HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-10-27 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 27, 1975 ....... .0.-JMc:notd,,.JtP .. U
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I
to rm 0
an In Wheelchair
RolJIJed by Trio of Yout-hs
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Riel1 Wi w-He
Mezico Search
OC Trio Aboard
. Missing Plane
By ROBERT BARKER
Of IM o.ur Pla.tst.ff
An extensive air and sea
search was being pushed today
for a missing plane on the west
coast of Mexico that carried fiVe
persons, including two promi-
nent businessmen from Hunt-
;f>atty Friend
Given Ticket
' After Heist
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Steven Soliah, charged with hid-
ing Patricia Hearst before her
arrest,. was cited for speeding
.near-Redding one day after a
bank robbery possibly linked to
th~ Symbiones e Liberation
Army.
The California Highway Patrol
eonfirmed today that Soliah was
stopped for speeding Feb. 26
about 4S miles north of Redding
near a turnoff to Wyntoon, a
Hearst family retreat.
Patrolman Darel Barham cit·
ed Soliah for s peeding ai
Castella, s aid CHP spokesman
~ntMilton .
,soliah's speeding ticket came
one day after $3, 700 was taken in
a robbery at a Guild Savings and
l'..oan Association bank in
Sacramento.
The 27·year-old Soliah was ar-
rested Sept. 5 -the same day
aut'borities picked up Miss
Hearst and her SL.A comrades
William and Emily Harris and
Wendy Yothimura.
.ll.iaw enforcement officials in
hcramento have said they are
studying the Guild robbery and
an April 21 robbery at a Crocker
Bank in Carmichael for possible
links to the SLA.
ington' Harbour and the wife of
one of them.
Believed aboard the plane
were Steven Dikeman, owner of
I..ook Properties in Sunset Beach,
Bruce Killian, president of the
Acme Wiring Co. in Garden '
Grove and Killian's wife Bonnie.
The plane vanished on a flight
from Ma nz·anillo to Puerto
Vallarta.
Carl Tobin, vice president of
Acme. said that Dikeman and
Killian had left from Huntington
Harbour in early October on a
57-foot yacht owned by Roger
Smith, a form,er Huntington
Harbour man. -I
He said they were in Mexico to
loo1<. into some real estate pro-
perty.
Tobin said that Killian's wife,
Bonnie, had flown to Mexico to
join her husband to celebrate an
anniversary.
Tobin, a life-long friend and as-
soci at e of Killian, said the
Killians have two d a ughters,
Lisa, 15, and Lauren, 13. He said
the Dikemans also have two
children, P a m ela, 17, and Steve
16.
The plane was apparently
piloted by a Denver dentist, Dr.
Paul Lunde!, whose Mfe also was
aboard.
Tobin said the ill-lated Oight
took off at 6:15 p .m. Oct. 18 and
that weather conditions were
good. He said the twin-engine
craft was equipped with beeping
devices but that nothing has been
heard of i_t.
Copter Crashes
VENTURA <UPI) -A
sheriff's department patrol
helicopter crashed into high-
tension power lines Saturday kill·
ing the pilot, Sgt. Kenneth
Collins, 35, a four-year depart-
ment veteran.
Deaths ·c1i·1ub
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Hurricane in Mawtlan
MAZATLAN, Mexico (l:JPl ) -Officials said to-·
day 27 persons were killed by Hunicane.Olivja which
l j>atlered this Pacll\c Coast .port Saturday. Damage
was estiroatedat$8milliPll ·.. . ·
With all.electnc power cut tiff :Ind telephone libes
down, Mazatlan was declared a disaster zone.
At least 17 ottiei:persons were iJ!jured and 10,000
houses suffered storm or water dam age.
No Americans were reported killed or injured.
Among build~ damaged liy the hurricane was·
the local jail. Two prisoners were ireported klHed
when &•Jail waJl ~lllllJSed. •
. federJil relief teams poured iliro the Pllrt lllnday
and a maaalv.e relief effort was under way;t.bday.
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Celebrities Chat
Fra nk Sinatra Cleft ) and Fred Astaire
(right) join a host of Hollywood celebrities.
as the Friars Club paid tribute to Gene
Ke lly (center) Saturday. The three
Hollywood notables gathered at a cocktail
party prior to formal activities.
Trio Rob
Toro Woman
In Wheelchair
Anaheim Drama
An elderly woman propelling
her wheelchair along a Laguna
Hills road was robbed of $38 dur-
ing the weekend in-what Orange
County Sheriff's o(ficers
describe as the most callous
purse snatc hing incident they
have ever investigated.
Holdup Man Slwt
By Market Clerk
DE"puties said three young· men
stopped th e ir ca r and ap-
proached Mrs. Addie H. Little·
john., 79, of 23262 Book.land Lane,
El Toro, as she propelled her
wheelchair along Calle de Los
Caballeros in Laguna Hills.
Mrs. Littlejohn told officers
that the young men snatched the
purse contail\ing $38 from the
handle of her wheelchair and
then drove off at high speed.
An Anaheim market clerk Sun-
day shot and IJ:illed a knife.
wielding holdup man who had
grabbed the clerk's wire by the
neck and was dragging her away
as a hostage, police said today.
Gary Lee PhiJlips, 25, of 425 N .
M?gqolia A"4'1.-~-w.as
dead at the robbery scene with a
single gunshot wound in the
chest, a police ~pokesman said. ·
The clerk, whose name was be-
ing withheld by investigators,
told officers Phillips entered the
small market at 1107 W. South St..
Tree Claims •
2nd Victim
In another purse snatthing fnci· ·
d ent a Lacuna Jiills ~l'I'!' ONEONTA. N .Y . _(AP)
World rsi':fent was.robbed duQ."l)-C«~iJaltWta,,.....;af!erhia.~
the weekend of a purse cohtairiing died when her auto-t:rasMd iilto a
$40 by a ~ung man who fled 00 tree aJon1sld• a rural "?ad near
foot. sheriff'sofficerssaid. here, John Simcox, 21 , died when his car struck the same tree,
Deputies said Lorene Helen
Lawrence, 68, of 29T Calle
Aragon, was ·robbed ··es s h"!:
wal.k'ed on Paaeo de Valencia
near U..,Loguna .Rllla-olfice.
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poUceaald. ·
AnnaSlmcoxdledDec. tT,1969, ...,en her auto ttruck the tree 'about a mile ll'olll the •family
bomeln 01oe10Couacy. Her son's
, , fatal cruh occurred ~ay .
at about 7:30 p.m . and walked to
a cooler where he took out a six-
pack of beer.
"The suspect walked to the
check stand and pulled a knife,
ordering the clerk to put some
money he was counting into a
paper sack.'' the po l ice
spakesman said.
"Then he grablx>d the wife
around lh e n eck a nd said
something to the crfect 'You 're
c o m i n g with me ','' th e
spokesman said.
The clerk told officers the sus·
pect began backing out the door
but stum bled, permitting the
woman lo break away.
"The clerk grabbed a revolver
and fired one shot at the suspect,
who ran off into the darkness,"
the police spokesman said.
Investigators found the falall¥·
wounded Phillips 200 yards from
Ute mark.et!
Battle Quelled
LISBON, Portugal (AP )
Troope: broke up a battle in which
dozens were injured early tod ay
after Communists seized the gov·
emor's mansion in the southern
town of Faro .
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Found
Heavily
Sedated ;
NEW ORLEANS <UPI)
Police say Edna Halbedel, an
83-year -old wealthy widow, was
kept heavily s edated in a locker
room in her home for two years
by two men , one of whom was the
sole beneCiciary in her will.
Firemen ended he r confine-
ment by breaking through a win-
dow in her French Quarter home
on a tip from a ramily friend who
became suspicious because she
was not allowed to see Mrs.
Halbadel. .
She was hospitalized and re-
ported in fair condition today.
Authorities still had many un-
answered questions about the al·
Jeged conspiracy to keep the
woman pris oner in her own
home.
··1t·s goin g to be pretty horrible
when it ·s all revealed, .. s aid a
spokesman for the district al·
tomey's office. "There are some
doctors involved in th.is thing.
They just had he r all doped up in
this room -no visitors or phone
calls or anything."
J ohn R . Villarrubia, 42, a
publicity agent named in Mrs.
Halbedel·s will, and Noel J.
Dube, 44. a school teacher, were
arrested and charged with ag-
gravated kidnaping. Their bonds
were set at $200,000 each.
A special grand jury was ex-
pected to meet Tuesday to study
the case. including a clisclosure
by a defense attorney that the
wife or District Attorney Harry
Con nick exec uted Mr s .
Halbadcl 's will.
Attorney Raymond McGuire,
<See SEDATED, PageA2)
Co ast
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Weath er
Partly cloudy through
early Tuesday becoming
mostly fair in the after-
noon. Not much change in
temperature. Highs 73 to
78. Lows SO to the low 60s.
I NSIDE TODA V
Bombs went of/ in .about
nine buildings early this
morning . in iV~w York.
Wwhington and Chicago. A
Puerto Rican group claimed
credit. See story 1\4 .
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AZ DAILY PtLOT s Monday. Octob« 27, 1975
Sadat Welcollled
Visiting U.S. With 'Open Heart'
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WASlll:-ICTON !APJ -F.gyp-
tian i>rei;idcnl Anwar Sad1:1it, the
first Egyptian he:.id uf st;ilc to
visit lht• United Statl~s. got :1
warm per.sonal \VCl£"omc today
frotn President Ford, ""hoealh.·J
their rneeling a signal Lhat pro-
gress toward peace In the ll1 lddl c
£;isl ··,,·di nut :-.tn1>."
In l'Uiol'ful l'crcmnnic::; ;.it the
White !louse, Ford halled the
EgypUru1 president ·s wisdom,
~ineerity and moderation.
Sadat v.•ill :-;tay two days in
Washington before visiting New
York City, Chicago und Houston
Md then returning to address a
JOint session of Congrcs~.
S.1dat ;1pplaudcd the Pres i·
dL·nt 's rem;irks and declared that
"''~'"
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1·
UPITt ........ t
PRESIDENT FORD GREETS PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT
He's Seeking Military Aid to Offset U.S. Israeli Support
'Kissing Gunman'
Robs NB Granny
A bandit. wearing gari s h
'makeup and brandis hing a
shotgun robbed a 70-year-old
Newport Beach grandmother of
SIJO over the weekend and then
asked for a kiss on the cheek
before he disappeared.
The victim, who lives in the
t'entral Newport area, phoned of-
ficers lat e Saturday night after
the gunman who was wearing a
stocking mask caked with
·greasepaint fled with ail the
money she had in the house.
Police said the victim told
them she was home aJone when
she heard a noise in a bedroom
and investigated.
The young bandit wearing the
elaborate mask was waiting for
her, his finger on the trigger or
the s hotgun . He demanded
money and the victim emptied
her pur!Se for him.
Moments later, the woman told
him. ''you mus t be very
_ desperate to stoop to this.·•
'"I am." he replied, "I'm try-
ing to find an apartment and I
Man, Wife
FowulDead
ONTARIO (AP) -The bodies
of a man and his wife, dead in an
apparent murder-suicide, have
been found in their trailer home.
Police said Sunday the pWr ap-
peared lo have been dead for
some tim e. They said they
believe the deaths occurred
Thursday, but the bodies weren't
!ound unlil Saturday. ·
Neighbors said the husband
h ad told them he was going to kill
his. "''ife over a m arital dis pule,.
but then lhe wife came around
and told them to ignore any shots
they might h ear, so when
gunshots were heard Thursday
they didn't pay much attention.
ORANGE COAST •
DAILY PILOT
TnJ Ql'en~ co,.11 11~11v PllOI, w1111 wlokk Is combl,,.d 1n• N•"'' p,..,,, ;, l)tlbl•~d nv tl>i'
Otanl)t COll~1 Pull!l,11!"11 (.,n....,ny S..pd•~lt
l'dlhont ate pul>lltht!I MDl'!l~v ln•<Mlfl f '"'""
!cw CO'llil Mow. N•,.Pofl e.-i...n, """tonqU>n
Be•<h l fount1oln V•lley, U •1n•. ~"°""~·'"
V•tit'v '"" L•t•mt Be&tn/Soutn CM•t " «nu" •~ION! tdltlon "o..bil•-S.lurMv• _. ~'"' O..•~· lhe P<•nup-• pu1>01nlrt,1 pt,.nl •• .ol llO
Wt'•l IMf:il,...I. C.Ollt MeM. Clof•lorni•t'l~l6.
Robert N. Weed
P ,e\lao-nl •!IG PUOI•_.
Jack R. cur1ev Yk4 ........ , • ...., 04.,.,,.. -.......
l h0m115 Kee vii
ro•tCI'
Thomas A. Murptilne
MentQlnt ll!ltlltl'
OWirles H . Loos Richard P. Nall
M tltt.rll Mltnqfng ~
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u....,.. .. 11tn.111t~~11 ... 1
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Ttlefllflont (7141 MJ-4321 Classlllw Ad .. rtlllMMZ.S671 ~bot(• 'f'.ittv N.;.;.;..~
Sl1-6J10 ,, .......... c .. -.. 4ts.OUO
f""' ,..,. OrM>Oe ~"'• CormMlltltl MO-t220
Coll¥tlollt, 1'71 OrMIVt cefo•I t\lhll_,. (Miio fltl'l'j. ,... .... '*-!ti. Utv1h8'lont;, WIMl'l•I
Ntltt ft .. \fttllHl!lfnl ~ Mrtln me• IH
"ff'MllC.ff •ltMwt IJ4tltf ilt'"t'llMIOI\ ti
CllPt'l'ltM -•
don't have enough money to get
one."
'.\fore conversation followed
and as the man left the victim
said she wished him well in his
aearch for a home.
"You make me feel like I want
to cry,'' replied the bandit, point·
ing to his right cheek aild adding,
'"kiss me right here."
The woman did so and the ban·
dit fled into the darkness, she told
police.
Investigators said they could
find no other witnesses to the rob-
bery, but that they round fresh
palm and finger prints on a slid-
ing glass door as well as other
clues near a rear gate which may
be helpf1:Jl in tbeir probe.
Man Stab'bed
ByTU'IO Men
During Melee
A mari id9iitiffed by shertrrs
officers 'as a Mexican national·
was listed in stable rondition at
Orange County Medical Center
today after being stabbed during
the weekend in a melee at a Cqsta
Mesa area apartment building.·
Deputies said Juventino
Cervantes Rivera, 24, underwent
emergency surgery after being
stabbed in the kidneys during the
fracas in an apartment on Monte
Vista Street.
A search for two broth~rs
believed to have been involved'in
the attack was halted today when
sheriff's officers learned that the
t \\'O men. bolh believed to be
M ex it"an n a ti onals, h a d
recrossed the border into Mex ..
ico.
Investigators h ave not yet
learned what sparked the quar·
rel that led to Rivera being
stabbed.
Fr'Olfl Page Al
SEDATED ••
who represented Villarrubia and
Dube during a bond hearing, said
the will had been executed by
Anita Connick.
··1 can't discuss my wife's legal
practice," Connick said "But I
can tell you that my wife does not
, represent either of the arrested
subjects.''
The spokes man for Connick's
office said a nurse who reported-
ly attended to Mrs. Halbedel and
administered the sedatives alao
was being questioned.
"She waa an unwlllina •c·
compUce,'' he said. .. She was
hired to take care of the lady and
give her medicine, but she had no
idea what was goln& on."
Victory Lauded
progress toward peace since he
ai.nd Ford met tall Juoe io
Salzburg "could be coosidered a
turning point in Arab-Israeli re-
lations." He said he came lo the
·United States ''with an open
heart.''
After · t·he ceremonies on the
south lawn of the White House.
Ford and Sadat began a private
session in the oval offi ce with
Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss·
inger.
As the presidents met, about
300 Arab and Iranian students
chanting ''Down With Sadat''
and "Long Live Palestine,'"
marched a half mile through
downtown Washington to the
While House.
The demon s tration was
sponsored by the Iranian Stu·
dents Associ<i tion and lhe
Organization of Arab Students in
the United States and Canada,
which said recent Sinai peace ac·
cords pose "grave implications
for the Arab national liberation
struggle.··
After the meetin g, as Sadat's
motorcade left the While House,
the d{'mORS].rators gathered
<1long Pennsylvania Avenue and
chanted: "Sadat is a U.S. puppet,
Sadat is a U .$.puppet."
From the back seat of his
limousine, Sa dat s miled and
waved al the protesters.
Sadat, whO arrived SUnday "to
begin his 11-day visit to the Unit·
ed States, spent the night al
Will iamsburg, Va. Ast.atedinner
at the Whi te H ouse was
scheduled for t onight for Sadat
anll hi s wife.
In the south-lawn ceremonies,
Sadat said the new Sinai accord
which Ki ssinger helped negotiate
between Egypt and Israel "will
be a very important milestone on
the road to peace in our area."
Not ing his warm personal
friend~hip-with the Egyptian
leader, Ford agreed that "much
has been achie ved '' and called
Sadat's visit "a symbol of the
new dimensions of our rela-
tions."
Sadat in turn told Ford that
"what you have already done·•
has been a "great event" (or the
~1iddle East, which he described
as "the most dangerous area in
lht> whole world.··
A crowd of tourists, diplomats
·and other visitors waved U.S.
and Egyptian flags and BP·
plauded as Ford and Sadat re-
viewed an honor guard. ·
Judge Ponders
Case of Girl
In Deep Coma
MORRISTOWN, N.J. (AP) -
The Karen Anne Quinlan trial
ended today with the judge say.
Ing he would rule In 10 to 14 dl)'ll
whether Mias Quinlan's life·
sustaining respirator may be un·
booked so she can "'die wltb
dlllJlity."
Judae Robert Muir Jr. said he
would either hand down a written
opinion or deliver an oral ruling
from the bench. He made the
statement after bearing emo.
Uonal cl08lng argumenta by the
attorney• for Miss Quinlan's
parents and five attorneys oppos·
Ing their request to cllaconnect
the machine.
Paul W. Armslrollll, arau!ng
for the Quinlans. said Muir
s hould allow Miss Quinlan lo
"pass on with peace," and let her
''follow lbe gentle call that
beckons her to lasting peace."
Oppasing attorneys asserted
that allowing her to die would be
tantamount to homicide or
mercy killing.
"If Karen Anne Qulnlan bu
one chance in a thousand or one
chance in 10,000, or one chance in
a million, who are we and by
what rl&ht do we kill that
chance?" said Ralph Porzio, at·
torney for Miss Quinlan's doc·
ton.
Miss Quinlan, 21, bas been in a
coma for six months -in what
doctors say is an irreversible and
''persistent vegetative state."
Her parents. Joseph and Julia
Quinlan have stopped prayln1 for
a miracle and say it is "God's
will" that their daughter "pass
lnto his aenlle and lovlni hands"
and ''diewith dignity.••
Doctort have refused tounhoo!I:
the respirstor, s•Yinl that since
Mias Quinlan is sUll alive it
would be a violation of law and of
medical tradition to deprive her
of treatment that sust.a.inl her
breathing. Some say "pullinJi.the
plug " would amount to using a
"quality of life'' scale to de·
termine who lives.
Dr . Julius Korein , a
neurotoaist who testified oo tbe
Quinlans' behalf, said that tbe
purpose or the trial was to "m8ke
written an unwritten law" by
which doctors allow terminally
Ill paUenta to die by "ludidous
ne1lect'' rather than prolong
their aaony in futile mecllcal pro-
ceduret.
He said it is coml'DOI\ practlce
for a doctor to tell a nurae to
"for,.t·" abOut prolOll(ed Ult.Of
.extraordinary medical pto·
.. ced_ for a patient who bu DO
f'ranco Saccessor
FarmerSlwt
By Pet Dog · Prince Faces ,
HAIJFAX.England(AP) M .. Proh1ems -Fann worker Michael any . !I Kelly wu abot in the chest
today by bJa red -· police nid. Kelly had put , • ' '
hiosbot1un Oil top ~fa wall JIADllJI> Spain IAP) -
at a farm near bere while be Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon, In
ellmbed over. Tbe doe llne to take over from tJie
scrambled up at the same atrlcket> G111. Francis.co Franu'C!l~.._:~..,,.,~~~-=~~~=::~ ttme. and !ta paw-bit-the--wllfilllli1'lran~n..-full-or -· • trigger,officeratald.Kelly blems a nat{on preuln1 for
managed to stagger back to eocfal 1aild POllUcal ebaaae ud
the farmhouse. and waa Ille risk of fallln& alm«f before
taken to• boap1tal, ~ betettlljlrled. •
his coodlUon waa1aldt.obe But the 87-yeOMld prince will
1atlafactory. iet· tome -opoortun1Uea aev~
,,.,... to Franeo 6eeause of Jn.
ternational disapproval of the
MricanBee
Descendants.
Kill Boy, 6
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
(AP> -A swarm of bees at~
tacked 18 passer9by in a small
town near the Bolivian border.
killing a six-year-old boy and
seriously injuring two children
and two adults, the official
Tel am new• agency reported.
The bees were described as
descendants of African bees
brought into South America 19
years ago by an American scien-
tist. African bees have been
blamed for several recent at-
tacks in Brazil, Argentina and
other South American countries.
Citing local police, Telam said
the bees swarmed out of dis-
carded boxes l yi ng at an in-
t ersection in the town o( El
Carm en, about 950 m iles
northeast of Buenos Aires, and
attacked anyone nearby.
The report did not say when the
attack took place. lt said the six·
year-old boy, identified as
Evaristo Cisneros, died Friday
at a local ho11pital and four other
victims were in serious condi-
tiorui.
African queen bees were in-
troduced in Brazil in 1956 by Dr.
Robert Kerr. a noted American
bee geneticist who wanted to up-
erade the local bee popul ation .
Several of the bees broke out of
captivity and mixed with local
breeds producing the dreaded
new strain.
Areentlne bee exPerts" sa:Y the
African bees were first encoun·
tered in Ara:entina in 1967.
way he establis hed his regime
and controlled it for more than 36
years.
Witho ut Fr a nco, Spain"s
chances will improve for enter-
ing the European Common
Market, the North AUanUc Trea·
ty Organization and the com·
munity of democratic nations.
Diplomatic relations with the
soviet Union are likely. Spain
probably will get Gibrallar back
from Britain. ,
But before the prince can
establish himself as King, he
m ust first Jive down the idea that
be is, as the S panish joke goes,
Juan Carlos the Brief, meaning
he is not ex.peeled to last long.
Credibility as a capable leader
m ay be one of his first tests.
One area whe re the prince is
certain to encounter a credibility
problem is the independen ce--
minded Ba s que region in
the north. Ba sque separatists
view Juan Carlos as an extension
of 7ranco and because or th is
hold him responsible as "'ell for
the execution in September of
two Basque terrorists, convicted
of killing police.
Opposition against Juan Carlos
4 Die in Crash -.
HEMET (UPI l -A youn g
mother. her one-year-old son,
and two passengers were killed
Sunday in a grinding headon col·
lisio n o n the R a mona Ex·
pressway just west of here. Wit·
nesses said a C'a r driven by Lori
DunJap, 22. smashed into a west-
bound vehicle driven by Richard
Ranselle, 18, of Perris. Pro-
nounced dead at the scene were
Mrs. Dunlap, her son, Ammon,
her siste r -in-law. Linda Dunlap.
26, and a cousin, Cindy Reim-boid, 10. .
Dlbbll6E
BUSINESS
CENTER
eould 1boW op Ill tlle rtlllllftly -~ CilalP r.--d J¥t-• Cat1la111,..1!!6'l"'ilj4islled· ,...t witb wt..t Ft_.._•
·-Uy-the unltJof !\:1111,D.
''Franco's 1uccen.or aWuat
mend the regionalism problem or there will be no un1t;,y,•• said a
Catalan lawyer. Knowied geabl• politicians say
Juan Carlos s bould have no trou.
ble shedding the Image of Fran·
co's band-picked 1Uc:cessclr, wbo
w .. specially schooled. trained
militarily and guided to swear to
political priDclplea Franco laid
down. ••Jr the prince can establish a
political opening, get a sumg but
lib.eral·minded g overnment
working and demonstrate to ~he
political opposition he is not just
a poor imitation of Franco, he
may make it," one government
official said. ••Juan CU:IOI must
make the country beli"°e he is
going to change things.''
This may be difficult for a
population inex perien ced
politically after 36 years of
authoritarian, right-wing rule by
Franco.
"One of the worst things Fran·
co did was to never give us ex.
perience in politics," a Madrid
journalist commented.
FRANCO FIGHTS
'IASI' BATTLE' .
M A--n R rD ( u'P'M--
Generalissimo Francisco Fran·
co, 82, his body wasted from two
weekend brushes with death,
fou ght today what many believed
would be his last battle for sur.
viva I.
Doctors said he was suffering
from a slight fever for the first
time since Saturday and from
cQPtinuing heart troubles.
The team of 14 doctors at Fran·
ro".s bedside in El Pardo Palace
said the old soldier was conscious
and resting quietly but that his
condition remained grave.
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MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet
U ni o n gave a r e d -carpet
welcome today to North V1et-
namne leader Le Xuan. with all
of the top,Kremlln leaden turn·
in& out to congratulate him m
victory over U .S.-alded South
Vietnam. cbanCeof1W'vival. I
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°""'' .... "4'" """"" HISPANO SUIZA, 192t VINTAGE, IS THE ST~R OF CY PAINTER'S CLASSIC AUTOS FLEET
The Rare Resiored C•ra AN Kept In Specl•lly O.humldHled G•regea
Vintage Auto Bobby
·Lagunan Collects, Restores Classic Cars
B7 JACK CHAPPELL otl .. 0.ltyPI .......
The engine of the old Rolls
Royce whispered beneath its
mas5ive chrome and rich
burgundy hood as its owner Cy
Painter nestled in the 1926
motorcar's pearl gray lealher
driver's seat.
He adjusted the levers and
switches and doo-dads oo the
auto's steering wheel and dash
like a concert violinist tunes his
instrument. The lightest vi bra-
tion faded out o( the SiG-year-old
phaeton.
''I wouldn 't have a car I
couldn't drive,·· Painter said.
And, those that he drives are
rolling masterpieces or restora-
tion and class.
In addition to the Rolls Royce.
Painter's stabl e includes a 1926
Hispano Su.iza town car, a 1913
Cadillac tourillgCar, a 19'28 nve-
passenger Packard phaeton, a
1930 Pierce Arrow dual
windshield phaeton and a 1931
Ford Model A deluxe roadster.
Painte r keeps them all in
specially dehumidified garages
at his oceanfront home in Laguna
Beach.
The cars have won for him
more than 100 awa rds and
trophies in classic automobile
meets in the five years Painter
has been collecting the vintage
autos.
The collection is a demanding bobby.
''It is a lot of work to maintai n
them. You 've got to keep the m
polished , gassed, greased and
oiled. They 'r e old cars a nd
Psychic Says
· 'Boy Killed'
r ~ LEAVENWORTH. Kan. <U Pll
"' -A California psychi c says a 6-
.; year-old Leavenworth boy , miss-
~ ing more than two months, was
="' abducted by two military men
"I and killed, the boy's mot.her says.
"' ''I feel certain he is dead, also,'' 16 VeronicaBachar,motheroCmiss-
ing Murry Bachar , said Sunday.
Law enfor ce ment off icials.
however, said the phys ic had not
.~ provided any clues to locale
, Murry but th ey may begin
another search for the boy, who
disappeared Aug . 16Crom a swim-
ming pool at Ft. Leavenworth.
Mrs. Bachar said she talked by
t elephone wit h Los An geles
p;ychic Karina Kinkade and sent
the woman a picture of Murry, the
•. date he disappeared and the name
of investigators working the case.
•
.. Pepsi Warns
Discreditors
POltT AU P RINCE, Haiti
(UPI) -The Haitian bottler of
Pepsi-Cola introduced on the
island only a month ago, says
' "despicable persons'' have been
putting foreign Dlalter into the
drink.
, Bottles or Pepsi b8.ve been
,. systematically opened, foreign
matter added and recapped with
the original caps. The bottler did
not identify the foreign matter
• placed in the beverage.
-1' "The company will do ever·
,. ytbing possibletoexposethecom-
pany or persons endangering
public health in an effort to dis·
credit Pepsi-Cola," the statement
·said.
iRahbi Condemns ,
: !Nixon Opponents
• '1 BEVERLY JUIJ,.S (AP) -"I
, >fully believe that rtert dt!lradcr
• lof Pr .. ideot NlXon will come'
• lbeforo the bar ot: juatf.,., whether " im this lifetime or next,~' IQS <• IRabbl Baruch Korff.
r. • The rabbi, a supoorter. &Del
l lfriend of Richard Nixon, spoke
•1 fSunday night to more than 100 et
• '• diMer almed at helpln4 raise • ].funds ror the former j)['eSldeot's ..,.., ... _. '
J I
FIVE PASSENGER PACKARD IS COLLECTOR 'S FAVORITE
Cy Painter Works On Hts Bea uties With Loving Hands
they·re a lltlle fu ssy at times.
··1 usually ta ke each car and
try and go through a car a week ,"
Painter said .
The star of Painter's fl eet is the
Hispano Su iza town car. a classic
auto Painter restored Crom the
chassis up.
It had been kept in a barn for 14
years after the Azusa museum
which had own ed it went bust.
"The guy 's kids played in it
and there were chickens in it, for
God 's sake,·· Painter recalled.
The ca r is 99 .99 percent
restored to its ori ginal condit ion.
Even t he uphols tery is the
ori ginal ractory-style, cloth that
Painter got from famed race
driver Phil Hill.
Some of the parts ha ve been
fabri cated from scratch by Pain-
ter's "ace·· mechanic.
A His pano Suiza similar to
Painter ·s, but not of the same ex-
CP:lent cond ition sold recently for
$48.000 in a Reno auction.
Painter s aid his personal
favorite is the 1926 Packard.
"There·s just something about
a Packard, the lines and the st yl·
ing is super b." Painter said
sounding so mewh at Like the ''Ask
the ma n who owns one" ad-
vertisements the now defunct car
maker used to r un.
He recalled that at one showing
or the car, a visitor told him, "if I
had a car like t hat, I'd have four
guys wi th baseball bats at each
fender and if a nybody touched it, t\e"d get clobbered.··
But ; Painter hasn·t had any
troub le with vandals.
"'lt"s absolutely amazing, the-
cars appeal to the very old and
the qui te young. 1 think the old
because they know the cars, and
the you ng because thcy ·re un -
usual. .. he said.
Painter s aid )le has always
been interested in cars. his father
was a Pierce Arrow dealer in th e
Midwest during the late 19'l0s
and ea,:rly 19305.
"When I was a Little kid, I
thought everybody had Pierce
Arrows," he said.
County Assessor's
Joh Appeals to 35
So far, 35 applications for the
job of Orange County assessor
have been r eceived by ~e county
Personnel pepartment.
And county officials expect a
last minute r ash of applications
this week fo r the job left vacant
Sept. 18 when former assessor
Jack Vallerga was sentenced to
serve60days in jail and ordered to
paya$1 ,000 fine.
Vallerga's sentencing and his
removal from office by Ventura
County Superior Court Judge
R.Wert Shaw followed his convic·
tioo on six of seven felony counts
brought against him in an Orange
County Grand J ury indictment.
Available to the succesaful ap-
1 plicant far bis vacated post ls a job
that will pay between $30,472 and
$40,020 a year and carry all the
prerogatives of an elected of-
ficiaf-at least until January 1979,
when Vallerga's term would have
ended.
Before the county Board of
Supervisors makes t he final
selection1 County Administrative
Officer Robert T homas and
Personnel Director Bert Scott
will whitUe the list of applicants
downto20.
1'>en, a special citiw>'s com·
mlttee will screen the 20 can-did~ Nov. l:Z.14 and reduce the numb« to live.
And from those five wiU come ~county 's assessor, the third
straight to rll'St win the office by
appointmentratberthaneJection.
Thomas ls presalng ror an early
selection to that whoever tt.kes
over the n lna of the :zoo.member
department can fill job vacanch. ,
in mid-management posts left va·
cant by resignations and firings
niulting from a series of scan~
dais that have hit the office in the
past year.
Those mid-management jobs
will make up the new assessor's
management team, a team that
will be faced with getting out the
county's 1976 assessment roll on
short notice.
Since VaJJerga's departure last·
month, the orrice h as been headed
by Assistant Assessor Elmer
Zimmer, the department's top
ranking offi cial after the wave or
resignations.
'Cannonball'
Zacchini
Laid to Rest
BUENA PARK (APl -About
100 ~rsons attended the funeral
service of Hugo Zacbin.i , known
as the world's first human can-
nouball.
Zacchini, who was fll"St fired
from a cannon in 1922, was
eulogized Saturday by Larry
Davis, owner of Carnival nme
Shows.
Zacchini died on his 77th birth-
day Monday following a heart at-
tack at his Fontana home. Her~
t.ired in 1961 . The cannon act is
being carried on by bis son. Hugo
Jr.
"
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Mond!J. OctobW 27. 1975 DAll'f l'tLOT A S
Rape Study
Lack of Dignity for Victims Told
WASHINGTON (AP> -Police,
hospitals and prosecutors
gene.rally r espond poorly and
baphai.ard.ly to r iape cases and
ra.pe victims , according to a na·
tional survey conducted for the
Law ~orcemeol Assi!tance Ad~
ministration.
The study, released today by
the LEAA, r ecommends tha t
loc al officials develoP ways to
treat rape victims with more
dignity and make it easier for
them to provide evidence against
. attac kers. Many of the report's
conclusions are similar lo fmd-
ings and recom mendaUons made
in recent years by women's
groups.
The JS-month study was con ..
ducted by the Center for Women
Policy Studies in Washington with
a $238,437 LEAA grant. The report
covers some 600 pages in four
volumes . The LEAA will dis·
tribute a condensed version to
state and local law enforcement
Family Held
Captive by
Armed Duo
PIERRE, S.D. (AP) -A stroll
through the state Capitol turned
into an hour of terror for a fa mi-
ly of five until the father smashed
a whisky bottle across the bead of
one of his captors.
The family e scaped Sunday
after Glenn Arneson, of Hayti,
S.D., hit the captor on the head.
Arneson. his wire. Jutll lh, and
three children, Kathy, 14, Kent,
13, and Jill, 9, ran for her .
"It was quite a stat or pan-
i!ernonlum," said security guard
Marty Cantine who heard noise
about 2 p.m.
..The boy came by me on the
third floor a nd I could tell there
was something bad going on, but
I didn ·t know wh at. The rather
and mother came a round the cor·
ner looking quite fearful.·•
Assistant Atty. Gen. Harry
Christianson said two men with
knives had jumped Arneson
about 1 p.m. a nd robbed him of
$72. The family was herded into a
fourth-floor room where they
we re threatened for a n hour,
Christiansoa said.
Authorities said members of
the family were forced lo drink
whisky and kneel to pray.
Atty. Gen. William Janklow
said Romeo Eagle Horse, 22, and
Robert Stein , 21, both of Pierre,
were charged with fll'St-degree
robbery a nd five counts of kid-
naping. They wer e held on
$75,000 after a ppearance before
Magistrate Lyle Ric hardson .
agencies across the country.
The researche rs lound that r ape victims usually must co to
public hospit als for an exa mina·
tion t o d e te rmine whethe r
medical treatment is needed and
to collect evidence foe use ln pro.
secuting the attacker.
Many private hospitals only re.
luctantly t reat r ape vi ctims and
may charge up to S75 for the ex-
amination, the report said.
Sunday's
Sermon
Reporled
BJ Tom Barle y
"Moot Police officers have dit·
ficully rinding a boopital tbal will
treat rape "~ctimS':' UM! report
:taid . ''Hospit als have exhibited
both r e lucta n ce to provide
mediul teaUmony and dia-·
Ing otUtudes toward rape vic-
tims.''
The conclusions were based Oft
a survey of 51 police departments
• and 41 hospitals and clinics in
largeandmedium·sizedciUes..
Generosity Stressed
In Pastor's Message
fF:mlor's Nole: TIU is.~ Monday f<atUTt m 10Jlich Dailu Pilot
l'qJOri.ef" Tom Barley giuces.o personoliud.occount of.a urmora
·from o church or 1ynogogue uleded. at rondom in the DoJJy Pilot
cireWalion.o•<a. ThechUTchCIUawiU be the nbjtd otafeatureon
Saturday's church page.)
Christians who hesitate to give full play to their natural
generosity need look no further than the Bible for ample
proof that God will always protect their interests, Dr. 8.
Lot.hair Green told bis congregation Sunday at Mesa Verde
United Methodist Church. Costa Mesa.
"J esus wants us to have fun and roll with the punches,''
the minister said, quoting at length from the New Testa·
ment and Matthew 6: 19-34.
"God isn't goi ng to abandon us in midst ream. All those
secondary issues will be taken care of," Dr. Green
~eled, urging generosity "in all our Christian en.·
deavors.
"Generoiily clears our distorted visiog ,'' the speak.er
said. "We get by giving. And we get from God in return for
our generosity blessi.nis, insight, wisdom, strength and
know how.''
Dr. Green said he believed that many Christians tend to
beco me possessive "because they worry. They come to
believe, mistakenly, Ulat if they don't look after themselves
nobody else will,'' he said.
He advocated. as a better approach to li(e, •1Faithfu!·
ness to one another. to God and Church. Far too often we put
the kingdom of God second to our other interests when it
should be al the top of our list,'' Dr. Green said.
Many Chris tians have learned to shove worry to one
side in their pursuit o( a true relationship with God, the
JDinister said.
An6 they have come to see how''thechurch is ooeofthe
few institutions practicing preventive medicine in today's
society,•· Dr. Green added.
If other institutions were to adopt the same approach,
he said, "we may not be witnessing the widespread ex·
panslon or jails. juvenile halls, alcoholic reha bilita tion pro-
grams and psychiatric lreatment facilities.
Dr. Green warned bis congregation that it is going to
take the fullest generosity of every Christian in the world to-
day if the poverty ahd hunger so rife amoog mankind is to be
contained.
"Afri ca is right here on our doorstep:~ he said. ''Give
all you can and more than you ever have.
''And then,'' Dr. Green said," give a little bit more."
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A4 OM. y PILOT Monday, October 71, 1175
•
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I I' ·l
.Just ·~ Bo s Rock Cities Say.~
Venus
Reds
:·":. "' Morning Blasts Hit 9 Buil,dings
'Alive' ':'.'~;, -···· ·~·-·· -. "'>•· .. Tom " . arphine
OLD GHOSTS Dl;:PT.-Now
that we are on the final
Countdown to Halloween night,
loU of authorities are giving ad·
Mee on how to dress the litUe
ghosts, goblins and monsters to
make sure they have a safe and
aane evening of tricking or treat·
>ing .
' It should not elude your atten·
.'t.ion, however, that little mention
h given to the question of trick-
lng. Nobody, for example, tells
the little monsters not to go
•iqound knocking over outhouses.
' ~he main reason for this is thal
'tHere aren ·t any outdoor toilets in
totlr social environment any ;,,Qare.
;_JThis condition has caused a lot Pt old-timers to lament the pass·
~ of Halloweens past. Indoor
:P\umbing has taken the outhouse
,out of Halloween.
. >WHY, I WAS CHAT11NG only
tytsterday with one of our coastal
~easoned citizens who explained
(that the outhouse -or as she
/called it "The Chick Sales" -
IWBS the very baais ol Halloween l1.1n in times (?&st.
' ··we didn't have anything like
~oor-to-door treat-gathering in
~hose days," she explained.
~·usually, the boys would take us
to a Halloween night dance. ~en, as the evening got later,
:t1'ey'd get rid or us. . l "Thal was so they could go out
n groups and tum over out·
Byne""ood•l<dPl'ao
Bomb$ were set off at nine busi-
ness and government buildings in
New York, Wa!lhington and
Chleago early today. A Puerto
Rican separatist &r"OUP claimed
responsibility for the bombings.
which occurred a year and a day
aft.er five sirnilar blasts the group
was blamed for .
The bombs went elf almost
simultaneously in the three c!Ues
at about 11 p.m. PST and caused
only minor d•mage and no in·
Juries . One of the bluudamqed
first and second-atorywindowl at
Chica10'1 Sears Tower. the
world's tallHt building.
THE GROUP'S comnwni<lue
Philippine Violenc!e
Marcos Assistant
Killed by Bullets
MANILA. Philippines CAP) -
Presidential assistant Guillermo
C. de Vega was s hot to death at noon today in bis office 200 yards
from the presidential palace.
member s o f President
Ferdinand E . Marcos' staff said .
Security forces immediately
closed off the heavily guarded
palace compound in central
Manila and streets 'Nilhin half a
mile. They refused to make any
comment on the killing.
A MEMBER OF the presiden.
tiaJ staff said Marcos was work-
ing in bis office at the
Malacanang Palace at the time
of the shooting and continued to
work.
Government sources said
Nonoy Arceo, a former journalist
and promoter, was arrested.
Arceo and another man were
wilh De Vega when be was sbot,
they said.
tit he announced in San Fran·
cisco that be was turning against
the president and his martial·law
regime.
MIJAR!;:S SAID later De Vega
offered him a bMbe not to appear
last June before a U.S. con-
gressional subcommittee inquir·
ing into civil Mght.s in The Pbllip-
pines. Marcos denied the charge
but conceded that De Vega on
behalf of the government had
previously given Mijares $45,000
to start a newspaper and to apy
on anti-Marcos Filipinos in the
United States.
De Vega bad been a presiden-
tial assistant since I~. He at-
tended Philippine schools and in
1962 earned a doctorate in
political history in Pakistan. He
was married and bad three
children.
al8o said It llad plaol<d bombo ID
P.ldio Rico, but theN wert DO
lmmM!ate nporta of apioalona
there.
In New Yori< the Poll.., Bomb
Squad oald the uploolons IOI C0'1r
banks w .... ·-by hip ,te1d explosive devices -similar to
GDN used in earUer explosions for
wl!icb the Puerto Rkan -claimed responsibillcy -but that
a 111111 blast was caUlod by a low·
yleldplpebomb.
Chicago authorities said the
type o( b o mbs used were
similar to one which exploded
Jtme 14 at the Mid-Continental
Plaza Building, alaodowntown.
A man called a Chicago 1 •11,.,.......-
newspaper after Ibo exptoeioos Blaek raralle and said two more bombs were
set to 10 off "in honor of Ille
veterans.'' Police found an unex·
ploded bomb consisting of five
sticks of dynamite iD a bouquet of
rooes al tile Standard Oil Build·
in&.
THEY ALSO found a sus·
picioua device outside in the
Federal Reserve Bank, but it tu..-out to be part d the bomb
which caused the aplosioo in a
building across the street. Win·
dowa in the Federal Reserve
were broken by the other ex-
plooion.
A spokeaman at the Slate
Department in Wublngton said
damace there was beli•ved
caused by one bomb. lie said be
bad no immediate explanation.
for earlier reports from security
personnel that four blasts oc-
curred.
Giving power salute,
Herman Finltlea leads 3,000
black marchers through
Florence, S.C. streets to
·protest shooting or black
man by a white policeman.
7,000 Given
Sentence Cut
In Jail Move
llOSOOW (UPI) -'Die 9"11&1 ,
Uaim'a hrla .,.-<#.V-W
1....r~ce<#.a-plnit•.
wttb nalodcal oxe11 • a I
b!yffaUite •ol••-· ex-P~--,,qualtea~
A 1 .... 1.,CS...i.& ~ I id· told tbe ommualat J'Utll' -per Pra'fda .....,._
may he able to -co ta.>
eartb'a ctoaeat plaaetaQ'
nei1hborbytbe:1Ut....-,..
( INSHORT J
Alexander Basll"*t, e •·
pert on space m-..oa, Uld
Venus 9 and 10 sbowlbe~ill
subject to ceologleal .. 7 ... -
in contrast to lbe donElaFlt .,.
face of the moon.
u .... w .......
' BEIRUT, Leb•-(AP) -
Beirut airport bee••• a
madhouse of confmlfa t.odll:r
after the U.S. EmbMIF 8dut11•
Americans wboee t-•-ta•
.......,tial to 1et ou1 <#. ~ ..
tom Leb!"'"""capltal.
Though saJinl It -Btlt ,._ dering an evacuatkwl. tbie ._.
bas1y issued the ••informal'•
advice as Moolem and Olrlatlaa
gunmen carried their street ••
into the previously peaceful
foreign residential dlatllct. es. They weren't even too
icular if somebody happened ;t!> be inside the outhouse al the
~1me.
: "But they surely didn't want
~girls around when they were
~oin c all this. " I Indeed, it was explained that
fe apsizing privies was a very
arge joke for ghosts and goblins
rural America.
THE MORE IMAGINATIVE
ype pranksters might even take
lj)art the outdoor facilities and
The government said i n -
vestigators were looking into two
possible motives for the killing
but had virtually ruled out any
political implications. It was pos-
sible one motive was extortion 8nd the other was that "the kill-
ing is part of a bigger con-
spiracy." It did not elaborate.
A Ml;:MBi::R OF De Vega's
sta!f said four or five shots were
heard about noon, and tbe 43-
year·old official cried out in
Tagalog, ··catch thatm~! ''
Oswald's FBI Note
Hushed by Hoover?
A'l'LANTA, Ga. !AP) -The
fU"St of as many as 1,000 state
prison inmates were set free to.
day as the Board of Pardons and
Paroles l..op__ped a year off the sen-
tences of about 7 ,000 prisoners to
relieve overcrowding at state
facilities.
Prison officials said 331 in·
mates were du.e for immediate
release. Most were up for >arole
in a matter of days, but some en-
joyed sentence reductions up to
six months.
A many as 1,000 ''noncapital of-
fenders•• will gain early release
within the next few weeks
because of the board's one-year
commutations, of(icials sald.
ltforott• /ffarele 1l
MARRAKESH, lloroeeo
<UPI) -The moblllutim ot.
Moroccans for a ma111•e
"'march of peace'' into SDmlsb
Sahara bas strengt~'Jtiq
Hassao· Il's hold on -·bit has dislocated Ills n1Uoa'•
economy. ·
assemble the little shack of
essity upon the roof of a
Um.er's barn. Or maybe place
~be privy in front of the
~'boathouse door.
Ah, but today these very huge
alloween jokes have passed ~from the American scene.
.: PUied maybe but not forgot-
·~ It may all return.
, 'A comeback for the outhouse in
,iiiral California Is being pushed,
rieyen today, by our youthful Gov.
mund G. Brown, J( •• who may
ve never even seen an outdoor
·plumbed toilet.
, But never mind that. He's in
flavor of them under certain
1~cittum.stances.
: GOV. BROWN IS supporting a
,chmge in the state building code
'which ia called, "Special Regula·
1tions for Rural Dwellings." Right
tllOW, the law says that even if
iyou reside out in the back coun-
•try. your house better have run-
1ning water for certain fixtures
lwitbin tile bathroom.
Our governor complains that is
'cramping the lifestyle of certain
rugted individuals who live in
our rural climes. They love to
commune with nature. 'Ibey ac-
ftually want to w •nder out to an
•outhouse on these fl'Ol!lty winter
mornings. Gov. Brown thinks they ought
•to be granted thia Privilege of
irural life.
A member of the presidential
press staff said De Vega was hit
three times and was reported de-
ad on arrival at a nearby clinic.
De Ve1a was one of three pre-
sidential assistants and was also
chairman of tbe board of motion
picture censors. He served the
Philippine president in many
capacities. .
He was sent last February to
the United States to meet
. Privitivo Mijares, a newsman
who had been close to Marcos un·
Nuke Test
In China?
N!;:W Dl;:LHI (UPI> -
China conducted an Wider-
ground nuclear test today
at her main Lop Nor testing
site in Sinki ang Province,
officials of India's Bhabha
atomic research center an-
nounced.
The officials said the ex-
plosion (al S p.m. PST Sun-
day) was in the magnitude
of 20 k:ilotoQ.s, about the size
of the fint atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in
194:>.
: Well, ti's ditficult lo figure
fwbat mart on Cali!omia history •
Gov. Brown will make. ! He may be remembered as the
tiovemor who put the outhouse
rback into Halloween.
If confirmed, the test
would be the I 7th conducted
by China since she set off
. her flf'St atomic bomb in Oc·
toberJ964 .
~
N!;:W YORK !APJ -A former
FBI ofricial says J . Edgar
Hoover was responsible for con-
cealing from the Warren Com·
mission a threatening note d~
livered by Lee Harvey Oswald to
the FBl's Dallas office about JO
days before President John F.
Kennedy was assassinated, Time
Magaiine reports.
THE MAGAZINE said William
C. Sullivan, head of the FBl's
Domestic Intelligence Division
at the time of the assassination,
also said at least 10 top bureau of.
ficials were aware of the note.
An FBl spokesman in
Washington said, "Mr. Sullivan's
statement is completely without
any basis in fact, completely er·
1 roneous . ·•
The note delivered: personally
by Oswald lo the FBI in Dallas
made no mention of the Presi-
dent, according to the FBI. Its
existence was verified receoUy
by the agency, but FBI
spokesmen said it was a vague
threat of reprisal if FBI agents
did not s top interviewing
Oswald"s Russiab·born wife.
Marina.
A House committee was told
last week by James Adams, de.
puty associate director of the
FBI, that an investigation by the
agency developed no conclusive
evidence that anyone other than•
James B. Hosty Jr., who bad in-
terviewed Mrs. Oswald and to
whom the note was addressed.
had knowled.1e of the note.
SULLIVAN SAID that Hoover,
who was FBI director until his
;(Snow Warnings in Sierra
' North Carolina ·Threatened 'by 'Hallie'
,Te~at•re.
...... u. IQ. -·· '-.. -..
15 .. ... " ·S:: .. .. .. ..... " . -,.
~~ .. .. -.. -""' .. ... _ ,, -" ...... ..
, ... 1"1211111 . ..
'-...... ~ .. .. .. .. ,. ..
" " .. ..
" ..
" ...............
.... t •
..
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0 .. ..
" .. • .. .. ,. .. .. • ., •
--~·.c~,..-... ..... ...... •. «J ........... . , ....... .--.--... -..._..,,.~11,.,,.e""' ...... """"~ e. • .,.. ........ -. •••• ....,.,. .... """"''o ........... '*"' .... ..........
arc,.....,...... .. ~CMJ!!flf_ .... , ..................... ... . ....... ~-... --t:.'l:..'11:.~ ...................
...
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death in 1972, was aware oC the
note and that John P. Mohr, the
FBJ"s administrative chief untiJ
his retirement in 1972, ordered
the note destroyed.
Mohr has denied he had any
knowledge or the note or tbal he
oroered it destroyed.
The board's action trims the
sentences of 7 ,000 inmates con-
victed of nonviolent crimes such
as auto theft, burglary and
forgery, officials said.
Busin..,men said 9mtl11P Ille
march bas clogged the pcllt at
Casablanca with ant.llltl 1111>
menu, crippled some_
bus service and caused ,.u.I
food shortages. _ t
•
He Speaks For You
Gloomy Gus Is your spokesmen because you and other Dan,
Pilot readers put words In his mouth.
Have you got a pet grievance? Lay It on Gus.
Just write to Gloomy Gus at the Dilly Pilot, Box 1560, C:O.ta
Meu, C1llfornla 92626.
'
Then witch for your Gus. He 1ppe1r1 dally on the edltortll
page of the Dally Piiot •
He 1"10 lor you, In the
DAILY PILOT
642-4321
•
-
•
t r ..
/
'· I
q
De
A
" a p •
$1 •
to
b
a
w
t
r
,
:1 -Six Rescued -• • •
. hi ·Honie Fif!e
'
' • ,
' WS AtjGBLE$ .!UPI) -An ll·month~lirl ~ to rleat!'-t.¥lf Sund&)' to her Oalriia,.tiome •11-.,...pe,.._edlnaldew-....-.1>y Delihbon who worted lf1111Ucally to pry oil aD·
llbur1!arlr l(OD ban that bed trapped them tnalde.
The body ol Talisha L:rnCh wu removed from the ==~Angeles home al\er'llremen put
"
Jf oman ~WJPf!Ct H~Wr'
In TIWeat o ·-F o ·a , '.
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-A Wf;tUtaD quoted as
flU'in• "If Goel tells me to.~ I will kill the l'ral·
dent .. bu been, a:rrested
at the requ'est. 'of the ~-SerVlce, """"' laid.
' The woman. a former
mental pati•nt , 're-
portedly made Ille st-
ment while bandln& out
religious llterature 9.an-
day.In MaeArtllur pan, Secret SenJoe had be<n
not far from downtown searcbine (Ot her ever
Loa An8ele1. Offlcen ainceb~release.
alrl'' motlier, WllDllA, 33, tllree Of her
dren &Dlf'a hlece, were report"'1 In lood condi·
Martin Luther King Hospital after treatment J
f. z;no«e·bl.balatioo and minor bums. Another son. "r. ~ . ·
Nid she. wu booked fOl' "There was a feeling
in v es ll 1 at lo n of aheisadanaerto herself
U>reaten!J>f the Ille of and to others," said
Prftident-Ford, doe to Powis.~''Sb.e w.as ~visit LOI Anlefts on ed and tumed over to-ua
Wednaday. and will be commiUed
"'PoUc& saJd the Secret for mental observation.··
Service asked tllem to be Sbe wu t.al<en to the
fOft theJookout for bier, psyebi8tri-c! ward of
aaylpl ·~· made a County .• usc Medical
similar lhl'eat In front of Center SUnd&)' and later
the White !Jouse last Sep-moved to an undisclosed
teniber and · was 11\en locall~,official1said.
Wen to St. Elizabeth's The j.,oman was un-
Hoilpital in Wasbin~on. idtnlined llecauae of a
D.C .• a mental bosPltal. Welfate and Institutions
beld ror 12 hours and r& \Code statute~pertaining
leased. to mental patients,
Warren. waa iD critical c:ondiUon with secood and j ~ Jw
lhb'il11•erttbumsovereopercentoth1sbody. • ;;;;,,-::11rl 'V'JJS re
.$...16 .n.iiD~FerttQt a-ieetect ... T_ Oil Lease
I .-" By-alelll'reu
Travelers were cautioned aliout snow showers in
N<r\lle••Callfomla mountains today, but a Paci!ic
~ ~t that brou1ht rain and snow to some areas 11'U-.k.W.«. the Nallooal Weather Service said.
· -~, ,. The weather front that
( . ~ ·' J bit Northern California State and dumped more than two inches or rain aloog
the northern coasUine
·• ·~·· · · over the weekend was
mov~1 toward Southern C&lifomia today, the
wea~r aerrice said. " . .;. For t.\le fWst time this year, snow chains were re-. qulr-ed SW{day niaht an '".ears using Interstate 80
near J)onner Summit. the highway patrol said.
Ali us-a .. Bid..,, Pi'06fewl
MARCH AFB (UPI> -In 30 days, a man's beard
can let pretty long, and the length of his beard is ex·
actly the problem that landed Airman First Class
Patrick Mannix in jail in the first place.
~anntx. 24, was sentenced to'30 days in jail, fmed
SlOO and demoted for defying the Air Force's
.. ••11mrt-beant'-' re~~ that prohibits facial hairs
to be more than one-qq&rlerinch in length.
A two-year Air Force veteran, Mannix said be
had a medical waiver to 1row the beard because of
a painful facial disease called pseudofolliculitis in
which cl01ely sbavedbairs become ingrown.
Mfin Kills 2 KiU, Self . .
_NORTH HOI.,LYWOOD <UPI> -Police said a
39-:Year.Old inan, apparently troubl~ about his re-
cent ~V:drce.., shot' his two young children in the
bead late snlidaytheohlroed the gun on himself.
Frank Novakovski, his daughter, Nicole, 11, and
soa.,.Michael, 7, were fowtd slumped in a bedroom.
The)' .were rushed to County-USC Medical Center
where their condition was listed as critical. Officer
Rich Parker 5aid Novakovski was disturbed about
bis tr,-q-,mon\h-old divorce from bis wile, Josephine,
Karen DeCrow, 37,
won a second tenn
as president of the
National Organiza-
tion for Women
(NOW) during its
convention bald in
Philadelphia Sunday.
120,000
At John
Concerts
· LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Elton John wrapped
up his two-day concert at
Dodger Stadium under
sunny skies and the
echoes of standing ova-
tions.
Police termed the con-
certs--:.... crowd~wise ...--as
··rather uneventful," but
they -complimented the
behavior of the young au-
diences, numbering an
estimated 60,000 fans
eacbday.
Meet Set
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-California officials ad-
mit they have · failed to
get environmental and
other controls on off-.
shore oil leases and they
say part or the problem
is that federal officials
aren't listening.
"We seem to be yelling·
down a deep cavern. All
we a:et back is echoeS, no
s ubstantive resPoru;e:·
said an aide to Gov. Ed·
mund 8rown Jr.
The governor and Los
Angeles city officials are
scheduled to discuss the
offshore oil leases.
which go on sale in
December, during a
meeting Tuesday with
newly appointed lnteriQr
Secretary Thomas 1S.
Kleppe.
Countian
Gets Term
LOS ANGELES (UP[) THE CROWDS who -James Tesla, 36, of
showed up to hear the Los Alamitos has been
British composer-given a three-year sen·
pianist-singer were or· tencein federal prison on
derly, said one police his conviction on
sergeant. "more so than racketeering charges in-
some baseball crowds." volving an alleged Mafia
There was no im· police said!.
mediate explanation of President Ford will
why .she was rele~, speak .it-· a Republican
but 72 hours is the stan-fundraiser 1n Los
dard maximum period a Anceles on Wednesday
p~rson can be held before flying to San
. without being committed Francisco for a similar
voluntarily or by court event at the St. Francis
order, officia\,s said. Hotel, sce,e of the most
Special Agent Robert recent attWnpt On his
Powis said SUnday the life. ·
'
4 Die as Plane
Hits Residence
RIYERSIDE lAP) -A small plane with engine
troublci crashed tHrough pc>wer lines into an ot'-
cupied residence Sunday night, killing all four
persons aboard, firemen said.
The two persons in the house were uninjured.
THE FOUR VICTIMS-a man, a woman, an adol~cent and a small child -were unidentified
pending notification o( kin. ':.
"I thought it was an earthquake or an ex·
pJosion. ''said George Wins, 50,'owner or the home
that was hit. He and hfS wife, Vella, 50, had just
walked out the part of the house clipped by the
single-engine Cessna210.
Lapins, a·memberof the administrative 1tatt a,t
UCLA , said part of his telling fell into his living
room.
MRS. LA.PINS, a hospital technician, said she
tried to phone for help, but the plane had knocked
out all power and phone lines.
Fire Capt. Bob Fisher said either the crash or
the high.voltage power lines kU1ed the people in the
plane. He said he' crawled under the wreckage and
looked into the coekpit. and 'Could not accept iL •· .
ll'o..-a..-aatH_ · •Bllffled~ Police said they ar· pl~~osecutors claimed g· rested eight persons that Testa and other or·
''You couldn 't really tell who they were or what
they looked like, .. he said. "They all looked like
mannjkins. ·· ·
~; COAUNGA <UPI) -The woman police chief or Saturday and lO Sunday, ganized crime figures
this quiet farm community bu her fll'St big case -all for •'marijuana· conspired during 1VJ3 WITNESSES SAID they heard the engine fail-
.. two bombings, obe against an animal control van related'' offenses. and and 1974 to extort pay-ing tust before the crash about a mile and a half ~theotberagainstapatrolcruiser. impounded about 100 ments from •oan sharks, from JUyerside Municipal Airport .. The craft re-
: KayGood. aformerLosAngelesCountysberifC's cars total ror the two bookmakers' and porno-portedlftjadbeenenroutetoAppleValley.
JC}eputy who took the $16,000.a-year job here on Aug. days, citing hundreds of gr-.pbers throughout the The.Natiqn&l TransPortation and Safety Board
1. said she did not have a clue which could lead to others for parking viola· metrooolitan area. was en route .to investigate the cause of the crash,
·the bomber or bombers. The van was ruined two lions. Fisber1aid; )!Weeks ago. The unmanned patrol car was bombed ______ .;._ _____________ _::=:::,:.c=. ______________ I
1twodaysago. ,--------------,---------------------~~~-.. : Mrs. Good said there have been no protests
~ i·against the police or the animal control depart-
' :ment. But, she admitted, "the animal control unit
· .ian'tJhe most popular in town.''
r All Media Show
Presents Awards
A dozen Southern ipcrafts.
California artists have Local honorable men-
Uceived awards forwork ·uon winne1-s were Beth
·in the current Fall All Beaudreau and Barbar.a
MediaMembershipShow Hogg, both of Laeuna ~f the Laguna Beach Beach and graphics
MuseumofArt. artists; and Philip
Local cash award win-Freeman of Dana Point
llers were Charlotte K. incrafls.
Myers of Laguna Niguel The All Media show
Who received $100 in th~ will continue through
painting ca ta gory; Oct. ~ at ~e museum.
,.. a r i a K 1 e i n of 307 Cliff Dnve. Laguna ~apistrano Beach. $75. Beach. Hours are t'.rom
Jraphics· and Donna 11;31> a.m.to 4:30 p.m.
:na ht.,.,;ofEIToro,$40·· daily.Admisslonisfree. -.
Totally~ thaQ any other
The SCHICK Weight loss program ~n't
use pills,."'°" OJ fod diets.
It is boHcl on <omisltnt weight ..du<~on
by Nlieving the DESIRE for fattening
foods ••• a<tually <hanges your eating
habits so pd/will no longer DESIRE fat.
toning f"JPds. I
I "~ ! . ..sa ~1·, . This met.,...· grew out of the some
$6,000.000 reseorch that de¥eloped
the famous Schick Centers ""for the
Control qf S111oklng.
..
ion
cearance
FURTHER REDUCTIONS
have been taken
TODAY
in most departments
SAVE 1/3 to 1/2 and more
., ' ,, •
. Bullock'~. South Co:ui P~aza .. San ~jego ~r~cway a't .Bristol, f>sta M;esa , 556-0611
' . ---~ ... ,.. ~ ., --
SOME QUANTITIES AIRE UMITED!
'·
SPECIAL.! ,
Lace-triirt~ed; long .'.
and lovely rob'es.
'
'l
Feel warm and wonderful> on those
nippy Fa ll mornings whelt you slip
into one of t hese delightful wo me n's
robes. Your choice of t\vO. [~Soft a nd
nice in a blend of 80% ernel, 20'"';;,
nylon Ocece with a tic front a nd lace>·
tri mmcdshawl coll ar.IBJ Button fron t
with accen t ing half-be lt. in lOOcA,
nylon qu ilt. Dainty lace t r im ~ the
Peter Pan collar and ~J eeves.
"CHARCE IT!"
• l'AHOllA•A CIT'/'
• llAN l l llHAllDtNO
• Wf;:llT 1.0. A.I.Ill'
• HU~Nqt'OM kACK
• I ANTA AHA
•
• I · .
• A6
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
i ~:~.!::.~!:~~-~--D!2.~.~!_!!~!~ THIS LATEST POLL SHOWS A LARGE MAJORrTY OF
AMERICANS THINK THEIR LEADERS ARE "OUT
O~ fOUCH" WITH THE PUBLIC.
cmment spending 'in line. When that philosophy was appear.
voiced by county s upervisors four months ago, il had Studying the sex life of mot_hs does sound
an appealing ring lo taxpayers. · ludicrous. But the purpose of this government·
• The idea was to budget requested new jobs, but ·financed study was to find something which would
require department heads to ju.-;tify each position lure male moths away from areas (some in the San
specifically as it became needed. · Joaquin Valley) where infestation was a serious-.
But that appealing ring is hollow now a s each an.d expensive-proble m. .
week supervisors thaw the rreeze to permit county de-An~ t~ere was the program for creating
partment.s to hire more and more new employes. d.t:press1«?D in monkeys. A!I attempt to make our long-. ' tailed pnmates as bedeviled as we humans? Not at
In short, the freeze was a device easily turned in-all. It was a serious attempt to develop animal models
to a power play by supervisors who want a chance to close enough to the human so new methods of combat-
put the squeeze on department heads they don't ting depression could be-studied.
particularly care for. Plenty or others could be pulled from newspaper
Favorites such as Sheriff Bradley Gates seem to pages In recent months. And, sure, s o_me of them ~ill
automatically get all the jobs they ask for. Those out be good examples _of what a madderungly expensive
of board favor such as Chief Probation Officer and wasteful machine they run m Washington.
Margaret Grier ,'are challenged each time. But, as our frie.nd the pro~ess.or sho~s. there. may DO YOU BELIEVE
THAT, SENATOR?
BELIEVE WHAT?
. . well be a worthwhile and obiect1ve proiect behind a But in a lmo~t every case, s upervisor~ eventually politician's easy bid to win a few lines of publicity in
accept the new )Ob request and more bodies s well the the nation's press
ranks of county government, which is now 11,500 '
strong andstillh'FOwing. Wrong Union for CHP.
At Times Justified
A UC ! professor quite correctly pointed out the
other day that the Daily Pilot, like other newspapers,
is inclined to g.i ve space to what appear to be amusing
little items o ut of Washington concerning government
spending on nonsensical projects . .
Senator Proxmire, particularly, is fond of
searching out odd little programs that appear to be
the height of foolishness-and the press is quick to
pick them up and relate to readers what stupid things
are going on in Washington. _ .
, Trouble is, the professor says, a lot or those.silly-
Members of the California Highway Patrol Wisely
have turned aside a sustained drive lo affiliate with
the Teamsters Union. -
CHP officers are understandably frustrated
because they are-by a number of measures-
'underpaid They were the victims of mishandllng by
the Legislature and the state's past two governors.
But joining up with the Teamsters would have put
the CHP in tbe uncomfortable position or patrolling
highways heavily traveled by truckers wbo were
fellow members of the same union.
The rejection doesn't help the officers' pay pro·
lll,ems, but it doesn't create new problems either.
.. . ..
Border Guard
.Draws Tighter
Reagan's
Cash Box
Tops Ford's
Pre.ss Survival
Is Real Threat
' '
I WASillNGTON -The NORAD
radar tracking system, which the
Air Force established to in-
tercept ene m ~ bombers, has
been turned against drug smu&-
glers.
"Operation Startrek," as the
secret spotting system is called,
was put into
.:o((eet by the
Customs
Service Sept.
20. Already,
·tire sophi ~
.sticatedt
radar bas
picked up a
dozen border-
h opp in g
planes, which
used to have easy air access to
the U.S.
Numerous other vehiCtes, ln·
eluding a motorcycle, have so
been intercepted. More 20
suspected traflickers hav been
arrested, and 10,000 ds oC
. high.grade iparijuana h been
seized. The total haul is worth
well over $2 mlllion.
' JUST AS NOllAD would spot
an incoming enemy bomber, its
radar syStern can. also pick up
-smaller 'craft nyi.ng without pre--
filed fiigbtplans. The radar feeds
this information into a computer
bank, which notifies Customs
(JACK ANDERSON)
agents or the plane's exact. loca-
tion.
Then, as at wartime fighter
bases, the Customs pilots
"scramble" and pursue the lW·
known craft.
:Seizures have been made in
Arizona, California and New
Mexico. This has required a uni·
q.ue cooperative., effort between
the Customs Service and Air
Force, supported by both federal
and local authorities.
Under the ··~tartrek " pro·
gram, more than 100 planes have
beeJl targeted as. suspects. Many
were lost at first as the new
system was put into effect. But in
the last few days, tbecoordinalion
improved, and the net has
been drawing tighter on the smug-
glers.
FOOTNOTE: We held up lhis
story until the Customs Service
became: convinced that word of
"Operation S!a1irek" had leaked
out. Comrnissioder Vernon Acree
confirmed the success of the pro-
aram. ''It has exceeded our
highest ex:pect>ations,'' he told us .
''At last we have a handle on the
problem. It's a major
breakthrough.''
Ne.ed Sex Be Dirty?
WASHIN GTON -The stub·
born refusal o( David Packard,
rmance chairman of President
Ford's campaign committee, to
broaden bis razor-thin money-
raising tareet far beyond
Republican fatcats is causing
consternation and anger among
tiome o·f Mr. Ford's political
aides.
.Instead of mass mailings -a
proven fund ·
raising
techniqu e .
which in ·
volves tens -of
thousand or
small donors
-Packard's
soliCitations
so far have
been limited
to a pitifully
inadequate numbe r of party fat·
cats who have received Packard
mailgrams and telephone calls
asking for large contributions.
( EVANS.NOV AK J
The res ult ha s been
catastrophic : o nly $707 ,000
collected, virtually the entire
amoW'lt from well-heeled donors
giving up to-$.1 ,000 each (the legal
maximum by a s ingle
contributor to a s ingle
candidate).
WASHINGTON -Many of us
formerly thought, back in the
days when Spiro Agnew and olher
Nixon administration heavies
.were harassing newsmen, that
the government posed a threat to
the press. But the real challenge
to newspapers, both in the United
States and ·elsewhere it seems, is
economic.
The pret;S in nearly every coun·
try, including the United States, is
faced by soaring costs and slump·
ing profits. And a key question is
whether newspapers can survive
under present conditioos.
Another question being debat-
ed, both here and abroad, is
whether the press can function
with assistance from the state, as
it does in some places, and still re-
tain its freedom.
ONE OF THE bi g problems
confronting newspapers is the de-
mands of labor, which is agitating
for higher wages. In some areas it
also is resisting the introduction
of technological innovations that
would cul production expen-
ditures and reduce the need ror
workers .
These issues, among others, re-
cently prompted the pressmen at
the Washington Post to stage a
strike that sparked an outburst or
violence and destruction.
Rising labor demands are being
aggravated, meanwhile, by the
escalating price of newsprint,
which has doubled within the past
year. Al the sam e time, advert.is·
ing revenue gains have been
slowed, in part by the global re.
cession and in part as a conse-
quence of competition from radio
and television for advertisers'
limited resources. Add to these
woes, at least in the United.States,
( STANLEY J
KAR NO~
ajumpin postal rates.
Thus New York, which in my
youth boasted 10 morning and
evening dailies. now has only
four, and most U.S. cities are one-
newspaper towns. The same sort
of shrinkage has occurred in
Europe .
OVER THE PAST 20 years, the
number or West German.
publishing firms putting out daily
newspapers bas declined from 624
to 421. Nearly every Paris
newspaper is financially in the
red. The prestigious Times of
London is expected to lose $2
million this year, and both the
Loudon Evening News and tile
London Observer are close toeol·
lapse.
The idea of newspapers reeeiv-
ing government aid is anathema
in the United States, where the no-
tion of a totally independent press
is as firmly implanted. as the
sanctity of motherhood. 'Dle pie·
lure in Europe, however, is dir-
ferent .
Most European governments
provide newspapers witb tax
breaks, newsprint subsidies, re-
duced postal rates, loans, grants
and other benefits, some overt
ana others delivered under the la·
ble.
The Dutch government
operates an informal press fund,
rmanced from a five·percent sur-'
charge on radio and television ad-
vertising revenues, in order to
bail out newspapers in trouble.
IN ITALY THE government
Dear
Gloomy
Gos
If LA Chier Ed Davis Is re-
ally after a higher office,
.he should hold out for FBr
director after George'
Wallace is elected Pre5i·
dent.
-M.R.M.
~yo.c-.e.1..-••~W ,....,.._. ...... _,u..rlly,..._t .. .......... -........ s.... ..... ........ ~ c... 0.11,. Pllilt. •
helps the press as well through
newsprint subsidies. The Frencb
"government also assists the press
to the tune or some $ICIO million a year. _
Strings are attached to most oC
these aid programs. So American
publishers are correct. I think, in
spurning the concept of govem-
mentsupport for the press.
The French government ls said
to have played a role behind the · 1 scenes, for example, in selecting
the new ow ner of Le Figaro, a
leading Paris newspaper, after it 4 was put up for sale by its former 1 proprietor.
EVEN IN Sweden, where
political shenanigans are sup-1
posedly rare, the government •
tends to back newspapers that are
loyal to the ruling Social
Democratic Party.
But here in the United States.
where the subsidy approach is un-
acceptable, the answer to the
dileaima is not easy.
One thing the press and publio
can do now, if time still permits, is
lo mobilize available resources to
examine the problem in the hope
that a solution may be found.
For democracy cannot flourish
wit.bout a free press, and to lose
one would be to lose lheotber. I had thought that, with· my
age and experience, I was
beyond embarrassment. but l
was wroni . Having been lured
to a drive-10 fot a showing of th~
film, ''Shampoo,'', I found
myself embarrassed by the ex-
plicitness of the scenes.
( SYDNEY HARRIS)
behavior of bis lQvers.
Jn RmMo .and Julkt, the most
tender scene is played with the
distance of a balCony between
the lovers. Jn The Tempest,
Ferdinand and Miranda are
shrewdly playing a game of
chess. Jn Twelfth Night , Viola's
love for the D\lke is concealed
beneath a boy's disguise. In A..1
You Like It, Rosalind and Orlan·
do merely touch hands. Even in
the fierce and lustlul infatuation
of Antony .and Cleopatra, not a
gesture is made that might of-
·rend a conclave of bishops.
BUT WHEN party officials
close to President Ford try to
explain the fact s of lire to
Packard, the multimillionaire
California industrialist (and
former Deputy Secretary of
Defense) is infuriatingly
patronizing. flis message: J
know better than yob do.
What"'l>ackard fails to
understand tS the enormous rx>klfcal dividt:nds accruing to
any Candidate who collects small
amounts from a large number of
contributors, each o( whom
immediately has a financial
:ttake in the election.
And Housing Costs Go Up •• •
l
l ' '
But I was embarrassed for
the performers, not for myself.
Thal they felt ·
required to
do this was a
1ign of thei r
artistic weak-
ness, not
their power.
And J re·
membered a
Jlne in
FrOhman •s
autobio -
graphy, quoting the late great
actress, Laurette Taylor:
"The mos t serious, tender .
passionate love scenes,'' she
said, ··are those t.hP• are pro·
jected over the footlights
through :suggesUon, without ac-
tual contact .''
AND JT is historically trul'
that the greatest love :;cenes in
the .. world bave always been
played ,free h:om pbyslcol
contr•ct -.,..not because tht
•Ulhonl •!'9 Puritans (there Is a
wllole ' t-!Ck 'didlo11ary 011 SllallnpeMte'1 'bawdy alone>. ·
.bill 'beci~U.. they are penetrat· 1111 obt+-.1'.on ol lluman em~
tlou, aild Jinow that lnan'i
body ii meaningful aily Wheft It ii a<ll¥1led by hit 1plrit.
Sllalrnpftlre Indeed l'ft.!l•ed tbl1 alioYe 11! .other,t. '[,Ills ,
•w.atia!,' whole~ wa1 1
Ille •alllut bn the~ Ea1Ush-
tla1 ata1e, showed a
••• • ••llca~y and --•
YET, ili. all ihese cases -as
in other Sha.kespearean plays -
we know we are in the presence
cl two persons who love each
other physically es much as
emotionally. This ls the purpose
of art: not to e;ive us a clinical
view of a chemical attraction,
or lo titillate us with sexual.
gymnastics that a re more
ludicrous than erotic, but to
gai.n our belief by implication
and l\llfeoti6n.
In fact, it . is one of the
partdoalcal qu•lllies of sex that
the more eccesslble, the less
provoeaU•1; tbe more explicit.
Ille less lolrlclllng; a black silk
nlebtgow:n ls far more sti mulat-
lnf than nudilJ.
Just u a· bad compooer needs
f'uriou. cresl!cindos lo cover the
empline11 and banality Of .h!S
muslc, 10 does a bad writer re-qld,.. absurd physical writhlngs
to muk blo usenUal hollowness
CJ( iplrlt. lni!ecant exposure ol
tile emotio Is ......., than a
moral tran reulon; lt la an.
artlatlc cdm •
•'The trouble with Packard,''
one higb·level Ford·'operative
told~. •'Js that he thlnks like a
dorior, not a collector. and ·
doesn't understand much about
polilics. ''
THE FACT that non -candidate
Ronald Reagan bas been able to
r aise almost $3 for every $4
raised for an incumbent
President hes sent shock waves
lhroogh the President's political
entourage.
.Packard's s kepticism about
the proven political assets of
mass mail-solicita tion is its cost ..
"A very expensive way to raise
money," he has told friends. Bui.
the of!set to cost is the huge
number of grass -root s
contributors making pocket-book
commitments: two-thirds o(
Reagan's 15,000 contributions,
for example, are less t,han $100
'tacll: less than one percent of
Mr. Ford's ar~ under $100 -and
many are the $1,000 legal
maximum.
A footnote: Adding misery to
the Pr .. ldent•s campaign woes
are the fund -raising difficulties
·bring encountered by Pack•rd's
state finance chairmen. Jn one
Southern state. a seasoned
lund·r:l la striking out. "They
HY they' not lnttt<Sted In Ford
beca\&le ey're not aure about.
1111 pollllca," be told~·
To\hjl Editor:
The price ot housing just went
up again. Jn your Oct. 17 "County
Imposes EIR Process Fee," it
explains how builders will now
have to pay $20 an hou.rtolhe F..o-
vironmental Management Agen-
cy for review, refinement and ·
consultation on the environmen-
tal impact reports they are re-
quired to submit.
Not only are the reports ex-
pensive to produce, but govern·
ment employes are not noted for
their speed or efficiency in pro-
cessing, especially at $20 an
hour. And if they don't like the,
EIR they can ask for a new or re-
viled one, causing another added
cost and review .
This only applies to county pro-
perty now, but it probably won't
be"Jong before the cities pick up
oo this extra revenue idea. Irvine already has.
Of course this added coot has to
be passed on to the hapless con·
sumer. With the average house in
Orange County now selling at
$65,000 and interes t rates
between t and 10 percent, this ex-
tra cost added to th<! mortgage
could turnout to be quite a sum.
ls it another form of hidden
taxation? ls there no end in sight
to the wasting of our money by
government demands?
GOLDIE JOSEPH
•
To tho Editor!
Tw .. hundred yun ago, the
.briflnil 13 1tatea produced 1uch fianla u Wublnll(on, Jelfenoo . . . -· .
( MAILBOX )
Letfrrt from reodn1 are wefconw. ·
The rlflht to c01ldcntt lellerr to fit
.space or eliminate ljbf!f ii raf!'r'Wd.
Lettera of 300 words or las will be
gSvn prefernice. AU ldttn nm in-
cmii. lign<llure •ncj maiiiftg oddre,.
but name1 may W tDith1w&d Oil Ye-
quost if ,.f/irient ,..._11.....,m.
Poetry wiU nol be publill>m.. •
Franklin, Hamilton, M:8disorr.
etc., and such monumental de-
cisions as the Federalist
Papers, the Declaration of In-
dependence, the ConstituUoo and
the Bill of Rights.
Two hundred years later,
,Orange County, with a popula-
tion not totally disproportionate
to that the 13 colonies, bas pro.
duced or harbors notorious non-
gian.ts such as Politicians, Dr.
Loua s Cella and land baron
Richard O'Neill, both moot COO·
spicuous by unbelievably gross
monetary contributions to local
politico:;. : Jn an0:ther category,
Supervisor Robert Battin and
·c.ooJressman Hinshaw, both un-
der indictment; an Assessor con:
victed of improprieties: an ex·
Pf"'Sident driven f romolficeand a
few of his notorious disbarred as-
sociates.
AS FOR Orange political
literary County output, the re-
cord Is virtually void of any
1l1nificant local written con-
trir,ut.lons of even minuscule lm-pot\ance.
la two c~ntu.rtu.-we have
moved from men or colossal ac-
compli shments to those of
Lilliputian politica l mentalities 1
unprincipled knaves, and practl:
lioners or a polillcal philosophy
that · money can buy anything •
particuJarlypoUtlcaloffice. , ' 1 In the circumstances lt is
perhaps ironic that t.:Vo in·
divlduals who ha•e slithered Into
leadership or the Orange Count,y
Bicentennial Com mlttee are Dr
Louis Cella and Rlcbanl O'Neill'.
Such a travesty bodes ill for com-
mencement or the lhlrd one bun·
dn!d yean of our Republic.
E.DAYCARMAN
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robm rl. Wttd, Publb .....
Thoma1 K11vil. Edilor
Barbora Kr~bich,
Edttorfcl Poge ._-ddor
Ttle editorial p1ge or the Dally Pilol seeks to infor m and stimulate readers by presmUng
on thlt page divene comrntntary on topics or Interest by 1)11dlC'.iit·
ed rolumnlsts and C'artoonlsts by P!'OV,tding a ronrm for re~rs·
v1ew1 and by presenting this newsp1per•1 oplnibn1 .and Mle11
on curre-nt topics. The editorial <>Pinions of the Dally Pilot appear·
only in thoed.ltoc181 tolumn at the 1
top Of the · P•I•· OpinlOfll ex· prcssl'd by· the columnists and
cartoonists and letter writers are-tb~r own and no endorsement <A
thtir vftw1 by the Daily Pllot
'lllould belnf1~....i ..
:Monday, Oclo~r 27, 197~·
,
Th
banU these t
check.!
cbecki o\f
new I'
banks
saving
ur
CJ( YOUl
mooei
comp:
If
writte;
· comp{
tral)lf
Uie m
practi
instat
and fa I Tl
NO W
count
teresl
that ti
indivi
T
perin
Ham1
passe
ther< s
stitut
banlo
legis,'
Depo
-pr•
I
begai
Kath
Dosi<
were
55,00 r
as th
COWi'
ThriJ
lions
COUii , ' . I -J<
Miss
balar othe:
bala
• ' beln
-It
acc:c
'
like
as <
Saving~ Cheeking
•
'Psychic T o ur'
Called a Hoax
•
DAJI. Y PILOT A 1 ' !'"
