Twen·
r.i ty jet.air cushioned land and sea ~vehicles were sold in January
alone, the store reports. r mE HJS Al'ID HER special
this year is a "Very i'eal paleon-
tologlcar sa.farl into the wilds o(
east-Central Utah." Included is
the guarantee the hunter and his
mate will unearth the skeletal re·
mains or an allosaurus, a flesh-
eating dinosaur of old staked out
by r esear c hers fro m th e
University of Utah.
Upon making the lucky find,
the diggers may not take the
bones home. They must be donat-
ed to the museum of their choice.
But "for the hunter to keep: a
bronze cast of the monster's skull
and the satisfaction or a contribu-
tion toward posterity.''
ONLY ONE ALLOSAURUS
and one bronze skull per couple
are allowed for the $29,995 and
"regretfully. no dogs allowed on
tbedig."
For those who doo't want to
.hunt dinosaurs , the 1975 catalog
offers moce .than 100 pages of
gifts from the $6 ,000 bicentennial
volQJDe one of an historic an.-
literature portfolio ol. originals
entitled "YourJiuddled Masses''
to the $17 k g of brandied Goodb"'e peaches. · -,; Other suggestions include the
1 , .
sex. Shows ~K gold paper clips ($12.50 for SO> and tbe lea ther-covered
hardwood executive yo-yo ($15
HIGH SPRINGS, F1a. including giltinitials).
(lJPI) -Tbere wlll be ' . some clwl&ea m~e at the SOME OF THE lutlng1 in Dra(on ·Arll Theater, a between:
drfv'!';ln tbat specla'll-In A bal1119int pen with a built-in
X-r,.ted nlckl; ,. colculator ($850), the gravy
ltta•under new manage-train, a silver-plated electric
ment -the pastor a! st. train that carries dining condi-
M ad e I e f n e' 1 Roman" mentsaroundthedinneltableon
catholic Church. · an oval track (18,000J ; a sterling
Father Roland Julien. ailYer oral th_ermometer case,
SAVE
20°/o.
Doubleknit
Crepe
1.55
per yd.
Reg. 1.99 yd. Time to start
your sewing machine
hummin'! Cause our sa le on
texturized polyester
doubleknits is fantastic.
And crepe stitchiiig gives it
that rich look. 11·s machine
washable, too. Assorted
colors. 60" wide.
~ \\ '
' " " I/ ~ • JI
\\
\\\I
Live
Plants
25%
OFF
.
All House
Plants
•
Hurry· in and
check our
large assortment
and pick the
ones that are
right for you.
..
The Famous Polaroid LOW PRICE
79~'8a 1i:Si
Big beautiful pict ures that
develop right before your
eyes. Plus all the other
revolutionary features of the
SX·?O but now in a trimmed
down ca se
SAVE -20%
Travel Organizer
Handbag
3.99
Reg. 4 .99. 4 separate
compartments. Solid colors.
LOW PRICE 3:·44
Reg. 4.44. Long sleeve,
nyton T-shirts for that
casual look. Machine wash.
Assorted prints. S.M,L.
Wit h electrlt eye, electronic
shutt"er, lighten/darken
control. Fo r great prctures
every time.
.3.22 Polaroid Type 88
Color Film .
4 .19 Polaroid Type 108
Color Fi lm.
SAVE 25%
Women 's
Panti-Hose
Reg. 88,. 100% cotton
crotch rei nforced panty.
Seam less with nude heel .
GREAT BUY
Misses' Pants
4.99
Easycare machine washable
polyester 1n sizes 8 to 18.
Assorted solid colors.
•
SPEClAL
YOIJR CHOICE -
66~
CUTLERY TRAY
• PAIL
• OISHf>AN
• UTILITY TUB
• COLANDER
• WASTEBASKET
Refuse Cans
Heavy Duty Plastic
2.99
Choose from a 44 qt. green
or ye I tow lift-top refuse ca n.
88« 44 qt . trash can
liner.
0
r··
.........~J . · .. • . I
SALE
GE Light Bulbs
4/1.22
Reg. 4/$2. General Electric
soft white bulbs in 40, 60,
.~· 100 watt sizes.
'
the .pastor,'immedlately · ($25 plain, $28 monogramed>; aanounced plan• for fami· and a box of 12.Texas grapefruit 11191'\'..-: 8e1Ch 11 Orangethotpe •Open weekdays 9:30 to 9:30. Sundays 1010 e. ,
11 entertai.Dme i . with serrated kl11fe from France OMMl•~tv Dr . .tit Gwden Gr'OYe Blvd. •Open weekdays 10 to 9. Sunctays 10 toe.
;-""t-;;::;:::;:;:::;;;;;::=::::;=::;:::7-ltt"°)lc.--------.. ..,-----------..-'."'=-::.:• A....., 3900 ~ Bl111to1-Ng._ot So. Cout Plaza• Open D•Hy 9:30 to 9, Sundm 10 to~ .
. \ ' I
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,ti OM. Y PILOT
By Phil lnterlandl
"My whoie life has been a 'game show .' Only ALL the
contestant.shave been I01Sers!"
B11w R 11 nm·:...., · 1ti·:•••z-::'1i
Deaths Elsewhere
'. STANFORD (UPI/ '-
Albert L. Petri, 66,
membe r of a dist -
ing ui s hed California
family associated with
the wine industry, died
Wednesday at ·Stanford
Hospital. Petri retired in
1963 as executive vice
president or U nit ed
Vintners, now a division
of Heublein, and presi-
dent of its subsidiary,
Petri Cigar Company.
SAN DIEGO (AP> -
Stage actress Shella Kay
Byrne, 30, honored by
San Diego's Old Globe
Theater in 1968, is dead
of traffic injuries. A
camper truck which s he
was driving hit a tree.
CHICAGO (U PI> -
Art Mercier , 62, a
Chicago radio personali·
ty for nearly 40 years,
died in his sleep Wednes-
day night . M eri e r
brOadcast 55 programs
per week for WBBrwt and
was considered an
a uthority on outdoor
reereation.
PARIS (AP> -
Former Premier Guy
Mollet, 69, Anthony
Eden's French partner
in the 1956 British·
French invasion of the
Suez, d ied today of a
heart attack. Mollet, a
Socialist, was premier of
France from February
1956toMay 1957.
SAN FRANCISCO LONDON CAP) -Olga
<AP) -Edward M. Gaff .. Kerensky, 90, widow of
ney, 88, known for his Alexa::der Kerensky, the
witandoratoryduring22 man who in 1917 led
years in the California· Russia 's only dem-
Assembly, from 1940 to ocratic government,
1954, died here Thursday died at her home i n
·after an illness of several Stockport Wednesday.
months. Births
Death Notices ST.JOSEl'N NOSl'ITAL
~ ... ,,._,.,,
Mir. •rd Mrl. Mllonlo Glow. JIOlll
PINi:l'llt1'0N Vl• S•11lo TllO"'•I. S•n Ju•n
GUY A. l'INKEll:TON. •Hidlnl of CAplslr-.t lrl.
s.nt•ANo.ca. 0a1eot ou111 oe.....2, Mr.•rdMtr .. J•m•' "•''· 2'1• lrviftor
1•1s. S11rvl¥•d by Ills wit•. hM"I ......... Hewsl0<1&eac:ll,bOY.
11t111i:•rlon. S.r¥1c•s •r• Plftdlll'l. S.•••r 11, lfJJ
P•tlllc View M•l'llar111 P•r~ Mr. and Mr$. Lu!t Medi~. 11•1 LAo ~.MoW11CN111ac:ll.C.. Pl.u,Wntm1~.01rt.
1 l.OOMIS · s1_. • ....,.,11.,1ns
t-tAZl'L M. LOOMll, re1Jdlftt of MT. afld """-ll:ltllard Bonnell, 2fl'H ~ 111111. C.. ~i. of dMlll Oc• NUlr..._. No. 711, ~I TOl'O, "°'I'· --t, "JS. SWvlWClby Mr ....... IN".eMMn.ClaylOflllrMbfl•w, 1Wll .......,.. u. ...,.,._ S.ricn .,. ...,.,.. Slfft5St., HllftllnotOf'l Bo.ch, bo)'.
I'll, PaclJk '¥'le• IN'lftClrlal P•rt· NII'. al'd Mn. Mol¥111 E<lwarft. inn ~.Newport 1141ac:ll,C.. MlllllllfakeW11y, lrvlno,o lrl. ._..,..,1J,1t1S
•
flnopposed Elections •
Candidates Win Easily
fllEf l.EClWE I Glllllll MIDITAJIOIC ... •••• w ...
~&CIWS&•wnmr ..... ~....., ........ °""',...... ..... ~ .. --.-. ........ .....
.......... " ........ €.ii .. ......
,__.~1Ml--AMAW'F• Nlm8ATIOM
-MIW-SANTA ANA -Unopposed
candjdate1 for office in IO special
district elections at stake in the
Nov. 4 election won easy vic-
tories this week, appointments to
off ice by the Orange County
Board of Supervisors.
will h.ave to seek out wUling of·
fice holders and appoint them to
the vacancies.
Comm\IDity Service. Dittrtct:
:And three directors' seats on the
Surfside Colony Storm Water
District board of directors failed
to attract a single candJd.ate.
8ACJC BAY RESTAURAHT
The board appointments,
authorized by government codes
when candidates run unopposed ,
save the cost of elections.
According to government
codes, the Board or Supervisors may appoint any resident land·
owner within the f ourdisbicta.
Supervisor Laurence SchiilJt is
expected to suggest next week
that the incumbent officeholders
in the two Surfside d.i.strict.s be re-
appointed.
• '
-MllD DAMCI
OHTHIWAiiWtCI"
s•S•TIOMU
lq four additional special dis·
trict.s, the board was powerless to
act inasmuch as no candidates
tlled nomination papers ror the
available posts.
Hardest hjt by the absence
of candidates were two
special districts within what is
known as the Surfside Colony, a
community or about 1,000 re-
sidences sandw iched between
Sunset Beach and Seal Beach.
Reap90int is just about.all the
supervisors did Tuesday when
they filled the open spots in other
districts where there wen only
unopposed candidates.
"UIS AMII THI SOllllOOIC"
IMTIUMelti NIMITLT
THAT MEANS the supervisors
FOR EXAMPLE, no one med
for an open director'& job avalla-
. bie witf': the Surfside Colony
Noise Control Laiv
Amended by County
SANTA ANA -Orange Coun·
ty's noise control ordinance was
amended this week by the
Oran ge Cou nty Board of
Supervisors but it stiJJ may take
a Philadelphia lawyer to figure
out how much noise is too much
noise.
The section on exterior noi se
levels, ror instance, talks about
decibels and how high they can
go and for how long.
Then the ordin"1lce specifies
that "in the event the ambient
noise levels exceecb any of the
rtrst four noise limit categories,
the cummulative period applica-
ble to said category shall be in·
creased to ren ect said ambient
noise level.'·
THE NEW amendment to the
noise control ordinance adds that
''in the event the ambient noise
level exceeds the fifth noise limit
category, the m aximum allowa-
ble noise level under s(tid
category shall be increased to
reflect the maximum ambit?nt
noise level.''
When proposing the amend·
ments to the noise control or·
dinance, county Health Ot'Cice
John Philp said, "enforcement
experience indicates the need for
clarifying a m endments.··
Those clarirying amendments
we r e what th e board or
supervisors adopted Wednesda1.
THE SUPERVISORS adopted
the noise control ordinance
itself a year ago as part of a state
mandated program.
The ordinance deals with noise
levels that are permissible in
dwelling units and construction
zones in unincorporated areas of
the county.
When asked if he felt the
amendments helped clarify the
ordinance. Board of Supervisors
Chairman Ralph Diedrich said
"they might have clarified the
ordinance but they confuse me.''
FOR INSTANCE, incumbents
James F. Penney and John
Vibert were appointed to new
terms on the Board ol Directors
of the Emerald Bay Community
Services District.
lncum bents Charles Peterson,
Clark Boswell and Marvin Drew
were named to serve additional
terms as directors of the Three
Arch Bay Community Service
District.
In the Dana Point Sanitary Dis-
trict , Angus Smith and Jack
Schmidt were appointed direc-
tors and in the Sunset Beach
Sanitary District, it was Frank
Duvall, Dick Harrison and
Harold Henderson who were
named to new terms as directors.
ALLEN R. SMITH was the sole
candidate for the jo.b of assessor-
tax collector-treasurer's job in
the Los Alisos Water District.
Like the others, he won the office
by appointment Tuesday.
ln the same district, Harry
Johnson, another lone candidate
was named to a director's post by
the supervisors .
Incumbent Robert Wilhelm
was reappointed as a director ot
the Santa Margarita Water Dis·
tri.ct and in the Talbert Water
District, Joseph Boyer J r. and
Andrew Holtz were given fresh
terms by the supervisors when no
one filed nomination papers to
oppose them.
-
9wedoof> "'"'" ·-.... 6 __ ..._
6-CI'""'""'' i\ftenc.1'1-•
,.--.. ! "--~ ,....,_ " ...,,.., .,.,._
",...,,.,. ... llllct .....
A ol.IWI Mfj'ftMl _... 'lv'<VI'"" _,,.
,.......,,~. ·-•
,_"",,....
·~ ·~
OPBC l'C>a LUHCH DAl.Y
11 :00 .fo,M,.3:00 P.M.
IHM...,_Dr.
Ms ........
Gmm gifts .••
lo give wilh kMI
.lllllK __ ._~_1:.::~.
Ban on Fortune
Telling Supported
Pollution
Advertising
Curtailed
ANNU.AL INVENTORY SALE!.
OFFICE FURNITURE
SANTA ANA -Palm reader Barney Marinu
has lost his battle to have the city of Newport
Beach's ba n on fortune telling declared unconstitu-
tional.
Orange County Superior Court Judge John L.
Flynn Jr. dismissed Marino's lawsuit against the
city during pretrial act.ion in which city lawyers
pointed out that the plaintiff had failed to adequate·
Broad Quality Range
•Wood Execuffve Desk and Chairs
•Metal Desks and Chairs
•Desk and WdA Accessories
I
i I
!
I
.----------, Ml. •N Mrs. Geofoo B•r...,, 01111
IALn~lll•llOH
JUHllAL HOMI
Corona del Mar 673-9450
C-W.y, Westl'lllMi.r, bOy, • ly pursue the issue.
SANTA ANA -A
Newport Beach com-
pany agreed Thursday to
l)alt its alleged false ad-
vertising of a Pollution
cor.itrol device al)d pay
$4 ,000 in civil penalties lo
the Califor n ia Air
Resources Board. New and Used
Cosla Mesa 646-2424
llll llOAOW A Y
MOITUAIY
110 Broadway, Cosla
Mesa
642-9150
Mc.COl:MIC•
MOITUAIY
Laguna Beach
494-9415
San Juan Car:iistrano
495-1776
PACfFfC YllW
MIMOllALPAll
Cemetery · Mortuary
Chapel
1 3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach.
California.
64-4-2700
PHI FAMILY
COLONl,AL PUHllAL
ltOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave.
Westminster
893-3525
SMfTHS' MOaTUAlY
627 Main SI.
Huntington Beach
. 536-6539
PUBLIC NO'l1CE
l"tCTtTIOUS •USINESS
fllAMI' STAT•M•NT
Tllo totlewt,... "rloOfl1aredClll,."'*· _ .. !
WIL1..IAMS AL.A"M SYlTEMS,
10r .... COUnty 01¥lt.lefl,»lo E. 11'11151.,
C..11 MMe, CA. m27 1Molllf19 M · dros• ,..0 . llC!a 723, C051• Mow, CA.
'""' Dll"ld All1111 Cl•rk•, 2•1 M95-
I ::Js' 41., MIMlofl Vl•lo. c..i11om1,
0011ald C•ort• C•rler, 1.S.I Callfle. i.....,... Hllll, Calllor11l•'lll6s.J
Cyflll\I• ·~ Cl•l"ll•, 24611 Miit
._. U.., Ml1110f1 Vlolo, CflliomW.
""' I ""'"-Jlefl camt, u.n et11ti..l UieWltHil .... C:.lltor11l•'2•t.1
111+1 bltM ... 11 le cOl'ldUCIW lly • 1 ......... ,.., ....... .
1 0. .. 1111 Allan Qark•
1'NI .... ,,..,.. •• , llled Wllfl 1"'
Ce.lltr c11t11. el o.-.,, .. c-.tr .,.
"-"""-' .. ttJ.S. .....
"""4llMdQr11119tC...ll ~.,. "* ft ..... 11,1',M,•lll~l.l,1'{' W-JJ
' PUBLIC NO'nCE
Mr. end Ml"I. ~kt "'-<M llJ.ttt, !Ml
l'l:lf111:9nwlck, N-port Be.,;h, boy.
..... e .... , ''· '"' Mr ..... Mrs. Le1H• Wll$0tl. SO" "9rf1
Way,l"'IM,boy. ' ........... ,,.,,.7J
Mr. •IW Mf's. K•ltfl O.rm-. tao Solren Or., CHU Mow, bOy.
Mr. •l'ld Mr•. Mlcri..e1 H•loht, 2&22
Vff-PIK•, lrvlnlo, bOY.
Mr. •nd Mrs. Yroy ,..n11lntl011, nu Feftllst., 1rv111e, olrl.
MT. and *'· Wllllllm Pellvs., •U2
HINN1te.ci s1 •• 1rv111e, bOV.
~ ... rtt,1'7S
MT. and Mr5. J•IMI ~Wll, 7tf1 Com-
fNdote Circle, Nu11U119t011 IM«I\, ....
........... rM,1t7S
Mr. •lld Mrt.. Louis Matcllloll, 2SlU
~Into Or., Ml1Slo11 Vle}o, gh'I.
Mt. afld Mrs. Atll'\lll\do MOUi, D9lS
-191ttist .• EIT0,.,b0y.
......... ,tt, ltfJ
Mt. 111'1111 Mrl. Oennl1 llo1t1, HHI '-"'
c.wt, EITOl'o,bOy.
Mr. •l'ld Mr1. 5'w.• llrelldl-. 101'2 ""'1cvl-Aw,. W.slf"tll'lster. (llrl.
Mr, eftd Mr1. Si.\lell ll:YMI, 1tto
W..IN<• St .. No. 1, COit• Mew, Qlrl.
Mr. al\d Mr1. Altllard V• V••k•, 10101
~.i Or,, N11ntlltgtCN1 EM.Kl\, bo)'.
•
Marino, who declares himself to be a true
Romany gypsy, argued in the action that the ban on
his Cortune telling activities in Newport Beach
amounted to religious discrimination against all
Romanies. .
An almost identical lawsuit filed against the ci -
ty of Costa Mesa by Romany gypsies Alfred and
Diane Stevens is · not being pursued in Sup~or
Court.
The lawsuit was rt.Jed Feb. 25 but no move has
bef:n made since that date to set a date for trial of
the issue.
The agree ment
between the Crown
Manufacturing Com·
pany, 858 Production
Place, and the st ate
ca me arter board
lawyers took action in
Orange County Superior
Court to halt sales of the
firm·s ''Crown Turbo
Systems."
Prices fro;.. 50°/o to 60°/o OFF
Salo w•,,.. tr.. Oct. I "'"'Od. 4
I
UNIVERSITY rt#u ~,,,-(.!Yhr..
• (0~1ci Me,ci. (A 97677 e (714] 646:8981 Costa Mesa's ban on fortune telling was recent-
ly u"Qh.eld in Superior Court when a three-judge ap-pellil~ court upheld the city ordinance and rejected
the elderly astrologer's claim that the measure was
tmconstitutional and denial of religious freedom .
Na ming president-
treasurer Margaret
Torley a nd vice pre-
sident-secretary Derek
Torley as co-defendants, r~:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;;::::;
the slate lawsuit claimed .... _.._ , ', '*'' , .. c-'4"f;JIW,
that the company's
claims of low emissions
: . . -···· DAILY PIL T from its pollution conirol
system were unverified.
•
JCPenney
GARDEN CENTER
FASHION ISU.MD STORE OHL Y
LAT ANA
ASSOITll>
COLOIS
GARD.EN
VALUES!
THIS WEEK
7'' HAllllllG
BASKETS . •h nlina:n Pl-' Altlhrt .,...,,
3.99
PERI WI Mii LE
IM FULL
ILOOM ·-1.19 1.19.'
SPRl•I BULBS ARE
HERE
S110P SUtCIA Y MOQM to Sp.a
~E:WPORT 0 CENTER
FASHION ISLAN0•(71 4) 644-2~1_3
! (
•
Public
AUCTION
FRIDAY, SATI.IRDA\', SUNDAY •t I P .M.
Bargains on Fine Crysta l. Sterling Silver, Porcelains. Oriental
Objects d'Art. Pa in tings. Jewelry, Antiques. Bronzes,
Furniture. Select lndion Turquoise ...
S 1.000.000 INVENTORY
f 'rom 1-.:ttdtt'.~. ("011rt.~. ri.11-nf-P4""'"· Rrutkruptdf's
VlSITORSf
Come and •e:e:
whcd Jun an
AUCTION
can bef
FREE ADMISSION!
... across the street from
seven of the Southland's
most elegant waterfront
restaurants!
HOURS
. r. ! .
' . ) '· i ,,J .' . . ' .
•
Inspection & PriuateSales
l0-5 DA.ILY 12-SSATURDAY 2·5SUNDAY
CkMm W«lnesday & Tnursday
• AUCTIOHSllD:D-EV.ERY-_
FRIDAY. SA1lllll>AV, SUNDll\' o1 8 P.lii:°"
,
USE YOUR BANKAMERICARD.
MASTER CHARGE.
PERSONAL CHECK OR CASH .
2542 W-~-Hltlbw•v Ne'"""a...,., c.ur ..... ma
f714) MS·210D
.,
' I
•
•
' I I
' d
r
g
w
•. • . •
•
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p
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r
<
'
I
'
..
·SF Mwsewm THE FAMILY CIRCUS
,
Coastal Race Erotic Yoyeurl ~al,ly ·i
I , .
• -t ' ' S et. Tuesday .
Yacblllll ..,111..S-In N s:; Harbor are
looldnl.1:1'::1he we c' etd .;; olroutiaere-iattu c"'"'11na their lnietolt ... Ille aas:m11e
California Cou\al Race wlalch ............ way·fhlm
SID 1"t1Dl!llerliext ~ and wlnda 111> bere lat«lnllle.weok.
BOATINC
•
SAN FRANCISCO <UPIJ -Th'! rea-e to reporta that Ille llnan·
cially-troubled San Fraoclaco
Nuaeum of Erotic Art -1ld cloae hu
hem to "overwbelmlna'' it will 1tay
open for at least three more weeks.
"lo fact.'' a1ld a spokesmen, the
Rev. Ted Mcllvenna, ••tr the
eustomen keep IOUl'Jng in the way Iller ~e tl>e put r• da11. we ml&hl-
llOl have to elole at all." .
TBi •uszu• 18 nu; home or
Ille pr!va(e collectloo ol paycbolo&iJlts 1'1111111 &Del JI:...,.._ KnJDbOUH'n.
'1'be 2,000 art obltcta -2,000 yean ol buman aexual _......, and l'\ID
·from worn ol ancl...tdndla. Japan
and China to modem wora by aucb
aclmowledted B~ mOl!ers as
Pablo Plcuoo&Dd a-. Groos.
For muy local yacbta the Coaatll 'Race ta simpl~ ' .boll:leward bound eo~tlao (or tbOle yac!t14),;blcl,l laave !>Mn In Ille Bay"'-• eomPtlina
in St. ·rr-.a1a Yacbt Qab'~ 1'11 Boal Serles. Ji.
number ,of northern yachts will use the race u a
ume'llp for Loni Beach Yacht Club's ino.mile La
Paz r~ce which stat'\S Nov. 1. -
Ventilation .. "!,!t'!!:'~~=~~:,:
Of 'D..:: U . 'riewtnalll~hnl<deplctlons.
NcllYeADa aal4 llle..or1anWnc
Genesb Cburcb &Del Bcumenlcal
Center c>peoed' ~ imwewn to ac~
compllsb three tblnp -lb cele.brate
sexuality:. to "democratllt.-ex" MPce
erotic art usu'11y b awned only by
wealthy collecteri, and to educate
people to see historic mterest In erotic
art.
. uuat n "ll'•ovft"l'belmlnc." he&ald. t'.. lluaeum officials bad announced
T o O wner 'J'HE .CAIJIFORNIA COASTAL race was
founded by NRYC and sr. TYC live years ago and hu steadUy crown In popularity amoog those who Contrary to co~
get llleir kicks out of offabo<e raceo /lllder potential-~lhaletvln, Ille rdcsporwte'blllty ty roQ.&b conditions. ~ . ~g a equa ven-
--That coits Of taxes. maintenance, and
insurance would force it to close Tues-
day. Now Mr. Mcllvennasaystheuni-
que museum wUl be open at least
lllrO\lgh Oct. 19.
"Many people are still frif(hteM<I or
sex,., Mcllvenna said. "It'•· tragic
that the city never underltood our IDOtive.••
"M,,.,..., ~'kn to ""' to hor plan .. '<OUM ltioy -talk bock." •
The race will f!lart in front ot si. F'¥C, juat ln· , tµation •board a reerea-
side Ille Golden Gate' Bridge, and !eke the a.et put tionll !!oat belonp to Ille
all San Francisco rocks and the aouth tower of the owner alld not the
Golden Gate Bridge. After worklnc llleir way Jl\llllUfacturer.
through the sometimes turbulent •"potato-patch'' Tbili ls a warnin(t'n>m
outside the Golden Gate, the· fleet will take to the the commander of the
sea, leaving Richardson's Rock, San Miguel, Santa 11.th Cout .Guard Dis-
Rosa, Santa Cruz and Anacapa islands to port trict who points out that
before turning for finish at the Newport Pier. the owner of.• boat could ~ course coven oome ot Ille potentially -&et birmell mto a lot of
dangerous waters on the Pacific Coast. In past pn:;blema if he assumes
races ttie fleet has encountered everything from th~t the manuf~~turer
gal"! to zerO-via.ibillty fog and light airs. baS met the m1n1mum . . . , --Coast Guard standards
cJN THE LOCAL REGATTA front this (orventilation.
weekend, ·Balboa Yacht Club is offering a
singlehanded race for outside cluaes on Saturday;
Udo lsie Yacht Club 15 sponsoriilg Its annual Fail
Regatta for inside classes Saturday and SUnday;
U,hla Corinthian Yacht Club 15 host to Soling
s8ilors In the Podolak Memorial Trophy shies
Saturday and Sunday, and NHYC will stage a
Lehman-12 regatta on Sunday.
Elsewhere on the Southern California Yachting
Aasociation scene: .
Loe:Aa1elea-Loa cBeaci'" , ·
LOS ANGELES YACHT CLUB -Fail Dinghy
Series (5-0-5, Laser, Guppy) Saturft)f and Sunday.
LONG BEACH YACHT CLUB -Long Point
and Return (Catalina J~land Series 7-8) Saturday,
~nday.
Santa Monica Bay
CALIFORNIA YACHT CLUB -Lazy 8 Race
(Hanis Series) Saturday.
MALIBU YACHT CLUB -Arbitrary Cham·
pionships•( multihull > $.mday.
PACIFIC MAR!Nf:RS YACHT CLUB -Invert·
IF THE boat does oot
meet minimum stan-
dards. the owner, pro-
vided be doesn't blow
himseU up, could be lia-
·ble for a $100 fine plus the
cost of properly ventilat-
ing Ille boat.
The Coast Guard said
most .manufacturers
comply with or even ex-
ceed Coast Guard re-
commendations, but it is
up to the prospective
buyer or owner to check
this vital point. One way
is to secure the services
of a marine surveyor, if
tbe owner is not capable
of checking the equi~
ment.
ed Start Race (PHRF) Sunaay.
WINDJAMMERS YACHT CLUB -Jolly ALTHOUGH there is
Roger Regatta <centerboards) undec 17 feet Sun-no fool-proof ventilation
day. ·--Die..... ' system. the Coast Guard
-e" has publlabed minimum SILVER GATE YACllT CLUB -.t.rea Chait\· standardi catbe~ from
pionships (¥.ii Ton, €al-25, P-Cat, Thunderbird) study and .thought, plus
Saturday, Sunday. I '•. -exteosiveteiting. ' . NortllW• ... nct ~ I ' r;:-
SANTA BARBARA.YACHT .CLUB -Mercuey The~e'standards re-RaceofChampioD.s.~YtSunday. . quire athleaat ont! inlet
POMONA VAJ,l,Ef ~G ¥S0£1AT10N duct ad'd one ~xbaust
·-All Centerboard Rega~ Sunday. duct ofladeqliate size to
ANACAPA YACHT CLUB",:Anacapi 19Jand create a llo!"' of freah air
race No. 3. Saturday. ~ ~ !;?<I exh,1ust dmpgerous .1"mes.
Fire women
Take O ver
Station
Gemini: Humor Sparkling
B78YDNEYO-lies.
SATURDAY,OCl'OU:R4 SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You receive back-
A.RIES (March 21-April 19): Accent is on settle-ing from group, organization. One yoU deal with
ment in conriection with job or special service. may be confined to home, hospital.
Means as1igoment is clarified. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Accent oo
MICANOPY, Fla. TAURUS (April 20-May 311): Pace should be deaires, friendships, monetary galna due to pro-
(UPI> -Between 8 a.m. steady. not sensational. Diet is more impartant fessional endeavors. Flnishralber than initiate pro-
and s p.m. on weekdays. than usual. Eschew foods that ''keep you awake.•• ject.
women run the GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Your sense or CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19): New approach
Micanopy Volunteer humor sparkles, wins you friends and influences proves favorable where standing, advancement iii
Fire Department while people. Personal magnetism soars. concerned. Go to source.
their melilolk are oft in CANCER (June 21-July 22): Be specific, aware AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: Emphasis on
nearby Gainesville earn-of details, able to dig in and work with factual travel, study, publishing, brid&ing language and
iDi a living. m1terial. If basics are learned, utilized -then you generation gaps. You learn by teacbin&, listening,
••At first, it was«ind of bei1hten chances for success. being receptive.
bard."• said Carmen L.EO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be ready for changes or P ISCES (Feb. JD-Mar 20): Concern about
Polk, tbe only paid creative nature -member of oppc>alte sex verifies costs can be resolved. U fiexible, You find ways of
firefighter in Micanopy facts. You'll be more cert.m, 1ble to say, write. ad-getting more for your mooey -and enjoying it just
(population500) and wife vert.ise. as much.
of Claude Polk. the VIRGO<Aug. 23-Sept.22): You learn about cos-~G~AR;;;;;:A:;;ii;;Go;;;;;;;;E·'"""Sl~D~EW"""A;;;;;;;;;;L;;;;;;;;;K;;;;; town's fll'e chief. ts. luxury items, home improvements -and you
conclude arrangement with family, You could also
''BUT THE TIMES locate missing article.
we've gone out we've . . ~BRA ~Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Cycle high -tike in· s A L E ! done the same things 1tiat1ve. Define terms, outline objectives, refuse to
they would've done. I sell yourself short. Your dynamic approach wins al·
think we've done as well -----=:::::;:-::;,;;;;:;~-::=----Saturday, Ocfobef' 4 as they could have
done." · 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
~·w~ew.°d':l~ ~e~ CORMER OF 16th &'ORA.MGE
department two years COSTA. MESA. ~~~n~erto8 ::~g~r= BARGAINS GALORE! ,
because firem en arrived
t 0 0 I a t e f r 0 m Furniture, Clothin&;
Gainesville. about 15
miles north of here. Now •inginir al lhe botw•iful Applian ces, Books, Sporting Goods,
"TREY REALIZED -erabella • TONY C-CRR -f onnerlr Toys, You-Name-It!
(hey couldn't be here of "Srreet-COIT'' now perfonninir Proceeds lo Hcrbor "'rea during the day, so now cu TONY R OSSINI nery niKhl A
We're doing the firefight-""cep l Monday from 8 p.m. youth mCI c-ity A.ctiyity ing," Mrs. Polk said.
Most of the women are WlLD WEST SHOPPING CENTER Projech
m8.nied to male volun· sAn Diego Frwy. and U Pu Rom, Laguna Hills Sp01111recl by the
. ~~ O~ bt:e :~enk~~ F or Reservatlo~ p lease call
• •
•
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOIJS aUSINlSS
NAMI STATaMINT c ... tai · Details of the Coast
Guard .minimum re-
quirements are availa-
ble from the Coast Guard
around, husband-and-581-1500 COSTA MESA ROTARY CLUB
wife firefighters work ~~::::::::::::'.~~~:'.:'.:::::::::::::~-~~~~;;=:;,,;;;;~;,;~~;,;,,,;;;;,;,=J; together. r
Tl'll IOllowlng POf'iOr\ IS 00!119 DUii· ..... ,:
LOG-WEST, 7311 Toul-Or.
Suite J, HIW!tlngton fle«ll. CA t2"'1
8n1et G. Alcll, 1'31 Toulol6t Or.
Sulttl. H\llltlngton Bo1th, CA '26-11 T1llt. bull,..•1 II tondutttd by IO'I I~
cllvld\All
, Bruce 0 . Rl<ll
11111 .....,,_nt ••• filed "'It! 1111
t~Y tlerlt of 0r""91 c-ty on --
to!J'lbtr:IO, t•JS -''VbllShtd 0rlng0 Coll! O.lly Piiot,·
Weatier
so-night ind mornr,.g low Office of Boating Safety
cloud• 1nd loc•• fog. oth•rwlM l9 Pine Ave Long' ...ri.tilo hlvti tloudS bVI l'l'IOlll'I' IMft-Be h • • ny -.S.'1' Ind $.llurAy. 3(' .
light v1rl1bl• winds night •rd
morn/no noun.. Hlghs todl'I' .. ton.
C:0.1t11 l•mPOr•tures will ranoe belwMn 6J •nd 7•. lnt1nd t1m-
P1rlt~I wltl rf"91' Ml_,, to Mid ts. Ttlo ••Uir 1ompor1two will IM ...
"If you've got your
hair rolled up in curlers
you"ve just got to go that
way," said -Mrs. Polk,
who has two chi!dren and
becomes a \l'o lunteer
herself after her B·to-5
shift and on weekends.
O<t.J,I0,17.2•.1ttS £!tlS '
Brochure
On Le<Ui ng
.. Available
ONE NIGHT THE
alarm was sounded
while she was wearing a
bikini. She grabbed her
heavy canvas jump suit
and put it on over the
bathing suit ..
PUBLIC NOTICE
,ICTICIClilJS aUMMISS
NAMI STATl.MINT
Tllo followtnt .,..--Is deWog bull· -n-' wisTFALL ·s. 21001 eiffidfno Cl.II
"91 RMd, MIUlonVitfO, CA 92.,-s
G•rl•,_. W. W.S1flll IK111'11"1'1),
1tt61CIVUlll lint, El TOro, CAmJO
'Tllls busf,..ss 11 (onducttd by• ln-
dlvkt.611. • K1tfllNn Wlllftll
TNs ttllt.mont -s tlltd "'tfl the
c..uMy Cltrt of Dr'"9e Cou'<tY s.p.
~JO, tt1S. ,._
Pl.lblldiid Or ..... ON1t Dlltr Pllc4.--
oetot.rJ, 10:11~2•, 1tJl ,,...15
PUBWC NO'J1CE
l'RIDAT
Sec"'"4 low 1:31 p .m. 5Kond"""' •:47 p.m. ...
SATURDAY
Finl'°" 2:•• 1.m. 0.2
First lllgft t :Oll •.m. 6.J
s.c.d low 2 :24 p.m. .0.)
5'clllnd 1119" t ::U p.rn. S.6
SUNDAY
Finl io. , J:27 Lm. 0.$
fl.n4 Mgh •=• '·"'· 6.6 Sitoftd io.. •: 11 '·"" o.• kond high 10:2• p.m. J.J
Sun rlMli 6:4' •.m., M'l16:1Sp.m.
MoOll rl101 5:07 1 .m., ..is S:21
·~·
A free ·brochure en-
titled "Leasing Marine
Electronics -Your
Questions Answered,··
has been published bythe
Marine Instrument
Division fOt Wes tern :Leasystems Company.
"Everybody tliought it
was real funny ," she
said.
· The women finally
·have reCeived fire hats
and boots made to their
petite sizes. Before,
some of the smaller·
women got lost in the The-publication-gives man-sized fire apparel.
answers to suc,h ques-STATEM "J:;,•::;DOtUMMT PUBLIC NOTICE tioos as: Why .should 1 A NEW AIR condi-
••CTiT1ous•u11•11:ssMNM -ITAfEMENTOf'AU.NDGM-.:iirf tease my marine elec-tioned fire station will ~1:i,:i:~kt1~1!~M-:'~ -~ o,use.o, tronic equipment? What have separate sleeping
....,..: . _ -'!~l•'ClOUtllUMJlll•l!IMlm._ haP.pen:S atlhe end or the quarters and bathrooms.
MARTIN AIRCRAFT SALES, Tiie ........... pfflOM "-1119 ....... • • ' said Mrs. Polk, whose 190SI C.mpus Or .. Or•i>ge c-tr ·=·tNUMoftlwffdltiou,bWw lease CODtJj&C~? can. I Nl'Ji0f\.Slnt•...,..,e.uton1~ft101 sHow ANO TELL tNTEN•OftS. select any manne ~wp. main job is to sound -n. F\(t111ous ausi ... ss N-,. -· ~... ---· •• t ·I t" -•larms and keep the ""tel to •t:iow ••s 111tc1 1t1 0r...,. aMJ ._._-·· '·· ,....._.~-men wan:..:__!J_. ~r~J~1J, 1tr1. · • flctltlCNt 1111tsll'lff• N•rn. •-'tn't'CI• • i equipment, two trucks e.r1 E. ••'''· ,,,01 Mine.....,, .t.o.... -· 111911 in Or411'1te Counlr on In add1t onR.there are and a rescue unit clean •rvii:~~':c"";~·~.':!,u. '"" v~ Miirdl., 1ni. ~ qu~ons concerning in-and shining. ="' ... Ml•11on Vl•JCI, CliltonH .cw":::.~'1:-v·"·UlRochtsm', stallation, warra.oty, The biggest fire the
c;.,. R. WOOd, isz• w. oaney, ,.zC:::~c!...., "'· 1to Od,,.., 01.. maintenance and in-women have bad was an
Apt.1, A1Mmelf1, e.11ton11• •1101 TN• 1111t1ftt.s ..:,11 c11114'1ct.d " 1 surance. · attic fire in an old house.
T1111 bu•'"'"••• eonciuctlf vt • ..,., .. ~1P 'J,bey had to request help
9'1'1ff•1Nr1"9f'lflrp. ' NORMAL WARMAN TIMl .boolClet can beob-froril the G•inesville T1111=~::....w11ntM TMl...._nt .w1s11i.ciw4th1 .. tained )Jy writing Fire Department. M~
eouintya.r.of0tll'ltl C-rt•_. CwM¥ Cl9rll llf 0r_,. e-.trons.p.. W t L ~· ...,,._ts. ttrs.. • -......,., ,.,s es ern eassystems; of the i r a I a rm s ,
.,._ • '"4im 3381 Stevens Creek Blvd., how f all ~0r.,..e.ontDel'Y""'-PutllltMc110r~C011toei1rP11at, SanJ Calif 95 ever, are or sm
Stilt.tt,».•...-Oct.a,to,ms .,._75 oet.J.10,11.2.,1t1s ~s ose, . 117. brushfire&.
I• ......................... -.. . rEARL'S l'l~ ... , ... ••CO.., ...cl,..., .... ,, .. --... , ............ ,
lfflJC-0.C ......... S....~J.wv <¥',. ... ," ... Mio ' F!tR411 I , ... .....,..~c--
.~.~ I MZ..1711 I
•
COME TO THE .
•EWPORT HARBOR
I• • THE • WATER.
BOAT
SHOW
at •.1.. ~o ·
_Where do you 10to 1et yo11r \
·'MA•i SUl'l'l.lfS.lftd 1et %
.t11eni .. ~fl!IT "'-~g.,,! Ii = AIAPORT .• BAKE ;z ::c
£ ~ ~ Tiki Newport Blvd. :
i f g "' Exit E11t 1t Biiker & $
"-Q, KALM Right on Pullman $
' .•
"' Cmft • • 1M1atlflllll1 llll ... • ,_ '§ •
, s.is..t.21 : :r 8 .~ :
. i.· sa';t1 • fi ~ • ~T. f MOM •iii i •~illjs ll•llll,_ ~-PULLMAM,CDITA•IA ca7-.. e -.,., 11•111,. .. -_ .. 1:'::::'-l!Mlt'.-:i='2::,.::"=11=,.=~· .:_· , ••••••••••• ~.··-··-
~ ""'~r
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N&Ballooiis.
1No Celebrities.
I
\ on Cutting.
~ .. pagne.
~ Pri
\. \ ~J1fs'. fine 2!tion of ~!~~n-
..._ ground glasses and frames for the
whole family. Fashionable, .
reasonable and expertly fitted. Seeing
is believing, so check out the r;ew
Optical Department at.Wards.
Use your Ward's charge.
OPTICAL 0£PARTME.NT AT
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"'' IMJLY PILOT •rlday, October3. 1875
Mystery Donor
( "'-
. . . $8JJ, OOO Grant for Breasts
Airporf l!arking
Jlates·TakiritJ f
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DURllAM. N.C. CU PIJ ___, An anonymous
donor has given a Duke University plastic surgeon
$80,000 to support research on recons tructing
breasts for women who have had them removed
bec~use of injury or disease.
Dr. NiC'holas Georgiade, chief ,of Duke 's
division of plastic s urgery •. said the money would be
used to help r esearch on the artificial breast, or pro-
sthesis, that he is developing to look and feel like a
normal breast.
THE ARTl,.~ICIAL BREAST IS covered with
soft plas ti c and is filled with a sterile gel, be said.
Surgeons in Australia have been inserting
artificial breasts for three or four years, but the
pnxedure ls far less common in the United States,
he said. . .
"The prosthetis makes it unnecessary for a pa-
tient to have an artificaJ breast built into her
braissiere,'' said Georgiade. •'This provides a
pcsychological advantage to the woman because the
prosthesis becomes a part of the patient.•• -.
THE ARTIFICIAL BREAST CAN be put into
place as early as four or five d8ys after a mastec-
tomy, or removal of U,e breast.
Women suffering from breast cancer may j)ave
to wait longer to be sure that the cancer bas not
spread beyond the breast, said Georgiade, though
surgeons can easily remove the artificial breast if
cancer recurs.
~· "l lllOAR p.jEW YORK CITV'
" l"GOMip.jG f:)('f11'1CT? •
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -It wlil'<Gll tn-n $1 "'""aeid
month" to Pllrk their c~ ~ 1111 :!f·llour period la ll!t -•I
parkinS lot• aervinC !bi Loi Ali_..et Iaw-natlonll Ab-port
pauen1er terminals. ..
The Board of Airport CommiJ•iona increased tile ruximu...!'! ,
,parldng ree from '3µ, $5to ~age IOlll·te.,.. P¥kiaS.in ·""' i facilities and to enc0urase uee or IOwer·rate Iota lOHted larilier
from the terminals. r f ' . ,1 ... ., • •
CUrre0Uy . the Parldnc fee~ the fu!t 21 lloun II j3, follOt'ed •
by M for the seealld day ancl"51or ..effh s'llbl~-t lN·bbUr •
period. When the new rate takes eUect Nov. 1, tbt?fee ~IU be $5
'or every 24 hours.
Alexander H. Pape, p~dent-ofjbe. commilsltlfl, a.id~
new rate should discaurage long-term parkin&"iD the-centrU · •
leaving more spaces for motorist& meeting or droppin& aff
trave-lers.
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ONE FANTASTIC DAY TO SHOP AND SA"\CE! BUT, HURRY, SOME QUANTITIE;S ARE hlMITE,D!
ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR
6-dig it LED dis play. fixed gss
decimal. Adds, i;ubtracts.
mul tip lies, divides. l<""or
pocke l, purse. Batt.ery extra.
OFflCI:: £(}Uli '1'1ENT
'
' SAVE 17% ~'"
JOO-LB. BARBELL WORKOUT SET
Get in shape and keep in 1888 shape with this set. 5-, 10-, __
and 15-lb. vinyl-coated discs,
68" bar. In struction book. REG. 22.99
SPORTING GOOl>S
SAVE $7
JO-CUP DRIP-COFFEEMAKER
Deluxe drip-coffeemaker of· 2988 ICrs super speed brewing and
ric h coffee taste. With per-
manent filter. signal light. REG. 36.99
HOUSJo;WARES
SAVE 25%
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5.99 pr., 64x38" .................. 4.49
6.49 swag, 70x38" ................ 4.86
3.49 valance, 64xll" .............. 2.68
''Somerset'' curtains with eyelet ruffle.
What a lovely way to dress a window! Fresh and 3 "74
breezy polye_ster and cotton with a scallopro ey~let f 1
ruffie. Machme wasl:i and dry so they stay nice with-· PR 60x24•
out a care. {n white or beige. Hurry.in and save! REG. 4,99
DliAPERJES
·SAVE 16%-22o/o
GIRL'S FLANNEL PJ OR GOW~
In 100% cotton flannel with s4~
colorful print. Meets U.S .
Standard FF 5.74 for flame
resistance. Girls' sizes. REG. 6.50-$7
d lRLS'WEAR
,
SAVE'13 r
WARDS TWo-vM.VE.s1NK FAUCET
This sink faueet has an aera-1388 .tor to help soften the ~tream
so there's no spJashirtg. E.jts , ,_
standard 3 hole sink. REG. 26.95
HEATING, PLUMBING ..
. • • • ' 1.: •
Early Bird Specia:ls from 9:30 to 11 :30 AM, Saturday! . .
, SAVE 33%
EARLY
BIRD
FOOTBALL FAVORITE NFL SOCKS
Team colors! 90% acrylic-10%
stretch nylon. Sizes 7-81h.
"1.19Sizes8-ll ......•.... 79c
1A9 Sizee 10.13 ........... 99c
OOYS'WEAR
66~AIR
REG. 99c
SAVE 36% ·
PLYWOOD FRAME FOOTLOCKER
Perfect for packing away 888 Summer c1othes. Heavy-duty
vinyl covering, Jock. In 3
coll>rs . 28\hl41'.xll I'.". REG. 13.99
SPORTING GOODS
SAV£23%
ECONOMICAL ELECTRIC DRY IRON
Big mirror-finish sole.plate 688
with button nooks. Finger-1 tip fabric dial. This wrinkle-
ridder is a teal value. Hurry! REG. 8.99
HOUSEWARES •
DON'T WAIT TO ENJOY WHAT YOU NEED NOW-JUST SAY "CHARGE IT !"
•
We like. ·having you aroui:id.
SAVE35%
EARLY
BIRD
, 1v •. cu. FT. RICH STEER ~ANURE t
Enrich the soil of your gar-· s 7i C
den and !&WI) with this weed
free, scre~n.ed fertilizer. BAC
·Limit of siir baso· Hurry! REG. 89c
'.., GAR.OEN SHOP
• PANOR:\MA faTY t.oblJat roecoe. phone 894·8211 • lfUNTINGTON BEACH edingerat bi11ch, 714·892·6611 •NORWALK imperial at. norwalk bl vd., phone 868-0911 • FUU$RTON harbor at~. 11~79-2600
• TORRANCt ~ 1mo ra•hion 11quan. pliona 542°6971 •COVINA harrancaat.un be.rnardino (rooway, 966-7411 •EAGLE ROCK CQJorado •t broadw~, phont 2!M-9261 1 • CA1'00A PA•K UlP'R8'' plaa. ~ ae&IOQO ,,
• MNTA/lHA brfllo/ at. Mvent.eenth, 7J.4•647·6841 • ROSEMEAD 3600 roiflmeed blvd ., 57a.3110 ' • MONTC~IR mQnkllafr plaia. phone 7,1"'621·:t064 • LYJ'(WOOD Imperial blv.d., at. 1t1•, phone'tS'l-0000
• 8\'-'E NARDINO etintnl city mall, '114·884·9231 • COS~A MESA twiatol 1t., at.88.n dicgo rwy., 7 14-549-9~00 •LAKEWOOD lakewOod blvd. at. candlewoad, phone 633.7900 • W£8T1 L08 ~OELES la cftnep at. 18th 1L, 836-792$
SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 9:30. TO 9:30 PM .•. SUNDAY AM TO 6:00 PM •.. JUST SAY" HARGE ITr'
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tt;llU.AND Boas J4am l~l~!t••J>lia1
";l_I Of.............. 'Pf'elbrtlriaD .. • '
l>ial>el•! .. " . ·Abo\lt-~..,. __
-An epidemic •'"""8c ""' munlty-d..S. • -. 1 'Unit«!~. ,' ; liAPIDritNEABlit ·,. •I"
-The number one health~ .&. Tqa DOYt,;· ....,_..._
"blem inthil country. nllltW nMaetr•~Y .._.,..be.i
-Flllll moat commoo UH~ -ruldJ.llereWht11ii Gia death, but, "\I 1bould be ankeil, eaN-~ 'lf'lif<ll be eaHICI a~
. num~two.'. . t • ~z"1' w ie-!• 111 h.
,-Six-mllli"!' Ani<ric~are =~• )teop e tiave' bl.ea dia.,...,... vict1m•1 -ihca · ~...-. teets"' ~thmr300;M new cues -=..e Kc~~ aild~·are
-About three to four million· -. L _ undiagnosed-dJabe.(ic• in Uotil t!1J:ee yeln •co. Dr.
America. ~ 1a1d, cUa~ ,,,.. ll!e
t -The odcb ol being a dialletic m01t frequen y mist\laa'noi~
are one in four. --~-----.. ~· 1 ,
---Other dl .. l5es mliy 1be tbe 1' He •Je41te tbe ·American
result of it. _ Diabetes Ad : v'DOClw:emi• _.
These hard fact wefe ·not 'sociatiool tor. 11!ff' !!<l~tbe tiven to fri.&hten but to inform. public, and I i • • U
They were 'offered· byl a :('p e ·l"o d 0 9t i.1 ;.-an a
medical panel durlpg_ 1-J>olbllC' 1-f~lmologlttl /f,....del'°'iDC
health program spoli!Cored1 tii • nmtoms and rd~u.ta.
-J <rd~ rr,--~ · ,"'
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• m erator. an 1t
Who i. a dlrecloi-.and (orDMr cblef or ,1art at Hoa•· laid, "Flt· t'9ll )'ffn a10 w&en I told a pa.
1 tf•t. h6 WU diabetic. he'd let .bostlle. ,, .
1.1'.odaY i>ioPIF. ~ IDOf"I acoept·
!DC. ba laid ll!ec-· \lltY Mr• bettar lnforinOd-* tbere'1 less
stigma at""1-· . . Dr. Dolle believes. however,
tbal U..-ue sbould11e ranked
MCOftd u the moat Common
.,,.,_ o( cleath. He reuoned that
often when the-cause is listed u a
bUrl ittOcl,or ltroke, tbe victim was:. a diabetic.
PDCENTAGES
••At leut IO percent ~cor
Oftaries .... d ia"betica; e'1 a
bl,cll pereentage iQ. all c . 'o-
.-ular paliints, and it's ·fre.
q u en t ly f o u n.d w,i t ·h
a rteri o sclerosis a'nd aDtUJ'1'111l9. •• '
He •uaaeated diabetic tests for
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tbo1e who ·nave-beadacbes •.
~able bearlnc 1 .... aoul or
illwrtlculltll, are hypothyroid or
-alcobollc.
··i•rn not 11yln1 that diabetes
ls the cau11e of the11e diseues, but
they do correlate." ·
·D..r.J>oyle cJalme4-lbat ,
diabetes is more prevelanl than
hypertension and tbal it 1bould
become ''the disease of the
year..,'' so morerese~d be
funded and a national campaign
would attract attention.
He ~aid he would llJce to see a
campaign a-gaib.st sugarand-in·
dicated he'd lite it lO be more
successful than the one for
cholnte.rol which reduced eu C'OftfU.mpt.ion from 400 in ltMS to
287In19'14. .
Each Amerl'can ccmsumes 130
pounda annually, bdsald. r
h l have long 1fougbt to liave
sdfar labeled witb the same ~rgeon G.t:al's warnin,g as
· • c11arett,packa~s have.""
PANEulns '
Symptemf ""t.:o. Welte~ , .
·Panelists fielding qu~ttms in-
cl~edJI>r. Donald Williams, in·
ternist. '•
-Oral drugs vs insulin. There
ate side effects with either.
Remember, whic,hever form is
used, it has been chosen by the
patient and his doctor.
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'abnormal ,4
-Research . Development of
the artificial ·pancreas is only in
preliminary stages. I'm hopeful.
Jt won't be in -use in the near
future.
Pancreas transplant has the
same proble ms as any other
transplant. The body rejects tis·
sue and this involves taking other
drugs, such as steroids which, in
some cases, can induce diabetes.
Dr. Robert Curtis, pediatri·
cian:
-Nine ty p e rcent or the
diainosed patients are adults.
-Life expectancy a( a 10-year-
old diabetic wtth good control is
S2 year,, comPartt<S to 72 f~ a
person who has not contracted
the disease.
'Warning: The Surgeon General Has
. Determined That Eating Sugar Is
Dangerous To Your Health.·--:--This
is the label that Dr. •James Doyle
advocates being prjnt~d on q./I
packages of sugar an'(f
products coq{aining a high
percentage of sugar. ...,,.,.. ~ --
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'Diabetes is r.nore prevelant than
hypertension. It should become
·the disease of the year so
• • •
more research will be funded.' •
DIET llENEFICIAL
-There's no conclusive we·
ventive medicine. Good dietilry
habits are beneficial. A balanced
diet, eatinc reiularly and ex-
erci.sin~ are ~ensible for ever-
)'Ofte. -t
Dr. ATthu r Strick ,
ophtbalmolOBiof: ·
:-Eye ~omplicatlons don't
always af(ect vision,, bu.t som e
can lead .. 1to complete loss .
•
Diabetics should have irequent
check·UPS and whenever they
not.ice a change in vision.
Mrs. Magna Schley, registered
dietician:
-Alcohol calories s hould be
treated like fat calories, but they
don't work the sam e with insulin.
However, they must be figured in
the diet, a nd if a sweet mix is
used. these calories also must be
counted.
_,.;;.:;.a Programs Alert Community
lly ALLISON DEERR
Of-. o..ur l'ii.t St.n
Promoting health education in
the community fs the goaJ or
public seminars of(ered by Hoag
Memor ial Hospit a l ,
Presbyterian.
The first in a series, presented
last s pfing, drew a standing
room only audience to hear a
panel ofJHoali( staffers discuss the
warning signals or heart attack.
The second, last week, d"rew
anothel( SRO crowd with the
topic Of current research in
diabetei. • i '
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"The seminars are one method
in which to promote good health
maintenance in the community,··
said Education Coordinator Kel-
ly Davis.
"They also offer an opportuni-
ty for people to come to the
hospital in a situation that is not
traumatic. They are coming fora
preventive m edicine type pro·
gram and the atmosphere is less
threatening," s he said.
. The public education program
grew out or Haag's long-standing
in-service teaching, she ex-
plained. Topics are selected by
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the hospital's medical education
committee considering sugges-
tions made by the public.
COPING WITH STRESS
Starr members make up
seminar panels, offe ring as wide
a range or hospital services as
possible. The next session. Cop·
ing With Stress, iis planned (or
January and will be conducted
by the departm cnt or psychi alry
drawing in guest panelists, s he
s aid.
To extend the benerits or the
program. panels may b e
videotaped, as was the diabetes
'presentation, for use in in-
servicetraining.
-'.!.Currently. we ·re planning
four seminars a year, but I would
like to see more as interes t
grows. Some programs m ay be
presented more than one evening
so that more people can benefit."
Miss Davis would like to see
more liaison work with school
districts in the area or health
education, even extending down
to the elementary level.
Another community education
project in the proposal stage, lo
be implemented by the first or
the year, is an outpatient
teaching program for ne w
diabetics:
According to RN Susan Hen-
dershott, who· coordinates the
current diabetic teaching pr°'
gram a( Hoag, the program
would be geared to· the patient
who is not hospitaUzed.
Last March, when she began
teaching diabetics rutl--time, Ms.
l-lendershott realized a need for
standardization of teaching prac-
tices.
TRAINING I
So, s he cool'dinated an in·
service training for RNs and
LVNs on the subject.
That led her to the realization
that many ne\v d iabetics need in·
dividualized instruction at first,
ering the gamut from what
. bet.es ·i1 and how it works to
urlne tesu,ig, insulin i.njed.tons,
hllh and low blood sugar reitc· ·-"
tions. foot care a nd general
health maintenance.
"l see the instruction as com-
plementary to what information
their private physician pro:-
vides, ··she said .
She advocates a .. no nonsense"
approach t o teaching, one that
urges the diabetic out of lhe
sick /patient role a nd toward in
dependence.
Ra ther than s poradic 1nstruc
lion, s he envisions a team ap
proach whe r e several pro·
ressionals -doctor. nurse, dil•\ 1-
tian -work together to meet in -
dividual needs of each patient.
Phas e II, she explained, would
be varied continuing educa tion
activities. ranging from socials
to rap sessions .
"A potluck or buffet d inner, ror
example, could be an opportunity
to re inforce diet ins truction .·· sht•
said .
"The overall goal would be to
achieve the best health main·
tenance possible .··
EDUCATION CONTINUES
The continuing edwcation por-
tion would nol only rcinforcC' in·
formation give n but keep the
diabetic up lo date on current re
search in the fi eld.
Group situations would make
problem-solving easier . "Talk·
ing with people who have the
s ame or similar problems has
always been a positive learning
• experience.··
The coordinator also behevcs 1n
good follow -up after a hospital
stay or outpatient instruction.
"A follow-up phone call can
sometimes prevent pro blems .
Sometimes a patient who is confi·
dent in the hospital is less as-
sured when he gets home.
"Or a patient who doesn't do
well in the hos pit al setting
handles tilings well at home. ,A.
phone call can resolve. a problem
before it gets out of hand.
"It also helps to know th-_l
there is someone there, someone
to call and ask 'dumb,' questions
without ·fear of taking up too
muc.htime." . •
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Frldey, October 3, 1175
Place to Be A lc!vfe;
Ra••;... ever,._ . ....., waa a,,_.., ~lf!Ho!:
join wllieb h.d•DO llNlllbenllip-, llO mlnt•, ~ ·-no ·meetJ.nre and no projecU1 One where )'°'8 ... ™t21:.':'r •
couldjuataoto1bare)'OW'joyaand101TOW1t ' ....... ~
Be1lnnln1 Monday, Oct. I, tbeff will be 1ucb Nttl Ge-'-• lhlnl In Jll11loa Viejo al the JIL ot OllYel .. ~ ... -:Ci ~-
·Lutheran Church. 0
1111SIO.Jf PWA Feclell, Mii<--
Called The 9/omen'a Free Day Care Center, ~,-11 & lndlvklu91 eye'•••·
lt Is a concept developed by AJJean Peterson, a Sll-4 £.':t-:l:i~
family counselor and Parent Effect-lvene11 •••n• ,,._,......,,
Training Instructor. bf Mary
A• she Jiu conceived It, the-centa;_wW not ·'l"lle llo•llown -··-·
even 1l!l a 1tructured ..,..p, lt simply will be a n•wip1ewfor•ll. EASTB!.UFJI' meettn1 place and an umbrella fOI' varloua ac-,.... COIFFURES
tivlUes and semipan. · the ON...., ~--•t -•IT!t;!~"·· · Inter.,led adults will' be lnvltect to come · • ....,. ..._ •-,:..;;;"'·"'9
''when you need help in doln& your own ll"tlle ............ ..___,, •
thine ... when yOu need a friend .•. wbea 7ou I;;~~~:;;:::~=:::::::::::::;~
Women's Free Day Care Center will open next Monday
in Mission Viejo. It is the concept of A/jean
Peterson (left) who views facility with Darlene Kosbab.
need ·to talk about your mother-in-law or j
macrame, sewing problems or .a wayward 100., a · new careerortbat°'d crabgrass.''
The concept grew out of a PET cl us conduct·
ed at tbe church by Ab. Peterson. From the tare•
group, a small aroupolwomen stayed together to
become close friendl. ~. -''For more than a year our group has been
experi,encing ,.the .1eU~htl1Wment which comes
from sharing needs in a caring. onaotnc rela·
tionship," Ms. Petenonsaid. ·
''This has become ao significaftt In our lives
that we would like every woman in Mission Viejo
to experience the satisfaction or being able to
contact the center for whatever assistance she
may need in coping with the practicaliUea and
complexities of daily living.''
The name was choleo as a "whimsical" re-
ference to the numerous children's day care
facilities already in existence.
The opening program will begin with coffee·
at 9 a .m. Oct. 6 at the church, 24772 Chrisanta
Or., Mission Viejo. Information will be &iven
about .the center and what it will offer to resi-
dents of the Saddleback Valley.
It will be in operation from 9a.m.to1 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
EARLY BIRD SPECIAU
PRIME Rll DINNER
SOUP-sALAD-FOTATO-DESSERT
$4.50
5:00 to 7 :30 P:M.-Mon. lhrll Sat.
THE MARQUIS
1670Newport-.c.--
Far lner••s 11: MJ.IJtJ
DAVISON ANl) TYSON, INa.
!1'..-1 ~. i ''if 2' 9
( 7·1•• •• , . .,.,.11
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eo1 Oovs aT .. eurn: 100 • ~~ au.cM, CA. azeeo
Betrothals
Pal B · · · daughter, Nancy Ann ey• BCClann1 Paley to Richard Paul
'Mr. and Mrs. RQbert
Paley of Newport Beach
have announce d the
engagement or their
Bacciarini.
Golden Date
Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Wilson of Newport
Beach celebrated their· gQlden weddil)g an~
niversary at an open house i~ the home of their
OPEN, TO PUBLIC
GIGANTIC a.EARANc:E ·SALE
BY NATIONALLY KNOWN
DECORATOR
son, Richard Wilson of Costa Mesa. 50% OFF
I
The b e troth e d ,
graduates of California
State University, Hum-
boldt, are planning to
.., marry Nov. 8 in Trinity
Baptist Church, Indio.
Co-hosting the party was their daughter,
Joan Chastain of Anderson, Ind.
The honored couple, who have five
grandchildren, were married Sept. 26, 1925 in
San Bernardino. They lived in Riverside and San .
All Types Frnritr.re & Amw»ies
t" Nancy Paley
. Redfield-Schlesinger
-,,.~..-
A garden weddjo«' a\
the SherJ!Wn 1-f'p lijl!lidl·,-
tion, C9r6fi~d~ ~), is "
planned. fa'r"lffec. 6 by An~
drea !ted'lietci.and ,)"odd'
R. Schl,tsihjei;.' ,.._ ·' ~--• ~
Theifparenta a"fe.)ln.
Neil Coh1', • .N~'wport
Beach ; ,Joh'rf M . Redfield
Jr., Laguna Beach, and
Mr. and Mrs. R. O.
Schlesinger, Newport
Beach.
Miss-Redfield attended Corona Cie l Mar High
School. Her fiance is a
graduate of Newport
Harbor High School. Mr. and Mrs. Frarik C. Wilson
''.See an Expert (Ann Landers OJ
Bernardino counties until 1969 when they re,,tii:redi~nf"!'-""'~!!l'!t~ to the beach area. r;~ :E
Wilson. who worked 48 years as a su
for the Santa Fe Railroad, was born in
Ind. and he is a member of the Masonic
San Bernardino. His wife is a native of
Colo.
S1arring Fa~ Svedeaway
and Jane Tann
·Jo Olson. Piiot staff writer says, ''It's almost as much foo
to read Ruth Hllbum's new ~ffL
cook book as It Is to read a )NTf.
now1:· \ y "They Laughed When I Walked
Into the Kitchen <now they ~ went to know my secrets)" will I I
help you nave fantastic meals, _.. _ v.
1
save money and time, while •1 lrj~ you're laughl'!Q away. /::} .
At$1.ts,llle ______ h (~~ D E A R A N N mother is afraid to let tlvlty. Tbe best spore for The psycbosomattci'
LANDERS: I realize you him take part in athletics tbe asthmatic cblld Js. aspects of thU lllness are~
A-Gllt,tool O' ...... lllC..tl.1"5Vlttai ........ ~ ................ . .......... ........, .... ~ ........ ,· ·~
can't print every letter because she says it tires s w i m m l n g . Go Ir , often a potent factor. 1n1 ·
but this one is very im-· him out and makes him baseball, ping pong ~d my opt n t 0 n . most· UfFEll
portant to me . wheeze. Ron has been bowling are also goOd. asthmatic children couJdl Uf'HOLST ls it possible for a asthmatic since he was Football, basketball and. profit from counseling. ' ERY
penon who takes an an· three. The allergist says track are too t,axiag and. Ask your physician what: ..._ T• W•
ti-depressant drug .io we shouldn't pay so sbouldbe"~ff_llmits.'' .betbinksabouttbls. .. .... change from an in-much attention to his 1112....._..,._
dividual of integrity and physical complaints -,,===-"=============-!:::::C:••:::'•::;W...-141-tJff ~gh principles to just because he uses them to ~
the opposite? Someone get out of doing un·
very dear to me has un· pleasant chores.
dergone a terrific My brother's son who
personality change and I is 10 also bas asthma, but
wonder if this could be he seems to be handling
.. t h e r e a s o n . -it better than our boy.
'BEWILDERED IN His parents let him do
ASHVILLE just about anything he
DEAit B.: Drugs can enjoys and he. seems
ldcteed create radical none the worse for it.
penoaalfty alteratkms. Can you give us a little
Generally, bowever, an-guidance, ple ase? -
ti-depressants relie-•e-JERSEY MOM AND
~ allkfety, make the In· POP
dlVWaal more cheerful DEAR MOM AND rw gngarloa1, and less POP: Appro:1imately
Waotpeetlve. Since you one out of every seven
·•iein eerlovsly con. children who attend
·ierned, I suggest you sct.ool has reaplr•tory
-..1scuaa thl1 question problems and some sort Mell your aoetor and cite: of allergy. Asthma fa the
spee:lflc e1:1mple1 ol the most common cau~ for
lndlvldual'a behavioral !ICbool absences •l'ftOll&
cUa1ea. children. ·
D E A R A N N _ All\hmallc youn1ster1
·LANDERS: Our 11-year-.should not partake In
old son has 8sthma. His. strenuous physical 1c·
"··· FRANK KREITIER, M.D.
Announces
The Association of
PHILIP W. GATES,,M.D.
' ..
For th• practice of
" general medicine --~
275 Ylolor1e, Soito 1-G
---c.ur. eaea1.
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NOW . 2 STORES FOR
CONVENIENCE
YOUR .
The newest
fall fashions ~-Womens Wear in
2515 E . Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar 673-2990 Two of
Orange County's
Finest Lady's Shops
now offer tlileirfinest
selections of .Fall Fashions.
resses, Jacket Dresses, Gowns
and Pant Suit~. Sizes 6 to 20.
Our Discriminating
Sales Ladles will be
happy to assist you In
making your choice
and give you the
service only •"l",il~~.., specialty shop who"'
cares can offer.
Free Par111n9 \, . In Rear Of \\
BottrStorn
.. .
Women1WNr
1401 N. 'Main St •
~nta A a SQ.9449
I
. .
• We're having a big drawing to
celebrate our
GRAND OPENING
lstPri1.e $300 gift certljlcat.e for
anything.In our store
2-JI n, ...... $200 gift certlflcat.efor marl .. _...,_ wallpaper of your choice
.•
3nl p -• $J00gf/tcertlflcat.eforyour 11'4 , choice of ac:ceuorle. or lamps
''Come In and reglater In our beautiful new store. Deadline for
entries Is Wedneldap, October 29. 1975 · .
' I I • J:
J<.w.'~a»lf'ANY
Jbe alie,,tatlve Interior design stuclk>.
'69Eaotl71hSt..Solt'ol7 . i .
Woo<ponSq.iore
Coota M ... ,CA ~7 · •
. (714) 631? . •
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DAILY "LOT
'AUete· Talkadve
'He's Not Ma
,,.Of Few Wo~
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• • Raleigh <N.C.) MayOr Oarence Ugbtner says
he hu no plans to withdraw from his race for re-
election because his 23-year-c>ld daughter has been
charged with credit card fraud. .
"I'm continuing in the race!" he said. "If I 'm
elected, J will continue to do tne things to m;.• Raleigh the great city it is.''.
Del>ra I. Lightner, a senior at St Augus Co~ege in Raleigh, Was charged and r~leased
wnUen promise to appear at her Nov. U trial
where. Lightner said she would plead guilty. Sbe ~
the third . mem~er of the family to face crimln;J
charges smce L1ghtner's election. • • Singer Jac:kfe Wilson, 41 rema.Uied in a com!!
Cherry ~ill CN .J .) Medical Center and doctors s
he sustamed suffered brain damage when he •
fered a heart att.ack. .
.A hospital spokesman said the extent of ~
brain damage could not immediately be de· termin~ and.said Wilson, ~ho collapsed on stage a . 1 the Latin Casino Monday rught, has been given nine~ .
separate electric shock treatments and placed.on ;
anelectricrespirator. · T : •
. Pr~id~n.t Ford .nom~ated StanJey S. Scott, 4i. · ~ ~hief l1a1son with blacks, to be assistant ad·•
m1n1strator or the Agency ror lnternation·i,1 :
Development. Scott would deal with Arrica if con· firmed.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
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.. ·DAA:v PILOT
,,.. ••• a.._
DAJLY 'PILOI' QASSIFIED AOS ;:..c:.::..:=:.1 w-lfiil ,.r~, ..... ·
MORE CLAS IF.IEDON'D1 . . '
,. .............. lljllM1•11•11nnFer54t ), ...•.................•..
' HRORS: .-.t-. 1002
theMlcl check....,.-····•••••••••••••••••••
Employer
Payments
(;(Jing Up
• dGlly -,._t ""' SPAHISHESTATI
:. ron l•••••llr. 1'llil .l 11 .. 2 STY l DAILY PILOT ••-11 POOL-llACH
••llty for ... flrol ... · $21,500 ~. cornet haw; flow...,.. La~1e entertalnina 1ized llv1ng room. Kitchen l ....... _ .. ___ larce enou.ih to prepare
~: 1 b1nquet and large
, ,..... ....... ,Noller. enouch dlnin& room to
: NI real e1tate advertl.aed serve it. Sweeping stlin
In this newspaper i.a sub· to bedroom suites. Huge
ject to the Federa\ Fair hideaway muter. Take
Housin g Act of 1968 over 7%% FHA. NO
· hi NEW LOAN COSTS. $196 . w ch makes It illegal to month pays all . HURRY ; · adverti1e ''any pre· FIRST TO CAU. GETS · fereoce, llmitation, or TH 1 5 8 AR GA 1 N . • di1crimlnation based on
I reU Ion 963-7881. : race ,coor, I ,1ex, Ol'fNHt 9-;ri"s'\oNfOll(~iti· or n1tional origin, or an
. Intention to mike any
: · such preference, Umlta·
tion, or discrimination."
Thia newspaper will not · IF..:
knowingly accept any 1dvertlsing ror real You appretlale the
estate which is in viola· finest, then come see the
lion of the law. best buy in Baycrest! ! 4
I
--"---'------I BR · 4 batha · sep. FR ·
.&1n1r.a 1002 formal DR. Gorgeous,•
••••••••••••••••••••••• separate mstr. suite wllh l
1 833-2906 ~~;.wio~r~~t~~:,
N.8 . 833-9265 675·28731 t Agt. I
' ' ME'NPOllT
TOWHHOUSE
LOWSJO'S
TWOSTORT
Two year s NEW ! 3
Bedrooms . 2 bath,
POOL, yard w/large
patio. Nr. So . Coast
1 P laia shopping. Best buy
1 on this townhouse. Ca ll
1 152:-1700 9·5. or 546-3288
·1 eves. Ask for Gail.
LIDOISLI
IAYFllOHT
' $249,000
TRl.UVB. I
POOL
Formal entry to newly l decorated tri·lev cl .
Rambling Uving and din·
ing areas served by
go u rme t kitchen .
Spacio\ls sun d eck.
Sec lud ed 1ep a rate
ma s ter sui t e and
ch.ildrena wing. Park lilte
g r ou nd s . Full price
SS.fi,238. Be first to see it !
Call 963-4767.
'Of"iNrit O•lfSfU°NIOl!f'l.{I ' -- J THE REAL
_E~TATERS
l NEW LISTING!
I Immaculate 3 bdrQl .. 2 ILUPFS COMDO baths; entry patio. pier · l for Jge. boat.~ Ft. Jot IA Y YllW
I LAWSONllM.TY Lowest priced view end · un it. &'lmos t new . * 6 75-4562 * Beautiful decor. 3 BR., I ---------1 r1och 1tyle kitchen, 2 I IOAT SUI' patios. A buy at 179.750
• f Avai lable with this C f C 1e5-..i. . j sharp. spadous l txt<m., • • 0 llVI uiY I ba, beat h residence. RHffors •4~001'0 Prestige, carefree livine,._ ________ ,1•
for only $82.9~. Calli ' I 646-7711 . HEWPOllT HTS.
· ·i Immaculate 3 bdrm. l '
home : remodeled kit ch. ;
copper plumbing; alley
., access for camper or
I' ----~-~---ibO•t 1tora1e. Cboice area of Newport lfeighta,
Sbowo by app't. $58,500 ·--BROKERS, 'share office 4 1pate, co-op. 96% com·
I ml11lon•. Let's talk · 3&4 8Rwinterrent8.\s • r.::.~•· Call Gene, "C" THOMAS
. REAi.TOR , SMASHING 224 W. Coast Hw y. 'I N'pt. Beach '548-5$2?
I Absolutely smashing EVES: 545-56'3
l home on Spyalaas Hill .:\;;;;~~~~~;;~\ .. BeautlfUI tile in entry 6:
bath•, exquisite rloor Tll-~ roverin11 everywhere, _....,_,
• la tact, It it perfect.,.. On BalbOa P~ninsula ;
":" per1ontfled trom the charmtna 2 ~·· 2 ba., noor up! 3 BR, 2 Ba .• used brick ~c .. sep.
family roo m, otea n home + 2-tSarin:, 1 ba.,
view; fee land. Owner tie. sundeck, beam «ii.
moving to Switzerland, apt. + 1-bdrm., l be.; ex·
burry I Only $185,0W tr• ba. ilt util. rm. off 2
. l car carage + 1 carport.
HA ... O.. 111•.ooo 8'13·3663 "'2·2253 Eva
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COMP'ANY
REA~TORS
SINCE 1944
671•4400
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associated
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Lowest·Price on
LINDAISLE I
Beautiful ~Br home
wlhigh v1.ulted ceilings.
sunken llvtn1 room . * OPIM DAILY * Designed for ~ala· I ing. Plus room for 3 lar1e
IF I WERE YOU-1'4" boats. NOWSl.89;500'. ~
see It today! Corooa del JACOIS HALn
•· Mar charm with beamed 6754670 · cellln1. peg1ed floor·, pan1led walll, nttplace:
rrencb doon open to a
of ceol, aecluded bricked
'
pa.Uo 6. yard shaded by a
•l•nt tree ; three
, bedroom•, two bath
bome on TWO LOTS plus
• hobby 1bop. Just one
bloc• to tbe ocean beach. :tO'I MARIGOLD AVE.,
. $119,500. ~
AUYIEWTHlt.
Private area. 4..,Br
swimming pool, wit views from Dana Poln
to Cat.allna. $180,000
ZAGRODZKY Realtor
494-8811 ~
11••• .,...., ···••••11tt f
· a a.c•r ca nae lt-P11oeled
. :.i. A REAL MER-&<
1 • ~ ... this .,_,t ln clui; tour :a:; bedroom homeotlhreelt ~ «mvertlbl• den. Mr. & :J Mn. Clean llv9 here-
,, newly palnted. draped 6.
I
carpeted. Spack>UI patio
It Y.•r·d with apple,
1prlC:ot, alaaond • plum . '-' trffl. Priv.t.e beach too.
•714 COR'M.AND DR., CAMEO HIGHLANDS.
All for 115,llO.
COW M llowporl ••••• %$1$ E. Oout HWy
· 67Mll 1
Fota.&WM
Mll10N c.a A IA&Y N.Of --...... n
···~······~·····~ CIMLT iJt,tlO -A1 1 'h ~ ..... v., Mat a.BR w/vjnt of surrounlilns
IIllll, eloM to lliulon le beach.
....... -AU. TllMS. ...... trplc.,
~-View, xlntnbrllood. ~y 14'1,tlt ,;; -.... ,,_ •· lillta 111118 2 'C!oCCqM-w/frplc. <:or,ier
-•'114ltw/a~teparking , ·==-~-dYI IE4L r.lfeU ••••••••••••
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SACRAMENTO (UPI)
-Gov . Edmund G.
Brown. Jr. baa signed
legislat1on to •tave oft
bankruptcy of l b•
Unemploym.ent
lnsurance Fund by in·
creasing employer con-
tributions almo1t--$600 ~-~,. ~~~~ milJion. ~,
The mea!lure (ABll>
by Assemblyman Allst.er
McAJister ( D·San Jose)
also increases maximuJn
weekly unemployment
benefits from $90 to $104.
It takes effect Jan. 1.
THE BILL was backed
by organized labor and
Brown and oppo!!ed by
lobbyist.s for business or-
gani zations.
Chrysler
Pric~s Up
WASHINGTON (AP)
-The United States has
one of the worst energy
conservation i:.ecords
among industrl•lized na·
lions, the International
Energy Agency says.
Reporting on a survey
of 18 of the world's most
industrialized countries,
the agency said it found
the United States to be
fourth from the bottom,
DETROIT CAPJ -w ith on ly Belgiu(D.
Chrysler Corp. said Norway and Austria
prices on its 1976-model farther down lhe list.
cars, i'ncluding options,
will be inc..rea sed an
average Sl78 or 3.4 per-
cent over comparably
equipped 1975 cars.
However, a reduction
in dealer discounts and
elimination of some pre·
vtously standard equip-
ment-will reduc·e the
average increase \o •144,
or 2.6 percent , the c!Om·
pany 11aid.
Chrysler's price in-
creases on new · mode ls
are the lowest or the four
major U.S. auto com-
panies.
THE UNITED
Kingdom and Sweden
headed the list, the agen-
cy said.
President Ford's fl·•·
barrel tariff on imPorted
oil won praise from the
agency for ra ising
.petr.oleum prices by 20
percent. But the report
said U.S. fuel taxes are
too low to curb consum~
tion effectively, there
are not enough lncen·
tives to redu ce
automobile t ravel and
utility rates paid by in·
3 Utilities Await
Ruling on Plant
SALT LAKE CITY
CAP> -The Department
of Interior will decide
soon whether-a . giant
power plant for Arizona
an d Ca lifornia
customers should be
built In Southern Utah's
picturesque desert coun·
try.
THE DECISION, ex·
_Flights
To Tahoe
Contested
SOUT H LAKE
rAHOE '(AP) -Air
California offici&li said
111&hta wlll cOlltinue Into
the· Lak~ Tahoe Basin
from all areas of the
state despite a federal
order limiting the airline
to .the San Francisco
area. .
Spo'keaman B ob
Payton Hid this week
Air California. with sup-
port Crom the California
Public Utilities Com·
miaiion ma1nt1ln1 the
federal Civil Aeronautjel
Board doe1 not have
' jurisdiction In tlJ• mat·
ter.
The commls1lon re--
cul1te• flt1hts within
California, while the
board bu jurisdiction
"Over travel fr.om one
1t1te to another.
•
pected within the next'
few months, will center
on a plateau north of
Lake Powell called
Kaiparowits, a Paiute
Indian word meaning
"Mountain or the Peo-ple. ••
Three utilities -
Southern California
Edison Co., Arizona
Public Service and San
Diego Gas and Electric
Co. -want to build an
electrical generating
plant that could produce
enough power for a city
of 1.6 million persons.
The site is on federal
land near the plateau's
coal tlepooita.
The companies say
growing urban areas or
~rizona and Southern
California need the elec·
tricity tO run their air
conditioners, lighl their
.streets and homes and
tlll'Jl the wheel~ of their
induatries. •
THEY SAY th e
Kalparowlts Plateau
provides the rlsbt com·
blnation of co•I to bum -some three bWlon tona
-and nearby .water far
steam .to ttarn the
turbines.
Opponents say fhe
3,000·meaawatt plant
would despoil wild areu
witb it1 1tack plume,
truckload• of 1u~pli"
rumbllnc lcroo1 Bryce
Canyon Na\lonal Park
11114 10,000·IO·IS,OOO new
resldenta.
:
dustries and other major
users are loo low.
The Internation al
Energy Agency, based in
•
Elee&rle .m.11.
• • Cos~ptU:aing
Habit .Blast~d ·
MUTUAL FUNDS
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• • • :Z!F' .... ,..... ... , , .. ., •• Wa • • I, ... •• 1 .,. #113 , t aatill~
-&n i------e .... , "; ..... ,, ................... :· .... ~ HQlo...,........_.._, ---a.• rna.. •O..,lllit:aa ...... ,..< • wal ~,
t· ·-~ ........ .:..~····1·~~,., ..... 111 1 .... Niwpwt ......... Pllo~ :IL ...... ,.
~~l'olw%,,,tletp dlmt6tio1 hr a11111rtlle
•1 lk-i1diWDC .. iU'I:. ....
--.. ... , .... l. -··-••.. -labonr -... 11. _,.. -...
' I
ll"clllorlorJoha_.,.._c. ba-tianCompqy; • • • .. '
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.. ' G1111tJ~V-tb,-aeeutbeaf U.a,._, .....
at Ci'•iral -.a-.~ .. -olected -.i.,
preoldentoltheAnabelm· e.=· , Voeatka waa 1-erl7 J Variall Data
J&.ebla•. He and bia wile live Sanlll AU .
• Alll'ed'L. GIMJ' bit joined !pedra-llrif c.r,.rau. u
vl .. -idenlot mubllnlandaalea. Re wu moat r-.tiy -al manqor ot An....cla
-.. in Anllbelm .and vice --ot Anaeondli CATV in Garden Grove. Speelro·strlp la locatad In Garden
Grove.
• .Jffk W. Kooman bu joined Southem Calllomla Teat-laa LaN<ai..r,..rrn.e, in ~rvtoe, .. vice president ana
director of buolneaa deve!Gp1Dent.
* lmperUI Boak bu nomed JG-1• Ocbaaer to tlle pcoi-
tion of vice president and mana1erof its Costa Mesa office.
Ochs ner was formerly employed with another
Califonlia bank in Newport Beach. He belongs to the Na-
• tional Association of Accountants,
Oran1e Coast chapter, and the Jrvioe
Cout Country Club.
He, his wife and two children live in
Newport Beach.
* Denala M. Amee bu been appointed
manarer of the Santa ·Ana HO\lllng
Divloion ot Weaten M«ll•P Corpora·
&loll. a divltion of Unionamerica, Inc. caM•a-· Ames(joined Westem in July after
four years with a SantaAn:a·mortgage bar\kin1 firm.
* Santa Ana resident JL A. ''T011t'' Fraakn hu been
named W11tern regianal salea mana1el' for TH Berkllae
Col:poratioll. · ~ .....
lie will liea~ Berkllne aalesmen In the 12 Weatem
statea. · ~ ~~
' ~·
* Dr. I.HO. 8t1rnes has been appC>inted a
director of Newport Beach·based
Amerle•• State Bank. according to
Raymond W. Haa~, presic;tent.
The ~practicine orthodonisl, with
offices in Newport Beach, is vice
president of the Hoag HO.pital 552 Club
and ii a member 0( the Chamber of
Commerce Commodoi'eClub.