THANKS ..• L ines Blurring,
·in B ank Use WASIUNGTON (\)Pl) -The Federal Trade
Commission has ordered four West Coast travel
agencies that promoted psychic surgery tours to the
Pbilippinea to stop tbe trips and advige c;ustomera
tbewholetbinl wuahoax.
South Orange County, for the wonderful acceptance of our
new dining addition.
' -
By Tbe ANO<latocl Press
'111e lines of dillinction separating commercial
banks and thrift institutions are becoming blurred
these days. Consumers soon may be able to write
checks on savings accounts and receive interest on
cbeckinc accounts. 1
one step in this direction came Sept. 2 witfi a ,
new Federal Reserve Board regulation allowing
banks to offer bill-paying services using funds from
savings aecounts.
UNDER TllE NEW RULE, YOU can pay many
of your bills automatically by having the bank take
.money out or your savings acroµnt and send it to
companies you specify.
If your bank offers this service, you can sign a
written contract giving the bank the names or the
companies or individuals to whom funds should be
traJ}lferted, the amotmt to be paid to each and the
frequency of the pay.
,------~·---., · ment.s.
( CONSVME., ) Note: Although you
" can make changes in the
-list of "'ho you want to be
l
UPIT ........
B e«rothf!d
Anwar Sadat's
youngest daughter,
'Gehan, 15, has
become engaged to
Mahmoud Osman,
22, son of Egyptian
Reconstruction
Minister Osman A.
Osman.
The tours involved visits to "surgeons" who
"operated'' on the patimts without incision11 and re-
moved diseased organs by menlal powers.
AN FTC LAW JUDGE EARUER this year
ruled thal the scheme was "pure and unmitigated
taken'.'' One defendant, GEM Travel Service Inc. of
San Francisco, and its officers and stockholders,
1.aurence C. Marquei and Marian E. Butterfield,
appealed.
THE FTC REJECTED THEIR appeal saying
"because we are dealing here with desperate con-
sumers with terminal illnesses who want to believe
that 'psy('hic surgery' will cure them. no a~ount of
disclosure will suffice to drive home the point that
all 'peychic surgery' is nothing but a total hoax.''
This community has give "Bob's". In San aemente. a
tremendous welcome. and we feel, we owe all our friends a
public, Thank You! Pemaps you like the new "Bob's", because it Is a little
ditterent, a relaxing, comfortable. luxurious place to bring
guests or the family, for breakfast, lunch or dinner and all at
Cottee Shop prices.
"Bob's" Is one of the very few restaurants that still prepare
fresh foods daily, rolls, pastries, pies. nut bread and special
entrees. All of these items are prepared by our Master Chef
'Steve" on our premises. ·
Again, we would like to say "Thank You" lor your response
to the new "Bob's·· is deeply appreciated.
SATURDAY SPECIAL
Special leCJilnn9 HoY. '· 197 5
paid and when you want ----------
Also named in the order were Travel King lnc.,
and ita successor Ramble Travel and Tours In('., of
Belleview and ~attle, Wash., the latter of which
did business until May 1974 ; Phil-Am Travel Agen-
cy Inc. San Francisco; and Yuda GaJazan. Nyla
Ford, Ronald Brown, Adeline C. Heredia and Emile
H . Heredia, officers olthe various companies.
TERIY AKI STEAK DINNER $645
For Two -Only the money to be sent, this sort of system is most
pradical for bills such as mortgages, rent or loan
installments that are the same amount each month
and fall due at regular intervals.
THE NEW SERVICE IS SIMILAR to so-called
NOW -Negotiated Order of Withdrawal -ac-
counts allowing depositors to write checks on in-
terest-bearin~ accounl5. The maior cliff PrPnri-iit
that the bill paying service does not involve writin(
Etiquette for Lobbyists
' BOB'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
SACRAMENTO (AP> home lrom the s10 limit place before the political 1409 S. B Camino Real • San Clemente
-A lobbyiat can invite~ that a lobbyist can spend reform act went into ef. [~§§§§§~~~~~~==================~ legislator home 101 din-on a lawmaker each feet.
individual checks. ner as lon1 as the month. C L I N E ( R ·
legislator follows rules of Commissioners also Northridge) mated his [ )
etiquette set down by the decidocl tbat ii was legal Brittany spaniel with a S. J. HAYAKAWA
Fair Political Practices for Assemblyman Bob dog owned by Leon _ _
The NOW program already is in effect on an ex-
perimental basis in Massachusetts and New
Hamplhire and House and Senate committees have
passed legislation that would allow such accounts in Commission. Cline to sell five puppies Henry. lobbyist (or the
The commission said sired by a lobbyiat's dog Southern California Ga.s
SUMS.It up.
. In the DAILY PILOT
the rest of the country.
SUch accounu could be offered by all thrin in-
stitutions -commercial banks, mutual savipgs
banks and savings and loan associations. Under the
legislation pending in Congress, the Federal
Depoeit Insurance Corp. would set the interest rate
that a legislator could at-_ _:bec=:•:us=•..:lh=•..:m:.:a::lin:· ::g:.took:.::::__.:.Co:::··~l:u:.t:.:N:.:.::o.:.•::em:::.:b:.:e::r.:.. __ L-------------------------------· tend a dinner or other
-probably about 5 percent.
MASSACHUSEris AND NEW Hampshire
began_offering the NOW accounts in January 1974.
Katharine Gibson of the Federal Reserve Bank in
Boston reported that as of the end of July 1975. there
were 504,000 NOW accounts in Massachusetts and SS,ood in New Hampshire.
NOW accounts pays percent intere.st, ~e same
as the maximum allowed on a passbook savings ac·
count in a commercial banJi:, Miss Gibson said.
Thrill institutions like savings and loan associa-
tions are allowed to pay SV• percent on passbook ac-
<OWlts. . The balance on which the interest is paid varies
r -just as it does with regular savings accounts.
' Miss Gibson said some banks offer interest on the
balance from day of deposit to day or withdrawal,
others calculate the benefits on an average daily
balance.
THER E IS STILL ANOTHER kind or service
being offered by savings banks in New York Stale
-t he payment order account. The legality of such
' accounts i's being challenged in the courts.
The payment or4ers look like and can be used
like checks and the accounts are basically the same
as checking accounts. They do not pay interest.
meet
social gathering at a lob-
byi st 's home if the
legislator brought a gift
or ;nvited the lobbyist to
dinner in return.
THAT MAKES t he Job-
b_yist ·s invitation re·
ciprocal instead of an
outright gift. said com-
mission spokesman John
Keplinger. He added that
the ruling "attempts to
recognize normal social
contacts and old
friendships.··
The ruling also
stipulates that lobbyists
can·t pay for the oc·
casio n with an
employer's money or de-
duct it frow taxes as a
business expense.
THE CASE WAS a
s pinoff of last year·s
Prop. 9, which was
aimed al limiting lob·
byists' influence over
public officials . The
commission's 3·1 vote
exempted dinners at.
Chef Bruce Timson
and learn to create
gourmet dishes
i •
Find out what's cooking at the . M ay Co. With Chef
Bruce Timson, a gourmet cooking instructor. Chef
Bruce will be using Le Creuset French cook w are to
create a superb 3<ourse meal. Just follow the won -
derful aroma to our COok Shop in the May Co. store
nearest you.
West minster, Tuesday, Oct. 2812:q!! p.m.
M,AV C O
Westminster Store Only
I
One of a series of repons by Harvey A.Proctor, Chairman, SOulhem California Gas Company.
We don't like to wo
..• but facts are facts.
you
Remember the advcrtio;;cmcnt
to the right?
It \Vas first published five
}"C:lTS ago.
For that Ion~ an<l lnn,-..:t r \',t".\'L'
hcl'n \\ ;irn1n~ ~cluth i.:r n
C:tl ifornians :ibout an :ippro;1ch·
in~ n.1tur;i \ g:ts ~horl.lgl·
N:i tural gas supplies :ivaiL1blc
to U'> fron1 California sourcec;
have Jech ncd 80 per 1;cnt 1n 1 he
I ris t six years.
Supplic~ from our n10-.1
i1npor1ant out-of·.':.tatc :.uuJLC"
arc being cut ba ck by 11 per cen t
this yea r.
f\nd '"c'vc been told to cxpci.:t
n1orc cu1s.
The Southern C:tliforniil G :1..,
Company supplies nround 12
million southern Cnlifor11inn:.
\vith n:ttural gas.
Approxlm:itcly 95 per cent of :ill hon1c:. in -.ou~IHl'I\
California arc heated by n:11ur;1 I g;1s.
So1nc 92 per cent tisc gas to heat their \V:lt er.
More than 75 per cent use it to cook.
Thousa nds of businesses and shop!' :ircn't cq111pr•i.:d tP
use any otl1er fuel except ga s. And n1:tny 111Uu-.11 11·· 11'-t' 1t
both as fuel , ond :'I!> :i T:l \<I 1n11teri:i \ for the pnlLlul 1 ... 1\icy
manufacture.
!>ources. Bu t that by itstlf won't
do the job either. There simply
i !>n 't enough available.
\Ve plan to build a pl3nt 1hat
makes sub~titutc >:;as from coal.
But \1vcr 100 approvals have
been nei.:dcd fro1n more than 40
d1 ffcrcnt government agc n1;ics,
and thlt takes time.
Even v.•hcn cun1plctcd, thi ~
Sl-h11lion pllnt will supply only
.1 port ro n of our gas needs.
We're rcsc;irL.hing the
J evelup n1cnt of new sourceo; of
energy, like sol;i r encr~y. bu1
"l.ICllll!>l~ telJ U.., TC.l~llll;i\l!y
pt 11;ed energy f rum thes.c source~
1 n qu:int 1ty I!> dL"L.adcs :l\\':ly.
\-Vc'rc ncgou.11i n~ 10 buy
n:11u1.1 l s:.:is fro111 1\l:isk;i. And
\\"C 0i l" ltx 1k1nj! LlltO !>Upphe:. Lil
C.in:n.l:i, lnJonC!>i<l, .1nJ Sout h
f\n1cr1c:i .
l\ut wl·'rc 1q1 •l?,;:Ji nst ~tiff
con1pctition fro1n both do1nc sl1 L.
.1nd f<1rl'lgn bu\"er-. \Vlio :i\<;0 badly nccJ th:it ~:is.
·to get !-\111111.: id the g:i~ he re. pl;int.., v.•ill h;ivc to be hui lt t11
I 1q11tfy 1 he )..:.1 ... -.1 1 1l c.1 11 he sh1ppcJ hy LN(~ ~hlp to C.111 forn1:i .
rhcn w t·' re g1 i1 n ~ tn h:ivc tn hu ilJ f ac 1I1 t ie o;, in C;il 1 forn ia
l(l JCl.P!lVCft thl" liqunl t11 j!:l<...
What is the solution!
It'" .11ni x of :ill thcsccffor!!l.13ut in the critical near future.
1f S<.'11nu-. s!HJ1l .1.:.:c.., .u c to he :ivoidcd, lar,';C·sc:i lc new su 11r!JL.,
nf g.1-.. ;i1\· rhc only :in-.\Vl"T Cold boaxsand lostjobs. /\ nJ \vi.:·rc 11or\,111~, I 11 r inu:.ly, :it gcttin~ you th:it ~.1<;.
We've already had 10 cut back supplyini.; n.1tur.d .r.:i-. to \\'\.•'vc "l! 1 cd C:ildur 111.i, ,111J v.•c believe \~·c'vc se rved it well.
some companies-those th at c:tn convert to oihcr f ucl -... Bv for 111nrl' than \llfl yc1r-.. \Ve intend td goon ~crving )'OU dcspllc
1979, \YC'll h:tvc to st:trt cu1t1n ~ h.1ck :.upplics tn -.on1c the oh:-.1;11.:]c-., J c:.pne th\· problctns.
customers \Yho arc not equ 1 ppcd to convL·rt to ut ht·r luc l-. -\Vt• c.1n ,1v11id thc \•Ju1 ~t c.ffccts of th~ n .1 tur:il g:is shoru.gc.
if \Ve don't get DC\\' supplies 1n ti1nc. It nci:ll not h.1ppen!
Companies that arc fn rccd to turn tn n1urc cxpcn'>i vc Juclo;; \\c t.ln ... t:ivenll J'1h ln,'-<.'s, cold home-., .1n<l thc heavy
arc bound to raise 1heir prices. con1r1hut1ng to 1n flat111n. co.<;l nf cunvi..:11111~ :1ppl1.1ncc1' and hcatini;: systems to n1orc
Businesses that de~nd on n ,\tu ra 1 g;1.., cxc 1 u~1 vcl y n1ay c~ pcns1 vc !01 Ill" nf cnl"r~v.
experience ~hutdo\,·n:-.. Th:it 1ne:'ln" heavy 1oh 1n-.-.l·• .. ----• Ht11 10 ... ui.:L.cl·d, \VC n1u~t have thccoopcra11on ot
Homes th.it a1e h eated by n.n u r:il J!J" nrc goin.c. to 6 i.tovi.:rn n1cn 1.11 off 1ci a ls, the regu 1 atory a gene le~,
experience cold days. ..:on-.u1ner griiup~. nn<l all others involved. W~vc been urging con&erv.otion i:tnd \'o'C continue \Ve can :-olve this problcn1, nnd with your help
to urge it. we shall!
Conserv11 tinn must he :t p:irt of our di11 lv l1vc>1: For 111orc information on the natural gas shortage,
B\11 conscrv:tt inn :ilnnc can't !illlvc the prohlc111 . QCS write: Southern Co.lilornia Gas Company, Box 54093,
\Vc'rc seeking n1 orc nt1tural gas (rom domcsttc Los Angclci;, California, 90054. ·
Southem California Gas Company
Kupinc Y!!U informed is also part of our $UV1ce. • 11' -
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Al DAILY PILOT Mond•y. 0t1obtf 27, 197S
,;Q;.;;U;,;;E;.;EN.;.;l;..E ____ _...;a;.:.Y..;.P.;;.hi;;.l ..;.l";;.'•;;.•l;,;;a.-nd-,i Dry B r ush, No Rain
.. Shi! watches game shows all day -she's become a
slor('house of trivia, and she 's driving me bananas~" ..... , ... .,... __ ... ., ..... _ -
County Blaze
Danger Jumps
ORANG E -Orange County is facing the worst
brush fire h azard condition of the year, according Lo
coWJty tire department Capt . Bruce Turbeville.
••THE SITUATION IS getting worse by the hour
and we a re currently on a 'Red Fl ag Alert' status, ....
Turbeville said. "When a red fl ag condition is
called, that's about as bad as you can gel in terms of
fire danger.'' .
The cause is a combination of tittle or no rain
and the seasonal Santa Ana winds that blow in ol(
the desert and dry out brush and limber in the coun-
ty's back coun try.
Turbeville said Cleveland National Forest land
has been closed to the public since July 1 and the
threat or fire has mowited ever since.
"WE'RE NOT Ot.rr OF danger until we have a
few reall y big rain storms,'' be said.
• '
2 Theater Operators .
Face OC Porno Airing
ORANGE COUNTY
$60,000
Offered
In Awards
SANTA ANA -'I"'!'
brothers who operate •
chain of t heater•
tbroucbout Southern
Ctllfomia have been or-
dered to face a pre·
lil!li.Daey bearine Nov. 12
on felony charges flied
alter Juvenlles allegedly
viewed a ''hard core''
movie at a Santa Ana
theater.
Santa Ana M:unl clpat
Court Judge Edward
Lajrd set the hearing
date for James Uoyd
Mitchell, 3J, and Artie
Mitchell, 29, bolb of San
Franci:lco. 'they pasted
bail of $25,000 each after
being booked into
Orange County Jail .
ANAHEIM -A total
of $60,000 including a
$10,000 o.utstanding T H E BllOT H E llS a.wa~d ~nd l ~o $5,000 were i d entified as· s~1al Judges awards, operators. of the Santa
Ana Theater in Honer
Plaza. They face
charges ol conspiracy r.o
~tribute to the detin·
quency of minors and the
exhibition of harmful
matter to minors.
J a iled on identical
charaes were four
tllealer employes: dJa.
trict man•aer Charles Landrvm Benton, 33.
theater m a n afel"
Jonatllan Fincher Hoya,
20, cashier Joan Darcy.
J9, and concessionaire
Nettle Na .. , 59, all ol
Sant• Ana.
·.----v.t.LUAU COUPqtt•---.
I UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT I LIT'S HT .t.c:quAIHllD
I CAR WASH & .EWAX I
I 69¢-... -•i I .._ s1 ;z1t Cs5'•• o.•·~
I COMPAllE OU. MOllL •AS l'lllCi5 •• I 1 .. 11.c:.w.,. OPIM 1 DI.TS
I c!!.'".;::;';., 642· 1993 I C:..lf<-J L----1~,.,.,,..,.71 , ___ _
I
For the Record
County Fire Warden Ca rl M. Downs has called
in additiona l wildfire fighting equipment from 'l Northern California to serve as a Santa Ana task
force.
Downs s aid he calls in the additional equipment
after the fire danger in the north is reduced by early
season rain and snowfal ls.
wtll 1 be. presented to ·
Oran&e County uraaniza. ~ii:""""j;:T:;.::·;::;;:~;:~;:-;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;i~I t.ions during Dis-1
Db•ol•tlon• Of llfarrlage
l:11Wf'H le'1•m1Mr If
NIODR, J•v M . J r, end Miry LOU
Rover,, G•I• Owen •nd Deen•
C.tt.rlne
M l,..~. M•t llyn A•u•e e11d Jol'ln
Edl'lf.,.d
Si!OQwkt , Dor!M J••n end O•vld Roy
Good•, Joh" Tl'l11m•s e11d M<l11 c;.,,....1o1 ...
.,. Fo11.Jol'lllJ .~JUC1ill'I Cl\tr,.._.
"" NIRlnM". fl.J. '1c. •nd "'" '--" Noel, W•tler lr•ln '"" ""'•sl'I•
P91rkl• Deaths Rltlll,..., $VS"' •nd Je.,.,.S HtM1
11Vlcco1m, fumit 11•nc1 Triemei R.
RQdltmen, ,,,..,y Lo...ls• •lld LOU•)
Els he O.v•d ew •n *'''· P•l•ki• L. lfld Tl'lom.ls s . I • c;;. Foil••. Sl'lir1•1 Ann •nd Etnet ..-d E'f9ebt-
NASSA h Andre-. flev.rly 8r_,. •nd !.tMllty U, Ba am as ... """""' (AP) -E n riqu et a O.vldt.on, OoUQl•s Ro11 ;mdH.Jr"et •-b Bo b if ( Hertf\, SPM 1I• J11n end &-rn1rd
.:Jiii;: ue11 H • 78, w eo JllMPh the president O( the rum· S-nlek.JMllllotVM•fldGuyAl!rn
k. B d . r· c-1-. -•!e E. •nd Mk-Io. ma lng acar 1 1rm, S<""'<'•r, J•1111 Lind• •n<1 St•...,.
Jose M. Bos ch, died Llllya 8 , ••• , •
S d r Gtrroull•. erl)t•• . ..,..,, ,,.,..., . atur ay o c ancer at G«••u Ol•n G••9""'Y •na Ketni.M her hom e in Nassau. ,.,,.rv · Mrs. Bosch, was closely ~;:,.,...nis. Robert Leon •nd ,.,,.,1
associated with the de· u Por11,0o,,...R,;mdE•,.....M. velopment of the firm cr.err1 , S.lld•• L-•nd a.n1am111 A. • Mlrtln, C.ne ltae ancl Ml<n..I Aft.
CHARLESTO N, S.C.
(UPI) -The 22·year-old
niece of Sen. Ernest F.
Hollings ( D-S. C. >. com-
mitted suicide early to-
day, authorities said. An·
na. Parsley Hollings was
found with a gunshot
wound in the head.
MIAMI !U PI ) Fun-
eral ser vices we re held
today for Kenneth Roy
Rralk. 62, a daredevi l
-stunt pilot of aviation's
barnstorming era. who
died Friday after a long
illness. During the lP>s.
-Bralk traveled obout the
cou ntr y , stunt-flying,
walking on wings while
in fli g h t a nd diving
planes under bridges.
8AL11.·IERGERON,
FUN!a.AL HOME
Corona dEM Mar 673-9450
Colla Mes. 646-2'42'4
BEU BROADWAY
MORTUARY •
110 Broadway
Costa Mes.a
642-9150
McCORMICK
MOftTUARY
Laguna Beech
'494-9415
San .l\len Capistrano
'495-1776
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach,
c.lllornla
944-2700
,_EK FAlltLY
COLONIAL FUNEllAL
HOM!!
7801 Boru Ave. w-.. ~52•
·-· ..Vrrl.....,, Lois A. and James E
c..mt>r,., Robt-rt Josirpl'I •nd !>.oNlr•
"""rlir .
Elllol, Wllh•I" E1>r<1eSI •ncl AMI El·
·~ Nlcl'IO/s, ~•<l'M Marlir •nd Robt'rt
Htrold
Ferre, Lll'Y R. •Ml Oorh J .
H1rdy, Mlro•r•I Joyce •nCI .Joron
l ..,_Hyll
R•mmlno, S1'11r on D1tll.1r •nd
Wllli•mJ•mn
ThkJPtn, 8-1• Jiii •ncl 0 1vid 8n.-:I
1(•11ff, J-""""'Id R•vmoncl F. ~es, Est.r Mid J•mes
VeMy, R0<1>eHe MM •nd All'ICllll ,,..
0 11111, L.ucre1i• G•ll and w11111...,
"'~" c.ott,....., Ct>er~I end Mer~ A
Long{)reke, (lll'ly Sue •rid Geol'!l!'
Oanltl
fpbjn, JCll,.frl"" JN" Ind L1ui.~
Trevor
Ertlng•on. Sylv l1 Eli11betn end
TI!On'Ns PllH
Stoclol•. Aobeft Edm1111d •nd 8.
....,_lie ' HCllM;I-, Wllll•"' ROY tnd \/1Ck11Slw
Wilton. 6•rbar• Ann •nd Ed•anf ,...,,,,.m•"
8'~1tt. J~queUne c . •nd OwlQPll M.
P UBLIC NOTICE
•IC:T1TIOUSaUSINl:SS
NAMI: STAT I MINT
Tllll lollowf119 Ht"50ol'I is dol"'Cll DUsl·
NISH:
PAC I F IC AUTOMOBIL E
CLASSICS, 12~ W. 1601 St., COi.ie Mtw.
CA. '1•17 '
MlcNel C¥1 Pokot11y, Q t ......,,..._
CU,_,..,, LOflO 8"'cll, CA, a t• I
Tnh IM.1-Is condll<tN "' ..-In-I dlv~I,
Mk Net Ctf't Poltot"Y
Thl1 llM•menl ••1 tlled 'lllltll 111e.
CDunly Cleric ot DtM'\911 CO...ntv on Cc ·
~1."1$. ·-~·JMCI 0rtnf' Co.st 0.lly Pllof,
on.•. tl, "°· 11. 1tts 111>-1s
P UBLIC NOTICE
Orange County will receive an additional fiv e
fire engines, two bulldozers and assorted additional
equipment lo be based in Orange, Yorba Linda, El
Toro, Irvine Lake, Trabuco Can yon and San Juan
neyland 's 1975 Com-
munity Service Awards
Progr am.
In addition, 40 cash
grants of $1 ,000 each will
be offered . Four
awardees will be chosen
for each of ten cale~ories Capistrano .
-cultural, educational,
Assessor Probe
Expansion Asked
service for youth, ac-
complishments by yooth
g r oups and s pecial
health services.
Also, support groups,
s o ci al c o mmunity
service, civic communi-
ty service, environment
and ec ology and
dive rsified community
service.
SANTA ANA -The
state Board of Equaliza-
ti on, whic h is a lready
auditing selected lax ac·
counts in the Orange
County Assessor 's Offi ce
as a test of the county's
assess m ent r a tio, has
been asked to ex pand its
efforts .
The cou nty Board of
Super vi sor s h as a p·
proved the expenditure of
$3,600 to pay the slate
auditors to perform a re-
gul ar annual audit of
selected county accounts
atlhesame time
IN A LETTER t o
supervisors. acting as-
sessor Elme r Zi mmer
said the presence of the
state fin ancial exP.erts in
his orfice will factlitate a
much less costly annual
audit.
The state board began
acheckof the county's as-
sessment r atio when it
was l ea rned several
months ago th at some
property was not being
taxed based on an as·
sessed valu ation of ex act-
ly 25 per cent of the pro-
perty's total a ppraised
valu e
Preliminary checks in·
dicate that over a period
of years . some properly
has been taxed on an as-
sessed valu e s li ghtly
below 25 pe rcent and
oth er s s lig htly higher
lhanlhe median fi gure.
The $10,000 award will
be granted lo the or-
ganization in Orange
County which achieved
the q1ost exceptional and
productive community
service program during
1975, while t he two $5,000
special awa rds are for
organizations which pro-.
vid e d th e mo st in·
novative proj ect un-
dertaken in 1975 and the
best community service
of continuing nature.
An y o r g aniz a t i on
MAX INE MA NISS, as-located in Ora nge Coun-
soci a t e Co u n t y Ad -ty which sponsors and
ministrative offi cer, said carries out community
Tuesday the latest re-ser vice activities as a
quest from Zimmer has part or its program is
nothing to do '-"ith the eligible for an award. a u~i t or a.ssess m ~nt All particiDJtting or-
rat1os or Wllh naggll).I,, ganizatiOOI Wffi h ave an
proble ms connected lo 1opportunity, '-to 'r eceive
wrongdoing , by fo,ri;n~r the out_stan41n, award
a ssess or s off ice '8Jld the special-judges'
employes. awards.
"
A creative
career fo r
en & wom en
Sl'lart t erm or v-Courw
fQo l\Mlx.We Ill Arla 0.0.M
DE51Gn Plfllfl DE51Gn Plf!Zfl
•
200 Newport tenl" Or.
&ufle 200 l
Newport Beach, Cf
PtiQne; 640-0500 m • DE51Gn PLfllA DE51Gn pffilf1 I
ORA NGE -Chapman
College 's Speech and
Hearing Clin ic is open
between 9 a .m . and 6
p.m . Mondays through
Thursdays, according to
Edith M . Schwartz,
clinic director.
A!'<4 ~« 11~.j!.I Nr~ TH! 'It I'. •i, (. 1 :-··········· .. ············ ......................
THE EUCLID FOOT CLIMIC
Mf (II( A l ( ~ IN I(
FOR THE PRACTICE OF
FOOT OATtlDP£01CS' COARECT1VE FOOT SURG!RY
CHILDREN ANO ACXJL TS
Additional information
about the community
s ervice is avai lable
through the director at
633-81121,ext.395.
DlllCTOR! CONSUi.TANT: ~AlOILl!OHS. M 0 . F A A F P. MILTON JAC08SOH. OP M.
10990 WARNER AVE., FOUNTAIN VALLEY
TL t'J.1945
Like To Hear More About the
TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION '" PROIRAM?
As
Taught By
MAHARISHI
MAH ESH
YOGI
Free
Introductory
Lecture
LAGUNA BEACH
T-. Od. 21 • 7\JO .....
lel)zz• s.edl We U.1•r
l ll Gf1 ... ,....
MISSION VIEJO
T-.Od21 ·1-
MllOIOll ""lo H19li Schol RM. 305
25025 Cllrf-Drf,..
IRVINE
Wod. 29 ·I,....
.... tff..:la ,. ..... .,,..
c.t .... .-c ;w•
NEWPORT BEACH
Wod. Od. 2' • • c M•l•lt"'I Scltoel .......
M...t ..... &lnlM
SAN CLEMENTE '
WM. 29 • 2 ..... & 11ton. JO• IPA s.. a ..... ._.. Clllt
IOJ .... Pko IA~*-l .. mtl-1
For ""''P"-ulfl7·t721 w4tt-27
• I • i • : : : • : : • : : : • • :
•
SILENCE
•
IS ' I' ti ·• 1" ,( ,I
~ •
GOLDE:N I • '
~
• • • "
" ' NOT ALWAYS!!
The City of Costa Mfta wants to
hecr ·y-oplnlmi! Diil loig the Hiit
year the City wlll recelYe OYer
$500,000 dollars Iii Federal fwnds to
MYoff to housing mtd COiiM:uilty ..
Yelopment needs, prhnarlly far
persons of low mtd IllOderate inc-.
luf, what are Ille ftffds? Y .. CMI
Mlp!
HOW?
ly attending o puYc clSCllSllon of
lhe City's housing mtd cw1-=nlty de-
Yllop..t Ilffds.
WHEN?
OCTOBER 29 -NOVEMBER 4
6:30 P.M.
WHERE?
City Holl Councl O.s::bcts 77 Fair DrlYe
WHY?\
If yw ......... wt MOW,._ w117 ..
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f
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•
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~ • l
J
t-,
~
f.
t ~
f
•
•
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I
Don't just sit
there
small
on your
fortune •••
1-
•
• • • •
Look around your house and 9ara9e and you'll probably discover you have a
mountain of oldies but 9oodies you could sell. Move that mountain.
· Call a friendly ad-visor at the Daily Pilot. Use the direct line.
Thousands of ready-to-buy ad readers are "shoppin9 the ads in the Daily Pilot
every day. Many are ea9er to buy just what you have to sell;
Advertise in the Orange -Coast Newspaper with ~ -=....iilliar6im.-.--
Classified Ad Line 642-5678 DAILY PILOT
.. \. ~ . ---. • •
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• A 10 DAIL y PILOT
Just Ran the Plays,
UPI T•I.,.-•
OAKLAND'S TONY CLINE (84) GRABS QB BOBBY DOUGLASS (10) AS HE TRIES TO SET UP.
Sports Clipped Slwrt
Kings Spank North Stars
INGI.EWOOD -1..os Angel es
Kin gs coach Bob Pulford hopes
his team's last outing 1s a sign of
thi:igs to come.
"l feel that this ~ame and our
next three home gamf'S are all
very important." Pulford said
after the Kings had whipped the
Minnesota North Stars 4-2 Sun-
day night at the Forum.
"I hope we can start on a ni ce
long winning streak now. If we
can win three or our four upcom-
ing home games, it could be the
shot in the arm we need ...
The King s. now 6-4. host
Washington Tuesday ni~ht , then
also play Pittsburgh cand Atlanta
at home before they have to hit
the road again.
Prinre11• l"all11
WNDON -Princess Anne·s
horse collided with her husband's
horse during a cross-country
rompetition Sunday, and s he was
knocked to the ground but not
hurt.
The 25-year.otd princess fell off
her horse in competition at Long
Buckby. in Northamptonshire.
The (all came while the couple
was representing the royal
military academy, Sandhurst.
Their team finished 15th out or 40
competing.
Anderson Hired
CINCINNATI -Sparky An-
derson has been rewarded for
piloting the Cincinnati Reds to
their first World Series title in 35
years.
The 41 ·year-old Anderson has
signed a new two-year contract
e>ttending through the 1977
season.
Demp11ey Unrhanged
NEW YORK -Jack Dempsey,
the former world heavyweight
boxing champion. was reported
in stable condition early today at
New York University ~fospital.
A hospital spokesman said that
the 8()-year-old Dempsey, who
held the title from 1919 to 1926,
Cancer Kills
Race Driver
R ace driver Jimmy
Caruthers, who returned to
~competition after being
' hospitalized with cancer last
winter. died or the disease
Sunday at Tustin Community
Hospital. Hew as 30.
was resting comrortably and his
condition w<1 s unchangl'<l since
he was admitted e<.1r/y Saturday.
Demps ey·s family h<1!-, declined
to disclose any details or the ill-
ness.
Dibb,.ftolb
TEHRAN -F.ddie Dibbs upset
defending champion Guillermo
Vilas of Argentina 6·3, 6-1 in tht•
s emifinals of the $100 ,000
Aryamehr tennis tournament
Sunday.
Solomon Win•
PERTH. Aus tralia -.. l<.1rold
Solomon beat Sandy Mayer 6·2,
7·6. 7.5 Sunday ;;ind won the $7 .000
first prize in a $46 ,000 indoor ten·
nis tournament.
Wo111et1's Golf
RANCHO SANTA FE -Mary
Rea Porter of Phoenix relin·
quished all but a stroke of a seven.
stroke lead, but then recovered to
tum back a late challenge rrom
veteran Donna Caponi Young
Sunday and win the $53,000 Ladies
Classir.
Golf Winners
ORl.A~DO . Fla. -Getting
their birdies in batches Sunday,
J im Colbert and Dean ReCram
turned bark all challengers to
win the $200,000 National Team
Championship at Walt Disney
World.
1'he sav.'ed·off shotmakers -
Colbert is five .feet-eight, and
Ref ram is two inches shorter -
fired a best.hall 64 on the Disney
Magnolia course in the final
round to post a tournament re·
cord 36·under-par 252
C.Olbtrl·R•l••m. '10,000
Si!lOrO·R•O'll•dO, \10,~
Col•Sc.111". ''o.~ MltctMU-GlltMrl, \S,lll
RuOolpt\·SlkH. '4,ln
MU~-Jont'I,, .,_,Jl2
Wa;ltln~·W.cfkln~. '3.•92
5nN(t.hed, '3.4'2
w 11i.nr.r11·AObon. U.tJr
Alll.,.C..lb9rgirr, U .IJI
Dtnl-.JoM!Dtl. U .IJI
a.rt.r.J•n ... ry, U.005
Ma~rlo.Hel~. S2,00S
... .,.,.51..,c••. ,1,001
Z-<·Porl••. \2,00S
lttile•·''~"9"1"· u .oos
~tfe'y·W.lson. \1,1 ..
~,_.,._1n
-Hl41-1SS
•1·6'14141-JSS
•1~-151
-1·61-JSI
lt.MoHl-U--2$8
•~s.-2s• 6!.-6~7S.
61..,...H•-160
6Mi14H4---260
.._....s.4J-UO
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~'~-761
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Raee of Champions
Andretti Eases
To Formula Win
RIVERSIDE -Bobby Allison
and Mario Andretti set record
times in winning their events in
the third -and most closely com-
petitive yet -International Race
of Champions before 56,000 at
Riverside J ntern a lional
Speedway.
Allison won the third event Sun·
day in the four -race series
averaging 99. 702 miles per hour in
his silver Camaro, while A.ndretti
breezed to victory in the season's
final F'ormula 5000 .-oad race with
an average speed in the 100-mile
event of 123.136 m .p.h. Andretli
piloted a Viceroy-Lola.
Trailing Allison in the IROC
race for equally prepared
Camaros. was Al Unser with A.J.
Foyt in third place.
The win was Allison's second
I ROC 76-m i le victory at Riverside
in two years. It enabled him lo
take 25 points into the fourth and
final IROC race at Daytona
Beach. F1a .• on Feb.13.
Foyt, who bfgan the race in the
Jlth row . pirk'ed his way through
the pack to finis h third and build
his IROC lead lo 31 points. tn third
place on points is Andretti with 23,
followed by Bobby Unser and
Benny Parsons, 21 each.
Andretti won his eventspeeding
in 15.676 seconds' ahead or his
teammate, Al Unser. The res ults
from third to sixth place were pro-
tested hy England's Tony Brise.
but his protest was disallowed.
After Brise, who was running'
third on the 40th and final lap. had
to quit because his car apparently
ran out of gas, the racer's team
manager. Sid Taylor. protested
the race procedure was not
followed when an e>ttra p?.ce lap
was added and not scored, result·
ing in Brise·s fuel shortage.
Sun01-,'1 r-t$ul!S ol ,,... Cllllonila C'.rand Prl•
M Al¥9r•ltlt lnt1rn.ttlon•I A~f'W•t;
I. Merlo Atldr1tll, Loi•, S1• • .00, Ill. 1:16 mpll. 1,
Al Unser. Lo11. sn.•so. olO. l . Brl.,. Re-.
Loi•. S7,JDO, olO, f . John OnflOfl, Mlll:h, U,100.
.:>. i. Jolln Morlon, Lo!•. U ,5CO • .0. •· Tony
8rlw, Loi•, ,l,lSO, rt. 7. a.,.., C:-.QllS. Loi•.
U.JOO. 3'. I. Jon Woodntr. TflOn, Sl.600, ~. 10.
JWtldr uw11, Lot•, \1,«KI, J't.
11. Gordon Johncoc-. Loi•, Sl,lOO, ~. 11. £pl•
W.!lr•1., Loi•, Sl,tSO, 31. IJ. Slo.ttl1r Mcltl!.
i.r1c11::, Lii••. ''· 100, 11. 1•. Jam Guin. Lo••. Sl,000, JI. IS Gtor9'1 Follmft", t..Rct. S900, )I.,
17, Elllotl Forbe1·Aoblnson, LOI•, MOD, J~. II.
Jody !ocl'llCkl•r, Sll•do•, SIOO, JJ 19. S.nny
5.(ot1, LOii, ,..,. l1. 10. Rob Earl, lQI•, 1100, .JO,
Top 11¥t polnl 'cortr' In SCCA·USAAC
f'ol'"""l8 5000 North Am ... IC81'1 O\l~PS -
A.clmlfl 127. Afldftlti 1"5, Al ~ 1'1, J«;klol
011,,_ n, we1!i.s to.
I.OS ANG f;l.P.S -Cull en
Bryant fought and won a battle
with the National ,Footb~ll
J,R;,1gl1e h1 ('rarchy to stay \4'1th
the I.os AngL'lcs Rams and the
big h~~lfback now (L'Cls himself a
true mC'mber of th(' team.
Rryant scort'd two touchdo~s
and aided in othL•r !>conng dnve3
Sunday as the !l a ms 'o\'h1ppt.'d the
New Orleans ~a1nts JR .14 with
tht'1r gre<.1tt~st point production of
the S{'a!>On.
They no w stand ~·I , three
gamL'S ~•h L·<:•d of the nearC'!>l
riv~1ls 1n '.'lt-'C \Vt•s t. .
"I fl't'\ hke I've finall y got 1t
put \1)gct h e r ,·· dec lared tht•
formt'r Colorarlo slar wh o in tht'
pre·:H.•ason had been awarded to
the DC'tro1t I.ions by Nl-'l, Com -
n11.ss ioncr Pete Itozcllc.· as C'Om·
J(>Ss1e. . J-le alternates at halfback with "Once you get on the field, },ou Jlm Bertelsen as coach Chuck
jWJt try to ~et yourself toget ~r Knox sends his plays to ~n.d I. di~.n ·~ .. worry a~ut u~de quarterback James Harris \'ia
ht1gat1on, said the 230 po the halfbacks.
back. _ . The victory over New Orleans
. Jessie had .Played C?Ut ~15w~ih was the ri!th straight tor the
t1on at Detroit and sign d1 d Rams "'ho lost their opener to
the Rams. Rozelle.the.n 3\4'ar ~ Dalla~ after being tabbed as pre·
Bryant to the l~1on~. b1 ul tr "e season favorites to reach the player went to court. go a P t-"Bo 1 hminary ruling in his favor and Surr t;r~ed the victory over
the commissioner then. changed N n~"( leans "probably our best
theawardtoadraftcho1re. • ewf r an~e overall of the Bryant had scored o~e ~e.r_or~
touchdown on kick returns in season. · 1 1 5 both 1973 and 1974 but not berore Still New Orle":lns. 1s ~n ~ . -
the New Orleans' game had he a~d now ~he na~toj ~ dl~ :v1~1g~
scored from scrimmage as a pro. v 1 e w c rs . c a r
.. Reali all I had to do was run themselves if the Ran:-s are IV·
the playsY:. he said or his jarring ing up to preseason ~ot1ces. :he~
bursts th3t sco~ed from three and Pl~ Y n eh~ t 0 n 1. oalvTV. a Phtladelp 1a on na ion .
Another Shutout
··There is no such thing as be·
ing at a stage where you are
satisfied,·· declared Kn<?" even
though his club had outgalned the
Saints 341 yards to 173. Chargers Skunked Again
....
OA-KLAND (AP) -San Diego
C'oach Tommy Prothro says the
Oakland RaidE>r s a re "vt'ry de-
finitely better this time than
last time in San Diego."
The Ra iders beat the
Chargers 25 -0 Sunday and 6-0 in
San Diego Oct. 5 -the first
time in its 16 years that an op·
ponent has shut out San Diego
twice in one season.
The home opener victory for
the Raiders. 4·2, moved them
ahead of Kan s as Ci ty and
llenver. both 3-J . in the
American Conference West. The
Raiders p\;:iy at Denver next
Sunday, then have six or their
las t seven National F'ootball
l..cague games here.
"The Raiders' line J:(ot off bet·
ter. their runne rs ran better
and their special teams played
better ," said Prothro. "Vle
didn 't do muC'h or anything."
The Raiders got safeties in
the first and last quarters and
in between s cored on plunges or
one and two yards by Pete
Ranaszak and a 45-run pass
Crom K en Stabler to Cliff
Branch.
lbe.Joii•ry;ll.e.l'leJed Chargers
•were held to a net of 17 yar{is
passing and 157 rus hing and got
inside Oakland's 35 only once,
helped by a 15-yard penalty in
the second quarter. They stalled
on the 17 and Ray Wersching
was wide on a 34-yard field goal
try
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Defen s ive end Jack
Youngblood sacked Manning
twice and the New Orleans
quarterback alsc:> w.as caught
behind the line a third lime.
"1 feel like I almost didn't even
play, because I didn't gel an oi:,
portunity to throw deep at all,
the Saints quarterback C'Omment·
ed. "Their defense is something
else. But we know there's still a
good portion of the season left and
we can saJ\lage something out of
it."
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LA'S JIM BERTELSEN (45) IS CAUGHT AS BOB POLLARD (82) MOVES TO ASSIST.
Pan · Ams Over--Almost
MEXICO CITY !AP> -The
VII Pan Amt-rican Games, which
will go into the books as another
show of athletic might by the
United States, closed Sunday
with a program of startlingly
dramatic fireworks and colored
floodlight s how a t darkened
Azteca Stadium.
It was just as well the lights
were suppased to be out in the
105,000 -seat stadium for the
ceremony, since most burned out
the night before in the middle of a
crucial soccer game.
The Saturday night · soccer
game that ended with Brazil and
Mexico tied 1-I in a darkened
stadium was ordered replayed on
Wednesday, when the Pan Am
Games Organizing Committee
and International Amateur Soc·
cer Federation rejected a de-
cision to award gold medals lo
both teams.·
"The decision by the officials
at the Games probably got them
out of the stadium alive," said a
Pan Am official. who asked not to
be identified. "Mexico played a
good game, but Brazil was de-
finitely on the offensive when the
Lights mysteriously went out."
Chicanery by the partisan
crowd of more than J00,000 wall
not ruled out in the matter of the
power failure. The game, in an
overtime period, was interrupted
twice earlier by fans on the field
and frenetic demonstrations.
The decision to award golds to
both teams was generally un·
popular with the crowd, but some
seemed happy enough that Mex·
ico got the gold medaJ, no matter
how. '
Caruthers, whose racing
brother, Danny, was killedin a
1971 midget car era.sh, re-
ceived cobalt treatment last
December and January but
returned to the track~ for
several races including the In·
dianapolis 500 in which he
fmished 14th.
·vikings (5·0) Tackle B~ars (1·4)
But Mexico City's Sunday
morning newspapers blasted the
decision, and one carried a ban·
ner headline ''absurdo decision.''
Those kinds of problems were
typical or th ese sometimes
mixed up Games.
But the one hallmark achieve--.
ment here was by the highl.)f'
favored United States. Mer •
sputtering start lhat found tbe
Americans trailing the ant.=r
bitious Cubans, the young·unilecl1
States athletes, some or the m
barely in their teens, turned (In
the power. "'
Jn late Scptem ber. he began
having stomach pains and two
weeks ago he was admitted to
tbe hospital here. Doctorssaid
complJc1tion1 in<"luded
pneumonia. Caruthers was
the son or Doug Caruthers.
former race car owner and
mec.hanic. "II'• hard to belleve he bat-
tled and whipped ii o\)d (ot it
again," his Cather saidi "I
can'tbelle\le lt ·a ralr. ''
CHICAGO (AP> -The
Chicago Bears, their running at-
tack sharpened by a pair or re·
serve backs, have awarded start-
ing assignments to Mike Adamle
and Roland 1-larper.
Adamle, acquired from the
J ets, and ltarper. a surprising
17th-round draft plek. la.ck the
~tature of, say, a Churk
Foreman. who will romc to town
tonight wtth the Minnesota Vik-
ings for a National Football
League game.
But, with starting runners
Walter Payton and Cid Edwards
sidelined by injuries, the pair of
rese.r\les combined for 196 yards
On Tl' Tonight
Cfaannd 1 at 8
last week in a 34-3 loss lo the Pit-
tsburgh Steelers. Adamle's 110
ysrds marked the top
performanC"c in three years by .a
Bears· ball carrier.
The Bears, J·4, are 17·JX>int un-
derdogs against their S-0
northern neighbors in lhe NFL's
b I
Central Division. It was just
·three weeks ago that Ftan
Tarkenton shredded the Chicago
secondary and led the Vikings to
a 28-3 victory.
But the rebuilding Bears, with
14 rookies on the squad, figure
they can start winning if they
eliminate the errors and
penalties that h3ve l>lagucd them
recently.
"We took a s tep forward to-
day," coach Jack Pardee . said
after the loss in Pittsburgh. "If
we keep that up. we'll win some
l •
football games this year. We
made good progress h.itting and
staying together. We were inches
away today. We 're so close ..•
yetsotar."
Although Adamle and Harper
were rewarded with starting
roles, Payton is off the injured
list and figures to play. The
Rears lis ted defensive ends
Richard llarris (kneel and Mike
Hartenstine <foot> us probable.
Edwards (ankle> questionable
and wide receiver Ron Shanklin
(knee) out for the sea.son.
)
American swimmers brandtt4•
by critics within their own ~
try as weak and second-rate •
crushed the oppasition by wifto ,
ning all but two o( 29 gold meclalti
-the most ever by any team ll\
these quadrennial Western
Hemisphere games.1-
f
Ml
call
tin
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from
...Bills
--Mia
first
ball
!eren
Bu
provi
Scott
have
alter
Sc
quart
Bills"
game
later.
Seo
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eover
mane
terce
"W
bootl
"But
we a
titron
anoth
the pl
0.J
ing
into t
yards
Els
aga
i;t. Lo
Da
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threw
to Dr
the!'
Ear
Car
benc
came
passe
boost
hal!ti
Pl
BAY
hisw
ands
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lilt ' 16-13
Pack
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•• 37 car
• Monday, Oetooer 27 191S DAIL v PILOT A A I
Defensive Switch Works Pro Cage, Checking Golf
· Hockey For Area Men
As Miami Edges Buff al~ st:~:~s ~li~,,Et;::1·~E~E
Football
Standings
For Pros
M.laml quarterback Bob Griese
<>lied the shots and Doo Not·
tin&b•m scored the blt
touchdown as the Dolpbinl came
from behind lo edge the Bullalo
.Bills Sunday, JS-30, propeling
Miami into sole pos&esslon or
first place in the NaUooal Foot·
ball Lcaeue's American Con·
(erence East.
But the key to the victory was
provided by vetera.n safety Jake
Scott o( the Dolphins, who now
have won five straight games
2'ter a season-opening loss.
Scott intercepted Buffalo
quarterback Joe Ferguson at the
Bills' 22 with 3:09 left in the
game. Nottingham scored J :25
later.
Scott said Miami crossed up
Fereuson by swltblng from z.oce
coverage to man-to-man and that
maneuver r esulted in the in·
terceptioo.
"We bad called a pass play,
bootleg strong," Ferguson said.
"Blll in the defense they were in
we aren't supposed to bootle~
tilrong, so I checked off tc
anolher play. J think Scott read
the play."
O.J. Simpson, the NFL's lead-
ing rusher with 823 yards going
into the game, was held to 88
yards and a 26-yard TD.
Elsewhere in the NFL Sunday'
DALLAS AT PWLADELPIUA
-Toni Fritsch 's 42-yard field
goal as time ran out provided the
Dallas Cowboys with a 20·17 vic-
tory over the Philadelphia
Eatles.
The victory keeps the Cowboys
a game ahead of Washington and
;>t. Louis in the NFC East.
Dallas trailed 17-10 when
quarterback Roger Staubach
threw a 21-yard touchdown pass
to Drew Pearson with 1:04 left in
the final period.
Earlier, wide receiver Haro1d
Carmichael, who had been
benche.d for inept receiving,
eame in to catch a pair of TD
passes from Roman Gabriel that
boosted the Eagles lo a 14-10
haUtime lead.
P ITTSBU R GH AT GREEN
BAY -Rocky Bleier powered
his way for 163 yards in 35 carries
and set up Roy Gerela's decisive
29-yard field goal with 1:04 lert to
lift the Pittsburgh Steelers to a
·J6-13 win over the Green Bay
Packers.
· Often overshadowed by mate
Franco Harris, Bleier gained 29
~Jl>l'ds' In a 61-yard drive capped ·llY Gerela '•field goal.
..; The Steelers' only TD came on
.a 94~yard kickoff retum by rookie
J(Ike Collier after the flfSt of
f.oQn Br o cking'ton's two
uctid owns bad given the
ackers a 6·3 lead in the second
quarter. ••
.,,DENVER AT KANSAS CITY
-Jan Stenerud kicked rour field
"ioats and Kansas City sprinkled
two defensive gems with some
llell-handling wizardry for a26-13
~ory over the Denver Broncos to avenge an earlier 3'7-33defeat.
"' Kansas City intercepted three
IJ'dsses and made a key fumble
fteovery to.emba'rrass Denver.
t)stene.rud's field goals were 28, t: .. 'J7 and 23 and he now has 895
career points, No. 10 on the all·
~olo Crucial
Orange Coast College's water
polo team elm grab a share or the
South Coast Conference lead with
a 'victory over Fullerton Tuesday
-when the two rivals battle at 3:30 •occ. a,.
time NFI;llat.
A turnina point eame with
Kansaa City up, M. A double re·
verse with Larry Brunson carry.
in& SS yards lo the Denver 10 set
up Stenerud'a second field goal
and Kansas City wu never in
trouble aner that.
SAN FRANCISCO AT NEW
ENGLAND -Rookie
quarterback Steve Crogan, sub-
bing for injured Jim Plunkett,
passed for two touchdowns and
the New England Patriots
capitalized on San F'ran~isco
mistakes to take a 24·16 lriu.mpb.
After the 49ers had closed to
within 17 -10 in the second half,
Grogan applied the pres.sure,
passing seven yards lo former
Golden West Colleae star Randy
Vataha for a touchdown at the
outset of the final period.
AJJ three Patriots touchdowns
were 1et up by SF errons. A hold·
ing penalty, a blocked punt f.Jld a
lost fumble killed San Francisco.
WA•SHINGTON AT
'1EVELAND -Rookie n1nning
back Mike Thomas pounded for
12A yards in 27 carries and scored
two touchdowns as tbe
W uhington Redskins rolled past
the winl ess Cleveland Browns,
2J.7.
Thomas combtne"d wi-th
quarterback Bill Kilmer to give
the Redskins a 7-0 lead in the
second period on a three-yard
pass.
The capper came in tbe fourth
period when Larry Brown caught
a 12-yard scoring pass from
Kilmer.
Pete Athas set the play up with
a jarring tackle that forced a
fumble and Ralph Nelson re-
covered.
CINCINNATI ATATLANTA-
Keo Anderson scored on a~
Plunkett Dort
yard run with 2:04 loll utheCin·
clnnati Bengals remained un·
defeated with• 21 ·14 win over the
Atlanta Falcons.
The wltlning score came alter
Ron Carpenter bad recovered a
fwnbJe on tbe Atlanta 21 and
marted the third touchdown the
Bengals had scored after an
Atlanta turnover.
Tbe other Lwo came within a
2'h·minute span in the second
period after pass interceptions
b)'Ken Riley and Jim LeClair.
Cincinnati is now 6-0.
BALTIMORE AT NEW YORK
JETS -The New York Jets con-
tinue to take it on the chin with a
sagging defense, this time
absorbing a 45 -28 humiliation at
the hands of the Baltimore Colts.
Baltimore quarterback Bert
Jones scored on a 15-yard run,
then hit Marshall Johnson on
scoring strikes or 15 and 68
yards. overshadowing Joe
Namath's three touchdown
passes for the J ets. · .
The Jets put themselves in a
hole at the outse't, falling behind
14-0 when Carl Garrett fumbled
on each of New York's fint two
possessions and the Colts COD·
verted them into touchdowns.
DETROIT AT llOUSl'ON -
HoUSTon quarterback Dan
Pastorini's S6·yard touchdown
bomb to Ken Burrough and Billy
Johnson's electric S2-yard punt
return for another TD over a
span of 1:35 ignited the Houston
Oilers to a 24·8 rout of Detroit.
After a brutal first half in
which at least eight players left
with injuries for both teams,
Pastorini hit his long pass to Bur·
roughs to pad a 10·6 lead.
Detroit couJdn 't move the ball
and then Johnson retwned the
punt to put the Oilers out or re-
ach.
Injuries Sweep
Pro Grid Scene
B y.Urie Associated Press
It's bard enough to find a good
quarterback these days in the Na-
tlonal Footb~ League bl!t it's
getting even tougher tokeepone.
New England, AUanta and Pit-
tsburgh lost one quarterback
each to injuries Sunday and
Detroit lost two of them.
The most serious injury ap.
peared. to be the one Jim Plunkett.
the strong·armed leader of the
New England Patriots, suffered
in a game with San Francisco .
Plunkett, who missed the first few
gamesoftbeseasonfollowingsur·
gery for a left shoulder &epara·
tion, Separated the shoulder again
in the first quarter Sunday when
he was tackled by 49ers
linebacker Dave Wash.ingtonon a
quarterback keeper play.
X·rayS for Plunkett were
scheduled today to determine if
more surgery is needed.
Atlanta lost high-priced rookie
Steve Bartkowski with a dislocat-
ed left elbow in the first quarter
against Cincinnati. Bartkowski
was hit by deCens ive tack.le Bill
Kolar after throwing a pass.
Bartkowski, who was also tore·
ceive X·rays today, said he ex-
pects to be Out at least one week
and maybe three.
· Pittsburgh lost Super Bowl hero
Terry Bracbbaw late in the fourth
period against Green Bay.
Bradshaw was shaken up by
linebacker Fred Carr, who
tackled him after a short run, but
is expected to be back next week. Both Bill Munson and Greg
Landry went to the sidelines after
being leveled in the first half of
Detroit's hard-hitting game with
Houston, Munson returned in the
second half but failed to move the
Lions. Both Munson and Landry
areex~cted to beOKn~prt week ..
Quarterbacks were not the only
casuaJties in the Detroit·Houston
contest. Eight players left the
game with assorted injuries in the
• fll'St half alone including Detroit
wide receiver Jon Staggers with
an achilles tendon injury. Stag-
gers· injury was the most serious
of the lot and he is expected to
miss about six weeks of play.
Among other injuries reported
Sunday were:
Kansas City -offensive tackle
Roger Bernhardt, tom knee liga·
ments; rUnning back Woody
Green, knee injury.
New Orleans -tight end Paul
Seal, sprained knee.
Miami -tight end Jim
McFarland, injured vertebrae;
deferu;ive tackle Randy Crowder,
knee injury.
Buffalo -defensive end Jeff
Winans, sprained ankle.
Banner Yearfor Gauchos?
Mulligan Rev~talizes Cage Program
By CRAIG SHEFF
OI ... 0.hf f'tlet """· Saddleback College's
basketball team had its
gi:eatest season ever in
1974·75 with a 19·12 re-
cord, but it figures to be
even better in '75-76.
And the reason is
namely Bill Mulligan.
Mulligan, one ol the
toP coaches ln JC basket-
ball, was named the
Gauchos coach in late
July and proceeded lo go
out and dig up some
ta'tent that most ob-
servers close to the scene
say could be enough to
w1n the Mission Con·
ference championship.
Winnin& Mission titles
it ·nothing new for
Mulligan-he won the
last four as the head man
.. ti , Riverside City
College. And he captured
fi.w in nine seasons as.
thel'l'igers'coach. .
· ,,MUJlican. who posted a
78-17 record in hls last
tbrOe seasons al nee.
tldaka bis ilrst Sad·
cll-ck team could be a -ten~er-11 It can hur-
dl\t a few obstacle..
:°'f'This Is probably a
""'"
team with more poten-
tial than any Saddleback
has ever had. But the
problem is we have 11
freshmen. And I don't
care bow good the
freshmen are, it's tough
to compete ri~ht off the
bat with teams that have
sophomores.
.. We have the capabili·
ty to win t he conference
title, but we have no
gym, we have a lack of
experience and other
problems. If we can
forget all the problems,
we have a shot at the COO·
ference title. Un-
fortunately the con-
ference will be better
than It bas b .. n In a lone
time." says Mulligan.
Saddleback 's gym-
nulum ii now under con·
stuctloo and flgur .. lo be
completed In June. The
Gauchos will practice at
Missloo Viejo, El Two
and sometimes San
Clemente, playing thdr
home games at Mission
Viejo.,
The 197S ·7f Sid· dleback team wllJ not be
extnmely tau. but It wlU
bave more overall hel&ht
than the previous seven All-Orange County selec-
Gauchos teams. tion, played at Tustin.
The three key players Others on the roster in·
figure to be sophomores _elude freshmen Uave
Mike Bokosky (6-3¥.1) Maracicb (5-10) from
and Mark Lovel~c e Chicago, Mark Zogg
(6 -4), elon~ w1~h (6-5) and Dean Egertson
freshman Denn1s Srmth (5-10) from Mission Vie·
(S.SYi). . joand Bill Marvin (S.11) Bokosky is from Santa from Cleveland J.ligh in
AnaValleyandLoveJace the San Fernando
prepped at Lon~ Beach Valley.
Poly, where Mulligan oo-
ce coached. Both were Another sophomore is
starters for Riverside CC David Mitchell (6·0),
last year. who played for Mulligan
Smith prepped at three years ago at ta:C,
Servile , earning a but bas been on a
second team All -Angelus Mormon mission.
League berth last Mulligan s~s one of
season. the key reasons he lert
Others that figure pro-Riverside was its bad
min•tely ln Mulligan's climate.
plans are Tom
Caserman (6-7), Buck "That was one of the
Day (S.8), Keith Musick big factors. l spent nine
(6·5), Bob Dove (6-4) and years In Riverside and
Jack Dean (6-3). tour or live months of
Caserman ls from each year was really
Long Beach Wll•on. He bad.
attended Fresno State ''And despite what
some people think, there
is a lot of potential In this
area. lt's better than 1l
wu at Riverside,'' says
11.st seasoo, but didn't
play. Musick i1 from
South Torrance, Day
prepped at Foothill,
~an is from Maler Del
and Dove, • third team Mulliaan.
•
M&Mtk:"~ M. oe tournament •t Carlton
....., 1 • 1.000 Oeks Country Club over
Mtaio 1 • 1.0DO twod••s. . PN ... lpf!M f I I 000 """-J
,...,,..,,.,. 1 1 .m 1 Winners were limited •""-°"°""'"" .. ~';-I.ODO to one prize.1iving more ,....on. ... s ' 1 ...,, players an opportunity lo
A.•laitli. 1 ' .iao "' stiareintberesults. ......... 0 1 .000 I
°""4and o t J1110 ,.,., In A fii&ht, winners in .....,.ca.•••-• the better nine compct.i-
CNt<l9D MMN."~"11, ... ·'°° tion included Albert
c.1ro11 • ' ·"° Botelho (32), Stanle.y
ICa-Clll' 0 ' 000 .,,, d H M M1to#..i1r1.. o 1 :a .,,, Poland (34 > .an . .
PacllkCM'lri•• CUrrey (36). ~'!_!,:...,., ! : :·:: .,,, In 18 boles, Frank
GOl.,.,St., 1 1 .• ' Rossi was the winner
"'-• 1 1 ·• 1 with 89, followed by Del Po<llaftd ti .Pl ~r,s.c.-1 Canfield (72) and Ray
'"• °''"n' us,,..,. vort 114, J Potts (75/. For 27 boles, 0'
s...t1i.111 "'-"''•" John Glasscock was Ci~t
Goldirft SC•M IOI, H1M1s1on * ~ ... with 108 and Walt Puth "'°"1;.n1
.,.,. second with 110.
ht""1tot'lki• Jack Lund captured
W L prrn. 08 titi ~"" , 1 ... , the 36·hole e with 146
Mt•Vo•ll 2 , .w with Georgl! Fowler
!otU..il I I ,ntl d !9 V1r91n11 o 1 ..., 1.,., secon al 4 .
wm..,..01v1,i. In 8 flight, the nine-
1 1 1·000 hole winners included 2 I .4'61 ....
1 1 ·'°° 1 Lynn Cathcart at 32 and 1 ' .m 1111 a tie at 35 between Pat 0 I J#J Ill) ,_...,.,k~ Henning, George Holt,
~y1at,v1r.1n11111 John Miles and T. O .. ..._Yortl Ut. tl'di~ 111 $1.l..Nt101,$aftOl~U Roe.
.... L._ w.-c .... ....-u ....,.,., CM¥11M
W L T 1'tt. Oft 0A
• 1 1 is a 11
•••11J11J
411•:111U
Ill S1$!0
01))'8G
~Dlwl16-
llufl1to I 0 0 16 4' 17
T°"'"'-0 f > I t :ta 21 .,.... Jlt •••
c.ltfonll• I 4 J I 25 a
~·c-.. -· ,..trittl Olwl.tiNI
l'tlll.i..111'!1• 6 1 I I• lf 1a
NVt.i .... r1 I I l 13 H ta
NY~•I 3 I 1 1 1• •
,t,tllrrta 2 S I S 21 U
Sll'lf011 Dl10l11M1
CNu9o • ' I 10 1t JO 5t.Loul1 • 3 J I I t1 t1
ICaraasOll' J ~ 1 1 It 11
v~ .... r JS11!J)I
For 18 holes, Me t
Vernoy ''/as the winner
with7Q .
, Harry Green finished
second at 73.
Louis Underwood was
the winner after 27 holes
with 106 and Charles
Schroer second at 120.
For 36 holes, it was
George Mitt~rman the
winner with ISO with
Fred Roth second at 164.
ln C !light, A. A.
27-hole winner with 110
and Fred Gruber second
at 130. Sam Letteer "''on
best 36 with 148 imnd
l.t>sler Gibson was
Sl'l"Ond at 188.
Roy llaller ~·as the
bt"st nine wanner ln D
light with 30. followed
by Ed Hayes (371 and a
tie between Russell
Ward and 1-lenry Winn at
•IO.
For the best 18. it was
Rill Bailey the winner
With 70, (Ol(owed by
Waltrr Essig (72) and
Dick liutch1nson (79).
G:;irrl't Fagan won
th~ best 27 hole competi·
tion with 111 and Harry
1-lough 'ol.'&s Sf'c·ond at 129
'ol.'llh Ted Kuchel thi~ d.
Al Schwesig took tap
honors ror 36 holes with
158 and George Kramer
was second al 173 .
Calendar
Wtlt• pOIG ~RanchO .-.iamflot ..
UQIHl<I 8e.acl1 (J U L C.010.n Wett at
i...A H1rb:tt Ill, F1111orton 11 Or,..
ON't !J·JCIJ, UC lr.-1 .... "' C..I Sl .. e
llOl'tQ 6aac:lll 11 Btlmonl P1au (l .lO
p "'". COtd 1..,nl1--0•a.n0t Coa11 tt C.r·
1110\, Golden WeU •I P1~na (-II
•ll)
()1111 'f<t41t,bllll-Wt1lmlm1,,.. al
,..WJIO'I H••oor. Mann .. al Edlsori.
F-•11n vol!11 01 coua Mew.. H""'·
1"91on S.ac:n 11tl e1titncla !all 11 J)0 M J11lon V lt )O •I £1 Toro, 51n
ci.,,..nl••I 01 .. a Hllh. un1,,.,\J•1•t
u~ &tM:h toll at• JDI, ua.,1, at
uc l•vl"" tn
G lrl1 11nn11-W1i1ml,n1t1r •t
Ht•port Harbor, M1r11>1 itl £Cihon,
Founttln Vlllt> 11 CoUt Miu, Hl.lnC·
ir>glor1 6aacti 11 E•tancla !all al u,
M lt1lo'l Vl•Jo at El taro, 5a'l
c ............ 11 OaM Hllt1, Un!wnlly at
~ &e.ch !•ti 1t J•J01.
... ... , .... c:-14, ...
~Ol'O'IW-
W LT ... ...... ...... • 1 • .... '" ..
WftN"9tort • 1 .... , ... " s.i. L.Oulo\ 4 1 .... , .. uo
H'l'Glenb ' •• "' ,, ... ... __
' •• .1., am C..u•I Olwl...., ... _ .... ' 0 0 1.000 '" ,.
Dtuoll ,,._)00 "' "' "'-' •• .... .. U> ....... , ' ' ' "' " "' .... _C>l•h*-... _ • ' • . om "' ,.
All~• • • • .lll .. ..
S,.. ,,,.ftc:l!M;O 1 • 0 ,J.D ... "' ..... Or ..... , ' • • .1•1 " ...
AJMrkM c-t.AM•
h•..,,.Dh<f~ .. _I • ' • "" ,,. • ........ • , 0 .w "' "' "'"'-' .. .... ·~ ...
..... t!ftOIM'ld , • • .m " ·~ H'l'.ll'tr. ' •• .... "' ...
c..iitr•I Dlft•le•
011e--..1 • • 0 1,000 •• .. ... __. • ' . -"' ... •• -·~ ' ' . .... . .. ..
~ • • • .... .. ..
... t•~•Ol•I• ... .,,., ... • ' . .... "' " ~,a,., ' ' . .... ... "' .. _ ' .. .... "' ... ... .,._ ••• .... ,, ...
S...•r'•k-• Ont""'-'-1 !1. ,t,t'-"' • 1 a w..,.lf>O\-Oll 1,. c1 .... 1~,
'WwEnOll!'ldl•, SM! F•.,.c:lso"
6aHlf'Nll• •). N'I' ,,_h ii O.!lt1'JO. Pnil-lpt1I• 11
Plrtl.bur;tl 11. ~-Say II
i.to.n1on la, Oelroltl
IC•'lHI 01J H . O.'l10'1' II
Mt...,• JS. &ul!alo JO
Los~ .. , •. ~w0ri.-t'4
0.llland li, Sen 0 1,.o 0
T•'9Jlt•1 O.l'l'le
Ml-90\a al Chi<~ ........... , ........
...... O...,tlN¥Glent1 ........ ,.. ... ,
Pll""""'°" a1 CJncln...-!I 811111•!0 at H'f .Nii
oo ... 11ftd at B•tUmonr ""'"'"I al O.lt•Vo iw-,.,....,.._ .. 't
+«Miilon a1 ICa.,...1 Cllt
Atttonta et N•w Orle.,,1
New E"91a.nd at ~1. Laul•
0.111.....:111 Otn-
O.trolt 11 Sollfl Fratl(IM;O
0.UM al W<lll'ltnvt-
........ \', frMV. J
1.0sA ..... sat Ptlll.otlpflia
National Tourney
Nebraska this year-.
' l
I .,
I
I '
.
Ml-Mia 1 1 0 1 XI JI s.,..., .• sc-•
l'tlli.a.lptll•1.NYA:a~n I
WMlllllQIOrl f, Chlta90 S
llosto!IJ, C.lroit,
LM,........ •. Ml-'-Ot.t ikdt91o).. C...Htomla J
Halley had the best nine
with 33 and Walter Price
was second at 36. Ken-
neth Kirby won best 18
honors with 72 and
Sherman Todd was
second at 74 .
Dale Wie se was the
Golden West College
will host the AIAW com-
munity college national
softball championship;,
May 20-22, 1976 after win-
ning the title in Omaha •
The tournament will
be moved from Omaha
for the first time when it
comes to GWC.
Siug ersvs. BGUgh
lrWin vs. Blalock
at Mission V"1eio, November 9th, 9:00a.m.-1:30p.m.
This promises to be one of the each other for the first time. ••
most exciting events in sports history. Live film coverage by CBS,
The best male and female athletes to be aired early next year, proves it's
in the world will compete against something you won't want to miss.
Events Participants Ticket Cost
SKYDIVING Top National Champions Free Nov. 71h-10 OOa.m Al lhu M1'.Sion Vl(ll'> Counl1~ riul'l
RODEO Larry Maha n vs Sheila Bussey Free Nov. Ith -1:00 p. m. A11h•l Mr<;~oon V,r·10 S!i1tlh1o;
BOWLING Carm en Salvino vs Paula Sperber $5.00 adu lts.
Dave Davis vs Judy Soutar Children under 12 Nov 71h -8.00 pm A! ttif! S;iddl"b I'. I.., lJOI':; hall pnce.
SWIMMING/DIVING Don Schollander vs Keena Rothammer S2.00 adults.
Ken Sitzberger vs Micki King Ct1ildren under 12 Nov 81h -1:00 p. m. AT Hu· Maruu<J•rtu J.<,.r, Con!O• half price.
Nov.91h-9 OOa .m GOLF Doug Sanders vs Laura Baugh $5.0 0 adulls.
Hale Irwin vs Jane Blalock Children under 12 Nov. 91h-1:30 p.m.
Al rt•• M · •uon y ,,., • r:our>r1y Cl•/O hall pnce.
OBSTACLE COURSE Bob Seagren vs Wyomia Tyus Simburg Free Nov. lOfh-10:00 a.m. Al "'" "-\· ;tt'ln V ••1n t' ')h ':.rnnnl
BILLIARDS Willie Mosconi vs Jean Balukas Nov. 10th -6 00 p m Al 1110 u , .~o0n V'""' tl•Qh Scnool G~m
-TABLE TENNIS Dan Seemiller vs In-soak-Na Nov. lOlh-6:00 pm. . At 1~ M•ssion v ... ,o t i..,., :.~iirio• G ym $3 75 adults.
$1.50 children
GYMNASTKS Makoto Sakamoto vs Linda Metheny Nov. 10th -6:00 p. m Al lho M1ss•on V•OIO H •otl S<:t.001 Gvm
BASKOBALL Jerry West vs Karen Logan Nov. 101h-6:00 p.m. A! 11\e M•O::S•On y,,.1(1 11• 111 '"' 1 r.v•n r-------------------, Make Chee!.. Payable to & Mai! 10: I CHALLENGE 27341 Tr~buco Place 1 Golt November 9 M 1c;s1o n V1ro10 California 92675 Bowling: November 7 Phone_ 7141586-9500 (Monday thru Friday. 9AM to 4 PM)
I No. of Tickel• No. of Ticketc:: CLIP & MAIL TODAYll I Billiards. NAM~ I Swimming/ Table Tennis, I Diving: November 8 ADDRESS
I Gymnastics, I No. of TickelS Basketball: crrv .
I November10 ST,11.rr-·1• I No. of T1cke10 PHONE
I AMT l:NClOSED 1 I L (CHECK ABOVE FOR PRICES) ALL T!C•ETS WILL BE HELO ON WILL CALL AT EVEN~ -------------------CHAI 1"'ENGE O F THE SEXES
MISSION Vll;JO
. S<:f!Odule r>! ev1or1t~ .1nrt oinir,~111r1 -:uto/f'l"f t •1Ii 1nl)o.,.. 1n.1u1 not..-f>. .
I
\
.. Alt DAIL y PILOT Monday. Octooer 2'1.1975
Welcome
Aboard
By ALMON LOCKABEY
One of the most dreaded mishaps in long di!:\·
lance yacht racing is dismasting. ''Sticks" can be
lost by a s udden kn0<:kdown during a squall, by a
tiredswedge fitting or an unexpected jibe.
In local offshore racing, the busted stick can
sometimes be cut free or hauled aboard and the
)'acht come back to port Wlder auxiliary power.
Btrr IT'S A different story when the m~t col·
lapses hundreds of miles from Sh.:>re in such races
as the Transpac, Trans-Atlantic, Bermuda, or any
oltbe long Mexico races. Yachts dol\'l carry enough
fuel to continue under auxiliary power.
The answer then is in the often tedious task or
jury.figging -providing some means of hoisting a
sail to continue under way. Jury-rigging takes not
only know-how and hard work, but some proper
tools as well.
Hood Industries. a Costa Mesa firm which pro·
duces finis hed cable rigging for the automotive,
aircraft, oil and marine industries, has come up
with a rigging repair kit that may eventually be
standard equipment aboard all long distance ocean
racing yachts.
T H E K IT COMES I N an easily-stowed
fiberglass box a nd contains such essential tools as a
wire cutter, a nicropress tool, nicropress sleeves
and thimbles, four lengths of stainless steel strap·
ping and 100 feet of gaJvanized cable.
Tht" wire cutter is the most vital toot It allows
the shrouds and stays to be cut away and free the
ma.st before seas can use it as a battering ram capa-
ble or seriously damaging the boat. Experience has
shown that turnbuckle pins are bent during dis-
masting, making their removal almost impossible.
After the rigging has been cleared away, the
next chore is to devise some semblance of a mast
from which sails can be flown . The strapping is
used to join two pieces of mast together.
The nicropress tool and fittings are handy for
altering the jitanding rigging to support the jury.
rigged mast.
HOOD HAS ALSO entered the running rigging
and cordage field with the firm's appointment as
West Coast distributor for Yale Braided Products.
manufacturers of yacht braid and rope made from
the ievolutionary new stronger-than-s teel Kevlar
fibers.
The Kevlar fibers are produced by DuPont and·
were hailed a few years ago as a possible new
material for sails. The material was first tried on
sails for P,n America's Cup 12-meter but was not
1 found to btsuitable for sailcloth.
UC Berkeley
Scores Upset
Engine
Powe r
Probed
WASHINGTON <UPI)
-The Federal Energy
Administration will in-
vestigate plans by the
nation's outboard engine
manufacturers to
market m otors with in·
creased horsepower,
officials said Sunday.
The issue was raised
by Dr. Albert Fritsch,
co-director or the Center
for Science in the Public
· lnterl'!l and a member
of a committee created
to advise the FEA on
recreational energy use.
Fritsch. in a letter to
FEA Chief 1--.rank Zarb,
complained that his com-
mittee had not met for
nearly 18 months and
suggested that'it be con-
vened to tackle the boat
engine issue.
"Public spirited peo-
ple within industry have
alerted CSPI that the
four m ajor outboar d
engine manufacturers -
Chrysler, Evinrude,
Johnson and Mercury -
are inC'reasing their 'top
of the line' engines from
135 horsepower to 150
h.p .• 200 h.p., 200 h.p. and
175 h.p .. respectively,"
Fritsch said .
The agency said Assis·
tant FEA Administrator
Roger Sant has reviewed
Fritsch"s comments on
the boat en gi nes a11d
judged "this is the very
type of issue to be
brought up and con-
sidered'' by the new
panel .
Craftsmen
Show Stuff
The Mission Viejo As-
sociation of Artists and
Craftsmen has selected
Nov. 8 and 9 as the date of
their annual Christmas
Carousel.
The two-day sate wiU
be held in the pa rking lot
of Wineman's Depart·
BOATING
Glwst II
Su:eeps
To Win
..
Ghost 11, a Yankee-38
sloop skippered by John
Reynolds and a family
cr.ew from Newport
Harbor Yacht Club.
scored three s traight
firs ts in winning t he
Southern California
Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet cham·
pionship.
THE ANNUAL cham·
pionship, which earns
the Al Rogers Perpetual
Trophy was C'onducted
by Santa Monica Yacht
Club with two races
Saturday and one Sun·
day over Olympic· type
courses ranging from 5
to 11 miles.
Twenty South ern
Calirornia yacht clubs
were represented in the
regatta. To qualify skip-
pers were required to·
have participated in six
major PHRF eventsdur·
ing the year .
RE YNO L DS CRE W
consisted of h is wife Sal·
ty, her twon sons, Chris
and Pat Seaver, a nd his
::ion, Norman Reyn olds.
Runner-up was Dave
Stont"s P uf!, Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club
and thir d was Merlin,
skippered b,Y Jack Ibach.
Santa Monica VC . Roy
Tower's Stiletto, Santa
Barbara Yacht c:ub was
fourth, and Primera,
Rubeo Vollmer, Palos
Verdes YC was fifth.
. Cheetah Wins
UYC Series
Clieelab, an Erl<l<I0-39
skippered by Dick Pen·
lllnston, King Harbor
Yacht Club, was the win·
ner of the third and final
t•ce of Los Angeles
Yacht Club's Harbor
Se:rles Sunday.
Tbe series was sailed
under the Ocean Racing
Fieet 'S revision of the In·
t ernetlonal Offshore
Rule Mark. Ill known as
IOR/ORF·75.
CHEETAH WAS also
the overall series win·
ner, f o l lowed by
Wbimsey Tres. a
Yankee-38 sailed by
Hugh Rogers, LAYC,
with Gene Trepte's
S&S-41 Brushfire, San
Diego Yacht Club,
finishing third.
Th.ird race results:
ORF-A -I, Cheetah,
2, Cottontail, John Holi-
day, LBYC; 3, Brushftre.
ORF·B -1, Hatriek,
Dick Deaver, LAYC; 2,
Whimsey Tres; 3 ,
Cohort, Milt Vogel,
LBYC.
P HR F I,
S h a w niga n , Craig
Norton, LAYC; 2, Black-
jack, Ted Isaacs and H.
Jackson. CBYC; 3, Hap-
py Time, Ed Comings,
CBYC.
MO RF -1, Pop 'NUs,
Peter Kent, LBYC; 2,
Wide Load, S. Godshall,
CBYC; 3, Angel's Gate,
Ray Corbett, CBYC.
Final standing,;:
Project Set
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-State fi nancintt or an
oral history project on
former Gov. Edmund G.
Brown has become law,
but wi thout the signature
of his son. Gov. Edmwid
Brown J r_ The $66,000
bill by Sen. James Mills
(0-San Diego) also cov-
ers an oral history p~ ,
ject on Goodwin Knight,
Brown Sr. 's Republican
predecessor.
ORF -1, clieetah; 2,
Wbimsey Tres; 3,
BrusbJlre.
PHRF -1, Happy
Time; 2, F1ame, Diet
Ramage, LMYC; 3,
Shawnigan.
MORF -1, Wide
Load; 2, Pop 'N Us; 3, El
Tigre Il, Bill Peterson,
LB"(C,
Durgan
Takes
Regatta
Dennis Durgan or
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club was the winnt!f' of
the Saint Cicero Trophy
against a field of 24 other
Lehman~ al
Newp6ftlliibor Ylltht ClubSunday.
Second in the annual
regatta was Tom
Omo}lundro, also of
NHYC, and third was
Jack Jakosky, Balboa
Yacht Club. ·
NHYC also. conducted
a regatta (or the Laser
Class in whith JO sklp-
pers showed up on the
starting line. The Winner
was Al Nelson of the
North Bay Dinghy Rae·
ing Association. Runner-
up was Mike Arrigo,
NHYC, and third was
Steve Arrigo, NHVC.
i 1976 ·CARS
and
remaininCJ '7 Ss
LOW
LEASE
RATES!
ment Store, corner La~----------COIDCOUl.Slhf
All makes
,_ cars & trucks!
~a3r:ue~te0P:r~wa8y ." d fJO:SAQ!i,@f\ .~!! ~~~ .. 83 3-0 5 5 5
Among the items ~ 7:JOP.M. ...._. ... ._.
UC Berkeley with Bill
. Leary at the helm of a
Shields Class s loop
scored an upset victory
featured will be original A great 6 w-eou,.., $16.SO UAH SPICLWST.
to capture the Douglas paintings, pottery, craft _. w ..._._. · W• oflw .. ..,
Cup, sym boJic of the~~w~ar~es~an~d~C~h;n~·s;tm~as~d~e~-b;;;;;~p~l~a~c~e~f:o~r~k~l~d~s~.~~~C~•~H~ .. ~·~7~1~1.f~l4~•~~~;;;~'~=~.,.~-~·~•~'c~lo~;;;~ match racing cham· corations.
Sunraker
Class A
Winner
pionship of the In-
tercollegiate Yacht Rae·
ing As sociation of North
America.
Leary scored six wins
and one loss in the eight-
school field that included
entries from the
University of Texas at
Austin, U.S. Merchant
Marine Academy, Kings
Point, University of
Ar t Howard's Oregon and University of
SUnraker was the Class Washington.
A winner in Bahia Corin-
t h ian Yacht Club"s PRE·RACE favorites
Round-the-Buoys races were UC Long Beach's
Saturday and Sunday. Mark Rastello, UCl 's
win ding up the 1975 Tom Wilson and defend-
Angelman Series. ing champion use with
Winner in Class B was Curt Olsen. As it turned
Sequoyah, skippered by out, UCLB and UCI
Jim Moore, South Shore wound up in a three way
Yacht Club, and the tie with Marvin
Class C winner was B ec k m an of the
Whimsey. sailed by Jack University of Texas,
Larson, BCYC . each with five wins and
two losses. USC finished
THE .ANGE L MAN fifthwitharecordof3·4-
S eries. consisting or Others were U.S.
seven races throughout M e r c h a n t M a r i n e
the season, is for yachts Ac ad e my (Charles
sailing under the Tripp) 2-S; University of
Perfor mance Handicap Oregon (Mike Coon) 1·6,
RacingFleet system . and U niversity of
C L A S S A -1 , Washington (Rick Rat-
Sunraker; 2, Cheerio, tray) 0-7.
Barry Faber. BCYC; 3, ~-'---------I
Valerie, Fred Powell,
BCYC.
' CLASS B -1, Se·
• q uoyab ; 2, A ndiamo, e Bob Sodaro, BYC; 3, t Pele, Jim Emmi, BCYC.
• CLASS C -1 ,
Whimsey; 2, Charisma,
' K aren Schoonmaker,
BCYC; 3, Hampshire
ltose, Dennis Burnett,
SSYC.
PLAY
-flDlklaa
0-'lltllr
MON~YS
in the DAILY PILOT
Sponsored by
Orange Coast
Daily Pilot
* Cash Prizes
Worth
-ly Pigskin Plckeroo '75 wlnnen
will be awarded a total of $50 In cash.
First place entries receive $25, second
place wins $15 and $10 Is awarded for
third place. Winnen are notified bJ
mail.
i..-for Ille official Pigslcln Plckeroo
players form each week In the Dally
Pilot -1s pages.
RULES
I, ~t .. eMry u..11 MIO'#w .In--.. fK"'"' .... ff .. ..... .. , ....................... t«llnlltr'' l.t *'IMf .. -
"'e ad: ... k ete." 1!11tr'6 _I .. ""''°"" 111 sl19 .........
.. fKlll111'8 J .... 119. TMM -.Mc• .... I Cflftfwttl will ...
...... llllM. 1 1eM It te: P!OSltlM PICltlElltOO, 75,, ~ ~.-nt,
f'.0. .... ,,.., cet.111 -... CA. ttdi.
S. Ollly -"'" ---....... ni.. NC• _.. CMl\ft ... b. .,. ........... , <•""' ~ ... _,. iMJ9t: ....... .,..,. ..... ..-• sl"'fle ........ -.................... ,,.., 911....,Ufy M Y "lktt"-9 M rN" ..trie, ... ~--... De<~ef l ..... HllMl .... -' .. "" ...... as ..... ~ .. ,~ ..
.. ... "'" -· ....... r1IMI ""' ._ a..i n.nNy .....
w --M ••O"""" te tJle Detty f'llilt efflc• .,. • f'.M. ~., ..
L O.lly "'"" ~.,....,,. 1t:w1••• lw!Uft -Ml .............. _
t. Tll! •11 aa1tl!ll. aUNK MllST at.: l"lu..l!D UI Oil E.NTaY
ll"YOID.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: . ENTRY BLANK . : • • : Nllrne.-..................................... : • • • Address ••••• .: • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • .. • .. .. • • • • • • • • • • • • •
·: City •••••••••••• ••••••• ••••• Zip........... : • •
. : Pllone •••••••••• ·······:·················· :
: Cfrclt toms you thl9* wilt win this week's games : • • • •
: San Diego vs NY Giants ·: • • : Buffalo vs NY Jets :
:• Dallas vs Washington :
: Houston vs Kansas City :
: Oakland vs Denver :
:: Pittsburgh vs Cincinnati :
: Minnesota vs Green Bay :
: Cleveland vs Baltimore : •• • : Miami vs Chicago : : use vs ca1 :
: Washington vs UCLA :
: Pitt vs Syracuse E
: Michigan State vs Purdue :
: Penn State vs Maryland : • • ': Nebraska vs Missouri :
: Oklahoma vs Oklahoma State : • • : Indiana vs Ohio State :
Tonight's
TV Highlights
'
NBC (4) 9:00 -''The Uves of JellJll'
Dolan." When a lady journalist tries to
uncover a conspiracy surrounding four
deaths, she finds her own life in jeopardy.
Dana Wynter, St ephen Boyd, J ames Dar-
ren, David Hedison, Farley Gr anger and
Sbirley Jones are featured.
CBS (2).11:30 -"Tbe Elevator." A
TV suspense d rama in which several peo-
ple are trapped in an elevator, including
James Farentlno, Myrna Loy, Carol
Lynley and Roddy McDowell. • KHJ (9) 11:30-."Kiss the Blood Off
My Hands.'' Burt Lancaster and Joan
Fontaine star in this 1948 movie drama.
TV DAILY LOG
Monday
Evening
OCT .... Z1
•
l11D81.J.lil:::: 8 , (I)) rn m 1111. -NOC llliMIW Viki1P at
I=. ... _ .. ...... ""T"" IE ~:":.
•
•
( •
'
Circle the team you think wlll win In
each of the 30 pairings. You m•J mall
your entry or brl ng It to Ille Dally Piiot
office nearest you. Thero are Dally Piiot
offices Jn Newport Beach, Laguna
BNch, Mission Viejo, Huntington Beach
-Costa Mesa.
E Navy vs Notre Dame E Tuesday '"'I~.:""..::.·-°'"'
• • I
h
•
1st prize $25
2nd prize $15
3rd prize $10
....... Pk••r .. h • ••~• hAsu flf .. ...,,...,_....._._.M11tqwl
Welt...,.
: Harvard vs Penn : ~!'> .... "'l.!;.,. .. _.
: Florida vs Auburn .: DAYTIME MOVIES
: Duke vs Georgia Tech : 1:11 g~~::'....::! • A A. F • t:» o "Sfl•••• ... l••> ·35 -Joel • rmy VS 1r Orce • -Mc:Cr.., Dl"rid lti¥M. "Dw'1._ S:91Rii"1111 sn, _. (*aJ '?ii . : TexasvsSMU : ...-11n1'<•-•·•-· ... _..,._
• • IO:GO rtf .,._ ._. '-It lf/tl'f' (hill) J:Jt (}) A ..... c.," (*'l "S1 -: Michigan vs Minnesota : ,,,...-..::;"'=• .. _ '"'""" ·
: LSU vs Mississippi : ,_.. 1 ... 1 . ., · """"" a 1<1_..,..,.1-i • : llllnolsvsWisconsin : . .,......, . .....,r-_.., __ _
: StanfordvsOregonState :KOCE Television (50)
: So. Carolina vs North Carolina St. : ... ,,.._ ....
: Miami (Fla.) vs Boston College : ,.;. n•n•••~•.=:""""
e • ti:• ISSAMSIT•••T ''°"""' : Dartmouth vs Yale : ;: ~=.!l=.=.WitM.
: TIE BREAKER -My guns on u. tOllll : ::: :.':a·~:~\':::::.."==" .. "'"'"'-""* •, : t:• HSAM• ITaa•T ( .. lftfnJ IHllllbtr' of Points scored In •1130 91mes 11 ... stet •L1CTa1cCOM,.aNY • S:• YILUAL8G••
: •••••••••••• : •.:• OllLOGltOWTM .... DMVa~•"ftltJiontlldW..... .... • • 4""'6ot Olllt"
• • •1• -ll lflllGPORA•S.ASOlll..,.,..,_.,efOtfttllttM'" •
: : ~~·A•CM 1 TMa QU IST "IH "~ MLuflM..,... ....
• • J;» •OCUJ1 HANH COUWTY''l'lltlrwi.o...t Ttlt,._ '""""""' .• •. • • t:• WOltLDPalll • t:• ... MllALl.-a"11t1V..., i . i :;: ="l,.~'=~f:::~:-:,:,:•11-,.,.r ·1..~~~~::..~.:;:::... ____________ .1 1 ......................................... ~ ............................................. , ~:.:.:r~~~~ ~ ,......,... I . . ' #, '
•
. ...
t r
I '
~ t I'
Bye, Bye Blubber
Come reduce the Dixon way,
Lose a pound every day. ·
Bye-Bye-Blubber
Bum up all those calories
Feel as light as a breeze.
Bye-Bye-Blubber
Everyone you know is getting thinner,
In our club. a loser is a winner.
Celebrate and hum a tune,
·we'll be thin very soon.
Blubber, Bye· Bye!!
(to the tune of Bye, Bye Blackbird)
•
Daily Pilot Photos
By Patrick O'Donnell
)
Pat Dixon will gear
exercise classes to
ski buffs. She will teach
body movement, how to
fall and how to be in
top physical condition.
'
" System Develops Skills
By ALLISON DEERR
Of .. 0.11, Pl ... ...,
How can you teach advanced
sets and geometric ftmctiOns to a
student who can't adds and5?
.... ls it realistic to teach
:.. vocabulary development when a
, child can't pronounce the words?
What good is a test at the end of
-the year that reveals how much a
\It child didn't learn?
To Richard L. Zw eig, the tradi-'° tional system was simply build·
ingon sand. f~,. "If a child misses a question,
.:S:-jbe time to do something about it
-la now. Stop. find the problems.
correct it, then go on."
'T'1' Zweig, in education since 1949
as a psychologist, remedial read.
PT iDg teacher counselor and con-'
sultant, developed a scbool-
1,requested, te'acber-generated
,c_lass management program for
"Ille Fountain Valley Scbool Dis-
trict In 1970.
The concept is a aelf-
adminiatered self-scoring pro-
<ess that allows · the teacher to
_.,ribe the exact materials a
student sfeeds to ac'!,jdre a
..,..--111c sldJI.
t'OIUIBDCOMPAJll\" •N" Zweia formed his own ''bol•in· ~be wall'' company in Hunt-
lnlton lleach to market the 1 .,.1em, with the backing of two
ootlege friends. and fil!id tested
. the system in the Fountain
Valley schools.
The first package was geared
to reading and after its success, a
second in math.was designed. A
similar prog ram for Early'
Childhood Education is under de-
velopment.
How ctoes it work?
''First, all of the teacher's
directions are recor~ on audio
cassette. Then a test is presented
on a coded form.
The students listen to tapes,
mark their answers on coded ·
forms which are self-scoring,
and either teacher or student
checkstberesults.
"Han answer is correct, 1:1 plus
is indicated. If it is incorrect a
number appears. This number
correlates with any material
available on the specific skills he
is missing, 1' Zweig said.
What the system does is code
all materials available in the
classroom and place it within
easy access. .
US~DINTERNATIONALLY
Fountain Valley Teacher SUp·
port Sr.stem now is used in some
S ~nt of the nation's elemen-tary schools, as well as Ireland,
South Africa, Israel, Saudi
Arabia and Australia.
Zweig will be one of a U.S.
Department of Commerce de-.
legation to Iran next month todla-
cuaaeducaUonal systems.
Results, recently evaluated na·
tionally in a variety of achool sel·
tings, have been phenomenal,Jte
said,
At the Salt River Indian Day
School near Phoenix, more than
a 200 percent increase in reading
skills Was reported. In rural
Georgia, a 240 percent increase
was measured.
ln Farmington-Bloomfield,
N.M., in a Title Ill project, test·
retest comparisons showed 250
percent improvement.
The same kinds of progress
were found in inner city schools in
Chicago, New York, Philadelphia and the 97th Street School in Los
Angeles.
A key to the project, Zweig
said is that students are not
measured against each other for
grades, against an ever-lowering
average, but against a body of
knowledge they must learn to
perform a specific skill.
Each can proceed at his own
pace and correct problems as
they arise .
COSTS REASONABLE
The system costs a district or
school $2.50 to Install and JU.t 31
cents thereafter to keep materials
up-dated.
The cost is not high. Zweig not·
ed, when you consider the cost of
remedial instruclion.
A surprisJng .result to some,
but nqt1to Zweig. was the p,,,.
gress1of children labeled educa·
ble mentally retarded. I
"The teacher doesn't expect
much and the child doesn't excel.
We are beginning to realize that
the IQ test is not sacrosanct.
''It see ms ridic ulous to
measure IQ with a test based on
reading skills, when a child has a
reading problem. The test is
loaded against him.
"The same holds true with the
ghetto or inner city child against
whom a test is culturally loaded.
As k an inner city child to
describe a cow . How could he
. -make the connection between cow
,and milk? Where is he going to see
one? ·
"But using the FVTSS. the
child can work at his own pace
and many kids who were labeled
EMR are reading at grade
level."
Another reason the system
works is that Zweig has not lost
touch with the stud ents. He still
teaches as a volunteer every
Wednesday at a sm3.ll school in
the mountains at Wrightwooct
His contact with students, and
students with problems. has been
along one. In 1951 hl'wasTHEre·
medial reading teacher at THE
higl/school In Huntington Beach.
He sees his system as a way o(
makint learnini more enjoyable
for everyone concerned.
''The kids like it, the teachers
like it, and as lhS cbildr"ll do
well, their parents 11\teit. ''
~
I
.,
Philosophy ;:
·:
Exercised
By JO OLSON °' llM 0.11, ,..._. Mllff
"Don't wait until you're 65 lo
start taking care of yourself. But
better late than never ...
Pat Dixon, tiny and trim, is a
good example of h er own
philosophy. Though she is a
grandmother and a latecomer lo
the physical fitness field, she
didn't wait until 65 to start get-
ting in shape.
Once exercise director at the
pre8tigious Golden Door spa in
Escondido, Mrs. Dixon laughs
when she tells how a housewife
got from the kitchen to the gym.
The story' goes back several
years to when Mrs. Dixon was
newly divorced and at loose ends.
e-de.cided _ _t_o aucm1?nl her
English nursing credentials and
earned her RN in preparation for
a career.
She had volunteered for and
was accepted in the Peace Corps,
but changed her mind at the last
minute because she decided it
would take her loo far from her
daughter.
Opting instead for a job at
Aspen, she got on skis and pro·
mptly broke her leg and four
ribs. Then, it was off to Rancho
La Puerta in Tecate lo ''recover
and get myself together."
Deborah Mazzanti, founder
and owner of the Golden Door
and the Ranch invited her to
move to the more prestigious spa
to serve as nurse, but warned her
that she would have to start lead-
ingexerciseclassestoo.
"I was· extremely nervous,"
Mrs . Dixon said. "l started at-
tending the classes and taking
notes. but there's nothing like
practice."
The time "in training" at the
Golden Door s howed her the
benefits or physical fitness and
she is a confirmed disciple today.
.. , believe in prevention much
more than trying to cure aft.er it
has happened,'' she said.
Mrs . Dixon finds it hard to ex-
plain how s he feels about the
benefits of exercise. "I can feel it
more than say it,'' she comment-
ed. "It's just plain old facts."
She likened it to an old car with.
an unused motor. If it isn't used it.
tiOOD will be inoperable.
''It's better to spend $25 on a·
class than $18 for a doctor's
visit.''
Lack of exercise will invite '.
arthntis and other disease she~
believes, while physical fitness is
good for circulation, nervous:
nes;;, bad backs and prevention
of injuries due to falls.
Exercising also teaches a
person tq become aware . of
himself, and takes that five
powids off before it becomes 10.
''Physical fitness also will im~
prove the tennis game,'' she
noted.
Mrs. Dixon, who was lured
from the Golden Door to start a
spa at the Lodge of the Four
Seasons at Lake Ozark, Mo., ad-
vocates teaching children how to
eat properly and how to take care
of their bodies •'from the begin-
ning ...
She has taught her principles
on radio and television as well as
in the fashionable spas (she also
has worked at Murrieta Hot Spr-
ings) but now is beginning a 6ew
venture in her work, private
classes geared toward ski buffs.
In preparation for the upcom-
ing winter season, Mrs. Dixon i~
teaching cJasBes in Corona del
Mar which include body move-
ment, how to fall and how to be in
top physical condition.
Each series will run for six
weeks and will consist of two or
three one-hour classes per week.
Early-morning and late evening
classes may be added at a later
date.
Mrs. Dixon , still getting settled
in her Huntington Beach apart-
ment, said she is anxious for the
classes to begin so she can get
back into an exercise regime .
Exercise is a commitment, shfl
3dmits, but "it's not too much ta
ask."
Anyone wishing information
may call Mrs. Dixon at 536-2766
or673-3420.
•
BEA ANDERSON, Edttor
Monday, October 27, 1975 Page B1
•
Richard L. Zweig
developed a class
management program
for Fountain Valley
School District.
1 i
,1
I
\
"
I
82 DAIL V PILOT
'/knew I had
to give up
my family,
children,
Monday. October 27, 1975
Conversion Required Sacrifice
By DENNIS McLEu.AN
0t IM 0.11, Piiot tu" Koran. lbe Jllllllhn hol1 ~.
Warned she SOOD ~ti bt
murdered, and ..-.,. lo llW
up her new.round faft.h. lt1!llhtwe
Sheikh was f~ to tM ... t•·lht~
ly and friends. SM mo1W!d..-Nrew
York City.
.
not once did lbey witness Jesus Chrl1t to me. We Wlced about
ov.rything eta•. but lbe KinJI ct
Klnp, lhe Lord of Lords.'' She
lo<•ted a Bible to ..., wbat lbe
Christian concept was.
ttt~s love of God for hi.a
peop e. ••1 said\ 'I promise You Ofle
thing, if You show me the way I
will follow'.••
SACIUl'ICES
friends and
be an outcast.'
She is th e daughter of a prince,
the wife of a former general and
minister or the inlerior. She en-
tertained world leaders in her
home and her name was a
household word throughout
Pakistan.
But eight years ago Madame
Bilquis Sheikh lt>ft her na tive
land with 40 pounds of luggage
and $500 to follow the \\'Ord Of
Jesus Christ.
.. My greatest pn\'llelre lo to
be<'ome a serval\l (l1f' ~ Lord,
Jesus Christ.'' a·AYI Madame
Sheikh. •' l am h~ to tell what a
wonderful Lord .re have.··
After reading the Bible, she
was still confused between the
two books. She told a Catholic
nun she wanted to find.God ... 'She ~aid "Why don't you pray anduk
God to show you the way?
Pray to Him like a father'.''
Madame Sheikh was aware she
would be killed for giving up the
MusUm faith. "I knew I had to
give up my famlly. children.
friends and the country I love. 1
knew 1 would be rejected as an
out.cast. a source of embarrass·
ment to my children.
ishe said it was a joy to be in a
Cbrii:;tla n !'ountry. But, she
'added, ''I was surprised there
were more cars on the freeway
and al the shopping_ centers than
at the churches on Sunday. Don't
these people worship? I was
amazed that the churches were
silent. There were no witnesses
fOlf' Jesws Chris t.
"Are you Christ ·like? Are you
g:entJe?., she asked the audience.
"If not then what h ave Vire done
wit.h the spirit of God within us?''
By converting to Christianity
and rt."maining in Pakistan,
Madame Sheikh was taking her
life into her own hands .
It is right and permissible to·
kill anyone who abandons the
M~slim religion, accorcling to the
Madame Sh~ikh was relating
her unusual lite story to Teen
ChaUenre Women. a Christian
women's club in Orange.
OIRISTIAN CONCEPT
"l knew nothing about Jesus
Christ," she confessed. "All my
life I had mixed with Christians.
1 had s tayed in their houses, but
The idea of praying to God at a
mortal being was foreign to tbe
Muslim concept, but she did it.
"I don't think any of you will
under!ltand wbat happened to
me." she said. "'I felt as if I was
in the presence of God. I was sur·
rounded by the love of God. For
the first time I realized the
••1 said 'I leave all these
thing& at your feet Lord',"
Madame Sheikh recalled, her
voice choked with emotion.
CHRISTIAN COUNTRY
When she arrived in New York
She implored the audience to
give out what Christ has given lo
them. "Use it freely and keep on giv-
lng it," she said. •·You love ypur
children. Whal do you do for
them? Is God's love only a verbal
love? Do something for Him.''
(Ann Landers QJ January Date Set
Troth Told
Facts Bring R~spect
DEAR ANN
LANDEllS.: l 'm a
teenager '!( bo never
thouahi tb-=: day would
come whe~1 I would be
'l!J(ritin( ''Dear Ann" but
it lw..'.6. Maybe l can help
~·me of your readers
·who had the same pro-
blem I suffered with for
years.
My brother is brain·
damaged. Until today, J
was very impatient wtth
him because he got more
attention from my folks
than l did. Last night my
Cather explained to me
for the first time exactly
what is wrong with my
brother. He told me how
hard he has to work to do
simple, ordinary thin~s
.and how much progress
he has made in the last
few years. I know now
how frustrating life must
be for him and I respect
him very much for the
way he is trying to cope
with his handicap.
Now I see him through
different eyes. I love him
and admire his courage.
Please pass this on. Ann.'
-JB
DEAR JB: Whal a
beautitul letter! It's too
bad your father didn't
talk to you a tew years
ago. You would have
been wiser sooner and
your brother's lite as
well as yours would have
been easier. Thank you
for writing. ·
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: I wa s
widowed four months
when I met Alex. He was
recovering from a
broken romance that had
lasted tor seven years.
Alex has been married tor 20 years but to a
\\'O man he doesn •t care
for. He tells me he loves
me very much and would
like to marry me, but he
doesn't want to upset his
wife and children.
l thought I was getting
away with sneaking Alex
in and out of my
bedroom for the last six
months. He would arrive
after my 12·year·old
daughter, Helen went to
sleep and would tiptoe
out the back door before
she got up for breakfast.
ashamed to face her
friends . Money is no pro-
blem, Ann. I can live
comfortably anyplace.
The trouble is -I Jove
Alex and believe he will
marry me if I just give
him time. Please advise.
-IN A QUANDARY Well, Helen saw Alex
leave this morning and I DEAR QUAN: Tbe
thought I would die: She;ttber-dame gave blm
informed me that the seven years and be
neighbors told her what didn 't marry HER. I
was going on but she ~an't improve on your
didn't believe them. See· daughter's advice. I
ing him with her own hope you take it -and
eyes was quite a shock. the sooaer the better.
Now Helen is begging
me to move to another ci·
ty because she is
and I'll bet most of it is
put on. I don't want to be
one of them.
It's too bad I wasn't
blessed with a cheerful
look and a h a ppy smile,
but J am what l am and I
wish people wouldn't as·
s ume I 'm an old m eanie.
Any suggestions? -
PREJUDGED IN PEN·
NSYLVANIA
DEAR JUDGE: Any
idiot can smile a lot. It's
what you 1ay and bow
you treat people that te·
Clsters. If you are friend·
ly, considerate and
pleasant, and baYe a
good sense of humor,
nobody will take you for
a sou rpuss. So cheer up,
already.
Mr. and Mrs. J<i ck
Linden Caldwell of
Newport Beach have an-
nounced the engagement
of their daughter, Joyce
Louise Caldwell and
Robert Roy Ukropina,
son of the John Robert
Ukropinas of San
Marino.
Miss Caldwell, a Na·
tional Charity League
debutante, is a graduate
of Newport Harbor High
School and the Universi·
ty of Southern California
where she majored in
public reJations.
(' HorQscope: Leo, Imprint Style
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: Will you
please tell your readers
that just because a
person hardly ever
s miles or laughs it
doesn't mean he is a
sourpuss?
What are lhe do's and
don 'ls of teaching your
child about the birds and
the bees? Let Ann Lan·
ders' new booklet, "How,
What and When to Tell
Your Child About Sex,"
give you the ground
rules. For your copy
send 50 cents in coin,
along with a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope, to Ann Lan·
ders, P .O. Box 1400,
Elgin, Illinois, 60120.
She is a member of
Kappa Alpha Theta and
the Public Relations Stu·
dent Society of America.
She also attended
California State
University at San Diego.
•• ••
TUESDAY, OCl'OBER 28
BySYDNEYOMARR
t ARIES (March 21-April 19): Avoid tendency to
believe you can gel something of value for
nothing. Be creative, perceptive -steer clear of
speculative ventures.
TA URUS (April 20-May20): Business, factual
information, security and basic costs tend to
dominate. Accept overtime assignment.
Welcome chance to display sense of responsibili·
ty.
GEMINI (May 21-Jwie20): Take special care
during short journey. Be sure of mission and
message. Accent is on finishing assignment.
family member.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Look beneath
surface indications. Be aware of financial re-
sourc~s or one who proposes partnership -or
mamage.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18 ): You get in·
formation which is solid, real and enables you to
establish intelligent, workable policy.
PISCES (Feb. 19·l'o1arch 20 ): Check basics. Do
your work. Take nothing for granted. Finish
task. Leave no loose ends. You are due for
greater recognition.
CANCER (J une 21 -July 22): Spotlight on
creative approach to special coll ections,
·~ ·.personal possessions, money. Strive for greater
Jf today is your birthday -You are dynamic,
independent, "sexy .. and original. Domestic ad-
justment works out in your tavor. Apparent set·
back rebounds to your great advantage.
independence of thought, action.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Lunar cycle high -get
going on your own. Imprint style. Take initiative.
Trust intuition and follow through on hunch.
VIRGO CAug.23-Sept. 22): Diversify in sense
that you experiment, try various methods,
.,. enlarge horizons. Don't get yourself painted into
f.. corner.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Accent on what you
want to happen as contrasted to law or probabili-
ty. Some friends seem intent on overturning best·
laid plans.
SCORPIO (Oc t . 23·Nov. 21): Emphasis on your
determination, ability to ride over obstacles to
attain goat. You receive written instructions.
You get chance to analyze material.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 211 : Take long.
range view. Refuse to be discouraged by those of
little vision or faith. Make conciliatory gesture to
'
A
cmon·s
SPORTsWEAR
:BALBOA fS{NI)
216MarintA'4.
67S-19':W
LOSE WEIGHT
OR MONEY BACK .
Ntw dinlell t"ll compteted 11 I .
m16or unhmlty llOsplbl PIM tMt tht
ODRINEX Pl.In llrill htlp rou lost.
lkeelS Wtltlll qulc•'Y. ANY LIVING ROOM
ANNOUNONG
Sl..aron C.amer
now at the
/l~jbolll-.'( /t//.
~~~ttas
CARPET
CLEANED $1995
ntlS Wiii OHL Y
any living room and hall
( Rll'gcndll!'\\ cl Reem S•:ll')
OORINEX conttlns •n 1m11ina
tlllllClt Umtr th•I au.ppitsstt !ht
appltltt. Enjoy t11rH fOOd meals • .S.y 11 tht tiny" ODRINl.X l1bl11 helps
rou 11t Int without l>lina tiunary.
DINING ROOM (or dlnln11ru)
Now .•• Advanced techniqu ts ind
ch1mic1I developmtnl s m1 k1 possi ble
superior rtsult s ri cht in your home -
and at 1 price you ca n 1lford. Now you
can have your carpet s clt1n1d profts·
sian1lly as afltn as you likt.
• Wllfl , ... ab-la. )'OUf Mi&hl '°"
down.. S.11 blllft n dlrKtld • trill not
:1111u '°" itrnw1. • Loot; "ti«, IHI betttr ts you 1ttn
·, :.lknmilfdownlodlY wtthOORINEX.
and HALL $2995 CLEANED
( R1c1rdl1ss
t lz.1)
• • :Stfbfec:tiofl tu1r1nttld or montY bee:•.
Sl!lltVlNQ
ALL 0,-
0tlllANO.I COUNTY
WE'L L CLEAN ANY ADDITIONAL ROOM 1195
WITH EITHfR THE ABOVE SPECIALS ................ ..
I
' '· 'H RIF Ty ""' '· "" (" •' '" ... ~1 H!lj >.
,.., ••.
f90ple HCtlon
fcHps at track
of what people
.are fHllng,
aaylng,
. and doing. EY•rf day.
In the
DAILY PI LOT
CALL 675-9140 TODAY
NOT DELIGHTED? DON'T PAY!
UVINGROOM
H:ll$2Q95
Deep Soil Extraction
MOST CARPETS DRY
IN ll TO 1 y, HR .
UVING ROOM
HALL $J995 &
DINING
ROOM
vn. WI DO DYE CAM'I ING RIGHT IN YOUft HOM[ •nd It k rudr t. uw
lm,...t.hfy, W• wflf •ho TINT or COLORIZC ,our urpet whlle shampoo Ina at
slllhtlddltktnlil ctuqe. COLOM SO 8RICHT AND VIVID ~u wlll be ntound~
•
'-:( GUaRanT@• '*i ®···
GUARANTEE CARPET CLEANING & DYE CO.
109 27th STR~ET, NEWPORT BEACH, CA.
' I•
I'm a young man who,
unfortunately, was not
blessed with a happy
face. But it's the only
face I have and I can't
force myself to put on
another one. I am sick to
death of people coming
up to me and saying,
"Why don't you smile?
You look so glum."
I know several people
who laugh a great deal
JOYCE CALDWEU.
Her fiance is a
graduate of San Marino
High School, where he
was vice president of the
student body and presi-
dent of his freshman
class. He is a business
administration major at
USC and is affiliated
with Kappa Sigma.
The wedding i s
planned in January at St.
Andrew·s Presbyterian
Church, Newport Beach.
I do_o't know what comes
first a sense of well being"
. •• or a more attractive figure
Liii• lallcrd
•Mae woncltrf.i chcnlge1 In l.our fl9"
that c• ch~ your whole II e.
•Learn how you can acquire lo•ely pro-
portlHI without lhoh. p1R1 or welghflift· ..,,.,,
Ing.
•lM gentle way to fiCJUre perfedlon the
Liii• lallcrd way.
Call Now For
Your Complimentary
FIGURE
ANALYSIS
631-2444
•• Learn what measurement lor
)'OUr particular body slructu re
,!,t1t«ue ~atkvtd
FIGURE CONTOURING SALON
639 E. 17th • Westport Square·
Costa Mesa • 631-2444
'
t
BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
Wt' OIW1 YOO
C-0/1\E OY€1l
ll£11f
lrl5fEAO ~
~w ~" t
~~£~ 601"6
'TO MAtf If
ff L CM'f
f1N1"1 W
S0o)(? ~ LI=-._--' .__,u...._._~IO-..:;;...JZ? ~:.:-<......J_--"l~Ji, '-~
TUMBLEWEEDS
i\flS MO!ml IHE covrno 91.ACK
FEA'TllER GOES 101HE iRl~E'S REAL
U00E A&t:NT! lllAT CRACK 1JVICT
AND SllACK PACTERL..THAT HIP
HEATH ANO HEARTH HUCKSTER! ...
'TW06RAPHICAI. 'IUR1'\.E1 I NM1E YOU
INDIAN OF TH E MONTH !
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
I t..XlULDN'T SW AN<I OF
~AT S1UFF, Jl\N I I WA&
READING AN ARl'ICLE THAT
.';AID IT CAN BE DANGEROll5
m~HEALTHI
FIGMENTS
• . ' ' •
NANCY
CONGRATS lllP! 10 l'M
WHAT ro \iXJ A'flRIOOll'. INSPIRED
'lt>UR SOCCE55? EN MY
IPCIL.
YO:J MEAN 1\1I5 Pk/\5 TIC
WRAP, MARCIA '!.
by Tom K. Ryan
TllE GUY
WOO UNUJAOEO
MANHATTAN.
by Tom Batiuk
NO, THE WN01MEAT
IN51DE !
by Dale Hale
by Emie Bushmiller
··-~•·•« •·-·-. ..,,._,_,_..,
I
DOOLEY'S WORlD
Olli;' Ml~ISIT.R
I \.:.l A,( 11 l l> l.»J
·1 ~11:;. ~il~
DR. SMOCK
eee. L.OOK
t1f SIN•
10f),W !
Al MY SMOCK,
MISS c R e:ese: ·' >.~Ave A ,....ew
L-AUNPRY ,.....uN\eeR .'
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
!==cir
' '
Mor'ldlf· Octobtr 27. 1915
NO
KIODtN' ?. ..
GOSH, C AL.t,...
THE REAPe~S
P'IGSS1".' YOU
MAY HAve
A L.Rf:ADY wo.....i.
A PR1Ze .1
YEfl .. Now PRACT/C o
/ILL 'TH' PUNCHES
YOU GOT WITH
'THAT FIST.
' lt .,
" J' ,, ..
• OAllYPllOT 83
by Rodger Brodfltlcf
by George Lemont
;
' • I ,
~ I
-~~
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
0¥. I BR ING ON
YouR OLD MAN '
GUPPY .. MOON1S
READY!.'
by Rodcjer Bollen
\
•
WE'VE A L.WAYS BEEN
PARTNERS ••• LET"S
SHARE OUR GOOP1ES -
' ~ ' I
i
"
..
ll
TODAY'S CRQSSWQRD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Oulch
tlll•f\11'•
S Elec1 units
9 Cancel.
Slang
14 Take .• -:
Sooo1e
1!) Trade
center
16 "Th11 ··
Mu11ny'"
17 veneer·
ma lung
machroe
19 [lec1ron tube
pt111e
20 J•tfv
21 OnlOOl!e•
2J Flighl ol
steps
25 Shlt<p blows
26 Hew1
A1chaoe
28 flowfi'f
le<tlu•n
32 ffr'"et's
"""" J7 Woody
ASllln l)Ul'I
.l8 Corn Or\
the ···
)9 Bushed
•I Und1Y1ded
42 j'l•~e M~IOQ"
........ lhP.
tla•k ..
45 Profuse
1;il~e1
48 Cano.> used u1
wockerw0<k
J •
S0 VK\IU"1
tube· Sufl•1
51 S!umble$
5.t Goggle
58 The Hotv
Spu1t
62 Setoul
63 Guman
man·lname
64 Goller's
accessory;2
word~
66 Poner's
wheel
67 fa!segod
68 long tome
penods
69 Co•ne1ed;
lnlo.imal
70 Camera oa•I
11 Acuess
Eleono<a ·•••
DOWN
I Pauses
2 .. Ifs···· , ..
J SorcetHS
4 Moie <llque
5 Chu<Ch
vessel
6 floo• cove•·
1ny piec,.!o
1 51.!JJOC)Oing
metnbt.'f.S
8 Spreitll l'>r•e
and !hP.!'e
9 0.spe!Sf>
10 C.JH.I gamr
11 Vr•v tunny
person
12 Annul
1J Hoooed uo
beYerage
18 Bra1enness·
lnf0<mal
22 Seal ot! a
""' 24 Rekgo0us
g1ouo
77 Jou•nev
:19 Roman god
JO Combatant
1•000.s
JI Patmre3de• .
" l2 Ewdence ot
an 1111u•v
43 K1nd ol case
44 Ve<v rl•v
46 Shee1 lab<oc
47 Pu! on l/lf
recO<d
49 Na1.1ght
52 Oange1
53 Underg•.Jd
55 Giar11
;i1mad1Mo
56 T..-s lh,.
SCO•t!
51 Della 0 1
p~~
58 An1mar~ sk.n
59 Sandar3t
JJ 81'\IP!ilQP !fr<'
34 HPlp 60 form.ii
J5 Mouths: P•O<:edUIP
An~r fil Black POI'!.
'.16 Beat .se\lerelv 65 C;orgo dor.·
40 L1pmN1 um,.nt~
Ahhr.
10 11 12 I)
I
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz
~~~~~~~--=
TOD'." 15
VETEt\1(5 DI.I,
LINV5 .,
DO \'00 THIN( 1rs WRONG
TO 6£ 5lTIING IN A PUMPKIN
PATCH WAJT1NG f<M1 THE '611EAT
fVMfl:rN' Jl<IHEKIJ{S Cl>."?
NO, I OON'T THINK SO ... I
HAVE A F'.EUNG THAT THE
VE1£AAN5 lilJc.tl' lli0£1\5TAND
' v '
JUDGE PARKER by Herold Le Doux
ARE 'fOU 5URE YOU I RECALL NON .'
FOUND A LAll.f.... lT WAS THIS Wf:t:1~
ANO THAT YOU WENT
FISHING, e>ART?
/!""'('I' II • ...... I· ,, ..
MISS PEACH
. Aer1-1 ~iz'r
~~EET1i f.4~f
}ft\lt~ -.,,~n Y ~
(ft l'lf l'JIT<Jf
'fOV IJP l<llT~ ~ Su1A11J -~~ • 'Tff,47 "°' M i). •
!
' l
1 •
DICK TRACY
l
' Al<TH~I<, I 'D LIKE A
~WEETHEAl<T WHO 1$
~,AITl-ll='tAL 1 ANO WMO'Lt..
NEVEi< EVEN LOOK
AT ANOTHEIC Glll'L, """°
MATTE.It HOW GO~GEO~~I
1'''' ~~ ~·>'•:,.-i '.
-. l.f'U
' I
'
C:OlALD >OlA
R:ELATE TO A
NEAR:· Sl<'HTED
ll<l?H SE TTEJZ ?
. ,. ' '
by Mell
by Chester Gould
THE GIRLS
'·Now 1n rh.11 nnc l'n1 :'llr.1i1I ;111 1our rk.ul1n~~ 111 "t nut C"t!n one
\I.in .... \'-tll tii: 111 no :1v.11 I. •
I i
DENNIS THE MENACE
.. '
'
' ' ' ,,
• ' ii I !~· ! :
j
'
' 'fx1r.0AD!Yoo Sl'QULUA SE~ EVE.Rfroi' sc.aJr OONf!
~ s:JtJNOf.O JUST LI K£ Sll\lt T~IN6 lt4 A JUNGLE ! •
•
•
I
I
•
'. ~ ·DAILY PILOT Monday. October 27, 1975
( L ]tl. Boyd
r.resting Wind
.With Crowbar
..
CR OWB~R llOl.t:
Q. "What ·s" crowbar hol l··' ·
J\ 'J'hul 's what lht~ c·1111t·nry 1n ()kl:thomu
(':lib; a knot h olt• in ,1 hou~1 · wall Yo\I push a
cruv•bar throug h 11 tu le:..l tht· wind. tr lhc
cro\\•bar bends. thL' \~·ind is normal If tt
,,.-->, -
brt•ak,, you 'd hl'lll'r nut gu
IJ Ul!:!LdC,
R .. ::ltf.MBER , the
lC'ffij.lt.'f<ilU!'(• Of )OUr liver
p; ,11\\:.t\>; :1 dt·g rec or lwQ
h1 ~hi:1 th ;.in tht· tern·
pt:rJturt• nf )C.lur kldllt') ~-
('R .. '.\\'7'1•:~ on (;rt•<Jt
1\111 ,1111 :.. roy a l Y<.t t'ht
/(r t1.1nn1 ,1 .trc rt'<1u1retl tu
V.'l'3r gym shut'" tu ~Llt·nct· their fool::itcps 011
the decks.
YQ\j K NOW \hj l t\1 t. RushmorC' SC'ulpl ure
of Abraham Lincol n's face? It 's so bi g :.i man
t'an slond upright insidt' of nnl' t·y e. Thi:-. ('1Jn1 ·
es to mind bccaUSl' a 1·l11·11t a :-.ks ho\\' f:..ir ;.iW<.JY
you <:an Sl'l' lhO!'i t' l'l11:-11·ll•d f:..it:l'~ on .J t·ll.:u'r
<l<.ty About 60 n 11I L':i
111\l.IJ
Argum ent continues over the claim that
m('n who can Wtl!J.!ie their ears r<Jrl•ly gel bald.
But a note from :J tll:itomer says that mu~t be
right. ··1 c<1n only w1g~ll· my right e;:,i r," hl'
says, "and m y hald spot 1s distinl't\y ovt'r on
the left .·· Rcm arkabll·' ·Wish he 'd :.ent '-'
snapshot.
i\t ,\ \'BF: \'OU know the gourmC't delicacy
knOV•'n as pate tll' foH.' i:ras ts mudc from lhl'
enlarRed li vers of v.·ell fallent.-d geese Uut do
YOU know how thoSC' J.!l'e~l' ):!l'l Wl'l\ f~1llt'llt.•d ''
Women in Eastern Europe force feed the• h1 rd:-
by pushing pot:itO dumphngs tlfl\\'n their
throats with their fin~cr:.. Chet L. Sw1tcll lold
rne that. too.
A client of Br1lish t>xtr<1ct1on asks how
Englanders came to refer to tht· tl'IC'phonc as
"the bl owt•r ... Long :.igo, it v.·a~ the praclil'l' ;11
the oulst'l of a c<1ll lo hlO\~ into lhl' rt·ct•ivt'r. To
hear if th~ line wt·rt' live. 1'hal ·~ "·h:.it our
l .anguage man found out. He did not find ')lll,
lhoug:h, how. Aml'f\l·ans came to refer to 1h1•
telephone as ''tht.• horn.··
'• ~tOST CO LLF:GJ-: men likl' and most col
lege women d1slikl• tu neck al len~h on dales
Or had you s urmised as much '~ Anyhow, a
study by Robert 0 . Dloud at the L'111versit y of
rt11chigan has proved that fact .
.... dd•~''""''llO L M Bov<I p 0 80~ llol0,(0lold ...... , .. Q?61b
THAT NEW BREED OF CAT
IS ON A WHOLE~ TRIP ! ~W"J:.;
... From junk pile to jet set
NOW! AT FOLLOWING THIATllS
Cinemaland, Anaht1m
LI .A.Costa~
ViUa21 .Qranl)e
Tiran, Fullerton
S!adium 0.1 .. 0ranqe
SaOdlebKk Cinema. El Taro
Valley View, Garden Gro~t
".Heavy lnt~tl
894·5Il!I
"MAS'tmu.I" IRI
.. MOMTIY "1'HOH'' ' "'HOLY GIAIL"IPGl
"HARD TIMES" IPGI
"LAST DETAlL" IRI
"TOMMY"
IPGI
"FRITZ THE CAT' IXI
•
0HEA VY nAFflC" IXI
"WHIFFS"
"MASH"
"HARD TIMES"
"LAST DET •IL"
''PtaUP" 111
"'TllP WJTH THI Tu.CHU." ll:J
Coast to Coast Sex
kautlful new ~lrls. la5t sequence is the hotrestjp
hlttory. It alone ls worth the ~rice of admission.
·.AL GOtDSTf IN
-t
t&~·ro ps in Pops @
8 y the Ass«l1ted Press
The following are Billboard's hot record hits !or
the W{'t•k ending November las they appear in next
week ·s lSsue or Billboard magazine:
llOT SINGLES
1. ISL.ANO GIRl.-Ellon John MCA
2. CAt.YPSO -l 'M SORRY -John Denver
RCA J. MIRACLES -Jefferson Starship Grunt
4. f. 'll'.'l' 1-:v r:s -Eagles Asylum
!J . 'J'Jl!Y J UST CAN'T STOP IT The Games
ProplC' Pl ay -Spinners Atlantic
6. W~IO 1.0V ES YOU -Four Seasons Warner
Bros. -Curb
7. FEELINGS -Morris Albert RCA 8. BAD 01 .(lOO -NeilSedakaRockel
9. llEAT WAVE -LOVE IS A ROSE-Linda
Ronstadt F.lektra 10. TllJS WILL BE -NatatieColeCapitol
TOPLPS
t . JEFFERSON STARSHIP -Red Octopus
(;runt
2 JOflN OENVER -WindsongRCA
3. l't ~K Jo"LOYO -Wish You Were Here
Columbia
·I. 1'HE EAGLF.S -One Of These Nights
1\!:iylum 5. !.!NOA RONSTADT -Prisoner In Oisgui.se
A:.ylum 6. RRUCE SPRINGSTEEN ·-Born To Run
Columbia •
7. JF:Tf!RO TUU. -Minstrel Jn The Callery
Chrysalis
8. GEORGE 1-lARRISON -Extra Texture Ap·
pie 9. ROD STEWART -Atlantic Crossing Warner
Bros.
IO. DAVID CROSBY·GRAJIAM NASH -Wnd
()n The Water ABC
EASY USTF.NING
I. SO METHING BETIER TO DO -Olivia
;\'('wton.John MCA
2 THE WAY I WANT TO TOUCH YOU -Cap-
tain & Tennille A& M
3. I ONLY HAVE EYES FOR YOU -Art
Gartunkt'I Columbia
'1 . LY IN' EYES -Eagles Asylum
S. DIA~1 0NDS & RUST -Joan Baez A&M
6. CA ROLINA 1N THE PINES -Michael
~urphy Epic
7. WHO LOVES YOU -Four Seasons Warner
Bro:->. -Curb
8. JUST TOO l\1ANY PEOPLE Melissa
\1anrhester' Aris ta
tic
9. GAMES PEOPLE: Pl.AV -Spinners Allan
10. SUi\1M ER OF ·42 -Biddu Orchestra Epic
COUNTRY SINGLES
I. TURN OUT TllE LI GHT ANO LOVE ME
TO::--llGHT -Don Williams A BC-Dot
2. l 'M SORRY -John Denver RCA
3. ARE YOU SURE HANK DONE IT THIS
WAY -ROB WILLS IS STILL THE KING
Waylon Jt•nnings RCA
,I. ROC KY -Di ckey Lee RCA
5. WHAT 'S HAPPE.'IEO TO BLUE EYES
Jessie Colter Capitol
6. J LIKE BEER -Tom T. l-lall l\1ercury
7. Al .LOVER J\o1E -Charlie Rich Epic
B. SAN ANTONIO Sl'ROLL -Tanya Tucker
MCA
9. IT'S ALL IN THE MOVIES -Merle Hag-
gard Capitol
10. WHAT IN THE WORLD'S CO ME OVER
YOU -Sonny J amesColumbia
Will De Escape TV?
Martin Sheen Figluing for Movie Career
By VERNONSCOTJ'
HOLLYWOOD IUPIJ -Martin Sheen, the
brilliant young actor who disbelieves in Emmy
awards, apparently would prefer to turn down .
Oscars.
He wants lo drop out or television and into mov-
ies.
In J-loJJywood, who wouldn 't .
Bigger , if not better. men than Sheen have tried
lo escape the tube for the greener pa.stures of the
big screen. The majority have fail ed
Shttn may have more d1(riculty than most
because of the enormous prestige he has gained as a
video performer in "That Certain Summer," "The
Missiles of October," "The Execution or Private
Slavik'" and ''J ohnny Come llome.''
TWICE: llE DEWNED F.mmy nominations,
£or ''Slovik ·· and ··Summer.·· I le feel.s actor:. should
not compete against one another.
Of Spanish extraction. born Ra mon Est evez in
Dayton, Ohio. Sheen is a brooding man of 34 . I-le 1s a
political a<'tiv1st who supports Tom Hayden. Jani·
f''onda's left -wing husband who is a candidate for
lhe U.S. Senate from California.
Sheen s eethes with inner fires, especially
t'holer at social and political.injus\ices. 1-te brings t cJ
mind the late J ames Q{•an who dit.'d 20 yea rs ago.
Uut he 1s :i quieter, more intcnsl" rebel.
"NRC IS DOING A biogrnphy of Jam{'~ Oean
and sounded me out about playi ng him ,'' Shct,>n
said . "Rut I'm not interested. It v.·ould be too hard.
I've watC"hed his old movies on the tube and J 'vt"
never seen a resemblance between us "
Sheen 's reticence may be attributed to his lack
11f enthusia sm for television. ··1·vc decided tu
l'urtail television bl'cause it lacks freedom anti
roo m for creativity ... he explained, citing his recent
T\' movie. "Sweet I lost age ...
"This film would have made a marvelous mov-
lt'. but the budeet was limited. We had only 15 shoot
.Wambaugh Book
Slated for Movies
t,QS ANGF.l.ES (APJ -The fourth hook by {'X
cop .Joseph W a mbaugh. ''The Choi r Boys,'· has bt't'n
purchased by l.ori mar Proclu(·t1ons for a feature n10
tion picture.
Lorimar. produ('er or "'fhe Waltons." mad{• a
four-part TV movie of Wambaugh's "The l:Uut·
Knight ... A TV series base<l on tht' book \•ollt bl' a
midseason entry on CBS
George Kennedy stars in the rulC" C'reated by
Willi a m Hold en.
._,_-..o••
n:i ~ .. "'" TMe -··-
' In 1M"W ~ .qikndor... I
Tbr most macnif1ttn1 ptm.,. rwr!
CllWlO SUlltl)~-,.-...,., • .,..,11
Surf c•,..lM-'
.c_• •" ', .• • "...' '"' • 'A.J.!.li.
SURF ALM HSTIVAL
THIS Wlfl!
''THE FORGOTTEN
ISLAND
OFSAHTOSHA"
B•t ... RRf •AIE'• s..o. .. ros .... •S 1 .. l SlQRV (JI ...
JOVRt.EV-... N ODE<;Sy TO ....... ,
l.J\NOS ~AN• ISL .. ~Jo<; .. '>E.o.nc ..
TO fl'-10 I "'A. I O~•E f>LAt~ l~I P •
WA.VE RIDER DREAMS Of' f lNOllfu
... BEA.Ul l~Ul f !U,O
l:lO&l)Q
flll!I! CAAW!NG$ NIOHIL~
ing days insle.id of nveorsix weeks. And it was cut
!or commercials.
· 'Thos~ things make it entirely different from•
featurt• film . That's why TV movies turnoutlookiJlJ-
l1kc poor rC'l ations.
"TllF.RE JS MOR E interference with the-
<'rC'allve proC'C'Sses in television. Networks are try-
Ulf:: to sell products instead of ideas.··
Sht"l'n ~d n gs a fa miliar lyric. Scorts or
l('lcv1 s1on actor~ feel precisely the same, apparent·
ly unmindful lhat the sale or products is making
them rich.
Sheen failed to mention another factor in hls
discontent -prestige.
The difference between Robert Redford or War·
ren B«:>atty and. say. Sheen or Dennis Weaver, ts the
d1ff eren<'c bet ween Ohio Slate and Slipyery_ Rock.
MOVJ F.S AR F. BIG time. Television is bush.
Television 1s a separate entity in the eyes or
movie makers ... She-en said. ''Once an actor is
categorized as a TV performer he's stuck. We have
to y,·ork to change that. Top movie names avoid
ll'il•v1 s1on like the pla~ue.
··11 should be easier ror m e to make the transi ·
11on from the tube because I've never worked ln a
!'er1cs. althougl:l 1 ·vc lx'en offered several op·
portur11lit•s ..
Sht•c n s:11d hP'd already taken a rirsl step away
frun1 \t•lt·v1sion hy refusing-all but irresistible roles
1n top-fl1 ghl dramas.
"l 'VF. BEEN OFFERED two low-budget pie·
lure~ ... he said. ''A'nd rather than work in more-
tl•lev1sion I \V iii do one or the other of them -even if
lhl~y ·re never seen.
·At least I will have the freedom 1 a m Jooking
fur and the creativity l can't find in television.''
C>ne can only wi sh Martin Sheen wel1 and
"'onder if he 1s nominated for an Oscar whether he
\VIII d1~da1n 1t as he did the Emmy.
lHE LION IN WINTER -·-o .... '1<•11#
NUI AND•t•l
Ta~ndSeed
Plus
"Touch of Satan"
·--,_,,_ ....... --· f-1~:}
.111·1IOlll.' I\: ,, .. ,.; .,_ .....
"HlAYY TUfflC
H lll l">M-f
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11n1 , .. , u r .... .,,,.,
fAllllY llM> IAJH'OA"°' "!Cf
MOttOAY TMllU IATUllOAY 11>O1t1 l:OCI '11
ll,IMOA• & MOllDAYS 11>O1t1 t :OO I'll
U llllU.OA' THfATJlfS ""'"' --SlmtluUitt .. ,.,.,..,,.,.
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"HURTS OF THE WESr ''II t. ,,1, u' /\~I .ll.l1ll.l1Jl.J•l .. t.i•
CINEMALAND
\II I St H>r OO! • lnl!Ullt i)~ liOI '"' "''"~
J ... w..,...
"RODSTER COGBURN'' ,, ... •:••
U.l/MIM-lill.ltl'-''11.1, ........
CINEMAlANO
1'14 So ~"~·· 1 .. ~.,.,~1\ II.Iii
ll llPllti•• ... -~114 .........
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CINEMALAND
ll llh M;i,,. h1~1 .. ,n1.c1 '"0 ,-:i£T19 .. -.. l9 NA.TVUI
"'MINI U'tlS Of
NrT'I THI C:: At"
, ...... ""'l l\Moltl .. 4:1 .. ,: ...... .il
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..,.rTITHICA'rlRI
"'HIAYTTRA'NC"'
MCllC. T-.i NI, .,,..,,..._II.JS
UC:W'T MOUO .. T•
Uf. I Wlt-Of'OM I l•ll
THl CITY SHOHINO CtNTAE
ORANGE •532.9121
~ CllT CtNTAI (l,,,t MA~
I.A. 'flWY !MA NCHllTI" IJC.t
O.Q. llflWY (CITY 0111 . IX.I
A "'THI w.cuuou•Hs"'
V-WAUCIMG TAu..t•IT Z"
IA.._ MUl'T HOOIM" 111 .............. , ..........
A "TMIW4T wl'w ... '1 . -.OLD,. .,.,
,, ..... OIM•--·-~ HAID 1'1MIS"' --ll1'T11 110 MAN ""
Ofol ll I! M llOO"I • ... nMIU MKl 10/14
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MACON COUNTY llNI 1111
-•UllltU""'IM•-
IOQSf(J COGIUIN !'ti ••• SUOlllAND ll,llS_~l.:,'".::_-l:J _.,. ....
MAHOGANY ,.,.. ..... --SHAIM'S 1'IL\SUll 1t11 _,.___...,...
TMI WAT WI Wllltl'll
GOlD,_ .
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t toU "° Wl' ... 11
A IOT l HIS DOG "'
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~IT'S 00 IT AGAIN Ml •••
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HAID nMfl..,. ..... .--.
Ml. MIJllTTI •
....... -8
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DIANNA ROSS
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ROOSTt."11
COG8URI<
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f C~ARLIS BRO•SO•
JAMfS CODUR•
114RDTIMH -~ ".-.-.... ..,~~,R-~~~TJ!,l,~.~ •. --1
"BUSTER I BILLIE" '""'I
'THE OTHER SIDE OF THE
MOUNTAIN'
IM EMTEI
NH_of..._.CO ........
Wll AUI NI;-'"·''''
.JAJD:S WBttMORE ..... ,s r..-•
GIVE 'Ell REJ,I. llAJIRT!
Plu1 "BROTHER CAN YOU SPARE .\DIME?"
olwuds BllSTOl CIN£MI CIM£MI WIST
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PUBLIC NOTICE .....
flH:TITIOUl IWSlllllt
fllAM81TATl .. C'"° ,,.,.t<et..,.1119,..-• • ..._ww.
~-;
MAOHOLIA H0M t'5, 10011
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PUBUC NO'l1CE
-P\.ltlt!V.O Ote11ge COtJ.I Oitilf Pllol
0e ...... ,,,,.,rl.1•1S *'"ll P lJ Buc;: NOTICE
~~-,•"•CT::o"T"o~o~u"s"o"u"s"o"•"•"s"•~~-1
MMl.ITATIM&JllT PUBLIC NOTICE
fllOiTIOU'•USU••ss
...... IUATIMIWT
,. ........... """ --....... "'*--ff
THI!: WALLPAPll!:A "OIJTf.. •I ...... Cl•sc. ... t ~ ..... _, &Ne.II. c.M"-"le nwo
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fhb ~M II <llNliliKIM .,. at1 lft> di~I,
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-n.1•11. .._,
P\lntl"-0 Ol'<11t9t C.0.'1 Dall, "llall
00.11,Md,..,.J,10,11,ltlS C..li
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
••cTI TIOU5 •uilNIE!l.S
N•,.ESTA"TE¥1ENT
TIW tooowll'IQ peri.on '' 00i"9 -_,.,.
itOMi:CON!TAUCTION CO., 1115 1
NII~ No 11.1, Hunt1nglon Be-.:.h.
callt<)rnfefl._..
Aicll G. Mll~t, ltl$1 Nflwtand No
113, Huntl~on 80-<I>. Col1fornl1~t.'"6
n.1, bo#s.fno11" cond1><Ted Ov •n •fl·
d1v1du•I
Alcll.C. M.dltr
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C.-ly Clorll. ol O• anQt Covn1 J on Ot ·
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""" Pul)l;ll'led Or•n~ Co•U O••h' Piiaf,
<k10bl!r•.1l 70.11 .1q1~ Hfl,J.IS
PUBLIC NOTICE
r:1CT1 TtOU5 llU!.IN£S!.
NAME !."T A"T EM.ENT
Tr. fol-•ng pt,r~n b doiroo bvV· --GOLDEN NEEDLE FABRICS,
ml &h101 S1., Cos11 ~''"'· C..lll0<n1a ""' A1l•m lritern11lon11 Int .. a
C•llfornlil tO•PO•ll1on, )60 E SSlll
Stre.t, Lonv Be.en, C•llfor,,l•~
TFll' tx.sl"e'' 1, conduc l"d Oy a
~fill P.t•tn.!rlhlp.
o\il ..... lr.t ... Mlion..I lno;
s.t<;il'llr .l.llm~ IUl•m
Tiiis U•ltm."I w•s IUtO wllll lht
(Dunty C•••ll. of Or•ngoe c -.tily on Ot·
tober11. ''''· -Pl.illl1'1otd Oflriqt Coasi Dolly Piiot.
Otl.Jl.•1'11 NoY. J, IG, 11, 1t1s «'.l'll·IS
PUBLIC NOTICE
S"T&Tl.MllNT o• o\a.t.NDONMl.NT
o• USE or:
••C'TITIOUl aust"£l5 NAME n. to1._it'IO p.rwn\ h•W ~ ,....,.. "".,,.or "~ flttlli...l ..,.._, _,
I MA,~TIN A,tl'ICl'IA,FT !.ALES,
~SI C•mpu' Or., Or•11.,e Counl} ...,,..,..,,, '-'•• ""•, c.. '1101
I Roborl t'I .... Plllt11, Jllft VI• ~liitt, Mlulon Vlt)o. CA . .,._,,
O.rrtl 81oMtlt1t. 1l't!O lfvfll"'I tfn,11111., Torrtonet;CA.tOios
l'Tht ll"lttll-81111Nti N-,..
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o.irit"tO!lttot. tt. "'' 1T'lllt ilwtl,..,I Wit C~ttd lty • -----t1nlf'~ 111-.n " . ...,"""" 1'111 tta~I w11 tllff wlttl' tlw
Qunty Otrti of br.,,.. c ... "'Y on Ot· ....,,·"" .
r "'"'' ' 11'1*1h1we1 0r.,,.. coeit o.i1, Pilol, on.•.''· M.11. '''' '''°"''
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.JSA tlNTll!:ftll'llU$1!S, 1111't ~
~. ~i.111 V•li.r, C..1lt9nole -.J1oew.:1.,. S-A'>ff"°"" 1f1tt
S.•lo Morto, Few11t•ll\ "'•""'· e.ti..,.111on10t
l'Jli\ ~-\''(-IM er.,.,,..
Ol'llGMI.
Jtoe;_ .... Sw ... ,.~
l'llll '1•'9tnefn -· 1114'ti ""'"' ,,.. CouMr o.t1i ot Ot..._ eo-v °" oc.. '°°""'" n. ltll. -""*'""-" Dl'""9J eo.11 Del•r Pllllt. Ot1.?J,.,,..NOv.1,t0,11,ltJS ..,..,1
P UBLIC NOTICE
•ICTITIOUS llUSINESS
N&llllllE 5l.llTEM£NT
T,.. !Qltowin~ P<O• """~ ••'-doo"Q Dusi
ntl$11J.
BRIGHTER ELECTR!C, 2Ul St
Gtr1ruck, S.....11 "'"I. C1lllorn11 '1XW
Ktn .. •th L••oy IC•Uf!~<h, 101
~,,,..A~ , 81!!»<1 l1l1nG, C..lllO<"n•• ,.,..,
Ricl\ilf'll B Mor"'°"· l01 ~""' .1. ... , IRl/Oo.o ht-. C•lllorn•• "71.ol
Thi\ Du\l ... \S i\ (Otldu<I.., bl' •
9'fl!1r•I -1ntrV11p.
ltfn K•~cn
Tiii• '11!e...-t Wil\ f1l~d ..,,,. fl\I!
COUnly (I••~ o• Ot-1nqc C<>ul'l1, on Ot 100..1, .. ,~
""~ Pvl>4iYltd Or•"9fl CO<l~t 0~111, P>IOI,.
0:1"""'•~.u.20.21,1•1~ ll>n1s
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
~CTITIOUS•usno111ss
NAM.STATllMl!NT
1"'9 fotlllwlftl Pit'-Li °'"'t'l9 ...... _ ..
S lril C ENVtAONMl!NTAl
5Y!.TEMS/C ALIFOANIA. !toOG
Clmlr.o C•Pl,l••no. !.•Ill .JU•fl
C..•blr-. C.tUo.rnl•
McLEISH BROTHERS, INC~ •
C.itorl>I• c.,,.,.i1o11, 1'0Clil C-Uno
C.llU•fl•. i..n .llHll C•Phlr•no,
(.allf'Oml•
Tlln bwtil\ft• I• <otldocl"9 br • .... ,.,-1_!Jlllp.
""'<Lo lsh 8rofhtr '· t roe;,
0....111 •• llM.Lol\h ,.,..,....,,,
"T·1111 11a1.,....nt ••I hltd Wlrl'I llW
CNoly 0.,11. al 0r..,... CG-ronOC·
"°'*'If, ltfJ,
"'"' Pl.oOl•"-0 0.01"9' CO•U 0611, Piiot,
Ott, 10, ll.•IMI NoY. J, lG. It/~ Jttt.J\
lfOPE IMOCl!NIE C•!.E"
llll E. P•(ltic C..sl Hl9'1w1,
L .... 9"<11, G11Uorr.I• fffOl
P\lbliW..O O••n{lt Co•\I 0•1ly Piiot.
'>clober•. ll.10 11.191~ 381 .. I\
PUBLIC NOTICE
J'.UBUC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS9USINa)S
.. ..,..JTATl!.lillllNT
Tr. follllwl"I ..,_ere .... ~ -··· MESA PA,WN AM O JEWEL.AV,
PUBUCNOTICE
f'~ITt<H.11" au11•as'
ll!IAMa ITATa,,...NT
TN tll19w1"'0 --'' .... ..,,. -··· AQUATIC C ANOt.•S OF
CAl.lil•(UtNtA, ISIM Got.,,_. Ck·
<lo. WllstfftlltllJH'.,..,
,_....,, "'9ttor. till ltfllPN Or ,
.....,~"6M.A.Calltor11le'-
n.1, ~» ii t...oi.KIM it, at1 1 ... ·-· lltOO.rt '""'lo• ~ "•,..nt w•i flt.Ml wirl'I the
~y Clo•• Of Oratt91 C-tyGl'I Ot-
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f'\ltlllllWd ()t1" .. (.NU OMI, J'\IOI. ~t.10.Jl.•nd"Mlw 1,10,1•1s Mt-1'
PUBLIC NOTICE
lltl 1'1ewporl 81'1'd., Co5tll Mils.a.
C.lltorlol• 1-------------1
PUBLIC NOTICE Wlnt.\OI\ J, V6rcktll, USl ~
01'1cllo, Golt• lllWM. C.llltlf'lli• 9M-• JO v.,dvlt. »U MetlOOl<f l--------------1 Ore It'. Cottll ......... C.llfOt'lll• .,. "T ....... ., o• "•&N DONM.EllllT
This l>u,lnt\\ It. tond11cted b1 • Ofl US._ O• ,....,., P0'1 ..... t.lllp.. PICTITIOUS •us1Nl"SJ NA.Ml!"
s.rtiwe J , \/efd11!1 n.. fol1owl"'9 "°''°"' ,..,.,. afW!n
Tl'>l1 \tlllo"""I "'IJ. IHt'd ••11" ttw llillnN lM ""'9 o4 I ... flclllloui ll\Nnft'
CO....y c .. '" of .Or~ c.o.m1, on Oc· ....,.., llOCltrt, l'IS. GOLDEN Nt!EDLE, Jl3l 9r•.tOI. ..-i.si C.t.11 MltW. C6111CN'til•W61l
P\lbll'lol>Ocl 0rf1P191! Co.a\I Daily Piiot, ,,.,_ •l<.llllows Bll\lnll•t. Hanw ,.._ 0CLlJ,:Z0,1/,endN0~.3,1flt .... IS Wnd .. ·~ •• ,fifed In O..., ~yonMar<ht, 1'11.
PUBLIC NOTICE
•ICTITIOUS •USINt:ll
NAME STAlEMllMT
T1'o followi"9 ,....._ 11 aol"9 bon'-
M!olM.
SElrilL.1.P, JM Sflo1;,.,., NO. t,
CO.la ....... C.Ufortil• '1•11
0..1><>r•11 !.wt•ti"'I Spe11c•. '"
~I-NO. I, C.0.C. Melfi, C.I"""'"•
""' Thi, ~' ,, t-11<1 bw .......
di..iau.1
D<IDOral'IS...1-~•
Tl\Ls sl•l•,,..nl wit lllH ""tit t.., °"'"'' Ottr11. ol ~11191! County 11111 Dt:-~•. 1t1S. ·-· PVbllVlt'd Ofat>Ot CM\! Oalty PUG(,
Od. U,10,17,•IW:INDY,3, lfll -....1s
Minor Me rrli-.n Whltf. •
~ • .......-. .... 11.c..i-..
""" ~ ¥i•tM While, <I litm'Ulflqil,
~ .. ac:,., c.utor..i• '1..0
Thh ~. _, tonOllcftd by..,.,,.
·~·· MW-H Wh•lo
Tlol1 llitlo ... 111 w•I 11/IO ""'" n. c.ow.t, O..• of Or.,._ Co...My 11111 Dt:• ..... tt. ,.,,
""' ,..I_ 0rflft9' C....\I 0.t!Y Pllol,
Ott.11, ..... Mo.,., l, 10, 11, 1t1' ~JS
P UBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOU' •U!.INIE'1
NAM• STATf:lr10t:NT
n. fol-l"'ll ...... '°" h OOll'IO lllN· --· KO'!. Pl.ACE. l•ll Horii\ CM\lrll Par~•-. .l.n•,,.lrn, C.Ulomi• l--------------1 JM.obi.ft ~Uc:,.r1 , ,..,SJ P.,wo!>o11 •ICTITIOU!.•U!.INIESS C.ebrl•t. S•n J11•n C•plllf•tio,
PUBLIC NOTICE
NAME$T.1.TIEMlNT Gallfoml•'761S
TI>e!Ollowl"'J ptr-.o~ .,tooina~ Tt•h 11u11,.,, 11 <onOUcl.ct by •n 1 ...
l'lftl•~: Ol"'Clla4il.
DESIGNS S, JI B•1con B•r. Ja<OOUiLtlS<."'°"
NewlJOftBeach,C11it'.'1l61 Tl'li1 1i.1 ..... ,,, ... 1~ 1111" ..,,h tht --~ .. ~,c,~,c,c,c0o-o,c0c,c0c,c,c0-,c,--·I 0.Wd SCotl Pr•n, 11 &e.c;°" a..v. County Cl••~ of Oranltf CGunt, ori 0c
SUPERIOR COUltT OJI' THE NitWPOr18etch,C.lltor ... 1 t1'6l "°""" n . lt'/S, ~TATllO,.C.l.Llf"OltNIAf'Olt Holen Rot>h.on P••ll, 334-B ..... ,, ...... S.Wlla,U.9\lf'l6MIUs,C11il.'1lU Pub111'>1d Oro~ Coa1t D•11y Pllt>I,
THE COUNTY OFOR.1.NGI!: This tx.11,..s, I~ c0tid11C;llld by • Ott.11, •nd1'1o~. l , IQ, 11, tfll ~IS
Mo ...... ,,., 9'fttl'itl -1-Vllp.
Ellltt' of Al Tl E KNIPP,•-• •l TIE O.wld S<oll Prlll
F. KNIPP, ·-· .l.LTIE f"AEE,,.,,.N This SC.tet'!Vnf ... , flied wim uw
KNIPP, Ootc ... wd County 0.•11. ol Df"l"Vt C.ouM, Ql'I Ott.
NOTICE IS HEAEBV Gt VEN tat"' IJ. tt7S.
c•9dllor' ol tM ooa ... ,,.tned dec.oem F411lS
1,..1 •II Pf"°"',,.,..,,,{! Cl11,.... _,,..., .... blllhl'd ~.....,.CO.Ost o.lly PllOl,
-..,Id dlec~nl ••• •rQ11irK1to 11 .. Ot1.10.27,•ndNoY.J.10, lt7S l't»IJ !hem, w\111 1"4! ..C:t\\flrv •OUC11tr1, 1n
!ht dl1co ot '"" c i.r-ol !I'll KO"'..,-.
Ulled<OV•I. Olf"lO P<•Mnl U~m .... m 11'1' nte•••••T YOUC""''· to tM unOer\1~
1111\t Oll1(to ot Pol.UL A HANN&. of.I
10f"N¥ •I U.w. 811 Dover D""'"· S...t•
lJ. No .. p0rt Se*""· C•lltor,,1• '16"'.l,
..nit" I\ tP>O 016{.• Of bi..il~l QI Ille ...
m~19nt0 lti •It m•llt•1 per1 .. n1na 10
tt'le~lllt OI '•u:I O•"lfdt'nt, wit""" fow ,,..,.,,,,, •lt'r llw l1t1! O«tlhtlhl)nQ/ 111,.
nolltt
0.llHIOtloOt• U, 1'11~
Ho\AOLDF KNIPP
E •tculor of tne Will ol
tr.to 1tiowe ,......,d dKttJllnl
ll'AUL4,MA,NN.t.
ol.ltwMr•tUw
a1 o....., Drl•• '''"'ii . ,....,.... ~. C.lll•r1111 tl.-ll
Tll; .. Z-4747, .. J•ZUCI ......... , ........ ,.,.,.
Pub11"'K1 Or1nt1t Co•ll O.lly PllOI.
OC.t.20, 27.•nd Nov. 3, lG, 197~ J'l'll..7~
P UBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TOCltlEOITOltS
SUPF.ltlOlt COUltT 0""TME
STo\TE OFCAll •ORNI• FOii
TME COUNTYO,.Oll:ANGIE ,, ........... .
EU•te ol BLANCHE ... Tl(!N!..
O.ct•'9<1
NOTICE I!. HERE8'1' GlVEN to 11-
c~too of trw •bOve ...,,,..d deud9nl
U..t •II prr'°'1' n.~;110 .:1.,/ms ~I
'"" i.tld do«.~1 ••• '"ulr9d lo Ille
'"""" wilfl 1no IWCHHTY 'IOUc;:r.n. '" tht olflco of trw <.Jerk of lnto •-..,.
11lled COurl. or lo Pft~n• them, wl!hl,..
nKttWryYOOXl'le•'· I011'1tundlefi.IOl'lfld
•I the Ollke of J , GA EGC. EVANS ¥w:1
LEONo\RO COMEGYS • .l.llomeys ..i
Uw. ?1'11 Wil\!'llt' 81~d ., Lo>. "'91"~.
C..tifortil• 10010. wn1C11 h 1tMt pla' ol
buSitlffS ol I""' _,,;gnod lr. oll ..... 1-
lln prr11INtoQ lo Int'''"'' of Wtd <IP-
.:_,,I. Wl!F1111 '°"' rnontM "'ter '"" 11•'1011t>lk111onof11\i\ no I let ,
o.1.ec10tt0ber 16, 1•1s
RUTH o\, AICO::.l.AO
E•tClll<l• ol t"" W•ll OI
!Mlbo'lt,..ft\e'd°"<f-1
J. GREGG EVA,NS11"1
l.EON.1.ltO C:OMEG YS
•"'-'•"., U.w 1'21WlllMr"O111_,._
Ut\.t. ..... l. C.llfw"IMI ... 11
Tot: CJlll .._.7 ...
... "'"""",.,. l"M<irlrl•
Pulill.....:i Df"artVe Coe'1 D•tl' Pilot.
Oc:L 10, 21, 1NS "°"· ], 10, 1•IS ,.,..,_,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLI C NOTICE
•ti•• NOTICIE O• !.A,LIE OP"
UNIM,.llllOY IEO llllll&l ,..O,.EllllTY
.t.l f'lltl'lfATIE !.ALIE
.... Nll,.·lllU
INTNI' SU,.IEllllOR COUltTOF
lltl! STA Tl! 01' CALI l"OltJ1U•f'Olt
TMI! COUNTY O• LOSANQEl.l!:S
'" lflt M•11•• ot ltlt £•1•1• of f"LOAENCE !.,No\NCE.Ot<t•~
-k• " ,.,.o, g;.,..n ,,..., t"" un
.,.,,~wlll Mil •I P .. w•tt wlt,\Otfle
NO'IHI -bt'\I OIOOer, •uOltcl lo <'.Oft.
llf..,.1Mirl of t.akl ~rlor C-1. on or
lftor I,. Ifft dly ol NOwmOirr, ''IS itt
1hlafflcoOllJOHNP HOFFM.1.N.•1 !.
Uko A-, Room XIS, Pl .........
c.llforrll• t1101, Count yo! Lo•.l.f9!'1t,,
SlitloofC..lltorl'tl•, •II IM fit,1111. l lllo.....,
lftt ... •sl al Uild dO(elMd •I I/It l1mt o1
•eth6".t 611 lho r1QFll , Ullt •r>dint ... tM
ll'lat tr. •tlillO OI Wld Oeet.wd JIM«·
QUI,..., by Gper•t!Ot> ol llW Of ol1WrwiW
ot"W ltlan Of 1,, •ddlllon 10 ,,.., ot wld
dK .. Md •I tllt tlrne OI Ot•lh, 1n -IO
all tr. Col1•1" i..n.tmprowed '"•I P'OIJI'•·
IY 111...._od !" C•PIUr•no Be•t h, Qlunly
ol Oran<;11 , Sl•tt of C•l•lor"I•.
perlk;lll..-ly Ott.<rllM'CI n IOllowl, 10-...
LOii 1) I" Bloc;~ ) ol rt Kt llJ M Pl!'•
""'111,....ll'Of,r.c;Olf"CIOd •n B-NO 11itt
.......,.11010,lt'l(hnlvo,olMIK•U......,.,
M9Pi. Rt<orct!. of Or•~ Countv. St.ot•
OI C.Hfoml• mor1 comma "1 y l_, .os
:M9'\2 C.llo FoflU'ntl. C.PllH-BllKll, C..i-kwn.e. Seid_..,, II ol!triea tor Wit •. ..,.
11" ""'"°"' •••••nty or rtp•ewmitt...,,
ft to tr. c-lllon or w•l•tltl1fy of ""
i.oit l'Of c.on,trvclloro or OC:CllPlllon
form1ot wlo t aih '" l;owfwl -rot
1hl Ur>il9d ~,.,,, .... ,..,, .. ~-"'
Nie. Ten ~rcttil Ol ltno<Jnl tloel IOOl:Gli-
PD\i-wtlhbkl
8idl or Olller~ to Ot In w•IU-.q _..,It
t9 r"Oali-•t '"" lfortWld oflltt al ... ~
llrne •tier lhe ll•'t O«bllu\...,, htreol
.-ioc.fortcr.teot 1.11t
Dolodlhll 'n""'GA' ot ~!Obtr, l'IS
Mol.RYJOTAOMBlE
Admlr.l,1f•trioc 1 •
Cl'llllrE•••teot
wld Ootctdetil
JOMN•.HO•l"MAN
""-'11trf..-.l.dm.c.t.•.
t1 S.U.ll•A .... , _,,,
ll'Hl491W1,t..lliffnol1•1101
Pl>tlll~ O••"Qt coast Diiiy P>1ot.
Otl.17.29,•ndNov l, Jtl} a 1.1s
P UBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: INVITING BIDS
NOTICi 1$ HEAEB'I' C.IVEN llw!
M!•l...i~ll W1110fl rt<ei-Oy t""
City QI ~I• Mt'w •t lhf' ot!iu ell !lw
01., Cler\ It ll'lt C•IY H•!I, 11 Fo11P
0.1'1t, ~II Mew. Collto•n11. unUI '""
hOur Ill n DG •.rn on NoYflmtJe<' I~
197S, •I WtlKll tim1 IMy wJll 1:>r _..,..,
riullikly •n<I ••Ml lloud ;,, '"' c.wn.:1!
O'lam0tr1 lor furt11•h•n11 111 '""°'·
....,ttr11 l1. -ID<n•"t. l•1,,'IP')l1.tlion
....:! !IUCh °'""' ll<lllllH 1• may M •f'
QllO•ed l<>r ""' CONSTRUCTION OF
SPORTS LIGHTING AT LIO N'S
P.1.RK·LVK E Oo\ VIS Fl ELD.
A Iott el' pl.n~. \P<l'C1lk•llon'IO •NS
otfler coritr•tl Oo<w,..nl\ ..,,.., be 00.
t•lne<I •I the olllc• Ol !tit Oepa•fr<e,,lol
Lelwrt Sennce,. 11 F•lr Orlw, c:o-.11
Mil~. C.lltor,,I• upOn • nonr•l'""'t>I~ pa.,.....nt ot 1ol (IQ, II blddt•s r~\!
plans and soeclll<•t;o,,i Ot m.t1!to:1. "'"
c...,1111..;11 Ot $1,SQoer M!I.
£«11 bid 1rwu oe m•O. "" th!! oro -·t IOlf"m •fld Ill Ill",.,.,,.,.., Pt'OVidMI
lr>tht conlr1c1 ooc:"""""· ano ""'" oe .:com-It'd by• Ctrllfl1d or c.i,11,.!r''
chtc:k or• l>ld bond fo• not 11\\ •~ 10
-c.nl of the •mou"t ot ttw bid, mtde
peyabltlo lflo C.l ly Of Cost• ,,,.Y.
NOTICE I!. f"UATHER GIVEN IM1
, ... Clly Co1111Clt o• Sl id Cily llot\
""••tolore •il•t>llslltd • 11r1wo1llu>Q
ralo •ftd K•lt of Wl{llll,, i" •C<O<'O¥>Ct
with la•. lo l>t P.tld I" Ille con"r\Kt...,,
ol tr. 1bcNo 1n1lllord lmP<nftfn!'rtli
lbal WCI r•I• and Ko11t w•\ ..clop!«! OV
lllt Clty COUn(.ll by Ao~lulion '~'on
mo 111\ .._Y of Jan111r' 1•1s, •NS k on
111111 lti lflo ol1K• of lht Clly Clt t koll W•d
CJly, Thal Wd r•ft •nd K•lt I, ....... "
...... ...a 10....., lldOPllHI 1 .. ""' nofl(f' '"' ~ fully •nd compltl•l• !.fl torth
llffelr.,...., "'--1 Mid K•lt . •• ~
by Mkl Rlll'IOt1111on, is m•<» '" part ot
W' nolkoby '1llertnc1.
Tl\1 Cotilrec tor s~tll, In lllt
-1•""6nc:1 ot ,,,. ...,, ... ..., ~
rntllU, <onlorm 10 ll>t L•DOr c:.aaie ol
tlW. 5'14o ol C•lllorltl• •nd ot""' 11..,. ot
111e Slat .. or c .,1;10,,,1., •PPli<•O'"
I~, ~11\thl IR<tPllOfl Ot'llyol wt.II
Y•l1#1:1art' ., ,,...., t>I •tQUlre<I undl!•
..,. .-:l•I 'l•hllt' P11r\u""' 10 wltl<h
oroie:Mdlnos. ,,., ..... ~ •••• 1•~"1 fnd
-kl\ flo .... Ml -IUPtt"'°'° 0., I,,.
PfOYl\ln"' OI lht Lilbor Cod•
PfotoretK• 10 t1b0t" ifl•ll oe 111-. Ot'll•
lftlht,,..,_•P'O'lltlotdb, , ....
No blcl 1 ... n 1:11 ~Of'\ldle•t'd ""~'\ 11 !1
rn«*I Oii • l>lanll torm furtiJ"""'° ov '""
Olr al Cott• MIM, •nd h rn.ot In~·
~ wllh IN ptOYl\lofl' ot I"'° Clf'C>-
powit ,.._"''· ea.di ~ m~1 1M UU>Med and
•'-......,.1lt+.1t •s roqulr!J<I .,., ._
TM Cll' Couolc.U ot tht Cl!y ot ~II
Mtll-v.• tM rltfl1 to••M<t .,,or .. -. 1:1 ..... ~. ftlllfW'lly
CltrClol'a
C.lly of C..lo ,_"6, <a. ~l\PIH Or ..... CM\I Deity""°'· Ck~ 10, ,, "1' ,..,,,
6
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Mand ,Oel0ber27, 1915 DAIL V P1LOT 8
l.ot f\ICMo .,, ••••• I000.1"f ........ '.. •• •• lOOO .. ,, 1u-.., •. 1...,.,.,_. ..
rinoftc.oa1 , • . SOCIO· S04f ,_ ' . '•100..'"' i---------1 Ho&ls.ts For ScH ......................... ·····---··············· ERROR So Ad•erlioon <O.-ol I 002 l>o•ral I 00
s.hould check their ads ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••
doily ..... ••porl ....
ron .._diotoly. Tito
DAILY P'ILOT as.wmet
Uability for tho first in-
cOt'r'Kt inseriion Hlr.
flvblishf'r's Notice:
AJI real t>st.1tt• ~,1 ,•t·rti1td
ln this nf'.,_,:.-ria1~:r '" !->ull
ject to I.ht'.' i-'cdt·r;il F;ur
f{ou ~1n~ Atl ut 1968
wh1rh m;ikc,•.; it 11/c~al tu
advert1:-.t" ··.1n.v pre·
fercnl'C!, lln~1t,ll1on . or
di5criminut1on ba~t.-d °"
race. rolor, rl·l1i.:1on. sex,
or national or1,1:111. vr illl
intenllon to mJKc any
such prt•rt.•rt.•111•1•, linulu·
tiQfl, or d1 .... e n mu1.1t1011. • ·
'l'hl:i nt ws pa1K"r ~·ill not
knowini,:ly OJC'(·('pt .an)
advert1 s1 n g for rt•a l
est.Ktc which i,.., 1n viola·
lionorlhelaw.