D.r . !.Starnes, his wife and four
children live In Newport Beach.
.
MARKET ·• HIGHLIGHTS
INOEXES • \
NYSE Index
ASE Index
Dow-Jones Ind
S&P 500 Stocks
44199'. '\ap
82.37 up
194.55 up
83.82 .. ,UP
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Top Et1-.'opean
·Athletes Getting
Secret Payoffs
BONN, West Germany (AP) -
Top amateur athletes in western
Europe are dipping into officia.i
subsidies and under-the-table
slush funds to finance full-time
tr~ining for the 1976 Olympics,
European sports sources report.
Although amateur rules forbid
s~ret cash .incentives for Olym-p1c competltors, an Associated
Press survey of eight countries
shows that many star& can earn al
least $20,000 a year from their
sport and still retain amateur
status.
All western European coun-
tries subsidize medal candidates
with cash payments, usu'al ly
several hundred doll ars a month,
for food, m edical treatment,
travel, "lost income" and other
provable expenses while train-
ing for the games.
West Germany's Sports Aid En-
dowme nt Fund distributes 12
million m arks -$4.8 million -
annually to som e 2,000 "needy'~
Olympic hopeful s, plus another
three million marks -$1 .1
million -to fin ance specialized
training for 350 athletes selected
for the 19760lympic team.
Italian medal candidates in
swimming and running, premier
events at the Summer Games in
Montreal, are getting uptoJ00,000
lire -S500 dollars a month -in
s anctioned subsidies, sources in
Rome report. But proven winners
can triple their income from
payoffs by their business-backed
sports clubs.
Austria, hosting the 1976 Winter
Games in Inns bruck, hands out
generous subsidies to its star
alpine skiers. They collect as
much as 450,000 s hillings -
$22,500 -a year from the national
ski pool funded by equipment
manufacturers, plus $1,200 or
more for winning international
races, inform ants in Vienna said.
. Swe.den 's Olympic medal
·hopefuls gel yearly official train-
ing subsidies of 15,000 kroner -
$4,000. But Stockholm informants
also say amateur runners there
can pocket "$1,000 a meet and top
hockey players $20,000 a year. 1
Olympic candidates in Den-
mark, Norway, Finland, France
-and Britain are also getting
-''bread -a nd-butter" subsidies
and rree equipment funneled
through national sports federa-tion8. But there, as elsewhere,
¥,IOSt amateur stars also have
'ghost'' incomes from com-
mercial ties with manufacturers
or liberal contracts with spe>rts
clubs.
"There are r eally no amateur
Jlthletes any more. Everyone has
a thing going," declared a
Plays Tonight
knowledgeable Frenchman,
echoing the recent confession of
U.S. distance running star, Frank
Shorter.
Shorter, the marathon gold
medalist at the 1972 Olympics,
told a U.S. panel in vestigatl.Dg in-
ternational amateuris1n: "We're
all professionals ... I have pro-
bably violated all the Olympic
rules."
Shorter told or amateur run.
ne~.at invitationa l meets in Italy
being ha~ded cas h on the victory
stand, with a $400 "expense" trip
paid off at $700.
In the United St ates, he said,
athletes might be given three
airline tickets t o a West Coast
meet, use one ... and cash in the
others.
American Olympians compet-
ing on the European amateur
track circuit this summer were
lured to West Berlin's invita-
tional meet with $750 bonuses of·
ficially described by the or·
ganizers as ''Atlantic air flight
compensation," German sources
said.
Guenther Pelshenke. manager
of West Germany's sports aid
fund, acknowledged that Official
subsidies per athlete can reach
huge sums over several years.
As ked to comment on allega·
tions that some West German
amateurs were getting secret
payoffs in addition to official sub-
sidies, P elshenke said : "The
sports f ederations carefully
watch their athletes. or course,
they can't always know if some
runner gels pa id $40 lo run in a
village meet.''
One well-known West German
company said it outfits 100 top
German spartsmen each year
with tree sets of competition
J hotS, warmup suits and other
gear worth $400. In return, the
athletes must s tay with the
trademark during the one-year
contract period. A compa ny
spokesman said national sports
federations are informed about
all arrangements -but he
declined to discuss specific de·
als. Shorter, in hls appearance
Sept. 9 before a Presidential
panel investigating International
amateurism, said he realizes
about $200 a month from running,
"about one-tenth of what foreign
competitors get.
"If I had been a Finn," he
declared, ''I would have received ·
a house from the town and maybe
a Peugot. I 'd a lso be getting
$2,000 a race," as an Olympic
gold medalist.
Momimental Upset
.Averted ·by Everi ·
Janet Newberry had Chtis
Evert on the ropes but it seemed
·the-thought of upsetting the
tournament favorite was a little
uptetting itself.
Newberry had the top seed at
set point six times in the opening
set but error after error let her
sUp by and Evert scored a 7-6, 6-2
victory Thursday night in the
third round of the $50,000 Mission
Viejo women's tennis tourney.
. Unseeded Bettyarm Stuart of
Newport Beach surprised Linky
Bischoff of South Africa, the
fourth seeded tournament player,
&--0. 8-4 in one upset and in another
Dianne Fromholtz ousteCI fellow
·Australian LesleY Hunt, 7-5,6-1.
Tonig.ht's stngles action
f~atures M·artina Navratilova of
CzechosJovakia and Holland's
'fine Zwaan at 6 and Chris Evert
and Soe Barker of Englahd at 7.
Golf Results
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Newberry led tt\e opening set
&-Sand bad a.40·0 advantage at set
point befpre four mi&takes in a
row let Evert tieit at deuce.
Even ihen Evert's forehand in-
to the net gave Newberry another
chance but she d9'Ubte faulted on
serve.
Evert took the tiebreaker 5-1
and had little trouble in the second
set.
Second-seeded Navratilova had
some difficulty with Valerie
Ziegenfuss' smashing serveS, but
still won, 6·2, 6·4.
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T.-ojans'
Evans
_Ailing
LOS ANGELES -Staitlnl
quarterback Vince Evant may
mi•• tbl rd•ranked Southern
1Callfomia'• same at lo.wa 5atur·
.day because of a badly. bruiSld
rl1ht thumb. · Coach lobn McKay Aid, "111• »~ be'U 10 with us becaUM he bisn ·r 'bee ii able to till• tbe
center snap. We'U see boW be
feels but my feeling right -la
it's best to leave him home to rest
with two conference gama com ..
'ing up."
Evans injured tbe thumb
-against Purdue last Saturday.
SOpbomore Rob Hertel is . ex-
pected to start at quarterback f<!J"
the Trojans _against the
Hawkeyes al Iowa City.
•
R-flaflatecl
PONTIAC, Mich. -The roof of
the world's largest enclosed foot-
ball stadium waa inflated Thur&-
day.
The top of the Pontiac
Stadium, home' of the Detroit
Lions, billows five stories above
the stadium.
Nine blow ers Thursday
pumped· air into the ao,-.aeat
~.stadium,pushing up the_20!acr.e
quilt of steel cables and Teflon-
coated fabric.
CZECH DEFECTOR MARTINA NAVRATILOVA GOES OFF BALANCE TO RETURN A SHOT.
Carl Luckenback, stadium
architect. called the roof-raising
a milestone in engineering
technology. There are several
similar, bu.t smaller, inflatable
roofs in the world. • rn MV Defector Plays
Navratilova Stuck by Her Decisiop,
By LAURENE KEYS
or ... o.11rP1i.ttt.tf
A year ago anyone and ever·
yone could t a lk to Martina
Navratilova, the 18-year-old ten-
ni s se n sation f rom
Czechoslovakia.
But since her recent defection
she is handled with kid gloves by
the promoters and has turned
down countless illterviews, in-
cluding one with S)1ldicated col-
umnist.Jim Murray.
Staying the week in Newport
Beach while playing in the Mi s-
sion Viejo Women's T ennis
eiassic, Na.vratilova has been
continuali'y hounded by re-
porters.
Understandably, lt is difficult
to talk about the defection time
and time again, but the fact re-
m"ins that people are more in-
terested in her now and like other
athletes and artists who have fled
their native countries, she is
5;0mewhat of a curiosity.
Instructed, she says, by the
U.S. government not to comment
~the details of her defection, she
did say that she did not discuss her
plans with anyone before she ac-
tually sou a: ht U .S residence. She m ay have been thinking
about seeking asylum for awhile,
but it appears no't to have been
planned in advance.
"When l decide something, I
just go ahead and do it,'' she said
matter of factly.
Although extremely animated
and personable on the court, she
became cool and distant, almost
to~ the point of indifference, dur·.
inj: the press conference after the
match Thursday.
Answering the questions with
short, curt replies , she made it
very clear that she did not wish to
be detained any longer than
necessary.
Softening a bit with fewer~
pie around, Navratilova ex-
plained that the many interviews
make it difficult for her to prac-
tice and rest b efween h er
m atches. She would like her t en-
nis and·not the defection to be the
subject of discussion.
l..Doking directly al her s ur·
rounding interviewers, almost as
if searching out a friendly face,
she mulled over each question
about b~r homeland carefully
before answering.
.. It is a good country," she
said. "Yes ... someday I would
like to go back."
Commenting that she would
miss her family most of all, she
said she hoped they would be
able to see each other next year
at Wimbledon.
Since the Czechoslovakian gov-
ernment does not permit dual
citizenship, Navratilova must
give up her rights and citizenship
to become a naturalized U.S.
citizen.
"Dual citizenship shoUld not~
allowed. You should be one or the
other,'" she said in a fluent
English traced with barely an ac-
cent.
Actually., she says, her iifestyle
has changed very little since she
defected since she spent more
time on the road than she did at
home.
"I always had plenty o(time to
practice at home,•• she said.
"But I didn't always know if I
would be allowed to get out of the
country to play._''
Only a month short of fmlshing
high school before she left home,
Navratilova left no doubt that she
prefers not to return to school
just now .
"Wh at for?·· she quipped. "I'm
here to play tennis.''
VALERIE ZIEGENFUSS, FRUSTRATED BY FOUR SERVICE BREAKS, LOST TO NAVRATILOVA.
The first Lions' football game
Wider the new big top will be
Monday night against the Dallas
Cowboys.
Aaro11 ,to Maaage't
BOSTON -Hanle Aaron is
coming back to the Milwaukee
Brewers next year.
That's fairly definite.
The only question is whether
he's coming back as a designa(ed
hitter or as manager. And rii:ht
now, there's a much stronger
likelihood he'll return as the
former rather than the latter,
although that situation could
change bet ween now and the
winter meetings two months
hence.
NeviM~a-
NEW YORK -i:.itUe known
Joe Frazier, manager of five
pennant winners in 10 minor'
league season~. today was
named manager of the New York
Mets.
Frazie r, 52, s ucceed~R Yf/I'
McMillan, who was na n.-
lerim manager ·on Aug. 6 _
Yogi Berra was fired.
He received a one-year con-.
tract. ,
Frazier bas been in the Mets'
s~tem since 1968, managing
most recently at their champion
Tidewater International League
affiliate. He has also previously,
managed title clubs at Victoria,
Memphis and Visalia. He is the
seventh manager in Mets his•
tory.
Dougl-Oaf•M
SAN DIEGO-The San Diego
Chargers have claimed
quarterback Bobby Douglass on
waivers from the Chica·go Bears.
The seven-year National Foot-
ball League veteran was picked
up Thursday for the $100 waiver
fee after the Bears dropped him
in favor of quarterback Gary
Huff. Douglass has a reputation
for being a bette r runner than a
p·aSS;er.
Kh•fl•Trt-.m
V ANCOUVER , B.C. -The Los
· AngeJes Kings are ending the Na-
tional Hockey League's exhibi-
tion season in a flurey.
The Kings edged Vancouver ·
6-5, Tbun;day night, take·on th~ C~ucks again tonight htte, then
wind up the preseasoo Saturday
night at home hosting the
California Seals.
.C.11trp11iel's• W'fU...
NEW YORK -Lany O'Brien
Nation:aJ Basketball AuociatiOO.
c~mm1ssioner, Said Thursday
ni_ght he would step into the
widening controversy between
~e Los Angeles Laken: and "re·
tired'' center Wilt Chamberlain
-if'4he club and player can not
· work out an agreement..
o.or.-c.-. ~ ~-E IJueQ Out to Impre~ Pollsters?
~ J;l.J1 ...... Sti;.te ''is the best college football tackles, a pair Vermeil says ''are
"His obligation is to play for
the Lakers for another full
season,•• the statement said.
Howe!e~, according' to Cham-
berlain s representative. Sy
Goldberg, the NBA had uked
Chamberlain WedneSd.y tO stay
away from traiolng camp fOI' a
f"'! days ao it can decide what to
do m the case.
_ .. ~..,, ,.,...... LOS ANGELES (AP)-Coach ==."-' ~ Woody Heyes thinks his Ohio
.... MWWr ~ state B\J.ckeyes should be No. 1 =:;:.... ~ and UCLA coach Dick Vermeil ,..,c.Mi ~::!: agrees: But that 1till doesn't ) =-,..._.. mean Ohio Stato might not in-to , ==.•= ::=::: make. a~ po:ll show out or the
1 ~ = &Chools' nalionallr televised foot· ;;,.-;;,r.. ,.._ ball meetin( Saturday nlJhl at 6.
=~ 1 .i Jj4$-10 Hayes made no aecret he felt t • 1 r ,...._.,, na.., """'_... .,.ff.4t ,.,..10 State deserved the toP rank-
JS,»-10 ing alter its 32· 7 victory over
, ... , 1 t::: North Carolina la.at weekend but •·~ the votera put the Buckeyes No. 2
::;::: behl~dOklahoma . '
1
aE== ..,,,...,. Ve!rmeil, whot e Bruins are ~:~.-·_,..-.,-~Fl:i-nnlted 13th aalct-.,.~Ohlo
. .. .
team in the country and with as good as any two defensive
televisi.on and al~, they'll r~ally linemen in the country."
becomincatus." ~ Ohiostatetakesa3-0recordin· The tackles and sophomore
to the aa.me after vi ctories over ·middle guard A"'kro n Brown
Micbl1an St&le and Penn State "they r1111 down r unning backa
\ uweUuNorthCarolirul. froQl , behind," said Verm,eil.
UCLA, beat Joj\'•' State and Despite the newness'. the Tennesaee before tieing.tied 20.20 lluckeye1 have allowed only one
at Air Fbrl:e lait Saturday. touchdown in three games, that
!layei has a cbmpletely,rebullt toNorthCar9Un1. '
de(ense with only three starten · 1he e'ntlre starting Ohio State
back from 1914. But tM new offensive back.fl•ld 11 back with
names include people such at c ·o r n e J'i U 1 Greene . ·at
Juf\ior 1 Nick .Buo1111amlcl and qua'rterb•ck, fullback P e te
sophoTEddle Baomon at. j . J..,, · Jl•!im~ Txopll)' win.
'
~·
nlng tailback Archie Griffin and'
wingback Brian Basc~agel .
' The game features a matcbup
of Griffin , the defendiag k-Ol•aepl---
Heisman winner .,vbo ls after biS > 25th consecutive 100-Ymd effort CLEVcELAND -P.ce Moaec)
·1n a regular seaaon ,1ame, and 'memberoCtbeltal'U.S.Qbm: Bruin~ 11uart,rbac1t, lohn Pie bom1 t~am, dlod 'flluniday.
1Sclarra, a rwinlng aDd P8'8bil HewU-87.. ,,
\hroat ,wh6 ls a caod14ale fol-tho . untilH~ ~='""'a bJdllll nrm
award<hlsyeat. · •~ .... rem~ 8" -• ., "Right oU band I woUid i'ay he .. .,. m~y ~· the b.Ot . quarterback ', An Infected.cut =from we've fae'ed aria mar.be he •~I •-Ion ' hJs
cSoeJn't tall< ibu~h," }bYH said lldl!lllY eompet1n1 In tM m· ~arra'-.i... -.,..;..-''!.!.'.....,..,....~,•· ll!!'i:m~made~ I~ ..
•
•
I
y
a
Oraftee,·
Oil City
Collide
• • 'Die R1111tlaatoa 8t..i.
llllh Oller1.:..1od by
1harp-thTowin.1
·quarterlltck Bill H-
'
•
•
Vangua r ds Given
.
No.din Cen
' llloot of a defense that Eatancla wu l ·S.l lalt
allowed Only '9 polnll In 10# but h14 been lm·
aeven...i.leaaue football r.re11ive ln two non··
1asa._4:• las t year hi1 eaiue1amestbuata.r::.
' I
f-anOunie Pantbon'
footNll team ·with aa a·
pertoececl secondary In
toBilbt'I Empire Leque
opener at Huntington
11'.adu~ed;-but the-El , SaaU--AD (%" .. ~ -'I Hl&h Vanguards • f d "'" •• the
tact Ilse and have 11.t
eully beaten by po••!,,
Mater Del and Ne•(>!!!'>'
lbut far. And lbo:r#. to bt O·s' after t w en ney-pray-VI la-~~·1
. Bue . .
1(1-f la-I, and Jloy
Bnunmett11 Oiiers arc<
two-point favorites to
notc:b.tbelr first win tbia ........
Bru1nmetl -in hla
fourth 7!ar as Olien'
bead football e:oach-
•AJ'I tho 1'75 Oiiers hive
the most balanced of.
fenseof any of bia teams.
But Oranae.....:.which de-
feated HunUnit:on Beach
.14·6 last year-has a
secondary with three ..,.
turning starters.
Although 0·2, the Pan·
then have been respecta-
ble, lcJtlng to Maenolia.
20-18, aod to El Modena,
13--7. •
Led by returnees
~ee Rodriguez, Brent
Walke.r and Joh!t Potter,
the Oran1! second1!9:-
h el d El MOl!ena
quarterback Steve
an ot!p picked to win lbe Lack 0 •...-~ • C...tun' League. problem here -only 32 ~~r touihest com· playetaareonthevarsity
petition should come -but coach Bob Lanon
. 15rr~m Vlllhal PaErk 's CllMTUaTIAA•"••ac• p11rtans w ' e atan· 1,e.....,..11.n ,._,....._ .ci1'1 Ea1les -whoop!ll L,,_,..,.,,,., .... ..,....,._
Park. ·'
Yet, the Sea Kini•~·
a top quarterb,ct 111, •
GaryGuilneu-tietom:,
pleted 55 of 100 p11aes f<ll' •
81111 yarda IUl HH<lll, -.
and a aood defenalve s.r
lnS.,yroKemble . ''•aue play Saturday t:='~m, ~~=ai&bt '•eainst Tustin -.. aa.... ..... 11-u • .,............,,
fin! h hi h "°"""""*1*'"•t1 T•VNI•. 1. Maf!'°!l• (l·l)-'lbe1 ~ 1 aa I as ,_,......n-o ._,, •• ,,......,, I tbiid. _ t.T1ittt111il1.11 ,.,.,.... ... .,.. Seotine are 10 Ill tq
Here's how the Daily ·~ miss all-leacue runnln~'
Pilot views the outcome. has aome excellent back Don Kindred, but'..
oltbeCenturyLeague : . personnel, andhlsSainl& they have a good:
I. El Modeu U·ll-complied a 4·2·1· merk throwing quarterback ID
Bob Lester's Van"uards lutyeer. Ron u ·unt and one alt.be • La • be t I i -no1e guerda nround have aix returnlns rsons s payer 8 inScottLusk(5-ll,lt5)., starters from a 7·0 team quarterback Chuck Huntdemonatrateclbls
•ut year' and al moat ~ Hoeg, who can run and 1· u oil • ~ Kennedy, the CIF's throw eq_ually well. venati ity in '!"•Ill a 1 A"ai.Mt T H f. •11 win over Oranae, No. 10 4-A team, in their • roy, 0 a com· running for two TDs ~. opener. pleted 9-of-12 or 121 . Le 8 d in g the yards and ran for 128 passingroranother.
V•n•nards' I of(ense ls yards aeainst Buena But the Sentinels are, ..,... p k ' hurting In the secondary running back Roger Rees ar · and there are some
· -an all·league pick -· ib th lng uaers and quarterback Steve 5. Costa Mesa (1·1)-~ ary· row P
Cody, who completed 17 Hereisanotherteamthat mthisleague.
ol 26 passes for 288 yards may surprise a lot of peo-I. T•atla (l•l)-The
against Kennedy. pie. The Mustangs must Tillers will be.much ))et..,
Cody-he threw for 2118· . •
yards aealn1t ·Kennedy-KEVI. N Pl ( 1 •• to two completions In KE 41) AND LB MATIS OREO BLANCMARD (15). RAY AGUADO (74) PLAY TONIGHT.
Other key players are over-come their in-.
orrenaive linemen Greg consistency -they ter than they were lat.
Eirich (6-0 210) and Joe fumbled twice inside )'ear when they went 1~
Young (6~3. 185), de-theirownlO-yardlinel~ .. but they're still relatively
tensive lineman Kurt week -and the schools young. eight attempts. They wlll ,face a stern
test again tonight. Holst B
threw for 231 yards UCS
. against Warren.
Go for 4th Victory Artists,
Canyon
Buthler (6-2, 200) and de-footballtradiUon -Costa. Their offemive line la Mesa has never had a ~ a bit suspect. 1be· (ensive back Bradlll (5-9, Tillers quarterba~ 135). wienninghseasonln. k Tom Banks, was sac ut t e pass g attac 2. Villa Park (2..0)--with Tim Rosauer eight times agalns ~
Ted Mullen's Spartans throwing to Dan Byers University. Tillers coach
showed their strength in and Dan Valentine -isas Jeff Jespersen has some
the season opener, de· good as any in the league. top players in linebacker
Also, the Oilers have a
good running back in Jim
Lucas, who has .rushed
·· for 133 yards on 30 car-
ries.
OCC Hosts Long Beach Tonight
''This is the most
t. ·balanced orrensive team
I've ever had,'' says
Brummett. ''Opponents
can't play a nine-man
I front against us ~ anymore. Jn the past they
knew wecouldn 't throw.·· f Orange can throw :r some too, led by the com-
bination of quarterback , , Rodriguez and 6·4 light
endJeffStiles. Rodriguez
hU completed 15 of 34
passes ror 217 yards and
Stiles has caught rive of
themforl04yards.
I • Ttie Panthers' top run. r ner is Carson Milligan
: who has picked up 132
yards.
Orange Coast College rushing record of 1,258.
is .a two-touchdown 'He has 1,011 (293 this
(avorite to post its fourth season> and is averaging
straight football victory· 7.7 yards per carry in
ot the season tonight 1975.
when the Pirates tangle The defense, which was
with winless Long Beach supposed to be OCC's
City College at OCC main strength this
(7 :30). season, was slow coming·
Tonight's game will be around, but looked sharp
broadcast over Long against LA Harbor six
Beach radio station daysago. KLON·FM (88.1). The Vikings have afme
Coach Dick Tucker's runner in . rreshman
Bucs have rolled to three Charle:r While: a _very
easy victories behind an g~ wlde receiver m Ed
awesome offensive at-G1ll1es and a . capable
tack led by quarterback quarterback 1n Dave
.Dave White and running ~tunoz-b~t coacl;I G.ary backTony Aecom do Jacobsen s out(tl JU~t •• , h · ~n · doesn't match up well in
'"iu t at sco~lng ex-overall talent
H•Otll-S£-61...,. s.m_,.,1
RT-Jol'lnKltTo
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Press doesn't (1gure to · '" slow down any against a Lon~ Beach has lacked ~~Long Beach out(it that consistency , .s~ys
1.s upset OCC rather rudely Jacobsen. The V1~1ngs
;:-lutYeaf,"41 -23.-have dropped a pair o(,
close games to Citrus and
Cerritos. squandering
leads in the closing
minutes.
Battle feating Foothill -one or Richard Umphrey (6-3,
the Empire League 6. Corona del Mar 205) and lineman Mark
powers -24-13. (0 -2)-The Sea Kings punbam <S...1,200).
Laguna Beach High's The Spartans probably
Jacobsen is hopeful it
won't be a high scoring
game. "If it is, we're in
trouble."
Artists go after theirthird have the league's best
straight non -league root -running back in Bruce
ball victory tonight when Ben Ben, who rushed for
the Canyon Comanches 8.55 yards last year and
* * 0r-.. Ctatl °""' ..
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* invade the Artists cam· already has two JOO.yard
pus for an8o'clock clash. plus games this season.
1.0 Canyon has split a pair Although re latively in·
~: or eames. but against experienced -only rour
ns tougher opposition and is starters from a 4-2·1 team
~ listed as a 3 Y.t-point return -the Spartans
200 favorite to end the have .some excellent
:: Artists' string. players in tight end Brad
oo The Artists will be try· Igou (6·5, 220), nanker
20S ing to beef up their inside Rob Martin (5·8, 165 )and
195 game to give the olltside de(ensive end Tom
no running and passing Cecrle(6-3.220). ~ game a better shot at the 3. Estaaci• (2-0J-The
;:: Canyondefense. Eagles could be the big
no And countering surprise. They have :~ Laguna Beach will be a Potentra1 and some out-
1911 Comanches offense pre· s tanding root ball ''° dicated around the pass· players.
Loam's Defeme
Concern to Coach'
Edison High School aprettysoliddefenseand
move s into sunset we may have trouble
Lea1ue play against movingthefootball."
Loar a Hilb Saturday Workman is also waey
night at Westminster o! the Loara runnina
with an undefeated pr.ac-game
ticeslate. ·
Loarabudroppedtwo , ''They .have a very
pre-league outings, yet good runn1rag fullback In
Edison coach Bill J~hn Leever an~ a
Workman is wary or the tailback with speed, he
Saxons says. · Steve Rakhshani will
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1t11 White and· Accomando i: have not been contained
'" in sparking the Pirates.
''' White has already tossed
11, nine touchdown passes, = completing 21 or 40
,. aerials for 507 yards.
uo He's thrown Scoring ?: bombs of 46, 50, 52, 57, 87
'" and68yards.
Barons, Wes ~ern
I n Loop Ope ner
ing game. "Our secon-Larry Hall -last
daryisgoingtobetested season 's No . 1
tonight," warns Laguna quarterback -has been
Beach coach Dennis starting at linebacker,
Haryung. and Kirk Langdale and
Canyon's major threat Kevin La Ru e ba ve
is quarterback Art looked strong at
Grosian. a 6-3, 190 -quarterback. Also, Gary
pounder who <'an run the Con! h h et option e(fectively. He"s er -w 0 as Y lo
"I do_o't care if they are return to the startin~
0·2, '' Workman Says. lineup thiS week at-aate-
''Our biegest problem ty. His return after an in·
against them will beth,eir jury will move Bill Balch
deCense. The derense bas to cornerback to make
really given up only ooe room for Rakbshani tn
touchdown in two games. the defensive secondary.
.J
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~~""'"" ca-a--• ca-Jll'l'IWeiall•tf
5 --Alllin .. blMlll
5 -0.Yld Moofl .
~~ · Accomando is quickly
110 closing on the OCC career
Founta i n Valley
High's explosive offense
will be on display tonight
wben the Barons tackle
Western at Westminster
High.
to go to the pass and will
from any J>9inl on the
field, wh\le Weatem's
. game, thrbu1h two noo-
Ieague wins is concen·
tratea-oo-thel'llnning
aspect of the wishbone
behindj quarterback
Dean Hess. -....
play because or a thrown (or 181 yarm in separated shoulder -
two 1ames, completing fianres to be one o( the
!5of34. ·-The leading ground circuit's top receivers.
"Servile scored on a · Another chanae will
60 -yard Cumbie return comeontheoffensivelinf
against the offensive unit if Randy Holladay is una"
and I think the touchdown ble to play after sufferinil
against Lakewood came a sprained ankle last
after a fumble recovery. week. Paul Radish will gc "That~eansthey bave bothWays . f
1 I
I
Kickoff for the Sunset
League (ootball opener is Uni 6-point Pick
To Stop Valencia
The Valent'ia High star agaimt Los Amigos,
Tigers ·are much im-makingflvetackles.
proved, but University's The Trojans' deCense
Trojam are favored by will have to contend with
six points (or tonight's · a s c r a m b I i n g
non-leaguefootballgame ,quarterback in Norm
at Valencia High. Kickof( Rodrteuez tonight.
' at 8 and coach Bruce
PickCord's Barons are
five -point (avorites to
snap Western's wishbone
offense.
is8. "He's the best we've
Valencia scored only 19 seen this year;• says
points in five Orange Universityfootbalicoacb
Leacµe eames !"a.st year .Dick Roche. ''He's a real·
but.b"as tallied '27 in two "Jyfinerunnerwhocancut
losses thi"1 season. backagainsttbegrain."
Howe.ver, the .Tigers Rodriguez bas carried
have surrendered 60 35timesfor208 ya.rds and
points while the Trojans has completed 10 of %7
have permitted just 12-panes for94.yards.
Also. University:& o(. Valencia's oiher top
tense-which didn't player is tackle John
score a p·oint against Martinez (8·2, 210) who
TUltin two weeks ago-goes both ways. Martinez
erupted for 21 against Los made AU-Orange League
Aml101andflgurestolm· ln1974.
prove even more tonight. * Tailback Ron Dykes Is
the Trojan1 top offensive ""'_....,°"'-*
threat, ru1bln° for 87 WR-o.tiHui o L T--rll M"'11h'f' yards on 22 carries Lo-o'"Nt1-
againstLoeAmi"oS. c -1'9utS.ldel • Jt0-11.ntr~ld Also, quarterback RT-TI1'1'1 1t.11i-Jobn Halagan has been Ta-oew 1t..1.11• ... ~ Gl".twfft i.n\pressive, completing 09-..loMH•i.e-13 of 28 panes for 153 ,.. "'1•0....-1to --yards. .. ........ ,~
But defense hU been LE-o.w.-..1..,.
Univer1ity'1 1tren.ath ~=., thus far. Tustin-despite 11tO ,,,..ti....,.no
beatina Un l ver1ity, r.~;:-i:,:r::litftDfft' S-0-<lllly netted 71 :yardll ........., .. _ ..
while Lot Aml1oe &lined ....-'"" ' ff ' ...--152. Sal4&1 Art ebe was · IS-«F'IC'-"'"911'"
Unlvttilly'a defemi.., ........,,...
-
....
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The Barons will be
starting the same reshuf ·
fled lineup as last week.
but in the wings and
waiting to return are
four or the blue chip stars
wbo missed last week's
came due to injury.
Quarterback Chris
Dove, who passed (or Z27
yards against Redlands,
hard-running halfback
Mike Musso and stan-
dout tackles Mark Burke
and Mark' Cowper are all
available for toni1ht's
action and figure to see
plenty.
With Gary Coleman (13 completions ln 28 at·
tempts for 209 yards and
2 TDs last week) also
available at
·quarterback, the Barons
enter with outstanding
depth at that eo•ition .
Fountain Valley likes
Shrout Out
Golden Weal College
quarterback Rich SbroUt
has beeft cleclere<I out·for
at leut two weeks and
possibly more following
Thursday's x-rays wtiich
revealed a chip fracture
in the second vertebra.
Shrout will be. re·
uamlned Thuroday.
'
Hess will test Fountain
Valley's flanks with his
o,ption series. either
banding off to fullback
Ron McEltoy throia.gh
the &;iddle, pitching to
one or his trailing
haUbacks (usually Rick
Fleager or Leroy
Ramirez), keeping
around end himself or
occasionally going to the
pass.
Western's No . l
lineman is Britt Bel(, a
6-0, 21S-poand of(ensive
tuard·tackJe and de·
fensive noseman.
Fountain Valley 's
passing game becomes
even more (ormidable in
terms or interceptions.
The Barons have yet to
have one of their aerials
intercepted in 43· at·
tempts.
* * *
gainer is Mike J
Uyematsu, a 160-pound
speedster who ran rort>A'o
touchdowns in Canyoras
21·13 victory over Para·
mount.
. Laguna counters with
quarterback David Chap·
man and a quick set. of
backs which includes
Kevin Pike, Vince
McCullough, Craig
French and Phil Trimble.
Speed is Laguna's forte
and as usual the hosts will ti
be on the short end of the i1
weight statistics.
Laguna is still without
(ullback John Miller, who
sustained a severe
charley horse in the pre·
seas on scrimmage.
Without him the Artists'
inside running game.
hasn't been effective.
Laguna Beach ac·
<'Ounted for 189 yards in
the air behind the armso(
Chapman and Craig
French last week.
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Now Maml"Olh offers the most1n luxuriouslcondominium tivtng
as well as sk);ng. Own your own condominium at the most prestigious
development In Mammoth aQd sjd to•your ftoril door from the new ba:M! lod!!" and c:halr-11(1~ 7, 8 .or .16. The ~·~h Ski &• RilcqiJel Club.
thats where It an begins. • ,
All condOniinlums are completel)i decorolor furnfshed from a fully
equlJ?peci .kitcl"'I' to conliertlble sofas, ~ colbr lV,, even a '24-hoUr com·
P"\erized PBX telephone '!)!Stem. to get lhe moot 9u1 Of Mammoth. start
by moving into yqur own Mammbth Ski& Racquet Club condominium.
Fully furnished condominiums from
$39,9QO. Inquire about our mutual owner-
ship Purchase plans.
[lo(i't delay. Mall the enclosed coupon
tod011 or better~ coll us collect
at our Newport Beach sales
olflce: 714/675-9100.
•
A A,,'~
~ v. :JJf 1 would llke mot"e , ~ *'" . ' lnformaOon on the
SOM aclnwtfy lhfo'4h ~ ~ Mammoth Ski & Racquet Club.
Maaaood'I PtopertMI. fht. liil ~ •
:=-i...:. ~r::"'• 'I' ;"""· Nam' -.. -"°""'"' et 2821 • PhN"I<' Ony ______ Evenlng _____ _ =.:::.~ , , Add'""-.
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6
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•. M Oo\ILV PILOT Ft!day. Oc.-3, 1175
Newport I .. ine Jelling
Their opponent last a long way to go. We
week was not as 1tron1 didn't have a returning
:u Servile-Which beat startw i n our offensive
Newport Harbor'ai line." ·
The Sailors also g&nea
17 first downs , 13 more
than they did-agafn11:
nlfiedServlle.
,-
' Cr088
C·o1•••try
' El Toro
MorwrchB Top Defense
oore feels his
:tt. unil bad a good
Sailors 24·7-but th8 Even with an inex-
Sa i lors offen sive Sailors are favored for
performan«:,e against their Sunset League
Corona del Mar gave opener with Los ---~Newport football coach Alamitos• Griffins Satur· m--"Przztc-a-1rope-aboUt day--ni-ght-at Western
his team's chances in thel High. · ·
·we were very )'OUDI
in lhe orrensive line,"
sa)'I Pizzica, "and we
are just beginning to im·
prove. If we improve as
much this week as last,
we ehould have a good
,.;l~UJtt:P. f S t • e evlC• laatweetandhe
,......,.1u1'1a.u-.. \V.illi.-m•• one~yard TD tor)'. would prefer to give t.ht
1.-v-. cc1 to;°'" 2. ~ td_ nm=-Yed..tb.J>e tbe..diG.. Lakewoc:llr~ied With offense more Ume on the
I
I
'
•• I
I
'
SUnSetLeaeue. Jn the 33·13 win over
"We came a long way CoronadeJ Mar, Newport
with our offense last Harbor gained 336 total
week,'' Pizzica says: yards, led py Steve
"'But we still feel we have· Foley'slll.
game." .
Like Newport Harbor,
Los Alamilos has been
suffe-ring from a n in·
consistent ofCense, but
10;11; 2. T!IOmJM" IC) 11:.n: 4. r r·--......_ ~..,_ -d I hL w.w11i.wo. cc1 1o:as: s. Eltl! (~~ ereoce, lt w11 Tl~ 4:38 to plaJ on a zo.,.ard 11e1u ~at"Ul" -a n I "
1o:J1: '· •11101 tel 101a.t: 1. ""-'•Joni= TD P•••· fr.om Ro1a when-the _Ed Toro ~1(110:M:l.MYl",.e\'CM) "h·-~ --t 11:•; •· •n•!lfft' <Ml 11:0f; 10. t at Jed t he un at.en Dodson to Paul Hamill. C b a r g e r s m e e
Ml.iri1io ~Ml 11:os, 11 . ?I,.,.., tM) JC• t er D e· i H l--S b A 1 e 1: p e c-t-e d Esperanza in non.league t1:11: ,,_ ........ IMl 11:n : 11. • .,.... -..;;;....~--t 1• ~ -Lak ood rled • a·ctton .~val-·ia Ill ... -lM)1J:n ;t•.Cn1•1H(M)t1:4 ~I-0 a V"'V ~J· ew t an oo~ .. 'l;U\.. &11
.....,,.1"tt•i11t11.v•..., .. taaue football wln over aide kick, but Mater at7:30.
1. Mn1tr-1w1 to:•; 2. TOlll"IM .Lakewood's Lancers De.i's John Slemmer re· "Our derense played a
Dolphins, At MV Tonight Corona, u•vi 10:1J: i . ,..,""1c1 iwi '°~12:... Th··-•ay night at the ed Tb ft • very good game ag·'--Nol• 1"v1 io:t5; s. Marti• 1w1 urau. cover . en a er aour a.u""L 11:i.;•.AC1Nuc,rv110:11;1.o.Mr SantaAnaBowl."' running pl'ays, ·the Gahr,'' Moore says.
IFVI 10::M; l. WhMr f~I t0:'7; 9. W'• thr · l 'B t dicln•t ve••-$iorml•l'llo (l'VI 10:.,; 10. s..oro la.more ew paases Monarcbt cu r1ous y ' u we mo ullCI
1l'VJ to:•5: 11. strlckl..-ct 1Fv1 to:ss: ol 53 and 35 yards to set went to the air twice and ball. We'd have three
, IL ~ <WI 11101: ia. ~ up both ol Mater "-''s I ked off d .. -. a'nd then punt cw111;•: 1•.s..t1wo 1w111 :4. '~"" one pus was Pc . o.... .
s-cio-.. osi '"'°'".._ fourth quarter scores, with 1 :30 left. most or the night anc).
1. HvOdlKe• cs1 t;.u.t..1.~11t but the Monarchs had to But George McGowan when tb~happens, the ISi J. Eclw.,.ft CSJ '-Aal•lt CSI S. ~ . r. I w.l«lft rs1 '· sar .. 1• 101 7, K-N• oyerco~e some ques~ intercepted a Lakewood de£ense go the ._ae d
Brea Vie Tough Hq,wks VP Vie
ts>. pus with 26 aeconds re-rnostofthe 1me.''
c.or.. _. w r 1»1 in1 vu1a ,.,_ "maini#&, and this time, Esperanza won its first
1. J. Dor CCI •:SI; 2, Gro.,_ w . , ' M t D lk tth ball-. I CVI IO;U; J. Martlri tYl t0:11/ ,, omen 8 ' a er e ep e vo• game ln WO years OVer A•Mr 1v.1 10:n : s. w.11to11cv110:u : tbea:round. Dana Hills last week, 8-0,
A major share of '-Hotl..-..t cc1 10=2•; 1· o. Dor icl The Monarchs took a and Moore ts hopeful his
~! 0~~m. lligh Play Diablos Toriight
School Dolphins tangle
with the Brea Wildcats
tonight at 8 in a non·
league football clash at
San Clemente High
School.
Both teams are 1-1 on
the year and are coming
off losses.
Dana Hills has relied
primarily on the strong
running of Kerry Crabb
to establish its ground at-
tack. In the past two
games Crabb has car-
ried the ball 30 limes for
anetll6yards.
This week Keith King,
sidelined with a leg in·
jury, will relurn to aid
the Dolphins' running
game.
Ttie Wildcats figure to
take advantage oC their
senior running backs,
trackster Ray Reynoso
and Jeff Johnson.
Quarlerbacks Rob
Stamos for the Dolphins
and Walt Weigand or·
Brea lend to the similari·
ty of the teams.
Stamos compleled
eieht or 17 passes for 113
yards last week, while
Weigand threw 11 com-
pletions out or 18 for 102
yards . W eiga nd,
however, is also a good
scrambling -type
quarterback and is a
cqnstant threat to the de-
fense.
Mission Viejo High bids
for its third straight win
of the you ng football
season toniiht, hosting a
winless, but tough El
Doradocontingent at8.
Mis sio n Viejo's
Diablos have logged vic·
tories over Saddle back
and Costa Mesa. but
coach John Murio says
the competition hasn't
been as tough as what El
Dorado has had to en·
counter. .
The Golden Hawks
have dropped close tilts
to Sunn!' Hills and La
Habra, both of which are
unbeaten.
El Dorado is led by
quarte r back Todd
Peterson and split end
Ken Dressel , an all-
Orange League selection
a year ago.
Peterson has complel·
ed 20 c.( 35 passes for 220
yards while Dresse l has
caught 10 for 116 yards.
The Hawks' top back,
Jim Haynie, will sit out
the Mission Viejo game.
says El Dorado coach
Glen Hastings. Haynie,
an all-league tailback
who gained 900 yards last
. year, is nursing an ankle
injury.
Dressel and Peterson
are also two or El
Dorado's top defensive
players. D'ressel is an
outside linebacker and
Peterson plays al a
halfback spot.
l'rteanwhile, Mission
Viejo counters with a
balanced attack, led by
quarterback Doug
Reeves and tailback
Scott Spear.
Reeves has connected
on 11 oC 20 passes for 172
yards and a pair of TDs.
Spear has rushed !or 141
yards (107 last week> in
22carries.
Corona del Mar High's t0:it : '· Wino ivi io::M: •·a.. A hJ •
C !Cl 10:.0; 10. Ocll•l'I CCI IO:a ; 11. t et1cs 1A) lead With 9:57 left in <':barges Can rebound success in entury, v°"""Wt"e1v11a:•1;12.~11<V> th h Willi I lh · 411• I t League football circles is 10 :»: 11. Kol'lrad 1c1 11 :02 : 1•. e game w en ams rom e1r · .. oss o ~cc1 11:1i. bunt one.yard off right GaHr . · ,, on the line tonight as the .,,. ............ 1.n 1111 tMl'W F ieldHoetey tack le'" .. McGowan · con· ····ESs>eranza has two or ·1
Sea Kings travel to El 1. ,..1,.. tM> 10:01: 2. Ga1tup <Ml .OM11Mw..t1._.wn:., -v~~the PAT and boot-three --' and ' ModenaHightobaltlethe to:OI; i . L-cw1 10:1•: .-. N1cM ~ Wt.i 1eor"'9: .. ....,.. r. a..-. ,.&"'lV runners CM) 10:ft : S. Plott IMI 10:1S;6. Efl. Sfty9tri_Flfllt,O.,.,. ed A lf..yard (ield goal 1.heiffe·quarterback has
Villa Park Spartans. :.c=..,1"'! '~~~;:o:!:.~.' ~~!..'°~:; two minutes later. Joe improved tremendously. Kickof( is at ,8 and VoUevba ll ol
h H ,1 d' 10:•:1a.Henctr1<111M110:11;n.sc.y " Schmit'• interception That No. 41 (Mark coac Dav.e 0.1 an s cw 1 1o:•s: 11. w.,,.., c"'' 10: .. : 1i. v•••iTv. a Lakewood p ass follow· Re'••vold) runs t ho dive
Sea Kl·ngs are 9« -'·{ 111n¥0 1w1 io:s..; ''· eorl'lk11'( <WJ --v ,_ .., ..,._ ""~-...... '"\ , , ... ,..P'"11 u:a iW: •....,. ........_.15-1.. ing Mater D ei's first veeF--vecy well~ -t: s~~~~~evae~a~~:~ : 1. F.T:::~:l1~1:1,::'i~1.'*..-.n Rft. vau!~:=i:.::..::1~-.._M. score h elped set UP the '~l'teeJ We wiJ} ·have lo 'V
ked N 2 · CIF 3-A 1E110:»1 a. aoor CEI 11 :•;" Wiii,. ,,.._ field goal. , ~-stbp the run but also, we :.1 ran ' o. in 1E1 11 :.t1? s. 1E.wo.n11 tT> 11:11: '-v••MTY • The win wu costly f1!r can't concentrate on this i~ circles, a notch be. hind Mee.a {E l 11 :1•: 1. HOM ce:1 n:n : E11>Dra0oo.furi1.,..1nr1,..10,1,..n. M t D · h . 1 th -11 -• Santa Ana Valley. . •· C..$1ro ''' 11 :21 ; •. c1art.e 1T1 "u"io•vAllSITY · a er e1, owe.ver, as entire y or ey WI. <.;•
n :)Q; 10. Armst,_, 1T1 11:»; 11. Ur11¥W11ty .., E1 00ra00 •>-tt, 1w. defensive end Mar.ty pass. Tbeir n uarterback; • It's the running game u...,.rt, 1T111::M; 11. SIP'"•-tTI 1w . ~ of Villa Park with all-11:11; 1s. van Morn CEI 11: ... ; 14. Sundy su((ered a tom. (Mark Whitley) is an si.,..., rT1 11:00. Tennis knee cartilage. He is out adequate th.rower.'' OrangeCountycandidate c 1 cw-.. ,,.. c 111s. Bruce Ben Ben against 1.~~~:>:o:':.:'f~~=U-1 ... r~ (MnwMa {ortheyear.. What,is'Mooreworking
the aerial darts 0y Corona 1o:fl; a. Mr• ILi 1o:s.; '· F•rnr-i c.i111fts isci•rc .... no•J. •AM•STATISTics on at El Toro 'to prepate -~ u.i n :o:i ; s. wanocri u.1 11:a1; •· .Hfl$ICldafG.sisco1-1. "' L for t-he Esperanza del Mar's Gary Guisness. owr.i1 rNi 11:11; 1. Fl•• IN 111: 11; 1. Aoot tc111e1 So>"•"-"'· 4 1 Ben Ben romped CorlOO Mll•v 11..1 11 :11 ; •. P•"°"' <Mt 11:10: Sl«ra 1c>•fM. Sisco..... ~:=;::::: • , Aztecs? 10. Ptir111ns <N! 11 :J1; 11. FullofnOto 0.1111.uClfl'l (!KlOetO.Sim-.. 1. 0 o t.!We've gone back to yards as a junior ln tea<l· tNi 11 :12; 11 .. Mow•"' 1N1 11.3'; 1a. &kM 1C1 •1c;op.•·•· Fh·tt~s-,..1t1•,
ing his mates to a 21 -7win F•1e'-<LI 12:11: 1•. Koen,.. 11..1 rio Flllgaf"•l~1 •1Muc11011 .. 1. ~:,:~~ ,,: ,;~ storie age football,'' he
11.... M1<:•1c>•'"'"'"..... van111,.,.1no 151 11 says. "We're just work-over Corona del Mar and , JuNio•v••StTY ~llande1 lSCl dofa1.1e11b1fldOI" .. ,, v n1 1mt 2
16s is again the core of Villa w.•-" 150, c1si ,.1,... v••trr 0..111.. . ~,,!ntt.-iried 33 17t ing on basics, the bread
271 Park's attack. i. cumm•rio• «Fvi 10:31 ; 2. eun &arc••·&ald•1"' IC> dolt ca1rt-Br•r ,f"l.lntHl..,.d11t. ,.:~, ,.. •. 2 and butter plays, and not
The two big keys for the
Diablos, says Murio, will
be (l J their ability to
move the ball against a
massive-El Dorado line
and <2) containing
Peterson. Dressel and
Haynie (if he plays J.
Mbll"" VlolO Ofl•tt .. TE-Jo1Cl•fl•
RT-6r"SU~• AG--"1eff McC..rly ( -Mike Hutltll'lg LG-Todd Shum•k1 L.T-M41r-8oriti.y SE-GrqJ_.
Qll--Dvl.!9 .... ..,., f"8-Ro1 8r-lat1• T8-k.otl5pe:•r Sii-Eric Sdimldt WnlH VloJo 0.l•rif• RE-Mark SorlltMll'I l'IT-Jall flernl"9
MG-tarr Gt"•er LT-Morll,...rwll'I LE-MarllNh.amm•rt L8-Joy Hatl•r La-f.1•.,.K•H•Y RV-Qw"ll •011 CB-MtirllArWt•wl
C8~ffHQtlP S....SCOttOvrM!'n
:~~ Ho 11 and · s crew. r,~~t~~Ji ~~~; 1 ~.v~~:~~.'..e! ~.,,111.word 1c1 a.1 saui·Aaflll"' ;~~:f .. 1ost 1~~ ~ trying toghet fancy.'' 1 ·~ meanwhile, is trying to tFVI 11:0.; •· aul'll•r 1Fv> 11::111: 1 •.. ,. , kw•~Qltlrten The C argers wi l aur11• cFv1 11:21; t . sm•u tf"v1 s.,.:'!:.'!".-0,.'8'1•" c> d•t Lindo-~ o o a ._, welcome back of(ensive ',!'? pick itself out or the dust ,, ,. , v , ''"' ,, ,. ,, ........ _ -~..... ...--• o o o •--•• •• ' ; · ar • : ; · "''"" AothCl'lllO.Shert!i ICI 6111 Lurio-Ll.Wld -·""' oU'"INO -guird John Peterson ahd ' uo after non-league losses to 1w111:•1. '"'
•,.,11 4.A powers Mater Dci T11111 .. 1u11111111u.11<1• vritiit-Post csc i "' saw,.r-F'Cllwn M11..,.o.1 linebacker Mart in 1.w.11..-,1£111:11;2.G . .ve1uo11 ..._ ~ tell rt rl ""'Moylan for this week's 1a:i and Newport Harbor. · tE i 11:11; J. l!lroo11""1" 1E1 11:11; '· ~riandoJz·•rocll•r csci e1ir1 euu.,. OON.llft '! '° 1' ~-• game.
1.., •·we·ve got to play our Sc:Pilndl•r tT1 11:3-3: s. Hov•llw 1e1 Mc:Gul••M. 10 o 2., ·• d 1 d . 1 11: .. : '· co.1•1 t1E1 11:s•; '· LM 1e1 GarM•·T-.ecl 1c1 "' 8o9'-ICIOI'' ~1am1 i ~ : ~:~ Leading rusher for the 190 e ense an s1 mp y ex· n:16;1.su1n1T112 :JO;•.Grut1ar 1T1 M 110 ecute better ,·· says 11:2l;10.w.uac•re.112:h. £1i•1-Cunmnvt1am 1ci *' L~· Mc.Gow«! 1 • a •.o Chargers is Craig Driml ,.. ;~ Holland. Newpart tu11 .. 1 i.o1a1.m1-.s ~..... °'.:::', ,: 1,; : ·;·: who gained 69 net yards
•ro BenBenha•rac.kedup '· H•i.ti.•u INI n:n : z. C-onll tNJ ~-, •• _•·" .. "'.•'""' ici d•t W•tson· ~••s1NG . against Gahr. Lee \1 ;JJ;J.Lumlan 1Nl ll:••;•.Mor.-.:I -tMWD91 :~ 241 yards in 51 carries !LI 11:s.; s. wa11co1t tNI 11:ot; '· !"',dlol-L.1p9or1 1c1 .,, sari c'°'"'"'"' .. ~ ,... Y• IJld., Binder, Kevin Urquhart
P•llon (NJ 12:111; 7. JaCllton (NJ -WI 12 d r( b Ck' Scott 110 through lwo games and n:io,i.w••d \N J 11 :1J;t.J~CL1 Moc•·8u cllblnd•r 1c1 cs•t S•ri ""'°" s 1 tSI ·•1' an qua er a 1
:: scored a pair of TDs. u:u,10.LM11 tL112:2•. a.mentat-1. :::.,. : ! ,~ : ::. Burghardt also run the
Villa Par'k's quarterback Toc.11 1• s 2 1s. .w ball for El Toro.
Both· defensive units
have acq'uitted
t themselves well. Dana
Hill»' dete,J!llqed 4•· Iense bas gjven up orilY
one touchdown in ils two
outings. Finding a way to
stop the speedy R eynoso
and. control Weigand will
be the Dolphins' primary
Mustangs, Sents isS-SMarkHaosen, aeon·
verted s plit e nd. When he
goes to the air it's usuaJJy
the short pass. Agairu;t
Foothill be completed 9 of
I2for43yards.
Tritons Travel HOW AYAIU.IUFORLliSE
··1975 AUDI 100 LS 4 OR •
objed.ives.
Br~a· will .be; counting
heavily ort' its defensive
ends Fred Hogan and
Bob Seaborn to anchor
the line. Both co3icties ,
consider Hogan to be one
of the best defe.nsive
linemen in Orange ·County. .
The 6·1, 190-pound
senior was all-Orange
League in bis sophomore
and junior years.
0-. Nitti OfMIO se-6lit... Toi.n-111
AT-wittCOlllw lta-$ __ .,
. ( ~11.0:.
L°"'""k~ 8•1-.rsbV
LT~IJoflMft TE-Mk.II 8r-.1"9 Qe-Rot!Sl-1"8-«•lttl Klfl!ll
Me-K•rry Cr•btl
fl ~ltWalttl
Daflt Nlllt 0. .... M
t:~s::'!r LT-WtsC:.lll•r Ro-Joltn 8acl'lmari ... _....,. .. 11'111•
L._....eflt Det'lrllftMr L8-ltetl KotmOlo
Cll-kolt Vo,,..,cllfl9 a_...,tcrowwt
S -OWis W•IUI S -f'Mnrr Mllll.wltt
HB Picked
Fourth
• ~ •. ~ \o4 I' 1'•1 I
hi Aerial Battle One oC his favorite
targets is tight end Brad
Igou, a 6-5, 220 ·pounder.
Igou is. o ne or t he big can·
nons in Villa Park 's of·
(ensiveline.~
•• I ' r • .,
To Redondo High
REDONDO BEACH-qoartetback Dav,e
San Clemenle High MOOre. Moore is a let·
School will be seeking its terman and was a starter
third straight non-league a year ago until he broke
football victory here an ankle.
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Guisn~s completed 8
or 16 atternPts · against
Newport HarbOr (or 107
yards and·a touchdown in
his firri start after miss·
ing lhe')Mater Dei game
due lo injury.
tonight against the San Clemente's power
Redondo High Seahawks running game is s parked
with kickoff at 8 on the by Brian Wood, Ron ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'!!!.
campus field. . Wade, Tool Arons and
· Corona del Mar, with
its horde or 170-paunders,
is again heavily out-
weighed in every depart·
ment.
CW-•IMll,OffeMO
SE-AkhN~ AT-00.,.MtldOr RO--O...r11tWlf'1911rd C ~llJol'ltnl'lts LG-&ti8Mlmort
LT-0a.,.YOUf'l9 TE-8rocl St•1MI ,oe-GarrGvl-ss T8-.;:-ftoll EIWll fB-6111 Moore ·FL---Gr99 Ntl..,Jlle
...
'" .... m m m m
'" '" "' "'
San Clemente has been Randy Adams. All are
installed as a half-point capable of breaking
---...... ,..,.....:-.:....~--clear on any given play. Dnc.-. .. ~"• Wood was the rushing . o.~~~~=~':~.:lt.'::t leader in the first game
WHt to Crou&IK" 1c1oM 10 PKlfk with 156 yards and last <M•tHttlfl-rl.'rumtentllf" .. blOcU week added 51 despite to VIM.•"t, tMn rklM to lt.MfUm at ptllNIKIWldY•'J'fe"l· having Cypress .key oo
f .t rt . , his movements . avor1 e a. e~ w1nrung Wade and quarterback
last years in augural Tim Vleisides each
battle, 7·6. ' . , gained 33 yards as the
Coach Allie Sc~aCf s :r r it 0 n s de re ate d S~n Clem ent~ Tri tons Cypress, 6-3.
QH-. del """'Do ...... LE-8rocl Dwol'I
L T-Jolln Gofoool MG--0...,ld Gombltl
RT--Rkl Ell'lall
AE:-.Spyro K•mbl<i Ll!l-Mlll•Cr•wlorCI L8-8r•ll ~trul C8-.5cottlllter'r (l!l-GroQ W•llSOl'I s --Rkll NelMI
AD..,·8111~
will opez:ate out of the Redondo lost fullback ~wer ~1.s~bone forma· George Pearson for last
155 t1_on, ut1l1z1n g_ the run-week's game with Avia-
190 !1"1i eame ahead of pass-tion but he is ex.-.-.ted ,,s ing ' ~._ ..
11s Rec1 d Be h . al back for the game "'° ~ o ac is so tonight. 11111 run-oriented although s.ioo-111•0t1•-
;: the Seahawks ran into TE-DtfwlkE1'191trom
1:n trouble last week in a ~ ~o!" 1"'
::: 36-0 Joss to A viatioo High c -Tome.:; u.s
Prep Polo
V•fl<lty
k .... itr~""" HWll:ll'ICltOfl Beocl'I a t 4 5--21
0r-. I 1 2 o-• H8 ~lftO: Wtlr I, JollflMll'I $, Kttfe
5, W-..,a, Tho<M$J, Vllo2, ltlt0tl'I. NeJVGomt.
f"•OSN·SOPN
k-lly0war1•"'
Huntl"91°" hoch • • ' 7~ °'"'* 0000-0 H8 scoring: T•rlor 10, .Moori-7.
Aamti.'9 '· wo11 ..... UO(l'I, Andtth\ BKkl•y.
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TIME
and were forced. to ~.:j:""'Mtc:'
pass-without success. sE-st~•tttb
"It ·was a trA~edy of Q8-TimVMl•ldts " = L H&--ttot\Wa.»_ errors. coac . es He......,.1oriWOOc1 · Congellier of R edonrlo f"&-TomA,._, "Tb d , .. J:_ S..a-ttti .. DoMso says. ey score uu~ 0E--..woe1a
touchdowns ()(f OUr Of· OT-'olleolllst,_i1r
tense. They really didn't ~.r.~:='"
do as much as we did to DE-Mlk•Hocllttt -·~eJ es '' Ll!l-TornAron1 VUI 3 V • L8_...,,... VMJ<Sldo1
The Seahawks feature ca-0...,,.0111
a junior ha lfback Steve ·c1-4...,.o.MK11
Swain and wis,h bone ~-::~.~~""111t
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MEN'S
TRADITIOHAL C!.OTHIHG
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~~-·~,~~~,,. _Qr!ginal Balkt
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Ballet Pacifica it ill open ita fall
season Oct. 12 with a new wort,
••paquita." choreographed by
Victor Moreno to_muaic by
~""· .Al8o ori the program will be
•"Ille Seasons,•• with music by
Gluounov-and cboreograph,y~by
MiC'.!bel PanaieU, and ''Three.
Plu.s Two,'' choreographed by
Lila Zali-to music by Ba~. ·
1be eeasOn's other scheduled
performances will include 10 pre-
sentations of "The Nutcracker"
begiruiini Dec. 12, a ~am to
be ·announced Feb. 8, and (our
performances of the children's
ballet ''Encounter Near Venus,"
starting March 26. ·
All performances will be at the
Lagiana Moulton Playhouse next
to the Fatival of Arts ·Grounds
on Laguna Canyon Road in
Laguna Beach. .
f, MOLLY LYNCH sqLOS IN 'THE SEASONS' . . .
Membership tickets for the
season are still available at a
cost of "10· In addition. for persons interested in helping
sponsor the group, associate
membeJ:Ships are available for
~ • SlS 'and patron memberships for
$35' (include& two members~), . ,.. -:· .. ,. ' " . ' .
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At -t-.~;-~~~: .. Fabfgro~nds
·-~ .. ":'""' .. ~ _,_ ·." .. P t:o~a c)(te --.: ·~. -, -...
) . ... ~ . . .
I · " '~ " ·•t "'1"1'.e'im1rojliilg~csb<iwn ai kgllt) Will be one or many e.venta·
,, in a prof~ssional-quality rodeo Saturday ancl, Sunday at
· fh'e t OZ.ange County Fairgrounds; 88 F8ir Drive, Costa
f· Mesa, .. to benef~t the ~Cystic ·Fibrosis Foundation. The
; ,rodeo is slated for 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. Sun·
' djlY, with admission at $4.50 for adylts and $1' per child. 1
Bluegrass F.~stivai
• 'file Great 'Eartb llluegrass
Festival will •off,~ a tilu!'-
grass ci>oipeflu\irl liind crafts demonstratk\lis~to cQast au· diences at tbe e CoUD·
ty Fairgrou' ~ct . 15
through' 19;" Hlghligbta will
be performances by Hoyt
Axton (right) at 9.p.m. Oct.
18.:and by • . .Mil! -~illar~
. (below), •4 IIDn· .O'cl. ~-t
1 Crafts demon•at,1ons Will
·be from 5 to 1~11.m: 'Oct'.16. ',
Games will be feaj;ured aur .. · :•
ing· the same h\i!ll:S (kt.' 17, :;<
with entertainm'e!tt by Mon-' ..
. tezuma's Revenge, t\)e )1uf. ,
falo Chip and Cocky· Carroll
and the F uhli: Dog Su~f ..
Band. The fiddl~ b!P.1191 and . ·
bluegrass ba11d cOJ1test will
. be from ·11 -a .'m . .to no0n aild ~ l to4p.m. Ocl.18 andll a.In.
' to 1 p.m: ect. 19, with finals
Ci'om 3 to 5 p.m. tllat day. I Preregistration to Compet~ is
available by c•ll-545-1131. ~d-
' missionfoU\efestivalis$2for .•
. adults and $1 fo'r ' cbildr.en, •
'with those under 6 admitted, .
free. -super·~seil '.i>1ay-is1~
available al all times and many family ~ontest5.will'be
offered, plus" storybook
theater ~t 7 o'clo~keach·even· . '., . ~
Also. one h~ur . before eaCh performance, Children will be
• invited,into the arena to learn about rodeo. A,mong the
stars will be' Oscar the bull and' Snowflake the bucking
horse:.poth Jeafured in the film "The Great American
Cowbo)<. ·~ .\'.f!1ong the humans will be Leo Camarillo,
Mootyllenson, John McBetb.and Joe and Mike Marvel. . , T
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tertainment
OAll.YPILOT ()J . • • •
LOUISE FRAZER ANO VICTOR MORENO REHEARSE NEW WORK, 'PAQUITA'
business patron mem ~
bersbips ($SO ror two) and honor
patron memherahips at $100 for
two.
Tickets for nonmembers are $4
for adults and $3 for children and
are also available for each
performance from Ballet
Pacifiea, 494-1148.
The Laguna Bea~h Company,
which is beginning its 14th
season, features lead dancer&
David Panaieff, Yict.or Moreno,
Paul Maure. Molly Lyrich,
Louise Frazer, Roger Faubel,
Louis Carver, Charles Colgan,
Benjamin Sperber, Cyn{h_ta
Tosh, Carrie Kneubuhl, Lt~~
Robertson, Belinda Smith aqil Randy Barnett._ · •
·Egypt W eavings .Showll
•
A collection of tapestries woven by
children of the Egyptian village of
Kirdassa is on display now through Oct .
8 at Asian Enterprise, 250 Newport
Center Dr., Suite '107, Newport Beach.
The tapest ries were woven by 10-year·
olds under an unusual program in which
no models and no Interference from
adults were allowed, resulting in ge.
nulnely prim i tive works. Hours are
from 10 a .m. t o ·s p.m. daily Tuesdays
through Saturdays •
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DAll.V PtlO'r F'tfdey, OCtober & 1m
CAST OF BICENTENNIAL SHOW 'ORANGE TREES'
OC History Center
Of Theater Pie~e
Martin and Juan Flores and the
contributions or rur trappers,
gold and silver prospectors, ear·
ly American settlers, Spanish
landowners, missionaries and In-
dians.
"Orange Trees" director John-
David Keller, known to coast au-
dience..s as director of SCR's
popular production of
"Godspell, .. calls it a celebration
-not just of past generations but
of the present as well. "We are
all a part of the bicentennial," he
said, "because we all have a his-
tory. Hi story is a part of each one
ofus,not somethingthathappcns
around us."
The cast of ''Orange Trees".
consists of John Ellington. Jake
Gardiner, Barbara Leva, Martha
McFarland, Richard A. Ryan
and Glen Barkley.
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1V Series
On Rights
, • r .
Of Women ~~
' I .,.. ~ !! ' ... ''Shoulder to Shoulier. "'a '1&·
part dramaUzation ol the long,~
often bitter strugglejor women's
rights in Britain from the turn of
the century to World War I, wlll
debut SUnday at 9 p.m. oo KCET.
Channel 28.
With personal accounts of the
women who fought for the vote in
Britain, the series provides
par11Jlels to such current social
issues as violence vs. non·
violence, prison reform., class
struggles, and ''conspiracy''
trials, as well as women's rights.
The series was created and
produced for the BBC by three
Englishwomen -Midge
MacKenzie, Verity Lambert and
singer-actrus Georgia Brown.
who J>Ot1~J working class sul-
fragette r•der Annie Kenney.
''AT T HE time we met to dis-
cuss the idea of a TV series on the
suffragettes,'' said Ms .
MacKenzie, ··1 did not really
make any connectioo between
my right to vote today and the
fight for me to have that right.··
In the ear1Y 1900s, the slogan
"Votes for Women'' wu a stan-
dard part of English political life:
Beginning with Unrealistic hopes
of quick government con-
cessions, the suffr:agettes s~
found they were faced with stub-
born resistance. The movement
eventually developed ipto a huge
popular struggle wltb marches
and demonstrations, finally
evolving into a bitter campaign
marked by violence.
In the opening program, mem-
bers of the famous Pankhurst.
family form the Women's SoeiaJ
and Political Union in
Manchester, adopting the motto,:
"Deeds not words.·• Interwoven·
with the story of t he Pankhurst\
women are the historical ' and
political events of the day, as
well as the slories or other
primary figures in the movement
and in government.
Pizza Prize Eyed
A pizz·a-eating
marathon, aimed at
establishing a world
record, will be spansored
by the Costa Mesa
Bass to Sing
In Ne wport
Bass-baritone Simon
Estes will be featured in
the opening concert of
the Harbor Area
Community C.oncert
Association season at 8
p.m. Oct. 12 at Newport
Harbor Hl&h School.
Information about
membership, which is
required for admission,
is available by calling
892-8034.
Categories for t he
competition are: junior
high school, high school,
faculty, service clubs,
and open (18 and over).
Trophies will b e
awarded.
Entry fee is 50 cents
per person. Applications
and ad d Jt i onal
in f ormati o n are
available from Donna
Adam. 556-5391.
AMAZING. ART SALE
GRAND OPENING
'
OILS-UlHOUMml> IDITIONS
PHOT0$4llAPHICS
PRINCE & PAUPER GAii ERIES
Lurrtier Y.cl Miii
384 Forest Ave. •'-""'Beach 92681
PHOHld 714f 4t7..J066 .
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UNIVE,.llTY OF CAUFORNIA, IRVINE
COMMITTEE FOR.ARTS PRESENTS
HARTFORD BALLET
Michael Ut hoff, Affillic Director
Lila Brodley, LeotJjng Dancer
UCI VILLAGE THEATRE
S:OOP.M.
THURSOAY, OCTOBER 16
Young hople'e lllnH:onoert-All .. llta ti .00
FRIDAY &.SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17 & 18
Full Performmc:eWltttWorks ByUthoff,
Limon, Gostar,Mutler, Tudor, Sokolow
(2 Dllfern Programs)
11CKIETS'
14.50 OENl!IW.. UCl.sruDl!NTtl S1 .00
t 2.DD P'OR FACULTYl.ST.At:°F; OTHER
STUDENTS
AVAILA8LEAT A.S.U.C.l.IOXOFFICE
GATl!WAY COFGCHS. 'FIRST FLOOR,
anw!.EN I A.M.&4:3QP.ll.
PHONE: (714)133 5111
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~ .[ Ivy House Charming
--. ..
A "!louse" d:rnuty _, to n..,---•·---. --• ""'l
• be olu\pin1 up al .... Ille Or-o ti~ I Out 'n" About Cout. The fouodon ct lhla do-•
main are ao astute hus--. .. ii M --wife team or restAUrateurs, BW --
and Jean Pelen.
$3.50; acam"'or smoked sal-
$3.115. .
....11 ........ --·--......... --ary fnitt.i.1, • ..
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Times/Places
' '
Psychre Filpis,
B~J. Thomas
•
VlrllDI• Woollf" Satlll'dn and Cid. I a U., •·oremi '\Illa'' and •"11)eGrut Nrbs'•laOder'-1
Oct.land I. Re1ervatka-7.
•WJl8T llD& ITO~lf•lo'1 al llollrrtW'a
Weat Dlllner Play 140 A-"la Plaa. Soa
Cloineate. Tonlsbf· tbn>qlh Dec. T, Yrrklua um.. WitJid!oou. ~•Uona•....._ -•RJ?•E LIU JEREllY 'BOY' -Comody by
tbo lrriae Community Theater, Bristol -Red
HUI, Coota MO.a, a:ao o'clod< lml•ht -Satur-cla7, 0ct.10, n. n-18. Resorvallom'57·72117. Not content to ...i on their
laurels ror the nne c>pel'at:ion of.
the Crown Jious e in Laguna
Niguel, Bill and Jean· have
branched· out wit h another ea·
terprlse. The resu..lt is a stwmina
new establis hment in Laguna
Beach -the_ Ivy House. 384
Fcrest Ave... 494·9491.
'ftlaNING tD the~
!belt ia a llU like opeaial a .,.
cyclopodie af "'° wwld'• ·srut
-· AD amuina variety ct nearly to eatret1_e.mbt:ece•
uarood •••••• .Iowl. 1'ouse
opedaltles, steab. ~. pasta.
egp andoraeleltea.
-ll:Ol'theotboraoafooden·
!NM 1"" may wuit to oanolder
(out ct a total of 181 lnchlde Bom·
blQ' ..i""' curry lllrlmp. $5.95 ;
amd daba. 1$.95; fr<ah ulmoo,
""5: broiled crab ..... 18.95;
ai..Jone steak, $7.95~batel'
1.Mrmldor. ST.SS; fresh water
trout. $5.75; 1our-abell fish Se#£i • ht dlGaer (lobster, crab logs, omgi ~acallot!ll,18-95. llepr•eat•tive... aeledioaa -rn ---· ~ -
UVE MUSIC REVUES -Featurinl mualc by
famous American 1on1wrttera. dally now lhl'OU&ll Oct. U la-. lll&"llDp-at Grut Woot-
J;a.vlap aod Loan, 4111 Newpo.'t, Center Dr.,
Newport Beacha-WerkdQI at 2:30 Pd 7:30 p.m ••
• Saturdays at na.m,llDll:1:30.P.m. })-ee. -,-
'TOO JIUCH JOllN80N' -Fm:e at the Marie
Taper Forum ct the Los Angelos lllualc Center.
toniC)lt tbtou&h Dec. 21. various times. $t to '9·
Reaervatlou (213) 626-7211, or.ticket asenclea •...
Inside. the 1 vy Home appears
to be an inn from Normandy
transport¢ to the art colony .'The All of the meat and fish it~ms
are served with a cbolee or soo.p
or mixed green or spinach salad,
steamed rice or boiled new
potatoes,creamed spinach or
vegetable du jour.
the other catecories are veal pic-
cate, $7.25 ; sauteed chicken TONIGRl',OCl'OBERS
Uvera, $4 .85 ; breast of chicken
Gloria, 1$.9$; New York airloio,
$8.95; smoked pork cbopo, $5.95;
pe·pper steak ( BJll 's own
Gourmet Ma1"•1lne prize·
winning recipeJ, Sll.95: broiled
lamb chops, $7 .95 ; mixed
English grill, $7.95 ; rigatoni
Romaoo, $3.95; rout prime rib
eye of beef, au jus, $8.95 ;
omelette aourmet, $3.95.
I exteriQr has a totally different
charm thanks to. its setting in
Laguna's new Lumberyard com-
'
plex.
LOCATED where a genuine
lumber yard did stlllld not long .. ago, this delightful shopping·
center merits ei ploratioo bet~
you bead to the r estaurant to eat.
Interestingly, too, all that re·
mains of the·former premises is
the street-front wall of the Ivy
House, which has been designat-
e d an offici a l histori c al
landmark .
Within the confines o( the din·
iDg and coc ktail a r eas, the broad
beams crisscrossing the straw·
fill ed pl aster w alls evoke the
elegant yet rustic feeling or
Northern Fra nce. Also, fresh
nowers gracin g each table add tO
the sense or cohtinenta1 refine-
ment.
We found ~it a parti cular
pleasure to ea't in a dining room
where the tables are spaced just
the ri ght dilttance apart. The
diner is made to feel neither that
he is eating in an arena nor that
he ha~ been jammed into a con·
fined area.
l.ike the Crown House, the Ivy
House has one of those fine iri·
stallations that "s the special de·
li ght of seafood fanciers, an
oyster bar. From it, by way or
appetizers, yo u can order such
delicacies as oysters or cla ms on
the h alf s h e ll, $2 . 75 ; crab
cocktail, $2.95; marinated her·
ring, $2.25; stuffed mushrooms
or artichokes 1with crab meat ).
The first of our two entrees was
Pa_c.lflc" r•d 1napper. $5.50.
Delicately 1auteed in butter, the
fish was wonderfully fresh,
topped by almondine sauce and
accompanied by broccoli hoUan·
dalse. Duck a la Ivy House, $6.95, was
the second happily chosen selec·
tion. Roasted to crisp golden
brown perfection, the generous
portion of one-half Long Island
eo-i.,, Si••-
Tammy Wynnette is
scheduled to appear
with Johnn-y Rodri·
guez in concert Oct. 9
at the Anaheim Con-
v e ntion Cent e r .
Tickets are available
a t agencies.
'Anyone who claims lbe tiUe or
~'big eater'' can also turn to a
taggerirtg -choice or a la carte
elections. In addition to ap·
peti.zers .. these include soups,
<SeeVARIETY,PaseCfJ
' ~
GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES
Specializing In Chinese A lo Corte Dishes
LUNCH•01t1t-4ER DAILY
Food f'O Take Out
2023 ............
· 11:30A.M.to10P.M.
COSTAMISA
64:Z.716Z • 646-"l l
In Hlstortc Aliso C.nyon
A di'hi ng experi ence in the
rustic tranquility of . a natflral
environment -
BEN BROWN'S
NEWLY REFURBISHED
RESTAURANT
SUNDAY BRUNCH
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
DANCING & ENTERTAINMENT
JASON CHASE -TUE.-W'ED.~THUR.
GENO LANZI -FRI. I SAT.
NOW .
i
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'
EHTERTAIHMIKI' •• DAHCIHG
.BILL
BAKER
T•lday lln Sllluclllr t:OO p.a.
Owhl'91' 1-. .
' ·KONA -LANES
26tt Hwllor ltftL. C1• W... .. •
• PLAIN TRUTH
OPENING OCT. 6
Nightly fo~ d•n<;:ing •nd et1tert•inment
lt'1 •II h•ppening et
Now appearing:
' Carol Ki~ey and
The Kimzey Report.
San Orego Freeway lilt 8rl1tol, 668 Anton Blvd.
Coste MNa·. C.Ufoft'll• 92626 (714) 54D-2500
~M COA.ST PLAZA MOTEL
.WESttR.N IN'tEltNAl10NACltO'tECS ...
P .. 1-11!1 trwtl ~ ~ Alrlin.a .,
,
PA8APSYCHOLOGY FIL.MS ..:. nnt In a
Golden Weat Colle&e Sll(!rie •, includlnl dis~
cuuions: ''Inner Spaces1' ·aibd .. The Ultimate
MY.tery," tonl&ht -Satnrday, 8 p. m. In
Forum 2. $3.50.157'4 Golclenwt?SISL, Huntlnltoo
Beach.
II. J. THOMAS -At Knott's llen'1 Farm, 8039
Beach Blvd., Buena .Park. 8 and 10 o'clock
tonight; 6, 8 and 10 p.m. Saturdlllr; 2, 4 aod 6 p.m.
SUnday. . ,
'LIFE WITH FATHE•'· -Family comedy,
tonight throuch Suoday and Oct. 9'12 at Cal State
Fullerton. Curtain and ticket tnform'ltlon,
87().3371.
'THE TWENTIETH CENTURY FLUTE' -
John Barcellona plays music 'by Poulenc,
Prokofiev and others, 8:30 o'clock tonight In the
Univenity Tbeater at cal State Lona·.Beacb. $2.
'JUMPERS' -Farce by Tom Stoppard, now
throu1b Nov. I at South Coast Repertory, 1827
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. 8 p.m. Tuesdays
through Saturdays, 3 and 8 p.m. Sundays.
Reservations 648'-1383.
'FINISHING TOUCHES' -Comedl' at the .UunUnf(on Beacb Playhouse, 2110 ltla!n St.,
Huntington Beach. Tonight and Saturd•>'. Oct. 10'
andll at8:30 p.m . RooervaUons842·MZ1 .
'THE CORN IS GREEN' -Drama revival at the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laauna Canyon
Road, Laguna Beach. Tonight and Sat1&rday.
Oct. 7·llat8:30 p.m. Reservations494-o743.·.
IRVINE REPERTORY THEATER -Tbree
shows in repertory, now through Oct. U at !J1•.m.
in Humanities Hall Playhouse at UC lrv.lne.
'"lbe Zoo Story'' and .. The American DreatD,''
tonight and Oct. 7 and 10. "Who's Afraid of . .
Bring your family and
au of your friends for a
meal no one will forget!
. ···:
AN'11QVE SHOW -At tbo Anaheim Conven\1¥;
Center, 1to10 p.m. todayaodSaturdef,noonlO<I:;
p.m. SUnday. $2 adults. Cbildren 12 aii4 uoder '44:
milted free with an adulL ; : : : . : ·= SA .. URDAY,OCl'OBERC : :::
'CO~NTRY MUSIC SnCrAClJLAR' -T~:
Tucker, Freddy Fender and Tom T. Hall at DIS•'
neyland, 8:30 p.m. to 1 :30 a .m. Saturday.
Includes square dancing and other performers.
$1.50 at agencies and advance sales, $9 at the
gate. ~. . :
PRO 80DEO -Benefits CycsUc Flbl'Osia Foun·
daUon. At tho Orange County Falr1rounds, 11&
Fair Dr .• Costa Mesa, llOOll, 2 and 8 p.m . Sat\l'·
day aod SUnday. $t.!IO adults. $1 children. ·
BENEFIT CONCERT -Soccoro de Castro,
prize-winning organist, 8 p.m. Saturday at
Orange Coast College Auditorium, 2701 Fairview
Rd .• Coota Mesa. Benefits. food projoelS foe
chlldm> aild elderly. $8.!IO and $8.!IO ceneral; $3
for student.II and senior citizens.
'THE NADA GANG' -French lilm by Claude
Cbabrol, with 1uest speaker Jack Scott, 8 P·'!'•.
Saturdoy at the Orange Coast College Forum.
$1.!IO.
SVNDAY,OCl'OBER5
PINCHAS ZUKERMAN -Conducting three
· works by Bach and one by Mozart, 8:30 p.m . &.u:\·
day in Crawford Hall, UC Irvine. Sponsored l!x,
Orange County Philharmonic. Tickets '4 ~ ~
if available. Information646-6411.
. THREE DOG NIGHT -In concert with Neil
(See TIMES, Poge Oil
~+++'H'++++++++++•~ • . ··<ft r@f d'Prussels }
,. Your Hosts . . . . . · ~ ~t ·· ... Julian Tovar & Pat O'Daly •
ril-SUNDAY BRUNCH <f If> 10 a.m . to3p.m. -fl
II'-LUNCH•OINNERDAILY .~ ~ ~
• 2700 S. COAST .. ~HWAY '4(1
• U.GUNAIEACH llS.4~4-7447 .<ft
~++••····~···~·~~
MEXtCAP'f R.ESTAUMNT
296 E.17th STREET
COSTA MESA • Hill.GREN SQUARE
Phone645o7616 Doi all I :00 a.,,..
Here le family dining at a price you can ~afford.
Bring a large party. We'll give you plenti1 of
urvlce and food to match. Be sure to not ice ,
our-ncled cocktail lounge. Come to •
Ml CaM. J\mean1~y House" and your tttea\
will be a ~P to 'Mnfc;ot ·
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q DAIL V fttLOT Frld!y. Octoblr 3.. 1175 . -VARIETY IN IVY HOUSE MENU. • •
... he1:1 ., ... _ ,,.._ .... Cll
salacb, vegetable•, potatoes and
dessert.I.
1:30 •.m. Saturday and SondQ
brunch Is 1erved from 9 •.m. to 4
p.m.
$1.tl;crab--.a.&
Wally Rutb. pianiot and vocalil!;;~an In !he cocktail ....... DiPI y, 8:30!01:30, 'l'llel·
day~Saturday. STA; -1.11&--ca•
Ill 211t Pl •• Nowpo;t --,_ .._ .. 111•1 ... ..,.,_Wa a a .. , .. ._ ......... _ ..
•
lt"s almost possible, too. to eat
. one's way around the clotk and
through the-wMlk at th~ Jvy
Home. P.rial' t..1..ch a1r:kdays,
tJae restaararit open1 f"Or:
brleakfast at 7 a.m .
SERVICE i s cooii.ououa '"'at the> o~ler •Glll\)r, ~ 111:m. to
11>e menu for the latter Ibo~
fers a 1-arge and varied.unbtrof
~tren . More than 20 selections
iAcbNle wild rice pwatea and
aama1e, SZ.6$; •IP Jlenedict,
$3.25 · sea(ood crepet, $3.25 : cl~bhouse sandwich, $3.H;
chicken livers add Krambltd
egp, $!.75; baked mabi mabi,
You eao't mlsa the ,Lum·
beryard ....i Ivy House, oriee
you're oa rore1t Ave.: two
bloeU ll'om the Coast fUlltway. -1te City Hall. And there~
plenty of free parkin1 in the
Lumberyard lots.
I
Hi1ftest Quatily
NJgive !\le11ea" Foods
'Week Doy\: 11 ;.)Q o.'" to 11 p.m
f.il ~Soi. 11 :30 OM'I. to t2p.m..
0J)t'n 7 Day!io
((Xj(TAILS
wi.ea the !nine ~rtory '[)>eat.er di ..
1-Dclecl Jiw,e ye.a,, ago an.er rour excellent
•tsws4 it ieatle!.onside.rable void in .the Orange
Coast oolliege ter scene.
'J'lliMy tbe nrr is back in business, otferin& a
repertoire or three productions every night but
Sunday through Oct. 11. Two of these three are of
• '1()93 E. ADAMS. HUNTINGTON&~ 1162-7911 , r
'
RESTAVRANT
LUNCHEON·• Diie&
COCZTAILS • SUteAY llWMCH acnaTMtrn11•1mv
l.lClfllna l'r --.
WHERE VOUCAH ENJOY
pa5o1AH, •• ·•AM. ...... LUY N'.STUFF
IUSSIAM & IJBJ:AM ... SISlltE ' :Z<1116 N•wporf lt¥4 • 0.11ie a.,
l.u1.1' H4Nll SnaAL !COME IT LAICI Olt IT SUI
• .--.. ... , .. 7.:Jlp& . •WPOllT IU.CH_ .. ' 67!1-2244
llCl.MEli BAAG SS.!15 ----SHfSH KABOB FLAMBE $4.95
C~c.llOlwolF.i
SHASHL "(EK FLAM BE
..... I ,~~t.-g
.
.All ENTREES INCUJOE: &iupms.Md .
.