1002
··············~········ HEED
QUICK SALE
Your dream:-; cumc true
Two ln'droom Nt.'aStdc
c•oltage ...,.tth r oom lu
g r ow . l.oC'atcd in
BAYSHORES. /\ Ar<'at
eommun11y ~·1t h pn\•atc
beaches. ThC' 1u·1t·c has
beco r edut·cd to $67 ,!'IQO.
Call 673·SSSO
f'Nl/fH'1 •1f •••.•<,r1•>
$$$$TRT$$$$
to heal this : l br. 2 bu .
s1nAlc story 1'uwnhou~c .
Your chou·1-. nl'W rug!'i-
drapc.•s·stuvt•, Nl•W paint·
eompl('t('ly refurbished.
SeC'u r1 ty )!ate .pool -ti
acrcs·nicL'IY k C'pt lawns.
tr<'e.s . rounl;un-a ll lh1!1
for only $21.~5'0. Ask for
l''rank , IS39 8321, A~ent.
in Santa Ana
AT THE BEACH
Fantasl1t· 3 hdrm. & rn
~phl-h!\CI ...,1th lhc hc:1(·h
JU~t 49 ):1rd!-> .LY":.t )
()(·1..·an vu:"'· IJ.!t' ronm'>.
l1t•aml'l.I cc1ling &· frplt·
Jtl'-I h stt•d C)nl} Sft"i,\l'M,l
f>'lti 7711 (>rx·n E\'t .. ,, .---.. •• Walker Slee
Real fetal•
SEASIDE
CHALET
Ju!->l 500 y:1rds tu !-><.ind
beach. 3,000 S.-1 ft . <1f lux
urY l1\.'111 g. 4 to 7
bedroo m .... \Y ;irm,
eharm1ng f:1mily roon1
Or1i:nlal pl.i nk patio
overlooks m1n1 orchard
~n pnvalC' yard . $k9,000
full pnC'e JO'; do...,'n t 'or
appotntmt•nl, CA L.L
Kf-:Y.962-77!:1X .
~ KEY
' P.EALTOP.sK
IT WON1 LAST
Oecn ralo r 's dcl1~ht!
Lar~l' 3 bedrooms. 2
balhs. rvrmal c.l1n•n$.:
room. L::ir µe ramil y
room. hrcakfa s l :irc:.1
OV('r/ook1nl! hcaul1f ul
back yard' 3 Car j.!arai,:e
with opener. Better t.han
a model hon1f', <>nl y
$82.500.
546-4141
MOVE RIGHT IN
Rack Bay arl'a. on thl.'
eorn1.•r 4 Bedrooms & 3
baths, nearly n<.·Y>'. /\ lut
of hous<' for onl.v $5!.l,OOO.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
'641·5100 . 675 · 4060
(21 Triplexes I 0°/o Dn.
New carpel , drapes,
built1ns, f1rcplal·(· l'rin·
cip;i\s only. 2~i6 1'-,1ncr ,
C.M.642-l\H8.'l
2 STORY
CHARMER
J IR-fOOL
BEACH · $29,000
CHARM·CHARM
Cla!.s1c E'ntrance to larg~
1am1ly 1H:tl'<I Living room
with artusttc use of shul·
te~ & .,.,.ood throu1thoul.
Formal duun~ room i.s
l'Ofl\'cnn.·nlly ~crvt'd by
lar~c .i.ourmf't k1lchet1 ,
ti' Sunken family enter·
t111nnu .. 'f'll ('t•nt1·r. Stiunl~~~~~~~~~~~!;
!->We1.•p lo elt·J:ant n1aster
~u1tt~ & t•h1\drens
11u;,rtl·r-., 1'Jkc OYer
7~"'" Jo'/I,\ LOAN. NO
NEW 1.01\N COSTS
SlO.JOO hal, !'ltusl
:o;;1cr1f1('l'. llurry ~ Call
'.JtiJ . 7 881.
0 V'!'• ' ,, !~._ .. I'
Lookin9For
A Mew Home?
TlwoChockThl•-
Nio:Wt~)trr ut:ACH
4 l\ll, 2VJ ha. Palerm
1'1odel 1n J-larbor Vie
llornC'll, 111•1th pools1z:l' lo [ ~ I ior $Il>i.Ooo ~ tltt ' ~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:I ""L~~E~·"'R0~A~1~s~'o:~R~1
...
R~DUC ED $16,000
ldt>ally l(lt'atctl on the REALTY :!rid lc vl•I tn Irvine Tcr·
rat•t·. ttus :;p;.i1·1ous home 45ZJC..mpulli Dr . Irvin
hci .... IHO d<.'J.:. unobstruct· C<1mpu.s Vallt"Y Shop Ctr
'1'(! \ICW lrotn lhl' barOOr CA.l.L833.8600 '
1•ntra1u·1• to Lulu! '1 Hit. :J
Ku . (rplti, pool & now on· '"AIAMDOMB>
ly $161,500. DECOU TORS
·"'' '\l 'I·: I'll I
673-4400
NO BRAG
JUST FACTS
W1• !->t•ll a lot of house .... let
U.\ l'hv...,, you .,_,•hy
CALL 540-3666
tii®i1vl
We'r-r here to help
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
VILLA"
$54,900
Rambllng two .\le.ti")' roo
bedroom villa left vaca
by d ecorator uwn e
Spat'1ous ll\.'1n~ nnd di
inf:: rooms Dressed i
BRAND NEW PLUSI
CARJ>ETS. Gourme
kitchen . Frcghly p1:1i11t
and wa ll pap_ere
throughout. 0Ycrslze
bedrooms. ·rwl> maste
suill'S. Lar~c (·ul·dC·s a
lot S<.·c this nuxltil loda)'
<.:all 00.1.fl7ti7 .,., .... '•'I' I• I
~ THE REAL 1·
ESTATERS · _____J
HUIOE I
FAMIL T HOME 1
4& \
FAMILY ROOM (
This huAe homl' 1s local,;
l\!.1tu:. -,\~C'nt t-d 1n l'JCCt'llcnt area or
Sut·(Jt· lnforrn ("osl<i :'>tt:sa C los(' t11
'l'f),\S'f s ho pp1n J;: & :.l·hool.'> 1
l>.d \11\1 hc..ir a~JUl thl' O\Crs1ze<l bdrms & 2' ~
hit rd lut·k guy who balh..; L1s ll'd a l $5H.50tl.
bouf!hl a f:iu/ty clectrtC' 545.~91.
blankt•l and 1111~· he':-; thl' _----,.
T0,'5To~~;;•n ? 1111:1
HUHTINvTOH --··-·-4 BOR +BONUS . '
+POOL
S unkC'n l iving room ,
formal ,1in1ni.:. K1tchl'n
~·1th ni'Mlk Party room
With C<>NVE ftSATION
Prr AND Flltr;rl.ACE.
(;uc~l ~11111·, :.lairs t o
ma!->l1·r ilnfl 1·h1Jdrcns
su1tl'.\, •1!10 St.), F'T.
BONUS Jt()Ol'ol .
St·cludPd s I '.1 ,000
963-6767.
'Y>'. I I '•
rear i,:rounds.
down. Call
'''""'·I'
SJIOR f.CL I FFS·Unusu:.I
s phl·lcvl'I with beam
C'c1hni::s. wood panchng;
thrtt bedrooms: privat~
1away from 11 all ) ram1!
ly room; lar~e areas o
rru1l trees, flower!!.,
la...,Tis. Excellent buy c.t
$98.000. [® THE REAL,
ESTllTERS
COLE OF NEWPORT
REALTORS
WATERFRONT
2515 F.. Coast 11.,.,·y
675-5511
EASTSIDE
2-0n-a-Lot
2· ll It. 2·h:1 , eomp rt·dcC' ·1.1
to new. Xlnt hn<in<"1n ~.
S:~l!'l() l)n., ownr W/<"<i rry hal lit 1t1.~·;. int. No Main house t•omplctely
rC'mod clcd. Both horn~ 1.11unL-., loa n fees. ('r<.•flil ur fJUallryin~ problems ha\'(' separate e nclos .~1 yards and J;:a ragcs. I $!)5 ,..,....
JACOBS REALTY nt'ss rc-qu1r('s fasl sail!.:
ti75 667() ----1 ~:1cr1ficc $·14 .~ao. c~ ___ __ f>-15·0J03 r
FOREST OLSON IHC.
Gfttttal I 002 Ge-Mral 1oi ................... ,, ... ····················-·
macnab I irvlne
realty
IAYFllOHT
Owner has inStructed us Lo sell
beautiful 5500 sq.ft. (4 bedroom, den
+ library) lu xury conslruclcd home
with 136' fee bayfront. Offers
solicited -$400,000 range. I 874)
Mrs . Fay&l2-8235
642·82l!i 644-6200
'JOI Dow•• 011•~ '644 MKA•lhu•
. ~ ..
I
I
BIG CANYON ,
1-lighly C'u.~tom1z('d -4 Gftteral 1002 G"'"°al 1002
~room Blt()AIJM()01t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··••••••••••••••••••••••
home. JOOO S<1 ft 11r hv·
in~ s p ace in l'hldt'~ ex.
panded family roorn .
Living room and master
bedroom. Professionally
landsaped. Air condl
lioned. See to appreci.3te
$171 ,900 .
640-6161
NOTICE
how Daily Pilllt C13~S
1hed sds <h~play their
mcst'&)t('ll .,_,ith l<-'~1b1l1t)
:ind 1rr111;.i<:t " Our ud~ • .,_,.l~
~re prout.I lo ~a}. rl'all,·
J;:Cl T(:'itllt~. l'h<ijll'
$29 ,995-EMERGENCY SALE :
Needs a liltle work, save thousands.
Big backyard with Ja zy veranda.
Cozy den. wood cabinet~. lJrcolkrast
ro0m arra. Calfloday!
SPRAWLING WESTERN . Walk lo
all schools Glanl maslcr bedroom
s uite. lligh wood beamed ceilings.
convertible den, dining· room area ..
built·ins. luxury carpet. S42,000,
must sell !
540-1720
2955 Hlrilorll•d. ...,nm-, ""9cJt .._ -eo.-w
642·S6'1R i_::::::__--±J====t'=====l:d·.
{
\
. . •
-FO< Sale -... fO< 541ie HoolM• for Sale •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..._ 1· ..+ loCIClt I 040 1........1.-1044 Gc•r.. 1002 Cotta Mn• 1024 nJL 11 ,.• ..........-••••••••••••••••••••••• ······················· ....................... •·•·••••·•····•••······
~~!!! -~~ ~~--...... J ~!!! .':'.~ .~"!:. ...... .
G....,.of I 002 GONral I OOZ
DAILY PILOT Monday, OctoW 27, 1;75
~-'::':~.~ ...... !~~!!!.~~~~ ........ !!'!4!!::!:~~.~ ....... .
GOMt'GI I 002 GtMral I 002 G-rol I 002
............................... , ............. .
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• VIEW -VIEW -VIEW
R.E.LICEMSEE College,Puk, 3 BR. 2 Ba, Coltogoby!M SH "1'HE RANCH"'
Wlllll l.O learn the com· newly dtt0rated, pool is .5 Short 610c:~ to 1and)' J.alRVlNE. By Owner
I
I
I
MESA VERDE
4 +POOL
mertial brokeraae busi· yant~·$14.tan.s iwf.Cbarmlag2bedrm. Lovely 38r, Zba home
ncss!'!''!' Small offi<'e in old downtown H.B. With w'ith ram . rm . 5071
OHLY $52,900!! Builder occupied, spJit.Jevel home,
with true, loving care evi~ent thruout.
2 Huge bdrms .. Cornin g range,
·self-cleaning oven. wet bar & open
Newport Beach. nffds lathlcM Cott.... parklike yard. Reduced Bayonne CirC'le. Call
1teady work~r. wilting to 3 Large bedrms. Country tooolY pt,500. 1..:"'::'~·-==~· ------Thul.S ri ght !! Unbt.-lu.•va ·
bll• '!harp pool hOffi{o.
Freshly 1><1Lntl'\I OUt!IJdc
& n e wl y remodeled
k1tl'ht•n Lots uf ·•l>VC JI &
h;1rd lo find !hJ!' oµ·
portun1t y ()WNt;K
S1\YS Il l'; fl;IJ<:ll1' lla.;LP
Fl.~ANt;t-:1 lh1rry. lakt•
arl\•11nl<1Al' Ca ll 546 2313.
learn. S.ckcround will 1lyl e kltc:hen . dbl sconUALTY OWHIEll be c1tretully c hecked. iarage. Huie lot for Sl ... 75ll IY
beamed ceilings. Just a joy to see!
Uppe r level provides privacy for
separate suites. $175,000
540-234.5 kida. Submit your down. 4 Yr Old, 3Br Home in Ca!Jd... "The Ranch". $49.900. -~ POOL+ SPA A.Qume 77<;> VA for ra1t Tl.UROH -~ <~ 10••• ~ ~ ~ only 8 blks to bch. 4 Br+ escrow or· terms. .....,.
TOWMHOUSE l"''Y .~~IM:_v din rm + huee ram rm .l.!:N:::onn:.:::.•::ndi:;:;;.e:.:·.::"':.:'~"::.'39=·-Lrg 3 bedroom, 2 bath--..,.-._~ Boat gate, Jr g lot .
hard to flnd one atory Fairview & Baker CM $49,900. Bkr, 968-5"403 UNIV.PARK
THIS OHE oons
Really! It oozes with Little Island
c harm . lt a I so makes cents! 3
bedrooms plus a very livable guest
room and 52 feet of prime waterfront
including a pi er and dock. Oh . t here're
the shingled exterior, 3 fireplaces,
ab.5olutely d arJing living room and 3
patios. It 's owned by a leading
architect a nd hi s wife, an Interior
decorator. A listing of Barb f lutchings .
UJ'lljl()Uf' t1()Mf'S
REAL TORS', 675·6000
2443 East Coast H1ghwav , Corona del Mar
'' '< ' I 'I I '
Hl·ttt•r lh;1n new 4 UR,
2 b.1 . PAl!h lus h l:Jndsc«P·
111K and 1·cn tral 11tr1utn
1·uurt "fh1 ~ S1·lecl
l'roµt•rl>' 1" lu1·11 ted on U
t·ornt·r lut in Otll' of Costa
,\feSJ "!Ll'""'''"l :Jnd (Jnc~t
eornn1un1tli!!t. Full price
$Iii ,500. CA LI~ 556·26'i0
C:::: SELECT
I PROPERTIES
VLAR
BAY ANO BEACH
675-3000
:?•107 l C OAS T .... W Y C ORONA D E L M AR
' Ge-Mr al 1002G.,....ol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
WESLEY N
TAYLOR CO.
REALTORS sinvc t!J4U
model . All cxtra.11 w1lh $49-9511
beautiful floor plan .~~~~~~~~~~·1 Nearby pool undj·
t'lubhouse. llurry. just FOOTIALL SPECIAL
rt>duced to $39.950. Call You 'll make OI good
54().llSl CATCll If you RECEIVE
J<V• HERITAGE
' • REALTORS
Utls 3-bdrm, rorm;ll din
rm , frplc, in xlnt cond.
The owner wa.11 PASS oo
all the extras to you, so ~~~~~~~~~~1 RUN to lhi! phone, don·t ~ FUMBLE the ball . 1006 Priced under $U,000. As-
sume 7'~ VA loan, low
Charmin& J BR. 2 Ba. monthly pyml5.
many xt"'•· T•nifir loe. CALL 540.3666 nr So. Bay. Priced to sell
•••••••••••••••••••••••
!;J:;i:?:r ~~':ii~~~~~~in~~r:~::ut. ;.;;~~!;.;'..!~.~~ t!r#V~
~ PRIME NEW French 1·raditional. 5 Large Peni ns ula Pt. 2 s t y
GHMrol IOO GtMl"'ol I002 BEACH AREA bdrms, fam rm, play·room, formal DR Spwni11h.remodeled2Br, We'reherttohelp ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,............. 1•,. Ba. rrnt, 2 sun det'k.s,1·--.. ---~~~-;I
4 + IOHUS READ AT YOUR UNDER $40.000! & 5'h baths . Pool, sauna. pier/slip, rm ror e~Pansion & pool.I• MESA VERDE
+POOL OWHRISK r:xet.>pt1onal 4 bdrm . 3-cargar . Pres tigiousbayfront. Ocean view. $85,000 pp HORTH
homl' ~Jtuatl'd on l<Jr~e 76 JJNOA ISLE DR. Open Daily 1-5 ti75·8878 $10,000 because $35.WO. \\'ill l'Orn~·r lo\. Fu net 1onc.I 3 Bedroom;2 bath, raml·
UNDER MARKET buy this lo vely 3-BH , floor pl:.111 + loads or 2111 SonJ~nHiD1Rood PEMIM.POIMT lyrm,dlningarea,fpl c,2
l\.I US'f S/\Clll}o~J C I-: f:.imilyhomcw1thformal i·harm 3U ' LIVING MEWPORT CEHTH. M.I. 644-4910 2-Houses ror lhepriceof patlos,quietstreet.Like
8 ·rr d1ningrm.Custom·buill1to01\1 4-HH IGllT · d ''""'a""" eaut1 u prt>5l1gt' 2 .. _ d d b 1. Best buy on Point an new .. _,....,, story . Room j!alor¥c for nvmc s urrouo c Y W l) t) I> .. : D r· A i\1 I L 'r' in addition. both co m· Roy McCcrcn.
the large rumily. 4 or 5 more expensive homes. HOO:\!. For once an a General 1002 G.-ral 1002 pletcly upgraded. 2-BR Rl'Clffor lllOMew__.
bcd'oom .• ''.·•th". Nicely dc('(lratc<l. 2·C<1r t1fl•t1mc b:ir"a1n -hurry, ••••••••••••••••••,••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• f & BR BA ,..... • u d s ruo d " 1-BA ront 1-• 1· Co&taMesaMB·77Z9
rormal d1n1nj(. r·am1ly ~ar . n e r 18
""· n. (:all :>-16·2313 . '·---------·I·-----..... --rear. $79,000. HOLLIS1..,~~~~~~~~~ room. 2 Cozy f1rcplal't'S Owner desperate. r HEW LISTIMG WOOD. Rltr. 615-8676 t ·
S•·eep;n g 'o '"" CALL54().3666 [~ fOUQNfTAIN w,1c,rrnnl. p;ccmoat. 2 ABANDONED g rounds with larJ,!c CoroftOdetMar t02 kl J d d •1.:..J •• r•••• Sparkle plenty! lmmal·. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r:r.~:i~;r.:~~~~.'i! •;ufif.illll "~""'-~-~-"~~~~ YOUTH ~~~~ii~t;o~ti:v~~~~~ og:~~~o:.-~.b~r H~:: STARTER HOME
beach. Take advantage HEWLY p •1NTeft ad y I 1i c duce d t 0 $79.500. Owner. 548-5306 Just reduced. $35,900 run
a nd call today. C<tll We're here to help d Aol ~ Af,0 ','0''y "1hhcar1~ .. dua;Y"s0~·o~~ $139,500 ! 3 Ir 2 la Duplex price. Lovely 3 bdrm, 1%
842-25.JS. an ° po ... " 1 bo I Pr bath, dining room, lge °"'"'''l.Q·11~'LJ"''Otir•.•1 • TAX SHELTER JUSTFORYOU!!! evo:n 1ngd1p1nth1slo\·ey Bal a ay op. ONLY$89,500. yard, clean & n e at. [~If ~ Choil'C Mesa Verde area. heated pool whde ",tom Realtors in an excellent South-of Demand area of Costa . · ' · .· ~~:!1i·~1 Home & Income on Little ',\ "-d,m, lam•'ly ,00m. prepares the 1n(>u s 1n * 675 .. 7060 * M W 'l la 1 Call 'd ,_,.., h h Hi ghway loc<1tion on a esa. on li •
;;\ : 1 :~~'f~e!~~~-~~~ ~~~s11)a~~ !::r;1~·,~,~'i1~~[~~95::.eady a~~ ~~:~~-11~~~~ r~~P ~~1 ... ~~~~~~~~~1 generous 45ft. l?t. 96.1-$71. ..
eqwty.$139.500. ~ the 22xlJ i;.irnc rvom •I EXECUTIVE Callusqwck. --
HALPINCHIN OJ\'llll'EEH~SU llu•c hedcoom>. 3 bath SEACHRETREAT 644-721l , , • , REAL'fOll +:1 S<'~'1nJ! roo1n m11kc ~ 4 BR·2 STORY ", .. . 2727 E . Coast Hwy up this 26iJO sq .ll. 2 story
675·4392 3&48 Campus NB s4t -llSS giant. 1\ltratlive low $52,500 ', , _. __ _
n1;1Jn\\•nance yard and &t'lud ed entry to enter-t , , Our h:clusfY•
JUST LISTED lot'alc<I on a tul-de-sac. taine rs deli~ht 1iving 1;;;;;;:;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;1 J>itlCf<:D BELOW room with crackhngl1 Two4.PLEXES
Have the bfft eomer and $4.200 DOWN LOTS of LOTS TltARKET FOil QUICK fireplace & t'on1manding DUPLEX (n excellent Cast moving MUCH HOUSE SALE! llurrv. call view of covered pavilion Costa ?.1esa area. A r a re
crosssection ofNewport SMALLPRICE 962-7771 & Rrounds. Banquet SOUTHOFHWY. commodity that won 't -Costa Mesa. Ha ve 2 u ·1 h 2 bdrms
REAL ESTATE
SALESPEOPLE
NEEDED
dr · r 11 Four bedrooms, 13 • LA.GUHABEACH stzedd1nini.:room 1st'on· n1s eac · last Jong. $87 ,000. each.
op-ins or 0 type pro-bath.s, large Ji,·1ng room Ocean View lots from tm I ''eniently served from Corner lot. quiet loca· Call for details. Agent,
perties. Need alert. with cozy fireplace, $5000. to $23.000. 12 ~ '· , :
7
, I hu~e ~ourmet kitchen. Lion ; underS.90,000 S4.9-<lll2 energetic salespeople. s 1 · r CORllH ""RTIN l-'----------1 \a,ge din.log area. Co\'-Parcelstosetcctrrom. epara e wing o r -· Commission 60'i0. Tri & 't • 662 OHED•Y O.,LY eccd patio and even an HUHTIHGTOH ICH master .i\Ul'Sl sw, es. Redton 64-7 .-,.. Harbor Realtors. 400 E. · I t
GAllDEH r A TIO
New condition, it's ready
when you are. 3 BR . 2
ba. Adult occupied. Nt•t.
uaptn! OnlyW.~.
833-2906
FAHTASTIC
TOWNHOUSE
Super tluntinctoo Beach
end unit Town~e at
only $39,SUO. 3 Bia
Bedrooms, 2 b a ths,
dream kitchen and din·
inR area & no t'Ornmon
wall. Only steps to pool
and recreaUon. Assuma·
ble 7o/,% Joan with
pymnta only $212. per~~~~~~~~~~ month incldg taxes. Firsl i-
t ime offe r e d. Call •• 1ntimate 3·BR, clean
S46-5880Agent. as a pin, perfect ramily
home. Will t'On1ider VA
-
STUCK UPI
Because it 'a so rich in
a menities & so young.
New enough to add your
personal touches outside,
with tasterul modem de-
t'Orators beauty inside.
Priced to sell quickly! .........
IHTHE
RIGHT PLACE
& t~JIA buyer~. Call
quit'kly for more in ·
formation. Bkr. 838-8586
DIHIHGROOM
VIEW
The rolling green can be
seen from the dining
room or enjoyed while
taking time out for patio
rt>l axation. An end unit
condo with 3 bdrms., 2
baths. kitchen nook. wet
bar a nd utility room. 162.m
552-7500
red hill
f'••lcy .
At the right time-priced ~ ..
right! Best describes this ~
4 bdrm. handsomely up·,..,~~~~~~~~~ graded home with many I·
extras, inc. WU soft, Gar.
opener, Cov'd patio,
close to schools, shop-
ping, library. 968·4456
DUPLEX
$48 900
Two bdrm,~ bath units.
One block rrom Beat'h
Blvd. J>rime investment.
Also ha ve others. $48,900
• S6S ,000. Pride of
o~-1
READY-
... willing & able. to .ac·
comodate yQur housinK
needs now! Let us show
you this delightful 3
bdrm., 2 bath attached
home in Turtle Rock.
Low m aintenance yard.
built-in wet bar & private
atrium, are onJy a few of
the appealing reatures
you will find! $58,000
WEHAVERENTALS
CAU 552·7000
17 th,CM&46-32SS attractive play house for R-5 Zoning,7 parl'l'lsap-Swce111n g s airs o .... ~~~~~~~~~/SPECIAL TODAY .~~~~~~~~~~1 the kids. To see. call second s lorv suit es. -0 LY $JS 000 646-717 1. prox 1.17 acres total. Hurry! O'>'·nCr bought Lots R-130x lt8; lor2 N · · • ' · CLOSE TO
Ol'f, .. ru9 ·11\rt•N"l,;·.'1' $141,600 with term s. another. Must sat'rifice ! $62,000south/Seaview Completely redecorated
1-========-
Looking For-
A Mew Home? (Located near 5 MUST J.BR Ranch-Style home. BE CH r~. POINTS). Call96J-?S81. Prinonly 644·4340 MUST SELL!• VA or A
:'.', MODJESKA CNYN """ '"''"' '°' <0'-''""'~ FHA welcom e. CALL DESPERATE OWNER
_ , 20 Acres (2 ten arrl' [®: VIEW now, Must sell. Spacious 4 1 ;~~~;;;;;;;;;~1 parcelsJ $5500 pe' '"'· SELL IRVIHE THRACE 540.3666 bdrm & family'°"""'"
Then Check lhls..
3 BR, 2 Ba. Terrac~
Home which h as been•
highly upgraded, for only
SO<l,!IOO
d1 terms and subordination Very seldom a r e we · bath, plush !!hag c<Kpel·
DA ISLAND available. ====~ fortunate enough to be • ~~ ~ ing, beautirul decor. . BALB FALLIROOK $39, 9 5 0 FIXER-4 BDRM able to offer a front rnw / ~ H 7/ a · Prore,.;onal landsoap.
BARGAIN 30neacreestatesizc lots Not a condo but a ge-$38,000 custom built view home { ;tL:JiZ:f(f" ing. Seller will pay 5
OR ..•
overlooking golr C()ursc. nu i n e old · ra s h ioned u NB EL I Ev/\ e LE ! in exclusive Irvine Ter-• --• • -· points ror sellers loan.
Exquisite, new, custom $25.000each. -modern :1 bedroom home Foreclosure forces sale race, and now is one of We're,....tohetp Call963-5671.
built 2300 sq.rt . 4 Ji6J{6.11 Ne·.$"an,·. on its own tree-filled lot of prope rty t housands those times. Wehavefor1------....,.".:"'.":-::-::---1 -
Another 3 BR. 2 ba. Ter·
race Home in secluded
location for only $59,000
OR
ona tree-lined street. Get below market ! Bring you a dramaUc -4 BR. BEAUTIFUL CONDO Check our ad in lhe
General Section your own vita1nln C from paint & elbow grease a nd home with exciting night 2 Br. Studio Mode I,
those trees oul back. Let make$$ S! r~ormal din-1 ight, bay. ocean & $34,500,Agt. 546-7139 · L£ RAISOR ANYTIME the kids and dogs run and ing! Huge bdrms! Large Isl a n d v ie ... ·s. + a l llH•j;;1~1,.;;J,oa;;;ile;;oc;dh;--.1~0~4~0il
stop paying rent. Owners yard! Walk to school and set'luded pool. All perfect """' -~=~------I REALTY ~~~~~~~~~~ I h ••••••••••••••• •••••••• WITH POOL _ have bou~ht anot er so shopping in an excellent for the owner who loves
wanltosellNOW.Asking area of $45,000 homes~ toentertain. . 1-~~~~~-~ .. ~ac~h-•I •IYOWMER• CSZICampusDr .• Irvinc
DUPLEX SJ!J.950 Seller says ··nail me Sl9'J,500. FEE CampusVall•yShopC'-c-" 2 OSELL' Approx4yrold,vac.pre. ,_ u. out"! An y offer · VA or ;u.i644·7 11 · c•U833 "600
TOWHHOUSE large Z bdrm., 2 baths Plac• ~ crastinate! t-•or quick your home. 2 or 3 pressiveentrance.4br,3 1 le h I04& Newpot1. Island. Extr a J .Quail ~ FllA help! Don 't pro· Have cash buye rs for stiege, 2 sty home w/im·li:;;;;A;t;;;~-~-.Q44'
$34 900 each. Oversized garage; .Bedrms. ba, lg. fam. rm. LoveJyO]PJlCI OC
' upper unit vacant. Prap•rti•• appt.CallS47·60IO. •CALLANYTIME• kit. w/brtrsl bar. Step.••••••••••••••••••••••• Lust'ious wallpaper & MESA VERDE 7S'l·1,l0 AF R Iv I N" carpets accent this +POOL Pricedat$9J,SOO ••oo ouA1l !.1 N1w1>0•t•l:ACH Ot'1,.,,1.,·•· '' "r .. ~f/./l{f ' 6'6-3928,eve9Sf9-1Sl2 down, .s pac. liv. rm. or ea a ue-ice.
t'harming noor plan. 3 673-3663 67S,-47'l1e\•es [ w/rrplc, rrml din rm. & 2Br Cottage. 2 Baths: Don 't miss th.is fantastic ® 1024 20'x22'bonusrm,crpt'd T~ees: Frpl: Ocean
Br, .1 ~ ba + sepr. mast party home, swim pool & RmKho San Joaquin . · ••••••••••••••••••••••• drps in luxurious Park View. Walk to beach.
br, dress ing a r ea hugerumpusroom.New· 500 '_' H 1· t L l t $59500 Bkr 499 2Z17 w/pullmansink&walkin I 1· 2 BR ,d('n.2ba$69, . MES•VERDE un ing on . g, o ' . -. Jydecorated&n ....... y 1st-a· c "' w /co n c. blk w a ll .
closet . Sma>I fenced ed. Only $52.500. 54$-9491. ICJ anyon BLUFFS CONDO Beautiful Pacesetter 4 ---------1 Massive heated pool in **TRADE
communlly w/pool. l lh -3 Bedrm ........ SI 59.500
0 CON Bed.rm, 2 ba, Frplc, Lge s•cluded yd. w/lavis h luxury, panoramic view. Yrs old. CALL NOW HARRY BABBITT WILL SELL N · 'k • &as-7221 TRACT : c u sto m 3 Family Rm. Forest hde QI $3&SQ d prof.lndscpg.Nr.schls& 2·BR home+ den, for -_..'c~EHTU~~R~Y~2~1~-l-Jll!llii;!!l!~-1Fil·~nd~w~h~a~t~y~ou~w~an~t~;n~~R~o~al~tor~ .. ~6~4~4~·~1~5~5~9~1 bdrm., 2"'1: ba., with love· setting on quiet Cul-· 0 J OWn shop'g. $79,SOO. Prin. on· less expensive home 6 WestcliCf Realty · . Daily Pilot Classifieds. ___ ly , large gre('nbelt view, Sac. Adss':l1mable lo9a:.; buys a newly decorated 3 Jy. Owner. 8J5.7156 miles from Oz.C. Airpod krt,
onquicl,privatestreel. Open 81 Y l ·S. 1 bedroom,2bathhomein ----------1or boat. agro z Y C.IN-OJ{}' ,( _ fr 'C ~C. "!! $74,950 Killdeer Circle. $71 ,500. excellent location. call HONEYMOONERS Realtor,494-8611 SELL idle items with a Have something to sell?
Daily Pilot Classiried Ad . Classified ads do it well.
I002G..,...I 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
IHVESTMEHT OPPORTUNITIES
14 UNITS, family ; 3 BR . Tustin.
$300,000. Need to refinance
39 UNITS. a dults 1 pride of
ownership. Pool, sauna, gym. 1,2,3
BR 's. $975,000; $200,000 Down . Costa
Mesa
120 ADULT Garden units; poot, rec.
room. 1 & 2 BR's. Hunt. Beach.
$1,900,000. 15% Down
8300 SQ. FT. INDUSTRIAL BLD G.
nr. Newport & San Di ego Fwy.
$149.000. 29% Down. Owner may
carry at 9%. 1or;f lleturn
VARIOUS SIZE
MOllLE HOME PARKS
IUSIHESS OPPORTUNITIES
;::>~ ~ \.",_ ~ i:..(,f" ;:> Owner557-1990. Spa · 3 b d
Thal lnfr;gu;ng W o,d Game w;fh a Chuclle C. F. Colesworthv ~~<kill! Ill horn~·~~.~ larg: ..::,~~ FAMILYDREAM-
1t11; ..... , ct.AT •. ron_,. off ofo MESA del If, ~ suite. CouDtry kitche n That can come true, with
Re on 640.0 MARVELOUS 962·44n i:l: 546·8103 and dine, ankle d eep this 2.sty. 3 bdrm., 3 bath
@ Pi1~i1 NU"-'N llfO L!l1£~S IN
1'1!'f 50\IA~f~
Ci UN~~AM~I( AAGllE l!llll ~ 10 Gf l ANSW{P I I I I I I
SCRAM-LETS An1wers, in Clonlfication_I 002
PRESIDENT HOME 1 :;;;;~;;~;;~;;;;1 carpet, freshly deoorat· r a mily ho me. Has 3-J\.tassive bdrms plus ed. on big lot with fruit beamed ceil '~ .• rrplc .,
TURTLEROCK spacious family room trees & a custom shim· central air-conditioning
Spacious four bedroom w/rustic open beam ceil· <Wy $44,950 mering pool! I Starter & electronic air rilter.
home. Great view from in~. t'o1y Winter frplc . EA.SY TERMS terms with a low $3995. Lge. htcl & riltered pool
master bedroom, living Under $1600. down or no-4 Bedtrn, 2bath, covered down OR YOU NAME with s pa. Lots of private
room & kitchen. All the down to veterans. Im· patio in excellent THE TERMS. Btr deck & patio area.·
wonderful extras lhat go mediate possession. neighborhood on quiet 962·5511 Beautifully landscaped.
with easy modem li ving c• 540.3666 tree-lined strq?t. Close to:i---------1 with sprinkler system &
plus a sparkling swim-shopping & schools. 2Sn-S23,750 fenced yard. Only
ming pool overlooking -Seller Anxious. Call POO'Sl5 0 MO. minutes rrom Nigue l the hills and valleys. A • '.:.J •• -·r. .,. Beach&shopping Areal ~~~~~~u~~~:V~~ce •Rl@p sc~lZ~::~TY Pti!i~~!!o'=ach jewetat m.soo ·
[ ®
m r.i '"...,. ,, ~ 1v'\I ro~1 ri1~1 . ! We're here to wp. /""~~~~~~~~~I \f~~~.;'noet~~ ::f~,~' ~ ~~~~
4 IR UHDER 1 · """""""' "'
. . ,· :· Culc 2 BR Cottage on lrge $30 000 ? AnG l que m1krrol 'hed decorh. " 499·2BOO . R.2 lot. $34,200. Holland • • ourmet tc en wit ~~~~~~~~~~· ~R~e~a~lt~Y~·~64~5~.4~1~7~0===;il Yes ... in this custom eon· large dining area . Nice Woods Cove Duplex, I do. Highly upgraded. Includes refrigerator! oc. vu. $10,000. dn :
SEEK & "INlf Near Pool, T ennis , Winding staircase to $9l,000. FP. Arch Bay r1 W•lt Dline:y Schoo 1, · S ho PP In 1 . giant hide-a-way master Real Estate, 499.2271
963-6862 s uite. Huge enclosed S 1. I HTAC)8MA.
T I E I T N C) R F I
ET s " A. r. N E D 1;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 patio. $11,150 buys at 6%
Y K k 0 CON BM I' LOAN· $150 MO. PAYS
F. L R (' 0 (' N I' L A C N E W S P I T R
A.F.RMPll I K C BBKPLNl>BDQ
ALL! Olympic t'Ommon
pool. Townbome. Take
advantage· Call 752-1700
NOW! MN f/1. O ;,, s·1i,;.. io8' Hie'(•.
.,At,/an
REAL ESTATE
QQO f,l,•ntH•y" 'iot
4<,o4Q4 1> )41)(\)lll
Beach Home
CHARMING restaurant, Newport
Beach; affluent location. $130,000.
50%Down
~S...ld~~
A I. F .
/);f!:I:s:J~· ].'.]]· 0 A.. 0 I u
.O MVNRY UV R S A..
RORROM8MRHNL
PW 9 fTI lEOY£L
THE RE-All
ESTATERS I _ ___,
Close-in, immaculate,
remodeled. Hdwd nn, I&
storage, elec. 1ar, p1Uo. ·~
A/C, 2 BR. $64,900 I ••
1044 • BEER BAR, Costa Mesa. Earns $20,000. s12.ooo Down ; owe
Kl;Al,TftKS
644-7270
TVO~l .KOA.~llOWSPATt!P E
W~O~IClNCSPINANOll~R
IN GJ R~K C lJ DOLANOOUA.E
I, ~ 0 II ~ N 0 'tit' W H I T f. M A. RT V 0
l.f~ATNA.PMIAISATNAFN
IO~LIRTTEKCORCYVAOI
~~I PLUTOLA.CO DNALRO C
••••••••••••••••••••••• OPENHOUSESA.T/SUN 't
' 'LAKE & REC. development; 40
acres; Ne wberry Springs (ncor
Barstow>. Submit. owe
PRINCIPALS
"1r..,•.0•1olil.-WHb/Mlblroww DWW..675-6427
,...., coroH del ,... .,._. -new paint U & carpets in lhe front 3 bedroom, 3
ath fire place unit. Rear unit
>graded, 2 bedrms, 2baths, fireplace,
alk to beach & shopping. Owner will
nsider trade for more units. $99,500.
2128 f . Cooit Highway, Corona d~ Mor ,
MOMIS fOtl LIVINC \ 111nwo1t1t
HELP'' "'6Agale St. Nr. beaeh. 2 II
br cottaa:e. $50,900/ ti
• • Owntt wtll carry. Bkr . .,.
549-8138 or 494·0198
eves/wknds 4+2+Fam
Out cl. lown sellen need
fqt 1'1e on thJs beautiful
ramily home. 4 Large
bedrooms, 2 king size
bath. All the exlr11-
every woman'• dream
kltchen-<anly 133,900.
Call oow for more de.
t1tt1t I "Red Carpet, Realtors .
133..J3t0
EANFRONT ROM.I:~
North Wguna. 263 Crd·
cent Bay Dr. (by app'L ..
onty) r..Oxurlaua 3 bdrm .• •
3 b1 .• cu1tom built.•
''Spectacular" view-al ~
Betit waterfront b'uy I\
town t OBS.000, seller w•I
help finance. Call ford
tails.
JAMES LOMAS R. E.
.... lOOI
..
,
-· ••••••
Pie
41>
de<:
for
S225
337
••••••
...
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"tr e nbrh .. ..
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liv1
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I "--'U p•s'qd Uand!y,Oct~ZT,1175 DAILYPILOT •7 "For~ 'Hws.. .... s. ....... For see Mc 1" I " mp 1rty 2000 H1utn,.,,..,... ••••••• :.:-........... .. . ' ··•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -·•••••••••••••••••••• •• . 4 111 nUalw•1h1d H1•nU.tw¥-1d A,alw1t1fllllli•d ~•
wporta..ct. 1069Hewportleoc:h 1049 S-Ju. Dupltllletfor1alt1ld•b C--.. Mw l l ZZc..t...._ JJJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••--••• .. •• •••••••.•••••-•• .. •-•• C_,_~ ·-• ~·· 000 ....................... 374 ••••••••••-•••••t•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·-1071 ah.-, SlJS.000 ...-. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• · .,..,.... JJ44 Mt.,,.,.ll'edl 3 269 llatlftt-•lltec:lt 0
.,
LIDO BA. YFROMT
50 FOOT LOT
Pier & slip for yacht to 55 It. 5 Bdrms.,
4'h baths. Move-in condition. Lots of
deck & patio areas. Owner may trade'
(or view, Irvine Terrace 4 or 5 bdrms.
$225,000 -Leasehold.
LIDO REALTY
3377 Vho U., M.I . 673-7300
••••••••••••••••••••••• Ownr.~ 3+8drms. MISA YllDI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
MIW LISTING BEACJl •l1ourdoor. 3 br 2 -.,. fam rm, frpk, BEAUT San Joaqu.la BEAUTIF1JL 1 br fUM ~ Jn pre1tl1iou1 Alto
CapJ1trano. $ Bdrm .. ~. ram. & dJn1n1 mo rm. borne. t89.soo.
OIANNEL VlKW. Mov• dbl 'prace. fnt'd yard, Tvmhm~ Lar e 2 Br Z\ot ESP£RAT£! Nu1t rent apta $170 ar StlO. Span.lab
CHOICE4·PLEX In t"Ond. AvaU u.nfura. rpb, cirpl, Mtm, cu.l·de· Ba 2 l\Y vfew of 'colt 1parklla1 new 2 br atyle bldC, pvt end 1ar, All 2 BR, sh11 crpl, $1$0 Wlnler renlal. 1 $GS mo m.cnv • it. 1 k S$50 Seawtod condo. Walk to pool sauna lndrt acl.ILI bl\nl, huh l~ndacapln1. Waterrron\ Homa• s c. • · :,~::,.: • e. 'bNcb.JIANYEXTRASI JTJOi K~ La: 1 blk ~r otcup1ed. S7t,500. 631·1400. MESA VERDE CC area, I $HS. Agt. 163·1911 or w. o1 Beach ot.r Slater. AMCMOAA•I Principals only pleaH. ..._..__ 3 124 Br, Fam. Rm, frplc, * l&ITALS * 9-6234 IC-1M8
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--.....--Aa:ent . $49·0812 or Cott.--ret:ris inc'd. Nswly cS. .. ~,~U'li •~ W-8'110 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cora\ed.S375.W-2?92 UNlV.PARK LeaH: Baycrest area. 4
1714149•7711 1..::=.::=-----;Ba<h pod, mobile, all utl1 I BR.2ba. booUJ •••• $475 BR, 2"' ba. •pool. POO!IA .. • IMclt 3741
Plex by owner, C.M . pd,$105. MESA Verde 3 bt, fam THETERRACE Mo.A,eent MC>-4CllG •••••••••••••••••••••••
xlnt. Jtond. call 556· Homefindtrs,6'2·MOO rm, newl1 d ecorated. 2BR,2:S. ..•••.••••. ~ EFnCIENCYAPTS
s-t1Aao 1010 daY1S49·422Seves. $315. mo. Reference• 3BR.28a .•.•.•.•.•. tA25 Brdr Condo. II.itch Ju.Uy from $190. Pool, ma.kl.
••••••••••••••••••••••• $4.50. Meaa Verde EuL 4 s.G-JOIM OREENI'RtEHOMES eq!.Dpt.. frplc, soft water, phone laundry. Vllia&e
** •D 't Weit•** Redllc.edl br 2 IMI, Ice Cam rm, din 3 BR,.2 Ba •••••••••• S375 pal.lo, 2 car pk'1. Pool, Inn . .M.M38 °" Now offered at $9$,000. rn\, pvt bltk yard. lit• Rent Hie.• Bd, 2 ba. SS!IO. 3 8R,3 Ba ••••••••••• $t2S ~rk area. Avail tu.m. . t~or prices and 1nterttt to F\ve Rental Unlll, or U\•e lut + dep. l.ae. Ml·IZll mo. Lae 1ar .• fncd J"d. 3 BR. Zba . ~ ........ s-> $350. &eZ·•OIZ. wkndl, Oceanrroot. 2 partially
L---HI--' 1052 M9--'leoch 1069 ~~br;~·p:i~~u~'.~~ ln 3-BR, ra1n rm, 2·ba L leocil 3141 s..4888 wlmdl/eves. DEERFIF.LDHOM~ (2ll))llS5Meva. fum..,2 8 0 , 2 ba, Juxury
..,.....-.,.... .. ,._. house w t-I •nd r~t ~-~ 3 8R,2~Ba ....••••. $42:5 _.~ apts. New carpet&, new ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. not doWl'I ! 2 Bedrm, 2 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR + uuuUI r!ft. new R.&ncboSanJoaqu.in NWPTHll3 br,2ba,u<R•, drapai balcony over the
BIGCANYONLOT ba single s t ory •·Units. CAU 1425. • .. or lae 2 br crpts,drP1 .... !;=l,cu.l· 2 BR+den,2ba •••• $:i00 veryl&e&clean.$QO. beach: Winter rental DUFFERS I Best location on Golf Townhou.'ie& •till at only charmer, new dcitor, d-aac.$375.-· 2BR.2Ba ..••......• $S75 t.e.6&2·9866 S345·$S7 0. 49•·10$S
La!it ZBdrmCondo Course. $84,500. Owner S2i.95o. New carpets. cpl.I, drps, adult.s :"1Y: NIOEClean 2BR.•dulll, 'l\LrtleRockHllls BLUFFS ·c o ndo. Ex· t9fi.38St
OnTheWes\Nine 1-=>8:.:l..:·02&1::~·~'~>4"2~·tr1=35~.-:---1~ne~w~dr~a~pes~.:S:•'.1lc!..~Aa~k~-'or no p ets. 494 ·2 02, 261 Palmer.~. mo. 4BR,Z8a .............. hWveUvin1·$450Mo.31..:::.:::::;:_ ____ _
At This Prlre·S42.000 1 f)oank, 8»-832I Aaent. <2ll)W«>342 Aaent. 548-8642 2 + ~~· 2 baba, rum ... ~ ~R. ' Mewport •och 3769
Cf':NTU RY FINANCIAL TllE BLUf"'F'S oceanfront North Lacuna 2 + u.m, 2 . ' ..... ·-Armt6'4·11.3l ••••••••••••••••••••••• HEAL TORSS81·l210 Bill Carroll 64().S56Q Mobile Homes Cov 4 B 3 Bii t le EASTSID!:. l&e houe 3 'nlE COLONY Need Temporary Hout• •-~~~~~~~1--..!.H!!•'!_st~;n~g~s~&c!C~o~-1 For Sol• 1100 REALTY IN C. ,. __ :· patt!' newly' p!Snt: Br, 2 Ba, fenced bk Jd. t BR. 2:V. Ba .•. ···· .. $425 EAST BLUFF IC. 4 BR int:?!? Bach apt Phone.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 714/846-1371 :;d' sB.50 WIRter No peU Bltns, crpts, dbl a:ar, • CULVEROALE home, super sharp $6m Wkly maid ierv. $275•
SE,\ TERR ACE llDUCED$40,000 •tnPwklnalH* -&U2 21.1.ziw·Sr:itl . t.oolshed.$1'15.W-1017 S BR.2Ba ....•..... $375 Monlh.Agt..6'4·1193 No.Nopeta.UdoShottl T<>WNHOME . 3 ·Blt RyownertorqWcksale. •lOWlDES• EASTSIDE Costa Meaa '94 or kida THEWIU.OWS Hotel &73-8800
fumis hed, many extras. Elegant Dover Shores •12WIDES• lnve1tment oppty. 2 Mtwportle-och 1169 $225, f ~:t~~~ ' 4BR.2ba •..••••••• $.140).BR, 2·ba, crpta, drpa,1..:=:::!:•::.:..=:;... ___ _
(;orr.:eous view. Im med. home. 4.200 sq fl, 4 br, 4 • 20 WlOES • houaet on a lot w/room ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~· -;lndetl 64.i.tJDoo dbl 1ar. $4.$0/mo. yrly. t or 2 Br, adults, no peU,
olTupancy. $69.950. ba, 5pectacular family • 24 WIDES• for another tn xlnl rental UDO ISLE BAY FRONT otne. ' Ast. 675-6870 $1701$190. 2421E.16\hS&..
• RON~1~:~LTY • rm. den. pool , beaut. Call & shopping art1. T_ry Wln\er ,38r, 2 Bl, E-Slde 3 Br, fam rm,2ba, 552-7500 t Br & FR, view. tennis, N.HtAM&-1801 ---------I \'lew. Great for enter· ''llUCHESTOOAY'' lD"'X.dowo. W.SOO. Pno. 675-4646 e?s-3098 kids, pets, fenced. pool,~ mo. $SM64.6/ StO WK UP l &2 Bdr &:
. taining. $189,000. Open $30-0200 only. &33-1182 Homeflnden, MZ-9900 d h 111 642-8235 Joyce Bach. Color TV. maid Laguna Niguel. da~ly. 12·8. 1608 Gwlaxy NEWPORT PACIFIC PARADISE tor 6 mos . re
the choice communih~ . · 133 t ec1. It Dnve 646-8049 Lake Forest INVESTMENTS Blulfa tum. condo. tGC>0 $220 3 ·Br unit, child, Dix 3 br, 2 ba, appl, frplc,
4
se
15
rvN •. pool.NewpoTHrtE BMIES, NAB. "1 Exceplional cu.stom Monlh.Aa:ent644·1 slniJe1,peta, enc re• V child,sn1l,1ar. 646-96Bl
NEWPORT SHORlS coach. 24 x 46 Hawaiian. COLLEGE Lido Sands croam puff. 3 Homeflnden,Ml-0900 ~ _,!Hom~'.!ef!_';n~d~e."C"''.:.·642:=:_·::""'°=~:=':::~"--:--::;-:;:-:;:
WATIRFIONT ~t 1 n y upgraded 1 dbl d I 't hild ~ FURN + color TV. Park
• • SEE & SELL
\.l)U RS ELF· Excitln I
nrw area in Laguna
N11:uel. Beautitul 3·Bdrm
foothill low n home .
poolside & rolling hills
\leWS. $41 ,950. ,.
Beaut. 4 BR. 2~ baths. reatures, S alar park. PARK BR. 2 Ba. frp' · iar., SITS 1 Br, e ux uni • c S.. ..._ Newport
1
b r. 1300.
Walk to pools, tennis & Call tor details. Arlyne, This 't l t I g paUo. Pool Ir: rec. uea. OK,appl,&1ar. . a--ALS C .. tr.o 3271 BT:J.5332:
one won as on . $4.SOMonth. Homefinders."2·9800 '""' f 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 833-8203oreves · ocean. Only $12,900 eves. Super sharp upsraded Agent&l6--4380 2 BR, 2 ba home or on y · d
1 2
b
CAYWOOD REALTY S86·2856 family home in prime $185, 2 Br. n ew paln\, SSlS Clean highly up-SpaniJh atyle up ex, r. Winter. $160. l br. Gara1e. * 548·1290 * Sodc:hl:MH:k V•y area. Close lo ever· WINTER, s.ns. 3 br, 2 ba, child, fncd, patio. cied. ' 2ba, ahas crpt1, dbl 1ar, Cloaetobcb.
Real Estate yt.hing. Call for appoint· garden, patlo;-arlor t v, 2 Homefmde",6'J.9800 era OR fenced yd, S265 mo. SlOO 675-4625.
FORSALEBYOWNER 586·5771 ment. car gar. Short blk to 3 BR 2 bah ;e fot'$.19S deposit . 496·7879 Or
Save Realtor·s fee, price ocean. P roperty House, 3 br, 2 ba, la m-rm, yrly w 1 LL c& N.S IDE Ji 729-lOlS Ebii:'~~b~Y2b:~.c=i
1ceallneducedonnce4 AcrHIJOfor•• 12001£ 1 .1 &U-3850 • lse, $.150 + sec.a!~ STUDENTS s.t.AM 3210 jac,w/d ,$365.673-6891,
Br Blutfs E Plan. Mt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• , QUGI l r-CI t ll76 11/15. 64&-7S94; OR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laguna Niguel. night light \•iew, mir· 10 Acre oran&e erove, Place =. .. ~~~-~•••••••••• evd. 3 BR, 2 ba townhouse for Nice 3 br. z ba, bltns, OCEANFRONT sparkling the choice commun;...,I rored. LR Formal DR, Corona. $15,000/ac. Sell Prapert:i•• Beautiful likenew3 bdrm, $425. New paint, clean ept/drp. gar. nr. Warnr dJx 3 br. 2 ba, Crplc. $4'75.
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FR, 2~ Ba . 2 patios. ctyd or trade, OWC 968·5700 7Jl-1t20 Sl90,tcl0#.e h\~dw~t:r, =•~r 2 ba, w /bltn kitchen, in· and ready to move In. On & f'airvu. ~. 642·S583. 3to7 mo.87S.1M9 • • J-1 E W H 0 entry. Nr. pool, highly eve i.oo ou1uls1.N1w"<>•ta1a.c:M uni s.fi cd 642 9ooo • eludin g dish washer, l.arge(reenbelt.
HESITATES may loose upgraded. PRIN. ONLY Plex, Costa Mes a . Home •n en. · lhirk shag cpls, s prklrs OR.. South~CI 3216 NEAR H ach 2 br, 2 ba,
this lovely 3·Bdrm. 2·ba ~5897 AVOCADO LAND. St .~. $00 500 Xlnt rental area. & renced. IZ50 per mo. 3 BR, l. ba. townhouse for ••••••••••••••••••••••• S2fJO, un~ June. 5'8-4063
tltlme on qui«t c.uJ.dc..•ac • per AC. Rancho. Cahf. · · 642 9772 ..._... Uttfwftishc>d Free rental se r vice. SUS. New! CIOle to pool z Br, z Ba home. Ocean before nud.nl&hl.
s treet . Convenient M'Df.ShoretS1MC1Cll1 80%SellerFin.8'iAl '7o lnt. Byowner, · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-Till Open Eves andj acur.z.l ·view, t rplc, carpo rt . VIEW apt
2
br, garage,
ubrhood.$54 ,000. Doll house. 2 sty. A · Tight S ror<"es sale. forsolr 2200 Q,eMral 1202 · · OR.. Adu lts, no pets. Lie. pool, bltna. Adult.a. $'lTS.
lAGUNA HtoUIL •IAltt' I rra01e. Only $63,5(1() Owner. 714 /616·5734 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. 2 ba + formal d,ln· 49'1·1612 an 7PM. Wkd)'I, 642-6889. 2A53 lrvine Ave.
•%-4040 or a»sosa_ Charmins 2·sty w/famlly Haff M-lo~ Ing room. Good local1on Sat &SUn. all day.
------1 rm.Reducedto Sfil.900 73 Acre Grape Ranch, 2 ,·;] ?~ .~ OceanFront,dlx<lbr,bll· ~~~'lllJlll~~-~'lllJlll~jSuper4BR .+den.Only houses adj . to Golf HcrborVlewL r1 J ~'l~ii [1~;1 1 OR. Wn.....i.thr 3291 ins drps,fplc.Beautiful
-: $72500 Course. $4,200. p/acre. LOWPRICE&TERMS I : ;' 1' 1L -4 BR. 2 ba single ram ••••••••••••••••••••••• v·
00
'w. 1400. Wi nter. • H !land Realty 645-4170 ;;;: d I th '") :t._,
CAYWOOD REALTY
0
· 35 Min to San FranC'isco "-·-• ·-·-·· -··--....-ho me In Culverdale. Use Fireplace. Super 4 BR, 2 673·2058bkr.
•548·1290• Outdoor &Sports-0riented ChelSalisburyll FREESERVICE BToro 3212 pool . tennis a n d BA r an<'h style tiome.l-'==-'-="'-------0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• k ~20 ....,., ..., .. ~""'963 1786 OC'eanfront Bachelor fa mi I y seek in K wner TO' ·~DLORDS .. ~loM-par ...... ~ . ...........,... · • LIDO. ( )/ . t (S) -" ~ OR ApC.,, $1SO. UUI rurn.illled. •PARADISE • partner s invcs or (714) 675-8344 •1ember of Board or 4 BR '"' ba + ra m rm Looking for a nice ramUy 548-2396 an proposed 40 acre •• RentalsOr • ho 3BR 2 ..::c::..::=c..·------3.Bdrms. din rm, 2·ba ., SP 0 rt s Ranch 1 n Realtors, Better Busi· and bonus r oom, in loArent our
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completely walled Fallbrookt Ranctlo Calif. CASH-TALKS ness Bureau,Chamberor TennL.eotes TurtlerotkSS75 B , super oca ion. · ~?!t.c.
70'x88' lot, fr.ont & rear ., ••. Day• 644 ·4492 or Bu.itd Gar. Apt.-0n 20 n. Commerce. El Toro, Mission Viejo & OH .. mo. 963-4567963·1786
• A•sos · ••••••••••••••••••••••• street parking, wood · Eves$5l·l075 paved :.illey.possiblc 53-Laguna Hills 2 BR+ den on water in Condomlnfumt ._..._
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3107 burning frplc . in lrg liv ocean view. 2 Bdrm.now MANY FOR $.100. Newport Beech. Bring u..tumiatwd 3425 -
rm open to garden patio lutiM11 Properly 1400 I on front with dble. gar.. ,Jf? 1 1~ CENTURY FINANCIAL YoUr boat. $600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
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PRIVATE ocean t'om· onboths1des. You·111ove •••••••••••••••••••••••,art studio & extra bath· [,;~;)l!,.~![ll,;1 al REALTORS SBl·l.210 LE RAISOR SUPER plush, bea~t. de. bay or ocean. $2l
5
. mo. munity . Imm ediate this charming early Lido f'RIMEIAHK 1 1-'.P .·bi~ rooms·R·2·lol· , 1jj 1~,·~it,• l' 'I t d ti a l ly
home.$159,900. IUILDIHGo 60xl37-Conc. bl~ fe~ce· --... .. • ~ REALTY cora e • par Uti l in<'l 67S.7876evea possession. Upgraded 1-1 .W. floors ·Z·br1ck sz'o F'ee·lYearserv1ce Fo.ltalnValll'y 3234 fumished3br,2ba,dbl .
single family 3·BR wflrg 11 ,050.000. 1,oot·•••"" kind of fruit •• garage t opener. Pool. New 2 Br, 2 Ba, duplx nr. living room. format din· $172000 Yearly 'J $150 Stai\ton2brduplex.••••••••••••••••••••• 45ZJCampusDr .. lrvine $385 . mo. 875·7184 or Yacht Club, yr l y .
1ng, Jovel~ landscapin&. Gr~at N~wp(,rt location. & citrus trees & be~ries· kids & pet ok. 2 Br. Condo w/Bonua Rm. Campus Valley Shop Ctr. 675·H170 213-449·64J2or673·5981
i74,500. Ted 1-lubert & Assoc. plOaydall c~~h,·,m.?.~'e.,•,n,vone Sl?S. 1-\lllerton, l br, incl 2EI~~ f.!!,· Btook~~l ~ CAU lll-1600 W k • 1· p . 3 'f ay 1.:S ... · stv/ref.cpts.drps. u:o .~mo.or-...,.y... n.-a...
11
_.__
3600
or °' 1ve on en1n. lnfoy the Good Li • DONALD M. IS IRO Realtors. S7S..SSOO $5000.·Z:W·E·IS·St. Qu.io· Sl6Ct. Westmins ter, nice 1 lease. P h: 642·5038 or UN IV. PARK 4Br, fam . ......,....1 .. vnTWrTI br. 134 ba, rrplc, bltns,. _4~9~9~·-4_5~8~4'-_4_9_3_·_2_5_1_3-1 --~·~·~'°~'~'·~'"~·~·-'·~·~"-'~"--I Celftltery Loh/ tard 642·2991 br, child ok. 673-1-4'5 . rm. rr plc, cpt11 /drps . •••••••••••••·~~;;•••• garage, duplex. Util pd.
Meo-"" hach I 069 ~ Cryph 1500 MCMttain Desert, SIGS. Cos~a Mesa. l br EZ living 2 Br. 2 Ba, pet wallpaper, pools, park & 2
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Rd.,e2n ::· ls. ~~~ Property House, 6'2·3850 ••• :":::'.: •••••••••• , •• , ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• R sort' 2400 fum. mobile home. bltn.s pool tennis gar water. 552·8573 (~. ) -~·~r~83c.cl·_94_00 _____ _
BIG BEDROOMS ,.. ~ 3 Burial Plol<> available_ at ••••~•••••••••••••••••• ~1~. k~~~~ Park, vacant Hom~f1nde~s.642·99oo . LOCJllfta hoc.h 3241 mo.644-6800 s1e N Corona dtl Mar 1122
IN NEWPORT Pacific View Memo.nal S Spectacular view acres $190. G de . Grove 2 br ..... I"--•-h 3240 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. l Ba . $300 mo. o ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wat~rfrontLl•ing Park. S825 full price. of high desert·valley · ar n ' · rMI .. ..,on_.ac d k pets Balboa S48 ·9662 OFF 1 t t• HEIGHTS 5 714·728·7668 . fromSouthAppl .. Valley. nieearea.w /c pet ••••••••••••••••••••••• VIEW3BR,2ba, ec ,nr d · 675 oisJ after 5 s.so s mo. ren · b h Extraordinary 2 tory .. SZJS. Gardl!n Grove, 3 br. Walk to the beach from town /be~ch. $425. mo. or p~s or · New 3 br , 2 ba. Super l~urge . spacious . 2 at . Home with Coe1•1Mtrcfal 2 Bd. house shell. Water 2 ba, vacant. kids ok . this beautiful 3 BR. 2 BA lease option. 494-6930 pm . ar~a. Z . car gar .• $400. ~b~~~~affi~:e~~~=!~ 4 Lrg Bedrms, Property 1600 & electricity book· up $260. Santa Ana. 3 br, + home. fplc. DW, $385 mo. Po1nsetl1a, CdM . 549-8867
for boat, etc. $54.950. Gall Din. Rm . & Family Rm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• avail. SIS,OOO. 846·20'l7 . 2, kids & pet ok Ask for Bev or Joe. · Af»cw ltnc"ts Furnished 1 -=d~•~Y'~·;_ ______ _
64fi·717 1. VIEW BAYFRO ... T OutafCOUftty $275. llunt Heh. s uper 96.J.4567963·1786 CHAR~11 NG Laguna •••••••••••••••••••••••
• $239000 1"'111 ...a.. 2550 >•('3brtnhse w1rrplc Bea ch Z bdrm., l·bath. lalboaPtftiMUlo 3707
"l'·'·'I •' ' .• ". •' ' Office building, spec· Propetty ......... C ...... taMesa.2story , v.canl ·L•r•e ~xec Close in . f'rplc. Enclosed ••••••••••••••••••••••• [~:·1m1 •1n1~ tacular view, luxurious •••••••••••••••••••~••• Jb:+ r:mrm.kids&pet ilome. 48r, r·am. rm, yard .$.n5~1o/yrly. Studio, patio, lnd ry , (S ~v ~.JjiJ ]\fJ "·~~~'.~':~~.000 ~I ~:,t~ ';:';'•~b~·~.~~; ~~SS Anaheim, cc•I g~·~~>~:~~;;~'-' !,:O~R,:~~ 'or2 h~a;h:~ ~:";::.·~;"£~.~dull 0" 'll ll~c.s_
llLL GIUMDY + 2rm otfice bldg. 27 ·?00 bargain for family, 4 br, private community. $450 1 -'"-'"-". "-'------·J
RHlltor 675·6 I 61 sq fl . S49•950. •OWNER. 2 ba. Village Real F.state Mo/yrly. BALBOA INN CORONA DELMAR 1--::--::;-:--:----;---1~~~~".'C:-:C.:.:::.:_::..:::.c.cl.'646~~-'34.S~~·~•~v~es~.'-----I ~I cm be r Bo a rd of No Agents Fee TURNER ASSOC. Oreanrront 1 br, Incl. 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. Split Level 5700 Sq.ft. Rf'Clf &tote Realtors. Better Busi· •Mct'adden/Newland llDS N. Cst Hwy, Laguna util: $260. mo. winter. 105 Pool, tenni!>, continental "'.:'.:.'..:'.:~------! 3 Bd'ms .• l'h baths ; 3 Mo.I llclg. 12 Units W..t.d 2900 ne5i Bureau & Chamber 3 BR. 2 BA ... $345 494·1177 Ma1n ,67S-8740 breakfast. Some ocean &
-reo •Warner/Magnolia c 1· · Cl-e lo garages & view. No loan Good rental area. Lot ••••••••••••••••••••••• o 5m3'!'e,!'5c·•0·5• A_. 3 BR, 2 BA ... $345 L H'll 3250 Yrly Bach for l person. Nr s~pi:;,ag v~e~~~e b':ach. Newport Crest. Jhr. 3 full
ha 's. Retreat. xtras, elec
~ar. vu . 645·9SZ7 . fee : owner will finanre'. 70x260 $129 900. MR APT OWNER ~ ,.. •Mct'adden /Bus hard CICJl"CI 1 5 stores. util pd. $135 mo. •ouv N H , hte ~ S00 /;At:>,., -' 549 1532 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,..,3•6790 644·2611 ewport e1g ~ . ..,.,, .....,... ""'•eves · • . • MOVE now ~ 2 br 1175., 3 BR . 2 BA ... $.nS d l:='"~'C'.'..':'...;:;::-;-:::--;:;;:;:;I~~~~~~~~~~~ C ALl 0 6J t ·l4 1J Owner 1n escrow on s.ale C.M .. Also ll.B. 2 br. 9G3·456'7or963·1786 3Br , 2ba, cpts. rapes,
BEAU d d& must purchase units. 5180·• kids. pets. N.B. 3 3 BR, 2 ba, bltns. cpts, SJOOmo.837 ·1581 •••••••••••••••••••••••Unusual 2 ~R., en,
TIFUL 9! '
or Costa Mesa Units, dshwshr. patio & pool. COi"OftCldtlMar 3722 d ZI'.
DOYER SHORES ••••.TV ••-ooo br $285. kids. Pt'ts. d 1 1 S · kle's Lar
0
,,.10 s 1 bd up ba. Lg. din. area, wet ,. Sl00.000 .. ....,.,, · range. s in gles. And H B. 3 br, rps. rp c. prin L Hi--' 3252 ~e. 5 u ' · bar rrplc. B·I kit ch, LOWEST f'RI CED i'l,1ti'lt1tporcP••tOffltt Ha s $60,000. Ca s h . front&rear.Lgefncd C191ftG 'r""' sta1rsapt.Adultsonly. ' ' f $47S
tl01'T F. 1 ~.:.:'...'..::.::CC.::::...:.:.:..c.::.:.:.c..:..I •-----........ -• KR $225 .• kids. pets. d 1 mi. beach. $.165. mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail Nov. 15th, Call art. lndry area, pa 10·
ON GALAXY DRIVE BIG CANYON Loquna Office lldcJ. 54Q.Z'J4S B . RENT·A·HOUSE r..,~. Isl. last + $IOO. de· LGE 2 br. 217 ha. twnhse. 8.615.9954. Mo, yrly Bkr.675-5726
l\•an Wells atrium, 4 HR. ONLY 1172,5-00. Comer Joe., 3,000 sq. ft.. Rfttlals 979-8430 posit. 963·8316 or 848·1004 lrplc. lndsc p, <'Om m
3724
BRAND NEW 3 Bedl2 a Ba . ~1 arvcl ous day & llighly upgraded Broad· ocean view oCfices. On ·••••••••••••••••••••••• poOl .$.nS.640-0254. CostoMHO bath. frplc, sunder.k.
n1teview.Pool&jacuzzi. moor Plan #4. 4 Br,+ s ite park ·g. Ask1n g House1 Furni1twd Bafboal .. and l206 wehave3&4BRhomes, 3267 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $450. mo , 540·3383;
!'nee reduced below ap· den. fam .rm., 3 frplcs, $160 000. Xln\ terms •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ready today. See to ap. Mlss.ioftVlrfo $37 SOWEEIC&UP ""'"tf!IG G I D • .,. d l $36 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ...... praisal.1824 aaxy r . pool. Jacuzzi. Corner avail.loquah1e buyer. General 3102 Lovely38R,11,o'.!8a,plus prec. $310 o "· --1&. •Studio&lBRApt.s 1-'"-'--------
0pcn Sun. 10·6. Sat & VI e w Jot . 0 w n e r . 9 Units. LCICJUllG ••••••••••••••••••••••• separate i;iuest room & 963-4567 963·1786 Monfft to MUftfft •1V & Maid Serv Avail Single rente r wanled. ~·kdays 2·6. $160,000. 547 .5832; 646·4831. 4 Shops, 5 apts., comer HOMEOWNERS bat h , 2 frp lc 's. bltn N/W fireplace super 3 Rentals Or •PhoneServ, lltdpool Small 2 br apt w /sun· f~l5·8498 loc .. annual gross in· 1 .... DLORDS kitchen. Many xtra.s. No BR 2 BA. $335. mo. See T Leases •Children Section deck. Free washer & • • BEST W ATER · come $18,444 . Asking ~" pets. $550. mo/yearly. lod' 963.4567963.1786 enn •Low monthly rates. dryer. $28.5. mo. 673·3001 EAST BLUFF FRONT BUY•• 2·BR, $167 .SOO. Owner will TAKETHEHASSEL 675-2975 ay. J\1ission Viejo, Laguna •$SOFFweek'srenL
$54,2 38 ~~~· w~~ni~~n~;~·!i: finance the purchase. OUT OF LEASING 4 Br 3 Ba new w/view Nice Area. extra lrg 3 br , l-lill~~IJ~8R$300. w/ad
DEN + POOL 8 Great buy! •WIAOVERTISE• 1 b . hf. . L d ' 2 ba tri-level. Huge den. CENTURY FINANCIAL 2376Newport91vd.CM
The fabulous Bluffs in ~·l4 l REALONOMtCS 615·6700 Contact Our In.come (~~ii, r~fng'. :71~iJg~ ry S375. 847·7293 REALTORS.
581
.
1210
S48·9755or645·3967
Eastbluff! R.ed tile roof.LI KI-.: NEW Ha r bo r Property Advisors . A .1 blenow•4 BR pool SUSCAStTAS
•2 br, 1 ba, Corolido •
walk bea<'h/pool.
carport. $250. Adil.S i no
pets 833·8974
Raised portico e~t ~Y · Highlands. J\tus t sell CondominlumtfTown .. CENTURY FINANCIAL 3 BR. 3 BA, den, wmter hova~!. SJ95tnlo. Ask for 3 Br, J\.-2 Ba, blt.ns, <'rpts, . 2 Dr, 2 Ba, frplc. itar.
Step· up to huge hving quickly by owner. Prine. hous.n for salr 1700 REALTORS. 581 ·1210 S500 f1no. Yrl y 1600. Keith. 962.447 1 Agt. drp&, fenc~ yd. 1345 mo. ~gb n1~~Y 1r~m .
1
bach. patio. bl tins, no children
room VIEW to huge only.613·6J770wner. •••••••••••••••••••••••ocEANFRONTlb,,$l6S. 675·144 Z 558·921 1 227 . 22862 Via Octavo. rs. u ony,no or pets, avail 11·9·75.
sparkling, common pool ! Coral 3 BR 2 BA 5816927 pets.2110Newport Bl. $300. mo. 833·0821 or Comry gourmet kilchen.s-ctentente 1076 MORTHLAGUNA ulil pd. Also H.B. 1 br Move in now! ' · ·
67
5-
042 Q"cen size bedrooms. ••••••••••••••••••••••• C DOS $145. CdM J br 1175., pets VACANT! Spac. 3 br, 2 ba Super sharp. Nr pool. Me___. leach 3269 1 ON M b s140 1 close to ocean. $425 /mo. "'t"""'" ........... SSAOOR IMHS s r JI Den or extra bedroom· REPO ok. And C. . l r . townhouse. ge garage. Ask!orKeith 9&2·4471 •••••••••••••••••••••.•• """' A 2 Br, 1 Ba, . o wy, your choice. Decorator 3 br, 2 ba golf <'0Ut"Sf' vu. Whitewater Views-2 & 3 uul 1xt. 132 Pearl, 640.4307 HBR vu. 4 Br, 2 Ba. Din. OF AMERICA. Adults on!}'. No pets. ~·al lpaper 1 thru ·out! $42,000 locln.AgtS46·7739 bdrm.unitsfrom$54.000. R94T·A-HOUSE CoronadtlMcr 1222 Your choice. 3 br, 2 ba Uv&Fam.Rms.,Bltns. TWOLOCATIONS $27S,4<171-leliolropeAve.
Seller has purchased ~~O Cypress, North 979-1430 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ho!Jsenr. ocean. $315. OR 1819 Port StirUng. Comm WEEKLY RATES i -="'~'~·~8303=-------new home · anxious! Saft.Nan ..-guna 3 br, 1 ~ b a con do Pool$525.67S·0771 FULLSERVICE
T11kc adv;i.ntace . $54 .238 Capitfrato I 071 Call 675-7225 lalboaPl'f'linMllet 3107 Coty 3 BR. 2 Ba, cl~e w,#;lshwhr, palio. 2 <'ar 2277 Ilarbor, C.M. Very !livable 3 _Bdrm .. 3
full price! Call today.••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• walk to park & trnnts gar SJOO Singles ok. 3Br,2Y.r8aTwnhseonthe 29098ristol,S.A. ba., rpl, patio; extr<t
752·1700. Beautiful 3 yr old home, 3 New 4 br, 2 ba. Nr Yacht C:S· $4~ ~ Clll bef.10 968-621s; ·963·4567, Mr. Bay wt boat Slip. 2 Car 64$.4840&540-2300 ~el ~sgttr.67~rzJ;2S/Mo. Of'fNJ•10••l~fUNTOl'f"'\'(' br.2 ba,overlookingSJC Club. $375 w inter . al.5.67 " Daly gar.$5.SOlse.846-2700 ry .. ·
[-,,. :, .. 1Ldi.,;f§;:UI v~ly~a1.·:'•'' .• Y~.·5001reey•o•.wn\,'.,.a•a1..J_,~~._Y.".t~ _2I.J..449.a412673·5981 Lovely~ BR. 3~ ba. Dwnlwn HB, 3 Br. crpt.s, Nwprt Crest. 3br, 3 full 2035r.hrt011.CM CostaMna 3124 ~-lliif'ili"l:' ,...,.., ....... Be tiJully rum 2 yr. old home. Righl o~ a ield.om drps, clean. 3 car gar, no baths. Retreat . Xtras. I BR FUm, 2 lg closel'I, •••••••••••••••••••••••
d.au1 l 1·0 bcb 3 used beach. with a view na1. $32S 53&9M7 elec gar, vu. $495 mo. quee nsize bed, priv. up ex, s eps · or the harbor entrance & --· • 645-952'7
Br. 2 Ba . $400 yrly . the bay. Loe. on fabulous New Condo 3 Br 2 Ba, · dressing rm, :x\ra lge ~leach 1069Mewporthach 1069 $21.950 673-339'1 Bayside Dr. House· prof. i n l. decor, was TOWNHOUSE 2 Br, 211.r room s. enel . gar.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~eel &: in\e~~ k~ft Winter Rental Only. Spac. keeper & gardener incl. model, $360 mo. +dep. Ba • po o I ' b I t n s ' w tsto~aGe. Adults only, fo.ng uft· up!nup . es 2 & Comrortable. 2Br. 11250/ Mo. Harbor In· Refs. req'd. 963-5461 wash/dry, gar. No pcts.1-'"°C'...".pe"''-' ------1 bav~are;si ~leb~~·h $2'75.(213)243·5316. vcsLCo. n-i 4 B 2 Ba k._._ 675-9188 $210. Altracli\·c 2 ~r.
MEW LISTING -
UNIVERSITY PARK
Beautiful Yale townhouse on big
greenbell n ear a dult pool. 4 Big BR,
family & dining rooms. Very sharp &
very scarce at $75,900 with the land
A COUW1U. llJCa CO.
644-1766
e • 1 · Realtors 6734400 .-....... , r, • l<.Q, E N v 1 E w patio garaRe Quiel Town houses at on Y $300. 3Br. 2Ath St. Nr. singles,pet,fnC'd. o C A • , adult ' no et. '2234 A
$21,900. Ask for Frank. Newport Pier W /W Walk to Bch, 2 Br, stove, Homefinders.642·9900 TWNllSE, END UNIT Rut • Dr P PIHECREEK
839-8321 Agent. in Santa Cpts dshwshr . 3 car pool.singles. ON 15 ACRE PARK . gers · UVES UP
Ana prt·i. tberm0 Heat. llometinde,.,,642·9900 Kid haven, 3 Br, 2 Ba, pet, New 3br,
0
2ba, blt·1ns . LARGE Ground nr. 1 Br TO ITS NAME
By Owner 4 Br twnhle Winter rate till June? Costa Mno 1224 111~1~ gdr. 642 9900 rplr.. up~ ~Ii.~· Garden apt. Pool. rec over soo tall 1rcr" ;inti
upcraded throug boul: 673-Z12S or (213 )662·768.S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• om an en, · 644•1480/ • ex ' room. $195. 710 18th St. ·to "t r" a n1 s w 1 f h
$31,950997-8445 . Capistrc.o hocll l 111 EasL,ide IUJI'.. duplx. 3 br, · gles, walk to bch, lge 1 Harbor View Homes. 4 Nice 1 Br dplx Qu.ieL Sep watt.'rfa I ls f rr a I cro~
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2\IJ ba, din rm, prlv yd, 2 Br Wlit, appl &: ga~ 9900 Bd, r:m ·rn·& din.nn., ~ by gar. Em Pl ad.It ovU rel ax;;a~·::s t~~!'., l ·or· °'!Ct.":'~ 1100 BEACH, sand It surf i car car,lchUdren ~ .. ~':I Homefanden,'4 . b:,tloec beau~?f~)~y 35,nopelt.S48·1021 F~roo~ apartment.:
••••••••••••••••••••••• YoUf r 3tronb t2 t•~.:i~c:~ f1~~~;00~ome . . ~ 2 Br, cbiJd, ain1ln, rand1ciped. Kol pond. t Br tnobile home $W . + From 1220.S t·u rlln1~~i~· D ,• l!v um. r. a. ''l:adynow. Near 1chool1, park & uUJ. Mature adu.lt only. available. ~ma , .. U I.CA year·round renl1I. MESA Verde 3 br. 2 bl, Homefinden,M2·9900 pool . $510. per mo. 1991 Newpor t Blvd, OK. Adult-'I only. 0rr1t-e D~na P~lnt .. c uatom C96-5813or499""584 frplc. F.R ., D .R., nr MO.o:MSorS7S.96S4. 646-8373 open 9·00 to 6:00 . 2300
built,oneoratmd. (2>.2 aC'hh1.S3TS.640·0008 · g.les,2Br,ch.ild,ato"e. Falrvi ~w Rd , Co!lla
Bedrooma, t:W. bath ~ IFYOU pr,SIGS. •Beautifully Designed • 0-PoW 3726 . r.1csa. l'hane54S·2300 .. eacbunll.Qat.b.edralcetl~ baveast.rvlcP.toott;eror Don' drop th b ll •Oeta Hom~.M2·9900 a Bd , 2 ba . home .••••••••••••••••••••••••''-'-----------~':!i c:::,,·l~t:.i•;P.~~::· ~h': seJI~ ri~ce t~i:~ job~ a 10~.:0.i Dally Br, dl>l iar. s u to bch. ~ewpon ASc~oo1 bl•1• Xlnl sm. OCEAN view. 2SOB1 ~ adu~•bedrooll&S Sm u:
· · Clual"•ed •--Ion Pll · Cla1slrled Ad. ms. No pet.a. a ll Nov ""'"Uon. v•1 • e now La Cresta. Owner ,.....,., no~-vantage or first user tor " ~" · · $4.50. per month. 1575-547$. 494 6M8 ' location 645-6810 uxaMlt.tr. 55l·lll5 Pbone6U·Sl'18. Phan M2..s878. 4. l88-0aS2
•
\
' BB DAILY PILOT Mon<l'•y. Oclober 27, 1975
Add 1t ••• Bu1ld 1t ••. D1 aper 1t .•• Harnmer 1t ... Carpet
1t ... Cem ent ;1 .. Wire 1t .. Hoe 11 ... Clean 11 .. Move
1t ... Press 11 ... Pa1nt it ... Na11 1t ... Ptaster •t ... Fix 1t SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb 1t ... atch 1l ... 1pe t .•. emo e 1 ...
Roof it... Landscape it. .. Tile it. .. Trim it...5ew1t. .•
Haul it ... Add it ... Plant it ... Alter 11. •. Learn •t ...
Appliance Repair CDfll'f'nfcr Controctor ................................................. ........................ .