$4.95
$'5.95 k.
t.UNCH--Fri • DINNEJl-Mon.Sot
COCKTAILS DAILY• CLOSED SUNDAY
' ..
j
TUES. & TitURS. RtOM 4 P .M. --
• • •
1'NfdS Dolar
-~ ''All• YM Ca· lot''
•AGliETTI
Teriyaki
·Dinners
forL~t:~~
~ alltl a fr iend c111 enior two great steak-s fa
only S6.95 lor boltl. we know you'll rotlle plas -ho Cllllle aboard sot1t o .. oiler inclOO.S two heatty JFril'*i stealls n11rilated it oor Slleciaf orienriif saoce
'and -• a gr'jled pil!Glfllle lil!U. Dimer
also inclooes IQ,ll tai Jar or ~-,.... siifad
irepared.., CUlll1'llelS <lld niarilatoo qlilOO
-· rte pillrl and a piping hot loaf d
heshly bakecl llead. ClilJ Oil the-
below and give In lo teffillWIOO eome
illltlant the Jol!J llO!llr toolgflt and
erjJy l~iS ileal!Y feast at a 1r.-,
pfcas1,. price.
•J•1-aer:
ROAST
LO~ISLAHD
DUCIUH5
~ ,S--Bigarde.
. WUd Rice
.....Olll 20
., SIUCT
~·..,..us
Yt'.1k'rlronl l·;nofi1\011f
· -mi m :1k"r< ~,,....
>11111 Jltthir.t'::at :-1,,.,..,..
superior quality, ud theother is sW1 1a cut above
the normal colleae-level fare.
The six·member comPany is stacinc
Edward Albee's mall.efpieCe "Wbo'a Afraid of
Virginia Woolf?'' on Wednesdays and
Saturdays ; two .otber Albee works, ·•'The
Amerieu Dream" and "The Zoo Story,··
Tuesdays and Fridays, and two other 1bort
plays, "Green Julia" md: '"The Great Nebula in
Orion," Mooclaya aod'lbundays. . .
THE PLAGSRIP OF -the Irvine fleet is
"Virginia Woolf," a lusty, gutsy sla&in& ol what
may well be Jhe most iqlportant American play ·
in modem'hi&tOI')'. Director Ashley Carr skillful-
ly balances the gripping tension and punaent
humor of tbi.s emotionally exbaustina: drama into
a concise, three-hour package, shaved slightly
around the corners but never diluted of its raw
and raucous power.
Robert Cohen, the founding director of the
IRT, steps ·nto the te.mnc role of George, the
~atec!College-prtlleaor, with an intuitive
EIMatuor
NAICIAL IS a.tal!
~ & l.t.Y ta.LO
MAACIAl.AlllO•ICIS WICIAL
SUHDA Y llEAllFAST
Plus Everything on the Menu
Open at 9:00A.M.
LUNCHEON SPECIAL $1.50
Now Serving Bee, and 'Mne-Menlldo Sat & Sun.
Mon. thru Thur. 111011 • fn. 11to 12
Sat 91012 •Suil. 9to 11
""~ ........... -.............. e.t ..... 64S-J510
~ . . ... . .
MONDAY tltru THURSDAY SPECIALS
lfn., Sir. & Sunday .Iii 6 P.M.) -Exdudit>f Holidlys
dinners include soup or salad, baked potato or rice
RED SNAPPER . . . . . . .. . • . . . . .. .. . 2.45
MAHI MAHI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.75
GRILLED SEA BASS . .. . . . .. . . . . . 295
TOP SIRLOIN ......... ·.......... 3.50
NEW YORK STEAK .... ~· ......... 3.95
LOBSTER TAIL ........ .'........ 4.95
STEAK AND LOBSTER . . . • . • .. . . . 5.96
WNCllEON lito 1"1Ved daily WJtil 4 p.m.
111'11~CodH-.y•ll 1111:nlldl.•f2131tll2-1:121
..,E.Co.tHwv•C....,'Diillllf•l714IWU.0
. NEW DINING INmE
TRADmONAL CIL\UIOf' LAGllJ'IA BEACH
OPEN WE!EilDAY.17 A.M. ,
BREAKFAST• LUNCll •DINNER
CHAMPA<ONE&RUNCH•SAT.-$UN.9to•
.P.INNER NIGHTLY 410 tt:JO
s ..... l'Ooo BAR tla.in. tO t:30a.m.
fOCKTAILS•EN'TlfRTAINMENT
WAU.YllUliljl'ftME-
" T-.tt.nt ... •••t:Jt
-•
._ .....
"'The Sharl Show.'"
starrinC Shari Lewis and her puppets. will
premiere MOllday at
7:30 p.m. on Channel
4 . Tbe progTam is
planned for famWes
and children.
Intermission
Tom Titus
&r•P of his character's co_mplexities. Cohea
pa-himself li.lte a champ too boxer, laiDln&
.trenitb as the all-night neurotic marathon ~
gresses, and moving in for the kill with seethina:
resentment. . Cohen's powerful performance 1s matched
by the finest interpretation of the younger
teacher'• wife, Honey, yet delivered on a local
stage. Mariana Renee disp~ays a . total .un-
derstanding of her giggling, s1mper1ng
<'haracter.
JOAN MORRIS AS the vitriolic Martha is
vocally strong and properly causti_c, but she
never completely overcomes Dei'jOiiUiaDO. com-
es across more as a petulant coed than a mid-
fifties harridan. Stuart Duckworth holds his own
splendidly as Nick.. blending a disarming li~bt
nesa into an intense character.and succeeding
admirably in bis confrontation scenes with
Colten. "Gteen Julia;· also directed by Carr, is the
next most impressive production. Jn this mid-
le.ngth play by Paul Abelman, two English un-
iversity students (Duckworth and Paul Barber)
await the arrival of theformer·s girlfriend (who.
like Godot , never shows up) and pass the time
with Intriguing improvisations which cast a good
deal of light on their inner characters.
Duckworth is the exploiter, a tall, handsome
stud who casts his roommate, Barber, in roles of
varying subservience. An interesting script, im-
!See IRVINE, Page CS) .
.
TEMPLE CfARD£N$. ~Ir -i QffNSS'.B Re1ta11rant -~~
LUNCHEON AND DINNER DAILY
S ... cial Lunc:heoo Buffet SI.IS
Monday thn.i Friday 11 :30 lo 1 :30
CHART
HOUSE·
FINE STEAKS
AND SEA FOODS
OPEN DAILY 6:00 P.M.
SUNDAY 5:30 P.M.
1520 w. C.,..t Hwy.
Hewpcwt-548-7167
9fwtMa11fc'Pan G> ~· ........
'ft' FRENCHBISTRO DINNER
eodc.tat11
COSTA MESA '
South Coast Plaza
IULLOCK"S WING
FAEEPAllUNO ? S.1225
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•
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;IOOMtll ·K1%t~ Me· iWell"
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:,Wif Btfoet
"Wt Go TO
~~eeP ...
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M '-IA6 tJ6
JfS..V' ., /JP!
•
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. ' .. ' I :
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1.ET:S TAKE LET:S WALK
A "WALK ON E'LM ST.
I'LL
6UY
THAT
l'LL
6UY
THAT
'
f .i TODAY'S CBDSSIDID. rVZZLE
:! .:·.
~ .: ACROSS 52 Maflti9rocll Y•t~tPuzzleSolYld :.
, : 1 ScMI\ 54 Thi "F• ol r • 5 °*'J' fiOhl· "FCC""
eous person 51 Cut 11110
~ ' t O WoitJ In TV pWtlcl•
-; 14 Tunny 51 ~gl\-
• •
15 Soothing In:~.
agent 90 Fibbed
18 V.,.,.tlan 82 Roma'1/hw
btlnd part &$ U.S. potltlcll
17 Thl1 monlh: INdtf
Abbf. 97 M1)or
• 18 Lend --to 99 SonorS.rl'I
. •tt CitY OI Japtn 7'0 Pw9dlM
• .. :20 Qalslfltation 71 willow twig
Z2 HI! with fOIW 72 CtnacSl't
• '24 Malt lkluor pallet lorct:
25 Un1ble to Abbr. . 41 .__1,_ 10 lnOft 13 ~ah 12 Shel'9 nl -
27 SAltMSIWt P91nter ,3 tCl'lh ' pieces
dlYlce 74 ~ncy .....,..,.. 51 O..wtlo 29 Sftalcfapeln ,... . 2'I Actm:1-,,... svll•
• pity : 2 wotOs 75 Water bc>din Gwyn !53 5'1f1P!t
32 As wtU DOWN ~ Sky ltght tnldll,_
33 MOYt ln 1 Dltarrangt 21 T!,lltle 54 nw.t.G"'*
I CUM 2 Moon IMOuacte ..........
34 Permit tnOY : 9QddUI 21 Board'• 55 A'f'Otd
2 w«ds s 1w11 compwikln .,..., kill
38 Oir«:UOl'I 1ptlludn Z9 Clibb9gl. !.e P\lt Ofl
40 Pltc*ofllnd 4 UnlUng ln 30-Cul\alft 57 OccuPIM'•
42 Of an armed marNQe l'I LMoe Mhnl conMct
tOfCll S CoM>r: •"-"' 11 Yugotlll'riln
44 FMWd Hrnctu 2 WORtt 35 MonlcMn ""-
mountain IS GMloPld l7 Abode 153 c.pital of • HIPJ*I 1 ~ o1 31 Att1m1r1Q11t .....,. 47 ~UJ ==~i:·:~t.tl• M:.=~:
"'sion111orhelp '-•'Y &J Smolllrl' es B~W•
'50 SMMy I*· 10 SOltcit ICC8MOI._ I'-' .on; Slang 11 (Wment 48 Tiiie If Buy
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•· ll!rT~.··~
®l'T 114ElJ' RUN
MOuNDHNl•
_,.,.,,. .,, ........... -.
MISS PU.di ,
.
' I ' • I I ' .
DICK TRACY'
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~~9 v
·' r · ANIMAL CIAC1 EIS. ' . '
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.
' •r
1.
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: ., ....
.. •
""Oh, I always buy broken candy-there's no way of keeping track
of how much you'Ye eate•."
DENNIS· THE MENACE
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DAILY PILOT Frklty, October S. 1t'71 •
Weekender Deadlines
D•adlint /or ••brttitltOft o/ malcrfol /or 01111
Wttkml<r i....., T'U<tdotl o/ !he U><elcofpubllcallon.
lttml about mid-iHek nJlffttt Mould M IUbmltted tn
tift'W! for tM Week.mder iuMC -prior' .to tht nwnt. Rt·
qu<str lo ha"' phol~ lok<n or for.o pornbk
/eolurr 1torv 1houtd bt tubmitted two wetlu prior to
publitofion. Material should bt uni to the WeekntMr,
Orongr Coa1t Da~IJI Pilot. Boz JS60,.COata. Mria1 CA
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• : :11:1'5
• ~.L;lt .· •• . . •• •
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~--
Daily · TV Log --
Friday
Evening
OCTOIUt 3
Saturday
Morning
OCTOBER 4
., . ...,.. ····~ ,., ............ ' .
'
TIMES, PLACES. • •
<From P•••CJ)
Sedaka. 8 p.m. Sunday at the Anaheim COnven-
tion Ctnte~ Tickelf Jt agencies.
TVESDAY, OCTOBER 1
INTERNATIONAL HORSE SHOW -B<>,nelito
City of Hope. Oct. 7throogh 12, 1:30and11:iop.m.
at the Forum , Manchest er and Pt airie,
Inglewood . Includes $5,000 grand prize
California Ope.n Jumper Stake, _$3,000 Five_ Gait-
ed Saddle Horse Championship Stake, others.
$3.25 to $S.2S.
PLANETARIVM SHOW -"The Creatipi) pr a.
Solar SY.stem,'' 1:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday.
nights Oct. 1 through 23 at 'Santa Ana College's ·
Teuman Planetarium. Reservations required,
&»-3000. Free. •
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8
.SENIOR CTrlZENS DAYS' -At Di~neyland.
Oct. S.10, with Myron Floren, And)' Russell and
Roberta Lion, pills dance contest. 10 a.m. to 6
p.m . each day, $5 at the gate, inclu<tes 10 m ajor
rides.
THVRSDAY,OCTOBER9
TAMMY WYNETTE -,WltbiJohnny Rodriguez,
6 p.m . Oct. 9 at the Anaheiln Convention Center.
Tickets at agencies. f
FRIDAY,OCTOBER ~O
'THE NORMAN CONQVESTS' -Richard Ben·
jamin, Paula Prentiss, Estelle Parsons and
Barry Nelson in three plays aboUt a romantic ad·
venturer named No""rman, Ocl. 10 through Nov. 22
at the Los Angeles Music center Ahmanson
Theater. Ticke~ at agencies.
... II
CIUNESE INDEPENDENCE DAY PARADE -
7:30 p.m. Oct. 10, north on SpriJl.g. Street from
Bellevue Avenue in Los Angeles .
'THE llVLES OF THE GAME' -French !ilm by
Jean Renoir, 8 p.m. Oct. 10, Room 515 of lhe Ap-
plied Arts Building al Fullerton College, 321 E.
Chapman Ave., Fullerton. Free.
;PAZZAZZ '16' -Musical revue by the Ana-
Modjeska' Players. Oct. 10, l:J., 17 and 18 at the
.Loara High School auditorium, 1165 W. cerritos,
Anaheim, at 8 p.m. $3 adults,----$2,sludents.
Reservations 527·8104. ' . 1
•
MAGIC SHOW -Chuck J ones at Huntington
Center Mall. 7771 F.dinger bve., Huntington
BeaCh. Oct. 10 at 2, 3, 4 and 7:30p .. m .; Oc:t.11 and
12all,t,3and4p.m. Free.
' SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11
'TEVYE IN HEAVEN' -The SWalom Repert,ory
Theater of San Diego, matinee and. evening
performances Oct. 11 at the Clubhouse 3
Auditorium in Leisure WOrld. Laguna tJ{ilJ.s.
Tickets. information from B'nai B'rith, c/o
CbaJ:'.loUe Setzer, 2261 F Via Puerta, · La1una
Hills, CA 92653. $2.50 . •
®
Radio to Off er
Live·S.F. Opera ·
For the second year in a row, Southern
Calitomia radio listeners will hear liv.e broad-
casts of.the San Francis~ Opera Company from
the sta1e of that city's War Memorial Opera
House startln1 this month.
. Theptµformances~be aired as part of the
''EVeninf Concert'' radio s~ries over KFAC AM
ll330Kc.J and FM (92.3Mc.J.
Donizetti's "Elixir of Love" will lead off the
live broadcasts on Oct. 10, followed b y
Tchaikovsky's "Pique Dame" on Oct. 24 and
Bellini's "Norma," Oct. 31 . Casts will be an-
nounced at tbe...time._Q(~~h_bro~dcast.
Other noteworthy ''Evening Con Cert·· broad-
ca~ts this month include memorial program-
ming for two composers who died recently.-
Robert Stolz and Dimitri Shostakovich. A record-
ing of S(olz's 90th-birtbday gala concert in Vien-
na will be played without interruption on Oct. 9.
Four works by Shostakovich are also scheduled
during the month.
''TOMMY"
ll'GI
-.OWl••• PQ0&.· 1 ... '"MITCHILL .. Ill -.-u---I SWISSflJr&TltO.w"l•J
"W.WllW......-.... 1 , •• ..,.. wnu-"'
SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES
__, SNt Dl!OO ~W. AT .ITOl
SO COAST NUE HARRIS · PlfM• "THE HID~ll PLACE"
A TflU£ STORY .
I 1: ..... :15.7-9:.tl . '.
•
•
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A -efl ::~· ~· ~. -
Julie Harris weeP as she and her ·
brother, played ~by.z 1•. -Paw lienley, are
rested by the N ~ .J
ln this scene from
''The Hidipg Place,:~ ..
a film Ji~ed on r elil!t .l
exp-eriences of :~
Dutch family hidiril(
J"ws~dudng W_orld -
War II . The fil~ opens this weeken , ·
at several Ioca •
theaters.
THE CITY SHOl'f'ING CfNtM:
ORANGE •S:JZ.6721 •;;
""TIDAL WAYI"
l'n ..01o1 1·WM. NOM 1
1JMlll-•-nM .. -'11"1 to .,,.., BU.CIC CHlllTMAStt1
.......... , l\W
fM.I.. n·s AU_Yl.r-1 •
oPE" 11:JD l<tOON • MATIH£E!I OAllY I
Ulllt .. , ...........
Wf·I• --lo ...... ....... , ... .... ,. MlSTU OUHFtGNTEI ...i ·' •·
~IJ •l:Jf•Wl •-•"'11 _...,
l• ...... I APPU DUMPllNG GANG ~ ·-· ~::::~"'~·~·-~~ES~Wl~SS;JAMl;;"Jj'°';'"'°";;;;~~ . ~ o .... ,,,. NOOl'I .............. ,
'AClftC THEATA!S DRIVE-IN SUPER SWAP MEETS
HARBOR BL.YD. Dri,e-ln
S•I' lletl t AYte Sto"' 'Sit. t S.'1:~11 .. 10 4p111
OAANGE Driq-tn 1 & 2
,,;., l•I. t 11111.-t .... q.111 ••Ill,,., S•f''' 11 "~'"-'"' Sllf•-
f•llltly fun! Prolilt! Barg•in• G1lore!
• I I •
.... ----~·,,.. .............. _ ..... W'OITANT NCmCI! C*.Dllft UNDll 11 flftl
l-~ ......
TMI HlP'Y HOC*ll .r
WILLIE DYNA.Mm 111
....... ~Cl"''I-• _,., ...... ,_.,, ....
JAWS,..;
TWrAl WAYI ,...
. --Ml.STD GUNrlGHTll ""' ....
DOC SAYAGI M
-•lll'ftWI" "•" MANSON~ :::
Mt• .. ;
llPHD Off111 ~~ -·-°"' MANSON• ... •• ,"' °''"
111tr•n.. . ..,n ...
II.ACK CHllSTMA.1~
-'7+· IT'S ALM ,. -:~ ••
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$ut~er•an-,-
;;. ,...,.--~ : i ,, .-. 1,,...-...,,.t -In Uoneert ·~
"
r .. c-certa
Joan Sutherland,
accompanied by
her husband
Richard Bonynge,
will appear in
concert Oct. s at
7:30 p .m. and
Grace Bumbry
O.eftl will ·give a
concert at 8:30 p.m.
Qc(. 9, both a.I the
Ambassador
Auditorium off the
Orange Grove exit
of the Ventura
.F re e w a y I n
Pasadena. Tickets
at $8.1S to $25 are
available at
agencies.
• ' . .
• -.------5 -. OAILV"LOT
-:V~rHE'~
WEEK TOSEEm
"llllllTUlll ......... ....... .... _ ....
-II AS THE Hll.NIOUS CU>UIEAU . . ..
You'll FEEL it as well as see ii..
"
NEYER BERtRE
HM ·TttlfllE llEN
IUCH A .:)¥IE!
4 ACADEMY AWMOll
AMft-'1.50 __ .....
etm_.-'IM
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8owt.setttowl'¥ r •
, Coloratur• Bewrly Siiis (left) wlll· star •s Qu1en Ellnbeth I
1 In• fUll """'uctlOn of Donizetti's opera "Roberto Devereux," ito be bro.acast .t 8 p.m. Monday on CMnnel 28. John
, Alecander (below left) sings the tltle role, with susanne
1 MltrsM (bel-rlglltl as the Duchess of lilottlngMm and
1 •Rlch•rd FrederkkS (right) as the Duke of Nottlr:ipMm, .. --• •
•
• r;:::::::::;,::;:;:;;;;;::=::::::=:::=:::; : ~ COMEDY THAT PROVES PEOPLE C •
AftLSJ'ILL ]J« FUNNIEST ANIMALS • ...__ _$ :
AT l:JO..t:4MrOS -ALSO ___ _
"THI GANG THAT
C°"H'f'.Jm! 1"''
"Aaonlzlally fuuy, a ZERO MOSTEL l
.-pat mo.te•" GENE WILDER
and
KAREN BLACK'
.EUGENE i'bNESCO'S'
"Rhln11ttros"
Directed by .• . 1'0"1 O'HORGAN
Screenplay by.
edwar.ds BRISTOL CINEMA 1· .. ..;..1u;.;;L..;..1A..;..N ..;..eARR..,.,..v--1
•ISTOL •T MAC~ Miit:: Oct. 10-1~
140.7444 "IUTUT"
. .....1.1J
"INI 1ClloW4 eo..,,..
•
Oct. I · "UITH8"
·Oct. 24-JI
"IMlll SISTllV
The stage 1tbactlan of the •
d1i:lde bl~ the gr8ltest
entiltll.••llt lnnt In hlltaryl
I ' I
Bitt~
.IAMES WRl'l'MORE
as Harry S. Truman in
GIVE 'EM BELi., BAJ\RY!
-ON M SC8llfl ... taimed lo! lhe ,.. ......... .
.Ch&ijerl ............ txldly a ii wa ,.11 111 • .... .
_ NOW TOGETHER WITH •
~ ~LIAN. MEAN J0'1. i J' wt9N AM11ttCA LAUOHID ••• TO KUP FllOM Cl'YtHC)t 1
'
FOUN TAIN VALLEY F OUNTAIN VALLE V
•• ( • "!~ ~t I01Nf,IW ~ ]" I " '. " . ' : ' ., '"
OENE WILDER •"" KA REN BLACK ,,
EUGENE IONESCO'S .. Rhinoceros ..
Oirec1ed "'' TOM O'HORGAN
Scree11pl1y by
JULIAN BARRY
The comedy th•t
proves P90PI• are
Still the funniest
~=,.:•nlm11ls.
, WU, TI«Hllt, '°"'· ..,.._ TUU J:l'-9:~s
SAJ,.&IJM.
~;J0.7:11-1: ..
ENDS OCT. 11: HURRY!
STARTING OCT. 17
KEN RUSSEL'S
''LISZTOMAHIA ''
STARAINQAOOf:A DALTRY
TWO EDGE OF THE SEAT
SHOCKERS NOW TOO!THtft ·---..... • _ _,_i..-
.. _.. .. -tlw!Qll. ITI ""-•iL ....
•
Galleries/ Exhibits
.. ! New Paintings
.. l Set at Challis
(1 ...
I PAINTING SHOW -Paintings by B. Sanfo~
Day and Lenore Sherman, at Challis Gallerie!',:-
1390 S. Coast Highway. Laguna Beach, Oct. 4
through 31. Reception 2 to 5 p.m. Oct. 4. Hours: 11
a .m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through SUnday.
WOR.KS BY GEOR.GE RAUCH.-Now through
Oct. 31 at The Orangerie, 1492 S. Coast Highway,
Laguna Beach. Hours; 10 a.m. to5:30 p.m. daily.
'PHOTOGRAPHY 1-ErrENSIONS OF THE
MEDIA' -Works by. Jerry McMillan, Lou
DiGiulio, Kay Shuper, Cr-aig Stecyk, Melissa
Garfield and Victor Land weber, Oct. 7 through 31 a:t Bird's Eye View Gallery, 3420 Via Oporto,
Newport Beach, in Lido Village. Hours: lla.m . to
Sp.m. Tuesdaythrough!junday.
' FULLER.TON AR.T FAIR.-Oct. 4 and Sfrom JO
a.m. to 5 p,m . at Hillcrest Parle on Harbor
•·Bpulevard ·at Valley View Street, Fullerton.
...
··' " I
· -·lnclµdes art exhibits and demonstrations, band
concerts, puppet shows, mim~. films, folk danc-
ing and children's activities. Free admission.
i\R.T GLASS EXHIBIT -Work by John Conrad
-Lewis. Oct. 6 through 31 at Designs Recycled
.Gallery. 719.S. Harbor Blvd., Fullerton. Hou rs: 10
a.m. to6 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
·I·; Fund Honors ' '·· ,..
.Roger-K-unt-z-•• v.
.1 An endoWment fWM:i drive in memory of artist
r f Roger Kuntz has · been Jaunched at the Laguna
I ' Beach Museum or Art with an 'initial donation 111 fromMr.andMrs.DonaldClarke.
· · When the fund reaches a sufficient amount, ~' l interest will be used for a perpetual award in the . , · 1 .name.of Kuntz at •a selected competitive.arlex-
11. hibltion to be b':ld in the Museum galleries.
•
..... · Kuntz, a memberof.tbemmeum board from ,t 1987tol9'10, alsoservedontheexhibitioncommit-.
',I? tee and was Juror for numerous art shows. He
• wu born in San Ant.ooio, Texas, in 1926 and
,1 • .passed away at his Laguna Beach home recently
• followlne a long illness.
Self-described as ''striving for quality of
strong abstract design concom.ittant with re-
allatic treatment of motifs,•• Kuntz established. a
reputation as painter. sculptor and teacher.·.
., :~ He was gr8duated from Pomona College and
11 :; received his masters at Claremont Graduate
,. School. He did work under a Guggenheim l ~ i Fellowship in the mid '.50s, was holder of various f scholarships and numerous awards and taught at .1!·: r several institutions including Claremont, Los , 1 .Anieles Art IDIUtute, Scripps College and the
1 .Laguna Beach School of Art. •i Donations to the Roger Kuntz Memorial ·.l\md may be lent to the Laguna Beach Museum
, d Art, 307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach 92651. Con• '·t · lrilNtioaa are tax deductible.
",·.r :IRVINE REP •••
, +I I , •
J • ( (FromPageCf)
.t1'' ·aeinatlve direction and two excellent 11 n.Plormances make this heretofore unknown
I• f s::. In " { ,,..., engrou g. . • 11
,.. ,t .• 1 ON THE SAME bill with 41Julia'' is a reprise • !••-.:.. fl a_Lanford Wilson one-act. staaed by Cohen two
years ago at UCI, ''The Great Nebula in Orion."
Its subjects are two women in their middle
" thirties, former s·cboolmates, who meet after
manyyean apart.
·~ 1be play is beautifully acted by Miss Renee •. • a suburban .housewife who bu married into
•' _., and lllbs Morris as a successful New nr:·, -• •• •• York fashion designer who puts down her
·' .friend'a life to hide berown envy. Their interplay J::i· : ·ad whis pered. asides to the audience are skillful-
11•.• •· ly Integrated Into an lntrlllUlng story.
tC I 'I -The first. and quit.e""the better, or the ~two
• , ,Albee one-acts la "The Zoo Story," alio directed
•• •by (:oben. Carr performs the more demanding
• role of Je'fr7, who usesamild·mBMered man re· ~;~,'' ~ · adlnl·a. book in Central Park (Duckworth) as a
.itJ· captive ·audience for a arotesque tirade
, • "111mlnatln1 In tra1edy. Duckworth, In sharp
• '"eoatrut to his other three macho characten. un· Oi , derpil11 bis uslpment splendidly, •••
E"
• •
.
a.o81NG THE double Albee -am 11 "The Americm Dram," a brutally bitter piece
, ·d IDnctlve asalnst Middle America directed
·.Uth a 1led1ehammer touch by Duckworth.·
,..i \1Dlike the otbu four plll)'I, ''Dream'' is total . " :I . ,.,..., often un1etWn1 oot too heavy-banded for
4 '\• :; • mulmum effect. ·
WI .., Can and Mias Renee play the cruelly ' ' ..--Ylled mother and father ftl\lt'OI, wlth
: ..• ~ llokln1 It up In drq u S<.udmL MIU• ~. •Jlunl» bu sreat fmnriththerole of the ooclally.
-·• "aaUloritarlan fiture of Mn. Barker, wbUe
111 • Jluelwortb .pan u the brollled eeldlna wbo
01 .•lijljWentatheplay'adtle. 11~ 1 • The .lrvble ~ ~ .... lui1 P.aCked I i.'1 • ~II of accom.ius•-lalo thUi U.-. .~o. • , 'om, wlik!b _..., with 'Oilibt
E me• lmllM llll'Oiilll nest S.l!ir·
ala time I» 9 P·llL la ta.a ....... ._ "'":-~··: ll!'!-lt•cmtbeUCI D~ I•· '
•
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.HAVE
•
FREESTANDING
FIREPLACES
-
., • •
• • :.
Bo Deed to cat a llcU la Ille wall Iba -of tba hall
c!OML S4aail1 all bf i.-u • • . IO wby don't y0u go ...W
and at iKo! talk lc!IL T~ llalola la~ or blGck. ._
canedtlreii:raab.dn•pa.andtallbam. '
DELMAR WALL FURNACES
Looldt all U.-BTUL !lothlng Uke
BTUs Oying around the room.
Swe beat• the expenM of fol'CM·
air, right?
ll!"...i ng,,, ............... 5 9 00
...... ITUlull!·IA 7900
30'' BLACK% 9 _0
30'' BED BAOO 0ROR.fU{GE .'7/f •
Thermostatic Cootrol .•••••
'5.lllllllTUWall-t 9700 Therraoatatk: Control,,,,,.
50.lllllllTUlloll!·fA 11 aoo 'TbenlMHltatk Coetftll • o • I
~6" BLACK 9900 J:
50.lllllllTUWollM-t 13700 Tbel1llOllotlc Coatrol •••
FURNACE flLTEltS
36"RED
OR ORANGE 1~ 1910+
.All lllze• (what'd ya thtnlr:. , • 3 7 C
we'donlyha'f'eone?)Fib9igtaia· EA. ,-.,i--..., ...
element• for good Wtration.
22"4LOG
OAISET
Custom. made for th•
lnidget·mlnded who
don't llff clecmlng the
tu.place. Reall•tlc. 1700
BURNING
EMBERS
•
lurnlng Ember. aound•
Ilk• a 101 String•
.record. but th•M go
v.nder the logs and alt
th ... and glow (big
doal). .
297
•
Thi• complete• the
inatallation without a hitch
(the hitch mWlt be extra).
, Flaablng and chimney . .
....... '!!"""""'!"""'""""----------..-------------.. pieceL CUSTOM-MADE
FIRE SCREENS
HOW TO
MEASURE
• MANUAL CONTROr;-Mec:rrure-wlth-a-metal--
rule to th• nearflt ~ •• .· 1900 BLACK FJNISH ••••• ;. the height cn:ad width
of the INSIDE of the
fireplace ~~~g. BRASS'FJNISH ....... 23 OO ALLOW3 S[OR
PULL CHAIN OPERATOR DELIVERY.
. BLACEFJNISH ..••••• 2s 00:~~~~~ml -;;~SFINI~~-· ..... 2900 .•
ANTIQUE BRASS, SUN. GLOW, SATIN BRASS, OO
ANTIQUE COPPER 33· ANTIQUE PEWTER ....•••
CAMEO OR 4400 SWIRLAPPIJQUE .•..
22"
DRirl'WOOD
PAN SET
For the little I•••
budget-ml.nd.d.wbo
aUll doa't like clecming
their fireplace. 1_9 _00 .
SIMULATED
OAI
BRANCHES
WegtOWbigoalt-
ln big plootlc bag• oo
we don't hClft to wrop
the 1'ranch•• -· ~(
tlMlt dkla't make IDUC:b
-~ \27
'
:. "'• l'9: .. :·.
SLOG
DECORATOR
OAISET
For the mlddl•mlnded
budgetffn who don't
lllr:e to clean THEIR
fireplace•. either. All
with rate ..
2-7"
PINE
FIREPLACE
LOGS
. SLOGCORX
OAISET
Here'• tb• clano one
for 'th.oM wbo bat. to
hmoe their help clean
the ti.replace ·1r m.
i>e91nnlng to think
n@ody likH to clean
the flreplace). . 470o
AGLOW
FIREPLACf: LOGS
Tbe -1 thing complete
Without tlMtworlr:..Gnd
aweat to cut and chop ID.
tlae·llllOW (what now?).
--·-laot lonsrer tban NGL A
whole bunc:ll-1•
them real too. 19c
EA. ll"LONG~
'
•
POT BEllY STOVES
• . Just like iD. ·lk•'• G.neral Store.
Sit baclr:, chew Cl p1eot of bay,
OJld M.IT· .. 1fowJa d0Ui0, yatdll ...
MEDIUM • LARGE. ,
1900 2100 ·;
. ,
ARVIK WALL MOUNT
ELECTRIC FIREPLACE' . . '
No m ... y log• pr am ... Just
plug lt In. Somehow ~t just
dqn't ae:em rtgbt ••• but
wbate-.er doH lt for you ••• 8700·.
FIREPLACE ~TCHES Th••• are what •1£zrt
everythiAg. Long matches eo'e
._.don't bqna our plnki ...
77r!x
•
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' . .
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• ' ~ • ' .
• . • . • •
. •
..
I :.• BHl'fl'D .'.
FEAL KlN-mEo 114' BAia<
' ' ; ·1 ·; ' . Real ldln·liNd brick that'a onl'f' 14" tlllclr.
Maatlc: for Ooor-. ln1tcmt Bonding Tape for
Walla. Brlk·lt ma.uc mortar mabs the -mo •"--good looking. Check them eolon.'
97 97 .·
ISQ.n. ISQ.FT • • BEDllUCK RED QUE lllllCK TAWNYIRO
•
?
I .
~ . HU& llQIB
640 4050 I
• •
LIDO ISLE, EST"-TE; fJDe faJllily
. Ill.me OD 18$ ft. !«. 5-1'= 11ouse;. 3 car car~; padiSle et.
wWI. uctrts~ rollm for pool,
TennJ.qe. • , ' ~ . -...;~ -.
· BA YFR Oi'fT ;-finest coptemp,
• arcbltecture of brick II f'iDll woOda ~·
bath elderior I< Interior; on 6"Nocl-ex-~ve •bay; 3 I< den -t-IJll'!lib'-!L!n..J
J'ier'li slip. $t95,000. SbalOQ l,.ypcJl ai...
PatlJUS,
c.uiEo SHORES; .iust listed! Lovely ocean view, pool &JaCUZll; 4 bdm14 ...
'4 baths; access to priv. beacb. Candi
Grant
• r IOOJ 11 1 ti.... , 111.Z ......................................... ,..~
• • i
' • • 1
LINDAISLE;EJ .. 4JiclnD.,1.a'6*f IST~TE SW-sS•.SOO
"°'me; formal dining rm. l<famil.Y rm. sotJTWCOBONA DliJ. llAR! Duplex
Pier I< slip for lg~. ;&.t. SZ~l~ Open lat, daM to everything, with 2 bclnn,
Sun. 2'5. 61 Lln~a Isle Dr. CaUV)'ll T«:n· ~; &reat for additia,ial unit . or
nille .. ' -, eventual modern, new, hiih income
l
1
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~YFRON'l;; Charming simPi;ciiy; 4
bdrm., 21-!t bath home with s~ndy
beach; pier i. slip. $249,SOO. Pat Hug
BIG CANYON; here's' a quiet location
-fairway view I< brand new! 2 BdrlJll. + den condo. $125,000. Open Sun. 2-5;
12 Rue Villars. Barbara Fredericks ·, .
BLUFFS CONDO; Lease at $425 per
mo. Buy at $56,500 .. 3 BR., 21-!t ba.;
garden patio. pwner anxious! Mary I<
Doo.
G1Mrll · IOOZ G1Mrll IOOZ ........•••.•..•• ~ ..... ········••··········•··
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.~~11 maenat 1 1~ ?-· realty '
FIHER HoM~S
FllOM $57,500 TO $745.000
, GALAXY DllYE
The home is breathtaking & so iJ; the
VIEW from this inviting custom 4
bedroom in Dover Shores. GOurmet
kitchen -lovely garden setting.
$329,500. Barbara Aune 642-8235.
(Yll)
. .
WESTCLl .. -REDUCID TO $117,500!
Lovely 2 bedroom pool con-
dominium only 1 block to Westctiff
shops. Owner anxious'to beltr all.of-
fers! Paula Bailey642-8235. (Y.12)
Sf'ICT 4C:UU.R HAllSOll YllW
4 bedroems, 3 baths ,+-l'n<idern
kitchen. Secluded pool in front
courtyard . .$225,000. F1exible financ-
ing. Larry·Dyer 642·1!23.5. (Yl3)
· IATSHOll ~! ,
2 bedrooms, guest roont bide·a·way_,
super size family room & kitchen.
$75,500. Jack Custer642:8235· (Yl4)
CAPl'C:OD
Sbedrooms + maid'sroom&family
room . l,.ocate11 in beautiful
'Westcliff. l>erfect for the Jg. family!
J;;van Corkett 642·8235. (YlS) ·
• A . -• ' H4UO!r TllW ~115 -• :-POHONtO
Mitvelous 3 beilJ'oom home w /lg'.
family room & separate teenag~r
area, 4t6 bedroom· Or game room_.
Ready for occ'upancy; $117,500. Tom
Queel) 644~. (Yl6) "
I . DOYa S~ YllW '
Beautiful Ivan' ~atrium home
w /4 bedrooms, farllity room, kitchen'
w /breakfast area, 3-car garage &
'fantastic POOL. $168,500. filaine
Svedeen642'8235. (Yl7) • ,
• • "LIDO ISU IATRONM
''Spanish"' Vtlla·'' w /Commanding
view or Newport Bay-f ~
41-!t baths, den, for~ dining room,
Iieautiful gourmet kitchen private
maid"s·quarters '!-pier·hllp. Appl
only. $435,000. v. Sl.inson 642-8235 -
or -H. WOod644-6200, (Yl8)
~ OCTOl9 SAUi
Price reauctlllii on Do¥er Shores ~ home .. 4 bedrOoma, .(llJ!lll1
,...._ 'dining t'OOID ..!. on Poill41M
loti'.l\llew frol!ll 'almolt alf1.-.
Appl. only. $155,500. Donna Goilsllall-
8" llOO (.YllJ'-,.. • ' . . . . ' ' u.-MWlll
"' °""-°"" j. ---· ... · ~..._,c11u:•..a
duplex. ·
.. IA Y -OCEAN VIEY,t · •::.f,e 3 bdrm., 4 bath home with huge <t ly rm. Part of family rm.•easilf
eooverted to 4th bdn!i. $124,500 · "
~. .
THE REAL
ESTllTERS - ----
CORONA
DEi.MAil
DUPLEX .
One or those uhusually
Cine properties we wish
1 everyone1coukl own. On-
ly one d~lex llk.e this.
Two bedroom and den
, home in rront plus an ex-
tra unit in the rear. Each
with rirepalace. Each in
marvelous condition.
New carpels, soutb of
highway. Priced at
"'1,000. Call673-8550.
<ll'fNTlf•'"ll"!i 'lJN IO Af "It(:(' ,
..
~ •";:· THE REiil "·.u>' ESlATERS --~
' ' ~· .
\ \ 1.1.E'
Bl . \I.I'
A IP M(, l .. ! f<l'MI~! S '_,
HOUSES FOR SALE:
. J lllDllOOM
1722 Miramar. Balboa
675-6125 $78.500 Open Sat !Sun
12-5
' ' ' NEED MORE ROOM??
673-7601
Anytime
se THIS SUPB · s Bedroom 2 story
wf\b 3 full l>atbs. 3 CBI' garage, dining
room '& roo'llJ fdt JJO<ll table and family
room. Owner· leavhtg area says -
"take advantage of me· but hurry"! ~ Ind., l·I PM. , .. A1•1• COllw 1
MOM. '$69,500 ... FoT more details call
'5*11$1.. '
G1•r.. I 002 G,.,,.. I 002 ··'················.···· ·······················
"\ ' ,...,
QU'AUTv CONSTRUCTION
COMPLl'tlLT RIMODILID and
enlarged, ·bright a: cheery Back Bay
home. Extra large master suite in this
3 bedroom home oo ~ col • ooc Owner la building contractor. $66,000.
Must see~ c• 546-SllO
TIRED OF PA YING RENT.1
DOH'T M•S. THIS ounTA-
TO-HOUSI
for $32,000. Popular 3 Bedroom, 1 \.!t
bath model, near playgrounds, pool·•
ii t•a••· Great family area wilh big
greenbelt. Just listed. . . hurry, •• ~1151 .
OCEAHFllOHT
Deluxe duplex +·guest
rm. & l)atli : parking ror 4
large cars. $1.58,500! . * 675-7060 *
I •ll!H 119\' Prop. R.••ot•
THE REAL '
ESTl!TERS
Don"t drop lbe ball t Get a
job with a low-cost Daily
Pilo t C lassified Ad.
Phone 642-5678.
644-7270
, JUJT USTID '
•
Ideal first home or fixer upper.
3 Bedrooms, brick BBQ in·rear
;auo. Priced to 'sell. $36,500, Submit. • •
'a121 IL Coo1t Highwo , Corona del Mor'
MOMU fOll llVINC NfTWOH
. . Being remodeled; custom 5"'BR, 5 Ba.
6500sq. n. home on point, pool, dock.
South.View: 3 BR, aY. b8, largei-oolJlll.
Boat slip. $224 ,500. · -
Custom ·5 BR, 4 ba. View, 80 n. on
·lagoon. Boat slip. $295,000 '
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
j.11 !' , I•('• •. •, •, I> , f>IOI
---·-------
' .... ,... 1ooi .... , .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••
COSTA MESA'S ARST
SOlAR HEAT CONDOS
-'
C .D.M. THE REl!L :
D9Mx $8Z,500
3 & 2-BR. prime area-
Fix and make thousands
$$.Try $14,CNXI down. As·
aumable financing, but
r eal potential.
ESTl!TERS
'
CALL&I0.0000
-,11 TARBEl~. rn
1926-1976
DISfRESS SALE: California ranch
home, Irvine. Covered veranda, 3
bedrooms , family room, wir
conditioning, $44 ,9SO, must sell !
·MESA VERDE -DRASTIC
REDUCTION: Country-like, forest
of trees, family room, double
fireplace , formal dining room,.
$62,000, desperate owner! ·
540-1720
2!1SH-.. ll ' .._ ...... c...,,....,
;L'I~. ...
COATS &WALLACE
REAL FSTfl.ff l~J'"
Amsn
TOW ... J1111S
UHllUiYJ.11.Y
$41,500!1
-
Long drive wmds bai::k to
rustic cha.let nestled
amonpt toWflf"iDa abacSe
trees . OPEN BEAM.
CEILINGS &: STEP
DOWN ROOMS add to
ANTIQUE CHARM.
Separate fcnn.W d.inlng
room & MAMJIOTH
PARTY ROOK. Bonus
siled lot. with ROOM TO
ADD UNITS k lot.a of·
Cruit trees. FirSt. to call
gets this unbeUevl.ble
bar11aln. FUIL PJUCE
ONLY $41,50AI llUl'O'
c:all 546-2313. /, : .
Of'fN 111 9 .1,-5 'IJflr611 NICf'
THI: REAL
ESlATERS
.
. .
ilSTMIY
l•lerailf
$9·4 ,500 . FJEE , S
bedroom.a, ~ Jacunl
&sauna. --L-. PETE"""""'' -REALTY-
642·52" '175·-~---HORSE PROfE$1 Y
' . \.i ACRE, Villa Park
4.._)!R_, 2 Ba, 2.tOO sq, n.
Atrium Model, tam-rm
w/frplc, formal dining,
pool w /apa, cocral, view
of Mounlainl, Reduced
by owner, $.105,000.
633.0485 I t
T-HI REAL l
E~~ll!ERS '
PRESIDEMT HOME
TURTLEllOCll
S PA C IOU S F OU R
BEDR O OM lt.O M E.
Great view Crom master
bedroom, living room, &
kitch e n . AU t he won·
derful extras that go with
easy modem Jivi ng pl~
a sparkling swimming
pool ove rlooking the hills
and valleys. A pleasure
to show . Price $125,000 •
call 673-8550.
Oi'f'I f11Q •1r ~ •vN 10 1if•1 ··• • [®?li~$1il
1006
Bayfront Condominium 2
Br 2 Ba. DR. pool. dk,
security 213-394-4293
CHARMIHGll
2 BR , 2 Ba, new kit.ch.
new carp. Dlx. cond. in &t
out! Price reduced $3,000
for quick sale. otwill lae:.
$475Mo.
CAYWOOD REALTY
•• 54&-1290 ••
Pennln1ula Point 2 br, lr• brick yrd., compl re ..
modeled. Nucrpt&.bll-in
quadrophonic 1ound.
Open Sat/Sun. 1122
M l,.a mar. $78 ,SOP.
87$ .. 125
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• ,if1:11._,,-= • .,v.:.""'LO~TL--:-''----...!.Frl!!:•!!!1X!I:..!· 0e~102!ob!!*!.:!>"'..!'!"'~s How:M1 p.,. S. H••H ..,. ~ llau rH ,_.. Heotea ,_. S.. l"••n..,.,. ..._" ,_. .._ -' ·················~···· ..................................... ,........ ....................... ..................... ... ......................... i.9e.""'";,i
I' 11,._S. H11111a,_,. . H11rnfwS49 · 11 11 1 ~-~ I .._....._ IM4 l hsle_. .... Ml p1rt .._. ........ ....... 1169 M&w'Porl .... .... . . . ... . ...-... .-.. -.. ., --.. . ............ .
I •••-•,••••••••••••• '''' '''''''' ••••••••• •••••••••••••••••-•••• ,,,,,,,, •• _.,._ .. ,.. ••--•••eee .. eee ............. , .... _ ................... 11 111111 .. -• .. ,,,,,,,
f!'.;,.~!:: .. !~ ~~ ...... !~!~ ~~ .. ~':'~~"!~ ~ PIACIMe OWL ; Cll a iroPLu J-4 br unlu. M•• Olfw q..-l<r Be 1 c b lo to" a
CWce Mc, So. of Hwy. l34Del....,. M1r14IMIGa •as Retreat to U-priY-llte Triple•-3·2 Br, 2
,,..,...OWner.IWl-UOIS CU •lvenlt•Dr.) Lars• hom e, (orma.1 en· study wltb itl at.rtu.m wtfrplc . a ear car. bl
1 try dllllDJ rm. famllv n...-•E+.. vtew, eoUeeU.IP•~I••• owntt. 3$2, &58 Ir ti#
C ..., ..,_ Open !-&Dally ' lo ' ' _. __,. muf.ar•alia, tllowalk· Tb all a . (55 fl il.oll. •••~ ......-Back B•Y·lrr 2 bd +den, rm. with rplc. Squeaky .._. ••..amu> •'-a ..... •551C custom h ... -. ...-a··'ve clean! Xlnt rlnancl o• W7na;vu ckJMt.'--doublebMlnl, s111 .~oo . 115· 314, ~ --. _. 1vall1ble. Priced to aell tbtll'••tCOUltrYkttehta &f.2.aoetorm.asM. AJI l•••culate roomy a frpJo , high beam c.iln'1, at$'1$,.500 .WHHllLSI: a.ad tM formal dlft1q.. ,BB. J Ba home with 2 ~ ba, many trees on FOR $37,500 It'•. a bdfm., a bath, m . •a.rmtla eod charm that 78'•124' Jot. Block wall ' • excellent tt«wWlon and l 11 'PS M.,_. 11:12
,ii iMeteribable, plus a fenced. Assumable 1% (-~ A~i•-~ Ca a You I Ind a 3 priced at •GOO •••••••••••••••••••••••
tretaltadedpatk>,IJ'as•f 1s t T D . Own /Act . ....,.....,~I W bedroom, 2: baUI clelUl, Overlook:in• -COU(M.
yard -' esceptional &42,1272. 11harp home, well cared 552 7500 SuJ>erlor •bedroom, 2 \11
'car' + shop garage on •;JL:~~~~~;;il~;I~~~;;;;;;~ I for, olose lo all conve-• • bath bome. Used brick t g1,aat IO ft. lot. J ust 81Leavlng: Area, s.ell by nlence\, anymore! Call ';J hill cou.rtyard....000
"DOYER SHOOS HOME
OFr•m
OH GALAXY DR.
· ByO-r
'""15lilJ~orlWilr-fro-m Bir owner, Lovely.,..,E. Side 1111 TO llA.CH us "we'll abow JOU< il t rl.11
OWou. Beach. Reduced Costa Mesa Home. 2: Br, Fantastic famlly home, lbll! 968-4456. reelty ~ AMCHC>all. ..
t•llll,.100.fee pen, Frplc, l&e cinder · 4 b 2 b ''Wl....,..W ·Call6M·1211 blk encl. yard. Attach. immac . r , •, ...,,.,,. ~ IMYISTMIMTS car, quiet area. nr. shop-famlly/dining rm. LoU wo1o10-· £...... --. ... of extras, bltna Incl; ....,,.....,. 171•~.Af ... 7l_l 1
ping ctr. 714-548-~ aft •-di Amado•~ lnvltlnr~ !"~~;;~~~~~!==~~~~~==1
Distinctive Tri-level contemporary
bome custom designed by local
arcllltect. Redwood & glua exterior,
complemented by dramatic blllb beam
ceillnp permlts.panoralDlc view of the
back bay from bearly all rooms. 4 BR.
IT/R-;-I;/R;Tfilil!lly-rooms;-3 Frplc's, 4
ba, laundry, xtra lge 3 car garage
w /Workshop or hobby room. Secluded OCEANl'Aom' a Bd + ~
Mst/Br Suite Incl. Frplc. and features 84 aara,. •P'-.,a,ooo
luxun1 usto. ous Mad t.r.. bajb__4'._dtPll!!g .~~·:--i:..ew-~;;·~-;;-;;;;;~ PM range • oven 1 1 -., -... --
l-'-6"-'c.·.:.$4:.c1c::·500=·'-------I hwasber, security fresh fee ngotwlndows ' .J •-•Wl lMOW*
College Park,3 BR,2 Ba, sys tem , de I u x e ea l o re displaying: Callf.Mode1Sbr,2oa,hu
..,,========newly decorated, pool 151 stereo I intercom, lge gorgeo1.11 ,i:ardrns o. a111umable 7% loan. LAGUMA...ull -I 2 I natural parad1se. Owner anx.k>ul. "'2, • llST *
Lu.,., SPY,._, •SS yard. MS·S74.l an . 6 c ea n car garaa:e, ove· fl .. th •• 1 ... _1 ~ ~ Jy yard & patio. Nr ... ower power em ,...en , ---THREE JS BETTER
/Jn NHi{l
BAii I Y f,
l\S'>UC 11\1 rs
Beaut. 4 hr, 3 ba. agl BYO\VNER ; come&see! schools, beautiful public welcom~you.Sl88 4'56. THANONE
level home. Prof. de, 6 BR, 3 Ba, pool, lge rum· park. 4 shopping ceoten. TUITl.ROCK • OUTSTANDING El cor'd, • lndacpd., 3 car pus room, lots of xtras. Priced for q uick sale. GIAMT LACUESTA Lovely .!·Bdrm. 2-blth, Nl1uel Golf C&ur1e
w c m l!l1gned We jacuul sauna.
Cllildrens wing incld's 3 BR,•2 ba .
. PRICED at $259,000. ·
Unique home for Living
& Entertaini ng.
Shown by appt. P,rincipals only.
6CC Cli8C
,-ar. You own Janel. Sac. $6.5,000. 964 Denver Or. SM ,000. 17201 Treehaven, Huge lrreeular culrde· family room, enclo.ed home. Old WcridSpanisb
s111.ooo. By owner. S45·S20t Lane. Opcnhou5ettos sac lotw /cuatom18a grounds, Alrium. Ideal architecture, 4·1rt
.... 17"' •----------•weekdays, 10 to 5 pool. Large family+ a !loorplanforleisureliv· .bdrm•, l\t ba. formal , .
POPULAR.
0
w .. ~A~~~~"'s,_o.r callS48-Zi23 den Jatudy for Dad ! ing.$83,500 dln"rm,ramnn,.App~ N4wP1rf.._ I06'Mewporta.-lt I069
] Ir z la Duple•
OHLY $19,500.
• "'"'° ~ F or mal dine, pa ti IOMD IEAl.TY 3100 aq fl luxunous liv~ •••••••••;;e~~••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I kitchen w /pool view! GALLllY Of HOMES tnc. sin.~. I;·----------------•
in aa n:cellent South.of
Highway location on a
acnerous45ft. lot.
Catt us quick.
6'4-7211
M V d I• Sweeping staircase t . 1 •1•9411 esa er e BR suites. A.uume 7% <# Great Pool Home v A 1oan ••t•••• • L-1041
Executive living at a re· A beautirully upgraded 3 $.12,040, $353 Mo. pays al •••••••••••••••••••••••
asonable price. Close to br. 2 -v. baths, 3 car OR you name the terma. ~TOllUIST ·
go Ir, s ho P P i n g & garage. Family room. Bkr962-Mll "' 'Fri dllne1s, galetY ,
rreeways. 4 Bedrms. 2 Formal dining room. hosp tallty are all
bath + ram rm +atrium Huge heated & filtered OPEN HOUSE Lg: cust. de1criptive ~ lhil 3 BR + no wax noors + cov, pool, Covered patio, Cul, Pool w /spa & patio. home with ocean view.
ered patio. Fully crtpd de·sac lot. Boat or trailer Beaut. 4br,1¥. ba, frplc. See It to belfeve It at
""========'! lhruout, All this for only .. ccess. Lots or extras. nxt.' to park &: schl. Nr. $78,500.
OWNER Harbor View $59,9:ii0.Cal1962·7771._. _$6.\,900. Shop'g Ctr . By Owner. HIGHOMAHIU.
/Jn NIL[I
!\All [Y 0.
ASS[)[ IAI [S
Hilb J Br 2 Ba, Fam. l' ~9 .500. 963·316S, 905 Mainificent view and
l\aa. Beaut. View. 185,000 Pioneer Dr. privacy add to· 7our
"'5Ul5or213-242-7021 962-44n r.i; 546-8103: pleuure. Milte an ap-
1 ~~~~~~~~~ poi.ntment to see this 4 Coron• Highlands. 3 Br, 2J_ lnlH 1044 BRbomefor$l2'7,SOO.
•BEAUTIFUL Cali(.
Ranch home w /vaulted
ceilings. golf course your
front yard. Accordian
stair acceu to unfutlsbed
attic area, brklst ooolc:,
z .way wet b ar ,
microwave oven. 4·
Bdrm. din rm, fam rm.
. s1lio,soo.
•LOVELY MONTEREY Ranclkatyle of clear
select cedar. 3·Bdr m, 2~·ba , OD lotb faitwaf,
wet bar, service rm, wy, many arnenlties.
PlllME LOCATION
SPECTACULAR VIEW!!
900 ILOCK VIA. UDO HOU
50 Ft. Bayfroot, Jarge pier & slip
Large falnily home
4 BR + fam rm. Tremendowi potential
$400,000
LIDO •REALTY
3377 Y11o Lide. H.I. 673-7300.
ea, View, Pvt Bch. $7000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • l •ZLOTS
ST•.--Owner/Broker FOR THOSE IH MOVES YOU IH 11•k Tl' •aOOF ~3-TH• MID 30' ~ ..... 3buildabte&otscio.etnto
$1'7$0. I ~Mlgml= ~°:'~~ .•. !~.~~~~~ ... !~~.~ •• ·-o: I This 4 BR, "'Ba Ccodo. DIH-lllYIHE center of io,m. Walk lo
DUPLKI 2 Br's each by Hidden on tree lined cul· bas been completely up· $52,850 8 h 0 p s and be a ch ,
owner. Mornings & Eves de·aac street, your own graded. Custom lemoa E)(cellent lrvine loca· $113,000. TOUCHefHIAV ..
<!allfor•ppl673..f214 privat.e .. hid.eaway , 4 yellow drapes, or11 lion ! Fabulous red tile MAYOCK --=====-==-==---1Larre bedrooms plus yellow crpt, breakfast ·· hiJb ~the bills over, /;OZY z br cottage, frplc~ huge family room with bar, stainless steel sink r oof! 2 Sto·ry entry. looll:ibl the LatUn.a
IDftl ·--1 000 p b · 11 g . kit h UJ "· Gorgeous Spanish red Ni1uel valleys, t his • Y Suo::g.. •• ' o en eam eel n , ID c en, new e .. brick fireplace. Formal COllPOUJION
-
be_. Ownr"""·""'M\ handsome fi ...... lace and s hower doors, cusl au-r·aharp Z.Br condo, _..., ._,.........., ..... ,. dining area. All tile -' garden atmasphere. As· alumn. patio cover & -acro.1 tbe at.reel from ~ l Ba. No. ol Hwy. sume 7% VA ioan. pay. plush plants o n patio k itchen. Gala family L....-rtaate.d·in pool and
Plans• Coastal permit ment• only $210. per make this a lruJ.y com· room . ~ Queen aia 1714J4t4-2146 clubbouaelson.lyl5J,900.
U)eola.r&e existing hse. & mo n th . vet e ran s fortable place for youna bdrms., or 2 BR+ lovelyl-~-'-~.,,:.-"'-'-,,.,C:.--1 Early possession. Call
' ~ 2 bed, lBa over nu welcome,Exc_ellent in· or old. Full price $29,950. den · as you wish!J.m. DECORATOR'S your broker°'"!
aar . 171,500. 613~1121, vestment. 1 k Id 1 1 maculate everywhere · DELIGKTII
_LIDO '!" ATBROHT .. • Spectacular bay view from every win-
dow. Executive 2 bedroom, 2 bath apt.
Professionally decorated. ·Boat slip
available. Tqtal secllrity. By owner.·
$134,950.
"WttATA"
WATERFRONT
Bil deluxe ~ bedn:!Om. 3
bat.ha with DID sq. ft. of
Iuury living. OveniMd
scar cara1e. 50' Lat with
pier and slip to aceomr
ft¥)date a 50' veuel. 203
D'own. Full price.
$280.000 ..
~~
... ANYTIME
~ .
AREAL HOME!
Our gro wing family neeas more room. So we
must self our sturdevant
bit bome which we en·
joyed. Cloee to Westcurr
scbb & shop'&. Gives you
Ume to enjoy paUO&, ad·
joinlnl liv. & din' rms.
Kitch. remodeled for ef-
ficiency. 3br, 2ba, 2,000
sq. It. 1"19,500 ..... 1253.
'/J II.CU .
Secluded , Cozy KnoltJ'
Pine. 4 Br. m, 66 K.330 lot •
Lge shop & shade house.
Space for camper or boat. 1arden, Volleyball,
Great place for kids!
m ,000. Ownr Will carry
financi o j . No aets .
548r0995. 379 E. 23rd St.
NB. lf!IO~~_.~'..__ _____ j CALLTODAY ~:r:s~ed.~f gall~~ includes air conditioning Splitlevel3bdrm,,2 bath ~CALL NOW -54 3666 n 6 Own & garage door opener! unique home! Hdwd. ~/.. 752 7315 .2.lld., Den, l Ba. So or .:•=·=P:::·m:::·.:o:=e:..'---1 Park like yard. Full nrs., frplc., tee. trees, i •il!!~J;~;;·~~~ t7 l 4167Mlll HVH P•sMO Mom-I
--
ffwJ'. aoom to add 2nd AbanA>-d price $.S2,&50 Call fast 7 brick patio,privateyard. OONAlDM.llltD For 1aleby--.4Br,3 Ollioice camer lot. 'lliiilUln.-7S2·1700. Area1Jewel al'82,500 "~"c.i ........ ,,.... b f ....... ~
,A*S.000.173,ll21,6«MIOBS $4 3,95041-.,.FHA c:l'f'I U(ll ·H ~HJl'•TO !<f~~f' .. ••· A--"---a, am r m;l.rg beaut, uuu.=i~ kitchen . New d r p s
Owne< lert, move l1ghl 111· '··~~~'ll~I' ·.' ~Iltl RARE GEM 1Ww1'9ri-106914-wporilleach 1069 t.bnlout.2Gujetfrplc's. ~ 716 ·l'MANGA "We're heretoheJp." in! Bike lO the beach! · .-~ ' J "1'7 Exclusive nel .... borbood .• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lo malnt yard, redwood
..W.i•vable value in Y.ard Is extra.big for th'.-' l ;• + : 499·2900 • 3br, 1~ ba. ho~.Lov. ely ~EWPOllTSHOll•r decking, #6,500 fir m,
• T In ho! VACAHT kids. Towering trees, . ·~"·'·"-=-•=••=-c=--, . "" ~ 6 d Ope • Ope H Sun 5' 812 Dp rdperty c ce park,like yards, veran-. ' . ~ Sharp ocean vtew, 2 Br, 2 patios. landsca.p1ng, An area with pizza&, that ran nuur D OUM! 1-• l t I r •I ae Terrace. 4 IR MESA VS DE da. Wood cabinets. range Turtlerock._4 BR, 2WBi, Ba, Den .. Will consider re.aced. S57,..5(1Q, Drive by hu:-Z-lge_ pools, tennis. •••• Port Wb«ler Pl, NB. ~ .......... 3 ba., sparkling Sharp 3 bedroom. Very & oven , Piano-s iz ed fam rm: di.fl rm, 2 atory, lease opUoo. '80K. By 29472 VI~ Valverde. cts;., clubhouse+ walk to NEWPORT VIII.It' ,_ .... _U1_2_· _____ _
clean• sharp, BeauUful, clean. Giant livine room . parlour wlt.h its own 2C trp
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die 1, com;n. pool, owner. 499-2109546--4691 dL.agtunb•, NOwn1,...i. bDoknol beach!! ,,.,~-domuu· ·um HomLUWes . OPEN HOUSE f lar1e pool, in a well Only $44,500. Lowest fireplace. 4 bedrooms or u · e ·sac .• 69,950. ta ur . . er· ro er. we have specialized in '-NII C ( li , th -J:..;~r patio. Open price in •ll Mesa Verde. 3 bedrooms+ den. bkr .. 752.()S.36 l._..rdc_,.... 496-6129. s ales & rentals in in P restigious are ree V1og on. e r,.<:-''P•~., ........
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Won't last! World Real muatsell, calll42·8:854. 4 Ill +~ "Retre_at lo nature!" MluJ. Vl-1-1067 Newport Shores since Wettclillarea ~~lr: 3.!k• ~~ ~ ~~~ ~ l:atate,5.56-WTl. ........ Unique rBR, den~ aua· --P' . ·1983· ofNewportBeacb noon ~~s· .•. ,-.:Sin.512 ! • I !~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ llYIM ... $61 ,900 te·n liv. rm, lollol glus, ••••••••••••••••••••••• wiKNOWTIIEAREA S42.000to $44.000 "' .a. -I• Quiet cul,de-aac. Curved skylight, wooden declr.1, 11F•t ,........... THE BEST, TRY US! 2 Bedl'Odlm, 2 Baths ~~~~OOO l!Y,. MISAYERDE cement drive. 2,Story frpl.EntryhaU.Aflndat MoVe right into this Homes ranging in price separatedining:area 5·1 d =.211132
• 171-StlO * HOITH tiled entry. Massive $72,500. magnificent 5 Br. Crom $52:500 to $73900 •Decorator wall to wall
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~~~E~-~C.~t=H~w~)·~·~C~d•~1;13Bedroom,2bath.fami, =======""''lhrick fireplace. Formal MISSJONREALTY MADRID~-Over 281'.Xl aUaiua4designs ' 'carpeting S-CleiM• 1076 lyrm,diningarea,fplc,2 LOOI! dining room. Gourmet •••494-0731••• sq. n . or luxury. Large Aakaboulour •Enclosed patio or •••••••••••••••••••••••
patio., quiet street. llke Bicycle to beach. !..Story kitchen with hP. r . EMERALD BAY form al dining room Guarantee Sale Program balcon~ . SAM CLfMEHTE Gfllt SUH. I
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~-newll $58,900. Villa Pacific Townhouse, Secluded master •W.te. Cb 1 1 3 •-•-So famUy room, Seller has CAYWOOD llALTY •Continuous cleaning Beach fixer·.,.._ location
-. .. Roy,McCwcle choice end unit 2·BR,2· Larae den-o~ office.! -of ~~Room~;''poo1' already leftarea&home * 541·1290 • oven I k' '"'be ti'&
1 4 IJC ..... T9"'. lnltor lllOMtw-rt ba, 2car gar, stonefrplc. Separate laundry ro:om. and -.,d.d-on w/vlew. ls Y'acan.t. $&>..250. '" •·Refrigerator, ice over
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ing ac. · .Buutihl14bdrm.canyon c r--· Owner tran1t'd. Priced Front &. p t 0 I MISSIOMVllJO maker ~~!l z,Br, -i~ ba, JUSt .,._. ._. •.• ~familyl~"'!"~°'"'!"L~a~M~es~o!"S48~-77~29~I rear a 1 s . $179,500. ·seller will ~-•J heated swi·mmlng ~.to the surf. Great · .__.
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for quick sale, 8k.r . Prime Unlv. Park loca, 1·1 A..t --Ill.ALTY lave1tm t ••t 500 #t9:i·:-;;-.wJ ._~.;: 988-4433orM6-3301 tioo. Anxiously asking · aance. ••·u"' .. ._ " 1 •7•9500 J pools . en· ... •. -"".. -1&1--·~ J t 1619001 H Call ,,,. __ _:.s•:.:....=:.:....--lr "'~. "" •Draporiea .,.._.
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:.-.-000 CALIF. CusSIC UI • urry ' 9UllT·a..ANCI ,. r . ~ •Log burning fireplace BERTIIA HENRY 7S2·~fOOtopreview. . In a m agnificent ocean .. Jftt l1mal•d" •Ab"-dant cl-~ space REALTORS
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,..W .... 2-Story, Irr lam rm, ~NrtP1°11 s 1t.M rolit N1Cl• fn)lltsettfnr:;tblareplica Brand new carpet' & IEACHUVING .... .__... '"' ..., .,.. frplc, country kitch, new of a Villa in 'l\asc:any, is dra'pes create a super with mirrored closet New 2 BR, 2: BA, Condo. ~snerlot ; cunom crpls & paint. Cov'd anchored above the model home. 3 large FOR $65,500 doors. Dbl. gar. $()..5()0, Prff_ ~ 4 bdrm .. family patio, walk to school. crashing swf, 00 nearly "ltedrooms & family & Not A Fia:er Upper I 184-1256 • Hts. 714-6'75--3.'587, '"'9'::-:~e~~l~~n ~e~i ~~ •;:,a~ in acre, High celling Uv, room. Private rear yard 3 Br. 2 B•:.,~, btlmd Rood -~-AU.for$119,500 1-;;;;;~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~ orMa,Do1 • TUl--K ing: rm ., suqroom, ·With large, new patio ..,..,o::.nrnuo~• NEWPOit'l'BEA.CH -I• ·--1alleria, dinJne r m,,; cover. HOMES Calif.92060 ·~·i · . lnhl•"......_ TOWl•IOMa m1tr. bdrm .• bath & MISSIOHYllJO ..,,we--SalesOffu:e-Pbooe ~ . 3 Larae~~try $37,950 Ea:cellent locatioo nr, s t udy . 3 Additional RIALTY :=~ 714c:~l!l Ba~8l'::~2~~=
· style kitcben , db 3Bedroomhomeoncor, bigbscbool&UCl.Near, bdrm, auites. Detached ,."r 137 .. 9500 J fully upgraded.. Approx
: '• 1'. -··-iK gauae. Huge lo• lo ner lot in OLD TOWN. 1y new 3 bdrm., 2 bl.• gudt bouse_wlth000~ "!P· FLEXIBLE DIRECTIONS' From the 1300 sq.It. $4,000 dcwn • .-_.,....,,. kids. Submit. yoor down. Walk to park and beach. luxury features Incl. wet guest apts. _..... Mewpo~ a..ch I 069 ~ewport ~lvd . Frwy GJ.SS79or-..2512 .
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'f'_." ,,~"'T.:..,o: t . ·~Call "'~ Lowest price in town!! bar,atrium&truhcom, AMIA(iLrS..ST •••••••••••••-••••-•• SELLER southtol7tliSt.,tumleftl---'-"'-'-'c.c;~=--Call to see, Red carpet, pactor. Pricedal$60,000. Nearly new Med.it. home HIW _.._...--_ on 11th to Rut.land (l s-t.A.e IOIO
I E I d B ~"9 On waterfnxit. beautiful .;;;-:-~-.. Realtors53&-8836 n mera ay . ,,.,......_.5 .,,,...,15 block past Irvine Ave,).•••••••••••••••••••••••
--~ .~ .. . ·~~"'~.' WEHAVERENT~ Dra m atic coast lint ""'"_.. ""1 -~ • 3,Br, 3-ba home. Asking tumleft:W.ths~blockto ***D•1Wait*** -.-...~ SIZ..7000 views,; 5 bdtms., 4 baths, 121,I DOVB DL SI29,ooo. Will consider NEWPORTyn,LA.S. For prices and interest to '~pG•ttiY ... ICH Fairview&BakerCM v•c•-ii aep. din1ihnc rm.; family Weatc3lilfBdrms.; beaulif2~!.~' ~:.:nes •• ~~=el~P~ <!Ome down. Both will ,
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,. 54g,9511 "" _...1 rm. wt frplc., game cor. . .• u.uli3, b bl , oi ~ • "" '"""'!"~~"'!"~~"'!""'!"~I Low, low down·take over room. utll. & stprage dinin1 rm., (rplc. Unique lion, or whatever. Make ·0 'f ,. ·pro • y,-.eep g ng: up .. • s..:J .S '-Inn .. fonnal1 . FHA Joan . Mo\'e in on rooms . St, Charles kitchen.15x3>Llvingrrb, anoffer. · CeCWl1onf .. not down! 2 Bedrm, 2 diL. 1 tiL. Zllower filled 5% down, Soulhcoast credit approval. Like kitchen withdinin& area, overlooking tropical PRISTIG E HOMES Largeat & best duplex in b a •i n I 1 e st or Y ~: aU on• wide, Shores. 3br, iba. A JC, new home, 11uper area. paneled wall.I• open garden, wltb fire pit 4t R..tton '4M646 town . Spectacular TownbOUlesstWatonly ... ..-·o a. lot. Best buy pool and lake,· $55,000. Walk to HD shoppe, 1=========c1 beamed ceil's, give thl.s gas lantern. Great home coaatllne views; 2 bdrm. $2i,95o. New carpets. l -~-I ~ 9'19-8498. schools.etc. $49.500. -;!~WCNHO~SEode, new laree family home ,for entuta.iDlng. Stop by EASTILUFF • 3 bdrm., with family ;.e:Jr!~.:,!'-1CA. Ask for -.----PACISETTB ~n arlos m Ion charm• warmth. &:seelbleMal'U'OUl.lt.and· nn.5Bat.h5;4frplcs.,S r ·-gent . Uod•• ... ...,. M ... V .... T.ft• Real EstateMS-2133 San Joaquin GokCoune. S335 000 inc features! Below martet., by owner, encl. caragee; ~ blt-tns s.al hocll IOl4
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., "--~ --io Separate master BR &•1--======-==-Pool & rec. facll's. z,Br, ' . --··. . · a.II w~•-$84,SOO. 4 br, 3 ba. den, -t-carp P'iDest. m ever-__ ..__,, ••-bath, \4i blck to elem,~ bar & entertainmt t ~ · -.....-.-dinrm,lgelot,man1ex· ... ,. •••••••••••••••••••••••
'OotSJAftDING Ocean. Bllu to .shops. HURRY. beaut crpts, drps, C.:ti ~ ·-rr lUln 67§..5200 tras,644·7598. :.·· :a·000
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Ou.el 'riew, Lse or Won 't last at $45,500. covering by int, de, ..:-·. ; 116 CANYON 9\:1 ~ COLLIGEPAaK ....... --...:..'!:-15C:-t~~~ BrokerS40-3650 corator.9'1!M313.Bkr. ,,_,_._,._ ! Ele1ant l s t ory . 3 MfHIC. POOL
. ..-. m1...-110.S N.Coosf ttw 1--.-· Fixer YJ!P'r ar:Al,.TY • 3 Bedrm, 2 bath with _ froat. ,..,.., Quaint old D919Poist 1026 Rancho Saft Joaquin, San y .. -. .... -bedroom, highly up· ~., N~•••rl' ,.,, orrle• 20x.t0 poQI, en large cor-
11i.,..e. Bdwd flrC Ii ••••••••••••••••••••••• Carlos model. 2 br, 2'n 494-1177 · eraded A: decorated in ..... , • • · -ner lbt, no care rock.
.. ••er w.alls 1~ A • .... I • 'd. RealEstate tia, upgraded floor 4t ~-C yellow . 12x25' pool ...-HAR:S.:OR VIEW HOMES ,vard. •c1,soo. Our -· • you r 5a5• '-• a.a..a..nl' crptg t hruout v1·ew -+cuslom i"ac····' A to SUBll.rrTEBllS POR ' ---=oe,3Br, In Dana Knolls:"1Br,2ba 1q,....;wu. · · l ·1 u -'--Be•-h .,._,,. u IFIN04-lk, f..ba, Buy!! Red Carpet,
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---Open Houae Sat" Sun 1 e to~· •c . ~rto.klen 3ar&ara1e. PACUEna f ronnat din D--1a--c.~ .
• --..-/ba,pvt.. l.c7ardwtpavedboator ll·S, #8 Montanas Nort Two 2 bdrm. houses on An excellent b••v at am nn. rm, ncaiMn•~
1111Mn.. Seelamtotpm ~ r 1 r Pk I s Pac e . STORY loOK orcall 496-6213eves. large 561140 wooded kit. etu. 000 -......... finished bonus rm, or~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; d'allJ. t26 Beaonia. 49S-0685/493-2161. Ftplc, 4i1 h4wd. nn. in _,....., · 141·21J3 park, scboola 6 comm ~ ar -Prla. BT DRIAMIR UHIVRSITY PARll !root; carpet & t11e 1n re-Poc>I. Lease OK . ..,,500.
Ollq. oro 1032 Welcome to reality as Edlnburg 3 ·BR + 18 ar unit. Good rental re· •ee.&14·7866/644-6548 JUSTUSTm
· ••••••••••••••••••••••• you sun bathe DeJlt to a d A b g t t KNOCK ICMOCI Oceaa view 3 bedroom \~alS. thy, ft..2, rm fat;" BY 0 W NE R AS . self cleaning pool & :.ud)'. ce~:r:i~tc. !,R1e·l2!: ~:500 ar a n a 1·~~:::::::::::::--1 Don't miaslheopportuni, ~MewD•' los· bome ID Private gate ~ ... \OClMft view JUlil. SUMABLE7%3Bd 1600 J c 111 A spa kl" g " ~ · tytoseethls lo guarded Surfolde co-· •-• u _.. • a u · r in tro filter. Ful1y wall ~· · · . MIWPOIJ"C: newcua m-l~ Blk from ocean. •• ~ me on 11 .. t. Agt. sq.ft. 1239.SO mo. pay. home that makes every d a. """ built 5-Br home on the munity · Good lnve1t-
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J.5M-4Dlll75-2141 ment. Will take SS.GOO. day a delirhtful ex, papere w /cust, dbl • PIM.~THOMIS 1th. fairway ol Bl& c., Quality construction. ment or year 'round
aerond $46900 837~ perlence.AwanlwlMing drp·s , fully erpt'd . JtBLUF"'OON'DOS• .... on Golf Course. N-$llf,OOO. Owner will take home. Call for complete .iCe•Maa 1024 · • · · ho d Kltchen,Atd dsbwshr, ON THE BAY-411&hly. ,_, -.. ~-i0%down.and<!&n72nd detallanowl l Prteedpn·
... -··-·••••••••••• Owner moved. must sell. omes. You'll be gla new water heater. frpl<!. DOif Y. rRA"IO.IJC µperaded, profelliooall,y ~ ..-..,000, can yoUr T.0 . This otrer will ID I ... 500 A&en
SSA Verde/Republic,· Vacant 5 BR, 3 BA. 2 yomcalled•4456· a\ilo gar. opener. Beaut. ~UJ.T~I · decorated a hedrm . eror . 171u~•:;·Loc~;,-~a~l~211l~--~~SL~-~!"·~~·~·~~~t~-~-~·~·
........ ~~---Sun br ••·-a 3000 ft 11l111'&1~PUL! Bkyd&patio.Loobllk ... °"""' Be tll I d bri "t = ..,...-~ , ..... _,. PP""' sq. . --•• u use •• ·~CALLNOWI Mow-='-106' . fhra, dlai .. I levels, frpl. 117,000. Lake Forest., all Honestly, beautiful btl1 ModelHome.Batlk.o' --~ patio. r-• Mt•••rl.._. 1069 ~"'f~~~-~ .. ~L~sn~~-'°°~·~~l'";;""~'·isa~'-~"'i"'~-lci~\ ~:~::a.~~=. ~~.~~~ ~g,.rz~.~ ~: 832 .. • ••• 41 ............. , .... ~ ··-················· ~ A&t-.S4l~ Pt •I• Y.., 1034 out1tandin1 exterior, tam rm. fplc, end unit. • DO'N.-LD M-l lRD · · ,,..POOL. J br, din rm,+ ••••••·•••••••••••••••• 1uporb IOT ~~-•-•nt. EDl ... BURG 0 r I 11 ' ~ · _....._.. ~ ... ac OUS YrDI ' A_,,..,,._,,_ , c...... 1 .,_ .
Gt••-' -~~(!Si;! ~·;:_~~;. 2-ba. :i:! ~=~~~ PLAN :=::~.t~e.·u.:,.~ D11.ux1Dll'LEX ~~l!a!' ~~171 '50.800. Act. Z.patiol.Lille_..,..._ •••> P.V . atone !nVlll1gel.311edrooms, DOM!t I · O..,.s.tJS-,1-1 , · _, .. ~ ... , __ , w11k 1o P"""' & ochll. fireplace . Loto-O· 21\ balbs, tomill' """"· ioa •-67 FEET ~UDO '"1°-'=~~:-'tsun l..C. uc, time offered. Ca11 Mirrors. Hu• aauma-orferinl you all th s:r.:dous~ w.JOCl bonae ""'-Vf"I' ...,,~-'-==·C.:c."'11"-• ..:.·--1 ~Bllr~.;•~11~•;'3li;or;"'1~~3:JO~l d~b;;l•;lo;111;;·;-~•;•;;;;;;;;,l amenlllu of a sing! I eal !orlr*0....ln¥U • ~-•lo belCb; lirp I BAYFROHT , r --I I• fa m 11)' home. 170 deck af(drds vu of { bdrm., 2 Nth~ unll Su b ' , .. , .... °"...,. 1040 Squareteet,dell1P•••U child ren· tn Blueblrd ·111.,.•RHI-tact. hut• motr. bdrm. per quiet l~ation-Room for • .,_ nn. walk to••••••••••••••••••••••• SU,.J-.W arerr-UYlng. Off: red w i th ••P· entraac:1. several boats to 125'. 6 car·=11•1 Pileed i. ..U MUS"'••• 2Beth,2•1oef·~· cecllo loc · 11 -•· ~• Part. • Bdr ..... lrtl. .i-erW11tbu2-...... ~led. Courtyard •
•-...__t ., ..., -~•i 1 _ 70U or_, _..,IOOl~-~-~li00~~·~7:~~~·:i:~g~~~~~~;;j:' ~ •or~ ----~ °""--• ,....,ll50. <WlllUlb ~~~ • .!.!.~""' air· . If ,;.,n:-b; .. ;=-··..._~ -.deckO:,.beidroo, . 11111,5~'-·~.·a ... -1 ,.... •ledna Zbttb.COteted earpetlnc. Fa11ta1tle ._.__,.,._,... 0 _. ·~~ .,..... .-.,. ' !!!!'-.-:.. ••,t patio la ea<!•llent home .•. ~me1ee!Call 81 Oner Arch Be•• r-..i" ally l9ll •brkftt.bar.•.SOO -.,... l[ RAISOR Hel1bts Be.t value In a oad. 'Brealbt akln MIWPOllTlllt.OM
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Co, , ., lllft.JOHm !emu.Call ·Beach~ 118 I , -C1mpuo1lr.,lrv1M 1.,.1 •. '5T,:t00z Aaa.,;,• Htuns lhtuoolt. Ast. ·-'wY _Y ..,.. ~~"~]~:.~·~;·~*"~,,,.~-~,;·~~-=sc~~J:1Z,:~:=:;:~:Tf~~~~~MMOS1t~~·~~~ca~m~,...~~va1~~!<Yi~~~Bhop~a.~.~-11~o~•~•tt~aa~•;·~·~t~fl'~,ooo~~,..~,...~;;:~~~1 C.utlJ , to0 I tll·I*. , ado Call =J·~,1~ooo~"-~·~MO~I~-~£~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -•-•' ------·---~------~-....::· ' ' . ----'----'--~ ----=-LI -
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Buulllul -·· llWAV M ·19M/lllP• -=~l~lum FROM $49 -.y .. _ ...... _,.,,.. .• _, ---1"-''* PACl:&l:TTl:B,Ul'llVPrkTw<,..._2 z ._._ u. ,,..~.. -
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i.tualtaUllllpr1et. LOV8LY I b••• br I .. -... i., M ----. 2.. . Beautif\111 r -•-"-'Jar udi cl ---• W_y._._ ,. for•• 1;1 • 19'11. 1i1-1aat eu1, .. ,.1 .... dlnlaa"""" . -1 u,.......... gest oaaJ>" "'Ol'POllTUNITY ~C.tHwJ.•Mn • .....,t;':f 11 ~~·Mlt an 11r. L%'/::.=~ one bedroom suites -all wl1b lull 11011~o.:C.":;,::O::: IMOCUTWIC~ ~EXCHAllGE + -OlllY':'".:-.... •RINTALS• p~~=~ kitchens. Aaml..l*lW . -l:!:,.c:.:t.~~ J .... ~1ac C.M.zh<.-.......... • ~1MtA<111d•1dop VNIV.PARk Newly remodeled. 3 Apartment living wltb motel cmve. BrtBalll'-~
lv&•lolf•ll=--ad 6UNmt'?SA0 ~.AlloN.B.21>r-.. ~N~· ;::-:::bciM .... s.w; :=,m,;i!.t~~.=; =:i"~i:1~~~.~~~ ::::.c ... r~·--.~ ·1.:::~··-· $12'"l000 ds • peta. Walk to CCIMDOI•-TuETEllllAiiE"' P,.....ed POOL..; view self-··-•~ laund-faclll"es avalla• ---·--water H .B. 2 br, kldil -Id I 1 °"'•"~ ~, u ~~u--• 31••
Haaaz -· ~ ~ ~~~ =~~1;:';.0t-.J-;l 2~::a1t=~ !:£~-iiOM*:: $.soiifi'~s~ ble. • ===tHttt-••= S. 1109 u-. 0.-w111..ua11 s\aaln .k A# Fee. Ci;, Offtnll at.,.. sea,2Ba ....... , ... S3!s ·IC2·1121S(Y2IJ Master Cbarue-and Ba-~•--erl•ard Offle,.•-_,
••••-•·•-•• cub out to tar deterred 97....,. • . per mo.+ ulil.-is&.A: 3BR.38a . .: •• -....•. $425 tlMDAISlE a UAl'UJl ... l. :t 6: I Br. Mhdta m ·
t: Y~Dsmiii:: esc-ban1e bnl•. Low +cMM•.,4111p.No1-., DEERP'ID.J)HOMES LA.aoN welcome. pett,dsllwbn.PU~
Fully luuJa•~ ad._, ,.. .. ..,.. Hard '° -HUNT Bosch 3 •~•-bo. ~-· · -, lBR. m aa. ........ $425 1-bl ~ -S EXECUTIVE SUITE MOTEL do1ed aaraco, lrple.
•creen roo;'lx.27-: vat
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Ye· Callnowf«pre-~pret,$S1$. ~ -uPER.B 211RueR %BaboS-.109CJUl.a_ bedroom w/1 family -BBQ, Gu 6 ..tao
manyoth•addodextr •ew·1S2·1700. nwPTBeacb2br,lllds, OMES . . .......... ~·· ....... allmnd dlnlna 2010Htwport-Pool • SlO.SOO ., tHVUtilthT miliON f::ouU1pc1.sns. IBR,2Ba ........... $525 room 'a. slip ror 2 1c two_.. _ _. UMAMCNA ·~~ Boadl--2 _,,_NO-.... TurtleBod<llllla boata. Avail •auried..,.; c-w .... c ...... ,2627 178Sce41"-. .1
a-..1110No ~Id.pot. Dopla2Br eri>ts•..,. •BR.2ba .......... $SIS ••••• , bHol. Cathy 642-2611 642-am ~ ~--1a~ ...... b ui'pc18albm~l,!·l paUo car"uw rm E Schweickert 142-8235 I -...... -1'129 "'How:!~s Sicle.'DI0.0...m..0. 552~7500 (Y2') MIOITWvru.A?!'"~ I /'11 Nubu.i 50' ext. LIR ai t41lllz .__/ -8 /Roneomerlotnr TrtrPrh z •64J...tt00• •ZBrtalliM..._.V dhlll ' l•o•PtM11Mla3707Mew~IMdl 37691Br,1Br•Dm.2Br.2
•-ach .. ~ ~-· ft DIW ••r·--~ re WATIEllPllotfl'. ················-····· ........................ Br T~ I'..-
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U'noM:-"''..,_._* · ·~··;;~;;:i:;·~~·~t•••• ~ ~ #TSCbI'ld-:i°SU..... ,...icy W / P RIV AT I BAY VJEW. beach, 1bftor2 Br, adults, nopeta, drapes, f1repi':~~
M . tOx>O Plyli>odI> mol>lle _ _ 1 Br " frplc DOC:X S27S. 2 br $12$. Util pd. $170/Sl90.:1421E.JlllbSt, poola, • -c:oorta • ~blle Hqme-AduJt park, bome i n adult Plfk • 1 .!:I. • ~ 2 8d I ,_ 2 PierJpkar, ad.Its. 303 E. N. Ht.1846-1')1 om •sauoa'1. Single ~ide, EJ[ce.11ent $3,BOO or uade few 218~ pra.se, )'anl. nr ~ nns, arge ua., Ediewater.1-871•2868 2400Ha.rborBlvd condlt1on . Irvine , travel trailer Cal sdllool.SM0.541-M71 Ls ..... 3241 rlreplacea, completely ParkNewport.&.lblea.se.l CoetaMeu(114)5S1.-ZO
494·2'492: 544-3417.. • I . Anabelm, $1"0., F1•l1laY....._ 3234 ,.}•••••••-••••••••••• remodleled & carpeted Cosh.Meso J724 Br. $325 mo.&13-8203.or Ad It 2 h .. d "--'-
Lo
"' _,. w/bu It-ins. Electric •••••••••••••••-•••••• eves673-5S3Z. u _e ~-or
.vely ocean view Dl(>. Ma•tn' DeMrt. bacbelor pd,. vacant ••••••••••••••-••••••• IUMD..W a:arage door. Very lara:e 1170 ao pets •• IDQulre • bile home. Nrii1y de. I...+• 2400 DOW-Luse 2 br, baCe nunpos OCIAMYllW patio w/gas conversation SJ~. WIBC & UP OCEANFRONT. neat 2 G sa W. WI.Jim
cora.ted,
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ii;.cnaculate •••••••••••••-•••••••• Balboa I.stand $200., 1 br f?D, 2 ba, 2 car 1ara1e, c BR, :S.:Ba, ExecuUve pit. No children or pets. •Studlo•lBRApts Br, upper • .tults,, ear. ME · E condi.t.i04--o1&11Pa PartoAK GROV£.20 A beachcotta.re. bltm,~mm.1wtmpool. Rererencei. $600 mo. •TV&MaldServAvall winter. $27$. 213. SA V ROE area ..
• ooCorner.&-att. Oaks. Elect-, l wC:U:: Wetlmlmt.er. Sl.55., f'eal Kida olli, no fee. $215. mo: ::.=.u:~~~ r.·::e~ 642·9405 d•YS; 'SUn & •PhooeServ,Htdpool 795-3018. e:::.~mr-z ••
• ·--1200 y · S't --DHltlncl.util. All·~ --~ eves,673-.5800. •ChildrenSeclion • ..,,. WK UP t•• Bdr r. ~ ... c.....,.,.....-· 1ew 1 e.--. Costa Mesa $18S., 2 Br, -·-•$50FFweek.'srent ...., °"'
••••••••••••••••••••••• PALMSPRINOS lddaok. Sharp 3 BR, 21A ba. LAGuNAOceanfront lse Rent or 'Lease Opt.ion BV w/ad Bach. Color TY, meld t.:i~~ AVOCADO~LAND. $2,080 31Acres •. Fountain Valley SZ25 .• 2 t.own.house. tm lloatb. $ll0,000 Condo for Onlf OWNER. 4 ht, 3~ ba, 2376NewportBlvd,CM serv, pool, THE MESA. orFu:n wae pd.
per/AC. Rancho Cal. CATHEDRALCJTY br, 2 ba, will consider 17$.70IOorl73-9117,Art ta5 mo. 3 Br 2 Ba 2000 Ba1crest. Ivan Wells 541·9755or6'5-3967 4.15 N. Newpart 81, ?JB Adults-N ·~~ ':':'.O
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80%SelJerPTn.8~%1nt. CAcres 137. kida&pets ft etbar f 1 •Sec Home. Pool, frml Dr & 646-9611 °--~Plll Tight S forces sale: •CATHEDRAL.CITY Fullerton silo 2br a.ice 1 Br, 2 ba, new, tennis IQ ·• w • rpc, · Fm rm SBOO mo incl SUSCASITA.S Pool,recrm,elev.tor.a
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Owner714-4176-5'134 2 Lots 19, area, kids acp$ok..' cowu, pool, adults only. Grd. Adulta.5'4-7678.. pool &. • gard~o maln-Laree nicely tum. bacb. 3br, %ba. Nr bcb. Mature 525 Victoril,ecanqa
CATREDRALCITY Santa Ana $MS., 3 br, SZIOmo.&18-9532 EMERALD BAY, pvt. tenance. 642-3099 or &: 1 brs-Adulta 00].y, oo !~~ts. 213 8B1·789S .tltt
JO Acre orange grove, 1 Lot SS, fncd yd, gar., kids a peta l .. thigl• INdl 3240 bch." ten.nil, pools, IC 2 615-UU pet.a. 2110Newport.Bl. · "" • i '~de.SJS~/~.: 6C-M42 ok: •••••••••••••••••••••• Br.I frplc, deck:, yd. • OCEANFRONT * Hocls••DI ..... •
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2B .acres, 20 mi eaat stanton $285., c br, lge Hunt.'Hbr~.N Whitewat.erVu.558-3030 S-CletMllh 3276 AMIASSADOl.IMHS .Bach.,Gar.$23Syrly. 16COloWMd.WIG 111;~
Juan Capistnuto, sale yard, Irids &cpetsok. occupied, .&Br, 3ba, 30 Immediate Occupancy. 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-3183 l4J51"K ·-' CawrcW, tease.Owners52-628t GardenGrove$300.,5br, boat slip, tennis pool Br Oc:VuH.illstdebome Pres.Ht.s.Condo2Br,ZBa, OF.....aiCA BEAUT.GROO'NDfi. '(
Property 1600 very rare. Fa'rily jacuui. $6501M.Sc7-8'7' W~ le glau ~ · Pool , view , lease , TWOLOCATIONS OCEAHYIEW ADUL'J'S.NOPB'J'S.r, I ••••••••••••••·~··••••• 1~!9~ ZIOO M~::'eer! or Board of orl73·lM15. dectslcaep.la~::: S2'15./mo.71"615-3587, ~~~~k8¢i't~ ~~:~!~~=d~ ~o::n~~~~~ BA YFR.OMl' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Realtors, Better Busi· 4 Br, 1~ Ba, frplc, car, $425.41'1-23'10. 2 Bd, 1 ha, 138 West 2277Harbor,C.M. Viewrrom.L-R.,kit,All-w/.Patto $220. Gaeira
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Otfiee building, spec-PALMDESERT-NRI.;Vl nesaBureau.OlamberoC Vacant.$.'1'75mo.M2-8 Li ......... 3252 Alessandro, Call 29098ristolS.A-Br. 2 Car parking. 710l wa-ter incl. Drapen..
I tacular view. luxurious acre, tie house, pool, Commerce. aftnoon/eves. •••~••••-••••••••••••• 213-597-7003orsee0ct..5, ~&t540-ZJOO Seashore Dr. Winter, carpets, 1u bea'9 ...
eJlecutlveoffice1. workshop, 40Cilnza; ror 530-ISOS FM.A.ti. SPAC. newer 3 br, 2 ba c;.offc-Mv.-.#2 12-5pm.$350. $400. mo. (.2]3) 722-3878 stove, air oo.idiii~~
Reducedto$600,000. Nw-pt Bch, home .l•oal.._.. 3206 near beach. Beaut Spacloua new 2 Br, 2\; S-..._ •Sltocly....,._* or675·9llltoabow. swimmlnc PoQI, rfi.
. .llLLGRUHDY 642-+MZ . • ••• ;.:•••••••••••••••• homes. SpoUesl·lh.ruout-Ba, Twnhme w/all the C-.M1tr.io 3271 1&2 Br $175. Up. AduJtS, Steps to beach. 2 room,wuben•
R...ttor 675-6161 R...r Est.te 3 Br avail foryrly. l block $345&1375. mo.531J.994l privacy o( home. Wood ••••••••••••••••••••••• . no peb. 177 E. -22:ad St. bedrooms, fireplace.. NEWLY-DECOBA.Tia>
W..ted 2900 to bay. Bar a patio. burning frplc in llv. rm, Spacious 3 BR, 2 Ba. 642·3645. $'ll5. mo.642-3t90 2 Br w/car .. $1.75. W.ter * SAM CLEM&n'I ••••••••••••••••••••••• &7S-l.200 J0-4pm Village Real ~late rorm. dii:i. rm. cust. shag Av•il. Oct. 3. Lease. pd. 2176 ••£" Placallliil.
4,000Sq .. ft. building ideal House Wanted-to Buy No Agents Fee crpt &r: drps thruout. AdJts . $400 Incl. waler, OCEANFRONT. 2br, lba. 636-41201--5 lo~ rum1lure or other re· 2-3 Br, Newpt Bch. • 2 Bd, 1 ba, c.ottage. •Bu.hard/Garfield Super kit w /sellcleaning trash , putting green, l BR Furn $170 Btn decor. Avail immed.. <
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tail.,onDelMar,heartor Prine Only 6'73-2509 Yearly.$325. 3BR,2BA. .. $295 dbl oven, dsbW!lhr. Al· pool. lBRUnlum $165 Winter. $375. Yrly, $450. 31EDIOOMS •
shopping. Loading dock. · · 49-f.·4524 or&M-1600. •Beach/Maio tached 2 car gar. w/auto . Agent-493-1137 Lota of bltns, pool, walk Open Sat/Sun. 12·$, 7010 3 1ge bdrrns w/patf~.
parking. $99,500. Wil l ... ah
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3207
3BR1.2BA.Ed .. !3~ opener&:lowmaint.rear ir-.....111ro.L 3216 to shopping . ..y, ml. W. Oceanfront.. Owner, rrplc, pool acrou fnhD
consider ·tease or leas •••••••••••••••••••••••mwaa •••• a •Bosa/ w .. 1,1;3 yd. Community pool. On·_. .,... beach. 931 W.19lbSt.. 2~7698.. lee quiet part. SUA., option. 492-4121 ~ ftlrllitllld •••"'•••••••••••••••••• 4 BR, 2 BA ... sass ly $315 mo. -lse opt.ion ••••••••••••••!•••••••• 548-0492 15l0 w. OCEANFRONT. Adulta on\y.545-8628 J
BER'J'HAHENRY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR, 2 ba. new kitch & •Slater/Beach avail. Children &r: pets 2 Bd, 2 ba. home. Ocean Fu 1 -• t ., M I 4 BR 2 •• -·1 f 1 rn, xtra gel br, Im-.I&. REALTORS GtMral 3102 cp .,....75 o, ease , un.. .. _. OK too. 496-%300 aak for v ew, rp c, carport. -S2SO s-4688 •VILLAJrlMOS,..
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••••••••••••••••••••••• Caywood Rily. 548-1290 •Mc Fadden/Bushard Holly. Adults, no pet.s. Lease. 2 BR. 2 ba. No pets mac. cpts. ·
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1 1 o• o• • -/fown .. OCEANFRONT b SI . 3BR,2BA ... S375 497·l612 aft. 7pm. week children. Pref. maLure 2 BR, steps to beach, 2 I 2 le holrws forlCllit 1700 l r .85., Oceanfroal. Winter. 3br, •Garfiekl/BUlhard 2 Yr old_ 3 Br, 2 Ba. 1700 days, sat. &Sun. all day. adults-$185. 642-5848 $300. p/mo. yearly, r, Aph
•••••••••·••••••••••-•• 8peu
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ok2, Lab g_ !:~ch.k~~ 2ba. S40067n;o.~16 2 BR,IBA ... 1285 Sqrt._ Walle to.ocean, pvt 675 7816 .n. 6 Suf>t'.r Comrortabkt ' .,ORTH• ... ~ .... .._ a · r, .....,., 1..,., ........, . ...__-963-t567or96l-1788 tennis ct• & pool. Pvt CotKloftliai_. 2 Br, partly furn. Cpts, __ · · Qwel. Upper/lower •
,.. ..,..~ pets,singles.C.M.lbr
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Comm.$425mo.644·5403 UttfwalsMcl 3425 deps.$190.mo.Adults, 2 BR 2 Ba EnclosedGar-.,ee11
eo....,.S util pd, singles or couple CoroRadelMe-3222 4 Br Condo, Continentals, 675·0430or847-8583 '••••••••••••••••••••••• peta.642-7154 • Was he r /Dryer Elec. Gu&Water"Paid.lloto ...., r. CdM l b t'I pd ••••••••••••••••••••••• I I b hse ~"-OK • . M l Is --White terView&
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r . u 1 • poo •cu • rwwt • •2Br 2 ba (rplc gar Gar Or avail Nov oren a . ....-to'!J wa --2 3 aiaglea ok. Agt. Fee. Vl£W<>c:ean&.Bay,new3 $320. 1984.5 Vermont Lo. Mlnlo.V'*fo 3267 pool: aduJt,'pet.oK'. $290'. l BR duplex. flan. Ad11:9. saoo:Ms-7714 · · ChildrenWekomo ~
bdrm. units from $54,000. 979-8430 BR, 2 Ba, encl. gar + 979-7188. ••••~··•••••••••••••••• Tustin 9B2·5680/838-92&6 DO pets. $145 mo. Ava.JI. -:;;;;;;,;;;~;;-:----[ 2324 Elden A.,., 833-
420 Cy press, North parking. Frplc. Lease 4 BR Eldorado crpta · now. 548-4160. Af.¥i hiN .. I
Laguna IDlboa l"-d 3106 $475. 631·2333 or eves. CLEAN ~ br, l~ ba, fam drps, bltna, patiO, fed yd: Brand New, Condo, 3 Br, · u..t.nlllMd ew 1 & 2 &:, month to Cal 675-7225 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-t868 rm, patio, 2 car 1arag CI08' to school &: shop'g Ba, 2 car gar, dk balcony SllO to Sl 40 1 hr trln • & ••••••••••••••••••••••• monlh, bltna, adulta no
LlKEnew4br,3baor3 yard, quiet. $340. mo. $350 mo. No pe ts . &.pool.$350mo.962-8767 ; ~!~~~~Ul11!.~k The~alsfmd 3106 pets. 202SPomooaAw-.
br, z ba, all elec. kitchen IRVINE TERR. near bay. 645-6702 830-5891. eve. 968-0881. Wilson /N~wport.~· ••••••••••.••••••••••••• 64S-OSZ'1/548-4291 . . , ' ' ~· . ' . '
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. wldishwhr, frplc~ patio, 3Br,2Ba, Frple,2Pati08. 0 p BR 2 8 3 BR avail for yrly._ I Br, pool, __ 2L $1SS.
bbq 9 mo I .... """' ...... 1 $450 Lse 675-«IO& . _ · er mo. 3 , A, ... __ ....... le-L 3269 BEAUT. decorat~ -do. bl k b Ba .... ' ..,..,...,,.,......,... . . 652 C N ,_ r-•' _.. ""........ L-L-21r oc to ay. r&pat10. mo. SIOO. -•--•-g ,:-:-1 1 ory . r .••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br, l ba, pool, nr. 7-~ ~ 1:!C4 SfEPS TO BAY·OPEN 3 HARBOR VlEWtllU.S Slater/Gc-lden~esl. Va· TOWNHOUSE 28 r , beach. $2.50. Hunt Beach Bltns, w/w. drps, pool 673·l200lo.4pm 32SJ 17th Pl,aft.llam ,
Br,2Ba,FMRm,Patio 5hr,3ba,livrm,dinnn, cant.Outalandinghome. 2~Ba pool bits area.897·4759afl9pm. $200 . Adltll. no pets 2BR,Yearly.$28S.plus "--':=::::::::::=::===:::::=:!-'328~S~a!!p~p~hl!_;':!re:_.~644~.()954~~--/ lge fam rm, pool. $750 Agt536-8836 wash/d'ry, gar.' No ~ts'. N 2 b 2 b lS 00·9520 util. A'vailable now. pacious 2-Br. Z..ba, 2 ear
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-"$$$$ mo. 1101 White Sails , 9188 ew r a crp 675 2866 gar, drps, crpl, lndr)'. . •.~ * BAY FRONT 4 -Br. \Vay. 640·1528 wkdys. 3Br, l~ ba,bigramnn, 67S-• drps, po01. sz7s .. Sa~ S230.NEWLYdeoorated2jk··;;~;;;i;;;i;""]iiirrl D/W,atove.$Z75.'Adults.,
"Blf4G f j,jTFRPRl')fS CO
illegal! ~nces&ioterest Family only. $550-49S-105Gwkends new .crpts. $385 . Nr. ~oo OOO View Estate Juan ca pi stra n o . hr. pool . garden setting.llolboa , ........ 3107 no pets. Available Ocl..
keep going up, up, up ! Winter. ' Adams le Brookhurst . .,. d• $I OOO 631·1821 Util pd. Adults ooly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 15th.IJ46.47S7
We still baveafewsingle * 4-BDRM near bay. VIEW HOME 645-3147or545-4289 •n er MO. Sorry no pets-18001----------.... 1,~-;-;;;;-;::;:::;-::;:;
.story, 2 bedrm, 2 bath Winter or yearly. in Corona mghlancts. 3 Remodeled 2BRhome nu 6 3 I -O 7 9 7 or Tow1'itoltH Wallace, comer W. 18lh IAYFIOMTCOHDO 1 & 2 BR garden a~.
I Townhouses al only REFERENCESREQ'D BR, 2 Ba, ~mall yard, cpts & drps. Must~ to 645-7102 Ullfuntislwd 3525 St.645-0805 •2 br,2ba, lseSMO. frplc, dshwhr, pvt paUO.
$21,950. Ask for Frank, Nelda Gibson, Realtor, rorma 1 dining, much apprec. $300. mo. Ask for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ht 1~ leach 3740 •Lae Op or sell $88,000 r'orJ!.v.~~~lAre&.$1811
839-8321Agent. 675-2898 · mo. re . Submit on Bev or Joe 963.4567 HARIOR~ NEW custom Spacious 2 ~ ""T°" 0p ~ --••~.. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• * en 1·5Sat&Sun
CUSTOM CONDO lolM>a P•aimerla 3107 children . Reduced to 963-1786 • 3-Br, 2·ba, $495. mo. Nr. Br 2 Ba, air. attach. gar. BEAUTIFUL 1 br furn •310Fernando. Balboa Eaalside. Lrg 2br. 2ba.
4 BR, nr Shopping & ••••••.-•••••••••••••••• $450. mo. 644-7211 Agcnl. pool & park. 673-7601 A~. S300 mo. 544-IIMl. apts Sl70 & SUIO. Spanish Olive Wiggenhorn, Rilr Enc I oa ed gar, d:· •
Schools. Would make a 2 BR, 1 blk to bay or Costa MelCI 3224 l"iM 3244 LIDO ISLE Luxurious lhlplexe1 Unfum 3600 style bldg, pvt encl gar, 675-6160 hwasher, lndry. $235. o
-eat1'nveslmen101'V"'""' ..,en ,... ....... 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• b · ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool saun 1~-· <11•-....... 642·3488or645-8l e.• --1 ocean .~.i::no . ......,·.ANO •••••••••••••••••••••••Red ted 3 48R. 5-Br ome.$13:10mo. . a, ,,..,.,,au.. ....,...... · comfortable lo live in. or67S-1753 AVAIL. 3 br, 2 ba Mesa 0 ... echoora Nor 1 __ _._•,2 Agt. 675-0123 3 BR, 2 Ba .. in CdM , no 17301 Keelson Ln, 1 hlk 3 Br 2 B od Eastsidelux d I 3b S29,950. or C'IL y d h ...en, on mes. u ~pg. pet.a or children $320 W or Beach off Saler 5,3• w a.9new, m em, 2 b d' ' up ~x. dr,
aft.6 .0wner. LacJ-oleach 3141 ere ome . ..,..,.... Agt. $345.·$355. mo. A4k ror 3 BR, Den. Nr Beach, mo.644-6800 · · 842·78'8 · · ay. Annual 'At a, 1.11rm,pnvy ·2
..=:::..::.:..::.:::::::.:_ __ -J••••••••••••••••••••••• 540-1720 Bev or Joe 963-4587 or 14 50 m 0 Ye a r 1 y lease. $350. 64().5719 car gar, children &t sml
OWNER. 2 br condo I Oceanfront North Laguna 3-Br 2·ba fnedydinColL 963-1786 875-3172 ' . 2 BR, 2 Ba, CdM , n LGC)Uftaleoch 3741 YEARLY3Br2Ba frplc ~l~~~c:e~ome. $
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Costa Mesa, J yrs. crpts Cove. 4 Br, 3 Ba, frplc, Pt.' Fplc°, dbl gar. $390. . . . children or pets. $'268. •••••••••.•••••••••••••• nu c pls. close ~ bch'.1------------
drps, gar w /op.ener deck, patio, newly paint-S46-5n 7 ~ght 002~0 JJ:'Ull'I· Gofl HBR VU, 4 Br, 2 Ba, Din, mo. 644-6800 ISusie) · BACH . ut1l pd, $18S. mo. bltins 645·0300 2 Br, 1 ba bltins newly
fenced yd & patlo. n ed. $850 Winter. No pets. ne. r, . • sing Uv, &r: Fam. Rm. 1819 . up/$60. wk Crescent Bay. crptd &p~~South schls. $30,900oraasum 494-6452 DeluJle Townhouse, 3Br, :evel,cenlralair.$550yr· Port· Stirling, Comm BALBOA Perun. Year-1435N.CslHwy494-2508 Oceanfront. Lrg I brup· Coa;l Plaza. $200.
7% Ji"HA. 893-25611 l \; ba, cpta, drpe,, bltns, y . 675-4059. Pool $.525. 67s.<r771 Avail round 3 br, 2 ha, frplc. per duplex. Sun deck, 5'0·0988 540-4075 Mewportleodt 3169 Pvt patio, dbl gar. Nr. 11 /1 ga rag e, $325 m o . EFFICIENCYAPTS stove. refrig, Oplce, garl-""'-===-==----~xet/ 110 ••••••••••••••••••••••• So. Cst Plaza. $295. SPECTACULAR VIEW! 581·0725. from $190. Pool , maid, space. $350yrly.2brrear TIMBERLANEAPT8.. ~ •••• '!:.~••••••••••• OCEAN FRO~ 3 BR 2 545-4763-~:!~:~u~:.n S~~~~f!gn Bn~1~,·e~~M~::~;:::~ PENINSULA phone, laundry. Village up~er . Stove. rerrig, 1975 Pomona, nr new de-BA, new paint, crpta, . den, Attractive 3 br 2 ba lnn.494·9436 patio, garspace.$33Syr. luxlBr,dfhW!lhr,refrtg.
•• FOUR-PLEXES ** drps, etc. $450 winter on-4 BR. 2 ba, kids, pet, fncd, new! 2 &: 2 ba, high sha.rp. Fum or unrum. rrplc bltins crp.;. drps. L 28 d JBa Pvt ly. 673-7412. rrplc. enc.I. gar• pool. neartbeocean. Sl.25.000. ly or $650/mo yrly . gar.$300. ceilings. frplc , 2 '854)mo. . . • .. ux. r,. en. · .. ~----"-----l s100 64$-1956
& UP. New, and nearl 675-4534 OLDER3br,kids,pet. balconies! Useolpool & Waterfront Romes $400yrly.673-Z223 Bch, tennl!!I, pool. Winter 2 Br near Beach & Bay, · ·
new. 1.:c:.:..=.:...------1 2 Br, child, pet, fncd, rec. Near UCI & golf Call631·1400 lease $450. (714) 499-2926 r edecorated, laundry, 2 BR deluxe studio, util UDO ISLE BAY FRONT szzs. course. $495. mo. Ready HARB R · Apcw IHNnh funliWd or (213) 790-4601 . parking, adults, no pet.a. pd. Bltns, crpts, pool.
Winter, 3 Br, 2 Ba, FURN. bachelor, kit., Nov.7th.644).8300 4 B o, bVIEWf HOMES••••••••••••••••••••••• O y · M b'I $275. 1116 W, Ba lboa $225.1987Mapla,64S-8al9 _309612 •• _._......_.. uUlpd -F A • r, . a am rm :r. cea n 1ew o 1 c 81 d 673 ~0 "U•.,.. ...... -.. ""VU<Ko • -· ee gt. RENTALS rormal din ;m fmis bed lalDOa lsfand 3706 Home, 2 Bd. 2 ba. Avail. v · -vc.l · or545·5647
Immediate Occupancy. HOMEftMDEIS VILLACil: I bonus rm, ne'ar park. ••••••••.••••••••••••••• Oct. 15. Prefer 1 yr. ren· Corona del Mer 3822 ADULT 2 br, Eastside,
REALTY1Nc. On tbe beach Beacon *642--ttOO• <BR 2,L b ...... schools &t oomm pool. 2 BR; Winter or Yearly. tal.4994364. ••••••••••••••••••••••• enc l . garage patio
Ba 3 b 2 ba U 'IJ , .,...., a1.na ...... •"'•S 1 d Available now • • 714/146-1371 y, r, , nti uly l ·BEDROOM 2-balh GAIDBIHOMES .., mo. nc. gr or. 675-2.136ti Oceanfro nt . 2 fur;-BRAND NE\V 3 Bcd /2 dshwhr, Near n ew.
__ ..,;,,,;:_:.c_c_;,.::;;..c.-1 :;:_3J;50. Incl. util. huge fam rin, rrplc: 3BR,2Baths ·•···· 644-18661144-65'&8 Charming 2 BO, 2 ba , bath, rrplc, sundeck,l_ ... _-_087-'-8------
Newport•s'a..ta., crpts, drps, builtins, THETBtlACI HVH Palermo 4 hr, D.R., Bache~or w/kitc:hen. S17.5. I u Jl u r y a pt s . Ne w $475 . mo. 540·3383 ; 2 IR W /\.OFT
$79,000 3 br. Nr Marinft. "SchJ. ~~..;,'.~ease $325. CALL 2BR,2Batbs -~···· F.R. 2\1: ba, $554). Owner mo. 1n cld . util .. Avail. carpets, new drapes.,-=:67:.:5-:..l~O'l;•;:;~~;;;:::---I (ki ~pe:to~an+theeo· $450 mo. 546-7547 . ..-.,-_, ·-· • 3BR,2Batha .. $4ZS / &M).0008 • now.67S-28fl6 baloonyoverlhebeach .. JEJTYVIEW AvaU. l.lsl ShoJOY,!l.!,!lo"1~p1'c~~~t. ,,....., s . ·Feaced yard. !pSE, LECT .. H~o--.... CH •-AL.-' -~ .. 3707 S385-l410, 494-1055 or PvtH~aTtL;oOFT,frpl:.l~Slse
• .,.. -1~ _ _.. KidsOK snr "'~ ZSTOIYJIDIM --• 111&&& a 4943834 on Ocean Blvd. Onl y .._. ~·
ms court.a &otherrettea· · · PROPERTIES 2Br,2ba,den. vu'800 2 Ba, Clubhouse w/pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -· steps lo Chlna Cove. A 213 A•ocado. CM
tiooal faeilities. De:IU¥ 3 BEACRFRONT Duplex -· . CULYEIDALE tennis. walk to ocean. IALIOA IMM Oceanfront Attrad.ive 2 large luxurious 2 BR. 2 645-0143
Br, 2 Ba. u.nits w /all upper, a Bt', z Ba, n0 3Br duplex, w/pvt yard & 4 BR, 2 Baths • ••••• 1425. 673-ll45/548-28SS. Winter $160-$235 Mo. bd, 2 ba, apt. Fabulous 0Ba DupleJl w/hard.,.ood Mon-Fri Spm to7 pm .
xtras. Owner. 642-3573 pets. Winter. $325 mo, garage S3'15 mo. Call An-LE-RAISOR Incl. util. equip. kitchen, view. Winter rental. No rs. ~super ocean & jet· Sat-Suo IO am to• pm 646-7550 na530-3Cfll. Need posh qua.rten? Lge pool. Nearbus,mkl,elc. pe t s . Days, 494 -1055. ty view. Singles O.K .1 -------~--
WwProperfy 2000 3 br, ram, 2\.1, ba cgndo, 105MainSt,675-8740 Ni g hts, 494 -5602 or SSSO. mo. CaU 644-7211 2 Br Townhouse 1:i. ba
••••••••••••••••••••••• LUXURY condo. Newport East.aide Im. d"'bi:, 3 hr, REALTY f rplc, tennis. pool, 494·3834. AGT. redecorated. '1 cbtJci
DUPLEX 1531 W. Stan-Creawet tb'a2rbrd.2bl\O gba,/f'!!c, !~ b:~rdl~~&Y:~ 4523Camp .. Dr Irvine !~ .. c~!I, view, $550. BthAeYbeFRaOchNnTrl.owerBaylunslo;tnond. H•wport leach 3769 Lovely 2 br, r~lc, gor., O.K., no pet.!. $200 me.
rord, Suta Ana. Al pool TE .... ~" .!'°CAo .... r, pet we'lcome $<OO CamN••Valley"''"-etr. __,,,.,_ ... lOIB-CMission.968-ll.515 tertn.1 VA FHA CL , l"''l.3. _..., mo. • · c";;'U
13
~ . 2 br, forced air, cpts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• yard, If:. blk to tennis ct .1----------'-•
CNL.' sts·:ooo. Com' 67S.7184or6'75-11J10 714-U1·7091 ... 3-8600 3Br Blulfs Tri-level Nr $250. mo.+ util. Winter0CEANFRON'f2br$325. S285.6'73-006lor67S.S419 NEW spac. 2br, 11A ba4
mettialstore,81' W. at 4.ar, 3 Ba, frplc, ~ blk to Lovely Fam. home. Avail UNIVERSITY PARK Pool, Wet Ba.rXtr. Clean only to June 12th. Mature Frpl, Winter r e ntal Large bacb., nearocean patio, earden. Adutts,'ao
St, $47,500. Cenl:W')' 21 oeean. Ve-•·-•· ......... now. 4Br, 2Ba, Fam. 4 Br lam!'• ,_1 __.. walk to Cd.M & &. Blf. adultcouple.Nochlldren w/gar.642-4500 ., 1 pet.s$'l15.842-1603 ' 548-188 •1 -• _.., R A • y,uvc, .. ..,.., Elem.Ottnr.644-4988 or pets 673-1351 Sat & •• 75av -now;Fireplace l yr,ly 119 3Sth *· 988--4544, m, JC, nice yll $375 drpa, wallpaper. Pool, Sun 001y Oceanrront apts avail. 1 person only. 844-4340
N E w N VI p t B c h leave ms1-Avatl. now. mo. 752-6088. pi1rk &: water. Give 3 Br, 2\; Ba Twnhseon the · from $145 to $190. Uli l in·
DUPLEX E·Slde 2 br,
$225. Bltns, encl. garaae.
Childreo ok. No pets, Waterrroot Duplex &r Beach 2 br, winter. $300 Mesa Verde. 3 Br, 2 Ba, not.i« A-mOYe ln next Bay w/boat Slip. Avail. $165. VRLV I br duple:i1.. cl. 675-4873 ; 67S.sax5 or $50. OFF l!t mo. rent!
Rome. Can be purcbued lncl util; alSOtbr garage Dlo., l1e k:ttcben. mo. 552·8S13 10112. SS50. Lse646-2"100. Util paid. 410 Harding. 871--8471 New 3 br, 2 ba. Super
Separately . Open upper apt winterSZ2Sin· S3SOmo.&12-Z156. BEAUT. Bltlts Coondo. 4 Nokidsorpet.sS47·llM OCEANFRONT. 3 hr ~~~~;e~ti~~f:.rS@:7 VlLLAMESAf'rom$205.;:
Sat/Sun 1·5 Pfll. Call cl utU . 1'°6 w. Ocean· B~ .• 2\1 ba. lmmcd. OC· Lg 2 Br, 2 Ba upper. Ac· home, lyrold,dl)l.,a vail. days . Br. patio. pool. No Pf;ts.
· eves. 175-6122 fronL MG-2510 ~ ~r, comer kit., Cal· cp y. $450. Agt. 644-1133 c e 1 s t 0 pvt b ch 3 to8 mo. $475. 675-1849 1-';;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! 719 W. Wil'°°'" 646-1251
646-4104
16 UflT5 545-1521 ,REALTY COMP.AN'( SU'PER plush, beaut. de-w /wash'g lacil. "'ntr. WINTER by park, nea t ..:g.;,cs:..__ _____ _
lNANAHEl'M H-nUafz If ad ll.16AHT corated , parlially lf°~Upd.CallaftGPM nt!W 2 br, 2 ba, dsbwbr. ~ ~:;
FP 1$200000 G ••••••••••••••••••••"•MESA VERDE-Brand GoHC-wYlew fumisbtd3br,2ba,db . $285.mo.5'8-4l63 •Tl b NJ CE 2 Bl', 1 Ba, pool.
aha1 cpl, drps, ell tc
evef)'tbiD..g. $lllO. :s..• sia 820. c'all 'Re.i~!: G111r.. 3202 ~w + erpt4'fly1c, rdlr-2 Bed.room. bilblY eara1e/opet1er. Pool. l>elwce 2 8R. 2 Ba priv .,, or~s .
Pau'JCoa.t tG-11'2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rorslnfam·nn..$175.Aalc eraded cODclomlnium. $400 m 875 7184 ti ' 3 BR , 2 Ba, Frplc . "'I• FR£t: YR.&£ rorCber)'l,-..ollal '900/Jrlo (Y2S) 175-1°'70 o. -or Pt> o,gar,$325.mo.yrly Tutefull y rum. 2 Dr. t
IOUMITSC.MoM •ProleHlonalSen\... µ,lloshat"-t144GOO ' . 20l2lotSt.673-ll4B beach. Wmtor $350, mo CORONA DELMAR ~·=°'l~~-•l.AMDLOIDS• ~~Epvt.~ga~ ~~~-~ lft~~y ~r~~ lfrE .:'a~w:!hdf:"~~e::its1 ~67=5-.::3':.:'=-'------t ~o:r. ~~!i~~~i
· n · Ha•eft: 1161• + ca.r space. Adu.Ila, no 48r,fam·klt..prof".1Ddl~ rncd)'d.$58$.6'4-4tp no.pets$2L5-$225 .6'13-007 Need Temporary Hous· breakfast.Some ocean&
Classlned ads sell bis 642.-ttOO petl.#JS.m.ozll pat/det.k. Nr park/ . in&??? Bach apt. Phone Catalina views. CJose to ~ma. am&d baa or *"l' CiUrornia,s Laraest Fldd h t tenftlt. See at '732 Scot· 3 Br, 2 Ba , Den 2 bib fr. 1 BR llrd story view "°" Wkl y maid H rv. $275 shopping • fine beach.
Item. lca&al0fdl'8, · •Ratal&lnical• 0 11 ~trot&°" -r'n'!J.~ in tsdale, lrv. S360 "rho. bucb, t wimrnint •ten· bli:'tOoc~an. S350. ulll·pd. Mo. No peu. Udo 8'4·26ll • 1 U1 -· 831-24411. I 1 nil, yrb lse. 548-8CZ3 yrly 673-0392 . Hote l, 673·~
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MIWUSTSIDI
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~oi Cllecli'Wlllm CARPENTRY. Cual<>m Prlvatel<Comm=l•l GARDENER : Ex-D' talc 11.ASONRY. CON.Calm Palat/Wal.,.Po<-RAllICTILll.-•
rome·Offlee 8Rti paUo coven A: rep,aln Cmtom patlol, room ad· perienced, Reliabl•. eft .... . CJlETE WORK. A1k for lq. Paint bit·_.., al PATCRPlMl'EIUNO ......... Fr#.._ Sml .,.;rou •. mo.chkbaJ.w'. :~~r:::.:_':f4 Nonn dilloa.1 . Remodel 67$-49~. ' LowC-~ Jak•.W·lm _. •.• ,.., ... ,_ ••ALLTYPD•/ joblwe~s · •W ~ .... 101.su-ua 5'9·4068. MIKEGAROENSERV. lndv/Fam.ib'tmmedCYr 'hp QuaJ: Prof ........ l'Nll:lt .. SD . .\ .
~ TAX Carpent..ry. Bullt·l.na, re· Mtlntenance, lndsepng, Call B. Sootl.$48-Jh4 Jl'in.Pl•c.Plllltln ntftat-ffq 11&, tr tit. VS&Y N&A~ PATCH ..... • ''i!wsiv1 modaLlnalcRepalrs.Cal Electricol c~an u'l. Tree work. Houtecle•'•I Brteit..coacncePatlo .Re1ideatl1I • Com· JOBIJ • aaTUCc& __ __..•••••••••••••
. dualorcorporate 541.o.a1.., •••••••~••••••••••••••• C1ll1ft 6'2-s·-B'--•w-"-BBQ-.-~a ·•-.c-r..-. ... __ _. --~·~·-~-• Llc~nsedWpreparer ....,.... · · ....,. •••••••••-•••••••••••• JUI!(;• llU9 ..--_,_ --i-.. ·--· • -.-...-..~ "
I'"" Call(orconaultatlon C..,.tSff\'lce ELECTRICIAN. Sml YAIDCUAMUP Wantal\2.ALa..EAN Reft,Eftl.MlotM. SO.ml. ·• llkb•Lds:a•• 1 Compl et~aervlcea ••••••••••.••••-•••••••• Jobi, malnt/repain. 22 Co Maint HOUSE?CaUGinaham W11LlA11S6SOtfS ProltuioDUP.UropOa ••••••••••••,•••_..,. C~-I 833-~UOl'm.~19-....CAR.eET XPRTS·18 yrs ynii~x~l08. 548-5203. mp._ ' · MM009 Girl. f'reee&tsMS-51Z3 MU0Dr1:...Brl..ftll&odc Wallpaper lnllalllr, Xbd 'I 0 t I
~ GetitRtally Clean ....... Serriut EXPERIENCE •ston,.CaU511·'1121 WilftSll·.,..,..---rii"Sir.tlee ~ --.!-~~~~~~!............ s~~L .. LRIAe~~ ... ·.11•,1 ···················-·· REFERENCES Pa.la.tta11D--1 .. ,15y,. --Sp11ldslsdl ····-·--~ ••••••• , ...... ~l toVINGCbildCJre .....,. • GwdetlU., "TltlNGs ~· by Moose. 539 7440 828-7032 ...,..... Water-~ntera I• alJs 11 , • .... ... ~a. Ex moth CarpetMan-Re"·-able ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gen woodw«k, repaini, . , MoY'-9 wortauar,takeadvaa-pM&ll, dr-., faue.ta. I ,u •''A _, ome. p. er. .._, J N SE plumbine.etc.842-5613 HOUSECLEANJNGb:our ••••••••••••••••••••••• ta&eotmyexp.531-'70M ao per replPM. S:...1 ' ••' Pfl•P a + u'@:dya.DanaPl.'86-3410 Repa!J'a-lnltallatim ~:!ra~xpe~.~phE~~R 1 Business. Call Juiice's Movla.c/Ha~ Student Prolpalattt,....,_, ces tlQ •al#. Wt Ptrewood. Jlc: air.
·c!:""-tM"'31g &SaJes.Call~l~. Re~asonable/Esti.mates l~OITAU. Rat&edyAnna.67~ w/larce (rue):. Reas. reu. lnt/exf, ftee eat. e M.alr Qaarfe. ue w.mc .
•••••••••••••••••••••••Shampoo & steam clean· Call751-1937. Electrlcal, Plumbing, 8arryM1·9'723'8-5Tl9 Refs 541-27591142-•11 IOONI. Fcwd'al"rel;Slnke Ca"m cabinets, boats, in1. Color brtghtenen; etc. Reas Tates.642-4957 Thorough ~leaning MOVJNGt Z x . JUSTPUl•R• JtxprCNw lc,'bcmded
!iPatiocvr. kitcbnndl, lal· wht crpts 10 min bleach. ~~Illy Mk1alnl/~~1ndscpdg HANDYMAN-Homes re;,.~i,!'n;'=~or re-move you. R!.!,.°'~' PAPERHANGING ·•CALLeG11JJ* &tlu;.;e.Lm..11i7
. ,lice wort 646-5218, Clean liv rm, din rm & ........ spr rs, ...... con • Apts. Conscientious refa.S1s.7172._51i2 ... 1. Protessioaal Reuoa•ble
548.9669 hall $15. Ava rm fl.SO, cleanup642-3331·646·4908 Craftsman.&45-6558 HOUSEWORK PreeEat.Ul.W:aft5 KA.BV'SPLUllBING-T• la c-t colluch $lO, chair $5. Gua Exp. Japanese .Gardener. . 645-7487 rn+-+r"'9 ,.. 1a PETERSPAlNTING No16M1~ .~ •• ! ... -...--••
-r--er em. pet odor. Crpt re· Complete yd maint, Haulll19 OWnlransportalion _,.. r• _,, Jnt,..xt·Reaa:Rate& fll,•,•••••••••••••••••••• pair.15yrsexp.Dowork Sh b Fr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '~ 1 YOt&rcbild Carpentry-C ustom . myself. Refs.531-0101 546 ru05i7 trees, ee est. L.ctscophMJ EXTERIORS SAVE • • CaUGeoeatS.SZ-0&58 AaJ.pltambiqwatereerY, ·ad. Qu
Remod , repair, add-on, . •HAULING• ••••••••••••••••••••••• R .L . Sinor State EXPERTPAINTING le•k•, marbollte W.lm ~tf1St~!~e34. 39.Designs. Free~~•~•~•••• Cleanups , treework , YARDC..EANUP Experienced Japanese Licensed Insured CalJ Int/ext Ourworkls:nea& enclo•ur-;;f r~aa. es · .....,. Pl ed ct' 't •;··~••• rototllling, minor ldacp, • • 556-0347 •• Gardening &: landscap. 979-3335 •OW' Prices. low. Paul 6 ~~lK w/ · r----...iw;.. _ _,
.MlNORHOMEREPAIR I:~y ~o.!.",!YAn, unyca1eae. 10yrsinarea646-2t83. Haul1'n • Anyth·1 g ing.lo,r eeest.&a-3388. HOUSEPAINTING Sons,U7·~aft.5. l12flwt y1etheDallJ'Pilot
1· • Pl b · ea ...... • • n · · · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'f'at Res.ult" atrYlce ',~IC um :n1.-rpentry 1 daysonly.642·7807 John Baker, Experienced Garage cleanup. Relia· Ford's Landscape Inside/out. ID qual/low PAINT6.PAPER BEPA.IRS.:ALLTYPES ' eram ctile. Sf0.5560 C~ ct lawn&; garden care. Cut, b I e , fa st s er'( ice. Sod lawns/Sprinklers rates. Bruce645-53'18. Quality work/IMleriall R lneeslJ l1 directory. Your A<t~it!ons , Remodeling, •• ~ •• ~?:'•••••••••••• edge" cultivate. 982·3408 963-6452. Design Svs ·862-1817 ISA.VE$$--Best prices, ex· J .E.SWENSON...-00 w.fi':ao.soaoa.Q.u~ Mrritt ii°"" 7 f<B~1os. Paneling, 1tmremodl,add,patios, Japanese Gardening HAULING Classified ada sell big t/intr. Any fix-it Jobi. Paintinglnt.Exttorlower apeClalty. ~ab1nets, etc. 492-9739 or kitchens. Design, fr est, Service. Re ul~&Clean AND CLEAN UP items, small Items er any Many Refs. 548·6107 rates. Call Jack. 835.(J608 Find w~at )'OU :want la Call IG-"71ext.3ZZ ...: 832·8026JackorJohn Uc:/lnsr64S-3QJ. Up. Free Es .6'2-3102 645·7307 after& PM item. Just Call642-S678. Jack. Anytime Daily,,PilotQMSifMdl, ._ _______ _
""8 lwwwol1-.._ Apa la1oil1 U..... . Apa 1-11 Uofwo. Apa lwwwola Uofunl. Yacalloo •-4250 Offlco R....., 4400 -.. 11.... 4450 Mort1•1J1•; Trwt P~ 5150
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Cotto Me10 3124 ............... leClch 3140 Newport hacll 3169 Newport leach 3169 Cabin, Big Bear, sips 12, 2 $140 up 1tore-olfices cpts 3200 Sq Ft C-2 stor'e fl'Ollt ••.••••••••••••••••••••• DIVORCE ,if:t•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~···••••••••••••••••••• fpl c!, 3br , sep playrm, drp~ air bath. 17301 with 6 drivie·ln bays. ZnclTD"--W ..... Do your own. avoid WI· ,,~Shoctya...rool• O"" BEACH •DELUXE-col TV, pooltbl. 494-8811 BeachBl,H.B.MZ-2834 Ideal for 1uto or boat WEHAVECASHI netttsarT expease. For
if.ad Br $175. Up. Adults, " East bluff 3 br, 2 ba, Jse . .\YINTER ~ENTAL 1 Br, Lag B'ch. aervic:e. • W. 19th St. Buy 2Ddl'.D.'1 .complete aervtces call
lno pets. 177 E. 22nd St. Incl. spac master suite, in ~~n1~~·~k Palm' Desert. 2 br condo, •lMOFREERENT• CM . Day1 M().5710. eves LoanonZndT.D.'1 m.zsuor83).2Sl9 "'!42·3645 Guaranteed no rent din rm & dbl garaa:e. o PC8C • ....-.· • 1·2·3 Rm. olfices Jrom 846·0881 NewLow.2ndT.D.'s ,.~ . increaaeinl975 Auto door opener avail. FANTASTIC SPOT! furn. $250 mo W/leue. $135 per mo. Near Equity lnvsmt. Div. SPJRl'l'UALREADE&
•W. 2 BR !tngle sty, Pool & recreation area $350 f 3 0 2 8 .540·G998eves Airport. Noleasereq. SMALL retail store loca~· BARNETT MTG. cot .Open lOAM·lOPM .~,am ceil. C6.D, 2043 Efflclencyfrom$239 Adultsonly,nopet.s. · 1 1 • ubnl · Adr, 1 a, BIG BEAR CABrN 2 b 833·32Z39Tilnoon ed in Cannery Villaa:e. &&5-2131 Adviceonallmatten:. 'C .. Wallace646-8883 2Br,1&2Bafrom$.115 rp c, tns,. uts,no · r, $80... mo 673-9608 ' 312NElcamiooReal
,:,K • 38r, 2 Ba,from$475 •Fl«";>M $322• pet11 . QUIET. Crpt.'I & frplc, crpt. Sips 8. \Ye;ek MINI-SUITES tl-2·3 + 673-9393 . • AM:•ct•azAs/ Saoc1emente Forappt
LOE, bright, cheerful. 2 865Am1gosWay,NB drps. PRJV. patio & orwknd. 714 /675-6773 rooms). Xerox & ·secy . , ,,,,.....,,., 4929034 • 4112-9136 ~r. crpt1. $185. mo. •Summer&:Wtnterat . ~anagedby lndry -store rm . 3 servJce avail. On DELI &: COUNTRY Lost&,.._. ' l--·--.,.-----
fl11!f2.•S466 or MS--4483 beach ia beautiful William Wallen Co. carports. Security Grd, S~!~; l;::!d.r!~e~ ~ewport Harbor In Cen· sroRE avail at The Fac-•••••••••ll•••••••••••• 14 of tMs date 10.1·1'. J S~acious 2 Br,'"" Ba, •Vlewsof~an. Bayfront2Bd,2 Ba,Pvt POOL . Wat er pd . cabin . Weekly rates. t1nella Bank Bldg. tory, N.B. $350. mo.Lott&Fomd SJOO am reaponaible·(Of'm)' di Catalina &Palos Bch & pier. $S50. yrly. 646·0086 or aft . ·7PM , calJ 752.1724 642·4644 673·9606 orf173.9383 ••••••••••••••••••••••• debts only, Sandra L.
ressing rm, patio. Nr. S. Verdes 979.1935 &:G44~to co llect 1-273·3551 NOW LEASING ••--Ne-1,_ or LOST/_....,...... Caldwell. ru~,q_ast Plaza. $185. Ph. L rt l d Oc 1 ........,,.., .... ....,. .. ...,...., 1:-vv,,..., l-----.,....---uHJ·2943 •Hargte ppv~~e-Sdttk• YEARLY 3 b 2 b 906 HCoawda i K Ix l~aMn rulnt Prestige Office Space otc •• ground noor. 3'1Xl5. ... A PE'I! Exp. licensed museuese "-"'-"-'"-''-------I * ea ed oo... aunas r, 8 • S• ClestMftte 3876 n °~ a anapa 1• a · Custom Retail Stores $200Mo. Broker875-6700 960-2900Adoption,Low in 50'a. Givei finest ,b".l 1·1 KIDS /PITS OIC •Assigned covered W. Balboa Blvd. Frplc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• By day, wk , mo. Ron Ort. HUNTINGTON Cost Spay /Neuter Info. Swed. mu.9age in your
-o->Q E.SIDETWNHSI parking bltna, garage. I blk to$200 Mo Zbr ezac~to 962·5585. MARINA SUl.F&S.t.t«l h el Sun :a..ih. •Addltionalfreeparldng bay or beach. $375. be~ch ·qutel Part of 7 FOUND· Raccoon Broad home or ot • & uiWJ..CE, BLT· INS. $290 •Maid service avail 675·5487 , . . EXECUTIVE CENTER Shopplzlig V...,.. ' St.&. sa'nta Aila NB. Call Mon. Cpls. onb'. 18t-1153 ,.iµ,_..0~._..,_·_8964 __ . ----1 •Furnitureavail u n Its . seek Ing lentol1 to..._... 4300 Billi'[\' , . l!I Xlnt space for commer I Dr'. stockton8'13-1050. before 5:30. N<Yr SUN. JIEACH YRLY.3br. 2 ba manager /t e nant ,••••••••••••••••••••••• lenant.865aqrtw /~an -OR MON. l 11, 2 IA $230 Open M-Flo-6 dplx. Oceanvu from e.nc. Substanti~J reduction in Straight roommate view. Ample park'g.1465 FOUND. Blk Ii: bm fem.1-----·~----olSW drps, shag crpt. up· Sat 10-5, Sun,l2·5 sunporch. $400 +ut1ls. rent for nghl tenant. d d 1 3 8 So. Coast Hwy, Lag. Bcb. Shepherd I yr w/flea col· IAMKRIWl'CY • .iUUn. Family, no pets 645·1598 Enc i no, apt ·E . nee e ; spac ous r 497·3088 Jar Ir: choker. Vic Harbor Doyourownandnveex·
v:'H1·5162 I;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; (714)547-8017 apart. Share w/Z other 1714114 ... 4493 •----triall....... 4500 &Gelsler,493-2199 Pensive fees. Complete -Hun~ I• ,._ 1 1 £ -" ... guys . $133 mo. 640-8109 -services. 833-2513 2 "Br, z ba famlles · OCUNF,ROHT ..,..._ ... ,. •"l'•ISWd Cdf.1 . SINGLE to 6 rm suites •••••••••••••••••••••••FOUND: Yng male cat,1----------
welcome. Most util. pd. Paci C 3BR,2Ba.SSSOWinler orU11fwN1Md 3900 Sh . B Avail. in plush office NEW M·l Newport, Costa hse brkn, org/Wht. Ja Tn1.-el 5450
Pt· t!) mo. $225. 622 7110c:eanAve STIPSTOllACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• h:rues~c~:~~~~~e[: bldgnr.~Airport.Full Mesa,1000,13X),lf40sq. hair. Airport, Irv.•••••••••••••••••••••••
··' •hiilton. 752-0895 (714)536-1487 3 BR, 2 Ba . $325\Viiiter THE EXCITING Sl20-S175 mo. ~5752 or service 1ncl: Recep· ft. 543·3145or'6f8..2928 979-5012 ManzaniUoMexico ·A-'-'•r-•~ · 3126 3BR,2ba$300Wntr. PALM.MESAAPTS. 831.9279 ·liontst, conference rm. On 'the·beautifulRiviera ~.:::~'••••••••••••• Managed by ~SEA WIMD. MINUTESTONPT · xerox, automated typ· ~D'•SQpi' FTnU, MfCgM_ ~ ':?UNWbDt: Meed.~· Bl~ ollhe Pacific. Nowlorm· William-Walters Co. .. BCH. Working girl moving to ing, etc. Call833-3MO ace a , · ........ • e oc .. er mix. in& ex.Citing newspnrt.a It .. --,..f~ w/ler-..1---------===-1 €ondo, 2 BR., 2 ba., den. Bac_h, I&2QJI:... Costa M>esa Nov has p/mo. M6·7Sl2/S47·at12. Male. Riverside & Coast recreation club. New
ra_c:e, upst.ai.n. no pets, llKETOllACH Unf. Yrly.$475. from$172.50 furn 'd . house, ~ee~a E•::~~~?~!~f"!~s Storage 4550 Hwy.NB.HMl855. Concept.. Lm.ury 8ccom~ ·9 · 675·52m N.1.41 SHOPPINCI-Adulta, No PelB t, e • p . , r o ~ma e w trecept., secy • phone ••••••••••••••••••••••• Los T : Med p u Ii i=iops ~-·
, 1 Ba, View, crpts, 1,2 &3 Br apU, bltns, dis-l56l Mesa Dr. Sl.SO/mo. <213 -4396 service. 359 San Miguel. Storage lot for RV's, etc.. Hun1arian Sheepdog, Croch~re 0, ~le It ~. c:lean. czoo. mo. in· hwaahers,somew/frplc1 <5 Blka EastofNewport RoOmmate wanted to N.B.640·1910orfM4.1880 $8.50 per mo. Neill Sign loat hair coven eyes. MexicoAdventuresS.A.
klti. util. 586-5478 • 6. 2 car garaaes. From Blvd.> share home in HB. Btwn Co. for info. 531·3374 Dearborn. Mich. tae. Vic p 0 Bo 3011 ll~sz~o~o~. ~L~lo:•:•:,,:E:•~t~1~t•:•~·1~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 1-----=-.:.:_""'°==----1 ~a~g~e~s~2S~&~as~·=84!=-1;m~a1t~s~.I Photography ofc w /dark Park Lido, NB. Generous Npt Bc.h, &,. 93663 ...,..0ttleoch ll40 536-2579 rm . A /C , ahower, Reward. Call collect: ~· Female to share 2 Br 2 Ba paneled walls. $48-9768 a.l•111jllt.-est/ 673·5998 f86.0l3'f93.2517 ' .. .. &
••e'••••············NEW 2&:3 Br aptS,QCEANFRONTnewlBr ESOR apart.furn.$12.5utilinc. C.M. . FIR•C• e::..... 2 Ba, 17381 Koledo dahwhr, lrplc, encl ear. upper. Cpts, drps, gar. CM.04&"'3Safl.SPM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• kATHAPPm . •·~ P
d ·--Mer 1413H Ungt I I ~ L If' In ., ••••••••.••••••••••••••• mo. Crp_ts, rps,~ · un on Yry 1e.$375.M2·34'3. uxury o ice preawge lmMlll Gray long haired
ve. -960-1991 Wkdays St, apt B, or catl-538 ~095 -College girl to share furn. b~g-, N.B. Gluaed wall Oppllllz tallllt 5005 Penian. ID Collar• Bell klleoll A
af\8:-30pm. ·or536·1528 2 Br, 2 Ba. steps to sand, ·2Br Apt . w/same. $100 + view.645·3700 •••••••••••••••••••••• wa1 t1ken Mon. Eve. He ........... Frplc, bltns, patio, $315. Util Nr OCC 846-3846 'h d •••••••••••••••-••••••
EAWT/THLGEEB>EABDCHR..,•" 2~lfPRE~~N~i~8: yrly.642·8686 LIVING Need. h . pt . CM Sinf'.gle &:I dou~leroomd of. c::,b:::e:e=-~ Be1innin1,sailillt.leuons -~ N Con se or a 1n . . ices oc. to mo ern Beat.___ Sour comer of 2Jrd Ii: Santa in Huntington Beach Huntington Harbor Area HunUnatonHarbot Area ewport Terrace do. 3 , Offer fast . Must be con· center, util's furn'd. By ~ IRr' • Centh.J P•u1t. Nut class
Adulls 846-4150 ADULTS .....,.. br, '"" ba. $350. Upper •enial.832-9589. themo$75tol00.540-520I ECO..,OMY ~na CM. No questions
l91.h St. 968•9186 6
f"llll 1-;;aa~k:ed::=o:r ~call;:;-'114$-4586~:;;'~':;:-l~·~ta'!rla~~Oc'-tober--lL--C-all-Fem. to share ranch type Offic:e • warehouse h d 675-1056. w l lediwrZ ID '".. ~44 Duplex unfW"D, 4 BR's, 2 Oakwood offers the home w/same. SlSO mo. apace, new from $50. A few stores are 1till Found : 10U black Lab, ....... W..t.cL 7075 fireplace. blt.na, FA ••••••••••••••••••••••• bath • u PP er .1 0 n fmesl in resort living at a orange. 673-5010. H.B. by Marina High. available a~ Shoppers wE /d~~ Mtall; !!.tn!!~i ••••••••••••••••••••••• a\. c L 0 s E T 0 NEW Ranc:ho San Joa· Seashore, slepe to oc::ean. price you can afford. 846-1177 Village, a high volume · "-'Vltta esa. _.ZHt:lti EAN. SCHOOLS. qulndeluxetownhome,2 $450. mo. 6'0-6161 ,Don There's Sl million in Respon1iblefem.toshare•I-====------aboppera mall. If YoU Eves. CX.EAN~G ~·Home,
KS 6. SHOPPING. Br, 2 Ba, den, San Joa· Glenn, Agent recreation raailities ex. lge 4 br duplex, IA blk Newport Beach deluxe bave the merchandile apt., olfice, · Wantoore-
&$360. per month. quln Garden Plan. Vlew. 3 Br, bltns, frplc, 2 Ba, NIGHT LIGHTED TEN: to ocean. $130 mo. UUI. IA~tes fro'!'_ llF'ulilper ';Q,· rt. w1 e•1u put u.e1 loot tr
1
atn( FC~~i~iJ':dt;l:;,s;;~~~! eular b~ais. 648-0191
N T R 0 G E Rs Avail. •OW. $500. 522·4010 dshwahr. Ocean View. NIS COURTS. A full time Incl. Call Gary845-466S ir, carpe.:., . paid n ,ront o YQU. I YOU Dally Piiot, P. O. Box Baker retired offds pt
REALTY orM0-1287 eves activities direct.or who . Broker815-6700 don t have the men:han ti b-• t I b · Wlnter$310.813-24.93 plans parties. BBQ's, 2 Br hse 1n s. Laguna w/ .11--, • 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca me -ery, res, cu , ---s be I •• OI u.a.rs:, .we 11 ~Ip you obo .......... hotel work. 548-5161 . trips & morel Free Sun· ocean view. $140 mo. mart aut. WTL "6e -tatn tt. JOlD 100 other __.. ·
ach.JJJ_yd. W~ton L•••• .. _.. -Jl41 ON THE BAY day brunch. . Straight M-F.499-Ql. fice Suite. J!ett C.M. & merchants, who are FOUND ·. Fem.·~-· Set' • 2 High school students. Adam1,.f.b&sto ••••••••••••••••••••••• Duplex, yrly. rental. Pl b UI I . NB 1-Takeover lie or b I ~-N Alb ri~ Ou d' b ba us eau u smgles · · ...... eat n• the So,ur '-r, approx 4 -. old. eed housec:leall'lng a ama, ..,tone ~ Drop a pebble' into th tstan 1ng 3 r, 2 , 1 •. 2 bedroom 1 • Male/Female,2BD,2BA, share. $195. mo. • u:: .,.u k:to202Rochester Oc from Y A: frplc, 1800 sqft. upper. ""' ap s , apt. $121 /mo, Pool. jac-6.f.2·6?S3/6f4-6815 ·Economy at Shoppers Vic. sa:nla tsabel..,CM. jobs. Wkendl or after ean r our P · Boit dock avail, Newly furnl.sbed & unfurnished. cuzi , etc'. Forested set-1-"'-'-"'"'-'-='----1 Village, rnM N. Maio St., 6'5-1427 Z:JO C.M. area only. Ex·
Lease. Luxury, HCurity, deror'd Sundeck S46S Model• open 10 . to 7. ting , Call Bliss at SUPULOCATIOM SantaAna,.834·15Sl perleoced. Have re-R ftew J br, 2 ba, Matureadulta.31755Cst. 615-420Ct . . Sorrynopetsorch1Jd~en . 751.5334. · F<>UND : Sheep Dog, Vic. ferencea. Call Sue -gara1e;trom-$27S:'""Hwy;-49t·~ · R-oomaui.t.e se_r__y 1c 17thSt,CoetaMeaa Bi 1 Vlctoria&:PlacentiaCM. ·979.9421 or Tammy
AlJoJbr,21,.iJ"ba,$115 .. AU . ..1--3Br,2Ba,delux,3doorto ava ilable. Month t G forll...t 4350 S5hqft11·$315. cyceDealenbips •.:540-:::.=2115=.:7·:_ ____ -'~..:848=.·:.:1256=------util pd. 'lf2Znd:St. Open Wide ocean.--•· Lge 2 best beach. $.115 yrly. month occupancy. •ege• 420aq $190. Choice areas, trg. &. ln·r s.l/Sul'I 1·5. Agl. No fee. brl ~ ba.. lwr.wy_ apt. Hi&h 646·9218 or815-0655. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 353 sq ft $150. ventory. Top bikes &: FOUND: Multi-colored Reliable wkg girl will lt.orl46-t938 ce 111, sep. dioinC rm,1---------StorageGaragefortentln Cal1833-90ll8 s porting goods. Mr. female kitten vie. of bHclean, babysit eves or
estate liv1n1, gardens, OCEANFRONT 2 br, residential area $2S mo. 'PRIM-i 'o-sr•CE Baker,213.f.Sl·Ma. Mesa Woods w/flea clr, ·wknda.873-027ieves
,patioApt.lblkfrom pool Ii 1~1e to bltns, crpts. drps, O k Ple1se call alter 5. ..,,.. '"" Be Ba .~-~ 81 .... 5S7·7412al'ter5PM. N ch, StlfS. mo. See beach A: a . $475. garage. 1 ba. $370. yrly. a wood 642-1861 LW.Yllap& er r, ......-._-..-u., , , une, eaper. full Ume. anagerD,HB"l4tbSt. mo. Incl. u\I . Adulll. 645·3655 · Sllep.... C.M. 140,000 Gros1. 6rthwes1.eril .. Univ. rtn1 S30asbift.,llveout,.ref'1.
-:.i=:::u::: .... =-'"'°='-· ___ 1_ ... =.::;,.;.:;a"'a?:;;•_.:-""'-=''-T __ 1-=='-------1 Garden Offlc1R..... 4400 3416,'¥'""~ _ S20,ooo Net. Ellt.,.. yrs .. 1oun11H.B.0t11..,..... 91Ma05 .. Apartments ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ..-. "9 Ast. $36,ooo; $15.oooDn After 3:30. . JH,~olp'-w'--'----7-1 o-o
Ire 2 br. 2 ... dlx n.nky cottare.frpl. $325 150 I w-~au. ..._ 1 suite •P-· eoo sq ft. BAY ••EACH ' lde aptnr·bch Adil 3 Bl\ apta· Sea Terrace L •5 'IRIS .. S Howpwt hech . -.n.11TT ...-. View factns Via Lido. REALTY 175-3000 LOST : 8111: Female •••••••••••-• .. ••••••• no pets $175.~. ' $3&5; Nt•'uei Golf c1e · M. "' lrvlne ai 161h Newport Financial Ctr Inq. Owher:-oreyer . Cockapoo, named "Pt:P-Aide to help wtlh invalid
P50 6•S.OSSO LHalftCJ Office Spoce Company. ('fl4)975-7002 LlqllOit UCllNSI per·~. Vic. Cdm. 1144-Wl lady. Possible live In .
I BR nr Hunt. Harbr. AUAvalllblenow For discriminati ng CaUonSJteMana«er OrangeCountyOn-Sale or6'75-6000.REW O. 963-3$4.leva. ·~~.'~Mo.~~~· lge Also h~e~l¥winter WatcbtJ:!~unaet R 400 (714)642:·3lllext2'6 11200~=~Hwy, GCOCKeneraTl.AILS'·OLD01SSNLY~ Loil. B'ik Lab Pu·p Aluminum Window
rf f overtheocean ooms HB 900 • -w/white ctiest, beard. Kanuf. Working Sb•~t BR 28a w/patio wat.e root.I roni$300 •••••••••••••••••••••• · · · IQ•.,.-•vmo. ._ .. ......_ Vi Alb t S -r • • GOOD REAL Beach within steps LIONS ISTATIS LWMl'QIKY ...-c · er aons, an ·Foreman. Exper'd In fU, crpts, drps, P/W, , 1 BEDROOM Pvt ent/K. priv. CM 1121Btbc. KB. Call 11.r. W'mston Clem . .f.88:-IU8Rew. ablfDiDI, receiving.
bib to beach 6 Hunt· ESTATE ' •Heated.pool $25 /wk & $60 /mo. u ~ Collect (213)zn.c:M9 ma r1 coatrol, aome
ljlllonHarbour.-5317 • 494-7518 * •Sun deck .548·59Mor556-0058 SALON forklllt..truckdlapalch. 4
.s;aut. aew J BR, 2 Ba, 2 Br, 2 ba view. -..1c, •Private balcony ROOMS $25. week Up wit v""' c.. ••, CPA bas omce suite to S BEAUTY To Place your Day worlr. ...._ «t hl'll.
frpk:,w /yard•ear.pri. beam clnp, ·~-:.·•dbl •Adequateparking kitchen , 548 ·91-55 o ;,/c..,,;..~ lease. 250 l4ft. With or mtnveat,bl&~tial, '"F11tResult'' O,ood P•'Y· 117951 p.uo ..... _._ D/W e; ........ , •Elevator 645-396l ./..._ w/out ·desU. Separate 1uper Joe Ill" Lido lale. Ai'mltroa1A~Jn1oe. U7lta r:,;;-be';°c~i.: Hwit• 11r. 811·1100;Jllt.5001 •Security ~==-~. entrance. oc· Airport Top cllenta, at aft. Service Directory ~Harbour.8*-51'17 ELEGANT,luxuryJitory Fumltureavailable Bac:1i Bay. Room w/p ~.,__..... area.152·1353 Noooperator owner ad .•. ·• Call Now
Lcnely n~• 2 BR, 2 Ba. apart. lo duplex. Llke Lseid:!~dN~ryBe~l;t.I ::!!'e1!1~~v~~U:SU~. ,....=.-.=-.,~ eµsJNESSorMed.orc•a. ~~=BkrTerinl 642~·671 14~~~5:r!:'rts ·c crpts, drpa, fo':i1~~:e=...'T."i/.'2 residence .... ., .. bel9AM. Prete 488 l<4T2sqtt.at40c sqft. F s I Indoor Pl bl. Hl nail., p /tlme, tnclud
' pr!. paUo. 8 Blk:a r II b • 2 551$Rlveri\.Venue non amoking workin Will redecor . l$i5 -or a e, ant · ... d • "-f•d bb.c:..a~ ~=~~~.!= J:~:;;~~= Pwom:nover25. , IS•PRS9FJ :0~~-lor Ave. NB ~:Pre~~;t~.Nl?; ·a.AsstFIEDwillHlllt. ;p~,;u*-r _pre •
~-------1 ly No pela Rafa -vt._,,oom l< Bath f lSlTWESTCLIFF-NB Share office apace, SU cond.Tll·TTl4,-14. l'fta•ola IJIO. Al'f'T,SIClllJIJIT ~~ LOWIST191T'. JM..., 18110..eca.iue Ocean View. Brttl rent, Colta Mt111a Nr. AGT.5"1~ mo new complex CM w-... IOJO ••••••••••••• .. ••"•••\. iTelepbone. eves
I br Madt apt.a . CaJI ' • 1paclout 3 bdrm twnhle. CoUe1;e, Kll. filcU avail. PROF.ESS'L~A area. S48·00M · · ~·••••••••••••~•••••••• Drtil.tia•Pl'obletnt (5~1Pll ), our office. •dd'U lafo (714) $300.Hu1elbdrmduptn. Eves aft 8/Wkndlh $3i5CI t&.S.551-6529. Bid · 3 0 Weneecla2nclTDcxaour CaUAlcobolHelpllDe Cd.M.XJ.ntsalary.Pleue ~ Deck, ocean view on 1 ~;nter. T2C»li\ Sea.shore i..r•e room with -prtv. g , .story. 27 ~ Three or t Executive ot $50,000 bOma wltb DO atbtaaday......, *> aot •PPb' .._ 70U
""
• •••To-·CH acre.-.2211. · bath . 8 t 1 h 0 m ~arJ>« 1:J~.=,_.1'. ~r fices, (layOUL Oatble>. polnta. Ex.illiD&Utllon· _..a.a expw'd, Mlt •-
- -B f t ftan'o amlc prlvile1 s R 1 condrap'e'a• •.•• rpe~,-· "1a • Conference Rm, Exec. '-Sl.f.,000. Want ••'"CNI, Foxy Glrt•a Ou.t Calt t:'ured. petauatlff 10-i lll-~ .. -bltm u-w,..rt-'!II•._. ay r..on r r . e . e erencea. e ec ~ ~,....... 11 • ... ,.., • .--·-•...-Vlew1 I Br 2 Bl $S'75 yr· 1?9·0205 · muaiC 'janitor ,,:. ... kln ·• • BaUU'm. Jdeal lotatl 14'1·2111 ••••••· U Call, We 1elt'r wbo pref en a ·JOI. M7·m1'; ••••••••••·····•••••••·•·• 1 11~· 11S.1ee1 R • • _. I · forlor,.fprol,t ,111 Com,. Sp~clallae Plti.1D•PolkJoa.f'J'l.8aO , GSl:$311-J058 1 Br lbyfront, bltns.tie y, or $100 Newport, lar-e M . · Stever, M1r. avail. on auW...a&.. s.cond. TD. Sl.0,000, l"' Plrap1e&lb..5a-lltt (an)'Ume)
•
Dur bMcb. apta pati:ufr, lllpxtra.112$. 2 Br Apart, \\ b),k fr. turniabed private. en 557·0l3Bor648-83118 sqrt f'rom llJternlt.kln lnt.erest. Well MCUred In .
1 00 pati ,171 • 11a. Ote1a, mature adultal trance, bath, patio EXECUTJV.E auites on SecUrittee Ocrp. 2121 Sa Cotta ·Meaa. Aaent C·--:i>1,REONANT'!'? 'Are Y•T•Y..-. Mio \ ' · trl.v $275 mo .. Cal linana,cln.ec5-11At. Newport~. 400 to Joeqllia Hllll Rd.. NB •1'N ·co~~~ c91r1~~aJ ,WAlll •f' :;:-;:=---'-----! OCEAN VU:W DELUXE e1J.e112 ill. TPM or I I I i..-• 2200 1q ft. S.f.2·4844 ; 141-$100 ttart1111a. tr..t A~rtloo'.',•do'p-U-o•' al... Lat19 coaet111 .. <ipan.
----IBr,bltlna.prqa!'* -·' • • .,,. am-me"~" -~~ IOJI -r M ~hrl0Ult6l1l7a18 ""''"""' -~. -,.iy.-, kltcb pHv. Exel~" · · •t11lo1•I-'441 -~I· • 'l'o m llmtlilalnide ....... _.,. WALK to Ocean. New 1rea.$1$0.'10-&101. Prime HWit. Bch. loe. •••••••••--••H•-•• ••••••••••••• .. ••••••••1 APCAlt1:5a.-s I ' ti. lo tra;rtl ..ire
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-6 •":"':!~~~is~ ~:· i~w· 2g':;· ~· lloonl" klldl prlvll•I 1romst:1s.mo.1i>c1c1.ut11. Da.~.!i~•· eomm LOANS !'-fl!NICV ,,_ u.s • ._, ••••ndom .,.. ...... .._ Md.ft ' 8o .-. • I • · O • ivall 3 '8r N La ....... 5075 W.arner Aye . . .,_.. WA» FBA~ ltlaenrJ~ 0-.. re-• •,=:aeldkl MMl7I -":!. C:,O·J:./Mz,~~K. horft ~ W/pool: Deii; M -4.Mt · ml•L warebou111 .1 latTDu•19% 11.AS&VJE'Uo. turn. a Wffk •apeaae
... l8r lll8 6'11a. . #{ Jtral&hl, 59P, tmPlo)'ed NEWPORT prden office ~~~':*:.'!tr 2-l1D"-........ tfl llll ~,,tralnln.s proctam. •1'11&\t .... crpt, J ........... YflY, Cali I Br, 2 ba, rtdec., ~ bllc 111ale or female. J\et1 A aultef troal o inc:I util Ian Diep p;.,, aoo P'atr.tTerwaiwJ.Mt ....... tfl •Its t ~••er ... t~'
::_Bdw•tar ....... ,.. · bay, bch 6 tfnnis cf.1. lnterylew req. Ill· Some wareboiuM Avail: .., .. n. M&ft.u Sillller .... C.. 1111,.u.tm.Cll ,:,.:rJ.:L;:,. a 0 • -•11 mo.mo.yrl)O.J41.-4M·UGor11..-1161T 1167.00SI t Pol'.A'ln.U..1400 • w -21n · MHllt toAJl-UPllAl·l114 canUl-8lirr.
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llUl:BTATE IM Clort ... , II ....,. .--11tt .,;o.;;~
.. Kft'W'lt,. Pried~~~ · ,.nn•"9 6 reUable: •••••••••••-•••-•••• •-•-••••"••••••••••• ••• ·-••••-......
· .. ...... .-. -•• ...,, •--• --W.IA'IS AM I..,._ Heodrm•-• ..... 1 ,_ I• Mei*''••••· WeM"9a~,,......_ Afp_l• la ••r•••· .._.,0 __.l'W!. SMOWASA.1 11rome. • rW"ll ..t. 2 0 ill penoa • .,._ b llalf . .._.. omc.. I :._. M •ell 4lJ . ~ 9 " • ..-... " A••Aelm OoD•entlo-. 1\t 1r old Del• . ......,, ftl'lilnc with young people or t..1.aoac11, ParsooallHd ........ lo!-. 1111-. ,,,. !":°'>..::"' .:.":. 111,doo c.i.r, ..., w. IUlolla, kllld 6 io¥..,.. _ -_;~;~"'!!'!'11 JJktll of ill slz llYPllMCNOPI. -11 --1!1!"· A~.Cll c ...... M ••• A ...... rro .. DlanoyUiiil. P'AMILY~-e. "'. ~ ,...,_ .,e.VmorJulls&e P it.Im•,.,._ llialNtHc='r1' 1U...SAL.SIPS81DN wut.tid W••l•la-ttr, i, •CU1blton.Oct2,S,4 , I mq. old ML ataU. wqoa required .. Excellent olc aear O.C. •01t off,eoa. 0•11 1•1' 1•••1 compaar. LakewoH •rea. Parl s. 'fttun/PH!SM l·topm, Shep. blt • tan, .
cwn!,'lplaaDt"1' may_,, up to $300 a..ua..-.-Aa S..7711ud"*lor-, i..i.-. • ..,,.,, Ume, aal+eomm. Call SU•»tl&UL.tcu •payed ·--u111~..,
WI <7· a 642""321 ext 219 tor in· aoc., 1401 Quall. H •••t appearance 6 all., 10.mm.crr-tm PRODUCTIONS well tra nod. I!"' .llniew. L _...., m.oo'IO. f,•r1oeali1.1 . Ccmtacl WlWnitoWortttGOOllCo ~e, but=:.w:C-:TO
· ··-' Uve4n. Nr .....,. CD}( cG!l9fl lJ~l'l:f" oeeda ....,ky man lo; llcydtt IOZO ·.~1~ to ..... ~ Elauat Op~ty Employer Ute baewrtl for 1 lacb' REAL ESTATE SA• a o. Wl a. a 8' baodlaw ..-Ip tJMel ••••••••••••••••••••••• $81·1310' da1" 4M·11'9
Mu1t drl••· $300 mo Uctued or wmcwct. lrvtlle.l• I 1 ~ ' met.I...;. la lillt. 8dL %UICI nes1 •
m..tmlt. WiUllbe ....... cuatolll•· s.i..11 1 Ila, .... U11u1trorVem. /II.._ i Samo;.l ~~~~~~-=.'.j~iiw_._. 7100 ...... W-1100 1-;;;~~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;j 101 ud '""price or WIU. alat __.rial w-wU!Od to -10 1,..illcycloa Pinbrcd em1 lld•:I
Atteadaat ...... CBo -••• := .......... =:r. •••••••••..••••••• 1• auolia•t.beleda>'l.ftJ 1kUl1 for .,i·t ••••• for hou1ecleaaia1 sro ...... c-e •P•)'ed. f.ente w T ~Cbrislia),toU UUa .,.W.fot ... 10urcom· ma~u_er. 11 ... tory Mivice ,Call8ts.A\t., CYCLEWORKSLTD MS /bttof .96.'W?al la6care~-fc:r2 e ~ct,. •PASHlONACLEY• W to llliNioaletmt•'fftf« ' "&e·Mr..u.d :!!.! -t.mNewport81¥d. .&e.mard."A&nft['lll"
wbo.,.. ~~~·rt• ed.~:: J8<,~~~-=!f~~E Uh':t:..-n:t.' I Pla~u.tlap~ b7.::. ~=.::J You~c 1r;rsoai ~J";;; eo.tall..a.541-571.1 l ~ yri. Male.. tr.fJ , ·=~~:::_:-+w wl1wc n11«, •STOREMANAGER• EscelJeal~ ~-~... _. =...., w ... :U,'%at..~ ~r~ Womeaa 10 spe"ed ~;::9:,t~"" fOll &d r---:-~-==::::;--10.......,,_~for •DEPT . .MANAGER• J _•....:. ---inl ~~reet .... ltloa w .mE1'7tbSt.(;w. Peiaceot, 21 lnc:b, Uke ... , · re
A...UTO D&LJVS'BY JuaUf~_ ....... Call •SALES PERSONNEL• ApptyP-e,.....lOMM rather tU& a i:b. A new.f".-Mixed DobermantStwJp,
&e1later 'Newspaper ,._.<(JUl)W, Exe.Salary/Benefits. 2PM .... Pll,,._llini"'h'l ~i.. ~--lmowltdparkift ..U· -Glfll Uo Schwinn St Puppies. 1 wb old..o~
NeedreM.dilecar. ICALIDrAll'Coadi· F\atu: ... ~al THl lROADWAT .nuntinpc11111c:bto&IU taci;Jdtillnblif. d •••••••••••••••••••••• in aye b: xtmcond 586-0431 ··••
All, 1·2 •rs dally-. OoollPWO'· ryp. Call .. ;:···1•· .. 6&5--~~~ CO.lalleaa-•U llt~. S•orid.,., (710 *5 .,.!•..2.108•· I I •• ~~
5*.,., "..,."' =u.oeaeraa Office. ..-w ..-. set .-. ,. •••••••••••••••••-•••• -· s m a 1 1 • n _• t • ......, ......_ Equal ·1Euf!Aoyer ltoel .... S.0 PUIUC ••-OM "SSpd Glrb ~" Xlnt Dacl1'und AKC. BeotV-Auto tnec:~ Xlnt ... ..., J.r9a.,f'or FAST FOOD Eatabllabed m ultiple Sate1womaa,._tnatyre, ~·• 211 · DlAe, fer . Hou.te·broltt!D.
\y. New~t,.Bch are a-..ur... CAFITlll• MA.IDWANTCD saletelftH.ll)"OUhavea f/timeperm.Dabnkmor M,\NVITEllSOFntl!: Con4. U•ed twice. Must 498-192'7. f\4;) ~ .. •IU3.!..t~.or 1tt.·Ca.sslON Mature persoo.·H.rs lic:enaea'wanttohave Coata Jleaa. lilt JEWELRY , ART aell.,.0.9'19-M26. ._ ___ A
•' -·-'7•2:10, Weekdays onlY. '""Time* call one Ol lhe heal locallom Newe<>rt Bl. OBJECTS, ANTIQUES, Cah 1035 SIUH TZU Pupo, -.
Willlrain."'-1991. MesaMotel•tMS.*1 iA the harbor area. eaU FIJl4"E FU.RN .•. "ETC . •••••••••••••••••••••••of joy, champloft
All'l'o••onn ·····-o1-o1. Pau!Martlll,'44·-for -••• ,-.,.. PHONE FOR INFQ,.. PRSIAHKITTIHS Shota.541 .... 7
DMV-COMIL\CTS ::·=~r:~ .. MtSl •Mi Mana1ement app't. ·-·--..•• -... Good pay Is t.eeeflta. BROCHURE.6'5-2200 S.W-S'l5. ISl-3644 . (2> Male SilkY ~.
!•perience bllplul, Co•ta Meta. Call PO~ PEOPLEPERSON Fftime. Public cont.act. Toall ourf'riendl AKC , 9 week1 41.fl,.
will train Ibo rl1h ... t::, Aa11 for Keo Furniture •llfg~ neoda Exec. looking ror part [niitil''-HallllH l lt CaJJClndy,00.llM. in OranceCouott PERSIAN Kille•, !em, 54f.41&9or"37.--r • penoo, Call u1-lie r=o.' Foreman to 1uPervl1e u.·me buaineu auoci.•te l.111 Ill f \ 51e•-••y JO ...... ..:..._ ... S 3~ mo'' beaut": shell ~ de .--.... t -1 10 ·'" I -·-"""'W"Wllll""I ca moo. 'sholt·, bo• AKC Old -. .. 1"-" ~-alMS-5100. . * D ~ * pa • ......_p ... .men. 1n. · ,....bole1ale supp 1ea. "aALTO"• Must have auperior lyp-~....-. ~ ::;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;j__:nu~~Ja~rA~n!:_l 11.wt be ,exper. in all Busi o 'as f u 11 y inc ••b akllll. Topquali· • ANTlqUl5 trtloed. $40. to Id home. dog Pupp1, female, lbot.. • J!bueaor~fmbhlng. c:apltall&ed. Interview •lhca,.lin'• SSZS ty OD IJ Dffd apply. ilha•lqtmlrannual Slf.lllO. reuooabte . .-..rr . AVON Coa1ei•nt4wa C9UPles. ~~Mr.,,M a'r~ue a, S73-Z223 ' Advert..fltm.Dream lrriae area. Perm poai-En~;:1innmer ,. SJameSeKiLtenlS2$.MaieFnetoY• iM
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Beot lnlla'e. Gnat pt MAMICWJST Job.Pbones,OimU. tioa.Call1141$56-m7for Saleon~Stock & Female. 9 weeks oos. ••••••••••••••••••!e!.'•
11-emp.-' POODS8YICE . MldtDoPecll-~~~lnjJi.R~ •Pll<· • upto .. OFFI! .... ..,, · KITTENS7wkaoldio! COOi~ A iiLllAMT Neoded!m~ EmploymeatAaency . SECURITYOFFICER mstatSLN.B. ftw 1040 TogoodhoCDet.