1\PPLIANC~ H.lo:l'AIH
SJ t).St.•r\ H'l' C:d l
17 14 15-l!J·Z.-120::
Add1t 1on:-. l!t·n1udt•l1 nr.. C"t1n r1•n1udJ, :•rlt1 , pal to-..
l'a11 11:s, l';in1•l1 n1:. kltcllt'n:-i)('?>IJ!'ll , Ir ,.,,l,
(·11 h1111~ts, 1·t~ 11~2 !J7:i~ ur ht· 111'1 ~.1:, :11.1:1
~~~-........ , .. ~-~-~~·-··.·······.······!~!~~ .......... ~~~':':!~~~~! ..... f:l~~~e~:: ...... _.. TENDER liaul als o cleanup ,A·l hOW>t'kccpcr Wl:Shl'l'I Prorpai nt rr hone-st work . ERV Nl!:AT PATCH u::.is~:e.L.:;,~~f:ES
• LOVl~G CARE G ~ r .. g l. · Pt em 1 5 e § · day work. All work by reas. Jnt te'xt, frt.•c est, JOBS & It £STUCCO. Wall BJ()-502() any'limt'
" I< <i t t:~ low · 552· 5777 · the job. Call :;after •pm. Rers. 548·2'7591642 3913> '!~!ee~ .. ~~'.:!""3~·~!4~39~. ---1';;;;::':::.=~=='"'---Wkly ... er\'l<-e & rnonthl)' !>UI H668 _ S4l-2AJ4 -Tiie
Rooflot9 •••••••••••••••••••••••
rutes. 14 yrs 1n ll;irhor Hou eocleoani ------PETERS PAINTING • • •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••CJrpt·nl ry. f 1n1sh . r•· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Arl•<i Re s/Comm .•••• ! ....... '!?......... W1ndowCleHn1ng lnttExl·ReasRat(is 1'1\TCllPL.M'TERl.NG-•• •• • • &•
labysitting t'.:Q ISO<!ti J :.ic·k or John
Wit' 11\ll Y'l "I' \I\" JI II >'.l.>."•"l'll ll'l •\0
," .'•••I t.>46~71 1f n" answer L' I"° • 1 n CallG•n"•l ""?·" .. 58 ••ALLTYPES•• CF.RAMlCTILt ... New ... 1 ·~ · nio! c· · r(•p;Jir 1'•1"' '-' .~ '' t' .. "'·,._._.1· v •lt0~1t:CLt:ANING• .-u1' .x:.' .. v18'.',·~;;,•n)' 11 t• "" _..... L'"-..,.,L"-l •.• ().6825 Rcn1odel .• .,·ree ~st . ll(Jl\1 1·'. IN ~'t)S'I'\ l\\l•:SA r11l('~. ~·a tl !17!J IJ:ri!I j()h..,, lll,J l ll\/r\•)l.11r ~ . .!.! ..... .., ;,., ...,., ~·-""' ~ ....
i\Rl-:i\ !ii-6\fl!~ \r:-; 1,,11 1Jy ro.:h<1lJle (•ouplt•. good -----------1r..:ahoote Pa1nt1n~ & Wet"-__ -.-. 848::_·0L'l33='-------
Clll"l!Wl't Scr.,icc .... ,18 , ,3 Japant'sf' r_;~rd {'n1n g· !t"fl•r(•n1'._!'.~m·6Z7 I __ Lcndscapinn lilasung-Don't i;.t>ttlc for 111mUJftCJ TapSoil
C I -,..-11~ ;,::1.11( ...... .--..!). !\t & - . -'7 ••••••••• arpener ••••••••••••••••••••••• . a 1t1t , tr1mm111 .: L' 1 d d h ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jess .Lu.•/J nsur979·~ •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••.•••••••••••••••••••-. f<:l .l·:<"l'HI\ ,\L IA'()ltt\ clt•anup. (;cl work.. J<efs r,xp~' ~u Y esircs_ ·"t ' 1_. -•··1. ...... . Dl...-... t-IJ 1\1 \S'f l" I( l' f 548 2572 t·ln ~. N('wport, (.;(1~ta . 0•u s a~...,.C&IJX: Custom Wallhnn~1ngs & r""RIQIUWJ •TopSoil •Compost .. s'pet•111;·1, 1r1~11~1:lr11·~;:::.~1 \.'1\Hl'l·:·l'Xll'H'l';'l' lt.\I'~ ,,\.111l\ll ·,r·,·p,11r.~, '11'~J1l1~1 ~u ·------flt e~a area. flefs, Xlnt Sodl_awn.s /Spnnklers Pa1ntJn,11:. 30'-4• du;counL s~ialllh •Mulch•Redwood .. · " . '"I Vet 1L H<'<.1 I) t 1•:1n :-rn.1 .•. 1 '~"'' :1 "· "'" G....,.al S•r••"c•• w"'rk . .,.2 ..... 71 . ___ Design Svs ~ 78_17 -,,., ···"pr. '"'"-""II r--CA' L586 6930 l1n1~h work, 1·1·1:-. l·r•·l' \\'ILLlt\~1 SJ·l~l tt ll !"• v "' ,,,., c,.,J ....... ..,...,....,., Water heater~. Jis· .... -
G k ·I G Mn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• M~ '· d I ucets , ... l uar .,.,·or· ~~ttl-.l '1·' :-.J ll·:.. Rcp:.11r 10 .. lJll Dr' inq f<:xch1s 1\'C llOME l;AHE --~-r Pa,....r-P'aint, 20 yr. 1•xpr. poga.,,, ra_ins, a • T""' Serlicf"
I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··'J'l{ING S" by fl.too.-.e. Amb1t1ou:. female ht'l'lc ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nti-d \4'0rk. !)avu SS no t.-oppcr rcpipes. D<iy & ••••••••••••••••••••••• l "":l111 (..';i ~111i •t ,\1.iJ..11~1'. f.. Sh.1n1pt_1U & s ll'Jrn l'IL·;1n l}u.i!l l) \l,11nt 1 .. in1 ! .. 1 pi.: c;l'n ~·oodwork . rt.'piiu·s. 1 1• 1 r-,1 A S ON H "i' & t;t>N S 1 , nighl service . We take '•"•''l o•·1···•1 to') , .. ,, ( J k >I,, .. , ( "'Z"l3 1n~S\'r \uml':.O o man1 w;ut .• at1s act1on l.Ju~r . M Ch 1.· ......nn.oo fo'ord'sTteeScrYice ,-""'' • ,,_ ''" ' 1n~ :oJ()r li1·1i:: 1li'/l 1•1.. \\',1h·rf.lll' ""d ~pr lrs, J ur u1ng .c i· ..... ·Jll lain wkl~, r r:f-., days. l;Hf.;'ft; WOHK. Ask for F'ree ests.45.9951 . .str arge. IC ~. t:xprCrew,Jic,bonded
1 ~:.111 1 r;11nl·d !>4X i>Sl•l' v. ht t rµt:-1 o n\1 n lill·.u·h ~oil i·h·.11111111 .. 1!0 -1!tOM I DO IT •LL! -6.'JJ .J'1M'.l J ak(' !14.!J· IAAS JUST PLUMll ... G & iru.urcd. 962· 7817
{ h l 'I' 'II~ C"l1·,111 11 ~ r n1. din '111 «.· I ~ -------l'APERllANC:INV •CALL642-4111 • u iqui· l .:'\ ...-..l , 11 St' A S7 ~.,, J \l'/\'.\~.:-.1·.l;,\H I J l-,,l-.H Klt.>c tr1ca l. Plumbin g. WILLlAMS&SONS lli\ I'l l r~·11111tl4·J1 n " 1·1 ·' 11.! rrn ""· f' I l'I l'rofl"Ss1onal. rea:. ... ·rce -.. , I 'ulorriliu ('on!l.l l 111 1 *';,1 l 1·ou1· h SI u. 1·h.,1 r s,--, (: u.1 r ~1.11 11t1·u.i11\·t• l.nd~rpn ~. etc ltt•:is ratcis li42 4!1:>7 1rep l1l't':-anlt•r, ~1 usonry. Bnck /lUcx:k L'Sl t' all aft Spm. 631 .3088 f11 A RV s PLUP.1 Bl NG
1 I I I . 1 I' I ~·l111l pt•l oil•n' t 'ipl ri• l'h·.111 lp. 111·•· .... urk IH 1. -Bnl·k<.:onl·rcll•l'.1110 &Slone ~ll58J -7M2'9 ----__ •S46·98Uf •
RemoYals. limbing, top
ping, pruning. Firewood
Uct1ns r. 642-2624 . \ t·ml'l<.'r ! 1 1· ( '1 1 . nnv I' ,·, k 1·::1.1"·rt 1~1::! . .I'."• 1 au ing Ulock Wall~ HBC} l'it:i . llOUS•"l'AINTING NO JOB TOO SMALL 'lti2t(il·1 p.or a yr~ t·xp n v.ur c.. !!l\':-i•lf ltl'f~ ~!I YHH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rer:.. r_:.,1 f>ol6 0.llJ..I ltnt·k. Ula«:k. SlQnt• Tile ln.stdc{out.1-fl qual flow ---~;,pr ll.1v.a11.1n <;r·ilnt·r llaul111 g An y thtni.:. --. -work cx~rll)' don t' by ralt.-s.Bruct!6.\S·5376 Any Plumb1ni.: water
t "\ill'EN"l"H\. l"l• .. \ll·.-..·i Ch'ldC Yd t'!t·.u1111"•1l ll,ud111,; G:u:a.,c t'lt!anup He/ia-Thorou.:h housc(.·l_n J;: Sl 4 l1C' t'Onlractor9G2 G71 2 -----------t service, 1 .. aks, morolite
DAILY PILOT
"t'AST
HESULT''
Sf'.RVJCE
l)IHl::CTOR"i'
For ltesull
Scrvu.:e Call
642-5678 ext. 322
\\' H K . 1J \ ,. 1 t\ ;, 11 ~ 1 arc .. k A & 1 '
1 I-' r l••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'r1n1&111 1u11•1,Ui•lti7fi ble . f:t s l .s t•r\1r c w · nn cre :s a • Attn:AptOwneni&mt::s. cnc losure1'. R eas. ~P\"l'l,I J.-.t. I t'I' l"• ti) th I•) ' I .. A. !~l-6452 900-29J7 Mo••hC) Apl IJUlnti ng, 111tr. $15 a 832-2468 IO'k.O((w/ad. ~~Iii 1ll5 ;'fl t> t• l u or 1 ;_i , i.;t· .. 1·::q1r .Jap:uu·.,t· t;ardl•n. __ __ __ ·-----••••••••••••••••••••••
I lG l\rl'.:I. lh:twn l!Jth S I 111.: l'1•1lll'l ~d~l'I \ 11'11 ;1 •ll AUl~INC.:• ~talur(' wom;in . jl/'t•r Iii.I! ~tOVING '' l l'XP 0\l'R rni .fi36·7~Ted. (/UALl'f"i'Bl'ILl)J;'o.:\;& ,1,, ll.i1n 1llot1. Wt·:-t o t h i •'. u o•.it. t r 1·t· 1~.-.t '-' I ''UI' ,. •"OM ( bl / Se · I h I l"i\lti'l-:N'l'H'i'S\':-. ll :irbor . i:;1,,1;1 ,\l~·s,, t~i:.i )li!•·l 11\ll)Cf.t-;A: ..,ilnyon or.., :.trt•a move you. fe<1son<1 c Jlth1ngs ast ~·1l Uiuy l't\LJ.f>l9 41;1~1 ',~16 •1J3.1 urj;737.11 ::! ••:>56·0347 •• ·rul·:.orWt•d$:iO 673-2257 rt.>(:-;.675-7572,:>52·~ P1lotWantAds.
OltAIN CLEANEO $6.50
Eves, wknds same price
Guar 558-7380
MEDITERRANEAN
VILLAGE
CJN'l'llE H1\Y
llo.•:.iut Apt. I Ur 2 liH,
WESTCLIFF BLDG.
NEWPORT BEACH
C0<no1 WHICl•lt Dt ... and l••I-11 ...
./-.. c-''"""'"' ./ COOi!"'°',. I""''°''_. ./-...
./t-•"" ./,.,., ................. .
,/ •e•oo --· ./ §«, ... "" ... ....
./ ................ ...
Call Mr. Howard
645·8101
t1 ('.1med <'l'•I. frpl c. $140 up .-;torc·-0ffi cl's t•pts
d:-hwshr $550 673-5719 ilrps ;nr hath \7Jol ""knd~Jr i1(l ·"'::''~--~aeh HI, lf_H. K42-~_
~~~!.':':C::!~~ ... !~.~~1~~!.~.~~ ..... !:.~~ ~~~::'.~.~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~!'~·~~ ..... ~!~~
ll?ui.t' wanted .to rent 1n 1~t : s100 HewMrd forinro ADV SALES/PR BOAT BUILDERS Costa !\-1 csa. S:.nta Ana. concern1n~ Rlal'k & f r ur llunt1n,::ton lica<·h while German Shepherd A "'"':' opening ~ o _r arc:J. 3-4 tx-drooms. Will h.il P·. c ·t 11 women who l1kt" <.1 PLANT MGR.
pay uptoSJOupermonth, Sun~t ~~ch sOl't :~~ challenge ._ are y~ung For r<.1pidly ~rowin£"
!'hone li:l'J·O:f36 anylime 2 1 3 1 5 9 1 • 2 9 2 5' 0 ~ t..>nough to M'ork ouU1de 5 po'wer boat co. buildin.:,
213 /498-3956 hrs daily &. mature 37• Trawlers ur lht-
Nr:ED L.AND llH LANO --------cnou~h lo accept hi~hcs t quality. t.1us t
IA' I Tit T i-:A A L>OW NS Lost · Fcmalt· Bluepoint r c s Po n s. 1 b 1 I 1 t Y • hit \'e extensive exper. & ZON~Dlli.ll2..H3.H4 . IN Siamese. l-'ront paws Personal1l)' & en· be <'apable or takin ~
S IA'. lJHANGE COUN declawed. needs medica-lhus1asm more 1mpor· complete c harge of all
T"i'. ~·ill take lot& or t1on . Child heartbroken. tantthanexper.Car nec. man ufacturing opera ·
lar~e parcel:s. ll.E Hy REWAilD'842·5897. ft.tore lh:tn $600 draw tions.Havex\ntsalary&
M{'V1\Y , INC ., 1:-fV . ---poss1blt.>_ arter short benefits.
DIVISION714 ·M2·7~1 U)ST: L1lllt• white dog, qual1fy1ng period. PacifJcTrawlerCorp
female l\Taltcsl". Cdflf 631-0454. JSOKalmus Dr,CM Hr. l Br & IJ1•1i , 2 Br ;:
lir Townhuui.e (.'a r~ts.
tlrapes. f1r1•pla 1·e . :1
t:Jsts idt• Lar,l!•' 2 Bd ·
ba. d1shv.·:1s hcr , 1•111·10.~ed
~.1ra ~~'. /:1un1Jr.\ Nj
llCls. $225 mo 1;.12 :1-Ufll or
G-15 M107
I ::! lllJ. l1u1lt1ns. blol'k!> lo
h1·a1·h $:!·10. 1n o nth
fi'.:jJ 2:!00
WALN TO BEACH
area. Reward. 644-2858, 540-3935 •<Jccan .~·u . 4 ~r. 2 bu.,2 SINGLt-.: to ti rm ~u1tci. Bvsineoss,11n..-cst / ifnoanswer.:>40-6840 APT l\fan~ger, mature1-___ c..:_c...;;.:.:c:..._ __ _
frplt·s )rly $525. W1nttr Av •nl. 1n i1lush uff1oc Fi -------1 couple, fo r 43 unit com-IJo:JOls. <1 lf•nn1s t·ourts 2 Hr. l'rpt-.. n111trp,., v.:ilk
.i.::vm ·s aunas. 1 to ~hopi. & <)(;(;, nn Pl'L~. 2 hr. 1·1Jl ~. dr1.I:'. bltns.
1-:.ir ~J i lfilh ~17 :lfl57 ;
~~· :I b_r.,2 ba, yrly $395. bldg nr. QC Airport. 1''ull •••• ='?'::.~ ...•.••..•• ,.,. F'OUND:Sm male Shep. plcx, Costa t.-1esa. Com-t.iol~ 3X50. 673-5606 scrvi ct· lll <'I · n cccp Wht w/hlk mrkngs. Vic· pensation apt +salary . BOATS
2400 llarbor Blvd $180. l>:il-201M
Cosl.a l\.l csa t71·1 !557·1'l020 ~:11; .. 1z;,~1 2 hou:-cs tu beach, 4 br 2
-SPAC. :! hr. f.111111.\ rn1.
1\dult 2 hugt.' bl'lirooms frple. pol)J. pnl1~~. i i~\\'
$170 no pets. Inquire apt Wll!!.un.1:.t1i 1::!51
·-\ ba. frple, wetbar. den
lr.,ine 1844 1 i.:tir. MOOyrly. 642 3443
C 568W Wilson
C1\.5t\ VJC1'()HI A
l.2&J br. Deluxe Linfur.
11r I-Urn. gast,,.,·lr pd
.........................
$20U 2br , 2.IJa . l'i1l1ti. \ l\H . hltni.. s t v1 refni.:. Spaciou ... <..'rpt ~. drps n•·~ 1·pt ... & drp !;. ,, I h
'
•, , , & "·kt•r •i~" SIOVt• & u ?> IW :. r . alf\I( W u.I ., ·•V. c·~I """""
5-15·1R8l ...... ''"'"'
\\'ALK to Oeean, Ni.'W
dpl:.. :1 Br, 2 Ha , crpt.
Urps, () 1W, garh d1i.p.
j.!11r. Yrly. Child 01\
s:t.:15 642«>5~ or 673·6fi92
,\dulls-No pets Sec gate -Laquna Beach 1848
Pool. rec rm. clt•valors 2 lir stud 111, I ' 2 h:i · liltns, •••••• ••• •••••• •••.. •• .. l Br. 2 Bo. Twnhse
525 V1ctona.642·H970 patio/a.:a r $195. Adlt s, no 0 bbl th I CrpLi.;, drn.:, bltns, walk ----~ls 5-'8·6357 rop a l'C' l" into c .----_ O..·t·an frorn your t\pt. 111 closets,dbl gar.condo
Hacienda De Mesa 2 Br. l l~ii .n1ccarea,1·lose l.ea:-;c. Luxury . .-.ccun_t),I P oo l & Clubhouse to s hpp i.:. Sl !IO mo Mature<.1dulL-..317!'iS C:st. AdullS.~.54~8397 __
160 W , Wilson, C .M. 498·1 ~3f; -~ _ llw}~ 499·283.'i j ~cw Op\x 1 Rll +. ,.., Bl~ B~~~ ~~~~S t>:<1sts1de I Br new. lg ocr:1\N v 1t>W, s p;it·. I or. tu ht•a th. crpti.. drps
;\DULTS·NOPr:·rs rooms. llu gt· walk-in ;11lults,2f)(f7 Sotan:lW.1 ~. lrpll' S3 15. rn o yrl)I
10m1nutl'S tnncean Lgc el osct. patio. g<ar. 5200 I. H $225.4!H -1·11~ ~5·5581
<I Hr $21 5. lgC' 2 Hr ti3l ·~ Luxury µenthous-l' eun-•• BRANU N~:W I Bit
""'/pa lio S220 G<t ~ & Dano Point 3826 dom1n1um. 2 br. 2 b.i. 1-b<i, bltnlJ. <:rpU., drps
t1onis t. cunrerenee rm. Busineoss or ~1uirland...'> & 1\lic1u. Ca ll 979-3630 between 8 & ftHISH
CARPEHTERS s~rox . auton111lt•d typ· Opportunity 5005 ~1.V.5RI ·l 55.'i . 12andl&5. _____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• M h -1nj.!',l'\I' <..:al18:1:1 :Jt>-IO ST ( d . us t uye exper. •rt _ _ __ B1 cyC'le OC'alcrs h1ps 1..0 : t>m . <.:a!l ro Cat, •Are you 1ntereste 1n boats & haYC the ability
PRIME OFC SPACE ·rup rul~I Jhkcs & s port-"Muffin" bell,collar Vic. mana~ement" Earn up & desire lo do top quality
l ido Viii-& 1nj! goods. C...:ho1ce areas. Isl . & Fcrnh:ar. CdM . to $1500 per mo p/llme. work.
--,.-trnj! & tll\-'enlory . l\1r. lteward. fi75 -H624 or fllature.6J9.61ZL CARPENTER
Shop Area r-.11l1er. 213r45t -!'i443 b/5-2428 eves. 1 3416Vialido .... 8 ------------1\:-;s 1stant l\fj!r. ('P . TRAINEE
.~uitt• approx 600 sq ft U N\ lJ U 1-: FA 5111 t•N FOUND: 2 Dobermans, w /mRmt opportunity. With d esire to learn
Vit•w f;icinj.! Via Lido B 0 UT IQ U I-'. h 1• :-1 male & fem . Blk /tan Ocean area. Delightful above skills.
1 nq. () wn ('r : IJ r <'Y l'r Newport ft('al·h .1rca. 19th & lrY1nc CM 642-9287 cumplcx. Ph: 962-6653. Pacific Trawler Corp
Company. 17 1·11675·7002 675-0030 LOST-CdM AUTO MECH.A.MIC .1--3SD __ K_a_lm_us_D_r~. c_.M_._
Nl-:Wi'OHT ~arden offi<·e Wine. Beer & Gift Shop Sm blk poodle-. Busy Toyota agency in BOYS AND GIRLS, ages
s uite-.. varu,us SIJ.l'S clu:.c tu La.(!una llott>I l~cward. 675·9774 lluntington Beach needs 11 to 15. Earn you r"
from4l'int·lutll557-0061 lnvenlorv . .[1xtur1·s &--------class A mechanic with C hristmus Shopping
equip S;Moi'I. •l'.l·I 1595 LOST:~. mal~. small auto. trans. experience. Moiiey selling subscri p-
60' PER S9FT 640-1136 s hort golden hair. Vi C' ror a permanent job tions to lhf' DA.ILY
lfil 7 Wl-:S·rc Lil',F NO ---Ltdolslc.s73-7521 with Best of Benefits. 5 PILOT. Please call Mr.
A, .. 1 •• 11 =. '.l'' l.1:asl' rna1•h1r1t-:.. tahlt.'S. C M h v .r "u ' eti· for ~l"win i.: v.•ork· f"ound dk Tahby l'ilt, dC' day!'.> a week -all r. Bing am,645-2873after9
I · 44• O· k 1.··"U" ... formed front paws, 10·23 Smilhat847·8S55. pm.
444 Ne,,.,•pr1rt Hl v1 . ~Ultl' room " a · .. ,_ "'" ,.;;;;,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1(~;;;;,j;;-~;.;;;;::-;t;;;-:; Jt. S!ISmoulll pd. Ucl Al ... r Art. 4!M 684tl ~~~7c6~1 & Atlanta JI . H. Cafeteria worker. 5 hrs a watt'r incl. ilraper1t>s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• frpl c. bllns . t yruld. Xlnt S275/mo. Winll'r.
t•arpets_ gas h{';.it, f.!<JS Lf;!e 2 Br 2 Ua upper Vll'W S. SJi5. yrly. J\•o It. BHANU NE:w 3 HR
-s tove, air condit1oninj!. lllt .1 J h. h $230 · pets 49-1 -1795 _____ :l·ba w/;.111 llltns. 2.-ca1 !>Wimmtn~ pool. rel'. Ad~~c~10w~hi~dre~/p~~----1-:ar. $-1:->U mo 'l'rly. Agt.
_:'s~oc:· 6_-,._.M57. ____ ln•~shne..t ---· AVON day. 5 days a week:
I ( N bid Oppo~-ity 5015 F'ound blk ft•m Cockt•r Starting pay $3.0S hr. 2 'nvalc 0 l's. l'W i.:. '"''" Spaniel, Ii arbor & 493-1$41 shag trpt, wl't bar. win·•••••••••••••••••••••••
room. w:.ishcrs & dryers. 5 5 7. 5 2211 •. 4 93 •8 00 1 . • S1'UDll) A 1'1" • G75-Gli70 Verr attracl1vc, quiet , -------1 dows. $70/$110. 711 W. TRO PJCA I. & SALT Wilson, C.M . Kar('n WA ... TTO CleaninJ! women want.<..'4u
17lh St., Unit 1\-li. CM . WA'rf:H FISJ-1 STORE1_63_l_-0588_______ MAKEMO ... EY, $3.00 + per hour. Own AllULT 2 br. 1'~astsidc, 831·!:1370 ~f't·ludt'rl ;irc:t. C:irpets. :1 lid . 2 Ba . carpt>ts.
encl. gara{!e. patio, Like Huntington Beach 3840 drapl'S. s tove /rcfritie. drapt•s. di s hwa sher MR·01)14(Ans .Scrv.) So. O~anAt' Coast, all Lost sm . blk /whitc do~. But ... ot9to5? ltans. NpBch area.
s upplies. t'.1n ks , ac · answers to Poppy, Lie 644-2266.
eessones R. f<~. Agts in-#05736. 642·8092 I~ e a n A V O N l----------
vited 493-6.119 --cc-:--l{EPRESENTATIVE. CLERK/TYPIST
new. 644-0878 _____ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Priv<tl~ fi.'nl'C'd patio frpl<·. · gar<1gc. Adults fiOO sq . fl. orfu·l'. nr. Uakt•r
NEW spa('. 2 br. 11,4 bu. BIKE TO BEACH $150 Month .. utd. paul S.l..')(). yearly. 675-3810. tl$~{~l~ol C l\l _ $200 1no
patio. gardi'n. Adults, no MEAR SHOPPING l\llSSION Rt.:AL'f\' <t Br. 2 na. :t frplc. gar:tgc. ------
pe"$215.642-160:1 •494·0iJI • d I I SI l N H h
----------Personal~ 5350 Be your own boss, set Secretarial duties &:
Outdoor&Sports-oricntcd ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'Orne bkkp"< c•p•. 1,2&.1Hrapts.h!tn,,.,d1s UPl'X. yr y. cps l'.1 l'Wport t•;i1· -Small
hwashers,suml•v.•/fr11k·~ KlTCJIEi~aPL'>ncart..:res s:.ind. Property llousl nfc I or 2 l\lcn. $65 r){'r I I k your own hours. No ex· .. ,. • aint Y sec ing Drink1n~pro'blem·~ per. necess. Training Mature woman.l girlo( ..
& 2 car ~ar agcs. 1-,rom cent Bay. 1'135 N. Coast 642-JRSo mu. Call <;l'ne 11111 , ~l~:s &&D~~h~~~i. d~5 $200. Lion s F:s t a tcs. llwy. HPas. rates:_ ___ LX\' TWNllSr:. nr. lloa.e 642-02{)(1
HEW EAST SIDE partner l s I I 1nvcstorts ~ Call Alcohol tlelpline provided. Call S40-7041 or lice. Mon thru t'r1day.
1n propos ed 40 acre 24hrsaday&1S-JllJO Zenith 7·13S9. 499-3719.
536-2579 di 548-7437 I ~;;~;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1New duplex, ocean \'1ew. 2. Hr. pallo. quiel a ts. 1331 W. Cst Hwy
S po r t s R il n C h i n\-;:;p;;;-,.;u,,;:';E,li)£i{ I ~~~~~~~~~~~·1(;;;J;;~~/;,{;.;;;~:-;;;;;7 f.,allbrook/ HanchoCalif.j S J>JRITUAL R .. ::ADER Cocktail Waitresses. Part
area. Days 644 ·4492 or Open IOAM·lOPt.1 Babysitter for 14 mo old & full Lime. Grand Open· I• frplc. bt'an1s. 2 br. 2 ba. $240642-1276 ·rf>KAI n ,\NK BLDG
$175. 2 Bil. s ingle sty. SIOO.Ma•e·ln blOC'k to beach & $425.l •-ci---=~---3876 r:x..:c SU IT1':SF1l0~1 Eves. 551-1075 AdYiceon a ll matters. boy. Near Atlanta & ing of Jaws. LlYe band&.
beam ePil. C&D. 2043 ~ eomCT11fe' •11 714 ·497-1523 213 -~MI · 7455 .... 25 mon<h• "<?"Wallace 545-7G28_ -I "" owance ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• Money to Loan 5025 312 N. E l Camino Real Magnolia. Your home, dancing. 2285 Newport
San Clemente. For appt. 536-3597. eYcs or wkends. Blvd. C.M. We train, stu·
492-9034 492·9136 ----------1 dents ok. 00·1225 a .m;· Mew 3 Bedrm·2 Ba Mew-..t Brach 1869 2 Jlr. G ba spae1ous :1pt !!arbor fronla,l!e avail. ........................
Ea.~,· •-1-2 8r ,_.' XI I Houm 500 •~QC' ~~ w1th fireplace, blt ns , t'A ••••••••••••••••••••••• nt ocation. Bllnsi w/w. re fr1g . pool h e :it . CLOSE 'r O •DELUXE• Ph : 498-1815. &l2·1243 642'-4&14 MEEDMOMEY!
PRIVATE FUHDS
FOR 2HD T.D.'s
$5,000. to $20.000.
Will assist Brokers
or Principals. Easy
1-----------1Babysitter, reliable own 83.l-lUiOp.m.
F'OXY Girl's Out-Call trans. Refs. 2-3 days perl----'---'------
Massagc. U Cal l-We wk.NBarea.642-6455 COOIC·DAYS $190. Adlts. n o pt•ts O C f".,\N . <Cll<)OLS".
J l::astbluff 3 br, 2 ba. Isl' .... --6---a .r.. • h d 642-9520 l'Al(KS" & SllOPPIN''. _..,,_ !!'"'."'s ...,.n11s e v Incl. spac mas ter suite. U L. ' •-d 3900
2 BR. I Ila. w /gar. Newly
decor West C M . Nr
SchlstSHP'G. 5195. Mo
No pets. 642·3336
Sl2:i&S360. per monlh d bl or nr .. mlSfR' 1n rm & d garage. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AJ;?ent960·38.'>8M<11\-H300 Auto door opener .avtt1I.
•l MO FREf; RENT•
1-2-3 Rm . offices from
$135 ppr mo . Nc<1r
Airport. No lease req.
1 1C~o~m~e~.~S~p~e~eji~a~I ~· ~'~' l ;;;;;~~~~~:~~;;;;;I Richard's Coffee Shop. Paraplegics. 542·3169 5(11: Paciric Coast llwy, BAKERY SALES H PREGNANT? unt. Bch. 536-3012.
Ucaeh Ulvd IA'\'Slon Pool & rccrcat1on arc&i
Adams, 4 lJ/ks to Adults onl y. no pets.
THt: f:XCITING
PALM MESA APTS.
~11NUTESTONPT
BCH .
833-322:19T1I noon J8 Years Or Older
Caring confidential Apply In Person COOK for guest home. 4
counseling & r eferral. Snack Shop Bakery Days. Hr:s: 10am-6pm.
Terms.
Abortion, adoption & ., .. AA EC tR CdM Call betwn 9·•m-Spm, k · .....,.... . oas wy, .. eep1ng. 646-671&
Alalnirna. right on(' FROM 5322 ., block to 202 ltocht>ster • • 8G-">Am1go~ Way. NI~
BEAUT. CLASS A Gl~alt' ln•cstme.d
F 1 ll F. J• HOU t' O FC Since 1946 MESA VERDE
NEW 2 Hr. 2 Ra. adult i\lanagcd by
William Waltt•rs Co
A. PCA RE 547 -2563 RLDG NwplOfc. 631·223J
!!arbor nl Ad;1ms. C.M. l7J1·BWeslclif£0r. · d I Beauty Op~ralor Rent i\ir con • c. eel, epls . Mart~s. Trust MASSAGE space in leading Newport COOK apl;S . Lge bcaut1(ul ln· E>.:X Jgc 2. br. 2 ba. fllx
tenors open lo lush water poolside ;.1pl nr bch. Adil.
landscaping. t;vcry con· nopcto; Sli5 536·8362
eeivable extra. ft.lu st sc\' ---------t
to appreciate. $355-$465. Brond Nt'w apl'I for rl'nt.
155.'i Mesa Vi.'rdc Onve ilunt. l{arbour. I . 2. & ~l
Bayfront 2 lid. 2 Ila. Pvt
Heh & pier. $55(1. yrly
!fl\J-1935&644 ·15 10
Hach, 1&2 BR.
from $172.50
Adults. No Pett'
1561 ~!esa Dr.
15 Blks r:ast of Newport
Hlvd. 1
drp ~. music. elev ., D •o 5035 FIGURE MODELS B hS I A k I r Janitor, nmple prk)!. All ff~ c a on. s or ~im, Lu x u r i o u s 6 2 •
1nC'I. 3 min. S.D. & 5 min. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ESCORTS 644•732tor552-0943.cves. Motorsailor. needs <il·
Ea!il. t714l540-887l br.848-0020.
lliv/N.B. F''rW)'S. 1 min. LOANS u~ to 80% Outcall-Appt.only BENCH-MEN tractive, educated_ 1n-
•LAPARISIEMME• 4000 airport. M. R. Stl"ver. l>ITD oans·-•o J{ome.ornce-Studio Helper, art gallery: part teresting person to plan
2 Br unfurn. $215. All Rooms t.1gr. 557-0136or646-8396 7-,, 631_3811 time. packing-framing_ meals & cook for crew or
___ 5'46-9860-'---I
EASTSIDE . nr new lux. Nl-.:WLY painti.'d modern e lectr1l·. Fireplac e ••••••••••••••••••••••• lndTDLoans 494·2C81 . 6 incl'g Prof. Jo.:ngineer,
duplex. 3 Br. 2 i~ Ha . Din. J br, J l.-z ba. 1 story, kids lh•ated pool. Adult:-, no HOOr-..IS ~. week up w1lh Business Rental 4450 F"·•·r-l T"rms <_ ,·n·e 1949 DONATIONS for Chn· .. 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 Sailor. Navigator, Owner
R P I 2 k A k1tehe n. 54"·97 55 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• " "" .. -~ '" "' & w ·1 G 11 m . Vl )'l cart!ar. &smallpeto . ptnr IX'L-.. " c. ............. M ... Co tianlady&chtldinneed It'. a cy has
Quiet residential area . ilunt. Jlarbour $.100 mo ~l7!J-12t>H f.4 5-:f.167 DELUXF: offire. comm'I ..7Un1CW" ·~ • ( h h Id ·1 B & G•rl Miera.wave oven. elc<-. & d I -I Al .,,.,,,, ..... ,, ~O<_c.2...use 0 I ems oys I s $425.645-78H8. Vaeant.531 -9770 1\cross fromgolfcourse in us na s paces. so u-.,...,. .......,.,,.,.,, range, deep freeze. ----Newly rc1nodelcd & r(" mini warehous e s 1n 10t.o14yearsofage.Dai· ( lh ' , L ·
I 20432.SantaAnat\Ye ( h 1 522 2-~m•--·Want-~ 1 every 1ng .) caving LARGE 2 br. S2.45fmo $350. 3 llr 2 Ha. encl'd yd I ;;;;;;,;,;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I urn•!' C< rooms · La,l!una Nii::uel & Mi ssion ""' ~ n1 Lone tra velcrs pa ired Y Pilot dcliYery routes on extended c ruise to Ch11drenok .2~Pamela children & Pt-ts OK . Nr I• Pl'r v.'k, 2 blks from Viejo ar\'as. flandy to WEl-IAVECASH'. compatibly. TRAVEL maybeaYai\ablein your Mexico, Centra l
Ln.54!:1-8138 sehools. H,3587fi 1\vall OCEAMFROMT bC'ach.publ1ctrans p.re-San O'ic~o f.,wy. 200 tu BuylndT.D.'s COJ\1PAN I ON. 545. area.Eamprofitforde-Am+:rica. Panama,
--Now J HR.2Ba.S.'J.5oWinter ;idil~· a \'all Call !\1ark 2000sqft.As lowas 30' Loanon 2ndT.D.'s TRIP_ Uveries&cash.lripsor Caribbeetn I s l and ,
1 &. 2 RR j!arde n apts, 'J60·2626or~-5155 persqft.831·1"100 NewLoans-2ndT.D:s merchandise for selling Bermuda. l\tedilcrr•• frplc. dshwhr, pvt patio. Rr an<l New Yorkto wn STEPS TO BEACH L· • I o · N' G I k r I ~ . ,-F
I . 1 d 3 1 A 2 ll .. 325 w l lvr· t N rt Be h cqu1ty nvsmt 1v . ice en . see s ema e new su......,cnp tons. or nean. Departing approx. Nr. rv1ne n 1\rC"u S18!'i Villa Condo. 3 Br, 2 fut , G • ~ · 3 .. intt•r 'w ·,·1·1 ewpo l •$3Sc · 3200 Sq Ft C-2 store front BARNETI MTG. CO. to 40 to help 1n home and inform ation please call Dee. l. Send sna-hol & to$205.S.'i7-~ll e;ir gar. Dk halcony ~ :1 Bl!.2b!.1$300Wntr. 1'<f•1 ywintc630rra2 w•'·c ,· with 6 drive-in bays. 645-2134 business. Prefer wilh 642·4321. From San qualificalionsloA~d."l ------• --pool. $345 mo. Kids OK. SEAWIHD sinRcrourn. · s · Ideal for .iuto or boat1 ------------1homc. Kids okay. (food Clem e nte -San J ua n ""'•
I.GE 2 br. t·p1 s. drps. fnC'd nu pets. 962·8767 l'Ye. <.:ondo. 2 ll R .. 2 ba . den llwy. P1nl' Knot Motel. service. 58.'i W. 19th St. pay. 571·9516. Capistrano area. call Daily Pilot. P .O. Box.
yd. $195. m1~. No dn,i.:s~~9f.M-0881 Uni Yrly ••75 _<_714)tii3·0440 cr-..1. Days 540-57 10. ev,s •---c-~/ -----------o '95--'" d M' . v· 1560. Costa Mesa, Ca. 549.2575 --· · .., • 646 (l)BI -~ .... ,.,.,., Tra•el 5450 , .,...,.,, an 1ss1on ie· 92626
. -Br. 1 Ila, drf7.", f'rpts. Rf'ntols to share 4100 · P.nonais/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~I Toro a rea. call 1-C----.------~
SPAC. 3 br apt o r usf• 1t asl bltns, gar. $lS5. 536 2888 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 28CIC} Sq. ft . in ·rown & Lott & FoUnd DVENTUROUS Ocean I 10. o~cian, fxper'd '
2br & dt·n . Frple, pulio & ;1fl 6P~I NEED A ROOMMATE Countrv Shoppin« Cntr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Equal Oppor. Employer Im med. opening. E:lt; Pool •I It 12 1 c ·~ ..., loving person-Se" ad "d 1 • ''1 u s "·1-·-------You ('an get alon)! with & f-IU. F'or lease. 962.-6607 Amouncemenh 5100 " per on y need apply. 545••-or8379517 1 Ill{" I underclass7100Cookin P l h ·ooa> · • .. u1) f')t , garage. trust? We can HELP. ••••••••••••••••••••••• eetse p one, Mr.
ratio. ba ck yard, frplc. 1 1 ·-~~~~~~~~·I · Jl ou.<>e-Mates Unlimited Prime Corner. Charming SOCCER Al"iYONE~ today·s paper. CLASSIFIED will sell it. Peterson.962-58<t7. . HEW EASTSIDE blk heh, $255. 536·979fi : 832-413412·7 PM . house 1.on1..'<I C -1. ldl'al Now forming new :.1d1.1\t
COUNTRY WOODS -----oct;ANt,R<lNTnew 1 Br 1'ltunlhrut~r1 for Doctor. Dentist, men' .. &womcn"ss•"cer HefpW..ted 7100 W.t.d 7100: 2.&3 BDR-At lhe beach R I A l ~ "'-,,~ ...... ~ .. "'!! ....................... . 1 br. 2 & ctcn. 11pl1t ICV'11 Nev.·-Private-Ex. lar,Kc upJ)(•r C'pLo;. drps. ~Hr. 1-1 ---,-1 i f l 0 ••1 tor ·x1ur n ique c_JulJ. t'or info & applica-L 'ytltft
Wood burning frplc, w;:1ll l~uxunous features. Ytly l!'t' $350. &12-3443. esp, nea ma e em ea er • nt parking. t1on. send name & ad· --pcrat
to w•U c rpt. bit :n Op share beaut rum hse HB. S.500. p/mo. 644 -6360 aft. 6 dress to 1,_ 0 _ Box 3042. ••••••-••••••••••••••• llunt.llarborarca '-'RIY 1 I l l be h •~zi~ (l pll&IJCe!I:. From $220 IMO 16884Sim~ /\~ults ' ~ 3 br. 2 ba. rpc, m• o ac .......,. u•a p.m. Nc..-.·portBeach.Ca926Gl JobsW .... d, 7075
E. 21s1 St. 846-1164 11r bltns. Rarafi!.i', By 38th St. GPM . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6fr.S.9543. ~().8442 tMtl-4150 !,ark. S400 ~-406-1 eve 600 SQ ti store or orf1ce Lost & Found 5300 2 HI h School . 1 --------Single t;xec. will Pn'.l\·1de front. Sl.'i5. 646 -2130 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 1 . t;:ir 8 want LOE S br. 2 00 . upJ>('r. Nr Bas1lde ll~ux,aptt~. nud int. I PARM MEWPORT P\1., rm, pvt ba & bonrd, 679.3709 LOST/FOUND A PET? M es~ ea'!1nf~l JObs C2os3ta0 OCC. New !!:h:lJ.: & p:nnt. r · rp c · u 1 · P • sm. .a.p •RTMENTS 1n exchange (or light · · ,.. er : pel' ,.11owed . pvl under-"" "' housekeeping &10-5623 lnG.strial Rental 4500 960-2900 Adoption.~..ow weekdays & weekends. ~15. 552'·4576 ~round pkg. l'ul lman Rathelnr I or 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cost Spay !Neuter info. Call 979-9621
N£W J br ai't". truly uni -Pro pe rt y /'It .i; l . 7 l 4 / ff.t.•<lroom s and 30 YR old local man share NEW M-1 NcwPQrt Costa lost S 11 A . t M 1 que in ~lyle. Bcum l'Cll · ~:!_643,963~1 1'ownhouse~ lovely fum. home over· Mesa 1000 l200 J44osq oodi ma pnco .. ~eAttention -N.8 .. Balboa l•'r.$?~50 looking bay & oce;1n rt ,54J.314s ~r646··2!J28 · P1 .• t·.,..Ans~710., B · Responsible young cou-lng1. frplc, ds hwhr & PACIOUS J Br. 2 Ra . 0P<'n ~J61);.uly !165.642·9666 Y · '~unt uays . plew1lldoyourhsecln't
pool. Adults, no p('ls. forced :11rheat.f<:n1·1.:ar. Spa.Pool!!.'ft•nru~ ---2000 Sq fo"t orf1ce & 540 ·7823 /5 45 9 49 1 , ooceawk.etf'ternoonson·
Terry9?9·3.?76 pvl deck . nt'" 1·rf)I At ross fron1 Fet:;h1on Gtar'CHJf'lforRettt 4350 warehouse s pace direct· Reward ly 960-2008
2 Br ne r bench. CX l'l'P-thruout. n e wly rcdcc Island al Jam bore(• on ••••••••••••••••••••••• I~ 11cross rr.o m OC LOST: all lfray fem . cat ~Ho~~l=p~W::;an::-:-le;-d-;----,;-:-::::1 1
tlon.I'" •lean. nu pal•!. $l75 mo. 1st mo 1' last. San Joaquin 111\ls Road. G1'rage \\'aDted 1n Back A1 ........ rt S49 1480 9G3 7878 / h l le c 7100 Y ... " 17 d 84 o ~ • ....., · · • -gray w 1 e m a a •••••••••••••••••••••••
crpl$, d"P&, bltns. no ~ cp. 2· ~--1714)644·1700 :;~:2oi~:r(2~l~a;~~t. 40.000Sq, fl. till·up. Vt:ry Newport Jl eight 3 , ACCOUNTANT p~ta. $ISO mo. 786-eluxr 3 Br_ I .; Ba, Sp;icioui 3 Br 2 ba frple reason. terms. 642-82a3 T2ic return preparc:ir for
==Apl, Z.&42-890'1 w.ashe r /dryer . frplc . 1 blktobeaeih. SJ.JO. Yrly' Offfc• RHtal 4400 ll&.5Tt:lt-UROWN . LOST Orange &. white beach area firm to work
Kut" OK , $.100 mo. 2015 C81164$-70$4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Realtor~ 833·9'181 wkoldkillen. Vic Orang appro:ic Jan-mid Apr.
Spaciou• 2Br. l ~ba Delaware 6..18 727$ t 50 I Wfftcliff Dr. s.__ 4550 & Virginia.CM 631 -0188. Must be eJ1p. In computer
blti11. Siinn:r pa\lo LOTS A CLOSETS 2 Bit.•~ 8A rondo style. . IC ·--r prepared return5 . Send ...,. .... 1at•ge, laun fntns b 1 bltm. cpt.t, drps, t-n t'I .r:~~OffiFinanc:: .. ....!r ••••••••••••••••••••••• I.DST: Sm bllt ~k·a·poo. resume ln<'I sel11 ry re· f•cU •wall. 'Ho children "'! ~ a cony, 3 blks lo P•llo, heated pool .-.n.,"11 ce ~e Sloras:<' lot ror RV 's etc. Fem. Red jeweled collar. quiremt.nt.s to Suite 900.
J.U M~J' L.aoo. ocean , 2 SR, 2 Ba.~ ,4.dults, no pets . S.21 5 CAii l1e MRn:'IJl:er S850 per mo Ne\ Sign ta~. Bch & Altanta. HB. 888 No Main. Santa Ana •1" 835-0211 pas:er882X 5-63682 -3111t!Xt246 Co for info. SJl-337 .\.16-1291 9'1to1.
Boat Manufacturing
How T .. iooc) Applic-. For.
* lllhrior loot Cea pc11lei s
•Cabht.t Ass111rblers
*&t1Jhl• l11stalei s
•Hardware hlstal..-.
Experience.Needed
Excellent Benefits Include ·
Group insurance, d ental pin~
vision plan & prescriptions.'
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7100 Mond!y. OclObef 21. 197!1 DAil Y Ptl.OT ••
CREW MANAGERS RESTAURANT
.... ~~ ..... !!!!r.~.~.~t::! ..... ?!.~ HeCp W.t.d 7100 _______________ .;.;.;.;;.;.;.;;;.;-· ···-····················
..... p,••omenPLE' PE •OFC MGR $900 SCTlY JIKk'lt •••••••••••••••••• ~~-~~ ~-~'!'!::>:? •.••• ~~!~
E RSON Buayolliceseeklnc Fema1e·.P•rl lime c G. Shorthair Pupa , •
Exec. looki.oa for part e>:perif'nc-ed ~111om Lo Coostruft1on en11t1neer· Rithlhoren/Mo••l••rd WANTED
~-':'!~.~ ..... !~.~~l~-:!.-:1.•.·.~ ..... ?~~!
For Hew1p_aper l'I c aotioli time busl.nns 1maoctate "RunThe"'-w" I b • d •-h I ,. ~ ns ac.groun pre· Pli~n.t.hotf.$.57·64U TOP CASH DOLL.AR
UI w ouate 1upplle.. CONTROLCAREER TWO New rerred. Call 4-8 PM . PAIO .~oR YOUR
Must enjoy working with young people
11 to 15 years of age. Van or full size
station ..wagon required. Excellent commJss1o~s. may earn up to $300
weekly. Dial 645-2873, ask for Mr. Bingham.
BU• i a e • • f u I I Y _ EmploymnitA,gency "1-1430. AKC Grell Dane pups, l J•:WEl.RY. WATCllES, capltall~ed, Interview 3400 lrvtne. Ste 1008 Res•·urants Openr·ng male llarlequ.ln S300. l ART OBJ 1-:(.JS, GOLD lm-22ZI Nwpt lkh 714 /~-8SOS La •Sticretaries. l600-Sl200 ftm. btlt $200, 495-$.539 W St L Vt: It St: It VICE .
M 100%fffrAID only t'JNE l'UltN & AN· a lat Medtimtlc PTJCAL TratnttS, men Ut R~1ndc-rs A«cnrr TIQULS 64~ 2200 Wllb k:nowled1e of AC &:womtnwlllloctowor-k. W 1_ ..a:!QBirchSt.Slel04 AKC Reg . m1n1aturc _ -·=.:....--~G::.en=era=""=.:'C-'5'1!:::::·::M::l:.cl __ 1 Learn internting trade. •stfttmster & LaMirada Area Newport Sruch S3J-Hl90 Sctvu1.uitr 89Z·&t97 aner Kntt sz Bed !"l!'w, tom·
Equal Opportunity Employer
NorettSsloos tn th1stype C~ for!"-t. 7 PM & tA'knd.s. plete, std I pk•d-Xtra MlllW't help needed for o/ .,.,vrk. Apply in per!SOn, fi fast food !lervice, nlfilhls, Executive Optical Lens, lnlervict.NS For Et.tabllsh 196S Tlny Toy M.t1h: Poodle. irm Sl?J I worth "25>.
21401BrookhunlH.O.No 29000ournler,Silnlll A.oa AKC & Blk female QnS:r.$liO,u1'ua llyhome. phmecall.s. or e.nll 5<1G 1086 Ser•lce Station At\en-Cb.lhu:.hua. ,s.u.3092_ incl del~ 226.J_· ___ _
Help Wanted 7100 Help w-.i 7100 -"--'=='-----1:===~--' Bartenders & Waiters d_ant, exper'd .. Day & • • -:--Mlscell-....s
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• McDONALD'S OnlCIAM Eves. f\jll &: p/t1mt. Ap-OogOBF.OIF.NCI-.Clasa W..t~
I f bu NICht help ovtr 18. ply, Shell St.at.ion, J7lh & WS1ur1 Wed. No"!>
·ivcry person or 1Y Glrl Friday.Shipping wiwkendJI m ulnt. man. Optica1Co.t4eedsdi lrvioe~B. 7 :30P.M.Newport/
8081
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Newport Travel Agency. Dept Sell st.Art t tnt • p '-aplld Being Held Thursday Oct. 30th Irvine area. 546-4928 SS CA.SH SS FOi f!ol.lrll Mon_ ·Fl'i 1 PM to ..... ..,,.;m , Apply , ... e;.;. .... ~ erv1ew&, Tue 9AM to ••..., . -. ••· 511 ~ ..... D t d ll & ""-.. .. • ...,..._. lOAM , Wed 3PM to5PM. Ollty in clspees.ln.g ~gh And Friday Oct. 31st ¥et"Mll1•n .. .., Good usc<l rurn/retngs ~ .')I). u 1"· e very Customweave Carpets' APP'y with \lie Manaaer fcn.hiow Between .,P .. I &SPM At Experienced. Equal OP· AKC JleJtistered Ccrmian i<'tt.-~ stu' l·S S-Mi-0768.
cll'ricul. Must s upply 18-aK>PacitieSt F v · McDonald 's 700 W~st eyt:wecr. FYI ~ u portunity en'lployer Shephertl pupple!i $50. Lo --. . . • • • •
0-.11 lruns. llrly salary + · · · Coa tlJM XMt ~ Piece work or hourly S7~ 9&2·til·'8 uftr 3. FllltNJ rUHt-. SI 1-~CIAl.S
rn1tea•e. 833·9615 • -=='::'.::llc:we<y.::· N'..'.:-'.B'.:.. ___ I & b' •"of 11 '. Cal I la fi_.• 64 cot1s1G.'*"81T SttOf' 1· . ~WI wage . .s-9474. PUPPIES. AKC \i.'irl·hair
'"'ntal Assistant. 4 day llost~es & Cooks. MEDICAL TECH. C2 I 31473 .. 652l. F' 1· 1 k 3 we HANDLE EVlR'fll1INt. Ar
':t.-ck incl sat. Expcr & ~ra;dbOpedn'~·g dol Ja
1
ws. Calif. Lie. & ASCP. ex· Ou--d 1 5242 Lakewood Blvd St~m!!1~:if/~~::°C~~~ r.t~~ ... 3("r~~er5'31.41~1 !>. Teno's Turnover.
;<ray certificat~ re-iv an • ancng. per. Micro-Biologist ror ts1 esaeswomenMust L k d Shoppi C o11.1E u~A l.Al l
11111rro.F.xper.inpreven-Students Ole. 2285 A.M, sbif\, eveninl have good appear::.nce. a tW00 ftCJ enter, Mr.llageme)'crbeltA"DZFrff toY°" 1045 ... Wl t.L SUl11 1011¥QUI
t1\e control prererred. Newport Blvd, C .&,t . Supervisor for clin1cal some sail's exper. & Lakewood &:4pm0nly,979·S465 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,..,~,t~~~~-~~.~u n
:-.a tary open . Day 642-1225 a .m . 833-1160 lab. 838·9600 Ext. JOt or ability to communicate a Store managers & Assis 3 kittens. 8 wks, oran2t·· 1•1..i ...... .01• ~2-6880 Evt.'5 673-3403 or·i~p-.m-'.--------I P.0 .Box 282S Lag. Hills, serv1('c & product to doc· tant Pt1anage.rs. ttt ature, <'ah<·o-~tr1ptd. 545-lQ-14 ~~--"'."'~~===: f~·Q:Kl2. •fousekeeper/Cook, Ex· i;""'~~S3~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; tors & . professional pe<>· Htip Wanted 7100 H.tp Wuted 71 O aggress ive self starters e''en1ngs, Mllsicol -per'd L"ve · f I Pie. ~fu s t have i;!ood ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Nauonal chain Jr. Sport.-. . .., lnsfnln\toftts 801) OENTAL Assi s tant . Pvt· r~o~n zr ~°::rb· serv1cable car. We pay wear. Apply l'etnl.'::., 220 Heuut_lns hSl·lt('r~yr old •••••••••••••••••••••••
Chair-side. 4 H::inded den· · MedicaJ salary. bonuses & ex· RLAL ESTATE SALES SALES COUNSELORS Los Cerritos Mall. :.;;~.!',~., & afCcet1v11at t: 4 piere drum ._1,1_ Cym·
ILStry. fo~xpcr 'd or recent 642-9606. Uc'd Psychiatric pense~. t.1 ay be 1tom Join # I For Ne-.·spaper Promo-.......,.. bals. stands, eloth cov-
1r:11111ng. 4 Days Tues Housekeeper llve-in S2SO Te-ca..lci9d overnight travehng. Call Tarbetl, Re-affon tion. 1\tust enjoy working SWITCHBOARD 6m o Pup . I-' cm. P rt ers, & Utility l'asc. Gd
1hru Fri.11.B. 842-6300. mo. Rers pref., pri. ba & We are taking applica· for .in~crvie~. J.;_~ecutiv •f'rce TriHnLng with younx people IO lo Will Train Au.o;tralian Shep. Gd dts-cond. $190. 6'6·9288 -rtl'I ~2 7887 ti 0 n 5 for 0 u r 11 e w ()pt1ca.I Lens, 546·0935. •Cadillac Program 14 ye<1.rs of age. Reliable 0 lk' DENTAL Asst. expanded . -• transportation reqwred. o you CllJOY ta rng pos1l1on.Shols 675·01~4. B.f'lat Tcnor Sax. Selmer
duties, I yr eX:p. Salary llousekeeper /Coverness JJS)'.thialric ~nil. FUii & PART Time eves & Sat •lla~aii.~capulcoTrips Excellentpart-timeposi· w /the public & working mwn. ~.162.5546. l. iv e . in . W
1
. do-e, p/Lime. all s h1n.s. A~I. perf. for studenl!I. •Nationwide Refcrra_ls lion. }IJgh pay for 2.3 at a fast pace? Are you COCK A POO!SheepdoK , Xlnt cond l\1t.•tal 1n1.>~th .. • Please Apply inside 'o\o'Ork. Ruaranteed I~ unhc.~nsed. _lt>l u::. al'I · . available all shifts, eves 10 mo J).d ram dog & gd pc. 74 1nslru1ni:nt !-i;1x
Des k clerks maids and children 8, 10. Must have Personnel Office wage. Call ,\I, 542.9013. s1st yo~ 1n obta1n1ng your hours e.:u·h evening, halt· & wknds? Need p ltime & w/th1ldrcn well lrained, st:1nds too! S60Q,or best. n1.:Jintenunc~man . car.833-9601,49'1·6297·. So.CoottHo•.Jtal Ra_al Lstatcllccnse.Call day Saturday . Call (/time oprs. Will train 673-0059 968·2&15 .,..., B ti ti 84 "''" 642-8102 for interview Apply in person JIOUSEKEEPER, IOam -South Laguna PIXAnswe-rStt•ice 1 Ory, 2·V'<JJI . before 6:oo ~pply Monda y, l~-1. fv LL--.-805 Otficef;..rnihtre&
The Inn at Laguna 7pm. car neroed. Small 714/49'J-1311 Gra_ \'eya_rd s hlC_l s. RE AL E 5 TATE Superior Answering mmn-e 0 s.-.oi~ 8085
N C II Pl' F & S h -S I -" r Service 250 E . 17th St ••••••••••••••••••••••• -..,....,.. ........ 21 1 o. oast wy. house,ladult.s48-33S2 1me. r~ at n1g t . CAREl-:R ATrENTJON ales1t1r want.,,,. or Tux . • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• _c.A:c'cc'~'°c.'~M~"c.·._Gc.occbc.i•c.lc_I EOE . .5-·JJ 7 ,87 . U p T 0 8 0 % C 0 M . edo Rental Shop. 20 hrs. Suite I, C.Pt1. (Upstairs}. *MATTRESS* h -181\1 Composer, operator Mgmt trne. Route 5ls co.1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j ?.1lSSION LICt:NSED· or less. Mus t be attraC· &u-7565. Exe S\'I c rs SJ,S t3S, gcy
Dn!l Cook for conv. hosp. System & stand alone' f<'\iture. Age ?3-39. Car.I• u ·1 t k •MAD..,ESS* chrs $B/up. scy dks.
Salary open. Contact Call fo r interview . phone.$160wlc.848-1004. PrintedC1rcuit ¥~tl~~~S~~R~~i a."r:'.'!v&';,.,:e:~. ~~= TRAVELAGENT "iz Pt1achinccvrs.P1erct.•·861
•!rs S"hon 642-"'00 &121'"2 ' PRINT[ 1 r _, w/ex ..... r.Ha,borTravel ••LLS "5* W.19th.CM.645-7411 . . '" . .,.. . . ...., · MODELS· MASSEUSES 0 TREATMENT We train sa es exper. pre err.,,... -"' ~ C ti ( . · M11He,675-l3ll Pri -•toM 1 Director of Figure Models, Escort.o;. you to sl'll home!S with an a or 1nterv1ew •l------'------1 Cccu qvr. Extra dt·::.ks, chairl'I, card
Muninn lnd Engr Hydrau SISK Masseuse$ net..'11cd. Top CIRCUIT accelerated cour.ie lhat 540-J333 Ext. 341. TYPIST 831·9625 & 646..a686 fil e systems & i\ddresso·
' Sis>! · I 1 SlSK money. New atudio . starts immed~ately . II p 0,1·ti'on avat'lable 1·n graph machine. Call 9'J Bed skilled nursin• .anne e ec · o M t II R tt I .,·11 /I th Sl3K 631·3811 UTILITY you'reinterestedineam· Santa Ana'"' lndtvt'dual us se , a an ove days752-7HJJ.
• • '' · mg btg mone,· from the ""' -1 ood t · b'I" a a e 1n air . -
'
0 ci11·1y th0 l has an RN 1 ing a e opr 1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I S •LES' •oy v se l & m l h g ch -----·u~,vi·sor . •tusl hav" a1ntenance Mech $950 E d 1 d w g yp1ng a 1 1ty. ro 1· ... 1 d 'I 1 r-t-'-er M1mou. & fax • r-• T POSITION surt, get individualized xpenence , a 1es re-r. 11 p r pa 10 -... so 1 1• ap e v= '--..U ...... •
exper . in Geriatrics. If ooMI Chutter/grindr $950 $MO..,EY $ frt..-e training&: on the job ady to wear & sports-.a er.sonncl cofft..-e table (4 ·x2 ·1 $25. AH necess ofc equip &:
you are Interested in H ec anhical Designer " assistance 10 a top orfice wear. Full & p /time posi. 549-0002 Call after 6PM, 645-7857. files. 640-5757 ____ _
<luall.lY patt."nl care, we eatexc angers $900 <AND PRIDE> Minimum 2 yrs ex· G , DowneySavings&Loan • K hO •..:.= · · local1on with a fr1cndl)" lions. ene s, 2JOO E alOp E I Hardrock maple round Pi.-os & Orqanl 8090
•-.<e 1·nlerest~ ,·n >'Ou. eypunc pr ......., That's what working for penence 1n most phases H b 8 1 d CM qu por. mp oyer ~ M tT _._ r PC h atmosphere. Call 1m -ar or v ,
•lcdt'oal, 11· re 1·n·.·ur. dt's-anagemen mes .-...... Time Life Libraries is all o s op operation : "~ ,,,..., " I · p I A p mediately Linda .... 5-o.utl. Urgent, need G'ma. live ab1hty wage insur. Other rv1ne ersonne gency about. We have the besl Screen c r, I ate r. i:.ooa.1•« . • oo E l1lh c M D -11 ->JO ~ in, rm & brd, few hrs
dinJng tbl .. 2 leaves, & •••••••••••••••••••••••
chrs $100.S45-0630 FIELD 'S Warehouse
xlnt benefits. Apply in ~ · , osta esa phone sal es group in n er. Salesperson-Apply bctwn person. P a rk Lido Conv. Su1te224 642-1470 Orange Co. & when you 11 & 5pm , The !-,actory, child care p /dMy. No 0...1.ae:oo Game Table w/4
t.,;cnter , Mon thru Fri, 466 ~ join o ur organii.ation, Excellent workini? condi-RECiPTIOMIST / 425 30th St, Shop 27 hswrk. Car nee. 536·1271 Uphol. wrap arou nd·
•i h' Rd N n you can average from lions, fnnge benefits & GEMER.A.L OFC. N rt Ue h eves. chairs, I yr old. ti-lint ~-ags IP ·· · · ln1Urance~Sedry opportunity for advance· Needed Imhiedia tely --~•w:;:po:-:~::a:;c::'::.~-:-:--1 •---------·! Cond. $250. Call 645-{)()ij8 $3.50 lo $7.50 per hr. We DISPATCHER Part time. exible hrs. have a guaranteed base ment. Newport 1-larbor Yacht SALES PJRSOM orS49·86H6.
{Graveyard.) Casua lty experience pay+ comm+ bonus. Club. Good telephone WerumU>haniccofc for *UTOTEM* Decor. F. t>rov din rm set.
('omplete. $900/bst ofr.
Cutglass. 640-5757.
Apply in person necessary Send resume But, equally important is J oin us now to be eligible voice W/accurate typing you to work in. All you do EMPLOYMEMT
YellowCabCompany t.oBoit8,CoronadelMar. the fact that you can be f or 12 days off at req'd. 40 llr wk, Wed is &ell. No expenses, No Of"PORTUMITIES
Jl251 Slater, F. Vly 92625 proud of your job. You'll Christmas+ many other thru Sun. Contal1. Mrs. exper necess. Call Mr.
(N Ph Call be working for & with excellent benefits. Ackerman,673-7730. Jackson. 848 _,122 (o< •n f\lllorParlTime o one s IMSURAMCE ood No Exper Necessary Please) 8 & friendly people R F SALES appt. Ag• 2t·65 El1'g1ble ---....:=="----!Secretary. full time. white you sell a great Apply In Per-son · ·•· ~
Sectional stripe Sofa.
Yel /orange/hlk. Velve-
teen . $1~0/bst ofr.
962·"'62
S:.ilt.'. 400 pi:.inos & or-
gans. n.ewJust..'(I. Spinel!,
Grands, Pluycrs. Goini.!
out for bus1n1·ss. ltcnl
w/opt to buy. Kawai,
Steinway. natdwin,
Ch1cker1ng, Yamaha,
Kimball , Wrlt :r.r.
(714 )638-2770, 12072
Brookhurst. GG.
THOMAS
ELF.C."TltlC ORGAN
3 Keyboards 968-3555 DRAFTSMAN commerc1a1 exper. oec. product. "The Beautiful M• d t EXPERl94CB> OR SALES-RETAIL Goto The Nearest
1t1echanical &: "El ectrical CdM area. 673·3850 T\me Life Book Series.'' ICrO 0 G MEW LICENSEES 3 Yrs min ex per. in TICTOC MARKET
M . d . bl j Start p/Lime, but, f/time 654E. Young Street The most active new of· plumbing supplies. Rers ForApphcaltons&lnfo Davenport and Love Pla)'.er piano, Trium,ph, anne ex per. es1 ra e.l lnler-led ; .. Nu•~u·on'. S l An OR CALL (714 ) 642 7702 · upnght 30 yrs old $900 $3.50 to_ $4hr.
1
Part""ume ~r !ulu1 • lt'me. avail. We will train an a a f1ceinCDM. We pay for: req'd.536-1451. TicTocSystems.inc Seat,xlntcond., . · ' •
P ( T I C energetic, articulate rvon. Equal Oppor. 1-:mployer at.lvertisin g, sig ns ·l~~~~~~PfiQ,1£:-l~~;;;~;;:;;;~;;~1~s~11~s~:-;:~--;---~S48~-~0304~llsRo~l;l•;;m~c~l.~6'~2~-l~2S=S~iit9& aci IC raw er orp New group being r--SALE"' TELEPflONE JSOKalmus Dr.C.M. lrained.6Jl -J27t pie who bave strong telephone, printing & "'"'" · The fastest draw in th Swaps 8096 ----~S4~0~·~39'~·~·~--...i;:::::';;-;::~;-:-;:;~·'::::-::::·I voi~. Oral reading test P it male, fem. service postage, business cards, Our offices, nr OC WAITRESS W l D I p e ••••••••••••••••••••••• Janitor/Maintenance. req d. cstab acels. Eves/Sats brochures, promotion. Airport. Retirees OK. Exnor'd Only. Must be c 1•.s,,.,.,·, .• ·da Ada."Pho'nloet 1970B.5A6SOLiJ?hlningfor •DR .. ~SMAN• w-~ For--.. t Ask abo l · 1· e Part or full time. Salary •· ,.._. • Must be ex per-. i.n build-i;wa '""' I $7 5 wk+. .!"if r. Lev 1 u our inccn iv 21. P 1t1me. Please ;.ipply •1 ~"';':·~56~1~8;-. ----..... ~"D~c~p~c~n"--d-a_b_l_•_V_w_. exPe;_rr;~mc~~.{°ds;~ifumr:nr ing ma.intenance. Mus\ Call 833..a098 848· 1004 Cc~';}mLissdion •'7P317it60. ,call ~sk~1c om miss i o o . 843W. 19th St, C.M , J 64.2-1890. •
...... be good worker & handle TIME Llfi 1----------1~'..''~~a~n~ry~. ~-~-~':.·-.i;;;;;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;l""w;;;;t;;;;;;~;;;;;---1 ••etry 807 • • applications accepted a varied job assignments RE,\L ESTATE SALES Wmeftotrlc ret"$0tl •••••••••••••••••••••••TV, Rod10,
Justin Pacific Corp. wt'lh m•·n,·mum supe<~t:;::;:Ubr~~ari~e~s~, l~nc.~:;:;I AT'TENTION RETAILS/\LES •. , 1 h · HIFi, Stetto 8098 15030 Goldenwesl Cir. vision. Please submit LICENSED. Experienced (mature). SECRETARIES ~t~"robi~;e me:feer~·a1's~ WANTED •••••••••••••••••••••••
Westmin1ster. "-'Ork record or resume to UNLICt:Nsi<.::D. Part lime• home ~-1452 TC>P CASH DOLLAR Stereo 1-:11ulpment .... ii;,i;iiiii .... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;I P .O. Box 664; San Juan GETTllI-: RED furnishings, salary+, PA I 0 i<~OR YOUR Kenwood KR-100 amp &
ESCROW OFFICER/ l.£.::af:::''.::".::a:::n.::o.::9267=~---I C1\RPET bondab1e. 494·20til. Opening for Secretary WJ.IOWANTS TO WC)RK? J 1-:WLLH y , WATCll LS, Niv1eo turntalJle $150. 2 newport w fmin. 2 yrs expenence R v c
Lo ROCE S
TRf:ATMENT! RET D I EA AB ! /\RT OBJl-:C.i'S, GOLD, Pioneer C577 S""'Ukers AMP 5 OR • S AIL SALES on executive level. Sh s ,..
M
,,.
0
, home builder Jmtitor-3Hr ~.-.P... personnel We train you to sell lOO,lyping 1o. CJ.100 F: your hours. S ILVl-:H s 1-::Rv1 c1-:, s110. J>anasonie cassette Pacific Trawler Corp .. ~ homes with an at'celerat· POSITION work for yourself, bl' 1-· 1 NE r UH N & AN. deck w /Do/by systern,
needs lake c h arge J50KalmusDr,C.M. . agency edoourse thatstarts1m-Want good com -your own bos!'. ~1en or TIQUES.1>45 -2200 onlyGmo::.old$100,head
escrow offit'er/ loan pro·1--=::..:.:::c::=.:::.!..::=::__1 -cd' t 1 If · mun1cator who is en-Secretary w /residenlial w C be I hll h ~< 84
( 752•0331 m 1a e y. you are tn · off.··i'le conslruclt'on ex· omen. an s Lg y Mach•'~ 8078 p ones-.., 6-1677 cessor or tracl work. LEAD COOK terested in earnin~ big thus1astic&likespcople. "' handi capped. Neat-··~·r 1'1ustberamiliarwithall -2192Martin,lrvlne money rrom the start. Specialty Food Sales. perience. Typu1g 60, sh Clean Appearance . •••••1 ••••••••••••••••1 Combo MagnavoxConsoli:
current conventional and Requires institutional Call f"or Appointment ~cl individualized free Pa rt, r I ti m c op por. 80, calculator· Vets., retired. A~e 25 to 6'' Atlas metal Lathe, & Cir TV. A!\1 /i<'M i:;tc reo &:
government financing cooking ex.per. Will1::;::;::;::;:~~:;::;::;:~1 trainingonthejobinone L1nk1etter's Firebrand 70. Supplement your in-actess $900 value, turntable, $250, xlnL
programs. supervise 2 other ormanytopofficeslocat-Foods.640-8712. Oppor tunity for in-eome.Driveacab6hrs bargainat$SS0673·3756 <:ond. over $1000 new.
Call Mr. Drryfl' employees. Working ed thruout Oran11:e Coun-1-----'-----·1 djviduals who desire to or morl.' a day. i\pply in • 675-6093
714:979·5340 schedule 7-2 :30pm, Sat. Nurses ly, call for further de -1•---------•I work whcne,·er necess. person. Yellow Cab Co., M1scell-.ous 8080 1-'""-="----.-----
f thru Thurs. Contact RM"sJLVM'11WA. tads . Arlene, (7141 RN T yping 70, sh 90. die-ll251 Slater Ave. f"oun-••••••••••••••••••••••• loats _&Manne
Grant Co. of Cali • South Coast Community On Call. All Sh(ft.;. Ex-848-S742 taphone, stat typing & 10 tain Valley. Coast Firewood Supply E.-pmem ;;";":;:eq~u;a;J;o~p~p;t~y;e;m;p;l;y;'~-!H~os~pt~'tia~l,~D!ie~l~a~cy~~D=e=p~t-perienced Acute hospital -~rqency key desirable. eural)·ptus $76 cord
1
h ••••••••••••••••••••••• 49'J-13Jlexl.152. only. Good working REALESTATESALES P ltime, 11Pl'r1 ·7:30AM . Window Trimmer. Exper cord$44del581·1122 Gen«al 9010
conds. Contact Mrs. Licensed or unhcensed. Xlnt working conds. Ca\lor send resume ladies wear, draping, •••••••••••••••••••••••
FOOD SERVICE LV.H. Jensen 642-Z134 Costa With the high cost of \iv. t:.o . E . Con ta et D . To: Mrs. Currier free nying &: manneqwn, For Sale Membership Ski or Fish. 16' all ~la~:<>
3·11 Re lief. 4 shifts a M es ; M e m ~ r i a 1 ing and the price of Hoa che. It . N. Cos ta 9A.\1 to NOON store interior & windows. Newport Beach 'fenn1s boat. Lge wheel trlr, 40
WORKER week. Entitled to our xlnt Hospital 301 Victoria St gasoline these days, why 1\1 e s a li'1 e m o r i a 1 644-1389 220 Los Cerritos ~1 all. Club. 644·5292 HP reblt ~1 crc en~. ~lu.~t
Part-time. All shifts. benefits program. Park CM. EOE ' settle for Jess? Our com-llosp1taL&42-Z734. sell this week. Make or·
Hospital exper pref'd. l~ido Conv. Hosp. 466 .... ~~~~~~~~~I missions start at 707t> for I""~~~~~~~~~' I THE IRVIME CO Who m e n1 n ceded ~or K Steoodreo F.K,qRui1P00ment & fl'r . 963-413'.l. Costa Mesa Memorial Fl h ' Rd N B = I d I 1= • ousec caning service. "n\I.· · amp 1 .c=.:.:.:c-.c~.:_ ___ _ 3 gs 1 p , . . sa cs an 1st1n~s. SSO N C N' Hospital. Ask for Food 642-8044 MURSESAIDES · · --. Don't Jiive up the ship! rwport tr Dr Robbies Rag &: Mop. !vn·o tur_ntabte $150. 2 48' Boat Mooring. Any ol'·
Service Supervisor. 30111 -=-=-="--------~ Exper'd. Bayview Conv. r ~~:'. i~ "Lis t " 1t in classified. Mew po rt I each ,1_5'8_.f_ns_1 _______ 1 P1onccr C577 s peakers fer over SJ.oou.
Victoria,CostaMesa. •LYM• Hosp;tal, ~s< Thurt'n t '11"" ..... ,......_~""'°"~ ~ Ship to shore results! 9 2663 $170. Panasonic cassette 714-6 249:)76. ~:;::;::;::;::;:;;:;::;::;:~ Needed for Orange Coun-"'v J .7>7'.!.. __ ._. :•~·?l, i...-_ \.,.;o 642-.5678. Eq I Op E I Ml'rchandise deck wJDolby system, l -'A='cc•~·-=C=.M:::.:·.::642.=.·=3'05=---I -0~~ 1-~~:ifi-;dyd;"-;;;(lt;;;[~;:;·~·~;po;r.~m:;;;p~o;y~e~r~••••••••••••••••••••••• only 6 mos old S\00, head Boals, Power 9040 ty's largest skilled nurs-1-lunlington Bch 96.1·8316 •-"----8005 ;ng facility, Many fringe •NURSES •1DES* c M Classified ads sell big -.. .,.......... phones$2.'l. 846-1677 •••••••••••••••••••••••
GENERAL benefits, in e I u de d : Needed for o::nge Coun-1-....:~°"c.':c'"'-'-~e~s~a-'S4_9=·=9.::5="'-~1 items. small item.'> or-any SECTY(EXEC ••••••••••••••••••••••• By ownt'r. 21' Tra\'cler
*r----.&aria1 I' Ith · 1 r Real~laleSales item.Jusl<·all642-=8. OrientaJRug,9'xll', Ice Skales. While, size 7. C•btt ''r .. 1·. / 1 ~n:'I "'" ,ea 1ns. Pano ty's largestskillednurs-go 1--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;·;;;,I NEWPORTBEACl~ Uscdtwice.$1S. 1 '"" .. s•·r w r:Hio, •Typists $250,000 + $2,000 Life ins. ing facility. Many frin ~e F.xcellent opportunity/, One girl office. Xlnt $300. heal!, fr es h wat e r.
6 Paid holidays. Up lo J benefits included ; for salesperson. Long shrthnd &typng. Hvyde-&W-4m. 545·0630 icebox, l6:'j MercrWsct\, *K•,.,..,chOpn wkspaidvac,bonusror Health ins. plan of established office Topfaceyourmessage tail. _Attracti _ve Appllmtees 8010 FL1\TWAHE ~<"•ln \'a~:>4K·4 l ri:t. *PIX Oprs good attendance. Apply $250,000 +$2,000 life ins. fi s pecia l1z1ng in sales before the personality. Pd benefits. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oneida s1lver-plaled din-19·, .75 ·rn I !,tut Fantasy
NEEDtDNOW! betwn 9am &. 3pm , Paid holidays. Up to 3 Also. rentals & propert)" rcadingpublic, G~opportunity for sales Refrig., Preczer. Washer, n('rware 5-pc place set-IO. v .8. fully cqutp'd
T empoTemporaryHelp Royale Conv. Hospital, ¥s paid vac, bonus for management with ac· phone oriented cart-er sec. Oryer & Dis hwshr. New ln1,i!' .. $7 50 ~r s rtlln~. fo~v ('s & "'"cc kcnfls,
17802 Sky Park Irvine 1~1~000:::.W;:_:·=W=a=rn"°'e=r~, S=:A=---I food attendance, $2 .25 countJ; lo take over for Daily Pilot Start $800. Reply to & used Warehse pnccs 1..:000 sets avail. 673·6052. 5J6..sw.r7. l)ays ~15 0.12li.
Call S40-44S5 MACHINIST, S yrs min. per hr to start, if 1 yr ex-immediate income. Classified, 642.5678 classified ad No 539 c /o 542.3501 _ (Ask for Lesl F.vcs, · ~~~~~~~~~~ exp. on lathes,& mills&: per. Apply betwn 9am & Daily Pilot , P.O. Box Su be 1 19' Boat. c;rt•y.,\f:1r1nc in-
GENER
•L OFFICE gen. shop work. 40 Hrs, 3pm, Royale Conv. 1560,C1\f92.626. Kenmore Electric dryer. :\tn am E1 ectnc Lkawn board, 1n ,.;hp w/trlr & .. Hos pilal, 1030 W. Like new, 1974 model. '. ower, amps,, in~ outni.:i.:l'rs $1750 541-1 .2229
Need sharp alert person 4~ day week. All Wamer,SA Sale or lrade for -gas. sizedbedsprcad,12 xll day..;1.nly.
for diversified duties. benefits, pleasant work-:11-1.\l•\HL'\t: 1\\ ~. Asking for $100. 536-3597 pink carpet, a ~~orlcd --· -------
A!acGregor Yacht Corp, ing cond. 1278 Logan NURSESAIDES 11\l.Hn.\ l"L\'\.lJ evesorwkends. cur1a1n s.644-49Z.L 34' Pl a.;\1r FnGl .1.;o;,
J83I Placentia Ave, CM Ave, Costa P.1esa. Equal Exper. in Geriatrics • 673-6900 • ---nc'(.'Cts lo ™' f1rus hl'd. Be..,l ----,;;;";;:';:";;:;;;--;;---COp~po!""rt~u~n~il~y~E~m~p~lo~y~e::''~· -1 h e Ip rut , but n 0 t GE El.ctric Dryrr Used l\f an neq t11 ns , re -offer. 171.1 iii~»! ,1063
GUARDS necessary, paid health & Real Estate A a.;on;1blc. M;1 kc offer. ----------
MAIMTEHAHCE life ins. Holidaya &. vac. OPENING SOOM! 54B·60l7 ft erS Petnl·s. 220 Los Ccrnlos Boah, Sail 9060
f'UllJPcrtTlntf' General plant main· with pay, Apply in lnt~strd RanR:eC81oric.newstillin i\.1all 213·865·3518 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Immediate placement in ten an c e. G ,o o d person Park Lido Conv. Sol 1 so carton, this model in ~e · VIDF.0 PONG GAMF.. 6 l\1u st !'C11 30' ke:tch, xlnt
Anaheim area . Good tl'lechanical background Center 466 f1agship Rd. es~op • mand/worth $600, asking mos new. Best ofler. con~ .. ~I or t;..:s t offer.
pay. Uniforms furnished. w/welding exper. Basic N.B. osk for Hal Cox WHAT'S $475. 847·1858 838.2253 aft('r 7 p.m. _.,_,_,_·~-'-'"-' -------
Liberal benefits. Must knowledge of electrical &r ~I h ave clear r ecord. plumbinghelpCul.Apply NunesAld.s NEW GasWhirlpoolDrycr, Dcs k 2,Frl."'t'7.r-r .l,ltuf1.sail.bo :1t.-•l ?O by Tt~nsportation & phone.. 8am-4:30 pm, Mon-Fri. All shifts available. Ex· "'-·orks good, $30 Bunk bed -.·itrundl, bed ~anCuurtJ. Clo ~s /\, ra•·-
C a I I r or a pp t . 231 1 So. Pullman Sl., 968·291S c · 1nl-! hn;1t I.I)/\ J5 "r.".
1141632_7224_ Santa Ana. per. pref'd, will train. WITH 1----------·1_586-9700evcs. & wknds. r'.WI. 14.7 ... h•·•lm 5.ll'"
"C""-===-----1 . ..:::::::::c.::::c....-----I Please apply at Park Auction 8015 ~ Superior Health Care. lrvincCoastCountryC\ub 1'"BGhull 2l :i~;I t;MOO.
Wonted 7100He-tpWGRfed 7100 l44.5SuperiorAve.NB. Yi ti) ••••••••••••••••••••••• Memtiers h1µ for Sale -.-- . - --tt,••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1-';::::.:::..::;:::::..:.:..::::;..:.:=;__I OU•' **I BUY** Make Offer. 644 .2939 or 29 Dr:i~on Sloop\\' ~ o\·er . NURSES • 1DES 673.78..">Q nutho~1rd &· ~1111 Slli50 call
""' Good used r urn it u re & 1 -;:::'-=~--:;--;;~::::-:::::: \~8.13!:"':·~"'1":'.'• '~'~'·~<~' s~. -----DELIVER TELEPHONE
DIRECTORIES
Men Or Women
18 or over with cars, station wagons
or light trucks. Pleasant outdoor
work . Your available daylight
hours. California license plates re-
quired.
Apply for job descripUon & training
8:J0.10:30AM or l :JOPM Daily
la L.poa .. och. ZZ4 Oc-A••
ll9hcnt.1T..._0ct.Ztfll.
S..Mr.tta•-
laWHtMMshr,937111..-Aff
• g11 lo 9 WM. Od 29th. 5" Mr. twm
OR ORDERLIES REAL ESTATE SALES :"lppliances, or J will Sell I For sale; 2 v 3JIC"y coin
Salarydependsonexper. CENTURY 21, A1arttn forYou. opp.barroompooltables
Be recogniied. Call MASTERS AUCTION 1 "rcen. t blue. SJ!".O. ea .•
I ed Real Es tate now in-" mm . Port Mesa Conv. 64' "686 & 133-9625 or best offer. 645 -8:175.