' N•wr.rt Beac:tL. 5 Day l-.. ~. B 67MOOI -......••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Roa1t a. Nt&bta. Must al ' C Dt l O 34GOlrvU1111<,-.cl08 IOllJdoPartDr,N.8. haYe kveral yearS ex· wee . Equal Oppor. a onry o rac r NwptBc:h 1'14 /~ 175-11014pm-midn.i&ht 1----------1 lft'W()lllft St Be rd "Al ~ ..
8 A V 0 N p er In lat ct-ass Employer'. For appt. ).o;eeds Laborer, 1JM11 Armoire-Mahog. W/oak •P • ., ~ • . rna . e~JIQlM:e REePR~lnENTATIVE .. reata'uranU. Call Cllef, (213> 648·3408 or (714) ave ex~· Call btwn RECEPT/TYPlST, con. Service 1tatlon atten· lining Ii: brass book1. Cockers. Chlhu.abua, l 'AI yrs. Mal,.
Be . you.r OWD bou, Ht!•'•••· EOE. 614.1700, $48-0671, ext495. P'S~., -(ii· t slnlc:tion background re-dub. full • put time $150. 552-8176 Poodles, Shib·t&u , G. trained. 173-10el. -.I):>
your 9wn boun. No es:-erts:n. Fry Cook, e-n......'d. Avail M •5• If._ • quired• . 548-87 pos~~lo.,.n• ~· ..... ~1,. Brau Bedl,:.E6 RocCa ten, s~orthaJr, Pit Bull•, Free to Id home. -lnk "_.. ,.. ~ bu-. --,...,.... 30T b&el ~ binet m1ni·Scbnauie..i:-. Poms. mile pood.Je. umo.. Very per. nec:es1. Trainioc COOi: days to work oof:ree shop Openin'9for~. lec•,et•'lt Harbor View Shell, 2500 a • . • Peke•. West1es, 100 frlendlyfscute.MS-MN. provided. Call5*'10Cl,or . · . opera\ion. Good oppor. • orloexp. Needed foa:_ front ofc. San. Joaquin Hilla Rd , 200 Cbalr1, 11n1Jea Ii: mixed puppies. Stud 1 va , ... ,
Zenith7-1359. St& alt es. immediate APP I Y • RI g g er Callfor inlo.Upmoa Muatbe neat,pteuant.lr: Newport Beach · sets. etci/lclota more.All moatbreeds.~W.17lh Free to good home JMle ~~~~~~~~~j.openl n I · Ap ply 11" Restaurant 16 Fashion &45--0fll4or67S-0259 enjoy dealing w ithe American antique oak, at Fairview. SA. Open Manx 10 wk old kitlib.
p erso n . Spaghe: fl Center. Ns aft 3pm · public. Mult be exper'd Service St ation Atten· allwboleaale.6'5-3222 eves.53l·5027. Call&7~4 :30pm .....
BABYSITl'ERWANTED Bender. 820f, W. Coast daily. • Mature woman ror live-in 10 handling a busy dant, exper'd. Day le _ _21~760~M~oorovl~~a~,~C':!.M!:._. -J-;;'::':'.;;;;;;';;;";;~~;:;;:::::-!;;'::'::::::~=:=:;"=:;;jii.~
Young L::!~e, owii Hwy. NB. GlRL FRIDAY !LAB AS-CcadrMe 64or5_s53trok16 e patient. pbooe. S Day wk. 9am-Eves. P\lll 6p/l.Jme. Ap-Hurry' SeltiDC out entire DogOBEOIENCECJus Sm POOdle, mixed wtdi 1.
transportation. r e· COOllS SIST. Typi'ng &kil ls & . . .Spm . Apply i.n _penon, ~,Sbe11 Statioa,17th6: stock. Dealers&: de-tostartWed.Oct.29 Male.Blk.Snuut!lwks.
rerences, &t\llent/ part For Lulieb 6;.,.Dinnf!r some science back -OM~ Tues thru Fri, 1545 lne,NB. corators wel come . 7:30 P.M..Newport. 646-6434. 1l'I
t i m e j ob 1> JC • Shi&. AppfJ Jn penon. ground. MOri-Frl, 1-5, MEM•W 13"'111 Newport Blvd.C.M. Service 1tation help ex· Gin1er.J ar ADUQues 1U67 lrvlnearea.548-4928. FREE puppies & kittens.
64&-5745167HU4. Ma Rafter'~ 212 E. 17th Nwpt Bch. 675-8499 Mature Individuals c:apa-Rec:eplioniat·Docton ore. per. mmt be able io do Church Sl. C.M. 646-4324 CHOW. CHOW Pups . Most under 6 mo'1. Call ---~--='---I St, C.M. ble or general ofJ1c:e Typing & sh a must, will light repair le aen'l serv, or by appt.56-3967 AKC, Red, 4 inale t ~-9846. ,1,
Babysitter/Housekeeper c-~~Olt Grandma type hsk pr. cle~i:ilng . SupplemenL train, $450 per mo to at.a. work. Mature, local 'ust opened. Refurished Fem.,5wksold.546-4676 M LY DOG ·b Loving lady wanted P .Z ~--5'parate rm. +am. Sal. yo,µr income_ with 3Ya start. 54&-007$. reft. z:.>O w. c.out Hwy, "oak 1 . 1 • . FA I , •,
giril, 7 to 10 yn. old . 4 wan ted ,for Gloria 2 teenage girls, wrJne. hours work 1n Laguna NB •nt ques our :spec:1a · GERMAN abort haired 9 mo old sm. GerfAln
days wk 2·5PM. Refs. tt· KaJ1ha11 Tiiure Salon, mother. 5$7-6732 Beach area, 6·9PM, Mon· RECEPTIONIST · · ty. Dre11er1, TOB '1, Pointer pu~. AKC reg. Shep 1 blk & tan, fe"tn.
quired..,-own trans. w t 11,f area Will day through Frida)'. Service Station Allen· tables, chain, hall trees. Atl shots, 3 f, 1 m. $15. spay~ aweettemiiered,
548·2M7art6PM. , tr"~ . .Vuatbeattrac:t.lve; GoUAIDS $2 .50 Per hour. Call Must have pileasant dants, c:ompetent.,exper, & sideboards. 1666 Muatsell.$52-9373after well tr~ined, lovea peo--'-~"'--"-'-"'-'-''-'--have trim figwe &enjoy Jmmed .. employment. 542-0373 and leave your tel~hone penCIOality. "= clean cu\. Full Is part Newport Bl, C.M. belw pm pie, but good watch~·
BARMAfD wanted full wof-kinl w Jwome~. ;f ftime, p/time. lns~de name. address & phone Tabillty to meet ~ublidc. time Salary Ii: com· 18lblrJ7th631·2082. Famityforcedtomo'f.1• time 4 nltes, 1 day, 0 k 1• k hilt yping re;Ju1re . · 1· c-".,..,..~ POODLES Darling AK d Mature woman pref . w r · , ... or any s · number. shorthand hel ul. Apply 3800m,..Non. port~Blu~~-or r--stal bowl. American TOYS. A.prl·cot male. a pt. 581 -6310 ys weekenda otr. Call Hn 2·9pm.&G-363o. U~lform s rurn . ew yu. ..,.~ad 100 Id 49810'79eve .M8~·:!99t~9'._ _____ j--:::::'.::-:==:::::-;---Jrv1netSanla Ana areas, Mgmt trne. Route sis oo. in person only. Lido m e. yno · 541·3092. · · ·
-COUMT&..,, Age21 or ovr. Retired ok. Future. Age 23·39. car, Shipyard, 900 Lido Park 642-5840. $'l5. SHIH TZU rem FtlnNhwe-1010
IEAUTICIAMS Days Ii: nights. pftime. 18 Universal. lZ.!6 \Y. Slh St, phone. Sl60 wk. Ml-toot. Drive, Newport Beach STIMo Cl .. S OUR FIRST BIG SALE! . puppy, . •••••••••••••••••••91i.• SIYIJ:STS SA . E qua I 0 p P . weekdays. Gnnriaj flnaNiaJ firm Save 10% to 40'7o on Cbamp'ahip sired. show w h I di J .Li
"For{2)N.B,Saloos.w _.over. Applybetwn2& Employer Need Ca r.p~nter /han.· Receptionist, eonvale1-basopelii.apinitsSanla armoiru, \ables, fem qual Eve & wkendsrto~ t ron omg., s I t f II . 644-<~ 5pm wkdya. Del Taro. d.ymantofuushrm. addi-cent boap. Sal open. 1... ha . ~ _. ,topt.able,45",4~-S: w OU 0 owmg. ltss Baker, CM liOrl R t 646-l355 An.a ofrlc:e for-s rp in· stands. s ideboards, tea SS1·9'793. ,,.
or540-M82. "-··pie. Mature, e•p. ror GUARDS · eas,ra es. Sat&Sun.1142-0400. d.ivlduala W/IOOd ah Ii: carts, china, M:lassware, AKC reglslered Germann.. 1.1 U -• ~·m1t" ..,.,.., M typtn1 skills. Good op· silver. collecl1bies, etc., Shepherd puppies 6 wks •• .,.a I Y acv .f"\I q:re. IEAUTICIAM 10 dlx units . San Costa esa work loc:a · Nurses Receptionist, c:onvales-por.tostartc~r.Call etc. reasonable.962·6l48 decorator s urpt.Us . Coilf Me1a-N'wpt Bc:b Clemente. Salary $100 lion. Relief shift. Above cent hosp, Sal open. perlODHI at 549-0902 (or CORNUCOPIA -Laguna Beach A~
area salon. No follow. plus.Offlrglbr$195apt. avg starting rates, RM't/LVM'•J.!'IA 4:30-3.~on-Fri.642-0400. furtherinfonnatim. ANTIQU&5 Yorkie3Lb stud service. Painlings-&Je now .r.n
· nee. $90 wk 1uarn Ii: Reply to Oassified ad ::~~odii~s .in~~:S~D&CV: On·.Cal~ A~l ~ ~ •I .E. SALES * Equal Oppor. EmpkJyer 40931stSI'. 34 Champs in pedigree. progress. 1635 &.!~ ·
comm. 548·9f!86. #522. C /0 Daily Pilot. L--p, s urg , mai'or med. penenc: cu Pl NEWPOR1'BEACH P~e:pies occ:u. 531).6455 Unit 4, Costa Mesa. ,..., -pn Bo lS60 CM92626 ·-""' only . Good working We now havr openlnp ,67,..:..,,.~ -
BEAUTY O P R '.~S· ·z· x · · · · Car-&pbonereq.·Forin-conds .. Contact Mrs. fornewsalesje0ple.Ex-Telep'bone~es,proson·1-=~~~~5-~~~:--1 ~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SJSTANT Part time. DENTAL ASSIST-AN terview appt in Coata Jensen, 642-2734, Costa cellent commission aplit ty need apply. $300 to . "-U'Pll'\ll&C.
Thurs, Fri. Sat. 211 W. Exper 'd chalrslde MesacalJ Me sa Mem o rial andloads ofleadl.Great l600perwk,5~hn.Per 111.n11~
Wilson , C.M . .548-1344 uk front ore:. N.B .. &M-92ll. A.QMI Security Services Hospital , 301 Victoria St.. atmoephere. day 8 3 5 . 53 6 4 M r . THE WIST 841)
(or George . (213) 659-2070 CM . EOE For interview appt. Turnbull 5911 WARNER AVE.
DENTALASSISTANT '"""~~~~~~~ THEROHTAROll l--------i ATSPRINGDALE IUUnST(LISTf Cbairalde.))rt.ho "xp. Help Wanted. mat~ &I -Tow Trui;:k Driver, ex· 846-:.:&4
Exp in cutting and quick req. ~.ewJibrt Beach. female, P~ or f(l1me.. NURSES AIDES CiROW per 'd. G & W Towing, SALE SAT. I0.4M
service styling. M\lllt be ~-2628 .. ~ • Kentucky Fned Chicken, OR ORDERLIES 673-7601 1000 I rvlne , N . B . Oak Hoosier with roll
proficie_nt in all olher Dental Receptionist fo 2929E.CoastHwy,CdM Salaryde~onexper. RestaurantTrainee.Goodl-642-·_lm __ . ------1 top. $285 . Walnut ·:;,a.;,'fs work. 837-4743 buy Pedodooti~ Prac: Host ess, Cashie r , Be r e cognized. Call oppor. Neat appear. Ex· TllAVB.Ati&IT sideboard with large -;;;;:;;:;;·;;;;;;;;;;;I UCe in CM . Deldal ex Waitress, part or fu'll Immed. Port.MesaConv. per. fast food operation. Immediate opening tor beveled mirror, $169.
• necessaryf51!1~. timlf. Call ~9446 after l-fosp,642·0400. i\biUtyto handlecashre· travel a1ent wtsalea & Walnut High Boy, $85.
.o'l.5 & l.!..::..1-......,et ,.__.k for conv. hosp 2pm Optical Cleaner, mature, gi81yte1r. · AApvpaliyl . '"Ri'!'~rekr bkkpng exp. Tour & Sets of oak chairs, $48 ea. ~ u• """ ••--be A reliable woman li•ht as d e& •roup background a Oak slide lealtable, $148. lOiol yeanolage.Dai_ s,1ary 9pen~ Contac: uu.tess, must 21· PP· ' 0 • Restaurant. Ui Fashion p"'lu1 . N .B. location. All in good c:ond. plus ly Pl'lol deliv_.,, ~ .. -Mn. Sc:bon,642-0400. IY in person betw 2 & 5· sLe mbly,Na!Dall1
00
83m1 ~1 · Center, NB aft 3PM ·1 · -# ..... u:. Bob Burns Restaurant. agun a 1gue , . ......., . Please send l!OU'l~lete re· many more1 ems. maybeayallablelny~ DISHWASHll 37Fashionlsland Daily. sume to Clusµi,1edPilolAd •...Jl•cH 1010 area . .J:am profit f~ de· . ••Over 62? Start your No 521 e/o DIU y ....,..... :-..._, · .... Neat anpear Reliable · · •••• ••••••••••••••••••• llvenes & c:ub,· tri~;or ,~, !'-• • HOTB. 2nd career as a Realtor p O B 1560 C M merchandise ror ;{9'ffi~ SUrf &Sirloin ,LllTI •UDITOR Associate. We're on the Restaurant sia26 ox · · · Wes tinghouse Rerri g-
new aqbscriptions. FM 5830W.Cst Hwy,NB " " OCTDbus linein Mission •HottflHI · erator.GoodCondi.lion.
information please tall 'DOCT"'-••sisT 40 hr wk . Xlnt working Viejo. Work your own •CnWon TIAY&S••ES $35 646-9793
•• 2-"321. Fr•m Sa·o Vil~-· • c:onds.CallLagunaHills hours.\"epayrortrain· •W~--R 1· d · 1·red' .-' Y ·-~ ('" -1 •-H'lt 586 5000 M ·• ~ e tr~ · serm-r_e ~· · Micro Wa ve Oven. never Clemeot.e4 San Jaan · OUAgui .. ,, .-.-o.uas 1 on, · · r . ing. Earning avg $1000 Parttimecomrrussaoned used.BestoCfer.
C.aa.lst.ltaoo aret call list in Health Spa. N Slack. per mo. Century Finan· •labor• sales for travel age":cy. 642.73'4 ~ u d ~. exp. req, we train. Appl IJouaekeeper·Live-in, pvt c:ial Reau.ors, 581 -1210. Many travel benefits.
Jo-El Toro are• ic•11 noon-8 pm. 2112 Har M~ For R I •-Clus'6ied ad no 1,·-d-.-h---.---1-I ~l.Ql.Q. ~ ~ -Blvd,Colt.aMeN.. quarters. ~Y f';l-lher &r PART Time eves & Sat epyo.u ui · IS was er .1.
Eq aflOp -i..i.....-a~ult son an fai;niJy . Son AM, perf. for students, TMMlw 521 cto Daily Pilot. P.O. refrigerator. name
u Pot"·~ ........ ~... ..__., ... ~ v1s~ally handicapped. inside work, guaranteed CISCO'S Box 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca brands . Reasonable .
'"' Write P . O~ Box 847, wage.CallAl M2·90ll. Hwl.._leocll 92626. M5-8S3J .Callafter6pm
Bi>ATBUILDER jflso'NA1 ,_...,... CoronadelMar,Ca9262:5 , " 2011 Ui1'00ktiunt TYPIST Washer & Dryer Deluxe.
Ex per . prod uctio -...tf ltn Housiekceper. live ~n. Light p!!!i~8}~1;="!:li~~ , "Mon. Tues, Fri. Fast ac:-$165 pr. Avocado. C.M.
fiberglass sailboat _.]',...A!•• I la 1 work, some ~king .. ~or ing-, _Sal+ commission. APPLY IN PERSON curate. dependable. Pen· 1_ ... _·843 __ 1 ______ 1 !:fif:nJ~r~~-•h~m. , Start~lmioediately ! gentleman witb ~ntIS. Vic Harbor & Baker, CM . South =~Dage ~{!d~~taC:es~ewpori A1eetiott 8015
po silion i n .Sant Tem=Help ~c~!s~.~:~~dr:1ve r s Owntransp.~Z191 31505.PlaaDr 1----------1•••••••••••••••••••••••
Barb-era area . 17802SkyP~.frvine ~.... VETCUHIC SSSSAVESSS
805·684-4215 C ,1$t0-<M55 Housekeepet< dependa-PBX I~~~~~~~~~~ General office, asst in ble, referenct!S. over 30, I· surgery, lite clea11ing.
Boating live in . 645 -5000ext30J PBX RN, •p1u'me; 11·7 relief. 41,A, day week. Send re· s.1 •• _......... Driver,partlime.lateaf L~. . p . .. Meta Verde Conv. sume to DaHy Pilot. Ad
Im med. openinef telJ;tOOl;I. 25 yrs. Pref 2 ·~sewives. art time Hospital• 181 Center St, N 9 p O Bo 1560 A.-LMJ '•I Laf. Deb. resident delivery for dental lab. RECEPTIONIST Cll ~.:'M'esa,C. . .i.s ,
Rua own 'lirae of bolit.t in! ;;;4'1;;·21;;1;•~•;•;752s6283;;~;· ;;~1;646~=·50&8~=·~==:::;;:~;;; Fr rr· asuom bly, BoC\Ulplanf ont 0 ice a_ppearan~. SALES Full time/part Waitresses. Good Ups &:
toPProctuc:er. INCENTIVE PLAN general cletical .duties time benerits. Apply between •1H•"-rs ElEl:llOllCS an~ accurateboardtypmggoodre-PRO FOOTl.a.1 • 3 & 6pm . Denny 's, 529 "' -__.. Ou r c: o mm is s i o n qwred co~ ...., s 'r · ·be '"r•· N'1,:_ but S Callr sUN~theWFL Avenlda Pico, an :'m~~.h:.~v'O: We are a fll( -ifOWin ;::0e'!;:!~ ~ ~:~n;~:~ .~~igvee .::rki~g ~di· ~fen ~tnt ~unities1_C_le_m_e_n_l_e_. _____ 1 band toola. I Electronics Divlsk>n you're looking for. if you ti®s. Apply : tn our expanding sales WAITRESS wanted Im·
M ..... ........_... N .• Y.S.E'. lisle are c:obtemplating n dep~rtment . Com· mediately,musti;beover
Know'J, ~ta 1-.11. diveralfled corp. local c:ban1e. or if you've had mission i;nanagement & 21 , exper. not necesaary.
-\naenii_:.-Goodp;yT ill tbe lrflae Industri one Y••r of real estate DICEON sales. poeitim. ~· In-Dana Villa Mexican MoW._.._, ' Ill I'. co cnplex. We h a\' sales experienc., please terv1ewin1 daily tbru Restaurant, 34311 S.
-..... ur1eatreqainmentsfor: eallusforapp't... Saturday 9-5,' 3rd floor Coast Hwy Dana Point
Exper'd mold<n to iw1d Sr. •di 11 h Electr~· Inc. Anaheim Stadium. :mo 4,,..5739 n ·.,,14 l•Y•UP"°811. • •••• ,,,, VI,...., State Colle1e Blvd. a . .
"• 18522 y 00 u .. rman Anaheim WAllHOUSE &U positioaa ~,.own n,OI
Lru.sp •ma~tobe ...... A.11 ili:l1r1 lrvir(e,caur.92664 s'ALl\t::TOll FO.,......
on ti\;;e for~·rk . Weotrorauta«lvesla An Equal Opportunity Previou s exper req'd.
llale/Fep1ale ln iDI raiet tocethe-r w -----------EmplO)'er N~ for Orange Court-Langlois IP'rw.m Foods, .Person e:u.... E. ~l:!..~'"''1nbe•~rlu IRVINEl'ERsQNNEL . ty S'ub-conlraelor. 21115 4guna Canyon Rd,
Oc<ldental,SoalaAlla. PeloGlln:l~.ryo" SERYJCES•AGENCY Perm. p/bmejob deliv .. •Collea• fir Jr. College Lagu•a BeaCh. 4'1·1141
Booklr:eo.per, nperi.need. s t&C in& early morn LA Ttrftes t degree preferred but not We are looking for an en·
Copy Call, m a'd St. otv.of.TJLB.Corp... 48SE.t7thStreet to horoes in the Irvlnt!I min datory. Apply In lbu1ia1tic , dependable
J;apn• Beb. .f94-1m. _.So. RedldlJ (at Irvine). Costa Mesa Newport. area. Must 'be person bt'Wn 9am Ii: lpm. aalesmAn '°work with us <DOrlkot'O.C..~rport) -Wte 224 642-1 410 relia~le & have depend. Mon • Fri. 1214 E. F..d· in our spec:i•lty rood
Bookkeeper /Cy. tk.nta Ana ca mos transp. Salary $325 mo+. inger, Santa Ana. store. Apply in person at
Typist, mmt be ~ ti:Qutl ~eh.y 546·8238. SALI SMANACiH orrice. 2952 Randolph ~Sen~d~re~1~ume¥.~to~P~,0~.~~-,~~2Em~p~loy~er~M~i~F=J J..itor,p,11mo _,. Street.CM. 811 , San Ju' Qldermanpreferred. Fut1rowtng3yr._.c:o.,1----------1
Capiatrano,C..aT5 Don_Qulmte Motel PLAMT'SMAH sales In 1 fieures, telling WHOWANTSTOWORK'I' DP•IBICiD C)a Cefl 842-3670 ror care of inlttlor plant.I cha.in 1tores, dnc It.ores DRIVE A CA.Bl
But Boy1 Wan&,ed., ll MIW UC•l'IR?I In commercial bld11~ Ii: dept 1toret. The man CHOOIE yqur houri,
ba able to w o r 1'11e1DOatadtt9aewof. ~ Someexper.w/plantate-we need must have work ror younelf, be
wukand1, aa we~l • nee• CDll: W.PIY ~Of'' w 1bfm'tb tlfPer. in repair q'd. Must dz!ve. ~ Hn "seyeral yi-t ol .suc:ca.ful your own t.:.. Mtn or ,.ee'\d aff·_~~ I ~ad•e rt ~~li •ltn•' ~•minut.Limitedexper. perwk.~artingaaJ eaper. aa a lale,1 Women.CanbeaUchtly ..... ..__.. -• '•UJul: 6 eo111idered.548-1313, per mo ... Co. truck 6 mana1er sellJn1 cori· h andicapped. Ne-at· ~•r• Rftt a .,.-•'-1 C.:tdl \ health benefilt. Pref. ao-sumer productt to retail Clean Appearance .
_t!!Ml2=:;11=::a::;<Anhur:::,::=:c:::o::;=-,i nr.. ~ 1 meone24or<Wt.f13. 1tore1. llui t h••• Vets.,---retlred. Ale 25
CARPETa.EAM'D ...... ·.==tf:.e IF!OU '"' bel\fn965wkd)llonly. bandied chain store 19. Slpplemenl your tn· -ft<RI_......_ btvea 1erVic:eto°'("ror buyen Ii: know how com•. Drlve.• cab• bn '•Ar ftl.Tii:Z_,-cosnmluiom tplit. Call 1ood1 to aell. pl<'tt: a1' ad "P /t male, ren(.' tervic work w /manufacturers or more a day. Apply in ..,.4_-;:~:.:::_'""'."'-:'~~Cllff::::::::..:L~.a:!,.,~!!.:·:.::a::a.::1110::l::·-in the P all y ,Piiot estab ac:c:ts . Eve./Sall rept1 . Send resume f .penon, Yellow Cab Co.,
P\n!l ·...ar )'OU,,_.. S&LL Idle ..... ,n1ta a Cla11ifled Sect.ion ~,. $15 Wk+. Mr. Levi Pres., P . 0 . ·eoa 4848, ua1-srater Ave, Foun·
. Da.tl7 PUota.P'kt. Dalb''PllotOiNlriedAd. PhoneM~I. 848·1004 \ trvlne, CalU.93664. ' tahi Valley.
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•
•PUIUC•
•FURMITURE•
•AUCTION •
T .. ilo 7:JOPM•
DEALERS WELCOM E
Est ... Funiihre
"""-....... M-udwtr
Sf'ock u.po-...
•ESTATES*
UNUSUAL IMPORTED
LIQ\IOR
REFRIGERATION
CABINET, antique
sideboards. wardrobes.
lot• of sliver pieces.
mahog . bedrm .
furnitur e .
BURLINGTON Bedrm
set, bunk beds, l.r. sofas,
loveseats, coffee &: end
tables, lamps, clocks,
mirron, formal d.r. sets,
tfessel tables & other
st1les, hi gh back chairs,
china.11, hutc:he!I , bars &
bar1tools, DRY SINK,
several styles rockers,
baby furnitur e .
bookcases. magazine
racks, M"5ic centers.
des ks, hoapittl bed,
rerrlceraton, was hers,
i:lryers, dlabWasbeN, col·
OI' Ii: bllr:,6 wfit 1V's plus
Iota or estate milt. •
SSSSAVISSS
Items Sub)ed. to Pttaa le
Food Avalltt.ble. We
honor B or A 6: Master
CharfJe.
MASTIRS AUCTIOH
2075~ Newport Bl. CM
133·M2S 4'641 888S
A COH'IENlt:NT SHOPPIHQ AH
llWIHC GUIOl ,Oft ?HE
GAL OH THE 00.
Day-Dimer Duo
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'
Go neiywhert conliftnlly In
ttlls •le111111, U$U•I duo. Nolt akltt's snioolllt1 angltd flip
Htmlnr. Crill' Plt•1. Printtcl P1111n ti~ M1u~i·
Sitts I, 10, 12, 14. 16. 11 Sitt 12 !bud J.tl blo!M 4''
yards 4s.iftcll; U;!rt I" Flldt ~Inell. --............. :I --J)l W ... llMI SI.,,._
TeA, MY ltlt I. 'rt•t .W... .t.HllHS. w . sm
.WlnUMUJ•-·
0. "' k .. w lllw t1 11t 1 ,.tttfll lrtlf Stl' MW fl4'
•• M• rlll·Wht" ••tt1r•
C11M1-cllll ""'" ltd .. l1r Im .. tt111 If rtlf diltk1, k~ "15~ ... ,
Sn + !(Mt .... !"' •lutttl! Mf"Y Crlfts _ 1.111
l11tut r1tflh1 "" _ !.• 11111111 S1wt11 Itek _ St•
--
The Beret Is Tops!
Te1m lhi1 101111 1ct wllfl
• eo11 or ii jacliet. sllcil,,
1kl1l1. Great 1ilt •ae11
Uw knil11111 wor11td -2
s!Yde1 ol 1 color to \nit tM1 11 11lly beret fn 11bbed stitch on
2 netOIM. Mitcll1n1 m1n1. P•I·· tern 72'!18: tll s11e1 lncl!Jded.
$1.00 for e111;1t l)lllf{n. Md
2SC' each ,.uern llH lin!.c!IU
111111 and tundhn1. Se•• I•= --· u ...... Dept.,,, --.... J. ow cw--..
.._T .... MY 10011.N.t
""-· ........ llp.I' ..... -· MOii[ ttian "'r btfore' 200 desll!'I! phn J lrtt 111l11ltd In·
side HEW 1976 NEEDLECRAf'f
CATAlOG! H11 trerytlung. 75•.
CrKlltt wttti S•••tts \1.'00 Crtdiet I Wanktltt -$1.00
Nifty rlfty Qltllh SJ.llO ltl,,lt CrKllll l .00
SIW + f<!tlt '"" $1lS
.... ,,.,. .. 1 '"" 'j·• fltwtr CrKlltl '"' .$ JI IUlr,I• CrKlltt t.-: -S l;OI' 11111.t•t Cr~tt toK .,....SI
t111t111t MlcrtM '"" :JI', 111111111 Mo11t• loot _ S1 •• Ct•'4•tt lift ]Ml _, ... c •• , .... 1,lt\•• 114 ..t.t• ...
12 Mn AIJhl!J 112 _ -·~ .... ti 11 Otilt1 I I •
...... l lllt .. 12 --5ltl IS hills lt r T1U' Jl -!!
lid •I IE Jiffy 11111 . -1"·1
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M IWl.YPILOT Ft!d!y,Oo-!,1171 ~1'1111Jlmo& p-,to41 .... ~. wdea/ _....... W-.... II , ......... ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• 5W .....-tolO S.1efren tllO -··"· '"'t-••._... ... ••••• -...... ......... . ::::~~-~.: ...... -.. ••••• s• '"' ""1eel••-~ •• ..................... w1 to ~ ....... ·············--····· !ftt-ii.:Sl'SL·-.. e:..--····.:.: ..... 11w•1 . TIP
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••••••••••••••-•••-• •••••••••,••••••••••••• Elle IVI clu'I flS/15, Beau. JO' t1..Uc-Chria lld boal 11' A~. 111 ••~.a-CL ,: ""°:; OUa•-•~nON ABL.&S : Waiau • PUIUCAUCTIOM Knl Sa. Bed. New. com· cllra SI/up, KY dlt., SedanCnd.ar Mahi lnL bpMerc IOpl&.Mk.fuU ~ --.. ... ..._._ $
Fanlka, $IO. &oUd llAHY l'l'BllB OF FINE plet• oUll i*rd. Xtr• M .. bloe e~-,!" lfd. Gally. U ~ eovu y-lrir -::1, Both low ml...... Jiii I. l•t :.1!!!:":!l!!:"!!l=od-=-w~/IMl=-"=lO::J . .&STATE JEWELRY. flnn 'pto (worth tmJ. W.lttb,CM.DU-'1-U.l. ov. haul. Sell• bid 9un toad,' 11'90. ~te; Mw.IO-»OO 4 ........ II.LI' _ ART OBJECTS, AN· QnS•llTO .... uybome Ofn 11'11 Slle-Dookl 10/$.211·-... ,... '141'..UJ~ COPUMD'S ll'-J'~~'1lc~tP~:l~'8 ~!,!. ~r:ffo~Ero":t~· lncldel.m.'2&1. ' cb:Tr •• ':°ook1b1lve1 it' T'wla am. Owns, '7SOlaaU'oaV·l7'll'.td· Trlump~~ M•S.U. J.. ITT ~
lnel, 10 Dieco ldn& a1 .. YO •.. BROCHURE WANTED ' Calcul11A>n$4l-WO IOlded , Hidy to ro hull. UOHP 1/0 vo1 .... -· Call---e UslllVW's
bdl'm set W/firm mat-&f.S.2200 TOP CASH DOLLAR ,... IOI ~~ri:::i ~,ttC:!1i trailer: cuaL,. COYtr. '•Yaa;naba10kc,SISOor . ••••••• ..-·-1· .-u.a. Wortbov•Sl,000. 'Gw sa.wal& PAID FOR YOUR•••••••••••••••••••••• f'7).Mll· tt950.l 7s.&437ev• belt. M~maba,ofllCk"tlT01otaLllllll~.I
Sell for $575. All ~ALI JEWELRY, WATCHES, Myna BJrd, fancy taJlt:er. , 1.5• G·S Hew~ r.tiU workllO. 1117 mo. old. J:,aotml. Lare• 111 ~ ::.:r:.1~~·,:.~~:.t s.~ Oct. ART OBJECTS, GOLD ~;.~,.. .. , •. 1 yr. ~ =~· 3$HB Eviorode, $'150. 'Tlll.ood1CB4Sllwllbfolr-off road u... am/(to : ?l'
Nau1ablde den furn. s ·ooarD'tos·i:iopm SILVER SE1\V1CE . cond $'150 a'f" lt': MZ-7'64. tn1.S100.D-78'71aft.erS lte:NO, aJrlbocbntn ~BcL .. ,..aap.
Carved oalt:Grandlatber ·CORNER OF ~l:u~s'~~& AN · Plw1&0rw M13eia · e • '1.C Koaa DaycruJ1er oof'tl. :r,:•· ••Jr~. *5
700
· ut '91'-t "'9to. Visa ~lock.Allwood11meaet JGTH&:ORANGE . •••••••,.;;.;;-.···••••• Sta JI Beautlf I Hws, • waseo ,.,... i 't\r 8'1l.
6 3-plece co(ree lbl aet. COSTA MESA Small air -conditioner~. "PIANO W Tolycraft 23' CC, v.a. man~9a1ra:516-9822 u ' s.lejRnt 9160 r.b tNO 1ood eio..dltba. Prl•* 1181-*l. 1..-.ailtlClllcwe tJ'xt5' blue, green & ·N'ellOll·Wlitena OMC, item room, new ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••t·-•• .. ••••J. P~J • .,,,.,. I Fum[ture. Clolbing white low plle ·carpet. -~ irov•r•, ·lraller • alnl. the us A the RV 0 Ford "' ton CalftPll'. • Ethall Allen drop leaf lbl. AppUances Boob ' Gd. Cond. S:iO Twin bed MS·7~7 itf"IPM. ---$1500. 913·3128 .-T,_ap11t .. 1n .,,... 86c) Mot. HDmt Special ~. $1IOO MZ-JS7t JJe2 to "70 El Cttalno or 4 ·cbr1. Adler elec. T 5 _,: 0 __:_ r •• r-•t'~31.1 •••••••·-••••••••••••••• ,. d '-•·•-1-•' "6 -Rane~ all ••1 typewriterll.50.640-4478 oya , PG•.u.ol .......... rame, -· _.. _,. 7 Baldwin Pla"er Piano 14• NYLOX Hllfl· 10 HP C ._ ........ , l:J&ru.all Ul-98li •YI or., • .,...-.. ~r' ·•-11 • ' YOUNAMEIT'' ' blt J hn.IOI) ~t z41n,-~ -wlnids · ••'IN" •
1 • M ho ProeeedstoJtarbor.Area 'UILICAUCTIOM Xlntcond'.w/rolla,$1J50 re · 0 1o11 ' une. •y;: '12021· Four Star: '73 Dodie . _. .. I t •
9301 a auy&tumof YoulhandCommunitv MANYITEMSOFFlNE orolfer.497420&. 5!1n~.~0-1.:.>'..1._Glv••••• •••••••••••••••••• cbusis. 145" whJ base. SUl .. +MrrM
3
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25
I .• ~~f~~.:r~~umlturo. ActivilyProjed• ' ESTATE JEWELRY, THOMAS ,_.,. y _,...~ SHE forlmportplckup Lo ml. Sleeps I. •• 500. '• Cbuy ... TM reeenl ••••••••• ••••~••••••••
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• SponsoredbylM ART OBJECTS, AN· 'ELECTR1CORGAN 35' Fiber1)a1a cabin well inaulated, 1ood m..ssn. ::_a1111·~-:r,.tram. )C• SA lllll.ITi, A ' .
1 FreochProv.hUkh,glass COSTAMESA TIQUES, FINE FURN .• JK yboardl 98IJ. cruiser hull, 90%' cond.tl00.5*53>0 ----T ...... tl7 0 ' ' '7511. r\ ~· doon,$17S.Dinetleset,6 aOT.AIYCl.UI ETC . PllONE FOR JN. fioiahed. Must aell. . ..--...--.. 'GDod&e4't«a.._.btd ..._ ... ..._ chn, $Mt. 842-5896. FO. & BROCHURE . Ball &: Clawfoot pl1n $30.3668'afl. 5 Camper for oompad pick ••••••••••••••••••••••• 31'..enalM, 1..,..S.. ... : ~~
, . MISC . Lumber, bLlildin 645-2200 stool$50 up. Mever ued. $115. '18 ''Terry'', aetr. lta-U60Dlr. . TOVOT'A ~Brow~ couch w1lh materials lightfixtLll'etg 645.2573 511P.IACIC20' C•U"1·'7941. contained. Includes DA · Pl UP " A
matching chalr, both for 20A •xi · n1 ' Maple table. 4 capl.'s F B Xlnt cond Many M •H H 9140 elrtr .• Air Cond., New $25.968·5642. Som"epwru'rne !.ns,•on915co1 E.i chairs. $275. Maple desk Emerson Baby Gran · · · ·lc4e OW la es E•Z ltrt b'at·"'. MAGS LOWMD..EAGE c.. 1 , .. J xlra1. Slip avaJI. Beal ••••••~••••••••••••••••• • '"'' $1000 11$-1153 Iv kb
1
Greco Cr · FV. g.sPM $2S . St i ngray $20. Pano, 4 8 . ust re orr.846-2249. Duo! Wide on ~y. Xlnt Sharp Cond. WUI trlde".;:=.:...-.---==.:::=1 ar rown eather chr. · · · 673-6034 finis hed $1300 or ofter ..,. t M bil H ,. 9• .a. ........ EW $35. Olive gm. swivel Sal. Only. · 497·3164.' · loah, SaM 9060 cond. Call 673-8385 or ;$o ~l J&3 ome or T,PY,OTA lkt.,,,,uper IU!ll""""""
rocker $40. 642·0132 or Queen bed complete with Blk . Vin yl couc h. Gd. 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 493--5837 . Newport.Beach. ' · clep, almmt D11W .ena., 75 TO~OT A $48·182'1 h d b d G 1 d Cond. $80. Lumber Rack Sewiftrg Mach.HIS 109 Mqptgomery 12 wankd Forester 17'. Semi self wide Urn. mqa. $MOO. e a o ~ r . o fits Mazda/Jap. Pickups. •••••••••••••••••••••• Will to $500 ·r I . Musl 1ell. By owner. N.B. cont'd Elec a:u or batJ Daya ••1·2444, eve• • speed, fully faetpr'/.
Victorian chrs, ~-:~shair & toys . $30.S48·98S2 SKIS,KaslleCMPGran. Xlnl.pa:o~~. a•&·4633n On the Bay. Frame & Xlnl. co,lid . $1500 :.1---=°'4,.·,,.,,o-~~~-1 ·•ndiq'!lPp1~· •• £:&~!.. .. ·.
glassware, lamp•, . Prix 200mm. Xlnt cood. E &: eekends · 1tuccoaddiUon.2br,2ba. 6'6-628l 7:1FOIDRIOO alwa ... ,..... a.a-
poreelaln laundry tub, GARAGE SALE Jt'urn Accessor1e11 & parts, Look Nevada Blndings vei. w · Fplc, covered P•tio, · -,<019518),
old folding chr1, l~e Toys, Games, &au, & l~ilgate for ''12 Ford $115.87~9239 SANTANA22 auperclean _1arace, clubbousemem· AllfoS.nkel PIC«UP cream chrs, machloLat Guitar Sal&.Sun9-S 298 pickup <grn) $2:5., miac. weUequip .fixed,keel ~rshif Included. Partly P..ts 9400 Share((50M5P) $313413 tools, . clothes. 1328 Princeion Dr CM · VW engine parts, step SportlfMJ Goods 109 make offer 114-841·53.19 fum t desired. 873-7456. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645·.5700 Dlr.
Waterside. Beachwalk. · · · h.umper for Chevy•••••••••••••••••••••• (213)869·2121. VWlit ISOOCC 1971 FORD C I
H.B. Garage sale, typc;wriler, pickup. Ca11544·3417. Falcon, AMF/Volt poo 25'Coronado, '13 RDF Motorc cJa 530.89401'DH199att. 8 camper abell. ~u~~~:
) M l Sell M . furniture, lawn lnmmer, Must ell ! 0 . rm 5 t 9, table. $450. Call '151;.7 Rad lo, xtra1, ~,250. Sc fr / t I · xtnt cond. Bit otr over Y~~ing! Llv:gvi:~.e.;:-_ r~esTVt a~l., luggage, sofa,' matc~nlove ~al . or6'2·3070. IJ46.1125callmom I · DD ert I ~ ~ort block, RARE NEW s:z.,.Dan,87$-6Z37
Bdrm, Din·Game Set. g ,e c. 96-4067. Recliner. ki'!I size bed, Rem. Model 700, m caI.19' Garr rtgeed wood cut· s7 T·Blrd £nalne. Best im Ford Rinchero. Air,
I
544-8421M1.1.,tSee. Antiques, baby gran 19 cu ft refng. 631·1897 . Weaver scope, 2.5x ter. new 18 eng. Many offer.Call~liK. P I B & S. After 5
E thin
plano, tennis dresses&. Allnucond. variable. Lee loade xtras.Sl500.493-281lt4 ieoocc V w enalne 481-'980 ' very a: goes Movlna I r __ ,, b •· In •:. · · ''l'"""""~"·~~----1 1 Refrig, stereo,' reconta' ot.s o guuw.es! 1812 Port w/extra ra.ss caC g u Int ~ Hilt · i counter weighted crank.·~ FORD RANCHER().6
book•, sofa, coCfee table: Wheeler, N.8.Sat.10.S *•CARPET** $150. 645.(8); Sl~~-~ & trape:~Z=~l& 2mos new84H904Tom cyl., 3 speed, AN radio,
bedrm 1et, lamp9, table. Garaee Sale: Sat & sun **WAREHOUSE ** Kneissl ski.s, 170. Nevad trlr,4475. otrer.498·2081. WANTED ro BUY-right vinyl top, wire wbeela 4r
Good cood.HJ..+t65 pool table. many other ••CLt•••-E ** bind In gs. used on door for 1964 or 1965 El new valve job. Clean in·
1 items. SS9 Grand Haven ,..,__,, season. $100. 963·4113 HOBIE 12· 2 mo. okl, x.lnt Camino, call after I PM . aide &: out and in good •Italian Prov. dining rm Cir.,C.M. Boal'S , Campers, Sue. cond.21lriped1all1,new AakforLaPTV.Q68.497l. condition . (29,853W).
table, chain, 3 extns & Trailers. Remnants, part TY odio m.~ooo sacrifice\ $6,10. .., ::TttT '
padS$320.541).2B27 ~~~~Y~o.:·a~D~t!!gbsik~ roll.s,fu~';~~4o% H~Fi. St~ 1971 Harley Davidson MtosforW. Dlr.
Select Uwd Fww. misc. 186 "'2 Rochester, Shores Interiors ••••••••••••••••••~!>;'. Su!lrise 13 ' fg: good for fis· Sport.Iler. Xlntcond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '62 Dodie 4'. ton, Jong bed,
Sold on consignment. C.M. 157S Placentia, NB New B /W Zenllh J9' :~g or s11~g w/trlr 848-0181 Gomer.. '510 318 engine, 3 speed. $9. Call ror Info. 5411·1'951 642·2210 Porlable. 2 weeks old _..,., 77s-79 io i::.at. 263 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• MS-8340. Dl,r.
Primitive inliques, horse Guarantee, etc. Mus 20' Sall boat, trlr &: sails ·~i Hl~~A C~r::i·~ 'il VW, Po~ Up. '3& ~ge '69 Fos;d '4 .. Ton P .U·.
Two 14" Sofas, olive / collars, wheel, plow. etc. HOSPITAL BED&M1tl., sacritice ss5 each $SOO Al 0 10 • Al m ..,.,c ,,.,1 pg, · CJas11c Pick-up. lnqwre Truck I' c8hover gold /carmelfloralprint. Reas Sal 10 ·4, 2403 adjustable.195. 1 • · · · s u · .,_/,,. er.997-4688. atll6W.Escolones.S.C. · $75' ea Coppertone Venier at Isabell c M 673-!MOI 51 96'1 cartop boat, $75. 548-9691 Camper,·new q. IJ.rt(I, Frlildaire frost free · · L 1 tt k 1 MalCO 2$0 CC '75 Model. ~s/ saddle tank, dii'al bal·
Refrlseralor, 17 e~. fl . O'Keefe & Merritt, JO" MOVING, Garage Sale in t:::ede~k8 ~r re::Jer K~fn~c:~· .J..~1, ;,ht;lr, Ridden only 3 mos. Xlnt Clinsica 9520 teries, P,OttY, etc. $2000.
Grealcond. Sl00.6'4·1130 1as ran1e. ftrm box spr-the LI vi ng Room . 8 s R 1 LIrnl ab 1 e · n 67~· · cond. $950/otr. 556·1056 •••••••••••••••••••••!•·1.7.....,..------~~
N.8. ·lng.s &. mattr_ess, lloo Everything marked Microphone & head afterS.646·2270days. 195'1Chev.Clusic 4-door, w 9570
pohaber. 4r m&JC. Sat & down . Fro~ 10: up. cash. phones. $300. 645-2468. SOL·C~ T 11. MEW ,74 Honda XLl25 4 000 good tires, new a~kl I: •••••••••••••••••••••••
Comer Group wlth table Sun. 321 Cedar. N.B. ~·23~pn . ply. Trailer 2 new main mile Lt'ke · s&oo brakes, $2,000 original Ford% T, Campr Van , !':~\'~PfJ':i~lvet 2642·4983. Kingsize bed $50. Admiral '°t:..~~--a11:if~· bbalttetns, 2 ndew Jbiboi 548-7~ new. . !~:8n't 1~';'11~ar& ~ :i~b~-:.f;;ct~tT~
couches, $25 ea . Spanish color 1V needs Wl a ens. ou e • 5 · · >box water I 5 :it.nt . Tk:orientalcoflbl$&5.Bk Washer/ dryer, $80. A.s-repair S7S. Sleeper sofa•••••••••••• .. •••••••••• trapeze. Faster and 15 1.1z1.1k1 T·SOO . Very motor: ~eeda new , • ••Pl • -
bed S70. Rd/W'd burl co sort. baby rum. Drafting $25. 6'15·l921 G...-NI 90 I more comfortable than Clean. Musl seU. Besl of •. Tranamtsatoo. $500. Call $2200. PP.j60-1S32.
lbl1Z25548-0360 set. Misc. 185 E, 19th. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hobie Cat and much rer.Call6'5-5073 830-3157 '73 Dodge T-100.' 6 cyl,
---old solid --• c••v CM . 642·2038. . 8 Track l!lpe maker $75. B~eyed~. more stable. $1500 .00 ''JO BMW (R 7S/5)..lO 000 •31 FORD AA·Flatbd all ck, economical . zun: U&A ..... Camper 1ce box $18. ''JS take s everythi 11g . 1 , ' M' ' 498·1404 tTe1. 831-1930 dioin& table. 8 ch~n. ·Sat, Ocl 4. M at 1 orangeScottskl bools, lO andalrplaon. Tax 675.3662 or645-2a00. _ m . $1 ,59S ; 74 Vespa int. rully restored. days.
extensions. XJnt cond. Gupe Cir. H.B. Antiqu med, lkled twice, xlnt advantages.546-49llO . ClaoDlx,$250.8t2-4442. <FORD AA), $5995 .. i.;:=:::...-------i
MZ·t523. tble 4 chrs. knee sur· cond. 644·2616 loah MoWJ llliUVe' W~1te Water Kayak , HONDA 00 like new i -642 __ ,_442_. ______ i •73 Fwd
fboards, tape player, etc. ' I F1bergl with wood pad· : : F S 1· -• Cb I Ee • V Avocado I' Couch. Perfect 142.1285. Slide Trays 4-sale. 25 air· 5erT ce 020 die. 613·l~or548-8531 2000mLSave.SS or a e 1-rys er W I • c:oodltlon. t50 or besl of. quip Magazines sor each. ••••••••••••••••••••••• , 613-944'.M Crown Jmperial. 49f.953!5 v.a, auto. trans., radio,
ONLY
$99 .
DOWM
Plus TaX &.Liceme
$83.97 .
PHMONIH
m approval ot YoUr eood
credit for • moatb5 of a
brand ne'J' lJn C«olla,
tot.al price lncludin& all
taxes Ir license ree:a.
$3351.28 deferred price
incl. aU finance charees.
$i346.61 with a low APR
of only 14.3'.
•CORONAS
•WA&ONS
•CllJCAS
•PICKUPS
•COICM 1 45
•LAMDCIUISBS
IEADYPOI
lritmeciate
Delivery
' Se Habla Espanol
•
I ftt.181:24• Theatrical Collectables 494-1774. Sc:rlot.rls:I Hand buUl 14 portable. '74 Kawa 175 2,.00 . ask for BUI. carpetine, bed, etc. ~ Sal. 1·4pm. 1240 Logan · ~ Ca~maran. Unique gas · ' mi. · SUrfer special~ 7'1687L l Quality loveseal 4s. Iola. CM .5"40.1450aftl0alii. Kelvinator slde·hY·Side Engine· adlos·Elec~ r1g , poly •sail. fUO. Ex· &mo. old, Gd cond. $55i0. '48 Plymouth Cub Coupe l Musl iell, new cond. refrti. Cannan Q.L.fT. FireSystm·Plmbg tras.&12.423. 1838Placentia,CM Deluxe. Beautifully ~'}JIG TOYOTA
llovin1. 962-ZIG Household F\lm. Motor· nu camera. 815-5258 Refre. rreeee:t 548-9704 ,74 H d EI 1 2SO restored. $3500. 495-5152 ~ill ·
SANTAANA
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cycle, bikes&: cloth.log. . y ht M 1 & R HOBIE t6 W/Trailer , on 8 snore or831·927'9. ij,..• l • ,.. 1..a.w .. ., ...
BoUnd Nev~r·Mar table, 169!i2 Lilac Ln. HB. Portable table teruus top; f ~~ 11 h 1 ~ :.t. Woo3: $1500. Xtra parts/equip, ~i~:;;,;,1:',::"1· 3•000 lecrutloMI UU\ UDtA.,,. SM1Soiaflea.l1Au'
approx. 50 wide, lood Thun: thru Sun. 10.9p1J1. Two h a Ive a . o/• wrtr:ng. & repair. Outfit· tr73-2087 or536-7cm6 Vehicles 'SJO • . 417 w. w.... 1 ... 2112
cond,P5.IMiJ.3l98· Patio furn .. Ho'uaehold plywood .$8.835-0tOC UngMate .645-4.S66Ev~. lpafJ,Sllpa/ MustSell! 19'12SuzukiTM •••••••r••••••••••••••• ·. TOYOTA
Oriental rue & pad, item1lc:Ki1c.917W.18l ' 2Custom8'Redwoodwirte loats,MoriM · Docka 9070 2SOMX . Forward mount· '74Dodge RVSurfe .. Van . Ormia_no. 55, 9X18, $2500. (off Monrovia ) rack~. each rack ho1ds 28 .... ,....... '0:10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• e~ ~h~c~a w~Ko.~is, CL1Slom, PIS, Am /Fm 8 !f66 AarbOf. C,M. 646 ·•303 U a · ··
Antlqu;, mbrbeg ;or MOVED NO ROOM' ea.a; of wine. S200 ea.••••••••••••••••••••••• BEA'CHRACK t::'f1fte:~u~tev!::n~~ track, mag wheel•l '65.DOD,GJl VAN 6 ~cyl.,· IW'l llR \D IS =~ Ant1~u:p m a'i:oi Sat/Sun Oruy. Houaehol · S49-8StJr641).(1181. •WANTED• STORAGE coll & fork ldt, & xlras. icebox, bed wall to "'.81 aulome.tlc. AM radio. ~ ·
ebina eor. cab6neta, $1 items'l:tlLIS? 8 E. 20th, Pool Table, matched (1) One outboard engine, ~m~OOat-112-$14 mo. 303 Really clean &: runs :=\::!ri·~ mJS:.S8:'. Sleeps2. (0QV828).$flllil8.· . M 0 T R 8
ea. Mahoe din table CM slate, walnut. See eves. prefer '5·70 hp Evlnrude · a:ewaterl..&'11·2866 areal. See&: make otr. · reg IMS-4447 Dir. ¥0L¥0AT01'0TA
chairs w/ needlepoln $.'iOOorbest.151-6170. or Johnson. NO JUNK NB 21'boatsUpfornnt 536·8032 . 4WM.eDri'f'ft 9550 '71Dod~Van, ........ J -. ~--•• ~ old Gara1e Sale: Furniture PLEASE. Have cash. · · · .. _.,. -.-.-,. .. ... u.~·2 ;tt.ume JunqUe. 11 Be.OX. Ba llRoyatB::.aeWedgewood Call Steve at 64&-4965, S70./mo. Ph: S46·6M/ 72Kawasaki'150, ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrAs, l ruon1ng l'OOd. ...._Via~
trunU$10u . ......,. NB. Sun. only 12·2pm. dinner platleJ'1 $35 . weetendsanytime.After 55'1-0MS slntcood. ''11 Ford Bronco, cu1t Sl600.642-61.53 • ..... .....mo
••111 S. · 1055 815-5016 6'5-2573 3PM weekday1. Need 50' slip for West.ail 644·Dim"Dave" ~~~:;:~r f~=· '69 Dodge Van, fully: Gewec ill 9701
•••••••••••••••••••••••GIGANTIC neigh Simmofts QueeD alze SH•walCICSAU 42 i<:;etch. Quiet cruising new Bill St~ shocks'. equipped .. Eng. oYer! •••••••••••••••••••••••
TRUllPl:T, Bicycles sale! Elec. stove, Slee Beaulyresl mattress. All gear from wrec-ked farndy. 41M-9679. '12 Honda :350 4 cyl. 9600 751-8901 momsoreves h1uled. New brakes. 72 Latm
Gamu, Chain, man desk.a, baby furn., misc Very eood cond $IS. Harco 40 (The Don· SI.JPS· Sailboat 35'48' mt Supenor cond. Fair-l948 WILLYS-CJ mod I &t6·l511 : ........ ~~Sir' Qaluy Dr 'crothrn~,1 ,.•• .... •re~.i~ 6'&6·20t6 nybrook). T.eak awlm elec. &: "".ater On dock ln_g. 1825. 548-2858 vs, big tires • lo~: ·11 Dodge M,axi-Van. hi.ta ~am, M.zf4 mil~.
.....,.., 2 Barbecues $15, need to step, sleer1n1 sear, free, prk e, everylhinJ Yamaha Mini F.nduro 80 (P890). Sl•. ... lleblt V-1, auto, nu paint ·.~ w1lh tan interior.
Huse I Mesa Verde . & Sat t to V3ll2 Carob .sell. bought gas grill . hatcbea, hardware, etc. Ul class. best ln Nwpt. special pipe seldoni COPILAHD'S • whla . 21S /4.48·458t SAVE
T1ea1.are1 to Junk ! Eastbtuff, NB 962.6164. P~lce.d • for qtd.ck sale. 673-8711 till lOp.m. L1Sed. $29S &M-i.m J .. CITY days,M6·50llevs.
hra. Haewn, Antiques, Ai dill Minney 11 25.17 West Cat · Uoeu-Muchmore.20 l~c:ore.~f.;u~~;; 18" Power M~wer .$35. Hwy,N.B.54M192 F~! ~FNJB S0'50do:· '14 Suzutl TM125MX, ex· SSMOOO '71 DODGE. P/S, P/B, f:_r118• C.M. Sat/SUn. Kelley Cr. KB. 841-7281. ~=~~1Pkfv1d. ~$35. •New '1S O,B. motors. Call615-7414 . $1 . • ~l~ce:;,.,;:t cond. 1972 DODGE POWER ;;,~ :18&1:
1
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f4l \Jj i'l Iii f
il'll'lll\ IS FollOW' stem from Spr · • Special. 4.S HP, t:z8S, 7.5 r . · VAN-Sbarp with low · MOYl ... SALll · iA1daJe/Slater , 1970 Suzuki "250", ex· HP, $425, 16 HP, Slit5. BOAT SL.U'St aome live miles! (P106J . Dodge'. \tan, C\ISt int,'
.Furn ai>p~ces.Odds Estate Sale. Oct. 4th &: ecutlve desk, 1 twin 645-6180 abo~.Mise~ 418J *. 115 SA.,..S * COP&AND'S mags, air cond, cusette.
• D i. . c l 0 t b e s . 5 l h . H 0 u a e b 0 I d while h~.adbo•rd. OLll· 9.,.. H.P. Evnrd. Lo Hrs, ' .· llsw ..... s. JEBt cm $3800._MS-2M4491Mi174 310I W11;usf hJ.U: . ~r"~'r,6t~' furnlshings-furnit.ure, ~~~~ ~~al:sar~~a~' i Lk Nw. $300 firm loah,Spetdli '75350ce,now•. SIMOOO AlltoeW...... 9190: . :,_142•MQ5 .... eo.iaM.i -l • appliance•, misc. newly webbed twin 646·4780Fri.645--4254Sit Sid 9080 'n125ec,now$1Xt. ••••••••••••••••~'••••' Alf•I-t70• •· · uten1ll1, ... diane1, etc. d ddi • .I._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• t'l5 M>Ote,now$997. 171 •07010 WEPAY~noo ' 33821 CaalaDO Dr., Dana sprea ca es....... · lo.ta, rowtr '04~ · · '75 OOt 11 .a.w-LL.AR ••-••••••••••••··~··• ':i~':.':.~P~~:~:: Point. (between Violet CoastFirewood&lpply .............. ,.,.,.,.., ''74~SOc~·=~o L•dcnlHr :8:lii~~i:::= j 97 J'M.fA •
mite. Sal NPM Lantern&$alvalfoad. eucalyptusmcord.,.. 197P.3lot33VHLFuhnEI, TSR,elFBri P)aT.L.S: Stick shift, Warrenhubl. orCLAS.5J:Qi IRUMA
----con1••ade1••11122 1 • ec. I Fi tfi:Ba '· Extraclean1auDVI ....... ua~UIV•'591 Super huge 5 family .... JO · etc. $28,900. 1-634--0844 rs Si.:. · · UYoUrearllextnclean 5 speed, stereo• low
•
or age sole A ti 538 a .... 5 l8SOE Inger.Santa f:J'399 aeeuaf. lnl. miles. Super Cl•••'· Gara1e S.~e_, S.l. Only. · n ·Recliner, avocado llhr _,, · Ana(lblkWeslNewport .,.,.. 9·5pm . 111 l1c furn, quea,mo'fle equip .. llke,orl1.S200.now$100.16'Allen8oat&Trailer Fnr7)541·5217 · ,,IAU•JUICK (6'2.IES) . .,..,. ..
we.sher, d1hw1hr stove. refi;ia:eralor,dln· 8x9Goldarearug&:pad 2SHP Eviarude, com'. -111111111L~1n:1: 1112SHarbotBlvd.. Cll'fa
c:oaebes, etc. 18082 Crai ninf &: Uvmg room sets, $75. 342·9839 plete. 7' wide. Bait tank. ""' UUW Cotta llesa 879-2500 • M--HB. cr011 St. Ed c~I ectablea, crystal, . seoo.orofr.21.3"'3l·1ST2. 'fll Norton 750.cGmman· ~ v•v..• lnft Edwatda "iver, macr•me. botUe Fine chana, 72 pc. $400. do, semi chopped , · T. OYOTA ; TOP DOii Al · t-flllOAOWAT
collection, &:·nm:h more. Crystal 42 pc. $39S . 23' Chris Sea Skiff, All fibi'e1lw u• Ski Custom John paint, 16 ·;. . . ~: pAl)JL.M SANTAANA.
Sale: 934 Cheyenne St. 3241AltaL..,,.n.aBlvd. 6CS.Q863 work.$1499. Boat, complete wllb in., H.D. rear wheel. IJ•·J171 CM. Redwood clock, 646-5'30 '71,40H.P.alleleclric SlOOOflrm.548-.5822 ·. l..,._Horbor:~M .• 44"·•3Q.3· I MIDIATaY -
Riviera Sofa, Evap. fan Bau Guitar, amp. Mini Mlsce ... eom Mercury outboard 66 Wagoneer. Dirt 1\rea, . =ALL cooler, Port. Ice-box, & Dune Bua_cy. Cement W-'ecl 1011 19tl7 Owens 28' Si.ogl motor•traller. '14 Bullaro 250 Punang, 5 ...... i.e w"''-.. -....,; .. 1 PO'
plants. Misc. 9-Spm. mlxer. Sal/Sun. 3107 ••••••••••••••••••••••• acrew, low eng. hrs, ~$89S xlot eond, take over .;;; dl;._..;~;'p .. $i5o' I CAIS
FrlJSat•Sun-CoolidgeAve.CM SSCASHSSfOR cent acrape & P,.int pymta. 815-0W'lO before 668-(514 · ' CAL&.OICot:•ll Goodusedfum/refrtga Radio, compqs .tt r ......,. 7pmorS73-3496after7pm · TO~SllUS
Misc. merchandise .'691 Royce , Irvine!; Sat Frzn/stoves.SMJ.-076S. aalty eqWp. Aecom. 6, 1972SCOUJ Everylbln1mu1tgo. 213 10/48:30AM.Kitcbappl. very, aeaworth ~ ·10 Triumph Bonneville
Amethyst, Balboa ls. crp~. drps, misc. . beautiful. $9,SOO. & -· Choppen $1200. For de· Ii 197:1 SCOUT SlttSUo 10.58'13-4799 Malcal evH & wknds tails. . HARDTOP. Root rack,
Gara1eSale-Sat/!Unl0-4, HerHI 1060 "!'~•llh l~J '68 Chris Craft 28', F/B ISt~~ ... ww::' .. ll:"td-5JW'129 :!~~~t~!~~.~~;:1~: [If l!Jf'[ JI\ I'
ll·lf'llf\IS llOTICltll'> •
· llt W. Bay Ave, Balboa••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• • •••••••••••••. •• outrlea:ers decontrol 64, •oiz '72 Suzuki T.S. l25 dirt, aide Ir out. Will trade.
Pealuula. Many areat Reg. Thoroughbred Mare, Learnj to 8Pl1ay 5 atrin9 twin V·I , szSoo. &T.O.P .-man1ex.tr11.$325. . 131·3060dlr.
bup.1 xlnt for pleasure or Ban o l uegra•• & Newporl mooring. ~ ..::.::.:=c::::.:..----'-1
74AUDll'OX
4 ipeed, red.lo. Like
-. ljillowroom -b.
shows, gd disp. 67J. l9l3 c h o r m a t I c s t 1 I e . 642·3013 days, .,...407
Sat. Onl1, lllO\'inft Starts Reuonable. Call Orel evea
tam, everJ'thin1 goes. 17 Hand Pinto Geldin1. ~048~;!-4'8!!:T~•!'ll~il!O!!!m~. ---1~~;;;;;;-.:;;;:0'";-;-.-i h:m lacl'*9 press Spirited le: 80UDd. 5 Galt· 45' HATT.ERAS AAA · back Oak Jtatty Amer. ed. "50./offer. ~ Selmer Radial Trumpet Looking for the best ~balr. i ear, cchn, sofa w/ca1e. s mos old. New w/terma to maleb, .au
.-S. 2 1mal rup. Muc Hima•ildGaa• 1065 :!::o~ac al $250. xtrutncld, Radar,ADF, MOH. 2tat Holldl.)' Rd, . wtr maker, air. Bob (~ 1-·-·-·-i 1 ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• H Bk~•-• NB .. wa ........ ...-~n Ko•in1 must 1eU, Uke MU1lcian1 : Give younelf enry.· r._.__l
. . aew 19eu.ft . Harvest the llr1l break! Lyon 23' Inboard ¥.. Wetdeck
llOY'lDI Sale: S.t/Sun. Gold Signature Frener, ftecordlngStudlohuthe DS. nu ta'.nb, rudder' ~~:!!
ll•lpm •. Etbaa Aile Xlnt cond. $11il0. Abo, latest facilities & a etc. Mu1t Sell $750
rec.lieder, 'Aottqu eurtJi..Mat.hll.23'' Color mellow atmo1phere. S30 ass.1020. Ular•'1talal........_rTi TV ·console-$100 . bour.2212NewportBlvd .. t -=:..::='------1
llt.lallttw/letMbaC -.5112. N .B .,Next to Crab •0·1..-..
ell af ra, Coaeltea ... . Cooktr. 1'1~. ateel 1achl.1'*'8d. Wi
_.i .. Jlilrmtwn. ,.....iry 1070 ff d . d O Sfllorlradelw-t i'71l·pa1m Dr••••••••••• .... •••••••• _en m• • erman oceutrtttbomeorunite. lleb. Tliols. to 'l'em WANTED ::l~ii:_•g.~ plying '1oe.soo. eqty. Mk
IDJlaDr. TOP CASH OOLLARl -"==:;:..=c:;;:~;=-~~1 211on~.~n~3~~~10~l~All!!:_·__:~1
.. .I PIANO Oonp ·loi lot. Oct 4. PA·ID FORAYOUR' Carvtdb•bYrrand f7'CHllSCOll• ·M•• ..,,,. ·~·· lllWl!Lll~'ICllES, l12SO .... 0300 Load~. wmr.:1or1r :t'iem0Mn .. i11,.r, :r.rv~8.(-sz1tm-~: Stv: tor reA.l e• ate, TD't, =. "a-.• • FJNl!!,URN 6: AN· cars, /etc. $90,000. --eqty.Aak for Ron .~·~~N~·~·===·~·~·~=1:n~Qll~,lfa.~'!~~llllll'~==:l.:~~ ~="'°~::;~J,,;,~=·="~~lA~P~·~~:::::~I ~
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CJS
.;., $3,511.
.,~ ........ ,.,,,, I ~ ,t ,.•4, J ,w_,i ,J
llM•ADI
•6CJl••1 •l s,..d •s11.r,1
O•••C•itt'• 111111111 • ..,.,. , . mu Boaela BIYll.
-.Bch .... _') .... :!.if~;:.
Cell ROlll'or · "14 Aucll Fox.. lake 'over
!------'--•="'----I leaaepurchaHplaa.Sll.5
$3295
(ORIT) ,
,.KK ENOON AM< r1Jr t:P
, 1 I) I • ·
per mo. MO«Mt. NMAPPRAI~
We bu1 tlled can 6; 9709 t"1ck1. Call G,flOTK ••••1••••••••••••••••••.
CllJ:\IROLEI' la< a tree ~ Allllla ~ •m:aitar. XlllL .,::;"!.'Sprite O!llmlau:YROU:T , .. .-.Id
IAli-81"'-"' =.-1DI. A cl--1< U.1'9--ne to Iliad. Gd llPO. eh4Gii f. __. 1 Removable hdtop ac
... Slda curtetu. sw• .. •YciulCM7 ,. Hob. cau-. TQPPllCllf'-.. , . ..--.
'74 Toyota~··· /W:I_.. ~ , t71Z
white 1~'.~... aldb'orNDt1' M••-••••• •••••••••• wtd• off U.. fW-De9 ....,.. • • CB Radio, --liHll. lllM arbor. <l.11 .~ Tf',JOOI., Sarr •••• , ..
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"1973 CANI ,..K KENDON
ANtC':'I Jfff~
' VS, 8 track ttereo air
conditionln1. XLNT'in •i-======~~~I out. 8'1·2040dlr.
I ',•,
apri· 11 Ghia "76. V&,
apt /fm &ape, rv•es.
perfect cond. 491-0IS7.
7311ATMM
AutomaUc tnnamluioa.
<~llOXI.
1<$-5100 Dir:
. )
· "74Mllc•111 • 194ZSLC '
11.0AbSD!
apri '71 2000 CC1 "4>spd, ~Ai'<,rp\. l2t..~ .. 8210, Haldi. $17. "'00 . ·~~1Ji•m /fm tape , A /C , ~ ~,. l~:!:~~~~:.;1~~~·d;~;a~l1~:~'2f~OO~.~a1~~~·~·~·1 -~-·C~a~l~l~=1~~=·=00~.·~-l •~M,;.°',,..,A·e· ··' '73 240Z. loaded, xlnt -, -l"'I
9720 cond. ,$5JOO. SM·IZIO
•••••••••••••••.•······ day1,•1.2211ev.. I JMw.c......,.
1970 IMW WILL BUY YOUR · I.. ' 2800 CSA. Sliver with DATSUN, TOYOTA, iS MOZ, Air, ....... Whls, WJlrf INda
74M~
Z40D ·
Diesel
A re•.l. econom1
.J,Ut.omeb)le wU.b aunroof', l utomitlc trammlulon,
Jlowtr ·-· loctory air condll.....,, noillo. " heater. (1711PV)
Priced to
Sell!
SLLMONS Ml HU ors bluelealher.Lowmlle3. ORVOLkSWAGEN AM/Fii 1tereo, :itru., . '41-1112 . ,f ~--~~ ~-~ ~-c~
19741MW ToiR~R ~~~i.":.°.::.~:;;.~'. erc .. d'u new mos 6i"l·IZ76
2002 tll · CALL air, stereo, AM/FM, tape wheel&. COit' '900-6ell "Tt, lle«edes 28) diesel.
Hard to find modt:l in ex-SAL BERNADENE deck, all mtcb1 .. woril $3GO, ........ auto, air coad. AM /P'M ,
)!e t1ent condition . _Md-OM% oew .M"uat ._to·apprec. MBZ •71 281 SEL. Low Mit.belin~Belta.On-
(D87 KXV>. ,74 zsoz . Au.to, air, $5100. 496-8003 aft 5; mileaJe an d f ull y ly 81,000 qai . Clean. CREVB AM /FM radio' 10 ml. 49M97.5days • '"' equippecj. A very nilcct --=c.20;.c,..:.·c_ ____ _ . MOTORS Xlnt cond $5900 /bsl~ '68 DATSUN sW..... speed, car l Lease or buy . 72 -280SE 4.S.Sedan, A/C,
1st &'110.ADWAY 645-3298. .-. radio. 1ood Ur•. ( 0 1 I 0 I I) D l r . immac. l owner local
S4NT4AIU. 1~73 DATSUM tJoocket •••to" .... In· 114/UJ.'/2SO. cor. Hfve proot of con-
ll'-1171 Z Wior. <X'.l'GMll...... MBZ '71 lllO U: Sod. <.S. tin .... Hrvlre. -2564
---------: ~i~g~ =·&ai.r~~ 641-4441 • Dlr. Pride ol ~P ud days, l5l-0718cvs.
1971 IMW2002 paint. Low miles. '72 510 "wen. Auto, air, immacutalet ExtendedM-BZ '72 250 c~. Runs
4 speed, air conditlonlnc, 831-20Wdlr. radials. <41,000 m,i. Miol term• Jvallable. ~015615) and look• like neW !
stereo &r: mag Wheels . cond.$2,lTS.6'2-4.509. Dlr_71 ·/6Z3·Tl50. Le&Q or bu):. .. C007113)
One owner Will tradei For Sale 197.S Dats un M•7 ,66 ~Sod.· •-oldi Dlr.114/SZ3·7ZSO. . · · .B210, 2500 rru . AM/FM --nu e,1-~--------11 8Jl-2040dlr. Radio" radials. $3,350. but a -oodiel Priced llBZ .'tt .U0 "SE Cpe.
546-0010 Pl.t 9725 .. u thla w..C. (0-61! -bl .. ,A bnllli!VI
1972 DATSUN
PICKUP
4 eyt .. 4 9PMCI. radio, ,....,.. ltinyt bench .....
vinyl interior. Sharp!
(8TK730) •
'
BMW '74 _4 Dr. Secs. Very ••••••••••••••••••••••• J>lr. 714/521-1250. '3 family car! Extended
lo"'. mtleage. Well.,, 260-Z. 'speed, low mumu . . term1. (085243) Dir. :we NEW. 240 .equ1pped_and ready to miles, AM /FM, xlnt. ~ llBZ 73 '50 SEL. Only ll•lm-72.50 ~
go. Sell or lease. (280974) cond. $:WIOO. Pvt pty. Call 28,000 m lle1. Tobacc · ~ z
714/523·1250. • •ft•rlPM 5'6-32116 He•~¥ lot• brown. BuU!lful car la 73M-•• "Jy/,.) DATSUN . . ' · a. s.... A.-jual Hke new. A'Vailable • -450 SL ~
Tr11Cks !560 Tntekl '''° P'ACJ'ORY for lease or purchase. 8olh ....... . ' trOl ~::.-...:.::::.. ..... .= s4's43 •••••••••.•.••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUTHORIZED ( o, 1 Z $ SI D I r . ~mpl.; C:.:.m • ..,.._,.....(7M.m_,
SALE •SERVICE Tif/5Z3·lZ50. ment including aterJ: , lllSS 'M'IWRT ~ MCTOl.Y AD, Y. Jt ...
PARTS •LEASING '61 300 N .d.. automatic. ,.,....._.. steer· t-----;::::-:~:--...;;;...=t-.;..;;;; _____ ..;;:.:;:;.;.;;;;,;...._..,;.;:::;;.__;.:,:.:..:;,.:::.:;_.I
5999 5 1099
~;,.,_. • .-.cw: YI. 3 ""'91t, "-'•· ~ t. ..,.. !lmlni. !'1&111S-1IHA}
·nroaD 7'~ C04•,_ P1C1 UP' -.nw•AM
52099 52199
4 IOMd. rldlo I .... !<Ir wlllte 'II. •u•-uc. ll11btlle 1011 ~. flllldlo. Miter. f'llf .-nor.('60111L-.1405.AJ° . pmlllC jOll, (11IOll-li'2<1A)
'66FORD 70YW •ONCO Yf'MOHIUS
52199 52299. ....... *M. •,:iz.:,, ..-. hG I roll W., lo, llNW .l ._ 111••d. r1d lo, s e1111. I'll• cet'lv•• too . l•11CYB-1MSA) ........'"'!'-' 11 tlAOV·llUleJ.
'70:JOYOT4, '73 SCOUT II • UMKllUll8 ·-..... ,. ·4wt-.Mlft
"53999 52799 • ~ .............. ~. Alf co• .. iwto111e11c. owr.
a.war-........ Aoll ......... ,,.,,, ""*-.......
'9'. '*-pelnt, a~ • ,_ hut.. 1vo11•11• ••ck & blu•
....._141781D-IS&29l ..._ {121HH8-4J1MA)
Fully equipped. Be e ar-ing, electric. windows, YI U TUM "f TIMI" FI AT · ew en.f>U'le. -~-· 5114 a IS
ly! <THF331 ) *'-· Dir. Rose miot wilh while '71 :="..;."":i..'":::$1863 '68:.:-..::::.-·..::::: s 1082 '72 !...~.Ji:;=: $.\VE Dick M1llC'r Moto r'l 714/S23·7.UO. leather interior. ... i...-..., W1J1 , .. 1 •• , ... , "''"''"· -.....,,.. ,.io.
SAVE
-.QtllllA.1 .-.COJ ,.._, u .. ..-·,i.,,
l20W. Warner at Maio . MBZ '1$ 230 Sed~ Only ._.._.~,-.:u-._~,Mea...:ar --~
Santa Ana SS7·21S2 4,400 miles. Tobacco l II.
i-----i -O:cr'FAC:.m~>·~i':. '71 .... ,,111!, !...$1583 '73 -~::s'!.'!!$_.4687 '73 --~~n fl MAKE
74HOND.A
CIVIC
•4Cyk• ·•·••1111• $2695
l l30il3SI
•KKENOON ,, dMC "I .JEEP
·.• . '
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714 /523·1250. ~.:··· ........ ---..... ..... .19Dt· -·-NFIJJPl JI\ f
ir·H'llf\ rs 1
(-PR)
'66 MllCIDIE-S
:ZSO SI COUPI
Au.tolnat lc" traaa.,
fO'#W steering, IUD· """· . $6,195
~ J:To~~
IJffW.C..ttwy.·
I . ::"S11'::z9"" l t\
' llOO W.Coast llwy.111.
542·9405
llBZ '71 280 SE Cpe. 3.$
Engine, fully equipped
w/sWI roof. Mint coad.
Ava ilable for leue or
purchase. <142CFUJ Dir.
714·S23·72SO.
MBZ '73 450 SE. Clean.
Pride of ownership. Can
be leased oc purcb
on extended lerm1 .
(003835) Dir. 714523-1250~
M BZ '73 ~ SEL. Fully
equipped wfsun roof. A
well maintained luxury
sedan for the dis·
c rimin a l i n g buyer .
Wase or buy. (OOll(l21)
Dlr . 21 3 /921 ·85SE
714 /523·7250.
IC.-..CM.ltC DWl'I ''I .' I I I II I' I I T ,i, 11 • • ~MSW.to\9'. ......
,__ ___ .._ MlCMl_,,'IO ......
NEW 1975 DATSUN 8210
7SHONDA'cvcc.•apd, .,,.......... ,.................. 9IOO-.Mew ,_, ............. 0 _,-..... 9100 ,............ 9100
yellow, AM/FM, Strack, ••••••••••••~•••••••• •••••••••~·••••••••••·~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••.•••••••••• •••••••••••111•••!••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
top rack, •tra warranty. ~ Onb' 2IOO mi. Ulr.e new.
a-i100. · 541-6024 o r
ers'32oo.'
J'!r•r t7JO .. , .............. , .... .
'84 XKE Coupe. Reblt-
& '61 trans. Gd cond. Call
evenings 581-Mll. G~~~~~~E -'7 6 CHEYETTESI
I ZO CJ.RS OH SALE HOW -
FREEW J. Y CLOSE; SJ. VE J. LOT!!!
YEAR
END SALE r
'12877
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, .for'76e....,.,.. ,
.. ~ "S.ooterJ'' See and drive the
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New '76 Chevrolets NOW
at HOW .ARD .Chevrolet!
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COROLLA
•4 Cytlacler
• AutolllClllc
$2495
(3F'9372)\
2toChooM!
•1(KENDON ,.. AMC'1JEEP
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-
MAnlClllfN -'1e VW't er_._ -l•l ,,,_,. -I ,.. A:mtom1Uc,alr_.._. C&lllll-lln.._.. ~Job 6--. Will
l d I -2 •-..11.., _.. -.• 11., ·············-·· r fllrltPldt iaa 6 Laa••· -7:tYWC •tr• ,...-.-..,.-_.-. AJelUAL ..u..m-.-•-" o.. .., .. ,.Sid roclu. 74H ...... 2Dr.•
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16UkMli 75's
2CELICAS
IST. WAG.
3 i600SEDS.
ISIUOPES
2DLXCPES
2LANDCRS
J MARKllMX
IHJLUXSRS
Up to 11.DOO Mllo ..ct""w .. w1, :t.Y.•16 11 ~
SHTHl-
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ll~Maey
TOYOTA
18881 Beacb-Blvd.
HIOlll ..... -k
847 .. 555
841-0WM-'I& B•f;.,...-. new OUM61CQ!llfTY whitewall \Ira. !ta
'72 Toyota fully uip., 'paint, ndiaMln&Ali!"°· YO&.YO olcel -IO'A
low mlleaae. ,:a:ln1 CZIS> SH-2*31. 5 EXCLUSlVELYVOLVO ...........
Sl8SO. Calt •5611 p,m. JArant VolvoDealer >L~ 1
'72 Bue. r«Wdif reWll. lnOraqeCounty! ti 7 1 TOYOl'A an1 111 e, new clutch. BUYorLEASE llJl
• COllOU.4 Sl.900. (211) 5"·23S2. DfRl!lOI' ~
<233DDAJ Aller 5 p.m, ~ . "Ol.VO
"'-'-0700 •• DJ' ''9 VW BUG ..,,
Tri ..... "", '767 Xlntcond,verycleao. , fq66~rbof.CJi!..6'6
••••••,.•••••••••••••••• si300. -.sm. 2025 S Manchester. '70 HOrDet. 8 cyJlll
'73 Bu.a, 1 pNS. A/C AIM Anaheim 750-2011 automatic, low mil
7-/M 1ttreo. SS,400 or bit SUll ... ..._,Dir.
Dir. 912.1 ... , • VOLVO •a t R A Ill 8 L g,
'•Squarebaic,lr.,newllna, _ Aa"loqa•tic, r•4
reblt eac • ..,$1100. tlrm. s·· t -bea&er, air eu.al.. ~ 1i: a aood t•• •.•"' r
All cars in our steck (ZVH.594). -· " '89 VW, needs motor, priced at below increue U&-4447
make ofrer. 847-1253 ofA t25th. 1..:=:'.:'.;;'-----'i btwn8:30&5:30 ua:us 19'1•HORNETWch 48 air, P /S, P /8, au&A>, 15
(OWl01'l
)!73 YW
_DILl!Jll IUS
Prii:ed below Market
Value. Abo, lS other•
to choose from.
, To CHOOSE trlr hllch. -· ffl days, fff..15111 evea
FROM JUST~ED
FACTORY
DEMOS
'61 Rambler SU. W
Ttans. ca·r. $25«)/beat.
fer. 548-6142.
hick • •••••••••••••••••••••• Example . ru . ., ,75 .. 44 Wm l970 Bwck v1era. ~r,
. ,. . full power, new tire;s . Atitomal1~., AM /FM 494-5980aft.5. • • s tereo raruo, power
steerin&, l>OWF antenna, "J3 Buick Rivier• GS.-..fDI·
low mile1. 13119. /y eqWpped with all op-
tions. 92,000 miles. e
• CO\l~'i1!S:i ,l1\1.'J : . 11/iT J.:,lt.'1'01ll' 1l UTllOHIZf,'/) : 69Toyotaeoron'a
• Sal~·· ·"""';,.,,, L •alfill/( &:· 0rtfniPru IJ~·li1·rry • Xlnt cond. $81.S~
$3,888
~-. ~eulemiA
• VOLVO .
driver. MOltly fr~a
driving daily bet~
Newport Beach~
Rosemead. A ~aUtlf1 I
automobile in exctdle:
condition. Beat Otr'e .
644-7065. ..
L 120 W. WARNER at So. Main, SANTA AN~ c1usirledAds 642·°'1 hes•orrer.646-9274.
• 557°2132 • """"Hew 9100'-.Hew tlOO ....................•.................. . .... : ................ "·······················
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SAVE All THE WAY! •••
WHEN YOU BUY -WHILE YOU DRIVE!
NEW 1975 PINTO 2 DR. SEDAN
ON Ly $2789 Incl. 2300 cc 2 V • cylin.i.;:,ieng.,
· Calif. emissions equipment, radio ,
· five B78x 13 BSW tires, fronr &-'ritqr
+To• & Ucenwi bum~ gygrJJ1J. more.
1·~-(S.r.:t5RIOY128345,Stii.#761)
NEW 1975 MAVERICK 2 DR.
_--..::-------ONLY s3099
+ oa & llc:et1M1
,
ONLYs3669
, , YOUR CAR IS HERE! r
· Incl. pin stfip9:s, radial tire1,
power 1te.ring, power front
.disc brakes, bumper guards, rodio~ heater, tinted sf01s.
(Ser.# SR02Y106991, Sile# 166)
'
O vet 00 f'lew 1975 Models ready to go at th11
greotio,st Cl._p Discounts of our 54 Year Hislory, '
VALIANT
4 •., ovto. "'°"'·• foctery .W, 57, 111 rtff,
C•ttOOVAN
55,610 ....,,
'f
lml Beacll Blvd.. I H-. Bch. 842-I 1966 Hmbor ( M 64/, 9303
'75 Volvos
hyoru-
'68 Riviera,
$900. orbtltoffer.
67S..578S
Caclllac ,,')s '69 VW But Auto. '3,000
miles. Good running
cond. $975. SCS-5396 •••••••••••••••••••••••
·10 VW Bua, sunroof', rebJt
eng, best offer over $2000.
495·0492
'"""1 -~
-1989 V·W-SquarebaCk I new tires, anxibus. .. -~ ~1; ....... .
Cadill8C: 1~:::::::::::::::~-~I $895 556-6337
'60TR·3 1968 VW Baja Bug, trick
New Tire:s, Runs Great motor. Weber carbs. neW I t7 Z VOL VO Selection S800 00!8479 whls &tires645-0418 142 E. 4 speed, air condi,
1972 Ric kman Triunlph '68 .Bug, f!61t. new t'ires. tioning &. AM /FM. One
ss·o . Mags, discs , paint, mint. $1~. Must owner.831 -2040dlr .
akronls . Fast, sturdy. selJ !673-232S '60 Volvo. Nu Paint.
OYB 100 ' .............
Afters, ~-4972. IAJAIUCi Brakes, Clutch. Runs
'7i Tri ..... n "" 1700 c.c. engine, dual ~,::.:O s5so. Aft. 5·
c~a:==-
Low miles A-M-/F-M-: port intake. full roll1---------1
Sharp! 108CIM. cage, ... racing seat w/har-
SAVF. nesa, jackman wheels &
offroad tires. Street &
dirt legal. &11-2040dlr.
'72Yo1Yo 164
Auto. trans., factory air
conditioning, power
Nabers'
Cadillac
GAAOE.H WE!>T VW '
steering. AM/FM stereo HOO M•r.,.111w.. J '-...... c.ostai ~ 540-,100 / '73 Bug, low mlle9, radio, heater. Used but1-.::::=====,;::::-' .
am Jim' super clean, not abused. :ES-JET. '59 Cadillac, 4 dr. all e'lec-~. 848-0952 $4499 ~ tric, Gd cond. Askin'k
,
• I\ · ' ·, · I I
',\ . . ' . , \ '66 VW-4apeed, bucket . ; $250. "6-~l •
'70Spitlire:overdrive seats, radio, heater, nice ej•1111 l"1n:a 1974 CAD Sedan OeVllle. $1621 675-5797 paint. A GOOD BUY ! -· tUIL Wl\O Compl . loaded. Xlnt
(611GXd). $009. ~ cond. $5950. 552-8547 l
Y-w-9770 646-4447 Dir. ~ VOLVO: •••••f>••••••••••••••••• 66 vw v eeds rk · 'Yhite '73 Coupe de Ville,
'68 VW B'uG-~u cket AM /FM 8~~dio, $7;.o 0; 'j~66 !inri>I?~ CM.. 646 9303, Joaded , blk Vinyl' lop
seats, AM radio, ~x-beat , w /leather int. Xlnt. cellent exterior, runs 631.z:MS VOLVO 74 ~. dr. Sed. $4800.494-8334or497-3'31
n ice & good tires . Economy w1lh style.. _
HATES GAS ! t448MV8>. ·ss VW Camper, xlnt Thi~ one has if all. Lease Classified Ads sell big
$999. cond. Ready to go. $1 ava1lable. Cs.6364 ) Dlr. items . s mall items or
646"'"41 Dir. or offer. 548"-9960 -.-'114 /523-7250. any ite m. 642·5678.
f-.PRICES ARE ·BEING SLASHED
: : ' i ON. i.ARGE INvENTORY-·
· · , OF ALt '75's
573.27 r.. -1oc. fa L
'°' "2 --.m;. ...,.... Cali lllloe Inc,,. & llmNii'U'tM.APR 14.IO'll; on~CNclil.
•
~EMAINING:
.. .
GREMLINS
MATADORS
HORNETS
.. BUY OR' LEASE NOW!
" I
• :~f AMC
· IRIL GRIMUN 'Dr.-9 ......... Aaloauit1c,'pwr. atom.Uc• with lHs !hon ~~!j,.., COGd. ·ft ~ lot>· mllet. MI NT CONDITION (~14' \ 'l:Q FfND. (309100() • Slttl ,
1971 FORD
TOllNO
Lo• mileage. Smatl VI ,
automaUc, air c.oadiUonln&.
(1"1DCtJ).
' Sltl ,. SAYE .
.,
• i
•
•
I·
GP· • a
. I
e .
5 •••
Ile .
Int
• •
•
Yllrlhlll'd B8rrJ'a ca..
llAeY OWNIDISHIP
Dl8COUNT
D••1s?
WITHTl;IE
BIG
•
·-··········_........ ms "7S 'CamarpLoT.G.OOOIDl, l Yr. limited warrancy
hlll pwT, A.C., Ylayl lap. OD all-can.
:J>.P.-:1111.U<-SllM-
•UTSAI ..... ,,
TOYOJA
1•1 Bacta Blvd.
'&1 Camaro S.1pd, ne H•.lfa ......
· clutch. tape dk. Bum Cd, . . 1474111 -.... -om , -'--=-:..:....::=:.__-I
R1ll)'e Sport, '68. 327 "10 El Camino SS.WS, low
p /B p /S Cd Ures. N mi, new point, pllyflu brake..' si,.s. -2531 tireo, air/ PIS. Uh-· evel\ in1 whee . -..re
'71 C.muo, 17.000 mi 7 4 CHEVY
lllnt coad. Arr. air, PIS L "'GU ..... P /B.$3400.-1230 ,.. ~
ttzo •Y4 & Aulo.
······················~ •Factory """' A'7,2 Y9fJ!1 Wap. •Power Stus "'9
""'· tram., ladar7 au 0,,._. lloaf coodltionin&. r8dio, · ·-r• ~ beat~. Super~& •LowMlll <
room! 687-EIU. •Lew Pi lee . :
·,· $339' .
l711LHL)
rK~~.~
'
· 1f · 197 6 is the year you plan
... to . buy .a .new.car, better plan
·~ -to ~ee what's -:reaJly n~w ..
>< O'LDS' '76' •STARFIRE•OMEGA•CUlUS '" · · ~ .. ,., . •. DELTA f ~~;··TO.· .RONADO · •• '" WE HAYE ONE FOR YOU .PRICED $
FOR AS LITTLE AS •••••••• We. .•1l1
top .u · " ~i .• ~ • ..,.., '76 OLDSMOBILE -'
....
.Ta...i
UclMi
big " OMEGA SERIAL 13S2706t.100942 IMMEDJATE_ Ql;LIVERY"
or l•I ... _ ...... _ .... _....._ _______ ....., ...... __ ....,_-!'.;;.;,.;"-----~
.
'
•
' '
-•
HUGE DISCOUN1 ·· ON ALL '75 OLDS NOW!
---· -. REMAINING . ,
50 4 Wheel .Dr.lwes Oft Sale
ALL AU IRAHD MEW 1971'• AHD THEY MUST IE SOLQ!
Al.SO BE SURE TO ···, · . · .
SEE AND DRIVE o1JR Dodge-Chevy-GMC TER~ VANS 4x4''
70 PLYMOUTlf oUSTI:R
Auto. trans .. radio. tiMter. rallye
-.(603BERJ
71 MAZDA ,
4 speed, air, AM/FM' radio,
, • (184EOJ)
' r I
.'68CAMARO 3 speed, radio. heater. (313281)
•
· .Colopy Park Wagon. Power $·111· 71 MERCURY s121· steenng, power l>rak!ls. power.
, ee"s, AM/FM 'radlo.(416EDB) . s977· 700LDSCUT1ASS ' s127 Auto. trans., air, power Jteering,
· • 'radio. (7a:fAGCl _,, . ' ' '
:72VEGA ·WAGON ' s101170DATSUN Pl(J(lJP s1477 4 speed, radio, i-ta;. rallye · Air conditioning, stereo radio,
wheela. (511 GBI) , chrome w!>eels. ~1 Pl • ,
71 FORo' GAl.AXIE 500 's117·7 72· DODGE DART s157 Auto. trans., air, po AS steering. ~ 'Auto. trans., air. pawer lttMWtng,,
r1dlo, heeler. vinyl roof. radio heater. (180EXKJ (58ZCF.Ul • . . '
'
. '
'
·.t Yhlt -•••••• to-Mlp .. c•l•llnzl1t We're.offet"'9 spec:W..., ••r••nl I g 19751b:atu..i.Mercwplalhck •••• ----...-...........
' .'75
MARK IV •75
30 LIPTTO
. SIUCT FROM 2691975'•
MUST GO!
BOBCAT
42:.~.
'
,
23 Mwcurys • Ll_:::Unc:-=oln=s,__ __ _c..:._~ 25 Montegos • 23 Cougcrs , __
'73 MHCURY
MOHTEGQ
4DOOR . """'°" ......... ""'9f .-.... -...-. ~ IOOf, [2119KXSJ
'72 UMCOLH
MARK IV
Air COl'ldilloni119, vin~ roof, io.cNod. ,,....,
'72UHCOLH .
COHTIMEMT AL
MK IV
Fedor\r • -*""'"" .. lull -fi _, OiiliW>.._ .. tr._ C•I TFFH) '
16 Comets
HeW-Executive Ccri
Demonstrators
"68
FORD
WAGON
(508CQR>
'63
STUDEBAKER
CLASSIC
<ZDR170)
1 75
CAPRI
65 MUST IE
'SOLD HOW!
'72 FORD
TORI HO
CLASSIC CAR
1964 IUICK
RIVIERA """"'°· lrWIL, I.Oort .ir, -~ -.......... ,..., llell« • .,...,.. llrw. ....... t'OTOMI
LOW MILES
'75 DODGE YAM
1-100
s5295
'71 DODGE DART SA YE
Slant 6. under 10,000 miles, loaded
w/ equipment. ( 4991.AG)
'72 DATSUN COUl'E • $1995
'72 f'IHTO $1495
4 cyl, 4 speed, radio, heater,·
economy special. (880EIBJ "
Loaded with extras!(661GMNJ
'75 PLYMOUTH DUSllll SAYE
Full factory equipment. under 7,000
miles. (368MCU)
1'
"
,1
I
'. .
I
·-•
•
-• 4 ·-...... -.. --.r------
• _ .......... _ ---
' · UM<! -.uted ·~ u .. d ·~-u-_. .-...... UMCI •••••· UMd .......,, ........................ . ..... ~'LY PILOT £..IA-,..,... __ I 1815 --. _.. _..., ••••• ... , .. •••• ••••••••-·-••••• • , l:~~~~-:;;:-!:!!:~--:i,;;;;:iil·;.-...:.=:.::::..·"~I~-::·~·~ ·············-·-·· ·····~·····~--·-·· .. _ ............... ~ __,... . . "so ffn '"'....., ,,,.. ... ,_,. :Ctaa. .,_. _,,I'-•" Uled J .... U... "20 ,..___. . ff25 c.,..ette . * ••••••••••••• ••••·-··---·_. •• , ········-··-··-·-·-··················· ···········-----' .... ........................ -······-·······-··-······ . ~ ,, .... ••••·••••••·•-•••••••• ................... ~ ... ........a • '71 r -1 -.. ~ 2 *' c•1 elol " ffZG c:-.~ -'58 C9r\'etle. 111. Mpd. •~ ·-·no -• 'IO a-Le Modi . -W -ere b . :.::>;;.. ••• ....t.•••••••• ••·••••••••·•""••-•••••• ·~·····••••••••:••-•• CONNB.L 1:='=~~:~~: sz,300, Pf&.Plb.1:r".:,. • zai. Alm~·1:11 :ire;: =={ ,l;:~e;.~•-.ir•
·u CHEVY VONTE'$7Z.'<lr.Chromewba,gd'?IXllUPl'B . "7WJo 54S4773. :::t" r..Ulb,i ... ":ir. P/Sl<PilL-'Cii
CARLO. Immaculate Uret. lblll n-oot eod. '6.1 t:,i. 2:;'fu J~f~!; CHEVROLET . tt•7 "73 Corvette 454 cu ta. T· "'10 ........ __ ea,~. ·lbla.-~ .::· ~l ~-to•operate. veg.,~ cond. Well eQulN)ed. rt7 eog. Rwu ed. $350. ~& ...... _._. C1•1t • Top Alr auto, Ult .w ..... or vu.er. $60I below Bl• IW!ilr_ <lll&ft._ or belt uull' ,_.. •
Me:reedes trade-lo. Ex·· 982-0021. fend4!-r· M~.us ln-.. . ··········-··········· am ifm 'stereo. G'old Coaab'YSedan.air~auto. ea.a ---,I ~ekaale.SSZ.'IS21 !1
tended terms available. _ runrungcondition. WouJd SAL'ESllSERVICE toCometn.w:good, /saddle ttbr inter full pwr, tlOO-or 'ol1ei-. -'
(41"63) Dir. '114·523-7250~ 1973 Chevy Mali~, auto, be nice for~ wbo 2121 H• .... llYd. needltrw. wort.$7S. *5150 $66.QOO. • 5&5-llm •t• Pa I con 2 d r ., Mercury PutJw•dr,, ~ I p/a, p /b. air, nn top, is looking for a t1;w:erup. COSTA MESA 540-<841 · aufomatJc. mac•. lo bit via top. v .. • f
'6S Jmpala Conv. Xlnt radials, xlnt cond. per. Will sell u is. fqr 546 llOO Ca .. or tt3J '82.J'aleonRancbero.~ mU.. S* .... 'Dir. traM,faet..alr,P/t,PJb. ,+
cond. Nu painl&isoforth. Sacrifice, $2,295. ~ $12:5/blt olr. catt 546-0073 • C1Rt......., 9930 ••••••••••••••••••••••• !'.If., new r..n.tor. 04IW' • • • • aew 1 taoek•, receot !
968-9745. eves/wknd&. after5. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •68 XRl: PIS. P /B, alr. fuel l)UJD.J), IOOd u,.. 6: W LTD catry Sq. 1tp. tUDueuP 6-...-: at.a.rt«.. • I 9770 72 Chevy Nova $2000 'M Lincoln Cont.. good XI 1 ood Must aeU. Of· brakes. Riff. Auto. I etL Ork cro. Rack, all stru. 'Jluu a:Jot. Gd:. tl.ret. $125 • I Volktwagen 9770 Volkswagen 9770 Volbw99" orbutdfer.Call cond. $695. Priv. pty: 0 c · 1 Gd ecooom1 truelt• ~.146-262'1.. or beslol!er.Sl"""" aft 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9(i3..48$)7. 493-4725 fen.S44-63l • 19mpc. Asld.a&$1SO.Call, . w sFrt.Sat /SUn.anytime. ~
'llCbev Impala Custom, Dodp ttJS ~epm . ....-n U PALCON Cpe, ne . WE'RE
DISCOUNTING
HARBOURVW
13711 BEACH BLVD .. HUNT. BEACH
842-4435
f 11 ·wer air X,lnt Cor"f'effe 9932 ••••••••••••••••••••••• T -sti W PIS brka, •t,~•· -.ttans. tt '•I HU .. :md.Pfc, mi. $82S. firm :••••••••••••••••••••••• '6' DODG&AutomaUc, ~tk fM tN . ::-. rack'. N"* P r .,.,,-,a11 •••-•.••;;;.•••·-·•••••
'31·3375. •TOPCA.511! radio, beat.er, ra~ial $158:5.l82-0.'11Saft. l 5'5-708I l97Z MUSTANG MACH
Fol' Corvettes and other tires, clean 1nter1or. _ '70 Ltd BRJUgb.am. good 1 .• Autqmattc~ powe.t" '63 6 CYL wagoo, auto, -Cood gas mileage. Very
good cond $475. 631·3388 .
used car s &t trucks! (952CGY). $399. 'It MERCURY 4dr. 74,000 cond. $1100/bs't ofr. sieerln&. A'!f /~M st.ereO./
HOWARD C_bevrolet, 646-4447 Dir. miles. Xb:tt Trans. #15 -..UMatLJ; air eoodJt10DJnS• Lo'f
Dove & Quail St.s. Near 515-2119 · ml ... • SHARP! (P;682) .. Jamboree, Bristol, & Ford 9940 · '75 Grao 'torino. ftpe.sa. CO~'S
Cllr'ytlB 9925 MacArthur, Newport ••••••••••••••••••••••• '63 FordFalal•• squire wag. Pvt. ply JE•CITY
••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach. 833~ '59 Ranchero,newbrak.el, V-8 auto. trau., radio, muatsell.'92-6538. • •ooo t:· '69 Town & Country Wgn. runs great. $CS/ oiler. be 't.e ff rd to find Im· '----"5::5::~:..:.0.:."'--....,., Btfl. P /B, PJS, P /W. 72 Corvette. p /~,. p /b, 646·1'61 . ·eur·te~ cEA..a '6' Ford Falcon289high • ~___,,,,,
Gold, & wood. $789 . auto, am/fm radio. $S800 _ ma • · perform. eng, mag whls. 66 Mustmg.-
548·081.2. firm.548·5819 '73 Black Torino. Air, tlVE $300."6-CCMMI. Cll5J6..73J9 1 1_:=.~""'------:-:-:::-!::'::'::::-;::::-;--;::-:;:=::;::I AM I F M, Automatic. ..,.
'6S New Yorker. $325. MUST SE:LL 7J Corvette Bestoffer.673-1625 ' d" · L • • wy 9950 otcMMOblle 9955 •
De pendable. Air, FM. mags, a ir. fu_)IY loaded.. . ltlll• fJOtA •••••••••• .. •• •••••,.••• ••••••••,."••••••••••••• , 962.3489. $6SOOorbest.6t.5-:m'J'. 57 T-B1rd. Sharp. BIO ~ ""' , Jlarqws Brougham, SaleiaodServiee
over $4,000. Take car in .;Wt. all pwr aupe'r. eond. Sac. OLDSMOllLE
IMPERIAL '73 Sed. A 1966STIHGRAY t.ade.540-.. 5" ·'?If,• VOLVO $2,200.' firm. 642-6753 / ClRUCKS loaded car with all th 4 speed,, magsi, both tops 6"-G815 GM t
extras. PrieeA for quick & cover . CONCOURSE '65 Ford Cow¢r'YPS B SedanC R . t966 Hnrbor,.C.M. 646 9303 . HONDA CARS ·l· sale! (169648) Dir. COND ITION.831-2040sta.wgn. PA.. 7SM~ UI -u..A.1~'•
71 15~7250 di &If szso. M-2042 -· -• • ••• -·1 WW. .... 4
-· r · . Mon.cit Ci-. 2850 Harbor Blvd. ·: I J 8 J M 9100 Auto1,Mew 9800Alrtos,M•• 9800 Alltos.Mew 9100 Auto. trans., factory air CostaMesa MD-9640 : Autos, Mew 9800 Autos, Mew 9 00 Aldos, ew ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••.,••••••••• conditioning power XI t . d•, ••••••• •• •••••••••••••• ••• •• •• •••• • ••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• rl adl • he ter '65 Olds F85. n nmrun&,
ALL 1975 FORDS
ttee og, r o, a • d ·t ·on 6 44·-480$•
whitewall tires, vinyl c.okn d's1 Eastblurr1• roof liated glass, wheel W D ' • cov~rs . 6,000 Orikinal . Newport. :;.
miles. 628-MCF. '73 cUtlass Salon, vi.Dy.I •:
$4999 top, all pwr, velour upc! hot., stereo tape, tilt wh~ ."'• · · ·-L · ·; nu tires/brks .. Own alil 11 ft•hi I moving, must selL Cal.,. . l¥1' lW w 559..()()98 •
. ~ TOYOTA 1'75 Ol<bmo~e Coove ' All white, immacula
tM HMbor, c M. 646·9303 , cond. $4600.642-_8787· ~
Don't give up the ship! '65 Olds convertible •. g~.,
"List". it in classified. r unne r . $375. Private
Ship to shore results! party· 493-4725
1142·5678. Pinto 9957 f
······················t: · 72PIMTOWAGOM ~ OPPOlt'l'UHITY Air conditionin g~:,:
knocks often when you ,(6J4FYE> ·;q
use result·~ting D!ilY 645:5700 Dir~< Pilot Classified Ads to !
reach the Orange Coast Pinto Runabout V6, ~ ....
market. Auto trans, P /B & ati .,,,
Phone 642·5678 ing. 499·2058 aft. 4 pm. , • ·
• ,,
'
1
•
HEW 75 PINTO MPG
HEW75 LTD
53H9
'951!..
llOWI
4 QOOJl .. tt.OOD $~. -· l.....,-..,...,.,
' -~-... oab-....... OU!eM---llJIM30I)
$3077 $7312 ··------' .... -~ ....... --....... , ... -... -.,. .. ---
..
NEW 1975
GRANADA
2DOOR •
~SO CID 6 cyltl'ldef erigine. Calllornia ~mission EQuipment. Deluxe
Bumper Group. #5W82L 143152
53555 583~ ... _____ ..,
.... -~ ..... --.... .... ~-.. _,,,,_ ... --
BRAND NEW COURIER
l.:'"'..::t.""-""~-~
s71~~:£f$1• PRICES WILL
NEYER BE
----.--~-
51877
'73 MERCURY -.. __ .. _ .. __ . -----·---__ ..., ____ _
52777
'71 CAMARO .
52677
'74 FORD ... _ .... ··--·-·--------·-------
-
..... . _ .. ____ _ __ ,,_._,...,.
'70 CAMARO ..... _-._ .. __ ------------
52377
72 CHIVROLET _ .... ,.. ______ _ -------
'74 PIMTO -----. ........ ____ _ -s3277
'71 FORD
~ ............ ... ---~--
___ .. ___ ,_
--~--11-'1777
"74FOlD ...
________ .. --· 52777
Sllow Us A good
Credit Statt•Rt
AND
We'IDeli•1r
Ott Tllo Spol!
REHT·A·CAR ••••• W'ICllll.'
PINTO •••••••••••• $20
MAYmlCl' •••••••• $12
MUSTAM •••••••• sas elAMJJIA , ••••••• $ll
150FIHMIW
'73 MA YHlcll
i:.::=.::;-:-,,.
. . '
'73 DATSUM _ .. ·-·----[-$2577. __ ,
'74TOYOTA
CCM!Ot.U. WAtOM ---------·-·---52677
'7JFORD ..n.uCMi ... __ ._ ... __ ----·----· 53377
'72 vw -·-------"" --· --'2177
'72 PLYMOUTH -... --.-.. ---·---.. --. -.--s1977
LOWER
. ..,. ________ .., ··-$1877
'72DODGI ••• .... --.-... --
52977
'72 FORD ... .... ___ .. __ -----.. -.......
5247.7
'61 OLDSMOllLE -· .. _._ ... _,J __
::-:..=:::..":~=-=
5777
'74PIMTO ·--::.------·
52977 ·
'74 MA YlllCll
------AMOl--:-i ,.. ... --.-........ -....,._ ___ ...
2240 S. MAIN at WARNER, SANTA ANA, 546-7070
I _ _, ___ _ --
IRAHD HEw '75 .
Aufo. trans.. power st9et;ng, Po'W8f' disc:
brakes, power· windows. AM/FM s1ereo.
rallye wh~s w/ radial tires. (1182) {8033)
IS
MOW
W AiS $5565.60
DISCOUMTED
$92893
'4424
Gre1nlin.
IRAHD HIW·'75
Auto. trans., air. power steering, power dlec
brakes. r.dto, custom Interior, roof rack.
(01611(0086)
WAS$4nUs
DISCOUNTED
IS
MOW
s572lJS
'41;61 • ,_ .....
HORNET . . -
IRAHD HEW '.75
EconomJcaJ 8 cyt, auto. trans.. ajr. POW8I'" •eatihO. power disc br'aMi. radio, vinyt
r<>Of, nicllnlng seat•· (t178) (6002)
WAS $4617.45 .
DISCOUNTED
' .
• $62345 .
IS -~ v~
S4QLlll • ~ ta &Lc. . . .
. --'-~ ...
I
Kendon AlfllllllHY~1teO . '
21J4 ... ,. -...c.-.....
549-8023 ~ ... 645-7770
--l
•
CLASSIFIED
HOURS
Advertisers may place
their ads by telephone
s:ooa.m. to5:30 p.m.
Mondaythru Friday.
BtonoonSalur~ay •
' COSTA MESA OFF ICE -.. • 330W. Bay
642-5673 • ;
NEWPORT BEACH
3333Newport Blvd .• ·
642-5678
,
HUNTINGTON BEACH t 17875Beach Blvd. -1,.
54().122() • >
LAGUNA BEACH
• 1181 Glenneyre
;·Laguna Beach 494-9466 .
SADDLEBACK
Z.5201 La Paz Road . Laguna Hills 581..&SlO,.
NOR'I11 COUNTY
dial free st0-1220
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
Deadline foroopy &r kills
is 5:30 p.m. lhe day
before publication, ex· Cl!I* for Sunday & Mon•
day Editions when l<:J:eadlin:e .is Saturday. I~~
noon-
CLASSIFIED
RIEGULATIOHS "
ERR()RS: Advertisers
should check their ad$.!
daily & report errors
Immediately. THE
DAILY PILOT assumes lial>llity for the first in~
airrect i~rtion only. 1
CANCEU.ATIO~S :
When killing an ad be
sure to malte a record of the KILL. HUMBER·
given you by your ad
taker as receipt of your
caocdlation. This kill
number must be Pr'ften·
led by the advertiMr in
case of a dispute .
CANCELLATION OR
CORRECTI ON OF ,
NEW AD BEFORE
RUNNING:
Every effort is made to .kill or correct· a new ad
that has been ordered.
bul: we cannot guaran·
'lee to do so until the ad .has appeared. in tbe ........ .
DlM&A·LINE'AOS:
These ads are strlctlY cash in advance by mall
or at any one or our of·
fkft. NO phone 1order1. Deadline: 3 p .rn •
.f'riday, CCita Me11a of.,
jfice'· 6. 12 IW.IOn at all > -"'r-· : .
'rllE DAILY PILO'f
·.nHr•ft the rl&llt to
ct.if>'. Wit, etnW or. \'efuae any ad•er· ••n-. net t.o th•n•• rates • regutau·ons . Priornatke. Cl.AS-.
MAUlaMtDllSS ·Pi.O ...... t.... , 1 U>lta Meta. .......
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Brand New
'ontlac
~Ires
start at. ..
Plus Tax a license
(ZC1185U524123)
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15 ASTRES
IN STOCK .
CLEAN
USED CARS
'61PLYMOUTH14.UACUDA . .
v.a': aUt • trans.. air. Sf 89 vlnyl roof, r1llye -
. ~Is. (705Kl.EJ ' . .
'71 MERCURYCOMIT
4 Door. auto.' lrans.. '1689 power steenng. vlnvt root. (678GCRJ . . .
'
'70 OLDS MS ~()UPI . -. ,,. . Auto. Irena .. a ir. $1689, power steeri ng ·&
btake1. radlll tlrft.
'(989ETYJ , ,
'7~ PIMtO 2-DOO,R '
A~FM stereo,,.,, .... Sunroof. 4 ape ed ... (1211GtPJ '> . . ,
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·ON ALL MIW "14
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.ON ALL HIW "74
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Ult """9 Dirt::; . '$1111· =-.53538
YES; (on•ll Is Dlscomtlng
r, ALL R·E NINI 1975's ••• ,. ' ...
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• IRAHD MIW 1975 •
MONZA TOWH·COUPE
•-.a-.eo.ooo~wwran1y . (1241U1"27811C245358J • . . .
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IMPALA STATIOMWAflOM
~ J':. *· '9Ck. ~ .... window. . f1 )(1LJMUS.,~19"J • •
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4--WHEEL
t•IYE
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5363553
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MALllU CLASSIC COUPE . _ Yinyt'root, air condhtonln;. rWfye whfflt.
(1380TJllD37L5248191MJ .
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llllAHD HEW 1975
HOYA 2·DOOR COUPE
Y-8. tuftM:> hydrametk:. air. rallye wheels. (201T) (1X27L51.1 21418)
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IRAMD MIW 1975
CHIVY WV TRUCI{ ·
4'~.~ bumper.
(1862JICLN1-22347n .
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.5450782
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·5417845
5311270
~ . 5583314 Ml.MD MIW 1975
CHlvY V2 TOH 4x4 CHIYEMMI Turt>o h)/dralMtk: tranemJ' l'M ar,power steering ;
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Atlas
THE SMALL CH«YSLER
i976
$AVE NOW
OH OUR EXCELLIHT SILECTIOH
OF REMAIHIHG llRAHD HEW '75'1
•
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e At(O t(i . o· n ,. '" ie.11., no " . mis•\0°· . o·u· s:t IO ... "liiom&liC .1'.~"~ool. sun-
. e091ne. a noPY "'"'' . 1 6 C)'linde< indsneild. ca
Econom1ca ·og. \in\ed w
powe< ste<JI
root. etc.
._· ... .: .. ' ·. ofi~ .DllPLAft ~ ..
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'73 EL CAMINO
Y-8, auto. trans .. air conditioning,
'PDW9f steering, power brakes.
' radio,healer.magwheelsw/while
lettered !ires. (2162 7N)
'7 2.t MONTE
CARLO
Y-8, euto. trans., air conditioning,
POwer steering. power brakes,
pawer windows, AM/FM radio,
whitewall tires. vinyl root. ti lt
-.(S67EJVJ
• , '7S CHRYSLER
... Jomm.'•Wte
M. Mo. tnna., Ii{, poilllil8I' ---ing, power brakes, ~ win-
dows.. AM/FM stereo radio.
~I tires, vinyl rool'. power
door tocb. cru11e control. titt a --·etc. (122JEY)
IPOSf ••rn '" 9 PMa. STATION WAGON. V-8,
auto. tr1n1., air condttionlng,
power steering. pQWer' ~
power window•. po'41filW 9'1t1.
stereo r1dlo w/11P9, hell.,,
whitewall tires. luggage rid!.
cruise control. lilt wheel.
'2895. '2191 ~30$0 ~3595
.
tPASsa.a:WMON
Y-8, MltO. trans., air conditioning,
POW8f' steering, power brakes.
rdo. whitewall Hres. roof rack.
(810G.AJ}
'70CHEVY
VAN
Eo:>nomical 8 cylindff. 3 IPMd.
ng wheeJI a rn11ny l'l'IOf9 vaiw to
choooe lroml 12195001
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'73 IUICK "--· v.e. uo. trw.. ak' «wditloning,
..,.,.. steering, pOW8f' .....
PoWlt ...... stereo rdo. hell•. """'tewall ur .. , vinyl root, tilt .
-· cruitoc:ontrol. 1-.GCI .
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INTER ... ATIONAL 1/2 TON
~ICI< UP .TRUCK ;
V-8, -ste«ing, radio, heeler, etc.
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COMPLETE
"HIEA.YY DUTY"
SERVICE AVAILABLE
fer y.w 11.Y. 0.pf Ille fllnt
1tr•lct fecllltlt1 i• Ora•9•
C14111 ~,.. s••r• 1:00 A.M. i.· 1:00 P.M. ll11d1r ... •
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·N.S. Sfeeu
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Capistrano Unified ScbOol Dli~
trlct trustees will' be Mked Moit·
cloy ni1ht to lay, the 1P"OW>4worit ·
fot a mulli·milli-jssuethat
,-would provide sehoola for an
estimated 8,000 new students ex-
pected by 1980. •
J?:rojeetions noW under study by
the district's ~Growth Planning
Advisor)'. Coullcll <C,f..AC> in-dlcate th'at the di.strict s current
D;~ 41W'Oll~ent ~~ swell to
EDl.J 10 N •
.-: OR~NG~'CtiUNTY', CALI FORNI A FRIDAY, OCTO~ER 3, 1'15 TEN CE!cf.s.
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. ·:Ef~'.-Mlll~i~~illi on Bo*~
more than 21'.eoo JVluwi Ute nut--!"~: tnca.;pqdei~i{;;.inJl.atcb,Juo._ ~TOQ·pn~h_"'"e-'imount-Of.tb,e issue _ game-~f ''catc_tl up" With~new Hai r.eCOmMen__ded ~ ~ ii8
flveyean. .. or November Of l,,916oFib March, would not be made until the board enrollmeQ.t. • ; UJed lo p1.4rchase in.. ttea
Tbenewdevelopmenti.an:pect-May and J"'4"ember; qr i977, is provided with tnore4etailed in-·school Jite. in Mission VtQ>
ed main.Ur in M.lssion Viejo, San 'Thotnll"yaai~ 1 ~, formation from GPAC, tbe aC!-He -sat it takes frQin two t;O construct' an eJen;aentary"iC ·
Juan Capistrano and Dana Point, • H6said he ~W. ask the bo'ard to visory council. Ttleinf'ora._tion is ~~::~~ri!~ ~l3~c~!f!~t~ on a. site recently .~ed _JI)
accordinl:totheGPACstudies: tocius on eit~ the March 1978or -not expected. until late this month madetoDuild it. ...... ~ SanJuan'C•Pi!\trano. I "The quest1ons the bOard will ?tl'P'Ch1977dat~s. TbOmsleyoot-orearly:November.. The rboard-:alfo will~
' be asked is When should, the elec-ed tha~ rnearch bas lhoWn bopd Joe Wlmer, director of ad-The district ·s tclst bond election that recommenj:laUon wh;el) iti
tion be held, and., for bow much ~dOnotlare"ellWhen'com-ministraUveservices.saidtoday Washeldinl973. Voters approved meets at 7:30 p.m·. at San Juan money.·• SUpt. Jerotne'Ibomsley biriedwiUl.eitbv~uneprimaryor that it ia necessary (or lhe board aSZSmillionissue. Elementary Scl)ool, 31642 ill
s!idtoday. · • .Novembergeneralelectiobs. to formulate a boridissue~lhe O(,that amount, about $2 .8 Camino Real , San Juan. Tbf>'~rdhastheoptionofcall-· • Tbe.su ripteDdent said a de-district is not forced to play a million remains unspent. GPAC CapiStrarw. , . ' .. '
ertOn . , . . . . -. ·c Cit~ . ou11cil
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CalledinB
' ByGARYGRAJl!\'ILLE
Of ... 0.lty .........
All five members or the
Jl'ulterton City Council and coun·
ty Supervisor Ralph Diedrich are
among witnesses subpoenaed lo
appear before 'the Orlil\ge County
Grand Jury next week to tell
what they know about an alleged
bribery sqlicitation'.
Neither Diedrich nor council
members Frl\nces Woqd, Robert
County's
Job Rate
AJ IJ.3o/o
Ward, Duahe Winters or Robert
Root were subjects of the in·
vestigation leading·to ~xt Wed-
~==~:~~s secret Qra ~ /ury ~
Central figures in the \n -
vestigation of the · alleaed
solicit ation c~tering on a recent
F\lllerton City Council land use
decision are:
--'Dr.· Willia~ Brashears or
Fullerton, who Won and then ldst
city council approv.-or a r\?zon-
ipg applJ.~4tton· ta all9w him to
build a higtr-dJ:nsity con·
dominium project en land pre-
viously zoned for ,single C:.mily
residential use.
-City councilman Charles
Phillipe, the Swi.nj: vole on a con-
troVersial .3 t,p 2 .council ballot
June 4 ap proving the rezoning
that was i:escinded1 Sept. 2 on a
5-0 vote; ~1
-Leroy Rose, a prominent
Anaheim archile<.'l and Fullerton
planning commissioner.
-Paul Wallich, a public rela-
tions c
1
onsultant and atone time a
member or the Brashears' team
seeking the rezoning.
AlOng witb the council mem-
bers, Diedrich, Fullerton City At-
torney Kerry Fox and the city's
planning .and public works direc-
<See BRIBERY, PageA2)
Bob Ba.t tin
Challenges ·
Indictment
lndictvd 01-ange County
SuP,enisor Robert Battin has
fit .. an appeal with tile Second
Diotrict Ccntrt·of Appeal.asking it
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For the th1ird consecutive
month, Qt 4nge C9unty's un-
employment rate in September
stoo,d at 8.3 pefcent. well above
the September, J9J<1, rate of 5.4
percent. • •·• ' .
Accor4ling to 'the state
Employment De¥elop19eftt. ·
Department mon(hJy repOrt,
there were 64,200 people un-
employed in the "lcouhty last
month. A year ago, the number
or unemployed was 25,200.
;'. •lf'g~uiy·~ 9~·, JurJ>IJl\lld., • , .. . r en.• nt ., • • . AJii1 • ld,th aJ>l>e!IO!e...art ·• W~?'-'cA.J~·..-r,& . ...., •. , .... ,.
As Orange County's labor
market continues to e xpand,
there also were 20,500 more coun-
ty job holders last month than in
, !See RATE, PageA2)
* * * Unemployed
Down in U.S.,
.Up in State
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
11ation's unemployment rate
declined from 8.4 -percenl to 8.3
I percent of the labor force in Sep-
tember, although the jobless rate
increased for adult men and heads or households, the govem-
inent-reported·today. -
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The September report indicat-
ed there was-ho significant
change in the over..all employ·
ment situation in the country.
But California's-uifemploy-
ment rate edged upward.to 10.3
percent, although ttJe number of
employed persons w'as the
·highest this year, Stale officials
said today. -
The state joQless rate in·
creased rroJQ 10.2 percent of tl:Je
(SeeJOl!S, PageA2)
l We 11t h e r ·
Variable high cloudiness
wJ,th hazy sunshine Satur·
day. Patchy night and mid-
morning low cloudS and
log. Slightly cooler with
beach highs near 70 rising
to 80 inland.
. INSIDE TOD~ Y
from bucking broncs to.a
.. bluegrws competition, there'11
. a lot. 11eheduled to ha:ipm.at
tlle Orange CountJt F.olr·
grovnd8 thi! month. sll P.oge
Cl of tatkly'1 Weekender.
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-s1ao~ltJng· Prar.1eJ,i-~
The San leme nte'.citY pier was a1e1seci')Vhlle crews tried
to find out wtiy an the'pier's water fountains were elec-
tJ:icplcy ·cbarg:ed \yjth abol!! !iO ~glts._'l'b .. pier reopened
Thursday after a d;iy and a ball'! seat'ch located a faul·
ty insulator which allow'l'I ,the current t<fleak intq the
water system .. City crews laboriously had to check
,through tl\.e 900 such insul;itors under tl)e:Pi~r to find the
source. ·
' Homosexutil.-A.irman ·>-
Will A.ppe'al O f;is ter . .... .. .
, HA~PTON, Va .. (~) -The. his . hQrn.bsexu"ality to test the
discharge of ~ir Force T, Sgt. riiitjtary regulations, and an ad·
Leonard P . Matlovich, cin mlnistrative discha,rge board re·
acknowledged homosexual, has com.mended Sep't. 19 that
been upgraded.. froin ,eneral to Matlovich be given a general dis-
bonorable1 But M:aUovicb who charie. · ·
rougbt to stay in the ser\rice, isn't
satisfied ..
' "No it doesn't make me •Po":
PY," he said or the cfecisiori·
Thursday by Col. ~io11 J,.~
Thogenen, comi:uandbll·officer
of Langley Ai<'Force,Ba..,here .
.TbocerseJL.Saia. he would send,.
his recom:mendl\ton to Air P't>rce-sec~acy John t •, Md.um, who will decide whether to uphold the
discharge or grant Matlovich's
reques oi;.a w.-aivei:._of the...A r
Force fegulatioas barrl g
hottiOlfexuals. ' • "
Matlovi~h ts attornfYs have
said they wquld take the case to
court if McLuca1 does not aUow
their clii;nt to s tay in the Air
Force. l ...
W•tiovlch, 32. an Air l"br« vet~an of 12 years~ announced ._, I I
A general dis'charge is a
, separation under honorable con·
ditions. It is better than a dis· hOOOr~le discharge but below 8.n tk>POrable separation.
Thogersen said he upgraded
tb-e discha-i:ge revi e wing -M"itlovlc~'s u-nblemis hed
.military reS9rd .Prior to the
sergeant's admission six month!
' ago that he wa,a.a bomosexu3l.
MaUovi~~-'....,:em8.in-on ac-.
tire dµty uotil '1.t:cUlcas mi.Jc.es
hJ"S decision/ • ' • Since the discharge board's de-
c.ision1 Matlovich has been in
charge oJ a'troup or enlisted men
who clean b&rracks, He rorJner1y
WllS a human reJations instructor
and terved {hr lOU'I or duty in
South Yletnam. , ,
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"'1ail to quash the indictment, Bat·
tin has asked it to or.der his trial,
which 1s scheduled to begin Mon ·
day, delayed . '
Furthermore, if Orange County
Superior Court Judge. Jerrold
Oliver rejects another bid by Bat-
tin this afternoon to have him set
the indi c tment a s"i d e, the
supervisor said Thursday he wi.11
file a second appeal with the ap·
pellate<.'ourt.
Ballin admitted lhere is little
chance the court will act on his
initial appeal and request (or a
trial delay before Monday.
"But I want to exercise all my
rii,hts, ''the supervisor said .
Whe n indicted in mid·August
on charges related to using coun-
ty' employes in his ill -fated 1974
campaign ror lieutenant gov ·
ernor, Battin said he would insist
on his right to a speedy trial.
Consequently. his trial date
was set tor Oct . 6, safely within
the normal 60 days generally
conceded to be the safeguard
period on a defendanrs constitu·
tional right to a speedy trial.
' SOW, however, Battin says he
wants more time to prepare his
defense and to a ppeaJ to hi gher
courts to have the indictment
against him set aside.
Basis for his appeaJ is a recent
state supre me court decision that
quashed an indictment because
the prosecutor had not told a
Grand Jury about evidence
which tended to point to the de-
fendant's innocence.
Battin said that decision .
which does not yet have the effect
or being law, has a bearing on his
case. ·
Chil d Bea ter
T o Serve 90
D ays in Jail
Convicted child beater Sheila
Louise Lessley, formerly or San
Clemente , has been sentenced to ·oo daY.s in Orange County JaiJ for
failing to serve the 60-day term.
she drew on sentencing in Sep-
tember. 1974 .
Superior Court Judge Kenneth
Williams impos ed the jail time on
Mrs. Lessley. 20, who was recent·
ly returned here Crom Arkansas.
She will serve three years proba-
tionon release from jail.
Mrs. Lessley was rece ntly
clellt~ in Arkansas of murder
~d arson charges filed when her
two children died in a fire that ·
destroyed the family·s mobile
'horhe. . ·.
Ark3nsa8 officers said Ulere
was reason to believe thaL Mrs .
LHsley sparked the fire that
killed her two ,sons, Jesse, 2, and
Audy, 2 months.
Muggers Lost This One
Wh en two young Baltimore thugs knocked down52-year·
old Ernest Mitchell to steal bis welfare cash (top) they
had one big problem. Mitchell got up with CJ knife
(center ) and gave chase. He nearly caught one (bottom)
despite uncon cerned onlookers. Muggers got away but
Mitcryell s till has his welfare money.
San J uan Protects
Hist oric Properties
Owners of 21 s tructures and
properties which are or historical
sig n i fican ce in San Juan
Capistrano will soon be informed
that their properl y is on a "pro-
tected li st.··
The City Coun ci l approved the
KY'S ·sPOUSE
UKES 'LIB'?'
DES MOINES, Iowa !AP)
The United States is a "paradise
for women," says Tuyet-Mai Ky,
wife o,f' former South Vietnamese
Premier Nguyen Cao Ky.
Mrs. Ky, ti fashionably dressed
mother or •six. s aid in an in·
te rview 1Thursd ay s he iJi happy
that Arherican women a re gain-
ing an increasingly progressive
·rolei
But her husband, who is on a
s peaking tour, disagreed, saying •
"I'm ready to go home already."',
list Wednesday as it was sub·
milted to them by the city·s
Cultural Heritage Commission.
Inclusion on the list means that
any alteration or destruction of
the property will fi rst have to be
approved by the council.
In the past, "quite a lot" ol his-·
torical structures have been lC¥>t
because there was no means of
protecting them . explained John ·
o·sullivan , director or ad·
minislrative services.
Now . he said, the cily will·knoW
what is happe ninj to the build.'
ings and be able to encourage
cont{nued use or them.
I Some or the s tructures, he
added, ar~ on Los Rios. Street
where another or:dinance prohit·
bits alterations without a city
permit.
This year·s city budget in-
cludei funds for a study of the
street· and the cily iS still con·
sidering development or ''kind of
(See PROTECTED, Pa1e'.U) ; -
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.... !W!,YPILOT l./SC
'-Bike Trail
~angers
: Debated .
! ·The S;ate Department of
: TransportaUon and the city of
,.,Laguna Beach aren'~exa in i tandem on a proposal en-
"" tennial bicycle rout al the • cou~ --
I The city recently received a let-
tir ll'om the stat• outllnlnc Its
!'uan to place bic~tennial bike
!'iOute signs along the portion of
aclfic Coast Highway that
passes through the Art Colony.
'lbe signs would be lnstalled by
J""Marcb and remain through 1983.
More recently. the slate re-
ceived a letter from the city,
which states that the highway is
the most hazardous place in town
for bike riders.
\
''Severa l sec ti ons of the
highway through l~aguna Beach
are extremely hazardous, having
'·t411'11Y 10-foot travel lanes, which, · •:~:r~~~. :h':;~~fie~~~.~=7 sub-
t!.' It is suggested in the letter to
the state that previously adopt-
ed bicycle routes that do not in-
clude the highway would be
safer, and, therefore, more pre-
t ferable.
1
"U it is necessary to place the
bike route on the Coast Highway,
we would think that parking
would have to be eliminated
along several portibns of the rou-
te ... and . would sUggest that you
arrange meetings with local
merchants along the highway to
. gain their input regarding the de-
letion of parking," the city letter
states.
The bicentennial bike route
was authoriz'ed by the state
·Senate. It is intended to extend·
from the Mexican border to
··0reaon.
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Par~VoteD~
Orange County Supervisors Tuesday will decide i!
$35,000 should be spent to develop this small park at
Catalina A venue and Monterey Street in South Laguna.
Drawing shows blend of turf areas with playgfound, tree
swings and natural arriphitheater on half#acre site
bought a year ago for $80,000.
President Vetoes
School Lunch Act
WASHINGTON (AP) -PreSi·
dent Ford vetoed the National
School Lunch and Child Nutrition
Act today. saying it would pro-
vide subsidies for non-needy . .
children and "is worse than the
programs we now have."
:.-U.S. Court Refuses
Ford suggested that Congress
either extend present school
lunch programs or act favorably
on his proposal to provide aid for
all children from families below
the poverty level.
Exercising his 39lh veto, the
President said, "By extending
. aid to families not in need, this
"Petaluma R L .-• bill would add $1 .2 billion to my e1~anng ~~-et proposals for the current
1 • "I cannot accept such fiscal ir-
N ' responsibility when we face the SAN FRA CISCO {AP) -The· Theordinancehasbeelibitterly real danger that the bud&et de-
.ltb. U.S. Circuit Court of Appea)s oppc>sed by the construction in-ficit· could reach S70 billion in-kt~led today to reconsider its dustry, wtµcb fears it could $et a stead of the already high limi~ of eruUal upholding the constltu· precedent for other communities '6() billion 1 set earli~r this year ...
,tkmallty of the city Of Petaluma's torestricf develOpment.~ Ford chastised Congress for
:controversial no.growth or· A tbree'-judge appi&lB court continuing to add to the deficit
dinanee. panel unaninwuilY. rev8ned a and thus adding to infiationary
) .... Tbecdurtln'abrleforderdenled ruling 'by U:S. Dlstr,lct Court pressures on the economy
·a request from the"conatrucUon Judge Lloyd H. Burke that the or· "which could push us back into J. industry f('r a rehearing on its dinance waa, ua_cqnistitutiOQaJ reeeesion~" Aua. 13 decision affirming the becaus.e it violated cltiiens' , The President said subsidies
1f12law. rilbts.totravelorto.abideandset-should not be expanded to ~ 1'he ordinance, which applies Ue. "' · families with incomes above the
only to bousin1 projects involvinl'·•. -J'he cburt disagreed. saying the gpvel'f.y level. . .
five or more units, limltato500JN::t'· Pit8.tum•Plan was a ''reasonable . · ~·1 believe the way to help most
year the total. number of .lD· and~ l~imate exercise" of a • Americ.sn families is to take ac-
dividual dwelling unit.a that can cit¥'~ ' wer to "preserve itl uons to hold down inflatioo and
bebulltinsucbProJecta. '.amQJ. character (its open "'1uce their tax burdens," he =~des)~And J:o grow at an orderly said.
• elioera~rate." Ford added that his proposal
BellN n __ ~. !-. r.. ln refusin.1: .to reMa.r the case, for reform of existing federal
"ti LIUIK;e the appeall. court also rejected a chlld-feeding programs limited
suege&tion. by. bulldini industry to families below the poverty
Pln '1UJ o_ ...... _::::__, attorneys that the entire court level would have halted the .,. i~ bearthearau,ents. "steady expansion" of such sub-
sidies to increasing numbers of
non-needy children and would
save the taxpayers "almost $4
billion over the next five years." . , Jigg~ ToJDy _
I KANSAS CITY,' Mo. <JJPi> -
Nleolo! Enalllb, a pbilooapby ltu-
-who mat .. a llvinl u a bel· ly dancer, hopes to l(rind out a
world record with her pelvis,
hlDS and navel. ~ To do l;t. 1he must belly dance
-.-.atop ror more than llix boun
tGday. •
''ft'• kind of a 1elf~test to aee if
I can meet the cbatlqe," the
colle1e aopbomore said. "It's
like the mountain climber trying to scale the blcboot lriountain ....
Miu English bu been belly
dancinC profnsfon.ally for five
years, but her appearance at a
store opening today will be the
first Ume she baa attempted to
clock her movements.
WomanFlee8
Knife Attack
lnL~
A 21:year-old Santa Ana
woman visitin& friends in
Laeuna Beach esca~ unln·
jurded after a male attacker ac-
coeted her on Glenneyre Street
early today and pressed a knife
to her throat. Sft-. Norman Babcock said the
woman was returning to a re-
sidence in the 1500 block of Glen-
neyre after an evening of drink-
ing and dancing when she dis-
covered that a man sbe had met
earlier. was follow.ingher.
He recommended a block
grant to states to let them tailor
food and nutrition programs to
their own needs, thus relieving
much red tape.
"Subh an approach," Ford
said, ''would eliminate the
wastefulness of present overlap-
ping programs which often sub-
sidize the same meal."
JOBS •..
wor.k force in August, the second
straight monthly rise of 0.1 per·
cent.
,,.-----------~·-. 11te victim told officers that
the man ran up arld grabbed her,
held the knif.e against her-throat,
and asked, "Do yoll know where
Denny's is?"
-But the. state Employment
Development Department re·
ported that total employment for
California hit a 1975 high of
8,646,900, up 85,600 from August.
·ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Babcock said the woman
managed to break away from her
attacker's grasp and fled.
. She described the assailant as
a male Caucasian, in his late 20s.
six feet tall. with light brown hair
and a full mustache.
San Juan Set
·For Steak Fry
The aniiUal Steak Fry,
sponsored by the Woman'• Club
or San Juan Caputrano, will run
from 8 to 8 p.m. SAturday, Oct.
11, In lb• clubhouse, 31442 El
Hornost. •
Frid and Ben Newhart, owner
and manager of the Walnut.
.Grove Restaurant, will cook the
steak.I .....
Proceeds from the event will
be Uftd for tfte cl~~an· thtoplc endeavors, . to
lits. Woodrow Covlnlton, pre-
1ld en t. Tickets m•y be
purcllued from club memben'
or by calling Mrs. Ernest Alex·
ander at491 080.
•
The Labor Department said
the number of unemployed in the
U.S. in September totalled nearly
7 .8 million, down only a few
thousand from the August jobless
total. The number of employed
persons was slightly more than
5.4 million; also just a few
thousand more since August, the
department said.
Th'e size of the nation's labor
force also infreased only slight-
ly, to ,just under 93.2 million in
September.
The rate of unemployment has
shown little change the lut three
mol'ltbs.
* * * l'r-PageAI
RATE •••
I
·September, 1974, meanll>c Ibis
year there are more erbployed
people' aa well as.. more-u.n-
~loyed . I
EDD labor analyst ·Alta
Eldtld10 predicted today that
employment in the COWltY .. will
rile sharply during the forth
quarter wttb1 atro'ng seasonal
1atna In public educaUon and re-
-talltrade.''
Hero
Honored .
For Act • •
llJ JACK ClfAPPELL ...... , ..........
"All I could aee In the -were these huae Ramel and""f
knew they hed eom• aiilnlala ID
tb,re. I ujd to lily wife, 'call the
fire department'.'' Dana Poiiit ....
resident Tom Hunt rec~led •
Thursday nl&ht. Then, Hunt, a palntina con·
tract.or, 1rabbed one ~ bis own
ladders, l'\llbfd to the blazing
second noor apartment, climbed. u:;._.;_,lililj
the balcony, broke lntotbe a.,.rt·
ment and put out the fire wlth a
...., ............
SAYED Nl!IGHllORI HOMI!
. D•n• Point'• Hlftt aarden hose.
-,.,....r.,,eAI
PROTECTED
~Hurst waa commended for bis
prompt action In extiqulshlng
the fire and presented with a cita-
tion durlna a ceremOIQ' Thurs-
day nlfht at the ~ Volun·
teer Fire Statton. Orange County
Fire Department Battaliop. Chief
Joo RoUand made the presenta-tion. a heritage square type thing''
Hurst said he was surprised by which would include many pld
all the attention. botlses, he said. "J didq't even think about tt. I The "newest'' buildin& on the
just ran over and did it," he said.· list is the former Frank Forster
The fire occurred Sept. 5 at residence which Was rebuilt in
34002 Ei Encanto Ave. acrOss the 1910. The oldest structure is Mis-
street from Hurst's borne. Fire sion San Juan C8pistrano which
officials said that because of his was originally built in 1776.
prompt action, and use of water, Other properties included on
damagewubeldtoaminimum. the list are the Casa de Los Rios,
The residents of the Montanez Adobe, Silvas Adobe,
apartment were In Los Angeles Parra Adobe, Pablo Pryor
·attending a play at the time, Adobe, Blas Aguilar Adobe, Casa
Hurstsaid. · ~ de Garfias, Domingo Yorba
He said be kne'w the neighborS Ado~. Juan Avila Ad9be and the
had two dogs and two cats. Both Juzgado and Jose Antooio Yorba
cats were in the apartment 'It the Adobe.
time. Both of the animals were Also on the list are the Mission
panic-stricken by the fire, but Cemetery; the Santa Fe Depot,
were not hurt. Egan Residence, Buddy Forster
The flre began in an over-residence, Albert Pryor re-
stuffed chair. Authorities suspect sidence and the Rowse Cottage.
a smolderine cigarette ignited it. The Mission Kiln, Mission
. By the time Hurst arrived, the Refuse Area and Burruel Adobe
chair and the drapes were flam-sites were included on the lslt
in&. because of their archeological
"When I sprayed the water on significance. The corqmission is
r...,.r ••A.I
BRIBERY •••
:w,~ ... -::.t.:i: ::: ..
A P'ulle1'0a pollee _.,._
• .dlltrttt --., la; I di 11 Mli .............. .... -•••lllatlllD ._ ... .... probed tbe all•l•d
bribery oolleltatlclL
'Ae-4iDI ID Di.tildl.. tlie ... ~ eame to,Jda olllee
-..-al '!!eeD ago lb '* him about a nctMat conea ' ·m,be
-with Bhlilbean.i "l told u..in-~ .... 1 ••
. come to me and nid .......
was lr)'lill to put tlieJll'ID cm him
to.c..~a favorable re10Dln1.···
Dleilrieb said. .
'"lly advlce to B..-..W wu
for him, Ube really belie•od.,.
meone wu 'putt1n1 !be llUe cm
him, to1oeitbel'to tbecliltrldalr
tomey or Fullerton Pallce Clllef
Wayne Bornboft;•• the~
atlcled. .
lie sold that earlier la !be~
when Br~an· 10a•nc -nuc•·
lion WU OOunClpf IJacl< and fartb
betwefn the city council and
planninl cOlllmisslon 1111-.
had aaked him to ~ wllb
Pbilllpo. .
"I call~ Cb~k and told him
thal In my opinion It wasn't a bad
propoo81'15ilfI am not a city coun-
cilman !Ind the judcmerit wo
Chuck's to make,•• Diedri.chsaJd.
Diedrich and others lnYOlncl In
the inveatigation who were in-
terviewed Were at a Jou to ea-
plain Rose's involvement ill the
investil~tioa.
• On two city plll!Dinl ·com-
mission votes on the rezoo.lng,
one of which failed to carTY, Role
voted In favor of the proposal
both times.
· NewSclwOu
Slated/or
Dedicat.ion
'
.,
that glass door, it just exploded,.. expected lo report to the council
he said. The fire was out when on the possibility of excavation at . Two Capisll'ano Unified School
District elementary schools that
opened this year will be dedicat-
ed in separate ceremonies Satur-
fire units arrived. these sites. '
"I just hope that if anything The commission ts also con-
like this ever happens to .my sidering adding several other
home that somebody would see it . properties to the· list. These are
and come put it out," Hurst saic[ .. the C. Russell Cook residence
and barn, Hot Springs Dance
Teen Girl Cut
SOUTH LAK~0TAHOE (AP> -
A teen-aced girl was in stable
condition TbUr1day following
l\µ'&ery to repair a cut suffered.
when she wa1 bit by a boat pro-
peller In Lake Tahoe.
Authorities '&atd Geraldine
Peters, 15, of South Lake Tahoe.
sustained a lar1e alasb on the
side of. her cheat.
J '
'
Hall, Joel Congdon residence.
Coombs House, Labat House,
River Street and Canedo Adobe.
Oregon Teen Held
PORTLAND, Ore. <UPI> -A
17-year-old boy was in juvenile
custody here today on an accusa-
tion he threatened the life or
President Ford.
LafupS~le
day. · ~
At 10:308.m .• Castille Scliool,
24042 Via La Coruna, ~ion
Viejo, will be dedicated.
Ceremonies at Moulton School,
29851 Highland Ave., Laguna
Niguel, will be held a\ 2'"3o p.m.
following a noop. luncheon
catered by the San Clemente
Ma.sonic Lodge.
The Masons, under the direc·
lion of Burton Meyer Jr., ll"and
master, will lay cornerstones: a(
the two new schools. student!
will plant time capsulea.o
All lampe e~aQy r,educedfor you.
ChooBefromsuchwelllmownlineBu -
Stiff el · Fredri~ Cooper
Marbro · Knob Creek
\' . ... Deeign Gild_. Chapman ,.
~manymore .. "~
Time, l:lut·
Aa Bad a Point
•
• .,_..,.WIN
lie .... -• .-...... ~ .... .... ..... ...,4llib' ........... , •trJ' _.... ··~::i..--.. --~ ... --............ 111 ---M---1:1.lii:.t'····-~ .... ,. ....... ~ It wa1 ••••••I ........ .-.......
.,,.. ranb' ••~r-Qe ._..,.. pabllc la __ -4 ....... .
Mol_1ey
·Tree I 1l1••d, ••rrom
Aaerlca• Moto-r1, .
1 ' Cbr)'lllar, Ford and : · ...... ....,,....,...,....J
I Oe1rll lftllon." wlddi lo ID 11~a1 order but ID re-_....,. ol 11leo paoltlm Ill tbe lllluotry.
• · lhmi.mumY•1N111amldoto1--,...., rib, importa nplarly 1ktmmina olf more than JO
~al-car lalll. U.S. auto..,.,..llCllon lo nmo•n1 II
por-bo!i•ndlbelluploblt74-. •
' ffowttA', tbe joilltOd WAI -OD a-..1 to ym to tnJt · dDwn to your.doaler to buy a car. No, tile luue that brouabt
tb• t compnl•• tocetber in t.bt1 $800,000 effort waa -a aailooloo 1tond1rdl. : ' ~ ...... ,.,.. wW be Pl1inl tbe bill, .. tbe ad 11ld lo Iha
~ 1111111c. ·-thoullll ym 1bould be a•are of two ~-u-beiDI ..... idarad by c-rlcbt MW." The Pl'opoaltlon wu lben put u folloin: '
' . •
"!lboalil tbe 1tamards covernlns automotive emllllona
lie19ade -llricter tbim tbel' are today? Or are they
ltri<t-b now? Tlke :ywr cbolt.f." ,
A F.Ua QUESTl!:I reaoonab!J' stated. But then lbe in· -,.'"'l::"t oo to oln theaecboices ID a "beads I win, talll ,..,..1 "oxp1..,-.. .
,. Cbolce No. l wu idmtilled as the Parcl adm.lniatr1Uon'1
plan to conlinue the pteoent 1tandardl for tbo next five
,......, If we opt for thlo cbolce. said the indUJtry; air quality
-will continue to improve u old can &et turned ln for new
, ...,,. ·and the compenlm will be able to improve ea.a
ml ...... by40perc-byJ8'0,
+<Cboice No. 2 wu identified as the plan embodied in the
federal law now on the books; which calls for ttricter stan-
d.arm 181977-1978 modell. U we opt for .thla cbolce,._1aid the
Uiduotry, you1ettheoereoulta:
' ' 1-Ala QUALITY WILL improve only slightly.
2~as mileage will be reduced between 5 percent and
30-t. .:t~ar prices WUI roup.between Sl.SO an~ $400 .
, 4-Be1ide1, "no auto ..manufacturer yet knows bo'f to ~ , meet the 1'78 standards on a mau producUon basis.'' '
, So, bow do you Uke thole apples?
; ., The ·t,ndualry ar111ment would ,be persuasive if you .di.in•t remember that it is the s ame tune auto companies: 'lave aunt ever since air pollution became an issue. The i' catalytic converter, which General Motors now lauds ,as a au aaver, wu bitterJYQPpOSed by the industry when it was
flnt ¥oach'ed as 1!11 effective pollution control.
-~ . ~ . ' ~ Money Management r
SemiJUUS in County •
I ' •. • • , . A week-Ion1 program en-
tlUed "H-to lloP-Y!Jllr ~ey in Tooa:Y'• Changlns' -l"y•; will be COllductejl
by"Jlerjilt, Lynch,~..!. Fenner 6 Smith, Inc., accord.
inc to Norman' Dahl, resident
vice -!dent of tbe Merrill
LybCh office in Santa Ana.
' Tllree aemluars will be Con·
1ducted in !lanta Ana belin· nine Oct. 28 at the Saddleback
Jllil ; on Oct. 29 lri Anaheim at Ille Grand Hotel and Oct. 30 in . ' .
FUiierton al'the Holiday Inn.
• Merrill Lynch chairman
Donald T. Regan said "We
have designed this series of
invettor meetings to help in-~ dividuals iinprove their un-
derstanding or the rapid
changes that are OC'curring in
our economy and markets.··
AJl p[ograms are free, but
admission is by ticket only. A
special toll free number
(800-228-1776) has been
established for reservations
and additional information.
tOl. Spoasor~d .. ,
omen's .Financial
·Seminars Scheduled ~.._,_ 1-. •
• Sad4leback Community
Hoopil*1 lo offering l"' invest· Diento, and financill planninc
seminar, desiened principal-
ly for women, to run four con-
secutive Wednesdays, begin-
ningOct. I , .
The lectures ill meet from ~
lOa.m. toliOOii liidiilli>groom
Nq ... 1 of Clubhouse Ill in
Lillure World. Anyone wbo •
. .
·Butz Hikes
, ~ IT I
SupportC~t
~~r!\filk
lives .outside Leisure World.·
but wants to attend the
seminar may phone the
hospital, 837-4500, ext. 427, lor
reservations.
THE SEMINA-R'S focus
will be on individual needs of
participants, ineludinC esllte
plllllllinc.
Speaken will dlacuss an·
nuiUes, wills, trusts. _estate
sal•. lnaUnnce, charitable
gift.a and. tbe role of an ac-.
cowrtant: ·
The followinc peo!Jle will
addreu the seminar:
-Oct-8 : Lawrence
Norman, attorney, and Frank
Lawrie, truot officer, Unlted
C4'lfDl'llia Bani
'--Oct. 15: Joan ut""· , .. al tor. IJ>d Low<sen mmis,
'CPA ' WASHINGTON (UPI) _: ~CUiture Secretlry Earl L.
JllJts bu r ... Ocl the •\IPP<>rt · pncaf0rmllkbljt1ildtllestep
Will Dot lmmedlalol)' boos\
dalryproductpricea in 11<lftS.
'Oct. 22: Gilbert Smith, pre-,
aident, Cua and Johanain& .
Oct. 21 ; Harvey'Scbwltur,
vice pre.aldent, Security
Pacific Natlonll Bonk, and
William Edgar 1 attorney and
president of Saddltback
Hoopltll bolrd of directOrs
-. Ttie 1ncNPe In 1ov9rnment ~prices for mllkwlll be
aboUt t'!'o cenll a hllf 1alloh.
'fboloolle alarket pri ... are
'lli-eady blcb,... than the new
Wpporl lenl, Buts •aid.
; But& Uld blaber conaumer prl~ ~ ~·ChlnC. but
irlU rM'f...i·~ abort milk :::r::.ce~ ~J::
that wbell wbolulle priceo
decllM later In tbe year apd eartY M# ,. ..... tborlllUal·
11---'l~ do et tbat Ume, retail priceo .... 1ilillYto datlllle lllU<h.. ~nldh•lalu.dthopri~
14pst bike becaUIO ol -• He aald Iha Im·
priCOI wore.--·
• f1r1ner1 µ.e ...
~1!''7 Dffd tr ~y In
.. ••
THE SEMINAR WILL be
featured oo ''You.and Your
Health" at 10:30 a.m. Moo-
d.,. Oct. 8 over RETV\ chan·
nel 6. 'lbe prosram will be re-
peated at llOOll tho lollowinlf
day.
BUENOS AIRES,
Ar...,tlna (AP) -Four
·factory workers who
jointly bat Ibo 411QUholeit
(!l IO centa in a 1occer lo(. ~ """ an ·Arceauno: ntord al Sl38,500. .
•
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Friday'•
Cl•lnl Priea
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NEW YORK STOCK EX~HANGE y_.. .............. A,,_. £~,..j Sa!JUUy
l
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•
• -DAILY PllDT
I
!Top E11ropean
Athletes Getting
Secret P&yoffs
BONN, West Germany {AP) -
Tuµ amateur athletes in western
Europe are dipping into orficia.i
subsidies and under·lhe·table
slush funds to finance full-time
training for Lhc 1976 Olympics,
European sports sources report.
Although amnteur rules forbid
secret cash incenti\'es for Olym-
pic competitors. an Associated
Press s ur\'t.'Y of l'ight COWltries
.:;hows that manv stars can earn at
least ~0.000 a· y(.ar from their
sport and .st ill retain amateur
status .
. .\II y,·cstcrn Europelln coun-
tries subsidize medal canditlates
"'ith cas h payments, usually
1~~l·~~~~~n~:~3i~~lll~e~~;~~~'.
trctvt•I. ''lost income" and other
provable expenses while lrain-
ingforthe games.
West Germ;.1ny's SPorts Aid En-
doy,·ment Fund distributes 12
million marks -$4 .8 million -
annually to some 2,000 "needy"
Olympic hopefuls, plus another
three million marks -$1 .1
million -to finance specialized
training for 350 athletes selected
for the 19760lympic team.
Italian m edal candidates in
swimming and running, premier
events at the Sum mer Games in
Montreal, are getting uptoJ00,000
lire -$500 dollars a month -in
sanctioned subsidies, sources in
Rome report. But proven winners
can triple their income from
payoffs by their business-backed
sports clubs.
Aus tria, hosting the 1976 Winter
Games in lnn~bruck, hands out
generous subsidies to its star
alpine skiers. They collect as
mu~h as 450,000 shillings -
522,500 -a year from the national
ski pool funded by equipment
manufacturers, plus $1.200 or
more for winning international
races, informants in Vienna said.
, Sweden's Olympic medal
·hopefuls get yearly official train-
ing subsidies of 15,000 kroner -
$4,000. But Stockholm informants
also say amateur runners there
can pocket $1 ,000 a meet and top
hockey players $20,000 a year. ,
Olympic candidates in Den -
mark, Norway, Finland, France
-and Britain are also getting
''bread-and-butter'' subsidies
and free equipment funneled throughrnational sports federa-
tions. But there, as elsewhere,
most amateur stars. also have
"ghost'' incomes from com-
mercial ties with manufacturers
or liberal contracts with sPorts
clubs.
"TheT'e are really no amateur ·
athletes any more. Everyone has
a thing going;'' declared a
Plays Tonight
knowledgeable Frenchman,.
tthoing the recent confession of
U.S. diStance running star, Frank
Shorter.
Shorter, the marathon gold
medalist at the 1972 Olympics,
told a U.S. panel investigating in·
ternational amateurism: "We 're
all professionals ... I have pro.
bably violated all the Olympic
rule$."
Shorter told or amateur run·
ners.at invitational meets in Italy
being handed cash on the vi ctory
stand, with a $400 "expense" trip
paid off at $700.
In the United St~. he said.
athletes might be given three
airline tickets to a West Coast
meet, use one a nd cash in the
others.
American Olympians compet-
ing on the European amateur
track circuit this summer were
lured to West Berlin's invita-
tional meet with $750 bonuses of-
ficially described by the or-
ganizers as "Atlantic air night
compensation,'' German sources
said.
Guent}ler, Pelshenke, manager
of West Germany's sports aid
fund , acknowledged that orficial
subsidies per athlete can reach
huge sums over several years.
Asked lo comment on allega·
lions that some West German
amateurs we re getting secret
payoffs in addition to official sub-
sidies, Pelshenke said : "The
sports federations carefully
watch their athletes. Of course.
they can't always know if some
nmner gets paid $40 to run in a
village meet."
One Wf,(il-known West German
company said it outfits 100 top
German sportsmen each year
with free sets of competition
shoes, warmup suits and other
.gear worth $400 . In return, the
athletes must stay with the
tr~demark during the one-year
contract pe riod. A company
spokesman said national sports
federations a re informed about
all arrangements -but he
declined to discuss specific de-
als.
Shorter, in his appearance
Sept. 9 before a Presidential
panel UJveBtigating international amatiurism, -said he reaUies
about $200 a month from running,
"about one-tenth of what foreign
competitors get.
"If I had been a Finn," he
declared, ''I would have received
a house from the town and maybe
a Peugot. I'd also be getting
$2,000 a race," as an Olympic
gold medalist.
I Momtmental Upset
.Averted by ·Evert r
I
Janet Newberry had Chris
Evert on the ropes but it seemed
the thought of upsetting the
tournament favorite was a little
upsetting Itself.
Newberry had the top seed at
set paint six times in the opening
set but error alter error let her
slip by and Evert scored a 7-6, 6-2
victory Thursday night in the
third round of the $50,000 Mission
Viejo women's tennis tourney.
. Unseeded Bettyann Stuart of
Newport Beach surprised Llnky
Bischoff of South Africa, the
fourth seeded tournament player,
6-0, 8-4 in one upset and in another
Dianne Fromboltz ousted fellow
Australian Lesley Hunt, 7-5,6-1.
Tonight's stngles action
features Martina Navratilova of
Czechoslovakia and HoJJand 's
Tine Zwaan at 6 and Chris Evert
·and Sue Barker of England at 7.
Golf Results
Newberry led the opening set
6-5 and had a 40-0 advantage at set
point before four mistakes in a
row let Evert tie it at deuce.
Even then Evert's forehand in·
to the n,et gave Newberry another
chance but she double faulted on serve. ·
Evert took the tiebreaker S-1
and had little trouble in the second set.
Second-seeded Navratilova had
some difficulty with Valerie
Ziegenfuss ' smashing serves but
still woo, 6-2, 6-4. '
•
a.tty ...... """95 "' "" .. ..,,..
'
I ,
Trojans' 1
Evans
·Ailing
• •
LOS ANG1,;LES -star&.
quarterback Vince -....,.,
111111 tblrd·ranked Seothera
Ca!Uomla'igame anoW~ilalllr
daY bee•-of a badly bn.ued
ritbtthuinb. "
Coach John Mc~ said, "It'•
50-50 he'll 10 with ua bee-be
basn•ttbeen-able to talc:• the
center snap. We'll Me bow be
feels but my reeling ritbl now is
it's bnt to leave him hometore.t
with two conference came. c:om-:ma up.''
Evans injured the Uiumb
"lainat Purdue last Satur6y.
Sophomore Rob Hertel i9 ex-
pected to start at quarterback for
the Trojans agai.nst the
Hawkeyes·at Iowa City. ... , '"""'" . PONTIAC, Mich. -The roof of
the world's largest enclosed foot -
ball stadium was inflated Thun:·
day.
The top of t he Pontiac
Stadium, home ot the Detroit
Lion&, billows five stories above
the stadium.
·Nine blowers. Thursday
pumped air into the 80,399-seat
stadium, pushing up the 20--acre
quilt of steel cables and Tefion-
coated fabric. ..
CZECH DEFECTOR MARTINA NAVRATILOVA GOES OFF BALANCE TO RETURN A SHOT.
Carl Luckenback, stadium
architect, called the rool-railinc
a milestone in engineering
technology. There are several
similar, but smaller, inflatable
roofs in the world. Defector Plays • ID MV
Navr(l,tilova Stuck by Her Decision
The first Lions' football game
under the new big top will be
Monday night against the Dallas
Cowboys.
Aaro• to M-age1 . .
By LAURENE KEYS
Of UM O.Uy Pilot SUfl
A year ago anyone and ever·
yone could talk to Martina
Navratilova, the 18-year-old ten·
nis se n sat i o n from
Czec hoslovakia.
But since her recent defection
she is handled with kid gloves by
the promoters and has turned
down countless interviews, in·
eluding one with syndicated col-
umnist Jim Murray.
Staying the week in Newport
Beach while playing in the Mis-
sion Viejo Women's Tennis
Classic, Navratilova has been
cont!1ually hound~ by re-
porterl.
,Understandably, it is difficult to talk about ·the defection time
and time again, but the fact r e-
mains that people are more in-
terested in her now and like other
athletes and artists who ha-Ve fled
their native countries, she is
~mewhat of a curiosity.
Instructed, she says, by the
U.S. government not to comment
on the details of her defection she
did say that she did not discus~ her
plans with anyone before she ac-
tually souJtht U.S residence.
She may have been thinking
about seeking asylum for awhile,
but it appears not to have been
planned in advance.
"When I decide something, I
just go ahead and do it," she said
matter of factly.
Although extremely animated
and personable on the court, she
became cool and d~tant, almost
to the point of indifference, dur-.
ing the press conference after the
match Thursday.
Answering the questions with
short, curt replies, she made it
very clear that she did not wis h to ·
be detained any longer than
necessary.
Softening a bit with fewer.peo-
ple around, Navratilova ex-
plained that the many interviews
make it difficult for her to prac-
tice and rest betwee n her
matches. She would like ·her ten-
nis and not the defection to be the
subject of discussion.
Looking directly at her s ur-
rounding interviewers, almost as
if searching out a friendly, face,
she mulled over each question
about her homeland carefully
beCore answering. ·
"It is a good country," she
said. "Yes ... someday l would
liketogoback.''
Commenting that she would
miss her family most of all, she
said she hoped they would be
able to see each other next year
at Wimbledon.
Since the Ciechoslovakian gov-
ernment does not permit dual
citizenship, Navratilova must
give up her rights and citizenship
to become a naturalized U.S.
citizen.
··Dual citizenship should not be
allowed. You should be one or the
other,·· she said in a fluent
English traced with barely an ac-
cent. ..
Actually, she says, her iifestylf:
bas changed very little since she
defected since s he spent Jllore
time on the road than she dia at
home.
''I always had plenty Of time to
practice at home," s·he said.
."But I didn't always know i( I
would be allowed to get out of the
country to play .. "
On\y a month short of finishing
high school before she left home,
Navratilova left no doubt that she
prefer& not to return to school
just now.
''What for?'' she quipped. ••1•m
here to play tennis."
BOSTON -Hank Aaron ls
coming back to the Milwaukee
Brewers next year.
That's fairly definite.
The only questio11; is whether
he's coming back as a designated
hitter or as manager. And rt~t
now, there's a much stronser
likelihood he'll return as the
former rather than the latter,
although that situ'ation could
change between now and the
winter meetings two montM
hence.
NeieMet•Bou
NEW YORK -LitU~ known
Joe Frazier, manager of five
pennant winners in 10 minor·
Jeague seasons, today was
named manager of the New York
Mets.
F.razier,• 52, succee~s Roy
Mc'MillaA, who wu, named in-
terim man&ger :on Aug. & after
YogiBerr.a was fired.
He received a one·year con·.
tract.
Frazier has been in the Mets'
system since 1968, managing
most recently at their champion
Tidewater International League
affiliate. He has also previously
managed title clubs at Victoria,
Memphis and Visalia. He is the
seventh manager in Mets his~
tory. •
Dougl-Ool8lftl
. S~ DIEGO-The San Diego
C·bargers have claimed
quarterback Bobby Douglass on
waivers from the Chicago Bears.
The seven-year 'National 'Foot-
ball League veteran was picked
up Thursday for the $100 waiver
fee after the Bears dropped blm
in favor of quatterb8clc: Gary
Huff. Douglass has a reputation
for being a better·runner than a
passer. ·
Klt1f1• Tri-plla
VANCOUVER, B.C. -'!:be Los
· Angeles Kings are ending the Na-
tional Hockey League's exhibi·
tionseasoo in a flurry.
The Kings edged Vancouver,
6-5, Thursday night, take on the
Canucks again tonight here, then
wind up the preseason Saturday
night at home hosting the
CallfotniaSeals.
.Co•troee1 .. 9 lt'fdelu
NEW YORK -Larry O'Brien,
National Basketball Association
co~missioner, said Thursday
night be wbuld step Into the
VALERIE ZIEGENFUSS, FRUSTRATED BY FOUR SERVICE BREAKS, LOST 1;9 NAVRATILOVA.
~ widening controversy between
the Los Angeles Lakers and ••re.
tired" center Wilt Chamberlain
' if the club and player can not
· work out an agreement.
Bucks Out to Inipres8 Pollsters?
"His obligation is to play for
the Lakers for another full
season,•• \be statemeat sald.
However. according to Cba.m-
berlain 's representative Sy
Goldl>erg, the NBA had ukad Cba~berlain WedneSday to sto,y
away from training camp for a
few <fays so it can decide what to
do in the case.
~ .. ""if.·, ----
LOS ANGELES (APJ ...'.Coach
Woody Hayes thlnks .his Ohio
State Buckeyes should be No. t
and UCLA coach Dick Vermeil
agrees. But that still doesn't mean Ohio State mlabt not tzy to
JDake a Poll show out ol the -
ichoola' nationally televbed foot.-
ball l)leeting Saturday night at 8.
Hayes made no ... ret he reit
Ohio State deserved the top rank·
Ina alter Its 32·7 Victory over
North Carolina last weekend but
the voters put the Buckeyes No. 2
behind Oklahoma.
Vermeil, whose Bruins are
ranked 13th, said he ll\lnkll Ohio
St1<te "i! the best college football tackles, a pair Vermeil says "are
team in the country and with :u good as any two· defensive
televialon 'and all, they'll really linemen in the cou(ltry."
be coming at us .••
Oh.lo SI.ate takes a 3-0 record in· The tackler and sophomore
to the aame alter victodes"'over middle &uard Aaron Brown
Mlchllan State and Penn -Stat ''they run down running backs
as well u North Carolina~ . fiOin ...... behlnd~''. ••Id VefmeiJ.
UCLA bd'at Iowa ·state ana Despite the newness, tbe
Ten bof beln ·ued -20 Buckeyes have allowed only one neu~ ore I ~· f touchdown In three •ames, th•' at Air Force last Saturda,y. & •• Haye1 bu a completely ...,bililt to Nortb:Carolln1.
defense wltb only three starters The ent{ro 1tartlng Qhio State
back lroln 1974 . But the new . ofrdistve backfield Is back Witb
namn include people such a.a Corne 1 t us Greene at
Junior N'ic~ B\lonamici and 1 quarterback, fullback Pete
sopbomQre 1'ddie Beamon at Johntonu Heilman Trophy win·
-· --l---..:.1-"' .... ,,
•
nlng tailback Archie Griffin and
Wintback Brian Basct.;aagel.
The game features a matcbup
..,of-Griffin, the defending
Htisman winner who is after bis
. ~· con~uUve lJIO.yanLeftort · in a re~ar 1eason_game and
Bruins quarterbatlt John
Sciarra, a ~unnin~ pualni
.throal,wbo l.i a ca ate ror U..
_ewardth;.l.ve•r. , ;. , •
"Rl1h\ off hand I wuuld,iay he
m,;y 'be the bHt qdlrte<back
We've faced •nd m ·17bil he ·, does"?'t talk. much'," lta)'es a&ld
of SClarra'.
I •
................
CI:EVELAND_ -Pete M....0,
member oTtlie 1928 U.S. OIJm,.
J>ic boxlns tum, died Tlnnday. llewasn. '
He wotked. for a trucldl!l llnn
·until his reUreqiont six m<inlbo ago.
An Infected out rtsWllna from
a tpam.o1 •easlon prevented. hla
I actutil\y com~llilc In tho 01¥m-
. J>icatheyearhe1m ailelheteam.
' •
•
t..;;.;. Iiiiflc' ed Ora re oUif y
SuPeryisor "Robert Battin has
!lied "" appeal with Ibo -• District Court ol Appe,i ukinc It
to quub the Grand Jury indict·
ment acaJn1t him. . •
And •hould th .. .appeilate court
fail to quuh the indictment, Bal·
tin has asked \t to order hl.s trial,
which ls scheduled lei begin Mon· '
d8)', delayed. I I
JIUrtbermOre, U Orange County
•
.:;:·011tity' s
Jobless
Boosted
'
For the third consecutive
month. O\"ange County's un-
employment rate in September
stood at 8.3 percent, wetJ ll:b&ve
the Se'ptember, 1974, rate of s.+
percent.
According to the state
Employment Development _
Department monthly ,repcrt,
.there were 64,200 people un-
employed in the county last
month. A year ago, thti number
of unemplo)'ed was 25,200.
As Orange County's -labor
market continues to expand,
there also were 20,SOO more coUn-
ty job holders last J1lonth than in
September, 1974, rrieaning this
year there are more employed
people as well as moa:e un -
empJoyed.
EDD labor analyst Alta
Eldricjge predicted foday that
employrb.ent in the county ''will
rise sharply ,ducing the rorth
quarter, 'w°itb· strong seasonal
gains in public education ana re-.
tail tracJe.' · • ' ·
"Most manurac~uring ,firms
arcurocertain.....iq.1tb_eir: =t• and seyts;a.I firrn• bave out
or business;• Mrs:~Etdri said
. when dilcussing the1ftlihi!Cliate ·
outlook for manufactµrinajobl!:.
· Along with a stow down in the
rate ·new firms ire coming to
(See RAT E, Pa1e AZl
* * * Unemployed
:Pown in U.S.,
Up in State
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
nation's un·employment rate
·declined from 1.4 percent to 8.3
percent of the Jabot force in Sep-
tember, although the jobless rate
• increased for a d uJt men and
heads of households, the govern-
ment reported today.
The September report indicat-
ed there was no significant
change in the over-all -employ-r
• ment situation in the rountry.
But C.ali(ornia's unemploy-
ment rate ede:ed u.pward to 10.3
percent, although the number or
employed persons was the
highest this year ... s'la{e officials
said today. >
The state jobl~s rate in-
creased from 10.2 percent of the
work force in August, the second
straight monthly rise ~ 0.1 per-
cent. ._ _
But the · 11:tate Employment
..Development Department re-
, ported that total employment foi-
Celifornia hit a 1975 hi&b of
8,646,900, up ~.600 lnmi A111ust.