H lervi ew1"ng r or -osp, 642-0400. speciali7.ed sales person· licyde-1 8020 DOORS, wind ows,
NURSING nel . Let us show you how
PSYCHAIO~. MALE to in<'rea!\e income and
3 ;30-12 :30Shifi for small enjoy doina it. Serve
pi)'Ch unit. Apply Royale your <'l1cntle from the
Conv. Hoepltal, 1030 W. pleasant and prcst1jZious
W • r n er A• e, SA · surrounding8 or Newport. ~-Center. Call now for ap·
Ole M91""looltk~ pointment, 640-5351
Exper'cf ln Mcd·l·Cal &:
lnlurance biUing n~8s.
Contact Garfield Conv.
Jt01plt1l, 1781 Garfield
Ave. H.B. 841·9671.
Clas1i:lfled Ads sell big
items. trnall U1m1
any lt.em. 54.2-$871.
'
•
..
Only the Dally Piiot really tells
you what's new In your local
community ... every day
DAILY PILOT
I
••••••••••••••••••••••• bathroom sink. shower
Used Bikes & Parts. Buy . cnrlosure, screen doors
sell and trade . 248R1 -'-"'---'~-'"------
Newport 81CM .642-7910
CGmlrot& e.,..,_..i 1030
l.()('a\ Tennis C'luh
Membership Sacn fi cc>
548-7020 after 6Ptt1
••••••••••••••!••••••••PERSIAN Rugs, Large &
LIKE NEW! #60, finest Small. Top quality & con -
Kodak lnstamatic made. dition. Ph : 548-2004
with "Kolmar pistol ·~rip
strobe light. Orig. rc>ta1t llot lfors d'oeuvres f::in
-Sl.$9.90. 8othfor$95.00. ll.l ~llcally dcliciou ~.
Phonc&42-6840. Pr('parc 96 In 10 min. (4
Try a Dally Pilot
CIA.Mllied Ad 10 buy, i.ell
or rtnl somethin a.
Recipe!'!). Send $!, ad·
dressed, •tamped en -
velope to: Reri~. Oox.
12. El Toro, Ca 92630
!! KELPIE !!
G 5 ' S T A Y S .\ I r.
S{.'t~OONF.R. u s.c.1:.
Lie. for 4!J Jlass. W/25 yr.
cstab. <'h:irt cr h11ll1nC':i:.-.
!! TRADITION !!
60'. CLASSIC ALl >F:S
SCltOON t-:n., jus t :lr
r1vl'<i, o.,..·ncr "''lint<> a~
11on. Al our docks no~·
!!?
Minnry01
Yacht Sales
548·172.'l or 548 •l l!ll
Ro}lbo t1 26 w /d~lu~ trlr
VHF. Mere 9 8. xtr:i:<.
Im mac. $8,SOO. R.17 -9360
23' ALIATROSS
$850 675·6771
I • •
•
•
\
.J IAlll I rted ;..to, ,.,._..:..... Atllo•. Imported ......... .., .. t.d ....... -. • -.. u...i --.
• DAILY PILOT Mondey, Oc!ober 27, 1975 01. mpo •••••• ' ••• ~::: •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ···············-·.,··-.x: ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• t772 Ck..,..... ftJ Mawridl r looh, Soil 9060 Whee( Dri•es 9550 Autot, lmporle-d Rot 9725 MG 9742 Vollcsw09'1' 9770 Vol•o • •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••o ••••••••••••••••••'!'•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •. v 71 MAYHtctr I
Cat.alina 22 perfect eond, Bronco factory spare tire Audi 9707/ 1951 MG yo. 1973 VW VOLVO 14 4 dr. It:~. '12NO A
•II poss ible xl ras. earner. con1plt't(' in (')(••••••••••••••••••••••• A CLASSIC! SUPE R BEE'tLE . F.(.'O(lomf .w/•trle. Tha Muatad.1.Sacrtfiee Raclio •beater. $1195. t
trallerable, 17 mo. old rellent l'Ondit1on. $20 '73 lOOlR'i. 4 llpd, lo a1 1, Will trade, m0tke orr~r Special mags, custom one .~8~1 •l 1(164 6~~~r SJ.700. 81~1• t~Z~e la6a. 1
MZ·l662 39 3 ·6 4 60 ev es. & x ln t rond 13,600 I r 831·2tMOdlr. paint job & st.ereo. Will ~V,ll a r el port• 213 "10lmpal1,4-dr.A.ir,R!R, DFOID
weekends. G42·Zif}..5, Pvt Pty. trade 8!11·2040dlr: ouae 0 m · P IS l owner $1100 l3'Sailfish.Gdcond. Pc:rit«a 9747 ' 921-M88;'1'14$Z3•72:i0. 9111-isos • ' ' 2060Harbor1Uvd. I
New trailer. Fantustic Buy ! '74 J l'c11 BMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ?O VW Pie"-Lal< ~•.Nearly new UME · a.ta Mesi &C-0010 I 646·01 52 Ch e r o kee H /11, 11 .••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 c.. d Blk 'fA _,. '1• M-1< r•r'· blac• I • ~ver t.'On • • Clean. lots of cargo Sedan. All equipment, lo .... -rv, ... l'""f... ff5Z erea m. great tires, •~lr so Lo I Cl el d e " . II landau 18000 mi $3995 -· J TRADE! hitl'h. J\1ust see' Pt·rfc:ct · m . ev an n". s pace,Ultlcgas.94.198F. ml, owner m.u•t 1e . .,._~ ' ' '••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ... •
Wiii •r,.k c Cat as f h Lo a.~t o(r. Work, S21·660ti, SAVES ..,._.494-3684. --,,...-v• .. or untcr. w m1lc:1~t· h ·-7..,3 c 1· l ---• dow11 /py1nt o n inex-$81·0596 days, .St!6·t:.isJ Honda 9727 ome,........ · in · '75 MALIBU Classic Gd rond ... S1$0. firm :
pensive Harbor Vi ew Lot eve!!. •••••••••••••••••••••••Porsche 9750 Alltof,Used Estate Wea. 9 psgr, 646-3068aller5pm.. . •
1n I-l air Moon Bay. .75 llllNl>A c vcc .. 1 s pll. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• yrl~/Wood Lrirn. Lu~. N+ ilNle 9,55 .. Owner. 675·8344. '72 Toyota .Land Crui)cr lot '~ "lr"s M ·.o ··~ s:.31,.... , PORSCHE-VW AMC 9905 equipt.. Warranty. lo nu.-• t AIC, radio. ~ mor1; "" "'· ,., vv *"""""'6''~ """'~ ••• .. •••·•••••••••••••-•
16• llohie C<i t, xlnt (:ond. p 6 r f e c 1 c 0 n d 29402...,91"ttfff•PkwJ. A.-:.kfurSlc\e.5'-IO·:!lvO RECA RO bucket seats ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........,.. -.-. SalesandStrvice I
$LSOO. W, 'l'railer. Lhrou~hQul. $:1,400. Afl ,C MIMlOnVlejo Olk leather w/blk cor· '73 lt.orneL Hatchback, -ft ...... ,...ILI I Pt-2040•49'5 tlM D JOCJUar 9730 doroy insert. New . yellow, la:e e cyl. std,....__'-9925 __ ..,.
493·1589 wkd ys.675-J.842. • .... _ "-•·-·· .,,_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• G45 '101 --·-#!!:..~ -uc•s .• ----------1 ,,,_~~-. ~" trans.$2400."97·1Ul ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-'"
Open !klM•y• 'i l XJ·6. • • CHRYSLER CORDOBA HOHDA CAH f Booh, Slips/
Docb
'64 Dodge PoYrer Wagt1n
"070 !t500. 7 645-9540 After 5
SS.MOU c..':..1 1 after 6 73 911,T . ~arga, 5 sp<l, 72 .HometSST,4dr,l<rl' ,75_ Only 7,000 miles. •1-1-a&..AL&. t
W"cku,,·,.751 1148 AM /FM Stereo, i\1;q;s, ,73 YWC•MPER m< gas saver Xlntcond F 1 d'l ' · Vlll'•"• .... •J """89 t •••••••••••••••••••••••
BOA1'SLIPS
Some live-.abourcl.'i
---1 1971 BMW 2002
4 Spcl'd. air l'ond1tu1n11'11{.
st<'rco & 1nai-: ,,., h(·c·I,
f>rlt' own er. Wiii tr:1Jc ~
1S:ll 2l);10 dlr
, ,. $0800 •1 ll ' .... . . . actoryarcon i1on1.0g, ~ttar~-st·d. t • ---A/..,. I • · 1• ust sc · '1995...&?J-8964 fulJ power. Car 1s loaded ~ ......,.. •
&l JA(; XKB CoupL' JS 642·9666. One owner. Ski racks. Wl'th every conceivable Costa Mesa 540-9840 I "72 JEEP
STM.WGM. hlrt>. $1200. / best offer. Immaculate inside & out. .:::::::::..:::.::=---'"-""-"-"'
A.'>k fur ~lt•vc, M0·91UO 1900 Porsche 912 5 spd . 8.11-2040dlr. lelick 9910 luxury optk>o. Avail for '68 Olds Cutlass Supreme • 645·8616 F.xt418J Po"'cr stcerui g. r11dio,
heutcr. ~895. ! N B946'1 ),
Theodore Robins
FORD
AM ·Stereo r'M, Mint. I ••••••••••••••••••••••• lease or purchase . auto trans, good cond. •
Mazda 9738 Ownr. $.\700,499·4188aft . '74 VW ~uper Bcct,lc . 'OORiviera.JUJtrblt.Xlnt (229132) House of Im· $750 /ofr. 833-362%/, . Slip for small boat. u1' tu
Iii' $2S mo./yrly Ba !boa
Island. Cali 673·931:18,
eves afters
---
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 10 ,000 n11 , AAt /Fl\f condition. $ll50/bst. ports. 213/921-8588; 644-8018 ,
IHX:J l'.174 CUOO rn i . s tereo. $2850 . Call 644-•l9SaftSpm 714 /523·7250. . f
2060 Jl;1rbor Bl vd &
AM /f'°M. riuto. ai r cond. * BEAT * 67~7655&752·6077. · ' 70 Olds, 442. Conv., air. 1 $1000/b:-.t.(':illMJJ.1408 Buick for sa le . 1974 IMPERlAL ~· '73. A AM /FM.Suprrcar!Call Boats, Speed& THE.76 '708us.Se$2m,2001·t·a 1nper. LeSabre Luxus . Im loaded car w1lb all the aft6.'96·2017. •
Ski 9080 Mercedes Ben1 9140 PRICE INCRE•SE I d 1 · extras. Priced for quick t • l " l A 64°·'"71. macu ale con ·• ow mi., sale•. (•=••). House of '71 Cutlass Supreme. I
Costa :\1\·~a ti42 0010
••••••••••••••••••••••• T--•· 9560 :.:1 ~·s ;."t•rv1ct· ~t"as111~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----"-"'~~="----1 f II AC le eo ~ •-"'-> u power, ' 5 r ' Imports. 213/921·8588; Hardtop 2 Dr. Xlnt coad, • SKI Boat 19' Hallt·t. 1974 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roy Carv1:r, Inc. Lease I 975 911 s vw Dune Bu ggy, blue metallic dark brown PS PB $2000/b 1 Cstm paint 452 ()Jds /( ll It IJ 'lW ( Fb l w/s•ddle ui· ten'or & lop. 114/523-1250. air. I ' S t . · '69 Dodge piekup. '" T · v :-. oyt•t· " LJ,..W• Ui•d COUPES 1ne l a l lakes, I! s .. ofr 64().1873 engine. Tndm lrlr. Xl!1t 4.spd. Gcyl. Clean. s1.300. :!:t l I·:. 17th St """ ., , ""' Body. Stron g 40 H $3400.C..11837·2983, •72 CHRYSLH · ' rond. 1 pty only. 847 ·5721 962.0121. C<-.·t11 ~l t·~a 5•1G 444<1 OYER I 00 f():'\J.Y :I LEF') s & s h l p~-9957 I '·' 1. o.,,,·ncr's Dl·mv·Sllver w / c x au s • '62 Buick S~cial Conv. MEW YORkER tnTU
-a_l_l_&_:30_P_M_. _____ I -'--------I MERCEDES sunroof. Load~tl with rx-Ar me
97
n
9
ca
2008
n Ma gs, Best Of· All power. 64.000 mi. Gd. ~ D oor hardtop. A••••••••••••••••••••••• I '73 Courier. H:.ifli o/ht r. • 71 FORD • wht wiills. Clc:.i n. $2.000. OM DISPLAY tra:;. Approx. 4,200 milt's. er. · trans. $800. 640·5586 beautiful low mileage !~~.s~~~~~••••••••·,~~-;2_.0~1-'~'-------I House of Imports A rl':lll y beautiful ear. ·10 Ghia m echani eallyl . luxury ear with lots of PINTO ~
• •-rcrfl • t Io•· Al>"l'l l<lHIZl·:JJ <20l!~J. good , niCc interior. Makej '73 Bwc~ Regal 2 dr hdtp, eye appeal. (12SFYY). Radio &. heater. $1595. !
Ah.. .,. '75 FORD $. I ST "BROADWAY 2 ld\1 s Demo llluc sun-offer 497 ·1664 I tape, atr, full pwr. low 0n:x $2675 (200(:PT). ••••••••••••••••••••••• iltF;r<c;E DES 01-:A l.1-:ll rO(iL Lu:.idcd withcxtr:.is · . mi, below book at $3400. heodot Roblfts
lneedMull•·F:ngi netime. F--IOOP.U. SANTA AJ>jA 68ti2fl'laiH·hi·stt•r, Approx. ~,800 1ndes . '63 VW. Good Eng. Good _•="'=·='='""-------·I JOH SOH&SOM ~... Ii
Allow me to take the t·on-Automat1t· tran~m1s~H111 , 835·3171 ijut'nil l':•rk <201837 ). transportation. $750 orl Cadlll-9915 Lincollt/Mtte.-FORD f
trofs on your next fh ,,ht V-8 ~ngin g e . radio, & H•Euu1MA1toR1~1NG MA.CHINf 523-7250 3 8 id "'W r •<l "Oo pe off•r "'"" J703 --, 2060HarborBlvd. / " h •-5 (ffl"tX I · ru• .. c t '" "·"""' I ••••••••••••••••••••• ""'""Ha•borBlvd. oo o &: I'll pay aU fi eld costs. ca ler . .,.,.,\1 · " · t)n lhe S:.inta An.:i Fw y. wlair. stcr1.:o, alloys, clc. , . · •• ~-----~ C08ta Mesa Costa Mesa 642-1 ,
Ca11Kevin (714 ltl26·5081 TheOdoreRobins 1970BMW ----1202293). 71Beetle54,150m1$1650. / s-' & 1213)594·0959. FORD 21'!!)() CSA. Silver with 1'1 HZ '75 2:.IU St•tt Only Nu eng., clutch, carb. -' '"'-~1 · 540.5630 74 Runabout 4 spd, fac:t A
:..>OOOllarborBl vd. blul' ll'alhcr. Low m tles ·l .<lOO indi·s. 'robacco Thesc3carsmustbesold O\'erhaul.544·0573days air,xlnt~3~~ : c~. Sale/ 0120 c·-l" M"S" "'2·001(1 ... ,, 2"111<llr. brown Lt':J~l' ~·r llu.v, bu\ Qn . first come has1S i\'o Rent ,. ""' u ... u ""' "' "' AC'!' F ,\~'l' ! 111:1:JOS4 1. a · · · ·1 1 VW bus \'Cry good Conflnlllfal 9930 , . t
V 0570 1 11 f 1 1 phone orders at>ccptcd. s h"""'. on·g.' own•. New Huge ••••••••••••••••••••••• 73 SqulJ'e. Fae air, rack, •••••••••••••••••••••••ans 7 '74 11/ltW 2002. Su nroo, nus~· <1 mpor s DOMBURMS "'~ · Gd--'' ·72 Six-Pac 8' Cab.over •••••••••••.,••••••••••• Slt.'rl'Q, 6UOU m i. Wht / 2 l a ~J 2 l • ti 5 8 ti ; reblt enJ.!, tires & trans BY OWNER. '73 4-dr 4-spd, nu tires. ~i.
Camper, good cond. It's Beautiful ·73 Dodge Van. '.'/:ivy. 642-7835 Morn & 71•1 52J·725U_. ____ __, PORSCHE/AUDI goocf_ New heavy duty Sedan. LincolnContinen· 559475.9.Eve&.
light enough Lo put on 1h 17.000 mi ., carpeted. fur Eve •'l ilZ .117 2(1" Ni·w t!n••i nc. 1363 I Harbor G.G. ~~.?;!_~~ in1AoamSeper. S21 l!OO. Cadi"llac tal. 8 w~y split bench pwr '74 Pinto Sdn. 2300CC.4 Ton Pickup Only $650 bed i•·e bu" ,. tra{·k "' "' GARDEN GROVE ....., . ..........., ns. rv. seat. Air, a.m/fm stereo, AM/FM/Tape stereoJ
544.9009 · · s tcr'eo~ aut;' Al:t rS, 74 ll~I W 2002. lo:1dcd, l"ully 1•q1uppf'd_ Bt• c<ir· -~~".".'.~~'.'.':~~-ll :.7:0;-;8~0~G;:--. ~A~M~/.~F~•~l~r=a~d~io::I. Select"IOll tape. Cruise ~ontrol. Clean.$2350.S75-7&59. "J: ----------1 Alurals 646_135,s clean, must sat·r1flce. I v~ ('1'111"33 1). S:J~!IS . 1966!.lll Sore track braklllg. Pwr·1 -----------~
Want to buy Camper or · · Bc_·~toffcr.7l•t·686·S.197 lious'--' uf l niports . 1'1-:RFF-:C.'T rbll e n g. sunroof . st-eering, br.ak.e.s, win· Plymouth · 996
·5hell for s hort bed G MC 1 ·73 Chevy 210 Van, fully -, -----.--;.;, :1_, ~J 2 I -8 5 81:1 , 7 l <I I !)!'cit ---£42·3.'>71 $1400/bsl. 673·5267 · OYEll 100 dows & antenna. 43,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••;II
pick up. 831-2433 8·5. Ask pa neled & carpeted. 73 BMW Ba•ana J23·i250 -. --''-"-------165 VWGhia conv. Rare re· .. .._..._ , ~mi . Mint cond. ITLAS '
for Ron. P.S.. P.B., <iulo trans. 4 s~ICcd. tr~nsmrs~1on. ;.ur •. 11 Z . . 250 S ·d /\ 11 • 72 l'ors<'hl.' !111 Blk w/blk built 1500 cng. $7()() or $4,SOO firm. BeelnNBOr ti
t. · / · b l cond1t1 on1ng & stereo " i · 1'6 c n ° t H' int 1\ppe.i r:.in cc grou1>. Cu .. ••• Prica Buena Park. s••·t450 f
H . h , new ires, ow mi. cow . l><t .. ,,,~~Jic' Pr><·<·d 1 considt r tr a d e fo r ? •-·-•--'71 1g wa y man 8 bookalS3450 >194-21'!7 rad10.831-2040dlr. 1 .. """' · -· ~1a~whls,Jomi . Pvtpty. --blvm8:30am&5pm. C~lerJPlymouth f cabover camper goodi------·---·--1 sell th1s .wt'ek. (015X1h~ $4500.5Bl·7862 751-51_4_3 ______ --t &&. ti
cond$79564Z·2204 '71 FORD Capri 9715 llou'l1· of Im port!;. :n :11 ----1974 vw_ Must sell. Nabers '•ss Lincoln. Xlntcond. Open aily & o. 'til ll
SUPER VAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• !;21 R:>8,ll., 714 /52:1-72:">0. Porst'he !:114, bl:.ick, pin $850 PM Motorcycles/ . I s · 1 S2:roo 18.000 miles. Cod"lllac . 2929HarborBlvd. f Scooter"S 9150 ElOO Su!X'r Buy ! /\uto 1973~APRI .. \1MZ ·1:$ 280 S(o; S('d. ·1 j .. t~~~~le~~iags~u~38e9~: 642·9158after3PM 548-2689or642·6351. Costa Mesa ' '
•••••••••••••••••••••••trans. faetorya1rcontl1-VG. 8 .trac stcrt·o. air Pride of ownt'r~h111 ;e ncl 8425617 art.5 Corveffe. 9932 546-1934 )
750 BSA . 1969, Rocket 3 t ion in g. $2895 . (169651 1/. eondit1on1n~. XLN'I' lll & 1111111ac uL1te' f .. \'.t\•nded ---------1'70 VW Bus, clean, new 2600 Harbor Blvd., j •••••••••••••••••••••••!----------''
Low mi .. original cond.. Theodore Robins __c:~t. 831-2040 dlr. t "-' r nl s a v a i 1 a,u It' Rolls Royce 9756 1~·,·~·on~"~1·~·~",~;,,~w"'.c''!~.'",.~.,~i5n~l1~'2?__'_'n_t_f::'-...~=c~M=":==M=•=w;==5'~0·~'=":::::'=:::·i •TOP CASH! '69 Fury I I I . 2 Dr ...
FORD jQJ5fi15J. llou~l' o I m ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·"""""'JOU St,000. Sacrifice. 64~·7290 ·11 C<ipn. 20tKl!;·t· 1.o .... · n11.. ,72 E l Dorado Converti· For Corvettes and other hardtop. rblt engine,,.
or646-6635. borUl\'d. $1 595. 5JG·2030 o r L,'1°4 r,5t.~·.7.~r•.1o'.1 1 :J:!l ti!.o 88 · #lDEALERINU.S.A. '72YW used cars & trucks ! trans.Ndstires,runsgtt; -----------t '-' ..., ble. Fircmist g reen. C 642·0010 531i9474 ROY Radio. & heater. $1995. 3'7,000 mi. IOO% extras. HOWARD (,'hevrolet, $750.Callaft5,64&7218. -
1974 KAWASAKI w I d "S90 Citroen. 9716 MHZ ·73 280 sr:L. Low ~ CARVER (J78FPD). Su pe r clean ! $4850. Dove & Quail Sts. Near ·m Fury 4 dr Full powor
CALFEllKE •••••••••""•·····••••'••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• nlclPilt-!C and fully Theodore Robins 675--Mll . Jamboree, Bristol, & · · · · r ROLLS·ROYCE M ac:Arthu r , Newport & a~r. Runs perfect.. $675. 9!J<l c.c. with many OP· WEPAYTOPOOLLAR '73Citro~nSM equipped. A ~·t.•ry nlt'.C :rJ<1f.r71hs1. FORD Beach.83J.055S 645-8614 t1ons-.must, see to ap· FORTOPUSED C/\llS <'11r1 Lca.s(• vr buy COSTAMfS,t, ._~Harbor Bl vd. CADILLAC EL OORADOl..."~~~~'.'!:'.~--...'...I:::"'-::-"°:--::---=:-:·
prec1ale. {8F9664). 1-'0REIGN DOMES1'1C 5 sp.ecd. air cond. l0 lf>086> !lt1us" of Im -'':::::::=:::'.~"~'~-~'~"~'!..........) CootaMesa 642·0010 '73. Very low mileage. 1966STIMGRAY '00 Road Runner 383. 4 831-2040dlr. orCLAS• SICS mctallLl' painL leather & pvrt s . 2 \3 /~21 ·8588;' Pride of ownership and spd mags & extras A~l 1 J•'Jl,t , !\1 ct1e ulously 71415Z:J·72SO. __ c_i_o_se_o_s_u_N_o_•_n ___ 1 ygt.,0 9772 shows it. F\Jlly equipped. 4 speed, mags. both top; • ' •
If your car is extra clean ma 1nla1 n ed by one --------<stvt 9761 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Buy on extended terms & cover. CONCOURSE $1200. S44-6468. 1975 Honda XL 350 on/off
road good cond. best of·
rer83&8296
see us fir::;t. owner. 8.11 ·2040 dlr. ~ BZ 'tit\ 250 SE: Cpf' .•••• !.................. or lease. (45P645). House CONDITION. 831-2040 Pontiac 9965
BAUER BUICK i lori r.on blut•. A beuut1ful VOLVO of Imports. 213/921-8588; dlr. •••••••••••••••••••••••
1974 Honda 7508 in . exlen·
tion's pull backs. Camel
seal, sissy bar. Highway
pegs. Harley rear wheel.
$1800 or will consider
cash or trade or? 751 ·5143
2925 Harbor Blvd. Datsun . 9720 fum1ly c<i r ! r_;xtcnt.li·d Exclusive Dealt'r 714 /523-7250. Costa Me ·a 979.2500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t<'rm.~. (08.52fJ)_ 11nu~e o •69 CORVETTE s WlLLBUYYOUR lmpocls. 213/921·8588 , EXCLUSIVE SoutltCoostAroo '65CadCoupeDeVillelike
TOP DOLLAR DATSUN. TOYOTA. 714 5Zl-72SO. FOR new. Mu•t see to app. STINGll .oy
QI{ V~LKSWAI; F:N 0 c ty Buy or lease at Call 968-4637 ~ PAID PA IDFOR ~tnz ·G3 ~4cyl.Scd.Car ran9e oun CPE
IMMEDl •TELY QR NOT looks "nd rims loke nl'W <QA M llR QI) JS '74 Coupe de Ville. 25,000 • " ll ·1 All l '"695 Radio,heater,automatic FOR ALL TOP DOLL/\R Pr1ecd for c1ui l·k sale. ~ m1 es. x ras . ..,, · transmission. power Honda SL 175, '70. 250
miles on rebll eng. $350.
call 675-5473. R CALI~ 1U.Tu7!r!lfl) llvusc vi' hn MQTQ RS 675·7629· steering, air condition·
FOREIGMCA S SALl~ERNADENE port :-;. zi:i 1!1i!I R~KK, '72 CAD SDV. xlnt cond. ing. Excellent condition. CALL OR COME IM 5'10·0442 714 1523·72.">0. MOTOR Avery Pkwy-SO Frwy N · ZXYl Air, FM stereo, etc. ew Lie. 54 .
TOSEEU5 •. 73 240 z. Coco brn, ~l!JZ ·1 1 2XO SE Cp~·· :is AUT~~~ltED MISSIOMVIEJO tires, battery, aux. fuel Su~uki 380.
Asking $650.
546.4449, ma~s. air . 4·spd. xtra 1'.nJ,:l nl'. fully equ1ppl'cl Sdff & Ser•icit s:n .2880 495· 1210 tanks w /elec. pump.
sharp. $4 .Roo , s:J0·6882. " sun roof Mini rond DAVE ROSS Company buying new
$4995
'74 Honda Elsinore Trick
Enduro, 250 CC $600
flf.94-~l .
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
1\vail. fur l1·;1s 1• or ORANGECOUNTY c ar. $3650. 645-1746 SLEMONS MERCEDES '74 Datsun B210 xlnt. purrhasl'. !142CFlJ) POHTIAC·STUTI VOLVO Roland .
cond ., l:lro.,.,·n . :1uto. !l ouse of l 1nport s 2480Harborll•d. EXCLUSIVELY.VOLVO
Motor H°""''• 3100 W.Coasl Hwy. NB.
12.5-00 mi .. $2900 or l:lest · :! I :1 I 9 2 l · 1:1 5 1:1 8 ; Largest Volvo Dea ler
ofr, 640-0295 714/52.l-7250. in Orange County?
.. ~/.~~••••••!!~.~ 642·9405 73 240Z. xlnt cond, lo mi.
d many xtrus. S4 .9H5.
'62 \\¥lC. Amlfm, R&l-L Toyota 9765
c:ood Buy! $1500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rent '73 Overlan 29·.1 ---------~ 714{i57·l955 rfr. 9.30 to
Loaded. Free miles, lo Oranqe County's 5:30. 21J-3:r7 ·0805 !'~I . Ca ll 675·9325 TOYOTA rates. Pri. ply. 538-o.547. Hl...a....st S Buyer ---------1 ·m 1\lB 280 5£. /\1r c·ond , ~·.-.. •74260Z./\uto.<11r. PS /PB , Ar.1 /FM . Exclusi•e Dealer
South Coast Area WinterizedMotorHomes. onlmpo~s lowmi.,Xlntcond. leathe r . Dark IJ luc
B. &: D. Motor Home Ren· Biii Maxey Toyota $.5300. C.45·3298. u)r1.ooo mi. $4600. Aftl'r·
tats. 646-9611 c ll R B'll B I • ot a ogeror 1 .74 260 Z. S:.i le /assumc noon /E\'es963·3139. uyor e-as
Trailers. Tro•el 9170 1 ~ __ 84_7-_85_55 ___ 1 loose Folly eqwp. Xlnt -M&rc-...1-M llR QUI S
••••••••••••••••••••••• FREE APPRAISAL cond.552-87136. • ~... II.
·74 J ayco hard top tent M Q T Q R S trlr. Used twice. sips 6, We buy used cars & Movmg must sell red '72 SALES
963
ca;-4llS233·.°"" .. Best orrer. trucks. C~l l GilOTH 24UZ, air. maj!s. AM ·FM SERVICE CHEV:ROLET for a free ster1..'0 tape, $4.250, best -'72=Fi=.",e=b~.-,,-T-.,-,-e-,-T-,-,,-.' ab~:yrn1CHEVR Ol~ET offer. 549-1295 aft 6, LEASING
Avery Pkwy-SD Frwy
MISSION VIEJO
2.6' long. Xlnt cond. Dual 18211 Beach Blvd. '73 DATSUN Ml••lon Vl•Jo
axles. 493.4007 AM /Eves. Huntington Beach 240 z 1rnpor;ta
831·2880 495-1210
1971 TOYOTA
MARK II COUPE Auto Ser-ice & 847 ·6M7 $49·3331
Parts 9400 SELLING YOUR CAR?
••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP PRICES PAID
PORSCHE-VW
RECARO bucket scats.
Blk leather w/blk cor.
duroy insert. New .
645-6101 •
Autos for Sale. •••••••••••••••••••••••
AnfiqllH/
Clotsics 9520 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1931 WOLSELEY
"COUNTY DELUXE
SEDAN'' •.. XLNT condi·
Uon! See it to believe It!
831·2040dlr.
'6'1 Shelby GT SOil $2,695.
Cash ooly. Many xtras.
962-MS'l.
'38 Chevy S window
For Imports
Paid for or Not
Dean Lewis lm~rts
1006 Harbor, C.M,
646.9303
TOP s
Paid
FOR
Used VW's
Paid for or Hot
Harbour V.W. . . . ' Coupe, all st ock, im-Jfllnt Och 842_4435 mac., $3000./ best offer.1--·--· ---"'~=-
890·6714 Autos. l"'P"riod
4 Wlwoff Dri•es 9550 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• Audi 9707
'
WE'VE MOVED!
llGSTOCK
OFNEW•USED
4 WHHL DRIVES
COPELAND'S
JEEP CITY
%001 L ht Sf.
5-111AH
llMOOO
ZTOCHOOSE
lt'12 Scollt
'61B73S-t
Both ire hardtops .
--1 lllclu<I .. ruol 'aek, automallC!, air Df.· '''"' oleorlna. laolde 6 out. Will
..... Dl·-dlr·
··············-········
*BEAT*
THE '76
P~ICE INCREASE
1975 AUDI
IOOLS
(CHOICE OF 20)
1975 AUDI FOX
ICHOJCE OF 10)
SAVE WHILE
THEY LAST!!!
DONIURMS
l'OllSCHE/AUDI
'1163 I Harbor
G~RDEH GROVE
Automatic transmissiort. Avery E•1t, SD Fwy.
factory air conditioning, 83 1-11.io Automatic, air condition .
ra dio. heater . $5495. ing & L andau. l.ow
<536Jl\fM I. l\1BZ '75 2802dr. hardtop. mjles.831 -2040dlr .
Theodore Robins Fu ll po\lo'er. stereo radio, executive car . s Year '74 Corolla. Auto, radio.
FORD finant•Ulg avail. (106014) htr. 12,000 mi. S2 ,700/ or
2060 Ha rborB1vd. 1-t ou 5 c of Imports. a ssumcloan.537-6101 . Costa ~t cSa 642 -0010 ~~~7~i 1 · 8 5 88 ; 114 / ·11. <;oroll a. Auto, Gd. con· Rat 9725 -· d1t1on. Z7 mp~. $1350. Ph :
••••••••••••••••••••••• MB Z '75 450 SEL F.::xel'. 673-8833aft6 . ra .. 'i'W..-J luxury seil~n . Metallic
,,. .. ~.,. f n I $ h ,
clel'I. roof. Old price .
Saveuver$2.UOO. (040890)
House of l1nporlS.
2 l 3 I 9 2 I -8 5 8 8 ;
714/523 ·7250.
Headquarte,.s
In Santa Ana
FAC'rORY
AUTllORIZF.O
SALE •S ERVICE
PAfiTS •L EAS ING
FIAT
Dick Miller Motors
1\187. '75 280 C, Executive
car. Prc-in<'rease sav·
1n~s . i l03809). Available
for l£'asc or purchase.
Ho u.s e of Impo rts .
t20W \Van1crat (\,1ai n 213 /921 -85R8; 7 14 /
CLOSE OUT
SALE
on remaining MEW
'75TOYOTAS
also Demo Sale
DISCOUNTS
as high. as Sunt~• Ana 557-21321_•'-"_·-_02'0_. _______ 1
===---::==iMBZ '73 450 SE. Clean. $1100
Pride of O\lo'n('rs hip. Can from list price
Fiat
Before you buy. see!
Mission Vlelo
Imports
be leased or purrhased
on e1l tcnd e d t e rm s. nn1111 LA11_;1
(00.1835). lfOuS(' or Im. IJ""' WIW ports . 213 /92 1·K5 88 ; ~
1_,_,._,,zi_._12>0_. ___ 1 ~ TOYOTA
·12 350SL Mercedes Benz,
silver w/blk int. fully 1966 Harbor ( ,,, 6~6 9JQ3
equip SI0,500. 640.1116 Triumph 9767
Avery Exit, S.D Fwy.
831 -1740 '63 190 Sedan, nr::1y w /red
leather int . Gd cond.
$1600. 640·1JWO or 645·4534
'74 Fiat 124 wgn, ZZ.000 , mi , g d cond ., $2900 75 MBZ 450 SL. Spl cpe,
646-6766 rd!ltr. fu lly equipped .
metallic finish, two tops.
E1lcC utivl' crir. 5 Year
NOTICE financi n a: av a 1l a ble .
how Daily l'ilot Class· (026515) JIOU!IC of lm-
1fled ads db;:play their ports. 213 /921 ·8588;
1meiosaacs with lci,tibllity 714/523·'1'250.
jlDd if11p11ct ? <>ur ads. we -'---------1
h rc proud to say, really '72 220 sedan. very low
get results, ('hone mllcage.verygood cood..
642-5678. 673·6.nf
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'72 Triumph TR-6
Low miles. sh arp! AM /
FM.1C6CUJ\1.
SAVE$
GARDEN WEST VW
2 HJoci..-. \\
uf H(lo1r h II!\ •I
i6t1V \\"~t m11 1-.h'r Hl\1l
\\'l-.;lr11111 .. 11•r l(!l.1 <~ •l
BUY or L EASE
DIRECT
M~m~~
2025 S. Manchester
Anaheim 750-2011
VOLVO
FINAL
CLOSE
OUT
OM '7 S Models
76
To Choose From
BUY
or
LEASE
FROM
. DeoJt leroib
.TOYOTA .
l9b6 Hurbor, Cf~ 646 9303
IFYOU
have a service to offer.or
goods to sell , place an ad
in the Da i ly Pilot
Classified Section • • .
Phone 642·5678.
·72 Cpe de Ville, lo mi.
Vinyl top, nu radials.
1970 Harbor. C.M.
631·1276
832-96121545·8586. 1----------=-=-------:1cc:o ..... _... 9933
Carnero 9917 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 Cougar, P IS, P/B, air,
10 Camaro VB. Xlnt cond. new tires, low mi, $1250.
$1950. Best offer. 533-0341 645-0991 1----------0' 645'6763· D~ 993S
Che•rolet 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
SALES&SERVICE
2828 Harbor lhd.
COSTA MESA
546-1200
"73DODGE
SPORT
Automatic transmission,
power steering, radio,
heater, bucket seats.
$2005. (969HEQI.
Theodore Robifts
FORD
2060 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 64.z.-0010
Ford 9940
CHEVY MONZA '75 375, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2+~ Cpe. Under 12,000 73 FORD, -ml le s. 4 Speed ~•u
transmission. Virtually IRGM.
new! Priced (or quick Auto. trans., factory air,
sale. (216919} House of power steering, vinyl
Imports. 213/921-8$88; roof, R&H, 27,010 mi.
714/ 523·1250. $3295. (912GRD).
72 CHEVY HOY A
HARDTOP
Beautiful condition ,
mechanical & ap ·
Theodon Robiu
FORD
2060Harbor Blvd • <:osta Mesa 642·0010
pearance. Factory air '73 LTD brn, 24,000 mi,
conditiooing, power pwr seats, wincJoV's,
steering, 350 engine. brakes, & st, tilt whl,
(1'5FL V). stereo, radJals 546-7201 or
Special $22501 ~552~·33=10----1
JOHNSON & SON "11 Ranchero, new steel
Lhtcoln/Mercury belted radials, nu brakes
262.6Harbor Blvd. & shocks, 38,000 mi, im-
Coota Mesa mac,646:-2503
54()..5630 ?3 RAHCHERO
GT
Auto. trans .. factory air
conditlonlna, power
steering, (dlsc) brakes,
$379'1. ('2003P)
T1oeodore Roliltos
FORD
2060 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 642-0010
U.Coln 9945 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'74UHCOLM
4DOOR
Jet black with egg shell
lnterior leather. Fully
equipped with .• u the U.•
tras except sunroof.
21.000 mu .. r (<M7KLS>.
Onlv$5895
J°"*'50H • SOM u.c• /Mflr<.wy 262* Harbor Blvd.
CO.ta Mesa
540.5630
1973 Firebird, lo mi, full~!
loaded. New tires. dlr
Warr. $3300. 644-55Q)
For Classified Ad
ACTION
Call a
Daily Pilot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
Codilloc 9915 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Cadillac
Month End
Sale
Due to the Tramendo&n
Public acceptance of
the 1976 CadiMac We
have an extraordinary
large inventory of se-
lect pre-owned c.ctif.
lacs & other fine cats.
Choose fTom °'""' c..t,'s largest Selecllell
of C..tlllM:s
Just a Few Exompln
'7$ Brougham
Doi ~ .,o•I ••llJ c_.;..
""'"' ............. Codiacx ..... 11'2MCtl)
18895
'75 El Dorado
~ ........ ....ion--.. -.. /._.~ .... _, .......... (J<MN~
'8395
'74EIDonitclo
Cabtl.t .. IOf>, 1-o•h••· '"'""" °""" ~. -(Sl:M06901) '7395
'74 Cpe De V1h '
c....... .... ·-· t.odw w .. "' ... -tsl•' ,,,.,,
'5895
'73 Cpe De 111119 • c ...... <-.I, ...... '""'· •If. ""1' ................ (30fl .. J
'5195
'72 Cpe De VIie
v1.i, ..... "-· ........ "-" .. ........ ,_'"•Ont
'3595
• '72 hd De VIie s...-. Mt .-i,...,., ......... i......-.1sa1•101t1 _
•3495
'69 c ... De VIiie ......,.,..Mt ........... ..,,..
--.1m••~t
'1995 --atlL
NABERS CADILLAC . ---. c.... ... MC).;:9100
OPUt IUNOAY •
"
Laguna/South Coast Today's Cl .....
N.Y. Stoeks .·
VOL. 611, NO. 300, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1975 TEN CENTS.
S ..;.:.. 'L cuua D~iver, 11-, Drowns La gun~ • Ill
An ll·year~ld boy scuba div·
in;g wt.th his rather and older
brother drowned Sunday in
L.q:una Beach.
The body o( Dennis Gerald
Peterson of Covina was found
meshed in kelp in about 35 feet of
water 300 yards off shore by
Laguna Beach Lifeguard Capt.
Jam~ Stauffer.
The child bad been the object of
a two hour air, sea and land
search by Laguna Beach poti~.
five Lagune. lifegt.ril'ds and the
Newport Beach helicopter.
Lifeguards reported that
equipment recovered from the
body appeared to be in proper
working order.
· Capt. Stauffer speculated that
the boy may have encountered
some difficulty and panicked.
His life vest was not activated
and bis weights were still clasped
on the body.
The body was identified by the
lad 's father, Hans Christian
Peterson.
Peterson told Police that he
and his two sons bad entered the
water at Diver's Cove in Laguna
Beach at about 12 :30 p.m . Sun·
day.
The three swam out to rocks
about 250 to 300 yan:l!i off·sbore
and at some point the 11 year old
became ses>arated from father
and brother.
Prearranged plans were tor
the party to surface and regroup
ii they ~ame separated, but
Peterson said that when be came
to the surface, he could oot see
his young son.
The father and the elder
brother then searched un -
derwater. At about 2: 18 p.m.
Laguna Beach police were con-
tacted.
Watch Commander Sgt. Terry
Temple set up a command post in
the 600 block or Cliff Drive and
called in the lifeguards.
Laguna Beach policemen
searched s urrounding land areas
including nearby stores and
restaurant&.
Lifeguard Chief Bruce Bal.rd.
Capt. Stauffer, and euard John
Simpkis donned scuba gear and
searched underwater whJJe other
guards combed the rock)!" cove
areas.
The Newport Beae.h Police
Department helicopter was
<See SCUllA, P•&e .Ul • . ' ~ount1ans on ost ane
Deaths Clin1b
HUrricmw. in Mazatlan
MAZATLAN, Mexico (UPIJ -Officials said to-·
day 27 persons were killed by Hurricane Olivia which
battered this Pacific Coast port Saturday. Damage
was estimated at S8 million.
With all electric power cut off and telephone lines
down, Mazatlan was declared a disaster zone.
At least 17 other persons were injured and 10,000
houses-suffered storm or water damage.
No Americans were reported killed or injured.
Among bui I dings damaged by the hurricane was
the local jail. Two prisoners were reported killed
when a jail wall collapsed.
Federal relief teams poured into the port Sunday
and a massive relief effort was under way today.
Widow, 83, Kept
Prisoner in Home
Ngw ORLEANS (UPI) -
Police say Edna Halbedel, an
83-year-oJd wealthy widow, was
-kept heavily sedated in a locker
room in her-home for two years
by two men, one of whom was the
sole beneficiary in her will.
Firemen ended her confine-
ment by breaking throufh a win·
dow in her French Quarter home
on a tip from a family friend who
became suspicious because she
was not allowed to see Mrs.
Halbadel.
She was hospitalized and re-
ported in [air condition today.
Authorities still had many un-
answered questions about the al-
leged conspiracy to keep the
woman prisoner in her own
home.
"It's going to be pretty horrible
when it's all revealed,'' said· a
spokesman for the district at-.
tomey's offiee. "There are some -~
doctors involved in this thing.
They just bad her all doped up in
this room -no visitors or phone
calls or anything.··
John R . VillaTrubia, 42, a
publicity agent named in Mrs.
Halbedel·s will, and Noel J .
Dube, 44 ._ a school teacher, were
arrested and charged with ag.
gravated kidnaping. Their bonds
were set at $200,000 each.
A special grand jury was ex·
pected to meet Tuesday to study
the case, including a disclosure
by a defense attorney that the
wife of District Attorney Harry
Connick executed Mrs .
Halbadel·s will.
Attorney Raymond McGuire,
who represented Villarrubia and
Dube during a bond hearing, said
the will had been executed by
Anita Connick.
"1 can't discuss my wife·s legal
practice, .. Connick said. ··But I
Co ast
Weathe r
Partly cloudy through
early Tuesday becoming
mostly fair in the after-
noon. Not much change in
temperature. Highs 73 to
78. Lows 50 to the low 60s.
INSIDE TODAY
Bomb.t wenl off in .about
nine buiJding.s early this
morning, in New York,
Wa.shinQton .and Chicago. A
PWno Rican group claimed
cmfit ~e .story A.4 .
can tell you that my wile does not
. represent either or the arrested
subjects.~·
The spakesman for Connick·s
· office saia a riurse Who reported-
ly attended to Mrs. HaJbedel and
administered the sedatives also
was being questioned.
"She was an unwilling ac-
complice,'' he said. "She was
hired to lake care of the lady and
give her medicine, but she had no
idea what was going on."
Ford. Greets
Anwar Sadat
In Ceremony
WASHINGTON CA PJ -Egyp.
tian President Anwar Sadat, the
first Egyptian head or state to
visit the United States. got a
warm personal welcome today
from President Ford, who called
their meeting a signal that pro-
gress toward peace in the Middle
East "will not stop ...
In colorful ceremonies at the
White House. Ford hailed the
Egyptian president's wisdom,
sincerity and moderation.
Sadat will stay two days in
Washington before visiting New
York City, Chicago and Houston
and then returning to address a
joint session of Congress.
Sadat applauded the Pres i-
·dent 's remarks and declared that
progress toward peace since he
and Ford met tast June in
SaJzburg "could be considered a
turning point in Arab-Israeli re-
lations."' He said he came to the
United States "with an open
heart."
Arter the ceremonies on the
south lawn of the White House,
Ford and Sadat began a private
session in the oval office with
Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss·
inger.
. As the presidents met, about
300 Arab and Iranian students .
('banting ''Down With Sadat"
and "Long Live Palestine,"
marched a half mile through
<See SADAT, P•&• .Ul
Capo Schools
Take Day Off
'lile Capistrano Unified School
District is the bnly school district
in Qr.ange County observing to-llttle* day_ a$ Veterans Day. Th4: board °if ed.l;lcation~ered
•n ::.=.. , .. .!! ·~~Oll~cl!J!leclto<l!iYamid :: ::::r:t'"l· ••:I • cm~'fons" t~al parents Ond Stu· LJl'•
a111.::t: a ,,.... -awwww • -----SI .. SZAi -.... --_ .......
•J..:.; S'l'MI .,_._ ·~: dents would abuse lhe VeteraM
N ..,.. .. , ... ,, Day holiday If It were held on :: ==-ltih .. ~; Nov. 11, a Tuesday.
M = .. Trustees reasoned that a :; ..,....._ :! percentage of students would
h take the Monday, Nov. 10, off,
too, tbua dlBMUnc classes.
Mexico
Jungle
Combed
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. IMllr"l._$11.n
An extensive air and sea
sear ch was being pushed today
for a missing plane on the west
coast or Me xico that carried five
persons, including two promi·
nent businessme n from Hunt·
ington Harbour and the wife of
one of them.
Believed aboard the twin-
engine Cessna 320A were Steven
Dikeman, owner of Look
Properties in Sunset Beach,
Bruce Killian, president of the
Acme Wiring Co. in Garden
Grove and Killian's wife Bonnie.
The plane vanished on a flight
from M anzanillo to Puerto
Vallarta.
Carl Tobin, vice president of
Acme, said that Dikeman and·
Killian had left from Huntington
Harbour in early Oct.oqer on a
57-foot yacht owned by Roger
S mith, a former Huntington
Harbour man.
He said they were in Mexico to
look into some real estate.
Tobin said that Killian's wife,
Bonnie, had nown to Mexico to
join her husband to celebrate an
anniversary.
Tobin, a life-Jong friend and as-
sociate of Killian, said the
Killians have two daughters,
Lisa. 15, and Lauren, 13. He said
the Dikemans also have two
children, Pamela, 17, and Steve
16.
The plane was aoparently
piloted by a Denver dentist, Dr.
Paul Lund el. whose wife also was
aboard.
Tobin said the ill-rated flight
took orr at 6 : 15 p.m . Oct. 18 and
that weather conditions were
good. He said the twin-engine
craft was equipped with beeping
device"S but that nothing has been
heard of it. '
John Hamilton, an employe of
the Don Koll Co. in Newport
Beach who is coordinating the
search, said that the search has
been nairrowed down to about 50
square miles over rugged jungle
terrain.
Hamilton said that there are 14
private aircraft from Orange
Coast cities assisting two C-1305
(See PL~NE, Page A2)
Trio Rob
Toro Woman
In Wheelchair
An elderly \foman propelling
her wheelchair along a Laguna
Hills road was robbed or $38 dur·
ing the weekend in what Orange
County Sheriff's officers
describe as tb,e most callous
purse snatching incident they
have ever investigated.
Deputies said three young men
stopped their car and ap-
proached Mrs. Addie H. Little-
john, 79, of 23262 Book.land Lane,
El Toro, as she propelled her
wheelchair along Calle de Los
Caballeros in Laguna Hills.
Mrs. Littlejohn told o[ficers
that the young men snatched. the
purse containing $38 from the
handle of her wheelchair tmd
then drovt off at high speed.
Jn another purse snatching inci-
dent a Laguna Hills Leisure
Worl4 rsldenl was robbed during
the weekend of a purse containing
$40 by a young man who fled oo
root. sherif('s officers said.
Deputies said Lorene Helen
·Lawrence. 68, of 29T Calle
Aragon, was .robbed a1 1be
walkod on Paaeo de Valebcla
oear lhe l.acun&,HlllB pootoftice. I
~
Kids a11d Their Dogs
There was a dog show in Laguna Beach
Saturday. but not all enLrants were of a
mind to be a part of it. Tracy Thompsoo
(above. left), 10. of Laguna Niguel had
trouble convincing Tangra, a Shih·tzu. Lo
parade before judges. So did Tracy·s sis·
ter, Laurie. 8, shown {above, right1 with
Shang. Tangra took third place in the
smallest dog category. Sbang placed third
as funnies t dog. Best costume award went ,
to "Tic Toe .. (below) owned by Leslie
Brown. II. of Laguna Beach.
Prince to Inherit
Troubled Nation
MADRID , Spain (AP ) -
Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon, in
line to take over from the
stricken Gen. Francisco Franco,
will inherit an orfice full or pro-
blems. a natio11 pressing for
social and political change and
the risk of failing almost before
he gets started.
But the 37-year-old prince will
get some opportunities oever
open to Franco because of in-
ternational disapproval of the
way he established his regime
and controlled it for more than 36
years.
Without Franco, Spain's
ehances win improve for enter·
ing the European Common
Market, the North AUantic Trea-
ty Organization and the com·
munity o( democratic nations.
Diplomatic relations with the
Soviet Union are likely. Spain
probably will gel Gibraltar back
from Britain.
Bu.l before the prince c: an
eot•bllsb • blmself os King. he
must fifst live down the idea that
he is, as the Spanish joke goes,
I
Juan Carlos the Brier, meaning
he is not expected to last Ion~.
Credibility as a capable leader
may be one of hi s first tests.
One area where the prince is
<See P RINCE, PageA2)
FR4NCO FI GHTS.
'L4SI' B.4.TI'LE'
MADRID (UPI)
Generalissimo Francisco Fran-
co, 82, his body wasted rrom two
weekend brushes with death,
fought today what many believed
would be his last battle for sur·
vival.
Doctors said he was sJfering
from a slight fever for the rirst
lime since Saturday and from
continuing heart troubles. T~e team or 14 doctors at Fran·
co·s bedside in El Pardo Palace
said the old soldier was cooscious
and resting quietly but that his
rondiUon remained grave.
S. Laguna's
Judge Owens
ToPresick
Judge Claude M. Owens of
South Laguna was elected today
as presiding judge of the Orange
County Superior Court for 1976.
Judge Owens, 59. will take over
the reins of the JI-judge court
Jan. I from Judge Robert A.
Ranyard. Judge Banyard has
served two terms in the presiding
judge's chambers. ·
F'our Orange Coast judges
were named to serve on Judge
Owens· executive committee.
during 1976. They are: judges
Bruce Sumner and James
Turner o( Laguna Beach, Robert
P. Kneeland of Newport Beach
and H. Warren Knight or Mission
Viejo.
Judge Sumner has also served
two terms as Superior COurt pre-
siding judge.
Born in Santa Ana in 1916,
Judge Owens was first appointed
to the bench in 1956 when Gov.
Goodwin Knight appointed him
to what is now the North Orange
County Municipal Court.
<See OWENS, P•ge.U)
..
y Z DAILY PILOT L/SC
Schools
Await
U.S. Aid
Officials in the Capistrano and
l.aguna Beach uniried school dis·
lriels patiently arc awaiting
1nort~ lh<tn $38,000 in federal
funds to help defrlty the costs of
educating Vietnamese refugees.
Tl\e Capistrano district will re-
eeivf. SJJ,600 toward the cost of
l'ducatinj! 106 refugee students.
t.aguna Reach, with 16 refugee
students. will receive$4,800.
President f'ord recently signed
legislation allocating federal
· funds to districts that have Viet-
namese refugees enrolled in
: classes.
~ Dis trirls with up to 100 stu-
: dents will r('cc1ve $300 per stu·
: dent. Districts with more than
• lflO students \Yill receive $.JOO per
: student for the first 100 and $.500
• pc>r slud1..•nt th('rc;.iftt•r.
~uperintt•ndcnts in thC' two dis-
tricts said the funds would be
used tu pay ll•<icher u1dcs and
various l'd UC'aliona/ 1naterials. •
The money will be allocal<.'d
during this school y(•ar only.
Jeromt" Thornsley, Capistr<.i no
supl'rint('ndenl, said most of the
cust in (•duratin~ the refugee
<'hi ldren will be borne by local
t:ixpay('rs. d rspitc the f1..>deral
funds.
lfc estimated that the cost or
educating the district's 106 Viet-
namese students will cost about
$100,000 this year. The govern·
ment is picking up about a third
of that cost.
The funds will be given to the
two school districts as soon as , • rules and regulations for their 1 use are drawn up by the Depart-
{ ment of Health, Education and
~ W~Ifare.
~~ f' ..... PageAI
I
: SADAT •..
I downtown Was hington lo the 1 White House. ! The demonstration was
: sponsored by the Iranian Stu -
! dents Association and the
: Organization of Arab Students in
I the United States and Canada,
.1 which said recent Sinai peace ac-! cords pose "grave implications
% (or the Arab national liberation
! struggle ...
t After the m eeting, as Sadat's
I motorcade left the White House,
the demonstrators gathered
along Pennsylvania Avenue and
l:,.. <"hanted : "Sadat is a U.S. puppet,
Sadat is a U.S. puppet.•·
I From the back seat of hi s
3 limousine, Sadat s miled and
t waved at the protesters.
: Sadat, who arrived Sunday to
l begin his 1 l ·day visit to the Unit-
1 ed States, spent the night at
I Williamsburg, Va. A state dinner ! at the White House was
i scheduled ror tonight for Sadat
and his wife. ·
Jn the south-lawn ceremonies,
Sadat said the new Sinai accord
t which Kissinger helped negotiate
· between Egypt and Israel "wiU a be a very important milestone on
j the road to peace in our area.''
J Noting bis warm personal
1 friend ship with lbe Egyptian
4-leader, Ford agreed that "much
t has been achieved" and called
J Sadat's visit "a symbol o( the
t new dimensions of our rela-f tions."
' Sadat in tum told Ford that
l "what you have already done''
l has been a "great event" for the
) Middle East, which he described
; as "the most dangerous area in
1 the whole world.·•
) • : liimher Stolen • ~ Construction lumber worth
J S300 belonging to J ohn Casey of
• 24085 Windwood Drive, Laguna ' t Niguel, was reported stolen Sun-
p day ftom a home construction
~ site in Laguna Beacch.
• Casey told Laguna Beach
• police the wood was taken from a
• home he is building at 618 Loretta
t Drive, Laguna Beach.
' • •
I
• • ;
I I
' I
t
I
ORANGE COAST . '""
DAILY PILOT
Top Dog
Paige Van Rensselaer, 11 , of Laguna Beach. embraces
Caesar, a Great P y renees judged best looking dog at a
dog show held in Laguna Beach Saturday afternoon.
Show was sponsored by the city of Laguna Beach and
Ken-L Ration dog food manufacturers.
'Kissing Gunman'
Robs NB Grarmy
A bandit wearing garish
makeup and brandishing a
tihotgun robbed a 70·year-old
Newport Beach grandmother of
Air Crash
Kills (j()
LA PAZ, Bolivia <UPI)
-Sixty persons were
killed today when a
military aircraft returning
Bolivian army ofrirers and
their familie s from a
weekend outing in the re·
sort of Tomonoco crashed
into a mountain , President
Hugo Banzer announced.
Banzer made the an-
nouncem ent to the Military
School o( Engineering dur-
ing cer e monies marking
the 25th anniversary or the
sch ool 's founding. The
school immediately sus-
pended festivities.
Banzer said the plane
was a Convair, a twin-
entine turboprop, which
was 08ing the orficers and
metf Wives and children
from an armed forces vaca-
tion spot 70 miles east of La
Paz.
Planners Set
Housing Meet
The Laguna Beach Planning
Commission will hold the first of
two public hearings into a federal
housing grant application for low
and moderate housing assistance
when it meets at 7 :JO p.m. Tues·
day in city council chambers_
The hearing will solicit public
views on the Housing and Com-
munity Development Act's ap-
plication to Laguna Beach and
may include suggestions for pro-
viding housing for elderly and
low income persons.
The second of the two public
hearings· will be held by the
Laguna Beach City Council al an
as yet undetermined dale.
SJJO over the weekend and then
asked for a kiss on the cheek
tx>fore he disappeared.
The victim. who lives in the
central Newport area. phoned of-
fi cers late Saturday night after
the gunman who was wearing a
stocking mas k caked with
greasepaint fled with all the
money she had in the house.
Police said the Vi('tim told
them she was home alone when
she heard a noise in a bedroom
and investigated.
The young bandit wearing the
elaborate mask was waiting for
her, his finger on the trigger of
the shotgun. He demanded
money and the victim emptied
her purse for him.
Moments later, the woman told
him , •·you mu s t be very
desperate to s toop to this."
"lam," he replied, "I 'm try-
ing to find an apartment and I
don·t have enough money to get
one.'·
More conversation followed
and as the man left the victim
sajd she wished him well in his
search for a home.
"You make me feel like I want
to cry,·· replied the bandit, point-
ing to his right cheek and adding,
"kiss me right here.''
The woman did so and the ban-
dit fled into the darkness, she told
police.
Investigators said they could
find no other witnesses to the rob-
bery, but that they found fresh
palm and finger prints on a slid-
ing glass door as well as other
C'lues near a rear gate which may
be helpful in their probe
f'roMPageAI
PLANE ••.
in the search. He said that pilots
from Orange County are doing
"a magnificent job.""
ffamilton added that ''a
tremendous amount or red-tape
from the Mexican government
has hampered the search."
Tobin said today Crom Killian's
company in Garden Grove that
none of the employes have given
up. .
"We're still figuring every.
thing is okay," be said. "People
have walked oul of that jungle
aCtertwoor three weeks:·
Anaheim Drama
Holdup Man Shot
By Market Clerk
An Anaheim market clerk Sun-
day shot and killed a knife·
wielding holdup man who had
i::rabbed the clerk's wife by the
neck and was dragging her away
as a hostage, police said today.
Gary Lee Phillips, 25, of 425 N.
Magnolia Ave. in Anaheim, was
dead at the robbery scene with a
single g'Unshot wound in the
chest, a police sp0kesman said.
The clerk, whose name was 00.
ing withheld by investigators
told officers Phllllps entered the
•mall market at 1107 W. South St.
at aballt 7:30 p.m . and walked to
a <aoler where he took out a six·
paclr of beer.
"The auspeet walbcl to the e~Jt st.md md pulkd a, knife,
ordering the clerk to put some
mooey be was counliog into a
paper sack," the police
spokesman said.
"Then he grabbed the wife
around th e neck and said
something to the effect •vou·re
coming with me •,•• the
spokesman said. .
The clerk told officen the sus·
pect began backing out the door
but stumbled, permitling the
woman to break away.
"The clerk grabbed a revolver
and fired one shot at the suspect.
who ran off into the darkness.''
the police spokesman said.
tnv .. Ugators found the fatalljl·
wounded Phillips 200 yards from
the market. ·
~I
•
I
Loaned
Book
Returns
Anna Stoddard of Capistrano
Beach figures that a Laguna
Beach bookstore may owe her a
refund or $1 .25, plus tax.
Her reasoning makes sense.
She bought a book she already
owned.
Back in J945, Mrs. Stoddard,
then a resident of Beverly Hills.
loaned the book ·' Ebell Lectures
in Spiritual Science" by Ernest
J~olmes, to a friend.
As happens. the book never
was returned.
Th1rty years passed. 'Iben, a
coupll~ or weeks ago, Mrs. Stod-
dard stopped at Buccaneer
Books. a Laguna Beach shop that
specializes in hard to fmd edi-
tions. She filled out a search card
for 1-lolmes· early works.
Mrs. Stoddard dropped by the
shop a few days later. Owner
Jack Vincent told her that he had
just purchased a used collection
that contained one of Holmes•
books.
He handed her a copy of "Ebel I
l...ectures on Spiritual Science.··
She paid him $1 .25, plus tax.
Mrs . Stoddard returned to her
home at 26801 Calle Verrano and
s tarted reading the book.
She found it had an unusual
finis il\
On the last page, written in
pencil, was her name, and her
Beverly Hills address.
•·It was quite a surprise,"
laughed Mrs. Stoddard.
"l"d say it was quite unusual,"
said Vincent . "t·ve never heard.
of it happening before.··
l'roMPageAJ
OWENS •••
The South Lagunan came to
the Superior Court bench in
December of 1967 via an appaint-
ment by Gov. Ronald Reagan
after serving as a member of the
California Judicial Council and
the California College of Trial
Judges.
Married with two adult
children, Judge Owens obtained
his Jaw degree from Stanford
University. He practiced in
Orange County as a deputy dis-
tri<'t attorney and in private
practice before being named to
the bench in 1956.
DllltyfltMll .........
FOUND A SURPRISE
Anne Stoddard
f'roMP.,.eAJ
PRINCE •••
certain to encounter a credibility
problem is the independence-
min d ed Basque region in
the north. Basque separatists
view Juan Carlos as an extension
of Ftanco and because of this
hold him responsible as well 'for
the execution in September of
two Basque terrorists, convicted
or killing police.
( NEWSANA LYSIS)
Opposition against Juan Carlos
could show up in the relatively
\Vt'althy Catalan region around
Barcelona. Catalans express dis-
gust with what Franco has called
~necessity ~ the unity of Spain.
··Franco's successor must
mend the regionalism problem
or there will be no unity,·• said a
Catalan lawyer.
Knowledgeable politicians say
Juan Carlos should have no trou-
ble shedding the image of Fran-
C'o"s hand-picked suC'cessor, who
was specially schooled, trained
militarily and guided to swear to
political principleS Franco laid
down.
.. If the prince can establish a
political openirtg, get a strong but
liberal -minded government
worki.ng and demonstrate to the
palitical opposition he is not just
a poor imitation of Franco, he
may make it,·· one government
official said. "Juan Carlos must
make the country believe he is
going to change things."
1Jlbbll6E
BUSINESS
CENTER
Grading
Changes
Studied
Further modifications to S.n
Clemente's new hillside cracllnc
ordlnanc~ will be considered
when the City Council meets al
1:30 p .m . l\l~do~ at City
Hall.
The council will receive -.. re-
comme.ndution from the !Ian·
tUng commission that woul em·
power-the Commis!ion to Waive
requi.remen~ o! the ordinance if
the size, shape, locations or topo..
graphy made application ot the
ordinance impractical.
The modification pr~edure
originally was drafted by the city
building and planning ataff. It
passed the 'commission on a
3-to-1 split vote. Commissioner
Donna Wilkinson dissented.
Councilmen also may consider
an amendment to the ordinance
that was hastily introdured Oct.
JS after a major landowner
threatened the city with a lawsuit
ir the law was not softened.
The a mendment received pre·
liminary approval on a 3·lD-2
vote. The change was opposed by
Councilmen Charles Fox: and
Palrick Lane.
The intent of the grading law is
to prohibit terraced grading and
protect natural hillside contours.
Proponents of the law have
suggested they will take the city
to court if efforts to weaken the
ordinance suceeed.
The grading ordinance is
among 30 items that will be con.
sidered by the council.
Other matters it will face in·
elude a public hearing on a pro·
posed 75 pereent increase in
sewer rates and a 10 percent in·
crease in water rates; removal ol
parking meters from streets near
the beach, and a n ordinance re·
gulating s kateboardin.e.
Fro• Page Al
SCUBA •••
called in for aerial recon·
naissance .
About three hours after the
time the father and his sons had
entered the waler, Capt. Stauffer
located the body.
The boy was pulled from the
water and no life signs were de-
tected. A coroner's deputy pro--
nounced him dead at the scene.
An autopsy is pending.
INDIVIDUAL EXECUTIVE OFFICES
DOWNTOWN IAGUNA
Designed to house Independent businesses
and to provide complete business services
to tenants and to the public
STOP IN AND GET ACQUAINTED WITH
OUR NEW FACILITIES
Private offices for lease with:
• Reception Service
•Telephone Answering Service
• Secretarial Service
• Conference floom and Xerox
• All Office Equipment Provided
.
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Moderate Cost
8:30·5:30 301 Forest Avenue at Glenneyre
,
·start Looking
fired? Don't
Stop to Worry
By SYLVIA PORTEil
Even though our economy ls recuperatinc from the
1913--75 slump, and employment is now climbing steadily,
many corporations are corrtinuin1 lo cut back on their staffs
o1 ueeutivn and professional employes.
And while these are ..---------.. employes who may be
excellent at performing
a job themselves, they
uslally are at a total
lou about how to rmd
another one . <Un ·
denstandably, it's an
Money's
Worth
area where no one wanLs a lot o( personal ezperience.)
Jt ·a self-evident that being fired is an emotional as well
as fmancial blow. Not so self..evident., stresses Anthony D
Eastman, chairman of the international executive search
firm of Eastman & Beaudine, lnc., is the fact that "an out-
burst of emotion on hearing about an abrupt termination
«>uld have a very negative Impact on the executive's future
success." Eastman's implication is that the last impression
an employe leaves often is the first one tbat comes to mind
when the company is called for a reference.
WHAT, THEN, SHOULD you do if now -or in the
future-this traumatic experience happens to you?
-Recognize that the person giving you the news is ex·
tremely uncomfortable too and try to conduct yourself
calmly. Ask why the action is necess·ary -if your position is
being absorbed into another activity, or what.
-Decide right then wbo should be used a s a reference
and reach an agreement on the exact reasons that will ~
given for your departure -an extremely valuable polnt,
says Eastman. ~
-EXPLAIN MA'M'ERS that are pending in your de·
part.ment that need attention and indicate where you can be
reached regarding any questions that may come up.
-If use of office space is offered to you, accept it as a
useful ~ase for job hunting -and also accept any
secretanal o~ phone-answering service the company offers
In any case, inform your friends and associates in the com-
pany that you are leaving, for they may be able to give you
valuable leads for interviews.
-For psychological as well as practical reasons start
Y.our job search at once. Do not yield to the common te~pta·
tion to .t~ke a short rest or: to go on a trip. "Apart from op-
portunities that may be missed. by delaying this effort,•· ob-
s~rv~ Eastman, "most executives and professionals in this
:ntuat1on are apt to become only more depressed from a
lack of activity."
-Organize your job hunt. starting with a succinct,
well-~ritten resume '!f your previous experience, ac-
complishments and basic personal data. Alon g with your re-
sum~. send a c~vering letter personally addressed to the ex-
ecutive who will make the employment decision -noting
your strengths for his particular firm. Follow up with a
personal phone call within a week or two.
~ AMONG YOUR SOURCES of job interviews:
i (1) Friends and business acquaintances . This is a
highly significant first step often overlooked because of
pride ~nd reluc~ance lo advertise the problem/ Yet, it pro-
bably 1s the quickest way to get the word around in your
field .
(2) Direct approach. Build a li st of companies that
might use your talents and plan mailings to a selected
number each week. Try to tailor your letters to the sPecific
company.
,<3) Respo~ding to ads. This is standard practice, but
don l rely on 1l too much. You may get lost in the r:tost of
replies the ad draws. The best reply lo a blind ad is a short,
~ well written letter indicating your special qualifications. ,i (4) Employment agencies. Most agencies do not
• normally handle positions in the upper salary ranges,
i however, and since they earn a fee only when they supply a
~ successful candidate, they tend to send as many people as
• passible for an interview.
1' • (5) .PROFESSIONAL COUNSELORS who charge fees
~ for helping executives evaluate their potential. This service
• must be vteighed against its expense and your need.
t (6) Executive search firms who work only on assign-
., ments and who do not conduct a search directly for you .
: They work for their corporate clients and are paid only by
• the corporations. .. < • • ~ OPEC's Spending
• ! In U.S. Declines .. o WASHINGTON CAP) -Oil
!Producing nations invested
flust S2 billion in the United
.t6tales during the first six
mionlhs of this year compared '° $11 billion during all or
' • ~Investment
~
: Seminar Set -~
; At Hospital • • Saddleback Community
pital will offer an invest-
ents and finan cial planning
ieminar Wednesday from 10
.m. lo noon in Dining Room
ne of Leis ure World's
ttubhouse Ill.
J. J{arvey Schwitzer, vice prt-
~ent, Security Pacific Na·
nal Bank, and William
gar. attorney and presi·
fent or Saddleback Hospital"s
)Gant of directors, will speak
90 trust services and chaiita·
•l•giving.
• Participants from outside
leisure World may ·call the
~pita!, 837·4500, ext. 4:?'1, ror
leservations. • ~
:Secretarial
r
EService Opens
• • A new secretariat service. pas opened in Laguna Hills.
• Sunshine Secretarial
'&ervlces in Suite 211 in the 4ew EI Dorado Banit build·
'tit, 2S25:i Cabot Road, offers
.iul>ply typing and related
"tMJ,slness aids in their own of-
f'lce and also supply tern·
~ secretarial help to
Jocal b~sinesses.
1974, but a Treasury Depart-
ment official says the coun-
tries are now stepping up
their spending here.
ASST. TREASURY
Secretary Gerald Parsky said
members o( the Organization
of Petroleum Exi>orting
Countries made investments
of $1 .2 billion in July and
August alone.
Last year, OPEC invest-
ments in the United States
totaled $11 bi!Uon -19 per-
cent of their total oil earnings
available for investment .
The 1975 share through
June was just 9 percent, said
Parsky.
Citibank's
Tape Tops
Club Meet
The October meeting of the
Economic Club will be held at
the Community Room of
Home Savings and Loan, El
Toro Road north of the San
Diego Freeway in El Toro at 4
p.m., Friday.
Tbe procram · will feature
the Flrst National City Bank
of New York's monthly tape
"Tbe Sound or the Economy "
a diScussion of vit.al ecooom'lc
!ssuea moderated by John
Daly.
A question and discussion
period following the taped
presenUUon allowa members
and gueab to alr their views.
The meetina cost la $1.SO; f'eoo
servaUpoa are requested by
pbonlng 752-7323, Gue:sta are
welcome.
• ·-
. Monday's
Closing Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
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NASH UA, N.H . CAPl -SandersAs-
&oei ates Tnc., a. major electronics con·
tractor with the Pentagon, has r e-
veJled for the first time that it Is
negotiating for extensive overseas
contracts that may entail millions or
d_ollars in agent tees to foreign na·
t1onals alone.
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. Harold W. Pope. therompany's pre·:
s1dent and chief executive. told a
week end stockholders mtttlng that
lh.e company has been negotiating
W1~~ two unnamed countries for non.
m1htary contracts with "agent fees"
in the · ·multl-mllliondoUarrange.''
•
I
•
ll'I T•...,._.
OAKLAND'S TONY CLINE (84) GR ABS OB BOBBY DOUGLASS (10) AS NE TRI ES TO SET UP.
• ' ' ' Sports Clipped Slwrt
Kings Spank North Stars
INGLEWOOD -l.os Angeles
Kings coach Bob Pulford hopes
his team·s last outing is a sign of
things to come.
"I feel that this game and our
next three home games are all
very important." PuUord said
after the Kings had whipped the
Minnesota North Stars 4·2 Sun-
day night at the Forum.
"J hope we can start on a nice
long winning streak now. If we
can win three of our four upcom-
ing home games. it could be the
shot in the arm we need.··
The Kings, now 6-4. host
Washington Tuesday night, then
also play Pitts burgh and Atlanta
at home before they have to hit
the road again.
Prin~e•• Falls
WNDON -Princess Anne's
horse collided with her husband 's
horse during a cross-country
comi>etition Sunday, and she was
knocked to the ground but not
hurt.
The 25-year·old princess fell off
her horse in com petition at Long
Buckby, in Northamptonshire.
Thi? fall came while the couple
was representing the royal
military academy, Sa.ndhurst.
Their team finished 15th out of 40
rompeting.
Allderson Hired
CINCINNATI -Sparky An-
derson has been rewarded for
piloting the Cincinnati Reds to
their first World Series title in 35
years.
The 41 -year -old Anderson has
signed a new two-year contract .
extending through the 1977
season.
Denlp•eu IJn c hang«>d
NEW YORK -Jack Dempsey,
~mer world heavyweight
boxing champion, was reported
in stable condition early today at
New York University Hospital.
A hospital spokesman said that
the 80-year-old Dempsey. who
held the title from 1919 to 1926,
' Cancer Kills
Race Drive r
Race driver Jimmy
Caruthers , who retun1ed lo
competition after being
hospitalized with cancer last
winter, died of the disease
Sunday at Tustin Community
Hospital. Hewas30.
was resting comfortably and hi s
condition was unchanged since
he was admitted C'arly Saturday.
DempSC'y's family hasdcchn cd
to disclose any details of lhl' ill·
ness.
Bibbs K o l b
TEHRA:"' -Eddie Dibbs upset
defending champion Guillermo
Vilas of Argentina 6·3. 6-I in the
se m ifin als of the $100,000
Aryamehr tennis tournament
Sunday.
Solomon Win•
PERTH. Au stralia -~larold
Solomon bPal Sandy Mayer 6·2.
7-6, 7-5 Sunday and won the $7 ,000
first prize in a $46,000 indoor t en·
nis tournament.
Women'• Golf
RANCHO SANTA FE -Ma ry
Bea Porter of Phoenix relin -
quished al l but a stroke of a seven-
stroke lead. but then recovered to
tum back a late c haHenge from
veteran Donna Caponi Young
Sunday and win the $53,000 J .. adies
Classic.
Golf Winn..,.•
ORLANDO, Fla. -Getting
their birdies in batches Sunday,
Jim Colbert a nd Dean Rerram
turned back all challengers to
v.•in the $200.000 National Team
Championship a t Walt Disney
World.
The sawed-off shotmakers -
Col~rt is fiv e-feet-eight, and
Ref ram is two inches shorter -
fired a bes t-ball S4 on the Disney
Magnolia course in the final
round to post a tournament re-
rord 36-under-par 2S2
(.albfor1.~lr..,.,, U0,000
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Col•·Schl ... , 110,J(M
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Rae«" of Champions
Andretti Eases
To Formula Win
RIVERSIDE -Bobby Allison
and Mario Andretti set r ecord
times in winning their events in
the third -and m ost closely com-
petitive yet -Inte rnational Race
of Champions before 56,000 at
Riv e r s ide Int e rnational
Speedway.
Allison won the third event Sun-
day in the four ·race series
averaging 99.702 miles per hour in
his sil ver Camaro, while Andretti
breezed to victory in the season's
final Formula SQO() road race with
an average speed in the 100-mile
event of 123.136 m .p.h. Andretti
piloted a Viceroy-Lola.
Traiting Allison in the I ROC
r ace f or equally pre pare d
Camaros, was Al Unser with A.J .
Foyt in third pl <1ce.
The win was Allison's second
IROC76·milevict ory at Rivers ide
in two years. It enabled him to
take 25 points into the fourth and
final IROC r ace at Daytona
Beach, F1 a .. on Feb. 13 .
Foyt , who began the race in the
11th row, picked his way through
the pack to finish third and build
his IROC lead to 31 points. In third
plareon points is Andretti with 23,
followed by Bobby Unser and
Benny Parsons. 21 each.
Andretti won his event speeding
in 15.676 seconds ahead of his
teammate, Al Unser. The results
from third to sixth place were pro-
tested by England's Tony Brise,
but his protest was disallowed.
After Brise. who was running'
third on the 40th and fmal lap, had
to quit because his car apparently
ran out or gas, the racer's team
manager , Sid Taylor, protested
the race procedure was not
followed when an extra pP..ce lap
was added and not srored, result-
ing in Brise's fuel shortage.
Sund1y'1 Nw1ti ot t""' Cellfornl• Grlftd Prl11
.II Al,..r51de llller1Wtlo,..t AKe-y:
1. MMlo AndrelU, LOI•, l 19.<t50. l:tl.13' mcitl. ?.
Al Uflwr, Loi•. 111,•!oO . .0. J. Brliln "-d....,,.
L.011. 11,300 • .0. •. Jor.n CMllOll. ~rt:11, U,100, .o 5, Jolln ""°t1ot1. L.ot1. ti.KIO . .0. 6. TGny
BrlM, Loi•, 11,l!oO. :J'I I. 0.fllly Oll0-1$. loll.
'2.JOD. Jt. t . Jor> WoOOner, T•kln. 11.600, J9. «I.
R1rdy t..wli,. LOii, ll,«>0. 39.
II, OorOofl Jollll<OC:k. L.o l•. 11.300. l't. 12. Epla<
w.ltres. lole, $1 ,tSO. J7. ll, Sk"ter MclCl1·
~!cli;. L.ol•. ,1,100, JI, ''· John Gtllln, l.ole.
$1,DOO, 31. 15. ~ Follmer, Lenee. $900, »..
17, Elliott Forti.!.·Rob!fl$0<!, l.ol•. SIOO. l5. , •.
Jody S<hl<llter, Sh1dow. MOO. lJ. 19. Binny
Scott. LDI•. MOO. 22. 10. Aob E.iorl, Loi.I, $100. JO.
TOP live POlnt $CO rers in SCCA-USAAC
~ .. sooo ~" ......... 1c .... ~"' -
Rec1rnM1 m , Anclr.111 1•s. "' Ul'!Mr 1•1. J.c•i. 011 .. r n. Wtl~1 ti0.
Just Ran the Plays,
Says New LA Hero
LOS ANGELES -Culle n
Bryant fought and won a battle
with the Na tional Footb<;tll
l..ea~ue hi erarchy to stay wtth
he Los An geles Rams and the
big halfback now feels himself a
true me mber or the team.
Bryant s.cored two to.uchdo.wns
and aided 1n other sconng dnves
Sunday as the Ra~s whjpped t.he
~e"'' Orleans Saints 38·14 . with
their greatest point production of
the sca:.on .
They now s tand S·l, threl'
~ames ahead or the nearest
rivals in :'ol F'C West. _
"I f Pe l hk e I 've finally got 1t
put together,·· d et'larE'd the
former Color ado star who in the
pre.season had been awarded to
the Detroit I.ions by NF'l. Co m·
missioner Pete Rozelle as com-
pensation for wide receiver Ron
Jessie.
.. Once you get on the rield. you
just try to get yourselr together
and I didn 't worry about the
lit igation,'· said the 2~-pound
back.
J essie had played out his op-
tion at Detroit a nd signed with
the Rams. Rozelle then awarded
Bryant to the Lions, but the
player went to court, got a pre-
Limi nary ruling in his favor and
the commissioner then changed
the award to a draft choice.
Bryant had sco r ed o ne
touchdown on ki ck returns in
both 1973 and 1974, but not before
the New Orleans game had he
St'Ored £rom scrimmage as a pro.
"Really, all I had todowas run
the plays ... he said of his jarring
bursts that scored from three and
Another Shutout
Charg ers Skunked Again
• OAKLAN D <APJ -San Diego
coach Tommy Prothro says the
Oakland RaideNi a re "very de.
finitely better this lime than
last time in San Di ego."
The ll aide r s beat the
Chargers 25·0 Sunday and 6-0 in
San Diego Oc t. 5 -the first
time in its 16 years that an op.
ponent has shut out San Diego
twice in one season.
The home opener victory for
the Raiders. 4·2, moved them
a head of Kansas Ci t y and
Denver, both 3-3. in the
American Confe re nce West . The
Raiders play at Denver next
Sunday, then have six of their
last seve n National Football
League games here.
"The Raiders· line got off bet-
ter, their runne r s ran better
and their special teams played
better." said Proth ro . ''We
didn't do much of anything."
The Raiders got safeties in
the first and last quarters and
in between scored on plunges of
one and two yards by Pete
Banaszak and a 45-run pass
from K e n Stabler to Cliff
Branch.
The injury-de pleted Chargers
•were held to a net of 17 yards
passing and 157 rushin g and got
inside Oakland's 35 only once.
helped by a IS-yard penalty in
the second quarter. They stalled
on the 17 and Ray Wersching
was wide on a 34 ·yard field goal
lry
0 0 0 0-0
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a.t.--!.•lety Pertee l.ck!ed lfl efld fOtW
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AUSHING~•n Olf-90, eo_.. 11...tl . Qu.uv1•n
!<Ml, Melthew• ._11 O.kleno, v .. EeQl'lefl l~I.
'"iuDCl.lnl 1-l<I, BM•ll•k '-1'. C. Olvt!. ll·ll.
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FrelW J+o. t. (),ff;l..,d. Si.Diet" 1).10-1. 111,
. ,,.
one-yard out ... The blockina was
tremendous.''
He alternates at ballback with
Jim Bertelsen as coach Chuck
Knox sendis his plays to
quarterback James Han'il via
tbe halfbacks.
The victory over New Orleans
was the fifth straight for the
Rams, who lost their opener to
Dallas after being tabbed as pre·
season favorites to reach the
Super Bowl.