The L~bor Department said
<See J OBS, P ap AZ)
£o asc
Weathe r ·
Variable blah cloudiness
. with hazy sunshine Satur-
_day. Patchy night &nd mid-
morning low clouds 1and
log. Slightly cooler ( with
beach higru& near 7o rising
to 80 inland. \
I NSIDE TODAY
1)-om bucking brottea to .o
bl~gro.i• competition, thtre'1
.o lot tchitdultd to hoppm.at
tM 0.rang Co11.nt11-£oir-_..,. ,,,,. mt>nth. Stt P.og<
CJ o/ k>do~'' Wttkenda'. ,
•
/"
ek
'FRl~Vj OCTOBER a, 1975
T•••Y'•U•lq
N.'t'. StMks
•
-
. . ~
TENCEN!j
Uftsh ·Indictments ~ .
" r -"' ' ' ; .. . .... •I - . • • ..... ....'l'.:... ),. Sojiirjo.r ,court udte Jerrold -rillita;<•tbeau"9rvlloraald.-J--umaJri9httoa·•peedytrial.
OtiverreJiecta•nothttbi.dbyBat-When indicted la rmd-A\C~t Now,-bowever1 BatUn says he ~ U. all.ernoon to have him set oG eta.ran related.to using C!OUO-Wants J:Jiore (~me to prepare his th~ •lQ.dlctment, as[de, 'the ty employes lD his ill-f•ted 1f14 defense and to l\Ppeal to hi&her
aupeniaQr' sajd ThUJ"l4ay h;e will carop1i1n for lieutenant rov-courts to }lave the indictm~nt
ft.le:.• s~d appe-1 With the ap-ernor, Battin said he would irulist a•_!l1n~t him s_et aside .. pen ate court~ • £ L on biS rirht to a speedy trial. B,i.s•• for bis appeal ~ ~ rec~t
Battin admitted there la little Consequentlx. hi. trial date state aupr..eme court dec1s1on that
chance tllei court will act oo his was seti for' Ott~ I, safely Within qualhed an indictment bec:ause
ini,Ual appeal and request !or a Ibo oormal N clilys aenerally the prosecutor had not told a
trial delay before Monday. eonreded tO N tbe" safeguard Grand Jury about evidence
_"_B_ut_l_w_an_t_t_o_e_x_erc_i5e __ a1_1...;m_;:,Y _ _,pe=ri:.:od..::.con=.•::..;cd.o.e._~eod='-ant-"'"'"-•-com __ l!i. _u-wbicb tended to po.int to the de-
f edClant ·.smnocence.
Battjn aald that decision,
which cloet not1et have the effect
of beins law. has a bearing on his
case. His atlcifney, Malt Kurilich,
will argue in Judie Oliver's
courtroom today that Battin was
denied constitutional safeguards
by the Gl:..and" Jury's actions
aeainst hlin.
Speeifi~ally, Kurilicb wUI con·
'
teOO tliitlils client WU a--
his right to confront his eccusan..,
tocroes e>eamlne witaessa ancl to
present evidence point to his ln·
pacenee. ,
Last Week, when Judge Oliver
denied the earlier Battin appeal
for him to Quash the indictment.
the Judge said Kurillch would be
1iven l' minutes today to slate
hilcase. l.
<See B.\1TIN, Pace.UI, :
. I
Co1111cil Called .
-
·n•fle_!-s ~ost Th~~Oae ... "-
When filo:Xoong BaltimOI'!' th\llS 'JQtoc ked down 52-year·
_!!Id Er!iest Mitchell to steal bis welfare cash (top) they
bad one big .'problem. Mitchell .got uY. with a knife
(centet)·and gave chase. He near y caught one (bottom)
despite· uncon.cemed onlookers. Muggers got away but
Mitchell 'Stllr1las his welfare money. -,
' ~ .
Prosecutors Ready
C~~ Against Patty
SAN F:~CIS:CO (APt -As them privately.
Patty Hear•t's psychological Jt Was uncertain whether a
testa neared cqmplet.ion today, a declaration of nf'ental incom-
delesation of federal and state peteQ,cy in federal court would
prosecutor:s began planning their. prevent state prosecutors from •
·second"1umtnit~'meetingohlhe jjrdceeding with their cases
increasingly complex case. a,aainst Mfss Hearst.
1be conclave, set for Wednes4 ' Cbar1es agains1. Miss Hearst
day. appears certain to concern and SL6. members William and
legal r•miflcations of Miss Emily Harris are multiplyin1. A
Hearst ·s men.tal status.
On Tuesday, U.S. Dist. Court
Juda• Oliver ti. Carter is e>epect-
ed to rule whether Miss Hearst is
MRS. HEARST
CONDEMNS MEDIA-AS
1M11tally -.peU.nt to be .,_. Loo Anplea grand jury Thurs-
u.amlnecl ia •oun. lier •\to<D01'. .S.Y indicted the trio-On armed
say sj'le m1y ~on the verge of1a • robbery, assault and kidnap
nenOllS breakdOwn and should char1ea.-
be hoopitaliJed • ' . • ' ' \ Two ot lhr~ court~ In ~other development Thurs-
d.i "'-. ··~ ••-J day, -otrkial <oollrmed that a PIJ M11,.11ll ""'~ .__. ailed "'"memoir1 ' wr1tt4!n t>)' William heireu Thunday. '1'be panel's . . written reports on Miss Hearst's Harrls was among evidence
mental slate were, beini P.re-1athered. when he ~u arrested.
pond ancfcoWd.bo.iilbmlttecl tq T~e ·in or' th an 1.3·page
the judce tod_, or )lllond_, rnan,..cript reportedly indicates • that Har~ wai one ol UM! men 'Cattet bu,aald' he "'11 Mal tbe whO lltdh,,... !Illa Hearst on
report• 1anUI alter he hu studied ' rob. 4. J.!n4'.
-""---..... -~--·•
'" ••
Jury· Probes Bribery AllegationS:
By GARY GRANYILLE
Oflllw~lr ..........
All rive members of the
Fullerton City Council and coun-
ty Supervisor Ralph Diedrich are
among witnesses subpoenaed to
appear before the Orange Cbunt)'.
Grand Jury next week to tell
what they know about an alleged
bribery solicitation.
Neither Diedrich nor council
members Frances Wood, Robert
Golf Card
Practice
'Routine' .
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKi °'* 0.11, pt ... ,..., The mailin1 of fr,ee golr
privileee cards to public officials
was described today as a
"routine:• p·rocedure which the
Milllllot ~any bas lol-for~eVerryears;-a·ccordlng-to-a
CO!PPIJIY official Roger F. Cl&rk .
''nae 111.uion Viejo Coe1»ny
has r.ootineJy ottered courtesy
playing privjleges at tHe,Mi..ssion
Viejo Country Club to various
dignitaries and celebritJes since
the .golf course opened in 1967,"
explained Clark, vice president
of the firm's builder's service
<Uvision.
"Like most other companies
that own and operate recrea-
liO(lal. entertainment or sports
facilities , the Mission Viejo
Country Club courtesy playing
privileges are us ually offered by
letter, which includes a card
evidencing that the holder is en-
titled to these privileges."
Use of the 'olr card by public
otrieials earlier th.is week was
t~rmed a possible eonflict or in-
terest bY Deputy County Counsel
Frank ~ Fekete who urged that
the recipients immediately re·
tum them.
A tot'al of 11 or the 44 cards
mailed this year were returned
to the Mission Viejo Com.pany as
or Wednesday but Chuck Dargan,
corpor.ate director of com -
munications for theifirm, said he
hadn't been able to find out ir any
more had been sent back.
Those on the Mission Viejo
Company's golf gratutity mail-
ing list include the President of
the United States, the governor.
both U.S. senators, local elected
representatives. members of the
Orange County Board of
SUpervisors and members of the
Orarige County Planning Com-
mission.
Golf privileges also have been
offered to trustees of the former
San Joa'quin Elementary School
District, the Tustin Union High
School District, the Saddleback
Valley Unified School District,
the Saddleback Community
College Di s trict and the
Capistrano Unified School Dis-
trict.
F\irther, the list includes board
members or the Moulton Niguel
and the Santa Margarita ~ater
(SeeGOLF, Page AZ )
Ward, Duane Winters or Robert
Root were subjects of the in-
vesti1ation leading to next Wed-
nesday's secret Grand Jury
hearing.
Central figures in the in-
vesU&ati9n of the alleged
solicitation centering on a ~ent
Fullerton City Council I~ use
decision are:
-Dr, William Brashears of
Fullerton, who won and then lost
GoingOU.i
With lJang .
JOHANNESBURG,
South Africa (AP) -Nine· .
teen-year-old Oliver Grey
blew himself up wi.lh
d)'J'amite today. leavinK· a
scrawl on the wall of his
room: "A~he king's men
and all the king's horses
won't be able to put Oliver 't!ice!ber again."
°'9y .wu a gold mine
mana,gement---trainee-n
Stillfontein. 80 miles from
J.,.aane•lt!lr•· Frieada
said they thought he bad an
argument with his
girlfriend.
School Lunch
Act Vetoed
By P resident
WASHJNGTON CAP) -Presi-
dent Ford vetoed the National
School Lunch and Child Nutrition
Act today. saying il would pro-
vide subsidies for non.needy
children and "'is worse than the
programs we now have."
Ford suggested that Congress
either extend present school
IWlch programs or act favorably
on his proposal to provide aid for
all children from families below
the poverty level.
Exercising his 39th veto, the
President said , "By extending
aid to families not in need, this
bill would add $1 .2 biJlioo lo my
budget proposals for the current
year.
''I cannot accept such fiscal ir-
responsibility when we race the
real danger that the budget de-
ficit could reach $70 billion in-
stea.d or the already high limit of
$60 billion I set earlier this year ...
Ford chastised Congress for
continuing to add to the deficit
and thus adding to inflationary
pressures on the economy
"which could push us bac'k into
recession."
The President said subsidies
should not be .expanded to
families with incomes above the
J)O'Verty level.
"l believe the way lo help most
American families is to take ac-
tions to hold down inflation and
reduce their tax burdens," he
said .
Sadd~k Distrirt
city council approval of a re~:
ing application to allow him ~~
build a high density co!'t
domlnium project on laOO ~
viously zoned for single {amjJt.
residential use. ,
-City councilman Cl)arles
Phillips, the swing vote on a COD·
troversial 3 to 2 council b&l(ot
June 4 apprOving the rezonln&
that was rescinded Sept. 2 on ,a
• <See BRIBERY, Pa1eAZl
Bond Issue .
Studied . ..
For Schoo~
'" Capistrano Unified School Dis~
trict trustees will be asked Mon-
day· night to lay the groundwork
ror a multi-million bond issue that
would provide schools for ai
estimated 8,000 new st.ents ex-
pectedby-1980. --
PTojecUons now under atudy by
. the district's Gr<>lrth Plahftinf .
A.dtdaory Co14·neil (GPAC> ift!
dicate that the dlt'triel 's current
13,SOO enrollment will swell to
more than 21 ,000 within the next
five years. .
The new development is expeCt.·
ed. mainly in Mission Viejo, San
Juan Capiatrano and Dana Point,
according to the G PAC studies.
"The questions the board wOI
be asked is when should the elec--
tion.be held, and, ror how much.
money,'' Supt. JE:romeThomSley
said today.
-'The board has tpeoption of call-
ing a bohd election in March, June
or November of 1976or in March.
May and November of 1971,
'lbomsley said.
He said he will ask the board to
rocus on either the March 1976 Or
March 1977 dales. Thornsley nOC·
ed. that research has shown bond
issues do not fare well when com-
bined with either June primary or'
November general elections.
The superintendent said a df!4
cision on the amount of the issue
would not be made until the board
is provided with more detailed in·-
formation from GPAC, 'the ad-
visory council. The information is
not expected unti I I ate this month
or early November.
Joe Wimer, director of ad.·
ministrative services, said today
that it is necessary for the boa.-.,
to formulate a bond issue so the
district is not forced to play a
game of "catch up" with' new
<"nrollment. · .. -.
He said it takes from two ~o
three years to plan amd con.strucf
a school after a decision has beeft
madetobuildit. .
The district's last bond election
was held in 1973. Voters approved
a $25 million il'ls ue. ·•~ or that amount, about $2.8
million remains unspent. GPAC
has recommended the money be
used to purchase a.n elementary
school site in Mi ssion Viejo and lo
construct an elementary school
on a site recently purchased. in
(See80ND, PageA2)
School Raises Mulled
Trustees ·of the Saddleback
Valley'"'Unified School District
will coosidexi awµdlnc cost-or.
living }ncrea-es lO the superin-
tendent• s staff and all ad -
ministrative officers . Mo'nday night. ' . '
Supt. Richard Welte hu re·
commended thai thelr·wages be
increa~ by between 8.2 and 9.6
percent, the 1same as was ac-
corded oarlier to the dla)<lct'~
teachln& $11 · , l t Memllen •the 1overntn1
board will doliberate,..the salary
question when 'they meet. at 8
--
p.ni. at Los Alisos Intermediate
Sdiool 25111 Moor Ave., Mission
ViejO.-
The salaries considered for two
top poata are $31 ,085 for Person-
nel Service Administrator Gciry
Shinkle and $32,811 ror Associate
Supe lntendent of Ad -
ministrative Services Jack
Schumaker.
~"'Administrative salaries pro-Poaed by tbe district's staff have
lM~IPIY ranges:
H11h Hllool princll>al, $27 ,968
to $.10,28'; lnterrnedlale .school
princl.al. $26.612 to $28,928 ;
elementary sc hool principal.
$23,338 to $25,654 ; continuatioft
school principal , $23,338 tO
$25,798; addlt education prin-
cipal;S24 ,804 to $21 ,120 and small
school principal, $21 ,924 lo
$24,240.
The new round or ad-
ministrative salary adjustment!
does not include Dr. Welte. ThC
superintendent last June was
awarded a four-yrttr contraj:t
with an annual salary of $38,000
plus Inn·;, benelits and a S!sli
per morith expense account.
'
' . '
!
I
I
•
I
•
I
Al ll.'ll v PllO~ SB Frtday.Oclober3; 1875
( Pilot Log:ook J
Women Better ··
At Sky Diving?
Winner
'Eelt
.-Lucky'
By RUDI )'JIEDZIELSKI
Of .. CMityPU .. .._,.
SI'. PETERSBURG, Pia. (AP)
-"He' felt lucky. He knew he
was aoinc·to win .• •• san..tbf:"'Wlre ot a dentist who won $812,000 iD
the largest Jrish Sweepstakes
prlzeever,aWarded.
SHOULD WOMEN SKY DIVERS be handicapped when
they're competing against men? On th~ c_ontrary, says John
Hennessey, "aerodynamically they're better s uited for the
competition than men ...
Hennessey, special events manager for Philip Morris
lne., maintains women are much better equipped to make
accurate laudings than men. Expert sky divers at Perris
Airport told him s o. Saddleback Valley r esidents will
find out if that's true next m onth· when
CBS comes to Mission Viejo to film an in-
s tallment for "The Challenge of the
Sexes.··
Dr. Vance Bishop, SO, held
ticket number SAA 0257~. the
fjrst ticket drawn in Dublin
Thursday.
Blohop, who was visil!ng his
hometown of Ococee, Tenn.. a
small community near Chat-
tanooga, could not be reached for
•comment.
Both sexes are scheduled to m ake a
landing on the 14th fairway of the Mis·
s ion Viejo Golf Course. There will be no
handica p for the woman sky dive r, un-
like other competitions to be taped in
Mission Vi ejo ~or the sports series.
•
But his wife. Isitbel, said her
husband, purchased the lucky
ticket last July in a Dublin hotel
lobby while the couple were tour-
ing Ireland after attending a den·
tal conference in England.
"He bought two or three tickets
with a spare five pounds," she
said. adding that it was lhe first
time they gambled on the
liWeepstakes.
Mrs. Bishop said she learned of
the windfall when she stopped at
her husb~nd's Office to pick up DR. ROBERT LOMBARDI, s uperintendent of the Sad-
dleback Co mmµnity College District has a reputation for
standing up for his convictions even when board meetings
become stormy.
• his mail. Dublin was calling.
That·s why it came to no one's surprise that architects
chose the Lombardy Poplar as one or the predominant trees
to be planted on campus.
They described the s uperintendent's namesak e as a
··ruiJtop tree. strong, vertical and firm·· -characteristics
~·hich suit Lombardi. A weeping willow he is not.
•
"I though my husband's assis-
tant was choking," Mrs. Bishop
said. "She told me he won, but J
wouldn't believe it.
"When I finally got home. the
phone wouldn't stop ringing.··
The Bishops . who will
celebrate their 26th weddirfg an·
niversary this month, have lived
in this · Gulf Coast community
Sin<'e 1953.
THE BA.M'LE over the toilets Oared in San Juan
Capistrano again this week as city councilmen attempted to
deal with citizen complaints about proposed rest room
facilities al El Camino Park.
They have no children, and
. Mrs. Bishop said she hadn't
thought much about what to do
with the money.
Councilman Doug Nash moved that the toilets be
eliminated to appease the anguish of homeowners con-
cerned about loitering. Fellow Councilman Yvon Heckscher foltowed by askin2
that the picnic facilities also be er~ed .
''One of the things about picnic tables --.. it seems to lead
to a needfor rest rooms.·· Heckscher logically concluded.
He said "a worse situatM>o might develop" if the tables
are left in the plans and the rest rooms are taken out.
Later, Minnie Surles. chairman of the Parks and
Recreation Commission. told the council she was less con-
cerned with people problems than with canine calling cards.
•'Taite out the grass, gentlemen, and the bushes and the
dogs won't use the park.·· she suggested.
Councilmen flushed the problem temporarily by send-
ing the whole park issue back to the planning department.
i Fnt1!!1 P.,,e A J
•' -RATE •••.
• • ' Orange County, ose are e re-
asom she gave for failing to pre-
dict an U'pturn in manUfacturing
employment.
But, M.rs. Eldridge noted, the
continual growth in service and retail joba is helping to offset the
spongy manufacturing job
mark.eL Tbe county's employment
scene was given a boost last
month by the reopening or
:schools.
The back to school move
helped add 800 jobs in retail trade
outlets as well as a gain in gov -
ernment jobs through school re-
hiring.
* * * I r .... r,..eAJ
JOBS •••
the number of unemployed in the
U.S. in September tot~led nearly
7 .8 million, down only a few
thousand from the August jobless
total. The number of employ.eel
persons was slightly more than
5.4 million, also just a few
thousand more since August, the
de_partment said. The size of the nation's labor
force also increased only slight-
ly, to just under 93.2 million in
September.
The rate of unemployment has
shown little change the last three
months.
· ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed
l'tHlditlll INI PW!hl ..
Jack R. Curlev VltePr~--1•,..00ne•.i M._..
Thomas Keevil
f.01111<
Thomas A. Murphlne
111e-.1119 EdO-
Chlrlts H . Loos Richard P. Niii
AMl ...... l lll'lritoll .... ~
~lkY1lleyOftke '»IOI l..o l'el ll•lldll S....OkQof',.......,
Othet' Offlc.n OMl.l-tl: Ql ... '1 ... MIWI
Nrootoplf1 ...... , JW N"""*1 ...... -• ""'"~ ~"~ 111,, 8MUlllO<iilr¥atd ue-1e ... 1ri.111•0 ....,..,,... ......
T•l-•1 (71tJ M2..Q21
Qasttflld Mwer11tint'41·5'71
Fr-P~AI I
BRIB:i:-;RY •••
s.ovote.
-Leroy Rose, a prominent
Anaheim architect and Fullerton
planning commissioner.
-Paul Wallich, a public rela·
tions consultant and al one time a
member of the Brashears' 'team
seeking the rezoning.
Along with the council mem-
bers, Diedrich, Fullerton City At-
torney Kerry Fox and the city's
planning and public works direc-
tors, have been su~poenaed to
testify at next week ·s hearinii.
A Fullerton police sergeant
and district attorney investigator
John Gier have formed the two-
man investigation team that bas
probed the alleged
bribery solicitation.
According to Diedrich, the in-
vestigators came to his office
~veral weeks ago to ask him
about a recent convenation he
had with Brashears.
"I told them Brashears had
come to me and said stmeone
was trying to put the arm on him
for a favorable rezoning , ..
Diedrich said.
"My advice to Brashears was
for him. if he really believed so-
meone was putting the bite on
him, to go either lo the district at-
torney or Fullerton Police Chier
Wayne Bornhoft, ·' the supervisor
added.
He said that earlier in the year
when Brashears' zoning applica-
tion was bouncing back and forth
between the city council and
planning commission Brashears
had asked him to intercede with
Phillips.
"I called Chuck and told him
that in my opinion it wasn·t a bad
proposal but lam not a city coun-
cilman and the judgment was
Chuck 's to make,·· Died.rich said.
Diedrich and others involved in
the investigation who were in-
terviewed were at a loss to ex·
plain Rose's involvement in the
investigation.
f'roM Page AJ
BATTIN.:.
Despite the last minute flurry
of legal maneuvers aimina at a
trial delay, Battin said Kurllich
will be preP.ared to begi'n his de·
tense Monday when the trial Is
1tiU scheduled to begin.
As yet, the Santa Ana
supervisor ha1 flot asked the
Orange County Superior Court to
oet his trial date back.
· "We've had a good life and
traveled all that we ·want to, and
we have all we want ... she said.
"But it's always nice to have a
Utile something extra.··
College Fair
Planned for
Viejo Schoof
Representatives from about 25
colleges and universities will
come to Mission Viejo High
School Wednes~ay night to
answer questions during a "cpl-
lege (air" for parents and slu--.. ..
Among' tftese 9cfled11'fed to
make presentations are
representatives of the CQmmuni-
ty college system; state college
and state university systems;
California Lutherari·College; Oc-
cidental College; Sout~rn
California College: Unive~ity of
Southern California;~ Cal State
Leng Bea~h ; Chapman College;
Whittier College; UC Ir.vine;
Azusa Paci£ic College; Loma
Linda University and the As-
sociated Claremont Colleges.
The7:30 p.m . session is open to
all students and parents but Mis-
sion Viejo High School seniors
are especially encouraged to at-
tend.
New Schools
Slated/or
Dedication
Two Capistrano Unified School
District elementary schools that
opened this year will be dedicat-
ed in separate ceremonies Satur-
day.
Al 10 :30 a.m .• Castille School,
24042 Via La Coruna. Mission
Viejo, will be dedicated.
Ceremonies at Moulton SChool ,
29851 Highland Ave., Laguna
Niguel, will be held at 2:30 p.m.
following a noon luncheon
catered by the San Clemente
Masonic Lodge.
The Masons, under the diree-'
tion or Burton Meyer Jr., grand
master, will lay cornerstones at
the two new schools. Students
will plant time capsules.
New Officers
For History -.
Group Named
The Saddleback Valley His·
·torical Society has announced
election of officer:s (« 1976.
Newly elected officers are:
president. Ray Prothero, Jr.:
first vice president, Nikki Fan·
non; second vlce preaident,
JeanneGa1nebin: third vicepre-
tldent, Frances Halloway; re-
cording secretary, ¥ary Castro;
corresponding secretary, Louise
Adler; treasurer, Ed Parker:
director, George Stevena; and
historian, Jim Sleeper. •
The society meets at3p.m. the
fOllrth Sunday of every "'°"lh for
lectures related to Saddleback
Valley hl9tory. .
•
. -r -
A~•n~ny Ollt~
<Johobitation Qu'izzed · .
:MADISON, Wis. (UPJ) -A di\IO<ttd -ll•-
lqwithanotber man may baveto forfeit her alllllmlJ'
payments from her tanner husband depenilln& on the
••manner and extent of·the cohabitation,'' according
to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Justice Bnice Beilfuss, in an opinion Thtll'ldn,
said a woman's cohabitetlon with another J.llaD ccOild bil seen as a change of circumstances that'imight af•
feet the llllmonr payments from herfonner l\IJSband.
The 5-2 dec1lll'1ft came in a case involving Dr. E.
Robert and.Barbara A. Taake, formerly of Jleav~r.
Dam, who were.cllvorcedJnl966. Dodge County Jl!dge
Joseph E. Schult1' hadstOpped Taake's alimony to IWi
ex·wife because Mrs. Taake was living with another , man. Mrs. Taake admitted to occasional sexual ...,Ja-
tions with ·the man and said she did not correct
persons when they referred to her as the man's wife.
Beilfuss said. He said her cohabitation with the man
was ''not an OCC'3ional indiscretion but conllnuous
cohabitation with arrangements for joint support.''
Beilfuss, however, said the high court majority
fell Schultz went loo far when be ruled out any future
alimony.
Belly Dancer
Plans Record
Jiggle Today
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPll
Nicole English, a philosophy stu-
dent who makes a living as a bel-
ly dancer, hopes to grind out a
world record with her pelvis,
hips and navel.
To do it, she must belly dance
non-stop for more than six hours
today.
"lt's kind of a self-test to see if
I can meet the challenge," the
college sophomore said. "It's
like the mountain climber trying
to scale the highest mountain."
Miss English has been belly
dancing professionally for five
ytars, but her appearance at a
store opening today will be the
first time she has attempted to
clock her movements.
''The six-hour record was set in
June at San Jose.·· she said. ''I'm
aiming for eight hours.'·
BOND •••
San Juan Capistrano.
'The board 'also will consider
that recommendation when it
meets •t 7:30 p.m . at San Juan
Elementary 'SChool: 31~2 El
Camino Real , San Juan.
Capistrano.
GOLF •••
districts, the San Juan
Capistrano City Council, the Mis-
sion Viejo Municipal Advisory
Council, members of the clergy,
radio and TV person~ities, the
press. commercial customers
and department heads of the
county administration, water
districts and utility corbpanies.
The opinion rendered by the
county counset·s office points out
that the Political Reform Act of
1974 forbids public officials from
influencing governmental de·
cisions in which they have finan·
cial interest.
Under the law financial in·
· terest consists of receiving value
in excess of $250 for a one year
period.
Public officials have been
asked to calculate the value or gol(ing benefits received from
the Mission Viejo Company and
to determine whether they are
now disabled from voting on mat-
ters involving the Mission Viejo
Company for a oneyearperiod.
Normal membetship in the
Mission Viejo Country Club costs
$3,000plus $85 in monthly dues.
Lebanon Violence
BEIRUT, tebanon CUPll -
Rival Christians and Moalems
began removing their militias
from the streets today •1~snfper
fire and kidnapings de~~ a full
return to normal in the city torn
by two weeks of civil strife.
PD88y~at
Def~n~e
Rests.'·;.
11.rRILAllYllAYE ................
l'be defense· 111 the Balboa
J>µpycat Th~ater ..-.,.ii)' trial
rested Its c-...e Tbiii..., with a
touch ot. eourtroom die blca -
111mmc>0lng to the~-· a woman wbo•--dla-milled ftom the jury. . I
Juron 'iii !he Jiar&r lfii!lcipd
Courtroom casped with IUll>l!se.
smiled.and nud&ecl-"-u
Lorraine Keeler ·-to the witness stand. j
·ne blond·b•ittd Kn. lteeltt
bad been cl.ismiasecl earlJr during iuO' seloctidb, when obasald abe
had viewed ''Deep Throat'' and
"The Devil In Miss J°"""" with ber bUSb&nd of 35 yean. Sbe aaid
the movies were beneficial to her
marital life. I
Mn. Keeler. who was called u
a witness with specific expertlte,
gave just a rew momenta ot
testimony before Judge Robert
c . Toild accepted an objection to
the witness by prosecuuon at·
tomeyTony Rackauku. l
Rackaukas objected that. Mrs.
Keeler's testimony bad "nofoun·
datloo"' and tbe judge agreed,
telling the jury to i1nore the com·
ments she made.
The six-man. six-woman jury
are judging whether the two
films are obscene and also
whether PussycRt Theatres I owner Viticent Miranda and
Balboa Pussycat ·Theater
manager Arlie Wood are gui.hy oC
miSdemeanor obscenity charges.
Now that the defense bas rest-
ed its case, the prosecutiOl'l will
ol'ier rebuttal Tuesday morning
and then the two sides will sum
up their case before it goes' to the
jury.
Prior to staging what he ad·
mitted was ''courtroo m
theatrics," defense attorney
Robert McDaniel spent nearly all
day Thursday and part of Wed-
nesday questioning UCLA
psychiatrist and sex researcher
Dr. Michael Goldstein.
Goldstein, who served as a con-
sultant to the t,J.S . Commission
OD Obscenity and has,apent eight
years conducting 'atudies OD the
effects of erotic material on
adults and their sex lives,
testified~tb:at the---films are
· "edu_cational and beneficial" for.
adults' sex lives.
. l'h'e two s~xy films ''give
aduJts a chance to see sex acts
they've beard., about,'' according
to the psychiatrist.
Lamp Sale
.. ~· .... ·-.. ··~' ...... ,......,~ , .. --.-.,.,.~ ·• v .,,. • •
All lamps specially reduced f~r you.
Choose from such well known lines as -
Stiff el Fredric ~ooper
Marbro Knob Creek
De11ign Gild Chapman 1
andmimymore
DRElCEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODM,ARK-l<ARASTAN-BAKER
I '?eJ ~-~~, l'/11e,
NEWPORT B.EAcH •
1m WES'l;CUl'P DR.. '42·2'1150
LAGUNA BEACH.
3'S NOHTll OOAST ~WV.. 49HSll
'
Wl9CDAY5 I SAlVUAYSt:OO le S:lO
.. •
"I don't think the court will
give me the time of d.y let alone
,. continuance on the trial," 86t·
tin Hid to explain the reuon for
his failure to ~lltlon the court
,... • delay In h1J trl al.
Addltlonal Information on the or1a1n11atlon is available f(Om
Mn Doris Prothero, &n-0519.. I I
\ .. \
I
TORRANCE• -~·HAWlll()RNE BLVD.
f()pfn Fr1. 1119. ~n. 12·5'30) :n•1m ·
' -· -:------~-:-...------,-.... ---------~-.... ~· I -
/
•
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3 1975 • TEN CENTS. -. -. .. ,.. c.I' ~ o-• I • • .~.,. ~· ~artµi :~~ves -.~ Qua~h ·Indictnients ~::
I • •
Indicted _O ra.n~e C..ou.n.ly · $uptrlqr .. ~~urL:J!l'IP 'Jeuolll d&blt."1ile•-rv1-Nld. tloaal ri9htto a s peedy trial. !endanl"• innoce nce.
Supervl.IOrft9DeFt Ba:ttltltias OliVfi1'ij~biCJ'111dby-U. When tnclicied-tn n.w-~ Now, howeve'r, Battin"says he -eattin said fhat decision,
tend that his client wu den.led
his right to conrront~tila attm~11 to cross exam'tne Ylitnelses and ~ pres~nt evidence point to hi• ~:...
nocenee. ··-
flied an appeal/wllh the 5econd tin this atte.._ to~ blm ~ an ...... nofa'4cf1q mill&-· wants more lime to prepare his which does not yet h•ve the effect
l>iatrictCourto Appealuldn&it th~ indictmut a1lde, the tt ~ti In bis iB·fat.d 19'74 ddense and to appeal to higher dbeinglaw, has a bearing on his
to q~h tile Grand Jur/. indict· supervisor. said 'tlnU'wdaY be will c•mpaip f~~ lleutenaqt COY · courts to ha Ye the indictment cue. .
meot .llcainst him. file a SttODd .appea( with.the ap-enam:. a.ttt• 1ai4Jle would imist aa~t hi.m set aside. 1 .. _His attoroey. Matt Kurilich. Last week, when Judge OUver
denied the earlier Battin appeal
(or him lo quash the indictment,
the Judae said Kurilich would be
given 15 minutes today to state .
hiscase. •
And should tbe appellate court pellatecourt,,.... • _ ,--.·t....,' cm bis rtcbt to a 91M'91Ytrial Basis for bis appeal is a r~t 'wilJ. ariue in Judge Qli.ver's
fail to quash the.,i,ndiCtment, Bal· Battin adbtltted tnere ls little ConaeQum~.-~ d trial da.te state.supreme c.ourtdecls~ that ;.; courtroom today-that Battin was
tin has asked it to order bis trial, chance· the court '4-lll act on bis wu Ml tor Of!t. •. Nfely. within quuhed an indictment t>Kause ~nied consti!UtionaJ 1afea:uards
which is scheduled to be&in Mon-iniUaJ appeal •nd ~·for a IM aormar~f_O ieya· __..ly U. proaecutor bad not told ~.. by .the Grand Jury's actlons
d-.y,delayed. lri•ldelayM:for-elloiiday. ecmeeded. -to \M U. aalecuanl Gradd Ju.ry about evidence agaipathim . .. _
FUri.hermOre, if Orange County ••sut J want to exwriae all my period ail ii W11tt.at·~• whicb leaded.to point tot.be de-.. Specifically, Kurilich will con-(Sff BATTIN, PaaeAJJ
Coun~y's
Jobless-
Increased
•
For the third consecutive
month, 'Orange County's un·
employment rate in September
stood at 8.3 percent, well above
the September, 1974, rate of 5.4
percent.
·According to the state
Employm e nt Development
· Department monthly rePort,
"' there were · 64,200 people un-
employed in the county last
montb. A year ago, the number
ofut)employed was 25,200.
As Orange County's labor
market continues lo expand,
there also were 20,500 more coun-
ty job holders las t month than in
September, 1974, meaning this
year there are more emplOyed
-people as we ll as more un-
emplbyed.
EDD l a bor a nalys t Alta
Eldridge predicted today that
employme nt in the county "will
rise sharply during the forth
quarter with s trong seasonal
gains in public education and re-
tail trade.,.
"Most manufacturing firmi
are uncertain in their rorecasts
and se.teral Cirms have gone out
-ot-busbiess,...!_.!_M-rs. Eldridge-said
. when ~i1pusSin1 the immed.iilte
OU:Uook.Cor manu(act,uringjobs.
· ' Along with ·a slow down in the
rate new rtrm" are coming lo
(See RATE, PageA!J
* * * Unemployed
'Down in U.S.,
Up in State
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
nation's unemployment rate
·declined from 8.4 percent to 8.3
percent of the labor force in Sep-
tember, although the jobless rate
• increased for adult men and
heads or households, the govern-
\ment reported today.
The September report indicat-
ed there was no signilicant
change in the over·all employ-
ment situation in the country.
But California's unemploy-
ment r ate edged upward to 10.3
percent, although ,lbe number of
employed persons was the
highest this year, state officia)s
said today.
The stat e jobless,rate in-
creased Crom 10.2 percent or the
.work force in August, the second
straight monthly rise of 0.1 per.
cent.
But t he state Employment
Deve lopment De partment re-
ported that total employmeht for
CalifOrnia hit a 1975 high of
8,646,900, up 85,600 from August.
The Labor Department said
. (See JOBS, Pa1e A2)
C o ast
Weath e r
Variable high cloudiness
with hazy 'sunshine Satur·
day. Patchy nig'ht and mid·
morning low clouds ·and
fog. Slightly cooler with beach highs near 70 rl sinc
to 80 inland.
I N.S IDE TODA 'Y ·
From bucking bronc. io.o
Nutgrou ioompefition, tMr~•
,G lot acMduled to happm.ot
the Or4nge County F..Gir·
..-,, ... -~. S«P.lo(le -
Clo/ lodaif'• W<<kmd<r.
•
llltlex .. "'-""'" .. ....., ,.,.. -., Ot.~ ;f'!.~= :: "e-.. . ...." &e . . ., •• ....,.,.._ M 9M
T 'I •I SCISI C4of ~ .... ........ ..., ... 11... Ct
..... 11111 •• ....... ""' ~--......... M ......... ,..1 •I..,..,.._ M -1• c
-· . •. • .. ,_ ~ :.-... _ .. ,,I ~
.·cou rieil -Called~
'
J11:ry-Probes Bribery Allegatio~c
vestiga\ion ·o r the alleged -r.eroy Rose·, a prom in~ By GABY GRANVILLE Of .. a.11., ...........
'All fi ve m e mbers of the
Fullerton City Council and coun·
ty Supervisor Ralph Diedrich are
among witnesses subpoenaed to
appear belore the Orange County
Grand Jury next week to tell
what they know about an alleged
bribery solicitation.
Neither Diedrich nor council .
members Frances Wood , l{_oberl
Ward, Dua ne Winters or Robert
Root were s ubjects or the in-
vestigation leading to next Wed-
nesday's s cret Grand Jur}'
heating.
Central £igures in the in-
Petaluma's
I No-growth
Bid Upheld
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The
'9th \).S. Ciccajt Court of Appeal• ~ftfmed todai to reconsider Its
":,!!:fit:pholding the coru;titu· ti · otUae cityol.PetalUma's
controver•t•I no·g\'-o'-'tlt or·
dlnat1Ce. t
The court in a brief order denied
solicit ation centering on a recent Anaheim architect and F\Jllertoa'
Fullerton City Council land use planning commissioner. '""
decision are: -Paul WaUich. a --public rela.r:
-Dr. William Brashears or
FUiierton, who won and then lost
city council approval of a rezon~
ing application to allow him to
build a hig h densit;y ·co~·
dominium project on land pre·
viously zoned (or single family
residefttial use . '
-City councilman Charles
'Phillips, 'the s wing vote on a con·
troversial 3 to 2 council balli>(
Jwie 4 1approving the rezoning
that was rescinded Sept. 2 on a ·
5-0 vole . r.
lions cons ultant and at one time»'
member of the Brashean' tea'h'l
seeking the rezoning. ,..
Along with the council meat:
bers, Diedrich, Fulle_, C"l,IY A(-
torney Kerry Fox and ~ clt)''S
planning and public wOrks dJrel4-
to.:S, have been subpoenaed\tb
testify at next week's hearing.''
A F\allerton police sergei,r{f
and dist.tict attorney investigatcf
John Gier have formed the two.-
man lnvesti_gation team that haf
prob e d the aJlc ge q
bribery solicitation. r
•
· Ali111ony Out?
COhabitation Questioned
MADISON Wis. (UPI ) -A divorced woman liv-
ing with anoth~r man may have to forfeit her alimony
payments from her former husb~d d~pe~.d~g on ~e
··manner and extent or the cohabitation, accord.inti:
to the Wisconsin l!upreme Court.
Justice Bruce Beilfuss, in an opinion Tl!w;ad•Y 1 said a woman's cohabitation with another man coulo_.
be seen as a ~bange of circumstances that might af-
fect the alimony payments from her former huaband. '
The 5.2 decision came in a .case involving Dr. E .
a reque~t Crom the construction
indwtry for a rehearing on its
Aug. 13 de~ision aftirining the \
Robert and Barbara A. Taake, foi:merly o! Beaver
Dam, who wer e divorced in 1966. Dodge County Judge
J oseph E. Schultz had slopped Taake's alimony to his
ex-wife because Mrs. Taake was living with another
man.
ltlwgg~;ost D if.Jhse ._ ••:T~
., ~.;:_~ _..,_ ".$ ) WJieil ... t\ifil'.:yO\ihg Baltimore tbup;!mocJll:ed down 52-year-!>li!-Erneit "Mitchell lo sleil his':Welfate cllsb (top) Ibey
'had on IC:problem . .;;Ml\.chefl .iOt \ap with .. a knife
(center) llJld;gave c~;He nearly, c~bt ·one (bottom)
-desP,"te-iihcomferned onlc&enl'. :Mugl!ed. got ,away but MitcbelfWILh~ llis wel{are.mon~1-!. • · .. -. . ' ·~~ . " ExJiifror olJ St:and
~ --. . .. .... . , -~ ·--J;,;. ... ·, !:"'.. • .. ~ : ~": !-111sye~~~ ~ ·J;i4l
By mLAi'Y,UY'E .. ~ who earlier was dis-... ·••°""'Po•).... ..... · t a Sstd from the jury.
The dek'nse ~in (he BalboA r'.tur;tl ln1he Harbor Municipal
Pussycat 1he8ter ~~trial · Counrponf t~spej:l with surpnse,·
rested its case. TliundaY. with a SmUedfand nudged ea~~ other as
touch of c.ourtroom t)eatrics -Lorraine! Keeler wallted fu ~e
summoning to the witness stand wit.dens and. · ~ • -IM blond·haired Mrs. Keeler
------------• ~.-been dismiased early during
KY'S SPOUSE viewed ''Deep Throat" and
1972law. ·
The ordinance, which appli es
only to housing projects involving
five or more units, limitst?500per
year the total number of in-
dividual dwelling units lhal can
be built in such projects.
. The ordinance has been bitterly
opposed by the construction in -
dustry. which fears it could set a
precedent for other communities
to restriel development.
A three.judge appeals court
panel una nimously reversed a
ruling by U.S. District Court
Judge Lloyd H . Burke that the or-
dinance was unconstitutional
because it violated citizens'
rights to travel or to abide and set-
tle.
Outhouses
Burned U p
ROYALTON, Wis. (UPI >
What's high school homecoming
without a naming outhouse or
two?
For the third time in two days,
an outhouse was r~rted stolen
1bunday in Wisconsin. And, as
in the other two incidents, the
theft. apparently was a prank in
connection with ho mecoming
festivities.
Waupaoa County authorities
iiaid ).he atructure was taken in
Royalton and found two hours
later on lop of a woOOpile lo be
used for the Weyerhaueser High
School h,omecoming'bOn!ii-e:·-
'-
' Go ing Out ... W i th Bang -• ~eelection, when she said she
Devil in Miss Jones" with JOHANNE SBURG,
-. • ttmbaod of 35 years. She said South A£riCa CAP) -N'me-1-.be IDO'fies were beneficial to her teen-year-old Oliver Grey
-DES MOINES, lowa <Al'>'-· madlalJlfe. · blew h l m sel! up with
The United .~atn la a "paradise Ml"97°Keifer. 'fbO was called as dynamite today, leaving a for w.oaien, says TUY&M~ JCy, 8 witness Wttb specific •perttse, scrawl on the wall or hi s
wile of forruer South Vietnamese a.l.ve just a few monients of room : •·All the king's meq
PremlerNguyenCaoKy. tstlmoay before Judie Rol)ert ond •II the king'• bone>-.
. Mr•. KJi, a fu_blonably dreosed c. Tvdd-accepfod llJI objectloa to won~t be able to put Oliver
motbef oo six, laid in 'illl in-1116'"wllaas by pr.ecution 81. -lotlether again." _ ~h.r~~:~~=!e";:fl..~~t'onYB.actaukas. ~ ~~~e~·:nta t~~i~e~~
lng an increailntly progreuive .lladl:aukfl Obj~ed that Mrs . .Stillfonteln, 80 miles from
role: • ' Jtee~!.I tntimpq.x had "no foun . Johannesburg. Ff tends
BUt her hu•bead !.mo I• on a' llalti>n" ud llie Judge ·8'reed, aald they ·thought he1hlld an
speakinctour, dl11ireod,saY1nf.· lelllnl~Ul'.1IO11,,....lllioiom-I a,., um en t w l t n h ls "I'm~ l!>IO-alreadf. • nlontl..1be111ade., ' . slrUriend. r lheTWL.J>ase-'41 ' \I' ....... -.. ,..-------' .. ~·~ -.. ... -. .
-~
Mrs. Taake admitted to occasional sexual rela~
tions with the man and said she did not correct
persons when they referred to her as the man's wife.
Beilfu ss said. lie said her cohabitation with the man
was "not an occasional indiscretion but continuous
co habitation with arrangements for joint support.~·
Beilfuss, however, said the high court majority
felt Sc hultz went too far when he ruled out any future
alimony .
!'.
~
Road Burial Delay !1
E x planation Asked ·
Newport Beach City Coun-
cilman Howard Rogers has ·or-
Ci cially reque!Jted a written
response from County Road
Commission Ted Mcconville,
asking the orricial to explain a re-
cent county action delaying the
orfi cial burying or the ill -fated
Pacific Coast Freeway route.
Rogers r ecently lashed out at
the county action which effected
a delay in the official California
Transportation Commission vote
o(ficially abandoning the old
freeway route.
Newport Beach effectively bat-
tled the freeway to the death and
Rogers· letter this week s aid lh~t
because the issue is so sensitive .
in Newport, Mcconville should'
fully explain the reasons behind ·
the bid for a delay.
Initially, the county rationale
was the need for more time to ex·
amine th~ county's own plans for
possible transit improvements
along the free way route.
'' V our action as reoorted in the
newspaper would api>ear Lt>~ a
last·dilch maneuver to bring tbe
Coastal Freeway back to lift\"
Rogers satd in the message. •;
Of particular concern, Rogers
added, was the lack or advartce
notice from the eowtly to the
communities involved.
President Vetoes ' '
• School Lunch Act
WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi·
dent Ford vetoed the National
Sd'Mx>l Lunch and Child Nutrition
Ad. today. saying it would pro.
vide subsidies (or non·needy
children and "is worse than the
~programs we now have ...
Ford suggested that Coocrcss
either: extend pr_esent school
lunch programs or act favorably
9111bis proposal to provide aid for
all'children from r8.mllies below t• · thepovert)' level.
Exetcisinc bis 39lh veto. the
PresJdent ••id, "By ext.ending
aid to families not iJ\ need. this
bill'would •dd ,J.2 billion to my "budget proposals for the cUTTent
~ear .
' " cannot accept such fiscal ir·
responsibility when we face the
real danger tha t the budget de·
fi cit could reach $70 billion in-
stead or the already high limit of
$60billion1 set earlier this year.··
Ford chastised Congress £qr
continuing to add to the deficit
and thus addina: to inflationary
pressures o n the economy
"which could pus h us back into
recession.''
The President said subsidi~,
s hould not be expanded ~o •
families with incom es aboYer:lhe •
· poverty level. " :
''I believe the way to help m~f:
American families i~ to take' ac·:
lions to hold down inilation i.hd • r.t.uce their tax burdens," ti•:
d 1,J • . . : .
•
••
•
•
• • 4' DAil Y PILOT
Winner .
Felt
Lucky' , ,....... ,
I
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)
1""""'" "Ile felt lucky. •te knew he
'WAS going to win\" says the wife
of-a dentist who won $812,000 in
p e Jarge.st_ J.rish Swe~wta_Jc.es .
prize ever awarded.
Dr. Vance Bis hoP., SO, held
ticket· number SAA 02579, the
first ticket drawn in Dublin
11iursday.
Bishop, who was vi!iting his
hometown of Ococce, Tenn., a
small commUnity near Chat-
tanooga, c ould not be r eached for
romment.
But his wife, Is abel, said her
husband purchased the lucky
ticket last July in a Dublin hotel
lobby while the couple were lour-
jng rreland after attending a den-
ial conference in England.
1 ''He bought two or three tickets
?1th a sp<.1r e f ive pounds," ~he
.. id, adding that it was the first
.,;me t hey gam bled on the
ifweepstakes.
,.*>Mrs. Bishop said she learned or
the windfa ll when she stopped at
her husband's offi ce to pick up
his mail. Dublin was calling.
"I though m y husband's assis·
1 ant was choking," Mrs. Bishop
£aid. "She told m e he won, but [
wouldn 't believe it.
"When I fin a lly got home. the
phonewouldn 't stop ringing.··
Th e Bishops, who wi l l
celebrate their 26th wedding an·
niversary this month, have lived
1n this Gulf Coast com munity
.since 1953.
They have no children, and
J\trs . Bishop said she hadn't
thought much about what to do
with the money.
"We've had a good life and
traveled all that we want to, and
·we have all we want, ''she said.
"But it's always nice to have a·
'lttUe something extra."
Cranston Asks
Income Tax
Cut Extension
Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.).
is urging President Ford to ex-
'\end this year's federal income '!p. cut through 1976, suggesting
µiat the move would bolster "a
-rvery wobbly economy."
''-"For the last few months there
nave been encouragina: signs that
at Jong ,last the economy· has
bei'UD to move up. Bu' the sipJ,s
are very tentative &nd weak, '
• Cranston said in remarks pre-
pared for delivery today before
the California Association ofv
Realtors meeting in Anaheim.
"I believe we must take more
decisive steps to aid a very wob·
bly economy and generate a new
business thrust.··
· Cranston, a m ember of the
Senate Budgei Committee, said
the tax cut extension would inject
an extra $10 to $12 billion into the
economy next year .
I
''We mus t keep cons umer
spending up," Cranston told the
realtors.
"Your busin-ess depends on it.
The general economy demands
it. Industry is currenUy operat-
ing at only about 70 percent or capacity.' .
. .-
•
Frld9, October ti 1971
Pat Brown Visits
Mesa Golf Course
Former California governor
Edmund G. ''Pat'' Brown and his
wife visited Costa Mesa Thurs-
day to play golf a nd inspect the
results of a project started IO
years ago during his administra-
tion.
Brown, playing with Coun-
cilman Bob Wilson, turned in a
score of 106 to Wilson·s 90 at the
Costa Mesa Cou~try Club while
Mrs. Brown, teamed with Coun-
cilman Will J ordan, shot a 95 to
Jordan's 91.
It was during Brown's ad·
ministration · that the city of
Costa Mesa, with the assistance
of Assemblyman R obe rt
Badham. acquired 256 acres tor
the 36 hol e public golf course. The
city leases the property from the
state for $10 per acre ~r year
;1nd at the same time malntains
the property. The clubhouse is
owned by the city or OJsta Mesa.
As a m ember of the state
t'cological com mittee, Brown
praised the use of open space and
noted that the coui-se "is in
damned good shape ...
''Without this coUrse here, this
land would be all hoUses and !Ub-
divisions," s aid Brown . "Costa
Mesa should be proud tp have
pl enty of opeb green space like
this.
Prosecutors 'Ready
Case Against Patty
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -As
Patty Hearst's p!ychelogical
tests neared completion today. a
delegation of federal and state
prosecutors began planning their
se:tbnct .. su m~it"' rri'eeting on the
increasingly complex case.
· The conclave, set for Wednes-
day, appears certain to concern
legal ramifications of Mi ss
Hear:,1."s mental status.
On Tuesday, U.S. Di st. Court
Judge Oliver J . Carter is expect-
ed to rule whether Miss 1-learst Is
mentally competent to be cross-
examined in court. lier attorneys
~ay s he may be on the verge or a
nervous breakdown and should
be hospitalized.
Two of three court-appointed
psyc hiatrists visited the jailed
heiress Thursday. The panel's
written reports on Miss Hearst's
mental state were being pre-
pared and could be submitted to
the judge today or Monday.
Carter has said he will seaJ the
reports until aft er he has studied
them privately.
PUSSYCAT TRIAL. • •
It was uncertain whether ·a
declaration of mental incom-
petency in federal court would
prevent state prosecutors from
proceeding with their cases
agaihst Miss Jiearst. The six-man, six-woman jury
are judging whether the two
films are obsce ne and also
whether Pussycat Theatres
owne r Vincent Miranda and
Balboa Pussycat Theater
manager Arlie Wood are guilty or
misdemeanor obscenity charges.
Now that the defense has riSt-
ed its case, the prosecution will
ORAHCE COAST
DAILY PILOT
•
Rober:t N. Weed Pfe•ICleM•llcl Pl>IM!~
Jack R. Curley
• VICI Pf"111*nl• ... OPMra1M.......-
1
Thomas Keevll
Thom•s A. Murphlne
,,..Aatil"' e:.iMO
,
Offer rebutta l Tuesday morning
and then the two sides will sum
up their case before it goes to the
jury.
Prior to staging what he ad-
mitted was ''courtroom
theatrics.·· defense attorney
Robert McDaniel spent nearly all
day Thursday and part of Wed-
n es d ay quest ioning UCLA
psychiatrist and sex researcher
Dr. Michael Goldstein.
Goldstein. who serv~ as a con-
sult.ant to the U.S. CommlSS\on
·on Obscenity and has spent eight
years conducting studies on the
effects of erotic material on
adults and the ir sex li ves ,
tes tified that the £ilms a re
"educational 3.nd beneficial'· for
adults' Sex lives.
The two sexy films "give
adults a chance lo see sex acts
they•"ve heard about," acco~ng
to the psychi atrist.
"Seeing the films is a de-
sensitization process by which
peoples· anxieties are reduced
throu·gh repeated e xpasure, •·
Goldstein said.
He said viewing the sexu81Jy
e:iplicit films m ay be ·an
alternative way to solvi ng
people's sex Problems. Rather
than ha v ing to identify
themselves as people with sex
problems and ~omlng to a sex
Clinic ·for treatment. by a doctqr,,
they can be helped throut:h films
of this nature, he said.
And , for persona withoul 1ex
problerns, the two Cilrm in .9.~~s
tion are definitely ''.ettte"fln-
inc." in thedoctor'a pptnloo. .
"Sexual stim\ifa.tlon la ~:
taining for adults,·· hee~pJ_.f ... -;
\
Charges against Miss Hearst
, and SLJ\ members William and
Emily Harris are multiplying. A
MRS. HEARST
CONDEMNS MEDIA-5
Los Angeles grand jury Thurs-
day indicted the trio on armed
robbery, assault and kidnap
charges .
In another development Thurs-
day. an official confirmed that a
"memoir"' written by William
1-tarris was a mong evidence
gathered when he was arrested.
T h e m o r e th a n 13-pag e
manuscript reportedly indicates
that Harris was one of the men
who kidnaped Miss Hearst on
Feb. 4. 1974 .
The San Francisco Examiner
also s aid s:>ther evidence in
federal hand s shows that SLA
members planned to infiltrate
the Pacific Gas & Electric Com·
pany and the Oakland Police
"Department .
Meanw bile, the arraignment of
William and Emily Harris on an
It-count indictment stemming
rrom a May 1974 crime spree in
Los Ang~Jes was postponed today
until next Frida)' to allow Mrs.
Harris time to find an attorney
who will help her lake an active
role in her defense. .
"I intend to take an active
role," she told SUperior Court
Judge Will iam L. Ritzl. "I don't .
want an attorney who will tell tne 1
what to do.
"I want \o work ln a coilecti\te war with my att-0r ney and with
811 and his attorney," aaid Mrs .
Harr\I, to this Point repreaented
bY. pbblic delender Leonard We·
lnglass. .J..
.1
•
•
I
BATTIN •• ·•
·-------.:"""--"-r O
'
Mesa N••..tt _ ~
l~tom
A(l«l~ng 'Ibreats '1
81 ABTRVB B. VINIBL • ...... .,.......... .
The · Telel>hono Phantom, a
breath! .. • man wbO sponda I!' centa to demand tl0,000 ,,.......
for ·a Jillie Clrl lle~-1.calls Gin1er, 1J1reatenln1 tp
mutilate her. 1Ull was souaht to-
.day in a stepped-up Costa MeA
police manhunt.
He apparenllf 'Weiit on '·a
tr\allclous dialing •pnie Tb.un-
day, calling at feast flve mothers
in noriheut Cotta Mesa wlU. his ·
pervertedprank.
Now, according to police, he-
has obtained. information about
certain ,.youn_ger children at
Sonora Elementary SchOol~~ln
northeast Costa Meea and 1s no
longer _appa,.n\IY a.ialfua num-
bers at random.
A woman whose sixth.grade
Fr_.Pllfle AJ
RATE •••
Orange C'!"nly, those are the re·
asons she 1ave for faillna to pre·
diet an upturn in manufacturing
employment.
But, Mrs. Eldridge noted, the
continual growth in service and
retail j"obs is helping to offset the
spongy manufacturing job
market. • I
The county's employment
scene was given a boost last
month by the reopening of
schools. •
The back to school move
helped add 800 jobs in retail trade
outlets as well as a Cain in gov-
ernment jobs through school re·
hiring.
dau1Mer aueada Llndberlk
Elementary School -alao wit· limbed Thursday, •• police
IOJte4 at least 1~ 1ucb telepbone calls lo fanq 91J111es.
JnveaUptora.aald!lll-.lllan
-<me ...... be daimoll lo llaW In
captivity a little 1111 aamed
Ginger and -one_ .lie did re·
1 ""ha woman with lldllldnamed "Glnaer. · ·
She was spared the lemr lllat
bu struck other motben In Illa
put. called periodlcall7 for two
yean, because Sonor8 Elemm-
tary School adminlstralorl sent
home a note with pupils warnillc
of the new wave ot. annoytq
calls. •
The telephoned tbreata w)ll<h
beaao Wednesday are ~nc handled as a matterorexlportloo
-a f'tderal offense eince
· lelePhorie lines are used.-r.tber
than m~rely annoying calla .
-Tbe. lat~r are governed·by the
California Penal Code and treat·
ed only as misdemeanor of· lenses. •
Courts traditionally force the
individual involved. to obtain
psychiatric help Bild place them
on probation when they ~re
cauaht atid convicted.
A Pacific Telephone Company
security spokesman ·said ThY.rs-
day that a whole group ot men
who chronically make lewd or
threatening telephone calls are
known to Orange C0W1ty law en·
forcement agencies.
Investigators s ay they believe
the man harassing Cost.a Mesa
families is the same one who
went on such a spree in tbe aoutb
county two years ago, with more
• tlJan 200 calls reported. , Despite the last minute flurry or legal maneuvers aimin_g at a
trial delay, Battin said Kurilich
· will be prepared to begin hiS de-
fense Monday when the trial is
still scheduled to begin.
* * * F .... P-.eAI
They say far mote th.,. 200
. calls were Undoubtedly placed
and never reported by victims at
thetime. ·
Previously, the caller only
warned the individual telephoned
-generally a woman with
children, home alone during
daytime work and school hours
As yet, the Santa An a
supervisor has not asked the
Orange County Superior Court to
set his tM.al date back.
"I don't t~k the court will
give me the time of day let alone
a continuance on the trial, .. Bat-
tin said to explain the reason for
his failure to petition the court
for a delay in his trial.
~on Teen Held
PQRTLAND, Ore. <UP!) -A
17-year-old boy was in juvenile
custody here today on an accusa-
Uoa he threatened the life of
Presldept Ford.
JOBS ••.
the number of unefnployed in the
U.S. in September totalled nearly
7 .8 million, down only a lew
thousand from the August jobless
total. The number ol. employed
persons was slightly more than
5.4 million, also just a few
thousand more since August, the
department said.
Th'e size of the nation's labor
force also increased only slight-
ly, to just under 93.2 million in
September.
The rate of unemployment has
show1n.ljttle chana:e the last lhree
mon hs.
Lamp Sale --...... ·•
· -that he had kidnaped her
. daughter. ·
He would then describe vile
acts he intended to perform on
the helpless child, but in the re-
cent outbreak of such calls, the
individual demands $10,000 for
her release. .
The information fiyer sent out
by the school following the fll'St
incidents, and a repOrt o( a ·
strange man trying 1to obtain
family information from
children there, has apparently
hel!"'d. offset the panic ana fear
ht trieS tO lhs pire. '
.. ~u·1ampa·•pecially reduced for you.
Choose from 1-lich well knowa ·lines as -
Stiffel Fredric Cooper
. Marbro ·Knob Creek
•
De~ign Gijd Chapman
andmanymoi:e
DREXEL-MERITAGE-,-tiENREOOl'(-WOOOMARK-«ARASTAN-llAKER
WHIDAYS &,SATUIDATS t:OO ~ llJO
•/
•
NEWPORT BEACH• >m WEST.Curr DR.. 642-:lllSO
LAGUNA BEACH• .I
3<.I NllHTll ~'OA!IT HWV. ~l
•
' . TORRANCE • v
m49 llAWTHORNE BLVD .• tf'>pen 'Frt Iii 9, Sun. 12·~:30)
• 3?8·1279
•
. .
• '
l
TEN.CE!!#
BliiltingtoR~:Lme Up 20% in 6 Month$-
....... -ertm .. ib~ -yearaad DOile lo t.be--llle period.. tblfts. .-"In my .oplnio_n, there are too cre¥es i11: that ''our l<K'.iety is what is aggravated uqult,\''he'
..Beac11Dotup201»eftent"t.be'ftrst iAlff.L · Lut year'• ..ix-monLbtOtils many people out iDthi'st.reeu--be®m1n&._i!'oi'e viOfent. -You see explained. ···and each d~
ah mantha of 1915, ~to J Gaidd Grove b8d a sligbll.f were 218 forcible r....,, S3 rob-thal should be in jail. We work it oo television aniJ yola see it in mmt m-ay be-repor{ing them dlf ..
data nleued UUa .weell by the hllber crime increuethan Hunt·· btirie•, 1.Zf7 burCtfri~. ~1218 the tame thieves and burglars your n•wspapers ever;y day," he terently. We've chanced so~at"
FBJ. ~ , ' ~ BeHll anCI santa An.a was larceny cdea-aiid Z,10 verucle over and over a1ain. • said. · our techniques ." '
11ai abi.rpeal ina1111111 came iilltli.9.1 dion lo'w'1;. .. thefts. ~· ;,We l~k them up and pretty Ekstrom said that the great in-Ekstrom said he regarded ~
in Iba number.of ac.ravated as-la areas at major crime CaPt . .Bert Ektlrom, acting soon '\MY are out on the street crease in aggravated assaults -sidential burglaries u t1'e prlt:
..al8 and murders.~ were for~ ,.ear, I;(~ Beach police chief while Zail Robitaille aaain doing the same thing," h"e from . 91. to-464 -could be al· problem in Huntington Bea •
IN -•tatt;!I "'"""'"In 1975 ~ 20 forc1!11• rapts. 83 ioatteodlnl•polieeoflleencon· added.. . tribiitt!IRYJ!ally to chaoces in Hesaidltillwidespreadond,'flon wl ti in 1'74.'Tt.ere ~three • ..,,...._, 4.550 ~-. Z,S.0 ventionia_tresno-, says he views U sfrom said that he feels one report accounting procedures. should put the tfurgtars in r
N ••-ill t.be tint ball at this 1~1 thefts a:nct• 2511 vehicle · t.beincreues with~. ol lhe-ba§.ic reasons tor crime in· "There's a gray area in Just and keep them there .....
,:,\ . .....~ -. ( .. . ..,. ·" ,,. . • ·• • •
·DI
I • . .. ... -•:
Job Rate
~teady.~
lnC01inty
.,..For the-tbi'i-~ consecutive
month. Orange County's un-
employment rate in September
stoOd at 8.3 percent,well-above
the $eptember, 1974, rate o( 5.4 . percent. #
Accordin'g to the state
Employment Devefopment
Department ... monthly report,
there were 64~200 people un·
employed in~ the 'county last
mooth. A Yea'r ago, the number
of\lnemployed was 25,200.
As Orange County's labor
market continues to expand,
there 'also were 20,500 more coun·
ty job holders last month than in
September, 1974, mtai'ing this
year there are more. employed
people as well as more un· 1employed.
"
--
• • I
. ...-.
*
•
* * Vall#
funding
Fight
lly KATHY CLANCY '* .. a...., ,..,... .....
The .Fi>untain' :Volley School
~;::::;i~;;;~-Board-voled-1<>.spe~OOO.mo•"'--~-<li ~ in unification .legal rees Thurs-
day nlt:hl, as Trustee Dick Plum
ruis\ered. \f!·'but loud,t"no ''
vote.
He charged tbe diatrict has al·
located $17,000 so far to defend a
right lo vote og, unification for
Fountain Valley residents.
Meanwhile. his employer. the
• Huntington .Beach Union High
School District, has spent less
than that amount on a rourt ef-
fort to haft the Nov. 4 unification
electiOll!I, Phlm said.
"They can lot well better af-
ford $17,000 than\this·school dis·
t ·ct," be said ... ·
'
Jurist . • •
. -.,
D . . . ec1s1on ~·
'Firm'· ... By GARYGRANVJU.E
Of ... °'"'.......... ..,.,, Superior Court Judge Claude
.M . Owens today ordered Oran~
County officials to h8.lt work Od
urilfication election~ Nov. 4 ID
Huntington Beach and Fountalii
Valley.
Judge Owens' ruling had lhe·er.
feet ot upholding his decision-of
Sept. 16 when he issued a writ of
mandate to stop the controversial
unification elections. , •
Following that earlier ruling,
county Registrar of Voters Jam es
Mayor bad continued preparation
for the election, admittedly on the
advice of Deputy County Counsel
Frank Fekete. •
EDD 111l>or -8nal1st .Alta
........ _lrhl1tre--Proedicled ~ that
employment in the county ''*W
r11e slfarply :;i11rtnt the forth
quarter with 'stroog sea..,.al
gains in public education and re·
tail trade.''
''fto 11 .... '<lilW!d/eUI _al{onl.
tO -"" that kind al money," ~Board Presl-.....-..se1i1en '" Plum Abo argued, as he has in
the past, that the right to vote in
Fountain Vall~y already is beina:
defended by (he Orange County
Counsel.
As a result. attorneys tor Uie
plaintiffs, Huntington Beacn
Union Hilb School District and
Garden Grove Unified School Di•·
lrict-the plaintiffs in the origintl
sµlt halting the election ~ask<:!!
fG' • Uuin• to ball the prepata,
tlon actJvtty.
Today, Judge Owens ruled that
his earlier decis ion was a clear or·
der not to proceed' with the 'elec.
lion. .
''Most· manufacturing 'firms
are uncertain in their forecasts
and several firms have gone out
of business," Mrs. Eldridge said
when discussing the immediate
outlook for manufactwin1jobs.
Along with a s low down in the
rate new firms are coming to.
Orange County, those are the re·
asons she gave for failing to pre-
dict an upturn in manufacturing
employment.
But. Mrs. E.ldrtdge noted, the
continual growth in· ~ice and
retail jobs is helpini to offset the
s pongy manufa,cturing job
market. ,
The county'.s employment
scene· was given a boost tut
month by the reopening or
schools. •
The back to school move -ne!peoadil 800 jol>s lifteUll tr Ide
outlets as well as a &ain in gov.
emment jobs through school re·
' hirini . -·
* • ·* *
Unemployed
' . : Down in U.S., •
(Jp in State
WASHINGTON ~> -0
The
nation's unemployment rate
·declined from 8.4 percent to 8.3
percent of the labor force in Sep.
ternber, altboueh tbe jobless rate
increased for adult men and .i heads of "°l'ffholds. the govern·
ment repGr(ed today.
The Sep(ember report iDdicat-
ed there wa1 no significant
change in the· over·all employ· ~t situation in the couM.ry.
But Californi"''!l.1.J1Demploy -
~ ment rate ede:ed'\lpward to 10.3
. percent, although the number or
employed persons ~'was' the
highest this year, state, officials
said today. •
The state jobleaa r•te_ in· "
• UPIT ........ . l•t r-S••rt · ·
Gale Watson, 32, or Brain-
tree,. England. lost her job
as ·.town clerk .. g'll another
positicin and tben lost it too
-all because her mini·skirt
is too short. "P!"'Ple seem
. niore interested in ap-
pearance than
~rformanc·e , '' she com-
plained.
•
t • .,, '
Teachers Nix . .
f ~y lncrease
In !Him.ti~gton
Teachers in the Huntington
Beach City (elementary) School
District turned .down .a seven per·
cent pay increase at a mass meet-
ing this morning, districtorficiaJs
reported.
And the school board then
called a special adjourned meet-
ing set tor 5 o'clock today to dis-
cuss any addition aJ orr er.
· At the same time, district of.
fieials said they had heard
r\unors o( a possible strike vote·
set by teachers foJ: next week, but
tearher spokesmen could not be
reac~ f orcomrnent. •
TeaCbers said earlier the seven
percent pay bike was not the chief
issue. Instead, they said, they
wanted additiodal classroom
teachinasupelies for this year.
• The dlltncl office.said leather
salaries inake up 56 percetit of the
b_udget, supplie:t make up six per·
Cftlt, benefits 2.S percont;lnstnic·
tional aides thr ee percent and ad-
fainistration nine perce~ ~ _
,. created from 10.2 percent of the
work force In August;theteeond • ,Qu k R i·r~
:.gbf_mootbly riaeofO.lyer-. 8 e ()C~
But the State Employment .6.""1•'1. • • a....:..'-Dev\lopment tleparlment re· • ~ea-8018ULl.l
PDrt'll that total -plorm• ror
California bit a 1975 high of HONGKONG (AP> -Aae~e,.;,
,&18,900, up U,eoo from August. earthquake was recorded rrom '""'~-ie',,ru~e~ln•thaide ~be bo•der ~e g l"on tielween --• _,,_,_ Ar•~inlilon onl Paltistaq todax. ~:·!'1:.!"J::~:"f.~ th "'1 ·~9 ·~al 1:\onc ·Ko••
-ud·from tba.A~Jobl... Oblerviltwy '71'0 !'i· total. Thit number of employed A, spokesman said the quake
penqns wu 1ll1ht&J more than measured 8.5 on the Richter
s.. mllllod. 'alao Juat a few sC'Ble. ,o\• • "
Superintendent Bob Read told
the board it already had spent
$3,SOO above an earlier $12,000 a l·
location He suggested the $5,000
figure to allow a •·cushion" 1n ....
case later court appearances are
required
Plum also argued loudly with
fellow tru stees and the ad ·
ministration on another aspect or
.unification, a staff _report whi ch
predicted continued overcrowd·
ing of Fountain Valley Hi gh
School if south Huntington Beach
unifie• a~d Fountain Valley
doesn't. The re~ prepared by Assis-
taftt Supe~lntendent Chuck
Woodfin, 1aid that even after the
new Ocean View High School is
completed in Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley High will have
4,300 to.4,500 students.
Woo(lfin said he got those
figures from Glen Dysinger, as-
sistant superintendent or the high
school district.
But Plum said he also had
talked to Dysinger "at a quarter
of. five today," and he accused
the staff 61 ''game playing·· with
the figures .
Plum said the Ocean View
High Sch'ool would remove about
800 youngsters from Fountain
Valley, although Woodfin argued
that with open enrollment many
students would choose to S tay
ibere.
"And you played what i( with
that and what if with that and
wt..t if with everything else,"
Plum arglied.
"All J' can say is what I have
said , Mr. Dysinger told me."
Woodfin replied,
• And Read s aid he insisted the
staff double check its figures
with Dysinger, because "under
(See LEGAL, Page A2)
Going Out
With Bang
•JOHANNESBURG.
sOOth Africa• (AP) -Nine-
teen0year-old Oliver Grey
blew himselr up with
• dynarillta loday. leovin~ a
1crowJ on \he wall ,of his
room~ 1• AU tbe ~ag•s men
and all lhe-kinl'• -• won't be lbta IO, pbl Oll,ver ~1_1111-rq~.'.. \ rer-,, 1old mine
mana1em~nt trainee, a.t
StiWontein, IO miles from
Muggers Lost This One Uf'ITel .........
When two young Baltimore thugs knocked down 52-year-
old Ernest Mitchell lo steal his welfare cash (top) they
had one big problem. Mitchell got up with a knife
(center ) and gave chase. He nearly caught one (bottom )
desp\te unconcerned onlookers . Muggers got ~way but
Mitchell still has his welfare money.
Gas Station Bandit
'• ~oµght in 2 Cities
•
Huntington &each and Foun-
tain Valley police are searching
ror a lone armed bandjt they
believe heid up one ga.-, station
Thursday night and failed at
another.
Huntington Be ach J)('}:ce said a
man d~cribed as six r/:et, two in ·
..cheo Uill and. about 25, pulled
a 1un at tbe Mobil Station, Beach
lfouevard and Adams Avenue at
8:40 p.m. .-
But his att.einp·t was foiled,
Policfi reported, when the atten·
dan' ~row up his hands, then
Tan,
ned on foot .
At 9 :38 p.m ., Fountain Valley
police said a man about six (eel,
one inch tall. and 185 pounds
escaped with an undetermined
amount of cash from the 76 Sta-
tion at Magnolia Avenue and
Garfield Street. .
That man. described as hav-
ing brown hair and as about 35
years old, pulled a .22-caliber re·
volver on t&e attendant and de-
mo.nded the cash.
orticers in both cities said that
tboulud more since Aulust, the The Richter scale is a measure j ~loald. of pooaad motion Hr~ on
• Joha~.nesburg . ,Brlenda
said tl\ey thought Ill had an
areunaent with bi s
llr1f
Officen. reP.Qrted the bandit
ellaatd the ·attendant a ahort
11-but was 4u.tdlstanee<1. then
· while there are some discrepan-
cies in the two des"triptions, the
bandit JTl8Y have been the same
m,an. • !Me JOBS, Pap Al> aat1mo1npba. " I\ . ' . . ~~:-.~~~~~-'--~~~~-ir-~~~~~~~~~~-,~~~~~::-->~~~~~~ ...... ~~~~·~~~~~ . • ,., ..
"J have to recognize that the
people in authority have breached
their duty. They have been or·
dered lo stop and they haven't,''
the judge said at the close or tho
two and one· half hour hearing.
However, he refused to cite
Mayor or Fekete for contempt or '
court ror proceeding with the elee·
tionpreparation.
"There is no doubt in my miriil
Mr. Mayor acted in good faith on
the advice of the county counsel
and that the county counsel was
also acting in good faith ... Judge
Owens said. :
Fekete believed that once · a
notice of a ppeal was filed . county
of(icials were free to continue pre-
pal'ation rorthe election .
But the judge thought otherwise
and today put a stop to the unifica-
tion election Nov. 4. .
And while Fekete is still free to
appeal the judge's decision to a
higher court, it is unlikely after
today·s ruling· that the ruling on
the appeal and preparation tort be
election could be completed by
Nov.4.
There( ore, Judge Owens· ruling
today has the errect of scuttling
the unification election in 1975.
Losing defendants in the car;e
wer e th e Orange County
Registrar of Voters. the County
(See UNI FY, PageA2l
Coast
Weather
Variable hig h cloudine~
with hazy sunshine Satur ·
day. Patchy night and mid-
morning . low clouds and
fog. Slightly cooler with
beach highs near 70 rlsing
to SO inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Prom bucking broncs to .a
bluegrrus competition. lhcre·s :.
.a lot JCheduled to h<ippen .Gl •
the Orange Caunt11 Fair-·
groundJ this monlh. See Page ·
CJ of today's Weekender.
ladex
MY-Sink • ... ,..._,T, .. -.. •• ,. ..... ...-.... ., __ ...... -Dl•ll 1•11-.1 .,.w, -.. " ~;r.C•'"'l 7 ......... k., •• ,, ............... .. • • • ................ "' C:•·' '~f!Mfrll1t' -· '" h ! ... ltM11 -•• Tl~· .......... " --_ ........ .. .... _ -.. --c
1
.. :.. DAILYPILOT H /,.. .ui~ ,...,o.1. oc:tot>w '· 111s
Fullerton
By G.\11\' GRANVILLE
Of .... 0.11, P'+lelll Maft
All five m e mbers of t he
}'\Jllerton City Council and coun-
' ty Supervisor Ralph Diedrich are
? among witnesses subpoenaed to
appear before t he Orange County
G rand Jur; next week to tell
what they know about an alleged
,.Juibery solicit ation,
•
. Neither Diedrich --eoupcll members Frances Wood, Robert
W*td, Duane Winters or Robert
Root were eub!ecll of \h• ID·
vestleatJon leadlDI to next Wed-
nesday's •ecre t Grand Jury
hearing.
Central fi g ures i n 'the in-
ve~tigat ro n of t h e a lleged
··---..
I -\
• ..
Probe ·.~
llclt.U.Qll cea.ter!Pi_ ma -' vi-11 ...... lllr lllllll• !1111111 .AJ.""•.oreblltel 111111 ~ ~~:'!.r~ly Cli'fcU lajjll u1e-ar~cellman CharlM JJl";?\",;::li.?* nle-
-D Will" B • lhenln«-••-· U--_ 11111\: r. 1am rube1n1 <ii ._,_...,'a to 2 ....,..u -~ member o(lhe Brzt'•I' -:Jlillerton, who won and lben loot ~::'.1",_. oily council approval of a......,. ..,..,. ' "1P'l'YiDf the •..-nc teekln1 lhe .--1.., .
ing application to allow him to• . tltat waa reoclndfd Sept. 2'"' a Aloli1 wi~ IM-,.Woll -,
bui ld a hig h d ensity con· ~vote. . ,. bers,Dledricht...~Qbt~
dominium project on land pro-, -~roy Rose. a prominent toa:neJ KC'TY Jf"OX ud U.clt7?a
... , ... pque-a·~;
........... -~to
week'•
. police--... illlllfet ...... ..., l&ttA ....... Joa Gier liave Coa med the \wo-mlD.l&~-tllat baa
p•obed lb • alle1ed
brlbor)'..Uellalioll'. . • •
~Battin Sets Appeal
l
--~
Aeeordioc to Dl,edrich. the lo·
-U,.tGn eame to lllo clllce __ ........ aso to -blm ....... ._,_ba
-wllbllru~ ·
''( told them ........... had
mme to me and 1akl IOIDeOne
waa lrJ'laa"to put the U'lii.., blm for a • favor·able rezonla1 _. ..
Asks Court to Quash Indictment Diedrich aalcl. '
•'My advice lo Brahe.an was
lor him. if l!e really believed so-
meone was puttill1 the bite on
him, to io either to the district at· Wrn.eY or }\lllerloo Police Cbief
Waynel19rnbo1t,'•t11e._.iaor
Ind ict ed Orange County
Supervisor Robert Battin ha s
filed an appeal with the Second
District Cou rt of Appeal asking it
to quash the Grand Jury indict-
~ m ent against him.
And shou ld the appell ate court
fail to quash the indictment, Bat-
~ tin has asked il to order his· trial,
:itwhich is scheduled to begin Mon-
~day, delayed .
39th Rejection
F\lrthe rmore , ifOrangeCounty
Superior Court Judge J e rrold
Oliver rejects a nother bid by Bat·
tin this afte rnoon to have him set
the i ndict m e nt as ide, t h e
supervisor s aid Thursday he will
file a second appe aJ with the a p-
pel I ate court.
llattin admitted there is little
chance the court will act on his
initial appeal a nd request for a
.I
i
I
President Vetoes
School Lunch Act
WAS HI NGTON IAP) -P resi-
d ent Ford vetoed the National
School Lunch und Child Nutrition
Act today, saying it would pro·
vide s ubsidies fo r no n-needv
children and "is worse than the
programs we now have.··
Ford suggested that Congress
either exte nd present school
lunch Progr ams or act favorably
on his proposal to provide aid for
all children rrom families below
,'the poverty level. The school
;;Hunt Boosted
For Phantom
Phone Caller
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OftMO.lly ~IM$Ull
The T elephone Phantom, a
breathless man who spends 10
, -cents to demand $10,000 ransom
i for a little girl he· sonletimes
u-.calls Gi9t,r. th.refl.lf.n},q&, to , muUlatei lier, stJIJ W.,-~to
day in a s tepped-up Costa Mesa
polic:e manhunt.
. He appare ntly went on a
malicious dialing s pree Thurs-
. day, calling at least five mothers
.. --in northe.as.t Cos\_a Mesa ~ith his
perverted prank.
Now, according to police, he
bas obtained information a bout
certain younger childre n a t
Sonora Elementary School in
nortbeas t Costa ~esa and is no
longer apparently dialing num·
bers at random.
A woman whose slxth-grade
daughter attends t.indbe r gh
Elementary School was also vic-
timized Thursday, as police
logged at leas t seven s uc h
telephone callS to family homes.
• Investigator s s aid in more than
one case, he claimed 'lo have in
capt ivity a little girl n amed
Ginger and -once -he did re·
ach a woman with a child named
Ginger.
She was spared the terror that
has struc k other mothers in the
past, ca lled periodically for two
years, because Sonora Elemen·.
tary Sch001 administrators sent
home a note with pupils warning
of the new wave or a nnoying
calls.
The telephoned threats which
began Wednesd ay ar e be ing
handled as a matter of ext portion
-a feder a l ofre nse sin ce
telephone lines are used -r ather
tha n mere ly a nnoying calls.
· ORANGE COAST ""
DAILY PILOT
11,. Or-CM~! 0.lly PllOI. Wllll w1o1c11 •t c~ "" Ne•t·Pr• ... I• -I-Q• 111t 0.-C.0.$1 Pwbllllllf\11 Co"_,' S.P>•otlr
odhlon1 ••• llUbltU.td Mo""•¥ lhr-h F•l<l<oy "" c...-MfM, 'it WPof\ i. .. h, H~nl•<>Qton hKlll Ft-l•lft V•Ut,, h~l ..... s..ddl•b«-
V•ller tnll ~ &tt<lll$Mllll C:0..1 A \"''9'~ ,... ..... 1 .. , .... b .... ~l•!Otd S..lutGlyt -s ..... ·~ n.. P<l<W.lpt l pUl>ll\hl<>Q Pltrtl 11 ot1 JJ0 ""'II .. , Str .. t. Co1tt M•••, CAlil0<,.•tU:i..
Robert N. Weed
Prnl<lltr.I •"° P-.v..,
Jack R. Curley Vic• PftloiOeftl •ftd c;.e...,, ....... _,
Thomas Keevll ........
ThOmas A. M urphlne
IMM91no l OllOr
Cherin H. l oos Richard P. Nall
A11'11\~1 Me""OlflO E<1hor~
Rot:iert Barker -tt o,.,.._ (_.f C01t0t
HUfttlnaton lt•chptfi<e
, l!'fiJ ... Kil S....ltNrd ,...lllfil ...... ".: ,. 0 .... 1'0 • .,,....
otfler OfliCft L•...-!WKll, II .. 0111,.,.fNI 51 ..... 1
W i. '"W I JJO W.tl flay S"-1 N9w_.i .. Kfl~ lSU .,._,.~ lloulew¥ll
~· y1111,, Uto1 Lo1 N1 ll-•lS.., D .... f ,_.,
lunch a nd breakfast programs
continue, however, operating un-
der a contin uing resolution by
Congress.
Exerc ising his 39th veto, the
President s aid, "By extending
aid to fa m ili es not in need, this
bill \l.'ould add $1 .2 billion lo my
budget proposals for the current
year.
"I cannot accept such fiscal ir-
responsibility when we face the
real danger that the budget de·
fi cit could reach $70 billion in-
stead of the ;:tlready hi gh limit of
S60 billion I set earlier this year."
Ford chastis ed Congress for
continuing to a dd to the deficit
and thus adding to inflationary
pressures o n the economy
"which could pus h us back into
recession ...
The President said subsidies
i:;hould not be expanded to
families with incomes above the
poverty level.
"I believe the way to help most
American families is-to take ac-
tions to hold down inflation and
reduce theic tax burdens." he
r"lflldl ft It f rl I •I \ t '""lJ"'lrl
Ford added that his proposal
for reform of 'existing federal
child-feeding programs limited
to families be low the poverty
level would have halted the
"steady expans ion'' of such sub-
Sidies to increasing numbers of
non-needy children and would
s ave the t ax,!payers "almost $4
billion over the next five years.··
He r ecomm e nded a block
grant to states to let them t ailor
food and nutrition programs to
their own n e eds, thus relieving
much red tape. ·
"Such an approach," Ford
said, ''would eliminate the
wastefulness or present overlap-
ping programs which often sub-
sidize t he s ame meal. ..
Cranston Asks
.Income Tax
Cut Extension
Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif. ),
is urging President Ford to ex-
tend this year's rederal income .
tax cut through 1976, suggesting
that the m ove would bolster ''a
very wobbly e conomy."
"For the last few months there
have been encouraging signs that
at long last the economy has
begun to move up. But the signs
are ve ry tentative and weak "
Cranston s aid in remarks pr~
pared for deli very today before
the Cali fornia Association o r
Re altors m eeting in Anaheim.
"I believe we must take more
decisive st eps to aid a very wob-
bly economy and generate a new
business thrust ...
Cranston, a m ember of the
Senate Budget Committee, said
the tax cut e xtension would inject
an extra $10 to $12 billion into the
economy next ye ar.
"'We mus t k eep consume r
spending up,·· Cranston told the
realtors.
"Your business depends oo it.
The eeneral economy d e'rnands
~t. Indust ry is currently opcrat·
mg at only a bout 70 percent of
capacity."