Knox te rmed the victory over
New Orleans, '·probably our best
performance overall of the
season."
Still New Orleans is only 1·5
and now the nation's television
vi t.>w e rs can judge for
themselves if the Rams are liv·
ing up to preseason notices. They
play next on Nov. 3 al
Philadelphia on nationaJ'TV.
"There is no such thing as be-
ing at a stage where you are
satisfied," declared Knox even
though his club had outgained the
Saints341 yards to173.
Defen s ive e nd Jack
Youngblood s acked Manning
twice and the New Orleans
quarterback also was caught
behind the line a third time.
"1 feel like 1 almost didn't even
play, because I didn't get an op-
portunity to throw deep at all,"
the Saints quarterback comment-
ed. "'Their defense is something
else. But we know there's sWI a
good portion of the season lert and
we can salvage something out of it ...
NtwOrleloM
LOS Al'lgrit°' ur. -F:G Oe.msu.er :n ' ' 10 ,.
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LA -&f"JMlt S....., !Detnpwykk kl
LA -~1i.tt11 run ~Dell"OW\'llickl
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LA -ICleln lc.-11 from H1rr!1 IDe~kkkl
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INDIVIDUAL LEADERS RU!i~l NG -New Ori"•"'· 51~~ 11·1'.
Mc.Ne it 6-1•. Jont'S >-21. L.os A~. BryMt llMJ.
8ff1e1_, 11-S6, S<ri-r 5--IS. Mc.CulC"-' 11·».
RECEIVING -N"w Ori._, Bunllft ).11.
Mc.NllUt 2·11, ,..,..'°" 2-11, Slr.c:Nln l·fl. Lo'.\ An911ff Jel!.141 l-!oO. l(lelt1 ).)1, Mtc:uw.etl J.11,
JKlllOll 1-21 , Bry•nt 1·16.
PASSING -New Orlt•t11. ~""' 10-1 .. 1, IS
yW<h; Clp.1 t·l..O. 11. l.o\ Ar>ge~ tQnls ll-JIMI,
U6; J•-tsclii 0.1..0; McCutchlorl 0.1..0.
O..llr PIJot ~"!IQ 0., !'llCIWl'lf ~-,..,.
LA'S JIM BERTELSEN (45) IS CAUGHT AS BOB POLLARD (82) MOVES TO ASSIST.
Pan · Ams Over--Almost
MEXICO CITY CAP> -The
VJI Pan American Games, which
will go into the books as another
show of athletic might by the
United States, closed Sunday
with a program of s tartlingly
dramatic fireworks and colored
floodlight s how at darkened
Aztec a Stadium .
It was just as well the li ghts
were supposed to be out in the
105,000-seat s t adium for the
cer emony, since most burned out
the night before in the middle of a
crucial soccer game.
The Saturday n ight soccer
game that ebded with Brazil and
Mexico tied l ·l in a darkened
stadium was ordered replayed on
Wednesday. when the Pan Am
Games Organizing Committee
and International Amateur Soc-
cer Federation r ejected a de-
cision to award gold medals to
both teams .·
"The decision by the officials
at the Games probably got the m
out oC the stadium alive," said a
Pan Am official, who asked not to
be identified. "Mexico played a
good game, but Brazil was de·
fmitely on the offensive when the
lights mysteriously went out.··
Chicanery by the partisan
crowd of more than 100,000 was
not ruled out in the matter of t~
power failure. The game, in ~
overtime period, was interrupted
twice earlier by fans on the rield
and frenetic demonstrations.
The decision to award golds to
both teams was generaJly un·
popular with the crowd, but some
~eemed happy e nough that Mex:
1co got the gold medal, no matter
how. Caruthers, whose r acing
brother, Danny, was killed in a
J971 midget car crash. re-
ceived cobalt treatment last
December and January but
returned to the tracks for
several races Including th e Jn .
dtanapGlis 500 In which he
·vikings (5·0) Tackle Bears (1·4)
But Mexico City's Sunday
morning newspapers blasted the
decision , and one carried a ban-
ner headline '· absurdo dec!ision.''
Those kinds of problems were
t y pical of these sometimes
mixed up Games. '1
But the one hallmark achieve-
ment here was by the highly
ravored United States. Aftet>11&
sputtering start that round Ute
Americans trailing the aJht.
bilious Cubans, the young UnJt@d
States athletes, some of them
barely in the ir teens, turned Oh
fllllshed 14th. .
I n late Septem her , he began
havine stomach pains and two
weeks ago he was admitted to
tbe hoe pl la I here. Doctors said
complication s included
11Deumonia. Caruthers was
the son or Doug Caruthers,
former race car owner and
mechanic. .
••tt's hard to believe he bat·
tied and whipped It and got it
a&aln," h11 father said. "I
e~'lbellovoll'• fair."
CHICAGO (Af'l -The
Chi cago Bears, their running at-
tack sharpened by a pair or re·
st>rve backs, have awarded start-
ing assignments to Mike Adamle
and Roland Harper.
Adamle, acquired rrom the
Jets, and llarper, a surprising
t1lh·round draft pick, Jack the
sl:tture o f , say. a Chuck
Foreman, who will come to town
tonight with the Minnesota Vik·
lngs for a National Football
League game.
But, with s tartina: runners
I
Walter Payton and Cid Edwards
sidelined by injuries. the pair of
reserves combined for 196 yards
On T'1 To"lght
Channel 7at 8
last week in a 34·3 loss to the Pit-
tsburgh Steelers. Adamle's 110
ya rd s marked the top
performance in three years by a
Bears' ball carrier.
The Bears. 1·4, are 11-point un-
derdogs again st their 5 -0
northern neighbors in the NFL'a
' I
l
Central Division. rt was just
'three weeks ago that Fran
Tarkenton shredded the Chicago
11econdary and led the Vikings to
a 28·3 victory.
But the rebuilding Bears, with
14 rookies on the squad, figure
they can start winnistg if they
eliminate the errors and
penalties that have plagued them
recently.
"We took a step forward to-
day," coach Jack Pardee said
after the loss in Pittsburgh. "Jr
we keep that up, we'll win some
•
football games this year. We
made good progress hitting and
staying together . We were inches
away today. We're so close ...
yetso far.··
Although Adamle and Harper
we re rewarded with starting
roles. Payton is off the injured
list and figures to play. The
Rears listed dercns ive ends
Ri chard Htrris <knee) and Mike
Hartenstine (foot) as probable,
Edwards (ankle) questionable
and wide receiver Ron Shanklin
<knee> out for the season.
the Power. ''
American swimmers braid by critics wtthin their own •
try as weak and second-r' .,
crushed the opposlUon by Wl ·
ning all but two of 29 gold medals
-the most ever by any team i'n
these quadrenn ial Western
Hemisphere games.
'
~addleback
EDITION
Today's Closl•g
N.Y. Stoek8
• • ' . • •
• • i
• • • :
' • • •
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MAC Backer to
1ly llVDI NIEDZIEISIU
Ol' .. DllUrP"l•MMt
.El Toro Homeowners Associa·
lion President Bill Monoson says
be will resign his orficc tonight in
proteslover public apathy toward
plans to etllablisb a municipal ad·
visory council (MAC) in his com-
munity.
Monoson, 37. or 23422 Dune
Mear Road, was the prime mover
behind the El Toro MAC, a pro-
po&a1 which he said dJed ~ause
of alack of public support.
.. I am thoroughly fed up with
the apathy. It was my personal in-
terest to see that something was
done so we could have a decent
community. But the people don't
give a damn and I have better
things to do with my time, ..
Monosonsaid.
Moooson, who served as presi·
dent of the association since
February, •aid be intends to sub-
mit hllf resignation during a meet·
in1 scheduled ror 7:30 p.m . in
Room L ·l or Los Alisos In·
termediate School. 25171 Moor
Ave., Mission Viejo.
The purpose or the meeting, OS·
tensibly, is to approve the word-
ing of a petition (or th.e MAC which
Monoson says no longer bas a
chance.
"That's my own opinion. The
defeatist attitude ls my own
rather lban the boa.rd of dirtt·
toni'' MOUJIOOn explained.
The. bomeowl\er leader said be
bttame discouraged when he
failed to eet support from Lake
Fol-est residents who are in the El
Toro county service area.
Lake Forest homeowners
earlier appeared willing to join
with a Saddleback Valley·wide
MAC. But they were not ready to
• Ill Protest ··1 ..
throw in their lot with an El Toro
MAC.
"The people are so wrapped up
in street name changes and the
name or their post office and other
things like that, that they're fail·
ing lo recognize the big issues,"
Monoson said.
Sharon Bid art. a director or the
El Toro 1-lomeowners Associa·
tioo, said the petition would be
submitted for approval despite
I
Monoson"•intentiontoresi,en. 1 I
"I'm pen1onally for 1tandini
down in front of the K·Mart ani:J j
getting signatures, ''shesald. rr the petition plans.,I
materialize, homeowner. wilf
have to collect signatures from10
percent of the registered vQters ln
County Service Area&.
Pending a successful outcome ·
or the petition drive, the MAC ll-·
CS.. RESIGN, Page AZ)
• ~'ount1ans on ost • anel
~"~ Pitel 51.tl l"'llot• Young Firema n and Friend
Sparky, an 18·moitth·old Dalmatian and his master,
Timmy Carmack, 5, of Mission Viejo, arrived at a dog
show in Laguna Beach Saturday intent on winning in the
best costume category. Sparky sort of fouled things up
on the way to the judging area. He pawed off his
fireman 's hat.
Widow, 83, Kept
Prisoner in Home
NEW ORLEANS CUPIJ -
Police say Edna Halbedel, an
83·year·old wealthy widow, was
kept heavily sedated in a locker
room in her home for two years
by two men, one or whom was the
sole beneficiary in her will.
Firemen e nded her confine·
ment by breaking through a win·
dow in her French Quarter home
on a tip from a family friend who
became suspicious because she
was not allowed to see Mrs.
Halbadel. ·
She was hospitalized and re·
ported in fair condition today.
\ Authorities still had many un-
answered questions about the aJ.
Jeged conspiracy to keep the
1woman prisoner in her own
·home.
"It's going to be pretty horrible
when it's all revealed," said a
spokesman for the district at·
Goldwater
torney·s office. "There are some
doctors involved in this thing.
They just had her all doped up in
this room -no visitors or phone
calls or anything."
John R . Villarrubia. 42. a
publicity agent n a med in Mrs.
Halbedel's will, and Noel J .
Dube. 44, a school teacher. were
arrested and charged with ag·
gravated kidnaping. Their lx>nds
were set at $200,000 each.
A special grand jury was ex·
peeled to meet Tuesday lo study
the case, including a disclosure
by a defense attorney that the
wife of District Attorney Harry
Connick executed Mrs .
Halbadel's will.
Attorney Raymond McGuire,
who represented Villarrubia and
Dube during a bond hearing, said
the will had been executed by
Anita Connick.
Mexico
Jungle
CQmhed
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. o.u, P'llet SUtt
An extensive air and sea
search was being pushed today
for a m issing plane on the west
coast of Mexico that carried five
persons. including two promi·
nent businessmen from Hunt·
ington Harbour and the wife of
one of them.
Believed aboard the twin·
engine Cessna 320A were Steven
Dikeman, owner of Look
Properties in Sunset Beach,
Bruce Killian, president of the
Acme Wiring Co. in Garden
Grove and Killian's wife Bonnie.
The plane vanished on a flight
from Manzanitlo to Puerto
Vallarta.
Carl Tobin, vice president of
Acme, said that Dikeman and
Killian had left from Huntington
Harbour in early October oo a
57·Coot yacht owned by Roger
Smith, a former Huntington
Harbour man.
He said they were in Mexico to
look into som e real estate.
Tobin said that Killian's wife,
Bonnie, had flown to Mexico lo
join her husband to celebrate an
anniversary.
Tobin, a life-long friend and as·
sociate of Killian. said the
Killians have two daughters.
l.isa. 15. and Lauren, 13 . He sai..d
the Oikemans also have two
children. Pamela, 17, and Steve
16.
The plane ~'a :s apparently
piloted by a Denver dentist, Dr.
Paul l.undel , whosf wife also was
aboard.
Tobin said the ill·fated flight
took off at 6 : 15 p.m. Oct. 18 and
that weather conditions were
good. He said the twin·engine
craft was equipped with beeping
devices but that nothing has been
heard of it.
John Hamilton. an employe of
the Don Koll Co. in Newport
Beach who is coordinating the
search . said that the search has
been narrowed down to about 50
square miles over rugged jungle
terrain.
Hamilton said that there are J•I
private aircraft from Orange
Coast cities assisting two C · J30s
<See PLANE, Page A2 )
Forgery Probed
_,
-·
Court Jester Bumbled
With crowd obviously enjoying it, Roma-
n.ian tennis star llie Nastase bows in mock
humility to his conqueror, Australia 's
Evonne Goolagong, following her 7.5 vie·
Lory over him in Mission Viejo. Action
took place Saturday at Marguerite
Recreation Center where battle of sexes
wl!s filmed for television. Nastase, who
clowned his way through the match, was
limited lo one serve a nd had to cover the
doubles court on his side of the net as
handicap in lhe singles match.
F ord Greets
Anwar Sadat
In Ce r emony
WASHINGTON (AP) -Egyp.
lian President Anwar Sad;:it, the
second Egyptian head or state to
visit the United States. got a
warm personal welcome today
from Pre»ident Ford. who called
their m eeting a signal that pro·
gress toward peace in the Middle
East ' 'will not stop.··
ln colorful ceremonies at the
White House, F ord hailed the
Egyptian president ·s wisdom ,
sincerity and moderation.
Sadat will stay two days in
Washington before visiting ~ew
York City, Chicago and Houston
and then returning to address a
joint session of Congress.
Sadat applauded the Presi-
dent's remarks and declared that
progress toward peace since he
a nd Ford met last June in
Salzburg "could be cons idered a
turning point in Ara1'.ls raeli re.
Jations ... He said he came to the
United States "with an open
heart."
Trio Snatch Purse
From Toro Invalid
An elderly woman propelling
her wheelchair along a Laguna
HjJls road was robbed of S38 dur-
ing the weekend in what Orange
County Sheriff 's officers
des cribe as the most callous
purse snatching incident they
have ever inves tigated.
Deputies s aid three young men
Wom an Gets
P rison T e rm
For Burglary
A Saddleback Valley woman
accused on arrest of passing an
estimated $20,000 in bad checks
was sent to state prison today
after pleading guilty in Orange
County Superior Court to lesser
charges.
.st o pped their car and ap·
proachcd Mrs. Addie H. Little-
john. 79, or 23262 Bookland Lape,
F.I Toro. as she propelled her
wheelchair along Calle de Los
C<iball eros in Laguna llills.
Mrs. 1.ittlcjohn told officers
th:.:it the young men snatched the
purse containing $38 from the
handle of her wheelchair and
then drove off at high speed.
In another purse snatching inci·
dl'nl a Laguna Hills I.eisure
World rs ident was robbed during
th(' wet'kend of p purse containing
S.10 by a young man who fled on
root .sheriff's of ricers said.
Deputies said Lorene I-Jelen
t.awrencc, 68, of 29T Calle
Aragon. was robbed as she
w:.:ilked on Paseo de Valencia
near the Laguna Hills post office.
Co ast
•
1'1 can't discuss my wife's legal
practice," Connick said. "But I
can tell you that my wife does not
represent either of the arrested
subjects ...
The spokesman for Connick's
office said a nurse who reported·
ly attended to Mrs. Ha1bedel and
administered the sedatives also
was being questioned.
UXBRIDGE. England <APJ -
A Florida man charged with
possessing forged U.S. Treasury
bills with a face value of more
than $12 million was kept in
custody today after a bail hear·
ing was told "an American syn·
dicate" is involved and the case
is being investigated in three
other countries. Robert James
Heller, 41, was ordered held for
another hearing on Nov . 4.
After the cere m onies on the
south lawn of the White House,
Ford and Sadat began a private
($ee SADAT, PageA2)
Judge Kenneth Williams or·
dered a prison term of one to 15
years for Charlene Laura Allen,
JO, of 25691 Minoa Ori ve, Agean
Hills alter accepting her plea of
guilty to second degree burglary.
Mrs. Allen was to have faced
trial today on charges of grand
theft, forgery and burglary.
Weath er
•
To Speak
Ai Chamber .
U.S. Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr.
(R-Calif.) will be the featured
speaker Friday at the Sad-
dleback Valley Chamber of Com·
merce general membership
breakfast. ,
Goldwater's subject is "The
War American Business Must
Win.·· He will appear al 7:30 a .m .
ia the Mission Viejo Country
Club.
The Republican Congressman
ls mentioned as a possible can·
dldate for U.S. Senate seat held
by John V. Tunney CD-Calif.}.
Goldwater is lhe oldest son of
Arizona Senator Barry M .
~ld'waler. Reservations for hfs
'8Jk may be made by calling the
Chamber office~ 887 ""'753.
"She was an unwilling ac·
complice,.. he said.
Tree Claims
2nd Victim
ONEONTA, N .Y. CAP) -
Almost six years after his mother'
died when her auto erashed into a
lTee alongside a rural road near
here, John Simcox, 21, di~ 'When
his car struck the same tree
police said. •
Anna Simcox died Dec.17, 1969,
when her auto struck the tree
about a mll• rrom the family
home in Otsego County. Her aon's
fatalcreshoc.curred:&mday.
Deaths Cli111b
Hurricane in Mazatlan
MAZATLAN, Mexico CU P!) -Officials said to-·
, day 27 persons were killed by Hurricane Olivia which
battered this Pacific Coast port Saturday. Damage
was estimated at $8 million,
With all electric power cut off and telephone lines
down, Mazatlan was declared a disaster zone.
At least 17 other persons wua Injured and 10,000
houses suffered storm or water dajiiage,
No Americans were reported !\illed or injured,
Among building• damaged by the llurricane was
the loca l jail. Two prisoners were reported killed
when a jail wall collapsed.
Federal relief teams poured in o th port Sunday
and a massive relief effort was un er way today.
• ,,
Arresting officers said the
c heck c harges stemmed from
her defrauding of the Bank of
America, the Security Pacific
National Bank and the Southern
Calilornia First National Bank.
Officers said the burglary
charges s temmed from alleged
Illegal entry into the offices of
two Lag_una Hills physicians.
King in Alaska
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI)
-King Olav V of Norway M ·
rived Sunday ni~ht for a 64 -hour
tour of Alaska, including a visit
to the north slope oil fields. The
king will be the Cirst royal guest
at the Trans-Alaska Plpeline pro-
ject.
Partly cloudy throug h
early Tuesday becoming
mostly fair in the after·
noon. Not much change in
temperature. Highs 73 to
78 . Lows 50 lo the low 60s.
I NSIDE TODA 't'
Bombs went off in about
nine buildings early lhis
morning, in 1Vt:w York,
Washington and Chicago. A
Puerto Rican group clmmed
credit. See story A4 .
ladex _,., ... ... _
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) I
••
'
}t2 DAIL V PILOT SB Monday. Oetobtl 'ZT, 117S •
"!lt'd fl :ti.:' cr1nd!111111.... a sligh.l .\\Ind.
h1 ).!h \t•mp1·r.1\tll"t' ~ind IO\V h urn1d1ly or
~1bnul llJ p1·rtt·n1 ht'lped spur ;.i brush
l"irt· ~:1L urd i1 .' t /l.1l ~vore hed 1~ ~1c res of
r:ind \\"t'"' 11f 1 hi• S;1n DiC'go !·'1·ee·wa:v
nffrai11p.s. ~1 t·t·or<lin g to Orange ('ounty
firemen. l l.s1n g SC'ven fire engines and a
bulldol't'r . lht•y brought lht• rlam es under
t'tlnlrol in t \VO hours. Cause of the f1rl.' is
tLI1tlcr 1nvt1:-tig;itio11.
111 ! \\ 1 •v n 1 ll 1 · 1.; 1 'J'q ro ; Hll~I _'_A~l::i <::_'i'.:"'._'I_:' <::_ir'..:k~· '::'.::":::-'---------------------~
f 'ro"' Pagf! A J
SADAT .•.
:;essi1ln in lhl· oval offi('e "''llh
St>l·retary of Sl.1lt• ll l'nry A. K.i :.s-
1ngl'r.
As tht' pr<'~1dt•nts mE't, about
JOO Ar ~··h ;,uul Irani an studt:!nls
chant1ni.: J)1lwn \Vith Sadat"
;.lnd 'l.nng l.1\'e Palestine.··
marl·hed a half mile throu ~h
do\\.'nlo\.\·n \\r'i.1 :-.hington to th{'
' White lluust•
The d e n1on s tration was
s ponsored Uy lhl' Iranian Stu-
• dents Assoria tio n and the
; "Organization of Arab Students in
the lJnited Slates and Canada,
which sea id rl'l'ent Sinai peace ac-
cords post• .. grave implications
for the AriJb national liberation
:Hrui;:gle ...
:\fler lhl' meeting, as Sadat's
motorcaclt• le ft the White House,
the demons trators gathered
along Pennsylvania Avenue and
<"hant{'(f : "Sadat is a U.S. puppet,
Sadat is a U.S. puppet.''
From the back seat of his
limousine. Sadat s miled and
, \lo'aved at the protesters.
' Sadat. who arrived Sunday to
t begin his 11 -day visit to the Unit-
ed States, spent the night at
Williamsburg, Va. A state dinner
!at the White House was
::;chedull?'d for tonight for Sadat
'and his w1£e .
In the south-lawn ceremonies,
• ~adal s;ucl thl' new Sinai accord
· \\•hich Kissin ger helped negotiate
: between Egypt and Israel "will
he a very import ant milestone on
• the road to peace in our area ...
'.'loting his "'arm person<.11
(riends hip ,.,,ith the Egyptian
Jeader. r~ord <.1greed that "much
Eas bet>n achieved .. and called
Sadat·s vi sit ··a s}·mbol of the
ilew dim('nsions Or our rcla-
;lions ."
, .Sadat in turn told Ford that
,' '"hat you h<t ve already done'"
)las been a "great cvt•nt" for the
..l'\1iddle East . which he dt!scrilx>d
..as "the most dangerous area in
_the "'hole ,,·urlrl. ··
. .\ cru"·d of tourists. diplomats
_,and other visitors waved U.S.
.and Egyptian fla~s and ap-
plauded a s Ford and Sadat re-
•viewed an honor guard.
Fro• Pagf! Al
• '.PLANE ••.
•in the search. J-fc s aid that pilots
·from Orange County ·are doing
& "a magnificc.>nt job.··
.. Hamilton added that ••a
: tremendous amount of red-tape
from the Mt•:'i'.ican government
! has hampered the search." •
ORANGE COAST •
DAILY PILOT
TIMOr.,.co ... 1 l)~·I • P<•ol,•••1 .... 11.~11 •·,-._ lfll' Ne,.., P•••'· ,, po>bl•""*"'ll• '"" Oo-
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I
Robert N. Weed
p, ~•!<!Ont ~"° P utlll"'°·•
Jack R. Curlry
\II(;~ P••l~nl •n<I c;..,,.,,., ""'MU"'
Thoma~ Kee\111
[O•I<••
ThOmas A. Murptune
,,.~n~Q•no ln''~'
OWlr1esH.Loos Ric.hardP.Nall jl,~l.!'ll"'I Mln•QlllO C"o\O<\
sa-ddt.bKk V•lteyOfticl'
U2QI L• Pa1 R-•t!>.n0t.oo>t1~"1f
Other Offices
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Prince to Inherit
Troubled Nation
:\fA.DRID , Spain (AP ) -
Pr1nct' Juan C:irlos de Borbon. in
line to lake over from the
stri('kE'n Gt'n f'ranc1sro Franco,
.... ,11 inhent an office full of pro-
blems, a nation pressing for
SOC'iaJ and pohl1cal change and
lhe risk of failing aJm05t !:>('fore
he gets started .
Rut the 37-year-old princE' will
get some opportunities never
open to Franco because or in-
tC'rnational disapproval of the
y,·ay he established his rcgimt•
~lnd rontrolled it for more than 36
yt>ars.
\Vithout Franco, S pa in 's
chances will improve for enter-
ing thE' European Common
Market, the North AUanlic Trea-
ty Organization and the rom-
munity or democratic nations.
Diplomatic relations with the
Soviet Union are likely. Spain
17 Arrested
In '&okie
Ring' Raid
The prE'sidenl of a Santa Ana
mobile home dealership and the
rlealership"s manager were
~mong 17 persons arrl~led fo'r i-
day in a crackdown on an alleged
Sl million-a -month 1...us Angeles
bookmaking ring.
While Robert Coulter, JO, presi~
dt>nt of Orange Crl'Sl l\1obi\e
I-tomes. 909 N . lf<.1rbor Blvd ..
Santa Ana . "''i.I S among the ar-
restees. poli ce said he was a bet-
ting suspect . not a bookmaking
SllSpE'r t. ,
It was Coulter and Robert
Brown. 28, Oran~e CrC's t ·s
manager, who placed $20.000
worth of bets with allt'ged
bookmaker .<\rt Levitt. 53, of Los
AngelE's. police cl<1imed.
And placing bets is just as il-
legal as book in g them , Lo s
AngE'les Deputy Di s trict At·
lorney James Grodin said today.
·'\\'e normally don't go after
those "'ho place bcls,"" Grodin
admitted.
"But it is our feeling that major-
players are the ones that make it
so profitable for bookies and thus
feed organized crime:· he added.
The majo r players Grodin
spoke of were JO alleged bettors,
including Coulter and Brown .
who kept the phones ringing at
acC'used bookmaker f,evitt "s
establishmE'nt last week.
Between the world se ries. col -
lege football and professional
football. an undercover agent
plant in Levitt ·s back room was
kept busy rerording hl•ts -and
telephone conversations, Grodin
said.
By the end of the week, 1 he vice
orricers felt they had enough
evidence to charge the 17 person~
with cons pirac y to commit
bookmaking, a charge that af
reels bettor and bookmaker
equally.
Coulter and Brown were not
the heaviest a lleged bettors
snared by the police, acC'ording
to Grodin.
David Seldich and William
J\fcClellan, operators of the
Trans Western Distributing Co.
in nearby El Monte purportedly
placed S90.ooo worth or bets
bet .... ·een them in 28 call s to
Le\'itt ':s west Los Angeles book.
Hal Brown. a vice pre1ident or
American International Pie·
tures, allegedly bet $15,000 in 17
phone calls during the pas t
months.
All the alleged bettors as well as Levitt and ~Ix of his employes
were arraigned Friday and en-
tered Innocent picas, accord.Ing
to Grodin.
/\' E Jr'S A NA /, Y!;/ S
probably will get Gibraltar back
from Britain.
But befo re the prince can
eslablish himself as King, he
must firs t live down the idea that
he is, as the Spanish joke goes.
Juan Carlos the Rrief. meaning
ht~ is not l':'Cpecled to last long.
Crrdibility as a capable leader
m:1y be one of his first tests.
(lne :irea "''here the prince is
C'ertain to encounter a credibililY
problem is the indeper:idenc_e-
m ind e d Basque region 1n
the north. Basque separatists
view Juan Carlos as an extension
of Franro and because of this
hold him responsible as well for
the execution in September or
two RasQue terrorists, convicted
o(killing poli<'e.
Opposition against Juan Carlos
could show up in the relatively
~·E'althy Catalan region around
Rarcelona. Catalans express dis-
gust with what Fran.co has ca_lled
a nl:'ressity -the unity of Spain.
"Franco·s successor must
mend the regionalis m problem
or thE're will be no unity,·· sald a
('.ala Ian lawyer.
Knowled~eable politicians say
Juan Carlos should have no trou-
ble shedding the image of 1'T<in -
<"o"s hand-picked successor, who
,\·as sperially schooled. trained
militarily and guided lo swear to
political prinriples f'ranco laid
do.,..'n.
· ff the prince <'~ln establish a
political opl•n1ng. get a stron~ but
11be ral -m1nded government
.,..·orking and demonstrate to the
µulitical oppos ition he is not just
:_l poor imitation of Franco. he
may make it.·· one government
uffic1~1 said. "Juan Carlos must
makt• thE' C'Ountry believe he 1s
going to change things ...
wast Woman
Recovering
After Crash
A Newport Beach woman is in
satis factory condition in Tustin
Community Hospital today as a
result of an automobile accident
in Irvine Friday.
r~rances June Richley, 46. of
104 Via Antibes in Nev.•port
Reach i s e:'i'.pected to be
transferred out of intensive care
in the next few days, a hospital
spokesman said.
Mrs. RiC'hley was a passenger
in ri car driven by Judith J . Rurf
of Tu s lin which collided
broadside with a car driven by
Marianne Russell , 39, or 26422
Via Oamasca, Mission Viejo
Thl' colli ~ion injured Mrs .
Richley and Mrs. Ruff, police
s aid . Mr s . Ruff was not
hospitalized. the hos pital
s pokesman said.
Capo Schools
Take Day Off
The Capi~trano Unified School
Distri ct is the only school district
in Orange County observing to·
day as Veterans Day.
The board of education ordered
1 hat schools bE' c losed today amid
C'oncerns that parents and stu·
dents would abuse the Veterans
Day holiday if it were beld on
Nov . JI.a Tuesday.
Trustees reason ed that a
p('rtcntage of students would
take the Monday, Nov. 10, ofr,
too, thus disrupting classes.
El Toro
Honors
Senior
El Toro lligh SC'hool senior Jim
i\1;.\rker has won the school's
Rict·ntf·nnia/ Seniors contest and
will now compete ror a $10,000
~rand prize schol3rship, acco~d·
ing to Maureen Engelhard; a.ssts·
tanl prinripal.
Shell Oil Company is sponsor-
ing the nationwide scholarship
t'Onlest. for which high school
students are compiling bicenten-
nial "minules", like the minute-
long C'ommercials sponsored by
tht"ull l·o1npany.
1'o win El Toro·s contes t .
~arker wrote a composition in
the form of the company"s biccn-
t11nn1iil comm(•rcials. J.le also
"''rot(' a commentary on lhe re-
ll'\·anct• uf his lh<'mt· llnd scored
\\l'll un ,1 (·urrcnt <'vents test.
.\l :1rkl·r \\•ill n o\v compete
:.t;ilt·widL' to be named one of two
C~lifornia l"l'pr£1 sentatJves lo the
nation ;d con1pet 1tion. Winners at
the st al(' levt•I \\'ill reC"eive $1,000
s1·h,,l11 rshins ;1nd expense-paid
t rt P" tu \\I ii It ;,1 n1s burg, Va.
1'ht' i!fJntl prize winner. select-
t'll fron1 <Jmong: statewide win-
nt•rs. \.\'ill receive i.l SJ0,000
scllol~tr~htp and "''ill have his
bH:l•ntennial •·minute" presented
on lt•lt'\•ision.
()lht.>r El 1'oro '''inners are run-
rlL~r s up . Rr e nl Rriscoe and
/\n~t·l.i I-foist. Commendations
'''t'rl' <J\.\'a r ded Cindy Schell,
R1Jb1n ;\Jaed:.i and Carol Porth.
Police Guard
. Boston.High
BOSTON iAP J -lloyrolled by
white s ludents and guarded by
500 policemt'n. twice the normal
for ce, South Boston High School
opcnl•d tod;.1y without incident.
l·'ighting invol v ing black stu -
Uents <.1nd white students on th e
fronl steps a nd inside to school
forced it to close early on Friday_
Only a handful of whites en-
tered the building today whiJe
about 100 blacks went in from the
buses that carry them into the
whitE'. working class
neighborhood under a court·
orderc.>d desegregation plan.
o.n, P'ilol M.lff ~
WINS SENIORS CONTEST
Jim Marker
Bells Blossom
In Saddlehack
Businesses
Mini;ture bells bi;>gan .appe<Jr-
ing on lht• rounter tops of Sad-
dleb<lck Valley businC'Sses today
to rt;>mind the public that the Ex-
change Club has launched a fund
drive to bring a two-thirds
replica of the. Liberty Bell to the
valley in 1976.
The bell. now being cast in Cin-
C'innati, is one of 2,400 that will be
produced -one for each month
or l' .s. independence.
Plans are to ins tall the bell at
the new Saddleback Valley
Unif~ed School District head-.
quarters in the Mission Viejo In·
duslrial Park on Jeronimo Road .
Prior to its permanent
emplacement, the bell will spend
one week at each of the Valley's
srhools and be exhibited at loc:al
shopping centers.
Person.s wis hing to donate
funds for th e $3,500 project
.should call Bob tlickey. Peoples
Federal Savings and Loan, El
Toro, 830-7220.
Body Discovered
MORRO BAY (UPI) -The
OOdy of 6-year -0ld Richard Hirst
was found floating in a tideJXK>l
Saturday nearly a week after the
youngster was swept out to sea
(rom his father's capsized boat.
Dlbbll6E
BUSINESS
CENTER
Frowr.,,eAl
RESIGN •••
:5Ut would be placed bt-:fore the
<'Ounly Board of Su~rvisors and
subsequently the votina public for
adecilioo.
Municipal ad\lisory council~
act in an advi:sory capacity to th~
board or supervLo;ors coneerning
issues within their wneai of in -
fluence.
Tht-only MAC presently operat-
ing in Orange County i.s in Mission
Viejo and it was the suceess of
that rouncil which gave Monoson
deisire to duplicate it.
1-fc pushed. initially , ror a
valley-wide MAC, but dropf>(.-d
those plans when he railed to a:et
s upport rrom the Saddleback
Area Coordinating Council
(SACC), a coalition of
homeowners organizations.
It is Monoson ·s opinion that
without a MAC. residentsolunin·
rorporated areas have no clout
with county offirials.
He said he believed an El Toro
MAC could be put acr05s if enough
funds were available to launch a
direct mail campaign.
;\!though the .\1 AC issu'e rc-
C'eived C'onsidcrablE' newspaJ)t'r
<tttention. Monoson said lhl'
publicity failed to n~tralize the
apathy. ''\'ou can't make the peo.
ple read the news papers
, becausetheydon·t,"'hesaid
African Bee
Descendants
'
Kill Boy, 6
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
(AP) -A · swarm of bees at-
tacked 18 passersby in a small
town near the Bolivian border.
killing a six-year-old boy and
seriously injuring two children
and two adults. the efficial
Tel am news agency reported.
The bees were described as
descendants o( African bees
brought into South America 19
years ago by an American scien-
. tist. African bees have been
blamed for several recent at-
tacks in Brazil. Argentina and
other South American countries.
Citing local police, Telam said
the bees swarmed out of dis-
carded boxes lying at an in·
tersection in the town o( El
Carmen, about 950 miles
northeast of Buenos Aires, and
attacked anyone nearby.
Argentine bee experts. saY the
African bees were first encoun·
tered in Argentina in 1967.
INDIVIDUAL EXECUTIVE OFFICES
DOWNTOWN LAGUNA
Designed to house independent businesses
and to provide complete business services
to tenants and to the public
STOP IN AND GET ACQUAINTED WITH
• OUR NEW FACILITIES
•
Private offices for lease with:
8:30-5:30
I'
• Reception Service
•Telephone Answering Service
• Secretarial Service
• Conference Room and Xerox
• All Office Equipment Provided
Quality Image-Single Monthly Billing
Moderate Cost
301 Forest Avenue at Glenneyre 497-1795
I
-Jr vine ' EDITION
•
Today's Clos ing
N.V. S toeks
IOL. 68, NO. 300, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MON OAY. OCTOBER 27, 1915 TEN CENTS
Conditions Asked for Aid to New York
WASHINGTON CUPll -With
'on.greas about to decide whether
, save New York City rtom.in-
ol venc y, Federal Reserve
hairman Arthur F. Bums bas ropos'°" that banks be required
'foreeo some income and unions
.ccept scaled-down pen5ion
eneJit.s as a condition to fed eral
elp, it was learned today.
l( Burns' proposals are adopt·
d, they could pose new obstacles
D New Yor"k City's receivi.ne help
rven if Congress and President
Ford •Cl'ff to offer a multi·bllllon
dollar 10Uuaranlee. Police d ri.remen probably
woul,d ge aid even ln a default.
~ their ion leaden may re-
ruse to a ee to reducing pension
benefits won in past labor settle-
ments.
Meantime, Senate sources said
the Administration, while still op-
posed to a federal rescue effort ,
bas been o(fering suggestions for
what it would like to see in a bilJ if
any is passed. 1
"They"ve been m&king com·
menu on what we 're working on,
without makidg any commlt-
me-nts," one of' those drafting a
bill said.
Publicly, the White House
adamantly opposes federal help.
The city. which owes $12.3
billion, has been unable to sell
bonds since March. It is expected
to run out of money anddefaulton
debts as they become due around
Dec. I.
UPI obtained a copy of a letter
Plane. Vanishes
3 Countians on Mexico Trip
By ROBERT BARK ER
Ol W.. ~ly "41M IUfl
An extens ive air a nd sea
iearch was being pushed today
or a missing plane on the west
~ast of Mexico that carried five
>ersons. including two promi-
1ent businessm en Crom Hunt-
ngton Harbour and the wife of
>neof them.
Believed aboard the twin-
engine Cessna 320A were Steven
Dikeman, owner of Look
Properties in Sun~et Beach,
Bruce Killian, president or the
.i\.c:me Wiring Co. in Garden
Grove and Killian's wife Bonnie.
The plane vanished on a flight
from Manzan il lo to Puerto
Vallarta.
Deaths Cli1nb
Hwricane in Mazatlan
MAZATLAN, Mexico (U P!) -Officials said to-
day 27 persons were killed by Hurricane Olivia which
battered lhis Pacific Coast port Saturday. Damage
was estimated at SS million .
\Vith all e lectric pov.'er c ut off and telephone lines
down, Mazatlan was declared a disaster zone .
At least 17 other persons were injured and 10,000
houses suffered storm or water damage.
No Americans we re re ported killed or injured.
Among buildings damaged by the hurricane YlaS
the local jail. Two prisoners were reported killed
when a jail wall colla~ed .
Federal r elief tea ms poured into the port Sunday
and a massive r elief effort was under way today.
Trio Snatch Purse
From Toro Invalid
An e lderly woman propelling
her whee lchair a long a Laguna
1 Hills road was robbed or $38 dur-
• ing tbe weekend in what Orange
County S h e riff 's offi cers
describe as the m ost callous
purse snatching incident they
have ever investigated.
World rsident was robbed during
the weekend or a purse containing
$40 by a young man who Oed on
fool , sheriCf's o££icers said.
Deputies said Lorene Helen
Lawrence, 68 , o f 29T Calle
Aragon. was robbed as she
~d.lked on Paseo de Valencia
near the Laguna Hills postoffi('e.
Carl Tobin , vice president of
A('me . said that Dikeman and
Killian had left from Huntington
Harbour in early October on a
57-foot yacht owned by Roger
Smith, a former Huntington
llarbour man.
He said they were m Mexico to
look into som e real estate.
Tobin said that Killian's wife.
Bonnie, had flown to Mexico to
join her hus band to celebrate an
anniversary.
Tobin. a life-long friend and as-
so('iate or Killian , said the
Killians have two daughters,
Lisa, 15, a nd Lauren, 13. He said
the Dike m ans a lso have two
children. Pamela, 17, and'Steve
16.
The plane was appar ently
pil oted by a Denver dentist, Dr.
Paul l.undel, whose wire also was
aboard.
Tobin said !he ill-fated flight
took off at 6: 15 p . m . Oct. 18 and
that \11eather conditions wer~
good. He s aid the twin -engine
<'raft was equipped with beeping
devices but that nothing has been
heard or it.
John Hamilton, an employe or
the Don Koll Co. in ~ewport
Reach who is coordinating the
search, said that the search has
been na rrowed down lo about 5()
square miles over rugged jungle
terrain.
Hamilton said that there are 14
private a ircr a ft £rom Orange
Coast citi es assisting two C·IJ&.s
in the searc h. He said that pilots
from Orange County are doing
a magnificent job.··
Hamilton ad d ed that ''a
tremendous <1mount of red-taPE'
from the .'.\1 exican government
h~1s hamperl'd the search.··
Tobin said toda y from Killian's
company in Garden Grove thal
nont' or lht' employes have given
up.
"\Ye 're s till figuring every-
thing is okay ... he said ... People
ha\'e y,•alked out or that jungle
after tv•o or three "'eek:,; ... Deputies said three young men
stopped their car and ap-
proached Mrs . Addie E-1. Little-
, john. 79. of 23262 Bookland Lane.
. El Toro, as she propelled her
'wheelchair along Calle de Los
Caballeros in Laguna llills.
Mrs. Littlejohn told o£ficers
that the young men snatched the
purse containing $38 from the
handle or her wheelchair and
then drove o£f at high speed.
Mesan Faces Rap
In Fatal Crash
'
'
' '
In another purse snatching inci-
dent a Lag una Hills Lei sure
Truste es to Meet
Irvine school trustees meet
tonight at 7: JOo 'clock al Universi-
ty High School. 4771 Campus
Drive. Matters to be discussed in -
clude a proposed conflict or in·
terest policy for district lrwtees
and a district homework ix;>licy.
Coas t
Weather
Partly cloudy through
early Tuesday becoming
mostly fair in the after-
noon. Not m uch change in
temperature. Highs 73 to
78. Lowa 50 lo the low 60s.
INSIDE TODA 't'
Bomba wnd o]t in about
nine bui lding.s early this
morning, in New York.
Wa..shingfon and Chicago. A
~o Rican group claimed
crtdit. ~~ &tory A4. ..• ,. -... -~= .. ............ •• _ ....... , .. •• .. -"'" =:.::.· .......... ., .. -.. •• oww• .. : .... _ ... ,..,, ---.. •• -.. T-. .. .. -.. -•• -.. ..... C\lOS •• --•• .. ..._. •• '.
\
A criminal complaint charging
felony manslaughter was being
sought today against a Cos ta
Mesan whose car. spinning out or
control, collided with another
auto Saturday night, exploding in
flames and killing a yoWlg Irvine
woman.
The passenger in the second
car, Eva May Palomera , 19, oC
4091 Manzanita St., died about
2 :45 "!-·m · in ~osta Mesa
Memonal Hospital or massive in-
ternal inji..ries sufrered in the ac-
cident.
Her companion and driver or
the small i mport car, Walter
Craig Forrester, 20, or 1549
Placentia Ave., Newp:.lrt Beach.
Ford Plans
State Visit
SACRAMENTO !UPI )
There are no plans ror President
Ford to mingle publicly with
crowds th.is week when he makes
his first visit to Caliromia since
his life was threatened twice last
month.
The President will attend a
$25().a·plate rund·raiser in Los
Angeles on Wednesday and a
similar event in San Francisco
on Thursday. He was invited to
both event.& beCore the two al·
leged. attempts to usassinate
him.
While in California, Ford may
also give testimony by videotape
on what he saw and heard when
M&nson aPosUe Lynette Fromme
thrust a .45·caliber pistol at him
from a crowd in Sacramento
Sept. 5.
y,•as listed in £air condition at the
same hospital today.
The motorist police accuse or
felony mans laughter. Jes us
Ramon Alvarez Cota, 23, of 552
Hamilton St .. Costa Mesa. was
said to be in fair condition at
Hoag M emoria l Hos pital in
Newport Beach.
He suffered head and neck in·
juries. act"ording to hospital
spokesm en.
Costa Me s a Police TraCfi c
Bureau Sgt . Cliff McBride said a
£elony manslaughter complaint
was being requested from the
District Attorney's Office today,
based on Patrolman Jeff Mill er 's
recommendation.
Scores of persons witnessed
both the headon collison of the
spinning car and the £iery af-
termath.
The accident occurred on a
twisli n~ curve in the 2300 block or
Estancia Avenue, in front of
Est ancia Hi gh School at JI :45
p.m., just as a dance was break-
ing up, police said.
The accident was unrelated to
the dance, they added.
Authorities said Cota may
have been hurled to the pave-
ment when his car collided with
Forrester 's, tearingoffthedoor.
Miss P alom er a and Forrester
were trapped , pinned in their
crumpled car but pol iceme n
Paul Cappuccilli and Miller were
credited with getting them '>Ul
beCore the car burst into names .
Forrester was conscious and
able to tell police he tri ed
desperatrely to swerve out oC the
way but couldn't avoid lhe col·
lision .
Police and par a medics treated
ISeeCllAllGES, PqeAZ)
Burns sent Friday to Rep.
'lboma.s Ludlow Ashle)' <D·Obio),
chairman or the llouse subcom·
mittee workin1 on legislation.
Bums listed two now conditions
which he 11aid s hou Id be imposed it
guaranteed loans are provided:
-''Some reduction of the
burden impos~ upon the city"
under existing pension plans.
This would require renegotiation
o( pension benefits unions won.
Somt" experts believe pension cos -
•
ts are a big factor in the city's
financial crisis.
-A reduction in the interest
paid on securities issued by the ci·
ty and by the state 's Municipal
Assistanl'e Corp., crc:.1ted alter
the city was unllble to sell any
bonds at eny price. MAC obliga-
tions pay between 6 and J J per<'ent
interest.
By Wednes day. a closely
divided Senate Banking Commit-
tee is to decide whether to .send
legislation to the Senate where it
"-'ould fact" a ftHbu~ter. Chairman
William Proxmire <D·Wis .), who
favors help, appeared to have the
supJX)rt of a slight majority in hi~
<'Ommittee.
Kry staff members said that
while the business world is begin·
ning to see fe-deral aid as vital and
1s putting pressure on Congress,
public opinion is becoming in·
creasingly hostile to any help roe~
theb1gcily.
Court Jester Bumbled
With crowd obviously enj oying it, Roma-
nian tennis star llie Nastase bows in mock
humility to his conqueror. Australi a 's
Evonne Goolagong, following her 7.5 vic-
tory over him in Mission Viejo. Action
took place Saturday at Marguerite
Recreation Center where battle of sexes
"'as filmed for television . Nastase, who
clowned his "'ay th.rough the mat ch, was
limited to one serve and h ad to cover the
doubles court on his side of the net as
handicap in the singles match.
'Charter' Debate • Ill
Women Voters and lroine Study Team Slated
Irvine voters will dc('idc '.'lov. 4
whether tht> (•ily should changl'
from its present general law
status to a charter go\'crnm£'nl.
The ·framework .. charter on
the ballot will not change Irvine·:-.
present system of government
The charter, ho"'C'v cr, v.·ould ;:il
low such chang<"s lo be madt·
i('gislatively by lhl' ('it y council or
by amendm('nt to the charte r .
The c hartl'r y,·i/J ht' debated hy
members of the Ir vine Tomorrow
citizens forum Wednesday at 8
p.m . at 1'urtll' Rork Elementary
School. at Turtle Rock Dri ve and
.<\malfi
The dt•bate y,·iJI feature mem-
bers of::. League of Women Voter.s
charter study team .
F'our · 1rvine councilmen have
signed the city's argument in
£avor of th<' proposed charter No
argument has be('n filed opposin g
the charter.
* * *
League Has
City Charter
Critique
The League of Women Voter s'
voters ser vi ce group h as
analyzed the proposed Irvine city
charter and developed a series of
ar guments for and against the
document.
Arguments fo r a charter are:
-The citizens of a charter city
have the unique opportunity to
choose and fashi on their own
form or government, beginning
with the basic charter or
"s keletal government.·· New
provisions are added to the basic
charter t hrough the amendment
prO<"("SS.
-Charter city government
may tailor taxes levied to sult the
residents of that city. They al so
m ay set their own limits of
bonded indebt edness.
-Many opt ions would be
availabl e to Irvi ne voters in
structuring their government,
such as an elected village coun·
cil·two ti er rorm or government
with specified functions.
-Charter city 101emment can
build capital improvements-
park~. police s tations and so
(S.. CRJTIQUE, Page AZl
CounC'ilman llobe rt West, who
did not sig n the charter ballot
argu ment. is nul act1 vt:!ly oppr}s·
1ng lht• l'harler .
Wl:'st said in an intcrvicv.• he ha:.
not madt• up his mind on how hc
\\·11l \•Ole
\\l('st t:'arlier had s aid he feared
ahusPs of powt•r by ~1 city council
pott•nti a!ly mad(' more poweriul
by the C'hart('r . ~f owcvcr, he has
lemp('rt:'d th al stand, he s aid, ad-
dinl! I <.im not unhappy that no
ISef" CJIARTER, Page A2 )
Widow, 83, Kept
Prisoner in Home
NEW ORLEANS (UPI 1 -
Police say Edna l·lalbedcl, an
BJ.year-old wealthy widow, was
kept heavily sedated in a locker
room in her home for two years
by ty,•o men. one of whom was th !.:'
sole benefi ciary in her will .
Fi remen ended her confine
ment by breaking through a win·
dow in her Frenc h Quarter hom l'
on a tip from a £amily Cnend who
became suspicious because she
was not allowed to sec Mrs.
Hal bade!.
She was hospitalized and re·
ported in fair condition tod ay.
Authorities s till had many un ·
answered questions about the al -
leged cons piracy to keep tht•
woman prisoner in her own
home.
"It ·s going to be pretty horrible
when it 's all revealed," said a
spokesman for the district at-
torney's office. "'rherc are some
doctors involved tn this thing.
They JU Sl had her all doped up in
thi s room no visitor.; or phone
calls or anything ...
John R. Villarrubia. 42, a
publi cit y agC'nl named in Mrs.
Halbed C'l's will. and Noel J .
Dube, 44 , a school teacher, were
arrt•sted and charged with ag.
gravated kidnaping. Thei r bonds
were set at $200,000 each.
A special grand jury was ex -
pected to meet Tuesday to study
the case . including a disclosure
by a defense attorney that the
wife of District Attorney liarry
<See SF.:DATF;O, Page A2J
Kiss and Run
Newport Bandit Robs Granny
A bandit wearing garis h
m akeup and brandishing a
shot gun robbed a 10 .year-old
1Vewport Beach grandmother or
$130 over the wee kend and then
asked for a kiss on the cheek
before he disappeared.
The victim. who li ves in the
central Newport a r ea, phoned of-
ficers late Saturday night aft er
the gunman who was wearing a
stocking m ask c aked with
greasepaint fl ed with all the
money she had in the house.
Police said the victim told
them s he was hom e alone when
she heard a noise in a bedroom
and investigated,
The young bandit wearing the
elaborate mask was walUng for
hPr. his finger on the trigger or
the s hotgun . I-le demanded
mont>y and the victim emptied
her purse for him .
-"1 oments later . the woman told
him. ··you must be very
dt.--sperate to stoop to this .·'
"I am," he replied, "I'm try-
ing to find an apartment and I
don't have enough money to gel
Oil('."
More convers ation followed
and as the man left the victim
said 8he wis h('d him well in his
search ror a home .
"You make me feel like 1 want
to cry ... replied the bandit, point-
ing to hi s right cheek and addlng,
.. kiss m e right here."
!See KISSING , PageAZl
',tJ DAJLY PILOT
'Peace Signal'
I
ti
Ford Welcomes
Egyp t's Sadat ..
.
1
WAf\l-llNG'J'ON (l\PJ -Egyp·
tian Presiclc:nt i\n"·ar Sadat. the
second Egyptian ht.•ad of state to
visit the United States, got a
warm personal welrothe today
from President Ford, who called
their meetin~ a si gnal thal pro-
~ress toward peace in the Middl e
r:ast "will not stop ."
In t•o\orful ('l'remonies ;.1t the
\\'hi tL~ tlouSL'. F'ord hajJi..-d the
Egyptilln JJrL'~1 d('n\'~ wi :sdorn,
sinc1,.·rity ~10 1..I n1udt•r;1t1un .
S•1d<o1t ,~ti[ st<1 y tu·o days i n
\Vas t11n~tvn hl'ro rl' \'isit1ng :-.ltw
Fro• Page Al
CHARTER. •
;1rgum1,.'nt h .1:-. bt.'L'f) fill'tl ;1g<.11nst
tht>l'h;1rler ...
\Vht>ther lrvi1l(' should be <1
f'h3rlt>r city h<1 s been studied by
three commissions dating back to
s hortly after tht' <·ity was in-
<·orporated. The city l'OUncil sat
.1~ thl' most rl"eenl commission
;ind after s t>ven mnnths of Satur·
day morning n1\~l'tings. it deC'id1.•d
to go to volt'rs with the skeletal
l'h::irter.
A two-tier form of government
featuring a city·\\•idc city council
<tnd a substrata of village counci ls
was left out of the initial charter.
llowever, the document woul(i al -
low such a system through an
amendmt'nl to the charter.
According to the council ma-
jority's ballot argument, Jrvine
needs a charter, ''because. as
California's most dynamic new
to('ai government, we need
greater fle:tibility in managin'g
our growth and ('hange than is
permitted us as a general law ci-
ty, our current status."
''We need flexibility in creating
more rei5ponsiveness to village-
level concerns so that all or us
may have a greater say in how
Irvine is built,·· it continues.
The initial charter. the council
argument says. is intended to be
modified into a more detailed city
"('onstitution'' through charter
amendments put before voters
"as Irvine's oeeds beeome more
apparent."
* * * FrDMPqeAI
. CRITIQUE.
• •
forth-without· relying heavily
'on the prOperty tax and
municipal bonds which require a
t"'·o-thirds vote or the electorate.
-Great flexibility is given to
the voters 1in structuring the
duties, powers and functions of
elected and appointed officials.
·This is accomplished through the
--...emendment process at the ballol
-box..
Arguments against a charter
' .are: -Every amendment to the
charter will have to be voted up·
• on by the citizens, consuming
tinie and money. The charter
couJd become a "patchwork"
, document, subjected to spot
legislation.
-Many additional forms of
taxation could be established in
• charter cities. Examples are
personal income tax, real estate
,. Lransrer tax., and admissions tax.
-A village council-two tier
form of government is permissi·
ble under a general law city, but
~ would have limited powers and
a.ppointed or designated mem·
hers.
-Charter city governments
,, have greater financial flexibility
and are thus more susceptible to
' fiscal irresponsibility.
-Innovative charter pro-
' visions may lead to challengeS in
,. ('Ourts of law which would be
) both time consuming and ex·
l pensive.
•
•
• J
• . ,
• . • I
1 , • • .
•
r
..
I
•
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Jack R. Curlev
V11.• P rtt'-'•"" \Al"<•t ............
Thomas Keevil . Eohlor
ThOfTU!IS A . Murphlne
~,..Oiftll Ealtt1t
CharlMH. Loos Richard P.Nell
At51JIMll ~~lno Edtlorl
·~ Offlc•s \ ~t• Mt.-~ JJO W.'1 hy St•HI ~ lk.i;I\; »lJN•w-1 Bo. . .iev¥d
~&.Kii llNG-...... S!tHI
~lltif>olon 9"•tl\. 1,.1) s. .. ~ llOll~V•rO
~tNotio v .1 .. .,. J)101 u ,.., "'-•tS.... 0!'90 ,,_
T•lephON (714) "42""321
Clanffled Ad vtrlisina M2·5'-71
$.odlfNotli. V•ll•y Nt .... l'>!IK.f
511-6210 Fr-'-"C .. ..,..,lt
4t5 .... JO
C00,1 ..... I, lt1i 0r•"9" C:_.tl ~1.,.1no (-
jlMl'f, No "'"" 11 ... lf\o lllU\ltfll ...... MllO<l•I ~II•' Of ffwe•ll••ll'l•1tll P14'rtlll "'"' ~ ffPl .... <t• •11"9111 i~Cl•I IMl•rrllhl"ll ol '"""""'-'. SM~ "''' POtl•Of (MIG ti Ct~t• Mt••, (.el•IOf'll•, S\etcflpOOll ltY l.#l'l'loor U.• -tM , 1t1mtl1 .... 00fl\Ol'lll'll1; mlllWydtttlNti-
IMfltlllW-
I
York City, ChiC'ago and 1-fouston
~nd then returning to (jddrc::i:s a
joint session of Congress.
Sadat applauded the Presi·
dent 's remarks and declared that
progress toward peace since he.
and fo"'ord met last June in
Salzbur~ "could bl" C'onsidered a
turning point in Arab-Israeli re-
lati on.s." llt' Si.lid he carne to the
United States ··with an open
hc~1rt.' ·
Af1er the ceremonies on the
.sotHh lav•n of the White House,
1-"'ord anJ Sitdat began a private
st·ssiott in thC' oval office with
ScC'retary of State Henry A. Ki ss·
1ng\•r
.<\s the presidents met. about
300 t\rab and Iranian studl'nts
<'ha nling "Do"'" With Sadat ..
and "Lon g l,ivc Palc:s tine,"
n1 1.1r('hl·d a h:ilf mile through
do"·ntown Wa s hington to the
Ylhi tl' House.
The demon s tration wa s
sponsored by the Iranian Stu-
dents Ass oC"iation and the
Organization of Ar<tb Students in
the United States and Canada,
\\'hich said recent Sinai pe<tce ac-
<.'ords pose "grave implications
for the Arab national liberation
struggle.··
After the meeting, as Sadat's
motorcade left the Whlte Hou se,
the demonstrators gathered
along Pennsylvania Avenue and
chanted: "Sadat is a U.S. puppet,
Sadat is a U.S. puppet."
From the back seat of hi s
limousine. Sadat smiled and waved at the protesters.
Sadat, who· arrived Sunday to
begin his ll·day visit to the Unit-
ed States, spent the night at
Williamsburg, Va. A state dinner
at the White House was
scheduled for tonight for Sadat
and his wife.
In the south-lawn ceremonies,
Sadat said the new Sinai accord
which Kissinger helped negotiate
between Egypt and Israel "will
be a very important milestone on
I.be road to peace in our area."
Noting hi s warm personal
friendship with the Egyptian
leader, Ford agreed that "much
has been achieved" and called
Sadat·s visit "a symbol of the
new dimensions or our rela·
lions."
Sadat in turn told Ford that
"what you have already done"
has been a "great event" £or the
Middle East, which he described
as ·•the most dangerous area in
the wtiole world.··
A crowd or tourists, diplomats
and other visitors waved U.S.
and Egyptian flags and ap·
plauded as Ford and Sadat re·
viewed an honor guard.
S. Lagrma's
Judge Owens
To Preside
Judge Claude M. Owens of
South Laguna was elected today
as presiding judge of the Orange ·
County Superior Court for 1976.
Judge Owens, 59. will take over
the reins of the 31-judge court
Jan. J from Judge Robert A.
Banyard. Judge Banyard has
served two terms in the presiding
judge's chambers.
Four Orange Coast judges
were named to serve on Judge
Owens· executive committee
during 1976. They are: judges
Bruce Sumner and James
Turner of Laguna Beach, Robert
P. Kneeland of Newport Beach
and H. Warren Knight or Mission
Viejo.
Judge Sumner has also served
two terms as Superior Court pre·
siding judge.
Born in Santa Ana in 1916,
Judge Owens was lirst apJ)Olnted
to the benC'h in 1956 when Gov.
Goodwin Knight appointed him
to what is now the North Orange
County Municipal Court.
The South Lagunan carne to
the Superior Court bench in
December of 1967 via an appoint·
ment by Gov. Ronald Reagan
after serving as a member of the
California Judicial Council and
the California College of Trial
Judges.
Married with two adult
children, Judge Owens obtained
his law degree from Stanford
University. He practiC'ed in
Orange County as a deputy dis-
trict attorney and in private
practice before being named to
the bench in 1956.
Bomb Blast
Hurts Eight
JERUSALEM (UPI) -A
bomb exploded outside a tourist
hotel in downtown Jerusalem to.
day, injuring eight persons and
heavily damaging the lobby.
Police sa.ld a time bomb, hid·
den in a parked car, exploded
soon after dawn near the Eyal
Hotel. about 100 yards Crom Zion
Square. Pollet! seiud 20 persons
Jor questioning.
-'
UPITt~•
Irvine
Student
Honored·
Uni"'ersity High SchooJ Mmlor
ConiJtance Gaulter has. been
named Irvine's representative to
Shell Oi l 's bicentennial
scholarship e$.:say contest.
Each essay ill on a "bicenten·
nial minute.·· Constance's
vi gnet t e from tht American
Revolution deals w ith the
smallpox that was sweeping the
colonies during the war.
But although smallpox inocul•·
tions had been developed JQ
years before. s he said in the es·
say, American troops were
forbidden to get the treatments.
.. :-c h < nu· ras 1
Kill.s {J(}
LA PAZ, Boll•la (UPI)
-Sixty pet'1on1 were
kil1ed today when a
military aircraft retuminl
Folivian army officerS and
their f.amille.s lrom .. a
weelcend ouUng In. 1116'.J'e,
aort of Tomonoco craabed
into a mountain. President
Huto Banzer announced.
Benzer made the an·
nouncement to th• Military
School of En1ineerinc dur·
tng ttremonfes marking
the 25th anniversary ol the
s-chool 'a fou.ndinf . .T..he
school invnediate y au.-
pended fo.sllvltl~.
PRESIDENT FORD GREETS PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT
He 's Seeking Military Aid to Offset U.S. Israeli Support
George Washington, she said.
told his men lhey would be treat-
t-"d as traitors if they took the in·
oculations.
Small pox inoculations were
against the law, a law passed to
protect the public ·.11hen the in-
oculations were an unproven
tt~chnique , she said .
Ranier said the plane
was a Convair, a twin-
entine turboprop, which
was nying lhe officers and
their wives and children
rrom an armed forces vaca.
lion spot 70 miles east of La
Paz.
Newport C ouncil
Studies Bay Report
Ry the time of the revolution,
the technique had been de ..
veloped to a safe form, but the
law still prevented its use.
The lesson for America. she
s'aid, is in retaining proscrip-
tions that no long~r make sense.
17 Arrested
In 'Bookie
Ring' Raid
The president of a Santa Ana
mobile home dealership and the
dealer s hip 's manager were
'among 17 per::lons arrested Fti~
day in a crackdown on an alleged
$1 million-a-month Los Angeles
bookmaking ring.
Newport Beach city <'oun-
cilmen Tuesday will consider a
lengthy report from the
California Department of f'ish
and Game describing 14 zones
around Upper Newport Bay and
setting landuse priorities for
each sector.
Tht• report will be brought
forth by state officials at 3 p.m . in
the middle of the council's r e-
gu lar study session.
Spokes men for the agency
holdin g title to tbe estuary have
prepared a lengthy report which
shows two areas as being of
highest value to the restoration
and preservation of the estuary.
A large area between Jam-
boree Road and MacArthur
Boulevard near San Joaquin
Marsh, the report states. is an ex·
tensive flood plain and has pro-
vi ded a highly valuable habitat
for wildlife.
Resides the wildlife aspect, the
area also rould be employed as a
silt collection area to spare the
estuary any more material de·
posited during heavy rains.
The Big Canyon area between
the bav and Jamboree Road also
s hares· a top-priority label in the
report. It could serve well as a
buffer zone between the bay and
highly developed portions of
Newport Reach.
The available water in lhe ca-
nyon already has nurtured ex-
tensive wildlife habitats. The ca·
nyon also could serve as an e:t -
C'e 11 en t acress route . A
freshwater mars h could be im·
proved where the canyon meets
SEDATED •.
Connick executed Mrs .
Halbadel's will.
Attorney Raymond McGuire,
who represented Villarrubia and
Dube during a bond hearing, said
the will ha·d been executed by
Anita Connick.
''I can't discuss my wife's legal
practice,'' Connick said. "But I
can tell you that my wife does not
represent either of the arrested
.subjects.''
The spokesman for Connick·s
office said a nurse who rePorted·
ly attended to Mrs. Halbedel and
administered the sedatives also
was being questioned.
"She was an unwilling ac·
complice," he said. "She was
hired to take care of the lady and
give her medicine, but she had no
idea what was going on.''
Patty Friend
Given Ticket
Mter Heist
SACRAMENTO (APJ
Steven Soliah, charged with hid·
ing Patricia Hearst before her
arrest, was C'ited for speeding
near Redding one day after a
bank robbery possibly linked to
the Symbionese Liberation
Army.
The California Highway Patrol
confirmed today that Soliah was
stopped for speeding Feb. 26
about 45 miles north of Redding
near a turnoff to Wyntoon, a
flearst family retreat.
Patrolman Dare! Barham cit-
ed Soliah for s peeding al
Castella. said CHP spakesman
Kent Milton.
I',.... Page Al
CHARGES. •
Miss Palomera at the scene but
sa.id she s ustained massive in·
te.rnal injuries .
F\lneral services for the young
woma.n were pending today at
MacDougall Family Mortuary in
Santa Ana.
•
,
tht~ back bay, the report adds
C>ne C'Onctrn is the accumula-
tion of stockpiled silt deposited
there after a dredging project
se\'eral years ago when material
"·as pulled from the estuary to
tlevelqp a water ski area.
The\ report continues through
the rest of the identified regions
surrounding the bay, with the
third-priority item being the ro\J-
1ng grasslal1ds on the west side of
the estuary.
Focusing particularly on the
rolling areas near University
Drive. the report stresses that
the soil in the region is highly
vulnerable to erosion, thus lead-
ing to even more silt problems in
the bay.
Special vegetation planted on
the steep slopes could ease the
erosion problem, the report
states.
Tues day's presentation is
calculated to show city officials
land·planning alternatives which
\'.'ill be a prelude to a master plan
for the estuary being developed
by the state agency.
No official action can be taken
at the study session, other than to
schedule the issue for a regular
action meeting.
ConstanC"e is the daughter or
Lefty and .Jo yce Schild of
Culverdale. She will enter com-
petition to become one of the
state's two representatives to the
national C'ompetition.
Two winners from each state
will receive a scholarship or
51,000 and a trip to William.sburg,
Va ., from Jan. 16 to 19 to attend
seminars on educational and
.social issues and to be on hand
for the selection or the national
winner.
The grand prize winner will re·
ceive a $10,000 scholarship and
have his or her bicentennial
minute presented on c,ns
tt;>levision.
FroMPage A I
KISSING ...
The worTI:an did so and the ban-
d.it fled into the darkness, she told
police.
Investigators said they could
find no other witnesses to the rob-
bery. but that they found fresh
palm and finger prints on a slid-
ing glass door as well as other
clues near a rear gate which may
be helpful in their probe.
Dlbbll6E
BUSINESS
CENTER
While Robert Coulter, 30, presi-
dent of Orange Crest Mobile
Homes. 909 N. Harbor Blvd ..
Santa Ana, was among the ar-
restees. police said he was a bet-
ting suspect, not a bookmaking
suspect.
It was Coulter and Robert
Brown, 28, Orange Crest's
manager. who placed $20,000
worth or bets with alleged
bookmaker Art Levitt, 53, of Los
Angeles~ Police claimed.
And placing bets is just as il-
legal as booking them, Los
Angeles Deputy District At-
torney .James Grodin said today .. ··we normally don't go after
those who place bets,·· Grodin
admitted.
''But it is our feeling that major-
players are the ones that make it
so profitable for boolties and thus
feed organized crime," he added.
Coulter and Brown were not
the heaviest alleged bettors
snared by the police, according
to Grodin.
INDIVIDUAL EXECUTIVE OFFICES
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L
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f
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f
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•
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley '
EDITION
Today's Closlag'
N.Y. Stoeks
'
VOL. 68, NO. 300, 2 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1975 TEN CENTS,
/
Valley Mayor Supporting Unification -
Fountain Valley Mayo< Berrue
Svabtad, speaking -as a·parent of
two teen-aged daughters in Foun-
tain Valley and two pupils in
elementary schools, today went
on record in support of schooJ un-
ification.
S°'alstad specifieally ad -
dressed himself to three polnts
made by opponents of unification
which he claims are incorrect.
"nley include:
-Additional-money-ii-needed
to build elementary schools.
Tbe Fountain Valley Elemen-
tary School District i.s experienc-
ing a de<Unlng enrollment ol 1.27
percent. Svalstad said. He said
the.t by using empty classrooms
and with the addition of some
tempGrary portables, there ia no
• untm
-Deaths Cli111h
Hurricane in Mazatlan
MAZATLAN, Mexico (UPI) -Officials said to-
day 27 persons were killed by Hurricane Olivia which
battered this Pacific Coast port Saturday. Damage
was estimated at S8 million.
With all electric power cut off and telephone lines
down, Mazatlan was declared a disaster zone.
At least 17 other persons were injured and 10,000
houses suffered storm or water damage.
No Americans were reported killed or injured.
Among buildings damaged by the hurricane was
the local jail. Two prisoners were rePorted killed
when a jail wall collapsed.
Federal r e lief teams poured into the port Sunday
and a massive reli ef effort was under way toda y.
Lile or Death
Judge Weighs Case
Of Girl in C·oma
MORRISTOWN. N.J . fA:Pl -
The Karen Anne Quinlan trial
ended today with the judge s ay-
ing he would rule in 10 to 14 days
whether Miss Quinlan's life.
sustaining respirator may be un -
booked so s he can "die with dignity:·
Judge Robert Muir Jr. said he
would either hand down a written
opinion or deliver an oral ruling
from the bench. He made the
statement after hearing emo·
tional closing arguments by the
attorneys for Miss Quinlan's
parents and five attorneys oppos·
ing their reques t to disconnect
the machine.
Paul W. Arms trong, arguing
for the Quinlans. said Muir
should allow Miss Quinlan to
•'pass on with pea ce ," and let her
••follow the gentle call that
beckons her to lasting peace.''
)
Horse Tosses
Princess Anne
LONG BUCK BY, Engla nd
(UPI } -Princess Anne, 25, was
thrown Crom he r horse in a c ross·
country riding event Sunday al
Long Buckby, 75 miles north or
London. She was uninjured.
The fall ('ame when the prin·
cess' horse ('Ollided with one rid·
den by her hus ba nd, Capt. Mark
Phillips. 'the c ouple was
representing a t eam from the
Royal Military Academy at San·
dhurst. Phillips is an instructor
at the aca demy. Their t eam
finished 15th out or 40 t aking part.
Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy through
early Tues day becoming
mostly fair in the after. nooo. Not much change in
temperature. Highs 73 to
18. Lows SO to the lowOOs .
INSIDE TODA "t"
Bombl wrni off in . about
nint buildingt eorlu this
morning, in New York,
Wmhingfon ond Chicago. A
Puma Rican grOMp cl.aimftl
credit. ~e !lorJI A.4.
llMlex
~· ... -0111=
.. --.. ••
.. .. .. -.... = ...... ., .. -•• --•• o-=••• •• -,., .. ,, --.. ==:· •• ·--.. . .. •• Isl ... .. -.. -•• -.. .... ,,,, •• --.. _._. ..
,I
Opp()Slng..:attorneys asserted
that allowing her to die would be
tantamount to homicide or
mercy killing.
"If Karen Anne Quinlan has
one chance in a thousand or one
chance in 10,000, or one chance in
a million, who are we and by
what right do we kill that
chance?" said Ralph Porzio, al·
torney for Miss Quinlan's doc·
tors.
Miss Quinlan, 21, has been in a
coma for six months -in what
doctors say is an irre versible and
''persistent vegetative state .··
Her parents, Joseph and Julia
Quinlan have stopped praying for
a miracle and say it is "God's
will" that their daughter "pass
into his gentle and loving hands ..
and "die with dignity."
Doctors have re£used lo unhook
the respirator. saying that since
Miss Quinlan is still alive it
would be a violation of law and of
medical tradition to deprive her
of treatment that sustains her
breathing. Some s ay "pulling the
plug .. would amount to using a
"quality of life" scale to de·
terminewho lives.
Dr . Julius Korein , a
neurologist who testilied on the
Quinlans· behalf, s aid that the
purpose of the trial was to ''make
written an unwritten law" by
which doctors allow terminally
ill patients to die by "judicious
neglect" rather than prolong
their agony in futile medical pro-
cedures.
He said it is common practice
for a doctor to tell a nurse to
"forget-" about prolonged use of.
,ex.traotdinary medical pro-
cedures for a patient who has no
cbanceofsurvival.
Police Guard
Boston High ,
BOSTON CAP ) -Boycotted by
white students and guarded by
500 policemen, twice the normal
!orce, South Boston J;figh School
opened today without incident.
Fighting involving black stu-
dents and white students on the
front steps and inside to school
Carted it to close early oo Friday.
Only a handful of whiles en-
tered the building today while
about 100 blacks went in from the
buses that carry them into the
while . working class
neighborhood u.nder a court-
ordcred desegregation plan.
Mayor'8 Me8 age
Hunting\on Beach Mayor
Nor~a Gibbs has recorded
another telephone message for
the residents or tbis city. By call-
ing 649-2929, residents can re-
ceive an update oo the cit,y'a ac-
Uritlet.
apparent need ror a new
ele.mentar)' school.
-You will pay a dditional
money for higher administration
of teachers· salaries.
'"The unification will eliminate
the duplication of admlnistralive
positions we c urrently have for
.wparate d~tricts, thereby re-
ducing administrative costs per
ton
Mexico
J11ngle
Combed
By ROBERT BARKER °''"" 0.lly P'li.tSld
An e xte nsive a tr and se a
search was being pushed today
~r a missing plane on the west
('oast of Mexico that carried five
persons, in('luding two promi·
nent businessmen from Hunt·
ington Harbour and the wife or
one of them.
Be lie ved a bo ard the twin-
engine Cessna 320A were Steve n
Dike m a n . o wn e r of Look
Properties in Sunset Beac h,
Bruce Killian, president ol the
Ac m e Wiring Co. in Garden
Grove and Killia n ·s wife Bonnie.
The plane van ished on a flight
from M a n za nillo to Puerto
Vallarta .
Carl To bin , vice president of
Acme, said that Dikeman and.
Killian had left from Huntington
Harbour in e arly October on a
57·foot yacht owned by Roger
Sm ith , a forme r Huntingt on
Har bour m an .
H(' said they were in Mexjco to
look into some re al estate.
Tobin said that Killian 's wife,
Bonnie, h ad nown to Mexico to
join he r husband to celebrate an
anniversar y.
Tobin. a li fe · long friend and as·
soci ate of K ill ian , said the
Killians have t wo da ug hters.
I.isa. 15, a nd La uren, 13. He said
the Dikemans also have two
<'hild ren , Pamela, 17, and Steve
16.
The p lane "'as appar e ntly
piloted by a De nver dentist. Or.
Paul I.undel. whose wife also was
aboard.
Tobin said the ill ·fated flight
look off at 6 : 15 p .m . Oct. 18 and
that weather C'onditions we re
good. He said t he twin·enginc
('raft was equipped with beeping
devices but that nothing has been
heard or it.
John Hamilton. an employe of
the Don Koll Co. in Newport
Bt;>a('h who is ('oordinating the
search, said tha t the search ha.s
been narrowed down to about 50
(See PLANE, Page A2 )
FRANCO FIGHTS
'IASI' BA.ITLE'
MADRID C UPJ ;
Gener alissimo Francisco F'ra n·
co, 82, bis body wasted from two
weekend brus hes with de ath.
fought today what many believed
would be his last battle for sur·
vi val.
Doctors said he was suffering
from a s light fever for the first
time since Saturday and from
continuing h e art troubles.
The team or 14 doctors at Fra n·
C'o·s bedside in El P ardo Palace
said the old soldier w as conscious
and r esting quie tly but that his
condition remaine d g rave.
stude-nt." Svalst ad said.
••Housin1 must be provided for
18 continuation pupils which can
easily be housed without great
expense through either a joint
use program, or space available
on existing campuses ...
Svalst a d also took up the issue
of overc rowding at Fountcti n
Valley High School.
"CUrrently. 2.300 hi gh school
students a tte nd our two high
schools whic h ar e being bused in
from Westminster. Santa Ana
and Hunt ington Beach.
.. As a community leader we
ha ve been ofte n rrustrated by the
overcrowding at Fountain Valley
High. Seven t imes we have very
actively campaigned for fund is·
s ues for building schools ln HW1t-
ington Beach. it is now time to
take care or our children and ex-
pect out or our educat.ionaJ pro-
gram. the sam e dema.ndl as we
do out of our city.
"I urge all the residents lo do
their own analys is and hopefully
come up with the same ans.wer I
have."
• • • .... .,,
r10 ISSID
-
Burned Out
Fire men fl ood remains of Anahei m Foam
a nd F a b r ic o u t let o n P a cifi c C o ast
Highway foll owing blaze that gutted the
firm·s Sunset Beach building early, today.
Pre limina ry estimates placed the loss al
575,000. Fla mes were s potted about 3 :20
a.m. fro m patrolling Huntington Be ach
Police helicopter . Firefi ghters said np one
was inj ure d in the bl aze. Cause is still un-
der investigation. ·
Trio Snatch Purse
From Woman, 79
An elderly wom an propell ing
her wheC'I C'hair al on~ a J~aguna
11.il\s ro<.1d was r obbed or $38 dur·
ing the weekend in what Orange
Coun ty S h er i f f 's of fi cers
dt>scri be as t he m ost callous
purs(' s na tching in cident they
have ever invt•st ig.11ted.
OepL•ties said th ree young men
s top p ed t h eir ('a r and ap·
prociC'hed Mrs. Addie J-1. Little·
john. 79. of 23262 Bookland Lane.
F.J Toro. as s he propelled her
wheei('hair along Calle de Los
Caball er os in Laguna Hills.
'.\1 rs. Littlejohn told offi('ers
that the young m e n snatched the
Forgery Probed
UXBRIDGE, England (AP) -
A Florida m a n c harged with
possessing forge'1 U.S. Treasury
bills with a ra ce value of more
than $12 million was kept in
custody today after a bail hear·
ing was told "an Ameri can s yn ·
dicate"' is involved and the case
is being investigated in three
other countries. Robert James
J-leller , 41 . was orde red held for
another hearing on Nov. 4.
purse containing $38 fro m lhC'
h<.1ndle o r her wheelchair and
tht.~n drove off al high .speed.
In anothe r purse snatching inci·
dent a l.agun a Ifill:-; Le isure
\\rorld rsidt.•nl was robbed du1i ng
the weekend of a purse containing
SIO by a young m an who fl ed on
foot. shcrirr·s officers said.
Deputies said l.orenc Helen
Lav.•ren('e, 68. o f 29T Calle
Aragon , was rob bed as s he
v.•alked on Paseo de Valen('ia
near the Lagun a Hills post off ice.
&mh Blast
Hurts Eight
J E R USALEM CU Pll -A
bomb exploded outside a tourist
hotel in downtown J erusalem lo·
day, injuring e ight persons and
heavil y damag ing the lobby. ·
Police s aid a time bomb, hid·
den in a pa rked car, exploded
soon after d awn near the Eyal
Hotel. about 100 yar ds from Zion
Square. Police seized 20 persons
for questioning.
Valley Street
Closed Down;
Too Slippery
Fountain Vall ey police closed
off Euclid Avenue from 6 to 9·
a. m . toda y because or slippery
conditions on the recently re-
surfaced tho roug hfare.
Police said th ey called the
sigalert after a li g ht rain made
driving conditions hazardous.
Officers said a new capping
::igenl on the street has not been
thoroughly soaked in yet and
could cause problems to drivers.
It was on this same stretch that
30 C'ars were in volved in acci-
dents in heavy fog Oct . 17 when
moisture al so s lickened the
street.
Refugees Depart
HONG KONG CUPI) -A
gr oup of 341 Vietnamese r e·
fugees. including a ne wly born
girl. left Hong Kong today for the
United States aboa rd a chartered
aircraft, an official announce-
ment s aid. They were among the
nearly 4,000 South Vietnamese
who fled to this colony afte r their
country fell to the Communis ts
last April.
Rich Wido"' Held 2 Years
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -
Police say Edna Halbedel, an
83-year-old wealthy widow, was
kept heavily sedated in a locker
room in her home for two years
by two men, one of whom was tbe
sole beneficiary in her will.
Firemen ended her conrme.
ment by breaking through a win·
dow in her French Quarter home
on a tip from a ramil'y friend who
became suapicious bttause she
was not allowed to see. Mrs.
Halbadel. •
She W•I bospllallttd 11'-DCl re-
l>Ol'tOd.111 ra1t cOllilitlC!D tom.r.
'I
Authorities still had many un·
answered questions about the al·
leged conspiracy to keep the
woman prisoner in her own
home.
"It's gOin& to be pretty horrible
when it'• all revealed," said a
spc>keeman for the district at-
torney·s office. "There are some
doctors involved in this thing.
They ju1t had her all doped up in
this room -no visitors or phone
calls or anylhing. ··
John R . Vlllarr ubia. 42. a
publlcil)' agent named in Mrs.
Halbedel't will . and Noel J .
'
Dube. 44, a s chool teacher, were
arrested and charged with ag-
gravated kidnaping. Their bonds
were set at $200,000 e ach.
A special gra nd jury was ex·
peeled to meet Tuesday to study
the case, including a disclosure
by a defens e attorney that the
wife of District Attorney Harry
C onnick executed Mr s.
Halbade l·a will.
Attorney Raymond McGuire,
who represented VilJarrubia and
Dube during a bond hearing, said
the Will had been exf!<!uted by
Anita Connick.
·· 1 can't discuss m y wire·s legal
practice:· Connick said. "But l
can tell you that my wife does not
represent either of the arrested
subjects:·
The SPokesman for Connick's
office said a nurse who re ported·•
ly attended to Mrs. HaJbedel and·
administered. the sedatives also
was being questioned.
"She was an unwilllni .ac·
compllce," he said. "She: was
hired to take care or the lady and
give her medicine, but she bad no
idea what was going on.''
'
A 2 DAILY PILOT H/F
School
: Petition
Signed
Residents -of Century l'ark
ttomt·~ in .,·oun.l.<1111 V<.1lll'Y ~.~y
tht:'y hJvc eulil't.:ll'd SflU
~ignaturt.•s on petitions <l Sklnl:: •
l·'ountain V<J!Jey school trustees
10 build a srhool on a LZ·ut·rc site
1n their tr:.ict.
Lynn S.urc.1<.·ino suid f~1milies in
tht' ;100-humt.• tl'i.ltl ;,1rt' bt.•111 1-:
asketl tu ::1tlend the Nov. 6 ~('h0ol
board m e ettnll'. to d1 s t'u1ts lht.•
rn ttt tt.•1·.
'l'ht·v :.il~o \\d i Pl'l''l'nt their
pt>tll1uns to tht.• t tl)' cuunttl Tues-
day.
Sa.i·;.i c 111l1 t.•xpl ;_11n~:d par<.•nts art'
urgini..: lht' bn.•r d ri ot tu .sf'll lhl'
~ite, "'lu1 ·h h.is bt•t·n t.lt·clarl!d
:-.urplus . unt il 11 lt•ci rns 1f lht• birth
r.Jtt· 1na~ !..1 lt·1 g11 up cn:-.t...-<ttl of
t!U\\ 11
As~i ~t a n t S11pt•r1 11tt.•nllt·nt .l ;:it·k
'!\1<1/ulk('ll of t h1• :-.c hool d1 slrH'l
:-:a1iJ thl' ::-C hl•~ll hn;1 r d ha~ no pr~·
sent plans to :-;ell tl anyway ,
Hlthough lherl' also ~1rt' no plons
tu build a s(•houl therc. either.
i"lc explained th(' l11 sl1ict 's ~tu
dent popul<.ttton has tlroppc>tl hy
about 700 :-tudl•nt s in rl'l"l•nt
''t'ars bt•rat1:-1• uf '' drov 1n 1111.'
birth ratt>, ~o no n~''"' school 1s
lll'l'dl•J .
But SaraC'ino s;.ud residents
want the board lo wail before
selling it, noting that if it were
n~ed later. the property value
would have jumped and lhc land
would be more <.'ostly.
Residents in the tract, located
o£f Bus hard St reet bt'tween
Garfield and Ellis Avenues, said
their students are now being
bused lo Arevalos, Newland and
Lamb Schools.
Parents would prefer having
all the children attend one school
within walk in ~ distance.
Patty Friend
Given Ticket
! After Heist •
• SACRAMENTO (AP>
: Steven Soliah, charged with hid-
• ing Patricia Hearst before her
, arrest, was cited for speeding
i near Redding one day after a
t bank robbery possibly linked to
• the Symbionese Liberation
-Army.
: The California Highway Patrol
I confirmed t9<1ay that Soliah was
• s topped for speeding Feb. 26 ~ about 45 miles north of Redding ~ near a turnoff to Wyntoon, a
I •
• Hearst family retreat. .
Patrolman Oare! Barham cit-
: ed Soliah (or s peedin g al i Castella, said CHP spokesman
t Kent Millon .
, Soliah 's .speeding ticket came
one day after SJ. 700 was taken in
a robb«y at a Guild Savings and
,-Loan Association bank in
t Sacramento.
7 The 27-year-old Soliah was ar ·
•rested Sept. 18 -the same day
"authorities picked up Miss
•Hearst and her SLA comrades
I William and Emily Harris and
l Wendy Yoshimura.
I Law enforcement o!ficiaJs in
'Sacramento have said they are
"studying the Guild robbery and
•an April 21 robbery at a Crocker ~fl:~: t~nt;:~~l~hael for possible
~ An official al the Castella
: Justice Court in Shasta County
: conJirmed that Soliah paid the ;525 fint> -for going 65 mi les an
, hour in a 55-mile per-hour zone -
~by mailing in a money order
~April 4.
: Red Offer Nixed
, WA SHI NGTON (AP)
Turkey reportedly is buying 60
helicopters from Russia but has
:turned down a Soviet offer to
.,furnish MIG 21 and MIG 23 jet
.fighters for the Turkish air force.
• • •
• • •
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed ""'"~"' •nd PuVl+W<
Jack R. Curley
""
• Vite ,...~1m~1 •nd c;.,.,..,., w..._.
Thomas Keevil
ThOmas A. Murphin@
MfMQI..., Ed1lor
a.a.rlH H. LOOS Ri<Mrd P. Nall
'
A11llt.,.1 MllYO',. Edltllil<l
Robert Banter W•~I O.Mlol'I" C:-J EO<!Ot
Huntlncrton 8eKhOtrkt 1niJ e..co11 "°"",..... ,.-.11.._ ...... .,_., P.O. h•1W..,,...
Othtr Olfke U9i1M liotKJI. I I .. (;lf"l'W!oo1,_ '-!•Mt 0...M> wu1.uaw.t1 a..,s1-,.. .. ..., 11e.c.ti. )»3 ,......., eovi.•..-d
SMlllMM-v•U•e• J.Ult IA P.r •-•t""" D._ F,..._
a-4onday. Oolobw 27, 197$
Farmer Shot
By Pet Dog
HAIJFAX, England (AP)
-Farm worker Michael
Kelly waa ahot in the chest
today by h is red .setter,
police said. Kelly had pu1.
tti.s s hotgun on top of a wall
at a farm near here wh.iJehe
climbed over . The dog
scrambled up at the same
time. and its paw hit the
trigger, offic('rs said. Kelly
managed to s tagger bal'k to
the farmhous e and was
taken to a hos pitc1I. where
his condition 'ti.' as said lo be
satis/;.ictory.
Trustees
Sticking
T o P l ans
Trustees of iluntington rk'ach ':-.
Oceun Vit'"' School Distn et h;.ivt.'
decided not to alter thL•Jr propos<.1\
to unify l'lloni.; cx 1st~n g t:lt·tnL·n
lo.1ry boundal"ll"S.
111s lr1 ct Supl•rintcntlent 0 ;;1lt'
('uogan s~1id tru::.l('L'S discusSl'd
lht' poss1b1 Ii ty uf Lill' lu1.11ng 111 lht.•1r
proposal five norlht'rn ~tunt·
lngton Beach schools that are now
part of the Westminster elemen-
tary district.
But he said staff reports showed
those schools would bring in about
830 more high s chool students,
which could overcrowd the
Marina and Ocean Vi ew Jligh
School campusei::.
At the same time, he said, the
addition oC that 3rea would not
have any apprecittble impact on
the tax rate -since both areas
have about the same dollars
available per student.
Barbara Milkovich, a parent in
north Huntington Beach. has pro·
posed a unified di strict either
along city boundaries or with her
area and Ocean View together.
.. The d oor is not clos ed,··
Coogan said or her pro1:x.>sal . ·· 1t 1s
just that Wt' are not going lo
pursue the idea.··
Coogan also noted that Mrs.
Milkovich 's area already is in-
cluded in a unification proposal
submitted to the Orange County
Committee on School District
Organization by the Westminster
<elementary) School Board.
Ford Plans
State J/isit
SACRAMENTO (UPI>
There are no plans for President
Ford to nting!e publicly \Vitti
crowds this "'eek when ht..• makes
his first visit to California since
his life was threatened twice last
month.
The Presidt>nt will attt'nd a
$250-a-platt> fund-raiser in Los
Angeles on Wednt>sd;1y a nd a
similar event in San Francisco
on Thursday. He was invited to
both events before the two al -
leged attempts to assassinate
him.
While in California, Ford may
al:..o give testimony by videotape
on \.\"hat ht> saw a nd heard when
J\tanson apostle l.ynette F'romm('
thrust a .'IS-caliber pi ~tol at him
from a crowd in Sacramento
Sepl. 5.
PLANE ..•
square miles over rugged jun gle
tt"rrain.
Hamilton said that there are 14
private aircraft from Orange
Coast cities assisting two C-l30s
in the search. He said that pilots
from Orange County are doing
"a magnificent job.··
Hamilton added that ··a
tremendous amount of red-tape
from the Mexican government
has hampered the search .. ,
Tobin said today from Killian·s
company in Garden Grove that
none of the e mployes have given
up.
"We 're still fi guring every -
thing is okay, .. he said. "People
havt> walked out of I.hat jungle
after two or three weeks.··
Mercer Shows
Improve ment
Compc>Ser Johnny Mercer, •
former Newport Beach resident,
was reported to be making slight
improvement tOOa y in his re-
covery from brain surgery at a
Pasadena hospital.
But even though Mercer
managed to open his eyes over
the weekend, spokesmen at llun-
tington Memorial Hospital still
described his condition as "pre-
cariou&-"'
Mercer underwent surgery for
removal of a benign brain tumor
late last week . He is the com-
poser of many popular songs
which have become standards,
including ••r .. a u ra,'' ''Days of
Wine and Rosu" and "Moon
&vu!'
Suspect
Slain
By Clerk
'
An Anaheim market clerk Sun-
day shot and killed a knifc-
wi('J ding holdup man who had
gr:-ibbcd the clerk's wife by the
neck and was dragging her away
as a hostage, police said today.
Gary Lee Phillips, 2.">. o! 425 N.
Magnolia Ave. in Anaheim, was
dead at lb\• robbery scent' with a
single gun.'l hot wound in the
chest, a police spokesman .said.
The clerk , whose nl:lm e was be·
ing "'ithheld by investigators.
told officers J>hillips entered the
s mall ma.rkel at 1107 W. South St.
~•l about 7.30 p.m . and waJked to
1.1 coult•r whl'rt.' h\• took oul a six
pack of bet'r.
.. Tht' sus pect walked to the
(·heck st.:u1d and pulled a knife,
ordt•ring thl' c·ll'rk to put some
money he \\•as counting into a
paper sa(.:k." the police
.spokl"'s man said .
"'fhen he grabbed the wife
:1rounll the neck and said
something to the effect 'You·rc
(.·urn in g with me·;· th e
s pokl'S man s<dd.
The C'lt'rk tultl urficers thl' SUS·
Jl('Cl bf'gari h,1ck11i g out the doo1·
but s lumblt·d . permitting tht·
\.\Oman to brl'~tk <1\\'ay.
··The clt'rk grabbed a revolver
and fi rt'd. one shot at the suspect.
who ran off Into the darkness,"
tht> po\i('e spokesman said.
Investigators found the fatal!~ ..
woundt>d PhilJips 200 yards from
the market.
Irish Police
Assure Pair
Of Safe ty .
MONASTF.REVIN, Ireland
<UPIJ -Irish police tried today
to ('Onvin<'e the kidnapers of
Outch industrialist Tiede I-fer·
rC'ma that they will not be shot if
they release their hostage, now
hl"ld at gunpoint for 25 days.
'"They are scared we will shoot
them if t hey come out,'" a police
sour ce said in outlining the latest
negotiating wrinkle.
It v.:as tht> seventh day of the
army and polict> siege of the two·
s tory house where the kidnap
duo. Eddie Gallagher, 27, an<l
Marian Coyle. 19. have been cor-
nered in an upstairs bedroom
with Herrema, 52.
Commissioner Edmund
Garvey, head of freland"s 9,000
strong police force, personally
took over disc ussions with
Gallagher during the weekend.
'fhl' lhemt" of his talks, the
source said, was an assurance
lhl' lives of the kidnapers would
ht• s afe if they walked out "'ilh
their hands up.
Although there was no firm
evidenre to back it, there was a
fe eling among policemen and
soldiers ringing the 6esieged
house that the operation was
near its final phase.
Tht> ambulance on standby to
rush Herrema to a hospital lx>gan
dummy runs and the security
escort for it has been picked and
alerted.
Sunday night the two kid-
n;ipers, both I RA renegades ,
S'>''itched on t he lights in their
bedroom hideout for the first
time.
Tree Claims
2nd Victim
ONEONTA . N .Y . (AP)
Almost six years after his mother
died when her auto crashed into a
tree alon~side a rural road near
here, John Simcox. 21, died when
his car struck the same tree
police said. '
Anna Simcox died Dec. 17 , 1969 ,
when her auto st ru('k the tree
about a mile from the family
home in Otsego County. Herson·s
!ataJ crash occurred Sunday.
Air Crash
Kills (j()
LA PAZ, Bolivia (UPI)
-Sixty persons were
ki l led today when a
military aircraft retWTiing·
Bolivian army officers and
their families from a
weekend outing in the re-
sort. of Tomonoeo crashed
into a mountain, President
Hugo Banzer announced.
Banzer made the an-
nouncement to the Military
School of Engineering dur-
ing ceremonies marking
the 25th anniversary of the
school's founding. The
school immediately sus-
pended festivities .
8Rnzer said the plane
was a Convair, a twin·
.., entine turboprop, which
was Oying the officers and
their wives and children
from an armed forces vaca-
tion spot 70 miles east of La
Pai.
U~ITf._....
PRESIDENT FORD GREETS PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT
He's Seeking Military Aid lo Offset U.S. l sraell Support
Sadat Greets Ford
'With Open Heart'
\\1 1\SHl~GTON (APJ -Egyp·
t1~1n President Anwar Sadat. the
second Egyptian head of state lo
visit the United Stales, got a
"'arm per:i;onal welcome today
from President Ford, who called
their meeting a signal that pro·
J!ress toward peace in the Middle
Eas t "will not stop."
In colorful ceremonies at the
White I-louse. Ford hailed the
F.~yptian president·s wisdom,
s incerity and moderation.
Sadat will stay two days in
W<ishington before visiting New
York City, Chicago and Houston
a nd then returning to address <t
joint session of Congress.
Sadat applauded the Presi·
dt'nt"s remarks and declared that
progress toward peace since he
a nd Jo .. ord m e t las t June in
Salzburg ··could be considered a
turning point in Arab-Israeli re-
lations.·· lie said he came to the
t Jnited States ''with an open
he;.1rt . ··
After the ceremonies on the ·
south lawn or the White House,
Ford and Sadat began a private
session in the oval office with
Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss-
inger.
As the presidents met, about·
:.))() Arab and Ira nian students
chanting ''Down With Sadat ..
and ··Long Liv~ Pales tine:·
marched a half mile through
downtown Washington.
The demon s tration was
sponsored by the Iranian Stu-
dents Association and the
Organization or Arab Students in
the United States and Canada,
which said recent Sinai peace ac-
cords pose ··grave implications
for the Arab nationaJ liberation
struggle."
After the meeting, as Sadat·s
motorcade left the White House,
the d e monstrators gathered
along Pennsylvania Avenue and
chanted: "Sadat is a U.S. puppet,
Sadat is a U.S. puppet."'
From· the back seat or his
11imous ine, Sadat s miled and
\1:aved at the protesters.
Sadat, who arrived Sunday to
begin his JI -day visit to the Unit-
t'd States, s pent the ni ght at
Williamsburg. Va. A state dinner
at the White J·lou se w as
.scheduled for tonight for Sadat
and his wife.
In the south-lawn ceremonies,
Sadat said the new Sinai accord
which Kissinger helped negotiate
between Egypt and Is rael "will
be a very important milestone on
the road to peace in our area.··
IJlbbllCiE
Bil SINE SS
CENTER
Betting
Suspects
Arrested
Tbe pretiident of a s&nta Ani
mobile home dealership and Ou.
dealership 's manacer wert
.among 17 persons arrested Fri
day ln a crackdown oo an alleged
$1 millioll·•·month Los Angel.,
bookmakinlnns.
While Robert Coulter, 30, pre.sl·
dent of Orange Cret;;l Mobil(
Home•, 909 N. Harbor lllvd ,
Santa Ana. was amoo1 the ar
restees. police said he was t. bet·
ting suspect, not a bookmakin1.t
suspect. ·
It was Coulter and Roberl
Brown , 28. Orange Crest's
manager, who placed $20,000
worth of bets with alleged
bookmaker Art Levitt, S3, ot Los
Angeles, police claimed.
And placing bets is just as iI-
teg a I as booking them, Lo s
An geles Deputy District At·
torney James Grodin said today.
··we normally don't go after
those who place bets," Grodin
admitted.
''But it is our feeling that major
players are the ones that make it
.so profitable fo r bookies and thus
feed organized crime,·· he added.
The major players Grodin
spoke of were 10 alleged bettors,
including Coulter and Brown,
who kept lhe phones ringing al
accused bookmaker Levitt•s
establishment last week.
Between the world series, col-
lege football and pro£essional
rootball, an' undercover agent
plant in Levitt '.s backroom was
kept busy recording bets -and
telephone conversations, Grodin
said.
By the end of the week, the vice
o£ficer.s felt they had enough
evidence lb charge the 17 persons
with eonspiracy to commit
bookmaking, a charge that af-
fects bettor and bookmaker
equally.
Coulter and Brown were not
the heaviest a l leged bettors
snared by the police, according
to Grodin.
David Seldich a nd William
McClellan , operators o! the
Trans Western Distributing Co.
in nearby El Monte purportedly
placed $90,000 worth of bets
bet ween them in 28 calls to
Levitt ·s west Los Angeles book.
Hal Brown, a vice president of
. .\merican International Pie·
lures, allegedly bet $15,000 in 17
phone calls during the past
months.
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• •
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--•
O~ange Coast
, EDlTIOlll
•
•
T oday's Cl IJJ1g
N.Y. Stoeks
'
VOL. 68, NO. 300, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1975 N TEN CENTS
• f
Conditions Asked for Aid to New York
• •
WASHINGTON <U PI! -With
Cantre.ts about to dectde whether
to save Ne'tl York Oty from in·
s olvency, Federal Reserve
Olairman Art.bur F. Burns has
proposed that bani« be required
to forego some income and unions
accept scaled-down pension
benefits ~ a condlticrl to federal
help, it was learned today.
If Burns' proposals are adopt-
ed, they could pose new obstacles
to New York City's receiving help
even it Congress and President
Ferd avee to offer a muJti-bll.lion
dotlartoanauarantee.
1'olice and firemen probably
would get paid even in a default,
so tbelr union leaden may re·
fuse to agree to reducing pension
benefits won in past labor setU e·
men ts. Meantime, Senate sources said
the Admlnistration, while still op-
posed to • federal rescue effort,
has been offering s uggestions for
.. what it would like to see in a bill if
any ls passed.
unt •
Deaths Cli111b
Hurricane in Mazatlan
MAZATLAN, Mexico (UPI) -Officials said to-
day 27 persons were kiJled by Hurricane Olivia which
battered this Pacific Coast port Saturday. Damage
was estimated at $8 million.
With all electric power cut off and telephone lines
down, Mazatlan was declared a disaster zone.
At least 17 other persons were injured and 10,000
houses suffere·d storm or water damage.
No Americans were reported killed or injured.
Among buildings damaged by the hurricane was
the local jail. Two prisoners were rePorted killed
when a jail wall collapsed.
Federal r e lief teams poured into the port Sunday
and a massive relief effort was under way today.
'Kissing Gunman'
Robs NB G;ranny
A bandit wearing garish .
makeup and brandishing a
shotgun robbed a 70-year-old
Newport Beach grandmother of
$130 over the weekend and then
asked for a kiss on the cheek
before he disappeared.
The victim. who lives in the
central Newport area, phoned of·
ficers late Saturday night after
the gunman who was wearing a
stocking mask caked with
greasepaint fled with all the
money she had in the house.
Police s aid the victim told
them she was home alone when
she heard a noise in a bedroom
and investigated.
The young bandit wearing the
elaborate mask was waiting for
her, his finger on the trigger of
the s hotgun. He d e mand ed
money and the victim emptied
her purse for him.
Moments later, the woman told
·him, ••yo)J must be very
desperate to sloop to this.'·
"l am;• he replied, "I'm try·
ing to find an apartment and J
don't have enough money to get
one.··
More conversation followed
and as the man left the victim
said she wished him well in his
search for a home.
"You make me feel like I want
to cry,·· replied the bandit, point-
ing to his right cheek and adding,
''kiss me right here.··
The woman did so and the ban-
dit fled lnto (he darkness, she told
police.
Investigators said they could
find no other witnesses lo the rob·
bery, but that they found fresh
palm and finger prints on a slid·
ing glass door as well as other
clues near a rear gate whi ch may
be helpful in their probe.
Trio Snatch Purse
From Woman, 79
An elderly woman propelling
her wheelchair along a Laguna
Hills road was robbed of $38 dur-
ing the weekend in what Orange
Co unt y Sheriff 's offi cers
describe as the most callous
purse sna tching incident they
have ever investigated.
Deputies said three young men
stopped their car and ap-
proached Mrs. Addie H. Little-
john, 79, of 23262 Bookland Lane,
Battle Que lled
LISBON, Portugal (AP>
Troops broke up a battle in which
dozens were injured early today
after Communists seized the gov·
El Toro, as s he propelled her
wheelchair aloug Calle de Los
Caballeros in Laguna Hills.
Mrs. Littlejohn told officers
that the young men snatched the
purse containing $38 from the
handle of her wheelchair and
then drove off at high speed.
In another purse snatching inci-
dent a Laguoa Hills Leisure
World rsident was robbed during
the weekend of a purse containing
S40 by a young man who fled on
foot , sheritf·s officers said.
Deputies said Lorene Helen
La wrence , 68, of 29T Calle
Aragon, was robbed as s he
walked on Paseo de Valencia
near the Laguna Hills post office
• •
''3'bey've been making com·
ments on what we're working on,
without ma.kine any commit·
ments," one of those drafting a
bill .. ld .
Public ly, the White House
adamantly opposes federal help.
The city, which owes $12.3
billion, bas been unable to sell
bonds since Marcil. ll is expected
to run out of m oney and default on
debts as they become due around °""· l. UPI obtained a copy of a letter
ton
Mexico
J11ngle
Comh.ed
By ROBERT BARKER
0. ~ D•ll'I' l"llet StMt
An extensive a ir and sea
search was being pushed today
for a missing plane on the west
coast or Mexico that carried five
persons. including two promi-
nent businessmen from Hunt-
ington Harbour and the wife of
one of them .
Believed aboard the twin-
engine Cessna 320A were Steven
Dikeman , ow n er or Look
Properties in Sunset Be ach,
Bruce Killian, president of the
Acme Wiring Co. in Garden
Grove and Killian's wife Bonnie.
The plane vanished on a flight
from M anza nillo to Pue rto
Vallarta. ~
Carl Tobin, vice president of
Acme, said that Dikeman and ·
Killian had left from Huntington
Harbour in early October on a
57-foot yacht owned by Roger
S mith , a form er Huntington
Ha rbour m an.
I-le said they were in Mexico to
look into some real estate.
Tobin said that Killian's wife.
Bonnie, had flown to Mexico lo
join her husband to celebrate an
anniversary .
Tobin, a life-long friend and as-
SOC'iate of Killia n . said thr
Killians have two daughter'i,
Lisa. 15, and Lauren, 13. He said ·
the Dikemans also have two·
ehildren. Pamela, 17, and Steve
16.
The plane \.\.'as apparently
piloted by a Denver dentist, Dr .
Paul l.undel. whoSe wife also was
aboard.
Tobin said the ill.fated flight
took off al 6: 15 p.m. Oct. 18 and
that weather eondit ions were
<See PLANE. Page A2 )
FRANCO FIGlllS
'l.ASI' BA.1TLE'
MADRID CU PJ J
Generalissimo Francisco Fran-
co, 82, his body wasted from two
weekend brushes with death,
fought today what many believed
would be his last battle for sur·
viva!.
Doctors said he was suffering
£roin a slight fever for the £irst
time since Saturday and from
continuing heart troubles.
The team of 14 doctors al Fran·
co's bedside in El Pardo Palace
said the old soldier was conscious
and resting quietly but that his
t'Ondition remained grave.
' ernor's mansion in the southern
town of Faro. Spain's ProbleMs
Burns aent Friday to Rep.
Thomai 4adlow Ashley <D-Ohio>.
chatrman-•or the House s ubcom·
mJttee working on legislation.
Bu.ms listed two new conditions
which he Said s)'tould be imposed if
cuaranteed loans are provided:
-''Some reduction of the
burden imposed upon the city"
under existing pension plans.
This would require renegotiation
o( pension benefits unions won.
Som eexpert.s believe pension cos·
l5 are a big factor in the city·s
financial crisis.
-A r-edut'tion in the interet
paid on securities issued bytheci·
ty and by the state·s Municipal
Assistance Corp., created afte:r
the city was unable to sell any
bonds at any price. MAC obliga-
tions pay between 6 and 11 percent
interest.
By Wednes day , a closely
divided Senate Ranking Co mmit-
tee is to decide whether to send
legiilation to the Senate where It •
would race a filibuster. Chairman :
William Proxmire (~Wia.), Wbo :
favors help. appeared to have th.-~
support o( a slight majority in his
committee.
Key staff members said · that
whjie the business world is begin·
ning to see fed eral aid as vital and
is putting pressure on Congress,
public opinion is becoming in-
creasingly hostile to any help for
the big t'ity.
• • • r10 ISSID
UPI''"°"""""' PRESIDENT FORD GREETS PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT
He'• Seeking Military Aid to Olfaet U.S. l araell Support
Sadat Greets Ford
"With Open Heart'
WASffINGTON (APJ -Egyp-
tian Prt"sident Anwar Sadat. the
second Egyptian head of state to
visit lhe United States, got a
warm personal welcome today
from Pres ident Ford, who called
their meeting a signal that pro-
gress toward peace in the Middle
East "will not s top .··
Jn t'olorful ceremonies at the
White House, Ford hailed the
Egyptian president's wisdom,
sincerity and moderation.
Sadat will stay two days 1n
Washington before visiting New
York City, Chi<."ago and Houston
and then returning to address a
joint session of Congress.
Sadat applauded the Presi·
dent·s remarks ond declared that
progress toward peace since ht!
a nd F"ot'd m et last June in
Salzburg ··C'ould be considered a
turning point in Arab-Israeli re·
lations. ·· J.l c said he came to the
United St ates "with a n open
heart.··
.<\ftt•r the ceremonies on the
south lawn of the White flousc.
Ford and Sttdat began a private
session in the oval office with
Secretary of Stale Henry A. Ki ss·
ingt?r.
(See SADAT, Page A2)
Mesan Faces Rap
In Fatal Crash
A c riminal complaint charging
felony manslaughter was being
sought today against a Costa
Mesan whose car, spinning out or
control, collided with another
auto Saturday night, exploding in
flames and killing a young Irvine
woman.
The passenger in the second
car. Eva May Palomera, 19, or
4091 Manzanita St., died about
2 :45 a .m . in Costa Mesa
Memorial Hos pital of massive in·
ternal injuries suffered in the ac-
cidt."nt.
Her companion and driver or
the s mall import car. Walter
Craig Forrester , 20. or 1549
Placentia Ave .. Newport Beach,
was listed in fair condition at the
same hospital today.
The motoris t police accuse of
fe lon y mans laughter, Jes us
Ramon Alvarez Cota, 23, of 552
Hamilton St .. Costa Mesa. w<is
sai d to be in fuir condition al
Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Ne~·port Beach.
1-fe suffe red hl"'ad and neck in ·
CSee CHARGES, Page AZ>
Signal
Backers
To Talk
West Newport residents who
insist that there is dire need ror a
new tra ffic si~nal at Prospect
Street and Coast Highway will br-
in g their case before the Newport
Be arhC'ity council Tuesday night.
Already. the dCsi re for a signal
to alleviate asserted hazards to
pedestrians has won endorse-
ment or homeowner groups, the
eity's planning commission, the
Library board and the Parks,
Beaches and Recreation Com-
mission .
The proposed site £or the signal
is in the same area where a
youngster was struck and killed
last summer.
The signal, which would be in··
stalled on the state.administered
highway, curre11tly is ninth on
the city·s priority list and now
appears only as a planning pro-
ject.
Hesidents a nd other advocates
insist on hi gher priority because
of city plans for a large park and
branch library in the vicinity
Be sid es the signa l matter,
these items appea.r on the agenda
for the 7 :30 p.m . sesSion :
-Deli beration and possible
vote on a new proposed schedule
of t'ompletion for the lot.al cable
televi s ion s y s te m o f
Tel e prompter . The schedule
would be part of a lengthy city
C'ouncil reassessm ent of the city
franchise with the cable firm.
-Airing of a s taff report or-
dered two weeks ago to de·
lermine the extent of studies on
alternate jetport sites to replace
Orange County Airport. The staff
report contains appraisal s of
government studies to date on
the alternate terminal issue .
Forgery Probed
UXBRIDGE. England (AP) -
A Florida man c harged with
possessing forged U.S. T reasury
bills with a face value of more
than Si2 million was kept in
custody today after a bail hear-
ing was told "a n American syn-
dicate" is involved and the case
is being investigated in three
other countries. Robert James
t-leller. 41 , was ordered held for
another hearing on Nov. 4.
C o ast
Weath e r
.. lXJW DECUNES
'ANOIBER 2 Prince Inherits Crisis
Me r cer Shows
Improveme nt
Partly cloudy through
early Tuesday becoming
mostly fair in the after-
noon. Not much c hange in
temperature. lli ghs 73 to
78. Lows 50 to the low 60s.
· NEW YORK (UPI) -Coo<ern
• <nM'> a. possible New York City
default sent prices lower Ln slow
trading today on the N.,. York
Sloclt Elrcbange despite predic·
, tiom the prime rate would drop
o• to the 7 ~ percent mark this
•'week.
11 The Dow Jones industrial
~1 aver~ Which •WUDI between
t•· plus minus territory during
1.,. e•ty tr,ding, lost 2.04 points to
" 838.G . The blue-chip indicator
lost 14.64 points Friday in
.. response to mOunUng opposition
~ tofederatald!orNewYc><kClty.
Declines outaJat anced ad·
"'" "ancea. CTables. A9>.
'
• 1}
MADRID, Spain CAP ) -
Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon, in
line to take over from the
stricken Gen. Francl$co F'ranco,
wi_ll inherit an orrice fU:U of pro-
blems, a n ation pressing for
social and political change and
tbe risk or falling almost before
he ge!B started.
But the 37-year-old prince will
get some opportunities never
open to Franco because of in-
ternational disapproval or the
.wftl' he establis hed his regime
a.nd controlled it for more than 36
years.
Without Franco, Spain 's
chances will improve for enter-
ing the European Common
( NE.:WSANA L YS I S J
Market, the North Atlantic Trea-
ty Organization and the com-
munity of democratic nations.
Diplomatic relations with the'
Soviet Union are likely. Spain
probably will get Gibraltar back
from Britain.
But before the prince can
establish .himself as King, he
mu.st first live dowp the idea tha t
he is, u the. Spanish joke goes,
Juan Carl06 the Brie(1 meaning
he i11 not expected t() 183t tong.
Credibility as a capable leade r
,,
may be one of his rirst tests.
One area where the prince is
certain to encounter a credibility
problem is the independence-
min d ed Basqu e region in
the north. Basque separatists
View Juan Car los as an extension
of Franco and because or this
hold h:im rea:Porwible as welJ for
the execution in September of
two Basque terrorists, convicted
or killing police.
Opposition against Juan Carlos
coul<\ show up in the relatively
-.•eaJ{hy Catalen region around
Barcelona. C•t•lans express dis-lllis\'~lth whafFranco has called
f!!ee P IUNCE, P•3'0'AZJ
,
Composer J ohnny Mercer, a
former Ne wport Beach reside nt.
was reported to be making slight
improvement today in his re·
covery from brain surgery at a
Pasadena hospital.
But even though Mercer
managed to open his eyes over
the weekend, spokesmen at Hun -
tjngton Memorial Hospital still
described his condition as "pre·
carious.··
Mercer underwent surgery for
removal of a benign brain tumor
late last week. He is the com-
poser of m a ny popular songs
which have become standards,
iucluding "Laura," "Days or
Wine and Rose&·' and "Moon
River."
I
I NSIDE TODA 't'
Bomb$ Wt>Tit off in about
nine buildings early this
morning, in 1Vew York,
Washington and Chicago. A
Puerto Rican group elaimed
<."redit . See story A.4.
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'6 ! DAILY ~LDT
o .. .i. ,.,..,. ~· '11ot•
SMR..ignrd
St·n1or Rr~ nn l)ul.Jro\\' \\·as
'ie lt•rlL'd ovl·r tht.• ''l'<'kt•nd as
Newpor t llarbor ll1 g:h
Schoot ·s hon1 ccomin~ qlh .. 'l'n
f\)f 1975 Shl' i:-. lhl'd~1ughterof
.\1r and .\t r~ l~rUC'l' E
Oubro'' of:\,,,,·pnrt lk·~tt"h
Suspect
Gave O ut
Fake Name
~e" port Beach police todav
claimed that o ne o f five person"s
charged last "'f.'t'k 1n "·hat of
ficers tt•rml•d a S.10.000 bunco
scheme had hed about her name.
\Vhen police learned the real
name of '.\-1 ar1e Ellen Johnson \'la
-computer. inrestigalO(S said
they also found thousands of
dollars worth of theft and fraud
"':trrants outstanding against
her.
She is \vanled for parole viola-
tion and sever a l out standing
Sl0,000 warrants in Los r\ngeles
County, :>J ewport police reported.
The J ohn son woman, 25, is one
of two £emales charged in
NewPort with attempting a so-
called pigeon-drop scheme.
Officers allege that she and
four other persons were involved
in th e trickery which was
calculated to bilk an e lderly
Costa i\1esa woman out of her
life's s avings.
Officers were tipped to the case
by bank personnel who became
~. suspicious when the elderly vie-
( tim and one of the suspects at-
tempted to close the senior
citizen's large savings account
• and demanded cash.
~ The Johnson woman and four
• other person s remained in
custody today in lieu of $50 000
bail apiece. They are bc\ng
rharged with conspiracy to com-
mit grand theft.
:·Coast Woman •
t Recovering
• • After Crash
• ,, A Newport Beach woman is in
, satisfartory eondi'.ion in Tustin
~ Community Hospital today as a
, resldt of an automobile accident
r in tri ine F'riday.
, Frances June .RichJ ey, 46, of
I" 104 Via Antibes in Newport
1 Rear h is ex p ect ed to be
1 ~ransferred out of intensive care
, in the next few days, a hospital
"spokes man said.
•.. Mrs . Ri cHley was a passenger
. 1n a car driven by Judith J. Ruff
-of Tu s tin whi c h roll i d ed
~ broadside with a car driven by
' Marianne Russell , 39. of 26422
f Via Damasca , Mission Viejo.
l _The collision injured Mrs.
' Rich1ey and Mrs. Ruff, police
~said . Mr s . Ruff was n ot ~hospit a l ize d , th e hospi t a l
: SPokesman said. .
• I
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I
Monday. October 27, 1975
• Judge
Po~ders
Decision
MORRISTOWN, N.J: !AP > -
The Karen Anne Quinlan trial
ended today with the Judge say-
ing he "'ould rule in IO to 14 days
whether Miss Quinlan's life-
sustaining respirator may be un -
hooked so she can ''die with
d1gn1ty. · ·
Judge Robert Muir Jr said he
would either hand down a "'ntten
op1n1on or dt'hver an oral rulLng
from the bt'nch. He m ade the
statement after beanng emo-
tional closing argumC'nts by the
attorneys for ~1i ss Quinlan ·s
part'nts and five attomt>ys oppos-
ing their request to disconnect
Lhe ma('h1ne.
Pau l \V :\rms trong, arguing
for the Qu1nlans, satd ~1u1r
s hould allow Miss Qwnlan to
"pass on with peace," and let her
"(ol!o""' the gentle call that
bt'ckons her to tasting !X'ill'l' ··
Oppos ing attorneys asserted
th;tt allowing her to die "'ould bl'
t..1nta mount t o ho m ic1dl' or
mercy killing.
.. If Kare n Anne Quinlan has
one chance in a thousand or Olll'
rhance in 10.000. or one chancl' in
a mfllion. who are we and by
v"h<it right do ""'l' kdl that
ehance? .. said Ralph Porzio. at-
torney for i\1 iss Quinlan's doc ·
tors.
:7\J1ss Quinlan. 21, has been in a
coma for six months -in what
doctors say is an irreversible and
··persistent vegetative state.··
Her parents , J oseph and Julia
Quinlan have stopped praying for
a miracle a nd say it is "God 's
will'" that their daughter "pass
into his gentle and loving hands"
and "die with dignity."
Doctors have re fused to unhook
the respirator. saying that since
Miss Quinlan is s till a li ve it
would be a violati on or law and of
medical tradition to deprive her
or treatment that sustains her
breathing. Som e say "pulling the
plug" would a mount to using a
"quality of li fe'" scaJe to de ·
termine who lives.
Dr . Jul i u s K o r ein. a
neurologist who testified on the
Quinians · behalf . said that the
purpose of the trial was to "make
written an unwritten law" by
which doctors allow terminally
ill patients to die by "judicious
ne glect'' rather than prolong
their agony in futile medical pro-
cedures.
He said it is common practice
for a doctor to tell a nurse to
"for Ket-" about prolonged use or
extraordinary m edieal pro-
Ct.~ures for a patient \vho h:1s no
ehance of surviv a I.
,,...,.,. Page Al
CHARGES. •
j uries, according to hospital
spokesmen.
C•lsta Mesa Poli ce Traffi c
Bureau Sgt. Cliff McBride said a
felony manslaughter complaint
was being requested from the
District Attorney's Office today,
based on Patrolman J cf{ Miller's
recommendation.
&ores of persons witnessed
both the headon co\lison of the
spinning car and the fiery af-
termath.
The accident occurred on a
twistin@ cur ve in the~ block or
Estancia Avenue, in front of
Estancia High School at I I :45
p. m .. just as a dance was break-
ing up. police said.
Tht'.' ae<'ictent was unrelated to
the dance, they added.
Authorities s aid Cota m ay
have been hurled to the pave-
ment whe n hi s car collided with
Forres ter's, t earin g off the door.
Miss Palom era and Forre!iter
were trapped. pinned in their
<'rumpled car but policemen
Paul Cappuccilli and Mille r were
credited with getting them out
be.fore the ear burst into n ames.
Forrester was conscious and
able to tell police he tried
desperatrely ti) swerve out of the
y,•ay but couldn 't avoid the col-
lision .
Police and paramedics treated
l\1 iss Palomera at the scene but
said s he s ustained massive in-
ternal injuries.
Funera l services for the young
woman were pending today at
MarDouga ll Family Mortuary in
Santa Ana .
E'roM Page A I
PLANE •..
good. He s aid the twin-('ngine
craft was equipped with beeping
devices but t hat nothing has been
heard of it.
John Hamilton, an employe of
the Don Koll Co. in Newport
Bear h who is coordinating the
search, said that the search has
been narrowed down to alx>ut so
square miles over rugged jungle
terrain.
Hamilton said that there are 14
private aircraft from Orange
Coast cities assisting two C-130s
in the search. He said that pilots
from Orange County are doinl(
··a magn ificent job,··
Hamilton added that ''a
tremendous amount of red·tapc
from the Mexican government
bu hampered the search."
,
SITS AMONG BIDDERS
FDR's Son, Jimmy
Roos e velt
Meme ntos
Auctione d
.\J t•mt•ntOC'S of the Roosevelt
family now lie in the homes or
1nany Orange Coast colll'ctors
fol\o"·ing an auction in Custa
'.\1 esa Sunday.
The auction attracted 95 bid ·
ders who vied for the 202 items of
Roosevelt m emorabilia and art
objects in SY'l hours of bidding.
''It went off very welt.··
J ames Roosevelt. a resident or
Corona del ~t ar. and owner of a
business management company,
S3id t'bctay . ··Everything was sold
and the auctioneer tells me that
the prices "''ere very generous.''
The auction included items
that once belonged to Roosevelt's
parent-;, Franklin and Eleanor
H.oosevelt. a nd a collection or
presidential papers and docu-
ments. It in cluded suc h sizeable
items as a baby grand piano.
which brought Sl.500, and a din-
ing-room table and chairs which
fetched st'.450 .
In addition there were paint-
ings, c locks and books.
Roosevelt said that he ke pt
part of his collection, but sold
much of of it because his family
members did not y,·ant the pieces
and because the objects might be
assigned infl ated values by
federal appraisers in judging his
estate.
FarmerSlwt
By Pet Dog
HALIFAX, England !AP)
-Farm worker Michael
Kelly was shot in the chest
today by his red setter,
police said. Kelly had put
his shotgun on top of a wall
at a farm near here while he
climbed over. The dog
srrambled up at the same
time, and its paw hit the
trigger . officers s aid. Kelly
managed to stagger back to
the rarmhouse and was
taken to a hos pital, where
his condition was said to be
satis factory .
'"' c • •
; -
..... ' •
o.ny Pii.t ""1oH 11, itlcMN Orelle
POTENTIAL BIDDER INSPECTS ROOSEVELT DOCUMENTS
Presidential Memos Sold at Auction In Costa Mesa
Newport Co11ncil
Studies Bay Report
'.'Jew pur t Rea c h c ity coun·
cilmen TuC's da,y will consider a
l e n gthy report fr om t h e
Cali£ornia Department of F'ish
and Game des cribing 14 zones
around Uppt!r ~e ..... ·port Bay a nd
settin g landuse priorit ies ror
~ach sector.
The report will be brought
forth by state officials at 3 p.m. in
the midd!(' of the couneil"s re-
gular study s ession.
Spokes m e n for the agency
holding title to the estuary have
prepared a lengthy report Whirh
sho"'S two areas as being of
highest value to the restoration
and preservation of the estuary.
A large area be tween Jam-
boree Roa d and i\1 ac Arthur
Boulevard near San Joaquin
Marsh. the report states. 1s an ex-
tensive flood plain and has pro-
vided a hi ghly valuable ha bitat
for wildlife.
Res ides the wildlife as pect, the
area a!so eould be employed as a
s ilt collection area to spare the
estuary any more material de-
posited during heavy rains.
The Big Canyon area between
the bay and Jamboree Road also
shares a top-priority label in the
report. It could serve well as a
buf£er zonC' between the bay and
highly developed portions of
Ney,•port Reach.
The available water in the ca-
nyon already has nurtured ex-
tensive "'ildlife habitats. The ca-
nyon al so eould ser ve as an ex-
c e 11 e n t al'cess r oute . A
fres hwater m ars h could bt' im·
proved whe r e the canyon met:>ts
the bark bay. the report adds.
One concern is the accumula-
tion or stockpi led s ilt deposited
there after a dredging project
several year!; a go when material
was pulled £rom the e!:»tuary to
develop a water ski area.
The r eport continues through
the rest of the ide ntified regions
surrounding the b ay, with the
third·priority item being the roll·
1ng grasslands on the we::;t side of
tht>estuary.
Focus ing particularly on the
rolling areas n ear University
Drive, the report stresses that
the soil in the region is highly
vulnerable to e rosion, thus lead-
ing to even more silt problems in
the bay.
Special vegetation planted on
the stee p slopes could ease the
e rosion problem , the report
states.
Tues da y·s presentation i s
calculated to s how city officials
land-planning alternatives which
will be a prelude to a master plan
for the estuary being developed
by the state agency.
No official action can be taken
at the study session, other than to
schedule the issue for a regular
action meeting.
2 Die in Plane
VISALIA (UPI) -Two youn g
m e n were kil le d h e re thi s
weekend when their smaJI plane
clipped arl oak tree and crashed
into a corn (ield. They were iden·
tified as John Ross Batten, 22,
and his passenger . James Dav-
nenport, 18, both of Visalia.
Court lester Bunabled
With· crowd obv iously enjoying it, Roma-
nian ten"is star Ille Nastase bows in mock
humility lo his conqueror, Australia's
Evonne Goolagong, following her 7-5 vic ·
tory over him in Mission Viejo. Action
took place Saturday al Marguerite
I
Recreation Center where battle or sexes
was filme d for t elevision. Nast ase, who
clown ed his way through the match, was
limited to one serve and had lo cover the
doubles court on his side of1 the net as
handicap in the singles match.
. . . . ~ ·-. ,
You;ng
Diver
I
Drowns
•
•
I
I
As> ll·Y•ar-oJd boy ICUl>a dl•-
ing with his father and older
brother drowned ,Sunda,y in
Laguna Beach.
Tbe body of Dennis Gen)d
Peterson of Covina was found
meshed In keli>ln about 35 fed of
waler 300 yards arr shore by
Laguna Beach Lifeguard Capt.
'James Stauffer.
The child had been the object ol'
a two hour air. sea and land
search by Laguna Beach Police,
five Laguna lifeguards and the
Newport Beach helicopter.
Lifeguards reported that
equipment recovered from the:
body appeared to be in proper
working order. ·
Capt. Stauffer speculated that
the boy may have eocouutered
some difficulty and panicked.
His life vest was not activated
and his weights were still clasped
on the body.
The body was identified by the
lad 's father. Hans Christian
Pete rson.
Peterson told police that he
and his .two sons had entered the
water 3t Diver"s Cove in Laguna
Beach al about 12 :~ p.m . Sun -
day.
The three swam out to rocks
about 250 to 300 yar<bi off-shore
and at some point the 11 year old
beeame separated from father
and brother.
Prearran ged plans were for
the party to surface and regroup
if they bec am e separated, but
Peterson said that when he came
to the surface, he could not see
his young s on .
The father and the e lder
brother then searched un -
derwater. At a bout 2:18 p.m .
Laguna Beach police were con-
tacted.
Walch Commander Sgt. Ter ry
T emple set up a com mand post in
the 600 block of Cliff Drive and
rail ed in the lifeguards.
Lag una Beach policem en
searched s urrounding land areas
including ne arby stores a nd
r estaurants.
Lifeguard Chief Bruce Baird,
Capt. Stauffer, and guard John
Si mpkis donned scuba gear and
searched underwater while other
guards combed the rocky cove
areas.
T he Newport Beach Police
De partment he licopter was
ealled in fo r aerial recon -
naissance .
About three hours after the
·.:..i.ime the father and his sons had
entered the water, Capt. Stauffer
located the body.
I
The boy was pulled from the
water and no life signs were de-
tected. A coroner's deputy pro-
nounced him dead at the scene.
An autopsy is pending.
F..-P~AJ
SADAT •••
As the presidents met, about
JOO Arab and I ranian students
chanting "Down With Sadat"'
a nd ··Long Live Palestine,·•
marche d a half mile through
downtown Washington .
The ' d e mons t ration wa s
sponsored by the Iranian Stu-
de nts A ssociation and th e
Organization or Arab Students in
the United States and Canada,
which said r ecent Sinai peace ac-
cords pose "grave implications
for the Arab national liberation
struggle.··
AJter the m eeting, as Sadat's
motorcade left the White House.
the demonstrators gathered
along Pennsylvania Avenue and
chanted: "Sadat is a U.S. puppet,
Sadat is a U.S . puppet."
From the back seat of bis
limousine, Sadat smiled and
waved at the protesters.
Sadat. who arrived Su nday to
begin his 11 -day visit to the Unit-
ed States, spent the night al
Williamsburg. Va. A state dinne r
at the W hite Hou s e was
scheduled for tonight for Sadat
and his wife.
In the south-lawn ceremonies,
Sadat s aid the new Sinai accord
which Kissinger helped negotiate
between Egypt and Israel "will
be a very important milestone on
the road to peace in our area."
E'.._P~AJ
PRINCE ••.
a necessity -the unity of Spain.
"Franco's successor m u st
mend the regionalis m problem
or there will be no unity, .. said a
Catalan lawyer.
Knowledgeable politicians -s ay
Juan Carlos should have no trou-
ble shedding the image of Fr an-
co 's band-picked successor, who
was specially schooled, trained
militari.Jy and guided to swear to
political principles Franco laid
down.
"If the prince can establish a
political opening, get a strong but
liberal-minded governrpenl
working and demonstrate tO the
political opposition he is not just
3 poor imitation of Franco, he
m ay make it," one government
offi cial said. "Juan Carlos mus t
make the country believe he Is
aoing to change things."
•
·Orange Coast
EDITION
VOL. 68, NO. 300, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today's Closlag
N.Y. Stoeks
MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1975 c TEN CENTS
Conditions· Asked ,for Aid to New York
WASffiNGTON CUPI> -With
Congress about to decide whether
to save New York City from in·
solvency, Federal Reserve
Chairman Arthur F . Bums has
proposed that banks be required
to forego some income and unions
accept Sl"aled -down pension
benefits as a condition to federal
help, it was learned today.
U Burns· proposals are adopt.
ed, they could pose new obstacles
to New York City's receiving help
even if Congress and President
Ford licree to offer a multl·blllion· dollarfoanparantee.
Police and firemen ·probably
would' get pald even In a default,
so their union leaders may re-
fuse to acree to reducing pension
benefits woo in put tabor settle-
ments.
Meantime, Senate sources said
the Admini.atration, while stiti op-
posed to a federal rescue effort,
bas been offering suggestions tor
what it would like to aee in a bill if
any is paased.
(
.. Tb.ey've been making com·
ments oo what we're working on,
without making any commit·
mftlta,'' one o{ those drafting a
bill said.
Publicly, the White House
edamanUy opposes Ceder al help.
The city, which owes $12.3
billion, has been unable to sell
bonds since March. It is expected
to run out o( money and def a ult on
debts as they become due around
Dec .I.
UPI obtained a copy of a letter
Burns sent Friday lo Rep.
1'bomas Ludlow Ashley (D·Ohio),
chairman of the House subcom·
mittee working on legislation.
Bums listed two new conditions
which be said should be imposed if
guaranteed loans are provided:
-''Some reduction of the
burden imposed upon the <.'ily"
under existing pension plans.
This would require renegotiation
ol pension bene(its unions won.
Some experts believe pension COS·
• unt ton • r10
Ford
Greets
Sadat ..
W ASH!NGTON (A Pl -Egyp.
tian President Anwar Sadat, the
second Egyptian head of state to
visit the United States, got a
warm personal welcome today
from President Ford. who called
their meeting a signal that pro
gress toward peace in the Middle
East "will not stop."
In colorful ceremooies at the
White House, f'ord hailed the
Egyptian president's wisdom,
sincerity and moderation.
Sadat will stay two days in
Washington before visiting New
York City, Chicago and Houston
and then returning to address a
joint session of Congress.
Sadat applauded the Presi·
dent's remarks and declared that
progress toward peace since he
and Ford met last June in
Salzburg "could be considered a
turning point in Arab-Israeli re·
lations." He said he came to the
United States "with an open
heart."
After the ceremonies on the
south lawn of the White House,
Ford and Sadat began a private
session in the oval office with
Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss·
inger.
As the presidents met, about
300 Arab and Iranian students
chanting .. Down With Sadat"
and ''Long Live Palestine,··
marched a half mile through
downtown Was hington .
The demon s tration was
sponsored by the Iranian Stu·
dents Association and the
Organization of Arab Students in
the United States and Canada,
which said recent Sinai peace ac·
cords pose "grave implications
(See SADAT, PageA2)
Mercer Shows
Improvement
Composer Johnny Mercer, a
former Newport Beach resident,
was reported to be making slight
impcovement today in his re·
covery from brain surgery at a
Pasadena hospital.
But even though Mercer
managed to open his eyes over
the weekend, spokesmen at Hun-
tington Memorial Hospital still
described bis condition as "pre-
carious."
Mercer underwent surgery for
removal o( a benign brain tumor
late last week. He is the com-
paser or many popular songs
which have become standards,
including "Laura, .. "Days of
Wme and Roses'· and '·Moon
River.··
DOW DECUNES
ANOTHER 2
NEW YORK CUPIJ -Concern
over a possible New York City
delault sent prices lower in slow
trading today on the New York
Stock Exchange despite predic·
tion.s the prime rate would drop
to the 7\A.t percent mark this
week.
The Dow Jones industrial
averaae, which •WUJ'l.k between
plus and minus territory during
early trading, lost 2.04 points to
838.48. The blue-chip ~cator
lost 14 .64 points Friday in
response to mounting opposition
tolede.ral aid for New York City.
Declines outdistanced ad-
vances. (Tables, A9).
I
UptT ......
PRESIDENT FORD GREETS PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT
He's Seeking Military Aid to Ollset U.S. laraeH Support
Trio Snatch Ptirse
From Woman, 79
An elderly woman propelling
her wheelchair along a Laguna
1-lills road was robbed.of $38 dur-
ing the weekend in what Orange
County Sheriff 's o(ficers
desC'ribe as the most callous
purse 6nat ching incident they
have evei: investigated.
Deputies said three young men
stopped their car and ap·
proached Mrs. Addie H. Little-
john, 79, of 23262 Bookland Lane,
El Toro, as she propelled her
wheelchair along Calle de Los
Caballeros in Laguna Hills.
Mrs. Littlejohn told officers
that the young men snatched the
purse containing $38 from the
handle or her wheelchair and
then drove off at high speed.
In another purse snatching inci·
dent a Laguna Hills Leisure
World rsident was robbed during
the weekend of a purse containing
S40 by a young man who fled on
foot , sheriff's officers said.
Deputies said Lorene Helen
Lawrence, 68, of 29T Calle
Aragon, was robbed as she
walked on Paseo de Valencia
near the Laguna Hills PQ£t office.
'Kissing Gunman'
Robs _NB Gra1my
A bandit wearing garish
makeup and brandishing a
shotgun robbed a 70.year·old
Newport Beach grandmother of
$130 over the weekend and then
asked tor a kiss on the cheek
belore he disappeared. .
The victim, who lives in the
central Newport area, phoned of·
ficers late Saturday night after
the gunman who was wearing a
stocking mask caked with
greasepaint lied with a ll the
money she had in t he house.
Police said the victim told
them she Was home alone when
she heard a noise in a bedroom
and investigated.
The young bandit wearing the
elaborate mask was waiting for
her, his linger on the trigger of
the shotgun. He demanded
money and the victim emptied
her purse for him.
Moments later, the woman told
him , ''you must be very
desperate to stoop to this ...
''l am ... he replied, "I'm try-
ing to (ind an apartment and I
don't have e nough money to get
one.''
More conversation followed
and as the man left the victim
(See KISSING, PageA2)
Mexico
Jungle
Combed
By ROBERT BARKER
Ot 1r.. ~11, ~le4 '*""
An extensive air and sea
search was being pushed today
for a missing plane on the west
coast of Mexico that carried five
persons, including two promi·
nent businessmen from 1-lunt·
ington Harbour a nd the wife of
oneofihem. ~
Believed aboard the twin·
engine Cessna 320A were Steven
Dikeman. owner of Look
Properties in Sunset Beach.
Bruce Killian, president of the
Acme Wiring Co. in Garden
Grove and Killian's wife Bonnie.
The plane vanished on a flight
from Manzanillo to Puerto
Vallarta.
Carl Tobin. vice president of
Acme, said that Dikeman and
Killian had left from Huntington
Harbour in early October on a
57-foot yacht owned by Roger
Smith, a former Huntington
Harbour man.
He said they were in Mexico to
look into some r eal estate.
Tobin said that Killian's wife,
Bonnie, had flown to Mexico to
join her husband to celebrate an
anniversary.
Tobin, a life-long friend and as-
sociate of Killian, s aid the
Killians have two d;iughters,
Lisa, 15, and Lauren. 13. lie said
the Dikemans also have lwo
children, Pamela, 17, and Steve
16.
The plane w as apparently
piloted by a Denver dentist, Dr.
Paul l.undel, whose wife also was
aboard.
Tobin said the ill.fated flight
took off at 6: 15 p.m . Oct. 18 and
that weather conditions were
good. He s aid the twin-engine
craft was equipped with beeping
CSee PLANE, Page A2 l
FRANCO FIGHIS
'IASI' BATTLE'
MADRID <UPI)
Generalissimo Francisco Fran-
co, 82. his body wasted from l\l.'O
weekend brushes with death,
fought today what many believed
would be his last battle £or sur -
vival.
Doctors said he was suffering
rrom a slight £ever for the first
t ime since Saturday and from
continuing heart troubles.
The team of 14 doctors at f'ran-
co·s bedside in El Pardo PaJace
said the old soldier was conscious
and resting quietly but that his
condition remained grave.
Mesans Eye House Funds
Tiro Hearings Set to Gather Testimony
Costa Mesa resident.a are again
being urged to say how they think
federal funds to improve living
conditions in the city should be
spent.
The city's Housing Community.
Development Committee has
scheduled two public bearings to
gain the cltlxens· comments on
what the city s hould do with
$5.W,000 it is due to receive next
year.
The money is an allocation to
the city under the Commwtity
Houslng a nd Community
Development Act, a pro1ram
which will bring $4.2 million to
Costa Mesa over six year.;.
The first entitlement was re-
ceived last July -$229,000 -and
is being spent in such areas as a
loan and grant program to re-
habilitate substandard housing,
and in ·providing emergency
shelter for the homeless.
Last year's decisions grew
Crom comments made by the
public at two public hearings,
and the housing committee is
following the same pattern this
)
year before making its recom·
mendations lo the city council :
the hearings will be held We<ln es-
day and Nov. 4, both beginning at
6:30 p.m ., and both in the council
chambers al city hall.
Anyone not able to attend the
hearings ean send in recommen-
dations in writing to William L.
Dunn, assistant city manager.
The letters must be received
before the end o( this week.
A stipulation o( the program is
that the money must benefit
those on low or moderate in-comes.
ts are a big fac tor in the city•s
financial cris is.
-A reducfion in the interest
paid on securities issued by the cl·
ty and by the state's Municipal
Assistance Corp., created after
the city wtf.s unable to sell Rny
bonds at any price. MAC obliga-
tions pay between 6 and 11 percent
interest.
By W ednesday, a closely
divided Senate Banking Commit·
tee is to decide whether to send
legisllllion tO the Senule where it
would face a filibuster. Chairman
William Proxmire <D-Wis.J, who
favors help, appeared to have the
support or a slight majority in his
committee.
Kt>y staff members said that
\\'hilt.• the business world is begin·
ning to see federal aid as vital and
is putting pressure on Congress,
public opinion is bec-Oming in·
creasingly hostile to any help for
the big city .
• • ISSID
Deaths Cli1nb
Hurricane in Mazatlan
MAZATLAN, Mexico (UPI ) -Officials said to-·
day 27 persons were killed by Hurricane Olivia which
battered this Pacific Coast port Saturday. Damage
was esti mated at S8 million.
With all electric power cut off and telephone lines
down, Mazatlan was declared a dis aster zone.
At least 17 other persons were injured and 10,000
houses suffered storm or water damage.
No Americans were reported killed or injured.
Among buildings damaged by the hurricane was
the local jail. Two prisoners were reported killed
when a jail wall collapsed.
Federal relief teams poured into the port Sunday
and a massive relief effort .vas under way today.
Sorsabal Doesn't
Want Pay Increase
Will Costa Mes a City Manager
Fred Sorsabal get a raise?
He 's told Mayor Alvin L .
Pinkley lhat he doesn't want one.
and when questioned today, he
repeated that he considers his
present salary of $38,364 a year
"f0ir and equitable."
Rut the question will not end
there.
Mayor Pinkley said that he
plans to a sk his £ellow council
members how they (eel about it
<it <1 personnel session after the
next counci l meeting, Nov. 3.
"I think it 's unsatisfactory that
he not get a raise, .. Pinkley said.
I don't like the connotation it
s uggests. that maybe we are
planning to get of rid or him
because that couldn't be further
£ram the truth. I think he has
done a good job , and should be
given a raise ...
Sal:Jrie~ of most other city
employes, including the depart·
ment heads, were settled three
weeks ago. The counC'il approved
increases or 6.25 percent for most
people. with the police getting 7.5
percent.
Sorsabal was on vacation dur·
in g the windup of s alary negotia·
lions. though before he left he
told lhe mayor that he did .not
want an increase, and has since
repeated that pos ition. fie said
that he has not even chC<.'kcd to
see what increases managers of
compa rable cit ies in Orange
County received .
The city·s fire men also have
not had lhl•ir salaries adjusted
yet this yea r . l 'hc fire men,
represented by the Teamsters,
are still dickering over terms
with the management team.
Mesan Faces Rap
In Fatal Crash
A criminal complaint charging
fc>lo ny mans l;iughler was being
sought today against a Costa
Mes an whose car, spinning out of
control, collided with another
auto Saturday night, exploding in
names and killing a young Irvine
woman.
The passenger in the second
C"ar, Eva May Palome ra, 19, of
4091 Manzanita St .. died about
2:45 a .m . in Cos ta Mesa
Memorial l·lospital of massive in·
lernal injuries suffered in the ac-
cident.
Her com panion and driver or
the s mall import car, Walter
Craig Forrester. 20, of 1549
Pl<icentia Ave .. Newport Be;ich,
~'as listed in (air condition at tht.·
same hos pital today .
The motorist police aCCUS(' or
felony manslaughter. Jes us
Ramon Alvarez Cota. 23. or 552
Hamilton St .. Cos ta Mesa, was
said to be in fair condition at
Hoag Me morial flos pital in
Newport Beach.
He sulfered head and neck in·
juries, aj.'cordlng to hos pital
spokesmen.
Costa Mesa Police Traffic
Bureau Sgt. Cliff McBride s aid-a
felony mans laughter complaint
was being requested Crom the
District Attorney's Office today,
based on Patrolman Jeff Miller'i.;
recommendation.
Scores of pe rsons witnessed
both the headon Collison of the
spinning car and the fiery af.
termath .
The accident occurred on a
twistin4 curve in the ZIJO block of E~tanc1a Avenue, in front or
btancla High School at 11 :45
1
p.m .. jus t as :.1 dance ~·i.ls brei.tk ·
1ng up, polic(' s aid
The ;iccident was unrcli.tted to
lh<'dance, they added.
Authorities s aid Cot a m ay
have been hurled to the pave-
m(•nt when his c:ir colluled with
ForrC'ster's, tea ring orfthr-door.
~1i ss Palomera and fo'orrestcr
tSt>e CHA RG f:S, Pag(' 1\2)
Coast
Weal her
Partly cloudy through
early Tuesday becoming
mostl y £a ir· in the after·
noon. Not muc h C'hange in
temperature Hi ghs 73 to
78. Lows 50 to the low OOs.
INSIDt: TODAY
Bombs Wf'n! off in about
nine build ings early this
morn ing . 1n iVew York,
Washington and Chicago. A
l"ut>rto Rican group cla.imed
credit See story A4 .
Index -... ...... ~~ .. MnleNI--'"' . •• .. .... ,_, .. •• •• 0..Mlf ... .,.,, -· •t·t ....... " s,1¥1•...,_ •• --" -.. , .. ,,
DMtllMttk" •• MK-Mil rlle'h •• 1•1ier1 .. ,. ... •• . ..... _ . .. 1.....-U'-ttl .. --•• "-•• _ ... •• --•• --•• A.MU."*" ••
'
•
"
•
•
'
DAILV PILOT
D••h Piiot St .. t Pri.oi.
Slee Rrigned
Senior Bryn n Dubro'A '''a ~
selected over lh e Yl'l't'kc>n cl ~~
Newport llarbor Jf1gh
Schoot·s homecoming queen
for 1975. She is the d~iughtc>rof
Mr. a nd Mrs l~rutL' 1'~.
Dubro\\1 nfN('wp11r1 lk«tth
D.1/rr Piiot SI .. ! Pho!<!
Queen of Eagle•
Ll s a Swens on reigned this
past weekend as Estancia ~ligh School's 1975 homecom-
ing queen, taking time off
rr~m her duties as a nag
twirler on the school 's pep
squad. She is 18 and a senior.
at the Costa i\1esa school.
SADAT .••
for the Arab national liberation struggle.··
After the meeting, as Sadat ·s
motorcade leCt the White House,
the demonstrators gathered
along Pennsylvania Avenue and
chanted: "Sadat is a U.S. puppet.
Sadat is a U.S. puppet.''
From the back seat of his
limousin~. Sadat smiled and waved at the protesters.
Sadat. who arrived Sunday to
begin his 11-day visit to the Unit-
ed States. spent the night at
Williamsburg, Va. A state dinner
at the White House was
scheduled for toni ght for Sadat
and his wiff>.
KISSING •••
said she wi shed him well in his
search for a home.
"You make me feel like J want.
to cry,•· replied the bandit, point-
ing to his right cheek and adding,
"kiss me right here."
The woman did so and the ban.
d.it fled into the darkness, she told
police.
Investigators said they could
fmd no other witnesses to the rob·
bery, but that they found fresh
palm and finger prints on a slid-
ing glass door as well as other
clues near a rear gate which may
be helpful in their probe.
ORANGE COAST c
DAILY PILOT
Ole Or~ (01\l 0fUll Pllol. wiP'I -101 k
t-11 !hr Nf#l·,.ffU, "_,..,..,, l>r ""' Or-C-$1 p.,1>11..,1n11 c:.in_.w !ofo-.i•
IMllllOl>I ••• !Kibll\!Wd M-v lhtOUl)ft flO<My
for Co•I" Mt11. N1wp0r1 IM«ll, >lunll<IQ!on 8otatt11 Foun111n 111111 ,. Ir•!,.., ~M•lbo\<~
Vlller 1..t l•V ..... Bf>M"l~ll Colt•! A ""ll"'
P'e9IONI .Oil-II ~lh""ll ~,..,,.,,"""!.<on· 0.V• IM PllMip1t .... 11111Mr>G ,._.,. !\ .i lJll ~··Bly !>ltHI. C<itll ,..,. ... C..!1fotnlo\1?•1~
Robert N. Weed "'•lllloi~I •"" Pllbji-
Jac.k R. Curley
V1<1 PrttlOlnl '"" i;.,,., .. ,,-..""'Of"'
. Thomas K~vll
IEdll0t
Thomas A. Murphlne
....... 11 ... !011 .. •
Chlrles H. Loos Rkhard P. Nall Mlllt-MlnlOI"' £111~
Young
Diver
Drowns
An 11 -year-old bQy S('Ubu div-
ing with his father and oldl~r
brolh t>r drowned Sund~1y 111
l.aguna Reach.
1'he body of l)ennis Gerald
Pett>rson of Covina w;.1s found
meshed in kelp in about :JS ft..'t:t (if
v.1ater 300 y<J rds off ~hr1r1..• hy
La guna fi('ac h l,ifi:guard Capt
J ames Stauffer.
1'hl• child had been thl' obJt·ct of
.:1 ilwo hour air. ~l'a and land
S('a rch by Laguna lk•Jch poliet',
five Laguna lifeguard.-; anti tilt·
~ev.rrort Be a r h hl•I icnpl er
l.if(•g uartls r eportt'd that
equ1pmt•nt recovt•r<'d frum th e.-
body appeared to be 1n pru1>t•r
~·11rki n g order.
Capt. Stauff('r S Pl'L't1 l.1tt'd th ;1t
the boy m ;1y have t>ncount1..·rl·d
:-.omt" difficulty and pan1t·k1..•d .
liis life vest was nu1 .1rtiv;itt•d
;1nd h1.-: \\'(•1gh ts \l'l'l't' s!dl cJ.1 .... pt·tl
on the body.
1'hl· l>odv v.•as 1rll•nt1f1t•d by thl·
J;1d 's rath t•r, li:.ins C hr1~t1a11
i'l'll'fSOO.
f'eterson told poli ce that ht•
and his two sons had entt'rl•d tlH.·
\.t:ater at D1ver·s Covl' in l ,;1~101<.1
&<:tch at about 12.30 pm Suri
d;i y .
The thret.' swam uut tu rocks
about 250 to Jt)O y;ir·lt'i uff.shor1..·
and at some' point the 11 ye<i r old
beca me separ;itcd from f;.1thcr
and brother.
Prearranged plans v.·ert• for
lhl' party to surf act• and regroup
if thPy bt•<.'amC' ~epara lt..•tl , hut
Peterson said that when ht· ('an1c
\u the surf;t('t'. ht' rould nut. !'il'l'
his young son.
Tilt~ falhl'r :.ind thl' clrl1•r
brot her th e 11 :-.earrhcd 11n
(\erv.'alt•r . J\t abuut 2 .18 r rn .
1.aguna lleat·h po!iC'l' wt~rc l"LJll
t<1Cted.
\Vatch C'omman<ll'i Sgt . 1\•rry
Temple .se t up .:i (·omm;intl po:-.1 in
the 600 block of Cl iff Drive .ant.I
railed in th e lift•guartl'i
I.aguna Beach pol icl'm l'n
searrhed s urrounding land ar1..·.:i .s
including nt•a rby s tor('s 1.1 nd
restaur ants.
I.ifeguard Chie f Rrucc Baird
Capt. Stauffer, and guard Joh~
Simpk is donned sruba gear and
searC'hed undcrwaler \.\'hile other
guards combed the rocky cove
areas.
The Newport Beach Poli<'e
Department h e li copter wa s
called in £or aerial recon -
naissance.
Life or Death
SITS AMONG BIDDERS
FDR's Son, Jimmy
Roosevelt
Mementos
Auctioned
.\lemt:'nlOL':,, of the Roosl'vcl t
family 1101\' lie 1n lhl' homes of
m any Oran~c· Coast collectors
fullow1n g ;in auC't1on 1n Costa
.\lt•:,,a Sund:.t~'·
The auction attracted 95 bid-
dt'rs v.1ho vicJ for the 202 items of
l<oost•\'elt memorabilia and art
ubJt1rts in 51 ~ hours of bidding.
It \\·cnt off very well ,··
.Jaml's lloosevE'lt. a resident of
, ('orona del Mar. and owner of a
bu :-:int•ss management company,
said today.·· Everything was sold
;1nrl the auctioneer tells me that
tht• prices v.·E're very generous .''
1·hp auction included items
th c1t once belonged to Roosevclt ·s
parl'nts, Franklin and Eleanor
Roosevelt. and a collection of
presidl'ntial papers and docu.
ments. It included such sizeable
items as a baby grand pi ano,
wh ich broug ht Sl ,500, and a din -
ing-room table and chairs wh ich
£etched Sl,450.
In addition the re we.re paint-
ings. clocks a nd books.
Roosevelt said that he kept
part of his collection, but sold
much of or it beC'ause his fa m.ily
members did not v.·ant the pieces
a nd because the objects might be
a~s:g n e d inflated values by
federal appraisers in judging his
estate.
Judge Weighs Case
Of Girl in Coma
MORRISTOWN. N.J . (AP) -
The Karen Anne Quinlan trial
ended today with the judge say-
ing he would rule in 10 to 14 days
whether Miss Quinlan's life·
sustaining respirator may be un.
hooked so she can '"die with·
dignity.··
Judge Robert Muir Jr. said he
would either hand down a written
opinion or deliver an oral ruling
from the bench. He made the
statement after hearing emo·
tional closing arguments by the
attorneys for Miss Quinlan's
parents and five attorneys oppos-
ing their request to disconnect
the machine.
Paul W. Armstrong, arguing
for the Quinlans, said Muir
should allow Mi ss Quinlan to
"pass on with peace,·· and let her
"follow the gentle call that
beckons her to lasting peace.''
Opposing attorneys asserted
that allowing her to die would be
tantamount to homicide or
mercy killinJi:.
"lf Karen Anne Quinlan has
one chanee in <:1 thousand or one
chance in 10,000, or one chance in
a million. who are we and by
what right do we kill that
Fro1t1PogeAJ
PLANE ...
devires but that nothing has been
heard of it.
John Hamilton . an employe of
the Don Koll Co. in J'lewport
Beach who is coordinating the
search, said that the sC'arch has
been narrowed down to about 50
square miles over rugged jW1gle
terrain .
Hamilton said that there are 14
private aircraft from Orange
Coast cities assis ting two C·l30s
in the search. He said that pilots
from Orange County are doinl!:
"a magnificent job.··
Hamilton added that ··a
tremendous amount of red-tape
£rom the Mexican government
has hampered the search."
Tobin said today from Killian·s
company in Garden Grove that
none or the employcs have given up _
··we·re still fi&:uring every.
thine is okay," he saJd. "Peor>le
have walked out or tha.t jungle
after two or three weeks .··
chance?·· said Ralph Porzio, at.
torney for Mi ss Quinlan"s doc-
tors.
l\1iss Quinlan, 21, has been in a
coma for six months -in what
doctors say is an irreversible and
··persistent vegetative state.··
Her parents, Joseph and Julia
Quinlan have stopped praying for
a miracle and say it is "God's
will" that their daughter "pass
into his gentle and loving hands"
and "die with dignity."
Doctors have refused to unhook
the respirator, saying that since
~1iss Quinlan is still alive it
would be a violation of Jaw and of
medical tradition to deprive her
0of treatment that sustains ber
breathing. Some say "pulling the
plug" would amount to using a
"quality of life" scale to de-
termine who lives.
Dr . Julius Korein , a
neurologist who testified on the
Quinlans· behalf, said that the
purpose of the trial was to ''make
written an unwritten law" by
which doctors allow terminally
ill patients to die by "judicious
neglect·· rather than prolong
their agony in futile medical pro-
cedures.
He said it is common practice
for a doctor to telJ a nurse to
"forget-" about prolonged use or
ex traordinary medic al pro-
cedures for a patient who has no
rhanceor s urvival .
CHARGES. •
were trapped, p inned in their
cru mpled car but policemen
Paul Cappuccilli and Miller were
credited with getting them out
before the car burst into flames.
Forrester was conscious and
a ble to t e ll police he tried
desperatrely to swerve out of the
way but couldn 't avoid the col -
lision.
Police and paramedics treated
Miss Palome ra at the scene but
said she sui;tained massive in -
ternal injuries.
l'\lneral services Cor the YoUng
woman w~re pending today at
M~cOougall F&mily Mortuary in
Si:mta Ana.
"
I
• ----•• • -• - -p • • • • • • ..... t •
n.11, P'llel ..._...., RlcM,.. Or ....
POTENTIAL BIDDER INSPECTS ROOSEVELT DOCUMENTS
Presidential Memos Sold at Auction In Colt• Mesa
Prince to Inherit
Troubled Nation
'1 1\DRID , Spain CA P ) -
Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon, in
line lo tak e over from the
stricken Gen. Francisco Franco,
will inherit an office full of pro-
blems. a nation pressing for
social and political change and
the risk of failing almost before
he gets started.
But the 37-year·old prince will
get some opportunities never
open to Fr an co because of in·
ternational disapproval of the
way he established his r egime
and controlled it for more than 36
year:.
\Vithout Franco, Spain's
t'hances will improvt• for enter-
ing the r::uropean Common
i\.l arket, the North Atlantic Trea-
ty Organization and the com-
r.1unity of democratic nations.
Diplomatic relations with the
Soviet Union ure likely. Spain
probably will get Gibraltar back
from Britain.
But before the prince can
estahl~sh ~imseJf as King, he
must first hve down the idea that
he is, as the Spanish joke goes,
Juan Carlos the Brief, meaning
he is not expected to last long_
Credibility as a capable leader
could show up in the relatively
wealthy Catalan region around
Barcelona. Catalans express dis·
gust "-'ith what Franco has called
may be one or his first tests.
'
One area where the prince is w
Mesa Council
Will Confer
With Staff
A seven -point agenda faces
Costa 1\1esa City Council mem-
bers tonight in a study session
with the staff.
The public meeting wiU be held
at 7:30 p.m. in th~ first-floor con-
ference room at city hall.
Topics range from a report by
Public Services Director James
Eldridge on the arterial highway
financing program to who should
pay for the upgrading of fire
hydrants in the city.
The fire hydrant topic emerged
as an issue when a developer re-
cently protested a requirement
that he up g rade an off-site
hydrant in addition to paying for
a new hydrant on the site of a pro·
ject. He argued that upgrading
an off.sit e hydrant was a
neighborhood improvement, and
that the neighborhood should
ishare the cost .
Another item on the agenda is
a report by City Manager Fred
Sorsabal on guidelines for the
beautification committee. This
topic will be followed by a report
by the Wests ide Task Force on
conflicting uses on West 19th
Street.
The location of the frontage
road for the Corona del Mar
Freeway, a concern or residents
or the Del Mar tract., also is
scheduled for discussion.
The £inal two items involve a
suggestion. that a city-owned
house be . used as a home for
juvJ?nilcs as part of a colmty pro-
gram, and a staff repcirt on a
petition from Fairview Road re-
sidents that a block wall be built
on the street south of the San
Diego Freeway.
( NEWSANALYSIS J
certain to encounter a credibility
problem is the independence-
m ind ed Basque region in
the north. Basque separatists
view Juan Carlos as an extension
of Franco and because ot this
hold him responsible as well for
the execution in September of
t·No Basque terrorists, convicted
o£killing police.
Opposition against Juan Carlos
a necessity -the unity of Spain.
''Franco's s uccessor must
mend the regionalis m problem
or there will be no wtlty,'· said a
Catalan lawyer.
TONIGIIT
COSTA MESA PLANNING
COl\1MISSION -Regular meet-
ing, City Hall, 6:30 p.m.
OCC LECTURES -
''Microwave Oven Cooking ··
Halecrest Park, 7: JO p.m. "Re'a.J
E;state Jn~est ments," Newport
Harbor High Auditorium, 7:30
p.m .
TUESDAY, OCl'. 28
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -
Community Recreation Center.
Tues., Wed., Thurs.12·Jp.m .•
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL
BOARD -Regular meeting,
Costa Mesa City Council Cham·
bers, 7:JOp.m .
"JUMPERS" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, thru Sun. 8
p.m .
OCC LECTURES -"Customs,
Cults & Cultures of the Western
Pacific," Art Lecture Hall 119.
7 :30 p .m . ''Behind the
Headlines," Forum, 7:30 p.m.
''Convers ations with Adoles ~
cents,'' First United Methodist
Church, 7:JOp.m .
Rites Slated
For Former '
Coast Woman
Funeral se rvices are
scheduled Tuesday for former
Newport Beach resident Mrs .
Geneva J. lngmundson, who died
Friday in Colorado Springs,
Colo., where she and her husband
bad moved.
Rites for Mrs. [ngmundson will
be at 2 p.m . in BeU Broadway
Mortuary Chapel, Costa Mesa,
with interment scheduled at
Harbor Rest MemoriaJ Park.
She was a past member or the
Harbor Eastern Star Lodge, and
the Ruhamal Temple of the
Daughters ol The Nile. The Rev.
Connie Salios end members of
Eastern Star Lodge will officiate
at the Cun eral.
Her husband Roy lngmund.son
and other family memben .sug-
gest memorial conlributlorni to
the Cancer Fund In Mrs .
lnfmundson 's memory.
)
Betting
Suspects
Arrested
•
1
I
The president or a Santa Ana
mobile home dealership and the:
d C'a lers hip's manager were
among 17 persons arrested Fri-
day in a crackdown on an aJ lejed
$1 million·a·month Los An.Jeles
bookmaking ring_
While Robert Coulter. JO. presi·
dent of Orange Crest Mobile
Homes, 909 N. rtarbor Blvd .•
Santa Ana, was among the ar-
rest(.l('S, police said be was a bet·
ting suspect, n ot a bookmaking
susoeet .
Ii was Coulter and Robert
Brown , 28, Orange Crest'11
manager, who placed $20,000
worth of bets with alleged
bookmaker Art Levitt, 53, of Los
Angeles. police claimed.
And placing bets is just as ii·
legal as booking them, Los
An geles Deputy Di strict At ·
torney James Grodin said today.
"We normall y don·t go after
those who place bets," Grodin
admitted.
•·But it is our feeling that major·
players are the ones that make it
so profitable for bookies and thus
fet"d organized crime,·· he added .
The major player s Grodin
~poke of were 10 alleged bettors,
i nrlud in~ Coulter and Brown .
who kE'pt lhe ph ones ringing at
accus ed book maker Levitt's
establishment lasl week.
Bet ween the world series. col-
lege football and professional
football. an undercover agent
plant in Levitt·s backroom· was
kept busy recording bets -and
telephone conversations Grodin
.said. '
Suspect
Gave Out
Fake Name
Newport Beach palice today
claimed that one of five persons
charged last week in what of~
fi cers termed a· $30,000 bunco
scheme had lied about her name.
When police learned the real
name or Marie Ellen Johnson via·
computer. investigators said
they also found thousands of
dollars worth of theft and fraud
warrants outstanding agains t
her.
She is wanted for parole viola-
tion and several outstanding
$10,000 warrants in Los Angeles"
County. Newport police reported.
The Johnson woman, 25, is one
of two females charged in
Newport with attempting a SO·
.:ailed pigeon-drop scheme.
Officers allege that she and
four other persons were involved
in the trickery which was
calculated to bilk an elderly
Costa Mesa woman out of ber
. life's savings.
Officers were tipped to the case
by bank personnel who became
suspicious when the elderly vic-
tim and one of the suspects at-
tempted to close the senior
citizen·s large savings account
and demanded cash.
The Johnson woman and four
other persons remained in
C'ustody today in lieu of $50,000
bail apiece. They are being
charged with conspiracy to com·
mlt grand theft.
Car Agency
To Bid Again
For Rezone
A rezoning request for three re-
sidential lots purchased by an
auto agency for expansion
several years ago will come
before the Costa Mesa Planning
Commission again tonight
The proposal by Dick Nabers
Cadillac agency is the last among
17items on the agenda forthe6::.J
p .m. meeting in city council
chambers.
Nabers bought Lo.is at 454, 458
and 464 Prince.Drive in the
College Park district originally
intending to expand his car lot
which front s on Harbor
Boulevard adjacent to those lots.
Community opposition finally
forced him to drop the idea and
the lots -from which homes had
already been cleared -were
planted with grass as a mini·park.
The planning staCf recom-
mends approval of the zone
change from residential use to
commercial development.
One other item on the qeoda is
a zone exception permit request
by Donald D. Smith to ope.rate
what be describes as an escort
service, photo figure-modeling
studio, massage parlor and voca·
tional workshop for teaching
massage techniques, at 130 E .
17th St., in acommercialzone.
The city staff recommends de-
nl~f Smith's enterprise pro·
pos , w~lch will ultimately go
belo the City Council for final
rejection or approval.