KIDS TO SHOW
GRID SKJUS
Tt.., .. DIM (714> 642""321 OH..,... Anart1atll'll '42·.M71 A punt, pass •nd kick contest ",_ ~°'..,. <-itw ~-for boy1 aged 8 thrO\l&h 13 will be ,..,220 held Saturday at 4 p.m . al Murdy !:r.lf:· ~ ~-:':, ~'!:!...~ Park In Huntin1ton Beach (near ~"'' ., ..... ,u •• """" ""'1" ,.,,, ... Golden West Street and Warner t•~• w1-.. .. 1,•,.t!•• ~IN•tttt •• Ave.) ,...,...........,, kt.,.. ••~t•c; 11•1• ., c..1• -.... The event ls sponsored by the ~~r ,,:..!T,~w.J: .. -Hu~lpgton Beach Recreation ~,~-_,.._.....,, __ ,_. _____ ,__, 1(, Department an~ WillOl'I Ford. S .. -.t-1
trial delay before Monday.
"But I want to exercise all m y
rights." the s upervisor said. ·
When indicted in mid-August
on charges r e lated to us ing coun-
ty employes in his ill-rated 1974
campaig n for lieutenant gov-
ernor , Ba ttin said he would insist
on his right to a s peedy trial.
Conseque ntly, his t rial date
was set for Oct. 6. safely within
the norma l 60 d ays generall y
conceded to be t he safeguard
period on a defendant ·s constitu-
tional rig ht to a s peedy trial.
Now, however . Ba ttin says he
wants more time to prepare his
defen se a nd to appeal to higher
courts to have the indictment
against hin1 set aside .
Basis for hi s a ppeal is a recent
state suprem e court decisioo that
quashed an indictment because
the prosecutor had not told a
Gra nd Jury a bo ut e v'id ence
· which tended to point to the de-
fendant's innocence .
Battin s aid tha t d ecision .
· which does not yet have the effect
of being law, has a bearing on his
case.
His attorney, Matt Kurilich,
will argue in Judge Ol iver 's
courtroom today that Battin was
denied constitutional safeguards
by the Gra nd Jury·s actions
against him.
Sper iricall y, Kurilich will con-
tend that his client was denied
UPI..._., •
GoQdbye, Gladys
Hurricane· Gladys is heading out to sea, posing no
further danger-to the Eastern Seaboard with her 140
m.p.h. winds. This chart shows bow the storm is expect-
ed to curve further out to sea. Story, Page A4.
Seal Beach Cancels
Animal Control Bid
his right to confront his accusers. The city of Seal Beach canceled operations and is using Orange
to cross examine witnesses and to its contract Thursday n.i j ht with Countyshelterfacilties.
present evide nc e point to his in· CaliforniaAnimaJContl'\ll,lnc. as California Animal Control also
nocence. difficulties continued to mount was placed under court~ order
Last wee k, when Judge Oliver for the hard-pressed firm that is Thursday to stop injef!ting
denied the earlier Battin appeal reportedly "just about out of animals~ its care with muacle-
for him to quash the indictment. business.'· trel~ant drug (Su CC16trin) that
the judge said Kurilich would be Seal Beach voted to hire two killsth8mbysuffocatipa.
given 15 minutes today to state persons to handle animal control Humane offic~rs told~ court
his case. s ervice and also to use pound that animals in1ected wttb·large
added. . I
• He said that earlier In tbeyear
when Brashears' zoning: applica-
tion was bowlcinc back aD:I forth
between the city ·council and
planning commissi:f:~ars "Ii*! aatecl blm lo lo with Pblllipe. .
"l c.Uect Chuck and ~ him
that ill my opinion ii wun't a bad
proposal but I am not a city coun-
cilman and the j~ent was ---Chuclt'S-to make~-rn1eanc·li s&id.
Diedrich and othen involved in
the investigation who were in-
terviewed were at a loss to ex.'
plain Rose's involvement in the
investigation .
On two City . planning com-
mission votes on the remning.
one of which failed lo carry, Rose
voted in favor of the proposal
bath times.·
Wallicb apparently bad a fall·
ing out with Brashears during
the city's five-mnonth delibera-
tion of. the rezoning appiicltion
~d m idwB.y through ,the tussle
was dr oppe d from the
Brashears team.
The proposed rezoning ap·
proved iii early June by the city
counCil touched off a referendum
drive by a group calling itself
T ax p ayers Againl{t Public
Giveaways, a reference to the r e-
d eve I o pm en t a s pect or
Brashears' proP.Qsal.
JOBS •.• I Despite the last tninute fiurry facilities at the Orange County dosdi ol the drug are paralyzed,
of legal maneuvers aiming at a s helter in Orange. but remain c.onscioµs µntil they The size of the nation's l abor
trial delay, Battin said Kurilich "'The GAO failed"to perform up tdie..by suf.focat.ion f~DlP@r~is force also increased only slight-·
\\ill be prepared to begin his de-to standards," City Manager. oflheluncs. ly, to just under 93.2 million in
fense Monday when the trial is DenoisQourtemarchesaidtoday. 11 A former ·employe cl1f./tiJC and September.
'' lllt.IU........_.10.... CAC lost Jta contract ia INnt-':ri~ownep.operator ~·Smith ·The rate of unemployment bas
A s yet. the Santa An a ington Beach on Sept. 22 and the indicated the court o~mayDot lhown litUe change the last three
supervisor has not asked the city also closed out its pound haveagr~atimpact. months.
Orange County Superior Court to ,--------------------~------------~__:' ______ _ set his trial date back.
.. I don't tt\ink the court. will
give m e the time of· day let alone
a continuance on the trial," Ba t -
tin said to e xplain the-reason ror
his failure to petition the court
for a delay in his trial.
LEGAL ..•
no circumsta nces would I con-
done bringing false information
lo the board of trus tees.''
But Dys ing er, r eached this
morning through a school district
aide, said in a sense both Plum
and the staff wer e correct.
He said there could be 4,500
students left at F ountain Valley.
But at the s ame time, about 800
m'ay leave. Yet, a bout300may be
moved in from Edison High and
some of Fountain Valley's porta-
ble classrooms could be moved
elsewher e to ease the student
load there.
"With or without unific:Jtion
the load at Fountain Valley High "'
School will not de pe nd on the suc-
cess or failure or unification , ..
Dysinger continued , "but it wi ll
depend on the extent that the
parents will insist on having their
students atte nd the school o r
their choice.··
He noted ma ny pare nts with
juniors and s e niors at Fountain
Valley may refuse to Kave them
moved to Ocean Vi e w.
On other unification matters
Thursday night, Belgen curta iled
discuss ion, saying he didn"t want
the board to argue the pros and
cons of the m a tter before the
·election.
He turned down a request from
Plum to s chedule an Oct . 23
forum on the matter, and he re:
fused a reques t from Ka thy
Bates and Sharon Stirling, Foun-
tain Valley parent.I, to ask ques-
tions about a unification informa-
tion booklet ·pre pared by the board. --
"Then why are you putting out
such propaganda?'' Mrs. Stirling
asked without r eceiving a ny
answer.
UNIFY •••
Committee. on School District
Or•anizatlon, and the county·
superintendent of schools. The
I"Ountalo Valley SchoQI district
hlld become an intervenor in the·
adlononbebalfollbede(eDdanta. I . . . . I •
••
All lamPs specially: reducedf or you.
Choose from such ~ell known lines as -
Stiff el Tred~c Cooj,er
•
Marbro Knob Creek
Design Gild Chapman
and many more -----------------.... -·· OREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOOOMARK-«ARASTAN-BAKER
Wlllllll TS I SA TUIOATS t:oo t. l:JO
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NEWPORT BEACH•
1mwi::n:c1.tt'FDR.. 6'2·2GIO
LAGUNA BEACH•
»NllkTll.C(>ASl'HWY,. .•M·~l
: ·TORRANCE • -~ HAWTllORNt BLVD
(0Ptn •'ri.1119. Sun. ta•5:30j
111J.IZ79 . •
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~VOL ... NQ. m,.4-&&moN~. !! .l':!Ga
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e OffANGE-COUN-PI', CALI EOJUIJA_ FRIDA'1',.ocn>BER.3..1975 ,, T_EN_C,ENTS.
' '
_ t~s Su1·prise Witness Ruled Out'
•1111LA.&YUl'E laa ' ._..; walbd to the oert.lH;1aveJuatafewinome\U lilms -are obscene and 'alsO Prior lo sta1in1 what he ad· ·effects of e.rotic mate.rial on ... ~,.. ... ...__ _ etti ......... . -W ... mon>;~J\ldceRobert whether Pussycat Tbeafres mitted was ··courtroom aclultis and their aex lives,
"'" The dereue i.n U.. Battiiia ~ ~::J(fs.. ~--C. Todd accepted an objeelion lo -owne Yineent Mi_ran<la--..ead--theatrics .• ~' -defenae attorn.e-y -lutUied th-•t the filma are i>us.~t T~ter ,obRell)',Jdal _, ta.I~ dia•'•l«l=dwlnl tbe wltnell ,by pr<MCUlion •t· Balboa "l>usaycat Theater Robert McDaniel spent nearly all .. educ11Uonal and beneficial' for
rested 1t81ase T~WU. a Jm:r..W.""' Wllea Uldsbe torneyToayRackauJl::u. managerArlieWOOdareguiltyot dQ Tbunday •nd part of Wed· adults'1exllves. ,
touch of. eoUM.ioom lhutrid~-· ta.I U.Wed '"Deep ••Md Radc:aukaa objected lhat Mn. mildemeanorobac911!tychargea. neaday questloninc UCl:.A .The. two sexy films "give
suramorJng to the witne. iltaDd ~·.,,_ l'MvJI \n JUN .._.,. with Keeler'a testimony bad ··no fowl. Now that the defense hu rest· p1ycbJatrlst and aex~researcher adults a chance to aee sex act.1"1
a woma1t1 who earlier wM,,...·· ',...-.~ 11(35 7e-L Sbe aaid daUon" and the judge agreed; ed its case. the pra&eeution will Dr.. Michael Goldstein. _ lhe)''ve beard about," accord.inc
111ioiecHrom lb,. J111-y. : J • · U..-leo _,.,-to her to!Hng the Jury lo ignore the com· offer rebuttal 'Tuesday mornln& Golclateln, who 1erved u ·a con· to the psychiatrist. ;
Juroraill.lhe Harbc?r•Mimicij>af _ nwflilllte. •• • menll she mode. and then the two sides will aum' aultant to the U.S. Commilsion "Seeing the films Is a de:
CourtroQm caaped Vt'._ld! ~' Mn. XeeJer. wbo 11Ja&-c"1ted u T)ie six·man, six-woman jury up their case berore it goes to the on Oblcenlty and hU spent.et.&ht settaitilatioo process by wbicb
•miled and nucl&~HCA9lher 9' ·a wi~ with' ncm.spec10c ex· are judgin1 whether th'e two Jury. years conducting studies ·on the <.See PUSSYCAT, PaceAz'l
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··MugfrE..~~iist T .. ~ _ . e :~. · ".""-
--~-~ ..... . -When two· you_pg •!Jaltimore thugs knocked down 52-year·
old Ernest Mitchell to .steal bis welfare cash (top) they
hail one big ~roblem. · Mitchell· ·goi up with a knife
(center) and gav~ cl)ase. He nearly caught one (bottom)
despite unconcerned onlookers. M:uggers got (lW•Y but
Mitchell still basJlis )Ne!Care mciney. _ ._. •
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Ro.a · ~~ria_l:.Delay -Expfanat.tion Asked
~ '
Newport Beach· Qt_r Coun-COrnmi11lon Ted McConvllle
cllman Howard Rogers hu of-· MkinC\be official to explain a rt!-
ficially reque.sted .a .. wtitten cent county action delaying the
. response rrorn counry"::..JtoacJ. --dftd8a , bu(ying of the ,-ill-lated•
Pt~lfl-C Coast Freeway.route. ·
, 'R.Ojen recently lashed out at
the'$G\U!ty action which effected
• delay in fhe official Catiromia
Trmsportation Com.mfssion vote
officl8lly abandoning the old
f.-Wayrout'e.
DOW RECORDS ~
· 2ND BIG ·JUMP
NEW YORK (UPI) -Priees
closed sharply""' and broadly
higher today In moderate tradina on the New Yori Slock _,.
in reaction.. to some fav«able
economic new• and hopes of an
easier monetary pollq-.. · ..
Th,e Dow 1ones )dduatriat
.aver•1e, a '10.3•·pqla.t •lllner
Thµf'S\lay, ·added )8.811-l><*U to .
813.21. ll had fluctuatedearllet.
Advance, led decUDea by about•
a 10..to-three marllill1 (Tall!•,
BSJ . "' • Pr,ce1 wer.41.,.blgh.er in
moder_a.J.e tradJnc on · tbe Amerte.an 9toclt ICseh8iice.
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1 f'le:iri>ort,Beach effectively bat·
tied ue l\"ftwa7 to the death and
lloltft!laller Wil-oald that
bec ... e the isaue ls so sensitive
In New.....,, MeComtlle s"""1d rully ~j>lala the reuooa behind ,
the bid for a delay. •
Inltlall), the eo1111ty r¥1onaJe,• w~ Ille-for lllQl'e llnM to ex-
•ndae ftw eount1 110Wn'pla111 for
pouible . t.r.an1lt imprvvement.s
aJana Ille rreeway ""II<· ··voor aeUon .. r~ hi the
-perwould appeartobe• l~-d:Stch maneuver to brln1 the
Olli.till ~ .... , INlctl: to llte,"
...... Hid In lbe m .... e.
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J>hantom l'hone Spree·
Hum-/ or Costa Mesa Caller Persists
By ARTHUR R, VI NSEL . . .. .,. .. ., ,. .......
The Telephone Phantom, a
breathless man who spends 10
cmts .to demand $10,000 ransom tor a little glrl he &0metimes
calls Ginger, threatening to
mutilate her, still was se>uihl to-
day in a stepped-up Co&la Mesa
pee manhunt.' . · '
He-apparently went on a
malicious dialing spree Thurs-
Fullerton
Council
Probe Set
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of .. 0.llY P6 ........
All five members o( th e
Fullerton<City Council and coun·
ty Supervisor Ralph Diedrich are
among witnesses subpoenaed to
appear before the Orange County
Grand Juey next week lo tell
'¥11al U.,y .......... •bou\ an alle&ed tmbery sofiCit8tion.
. Neither Diedrich. nOr council
memltera Fraqces Wood , Roberi-Wanf,~ Duane Winters or Robert
Root were subjects of the in·
vest11ation leading to next Wed-
nesday·s secret Grand Jury
hearing.
Central figures in the in-
vestigation of the alleged
IOlicitation centering on a recent
f\lllerton City Council land use
deci!;ion are:
day, calling it least five mother& '
in northeast Costa Mesa wiUi bis
perverted prank.
.Now, according to police, he
has obtained information about
certain younger children at
Sonora Elementary School in
northeast Costa Mesa and is no
tonger apparently dialing num ...
bera al random.
A woman whose sixth-grade
daughter attends Libdbergtt_
i:lemotarY Scbool wa.s also vie·
ttm lzed T·hur sday, as poliee
logged at least seven s uC'h
telephone <"alls to family homes.
lnvesUaatOrs. said in more than~
one C'.ase, he claimed to have in
captivity a little girl named ·
Ginger and -once -he did re·
ach a woman with a child named
Ginger.
1 She was spared the terror that _
has _ :ttruck other mothers in.the
past, called periodically for two
years, because Sonora~Elemen·
lacy School administraton sent·
home a note with p!Jplls warning1
of the new wave of annoyinl"
calls. :.. · •
The telephoned threats whic'h
began Wednesday are beina:
handled as a ma~er of ext portion -a federal frense sine
telephone lines a e used -rathftlj. ·
. !See CALLS, Page .Ul •
-Dr. 'William Bras hears of
F\lllerton, who won and then lost
city council approval or a rezon·
Ing ':!'plication to allow him to
buil a high density con-
dominium project on land pre·
viously zoned for single famil y
residential use.
"R a mpart, Tlais is. ' ••
-City councilman Charles
Phillips, the swing vote on a con-
troversial 3 to 2 council ballot
J\lne 4 approving the rezoning
that was re,cinded Sept. 2 on a
5-0vote,
Newport Bea ch 's paramedics run through
mock treatment scene with Chamber of
Conime rcc Pre sident Bill Lusk ,as realistic
"victim"' at this morning's town hall
mE1eting ~he re new _paramedic service
was introduced. 1'Toln left, the saviors are
Capt. Don Jones, Drake Muat and Ke n
Flessel. Service in Newport Beach begins
Monday morning when shift begins at 7: 30
a.m . Hoag M emorial J.lospital is base sta-
tion for the squad.
-_Leroy Rose, a prominent
An~im architect and FUii erton
,planning commissioner.
' -Paul Wallich, a public rela-
tions con~!.tltant and at one time a
me~ber of the Brashears' team
seeking the rezoning.
Along with the ('Ouncil mem-
bers, Diedrich, Fullerton City Al·
toniey• Kerry Fox and the city "s
planning and Public works direc-
t.on, have been subpoenaed · to
testily at next week's hearing.
(See BRIB~RV. PageA2)
U n e mployed
Down in U.S.,
Up in State
WASHINGTON LAP ) -The
nation's. un e m p loyment rate
declined from 8.4 percent to 8.3
percent of the la bor force in Sep.
tember, a lthoug h the jobless rate
increased for adult men a nd
heads of households. the govern· •1 • Due ment reported today. 1r.1.eet1~1Y The September report indicat-
-!e' ed th e r e was no significant
On change in the ov er-all employ· Newport ments ituat ion in the country.
But California's unemploy-
i . ment rate edged upward to 10.3 Librn:rv Site J>:Crcent, although the number of
-,J employed pe r s ons was the
-Concerns about potential trar. highest this year, state orflcials
fie hazards to patrons of the pro· said today.
1>9Sed West Ne wport branch The s tate jobless r ate in -
library as well as final planning creased from 10.2 percent or the
fora n ew main library at Newport work force in August, the second
Center have prompted a special straight monthly rise of 0.1 per-
meeting set for Monday by the cent.
city'sBoardofLibraryTrustees.
The 10 a.m. session in council But the s tate Employment
chambers will examine the need Developme nt Department re.
for an additional signal on West ported that total employment for
Coast Highway at the area where California hit a 1975 hi gh of
t.f\enew branch would be built. 8.646 ,900, up 85,600 from August. .
lt was in the same area, near The Labor Department said
Glst Street, that a local youngster the number of uriemployed in the
was struck and killed last month U.S. in September totalled nearly ...
as he darted across the crowded 7.8 million, down only a few
highway· thousand ftoip the August jobless
SinCe then, homeowner groups total. The numbe r of employed
in the area have vowed a renewed persons was slightly more than
camplllgn to make the road safer 5.4 million, also just a few
forpede5trians. . thousand more since August, the 1'1¥! Newport• Center Library de ru:o nt Id propoeal already has won concep· pa ~ si0-·
tuaJ a.pprova_I from the city coun· The size of the nation's labor
ell and pro~rt• appraisals nd . force a,IMJ increased only sUeht·
drawinp.,;-uad.itrway. a ly,\ to Just unde.r 93.2 million in
The p~a1 calls for a facility Septeinber.
next door to the proposed new art The rate of Unemployment bas
m......._ ntar Jtmboree Road shown litth~ change the last three
and Senta B'tbara Drive. · months . I . . ,
•I) .,
•
3-month Standstill
For OC Jobless Rate
For the third consecutive
month, Orange County's un-
employment rate in September
stood at 8.3 percent, well above
the September. 1974. rate of 5.4
percent.
Accordin g t o th e s t a t ('
Employ m e nt Develo pme nt
Department monthly report,
the re were 64 ,200 people un·
employed in the count y la!'l
month: A year ago, the num ber
of unemployed was 25,200.
As Orahge County·s labo r
market continues to expand.
there also were 20,500 more coun·
ty job holders last month than in
September, 1974, meaning this
year there are more employed
people as we ll a s more un -
employed.
EDD labor analys t Alla
Eldridge predicted today th at
employment in the county "will
rls-e--s h-arply during -th·e forth
quarter with s trong seasonal
gains in public education and re-
tail trade."
"Most manuracturing rirms
are uncertain in their forecasts
and several firms have gone out
ol business," Mr1'. Eldridge said
when discussing the immediate
outlook (or 11;1anur acturing jobs .
Along with a slow down in the
rate new rirms are coming to
Orange County, those are the re-
asons she gave for failing to pt'e-
dlft an upturn in manufacturing
employment. •
But: Mrs. Eldridge noted, the
continual 1rowth in service and
Tetall jobt is helping to offset the
.s pongy manufacturing job mar·ket .
i
The county 's employme nt
scene was g ive n a boost last
month by t he r eopening of
schools.
The bac k to school move
helped add 800 jobs in retail trade
outlets as well a s a gain in gov -
ernment jobs through school re·
hiring. ,
Ora ng~ Coast
fa:. _.@ y=p 7s;;o; SE-
Weath er
Variable high c-loudincss
with hazy s un shine Satur-
day. Patchy night and mid-
morning low clouds and
fog . Slightl y cooler with
beach highs near 70 ris ing
to 80 inland .
I NSIDE TODA 't'
Prom bucking broncs to .a
bluegraas competitkm, there'~
.a lot 1ched1.1led to happen.al
the Orange Co unty F.air·
ground1 this month. ~e P.age
CI o/ today 's Weekender.
•• •••
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(6-, ·• .. •• • Cl ...
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4J DAILY PILOT N Frldey, Octl>t* 3, 1976
lHearst
lfSummit'·
~Planned
(
!r SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -As
Patty Hearst'5 psychological
1--testSneared completion today, a
delegation or !ederal and stale
Yprosecutors began planning their
·second "summit" meeting on the
increuin&lY complex case. .
• The conclave. set for Wednes ·
day. 8.ppears certain to concern
legal ramifications of Miss
Heant•1 mental status.
· On Tuesday, U.S. Dist. Court
Judge Oliver J . Carter is expect-
ed to rule whether Miss Hearst is
'mentally competent to be cross·
examined in court. Her attorneys
say she may be on the verge or a
nervous breakdown and should
be hospitalized.
Two of three court-appointed
psychiatrists visited the jailed
heiress Thursday. The panel's
~ written reports on Mi ss 1-learst 's
•mental s tate were being pre-S pared and could be submitted to
the judge today or Monday.
Carter has said he will seal the
reports until after he has studied
them privately .
It was uncertain whether ti
declaration of mental incom-
petent'Y in federal court "'ould
prevent s tate prosecutors from
proceeding with their cases
against Miss Hearst.
Char~es against Miss J.learst
and SLA members William and
Emily Harris are multiplying. A
MRS. HEARST
CONDEMNS MEDtA--A5
: Los Angeles grand jury Thurs·
day indicted the trio on armed
robbery, assault and kidnap
charges.
'-In another development Thurs-
day, an official confirmed that a
· "memoir" written by William
Harris was among evidence
gathered when he was arrested.
The mor e than 13 -page
manuscript reportedly indicates
that Harris was one of the men
who kidnaped Miss Hearst on
., Feb. 4, 1974 .
, The San Francisco Examiner
1·also said other evidence in
federa.l hands shows that SLA
members planned to infiltrate
• the Pacific Gas &: Electric Com-
: pany and the -Oakland Police
· Department.
Meanwhile, the arraignment or
''William and Emily H&rris on an·
t•11-couht indictment stemming
1 from a May 1974 crime spree in
'Loa Angeles w•s postponed tcxlay a Until neit Friday to allow Mrs.
'• Harris time to find an attorney
-: who will help her take an active
role in her defense, preferably a,
woman. ~-"I intend lo take an active
role," 1he told Superior Court
Juda• William L. Ritzi. "I don't
want an attorney who will tell me
wbattodo.
'
Burglar T rip s
Alarm, Drops
Some of Loot
A burglar who apparently pried
away some window louvers made
a hasty exit with cash and a banjo
after he tripped an .alarm early
ThursOay in a Balboa Island
guitar shop.
Police said that neighbors first
alerted officers about the 2:01
a.m. breakin at Island Guitars.
219MarineAve.
Officers said the thief apparent-
ly had to leave much of his loot
behind when the alarm began to
ring. Investigators found several
guitars and other gear stacked in-
side nearrlhe window.
As it was, the sneak thief made
orr with the banjo and $00 in cash
from the store's register. The
total loss was $190.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Jack R. Curley \fkt-,,.,...i..1'11-Gtfllf ....... _
ThOm•S Keevll 1!411or
Thomas A. Murptdne -~·"11 t ltltor
•
°*1es H. Loos Rkhard P. Nall
A1 .. 1ttnl W"911>Q £Olton
p ._
• -. " . -~ ... r "' ~"" , t:.,. )' Ji· ' !.. ... '..i , .... -~~ .... ~ ... ... ' _.,...,, ~ .... ~'
--~'!'! • ~
UPITt-ltPll01o
LAWMEN CONFER AFTER UNEARTHING WOMAN'S BODY
Murder May Be Llnlied With Fugutive Busted in Newport
Companion of Co ast
Fi gure Found D ead
From Wire Services
PORTLAND, Ore. -A nude,
mud-caked woman's body
believed to be that or a known
traveling companion of an im-
prisoned defendant in the na-
tion's biggest bank robbery, ~
Sl.44 million job, has been found
in a shalk>w grave near Lava
Butte.
She was last known to be in
company or Floyd C. Forsberg,
33, whose alleged convicted ac-
complice in the Reno. Nev.•
bank holdup a year ago was cap·
tured in Newport Beach, where
he lived.
Authorities today tentatively
identified the decomposed corpse
a5 that of Denise L . Catlin, in her
.late teens or early 20s, a resident
of Merced. where her father
lives.
"She was killed by a shot fired
at close range in the back or the
head," says Deputy State .
Medic al Examiner Dr. Larry
Lewma,n, Who performed . the
autopsy'. 1
BRIBERY •.•
A Fullerton police sergeant
and district attorney inyestigator
John Gier have formed the two-
man investigation team that has
probed the a ll eged
bribery solicitation.
According to Diedrich. the in-
vestigators came to his office
several weeks ago to ask him
about a recent conversation be
had wit~shears.
"I tola' ttiem Brashears had
come to me and said someone
was trying to put the arm on him
for a favorable rezoning,··
Diedrich i;aid.
"My advice to Brashears wu s
ror him. if he really believed so·
meone was putting the bite on
him, to go either to the district at-
torney or Fullerton Police Chier
Wayne Bornhort, ··the supervisor
added .
He said that earlier in the year
when Bi'ashears' zoning applica·
lion was bouncing back and forth
between the city council and
planning commission Brashears
had asked him to intercede with
Phillips.
"I called Chuck and told him
that in my opinion it wasn't a bad
proposal but I am not a city coun-
cilman and the judgment was
Chuck's to make.·· Diedrich said.
Diedrich and others involved in
the investigation who were in ·
terviewed were at a loss to ex-
plain Rose's involvement in the
investigation.
On two city planning com-
mission vote:s on the rezoning,
one or which failed to carry, Rose
voted in favor or the propasal
both times.
Wallich apparently had a fall·
ing out with Brashears during
the city's five·mnonth delibera·
lion of the rezoning application
and midway through the tu.ssle
was dropped rrortt the
Brashears team.
The proposed rezoning ap-
proved in early June by the city
council touched ore a referendum
drive by a group calling i~el!
Taxpayers Against Public
Giveaways, a rere.rence to the re·
development aspect or
Brashears· proposal.
Oregon Teen Held
He characterized it as an ex-
ecution-type s laying.
Miss Catlin vanished in June .
abo1.1t the time FBI agents cap·
tured Forsberg. his wife Deetta.
S.:l, and Clark Gable Timmons,
30, at an Oregon motel after
~orsberg had escaped from jail
in Reno.
Items seized as evidence at the
time included a purse containing
Miss Catlin ·s identification, but
there wali no trace or her.
although she was suspected of be-
ing with Forsberg a day or two
before.
"There were supposed to be
four persons there, but there
were only three.·· a police officer
revealed.
Investigators said the body
was found in a wooded area near
pictures que Lava Butte, in
Deschutes County, riear Bend.
but did not reveal what led t hem
to the three-root deep grave.
Forsberg is currently held al
Washoe County Jail in Reno.
aw-ailing his Oct. 28 trial for the
First National Bank of Reno
holdup 13 months ago.
'Curtis R. Michelson. :n, who
Uvedon Bruce CrescEintCircle, in
West Newport, is cwTently serv-
ing a 20-year sentence after plead·
ing guilty to the highly -
·sophisticaledheist. _
He and Edward T. Malone, 51,
who lived on Seashore Drive in
West Newport, were captured
last November by FBI agents as
they approached a friend's Irvine
Avenue apartment in Newport
Beach.
Milone pleaded innocent to the
Reno bank robbery pulled by
three gunmen, believed to be
monitoring police radio calls
through earplug microphones. as
a huge crowd stood outside the
bank watching a Shriners'
parade.
F'ro• Page AJ
CALLS •..
than merely annoying calls. .
Th_e latter are governed by the
California Penal Code and treat-
ed only as m isdemeanor of·
lenses.
Courts traditionally force th!!
individual involved to otit ain
psychiatric help and pl3ce th em
on probation when they arc
caught and convicted. ·
A Pacific Telephone Company
security spokesman said Thurs-
day that a whole group of men
who chronically make lewd or
threatening telephone calls are
known to Orange County law en·
forcement agencies.
Investigators say they believe .
the man harassing Costa Mesa
ramilies is the same one who
went on such a spree in the south
county two years ago, with more
than 200 calls reported ...
They say far more than 200
calls were undoubtedly placed
and never report~by victims at
lhetime .
Previously, "the caller only
warned the individual telephoned
-generally a woman with
children. home alone during
daytime work and school hours
· -that he had kidnaped her
daughter.
He would then describe vile
acts he intended to perform on
the helpless child, but in the re-
cent outbreak or such calls, the
individual demands $10,000 ror
her release.
PORTLAND, Ore. !UPI> -A
17·year-old boy was ln Juvenile
custody here today on an accusa-.
tiora, he threatened the life of
President Ford.
The information Oyer sent out
by the school followll)g the first
lncident1, and a report of a
strange man trying to obtain
!omlly lnformatlol) lrom
children there, has apparently
helped offset the panic and. fear
he trielto buplre.
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•
·B . ttin. Sets Appeal.
A•ks Court to Qiµish Indictment
Indicted Oran1e County
a,penbor Robert Battin llP
llled on oepeal with tbe Secoad District COurt-of Appe81•1iwor.1r
to quuh the Grand Jury iftdct·
inent aeainst hlm.
And should lhe appelfate cowt
fall to quash the ll>dlctment, Bot· •
Tu> bas aiked It ~o order hls trial,
which Is scheduled to)>elbt ¥on•
day, delayed. -·
F\lrthermore, if Or""(t'COunty
Superior Court Judie Jerrold
Oliver reject& anothet..blclbJ-Bati
tin this afternoon to have him set
the indictment aside, the
supervisor said TbunCtay be will rue a oecond appeal with tbe SP·
pellatecourt. .
Battin admitted there is little
chance the court wW act on bis
initial appeal and request· for a
trial delay before Monday.
•'But I want to exercise all my
rights,'' the supervisor said.
When indicted iii mid·August
on charges related to using coun·
ty employes in his ill·fated 1974
campaign for lieutenant gov-
. em9r, Battin said lJ4? would insist
on his right to a speedy trial. ~ Consequently, his trial date
was i;e t for Oct. 6, safely within
the normal 60 days generally
·conceded to be the safeguard
period on a defendant's constitu·
tional right to a speedy trial.
Now, however, Battin says he
wants more time lo prepare his
defense and to appeal to higher
courts to have the indictment
against him set aside.
Basis for his appeal is a recent
state supreme court decision that
quashed an indictment because
the prosecutor had not told a
Grand Jury about evidence
whi<'h tended to l 'nt to the <le-
fendant 's innocen
Rnttin said t decision,
whi<'h does not yet have the effect
of being law, has a bearing on his
case. .
His attorney, Matt Kurilich.
"'ill argue in Judge Oliver's
courtroom today that Battin was
denied constitutional safeguards
by the Grand Jury's actions
against him.
Specifically, Kurilich will con-
tend that his client was denied
his right to confront his accusers .
to cross examine witnesses and to
present evidence point to his in-
nocence.
Last week. when Judge Oliver
denied the earlier Battin appeal
for him to quash the indictment.
the judge s aid Kurilicb would be
given 15 minutes today to state
his case.
Despite the last minute flurry
or legal mane uvers aiming at· a
. . . . .
trial clelay, BaW. ulilll'mtlleh •. ~.r-~=~"tt-wUI will be prepand to beCID bll cJe. _. -•• ~ _ ,,...... •
r ...... Monday wben tbe trial Is .,ve me""' Ume al dai let -
still scheduled to~~ • • ccm:tinu~c.• on~-~,~
A• yet the Santa no . aald'!Oexplalll-tlliait .. ztar ' k~ th hls failure to petltlcD tbe -n $Upenisor has not as~ e f0tadelaylnh'5trial Oronfe County 5-rior Court to . · -. 39th R.eJ~·
P r esident Vet_oes · ~ 1 f
Sc hool Lunch Act
WASHINGTON (AP,) -Preli·
dent Ford vetoed the iw.u..,al
School Lunch and CbDd N-tion
Act today, sa:rinl It -.Id. pro.
vidR subsidies for non-needy
Fro • P llfle AJ
PUSSYCAT
peoples' anxieties are reduced
through repeated exposure,"
Goldstein said.
He· said viewing the sexually
ex plicit films may b~ an
a lternative way to solving
people's sex problems.: Rather
than having tp i 'd"*entiCy
themselves ~s peopte y.rith 1ex
problems and comb:\g to ,. sex
clinic for treatment-by a..dodor,
they can be helpe<Lthroulb fllms
oft.his nature, he said
And, for persons without sex
problems, the two ftlms in ques·
tion are definitely "entertain·
ing," in the doctor's opinion.
"Sexual stimulation is enter-
taining for adults,'' he explained.
Goldstein cited numerous
studies by himself Blld his col·
leagues that show there are
"minimal effects on actual sex-
ual behavior'' from watching
erotic movieli . ' -·-
Studies show that married
couples experience a slight in·
crease in sex activity within 24
hours of viewing such fllms, but
that the activity returns to the
normal level after that time
period, according to Goldstein.
Also, the activity is their
"normal sex repertoire," not
necessarily the sex acts they
view on the screen, he said.
With single people studied, the
only significant change was that
they talked 'more about sex
within the 24-hour peri·od.
There was no increase in sex
activity unless there was a re·
gular, sanctioned sex partner, he
said.
cblJdreD and "II -tJum the procrama weao,r haft.'' •
Ford augc-tbal Coeirw
eitbef extend pr-aebool
luncb prop-ama or act~
on his propooal to p1btlde DI for
all children from f1mltLet; below
lhe poverty level. Tlie scbool
hmcb and breakfast _...,.
continue, however. operatlne un-
der a continuing resolution by
Congress.
Exercising his 39th veto the
Preildent, ~~d, "By extetMtmg
aid to families not in need this
bill.}¥J>l!!il..!!.dJL$1,2 billion i;, IQY
budget proposals for tbe cilrreot
year. •• '
"I C'ann0t aeCept such fiscal ir·
responsibility wbm we face the
real danger tbot the budget de·
flclt could reach SIO bllU.., in-
stead of the already hlcb limit of
$!Clblllloa I set earllertblayear. ••
Ford cbutiaecl C<1alreoa for
continuing to add to. t&e deficit·
and thus ~c·to lnflotlcmary
pressures on the economy
"which could push m back lnto
recession.''
The President said subaidiH
!hould not be expanded to
families with inconies above the
poverty4,evel.
-!!I -believe the way.tobelp most
American families is to take ic-
tiorts to hold down fuflation and
reduce their tax burdens," he
said. ·
Ford added that his proposal
for reform of e~ federal
child-feeding programs limited
to families below the ·poverty
level would have halted the
. "steady expansion" ol such aub--
sidies to increasing numben of
non-needy children and would
save the taxpay~rs ''almo!lt $4
bilJ,.ion over the next five years.'' -
He recommended a block
grant to states to let: them tailor
food and nutrition programs to
their own needs, thus relieving
much red tape.
All lamps specially reduced I or you.
Choose from such well kno wn-Jines as -
St iff el , Fredric Cooper ·
Marbro Knob Creek
Design Gild Chapman
and many more
OREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON;-W,OOOMARK-l<ARASTAN-BAKER
a DA YS I SA TUIDA TS t :OO ID 51JO
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NEWPORT BEACH •
1m Wl!StCUt'F DR., 64Z·IOIO
LAGUNA BEACH • ~ NllllTll COA.'T HWV.. ""·WI
· TORRANCE •· 2:1Mt llAW'nfORNr. e~vo'
10Ptl'I Frj. UI 9.Sun, 12·5:30i 3!~t279
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~ey
Tree
TBS 1NDuirra\-•IN Ille mldot ol -dlu...;,,. year, wltll lmPortl recularl)' 1klmmlq alt more tlMia JO
perc.nt of new 'car 1ale1. U.S. auto productioo la ntMlftl 15
percent bej>lad the slu&cilb 197• po ...
· · Howevor, tbe joint ..i •• not an appeal lo yOU to trot
down to your dealer lo buy a cu. No, the l11uo that brouaht
tbe compeotes to1ether In thia '800.000 ertort wa1
autqmobUe emission ataodatdl.
••Since you will be pa)'int the bill,·• the ad takl to the
American pJblic. "wt! thoucht you sllould be awar• cl two
pialor altemoUves ~ considered by Coosreu rl•ht
·now." Tliejlroj>oslllCii waafllOn pill as follows. . --,
' "Should the atandards govemiDC automotive emilsiOftl
be made even atrid.er. th.o: they are· today! Or are they
strict eoouah now! Take your choice." '
"F/1.1& QUESTION, reuonably•tated. But then ibe In· clustrt ad went oo lo explain these cbolca ID a "beads I win,·
t.aill )'OU loee'' elll'.pl.....iicn.
Choice No. 1 wu lclentlfled as Ille !"ofll admUU.traucin ·s
plan to ·continue tbe _..,t standards for the ne'!l five
years.-If we opt tor this choice. said the industry, air quality
will continua to improve u old cars get turned in for new one., and the companies will be able t<> improve gas
mllea&e by 40percentby1980.
Cboice No. 2 wu ideotUied as the plan embodied in the
federal law now on the books, which calls for atrict.er stan-r
dalda lo 1977·1978 models. If we opt for this cholce, said the ·
Industry, you get these results:
•t-/1.1& ClU/l.LITY WILL Improve only iliilitk:
2-Gu mileage will be reduced between-S pe~t and
30percent.
3-<:'ar prices will go up between $150 and $t00.
4-Besldes, "no auto ·manufacturer yet knows bow to
meet the 1978 st ah.duds on a mass production basis.··
· So, how do you like those apples? ·
The industry argument would be persuasive if you
didn't remember that it-is the same tune auto c<>l'.QJ)anies
have sung ever since air pollution became an. issue. The
catalytic converter, which General Motors now lauds as a
ti gas saver, was bitterly opposed by the industry when it ~s f lint broached as an effective pollution control.
· Money Management
Seminars in County
A week-long progr{lm en·
titled "How to Manage your
Money In Today's Changing
Economy" will be conducted
by Merrill, Lynch, Pierce;
Fenner & Smith, Inc., accord-
in& to Norrnan Dahl, resident
vice president oC the Merrill
Lynch office In Santa Ana.
Three seminars will be con·
ducted In Santa ~ begin·
ninl! Oct. 28 at the Saildleback
Inn; on Oct. 29 in An,aheim at
the Grand Hotel and Oct. 30 in'
.
F\IUerton at tbe Holiday Inn.
Merrill Lynch chairman
Donald T. Regan said ''We ·
have designed this series of
investor meetings to help in-
dividuals improve their un-
deratandtng of the rapid
changes that are occurring in
our economy and markets."
AU programs are free, but
admission is by ticket only. A
s pecial toll free nu1nber
(800-228-1776) baa been
established for reservations
and additional inrormation.
MARKET HIGH-LIGHTS
•
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INDEXES
• ' .. ' ~ •
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will not appear In the Daily Piiot .
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Ot<cllltl .... • • • • "'·* •Vt + Vt
Otlcor9 . 'I' " . :rtt;AG '"' + '"" ' ,........ ••••.• !11,-400 11 + '"" 0... .. #ti'\ .• ,, !iiA... S;M + »t
F9d ~ Ma •'f'o.. -fJl,ii + 1
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T• .. .s 1"9CN , , , • 11t,IOO """° • 11'
Amrrl,.a11
I01ff1t11f Arth•"
Prlilar• .....
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•
'"' N
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE • • •
Pound Down
LONDON (U PI) -The
beleaguered British pound showed
further weakness today in its continu-
ing slide towards a "crisis" value of·
$2. .
But London press specuJaUon that.
the government soon may seek a $6.3
billion Joan from the International
Monetary Fund helped raise it Crom
ita all time low .
The pound opened at $2.0320, com·
pared with a theoretical o£Cici al value
o1$2.40. .
Car Sales Trail
DETROl'r CAP> -Domeotlc car
. sales l••t month trailed modest year-
aro levels by about s percent. wbUe·
foreign car sales rose aligbUy to tal!e
a record September s~e of the U.S.
mar.k et, industry analylts say.
• • •
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L • ft DAILYPILOT Ftld!r. Octoe. \ 1975
Top E:urQpean
' '
_·Trojans '
-Evans
iAthletes Getting
Secret Payoffs
BONN, We.st Germany CAP) -
Top am ateur athletes in western
Europe are dipping into orfi cia:i
s ubsidies and under-the·l a ble
slusb funds to rinance full -time
training for the 1976 Oly mpics,
E uropean sport s sourt'es report.
Although a m ateur ru les forbid
secr.-t cash incentives for Olym -
pic c:o mpetitors , an Associated
Press surv ey of eight countries
sho .. vs th<1t ma ny stars can earn at
lt""ast $20.000 a year from their
sport and st ill re tai.n amateur
~tat us.
All Wl'Slc rn European coun-
tries s ubsidi ze medal candidates
...,,it h cash paymt'nts, us uall y
several hund red dolh1rs a month ,
for fuod, m (.'d ir al treatment.
travel. "lo st income" and other
provable t•xpt•n scs while train·
ing for the games.
\Vest Germ any's Sports Ai d En-
dowment Fund distributes 12
million marks -S.1.8 million -
annuall y to som e 2,000 "needy"
Olympic hopefu ls. plus another
three million marks -St .I
million -to finance specialized
training for 350 athletes s elected
fort he I9760lympic team.
Ita li an medal candidates in
swimming and running. premier
t-vents at the Sum mer Games in
Montr eal, are getting uptoJ00,000
li re -$500 dollars a month -in
sanctioned subsidies, sources in
·Rome report. But proven winners
can triple their income from
payoffs by their business-backed
sports clubs.
Austria. hosting the 1976 Winter
Ga mes in Innsbruck. hands out
generous s ubsidies to its star
alpine skiers. They collect as
much as <150 ,000 s hillings -
$22,500 -a year from the national
ski pool funded by equipment
manufacturers, plus $1 ,200 or
more for winning international
races, informants in Vienna said.
Sweden's Olympic m e dal
-hopefuls get ye arly official train·
ing subsidies of 15,000 kroner -
$4,000. But Stockholm informants
also say amateur runners there
can pocket Sl,000 a meet and top
hockey player s $20 ,000ayear. 1
Olympic candidates in Den·
mark, Norway, Finland, ftance
-and Britain are also getting
''bread-and -butter'' subsidies
and free equipment funneled
through national sports federa-
tions. But there, as elsewhere,
most amateur stars also have
''g host" incomes from com-
mercial ties with manufacturers
or liberal contracts with sports
clubs.
'
"There are really no amateur
athletes any more. Everyone has
a thing going ," declared a
Plays Tonig ht
knowledgeable .Fr.en chman.
tthoing the recent confession or
U.S. dis tance running star, Fra nk
Shorter.
Shorter, the m arathon gold
meda list al the 1972 Olympics,
told a U.S. panel investigating in·
ternational amate urism: "We 're
all profession als ... I have pro-
bably violated all the Olympie
ntles."
Shorter told of amateur r un·
ne:s-at invitationa l meets in Italy
being handed cash on the victory
stand, with a $400 "expense" trip
paid off at $700.
In the United States. he said,
athletes might be given lhrt•e
air line tickets to a West Co0;1st
meet. use one a nd cash in the
others.
American Oly mpians co mpet-
ing on the European amateur
track circuit this s ummer were
lured to West Berlin·s invita·
tional meet with $750 bonuses of-
ficially described by th e or-
ganizers as "Atlantic air flight
compensation," German sources-
said.
Guenther Pelshenke, manager
of West Ge rmany 's sports aid
fund , acknowl ed ged that orricial
subsidies per athlete can reach
huge sums ove r several years.
Asked to comment on allega·
tions that some West German
amateurs wef e g etting secret
payoffs in addition to offi cia l sub-
sidies, Pelshenke s aid: •·The-
sports federation s carefully
watch their athletes. Of course,
they can't always know if some
runner gets paid $40 to run in a
village meet ."
One well·known West German
company said it outfits 100 top
German sportsmen each year
with free sets of competition
shoes, warmup suits and other
gear worth $400. In return, the
athletes mus t s t ay wit h the
trademark during the one-year
contract pe riod. A company
. spokesman s aid natiocal s ports
federations are informed about
all arrang e m e nts -but he
de(lined to discuss specifi c de-
als. Shorter, in his appearance
Sept. 9 before a Presidential
panel investigating internation~I
amateuris m. said he reaiji,eS
about $200 a month from running,
"about one-tenth of what foreign
competitors get.
"If I had been a Finn," he
de(lared. "I would have re(eived
a house from the town and maybe
a Peugot. I'd also be getting
$2,000 a race," a s an Olympic
gold medalist.
• Monnmental Upset
Averted by Evert
Janel Newberry had Chris
Evert on the ropes but it seemed
the thought of upsetting the
tournament favorite was a little
upsetting itself.
Newberry had the top seed at
set point six times in the opening
set but error after error let her
.slip by and Evert scored a 7-6, 6-2
victory Thursday night in the
third round of the $50,IXX> Mission
Viejo women's tennis tourney.
. Unseeded Bettyann Stuart of
Newport Beach surprised Linky
Bischofr or South Africa. the
rourth seeded tournament player.
6-0. 6-4 in one upset and in another
Dianne Fromholtz ousted fellow
Australian Lesley Hunt. 7-5, 6·1.
Tonight 's singl es act ion
features Martina Navratilova of
Czechoslovakia and Holla nd 's
Tine Zwa an at 6 and Chris Evert
and Sue Barker of England at 7.
Golf Results
~_,,__.,
.».»-6.S u.:u-..
JJ..)I~· ........... ,,.,......
Newberry led the opening set
6-5 and had a 40-0 advantage at set
point before four mistakes in a
row let Evert tie it at deuce.
Even then Evert's forehand in·
to the net gave Newberry another
chance but she double rau1ted on
serve .
Evert look the tie breaker 5·1
and had little trouble in the second
set.
Second-seeded Navratilova had
some difriculty with Va lerie
Ziegenfuss ' s m ashing serves but
still won, 6-2. 6·4. '
• •
o.ny "let ..,.... ...,. LM ... ,,_
CZECH DEFECTOR MARTINA NAVRATILOVA GOES OFF BALANCE TO RETURN A SHOT.
Def ector Plays inMV
Navrmilnva S tuck by Her Decision
By J,AURENE KEYS
01 UI• D.1lly f'1lct1 SUH
A year ago anyone and ever-
yon e c ould ta lk to i\.1 a rtina
Navratilova, the 18-year-old ten-
ni s se n satio n fr o m
Czechoslovaki a .
But sin ce her recent defection
she is handled with kid gloves by
the promoters and has turned
down countless iri terviews, in-
cluding one with syndicated col·
umnistJim Murray .
Staying the w eek in Newport
Beach while playing in th~ Mis·
sion Vi ejo Wom en 's 1'e nnis
Classic, Navr at ilova his been
co ntinually ho unded by r e-
porte rs.
Understanda bly, it is diffi cult
to talk about the defection time
and time again. but the fact re-
mains that people are more in-
terested in her now and like other
athletes and artis ts who have fled
their native countries, s he is
s.omewhatof a curiosity.
Instructed, s he seys, by the
U.S. governme nt not to comment
on the details of her defection she
did say that she did not discus~ her
plans with anyone-before she ac-
tually souizht U .S r esidence.
She may ha ve been thinking
about seeking asyl"um for awhile,
but it appears not to have been
planned in advarice.
"When I decide something, I
just go ahe ad and do it," she said
matter or factly.
Although extremely animated
and personable on the court, she
became cool and distant, almost
lo the point or indifference, dur-.
ing the press conference after the
match Thursday.
Answering the questions with
short, curt replies, she made it
very .clear that she did not wish to
be d etained any longer than
necessary.
Softening a bit with fewer peo--
ple around, Navratilova ex·
pla ined that the m"any interviews
make it difficult for her to prac·
lice and rest between her
matches . She would like her ten-
nis and not the defection to be the
subject of discussion.
Looking directly at her sur·
rounding interviewers, almost as
if searching out a frie ndly face,
she mulled over each question
about her homeland carefully
before answering.
''It is a good counlcy,'' she
said. "Yes ... someday I would
like to go back.''
•
Commenting that she would
miss her family most of all, she
said she hoped they would be
able lo see each other next year
at Wimbledon.
Since the Czechoslovakian gov·
ecnment does not permit dual
citizenship, Navratilova must
give up her rights and citizenship
lo become a naturalized U.S.
citizen.
"Dual citizenship should not be
allowed. You should be one or the
other," s he s aid in a fluent
English traced with barely an ac·
cent.
Actually. she says, her ii restyle
has changed very little s ince she
defected since she Spent m ore
time on the road than she did at
home.
"I always had plenty of time to
practice at home," she said.
"But I didn 't always know if I
would be allowed to get out of the
country to play .. "
Only a month short or rinishing
high school before she left home,
Navratilova left no doubt that she
prefers not to return to school
just now.
"What for "?'' she quipped. "I'm
here to play tennis.·'
VALERIE ZIEGENFUSS, FRUSTRATED BY FOUR SERVICE BREAKS1 LOST1;0 NAVRATILOVA.-
• I •
,..,...., ~ Beeks Out to Impress Pollster~?
::::=:: LOS ANGELES CAP> -Coach St&.te "is the best college football tackles lt pair Vermeil sa~ "~ ning tailback Archie Griffin and'
,..,,_.. Wstoody Hayes thinks his Ohio team in the country and wltft aJ good as any two defensive wirt.oback Brian Baachnagel. ~ ate Buc)(e~n bould be No. l television and a1l. they'll really linemen in the country " •"" ~::::: and UCLA coach Dick Vermeil be coming at us." · · The game features a matchup »-,._.. a1rees. But that still doesn't OhioStatetakes a3.()reoordln· The tackles and sophomore of Griffin, the defending = mean Ohio State might ndt. try to to the came after victories over ·middle guard A11ron Brown HeUman winner who i.s1atter his »-a-" make a Poll show out or the Michigan Sta.le and Penn State "they run down running bac~ 25th' consecutive JO().yiht: effort
»»-" schOots• nationally teJ~vtsed foot· 8$ well && No(lh Carolina. Crom behind.'' said Vefmeil. . in a regular season came and :::=;: ballmeelin1Saturdaynightat6. UCLA bea\· Iowa State and Despite the n ewnes~t tKe BTuina quarterback John
JWHO HayH made no secret he felt Tennessee before being tied 20·20 Bucke)'es have allo¥fed °"'Y ope Sciarra a ~nlnJ , and. pus~ng :t:::: Ohio State de11Tved the top rank· al Air Force last Saturday. touct\dowr.r' lnJ.llree games; that threat who is a candidate for the
u. .... 10 int aft.er its 32.7 victory over , Hayes has a completely rebW.1t toNorthCirolina. , Jt.Ward\hisyear • ::::=:: North Carolina lul week<nd l>ut defense wllh only three al$ttei'll The .~~tire starting Oliio st.le "Rlgbl ¢!hand 11.ouid '"'1 he
....,..,. the votera pulthe Buckeyes No. 2 back from 1974 . But lh• new offw\OiVe ba~kfield Is back With may be the besl quarter6aek ·= behind Oklahoma. names include people such' aa C o·r n e 11u1 Greene at we'ye faced and maybe be
_ _, .... ..,..-..,~ Ver~el),_whose Bruins ere Junior Nlct Jluonamlci and quarterback. fullback Peto · dodn't talk.mucli," Hay• said
-ra:nteu-.rn:..-'l•ld b~ Ohto oPhomqre 2ddie-Bea111011 a J~n.~Heilm~y ..win~~Sciirtl -·-
'I
•
Ailing •
LOS ANGELES -Starting
quarterback Vince Evans may
ml11 thlld-.rank.ed_ Southern
Celllornla's game at lowaSatu.r·
d,t.Y bec~.use of a badly brulltd
nebtlhumb.
Coach John McK~y said. ••tt's
ll0-50-be'll-go with-us because be
haan't been able to tak~ the
anter snap. We'll see boW be
feels bul my reeling right oow LI
it's best to leave him home to rest
with two conference games com· ·1.... .. ... up.
Evans injured the thumb
against PUrdue last SaturdaY.
Sophomore Rob Hertel ls ex.
pecttd to start at quarterback for
the' Trojans against the
Hawkeyes at Iowa City_
._, l•lklted
PONTIAC, Mich. -The roof of
the wor ld's largest enclosed root.
ball stadium was inflated Thurs·
day.
The top of the Pontiac
Stadium, ho.me of the Detroit Lions. billows five stories above
the stadium.
Nine blowers Thursday
pumped air into the 80,399-seal
stadium, pushing up the 20-acre
quilt or titeel cables and Teflon·
coated fabric. ·
Carl Luckenback. stadium
architect. called the roof·raiaing
a milestone in engineering I
technology. There are several
similar, but smaller. inflatable {
roofs in the world.
The first Lions' f0otball game 1
nnder the new big top will be
Monday night against the Dallas
C\>wbOys.
Aora• ta Moaage1
BOSTON -Hank Aaron is
coming back to the Milwaukee
Brewers next year.
That's fairly derinite.
The only question is whether
he's coming back as a designated
hitter or as mana2er. And ria;ht
now, there's a much strooJer
likelihood he'll return as the
rormer rather than the latter.
although that situation could
change between now and the
winter meetjngs two months
hence.
New M euBan
NEW YORK -Little known
Joe Frazier, manager of five :
pennant winners in 10 minor·
league seasons, today was
named manager of the New York.
Mets.
Frazier, 52, succeeds Roy
McMillan, who was named in·
terim manager ·on Aug. 6 after
Yogi Berra was fired.
He received a one.year con·.
tract. ·
I
Frazier has been in the Mets'
system since 1968, managing
most recently at their champion
Tidewater International League
affiliate. He has also prevlousty _ .....
managed title clubs at Victoria.
Memphis and Visalia. He is the
seventh manager in Mets his·
tory.
DoMgl-<Jaf•ed
SAN DIEGO-The San Diego
Chargers have claimed
quarterback Bobby Douglass on
wai¥ers from the Chicago Bears.
The seven-year National Foot·
ball League veteran was picked
up Thursday for the $100 waiver
fee after the Bears dropped him
in favor 'of quarterback Gary
Huff. Douglass h as a reputation
for being a better runner than a
passer.
Kings Tri.-pla
VANCOUVER. B.C. -The Los
· Angeles Kings are ending the Na·
tional Hockey League's exhibi·
lion season in a nurry.
The Kings edged Vancouver.
6-5. Thursday night, take on the
Canucks again tonight here, then
wind up the preseason Saturday
night at home hosting the
California Seals.
Coatrot>e t•fl Widens
NEW YORK -Larry O'Brien,
National Basketball Association
commissioner, said Thursday
night he would step into the
widening controversy between
the Los Angeles Lakers and "re--
tired" center Wilt Chamberlain
if the club and player can not
. work out an agreement .
"His obligation is to play for
the Lakers for another full
seas·on,'' the statement said.
However. according to Cham·
berlain's representative, Sy
Goldberg, the NBA had esktd
Chamberlain W edneSday to stay
away from traiDmg camp for a
rew days so it can decide what to
do in the case. ·
Ez·Ol11••• IHn
• CLEVELAND -Peto M.,,..
a m•mber or the 1928 U.S. Otym'.
p1a boxing team, died Tbund1y.
Hewu67. ' ~
He worlcod.Cor a trucking r""'
· until his re.ur,ment slx monthS aco. ;
An,in!'•ct"ll cut resuillnc rram a _,,.nine .... ion pre.,.,iM ~
a,.ually compeUns In u., Ol)'lll-
. pies the year he mado_thetum.
VOL 68, .NO; 216, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES -· --
~a:
ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI.A i . •
• m
Police
---
.
~tf1p. Up_
Search·
•
By ARTHUR R . VINSEL °' .. ..,..,......... .
The T!lephol)e Phantom. a
breatfiles• man who spends 10
cents to demand Sl0,000 ransom
for a llttlLclrl he. sometimes
calls Ginger, threatenin1 lo
mutilate her, still Wat 50Ulht to-
day in. a stepped-up Costa Mesa
'police riiai\hunt. •
He apparently went on a
malicious dialing spree Thurs-
day, calling at least five mothe~
in northea~t Costa Mesa with his
perverted prank.
Now, according to police, he
has obtained information about
certain younger children at
Sonora Elementary-School in
northeast Costa M'esa and. is no
longer apparently dialing num·
bers at random.
A woman whose sixth-grade
daughter attends Llndber~h
Elementary School was also.vic-
timized Thursday, as police
logged at least seven such
telephone calls to family homes.
Investigators ••id in more than
one case, he claimed to have in
captivity a little &irl named
Ginger and -once -he did re-
ach a wt>man witb a child named
Ginger.·
'FORMER QOV. EDMUNDO. 'PAT llAOWN (LEFT) CHECKS SCORECARD WITH WILL JORDAN
She was spared the terror that
has struck other mothen in the
paal, called periodically for two
years. because Sonora Elenien-
lary School administrators sent
home a note w1"th pupils warning Mrs. Brown Looks on~-R~nd of Golf on Coat• Mea• Country Club Course
3-11W.rtili si(J,11/J,s_t:ill p;t Brown
For OC Jobl~ss Rate Tries Mesa
"'.... 'of . ~"",,, .,.-, W,4Jll -CaJUI. ·
For the third consecutive Oradg:e .County, those are the re· Golf U.llks
month Orange CouniY•s un-uons she gave for failin.g to pre-
emploYment rate in September diet an-upturn iii-rriMllf3ctufi"ng
stood al 8.3 percent, well above emplo)"tnent.
the September, 1974, rate of 5.4 But, Mrs. Eldridge noted, the
percent. continual growth in service and
According to the state retailjobsishelpingtoorrsetthe
Employment Development spongj manufacturing job
Department monthly report, market.
·there were 64,200 people un-The county 's employment
1 employed in the.-county last scene was given a boost last
month. A year ago, the number monfb by the reopening of or unemployed was 25,200. schools.
As Orange County's labor The back to school move
market continues to expand,· helped add 800 jobs in retail trade
there a lso were 20,Soo more coun-outlets as well as a gain in gov·
ty job holders last month than in ernment jobs through school re-
September. 1974, meaning this hiripg.
year there are more employed -/ *
people as well as more un· * * employe<I. . Un I d EDD labor analyst Alta emp Oye
Eldridge predicted today that
employment in the county "will D ;.., U S ·
rise sharply during the forth own ..... • .,
quarter with strong seasonal •· .
gains in public education and ri:· u· . ~
!ail trade... p m late
"Most manulactwi.ng firms _. ,
are uncertain in their fore;_casts WASHINGT.ON <API -The
and several firms have gone out Ration's unemployment rate
of b~iness," Mrs . Eldrida:e said ·declined f\oom 8.4 percent to 8.3
when discussing the immediate perrent of the labor force in Sep·
outlook for manufacturing Jobs. tember, although the jobless rate
Along-with a slow down in the increased (or adult men and
rate new firms are coming to beads' or households , the govern·
mentreported today.
·coast
Weather
Variable high cloudiness
. with hazy sunshine Satur-
day. Patchy night and mid-
morning low clouds and
fog. Slightly cooler with
beach highs near 70 rising
to 80 inland.
INSIDE TOD-' Y .
From bucking bronc. to .o
bl~• competition, there'•
,0 lot IClvduJed to happen.Gt
the Oi-oAgl CounlJI F.air-
groundl 11111 m<iilth. s .. P.oge
Cl of todQ11'• Weekender.
I f I ,. •••ex · -_,_. ,..,_........, .. Al~ .,
• "' ,....... C.-1 Al_.. ....... M D'•ll ............... M :-=-..... -:: =c..., ,;-:;
=-::-: c:: =-""'* :::: "'-"" .. , '-•lel•:t C6 :::.:.. : :=.= ~ .-.Uliilllft •a _...._ . M --... ,, ..
'"
The September report indicat-
ed there was no significant
change in t}le over-all employ-
ment Situation in the country.
But California's unemploy·
tnent rate edged upward to 10.3
percent, although the number or
e mployed persons was the
highest this yearr state officials
said today.
The slate jobless rate in-
creased from 10.2 percent of the
work rOrce in August, the second
straight monthly rise of 0.1 per-
cent.
But the state Employment
Development Department re-
ported that total employment for
California hit a 1975 high of
8,646,900, up 85,600 Crom August.
The Labor Department said
the number of unemployed in the
U.S. in September totalled nearly
7.8 million, down Q_rUy a few
thousand from the Aut:ust jobless
fut.al. The number of-employed
peraons was sU1htly more than .
5.4 million, also.. just a few
thou~aod more since August, ttit:l
depa!"ment sai~.
The ilze of the nation's laOOr
force also increased only slight-
ly, 'to just under 93.2 million ln September. ..
•
Former Calirornia governor
Edmund G : "Pat .. Brown and his
wife visited Cos ta Mesa Thurs-
day to play golf and inspect the
result:S or a project started 10
years ago during his administra-
tion. '
Brown, playing with Coun-
cilman Bob Wilson, tumed in a
score of 106 to Wilson's 90 at the
Costa Mesa Country Club while
Mrs. Brown, teamed with Coun-
cilman Will Jordan. shot a 95 to
Jordan's91.
It' was during Brown's ad-
ministration that the city or
Costa Mesa, wilh the assistance
of Assemblyman Robert
Badham, acquired 256 acres for
the 36 bole public golf course. The
city leases the property from the
state for $10 per acre per year
and at the same time maintains
tbe property. The clubhouse is
owned by the city of Costa Mesa.
As• a member or the state
e<'ological committee, Brown
praised the use of open space and
noted that the course "is in
damned good shape."
"Without this course here, this
land would be all houses and sub·
divisions," s aid Brown. "Costa
Mesa should r>e proud lo have
plenty of open green space like
this.
'Honorable'
Discharge Not
His Solution
HAMPTON, Va. CAP) -The
discharge of Air Force T. Sgt.
Leonard P . M allovich, ·an
acknowledged homosexual, has
been upgraded from general lo
honorable. Rut Mallovich, who
fought to stay in the service, isn't
satisfied. •
"No it doesn 't make me hap-
py," he said or the decision
Thursday by Col. Alton J .
'Mlogersen, commanding officer
oC Langley Air Force Base here ..
Thogersen said he would send
his recommendation to Air Force
Secretary John L. McLucas, who
will de~jde whelherto uphold th~
discharge or ;rant Matlovich's
request for a waiver of the Air
·Force regulations barring
homoaexuals.
Matlovich's attorneys have
said they would take the case lo
court if McLucas does not allow
their client to stay in the Air
Force.
r
The leleehoned tbreata which began we·dnesday are beinJ
hahdled u a m oiler of ..tportiah
-a federal offense since
telephone lines are used -rather
than merely annoying calls.
The latter are governed by the
California Penal Code and treat-
ed only as mi•demeanor of·
lenses.
Courts traditionally force the
individual involved to obtain
psychiatric help and Place them
on probation when they are
caught and convicted.
A Pacific Telephone Company
security spokesman said Thurs·
day that a whole grou,p of men
who chronically make lewd or
threatening telephone calls are
known to Orange County law en-
forcement agencies.
Investigators say they believe
the man harassing Costa Mesa
families la t~e same one who
went on such a spree in the south
county two yearil ago, with more
than 200 calls reported.
They say rar more than 200
calls were undoubtedly placed
and never reported by victims at
the time.
Previously. the caller only
warnec:J the individual telephoned.
-generally a woman with
children, home. alone during
daytime work 'c{n(l school.hours
-that he had kidnaped her
daughter.
He would then describe Vile
acts he intended lo perform on
the' helpless child. but in the re-
cent outbreak of such calls, the
individual demands $10.000 for
her release.
The information flyer Sent out
by the school following the first
incidents. and a report of a
strange man trying to obtain
family infor mation from
children there, has apparently
helped offset the panic and rear
he tries lo inspire.
I '
He was abruptly rebuffed by
<See CALLS, PageA2>
Going Out
With Bang
JOHANNESBURG .
South Africa (AP) -Nine-
teen-year-old Oliver Grey
blew himself up with
dynamite today, leavin" a scrawl on the wall ot his
room: "AIJ the king's men
and 111 the king's horses
won't be able ro put Oliver
together again." .
Grey was a gold mine
management trainee •.at
-Stillfonlein, 80 miles !rOm
Johannesburg. Friends
said they thouaht he had an
ara urq.ent with his
£\rlfriend.
•
FAl°"Y' <?fTQBER 3, ~975 c TENCENT)
•
. ,
•
' ~epts ·:
Muggers Lost This One Ul"IT ...........
Wh en two young Baltimore thugs knocked down 52-year·
old Ernest Mitchell to steal his welfare cash (lop) they
had one big problem. Mitchell got up with a knife
(center ) and gave chase. He nearly caught one (bottom'
despite unconce rned onlookers. Muggers got away but
Mitchell still hash.is welfare money.
Jasmine. Gets New
Home Near Corona
Jasmine, the lioness that a p·
parently nobody but her owner
Daniel Shook and hi s friends
want, was formally on her way lo
a new home today, -0r al least
away from the Orange Coast.
Costa Mesa Assistant City Al·
torney Robert Campagna an-
nounced this morning that agree-
ment has been reached on how lo
handle the case that has oc-
casion ally captivate d the
headlines.
••The primordial pussycat will
be taken to the five-acre ranch or
a couple in Corona." ~aid Cam-
pagna, who has previously iden-
tified Jasmine, a 175-pound, de-
clawed specimen , as "that
thing'' and ''a carnivore.··
Shook, meanwhile, is still fac-
ing a trip to Harbor Judicial Dis-
trict Court Oct. 15 to answer to a
five-count complaint charging
him with keeping an un -
domesticated, unlicensed animal
in the City without a permit and
alto violating the State Depart·
ment of Fish and Game Code.
Campagna also signed an order
""allowtrig Shook a nd · his room-
ma.te, Marc Sehroeder, or 2115
Orange Ave., Costa Mesa, to free
Jumine from her cage captivity
at Uon Country Safari in Irvine .
.She wa,s delivered there a week
:lgo following the latest incident
in which police confronted Shook
about the 10,month·old lioness Ile
had in his bac kyard, which
alarmed some townsfolk ..
The city attorney's office will
next ask the court lo continue
Shook"s Oct. 15 <1 rraignment to
Nov . J3, allowing adequate time
to complete Jas mine·s transfe r
lo Corona and assure s he stay$
there.
DOW RECORDS
2ND BIG JUMP
NEW YORK IUPI ) -Prices
closed s harply and broadly
higher today in moderate trading
on the New York Stock Exchange
in reaction to some favorable
economic news and hopes o( an
easier monetary policy.
The D·ow Jones industriaii
average, a 10.39-point a;ain~r
Thursday, added 18.66 paints to
813.21. Ith ad flu~tuatedearlier.
Advances led declines by about
a 10-to-three margin. CTahle!(.
85).
Prices were i1;wher ip
moderate tradin* ~ri th,e
American Stock Exch~e. '
·~ '----c •
1·Fullerton Council ·G~ts J111-y · PrOhe ~ 117 GAllV GllANVILLE N•i!Mr Dledrl<h nor -cit
•
0t•0a11,l't•SUM "-A}J five members of the memben France.Wood, Robert
. 'Fllll•rton City Connell and coun-Ward, Duane W.lnten or Robtrt
t l)' Supervisor Ralph Diedrich are ~ were aub~ect.s d the in· t amonc witnesses subpaenaed to vestiga~n leadan1 to next Wed·
• appear before the Orange County nesct;ay • secret Grand Jury
Grand Jury next week to tell heanng. .
what they know about an alleged Ce~tral figures in tpe in-
bribery solicitation. vei;tagatlon ol the alleged
• •
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA CIVIC
PLAYHOUSE -"Four on a
Garden,•• Ott. 3 and 4, 8:30 p.m.
IRVINE COMMUNITY
THEATER -•·Here Lies
Jeremy Troy,~~ Bristol Street at
Red Hill, Oct. 3-4, 10-11, 17·18,
8:30p.m. Reservations557·7297.
"JUMPERS" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, through Sun. 8p.m. .
FOOTBALL -Costa Mesa vs.
Magnolia, Davidson Field, 8 p.m.
OCC vs . Long Beach City
College, OCC Stadium, 7:30p.m.
OCC LECTURES -
"Astronomy." Joel Levine lec-
turer, Science Lecture J, 6 :30
p.m. ·'Charles Darwin and the
Beagle," Lloyd Mason Smith lec-
turer, Science Hall, 7 :30 p.m.
"Movement and Life," R. Ken-
neth Hutchins lecturer. Science
Lecture 2, 7 :30 p.m. "Our Ex·
plosive Earth,·· George Mason
lecturer, Art Lecture Hall 119.
7:30p.m .
MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY
RACING -Fairgrounds, 8: 15
p .m.
. SATURDAY,OCT.4
.BEN~FIT RODEO -Cystic .
F1~ros1s Foundation benefit,
Fairgrounds, Oct . 4, 2 and 8 p.m .
Sunday,2p.m .
FOOTBALL -Estancia v
Tustin, Davidson Field, 8 p.m .
Newport Harbor v Los Alamitos
at Western, 8p.m.
SUNDAY,OCT.5 I PHILHARMONIC CONCERT
. -Los Angeles Philharmonic
Orchestra, Zubin Mehta conduct·
i.ng, UCI Crawford Hall, 8 :30
p.m.
·Tustin Man
~Survives
Bob Battin.
Challenges
Indictment
Indicted Orange County
Supervisor Robert Battin has
fiJed an appeal with the Second
District Court o( Appeal asking it
to quash the Grand Jury indict-
ment against him.
And should the appellate tourt
fail to quash the indictment Bat-
tin has asked it to order his 'tnal
which is scheduled to begin Mon:
day, delayed.
FUrthermore, if Orange County
Superior Court Judge Jt!rrold
<?live~ rejects another bid by Bat·
ttn lhts afternoon to have him set
the 'indictment aside,· th e
s_upervisor said Thursday he 'will
!tie a second appeal with the ap-
pell·atecourt.
Battin admitted there is little
C'hance the C'ourt will act on his
initial appeal and request for a
trial delay before Monday.
"But I want to exercise all my
rights,'' the supervisor said.
When indicted in mid-August
on charges related to using coun·
ty employes in his ill-fated 197•1
campaign for lieutenant gov-
ernor, Battin said he would insist
on his right to a speedy trial.
Consequently, his trial date
was set (or Oct. 6, safely within
the normal 60 days generally
conceded to be the safeguard
period on a defendant's ronstitu·
lion al right to a speedy trial.
Now, however, Battin says he
wants more time to prepare his
defense and to appeal to higher
courts to have· the indictment
against him set aside.
Basis for his appeal is a recent
state supreme court decision that
quashed an indictment because
the prosecutor had not told a
Grand Jury about evidencl'
· which tended to point to the de·
fendant's innocence.
~ .,
Battin said that decision.
which does not yet have the effect
of being law, has a bearing on his
~ue-. -
His attorney, Matt Kurilich.
will argue in Judge Oliver's
courtroom todf;Y that.Battin was
denied ~onitlttltional sateiuards
by the Grand J ury's actions
against !lim.
•
MesaCmsh
A Tustin man escaped seriO~s
injury Thursday night when, ap-
parently stricken by a seizure at
the wheel and helpless, his car
careened through a busy inters·ec-
tion, clipped another tar, jumped
acurbandsmasheddownafence.
Richard D. Kramer, 32, of 14832
Fox.croft Road, was examined at
Costa Xesa Memorial Hospital
treated for minor facial injuries
and ·released following the 6:20
p.m. accident.
Police Officer Robert Crogan
witnessed the crash at Fair Drive
and Fairview Road, where be had
stopped ~ motorist ror a traffic
violation moments before.
He said Kramer, westbound on
Fair Drivl~. entered the intersec-
tion on a red light and clipped the
front or a car driven by Carla L.
Hosmer, 18. of 408 E. 16th St.,
Costa Mesa .
Kramer's car, which sustained
major damage, then careened on
at a sharp angle, jumped the curb
and smashed down 20 feet of a
redwood fente before coming to
rest, actording to OfficerCrogan.
The fence bordered homes of
Millard R. Getty, 2519 Columbia.
Drive and Trudie Smith, 2518 Lit-
tleton Place, police said.
Officer Crogan said when he re-
ached the scene moments later,
Kramer was stretched behind the
wheel, eyes rolled back into his
head and foaming atthe mouth .
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Rober1 N. Weed
t>fe•llkM •1141 Pul>ll ......
Jack R. Curlev
Vk• P.1t.lde11\ •NI G4 _ .. M.~•
Thomas Keevll
l:Cllle>•
Tttom•s A. Mu'l)hlne ~ .... ,,.. lht•t<)r
<
~rles H. Loos Ric.hard P. Nall
lh•hl1W11 ""-Mt""' f:<llOn
Dismissed
Juror-Appears
At Porn Trial
The defense in the Bal boa
Pussycat Theater obscenity trial
rested its case Thursday with a
touch of tourtroom theatrics -
summoning to the witness stand
a woman who earlier was dis·
missed from the jury.
JurQJ's in the Harbor Municipal
Courtroom gasped with surprise.
smiled and nudged each other as
Lorraine Keeler walked to the
witness stand.
The blond-haired M.ni. Keeler
had been dismissed early during
jury selection, when she said she
had viewed "Deep Throat" and
"The Devil' in Miss Jones" with
her husband of 35 years. She said
the.movies were beneficial to her
marital Ufe .
Mrs. Keeler. who was called as a witness with non-specific ex-
pertise, gave just a few moments
of testimony before Judge Robert
C. Todd accepted an objection to
the witness by prosecution at·
tomeyTony Rackaukas.
Rackaukas objected that Mrs.
Keeler's testimony had "no foun ·
dation" and the judge agreed.
telling the jury to ignore the com-
ments she made.
Stables Hit
By Burglar
A Costa Mesa tea'Cher's family
has lost nearly $600 worth or
equestrian equipment including
silver trappings and kangaroo
leather horse r eins to a bur.&lar
at the Orange County Fair-
grounds.
The break-in al the stables'
lack room, 88 Fair Drive, was re-
Ported Thursday by Mrs. Belly
Grgurich, of 824 Presidio Drive,·
·whose husband William, a
NewPort Harbor High School
math instructor, js a former
leader of a Newport· Mesa Unlried
School District's teacbera• as-
soclaUon.
She told Police Officer Sam
Morabito the f•mily'I SS80 loss
Include• three sets of hone bits.
bead stall• and kangaroo leather
ttina for their horses stabled at
tbefalraro~!'da . ---·~ --..
/
•
IOlicitatioa cmterinr en a recent
Fllllertcin City Council land use
declslaaore:
-Dr. William Brashears of
Fullerton, who won alld Ihm loet cit, council Jlpproval or a rezon-
ing application to allow him to
build a hJgh density ton-
dominium project on land pr~-
•
••
'Vklulty ooned ror aintle funlly
rrsldentlal ..... .:...City councilman 'Chatt ..
l'hllllpo, the1wln.c vote on•--tn>veralal 3 to 2 council ballot
J-4 •pprovlng the reionlng
that wu rescinded Sept. 2 on a
5-0 vote. •
-Leroy Rose, _. prominent
~ ..
Ul"lltt .......
Anallelm .,..hlteet ... !lllllrtm Pl8!Utin&comm ... kmr.
-Paul WaW ... a ..... ...,. -----.--· member of the Br ....... • luln
seeking the reaoom1.
Along with the ~ metll·
bers, Diedrtcl1, P\lllertonCllY Al·
torney Kerry Fox-and U. dtY~•
-Ford Nixes ·
Natiowd· •
Lunch Act
pl-Int end publl•--
ton ...... -... ~ lo -~:.:""·· •. ~~ .......... 1 __ ..,..«_,~
J<jhn Gitt have ,.,.._ the t...0-,
man lnveaU,allon team tllot has I
probed. the alle1ed
briberysoU<U.1*1:
Acoordlnf to Diedrich. the In·
vestigaton t'ame ·to Ills office
several weeks a10 to aak him
about a recent convautklo he
had."With Brashear..
··r told them Br•411m had
come to me and Aid eomeone
wu ti'yitlg lo put the -on him . f~r ~ favora ble rezoninc.~: Diedrich said. I
"'My advice to Brasbean was
for him, if be really believed .,. I
meone was putting tbe bite on
WASHINGTON <AP) -"'-I· him, to1oeitbertolhedistrtctat·
dent Ford vetoed the. National torneY or ]'ullertoo POiice Chief
School Lunch and CbildNulllllm Wayne Bomhon."lhe_..tsor
Aictd todayb011d81 ylngf It -~ ~' II ·~ v e 1u • ea or DOii· y He eaid that ear er in ~ ~
children and "l• wone -the -Brubean' zoalnl awuc•·
progra1113 we now hive:• Uon was bounCinl beck and forth
Ford suggested that Coneress ~tw~n the c~ty council ~·
either extend present school ~anrung coz;rimtss~on Brashears
lunch program·s or act.favorably ti~ asked him to intercede with
on his proposal to provide aid for PhilllJ!lli.
all children from families beloW· "I called Chuck and told him
the poverty level. The school that in my opinion it wasn't a bad
lunch and breakfast programs proposal but Jam not a city coun -
eontinue, however, operating un-cilman arid the judgment was
der a continuing resolution by Chuck's to make.'' Diedrich said.
Congress.
Exercising his 39th veto, the
President said, "By exteoding
aid to families not in need, this
bill would add $1.2 billion to my
budget proposals for the current
year .
"I cannot accept such fiscal ir-
responsibility when we face the
real danger that the bud&et. de·
ficit could reach $70 billion in·
stead or the already high Umit of
$60 billion I set earlier this year.··
Diedrich and others involved in
the investigation who were in·
terviewed were al a loss lo ex-
plain Rose·s involvement in the
investigation.
On two <'ity planning com-
mission votes on the rezoning,
one of wbith railed to carry, Rose
voted in favor of the proposal
both times.
LAWMEN CONFER AFTER UNEARTHING WOMAN'S BODY
Murder M ay Be Linked With'Fugutlve Busted In Newport
The President said subsidies
s hould not be expanded to
families with incomes above the
poverty level.
Wallicb apparently had a fall·
ing out with Brashears during
the city's flve-mnonth d,elibera-
tion or the reioning application
and midwaf through the tussle
was d ropped 'frorh th e
Brashears team.
Companion of 4rea
Figure Found Dead
Mesa Carnival
Firm Burgled
Somebody with light fin gers
and a bulging pocket has taken a
Costa Mesa carnival concern for
a ride to the tune or $836.36, police
said today.
Punt, P888, Kick
Contest Carded l
None of the sweaty com-
petitors will likely. be gulping
Gatorade. betause free Pepsi
will be served Saturday when the
footballs-fly in the 15th Annual
Boys Club of the Harbbr Area
Punt, Pass and Kitk Contest.
From Wire Servitts
PORTLAND. Ore. -A nude,
mud .caked woman 's bod y
believed to be that of a known
traveling companion Of an im-
prisoned defendant in the na·
lion's biggest bank robbery, a
$1 .44 million job, has been round
in -a shallow gr.ave...near Lava
Butte.
She '"as las t kno\\'tl to be in
CO};?JP4"Y of FJoyd C. 1-"'orsberg,
33, whose. alleged c~vtcted ac-
com plice in" ttie Reno: 'Nev .~
bank holdup a year.ago was cap·
lur~ in NewPort Beach, where
he 11ved.
Authorities today tentatively
identified the decomposed corpse
. as that of Denise L ; Catlin, in her
late teens or early 20s, a resident
~f Merced, where her father
lives.
"She was killed by a shot fired
al close range in the back of the
head,·· says Deputy State
?ttedi<"al Examiner Dr. f_.a rry
Lewman, who performed th.e
autoosy.
He <"hara cterized it as an ex-
ecution-type slaying.
Miss Catlin vanished in June
about the time FBI agents cap'.
lured Forsberg, hi s wife Deetta
54, and Clark Gable Timmons:
30, at an Oregon motel after
f'ro• Page Al
CALLS •••
·two women Thursday when he
called with his message and de-
manded $10,000 to free their
daughters.
"Oh fine, I'll have it in just a
second," one replied.
''I only have 10 cents ,·•
snapped another mother .
"That's not enough," the
sinister ~aller said, hanging up. ~escr1ptlons or the caller 's
voice and manner were uniform
in reports filed by anno'yed and
angered women Thursday ac-
<'Ording to police. '
He is quiet, soft·spgken and ap-
parently completely calm in out·
lipillg his demands, but his voice
sounds breathless, as though he
is sexually excited or Had been
running, the wemen said.
Detective Sgt. Sam Cordeiro
said Thursday it is believed the
caller is middle-aged or older.
but some victims said it sounds
like he· is trying to disguise his
voice.
One woman described the
raspy m)11tery voice as sounding
sickly.
.Waitress Loses
$70 to Burglar
A Costa Mesa ·waitress com·
plained to J>Ollce Thursday that.
somebody alole $70 in cash that
she hid in. a ~resser-C!rawer for
safekeeping. ~
The victim, 19, sal~ the burglar
climbed th.roug·h a bedroom win-
dow and ransacked her dresser
. taking the JDOney from under he;
neatly folded lingerie where the
bankroll wusecreted.
fo'orsberg had escaped from jail
in Reno.
Items seized as evidence at the
time included a purse containing
Miss Catlin's identification, but
there was no trace of her.
although she was suspected of be-
ing with Forsberg a day or two
before.
"There were s llppOSed to be
four persons there. but \'here
were only three,·· a police officer
revealed.
Howard W . Benjamin, 74,
operator o( Aquatic Rides Inc.,
624 Terminal Way, reported the
grand theft of compan~ receipts ·
stolen from the office Thursday.
Investigators filed the case as
one or grand theft because it ap-
parently occurred 'during open
business hours and there was no
sign or forced entry. ..
Lamp Sale
.,. ,,. • ..,.._ ¥ .... ¥ .,, ,.
Boys and g"irls from throughout
the Harbor Area, ag~ 8 to 13,
may enter the contest scheduled -
from 1 to 3 p .m . at Kaiser Field.
ziao-santa ·A-n-a Ave:, COsta Mesa.
First, second and third place
awards :will be presented to each
age.group.
•
All lamps specially reduced for you.
Choose from such well known lines as -
Stiff el Fi:edric Cooper
Marbro Knob Creek
Design Gild Chapman
and many more
OAEXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK--l<"R"STAN-BAKER
WUllDATS A SA TUIDATS ':00 io 5:10
~ --"~--
NEWPORl'BEACH •
1127 WESlCUt'F 0~ 6'2·2000
LAGUNA BEACH •-
3'.5 NllMTll COA.\T HW\'., 4M1Mt
. TORRANCE•
23449 llA~''l'llOR~E BLVD. fo;tn Fn.1119, SU:n. IZ.5:30)
3'18-111'9
-· I